University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)
- Class of 1953
Page 1 of 404
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 404 of the 1953 volume:
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D -h y. so many more advertisers depend on BURD FLETCHER than on any other Midwest printing plant, that it must be an excellent idea - - and worth your remembering BURD FLETCHER Company Seventh St., May to Central Victor 1122 Kansas City 6, Missouri midwest landmarks K. U. ' s Campanile and the . KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY A GREETING TO JAYHAWKERS EVERYWHERE from these Kansas City Jayhawkers Henry Gate Harry Darby . Don Davis Karl Koerper James McGilley Roy M uehlbach Hor O ' Neill . Ralph Perry . Roland Record John W. Starr Flour Mills of America . Kansas City, Kansas . . WHB Broadcasting Co. Kansas City Power Light Co. . Mellody-McGilley-Eylar Geo. Muehlbach Sons . O ' Neill Oldsmobile Co. . ,-T ' Perry Pontiac . Jackson Motors R. B. Jones Sons Speed Warner Speed Warner Insurance Pay Way Feed Mills Inc. KI: M; i ii DAM I 1C K OICICIS 6 _ f- J T. fl - 1 I M B E It I N THE BEGINNING THIS ISSUE marks the nineteenth year that the Jayhawker has appeared in the form of a magazine-yearbook. As such, it holds a unique position among American university yearbooks. Most institutions of higher learning publish a single issue yearbook, and no major university other than Kansas publishes more than two issues yearly. So we of the Jayhawker staff believe that the students of KU have in their yearbook something very distinctive. The advantages of a multi-issue yearbook are many. Coverage of student events reaches the student soon after they occur. The rundown on the football squad is available before the season is over instead of appearing during the confusion of spring finals or the heat of summer. Few are the men ' s houses which do not wear thin the pages of the fall issue poring over the pictures of freshmen women and sorority pledge classes in the never-ending search for dates. And it has been said that the same thing happens in the women ' s dorms and sororities. Several years ago the students of Kansas University reaffirmed their desire for the magazine style by decisively defeating in an all-school election a measure designed to reinstitute the single issue book. But if KU students were so satisfied with their multi-issue yearbook, why don ' t other universities adopt this style? The ansv er is that many have tried but for one reason or another returned to conventional style. In many schools the student staff simply was not equal to the task of producing more than one issue a year. Certainly anyone with any experience in journalism knows the work and sweat necessary to meet the many deadlines necessary for a publication the size of a yearbook. Producing four issues a year simply means quadrupling the number of those deadlines. The failure of a regularly enrolled student staff to meet those many deadlines has ruined many schools ' attempts at a magazine-yearbook. Other schools with strict faculty control of publications have found that the university advisors concerned have simply been unwill- ing to expend the energy and accept the responsibility for the additional labor required. In other universities, the staff and advisors have been technically capable of getting the issues out on time but have not been able to keep the magazine style because of student apathy. Their issues have either been too much like a magazine or too much like the conventional yearbook. Here is the basic prob- lem of multi-issue yearbook production. From the broad editorial standpoint the difficulty is one of evaluating and choosing the best points of both the magazine and the conventional yearbook. From many students comes the request for a light, entertaining volume with cartoons, stories, and risque jokes in short, a collegiate New Yorker. Meanwhile, many graduating seniors and faculty members are breath- ing down the staff ' s neck with demands for a regular yearbook split neatly in four parts appearing at equi-distant times during the year. To adopt either plan completely would be to undermine the basic philosophy of the Jayhawker and to lead it down the path of failure along which all other attempts at magazine yearbooks have traveled. So the problem is maintaining the delicate balance between frivolity and ponderosity. With this in mind we of the Jayhawker staff shall endeavor to report accurately the activities of the university during the school year, to clearly portray the beliefs, the personality, and the actions of the present day student, and to reflect those factors in the world situation which vitally affect him. We will do these things in as entertaining a manner as possible without making the Jayhawker over into a leather-bound humor magazine. This, then, is the first issue of the 1952-53 Jayhawker magazine-yearbook; three more will appear during the year. We are, of course, open to any and all suggestions which will make the Jayhawker a more accurate, interesting, and entertaining record of your year at KU. THE EDITOR - ' . FOUR ASPECTS OF KU LIFE: Students hurrying along the walks . . . Kenney scoring again at the Olympics . . . And we can party, too . . . Yet we are always bound by the administration of Strong Hall. THE 1953 JAYHAWKER fall issue 6 10 16 18 20 23 28 38 40 48 50 64 66 70 73 74 76 82 84 86 88 91 Campus pictorial Background of news The big 3 at Kansas This business of a university The deans A plan for tomorrow Science in the making Big wheels on campus Party pix and others So what happens to a queen Pledges and new students Report from Helsinki The Olympic story Then we went to Europe Wonder boy Wes Santee John Ise proposes Football inventory Texas Christian Santa Clara Colorado Iowa State Index Watson Memorial Hospital K.I is A GREAT UNIVERSITY! These five words so often spoken, so often written, are more to most students than an apt phrase for a university press release or for idle rush week chatter. KU is a great university . . . but why ? At this point the average students ' concept of greatness becomes hazy. He lacks real understanding of his school. And for good reason! True understanding and appreciation is based on knowledge. To provide the material, the facts, from which this appreciation and knowledge of Kl can grow is the purpose of this Jayhawker. ' From Student Union Eat Entrance Watson Memorial Library Window But why is KU so outstanding? Is it because of fine administration? or the quality of the instruction? or the speed with which KU is growing? or the quality of the students in a ttendance? or the social program of the university? or the world-renowned athletic teams? A bit of reflection makes one realize that none of these things constitutes a claim to greatness, but rather that each is a major factor in making valid the claim that KU is a great university ! NOVEMBER 1952 In observing the forces that mold the college student of today, we believe that wars and elections affect him no less than football games and weekend parties. A record of this college year would be incom- plete without reference to these outside influences. In these pages, therefore, we attempt to analyze the news of the world in which the university and its students must live. Ike beats Adlai On November 4, 1952, more than 51 million voters the largest number in any United States presidential elec- tion went to the polls and elected the first Republican chief executive in 20 years. Primarily, they were voting for a change. After thirteen years of New Deal policies and seven of President Tru- man ' s Fair Deal, America had given the highest office in the land to a political tyro who promised a great deal, by a margin of 442 electoral votes to 89 for his opponent and a popular vote of 32,690,000 to 26,275,091 (as tabulated at our time of going to press). The General also accom- plished the feat of winning several southern states. For the victor, the great military hero Dwight D. Eisenhower, the triumph was the climax of a long, 50,000 mile campaign marked by bit- terness in which the general the first Republican presidential candi- date to do so successfully invaded the Solid South on four different oc- casions during his speech tours. At this time he plucked the usually Democratic 24 electoral votes of Texas. He achieved this partly through his promise to support the state ' s rights in regard to the Tidelands oil issue, which concerned Texans greatly. For the loser, Governor Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, it was the end of an equally hard-fought campaign which had changed him from a reluc- tant candidate in June to a vigorous campaigner of notable eloquence. But the people seemed more charmed by General Eisenhower ' s plans to lead a crusade in Europe more than they were by the promises of the obviously qualified Governor Stevenson, who lacked the General ' s fame. The Democrats built their campaign on the premise of prosperity and NIXON, EISENHOWER Co. The happiness of victory STEVENSON EATS CROW Only 9 states, 73 electoral votes trumpeted the song You never had it so good. The GOP forces, on the other hand, pointed out two chief ideas which vitally concerned the av- erage US citizen the war in Korea and the mess in Washington, with em- phasis on the seriousness of Demo- cratic bungling both at home and abroad. True, many Americans seemed to be tiring of a seemingly endless shooting war, which began in the summer of 1950 as a police action of the United Nations, but which was in 1952 still killing their sons and husbands in an apparently deadlocked struggle in a far off land. Probably next in importance to Mr. Average American, who wanted a change, was the issue of corruption in federal government or what the Re- publicans referred to as moral rot in high places. Candidate Eisenhower made the statement during his campaign: There is only one issue in this cam- paign the mess in Washington. From there, the GOP took up the cry to the effect that it ' s time for a change and what we need is a new administration with new policies. The infiltration of Washington by Communists and communist sympa- thizers as a great danger to America was introduced and popularized by Wisconsin ' s junior senator, Joseph McCarthy. As to foreign policy, the Republic- ans favored a get tough policy in Korea which the Democrats had said would lead inevitably to a third world war. Peace takes patience was the idea voiced by Governor Stevenson in one speech. To the Democrats ' you never had it so good speech, the Republicans constantly reminded the people (al- though there was little need for it) that although more money was in Continued on page 90 10 War in Korea War in Korea has reached the two year, four month mark as this issue goes to press and cessation of hostili- ties seems impossible in the foresee- able future. Peace talks which have been going on intermittently for al- most fifteen months have now bogged down over the issue of exchange of war prisoners. The Communists are demanding full exchange of all pris- oners while the United Nations de- mand that only prisoners who wish to return to their home country be re- patriated. This is a very real, practi- cal problem since a very high per- centage of North Korean and Chinese Communist prisoners reportedly want to stay in UN territory. American casualties are now ap- proaching the 125,000 mark with nearly 1,000 added to the list each week. South Korean casualties num- ber 150,000 while those of other UN countries are slightly more than 11,000. Present UN strategy seems to be an intensification of the conflict, but by means of large scale bombing rather than infantry action. One thousand plane raids are quite normal with some air attacks rivaling in size the massive raids of late World War II. The present plan of attack is aimed at destruction of communica- tion and transportation facilities in rear areas. Although this strategy is rather cheap in terms of casualties, no great deterioration of enemy forces is taking place. On the ground the battle lines are very static with ac- tion resembling the trench warfare of World War I. Though still officially termed a police action, the effect of the Korean war on the economy is becoming quite pronounced. The direct cost of the conflict thus far has reached 15 bil- lion dollars. Nearly 525,000 American men are now in Korea and another 1,100,000 are veterans of this gigantic police action. The selective service draft is now taking 47,000 men per month and 1,000,000 are expected to be taken into the armed forces in- voluntarily in the next year. This pressure from Uncle Sam has caused a huge growth in ROTC programs in American colleges and universities. At present these programs promise a four year deferment in return for a minimum of two years active duty following graduation. The presidential campaign engen- dered new interest in the Korean con- flict as Republican candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower proposed that Ameri- can troops be withdrawn from the front lines and replaced entirely by South Korean troops, a policy which some military leaders have declared highly impractical. Eisenhower fur- ther promised that, if elected, he would go in person to Korea to look at the situation, before laying his course in a vigorous effort to seek a just peace. US and the world War and threats of war continue to be the big news on the international scene. In addition to the hot war in Korea, the incessant cold war con- tinues along the periphery of the Rus- sian empire. Constant guerilla war- fare is found in Indo-China and Ma- laya while armed conflict seems not KOREAN CATNAP Sleep is where you find it unlikely in Iran and Yugoslavia. How- ever, the general trend of public opin- ion is that war no longer is so immi- nent as was once thought. Most people think that war is still several years away, and the students at KU no longer have that hopeless feeling so prevalent during the past few years. Winston Churchill, Conservative prime minister in Great Britain, displayed this growing optimism by declaring that the prospect of war is remote and receding. However, the reasoning behind this statement is far from cheery; the famed British statesman feels that atomic warfare would be far too horrible for either side to con- template. Even with these bright signs pointing to a new era of cold peace, it is significant that the Nobel com- mittee is awarding no Peace Prize this year. Although heavily censored, news from Soviet Russia seems highly prophetic of a change in future Com- munist policy. The universally feared Politburo, a twelve man board that has ruled Russia for some 35 years, has been dissolved and will be re- placed by a body known as the Presi- dium. Since a turn away from the highly autocratic government now in power seems highly unlikely, the change is generally accepted as a propaganda move. The Politburo, so long connected with the ruthless des- potism of Soviet dictators, may have been abolished as part of a new Rus- sian peace drive. Further sign of a Soviet policy change comes from the manner in which the Russians have forsaken their terrorist practices in Europe in favor of a new peaceful approach. The strategy is to appear to be work- ing very hard for peace while making the Western powers look like war- mongers and terrorists. Continued on page 91 Music lovers on campuses today are undergoing a rough division into two groups pops and bops. The popular addict has been present in every gen- eration. Characterized by giggling girls who rush out to buy a record of a pop song so they can learn the words, this group makes popular songs into towering hits in a matter of weeks. Some bands, notably Guy Lombardo, have ridden the crest of popular songs for decades by bringing out palatable discs of whatever happens to be riding high at the time, while others have gotten a start fairly recently by the same method. The recent shift back to instrumental dance music in the popular field has brought to the fore such strictly dancing bands as Billy May, Ralph Flanagan, and Jerry Grey. The latter two brought back memories of the greatest dance band of them all, Glenn Miller ' s group. This switch to instrumental accents gave Blue Tango the distinction of being the first tune to climb to the top of the Hit Parade entirely without benefit of lyrics. The true boppers, known in their own group as hipsters, are (fortunate- ly) rare on the campus, as are their costumes (berets, goatees, floppy bows and horn-rimmed glasses) and their vocabulary (gone, crazy, cool, etc.). Usually quite prevalent, however, are their first cousins, the modernists. These cats on a modern kick dig deep on Stan Kenton, George Shearing, Billy Eckstine, Sarah Vaughan, and cohorts. They are completely gassed by an augumented 13th in 6-part brass. They are, however, not sufficient in number to support their idols in the manner to which the commercial bands are accustomed. There is not any open conflict between these factions, but rather a com- placent sympathy for the other side. From any angle, however, the music business is not in as much of a slump as it is commonly depicted to be. Inventiveness and the striving for a new sound will continually bring new artists and ideas to the public eye, as they have in the cases of Stan Kenton, Billy May, Les Paul, and that controversial figure, Johnny Ray. This singer ' s voice and style created a furor of monstrous proportions when he appeared on the musical scene. But whether Johnny ' s ray is bright or dim, at least it has a different shade to it. 11 , . ' t. ' % ?.-i - ,-v, . . - ' , 5rV ' WrSf: ,,v flfc . ' ' i t- i-jcb -- ' vs 1 --r ' r ADMINISTRATION -1 ACROSS Jayhawker Drive in Strong Hall are the busy offices of busy men. For a look inside those offices, the Jayhawker introduces you to Chancellor Murphy and the host of deans and administrators who make up his staff. Next you will see projects of science that will revolutionize your future. And finally you will see how KU plans to meet that future through A Plan for Tomorrow. THE BIG AT KANSAS To THE BIG THREE of the administrative staff, Chancellor Murphy, Mr. Nichols, and Mr. Lawton, belongs the task of planning, co-ordinating, and managing the University of Kansas. According to Dr. Murphy, the job can be divided into three major areas the academic, financial, and physi- cal plant programs. Dr. Murphy, as presiding officer of the Uni- versity Senate, directs and guides this senior policy- making group. This group has the responsibility of handling problems and matters which affect all of the various schools of the University. The calen- dar for the school year, the examination schedule, and advanced standing of students serve to illus- trate the wide scope of this body. Raymond Nichols, Executive Secretary, handles an endless procession of administrative problems. New appointments to the faculty of the Uni- versity are made by the deans of the respective schools. By order of the Board of Regents, it is the duty of the Chancellor to approve or disapprove of these appointments. They are theoretically only recommendations to the Regents and subject to their approval; but actually, and in practice, they are final, as the Board always follows the decisions of the Chancellor. Dr. Murphy also has many other varied and miscellaneous tasks which are associated with the title of chancellor. As the official representative of the University of Kansas, he attends many con- ventions and meetings. That his role is not a pas- sive one can be shown by his success in Washington in obtaining the steel for the field house. Speaking at all types of gatherings and meet- ings might also be classified in the miscellaneous duties of Dr. Murphy. The great number of invita- tions and the limited amount of time present the problem of gracious refusals to many of the invi- tations. Although, literally, he is charged by the Board of Regents with absolute control, Dr. Murphy must delegate authority and accept the aid of capable assistants. Those assistants are Raymond Nichols, Executive Secretary, and Keith Lawton, Adminis- trative Assistant to the Chancellor. The administration of the financial area of the task is largely the responsibility of Mr. Nichols. Mr. Nichols has been a member of the staff of the University for more than 20 years and has served under three chancellors. The fiscal budget is one of the most important aspects of financial control of the University. It is prepared by all the heads of departments. The fig- ures submitted by each department in a school are totaled and the proposed budget for the specific school is then submitted to the Secretary of the Budget. This budget represents the estimated amount of money that will be needed in order to operate the school for the coming fiscal year. As Secretary of the Budget, Mr. Nichols pre- pares the university budget from the figures which he has received. He submits it to the Budget Com- As Administrative Assistant to the Chancellor, Keith Lawton has charge of KU ' s physical plant. 7 I 18 VVKI.IV D. MUKPUY, Chancellor of the University mittee which reviews and discusses the proposed expenditures. Revisions in the figures may be nec- essary and such revisions are made after consulta- tion with the school and department concerned. The budget is taken to the Board of Regents meeting by Dr. Murphy and Mr. Nichols. After the Board of Regents has secured the state appro- priations, it is the duty of Mr. Nichols to enforce the budget throughout the fiscal year. The Executive Secretary also has a large num- ber of duties which he can class as miscellaneous. Dr. Murphy may desire reports, information, or the answering of correspondence. The position held by Mr. Lawton, instituted in January of this year, is of major importance in the efficient operation of the University. The co-ordination of the physical plant is the primary purpose and function of the Administra- tive Assistant. Departments throughout the Uni- versity send Mr. Lawton reports of future building needs. The state architect then draws the blue- prints and Mr. Lawton discusses their adequacy with the department heads and dean of the school. A final set of plans is constructed, and if money is available, bids are received. It is the duty of Mr. Nichols to observe the progress and to keep the process moving as rapidly as possible. The work of Mr. Lawton does not cease at this point. Frequently he must act as mediator between contractors and subcontractors; and as Secretary of the Planning Council, he aids in the long range building program. THIS BUSINESS OF A UNIVERSITY The men and women who run it by Wayne Knowles STRONG HALL, the heart of the KU campus, houses the offices which offer non-academic services to students. Some of these offices work directly with students; others influence students only indirectly, but all these offices are concerned with making the University of Kansas a more pleasant and more profitable place for every student. One of the most important of these offices is that of MARTHA PETERSON, Dean of Women, whose warm personality and hearty laughter are well known to all women students. The Dean of Women ' s office is concerned with women ' s prob- lems as such, and operates on the principle that students can, if given the facts of a situation, reach The man with the money, Karl KIooz, purchases supplies, pays employees, checks student funds. Dean of Women Martha Peterson and Dean of Men Laurence Woodruff give personal aid and counsel. their own decisions. Miss Peterson acts as advisor to the large exclusively women ' s groups as well as to individual students with social, academic, or personal problems. One of the largest parts of the Dean of Women ' s job concerns dormitories, espe- cially the freshman dormitories, for which coun- sellors must be selected and trained. Another part is the process of admission, assignment, and selec- tion of staff which is carried on for all women ' s dormitories. Across the hall in the Dean of Men ' s office is LAURENCE WOODRUFF, quiet and sympathetic, who doubles in brass as professor of biology. The Dean of Men does, as he puts it, everything that no one else will do. Although concerned primarily with the welfare of men students, he finds himself assisting and advising activities, such as student government, composed of both men and women. In addition to activities, the Dean of Men watches over men ' s housing, health, and academic progress. He serves as a general counsellor to men students and is able to refer students to the proper agencies if their problems require more specialized attention than he can give them. You can ' t attend the University of Kansas without the permission of Registrar James K. Hitt. From the moment the KU student begins his physical examination at Watkins Hospital until he marches through the campanile on his way to re- ceive his sheepskin, he is aware of the influence of private philanthropy at the University, most of which is channeled through the Endowment Asso- ciation. IRVIN YOUNGBERG, Executive Secretary to the Association, has the task of promoting and ad- ministering the gifts and bequests which have made the University of Kansas the great school that it is, a greater school than the taxpayers of the state could be expected to provide. The 250 trust funds which Mr. Youngberg invests and administers have helped enlarge the campus and permit many stu- dents to obtain an education or carry on advanced study. The Registrar ' s office acts as a front door to the University for the prospective KU undergrad- uate. New students are admitted through this office headed by JAMES K. HITT. The student then literal- ly enters the front door of KU, the registration line. After registration the office staff plunges into the task of preparing a permanent record for each student. These records are filled, semester by semester, until the student is eligible for grad- uation. The Registrar ' s office then serves as a back door to the University for it is in this office that the all-important document is prepared. Mr. Hitt maintains his sense of humor at all times. He finds time to head several committees and to serve as Secretary to the National Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. The Alumni office is a scene of a constant bustle of ringing phones, proofreading, editing, checking and layout. Through all this, FRED ELLS- WORTH, Alumni Secretary and ex-newspaperman, remains calm and friendly. Much of the activity can be attributed to the preparation of the Alumni Magazine which is distributed to 10,000 former students, graduates, and friends of the University. The Alumni Magazine carries evidence of much of the Alumni office ' s work, addresses of former students and notices of meetings of organization of KU clubs. But don ' t be misled by the name. The Alumni Association sponsors Statewide Activities for undergraduates and is interested in promoting class spirit in undergraduate classes. KARL KLOOZ, University Bursar, holds one of the most responsible positions at KU, but he man- ages to remain efficient and relaxed before the myriad, complex operations with which he is faced. The Bursar prepares and pays the payroll for the University faculty and employees. He purchases, pays for, and inventories the supplies necessary for the functioning of the University. Bookkeeping and accounting for these transactions are a large part of the Bursar ' s large job. In addition to these major functions, the Bursar ' s office performs many services to students such as handling funds for student organizations and a check cashing service. A devoted KU alumnus, Mr. Klooz likes to spend Saturday afternoons at KU football games and relaxes with a game of golf on non-football week- ends. Left, Irvin Youngberg, head of the University En- dowment Association; right, Fred Ellsworth reach- es for his own publication, the Alumni Magasine. T. DfiWiTT CARR Engineering PAUL B. LAWSON Liberal Arts and Sciences THE DEANS Architects of the intellect fey Dick Sheldon When I came here five years ago, I opened that door, ' ' said T. DEWixr CARR, Dean of the School of Engineering, and it has never since been closed. My hobby is human relations ' The Dean launched a 26- year career as a naval officer at Annapolis. Keeping the German fleet bottled up was his task during World War I when he served on an American battleship with the British Grand Fleet. After the war Dean Carr became the naval aide at the White House under President Calvin Coolidge, spending his second year there on board the President ' s yacht, Mayflower. December 7. 1941. found the Dean, after having commanded two sub- marines, as executive officer of the US Naval Training Station at Great Lakes, 111. He later served under General MacArthur in the Southwest Pacific, and became special assistant to the Chief of Naval Personnel in Washington. He came to KU as Dean in 1947. I am undoubtedly the man with the most brilliant head on the campus, chuckled DR. PAUL B. LAWSON, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Ex- ternally, that is. Dean Lawson was born in India, where his parents were missionaries for 35 years. In 1903, just before his fifteenth birthday, Paul B. Lawson came to America. When he retires after next year, he plans to return to India. Dean Lawson still speaks Hindustanese fluently. Since coming to KU, Dean Lawson has held more positions than any other man in the history of the school. When not working, the Dean likes to get his fingers in the soil, for he has a thesis that nations which stay close to the soil never go too wrong. BURTON W. MARVIN, Journalism F. J. MOREAU, Late LEONARD H. AXE, Business THOMAS GORTON, Fine Arts F. T. STOCKTON, University Extension HAROLD G. BARR, Religion Dean BURTON W. MARVIN is President of the Asso- ciation of Accredited Schools and Departments of Jour- nalism for next year. Besides being a member of the American Council on Education for Journalism and Chairman of the Board of the School of Religion, Dean Marvin heads the Lawrence Rotary Club and teaches an adult Sunday school class at the First Methodist Church. Recalling his biggest thrill, the Dean still remembers the Christmas vacation in 1934 when a convention of college editors was held in Washington, D. C. The boys were all guests of Franklin D. Roosevelt for an hour bull session. Undoubtedly the most hilarious experience which DR. F. J. MOREAU of the law school has ever undergone is the time he refused to talk on the telephone with his boss because he thought it was someone impersonating the President. Later when it was discovered that it had really been the chief administrative officer, both had a good laugh. As one of a committee of four men, Dean Moreau worked for five years to draft a new corporation code for Kansas, which was adopted in 1939. Along with this enjoyment of his job comes the deep satisfac- tion of seeing how well law graduates of KU fare wher- ever they go. The Dean feels that the outstanding thing about the law students is that they have minds of their own. The only dean of the KU faculty who was born in Kansas is DR. LEONARD H. AXE, Dean of the School of Business, who hails from Council Grove. After graduat- ing from KU, the Dean taught high school in his home town for four years before returning to attend law school. He then practiced here in Lawrence for some time. Noting the jobs which he has held here at KU causes the Dean to murmur that he has done everything but direct traffic. During the war he was University Director of the V-12 program and the medical training program for the Army and Navy. As first Director of the Veterans ' Training Pro- gram, he organized the initial setup, which continues today largely unchanged. He later became assistant to Chancellor Malott and in 1947 attained his present post as Dean of the School of Business. My primary interests are fishing, bridge, and read- ing, remarked DR. THOMAS GORTON, Dean of the Col- lege of Fine Arts, though not necessarily in that order. Having graduated from the Rochester, N. Y., Music School, Dean Gorton taught for some time in a settlement school at Rochester for poor but talented children. After the war he became Director of the School of Music at the University of Ohio; then in the fall of 1950 he came to KU as Dean of the School of Fine Arts. While a student at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania, Dean F. T. STOCKTON played football and basketball, participated in varsity debate, and was elected to Phi GEORGE B. SMITH, Education J. ALLEN REESE, Pharmacy JOHN H. NELSON, Graduate School Beta Kappa. While earning his Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins the next two years, the Dean played more varsity foot- ball. In the following year he was chosen captain of the football team. In 1917 Dean Stockton joined the faculty at the University of South Dakota as Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, the youngest dean in the country at that time. Then in 1924 Chancellor Lindley asked him to come to KL ' as head of the newly organized School of Business. In 1947 Dean Stockton became the first Dean of University Extension, which now reaches more than 30,000 adults all over the state and area. Rumor has it that 1 play a very lousy guitar, quips DR. GEORGE B. SMITH, Dean of the School of Education. Well, that rumor is true. Dr. Smith ' s musical talent and his penchant for collecting folk songs were acquired from several men from Kentucky and Tennessee with whom he served overseas during the war. The Dean has two young sons who are constantly revising his knowledge of child developmental psychology. When asked what qualities he particularly likes in people, the Dean replied, All of them. The longer I live, the more sure I am that there ' s no one way to do anything; no one quality that ' s best. Belief in sound fundamentals characterizes the edu- cational philosophy of DR. J. ALLEN REESE, Dean of the School of Pharmacy. To him, particular courses are not nearly so important as is a basic understanding of the human race and its problems. The Dean believes that a student must be taught to think and adapt himself to changing conditions. While getting his Ph.D. at the University of Florida, the Dean received a telegram from Chancellor Malott suggesting he meet Dean Stauffer, then of the Graduate School, at Washington. Seeing an oppor- tunity to develop the school, and particularly interested in building up a young faculty, Dr. Reese came to KU as Dean of the School of Pharmacy in 1940. During his years at KU, Dr. Reese has held every position in the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, having been president last year. For 18 years DR. JOHN H. NELSON, Dean of the Graduate School, has owned a farm in the Kaw Valley; during the war he ran a dairy farm. Anything connected with the outdoors, whether farming, fishing, or hunting, appeals to him. Dean Nelson took his Ph.D. at Cornell and taught there for seven years. Through the late Pro- fessor Carl Becker, one of America ' s most distinguished historians. Dean Nelson became interested in KU. Here he taught English until seven or eight years ago, when he left his post as Associate Dean of the College to become Dean of the Graduate School. A thorough knowledge of a few fundamentals, such as one ' s own language, mathe- matics, and the history of one ' s country, is the true basis of education. Dormitory Row, the University ' s newest housing area, contains newly built Pearson and Stephenson Halls as well as Sellards Hall (out of sight to the right). Older dorms on this new street include Batten- feld and Templin Halls. PLAN FOR TOMORROW by Virginia Mackey KU ' s FUTURE includes no growing pains as the University looks ahead, planning its building and housing needs. At a recent meeting of the Board of Regents, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy outlined a ten year building program totaling more than twelve and a half million dollars. To date more than four million dollars worth of construction is underway on the campus. Daily the walls of the new science building rise higher above the south side of the hill, the addition to the Union is almost completed, and the excavation for a $200,000 stack addition to the law library behind Green Hall has recently been finished. The reason behind the extensive building pro- gram is an anticipated increase in enrollment over the next ten to twenty years. University officials agree that planning for housing and supervised living cannot be over-emphasized since the student population may increase to between 10,000 and 12,000 within the next decade. At present Kansas elementary schools are jammed with children of the post-war baby boom. This increase in the school-age population, cou- pled with a growing exodus of industry to the Mid- west and particularly around Kansas City and Wichita, makes it extremely important that not less than 2,000 more student living units must be constructed in the near future. Without additional housing and classrooms there can be no continued progress in higher educa- tion at Lawrence. The two programs are linked 23 Many parts of the new tripled-in-size Memorial Union Building opened this fall and the entire building is expected to be ready early in 1953. together and must go forward at the same time. About six million dollars will be available to the University from the state educational building fund at the beginning of the 1953 legislature. Chancellor Murphy plans to ask the legislature to approve at least a third of the proposed ten million dollars at the present time. The money will go toward: 1. Construction of a l o to 2 million dollar music and fine arts building. 2. Remodeling of Bailey Chemical Labora- tories into facilities for the School of Education, amounting to $500,000. 3. Purchase of $500,000 - $750,000 worth of equipment to be installed in the science build- ing which is now under construction. The remainder of the program, which will not come before the legislature until 1955, includes plans for the construction of a $740,000 annex on the northeast corner of Snow Hall and the addition of a third story on Haworth Hall annex costing $150,000. Housing for students is one of the most press- ing needs at the University. In repeated statements Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy has cited the neces- sity for expanding the dormitory system as well as classroom facilities. Plans being made to alleviate the housing sit- uation include construction of dormitories to ac- commodate 600 male students in the area west of Lindley Hall. The proposed location for the build- ings is about a mile west of the campus in what is 24 now known as the Daisy Field. Addition of another unit to house freshmen women also is under con- sideration. It will be built, along with dormitories housing upperclass women, on North College hill. Although designs are not complete for the music and fine arts building, the site selected for it lies west of the Military Science building and south of Lindley Hall. The building will straddle the old road leading to the Military Science build- ing. Among many conveniences featured in the building will be air-conditioned practice rooms especially designed for both instrumental and vocal music. For dramatic productions the building will include a theater at least as large as the one in Fraser Hall. There also are hopes for providing an outdoor theater. Chances are that this year ' s freshman class will be the first to see a basketball game in the new fieldhouse. However, according to the Chancellor, construction on the fieldhouse is farther along than would appear to the eye. About 35% of the total construction is completed in the finished under- ground work, but until more steel is released, work cannot begin on the superstructure. When completed the fieldhouse will hold about 5,000 more spectators than the municipal auditorium in Kansas City and about 3,000 more than K-State ' s fieldhouse. ROTC classes will use it for drill and both physical education and ath- letic programs will use its movable basketball floor, indoor track, lockers, showers, and storage space. The Science building, dedicated to the advance- ment of all physical sciences, rises on the south slope of Mt. Oread below Robinson gymnasium. IJUt 25 Nearly doubled in size, the Union building with its million and a half dollar addition will be ready for operation early in the year. The book store moved into its new quarters in the middle of November. Included in the addition are student offices, a bowling alley, an enlarged cafeteria, and a ballroom twice the size of the original one. SINCE THE Chancellor laid the cornerstone in ceremony early this fall, construction on the 2 million dollar science building has proceeded rapidly. Last spring a severe windstorm set work back when a portion of the superstructure was blown over. Now its walls of native Kansas stone are almost complete. The building will house the School of Pharmacy, the basic sciences, and physics and chemistry departments. The center wing has six floors. The School of Pharmacy will occupy floors three, four, and five. The science library will be housed on the sixth floor. The building is a roadmark in the realiza- tion of the dream to provide adequate teaching and research facilities for the physical sciences, Chan- cellor Murphy said at the cornerstone laying. Those participating in the cornerstone laying were Chancellor Murphy, J. Earl Schaefer, Wich- ita, Vice President and General Manager of the Boeing Aircraft Company, and Chairman of the University Research Foundation board; Sen. Wil- frid Cavaness, Chairman of the Ways and Means committee; Drew McLaughlin, Paola, Chairman of the state board of regents; Hubert Brighten, To- peka, Secretary of the board of regents; Dr. Ray- mond Q. Brewster, Chairman of the chemistry de- partment; J. Allen Reese, Dean of the School of Pharmacy; J. D. Stranathan, Chairman of the de- partment of astronomy and physics. Another proposed unit is a business building, which would be a general classroom building. Its site has not yet been selected. Plans also include k I ' - massive fieldhouse, comple- tion date still uncertain, will be one of the largest enclosed athletic arenas in the nation. In the lower picture, beautiful Sellards Hall is a step in the administration ' s plan for more adequate housing. First completed part of the renovat- ed union is the ultra-modern cafe- teria, a preview of what awaits the student when the rest of the huge building opens. Below, Chancellor Murphy officiates as the corner- stone of the new Science Building is laid. remodeling of the electrical engineering labs, an addition to Watkins Hospital, and an addition to Lindley Hall. As landscaping progresses on Sellards Hall, construction around the three new scholarship dor- mitories on the east side of the campus nears com- pletion. Men students moved into Stephenson and Pearson Halls last spring, but women did not move into Sellards Hall until this fall. The present land- scaping program would turn the whole area sur- rounding the dormitories into a sort of park, with large lawns and many varieties of trees. Sellards and Pearson Halls are the gift of Joseph R. Pearson and his wife, Gertrude Sellards, while Stephenson Hall was built from funds willed by Lyle A. Stephenson. Construction of the new dormitories will be financed by revenue bonds which will be retired with income from them and existing facilities. Further expansion of the student housing program will require appropriated or donated funds as the new buildings cannot be entirely self liquidating if reasonable rates are to be charged. University officials are trying to anticipate the future needs and to have dormitories ready well in advance of the time present facilities will not suffice. This program of expansion has been helped greatly by private gifts and bequests to the KU Endowment Association. They have augmented appropriations of the state legislature for regular operating expenses and have provided additional services to students which could not have been ob- tained in any other way. Studying the needs of the University and making recommendations for meeting them is the special work of a planning commission set up by the Chancellor. Constantly examining enrollment trends and critically analyzing the building and space needs of the University, the commission keeps its eye on the future, helping KU grow into one of the most modern and well-equipped univer- sities in the nation. 27 Dr. Norman Plummer removes newly fired samples of firebrick from the State Geological Sur- vey ' s ceramic kiln. ; . SCIENCE IN THE MAKING: KU 52 by Bob Martin E == me 2 , log 942 == 2.9741, B. P. Mg == 1110- these facts are listed page after page, volume after volume, but who determines them? These facts are the result of blood, sweat, and tears in the truest sense, and they are certainly not obtained by the methods employed by the behind-schedule stu- dent ' s dry lab. Starting with the first applica- tions of Bacon ' s methods of scientific investiga- tion, the man of science has toiled incessantly to explain one curious scientific phenomenon after another. He has worked diligently at his task, failing over and over again, then finally succeeding in a moment of triumph. He has done his job well and in the last hundred years has caused the world to advance faster than it has since the beginning of time. 28 Dr. A. W. Davidson, professor of chemistry and assistant dean of the Graduate School, is instru- mental in the coordination of graduate research projects. We don ' t stop to realize what the research worker goes through. Many of you have had to reproduce the classical proofs of the Pythagorean theorem. Think of what the first man to prove it must have gone through. In the archives of science we find records of bravery, logic and sheer guts not to be surpassed by that on any battlefield. For an example, take the story of the construction of the first atomic pile beneath the University of Chicago ' s stadium. These men knew the principles behind the construction and control of the pile, but they had no idea how to keep their project from exploding. Nevertheless, they set to work, realiz- ing that an atomic pile was nothing more than a controlled atomic bomb and that they might be roasted alive in the white-hot inferno of an atomic explosion. Fortunately, these men succeeded, and we now look forward to the day when the atomic pile will be our chief source of centralized power. The most pathetic thing about research is failure over and over again. Even Einstein says that he is wrong 99% of the time. Although Ein- stein is a modest man, his estimation is probably very close to correct in describing most projects. One outstanding example of this is the story behind the discovery of fluorine, a deadly poisonous gas. Some of the world ' s greatest scientists worked in vain for 75 years to isolate the gas. At least eight are known to have died working with it; how many unknown men were killed is unrevealed. Finally, Henri Moissan isolated the gas in 1886. Moissan was a fanatically neat person, the story being that he once went into a fit of rage at finding a drop of water on his laboratory floor. He was well aware of the 75 years of failures, and it was only by applying all of his passion for neat- ness and precision that he finally succeeded. Yet in his joy and triumph, he nearly wrecked his lab- oratory celebrating. This was one case where the 99% of failures nearly reached the 100% mark; today we have many problems that are also approaching that mark. Most of us will never know that feeling of long repeated failure and then success; but on this campus there are those who are experiencing it now. It is to these men that we wish to pay tribute and to offer our heartiest wishes for good luck and success. The research being done here is by no means confined to the physical sciences, nor even to sciences as far as that goes. The research program here is an immense undertaking including projects concerning government, education, and business. However, since the physical sciences are more tangible, we will concern ourselves with them for the present. Even then we can only glance at a limited field, the projects of the departments of chemistry, physics, the Research Foundation, and the State Geological Survey. With all this in mind, let ' s look at some of the men that are writing to- morrow ' s textbooks. Explosions aren ' t the only things that happen at Bailey Chemistry Laboratories. A good example is the work being carried on by Dr. Jacob Klein- berg. The purpose of the project is to obtain 29 Top: Tad Shvotsuka, graduate student from Waseda University in Tokyo, contemplates just where to start as he examines some of the Research Foundation ' s massive equipment. Below: Dr. Cordon Wiseman poses with a bat- tery of two oscilloscopes, an electrometer and other measuring devices used in his project. various metals in unusual oxidation or valence states; an example (for those who understand some chemistry) is the formation of aluminum with a plus one or plus two charge instead of the usual plus three. The most interesting thing about the project is the fact that the whole experiment does not use water as a solvent, but liquid ammonia. The advantage of liquid ammonia is that such strong reducing metals as sodium and potassium will dissolve in it much as salt does in water. In- cidentally, besides aluminum, the metals being studied include gallium, indium, magnesium, and ruthenium. The larger portion of research in the chemis- try department is the work of graduate students. Their work is done in the quonset hut behind Bailey. The hut is divided into small rooms; this allows each student to have his own laboratory (and rumor has it that they make excellent day- time sleeping rooms). One interesting graduate project is that of Ronald Jackson, who is working toward his doc- tor ' s degree. This project is the determination of the vapor pressure of cerium, a metal used in cigarette lighter flints. The metal used is particu- 30 Top: Dr. J. O. Maloney considers the many aspects of his job as director of the Research Foundation. Here he adjusts one of the many projects that he controls. Below: Dr. John C. Frye, executive di- rector of the Geological Survey, points with pride to one of the Survey ' s projects, the complete map- ping of all mineral resources in Kansas. larly fascinating. It is heated above its melting point of 645 C without any fire whatsoever. This is done by an induction furnace. A crucible con- taining the metal is placed within a water cooled tube. Encircling the tube is a coil through which a high energy alternating electric current is pass- ing. Each time the current is reversed the magnetic lines of force created by the current pass through the cerium in the crucible. This causes a terrific heat build-up in the metal. Since the temperature of the metal is so high, an ordinary thermometer is out of the question. Instead, an instrument known as an optical pyrometer measures the temperature by scanning the color of the metal. As the tempera- ture of the metal rises, its vapor creates a pressure in the tube exactly like the vapor or steam of boil- ing water. These figures are tabulated and will eventually find their way into a handbook of chemistry tables. This is the merest hint of the work done by the department of chemistry. The department is unfortunately handicapped by the lack of room at Bailey and is anxiously waiting to move into the new science building. The faculty is one of the best anywhere and its former students agree that the moment you enter Bailey you begin work on some of the most fascinating and most difficult courses of your college career. A few blocks from the delightful aroma of Bailey is another hot spot for research. This is Blake Hall, home of the department of physics. The physics projects are extremely complicated to say the least, and are mostly concerned with some form of atomic energy. The department has three major projects at present, each under the sponsorship of a faculty member, one of whom is Dr. L. Worth Seagon- dollar. His main piece of equipment is the Uni- versity ' s pride and joy, the Van de Graaff gen- erator. This essential for atomic research was built by the University several years ago. Since such machinery as the generator and cyclotron are not manufactured, all parts except some electrical de- vices were made here on the campus. The gen- erator is one of the largest in the Midwest, the only comparable ones being in St. Louis and Houston, and it is probably one of the best controlled in the world. The machine is capable of producing near- ly 3,000,000 volts and driving a particle at very nearly the speed of light. It is a monster of a machine consisting of a tank about six feet in diameter and twenty feet long. The control panel, containing a maze of wiring and dials, is shielded 31 Top: The electrometer, a fundamental part of the Physics Department ' s project in dielectrics, is shown in operation by Dr. Cordon Wiseman. Center: 3,000,000 volts at my fingertips might be the thought of Dr. L. Worth Seagondollar as he operates the University ' s Van de Graaff gen- erator. Bottom: A must for modern petroleum research is a combination of high and low tem- perature analyzers here operated by C. V. Dostie. by a wall of concrete blocks. The basic parts of the generator are an aluminum bucket and a belt passing very close to it. When the generator is in operation the moving belt causes a very high static electrical charge to build up on the bucket. The process is very similar to the sparks that jump from a tractor belt. The charge continues to build up until both the bucket and the gas within (usually hydrogen) are highly charged. Since like charges repel, the gas is forced out of the bucket in the form of charged atoms at a speed of nearly 15,000 mph. The charged atoms continue down a porce- lain tube, still increasing in speed, until they strike a target of some material to be studied. Doctor Seagondollar ' s project is technically described as a tabulation of the values of the ener- gy levels in the nucleus. The project is carried on by mutual agreement of such groups having the necessary equipment to study the atom. The idea is that if enough observations are made concerning the behavior of certain elements and the results placed on a master list, some day, perhaps one, five, or fifty years from now, someone will see a pattern in the figures and we will be one step closer to the mathematical explanation of physical reality. The results of this project will never become the plot of a popular novel, but it is the stuff that is carried on by the unsung hero who does the real work and keeps the inner wheels of pure science turning. A main concern today is the threat of atomic war and its aftermath, the damage of radiation to living tissue. This is exactly what Dr. Frank E. Hoecker is now studying. The effects are studied by injecting mice or other animals with some radio- active substance and noting where the compound settles and what harm it does. These results can be pinpointed with such accuracy that the radia- tion effects on humans can be predicted. This project is extremely important and the more we can learn the more we will be protecting not only our- selves from atomic warfare but also learning more about cancer and other diseases that can be treated by radiation. Another project in the physics department has quite a history. Dr. Gordon Wiseman ' s project, concerning the permanent electrification of non- conductors, was started as a departmental function 15 years ago. In February, 1950, the Army Signal Dr. Jacob Klienberg observes as Lloyd Taylor checks the pungent odor of leaking ammonia in a Bailey chemistry lab. Corps became interested and became a co-sponsor. A non-conductor such as rubber is charged and sealed in a conductor such as tinfoil. The sample is measured for surface charge periodically to see how much the charge has diminished. Some sam- ples eight years old have lost surprisingly little of their charge. The instrument used to measure the charge is an electrometer. Dr. Wiseman and his assistants, Gene Feaster, Mark Levi, John Fisher, and Al Mertz, noticed several months ago that the machine gave inaccurate measurements at 1:30 P.M. every day. The trouble was finally attributed to the radio station. Now the machine is shielded from the beams. Leaving Blake and going to the engineers ' sec- ond home, Lindley Hall, we find many more re- search projects, carried on by the Research Founda- tion through grants from numerous institutions. They include many things in particular, chemical engineering. One, carried on by Ronald L. Reed and sponsored by the Army Ordnance Corps, is an attempt to find economical methods to produce synthetic benzene from petroleum hydrocarbons. This project is extremely practical, since benzene is so important in the manufacture of dyes, ex- plosives, and detergents, as well as other industries. The foundation owns much equipment, and most of it is available to other departments. Some Left: Morris Teplitz makes hair- line adjustments on apparatus used by the Army Ordnance Corps to study production of synthetic benzene. Right: The maze of figures obtained from research have little meaning un- til interpreted. Willard Schmidt poses with the Boeing analog computer which saves many man-hours by computing such things as the values obtained from the Van de Graaff gen- erator. of their prized pieces include a high temperature micro-distillation analyzer for liquids, and its companion, a low temperature analyzer for gases. The two machines are highly valued by oil com- panies in particular, since they make the analysis of petroleum a fairly simple process. The prin- ciple of the machine is quite simple. An oil con- tains several different compounds of various boil- ing temperatures. A measured sample of the oil is placed in the machine and heated. The oil with the lowest boiling temperature vaporizes first and is condensed and measured. This process continues until you know exactly what and how much of each compound was in the oil. Another piece of equip- ment that the foundation is quite proud of is its new electron microscope. The microscope is now being installed and will be an important aid to research. As an illustration of the danger and safety precautions of some projects, the high pressure lab- oratory at Lindley is a prime example. The lab- The use of the optical pyrometer to measure high temperatures is demonstrated by Donald Jackson, a graduate working for his doctor ' s degree. The metal being studied (cerium) was approximately 1100C at the time the picture was taken. oratory is a small room (about 6x6 feet and 20 feet high) and the walls are lined with sandbags. High-pressure machines are used in this room. The arrangement is such that in the event of an explo- sion, the main force of the blast, the machines, and the operator all fly out of the roof of Lindley. Such a prospect might well make one wonder if his project is that important. Another place of interest at Lindley is the radioactive materials laboratory, handled through the research foundation. In this laboratory safety is the watchword since radioactive materials can be so stealthily treacherous. In any other labora- tory you know when you have been injured, but you may have no idea that you have received a harmful dose of radiation until many hours later when nausea, the first symptom of radiation sick- ness, sets in. A prime example of a research worker ' s self- sacrifice happened several years ago in such a lab- oratory. The story is that several research workers were waiting for their apparatus to precipitate some plutonium they were trying to isolate. One of the men happened to notice that a small amount of metal had accumulated and was giving off a mysterious blue glow. He realized instantly that too much of the metal had gotten together and an atomic reaction was taking place. He hurled his body at the machine so as to shiel d the others from the deadly rays and to stop the atomic reaction. Several hours later he developed symptoms of radiation sickness and was rushed to a hospital. As the victim lay on his deathbed, his last request was that his body be carefully watched to deter- mine why radiation causes death. As each hour passed, it was observed that his white corpuscles were dying. Finally, his white corpuscle count down nearly to zero, he died from lack of re- sistance. The dedicated research worker continues his quest for truth even until his dying moment. The research foundation is a basic part of most universities. One benefit besides the research itself is the granting of fellowships. Since research projects require much routine but technical work, the graduate is the logical man for this job. A research fellowship means that a student is hired by the university to put so much time in on a project, just as some students are hired as part time instructors. 34 Top: Author Bob Martin attempts a scientific pose as he adjusts the controls of a Geiger counter in the radioactive materials laboratory. Safety pre- cautions are a must here, since so much is un- known about atomic chemistry and radiation. Below: Within the tank of the Van de Graaff generator lies the mechanism for examining one of the most perplexing problems of physical real- ity the micro-world of the atom. Also located in Lindley Hall is the State Geo- logical Survey. This is a branch of the state gov- ernment, designated to operate through the Uni- versity. The scope of the Survey ' s responsibilities are broad, but basically they fall into several cate- gories. The Survey ' s duties include research and an accurate file of oil wells, strata, and mineral samples. One division is the department of mineral re- sources. The main function here is to locate min- eral deposits, determine their quality and quantity, and make suggestions of economical methods of removal. The oil and gas division maintains a library of the logs of 71,000 wells. It also main- tains a library in the basement of Lindley contain- ing 23,000 well cuttings. These well cuttings are samples of rock taken at various depths as the well drilling progresses. By comparing the samples from various cuttings an accurate concept of the underlying strata is made. Another division is known as ceramics. This division locates Kansas clays, determines how to mine them, and what is the necessary treatment to make the clay usable. This division also does con- stant research on glazes, and maintains a library. This consists of various samples of clay, each sam- ple having a record of its source, its type and the temperature at which it was fired. The ceramics laboratory is now running a project to help deter- mine whether certain localities should begin the production of fire brick. Another division main- tains a constant vigil on the underground water resources and reservoirs of Kansas. The Geological Survey functions more to solve specific problems, rather than to determine facts of pure science. People are constantly requesting information, and the Survey attempts to supply it, even though it may require considerable research. Even though a research project may be care- fully planned, a certain amount of guess work and luck are present. Some of our greatest discoveries have been purely accidental. The aniline dyes were discovered when a chemist dumped some coal tars into a sink and happened to notice the colors formed. This is only one example, but there are countless others. No matter how the research worker solves his problem, the important thing is that he is getting the job done. As long as these men are in their laboratories, we are assured of a better life for tomorrow and continued encourage- ment for today. 35 R AMD HER EYES sparkled like diamonds - - Beth Lowell typifies the bright eyed student who attends KU. To meet more like Beth, the Jayhawker takes you into the houses to meet the pledges and the new students. Then you get a look at the Big Wheels on Mt. Oread. But for a fuller understanding, look through the Jayhawker camera at the students in their most unguarded moments. S T U D E NTS 36 jar WHEELS ON CAMPUS A BANG-UP freshman year, when senior BILL WILSON was President of the Phi Kappa Sigma pledge class, honor initiate and Secretary of the Froshhawks, gave early indi- cation of Bill ' s ability. Strangely enough, the quality which he admires so much in other people, integrity, is the one which has brought him so far at KU. His career continued with his electi on to All Student Council and being selected as the KU delegate to the Big Seven Student Government Conference. Later he added IFC and the Campus Affairs Committee to his agenda. Since that time Bill has become an important man in the Student Union Activities, has been elected to Alpha Kappa Sigma, chemical engineering fraternity, and this year is President of the All Student Council. The only way to succeed, says Bill, is to start at the bottom and work hard until you ' re recognized. This philosophy will probably bring Bill back to law school after earning a degree in chemical engineering. Then he will either practice law, perhaps with an oil cor- poration, or try his hand at politics. To round out this brief survey of Bill ' s talents, one must mention his proficiency as a professional umpire. In occasional spare moments he hunts and fishes. And not to be forgotten among all these attributes is a friendly smile, which shows in his eyes. by Dick Sheldon IN BEING recently elected President of Kappa Kappa Gamma, senior VIRGINIA MACKEY added another arc to her amazingly complete circle of activities. For instance, golden-haired Ginny heads her class in the journalism school a fact that one could discover only by reading the program from last year ' s Honors Convocation. Ginny ' s desire to help and work with people is head- ing her toward a career of planning and writing educa- tional TV programs for children. In working toward her journalism major, Ginny has been on the business staff of the Kansan and the Kansan Board, besides having been elected to Gamma Alpha Chi, national advertising fra- ternity. Other sidelines include her work as Vice President of Mortar Board. Vice President of the Senior Class, Panhellenic, the Jayhawker, All Student Council and YWCA Cabinet. Ginny can have just as much fun working out an assignment for class as she can sloshing about in a sinking boat in the middle of Lone Star. Her interests vary abruptly from reading plays and traveling (with Europe and South America beckoning) to fishing, swim- ming, playing tennis, and riding horseback. Her pet peeve probably goes a long way in explaining her success in journalism a dislike of trite expressions and wordi- ness. SIPPING his favorite dish raspberry Dairy-Queen milk shake or performing as KU ' s star quarterback, GIL REICH is a genuine, quiet, and unassuming person. When asked what qualities he particularly admires in people. Gil observed that the essential requirement is that one be himself. Besides maintaining a good appearance by being neat and clean, says Gil, one must have utmost consideration for others and avoid becoming self- centered. At Steelton High School, Pennsylvania, Gil qualified as co-captain of the football team and captain of the basketball team. He still has an 11-year-old brother there and one who is a sophomore at West Point. Coming to KU after three years at West Point, Gil is impressed by the Midwest. Too much hustle-bustle characterizes the East, while here Gil feels that people have more time to be friendly and considerate. To relax occasionally, Gil likes golf. With one more year to go in civil engineering, however, he ' s not doing much relaxing. The last few summers he has worked at home in the engineering office of Bethlehem Steel. After graduation, two years in the air force, and perhaps a little professional football, Gil hopes to become an engi- neer in the plant. With these qualifications he won ' t have any trouble. AFTER a few preliminaries, during which the ice was evidently shattered, SHIRLEY PIATT, pert and sweet, con- fessed to being TNE President and star writer for the Sour Owl. Although these activities, and her claim to have learned to swim en route from Alcatraz, seem a little open to question, Shirley ' s schedule contains about every- thing else. Besides being Treasurer of the Student Union Board of Directors, Shirley is Secretary of the Jay Janes, mem- ber of the All Student Council and the YWCA Cabinet, and Secretary of her Kappa Alpha Theta pledge class. Last year she was chosen Honorary Cadet Colonel of AFROTC and this year she was Co-editor of the Student Directory. A junior in the School of Journalism, she works on the University Daily Kansan and is a member of the Kansas Board. Recently she was selected as a board member of the Journalism School Association. It took a while, but Shirley finally admitted that she likes to milk cows, despite her Hutchinson background. In the nutritional line her likes include, she says ruefully, anything fattening. Following graduation she hopes to go into profes- sional journalism doing free lance writing and later she would like to enter the public relations field. REMEMBER THIS? cut lines by Dana Hudkins TOP Row: Could you look a little more guilty? We must assume the penitentiary pose. Eee Gads! what a scandal! screams Virginia IValley as DCs Nancy Cater and Carolyn Nardyz stand by for the first hand report. MIDDLE Row: Ruth Ann Marsh, Pi Phi, and Dick Cameron listen intently to the Iowa State game at a Sig Alph func- tion. Just 82 more cards to sign and then on to enrollment! BOTTOM Row: Orval Swander and Connie Kagey at the Theta Open House. What do you suppose Hank Brown said? Building and grounds combat the drought with powerful sprays which present a problem for campus maneuvers. Ppl m TOP Row: Orientation week ' s Street Dance sponsored by Student Union Activities draws a record breaking crowd. MIDDLE Row: Gil Reich, Jack Rogers and Bob Mayer approve the well known soft-shoe-shuffling of Peggy Hughes and Mary Taggart as the Pi Beta Phis entertain the Arnold Air Society. BOTTOM Row: The Brass comes out in full force for the traditional Night Shirt Parade. 41 TOP Row: The traditional Delta Tau Delta Paddle Party finds Joe Schwarz, Delores Myers, Jean Legler and Mary Alice Wiederman present in appropriately tight levis. Less sting, you know. Rosco Graham, Betty Theis, Wes Santee and date look coy at the Acacia formal. The steps are so photogenic at the Kappa Open House that Bob Lacy, Sally Heindel, Dick Eflin and Sally Bontz pause there and add considerably to the scenery. MIDDLE Row: Hank Brown pulls a fast one on his camera as he steps into the limelight with Theta Tina Bowman. Gene Hall peers placidly out over his keyboard at one of the many parties where he and his well-known orchestra provide the where-with-all for dance. Four legs with and four without seem to be the logical conclusion for this shot of Jim Sharpnack, Gretta Reetz, Lloyd Martin, and Jo Ann Glenn at the Sweat Sock Stomp. BOTTOM Row: The Pi Phis and Delts express smiling ap- proval at Annabel Hungate and Joe Christy ' s pinning party. Let ' s not let these pinnings go to our heads. The Thetas and their Sig Alph dates line up to get shot at the Kappa Alpha Theta Open House. 42 neof itfra iand !S hot I AM part? ' lets jppa TOP Row: Alpha ( ' .hi- caught in a moment of anticipation during the festivities following rush week. Kappa pledges Joan Shaw, Sue Anshutz, Lela Raines, Sally Bontz, Kay Scott, and Mary Lou Myers take your breath away with their chlorodented smile. Don Jensen, Mary Ann Irwin, Tom Ritter and his elusive date compose a harmonious quartet. SECOND Row: Jim Devlin, Mrs. Mayhers, Jim Fowler, Marian Miller, Pat Hayes, Kathleen Powers, Leo Bulla, John Johnston in a congenial western pose at the Delt Paddle Party. The camera invades a Theta boudoir to find Joanne Coodjohn and Celia Kilgore busy with extra curricu- lar activities. A demure group of Katie Knauss, Jessie Hunt, Janie Hollingsworth. THIRD Row: Looks like a Sigma IVu laking, but the victim, Don Woodside, seems resigned. Phi Gam-Pi Phi onlookers observe technique as Phyllis Scott and John Reiderer dem- onstrate the correct procedures. Time out at the Kappa Open House with Bob Carrity, Eugenia Ferguson, Martha Jo Johnson, and Monty Greene monopolizing the stairs. BOTTOM Row: Oh! for the life of a stuffed animal! Thetas, Betty Carmean and Ann Whittier, love ' em. The Kappa Alpha Thetas and their dates look camera-wize at the Theta Open House. It ' s in the cards for the Alpha Chis. 43 TOP Row: Sara Starry gets a bear hug from Dick Hughes. Question is who ' s in the background t Jo Ann Zimmerman and Jim Ross seem to represent a fire drill in hell. Bev Bonebrake, Nancy Hampton and other Theta pledges rake in the loot. MIDDLE Row: Rosemary Cench adds important jewelry to her collec tion, as her Chi O sisters give moral support. Vir- ginia Yancey and Jim Hershberger smile engagingly at the Kappa Open House. Nancy Gill, Mark Gilman, Reuben Short, and Barbara Dunn give us a break at the ADPi Open House. Borrow Row: Marge Brown is a gracious punch bowl at- tendant at Sellards. Alpha Chi ' s Queen and King of Hearts, Rita Schwader, Betty Landree, receive a curtsy from Alice- in-Wondcrland Mary Ann Foreman as the club, Jean Michaels, looks on. Could it be a flying saucer? Katy Nelligan, Mrs. Wentworth and Kay Collins. OPPOSITE PAGE TOP Row: These lovelies line the banister for dental inspec- tion. Scott Hayden inspects Dottie Jordan ' s babonska at the Sigma Chi-ATO Double-Cross party. MIDDLE Row: It ' s in the Book with Tal Hal on the end of a pen and Bonnie Roots as guiding light. Three little maids in school Margie Terry, Katie Nelligan, and Ann Wallace. BOTTOM Row: Looks bad for Lee Pemberton Liz Hille is taking advantage of Leap Year. Bernell Hiskey receives a congratulatory handshake from Ben McCallister at the Phi Psi Yell-in. Sandy Puliver and Dave Moxley cool off at the Kappa Open House. 44 45 TOP Row: Bob McClune strolls casually along the campus with a few little items necessary for a healthy ROTC life. Second shot: Is this a new type of salute or complete col- lapse? Oh, goody, a function! The Kappas cheerfully leave their home on Gower Place for an hour of socializing and dancing with the Sigma Chi-. MIDDLE Row: We ' re having a Real Nice Clambake! Bar- bara Spaulding, AOPi, opens with four no-trump, and Bruce Zuercher and Pam Blanks assume poker faces. The mystery man in the foreground must be playing solitaire. TGIF at the Horse Barn. Dick Hughes and Johnnie Johnson switch stalls. BOTTOM Row: Come on in, men, while the gettin ' s still good at the Chi O Open House! Charlie Schleicher ex- emplifies the old college try attitude on the steps of Green ' s lawyer laboratory. Jerry Cooley gets a pep talk from Pat Lewis at a Sigma Chi hour dance. One can ' t play the introvert on such occasions. 46 TOP Row: Pledges Betty Hauck, Gayle Gould and Patli Davis relax with their dates Joe Muller, Jim Wiley, and Tom Childers, at the Theta Open House. Ann Dodge, Rich Young, Carol Marshall, and Bill Withers look straight into the camera at the Kappa Open House. MIDDLE Row: Barbara Sutorious and Sally Freeman per- form in the Alpha Chi Alice in Wonderland Show. Delts Kay Lawrence, Dick Schmidt, Bud Walker and Jim Thorn are men of distinction when in the presence of lady Wann Harwood. BOTTOM Row: Frank Williams, Joanna Schrag, JoAnn Stone and Bill Blaker say Schlitz at the ADPi Open House. The Delt Paddle Parly seems to have left no ill effects on Tom White, Rosie Gench, Helen Anderson and Frank Bodky. 47 Tell me: What happens to a JAYHAWKER QUEEN This is the photograph that won first in last year ' s Jayhawker Queen Contest and placed Sara Starry in the national finals. DOES SHE fade out of the picture or continue to catch the public eye? Does she rest on her laurels or add more stars to her crown? KU can give you the answer. Sara Starry, 1952 Jayhawker Queen, reigned over the nation ' s colleges. KU Public Relations entered Sara ' s picture in the national contest judged by Westmore Brothers, Jeff Chandler, and Jack Bailey. The competition was narrowed down, and Sara and four other college queens were flown to Hollywood to appear on Jack Bailey ' s Queen jor a Day. The day after the girls arrived at the movie citadel, they went to Westmore Studios where they were given professional make-ups and hair styling. Following this they had lunch at the Brown Derby where they met Stuart Granger. Then it was off to Mutual Broadcasting and TV studios for the big moment. Each girl made a wish upon which the final selec- tion of the queen depended. Sara ' s wish was that her parents be flown to New York to meet her brother and his family who were returning from Germany. The com- bination of the unselfish wish and regal potentialities won Sara the crown. After the program was over, the queen, her attend- ants, and their Stanford and USC dates had dinner at Don the Beachcomber ' s. The remainder of the evening was spent at the Macombo, where Joe E. Brown was entertaining. The RKO Studios was the first stop the next morn- ing. The girls toured the lot, saw pictures being filmed, and had lunch with the stars. In the afternoon they attended a swimming party held by Jeff Chandler in Sara ' s honor. That evening the girls and their escorts dined at the Coconut Groves and met Frankie Laine. The excitement of Hollywood was left behind the next morning when Sara returned to Kansas City. The thrill of it will be remembered and cherished, for it was an experience truly fit for a queen. 48 Sara ' s wish is granted as she meets her brother Lt. Donn A. Starry and nephew Pat Starry at LaCuardia Field, New York City. Although Sara asked only to have her parents flown to New York, Queen for a Day brought Sara along to the meeting. She had never seen two- year-old Pat whose father had been on duty in Europe for three years. Finalists Rose McCIean Breneau College of Atlanta, Shirley Stephen- son Louisiana State, Carolyn Rudy De Pauw, Florence Stanley San Diego State Teachers, and Sara Starry enjoy conversing with singing star Frankie Laine. The scene is the Coconut Groves Room of Hollywood ' s Ambassador Hotel, one of many spots on Queen Star- ry ' s itinerary. SORORITY PLEDGES a n d FRESHMAN WOMEN r.o ( r r ALPHA CHI OMEGA Front Row: Judy Ringer, St. Louis, Mo.; Joan Leon- hart, Lawrence: Betty Tudor, Olathe; Lucy Ann Mullinax, St. Joseph, Mo.; Judy Estell, Kansas City; Anne Reitz, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Keller, Lenexa; Sally Dial, Kansas City. Second Row: Carol Wolfe, Meade; Karen Hilmer, Kansas City; Connie High, Wichita; Gretta Reetz, Linwood; Sara Buchanan, Emporia: Lellie Kiewe, Topeka; Georgia O ' Daniel, Kansas City; Barbara Axtell, Grandview, Mo. Third Row: Frances Henrungson, Herndon; Martha Mor- ton, Wichita: Ruth Cowie, Highland; Helen Stealey, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jean Covacevich, Winfield; Cynthia Krehbiel, Topeka; Pat Lewis, El Dorado. ALPHA DELTA PI Front Row: Eddina Symns, St. John; Marjorie God- win, Beloit; Konstantina Maduros, Junction City; Carol Logan, Junction City; Patricia Hayes, Kansas Cit y, Mo.: Jennie Osborn, Winfield; Janice Stone, Cedar Vale. Second Row: Mary Wallace, Kansas City, Mo.: Dolores Myers, Hutchinson: Donna Fran- cis, Kansas City; Marietta Shannon, Paola: Martha Nienstedt, Beloit; Joy Van Meter, Paola; Sandra Balderson, Wamego. Third Row: Margaret Brown, Kansas City; Peggy Jones, Haddam; Lois McArdle, Arlington, Va.; Jacqueline Kimmel, Hiawatha; San- dra Dunlop, Augusta. ALPHA OMICRON PI Front Row: Freddie Blanks, Salina; Carolyn Boyd, Kansas City; Jeannine DeGroot, Kansas City; Dianne Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Beverly Wilson, Kansas City, Mo.; Janice Mason, St. Joseph, Mo. Second Row: Norma Fenn, Kansas City, Mo.; Lucille Defen- baugh, Coffeyville: Barbara Deal, Kansas City; Carol Ann Peters, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jo Heller, Kansas City, Mo.; Billie Jones, Vanndale, Ark.; Ann Vaughn, Governor ' s Island, N. Y. ALPHA PHI Front Row: Carolyn Smith, Kansas City; Babette Cooper, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilou Selvig, Russell; Sue Epperson, Coffeyville; Carol Burchfield, Mitch- ell, S. Dak.; Donna Cooke, Salina; Pat Dowell, Chil- licothe, Mo.; Nancy Echols, Ft. Sill, Okla. Second Row: Jeannette Gowan, Arkansas City; Annette Young, Abilene; Shirley Dodd, Kansas City; Sally Foster, Webster Groves, Mo.; Marlene Gray, Cha- nute; Kay Gustafson, Turner; Sally Yoder, Kansas City, Mo.; Elva Sutton, Sugar Creek, Mo.; Sally Kiddoo, Coffeyville; Kathy Temple, Hoisington. CHI OMEGA Front Row: Margie Garr, Kansas City, Mo.; Janie Hollingsworth, Wichita; Kaye Siegfried, Independ- ence, Mo.; Mary Lou Rickman, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Bradstreet, Russell; Jeanie McDonald, To- peka. Second Row: Sally Renner, Goodland; Bar- bara Brammer, Tulsa, Okla.; Kathleen Knauss, Topeka; Mary Ann Kaaz, Leavenworth; Donna Go- forth, Kansas City, Mo.: Lisa Griesser, Winnetka, 111.; Jane Megaffin, Wichita; Kathleen McKee, Pittsburg; Jan Leonard, El Dorado. Third Row: DeeAnn Price, Wichita; Alice Thorpe, Clay Center; Martha Taylor, Osborne: Suzanne Ziegelasch, Junc- tion City; Chrys Angersbach, Eureka; Lue Eddie Diver, Coffeyville; Barbara Hibbard, Wichita; Janet Gabrielson, Hutchinson. CORBIN HALL Front oitf.-Shirleyann Vehlenwald, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Schroeder, Holyrood; Marolyn Kulp, Beloit; Jan Gradinger, Halstead; Barbara Lukert, Sabetha; Shirley Cox, Lawrence; Barbara Bradley, Lawrence. Second Row: Marcia Anne Ralston, Topeka; Sheila Morton, Minneapolis; Barbara Hampton, Oskaloosa; Jane Holtzclaw, Lawrence; Jennie Fulton, Sabetha; Margaret Howard, Lawrence; Pat Howell, Hoising- ton; Mildred Weichman, Lawrence; Cathy Adamson, Lawrence. Third Row: Billie McClure, Oberlin; Lorna Plummer, Perry; Ina May Brewster, Law- rence; Jonell Brown, Lawrence; Joyce Barron, Tus- cumbia, Mo.; Virginia Black, Reece; Carolyn Hawk- ins, Lawrence; Susan Montgomery, Lawrence; Carol Judson, Lawrence. Front Row: Mary Cain, Leawood; Marilyn Pierson, Cheyenne, Wyo.; Barbara Rees, Cheyenne, Wyo. ; Anne Higgins, New York, N. Y.; Mary Ellen Blaine, Springfield, Mo.; Dorolyn Humbargar, Nickerson; Martha Poor, Olathe. Second Row: Pat Steckel, Em- poria; Kay Vetterick, Creston, la.; Retta Jones, Nickerson ; Joan German, Kansas City, Mo. ; Shirley Woodhull, Wichita; Sally Rendigs, Kansas City, Mo.; Janet Kesler, Topeka; Jeanette Ran, Welling- ton; Jeanette Ewy, Stafford. Third Row: Harriet Scholten, Salina; Phyllis Fulk, Horton; Joan Worley, Horton; Diane Steierl, Sterling; Jac Kay Phillips, Colby; Gretchen Guinn, Delmar, N. Y. ; Frances Meng, Kansas City; Wanda Matkins, Ness City; Gladys Hubert, Haviland; Nona George, Pittsburg. 51 wo no CORBIN HALL front ftoui: Dia Hawes, Wakefield; Norma Jean Nelson, Clay Center; Carol Dee McKee, Des Moines, la; Carla May Gerber, Leavenworth: Kay McFar- land, Great Bend; Dorothy Meier, Haven; Alice Kaver, Manhattan. Second Row: Janet Weiler, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Marilyn Claunch, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Runyan, Louishurg; Sally Vance, Marksville; Winifred James, Chicago, 111.; Georgetta Bridge, Washington; Patience Ensminger, Prairie Village; Mary Ann Whitney, Utica; Laura Drew, Rolla; Dorothy Watson, Wichita. Third Row: Nancy Herre, Kansas City, Mo.; Joann Swanson, Kansas City; Phyllis Adams, Bethel; Connie Casebier, Topeka; Faye Kramer, Topeka; Martha Hazzard, Topeka; Janet Early wine, Pratt; Joycelyn Gladfelter, El Dora- do; Crysta Coxon, Little River. Front Row: Darlene Hunsaker, Mountain Grove, Mo. ; Joan Parker, St. Joseph, Mo.; Sue Harper, Winches- ter, 111.; Dianne Nothdurft, Patterson, N. J.; Lee Gouldthread, Topeka; Beverly Taney, Boulder, Colo.; Francile Aronhalt, Topeka. Second Row: Gloria Ball, Mi Farland: Carol Bowman, Mission; Allois Twigg, Plains: Edie Jochims, Leavenworth: Sonya Langer, Delafield, Wis.; Shirley Clinesmith, Rolla: Alice Wiley, Chicago, 111.; Janeice Keady, Dighton. Third Row: Joleen Manning, Salina; Beth Owen, Garden City; Kay Walls, Garden City; Adelaide Miller, Kansas City, Mo.: Myrna Winzer, Troy; Jane E. Henry, Howard; Phyllis Caspar, Junction City; Kay Ames, Moline. DELTA DELTA DELTA Front Row: Kay Lowis, Colby: Letty Lemon, Pitts- burg; Joyce White, Kansas City, Mo.; Donna Jean Johnson, Salina; Nannette Pitman, Minneola. Second Row: Barbara Anderson, El Paso, Tex.; Carolyn Zimmerman, Lawrence; Joanne Glenn, Sacramento, Cal.; Marlene Stayton, Lawrence; Frances Hanna, Clay Center; Lucille Walter, Lawrence; Carolyn Husted, Lawrence; Clara Brown, Hutchinson. Third Row: Kay Magers, Parkville; Mary Gayle Siebert, Pretty Prairie; Rocelyn Roney, Lawrence; Barbara Becker, Coffeyville; Susie Dye, Independence: Jo Wellborn, Lyndon; Billie Mallory, Augusta; Mary Lou Bird, Winfield; Jo Anne John, Tulsa, Okla.; Carol Stutz, Kansas City. Fourth Row: Jackie Chinn, Wheaton, 111.; Alice Force, Topeka: Bonnie Metz, St. John; Mike Vance, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Wal- lace, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilyn Marhofer, Arnold; Mary Ellen McKibben, Stafford; Gayle Rimann, Kansas City. DELTA GAMMA Front Row: Marilyn Lovelady, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathy Holthus, Ludell; Marcia Porter, Kansas City; Cecie Perry, Kansas City; Jo Anne Smith, Kansas City: Eleanor Snyder, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Mary Ruth Anglund, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Nancy Russell, St. John: Peggy Long, Norton; Elea- nor Haley, Webster Groves, Mo.; Anne McCutcheon, Wichita; Joanne Skaer, Augusta; Mary Lou Eklund, Kansas City. Third Row: Barbara Bateman, Kansas City; Margie Smith, Hutchinson; Janet Eckert, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Carleen Mears, Beloit; Margie Wad- dell, Junction City: Rita Carey, Kansas City; Janice Skaer, Augusta: Marsha O ' Brien, Kansas City; Bar- bara Holmes, Marysville. FOSTER HALL Front Row: Geneva Grout, Kansas City; Judie Mor- gan, Newton; Jan Foelzer, Seneca; Sue Brown, Cof- feyville; Shirley Pemberton, Muncie; Judith Blesse, Leavenworth; juanita Smith, Great Bend. Second Row: Sondra Long, Newton; Joyce Sejkora, Chap- man: Jobayne DeNeve, Pittsburg; Juanita Jarvis, Phillipsburg: Rowena Sorem, Jetmore; Carol Redd, Sublette; Margie Allen, Kansas City, Mo.: Pat Tucker, Kansas City, Mo.; Connie Tatum, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Joan Talley, Sunflower; Doro- thy Brunn, Kansas City, Mo.; Elaine Stunkel, Bird City; Virginia Oaks, Wichita; Barbara Pering, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Delores Gish, Enterprise; Frances Richart, Muncie: Bernetta Custer, Menlo; Allegra Wright, Salina; Mary Ann Curtis, Ulysses. Fourth Row: Margaret Steinke, Colby; Vivian Crowley, Blackwell, Okla.: Shirley Ham, Prescott; Rosine Gualdoni, Morenci, Ariz.; Birdene Jamison, Quinter; Marilyn Schainost, Colony; Betty Kepler, Kansas City; Beth Anne Martin, Newton; Billie Bergen, Overland Park. GAMMA PHI BETA Front Row: Judith Griffin, Wichita; Betty Don Knupp, Great Bend; Shirley Summers, Phillipsburg; Sue Wright, Lawrence; Lenore Matthews, Wichita: Shirley West, Kansas City, Mo. ; Charlene Foerschler, Kansas City. Second Row: Joyce Reusch, Valley Falls; Pat Buell, Nickerson; Betty Turner, Topeka; Marilyn Miller, Columbus; Nancy Neville, Kansas City; Betty Rieger, Wichita; Mary Alice Wiederman, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Mozelle Neville, Wichita; Nancy Hutton, Lawrence; Ruth Longwood, Stafford; Catherine Campbell, Pratt; Alberta John- son, Paola; Karen Beardslee, Hutchinson. HODDER HALL Front Row: Anita Ramirez, Kansas City, Mo.; Phyl- lis Beach, Chanute; Sally Ackerson, Chanute; Mary Lavy, Glasco; Regina Lux, Kansas City, Mo.; June Cooley, Cunningham; Marilyn Miller, Mission. Sec- ond Row: Andrea Jones, Belleville ; Kathryn Marshall, Liberal; Susan Smith, Tulsa, Okla. : Virginia Slocum, Ada, Okla.; Dolores Sherman, Wichita; Roberta Millman, Hutchinson; Jo Anne Collins, Kansas City; Lela Mae Lehning, Hoisington. Third Row: Donna Lindsey, Salina; Georgia Lou Heil, Topeka; Doris Gaie Bunn, Chanute; Mary Ethlyn House, Goodland; Jan Reed, Morehouse; Diana Wessell, Hiawatha; Anne Rowland, Des Moines, la.; Betty Gordley, Kingsley. KAPPA ALPHA THETA Front Row: Betty Hauck, Kansas City; Shirley Piatt, Hutchinson; Hankie Haines, Durham, N. Car.; Doris Stites, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Jan Brown, Columbus; Nancy Hampton, Salina; Pat Erickson, Kansas City. Second Row: Gayle Gould, Kansas City; Janet Francis, St. Joseph, Mo.; Carol Christ - mann, Pratt; Connie White, Topeka; Jane Arm- strong, Russell; Beverly Bonebrake, Salina; Marge Englund, Salina; Jody Anderson, Salina; Julie Un- derbill, Wichita. Third Row: Judy Crane, Topeka; Ginny Brosnahan, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Hovey, Kansas City, Mo.; Pat Davis, Lawrence; Betty Card, Hutchinson; Patsy Wiley, Wichita; Maria Griffith, Topeka; Cynthia Creel, Parsons; Linda Conner, Lawrence. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Front Row: Kelly Brent, Kansas City, Mo.: Carol Marshall, Kansas City, Mo.; Martha Jo Johnson, Topeka; Laura Ann Shutz, Kansas City, Mo.: Sandy Puliver, Atchison. Second Row: Betty Bubb, To- peka; Lyle Mesker, Mission; Norma Simons, Pitts- burg; Evelyn Hitt, Kansas City; Mary Lou Myers, El Dorado; Sallie Heindel, River Forest, 111.; Mar- garet Short, Salina; Althea Rexroad, Partridge. Third Row: Diane Baldwin, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Dodge, Salina; Flavia Robertson, Kansas City, Mo.: Mary Knight, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Shaw, Wich- ita; Sally Bo ntz, Wichita; Janie Gagelman, Hays; Barbara Elam, Lawrence; Kay Scott, Wichita; Eu- genia Ferguson, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerry Odell, Minneapolis, Minn. Fourth Row: Mary Beall Porch, Mission; Lela Raines, Wichita; Judy Timmons, Pitts- burg; Margy Harms, Great Bend; Sue Anschutz, Wichita; Marjorie Davis, Great Bend; Winnie Meyer, Hoisington; Lou Ann Schuetz, Great Bend. MILLER HALL Front Row: Birgitta Steene, Uddevalla, Sweden; Lois Balding, Reading: Barbara Blount, Lamed; Frieda Easter, Abilene; Helen Haize, Seneca; Ruth Henry, Winfield. Second Row: Nancy Myers, Kansas City; Donna Davis, Attica; LaDene Cummins, Holyrood: Annette Luthy, Kansas City, Mo.; Elizabeth Robb, Mayetta; Mary Schroeder, Colby; Colleen Engle, Quenemo; Carol McComb, Zenith. Third Row: Golda Walker, Concordia: Carol Hemphill, Byers; Carol Kaspar, Jennings; Ruby Schaulis, Clay Center; Jane Grantham, Topeka; Marilyn Fuller, Lyons; Mary Frances Poe, Mountain Grove, Mo. L Ml_. nn no no 0$W $ ftp n n 0000 NORTH COLLEGE HALL front Row: Louise Shockley, Lawrence; Phyllis Springer, Lawrence; Shirley Dean, Lawrence: Joann Bowman, Douglaston, N. Y.; Norma Bartel, Tucson, Ariz.; Ann Algie, Kansas City; Nancy Smith, Law- rence. Second Row: Melba Beers, Hoisington; Dona Benscheidt, Hutchinson; Charlsia von Gunten, Law- rence: Pat Allison, Lawrence; Peggy Wilson, Law- rence; Pat Norrie, Lawrence; Barbara Norrie, Law- rence; Susan Brown, Kansas City; Cheryl Anne Brock, Wichita; Rose Marie Bradley, Greensburg. Third Row: Madelyn Brite, Mission; Barbara Boole, Mission; Marilyn LeSuer, Lawrence: Betty Billings- ley, Kansas City; Carolyn Andrews, Kansas City: Margaret Campbell, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathleen Soden, Lawrence; Artis Olson, Lawrence: Barbara Brooks, Kansas City; Ange Butler, Central ia. Front Row: Donna Tarwater, Topeka; Colleen Fitz- gerald, Jamestown; Kathleen Conner, Osawatomie; Cara Jane Collier, Independence; Marjorie Heard, Russell; M. Katheryn Hayes, Kansas City; Ann Col- vin, Topeka; Judy Fincke, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Doris Daniels, Kansas City; Jean Dumler, Russell; Joan Dukewits, St. John; Beverly Bea Churchill, Beloit; Sara Jo Graves, Kansas City; Helen Dalton, Sedan; Carol Fluharty, Leavenworth; Jpcelyn Dougherty, Dodge City; Josephine Dilsaver, Kensington; Margaret Donnelly, Kansas City, Mo.; Carolyn Chard, Topeka; Karen Hansen, Hutchinson; Irene Coonfer, Lyons. Third Row: Grace Favors, Kansas City; Maureen Harris, Fredonia; Pat Casey, Hutchinson; Genie Hart, Kiowa; Dale Harris, Ot- tawa; Emily Handen, Kansas City, Mo.; Joanne Hartman, Bernardsville, N. J.; Carole Fisher, Meade; Barbara Fuller, Wichita; Elrie Armstrong, Kansas City, Mo.; Pam Ellis, Merriam; Marilyn Heim, Ellin- wood; Pete Doty, Kansas City, Mo.; Diana Harrison, Wichita. Front Row: Barbara Johnson, Wellington; Laurie Lane, White Bear Lake, Minn.; Sally Lindemuth, Topeka; Diane Hollis, Fredonia; Carol Hill, Meade; Jo Houlton, Wichita; Mary Ellen Lewis, Winfield; Mary Lawrence, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Loy Henry, Topeka; Cynthia Mason, Wakefield. Second Row: Marilyn Klempnauer, Bethel; Mary Jo Huyck, Bethel; Peggy Hopfer, Topeka ; Ann Jeffrey, Topeka ; Dotty Jordan, Kansas City, Mo.; Julianne Keeter, Clovis, N. M.; Gwynne Leach, Colby; Marjorie Mackey, Mission; Ann Kelly, Leavenworth; Joane Manney, Leavenworth; Jane Letton, Pittsburg; Jane Hill, Abilene; Jo Kincaid, Pittsburg. Third Row: Martha Humphrey, Beverly, Mo.; Beverly Lander, Newton; Phyllis McClelland, Kansas City, Mo.; Janis Johanson, Kansas City; Beverly Jackson, Kansas City; Sue Miller, Mission; Pat Mackey, Overland Park; Jo Ann Heitman, Clay Center; Carol Mather, Stafford; Bonnie Hyten, Wellington; Wanda King, Kansas City, Mo.; Irma Lou Kolterman, Washing- ton ; Eleanor Major, Topeka. Front Row: Jackie Mills, Topeka; Roberta Riege, Wellington; Pat Pierson, Burlington; Jane Seidl, Great Bend; Annie McFarlin, Hays; Gayle Orrick, Kansas City, Mo.; Marcia Muehlebach, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Marcelene Richards, Kansas City; Joann Pope, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorothy Parshall, Mission; Shirley Price, Wichita; Stephany Quigley, Kansas City, Mo.; Joanne Ramaker, Downs; Mary Carolyn McKinney, Warrensburg; Kirma Peters, Minneapolis; Mary Rigor, Kinsley; Virginia Roen- baugh, Fellsburg; Cleta Schmalzried, Dighton. Third Row:Faydean Orth, Hutchinson; Suzanne Schwantes, Winfield; Edna Schumacher, Topeka; Gaye McDon- ald, Junction City; Mary Paxton, Kansas City, Mo.; Carolyn Pearson, Kansas City; Jo Ann Shay, Mani- tou Springs, Colo.; Margie Neighbors, Hutchinson; Ruth Ann Robertson, Kansas City; Sylvia Mitchell, Merriam ; Mary Michener, Topeka ; Sue Schmiederer, Kansas City, Mo. Front Row: Patty Worcester, Kansas City; Joan Zim- merman, Liberal; Peggy Whitney, Topeka; Betty Lou Watson, Kansas City; Fredrica Voiland, To- peka; Carol Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Carol Shellhaas, Junction City; Susan Sohl- berg, McPherson; Betty McCollum, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Shelinbarger, Garnett; Johanna Trotter, Overland Park; Marilyn Stueck, Leawood; Mary Ann Taylor, Seneca: Sue Summerville, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Donna Spoils, Ashland; Shirley Venard, Greensburg; Pat Thies, Kansas City; Edith Sorter, Kansas City: Marilyn Underwood, Wichita: Ann Williams, Peekskill, N. Y.; Lee Ann Urban, Lincoln. 54 r. l_i_ PI BETA PHI Front Row: Jann Duchossois, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Eversull, Kansas City, Mo.; JoAnn Lemoine, Kansas City, Mo.; Frances Grimes, Paol a; Julie Gempel, Kansas City; Kay Coolidge, Kansas City. Second Row: June Hereford, Emporia; Cynthia Patterson, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorthy Ann Smith, El Dorado; Maralyn Eyler, Salina; Sydney States, Dodge City; Mary Ellen Stewart, Hot Springs, Ark.; Nancy Teed, Hutchinson. Third Row; Jane Under- wood, Lawrence; Jadeen Scott, Kansas City, Mo.; Margery Null, Wichita; Peggy Hughes, Topeka; Mary Taggart, Topeka; Ann Stevens, Lawrence; Joy Brewer, Hays; Marlene Moss, El Dorado. SELLARDS HALL Front Row: Marlyn Butler, Norton; Sylvia Kendall, Topeka; Sheila Haller, Colby; Rose Marie Roth, Mayfield; Virginia Biggart, Topeka; Sally Tan, Singapore, Malaya; Joyce Lundry, Pretty Prairie. Second Row: Geraldine Walterscheid, Coifeyville; Ruth Elser, Independence, Mo.: Norma Wahl, Gor- ham; Lynn Sejkora, Jennings; Bonita Roots, Hutch- inson; Shirley Pagel, White City; Carol Schatzel, Ossinino, N. Y.; Joann Hunsinger, Little River: Fran Geyer, Topeka. Third Row: Jo Ann Boswell, Kansas City, Mo.: Margaret Smith, Topeka: Karleen Rogge, Russell Springs: Mary Ann Strumillo, Kansas City; Wuanita Rench, Coffeyville: Judith Koontz, Haven; Carol Brumfield, Lewis; Sally Miller, Bethel. SIGMA KAPPA Front Row: Barbara Krug, Kansas City, Mo.: Nancy Rush, Chanute; Barbara Watson, Kansas City, ' Mo.: Mary Lois Jarrett, Columbus; Phyllis Lee Wilson, Kansas City, Mo.; Martha Yeoman, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Patricia Fox, Anthony; Wilma Stith, Kansas City, Mo.; Marcia Hiningee, Bonner Springs; Mary Thompson, Goodland; Shirley Hunsinger, Mos- cow; Pat Plummer, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerry Ann Street, Kansas City; Joan Markley, Minneapolis. THETA PHI ALPHA Eileen Foley, Hutchinson; Rose Marie Lozenski, Leavenworth; Maizie Harris, Monterey, Calif.; Pa- tricia Schulte, Mission; Maxine Tajchman, Tampa. WATKINS HALL Front Row: Monte Jackson, Minneapolis; Barbara Tweet, Kansas City; Betty Bunton, Holton; Shirley Holmes, Langdon; Nancy Collins, Richmond; Phyllis DeLong, Topeka: Pat Hurt, Kansas City. Second Row: Betty Southern, Larned; Nancy Adams, To- peka; Ruth Ellen Koukol, Munden: Diann Linn, Salina; Paula Ryan, Lincoln: Ann Rita Werth, Kan- sas City; Patricia Powers, Kansas City; Beryl Bell, Lyndon; Sandra Rhodes, Little River. Third Row: Leah May Vaughan, Protection : Marjorie Ruth Por- ter, Mayetta; Else Kvamme, Bergen, Norway; Wilma Rae Ludwig, Topeka; Mary Emily Parsons, Kansas City: Dorris Toland, Mount Ayr, Iowa; Lorraine Gross, Bucklin. FRATERNITY PLEDGES a n d FRESHMAN MEN m j!rW ACACIA Front Row: Tommy Jester, Oxford; Elbert Calkins, Shawnee; Richard Searl, Hutchinson; Larry Cooley, Pratt; Wesley Downing, Pratt; Clement Blakeslee, Wichita; Charles Calnan, Troy. Second Row: Harry Sprague, McPherson; Dick Cayot, Kansas City, Mo.: Stan Hamilton, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Rupp, Bucklin; Joe Williams, Kansas City, Mo.; John Quarrier, Kansas City; Ted Weidman, Galveston, Tex.; Lyle Boutwell, Kansas City, Mo.; Ralph Stone, Sharon Springs. ALPHA EPSILON PI Bernard Sherman, Kansas City, Mo.; Kenneth Lerner, Kansas City, Mo.; Frederic Sachs, Kansas City, Mo.; Phillip Rubin, Kansas City, Mo. ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Front Row: Karl Mecklenburg, Prairie Village; Marion Hawk, Kansas City; Ronald Phillips, Mis- sion; Chuck Baxter, Pittsburg; Henry Miller, Louis- burg; George Leondedis, Kansas City. Second Row: Belden Mills, Mission; Harry Matheney, Kansas City; Jack Austin, Topeka; Peter Arrowsmith, Mis- sion; Jim O ' Dell, Kansas City; Steve McElheny, Louisburg; Dave Urie, Salina; Kay Hughson, Belle Plaine; Don Park, Lawrence. ALPHA TAU OMEGA Front Row: Bob Sommers, Ellsworth; Peter Thomp- son, Lenexa; Jim Furguson, Independence; Gene Brown, Coffeyville; Bill Burns, Wichita; Boh Daugh- erty, Meade; Courtney Nason, Kansas City; James Shepler, Newton; Arch Jones, Wichita. Second Row: Tom O ' Farrell, Kansas City; Fred Struhle, Wichita; Dean Scott, Wichita; Bruce Hotchkiss, Lyndon; Dar- rell Walker, Stanherry, Mo.; David Ross, St. Joseph, Mo.; Leonard Martin, Ottawa; Bill Mikesell, Wich- ita; Spencer Carter, Independence; Verne Moser, Augusta; Don Carpenter, Wichita. Third Row: Jim Adam, Mission; Adrian Brubaker, Lawrence; Jim Bowman, Newton; Larry C. Lamborn, Wellington; Boh Conn, Wichita; Boh Beaudry, Edwardsville; Jack King, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jack Metz, Lawrence; Richard Bloney, Augusta; Robert Bussard, Kansas City, Mo. BATTENFELD HALL Front Row: Jack Halula, Kansas City; James Hoff- man, Ottawa; Jim Brock, St. John; Vaughn Moore, Osawatomie; Perry Rashleigh, Little River; Don Lehnus, Lyons; Jere Matchett, Topeka; Second Row: Ed Wall, El Dorado; Jack Reams, Ottawa; John Long, Winfield; Paul Hedrick, Atchison; Floyd Clark, Topeka: Paul Enos, Perry; Tom Stewart, Kansas City, Mo.; Max Lynn, McLouth. Third Row: Mack Norris, Mullinville; Bill Nofsinger, Welling- ton; Kariofilis Mitsakis, Greece; Ronald Deuchfield, Garden City; Merle Ellis, Perry; Tom Schafer, Over- land Park. BETA THETA PI Front Row: Douglas Sheafor, Topeka; John Kane, Bartlesville; Cleve McCarty, Denver, Colo.: Dallas Dohbs, Bartlesville, Okla.; Don Johnston, Pittsburg; Bob Hobbs, Topeka; Curt Nettels, Pittsburg; Paul Smith, Paola. Second Row: Joe Muller, Mission; John Simpson, Salina; Don James, West Caldwell, N. J.; David Hill, Lawrence; John Rothrock, Well- ington; Allen Lay, Columbus; Dean Matthews, Ash- land; Marlin McCune, Chanute; Dave Convis, Wich- ita; John Smith, Wichita; Jim Newby, Neodesha. DELTA CHI Front Row: Gary Collins, Kansas City, Mo.; Ronald Olsen, Delafield, Wis. ; Harry Gundersen, Mission; Dan Daniels, Denver, Colo.; Jack Fowler, Paola: Boh Bahcock, Jackson, Mich.; Wayne Weiss, Baxter Springs. Second Row: Raymond Wall, Udall; Dick Hill, Topeka; Forrest Hoglund, Kansas City, Mo.; Edward McCallum, North Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Thompson, Kansas City; Jacques Clifford, St. Joseph, Mo.; Wayne Wagers, Osawatomie; Mike Beardslee, Denver, Colo. Third Row: Phil Martin, Salina; David Cassell, Leavenworth; William Lohman, Leav- enworth; Bob Hessenflow, Leavenworth; Marvin Slagle, Ness City; Bob Abbott, Jetmore; Ronnie Allen, Raytown; Bill Lewis, Kansas City, Mo.; Ray Radford, Kansas City. DELTA TAU DELTA Front Row: Charles Franklin, Clay Center; Gary Riley, Pittsburg; Irby Hughes, Lawrence: Bill Tom- linson, Wichita; Dana Anderson, Salina; Bob Creigh- ton, Flagler, Colo.; Terry Gardner, Fort Scott; Chuck Dietrich, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Dick Brummett, Concordia; Joe Schwarz, Hutchin- son; Dick Morrison, Mission; Mick McGuire, Hutch- inson; Gary Cool, Concordia; Greg Pierce, Peabody; Don Helfrey, Hutchinson; Leo Bulla, Fort Scott; Duane Werneke, Wellington. Third Row: Jerry Nel- son, Pittsburg; John Fink, Oxford; Jack Kincaid, Wilmette, 111.: Bud Whiteside, Fort Scott; John Dieterigh, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Knowles, Wichita; Don Hawley, McPherson; Jerry Cox, Lawrence; Richard Glenn, Kansas City. r n DELTA UPSILON Front Row: Dick Meyers, Kansas City, Mo.; C. R. Thomas, Winfield; John Hysom, Ottawa; Donn Dun- can, Kansas City, Mo.; Dirk Stahl, Troy; Jon Sar- gent, Wichita; Bill Brainard, Newton. Second Row: John Graham, Belleville: Jim Lowe, Winfield; Charles Hedges, Courtland; Pat Canary, Wichita; Condon Kuhl, Beloit; Jack Clodfelter, Winfield; Ted Eckert, Topeka; Gordon Hallman, Hudson. Third Row: Philip Parker, Medicine Lodge; Brad Tate, I .akin: Don Krause, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Shirley, Grantville; Jim Lamb, Wichita; Tom Chil- ders, Merriam ; Ellis Evans, Wichita. JOLLIFFE HALL Front Row: Frank Janousek, Gypsum; Jimmy Wy- man, Caney; Duane Hopkins, Galena; Richard Smiley, Arlington; Tal Streeter, Manhattan; Tom Downs, Okmulgee, Okla.; Bob Morrison, Wichita. Second Row: William Martin, Eskridge; William Allen, Lamar, Mo.; William Wasson, Olivet; Rich- ard Chatelain, Fairbury, Neb.; Hans-Dieter Deppe, Niedersachsen, Germany; Ivo Feuerborn, Richmond; William Hurley, Garnett; McCage Ford, Wichita; Brooke Collison, Buffalo. Third Row: Max Thayer, Salina; Chester Arterburn, Conway Springs; Don Burton, Kansas City; Ronald Jaderborg, Oberlin; Carl Leonard, Howard; Dennis Richards, Marion; Jim Sparks, Goodland; Don Flory, Overland Park. KAPPA ALPHA PSI Front Row: Alvoyd Glover, Kansas City; Aubrey Smith, Kansas City; Richard Whitmore, Dodge City; Shannon Bennett, St. Louis, Mo. Second Row: Charles Dixon, Kansas City, Mo.; Kenneth Barnes, Gary, Ind. ; Vincent Terry, St. Louis, Mo.; Phillip White, Lawrence; William Amos, St. Louis, Mo.; James Smith, St. Louis, Mo.; Carlton Dowdy, St. Louis, Mo. KAPPA SIGMA Front Row: Noel Rooney, Dodge City: Darryl Knorp, Hazelton: Jerry Kindig, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Toft, Grand Island, Neb.; Joe Wagoner, Mason City, 111.; A. D. Coe, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Getto, Arkansas City: Howard Wynn, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Jerry Whitehead, Bonner Springs- John Dunn, Inde- pendence, Mo.; Hugh Charles, Parsons; Robert Tebow, Southwest City, Mo.; Glenn Stockham, Lyons; Jack Abercrombie, Beloit; Claude Fare, Dodge City; Myrlen James, Dodge City; Ted Cramer, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Don Stewart, Abilene; Tom Sherman, Hutchinson: Richard Slater, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul Barker, Pasadena, Cal.; Bill Buck, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Derge, Kansas City, Mo.; Leon Ellsworth, Fort Scott; Ed Chimenti, Kansas City, Mo.; Harry Ogg, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Bruce, Topeka. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Front Row: Bob Hougland, Russell; Don Witcher, Elk Heart; Larry Winter, Kansas City; Bert Baker, Ozawkie. Second Row: Robert Masson, Kansas City, Mo.; Merwin Porter, Valley Falls; Roy Bennett, Parsons; Roger Roark, Kansas City; George Detsios, Cyprus: William Bilderback, Olathe. 58 PEARSON HALL Front Row: Jepson Garland, Wellington; Robert Shoemake, Turner; Richard Hazlett, Cunningham; William Brehm, Lakin; Richard Foster, Longton; John Garland, Wellington. Second Row: Al Dean. Partridge; Don Smith, Merriam; Edward Wakeland, Caney: Darrell Webber, Norton; Wilbur Kent, Beloit:: Rupert Dunn, Wellsville; John Boerger, Sedgwick; Paul Cecil, Hutchinson. Third Row: Gene Schmitz, Alma; Ebbe Thve Poulson, Denmark; Bob Skinner, Mission; Bob Crisler, Merriam; Johnny Holsinger, Prescott; Gerry Stone, Topeka; William Oborny, Durham; Jimmy Miller, Merriam. PI KAPPA ALPHA Front Row: Lloyd Palmer, Plains: Galen Seever, Belle Plaine; Arthur Wegert, North Kansas City, Mo.; Ronald Dickens, Sedan: Richard Hammond, Junction City; Paul Johnston, Wichita; Elton Evans, El Dorado Springs, Mo. Second Row: Marvin Par- ten, Beaver; Bob Foyle, Harper; Homer Frazier, Garden City; Alexander Mitchell, Wichita: Bill Pass- more, Hutchinson; Jerry Bouse, Madison; Jim Nor- man, Mission; Robert Hazlett, Lawrence; Kos Jar- rell, Leawood. Third Row: Dean Pontius, Lawrence; Charles McDonald, Satanta; David Johnson, Mission; Gordon Moore, Kansas City; George Bauerle, Hois- ington; Clyde Martin, Coffeyville; William Sullivan, Wichita: Richard Ebersole, Conway Springs. PHI DELTA THETA Front Row: Jim Foster, Overland Park; John Paul Jones, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Coen, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Allison, Raytown, Mo.; Fritz Heath, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Don Martin, Lamed; Howard Sturde- vant, Fort Scott. Second Row: Tommy Matthews, Columbia, Mo.; Mike Getto, Lawrence; Dick Butler, Lawrence; Bob Richards, Lawrence: David Dickey, Kansas City, Mo.; David Hogan, Houston, Tex.; Tom Phoenix, Ellinwood; Sandy Markham, Pitts- burg; David Burgett, Pasadena, Cal.; Steve Brier, Topeka: George Remsburg, lola; Carl Ade, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: George Kinney, Garden City; Dean Graves, Kansas City; John Handley, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Dave Ryther, Lawrence; Ted Ice, Newton; Bill Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Al Roberts, Sabetha; Jim Miller, Fort Scott. PHI GAMMA DELTA Front Row: Ralph Kelley, Marysville; Mark Nardyz, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Rumsey, Kansas City; Gary Welch, Hutchinson; Jim Richards, Lawrence; Bob Martin, Hutchinson; Loren Morris, Topeka. Second Row: Dan Robison, Topeka; Jerry Rosenlund, To- peka: Dick Blair, Osborne: Jerry Foley, Atchison; John McFarland, Osborne; Wayne Orlowske, Leaven- worth; Don Burnett, Larned; Steve Thorpe, Pratt; Humpy Hodge, Kansas City; Dick Dennis, Kansas City. Third Row: Paul Hunt, Kansas City; Charles Middlekauff, Hays; Bob Gelvin, Topeka: Alfred Kobbeman, Lincoln; Bob Grogger, Topeka; Don Bishop, Overland Park: Bob Stinson, Randall: Ethan Smith. Lawrence; Allen Sweeney, Wichita; Donald Stevens, Pratt. PHI KAPPA Front Row: Don Menard, Clyde: Jack Pickerill, Clyde; Bill Hegarty, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Mc- Donald, Wichita; Frank Person, Girard; Bob Rei- land, La Grange, 111. ; Barney Speckin, Argentine; Tim McHugh, Chicago, 111. Second Row: Jim Galbraith, Kansas City, Mo.; Chuck Bavuso, Pittsburg: Alfred Polski, Kansas City; Dudley Budrich, Chicago, 111.: Joe Galbraith, Kansas City, Mo.: Bernie Clark, Chi- cago, 111.; Larry Larson, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Dixon, Beloit, Wis.; Bill Dilley, Topeka; Gene O ' Neill, Lawrence. I I S rK V .1 n :? P H ' . n - O ,0 ' I ' Oi K n S In i. PHI KAPPA PSI Front Row: Stan Stringer, Topeka; Ed Enfield, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Harold McElroy, Sugar Creek, Mo.: Bill Griffith, Kansas City, Mo.; David Kane, Kansas City; George Ira, Kansas City; Tom Jones, St. Louis, Mo.; Mick Kesner, Le Roy; Dick Haydon, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Dwight Engelland, Nicker- son; Ed Fogle, Williamsburg; Tom Pott, Wichita: Bob Jackson, Kansas City, Mo.: Mark Tiderman, Kansas City; Ken Fligg, Kansas City, Mo.: Dean Durham, Greenleaf: Jim Elliot, Hutchinson: Richard Arnold, Kansas City, Mo.: Edmond Tucker, Wich- ita. Third Row: Marvin lott. Junction City: Bob Bishop, Kansas City; Bernell Hiskey, Mission: Jim Berglund, McPherson; Leon Wells, Hutchinson: John Nanninga, Garden City; Dick Baker, Kansas City; Charles Casebeer, McPherson; Fred Ball, Kan- sas City; Kenneth Keen, Hutchinson. PHI KAPPA SIGMA Front Row: Lee Holland, Olathe; Crandall Melia, Bucklin: Larry Waller, Coldwater; Rex Schenk, Coldwater; Larry Burt, Salina. Second Row: John Davenport, Fort Leaven worth; Paul McWilliams, Kansas City, Mo.; Seth McClure, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Peterson, Coldwater; John Henderson, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Richard Kline, Goodland; Jorge El- liot, Leavenworth. PHI KAPPA TAU Front Row: Paul Langerman, Lindsborg; William Copple, Mission; Norman Smiley, Kansas City; Richard Newbold, Kansas City. Second Ruw: Wal- lace Johnson, Kansas City; Murl Munger, Tola: Robert Conklin, Kansas City; Jack Weathered, Kan- sas City; Stuart Walker, Kansas City; Larry Cun- ningham, Topeka. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Front Row: William Bigham, Great Bend: Jim Had- ley, Tulsa, Okla. ; Joe McMulIen, Great Bend; Jim Taylor, Kansas City, Mo.: Paul Burke, Kansas City; Tom Welch, Topeka; John Underwood, Emporia; Dick Sargent, Topeka. Second Row: Conboy Brown, Larned; William Holiday, Carthage, Mo.; Sam Van Meter, Bethesda, Md.; C. A. Smith, Pittsburg; Mike McKee, Pittsburg; Eugene Buchanan, Muncie; Dan Rich, Springfield, Mo.; Andy Hall, Kansas City, Mo.; O ' Dell Henson, Topeka; Bill Welling, Tulsa, Okla. Third Row: Richard Breidenthal, Kan- sas City; Bob Heath, Kansas City: Bob Haggart, Lawrence; Jim DeGoler, Kansas City; Bob Haynes, Kansas City; Frank Smith, Pittsburg: Tom Davis, Ashland; Ed Stith, Ottawa; Harlan Stamper, Great Bend; Bob Childs, Manhattan. SIGMA CHI Front Row: Charles Brown, Parsons: John Dixson, Topeka: Keith Smith, lola: Phil Coolidge, Topeka: Wendell Dickey, Kansas City, Mo.; David Cleveland, Glencoe, 111.; Don Schultz, Kansas City: Terry Ter- rell, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Marc Hurt, Emporia; Stanton Ball, Lawrence: Walter Hayden, Mission; Bernard Maguire, Fort Scott; John Meri- deth, Emporia; Phil Endacott, Lawrence; Dick Diers, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Paul Dibble, Topeka; Jerry Witt, Glencoe, 111.; Jim Burks, Kansas City, Mo.; Curt Woodbury, Kansas City, Mo.; Don Kallos, Horton. Third Row: Gene Imes, Hutchinson: Jim Harmon, Sedan; Sam Smith, Kansas City: Richard Reynolds, Emporia; Phil Stiles, Hutchinson: Jim Alexander, Emporia; Jim Jackson, Kansas City, Mo.; Merl Sellers, Hutchinson; Don Stiles, Hutchinson; Hal Brent, Kansas City, Mo.; Skip Landers, Du- buque, la. SIGMA NU Front Row: Chuck Ensminger, Wichita; John Zieg- ler, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Victor Blankenship, Topeka; William Birch, Greensburg; Dick Maguire, Normandy, Mo.; Stephen Sanders, Independence; William Elliott, Marysville. Second Row: Richard Anderson, Parkville, Mo.; Jack Owen, St. John: Don Cunningham, Independ- ence; Jim Powell, Chanute; Roger Collins, Kansas City; Don Smith, Marysville; Howard Browning, Kansas City, Mo.; Dell Johnston, Moherly, Mo.: Burton Howell, Kansas City. Third Row: Richard Ross, Lincoln; Grant Napier, Wichita; John Simon, Alva, Okla. ; Carl Lathrop, Harrisonville, Mo.; Al Hyer, Olathe; Jim Perkins, Salina; Roger Hoover, Wichita; Jim Kastner, Wamego. SIGMA PI Front Row: Scott Jordan, lola; Glen Austin, Glen- dale, Ore.; John Bartholomew, Lawrence; Larry Biggs, Lawrence; Bill Stevens, Ottawa. Second Row: Gerald Knepp, lola; Don Lindsay, Leavenworth; Bill Duesler, Mission; Wayne Lambert, Palco; John Hooton, McAlester, Okla.; Gary Stonestreet, Culli- son; Chuck Hayes, Kansas City, Mo. SIGMA PHI EPSILON Front Row: Neil Dodge, Mission; Bill Griswold, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Dick Parton, Topeka; Lyle Armstrong, Topeka; Bob Benhani, Kansas City. Second Row: Lawrence Bell, Garden City; LeRoy Waldschmidt, Ellis; James Van Lew, Belleville; Bruce Fields, To- peka; Curtis Sell, Merriam; Bud Larson, Kansas City, Mo.; Tom Lance, Kansas City, Mo.; Dale Emig, Solomon. Third Row: Wilbur Larkin, Kansas City; Con Eriksen, Manhattan; Hal Marshall, Wich- ita; Collin McKinney, Yates Center; Gil Pruyn, Ells- worth; Dean Wright, Chanute; Frank Spurney, Belle- ville; Charles Hedrick, Kansas City, Mo.; Lyle Stem- merman, Lawrence. Fourth Row: Terry Burton, Hutchinson; Neale Gerboth, Abilene; Bob Ariagno, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Kibler, Kansas City: Frank Foyle, Kansas City; Dave Martin, Kansas City, Mo.; Hugh Fullerton, Medicine Lodge; John Beal, Wich- ita; Norman Bitner, Kansas City. TAU KAPPA EPSILON Front Row: Rex Rice, Nickerson; Gene Knobloch, Nickerson ; Bill Conway, Kansas City, Mo. ; Dale Hobein, Marion; Larry Heil, Topeka; Gene Elder, El Dorado; Larry Buckels, Ottawa. Second Row: William M. Lucas, Jr., Lamar, Mo.; Robert C. Ren- fro, Topeka; Richard R. Thornton, Madison; Nathan N. McGrew, Topeka; Burke Krueger, Emporia; John McMillen, Dighton; James Curry, Ottawa; Bill Crow, Logan; Ronald Davis, Syracuse. Third Row: Philip Jacka, Wichita; Thomas Wilkerson, Wichita: Orland Oswald, Yates Center; Charles Eyman, Wichita; Harold Hall, Dighton; Virgil Basgall, Junction City; Clair Law, Hays; Dean Kobler, Hays; Jerome Hart- nett, El Dorado. TRIANGLE Front Row: Clark Anderson, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Walker, Kansas City; James Moore, Kansas City, Mo.; Gene Montgomery, Preston; Bob Pearce, Kan- sas City, Mo.; Paul French, Bethel; Paul Moyer, Independence, Mo. Second Row: Raymond Fann, Independence, Mo.; Jimmie Book, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Jones, Kansas City; Bob Brooks, Kansas City, Mo.; Jock Garden, Nickerson; Jim Oliver, Leaven- worth; John Grauberger, Overland Park; John Meh- nert, Fairway; Harry Gaffney, Kansas City: Willis Reddick, Kansas City. Third Row: Leonard Meier, Parsons: David Bartlett, Miami, Okla.: Alan Akers, St. Joseph, Mo.; Leonard Atwood, Overland Park: William Stoff, Kansas City; Robert Lewis, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Birkhead, Parkville, Mo.: Bob Spueh- ler, Kansas City; Bob Wagner, Hutchinson: Ray Krahenbuhl, Independence, Mo. ; Of . ' c 1 I END PAUL LEONI takes a pass over his shoulder, and Kansas scores again. KU ' s mighty athletic machine is made of dozens of very interesting people. You see them close up in the following pages. So just turn, and you ' ll be halfway ' round the world in Helsinki, with Phog Allen telling you how it feels to be a world champion. ATHLETICS 63 P h o g Allen reports fro m H N THE PRESENCE of the Russians in the Olympic games for the first time since the Czaristic regime ended may have accounted for the astronomical number of new records made by the Americans. The tremendous ability of the Americans to come through when the chips were down and when com- petition became severe was an outstanding single contribution. The US athletes came from behind to win the unofficial team title with a total of 614 points to Russia ' s 553. The purpose of the Olympic games is to have keen, friendly, individual competition. Each event is for the World Championship or Olympic Title. Group team championships are not legally counted. Finland, Sweden, or other small countries would have little chance if competition were on that basis. The fact that the Russians and the other Iron Curtain satellites lived apart in their own Olympic Village, Ontaniena, perhaps accounted for the added zest of competition. All the free countries lived at Kapla, Olympic Village. We were housed in apartment buildings put up by the government of Finland, which were to be sold to home owners later. We ate together in a tremendously large circus tent where the food was both ample and good. The Russians, who called the Americans bour- geoisie, capitalists, and warmongers, ate in a very swanky place. Their waiters were dressed in tux- edoes with white shirts and black bow ties. The Russians were served ultra-fine foods, including caviar and Russian vodka. The silverware at their tables was sterling. We ate from heavy tin spoons and white crockery dishes, but our food tasted mighty good. The Russians were out to put on a show, and they did it with great flourish. Pleasantly, we recall one outstanding thing: When the Russians and the United States came to grips as finalists, the Russkies did not win a single gold medal. This refers to men ' s track and field, rowing (crew), swimming, weight lifting, boxing, and basketball. In all events, when the Americans and Russians were the finalists, the interest mount- ed to razor-edged sharpness. Further, to understand the Russian mind, sev- eral of the American newspapermen liked to bandy these words about: When you go to a Russkie camp to talk of one thing, you never end by talking of something else. Then they would think you came for the second reason in the first place. At the Russkies ' Ontaniena, Iron Curtain Vil- lage, the Russians, who had jumped to a terrific advantage by loading up on the men ' s and women ' s gymnastic competition and who scored a total of 188 points to the United States ' nothing in those events, kept a large Scoreboard on which they showed the United States behind the Russkies in total points (unofficial). They kept this score- board daily until the United States in the fifth day pulled ahead of Russia. Then they erased the Scoreboard. One American newspaperman visiting the Russian Village asked a fellow American, Why do you reckon they erased the scores on the Scoreboard? The second American replied: The Americans caught the Russians with their points down. The Russians were out to win the Olympics 64 isted on a nelo ingle [ieR sing, icans ount- ,sev- andy ikif Jking came Trifle men ' - lalof those they iesin score- hday dlhe i-ilin? rican, on the The points and thus add to their propaganda war. Bill Hougland, Bob Kenny, Charlie Hoag, Clyde Lovellette, Bill Lienhard, Dean Kelley, John Keller, and seven other midwestern boys did an outstanding job for the United States. Howie Wil- liams, Purdue; Dan Pippin, Missouri; Marcus Freiburger, Oklahoma University; Ron Bontemps, Beloit; and Frank McCabe, Marquette, represented the Caterpillar Diesels; and Bob Kurland, Okla- homa A M, and Wayne Glasgow, Oklahoma Uni- versity, were the Phillips 66 representatives. Bill Hougland undoubtedly was the outstand- ing basketball player of the games. He came into his own most deservedly. 65 Basketball hits the language barrier. Listening hard to the French referee whom he doesn ' t understand, except by hand signals, Dan Pippin (left), American team captain, looks on bewildered as referee ex- plains a rule to the Russian captain before a game. THE OLYMPIC STORY by Bob Stewart EIGHT KU athletes took part last summer in the Fifteenth Olympiad at Helsinki, Finland a vital part which rose to dramatic heights as the basket- ball competition got under way at a time when the USA was well behind the Russians for the lead in the unofficial tabulation of total points scored. In this pinch the US Olympic basketball team came through, winning all eight of its games; and seven exactly half of the squad were Jayhawk- ers of the 1952 NCAA champions: Bob Kenney, Bill Lienhard and Charlie Hoag at forwards; Clyde Lovellette and John Keller at center, and Bill 66 Hougland and Dean Kelley at guards. The rest of the roster consisted of nationally known AAU players. Very few of the victories were easy sled- ding ; and meeting such a variety of offenses and defenses, plus refereeing which often was pretty novel by our standards, combined with the prowess confidently expected from Americans in basketball the more so because most of them were much taller than most of their opponents all these made the games nerve-racking for the coaches, Warren Womble of the AAU champion Peoria Caterpillar Diesels and our own F. C. Phog Allen. Probably for the same reasons, the Americans looked ragged in their first game, though they beat Hungary easily enough, 66-48. Observers thought that Russia, in routing Bulgaria, had looked sharper. The next day, routing Czechoslovakia 72-47, the American squad as a whole looked much more impressive. The AAU and KU squads, sharing the playing time about equally, worked well to- gether except that Lovellette still played well below his All- American status. With the big guy benched, Uruguay was downed 57-44. The South Americans were unable to hit from far out, and drew many fouls charging our defense. Then came the first victory over the Soviets. For the first eight minutes it was all Russia, with the hard-driving Commies earning the plaudits of the players and crowd alike. But the USA began to find the range both from the outside and under the bucket, and at halftime they were on the long end, 39-22. American height told the story, with first Kurland and then a rejuvenated Lovellette giving the Russians a bad time. The Russian man- to-man defense was ineffective, while our shifting zone defense held them down. Both Kenney and Lovellette got 14 points. More confident, next day the US cagers romped over Chile, 103-55. Lovellette, with 11 field goals and 3 free throws, looked more like himself. But the margin over Brazil, on July 30, was tight, 57-53. Despite great advantage in height, in the first half the US cagers not only missed easy lay-ups and tip-ins but even failed to control the ball off the backboard. But in the second half KU ' s Bill Hougland tipped the ball in to draw the team within a point of the Brazilians, 30-31, and thus started the drive that carried the Americans to victory. Lovellette then sank a free throw, and fol- lowed with a hook shot from the right side and an- other free throw to put the USA into a 34-31 lead. Big Clyde counted all his 11 points in the second Clyde Lovellette, 9, moves in to foil a Czechoslovakian fast break. Boh Kenney, 7, and Bill Lienhard reach for a high Russian pass. half to lead American scorers, and Hougland fol- lowed closely with 10. An 85-76 victory over Argentina the next day put the US squad into the finals. This was a wild tilt, with seven Americans and three Argentines leaving the game before the end. Starting with a 14-0 margin while Argentina went more than four minutes without a tally, the USA led throughout, although later the South Americans drew up to within a single point. Lovellette was at his sharp- est and led the scoring with 25 points. Bob Ken- ney ' s 16 points were another important factor in the victory. The championship game against Russia was a toss-up most of the way, but the Americans finally ended with a 36-25 victory and first place in the tourney. The Soviets surprised everyone by em- ploying stalling tactics until the last minute of the game. They slowed the play almost to a standstill, and had the Americans on edge until the last few minutes of one of the lowest scoring games in Olympic basketball. Only 6 points were scored in 68 Pippin and Lovellette close in on a rebound as a short Brazilian is boxed out of the play. . the first ten minutes of play. The Soviets froze the ball all the way and broke up US attack patterns with an eye to keeping the ball in their own posses- sion; even refraining from shooting at times when they were in good position to do so, in their anxiety to prevent the ball from getting into Amer- ican hands. Less than five minutes before the end, with the score only 29-25 in favor of the US, there was genuine concern on the American bench. In the waning moments of play, however, the USA turned the tables, froze the ball, and even found opportunities in the process to add a few buckets for insurance. Lovellette, with 9 points, was the high scorer. Hougland scored on spec- tacular set shots. He and Kenney each got 6 points, while Hoag and Kelley added 2 each. Thus the American victory in basketball was added to other US triumphs, in track and field, swimming, and boxing. The United States and Russia hit a stand-off in weight lifting. Russia had the advantage, though slight, in free-style wres- tling, while the USA excelled in rowing and yacht- ing. The Russian women provided much of the Soviet point total, while American women were most successful in swimming. The Olympic games of 1952 will go down in history as a tremendous exhibition of progress in athletics, for more than 150 Olympic records were broken. The outstanding individual feat, bordering on the miraculous, was accomplished by Czech Emil Zatopek, who won triumphs in three of the most exhausting footraces the 5,000 and 10,000 meter runs, and the Marathon. KU ' s own Wes Santee was part of the field in the 5,000 meter competition, but was eliminated in a qualifying heat. Bob Kurland lays one up for another two points on the way to a 57 to 44 victory over Uruguay, third place winners in the Olympics. Bill Houg- land, 4, moves up from the outside. But at least equally important to the success of the games was the fact that, in spite of the in- tense competition, unpleasant incidents were kept at a minimum and there were many evidences of good sportsmanship and good feeling. Athletes from behind the iron curtain mingled with those of the western world, and vice versa. Tears were in many eyes, at the closing ceremonies, when the Olympic flame was extinguished until 1956. Bob Kenney dives for a loose ball against Czechoslovakia as Bill Lien- hard and Clyde Lovellette look on. And then we went to U by Bob Kenney as told to Keith Maclvor IT WAS in the dressing room of Madison Square Garden, after our Kansas team had won a hard- fought battle with LaSalle in the Olympic playoffs, when the realization first came to me that I was to be a part of the US Olympic team of 1952. The thought had been in the back of our minds since the time four years ago when Doctor Allen and Dick Harp mentioned the prospect of having an Olympic team at KU in ' 52. But after years of varsity competition, you know what a difficult task it is to win a conference championship, let alone the national. So it was with a feeling of great pride and satisfaction that all the members of the KU team prepared to go on to Helsinki. On July 7 we saw the Statue of Liberty and the New York skyline disappear in the west as our Pan American DC 6 winged its way toward Finland and the Olympic games. In less than 24 hours we landed at the newly-constructed airdrome in Hel- sinki and received a warm welcome from the Finns. Then began the grinding of movie cameras and the snapping of shutters by the squad members which was to continue until our return to the States. The living accommodations provided for us by the International Olympic Committee were far above our expectations. A group of approximately 35 apartment buildings, newly furnished, had been set aside for the athletes of the competing nations. The only exceptions, of course, were the Russians Phog locked the door, hut the party goes on. Bob Kenney pours a mysterious liquid in the ear of Bill Hougland as John Keller yawns and Bill Lien- hard checks the clock. Bob Kenney, Helms Foun- dation All-American. and their satellites. These buildings were located in an area which had been leveled by Russian bombs during the second world war. Nearby, bombshelters used during this period are still in evidence. This area was known as the Olympic Village. All the activities of the athletes were cen- tered here. A barbershop, money exchange, sou- venir shops, and an American style soda fountain were within easy walking distance. The meals were served in a tremendous dining hall with a capacity exceeding 3,000. The room was divided into sec- tions where the different foods of the native lands were served exclusively. Much of the food for the - American team was flown in from the US and England and was quite well prepared. The Finns themselves were extremely friendly toward the Americans, and they made our stay very pleasant. The Finnish girls were interesting and quite pretty, but the highpoint of our social activi- ties in Finland was a visit from three KU coeds who were touring abroad. They were Pat and Nancy Glenn and Joyce Driver. Charlie Hoag, Bill Lienhard, and I spent a very pleasant evening at Olaf ' s with the trio comparing notes on Europe. The question most asked of every member of the US Olympic team upon their return was, How were the Russians? This question is rather diffi- cult to answer because of the language difficulties encountered; however, the members of the Russian basketball team were very well-behaved gentlemen and never failed to have a smile and a handshake when we met. They were quite reserved, for the most part, with the exception of M. Korkia, the Russian star, who showed a great variety of facial contortions when the decisions of the officials met with his disapproval. Korkia was a talented athlete, as were all of his teammates. At no time did they act in an unsportsmanlike manner. As the final tabulations show, the entire contingent of Russian athletes presented a formidable Olympic team. One day, four of us had an opportunity to visit the Russian Olympic Village. It came to us in the form of two wild-driving journalists from the Helsinki press. Seizing at this possibility of some interesting sight-seeing, we embarked on a ten mile ride with these direct descendants of Barney Oldfield. As we entered the gates of the 70,000 people jam Olympic Stadium in Helsinki, Finland. The Scoreboard shows that USA ' s Mai Whitfield has just won the 800 meter run. Russian village, I think each of us uttered a prayer of thanks that the US basketball team had not just lost four of its members. Most of the occupants ignored the inquisitive Americans. There was no outward sign of resentment toward us, but we could not help but feel that our presence was not wanted. It might be said that the members of the Olympic team considered the Russian athletes as good guys and that they would be much like Americans if they had the benefit of our education and en- vironment. The US began the defense of its Olympic basketball crown with a win over Hungary, and we had a victory string of eight games against no defeats when the competition ended. Wins were World War III seems improbable as US and Russian players join hands in friendly understanding. Bob Kenney drives down the base line for a set up against Russia. At right, Clyde Lovel- lette and the Russian team captain smile at a little Finnish bystander. posted over Argentina, Uruguay, and Russia twice. The South American countries played a type of ball much like we play in the States. Russia used a typical European style which is comparable to basketball ten years ago in this country. The two games we played against Russia held the most in- terest for the spectators. In the first contest, Russia attempted a fast, quick-shooting brand of ball and the US registered a rather easy 86 to 68 win. The story was different in the finals, however. They employed a stall much like the one used by Hank Iba ' s Oklahoma A M teams, and held onto the ball like it was a present from Uncle Joe himself. The game was close until, in the waning minutes, the fired-up, white-clad US team rallied to dump the Soviet basketball hopes and, as it turned out, the overall Olympic title. Incidentally, we kept intact Uncle Sam ' s record of never having lost an Olym- pic basketball game. Actually, the main difficulty to overcome was the entirely different basketball which had been selected for the Olympics. It was approximately the same size as the American ball but it resembled a soccer ball and bounced like a shotput. The ball was manufactured in Italy, and as it was hand- sewn, it was not perfectly round. For this reason we abandoned our fast-break offense which would have been a very efficient weapon against the opposing teams. A rule change that affected the American team a great deal was the limit of four fouls and the officials kept a vigilant eye on the tall men (over 6 ' 9 ). It seemed that these giants were continually treading on someone or doing some- thing that was not allowed. Immediately after the closing game came the biggest thrill of the entire Olympics. The presenta- tion of the gold medal, signifying world supremacy in basketball, and the playing of the Star Span- gled Banner were wonderful experiences never to be forgotten. 72 At left, Wes Santee beats the nation ' s best by 35 yards in the AAU 1,500 meter cham- pionships at Los Angeles. This win quali- fied him for the American Olympic try- outs. Below, Santee comes home all alone in winning the 800 meters in Vienna, Aus- tria. The race was part of a barnstorming tour following the Olympics. wonder boy WES SANTEE by David Hills WITH TWO YEARS of collegiate track competition still before him, lanky Wes Santee already ranks as one of the all-time greats in Kansas track history. Among his accomplishments is the collegiate 5000 meter record which he captured at the ISCAA meet in California last summer by lopping 22 seconds off the old mark. The versatile Santee also ran the fastest collegiate mile of 1952 in 4:08 besides clocking the fastest 1500 meters of the year. Santee commenced his winning ways early in Ash- land, Kansas, when he toppled the national high school record held by KU ' s Glenn Cunningham. As a freshman at Kansas, Santee won the National Junior AAU 5000 meters and went on to finish second to Fred Wilt, the outstanding FBI runner, in the senior division. Wes was then selected to compete with a United States track team which toured the Orient. As a sophomore Santee ran on the Kansas Big Seven championship team, winning the mile at the conference meet in a driving rain. But it was at the Drake Relays on April 25, 1952. that Santee won his greatest national acclaim by anchoring KL ' s four-mile relay team which set a new American record. Santee overcame a 40-yard deficit and went on to win in a blazing finish that quali- fied him as the Outstanding Athlete of the Relays. Coach Bill Easton points to this mile as Santee ' s greatest race of his yet young career. On the basis of this race Santee was acclaimed the greatest prospect for the four minute mile America has yet produced. Last summer Wes Santee, beating all American com- petition, was named to represent the United States in the Olympics. In the Olympics Wes ran against the fabulous Czech distance star, Emil Zatopek, in the 5000 meters though he didn ' t enter in the scoring column. In a pre- Olympic warm-up in New York, Santee touched off a rash of speculation as to his ability to run the mythical four minute mile when he sped through the three-quarter mile at 2:58.3, a new American record. Plans for the future look bright for the tall, 148 pound athlete. Coach Easton points out that Santee, whose running style resembles that of the best Finns, has not yet reached his peak. In fact, we ' re pointing toward Wes ' s senior year as being his finest; he still has great potential coupled with innate running ability. 73 ffi John Ise makes PRACTICAL PROPOSAL for the welfare of the University To us WHO have lived in the sunshine, pride, joy, glory, and pandemonium of the glorious football and basketball records of last year, procurement of athletic material looms as our most important academic problem. With men like Griffith and Lovellette we could all be happy and KU could be recognized as a great university. Yet, to our shame, we have no systematic long-run plan for assuring ourselves of worthy successors of such great men. Phog Allen tells me that he cannot look forward to a repetition of last year ' s glorious vic- tories ... no Lovellettes, and no plan for more Lovellettes! Each year we face this disheartening task of finding great men; each year we are obliged to scour the country for men of great stature and power and asthmatic health who need the bracing Kansas air for recovery; and worst of all, we some- times fail. We need and must have a long-range program, a program that will assure a steady flow of talent into our athletic teams; and I should like to offer a modest proposal to this end. My plan, in brief, is that we socialize our great athletes, declare them to be public utilities, put them in charge of a Public Utilities Division of the Athletic Department, to be managed like any other public utility that we recognize as essential to our welfare; that the Public Utilities Division find suitable mates for them, not sweet, delicate little flowers, not Phi Beta Kappa intellectuals, but women of great strength and stature; and that, to insure a steady flow of power back to KU, the Division should offer suitable bonuses for their children ... say $25,000 for the first, $30,000 for the second, and up to $80,000 for the twelfth. To make sure that the progeny of such marriages 74 return to KU we should make these payments on the installment plan, conditional on their coming back. Think what would be our situation if we had adopted such a plan years ago! Take, for instance, one of the giants of years ago, Big-Six Lattin . . . six feet and a half tall, a mighty powerhouse, largely responsible for our victory over Missouri one year. We allowed him to choose his own wife . . . probably an amiable little thing, I never met her. Result, no more Big-Six Lattins! If we had socialized and managed him according to my plan, his children might be coming back now, one each year, to tear our enemies to shreds on the grid. We simply can no longer permit individualism in the marriage of our supermen any more than the British allow it for their kings. Why not go even further? With a steady stream of magnificent young manhood flowing back to KU we could pick out the very choicest men for special consideration, special protection. Of these giants some would be great er than others, and we could make Grade A public utilities of the largest, marry them early to women of very special size and vigor, and so develop a type of supermen, perhaps seven, or even eight feet tall. Indeed why not nine or ten feet tall? Who would set a limit to the possibilities of modern science? See what the scientists have done with such relatively unimpor- tant products as cattle and hogs and squashes and pumpkins! We could in time develop a new and greater type of manhood, a new elite, a new aris- tocracy, based on obvious and indisputable phy- sical measurements. In time we could no doubt drop all restrictions on marriage, for these new aristocrats would no more marry small women than a British baron would marry an American com- moner. Such marriages would in time be regarded as a scandalous sort of miscegenation, a threat to the quality of the race, perhaps more reprehensible than communism. My plan would have even wider influence. With this new elite visibly and daily before us to see and to worship, we would inevitably develop a new social ideal, the ideal of physical perfection. No longer would our big men and women choose spouses indiscriminately from the little runts and scrubs, or from the average mediocrities, however amiable and superficially attractive: they would rather look ahead, and in marrying would consider the kinds of children that they were likely to usher into the world, and their effect on the glory of Kansas and the dignity of the human race. HERE EMERGES a delicate question. Should we content ourselves with one wife for each of these men, and perhaps a dozen children, or should we provide for each perhaps a score of wives and hope for a few score of distinguished children? I have a strong sentimental preference for monogamy, for ordinary people, but of course athletic considera- tions would outweigh other considerations with many people, particularly the alumni. Perhaps monogamy would provide about all the athletes we need. It will be argued by some that we should try to develop intellectual rather than physical giants. Professors often urge this . . . self-interest, of course. But who has any use for intellectuals? The professors, of course. Some of the students, but doubtless a minority. Not the alumni, certainly. There has been no recorded example of alumni interest in the intellectual life of the University. Not the general public. Who ever saw 45,000 peo- ple cheering a professor ' s brilliant lecture, or a student ' s brilliant recitation? Do the Chamber of Commerce, the American Legion, and the Rotary club promote a dinner to honor the Phi Beta Kappa initiates? Does the band play for Coif or Tau Beta Pi initiation dinners? No, none except a few of the students are interested in that sort of thing. Fur- thermore, the American of today is very hostile to intellectual activity. It is likely to lead to uncon- ventional views . . . New Dealism, Socialism, Le ft- ism, Individualism and the like. Why should we try to develop a kind of men and women who would have no proper place in American society? Perhaps it may be argued that my plan would cost too much; but how could a plan for raising the standard of athletics cost too much? We spend millions, many millions, to improve strains of live- stock, fruits, and vegetables: surely a few millions to improve human athletes would not be too much. Our university costs only about six million a year. Why not turn this over to the Public Utility Division of the Athletic Department and make us a really great University? It may sound fantastic, too good to be possible; yet this is the direction in which we are moving! The future holds glorious promise: no more professors, no more boresome lectures, no more textbooks to read, no more slavery to the things of the intellect! Eventually, why not now? 75 Coach Jules V. Sikes guides the efforts of one of the nation ' s ten best teams. GRIDIRON INVENTORY by Bob Ball LONG BEFORE autumn leaves and cool breezes de- scended on Mount Oread the 1952 Jayhawk foot- ball team was running high in the minds of sports- men throughout the Midwest. Coaches, sports- writers, and fans were predicting that this was the year for Kansas. It is not difficult to trace the source of such optimism or fear as the case may be. With the exception of some offensive linemen Coach Sikes would be able to field a veteran team, a team which the year before had made an out- standing record, chalking up some impressive vic- tories and suffering but two close defeats. Offen- sively the Hawks could return every backfield man who had started last season, one an all-conference selection, one the high scorer in the conference, and the third a regular since his sophomore year who was definitely in consideration for all-American honors. Returning to the squad were four men who had at some time or another been starting quarter- backs. Defensively, Kansas boasted an all-Ameri- can selection at tackle and an all-conference guard, plus numerous other veteran rushers. In the de- fensive backfield the spot of the only graduated defender was filled by a West Point transfer who had been a regular for the cadets in that spot. On paper the Jayhawks looked impressive; the record books alone at the end of the season would be able to trace the results accurately. But going out on a limb, Kansas sports fans bought a record breaking number of season tickets. All reserved 76 Face to face with three of the Kansas forward wall George Helmstadter, Dick Knowles, and George MrKonic, all offensive guards, with MrKonic doubling at the defensive tackle. They make Saturday a long afternoon for KU opponents. seats for the Oklahoma tilt were sold before school began in the fall. Beginning his fifth year as top mentor of the Jayhawks, Coach JULES SIKES has already distin- guished himself by guiding last year ' s squad to an all-time offensive record. The 1951 club surpassed by 10 points in 10 games the total amassed by the 1947 Orange Bowl team in 11 games. Coach Sikes seems to fit his offense to the talents of his ma- terial. This season the Tall Tactician from Texas has his team running principally from the sliding T. In previous seasons he has used variations of the standard T and the Texas spread. J.V. was well schooled in top flight football by Dana Bible, his coach at Texas A M. While acquiring nine letters at A M in football, basket- ball and baseball, he was all-Southwest conference end in 1927 and an all-West selection in 1928. Alternating at the offensive end position dur- ing the first few games of the season were JERRY BOGUE and JERRY TAYLOR. Jerry Bogue came to Kansas an all-around athlete from Wichita East High School. He had starred at the tailback spot Sure protection for three years has been the policy of Galen Fiss, linebacker, and Hal Cleavinger, half- back. Both have been defensive regulars for three years. Fiss has often been named top linebacker of the conference. on a single wing, being able to throw equally well with either hand. He became regular KU quarter- back in the fifth game of his sophomore year and finished the year sixth among conference passers. A knee injury cut him out of the next season and part of last year. He has done a brilliant job of converting to the foreign wing position and barring further injury will surely win conference plaudits. Snaggin ' passes is JERRY TAYLOR ' S specialty. Fleet and agile, he figures prominently in the Jay- hawk ' s aerial plans for this season. He played in all ten Kansas games as a sophomore. At right end and progressing with every game is sophomore PAUL LEONI. Paul played in eight Morris Kay, Bob Brandeberry, and Paul Leoni spell out touchdown trouble. Kay was sidelined with ill- ness early in the season after starring in three games. All-conference halfback Brandeberry and end Paul Leoni are two of the top pass receivers in the Midwest. varsity games last year and started the Oklahoma A M game when Bill Schaake was sidelined by sickness. Leoni has been a favorite target for Kansas passers in the earlier part of this season. In his first year as an up-front starter JOE LUNDY has more than lived up to the expectations he prompted during spring practice. Joe is a smart, capable, all-around performer at offensive left tackle. Hustling, intelligent, and hard-hitting is Co- captain OLIVER SPENCER. Ollie came up the hard way. Beginning as a fullback in his freshman year he has developed in the tackle position to the point t hat he was selected first team all-conference and second team ail-American on the AP poll. One of the most dependable performers on the team, Co- captain Ollie is a terrific downfield blocker and an able leader. Many who thought they knew were surprised to find DICK KNOWLES starting on the offensive unit at left guard this season. Only a sophomore, he had a long jump from B team tackle last season to a varsity guard position this year, but Dick has performed and seasoned well. Good enough last season as a sophomore to be a regular guard was GEORGE HELMSTADTER. Since last football season George married Nancy Lindsey, daughter of Ad Lindsey, former head football coach at KU. George possesses a bone- breaking charge that will rank him among the top guards in the conference this season. Junior center WARREN WOODY has been learn- ing to take the middle slot knocks the hard way this season. Coach Sikes had relied on Wint Winter all last year and has thrown the breaking-in honors to Warren. Junior performers only in the sense of their eligibility. These men, Jerry Taylor, end, Warren Woody, center, John Konek, halfback, and Joe Lundy, tackle, have definitely been senior reasons for much of the Jayhawker success this fall and all will be back next year for another full season. JERRY ROBERTSON was no new threat to Kan- sas opponents this year as he performed beautifully against TCU, Oklahoma, Oklahoma A M, and Colorado last season. In early games this year he has been just as masterful with his needle-thread control and strong-arm tosses. In addition to his gift for passing, he also demonstrates a remarkable ability as a signal-caller and ball-carrier off the sliding T options. At the halfway point in the season he stood second in the league in total pass- ing yardage. With a full season left before him, this half- back has already broken the school ground-gaining record formerly held by Ray Evans. He has that inherent quality of gaining top speed from a dead stop in one or two strides. This could be said of none other than the Jayhawks ' co-captain CHARLIE HOAG. Charlie is one of the most remarkable all- around athletes in the history of the school, being the first in over ten years to win varsity letters in three major sports. He spent last summer in Helsinki as a member of the US Olympic basket- ball team with other members of Kansas ' NCAA championship team. Charlie looked outstanding even in his team ' s losing cause against the Okla- homa Sooners. With the loss of Bud Laughlin to the army, line-backer GALEN Fiss and a virtually untried junior, FRANK SABATINI, were left to handle the fullback position. Due to Fiss ' s defensive respon- sibility, Frank has carried a big load of plunging. Certainly no one has been dissatisfied with his performance; he is a fierce, slashing ball-carrier and a vicious blocker. Every write-up of Kansas ' first three games this year carried much print about the exceptional play of MORRIS KAY, St. John, Kansas, junior, at defensive end. Against TCU, Santa Clara, and Colorado, Morris was the fifth man in their back- field and consistently piled up end sweeps and re- verses before they got under way. Just before the Iowa State game Morris suffered a slight case of polio and was forced to give up football for the One opens and one goes through to make a danger- ous offensive combination. Frank Sabatini has done a good deal of the Jayhawk ball lugging and has eaten up considerable yardage in the process. Co-captain Oliver Spencer, all-conference and all- American last year, has been a consistently out- standing blocker this season. rest of the season. This was a blow to the Kansas defense and to a fine young man who loves to play football. With good luck Morris will be back in uniform again next season. The Jayhawker ' s regular defensive right flanker, DON BRACELIN, was comparatively un- known before the current season. Experts were calling the Kay-Bracelin combination the finest defensive end pair in the conference. Big GEORGE MRKONIC is playing his third year as a Kansas regular. George started off in his sophomore year as offensive guard and defensive tackle. Last year he spent almost full time at his defensive spot while doing all of the kicking. On six kicks against Nebraska he averaged 31 yards against a 35 mph wind. The INS ail-American selectors placed Big George at first string offensive guard. This year George has been going both ways, but he ' s still concentrating on his defensive assign- ment. Four of a kind Don Bracelin, end; Orville Poppe, tackle; Bob Hantla, guard; and Joe Fink, everything have composed a major part of the best defensive line in the Midwest. All have one or two more years of eligibility. Hantla was an all-con- ference defensive guard last year. Fink started the season at guard and as vacancies arose went from there to end to linebacker. For three years Merlin Cish has supplied quarter- back brains as well as brawn to the KU defensive. Coach Sikes has given him the responsibility for calling the defensive alignment for each play. In the other guard position is ORVILLE POPPE. Orville started every game at defensive tackle in ' 51 and did even better as a sophomore than was hoped for. Opposition teams remember him as being big, sturdy, steady, and hard to move. JOE FINK is called in whenever the coaches see a big job for a capable performer to fill. As a sophomore last season he saw action as a lineback- er. This year he started and showed exceptionally well as a guard; then when Morris Kay was forced out of the lineup due to his illness, Joe was moved out to take over the flanking spot. A shining stalwart in the Kansas defensive line is junior BOB HANTLA. Playing his season on the line last year, Bob was rough enough on invad- ing backfields to be selected for the all-conference defensive team. One of the roughest, most powerful players in the conference is GALEN EARTHSHAKER Fiss. He has been a regular linebacker ever since his sopho- more year, and before missing two games last year due to an injury, Fiss seemed to be a top contender for defensive ail-American honors. He has demon- strated that he is amazingly fast for his size. Galen is a high-spirited, durable performer who gives his best on every play. The other Kansas linebacker has also been a regular since his sophomore year. MERLIN GISH is a hard, sure tackier who manages to get in on nearly every play. Gish ' s durability is emphasized by the fact that he has started every game and missed few defensive plays since his first year. GIL REICH is a sure passer, an accurate punt- er, a hard defensive halfback, an exceptional ball carrier, and a natural leader. Fortunately for Jay- hawk football ambitions, Gil transferred here from West Point last fall and liked it so well that he turned down an invitation to return to the academy last spring. As well as shining on defense Reich has been offensively potent in every game. He pro- vides the leadership and incentive that every team must have to win. JOHN KONEK with his added defensive chores shares the offensive post with Bob Brandeberry. One of his most important functions on the team is converting after touchdowns. Last season he was the Big Seven ' s third highest scorer with 63 points. Thirty of these points were on placements. John was an AP choice for first team all-conference de- fensive honors last season. He does the kicking-off for the Jayhawkers. HAL CLEAVINGER is finishing his third year as a starter in the Kansas defensive backfield. Hal, a high school all-state selection, bucked hometown pressures to come down to Mount Oread from his home in Manhattan. Hal has been noted for his hard tackling from the safety position. He comes up fast to make stops at the line of scrimmage on end sweeps and to assist with drives through the line. And they filled the sky with passes all four of this impressive quar- tet are passers to be feared. Jerry Bogue, end; Jerry Robertson, quar- terback; Charlie Hoag, halfback; and Gil Reich, quarterback all have done considerable throwing for the Jayhawks. This season it has been Reich and Robertson mak- ing most of the tosses with Bogue and Hoag receiving. ;,v , , Quarterback Reich fakes a handoff, keeps, fades to pass, gets the ball away just in time to John Konek all alone in the end zone for six points. Kansas 13 TCU THAT THE HIGHLY heralded Kansas team was to begin the season with a real test of strength against the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs was vouched for in that the National Broadcasting System had arranged to carry the game on their na- tional television hook-up. TCU, who had lost to KU only once in nine games, was once again slated to successfully defend their Southwest Conference championship. The Frogs boasted a high percent- age of returning veterans from the squad which last year spent its New Year ' s Day in the Cotton Bowl. Considerable attention was trained on this first game. Many felt that if the Hawks could get by this first hurdle in championship form then the sky was the limit, if not well, that ' s the story. The overcast sky and the television drawing did not discourage an excellent opening day crowd from being on hand for what proved to be an out- standing ball game. Kansas ' 13-0 victory marked No more write-up need be made of the KU-TCU opener than is expressed in the faces and pos- tures on the TCU bench: Hall- mark (17) Gee whiz, Gil ; Robinson (26) Dutch ' ll let us hear about this one ; Finney (24) I didn ' t want to win any- way ; Buchanan (20) This should happen to us? ; and Ford (86) Let ' s go home, fellas. the first time in 43 consecutive games that the Frogs had been held scoreless. The game was marked by numerous fumbles on both sides, but the early advantage went to KU who covered a TCU miscue on the Frogs ' 30 yard line. Kansas drove to the one yard line before returning the pigskin via the fumble route. Mc- Kown kicked out but this time the Jayhawks were not to be denied. With first down ten on the TCU 14 yard line, Gil Reich hit halfback John Konek all alone in the end zone for the first KU tally. The most outstanding part of the second quar- ter was the kicking of Gil Reich, playing in his first intercollegiate game for Kansas. Reich booted one 58 yards that rolled out of bounds on the TCU 3. Another kick nearly outdid the previous one as it rolled dead one foot across the goal line. Kansas started a sustained drive down the field in the second half and were down to the 13 yard line before a series of penalties halted the march. Highlight of the drive was a sparkling catch of a Reich aerial by end Jerry Bogue. The succeeding tackle, however, injured his trick knee and hampered him the rest of the season. The next time the Jayhawks were on offense they went all the way to pay dirt. The drive started with Reich ' s taking McKown ' s kick on his own 10. He returned the kick to the 27. The running of Galen Fiss, Bob Brandeberry, and Charlie Hoag and the passing of Reich carried the ball across in 13 plays. The drive culminated in a Reich to Brandeberry pass from the eight yard line, exactly the same play on which the Jayhawks had scored their first TD. This time Konek converted and the score stood 13-0 for the remainder of the game. On several occasions the Horned Frogs drove deep into KU territory before being halted. Their most potent offensive weapon was the accurate passing of quarterback Ray McKown. One of the most pleasing revelations of the day was the successful perseverance of the Kansas defensive line. From end to end the stubborn Hawker defenders were the talk of the circuit. It was much on the basis of their performance that the squad was ranked ninth in the national poll. Also outstanding was quarterback Gil Reich who threw for both tallies. His passing record for the afternoon was eight completions out of 13 tries for a total of 86 yards. He punted eight times for a 34 yard average. Galen Fiss played all but three minutes of the ball game as he took on offensive chores in addi- tion to his usual linebacking duties. This was Fiss ' first experience as regular ball carrier, forced on him due to Bud Laughlin ' s absence. Ray McKown was definitely the standout for the outclassed Horned Frogs. His passing and punting were often the only thing that kept his team in the ball game. Coach J. V. Sikes was very well pleased with the fine showing of his boys. Of course, he was especially happy to beat a Southwest Conference team, his native conference. Outstanding in the game were the defensive line and the dogged per- formance of several boys who had to play most of the way offensively and defensively. Top: Galen Fiss, the Earthshaker, attempts to push his way past TCU end Weldon Dacus, on a Jay- hawk ground play. Below: Ray McKown, TCU quarterhack, thinks of passing but oncoming George MrKonic thinks otherwise. Result a TCU loss. 83 Kansas 21 Sa nta Clara 9 WHEN SANTA CLARA, the Jayhawks ' 1952 West Coast opponent, moved into the stadium, the Bron- cos seemed to bring a little of the California sun- shine, for the second game of the season was played in sunlit 90 degree weather. This was the first tussle between the two schools. Santa Clara is con- sistently regarded as one of the fine football pow- ers in the nation; they are called the Notre Dame of the West. As on the previous Saturday, much of the credit for the Kansas 21 to 9 victory was heaped upon the defensive line. On several occasions the stubborn defenders were called upon to halt a Bronco advance, often set up by a KU offensive fumble. Bob Hantla, Morris Kay, and George MrKonic deserve special mention for their fine play. Easily the most thrilling play of the game came in the third quarter with Kansas trailing by a count of 9 to 7. Louis, kicking for Santa Clara, booted one down to the Kansas 30 yard line. The kick was received by safety Hal Cleavinger who executed a tricky criss-cross with Gil Reich. Reich wove down the field with beautiful blocking and outran the last two defenders to complete his 70 yard jaunt. The first Bronco TD came as a result of a second quarter KU fumble. The score came on a 14 yard off-tackle romp by halfback Jack Kaplan. Hal Cleavinger broke through to block the try for point. 84 On the opposite page, Robertson takes the snap from Woody. Above, he hands off to Cindrich. The hole fails to open and Cindrich is halted at the line. He rolls free, however, and gets away from two Santa Clara tacklers. He looks like he ' s on his way for a TD, but three tacklers come from nowhere, finally pull Cindrich down. Kansas took the following kickoff and marched 69 yards up the field to score. The drive was halted momentarily when a Robertson to Pat- terson pass resulted in crossing the double line, but an offside penalty nullified the score. On the next play Santa Clara interfered too vigorously in breaking up a Robertson-thrown pass, and it was KU first and goal to go on the 4. After a three yard setback, Brandeberry went across for the tally. Konek made his first of three straight conversions and Kansas led 7 to 6 . With only seconds remaining in the first half John Daly calmly kicked a 31 yard field goal to give Santa Clara a 9 to 7 half time lead. The second half gave way to Reich ' s 70 yard punt return, a series of fumbles by both teams, and several goal line stands by the Kansas team. In the last quarter a hurried kick by Louis went out of bounds on the Santa Clara 31 and Kan- sas converted the break into their final touchdown. Cindrich carried across from the three for the marker. Game statistics showed Kansas having 176 yards rushing to 85 for Santa Clara, but only 15 yards of the Kansas total were via the air while the Broncos threw for 79 yards. KU had 13 first downs; Santa Clara had 9. Fumbles and penalties hurt Kansas all during the game, but once again the defensive unit seemed to shine with their backs up to their own goal. Kansas 21 Colorado 12 WITH THE exception of the long-awaited Oklahoma game no other game of the season aroused more interest among fans, sportswriters, coaches, and players than the tilt with the Buffs from Colorado University. The Jayhawks had several things to remember as they approached this, their third con- secutive home game of the season. The Buffs were just one week away from a surprising tie with mighty Oklahoma. In Zack Jordan they had the top punter in the nation. Colorado had shown a decep- tive two-way push from their spinning single wing in the Oklahoma game. To top it all off the Kan- sans well remembered how the Buffs had taken their measure at Boulder last year in one of the two Kansas defeats of the season. The game was tight with tension until the fourth quarter when Charlie Hoag broke away for a 66 yard gallop to put the game on ice, but as in the previous two Kansas outings the stalwart Kan- sas defense proved to be the turning point in the ball game. Charlie Hoag had what was easily his most impressive game of the season thus far as he scored all three of the Kansas touchdowns. His run of the day came in the fourth quarter with Kansas holding a precarious 14 to 12 advantage. Kansas had the ball on their own 26 after a Colorado punt. On the first running play in this series fullback Saba- tini moved for eight yards to the 34. On the next play Hoag took a quick opener off tackle and raced up the middle of the field. Just as it seemed he would be hauled down in the secondary, Paul Leoni, right end, and George Helmstadter, right guard, threw key blocks on the two Colorado de- fensive halfbacks. Squirming between these two blocks, Hoag headed for the west sideline and out- ran the safety man to the goal line. After the 66 yard excursion you could almost hear a sigh of relief go up from the KU bench and rooting section. The ball is snapped and Robertson is back to pass. Protected by excellent blocking, he has plenty of time to get it away to Paul Leoni. Leoni attempts to get away from tackier Roy Shepherd, but Colo- radan George Figner moves in to finally stop a long Kansas gain. Until he was temporarily dismantled by a bone-jarring run-in with earthshaker Fiss, the main Colorado threat was triple threat man Zack Jordan. Employing the single wing ' s deceptive pass-or-keep, Jordan started wide around right end. When the KU backfield was sucked in to stop him, he lofted one over their heads to the waiting arms of halfback Bernardi who scampered the rest of the distance untouched. The play netted 77 yards and the first Colorado TD. Jordan showed the form which won him the national kicking title by punting six times for an average of 44 yards. Kansas scored first after Dick Knowles hawked a Colorado loose ball on the CU 36 yard line. With Sabatini and Hoag carrying, plus a Robertson to Leoni pass, the Jayhawks had the ball on the six yard line. From there Charlie bucked over for the score. Konek converted for the extra point. With Kansas leading 7 to 6 in the second quar- ter, Hantla barged in to cover another Colorado fumble on the visitor ' s 35 yard line. On the next play Jerry Robertson raised his talented arm in the air and hurled a forward pass to Charlie Hoag on the four. Konek successfully conv erted, as he had done earlier in the game and was to do again. The Buffaloes, never to be counted out, drove from the Buff 35 yard line to a score. Hardy on a double reverse, a tricky play from the single wing, drove over for the counter. The point after touchdown was blocked. That was the way the scor- ing stood at the end of the half and until Hoag ' s fourth quarter run. Colorado ' s Coach Dallas Ward praised the Kansas defense, saying it was the best he had ever seen from a Kansas team. Certainly the defensive Hawkers deserved this praise. Twice they had re- pulsed a Colorado threat inside their own five yard line when the potent Buff offense had delivered the ball there with a first and goal to go series. It is hard to name a single outstanding performer from this group, but such names as Galen Fiss, Joe Fink, Bob Hantla, Merlin Gish, Gil Reich, Morris Kay, and George MrKonic should not escape men- tion. As well as its being Hoag ' s best showing of the season, Sabatini and Robertson both turned in stellar offensive assignments. Sabatini gained much valuable yardage up the middle all during the afternoon, and Robertson completed five of ten passes from the quarterback slot. He also averaged 8.5 yards on four carries from quarterback option plays. After the game the United Press pollsters named Head Coach Sikes as their Coach of the Week because of the outstanding performance of his charges. In accepting the honor Coach Sikes had good words for his defensive platoon. - J .- ft Kansas 43 Iowa State Top: Bob Brandeberry gives three Iowa Staters a free ride as he goes off-tackle for five yards. Center left: Gish gets set for a spectacular tackle just when it looks like the Iowa State runner is in the open. Circle: Charles Hoag dives for a low pass to show why he is the Jayhawk ' s leading pass receiver. Below: Bracelin brushes off a Cyclone block- er moving in on the ball carrier. 4 HAPLESS IOWA STATE was no match for the march- ing Jayhawkers as the boys from Mount Oread notched their fifth win of the season by the wide margin of 43 to 0. The Kansas victory was a result of the Kansas resolute defensive line, a well geared offense, and a number of Cyclone miscues. Charlie Hoag again tied the school mark for the most TD ' s in a single game as he tallied three of six Kansas touchdowns. Iowa State fumbled on the second play of the ball game and KU worked up to the Cyclone four before losing the ball on a fumble of their own. When they next got the ball, however, on their own 36 they marched on down for their first score and from there on out they were never headed. Hoag scored the first and fourth touchdowns on long passes from Jerry Robertson and the third TD was his as he slammed across from the four, following an Iowa State fumble. In all, the Iowa team fumbled and lost the ball five times in the first half. Gil Reich scored for the Hawks on a 75 yard punt return behind good blocking, and Bob Brandeberry went across from the one after KU had obtained the ball from a Cyclone fumble on the 21. The last touchdown came with only seconds left in the game as Arch Unruh hit John Simons with a button-hook pass. Simons took the pass on the five and bucked his way on over. Alleman, at- tempting to kick out of the Iowa end zone, was smothered under by Bixler and Poppe for the safe- ty and the 43 point total. Konek converted five times. Iowa State threatens to break away, but that stalwart KU defense has other plans. 1 ft Stengel wins again For the fourth successive year Casey Stengel piloted the New York Yankees to the world ' s baseball championship. This year it was the Brooklyn Dodgers who had the chance to remove the victor ' s flag from Yankee Stadium. But as in the past the Yartkees showed they were true champions by winning the seventh and deciding game. It was a seesaw series as the Dodg- ers won the first, third, and fifth games. The mental burden was on the American Leaguers all the way as they fought from behind. Johnny Mize and the Dodgers ' Duke Snider provided sensational hitting to become the series heroes. Mize, the oldest player on the field, delivered a pinch-hit home run in the third game and then hit two more round-trippers on successive days. It was Snider who, at one point in the series, was responsible for eight of nine Dodger runs. He tied the series record with four home runs. Other heroes were Mickey Mantle, who drove in the winning runs in the last two games, Allie Reynolds, who appeared in four games while pitch- ing one shutout, and Pee Wee Reese, the Dodger captain who led the regu- lars of both teams in batting per- centage. STENGEL ' S FOURTH Signals make singles The goat of the series was Gil Hodges, the Dodger first baseman who is famed for his home run hitting. Hodges went hitless in 22 appearances at the plate. However, everything considered, the real hero was Casey Stengel whose decisions turned out to be correct far too often for the Dodgers. Plan now to take a university- sponsored tour via TWA next summer and earn full college credit while you travel Again in 1953, TWA world leader in educational air tours will participate in the travel-study programs that have proved so enjoyable to thousands in the past four years. Itineraries will include Europe, the Mediterranean, the Middle East and a tour around the world. Two to six weeks of resident study can be arranged in foreign universities. Other study tours will deal with special fields such as music, art, languages, political science, etc. Whichever tour you choose, you ' ll discover just how near you are to the rest of the world only when you fly. For 300-mile-an-hour TWA Constellations will whisk you to Europe overnight. And when you travel by TWA Sky Tourist, you save time and money. So start planning now for that thrilling, profitable vacation next summer. Mail the coupon below today. ACROSS THf U.S. AND OVERSEAS. PLY TWA TRAMS WOULD AimiMCS I am interested in: University credits Q Resident study at a foreign university Q Special countries or areas D (Specify) John H. Furbay, Ph. D., Director Air World Tours, 80 East 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y. Please send me information on the Trans World Airlines Educational Tours to be offered in 1953. Name Position, Address__ City Slate Phone Ike Beats Adlai Continued from page 10 everyone ' s hands, a real inflation plus sky high taxes on every level were constituting a terrific drag on the average American ' s pocketbook. In the course of his stumping for Stevenson a thing which a great many Democrats had hoped he would not do President Truman made some statements in regard to the McCarran Act, a law limiting entry of certain persons into the country, which were construed by Republicans to indicate Mr. Truman had called General Eisen- hower anti-Semitic and anti-Negro. This factor may have cost the Demo- crats a good many votes. During the last few weeks of the campaign, two funds took the public spotlight. It was reported that Re- publican Richard M. Nixon had re- ceived donations totaling around $17,- 000 from a group of Southern Cali- fornia businessmen for the purpose of def raying campaign expenses. Republican puritans were horrified and Democrats delighted at the dis- closure and for a short time there was talk of replacing Nixon as the candi- date. But shortly after Nixon and his wife appeared on a theatrically pre- pared television broadcast to explain the gifts, Eisenhower announced that Senator Nixon was completely vindi- cated of any wrong-doing and on the ticket to stay. Then, after a meeting in West Virginia, they re- sumed their campaigning. Meanwhile, the Scripps-Howard newspapers reported that Governor Stevenson had a political fund of $100,000 or more in Illinois which had been solicited from firms doing busi- ness with the state. The Republicans had congratulated themselves on the handling of the Nixon incident. They felt that Eisen- hower ' s unqualified acceptance of 90 Nixon in addition to a 107 to Re- publican national committee vote to keep the senator on the ticket made the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket stronger than ever. They were also resting easier now that the shoe, in regard to campaign funds, was momentarily on the other foot. Voters seem to have had a great deal of faith that General Eisenhower, being a brilliant military leader, was qualified to deal with one of the prin- cipal issues on which they were con- cerned that of the Korean War. The General, in one of his last cam- paign speeches, promised that if elect- ed he would make an early flight to Korea to see just what can be done about bringing the war there to the earliest possible halt. US and the World Continued from page 11 opinions seem to be settling on fifty- year-old Georgi Maximilianovitch Ma- lenkov, rotund 5 ft., 7 in., 250 Ib. Sec- retary of the Central Committee. In general the trend is to focus attention away from the bloody, autocratic gov- ernment that has ruled Russia through the past few decades. Russian - American relations were strained somewhat lately by the news that the Kremlin was asking the US to recall Ambassador George F. Ken- nan. Kennan is generally recognized as the American who knows most about Russia and her plans; the recall may indicate that Kennan knows en- tirely too much. In this hemisphere Canada is cur- rently in the midst of a tremendous economic boom. Discovery of new oil and uranium deposits and the result- ing expansion of Canadian industry has pushed the value of Canadian money to the point where it is the only currency in the world that ex- changes for US dollars at a premium. In Egypt the famed King Farouk has abdicated and a people ' s national- ist government is controlling the gov- ernment. The roly-poly ruler was best known during his reign for his limit- less wealth, his mad parties, his reck- less gambling, and a host of other more or less immoral activities. At present he is touring the pleasure spots of the world although he claims to be a poor man due to the fact that he can ' t take his wealth out of Egypt. JAYHAWKER INDEX Nancy Teed, Editor ABBOTT, Bob 57 Abercrombie, Jack 58 Adam, Jim 57 Adams, Nancy 55 Adams, Phyllis 52 Adamson, Cathy 51 Ackerson, Sally 53 Ade, Carl 59 Akers, Alan 61 Alexander, Earle 42 Alexander, James 60 Algie, Ann 54 Allen, Forrest C. 64 Allen, Margie 52 Allen, Ronnie 57 Allen, William 58 Allison, Bob 59 Allison. Pat 54 Ames, Kay 52 Amos, William 58 Anderson, Barbara 52 Anderson, Bob 42 Anderson, Clark 61 Anderson, Dana 57 Anderson, Helen 47 Anderson, Jody 53 Anderson, Richard 61 Andrews, Carolyn 54 Angersbach, Chrys 51 Anglund, Mary Ruth 52 Anschutz, Sue 53 Ariagno, Bob 61 Armstrong, Elrie 54 Armstrong. Jane 53 Armstrong, Lyle 61 Arnold, Richard 60 Arrowsmith, Peter 56 Arterburn, Chester 58 Ash, Walter 43 Ashley, John 43 Atwood, Leonard 61 Austin, Glen 61 Austin, Jack 56 Awnhalt, Francile 52 Axe, Leonard 20 Axtell, Barbara 43, 50 Aylward, Pat 44 BABCOCK, BOB 57 Baker, Bert 58 Baker, Dick 60 Baldwin, Diane 53 Balderson, Sandra 50 Balding, Lois 53 Ball. Fred 60 Ball, Gloria 52 Ball, Stanton 60 Barker. Paul 58 Barnes. Kenneth 58 Barr. Harold 20 Barron, Joyce 51 Barsley, Iris 43 Bartlett, David 61 Bartholomew, John 61 Bartholow, Paul 43 Basgall, Virgil 61 Bateman, Barbara 52 Bauerle, George 59 Baute, Norma 54 Bavuso, Chuck 59 Baxter, Chuck 56 Beach, Phyllis 53 Beat, John 61 Beardslee, Karen 53 Bcardslce, Mike 57 Beaudry, Bob 57 Becker, Barbara 52 Beers, Melba 54 Bell, Beryl 55 Bell, Lawrence 61 Benham, Bob 61 Bennett, Roy 58 Bennett, Shannon 58 Benscheidt. Dona 54 Bergen, Billie 52 Bcr. ' lund, Jim 60 Biggart, Virginia 55 Biggs, Larry 61 Bigham. William 60 Bilderback, William 58 Billingsley, Betty 54 Birch, William 61 Bird. Mary Lou 52 Birkhead, Jim 61 Bishop. Bob 60 Bishop, Don 59 Bitner, Norman 61 Black, Virginia 51 Blaine. Mary Ellen 51 Blair. Dick 59 Blaker. Bill 47 Blakeslee. Clement 56 Blankenship, Victor 61 Blanks, Freddie 51 Blanks. Pat 46 Blcssc, Judith 52 Blount, Barbara 53 Blowcy, Richard 57 Boerger, John 59 Boguc, Jerry 81 Boles, Rosic 44 Bonebrakc, Bev 44, 53 Bontz, Sally 42.43,53 Book, Jimmie 61 Boole, Barbara 54 Boswell, Jo Ann 55 Bouse, Jerry 59 Boutwell, Lyle 56 Bowdish, Barbara 43 Bowman, Carol 52 Bowman, Jim 57 Bowman, Joann 54 Bowman, Tina 42, 43 Boyd. Carolyn 51 Bracelin, Don 80 Bradley. Barbara 51 Bradley. Rose Marie 54 Bradstreet, Barbara 46, 51 Brainard, Bill 58 Brammer, Barbara 51 Brandeberry, Bob 78 Brehm, William 59 Breidenthal, Richard 60 Brent, Hal 60 Brent. Kelly 53 Brewer, Joy 55 Brewster. Ina May 51 Bridge, Georgetta 52 Casey, Pat 54 Cunningham, Don 61 Brier, Steve 59 Caspar, Phyllis 52 Cunningham, Larry 60 Britc, Madelyn 54 Cassell, David 57 Curry, James 61 Brock, Cheryl Anne 54 Cater, Nancy 45 Curtis, Mary Ann 52 Brock, Jim 57 Cayot. Dick 56 Custer, Bernetta 52 Brooks, Barbara 54 Cecil, Paul 59 Brooks, Bob 61 Chard, Carolyn 54 Brosnahan, Ginny 53 Charles, Hugh 58 DALTON. HELEN 54 Brown, Bill 59 Chatelain, Richard 58 Daniels, Dan 57 Brown, Clara 52 Childers, Tom 47, 58 Daniels, Doris 54 Brown, Conboy 60 Childs, Bob 60 Daughcrty, Bob 57 Brown, Gary 61 Chimcnti, Ed 58 Davenport, John 60 Brown, Gene 57 Chinn. Jackie 52 Davidson, A. W. 29 Brown, Hank 42 Christmann, Carol 53 Davis, Donna 53 Browning, Howard 6] Christy, Joe 42 Davis, Marjorie 53 Brown, Jan 53 Churchill, Beverly 54 Davis, Pat 47, 53 Brown, Janice 42 Clark, Bernie 59 Davis. Ronald 61 Brown, Jonell 51 Clark. Floyd 57 Davis, Tom 60 Brown, Margaret 50 Claunch, Marilyn 52 Deal, Barbara 51 Brown, Marge 44 Claussen, Bob 43 Dean. Al 59 Brown, Sue 52 Cleavinger, Hal 77 Defenbaugh, Lucille 51 Brown, Susan 54 Cleveland. David 60 DeColer. Jim 60 Brubaker, Adrian 57 Clifford, Jacques 57 DeGroot, Jeannine 51 Brumficld. Carol 55 Clinesmith, Shirley 52 DeLong. Phyllis 55 Brummett, Dick 57 Clodfelter, Jack 58 Denchfield, Donald 57 Brunn, Dorothy 52 Coe, A. D. 58 Dennen. Nancy 43 Biibb, Betty 53 Coen, Dick 59 Dennis. Dick 59 Buchanan, Eugene 60 Collins. Gary 57 Deneve, Jobayne 52 Buchanan. Sara 43. 50 Collins, Jo Anne 53 Deppe. Hans-Dieter 58 Buck, Bill 58 Collins, Kay 44 Derge, Bob 58 Buck, Joyce 43 Collins, Nancy 55 Detsios, George 58 Buckets, Lanny 61 Collins. Roger 61 Devlin. Jim 42, 43 Budrich. Dudley 59 Collison. Brooke 58 Dial, Sally 50 Buell, Pat 53 Colvin, Ann 54 Dibble. Paul 60 Bulla, Leo 43,57 Comstock. Bobbie 43 Dickens. Ronald 59 Buntcn, John 43 Condon, Kuril 58 Dickey. David 59 Bunion, Betty 55 Conway, Bill 61 Dickey. Wendell 60 Bunn. Doris 53 Conklin. Robert 60 Dicrs. Dick 60 Burchfield, Carol 51 Conn, Bob 57 Dieterick, John 57 Biirgett. David 59 Conner, Linda 53 Dietrich. Charles 57 Burke, Paul 60 Convis, Dave 57 Dilley. Bill 59 Burnett. Don 59 Cooke. A. C. 42 Dilsaver, Josephine 54 BiiniK, Bill 57 Cooke, Donna 51 Diver. Lue Eddie 51 Burl, Larry 60 Cool, Gary 57 Dixon. Bill 59 Burton. Don 58 Cooley, Jerry 46 1 li.i.n. Charles 58 Burton, Lynn 43 Cooley. June 53 Dixon. John 46 Burton, Terry 61 Cooley, Larry 56 Dixson. John 60 Bussard, Robert 57 Coolidge, Kay 55 II,, 1.1,-. Dallas 57 Butler, Ange 54 Cooli.lge. Phil 60 Dod.l. Shirley 51 Butler. Dick 59 Coonfer. Irene 54 Dodge. Ann 47. 53 Butler, Marlyn 55 Cooper, Babctte 51 Dodge. Neil 61 Copple, William 60 Donnelly. Margaret 54 Cortner, Kathleen 51 Doty. Pete 54 CAIN, MARY 51 Covacevich. Jean 50 Dougherty. Joceljn 54 Calkins. Elbert 56 Cowie. Ruth SO Dowdy, Carlton 58 Calnan, Charles 56 Cox, Hugh 43 Dowell. Pat 51 Cameron, Dick 40 Cox, Jerry 57 Dowing. Wesley 56 Campbell, Catherine 53 Cox, Shirley 51 Downs, Tom 58 Campbell, Margaret 54 Coxon, Crysta 52 Drew, Laura 52 Canary, Nancy 43 Craig, Nancy 45 Duane. Werneke 57 Canary, Pat 58 Cramer. Ted 58 Duchossois. Ja nn 55 Carey. Rita 52 Crane. Citty 42 Duesler. Bill 61 Carmean. Betty 43 Crane, Judy 53 Dukcwits. Joan 54 Carpenter. Don 57 Creel, Cynthia 53 Dumler. Jean 54 Carr, T. De Witt 20 Creighton, Bob 57 Duncan. Donn 58 Carter, Nancy 40 Criler. Bob 59 Dunlop. Sandra 50 Carter, Spencer 57 Crow. Bill 61 Dunn. Barbara 44 Casebecr. Charles 60 Crowley. Vivian 52 Dunn. John 58 Casebier, Connie 52 Cummins, LaDene 53 Dunn. Rupert 59 91 Durban, Dean 60 Cetto, Mike 59 Henry, Jane Loy 54 Johnston, Don 57 Durks, Jim 60 Geyer, Fran 55 Henry, Ruth 53 Johnston, Paul 59 Dye, Susie 32 Cilchrist. Nancy 5, 42, 44 Herre. Nancy 52 Jones, Andrea 53 Gill, Nancy 44 Hereford, June 55 Jones, Arch 57 Gilman, Mark 44 Hershberger, Jim 44 Jones. Billie 51 EARLYWINE, JANET 52 Gish, Delores 52 Hesse, Jerry 43 Jones, Chuck 43 Easter, Frieda 53 Gish, Merlin 80 Hessenflow, Bob 57 Jones, JnhnPaul 59 Ebersole. Richard 59 Cish, Wesley 42 Hibbard, Barbara 51 Jones, Peggy 50 Ecbols, Nancy 51 Cladfelter, Joycelyn 52 Higgins, Anne 51 Jones, Retta 51 Eckert, Janet 52 Glenn, Joanne 52 High. Connie 43. 50 Jones, Tom 60 Eckert, Ted 58 Glenn. Richard 57 Hill. David 57 Jordon, Dottie 45 Eflin, Dick 42 Glover, Alvoyde 58 Hill. Dick 57 Jordan, Dotty 54 Eklund, Mary Lou 52 Godwin, Marjorie 50 Hill. Carol 54 Jordan, Scott 61 Elam, Barbara 53 Goforth, Donna 51 Hill. Jane 54 JiHison, Carol 51 Elder, Gene 61 Collier, Cara Jane 54 Hillie. Liz 45 Elliot, Jim 60 Coodjohn, Jo Ann 43 Hilmar. Karen 43, 50 Elliot, Jorge 60 Gordley, Betty 53 Hininger, Marcia 55 KAAZ, MARY ANN 51 Elliott, William 61 Gorton, Thomas 21 Hiskey. Bernell 45,60 Kagey, Connie 40, 43 Ellis, Merle 57 Gould. Cayle 47, 53 Hitt, Evelyn 53 Kallos, Don 60 Ellis, Pam 54 Elser, Rutb 55 Couldthread. Lee 52 Gowan, Jeanette 51 Hitt. James K. 19 Kane. David 60 Kane John 57 Ellsworth, Fred 19 Gradinger, Jan 51 Hobbs, Bob 57 Kaner, Alice 52 Ellsworth, Leon 58 Graham, John 58 Hobein. Dale 61 Kaspar, Carol 53 Embree. Max 42 Graham, Rosco 42 Hodge, Humpy 59 Kastner, Jim 61 Emig, Dale 61 Grantham, Jane 53 Hoffman, James 57 Kay, Morris 78 Endacott. Phil 60 Grauberger, John 61 Hogan. David 59 Keady, Janeice 52 Enfield. Ed 60 Craves. Dean 59 Hoge. Jim 46 Keen, Kenneth 60 Engelland, Dwight 60 Craves. Sara Jo 54 Hog land. Forrest 57 Keeter. Julianne 54 Engle, Colleen 53 Gray, Marlene 51 Holland, Lee 60 Keine. Lellie 43 Englund, Marge 53 Greg, Pierce 57 Holliday, William 60 Keller. Carol 50 Enos, Paul 57 Green. Monty 43 Hollingsworth, Janie 43,51 Keller, John 66 Ensminger, Chuck 61 Greenleaf, Harold 43 Hollis. Diane 54 Kelley, Dean 66 Ensminger, Patience 52 Criesier. Lisa 51 Holmes, Barbara 52 Kelley. Ralph 59 Epperson, Sue 51 Criffen. Myra Roesler 45 Holmes, Shirley 55 Kelly, Ann 54 Ericksen. Con 61 Griflin. Judith 53 Holsinger. Johnny 59 Kendall. Sylvia 55 Erickson, Pat 53 Griffith, Bill 60 Holthus. Kathy 52 Kennedy, Bob 43 Eslelle. Judy 43, SO Evans, Ellis 58 Griffith, Maria 53 Holtzclaw. Jane 51 Hootitn John 61 Kenney, Bob 5. 66, 70 Kent Wilbur 59 Evans, Elton 59 Cri.wold. Bill 61 Hoover. Roger 61 Kepler, Betty 52 Evans, Kon 43 Crogger, Bob 59 Hopfer. Peggy 54 Kealer, Janet 51 Eversull, Mary 55 Gross, l.nrrainr 55 Hopkins, Duane 58 Keaner, Mick 60 Ewy, Jeanette 51 Grout. Geneva 52 Holchkiss. Bruce 57 Kihler, Bob 61 Eyler, Maralyn 55 Gualdoni. Rosine 52 Hougland. Bill 66 Kiddoo, Sally 51 Eyman, Charles 61 I .iiinii. Gretchen 51 Hougland. Bob 58 Kiene. Lellie SO Gunderson, Harry 57 Houlton. Jo 54 Kitgore. Celia 43 Gustafson. Kay 51 House. Mary Elhlyn S3 Kimmel, Jacqueline 50 FANN. RAYMOND 61 Hovey, Joan 53 Kincaid. Jack 57 Fare. Claude 58 Howard. Margaret 51 Kincaid. Jo 54 Favors, Grace 54 HADLEY. JIM 60 Howell, Burton 61 Kindig, Jerry 58 Fawatu. Donna 54 Haggart. Bob 60 Howe II. Pat 46.51 King, Jack 57 Fenn, Norma 51 Hahn. Phil 43 Howland. Anne 53 King. Wanda 54 Ferguson, Eugenia 43. 53 Haines, Hankie 53 Hubert. Gladys SI Kinkead. Suzie 42 Feraon, Frank 59 Haize. Helen 53 Hudson. Marilyn 43 Kinney. George 59 Feuerbo rn, lye 58 Hantla, Bob 80 Hughr . Dick 43. 44. 46 Kinry. Jane 52 Fields, linn i- 61 Hal.Tal 45 Hughes. Peggy 41, 55 Klemimauer. Marilyn 54 Fincke. Judy 54 Haley. Eleanor 42 Hughson. Kay 56 Kline, Richard 60 Fink, Joe 80 Haley. Eleanor 52 Humbarger, Dorolyn 51 Kloax. Karl 18 Fink, John 57 Halula. Jack 57 Humphrey, Martha 54 Knaiifts. Kathleen 43,51 Fiss, Galen 77 Fisher, Carole 54 Hall, Andy 60 Hall, Harold 61 Hungate, Annabel 42 Knepp. Gerald 61 Knight, Mary 53 Fitzgerald. Colleen 54 Hal ler. Sheila 55 Hunsinger, Shirley 55 Knobloch. Gene 61 Fligg, Ken 60 Hal (man, Gordon 58 Hunt, Jesse 43 Knorp. Darryl 58 Flory, Don 58 Ham. Shirley 52 Hunt. Paul 59 Knowles. Dick 57, 77 Fluh ' arty. Carol 54 Hamilton. Stan 56 Hunsaker, Darlene 52 Knupp, Betty Don 53 Foelzer. Jan 52 Hammond, Richard 59 Hurley, William 58 Kobbeman. Alfred 59 Foerschltr. Charlene 53 Fosle Ed 60 Hampton, Barbara 51 Hamilton Nancy 42 44 53 Hurt. Pal SS Hurt Marc 60 Kobler. Dean 61 Foley ' . Eileen 55 Handen. Emily 54 Hiif.tr. 1. Carolyn 52 Konek. John 48 Foley. Jerry S9 Handley. John 59 Hutchins. Sid 43 Koontz. Judith 55 Ford. MeCage 58 Hanna. Frances 52 HuttoD, Nancy 53 Koukol. Ruth Ellen 55 Foree, Alice 52 Hansen, Karen 54 Huyck. Mary Jo 54 Kramer, Fye 52 Foreman. Mary Ann 43, 44 Harmon. Jim 60 Hyer. Al 61 Krause, Don 58 Foster, Jim 59 Harms. Margy 53 Hyaom. John 58 Krehbiel. Cynthia 43,50 Foster, Richard 59 Harper, Sue 52 Hyten, Bonnie 54 Krueger. Burke 61 Foster. Sally 51 Harris, Dale 54 Krug, Barbara 55 Fowler, Jack 57 Harrison, Diana 54 KuII. Ron 43 Fowler, Jim 43 Harris, Maureen 54 ICE, TED 59 Kulp. Marilyn 51 Fox. Patricia 55 Harris. Maine 55 Men. Thelma 45 Kvamme. Else 55 Foyle. Bob 59 Hart, Genie I men. Gene 60 Foy If, Frank 61 Hartman. Joanne 54 loll, Marvin 60 Francis, Donna 50 Hartnett, Jerome 61 Ira, George 60 LACY. BOB 42 Francis, Janet 53 Harwood, Wann 47 Irby. Hughes 57 Lagler, Jean 42 Franklin. Charles 57 Hauck, Betty 47, 53 Irish, Mary 43 Lamb. Jim 58 Frazier, Homer 59 Hawes, Dia 52 Irwin. Mary Ann 43 Lambert, Ann 43 Freeman. Sally 43,47 Hawk. Marion 56 IK, John 74 Lambert, Wayne 61 French, Paul 61 Hawkinson. Carolyn 51 Lamborn, Larry 57 Friabie, Dean 42 Hawkinson. Jack 59 Lance, Tom 61 Frye. John C. 31 Hawley. Don 57 JACKA, PHILIP 61 Lander, Beverley 54 Fulk, Phyllia 51 Hayden. Scott 45 Jackson, Beverly 43 Landers, Skip 60 Fuller, Barbara 54 Haydon, Dick 60 Jackson, Beverly 54 Landree, Betty 43, 44 Fuller, Marilyn 53 Haydon. Walter 60 Jackson. Donald 34 Lane. Laurie 54 Fullerton, Hugh 61 Hayes. Chuck 61 Jackson, Jim 60 Longer. Sonya 52 Fulton, Jennie 51 Hayes, M. Katheryn 54 Jackson. Monte 55 Langerman. Paul 60 Furguson, Jim 57 Hayes, Pat 43 Jjderborg. Ronald 58 Larkin, Wilbur 61 Hayes. Patricia 50 James. Don 57 Larson, Bud 61 Haynes, Bob 60 James. Myrlen 58 Larson, Larry 59 CABRIELSON. JANET 51 Hazlett, Richard 59 James, Winifred 52 Lathrop. Carl 61 Caffney, Harry 61 Hazlett, Robert 59 Jamison, Birdene 52 Lavy, Mary 53 Gagleman, Janie 53 Hazzard. Martha 52 Janouaek, Frank 58 Law, Clair 61 Galbraith, Jim 59 Heard, Marjorie 54 Jarrell, KOB 59 Lawrence, Mary 54 Calbraith, Joe 59 Heath, Bob 60 Jarrett, Mary 55 Lawrence, Roy 47 Card, Barby Allen 45 Heath, Fritz 59 Jeffrey, Ann 54 Lawson, Paul 20 Card, Betty 53 Hedges. Charles 58 Jensen, Don 43 Lawton, Keith 16 Garden, Jock 61 Hedrick, Charlea 61 Jester, Tommy 56 Lay, Allen 57 Gardner, Terry 57 Hedrick, Paul 57 Jochims, Edie 52 Leach, Gwynne 54 Garland, Jepson 58 Hegarty. Bill 59 Johanson, Janis 54 Lehning, Lela Mae 5 4 Garland, John 59 Heil, Georgia Lou 53 John, Jo Anne 52 Lehnua, Don 57 Garr, Margie 51 Heil, Latry 61 Johnson, Alberta 53 Lemoine, JoAnn 55 Garrett, Gerold 43 Heim. Marilyn 54 Johnson, Barbara 54 Lemon, Letty 52 Carrity, Bob 43 Heindel, Sally 42, 53 Johnson, Bud 43 Leonard, Carl 58 Gelvin, Bob 59 Heitman, Jo Ann 54 Johnson, David 59 Leonard, Jan 51 Gempel, Julie 55 Helfrey, Don 57 Johnson, Donna Jean 52 Leondedis. George 56 Gench, Rosemary 44, 47 Heller, Jo 51 Johnson, John 43 Leonhart, Joan 43, 50 George, Nona 51 Helmstadter, George 77 Johnson, Johnny 46 Leoni. Paul 62, 78 Gerber, Carla May 52 Hemphill, Carol 53 Johnson, Martha Jo 43 Lerner, Kenneth 56 Gerboth, Neall 61 Henderson, John 60 Johnson, Martha Jo 53 LeSuer, Marilyn 56 German. Joan 51 Henningson, Frances 43, 50 Johnson, Wallace 60 Letton, Jane 54 Cetto. Dick 58 Henson. O ' Dell 60 Johnston, Dell 61 Lewis, Bill M Lewis. Mary Ellen 54 Lewis, Pat 46, 50 Lewis. Robert 61 Licnhard. Bill 66 Lilley. Donna Hobein 45 Lindemuth, Sally 54 Lindsay. Dan 43 Lindsay, Don 61 Lindsey, Donna 53 Linn, Diann 55 Lodde. Joan 44 Logan, Carol 50 Lohman, William 57 Lolley, Dick 43 Long, John 57 Long. Peggy 52 Long, Sandra 52 Longwood. Ruth 53 Lovelady. Marilyn 52 Lovellette, Clyde 66 Lowe, Jim 58 Lewis, Kay 52 Lozenski, Rose Marie Lucas. William. Jr. 61 Ludwig, Wilma Rae 55 Lukert, Barbara 51 Lundry. Joyce 55 I.unily, Joe 78 Luthy, Annette 53 Lux, Regina 53 Lynn, Max 57 MCALLISTER. BEN 45 McArdle. Lois 50 M. (..ilium. Edward 57 McCarty, Cleve 57 McClelland, Joe 43 McClelland, Phyllis 54 McClunc, Bill 46 McCune, Marlin 57 McClure, Billie 51 McClure, Seth 60 McCollum. Betty 54 McComb, Carol 53 McCutrheon, Anne 52 McDonald, Charles 59 McDonald. Gaye 54 McDonald, Jeanie 51 McDonald, Jeanne 46 McElheny, Steve 56 McElroy. Harold 60 McDonald. Jack 59 McFarland, Janice 46 McFarland. John 59 McFarland. Kay 52 McFarlin, Annie 54 McCrew, Nathan N. 61 McGuire, Mack 57 McGuire, Tom 43 Mclliigh, Tim 59 McKee, Carol Dee 52 McKee, Kathleen 51 McKee, Mike 60 McKernan. Sally 42 McKibben. Mary Ellen 52 McKinney, Collin 61 McKinney, Mary Carolyn 54 McMillen. John 61 McMullen. Joe 60 McWilliams, Paul 60 McVay. Anne 46 MACDOUCALL, JORDAN 45 Mac Ivor. Keith 70 Mackey, Marjorie 54 Mackey. Pat 54 Mackey. Virginia 38 Maduros. Konstina 50 Magers. Kay 52 Maguire. Bernard 60 Maguire. Dirk 61 Mahyers. Mrs. 43 Major. Eleanor 54 Mallory, Billie 52 Maloney. J. O. 31 Manley. Don 43 Manney, Joane 54 Manning, Joleen 52 March, Jo Anna 41 March, Ruth Ann 43 Marhofer. Marilyn 52 Markham. Sandy 59 Markley, Joan 55 Marsh, Ruth Ann 40 Marshall. Carol 47, 53 Marshall, Hal 61 Marshall. Kathryn S3 Martin, Beth Anne 52 Martin. Bob 28. 35. 59 Martin. Clyde 59 Martin. Dave 61 Martin, Don 59 Martin, Leonard 57 Martin. Phil 57 Martin, William 58 Marty, Anne 43 Marvin, Burton 20 Mason, Cynthia 54 Mason, Janice 51 Masson, Robert 58 Matchett, Jere 57 Matheney, Harry 56 Mather, Carol 54 Matkins, Wanda 51 Matthews, Dean 57 Matthews, Lenore 53 92 Matthews, Tommy 59 PAGEL. SHIRLEY 55 Rosenau. Shirley 43 Mayer, Bob 41 Palmer. Floyd 59 Roshleigh, Perry 57 Mears, Carleen 52 Park, Don 56 Ross. David 57 Mecklenburg, Karl 56 Parker. Joan 52 Koss, Jim 44 Megaffin. Jane 51 Parker. Philip 58 Ross. Richard 61 Mehncrt, John 61 Parshall, Dorothy 54 Roots, Bonita 45, 55 Meier, Dorothy 52 Parsons, Mary 55 Roth, Rose Marie 55 Meier, Leonard 61 Partcn, Marvin 59 Rothrock. John 57 Melia, Crandall 60 Parton. Dick 61 Rubin, Phillip 56 Menard, Don 59 Passmorc. Bill 59 Rumsey, Dick 59 Meng. Frances 51 Patterson. Cynthia 55 Runyan, Ann 52 Merideth. John 60 Paxton, Mary 54 Rupp. Robert 56 Mesker, Lyle 53 Pearce. Bob 61 Kush, Nancy 55 Metz, Bonnie 52 Pearson. Carolyn 54 Russell. Kay 43 Metz, Jack 57 Pemberton, Lee 45 Russell, Nancy 52 Meyers, Dick 58 Pemherton. Shirley 52 Ryther, Dave 59 Meyer, Winnie 53 Pendelton. Helen 43 Ryan, Paula 55 Michener, Bill 43 Perkins. Jim 61 Michener, Mary 54 Michaels. Jean 43, 44 Middlekauff, Charles 59 Mikesell, Bill 57 Perkins. Nelson 42 Perring. Barbara 52 Perry, Cecie 52 Peters. Carol 51 SABATINI. FRANK 79 Sachs. Frederic 56 Sanders. Stephen 61 Miller. Adelaide 52 Peters, Kirma 54 Santee, Wes 42, 73 Miller, Dianne 51 Peterson. Charles 60 Sargent. Dick 60 Miller, Henry 56 Miller, Jimmy 59 Peterson. Miss Martha 18, 41 Phillips. Jac Kay 51 Sargent, Jon 58 Scanlon, Duggan 41 Miller, Marian 43 Phillips. Ronald 56 Scarrit, Kip 43 Miller, Marilyn 53 Miller, Mary Lou 43 Miller, Sally 55 Miller, Sue 54 Phoenix. Tom 59 Piatt. Shirley 39. 53 Pickerill. Jack 59 Pierson. Marilyn 51 Scott, Dean 57 Scott, Jadeen 55 Scott, Kay 43, 53 Scott, Phyllis 43 Millman. Roberta 53 Mills. Belden 56 Mills. Jackie 54 Mitchell. Alexander 59 Pierson. Pat 54 Pitman. Nannette 52 Plummer. Lorna 51 Plummer, Norman 28 Schafer, Tom 57 Schainost. Marilyn 52 Schatzel, Carol 55 Schaulis. Ruby 53 Mitchell. Sylvia 54 Mitsakis, KariofilU 57 Montgomery, Gene 61 Montgomery. Susan 51 Moore. Cordon 59 Plummer. Pat 55 Poe. Mary Frances 53 Pontius. Dean 59 Poor. Martha 51 Pope. Joann 54 Schenk, Rex 60 Schmiederer, Sue 54 Schlicker. Charles 46 Schmalzried, Cleta 54 Schmidt, Dick 42, 47 Moore. James 61 Moore, Vaughn 57 Poppe. Orville 80 Porch. Mary Bcall 53 Schmitz. Gene 59 Scholten. Harriet 51 Moreau, F. J. 20 Morgan, Judie 52 Morris, Loren 43, 59 Morrison, Bob 58 Morrison, Dick 57 Morton, Martha 50 Morton, Sheila 51 Moser, Verne 57 Moss. Marlene 55 Moxley. Dave 45 Moyer. Paul 61 MrKonic. George 77 Myers. Dolores 42, 50 Myers, Mary Lou 53 Myers. Nancy 53 Muehlebach, Marcia 54 Muller, Joe 47,57 Mullinax. Lucy 43, 50 Porter, Marcia 52 Porter, Marjorie 55 Porter. Merwin 58 Pott. Tom 60 Polski. Alfred 59 Poiilson, Ebbe 59 Powell. Jim 61 Powers. Kathleen 43 Powers. Patricia 55 Price. Dee Ann 44, 51 Price. Shirley 54 Pruyn. Gil 61 Puliver, Sandy 53 QUARRIF.R. JOHN 56 Quigley. Stephany 54 Schroeder. Joan 51 Schroeder. Mary 53 Schroers. Bob 43 Schuetz, Lou Ann 43 Schulte, Patricia 55 Schultz. Don 60 Schumacher, Edna 54 Schwader, Rita 43, 44 Schwantes, Suzanne 54 Schwartz, Joe 57 Searl, Richard 56 Seever, Galen 59 Seidl, Jane 54 Sejkora. Joyce 52 Sejkora, Lynn 55 Sell, Curtis 61 Sellers. Merl 60 Selvig Marilou 51 Munger, Murl 60 Munger, Nancy 45 Murphy, Franklin D. 16,17,27,41 RADFORD. RAY 57 Radrick, Ron 43 Raines, Lela 43, 53 Shannon, Marietta 50 Sharpnack, Jim 42 Shaw, Joan 43, 53 Ralston, Marcia Anne 51 Shaw, Sis 42 NALLEY. VIRGINIA 40, 45 Nanninga, John 60 Ramaker. Joanne 54 Ramirez, Anita 53 Shay, JoAnne 54 Sheafor, Douglas 57 Raw, Jeanette 51 Shelinbarger, Joan 54 Nardyz, Carolyn 40, 45 Nardyz, Mark 59 Nason, Courtney 57 Neighbors, Margie 54 Nelligan, Katie 44,45 Nell in, Jim 43 Reams, Jack 57 Redd. Carol 52 Reddick. Willis 61 Reed. Jan 53 Rees, Barbara 51 Reese, J. Allen 21 SheMhaas. Carol 54 Shepler, James 57 Shepp, Barbara 43 Sherman, Bernard 56 Sherman, Dolores 53 Sherman, Tom 58 Nelson, Jerry 57 Nelson, Norma Jean 52 Nettels, Curt 57 Reetz, Gretta 42, 50 Reich, Gilbert 38, 39. 41, 81 Reiderer, John 43 Shirley, Bob 58 Shockley, Louise 54 Shoemaker. Robert 59 Neville, Mozelle 53 Reiland. Bob 59 Short, Margaret 53 Neville! Nancy 53 Newbold, Richard 60 Newby, Jim 57 Nichols, Marlene 42 Rein, Jack 43 Reitz, Ann 50 Remsburg, George 59 Rench, W uanita 55 Short, Reuben 44 Shulz, Laura Ann 53 Shutz, Sue Ann 43 Shvotsuka, Ted 30 Nichols, Mile 42 Rendigs. Sally 51 Siebert, Mary Gayle 52 NichoU, Raymond 16 Nienstedt, Martha 50 Renfro. Robert C. 61 Renner. Sally 46. 51 Siegfried, Kaye 51 Sikee, Jules 76 Nofsinger. Bill 57 Reusch, Joyce 53 Reynolds. Richard 60 Simmons, Norma 53 Simon, John 61 Norrie, Barbara 54 Rexroad. Althea 53 Simpson, John 57 Norrie, Pat 54 Rhodes. Sandra 55 Skaer, Janice 52 Norris, ' Mack 57 Rice. Rex 61 Skaer, Joanne 52 Nothdurft, Dianne 52 Null, Margery 55 Rich. Dan 60 Richards. Boh 59 Richards. Dennis 58 Skinner, Bob 59 Slagle, Marvin 57 Slater, Richard 58 Richards, Jim 59 Slocum, Virginia 53 OAKS. VIRGINIA 52 Richards, Marcelene 54 Smiley, Richard 58 Oborny. William 59 Richart, Frances 52 Smiley, Norman 60 O ' Brien, Larry 43 Rickman, Mary Lou 52 Smith, Aubrey 58 O ' Brien, Marsha 52 Riege, Roberta 54 Smith, Bob 43 O ' Daniel, Georgia 50 Rieger, Betty 53 Smith, C. A. 60 Odell, Jerry 53 Rigor, Mary 54 Smith, Carolyn 51 O ' Dell.Jim 56 Riley. Gary 57 Smith, Don 59 O ' Farrell, Tom 57 Rimann. Gayle 52 Smith, Don 61 Ogg, Harry 58 Ringer, Judy 50 Smith, Dorothy Ann 55 O ' Grady. Pat 42 Ritter. Tom 43 Smith, Ethan 59 Oliver, Jay 43 Roark, Roger 58 Smith, Frank 60 Oliver, Jim 61 Robb, Elizabeth 53 Smith. James 58 Olsen, Ronald 57 Roberts, Al 59 Smith, Jo Ann 52 Olson, Atis 54 Robertson, Flavia 53 Smith, John 57 O ' Neill, Gene 59 Robertson, Jerry 81 Smith, Juanita 52 Orlowske. Wayne 59 Robertson. Ruth Ann 54 Smith, Keith 60 Orrick, Gayle 54 Robison, Dan 59 Smith, Lud 43 Orth. Faydean 54 Rodky. Frank 47 Smith, Margaret 55 Osborn, Jennie 50 Roenbaugh. Virginia 54 Smith, Margie 52 Osborne, Rosalee 44 Rogers. Jack 41 Smith. Nancy 54 Oswald, Orland 61 Rogge, Karlan 55 Smith. Paul 57, 60 Owen, Beth 52 Roney, Rocelyn 52 Smith, Sam 60 Owen, Jack 61 Rooney. Noel 58 Smith, Susan 53 Owen, Rosemary 43 Rosenlund, Jerry 59 Snyder, Eleanor 52 Soden. Kathleen 54 Solberg. Susan 54 Sommers. Bob 57 Sorem, Rowena 52 Sorter, Edith 54 Southern, Betty 55 Sparks, Jim 58 Spaulding. Barbara 46 Speckin, Barney 59 Spencer. Oliver 79 Spoil. Donna 54 Spraguc, Harry 56 Springer. Phyllis 54 Spuehler, Bob 61 Spurney, Frank 61 Stahl.Dick 58 Stamper. Harlan 60 Starry. Sara 44. 48 States. Sidney 55 Stauffer. Rachel 43 Stayton. Marlene 52 Stealey. Helen 50 Steckel, Pat 51 Steene, Birgitta 53 Steinki, Margaret 52 Stemmerman, Lyle 61 Stererl, Diane 51 Stevens, Ann 55 Stevens. Bill 61 Stevens, Donald 59 Stewart. Bob 66 Stewart. Don 58 Stewart. Mary Ellen 55 Stewart. Tom 57 Stiles. Don 60 Stiles. Phil 60 Stinson. Bob 59 Stiles. Dories 53 Stith. Ed 60 Stith. Wilma 55 Stockham. Glenn 58 Stockton. F. J. 20 Stoff. William 61 Stone, Gerry 59 Stone, Jan 47 Stone, Janice 50 Stone. Ralph 56 Stonestreet, Gary 61 Street, Jerry Ann 55 Streeter. Tal 58 Stringer, Stan 60 Slruble. Ted 57 Strumillo, Mary Ann 55 Stueck. Marilyn 54 Stunkel, Elaine 52 Sturdevant. Howard 59 Stutz, Carol 52 Sullivan. William 59 Summers, Shirley 53 Summerville, Sue 54 Sutorious, Barbara 43, 47 Sutton, Elva 51 Swander. Orva! 40. 43 Swanson, Joann 52 Sweeney, Allen 59 Syuins. Eddina 50 TAGCART, MARY 41, 55 Tajchman, Maxine 55 Talley. Joan 52 Tan. Sally 55 Taney. Beverly 52 Tale. Brad 58 Tatum, Connie 52 Taylor, Jerry 78 Taylor. Jim 60 Taylor, Martha 51 Taylor, Mary Ann 54 Tebow. Robert 58 Teed, Nancy 55 Temple, Kathy 51 Teplita, Morris 33 Terrell. Terry 60 Terry. Margie 45 Terry. Vincent 58 Thayer. Max 58 Theis. Betty 42 Thies. Pat 54 Thomas, Mrs. 43 Thomas, R. C. 58 Thompson, Bill 57 Thompson. Mary 55 Thompson, Peter 57 Thorn, Jim 47 Thornton, Richard R. 61 Thorpe, Alice 51 Thorpe, Steve 59 ' I ' M. mi. in. Mark 60 Timmons, Judy 53 Toft, Jim 58 Toland. Dorris 55 Tomlinson, Bill 57 Trotter, Johanna 54 Tucker, Edmond 60 Tucker, Pat 52 Tudor, Betty 50 Turner. Betty 53 Tweet, Barbara 55 Twigg, Allois 52 UNDERBILL, JULIE 53 Underwood, Jane 55 Underwood, John 60 Underwood, Marilyn 54 Uppdegraff, Mary Lynn 41 Urban, Lee Ann 54 Uric, Dave 56 VANCE, MIKE 52 Vance, Sally 52 V ' andenburg, Ceorganne 43 Van Dyke. Carol 54 Van Lew, James 61 Van Meter, Joy 50 Van Meter, Sam 60 Vaughan, Leah May 55 Vaughn. Ann 51 Vehlewald, Shirleyann 51 VenaiJ, Shirley 54 Vetterick, Kay 51 Voiland, Frederica 42. 54 von Gunten, Charlsia 54 WADDELL, MARGIE 52 Wagers. Wayne 57 Wagner, Bob 61 Wagoner, Joe 58 Wahl. Norma 55 Wakeland, Edward 59 Wainscott, Scotty 43 Waldschmidt, LeRoy 61 Walker. Bud 42, 47 Walker, Darrell 57 Walker, Gary 61 Walker, Colda 53 Walker. Stuart 60 Wall. Ed 57 Wall. Raymond 57 Wallace, Ann 45,52 Wallace. Mary 50 Waller. Larry 60 Walls. Kay 52 Walteischeild. Ceraldinc 55 Walter. Lucille 52 Wasson. William 58 Watson, Barbara 55 Watson, Betty Lou 54 Watson, Dorothy 52 Weathered, Jack 60 Webber, Darrell 59 Wegert. Arthur 59 Weiler, Janet 52 Weiss, Walter 57 Welch, Gary 59 Welch. Tom 60 Wellborn. Jo 52 Welling, Bill 60 Wells, Leon 60 Wentworth, Mrs. 44 Werth, Ann Rita 55 Wessell, Diana 53 West. Shirley 53 White, Connio 53 White, Joyce 52 White, Phillip 58 White, Tom 47 Whirehead, Jerry 58 Whiteside, Bud 57 Whitmore, Richard 58 Whitney, Mary Ann 52 Whitney, Peggy 54 Whitter, Ann 43 Wideman, M. A. 42 Widick, Fritz 43 Wiechman, Mildred 51 Wiedeman, Mary Alice 53 Wiley, Paray 53 Wilkerson, Thomas 61 Williams, Ann 54 Williams. Frank 47 Williams. Joe 56 Wiley. Alice 52 Wiley. Jim 47 Wilson, Beverly 51 Wilson, Bill 38.39 Wilson, Peggy 54 Wilson, Phyllis 55 Winter, Larry 58 Winzer, Myrna 52 Witcher, Don 58 Withers, Bill 47 Witt. Jerry 46, 60 Wolfe. Carol 50 Wolfe. Joe 42 Woodbury, Curt 60 Woodhull, Shirley 51 Woodside, Don 43 Woodruff. Dean 41 Woody. Warren 78 Worcester. Patty 54 Worley, Joan 51 Wright. Allegr. 52 Wright, Dean Wright, Sue 53 Wyman, Jimmy 58 Wynn. Howard 58 YANCEY. VIRGINIA 44 Yeoman, Martha 55 Yoder. Sally 51 Young. Annette 51 Young. Rich 47 Youngberg. Irvin 19 ZIECEI.ASCH. SUZANNE 51 Zieglcr. John 61 Zimmerman, Carolyn 52 Zimmerman, Joan 44, 54 Zimmerman, Pat 43 Zuercher, Bruce 46 Zucrcher, Sam 43 DON HUNSINGER welcomes you to the DOWNBEAT The night spot with atmosphere On Mass., across from the Granada JAYHAWKERS! You can always count on us to give you the FINEST in HOLLYWOOD MOVIES FOREIGN FILMS ART PRODUCTIONS OUTDOOR MOVIES ONLY LARGE SCREEN TV IN KANSAS That ' s Right . . . Entertainment Is Our Business ! COMMONWEALTH - LAWRENCE THEATERS GRANADA Phone 946 PATEE Phone 32 1 DRIVE-IN Phone 260 J. D. King, City Mgr. FRIENDLY COURTEOUS SERVICE II ' - IIIUIK1I 11 iiiiiifiii WINTER CHEVROLET 94 4? . - _ fc Betty Billingsley and Conn ' e Sims (North College) showing off the future Kansas T-shirt. Get The Rowland Habit We Offer a Wide Variety of Choice K.U. Souvenirs YOU WILL ENJOY SHOPPING AT Two Stores 1401 Ohio 1 237 Oread Phone 926 Massachusetts EXPERT CLEANING AND PRESSING SAFE GARMENT AND FUR STORAGE HATS BLOCKED Felt and Straw for Men RUGS CLEANED Both Domestic and Orientals it WALL-TO -WALL CARPETS CLEANED Bige- low-Sanford Karpet Kare HUTSON HOTELS 7000 Rooms in Kansas, Missouri and Colorado HOTEL BROADVIEW Wichita HOTEL ELDRIDGE Lawrence HOTEL STATE Kansas City, Mo. ROBERT E. LEE Kansas City, Mo. Billy Hutson, Pres. Mike Getto, Mgr. R. C. McCormick, Sec.-TVeos. Eldridge Hotel HOTEL BOULDERADO Boulder MEADOWBROOK LODGE Jackson, Wyoming Billy Hutson, Jr., Mgr. and Owner Frances Hanna and Kay Lowls (Tri-Delts) picking up cookies for that midnight snack GOING TO STUDY LATE? BUY YOUR SNACKS AT REEVES GROCERY 900 Mississippi Phone 413 95 Now Two Locations for Your Convenience the town shop 841 Massachusetts the university shop 1420 Crescent Road THE FINEST IN MEN ' S APPAREL CO-OP NITROGEN PLAUT This is a replica of the Co-Op Nitrogen Plant soon to be built in Lawrence. See this model in our lobby. Just another project for the betterment of our community with which we have a hand. THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Seventh and Massachusetts For Your Transportation Needs Use The Bus RAPID TRANSIT LAWRENCE CITY BUS SERVICE For The Beit in Laundry and Dry Cleaning ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1 1 1 1 Mass. St. Phone 646 96 ORBEL Fabulous French perfumes are yours at a down to earth price! Three delightful fragrances, each a generous size, are the product of Paris ' most exclusive and expensive perfumer. Orbel usually would sell for $30 or more. Three ' 2 ounce flacons are beautifully packaged in an exquisite treasure chest ... a wonderful gift. Andre Roman brings them to you directly from Paris at a price that is truly amazing . . . including packaging, shipping, import and Federal taxes . . . only $10. Satisfaction guaranteed. If you are not delighted with these genuine French perfumes, return in five days for full refund. Send check, cash or money order to: ANDRE ROMAN, 400 Madison Avenue, N. Y. 17, N. Y. Student Salesmen for FRITZ COMPANY 8th and New Hampshire Phone 4 Jerry Buchman, Joe Christy, John Biegert, Lorry O ' Brien George McKenny, Bob Aungst, Frank Norris A complete line of GRADE A DAIRY PRODUCTS for all your needs Phone 696 202 W. 6th St. 97 For Better Meals or Between Meal Snacks try DRAKE ' S cookies coAes breads pastries Remember, it ' s Drake ' s for Bakes! THE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS offer Experience in Handling All Your Cleaning Problems 1001 New Hamp. Phone 383 Top National Brands of Cosmetics, Candies, Photo Supplies, Subscriptions, and Superior Fountain Service Are Synonymous with RANEY ' S Self-Service Drug Store 909 Mass. Phone 521 Connie White and Linda Connor picking up some of their cleaning. The Quality of Our Work Must Meet with Your Approval INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont St. Phone 432 98 Refre sli . . . add zest to tlic bour KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY FOR YOU AND YOURS PHONE 151 FOR APPOINTMENT issue- WE have customers in New York, likewise in California. Wherever you may go in the U.S.A., BURD FLETCHER printing services are always available to you. BURD FLETCHER Company Seventh St., May to Central Victor 1122 Kansas City 6, Missouri It ' s GIBBS for Quality Merchandise at budget prices HYDE PARK SUITS-TOPCOATS VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS-SPORTSWEAR JOCKEY UNDERWEAR WEMBLEY NECKWEAR WEATHERCREST JACKETS LAMBKNIT SWEATERS RAND SHOES GIBBS Clothing Company 8 I I Massachusetts St. Grade A Dairy Products We Have a Complete Line For All of Your Needs ex Phone 696 202 W. 6th St. FROM TOPEKA, BEST WISHES FOR A anfi a Nimt TO JAYHAWKERS EVERYWHERE J. M. BRIER Sr. . HENRY BUBB . R. M. BUNTEN DALE CARMEAN HARRY CRANE T. L. HOGUE . M. B. SALISBURY L. W. SCOTT . and STEVE and BETTY and JOHN and BETTY and JUDY . and JIM and JOHN and JERRY 97 m m issue- KI;AM ;TII DAM FRAXK OltltlS . ' I m IJ 1 THE 1953 JAYHAWKER page 102 104 108 116 118 122 129 148 182 188 189 190 192 winter issue December, 1952 Winter comes to Mt. Oread Kansas City the forgotten campus Big wheels on campus Homecoming Party, party, party Women ' s houses Men ' s houses They ran out of tape Over hill and dale Cage fever hits Mt. Oread The 1953 cage team Index The campus we live on as viewed from the air . . . we ' ll prob- ably remember best the parties . . . but the Jayhawker will remember best the little trials like trying to take the Phi Psi ' s picture to the competition of a dog . . . right now Phog Allen and his basketball team are big news . . . but we still recall the thrills of the gridiron. THE YOUNGER GENERATION WITH THE appearance of Sigmund Freud ' s first published work, On the Psychic Mechanisms of Hyster- ical Phenomena , a new era arose in the art of conversation. No longer limited to the weather, free trade, or the moral values involved in the protrudance of a woman ' s ankle below her skirt, the conver- sational dilettante could now reach the higher and freer realm of pyschoanalysis . And so today one may discuss his best friend ' s faults and foibles without seeming unduly gossipy. But the psychoanalysis of large groups of people was a common avocation long before Freud. In ancient Greece philosophers such as Plato sat around discussing the younger generation and how it might be guided. But today everyone sits around talking about the younger generation. One can ' t pick up a popular magazine without a bold headline asking, Are Our Teen-agers Rejecting Our American Heritage? or Teen-age Morals Good or Bad? One can ' t start a family conversation without some older member remarking, My, aren ' t those college kids wild these days? A club meeting may seem a nice relaxing way to spend an evening, but more often than not the speaker will be some amateur sociologist conveniently solving the problems of the degenerate genera- tion in forty-five minutes. No other topic seems to carry such interest and enjoyment for the average person as The Younger Generation. With all this discussion the problem should soon be solved, but unfortunately no one seems able to agree. One magazine article speaks of the growing responsibility and foresight of our young peopl ' while another decries the shocking moral degeneration among teen-agers. No, continued discussion has not brought progress. In fact, many years ago people generally agreed that the younger generation was going to the dogs, but now no one is sure which way it ' s going. Furthermore, we can ' t be too sure that the controversy is doing any good at all. Before the popular magazines started telling of a few depraved hot-rod artists playing chicken , few young people ever thought of such a dangerous sport. But let ' s bring the examples closer to KU. Before Life described the pantie raids at the University of Michigan, no student at Nebraska thought of such a ridiculous thing. And before Life patted itself on the back for its power over collegians with a story entitled Nebraska apes Michigan , no one at Missouri, or Colorado, or KU thought of doing it. But thanks to the journal- ism profession ' s concern for the young, nearly every large campus had an outbreak of pantie raiding with the resulting damage and bad feelings. Since this criticism of the young has been going on for thousands of years and each generation believes that the following is highly inferior, obviously they have been wrong most of the time for who can deny the continued progress of civilization? No, there is a very logical reason for all the controversy. Changes in technology, science, religion, and culture alter the environment of each new generation. As a result, each crop of young people develops its own ideals, beliefs and mores, differing from those who have gone before. In America, difference is an imperfection approaching criminality. Differences in race, religion or economic system are highly unsavory faults to the majority, who therefore look with disfavor upon succeeding generations. The situation is further complicated by the national magazine which sees in the younger genera- tion a topic of profitable interest, since a large percentage of the reading public have children. The national magazine steps in to meet that interest with the easy answer on all of youth ' s problems. But they make no attempt to reach the really scientific answer in terms of changing environment, etc., for after all, the scientific answer is too complicated and doesn ' t sell magazines. So the discussion goes on and on. But don ' t be too critical. Read all the articles, attend all the speeches, listen to all the adult con- versations. Then someday you too will be able to sit upon the pedestal of adulthood and discuss the faults and shortcomings of the younger generation. THE EDITOR 101 DECEMBER 1952 Ike and the nation The weeks following the election have been filled with discussion of the new Eisenhower administration. While no one is sure just what road the gov- ernment will take, certain steps do appear likely. First of all, most peo- ple believe that Eisenhower will turn away from socialism toward more freedom for the businessman. The whole attitude of business toward gov- ernment and government toward busi- ness is expected to change. Many of the big jobs in the new administra- tion, including most of the cabinet positions, are being filled with indus- trial and financial leaders. The busi- ness world is expected to look toward Washington for aid rather than re- striction. The exact attitude of Eisenhower toward Korea is not certain. Eisen- hower promised to go to Korea if elected, but as this issue goes to press he has not gone. Shortly after elec- tion day, outgoing-President Harry Truman offered Ike the use of the Presidential plane Independence if he should still desire to go. Eisenhower, obviously annoyed by Truman ' s insin- uation as to Ike ' s sincerity, snapped back first an unprintable reply and later a statement that any suitable transport plane . . . will be satisfac- tory. There is great doubt that Ike will be able to do anything once he gets to Korea. Failure to accomplish some- thing concrete could result in a great loss of prestige by the new adminis- tration as the Republican ' s election depended greatly on the Korean issue. The first Eisenhower move is ex- pected to be a step-up in training for Republic of Korea troops in order to relieve US front-line troops. In regard to specific action on the home front, Eisenhower will work to- wards lower taxes, less inflation, and a cut in deficit financing. Many ob- servers tend to believe that success along these lines will depend more upon the military and political actions of the Kremlin than the domestic policies of the Republican administra- tion. Organized labor, which had come out wholeheartedly behind Stevenson for President, has received a great loss of political power. Its decline in Better Than Ever? Movies are better than ever continued to be the slogan of the cinema industry this year, but some well-meaning people are loudly contesting that statement. Movies are still being attacked as being too Hollywoodish, but the competition of television has brought a slight trend toward increased dramatic quality rather than mass appeal. Among the movies that will be long-remembered was Quo Vadis, a super-extravaganza starring Robert Taylor and Deborah Kerr. The 6% -million-dollar tale of Biblical times had a cast of 30,000 extras and more noted for thespian achievement 63 lions. Other show- pieces of Hollywood ' s wealth were Ivanhoe and The Snows of Kilimanjaro. Two Taylors, Robert and Elizabeth, carried the acting load in the former, a fairly accurate interpretation of an age-old novel by Sir Walter Scott. The Snows on the other hand took a short story by a modern author, Ernest Hemingway, and blew it up into a practically unrecognizable, emotion-loaded travelogue. Alec Guiness, urbane English master of comedy, made a solid hit on the American screen with three excellent movies, The Lavender Hill Mob, The Promoter, and The Man in the White Suit. The latter was a long-to-be-remembered story of the discovery of an indestructi- ble, dirt-free fabric and its effect on England ' s monopolized industry. The African Queen with Katherine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, Pat and Mike starring Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, and Where ' s Charley featuring Ray Bolger, were the leading American stabs at the public ' s funnybone. The first of the trio won academy awards in 1951, but actually showed in most US moviehouses during the current year. Big news in the cinema world was the return of Rita Hayworth from a brief marital whirl with international plutocrat Aly Khan, the revival of the silent era with The Thief in which not a word was uttered, and Cinerama, a highly successful three-dimensional film showing to packed crowds in New York City. The latter may well revolutionize the whole movie industry if it proves financially practical. prestige has now been augmented by the loss of two of its greatest leaders. Philip Murray, president of the Con- gress of Industrial Organizations, and William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, died within two weeks of each other and each died of a heart ailment. So labor, now in its darkest hour since pre- New Deal days has been temporarily cast adrift without leadership. The AFL is expected to elect acting-presi- dent George Meany as its head, but a real battle is shaping up in the ranks of the CIO. Both Walter Reuther, head of the CIO ' s United Auto Work- ers, and Allen Haywood, CIO execu- tive vice-president, are logical con- tenders for the presidency. Although presently in the back- ground of the news, Democratic de- cisions as to their leadership may have far-reaching effects in the future. Although Adlai Stevenson is generally regarded as the titular head of his party by virtue of his recent can- didacy, he is still considered a new- comer to big-time Democratic circles by many of the old-time stalwarts. When Stevenson is no longer gover- nor of Illinois, he may lack the patron- age and the contacts necessary to maintain his position of political emi- nence. The only hint as to Truman ' s future status in his party is his tele- gram acknowledging Stevenson as head of the party, a statement which may be more formality than sincerity. The eternal conflict Hopes for peace in Korea continue dim as this issue goes to press. Truce talks have been indefinitely post- poned and sessions of the United Na- tions General Assembly are resulting in no concrete action. The issue bar- ring final agreement of the warring parties continues to be the exchange of war prisoners. An Indian proposal for solving the conflict through the establishment of a UN Repatriation Committee has gained the attention and approval of many people through- out the world. However, the three big world powers hold conflicting view- points. England is wholeheartedly be- hind the plan as the only way to achieve world peace; the US is only lukewarm toward it as it might make possible the forced repatriation of war prisoners, a policy violently opposed by America; and Russia is definitely against the Indian plan as it does not specifically provide for forced re- patriation. So the debate continues as does the war itself. The severe disagreements and argu- ments over the truce have brought about the resignation of Trygve Lie of Norway, the UN Secretary Gen- eral. He gave up the post because he felt his holding of office was hinder- ing international agreement. 202 In the hills of Korea winter has moved in with no letdown in the fighting. US 8th Army commander Van Fleet claims complete control of the central front but casualties continue to rise. More and more South Korean troops are being trained for front line duty, and many here at home hope that American soldiers may soon be relieved completely of combat duty. Science steps forward Scientific development has received a tremendous impetus from the Korean War. The limitless horde of fighting men available to the Com- munists and the very restricted amount of US manpower have made necessary superior United Nations armaments, communication facilities, and transportation systems. US and British scientists and engineers have answered the call, and every day re- ports on new weapons are published. The latest big news in science is that the US has produced a successful hydrogen explosion. While the official government dispatch did not say that an H-bomb had been exploded, that impression was given to reporters in Washington and the government has made no attempt to counter it. The H-bomb, or Hell-bomb as it is some- times called, may be many times as effective as the World War II atom bomb. Theoretically the size of an H-bomb is unlimited. Scientists be- lieve that one might be produced that would be capable of entirely destroy- ing New York. The lack of security regulations surrounding the explosion has caused quite a furor. No formal announce- ment was made until the newspapers had printed a large number of letters from servicemen describing the scene. These men were aboard ships in the blast area. Apparently there were no security measures taken to prevent leakage of the news. This fact has led some columnists to speculat e that the US desired to have the event pub- lished in this informal manner for its strategic affect on the Kremlin and other foreign capitals. Guided missiles have been used suc- cessfully in the Korean War for the first time in history. Actually they are only pilotless Navy Grumman Hellcats launched from ships, but their deadly accuracy in hitting in- land targets suggests that the age of push-button warfare may not be far distant. Recently the US government has announced the perfection of atomic artillery. The powerful cannon bar- rel 84 feet in length has a range of better than 20 miles. Exact details are not available but the projectiles are reported to contain miniature atomic bombs. Elsewhere in the world of the atom, the British have announced the ex- plosion of their first atomic bomb. Cabinet Close-up The Chairman of the Board of the M. A. Hanna Co., a vast industrial empire stretching throughout the world, was picked by Eisenhower to be his Secretary of the Treasury. The millionaire industrialist was a sur- prise selection, but he has demonstrated outstanding financial ability in bringing his company from a losing business to a 14-million-per-year profit-maker and in organizing a number of other companies. Attorney General-designate Herbert Brownell Jr. was born in Peru, Nebraska, attended Nebraska University, moved East, and became one of New York City ' s most outstanding lawyers. Known as a brilliant political strategist, he played a very important part in Eisenhower ' s election. Douglas McKay, governor of Oregon, is Eisenhower ' s selection for Secretary of the Interior. The Salem automobile dealer has considerable experience in conservation and public works, the main jobs of the Interior Department. He is noted for his ability to pick outstanding subordinates. New Secretary of Agriculture, Ezra Taft Benson, specialist in farming problems and a leader of the Mormon Church, will lead the nation ' s agricultural policy. He has been universally recommended by farm leaders of all parties. The Cabinet of the United States took on a new look when Dwight Eisenhower became President. Cabinet members have been picked for ability and experience despite the fact that they might be open to criticism as tools of Wall Street. In fact, Eisenhower promised during the campaign that he intended to name business brains to run the nation ' s largest business, the government. In living up to the promise, he has reversed the former formula of selection according to geographi- cal location and sociological class. John Foster Dulles was picked as Secretary of State. The 64-year-old New York lawyer and diplomat has long been known as an expert on foreign policy. After the death of Senator Vandenberg of Michigan, he became the principal Republican in bipartisan foreign policy decisions. He is expected to inject a note of positiveness into the directionless Department of State. Secretary of Defense-designate is Charles E. Wilson, president of General Motors. With his vast experience heading the world ' s largest corporation, he will be well qualified to lead the 60-billion-dollar Defense Department. His selection shows increasing acceptance of the idea that America ' s war potential depends more on industrial power than on the size of the armed forces. GOP national chairman Arthur Summerfield was picked as Postmaster General. This is considered to be Eisenhower ' s only political appointment although Summerfield ' s selection can be justified through his demon- strated ability in the General Motors empire and in fund-raising activi- ties for the GOP. A pro-Stevenson Democrat was named as Secretary of Labor. Selec- tion of Martin P. Durkin who had been an AFL leader in the plumbing and pipe-fitting industry illustrated Ike ' s formula of selecting men most qualified regardless of political affiliation. Experience gained as the head of six large corporations and a bank will be the background of the new Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks. The Boston resident has been chairman of the Republican national finance committee since 1949. The cloud pattern of the explosion has many armchair scientists wondering, since it in no way resembled the standard mushroom cloud of the US A-bomb. Great progress is reported in the race for an atomic submarine with mass production expected by 1954 or earlier. The military often finds that tactics used thousands of years ago are more effective than modern razzle-dazzle tactics. For instance, in the Korean War they ' ve found that the armor of the medieval knight wasn ' t such a bad idea, and, as a result, many fight- ing men today are wearing armor made of fibrous glass and a special nylon fabric. In present tests with in- fantry and marine pilots, results are termed exceptional. In the field of airpower a new con- cept of aerial combat may be coming in. The air force has announced the design of a ram fighter. This plane would be so designed that it could ram and fly completely through a large bomber with little or no damage to the fighter or the pilot. Accuracy of such a human-guided missile would be nearly perfect and the destructive- ness to a bomber would be complete. It might well render obsolete the con- ventional machine-gun armed inter- ceptor. The ram fighter would be jet powered and would be heavily arm- ored, particularly in the nose. 103 104 - ' ,. S s, ! .-fcj TO MT. OREAD LEFT: Snow Hall looking north from Jayhawk drive. TOP: Fraser Hall as it appears from Lilac Lane looking across the quadrangle. RIGHT: A photographer ' s impression of Danforth Chapel. The Memorial Campanile as seen from across Potter Lake. Looking northwest at the Dyche Museum of Natural History. KANSAS CITY-THE Henry Reed and Dale Griswold THERE is MORE to the University of Kansas campus than The Hill. In fact, there is an already large and rapidly growing Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas, that flies the crimson and the blue flag of KU. The extent of the educational program carried on by this branch of the University can better be understood if one realizes that recent statistics reveal that the KU Medical Center was second in the country in the total number of personnel trained (including nurses, technicians, occupational and physical therapists, practical nurses, and dietitians) and fourth in the total number of practicing physicians enrolled in refresher courses. KUMC has become a recognized first in a number of fields. One of the more dramatic firsts which immediately received both public and profes- sional recognition was the installation and use of color television. The possibilities are immediately apparent. Surgical procedures that were ton Bell Memorial, administration building of the Medical Center, contains the administrative offices, the medical library, and a complete hospital. Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, Dean of the University of Kansas School of Medicine and Director of the KU Medical Center. Having assumed his duties just last July, he is the first permanent Dean since Franklin D. Murphy resigned from that position to become Chancellor of the University. Dean Wescoe came to KUMC from Cornell University and spent just one year at Med Center prior to his appointment. During that time he was Professor of Pharmacology and Experimental Medicine. The Medical School as seen from the air. A Bell Memorial, the administration building. B B Building. C Children ' s Pavilion. D D Build- ing. E Eaton Building. F Service Building. G Out-patient Clinic. H Hixon Laboratories. I Medical Sciences Building. J Women ' s Resi- dence Hall. K Nurses ' Residence. FORGOTTEN CAMPUS 109 The new Medical Sciences Building. Finished just last September, this huge five-story building makes possible the training of the Medical School ' s entire sophomore class on the Kansas City campus. Formerly one semester of the sophomore year was spent in Lawrence. It will house the Departments of Microbi- ology, Pharmacology, Pathology, and Oncology. Included in the building are a teaching auditorium seating 180 students and a medical museum for the public, as well as the usual offices and classrooms. I : ' - A University of Kansas Medical School firsts-color TV for teaching surgery. This innovation enlarges infinitely the number of students who may watch an operation. Here some students view complicated ab- dominal surgery. I 7 The Logan Clendening Library of Medicine. Housed on the third floor of the Hixon Research Building, it is considered one of the finest medical libraries in the world. The 6500 volumes were part of the private collection of the famed writer and surgeon, Logan Clendening. The purpose of the library is to provide material for the highest level of medical scholarship and study and to give students a chance to better understand and appreciate the classics of medicine literature. Dr. Mahlon Delp, Asst. Dean and Chairman of the Department of Post-Graduate Medical Education. Robert A. Molgren, the Adminis- trator of the Kansas University Medical Center. Dr. Kenneth E. Jochini, Assistant Dean and Chairman of the De- partment of Physiology. Ill Looking northeast from Rainbow Ave- nue toward the new women ' s resi- dence hall where the many nurses who work at the Medical Center may eat, sleep, and relax. This is the ultra-modern lounge of the hall. Here are held the nurses ' and women students ' parties. The person- nel at these parties sometimes changes strangely and completely at 11:00 PM. And this is where the nurses receive their education. This lecture hall ad- joins the living quarters. 112 The almost completely enclosed quadrangle. This sheltered area is a perfect spot for con- valescents to soak up a little sunshine. The picture was taken from atop Bell Memorial looking southeast. This fountain was built in the center of the quadrangle as a memorial to Dr. Logan Clen- dening, professor of medicine at the Univer- sity of Kansas Medical School. He was a noted author, having written a number of books and a nationally circulated syndicated column. 113 formerly viewed by two students can now be ob- served with greater detail by an entire class. A still more recent first was the transmission of heart tracings via the telephone from Lawrence to the Medical Center. The progressiveness of the Medical Center is well exemplified by its part in the Kansas Rural Health Plan. This plan calls for an increase in the number of doctors and ancillary personnel trained, post graduate opportunities for physicians, and community action to attract doctors. Under the stimulus of this plan, KUMC now has increased facilities, year-around teaching on the quarter system (%. of the students studying at all times), an increased enrollment of medical stu- dents, and refresher courses offered to practicing physicians. The well known preceptor program was ini- tiated in March, 1950. Under this program the senior medical students spend their off quarter working with a rural practitioner in a town of 2,500 population or less. KU is currently a leader in numerous fields of research. Work with polio, cancer, heart and lung diseases, chest surgery, fungus, virus, and de- generative diseases, to mention only a few, are some of the present projects. THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE was organized in 1894 and offered only the first two years of medical in- struction. In 1905, three medical schools from the Kansas City area merged to form a four year course under the direction of the University of Kansas. Gifts of tracts of land and a later donation of new buildings were made by Dr. Simeon B. Bell. Private, municipal, and state funds were used to purchase a new site of 15 acres at 39th and Rain- bow. Buildings were completed and occupied on this land in 1924. The physical plant of KUMC has continually expanded. From 1934 to 1947 a warehouse, the Hixon Laboratory for medical research, a chil- dren ' s ward, and an outpatient building were built. Construction since 1948 has included X-ray rooms, surgical and medical wards, a new women ' s resi- dence hall, and a medical sciences building. A chest disease hospital is nearing completion, and a combination continuation center and student union building will be finished in June, 1953. The Medical Sciences Building enables the sophomores to come directly to Kansas City in- stead of spending a semester of their sophomore year at Lawrence. This makes possible a further integration of the didactic and clinical material. The Continuation Center, which is being paid for entirely by gifts, will contain accommodations for visiting doctors and lecturers, eating facilities for students, and an auditorium with a capacity to hold the entire student body. ONE MUST KEEP in mind the fact that KUMC has a three fold function, i.e., education, research, and patient care. Not only is it the only medical school in the state, but the 488 bed hospital with over 12,000 admissions per year and the outpatient de- partment with over 74,000 visits per year serve as a diagnostic and treatment center for the people of Kansas and the surrounding area. All the massive physical plant of the KU Medical School has but one purpose the healing of the sick. Here Dr. Ralph Major demonstrates- the examination of a patient. - WHEELS O N CAMPUS DUGGAN SCANLAN says he ' s majoring in coffee at the Union, but it would be more correct to say he ' s major- ing in pep. To most students he is known as the man who organized the tremendous rally for the basketball team last year after they won the NCAA championship. Since then he has become official chairman of the pep and rally committee. As activities chairman for the Class of ' 53 he pro- moted the sale of babushkas and engineered Senior Day activities at the Oklahoma A M game. A member of the Campus Affairs committee, Duggan was student chairman of Freshmen Orientation week and was in charge of publicity for the Jayhawk Jubilee. A com- mander in the Arnold Air Society, he recently flew to Los Angeles to attend their convention. Past veep of the Newman Club, Duggan also found time to be advertising manager of the Sour Owl, Up- stream, and the Alumnae Magazine last year. A Lawrence boy, lanky Duggan calls politics one of his main interests and plans a diplomatic career in the foreign service. Although he won ' t tell you himself, his real name is Charles Francis Scanlan. But don ' t call me that. he says. It ' s Duggan. or Bud. ONE OF the busiest girls on the campus (but you ' ll never find it out from talking to her), ORINNE GRAY handles everything she does with a friendly dignity and charm. A junior from Lyndon, Kansas, she was elected president of the Associated Women Students last spring after serving on the Senate for two years. Her first year on the hill she was one of two freshmen women elected to the Senate. She was also a member of Red Peppers. Last year Orinne represented the AWS on the All Student Council. Enrolled in pre-nursing, this pert brunette plans to specialize in pediatrics, for she loves to work with chil- dren. In fact, she says people in general are one of her main interests because you can never stop learning some- thing new about them. Always ready for a chat over a cup of coffee, Orinne has the ability to remember people ' s names after only a short introduction. Very unwilling to talk about her accomplishments, she has also been on the Dean ' s Honor Roll. Orinne enjoys her work as a counselor in the fresh- man dormitory, and with a twinkle in her eyes says that life at Corbin is never dull. 116 Story by Virginia Mackey WELL, don ' t call me a card shark just say I really like to play bridge, said KEN MERRILL, describing an inter- esting hand. When he ' s not playing bridge at the Triangle house, this senior from Pratt might be discussing politics, campus or national. In fact, he claims he spent most of a 44-hour drive back from New York after Thanksgiving doing just that. President of the Inter-Fraternity council, Ken is a member of the Calendar committee and Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity. A member of Pacha- camac, he is also president of the Hawkwatch society, the Navy social organization. He ' s a company com- mander in his Navy unit, and as a second lieutenant in Scabbard and Blade, the military honor society, he is secretary of the organization. Ken says he likes to listen to any type of music except Western. I ' ve got the radio going all the time, even when I ' m studying. Someday Ken would like to sell heavy industrial equipment, preferably along the Diesel line. Uncle Sam will take care of him for the next three years, however. Now on a NROTC scholarship, Ken plans to see the world aboard ship after graduation. BECAUSE she enjoyed working on the Pan-American, the newspaper in Balboa, Panama, DOT TAYLOR decided to go into journalism. Her admiration for William Allen White plus the fact that her family moved back to her native Topeka after living in the Canal Zone for ten years, brought her to KU. On the staff of the Daily Kansan, she also has been editor of the K-Union and of the Y-Knot. Last spring she was elected to Theta Sigma Phi, women ' s honorary professional journalism fraternity. But hustling to meet newspaper deadlines accounts for only part of Dot ' s activities. President of the YWCA, she attended the national YW council meeting in Oxford, Ohio, last summer as representative of the entire Rocky Mountain region. At the Canal Zone Junior College, Dot was elected to Phi Theta Kappa, the PBK of junior colleges. In her two years on the hill this tiny (5 ' 1 ) senior managed to fill her spare time by working on the Campus Chest, placing second in the intramural speaking contest two years in a row, being corresponding secretary and activ- ities chairman for Sigma Kappa, a member of Mortar Board, and a commission leader for the Westminst er fellowship. 117 OUR HOMECOMING ' 52 TOP: 1952 Homecoming Queen Mary Lou Lavy. TOP RIGHT: The winners of the fraternity homecoming decorations contest, Delta Tau Delta. CENTER RIGHT: Gamma Phi Beta ' s Campanile which placed first in the sorority division. BOTTOM RIGHT: A familiar scene about noon on Homecoming day the Kappas hold a buffet lunch for their parents. 118 and the rains came The KuKu Club decorates the goal- posts just before kickoff time of the Nebraska game, feature attrac- tion of the weekend. With showers in the first half and drenching rain during the second, the game was rather wet. Here Nancy Gilchrist begs the crowd to yell as the rain gets worse. QUEEN FOR THE 1952 homecoming was Mary Lou Lavy, a freshman from Hodder Hall. Selected from a group of thirty entrants on the basis of charm, beauty, and personality, the 5 ft. 9 in., 123 pound, brown-haired, hazel-eyed queen came to KU this fall from Glasco High School where she was also Homecoming Queen. Mike is enrolled in draw- ing and painting in the School of Fine Arts. A panel of three faculty members and three businessmen made the selection after the various houses picked the student to represent them. First elimination took place at a tea on Monday before the game, and the queen and her two attendants were picked at a banquet Wednesday evening. How- ever, the name of the queen was kept secret until the actual ceremony between the halves of the Nebraska game. CIRCLE: Her Majesty, Miss Mary Lou Lavy, Queen of the 1952 Homecoming. TOP RIGHT: The Final- ists Dinner at which the Queen was selected. BOT- TOM RIGHT: Jane Henry and Patsy Wiley get last minute instructions from one of the judges. TOP: The finalists and escorts as they appeared on the stage at the Jayhawk Follies Stephanie Drake, Jack Rodgers, Mary Lou Lavy, David Hill, Beth Lowell, and Jim Perry. CENTER LEFT: The final- ists nervously await their cue to go onstage at the Jayhawk Follies. CENTER: Queen Lavy shows Bill Blair the flowers that her friends at Hodder Hall gave her. CENTER RIGHT: Even the Queen works Mary Lou putting her Homecoming roses in a vase. BOTTOM: Governor Edward F. Arn and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy present Mary Lou with her roses during halftime festivities of the Nebraska game. AND THEY CROWNED HER QUEEN 120 PARTY! I PARTY!! PARTY!!! Who do you know in Heaven? ' Jill Ogilvey and Don Endacott. Playmates Lynn Burton and Bill Landes. It ' s all in the game Chris Wiley. - What is a party? We might more profit- ably ash that great question of the philosophers, What is art? A party is one of those concepts we all are conscious of, yet can never define. As you will see on the following pages, a party can be one of an infinite number of types. And in the more informal varieties, who is to say when the party begins and when it ends? So with apologies to Gertrude Stein, we must conclude that a party is a party is a party. 122 : : I Give me five minutes more George Michale and Delta Upsilon Queen Barbara Findley at the DU formal. Those little white lies Nancy Hutton and Merle Hodges at the Gamma Phi Open House. There is nothing like a dame Kay Lehman, Datha Lauber, Lee Ann Thompson, and Pat Hayes. Some enchanted evening, you may see a stranger, across the crowded room Mary Alice Wiederman. And so to sleep again Ann Con- way and Joe Conklin at the Gamma Phi open house. Strange enchantment Eleanor Haley and Roger Collins at the Delta Gamma Halloween Party. The band cuts loose at Hoch after freshman-varsity game. A familiar scene at Homecoming Mr. and Mrs. John Meyer and Winnie, looking at portraits. The high kicking chorus line at the Jayhawk Follies on Coffee time before the game at the Phi Delt house Nick Friday night before Homecoming. Agnos, Mike Chalfant, Steve Brier. A happy couple, Gayle Gould and Jim Wiley, after their pinning out at the Flamingo. Looking for something? Keceiving line at Gamma Fhi house. 124 Trying to get dry alter Homecoming are Maryiin Ahlslroni, Marjorie Heard, Gaye McDonald and Martha Humphrey. Back to North College for coffee and doughnuts after the game are Mr. and Mrs. Tarwater and Carol Fluharty. Gathering of state-wide county meetings Jim Van Pelt, Anita Souder, Chrys Angersbach, Sue Baird, Virginia Black, Jerry Bouse, Don Smith, Jeaneene Liseher. Getting a little timely advice from Mr. McGuire, chapter advisor, is Blaine Schiedeman, Phi Delt president. Under the harvest moon are George Lund, Barbara Ander- son, Jack Brand, Carol Landis, Charley Dockhorn, Maureen Kelly, enjoying the Phi Delt Harvest Party. Relaxing at the Alpha Chi Open House, Joe Schroeder, Cynthia Krehbiel, Carol Swanson, Scott Ritchey. 125 TOP Row: Mr. and Mrs. Mick Denny trapped in a corner of the Lambda Chi Showboat Party. These are no cigar store Indians Joe Cox, Pat Buell, Annette Young, and Rex Sullivan. Yes, suh, Mr. Interlocutor, says Louie Helmreich to Charles Shrewsbury. It ' s quite obvious that Cliff Lambert and date use Pepsodent every morning. Seems like Pat Garret! and Joanie Carter are getting too big for diapers. SECOND Row: How about a Red Dog? say bar leaners Pat Garrett and John Calvin at the Kappa Sig Red Dog Party. Through the looking glass, we see Judy Fink, Dean Graves, Fredrica Voiland, and Howard Sturdevant at the Phi Dell Harvest Party. Carolyn Nardyz, Jim Floyd, Bar- bara Bateman, Dale Scheideman, Teresa Waugh, and Les Wenger at the Delta Gamma Halloween Party. Don ' t let that gun go off, says John Wyman to Janet Gabrielson. It ' s Bill Atkinson with the Lady of Sophistication, Carolyn Zimmerman. THIRD Row: Patsy Wiley and Betty Lu Card have just arrived from an overland hike to announce the pinning of Gayle Gould. Love on a Pile of Hay might be the title of this shot of Bev Lander and Ben Platter. Well Yes! Rosie Boles at the Lambda Chi Showboat Party. John Hoisinger hands Eleanor Ormond the prize money for the best costume at the ISA Bums ' Ball. This couple should have no trouble striking a match! Eleanor Ormond and Will Adams. BOTTOM Row: Speaking of being entangled . . . Johnnie Muir and Phil Greene at the Delta Gamma Halloween Party. Strictly off the reservation are Rex Sullivan, An- nette Young, Joan Swanson. and Jean Schanze. Through the Fiji keyhole come Phyllis Scott, John Reiderer, Ann Smith, and Paul Bartholow. They survey a late departed guest (in the lower left hand corner) at the Chi Omega Pirate Party. Better half dressed than this is Don Williams and date at the ISA Bums ' Ball. 126 TOP Row: Smilin ' through . . . Max Murray, Judy Buckley, Georgia O ' Daniel, Milton Wallace at the Alpha Chi Open House. At least they think it ' s funny Hank Brown ' s view of a PKA house party. There must be a cold wind blowing off the prairies at the Phi Delt Harvest Party Harlan Parkinson, Peggy Hughes. SECOND Row: Spirits at work Bill Hall, Diane Hornaday, Peggy Longwood, Ralph Lamb. Dick Judy, Bev Jackson, Neil McNeill, Betty Weber at the Alpha Chi Open House. With good old fashioned harmony at an ATO party Charlene Ewell, Larry Munns, Bob McCann, Margaret Brown. THIRD Row: Dick Cummings says he was invited but Mary Rohwer, Jack Clifford, and Cathy Rohwer say otherwise. George Bauerle, Janet Kesler, Pat Howell, Bob Foyle have a chat on some convenient stairs. Oh, I ' m sorry, this must be the wrong room, says photographer Hank Brown. The guilty parties are Earl Salyers, Loreine Locke, Jim Phillips, Marilyn Roolgers. BOTTOM Row: Enjoying the party at the ATO house are Bob Wunsch, Joan Skaer, Bob Toalson, Nannette Pitman. We couldn ' t print the joke but here are the reactions Ron Kiill. Georgia Tipton, Tiffy Challis, Warren Capped at a TKE party. Whooping it up at the Kappa Sig Red Dog Inn are Glenn Stockham, Irene Coonfer, Pat Buell, and Joe Cox. 127 TOP Row: This for the Byrds Jack Byrd and Ceorgann Vandenburg enjoy their pinning party with Joe Culver, Pat Roney, Jayne Grovier, Jim Ireland, Annabel Hungate, and Joe Christie. Contented Jeanie Johnson, Don Morris, Marilyn Sorem, Dean Tinkler. PKA prepares for home- coming Bill Schmidt, Bruce Kirkpatrick, Jim Sharpnack, A. F. Simon, Cliff Lambert. SECOND Row: Jerry Albert, Cretchin Orinn, Jerry Schafer, Janet Kesler, Doug Kay, Ann Jeffreys enjoying Sig Ep Bowery Brawl. The Chi O Pirates party at a little Portu- guese inn Don Helfey, Frank Rodkey, Bob Mallory, Bar- bara Logan, Pat Aylward, Helen Anderson, Tom White, Rosie Gench, Beth Lowell, Dick Schmidt. The Phi Psis live ' t P Bobbie Glower, Pete Fotopolous, Bob Knightly, Mary Rengel, Bill Renick, Irma Smith. THIRD Row: Shades of the barber shop Charles Shrews- bury, Joe Renner, Ro-coe Littel, Ken Cox. From Cheyenne to Park Avenue to Monterrey is the range of costumes Marilyn Button, Nancy Munger, Barbara and Howard Card, Sherman Nichols, Bob Hamilton, Joyce Cox, and Marvin Murphy. Deep in the Fiji Islands are found Paul Leoni, Hughes, Paul Gordon and Pat Roney. BOTTOM Row: The metamorphosis of a smile by Jerry Hougland, Betty Turner, Betty Rieger, Joe Woods. A tail for her Theta kite the pinning of Gayle Gould, with Patsy Wiley, Sara Starry, Susie Speck, Connie White, Betty Hauck, and Carolyn Harbordt attending. The end of a perfect day Bill Roberts, Allen Craig, Pete Arrowsmith, Marilyn Culp. I I 128 FRONT ROW: H, ii,. Entail, Mullinax, Forman, Schwader, Buck, Keller. SECOND HOW: Fitzpatrick, Scott, Michaels, Canary, Mrs. Underwood, Marshall, Mans, Leach, Bowdish. THIRD ROW: Landree, Wampler, O ' Daniel, Marly, Malone, Mahoney, Buchanan, Klene, Stealey, Krehblel, Covacevich. FOURTH ROW: Kelley, Hilmer, Tudor, Herring, Leonhart, Morion, Nelson, Lewis, Shepp, Aitelt. FIFTH ROW: Cowle, Barsby, High, Sutorius, Swanson, Jackson, Weber, Ringer, Owen. SIXTH ROW: Wiley, Freeman, Dennen, Wolfe, Cray, Flynn, Botolfsen, Hennlngson, Rosenan, Reetz. ALPHA CHI OMEGA ACTIVES Iris Barsby Barbara Bowdish Joyce Buck Nancy Canary Nancy Dennen Sharon Fitzpatrick Georgianne Flynn Mary Anne Forman Sally Freeman Phyllis Gray Mary Ann Harris Bobbie Herring Beverly Jackson Maureen Kelley Betty Landree Mary Agnes Leach Mary Ann Mahoney Barbara Axtell Sara Buchanan Jean Covacevich Ruth Cowie JudyEstell Frances Henningson Connie High Karen Hilmer Carol Keller Llewellyn Kiewe Cynthia Krehbiel Nancy Malone Betty Marshall Ann Marty Connie Maus Jean Michaels Nanette Nelson Rosemary Owen Gretta Reetz Shirley Rosenan Rita Schwader Sue Scott Barbara Shepp Barbara Sutorius Carol Swanson Jo Wampler Betty Weber Christine Wiley PLEDGES Joan Leonhart Pat Lewis Martha Morton Lucy Ann Mullinax Georgia O ' Daniel Anne Reitz Judy Ringer Helen Stealey Betty Tudor Carol Wolfe Alpha Chi Omega was founded in 1885 at DePauw Uni- versity, Greencastle, Indiana. Phi, one of seventy-seven chapters, was established on the KU campus in 1914. This fall Phi tied for the scholarship cup annually awarded to the sorority with the highest scholarship aver- age for the preceding year. Outstanding Alpha Chis on campus are Nancy Canary, Vice President of ASC; Connie Maus and Georgia O ' Daniel, cheerleaders; Chris- tine Wiley, Lee Swanson, Gretta Reetz, Rosemary Owen, Sigma Alpha Iota; Jean Michaels, Secretary of WAA; Georgianne Flynn, Vice President of Newman Club; Maureen Kelley, Interfraternity Council Sweetheart of 1952; Barbara Sutorius, Forensic League; Mary Anne Forman, Nancy Dennen, Sally Freeman, Delta Phi Delta. Phi has a foreign exchange student, Anett Botolfsen, from Oslo, Norway. Annual social activities include Open House for pledges, Parents ' Day, Hera Day, and the Pink Champagne Dinner Dance. OFFICERS ELIZABETH MARSHALL President NANCY CANARY Vice President SUE SCOTT Secretary JEAN MICHAELS Treasurer 129 HUIN I ROW: Co , GUI, Johnson, Dunlop, Lehmann, Cazier, Hauersfeld. SECOND ROW: Han. on, M.-r-li. .. I MI, I,. Perry, Mrs. Clark, Stonebraker, Glenn, Sehindlinn, Srhraft. THIRD ROW: Osborn, Logan, Symns, Kimmel, Dunn, Neuer, Hayes, Hall, Stone. Mil II I II ROW: Irwin, M. i.-l.-.li. Roberts, Jones, McArdle, Turner, Van Meier, Balderson, Ralzlaff, Lauber. FIFTH ROW: Franels, Wallace, He-own. Driver, Myers, M.i.liir.,.. Shannon, Henry, Thompson. ALPHA DELTA P I The oldest secret society for women is Alpha Delta Pi sorority, founded in 1851 at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia. Tau chapter, one of 80 active chapters, was established at KU in 1912. Freshman counsellors at North College and Corbin are Marilyn Miller, Billie Loflin, and Barbara Findley. Maxine Ratzlaff is soloist for the Phi Gam combo. Other activity girls include Denni Wade, President of El Ateneo and Treasurer of Sigma Delta Pi ; Dianne Stonebraker, Assistant Managing Editor of the University Daily Kansan and member of Theta Sigma Phi; Kay Lehmann, Jay Janes Reporter, member of Phi Chi Theta, and Secretary of the Business School Association; Twyla Cox, Delta Phi Delta; Bobbie Dunn, Secretary of Alpha Rho Gamma; Jody Johnson, Secretary of Amateur Radio Club; Mike Turner, Treas- urer of Social Work Club; and June Porter, Vice Presi- dent of WAA. OFFICERS DIANNE STONEBRAKER President JANICE PERRY Vice President JUNE PORTER Secretary NANCY GLENN Treasurer ACTIVES Cotty Bauersfeld Joyce Cazier Twyla Cox Joyce Driver Bobbie Dunn Nancy Gill Nancy Glenn Marilyn Hanson Joyce Henry Sue Hershey Mary Ann Irwin Jody Johnson Kay Lehmann Sandra Balderson Margaret Brown Sandra Dunlop Donna Francis Marjorie Godwin Louisa Hall Pat Hayes Peggy Jones Jackie Kimmel Datha Lauber Carol Logan Marijane Lynch Howard Neuer Janice Perry June Porter Maxine Ratzlaff Marilyn Roberts Jane Schindling Joanna Schrag Dianne Stonebraker Lee Ann Thompson Mike Turner Denni Wade PLEDGES Tina Maduros Lois McArdle Dodie Myers Martha Nienstedt Jennie Osborn Marietta Shannon Janice Stone Eddie Symns Joy Van Meter Mary Wallace 130 131 ALPHA OMICRON P I Patricia Blanks Norma Bradley Joyce Cameron Ruthanna Charles Danna Denning Mary Ann Dilts Carla Haber Elizabeth Hille ACTIVES Joan Ketterman Veda Russell Barbara Spanlding Betty Thies Shirley Tinsley Barbara Trotter Barbara White Alpha Omicron Pi was founded January 2, 1897, at Bar- nard College, Columbia University, New York. Phi, one of 57 chapters, was established in 1918. Social events include Founders ' Day, the Christmas Formal, Senior Breakfast, and the Ruby and Rose Formal. Betty Theis is the present queen of Triangle ' s Sophisticated Swing. As for activities, Shirley Tinsley is Vice President of Panhellenic and Vice President of Radio Players; Betty Theis is Vice President of Sigma Alpha Iota; Nan Charles is a member of the YWCA cabinet; Barbara Trotter is Secretary of the Entomology Club; Mary Ann Dilts is Vice President of Kappa Epsilon ; Barbara Spauld- ing is a member of Gamma Alpha Chi ; and Carla Haber is a member of Tau Sigma. PLEDGES Freddie Blanks Carolyn Boyd Barbara Deal Lucille Defenbaugh Jeannine DeGroot Norma Fenn Jo Ann Heller Billie Jones Janice Mason Dianne Miller Carol Peters Ann Vaughn Beverly Wilson OFFICERS ELIZABETH HILLE President CARLA HABER Vice President RUTHANNA CHARLES Secretary SHIRLEY TINSLEY Treasurer FRONT ROW: Trotter, Spauldinx, Haber, Mrs. Deubaur, Mill,-. P. Blanks, Tinsley. SECOND ROW: White, Peters, Cameron, Defenbaugh, Charles, Denning, Bradley, Heller, Fenn. THIRD ROW: Vaughn, Ketterman, Miller, DeGroot, Boyd, Jones, Mason, Wilson, F. Blanks. 132 ' A L P H P H I Alpha Phi was founded on October 10, 1872, at Syracuse University. Gamma Delta was installed at KU on March 25, 1950. Prominent figures in campus activities are Mary Lee Haury and Harriet King, who had leads in Dido and Aeneas. Leah Ross and Mary Lee Haury are members of the KU Chorale, and Harriet King, the A Cappella Choir. Norma Lou Falletta is Treasurer of AWS and a member of ASC and the Forensic League. Diane McFarland is President of the Home Economics Club; Elva Sutton. Treasurer of WAA; and Mary Lee Haury, Treasurer of SAL Diana Foltz is a member of the AWS Senate and Secretary of Kappa Epsilon. Bar- bara Orendorff, Leah Ross, and Pat McNabney are mem- bers of the Radio Players. Lee Calkins reigned as Queen of the Hob-Nail Hop and Donna McCall was among the Jayhawker royalty. Patsy Jeffers and Phyllis Sims won the badminton intramurals. OFFICERS NORMA Lou FALLETTA President PHYLLIS SIMS Vice President JOYCE RONALD Secretary DIANA FOLTZ Treasurer ACTIVES DeNean Ankerholz Aha Joyce Bryan Lee Calkins Mi-Ilia Cantrell Delores Dolson Norma Lou Falletta Diana Koltz Mary Lou Fuller Rebecca Garvin Mary Lee Haury Dolores Hawkins Martha Heck Rosemary Heiny Millicenl Hunt Lou Ann Bowersox Carol linn h! i M Donna Cooke Babette Cooper Diana Cruse Shirley Dodd Pat Dowell Nancy Echols Sue Epperson Sally Foster Jeanette Cowan Marlene Gray Patsy Jeffers Marian Jenkins Harriet King Diane McFarland Jean McGinnis Pat McNabney Kathryn North Barbara Orendorff Joyce Ronald Leah Ross Phyllis Sims Marilyn Swartz Dorothy Twente PLEDGES Kay Gustafson Sally Kiddoo Donna McCall Jane Murdock Joan Phillips Marilou Selvig Carolyn Smith Elva Sutton Kathleen Temple Evelyn Thomas Sally Yoder Annette Young . FRONT ROW: Twente, Selvig, Yoder, Calkins, Echols, Dowell, Ankerholi. SECOND ROW: Hunt, North, Ronald, I ..ll.-ii... Mi-. Ilium,-. Sims, Foltz, Cantrell, Cowan. THIRD ROW: Jeffers, Hawkins, !(.,-.. Gray, Helny, Fuller, Garvin, Sutton, II,,-. i..,. Kiddoo, Temple, McGinnis. I til II I II ROW: Dodd, Smith, Murdoek, Burchfield, Epperson, Cooke, Bryan, Phillips, Thomas, Cooper, Swart . FIFTH ROW: Dolson, King, Haury, Mt-Nabney, Orendorff, McFarland, Jenkins, Young, Crune, Gustafson, Foster. FRONT ROW: Ogilvy, Miller, A. Price, Dorking, Todd, Penfold, Decker, Godding. SECOND ROW: Armentrout, Hunt, I ...1,1, . Osborne, Morrison, McVay, Jaekson, Carothers, Hardman. THIRD HOW: Kellam, Taylor, York, MrFarland, Brown, Cody, Kaaz, Quinley, Lowell, Renner, Gabrielson. FOURTH ROW: D. Price, Mepaffin, Tyson, Aylward, Groe, Gench, Anderson, Logan, Goforth, Diver, Thorpe. FIFTH ROW: Brammer, Leonard, Ziegelasch, Knauss, Hollingsworth, Hibbard, Garr, Rickman, Siegfried, BradMreel, M, I ,..,., I, I. McKee, Angersbach, Criesscr. C H I OMEGA ACTIVES Helen Anderson Suzanne Armentrout Patricia Aylward Dorothy Brown Judy Carothers Rosemary Cody Delores Decker Marcia Docking Rosemary Gench Lorraine Godding Joanne Groe Mary Lou Hardman Jessie Ann Hunt Anne Jackson Sally Kellam Priscilla Angersbach Barbara Bradstreet Barbara Brammer Lue Edna Diver Janet Gabrielson Marjorie Garr Donna Goforth Lisa Griesser Barbara Hibbard Jane Hollingsworth Mary Ann Kaaz Kathleen Knauss Joan Lodde Barbara Logan Beth Lowell Janice McFarland Ann McVay Janet Morrison Jill Ogilvy Rosalee Osborne Mary Lou Penfold Ann Price Margaret Quinley Shirley Strain Kathryn Todd Mary Tyson Julie York PLEDGES Janice Leonard Jean McDonald Kathleen McKee Jane Megaffin Winnifred Miller Dee Ann Price Sally Renner Mary Lou Rickman Kaye Siegfried Martha Taylor Alice Thorpe Suzanne Zieglasch Chi Omega was founded on April 5, 1895, at the Uni- versity of Arkansas. Lambda celebrated is fiftieth anni- versary this year. Chi Os that can be found in campus activities are Lue Edna Diver, President of the Rifle Club; Marcia Docking, President of the Christian Science Organization and Chairman of Gamma Alpha Chi; Jessie Hunt and Suzanne Armentrout, A Cappella Choir; Pat Aylward, AWS; and Kaye Siegfried, Secretary of Junior Panhellenic. Others prominent on the hill are Chrys Angersbach, Shirley Strain, and Dee Price, Tau Sigma; Jessie Hunt, Sigma Alpha Iota; Pat Aylward, Campus Affairs Committee; Lisa Griesser, Quack Club and WAA; and Kathie Knauss. Secretary of the Physical Therapy Club. OFFICERS JANET MORRISON President ANN McVAY Vice President JUDY CAROTHERS Secretary ROSALEE OSBORNE Treasurer 133 FRONT ROW: Walter, Hanna, Turker, Slayton, M,-|,.T|,,,U. M. Brown, H. Zimmerman, MU-I..I. SECOND ROW: MrMlllan, I ,,,,. Bonerutler, Mi.l.ll. k.,i, I I . Kndacott, Cardenhlre, Crady, Robertu, Collinn, Terry. THIRD ROW: J..lm-.. .1. Bird, . Zimmerman, While, Sorem, Mtulz, Melz, McKlbben, Qulnn, Pitman, Wallace, P. Vance. FOURTH ROW: I ..-,.. N,- 1 1 ,..,. I .,,,.,. Marhofer, Reed, Carter, Carrelt, Nelson, Morrin, McDowell, M. ,,,,.. Foree, F.well. FIFTH ROW: Hin,. ,i,n. I . Brown, Chinn, Roney, Becker, Dye, Maner, Anderson, Mallorv. Wellborn, Errebo, Slebert, John. DELTA DELTA DELTA Theta Omega chapter of Delta Delta Delta was established at the University of Kansas in 1945 and has grown to a total of 61 members. The California style home, located in West Hills, was completed in February of 1951. A major interest among the Tri Delts is activities. Katy Nelligan is President of Mu Phi Epsilon, music fraternity, and Grace Endacott is President of Jay Janes. In intra- murals the Tri Delts received second place trophies in basketball and baseball. ACTIVES OFFICERS GRACE ENDACOTT MARY MIDDLEKAUFF PATRICIA GARDENHIRE MARY SUE CRUM President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Margaret Barr Ann Bonerutter Mary Jane Brown Joan Carter Elizabeth Collins Mary Sue Crum Grace Endacott Marjorie Errelo Charlene Ewell Carole Galloway Pat Gardenhire Pat Garrett Patricia Grady Darlene Heberling Mary Loveless Barbara Anderson Barbara Becker Mary Lou Bird Clara Brown Jackie Chinn Susie Dye Alice Foree Joanne Glenn Frances Hanna Carolyn Husted Jo Anne John Donna Johnson Letty Lemon Kay Lowis Marilyn Marhofer Kay Magers Hanna McDowell Lynne McMillan Mary Middlekauff Millicent Morris Katy Nelligan Clara Nelson SueQuinn Marilyn Reed Kay Roberts Ann Sproul Marguerite Terry Barbara Tucker Patricia Vance Helen Zimmerman PLEDGES Billie Mallory Mary Ellen McKibben Bonnie Metz Nannette Pitman Gayle Rimann Rocelyn Roney Mary Gayle Siebert Marilyn Sorem Marlene Stayton Carol Stutz Mike Vance Ann Wallace Lucille Walter Jo Welborn Joyce White Carolyn Zimmerman 134 135 DELTA GAMMA ACTIVES Betty Berry Heidi Bloesch Joan Bingaman Janet Bond Marilyn Button Nancy Carey Adele Connor Joyce Cox Virginia Cox Mary Lou Daugherty Mary Anne Everett Prudy Harper Pat Harris Shirley Hatcher Thelma Iden Nancy MacGregor Paula McFarland Johnnie Muir Nancy Munger Virginia Nalley Carolyn Nardyz Doris Roenbaugh Sue Roop Beth Shearer Pat Williams Nora Wilson PLEDGES Delta Gamma was founded in 1823 at Lewis School in Oxford, Mississippi. Beta Kappa, one of 77 active chap- ters, was established in 1941. The Halloween Party began the social season, followed by such annual events as the Christmas Formal, Pinafore Party, Fathers ' Weekend, and Founders ' Day. Last spring the chapter received first place in the women ' s division of the Rock Chalk Revue. Members of the Radio Players are Marilyn Button and Mary Ruth Anglund. Tau Sigma includes Johnnie Muir, Marcia Porter, and Ann McCutcheon. Sue Roop is Presi- dent of the Physical Therapy Club; both she and Janet Bond are members of the Quack Club. Betty Berry is on the YWCA Executive Board and Peg Long on the AWS cabinet. Delta Gamma is represented in such honorary organizations as Sigma Alpha Iota, Delta Phi Delta, and Forensic League and has seven girls in WAA. Mary Ruth Anglund Barbara Bateman Rita Louise Carey Janet Eckert Mary Lou Eklund Eleanor Haley Barbara Lee Holmes Kathy Holthus Peggy Long Marilyn Lovelady Anne McCutcheon Carleen Mears Marsha O ' Brien Cecie Perry Marcia Porter Nancy Russell Janice Skaer Joanne Skaer Jo Anne Smith Marjorie Smith Eleanor Rose Snyder Margaret Ann Waddell Teresa Waugh OFFICERS NANCY MUNGER SUE ROOP PAT WILLIAMS THELMA IDEN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer FRONT ROW: Waugh, Daugherly, Bond, Holthus, Koenbaugh, Wilson, Muir. SECOND ROW: MarCregor, Nardy , Nalley, Roop, Munger, Berry, Williams, I.I. ,1, Button. THIRD ROW: Eckerl, Kklund, Carey, IlinKaman, Harper, J. Cos, LOOK, Haley, McFarland, Hatrher. FOURTH ROW: Shearer, Lovelady, Anglund, Connor, Holmes, Everett, V. Cox, O ' Brien, Bloesrh, Porter, Perry. FIFTH ROW: Bateman, Mears, Carey, MrCulrheon, Russell, Waddell, Jo. Skaer, Ja. Skaer, M. Smith, J. Smith, Snyder. 136 B BE B B , . m- ffr a wto. i GAMMA P H I BETA Gamma Phi Beta was founded November 11, 1874, at Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Sigma, one of 58 active chapters, was founded at Kansas in 1915. Janie Heywood is President of Mortar Board, Vice President of Jay Janes, and a member of YWCA cabinet. Other Gamma Phis prominent in activities are Janice Manuel. President of Panhellenic, and member of Campus Affairs Committee; Donna Carter and Sue Wright. Quack Club; Donna Arnold, Senate and House of Representatives of AWS; and Jane Henry, President of Women ' s Glee Club and Secretary of Nursing Club. Vinita Bradshaw is a member of Mortar Board and was President of WAA and Sasnak. Gamma Phi Beta tied for first in scholarship last year. ACTIVES JoAnn Anderson Donna Arnold Marianne Asbell Jonell Ashcraft Eleanor Bell Vinita Bradshaw Donna Carter Anne Con way Shirley Deniston Joni Fordyce Corky Fullerton Jane Henry Janie Heywood Diane Hornaday Peggy Longwood Ellen Jane I.upton Janice Manuel Nancy McCammon Doris McConnell Marilyn Pollom Cynthia Quick Zannie Russing Winnie Schumacher Kathleen Shaughnessy Nathalie Sherwood Joan Squires Joan Stewart Carol Stout Marimae Voiland Caroline West Holly Wilcox PLEDGES OFFICERS JANICE MANUEL President SHIRLEY DENISTON Vice President MARIMAE VOILAND Secretary DIANE HORNADAY Treasurer Karen Beardslee Pat Buell Cathy Campbell Ruth Caulsen Charlene Foerschler Judy Griffin Nancy Hutton Alberta Johnson Betty Don Knupp Ruth Longwood Lenore Matthews Marilyn Miller Mozelle Neville Nancy Neville Joyce Reusch Betty Rieger Rosanne Ruble Shirley Samuelson Shirley Summers Betty Turner Shirley West Mary Alice Wiedeman Sue Wright FRONT ROW: Pollom, S. West, Matthew., Fullerton, Rus.lnx, Fordyre, I ., -.1,1. , . SECOND ROW: Volland, Arnold, Heywood, Manuel, Mrs. Park, Deniston, Hornaday, P. Longwood, Asbell. THIRD ROW: Squires, Wiedeman, Turner, Riefter, McCammon, Miller, Henry, Shaughnessy, Schumacher, Buell, Hutton. I (II 1(111 ROW: Stewart, Lupton, Anderson, Conway, MrConnell, V Neville, C. West, R. Longwood, Knupp, Campbell, Johnson, Bell, I., ill,,,. FIFTH ROW: Carter, Caulsen, M. Neville, Beardslee, Sherwood, Quick, Wright, Samuelson, Ruble, Summer , Reuneh. fiV FRONT ROW: Conner, Muehlbach, Houston, Guthridge, Haines, Gilchrist, Piall, Hovey. SECOND ROW: Conrad, Carmean, Starry, Hesse, Comstock, Goodjohn, Bowman, Kilgore, Russell. THIRD ROW: Forney, Campbell, Christmann, While, Bonebrake, Speck, Brosnahan, Davis, Francis, Armstrong, Drake. FOURTH ROW: McCoy, Wandling, McKernan, Anderson, Frickson, Hampton, Creel, Stiles, Wiley, Card, Griffith. FIFTH ROW: Kagey, Gould, Murphy, Stoneman, I ' nderhil], Hampton, Whittier, Barnes, Mock, Davis, Tipton, Brown, Crane, Hauck, Hoover. KAPPA ALPHA THETA ACTIVES Jeannot Barnes Bontina Bowman Carolyn Campbell Betty Carmean Catherine Challiss Barbara Comstock Kay Conrad Georgiann Drake Susan Forney Nancy Gilchrist Joann Goodjohn Joan Guthridge Nancy Hampton Carolyn Harbordt Jerre Hesse Mary Evan Holte Penny Hoover Pat Houston Constance Kagey Cecilia Kilgore Nancy Landon Anita McCoy Sally McKernan Norma Mock Marilyn Muehlbach Janis Murphy Kay Russell Suzanne Speck Sara Starry Jean Stoneman Louise Swigart Georgia Tipton Dorothy Wandling Ann Whittier Kappa Alpha Theta was founded in 1870 at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana; Kappa chapter at KU was established in 1881. Outstanding Thetas in extra- curricular activities are Louise Swigart, President of Delta Phi Delta; Kay Russell, Sociology Club President; Kay Conrad and Louise Swigart. Mortar Board. Sara Starry was Jayhawker Queen and later College Queen of America. Other Thetas on the hill are Nancy Gilchrist, cheerleader; Jerre Hesse, AWS Senate; Shirley Piatt, Treasurer of Student Union Activities and ASC represen- tative from YWCA; and Betty Card, Treasurer of AWS House of Representatives. PLEDGES Jody Anderson Jane Armstrong Beverly Bonebrake Virginia Brosnahan Janice Brown Carol Christmann Linda Conner Judy Crane Cynthia Creel Pat Davis Margery Englund Pat Erickson Janet Francis Betty Lu Card Gayle Gould Maria Griffith Hankie Haines Nancy Hampton Betty Hauck Joan Hovey Shirley Piatt Doric Stites Julie Underbill Constance White Patsy Wiley OFFICERS BARBARA COMSTOCK President KAY CONRAD Vice President JERRE HESSE Secretary SARA STARRY Treasurer 137 3AAAAA. FRONT ROW: Marshall, Hunt, Ansrhuli, Puliver, Johnson, Ankrom, Ii.hu. 1 ,..,!.,. i. Yancey. SECOND ROW: Black, Allen, Wagner, !(.... 1, 1 1. Mrs. Peel, Maekey, Walker, Denman, Howell. THIRD ROW: I ..!,.,. Bubb, Odell, Merrlman, H.-M.....I. II. . . . Dodge, Meker, Myers, Ferguson, Shaw, Short, Deschner, Bonlz. FOURTH ROW: Hi-. Dubach, Raines, Wahlberg, Scupln, Hitt, Brent, Ain.worlh, Gard, Elam, lleindel, Filler, Smith. FIFTH ROW: Clem, Lawrence, Harms, Scott, Davis, Simons, Cagelman, Swaffar, ll-.l.h . Schtieti, Meyer, Mint . Knight. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded at Monmouth College in 1871. Omega chapter is one of 81 chapters. Social events of the year include the Open House. Mothers ' Tea. Founders ' Day Banquet, and the Christmas Formal. Kappas found in KU activities are Virginia Mackey, Vice President of Mortar Board and Vice President of the senior class; Ann Wagner, President of NOW and Secre- tary of the senior class; Winnie Meyer. President of States ' Women ' s Club; Millie Hobbs, President of Sigma Alpha Iota, Diane Walker. President of Quack Club; and Margaret Black. Vice President of AWS and the junior class. Sandra Puliver is Vice President of the sophomore class and a cheerleader. Ann Ainsworth Lucille Allen Georgeann Ankrom Susan Bagby Margaret Black Patty Clem Jean Denman Mary Ann Deschner Marilyn Dubach Jeaneene Fischer ACTIVES Diane Gard Mildred Hobbs Pat Howell Claudette Hunt Marilyn Kendall Barbara Landon Martha Lawrence Nancy Lichty Virginia Mackey Betty Merriman Kay Newman Joan Filler Nancy Reese Louise Rigs Jean Ann Scupin Shirley Smith Durian Swaffer Ann Wagner Carolyn Wahlberg Diane Walker Virginia Yancey OFFICERS VIRGINIA MACKEY MARILYN KENDALL DIANE WALKER LUCILLE ALLEN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sue Anschutz Diane Baldwin Sally Bontz Ellison Brent Betty Bubb Marjorie Davis Ann Dodge Barbara Elam Eugenia Ferguson Janie Gagelman Margaret Harms PLEDGES Sally Heindel Evelyn Hitt Martha Jo Johnson Mary Knight Carol Marshall Lyle Mesker Winifred Meyer Mary Lou Myers Gerry Odell Mary Beall Porch Sandra Puliver Lela Raines Althea Rexroad Flavia Robertson Lou Ann Schuetz Kay Scott Joan Shaw Margaret Short Laura Shutz Norma Simons Judy Timmons 138 139 LOCKSLEY HALL RESIDENTS Gloria Baker Margie Bedell Barbara Beers Suzanne Berry Carolyn Blouch Vida Brandt Helen Burson Eleanor Burton Jo Ann Childs Barbara Curtis Jean Dawson Mary Demeritt Karen Gerber Lucy Giddings Edeltraud Glass Georgenne Griffith Thelma Henderson Marian Henricksen Gladys Henry Mary Hill Joanne Lusk Betty McCoy Merry Lou Mitchell Sadie Owen Billie Beth Pence Shirley Post Mary Pretz Helen Priddy Evelyn Richardson Delores Runyon Joan Salisbury Mary Jo Schauvliege Luella Schmalzried Donna Lee Schmid Phyllis Snyder Margaret Steele Janet Stewart Georgia Stiles Thelma Stoeker Linda Stormont Bobbie West Mary Williamson Elizabeth Wohlegemuth Shirley Young Locksley Hall became an organized women ' s dormitory in the fall of 1944. Before this time, the houses were used by army personnel. Locksley is unique in that it consists of five houses organized as one. Locksley Hall this year won the first prize for homecoming decorations in the independent women ' s division. OFFICERS LUELLA SCHMALZRIED President MARY PRETZ Vice President GLADYS HENRY Secretary MARY Lou MITCHELL Treasurer FRONT ROW: Priddy, Brandt, Stewart, Curtis, Stoecker, Richardson. SECOND ROW: Stormonl, Childs, Henry, Schmalzried, Stanley, Pretz, Mitchell, Class. THIRD ROW: West, Young, Schauvlleite, Sleele, Ciddin K s, Williamson, Wohlgemuth, Blourh, Burson, Berry. FOURTH ROW: Gerber, McCoy, Baker, Snyder, Bedell, Hill, Henricksen, Griffith, Owen, Burton. FIFTH ROW: Stiles, Pence, Beers, Srhuiid, I ,,-k. Post, Runyan, Dawson, Demerit!. 140 MILLER HALL Miller Hall was presented to the University of Kansas in 1937 by Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins. Residence in the schol- arship hall is awarded each year to fifty girls selected on the basis of scholastic ability, leadership, and financial need. For the past two years Miller has maintained the highest grade average among organized houses on the campus. This year the hall received the ISA membership trophy. Prominent Miller members hold offices in Jay- Janes, ISA, El Ateneo. Delta Phi Delta, Engineering Council, Gamma Delta, Mountaineering Club, Art Educa- tion Club, Campus Affairs Committee. Pi Lambda Theta. Sasnak, Student Union Activities, Wesley Foundation. WAA. AWS Senate, Young Democrats, and Westminster Foundation. OFFICERS CHRISTINE JOHNSON President MARY HELEN ROBINSON Vice President VIRGINIA LEON Secretary KAY MUELLER Treasurer RESIDENTS Lois Balding Barbara Bloiint Shirley Boatri;;lil Margaret Breinholt Betty Clinger La Dene Cummins Donna Davis Norma Davison Janet Dearduff Frieda Easter Colleen Engle Emily Enos Marilyn Fuller Dina Gaskell Dorothy Gerber Jane Grantham Helen Haize Mary Hansen i MI nl Hemphill Ruth Henry Joy Hutoherson Christine Johnson ( ' .arol Rasper Virginia Leon Annette Luthy Sid Matsushita Carol MrComb ( Bonnie McNergney Kay Mueller Nancy Myers Mary Poe Virgie Rawline Mary Helen Robinson Vicki Rosenwald Wanda Sammons Ruby Sehaulis Mary Schroeder Marjorie Sereda Kathy Siler Judy Smith Mary Beth Staley Birgitta Steene Georgia Story Rosalie Thorne Nancy Turk Golda Walker Emily Wolverton Joan Worthington Avalon York FRON T ROW: Matsushita. Henry, Blounl, Wolverton. M.,,i-,m. Hulrherson, Staler. SECOND ROW: Bomwriiihl, Sleent, H..M-I-H. Robinson, Mrs. I),., In. Johnson, Leon, McNergney, Gaskell. THIRD ROW: Cerber, Srhaults, Cummin , Turk, Engle, Myers, Thorne, Luthy, Story, Srhroeder, Poe. FOURTH ROW: Rawline, Siler, Breinholt, Easier, Sereda, Haize, Fuller, Hemphill, Rosenwald, Balding. FIFTH ROW: Granlhain, Dearduff, Smith, Sammons, II.,. i . Robb, dinner, Kaspar, McComb, Enos, York, Walker. Aft FRONT ROW: Null, Lemoine, P. Scott, Duchos oi, Updegraff, Brown, Hughe , Drake. SECOND ROW: Ringler, Hungate, Marsh, Crane, Shaw, Lloyd, Lambert, Kinkead, Taggart. THIRD ROW: Brewer, Crovier, Laybourn, Eyler, Scarritt, Grimes, Pendleton, Cempel, Baker, Rohwer, Graham, Cool id ge, J. Scott. FOURTH ROW: Eversull, Barton, MacLaughlin, Allvlne, Teed, Florlan, Stewart, Me,-, Stauffer, Hawkinson, Sims, Sullivan. FIFTH ROW: Burton, Patterson, Stevens, Underwood, States, Hudson, Roney, Hudkins, Grosjean, Vandenberg, Smith, Hereford, Lambert. P I BETA P H I ACTIVES Jane Allvine Barbara Baker Betty Barton Sidonie Brown Lynn Burton Elmyra Crane Stephanie Drake Barbara Florian Lynn Graham Sue Grosjean Jayne Grovier Marilyn Hawkinson Dana Hudkins Marilyn Hudson Annabel Hungate Suzann Kinkead Anne Lambert Kay Lambert Joy Brewer Kay Coolidge Jann Duchossois Mary Eversull Maralyn Eyler Julie Gem pel Frances Grimes June Hereford Peggy Hughes Jo Ann Lemoine Marlene Moss Joyce Laybourn Patricia Lloyd Anne MacLaughlin Jo Anna March Ruth Ann Marsh Frances Mason Helen Pendleton Marilyn Ringler Patricia Roney Katherine Scarritt Phyllis Scott Martha Jane Shaw Ann Sims Rachel Stauffer Marjean Sullivan Mary Lynn Updegraff Georgann Vandenberg PLEDGES Margery Null Cynthia Patterson Kathryn Rohwer Jadeen Scott Dorothy Smith Sydney States Ann Stevens Mary Stewart Mary Taggart Nancy Teed Jane Underwood Pi Beta Phi was the first organization of college women to be founded as a fraternity. The first chapter was established in 1867 at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. At the University of Kansas, Pi Beta Phi was founded in 1872. The Pi Phis added another first to their list and another trophy to their collection when they re- ceived the award for first place in the women ' s division at the Student Union Carnival. Pi Beta Phi ' s grand altruistic project is the Settlement School at Garlinburg, Tennessee. OFFICERS MARTHA JANE SHAW President ELMYRA CRANE Vice President MARILYN RINGLER Secretary PATRICIA LLOYD Treasurer 141 FRONT ROW: M. Smith, Boswell, Rench, J. Smith, I.unHry, Iliiiiiart, Ormond. SECOND ROW: Butler, O. Smith, Janounek, Wllion, Mrs. Slooper, Clyma, Dawson, Swlsher, Miller. THIRD ROW: Woodle, Page), A. Smith, Ward, Brown, Kendall, Porter, Mailer, Roots, I l-.-i. FOURTH ROW: Strumillo, Canfield, Roth, Murphy, Sejkora, Hlnehee, Fisher, Sloan, Oliver, Alllion, Wallerieheid. FIFTH ROW: Ceyer, Long, Rogge, Hyde, Sehatzel, Hunslnger, linn, ,li, I.I. Koontz, Nottingham, Wahl. SELLARDS HALL Although Sellards Hall was organized in 1950, this is the first year that the girls have occupied their new building. Sellards Hall is a gift to the University by Mr. Joseph R. Pearson in honor of his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Sellards Pearson. The 48 residents are selected on a basis of ability, scholastic merit, and financial need. Annual social events include the fall Open House, the traditional Christ- mas Formal, and the Spring Formal. Sellards girls par- ticipate in activities on the Hill. Among those more prominent are Peggy Allison, board member of SUA; Lessie Hinchee, President of French Club; Ruth Elser, Secretary of German Club; Sue Wilson, Social Chairman of Inter Dorm and Rush Chairman of Mu Phi Epsilon; Ila Dawson, Social Chairman of ISA; and Bonnie Roots, Secretary-Treasurer of the Art Education Club. OFFICERS RESIDENTS SUE WILSON ILA DAWSON LUCILE JANOUSEK OPAL SMITH President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Margaret Allison Virginia Biggart Jo Ann Boswell Marjorie Brown Carol Brumfield Marlyn Butler Jacquelyn Canfield Marian Clyma Ila Dawson Ruth Elser Jo Anna Fisher Frances Geyer Sheila Haller Lessie Hinchee Joann Hunsinger Anne Hyde Lucile Janousek Sylvia Kendall Judith Koontz Rita Long Joyce Lundry Sally Miller Ella Mae Murphy Wanda Murray Joan Nottingham Julia Oliver Eleanor Ormond Shirley Pagel Margaret Porter Waunita Rench Karleen Rogge Bonita Roots Rose Marie Roth Carol Sehatzel Lynn Sejkora Marianne Sloan Anne Smith Jo Smith Margaret Smith Opal Smith Mary Ann Strumillo Barbara Swisher Sally Tan Norma Wahl Geraldine Waltersheid Phyllis Ward Sue Wilson Dorothy Woodle 142 SIGMA KAPPA ACTIVES Patricia Aurell Jane Bock Gay Bonney Lois Clough Louise Garvin Patricia Hessling Peggy Howard Frances Hoyt Carolyn Lacey Marilyn Metz Marian Miller Haven Moore Dorothy Byler Patricia Fox Marcia Hininger Shirley Hunsinger Mary Lois Jarrett Barbara Krug Jo Ann Mar kley Patricia Plummer Nancy Rush Mary Beth Moore Carolyn Neff Rose Marie Novotny Carolyn Oliver Billie Richards Anneliese Schnierle Dot Taylor Vernie Theden Margaret Thompson Kay Underwood Allane West PLEDGES Donnalea Steeples Wilma Stith Joan Stockmyer Jerry Ann Street Mary Loretta Thompson Barbara Watson Phyllis Wilson Martha Yeoman Sigma Kappa was founded at Colby College in 1874. Xi, one of 61 active chapters, was established in 1913. Mary Beth Moore is a member of Delta Sigma Rho and Na- tional Collegiate Players and was named outstanding KU actress of 1952. Elected to campus honoraries are Vernie Theden, Phi Chi Theta; Dot Taylor, Theta Sigma Phi; Gay Bonney, Phi Lambda Theta ; Carolyn Oliver and Dot Taylor, Mortar Board. Carolyn Lacey is Chaplain of Sigma Alpha Iota and a member of Light Opera Guild. Jane Bock and Martha Yeoman are members of A Cap- pella Choir. Margaret Thompson is Secretary of the In- ternational Club. Dot Taylor is President and Vernie Theden Vice President of the YWCA. Marian Miller and Carolyn Neff are in the Women ' s Athletic Association. On the party list are the Fall Formal and the Spring Formal. Xi also holds the Christmas Party and Valentine ' s Day Party. OFFICERS ANNELIESE SCHNIERLE President GAY BONNEY Vice President LOUISE GARVIN Secretary VERNIE THEDEN Treasurer FRONT ROW: Watson, Underwood, Miller, Novotny, Rush, Jarrett, Wilson, Yeoman. SECOND ROW: Hassling, II. i. Bonney, Schnierle, Mrs. Hawbeeker, Oliver, Taylor, Krug. THIRD HOW: Neff, Hunsinger, Hininger, Garvin, Theden, Byler, Howard, Plummer, MR. Thompson, Stith, Aurell, Melz. FOURTH ROW: Stockmyer, Street, Clough, West, H. Moore, Richards, Markley, Larey, M. Moore, Fox, Bock, My. Thompson, Steeples. 744 T H E T A P H I ALPHA Theta Phi Alpha is a national social sorority for Catholic women. It was started at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1912 by Bishop Edward D. Kelly. Theta Phi has been active on the KU campus since 1946. Iota chapter had been on the campus formerly in the 1920 ' s. but was deactivated during the depression. The chapter moved from its old address on Louisiana street to its new home at 1528 Tennessee two years ago. The new home was completely remodeled at that time and plans for a new recreation room are under way at present. OFFICERS JEANNE FITZGERALD President BARBARA TRAPP Vice President JAN HYNES Secretary LOUISE KOPPERS Treasurer ACTIVES Norma Birzer Jeanne Fitzgerald Jan Hynes Barbara Klanderud Louise Koppers Barbara Trapp Marguerite Unrein PLEDGES Eloise Dlabal Eileen Foley Lois Fox Maizie Harris Rose Marie Lozenski Dorothy Morris Patricia Schulte Maxine Tjachman FRONT ROW: Lozenski, Dlabal, Kopper , 11,.,.-. Fitzgerald, Trapp, Birzer, Foley. SECOND ROW: Unrein, I i... I,,....... Foi, Harris, Morris, Schulle, KlancleruH. ' FRONT ROW: Hurt, Holmes, Calling, Tweet, Jackson, Selbe, DeLong, SECOND ROW: Tate, Cranberg, Boring, WUlard, Skinner, Hund, Haxder. THIRD ROW: Ryan, Godwin, Koker, Bolas, Townsend, Czinczoll, Powers, Werth, Rhodes, Bell, Thomson. FOURTH ROW: Linn, Southern, Koukol, Adams, Atkins, Betz, Davidson, Cross, Bunion, Glass. FIFTH ROW: Vaughan, Parsons, Ludwig, Porter, Thomas, Scheuerman, Cusic, Garberich, Hudsonplllar, Stranathan, Toland, Kvamme. WATKINS HALL RESIDENTS Nancy Adams Rozanne Atkins Beryl Bell Mary Betz Julia Bolas Helen Boring Betty June Bunion Nancy Collins Patricia Cusic Mary Czinczoll Sally Davidson Phyllis DeLong Betty England Jeanne Esch Barbara Garberich Norma Glass LaVonne Godwin Gayle Granberg Mary Jane Harder Shirley Holmes Wilma Hudsonpillar Esther Hund Patricia Hurt Monte Jackson Doris Koker Ruth Koukol Else Kvamme Diann Linn Wilma Ludwig Anne Painter Mary Emily Parsons Ruth Porter Pat Powers Sandra Rhodes Paula Ryan Rosemary Scheuerman Sally Selbe Ellen Skinner Betty Southern Norma Lee Stranathan Judith Tate Florence Thomas Shirley Thomson Dorris Toland Shirley Townsend Barbara Tweet Leah May Vaughn Ann Rita Werth Beginning its 26th year, Watkins Hall was the first schol- arship hall to be established at KU. Forty-nine girls, selected on the basis of scholastic ability, leadership, and financial need, live here cooperatively, sharing the house- work, cooking, and good times. OFFICERS HELEN BORING GAYLE GRANBERG ESTHER HUND ELLEN SKINNER President Vice President Secretary Treasurer US FRONT ROW: Guest, Boiiart, Harada, Pierre, Bolz, Rifidon, Harm.. SECOND ROW: Creer, Slrileky, Com- mons, Klumnire, Clark, Blanke, Shaw, Caslerline, EIIU. THIRD ROW: Bennett, Shipp, Caulsen, Copeland, White, Thompson, Mirirk, Jarrett, Graewe. RESIDENTS Martha Bennett Marilyn Blanke Grace Bogart Julia Bolz Emmalou Burhank Twila Casterline Ruth Caulsen Darlene Clark Dolores Commons Patricia Copeland Jane Ellis Irene Graewe Naomi Greer Delcina Guest Miyeko Harada Esther Harms Shirley Jarrett Charlotte Klusmire Ruth Mirick Donna Rigdon Barbara Shaw Rita Shipp Delores Stritesky Suzanne Thompson Patricia White C A R R U T H HALL OFFICERS MIYEKO HARADA ' resident GRACE BOGART Vice President DONNA RIGDON Secretary JULIA BOLZ Treasurer FRONT ROW: Pendleton, Bayliss, Skinner, Brodr, Lyon, Cilstrap. SECOND ROW: Nlcklaus, Rash, Letteer, Shaw, Mrs. Dohner, Cook, Kenison, Anderson, Austin. THIRD ROW: Edwards, Dalton, Mahonev, Gaston, Smith, Brownlee, Moore, Hanlon, Smee, Patterson, Holm. MONCHONSIA HALL OFFICERS MARLENE SHAW President JEAN LETTEER Vice President KATHRYN COOK Secretary JEAN KENISON Treasurer RESIDENTS Wanda Anderson Melba Austin Jacqueline Bayliss Esther Brody Eldena Brownlee Kathryn Cook Marylyn Dalton Dolores Edwards Velma Gaston Pegey Gilstrap Theresa Hanlon Karolyn Holm Jean Kenison Jean Letteer Shirley Lyon Kathleen Mahoney Margaret Moore Dorothy Nicklaus La Vette Orme Paulyne Patterson Janet Ann Pendleton Alta Rash Marlene Shaw Jo A nne Skinner Lou Ann Smee Shirley Smith 146 RESIDENTS Evelyn Audas Sue Baird Mary Bello Evelyn Bradford Teresa Cartwright Hazel Davis Allie Deem Beth Deibert Barbara Deickman Mary Ann Deines Rosanne Drake Donna Dyck Patricia Felzien Barbara Fischer Margaret Follett Marcia Jane Fox Wanda Gugler Gertha Harper Joanne Hartell Rosalie Henry Nancy Hindman Donna Hollingsworth Barbara Joyce Martha Mueller Geraldine O ' Dell Haruko Oskima Thelma Pusitz Vada Reida Frances Samson Valerie Svensson Lo Ree Waterson Kathleen Wiley- Dorothy Williams FRONT ROW: Dierkman, Deibert, Davis, Audas, Henry, Mrs. Whiteford, Holllngsworth, Fallen, Drake, Hindman. SECOND ROW: Bradford, Joyce, O ' Dell, Deines, Svensson, Mueller, CartwrUIn, Walerson, Wiley, Harper. THIRD ROW: Oskima, Reida, Hartell, Baird, Williams, Dyck, Fischer, Felzien, Cugler, Fox. T E M P L I N HALL OFFICERS ROSALIE HENRY President EVELYN AUDAS Vice President HAZEL DAVIS Secretary I)o Hou.lNGSWOKTH Treasurer RESIDENTS Lonnie Adamson Normon Arnold Jim Barber Lynn Bartlett Dewey Bernard Fred Bunch Art Burnham Jim Christenson Ed Cresswell Jim Crosby Dick Davis Jack Davis Charlie Dodd Don Fine Vic File Lawrence Goudie Tommy Griffith Bill Hancock Bill Harmon Ivan Henman Dick Howard Gary Kinemond John Kramer Bill Kuhlman Bob Longstaff Dick Markle Fred Miller Leonard Morti Jay Ochs Dick Philips Bruce Rogers Bob Sacks Harry Schanker Carroll Smith Terry Strong Bob Stutz Herb Wahaus Jim Walls Francis Weber Tom Wellman Bob Wildin Hugo Zee FRONT ROW: Kuhlman, J. Davis, Kramer, Barber, Harmon, Bunch, Arnold, Schanker, Goudie, Ropers. SECOND ROW: Markle, Bartlett, Smith, Adamson, Dodd, I ,....! 1 Lee, Morti, Weber, Wellman, Crosby. THIRD ROW: -mi . Lonxstaff, Ochs, Walls, Wahaui, Henman, Hancock, Miller, Burnham, Griffith, Sacks, Fine, Kinemond, Strong, Philips. STERLING-OLIVER OFFICERS JIM BARBER President BILL HARMON Vice President JOHN KRAMER Secretary NORMAN ARNOLD Treasurer 147 ' IICOM ROW: Weber, Downing, -. ' ...I. J.-I.T. Buck. SECOND ROW: I ....,... Folopoulo., .... Bebber, Tire, Srhell, llrown, unlrr, ;!,, Hoffman, Willix. THIRD ROW: Taylor, Tonga , Keefer, FerRunon, Boutwell, Dirk, Pal lln.on, B. I.indlrom, Quiirrler, SpraRue, Weidman. I III III II ROW: Janet, 0-1, .,r,,. Daniels, C. Wllllami, IVI.T...O. Rupp, Short, Hamilton, Catalan, Stone. FIFTH ROW: Slriink, Ro hona, Blake lee, D. LlnHitrom, J. William., Burge, Berk, Cunkey, Carol, Coolev, Duphorne, Calklni. Acacia was founded in 1904 at the University of Michi- gan in Ann Arbor. On November 14. 1904. Kansas chapter was instituted by the mother group. There are now 41 chapters at major colleges with a total member- ship of over 16.000. Acacia has members in Sachem. Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, and many other honorary and professional fraternities on the campus. Wes Santee. a member of the Olympic team, has consistently broken distance records. Nationally there are 142 alumni listed in Who ' s Who, among whom are Paul V. McNutt. Arthur Capper, Frank Carlson, and Noble P. Sherwood. Major social functions each year include the Spring and Winter Formals, Egyptian Party, Pig Roast, Gingham and Jeans Party, Founders ' Day. and Parents ' Day. ACTIVES Nelson Bachus Kenneth Beck James Burgess O. C. Chowning George Claunch George Daniels Charles Dick Cameron Dostie Ronald Duphorne Koyse Ferguson Paul Fotopoulos Jim Glass John Hoffman Bernard Jones Robert Keefer Muryl Laman Richard Linstrom William Linstrom Lynn Osborn John Pattinson Neil Peterson Don Rieder Richard Roshong Wesley Santee Farrel Schell James Short Kenneth Stanley Eugene Stacker Edward Taylor Donald Tice Larry Tougaw Norton Turner Thomas Van Bebher Victor Weber Clyde Williams Jack Willis PLEDGES OFFICERS FARREL SCHELL DON TICE JIM GLASS JOHN HOFFMAN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Clement Blakeslee Lyle Boutwell Louis Buck Elbert Calkins Charles Calnan Richard Cayot Harlan Conkey Larry Cooley Wes Downing Stanly Hamilton Thomas Jester Albert Koch John Quarrier Robert Rupp Richard Searl John Spencer Harry Sprague Ralph Stone Ted Weidman Joe Williams 148 149 ALPHA E P S I L O N P I ACTIVES Ben Benjaminov David Belzer Jack Bloom Alvin Borenstine Herbert Burdo Sidney Gottesmann Herbert Horowitz Aaron Hershkowitz Sidney Lasaine H. J. Levikow Martin Rogoff Stan Shane Mendel Small Joseph Shultz Don Steinberg Harold Steinberg Bernard Weitzner Clarence Winer Allen Wolf Alpha Epsilon Pi was founded at the Washington Square Campus of New York University on . ovember 7. 1913. by a group of students who wanted to establish a frater- nity which would select its members not on the basis of wealth or social position but by their deeds and worth as men. Alpha Epsilon Pi today numbers 61 active chapters on campuses in the United States and Canada. Kansas Kappa Upsilon chapter was established on March 20, 1949. Scholastically the chapter placed third among so- cial fraternities for the 1951-1952 school year. Outstand- ing social events of the year are the Installation. Annual Homecoming Party, Spanish Party, and Spring Formal. Members of Kappa Upsilon have continually worked to improve the house, and last summer completely redecorat- ed the first floor. Among the many celebrated members are Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. PLEDGES OFFICERS Dick Gier Kenneth I.erner Philip Rubin Frederic Sachs Bernard Sherman JOSEPH SHULTZ CLARENCE WINER ALLEN WOLF ALVIN BORENSTINE Master Lt. Master Scribe Exchequer FRONT ROW: Burdo, Runoff, Shultz, Wolf, Winer, Hershkowiiz. SKCON ' D ROW: Weilzner, Sherman, Borenstine, Cottesmann, Rubin, D. Steinberg, Small. THIRD ROW: Sachs, Horowitz, H. Sleinberit, Bloom, Belzer, Lerner, Shane, Levikow, Lasaine. 150 - , ' ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Alpha Kappa Lambda, first national fraternity on the west coast, was founded at the University of California on April 22, 1914. Delta chapter at the I ' niversity of Kansas was founded on June 22, 1922. Top social events are a fall costume party, the Winter Formal, and the Laurel Fete. AKLs prominent in campus activities are Lyle Jenkins, President of the Engineering Council and Vice President of the KuKus; Stanford Lehmberg. mem- ber of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity. As- sistant Carilloneur to the I ' niversity; and Bert Larkin. member of Sigma Tau. Phi Lambda Upsilon. Tau Beta Pi. and Alpha Chi Sigma. Kent Bowden is a member of the Executive Council of the Interfraternity Council and was its summer rush captain. Tom Ricky is Treasurer of the sophomore class and a member of Pachacamac. OFFICERS JOHN ESTHER President JAMES VANPELT Vice President BOBBIE MARSHALL Treasurer THOMAS KICKY Secretary ACTIVES Alvin Benham Harold Bergsten Raymond Birk Kent Bowden Charles Burch Gene Campbell Jack Chittenden Glen Davis David Edwards John Esther James Gillett James Huhhanl I. yle Jenkins Delbert Jones Ralph Kiehl Bert Larkin Herbert Lechner Stanford Lehmberg Peter Arrow smith Jack Austin Charles Baxter Marion Hawk Kay Hughson George Leondedis Harry Matheny Karl Mecklenburg Ronald Lett James Light foot Bobbie Marshall George Mayberry William McClelland Marvin Mog Charles Morelock Jerry O ' Dell Albert Park James A. Phillips James E. Phillips Thomas Ricky William Roberts Earl Salyers Stanley Schneider Ralph Tannahill James Van Pelt PLEDGES Stephen McElheny Henry Miller Belden Mills Jim O ' Dell Donald Park Ronald Phillips David Urie FRONT ROW: Mog, Marshall, Kiehl, YanPelt, Esther, I ,.,., I, ,11. II. .! .. Prk, Salver., II.. -.1...,. SECOND ROW: Au.lln, I rie. Park, I .-n, J. .,..-.. M, I II,. .. O ' Dell, Mayberry, Davl, Arrowsmith, Iliiuli-mi. Burch, Benham. THIRD HOW: I ....... I.-, I,-. I . . I.,,. ,. BerR len, Edwardu, Morelork, Roberlx, J. A. Phillip., Cillett, Miller, Mecklenburv, Hubbard, ( ' .ampbell. Mil 1(1 II ROW: Mill., ii ' li.ll. Hawk, ( I,, 1 1, ,!. . I , _ l.il .,..,. Bailer, Srhnelder, J. I . Phillip., Larkin, R. Phillips, Jenklnx, Birk. FRONT ROW: Wheeler, Williamson, Coodseal, Simmons, Blair, h. Rogers, Squires, Ellison, Cales. SECOND ROW: Wright, Aikens, Scott, Jones, Warder, Kynard, C. Rogers, Snelhen, Evans, Lewis. THIRD ROW: Manley, Edwards, Herron, Eaucette, Clowers, Farnham, Crockett, White, Gray, Brown, Strickland, Harriford. ALPHA P H I ALPHA ACTIVES Emmanuel Aikens James Blair Charles Gates Claude Ellison Dorsey Evans Wilbur Goodseal Benjamin Hammond Curtis Herron Chester Lewis Madison Murray Kenneth Rogers Otis Simmons James Sims LaVannes Squires R. James Strickland Robert Warder Ollie Williamson Claude Wright PLEDGES Ronald Brown Churby Clowers Wilbert Crockett Donald Edwards Milo Farnham Wendell Fawcette David Gray Willie Harriford Jordan Johnson Ralph Jones Charles Kynard Veron Lewis Horace Manley Calvin Rogers Stanley Scott Franklin Shobe Charles Snethen Nathaniel Warder Otis Wheeler Chauncey White Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity was founded at Cornell Uni- versity in 1906. Upsilon Chapter was established at the University of Kansas on December 21, 1917, the twenty- first chapter on the roll and the first of 225 west of the Mississippi. The Annual Halloween Masquerade. Foun- ders ' Day Banquet, Christmas Formal, and Spring Formal are principal social events. Outstanding Alphas on campus include Chester Lewis, President of FACTS, and last year ' s Vice President of the ASC; Wilbur Goodseal, winner of the Lorraine Buehler Oratorical Contest and ASC Representative; LaVannes Squires, varsity basket- ball player; Otis Simmons, Lewis, and Goodseal, mem- bers of the Campus Affairs Committee; Curtis Herron, President of NSA. In the honorary societies are Richard McLain, Phi Beta Kappa; Otis Simmons, Forensic League and Phi Delta Kappa; Benjamin Hammond, La Confrerie; Dorsey Evans, Phi Mu Alpha; LaVannes Squires, Owl Society. OFFICERS OTIS SIMMONS President JAMES BLAIR Vice President WILBUR GOODSEAL Secretary JAMES SIMS Treasurer 151 FRONT ROW: Haine, Willson, Shaw, Slephen.on, Dickin...... .,l,l-i.-.n. H.II-. Kl., -, . Curlri| ht, I.. ,1.1. !..,:.. .1, . I I, ,.,,.... Adam. SECOND ROW: Carter, Mikesell, I ,,,-,.,,. I li, k. ,, l,.-,-i- . Wynkoop, Harron, Carvin, Schmidt, I....I-..M. Munns, l.nndls. Id..-.-. Owing , Boolcy. THIRD ROW: lt,,,-:n.l. Jones Brubaker, Conley, V,-,.n. Hum-. Martin, Deacon, Walker, Trombold, DaUKherly, Crcen, II..--. King, Bowman, Summer.. Blowey. FOI ' RTH ROW: Hay, Stark, Duncan, Johnson, Hammer, Elliott, tlotchki , Mo er, O ' Farrell, Shepler, Brown, Goodman, Scott, Mcl unn, Beauilry, Metx, Conn, Tail, Struble, Carpenter. ALPHA T A U OMEGA Alpha Tau Omega was founded at Virginia Military In- stitute in 1865. Kansas Gamma Mu chapter, one of 115, was chartered September 21, 1901. Representing ATO in varsity athletics are Merlin Gish and Bill Karras. foot- ball ; John Trombold, Bob Toalson, John Wynkoop, and John Brose, baseball; Jim Swim and Merlin Gish, track; and Pat Garvin and Don Willson, tennis. On the social side Alpha Tau Omega held its Double Cross Party in conjunction with Sigma Chi this fall. The next big party- is the Winter Formal. In campus activities Alpha Tau Omega is represented by Art Wahlstedt, President of Alpha Omega; Bill Dickinson, past President of Quill Club; Dick Klassen, David Hills and Bill Dickinson, Sachem ; John Trombold and John Brose. Owl Society ; and Dick Klassen, producer of the Rock Chalk Revue and College Daze. OFFICERS ACTIVES DAVID HILLS ART WAHLSTEDT BOB WUNSCH DICK KLASSEN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Dick Astle John Goodman Paul Owings Jim Barren Barry Green Jim Schmidt John Brose Carlos Guzman-Perry John Shaw A. B. Collom C. W. Haines Bob Stark David Conley Ken Hay Don Stephenson Gale Curtright David Hills Dick Tail Winston Deacon Jack Hoerath Bob Toalson Bob Dirkensheets Charles Johnson John Trombold Bill Dickinson Bill Karras Art Wahlstedt Jim Duncan Dick Klassen Harry White Boh Elliott Mike Landis Don Willson Pat Garvin Bob McCann Bob Wunsch Charles Goldenberg Larry Munns John Wynkoop Jim Adam Bob Beaudry Dick Blowey Jim Bowman Gene Brown Adrian Brubaker Bill Burns Bob Bussard Don Carpenter Spencer Carter PLEDGES Bob Conn Bob Daugherty Jim Furgason Bruce Hotchkiss Archie Jones Jack King Len Martin Jack Metz Bill Mikesell Vern Moser Corky Nason Tom O ' Farrell Dave Ross Dean Scott Jim Shepler Bob Sommers Ted Struble Peter Thompson Darrell Walker 152 153 BATTENFELD HALL RESIDENTS Lyle Anderson Neal Anderson Dirk Backman Melvin Biggart Jim Brock Chuck Church Floyd Clark Alan Coxen Ron Denchfield William Eastwood Merle Ellis Calvin Engelmann DuWayne Englert Paul Enos Jim Gleason Jack Halula Paul Hedrick Ralph Hite Jim Hoffman Kermit Hollingsworth Wallace Jorn Lloyd Kirk Jack Kirsch Don Lehnus John Long Max Lynn Jere Matchett George McCune Bob Megredy Dean Melkus Charles Mitsakis Vaughn Moore John Newton Bill Nofsinger Mack Norris Hillary Oden Bill Pearn John Perry Perry Rashleigh Jack Reams Harold Rinier Gene Rogers Ron Sammons Tom Schafer Charles Schroff Gene Shank Bob Stewart Tom Stewart Bob Terry Ed Wall Alvaro Wille Tom Ying Battenfeld was presented to Kansas University in 1940 by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld as a memorial to their son, John Curry Battenfeld. From its beginning, Battenfeld has been established as a resident scholarship hall. Social highlights of the year are the Christmas Dinner Dance and traditional Gay Nineties Party in the spring. Wheels on the campus include Neal Anderson, member of Sachem, Treasurer of YMCA, and Business Manager of the Rock Chalk Revue; Lyle Anderson, member of Sachem and Treasurer of ASC; John Perry, letterman on the varsity baseball team; Ron Sammons, President of Wesley Foundation, ISA representative to ASC, and member of Statewide Activities; Bob Stewart, Proctor of Battenfeld Hall and Editorial Assistant on the Kansan; Gene Rogers, member of Student Union Activities, engineering school representative to the ASC, and member of Owl Society. OFFICERS CALVIN ENGELMANN President RON SAMMONS Vice President GENE SHANK Secretary LYLE ANDERSON Treasurer I ICON ! ROW: Melkus, Nofsinger, Lehnus, Halula, Rinier, Ellis. SECOND ROW: Perry, Eastwood, McCune, L. Anderson, Engelmann, Nellis, B. Stewart, Shank, Sammons, Yinii, Rashleigh. THIRD ROW: Newton, Schroff, Enos, Kirk, Church, Clark, Terry, Rogers, Wall, Long, Backman. FOl ' RTH ROW: Norris, Kirsch, Lynn, Gleason, Jorn, Biitftarl, Hollingsworlh, ' . Anderson, Matchett, Englert, Mitsakis. FIFTH ROW: Reams, Megredy, T. Stewart, Pearn, Denchfield, Hedrick, Hite, Brock, Coxen, Moore, Schafer. 154 BETA THETA P I Founded at Miami University of Ohio in 1839, Beta Theta Pi established its Kansas chapter in 1873. making Alpha Nu the oldest fraternity chapter at Kl . The Inter- fraternity Council Scholarship Cup is held by the Betas as a result of a grade average of 1.80 for the 1951-52 year. Athletically the Betas started intramurals with an A and both B division football trophies, hill champion- ship in basketball, bowling, and volleyball, and the A division trophy in baseball. Hal Cleavinger is a varsity football starter, Don Smith and Jim Floyd lettered in track, and John Prosser and Ham Lynch lettered in varsity golf. In activities on the hill are Don Woodson. President of Sachem; John Prosser and Bob Reed. Owl Society; Cliff Ratner, President of the Young Republicans Club; and Bill Nulton, President of Delta Sigma Rho. The house won the second place trophy in the Rock Chalk Revue. Dick Altman Jack Atherton Charles Bascom Hugh Bell John Benson Wally Birkenbuel Bob Blanchard Alden Brownlee Jerry Brownlee Hal Cleavinger A. C. Cooke Dale Darnell Bol) Dunne Jack Elvig Don Endarott Jim Floyd Don Franklin Ed Freehurg Roderic Gardner ACTIVES George Gordon Harold Greenleaf Ben Hall Jay Hardy Tom Hunt Herb Irwin Dick Judy Ham Lynch Pat Manning Don McClelland Ted McCoy Dick McEvers Mike McNalley Neil McNeill Jock Miller Al Mulliken Eldon Nicholson Bill Nulton Charles Peterman Innes Phillips Bud Price John Prosser Cliff Ratner Harold Ray Bob Reed Dick Ressler Mark Rivard Gerald Rogers Jerry Scott Don Smith George Smith Hughes Spencer Jim Stewart John Strawn Bob Swisher Jim Teichgraeber Ned Wilson Don Woodson I OFFICERS JERRY BROWNLEE President MARK RIVARD Vice President GEORGE GORDON Secretary NEIL McNEILL Treasurer Dave Convis Dallas I ..l.li- Dave Hill Bob Hobbs Ijirry Horner Don James Don Johnston PLEDGES John Kane Allen Lay Dean Matthews Cleve McCarty Martin McCune JoeMuller Curt Nettles Jim Newby John Rothrock Doug Sheafor John Simpson John Smith Paul Smith FRONT ROW: Matthew , Simpson, Smith, Bell, Hlv.rd, Hall, J. Brownlee. v ,!-. ,,,. Judy, Blanchard, Reler, Cordon. SECOND ROW: M.I ,,n.. Rolh- roek, P. Smith, Horner, Kane, Freeburg, Elvlfc, C. Smith, A. Brownlee, Bennon, Phillips, MrEvern, James, l ' r.. ..r. Nicholson. THIRD ROW: llobbs. Lay, Sheafor, Convis, Hardy, Barrow, Reed, McNelll, McClelland, Endarott, Darnell, Stewart, Muller, Smith, Lapin. I (II II I II ROW: Johnston, N.-II. I-. Wilson, Ray, McCune, Franklin, Miller, Lynch, Mulliken, Price, Spencer, Nulton, Peterman, Hill, II. ,1,1,-, Slrawn, Newby. j FRONT ROW: Clifford, Carrily, Cook, Peterson, Worcester. SECOND ROW: Carver, Pearson, Dryden, Young, Vokamp, Cummin , Shaver, Meeker, Farha, Lohman, Baker. THIRD ROW: Olsen, Hoefener, Henry, Thompson, Thompson, Daniels, Gunderson, Knauss, Wagers, Hessenflow, Cassell, Fowler. FOURTH ROW: Collins, Wittenberg, Weiss, Radford, Bigelow, Mueller, Hoglund, Hill, Redd, Abbott, Slagle, Brunner, Herbolh. FIFTH ROW: T. Krueger, R. Kn.c-u.-r, Allen, McCallum, Heilman, Barley, Miller, M.E .-,,.-. Babrork, Lewis, Gates, Sheridan. DELTA C H I ACTIVES Robert Asbury John Barley Bruce Bigelow Bill Brunner Ron Carver Burleigh Cook Dick Cummings Jack Dryden Al Farha Bob Garrity Don Gates Don Henry Lee Herboth Jim Hoefener Barton Hoglund Don Hursh Earl Knauss Bob Abbott Ronald Allen Robert Babcock Chan Baker Dave Cassell Jacques Clifford Gary Collins Dan Daniels Jack Fowler Harry Gunderson Robert Hessenflow Leo Heilman Dick Hill Roy Krueger Tom Krueger Bud McLeroy Donald Meeker Roger Miller Fred Mueller John Pearson Hans Peterson Glenn Shaver Reuben Short Chester Strehlow Bill Thompson Raymond Voskamp Henry Wittenberg Joe Woods Robert Worcester Keith Young PLEDGES Forrest Hoglund Bill Lewis Bill Lohman Ed McCallum Ronald Olsen Ray Radford Norman Redd Larry Sheridan Marvin Slagle William Thompson Wayne Wagers Wayne Weiss The Kansas Chapter of Delta Chi, established May 19, 1923, is now one of 42 chapters of the national fraternity founded 62 years ago at Cornell University. The out- standing social events of the year include the Christmas Formal, the White Carnation Ball, and the traditional pledge class Honeymoon Party. Prominent in campus activities are such men as Joe Woods, ASC representa- tive; Ray Radford, President of Froshhawks; Ray Vos- kamp, Pledge Trainer of Ku Kus; Bill Thompson, a mem- ber of University Players and radio announcer for KANU; and Lee Herboth and Jim Hoefener, Scarab. On the staff of the Jayhawker are Bob Garrity, Associate Editor, and Wayne Wagers, Copy Editor. In football Chet Strehlow, an outstanding quarterback, has been a member of the varsity squad during the past three years, while on the freshman football team are Norman Redd. Bob Bab- cock and Leo Heilman. OFFICERS DICK CUMMINGS RAY VOSKAMP KEITH YOUNG GLENN SHAVER President Vice President Secretary Treasurer yi V- Wii. ' I FRONT ROW: Pursley, Franklin, D. Anderson, Dietrich, V Harris, White, Kodkcy, Palmer, P. Johnson, Byrd, Barllnn, Itnll.i. Lawrence. SKCOVD ROW; It. Anderson, Rose, Davis, Deering, Dielerich. llawley. Fink, I ..-.. Cues., Bender, llettinfter. Fowler, Gore, Werneke. THIRD ROW: R. Harris, Glenn, Kilev, I ruler. Helfrey, Schwar , MrFarhen, Diefendorf, MrGulre, Johnson, Kerr, I nflerwood, Milrhel!, Burk, Sanborn, Gardner, J. Thorn, Johnston, Whlteside, Nichols. KM Kill ROW: Rehkop, Cool, Pierce, Fo, Loudon, l.n-i,. Walker, Knowles, NeUon, Pemberlon, I ,i, k-,.,,, Kmbree, Devlin, McDonald, Gun- ningham, Schmidt, Jaquith. DELTA T A U Delta Tan Delta, established in 1859 at Bethany College in West Virginia, now has 84 active chapters. The Gamma Tau chapter took over the Keltz Club in 1914. Each year the outstanding Delt parties are the Pledge Paddle Party, the Winter Formal, and the Chinese Formal. In varsity football Delta Tau Delta is represented by Joe Fink, Dick Knowles. Charles Lane, and Cal Bender; in track, Frank Rodkey and Warren Diefendorf. Jack Byrd adds spirit as a KU cheerleader. Three Delts are in Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, and two are representatives on the ASC. Max Embree is a Cadet Colonel of the Air Force ROTC. The Delta Tau Delta chapter won three hill championships and five trophies last year. The precedent has been followed again this year with first place in fraternity homecoming decorations. DELTA Robert Anderson Douglas Barling Clarence Bender Jack Byrd Wallace Buck Joseph Christy John Cox William Cunningham Gary Davis James Devlin Warren Diefendorf Max Emhree Richard Erickson Joe Fink James Fowler Dan Fox Dean Frisbie Glenn Gore ACTIVES ( lark Grimm Paul Guess Jack Hammig Nathan Harris R. C. Harris Keith Hartell Ray Hessling Robert Hettinger Terry Jaquith Don Johnson Phil Johnson John Johnston Jerry Kerr Charles Lane Ray Lawrence Gene Legler Jack Loudon Francis Lyons Dick McDonald Dick McEachen Kent Mitchell Jack Mohler Don Muir Miles Nichols Dick Palmer Lee Pemberton Bill Rinehart Frank Rodkey Jack Rose Kent Sandborn Dick Schmidt Jim Thorne Sonny Underwood Clayton Walker Tom White OFFICERS TOM WHITE FRANK RODKEY PHIL JOHNSON NATHAN HARRIS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Dana Anderson Leo Bulla Dick Brummett Gary Cool Jerry Cox Bob Creighton Charles Dieterich John Fink Charles Franklin PLEDGES Terry Gardner Dick Glenn Don Hawley Don Helfrey Irliy Hughes Jack Kincaid Richard Knowles Micheal McGuire Dick Morrison Jerry Nelson Gregg Pierce T. J. Pursley Joe Schwartz Al Rehkop Gery Riley Duane Werneke Ralph Whiteside 756 757 DELTA U P S I L O N Lorrimer Armstrong Lee Baird Fred Coombs Larry Davenport Ken Davidson Max Deterding Lee Dittmer Chuck Dougherty Hubert Dye Frank Emery Terry Fiske Richard Folck Greg Gamer Mark Gilman Ray Gumm Gene Hall Bob Hamilton Dave Hardy Jim Harris ACTIVES Milan Hart Chuck Henson Harold Henson Charles Hinshaw Merle Hodges Ron Holmes Bill Holt Wes Johnson Bob Kaak Gale Kaff Allen Kelley Dean Kelley Bob Kenney John Konek Richard LaGree Ralph Lamb Bill Landess Ed Maag Dick McCall George McKemey Jim Mears George Michale Charlie Moon Dick Morris Jim Nitz Dick Nordstrom Don Porter Marv Rausch Roger Robertson Don Roskam Jerry Schirmer Don Slawson Byron Springer Al Stallard Jack Stonestreet Jerry Taylor Jay Warner Wes Whitney Jim Wiley Delta Upsilon, installed in 1920, is the only non-secret fraternity at the University. DU was founded in 1834 at Williams College and now has 70 chapters. Among those prominent in school activities are Hubert Dye, President of Owl Society; Gene Hall, President of Alpha Kappa Psi; Mark Gilman, President of University Players; Jay Warner, President of the sophomore class; and Ralph Lamb, Executive Council of Pachacamac. Varsity foot- ball players include all Big Seven defensive halfback John Konek, Jerry Taylor, Merle Hodges, and Bob Alpers. DU basketball players are Captain Dean Kelly, Wes John- son, Wes Whitney, and Larry Davenport. Jack Stone- street is a varsity baseball player. Among the social events are the annual Pledge Smoker, Trophy Girl For- mal, the Two- Yard Hop, and the Spring Formal. Bob Alpers Gene Blasi Bill Brainard Pat Canary Tom Childers Jack Clodfelter Donn Duncan Ted Eekert PLEDGES Ellis Evans John Graham Gordon Mailman Chuck Hedges John Hysom Don Krause Condon Kuhl Jim Lamb Jim Lowe Dick Meyers Phil Parker Jon Sargent Bob Shirley Dick Stahl Brad Tate Chuck Thomas OFFICERS RICHARD McCALL President WILLIAM LANDESS Vice President BYRON SPRINGER Secretary RICHARD FOLCK Treasurer FRONT ROW: Parker, Hardy, Duncan, Krause, Kaff, Stallard, Nordstom, Meyers, A. Kelley. SECOND ROW: Roskam, McKemey, Porter, Folrk, Springer, Landess, MeCall, Dye, Kaak, Michale, Coombtt, Gamer. THIRD ROW: Hysom, Brainard, Davenport, Stonestreet, Whitney, H. Henson, Warner, Johnson, Stahl, Slawson, Deterdinft, Emery, Holt, D. Kelley, C. Henson. FOURTH ROW: Shirley, Nitz, Thomas, Fiske, Moon, J. Lamb, LaCree, Gumm, Robertson, Dittmer, R. Lamb, Hodges, Armstrong, Srhirmer. FIFTH ROW: Hallman, Kuhl, Holmes, Morris, Alpers, Hinshaw, Erkert, Graham, Canary, Hedges, Sargent, Evans, Lowe, Hart, Tate. 158 J O L L I F F E HALL Jolliffe Hall, gift of Mr. 0. Jolliffe of Peabody, Kansas, was reorganized as a university scholarship hall in Sep- tember, 1950. Scholastically, Jolliffe boasts a grade point average of 1.91. the highest men ' s grade average for the 1951-1952 school year. Jolliffe also received second prize for homecoming decorations. In intramural play Jolliffe has collected four trophies in only two years of competi- tion. Representing Jolliffe in campus activities are a member of Sachem, Vice President of SUA, two members of the ASC. and members of numerous honorary and professional fraternities. OFFICERS BILL PATTERSON CHARLES STUBBLEFIELD Vice President CHARLES SPARKS Secretary RAY BORDEN Treasurer RESIDENTS Bill Allen Chet Arterburn Ray Borden Dirk Bowen Bill Brown Don Burton Dick Chatelain Brooke Collison Clay Comfort Melvin Cox Dirk Cummings Boh Denny Hans Deppe Joe Donnigan Tom Downs Don Edmonds Ivo Feuerborn Don Flory Jack Folsom Toby Ford George Gummig Walt Haufler Dennis Henderson Duane Hopkins Bob Huff Bill Hurley Ron Jaderborg Frank Janousek Bill Latimer Carl Leonard Bob Lytle John Mann Bill Martin Don McCoy Bob Morrison Jim Parker Bill Patterson Dennis Richards Vernon Schrag Dick Smiley Charles Sparks Jim Sparks Jerry Speers Leonard Starr Lynn Stewart Tal Streeter Charles Stubblefield Max Thayer Kay Wasson Jim Wyman FRONT ROW: Slreeter, Denny, Spark , Stubblefleld, Patterson, Mrs. Galloway, Mann, Borden, Lytle, Martin, McCoy. SECOND ROW: Folsom, Parker, Comfort, Deppe, Feuerborn, Smiley, Burton, Bowen, Srhrag, Jaderborp, I .lli- .n. Brown, Huff, Wason, Stewart, Ford, Donnigan. THIRD ROW: Hopkins, Henderson, Allen, Kellison. Sparks, Speers, Starr, Hi. li.ir.1-. Wyman, Thayer, Hurley, Haufler, Kindley, Downs, Latimer, Cumminps, Janousek, Cutnmfg, Kdmonds. ( a -or ; j I J J A L. - - xfr -- -X 1 it FRONT ROW: Milbradt, Basye, House, Kravlu, Ma, Hamm, I ,,. . SECOND ROW: Henpen, Carpenter, Buoth, Hill, Clark, Thomas, Chan):, (Clt.-ll. THIRD ROW: SkagK , Vinson, Hughes, Bridge, Stephens, Murray, Jellison. KAPPA ETA KAPPA ACTIVES Russell Basye Forrest Bland Edmund Bridge Maurice Hamm Robert Hill Edward House Lawrence Kravitz Earl Long Lit Ma Eugene Milbradt Warren Murray JimO ' Dell LuizMachado Willard Schmidt Charles Stephens John Thomas PLEDGES Charles Booth Raymond Carpenter Vernon Chang Paul Clark George Frye John Hengen Louis Hughes Kenneth Jellison Lewis McCalmon James Schmitendorf William Skaggs Edward Vinson Kappa Eta Kappa, national professional electrical engi- neering fraternity, was organized at Iowa State College on February 2, 1923. Gamma was founded at KU on February 2, 1924. In campus activities are Ed House, President of men ' s Glee Club, KUWF men ' s group, Treas- urer of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, Engineering Council, and Cadet Commander NROTC; Larry Kravitz, Secretary of IRE, Engineering Council, Owl Society, and Eta Kappa Nu; Warren Murray, Treasurer of Sigma Pi Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, and Sigma Tau; Lit Ma. Secretary-Treasurer of Engineering Council, Sigma Tau, Tau Beta Pi, and Eta Kappa Nu; and Jim O ' Dell, Sigma Tau. John Thomas is President of IRE and a member of Eta Kappa Nu and Sigma Tau; Charles Booth is Secretary of AIEE; Vernon Chang is Treasurer of Hawaiian Club and IRE. OFFICERS EDWARD HOUSE President RUSSELL BASYE Vice President LAWRENCE KRAVITZ Secretary LIT NlNG MA Treasurer 159 ' FRONT ROW: Knorp, Footer, II. .ill. Buller, O ' Brien, Mer. O.I.-. Smith, Rirkel, F. M-..M. Witt, I. .11.,,.,. Calvin. SECOND ROW: Sullivan, Brown, Dunn, Derge, Getto, Church, Little, Rathsaek, Braditreel, Tod, House, Wynn, MrF.arhen, Srhanze, Sv alm, Carter, Stoeppelwerth, MarCee. THIRD ROW: Prlnile, Cramer, N. Rooney, Wtwood, Cheilnut, Hl oa, Dade, Whllehead, Sherman, Mclntonh, Fare, Klndlg, Spradley, Ellworlh, Myern, Creer, Barker, Stepheni, Armntrong. FOURTH ROW: B. Rooney, Buck, Slater, Aberrromble, Markley, Wagoner, Anderoon, Brure, Tebow, Stotkhaiii, T. Wll.on, Charle , Coc, MrClenny, Chlmentl, Ogg, Cole, Coi. KAPPA SIGMA Kappa Sigma social fraternity, established December 10, 1869, has 124 chapters in the United States and Canada. Gamma Omicron was chartered May 18, 1912. The Red Dog Inn, a costume party; the Black and White, a winter dinner dance; and the Stardust Ball, a spring formal, are the main Kappa Sigma social functions. Varsity athletes include Arch Unruh, Duane Unruh, Rex Sullivan, and Orville Poppe, football; Dal Chestnut, swimming; and Bill Brown, track. Walt Rickel is president of Pachacamac and Vice President of the Interfraternity Council; Duane Unruh is K-Club President; Myron McClenny is a mem- ber of the Owl Society, and a cheerleader; Bob Walker is President of the Young Democrats. Jim Anderson Jerry Armstrong Bob Bradstreet Bill Brown Ken Buller John Calvin Marvin Carter Maurice Casey Ual Chestnut Tom Church Walt Cole Joe Cox Ernest Dade Dick Foster Charles Gillam Kee Greer ACTIVES Harold Hixson Bill House Jim Hyatt Bob Kline Steve Little Jay Markley Myron McClenny Bill McEachen Holland Mclntosh Tony Merz Dave Myers Steve O ' Brien Don Ochs Orville Poppe Don Pringle Herb Rathsack Walt Rickel Bernard Rooney Jean Schanze Dick Smith Calvin Spradley Bill Stephens George Stoeppelwerth Rex Sullivan Rod Swaim Arch Unruh Duane Unruh Tom West wood Frank Wilson Tom Wilson Cecil Witt Ken Yunker . ' - OFFICERS DON OCHS DUANE UNRUH TOM CHURCH STEVE O ' BRIEN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Jack Abercrombie Paul Barker Jack Bruce Bill Buck Hugh Charles Ed Chimenti A. D. Coe Ted Cramer Bob Derge PLEDGES John Dunn Leon Ellsworth Claude Fare Dick Getto Jerry Kindig Daryll Knorp Ed MacGee Harry Ogg Noel Rooney Tom Sherman Dick Slater Don Stewart Glenn Stockham Bob Tebow Jim Toft Joe Wagoner Jerry Whitehead Howard Wynn 160 11,1 LAMBDA C H I ALPHA ACTIVES Clark Akers Don Anderson William Atkinson Frank Austin Kenneth Beardsley Robert Becker Charles Bether Bill Biberstein James Bodenheimer Gerald Boyd William Chancy Jess Charles Kellem Childers Kenneth Cox Mick Denny Paul Fore George Fraser Rex Hargis William Heitholt Louis Helmreich Robert Hollingsworth Delbert Howerton Eugene Johnstone Morris Kay Robert Kay Bradley Keith Darrell Kellogg Paul Kliewer Gary Lehman Roscoe Littell James Mathes Phillip Owen Sam Perkins Ben Phillips Joe Renner Robert Richardson Kent Shearer Charles Shrewsbury William Smith James York Lambda Chi Alpha, founded in 1909 at Boston Univer- sity, now has 141 active chapters. The Kansas chapter was commissioned as Zeta Iota in 1947. The Show Boat Party, Crescent Ball, and White Rose Formal are the main social functions. Kent Shearer has been elected to Phi Beta Kappa and is Chief Justice of the Student Court. Darrell Kellogg is AFROTC Wing Commander. Phil Owen is a member of Pachacamac and Owl Society. Paul Kliewer is President of Phi Chi, medical fraternity, while Roy Bennett is Vice Chairman of Young Republicans. Jim Bodenheimer and George Fraser are members of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary engineering fraternity. In varsity athletics are Morris Kay, football; Bill Heitholt, basket- ball; Bill Biberstein, track; Sam Perkins, Co-captain of swimming team; Charles Bether, Phil Owen, Don Ander- son, and Mick Denny, baseball. PLEDGES Bert Baker Roy Bennett Bill Bilderback George Detsios Bob Hougland Alex Masson Merwin Porter Roger Roark Dave Schwenk Larry Winter Don Witcher OFFICERS GERALD BOYD CHARLES SHREWSBURY BEN PHILLIPS GEORGE FRASER President Vice President Secretary Treasurer FRONT ROW: Howerton, Charles, Helmreich, Phillips, Fraser, Shrewsbury, Boyd, Smith, Bilderbaek, Perkins. SECOND ROW: Baker, Bennett, Porter, Beardsley, Cos, Becker, Fore, Lehman, Kay, Richardson, Hollingsworth, Kellogg, Owen. THIRD ROW: Bodenheimer, Witcher, Schwenk, ' Googenheim, Masson, Biberstein, Hougland, Winter, Roark, Hargis, Renner, Detsios. n r 162 oa BD UU 1 PEARSON HALL Pearson Hall, the newest men ' s scholarship hall, was com- pleted in September, 1952, and presented to the university by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Pearson of Corsicana, Texas. Upperclass residents of Pearson are former members of Sterling-Oliver Hall, which had the second highest grade average among men ' s organized houses last year. Pearson has Ebbe Poulsen from Denmark as this year ' s foreign student. Leaders from Pearson in campus activities in- clude Don Horttor, ASC representative, member of Sachem, and member of the Executive Council of FACTS; Lewis Clum, President of ISA; Rodger Vaughan, Presi- dent of the University Band; Dale Moore. President of the A Cappella Choir; Bob Crisler, Vice President, and Jim Miller, Secretary of Froshawks. RESIDENTS OFFICERS BOB LAMB ELDON CLARK A. G. ARNOLD WAYNE BLOUNT President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Dick Anderson A. G. Arnold Levi Barnes Bill Itrln maim Wayne Blount John Boerger Bill Brehm Darrell Brown Paul Cecil Eldon Clark Louis Clum Bob Crisler Al Dean J im Detter Bill Doyle Rupert Dunn Bill Farrar Dick Foster Jep Garland John Garland Bill Hampton Eddie Harsch Richard Hazlett LeRoy Herold Jon Holman John Holsinger Donald Horttor Bud Kent Bob Lamb Jim Lavery Veryl Mayberry James Miller Dale Moore Bill Oborny Paul Pankratz Jack Pickering Ebbe Poulsen Jean Richter Charles Schafer Gene Schmitz Bob Shoemake Ely Shrauner Bob Skinner Don Smith Gerald Stone Wilfred Strain Jay Templin Rodger Vaughan Eddie Wakeland Bud Walker Darrell Webber Otto Wullschleger FRONT ROW: Wakeland, Brown, Clum, -. h. ,(. Lamb, Clark, Arnold, III,, MI, i. Vauithan, -.limit . Shoemake. -I i i) li ROW: I: ,.,,.. Lavery, Holmun, Dean, Mayberry, Pankratz, Smith, Webber, Roerger, ilarsrh, Rehrmann, Anderson, Templin, Hortlor. THIRD ROW: Detter, Skinner, Crisler, Richter, Dunn, Pickering, Poulsen, Cecil, Stone, Holsinger, Herold, Je. Garland, Kent. I OI II I II ROW: Foster, Jo. Garland, Miller, Shrauner, Moore, Hampton, Hazletl, Oborny, Walker, Rrehm, Strain, Farrar, Doyle. FRONT ROW: Card, R. Olson, Chancy, Patterson, Davidson, Hair, Murphy, Belzer, MacLeod, Carlson. SECOND ROW; Morrow, McCuire, Tretbar, Mill,,,. ,. Kirby, Ward, Hamilton, Peterson, Kliwer, Boe, Binyon, Denison. THIRD ROW: Hicks, Ambler, Nason, Lewin, Benes, Reuber, Drevets, J. Olson, M, ,.!,,,. Walker, Fee, Hall. P H I BETA P I ACTIVES David Belzer Kernie Binyon John R. Boe Daniel Boone Wallace Cox Ken C. Davidson Terry Denison Dale Doubek Curtis Drevets Chester Fee Howard Card William Gertson Walter W. Hair Robert Ha milton Van L. Hicks Norman R. Hillmer Robert Jacobs Le Johnson Herbert Karbank Merlin Kirby John Kliver Walter Lewin Don MacLeod John May Thomas McGuire Malcolm Morrow Don Mosher Marvin Murphy Herbert Nason Terry Neal Sherman Nichols John Olson Robert Olson William Patterson Gene Peterson Melvin D. Reuber Don Saunders Gilbert Sechrist Harold Tretbar Sam Walker John Ward Harry Webb The Phi Beta Pi Medical fraternity was founded in 1893 at Western Pennsylvania Medical College. At the present time it boasts 36 active chapters. Alpha Iota chapter was established at Kansas University on March 18, 1910. The chapter sponsors the Noble P. Sherwood Lectureship, the only lectureship at Kansas University honoring a living faculty member. Phi Beta Pi maintains one of the finest medical libraries in Lawrence. Designed to aid and stimu- late medical education, the library is the center of the fraternity ' s scholarship program. The fraternity has con- sistently maintained scholastic honors and has still ma n- aged to enjoy an informal party and the traditional Spring Formal. OFFICERS Carl Ambler Zdenek Benes Ernie Chaney PLEDGES Harold Cogswell Charles W. Hall J. Ruddell WALTER HAIR MARVIN MURPHY DAVID BELZER KEN DAVIDSON Archon Vice Archon Treasurer Secretary 763 FRONT ROW: Haar, Charles, Chownlne, Stipe, Kllewer, Keller, Twente, Besharal, Flinner, Torres. SECOND ROW: llawley, Cos.man, Reuxrh, Pfenninger, Pokorny, Hocker, Carpenter, Barhus, Stanley, Parker, Hoadley, Bare, Cramm. THIRD ROW: Malone, Marlun, MrCormlrk, Kaufman, Sleeper, Simpson, Decker, Kalber, Gibson, Wilson, Hunsley, Trent, Degner, Cooney. HI C H Phi Chi, largest medical fraternity with over 35,000 ac- tive members, was founded on March 31, 1889, at the University of Vermont. The local chapter received its charter May 22, 1915. This year Kappa Upsilon of Phi Chi is in its 37th year. Annually the chapter has an informal fall party, the Christmas Formal, and the Hypo Hop in the spring. The majority of the time, however, is spent in more scholastic pursuits. As a token of this effort the Eben J. Carey Award for achievement in basic anatomy is presented each year by the grand chapter to the most deserving student in each of its 54 chapters. Also in this line are presented the C. B. Johnson and R. W. Everson Awards. The chapter maintains a complete and up-to-date medical and pre-medical library. OFFICERS PAUL KLIEWER LELAND KELLER ELMO TWENTE DAVE HAGAR President Vice President Secretary Treasurer ACTIVES Jalal Besharat Nelson Bachus Chester Bare Roy Carpenter Jess Charles Oscar Chowning Joe Cooney Price Cussman Russell Cramm Don Decker Bob Flinner Beryl Gibson Dave Hagar Wes Hall Clyde Hawley Bill Hoadley John Hocker Perry Huntsley Douglas Kalber Ed Kaufman James Degner Leland Keller Paul Kliewer Eugene MoCormick Eugene Malone Norman Mariun Wayne Parker Mark Pfenninger Bol) Pokorny Clifford Reuse h Ken Simpson Don Sleeper Ken Stanley Dan Stipe Alphonso Torres Chester Trent Elmo Twente Pete Weins Jim Wilson Bill Woodward Otto Wullschleger PLEDGES 164 165 P H I DELTA T H E T A Nichols Agnos Robert Ball John Biegert Jerry Bogue B. H. Born Jack Boyd Jack Brand Arthur Brewster Carl Brust Hugh Buchanan Sunny Burge Jack Campbell Terry Carle Mike Chalfant Jack Dicus Charles Dockhorn Rodney Dyerly Darrell Fanestil John Fifield Robert Forsyth Jack Frost Carl Ade Robert Allison Steven Brier William Brown Richard Coen David Burgett Richard Butler David Dickey James Fee James Foster Michael Getto Dean Graves Richard Hadlev ACTIVES Robert Galliart Larry Gish Larry Greiner Roger Heiskell Theodore Hogan Lloyd Hollinger Jay Holstine Duane Houtz Richard Hughes James Ireland Frank Jennings Phillip Kassebaum Charles Keith Harold Kendig Charles Kimbell Stuart Knutson Lewis Leonard Jerry Lewis George Lund Thomas Lyons Robert Mehl Max Merrill PLEDGES John Handley Fritz Heath David Hogan Jack Hawkinson Ken Harper Donald Hess Theodore Ice J. P. Jones George Kinney Sandifer Markham Donald Martin Thomas Matthews Edward Miller Glenn Opie Harlan Parkinson Alan Peschka Lewis Phillips Ben Platter David Platter Frank Priest Bill Pulliam Scott Ritchie Peter Rush Thomas Ryther Elaine Scheideman Dale Scheideman Richard Sheldon Burwell Shepard John Simons Gad Smith Richard Smith Fred Thompson Virgil Wenger James Miller Thomas Phoenix George Remsberg Robert Richards Albert Roberts David Ryther Richard Sandifer Donald Sifers Max Straube Howard Sturdevant Mike Wayland James Weber Leslie Wenger Founded nationally on December 26, 1848, at Miami Uni- versity, Oxford, Ohio, Kansas Alpha, now one of 115 active chapters, came to Mount Oread in 1882. The chapter ranked among the upper three in scholarship last year. Well-known names on this year ' s varsity squad are Jerry Bogue and George MrKonic. On the basketball team the Phis are represented by B. H. Born. Besides being a member of Sachem, Phil Kassebaum is this year ' s President of Student Union Activities. Other Phi activi- ties include Bob Ball and Dick Sheldon. Owl Society; Harlan Parkinson, Student Union Executive Board; John Biegert, President of YMCA; Bob Ball. President of the junior class; Dick Sheldon, President of Forensic League. Major parties are the Harvest Party, Christmas Formal, and Southern Mess. Nationally, Phi Delt has more all- Americans and more men in Who ' s Who than any other fraternity. OFFICERS ELAINE SCHEIDEMAN President RICHARD SHELDON Reporter VIRGIL WENGER Treasurer BOB BALL Rush Chairman FRONT ROW: D. Ryther, Foster, Hawkinson, Brown, Miller, Matthews, Roberta, Kinney, Wayland, Miller, Graves. SECOND ROW: Holsline, Fanestil, D. Scheideman, Jennings, Priest, Heiskell, B. Mrheideman, Hutihes, Brand, Ball, Houtz, Lyons, Harper, Platter, Thompson. THIRD ROW: Campbell, Sturdevant, McGuire, Fifield, Mammel, V. Wenger, Greiner, Buchanan, Bom, Parkinson, Smith, L. Wenger, Dyerly, Carle, Hudley, Getlo, Phoenix, Lewis. FOURTH ROW: Markham, Ire, Butler, Opie, Keith, Platter, Agnos, Rush, Frost, Ritchie, Lund, Ireland, Kassebaum, Smith, Jones, Knutson, Brust. FIFTH ROW: Galliart, Kendig, Dickey, Ade, Coen, Gish, Bogue, D. Hogan, Richards, Fee, Kimbell, Brier, T. Hogan, Burgett, Heath, Tom Ryther. P H I GAMMA DELTA Pi Deuteron chapter of Phi Gamma Delta, one of 81 chapters, was founded at the University of Kansas in 1881. Charlie Hoag is President of the senior class and Co-captain of the football team. Other members of the team include Gil Reich, George Helmstadter, Warren Woody, Paul Leoni, Bob Mayer, and Jack Rodgers. Dean Smith. Charlie Hoag. and Kverett Dye hold down posi- tions on the basketball squad. John Riederer captains the track team, while Dean Smith, Harlan Hise, and Al Hed- strom have important spots on the baseball, golf, and tennis teams, respectively. Ralph Kelley is President of the Interfraternity Pledge Council, and Humphreys Hodge is Treasurer of the freshman class. Keith Mac-Ivor is a member of Sachem, and Ken Dam is a member of Owl Society and Editor of the Jayhawker. Last year Phi Gam won hill championships in A and B football. A softball. swimming, and the Intramural Speaking Contest, and fraternity championship in C basketball. OFFICERS JIM NELI.IS DWIGHT HARRISON BOB SMITH BILL MICHENER President Treasurer Secretary Historian Walter Ash John Ashley Jack Barr Wally Beck Neill Buie John Bunten Norman Capps Boh Carpenter Tony Gate Larry Cheatham Jerry Clark Boh Clawson Boh Costello Ben Dalton Ken Dam John Dougherty Everett Dye Gerald Garrett Paul Gordon Don Bishop Dick Blair Don Burnett Dick Dennis Jerry Foley La Verne Fiss Boh Gelvin Bob Grogger Gordon Hamilton Humphreys Hodge ACTIVES Sutton Graham Dwight Harrison Harlan Hise Charlie Hoag Jerry Jester G. H. Jones Bill Krehbiel Jack Landon Paul Leoni Keith Mat-Ivor Bob Manion Bob Mayer Joe McClelland John McGilley Bill Michener Tom Morton Jim Nellis Jim O ' Rourke Bill Payne PLEDGES Paul Hunt Warren Johnston Ralph Kelley Al Kul n it in. in Bill I i i i .ii ' Bob Martin John McFarland CapMiddlekauff Loren Morris Mark Nardyz Wayne Orlowske Gil Reich Jack Rein John Riederer Jack Rodgers Bob Roth Carl Schutz Don Shawver Jack Shears Bob Smith Dean Smith Dick Smith Norm Steanson Lon Thomas George Wainscott Fritz Widick Warren Woody Wayne Woody Jack Wolfe Pal Zimmerman Jim Richard Dan Robison Jerrv Rosenlund Dick Rumsey Ethan Smith Don Stevens Bob Stinson Allen Sweeney Steve Thorpe Gary Welch FRONT ROW: Costello, O ' Rourke, Sweeny, Keller, Martin, Crogiter, Steven , Richard, V.r.l,,. Landon, E. Smith. SECOND ROW: Dougherty, Roth, Hamilton, Larrabee, Michener, Hein, ellts, B. Smith, Harrison, Bunlen, Roblson, Welrh, Wolfe. THIRD ROW: Burnett, Wainsrolt, Bishop, I i--. Rosen- lund, Morris, Steanson, Krehbiel, Slinson, Cheatham, Buie, Ruese, Dam, Woody, Maclvor, Payne. I ol Hill ROW: Graham, lli-e, Barr, McGilley, Capps, Rumsey, MrClelland, Schutz, D. Smith, Johnston, Shawver, Carpenter, Garretl, Hodge, Mtddlekauff, Gclvin, D. Smith. FIFTH ROW: Hunt, D. Blair, Manion, Kobbeman, Dalton, Foley, Widick, Riederer, Clark, McFarland, Ash, Cale, Shears, Clawson, Jones, Dennis, Orlowske, Dye, B. Blair. FRONT ROW: Halligan, Loflus, O ' Neill, Lysaui ' ht, Jensen, Ridder, Greeley, Mercier, Smii-i B a, Laughlin, Jo. Calbrailh. SECOND ROW: Pickerlll, Verbrugge, Helmstetter, Remark, Arkermann, Weishaar, Ruder, Hall, Clark, Dixon, McHugh, Smirl. THIRD ROW: Hadel, Ji. Calbrailh, Slavic, Huerter, MrConigle, Hegarty, Meysenburg, B. Reiland, H. Reiland, Schmid, McDonald, Rebein. FOURTH ROW: Menard, -.HUT. Schauf, George, Sohmen, Tkach, Slonek, Polsk, Herzog, Dilley, Speckin, Larson, Sabatini, Ferson, Budrich. P H I KAPPA ACTIVES Ray Ackermann Jim George John Greeley Bill Hadel Hap Halligan Larry Helmstetter Bob Herzog Quent Huerter Don Jensen Marv Keller Bob Laughlin Larry Loftus Jerry Lysaught Dick McGonigle Larry Mercier Bob Meysenburg Bob Rebein Harry Reiland Don Remark Tom Ridder Hearn Ruder Frank Sabatini Hank Sauer Don Schauf Al Schmid Ray Slavic Steve Smiriga Gene Stark Steve Tkach Dick Verbrugge Marv Weishaar Joe Wimsatt Epsilon chapter of Phi Kappa, national social fraternity for Catholic men, was founded at Mount Oread in 1915, and since its inception has held a place among the pro- gressive campus leaders of the University. Possessed of a beautiful home in West Hills, the fraternity, through its members, presents a common plane to understanding and action. As diversified as it is singular, Epsilon numbers her men from New Jersey to California, Minnesota to Oklahoma. Outstanding actives include Joe Wimsatt, former President of the Interfraternity Council; Frank Sabatini, starting fullback of the Jayhawk eleven ; Larry Helmstetter, President of the Newman Club; and Jerry Lysaught, past Editor of the K-Book and K-Union. PLEDGES Dud Budrich Bernie Clark Bill Dilley Bill Dixon Frank Ferson Jim Galbraith Joe Galbraith Bill Hegarty Larry Larson Jack McDonald Jim McHugh Don Menard Gene O ' Neill Jack Pickerill Al Polski Bob Reiland Bill Smirl Bernie Sperkin OFFICERS TOM RIDDER DON JENSEN LARRY MERCIER JOHN GREELEY President Vice President Secretary Treasurer 167 J . ' . 1 1 . FRONT ROW: Baker, K, ... r. Ira, Hiskey, Arnold, Ball. SECOND ROW: Speckman, Young, Plenon, Dunmlre, Slmpon, Mrrrer. C..HI.-M. Fotopoulos, Prall, Hovey, Griesser, I i-.i,l,i-.. THIRD ROW: Ambler, Fligg, Renlek, Lauterbarh, Ellioll, Hamiard, Stringer, MrElroy, Padiell, Haydon, I ,. k ..,i. Tucker, Poll. FOURTH ROW: Petitt, Rlley, Jurden, Nannlnga, Tlderman, McCallliler, Wallace, Camlin, Bishop, Engelland, Enfleld. FIFTH ROW: Roger . Keen, Griffith, Grlmei, Well , Durham, Caiebeer, Fogle, Jones, Berglund, lo It, Wilson, Kane. P H I KAPPA Phi Kappa Psi was founded on February 19, 1852, at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. Kansas Alpha, established at KU in 1876, was the second fra- ternity on the campus. Prominent in campus activities are such Phi Psi ' s as Damon Simpson, Sachem; Ben McCallister and Carl Ambler, Owl Society; Jim Graves, Student Union Operating Board; Bud Roberts, Athletic Board; Milton Wallace, cheerleader; Max Murray, Rock Chalk Revue ; and Carroll Speckman, Treasurer of Alpha Kappa Psi. In varsity athletics Bud Roberts, Marvin Rengel and John Griesser play football ; Rich Young and Gary Padgett play basketball; Pete Fotopolous is the top man on the tennis team; and Ed Tucker and Dick Gamlin are slated for action on the swimming team. The out- standing social events of the year are the Forty-Niner Party, Winter Formal and the Annual Spring Formal. OFFICERS RICH MERCER President DAMON SIMPSON Vice President FRED DUNMIRE Secretary AUG LAUTERBACH Treasurer P S I Carl Amliler John Barber JoeCompton Fred Dunmire Warner Eisenbise Pete Fotopoulos Brooks Cauert Jim Graves John Greisser Bob Grimes Frank Haggard Lee Hamilton Bob Hovey Ron Hubert Jerry Jurden Bob ' Kniphtly August Lauterbach Dick Arnold Dick Baker Fred Ball Jim Berglund Bob Bishop Charles Casebeer Dean Durham Jim Elliott Ed Enfield Dwight Engelland Ken Fligg Ed Fogle Dick Gamlin Bill Griffith Dick Haydon Be.-nell Hiskey ACTIVES John McBride Ben McCallister Rich Mercer Max Murray Gary Padgett Phil ' Petitt Ray Pierson Tom Pratt Marvin Rengel Bill Renick Dave Riley Bud Roberts Damon Simpson Jerry Smith Merlin Stickelber Bill Taylor PLEDGES Marvin lott Bob Jackson Tom Jones Dave Kane Ken Keene Mick Kesner Harold McElroy John Nanninga Tom Pott Larry Rogers Stan Stringer Mark Tiderman Ralph Wallace Leon Wells Dave Wilson 168 169 P H I KAPPA SIGMA ACTIVES Bob Atteberry Cleo Beougher Bob Brown Grant Canaday Gene Ewy Gordon Ewy Gil Fayette John Forman Ken Geier Craig Grow Doug Harlan Dick Higgins John McCullough Bob McMullen Larry Burl John Davenport Jorge Elliott Homer Foutz John Henderson Lee Holland Dick Kline Steve Milne Don Mosher Jerry Murphy John Olson Marvin Pool Sam Prochaska Thurston Smith Jim Swisher Bill Tobler Gordon Toedman Bill Wilson Bob Wilson Tom Woods PLEDGES Seth McClure Paul McWilliams Crandall Melia Chuck Peterson Rex Schenk Larry Waller Phi Kappa Sigma was founded in 1850 at the University of Pennsylvania. Beta Beta, one of the newer of 44 Phi Kap chapters in the United States and Canada, was estab- lished at the University of Kansas in 1947. Social high- lights are the Black and Gold Formal. Dream Girl Formal, and the Sewers of Paris Party. Bill Wilson is President of the All Student Council. Bob Hantla represents Phi Kappa Sigma in varsity football, and Sam Prochaska is Secretary of Delta Theta Pi. OFFICERS BILL TOBLER President JIM SWISHER Vice President THURSTON SMITH Secretary BOB ATTEBERRY Treasurer FRONT ROW: Burl, Woods, Fayelte, Ewy, Tobler, Atteberry, Swisher, Murphy. SECOND ROW: Kline, Me Williams, Bruwn, Peterson, Smith, Henderson Davenport, Milne, Harlan, Crow. THIRD ROW: Schenk, Holland, Melia, Toedman, Mosher, Olson, Elliott, Higiiins, Waller. 170 1 P H I KAPPA T A U Phi Kappa Tau, founded in 1906 at Miami University, Oxford. Ohio, is one of the largest national fraternities with seventy active chapters. Beta Theta chapter was founded at Kansas in the fall of 1948 and has since initiat- ed more than 70 men. Outstanding social events on the chapter calendar are the Waterfront Wobble, the Fall Formal, and the Dream Girl Formal. Beta Theta takes especial pride in the number of its men elected to hon- orary societies. Gene Haley was Cadet Colonel of the Air Force KOTC last year. The chapter house at 1408 Tennessee has formerly been occupied by several fraterni- ties on the Kansas campus. ACTIVES OFFICERS JERRY RUSHFELT NORMAN WEARE JOHN NANGLE BOB BREWER President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Robert Brewer Gary Buehrer Edward Campbell George Corbett Leland Duvall Lawrence Ferrell Harry Fuller Euaene Haley Raymond Hower Donald Johnson Warren Jungk Fritz Kauffman Vern Lemon Robert ( nnkliii William Copple Larry ( Cunningham Leonard Dexter Richard Fredrickson William Hewitt Marvin Holley Wally Johnson Paul l.,umiTin,iri Dennis Marr Thomas Milne Earl Merriman John Nangle William Nicholson Donald Nielsen Kenneth Priaulx Jerry Rushfelt Jerry Sherman Courtney Sloan Norman Weare John Worrall Robert Taylor PLEDGES Dee Munger Richard Newbold Robert Reynolds Norman Smiley Jack Smith Dale Sutton Stuart Walker Jack Weathered John Werling FRONT ROW: II., I.-., i .,.,. h.-ll. Nannie, We.r, Rushfelt, Brewer, Copple, Langerman, Buehrer, Sullon. SECOND ROW: Walker, Merriman, ! ,,,., II. i.nkliii. Weathered, Fuller, Marr, Jungk, Werllng, Cunningham, Priauli, Taylor. THIRD ROW: Johnson, Munger, Fredrirknon, Ferrell, Smith, Sloan, Dexter, Corbett, Kauffman, Lemon, Nicholson, Newbold, Smiley. ei v A v H FRONT ROW: Palmer, Mason, Evans, Johnston, Seever, Hicks, Parlen, Welsh. SECOND ROW: Skinner, Simon, Ross, Ulrich, Johnston, Zimmerman, Schmidt, L. Martin, Sharpnack, Foree, Wegert. THIRD ROW: Louk, Mir-. I,. Calverl, Ireland, Hammond, Baker, Zahn, Bills, Passmore, Bouse, Glirk, Jarrell, Dameron, Clark. FOURTH ROW: Dickens, Lambert, Mitchell, Sellars, Sullivan, Bauerle, Johnson, Pontius, Foster, Norman, Sneegas, Leibengood, C. Martin. FIFTH ROW: C. Kirkpatrick, Frazier, Rooney, Considine, Christie, Talley, Snook, Johnson, Moore, McDonald, Hazletl, Foyle. P I KAPPA ALPHA ACTIVES David Baker Richard Bills Joe Brown Walter Calvert John Christie Chapin Clark Dean Considine Dana Dowd Jerry Foree Richard Foster Jack Click Robert Gray Jimmie Grey Walter Hicks Duane Hirsch V. J. Johnson Bruce Johnston Bruce Kirkpatrick Charles Kirkpatrick Cliff Lambert Dana Leibengood Charles Lindberg Frank Louk Lloyd Martin Leon Mason Ned Rooney James Ross William Schmidt Richard Sellars Charles Shanahan James Sharpnack Orrie Snook Robert Talley Leland Tatum Allen 1 hompson William Turner Lee Ulrich John Welsh George Zahn Max Zimmerman Pi Kappa Alpha was founded on March 1, 1868, at the University of Virginia. Beta Gamma chapter came to Kansas in 1914. The Sweat Sock Stomp, Christmas-iri- Dixie Formal, and the Dream Girl Formal are so cial high- lights. During the summer the chapter was host to the National Convention of Pi Kappa Alpha held in Kansas City, Missouri. At this time Miss Sara Starry of KU was crowned National Dream Girl of Pi K A. Pi Kaps prom- inent on the hill include Gordon Moore. Distinguished Military Student and Cadet Major; Richard Bills, Adver- tising Manager of the Student Directory; Bruce Johnston. President of Disciple Student Fellowship; Chapin Clark. Phi Beta Kappa; John Welsh, Business Manager of the Student Directory; and Paul Johnston, member of the gymnastics team. In varsity athletics the chapter is rep- resented by Walt Hicks, baseball, and John Welsh, swimming. George Bauerle Jerry Bouse Doug Dameron Ronald Dickens Elton Evans Robert Foyle Homer Frazier Richard Hammond Robert Hazlett PLEDGES Robert Ireland Kos Jarrell David Johnson Paul Johnston Clyde Martin Charles McDonald Sandy Mitchell Gordon Moore Lloyd Palmer Marvin Parten William Passmore Dean Pontius Galen Seevers Donald Sneegas William Sullivan Art Wegert James Norman OFFICERS RICHARD BILLS President LEE ULRICH Vice President BRUCE JOHNSTON Secretary MAX ZIMMERMAN Treasurer ' - HdMJfe. ' T F5u. 171 FRONT ROW: Perkins, Stamper, Meier, Chandler, Wolfe, Worley, II ,.n.--. Taylor, Carrier. Price. SECOND ROW: -i. m. I II.-. IP ,-,-. Humphrey!, S. Smith, Bell, Liggett, Cth, Cordell, Alexander, P. Smith, Goodwin, Taylor, DeVry. THIRD ROW: Slgler, Sariient, Welch, Heath, Mi-Mullen, Perry, Rich, Nelson, Domed, I I.II.I-. Sommero, C. Smith, F. Smith, Brown, Holiday, ... I, ,,,,,. FOI RTII ROM : I nilrrxood, M..I. ,-- ,. Allen, Burke, WelllnK, WiUun, Robbins, Mill. ml. Sllth, Ferguson, CraiK, Barron, Daw.on, T. Davl., MrKee, Henon. FIFTH ROW: Salisbury, Ball, Hanfiart, Van Meter, Gerllnn, Winlerrowd, Duggan, G. Buchanan, Ilreidenlhal, Thornberry, Fulton, Cameron, Ilo en. Hull, Glenn, Campbell, DeGoler. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded March 9. 1856. at the University of Alabama. SAE consists of 130 active chap- ters and a total membership of 80.000 brothers. Kansas Alpha celebrated its 50th anniversary this year. Over 700 alumni attended the weekend celebration and John Mose- ley, national secretary, presided. This year the Sig Alphs are also celebrating the completion of their new chapter house. SAE is represented in varsity football by Jerry Robertson, Frank Cindrich. Hugh Armstrong, and Wayne Woolfork. The annual social calendar includes the Spring Formal, and the Winter Formal, a costume party, the Violet Hunt, and Founders ' Day Celebration, and is cli- maxed in May by the Plantation eekend. OFFICERS WILSON LIGGETT MAX WHITSON FRED BELL DON HUMPHREYS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Earl Alexander Jim Allen Hugh Armstrong Dan Barron Fred Bell Jack Billingsley Dirk Bowen Hick Cameron AI Campbell Dirk Carrier Dave Cordell Owen Craig Dave Davis Jerry Dawson Bill DeVry Bill Dorsch Phil Anderson John Ball Bill Bigham Dick Breidenthal Conboy Brown Gene Buchanan Buddy Burke Boh Childs Tom Davis Jim DeGoler Jim Hadley ACTIVES Lee Duggan Don Kill- Ward Fergeson Bob Fulton Hank Gerling Wesley Gish Jack Glenn Lynn Goodwin John Hordyk Don Humphreys Jerry Jacol son ( larl Klobassa Wilson Liggett Bob Meier John Mill ml George Nelson PLEDGES Bob Haggart Andy Hall Bob Haynes Bob Heath Bill Henson Bill Holiday- Mike McKee Joe McMullen Dan Rich Dick Sargent Nelson Perkins Jim Perry Bill Price Tom Richmond Dick Robbins Jerry Robertson John Salisbury Reinhold Schmidt P. K. Smith Stan Smith Dave Sommere Bill Stewart ( Charles Taylor Max Whitson Joe Wolfe P. K. Worley C. A. Smith Frank Smith Harlan Stamper Ed Stith Jim Taylor Bill Thornberry John Underwood Sam VanMeter Tom Welch Bill Welling Jim Wilson I 172 173 SIGMA C H I Mahlon Ball Bill Blaker Jim Blessing John Brown Jim Burks Joe Conklin Jerry Cooley Dick Coolidge Tom Coolidge Dan Dibble Allen Ditzen Chuck Duroni Dick Eflin Bill Farney Galen Fiss Frank Fee ACTIVES Chuck Garney Bill Gibbs Ralnh Grether Chuck Grover Bill Hall Tod Haren Jim Hershberger Jim Hogue Hugh Jacks Tom Johnston Greff Kallos Bob Lacy Pat Lewis Wayne Livingston Dane Lonborg Erik Luplau M. V. Lyle JackMcCall Dick McFarland Larry Miller Jack Morris Dave Moxlev Dean Owens Jake Rathbun Fred Rice Dick Rinehart Herb Schumacher Dick Sears Bob Tanner Fred VanBebber Gene Westerhaus Bill Withers Fred Young Sigma Chi was founded June 28, 1855, at Miami Univer- sity, Oxford, Ohio. Alpha Xi, one of 123 active chapters, was established at KU in 1884. Prominent in campus activities are Mahlon Ball, member of Sachem, Sigma Tau, Tau Beta Pi, and Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Bill Hall, Chairman of Statewide Activities and Vice President of Alpha Kappa Psi; Fred Rice, President of HAJAS; and Stuart Conklin, member of Owl Society and Executive Council of IFC. Sigs in varsity athletics are Galen Fiss and Dick Wogan, football; Dick Diers, basketball; Bill Farney and Jim Hershberger, track; Stuart Conklin, lennis; Bob Lacy, golf; Galen Fiss, baseball; Dick Eflin, Mahlon Ball, Dave Moxley, and John Brown, swimming. Several large parties during the year are climaxed by the Sigma Chi Sweetheart Formal in the spring. Jim Alexander Stanton Ball Hal Brent Chuck Brown Dave Cleveland Phil Coolidge Paul Dibble Wendell Dickie Dick Diers John Dixson Phil Endacott PLEDGES Jim Harmon Scott Hayden Mark Hurt Gene Imes Jim Jackson Don Kallos Skip Launders Dick Leahy Bud McGuire John Merideth Dick Raynolds Don Schultz Merl Sellers Keith Smith Sam Smith Don Stiles Phil Stiles Terry Terrell Ken Trippe Jerry Witt Curt Woodbury OFFICERS TOM JOHNSTON HUGH JACKS DEAN OWENS BILL HALL President Vice President Secretary Treasurer FRONT ROW: T. Coolidge, Hayden, Tinner, Cooley, I. Brown, Moxley, Morris, Withers, Grover, M. Ball. SECOND ROW: Fee, K. Smith, Bilker, Jacks, Hall, Johnston, Owens, Glbbs, Grether, Sehultz, Luplaii, Terrell. THIRD ROW: Lacy, Harmon, Conklin, McCall, Lewis, Rathbun, Dixson, Endacott, Dickey, D. Dibble, Diers, Witt, Schumacher, Brent, P. Dibble, Westerhaus. FOURTH ROW: Miller, D. Kallos, Hurt, Cleveland, Rice, Woodbury, P. Coolidge, Burks, Blessing, Alexander, Merideth, Sellers, VanBebber, S. Ball. FIFTH ROW: C. Brown, McFarland, P. Stiles, S. Smith, Maguire, Raynolds, Eflin, Trippe, D. Coolidge, Hogue, Leahy, Rinehart, Imes, Jackson. 174 III 1 M N U Sigma Nu fraternity was founded at Virginia Military Institute in 1869. Nu, one of 115 collegiate chapters, was established at KU in 1884. Nu is represented in campus activities by Orval Swander and Frank Norris holding membership in Sachem, and Bill Crews and Bob Kennedy on the varsity debate squad. Nu is also represented in varsity football by Bob Brandeberry, Bud Bixler, Dick Rossman, Co-captain Ollie Spencer, Don Aungst, and Bill Marshall. Another Sigma Nu in varsity athletics is Buzz Frasier, track. The Hi-Rickety Invitational Winter Formal and the White Rose Spring Formal are the main events on the Sigma Nu social calendar. Don Aungst Bob Asmann Bud Bixler Don Bouska Bob Brandeberry Bob Burlingame Jim Burns Hugh Cox Hill Crews Ron Evans Buzz Frasier John Golden Don Green Monty Greene Phil Hahn ACTIVES Allan Hall Gene Hall Charles Hyer Jerry Ivie Gary Irish Bill Johnson Don Johnston Bob Kennedy Joe Kosar Bob LaFollette Dan Lindsay Dick Lolley Don Manley Bill Marshall Alex McBurney Ron Meeker Frank Norris Eric Null Larry O ' Brien Jay Oliver Dick Rossman Ludwig Smith Oliver Spencer Orval Swander Jim Swords Paul Walter Bill Yockey Dan Young Bruce Zuercher Sam Zuercher OFFICERS BILL JOHNSON Commander CHARLES HYER Lieutenant Commander ALLAN HALL Recorder ERIC NULL Treasurer Dirk Anderson Bill Birrh Vic Blankenship Howard Browning Roper Collins Don Cunningham Charles Ensminger Rodger Hoover Burt Howell PLEDGES Sidwell Hutchins A I Hyer Dell Johnston Charles Jones Jim Kastner Dirk Maguire Grant Napier Jav Ott Jim Perkins Jim Powell Ron Rarick Dick Ross Steve Sanders John Simon Don Smith Con Spainhour John Ziegler FRONT ROW: Ensminger, Hoover, Ivie, Oil, Harper, A. Hall, Null, B. Johnson, C. Hyer, Oliver, Irish, Waller, A. Hyer. SECOND ROW: Cos, Browning, Marshall, Swords, Aungsl, McBurney, Bixler, Rossman, Yoekey, Spainhour, Simon, O ' Brien, .Norrii, Evans, Burly. THIRD ROW: Sanders, Perklnn, Ziegler, Lindsay, Jones, Golden, Asmann, Burns, I Smith, Hulrhin , Bouska, Lolley, Birch, Greene, S. Zuerrher, De. Johnston, Anderson. FOI ' RTII ROW: Kaslner, Cunningham, Yuunp, Powell, Blankenship Maguire, Howell, Napier, Manley, Collins, Hahn, Kennedy, Emrirh, Do. Johnston, Ross. FRONT ROW: Dangerfield, Satlerwhite, Dalzell, Lance, Sell, Wharton, ilenham, Fields, Bell. SECOND ROW: Hopkins, Armstrong, Kellls, Sears, Crawford, Loevenguth, II, ,,!-.-. Fenity, Clasco, Van Lew, Burton. THIRD ROW: Courtright, Busher, Marshall, Hausler, Sullivan, James, Pruyn, Wright, Hawes, Cole, McKinney, Peterson, Ernst, Stemmerman. FOURTH ROW: Christie, Schafer, Dodge, Bullinger, Fullerton, Waldschmidt, Soper, Slawson, Spurney, Martin, Beal, Foyle, Alexander, Breyfogle. FIFTH ROW: Emig, Kibler, Bitner, Gatewood, Tarry, Hedriek, Douglass, Schroeder, Ariagno, Koeppel, Cerboth, Burton, Kay, Smith. SIGMA P H I E P S I L O N Walker Alexander Charles Benscheidt Louis Breyfogle Dick Bucher Bill Christie Howard Cole Bill Courtright John Crawford Arthur Dalzell Phil Dangerfield Bob Davis Dale Dodge Bob Douglas Clyde Dyerson Bob Ariagno Lyle Armstrong John Beal Larry Bell Bob Benham Norm Bitner Jim Burton Terry Burton Neil Dodge Dale Emig Conrad Eriksen Brure Fields ACTIVES Courtney Ernst Doug Fenity Clarence Frieze Roth Gatewood Dean Glasco Ken Hausler Bill Hawes Don Hopkins Doug Kay Karl Koeppel Phil Loevenguth Bob Londerholm Jim Morehead PLEDGES Frank Foyle Hugh Fullerton Neal Gerboth Bill Griswald Charles Hedriek Jerry James Wes Kellis Bob Kibler Tom Lance Wilbur Larkin Bud Larson Hal Marshal Connie Satterwhite Jerry Schafer Roger Schroeder Jack Scott Bruce Sears Bob Settles William Smell Douglas Smith Fred Soper Charles Steele Wendell Sullivan Fred Tarry Bob Wharton Phil Peterson Dave Martin Collin McKinney Dick Parton Gil Pruyn Curtis Sell Bill Slawson Frank Spurney Lyle Stemmerman Jim Van Lew Leroy Waldschmidt Jim Wallace Dean Wright Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, founded in 1901 at Rich- mond College, Virginia, has 115 chapters. Kansas Gamma was established in 1923. Highlighting its social season each year are the Bowery Brawl in the fall and the Golden Heart Ball in the spring. In varsity athletics are Jerry Alberts, basketball; Dean Glasco, swimming; Art Dalzell, Norm Bitner, and Bob Smith, track; and Hugh Satter- white, track manager. In freshman athletics are Gil Pruyn, football; Bud Larson, basketball; Bill Griswold, track. The Sig Ep quartette, composed of Fred Tarry, Bob Davis, Jim Ralston, and Phil Loevenguth, won the YWCA Barbership Quartette Contest last year. This year the Sig Ep B football team won its division championship. Dean Glasco is Chairman of the publications board of the All Student Council. Dale Dodge is a cheerleader. OFFICERS DALE DODGE PHIL LOEVENGUTH DOUG FENITY DEAN GLASCO President Vice President Comptroller Secretary 175 FRONT ROW: Haye , -i..n.--ir.-.-i. Knepp, Beydler, Harrlerode, Hunt, Frailer, Bethany, Clifton, !( .1, Roach, Dl ap. SECOND ROW: Hoolon, Stevens, Jordan, Due !er, Grlswold, Austin, Klllng, Bartholomew, Ament, Blgg, Toll , Vaeln, Lambert, Lindsay. M Sigma Pi fraternity was founded on February 26, 1897, at Vincennes University in Indiana. Next to the Miami Triad, it is the oldest national fraternity originating west of the Ohio River. There are 48 active chapters with a membership of over 12.600. Beta Delta received its char- ter on March 25, 1950. The social calendar includes the Emerald Ball, Orchid Formal, Western Party, and the Cokette Dance. Sigma Pi is well represented in campus professional and honorary fraternities. Beta Delta pledges have won the annual Zeta Province scholarship award for three consecutive years. The KU campus is being con- sidered as the meeting place for the annual Sigma Pi Founders ' Day Convention of 1953. Arthur Ament Kermit Beal Glenn Bethany William Beydler John Cain Keith Clifton William Delap Stanley Frazier James Griswold ACTIVES Donald Harrlerode Harry Hunt Howard Kisling Richard Roach Donald Seiwald Walter Smith James Tolle Elmer Twente Frank Vacin OFFICERS PLEDGES BILL BEYDLER HARRY HUNT DON SEIWALD DON HARCLERODE President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Glenn Austin John Bartholomew Lawrence Biggs William Duesler Charles Hayes John Hooton Scott Jordan Gerald Knepp Wayne Lambert Donald Lindsay William Stevens Gary Stonestreet 176 177 STEPHENSON HALL RESIDENTS Jim Bass Thor Bogren Sanford Bushman Keith Coffin Jim Crabtree John Daise Rodnev Davis Dale Dill Howard Duncan Leonard L. Duroche Wendell Dutt Norman Ford Leo Franz Jean Gob Jerome Goodman Loyde Hales Herbert Hall Bernard Haney Walter Haskins Harlan Henderson Cole Hendrix William Hoffman Richard Hunsucker Richard Jackson Bill Johnson Galen Kelly Dean Kopper Bernard Lewis John Logan Richard Love McKee Lynn Rich ard Maag Roger McCoy LeRoy McKeage Larry Murphy Joe Nixon Dwight Patton Mark Pfenninger Bob Ramsey Ben Robertson Ronald Roth Dick Scott Ranendra Sinha Murlin Smith Roy Snelling Joseph Stmzzo Lloyd Thomas Sherman Timmons Norman Toothaker Roger Warren Ivan Watkins Don Weaver Stephenson Hall is a gift to the University from the late Lyle Stephenson of Kansas City and was occupied on February 14, 1952. Among Stephenson men active in campus affairs are Leonard Duroche, President of Ger- man Club, and Dick Scott, Vice President of YMCA. Numerous other men represent Stephenson in honorary and professional groups and musical organizations. Social events include the traditional Harvest Moon Party in the fall and the Christmas and Spring Formals. OFFICERS GALEN KELLY RONALD ROTH RODNEY DAVIS LEO FRANZ President Vice President Secretary Treasurer FRONT ROW: Lewis, Warren, Franz, Roth, Kelly, Mrs. H. P. Rainage, Johnson, Davis, Pfenninger, Haskins, Hoffman. SECOND ROW: Sinha, Nixon, Toothaker, Smith, Hales, Dutt, Daise, Robertson, Goodman, Bass, Lynn, Hall, McKeage, Haney. THIRD ROW: Dill, Weaver, Patton, Maag, Bogren, Duncan, Cob, Ramsey, Ford, McCoy, Coffin, Hendrix, Timmons, Bushman. FOURTH ROW: Duroche, Snelling, Kopper, Henderson, Love, Crablree, Watkins, Hunsucker, Murphy, Jackson, Logan, Struzzo. J.rf 278 I II i I! I ' ! n T A U KAPPA E P S I L O N Tau Kappa Epsilon, founded at Illinois Wesleyan Univer- sity in 1889, has 98 active chapters. Alpha Phi chapter was established in 1941. On the social calendar are a hayride, an annual pledge party, and the traditional Red Carnation Ball. Don Creighton is Secretary of Pi Tau Sigma and Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternities; Lee Douglass is a member of Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Tau. Ron Kull is a member of Sigma Delta Chi, Editor of the Sour Owl, and IFC representative to the All Student Council. ACTIVES Al Armstrong Marvin Arterburn Wayne Bear Herb Beauchamp Dick Beilharz Bob Brown David Butts Ed Chapman Frank Chesky Don Creighton Jack Crowley Bud Dalton Bill Fair Roger Franke Don Caddis Bruce Greene George Harper Bill Hawkey Larry Keenan Bob Kobler Harry Kraus Ron Kull Don Landes Joe Limes Don Macauley Lynn MacDougal Bernie Malkmus Frank McCollum Don Menchetti Gene Shumway Dick Sjoberg Stan Spencer Bill Todd Jess Wheeler Kemple Wilhelmsen Bob Willms Ron Winslow Joe Wurster OFFICERS BILL TODD RON KULL FRANK CHESKY AL ARMSTRONG President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Virgil Basgall Larry Buckles Bill Conway Bill Crow Jim Curry Ron Davis Gene Elder Charles Eyman Jack Fisher Harold Hall PLEDGES Jerry Hartnett Larry Heil Dale Hobein Phil Jacka Dean Kobler Gene Knobloch Burk Krueger Clair Law Max Lucas Nathan McGrew John McMillen Orland Oswald Bob Ren fro Rex Rice Dallas Schulte Shelby Schulte Dick Thornton Neil Wathen Tom Wilkerson FRONT ROW: Elder, Eyman, Hi. .-. Heil, Wathen, Knobloch, Hall, t ., .,,. SECOND ROW: Sjoberg, Creighton, -P,.n.i ... . I ...I.I. Kull, Wheeler, Chesky, Bear, Caddis, Fair. THIRD ROW: Lucas, Renfro, Kraus, Limes, Krueger, Spencer, Bulls, Arterburn, Hartnetl, Beaurhamp. I ill II I II ROW: Harper, Law, Oswald, D. Kobler, Dalton, Chapman, Jarka, MrDougal, Beilharz, Sehuessler, Wilkerson, Davis, Franke. FIFTH ROW: Hobein, iir-n-r. Basgall, Buckles, McMillen, Curry, Hawkey, Thornton, McGrew, B. Kobler, McCollum, Fisher, Crow, Willms. FRONT ROW: Cray, Dougherty, McKay, Byrnes, Lloyd, Beaurhamp, I.imlemu Ih, Oliver, Rhodes, Peyton. SF.OOND ROW: Wahaus, Pankralz, Pope, Holy- field, I .ml.-. Sutton, Walker, G. Rogers, Baker, Wilkening. THIRD ROW. Foster, Brown, Crowell Jr., Trott, I hi I.I. -i-. Rose, Simmons, J. Rogers, Sills, Backman. T H E T A T A U ACTIVES E. J. Allison Dick Backman Glen Beauchamp Richard Boggs Marshall Brown Richard Byrnes Milor Childers Charles Crowell Joe Engle Glenn Foster George Holyfield Roy Baker Larry Brennan J im Crosby Harold Dougherty David Gray Bill McKay Paul Pankratz Ed Peyton Frank Lindemuth Don Lloyd William Mains Tom Ol iver Bob Pope Gene Rogers Jimmy Simmons Bob Sutton Clarence Walker John Wilkening PLEDGES Ralph Rhodes Jack Rogers James Rose Milton Dee Sills Dale Trott Herb Wahaus Kenneth White Theta Tau. national professional engineering fraternity, was founded at the University of Minnesota in 1904. Last spring Zeta chapter, one of 24 active chapters, celebrated its fortieth anniversary at KU. Always active in engineer- ing school activities, Theta Taus serve on the Engineering Council, The Kansas Engineer staff, and again last spring as Chairman and Publicity Chairman of the Engineering Exposition. Theta Tau is represented on the ASC and Student Court, by six men in Sigma Tau, four in Tau Beta Pi, and two in Eta Kappa Nu, engineering honor societies. Outstanding individuals include Glen Beau- champ, Business Manager of the ' 52 K-Book and Presi- dent of Scabbard and Blade; Tom Oliver, cheerleader; Bob Pope, Sachem; and Gene Rogers, Owl Society. Annual social events include a Halloween Party, a Christ- mas Formal, and the Red Dog Inn Party. OFFICERS GLEN BEAUCHAMP FRANK LINDEMUTH TOM OLIVER DON LLOYD Regent Vice Regent Scribe Treasurer 179 I HUM ROW: Mover, Atwood, Jon ., II. Miller, Merrill, Funkhou-er, M.,rri.. Jim.,. I. D. W llon, Krahenbuhl, Moore. SECOND ROW: Akern, Walker, Graham, D. Miller, Conner, Hilburn, Bartletl, Care;, Park, Pearre, Sloff. THIRD ROW: Bell, Mehnerl, MarCormark, C. Berk, Robinson, Anderson, Book, B. Wll.on, I. .,11 ii,-,. Lewii, Benlon, Montgomery. Kill III II ROW: Wanner, Meier, Birkhead, I Berk, Fann, Keddlck, Crauberiier, Garden, Marshall, Brooks, Oliver, Hamilton. N Triangle fraternity was founded on April 15. 1907. at the University of Illinois. The Kansas chapter was founded in 1927. Highlights of Triangle ' s social events are the Halloween Party, King Winter Formal. Saint Pat ' s Party. and the Annual Spring Formal. Triangle men prominent in campus affairs are Ken Merrill, President of the IFC. President of Hawkwatch Society, member of Scabbard and Blade and Alpha Kappa Psi ; Ken Harris. John Carey, and Howard Miller, members of Pachacamac. Members of honorary fraternities are Dan Wilson, Harold Conner, and Clark Anderson. Tau Beta Pi; John Hilburn. Doyle Miller. Harold Conner, Jim Birkhead, Dan Wilson, and Clark Anderson, Sigma Tau ; Bill Funkhouser and Jim Birkhead, Pi Tau Sigma: John Hilburn and Clark Ander- son, Eta Kappa Nu; and Dan Wilson. Tau Sigma Delta. OFFICERS BILL FUNKHOUSER KENNETH HARRIS JOHN HAMILTON BRYAN WILSON President Vice President Secretary Treasurer 180 Clark Anderson Dean Barrett Cliff Berk Leonard Berk David Bell Duane Benton Jim Birkhead John Carey Harold Conner Bill Funkhouser Rosroe Graham John Grauberger John Hamilton Kenneth Harris Alan Akers Leonard Atwood David Bartlett Jimmie Book Robert Brooks Ray Fann Harry Gaffney Jock Garden Dick Jones Ray Krahenbuhl Robert Lewis ACTIVES John Hilburn Norman Junod Jack MacCormack Jim Marshall Kenneth Merrill Doyle Miller Howard Miller Gene Montgomery Bill Park Marc Williams Bryan Wilson Dan Wilson Norman Wilson John Mehnert Leonard Meier Jim Moore Paul Moyer Jim Oliver Robert Pearce Willis Reddick Jay Robinson Bill Stoff Robert Wagner Gary Wagner f v THEY RAN OUT O F TAPE 6y Boft FOR THE FIRST time in the history of the conference two Big Seven teams were ranked in the top ten football teams in the nation. One, of course, was invincible Oklahoma and the other was Kansas, in one of the most potential years of her football existence. Even kind Mother Nature did her bit to add to the color of the meeting of these two top grid aggre- gations. An hour before game time the entire stadium and surplus bleachers were filled to capac- ity, and the warm autumn breeze breathed excite- ment. This was it the game of the year. In looking back it seems that the offensive- minded Sooners merely toyed with the Jayhawks up to that point in the third quarter when Kansas trailed only 21 to 20. Kansas got off to an early advantage when Galen Fiss covered Billy Vessels ' fumble on the Sooner 8 yard line. Charlie Hoag dashed across from the 6 yard line and John Konek converted to give KU a 7 to lead. However, Kansas, a little too liberal with its northern hospitality, fumbled the ball over to Okla- homa on the KU 19 yard line. Buddy Leake going wide on a pitch out stepped across for the OU score and then kicked to tie the score. It was the Sooner quarterback Eddie Crowder who kept the fans and players guessing all afternoon. Behaving like a uniformed Houdini, Crowder faked several times into the line and then passed to Max Boydston, wide open on the Kansas 25, who raced over for the score. The Oklahoma try-for-point was good, as was every one of their conversion attempts, and the Okies were never be- hind again. 182 Memorial Stadium, largest in Kansas, seats 39,000 when packed as shown here in the Oklahoma game. m Oklahoma ' s third TD of the half came follow- ing an interception and a 39 yard drive. Kansas came back with a sustained drive and a few tricks of their own (e.g., putting Reich at fullback) and marched from the KU 39 to paydirt. Jerry Robert- son went over on a quarterback sneak. Konek ' s con- version try was no good and that ' s the way the scor- ing ended for the half. After a third quarter burst that saw Brande- berry score from the 6 inch line, the second half was all Oklahoma. Vessels scored once in the third quarter, and Buddy Leake ' s substitute, Merrill Green, scored twice in the final stanza to round out the Oklahoma tallies. All observers agreed that it was OU ' s finest team, and their coach, Bud Wilkinson, agreed it was their finest game. Despite the KU loss Charlie Hoag turned in his finest performance of the season up to that point. The Hawkers ' 42-20 defeat was to a fine ball club. Perhaps it was that the pressure was now off or perhaps it was the thrill of a Cotton Bowl ap- pearance; in any case the Kansa s gridmen came back the following Saturday to defeat highly re- garded SMU 26-0, and to thereby return to the top ten in the national ratings. Potentially all-American for three years, half- back Charlie Hoag knew his finest gridiron hour in this non-conference tilt. His running, passing, and circus catches prompted SMU coach, Rusty Russell to say, . . . and in Hoag, KU has one of the finest all-around backs in collegiate football. He carried 16 times for 79 yards, caught 6 passes for 74 yards, scored once, and converted twice. Hoag tallied first for the Jayhawks as he wig- gled through the Mustangs from the 14 yard line. Picking up sizeable yardage on Robertson passes, the second KU score came as Gil Reich threw his only pass of the afternoon to Bob Brandeberry in the end zone. The Kansans scored twice within five minutes in the third quarter. The first drive featured two of Hoag ' s circus catches and culminated with Sabatini ' s bulling over from the three. Reich set up the second TD by recovering a Mustang fumble in SMU territory. Hoag passed to Leoni from the 13 to close the scoring. 183 The luster of the afternoon was considerably dimmed when always-outstanding linebacker Galen Fiss suffered a dislocated shoulder on the last play of the game. Both KU linebackers, Gish and Fiss, played outstanding ball. MrKonic, Hantla, and Bixler kept meeting each other in the SMU back- field effectively confusing the SMU offense. The ancient rivalry between K-State and KU was played in 75 degree weather before a crowd of 16,500 at Manhattan. The favored Jayhawks took nearly the whole first period to march slowly but surely up the field for their first TD. Brandeberry enjoyed the scoring honor and Hoag missed the try-for-point. The Wildcats took the following kick off and roared back to the Kansas 11 before being halted. However, a subsequent Kansas fumble gave them new life on the 19. This time they were not to be denied and K-Stater Dick Towers dived over from the one yard line. Gish broke through to block the kick. Reich took over in the second half and passed for two counters. His favorite target was end Paul Leoni, who was on the end of both scoring passes. The major significance of the game to the Jayhawkers was the loss of Hoag with a knee in- jury. The backfield flash was to see only one more play of action in the season. Had he been able to play, he would doubtlessly have gained 89 more yards to enter the 2000 yard groundgainers circle. Excessive injuries, a wet day, and Bobby Rey- nolds were all major factors in Kansas ' 14 to 13 loss to Nebraska. Neither Galen Fiss nor Charlie Hoag was able to put in any game time in the Cornhusker game. A heavy rain which fell through- out the game fatally weakened Kansas ' vaunted passing attack. Reynolds turned in his best game of the season (a minor duplication of his 1950 performance) to be the game ' s top ground-gainer and kick the game deciding extra points. Nebraska capitalized on a Kansas fumble on the KU 13 to draw first blood in the contest. Quar- terback John Bordogna sneaked across from the one. The first Jayhawk tally came in the second quarter when Hal Cleavinger recovered a Nebraska fumble on the Cornhuskers ' 27 yard line. Brande- berry went over standing up from the nine. Hess ' conversion try was good to tie the score. On its next series of offensive downs Kansas marched 63 yards to score. The drive terminated in the end zone when Jerry Robertson hit Paul Leoni with a seven yard pass. Hess missed on his conversion and that ' s the way the score stood until the last quarter. Nebraska recovered a bad Kansas pitch out on All year Coach Sikes fared the dilemma as to whether he should play quar- terhack Jerry Robertson or quarterback Gil Reich. Here the Jayhmcker 184 the KU 27 yard line. On the next play a Kansas penalty took the ball to the one where Bordogna went over for the score. Reynolds converted to give Nebraska the lead and the ball game. Kansas tried a series of desperation passes that got them to the Nebraska 37, but the clock and the rain were against them. Still plagued with injuries, the Jayhawks muffed past an inspired bunch of Oklahoma Aggies, who were much better than their record indicated, for Kansas ' seventh win of the season. An early recovery of an Aggie fumble and a pass from Reich to Leoni set the Hawks in scoring position on the 17. After two ineffectual line plays Reich faded to pass, but finding no receivers he tucked in the pigskin and rambled over for the score. Hess ' conversion attempt was blocked. Less than four minutes later the Aggies were ahead. Two long runs set the ball on the KU 17. From there quarterback Don Babers passed to end John Weigle who bulled across to tie the game. Bennie Davis moved the Cowpokes ahead with a perfect placement. It was not until the third quar- ter that the Kansas scoring machine was able to produce another TD. Bob Brandeberry, carrying on three successive plays, finally made it across from the one. All during the game the A M boys kept the ball in Kansas territory. They had 20 first downs to Kansas ' 10, 300 yards net offense to 199, but only 7 points to KU ' s 12. In their final game and their final bid for high honors in the Big Seven for the season the Jayhawks lost a heartbreaker to Missouri 20-19. Kansas scored first on a beautifully executed play beginning with a pass from Robertson to Reich who then lateraled off to Brandeberry for the tally. Mizzou countered with an 82 yard run by Bill Rowekamp and led 7 to 6. Another second period score gave them a 14-6 halftime advantage. In the second half Robertson put his shoulder to the grindstone and guided the Hawks to two touchdowns. One he carried across himself on a sneak, and for the other he passed 52 yards to Jerry Taylor to register the points. Reich was able to convert only once. Kansas held this 19-14 lead until the fourth quarter when a deflected KU aerial fell into unfriendly hands and resulted in the win- ning score. In those final moments the Jayhawks fought back and drove deep into Missouri territory, but they were unable to gain those needed points. In many ways their 7 and 3 season was dis- appointing for it had been a year of high expec- tations for Coach Sikes ' crew. But Kansas didn ' t get the breaks they needed. They did, however, play good ball, and their fans were proud of them. suggests a possible solution as Robertson, No. 10, whips a quick pass to the buttonhooking Reich, No. 16. The action took place in the Oklahoma game BMH 34; 785 Crowder, 16, Oklahoma quarterback lakes the ball from center and hands to All American Billy Vessels, 35. MrKonic, 74, is effectively blocked out of the play as Vessels tries to cut inside Fink, 62. Fink, however, hits I - Gil Reich, 16, former West Point grid star, takes the snap from center and fades for a quick forward pass. Knowles, 63, Woody, 54, and Fiss, 33, throw quick blocks as Reich elects to run. Reich breaks Ei Vessels solidly, knocking the ball free. KU linebacker Galen Fiss, 33, scoops up the ball and races across the goal line. The ball is brought back, on the ruling that it hit the ground and that Fiss caught it on the bounce. through a huge opening and cuts to his left. As he gathers momentum he eludes two tacklers and, although nearly stopped on the one yard line, he crosses over for a touchdown. Ik ' OVER HILL AND DALE by David Hill KU ' s WIN in the 1952 Big Seven cross country meet marks the sixth straight time that Bill Easton ' s distance proteges have taken the title. Since he took over the reins of Kansas track coaching in 1947, Easton has produced cross country teams that have won the Big Seven title in every year of his conference coaching career and piled up a winning streak of 22 consecutive meets over the past six years. This is a record unequaled by any school in the history of the Big Six and Big Seven. In addition to the outstanding team record com- piled over the past six years, a KU man has al- ways taken the individual distance conference title. The 1952 team of four juniors (Wes Santee, Ashland, Kansas; Art Dalzell, Spring Hill, Kan- sas; Lloyd Koby, Sedgwick, Kansas; Dick Wilson, Albany, New York) and one senior (Keith Palm- quist of Minneapolis, Minnesota) continued the tradition established by their forerunners. In the conference meet held November 15 at Lawrence, Santee took first place, Palmquist fourth, Dalzell tied for fifth, Koby was tenth, and Wilson was twentieth to give the team a winning low score of 20 points, trailed by Oklahoma with 34, Colorado 43, Missouri 66l , Iowa State 69, and Nebraska 92. Santee took Big Seven individual honors with a time of 15:08.1, following in the footsteps of Kansas all-time greats Bob Karnes, three times win- ner of the same title, and Herb Semper, twice Big Seven cross country champ. The team ran roughshod over 1952 dual meet competition. The Oklahoma Aggies were first to fall, as the Jayhawks dropped them 13 to 25 at Lawrence. Drake followed, losing on their home ground 12-27. The squad wound up the duals with a smashing 11-28 win over Missouri. Santee con- tinued in his usual stellar role, taking first place in every meet. His best time of the year, 14:57.2. was at Missouri. 1952 was the first year that Big Seven com- petition returned to the three-mile cross country. From 1930 until 1951 the two-mile run on the cinders was the fall track event in the Big Six and later in the Big Seven. Prior to 1930 the five-mile cross country was run. The only record surpassing that of the present is found in a ten meet winning streak piled up by Iowa State in the old Missouri Valley Conference from 1913 to 1924. Since the team was first entered in the NCAA cross country meet in 1948, it has risen in national rank from seventh place to sixth, to fifth, and in 1951 to second. No team was entered in 1952 due to illness and injuries. Herb Semper took first place individual hon- ors in the NCAA meets of 1950 and 1951. Six times in a row Big Seven champs Keith Palmquist, Dick Wilson, Wes Santee, Art Dalzell, and Lloyd Koby. CAGE FEVER HITS M T OREAD by David Hill BASKETBALL AT KANSAS must start from scratch in the coming season. With only Dean Kelley and Charlie Hoag returning from his Olympic champs, Phog Allen faces decisive lack of size, experience, and finesse in building a squad for 1953. Kelley should be even greater than he was as a junior, as should Hoag, and both will carry a tre- mendous load. But Hoag is again hampered by injuries, and this year the two will not find great teammates who have been playing together for four years. Under the bucket will be former relief man for Lovellette, six-foot eight-inch B. H. Born, backed by hustling six-foot seven-inch sophomore Eldon Nicholson. Both of the men lack the weight and finesse necessary to avoid fouls against tough competition, and Nicholson has no varsity expe- rience. Bill Heitholt, Larry Davenport, Dean Smith, and LaVannes Squires round out the list of players with varsity experience. Newcomers who will be important assets in- clude scoring aces Harold Patterson and Marvin Deckert, transfers from Garden City Juco, ex-army starter Gil Reich and sophomore John Alberts. Football players Reich and Patterson will check out late. Civil War in I loch it ' s Kansas vs. Kansas as the varsity play the freshmen. Kansas ' prospects will be dim. There are too many ifs in the picture, including injuries to Hoag and Reich, a lung ailment of Squires, the late date when football players report, and the time it will take to gain experience and teamwork. Competi- tion will be tougher than ever. K-State, second team in the nation last year, finds plenty of lettermen returning, and Colorado and Missouri are pushing for the top with experience and good material. As the situation now stands, Allen sees a Kansas State runaway within the Big Seven and perhaps a na- tional title for the Aggies. KU will get a slow start, with Patterson check- ing out late, and with Hoag and Reich probably out for the pre-season Big Seven tournament due to post-season football. Injuries will make it uncer- tain whether they will be in condition for the first conference tilt, Oklahoma, on January 5 at Norman. However, Allen says, I will guarantee Kan- sas has a fighting team. They will be crowd pleasers who never give up. 189 1953 CAGE TEAM I-arry Davenport from Newton plays forward. Only a sophomore, he has three years of competition to go. Allen Kelley from McCune weighs 161 pounds, stands five feet eleven inches at either forward or guard. Forward Jerry Alberts is six feet three inches tall and weighs 181. He hails from Lincoln, Illinois. A six foot six and one-half inch center, Eldon Nicholson aUo plays forward, thus giving extra height. Gil Reich, six foot 187 pound senior guard, is an ex-Army starter. He hails from Steeltown, Pennsylvania. Dean Kelley, standout senior guard from McCune, captains the squad, claimed Olympic honors as a junior. 190 LaVannes Squires, junior forward, stands six feet one inch, weighs 170 Ibs., and conies from Wichita. Doubling at guard, forward will be 150 pound, six foot two and one half inch Neodesha junior Everett Dye. Bill Heitholt, sophomore letterman from Quincy, Illinois, stands six foot three and one half, plays guard. Forward Harold Patterson, six foot one inch transfer from Garden City Juco, should bring scoring strength. Charlie Hoag, Oak Park, Illinois, senior, is a veteran of the Olympic squad playing forward or guard. B. H. Born, starting center, has a six feet nine inch frame and is the tallest man on the Kansas squad. Six foot three inch junior Wes John- son, 175 pound Newton guard, has one year on the B team behind him. Dean Smiles Smith, from Topeka, veteran of NCAA competition, will play guard; he stands five feet ten. Buller from Buehler Ken Buller, five feet eleven inches, 180 Ibs., is a senior and will play forward. 191 JAYHAWKER INDEX Nancy Teed, Editor ABBOTT, BOB 155 Abercrombie, Jack 160 Ackermann, Ray 167 Adam, Jim 152 Adams, Nancy 145 Adam . Will 126 Adameon, Lonnie 147 Agno. Nick 124, 165 Ahlslrom, Marylin 125 Aikens, Emmanuel 151 Ainaworth. Ann 138 Akers. Alan 180 Akeri, Clark 161 Alberts. Jerry 128, 190 Alexander, Jim 173 Alexander, Walker 175 Alexander, Earl 172 Allen, Bill 158 Allen, Jim 172 Allen. Lucille 138 Allen, Knnnie 15S Allison, Margaret 142 Allison, Robert 165 Allvine. Jane 141 Alpers. Bob 157 Ambler. Carl 163, 168 Altman. Dick 154 Ament, Arthur E. 176 Anderson. Barbara 125, 134 Anderson, Clark 180 Anderson. Dana 156 Anderson, Dick 162, 174 Anderson, Don 161 Anderson. Helen 128, 133 Anderson, Jim 160 Anderson, JoAnn 136 Anderson, Jody 137 Anderson, Lyle 153 Anderson. Neal 153 Anderson, Phil 172 Anderson, Robert 156 Anderson, Wanda Jean 146 Angersbach, Chrys 125 Angersback. Priscilla 133 Ankerholz. DeNran 132 Ankrom, Georgeann 138 Anschuli. Sue 138 Ariagno, Bob 175 Armentrout. Suzanne 133 Armstrong. Al 178 Armstrong. Hugh 172 Armstrong, Jane 137 Armstrong, Jerry 160 Armstrong, Lorrimer 157 Armstrong. I.yle 175 Arnold. A. C. 162 Arnold. Dick 168 Arnold, Donna 136 Arnold. Normon 147 ArrowBir-ith, Peter 128, 150 Arterburn, Chester 158 Arterburn, Marvin 178 Asbell, Marianne 136 Asbury, Robert 155 Ash. Walter 166 Ashcraft. Jonell 136 Ashley. John 166 Asmann. Bob 174 Astle. Dick 152 Atherton. Jack 154 Atkins. Rozanne 145 Atkinson, William 126,161 Atteberry, Bob 169 Atwood, Leonard 180 Audas, Evelyn 147 Aungst. Don 174 Aurell, Patricia 143 Austin, Frank 161 Austin. Glen 176 Austin, Jack 150 Austin. Melba 146 Axtell, Barbara 129 Aylward, Pat 128. 133 BABCOCK, BOB 155 Bachus, Nelson 148, 164 Backman, Dick 153 Bagby, Susan 138 Baird, Sue 125, 147 Baird. Lee 157 Baker, Barbara 141 Baker, Bert 161 Baker, David 171 Baker, Dick 168 Baker, Gloria 139 Baker, Roy 179 Baldwin, Diane 138 Balderson, Sandra 130 Balding. Lois 140 Ball, John 172 Ball. Mahlon 173 Ball, Robert 165 Ball.Stanlon 173 Barber, Jim 147 Barber, John 168 Bare. Chester 164 Barker. Paul 160 Barling. Douglas 156 Barnes, Jeannot 137 Barnes, Levi 162 Barr. Jack 166 Barr. Margaret Calvert 134 Barrett, Dean 180 Barron. Dan 172 Barron, Jim 152 ll.ii. In . Irsis 129 Barllrtt. David 180 Bartlett, Lynn 147 Bartholomew, John 176 Barthlow. Paul 128 Barton. Betty 141 Ba.com, Charles 154 Ba.gall. Virgil 178 Bass. Jim 177 Basye. Russell 159 Baleman. Barbara 126 Bauerle, George 171 Bauersfield. Cotly 130 Bayliss, Jacqueline 146 Beal, John 175 Beal, Kcrmit 176 Bear. Wayne 178 Beardslee. Karen 124. 136 Beardstey, Kenneth 161 Beauchamp. Herb 178 Beaudry. Bob 152 Beack. Cliff 180 Beck. Denneth 148 Beck. I eonard 180 Beck. Wai ly 166 Becker. Barbara 134 Becker, Robert 161 Bedell. Margie 139 Beers. Barbara 139 Behrmann. Bill 162 Beilharz. Dick 178 Bell. II. t.. 145 Bell, David 180 Bell. Eleanor 136 Bell. Fred 168. 172 Bell. Hugh 154 Bell. Lawrence ITS Bello. Mary 147 Belzer. David 149. 163 Bender. Clarence 156 Benes. Zpenek 163 Benham. Alvin ISO Benham. Bob 175 Benjaminov, Ben 149 Bennett. Martha 146 Bennett. Roy 161 Bennchoi.lt. Charles 175 Benson. Bill 172 Benson. John 154 Benton. Dane 180 Beougher. Cleo 169 Berglund. Tim 168 Bergten. Harold ISO Berley. John 155 Bernard. Dewey 147 Berry. Betty 135 Berry, Suianne 139 Besharat. Jalal 164 Bethanv. Glenn 176 Bether. Charles 161 Betz. Mary 145 B vthanv. Glenn 176 Bibersteine. Bill 161 Biegert. John 165 Bigetow. Bruce 155 Biggart. Melvin 153 Biggart. Virginian 142 Bijres. Larry 176 Rieham. William 172 Bilderback. William 161 Billingsley, Jack 172 Bills. Richard 171 Bingaman, Joan 135 Binyon. Kernie 163 Birch. William 174 Bird. Mary Lou 134 Birk. Raymond 150 Birkenbuel. Wally 154 Birkhead, Jim 180 Birzer, Norma 144 Bishop, Bob 168 Bishop, Don 166 Bitner, Norman 175 Bixler, Bud 174 Black, Margaret 138 Black, Virginia 125 Bland, Forrest 159 Blanke, Marilyn 146 Blaker. Bill 173 Blakeslee. Clement 148 Blair, Dick 166 Blair. James 151 Blanchard. Bob 154 Bland. Forrest 159 Blankenship, Victor 174 Blanks, Freddie 131 Blanks. Pat 131 Blasi. Gene 157 Blessing, Jim 173 III...-, h. Heidi 135 Bloom. Jack 149 Blouch, Carolyn 139 Blount, Barbara 140 Blout, Wayne 162 Blowey. Richard 152 Boatwright. Shirley 140 Bock. Jane 143 Bodenheimer, James 161 Boe. John 163 Boerger, John 162 Bogart, Grace 146 Bogren. Thor 177 Bogue, Jerry 165 It.. l.i. . Julia 145 Boles. Rosie 126 Bolz. Julia 146 Bond. Janet 135 Bonebrake. Bev 137 Bonecutter. Ann 134 Bonnev. Cay 143 Bonn. Sally 138 Book. Jitnmie 180 Boone. Daniel 163 Booth. Charles 159 Borden. Ray 158 Borenstine. Alvin 149 Boring. Helen 145 Born. B. H. 165. 190 Boswell. Jo Ann 142 II...,.,.. Jerry 125. 171 Bmiaka. Don 174 Boutwell. Lyle 148 Bowden. Kent ISO Bowdish Barbara 129 Bowen. Dick 172. 158 Boweraox. Lou Ann 132 Bowman, Bontina 137 Bowman, Jim 152 Boyd, Carolyn 131 Boyd. Gerald 161 Boyd. Jack 165 Bradford. Evelyn 147 Bradley. Norma 131 Bradshaw. Vinila 136 Bradstreet, Barbara 133 Bradstreet. Bob 160 Brainard. Bill 157 Brammer. Barbara 133 Brand. Jack 125. 165 Brandeberry. Bob 174 Brandt. Vi.la 139 Brehm. William 162 Breidenthal. Richard 172 Breinholt. Margaret 140 Brent, Hal 173 Brennan, Larry 179 Brent. Kelly 138 Brewer. Joy 141 Brewer. Robert 170 Brewster. Arthur 165 Breyfogle, Louia 175 Bridge. Edmund 1S9 Brier. Steve 124. 165 Brock. Jim 153 Brody. Esther 146 Brooks. Bob 180 Brose. John 152 Brosnahan. Cinny 137 Brown. Bill 158, 160 Brown, Bob 169, 178 Brown. Charlea 173 Brown. Clara 134 Brown. Conboy 172 Brown. Darrell 162 Brown, Dorothy 133 Brown, Gene 152 Brown, Jan 137 Brown. Joe 171 Brown, John 173 Brown, Margaret 130 Brown, Marjorie 142 Brown, Mary Jane 134 Brown. Ronald 151 Brown. Sidonie 141 Browning, Howard 174 Brownlee. Eldena 146 Brownlee, Jerry 154 Brubaker. Adrian 152 Bruce. Jack 160 Brumfield. Carol 142 Brummett, Dick 156 Brunncr, Bill 155 Bruit, Carl 165 Bryan, Alta Joyce 132 Bubb, Belly 138 Buchanan, Eugene 172 Buchanan, Ralph 165 Buchanan, Sara 129 Bucher. Dick 175 Buck, Bill 168 Buck. Joyce 129 Buck, Louia 148 Buck. Wallace 156 Buckels, Judy 122 Buehrer. Gary 170 Hi, .! I. Pat 126. 136 Buie. Neil 166 Bui la. Leo 156 Buller, Ken 160. 190 Bunch. Fred 147 Bunten. John 166 Bunton. Betty 145 Burbank. Emmalou 146 Burch. Charlea 150 Burchfield. Carol 132 Burdo. Herbert 149 Burgaas. James 148 Burge, Sammy 165 Burgetl. David 165 Burks, Jim 173 Burke, Paul 172 Burlingame, Bob 166, 174 Btirnham, Art 147 Burns, Bill 152 Burns, Jim 174 Burton. Helen 139 Burl. Larry 169 Burton, Don 158 Burton, Eleanor 139 Burton, Jim 175 Burton. Lynn 122, 141 Burton, Terry 175 Bushman, Sanford 177 Bussard. Robert 152 Butler. Dick 165 Butler, Marlyn 142 Button. Marilyn 128. 135 Butts. David 178 Bylrr. Dorothy 143 Byrd, Jack 156 CAIN, JOHN 176 Calkins, Elbert 148 Calkins, Lee 132 Calnan, Charles 148 Calverl. Walter 171 Calvin, John 126, 160 Cameron, Dick 172 Cameron, Joyce 131 Campbell, Al 172 Campbell, Carolyn 137 Campbell, Catherine 124,136 Campbell, Edward 170 Campbell, Gene 150 Campbell, Jack 165 Canary, Nancy 129 Canary. Pat 157 Canfield. Jacquelyn 142 Cannday, Grant 169 Cantrell. Melba 132 Capps, Norman 166 Carey, John 180 Carey, Nancy 135 Carle, Terry 165 Carmean, Betty 137 Carpenter, Bob 166 Carpenter, Don 152 Carpenter, Raymond 159 Carothers. Judy 133 Carrier, Dick 172 Carter, Donna 136 Carter, Joan Marie 134 Carter. Marvin 160 Carter, Spencer 152 Cartwright, Teresa 147 Carver. Ron 155 Casebeer, Charles 168 Casey. Maurice 160 ( .,..,] I. David 57 Cuterline. Twila 146 Cate. Tony 166 Cates. Charles 151 Caulsen. Ruth 124, 136, 146 Cayot, Dick 148 Cazier, Joyce 130 Cecil. Paul 162 Chalfant. Mike 124. 165 Chal lias, Catherine 137 Chaney, Ernie 163 Chang. Vernon 159 Chapman. Ed 178 Charlea. Hugh 160 Charles. Jess 161. 164 Charles. Ruthan na 131 Chatelain, Richard 158 Cheatham, Larry 166 Cheney. William 161 Cheky. Frank 178 Chestnut, Dal 160 192 Childers. Kellem 161 Childers, Tom 157 Cl.il, Is, Bob 172 Childs, Jo Ann 139 Chimenti, Ed 160 Chinn, Jackie 134 Cbittenden, Jack ISO Chowing. O. C. 148 Chowning. Oscar 164 Christenson, Jim 147 Christie, Bill 175 Christie, John 171 Christmann, Carol 137 Christy, Joe 156 Church, Chuck 153 Church, Tom 160 Clark, Bernie 167 Clark, Chapin 171 Clark, Darlene 146 Clark, Elden 162 Clark, Floyd 153 Clark, Jerry 166 Clark, Paul 159 Claunch, George 148 Clawson, Bob 166 Cleavinger, Hal 154 Clem, Patty 138 Cleveland, Dave 173 Clifford, Jacques 155 Clifton, Keith 176 Clinger, Betty 140 Clodfelter, Jack 157 Clough, Lois 143 Clowers, Churby 151 Clum, Louis 162 Clyma, Marian 142 Cody, Rosemary 133 Coe, A. D. 160 Coen, Dick 165 Coffin, Keith 177 Cogswell, Harold 163 Cole, Howard 175 Cole, Walt 160 Collins, Elizabeth Louise 134 Collins, Gary 155 Collins, Nancy 145 Collins, Roger 123, 174 Collison, Brooke 158 C.. II. mi, A. B. 152 Comfort, Clay 158 Commons, Dolores 146 Compton, Joe 168 Comstock, Bobbie 137 Conkey, Harlan 148 Conklin, Joe 123, 173 Conklin, Robert 170 Conley, David 152 Conn, Bob 152 Conner, Harold 180 Conner, Linda 137 Connor, Adele 135 Conrad, Kay 137 Considine, Dean 171 Convis, Dave 154 Conway, Anne 123, 126 Conway, Bill 178 Cook, Burleigh 155 Cook, Kathryn 146 Cooke, A. C. 154 Cooke, Donna 132 Cool, Gary 156 Cooley, Jerry 173 Cooley, Larry 148 Coolidge, Dick 173 Coolidge. Kay 141 Coolidge, Phil 173 Coolidge, Tom 173 Coombs, Fred 157 Cooney, Joe 164 Cooper, Babette 132 Copeland, Patricia 146 Copple. William 170 Corbett, George 170 Cordell, Dave 172 Costello, Bob 166 Courtright, Bill 175 Covacevich, Jean 129 Cowie. Ruth 129 Cox, Hugh 174 Cox, Jerry 156 Cox, Joe 126, 160 Cox, John 156 Cox, Joyce, 128, 135 Cox, Kenneth 128, 161 Cox, Melvin 158 Cox, Twyla 130 Cox, Virginia 135 Cox, Wallace 163 Coxen, Alan 153 Crabtree, Jim 177 Craig, Ellen 128 Craig, Owen 172 Cramer, Ted 160 Crawford, John 175 Cramm, Russell 164 Crane, Elmyra 141 Crane, Judy 137 Creel, Cynthia 137 Creighton, Bob 156 Creighton, Don 178 Crendorff, Barbara 132 Cresswell. Ed 147 Crews, Bill 174 Crisler, Bob 162 Crockett, Wilbcrt 151 Crosby, Jim 147, 179 Crow, Bill 178 Crowley. Jack 178 Cruse, Diana 132 Cummings, Dick 158 Crum. Mary 134 Cruse, Diana 132 Culp, Marilyn 128 Cummings, Dick 155 Cummins, Betty 140 Cunningham, Bill 156 Cunningham, Don 174 Cunningham, Larry 170 Curry, James 178 Curtis, Barbara 139 Curtwright, Gale 152 Cusic, Patricia 145 Cussman, Price 164 Czinczoll. Mary 145 DADE, ERNEST 160 Daise, John 177 Dalton, Ben 166 Dalton, Bud 178 Dalton, Marylyn 146 Dalzell, Arthur 175 Dam, Kenneth Sam 166 Dameron, Doug 171 Dangerfield. Phil 175 Daniels, Dan 155 Daniels, George 148 Darnell, Dale 154 Daugherty, Bob 152 Da venport, John 169 Davenport, Larry 190 Davis, Dick 147 Davis, Glen 150 Davis, Jack 147 Davis, Tom 172 Daugherty, Mary Lou 135 Davidson, Ken 157. 163 Davidson, Sally 145 Davis, Bob 175 Davis, Dave 172 Davis, Donna 140 Davis, Gary 156 Davis, Hazel 147 Davis, Marjorie 138 Davis, Pat 137 Davis, Rodney 177 Davis, Ronald 178 Davison, Norma 140 Dawson, Jean 139 Dawson, Jerry 172 Dawson, Ila 142 Deacon, Winston 152 Deal, Barbara 131 Dean, Al 162 Dearduff, Janet 140 Decker, Delores 133 Decker, Don 164 Deem, Allie 147 Defenbaugh, Lucille 131 Degner, James 164 DeGoIer, Jim 172 DeGroot, Jeannine 131 Deibert, Beth 147 Deickman, Barbara 147 Deines, Mary Ann 147 Delap. William 176 DeLong, Phyllis 145 Demeritt, Mary 139 Denchfield, Donald 153 Denen, Nancy 129 Denison, Terry 163 Deniston. Shirley 136 Dentnan, Jean 138 Denning, Danna 131 Dennis. Dick 166 Denny, Bob 158 Denny, Mick 126, 161 Deppe, Hans-Dieter 158 Derge, Bob 160 Desrhner, Mary Ann 138 Deterding, Max 157 Detsios, George 161 Detter, Jim 162 Devey, Bill 172 Devlin, Jim 156 Dexter, Leonard 170 Dibble, Dan 173 Dibble, Paul 173 Dick, Charles 148 Dickens. Ronald 171 Dickensheets, Bob 152 Dickey, David 165 Dickinson, Bill 152 Dickey, Wendell 173 Dicus, Jack 165 Diefendorf, Warren 156 Diers, Dick 173 Dietrich, Charles 156 Dill, Dale 177 Oil ley. Bill 167 Dills. Mary Ann 131 Dittmer, Lee 157 Ditzen. Allen 173 Diver, Lue Eddie 133 Dixon, Bill 167 Dixon, John 173 Dobbs, Dallas 154 Dockhorn, Charles 125, 165 Docking, Marcia 133 Dodd, Charlie 147 Dodd, Shirley 132 Dodge, Ann 138 Dodge. Dale 175 Dodge, Neil 175 Doevenguth, Phil 175 Dolson. Delores 132 Donnigan, Joe 158 Dorsch, Bill 172 Dostie, Cameron 148 Doubek, Dale 163 Dougherty, Chuck 157 Dougherty, Harold 179 Dougherty, John 166 Douglas, Bob 175 Dowd, Dana 171 Dowell, Pat 132 Downing, Wes 148 Downs, Tom 158 Doyle, Bill 162 Drake, Georgia Anne 137 Drake, Rosanne 147 Drake, Stephanie 141 Drevets, Curtis 163 Driver, Joyce 130 Dryden, Jack 155 Dubach, Marilyn 138 Duchossois, Jann 141 Duesler, Bill 176 Duggan, Lee 172 Duncan, Donn 157 Duncan, Howard 177 Duncan, Jim 152 Dunlop, Sandra 130 Dunmire, Fred 168 Dunn, Barbara 130 Dunn, John 160 Dunn, Rupert 162 Dunne, Bob 154 Duphorne, Ronald 148 Durham, Dean 168 Duroche, Leonard 177 Duroni. Chuck 173 Dutt, Wendell 177 Duvall, Leland 170 Dyck, Donna 147 Dye, Everette 166, 190 Dye, Hubert 157 Dye, Susie 134 Dyerly. Rodney 165 Dyerson, Clyde 175 EASTER, FRIEDA 140 Eastwood, William 153 Echols, Nancy 132 Eckert, Ted 157 Edmonds, Don 158 Edwards, David 150 Edwards, Dolores 146 Eflin, Dick 173 Eisenbise, Warner 168 Elam, Barbara 138 Elder, Gene 178 Elliot, Jim 168 Elliot, Jorge 169 Elliott. Bob 152 Ellis, Don A. 172 Ellis, Jane 146 Ellis, Merle 153 Ellison Claude 151, 154 Elscr, Ruth 142 Ellsworth, Leon 160 Elvig, Jack 154 Embree, Max 156 Emery, Frank 157 Emig. Dale 175 Emrich, George 123 Endacott, Don 122, 154 Endacott, Grace 134 Endacott, Phil 173 Enfield, Ed 168 Engelland, Dwight 168 Engelmann. Calvin 153 Englund, Margery 137 England, Betty 145 Engle. Colleen 140 Englert, DuWayne 153 Englund, Marge 137 Enos, Emily 140 Enos. Paul 153 Ensminger, Chuck 174 Epperson, Sue 132 Ericksen, Con 175 Erickson, Pat 137 Erickson, Richard 156 Ernst, Courtney 175 Errebo, Marjorie Ann 134 Esch, Jeanne 145 Estelle, Judy 129 Esther, John ISO Evans, Dorsey 151, 154 Evans, Ellis 157 Evans, Elton 171 Evans, Ron 174 Everett, Mary Ann 135 Eversull, Mary 141 Ewell. Charlene Ann 134 Ewv, Gene 169 Ewy, Gordon 169 Eyler. Maralyn 141 Eyman, Charles 178 FAIR. BILL 178 Falletta, Norma Lou 132 Fanestill.Darrell 165 Fann, Raymond 180 Fare. Claude 160 Farha, Al 155 Farney. BUI 173 Farnham, MHo 151 Farrar, Bill 162 Fawcette, Wendell 151 Fayette, Gil 169 Fee, Chester 163 Fee, Frank 173 Fee, James 165 Felzien, Pat 147 Fenity. Doug 175 Fenn, Norma 131 Fergeson, Ward 172 Ferguson, Eugenia 138 Ferguson, Royse 148 Ferrell, Lawrence 170 Person, Frank 167 Feuerborn, Ivo 158 Fields, Bruce 175 Fifield, John 165 Fine, Don 147 Fink, Joe 156 Fink, John 156 Fink, Judy 126 Finnegan, Barbara 123 Fischer, Barbara 147 Fischer, Jeaneene 125, 138 Fisher, Jack 178 Fisher, Jo Anna 142 Fiske, Terry 157 Fiss, Galen 173 Fis, La Verne 166 File, Vic 147 Fitzgerald, Jeanne 144 Fitzpatrick, Sharon 129 Fligg, Ken 168 Flinner, Bob 164 Florian, Barbara 141 Flory, Don 158 Floyd, Jim 126, 154 Fluharty, Carol 125 Flynn, Georgianne 129 Foerschler, Charlene 136 Fogle, Ed 168 Folck, Richard 157 Foley, Jerry 166 Follett, Margaret 147 Foltz, Diana 132 Ford, Norman 177 Ford. Toby 158 Fore, Paul 161 Force, Alice 134 Force, Jerry 171 Fornvth, Robert 165 Forman, John 169 Forman, Mary Anne 129 Fordyce, Joni 136 Forney, Sue 137 Foster, Jim 165 Foster, Richard 160, 171 Foster, Sally 132 Fotopolous, Pete 128, 168 Foutz. Homer 169 Fowler. Jack 1S5 Fowler, James 156 Fox, Dan 156 Fox, Marcia Jane 147 Fox, Patricia 143 Foyle, Bob 171 Foyle, Frank 175 Francis, Donna 130 Francis, Janet 137 Franke, Roger 178 Franklin, Charles 156 Franklin, Don 154 Franz, Leo 177 Fraser, George 161 Frasier, Buzz 174 Frazier, Homer 171 Frazier. Stanley 176 Fredrickson. Richard 170 Frceburg. Ed 154 Freeman. Sally 129 Frieze, Clarence 175 Frisbie, Dean 156 Frost, Jack 165 Frye, George 159 Fuller, Harry 170 Fuller, Marilyn 140 Fuller, Mary Lou 132 Fullerton, Corky 136 I nil,., 1, in. Hugh 175 Fulton, Jennie 172 Furguson, Jim 153 CABRIELSON. JANET 126. 133 Caddis. Don 178 Gaffney, Harry 180 Gagelman, Janie 138 Calbraith. Jim 167 Galbraith, Joe 167 Galliart, Robert 165 Galloway, Carole 134 Gamer, Greg 157 Gamlin. Dick 168 Carberick, Barbara 145 Card, Betty 123. 137 Card. Diane 138 Card. Howard 163 Garden. Jock 180 Cardenshire, Pat 134 Gardner, Roderic 154 Gardner, Terry 156 Garland, Jepson 162 Garland, John 162 Carney, Chuck 173 Garr, Margie 133 Carrett, Cerold 166 Carrett, Pat 134 193 Garrity, Bob 155 Garvin, Louise 143 Carvin. Kebecca 132 i:.,.k, 1 I. Dina 140 Canton Velma 146 Gates. Don 155 Gatewood, Roth 175 Gauert. Brooks 168 Geier, Ken 169 Gelvin, Bob 166 Cempel. Julie 141 Gench. Rosemary 128, 133 George, Jim 167 Gerber, Dorothy HO Gerboth. Neall 175 Cerhling. Hsnk 172 Gertson, William 163 Getto, Dick 160 Cetto. Mike 160. 16S Geyer. Frances 142 Cibbs. Bill 173 Gibson. Beryl 114 Giddinga. Lucy 139 Cier. Dick 149 Cilchrist. Nancy 137 Gill. Nancy 130 Cillam. Charles 160 Gil lett, James 150 Gilman. Mark 157 Cilstrap, Peggy 146 Gish, Larry 165 Cish. Wesley 172 Glasco. Dean 175 Glass. Edeltrud 139 Glass. Jim 148 Glass. . i ' . .. 145 Gleason. Jim 153 Glenn, Jack 172 Glenn, Joanne 134 Glenn, Nancy 130 Glenn, Richard 156 Click, Jack 171 Clover. Bobbie 128 Gob. Jean Arthur 177 Godding. Lorraine 133 Godwin, La Vonne 145 Godwin, Marjorie 130 Gi, forth. Donna 133 Goldenberg. Charles 152 Golden. John 174 Goodjohn, Jo Ann 137 Goodman. John 152. 177 Coodseal, Wilbur 151 Goodwin. Lynn 172 Cordon, George 154 Cordon. Paul 128, 166 Core. Glenn 156 Gottesmann, Sidney 149 Goudie, Lawrence 147 Could, Cayle 124. 128. 137 Cowan, Jeanette 132 Grady, Patricia Anne 134 Graewe, Irene 146 Graham, John 157 Graham, Lynn 141 Graham. Rosco 180 Graham, Sutton 166 Cranberg, Gayle 145 Grantham, Jane 140 Crauberger, John 180 Craves, Dean 126, 165 Craves. Jim 168 Cray. David 151 Cray. David 179 Gray, Marlene 132 Gray. Robert 171 Cray. Phyllis 129 Greeley. John 167 Green. Berry 152 Green, Don 174 Greene, Bruce 178 Greene, Monty 174 Greene, Phil 126 Greenleaf, Harold 154 Creer, Kee 160 Greer. Naomi 146 Greiner, Larry 165 Crether, Ralph 173 Grey, Jimmte 171 Criesser, John 168 Griesser. Lisa 133 Griffin, Judy 136 Griffith, Bill 168 Griffith, Ceorgenne 139 Griffith, Maria 137 Griffith, Tommy 147 Grimes, Bob 168 Grimes, Frances 141 Grimm. Clark 156 Criswold, Bill 175 Criwold, James 176 Cob, Jean 177 Groe, Joanne 133 Crogger. Bob 166 Goodman, Jerome 177 Grosjean, Sue 141 Crover. Chuck 173 Grovier, Jayne 141 Grow. Craig 169 Guess, Paul 156 Guest. Delcina 146 Cugler. Wanda 147 Cumm, Ray 157 Gummig, George 158 Cunderson, Harry 155 Gustafson. Kay 132 Guthridge, Joan 137 Guzman. Perry. Carlos 152 HABER, CARLA 131 Hadel, Bill 167 Hadley, Jim 172 Hadley, Richard 165 Hagar, Dave 164 Haggard. Frank 168 Haggart, Bob 172 Hahn. Phil 174 Haines. C. W. 152 Haines. Hankie 137 Hair, Walter 163 Haize. Helen 140 Hales. Loyde 177 Haley, Eleanor 123 Haley, Eugene 170 Hall, Allan 174 Hall, Andy 172 Hall, Ben 154 Hall. Bill 173 Hall, Charles 163 Hall. Gene 157, 174 Hall. Harold 178 Hall. Herbert 177 Hall. Louisa 133 Hall.Wes 164 Haller. Sheila 142 Halligan. Hap 167 Hallman, Gordon 157 Halula. Jack 153 Hamm, Maurice 159 Hamilton. Bob 1S7 Hamilton, Gordon 166 Hamilton. John 180 Hamilton. Lee 168 Hamilton. Robert 163 Hamilton, Stan 148 Hammig. Jack 156 Hammond, Benjamin 151. 154 Hammond, Richard 171 Hampton, Bill 162 Hampton. Nancy 137 Hampton, Nancy 137 Hancock. Bill 147 Handley. John 165 Haney, Bernard 177 Hanley. Horace 151 Hanlon. Theresa 146 Hanna, Frances 134 Hanna, Jan 123 Hanson. Marilyn 130 Hansen. Mary 140 Harada. Miyeko 146 Harbordt. Carolyn 128. 137 Harclerode. Donald 176 Harder. Mary Jane 145 Hardraan. Mary Lou 133 Hardy, Dave 157 Hardy, Jay 154 Hartis, Ret 161 Harlan, Doug 169 Harmon. Bill 147 Harmon. Jim 173 Harms, Esther 146 Harms, Margy 138 Haren. Tod 173 Harper, George 178 Harper, Certha 147 Harper. Prady 135 Harriford. Willie 151 Harris. Jim 1S7 Harris, Kenneth 180 Harris. Mary Ann 129 Harris, Nathan 156 Harris. Pat 135 Harris. R. C. 156 Harrison. Dwight 166 Harseh. Eddie 162 Hart. Milan 157 Kartell. Joanne 147 Kartell, Keith 156 Hartnett. Jerome 178 Haskins. Walter 177 Hatcher. Snirley 135 Hauck. Betty 128. 137 Haufler. Walt 158 Hausler, Ken 175 Hawei. Bill 175 Hawk. Marion 150 Hawkey, Bill 178 Hawkins. Dolores 132 Hawkinson. Jack 165 Hawkinson, Marilyn 141 Hawley, Clyde 164 Hawley, Don 156 Hay. Ken 152 Hayden. Scott 173 Hayden, Walter 173 Haydon. Dick 168 Hayes, Chuck 176 Hayes. Patricia 123, 130 Hayes, Bob 172 Hazlett, Richard 162 Hazlett, Robert 171 Heard, Marjorie 125 Heath, Bob 172 Heath, Fritz 165 Heck, Martha 132 Hedges. Charles 157 Hedrick. Charles 175 Hedrick. Paul 153 Hegarty. Bill 167 Heil, Larry 178 Heindel, Sally 138 Heiny, Rosemary 132 Heiskell. Roger 165 Heitholt. William 161. 190 Helfrey, Don 128. 156 Heller, Jo 131 Helm, Karolyn 146 Helman, Jon 162 Helmreich, Louis 126. 161 Helmstetter. Larry 167 Hemphill. Carol 140 Henderson, Dennis 158 Henderson. Harlan 177 Henderson, John 169 Henderson, Thelma 139 Hendrix, Cole 177 Hengen, John 159 If. MMI. in. Ivan 147 Henningson, Frances 129 Hendricksen, Marian 139 Henry. Gladys 139 Henry. Jane 136 Henry, Joyce 130 Henry, Rosalie 147 Henry. Ruth 140 Henson, Chuck 157 Henson, Harold 157 Hereford, June 141 II. i, ,1.1. LeRoy 162 Herring. Bobbie 129 Herron, Curtis 154 Hershberger. Jim 173 Hershey, Sue 130 Herzog. Bob 167 Hess. Donald 165 Hesse. Jerry 137 Hessenflow. Bob 155 Hessling, Patricia 143 Hessling. Ray 156 Hattinger. Robert 128, 156 Hewitt. William 170 Heywood, Janie 136 Hibbard. Barbara 126, 133 Hicks, Van 163 Hicks. Walter 171 Higgens. Dick 109 High. Connie 129 Hilburn, John 180 Hill. Dave 154 Hill. Dick 155 Hill. Mary 139 Hill. Robert 159 Hille. Elizabeth 131 Hillmer. Norman 163 Hills. David 152 Hilmar. Karen 129 ll,,i. li. ... Lessie 142 Hindman, Nancy 147 Hininger, Marcia 143 Hinshaw. Charles 157 Hirsch, Duane 171 Hise. Harlan 166 Hiakey, Bernell 168 Kite, Ralph 153 Hilt, Evelyn 138 Hiison. Harold 160 Hoadley. Bill 164 Hoag. Charlie 166. 190 Hobbs. Bob 154 Hobbs. Mildred 138 Hobein. Dale 178 Hocker. John 164 Hodge, Humpy 166 Hodges, Merle 123, 127 Hoefener, Jim 155 Hoerath, Jack 152 Hoffman, James 153 Hoffman, John 148 Hoffman. William 177 Hogan, David 165 Hogan. Theodore 165 Hoglund, Barton 155 Hoglund. Forrest 155 Hogue. Jim 173 Holland. Lee 169 Hoi ley. Marvin 170 Holliday, Bill 172 Hoi I infer. Lloyd 165 Hollingiworlh. Donna 133,147 Hoi lingaworth, Janie 125 Hollingsworth, Kermil 153 Hollingiworth, Robert 161 Holmes, Ron 157 Holmes. Shirley 145 Holsinger, Johnny 125, 162 Holstine. Jay 165 Holt. Bill 157 Holte. Mary Evan 137 Hooton, John 176 Hoover, Penny 137 Hoover, Roger 174 Hopkins, Don 175 Hopkins, Duane 158 Hordyk, John 172 Hornaday, Diane 136 Homer, Larry 154 Horowitz, Herbert 149 Horttor. Donald 162 Hotchkiss, Bruce 152 Hougland, Bob 161 Hougland, Jerry 128 House, Bill 160 House. Edward 159 Houston, Pat 137 Houtz, Duane 165 Hovey, Bob 168 Hovey, Joan 137 Howard, Barbara 128 Howard, Dick 147 Howard, Peggy 143 Howell, Burton 174 Howell. Pat 138 Hower. Raymond 170 Howerton, Delbert 161 Hoyt, Frances 143 Hubbard, James 150 Hubert, Ron 168 Hudkins, Dana 141 Hudson, Marilyn 141 Hudsonpillar, Wilma 145 Huerter, Quent 167 Huff, Bob 158 Hughes, Dick 165 Hughes, Irby 156 Hughes, Louis 159 Hughes, Peggy 128. 141 Hughson, Kay 150 Humphrey, Martha 125 Humphreys, Don 172 Hund, Ester 145 Hungate, Annabel 141 Hunsucker, Richard 177 Hunsinger, Joann 142 Hunsinger, Shirley 143 Hunt. Claudette 138 Hunt, Harry 176 Hunt, Jesse 133 Hunt. Millicent 132 Hunt, Paul 166 Hunt, Tom 154 Huntsley, Perry 164 llin.li. Don 155 Hurt. Marc 173 Hurt. Pat 145 Husted, Carolyn 134 Hutcherson, Joy 140 Hutchins. Sid 174 Hurley. Bill 158 Hutton. Nancy 123, 136 Hyatt. Jim 160 Hyde, Anne 142 Hyer. Charlea 174 Hynes, Jan 144 Hysom, John 157 ICE. TED 165 Iden, Thelma 135 Imes, Gene 173 lott, Marvin 168 Ireland, James 165 Ireland. Robert 171 Irish, Gary 174 Irwin, Mary Ann 130 JACKA. PHILLIP 178 Jacks, Hugh 173 Jackson, Anne 133 Jackson, Beverly 129 Jackson, Bob 168 Jackson, Jim 173 Jackson, Monte 145 Jackson, Richard 177 Jacobs, Robert 163 Jacobson, Jerry 172 Jaderborg, Ronald 158 James, Don 154 James, Jerry 175 Janousek, Frank 158 Janousek. Lucille 142 Jaquith, Terry 156 Jarrell, Kos 171 I. ui. it, Mary 143 Jarrett. Shirley 146 Jeffers, Patsy 132 Jeffrey, Ann 128 Jellison, Kenneth 159 Jenkins, Lyle 150 Jenkins, Marian 132 Jennings, Sandy 165 Jenson, Don 167 Jester, Jerry 166 Jester, Tommy 148 John, Jo Anne 134 Johnson, Alberta 124, 136 Johnson, Bill 174,177 Johnson, Charles 152 Johnson, Christine 140 Johnson, David 171 Johnson, Don 156 Johnson, Donald 170 Johnson, Donna Jean 134 Johnaon, Jody 130 Johnson, Jordan 151 Johnson, Lee 163 Johnson, Martha Jo 138 Johnson, Phil 156 Johnson, V. J. 171 Johnson, Wallace 170 Johnson, Wes 157, 190 Johnston, Bruce 171 Johnston, Dell 174 Johnston, Don 154 Johnston, John 156 Johnston, Paul 171 Johnston, Tom 173 Johnston, Warren 166 Johnstone, Eugene 161 Jones. Arch 152 Jones, Bernard 148 Jones, Billie 131 Jones, Chuck 174 Jones, Delbert 150 Jones, Dick 180 Jones, C. H. 166 Jones, John Paul 165 Jones, Peggy 130 Jones, Ralph 151 Jones, Tom 168 Jordan, Scott 176 194 Jorn, Wallace 153 Joyce, Barbara 147 Judy, Dick 154 Jungk. Warren 170 Junod, Norman 180 Jurden, Jerry 168 KAAK. BOB 157 Kaaz, Mary Ann 133 Kaff, Gale 157 Kagey, Connie 143 Kalber, Douglas 164 Kallos, Gene 173 Kallos, Don 173 Kane, David 168 Kane, John 154 Karbank, Herbert 163 Karen, Gerber 139 Karras, Bill 152 Kaspar, Carol 140 Kassebaum, Phillip 165 Kaufman, Ed 164 Kauffman, Fritz 170 Kay, Doug 128, 175 Kay, Morris 161 Kay. Bob 161 Keefer, Robert 148 Keen, Kenneth 168 Keenan, Larry 178 Keith, Bradley 161 Keith. Charles 165 Kellam, Sally 133 Keller. Carol 129 Keller. Leland 164 Kelley, Allen 157, 190 Kelley, Dean 157, 190 Keller, Marv 167 Kelley. Maureen 125, 129 Kelley, Ralph 166 Kellis, Wen 175 Kellogg. Darrell 161 Kelly, Galen 177 Kendall, Marilyn 138 Kendall, Sylvia 142 Kendig. Harold 165 Kennedy, Bob 174 Kenney, Bob 157 Kension, Jean 146 Kent. Bud 162 Kerr, Jerry 156 Kesler, Janet 128 Kesner, Mick 168 Kestner, Jim 174 Ketterman, Joan 131 Kibler, Bob 175 Kiddoo, Sally 132 Kiehl, Ralph 150 Kiene, Llewellyn 129 Kilgore. Celia 137 Kimbell, Charles 165 Kimmel, Jacqueline 130 Kincaid, Jack 156 Kindig, Jerry 160 Kinemond, Gary 147 King, Harriet 132 King, Jack 152 Kinkead, Suzie 141 Kinney, George 165 Kirby. Merlin 163 Kirk, Lloyd 153 Kirkpatrick, Bruce 128, 171 Kirkpatrick, Charles 171 Kirseh, Jack 153 Kisling, Hasard 176 Klanderud. Barbara 144 Klassen, Dick 152 Kliewer, Paul 161, 164 Kline, Bob 160 Kline, Richard 169 Kliver, John 163 Klobassa, Carl 172 Klusmire. Charlotte 146 Knauss, Kathleen 126, 133 Knepp, Gerald 176 Kneuss, Earl 155 Knight, Mary 138 Knightly, Bob 128 Knobloch, Gene 178 Knorp, Darryl 160 Knowles, Dick 156 Kobler, Dean 178 Koeppel, Karl 175 Knupp, Betty Don 123, 136 Kobbeman, Alfred 166 Kobler, Bob 178 Koch, Albert 148 Koker. Doris 145 Konek, John 157 Koontz, Judith 142 Kopper, Dean 177 Koppers, Louise 144 Kosar, Joe 174 Koukol, Ruth Ellen 145 Kramer, John 147 Krause, Don 157 Kraus, Harold 178 Kravitz, Lawrence 159 Krehbiel, Bill 166 Krehbiel. Cynthia 125.129 Krueger, Burke 178 Krueger, Roy 155 Krueger, Tom 155 Krug, Barbara 143 Kuhl, Conden 157 Kuhlman, Bill 147 Kull, Ron 178 Kunkhouser. Bill 180 Kvammc, Else 145 LACY, BOB 173 Lacey, Carolyn 143 LaFollets, Bob 174 LaGree, Rich 157 Laman, Muryl 148 Lamb, Bob 162 Lamb, Jim 157 Lamb, Ralph 157 Lambert, Ann 141 Lambert, Cliff 128 Lambert, Kay 141 Lambert, Wayne 151 Lance, Tom 175 Lander, Beverley 126 Landes, Don 178 Landess. Bill 122, 157 Landis, Carol 125 Landon, Barbara 138 Landon, Jack 166 Landon, Nancy 137 Landree, Betty 129 Landis, Mike 152 Lane, Charles 156 Langerman, Paul 170 Larkin, Bert 150 Larkin, Wilbur 175 Larson, Bud 175 Larson, Larry 167 Lassine, Sidney 149 Latimer, Bill 158 Lauber, Datha 123, 130 Laughlin, Bob 167 Launders, Skip 173 Lauterback, August 128 Lavery, Jim 162 Law. Clair 178 Lawrence. Martha 138 Lawrence, Ray 156 Lay, Allen 156 Laybourn, Joyce 141 Leach, Mary Agnes 129 Leahy, Dick 173 Lechner, Herbert 150 Legler, Gene 156 Lehman, Gary 161 Lehmann, Kay 123, 130 Lehmberg, Stanford 150 Leibengood, Dana 171 Lemoine, JoAnn 141 Lemon, Letty 134 Lemon, Vern 170 Leon, Virginia 140 Leonard, Carl 158 Leonard, Janice 133 Leonard, Lewis 165 Leondedis, George 150 Leoni, Paul 128, 166 Leonhart. Joan 129 Lerner. Kenneth 149 Lett. Ronald 150 Letteer. Jean 146 Levikow. H. J. 149 Lewin, Walter 163 Lewis, Bernard 177 Lewis. Bill 155 Lewis, Chester 154 Lewis, Jerry 165 Lewis, Pat 129. 173 Lewis, Robert 180 Lewis, Vernon 151 Lichty, Nancy 138 Liggett, Wilson 172 Lightfoot, James 150 Limes, Joe 178 Lindberg, Charles 171 Lindsay, Dan 174 Lindsay, Donald Ray 176 Linn, Dianna 145 Linstrom, Richard 148 1 .iii-n.il,,. William 148 Little. Steve 160 Littell, Roscoe 128.161 Livingston, Wayne 173 Lloyd, Patricia 141 Lodde, Joan 122, 133 Loftus, Larry 167 Logan, Barbara 128, 133 Logan. Carol 130 Logan, John 177 Lohman. William 155 Lolley, Dick 174 Lonborg, Dane 173 Londerholm, Bob 175 Long, Earl 159 Long, John 153 Long. Rita 142 Longstaff, Bob 147 Longwood, Peggy 136 Longwood, Ruth 124, 163 Loudon, Jack 156 I ...uk, Frank 171 Love, Richard 177 Loveless, Mary Gayle 134 Lowe, Jim 157 Lowell. Beth 128, 133 Lowis, Kay 134 Lucas, Max 178 Ludwig. Wilma Rae 145 Lund, George 125, 165 Lundry, Joyce 142 Luplau, Erik 173 Lupton, Ellen Jane 136 Lusk, Joanne 139 Luthy, Annette 140 Lyle, M. V. 173 Lynch, Ham 154 Lynch, Marijane 130 Lynn, Max 153 Lyon, Shirley 146 Lyons, Francis 156 Lyons, Thomas 165 Lysaught, Jerry 167 Lytle, Bob 158 McARDLE, LOIS 130 McBride, John 168 McBurney, Alex 174 McCall, Dick 157 McCall, Donna 132 McCall, Jack 173 McCallister, Ben 168 McCallum, Edward 155 McCatmon, Lewis 159 McCammon, Nancy 136 McCann, Bob 152 McCarth, Cleve 154 McClelland, Don 154 McClelland, Joe 166 McClelland, William 150 McClenny, Myron 160 McClure, Seth 169 McCollum, Frank 178 McComb, Carol 140 McConnell, Doris 136 McCormick, Eugene 164 McCoy, Anita 137 McCoy, Don 158 McCoy, Roger 177 McCoy, Ted 154 McCullough, John 169 McCune, George 153 McCune, Martin 154 McDonald, Charles 171 McDonald, Dick 156 McDonald, Gaye 125 McDonald, Jack 167 McDonald, Jean 133 McDowell, Hanna Mary 134 McEachen, Bill 160 McEachen, Dick 156 McElheny, Stephen 150 McEIroy, Harold 168 McEvers, Dick 154 McFarland, Diane 132 McFarland, Dick 173 McFarland, Janice 133 McFarland, John 166 McFarland, Paula 135 McCaffin, Jane 125 McGilley, John 166 McGinnis, Jean 132 McGonigle, Dick 167 McGrew, Nathan 178 McGuire, Michael 156 McCuire, Bud 173 McGuire, Tom 163 McHugh, Jim 167 Mclntosh, Holland 160 McKay. Bill 179 McKeage, LeRoy 177 McKee, Kathleen 133 McKee, Michael 172 McKee, Lynn 177 McKenney, George 157 McKernan, Sally 137 McKibben, Mary Ellen 134 McKinney, Collin 175 McLeroy, Bud 155 McMillan, Lynne 134 McMillen, John 178 McMullen, Bob 169 McMullen, Joe 172 McNabney, Pat 132 McNalley. Mike 154 McNeill, Neil 154 McNergney, Connie 140 McVay, Ann 133 McWilliams, Paul 169 MA, LIT 159 Maag, Richard 177 Macauley. Don 178 MacCormack. Jack 180 MacDougal. Lynn 178 MacCee, Ed 160 Macgregor, Nancy 135 Machado. Luiz 159 Mac Ivor, Keith 166 Mackey, Virginia 138 MacLaughlin, Anne 141 MacLeod. Don 163 Maduros. Tina 130 Magers. Kay 134 Magg. Ed 157 Maguire, Dirk 174 Mahoney, Kathleen 146 Mahoney, Mary Ann 129 Malkmus. Bcrnie 178 Mallory, Billie 134 Mallory, Bob 128 Malone, Nancy 129 Malune, Eugene 164 Manley, Don 174 Manion, Bob 166 Mann, John 158 Manning, Pat 154 Manuel, Janice 136 March, Jo Anna 141 Marhofer, Marilyn 134 Markham, Sandy 165 Markle, Dick 147 Markley, Jo Ann 143 Markley, Jay 160 Marr, J. Dennis 170 Marsh, Ruth Ann 141 Marshall, Betty 129 Marshall, Bill 174 Marshall, Bobbie 150 Marshall. Carol 138 Marshall, Hal 175 Marshall, Jim 180 Martin, Bill 158 Martin, Bob 166 Martin, Clyde 171 Martin, Dave 175 Martin, Don 166 Martin, Len 152 Martin, Lloyd 171 Marty, Anne 129 Marvin, Norman 164 Mason, Francis 141 Mason, Janice 131 Mason, Leon 171 Masson, Alex 161 Matchett, Jere 153 Matheny, Harry 150 Mathes, James 161 Matsushita, Sid 140 Matthews, Dean 154 Matthews, Lenore 136 Matthews, Tommy 165 Maus, Connie 129 May. John 163 Mayberry, George 150 Maybcrry. Veryl 162 Mayer. Bob 166 Mears, Jim 157 Mecklenburg, Karl 150 Meeker, Donald 155 Meeker. Ron 174 Megaffin, Jane 133 Mcgredy. Bob 153 Mi-hl, Robert 165 Mchnert, John 180 Meier, Bob 172 Meier, Leonard 180 Melia, Crandall 169 Melkus, Dean 153 Menard, Don 167 Menchetti. Don 178 Mercer, Rich 128 Mercier, Larry 167 Merideth, John 173 Merrill, Kenneth 180 Merriman, Betty 137 Merriman, Earl 170 Merz, Tony 160 Mesker. Lyle 138 Metz, Bonnie 134 Metz, Jack 152 Metz, Marily 143 Meyer, Winnie 124, 138 Meyers, Dick 157 Meysenburg. Bob 167 Michale, George 123, 157 Michaels, Jean 129 Michener, Bill 166 Middlekauff, Charles 166 Middlekauff, Mary 134 Mikesell, Bill 152 Millard. John 172 Milbradt, Eugene 159 Mill, Max 165 Miller, Dianne 131 Miller, Doyle 180 Miller, Edward 165 Miller, Fred 147 Miller. Henry 150 Miller, Howard 180 Miller, Jimmy 165 Miller, Jock 154 Miller, Larry 173 Miller, Marian 143 Miller, Marilyn 136 Miller, Roger 155 Miller, Sally 142 Miller, Winnifred 133 Mills, Belden 150 Milne, Steve 169 Milne, Thomas 170 Mirick, Ruth 146 Mitchell, Kent 156 Mitchell, Merry Lou 139 Mitchell, Sandy 171 Mitsakis. Charles 153 Mock, Norma 137 Mog, Marvin 150 Mohler. Jack 156 Montgomery, Gene 180 Moon. Charlie 157 Moore, Dale 162 Moore, Gordon 171 Moore. Haven 143 Moore, Jim 180 Moore, Margaret 146 Moore, Mary Beth 143 Moore, Vaughn 153 Morehead. Jim 175 Morelock, Charles 150 Morris. Dick 157 Morris, Don 128 195 Morris, J.ck 173 Morris, Loren 166 Morris, Millicent 134 Morrison, Bob 158 Morrison. Dick 156 Morrison, Janet 133 Morrow, Malcolm 163 Morli, Leonard 147 Morion, Martha 129 Morton, Tom 166 Moser. Vern 152 Mmhcr, Don 163. 169 MOSD. Mnrlenc 141 Moxley, Diive 173 Mnycr. I ' . ml 180 Muchlliiich, Marilyn 137 Mueller. Fred 155 Mueller. Kny 14U Mueller. Murllm 147 Mnii. Doll l..l Mnii. lol.nnie 126, 135 Mn HIT. Joe 154 Miilliii.ix. l.iiry Ann 129 Ml. ,.;..,. ! 170 Munerr. N.int-y 126. 135 Mm MI-. l.iirry 152 M.ill.k, ii. Al 154 Mm. l.,ck. June 132 Miir|.liy. Kiln Mac 142 Murphy, Jniii. 137 Muiphy. J.-ny 169 IMuipliy. Lurry 177 Mui|.liy. Marvin 12H. 16.1 Murray. M !,-,, I.I Murray. Max 122. 16H Murray. Wati.la 142 Murray. Warren 159 Myern. Dave 161) Mycis. liixlii! 130 Myers. Mary 1 138 Myei. N.niry 14(1 NAI.I.EY. VIHC1NIA 135 Nanglc. John 170 Nnnninga, John 168 %.,]...,. Grunt 174 Nardyz. Carolyn 126. 135 V...lw. Mark 166 Nasoii, Corky 152 Nason. II..,!.. ii 163 Nenl. Terry 163 VII. Carolyn 143 Nefsinger. Kill 153 Nellignn, Katie 134 Nellis. Jim 166 Nelson. Clara 134 Nelson, George 172 Nelson, Jerry 156 Nelson, Nannetle 129 Nettles. Curt 154 Neuer. Howard 130 Neville, Mozelle 124.136 Neville. Nancy 124.136 Newholil. Richard 170 Newhy. Jim 154 Newman. Kay 138 Newton. John 153 Nichols. Mil. - 156 Nichols. Sherman 128, 163 Nicholson, Eldon 154. 190 Nicholson. William 170 Nicklaus, Dorothy 146 Nielson, Donalil 170 Nienstedt, Martha 130 Niti. Jim 157 Nixon, Joe 177 Noristrom, Dick 157 Norman. James 171 Norris. Frank 174 Norris. Mack 153 North, Kathryn 132 Nottingham. Joan 142 Novolny, Hose Mnrie 143 Nn 1 1. Eric 174 Null. Margie 141 Nulton. Bill 154 onoltNY. WILLIAM 162 O ' Brien, Larry 174 O ' Brien. Sieve 160 Ochs. Don 160 Ocln, Jay 147 O ' Daniel. Georgia 122.129 O ' Dell. Ceral.line 138.147 O ' Dell.Jim 150.159 O ' Dell. Jerry 150 O.len. Hillary 153 O ' Farrell, Tom 152 ORB. Harry 160 Ogilvy. Jill 122. 133 Oliver. Carolyn 143 Oliver, Jay 174 Oliver. Jim 180 Oliver. Julia 142 Olsen. H. HI, ,1,1 155 Olscn. John 163, 169 Olson, Robert L. 163 O ' Neill, Gene 167 Opie, Glenn 165 Orlowake. Wayne 166 Orme, La Vette 146 Ormond. Elcnnor 126, 142 O ' Rourke. Jim 166 Osborn, Lynn 148 Osborne, Jennie 130 Osborne, Rosalee 122, 133 1 1- In,,..., Harulta 147 Oswald, Orland 178 Ott, Jay 174 Owens, Dean 173 Owen, Phillip 161 Owen. Rosemary 129 Owen, Sadie 139 Owings. Paul 152 PADGETT, GARY 168 Page). Shirley 142 Painter, Anne 145 Palmer. Dick 156 Palmer, Lloyd 171 Pankrat. Paul 162, 179 Park, Albert 150 Park. Bill 180 Park, Donald 150 Parker. Jim 158 Parker. Philip 157 Parker. Wayne 164 Parkinson, Harlan 165 Parsons, Mary 145 Parten, Marvin 171 Parton. Dick 175 Passmore. William 171 Patterson. Bill 158 Patterson. Cynthia 141 Patterson. Pat 190 Patterson, Paulyne 146 Patterson, William 163 Patlinson, John 148 Patton, Dwight 177 Payne, Bill 166 Pearce. Robert 180 Pearn. Bill 153 Pearson. John 155 Pemberton, Lee 156 Pence. Bit lie Beth 139 Pendelton, Helen 141 Pendleton, Janet Ann 146 Penfold. Mary Lou 133 Perkins, Jim 174 Perkins, Nelson 172 Perkins. Sam 161 Perry. Janice 130 Perry. John 153 Perry. Jim 172 Peschka. Alan 165 Peterman. Charles 154 Petert. Carol 131 Peterson. Chuck 169 Peterson. Hans 155 Peteraon. Neil 148 Peterson. Phil 175 Petilt. Phil 168 Phenninger. Mark 164, 177 Phillips. Ben 161 Phillips. Dick 147 Phillips. Innes 154 Phillips, Jamei A. 150 Phillips. James E. 150 Phillips, Joan 132 Phillips, Lewis 165 Phillips. Ronald 150 Phoenix, Tom 165 Piatt, Shirley 137 Pickerill. Jack 167 Pickering. Jack 162 Pierce, Gregg 156 Pierson. Ray, Jr. 168 Piller. Joan 138 Pitman, Nannette 134 Planer. Ben 126 Platter, David 165 Plummer, Patricia 143 Poe, Mary Frances 140 Pokorny, Bob 164 Pollotn. Marilyn 136 Polski. Al 167 Pontiua, Dean 171 Pool. Marvin 169 Poppe, Orville 160 Porch. Mary Beall 138 Porter. Don 157 Porter. June 130 Porter, Margaret 142 Porter, Merwin 161 Porter, Ruth 145 Post, Shirley 139 Pott, Tom 168 Poulsen. Ebbe 162 Powell, Jim 174 Powers, Patricia 145 Pratt, Tom 168 Pretz, Mary 139 Priaul, Kenneth 170 Price. Ann 133 Price, Bill 172 Price, Bud 154 Price, Dee Ann 133 Priddy, Helen 139 Priest. Frank 165 Pringle. Don 160 Prochaska, Sam 169 Prosser. John 154 Pruyn. Gil 175 Puliver. Sandra 138 Pulliam. Bill 165 Pursley. T. J. 156 Pusitz, Thelma 147 QUARRIER, JOHN 148 Quick, Cynthia 136 Quinley, Margaret 133 Quinn, Cretchen 128 Ouinn, Sue 134 RADFORD, RAY 155 Ramsey, Bob 177 Raines. Lela 138 Rarick, Ron 174 Rash. Alia 146 Rashleigh. Perry 153 Ralhsack, Herb 160 Ratner. Cliff 154 Ratslaff, Maxine 130 Rathbun, Jake 173 Raynolds. Dick 173 Rausch. Marv 1S7 Rawline, Virgin 140 Ray. Harold 154 Reama. Jack 153 Rebein, Bob 167 Reed, Bob 154 Reed, Marlyn Sue 134 Reetz. Cretta 129 Reese. Nancy 138 Reddick. Willis 180 Rehkop. Al 156 Reich, Gilbert 166. 190 Reida. Vada 147 Reiger. Betty 128 Reiland. Bob 167 Reiland, Harry 167 Rein, Jack 166 Reitz, Anne 129 Remark, Don 167 Retnsburg. George 165 Rcnch, Wuanita 142 Renfro. Bob 178 Rengel. Marvin 128. 168 Renick, Bill 128,168 Renner. Joe 128. 161 Renner. Sally 133 Resseler, Dick 154 Reugel. Roaeann 124 Reuber. Melvin 163 Reiuch. Clifford 164 Reusch. Joyce 136 Rexroad. Althea 138 Reynolds, Robert 170 Rhodes. Sandra 145 Rice, Fred 173 Rice. Rex 178 Rich, Dan 172 Richards. Bil lie 143 Richards. Bob 165 Richards, Dennis 158 Richards, Jim 166 Richardson. Evelyn 139 Richardson, Robert 161 Richmond, Tom 172 Richter, Jean 162 Rickel, Walt 160 Rickman, Mary Lou 133 Ricky. Thomas 150 Ridder, Tom 167 Rieder, Don 148 Riederer. John 128, 166 Rieger, Betty 136 Rienhart, Dick 173 Rigdon. Donna 146 Riley. Dave 168 Riley. Gery 156 Rimann, Cayle 134 Rinehart. Bill 156 Ringer. Judy 129 Ringler. Marilyn 141 Rinier, Harold 153 Riss. Louise 138 Ritchie, Scott 125, 165 Rivard, Mark 154 Roach, Richard 176 Roberts. Albert 165 Roberts, Bud 168 Roberts. Kay 134 Roberts. William 128, 150 Robertson. Ben 177 Robbins, Dick 172 Roberts. Morilyn 130 Robertson, Flavia 138 Robertson, Jerry 172 Robertson, Roger 157 Robinson, Jay 180 Robinson, Mary Helen 140 Robison. Dan 166 Rogers. Bruce 147 Rogers. Gerald 154 Rodgers, Jack 166. 179 Rodkey. Frank 128. 156 Rogers, Calvin 151 Rogers. Gene 153 Rogers. Kenneth 154 Rogers. Larry 123. 168 Rogge, Karleen 142 Rogoff. Martin 149 Rohwer. Katherine 141 Ronald. Joyce 132 Roney, Patricia 128, 141 Roney, Rocelyn 134 Rooney, Bernard 160 Rooney, Ned 171 Rooney, Noel 160 Roop, Sue 135 Roots, Bonita 142 Roenbaugh, Doris 135 Rose, Jack 156 Rose, James L. 179 Rosenan, Shirley 129 Rosenlund, Jerry 166 Rosenwald. Vicki 140 Roshong. Richard 148 Koskam, Don 157 Rosrk, Roger 161 Ross, Dave 152 Ross. Dick 174 Ross, James 171 Ross, Leah 132 Rossman, Dick 174 Roster, Dick 162 Roth. Bob 122. 166 Roth, Ronald 177 Roth, Rose Marie 142 Rothrock, John 154 Rubin, Philip 149 Ruble, Rosanne 136 Ruddell.J. 163 Ruder. Hearn 167 Rumsey, Dick 166 Runyon, Delores 139 Rupp, Robert 148 Rush, Nancy 143 Rush, Peter 165 Rushfelt. Jerry 170 Russell, Kay 137 Russell, Veda 131 Runsing. Zannie 136 Ryan, Paula 145 Id ih. i. Dave 165 Ryther. Thomaa 165 SABATINI, FRANK 167 Sachs, Frederick 149 Sacks, Bob 147 Salisbury. Joan 139 Salisbury, John 172 Salyers. Earl 150 Sammons, Ron 153 Sammons, Wanda 140 Samson, Frances 147 Samuelson, Shirley 136 Sandborn, Kent 156 Sanders, Steve 174 Sandifer. Richard 165 Santee, Wes 148 Sargent, Dick 172 Sargent, Jan 157 Satlerwhite, Connie 175 Sauder, Anita 125 Sauer. Hank 167 Saunders, Don 163 Scarritt, Katherine 141 Schafer, Charles 162 Schafer. Jerry 128. 175 Schafer, Tom 153 Sehanze. Jean 126, 160 Schatzel, Carol 142 Schauf. Don 167 Schaulis, Ruby 140 Schauvliege. Mary Jo 139 Scheideman. Blaine 125. 165 Scheideman, Dale 126, 165 Schell, Farrel 148 Schenk. Rex 169 Scheuerman, Rosemary 145 S, himlliug. Jane 130 Schmalzried, Luella 139 Sehmid, Al 167 Sehmid, Donna Lee 139 Schmidt, Bill 128 Schmidt, Dick 128. 156 Schmidt, Jim 152 Schmidt, Reinhold 172 Schmidt. William 171 Schmidt, Willard 159 Schmitendorf, James 159 Schmilz. Gene 162 Schneider, Stanley 150 Schnierle, Anneliese 143 Schrag, Joanna 130 Schrag. Vernon 158 Schroeder, Mary 140 Schroeder. Roger 175 Schumacher, Herb 173 Schumacher, Winnie 136 Schultz, Don 173 Schutz. Carl 166 Schwader. Rita 129 Scott. Dean 152 Scott. Dick 177 Scott, Jack 175 Scott, Jadeen 144 Scott, Jerry 154 Scott. Kay 138 Scott. Phylles 128. 141 Scott, Stanly 151 Scott, Sue 129 Schirmer, Jerry 157 Schuetz. LouAnn 138 Schutz. Laura 138 Schwartz, Joe 156 Schwenk, Dave 161 Scupin. Jean Ann 138 Searl, Richard 148 Sears, Bruce 175 Sears. Dick 173 Sechrist, Gilbert 163 Seevers, Galen 171 Seiwald, Donald 176 Sejkora, Lynn 142 Selbe, Sally 145 196 Sell, Curtis 175 Sellers, Merl 173 Sellars, Richard 171 Selvig, Marilou 132 Serda, Marjorie 140 Settles, Bob 175 Shank. Gene 153 Shapp, Barbara 129 Sharpnack, Jim 128 Shaughnessy, Kathleen 136 Shaw, Barbara 146 Shaw, John 152 Shaw, Joan 138 Shaw, Martha Jane 141 Shawver, Don 166 Sheafor, Doug 154 Shearer, Beth 135 Shears, Jack 166 Sheldon, Richard 165 Shepard, Burwell 165 Shepler, Jim 152 Sherman, Bernard 149 Sherman, Jerry 170 Sherman, Tom 160 Sherwood. Nathalie 136 Shipp, Rita 146 Shirley, Bob 157 Shobe, Franklin 151 Shoemake, Robert 162 Shoerer, Kent 161 Short, James 148 Short, Margaret 138 Short, Rueben 155 Shaver, Glenn 155 Shanker, Harry 147 Shumway, Gene 178 Shaw, Marlene 146 Sharpnack, James 171 Shanahan, Charles 171 Shannon, Marietta 130 Shane, Stan 149 Shrauner, Ely 162 Shrewsbury, Charles 126, 128, 161 Shultz, Joseph 149 Siebert, Mary Cayle 134 Siegfried, Kay 133 Sifers, Donald 165 Siler, Kathy 140 Sills, Milton D. 179 Simmons, Otis 154 Simon, A. F. 171 Simon, John 165 Simon, John 174 Simons, Norma 138 Simpson, Damon 168 Simpson, John 154 Simpson, Ken 164 Sims, Ann 141 Sims, James 154 Sims, Phylles 132 Sinha, Ranendra 177 Sjoberg, Dick 178 Skaggs, William 159 Skinner. Bob 162 Skinner, Ellen 145 Skinner, Jo Anne 146 Slagle, Marvin 155 Slaon, Marianne 142 Slater, Richard 160 Slavic, Ray 167 Slawson, Bill 175 Slawson, Don 157 Sleeper, Don 164 Sloan, Courtney 170 Small. Mendel 149 Smee, Lou Ann 146 Smell, William 175 Smiley, Norman 170 Smiley, Richard 158 Smiriga, Steve 167 Smirl, Bill 167 Smith, Anne 142 Smith, Bob 166 Smith, Carroll 147 Smith, Dean 166. 190 Smith, Dick 122. 160 Smith, Dick 166 Smith, Don 125 Smith, Don 162 Smith, Dorothy Ann 128 Smith, Dorothy 141 Smith, Douglas 175 Smith, Ethan 166 Smith, Gad 165 Smith, George 154 Smith, Irma 128 Smith. Jack 170 Smith. Jerry 128 Smith, Jo Ann 142 Smith, John 154 Smith, Judy 140 Smith, Kieth 173 Smith. Lud 174 Smith, C. R. 172 Smith, Carolyn 132 Smith, Don 174 Smith, Frank 122 Smith, Margaret 142 Smith, Murlin 177 Smith, Opal 142 Smith, Paul 156 Smith, P. K. 172 Smith, Richard 165 Smith, Sam 173 Smith, Shirley 138 Smith, Shirley 146 Smith, Stan 172 Smith, Thurston 169 Smith, Walter 176 Smith, William 161 Sneegas, Donald 171 Snel ling, Roy 177 Snethen, Charles 151 Snook. Orrie 171 Snyder, Phyllis 139 Sommers, Bob 152 Sommers, Dave 172 Soper, Fred 175 Sorem, Marilyn 128, 134 Southern, Betty 145 Spainhour, Con 174 Spradley, Calvin 160 Sparks, Charles 158 Sparks, Jim 158 Spaulding, Barbara 131 Speck, Suzanne 128. 137 Speckin. Bernie 167 Speers, Jerry 158 Spencer, Hughes 154 Spencer, John 148 Spencer, Oliver 174 Spencer, Stan 178 Spragus, Harry 148 Springer, Byron 157 Sproul, Ann 134 Spurney, Frank 175 Squires, Joan 136 Squires, La Vannes 154, 190 Stahl, Dick 157 Staley, Mary Beth 140 Stallard, Al 157 Stamper, Harlan 172 Stanley, Ken 148, 164 Stark, Bob 152 Stark, Gene 167 Starr, Leonard 158 Starry, Sara 128, 137 States, Sydney 141 Stauffer. Rachel 141 Stayton, Marlene 134 Steanson, Norm 166 Steele, Charles 175 Steele, Margaret 139 Steeples, Donnalea 143 Stemmerman, Lyle 175 Stephens. Bill 160 Stephens, Charles 159 Stephenson, Don 152 Stevens, Ann 141 Stewart, Bill 172 Stewart, Bob 153 Stewart, Don 160 Stewart. Janet 139 Stewart, Jim 154 Stewart, Joan 136 Stewart, Lynn 158 Stewart, Mary 141 Stiles, Georgia 139 Stipe, Dan 164 Stiles, Dorie 137 Stith. Ed 172 Stith, Wilma 143 Stockham, Glenn 160 Stockmyer, Joan 143 Stoeker, Thelma 139 Sloeppelwerth, George 160 Stoff, Bill 180 Stone, Birgitta 140 Stone, Gerry 162 Stone, Janice 130 Stone, Ralph 148 Stonebraker, Diane 130 Stoneman, Jean 137 Stonestreet. Gary Bill 176 Stoneatreet, Jack 157 Stormont, Linda 139 Story, Georgia 140 Stout, Carol 136 Strain, Shirley 133 Strain, Wilfred 162 Stranathan, Norma Lee 145 Straube, Ma 165 Strawn, John 154 Strehlow, Chet 155 Steinberg, Don 149 Steinberg, Harold 149 Stiles, Don 173 Stiles. Phil 173 Street, Jerry Ann 143 Streeter, Tal 158 Stickelber, Merlin 168 Strickland, R. Jamet 154 Stringer, Stan 168 Stritesky, Delores 146 Strong, Terry 147 Strubel, Ted 152 Strumillo, Mary Ann 142 Struzzo, Joseph 177 Stubblefield, Charles 158 Stucker, Eugene 148 Sturdevant, Howard 126, 165 Stutz. Bob 147 Stutz, Carol 134 Sullivan, Marjean 141 Sullivan, Rex 126, 160 Sullivan. Wendell 175 Sullivan, William 171 Summers, Shirley 136 Sutorious, Barbara 129 Sutton, Dale 170 Sutton, Elva 132 Svenson, Valerie 147 Swaffar, Durian 138 Swaim. Rod 160 Swandcr, Orval 174 Swanson, Carol 125. 129 Swanson, Joann 126 Swartz, Marilyn 132 Swigart. Louise 137 Swisher, Barbara 142 Swisher, Bob .... Swisher, Jim 169 Swords, Jim 174 Symns, Eddie 130 TAGCART, MARY 141 Talley. Robert 171 Tail, Dick 152 Tan, Sally 142 Tannahill, Ralph 150 Tanner, Bob 173 Tarry, Fred 175 Tate, Brad 157 Tate, Judith 145 Tatum, Leland 171 Taylor, Bill 168 Taylor, Charles 172 Taylor. Dot 143 Taylor, Edward 148 Taylor, Jerry 157 Taylor, Jim 172 Taylor, Martha 133 Taylor, Robert 170 Tebow, Robert 160 Teed. Nancy 141 Teichgraeber, Jim 154 Temple, Kathleen 132 Templin. Jay 162 Terrell. Terry 173 Terry, Bob 153 Terry, Marguerite 134 Thayer, Max 158 Theden, Vernie 143 Thies. Betty 131 Thomas, Evelyn 132 Thomas, Florence 145 Thomas, John 159 Thomas, Lloyd 177 Thomas, Lon 166 Thomas. R. C. 157 Thompson. Allen 171 Thompson. Bill 155 Thompson, Fred 165 Thompson, Lee Ann 123, 130 Thompson, Margaret 143 Thompson, Mary Loretta 143 Thompson. Peter 152 Thompson, Suzanne 146 Thomson, Shirley 145 Thorn, Jim 156 Thornberry, Bill 172 Thorne, Rosalie 140 Thornton, Dick 178 Tice, Donald 148 Tiderman, Mark 168 Timmons, Judy 138 Thorpe, Alice 133 Timmons, Sherman 177 Tinkler, Dean 128 Tinskley, Shirley 131 Tipton, Georgia 137 Tkach, Steve 167 Toalson, Bob 152 Tobler, Bill 167 Todd. Bill 178 Toedman, Gordon 169 Todd. Kathryn 133 Toft, Jim 160 Toland. Dorris 145 Tolle, James 176 Toothaker, Norman 177 Torres, Alphonso 164 Tougaw, Larry 148 Townsend, Shirley 145 Trapp, Barbara 144 Trent, Chester 164 Tretbar, Harold 163 Trippe, Ken 173 Trombold, John 152 Trott. Dale 179 Trotter, Barbara 131 Tucker, Barbara Lee 128, 134 Tudor, Betty 129 Turner, Betty 128, 136 Turner, Mike 130 Turner, Norton 148 Turner, William 171 Tweet. Barbara 145 Twente, Dorothy 132 Twente, Elmo 164. 176 Tyson, Mary 133 ULRICH, LEE 171 Underwood, Jane 141 Underwood, John 172 Underbill, Julie 137 Underwood . Kay 143 Underwood, Sonny 156 Unrein, Marguerite 144 Unruh, Arch 160 Unruh, lln, in,- 160 Updegraff. Mary Lynn 141 Urie. David 150 VACIN. FRANK 176 Vance, Mike 134 Vance, Patricia Ann 134 Vaadenberg, Gcorgann 141 VanBebber, Fred 173 Van Bebber, Thomas 148 Van Meter, Joy 130 Van Meter, Sam 172 Van Pelt, Jamer 125. 150 Vaughan, Leah May 145 Vaughan, Rodger 102 Vaughn, Ann 131 Verbrugge, Dick 167 Vinson, Edward 159 Voiland, Fredrica 126 Voiland, Marimae 136 Voskemp, Raymond 155 WADDELL, MARGIE 52 Wade. Denni 130 Wagers, Wayne 155 Wagner. Ann 138 Wagner, Bob 180 Wahaus, Herb 147, 179 Wahl. Norma 142 Wahlberg, Coralyn 138 Wahlstedt, Art 152 Wainscott, Scotty 166 Wakeland, Edward 162 Walder, Bud 162 Waldschmidt, LeRoy 175 Walker, Clayton 156 Walker. Darrell 152 Walker, Diane 138 Walker, Gary 180 Walker, Colda 140 Walker, Sam 163 Walker, Stuart 170 Wall. Ed 153 Wallace, Ann 134 Wallace, Jim 175 Wallace, Mary 130 Wallace, Milton 122 Wallace, Ralph 168 Waller, Larry 169 Walls, Jim 147 Walter, Lucille 134 Walter, Paul 174 Waltersheid, Ceraldine 142 Wampler, Jo 129 Wandling, Dorothy 137 Ward, John 153 Ward, Phyllis 142 Warder, Nathaniel 151 Warder. Robert 154 Warren, Roger 177 Wasson, Kay 158 Warner, Jay 157 Waterson, Lo Ree 147 Wathen, Neil 178 Watkins, Ivan 177 Watson. Barbara 143 Waugh, Theresa 126 Wayland. Mike 165 Weaver, Don 177 Weathered, Jack 170 Webb, Harry 163 Webber, Darrell 162 Weber. Francis 147 Weber. James 165 Weber, Victor 148 Wegert, Arthur 171 Weidcman, Mary 123 Weidman, Ted 148 Weins, Pete 164 Weishaar, Marv 167 Weiss, Wayne 155 Weitzner, Bernard 149 Welch. Tom 172 Wellborn, Jo 134 Welling, Bill 172 Wellman, Tom 147 Wells, Leon 168 Welsh, John 171 Wenger, Les 126. 165 Wenger, Virgil 165 Wenre, Norman 170 Werling. John 170 Werrall, John 170 Werth. Ann 145 Werncke, Duane 156 West, Allane 143 Weber, Betty 129 West, Bobbie 139 West, Caroline 136 West. Shirley 136 Wcsterhaus. Gene 173 Westwood, Tom 160 Wharton. Bob 175 Wheeler, Jess 178 Wheeler. Otis 151 White, Barbara 131 While, Chauncey 151 White, Connie 128, 137 White, Harry 152 White, Joyce 134 White, Kenneth N. 179 White. Patricia 146 White, Phillip 58 White, Tom 128, 156 Whitehead, Jerry 160 Whiteside. Ralph 156 Whitney, We 157 Whitson, Max 172 Whittier. Ann 137 Widick, Fritz 166 Wiederman, Mary Alice 136 197 Wilcoi, Holly 136 Wildin, Bob 147 Wiley, Christine 123, 129 Wiley, Jim 124, 157 Wiley, Kathleen 147 Wiley. Patsy 126, 128, 137 Wilhelmsen. Kemple 178 Wilkeraon, Thomas 178 Wille, Alvaro 153 William) Don 190 Williams Willia Williams Willia Wil Dorothy 147 Clyde Frank Joe 148 Marc 148 123 180 Williamson. Mary 139 Williamson, Ollie 154 Williams, Pal 135 Willson, Don 152 Willis, Jack 148 Wilms. Bob 178 Wilson, Beverly 131 WiUon, Bill 169 Wilson, Dave 168 Wilson, Jim 172 Wilson, Bob 169 Wilson, Bryan 180 Wilson, Dan 180 Wilson, Frank 160 Wilson, Jim 164 Wilson, Ned 154 WiUon. Nora 135 Wilson. Norman 180 Wilson, Phyllis 143 Wilson. Sue 142 Wimsatt, Joe 167 Winer, Clarence 149 Winslow, Ron 178 Winter. Larry 161 Witcher, Don 161 Withers, Bill 173 Witt, Cecil 160 Witt, Jerry 173 Wittenberg. Henry 155 Wohlegemuth, Elizabeth Wolf. Allen 149 Wolfe. Carol 129 Wolfe, Jack 166 Wolfe, Joe 172 Wolverton, Emily 140 139 Worthington, Joan 140 Woodbury, Curt 173 Woodle, Dorothy 142 Woods. Joe 128. 155 Woods, Tom 169 Woodson, Don 154 Woodward, Bill 164 Woody, Warren 166 Woody, Wayne 166 Wooster, Joe 178 Worcester, Robert 155 Worley, P. K. 172 Wright. Claude 154 Wright, Dean 175 Wright. Sue 136 Wullschleger, Otto 162, 164 Wun.ch, Bob 1S2 Wyman, Jimmy 158 Wyman, John 126 Wynkoop. John 152 Wynn, Howard 160 YANCEY. VIRGINIA 138 Yeoman, Martha 143 Ying, Tom 153 Yockey, Bill 174 Yoder, Sally 132 York, Avalon 140 York, James 161 York, Julie 133 Young. Shirley 139 Young. Annette 126. 132 Young, Dan 174 Young. Fred 173 Young, Keith 155 Yunker, Ken 160 ZAHN, GEORGE 171 Zee. Hugo 147 Zieglasch. Suzanne 133 Ziegler, John 174 Zimmerman, Carolyn 126, 134 Zimmerman, Helen 128 Zimmerman, Max 171 Zimmerman, Pal 166 Zuercher, Bruce 174 Zuercher, Sam 174 Your JAYHAWKER is a unique yearbook FOUR ISSUES . . . you get your yearbook while interest is still fresh. COMPLETE COVERAGE . . . sports, social life, activities, feature stories and your house pictures. LEATHER BINDING . . . makes the yearbook a lasting record of your college days. VALUE . . . well below average big-seven and other university yearbook costs. Subscribe now at the Daily Kansan business office (If you don ' t, you ' ll be tarry and sooner than you think!) 198 THE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS offer Experience in Handling All Your Cleaning Problems 1001 New Hamp. Phone 383 Judging from the smile, Moze e Neville likes that recording For All Music Supplies Popular and Classical Records visit BELL MUSIC COMPANY Connie White and Linda Connor picking up some of their cleaning. The Quality of Our Work Must Meet with Your Approval INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont St. Phone 432 it ' s DRAKE ' S for bakes YES, FOR ALL OCCASIONS AND FOR THAT MIDNIGHT SNACK 199 THESE SOUVENIR MUGS ARE PART OF OUR LARGE SELECTION OF GIFTS BE SURE AND COME IN AND SEE THE MANY GIFT ITEMS 1401 Ohio 1237 Oread FOR CAMPUS it ' s OLD MAINE TROTTERS ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837-39 Mass. 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Dougherty Mrs. Doris Rooney Mrs. John Jay Scott Mr. O. B. States Mr. Harold Swaim Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Young and Rosemary, ' 54 and Virginia, ' 55 and Joss, ' 56 John, ' 55 and Bernard, ' 55 Noel, ' 56 and Johnna Jayne, ' 55 and Sydney, ' 55 and Rodney, ' 55 and Fred, ' 53 KENNETH DAM JACK REIN ft n w ISSUE APRIL 1953 Ike and the Nation The first Republican administration in twenty years was the big news of early 1953. A military hero and sol- dier-statesman, Eisenhower made a long jump when he took over the Presidency. Determined to do big things and make sharp changes, he got off to a good start with the most elaborate inaugural in history. While millions watched on a nation-wide tele- vision hook-up, hundreds of thousands jammed Washington streets to hear Ike take the solemn oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States. Eisenhower ' s desire to bring about big changes got him in hot water even before the inaugural. Eisenhower ' s cabinet appointments had largely been extremely wealthy business executives. Resentment against this favoritism toward big business began to stir and broke into the open in congressional discussion of the appointment of Charles E. Wilson, president of Gen- eral Motors, as Secretary of Defense. Before being approved for the post, Engine Charley was forced to divest himself of his vast holdings of Gen- eral Motors stock. Congress seemed to fear that Wilson ' s holding of the stock might influence his decisions in regard to the awarding of war con- tracts. Wilson ' s appointment was duly approved, but Ike ' s administration had received a definite pro-Big Business reputation. The incident led Adlai Stevenson to fear that the New Deal and Fair Deal might now become the Big Deal. The Republicans also ran into trou- ble carrying out their campaign prom- ises of lower taxes and cuts in Fed- eral expenditures. While Congressmen clamored for a quick reduction in tax rates, Eisenhower and his aides were finding budget cuts hard to make. With continued high levels of expendi- tures, a balanced budget looked diffi- cult to achieve with present taxes and impossible with a tax reduction. And so Ike found himself comple tely re- versing his campaign position and de- manding that Congress hold off on tax revision. The differences were still unresolved as this issue went to press. In two areas a definite change did take place. Price controls, a hot issue in the campaign, were completely re- moved with no appreciable price rise. Handouts to special groups proved to be hard to get as Agriculture Secre- tary Ezra Benson refused to raise farm price supports despite a down- turn in agricultural prices, particu- larly in the beef industry. Benson ' s public speeches emphasized the new philosophy in Washington of economic adjustment by working of supply and demand rather than by government aid. Kansas made big headlines nation- ally with the appointment of Wes Roberts as Republican National Chair- man and even bigger headlines when Roberts was forced to resign under fire. The former Holton newspaper- man ran into trouble when it was dis- closed that he had received an $11,000 IKE AND HARRY . . . and defend the Constitution of the United States fee for negotiating the sale of a hos- pital building of dubious title and value to the state of Kansas despite the fact that he wasn ' t listed as a lobbyist. The resulting criticism was so severe that Roberts was forced to resign. For the first time in the history of the US, two people seemed headed towards execution for treason in peacetime. President Eisenhower ' s re- fusal to grant clemency doomed Julius and Ethel Rosenburg, a husband-wife team convicted of passing atom secrets to Russia. A storm of protest arose, partially on the grounds that the trea- son had not been adequately proven and partially because the execution might hurt our prestige abroad. The protest which was allegedly Commu- nist inspired reached its peak when the Vatican requested Eisenhower to grant clemency. However, the Presi- dent stood fast and the last door seemed closed on the Rosenburg ' s quest for life. That Korean Episode I shall go to Korea, said Dwight D. Eisenhower in his election cam- paign last fall. With the hope that his trip to the Far East would put a quick end to the conflict, many people enthusiastically supported Ike in the election. Eisenhower secretly left New York early one morning and was in the middle of the Pacific before the public knew of his absence. Twenty thousand miles and one week later he was back in the states with an eye- witness report, but contrary to popu- lar expectations, hostilities continued. The disclosure that an ammunition shortage existed in Korea caused a scandal in the US. While generals and public figures disagreed on just how severe was the shortage, it seemed evident that the Pentagon had been putting too much emphasis on secret weapons and too little on essential materials of combat. Either as a re- sult of the shortage or of the limited warfare strategy, the winter was spent in local but bloody battles for isolated hills. The truce negotiations which broke down in the late fall of 1952 seemed likely to reopen when the Chinese an- nounced that a compromise was possi- ble on the exchange of prisoners issue. This question had been the stumbling block in all previous peace talks. The crux of the disagreement was that the Chinese demanded compulsory repat- riation of war prisoners while the UN commanders favored allowing prison- ers to stay with their captors if they so desired. No action towards reopen- ing the talks had yet been taken as this issue went to press. Eisenhower ' s first act in the Far East area was to withdraw the Sev- enth Fleet from the Straits of For- mosa. They had been placed there earlier to prevent conflict between the Chinese Nationalists on Formosa and the Communists on the mainland. Commando attacks or even an in- vasion of the mainland by the Na- tionalists was expected, but little ac- tion was forthcoming. Elsewhere in the Far East the com- munist forces in Malaya and Indo- China seemed finally to have been stopped by the British and French armies. 204 Teachers vs. Politicos Development of the congressional investigation, newest institution in the American system of justice, has had a profound effect upon American life in all fields. But the interest congres- sional committees have been showing the past few months in education threatens to sharply affect American universities including the University of Kansas. Spurred on by the growing anti- Communist trend of public opinion, these committees are trying to ferret out Communist teachers and school administrators. Chairman of the most prominent committees are Senator William Jenner, Senate Internal Se- curity subcommittee, and Representa- tive Harold Velde, House un-Ameri- can Activities committee. Senator Jo- seph McCarthy has aided the cause by being a public spokesman rabidly in favor of all such Commie-hunts. Although the investigations turned up few Communists in education, the reaction of the educator and the lib- eral press was instant and angry. Labeled witch hunts, an allusion to the Salem witch trials of early Amer- ican history, these investigations are alleged to threaten the basic spirit of academic freedom, the cornerstone of US education. Certainly the recent developments have frightened the teaching profession in general and have produced near-hysteria in some Eastern institutions. The Velde investigations opened with inquiries into the New York City public school system. Most of the teachers refused to testify on the grounds that I may incriminate my- self, but some told of Communist cells that existed some years ago. A Harvard professor later listed several dozen ex-Communists in Harvard and other Eastern schools. Fear that the teachers ' general refusal to testify might hamper the inquiries was some- what alleviated as the schools them- selves began to cooperate. Many still refused to testify, however, claiming that should someone later dispute their testimony they would automati- cally be involved in a perjury trial which neither their reputation nor their pocketbooks could afford. Sharply differing views toward the investigations were taken by poli- ticians and other public figures. Sen- ator Robert A. Taft, Republican ma- jority leader, opposed firing a teach- er simply for being a Communist un- less I was certain he was teaching Communism or having some effect on the development of the thought of the student. Senator Jenner, one of the investigators, promptly termed this viewpoint naive. In a press confer- ence President Eisenhower demanded the firing of all Communist teach- ers. Dr. James Conant, High Com- missioner to Germany absent on leave from his presidency of Harvard, voiced the general fear that the con- gressional inquiries would do aca- demic spirit harm far greater than any conceivable harm a Communist professor might do. Opposition has been so intense that the investigating committees have been meeting infrequently in recent weeks. Representative Velde brought severe criticism on his committee by his view that religion as well as education of- fered possibilities for uncovering Com- munist infiltration. Stalin and Malenkov He died and the year ' s biggest news story was born. With the passing of Joseph Stalin, an era in international affairs drew to a close. Every news- paper in the free world used column after column discussing what might happen in the new era under Stalin ' s successor, Georgy Maximilianovich Malenkov. After suggestions that eter- nal peace or the next World War were just around the corner, the press arrived at the general conclusion that little would be changed and that the present pattern of lukewarm war would continue. Stalin died of a cerebral hemor- rhage according to the official Rus- sian news release. However, the purg- ing of a number of Jewish groups in the satellite countries and the execu- tion of nine top Russian doctors ac- cused of murder of Politburo members spurred rumors that Stalin might have been assassinated. Progress toward the strengthening of Western Europe was stymied dur- ing the early part of 1953. Jealousy and a general lack of leadership was destroying plans for a European army when John Foster Dulles, US Secre- tary of State took a ten day flying trip to Europe. Still unknown is the effect of his seventy-five day ulti- matum to Europe to produce results or lose American aid. Real hope for European unity could be found in first operations of the Schuman Plan for integrating the economies of West- GENERAL TAYLOR Korea, here I come ern Europe. Under the brilliant lead- ership of French economist Jean Mon- net, trade restrictions of scrap metal were wiped out in March. This action was to be the first step toward a com- plete sharing of natural resources. England ' s joy over next summer ' s coronation of Queen Elizabeth re- ceived two blows during the early spring. Severe floods and storms along the seacoasts of Great Britain and the Low Countries killed more than one thousand and destroyed property valued in the millions. Just a few weeks later the beloved Queen Mary, grandmother of Queen Eliza- beth, died. Russia ' s satellite trouble grew as Tito made his first trip to England where he hinted that Albania might be the next iron curtain country to turn West. THE ROSENBERGS On to the death chamber 205 JAYHAWK spring issue April, 1953 Is Education Doing the Job? Inside the New Union A History in Stone They Said It Couldn ' t Be Done Twelve Laps to the Mile KU ' s More Respectable Dives Summarizing the Season KU ' s Newest Team, Gymnastics Big Wheels on Campus Speaking Frankly Parties ! Professionals and Honorari Some Americans are beginning to rea ize that democracy today has brought more t han just equal rights as citizens. It has also brought the ideal of the common man, that nebulous individual so beloved because he is so average. As the ideal of the common man arose, this individual was glorified as a standard toward which all young Americans might strive. But today that early, pure ideal has been corrupted. Today in our cynical, confused world that ideal has become a curse, a ceiling above which respectable people do not attempt to rise. Who is this common man? You see him on every street corner, in every office building. He ' s very ordinary drinks in moderation, smokes to excess, goes to church on Sunday, steadfastly refuses to think. In the very age when the world needs an aristocracy of thinking responsi- ble leaders, we have an ideal which has brought soap- opera television, McCarthyist demagoguery, and a press which gives bigger headlines to a president-elect ' s choice of hats than to the Korean War. Who is responsible for this leveling process? Why are young Americans not challenged to think for them- selves rather than get their answers from canned news- paper articles or the prejudices of their ancestors? To see if education itself might not be at fault, the Jayhawker has invited John Ise, professor of economics, to look into the problem. His entertaining, arresting approach to the subject appears below. The Edlfor John Ise asks IS EDUCATION DOING THE JOB? THERE is mounting evidence that the American homo sapiens is not sapient enough to solve the problems that are piling up ahead of him. In a score of ways he shows that he hasn ' t enough in- formation, and can ' t think straight with the small knowledge that he has. With respect to straight thinking, many of our Americans shout the virtues of rugged individualism in one breath and, in the next, yell for a subsidy or some other government assistance; they all revere the name of Thomas Jefferson, who, with McCarthy in Congress, couldn ' t hold a job as stenographer in Washington today; they hate Stalinism, and borrow Stalin ' s tactics every day; they love democracy, and think seven- teen millionaires and a plumber make an ideal President ' s cabinet; they love freedom and set up half a dozen gestapos to keep the people from thinking as they please; along another line, they worship Jesus, who as a pacifist couldn ' t get into the United States today. Most Americans don ' t think well about public questions. 207 Why? Some people blame our educational in- stitutions, pointing out that the children are in the schools from the age of six until sixteen or perhaps twenty, and insist that if they don ' t develop in- telligence, the fault must be in the schools. That the schools don ' t do a very wonderful job must be conceded, particularly in the area of social studies. In our public schools the children are herded by women who combine the functions of nursemaid, missionary, police-matron and, to a limited extent, teacher. They largely evade the educational process, although they may well be trained in graphic arts, cooking, folk dancing, citi- zenship, football, basketball, and assorted ath- letics, and, having plenty of leisure, have perhaps learned to loaf, smoke, drink, make love, push the accelerator, talk silly nonsense, and otherwise de- port themselves as befits leisure classes every- where. They are largely illiterate. Even in our universities, we don ' t do a great deal to develop the sort of intelligence that our critical political and economic problems call for. Here at KU we have indeed shown some awareness of our situation in introducing such a course as Western Civilization, but most of our students are largely uneducated when they graduate, and of course they are much worse than that a few years later. I believe that we did a much better job in many respects fifty years ago. Fifty years ago a far greater proportion of our courses were really educational and significant. The College of Liberal Arts, which is the school most definitely dedicated to education as opposed to vocational training, enrolled a much larger proportion of the students than today. In fifty years a succession of vocational schools education, business, and journalism have been set up, devoted to the task of turning out, not broadly educated citizens but vocational specialists; and these vocational schools proceeded to proliferate a vast number of courses of no cul- tural value, often of no vocational value, perhaps requiring the students to take them. In the mean- time, the College also exhibited a Malthusian ten- dency in the matter of courses, adding courses ad infinitum, usually courses of less cultural value than those already in the curriculum a general process of multiplication and debasement. We would do a better job of education if we could cut about half the courses offered at KU; and of course it would be at less expense. The result of all this is that the student of fifty years ago had a better chance to get an edu- cation than the student of today. For this the uni- versity is partly responsible. For the fact that within a few years graduates of high schools, col- leges, and universities usually lose whatever edu- cational veneer they got in school, the schools bear little responsibility. The American social milieu, materialistic, acquisitive, flamboyant, regimented, and unsophisticated, is generally hostile to educa- tion. Out in the practical world, the people care ' u 208 little about literature, history, economics, political science, or anything else that hasn ' t a cash value or won ' t make a big show. They build fine school buildings, but they seem interested mostly in ath- letics. The budget of a certain high school bears this out $3,500 for the coach, $25 for books! When I talk with alumni over the state I almost invariably hear first, How ' s the football team? and there the conversation ends. Almost never do I hear any inquiries as to the real work of the university. In the towns, too, the high school foot- ball teams are about the sole focus of interest, and the palatial gymnasiums make the libraries look like scuttle closets, if indeed there are any libraries. Thrust into such an environment even our best stu- dents usually revert to pre-school mental habits and interests. I doubt if the average university grad- uate, unless he is teaching, reads two books a year. We teachers have to be modest about our achievements anyhow, because we do only about ten per cent of the educational work done in our land of fine school buildings and homogenized thinking. The other nine-tenths is done by the news- papers, cheap magazines, radio commentators, tele- vision, and movies, and these are mostly interested in selling goods, not in honest education, and are therefore of little or no value. So when our stu- dents graduate, they fall easily into the ways of the practical world most of them become de- educated. The outlook isn ' t cheering. For some time there has been a growing indifference or even hos- tility to education, in the proper sense of that term. Witness the loyalty oaths and various investigations of subversive influences in the schools, and when McCarthy is turned loose on the schools this situa- tion will become worse. In our march toward fascism we shall apparently become more and more suspicious of education, educators, and intellectuals generally, just as Hitler ' s Germany and Stalin ' s Russia did, and as a result will insist on and get a lower grade of teachers. This degradation of per- sonnel is already in operation in federal service. Some men of ability and intellectual independence will not work for the federal government, and it seems likely that the same situation lies ahead for our schools. If there is any hope for the future it is in our students, as it always has been. A fair minority of our students would like to have education on a high plane, and they may help to stem the tide of anti- intellectualism that threatens us. If they cannot, no one will. John Ise at his desk, comfortably fixed for heavy thinking. I UP WHERE THE QUIZZES || . How Mt. Oread Got That Way 212 Inside the New Union 220 A History in Stone Buildings do not make a university, but it would be hard to imagine the University of Kansas without its dozens of impressive structures. Although the buildings themselves are not the stuff that education is made of, they do provide the atmosphere and the mechanical facilities which integrate them closely into the modern collegiate campus. In order to determine the influence of these more or less noble piles on the life of KU students, the Jayhawker first takes an X-ray view of the new Union through the eyes of Marilyn Hawkinson. Then in an attempt to gain proper perspective Dick Bills, in his A History in Stone, takes a long, lingering look. Frank Hamilton handles the illustration job with uncommonly beautiful ink drawings. Nearly 5,000 students and townspeople, a near capacity crowd, listen to Alice Foree at the Student Union opening. INSIDE THE NEW UNION by Marilyn Hawkinson THE UNION as we see it now was only a vision to the men and women of Kansas University in 1919. Immediately following World War I the then chan- cellor of the University, Mr. Frank Strong, ap- pointed a committee to consider a suitable me- morial for the graduates of the University of Kan- sas who had been killed during the war. This com- mittee chose as memorial projects a stadium, a union building, and a statue in memory of Uncle Jimmy Green and proceeded with a campaign to raise funds among the students, faculty, alumni, and friends of the University. The proposed pro- gram met much enthusiasm and consequently $1,000,000 was pledged of which $600,000 was collected. Of this sum approximately $250,000 went into the construction of the first units of the stadium, approximately $350,000 into the first structure of the Union building, and some $35,000 was spent for the statue of Uncle Jimmy Green. Construction on the new Union building be- gan in 1925, and it was first opened for use in the Fall of 1927. The walls, roof, the cafeteria floor, and the lounge floor were completed and furnished. Money was raised on a build as we pay plan. Voluntary fees of one dollar were collected from students who wished to use the Union. From these 272 fees and other income fro m the building the dance floor was completed in the Fall of 1928. Other rooms and portions of the building were completed during the succeeding years either as gifts from classes or from building income or a combination of these two sources. Gradually the unfinished portions of the building were completed and fur- nished for use. Meanwhile, during the early 30 ' s, a fee of one dollar per semester was charged to all students. In 1940 the present soda fountain was built. At this time a proposed addition to the Union was con- sidered to consist of sub-basement, bowling alley, and other recreational facilities basement: a book store, barber shop, etc. first floor: a dining room and space for the University Club second floor: an enlarged ballroom. It was emphasized that all the above additions would be revenue producing. An estimate for the total cost of the building was given as $150,000. In 1942, with the advent of the Navy, the activities of the Union building were curtailed, and plans for any addition were held in abeyance. In the Spring of 1946 the All Student Council approved a fee of five dollars per student per semester to be used for these purposes with the understanding that a portion of that fee might be used to defray the ordinary expenses of operating the building. The increased fee made the new Union closer to realization. Construction began in the Fall of 1950 on the new Union addition. Finally Bridge, canasta, hearts, poker, old maid and soli- taire are popular at this niecca for all true and loyal card players, the Student Union card room. on February 27, 1953, the plans and dreams of the Union organizers came to reality with the opening of the Union as we know it. At 8:15 on the evening of February 27, the Union Queen, Jane Henry, cut the ribbon and offi- cially opened the new building. The bands blared out from the ballroom and the Kansas room, the barkers began to lure bridge and chess lovers into the card room, and the party was on! Student Union Activities ' Pres- ident Phil Kassebaum presents Jane Henry, Union queen, to Chancellor Franklin Murphy. 213 Two lost souls seem bewildered by the rush at the Union opening. Over 5,000 students had been waiting anxious- ly for this hour ever since they had caught glimpses of finishing touches being added here and there. There were free cokes and cookies, free movies, and free bowling privileges. For the lovers of art, exhibits of paintings on loan from the Nelson Art Gallery, Iowa University, and the Hallmark Greet- ing Card company were scattered throughout the building. One of the favorites was a Miro, Rosalie Is Awakened by a Drop of Dew Falling from the Wing of a Bird. Adorning the wall at the landing of the new marble staircase was a Norman Rock- well, The Spirit of Kansas City. However, the main attraction was an original Rubens, Atlanta and Maleager, which was loaned to the Union by the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art and valued at $85,000. Not only was the opening night attended by students, but also by many men and women who have worked and planned for the Union ever since it began as a dream. These honored guests were entertained with a dinner in the stylish Kansas room before attending the opening ceremonies. When midnight arrived and the crowd began to thin out, it looked as if the new Union was a success on its opening night. The students and guests were satisfied that the modernly decorated building was useful as well as beautiful. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said of the open house, It was one of the most successful University affairs that I have had knowledge of since becoming a student in the ' 30s, and since becoming chancellor. On no occasion have the stu- dents seemed to have as good a time except at an athletic contest. They have a sense of pride in such a fine building. If you were forced to stand at the Union opening, this is how Otis Simmons looked to you as he sang Old Man River. 214 No hotel ever had a more beautiful lobby than this ultra- modern first floor of the Stu- dent Union. The gala opening of the new Union was front page news for dozens of Kansas newspapers and flashbulbs were popping throughout the evening. The architects and engineers were Mann and Co., Hutchinson, Kansas, and the State Architect ' s Office. The consultants for the kitchen were Green- woods of Kansas City, Missouri, and Southern Equipment Co.; for the interior, Ken White of New York; and for the acoustics, Mann and Co. The total floor area of the building is 127,000 square feet. From the basement up Each of the six floors of the Union provides recreation and conveniences for the Kansas Uni- versity family. In the very bottom floor, the sub- sub-basement, there is a general recreational area of six bowling alleys and several billiard tables. Already tournaments are being held and others are being planned, but they are kept at a minimum to allow the non-league bowlers to be free to bowl, too. The recreation area is a self-supporting enter- prise and is open afternoons and evenings. In the sub-basement the ever popular Hawk ' s Nest and Trail room are located. At coffee hour literally all trails lead to these two campus favor- ites. Here, every day, students meet their friends and chat over a cup of coffee and a Union roll. Also located on this level is the enlarged and completely redecorated bookstore. The new man- ager is Mr. Ray Verrey, who continues to operate the store, a non-profit organization, with the student in mind. The students themselves in 1946 asked the chancellor for such a bookstore. Their wish was granted, and the store has since been interested only in serving the students and the University family. During the book rushes after enrollment and registration, the store operates on a self-service basis for the two-fold purpose of convenience and elimination of the long waiting lines. In January of this year a student could get his books and sup- plies and pay for them in ten to fifteen minutes. The store works on the basis that the profits be returned to the students. Every six months the net profits are computed as a percentage of sales. That percentage applies to every cash register re- ceipt that the student brings in and constitutes the patronage refund that he receives. In the last seven years the patronage refund has averaged fifteen per cent. By next September the bookstore will have in the neighborhood of 50,000 books on its shelves. Besides books, the store offers stationery, medical, 275 Have a question? Chief hostess Mrs. Novotny knows all the answers to Union-visitors ' problems. Boh Skinner and Mary Taggart are asking the questions here. art and engineering supplies, and a few college specialties, such as pennants, decals, and sweat- shirts. The basement which formerly contained only the cafeteria now has become the center of all activities. The cafeteria itself has been enlarged to seat four hundred people. In the area of the stu- dent office eleven campus organizations have their own offices plus a workroom which is available to all. For committee meetings too large to be held in the respective offices the activities lobby and lounge is for use. The new University calendar hangs along the hall wall. It is kept up to date by the secretaries and is for the use of all in an at- tempt to coordinate campus activities with the least possible conflict. Darkrooms and hobby shops Interest in bowling has risen rapidly with the opening of six new alleys in the sub-sub-basement. Small in area, but not to be overlooked are the two separate dark rooms and the craft and hobby room, also on the basement level. The craft room features metal, wood, and leather crafts. A student is on hand all of the time (in the shop) to give assistance and direction. On the first floor, the main lounge with its comfortable chairs and television set offers a quiet place for relaxation or meeting a friend. It has been doubled in size and redecorated, complete with the Jayhawker rug immediately inside the main entrance. One of the main points of interest is the Indian bas-relief screen which depicts four chiefs of the Kanza tribe, named No Fool, Man of Good Sense, Little White Bear, and The Wolf. Fast becoming popular with the students are the restful music and browsing rooms. The Carne- gie Record Library was a gift of the Carnegie Foundation in 1938 and consisted of a collection of 500 semi-classical records. Since then the Union building has added many records each year for student enjoyment. At any time of the day students crowd the rooms enjoying the benefits of classical and semi-classical records. Also, for casual read- ing a library of excellent books and magazines is open to the browser. Fourth for bridge? Cards and Union are almost synonymous, for nearly every afternoon finds a game in process in the card room on the main floor. This lovely new room with its red, white, and charcoal curtains and huge playing cards on the wall is a popular spot for many hours of pleasure for both card and chess players. Not to be overlooked is the plush new ladies ' lounge which the men were allowed to view for the last time at the opening! Its deep carpeting and comfortable couches together with the white leather- covered walls never fail to produce comments of wonder and awe. The beautiful new Ballroom on the second floor is used for all-school activities, dances, ban- quets, and other functions of campus and univer- sity groups. It has recently proved its worth at the television and listening parties and the rallies last- ing late into the night. This room easily accommo- dates a thousand couples or more. Surrounding the great room, a floor above is the balcony with tables and chairs for those who wish to sit out a dance. Two open loggias open off the Ballroom. At the north end of the Ballroom, there is a pleasant spot for relaxing and visiting. This is paneled with antique mirrors and wood. The Kansas room, the Room with a View, is on the third floor with expansive windows over- looking the campus and the Kaw River valley. An ideal room with a large open fireplace for that special party or dance. A large terrace with an out- door fireplace and tables and chairs promises to be a popular place in nice weather. Also on the top floor facing Oread street is a lovely carpeted dining room with the Kansas sun- flower as a strikingly decorative theme. A perfect spot for a luncheon or dinner is the Sunflower room. Besides the new rooms there are many meeting rooms which are in use, free of charge, every day of the week. Several of these rooms are large This is the only authorized view of the women ' s lounge on first floor of the Union. ' s. enough to be made into three separate compart- ments by the use of sliding accordion doors. Cater- ing kitchens on the respective floors serve the rooms which are used for banquets, dinners, and lunch- eons, thus allowing quick and efficient service. What is the SUA? To manage the Union the officers and direc- tors of the Memorial Corporation set up in 1928 the Union Operating Committee, which still func- tions as the policy making board of the Union. To initiate and promote the recreational, cultural, and social activities in and around the building, a Stu- dent Union Activities board was set up. The Student Union Activities board consists of twelve students a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, and eight other board members. A new board is chosen each spring and functions throughout the following year. The board is chosen with the pur- pose of making it as representative as possible of the living groups and the various schools and inter- ests on the campus. There is usually an equal num- ber of boys and girls and a balance between upper and lower classmen. The purpose of this board is to coordinate and direct the major campus events sponsored by Stu- dent Union Activities. A few of these events are freshman orientation week, Homecoming dance, the Union Carnival, College Daze, Student Union open house, big-name bands, KU Relays dance, and KU Relays queen contest. It also conducts a talent search each year to seek out the hidden talent on the campus. These entertainers are used by Student Union Activities and are available to other organizations or groups on the hill. TOP: Typical of the dinners served in the Union is this banquet served in the Kansan room to honor those who made the Union possible. SEC- OND: Enthusiastic team boosters at the Union lis- tening party come to life as KU increases its lead over K-State. THIRD : Students inspect the Union ' s music room during the opening ceremonies. BOT- TOM: It ' s A. B. Collom behind the cue ball in the Union ' s recreation area when games were free and time was limited. In addition to all of the above, the board also plans chess and bridge tournaments, game listening parties, music and browsing room functions, art displays, and informal Wednesday night dances all of which take place in the Union building. In the director ' s office The person who directs all activity in the Union is Frank Burge, a cornfed lowan, who has done a wonderful job in Kansas. He came to Kansas from the University of Iowa, where he was assistant director of Iowa ' s Union. While attend- ing the University of Iowa he became interested in Union work, and after serving five years in the armed forces, he returned to his home school and began his Union activities. In July, 1952, he visited Kansas University. While here, he realized that Kansas could have one of the most potentially ef- fective Unions in the nation; he stayed, and is now convinced of this fact. Mr. Burge deserves praise for the fine accomplishments he has brought to the students of Kansas University. The philosophy underlying the idea of the Memorial Union is to provide a center for the fur- therance of student social, recreational, and cul- tural life on the campus where all students learn to live together. At all times the facilities of the Union are open to any college student. The Union has found it necessary to charge a nominal fee for the use of some of the facilities but attempts are made to keep the charge to a bare minimum. Al- ways the aim of pleasing the students is kept in mind. Those who work with the Union feel that they are a vital part of a wonderful service, and they hope that all students will appreciate the opportuni- ties provided for them in their new Union. In the words of Professor Baumgartner speaking to the audience at the open house, The Union is yours; use it, but don ' t abuse it. The Union as it is today has evolved from a dream into a reality. Many hours of planning, de- velopment and work have transformed a building into a living center of campus, social, and cultural life for the students of the University of Kansas. Use it, work with it, enjoy it, and its purpose will be achieved. And here it is from the outside the new east entrance to the main lounge. The balconies above the doors to the left are just a few of many from which students may get a new look at Mt. Oread. 220 HISTORY I N STONE The Story of Architecture on Mt. Oread story by Dick Bills illustrations by Frank Hamilton I know of no university occupying a more suitable position or a more commanding view, although the uni- versity has been more fortunate in the selection of its site than in its architecture and the arrangement of its grounds. Like other colleges founded forty or fifty years ago, the University of Kansas started in a small way and failed to anticipate the greatness of the future. The campus seems to have ' just growed ' without regard to grouping of buildings or harmony between them, and the architecture is generally poor. Nevertheless there is a sort of homely charm about the place with its unimposing, helter-skelter piles of brick and stone, its fine trees, and its sweeping view. Thus mused a visitor to the campus in 1914. Un- fortunately a more correct observa- tion could not have been made for never in the history of the develop- ment of the university has there been evidence of a long range plan of building that is up until now, when after 88 years of what was referred to as helter-skelter building, we have adopted a 20 year plan of campus development and beautification. Every chancellor had his own idea as to the growth of the campus and made every effort during his ad- ministration to follow this pattern. Unfortunately, however, our long line of distinguished chancellors did not see eye to eye on the development and building of the university, consequently any continuity and order that is now in evidence among our hallowed halls came about purely by coincidence. An interesting paradox in the misalignment of ideas among administrations as to the building of the university can be pointed out in the story of one stone wall that in successive years was first built, then removed, rebuilt, and then again removed. Quipped a historian, Fortu- nately we (the University) did our experimenting with walls and not classrooms. The building of the University suffered greatly as a result of one tremendous handicap lack of financial support. This is a result of the fact that Kansas, being an agricultural state, does not have the wealth that a number of industrial states possess. Many campus struc- tures did not follow to the letter original drawings simply because of lack of funds. In many cases appropriations from the legislature were used entirely for building con- struction, whereas originally the intent was for both build- ing and equipment. This was not due to the lavishness in design on the part of the architect, but to the legisla- ture ' s strong view in the past of minimizing appropria- tions for university building. The city of Lawrence transferred to the Board of Regents of the newly formed University the deed to Pres- byterian or North College Hill as well as the remainder of the state funds given to the city for relief after Quantrill ' s raid. Conditions were that a school would be built and be in operation by January 1, 1867, and that the school furnish free educa- tion to all orphans of the raid. Construction was immediately started on the foundations left by the Presbyterians and by September, 1866, at a cost of less than $20,000 stood North College, the first build- ing of the University of Kansas. Later, after the University moved south to its present location, North College hall was the seat of several of the college ' s schools. In 1917, the state architect con- demned the building because of increasing structural in- stability. Because of the unsightly condition of the building, and because it was a menace to safety and the morals of the neighborhood after its abandonment, per- mission was given to raze the structure. In April, 1919, a tank, similar to the ones used dur- 227 Edward W. Tanner of Kansas designed this quaint cam- pus structure Danforth Chapel, built in 1945. ing World War I, was being exhibited in Lawrence to spark a Liberty Loan Drive. As a demonstration of the effectiveness of modern science against inanimate objects, the tank was used to tear down the remaining dismantled ruins of North College. As is the case with many buildings today North College hall was considered upon completion to be very roomy and quite sufficient in size. It took only two short years for the building to become overcrowded and insuf- ficient for the teaching of a total enrollment of 152. It was at this point that Chancellor Fraser realized two things. One, actually a visualization, was a new univer- sity building that would cater to the needs of 500 stu- dents, each department or branch of education having a room or suite of rooms fully equipped. Secondly, that an appropriation from the state legislature was an impossi- bility. Consequently an appeal was made to the city of Lawrence, and a resulting election voted $100,000 to erect a new university building, Fraser hall. To classify the architecture of Fraser hall would be difficult for it recalls nothing except that of a sturdy stone building with admittedly pleasing proportions. The walls are of native limestone with a rock face broken ashlar finish. It has produced little trouble through the years structurally speaking; however, at one time consid- erable work was done on the foundations. Water for the University was supplied by three large cisterns on the west side of the building. This provided not only drinking water for the students but filled large tanks to be used in case of fire. Fraser, while built as the ultimate in collegiate struc- tures, soon became too small. Then too, because of the nature of the work in the chemistry department it soon became evident that quarters with more adequate ventila- tion was a must. Safety, comfort, and convenience dictat- ed the need for a separate building for the chemistry department. In 1883 an $8,000 state treasury surplus was appropriated to the University for the construction of a new building which became old Snow hall. Only two major buildings of the University have been removed during the passage of time. The first was North College hall, the second, old Snow hall. Built in 1886 for a sum reputed to be near $50,000 it sat west of Fraser hall and in front of the present location of Watson library. A handsome structure of native lime- stone and brick, it reflected the period of the romanesque. The main approach was by a broad flight of buttressed stone steps under a decorated portico, the decorations suggesting the uses of the building. The stone carvings on this portico were done by a tramp stone cutter; how- ever, additional panels were left to be completed when the cutter moved on to other parts of the land. This ornate entrance was saved when the building was re- moved in 1930 with the idea of adapting it in the entrance of the new Snow hall. The styles of the two building did not blend too well and so today packed away somewhere on the campus is the entrance of old Snow hall, waiting to be again used for some future building. The building, as did so many of the early structures, served a multitude of purposes, many departments having their quarters in the building at one time. While the building was built in a nearly fireproof manner, it was not constructed well, so in 1930 it was vacated and razed. Today, the bulletin boards and stone benches in fron t of the library are among the last shreds of Snow hall to be seen on the campus. Contemporary influence is seen in the newest campus structure bus stop and information booth. 222 At this point comes one of the many misalignments among administrations as to the general plan of the Uni- versity. Chancellor Lippincott, despite continued opposi- tion, could not conceive of the University facing east as was called for in the original plans. On July 1. 1890, brilliant Francis Huntington Snow was elected to the top post of government at the University. Late in 1891 Professor Snow received a check for $91,618.03 as a result of the settlement of the estate of his late uncle. Included was a note from the chief trustee saying . . . hand you herewith a check for $91,618.03, the amount coming to you by virtue of the will of your late uncle, Mr. William B. Spooner of this city. In placing this magnificent present in your hands I beg to assure you that this ought to be considered in some degree a measure of your uncle ' s confidence in you, his admiration for your work in the great field of science, and his faith in the institution to which you have nobly devoted your life. . . It was the request of the Chancellor that the entire sum be put aside for the erection of a fireproof library building. In his report to the Regents Professor Snow said the building could then properly be designated as the Spooner Library building, and would constitute a per- petual remembrance of the giver in a manner which, I know from personal acquaintance with him, would have received his most heartiest approval. A site on the northeast corner of 14th and Oread avenue was chosen as the most convenient location for the new library building. The ground, a scant three acres, was subsequently purchased for $4,000. Every effort to make the new library the best thing on the campus was shown in the committee ' s effort to employ the country ' s best architects to execute the plans. The firm of Van Brunt and Howe, Kansas City, Missouri, won this distinction and proceeded to design one of the most interesting buildings on the campus. Architecturally the building is styled as southern romanesque, the build- ing carried out in rockraced ashlar stone quarried from the site and trimmed in red Dakota sandstone. The basic idea of the plan of the library was taken from the basilical type of church. The main section of the library recalls the nave of the church with the side aisles and clear story above. What was originally designed as a stack area and now used as a solarium reminds one of an apse. A unique way of handling books for this time, that of having a stack room adjacent to convenient pleasant reading or study rooms was used. Heretofore used only in the libraries at Harvard and Michigan, it was considered quite a progressive step forward in the conception of libraries. Learning from the shortcomings of the past, Van Brunt and Howe made careful provisions for the future. A twin building was to be erected on the ground directly to the north with a large reading room to connect the two buildings. This idea, as good as it seemed at the time, was disregarded when the need for expansion arose, for by this time the center of the campus had shifted westward and Spooner Library was no longer centrally located. Thirty years after the doors of Spooner opened the library moved to its present location at Watson library. Doomed to emptiness, Spooner was later remodeled to house the art collection of Mrs. Sally Thayer. Recently, under the direction of Director Maxon, the building was reconditioned in a contemporary fashion using the latest techniques in the display of art work. It is interesting to note at this point how well the two far remote veins of architectural thinking blend together, for there is com- plete harmon y between the interior and exterior of this building. It seemed only fitting to the Board of Regents that part of the Spooner gift be used for the construction of a home for the Chancellor. Up until this time the pre- vious heads of the school found housing as best they could without the benefit of an official residence for the Chan- Southern Romanesque flavor is seen in this entrance arch of Spooner Thayer Museum. cellor. Using part of the four acres purchased before the building of Spooner library and facing it on what is now known as Louisiana street, an official residence was built for present and future Chancellors of the University. It was occupied by Chancellor Snow in late 1893, and was used until the Watkins home was given to the University for the express purpose of being the home of the Chan- cellor. The frame and brick structure on Louisiana was converted into a residence hall for women and is now known as Carruth hall. It was in the Chancellor ' s report to the Board of Regents in 1892 that Professor Snow first mentioned the need of additional facilities for the Department of Physics and Electrical Engineering. The energetic efforts of Pro- fessor Lucien Blake, he wrote, have resulted in the de- velopment of this department to such an extent that the present accommodations are entirely inadequate for the 223 prosecution of work and for the safe protection of the valuable apparatus by the means of which the work is conducted. Professor Blake has declined invitations to first class institutions in other states because of his confi- dence that Kansas will furnish means to develop his work at the University. Let the state show its appreciation of the talented services of such a man by furnishing the buildings and other equipment necessary to satisfy his responsible ambition. The man in reference was Professor Lucien Blake, professor of physics and one of the most popular men on the campus. His circle of friends was a large one and they included not only townspeople and students but also important people at the state capitol. It was this plus his most pleasing way of pursuing a situation that helped immensely in the state appropriation of $50,000 for a new physics building and $8,000 for equipment. History tells not only of Professor Blake ' s magnetic personality but also his ability to place himself and the things which he found important in the limelight. It was only natural then, and somewhat appropriate, that the new building be located in a most conspicuous place directly in view of the main approach to the Uni- versity. Rising from the original plans that Professor Blake used during his talks with the legislature, state archi- tect Seymour Davis supervised the building of a structure strongly remi- niscent of a French chateau Professor Blake had once seen and liked. The architecture was a combination of gothic and renaissance and it is re- ferred to as the French chateau style. The walls are native limestone and brick, faced on the facade and sides with Berea sandstone. The building was designed to be seen from the front only. At this time the town had not extended southward and there was no southern approach to the campus. Hence, it was considered a needless expense to consider the appear- ance of the rear elevation. The south walls were merely plastered and marked off with imitation stone joints. The building was constructed without the iron below the roof line that is, that was the original plan for ' the simple reason that at this time a movable-needle galvo- meter was being used in the laboratories. The instrument, easily disturbed by magnetic fields, required the specifica- tion that there be no iron used in either construction or furnishing of the building. Hence, at great expense all plumbing fixtures were made of brass, copper, or lead. All conduits and pipes were made of tile. It was unfortu- nate, however, that both iron nails and iron sash weights were used, consequently the original plan of the non- magnetic building was not obtained. Later a movable coil galvanometer was invented that was not disturbed by the presence of iron, and the effort to keep iron out of the construction of the building was useless. Dyche Museum. The architectural style of Blake hall was such a de- parture from the design of other campus structures that an issue of the campus rag in 1895 observed: The sandstone front of the Physics building looks like a speckled chicken. The iron in the stone shows more plainly than the stone itself. If there be no lotion that will remove these blemishes, let a screen be put before the building. The Regents should think twice before accept- ing unconditionally the sorrowful looking structure with its chubby freckled face, its one eye with a cross above it, and its monstrous hat. The PC or physics clock as so referred to by many a budding journalism student was often the cause of many a campus joke. The old clock was controlled by a master clock on the first floor of Blake and was operated by a complicated system of wheels and cogs that were constantly getting out of order. Repairs on the clock cost the physics department upwards of $150 a year and it wasn ' t too many years later that the department, after reviewing its budget, decided that the clock was the University ' s expendi- ture since all the students used it. Again the Department of Chem- istry found itself in quarters consid- erably too small for the number of students enrolled. It was only ten short years after the new quarters were occupied that it was found that the department had classes and lab- oratories in both Blake and Fraser. Hence, in 1899 the legislature appro- priated $55,000 for a new chemistry building. After considerable travel Profes- sor E. H. S. Bailey returned with enough information to enable archi- tect John Haskell to design one of the finest chemical laboratories west of the Mississippi. It was unfortunate, however, that much of the architec- tural effect of the building was not obtained because of the requirements of construction due to limited costs. The building is, to say the least, quite unpleasing in appearance. Only after years of arduous growth has ivy done its part to beautify this basically unhappy structure. The need for many flues and vents give it a boxy look, and for a long time it was referred to as Bailey ' s barn. Building material used was native limestone quarried di- rectly from the site. As the stone was removed it was discovered that some of it was light in color while some was colored yellowish by iron oxide. The light stone was used for facing the front and side walls, the oxide stained stone in the rear. Actually the building is frame with a stone veneer, the original framing still serving its basic purpose without the aid of modern construction devices. By 1900 it became evident that a new museum of Natural history was necessary to supplement the already crowded Snow hall. Because the museum attracted a great number of visitors annually it was decided to place this new museum near the entrance to the University. 224 Eraser Hall namesake of Kansas ' second Chancellor. Hence on an axis coinciding with the Spooner Library and across the street from it was built the Dyche Museum. A competitive system of submitting designs was used to secure the plan of the new museum. Root and Siemens won the competition with a handsome adaptation of the Venetial romanesque style. The main entrance was modeled after the most beautiful portal in the world St. Trophime at Aries, in the south of France. The stone carvings of naturalistic birds, beasts, and characteristic forms suggest the use of the building. The carvings were done by an Italian stonecutter, whose work to this day still brings praises from large and small alike. After the plot-plans for the new museum were made it was discovered that the panorama section of the build- ing would extend beyond the curb line of Mississippi street. After much consideration the University asked the city to vacate Mississippi street south of 13th with the provision that they, the University, would regrade the avenue up the hollow and connect it with the western- most point of Oread avenue. This was agreed to and soon the construction of the museum was started. Professor Snow was ably succeeded in 1901 by Dr. Frank Strong who was installed in the temporary audi- torium of the new museum. After making a survey of the needs of the University the new Chancellor asked for two new buildings. To provide for additional classrooms as well as a permanent place for the School of Law he asked for a new law building. Sensing the appalling condition of gymnasium facilities (the women ' s gym for many years was in the attic of old Snow hall) he asked for a gym- nasium. The legislature of 1903 appropriated $50,000 for a new law building. Here again, after examination of a site for the new School of Law, the University officials found themselves without an approach to the growth of the University. Chancellor Lippincott ' s idea for the new campus, while eventually followed even beyond his wildest dreams, was noi completely satisfying to the Board of Regents. Hence Mr. George Kessler was employed to help with the choos- ing of the new site. A Kansas City landscape architect of much repute, he immediately sensed the chance of crowd- ing and made a schematic drawing of a new campus which grew to the west along the ridge (actually following At one time the campus clock, the Blake timepiece now enjoys semi-retirement. 225 ' Bailey ' s barn as it was long referred lo after being built in 1900. Its site was then the western edge of the campus the basic idea Chancellor Lippincott introduced) with a formal grand entrance that would have been located near the present site of Memorial Stadium. He located the law building to the east at its present site adjacent to the new museum, the gymnasium near the entrance to the Univer- sity, the new and formal entrance. Green hall was built in 1904 and perhaps no other building on the campus was accepted so whole-heartedly as was the new School of Law. The style was referred to as American renaissance but being an adaptation of the Greco-Roman style. The principle feature was an ionic temple portico on the front facade. The ionic temple treatment was repeated on the rear facade but not as a portico. Although the building was constructed of brick it harmonized well with the other buildings on the campus. Close observation between Green hall and Blake hall will reveal that their floor plans are practically ide ntical. With small changes they are practically the same size and contain the same number of rooms. This merely points out the fact that architecture of this period was mostly development of facial treatment, for a master plan could be used if so desired with several stylistic treatments in- corporated as facades. To this day many are of the opinion that Green hall is not only one of the most attractive buildings on campus but also the most strategically located. Somewhere in the period that ensued after Mr. Kis- sel ' s new approach to University planning the location of the new gymnasium was reshuffled for eventually it was located directly west of the shops. The reason for the angle on which it is built has never been explained, for it is one of the new buildings in the western expansion that did not use the extension of Oread avenue as its cross axis. The architectural style of the building is collegiate gothic, that being the vogue during the eclectic period of the 1900 ' s. It was suggested by the English tudor style which is a combination of gothic and renaissance. At the western terminus of the Avenue was built Marvin hall. Another adaptation of collegiate gothic, it was constructed of heavy wall-bearing construction. Planned by F. 0. Marvin, then Dean of the School of Engineering, it was completed in 1907. Shortly thereafter was constructed the engineering shops, whose style is more function than esthetics. To connect the existent gymnasium and engineering building and also to provide room for classes in geology and mining engineering, Haworth hall was built. Here again is shown the style of the Renaissance in a building that closely followed the character of Marvin hall and Robinson gymnasium. The administration building was made possible through the untiring efforts of Professors Templin and Griffith. The two, heads of the Department of College and School of Drawing and Painting, desired a building that would house both schools and also serve as an ad- ministration building. Fraser hall no longer was the center of the campus and administrative quarters in this building were much too small. The University officials realized that without draw- ing plans it would be impossible to go before the legisla- ture and ask for an appropriation for the $150,000 build- ing. Hence W. A. McArdle of St. Louis was hired as a member of the staff of the Department of Architecture and spent the better part of a year drawing the plans for the new administration building. He chose the style of the classical renaissance and a building of a center square and rectangular wings. The center of the building was to be used exclusively for administrative purposes. A great rotunda four stories high with a huge glass dome was to be the center of university life for a student body of over 10,000. Considerable opposition arose from the regents on such a large and grandiose building and many 226 changes resulted. Architect McArdle was greatly unhappy about the revisions he was forced to make and never really approved of the changes. The east wing of the building was the first portion constructed and in time the main section and west wing were completed. In 1922 the new administration building was presented to the students total cost running to $650,000. At the beginning of Chancellor Hiram Lindley ' s ad- ministration in 1920 the University experienced one of the greatest building eras in its history. A new library was built in 1924, followed by an auditorium in 1927. The year 1927 also saw the starting of the Memorial Union and the erection of the Watkins hospital, the first real hospital the University knew. New Snow hall was completed in 1929. All of the new buildings constructed were on an en- tirely different character than in the past. No longer was local sandstone used but imported Indiana limestone. Stylewise, the new buildings for their time had con- siderable less character than those of an earlier period. New Snow hall adopted a modern collegiate gothic, as did the new Hoch auditorium. With the coming of the forties and the introduction of a new Chancellor, building began anew on the campus. In 1941, the Military Science building was constructed, using reclaimed stone from old Snow hall. The same year saw the completion of Lindley hall at the western terminus of the campus axis. It was in 1944 that Dean Lawson talked with Mr. Danforth, Minneapolis, Minn., suggesting that the Dan- forth Foundation assist the University in building a chapel on its campus. By late 1945 at the head of the original entrance to the University stood a quaint English structure, probably one of the smallest university struc- tures ever done. Today it is quite popular with students as a place of private prayer, and it is the scene of many campus weddings. The Union was completed in early 1953, after being started in 1927. This provides the best student recreation- al facilities in this part of the country. The late forties showed the addition to the campus of the new Fowler shops, the freshman dormitories on the location of old North College hall, and the completion of the addition to the Watson library. Probably the most controversial structure to be placed on the campus was the memorial Campanile. De- signed by Neville, Simon and Sharp of Kansas City, its style cannot be attributed to any one phase of history. One professor aptly said it was a contemporary adapta- tion and left before saying exactly what it was adapted from. At any rate it is becoming more attractive as the years pass and one gets accustomed to its stubby appear- ance, nothing of which affects the lovely music it extolls. The latest, and the smallest addition to the campus was the 1952 erection of a combination bus shelter and information booth at the main intersection of Jayhawk boulevard and Mississippi. Of contemporary style, it was designed by Peter Keleti, a Hungarian instructor in the Department of Architecture. It is a pleasing structure of glass and stone, accentuated by dark panels of exposed wood. Biggest and best student activity facilities in the midwest KU ' s new enlarged Student Union building 227 T HAS BEEN A GREAT)! c II Y E A R In Spite of All The Predictions 230 They Said It Couldn ' t Be Done 244 Twelve Laps to the Mile 248 KU ' s More Respectable Dives 250 Summarizing the Season 255 KU ' s Newest Team, Gymnastics In true story book fashion the University basketball squad, a team that was supposed to win but half a dozen games all season, went to the NCAA finals. It was the big news of the year on Mt. Oread and the Jayhawker has covered the season complete with many action photos and a game-by-game resume. But realizing that one sport does not make a program of athletics, your yearbook has also included complete run-downs on the indoor track, swimming, and gymnastic teams. An unusual series of photos of KU stars in action supplements the story of the Big Seven championship track team. An account of intramurals through basketball rounds out the section. 1 14 Dean Kelley, Reich, Carby, Bergen, and Born register their feelings as Al Kelley and Dick Knostman fight for the ball. They said IT C O U L D N T BE DONE By David Hill A SCRAMBLING, fighting Jayhawk basketball team confounded coaches and sportswriters, ending the cage season Big Seven champions and two points from the national championship. The Jayhawkers strove mightily for the NCAA crown, but couldn ' t overcome Big Ten champion Indiana to grasp the coveted trophy. The defeat by the Hoosiers in the final game of the NCAA tourney, however, was a far cry from a loss to Rice and early predictions that KU would be lucky to win five games in the 1953 season. Coach Phog Allen predicted a second division finish for his undersized club. 230 Few would have believed in December that in March the Jayhawkers would lose the national title in a closely contested basketball classic. Kansas fought all the way the last night of the tournament, but hot, smooth-working Indiana was too much for the boys from the Kaw. B. H. Born scored 26 points before fouling out and Al Kelley added 20, but the Hoosiers put enough on top of center Don Schlundt ' s thirty to outdo the Jayhawkers. It was a close contest all the way, with terrific pressure that told on both teams. Six points was the greatest margin either team could build up. Indiana held the lead 21-19 at the first quarter, but KU tied it up 41-all at the half. Indiana out- scored KU 18-17 in the third period, grabbing a one-point margin that won the game. With 5:36 left to play, Born fouled out, leaving KU without its major scoring threat, and although the Jayhawks held even with Indiana, which the writers had predicted couldn ' t be done without Born, they couldn ' t pull ahead to the points that would have meant victory. The pressure began to show in the closing minutes, as both clubs missed easy lay-ups and free throws. After missing two out of three free throws Corning through Dean Kelley dribbles past Mis- souri ' s Gary Filbert. Bill Heitholt, Eldon Nichol- son, and Missouri Lee Fowler give moral support. Dean Kelley takes a pass in front of Nebraskan Bill Johnson. Al Kelley, Born, Reich, Nebraskan Webber, and Patterson are in the background. ; i with 79 seconds left, the Kansans tied it up, only to foul and give Indiana the winning point. Kansas failed in their attempt to score in the closing sec- onds, and the Hoosiers took their second national crown. The Jayhawks reached the finals with an amazing 79-53 rout of the Washington Huskies, rated the nation ' s number two team by the Asso- ciated Press. The hustling Kansans held Washing- ton ' s ail-American center, Bob Houbregs, to a meager 18 points as the 6 ' 9 scoring ace fouled out for the first time in 58 games. Washington was a four-point favorite on the eve of the conflict, but the Kansans were not to be denied, stealing the ball at every turn and scor- ing eight points before the Huskies could shoot. Born took game scoring honors with 25 points, although guarded at times by two Huskies and hampered by a bad cold. The towering Huskies couldn ' t hold Allen ' s boys wh en they began to move, and Dean Kelley dropped through 18 points while Patterson got 17. Houbregs, sporting a 25.4 game average, picked up his third foul with 4:38 to play in the first quar- ter, thus losing much of his effectiveness. Late in the second period he was further crippled by his fourth foul. The big center ' s scoring was effective- ly held down by Born, and his smaller teammates kept 6 ' 8 and 6 ' 7 Huskies McCleary and Parsons out of the high scoring brackets also. First opponents on the NCAA trail were the Oklahoma City Chiefs in the regionals at Manhat- tan. An up-and-coming ball-control team, the Chiefs sported 6 ' 3 Arnold Short, one of the best outside shooters in the nation with a 39 per cent average, and a glittering 18-4 season ' s record, the best in the regional. KU at this time had a 16-5 record. The contest was drab, the outcome never much in doubt. Fast-breaking Kansas held a half-time margin of 47-26. The Oklahomans cut this margin by three points in the third quarter and outscored KU again in the last period, but they could never overcome their early deficit. This is no place for a person with claustrophobia Peck Mills experiences Kansas ' famed defense as John Anderson, B. H. Born, and Larry Davenport surround him. Kansas State Jerry Jung tries to help out from behind teammate Mills. Hank Iba instructs Aggies Rogers, Stockton, Mattick, Fuller, and Roark. The reason for Iba ' s dismay can be seen in the reflection from the Scoreboard A M is on the wrong end of the score. Gil Reich was high scorer for the victors with 20 points, followed by Al Kelley with 17, and Born with 11. In the second night of the tourney, the Jay- hawkers downed Oklahoma A M 61-55, posting their second win out of 3 games with the Aggies during the current season. The Cowpokes were rated sixth in the nation by the Associated Press, one notch behind Kansas in fifth place. Hank Iba combined a stingy defense and potent shooting in his ball-control machine, working around big Bob Mattick at post and Dale Roark, Harold Rogers, and Bob Hendricks to set him up. As the game entered the fourth quarter Kansas raised a nine-point margin to 11, only to have B. H. Born foul out and Patterson follow. Aggie power soared with the drop in opposing height and the Cowpokes pulled within two points, 55-57, but the Jayhawks hung on by dumping in free throws and cutting Bob Mattick off from his feeders while they stalled the last minutes of play. Mattick was high scorer in the contest, followed by Born with 18. Dean Kelley played a sparkling game, pouring in 16 points, ten of them in the crucial third quarter. Kansas ' 1953 basketball team will be remem- bered as one of the great ones over the years. This team started with next to nothing. There was one remaining starter from the 1952 Olympic champs, Dean Kelley. The only height available was B. H. Born, an inexperienced substitute for Clyde Lovel- lette. Sportswriters pointed to the lack of ex- perience and height and predicted a second-division club, but they forgot to consider several factors the coaching of Phog Allen and speed and hustle two ingredients the team had in abundance. On speed, hustle, and coaching the Jayhawks turned up as the miracle team of the season, winning on heart alone the Big Seven championship, the Western NCAA championship, and second place in the NCAA national playoffs. 233 The team boasted the leading conference scor- er, B. H. Born, with 270 points in 12 games. Dean Kelley was named most valuable player in the NCAA regional tournament, Born took the same honor in the final playoffs, and Gil Reich was placed on the regional all-star team. Born and Al Kelley were voted berths on the Associated and United Press all-Big Seven teams. With the exception of Dean Kelley and Gil Reich every man on the team had to make a tremen- dous adjustment and improve rapidly when they took over starting spots from the departed regulars. Born in particular came through in a style not expect- ed, equalling in his junior year the school single-game scoring record and capably taking the place of Clyde Lovellette. The Kelley brothers were a potent combination, intercepting pass- es and flipping them into fast breaks. It was these two and Gil Reich that ran the opposi- tion ragged with their aggres- sive defensive tactics. Reich added poise and experience, elements much needed on the young squad. Harold Patterson made the transition from center to forward and played all year against taller men, replacing Born on occasions. The junior college star ' s springing legs made him the equal of many a giant. Kansas set the pattern for the season in the opener against Tulane, stifling a scoring machine with sharp defensive play and working offensively with a good shooting average and speedy fast breaks. Tulane had an average of 88 points per game, but the Jayhawkers throttled the Green Wave 63-50, hitting 45 per cent from the field although they played a ragged game on the whole. Scoring honors were fairly well distributed with Al Kelley and B. H. Born each getting 13 points while Bill Heitholt scored 11. Born tries to outstretch Jack Carby as Kansas upsets the Wildcats in Hoch. Kansas couldn ' t score against a stubborn Rice team in Houston, losing a close one 54-51. The Jayhawkers trailed most of the way, leading only in the third quarter when their defense stiffened, and Rice scored only five. KU was unable to score proficiently, Jerry Alberts being high man with nine and Born and Dean Kelley each getting seven. The defeat ended a 16-game winning streak over college competition. The Kansans began their home court season lacking in offense but with a proven defensive ability. A red-hot scoring punch came to light, however, as SMU fell 83-66 in the first home game of the sea- son, and the Jayhawks extend- ed their home court winning streak to 13. The hapless Mus- tangs were always behind in the contest, which saw a torrid and surprising KU team on the floor. The rampaging Jay- hawkers took over in the first quarter and posted a lead SMU never tied. KU played alert defensive ball, intercepting Methodist passes and causing myriad mistakes in the oppos- ing offense. B. H. Born ' s much-im- proved play was a decisive factor as the Medicine Lodge junior took top scoring honors with 20 points and played ex- cellent defensive ball. Patter- son and Larry Davenport fol- lowed in the well-distributed KU scoring with 12 points each. Jack Kastman paced the Mustangs with 12. On the following night the Mustangs fell again, 72-55. The story was much the same except for a first quarter flurry by the Mustangs when they led, 5-4. KU then jumped ahead never to be threatened, reaching a 20 point margin in the fourth quarter. KU had another good shooting night, averaging 43 per cent of their shots. Born and Dean Kelley each hit 12 points, and Al Kelley ten. Larry Davenport was knocked to the floor midway in the contest, losing several teeth and receiving facial cuts. 234 m The dark horse of the pre-season Big Seven tournament, the Kaw crew outhustled Nebraska 73-66 in the first night of play. Born led a new combination, fielding Reich, Al Kelley, Patterson, and Dean Smith, which played a ragged but stubbornly successful game. Dean Smith ' s generalship and Reich ' s poise were added elements which contributed greatly to the victory. Born played his best game to date, starring defensively and takin g top rebounding honors. The Lonesome Pine led the scoring count with 19, followed by Al Kelley with 15. Bill Johnson led a well-balanced but unimpressive Cornhusker attack, taking an opening 6-0 lead. KU took over to lead 16-10 at the first quarter, but then cooled off and Nebraska pulled up even, 32-all at the half. NU jumped to an early third period lead, but the Jayhawkers stifled their attack and led 50-43 at the beginning of the fourth quarter. In the final period the Cornhuskers closed the gap to 67-66 with 1 :16 left to play, but KU hung on to win. TOP: Dean Kelley and Win Wilfong fight over the ball while Kastile and Patterson ki- bitz over Wilfoiig ' s shoulder. RIGHT: Who ' s here? Jim Smith, Harold Patterson, and Jess Prysock are all tangled up, and B. H. Born seems to wonder what he can do. KU outscrambled an equally ragged Missouri team to win 66-62 in a thrilling contest the second night of the tournament. Aggressive Kansas defensive play won the game as Missouri outshot KU from the floor 42 to 27 per cent but were so harassed by the Jays that they couldn ' t get off the shots that would have meant victory. Born took scoring honors with 24 in the furious struggle, leading KU from behind time and again to catch the Tigers. Al Kelley hit for 13 and Dean followed with twelve. The senior Kelley played an outstanding game, scoring and holding Tiger big gun Win Wilfong scoreless from the field. 236 BELOW: Born looks on as Al Kelley takes a shot and Lane of Oklahoma tries to block it. Thanks to a cold KU second quarter Missouri led 31-28 at the half. The third period was nip and tuck, and the lead began to change hands furiously as the game entered the fourth quarter. KU grabbed the lead with three minutes to go and hung on the rest of the way. In the final game of the tourney the Jays met Kansas State, at that time ranked number one in the nation. The fiery KU men couldn ' t match State ' s height and shooting ability, losing to the Wildcats 93-87. Fouls and incidents abounded in the fierce cross-state struggle, KU drawing 33 per- sonals and K-State 31. Born, Patterson, Al Kelley, Jess Prisock, and Jim Smith fouled out of the contest, Born leaving with 5:29 to go in the second quarter after scoring only two points. High-leaping Harold Patterson did a spark- ling job as replacement, but he couldn ' t cope with K-State ' s Knostman. Patterson himself fouled out with 5 minutes left in the game, leaving his job to sophomore Eldon Nicholson. Knostman, 6 ' 6 all- American, took game scoring honors with 38 points, missing his school and the tournament scoring rec- ord by one bucket. The Jays were dwarfed by the K-State quintet, who controlled the rebounds 50 to 29 and led all the way after the half. KU pulled to within two points several times but couldn ' t keep up the pace. Rated to lose by 15 points, KU upset fifth ranked Oklahoma A M in Hoch auditorium by a 64-53 margin. The by now well-known defense and first and fourth quarter scoring sprees put Kansas on top. Time after time the Cowpokes lost the ball on traveling, interceptions and bad passes, as the Jays tore the Aggie offense to shreds. Failure of the Kansas man-to-man defense and a red-hot 51 per cent shooting average by the Sooners brought on the rout. Kansas was unable to score all the way, with the Kelleys carrying most of the load, Al grabbing 16 and Dean scoring 13. Dean and Al Kelley study in their hotel room during a road trip. The team which opened eyes in the Big Seven tournament had its eyes opened as conference play began against Oklahoma at Norman. The Sooners beat the Jayhawkers with their own wea pon, hus- tling the game out from under the favored but cold Kansans by a 76-61 score. Slack in all depart- ments, KU was hard put to stay in the game with the Sooners. After a slow start Allen ' s men picked up steam to crush Iowa State 76-57 at Ames. A smooth fast break in the second half was a notable addition to the aggressive defense, using to advantage the loose balls and errant passes the Jays picked up. The victory was a significant one, as the Kan- sans had the largest victory margin at Ames in four years, and State coach Chick Southerland rated his five, built around Delmar Diercks, as the best of recent years. Gil Reich took a firmer grip on his newly-won starting role as he scored 19 points to lead the Jays. Post man Diercks held Born to six points while scoring 24 for game honors, but Reich, Pat- terson, and Al Kelley came through with accurate outside shooting to make up the deficit. Patterson scored 16 and Kelley 14. The Nebraska Cornhuskers put a zone defense averaging 6 ' 4 in height on the diminutive Kan- sans, and although they cut Jayhawk scoring from the outside to a minimum, they couldn ' t stop post man Born from plunking 34 points to lead KU to a 65-59 victory. In the game played at Lincoln, Born out-rebounded and outshot Cornhusker Bill Johnson, 6 ' 7 center, for a stellar performance. The aggressive KU defense was not as effec- tive as in previous games. Ball-hawking tactics succeeded in causing Cornhusker fumbles, but the antics fouled four Jayhawk starters out of the game. The loss of Dean Kelley due to a back injury in the third quarter stalled the Jay scoring drive, but alert ball-handling and an eleven-point half-time lead served to tide the Kaw crew through. Kansas knocked over first-ranked Kansas State in their cross-state battle in Hoch auditorium to score one of the major upsets of the year, win- ning by an 80-66 score. Born came through in the sty le of his Nebraska performance, leading his teammates down victory trail with 31 points and an outstanding over-all performance, in which he held all-American Dick Knostman to 12 points. Kansas reserve strength was a major factor in the win, with subs holding down the Wildcats after the KU first string was depleted by fouls. John Anderson and Dean Smith did outstanding replace- ment jobs in the second half. The hustling Jayhawks so rattled the Wildcats that they could hit only 18 per cent of their shots from the floor, compared to 42 per cent for KU. In the final quarter K-State went to pieces com- pletely, letting Kansas outscore them 26-18 and fouling wildly. The Staters never threatened after the fourth period got underway with Kansas in the lead 54-48. Kansas, ranked ninth in the nation by virtue of its upset of first-ranked K-State, found that other folks could upset, too, as Colorado dumped the Jays ' applecart, 72-68. The loss left Kansas in second place in the Big Seven, with a 3-2 record. Kansas laid off for finals after the game, leaving K-State to better their 0-1 conference record by rolling over Iowa State and Missouri. I ' ll fox ' em yet, Mock of Colorado seems to be thinking as he cuts in front of B. H. Born and keeps a wary eye on Al Kelley who is covering behind him. Harold Patterson watches from be- hind. Smiling Jack Gardner leads his hapless hand of Wildcats off their court at half-time. Jim Smith, Boh Smith, Jung, Carby, Wolfe, and Stauffer don ' t seem to be quite so happy. The Jayhawkers were outhustled, outrebound- ed and outshot, scoring on 35 per cent of their shots compared to Colorado ' s 41 per cent average. The lead changed hands nine times in the thriller, with Kansas making a desperation attempt as the score stood 69-68 with one minute remaining. Dean Kelle y overguarded and gave the Buffs two free throws which carried them down to the wire ahead of the Kansans. KU pulled ahead in the third period from a 37-all halftime tie, but fouls cut the first string, and Kansas couldn ' t keep the pace, although they were nipping at the Buffs all the way. Born was top scorer with 26 points. Kansas kept in the conference first-place run- ning by crushing hapless Missouri 86-62 in Hoch. The Jays left the Tigers in the dust after the first few moments of play, hitting 52 per cent of their shots and cutting the opposing offense to pieces with a choking defense. Missouri didn ' t score from the field until six minutes were gone and then couldn ' t catch the scampering Jayhawks, who led 21-9 at the first quarter mark and 49-26 at the half. Allen cleaned Al Kelley dribbled in for a layup despite Sooner Hamilton. the bench in the last quarter, allowing the Tigers to cut the margin a little, but they were hopelessly behind. Kansas scoring was evenly divided, Al Kelley taking 15, Reich 13, and Born 12. KU took over first place in conference stand- ings with a Hoch auditorium win over Oklahoma, 87-59. Like Missouri, OU fell easily on the Jay home court, unable to score against or stop the Kansans. KU whipped Oklahoma on the backboards as well as through the bucket, taking 56 rebounds to OU ' s 35. Al Kelley and Born led the scoring parade against the Sooners, Kelley scoring 25 points and Born 21. The Sooners struggled hard for two quarters, trailing at the half 39-33, but after intermission Kansas took over and turned a struggle into a rout, leading by 22 points at the end of the third quarter. Another home court walkaway followed when Nebraska went down 77-58. The Cornhuskers had TOP LEFT: John Anderson, Bob Gompert, and Har- old Patterson encircle Bunte as Al Kelley tries to grab the ball. Kansas trompled the Buffaloes in Hoch after losing in an upset at Boulder. TOP RIGHT : Larry Davenport breaks away from Harold Rogers, Hicks and Mattick as KU upsets Oklahoma A M at Lawrence. CENTER: Guard Dean Smith is congratulated after the Jays upset K-State in Hoch. Al Kelley, Marv Deckert, Everett Dye, and Dick Harp crowd around the senior reserve. BOTTOM : The wolf pack closes in and Lane of Oklahoma tries to get rid of that ball. Al Kelley, Reich, and Dean Kelley snap at his heels. Dick Knostman is after the ball like a cat after a mouse, but Al Kelley is just a little bit quicker. An SMU guard dribbles past B. H. Born following a tip-out from SMU center Jack Kastman. Moving to bottle him up are Davenport and Heitholt. no more success at Lawrence than any of their pre- decessors, giving KU its 19th straight victory in Hoch and a 12-4 season record, as well as first place in the Big Seven. Nebraska was never ahead of Kansas and couldn ' t find the key to the ever-potent Jayhawk combination of hustling defense and a fast break that took advantage of every loose ball. The game soon amounted to a complete runaway, KU leading 42-28 at the half. Al Kelley scored 21 and Born 20 to lead the field in scoring. February 17 was a big night for the diminu- tive Jayhawkers as they defeated taller Kansas State 80-78 to take undisputed possession of first place in the conference and broke a 27-game win- ning streak held by the Wildcats on their home floor. Kansas became the first Big Seven team to defeat K-State at Manhattan. It was a nerve-straining victory, with the bat- tle nip and tuck all the way and a constant possi- bility that the Cats might break loose with their explosive scoring power and run away with the game. Several times it looked as if this might happen, but one Jayhawker or another always came through with a clutch shot to keep Kansas in the running. After a see-saw first half KU took over in the third quarter, and scrambled desperately to stay ahead. With 30 seconds left and the score 78-79 Kansan Ken Buller fouled K-State ' s Smith, but Smith gave KU fans a sigh of relief as he missed both shots. K-State grabbed the rebound, missed iwice, and fouled Dean Smith. With the spectators ' hearts in their throats Smith made the charity toss, giving KU the final margin. Born and Prisock each hit 27 for scoring honors, and Patterson followed with 15. An Aggie defense tougher than a stone wall and a hot shooting percentage from the field boost- ed Oklahoma A M to a romp over KU, 79-58 in Stillwater. The Aggie win over fifth-ranked Kan- sas moved Coach Hank Iba to a 14-12 lead in his coaching duel with Phog Allen. Born picked up four quick fouls and Kansas couldn ' t hit from the field, nor could the Jays hold down the Aggie offense. A M led at the first quarter and stretched the margin to 37-29 at the half. The Cowpokes moved ahead for good in the third period, outscoring Kansas 20-10, and al- though KU picked up a little in the last quarter they couldn ' t close the gap. Bob Mattick played a standout game for the Aggies, garnering 24 points and more than his share of the rebounds while holding Born to a total of six for the evening. Patterson led the Jayhawks with 18, followed by Al Kelley with 13. B. H. Born set a new Big Seven scoring record with 44 points as KU roared past Colorado in Hoch March 2. Bern ' s mark broke that of 42 points set by Dick Knostman against Oklahoma and tied Clyde Lovellette ' s school record set in the 1952 NCAA regionals. The victory was Kansas ' 20th straight at Lawrence and left the Jays with an 8-2 conference record. Born ' s performance was followed by Al Kelley with 14 as the Jays outshot, outrebounded, and outhustled Colorado. KU led all the way, 14 points at the half and 54-40 at the end of the third quarter. The Kansas defense sparkled to bottle up all but sophomore forward Arte Bunte, who turned in a stellar performance, scoring 30 for the Buffs. Kansas, invincible on its home floor, scored another crushing victory as Iowa State went down by a 25-point margin, 87-62. The Cyclones failed to score in the contest until KU had chalked up five and then held even for a few buckets, but the Kaw crew broke loose from a 10-7 lead to grab a 25-12 first quarter margin. In the second period Kansas put the game on ice, outscoring Iowa State 21-4, leading by 27 points at the half. State pulled up a little in the third period, but the margin was too great. Kansas substituted freely in the final period with the Cyclones hopelessly behind. Patterson took 19 points to lead the Jays in scoring, followed by Born with 17. The flashing, rock-solid KU defense allowed few shots to the invaders, who hit on only 27 per cent on the ones they took, as compared with 44 per cent for the Kansans. The fast break served its Jayhawk masters well, as they capitalized on Cy- clone mistakes frequently. Kansas overcame a first-half deficit to beat Missouri at Columbia, 69-60, winning the Big Seven championship and the right to enter the NCAA play-offs. The Jayhawks finished the sea- son with a 10-2 conference record and a 16-5 sea- son ' s mark. KU pulled the game out of the fire in the third quarter when they went on a scoring spree after a sluggish first half. Missou out-played their opponents in the first two periods, leading 30-25 at the intermission. The Kelleys and Born began the rally and Reich hit the goal that put Kansas ahead for good, with one minute to play in the third quarter. From there on the Tigers never threatened, although Missouri edged KU in both rebounds and shooting percentage. Born led on the Scoreboard with 22, followed by Al Kelley with 14. The duel expected between Born and Tiger center Bob Reiter never material- ized, with Reiter scoring only four points. Win Wil- fong was the Tiger high man with 14. 242 TOP LEFT: Missed it! Al Kelley and Dick Knostman scramble for a loose ball as Dean Smith, Jess Prysock, and Harold Patterson give moral support. BOTTOM LEFT: Phog and assistant coach Dick Harp discuss game strategy. TOP RIGHT: Harold Patterson and Gil Reich stand by while B. H. Born covers Aggie center Bob Mattick. Al Kelley, hidden behind Mattick, tries to steal the ball. RIGHT CENTER: Reich goes up for a shot, Bunte of Colorado tries to block it, and Born waits for a rebound. BOTTOM RIGHT: Cil Reich blocks a shot by Cornhusker Jagler at the cost of a foul and Johnson can ' t help out. Speedy Thane Baker of Kansas State seems to be using the tape for an arm-rest as he edges Kansas dash man Don Hess in a last stride kick. Baker ' s time of 6.2 tied the meet record. TWELVE LAPS TO THE MILE by Bob Ball MANY KANSAXS shared the top step of the victor ' s stand as Kansas decisively defended their cham- pionship in the 25th Big Seven indoor track and field meet in the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City. Bill Easton ' s Jayhawks amassed a total of 52 5 6 points to far outdistance runnerup Okla- homa who acquired a total of 32. The big name for Kansas was Wes (the Ante- lope from Ashland) Santee, who scored two wins in two record breaking performances. Wes used the preliminaries Friday for his first record, spin- ning a 1:52.5 half to engulf Don Crabtree ' s old 1:54.6 mark erected last year. The final night crowd of 7,000 roared its approval as Santee hung on to a furious pace set by Sooner Bruce Drum- mond, lapped most of the field, and broke the fin- ish tape in a record time of 4:08.3, surpassing the previous record by :08.9. He thus joined Kansan Glen Cunningham as one of three men in Missouri alley, Big Six, and Big Seven history to turn the mile-880 double win. Also sharing the limelight for the Kansas thin- clads were high jumper Buzz Frazier and pole vaulter Norm Steanson who turned in the best per- formances of their careers to win top honors in their events. Frazier ' s leap of 6 ' 3 tied him with Nebraska ' s Phil Heidelk for that crown. Steanson, who had cleared 12 ' 6 the previous week against Missouri, came through on his third try to win with a vault of 13 ' 634 . 244 The other Kansas first place winner was sur- prising little Keith Palmquist who pulled some- thing of an upset in downing Bruce Drummond of Oklahoma in the two mile. After shadowing Drum- mond most of the way, he pulled away in the last few laps to win by a comfortable margin. His win- ning time was 9:31 flat. A moral victory was scored by Hawker Don Hess in the 60 yard dash. After jumping the gun on the first start, Hess got an excellent lead on the second try and led Olympic star Thane Baker near- ly all the way before being edged out by six inches at the finish line. Baker tied the meet record of 6.2. Double victories in the meet were scored by Santee in the mile and 880, Baker of Kansas State in the 60 and the 440 yard dash, and Tolman of Nebraska in the 60 yard low hurdles and the 60 yard high hurdles. Santee, Baker, and Price all broke meet rec- ords in the qualifying rounds Friday night, and Santee, Baker, and the Oklahoma mile relay team wrote their winning performances in the record book on Saturday night. Although Kansas emerged victorious largely on the basis of performances of her distance race iron-men, comprised of Santee, Palmquist, Lloyd Kolby, and Art Dalzell, she was to place valuable point winners in several other events throughout the program. Kolby notched a third in the mile run, and Dalzell matched that position in the half mile. Three big second place winners in the indoor festivities running under the colors of the crimson and blue were Bill Biberstein in the 60 yard high hurdles, Adolph Mueller in the 60 yard low hur- dles, and the mile relay team composed of Don Kansas hurdler Bill Biberstein goes over the last hurdle to take second in the 60 yard highs. I Norm Steanson takes off on one of his approaches that brought him to a winning 13 ' 6-% vault in the Big Seven Indoor. Smith, Adolph Mueller, Frank Cindrich and John Reiderer. In this latter attempt Kansas captain Reiderer was hard pressed by K-State ' s Baker who ran the swiftest indoor quarter of his career, an unofficial :47.8, in the final leg of the relay. Okla- homa had already set their record in a previous heat. Reiderer was able to stand off Baker ' s drive to win his heat and second place in the event by three yards. Kansas came through on schedule leading the field with nine qualifiers on the route toward the defense of its team championship in Friday night ' s preliminaries. Kansas State and Oklahoma, ex- pected to press the Jayhawkers, each landed five men in the Saturday night go-round, Iowa State placed six; Colorado, Missouri, and Nebraska, four each. Hurdler Adolf Mueller strains to get over the last hurdle ahead of Kansas State ' s Veryl Switzer. Mueller finished second in the 60 yard lows. Ace distance runner Wes Santee conies down to the tape all alone in his rec- ord breaking 4:08.3 mile at the Big Seven Indoor classic. Kansas distance man Keith Palmquist laps an Iowa State entry as he easily wins the gruelling two mile with a time of 9:31.0. Although Kansas went into the meet as the favorites to repeat their 1952 victory, their margin of victory and certainly several of the individual performances were far above expectations. Kansas coach, Bill Easton, smilingly com- mented that it all goes to show that track is much more of a team sport than most people realize. All during the meet the Kansas performers who were not scheduled for the next event could be seen help- ing and encouraging those who were about to compete. This Big Seven meet was a culmination of an- other all-victorious indoor season for the Jayhawk- ers who carried eight successive wins into the ' 53 season. The schedule consisted of three dual meets on the three Saturdays preceding the Big Seven affair. In the opening meet of the season with Kansas State in the Wildcats ' fieldhouse the Hawkers won 641 3 to 39% as seven meet records were broken. As he did in every indoor meet this season Wes Santee broke the records in both the mile run and 880. His times in these events were 4:12.5 and 1 :54.3 respectively. Kansan Norm Steanson pulled one of the biggest surprises of the meet when he vaulted 13 ' 4l o to post a new meet record in that event. Bob Smith and Kermit Hollingsworth tied for first in the high jump as they set a new record at 6 ' 15 8 . Santee and Bill Biberstein each won two events to lead the Jayhawks to a 67-37 win over Nebraska the following week. Santee ' s record times in this meet were 4:15.3 in the mile and 1:56.2 in the half. Bill Biberstein pulled his dual win in the 60 yard high and 120 low hurdles. Don Hess, Kansas sprint star, erected a new mark in the 60 yard dash at 6.2 seconds. Other Kansas winners were Don Smith in the 440, Dick Wilson in the two-mile, Norm Steanson in the pole vault, and the mile relay teams. In the last of the dual-indoors the high-flying Jayhawks won first in every running event, took first in two of the four field events, and had a tie for first in a third as they swept to their eleventh consecutive dual meet triumph. The host Mis- sourians fell victim to this power. Double winners were Santee (4:12.9 mile and 1:53.4 880), Biberstein (high and low hurdles), and Frazier (high jump and broad jump). Don Hess tied the meet record of 6.2 in the 60, and the mile relay team (Smith, Cindrich, Reiderer, and Mueller) set a record of 3:26.3. Ragon won the shotput, Palmquist the two-mile, and Reiderer the 440 to round out the Kansas victories. 247 TOP Row: Jerry Scott, Dal Chestnut, Mahlon Bull, Dean Glasco, John WeMi, Dave Moxley. BOTTOM Row: Jerry Jester, Kenny Reid, Dick Eflin, Phil Krulsch, Sam Perkins. KU s MORE RESPECTABLE DIVES by Dick Smith THE START of the 1952-53 season saw seven letter- men returning to the pool to give the tank-team a solid, experienced punch. Around these seven men Coach Phil Krutsch built a tank squad that made a creditable showing throughout the season. Cap- tains of this year ' s squad were free stylers Dick Eflin and Sam Perkins. Eflin was one of the outstanding swimmers throughout the season, proving his ability by set- ting new KU pool standards in the 100 yard free style and individual medley. Perkins continued to hold the pool record for the 220 yard and 440 yard free style races, which he established during the 51-52 campaign. Both of these men teamed with Mahlon Ball and Jerry Jester on the 400 yard free style relay team and remained undefeated in dual competition throughout the season. Ball, in addition to his relay event, set a new pool record this year in the 60 yard free style race. Jester, although primarily a diver, helped the free style team win their specialty in three dual meets and capture a third in the conference meet. Other returning lettermen were Dean Glasco, a backstroker; Ken Reid, a swimmer in the indi- vidual medley; John Welsh, a backstroker in the 200 yard open and medley relay, and diver Dallas Chestnut. To bolster the seven lettermen of the squad new strength was uncovered. Jerry Jester, diving and free style; Dave Moxley, free style; Jerry Scott, breast stroke; Bill Payne, free style; Gene 248 Schanze, breast stroke, and Terry Williams, an out- standing free styler who joined the team in mid- season. On March 6-7, 1953, the Oklahoma Sooners played host to four other Big Seven schools at Nor- man. Oklahoma and Iowa State fought it out for the conference swimming crown with Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska battling for the next 3 posi- tions. Colorado finally eased into the number three spot, three points ahead of the fourth place Jay- hawkers. Divers Dallas Chestnut and Jerry Jester sup- plied most of the Kansas punch in the Big Seven championships. Chestnut placed second in the three meter diving event and fifth in the one meter. Jester claimed fourth spot in both of these events. Other Jayhawker place winners were Jerry Scott, fifth to finish in the 100 yard breast stroke; Dick Eflin, sixth in the 150 yard individual medley, and Sam- my Perkins, sixth in the 440 yard free style and .sixth in the 1500 meter race. Other KU scoring was accounted for by the free style relay ' s third, and a fourth by the medley relay team composed of Welsh, Scott, and Eflin. KU swimmers opened their five-meet dual schedule against Nebraska, January 14, at Law- rence. Led by Dick Eflin ' s firsts in the 120 yard individual medley, 100 yard free style, a nd anchor laps on the free style relay, the team made a credit- able showing in losing 43-50. Against Oklahoma at Norman three days later, the Jayhawks went down by a 55-36 count. Following this the swim- mers met Nebraska at Lincoln and revenged their earlier defeat by the Huskers, 50-43. Iowa State proved an unfriendly host as they downed the swim- Eflin edges a Nebraska swimmer in the 100 yard free style in Robinson pool. mers 57-33. The season ' s last meet was held with Colorado at Lawrence with the Jayhawks on the short end of a 53-40 tally. On the basis of a season long appraisal, the divers were this year ' s main strength as indicated by the scoring of Jester and Chestnut in the confer- ence meet. Their accomplishments in the high board event were particularly notable as the KU pool has no three meter diving board. One handicap which faces all KU swimmers, especially back and breaststrokers, is the size of the Jayhawk tank. Only twenty yards in length it is five yards shorter than any other pool in the con- ference. In events such as the back stroke, in which turns must be made by the swimmer ' s timing, the short length causes difficulty in adjusting to regu- lation pools. Coach Krutsch talks strategy -with swimmers Dick Eflin and Bill Payne. SUMMARIZING THE SEASON Man, dig that crazy ball Jerry Brownlee, Hal Clea- vinger, and Bob Allison wonder if it will ever come down. A Run-down on Intramurals by Bob Ball BESIDES boasting one of the finest intercollegiate athletic programs and records in the nation Kansas University also owns another athletic scheduling, equally competitive and much more inclusive in its number of participants. This is, of course, the KU intramurals. This program has as its faculty head Mr. Walter Mikols and operates solely under a student committee. About seven freshmen are chosen each year and on the basis of their work and interest are narrowed down to a one or two man senior chair- manship each year. This committee runs a tightly organized schedule of all kinds of athletics, major and minor, beginning with football in the fall and ending with Softball in the spring. According to director Mikols the key to their intramural endeavor is competition. To promote this end the program is divided into as many di- visions and classes as the sport and number of par- ticipants demands. For each division champion- ship an intramural trophy is awarded as well as championship trophies for winners in the fraternity and independent leagues. The most strived for tro- phy is, of course, the hill championship. 250 At the time of this printing the following sports had been completed and winners selected: bowling, football, badminton, horse shoes, tennis, golf, handball, and baske tball. The following statistics will give some idea as to the number of men participating in the pro- gram this year. In bowling there were 34 teams entered with a competing body of 153 men. Foot- ball season brought out 834 men on 49 teams play- ing a total of 127 games. So great was the interest in intramural basketball that the teams were di- vided into A, B, and C classes with several divisions in each class. In these three classes were entered 126 teams supporting a roster of 1,312 men who participated in a total of 332 games. Nearly as soon as the oval-shaped pigskin be- gan zooming around in Memorial Stadium a simi- lar scene was taking place across the campus on the intramural gridirons. The final games of the season saw Beta Theta Pi walking off with hill championships in both the A and B classes. The Beta B team won their standing by winning their way through their division and fraternity playoff competition. For the A team, however, the competition was more formidable. After winning their division and the fraternity championship they met the win- ners of the Independent A league, Jim Beam, in the championship game. Louis Phillips, Blaine Scheideman, J. P. Jones, Dane Lonborg, and Tom Ryther all ready to grab the ball if it should bounce their way. LEFT: Harlan Hise seems determined to keep Gene Imes from getting that ball away as Jerry Clark moves up to assist him. RIGHT: Bob Allison looks for the basket as he tries to get a shot off from under Jerry Brownlee. Hal Cleavinger and Hugh Buchanan wish to be helpful. 251 The fraternity championship game was fought against Phi Gamma Delta, defending champions from last season. The Beta Blue, with the precision passing of John Strawn, notched the first marker with a completion from Strawn to Rivard in the first quarter. Another Beta tally in the second quarter, this time from Strawn to Ressler, gave the challengers a 14-0 advantage. Led by the passing of Jim Potts the Phi Gams came back to score in the second stanza and trailed at half time only 14-7. The hard-fighting Betas were never behind as they scored again in the third quarter with Jim Floyd gaining scoring honors on this tally. The fourth quarter yielded nothing to either team, and the Betas emerged victorious 21-7. The job was not done for the boys in blue, however, as they squared off against the strong in- dependent champs, Jim Beam, in the final game for the hill championship. Again the Beta team ex- hibited the fine defensive play which had been so strong as to allow only one team to score against them all year. The final score in this contest was 13-0 in favor of the Betas. Neither team was able to push across pay dirt in the first half, but the third and fourth quarters each yielded a touchdown to the unerring passes of Johnny Strawn. Floyd and Ressler were on the receiving ends of these counters. Hardly had football season closed when the sound of balls rebounding off backboards and courts was heard in both Robinson gymnasium and Robinson annex. Basketball season had arrived and the going was exceedingly precarious. Through a process of elimination nearly as exhausting as the varsity Jayhawks were encountering in their bid to retain their NCAA crown, three intramural teams fought their way through division schedules, fra- ternity and independent tournament playoffs, and succeeded in capturing the hill championship tro- phy for their respective A, B, and C classes. Phi Delta Theta displayed their round-ball prominence by posting hill championships in both the A and C classes while Delta Upsilon gar- nered the B title. Runners-up for the champion- ship spots and winners of the independent competi- tion were Hodder Annex in A, Gamma Delta in B, and AFROTC II in C. In the final A game featuring Phi Delt and Hodder Annex the victorious Phi Delts gained an early lead and were never headed. The score at the end of the first half stood 32-17, Phi Delt. The Phis coasted through the last half to chalk up a 55-37 final score. Bob Allison was the big gun for the winners getting six fielders and an equal number of free throws for 18 points. Buchanan was second high A TEAM HILL CHAMPIONS Football, Beta Theta Pi. TOP Row: John Strawn, Charlie IV- ternian, Dick Judy, Dick Resse- ler, Mark Rivard. BOTTOM Row: George Smith, Al Mulliken, Jerry Brownlee, Ben Hall, Ned Wilson. Basketball, Phi Delta Theta. TOP Row : John Handley, John Jones, Darrell Fanestil, Blaine Scheide- MI:III. Al Roberts. BOTTOM Row: Dick Hughes, Tommy Ryther, Lewis Phillips, Jack Dicus, Dale Scheideman, Eddie Miller. f T rf H ... . t HILL CHAMPIONS TOP Row: Badminton singles, Da- vid Cray; handball singles, Bill DeVry; tennis doubles, David Kane and Dick Mercer. MIDDLE Row: Coif, Robert Haynes; tennis singles, Don Franklin; horseshoe doubles, Walter Cole and Ron Thomus. BOTTOM Row: Horse- shoe singles, Carl Cole; handball doubles, Tom Kennedy and Julian Zimmerman. BOTTOM RIGHT: Badminton doubles, Mark Rivard and Don Woodson. for the winning cause with nine. R. T. Gray led Hodder with 12 and Jack Allen had seven when he left the game on fouls in the final quarter. In a much closer, more hotly contested contest Phi Delt had defeated thrice champion Beta 49-41 in the fraternity championship finals. In the B encounter neither team could find the range until DU started hitting mid-way in the third period, after leading at halftime, 12-9. Merle Hodges was all that kept DU in the game in the first half, accounting for 10 of the 12 points. He scored 13 to lead his team. Gamma Delta ' s usual big gun, Ken Morrow, was tightly bottled up by the stout DU defense and got only four points for the evening. Without Mor- row ' s usual 20 points Gamma Delta was lost. Charles Bether scored nine to lead the losers. In the C contest, Phi Delt made it two out of three titles by whipping AFROTC II in a close game. The halftime score was 30-23, Phi Delt. The Cadets stayed within striking distance through the third quarter and pulled to within one point, 40-41, with two minutes left in the game. !lP-;Pi Dick Kramer ' s 35-footer for the Air Force team again brought them to within a point following a Phi Delt score on a fast break. With 44 seconds left, J. P. Jones hit a jump shot to put the game on ice, and Lou Phillips added a pair of free throws for insurance. Blaine Scheide- man and Phillips led Phi Delt with 11 and 10 points respectively, but Harold Finch took game scoring honors with 14 for AFROTC. In individual and minor sports the champion- ship trophies were well spread out. In each of these events except bowling and golf an individual and doubles champion was named. The victorious bowling team was Beta Theta Pi who rolled past a field of 34 teams for the victory. In badminton the singles champion was David Gray representing Oread Hall and the doubles win- ners were Mark Rivard and Don Woodson of Beta. Carl Cole, without sponsorship, picked up the trophy for high man in horse shoe competition. The Kappa Sigma team composed of Walter Cole and Ron Thomas threw for the team victory. Rich Mercer and Dane Kane of Phi Kappa Psi teamed up to win the doubles tennis crown, and Don Franklin of Beta was the individual winner. Moving back indoors to the enclosed court and the handball race, it was Bill DeVry, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon, as singles champion. Inde- pendents Kennedy and Zimmerman were doubles champions. The Fall golf tiller was Robert Haynes of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, rounding out the first sec- tion of intramural competition. Director Mikols expressed the hope and the optimism that if the intramural participants con- tinued to hold this same enthusiasm all year the program would continue to be successful. HILL CHAMPIONS B Football, Beta Theta Pi. TOP Row: Bud Price, Innes Phillipps, Hughes Spencer, Bob Reed, Curt Nettles, Joe Muller. BOTTOM Row: Ted McCoy, Alden Brownlee, Ed Freeburg, John Prosser, Al Lay, Jack Elvig. B Basketball, Delta Upsilon. TOP Row: Brad Tale, Merle Hodges, Don Slawson, Bob Shirley. BOTTOM Row: Richard Rolck, Dick McCall, George McKemey, George Michale. C Basketball, Phi Delta Theta. TOP Row: Jerry Bogue, Max Merrill, Bob Richards, Carl Ade, John Simons, Darrell Fanestil. BOTTOM Row: Burwell Shepard, Hugh Buchanan, Bob Allison, Dick Hadley, Bob Forsylh. TOP Row: Jerry Busch, Kenneth Reid, Don McClelland, Jack Hammig. BOTTOM Row: Paul Johnston, Bradley Keith, Bob Bell, Dick Laptad, Kenneth Bateson. NOT PICTURED: Gail Wetmore, Al Lange, Duane Houtz, Jim Marsell. KU ' s NEWEST SPORT, GYMNASTICS by Wil Larkin THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas gymnastic team first began its activities six years ago when a group of interested athletes started to work out together without the help of any outside faculty coaching. In these six years this group of boys, and those following them, have added another note of respect for KU in the athletic world. Last year two of the members, Kenneth Bateson and Dick Laptad, entered in the Southwest AAU-YMCA gym- nastic meet held at Austin, Texas, returned to KU with a combined total of eight medals. These two, however, were entered as individual contestants, thus not officially repre- senting the university. This year at the Southwest AAU-YMCA meet held at Ft. Worth, Texas, KU ' s team of 6 men, competing against 15 other teams from the southwest district with as many as 26 men per team, placed second as a team in both the novice and junior divisions. In this meet Dick Laptad and Al Lange placed second and fourth re- spectively in the Ail-Around, a gymnastic equivalent to the pentathlon. Earlier in the season, Laptad had entered the Mis- souri Valley AAU-YMCA meet and walked off with All- Around honors, the most coveted award of any such meet. The team has given various exhibitions throughout the state, and is most readily recognized for its per- formances during the half-time at games. Mr. Henry Shenk, chairman, and Mr. Walter Mikols, instructor, of the Men ' s Physical Education department are now the co-sponsors of the team. 255 IT ISN ' T ALL GRADES AN . I I I GRIN Just Most of It 258 Big Wheels on Campus 260 Speaking Frankly 264 Parties! 266 Professionals and Honoraries Rare indeed is the student who spends more time studying than in living. To record all the myriad interests of KU students would be difficult, but the Jayhawker tries. In the following pages are pictured the workings of a typical extra-curricular activity, intercollegiate debate. Also pictured are the Big Wheels, individuals who have been most outstanding in extra-curricular activities. In lighter vein are seven pages of pictures of KU ' s frothiest side, entitled simply Parties! Then in true yearbook fashion are presented the honorary and professional organizations which provide so much of the stimulus and experience to be gained on the KU campus. WHEELS O N CAMPUS ' DICK SHELDON, commonly called Mr. Frostbitten, can be seen madly dashing across Mount Oread in 32 degrees or lower temperatures. It isn ' t that Dick is cold-blooded, but he has a tender spot in his heart for a coat hook at 1621 Edgehill Road. Dick has been dashing ever since he became honor initiate of Phi Delta Theta. While he is president of Phi Delta Theta, he is also prez of the Forensic League. Dick ' s activities ' honor roll also include Owl Society, Delta Sigma Rho, the disciplinary committee, and La Con- ferie. A few brisk moments of study have helped Dick to maintain a 2.7 average and to earn the title of Summer- field scholar. Jimmie Green and his law building are Dick ' s ambi- tions after he graduates in 1954. This Salina junior won the fall poetry contest at KU. However, writing short stories and articles, not poetry, is Dick ' s ambition. Dick has formulated what he calls the Sheldon Doc- trine. First of all, says Dick, I hate all people rather. I like most people. However, my five pet gripes are complacency, hypocrisy, effusion, smugness, and ostentation. (If confused, please consult Mr. Webster.) Mr. Ideal Person, Dick continues, is very sincere and unassuming. WANTED: Nickels, dimes, quarters, and silver dollars from upper Mongolia to be sent to LEWIS KLI ' M, coin collector at Sterling-Oliver Hall. Lewis rests from coin-collecting for 40 hours a week to major in accounting with an eye on tax law as his future profession. Lewis, from Rose Hill, has been treasurer of Sterling- Oliver Hall, the Ku Ku ' s. and the Independent Students Association. Now, Lewis is president of the ISA and his scholarship hall, while also a member of Beta Gamma Sigma and Delta Sigma Pi. national business fraternity. For a favorite pastime, Lewis just asks to be left alone to hike, camp, run, and play softball and baseball. One of my faults, Lewis admits, is that I dislike the centralization of, authority here at KU. and all authority in general, but I seem to enjoy the use of the same au- thority very much. Fascinated by the ups and downs of politics, he hopes some day to be a politician, and Mr. Einstein Klum contends that world diplomacy is the only way to avoid a hydrogen war. Another item on Lewie ' s agenda is a safari to primi- tive lands. Well. Lewis decides, you have time for any- thing that you really want to do. 258 Story by Jane Allvine NANCY CANARY has broken the traditions on the KU campus by becoming the first woman president of the All Student Council. This peppy little junior from Wichita says her only hope is that the Council can serve the best interests of the entire student body. Nancy has been an AWS counselor, a member of the YWCA House of Representatives, veep of Alpha Chi Omega, in addition to her former duties as vice president of the ASC. In March, she will be initiated into Pi Lambda Theta. Vith her usual modesty, Nancy admits she plays classical and popular music and that Grieg ' s Concerto ranks high on her hit parade ratings. Teaching is her chosen profession. High on Nancy ' s distinguished per- son ' s column are people who are natural and unassuming. To be a sports pro in several fields is now Nancy ' s dream ambition. Golf and bowling are real challenges, but Nancy confesses that, in spite of aching muscles and slightly improved form, she is still in the amateur stages. As for those in-between-class hours, Nance has one easy solution. Walk one block north of the library. Stop at the first building commonly called the Union. Go to the Hawk ' s Nest, grab a cup of coffee, and relax. WHILE ATOP Mount Oread, WALT RICKEL ' S interests have followed two main trends: (1) women, and (2) activities. Although he has singled his first field to one, this black- headed senior has shown versatility in the second. Coming to KU after a year at Arkansas City Junior College, Walt soon busied himself with the duties of president of the Inlerfraternity Council. His subsequent titles have included those of money keeper and president of Pachacamac, as well as a member of its executive council. He also has acquired the office of grand master of ceremonies for Kappa Sigma fraternity, and has been initiated into Kappa Psi, national pharmaceutical fra- ternity. I have the most marvelous job opportunity waiting for me after I graduate, confides Walt in his inimitable humor. My dear old t ncle Sam has been saving a $75 a week job just for me for five long years. Sometime, barring the interferences of Korea and the communists, Walt hopes to open his own drugstore. As for his main gripe. Walt feels that Charlie College and buddies should get into the swing of happenings on the campus. Then, he says responsibility would be shared by more people with less control by the few. 259 SPEAKING F R AN K L Y KlTs Debate Team in Action by Dick Sheldon WHEN Professor E. C. Buehler came to KU in 1925, a sign on the campus caught his eye. It said, If you can debate, Kansas needs you. The crisis was further pointed out by Chancellor Lindley ' s terse statement: Buehler, put Kansas on the map in forensics. Today Kansas is known and respected as one of the foremost schools in the country, forensically speaking. Professor Buehler introduced the now- traditional campus problems speaking contest the first year he was here. In 1932 he started the ora- torical contests which are now annual occurrences, and in 1946 Forensic League came into being, thanks to Prof, as he is called by his students. E. C. Prof Buehler, grand old man of de- bate, is one of the best known speech teachers in America. It is largely through the efforts of four men that KU has become such a feared opponent in de- bate circles: Professor E. C. Buehler, Director of Forensics, the man who started debate at KU; Dr. Kim Giffin, Director of Debate, who works mostly with the juniors and the seniors; Mr. Bill Conboy, freshman coach who is now getting his doctorate at Northwestern; and Kent Shearer, acting freshman coach. Ann Ivester stresses an important point to opponents Bill Crews, who seems disbelieving, and Orval Swan- der, who looks bored. Ann ' s colleague Dick Sheldon looks on from the left. Discussion is one of the newest fields of intercollegiate competition. Around the table in this practice group are Bill Arnold, Hugh Bell, Margaret Heard, Lee Baird, Bill Crews (partial- ly hidden), Jane Letton, Margaret Smith, and Letty Lemon. Dr. Kim Giffin debated for Iowa University, where he received his master ' s degree and Ph.D. After an active college career in discussion and radio work, Dr. Giffin taught debate and coached basketball for three years. Then after being di- rector of forensics at the University of South Da- kota, Dr. Giffin came to KU as director of debate. Since then, says Kim, I ' ve had a lot of fun. Part of KU ' s debate program features the visits of students from abroad to KU for debating. This year two boys from England took part in a panel discussion with Jack Stewart and Don Dirks at Haskell, where the Korean question was thor- oughly worked over. At a spirited convocation the British boys debated Kent Shearer and Lyn Good- win on the topic, Resolved: That every nation needs a strong left wing. Early each year tryouts are held to select new members for the team. The individual teams work out their own cases and the group as a whole meets every Thursday evening to discuss the issues and practice delivery. Those who debate as an extra- curricular activity may receive one-half hour ' s credit in speech practice per semester. Professor Buehler also teaches a class in fundamentals of de- bating, while Dr. Giffin offers a course in ad- vanced debating. The question considered this year has been Resolved: That the Congress of the Unit- ed States should enact a compulsory fair employ- ment practices law. Dr. Kim Ciffin, director of debate at KU, has a long record of successful teams. He is considered a leader in national forensics, particularly in the field of discussion. KU operates under a philosophy of debate which permits many people to benefit by it. For instance, no student can attend more than two major events in one semester. Thus this year ' s achieve- ments represent the work of 23 individual students, instead of three or four. Dr. Giffin recently dubbed this year ' s team the most industrious, most co-operative we have ever had. A glance at the statistics available for tournaments attended this year seem to substantiate Dr. Giffin ' s remarks. So far, KU teams have par- ticipated in 184 decision debates, 141 of which have been victories. 261 I Mill mimimii ' rill HtltiM Local members of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debate fraternity, include Gene Balloun, Don Hopkins, Jack Stewart, Kenneth Dam, Bill Nulton, E. C. Buehler, Kim Giffin, Orval Swander, and Kent Shearer. Professor Buehler is national president of the Organization. At the Kansas State Beginners ' tournament in November, Ann Ivester and Ed Cresswell were un- defeated. A total of 19 out of 25 debates was won to give KU the best over-all record in the tourna- ment. KU garnered second place at the University of Iowa in December when Ann Ivester and Don Hopkins were undefeated. Bill Crews was chosen the only superior extemporaneous speaker in the tournament, while Don Hopkins won the best over- all ratings in the tournament for discussion and debating. Margaret Heard and Edith Sorter advanced to the finals in the junior division of the Pittsburg tournament, where they were defeated by Edmond, Oklahoma. In the semi-finals of the senior division Hubert Bell and Bill Arnold lost to Springfield, Missouri State Teachers ' College. When St. John ' s College at Winfield was unable to hold its annual tournament because of the serious illness of the coach ' s wife, Dr. Giffin offered to take charge of the tournament and have it at KU. By winning 18 debates and losing only three, KU won the tourna- ment and went on to win the sweepstakes trophy. The last of February four KU debaters trav- eled to Northwestern for the St. Thomas tourna- ment. Bill Arnold and Hubert Bell won six out of eight rounds, thus having qualified to advance to the quarter-finals. But tournament rules permitted only one team per school to go on, and, since Hop- kins and Swander had won seven of eight rounds, they entered the quarter-finals and went on to win the tournament for KU. By winning four out of six debates at the Southwestern tournament, held in Winfield Decem- ber 12-13, Lee Baird and Bill Nulton got into the quarter-finals of the senior division, where they were defeated by Springfield State Teachers ' Col- lege. Bill Nulton received a superior ranking in discussion. In the junior division Arnold and Bell copped first place by defeating Nebraska Wes- leyan in the semi-finals and Garden City Juco in the finals. Bell received a second place in extem- poraneous speaking. At the Ottawa University Practice tournament, KU won six and lost none. KU won 20 and lost 11 at the Emporia Quadrangular tournament - - K- State, Wichita U., Emporia State and KU KU emerged with the best over-all record in the tourna- ment. Again KU took top honors for having the best over-all record at the William Jewell tourna- ment, with 23 wins and one loss. 262 Thirty-three schools, representing nine states, attended the Nebraska University tournament, where emphasis was placed not on actual win-loss records but on speaker ratings. KU was the only school having superior ratings for all four of its debaters Crews and Nulton on the negative and Swander and Hopkins on the affirmative. Each team also received a top rating. Nulton was one of the four people in the tournament to obtain a su- perior rating in discussion. Each team debated five rounds and lost one, the negative to Oklahoma Uni- versity, the affirmative to Concordia. On the basis of their season record, Hopkins and Swander were invited to participate in the Midwestern regional eliminations to determine which schools would attend the West Point elimina- tion tournament at Ames, Iowa, March 23-24. These teams represented the best from this Mid- western area. Each of the seven rounds debated was judged by two persons. KU received eight de- cisions, which gained the team the invitation to West Point for a try at the national debate cham- pionship, to be held April 23. A superior performance was turned in by KU participants in the Missouri Valley tournament, held in Boulder, Colorado, March 28-29. Debating Resolved: That the NATO nations should abolish trade restrictions among themselves, Ivester and Hopkins on the affirmative won three out of six; Crews and Swander on the negative won four out of six. The affirmative defeated Oklahoma and Texas Universities and Kansas State. The negative beat K-State, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Creighton University of Omaha. Nebraska won the tourna- ment with ten wins and four losses. Baird placed first in extemporaneous speaking and third in oratory; Crews was ranked a superior debater. The objective of our debate program at KU is to give selected students intensive training and practice in oral argumentation. To accomplish this objective, we do two things: (1) we participate in debate tournaments where the emphasis is on logi- cal argument and evidence; (2) we participate in debate before audiences where persuasion and logi- cal argument are emphasized. By the end of this year the squad will have engaged in about 16 audience debates before civic groups here in Lawrence and in surrounding towns. The topics range all the way from Joe McCarthy and farm subsidies to Red China and the draft de- ferment policy. Dr. Giffin points out that emphasis is not placed on winning debates to the extent that favor- able decisions are the only goal. The competitive factor, however, is what motivates the students to work and improve. Since a favorable decision does indicate that a KU team has done better debating, a victory is preferred. Better debating is the ob- jective of the squad. VARSITY DEBATE TEAM TOP Row: Don Hopkins, Lee Breckenridge, Hugh Bell, Bill Nulton, Orval Swander, Lee Baird, Bill Arnold. BOTTOM Row: Edith Sorter, Coach Kent Shearer, Coach E. C. Buehler, Margaret Smith, Coach Kim Giffin, Lelty Lemon. Gerald Garrett, party picture editor OPPOSITE PAGE TOP LEFT: Bob Damkroger and Helen Schmedemann strike a nostalgic note at Pearson Hall ' s Eccentric Escapades. TOP RIGHT: A double pinning Ben McAllister, Judy Ringer, Georgia O ' Daniei, and Milton Wallace celebrate at the Phi Psi formal. BOTTOM LEFT: Bob Hantla, Joan Carter, Carol Stutz, and Frank Cindrich at the Tri-Delt Christmas formal. BOTTOM RIGHT: A quar- tet of Kappa Sigs cram for finals. Kee Greer, Ernest Dade, Jim Anderson, and Cal Spradley. TOP Row: Winston Deacon, Kathy McKee, John Trombold, Jan Leonard, John Brose, Virginia Johnson, A. B. Collom, and Mary Tyson at the ATO formal . . . Reese ' s Reading makes Riss Red Nancy Reese, Georgeann Ankrom, and Louise Hi-- . . . G. H. Jones, Diane Baldwin, Jim Floyd, Joan Shaw, Tom Kennedy, and Jo Pillar at the Kappa formal. SECOND Row: Marilyn Hudson, prospective freshman, and Jadeen Scott at the Pi Phi ' s Kid Christmas party ... Dig that crazy rabbit! Max Murray, Phil Petitt, Margie Camp- bell, Jerry Jurden, Faydean Orth, and Bob Jackson bunny hop at the Phi Psi formal . . . Marjean Sullivan, Dana Hudkins, John Fifield, Dick Hughes, Pat Roney, and Dean Mammel at the Pi Phi Christmas formal. THIRD Row : Margie Campbell miscues at a Phi Gam pledge party . . . Paul Hunt, Ralph Kelley, and Dorothy Sheets kibitz . . . Qwitcher squeezin ' ! Nancy Reese, Jim Hogue, Chuck Furlong, and Georgeann Ankrom . . . Noel Rooney, Barbara Bradstreet, Nancy Mayrath, and Claude Fare at the Kappa Sig Red Dog. BOTTOM Row: . . And a fine time was had by all. Bob Meysenburg and Nancy Dennen pose at the Alpha Chi Tree Trimming party . . . Bill Michener, Jane Henry, Rosie Osborne, Bob Roth, E. J. Lupton, and Larry Cheatham at the Gamma Phi formal . . . Francie Grimes, Kay Coolidge, and two suspicious friends at the Pi Phi Kid ' s party. 265 Gripes, you mix ' em strong. Bob Bradstreet and Jean Sloneman at the Kappa Sig Red Dog party guess which is which. Oh, your hand is so cold . . . Pat Harris, Jack Greenwood, Nancy MacGregor, and Max Merrill at the DG Christmas formal. Burwell Shephard and Patty Clem at Darwin was right Bob Brandeberry. the Kappa Christmas formal. Face the camera, Burly. 266 muam . . . And Mom, the studies are much more difficult than in high school. Donner and Blitzen Jack Hurley and Kathleen Shaughnessy pull a couple of pseudo-Santas, Eleanor Bell and Jack Dryden by name, at the Gamma Phi Christmas formal. Dianne Miller and B. H. Born at the AO Pi Christmas formal. Ann Ainsworth has a foot under her arm, and Corky Wahlberg seems pret- ty tickled about it. Cad, what a hangover . . . Photographer Hank Brown toils away at the monotonous drudgery of taking Jayhawker pictures with Tlielus Jean Stoneman and Penny Hoover. 26 ' . TOP Row: Don Meeker, Kay Coolidge, Ann McLaughlin, and Roy Krueger at the Delta Chi formal ... Ed Ruese, Betty Don Knupp, Merle Hodges, Nancy Hutton, Fred Coombs, Nancy Underwood, Sally Six, and George Lund celebrate Merle and Nancy ' s pinning . . . Suzie Speck, Mini Teichgraber, Marilyn Meuhbach, Wally Birkenbuel, Jadeen Scott, and Mark Rivard at the Beta Turkey Pull. SECOND Row: Reflections of Judy Estell and Jim Barrow after they announced their pinning . . . Skoal! Phi Psi ' s Tom Brannon, Bud Roberts, and John Criesser . . . Lisa Criesser, Dick Arnold, Kay Knight, Ed Enfield, Jane Hol- lingsworth and Ken Fligg at a Phi Psi pledge party. THIRD Row: Betty and Bill Dickinson, Rita Schwader, and Don Stevenson at the Alpha Chi Tree Trimming party . . . Betas and their dates between courses at the Beta Turkey Pull . . . George Detios, Marie-Claude Bertrand, Annette Young, and Ken Cox look very contented at the Lambda Chi Christmas formal. BOTTOM Row: Jim Norman, Cynthia Patterson, Julie Gem- pel, and Dick Bills smile for Hank at the Pi KA Christmas formal . . . Just one short of a baseball team. Jean Ann Scupin, Jack Mohler, Millie Hobbes, Pal Zimmerman, Jeaneene Fischer, Jock Miller, Jo Pillar, and Tom Kennedy at the Kappa formal . . . The Sig Ep formal is graced by the presence of Neil Dodge, Marjorie Mackey, Geneva Grout, and Bob Wharton. Ui u, n. j Uri Ti W, 268 iiiiiiiiiuiiiigS . tffSSSSSS ' SSSfS ' TOP Row: Bill Smell, Rosalie Vogel, Caroline Stoneburner, and Doug Smith at the Sig Ep formal . . . Jay Oliver, Georgia Tipton, Bill Crews, Janice Murphy, Bruce Zuercher, Barbara Comstock, Gene Hall, and Anita McCoy prepare to surround the rest of the punch at the Theta buffet . . . Hal Cleavinger, Suzanne Russing, Moselle Neville, and Don Green at a Gamma Phi House party. SECOND Row: Jerry Scott, Bobbie Praimer, Syd States, Ned Wilson, Linda Connor, Bud Price, Jeaneene Fischer, and Jock Miller at the Beta Turkey Pull . . . Jerry Cox, Laurie Lane, Fredrica Voiland, Duane Werneke at the Delta Tau Christmas party . . . Alpha Chis Pat Lewis and Bar- bara Axtell and dates grimace at the camera. THIRD Row: And so this cop says to me . . . Sandra Carey, Joe Renner, Alex Masson, and Adelaide Miller at the Lambda Chi formal . . . Looks like a party. Kathy Rohwer, Kay Coolidge, Barbara Baker, and Ed Clery . . . Bill Karras, Janet Francis, Virginia Brosnahan, and Mike Landis at the ATO Christmas formal. BOTTOM Row: Ann Dodge, Rich Young, Betty Bubb, Max Murray, Mary Ann Deschner, and Floyd Grimes say cheese . . . John Jackson, Gladys Henry, Joanne Childs, Bill Irsik, Suzanne Berry, Jim Giddings, Lucy Gid- dings, Mary Pretz, and Al Hardy sit one out at the Locksley Hall formal . . . George Leinmiller, Avis Mclrwin, Mar- garet Moore, Louis Clum, Leo Hayben, and Shirley Lyon live it up at the Hopkins Christmas party. 269 TOP Row: Sure a good way to break a pair of glasses. Chris Wiley and George Zalm demonstrate Phyllis Gray is the innocent bystander . . . Weekly meeting of the Literary Critics guild, Bill Thompson officiating . . . Betty, that cigar does something for you Betty Reaper and Joe Woods . . . Kappas Corky Wahlberg, Pat Howell, INancy Reese, Jo Pillar, Kay Newman, and Jeaneene Fischer get set for an evening of studying . . . Connie Sailer- white, Sue Hershey, Louis Breyfogle, and Jodie Johnson stepping out for a show. SECOND Row: John Davenport and Martha Yeoman at ihe Sigma Kappa Kiddies parly . . . Frank IVorris demon- slrates his versalilily . . . John Konek and Jan Skaer. Jacques Clifford, Mary Garvey, Dianne Harrison, Bill ISrim- ner, Jo Ann Anderson, Leo Herbolh, Eleanor Bell, Jack Dryden laken unawares at ihe Delia Chi formal . . . Donna Carter and brother Sieve coming oul of the Gamma Phi Marriage Boolh al ihe Sludent Union Carnival. THIRD Row: Dave Hardy, Marilyn Lovelady, George MM d aele, and Marsha O ' Brien pose for the Jayhawker . . . Dodie Meyers representing one of Iwo ancienl sports: An- thony and Cleopalra . . . Wes Sanlee rounds ihe far turn as he and Dana Denning join in the festivilies al ihe AO Pi formal . . . Belh Lowell and Dick Schmidl wilh Max Embry puckered in ihe background . . . Madelyn Brite and Wil Larkin at ihe Sig Ep formal. BOTTOM Row: Hmmmmmm Warren Woody and Norma Mock . . . Gay Bonney, David Bell, Barbara Walson, and Bill INossinger al ihe Sigma Kappa Kiddies parly . . . John Simons, Allhea Rexroad, Dave Moxley, and Sandy Pulliver . . . Don Nichols, Suzie Ziegelasch, Barbara Bradslreet, and Scott Sheets at the Chi O Pirate party . . . Ever see a Santa wilh a shape like lhal? ,,. 270 .0 JLu FRONT ROW: Anderson, Fink, Plait, Landon, Campbell, Fallelta, Rosenwald, Canary, Hawklnson, Conrad, Stapleton. SECOND ROW: Cla.ro, Rogers, Sammons, Schmidt, Adams, Drury, Carman, Heysinger, Scott, Ball. THIRD ROW: Horttor, Henderson, Hurl, Cants, Wilson, hull. Nulton, Anderson, Hills, Heil, Weston, Dye, Woods. ALL S T U D E NT COUNCIL MEMBERS Will Adams Lyle Anderson Mahlon Ball Jackie Bayliss Margie Campbell Nancy Canary Kay Conrad Hubert Dye Norma Lou Falletta Joan Fink Wilbur Gants Dean Glasco Marilyn Hawkinson Dennis Henderson Louis Helmreich Larry Heil Skip Hills Don Horttor Mar c Hurt Ron Knl Nancy Landon Bill Nulton Bill Patterson Shirley Piatt Fred Rice Gene Rogers Vicki Rosenwald Ron Sammons Dick Schmidt Geoffrey Weston Joe Woods The All Student Council unites in a single, self-governing body the students of the University of Kansas and pro- motes and regulates their extra-curricular activities. By coordinating student activities with the programs of the faculty and administrative governing bodies, it promotes the highest interests of KU and cultivates loyalty to the University among its students. The All Student Council consists of a president, a representative at large, repre- sentatives elected by various schools of the University, organizational representatives, and two representatives elected by the freshman class. OFFICERS BILL WILSON NANCY CANARY NANCY LANDON LYLE ANDERSON President Vice President Secretary Treasurer 271 Top Row: Lloyd, Bradihav, Fltagerald, Endaeolt, Maekejr, Oliver. BOTTOM Row: Heywood, I. wU, Conrad, DavU, Taylor. MORTAR BOARD Mortar Board, senior honor society for women, was founded in 1918, at Syracuse, New York. Torch Society, organized at the University of Kansas, became affiliated with National Mortar Board in 1924. There is a definite scholarship standard set by National Mortar Board, which must be met by each candidate. In short, the object is to promote and recognize service, scholarship, and leader- ship. New members are elected to Mortar Board in the spring from the undergraduates who will have completed their junior year at the opening of the following fall term, by a unanimous vote of the outgoing chapter. No chapter is permitted less than five, nor more than twenty, members. OFFICERS MEMBERS Kathryn Conrad Louise Swigart Davis Grace Endacott Jeanne Fitzgerald Janie Heywood Jannith Lewis Patricia Lloyd Virginia Mackey Carolyn Oliver Venita Bradshaw Sturgeon Dot Taylor JAMIE HEYWOOD President VIRGINIA MACKEY Vice President JEANNE FITZGERALD Corresponding Secretary PATRICIA LLOYD Treasurer 272 TOP Row: Maclvor, Woodson, Stewart, Dickinson, orri-, Kassebaum, Hills. MIDDLE Row: Coodseal, Nultun, Sebesta, Ball Wiglngton, Anderson. BOTTOM Row: Stewart, Anderson, Houlton, Kirkpatrick, Klasser, Dirks, House. SACHEM MEMBERS Lyle Anderson Neal Anderson Mahlon Ball William Dickinson Donald Dirks William Goodseal David Hills Donald Houlton Edward House Philip Kassebaum Loy Kirkpatrick Dick Klassen Keith Maclvor John Mann Frank Norris William Nulton Sammy Sebesta James Stewart Robert Stewart Ronald Wigington Donald Woodson Sachem, honor society for senior men at the University of Kansas, was founded in 1910 by 12 upperclassmen. In 1947 the organization became affiliated with Omicron Delta Kappa, a national honorary organization. Requisites for membership include outstanding attainment in schol- arship, activities, service to the University, and character. Sachem, in cooperation with Mortar Board, is responsible for the annual Fire Basket and Torch ceremony at the new-student induction. The Rock Chalk Cairn, a me- morial to outstanding events in the history of the Uni- versity, was constructed by Sachem in 1926. OFFICERS DON WOODSON President LYLE ANDERSON Vice President LOY KIRKPATRICK Treasurer 273 FRONT ROW: Porter, I.urkln, -. li.-ll. Rirhardon, ![..,,.. Wiiilniilan, II ,,1.11. linkm-. Murray, Haydt. SECOND ROW: Amend, Mai-Ivor, Wllhelm, i.h, k. I ' .. -I. i i, i HIM. Pope, VerbruKlte, Simmons, I l.il.l.-i . Carter, Stephen . THIRD ROW: Conner, Stewart, llollenberk, Trannue, Ilrarkmann, Anderon, Hrodenhelmer, Lit Mng Ma, Christy, Kahre, Mann. T A U BETA P I The National Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering society, was founded in 1885 at Lehigh University. The Kansas chapter was established in 1914, and since that time it has been active in the activities of the engineering school, maintaining a number of long term projects. One is a gallery of graduates of the KU engineering school who appear in Who ' s Who in Engineering, located in the main hall of Marvin. Another is a shelf of non-technical books in the engineering library. In the past the group has initiated a slide rule course for new engineers and organ- ized the first faculty evaluation poll in the engineering school. Each year the organization assists in staging the Engineering Exposition by furnishing an information booth and guides for visitors to the campus. OFFICERS RONALD WIGINGTON President EDWARD RICHARDSON Vice President KEITH KARTELL Corresponding, Secretary LYLE JENKINS Recording Secretary EDWARD HOUSE Treasurer MERVIN CARTER Cataloger MEMBERS James Amend Clark Anderson Theodore Arensberg Mahlon Ball William Behrmann James Bodenheimer Kent Bowden Richard Brackmann Marvin Carter Harry M. Childers Joe Christy Harold Conner Lee Douglass Clyde Dyerson Max Harris Keith Hartell Heliton Haydt Gerald Hollenbeck Edward House Gerald Imming Lyle Jenkins LeRoy Kahre Bert Larkin Lit NingMa Keith Maclvor John Mann Warren Murray William Pearn Philip Peterson Robert Pope John Porter Edwin Richardson Farrel Schell Jimmy Simmons Damon Simpson Charles W. Stephens James Stewart George Swift Walter Teegarden John Transue Leonard Urban Richard Verbrugge Fritz K. Widick Ronald Wigington John Wilkening Paul Wilhelm Danny Wilson 274 FRONT ROW: Brackmann, Kahre, M,K,-.,a,-. Haydt, Larkin, Tran B ue, Schell, Creighlon, Gillam, O ' Dell, Haley. SECOND ROW: Pope, Goading, Tolle, House, Yohe, Widick, Verbrug e, Gray, Doughty, Behrmann, Childers, Salyers, Carter, Phillips. THIRD ROW: Delap, Birkhead, Miller, Hilburn, Hartell, Christy, Stewart, Hodgden, Murray, Lit Ning Ma, Brown, Wiginglon, Mar Ivor, Jenkins. FOURTH ROW: Richardson, Donnigan, Nelson, Moore, Breedlove, Wilhelm, Lloyd, Duvull, HoIIenbeck, Good, Conner, Anderson, Bodenheimer, Simmons. SIGMA T A U OFFICERS JOHN R. TRANSUE President BERT K. LARKIN Vice President, HELITON M. HAYDT Treasurer DONALD L. CREIGHTON Recording Secretary FARREL L. SCHELL Historian Sigma Tau, a national honorary engineering fraternity, was founded at Nebraska University in 1904. Since that time Sigma Tau has grown until it now has 28 chapters in leading engineering schools throughout the nation. The purposes of Sigma Tau are to recognize scholarship and professional attainment, to work for the improvement of the profession, and to honor those students of engi- neering that possess to a high degree the broad principles of scholarship, practicality, and sociability the three at- tributes of a successful engineer. INITIATES Mahlon Ball Wallace W. Beasley William C. Behrmann Jim W. Birkhead James M. Bodenheimer John A. Boyd R. T. Brarkmann Edmund T. Bridge Marvin A. Carter Joseph H. Christy Harold W. Conner Alan L. Coxen Donald L. Creighton William J. Delap Robert N. Denny Cameron V. Dostie Leland R. Duvall Clyde W. Dyerson, Jr. Donald H. Erickson Loukas Gianakis Charles E. Gillam Eugene O. Gooding Richard T. Gray William K. Hartell Heliton M. Haydt John D. Hil burn Jerry Hodgden Gerald R. Hollenbeck Edward C. House Lyle M. Jenkins LeRoy C. Kahre Bert K. Larkin William M. Lindstrom James I. McLeod Tony W. Mere Doyle R. Miller Robert E. Mitchell Howard G. Moore Warren A. Murray Paul C. Parker Warren E. Parkhurst William C. Pearn Philip Peterson Scott H. Phillips Robert Pope Edwin L. Richardson Farrel L. Schell Damon G. Simpson Elbert K. Stevenson Jim M.Stewart John R. Transue Leonard Urban Dick J. Verbrugge Fritz K. Widick Ronald L. Wigington Paul E. Wilhelm Danny E. Wilson PLEDGES John D. Alexander Clark C. Anderson H. Kent Bowden C. W. Stephens Robert E. Breedlove, Jr. Billy Paul Brown Harry M. Childers Joseph E. Donnigan Thomas C. Doughty Lee S. Douglass Jack N. Jester William R. Krehbiel Donald E. Lloyd LeRoy McKeage Lit N. Ma Eugene C. Nelson Jean M. O ' Dell Frank O. Raley,Jr. Robert G. Rickey Gene L. Rogers W illis E. Salyers Jimmy Simmons Daniel F. Swartz David L. Thomas James M. Tolle Julius H. Wilhelm John W. Wilkening Billy B. Wilson W. Russel Yohe 275 FRONT ROW: Nordlrom, Swalm, Perkins C. Hill, Heyilnger, R. Hall, Mitchell, Dibble, Speckman, Null, Rice, Merrill. SECOND ROW: Hughe , McCall, Schlundl, Prlaulu, Kimbell, Smith, I ,.,.,,!,. Church, l i. k,.,, -h. . , - . i.,,l,l..,,l., , .-. Miller, Elliott, . THIRD ROW: Pellll, Tarr, Crewi, Kauffman, Holstlne, Hu-h, Burllnfiame, flyer, Anderson, Bear, Cooley, Craig, Cole, Dye, Mai. ALPHA KAPPA P S I Alpha Kappa Psi, national business fraternity, was found- ed at New York University in 1904. Alpha Kappa Psi was the first business fraternity to be established in this country. Psi chapter, one of 87 active chapters, was founded at KU in 1920. Requirements for initiation in this fraternity are scholarship and leadership qualities. OFFICERS GENE HALL President BILL HALL Vice President CARROLL SPECKMAN Secretary SAM PERKINS Treasurer JACK HEYSINGER Deputy Councilor ACTIVES Lyle Anderson Al Armstrong Bob Atteberry Wayne Bear Dick Beilharz Bob Burlingame Tom Church Walt Cole Joe Compton Jerry Cooley Owen Craig Bill Crews Dan Dibble Hubert Dye Bob Elliot Bill Fair Charles Goldenberg Gene Haley Bill Hall Gene Hall Bill Hawkey Dick Hughes Charles Hyer Fred Kauffman Charlie Kimbell Dick Klassen Dick LaGree Rich Mai Dick McCall Myron McClenny Kenneth Merrill Art Nease Dick Nordstrom Eric Null Dean Owens Sam Perkins Kenny Priaulx Fred Rice Howard Schlundt Gad Smith Carroll Speckman Rod Swain Orval Swander Frank Tarr Bill Tobler Bob Wilbur PLEDGES Joe Conklin Dick Coolidge Bob Dickensheets Charles Eyman Bob Forsyth Bill Gibbs Jay Holstine Howard Miller Phil Petitt Pete Rush Merl Sellers Bob Stark 276 FRONT ROW: Roberts, Kramer, Kidd, Belden, Croyle. SECOND ROW: Smith, Austin, Hi. I. Johnson, Pagedas, Haught. THIRD ROW: -i.i !,.,, k,,. Godfrey, Stiller, Simmons, Wilson, Tiemeier, Knittg. T H E T A C H I ACTIVES Bob Austill Don Belden Benny Croyle Vernon Diel Dick Godfrey Ron Haught Ed Johnson P. H. Kidd Keith Knitig Mitty Kramer Duane Krug Tony Pagedas Jim Simmons Jack Smith Don Stiller Joe Steinbacher Wayne Tiemeier Stan Wilson Theta Chi, social fraternity founded at Norwich Univer- sity, April 10, 1856, has 109 active chapters. The Kansas colony of Theta Chi, formerly the Boggi, a local frater- nity, was installed at the University of Kansas December 6, 1952. Approaching 100 years of existence, Theta Chi is forging an outstanding position of leadership in the Greek letter world the first fraternity to have a definite set of objectives, or design for living. In the last two decades since comparative records have been available, Theta Chi has ranked first in scholarship among national fraternities established prior to 1890 and among fra- ternities having fifty or more chapters. This evidence shows that Theta Chi lives up to its maxim, Alma Mater first, and Theta Chi for Alma Mater. OFFICERS PLEDGES Art McCash Bill Masovero Joe Moya Glen Roberts Dale Trott JIM SIMMONS BENNY CROYLE P. H. KIDD DON BELDON President Vice President Secretary Treasurer 277 no onr on on A n n FRONT ROW: Scoll, Morri on, Smith, Hanson, Piall, I .!,.., u. II. ......!. Ball, Brook., l.il. liri-t. II..I, I ,. I.I. Muaxer. SECOND ROW: Thomion, Cllnger, Hoop, Miller, Black, I I, .,!..,. Clyma, Swliher, Rosenwald, Lehmann, Lambert. THIRD ROW: II .. ... .. Cooler, Blanks, Brown, SchmaUrled, M..I...I..-. . Joyce, (..1,1. -M. Cole, O ' Danlel, Mahoney, I I.,..., ,.-.,,,. II ,, ... JAY JANES The Jay Jane chapter of Phi Sigma Chi, national pep or- ganization, is composed of two representatives from each organized house and from representatives of independents at large. As well as promoting sportsmanship on the campus, the Jay Janes promote traditional KU principles. This fall Nancy Gilchrist and Vernie Theden were elected as president and corresponding secretary respectively of the national convention of Phi Sigma Chi to be held on this campus next fall. The Jay Janes followed the cham- pion basketball team from start to finish last year and would have gone on to Helsinki if possible. Members of the club also usher for school events and publicize pep rallies and athletic events. OFFICERS GRACE ENDACOTT JANE HEYWOOD SHIRLEY PIATT MARESE BALL President Vice President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS Marese Ball Mary Betz Margaret Black Pat Blanks Virginia Brooks Esther Brown Betty Ginger Marion Clyma Betty Cole Loretta Cooley Nancy Echols Grace Endacott Jeaneene Fischer Pat Garrett Nancy Gilchrist Marilyn Hanson Gertha Harper Maizie Harris Martha Heck Jane Heywood Anna Jean Holyfield Miyeko Horado Alberta Johnson Barbara Johnson Barbara Joyce Lillie Kiene Kay Lambert Kay Lahman Jo Ann Lusk Kathleen Mahoney Mary Ann Mahoney Teresa Mayer Diane Miller Marion Miller Gwen Morrison Nancy Munger Georgia O ' Daniel Jeannine Parkerson Shirley Piatt Sue Roop Vicki Rosenwald Luella Schmalzried Johnna Scott Sis Shaw Annette Smith Barbara Swisher Vernie Theden Shirley Thompson Suzanne Thompson 278 n n y-v OL A FRONT ROW: Cox, Ellis, Murphy, Junod, Horowitz, Tice. SECOND ROW: Foster, Taylor, Lund, Jenkins, Perry, Olner, Sloan, Pool, Smith, Brubaker, Craig. THIRD ROW: Walker, Parlz, Shrauner, Voskamp, Worcester, Horttor, Haufler, Kirk, Starr, Fore, Kirsch. FOURTH ROW: Robinson, Herbolh, Adams, Bartletl, Robertson, Bird, Bass, Bowers, Shane, Robinson, Borden, Tanner. FIFTH ROW: Barling, Pemberton, Johnson, Haydcn, O ' Dell, Crain, Butts, Hodgen, Ellison, Dlekensheets, Astle, Wunsch. K U K U CLUB OFFICERS COURTNEY SLOAN President MARVIN POOL Vice President MAX SMITH Secretary EUGENE BRUBAKER Treasurer TOM OLIVER Cheerleader Representative The Ku Ku Club, men ' s honorary pep organization, was first formed in 1921 by three university students. In 1925 it became one of the founders of Pi Epsilon Pi, national pep fraternity, which was formed to promulgate pep and promote a better spirit of friendliness and sportsmanship between the various universities, especially at athletic contests. The membership of the club is comprised of one fifth unaffiliated students, with the rest from organ- ized houses. The Ku Ku ' s white sweater can be seen on the campus before home games, at pep rallies, at the night shirt parade, and working with other pep organiza- tions in organized action to promote school spirit. ACTIVES Dick Astle Ray Borden Eugene Brubaker Jack Byrd Lewis Clum Dean Cole Don Ellis Jerry Hodgden Don Horttor Bill Foster Lyle Jenkins Charles Junod Lew Leonard Bob Longstaff George Lund Tom Oliver Albert Park Jim Perry Marvin Pool Don Rieder Lloyd Robinson Courtney Sloan Max Smith Orrie Snook Ed Taylor Don Tice Ray Voskamp Bob Wunsch PLEDGES Stan Adams Dick Backman David Bartlett Doug Barling J im Bass Leo Bird Richard Bowers David Butts Walt Calvert A. D. Coe Jack Collins Hugh Cox Owen Craig Bill Crain Bob Dickensheets Charles Duroni Claude Ellison Paul Fore Dale Fox Walter Haufler Lee Herboth Bill Hoffman Jay Holstine Herbert Horowitz Dick Hunsuker Harry Hunt Ralph Hayden Don Johnson Bruce Johnston Lloyd Kirk Jack Kirsch Gerald Knepp Wilbur Larkin Jerry Murphy Jerry O ' Dell Lee Pemberton Bob Robertson Rowland Robinson Jean Shanze Stan Shane James Shrauner Ludwig Smith Con Spainhour Leonard Starr Bob Tanner Adolphus Toliver Freeman Walker Bob Worcester 279 FRONT ROW: Copple, Hillyer, Bauerle, III:,,,!,. -!,,,,. II,,,,, II. llu.h.on, l( ,.ll,,r,l. Holland, I. I.T, Mr.rr-, Baker, Williams. SECOND ROW: Terrell, Dunn, I.,-,,,,..,. MrKlheny, Schumann, (I ' ll, II. Gunderoen, Rubin, -mill,. II, 1,1, , I, ,. k . Hedge , Lewl, Daugherty, O ' Farrell, Smith, Brown. THIRD ROW: Porter, IV-, 1,1..,. Franklin, Fare, Mella, Kllioll, Burnett, Dlrkey, II. ..!_-.. Marshall, Winter, Haxton, -..,,, ,,,,-r-. Ochi, Slumpe. FROSHAWKS The Froshawk Club is a pep organization for freshmen men interested in promoting school spirit and enthusiasm toward athletic competition. This year the Froshawks have added their support to the older pep clubs at games and rallies by building bon-fires, decorating goal posts, and taking an active part in pep club activities. The boys have enjoyed a new experience and have had an exciting year under the leadership of Ray Radford, president; Bob Crisler, vice president; Jim Miller, secretary, and John Dunn, treasurer. OFFICERS RAY RADFORD BOB CRISLER JAMES MILLER JOHN DUNN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS Bill Franklin James Miller Paul French Mark Nardys Victor File JimO ' Dell Bill Allen Jepson Garland Tom O ' Farrell Dick Baker Dick Glenn Jay Oehs George Bauerle Harry Gunderson Wayne Orlowske Joe Bicking Arlyn Haxton Bill Passmore William Bilderback Jack Hawkinson Bob Pearce Don Bishop Chuck Hedges Rollin Peschka Vic Blankenship Dick Hillyer Merwin Porter Jerry Bouse Bernell Hiskey Ray Radford Conboy Brown Lee Holland Al Rehkop David Burgett Burton Howell Ben Robertson Don Burton Kay Hughson Bruce Rogers Dick Cayot George Ira Phil Rubin Bill Conway Frank Janousek Don Schultz William Copple Steve Jennings John Schumann Bob Creighton Nelson Jester Curtis Sell Bob Crisler Tommy Jester C. A. Smith Larry Cunningham Wally Johnson Don Smith Bob Daugherty Beau Kansteiner Bob Sommers John Detrich Frank King Barney Speckin Dave Dickey Dean Kobler Bob Spuehler William Dilley Don Krause Harlan Stamper Neil Dodge Clair Law Phil Styles Wesley Downing Ken Lerner Terry Terrell John Dunn William L. Lewis Stuart Walker Bill Elliot John Logan Ed Wall George Elliot Steve McElheny Joe Wallace Claude Fare Hal Marshall Don Williams Robert Ferguson Crandall Melia Howard Winn Norman Ford Dick Meyers Larry Winter 280 vm .w 7 1 1 f+ j- r T- 1IW1 V V FRONT ROW ' : Tarwater, Spoils, Sejkora, Roth, Butler, Burton, Kolterman, Hill, 1 ' rban, Bradley, Venard, Lander, Burleigh, Quigley, Wilson, Jenkins. SECOND ROW: Heilman, Whitney, Adams, Lindemuth, Campbell, Nolhdurft, Springer, McFarlin, Swanson, Mills, Martin, Murphy, Richart, Brock Muehlbach, Holtzclaw, Olson, Brewster, Smith, Allison. THIRD ROW: Henry, Haller, Harper, Ackerman, Gradinger, Poor, Lewis, Long, Brite, Nelson Poe, Montgomery, Hartman, Brown, Dilsaver, Caspar, McDonald, Dean, Michener, Norrie. FOURTH ROW: Hubert, Edmonds, Brumfield, Humbargar Vetterick, Algie, Kelly, Sehwantes, Jones, Fluharty, Schroeder, Schaulis, Kaspar, Jordan, Sejkora, Taylor, Norrie, Morton, Hampton, Black, Plummer Eshelman. FIFTH ROW: Zimmerman, Sealey, Thies, Hansen, Talley, Churchill, Steierl, Notestine, King, Bowman, Voiland, Benscheidt, Mason, Allen Schumacher, Ahlstrom, Koelzer, Morgan, Rau, Hyten, Scholten, Ensminger, Herre. RED PEPPERS MEMBERS Ackerman, JoAnn Ackerman, Sally Adams, Phyllis Algie, Ann Allison, Pat Benscheidt, Dona Black, Virginia Bowman, Carol Bowman, Joann Bradley, Barbara Bradley, Rose Marie Brewster, Ina May Brite, Madelyn Brock, Cheryl Brumfield, Carol Burleigh, Joan Burton, Anne Butler, Ange Butler, Marilyn Campbell, Alice Campbell, Margie Caspar, Phyllis Churchill, Beverly Dean, Shirley Dilsaver, Josephine Edmonds, Ann Ensminger, Caroline Eshelman, Norma Fincke, Judy Fluharty, Carol Gear, Susie Gradinger, Jan Haller, Sheila Hampton, Barbara Hansen, Karen Harper, Rachel Hartman, Laura Heitman, Jo Ann Henry, Jane Henry, R uth Herre, Nancy Hill, Carol Holtzclaw, Euna Jane Hubert, Gladys Humbargar, Dorolyn Hyten, Bonnie Jones, Retta Jordan, Dorothy Kaspar, Carol Keller, Sandy Kelly, Ann King, Wanda Koelzer, Janice Kolterman, Irma Lou Lander, Beverly Lewis, Janet Lewis, Mary Ellen Lewis, Virginia Lindemuth, Sally Long, Sondra Mackey, Margie Martin, Elizabeth Mason, Cynthia McDonald, Gaye McFarlin, Ann Michener, Mary Mills, Jackie The Red Peppers is the freshman women ' s pep organiza- tion. As the name implies, the Red Peppers promote school spirit, good sportsmanship, and pep. This year, besides cheering at every home game, the Red Peppers attended two out-of-town football games, participated in the half-time ceremonies for the homecoming game, and the card drills. Montgomery, Henrietta Morgan, Judith Muehlbach, Marcia Murphy, Margie Nelson, Norma Newell, Nancy Norrie, Barbara Norrie, Pat Nostestine, Sharron Nothdurft, Dianne Olson, Artis Olsen, Nancy Orth, Faydean Parshall, Dorothy Paxton, Mary Plummer, Lorna Poe, Mary Frances Poor, Martha Quigley, Stephany Rau, Jeanette Richart, Frances Roth, Rose Marie Schaulis, Ruby OFFICERS ANNA Lu MCFARLIN President PHYLLIS SPRINGER Vice President JACKIE MILLS Secretary JOANN SWANSON Treasurer JUDY FINCKE Social Chairman DIANNE NOTHDURFT Song Leader Schmiederer, Sue Scholten, Harriet Schroeder, Mary Schumacher, Edna Sehwantes, Suzanne Sealey, Mona Sejkora, Ethlyn Sejkora, Joyce Spotts, Donna Springer, Phyllis Steierl, Diane Summerville, Sue Swanson, Joann Talley, Joan Tarwater, Donna Taylor, Mary Ann Thies, Patricia Urban, Lee Ann Venard, Thelma Vetterick, Kay Voiland, Fredrica Whitney, Mary Ann Wilson, Margaret Zimmerman, Donna 281 MEMBERS FRONT ROW: (.,11, n. Pool, M. I,,, ,.,,!,. Nordstrom, Small, Judy, Merrill, Hickel, Kull, I ,..,!, ,,,. Schmidt. SECOND ROW: Steinberg, Guzman-Perry, Duncan, Lawrence, Harclerode, Miller, Sullivan, Baker, Meeker, Conklln, Ruder, Coodseal, Verbrugge, Wood . THIRD ROW: IN-,-. MrEachen, II.,--..,,. Worcester, Roach, Either, Bowden, Flske, Crews, Hoefener, I I,,. I,. Kay, D. Smith, Shane. INTERFR ATERN IT Y COUNCIL The Inter-Fraternity Council, governing body of the fraternity system at the Univer- sity, is composed of representatives from each of the 26 member fraternities. Besides the function of administration and promotion of the fraternity welfare, it is engaged in philanthropic movements such as clothing drives, financial-aid scholarships, pro- motion of better international relations, and support of such programs as the blood donor drives and other campaigns. FRONT ROW: ..!.,-... Craves, Simons, Trombold, Dye, Woods, MeClenny, Reed. SECOND ROW: Sheldon, Squires, Bro e, Conklln, McCalllster, I ..II.,,,,. OWL SOCIETY Requirements for membership in the Owl Society, honorary organization for junior men, include scholarship, extra-curricular activities, athletics and service to the Uni- versity. The Owl Society was founded at the University of Kansas in February, 1914. On initiation day its neophytes can frequently be seen perched in trees and emitting hooting noises. Filling a vital need in university life, the Owl Society devotes its meetings to constructive planning and frequent panel discussions concerning the prob- lems of our university. Occasionally informal get togethers are held. Dave Baker Bob Ball Bob Becker Kent Bowden George Claunch Bob Clawson JoeConklin Dick Coolidge Bill Crews Benny Croyle Jim Duncan Fred Dunmire John Esther Bill Fair Darrel Fanestil Terry Fiske Charles Carney Jim Gillett Jack Glenn Dick Godfrey Wilbur Goodseal Jim Graves Jim Griswold Don Harclerode Louis Helmreich Jim Hoefener Don Humphreys Don Jensen Dick Judy Bob Kaak Doug Kay Bob Kennedy Ron Kull Ray Lawrence Dick Lindstrom George Lund John McClough Bill McEachen Dick McEachen Dick McEvers Dick McGonigle Don Meeker Ken Merrill Howard Miller Jock Miller Tom Morton John Nangle Bill Nicholson Dick Nordstrom Larry O ' Brien Phil Owen Carlos Perry Barney Pool Tom Pratt Walt Rickel Farrell Schell Stan Shane Bill Schmidt Jim Simmons Mendall Small Doug Smith Don Steinberg Wendell Sullivan Jim Thome Bill Todd Lee Ulrich Dick Verbrugge Norman Weare Bryan Wilson Tom Wood Bob Worcester Bob Wunsch OFFICERS KEN MERRILL WALT RICKEL BOB BALL DICK JUDY President Vice President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS Carl Ambler Robert Ball John Brose A. B. Collom JoeConklin Kenneth Dam Lee Douglas Hubert Dye Dean Glasco Jim Graves Larry Kravitz Ben McAllister Myron MeClenny John Prosser Robert Reed Dick Sheldon John Simons LaVannes Squires John Trombold Joe Woods OFFICERS HUBERT DYE KENNETH DAM ROBERT BALL President Secretary Treasurer 282 MEMBERS Neal Anderson Bob Ariagno Paul Arrowood Ray Birk Wayne Blount Ray Borden Ed Bowen Bob Brewer Terry Burton Lewis Clum Bill Christie Bob Davis Dale Dodge Don Ellis Don Ferrell Jack Folsom Bob Garrity Ron Greeson Ralph Hite Ray Hower Don Humphreys Bob Knightly Larry Manweiler Bob Meier Max Murray Dave Olson George Reif f Clay Roberts Ron Roth Jerry Schafer Bill Smith Ron Slang Ralph Tannahill John Wilkinson Spencer Yohe FRO T ROW: Olson, Wilkinson, Reiff, Smith, Ferrell, Tannahill, Davis, Ellis, Meier. SECOND ROW: Birk, Clum, Greeson, Ariagno, Folsom, Borden, Arrowood, Humphrys. THIRD ROW: III. .111,1. Anderson, II. i.-. Burton, Srhafer, Murry, Dodge, Garrity. OFFICERS DON FERRELL President BILL SMITH Vice President RALPH TANNAHILL Secretary ED BOWEN Treasurer MEMBERS Donna Arnold Margie Black Jane Bock Betty Carmean Barbara Comstock Grace Endacott Charlene Ewell Norma Lou Falletta Jeanne Fitzgerald Marilyn Hawkinson Elizabeth Hille Mary Ann Irwin Joyce Laybourn Letty Lemon Joan Lodde Virginia Mackey Janice Manuel Betty Marshall Nancy MacGregor Janet Morrison Nancy Munger Anneliese Schnierle Joanna Schrag Pat Schulte Martha Jane Shaw Marilyn Swartz Shirley Tinsley Christine Wiley OFFICERS JANICE MANUEL President SHIRLEY TINSLEY Vice President JOYCE LAYBOURN Secretary BARBARA COMSTOCK Treasurer MARILYN HAWKINSON AWS Representative LETTY LEMON Junior Panhellenic Representative DELTA SIGMA PI The International Fraternity of Delta Sigma Pi was founded in 1907 at New York University as a professional commerce and business administration fraternity. Iota, one of 82 chapters, was established at KU in 1921. The Delta Sigma Pi Scholarship Key is awarded annually to the male senior who ranks at the top of his class scholas- tically upon graduation. FRONT ROW: Swartr, MaeCregor, Marshall, Morrison, Lodde, Comstoek, Stewart, Tinsley, Bock, Hllle, !,.,!..- colt, Wiley. SECOND ROW: Falletta, Sehulte, Schrag, Maekey, Irwin, Fitzgerald, Black, Arnold, Munger, Schnierle, Carmean, Lemon. PANHELLENIC COUNCIL The Women ' s Panhellenic Council is made up of two members from each sorority, a representative from AWS, and one from Junior Panhellenic Council. Each year the Council sponsors a Panhellenic Workshop. They also plan rush week and set up all rush rules for women. 283 I IIIIM ROW: Earlywine, Logan, Painter, Taylor, II, ,,!,,.--..;-. Wall, Cole, Card, Conrad. SECOND HOW : Berry, II... ....... I. Siegfried, Eyler, Griffith, Englund, Theden, Harper, Heller, Aylward, Thompson, Plait, Hawklnson. BOARD Shirley Piatt Mary Ellen Stewart Marjorie Englund Betty Card Jann Duohossois Jane Heywood Joyce Laybourn Maralyn Eyler w The Kansas University YWCA, founded in 1886, has a long history as a rampus force, pioneering in freshman orientation, student housing and employment. Open for mem- bership to any college woman, the Y is an association which seeks to further the religious growth of its members and to provide channels of expression for the Christian conviction. Each Thursday is Y-Day with discussions on campus, national, and world problems. Other activities are current-event coffees at the Union, foreign student fire- sides, and barber shop quartet contests. OFFICERS VERNIE THEDEN President MARILYN HAWKINSON Secretary JEANEENE FISCHER Treasurer BOARD Louis Helmreich Ben Platter Reinhold Schmidt Scott Hayden Jim Adam Harlan Stamper Dean Tinkler Bob Meier FRONT ROW: Guslon, Srolt, Biegert, Dyerly, Meier. SECOND ROW: Harden, Adam, Platter, Stamper, Anderson. M The KU YMCA has a long tradition here on the campus. The YMCA seeks to develop a spirit of Christian purpose and action among its members by its activities and program. Its activities include discussion groups, work projects, meetings, worship services, field trips, and the sponsorship of the Rock Chalk Revue. The YMCA also takes part in many inter-collegiate conferences and meetings throughout the school year. OFFICERS JOHN BIEGERT President RICHARD SCOTT Vice President ROD DYERLY Projects Vice President NEAL ANDERSON Secretary- Treasurer IRVIN GASTON Executive Secretary 284 STUDENT BOARD Fred Rice Harlan Parkinson Jim Graves Nancy Munger Althea Rexroad Peggy Allison Dana Hudkins Vicki Rosenwald Phil Kassebaum John Mann Marilyn Hawkinson Shirley Piatt FRONT ROW: Allison, Huwkinson, Kussebuum, Mann, Piall, Rice. SECOND ROW: Rosenwald, Munger, Craves, Parkinson, Hudkins, Rexroad. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICERS PHIL KASSEBAUM President JOHN MANN Vice President MARILYN HAWKINSON Secretary Rock Chalk Jayhawk is what you often hear from this lively group of cheerleaders who lead this and other yells at all the KU football and basketball games throughout the year. Besides their regular cheerleading duties, they also help to plan and carry out all the rallies and otherwise back the teams in every way possible. In addition to leading the cheering section at home, they have traveled with the teams on many of their games away from home. CHEERLEADERS Sidonie Brown Jack Byrd Dale Dodge Nancy Gilchrist Mary Gayle Loveless Connie Maus Myron McClenny Tom Oliver Sandy Puliver Milton Wallace FRONT ROW: Cilrhrist, Maus, Loveless Puliver, Brawn. SECOND ROW: Dodge, MrC.lenny, Oliver, .ill.i.-,-. Byrd. CHEERLEADERS OFFICERS SIDONIE BROWN Head Cheerleader CONNIE MAUS Assistant Head Cheerleader Student Union Activities is an organization which strives to provide a recreational program for the students of KU and to make the most use of the facilities offered by the Student Union building. The SUA board is composed of twelve students who take immediate responsibility for Union activities. Such activities are the Jayhawk Nibble, SUA Carnival, Homecoming dance, and Kansas Relays Queen contest and dance. Activities sponsored in the new Union include bowling, arts and crafts shop, and various tournaments. 285 FRONT ROW: Wiley, Crawley, Ensminger, SrhulK, 11,111 . .1, ,. II,,,.... M., . . SECOND ROW: Boswell, Peters, Slritesky, Henry, Howard, Cerber, Keller, 1 ' nderwood. MEMBERS Betty Billingsley JoAnn Boswell Sonya Cade Pat Casey Virginia Delp Patti Ensminger Jeanette Ewy Karen Gerber Mary Frances Haines Jane Henry Sandra Keller Janet Markley Janice Meisner Winifred Meyer Mary Beth Moore Mary Shearer Wilma Stith Delores Stritesky Marjorie Tibbs Kay Underwood Betty Lou Watson Martha Yeoman Christine Wiley Marie Wellman WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB The Women ' s Glee club under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel has made several notable appearances on the campus this year. Among these was their annual concert with the Men ' s Glee club and a beautiful Christmas program. In past performances the group has sung several of the compositions written by the faculty of the School of Fine Arts. The versatility of this group is illustrated by their performances which range from the classical and semi-classical to folk tunes. OFFICERS JANE HENRY President WINIFRED MEYER Treasurer KAY UNDERWOOD Librarian CHRISTINE WILEY Asst. Conductor FRONT ROW: Laughlin, McCoy, Stubblefield, House, Wilkins, Bovden, May, Martin, Smiley. SECOND ROW: Mion, Hessenflow, Wright, Stone, Ryther, Collins, Hordyk, Conley, Stlle. THIRD ROW: Jorn, Medlln, Rosarlo, Miller, Daugherty, Dillinaer, Meek, Calewood, Janney, Carter, Newton. I l Kill ROW: Spurney, HauHer, Kauffman, Nangle, Mathes, Marr, England, Hughson, Nottingham. FIFTH ROW: Krehbiel, Valentine, Swiuer, Kelso, Deacon, Woods, Rushfelt, Tebow, Gales, Hart. SIXTH ROW: Starr, Beardslee, Hegarly, Jones, Engelmann, Daniels, Mayberry, MrElheny, Bird, Whatley, Garretl, Knauss, Pankralz, Hedges. MEN S GLEE CLUB MEMBERS Mike Beardslee Leo Bird Kent Bowden Marvin Carter Ernest Gary Collins David Conley Daniel Daniels William Daugherty Winston Deacon Jan P. Dillinger Calvin Engelmann Kenneth England Gerold Garrett Norman Gates Roth Gatewood Milan Hart Walter Haufler Charles Hedges William Hegarty Robert Hessenflow John Gerard Hordyk Ed House Robert Hughson Lyman Janney Delbert Jones Wallace Jorn Al Kauffman Myron Kelso Earl Knauss Bill Krehbiel Bob Laughlin William Martin Dennis Marn James Mathes Charles May George Mayberry Don McCoy Steve McElheny Allen Medlin Joseph Meek Fred Miller John Nangle John Newton Joe Lynn Nixon Dave Nottingham Paul M. Pankrotz David Rosario Jerry Rushfelt David Ryther Richard Smiley Frank Spurney Leonard Starr Joe Stiles Jerald Stone Charles Stubblefield John Switzer Bob Tebow Gregg Whatley Joseph F. Wilkins Tom Woods Richard Wright Max Valentine The Men ' s Glee club is active during the year in staging various campus perform- ances. One of the most popular of these is the Christmas vespers, staged shortly before Christmas vacation. Other performances include convocations and an annual concert with the Women ' s Glee club. One of the highlights of the club ' s activities is an annual 3 day tour of Kansas high schools, usually taken during Easter vacation. OFFICERS ED HOUSE CLAYTON KREHBIEL President Conductor 286 MEMBERS Phyllis Bisch Virginia Certain Dorothy Davis Anna Marie DeMelfy Amy DeYong Carole Ferrin Maryann Garner Bette Garney Jean Gurley Nancy Homeyard Theresa Maher Jeanne Scheer Donna Summers Marilyn Sweet Jean Waddell Glenna Williams FRONT ROW: Garner, l , Yang, Certain, Bisch, Scheer, Maher, Carney. SECOND ROW: Williams, DeMelfy, Homeyard, Davis, Gurley, Waddell, Sweet, Summers. u w OFFICERS PHYLLIS BISCH President MARYANN GARNER Social Chairman DONNA SUMMERS Treasurer The newest organized house on the Hill, KRUW was established this fall to encourage individuality in organized living. KRUW, located at 1215 Oread, offers the inde- pendent woman an active part in a social and organizational unit. Women in campus organizations are Phyllis Bisch, Campus Affairs, Rock Chalk Revue staff; Bette Garney, Quack Club, WAA; Theresa Maher, Jay Janes; Jean Waddell, Campus Af- fairs, and Jean Gurley, SAL Members also participate in AWS, ISA, YWCA, SUA, and Inter-Dorm. MEMBERS Dick Altman Warren Andreas Jack Atherton Roy Bennett Bob Bradstreet Bill Buechel Hal Cleavinger A. C. Cooke Dave Cordell Jim Cay wood Jack Dalton Gary Davis Don Dirks Dean Frisbie Norman E. Fuller Don Giffin Jim Gurley R. C. Harris Charles Henson Duane Hirsch Jim Houghton Bob Hovey Kenny Howard Larry Keenan Thomas Kennedy Tom Kennett Ralph King Dick Kirchhof f J. Fred Kubik Charles Lindberg John Vander Lippe Robert Londerholm BobLytle John McBride Leo Meysing Dick Milton Glenn Opie Bill Porter Dick Randall Cliff Ratner Bob Rebein Gerald Rogers Gerald Sawatzky Donald Schauf Charles Schliecher Bob Smith Wilson Speer Robert E. Trego Robert Talkington G. Thomas Van Bebber Sterling Waggener Robert Walker Jerry Weber John Whealen Julian Zimmerman FRONT ROW: VanBebber, Trego, Sawatzky, Slough, Moreau, Fuller, Smith, Johnstone, Vander Lippe, li .... SECOND ROW: Kubik, Henion, Curley, Alherton, Milton, Andreas, Kennett, Bradstreet, 1lii-.li. Lindberg, King, Caywood, Waggener. THIRD ROW: Harris, Altman, Houghton, Speer, Cordell, Dirks, ki,. I.I...H. Bneehcl, Hovey, Weber, Randall, Ratner, Lytle, Glffln. PHI DELTA PHI OFFICERS NORMAN E. FULLER RICHARD RANDALL GERALD SAWATZKY DON GIFFIN Magister Exchequer Clerk Historian Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity, founded in 1869 at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, was the first professional fraternity in the United States. The local chapter, Green Inn, was organized in 1897. Membership is open to those students who have a satisfactory grade average. Although professional in nature. Phi Delta Phi holds various social functions during the school year. 287 FRONT ROW: Denning, Sehnlerle, H. ...... I .-I........... Kartell. SECOND ROW: Hevwood, Carv.n, Theden, Hunsinger, Ward. PHI CHI THETA ACTIVES Citty Crane June Kartell Jane Heywood Kay Lehmann Eileen Rogers Kip Scarritt Vernie Theden PLEDGES Barbara Bowdish Danna Denning Louise Garvin Barbara Gilbert Shirley Hunsinger Anne McLaughlin Connie McNergney Anneliese Schnierle Barbara Shepp Phyllis Ward OFFICERS Phi Chi Theta, professional fraternity for women in business, was organized at North- western University in 1924. for the purpose of promoting higher business education and training for women. Lambda chapter, one of 28 chapters, was formed at the University of Kansas in 1925. Each year the Phi Chi Theta key is awarded to the outstanding senior woman in the business school. JANE HEYWOOD EILEEN ROGERS VERNIE THEDEN JUNE KARTELL President Vice President Secretary Treasurer FRONT ROW: Davis, Freeman, Pollom, Fruhlinfi, Mchlotterbark, Coi, Toil. Ankrom, Mlorev. SECOND ROW: Dennen, Peterson, Grady, Anderson, Brownlee, Thome, Sloneman, Harder, Rawline, Russell. MEMBERS Jean Anderson Georgeann Ankrom Eldena Brownlee Twyla Sue Cox Louise Swigart Davis Nancy Dennen Jeanne Esch Mary Ann Forman Sally Freeman Madelon Fruhlinjr Norma Glass Patricia Grady Mary June Harder Shirley Hatcher Dolores Hawkins Marlene Peterson Marilyn Polloin Virgie Rawline Mary Lou Russell Thomas Schlotterbaok Phyllis Scott Joseph Stiles Jean Stoneman Ada Storer Rosalee Thorne DELTA PHI DELTA Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, was founded at the University of Kansas in 1909 and now has 33 active chapters throughout the nation. Junior and senior art students of high scholastic standing and exceptional art ability are eligible for membership. OFFICERS TOM SCHLOTTERBACK President SHIRLEY HATCHER Vice President MADELON FRUHLING Recording Secretary ELDENE BROWNLEE Corresponding Secretary TWYLA SUE Cox Treasurer 288 MEMBERS Stella Carlson Millie Clark Nancy Erirkson Louisa Hall Connie Hyre Miriam John Gwen Kimball Mary Lou Knostman Lorene Locke Avis Mclrvin Paula McVay Joan Mitchell Ruby Nash Jeannine Parkerson Marlene Peterson Eileen Rogers Mary Jo Schlotterback Ann Terflinger Barbara Lee Thomas Lenore Thornton FRONT ROW: Roger ,, MeVay, Kimball, Thomas, Thornton, Parkerson, Terflinger, Schlotlerbark, Mclrvin John. SECOND ROW: Nash, Carlson, Erickson, Hyre, Peterson, Locke, Hall, Clark, Mitchell. HOPKINS HALL OFFICERS JEANNINE PARKERSON President BARBARA LEE THOMAS Vice President GWEN KIMBALL Secretary-Treasurer Hopkins hall is another of Kansas University ' s dormi- tories for university women. Located at 1011 Indiana, the girls cooperate to program a well balanced schedule of events for university living. Girls in hill activities include Jeannine Parkerson, Jay Janes, and Marlene Peterson and Eileen Rogers, Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity. Social activities include parties, dessert dances, and ex- change dinners. JAYHAWKER INDEX Nancy Teed, Editor Ackerman, JoAnn 281 Adam, Jim 284 Adams, Phyllis 281 Adams, Stan 279 Adams, Will 271 Ade, Carl 254 Ahlstrom, Marylin 281 Ainsworth, Ann 267 Algie, Ann 281 Allen, Bill 280 Allen, Martha 281 Allison, Bob 254 Allison, Pat 281 Allison, Peggy 285 Altman, Dick 287 Ambler, Carl 282 Amend, James 274 Anderson. Clark 274. 275 Anderson, Dave 271 Anderson, Jean 288 Anderson, Jo Ann 270 Anderson, Lyle 271, 273, 276 Anderson, Neal 273, 283 Andreas, Warren 287 Ankrom, Georgeann 265, 288 Arensberg, Theodore 274 Ariagno, Bob 283 Armstrong, Al 276 Arnold, Dick 268 Arnold, Donna 283 Arrowood, Paul 283 Astle, Dick 279 Atherton. Jack 287 Atteberry, Bob 276 Austin, Bob 277 Axtell, Barbara 269 Aylward, Pat 284 B Backman, Dick 279 Baker, Barbara 269 Baker, Dave 282 Baker, Dick 280 Baldwin, Diane 265 Ball, Marese 278 Ball, Mahlon 248. 271, 273. 274 Ball, Robert 282 Barley. Jack 267 Barling, Doug 279 Barrow. Jim 268 Bartlett. David 279 Bass, Jim 279 Bateson, Kenneth 255 Bauerle. George 280 Bayliss, Jackie 271 Bear, Wayne 276 Beardslee, Mike 286 Becker. Bob 282 Behrmann. William 274. 275 Beilharz. Dick 276 Belden, Don 277 Bell, Bob 255 Bell, David 270 Bell, Eleanor 267, 270 Benecheidt, Dona 281 Bennett. Roy 287 Berry, Betty 284 Berry, Suzanne 269 Bertrand. Marie-Claude 268 Betz. Mary 278 Bicking, Joe 280 Bilderback, William R. 280 Bills. Dick 268 Bird, Leo 279, 286 Birk. Raymond 283 Birkenbuel, Wally 268 Birkhead, Jim 275 Bisch, Phyllis 287 Bishop, Don 280 Black, Margaret 278, 283 Black, Virginia 281 Blankenship. Vic 280 Blanks, Pat 278 Blount. Wayne 283 Bock, Jane E. 283 Bodenheimer, Jim 274. 275 Bogue, Jerry 254 Bonney, Gay 270 Borden. Raymond 279. 283 Born. B. H. 267 Bouse, Jerry 280 Bowden. Kent 274. 282. 286 Bowdish. Barbara 288 Bowers, Richard 279 Bowman, Joann 281 Brackmann, Richard 274, 27} Brandeberry, Bob 266 Bradley, Rose Marie 281 Bradshaw, Vinita 272 Bradstreet, Barbara 265, 270 Bradstreet. Bob 266, 287 Brannon, Tom 268 Breedlove. Robert E. 275 Brewster, Ina May 281 Breyfogle, Louis 270 Brite, Madelyn 270. 281 Brock, Cheryl 281 Brooks, Virginia 278 Brose. John 265. 282 Brosnanan, Virginia 269 Brown. Bill 275 Brown, Conboy 280 Brown, Esther 278 Brown, Sidonie 285 Brown. Susan 281 Brownlee, Alden 254 Brownlee, Eldena 288 Brownlee, Jerry 252 Brubaker. Eugene 279 Brumfield. Carol 281 Brunner. Bill 270 Bubb, Betty 269 Buchanan. Hugh 254 Buechel, Bill 287 Burgett, David Burlcigh, Joan 281 Burlingame. Bob 276 Burton, Anne 281 Burton, Don 280 Burton, Terry 283 Busch, Jerry 255 Butler. Ange 281 Butts, David 279 Byrd, Jack 279. 285 289 Campbell, Margie 265, 271, 281 Canary, Nancy 259. 271 Cants, Wilbur 271 Carey, Sandra 269 Carter, Donna 270 Carter, Marvin 274, 275, 286 Carter. Steve 270 Calvert, Walt 279 Carlson, Stella 289 Carmean. Betty 283 Caspar, Phyllis 281 Cayot, Dick 280 Certain, Virginia 287 Cheatham, Larry 265 Chestnut, Dal 248 Childers, H. Milor 274, 275 Childs, Joanne 269 Christy, Joe 274, 275 Church, Tom 276 Churchill, Beverly 281 Clark, Millie 289 Claunch, George 282 Clawson, Bob 282 Cleavinger, Hal 269, 287 Clem, Patty 266 Clcry, Ed 269 Clifford, Jacques 270 Clinger. Betty 278 Clum, Lewis 258. 269, 279. 283 Clyma. Marion 278 Coaklin, Joe 282 Cole, A. D. 279 Cole, Betty 278, 284 Cole, Carl 253 Cole, Dean 279 Cole. Walt 253. 276 Collins, Ernest 286 Collins, Jack 279 Collom, A. B. 265. 282 Compton, Joe 276 Comstock, Barbara 269, 283 Conklin.Joe 276, 282 Conley, David 286 Conner, Harold 274, 275 Conner. Linda 269 Conrad, Kay 271,272.284 Conway. Bill 280 Cooke. A. C. 287 Coolidge. Dick 276, 282 Cooley, Jerry 276 Cooley, Loretta 278 Coolidge. Kay 265, 268, 269 Coombs, Fred 268 Copplc. William 280 Cordell. Dave 287 Cox, Hugh 279 Cox. Jerry 269 Cox. Ken 268 Cox. Twyla Sue 288 Coywood, Jim 287 Craig. Owen 276. 279 Grain, Bill 279 Crane, Cicty 288 Creighton, Bob 280 Creighton. Don 275 Crews. Bill 269, 276, 282 Crisler. Bob M. 280 Croyle, Benny 277, 282 Cunningham. Larry 280 Dalton, Jack 287 Dam, Kenneth 282 Daniels, Dan 286 Daugherty, Bob 280 Daugherty, William 286 Davenport, John 270 Davis, Bob 283 Davis, Dorothy 287 Davis, Gary 287 Davis, Louise Swigart 272. 288 Deacon. Winston 265, 286 Dean, Shirley 281 Delap, B. J. 275 DeMelfy, Anna Marie 287 Dennen. Nancy 265. 288 Denning. Danna 270, 288 Descbner. Mary Ann 269 Detsios, George 268 De Vry. Bill 253 De Young, Amy 287 Dibble, Dan 276 Dickensheets. Bob 276, 279 Dickerson, Bill 268 Dickey, Dave 280 Dickinson, Betty 268 Dickinson. Bill 273 Dicus. Jack 252 Diel. Ver. - ernon 277 Dieterigh, John 280 Dillinger. Jan 286 Dilley. William 280 Dilsaver. Josephine 281 Dirks, Don 273. 287 Dodge, Ann 269 Dodge, Dale 283. 286 Dodge. Neil 268. 280 Donnigan, Joseph E. 275 Doughty, Tom 275 Douglass, Lee 274, 282 Downing, Wesley 280 Dryden, Jack 267, 270 Duchossois, Jann 284, 285 Duncan, Ji m 282 Dunmire, Fred 282 Dunn, John 280 Duroni, Charles 270 Duvall, Lee 275 Dye. Herbert 271, 276. 282 Dycrson, Clyde 274 Earlywine. Georgia 284 Echols. Nancy 278 Edmonds, Ann 281 Eflin, Dick 248 Elliott, Bill 280 Elliot, George 280 Elliott. Bob 276 Ellis. Don 279, 283 Ellison, Claude 279 Elvig. Jack 254 Embree, Max 270 Endacott. Grace 272, 278, 283 Enfield. Ed 268 Engelmann. Calvin 286 England. Kenneth 286 Englund, Marjorie 284. 285 Ensminger. Pat 281 Erickson. Nan 289 Esch. Jeanne 288 Eshelman, Norma 281 Estcll. Judy 268 Esther. John 282 Eyler. Maralyn 284. 285 Eyman, Charles 276 Fair. Bill 276. 282 Falletta. Norma 271, 283 Fanestil. Darrcll 252. 254. 282 Fare. Claude 265. 280 Ferguson. Robert 280 Ferrell. Don 283 Ferrin. Carole 287 Fifield. John 265 Fink, Joan 271 Fischer. Jeaneene 268, 269. 270, 278 Fiske. Terry 282 Fite. Victor 280 Fitzgerald. Jeanne 272, 283 Fligg. Ken 268 Floyd. Jim 265 Fluharty. Carol 281 Folsom. Jack 283 Ford. Norman 280 Fore. Paul 279 Forman, Mary Anne 288 Forsyth. Bob 254, 276 Foster. Bill 279 Fox, Dale 279 Francis. Janet 269 Franklin. Bill 280 Franklin. Don 253 Freeburg. Ed 254 Freeman, Sally 288 French, Paul 280 Frisbie. Dean 287 Fruhline, Madelon 288 Fuller, Norman E. 287 Furlong. Chuck 265 Gard. Betty 285 Garland. Jepson 280 Garner, Maryann 287 Garney, Charles 282 Garrett. Pat 278 Garrett, Gerold 286 Garrity. Bob 283 Garvey, Mary 270 Garvin, Louise 288 Gates, Norman 286 Gatewood. Roth Gempel, Julie 268 Gibbs. Bill 276 Giddings, Jim 269 Giddings. Lucy 269 Giffin, Don 287 Gilbert. Barbara 288 Gilchrist. Nancy 278, 285 Gillam, Charles 275 Gillett, Jim 282 Glasco. Dean 248. 271. 282 Glass, Norma 288 Glenn, Dick 280 Glenn, Jack 282 Godfrey, Dick 277, 282 Goldenberg. Charles 276 Good, Edwin 275 Gooding, Gene 275 Goodseal. Wilbur 273, 28 2 Gradinger, Jan 281 Grady. Patricia 288 Graves. Jim 282. 285 Gray, David 253 Gray, Dick 275 Gray, Phyllis 270 Green, Don 269 Greenwood, Jack 266 Greeson, Ronald 283 Griesser, John 268 Griesser, Lisa 268 Griffith. Maria 284 Grimes, Floyd 269 Grimes. Francie 265 Griswold, Jim 282 Grout, Geneva 268 Gunderson. Harry 280 Gurley. Jean 287 Gurley. Jim 287 Hadley. Dick 254 Haley. Gene 276 Hall, Ben 252 Hall, Bill 276 Hall, Gene 269. 276 Hall. Louisa 289 Haller. Sheila 281 Hall. William 276 Hammig, Jack 255 Hampton, Barbara 281 Handley. John 252 Hansen, Karen 281 Hanson. Marilyn 278 Harclerode. Don 282 Harder. Mary Jane 288 Hardy. Al 269 Hardy. Dave 270 Harper. Gcrtha 278 Harper, Prudy 284 Harper. Sue 281 Harris. Max 274 Harris. Mazie 278 Harris. Pat 266 Harris. R. C. 287 Harrison. Diana 270 Hart. Milan 286 Kartell, Keith 274. 275 Kartell. June 288 Hartman, Joanne 281 Hatcher. Shirley 288 Haufler. Walter 279. 286 Haught. Ron 277 Hawkey. Bill 276 Hawkins. Dolores 288 Hawkinson. Jack 280 Hawkinson. Marilyn 271, 284, 285 Haxton, Arlyn 280 Hayben. Leo 269 Hayden. Ralph 279 Haydcn. Scott 284 Haydt. Heliton 274, 275 Haynes. Robert 253 Heck. Martha 278 Hedges. Chuck W. 280, 286 Hccarty. William 286 Heil. Larry 271 Heitman. Jo 281 Heller. Jo Ann 284 Helmreich, Louis 271. 282, 284 Henderson. Dennis 271 Henry. Gladys 269 Henry, Jane 265. 281 Henson. Charles 287 Herboth, Lee 270, 279 Herre. Nancy 281 Hershey. Sue 270 Hessenflow. Robert 286 Heysinger, jack D. 276 Heywood. Jane 272, 278, 284. 285, 288 Hilburn. John 275 Hill. Carol 281 Hille, Elizabeth 283 Hills. David 273 Hills. Skip 271 Hillyer, Dick 280 Hiskey. Bernell 280 Hite. Ralph 283 Hobbs, Millie 268 Hodgden, Jerry 275, 279 Hodges. Merle 254, 268 Hoefener, Jim 282 Hoffman. Bill 279 Hoeue. Jim 265 Holland, Lee 280 Hollenbeck, Gerald 274, 275 HoIIingsworth, Jane 268 Holstine, Jay 276, 279 Holtzclaw, Jane 281 Holyfield, Anna Jean 278 Homeyard. Nancy 287 Hoover, Penny 267 Horado, Miyeko 278 Hordyk. John Gerald 286 Horowitz. Herbert 279 Horttor, Don 271, 279 Houghton, Jim 287 Houlton. Donald 273 House. Edward 273, 274, 275, 286 Houtz, Duane 255 Hovey, Bob 287 Howell, Burton 280 Howell, Pat 270 Hubert, Gladys 281 Hudkins, Dana 265, 285 Hudson, Marilyn 265 Hughes, Dick 252, 265, 276 Hughson, Robert 280, 286 Humbargar, Dorolyn 281 Humphreys, Don 282, 283 Hunsinger, Shirley 288 Hunsucker, Dick 279 Hunt, Harry 279 Hunt, Paul 265 Hurt, Marc 271 Hutton, Nancy 268 Hyer, Charles 276 Hyre, Connie 289 Hyten, Bonnie 281 Imming, Gerald 274 Ira, George 280 Irsik, Bilf 269 Irwin, Mary Ann 283 ackson. Bob 265 ackson, John 269 anney, Lyman 286 ' anousek. Frank 280 enkins, Lyle 274. 275, 279. 281 ennings, Steve 280 ensen, Don 282 ester. Jerry 248 ester. Tommy 280 ester. Nelson 280 ohnson, Virginia 265 ohn, Miriam Sue 289 ohnson. Alberta 278 ohnson, Barbara 278 ohnston, Bruce 279 ohnson, Don 279 i ohnson, Ed 277 hnson, Jodie 270 ihnson, Wally ohnston, Paul 255 ones, Delbert 286 ones, G. H. 265 ones, John 252 ones, Rctta 281 ordan. Dotty 281 orn. Wallace 286 oyce, Barbara 278 ' udy, Dick 252, 282 unod. Charles 279 urden, Jerry 265 Kaak, Bob 282 Kahre, Roy C. 274, 275 Kane, David 253 Kansteiner. Beau 280 Karras, Bill 269 Kaspar, Carol 281 Kassebaum, Phil 273, 285 Kauffman, Al 286 Kauffman, Fritz 276 Kaufman, Fred 276 Kay, Doug 282 Keenan, Larry 287 Keith, Bradley 255 Kelicy, Ralph 365 Kelly, Ann 281 Kelso, Myron 286 Kennedy, Bob 282 Kennedy, Tom 253. 265, 268, 287 Kennett, Tom 287 Kidd. P. H. 277 Kiene, Lilhe 287 Kimball. Gwen 289 Kimbell, Charlie 276 King, Frank 280 King, Ralph 287 King, Wanda 281 Kirchhoff, Dick 287 Kirk, Lloyd 279 Kirkpatrick, Loy 273 Kirsch, Jack 279 Klassen, Dick 273, 276 Knauss, Earl 286 Knepp. Gerald 279 Knight, Kay 268 Knitig, Keith 277 290 Somebody told us that YOU are intelligent, farseeing, and all that. . . Comparatively so, at least, or you wouldn ' t be here at KU. All right, then LOOK: There were people like you here on the Hill ten years ago, in 1943. And today they could pay a fancy price for the Jayhawkers they did not get, and gladly would they pay it BUT neither love nor money can buy those Jayhawkers now, and they ' re very, very sorry. They really are. And one of the surest things you know is that, come 1963, you may be able to buy Cadillacs and mink coats, but you won ' t be able to buy a 1953 Jayhawker, and then YOU will be sorry. You sure will . . . That is, of course, unless you really are intelligent, farseeing, etc., just like the man said, and BUY YOUR JAYHAWKER NOW! Busy? Be consoled you ' re not the only one that has quizzes. Others make it, why not you? On your feet ! Now put one foot ahead of the other. Repeat. Now you ' re moving. Keep going, all the way to the Daily Kansan Business Office. The next voice you hear will be ours, telling you how glad we re to see you. 291 Knupp, Don 268 Kobler, Dean 280 Kolterman, Irma Lou 281 Konek. John 270 Kosher, Jan 281 Kramer, Mitty 277 Krause, Don H. 280 Kravitz. Larry 282 Krehbiel, Bill 286 Krueger. Roy 268 Krutch, Phil 248 Kubik. J. Fred 287 Kull, Ron 271.282 LaGrce. Dick 276 Lambert. Kay 278 Lander, Bev 281 Landis. Mike 269 Landon, Nancy 271 Lane. Lauri 269 Lange. Al 255 Laptad. Dick 255 Larkin, Bert 274, 275 Larkin. Wil 270. 279 Laughlin. Bob 286 Law. Clair 280 Lay. Al 254 Lawrence. Ray 282 Laybourn. Joyce 285 Lehmann. Kay 287. 288 Leinmiller. George 269 Lemon. Letty 28} Leonard, Jan 265 Leonard, Lew 279 Lerner, Ken D. 280 Lewis. Jannith 272 Lewis. Mary Ellen 281 Lewis. Pat 269 Lewis. William L. 280 Lindberg. Charles 287 Lindcmuth. Sally 281 Lindstrom. Dick 282 Lloyd. Don 275 Lloyd. Patricia 272 Locke. Lorene 289 Lodde, Joan 283 Logan, Barbara 284 Logan, John 280 Londerholm. Robert 287 Long, Sondra 281 Longstaff, Bob 279 Lovelady, Marilyn 270 Loveless, Maiy Gaylc 285 Lowell. Beth 270 Lund. George 268, 279, 282 Lupton. E. J. 265 Lusk. JoAnn 278 Lyon, Shirley 269 Lytle. Bob 287 Me McCall. Dick 254, 276 McCallister. Ben 282 McClelland. Don 255 McClennv. Myron 276. 282. 285 McClough, John 282 McCoy. Anita 269 McCoy. Don 286 McCoy. Ted 254 McDonald. Gaye 281 McEachen. Bill 282 McElheny. Steve 280, 286 McEvers. Dick 282 McFarlin. Ann 281 McGonigle. Dick 282 Mclrvin. Avis 269. 289 McKeage LeRoy 275 McKee. Kathy 265 McKemey, George 254 McLaughlin, Anne 268 McNergney. Connie 288 McVay. Paul 289 M Ma. Lit Ning 274, 275 MacGregor. Nancy 266. 283 Maclvor, Keith 273. 274, 275 Mackey, Marjorie 268 Mackey. Virginia 272, 283 MacLaughlin, Anne 288 Maher. Theresa 278, 287 Mahoney, Kathleen 278 Mahoney, Mary Ann 278 Mai, Rich 276 Mammel. Dean 265 Mann, John 273. 274, 285 Marn, Dennis 286 Marsell. Jim 255 Marshall. Elizabeth 28} Marshall. Hal 280 Martin, Beth 281 Martin. William 286 Mason. Cynthia 281 Masson, Alex 269 Mathes. James 286 Maus, Connie 285 May. Charles 286 Mayberry, George 286 Mayrath, Nancy 265 Medlin. Allen 286 Meek. Joseph 286 Meeker. Don 268. -282 Meier. Robert 283. 284 Melia. Crandall 280 Mercer. Dick 253 Merrill. Ken 276. 282 Merrill. Max 254. 266 Meyers, Dick 280 Meyers. Dodie 270 Meysenburg. Bob 265 Meysing. Leo 287 Michale. George 254. 270 Michener, Bill 265 Michener. Marv 281 Miller. Adelaide 269 Miller. Dianne 267, 278 Miller. Dovle 275 Miller. Eddie 252 Miller. Fred 286 Miller. Howard 276. 282 Miller. James 280 Miller. lock 268. 269, 282 Miller. Marian 278 Mills. Jackie 281 Milton. Dick 287 Mitchell. loan 289 Mitchell. Wiley 276 Mock. Norma 270 Mohler. Jack 268 Montgomery. Susan 281 Moore. Howard 275 Moore. Margaret 269 Moreau. Dean F. J. 287 Morgan. Judith 281 Morrison. Gwen 278 Morrison. Janet 283 Morton. Sheila 281 Morton. Tom 282 Mossinger. Bill 270 Moxlev. Dave 248. 270 Muehlbach. Marcii 281 Muehlbach. Marilyn 268 Muller. Joe 254 Mul liken. Al 252 Munger. Nancy 278. 283. 285 Murphy. Tanice 269 Murphy. Jerry 279 Murphy. Margie 281 Murray. Max 265. 269. 283 Murray. Warren 274, 275 N Nansle. tohn 282. 286 Nardyz. Mark 280 Nash. Ruby 289 Nease. Art 276 Nelson, Eugene 275 Nelson. Norma 281 Nettels. Curt 254 Neville. Mozelle 269 Newman. Kay 270 Newton. Tohn 286 Nichols. Don 270 Nicholson. Bill 282 Nixon. Joe 286 Nordstrom. Dick 282 Norman. Jim 268 Norrie. Barbara 281 Norrie. Pat 281 Norris. Frank 270, 273 Notestine. Sharron 281 Nothdurft. Dianne 281 Nottingham. Dave 286 Null. Eric 276 Nulton. Bill 273 O ' Brien. Larry 282 O ' Brien. Marsha 270 Ochs. Jay 280 O Daniel. Georgia 264, 278 O ' Dell. jerry 279 Odell. Jim 275. 280 O ' Farrell, Tom 280 Oliver. Carolyn 272 Oliver. Jay 269 Oliver. Tom 279, 285 Olson. Artis 281 Olson. David 283 Opie. Glenn 287 Orlowske, Wayne 280 Orth, Faydean 265 Osborne, Rosie 265 Owen. Phil 282 Owens, Dean 276 Pagedas, Tony 277 Painter. Anne 284 Pankrotz, Paul 286 Park, Albert 279 Parkerson. Jeannine 278, 289 Parkinson. Harlan 285 Passmore, Bill 280 Patterson, Cynthia 268 Pearce. Bob 280 Pearn. William 274 Pemberton. Lee 279 Perkins. Sam 248. 276 Perry. Jim 279 Perry. Carlos 282 Peschka. Rollin 280 Peterman. Charlie 252 Peterson, Philip 274 Peterson. Bill 271 Peterson. Marlenc 289 Petite, Phil 265. 276 Piller. Jo 265. 268. 270 Phillipps. Innes 254 Phillips. Lewis 252 Phillips. Scott 275 Piatt. Shirley 271. 278. 284. 285 Platter. Ben 284 Plummer, Lorna 281 Poe. Mary Frances 281 Pollom. Marilyn 288 Pool. Man-in 279 Poor. Martha 281 Pope. Bob 274. 275 Porter. Bill 287 Porter. John 274 Porter. Merwin 280 Praimer. Bobbie 269 Pretz. Mary 269 Priaulx. Kenny 276 Price. Bud 254. 269 Prosser. John 254. 282 Puliver. Sandy 270. 285 Radford. Ray 280 Ralev. Frank 275 Randall. Dick 287 Ratner. Cliff 287 Rau. Jeanette 281 Rawlme. Virgie 288 Reager, Betty 270 Rebein. Bob 287 Reed. Bob 254. 282 Reese. Nancy 265. 270 Rehkop. Al 280 Reid. Kenny 248. 255 Reiff. George 283 Renner, Joe 269 Ressler. Dick 252 Reicroad. Althea 270. 285 Rice. Fred 271. 276. 285 Richards. Bob 254 Richardson. Edward 274. 275 Richart. Frances 281 Rickel, Walter 259 Rieder. Don 279 Riss. Louise 265 Rivard. Mark 252. 253, 268 Roberts. Al 252 Roberts. Bud 268 Roberts. Glen 277 Robertson, Ben 280 Robertson. Bob 279 Robinson. Lloyd 279 Robinson. Rowland 279 Rogers. Bruce 280 Rogers. Eileen 288, 289 Rogers, Gene 271 Rogers. Gerald 287 Rolck. Richard 254 Roney. Pat 265 Rooney. Noel 265 Roop. Sue 278 Rosario, David 286 Rosenwald. Vickie 271. 278. 285 Roth. Bob 265 Roth, Rose Marie 281 Rubin. Phil 280 Ruese. Ed 268 Rush. Pete 276 Rushfelt. Jerry 286 Russell. Mary Lou 288 Russing, Suzanne 269 Ryther. David 286 Ryther, Tom 252 Satterwhite. Connie 270 Sawatzky. Gerald 287 Scarritt. Kip 288 Schafer. Jerry 283 Schanze. Jean 248 Schauf, Donald 287 Schaulis. Ruby 281 Scheer. Jeanne 287 Scheideman, Blaine 252 Scheideman. Dale 252 Schell. Parrel 274, 275 Schleicher. Charles 287 Schlotterback, Jo 289 Schlotterback. Thomas 288 Schlundt. Howard 276 Schmalzried. Luella 278 Schmidt. Dick 270, 271 Schmidt. Reinhold 284 Schnierle, Annelicse 283, 288 Scholten. Harriet 281 Schrag. Joanna 283 Schroeder. Mary 281 Schumacher. Edna 281 Schulte. Pat 283 Schultz. Don 280 Schumann, John 280 Schwader. Rita 268 Schwantes. Suzanne 281 265. 268 . 269 Sabesta, Sammy 273 Salyeis. Earl 275 Sannons. Don 271 Santee. Wes 270 Scupin. Jean Ann 268 Sealey. Mona 281 Sejkora, Joyce 281 Sejkora, Lynn 281 Sell. Curtis 280 Sellers. Merl 276 Shane. Stan 279 Shanze. Jean 279 Shaughnessy, Kathleen 267 Shaw. Joan 265 Shaw. Sis 278 Sheets. Dorothy 265 Sheets. Scott 270 Shelton. Dick 258, 282 Shepard. Burwell 254, 266 Shepp. Barbara 288 Shirley. Bob 254 Shrauner. James 279 Siegfried. Kay 284 Simmons. Jim 274, 275, 277 Simons. John 254. 270, 282 Simpson. Damon 274 Six. Sally 268 Skaer. Jan 270 Slawson. Don 254 Sloan. Courtney 279 Smell. Bill 269 Smiley. Richard 286 Smith. Annette 278 Smith. Bill 283 Smith. Bob 287 Smith. C. A. 280 Smith. Don 280 Smith. Doug 269 Smith. Gad 276 Smith. George 252 Smith. Jack 277 Smith. Lud 279 Smith. Max 279 Smith. Nancy 281 Snook. Orrie 279 Sommers. Bob 281 Spainhour. Con 279 Speck. Suzie 268 Speckin. Barney 280 Speckman. Carroll 276 Speer. Wilson 287 Spencer. Hughes 254 Spotts. Donna 281 Spuehler. Bob 280 Spurney, Frank 286 Squires. LaVannes 282 Stamper. Harlan 280, 284 Stark. Bob 276 Starr. Leonard 279, 286 States. Syd 269 Steierl. Diane 281 Steinbacher. Joe 277 Stephens. Charles 274 Stevenson. Don 268 Stewart. Bob 273 Stewart. Jim 273. 275 Stewart. Jim 274. 275 Stewart. Janice 283 Stewart. Mary Ellen 285 Stiles. Joseph 286, 288 Stiller, Don 277 Stone. Jerald 286 Stoneburner. Caroline 269 Stoneman. Jean 266, 267, 288 Storer. Ada 288 Strawn. John 252 Stubblefield, Charles 286 Styles, Phil 280 Sullivan. Marjean 265 Summers. Donna 287 Swaim. Rod 276 Swander. Orval 276 Swanson. Joann 281 Swartz. Marilyn 283 Sweet, Marilyn 287 Swift, George 274 Swisher, Barbara 278 Switzer. John 286 292 Talkington, Robert 287 Talley, Joan 281 Tannahill, Ralph 283 Tanner, Bob 279 Tarr, Frank 276 Tarwater, Donna 281 Tate, Brad 254 Taylor, Dot 272, 284 Taylor, Ed 279 Taylor, Mary Ann 281 Tebow, Bob 286 Teegarden. Walter 274 Teichgraeber, Jim 268 Terr, Frank 276 Terrell, Terry 280 Terflinger, Ann 289 Theden, Vernie 278, 284, 28 Thies, Pat 281 Thomas, Barbara 289 Thomas, Ron 253 Thompson, Bill 270 Thompson, Margaret 284 Thompson, Shirley 278 Thompson, Suzanne 278 Thome, Rosalie 288 Thornton, Lenore 289 Tice, Don 279 Tiemeier, Wayne 277 Tinkler, Dean 284 Tinsley, Shirley 283 Tipton, Georgia 269 Tobler, Bill 276 Toliver, Adolphus 279 Tolle, James 275 Transue. John 274, 275 Trego, Bob 287 Trombold, John 265, 282 Tyson, Mary 265 u Underwood, Nancy 268 Urban, Lee Ann 281 Urban, Leonard 274 1 am interested in: University credits O Resident study at a foreign university Q Special countries or areas a (Specify) Plan now to take a university- sponsored tour via TWA next summer and earn full college credit while you travel Again in 1953, TWA world leader in educational air tours will participate in the travel-study programs that have proved so enjoyable to thousands in the past four years. Itineraries will include Europe, the Mediterranean, the Middle East and a tour around the world. Two to six weeks of resident study can be arranged in foreign universities. Other study tours will deal with special fields such as music, art, languages, political science, etc. Whichever tour you choose, you ' ll discover just how near you are to the rest of the world only when you fly. For 300-mile-an-hour TWA Constellations will whisk you to Europe overnight. And when you travel by TWA Sky Tourist, you save time and money. So start planning now for that thrilling, profitable vacation next summer. Mail the coupon below today. ACROSS THE U.S. AND OVERSEAS ... FLY THAHS WOULD AlgLIMlS John H. Furbay, Ph. D., Director Air World Tours, 80 East 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y. Please send me information on the Trans World Airlines Educational Tours to be offered in 1953. CM Name Position, Address_ City State Valentine, Max 286 Van Bebber, G. Thomas 287 Vander Lippe, John 287 Venard, Shirley 281 Verbrugee. Richard 274, 275 Vetterick, Kay 281 Vogel. Rosalie 269 Voiland, Fredrica 269, 281 Voskamp, Ray 279 w Waddell, Jean 287 Waggener, Sterling 287 Wahlberg, Corky 270 Walker, Freeman 279 Walker, Robert 287 Walker, Stuart 280 Wall, Ed 280 Wallace, Joe 280 Wallace. Milton 264, 285 Walz, Betty 284 Ward, Phyllis 288 Watson, Barbara 270 Weber, Jerry 287 Welsh, John 248 Werneke, Duane 269 Weston, Geoffrey 271 Wetmore, Gail 255 Wharton, Bob 268 Whatley, Gregg 286 Whealen, John 287 Whitney, Peggy 281 Widick, Herman 274, 275 Wigington, Ronald 273, 274, 275 Wilbur, Bob 276 Wiley, Christine 270, 283 Wilhelm, Paul 274, 275 Wilkening, John 274 Wilkins, Joseph 286 Wilkinson, John 283 Williams, Don 280 Williams. Glenna 287 Wilson, Danny 274 Wilson, Ned 252, 269 Wilson, Peggy 281 Wilson, Stan 277 Winter, Larry 280 Woods, Joe 270, 271, 272 Woods, Tom 286 Woodson. Don 253, 273 Woody. Warren 270 Wright. Richard 286 Wunsch, Bob 279 Yeoman, Martha 270 Young, Annette 268 Young, Rich 269 Zahn. George 270 Ziegelasch, Suzic 270 Zimmerman, Joan 281 Zimmerman, Julian 253, 287 Zimmerman, Pal 268 Zuercher, Bruce 269 A complete line of GRADE A DAIRY PRODUCTS for all your needs Phone 696 202 W. 6th St. 293 A PART OF THE KU TEAM SERVING STUDENTS RAPID TRANSIT Your Local Bus Service Phone 388 THE LAWRENCE LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS offer Experience in Handling All Your Cleaning Problems When clothes leave here, they ' re practically new again. for PRECISION PRINTING on Your Organization Yearbooks, Newsletters, Stationery, and Social Forms crone the way you want it! THE ALLEN PRESS Phone 1234 1041 New Hampshire GET THE ROWLANDS HABIT! We Offer a Wide Variety of Choice K.U. Souvenirs Stationery Sweat Shirts T-Shirts Pennants You Will Enjoy Shopping at 1401 . . two stores . . 1237 Oread 294 For Better Meals or Between Meal Snacks fry DRAKE ' S cookies coAes breads pastries Remember, it ' s Drake ' s for Bakes! First in Style First in Quality in MEN ' S WEAR WE have customers in New York, likewise in California. Wherever you may go in the U.S.A., BURD FLETCHER printing services are always available to you. BURD FLETCHER Company Seventh St., May to Central Victor 1122 Kansas City 6, Missouri 295 Ginny Brosnahan and Maria Griffith (Thetas) picking up some clean clolhes We Specialize in Quality Workmanship INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY 740 Vermont Telephone 432 SYMBOL OF SAFETY The Lawrence Merchant who places his business funds in this night depository knows, like the wise savings account owner . . . that they ' re safe in THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Seventh and Massachusetts HUTSON HOTELS 1000 Rooms in Kansas, Missouri and Colorado HOTEL BROADVIEW Wichita HOTEL ELDRIDGE Lawrence HOTEL STATE Kansas City, Mo. ROBERT E. LEE Kansas City, Mo. Billy Hutson, Pres. Mike Getto, Mgr. R. C. McCormick, Sec.-Treas. Eldridge Hotel HOTEL BOULDERADO Boulder MEADOWBROOK LODGE Jackson, Wyoming Billy Hutson, Jr., Mgr. and Owner Frances Hanna and Kay Low!s (Tri-Delfs) picking up cookies for ihat midnight snack GOING TO STUDY LATE? BUY YOUR SNACKS AT REEVES GROCERY 900 Mississippi Phone 4 1 3 296 Refresh,.. add zest to the hour KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY NOW IS THE TIME FOR PHONE 151 FOR APPOINTMENT ON THE ALERT tor what collegiates want to wear come in and see our line of clothes that are today ' s styles . . . o result of keeping on the alert TOM HOULIHAN Custom Tailors 208 E. Nth St. Kansas City, Mo. AFTER THE SHOW - - - - or studies - - - - drop by the DAIRY QUEEN for a real treat AFTER YOU GRADUATE and return to Lawrence in later years as a K. IT. Alum. yon will remember your friendly Serv- ice Station as a part in your life at K. U. CITIES A warm welcome awa ' ih you here we will be glad to see you now, and in the years to come. FRITZ CO. SERVICE Phone 4 8th and New Hampshire . Gifts and Souvenirs along with a Complete Line of Books and Supplies are Offered at Your New STUDENT UNION BOOKSTORE WE have customers in New York, likewise in California. Wherever you may go in the U.S.A., BURD FLETCHER printing services are always available to you. BURD FLETCHER Company Seventh St., May to Central Victor 1122 Kansas City 6, Missouri 305 KENNETH DAM editor JACK HI] I Business VIPI MAY, 1952 The practice of including national and international news in the Jay- hawker was originated with two ideas in mind. First, one cannot interpret the life of today ' s student without knowing all the forces which affect him, off-campus as well as on-campus. Secondly, in the years to come your enjoyment of your yearbook will be enriched if you can recall those world events which shaped your university life. In this issue we shall review the year and suggest a few of the ways in which world happenings affected Mr. Oread life. Malenkov and peace The world spent years speculating upon the path of events inside Russia should dictator Joseph Stalin die. The Western nations inwardly hoped that the entire USSR would be swallowed up in revolution, but when Stalin ac- tually did die, they realized that it was only an idle dream. Pravda, offi- cial government newspaper, soon an- nounced that Georgi Malenkov had assumed Stalin ' s position. At first all seemed peaceful and the world believed that Malenkov had won the position quickly and decisively without bloodshed. However, news leaking out of Russia in the past few weeks suggests Malenkov may be but a front man for someone else or that he may be busy purging his associates in order to stay ahead in a palace revolution. At any rate, the Saturday Evening Post concludes, There ' s murder in the air in Moscow! The effect of these happenings on the Western World has been a full scale peace offensive by the Kremlin. All the familiar Russian propaganda tricks have been used to convince the West that Moscow really wants an end to the war. This peace campaign appears to be only a front behind which Malenkov can steady his shaky home front. However, many leading observers warn that the peace feelers are another attempt to lull the West to sleep in preparation for surprise aggression in another part of the world. GEORGI MALENKOV There ' s murder in the air In search of Reds One of the most highly controver- sial political figures to arise in the past few years has been Senator Jo- seph McCarthy, Republican from Wis- consin. Always a powerful figure in government, he reached a peak in his influence with the incoming Republi- can administration. In promising to rid the government of Communists, he has used methods which have shocked a large segment of the population. The congressional investigation has been the stage for most of McCarthy ' s attacks. In these investigations ex- Communists have named hundreds of men whom they believe to have Red connections. The effect on the repu- tation of those so named has been devastating, particularly since few have been given sufficient opportuni- ty to defend themselves. The investi- gators, free from libel suits because of congressional immunity, have been accused of irresponsibility and their methods termed character assassina- tion . These men have been so vio- lently condemned by the liberal press that a new word mccarthyism has been coined to describe their methods. The latest inquiries into education by McCarthy as well as Senators Harold Velde and William Jenner have had a particular effect on the KU campus. These investigations have been roundly condemned by most pro- fessors on the Hill. Their biggest ob- jections are that the investigating senators are not particularly capable of finding real subversives in our col- leges, that academic freedom is en- dangered, and that the benefits of the investigation will be far outweighed by the climate of fear engendered. Particularly in the social sciences, the new attitude of apprehension has caused a real change in teaching methods. Professors are becoming less and less interested in exposing stu- dents to liberal ideas or promoting liberal discussions for fear that their motives will be misunderstood by some roving investigator. So many of those teachers who have been brought before the investigating committees have lost their jobs that a real crisis is developing in university life. McCarthy and others have defended themselves by saying that they are seeking to eliminate all Communists SENATOR JOSEPH MCCARTHY Guilt by association from education and that any who might condemn their methods are aid- ing the Communist cause. Whether the investigators are justified or not, their home states have returned them to Congress by large majorities and their power in Washington has con- tinued to grow. However, a severe public reaction against their methods may come if proposed investigations into Communism in religion are car- ried out. The endless Korea With the third year of the Korean War nearing an end, the chances of peace are still uncertain. All hope for a truce seemed to have vanished late last fall when the year-long peace talks were broken off. However, the death of Stalin and the subsequent peace campaign brought fresh nego- tiations. Following Communist sug- gestions, meetings were held to deter- mine the possibility of resuming the peace talks. As a first step, agree- ments were made to exchange sick and wounded prisoners. Some 149 American and 535 other UN prison- ers were exchanged for more than 6,000 Communists. With high hopes of an early peace, UN negotiators began daily meetings with the Com- munist truce team. However, disagree- ments again appeared and to some observers it seemed that the Reds were going back to their old tricks of acting peaceful while stalling for time. Hysteria and fear so prevalent on college campuses after the Korean outbreak died down during the year; this was partially because students were becoming so accustomed to the constant world tension and partially because of the peace campaign which Russia launched following Stalin ' s death. The draft, now a permanent facet of life for the student, has 308 caused a tremendous growth in the strength of ROTC units on most cam- puses. During the past years ROTC graduates have been called for two to three years ' duty immediately after graduation. However, with hope of peace in Korea, with Republican de- sires to cut the fat off the armed forces, and with the large supply of junior oficers in most branches of the service, many ROTC students may be able to delay their active service or, in rare cases, bypass it entirely. The Army has already issued regulations providing that call-up of 1953 grad- uates be delayed until 1954. The Navy and Air Force are expected to follow suit. Even though the Korean War has not been ended, large-scale fighting is nearly a thing of the past. Although individual engagements for a hill are as violent as ever, there have been no full-scale offensives in many months. In other areas the fighting is much like the World I trench war- fare. Perhaps one reason for the lack of activity is the ammunition shortage in the US armed forces. Although lit- tle is known as to the extent of the shortage or its cause, it is generally conceded that the US planned on an early end to the Korean War and failed to requisition additional am- munition for an extended struggle. Another cause may be a highly inef- ficient procurement system which dates back to the Revolutionary War. Although the Korean War has sim- mered down, terrorism and revolution exist in many parts of the world. Just when the Communist threat in Indo- China appeared to be getting under control, a fresh Red attack on the in- land province of Laos endangered the whole French position in Southeast Asia. British - Communist guerilla fighting continued in Malaya with the British slowly coming into control. India and Iran continued to be trou- ble spots but so far only occasional rioting has broken out; some observ- ers see the new outbreaks in Indo- China and the rising pressure in Iran as a Russian attempt to surround India. In Africa race troubles have given the Communists new opportunity to stir up fighting. The white man, al- ways outnumbered in Africa, is now in danger of being overthrown by the nationalistically-minded natives. Riot- ing has been prevalent throughout Africa, particularly in Kenya, where the Mau Mau terrorists have been causing considerable bloodshed in backing up their demands that the white man be thrown out. Just how much Communist influence is behind the African race problem is unknown. The western hemisphere has not been entirely free of violence. In Ar- gentina, where Dictator Juan Peron rules with an iron hand, a series of bombings indicate revolution may be brewing. News from Guatamala tells of powerful pro-Communist demon- strations. Spotlight on Washington The biggest news of the year on the national scene was the election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president. Eisenhower, who won campus polls on Mt. Oread handily, did not have much trouble in the rest of the na- tion. His principal assets in the cam- paign proved to be his popularity as a military hero and the general desire of the electorate for a return to gov- ernmental conservatism. His greatest strength was in the midwestern states such as Kansas where the Truman administration had become increas- ingly unpopular. President Ike ' s opponent, Governor Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, emerged from the election a more highly respected man than before his nomination. This was certainly an accomplishment in a present day cam- paign with all its mud-slinging and name-calling. Stevenson, generally considered the best political speech- maker since President Wilson, became a favorite of liberals everywhere. On the KU campus, his support from the faculty, particularly in the social sciences, was nearly unanimous and unusually vigorous. With the new administration came many changes complete elimination of price controls, a new hard money credit policy, and cuts in the budget. Business influence rose in the gov- ernment immediately and labor failed to find the ready support that it re- ceived in previous Democratic admin- istrations. Whether through Eisen- hower ' s policies or through natural workings of the economy, inflation came to a halt and many consumer prices fell off; students and profes- sors on fixed incomes were no longer being squeezed by rising living costs. With economic stabilization came a new fear the fear of depression. With the prospect of world peace ris- ing and therefore a likelihood of de- creased defense spending, a business decline began to look almost inevita- ble. The Republican administration, realizing that fear of a business re- cession might be sufficient cause to bring about that very recession, began a powerful campaign of speeches and articles to reassure the public of the strength of the economy. But some fear of a business decline still re- mained. The passage of the tidelands oil bill by Congress in early May climaxed one of the longest fights over a single bill in Congressional history. At last report the signature of President Eisenhower was virtually certain. The bill, which provided that the states should assume title to offshore lands containing oil deposits valued at ten billion dollars, was a major issue in last fall ' s presidential campaign. In general the Republicans and the Southern Democrats favored the bill, with Northern liberals opposing. Main feature of the three-ring de- bate on the measure was Oregon Sen- ator Wayne Morse ' s 22 hour 26 min- ute oration, longest in history. In up- wards of 100,000 words he extolled the virtues of horseback riding, baloney, and federal ownership of off-shore lands. Many five to nine hour speech- es were given by the opposition who claimed they were not filibustering but merely educating the public to the greater issues involved. Although all Presidents have been consistent sources of front page news, Eisenhower may go down in history as the President who made the sports page most consistently. Golf has been Ike ' s favorite pastime and the papers have been full of news of his chipping on the White House lawn and his fre- quent golfing expeditions to Augusta, Georgia. GENERAL LEE SANG CHO He signed the prisoner exchange agreement 309 BETTER THAN FORESIGHT This, the 87th year of the University of Kansas, has truly been a year to remember. So it is that the Jayhawker is published to provide a permanent record of the fun, the triumphs, and the hard work of 1952-53. To the mem- bers of the staff the yearbook sometimes seems to be only a series of problems and long hours, but we know that soon we shall remember only the stimulation of a challenging and rewarding experience. To thank each individual of this year ' s staff suffi- ciently would require not a paragraph but volumes, for true appreciation cannot be expressed in mere words. In particular such members of the staff as Jane Allvine. Wil Larkin, Nancy Teed, and Mary Betz have worked longer and harder than anyone should expect or even ask. In the business office Frank Norris and Jack Rein have done exceptional jobs as business managers. Nor should we forget those members of the administration Karl Klooz and Pete Swartz who helped so much, or the business men who have given freely of their time and professional experience Karl Fitzer and Ralph Kolb of Burger-Baird Engraving Co. and R. R. Maplesden of Burd Fletcher Co. Finally the staff wishes to thank the students and University for the opportunity. We hope you like the book ! THE EDITOR 310 THE 1953 JAYHAWKER senior issue She ' s a queen That ' s where we are today Third floor Strong Big wheels off campus The 1953 Jayhawker The University Daily Kaiisaii Upstream, Trend, Sour Owl Bill Eastou Company It was a cold day An intramural summary Baseball on Ml. Oread The racquet racket Out at the country cluh Big wheels on campus Along the party front Class of ' 53 AND OTHERS H E ' S U N THE JAYHAWKER QUEEN, selected by Cecil B. DeMille, producer of Academy Award winning motion picture, Biggest Show on Earth. First: Second : Third: Fourth : Barbara Orendorff Anna Marie DeMelfy Eddina Symns Margaret Allen Honorable Mention: Donna Lindsey 312 1 P. J oLinds. lA adt f orma nne Wl - I?- f I V larilun r inffle THAT ' S WHERE WE ARE TODAY material compiled by Bill Wilson STUDENT GOVERNMENT on our campus dates back to the spring of 1908 when a faculty committee on student affairs recommended the formation of a student council. Their main reason for the formation of such a body was probably that outlined by Professor Bryant when he said, The social life at the uni- versity is entirely too strenuous in fact it is faster here than in any other institution the committee has investigated. Immediately, because of a misunderstanding of the facts, the newspapers of the state took up the cry that the students were almost in open rebel- lion against the faculty. One of the Kansas City papers of the time characterized the movement as Emancipation of Lawrence. A split occurred as to whether the girls should be entitled to representation on the student council. The Kansan said, The fight waxed warm. It (the student council) would be a failure with the girls Representation of extra-cur- ricular activities has always been a point of contention. Under the new bicameral plan there will be no organizational representatives. dabbling in it, said the leader of the majority. . . . The girls are as much interested in student affairs as anyone, and by all that ' s good and sweet the girls must have a square deal, said Mr. Naramore (the minority leader). ' In March, 1909, Chancellor Frank Strong, Professor W. J. Baumgartner, and several students spoke at a mass meeting of the university. A mo- tion was passed at this meeting that the Chancellor appoint a committee to make preliminary proposals for a council and make a report to the students in three weeks. On April 29, 1909, a mass meeting of the men students adopted a constitution and set an election date for May 6. The plan was not completely favorable to all, but most of the objections were minor ones. A few, however, did not care for the idea at all. In the April 22 issue of the Kansan this appeared: The Kansas University Section of the American Amal- gamated Association of Knockers, combined with the Society of Gum Shoe Politicians, has come out Gene Rogers and Dick Sheldon were elected vice- president and president, respectively, of the ASC as FACTS regained power this spring. in opposition to the student council movement. The sterling statesmen included in the above classifica- tions have just made the startling discovery that the university is not ready for a student council. And in their mind the time for a council will never come until they get a chance to draw up the constitution according to their own ideas. During this same period in 1909, the women, since they were excluded from the men ' s meetings, determined to form their own student council and a committee was elected by the classes in May of 1909 to draw up a constitution patterned after that of the men. This constitution was adopted on May 15 at a mass meeting of the university women. An election of officers was held on May 20 in the YWCA lounge. Great interest was shown by the girls. There were about 370 votes cast. With- in the by-laws of this constitution was an article entitled Customs. It contained the social rules for women and included the beginning of the 10:30 closing hour rule on week nights but gave no limit to week-ends. As early as 1911, the wrangling which was to grow between the two councils began. On October 5, 1911, the Kansan said, Just where is the divid- ing line between the Men ' s Student Council and Women ' s Student Government Association? At the regular meeting of the MSC Tuesday evening, this perplexing question was asked and at the present time there is no answer. The men insist that by right of priority and precedent they have assumed the regulation of all class elections and hence it is their right to act upon the questioned eligibility of certain candidates. At a meeting of the Wom- en ' s Association Tuesday afternoon, they assumed responsibility to act upon certain matters of eligi- bility and when the matter was reported at the men ' s meeting, they arose in a mighty wrath and said, ' nay, nay. The two movements were antagonistic to each other from their creation with each striving to out- wit the power of the other, with neither fulfilling its purpose. Wrangling, indecision, and division of the councils continued until in 1940 when the women at last gained the edge. Due to the draft, the Men ' s Student Council existed only in name. In the fall of 1942, the men and women ironed out some of their differences and presented an All Student Council plan to the students for a vote on April 1, 1943. This plan was adopted establishing the ASC which began its work the following fall. Presidents of political parties are powerful in student gov- ernment. Larry Loftus heads Pachacamac while Dennis Henderson is president of FACTS. The council was reorganized on the basis of population from school districts. Also representa- tives were elected from the various influential campus organizations who were placed on the coun- cil by a majority vote of the elected representa- tives. One-fourth of the elected representatives could and often did disinfranchise the right of the organizational representatives to vote on an issue. Much of the women ' s influence in the forma- tion of the ASC is seen in its constitution and bills. For instances, the proportion of representatives be- tween sexes was ... a mean between equal and proportional representation. . . . a little more for the women than their share. In one of the last articles of the constitution, the AWS is specifically provided for and allowed two representatives on the council. More than any other organization. During its first few years of existence, the ASC followed the stricter meaning of its purpose, but as student government began to assert itself more widely in the universities of the United States, it too began to enlarge its field of activity, entering more and more into the realm of student and uni- versity welfare. Some of these activities were pub- lic relations, housing for the student, and organized social life for the student. The All Student Council was organized to ex- press both the student ' s desires and to govern his activities; however, student government, contrary to the opinions of many, does not lie wholly within a body such as the ASC, but is also expressed in other ways. Student government in general is the method by which the student expresses his desires to the university and provides control of his many activities. Although the ASC is the elected and official voice of student opinion and the governing body of student activity, there are also many committees and boards within the university through which the student ' s opinion is voiced. The Union is an ex- ample of almost complete student control. The Board of Directors of the Memorial Union Cor- poration includes the president and secretary of the ASC in its meetings as members. Student voice is also exercised in the Athletic board, the Senate, Statewide Activities and numerous other activities. Political factions and parties have been in ex- istence since the beginning of the Men ' s Student Council. Most all of these groups have added color to the student government scene on our campus and are continuing to do so. An account of the activi- ties of each of our parties on campus today has been written by a member of each group. These present to some extent the underlying themes of their respective parties. FACTS POLITICAL PARTY was first organized in the fall of 1950 by a group of students led by James Logan and some of the non-Pach members of the ASC. They formed a party to oppose the Greek- independent split and to create a student govern- ment which would be more responsive to student needs. The letters of the party stand for the First Actually Constructive Ticket Society. The slogan It ' s not where you live but what you believe, il- lustrates their attitude toward student government. 321 The party gained some Greek support and car- ried also a majority of the independent vote carry- ing the election of 1951 with a record vote of over 3000. Logan was elected president of the ASC and FACTS also won a majority of the seats on the council. After taking office, FACTS began passing legislation particularly in the fields of housing and labor. The basic philosophy of FACTS has been that of Jim Logan: Anything in the interest of the students is within the jurisdiction of the student council. In this spring ' s election, FACTS won the presi- dency and vice presidency of the new ASC while Pachacamac gained a small majority in the houses. Whether FACTS has controlled a majority in the ASC or not, they have always proposed legislation which would benefit the students of the university and even against a majority of the other party have been successful in passing much of this. THE SOCIETY OF PACHACAMAC was founded in Oc- tober of 1912 for the purpose of electing William Howard Taft to the Presidency. When their candi- KU freshmen are often confused by the multitude of organizations vying for their support. date lost, Pach turned its attention to campus elec- tions. The party has been made up of both Greeks and independents, but it has always been accused of being dominated by fraternity men. This was true even in 1934 when the Pach ticket supported independent students for over half the student offices. Political tactics of Pachacamac have always been colorful. Other parties have gone so far as to accuse Pach of poll-blocking, ghost voting, and even booth-peeking, but none of the charges have been proven. One of the most colorful campaigns was that of 1922. In those days the campus elections were held in the fall. The campaigns were very en- thusiastic. Walks were literally covered with cam- paign literature and friends of the candidates lined the approaches to the polls passing out pamphlets and making last minute pleas for votes. The 1926 election had quite an effect on the University administration. A newly formed Inde- pendent Coalition was opposing Pach and each ticket listed several football players. As a result of avid campaigning, KU lost to K-State in foot- ball. Chancellor Lindley announced that campus politics were responsible for the defeat, whereupon all athletes withdr ew from the tickets. After a month ' s postponement, election time came again but this time some 800 names were found missing from the voting list. Following another postpone- ment, the election finally was held in a state of gen- eral indifference with the Independent Coalition winning. In 1934, vandals, using eggs as bombs raided the strongholds of the Oread party, a Greek-inde- pendent anti-Pach party. Naturally Pach members were accused of the vandalism and of trying a Kan- sas City type terrorist campaign. The rumor was that the Oread party would ask Governor Landon to call out the National Guard to patrol the polling places. The campus police promised to watch for any high powered cars racing across the campus with politically corrupt politicians. Through the years many parties arose to chal- lenge Pach ' s position. Although some of them won, none were able to remain in prominence more than a few years. Since 1926 Pachacamac has won all but five elections. This is a batting average of over .800 good in any league. 322 THE WORK of the ASC in the spring semesters for the past two years has been devoted almost entirely to the consideration of reorganization proposals. In early 1952 the ASC considered a plan initiated by the president of Pachacamac and drafted by leaders of both parties. The basis of this plan was to elect representatives from living group districts. After heated debate and little compromise, two minorities groups gathered enough strength to de- feat the proposal. This spring a similar reorganization plan in- corporating a voter participation plan was pro- posed by a bi-partisan group. An alternate and opposing plan was offered by Pachacamac which was to increase the representation in school dis- tricts by eliminating the organizational representa- tives and reapportioning these seats throughout the districts. One council member who was rather dis- gusted by what he considered party politics pro- posed that the ASC be abolished. After a week ' s discussion the first two plans were coordinated into a new plan, a bi-cameral congress, with one house organized in accordance with Pach ' s wishes and another in accordance with the bi-partisan group. The two plans for a bi-cameral congress and for abolishing the ASC were voted on by the student body with the former being adopted by a sizeable majority. The basic reason for reorganization was to ob- tain a more direct representation of the students. There were strong feelings, however, that the schools should also be represented and that certain minority groups needed their representation as- sured. The political parties, as usual, had the most to say on the matter. Pach could foresee the possibil- ity that they might ultimately lose control of the political scene for all time. FACTS was the chance that Pach might gain easy victories by running men in the unorganized student districts. All of these factors finally affected the com- promise proposal. Although none of the groups had their ideas adopted completely, each felt that it had protected its interests. The new Council has several advantages over the old. With forty-five instead of thirty members, each member can devote more time to his particular project. Secondly, the addition of residence repre- sentatives who know their constituents so well should add to the ability of the representative and Early student government with separate councils for men and women lead to some lively conflicts. For some reason entering freshmen always seem a bit confused by student politics. bring student government much closer to the aver- age student than in the past. On the other hand, it is generally conceded that bicameralism is ill suited to government on such a small scale as the Student Council. Unless all elements the political parties, the students, the Administration cooperate to make it work, it may well prove so cumbersome that the ills of the old Council will simply have been multiplied by two. Dean Glasco was Pachacamac ' s candidate for presi- dent of the ASC in the spring elections. Jo Heitman, interior design major, stains some ma- terial in preparation for an oven baking. THIRD FLOOR STRONG Despite jealous rumors to the contrary, the students of third floor Strong are a perfectly normal hardworking group of individuals who spend an average of 28 to 30 hours on the hill in class. These 300-odd students sometimes appear to almost inhabit their classrooms in working toward their majors, although they still find time to engage in outside activi- ties. Typical of these activities are the decorations around and in the rotunda of Strong hall during Christmas time DESIGN TOP LEFT: Bob Grimes, industrial design, Larry- Davenport, commercial art, and Russel Short, in- dustrial design, work on their projects in a be- ginning sculpture class. TOP RIGHT: A look through the window in the design workshop finds George Ilnotts, art education junior, working on the stone replica of a Jayhawker, the first of its kind to be made. RIGHT: Claude Ellison, senior in commercial art, copying a picture for a layout. 324 LEFT: Members of an advanced painting group in a live model class. RIGHT: Sue Ann Miller, freshman, uses chemistry technique as she solders a piece of jewelry. and the tableau for the Christmas vespers provided by the design classes. Another example is the student art exhibition sponsored by the members of painting classes. Many of these paintings are done inside with the facilities of natural lighting offered. The Kansas School of Fine Arts is the finest in the midwest, boasting both an outstanding faculty and excellent facilities. Recent additions to equipment has been the purchase of new looms for the weaving classes. Among the many majors offered are drawing and painting, fashion illustration, design, history of art, and jewelry and silversmithing. The history of art course was newly initiated this year. Another first is the graduate degree offered in jewelry and silver- smithing. KU is the only school to offer such a course on the graduate level and one of the few schools in the nation to offer this phase of art as a major. : TOP: Marilyn Sorem, a sophomore in fashion illustra- tion, paints a copy of a car from a national advertise- ment. CIRCLE: Herb Schumacher checks some meas- urements on his model slide viewer. LEFT: Interior design major Barbara Frieze works on some late ma- terial. 325 BIG WHEELS OFF CAMPUS by Shirley Piatt ONE OF THE BEST ways to judge a university is to look at its graduates. Only in that way can one really tell what kind of individuals are being produced through the school ' s educational processes. With this idea in mind, the Jayhawker has selected a few KU men and women who have been outstanding successes in their chosen fields. ALF M. LANDON of Topeka learned politics from his father, a man who never held public office or was a can- didate for public office, but who believed in that form of civic activity. Alf M. Lantlon, 1936 Republican presidential candidate Paul Endacott, president, Phillips Petroleum Co. Mr. Landon served two terms from 1933-37 as gov- ernor of the state of Kansas. In 1936 he was nominated at the Republican national convention for President of the United States, but was defeated by Franklin D. Roosevelt. In World War I, Mr. Landon served as a first lieu- tenant in the chemical warfare service in the US Army. He was a delegate at large to the Republican national convention in 1940, 1944, and 1948. While a student in the University, the former Kansas governor was a member of Phi Delta Phi, national hon- orary law fraternity. Of college, Mr. Landon remarked. It was much simpler in my time. There was not an auto- mobile on the hill. Girls were glad to wade through snow drifts to dances, he said. Maybe they had more on in those days. A son, Jack, and a daughter, Nancy, are students in the University. THREE DAYS after his graduation from the University of Kansas in 1923. PAUL ENDACOTT joined Phillips Pe- troleum company. Mr. Endacott accepted a position as an engineer and worked steadily up through the ranks. From 1927 to 1934 he was employed in the Philgas di- vision where he developed the Philgas Self-Service system. Called back to the Bartlesville headquarters, Mr. Endacott soon became assistant to the president, then vice president and assistant to the president. On April 24, 1951. he was elected president of the company. Born and reared in Lawrence, Mr. Endacott attended the University, where he received the school ' s first honor award in 1924. He was president of the KU Alumni Association in 1939, and received a citation for distin- guished service from the association in 1948. Cl During college, Mr. Endacott was an all-American basketball player and is a member of Helms Foundation Basketball Hall of Fame. He later played on the Phillips 66 team. In May, 1951, Mr. Endacott was among the eighty leading US citizens selected to attend the conference of the American Assembly of Columbia University, an or- ganization originated by Dwight D. Eisenhower to study US World affairs. One son, Don, is now a student at the University. REGARDLESS of his present position on the Kansas City Star, old hands on the newspaper report that ROY ROBERTS has been and still is its best reporter. He went to work as a $22.50 per week sports writer in 1908. Now president and general manager of the paper and owner of $1,000,000 in Star stock, the energetic 300-pound journalist still loves to write pieces for his paper. This same enthusiasm and energy for journalism was expressed and exercised by Roy Roberts in his col- lege days. As a member of the Scoop club, he and his journalistic fellows, including Jerome Beatty, now a well- known magazine writer, and Brock Pemberton, a Broad- way play producer, took part in an incident which prob- ably led some of the club members to early departure from classes and into an active place in journalism. The club members offered, one spring semester, to get out one day ' s edition of the Lawrence Daily Journal. Editor J. L. Brady accepted. Showing great confidence in the students, the editor went fishing only to find upon his return that the boys had published a blazing story exposing the beer joints and other places of iniquity in east Lawrence. The story made it necessary to bring the exposed owners and operators to trial. But while the editor faced libel suits, the Scoop club members testified on their findings, the defendants pleaded guilty, and there were no law suits. Mr. Roberts, an A student in col- lege, served as editor of the University Daily Kansan in 1908. He quit school only six to eight credit hours short of graduation because of an intense desire to get into the active newspaper field. SHOUTS of praise rang from first-nighters as the curtain fell on Come Back, Little Sheba. It was the moment of a lifetime for a young Kansan who had just been intro- duced to success by a new Broadway play, but the writer of the play wasn ' t there. WILLIAM INGE, 36-year-old playwright, dressed in old clothes, was sipping coffee at a doughnut shop less than a block away. Since he graduated from the University in ' 35, where he studied drama under Professor Allen Crafton, William Inge had wanted a career in the theater. It was a long time, however, before he realized this ambition. After years of teaching, newscasting, and reporting, Bill Inge went to the St. Louis Star-Times as a music and drama critic on a temporary basis. When his predecessor returned from military duty, Mr. Inge was told his use- fulness had ended. But the time in St. Louis was not wasted. Tennessee Williams, passing through the city, read the rough draft of Come Back, Little Sheba and en- couraged Mr. Inge to make a bid for Broadway. In the Roy Roberts, editor, Kansas City Star fall of 1947 the Theater Guild announced it was ready to give Little Sheba a test. The people of Westport, Connecticut, liked it, but critics were still skeptical about the play ' s possibilities in New York. Fears proved unfounded, however, as Brooks Atkin- son of the New York Times lauded the play as straight- forward, unhackneyed, and in best moments, terrifyingly true. As for the Kansas playwright, Richard Walls of the Washington Post nominated Mr. Inge as the most prom- ising recent new playwright. No ONE could accuse retired ENNIS C. WHITEHEAD of being an armchair major general. As one of the highest ranking officers ever to graduate from the University of Kansas, the former commander of the Fifth Air Force has earned and received awards too numerous to list. One of his most famous is the Distinguished Service Medal which he received along with the highest compli- ments of General Douglas MacArthur for extraordinary courage, marked efficiency, and precise execution of op- eration during the Papuan campaign. Whitehead entered the Signal Corps as an enlisted man and was commissioned in 1918 as a first lieutenant. On September 25, 1920, the day after he married Mary Nicholson of Newton, he reentered the Army Air corps. In 1922, he participated in the Pulitzer races, 327 William Inge, playwright, Sheba (line Back Little marking one of the highlights of his Army career. In 1927, the then Lt. Whitehead was pilot of the lead ship of a flight making a good will tour around the South American continent. On this tour he won the Distin- guished Flying Cross. He escaped death in two accidents. In one of these, over Buenos Aires, two planes collided in mid-air. Lt. Whitehead parachuted to earth and was only slightly injured. Before taking charge of the Phoenix, Arizona, ad- vanced flying school in February, 1941, Whitehead be- came a colonel and after transferring to Australia was made a brigadier general. Later he became commanding general of the Fifth Air Force and moved his headquar- ters to the Philippines, to Okinawa, and during the final weeks of the war, to Japan. One of his most famous operations was the battle of Bismarck Sea, March 2-5, 1943. in which Army bombers Ben Hibbs, Editor, Saturday Evening Post sank three Japanese cruisers, seven destroyers, twelve transports, and killed 15,000 personnel. General White- head ' s strategy and tactics in this battle earned for him among the Japanese, titles as the Murderer of Moresby and the most feared and hated man in the American Army. One American general called him a fighting fool who knows his stuff. General and Mrs. Whitehead now live in Newton. They have two children, Margaret and Ennis C. Jr., both Army personnel. ELEVEN years ago a University of Kansas graduate BEN limits, became editor of the Saturday Evening Post. Today the circulation of the magazine has reached an all-time high of 4,933,000 copies, a gain of over a million and a half copies under his editorship. In taking over, Mr. Hibbs announced he would in- crease his audience to include more young men and women. His goal was to convert the publication into a Ennis E. Whitehead, major general retired, USAF general family magazine, and it eventually increased cir- culation and advertising as the main purpose was accom- plished. Mr. Hibbs built his staff into a team that is, accord- ing to the editor, capable of keeping the Post in step with the times. Staff members were qualified by their varied backgrounds, ranging from boxers to lawyers and from the poor to the wealthy. Before his appointment in March, 1942, as editor of the Saturday Evening Post, Mr. Hibbs worked on sev- eral newspapers in Kansas and Colorado and taught journalism and English in Hays State College. In 1929 he went East as an associate editor of the Country Gentle- man, a sister publication of the Post. The Post was slip- ping at the time, and Mr. Hibbs often speculated what he would do if he were editor. Circulation and advertising figures are proof of the value of Mr. Hibbs ' speculations. In ten years, the Post ' s circulation was up about one million, while advertising revenue almost tripled. In 1942, Mr. Hibbs received the University of Kan- sas Distinguished Alumnus citation for his outstanding work in the field of journalism. He was also the re- cipient of the University of Pennsylvania Journalism award in 1947. While a KU student, Mr. Hibbs held most of the usual jobs on the University Daily Kansan including that of editor-in-chief. He was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, national honorary journalism fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sachem. IN OCTOBER of 1951 the Reverend JOHN URICH, the only sightless minister in New York, was installed as per- manent pastor of Grace and St. Paul ' s Lutheran Church. The Kansas born clergyman was unanimously elected by his congregation after a six-month ' s trial period. His wife, also blind, aids Mr. Urich in his parish work. The blind couple began their married life at the University while Mr. Urich was a senior and his wife a junior. With graduation, life became more difficult for the blind couple. They went to war-expanded Washington in 1942. My husband spent three whole weeks pave- ment-pounding. He was desperate for work, Mrs. Urich said. The only job the sightless college graduate could find at that time was that of a typist. Etta Moten, original Bess of Porgy and Bess. John Urich, minister, Grace and St. Paul ' s Luther- an Church, New York City After the war, the future clergyman worked as a counselor to blind patients in a veterans ' hospital and did a stint as a singer with his wife at the piano. Then he decided to become a minister. His rise to the pastorate was not easy, Mr. Urich said. Since his graduation in 1950 from Mount Airy Lutheran Seminary, Philadelphia, Grace and St. Paul ' s Lutheran was his first steady church. Before he had served only as a supply preacher. Today friends of the Urichs marvel at the energy, enthusiasm, and thankfulness of the blind couple for their job, which to them has become a symbol of hard earned success. UPON GRADUATION from the University of Kansas voice department, ETTA MOTEN decided to take the advice of the dean of the department and try to combine her sing- ing and acting ability. The Negro mezzo-contralto from Kansas City went almost immediately to New York and Broadway where she appeared in several musical come- dies and dramatic productions. When Etta Moten took over the role of Bess in Porgy and Bess, she won the critics ' praise for outstand- ing vocal and dramatic ability. One critic remarked that Gershwin ' s judgment was excellent, for he had Miss Moten in mind when he wrote his masterpiece. Acclaimed as an outstanding exponent of the spirit- ual, Miss Moten interprets these songs with genuine feel- ing. As a minister ' s daughter, she sang them as a child on church programs and later in the church choir. She developed a natural appreciation for the native American music with its age-old African origin. In private life Miss Moten is Mrs. Barnett, wife of Claud A. Barnett. founder-director of the Associated Press and is also the mother of three young daughters. 329 THE 1953 JAYHAWKER As THE OFFICIAL magazine-annual of the Univer- sity of Kansas, the Jayhawker holds a unique posi- tion among university yearbooks. The only college yearbook in the nation to appear in magazine form, its problems of production are quite unusual. With four times as many deadlines as other yearbooks and with the necessity of writing many stories on an emergency basis, the Jayhawker office often appears to be a scene of mass confusion to out- siders and occasionally to insiders too. While KU ' s yearbook is not always appre- ciated, it certainly is always controversial. Unlike other yearbooks which appear during spring final week and thus are never of much student interest, the first issue appears in November. From that time on each student becomes a professional jour- nalistic critic; the staff likes to believe that this student interest has given KU an outstanding year- book. The magazine form was first adopted in 1934 by editor Floyd Quentin Brown. In his honor the Floyd Quentin Brown memorial trophy will be awarded annually, beginning this year, to the house which sells the highest percentage of Jayhawkcrs. The magazine versus single issue yearbook question has been voted on by the student body several times since 1934 with the magazine always coming out on top. Actual production of the book is the responsi- bility of the editorial staff under the direction of Secretarial work is the core of Jayhawker production. Here secretaries Henrietta Mont- gomery, Gretchen Cuinn, Sue Berry, Shirley Dean, and Bev Lander work on the Index. editor-in-chief Kenneth Dam. The editor is a fi- nance junior in the business school who had pre- viously been managing editor of the 1952 Jay- hawker. The most tedious and exacting task in maga- zine production is that of copy editor. In associate editor Wil Larkin the Jayhawker found an unusual- ly capable and efficient man for the job. A sopho- more in the engineering school who is interested in industrial journalism, he has extensive experience on many other publications from writing for the Daily Kansan to professional photography for United Press and Prom magazine of Kansas City. Eighty pages of group pictures pledges, houses, honoraries, clubs, etc. appeared in this year ' s Jay hawker; the responsibility for scheduling the picture taking and assembling the mass of in- formation supporting the photographs fell on one person, Jane Allvine. Handling the job with ease, she also relieved Barbara Comstock as secretary during the second semester. The Jayhawker had two business managers this year, Frank Norris and Jack Rein. Each served one semester, and Jack was re-elected by the board for the 1954 book. Under the super- vision of the business manager, the business staff is responsible for sales promotion, advertising, and distribution of the book. Producing the yearbook and keeping the ac- counting records is not the whole story of the Jay- haivker. The books must be sold, a job requiring a rare combination of imagination and hard work. Lud Smith, a sophomore engineer, proved consist- ently that he had those qualifications. A new record of advertising sold was the record of Jack Rein and Gary Welsh, advertising managers for the two semesters. Circulation, the tedious task of insuring that each subscriber re- ceives his Jayhawker, was the specialty of Jerry Jurden. The backbone of any yearbook staff is, of course, the secretarial section. Under the leader- ship of Jane Allvine and Barbara Comstock, the secretaries typed stories, wrote letters, and helped index editor Nancy Teed with the more than 4,000 names appearing in the index. TOP LEFT: Larry O ' Brien, Jerry Jurden, Gary Welch, and Lud Smith assumed the business responsibili- ties for the ' 53 Jayhawker. TOP RIGHT: Nancy Teed, Bobbie Comstock, Jane Allvine, and Mary Betz figure layout for the next issue of the Jayhawker. BOTTOM LEFT: The secretarial staff at work Fay- dean Orth, Ann Algic, Susan Brown, Marilyn Underwood, and Mary Michener. BOTTOM RIGHT: Writers Bob Martin, Bob Stewart, and Wayne Knowles discuss the handling of a future Jayhawker story. + ; v f Dick Sheldon, Skip Hills, Keith Maclvor, and Dick Bills writers for the ' 53 Jayhawker. the staff KENNETH DAM, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Copy Editor: WIL LARKIN Assistants: BOB GARRITY JANET LIBBY WAYNE WAGERS MADELYN BRITE ANN JEFFREY Organizations Editor: JANE ALLVINE Editorial Assistant: DONNA FRANCIS I ' arty Picture Editor: GERALD GARRETT Senior Editor: MARY BETZ Index Editor: NANCY TEED PHIL NEWMAN HENRY REED DALE GRISWOLD MARILYN HAWKINSON WAYNE KNOWLES BOB GARRITY DICK SHELDON VIRGINIA MACKEY DANA HUDKINS SALLY MCKERNAN Illustrations: SAM VAN METER HUGH BUCHANAN FRANK HAMILTON Sports Writers: BOB BALL DAVE HILL SKIP HILLS BOB MARTIN KEITH MACIVOR DICK SMITH Feature Writers: JOHN ISE DICK BILLS MARY BETZ SHIRLEY PIATT BOB STEWART BILL WILSON Jack Rein, business manager second semester; Frank Norris, busi- ness manager first semester; Jerry Jurden, circulation manager. 332 Wil Larkin, associate editor; Jane Allvine, associate editor and secretary; Kenneth Dam, editor-in-chief. Photographers: JOHN ESTES PAUL DIBBLE DON SARTEN DUKE D ' AMBRA RICH CLARKSON BOB LONCSTAFF HANK BROWN BOB BLANK WIDE WORLD PHOTOS FRANK NORRIS, BUSINESS MANAGER (first semester) JACK REIN, BUSINESS MANAGER (second semester) Sales Manager: LUD SMITH Circulation Manager: JERRY JURDEN Advertising Manager: GARY WELSH Salesmen: LARRY O ' BRIEN JOE CONKLIN GORDON HAMILTON JANE ALLVINE, SECRETARY Assistants: MARY EVERSULL JOAN LAMOINE FRANCES GRIMES KATHRYN COOLIDGE MARJORIE NULL JULIE GEMPEL ANN HIGGINS HENRIETTA MONTGOMERY FAYDEAN ORTH NANCY NEVILLE MARGARET DONNALLY SUSAN BROWN DAVE BAKER LORRAINE HASELHORST GRETCHEN GUINN MARILYN UNDERWOOD ANN ALGIE ELEANOR HALEY BEV LANDER MARY MICHENER SUE BERRY SUE WRIGHT SHIRLEY DEAN KELLY BRENT ELEANOR HALEY Copy editor Wil Larkin receives able assistance from staff members Madelyn Brite, Margaret Donnelly, and Janet Libby. UNIVERSITY DAILY K A N S A N by Mary Betz KU COED STRANGLED Body Recovered From Potter Lake Atomic Blast Scheduled (or KU Stadium t UNI RITY Dciilij ncinscm Murphy Granted Leave of Absence To Assist Hobby, New Cabinet Post Some KU students took this April Fool ' s Day issue of the Kansan a bit too seriously. THIS YEAR has been an eventful one for the Univer- sity Daily Kansan, which is published five days a week during the school year by students of the School of Journalism. With a staff which changes every quarter, al- most every student is enabled to hold some position of authority by the time his two years in the J- school are completed. Editors-in-chief this year have been Chuck Bob Longstaff, Bob Nold, and Bob Stewart had important positions on the fourth quarter Kansan. Zuegner, graduate student, and Bob Stewart, Don Moser, and Roger Yarrington, seniors. A first class honor rating in the college dailies class was awarded to the Daily Kansan by the Na- tional Collegiate Press for its first semester ' s work. In a national safety contest the Daily Kansan won second prize for photographic work, feature stories, and editorials aimed at cutting down ac- cidents. The latest innovation for the Daily Kansan is the picture supplement started this year, issued every other Friday by the advanced photography class. Members of the class write the accompany- ing stories, take the pictures, develop them, and do the layout work. The newest addition to the Daily Kansan equipment is a Scan-a-graver, table model machine to reproduce pictures for printing. Still in the ex- perimental stage, the machine has proved workable in transferring pictures to a plastic plate, which in turn is tacked onto a type-high wooden block for printing. Newest members of the Daily Kansan staff are a group of freshman and sophomore pre-jour- nalism students, who were drafted as cub re- porters. The cubs did many of the smaller, with- out-glory jobs with little recognition and reward except for an occasional small article which showed up in print. 334 Editor Chuck Zuegner, managing editor Charles Burch, circulation manager Virginia Mackey, and retail ad manager Tom Breckenridge headed the first quarter ' s staff. Working on the third quarter ' s issues were Phil Newman, Don Sarten, Don Moser, and Don Landes. The other side of the Kansan is the adver- tising crew. The ad shack is in charge of selling all advertisements on campus and downtown. An eternal argument persists between the ad shack and the news rats as to whether news is built around ads, or ads around news. Each side has to admit, that without the other the Daily Kansan would not be possible. Election night was the big night of the year for the staff and anyone who bothered to call the newsroom for late returns. With a giant urn of steaming hot coffee and dozens of rolls and sand- wiches, the staff tabulated and reported and wrote stories for a special edition which went to press at 5 a. m. The national election brought the Kansan oth- er recognition besides that for the special edition. Because the three editorial writers for that quarter actively supported Stevenson, they asked in the editorial columns for someone to carry the banner for Ike. No one volunteered, so there were no Re- publican editorials. When a Kansan-sponsored straw vote revealed Ike to be the favorite campus presidential candidate, angry Kansan readers charged that Kansan editorial opinion did not re- flect that of the students. Because of protests and reverberations heard throughout the state, an editorial advisory board was set up to guide editorial policy. The board is composed of editor-in-chief, chairman of the Kan- san board, news editor, business manager, manag- ing editor, and two non-voting faculty members. The second extra was published after the NCAA playoff in March. Containing many fea- tures on Phog and his boys the paper hit the campus before breakfast the morning after. A dull murmur and roar issuing from the newsroom most of the time probably can be traced to students in Reporting II class, the group which carries the brunt of writing duties for the paper. Each reporter is assigned a beat of campus or- ganizations, offices, and activities, and is responsi- ble for everything that happens on his beat. To get a scoop to beat the Lawrence, Kansas City, and Topeka newspapers to the story is the ambition of every reporter. To be scooped by other papers is the very worst thing which can happen to any reporter. Such is life on the Kansan. Around the teletype are second quarter big wheels Elbert Spivey, Patty Vance, Mary Cooper, and Don Nielsen. ' B WAYNE KNOWLES UPSTREAM Upstream, humanities and politics magazine, is published four times during the school year. Though only in its fifth year, it already has built up an appreciative following both on and off the campus. Wayne Knowles, editor of this year ' s magazine, is a junior in the college, majoring in English and writing for Upstream, Trend, and the Daily Kansan. Upstream was founded on the belief that its readers should not be content merely to follow the current of popular thought but should resist the current, if necessary, in formulating ideas. Contribu- tions to the magazine ranged from short stories and poetry to legislative and political debates to literary criticism and reviews. John Ise, popular professor of economics and faculty advisor to Upstream, authored Too Much and Too Poor, an article in the fourth issue which attracted much attention. f U W L THE SOUR OWL, official campus humor magazine, is published under the sponsorship of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity. Featuring jokes, cartoons by former campus favorites, Paul Coker, Dick Bibler and others, and a number of clever feature stories, the first issue was a big success. Ron Kull, journalism senior, was editor this year. From sample titles of articles Down Among the Guanos, a stirring tale of how Daddy Warbucks made his wealth; Should I Hold Hands Before Being Pinned in This Modern Day? a well-balanced discussion on a burning social issue, and The Adventures of Ambi- dexter, a Greek god of the chlo rophyll age the reader could guess at the wide interests and versatility of its writers. Minor little details like presidential elections, journalism school antics, and Dr. Kollmorgen ' s quizzes were blamed by Editor Kull for the Owl ' s failure to appear frequently. RON KULL SAM SEBESTA N MORE THAN forty years ago Quill Club, literary society, published its first magazine. Trends of the times can be traced down through the years by the content of the magazine. This year Quill Club published a new magazine, Trend, with the club president, Sam Sebasta, a senior in education, as editor. Humor, drama, poetry, short stories, anecdotes, and campus items were the meat-potatoes-and-gravy of the first issue with a number of expressive pen-and-ink sketches for dessert. Winning entries from the two Quill Club contests were featured in fall and spring issues. Short story subjects ranged all the way from a prize-winning story of Russian peasants, Semyon Gubinov, to a Spillane parody, Vengeance Is Fine, by Icky Profane. A Campus Cogitator ' s page was dedicated to airing blasts, condonings, comments, and trivia about campus life. 336 BILL EASTON COMPANY by Dave Hill THE OUTDOOR track season opened with Coach Bill Easton ' s Kansas team as favored entrant in dis- tance competition, with outstanding men in hurdles, sprints, and pole vault. Relay combinations put together from available cinder talent could be al- most invincible, as witness the triumphs in the season ' s opening meet, the Texas relays. Kansans set one new mark after another in the two day cinder carnival. The first to go was the sprint medley relay Friday afternoon. Leadoff man on the Jayhawk baton team was senior 440- runner Don Smith, 4-time runner-up for the Big Seven Indoor title. Following Smith were sopho- mores Frank Cindrich, Don McGlinn in the 220 and Wes Santee in the 880. Santee broke the tape in 3:21.8, a new world ' s record by .9 of a second. Trailing the Crimson and Blue by 25 yards was Kansas State, and Oklahoma A M, 43 yards in the rear. It was the first time Kansas had ever won a sprint medley in competition. After a half hour ' s rest Smith and Santee teamed with half- miler Art Dalzell and Lloyd Koby in the %. to take the distance medley handily. Smith opened with a 48.4 opening lap to put KU in the lead, never to be overtaken. Santee put it to the floor to beat second place Texas by forty yards in his anchor lap. Wes Santee anchors another winning mile for the Kansas four-mile relay squad at the Kansas Relays. Ill Wendell Cole of Nebraska, Mike Reese, Drake; Rigney, Loyola of Chicago; Bradley ' s Philbee, Jayhawker Bill Biberstein, and Sooner Dobson strain towards the tape in the 120 yard high hurdles at the Kansas Relays. Biberstein won. Bill Biberstein opened the day Saturday, tak- ing first in the 120 yard high hurdles with a time of :14.4 against a strong wind. Biberstein ' s was the first individual medal won by a Kansan since Bob Crowley won the broad jump in 1947. A new Texas relay record was set by the de- fending champion four mile relay team composed of Dick Wilson, Koby, Dalzell, and Santee. The time, 17:14.0, topped the American record but missed Sweden ' s world record by 27.2 seconds. In the two mile relay the same four tied the Texas relay record of 7:41.8 to complete a grand slam of the baton events. Santee, the key man in the four relay per- formances, won the meet ' s outstanding athlete award. The world four-mile relay record was also in doubt with the Jayhawks out to break their own relay ' s mark while keeping intact their string of four consecutive victories in the event. One judge the record seekers didn ' t figure on old man weather made the decisions on a cold, windy April 18. Runners fought not only time but 45 cold and 20-mile-an-hour wind. Kansas came through intact, winning the four mile relay and the sprint medley. KU walked away with the four mile race, leading by 200 yards at the tape. There was no chance for a record in the blustering winds. The sprint medley team also was unscorched by defeat. Leading contender Iowa finished far behind the speedy Kansans, who were seven sec- onds above their performance in Texas. Norman Steanson, Kansas pole vaulter, tied for second with Texas A M ' s Glen Spradlin at 13 2%. . The mark was well below the 13 ' 6 plus he had gone previously in winning the conference indoor title, but was better than his Texas relays height of 12 ' 6 . He tied for third place in Austin. Don Smith passes to Frank Cindrich as the KU sprint medley team pulls away from Iowa State. Outstanding individual Jayhawk was again Bill Biberstein, who duplicated his win of the 120 yard high hurdles. Adolph Mueller took third in a new event, the 400 meter intermediate hurdles, run in Olympic competition. The Sooners ran away with the distance med- ley after Coach Bill Easton removed Santee from the anchor spot. After taking out the Ashland Antelope, Easton cautioned the original members and Dick Wilson to run only as hard as they want- ed, because of the cold. Kansas took its third consecutive dual meet victory over Nebraska at Lawrence, April 11, win- ning easily 87-44. It was the 12th straight dual victory for Easton ' s crew, which hasn ' t been beaten outdoors or in since 1951. Times were poor, thanks to a sodden track and 35 degree cold, and several upsets resulted. Bill Biberstein had to settle for third in the high hurdles and Wendell Cole took first in the event from his Cornhusker teammate, Dan Tolman, who took the Big Seven high hurdles crown at the indoor meet. Biberstein subsequently took first in the low hurdles. Competent Nebraska could take only first in the hurdles, broad-jump, and discus. In the dis- tance events Santee loafed to tie with Dalzell and Koby in the 880 yard run. Jayhawker Dean Ragon upset indoor king Cliff Dale in the shotput, but Oklahoma A M winner Bill Williams is already beyond camera range, but the pack is hot after him. Adolf Mueller, Kansas; Sanchez, Chaffey Juco, Steele, Southwestern; Fowler, Iowa, and Dickinson, Iowa State, run in the 400 meter hur- dles at the Kansas Relays. the Nebraskan set the only new record in the meet with a 145 ' 1% toss of the discuss. In the third and last major baton meet of the season, the Drake relays, Kansas faced stiff com- petition from Georgetown, the club which barely lost to the Jayhawkers in ' 52. A rivalry was en- gendered in the ' 52 meet when KU ' s four mile relay team edged the Hoyas in the final lap, thanks to a blistering mile by Santee. Out for revenge this year, Georgetown got it, winning by 150 yards, and continued its sweep of the distances by beating KU in the distance medley. As was expected, KU took the sprint medley in a time of 3:23.6. The time was outstanding for a wet track, missing the relays record by a six- teenth of a second. Santee ran a 1 :50.2 anchor lap to overhaul an eight-yard Illinois lead. The time was Santee ' s all-time second best. The Versatile Wes provided the surprise event of the games, running a whizzing 47.4 quarter on the winning mile relay team. The quarter was not only the best on the Jayhawk crew, but was low time for the meet. Running third, Santee received the baton a foot behind OU ' s best man, Cox, and pulled ahead to give KU anchor man Don Smith a winning lead. Smith finished with a scorching 49.1 time. Athletic Director Dutch Lonborg has consist- ently emphasized track at KU! Here he gives Darrell Hooper the Most Outstanding Athlete award at the KU Relays. V Ooh, that water ' s cold! There was ice on the pit the morning before Rich Ferguson won the steeple- chase for Iowa. I T WAS COLD DAY by Shirley Piatt COLD WINDS swept out of the North, but they couldn ' t chill the enthusiasm of the Jayhawk Jubi- lee and the 28th running of the Kansas relays. More than 1,600 shivering Kansas high school athletes kicked off the two-day festival in the 49th Kansas Interscholastic meet on Friday under over- cast skies and 30-degree temperature. The skies lifted for the big day Saturday, but the temperature didn ' t. Nevertheless nearly 30 floats paraded down Massachusetts street in the revival of the Relays parade, absent the year be- fore because vacation intervened. It was a cold day for the queens, too. The finalists were Vivian Graber of Wichita University, Margie Allen of KU, and Charleen Dunn of K-State. Margie, a North College freshman, was selected queen with Vivian and Charleen as attendants. Wildcat Thane Baker edges out Cene Buie of Pittsburg State and Pal Wells from Ok- lahoma A M in a century time of 10:0. Drake ace Arnold Bettin jumped 6 ' 6 to win the high jump, despite cold and a 20 mile an hour wind. Margaret Allen, college freshman from Kan- sas City, Missouri, reigned over the Relays that afternoon and the Relays dance Saturday night in the new Union building as Hal Mclntyre and his band provided the big show. Of course, the athletes weren ' t forgotten in the day ' s activities. In fact more than 10,000 hardy- souls moved into Memorial stadium to watch the Midwest ' s finest as they circled the cinder track for the clock and the glory. The Kansas Jayhawkers again pleased their fans, winning both the sprint medley and the four- mile relays plus taking a victory in the high hurdles. But still the day meant more than just running to many KU students. Using the theme of Jubi- lant Jaunt, Theta Phi Alpha ' s float of Kansas ' winning bid for Relays honors won first place in the women ' s division of the float contest. The Jayhawker was far ahead of representa- tives reaching up the golden stairs for the crown held by a shining angel. Alpha Delta Pi finished second and Alpha Omicron Pi took third. Delta Tau Delta ' s entry, labeled On top of the World, showed a globe in white with a large map of Kansas in blue and red. On top of the world was the figure of a Jayhawker. Two track- men were seated on chairs in the bed of the truck, and a large yellow sunflower was at the back. Delta Chi took second in the men ' s division with Triangle third. The Relays queen and her attendants, Char- leen Dunn of Kansas State College and Vivian Graber of Wichita University, were honored at weekend events, including an Associated Press Stu- dents tea, an SUA dinner, and the Relays dance. Miss Allen and her court was presented to the relays crowd and given a bouquet of roses. The queen, a 19-year-old cover girl who has been modeling four years, was chosen from a In top row are two entries in the women ' s division of the KU Relays. Theta Phi Alpha (left) won, with Alpha Delta Pi second. Middle left is winner Delta Tau Delta, with second place Delta Chi at right. A few impromptu entries are shown at bottom. group of 14 candidates from Kansas and Big Seven colleges and universities. She was elected Butter Queen of America in 1950, and cover girl for the Fortress, a monthly serviceman ' s magazine, in Feb- ruary, 1952. 343 A N INTRAMURAL SUMMARY VOLLEYBALL is usually considered as merely a fine game for the beach or an excellent way for basketball players to keep in shape between seasons. However, this year ' s intramural volleyball contest presented many excellent teams and keen competition. The hill volleyball championship in the A division went to Phi Gamma Delta. Competition in the A di- vision was unusually great and the Phi Gams captured the fraternity pennant only after a hard-fought victory against Phi Delta Theta and the spiking of B. H. Born and Hugh Buchanan. The Phi Gams went on to defeat the Independent champions, the Set Ups, by using their chief weapon, the set ups of Dick Smith and the spiking of Wally Beck and Gil Reich. Sigma Alpha Epsilon won the hill championship in the B division. They earned the fraternity B crown by defeating Delta Upsilon 15-6, 15-13 and the hill cham- pionship by defeating the Air Force B team 15-8 and 15-2. The C title went to Delta Tau Delta. The Delts defeated the C team of Beta Theta Pi 15-7 and 15-10 which automatically gave them both the fraternity and hill championship. The intramural swimming title went to Phi Gamma Delta for the sixth consecutive year. The Phi Gams nudged out the powerful team of Phi Kappa Psi by a margin of eleven points. Alpha Tau Omega made an excellent showing by setting a new record of 1:11.5 in the 120 yard medley. Consistent point scorers included George Helmstadter, John Bunten, and Bob Grogger for Phi Gams, Ed Tucker for the Phi Psis, and Gene Bu- chanan for the Sig Alphs. Hill Champions A VOLLEYBALL Phi Gamma Delta. TOP ROW: Dick Smith, Bill Michener, Dan Robison. BOTTOM ROW: Wally Beck, Everett Dye, Gil Reich, Jerry Rosenlund. B VOLLEYBALL Sigma Alpha Epsilon. TOP ROW: Bob Meir, Bill Henson, Dick Cameron, Hugh Armstrong. BOT- TOM ROW: Bill Thornberay, Jerry Robertson, Dan Rich, Henry Gerling. C VOLLEYBALL Delta Tau Delta. TOP ROW: Irby Hughes, Dick Ericksen, Paul Guess, Dick Morrison. BOT- TOM ROW: Joe Schwarz, Kent Mitchell, Jerry Cox, Doug Barling. SWIMMING Phi Gamma Delta. TOP ROW: Mark Nardyz, Ed Reuse, Bob Grogger, Lonnie Thomas, Bob Gelvin. SECOND ROW: Loren Morris, Walt Ash, Earl Schutz, Bill Payne, Fritz Widick. BOTTOM HOW: Paul Hunt, John Bunten, Don Stevens, Al Sweeny. S . First baseman John Trombold smashes a solid double against Nebraska on the KU diamond. He hit a home run in the previous inning. BASEBALL O N M T OREAD by Dave Hill KU BASEBALL prospects look fairly dim as this is written. Although not seriously hurt by graduation, Coach Hub Ulrich ' s team lacks the ability to work as a unit which comes from experience. In early games Kansas errors and wild pitching have en- abled opponents to build leads the Jay batters couldn ' t overcome. The same trouble, possibly caused by greenness and early-season jitters, has blown substantial leads in several games. A poor defense is the blackest cloud over Kan- sas chances. In the Big Seven openers against Ne- braska, ten errors in the first game and seven in the second contributed materially to the two losses. The opener, a 10-9 thriller which went ten innings, was lost by two errors in the tenth. Nebraska had only half as many bobbles, committing five throughout the game. The same pattern has con- tinued in early contests. Pitching is another defensive weakness. The mound staff is composed of lettermen Jack Stone- street, John Brose, and Wayne Tiemier, and new- comers Ben Dalton, John Wynkoop and Frank Hamilton. Stonestreet and Brose, expected to be the backbone of the pitching crew, are not up to the form they achieved in winning their letters, and walks and wild balls are hurting an already weak defense. Against OU, ineffective KU pitching gave 22 walks to the Sooners, and with Jayhawk batters stifled by Larry Foley, Oklahoma went on a scor- ing spree to win 19-1. Pitching promises to be a 345 . KANSAS r Coach Hubert Ulrich main trouble-spot all season unless new blood is added or the present staff steadies with time. The infield is still green and leaky. Coach Ulrich is shifting his men about, attempting to find a double play combination and stop crippling er- rors. Three lettermen, John Trombold, Bill Pul- liam, and Frank Wolf, and newcomers Harold Bergsten and Harold Patterson are available. Trombold is at first, Pulliam at second, and Pat- terson, Wolf and Bergsten are jockeying for the short and third positions. In the outfield the situation is bet ter. Scoring power concentrated here has not hurt the defense which is better than in most areas. John Perry is playing in left field. After a pre-season struggle with Bob Toalson and Bill Todd, basketball player Bill Heitholt won the centerfielder ' s position. In right field is John Konek, who may have trouble with a football knee. Two lettermen, Dean Smith and Galen Fiss, are available to work behind the plate. Both are capable of handling the job, making the catching spot one of the brighter on the team. At present Fiss is catching and Smith is being used as a pinch hitter. Although Walt Hicks, ' 52 home run king, and powerhitter Bud Laughlin were taken by gradua- tion and the draft, hitting is still promising. Junior letterman John Perry sports a .480 average and seven home runs in four starts. This outfielder promises to be the Jayhawker big gun. Heitholt and Konek also have creditable averages, and Trombold and Pulliam from the infield have been getting their share of hits. Stacked up against the chief contenders for the Big Seven crown, Kansas doesn ' t compare too well. Nebraska, Missouri and Oklahoma, picked to be the top three in the conference, are living up to expectations. At Oklahoma a crew of old-timers is checked out, sporting ail-American Gene Sheets, who batted .375 last year. Missouri has inexperi- ence trouble, but the ' 52 Big Seven champs have all-American Don Boenker and four other top- flight pitchers on the mound as well as first base- man Bob Schoonmaker, who hit .333 in ' 52. Ne- braska, last year ' s NCAA runnerups, are counting on a veteran team to come through despite the loss of stellar second baseman Bobby Reynolds. Reyn- olds was lost to the Cornhuskers when he broke his leg sliding home against Kansas State. There are many ifs in the Kansas picture. The biggest is defense. If Ulrich can clean out the errors and steady the pitching, KU may go places. KU opened against Oklahoma A M at Still- water, losing 5-4. Although the Jayhawks outhit the Aggies 7-6, A M came out on top, thanks to two unearned runs. Wayne Tiemier was replaced by Jack Stonestreet in the fourth inning after giv- ing up two hits and a walk. Against Tulsa the Jayhawks led 9-4 going into the ninth, only to be caught napping by a late Hur- ricane rally. The game lasted 12 innings and saw Kansas lose 10-9. KU hitting was the high point of the game. Led by home run hitters Konek and Heitholt, Jay batters got 17 hits to Tulsa ' s nine. The deciding factors in the contest were 15 walks and five errors on the KU scoresheet. Wichita was the next opponent, losing in a 13-0 shutout. Kansas batters had a field day, knocking four homers and hitting Wichita ' s Eli Romera almost at will in the early innings. John 346 Perry starred with three homers, and first sacker Trombold also put one over the fence. Tiemier, Brose, and Wynkoop combined for the shutout. KU led 2-0 at the top of the third when Wichita made their only threat, but the Jays put out the Shocker fire, then scored four runs of their own in the bottom of the inning to put the game on ice. Against Rockhurst the next day the Crimson and Blue nine did a repeat performance, winning 9-5. The offense was well-balanced, led by Perry with two homers, and Fiss and Heitholt with one each. Frank Hamilton started the game, allowing the four Rockhurst runs. He was replaced in the fifth by Stonestreet, who shut out the Hawks in the rest of the game. An improved defense which made two double plays was instrumental in the victory. Kansas did not score until the fifth inning, when with Rockhurst leading 4-0, Perry hit his first homer with Patterson and Pulliam on base. Kansas then pulled ahead, completing the scoring in the eighth. In the Big Seven opener against Nebraska Ulrich ' s crew went down to defeat 10-9 in a ten- inning thriller. Two errors in the top half of the crucial tenth enabled the Cornhuskers to win the ball game. In the second game with Nebraska the Jay- hawks went to pieces, losing 20-6. Ulrich used four pitchers Hamilton, Tiemier, Wynkoop and Dalton but couldn ' t stop the deluge of Cornhusker hits. Kansas committed seven errors in the contest, al- lowing the Nebraskans to capitalize on nearly all of their twenty hits and three walks. KU got only nine hits, thanks to standout pitching by Nebraska ' s Ray Novak. Twenty-two walks given by wild KU pitching accounted for a 19-1 loss in the next game, played against Oklahoma at Norman. John Brose started but after he gave eight walks was relieved in the fifth by Ben Dalton who gave up twelve more. John Konek was called in from the outfield to see what he could do, but the footballer was unable to turn the tide either. Larry Foley smothered the Kansas batting lineup, holding KU to five hits and staying in the clear all the way. Kansas picked up an early 1-0 lead, but OU took over in the third and cinched the game in the fourth. In the second game at Norman scores were more baseball-like, OU winning 4-2. Opposing pitcher Sanders gave up only two hits, besting Jack Stonestreet with six. The Sooners did all their scoring in the fifth, overcoming Kansas ' s early two- run lead. All the runs were unearned in the error- strewn contest. FRONT ROW: Harold Bergslen, Wayne Tiemeier, Dean Smith, Bill Pulliam, Frank Wolf, John Perry. SECOND ROW: John Konek, Bill Heitholt, John Brose, Frank Hamilton, Coach Hubert Ulrich, Galen Fiss, Jack Stonestreet, Rex Smith, John Trombold. THIRD ROW: Bob Toalson, Ned Wilson, Bill Kaek, Bill Todd, Ben Dalton, John Johnston, Harold Patterson, John Wyncoop. ... ; - KANSA: dJ- r-jurm - ; i 347 BACK Row: Dave Edwards, Al Hedatrom, Pele Fotopoulos, Mert Sellars. FRONT lii : Don Franklin, Joe Conlon, Rich Mercer, Coach Dick Mechem. THE RACQUET RACKET by Dave Hill f. JAYHAWK netmen should go places in Big Seven competition if their early season style of play con- tinues. The Kansans have taken four out of their first six matches, losing only the opener 7-3 to Iowa and a close contest with Washburn, 4-3. Baker, Northeastern Oklahoma State, Nebras- ka and Kansas State went down in order to the hard-hitting Jays. Little Pete Fotopoulos, number one man on the squad, pulled two startling upsets in the team losses. He downed Iowa ' s Norman Barnes, Big Ten singles champ, 8-6 and 6-4 in two straight wins. Against Washburn he dropped Gene Rowell, CIC champion and 1952 NAIA titlist. Fotopoulos, a Hutchinson senior, lettered in the number two position on the 1952 club and fitted easily into the first position on this year ' s club. Thus far Fotopoulos is undefeated in singles play and has won all his matches in the minimum two sets. In the number two spot is junior letterman Al Hedstrom from Wichita. Hedstrom has won four and lost two of his matches, losing to opponents from Iowa and Washburn. Coach Dick Mechem 348 is counting heavily on Fotopoulos and Hedstrom in conference play, both having the ability and ex- perience to make their formidable contenders. From the 25 non-lettermen reporting for the first workout Mechem picked Merle Sellers, Joe Conklin, Don Franklin, Dick Mercer, Roger You- mans and Dave Edwards to round out his squad. Sellers, a junior, has won three matches and dropped three in his first varsity season. He won contests with Washburn, Oklahoma State and Baker, losing to Nebraska, K-State and Iowa. Junior Joe Conklin hails from Hutchinson also. Bouncing back from a defeat at the hands of Iowa ' s Van Glyke, he won at Baker and lost in a doubles match at Northeast Oklahoma State. Sophomore Don Franklin, hailing from Par- sons, has shown considerable promise in early meets. He too was defeated at the hands of power- laden Iowa and came back against Baker. Against Oklahoma State he came from behind to win his two sets. Nebraska went down for the count, but David Maclntee of Washburn was too much for the Jayhawker, winning handily. Another Hutchinson product is college junior Dick Mercer, currently holding a 0-3 record in singles play. Sophomore Roger Youmans from Kansas City saw action for the first time against Washburn, losing to Danny Holcom. Dave Edwards, another Kansas City soph, boasts a win against Iowa, a loss in Oklahoma, and action on a winning doubles team to his credit. In the doubles matches to date, Fotopoulos and Hedstrom have been the most potent combina- tion, winning three of their four matches. The duo won in Oklahoma and took victories against Ne- braska and K-State, losing only to Washburn. Sellers, Conklin, Franklin and Mercer have consistently worked the doubles matches in various combinations, receiving occasional help from You- mans and Edwards. To date Kansas has won seven and lost five doubles contests. Graduation cut Mechem ' s potential heavily. Lost were Charles Crawford, John Frieburger, and Hal Titus. Crawford played front man on the 1952 squad, Freiburger was fourth behind Al Hedstrom and Titus ranked fifth. Mechem, a KU letterman himself, coached his ' 52 crew to second place in the conference, only a half-point behind champion Oklahoma. Against Iowa in the opener Kansas went down to defeat 7-3. Fotopoulos took the opposing num- ber one man, but Buckeye depth was too much for KU. Kansas could take only one other singles match and a doubles contest. The squad played the next match at Baldwin against Baker, taking an easy 6-0 win. Continuing the Easter vacation warmup prior to league com- petition, the Crimson and Blue cut down Northeast- ern Oklahoma State College 5-2. In the Big Seven opener against the Nebraska Cornhuskers KU continued the winning streak, tak- ing the contest 5-2 on a windy court. Fotopoulos kept his singles victory string unbroken, with Hed- strom and Franklin also taking singles wins. Foto- poulos-Hedstrom and Sellers-Mercer took doubles matches. Invading Manhattan with memories of a near- riot after the ' 52 contest, the Jayhawks won by a narrow margin, 4-3. Led by Fotopoulos, KU took three singles matches and split the doubles contests. Fotopoulos, Hedstrom and Franklin took singles games, and Hedstrom and Fotopoulos together took one doubles battle. TOP TO BOTTOM: Mert Sellars, Al Hedstrom, Pete Fotopoulos. Uftk.- Han Lynch, Jim Jx-hmilendorf, Coach Bill Winey, Pete Rush, Harlan Hise. OUT AT THE COUNTRY CLUB by Bob Martin AT THE midpoint of an 11-match season KU showed promise of title contentions with the ' 53 team showing a well-balanced fivesome which displayed finesse, power, and scoring ability. Harlan Wickets Hise, junior, an expert with the wedges, has the best medal average to date. He is followed by Ham Lynch, senior, an expert on the greens; John Prosser, junior, the team power hit- ter; Bob Lacy, senior, an irons expert, and Pete Rush-, a fast improving sophomore. Completing the eight-man squad are sophomores Jim Schmitendorf, Mike Chalfant. and Jim Mears. Kansas opened its ' 53 match play season with a l VirVs w i n over Emporia State. The next match result- ed in a 14l 2-3l victory over Washburn. In the season ' s first conference game Nebraska was defeated 71 -41 . Washburn came to Lawrence and faced a red hot team which turned in the following scores on the 68 par course: 69-70-70-72-77. At press time Kansas rests after a close win over Kansas State, 6l -5lA. Big Seven tournaments rotate from school to school following the track meets. The tournament is due at Law- rence in 55, at which time Lawrence will offer an 18 hole, par 72 course. The Big Seven tournament is only one match and whoever wins that match walks off with top honors, regardless of the team ' s past record. Statis- tically speaking, however, Kansas was considered as a major title contender. Kansas has already knocked off two of the Big Seven teams, Kansas State and Nebraska. KU entered the tournament with three previous con- ference championships and two ties. As an added asset, KU went to the tee with three returning lettermen which incidentally are included in the list of top contenders for individual honors. It was with these returning lettermen plus promising sophomores that coach Bill Winey has built his powerful squad. Chuck Erickson, president of NCAA Golf Coaches Association, has announced that the 1953 Golf Champion- ship tourney will be held at the Broadmoor Country Club June 24-27. Although it is not now known whether or not the Jayhawkers will make the journey to Broadmoor, their present record gives them a strong chance in the tournament. 350 - WHEELS ON CAMPUS by Jane Allvine SPARE TIME, remarked Gene Rogers, I am afraid that I have none. Gene, a junior from Dresden, Kansas, liv- ing in Battenfeld Hall, is majoring in electrical engineer- ing with a future outlook toward selling electronics products. Gene recently became vice-president elect of the ASC. His hope for the ASC is that the new members can reduce the bickering and accomplish something. Gene ' s name has appeared on the dean ' s honor roll for four out of his five semesters at the university. After working for two years, Gene was appointed editor of the 1954 Kansas Engineer. Engineering-wise, Gene was a member of the engineering council, Sigma Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Theta Tau, and Eta Kappa Nu, elec- trical engineering society. The John Morris Memorial Fund is also in Gene ' s possession. This is a scholarship which is granted to three boys in their junior year who are outstanding in electrical and mechanical engineering. With this record he was elected to Sachem and Owl Society, campus honoraries. Gene says that he has little time to be of exceptional service to Battenfeld, his scholarship hall. However, his talents do pay off as he is general electrical handy-man for faulty wiring, P.A. systems, and the like at Battenfeld. Politically speaking, Gene admits that Eisenhower has swayed his political ideas. A rugged man from southwest Kansas, WES SANTEE says that there is nothing that compares with the wide-open spaces around Ashland, Kansas, complete with ranch life, horses, cattle, and livestock. However, KU appealed to him since he could become acquainted with the ways and ideas of students from big cities. Wes was president of Sasnak, a club for physical education majors, and social chairman of his fraternity, Acacia. Between his freshman-sophomore year, Wes was chosen as a member of the US track team which toured for six weeks in Japan. Last summer, he represented the US in the Olympic games at Helsinki, while he also visited Sweden, Ireland. Germany, Austria, and near-by countries. Wes holds the NCAA record for the 5000 meter (three miles, 188 yards, two inches) run. The % mile US championship title is in his possession time, 2:58.3. The Big Seven cross country title was given to him this year. Wes was also a member of the relay team which set the world record at the Texas Relays. This year he holds Big Seven half mile, mile indoor records. An all-around sportsman, Wes also likes tennis and bowling. However, track holds priority for him not only for its opportunities and excitement, but also for the in- teresting people that he meets. 352 Meet NORMA Lou FALLETTA, a devoted lover of the fine arts. Norma Lou, an Arma, Kansas, junior, discloses that she is a true and loyal advocate of semi-classical music in general. Also, the glitter, glamour, and gaiety of the amateur stage world have always fascinated her. If I could find a few extra minutes, confesses Norma, I could probably be found in Fraser theater trying to per- fect an unhumorous approach to a humorous reading. Presiding over the AWS, Norma has one of the most difficult, but vital offices on the KU campus. Recently elected to Torch chapter of Mortar Board, she was also the president of Alpha Phi. Her activities line-up includes Forensic league, Panhellenic council, secretary of the YWCA junior cabinet, representative to NOW, States- woman ' s club, and the judiciary board of the AWS. Dietetics is her major field and after a year of in- terning, she hopes to earn the title of a hospital dietitian. Calm, pleasant Norma always has a cheery word for everyone. Sincerity is the coveted quality for which she strives and which she appreciates in other people. Norma ' s philosophy toward KU is that the real KU is not found in our impressive Student Union or in the gigantic fieldhouse now being constructed, but in the sincere friendliness of the college students of the Sunflower state. HONOR MAN of the University for 1953, RON WIGINGTON, an engineering physics senior from Topeka, was awarded this title at this year ' s KU Honor ' s convocation. As for his post-collegiate career, he plans to begin work with Bell Telephone laboratories at Murray Hill, New Jersey in June in the electronics apparatus department, while he will also begin his graduate work. Since he entered KU as a Summerfield scholar, out- standing has been the most appropriate description of Ron. As a freshman he was tabbed as a big wheel in the engineering school by being named to the Sigma Tau freshman award. During his three years with the Kansas Engineer, he has served as feature editor, associate editor, and editor. A member of Sigma Tau, Ron was also Mr. Prez of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering society, and veep of Sigma Pi Sigma, honorary physics society. For his work with the Kansas Engineer, Ron was appointed to associate membership in Sigma Xi, a research honorary society. Ron and his wife live at 739 Mississippi. When dishes are done and meetings are over, Ron says that it is time for a little amateur squirrel and rabbit hunting. But for the real hunter. Ron prefers the glory of the coon hunts in the old Virginia style. 353 MY, WHAT you can learn by just talking to people! JACK REIN is an avid horse fan. In fact, Jack and his family have been winning medals in such gala events as the American Royal by owning the reserve champion quarter horse for one year and for two consecutive years the state champion pony. Jack, from Shawnee, Kansas, is a junior in the busi- ness school. After three years that Jack has set aside for Uncle Sam, he plans to be a stockbroker with his eye on a firm in Kansas City. Jack was recently re-elected to the position of Busi- ness Manager for the 1954 Jayhawker. Numerous house activities have occupied Jack ' s time at the Phi Gamma Delta house where he has been corresponding secretary. Last year, he was advertising manager for College Daze and this year, he was named business manager of the 1954 College Daze production. Continuing his fondness for business, Jack was also assistant publicity manager for the Rock Chalk Revue. As for his likes, Jack feels that people have top priority. Jack ' s philosophy is that if you smile at people, there is a pretty good chance that they will return the compliment. For recreation hours. Jack finds that a rod and reel are great companions. His greatest problem is that his friends seem to find utmost joy in abducting his beloved pipe. Bubbling over with enthusiasm and new ideas, MARILYN HAWKINSON, known as Hawkie. returned from the sunny seashores of Berkeley. California, where she represented Kansas at the National Student Union con- vention. Hawkie confides that she met and became well acquainted with the 170 representatives from all corners of the 48 states. Returning to the Kansas scene, Marilyn was tapped by Mortar Board, while she has also been the AWS rep- resentative to the ASC. Hawkie was recently elected president of the Student Lnion. Secretarial positions. are among Hawkie ' s favorites as she has been secretary of the Student Union, Red Peppers, Panhellenic council, and YWCA. Marilyn, a personnel management junior from Marquette, has also been president and rush captain of her sorority, Pi Beta Phi. Good-natured Hawk, since she has been a resident of Mt. Oread, has been attempting to master the art of in- telligent conversation with emphasis on current events. In addition to her aversion to being a book worm, when she has those precious spare moments, Hawk may be seen vigorously cheering at all football, basketball, track, and baseball events. 354 ALONG THE PARTY FRONT TOP ROW: Can you figure out what ' s going on? Maurice Casey, Dee Ann Price, Ned Hutchinson, and Jerry Scott. Ooooo! Sue Epperson all decked out for the Alpha Phi Rock Chalk skit. Ooooo! Again Denni Wade represent- ing the month of May in a skit during intermission at the AD Pi Black Diamond. Heavy load, eh wot? Joanne Glenn, Millie Morris, Clara Nelson, Lloyd Martin, Chuck Fitz- patrick, and Bill Schmidt at the Tri Delt Crescent Carnival. SECOND ROW: That old sawdust spirit drags out Carolyn Zimmerman, Don Stiles, Fred Young, and Linda Connors for the Tri Delt Crescent Carnival. The Hand Jackie Kimmel, Ron Meeker, Jack Stonestreet, and Janice Perry at the AD Pi Beaux Arts ball. It could be a family portrait Sandy Dunlop, Ernie Dade, Martha Nienstedl, and Tom Wilson at the Beaux Arts ball. Oh, a nickel, thank you very much sir, and here ' s your pencil. BOTTOM ROW: Extra cash, a reefer, or a loose garter? Don Ellis and Joyce Cazier at the AD Pi Black Diamond. Of all the places for people to leave thumb-tacks . . . Dick McCall and Barbara Findley at the III Two Yard Hop. Which looks better, heads on or off? Marge God- win, Jane Schindling, Neil Holliman, and Glenn Bethany at the AD Pi Beaux Arts ball. Bob Parker, Louisa Hall, Mark Gilnian, and Nancy Gil provide an arty looking bunch at the Beaux Arts ball. 355 TOP HOW: How to win friends and influence people Louis Breyfogle, Jodie Johnson, Carol Powell, and Dick Cantrell at the AD Pi Black Diamond. Jovial bunch, aren ' t they? Tom Pratt, Charlene Ewell, Carole and Ray Hessling, Max Embree and Pat Crady party it up at the Tri Delt Crescent Carnival. Everybody has a nice smile for the Jayhawker camera Courtney Clark, Jeannot Barnes, Tina Bowman, and Allen Wilson at the Theta formal. SECOND ROW: Jack Rein, Suzie Kinkead, Nancy Cater, and Bob Clawson at the Phi Gam Pig dinner. Dangerous Davenport has kidnapped The Lady Known as Lou and is about to be repaid for his crime by Hair-raiser Holmes Barbara Hampton, Ron Holmes, Larry Davenport, and Mary Lou Lavy at the 1)1 Two Yard Hop. Charlie Hoag gives forth with the Dandruff aria from The Barber of Seville as Maria Griffith, Wally Birkenbuel, Patsy Wiley, Innes Phillips, and Marilyn Muehlbach listen attentively. THIRD ROW: New foreign students Dave Hardy, Margie Harms, Lolly Schutz, and Hubert Dye at the DU Two Yard Hop. Don Aungst, Joan Lodde, John Golden, Barbara Logan, Bob La Follette, Jo Anne Groe, Janie McGraffin, and Jim Porter steppin ' high at the Chi O Bum Bum. Phyllis McMillian, Sid Hutchins, Bob Asman, Karen Beards- lee, Jim Burns, Margery Null, Lud Smith, and Biz Wiede- man at the Sigma Nu Hi Rickety. BOTTOM ROW: The DU Two Yard Hop produces not only a devil but also a fallen angel. Brad Tate, Kay Ames, Marge Pennington, and Dick Myers. Pal Canary, Shirley Dean, Anne Haggard, and John Hysom seem to be enjoying them- selves at the Two Yard Hop. Whis-s-sky! John McCul- lough, Mary Ann Irwin, Howard Neuer, and Don Jensen at the AD Pi Beaux Arts ball. 356 TOP ROW: My, what pretty teeth! The Two Yard Hop finds i- Whitney, Norma Eshelman, Margie Allen, and Bob Shirley in a smiling good humor. Omigawd, Jim! Tom Pratt, Nancy Teed, Jim Graves, and Sidonie Brown at the Pi Phi formal. Cozy, eh wot? The Chi O Bum Bum is graced by the presence of Phil Hahn, Alice Thorpe, Bill Blair, and Marti Taylor. SECOND ROW: Marilyn Kendall and Jim Nellis celebrating their pinning. Through the looking glass Ed Freeburg, Jane Armstrong, Ginny Brosnahan, and Hugh Buchanan at the Theta formal. Ah, this takes me back to the days before I was admitted to graduate school Mary Gayle Siebert and Roger Miller. THIRD ROW: Giving forth with Pepsodent smiles are Lee Baird, Caroline West, Sally Rendig, and Don Slassen at the D! Two Yard Hop. Three Blind Mice, but what ' s Bob? Milan Hart, Jan Brown, Maria Griffith, and Bob Kenney at the Two Yard Hop. Rosie Cody, Ed Hall, Harold Reiland, and Lisa Griesser at the Chi O Bum Bum. BOTTOM ROW: Alpha Phis Sally Kiddoo, Elva Sutton, Mary Lou Selvig and Donna Cooke try to feel in character for their Rock Chalk Revue skit. Rather becoming, Frank Alice Foree, Carol Stutz, Frank Cindrich, Don Morris, Donna Jean Johnson, Don Hess, and Kay Magers at the Tri Delt Crescent Carnival. Yard goods sale at Penney ' s? Dick La Gree, Phyllis Gray, Kathy Knauss, and Chuck Henson at the DU Two Yard Hop. 357 ABBOTT, KARL LAWRENCE. Lawrence Music Education ACHTERBERG, CONNIE. Lincoln IMW Pi Beta Phi; Phi Delta Delta. ALLISON, MARGARET ESTHER. Kansas City Elem. Education Sellards Hall scholarship; Orchestra: Pi Lambda Theta; SUA Board: LSA, president. AMEND. JAMES LEE. Independence Architecture Dean ' s Honor Roll; Scarab: Tau Beta Pi: Tau Sigma Delta, secretary: AIA, treasurer: Rayburn House competition, 2nd: Voscamp-Slezak award. AMENT, ARTHUR ELDON. Harrisonville. Mo. Gen. Business ANDERSON, LYLE ARTHUR, Abilene Accounting Battenfeld Hall, president: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Alpha Kappa Psi: Sachem, vice president: ASC, treasurer: FACTS; BSA: YMCA: ISA. ANDERSON, NEAL ARVID, Abilene General Business Battenfeld Hall, secretary: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Delta Sigma Pi: Sachem: Owl Society: Statewide Activities, executive board; Rock Chalk Revue, business manager: YMCA, secre- tary-treasurer: ISA; FACTS: Inter-dorm, vice president: John Battenfeld award. ANDERSON, RICHARD ALGOT, Topeka Psychology Pearson Hall scholarship: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Band: Orchestra. ANDERSON, ROBERT SHELDON, Marysville General Business Delta Tau Delta, vice president; Pachacamac; BSA; Statewide activities county chairman. ANDERSON, WANDA JEAN, Chanute Design Delta Phi Delta; Wesley Foundation; Sculpture Club. ANKROM, GEORGEANN, Kansas City Art Education Kappa Kappa Gamma: Junior Panhellenic: AWS House: SUA; Art Ed. Club: Delta Phi Delta. ARMSTRONG, JERRY DEAN, Russell Geological Engineering Kappa Sigma, vice president: Kansas Relays committee chair- man: Geology Club, vice president: Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Distinguished Military Student. ATHERTON, JOHN G., Emporia Law Beta Theta Pi: Phi Delta Phi: Scabbard and Blade: Forensic League. AURELL, PATRICIA ANN, Enid, Okla. Occujxitional Therapy Sigma Kappa: OT Club; SUA. BACKUS, NELSON EUGENE, Abbyville Medicine Acacia; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Phi Chi. BAKER. BARBARA HELEN, Salina Pi Beta Phi. History BALL, MAHLON M.. Lawrence Geological Engineering Sigma Chi: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Sigma Tau: Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Sigma Psi; K-Club; Swimming team: Owl Society: Sachem: Pachacamac: ASC; SUA director; Geology Club: Hawkwatch: N ' ROTC scholarship, honor man: SAME efficiency award: Scabbard and Blade; Haworth award. BALL. MARESE ANN ICE, Olathe Speech Correction Monchonsia Hall, president: Corhin hall counselor; Jay Janes, treasurer: A Cappella: Inter-dorm: AWS House; ISA; FACTS. BARLOW, H. LORENA. Halstead News-Editorial Quill Club, treasurer: Theta Sigma Phi, vice president: Kansan board; Daily Kansan, society editor; German Club: Theta Sigma Phi scholarship. BARR, JOHN FRANKLIN JR., Ottawa Phi Gamma Delta: Arnold Air Society. General Business BARTON, BETTY B., Dallas, Texas Elementary Education Pi Beta Phi: Young Republicans: Home EC Club; YWCA; IRC, secretary. BEAUCHAMP, GLEN THOMAS, Pomona Elec. Engineering Theta Tau, regent; AIEE; Scabbard and Blade; K-Book, business manager. BECK, CLIFFORD C., Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineering Triangle; ASCE, secretary. BEHRMANN, WILLIAM GLAUS, Bluff City Chem. Engineering Pearson Hall scholarship: Dean ' s Honor Roll; YMCA; ISA; SRC; Westminster: AChS; AIChE, sophomore award; Sigma Tau: Tau Beta Pi: Phi Lambda Upsilon; Campus Affairs committee; Cook Paint award. BELL, ROBERT SAMUEL, Garden City Physical Education Sigma Phi Epsilon, vice president; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Gym- nastic team: Light Opera Guild: KuKu, treasurer; College Daze; Alternate cheerleader: Pershing Rifles: Wesley Founda- tion, president: Bacteriology Club, treasurer; Sasnak: YMCA. 358 BERRY, BETTY MARILYN, Hutchinson Speech Correction Delta Gamma, vice president; YWCA junior cabinet: SRC; Campus Affairs committee; NOW. BETHANY, GLENN ALLEN, Russell Economics Sigma Pi, vice president; SUA; Arnold Air Society: Young Republicans; AFROTC Rifle team. BEYDLER, WILLIAM LEE, Ashland Economics RICHARD N., Kansas City, Mo. Architecture Pi Kappa Alpha, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Scarab bronze medal; SUA; Young Republicans; Alpha Phi Omega; A Cap- pella; Rock Chalk Revue. BINGAMAN, J. JOAN, Sedalia, Mo. Delta Gamma. Home Economics BIRZER, NORMA ELIZABETH, Hoisington Music Education Theta Phi Alpha; Newman Club; Sigma Alpha Iota; Chorus. BLANKS, PATRICIA ANNE, Sedalia, Mo. Language Arts Alpha Omicron Pi, secretary; Jay Janes; Lab Theater; SUA; Newman Club; Radio Players: Junior Panhellenic. BOLAS, JULIA RUTH, Kansas City, Mo. German Watkins Hall scholarship; German Club, president; Delta Phi Alpha, president. BOLZ, JULIA LEE, Topeka Mathematics Math Club, vice president; ISA; Glee Club. BONECUTTER, ANN, Wichita Interior Design Delta Delta Delta, president; Gamma Alpha Chi, secretary; YWCA; Jayhawker; Interior Design Club; SUA. BONNEY, JOSEPHINE GAY, Roswell, N. M. Elem. Education Sigma Kappa, vice president; YWCA; SUA; K-Union; Wesley Foundation ; Pi Lambda Theta. BOWEN, EDWIN A., Lawrence Accounting Delta Sigma Pi; Dean ' s Honor Roll. BOWMAN, BONITA LOUISE, Osborne Apparel Merchandising Kappa Alpha Theta, secretary; Young Republicans; Home EC Club; YWCA; SUA. BOYD, GERALD LEE, Western Springs, 111. Geology Lambda Chi Alpha, president; Geology Club. BRACKMANN, RICHARD T., Kansas City, Mo. Eng. Physics Sigma Tau; Tan Beta Pi; Sigma Pi Sigma: Dean ' s Honor Roll. PICTURED AT LEFT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Abbott, Achterberg, Allison, Amend, Ament, L. Anderson, N. Anderson, R. A. Anderson, R. S. Anderson, W. Anderson. MIDDLE ROW: Ankrom, Armstrong, Atherton, Aurell, Bachus, Baker, Mahlon Ball, Marese Ball, Barlow, Barr. BOTTOM ROW: Barton, Beauchamp, Beck, Behrmann, Bell, Berry, Bethany, Beydler, Bills, Bingaman. K U CLASS OF 1953 Photographs by John Estes PICTURED BELOW TOP ROW: Birzer, Blanks, Solas. SECOND ROW: Bolz, Bonecutter, Bonney. THIRD ROW: Bowen, Bowman, Boyd. FOURTH ROW: Brackmann, Bradshaw, Bradstreet. , ft .1L PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Breckenridge, Brownlee, Brubaker. SECOND ROW: Burbank, Buller, Burch. THIRD ROW: Bush, Bushey, Byrnes. FOURTH ROW: Campbell, Cantrell, Carey. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Casey, Chaney, Chang, Charles, Childers, Chowning, Chrapliwy, Christy, Church, Clabough. MIDDLE ROW: E. Clark, L. Clark, Claypool, Clinger, Cloepfil, Clum, Cole, Combs, Commons, Comstock. BOTTOM ROW: Connor, Conrad, Converse, Cooke, Cooley, Cooper, Cox, Coyne, Crane, Craw- ford. 360 BRADSHAY, VIMTA LOUELLEN, Lawrence Phys. Education Gamma Phi Beta; Mortar Board; WAA, president; Tau Sigma: Sasnak, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll. BRADSTREET, ROBERT EDWARD, Russell Economics Kappa Sigma, rush chairman; Debate: Forensic League, vice president: Owl Society; Gamma Chi Chi; Pachacamac; IFC; Phi Delta Phi; Freshman law class president. BRECKENRIDGE, W. THOMAS, Holton Advertising Alpha Delta Sigma, president: Daily Kansan, circulation man- ager; Kansan Board; Press Club; University Players; Light Opera Guild. BROWNLEE, ELDENA J., Deerfield Design Dean ' s Honor Roll; Delta Phi Delta, secretary; Sculpture Club, secretary-treasurer; ISA. BKUBAKER, EUGENE VERYL, Lawrence Mathematics Dean ' s Honor Roll; LSA, vice president; Math Club, presi- dent: SRC, treasurer; Arnold Air Society; KuKu, treasurer; Carruth award; ISA, treasurer; Young Republicans. BURBANK, EMMALOU, Winchester. 111. Elem. Education Rifle Club, executive officer; Kappa Phi; Chorus. BULLER, KENNETH DARRELL, Buhler Physical Education Kappa Sigma; Varsity Basketball; Sasnak. BURCH, CHARLES LEON, Oswego News-Editorial Alpha Kappa Lambda; Arnold Air Society; Kansan Board; Sipna Delta Chi, secretary; Daily Kansan, managing editor; Kl Calendar, editor. BUSH. DARRELL CLEO, Bunker Hill Geology Dun Henry Co-op, vice president; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; ISA; Geology Club. BUSHEY, JACQUELINE LOUISE, Newton Occupational Therapy Pi Beta Phi: Jayftawker; WAA: Newman Club: OT Club. BYRNES. RICHARD LEE, Kansas City, Mo. Mech. Engineering ThetaTau: ASTE; ASME. CAMPBELL, GENE LEROY, Lakin Personnel Management Alpha Kappa Lambda, secretary: BSA: Sasnak. CANTRELL, MELBA JEAN, N ' orth Kansas City, Mo. Interior Design Alpha Phi; University Players. CAREY, DONALD A., Coffeyville Music Education Chorale; Band; A Cappella; Chorus; MENC; Light Opera Guild. Psychology General Business CASEY, ALBERT, Austin, Texas CHANEY, WILLIAM R., Elkhart Lambda Chi Alpha, rush chairman. CHANG, VERNON MUN HIN, Wahiawa, Hawaii Elec. Eng. Kappa Eta Kappa, vice president; AIEE, treasurer; Hawaiian Club, secretary-treasurer. CHARLES, RUTHANNA NAN, Parsons Elementary Education Alpha Omicron Pi; YWCA Cabinet; Jayhawker. CHILDERS, HARRY Mi LOR, Merriam. Mech. Engineering Theta Tau; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; ASME. CHOWNING, 0. C., Coffeyville Medicine Dean ' s Honor Roll. CHRAPLIWY, PETER STANLEY, South Bend, Ind. Zoology Zoology Club, vice president. CHRISTY, JOSEPH A., Kansas City Chemical Engineering Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Chi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Phi Lambda Upsilon. CHURCH, CHARLES FREMONT III, Independence, Mo. Marketing Battenfeld Hall scholarship. CLABOUGH, JAMES MATSON, Coffeyville General Business BSA. e CLARK, ELDON L., Topeka Interior Design Pearson Hall scholarship, vice president; Pershing Rifles; Interior Design Club, treasurer; AID. CLARK, LLOYD MARLIN, El Dorado Pharmacy Kappa Psi ; APhA. CLAYPOOL, Louis S., Arkansas City Pharmacy CLINGER, BETTY CHARLOTTE, Rose Hill Physical Education Miller Hall scholarship; Kappa Phi: Sasnak, secretary: WAA, president; Jay Janes; Pi Lambda Theta; ISA; Inter-dorm. CLOEPFIL, KIETH S., Lawrence Architecture AIA; ASTE. CLUM, LEWIS LYNN, Augusta Accounting Sterling-Oliver Hall scholarship, president; Beta Gamma Sig- ma; ISA, president; Delta Sigma Pi; KuKu, treasurer; FACTS; Young Republicans. COLE, WALTER L, Topeka Economics Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi. COMBS, MARTHA E., Kansas City, Mo. Social Work Alpha Phi; Rifle Club; YWCA; Young Republicans; SUA; WAA. COMMONS, DOLORES HELEN, New Castle, Ind. Elementary Education Carruth Hall, vice president; Inter-dorm; YWCA; ISA; AWS House; FACTS; SUA. COMSTOCK, BARBARA ELAINE, Mission History of Art Kappa Alpha Theta, president; Panhellenic, treasurer; WAA; Sour Owl; Tau Sigma; Stateswomen ' s Club. CONNOR, ADELE FRANCES, Kansas City, Mo. Sociology Delta Gamma; SUA; Sociology Club. CONRAD, KATHRYN MAE, Hiawatha Humanities Kappa Alpha Theta, vice president; Stateswomen ' s Club, president; University Players; Brown County chairman; ASC; FACTS; YWCA, president; Campus Affairs committee; La Conferie, secretary; Mortar Board; Freshman dorm counselor. CONVERSE, MARVIN LEE, Larned Geological Engineering Tau Kappa Epsilon; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. COOKE, MARTHA SHAW, Wichita Art Education Pi Beta Phi, president; Jay Janes; SUA; NOW; Art Ed. Club; Panhellenic. CoOLEY, LORETTA RUTH, Hutchinson Bacteriology Watkins Hall scholarship; AWS House, Senate; Stateswomen ' s Club, president; Freshman Dorm Counselor; Eastern Star scholarship: Jay Janes: Bacteriology Club. COOPER, MARY AGNES, Independence, Mo. News-Editorial Freshman Dorm Counselor; Theta Sigma Phi: Kansan Board; Daily Kansan. society editor; Press Club. Cox, VIRGINIA JEAN, Kingman Delta Gamma; Stateswomen ' s Club; YWCA. COYNE, MARGARET ANN, Kansas City Miller Hall scholarship; Omicron Nu; Symphony Orchestra, secretary-treasurer. CRANE, ELMYRA ALICE, Brecksville, Ohio Pi Beta Phi, vice president; Phi Chi Theta. CRAWFORD. JOHN SYDNEY, Kansas City, Mo. Advertising Sigma Phi Epsilon: Alpha Delta Sigma, vice president. Wesley Design Foundation; Home Economics Dean ' s Honor Roll ; Economics PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Crum, Cummins, Dabbagh. SECOND ROW: D. Dalton, J. Dalton, Davidson. THIRD ROW: D. Davis, H. Davis, L. Davis. BOTTOM ROW: R. Davis, Decker, Deem. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Delap, Dennen, Deschner, Dick, Dicki nson, Dilts, Dinsmore, Dirks, Docking, Dodge. MIDDLE ROW: Dostie, Doubek, G. Drake, R. Drake, Dubach, Dukelow, Dula, Dyerly, Earlywine, Eggert. BOTTOM ROW: Ellis, Endacott, Engelmann, England, D. Erickson, N. Erickson, Evers, Fee, Ferrell, Fink. 362 Civil Engineering Sculpture Dean ' s Honor Law Kansas Law Mathematics CRUM, MARY SUE, Kansas City, Mo. Speech Delta Delta Delta, treasurer; Forensic League; YWCA; Kappa Phi. CUMMINS, ROBERT ALVIN, Mission Architectural Engineering Acacia; AIA; ASCE. DABBAGH, YOUNIS H., Mosul, Iraq International Club: ASCE, treasurer. DALTON, DOROTHEA, St. Louis, Mo. Delta Phi Delta; Sculpture Club, president; Roll. DALTON, JACK EWALT, Sedan Kappa Sigma, vice president: Phi Delta Phi: Review. DAVIDSON, SALLY JEAN, Leavenworth Watkins Hall scholarship; Dean ' s Honor Roll. DAVIS, DARLENE CLARK, Topeka Personnel Administration Miller Hall scholarship; Band; ISA; FBLA; Carruth Hall, assistant counselor. DAVIS, HAZEL, Kansas City, Mo. Elementary Education Templin Hall, secretary; Band: Kappa Phi. DAVIS, LOUISE SWIGART, Kansas City Fashion Illustration Kappa Alpha Theta, rush chairman: Mortar Board; Delta Phi Delta, president; SUA: Panhellenic; Gamma Alpha Chi; Jayhawker. DAVIS. ROBERT RAYMOND, Leawood Personnel Management Sigma Phi Epsilon, vice president; Delta Sigma Pi; Psychology Club: Dean ' s Honor Roll; BSA. DECKER, DELORAS, Concordia History Chi Omega; Young Republicans: History Club: Dean ' s Honor Roll. DEEM, AILIE, Cameron, Mo. Pi Lambda Theta. Social Studies DELAP, B. J., Paola Petroleum Engineering Sigma Pi: Sigma Tau; AIME: Dean ' s Honor Roll. DENNEN, NANCY LOUISE. Colby Design Alpha Chi Omega; Delta Phi Delta; Kappa Phi; Stateswomen ' s Club. DESCHNER, MARY ANN, Newton Art Education Kappa Kappa Gamma: YWCA; Art Education Club. DICK. CHARLES HOWARD, Hutchinson History Acacia History Club; French Club; YMCA. DICKINSON, WILLIAM BOYD III, St. Davids, Pa. English Alpha Tau Omega, secretary; Dean ' s Honor Roll; puill Club, president; Campus Problems Speaking contest winner: co- winner H. E. L ewis Essay contest; University Players; Upstream. DILTS, MARY ANN, Anthony Pharmacy Alpha Omicron Pi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; APhA; Kappa Epsilon, vice president. DINSMORE, JAMES CHARLES, Hobart, Ind. Physical Education Track; Sasnak; K-Club. DIRKS, DONALD NELSON, Winchester Pre-Law Sterling-Oliver Hall scholarship; ASC; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Debate: FACTS, president; ISA; KuKu; NROTC scholarship; Phi Delta Phi; Sachem; YMCA cabinet; Young Democrats, president. DOCKING, MARCIA HORN, Goodland Advertising Chi Omega; Gamma Alpha Chi; ASC, secretary; SUA Board; Christian Science organization, president; Campus Affairs committee; YWCA; Freshman class president; Daily Kansan, promotion manager. DODGE, DALE ARLYN, Mission Accounting Sigma Phi Epsilon, president; Delta Sigma Pi, vice president; Cheerleader; IFC, treasurer; Junior class treasurer; BSA; Pachacamac; KuKu. DOSTIE, CAMERON V., Royal Oak, Mich. Chemical Engineering Acacia; Sigma Tau; Alpha Chi Sigma; AIChE: Hawkwatch. DOUBEK, HERBERT D., Coats Medicine Phi Beta Pi. DRAKE, GEORGIA ANNE, Wichita Art Kappa Alpha Theta; AWS; SUA. DRAKE, ROSANNE, Nevada, Mo. Music Theory and Composition Sigma Alpha Iota; Kappa Phi. DUBACH, MARILYN, Kansas City, Mo. Home Economics-Journalism Kappa Kappa Gamma; YWCA; University Players; Tau Sigma, secretary; Gamma Alpha Chi, treasurer; Theta Sigma Phi; Daily Kansan, society editor; Law School queen. DUKELOW, WILLIS HOWARD, Hutchinson Mathematics DULA, ROBERT MASON, Lawrence Physical Education Sigma Phi Epsilon; YMCA; Sasnak; ISA; Wesley Foundation. DYERLY, RODNEY BURKE, Pratt Political Science Phi Delta Theta; Arnold Air Society, vice commander; YMCA, vice president; AFROTC Rifle Team, treasurer. EARLYWINE, GEORGIA ANN, Pratt Political Science Delta Delta Delta; Panhellenic; YWCA; International Rela- tions Club; Stateswomen ' s Club; Freshman Dorm Counselor. EGGERT, ROBERT WALTER, Lawrence General Business YMCA; SAM; ISA. ELLIS, DON A., Kansas City General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon, president; Delta Sigma Pi; KuKu; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Canterbury Club. ENDACOTT, GRACE LAURAINE, Lawrence Piano Delta Delta Delta, president; Jay Janes, president: Mortar Board; Sigma Alpha Iota; Quack Club; WAA; Junior class president; Panhellenic. ENGELMANN, CALVIN ERNEST, Hiawatha Chemistry Battenfeld Hall scholarship, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Glee Club. ENGLAND, BETTY MARIE, Prescott Secretarial Training Watkins Hall scholarship; DSF, treasurer; FACTS. ERICKSON, DONALD H., Holdrege, Neb. Electrical Engineering Sigma Tau; Eta Kappa Nu; Eta Eta Kappa; SAME, presi- dent; Kansas Engineer; SAME Gold Medal. ERICKSON, NE ALDA MAE, Oslo, Minn. Home Economics Inter-dorm; Home EC Club; AWS; LSA. EVERS, JOHN H., Edwardsville Mathematics Dean ' s Honor Roll; Pershing Rifles, captain; Rifle Team; Distinguished Military Student: Delta Phi Alpha; German Club; Roger Williams Foundation; Mathematics Club; Scab- bard and Blade. FEE, FRANKLIN T., Hutchinson General Business Sigma Chi; IFPC; BSA; Statewide Activities County Chair- man. FERRELL, LAWRENCE VERNON JR., Independence Mathematics Phi Kappa Tau. FINK, JOAN, Quinter Business Education AWS House; ASC; FACTS; Stateswomen ' s Club, president; FBLA; Kappa Phi; Junior Inter-dorm, vice president: Wesley Foundation: WAA; Freshman Dorm Counselor; A Cappella; Girls State Alumnae, president. PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Fuller, Card, Gardner, Garrity, R. L. Garvin, R. Garvin, Georgi, Gianakis, Giffin, Gilstrap. MIDDLE ROW: Glenn, Godding, Good, Gooding, Goodjohn, Goodseal, G. Gordon, S. Gordon, Gottesmann, Granberg. BOTTOM ROW: Gray, Grove, Haber, Hagar, C. Hall, E. Hall, R. Hall, W. Hall, Wm. Hall, Hamilton. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED BELOW TOP ROW: Finkemeier, Fiss, Fitzgerald. SECOND ROW: Fitzpatrick, Fitz- simmons, Foster. THIRD ROW: B. Frazier, S. Frazier, F. Freeman. FOURTH ROW: S. Freeman, B. Frieze, C. Frieze. FINKEMEIER, THEODORE C., Kansas City Architectural Engineering Scabbard and Blade: SAME; Gamma Delta. Fiss, GALEN R., Johnson Physical Education Sigma Chi; Football; Baseball; K-Club; Sasnak. FITZGERALD, JEANNE SABRA, Jamestown Home Economics-Journalism Theta Phi Alpha, president; Jay Janes: Theta Sigma Phi, president; Daily Kansan, society editor: Omicron Nu; Mortar Board: Panhellenic; Kansan Board: Dean ' s Honor Roll. FITZPATRICK, SHARON JOANNE, Lawrence Elementary Education Alpha Chi Omega: Panhellenic; Jayhuwker; Newman Club; SUA. FITZSIMMOXS, WILLIAM WESLEY, Yonkers, N. Y. Latin American Area Sigma Pi. FOSTER. WILLIAM MAYNARD, El Dorado Geology Battenfeid Hall scholarship; FACTS; ISA; KuKu, secretary; Geology Club. FRAZIER. BETTY JEAN, Lawrence Elementary Education Dean ' s Honor Roll: LSA, secretary. FRAZIER, STANLEY WAYNE, Caldwell Pharmacy Sigma Pi, president: IFC; Band. FREEMAN, FREDERIC W., Ferguson, Mo. Botany Linnaean Club. FREEMAN, SALLY MALRINE, St. Joseph, Mo. Commercial Art Alpha Chi Omega; Delta Phi Delta; YWCA. FRIEZE, BARBARA PETERSON, Kansas City, Mo. Interior Design Delta Delta Delta: Interior Design Club; YWCA. FRIEZE. CLARENCE I. JR., Merriam Architecture Sigma Phi Epsilon, president; AIA. FULLER, HARRY VREELAND, Kansas City Economics Phi Kappa Tau. CARD. HOWARD ELLIOTT. Lawrence Zoology Beta Theta Pi; Phi Beta Pi. I C.JI GARDNER, JOSEPH ELDEN, Houston, Mo. Mechanical Engineering ASME; ASTE. GARRITY, ROBERT ALEXANDER, Kansas City, Mo. Accounting Delta Chi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Debate; Dean ' s Honor Roll; SUA; Jayhawker, associate editor. GARVIN, R. LOUISE, Attica Secretariat Training Sigma Kappa, secretary; Phi Chi Theta; FBLA; Kappa Beta. GARVIN, REBECCA JEANNETTE, Attica Pharmacy Alpha Phi: Kappa Epsilon, president; APhA: YWCA. GEORGI. HENRY JOHN, New York, N. Y. Marketing BSA; German Club; Chess Club, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll. GIANAKIS, LOUKAS, Levadia, Greece Electrical Engineering Eta Kappa Nu; Eta Eta Kappa: Sigma Tau; AIEE. GIFFIN, DONALD WALTER, Kansas City Law Phi Delta Phi; Kansas Law Review, editor-in-chief: Young Democrats: Scabbard and Blade. GILSTRAP, PEGGY ANN, Fredonia Interior Design Kappa Phi; Interior Design Club. GLENN, NANCY JEAN, Kansas City, Mo. Bacteriology Alpha Delta Pi, treasurer; Quack Club; Bacteriology Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. GODDING, L. LORRAINE, Lawrence Advertising Chi Omega, rush captain; Gamma Alpha Chi; WAA: Young Republicans; Kansan Board; Panhellenic. GOOD, EDWIN GEORGE, Louisburg Engineering Physics Sigma Pi Sigma, secretary: Sigma Tau; Table Tennis Club. GOODING, EUGENE ORION, Ottawa Chemical Engineering AIChE, treasurer; Sigma Tau; Alpha Chi Sigma, president; Engineering Council. GOODJOHN, JOANNE, Leavenworth History Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Alpha Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll: History Club; NOW. GOODSEAL. WILBUR DEAN, Chanute Speech Correction Alpha Phi Alpha, secretary; Buehler Oratorical Contest Win- ner; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Sachem: ASC: IFC; NSA; FACTS; Campus Affairs Committee: Twin Pines Co-op, secretary; Inter-Co-op coordinator; English Club: Dove. GORDON, GEORGE HEMINGWAY, Kansas City, Mo. General Business Beta Theta Pi, secretary; BSA; Arnold Air Society. GORDON, STEWART LYNELL, Olathe Speech GOTTESMANN, SIDNEY, New York, N. Y. Chemistry Alpha Epsilon Pi; Dean ' s Honor Roll. GRANBERG, GAYLE MAXINE, Kansas City Elementary Education Watkins Hall scholarship, vice president; ISA. GRAY, PHYLLIS ANN, Emporia Interior Design Alpha Chi Omega; SUA; Young Republicans; Interior Design Club. GROVE, ALLIE KATHRYN, Kansas City Social Studies Watkins Hall scholarship, president: WAA; La Confrerie; Dean ' s Honor Roll ; Inter-dorm, president ; Pi Lambda Theta, president; Chorus; History Club; Freshman and Junior Hon- ors; Freshman Dorm Counselor. HABER, CARLA ANN, St. Joseph, Mo. Language Arts Alpha Omicron Pi, vice president; University Players; Light Opera Guild; Forensic League; Tau Sigma; A Cappella; KFKU Players; Young Republicans. HAGAR, DAVID LEO, Tulsa, Okla. Medicine Phi Chi, treasurer; Amateur Radio Club, treasurer. HALL, CORNETT EUGENE, Liberal General Business Delta Upsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi, president; Arnold Air So- ciety; BSA. HALL, EUGENE CHARLES, Kansas City, Mo. Piano and Composition Sigma Nu; Phi Mu Alpha; SUA; Newman Club; 1950 College Daze composer; Distinguished Military Student; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HALL, ROBERT ABEL, Wichita Pharmacy APhA; Kappa Psi. HALL, WANDA DENNEY, Liberal Elementary Education Delta Delta Delta, secretary; Junior Panhellenic; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HALL, WILLIAM RESER, Wichita Accounting Sigma Chi, treasurer; Statewide Activities, chairman; Alpha Kappa Psi, vice president; Arnold Air Society; Owl Society. HAMILTON, ROBERT LEE, Pratt Medicine Delta Upsilon: Phi Beta Pi, rush chairman; Student AMA. 365 HANDRAHAN, JOHN R., Uniontown Political Science FACTS. HANSON, MARILYN RUTH, Wichita Bacteriology Alpha Delta Pi: Junior Panhellenic: Sophomore rlass secre- tary: WAA: Bacteriology Club, treasurer: Jay Janes. HARMS, ESTHER D., Whiting Business Education Carruth Hall: FBLA; WAA; Glee Club; Stocking scholarship: Dean ' s Honor Roll. HARPER, GERTHA LEU, Argonia Dietetics Templin Hall, secretary; Junior Inter-dorm, president: Inter- dorm; AWS House, secretary; Jay Janes; Kappa Phi, presi- dent. HARRIS, KENNETH ARLEN, Kansas City, Mo. Geological Eng. Triangle, vice president; Pachacamac: KuKu: Geology Club; Hawkwatch; NROTC rifle and pistol teams. HARRIS. PATRICIA JANE, Marion Art Education Delta Gamma; YWCA; Art Education Club: AWS summer counselor; Young Democrats: Stateswomen ' s Club, vice presi- dent. KARTELL, JUNE DE VALL, Kansas City, Mo. General Bus. Delta Gamma; Phi Chi Theta, treasurer. HARTELL, WILLIAM KEITH, Plattsburg, Mo. Elec. Engineering Delta Tau Delta, president: Tau Beta Pi, secretary; Sigma Tau; Eta Kappa Nu, president; Morse scholarship. HARTMAN, EMILY Lou, Kansas City, Mo. Bacteriology Bacteriology Club. HARVEY, WAYNE LEROY, Neodesha Bacteriology Bacteriology Club. HAURY, MARY LEE, Altamont Voice Alpha Phi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Sigma Alpha Iota, secretary; A Cappella; Chorale. HAWES, WILLIAM G., Wakefield Pharmacy Sigma Phi Epsilon; APhA; A Cappella; Band; Phi Mu Alpha; YMCA. HAWKINS, DOLORES F., Cabool, Mo. Occupational Therapy Alpha Phi, vice president; Delta Phi Delta; OT Club. HEBERLING. DARLENE JEAN, Topeka Home Economics Delta Delta Delta: University Theater. HEINY, ROSEMARY. Goodland Sociology Alpha Phi, secretary; Rifle Team; Sociology Club; SUA; YWCA; Chorus. HELMREICH, Louis PARKER, Overland Park Accounting Lambda Chi Alpha, treasurer: IFC: ASC; YMCA: Young Republicans; Pachacamac; SUA; Campus Affairs Committee. HENRY. ROSALIE PAULINE, Penokee Bacteriology Templin Hall, president; Bacteriology Club; Kappa Phi. HENTZLER, MARILYN LOUISE, Topeka Elem. Education Kappa Kappa Gamma: Y ' WCA; WAA; Rifle Club. HERSH, JERRE FRANKLIN JR., Shawnee Law Phi Alpha Delta; Mountaineering Club. HERSHBERGER, JAMES W., Wichita History Sigma Chi; BSA: History Club; K-Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; SUA: HAJAS; Track; Arnold Air Society; Math Club; New- man Club; Editor, ROTC newspaper. HERSH EY, SUE LYN, Birmingham, Mich. Psychology Alpha Delta Pi; Psychology Club; Young Republicans; Rifle Club; YWCA. HESSE, JERRY ANN, Lawrence History Kappa Alpha Theta, secretary; AWS House, secretary, and Senate; SUA Board; ASC disciplinary committee; YWCA, cabinet; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Stateswomen ' s Club, vice presi- dent. HESSLING, PATRICIA ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Child Devel. Sigma Kappa, secretary; YWCA. HEYWOOD, MARTHA JANE, Kingman Personnel Management Gamma Phi Beta, treasurer; Mortar Board, president: Phi Chi Theta, president: Beta Gamma Sigma; Jay Janes, vice presi- dent; YWCA; Symphony Orchestra, secretary-treasurer; State- wide Activities, secretary; Rush Week counselor. HIGHFIELD, CONNIE LEE, Coffeyville Accounting HILBURN, JOHN D., JR., Kansas City, Mo. Elec. Engineering Triangle, secretary; IFC; Sigma Tau; Eta Kappa Nu, secre- tary; Engineering Council. HILLE, ELIZABETH CATHERINE, Wakeeney Latin American Area Alpha Omicron Pi, president; NOW; El Ateneo; Panhellenic. 366 HILLS, DAVID ALLEN, Manhattan English Alpha Tau Omega, president; YMCA, cabinet; IFC, vice president; Summerfield scholar; Owl Society; Sachem; ASC. HINDMAN, NANCY LEE, Kansas City, Mo. Piano Templin Hall, secretary: Sigma Alpha Iota. HOADLEY, WILLIAM D., Dodge City Medicine Phi Chi. HODGDEN, HUGH JERRY. Lawrence Geological Engineering Sigma Tau; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; KuKu; Arnold Air So- ciety; Geology Club. HOLM, KAROLYN MARIE, Western Springs, 111. English Dean ' s Honor Roll; Pi Lambda Theta; ISA; AWS House; English Club; Roger Williams Foundation, vice president; YWCA. HOLMBERG, ARTHUR JR., Shawnee Mechanical Engineering Pi Tau Sigma. HOLYFIELD, ANNA JEAN, Basehor Elementary Education Carruth Hall, vice president: AWS, vice president; Inter-dorm; Kappa Phi: Jay Janes; Freshman Dorm Counselor. HORNADAY. DIANE, Kansas City, Mo. Economics Gamma Phi Beta, treasurer: YWCA; SUA: Phi Alpha Theta; Boynton economics scholarship, co-winner; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HORTTOR, DONALD J., Centerville Economics Pearson Hall scholarship; ASC; KuKu, president; SRC, presi- dent; YMCA cabinet; Sachem; ISA Council; Arnold Air Society; FACTS; Campus Affairs Committee. HOUSE, EDWARD CARRINGER, Fort Worth, Texas Eng. Physics Jayhawk Co-op, president; Kappa Eta Kappa, president; Sigma Pi Sigma, president; Tau Beta Pi, treasurer; Sigma Tau; Glee Club, president: Sachem: AIEE: Engineering Council. HOVEY. ROBERT DEAN, Kansas City, Mo. Pre-Law Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi: Pachacamac; IFC. HOWARD, MARGUERITE LOUISE, Idaho Falls. Idaho Elem. Ed. Glee Club. HOYT, FRANCES LOUISE, Laramie, Wyo. Bacteriology Sigma Kappa; Bacteriology Club; Newman Club. HUCKABY, JEWELL J. JR., Nevada, Mo. Music Education Band; Glee Club. HUDKINS, DANA, Salina English Pi Beta Phi, secretary; SUA Board; College Daze director; Pi Lambda Theta, vice president. PICTURED AT LEFT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Handrahan, Hanson, Harms, Harper, K. Harris, P. Harris, C. Kartell, W. Hartell, Hartman, Harvey. MIDDLE ROW: Haury, Hawes, Hawkins, Heberling, Heiny, Helmreich, Henry, Hentzler, Hersh, Hershberger. BOTTOM ROW: Hershey, Hesse, Hessling, Heywood, Highfield, Hilburn, Hille, Hills, Hindman, Hoadley. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Hodgden, Holm, Holmberg. SECOND ROW: Holyfield, Hornaday, Horttor. THIRD ROW: House, Hovey, Howard. FOURTH ROW: Hoyt, Huckaby, Hudkins. i. HUGHES, DICK ROSCOE, Sabetha General Business Phi Delta Theta, rush chairman; International Relations Club. HUND, ESTHER ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Apparel Merchandising Watkins Hall scholarship, secretary; ISA; AWS House; Gamma Alpha Chi; Newman Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Spanish Music Education HUNGATE, ANNABEL, Kansas City. Mo. Spanish Club; YWCA. HUNT, MILLICENT, Conway Springs Alpha Phi; MENC: A Cappella: Chorus. HUNTLEY, WILLIAM H., Kansas City, Mo. Physical Education Sasnak. General Business HURLEY, RALPH M., Elkhart ASA. HUTCHERSON, JOY IRENE, Norton Home Economics Miller Hall scholarship, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll; YWCA cabinet; Wesley Foundation, president; Home Economics Club; Omicron Nu; Kappa Phi; ISA; Inter-dorm. HYNES, Jo ANNE MARIE, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology Theta Phi Alpha, secretary; Chemistry Club, secretary; New- man Club; SUA: French Club; Psychology Club. IMMENSCHUH, WILLIAM EUGENE, Salina Pharmacy Newman Club; APhA. IMMING, GERALD Louis, Topeka Architecture Tan Beta Pi; Tau Sigma Delta, president; AIA. JACKSON, ANNE GILBERT, Mission History Chi Omega, rush captain: Dean ' s Honor Roll; SUA; Phi Alpha Theta; Young Republicans; Panhellenic. JAQUITH, TERRY A., Topeka Pharmacy Delta Tau Delta, vice president; Kappa Psi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Tennis. JARRETT, SHIRLEY ANNE, Columbus language Arts Kappa Beta, secretary-treasurer; A Cappella; Band; AWS House; YWCA; Rifle Team; FACTS; Young Republicans; English Club. PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Hughes, Hund, Hungate. SECOND ROW: Hunt, Huntley, Hurley. THIRD ROW: Hutcherson, Hynes, Immenschuh. FOURTH ROW: Imming, Jackson, Jaquith. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Jarrett, L. Jenkins, M. Jenkins, Jensen, C. Johnson, W. Johnson, J. Jones, R. Jones, Joyce, Junod. MIDDLE ROW: Kagey, Kassebaum, Kauffman, Kaufman, Kearse, Keith, Kelley, Kellogg, Kendall, Kennedy. BOTTOM ROW: Kermashek, Kerr, King, Kirkpatrick, Klassen, Kline, Klusmire, Koppers, Kull, Kunz. 368 xJMBMta . f JENKINS, LYLE M., Holton Civil Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda; Engineering Council, president; Tail Beta Pi, secretary; KuKu, vice president; ASCE, secretary: Sigma Tau; Pachacamac; Scabbard and Blade; Socony- Vacuum scholarship. JENKINS, MARIAN JOAN, Cullison Music Alpha Phi; Statewide Activities, secretary; Glee Club. JENSEN, DON F., Emporia Drawing and Painting Phi Kappa, vice president; Owl Society; SUA; Newman Club; Pachacamac. JOHNSON, CHRISTINE MARIE, White City Language Arts Miller Hall scholarship, president; ASC, secretary: Inter-dorm; ISA; FACTS; SUA Board; Calendar Queen. JOHNSON, WILLIAM EUGENE, Caldwell General Business Stephenson Hall scholarship, president; BSA; Distinguished Military Student; Sigma Tau Delta. JONES, JACKIE. Linwood News-Editorial Daily Kansan, sports editor; Theta Sigma Phi, secretary; Press Club; WAA; ISA. JONES, ROBERT LEE, Topeka Architecture Sigma Phi Epsilon; Scarab, secretary; Scarab silver medal for design; AIA. JOYCE, BARBARA KATHLEEN, Kansas City, Mo. Bacteriology Bacteriology Club, secretary; Jay Janes; Newman Club. JUNOD, CHARLES NORMAN, Chanute Architectural Engineering Triangle; KuKu. KAGEY, CONSTANCE, Wichita Personnel Administration Kappa Alpha Theta, treasurer; NOW; Pi Sigma Alpha; AWS House; Dean ' s Honor Roll. KASSEBAUM, JOHN PHILIP, Kansas City, Mo. Political Science Phi Delta Theta, president; YMCA, vice president; IFC, secre- tary; Owl Society; Sachem: Forensic League; International Relations Club; Young Republicans; SUA, president; Campus Affairs Committee. KAUFFMAN, FRED M., Joplin, Mo. Accounting Phi Kappa Tau, treasurer; Alpha Kappa Psi. KAUFMAN, EDWARD WAYNE, Pretty Prairie Medicine Phi Chi. KEARSE, KATHERINE, Kansas City English-Social Studies Alpha Kappa Alpha. KEITH, BRADLEY F., Hiawatha Physical Education Lambda Chi Alpha, treasurer; Hawkwatch; Sasnak; Gymnastic team. KELLEY, MELVIN DEAN, McCune Physical Education K-Club, secretary; Sasnak; Basketball, captain. KELLOGG, DARRELL DEAN, Hiawatha Psychology KENDALL, MARILYN, Concordia Elementary Education Kappa Kappa Gamma, vice president; Pi Lambda Theta, secre- tary; Quack Club; WAA; Dean ' s Honor Club. KENNEDY, ROBERT JOHN, Omaha, Neb. Psychology Jayhawk Co-op, secretary; Hill Co-op, vice president; German Club; Psychology Club; International Club. KERMASHEK, EUGENE Louis, Lansing Pharmacy APhA, vice president. KERR, GERALD LEE, Topeka Pharmacy Delta Tau Delta. KING, RICHARD DEAN, Topeka Geological Engineering Don Henry Co-op; Table Tennis Club; Geology Club; ISA. KIRKPATRICK, LOY WESLEY, Council Grove Pre-Law Campus Chest chairman: ASC; Student Court; Sachem, treas- urer; Phi Alpha Delta; Kansas Law Review. KLASSEN, DICK N., Nickerson Finance Alpha Tau Omega, treasurer; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sachem: Rock Chalk Revue producer; College Daze producer; BSA; YMCA; Arnold Air Society; SUA. KLINE, WILLIAM PATTON, Kansas City, Mo. Economics KLUSMIRE, CHARLOTTE ROSE, Holton General Business Carruth Hall; German Club; Rifle Club; FBLA; ISA. KOPPERS, ELLEN LOUISE, Olathe Language Arts Theta Phi Alpha, president; Newman Club; Panhellenic; AWS House; English Club. KULL, RONALD, Topeka News-Editorial Tau Kappa Epsilon, vice president; Sigma Delta Chi: Sour Owl, editor; Bitter Bird; Daily Kansan, news editor; Pacha- camae, vice president; ASC; IFC; Band: AFROTC Band. KUNZ, WILLIAM FREDERICK, Lawrence Biophysics Sigma Pi Sigma; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Congregational Youth; HAJAS. LACEY, CAROLYN SUE, Topeka Music Education Sigma Kappa: Sigma Alpha Iota, rush chairman; Symphony Orchestra; MENC. LA GREE, RICHARD DUANE, Newton Marketing Delta Upsilon, secretary; Alpha Kappa Psi; Arnold Air So- ciety; Dean ' s Honor Roll. LAMBERT, ANNE B., Leavefiworth Drawing and Painting Pi Beta Phi, vice president: Delta Phi Delta: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Quack Club; WAA: Newman Club. LANCELOT, JOHN E., Wichita Law Phi Alpha Delta. LANDIS, CAROL JEAN, Wichita Occupational Therapy Alpha Chi Omega: SUA; WAA; Home EC Club; Delta Phi Delta; OT Club; YWCA. LANGSJOEN, JAMES PAUL, Weskan Latin American Area Spanish Club. LARKIN, BERT KENNETH. Kansas City, Mo. Chemical Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda: Tau Beta Pi: Sigma Tau, vice presi- dent: Phi Lambda Upsilon; Alpha Chi Sigma, treasurer; AIChE, vice president. LEACH, MARY AGNES, Wichita Child Development Alpha Chi Omega, vice president: A Cappella; Glee Club; Junior Panhellenic: Panhellenic; Newman Club, president; Stateswomen ' s Club; AWS House. LEADERBRAND, LEE CALKINS, Garden City Language Arts Alpha Phi; Campus Affairs Committee. LEHMBERG. STANFORD EUGENE. McPherson Humanities Alpha Kappa Lambda, secretary: Phi Mu Alpha, secretary- treasurer: Band; Orchestra: YMCA: Quill Club; Upstream; Young Republicans: Summerfield scholar; Phi Beta Kappa. LEWIS, JANNITH LOUISE, Kansas City Language Arts Jayhawk Co-op, president: Mortar Board: YWCA: NSA, presi- dent: SRC; ASC: Campus Affairs Committee: Alpha Kappa Alpha; Dean ' s Honor Roll. LIGGETT, WILSON W.. Topeka General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon, president. LINDEMUTH, FRANK LAURENCE, Topeka Industrial Management LIPPS, EUGENE HARVEY, Newton Law Delta Theta Phi. LISEC. FRANK S., Omaha, Neb. Advertisin g Alpha Delta Sigma, president; Kansan Board, secretary; Daily Kansan, business manager; Sour Owl: Senior Calendar. LLOYD, PATRICIA ANN, Hutchinson History Pi Beta Phi, treasurer; Mortar Board, treasurer: YWCA; AWS House, Senate; Phi Alpha Theta, secretary; History Club, treasurer: Senior class treasurer: Dean ' s Honor Roll. LOEVENGUTH, 0. PHILLIP JR., Wichita Personnel Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon, vice president. LONG, EARL DIXON, Kansas City Electrical Engineering Kappa Eta Kappa; AIEE. LONGSWORTH, ANNE LOUISE, Flushing, N. Y. Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa: Chemistry Club, president; La Confrerie; Mountaineering Club. LONGWOOD, MARGARET ALICE, Stafford Elementary Education Gamma Phi Beta; Glee Club; A Cappella; Chorus: SUA. LUPTON, ELLEN JANE, Lawrence Mathematics Gamma Phi Beta; Stateswomen ' s Club: Math Club; Rifle Club: Rush Week counselor: Dean ' s Honor Roll: SUA. LYON. SHIRLEY ANNE, Fredonia Anthropology Monchonsia Hall, president: AWS House: Inter-dorm; Kappa Phi; Wesley Foundation; ISA. MACGREGOR, NANCY ALICE, Medicine Lodge Art Education Delta Gamma, rush chairman: Art Ed. Club, president; Kappa Phi: YWCA: Young Republicans; Wesley Foundation; Pan- hellenic: NOW. MAC!VOR, KEITH A., Wichita Geological Engineering Phi Gamma Delta; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Engineering Council; Tau Beta Pi: Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Sachem; Sigma Tau; Owl Society; IFC, president: Jayhauiker. MACKEY, VIRGINIA, Mission Advertising Kappa Kappa Gamma, president; Mortar Board, vice president; Gamma Alpha Chi, president; Senior class vice president; Kansan Board; Panhellenic; YWCA, secretary; ASC: Fresh- man class secretary; Junior Panhellenic, president: Jayhawker; Dean ' s Honor Roll. MAMMEL, ALLEN DEAN, Hutchinson General Business Phi Delta Theta; SUA; Young Republicans; BSA: Interna- tional Relations Club; YMCA: Westminster. MANN, CHRISTIAN JOHN, Junction City Geological Engineering Jolliffe Hall scholarship, proctor; SUA Board, vice president: Tau Beta Pi: Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Sachem; Distinguished Military Student; Geology Club: SAME. MANUEL, JANICE NIELSEN, Wichita Sociology Gamma Phi Beta, president: Panhellenic, president: Jay Janes; Campus Affairs Committee: YWCA. MARSH. RUTH ANN, Emporia Education Pi Beta Phi: YWCA; SUA. MAR SHALL, BOBBIE E., Parsons General Business Alpha Kappa Lamhda, president. MARTIN, LLOYD PIERRE, Bartlesville, Okla. Architecture Pi Kappa Alpha; AIA. MARTINEZ, P. BILL, Kansas City, Mo. Personnel Management MATSUSHITA, SADAKO, Kansas City Zoology Miller Hall scholarship; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Zoology Club; Bacteriology Club: ISA. MAUS, CONSTANCE LORRAINE, Indianapolis, Ind. Radio-Speech Alpha Chi Omega, vice president: YWCA; Cheerleader; Jay Janes. McCALL, RICHARD R., Newton General Business Delta Upsilon, president; Alpha Kappa Psi; Arnold Air Society. McCLENNY, JUNE CHARLOTTE, Topeka Occupational Therapy Alpha Delta Pi: OT Club; Young Republicans. McCoNNELL, DORIS I., Lawrence Piano Gamma Phi Beta; Mu Phi Epsilon; Dean ' s Honor Roll; AWS House; Chorus. McDowELL, HANNA MARY, Concordia Bacteriology Delta Delta Delta: YWCA: Bacteriology Club. McEvERS, RICHARD MALCOLM, Kansas City, Mo. Economics BetaTheta Pi; IFC. McGii.LEY, JOHN WILLIAM, Kansas City, Mo. Speech Phi Gamma Delta; Jayhawker; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Forensic League. McGiNNis, PATRICIA JEAN, Arkansas City Sociology Alpha Phi; YWCA; SUA; Canterbury Club. McGuiRE, THOMAS HOOVER, Kansas City, Mo. Medicine Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Pi; KuKu; YMCA; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Owl Society. PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Martin, Martinez, Matsushita. SECOND ROW: Maus, McCall, McClenny. THIRD ROW: McConnell, McDowell, McEvers. FOURTH ROW: McGilley, McGinnis, McGuire. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT LEFT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Lacey, LaGree, Lambert, Lancelot, Landis, Langsjoen, Larkin, Leach, Leaderbrand, Lehmberg. MIDDLE ROW: Lewis, Liggett, Lindemuth, Lipps, Lisec, Lloyd, Loevenguth, Long, Longsworth, Longwood. BOTTOM ROW: Lupton, Lyon, MacGregor, Maclvor, Mackey, Mammel, Mann, Manuel, Marsh, Marshall. 371 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Mock, G. Moore, K. Moore, M. Moore, Morrison, Morrow, Mosher, Murray, Nalley, Neighbor. MIDDLE ROW: Nelligan, Nellis, C. Nel- son, H. Nelson, Nicholson, Nielsen, Nitz, Nold, Norris, North. BOTTOM ROW: Nulton, Ochs, Ogilvy, Oglesbee, Oldham, C. Oliver, T. Oliver, Olson, Orendorff, Owens. , K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED BELOW TOP ROW: Mclrvin, McNabney, McNeill. SECOND ROW: Meador, Meier, Meils. THIRD ROW: Metz, Michaels, Middlekauff. FOURTH ROW: Milan, D. Miller, W. Miller. MclRVi.N, Avis MARIE, Altoona Chemistry Kappa Phi: YWCA; ISA, secretary. McN. BNEY. PATRICIA SUE, Coffeyville Speech and Drama Alpha Phi; KFKU Players; Young Republicans; Lab Theater Players. Mc EiLL, NEIL EDWARD. Topeka General Business Beta Theta Pi. MEADOR, MURRAY W., Independence Medicine Sigma Nu; Nu Sigma Nu. MEIER. ROBERT EDWARD, Kansas City, Mo. General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Delta Sigma Pi; YMCA. MEILS, Lois ANN. Cleanv ater Elementary Education Carruth Hall, president: Jay Janes: Rifle Club; SUA; Band. METZ. MARILYN LOUISE, Lawrence Merchandising Sigma Kappa: SUA. MICHAELS, JEAN LYNN, Kansas City, Mo. Physical Education Alpha Chi Omega, treasurer: Young Republicans; University Players: WAA, treasurer: YWCA: Sasnak. MIDDLEKAUFF, MARY EMMA, Hays Apparel Merchandising Delta Delta Delta, vice president: Panhellenic; Gamma Alpha Chi; Rifle Club; SUA. MILAN, JESSE, Kansas City Kappa Alpha Psi. MILLER, DOYLE RUSSEL, St. John Triangle; Sigma Tau; AIME. MILLER. WINIFRED IRENE, Eureka Physical Education Petroleum Engineering Music MOCK, NORMA JEAN, Hutchinson Elementary Education Kappa Alpha Theta; YWCA. MOORE, GORDON EUGENE. Kansas City Accounting Pi Kappa Alpha; Pershing Rifles; BSA; Distinguished Mili- tary Student. MOORE, KENNETH GEORGE. Kansas City, Mo. English Quill Club: Arnold Air Society. f MOORE, MARY BETH, Wichita Speech and Drama Sigma Kappa; Tau Sigma; Glee Club; University Players; National Collegiate Players. MORRISON, JANET SIMPSON, Great Bend English Chi Omega, president; Young Republicans; YWCA; Pan- hellenic; English Club; SUA; Archery Club. MORROW, DUANE CLAY, Lawrence Law Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Delta Phi; President Second-year Law Class; National Moot Court competition; Law Review. Fresh- man, Junior, Senior Honors; Campus Problems Speaking Contest. MOSHER, DON THURSTON. Plainville Medicine Phi Kappa Sigma; Phi Beta Pi; Dean ' s Honor Roll. MURRAY, WARREN ALLEN, Winfield Engineering Physics Kappa Eta Kappa; Oread Hall, secretary; Tau Beta Pi: Sigma Pi Sigma, treasurer; AIEE; IRE. NALLEY, VIRGINIA MAE, Kansas City, Mo. History Delta Gamma; YWCA; SUA; History Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. NEIGHBOR, NANCY JANE, Hutchinson Occupational Therapy Kappa Alpha Theta, vice president; OT Club; Stateswomen ' s Club. NELLIGAN, KATY JANE, Halstead Music Education Delta Delta Delta; Westminster; Mu Phi Epsilon, president; MENC, president; Glee Club; Band; Chorus; A Cappella; Light Opera Guild. NELLIS, JAMES SCOTT, Topeka Marketing Phi Gamma Delta, president. NELSON, CLARA LOUISE, Lawrence Sociology Delta Delta Delta; WAA; Home EC Club; Sociology Club, vice president. NELSON, NANETTE ARNHOLD, St. Joseph, Mo. Sociology Alpha Chi Omega; AWS House. NICHOLSON, ROBERT GALEN, Clifton Pharmacy NIELSEN, DONALD EDWIN, Overland Park A ' ens-Editorial Phi Kappa Tau; Press Club, president: Seahawk, editor; Daily Kansan, assistant managing editor; Kansnn Board. NITZ, JIM C., Troy Marketing Delta Upsilon; Young Republicans; Glee Club; BSA; SUA. NOLD, ROBERT LEWIS, St. Joseph, Mo. News-Editorial Sigma Delta Chi; Daily Kansan. assistant managing editor. NORRIS, FRANK JR., Raytown, Mo. General Business NORTH, KATHRYN JANE, Kansas City, Mo. Sociology Alpha Phi; YWCA; Young Republicans; WAA. NULTON, WILLIAM C., Pittsburg Economics Beta Theta Pi: Summerfield scholar; Boynton award in eco- nomics; Delta Sigma Rho; Sachem. OCHS, DONALD L., Russell Marketing Kappa Sigma, president. OGILVY, JILL, Eureka Clothing and Textiles Chi Omega; Wesley Foundation cabinet: Jay Janes: French Club; Home EC Club cabinet: International Relations Club; SUA; Kappa Phi; Young Republicans. OGLESBEE, DWIGHT CONLAN, Lawrence Geological Engineering ISA; YMCA cabinet; Geology Club; FACTS; Young Demo- crats; AIME; AAPG; Band; IAS; Track. OLDHAM, WILLIAM EDWARD, Kansas City Music Education Phi Mu Alpha, president: Light Opera Guild, president: A Cap- pella; Chorus; Chorale; Phi Delta Kappa; MENC; KSMA. OLIVER, CAROLYN FRANCES, Topeka Philosophy Sigma Kappa: Phi Beta Kappa: Mortar Board; La Confrerie: A Cappella; University Players; KFKU Players: AWS House. OLIVER, THOMAS W., Topeka Theta Tau; KuKu. Civil Engineering OLSON, JOHN E., Dwight Medicine Phi Kappa Sigma: Wesley Foundation: Phi Beta Pi, rush chairman; KuKu: Student AM A: Dean ' s Honor Roll. ORENDORFF, BARBARA JEAN, Salina Language Arts Alpha Phi: KFKU Players: Junior Panhellenic; Alpha Psi Omega; Young Republicans: Lab Theater Players. OWENS, WILLIAM DEAN, Topeka Sigma Chi, president: Alpha Kappa KuKu. General Business Psi; BSA, president; 373 PACE, ROBERT JESSE, Kansas City General Business Chorus. PARK, ALBERT LAWRENCE, Lawrence Pharmacy Alpha Kappa Lambda, secretary: Distinguished Military Stu- dent; Rho Chi; APhA; KuKu; Dean ' s Honor Roll. PARKERSON, JEANNINE MAYE, Junction City Mathematics Hopkins Hall, president: Foster Hall, secretary; Jay Janes; YWCA: Inter-dorm; FBLA, vice president. PENFOLD, MARY Lot, Kansas City, Mo. Elementary Education Chi Omega; YWCA: Home EC Club; SUA; Young Re- publicans; Junior Panhellenic. PENNY, Lois, Lawrence Occupational Therapy OT Club: Kappa Beta, president; KUDF, vice president: Jay Janes. PERKINS, SAM GENE, Olathe General Business Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi, secretary; University Players; SUA; BSA; K-Club; Swimming team, co-captain. PESCHKA, THOMAS ALAN, Great Bend General Business Phi Delta Theta; Young Republicans; International Relations Club; HAJAS; Arnold Air Society. PETERSON, MARLENE RUTH, Emporia Art Education Foster Hall, president: Delta Phi Delta, secretary; Art Ed. Club; WAA; Pi Lambda Theta; SUA. PHELPS, DOROTHY WATSON, Lawrence Art Education Sigma Kappa; YWCA; Art Ed. Club: Theta Epsilon. PHILLIPS, SCOTT, Lawrence Geological Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon; Geology Club; SUA; Sigma Tau: Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Engineering Council; Dean ' s Honor Roll. PINKNEY, NANCY ANN, Ford Home Economics Corbin Hall, secretary: Home EC Club, president; Omicron Nu; ISA; Junior Inter-dorm; Dean ' s Honor Roll. PITTMAN, WILLIAM H., Independence Pharmacy APhA: Kappa Psi; ISA; FACTS; YMCA; SUA. PORTER, DONALD E., Beloit Marketing Delta Upsilon, vice president; Statewide Activities, president; Young Republicans; Band; Y-Jayhawker, K-Union, editor; SAM, chairman. PORTER. JOHN SEAMAN, Salina Geological Engineering Alpha Tau Omega, vice president: Geology Club; Sigma Gam- ma Epsilon, vice president ; Tau Beta Pi. PORTER, JUNE ARLENE, Beloit Physical Education Alpha Delta Pi, secretary: Sasnak: WAA, vice president; Quack Club, president: AWS Summer Counselor: Kappa Phi, secre- tary; Glee Club. POWELL, C. RICHARD, Council Grove Psychology PRICE. ARLENE WHITE. Lawrence Occupational Therapy Miller Hall scholarship: Dean ' s Honor Roll: Delta Phi Delta; Quill Club: ISA. PULLIAM, JOE ROBERT, Osawatomie Economics Kappa Sigma. PULLIAM, ROBERT RAYMOND JR.. Coffeyville Social Studies RAINES. BEN ALFRED. Hickman Mills, Mo. Chemistry KUCF; A Cappella: Glee Club. RANDALL, RICHARD D.. Towanda Law Kappa Sigma: Phi Delta Phi, treasurer; vice president, 3rd year law class. RAWLINE, VIRGIE KATHERINE. Gypsum Art Education Miller Hall scholarship: Art Ed. Club, vice president; Pi Lambda Theta: Delta Phi Delta, treasurer; ISA; YWCA; Dean ' s Honor Roll. REED, CORNELIUS, Muskogee, Okla. Social Work Kappa Alpha Psi: Quill Club: Sociology Club. REED, MARLYN SUE, Lamed Commercial Art Delta Delta Delta; Gamma Alpha Chi, vice president. REIDA, VADA LORRAINE. Rago Home Economics Home EC Club. RENNER, GERALD EUGENE, Concordia News-Editorial Sigma Delta Chi, treasurer; Kansan Board; Daily Kansan, managing editor; ISA. RICHARDSON, EDWIN L., Lawrence Aeronautical Engineering Tau Beta Pi, vice president; Sigma Tau: Tau Omega, presi- dent; IAS, vice chairman; Engineering Council. RICKEL, WALTER LEO, Arkansas City Pharmacy Kappa Sigma; Kappa Psi; Pachacamac, president; IFC, presi- dent; APhA; Directory business manager; Dean ' s Honor Roll; YMCA; Young Republicans: SUA. 374 PICTURED AT LEFT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Pace, Park, Parkerson, Penfold, Penny, Perkins, Peschka, Peter- son, Phelps, Phillips. MIDDLE ROW: Pinkney, Pittman, D. Porter, J. Porter, June Porter, Powell, Price, J. Pulliam, R. Pulliam, Raines. BOTTOM ROW: Randall, Rawline, C. Reed, M. Reed, Reida, Renner, Richardson, Rickel, Riederer, Riggs. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED BELOW TOP ROW: Riling, Ringler, Roberts. SECOND ROW: Robertson, Robinson, Roenbaugh. THIRD ROW: Rogers, Roop, Roshong. FOURTH ROW: Ross, Roth, Rubins. RIEDERER, JOHN EDWARD, Holton Interior Design Phi Gamma Delta; Track team, captain: K-Club, vice presi- dent: Interior Design Club, president; YMCA; Young Re- publicans. Rices, HAROLD RICHARD, Wichita Law Phi Alpha Delta; Law Review; Kansas Bar Journal. RILING. JOHN J. JR., Lawrence Architecture RINGLER. MARILYN, Lawrence Home Economics Pi Beta Phi, secretary; Quack Club; Tau Sigma, treasurer; Home EC Club; Omicron Nu; WAA; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. ROBERTS. MARILYN OLIVE, Sabetha Elementary Education Chorus; YWCA; Junior Panhellenic. ROBERTSON. ROGER ALLEN, Troy Accounting Delta Upsilon; BSA; Young Republicans. ROBINSON, MARY HELEN, Garden City Bacteriology Miller Hall scholarship; YWCA; Bacteriology Club; Moun- taineering Club. ROENBAUGH, DORIS, Fellsburg Interior Design Delta Gamma; Interior Design Club, secretary; Phi Beta. ROGERS. EILEEN, Oakley Secretarial Training Phi Chi Theta, vice president; Kappa Phi; FBLA. ROOP, SUZANNE JANE, Wichita Physical Therapy Delta Gamma, vice president; Jay Janes; Quack Club; PT Club, president. ROSHONG, RICHARD, Oberlin History Acacia; Arnold Air Society; Pershing Rifles, vice president; History Club. Ross, LEAH HELEN, Washington, D. C. English Alpha Phi, president: Chorale; A Cappella; English Club; University Players; Wesley Foundation cabinet; KFKU Play- ers, secretary; Campus Affairs Committee; AWS House; Junior Class secretary. ROTH, RONALD CARL, Kansas City, Mo. Industrial Management Stephenson Hall scholarship, president; Delta Sigma Pi, chan- cellor. RUBINS, ALFRED E., Oklahoma City, Okla. Architecture PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: Ruehlen, Rushfelt, Russell. SECOND ROW: Salisbury, Samson, Scheer. THIRD ROW: Scheideman, Scheloski, Scheuerman. FOURTH ROW: Schindling, Schlundt, Schmidt. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Schnierle, Schwader, N. Scott, P. Scott, Sebesta, Shanahan, Shaw, Shrewsbury, Shultz, Shumaker. MIDDLE ROW: Shumway, Simmons, D. Simpson, G. Simpson, K. Simpson, Sinclair, Slankard, A. Smith, C. Smith, D. Smith. BOTTOM ROW: T. Smith, W. Smith, Snook, Sowers, Spaulding, Spencer, Spivey, Springer, Stamm, Stanfill. 376 RUEHLEN, MARVIN L., Larned Pharmacy RUSHFELT. JERRY LLOYD, Lawrence English Phi Kappa Tau, president; Glee Club: KFKU Players. RUSSELL. KAY, Wichita Sociology Kappa Alpha Theta, secretary: Sociology Club, president; Dean ' s Honor Roll: History Club. SALISBURY, JOAN, Kansas City, Mo. Elementary Education Locksley Hall. SAMSON. FRANCES E., Ludell Occupational Therapy OT Club. SCHEER. JEANNE LAVERNE, White Cloud Economics KRUW: A Cappella; YWCA; SUA. SCHEIDEMAN, DOUGLAS BLAINE, Ellis Industrial Management Phi Delta Theta, president; KuKu: BSA; Arnold Air Society. SCHELOSKI, DONALD LEE, Kansas City General Business SCHEUERMAN, ROSEMARY, Wichita Elementary Education Watkins Hall scholarship; Wesley Foundation cabinet: SRC, vice president; Kappa Phi: Inter-dorm, president; YWCA; ISA; FACTS; WAA; Delta Phi Alpha; Dean ' s Honor Roll. SCHINDLING, JANE MARIE, Leavenworth Physical Education Alpha Delta Pi; Quack Club: WAA: Sasnak; Newman Club; Young Republicans. SCHLUNDT, HOWARD A., LaPorte. Ind. General Business Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; BSA. SCHMIDT, WILBUR WILLIAM, McLouth General Business Pi Kappa Alpha, vice president: ASC; IFC; KuKu. SCHNIERLE, ANNELIESE LUISE, Shawnee Secretarial Training Sigma Kappa, president; Panhellenic; FBLA; Stateswomen ' s Club: Phi Chi Theta: AWS House, Summer Counselor. SCHWADER, RITA, St. Joseph, Mo. Sociology Alpha Chi Omega: Young Republicans; University Players; Chorus: Sociology Club. SCOTT, NANCY SUE, Kansas City, Mo. Apparel Merchandising Alpha Chi Omega, secretary; Home EC Club; Gamma Alpha Chi; Canterbury Club; SUA; Young Republicans. SCOTT, PHYLLIS BLAKESLEE, Kansas City, Mo. Commercial Art Pi Beta Phi; Delta Phi Delta, treasurer: Quack Club; YWCA; SUA; WAA. SEBESTA, SAMMY LEATON. Brookville English Quill Club, president; KFKU Players, treasurer; University Players; English Club; Phi Mu Alpha; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Sachem. SHANAHAN, CHARLES JOSEPH, Overland Park Physical Education Pi Kappa Alpha. SHAW, MARLENE ELAINE, Wakeeney Business Education Monchonsia Hall, president; Kappa Phi; Stateswomen ' s Club; FACTS; Young Republicans; FBLA, secretary; Wesley Foun- dation; ISA. SHREWSBURY, CHARLES LESLIE JR., San Antonio, Texas Personnel Management Lambda Chi Alpha, vice president; Alpha Phi Omega. SHULTZ, JOSEPH STANLEY, Kansas City, Mo. Architectural Engineering Alpha Epsilon Pi, president; IFC; AIA. SHUMAKER, WILBUR ALLEN, Alma Law Mu Epsilon Nu, president; Wesley Foundation cabinet; Young Democrats; SAME; Delta Theta Phi; YMCA. SHUMWAY, MILTON EUGENE, Sterling General Business Tau Kappa Epsilon; Chemistry Club; Young Republicans; BSA. SIMMONS, OTIS DAVIS, Kansas City Music Education Alpha Phi Alpha, president; Phi Delta Kappa; ASC; Forensic League; Winner All-University Oratorical contest. SIMPSON, DAMON GEORGE, Spring Hill Mechanical Engineering Phi Kappa Psi, vice president; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma, vice president; Young Republicans; ASME; Sachem; SUA, vice pres ident; Kansas Engineer. SIMPSON, GLORIA KAY, Jennings Music Education Band; A Cappella; Kappa Phi; Sigma Alpha Iota; Wesley Foundation cabinet; Rifle Club; MENC; YWCA. SIMPSON, KENNETH JAMES, Pratt Medicine Delta Chi, secretary; Phi Chi, president. SINCLAIR, RICHARD GLENN II, Kansas City, Mo. Chemistry SLANKARD, JAMES EDWARD, Pittsburg Bacteriology ISA; Bacteriology Club. SMITH, ANNETTE J., Lawrence Elementary Education Jay Janes; Roger Williams Fellowship, president; SRC, secre- tary; Theta Epsilon, president. SMITH, CARROLL MARSHALL, Hutchinson Pharmacy Sterling-Oliver Hall scholarship; APhA; A Cappella; Band; Roger Williams Fellowship, president; Rho Chi, secretary- treasurer; Dean ' s Honor Roll; SRC; YMCA; FACTS. SMITH. DEAN EDWARDS. Topeka Physical Education Phi Gamma Delta: Baseball: Basketball; K-Club; Sasnak. SMITH, THOMAS HARRY. Horton Political Science Sigma Pi; German Club; Roger Williams Fellowship. SMITH. WILLIAM Ross. Hiawatha General Business Lambda Chi Alpha: Band; YMCA. SNOOK, ORRIE McVEY, Fort Riley Bacteriology Pi Kappa Alpha; KuKu. SOWERS, JOHN W., Wichita Economics SPAULDING, BARBARA SUE, Kansas City, Mo. English Alpha Omicron Pi: Gamma Alpha Chi; Forensic League; SUA; Junior Panhellenic. SPENCER, STANLEY RAYMOND, Bethesda, Md. Mechanical Engineering Tau Kappa Epsilon; ASME; SAME. SPIVEY, ELBERT DEAN, Lawrence Advertising Alpha Delta Sigma, president : Kansan Board, chairman ; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Band; Dally Kansan, business manager; Press Club; Calendar. SPRINGER, BOB GENE, Lawrence Jewelry and Silversmithing Alpha Rho Gamma, president; Arnold Air Society, treasurer. STAMM, WILLIS DUANE, Sedgwick Pharmacy Don Henry Co-op, vice president; Kappa Psi; APhA. STANFILL, WILLIAM E., Hutchinson News-Editorial Sigma Delta Chi. STANLEY, KENNETH E. JR., Arkansas City Medicine Acacia, president; Phi Chi; Dean ' s Honor Roll. STEINBERG, HAROLD BERNARD, Kansas City, Mo. Architectural Engineering Alpha Epsilon Pi. STEPHENS, CHARLES WILLIAM, Liberal Electrical Engineering Kappa Eta Kappa, secretary: Eta Kappa Nu, president; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Pi Sigma; AIEE; IRE, secretary; Senior Honors. STEWART, JAMES Mu.o, Wichita Petroleum Engineering Beta Theta Pi; Sachem; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Sigma Gamma Epsilon. STEWART, ROBERT BRUCE, Kansas City, Mo. News-Editorial Battenfeld Hall scholarship, proctor; Sigma Delta Chi, vice president; Daily Kansan, editor-in-chief; Sachem; Press Club; FACTS; Sour Owl; Jay hawker; Kansan Board. STICKELBER, MERLIN CRONIN, Kansas City, Mo. History Phi Kappa Psi. STILES, JOSEPH EDWIN, Mission Drawing and Painting Delta Phi Delta; Chi Chi Chi, secretary; Symphony Orchestra; Kansas Painters exhibition, 1st prize. STORER, ADA JOAN, Lawrence Drawing and Painting Delta Phi Delta, vice president; ISA; SRC; Dean ' s Honor Roll. STORER, ESTHER JEAN, Lawrence Psychology German Club, president; Psychology Club, president; ISA; Hillel. STORY, GEORGIA REECE, Wichita Child Development Miller Hall scholarship; Pi Lambda Theta, secretary; Omicron Nu; Kappa Phi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; FACTS; ISA. STOVER, DORENE M. SCHULER, Topeka Sociology Sociology Club. STOVER, HAROLD M., Topeka Architecture AIA: Scarab. STRAIN, SHIRLEY ANN, Ottawa Speech and Drama Chi Omega, rush chairman: Young Republicans; Tau Sigma, president; Jay Janes; YWCA; Panhellenic; University Play- ers; National Collegiate Players. STRUZZO, JOSEPH, Muncie Chemistry Stephenson Hall scholarship; Newman Club; ISA. STUTZ, BOB, Kansas City Chemistry SUSKE, JOE E., Coffeyville General Business BSA. General Business SUTTON, JACK R., Salina Sigma Chi; BSA. SWAIN, MARSHALL M., Winner, S. D. Bacteriology Battenfeld Hall scholarship; ISA; John Battenfeld award; Bacteriology Club. SWARTZ, MARILYN JOYCE, Junction City Interior Design Alpha Phi, rush chairman: YWCA cabinet; Interior Design Club, president; SUA; Dean ' s Honor Roll. SWISHER, ROBERT CHALMERS. Mission Beta Theta Pi. Pre-Med TAGGART, NANCY CORNELIA, Topeka Occupational Therapy Alpha Delta Pi; OT Club, vice president. TAN.NAHILL, RALPH ELLSWORTH, Ellinwood Accounting Alpha Kappa Lambda, secretary; Dean ' s Honor Roll: Delta Sigma Pi, secretary; Young Republicans; BSA; YMCA; Beta Gamma Sigma. TARR. OLIVER FRANK. Coldwater Accounting Beta Gamma; Alpha Kappa Psi; BSA; ISA; Chess Club, sec- retary; Dean ' s Honor Roll. TAYLOR, ARLEE ROCENA, Lawrence French Delta Sigma Theta: La Cercle Francaise; La Confrerie; Dean ' s Honor Roll. TAYLOR, CHARLES MILTON, St. Louis Bacteriology Kappa Alpha Psi, treasurer; Gamma Delta, treasurer. TAYLOR, DOT E., Topeka News-Editorial Sigma Kappa; YWCA, president; Mortar Board; Theta Sigma Phi; K-Union, editor; Westminster; WAA. TAYLOR, JAMES EDWARD JR., Sharon Springs Accounting Acacia, secretary; KuKu, treasurer. TERFLINGER, CURTIS D., Kansas City Law Chi Chi Chi, president; Delta Theta Phi; Young Republicans; KuKu; Wesley Foundation; Dean ' s Honor Roll. THIES, BETTY JANE, Kansas City Music Education Alpha Omicron Pi, rush captain; Sigma Alpha Iota, vice presi- dent; Westminster; Glee Club; Chorus; Light Opera Guild; University Players. THOMAS, DAVID LLOYD, Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Sigma Tau; ASTE; ASME. THOMAS, RONALD 0., Baxter Springs Economics Kappa Sigma; YMCA; Dean ' s Honor Roll. THOMPSON, D. FREDRIC, Mission Philosophy Phi Delta Theta. THOMPSON, MAX ARTHUR, Mound Valley News-Editorial Sigma Delta Chi; ISA; Daily Kansan, assistant managing edi- tor; Sour Owl. THOMPSON, SUZANNE MARIE, Kansas City Bacteriology Alpha Kappa Alpha, president; Jay Janes. THOMSON, SHIRLEY ANN, Irving Physical Education Watkins Hall scholarship; ASC; FACTS, secretary; ISA; Jay Janes: Westminster; Inter-dorm; Pi Lambda Theta; Sasnak; Tau Sigma; WAA; Dean ' s Honor Roll. TINK, JOHN H., Lawrence Petroleum Engineering TIPTON. GEORGIA BRENNER, Kansas City, Mo. Elementary Education Kappa Alpha Theta; A Cappella; Canterbury Club; Young Republicans. TKACH, STEPHEN, Perth Amboy, N. J. Chemistry Phi Kappa; Newman Club; Russian Club; Psychology Club. TOBLER, WILLIAM JENNINGS JR., Kansas City, Mo. Marketing TODD, MARY KATHRYN, Tulsa, Okla. Elementary Education Chi Omega; YWCA; Young Republicans. TOWNSEND, SHIRLEY NELL, Linwood Chemistry Watkins Hall scholarship; Westminster; Chemistry Club; Ger- man Club. TUCKER. BARBARA LEE, Wichita Child Development Delta Delta Delta; AWS House; SUA; Home EC Club; Young Democrats; Rush Week counselor. PICTURED ABOVE TOP ROW: R. Thomas, D. Thompson, M. Thompson. SECOND ROW: S. Thompson, Thomson, Tink. THIRD ROW: Tipton, Tkach, Tobler. FOURTH ROW: Todd, Townsend, Tucker. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED AT LEFT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Stanley, Steinberg, Stephens, J. Stewart, R. Stewart, Stickelber, Stiles, A. Storer, E. Storer, Story. MIDDLE ROW: D. Stover, H. Stover, Strain, Struzzo, Stutz, Suske, Sutton, Swain, Swartz, Swisher. BOTTOM ROW: Taggart, Tannahill, Tarr, A. Taylor, C. Taylor, D. Taylor, J. Taylor, Terflinger, Thies, D. Thomas. 379 PICTURED AT RIGHT, ACROSS TOP ROW: Waddell, Wade, Waggener, Wagner, Wakefield, Walker, Water- son, Wegner, Weitzner, Welsh. MIDDLE ROW: Weltmer, West, Westerhaus, B. White, C. White, Whittier, Widick, Wigington, Wilhelm, Wilkinson. BOT- TOM ROW: C. Williams, P. Williams, A. Wilson, B. Wilson, D. Wilson, J. Wilson, R. Wilson, Wimsatt, Winer, Witmer. K U CLASS OF 1953 PICTURED BELOW TOP ROW: Turner, Twente, Unrein. SECOND ROW: A. Unruh, H. Unruh, 0. Unruh. THIRD ROW: Valentine, Vance, VanderLippe. FOURTH ROW: Vaughan, Vesper, Volzke. TURNER, A. JOA , Freeport, 111. Social Work Alpha Delta Pi; Serial Work Club, treasurer; YWCA. TWENTE, DOROTHY, Webster Groves, Mo. Music Education Alpha Phi; YWCA; Orchestra; Chorus; SUA; Campus Affairs Committee. UNREIN, MARGUERITE C., Hays Occupational Therapy Theta Phi Alpha; Newman Club, secretary ; OT Club. UNRUH, ARCHIE DEAN, Clay Center Physical Education Kappa Sigma: K-Club, secretary; Football; Swimming: Sasnak. UNRUH, HARLAN DEAN, Mulvane Pharmacy Don Henry Co-op; Kappa Psi; Rho Chi; APhA. UNRUH, OTTO DUANE. Clay Center Physical Education Kappa Sigma, vice president; K-Club, president; Sasnak: Foot- ball. VALENTINE, MAX EDWARD. Bedford, Iowa Political Science Glee Club, president: Wesley Foundation cabinet; SRC, treas- urer: Dean ' s Honor Roll. VANCE. PATRICIA ANN, Kansas City. Mo. Advertising, Delta Delta Delta: Daily Kansan. circulation manager: Gamma Alpha Chi, secretary; Press Club: Kansan Board, secretary. VANDERLIPPE, JOHN M., Leawood Law Kappa Sigma: Phi Delta Phi. VAUGHAN, RODGER DALE, Protection Music Theory Pearson Hall scholarship; Phi Mu Alpha; College Daze com- poser: Band, president. VESPER, Do . Hill City ASME; ASTE; Dean ' s Honor Roll. VOLZKE, NITA LOUISE, Waco, Neb. OT Club: YWCA; Gamma Delta. Mechanical Engineering Occupational Therapy WADDELL, JEAN ELISABETH, Bonner Springs Psychology Debate; Inter-dorm; Campus Affairs Committee; Young Re- publicans; Psychology Club; Psi Chi. WADE, DENNI DIANE, Mission Latin American Area Alpha Delta Pi, secretary: El Ateneo, president; Sigma Delta Pi, treasurer: Chorus; University Players. WAGGENER, STERLING SADLER, Atchison Law traJHta WAGNER, IRMA CLAIRE, Cambridge, Ohio Occupational Therapy OT Club; Newman Club. WAKEFIELD, GORDON LEE, Lawrence History IVCF, vice president. WALKER, DIANE, Kansas City, Mo. English Kappa Kappa Gamma, secretary; Quack Club, president; WAA; SUA; Chorus; YWCA; Phi Chi Theta; Young Re- publicans. WATERSON, LoREE, Dighton Secretarial Training FBLA, president; Inter-dorm, secretary-treasurer; Square Dance Club, secretary-treasurer; BSA; ISA: Dean ' s Honor Roll. WECNER, KENNETH WALTER, Lawrence Language Arts Gamma Delta; Arnold Air Society. WEITZNER, BERNARD, Veracruz, Mexico Petroleum Engineering Alpha Epsilon Pi, vice president; International Club; Spanish Club; Hillel, treasurer. WELSH, JOHN S., Kansas City Chemistry Pi Kappa Alpha; Swimming; K-Club; SUA; University Play- ers; Directory, business manager. WELTMER, LOREN MARMADUKE, Mankato Law Delta Upsilon; Phi Delta Phi; Alpha Phi Omega; Band. WEST, EDITH ALLANE, Kansas City Music Education Sigma Kappa; Light Opera Guild; YWCA; A Cappella; Glee Club; Chorus. WESTERHAUS, HARRY EUGENE, Hutchinson Latin American Area Sigma Chi; El Ateneo; Newman Club. WHITE, BARBARA LENORE, Indianapolis, Ind. Occupational Therapy Alpha Omicron Pi; OT Club; SUA. WHITE, CHAUNCEY DEPHEW, Kansas City Sociology YMCA, treasurer; Sociology Club. WHITTIER, ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish Kappa Alpha Theta: YWCA; SUA; Junior Panhellenic. WIDICK, FRITZ KESSLER, Atchison Engineering Physics Phi Gamma Delta; Sigma Pi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi: Sigma Tau: Pachacamac; Hawkwatch. WIGINGTON, RONALD L., Topeka Engineering Physics Summerfield scholar; Sigma Xi; Tau Beta Pi, president; Sigma Tau; Sigma Pi Sigma, vice president; Kansas Engineer, editor; Sachem; Sigma Tau freshman award: Band: Phi Mu Alpha. WILHELM, PAUL EDWARD, Great Bend Chemical Engineering Gamma Delta; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma, secretary; AIChE, president; Phi Lambda Upsilon. WILKINSON, JOHN ERCY, Cherryvale Accounting Stephenson Hall scholarship, treasurer; Delta Sigma Pi; KuKu. WILLIAMS, CLYDE ALLEN, Olathe Chemical Engineering Acacia; Alpha Chi Sigma; NROTC scholarship; Hawk watch; AIChE. WILLIAMS, PATRICIA ANNE, Lawrence Language Arts Delta Gamma, secretary; SUA: YWCA; English Club; Young Republicans. WILSON, ALEXANDER H., Lawrence Lau Phi Alpha Delta. WILSON, BILLY BURTON, Olathe Electrical Engineering AIEE; Sigma Tau; Eta Kappa Nu. WILSON, DANNY E. DAVIS, Wichita Architectural Engineering Triangle, president; Tau Beta Pi; Tau Sigma Delta; Sigma Tau; Lorentz Schmidt award; AIA; Dean ' s Honor Roll. WILSON, JAMES ROBERT, Meade Law WILSON, RICHARD EUGENE, Mound City Advertising Alpha Delta Sigma; Schott award; Newspaper Guild award: Kansan Board: Dean ' s Honor Roll. WIMSATT, JOSEPH PATRICK, Kansas City, Mo. General Business Phi Kappa, president; IFC, president; ASC, treasurer; Pacha- camac; Newman Club; Union Operating Board. WINER, CLARENCE HERSCHEL, Kansas City, Mo. Entomology Alpha Epsilon Pi, president: IFPC: Entomology Club; Table Tennis Club; SUA. WITMER. JOHN JOSEPH, Phillipsburg Kappa Psi; APhA. Pharmacy 381 f WONG, DAVID Y. H., Hong Kong Aeronautical Engineering Tau Omega; Sigma Gamma Tau; IAS; ASTE; Chinese Stu- dent Club, president; Table Tennis Club; International Club. WOODSON, RILEY DONALD, Kansas City, Mo. Medicine Beta Theta Pi, president; Sachem, president; Owl Society; Nu Sigma Nu; K-Book, editor; Engineering Council; K.FKU An- nouncer; Dean ' s Honor Roll. WOOLPERT, FRANCES Jo ANN, Bethany, Okla. Secretarial Training WOOLPERT, KEITH DELLAN, Topeka Zoology YOUNG, KEITH S., Washington Accounting Delta Chi, secretary. ZANNETOS, ZENON S., Famagusta, Cyprus Mathematics Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Pershing Rifles: Arnold Air Society. ZIMMERMAN, HELEN JANET, Wichita Bacteriology Delta Delta Delta; Bacteriology Club. JAYHAWKER INDEX Nancy Teed, Editor Anderson. Helen 47, 128, 1J3 ABBOTT, BOB 57. 155 Abbott. Karl 358 Abercrombic. Jack 58. 160 Achterberg, Connie 358 Ackerman. JoAnn 281 Ackermann. Ray 167 Ackerson, Sally 53 Adam. Jim 57. 152. 284 Adams, Nancy 55, 145 Adams, Phyllis 52, 281 Adams, Stan 279 Adams, Will 126, 271 Adamson, Cathy 51 Adamson, Lonnie 147 Ade. Carl 59 Agnos, Nichols 124, 165 Aikens. Emmanuel 154 Ainsworth, Ann 138, 267 Akcrs. Alan 61. 180 Akers. Clark 161 Alberts. Jerry 128. 190 Alexander, harle 42. 172 Alexander, Jim 60, 173 Alexander, Walker 175 Algie, Ann 54, 281, 331 Allen, Bill 158. 280 Allen. Forrest C. 64 Allen, Jim 172 Allen, Lucille 138 Allen, Margie 52, 341, 357 Allen, Martha 281 Allen, Ronnie 57, 155 Allen, William 58 Allison, Bob 59, 165 Allison, Margaret 142, 358 Allison, Pat 54, 281 Allison, Peggy 285 Allstrom, Marilyn 125. 281 Allvine, Jane 141. 331, 333 Alpers. Bob 157 Altman, Dick 154, 287 Ambler, Carl 163. 168, 282 Amend, James 274, 358 Ament, Arthur E. 176, 358 Ames, Kay 52, 356 Amos, William 58 Anderson, Barbara 52, 125, 134 Anderson. Bob 42. 156, 359 Anderson, Clark 61, 180, 274, 275 Anderson, Dana 57, 156 Anderson, Dave 271 Anderson, Dick 162, 174 Anderson, Don 161 358 Anderson, Neal 153. 283. 358 Anderson. Phil 172 Anderson. Richard 61, 359 Anderson, Wanda Jean 146, 359 Andreas. Warren 287 Andrews, Carolyn 54 Angcrsbach, Chrys 51. 125. 133 Anglund. Mary Ruth 52 Ankerholz. DeNean 132 Ankrom. Georgeann 138,265, 288. 358 Anschutz. Sue 53. 138 Arensberg, Theodore 274 Ariagno. Bob 61. 175. 283 Armentrout, Suzanne 133 Armstrong. AI 178. 276 Armstrong, Elrie 54 Armstrong. Hugh 172, 344 Armstrong. Jane 53. 137, 357 Armstrong, Jerry 160. 358 Armstrong. Lorrimer 157 Armstrong, Lyle 175 Arnold. A. C. 162 Arnold, Dick 168, 268 Arnold, Donna 136, 283 Arnold, Normon 147 Arnold. Richard 60 Arrowood, Paul 283 Arrowsmith. Peter 56. 128. 160 Arterburn, Chester 58. 158 Arterburn. Marvin 178 Asbell. Marianne 136 Asbury. Robert 155 Ash. Walter 43, 166. 344 Ashcraft. Jonell 136 Ashley. John 43. 166 Asmann. Bob 174, 356 Astle, Dick 152, 279 Atherton. Jack 154. 287, 358 Atkins, Rozanne 145 Atkinson. William 126, 161 Atteberry. Bob 169. 276 Atwood, Leonard 61, 180 Audas, Evelyn 147 Aungst. Don 174. 356 Aurell. Patricia 143, 358 Austin, Bob 277 Austin, Frank 161 Austin, Glen 61, 176 Austin. Jack 56, 160 Austin. Melba 146 Awnhalt, Francilc 52 Axe, Leonard 20 Axtell, Barbara 43, 50, 129, 269 Aylward, Pt 44, 128, 133, 284 B BABCOCK. BOB 57, 155 Bachus. Nelson 148. 164, 358 Backman, Dick 153. 279 Bagby, Susan 138 Baird Lee 157. 357 Baird Sue 125. 147 Baker Barbara 141, 269, 358 Baker Bert 58. 161 Baker David 171, 282 Baker Dick 60. 168, 280 Baker Gloria 139 Baker Roy 179 Baldwin, Diane 53, 138, 265 Balderson. Sandra 50, 130 Balding. Lois 53, 140 Ball, Fred 60 Ball, Gloria 52 Ball, John 172 Ball. Mahlon 173, 271, 274, 358 Ball, Maresc 278. 359 Ball. Robert 165, 282 Ball. Stanton 60, 173 Barber, Jim 147 Barker. John 168 Bare. Chester 164 Barker, Paul 58. 160 Barley, Jack 267, 344 Barling, Douglas 156, 279 Barlow, Lorean 359 Bi nes. Jeannot 137, 3! 6 Ba nes, Kenneth 58 B.i nes, Levi 162 B.i r, Harold 20 B.i B.i r, lack 166, 359 r, Margaret 134 B.i ret, Dean 180 Ba ron. Dan 172 B.i B.i ron. Jim 152 ron, Joyce 51 B.i Ba row, Jim 268 sby, Iris 43, 129 Bartlett, David 61, 180 279 Bartlett, Lynn 147 Bartholomex, John 61, 176 Barthlow, Paul 43, 128 Barton, Betty 141. 358 Bascom. Charles 1 54 Basgall, Virgil 61. 178 Bass. Jim 177, 279 Basye. Russell 159 Bateman. Barbara 52, 126 Bauerle. George 59, 171, 280 Bauersfeld. Cotty 130 Baute, Norma 54 Bavuso, Chuck 59 Baxter. Chuck 56 Bayliss. Jacqueline 146, 271 Beach. Phyllis 53 Beal. John 61. 175 Beal, Kermit 176 Bear, Wayne 178. 276 Beardslee. Karen 53. 124. 136. 356 Beardsless. Mike 57. 286 Bcardsley. Kenneth K.I Beauchamp, Glen 358 Beauchamp, Herb 178 Beaudry, Bob 57, 152 Beck, Cliff 180. 358 Beck. Denneth 148 Beck. Leonard 180 Beck. Wally 166. 344 Becker. Barbara 52, 134 Becker, Robert 161 Becker, Bob 282 Bedell. Margie 139 Beers. Barbara 139 Beers. Melba 54 Behrmann, Bill 162, 274, 275, 358 Beilharz. Dick 178. 276 Belden, Don 277 Bell. Beryl 55 Bell. Berys 145 Bell. David 180. 270 Bell. Eleanor 136. 267. 270 Bell. Fred 168, 172 Bell, Hugh 154 Bell, Lawrence 61. 175 Bell. Robert 358 Bello. Mary 147 Belzer, David 149, 163 Bender, Clarence 156 Benes. Zpenek 163 Benham, Alvin 150 Benham, Bob 61, 175 Benjaminov, Ben 149 Bennett, Martha 146 Bennett, Roy 58. 161, 287 Bennett, Shannon 58 Benscheidt. Charles 175 Benscheidt. Dona 54, 281 Benson, John 154 Benton, Dane 180 Beougher. Cleo 169 Bergen, Billie 52 Berglund. Jim 60, 168 Bergsten. Harold 150, 347 Berley. John 155 Bernard. Dewey 147 Berry. Betty 135. 284. 358 Berry. Suzanne 139. 269. 330 Bertrand. Marie-Claude 268 Besharat. Jalal 164 Bethany. Glenn 176, 355, 358 Bether, Charles 161 Bettin, Arnold 339 Betz. Mary 145. 278. 331 Beydler, William 358 Bibersteine, Bill 161 Bicking. Joe 280 Biegcrt, John 165 Bigelow, Bruce 155 Biggart, Melvin 153 Biggart. Virginia 55, 142 Biggs. Larry 61. 176 Bigham. William 60, 172 Bilderback, William 58, 161, 280 Billingsley, Betty 54 Billingsley, Jack 172 Bills, Richard 171, 268, 332, 359 Bingaman. Joan 135, 359 Binyon, Kernie 163 Birch. William 61. 174 Bird, Leo 279, 286 Bird. Mary Lou 52. 134 Birk, Raymond 150. 283 Birkenbuel, Wally 154, 268, 356 Birkhead. Jim 61. 180, 275 Birzer. Norma 144, 359 Bisch, Phyllis 287 Bishop, Bob 60, 168 Bishop, Don 59, 166, 280 Bitner, Norman 61, 175 Bixler, Bud 174 Black, Margaret 138, 278, 28 J Black, Virginia 51, 125, 281 Elaine, Mary Ellen 51 Blair, Bill 357 Blair, Dick 59, 166 Blair, James 154 Blaker, Bill 47, 173 Blakeslee. Clement 56, 148 Blanchard, Bob 154 Bland. Forrest 159 Blanke. Marilyn 146 Blankenship. Victor 61, 174, 280 Blanks. Freddie 51, 131 Blanks, Pat 46. 131. 359 Blanks. Pat 278 f 382 Blesse, Judith 52 Browning, Howard 61, 174 Carter, Donna 136, 270 269. 283. 331. 361 Dalton, Dorothea 362 Blessing, Jim 173 Brownlee, Eldena 146, 288, Carter, Joan 134 Condon, Kuhl 58 Dalton, Helen 54 Bloesch, Heidit 135 360 Carter, Marvin 160, 274, 275, Conkey, Harlan 148 Dalton, Jack 287, 362 Bloom, Jack 149 Brownlee, Jerry 154 286 Conklm. Joe 123, 173, 276, Dalton, Marylyn 146 Blouch, Carolyn 139 Brubaker, Adrian 57. 152, 360 Carter, Nancy 40 282. 348 Dalzell, Arthur 175 Blount, Barbara 53, 140 Brubaker, Eugene 279 Carter, Spencer 57, 152 Conley, David 152, 286 Dam. Kenneth 166, 282, 333 Blount. Wayne 162, 283 Bruce. Jack 58. 160 Carter, Steve 270 Conn, Bob 57, 152 Dameron, Dough 171 Blowey, Richard 57, 152 Boatwright, Shirley 140 Brumfield. Carol 55. 142, 281 Brummett. Dick 57, 156 Cartwright, Teresa 147 Carver, Ron 155 Conner. Harold 180, 274, 275 Conner, Linda 53, 137, 269, Dangerfield, Phil 175 Daniels, Dan 57, 155, 286 Bock, Jane 143, 283 Brunn, Dorothy 52 Casebeer, Charles 60, 168 365 Daniels, Doris 54 Bodenneimer, James 161, 274, Brunner, Bill 155, 270 Casebier, Connie 52 Connor. Adele 135, 360 Daniels, George 148 275 Brust, Carl 165 Casey, Albert 360 Conrad, Kay 137, 271, 284, Darnell. Dale 154 Boe, John 163 Bryan, Alta 132 Casey, Maurice 160, 355 360 Daugherty, Bob 57, 280 Boerger, John 59, 162 Bubb. Betty 138. 269 Casey, Pat 54 Considine, Dean 171 Daugherty, Mary 135 Bogart, Grace 146 Buchanan, Eugene 60, 172 Caspar, Phyllis 52, 281 Converse, Marvin 360 Daughterly, William 286 Borgen, Thor 177 Buchanan, Hugh 165. 357 Cassell, David 57, 155 Convis, Dave 57, 154 Davenport, John 60 169 190 Bogue, Jerry 81, 165 Bolas, fu la 145, 359 Boles, Rosie 44, 126 Buchanan, Sara 43, 50, 129 Bucher. Dick 175 Buck, Bill 168 Casterline, Twila 146 Cate, Tony 166 Cater, Nancy 45, 356 Conway, Anne 123, 136 Conway, Bill 61, 178, 280 Cook, Burleight 155 270, 356 Davenport, Larry 324 Davidson, A. W. 29 Bolz. Julia 146, 359 Buck, Joyce 43, 129 Cates, Charles 154 Cook, Kathryn 146 Davidson, Ken 157, 163 Bond. Janet 135 Buck, Louis 148 Caulsen, Ruth 124, 136, 146 Cooke, A. C. 42, 154. 287 Davidson. Sally 145, 362 Bonebrake. Bev 44. 53, 137 Buck, Wallace 156 Cayot, Dick 56, 148, 280 Cooke, Donna 51, 132, 357 Davis, Bob 175, 283, 363 Bonecutter, Ann 134, 359 Buckels, Larry 61, 178 Cazier, Joyce 130, 355 Cooke. Martha 361 Davis, Darlene 362 Bonney. Gay 143, 270, 359 Buckley, Judy 122 Cecil, Paul 59, 162 Cool. Gary 57. 156 Davis, Dave 172 Bontz, Sally 42, 43, 53, 138 Book, Jimmie 61, 180 Bucrich, Dudley 59 Buehrer, Gary 170 Certain, Virginia 287 Chalfant, Mike 124, 165 Cooley, Jerry 46, 173, 276 Cooley, June 53 Davis, Dick 147 Davis, Donna 53, 140 Boole. Barbara 54 Buechel. Bill 287 Challiss, Catherine 137 Cooley, Larry 56, 148 Davis, Dorothy 287 Boone. Daniel 163 Buell, Pat 126, 136 Chancy, Ernie 163 Cooley, Loretta 261, 278 Davis, Gary 156, 287 Booth, Charles 159 Buie. Neil 166 Chancy, William 360 Coolidge, Dick 173, 276. 282 Davis, Glen 160 Borden, Ray 158, 279, 283 Bulla. Leo 43, 57, 156 Chang, Vernon 159, 360 Coolidge, Kay 55, 141, 265, Davis, Hazel 147, 363 J3orenstine, Alvin 149 Buller, Ken 160, 190, 360 Chapman, Ed 178 268, 269 Davis, Jack 147 Boring. Helen 145 Bunch, Ken 147 Chard, Carolyn 54 Coolidge, Phil 60. 173 Davis, Louise 288, 363 Born. B. H. 165, 190. 267 Bunten, John 43, 166, 344 Charles, Hugh 58, 160 Coolidge, Tom 173 Davis, Marjorie 53, 138 Boswell. Jo Ann 55, 142 Bunton. Betty 55, 145 Charles, Jess 161, 164 Coombs, Fred 157, 268 Davis, Pat 47, 53, 137 Bouse. Jerry 59. 125, 171, 280 Bunn, Doris 53 Charles. Ruthanna 131, 361 Cooney, Joe 164 Davis, Rodney 177 Bouska, Don 174 Burch. Charles 150, 360 Chatelain, Richard 58, 158 Coonfer. Irene 54 Davis, Ronald 61, 178 Boutwell, Lyle 56, 148 Burchfield, Charles 51, 132 Cheatham, Larry 166, 265 Cooper, Babette 51, 132 Davis, Tom 60 Bowden. Kent 150, 274, 282, Burdo. Herbert 149 Cheney, William 161 Cooper, Mary 361 Davison, Norma 140 286 Burgass. James 148 Chesky, Frank 178 Copeland. Patricia 146 Dawson, Ila 142 Bowdish, Barbara 43, 129, 288 Bowen, Dick 172 Bowen, Edwin 359 Burge. Sunny 165 Burgett. David 59, 165 Burke, Paul 61. 172 Chestnut, Dal 160 Childers, Harry 274. 275, 361 Childers, Kellem 161 Coople. William 60. 170. 280 Corbett, George 170 Cordell. Dave 172. 287 Dawson, Jean 139 Dawson, Jerry 172 Deacon, Winston 152, 265, Bowers, Richard 279 Burks, Jim 173 Childers. Tom 47, 58, 157 Cortner, Kathleen 54 286 Bowersox, Lou 132 Burleign, Joan 281 Childs, Bob 60, 172 Costello, Bob 166 Deal, Barbara 51, 131 Bowman, Bontina 137, 359 Burlingame. Bob 166, 174, 276 Childs, Jo Ann 139, 269 Courtright. Bill 175 Dean, Al 59, 162 Bowman, Carol 52 Burnett. Don 59 Chimenti, Ed 58, 160 Covacevich. Jean 50, 129 Dean. Shirley 54, 281, 330 Bowman, Jim 57, 152 Bowman, Jpann 54, 281 Bowman, Tina 42, 43, 156 Burnham. Art 147 Burns. Bill 57. 152 Burns. Jim 174. 356 Chinn, Jackie 52, 134 Chittenden, Jack 150 Chowning, Oscar 148, 164, Cowie. Ruth 50. 129 Cox. Hugh 43, 174, 279 Cox, Jerry 57, 156, 269, 344 356 Dearduff. Janet 140 Decker, Delores 133, 362 Boyd, Carolyn 51, 131 Burson, Helen 139 361 Cox, Joe 126. 160 Decker, Don 164 Boyd, Gerald 161, 359 Burt, Larry 60. 169 Chraplivy, Peter 361 Cox, John 156 Deem. Allie 147, 362 Boyd, Jack 165 Burton, Anne 281 Christenson, Jim 147 Cox, Joyce 128. 135 Defenbaugh, Lucille 51, 131 Brackmann, Richard 274, 275, Burton, Don 58, 158, 280 Christie. Bill 175 Cox, Kenneth 122, 161, 268 Degner, James 164 359 Burton, Eleanor 139 Christie, John 171 Cox, Melvin 158 DeGoler, Jim 60 Braclin, Don 80 Burton, Jim 175 Christmann, Carol 53, 137 Cox. Shirley 51 DeGroot, Jeannine 51, 131 Bradford, Evelyn 147 Burton. Lynn 43. 122, 141 Christy, Joe 42, 156, 274, 275, Cox. Twyla 130. 288 Deibert, Beth 147 Bradley, Barbara 51 Burton. Terry 61. 175, 283 361 Cox. Virginia 135, 361 Deickman, Barbara 147 Bradley, Norma 131 Bush. Darrell 360 Church, Chuck 153, 361 Cox. Wallace 163 Deines, Mary Ann 147 Bradley, Rose Marie 54, 281 Bushey, Jacqueline 360 Church, Tom 160, 276 Coxen, Alan 153 Delap, B. J. 275 Bradshaw, Vinita 136, 359 Buchman. Sanford 177 Churchill, Beverly 54, 281 Coxon, Crysta 52 Delap, William 176, 362 Bradstreet. Barbara 46, 51, Bussard, Robert 57, 152 Cindrich. Frank 339, 357 Coyne. Margaret 361 DeLong, Phyllis 55, 145 133, 265, 270 Butler, Ange 54, 281 Clabough, James 361 Coywood, Jim 287 DeMelfy, Anna 287 Bradstreet, Bob 160, 266, 287, Butler, Dick 59, 165 Clark, Bernie 59, 167 Crabtree. Jim 177 Demeritt, Mary 139 359 Butler. Marlyn 55. 142 Clark, Chapin 171 Craig, Ellen 128 Denchfield, Donald 57, 153 Brainard, Bill 58, 157 Brammer, Barbara 51, 133 Button. Marilyn 128 Butts, David 178, 279 Clark, Courtney 356 Clark, Darlene 146 Craig, Nancy 45 Craig. Owen 172. 276, 279 DeNeve, Jobayne 52 Denison, Terry 163 Brand. Jack 125. 165 Byler. Dorothy 143 Clark, Elden 162, 360 Crain. Bill 279 Deniston, Shirley 136 Brandeberry. Bob 78, 174, 266 Byrd. Jack 156. 279, 285 Clark. Floyd 57, 153 Cramer, Ted 58, 160 Denman, Jean 138 Brandt, Vida 139 Byrnes, Richard 360 Clark, Jerry 166 Cramm, Russell 164 Dennen, Nancy 43, 129 265 Brannon, Tom 268 Clark. Lloyd 360 Crane. Citty 42, 141, 288, 361 288, 362 Breckenridge, Thomas 360 Clark. Millie 289 Crane. Judy 53, 137 Denning. Danna 131, 270, 288 Breedlove. Robert 275 Clark. Paul 159 Crawford, John 175. 361 Dennis, Dick 59, 166 Brehm. William 59. 162 Claunch. George 148, 282 Creel. Cynthia 53, 137 Denny, Bob 158 Breidenthal, Richard 60. 172 c Claunch, Marilyn 52 Creighton, Bob 57, 156. 280 Denny. Mick 126. 161 Breinholt, Margaret 140 V- Claussen, Bob 43, 166, 282, Crei hton, Don 178, 275 Deppe. Hans-Dieter 58, 158 Brent. Hal 60. 173 356 Crendorff, Barbara 132 Derge. Bob 58, 160 Brennan, Larry 179 Claypool, Louis 360 Cresswell. Ed 147 Deschner. Mary 138, 269 362 Brent. Kelly 53, 138 Cleavinger, Hal 77, 154, 269, Crews. Bill 174, 269. 276, 282 Deterding. Max 157 Brewer. Joy 55, 141 287 Crisler, Bob 59, 162, 280 Detrich, John 280 Brewer, Robert 170 CAIN, JOHN 176 Clem, Patty 138, 266 Crockett. Wilbert 151 Detsios, George 58, 161, 268 Brewster, Arthur 165 Cain. Mary 51 Clery, Ed 269 Crosby, Jim 147 Defter. Jim 162 Brewster. Ina May 51, 281 Calkins, Elbert 56 Cleveland, David 60, 173 Crow. Bill 61, 178 Devey, Bill 172 Breyfogle, Louis 175, 270, 356 Calkins, Lee 132 Clifford, Jacques 57, 155, 270 Crowley, Jack 178 Devlin. Jim 42, 43, 156 Bridge, Edmun 159 Calnan, Charles 56, 148 Clifton, Keith 176 Crowley, Vivian 52 De Yong, Amy 287 Bridge. Georgetta 52 Calbert, Walter 171, 279 Clinesmith, Shirley 52 Croyle, Benny 277, 282 Dial, Sally 50 Brier, Steve 59, 124, 165 Brite, Madelyn 54, 270, 281, Calvin, John 126, 160 Cameron, Dick 40, 172, 344 Clinger. Betty 140, 278, 361 Cloclfelter, Jack 58, 157 Crum, Mary 134. 362 Cruse, Diana 132 Dibble. Dan 173, 276 Dibble, Paul 60, 173 331 Cameron, Joyce 131 Cloepfil, Keith 361 Cummings, Dick 155, 158 Dick, Charles 148, 362 Brock, Cheryl 54. 281 Campbell, Carolyn 137 Clough, Lois 143 Cummins, Betty 140 Dickens. Ronald 59, 171 Brock, Jim 57, 153 Campbell, Catherine 53, 124, Clowers, Churby 151 Cummins, LaDene 53 Dickensheets, Bob 152, 276, Brody, Esther 146 136 Clum, Louis 162, 269, 279, Cummins, Robert 362 279 Brooks, Esther 54 Campbell, Edward 170 283, 361 Cunningham. Bill 156 Dickinson, Betty 268 Brooks, Bob 61, 180 Campbell, Gene 150, 360 Clyma, Marian 142, 278 Cunningham, Don 61, 174 Dickinson, Bill 152, 268, 362 Brooks, Virginia 278 Campbell, Jack 165 Coaklin, Joe 282 Cunningham, Larry 60, 170, Dickey, David 59, 165, 280 Brose, John 152, 265, 282, 347 Campbell, Margaret 54, 265, Cody, Rosemary 133, 357 280 Dickey. Wendell 60, 173 Brosnahan, Ginny 53, 137, 271, 281 Coe, A. D. 58, 160, 279 Curry, James 61, 178 Dicus, Jack 165 269, 357 Canary, Nancy 43. 129. 271 Coen, Dick 59. 165 Curtis, Barbara 139 Diefendorf. Warren 156 Brown, Bill 59, 158, 160 Canary, Pat 58, 157, 356 Coffin, Keith 177 Curtis, Mary Ann 52 Diel, Vernon 277 Brown, Bob 169. 178 Canfield, Jacquelyn 142 Cogswell, Harold 163 Curtright, Gale 152 Diers. Dick 60, 173 Brown, Charles 60, 134, 173 Cannday, Grant 169 Cole, Betty 278, 284 Cusic, Patricia 145 Dieterick, John 57 Brown, Clara 134 Cantrell, Dick 356 Cole. Dean 279 Cussman. Price 164 Dietrich. Charles 57, 156 Brown, Conboy 60, 172, 280 Cantrell, Melba 132, 360 Cole, Howard 175 Custer, Bernetta 52 Dillinger, Jan 286 Brown, Darrell 162 Cants. Wilbur 271 Cole, Walt 160, 276, 361 Czinczoll, Mary 145 Dill, Dale 177 Brown, Dorothy 133 Capps, Norman 166 Collins, Ernest 286 Dilley, Bill 59. 167, 280 Brown. Esther 278 Carey, Donald 360 Collins, Elizabeth 134 Dilsavcr. Josephine 54, 281 Brown, Gary 61 Carey, John 180 Collins, Gary 57, 155 Dilts, Mary Ann 131, 363 Brown, Gene 57, 152 Carey, Nancy 135 Collins, Jack 279 Dinsmore, James 363 Brown, Hank 42 Carey. Rita 52 Collins, Jo Anne 53 Dirks, Donald 287, 363 Brown. Jan 42, 53, 137, 357 Carey, Sandra 269 Collins, Kay 44 Dittmer, Lee 157 Brown, Joe 171 Brown, John 173 Brown, Jonell 51 Carle, Terry 165 Carlson, Stella 289 Carmean, Betty 43. 137, 283 Collins, Nancy 55, 145 Collins. Roger 61. 123, 174 Collison, Brooke 58, 158 Ditzen, Allen 173 Diver, Lue Eddie 51, 133 Dixon, Bill 59. 167 Brown, Margaret 50. 130 Carothers. Judy 133 Collom, A. B. 152,265,282 Dixon, Charles 58 Brown, Marge 44, l42 Carpenter, Bob 1 66 Colvin, Ann 54 DABBAGH, YOUNIS 362 Dixon. John 46, 173 Brown, Mary 134 Carpenter, Don 57, 152 Combs, Martha 361 Dade, Ernest 160, 355 Dixson, John 60 Brown, Ronald 151 Carpenter, Raymond 159 Comfort, Clay 158 Daise, John 177 Dobbs. Dallas 57, 154 Brown, Sidonie 141, 285, 357 Carpenter, Roy 164 Commons, Dolores 146, 361 Dalton, Bill 347 Dockhorn. Charles 125, 165 Brown, Sue 52, 54, 281, 331 Carr. De Witt 20 Compton, Joe 168, 276 Dalton, Ben 166 Docking. Marcia 133, 362 Brown, William 165 Carrier, Dick 172 Comstock, Bobbie 43. 137, Dalton. Bud 178 Dodd, Charlie 147 383 Dodd. Shirley 51, 132 Dodge, Ann 47, 53, 134, 269 Dodge, Dale 175, 283, 285, 362 Dodge, Neil 61. 175. 268, 280 Doevenguth. Phil 175 Dolson. Delores 132 Donnelly, Margaret 54, 333 Donnigan. Joe 158, 275 Dorsch. Bill 172 Dostie. Cameron 148, 362 Doty, Pete 54 Doubeck, Herbert 362 Doubek, Dale 163 Dougherty, Chuck 157 Dougherty. Harold 179 Dougherty, Jocelyn 54 Dougherty, John 166 Doughty, Tom 275 Douglas, Bob 175 Douglass, Lee 274, 282 Dowd, Dana 171 Dowdy, Carlton 58 Dowefl, Pat 51, 132 Downing Wesley 56, 280 Downs, Tom 58, 158 Doyle, Bill 162 Drake, Georgia 137, 362 Drake, Rosanne 147, 362 Drake. Stephanie 141 Drevets. Curtis 163 Drew. Laura 52 Driver. Joyce 130 Dryden, Jack 155, 267, 270 Duane. Werneke 57 Dubach, Marilyn 138. 362 Duchossois, Jann 55, 141, 284. 285 Duesler, Bill 61. 176 Duggan. Lee 172 Dukclow, Willis 363 Dukcwits. Joan 54 Dula. Robert 363 Dumler, Jean 54 Duncan, Don 58. 157 Duncan, Howard 177 Duncan, Jim 152. 282 Dunlop. Sandra 50, 130. 355 Dunmire. Fred 168. 282 Dunn, Barbara 44. 130 Dunn. John 58. 160, 280 Dunn, Rupert 59. 162 Dunne, Bob 154 Duphorne, Ronald 148 Durham. Dean 60, 168 Durks. Jim 60 Duroche. Leonard 177 Duroni. Chuck 173. 279 Dutt. Wendell 177 Duvall. Leland 170, 275 Dyck. Donna 147 Dye. Everett 166. 190, 344 Dye. Hubert 157. 256, 271, 282 Dye, Suzie 52. 134 Dyerly. Rod 165. 363 Dyerson, Clyde 175. 274 EARLYWINE. GEORGIA 363 Earlywine, Janet 52, 284 Easter. Frieda 53, 140 Eastwood, William 153 Ebersole. Richard 59 Echols, Nancy 51, 132, 278 Eckert, J_anet 52 Eckert, Ted 58, 157 Edmonds, Ann 281 Edmonds, Don 158 Edwards, David 150. 348 Edwards. Dolores 146 Eflin, Dick 42. 173 Eggert, Robert 363 Eisenbise, Warner 168 Eklund. Mary Lou 52 Elam. Barbara 53, 138 Elder, Gene 61. 178 Elliot. Bill 280 Elliot, George 280 Elliott, Jim 60. 168 Elliott, Jorge 60, 169 Elliott, Bob 152, 276 Elliott. William 61 Ellis. Don 172-. 279, 283. 355, 363 Ellis, Jane 146 Ellis, Merle 57, 153 Ellis, Pam 54 Ellison, Claude 151, 154, 279, 324 Ellsworth, Fred 19 Ellsworth, Leon 58, 160 Elser. Ruth 55, 142 Elvig, Jack 154 Embree, Max 42, 156, 270, 356 Emery, Frank 157 Emig. Dale 61, 175 Emnch, George 123 Endacott, Don 122. 154 Endacott, Grace 134, 278, 283, 363 Endacott. Phil 60, 173 Enfield. Ed 168, 268 Engelland, Dwight 60, 168 Engelmann, Calvin 153, 286, 363 England. Betty 145. 363 England. Kenneth 286 Engle,, Colleen 53, 140 Englert, DuWayne 15} Englund, Marge 53, 137, 284, 285 Enos, Emily 140 Enos. Paul 57, 153 Ensminger. Chuck 61. 174 Ensminger. Pat 52, 281 Epperson, Sue 51, 132, 355 Erickscn, Con 61, 175 Erickson, Donald 363 Erickson, Nan 289 Erickson, NeAlda 363 Erickson, Pat 53, 137 Erickson, Richard 156, 344 Ernst, Courtney 175 Errebo, Marjorie 134 Esch. Jeanne 145. 288 Eshelman. Norma 281, 357 Estelle, Judy 43, 50, 129. 268 Esther. John 150. 282 Evans. Dorsey 151, 154 Evans. Ellis 58. 157 Evans, Elton 59, 171 Evans. Ron 43, 174 Everett. Mary Ann 1}5 Evers, John 363 Eversufl. Mary 55, 141 Ewell. Charlene 134. 356 Ewy, Gene 169 Ewy, Gordon 169 Ewy. Jeanette 51 Eyler. Maralyn 55, 141. 284. 285 Eyman. Charles 61, 178, 276 FAIR, BILL 178. 276, 282 Falletta, Norma Lou 132, 252. 271. 283 Fanestil. Darrell 165. 282 Fann. Raymond 61. 180 Fare. Claude. 58. 160. 265. 280 Farha. Al 155 Farney. Bill 173 Farnham. Milo 151 Farrar. Bill 162 Faucette. Wendell 151 Favors. Grace 54 Fawatu, Donna 54 Fayette. Gil 169 Fee. Chester 163 Fee. Frank 173. 363 Fee. James 165 Felzien. Pat 47 Fcnity, Doug 175 Fenn, Norma 51, 131 Fergeson, Ward 172 Ferguson, Eugenia 43. 53. 138 Ferguson, Robert 148. 280 Ferrell. Don 283 Ferrell. Lawrence 170. 363 Ferrin. Carole 287 Person. Frank 59. 167 Feuerborn. Ivo 58. 158 Fields. Bruce 61 Fifield. John 165, 265 Fincke, Judy 54. 126 Findley. Barbara 355 Fine. Don 147 Findley, Barbara 355 Fine. Don 147 Fink, Joan 271, 363 Fink, Joe 80, 156 Fink. John 57. 156 Finkemeier, Theodore 364 Finnegan, Barbara 123 Fischer, Barbara 147 Fischer. Jeaneene 125, 138, 268, 269, 270, 278 Fisher, Carole 54 Fisher, Jack 178 Fisher, Jo Anna 142 Fiss, Galen 77, 173. 347, 364 Fiss. LaVerne 166 File. Vic 147, 280 Fitzgerald. Colleen 54 Fitzgerald, Jeanne 144, 283, Fitzpatrick, Sharon 129. 364 Fitzsimmons. William 364 Fligg, Ken 60. 168, 268 Flinner, Bob 164 Florian. Barbara 141 Flory. Don 58. 158 Floyd, Jim 126, 154, 265 Fluharty. Carol 54, 125, 281 Flynn, Georgianne 129 Foelzer, Jan 52 Foerschler, Cha rlene 53, 136 Foele, Ed 60, 168 Folck. Richard 157 Foley, Eileen 55 Foley. Jerry 59, 166 Follett, Margaret 147 Folsom, Jack 158, 283 Foltz, Diana 132 Ford. MeCage 58 Ford, Norma 177, 280 Ford, Toby 158 Fordyce, Joni 136 Fore. Paul 161. 279 Force. Alice 52. 134. 357 Force, Jerry 171 Forman, John 169 Forman, Mary Anne 43, 129, 288 Forney, Sue 137 Forsyth, Bob 165, 276 Foster, Jim 59, 165 Foster, Richard 59. 160, 171 Foster, Sally 51. 132 Foster, William 279. 364 Fotopolous. Pete 128, 168, 348 Foutz. Homer 169 Fowler, Jack 57. 155 Fowler, James 43. 156 Fox, Dale 279 Fox, Dan 156 Fox, Marcia 147 Fox. Patricia 55, 14} Foyle, Bob 59. 171 Foyle. Frank 61. 175 Francis. Donna 50. 130 Francis, Janet 53, 137, 269 Franke, Roger 178 Franklin. Bill 280 Franklin. Charles 57. 156 Franklin. Don 154. 348 Franz, Leo 177 Fraser, George 161 Frasier, Buzz 174 Frazier. Betty 364 Frazier, Homer 59, 171 Frazier. Stanley 176. 364 Fredrickson. Richard 170 Frecburg. Ed 154, 357 Freeman. Frederic 364 Freeman. Sally 43, 47. 129. 288. 364 French. Paul 61. 280 Frieze. Barbara 364 Frieze. Clarence 175. 364 Frisbie. Dean 42. 156, 287 Frost, jack 165 Fruhling. Madelon 288 Frye, George 159 Frye, John 31 Fulk, Phyllis 51 Fuller. Barbara 54 Fuller. Harry 170. 364 Fuller. Marilyn 53. 140 Fuller. Mary Lou 1}2 Fuller. Norman 287 Fullerton. Corky 136 Fullcrton. Hugh 61 Fulton. Jeanie 51, 172 Furguson, Jim 57, 152 Furlow. Chuck 265 George, Jim 167 George, Nona 51 GABRIELSON, JANET 51, 126, Gaddis, Don 178 Gaffney. Harry 61. 180 Gagelman. Janie 53. 138 Galbraith. Jim 59, 167 Galbraith. Joe 59, 167 Galliart, Robert 165 Galloway, Carole 134 Gamer, Grey 157 Gamlin, Dick 168 Garberick, Barbara 145 Card, Barby 45 Card, Betty 53, 123. 137. 285 Gard, Diane 138 Card. Howard 163, 364 Garden. Jock 61, 180 Gardenhire, Pat 134 Gardner, Joseph 364 Gardner, Roderic 154 Gardner, Terry 57, 156 Garland. Jcpson 58. 162, 280 Garland, John 59, 162 Garner, Maryann 287 Garney. Chuck 173, 282 Garr, Margie 51, 133 Garrett, Gerold 43. 166. 286 Garrett, Pat 126, 134, 278 Garrity. Bob 43, 155, 283, 365 Garvey, Mary 270 Garvin, Louise 143, 288, 365 Garvin. Rebecca 132, 365 Gaskell, Dina 140 Gaston, Velma 146 Gates, Don 155 Gates. Norma 286 Gatewood. Roth 175, 286 Gauert. Brooks 168 Geier. Ken 169 Gelvin. Bob 59. 166. 344 Gempel. Julie 55, 141, 268 Gench. Rosemary 44, 47, 128, 133 - - Jrge, Georgi, Henry 365 Gerber, Carla 52 Gerber, Dorothy 140 Gerboth, Neale 61, 175 Gerhling, Hank 172, 344 German, Joan 51 Gertson. William 163 Getto. Dick 58, 160 Getto, Mike 59. 160, 165 Geyer, Frances 55, 142 Gianakis, Loukas 365 Gibbs. Bill 173. 276 Gibson, Beryl 114 Giddings, Jim 169 Giddings. Lucy 139. 269 Gier, Dick 149 Giffin, Donald 287, 365 Gilbert, Barbara 288 Gilchrist. Nancy 5, 42, 44 137, 278, 285 Gill, Nancy 44, 130, 355 Gillam, Charles 160, 275 Gillett, James 150. 282 Gilman, Mark. 44. 157. 355 Gilstrap. Peggy 146, 365 Gish. Delores 52 Gish, Larry 165 Gish, Merlin 80 Gish. Wesley 42. 172 Gladfeltcr. Joycelyn 52 Glasco. Dean 175. 271, 282 Glass. Edcltraud 139 Griffith, Tommy 147 Grimes, Bob 168, 324 Grimes, Floyd 269 Grimes, Frances 55, 141, 268 Grimm. Clark 156 Griswold. Bill 61, 175 Griswold, James 176, 282 Groe, Joanne 133, 356 Grogger, Bob 59, 166, 344 Grosjean, Sue 141 Gross, Lorraine 55 Grout, Geneva 52, 268 Grove, Allie 364 Grover, Chuck 173 Grover, Jayne 141 Grown, Craig 169 Grwiner, Larry 165 Gualdoni. Rosine 52 Guess. Paul 156. 344 Guest. Delcina 146 Guglcr. Wanda 147 Guinn, Grctchen 51, 330 Gumm. Ray 157 Gummig, George 158 Gundersen. Harry 57, 155. 280 Gurley, Jean 287 Gurley. Jim 287 Gustafson. Kay 51. 132 Gutridge, Joan 137 Guzman. Perry 152 H VJI439, 1 Utlll.lUU 11V Glass. Jim 148 1 1 Glass, Norma 145. 288 Gleason. Jim 153 Glenn. Jack 172. 282 Glenn. Joanne 52, 134. 355 Glenn, Nancy 130. 364 Glenn, Richard 57, 156. 280 Click, Jack 171 Glover, Alvoyd 58 Glower. Bobbie 128 Gob. Jean 177 Godding, Lorraine 133. 364 Godfrey, Dick 277. 282 Godwin, LaVonne 145 Godwin, Marge 50, 130. 355 Goforth. Donna 51. 13) Golden. John 174. 356 HABER, CARLA 131, 364 Hadel. Bill 167 Hadley. jjm 61. 172 Hadley. Richard 59. 165 Hagar, Dave 164. 365 Haggard. Anne 356 Haggard, Frank 168 Haggart. Bob 60, 172 Hahn, Phil 43. 174. 357 Haines, C. W. 152 Haines, Hankie 5), 1)7 Hair, Walter 163 Haize. Helen 53, 140 Hal Tal 45 Goldcnberg. Charles 152. 276 Collier. Car 54 Good. Edwin 275, 364 Gooding, Eugene 275, )65 Goodjohn, Jo Ann 43, 1)7, Hales. Loyce 177 Haley. Eleanor 42, 52, 123 Haley, Eugen 170, 276 Hall. Allan 174 Hall, Andy 60, 172 365 Hall Ben 154 Goodman, Jerone 177 Goodman, John 152. 177 Goodseal. Wilbur 154.282. Hall. Bill 173, 276, 365 Hall, Charles 163 Hall, Cornctt 365 )65 Hall. Ed 357 Goodwin, Lynn 172 Hall. Gene 157, 174. 269. Gordley, Betty 53 276. 365 Gordon, George 154. 365 Hall, Harold 61, 178 Gordon. Paul 128. 166 Hall, Herbert 177 Gordon. Stewart 365 Hall, Louise 133. 289, 355 Gore. Glenn 156 Hall. Robert 365 Gorton. Thomas 21 Hall. Wanda 365 Gottesmann, Shirley 149, 365 Hall, Wes 164 Goudic. Lawrence 147 Hall, William 276 Gould. Gayle 47, 53. 124, Haller, Sheila 55. 142, 281 128. 137 Halligan, Hap 167 Gouldthread. Lee 52 Hallman. Gordon 58, 157 Gowan, Jeanette 51, 132 Graber. Vivian )41 Halula, Jack 57, 153 Hamm, Maurice 159 Gradinger. Jan 51, 281 Ham, Shirley 52 Grady. Pat 134. 288, 356 Hamilton, Bob 157. 163, 365 Graewe. Irene 146 Hamilton, Frank 347 Graham, John 58, 157 Hamilton, Gordon 166 Graham. Lynn 141 Graham. Rosco 42, 180 Hamilton, John 180 Hamilton, Lee 168 Graham, Surton 166 Hamilton, Stan 56, 148 Granberg, Gayle 145, 365 Grantham, Jame 53, 140 Hammig. Jack 156 Hammond. Benjamin 151, 154 Grauberger, John 61, 180 Graves, Dean 59. 126, 165 Hammond. Richard 59 Hampton, Barbara 51, 281, Graves, Jim 168, 282, 285. 357 356 Graves. Sara Jo 54 Hampton, Bill 162 Gray, David 151, 179 Hampton, Nancy 42, 44, 53, Gray, Dick 275 137 Gray, Marlene 51, 132 Hancock, Bill 147 Gray. Phyllis 129, 270, 357, Handen, Emily 54 364 Handley, John 59, 165 Gray. Robert 171 Handrahan, John 366 Greeley, John 167 Haney, Bernard 177 Green, Berry 152 Hanlon, Theresa 146 Green, Don 174, 269 Hanna, Frances 52, 134 Green. Monty 43, 174 Hanna, Jan 123 Greene, Bruce 178 Hansen, Karen 54, 281 Greene. Phil 126 Hansen, Mary 140 Greenleaf, Harold 43, 154 Hanson, Marilyn 130. 278, Greenwood, Jack 266 366 Greer, Kee 160 Hantla, Bob 80 Greer, Naomi 146 H. ii. nt. . Miyeko 146 Greeson. Ronald 283 Harbordt, Carolyn 128, 137 Greg, Pierce 57 Harclerode, Donald 176, 282 Grether, Raphy 173 Harder, Mary Jane 145. 288 Grey, Jimmie 171 Hardman, Mary Lou 133 Griesser, John 168, 268 Hardy, Al 269 Griesser, Lisa 51, 133, 257, Hardy, Dave 157, 270, 356 268 Hardy, Jay 154 Griff, Marcia 42 Haren. Tod 173 Griffen, Myra 45 Hargis. Rex 161 Griffin. Judith 53. 136 Harlan. Doug 169 Griffith, Bill 60, 168 Harmon, Bill 147 Griffith. Georgenne 139 Harmon. Jim 60, 173 Griffith. Maria 53, 137, 284, Harms, Esther 146, 366 356, 357 Harms, Margy 53. 138, 356 384 Harper, Gertha 147, 278, 366 Harper, George 178 Harper, Prudy 135, 284 Harper, Sue 52. 281 Harriford, Willie 151 Harris, Dale 54 Harris, Jim 157 Harris, Kennetl narr, Milan o Hartell, Joanne Kartell , June 2 Hartell, Keith _. jeth 180, 366 Harris, Maizie 55, 278 Harris, Mary Ann 129 Harris, Maureen 54 Harris, MaK 274 Harris, Nathan 156 Harris, Pat 135, 266, 366 Harris, R. C. 156, 287 Harrison, Diana 54, 270 Harrison, Dwight 166 Harsch, Eddie 162 Hart, Genie 54 Hart, Milan 157, 286, 357 ne 147 288, 366 . .li 156, 274, 275 Hartell. William 367 Hartman, Emily 367 Hartman, Joanne 54, 281 Hartnett, Jerome 61, 178 Harvey, Wayne 367 Harwood, Wann 47 Haskins, Walter 177 Hatcher, Shirley 135, 288 Hauck. Betty 47, 53, 128, 137 Haufler, Walt 158, 279, 286 Haught, Ron 277 Haury, Mary 132, 366 Hausler, Ken 175 Hawes, Bill 175, 366 Hawes, Dia 52 Hawk, Marion 56, 150 Hawkey, Bill 178, 276 Hawkins, Dolores 132,288, 366 Hawkinson, Carolyn 51 Hawkinson, Jack 59, 165, 280 Hawkinson, Marilyn 141,252, 271, 284, 285 Hawley, Clyde 164 Hawley, Don 57, 156 Haxton, Arlyn 280 Hay, Ken 152 Hayben, Leo 269 Haydcn, Ralph 279 Hayden, Scott 45, 173, 284 Haydon, Dick 60, 168 Haydon, Walter 60 Haydt, Heliton 274. 275 Hayes, Chuck 61, 176 Hayes, Katheryn 54 Hayes. Pat 43, 50, 123, 130 Haynes, Bob 60, 172 Hazlett, Richard 59, 162 Hazlett, Robert 59 Hazzard, Martha 52 Heard, Marjorie 54, 125 Heath. Bob 60, 172 Heath, Fritz 59, 165 Heberling, Darlene 134, 366 Heck, Martha 132, 278 Hedges, Charles 58, 157, 280, 286 Hedrick. Charles 61, 175 Hedrick, Paul 57, 153 Hedstrom. Al 348 Hegarty, Bill 59, 167, 286 Hell, Georgia 53 Heil, Larry 61, 178, 271 Heim, Marilyn 54 Heindel, Sally 42, 53, 138 Heiny, Rosemary 132, 366 Heiskell, Roger 165 Heitman, Jo Ann 54, 281 Heitholt, William 161, 190, 347 Helfrey, Don 57, 128, 156 Heller, Jo 51, 131, 284 Helmreich, Louis 126, 161, 271, 282. 284, 366 Helmstader, George 77 Helman, Jon 162 Helmstetter, Larry 167 Hemphill, Carol 53, 140 Henderson, Dennis 158, 271 Henderson, Harlan 177 Henderson, John 60, 169 Henderson, Thelma 139 Hendrix, Cole 177 Hengen, John 159 Henman, Ivan 147 Henningson, Frances 43, 50, 129 Henson, Charles 287, 357 Henson. O ' Dell 60 Hendricksen, Marian 139 Hemy, Don 155 Henry, Gladys 139, 269 Henry, Jane 136, 265 Henry, Jane 281 Henry Jane 54 Hemy, Joyce 130 Henry, Rosalie 147, 366 Henry, Ruth 53. 140 Henson, Bill 344 Henson, Chuck 157 Henson, Harold 157 Hentzler, Marilyn 367 He both. Lee 155, 270, 279 He eford, June 55, 141 He old, LeRoy 162 He re, Nancy 52, 281 He ring, Bobbie 129 He ron, Curtis 154 He sh. Jerre 367 He shberger, Jim 44, 173, 367 He shey, Sue 27, 130, 366 He shkowitz, Aaron 149 He zog. Bob 167 Hess, Don 165, 357 Hesse, Jerry 43. 137, 366 Hessenflow, Bob 57, 155, 286 Hessling, Carole 356 Hessling, Patricia 143. 366 Hessling, Ray 156, 356 Hettinger, Robert 128, 156 Hewitt, William 170 Heysinger, Jack 276 Heywood. Jane 136, 278, 284, 285. 288. 366 Hibbard. Barbara 51, 126, 133 Hicks, Van 163 Hicks, Walter 171 Higgens, Dick 109 Highfield, Connie 366 Higgms, Anne 51 High. Connie 43. 50, 129 Hilburn, John 180, 275, 366 Hill, David 57 Hill. Carol 54, 281 Hill, Dick 57, 155 Hill. Jane 54 Hill. Mary 139 Hill, Robert 159 Hille. Elizabeth 45, 131, 283, 366 Hillmer, Norman 163 Hills, David 152, 367 Hills. Skip 271. 332 Hillyer. Dick 280 Hilmar, Karen 43, 50, 129 Hinchee, Lessie 142 Hindman, Nancy 147, 367 Hininger, Marcia 55, l43 Hinshaw, Charles 157 Hirsch, Duane 171, 287 Hise, Harlan 166, 350 Hiskey, Bernell 45, 60, 168, 280 Hite, Ralph 153, 283 Hitt, Evelyn 54, 1 38 Hitt, James 19 Hixson, Harold 160 Hoadley, Bill 164, 367 Hoag, Charles cover, 66, 81, 166. 190, 356 Hobbs. Bob 57 Hobbs, Mildred 138, 286 Hobein, Dale 61, 178 Hocker, John 164 Hodge, Humpy 59, 166 Hodgden, Jerry 275, 279, 367 Hodges, Merle 123, 157, 268 Hoefener, Jim 155, 282 Hoerath, Jack 152 Hoffman. Bill 279 Hoffman, James 57, 153 Hoffman, John 148 Hoffman, William 177 Hogan, David 59, 165 Hogan, Theodore 165 Hoge, Jim 46 Hoglund, Barton 155 Hoglund. Forrest 57, 155 Hogue, Jim 173, 265 Holland, Lee 60, 169, 280 Hollenbeck, Gerald 274, 275 Holley, Marvin 170 Holliday, William 60, 172 Holliman, Neil 355 Hollinger, Lloyd 165 Hollingsworth, Donna 133, 147 Hollingsworth, Janie 43, 51, 126, 268 Hollingsworth, Kermit 153 Hollingsworth, Robert 161 Hollis, Diane 54 Holm, Karolyn 146, 367 Holmbert. Arthur 367 Holmes, Shirley 55, 145 Holmes, Barbara 52 Holmes, Ron 157, 356 CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES to The Class of 1953 from HUTCHINSON J. H. Child .... Davis Child Chevrolet Motor Co. Baker Headlee Headlee ' s L. R. Martin E. W. Woolworth Co. Pegues Pegues Wright Co. Charles A. Rayl A. D. Rayl Motor Co. Grant Wagner .... Wagner Supply Inc., Kinsley Perry A. Welch Welch Shoes Phil Wiley Wiley Inc. J. S. Dillon Sons. 385 Holsinger, Johnny 59, 126, 162 Holstine, Jay 165, 276, 279 Holt, Bill 157 Holte, Mary 137 Holthus. Kathy 52 Holtzclaw, Jane 51, 281 Holyfield, Anna 278, 367 Homeyard. Nancy 287 Hooper, Darrell 339 Hooton, John 61, 176 Hoover, Penny 137, 267 Hoover, Roger 61, 174 Hopfer, Peggy 54 Hopkins, Don 175 Hopkins, Duane 58, 158 Horado, Miyeko 278 Hordyk, John 172, 286 Hornaday, Diane 136, 367 Homer, Larry 154 Horowitz, Herbert 149. 279 Hortter, Donald 162, 271, 279, 367 Hotchkiss, Bruce 57, 152 Houghton, Jim 287 Houghland. Bill 66 Hougland, Bob 58. 161 Hougland, Jerry 128 Houlton. Jo 54 House, Bill , . ill 160 House, Edward 159, 274, 275, 286, 367 House, Mary 53 Houston, Pat 137 Houtz, Duane 165 Hovey, Bob 168, 287, 367 Hovey, Joan 53, 137 Howard, Barbara 128 Howard, Dick 147 Howard, Margaret 51 Howard, Marguerite 367 Howard, Peggy 143 Howell, Burton 61, 174. 280 Howell. Pat 46. 51, 138, 270 Hower, Raymond 170 Howerton, Delbert 161 Howland, Anne 53 Hoyt, Frances 143, 367 Hubbard, James 150 Hubert. Gladys 51, 281 Hubert, Ron 168 Huckaby, Jewel 367 Hudkins, Dana 141, 265, 285. 367 Hudson, Marilyn 43, 141, 265 Hudsonpillar. Wilma 145 Huerter, Quent 167 Huff, Bob 158 Hughes, Dick 43, 44. 46. 165. 265, 276. 368 Hughes. Irby 57. 156, 344 Hughes, Louis 159 Hughes, Peggy 41, 55, 128. 141 Hughson, Kay 56. 150, 280 Hughson. Robert 286 Humbargar, Dorothy 51, 281 Humphrey, Martha 54. 125 Humphreys, Don 172, 282, 283 Hund. Esther 145, 368 Hungate. Annable 42. 141, 368 Hunsaker, Darlene 52 Hunsinger, Joann 55. 142 Hunsinger, Shirley 55, 143, 288 Hunsuker, Dick 177. 279 Hunt, Claudette 138 Hunt. Harry 176. 279 Hunt, Jesse 43. 133 Hunt. Milliccnt 132. 368 Hunt. Paul 59. 166. 265. 344 Hunt, Tom 154 Huntley, William 368 Huntsley, Perry 164 Hurley, Bill 158 Hurley, Ralph 368 Hurley, William 58 Hursh. Don 155 Hurt. Marc 60. 173. 271 Hurt. Pat 55. 145 Husted. Carolyn 52. 134 Hutcherson, loy 140, 368 Hutchins, Sid 43, 174, 356 Hutchinson. Ned 355 Hutton, Nancy 53, 123, 136. 268 Huyck, Mary Jo 54 Hyatt. Jim 160 Hyde. Anne 142 Hyer. Al 61 Hyer. Charles 174. 276 Hynes, Jan 144 Hynes, JoAnn 368 Hyre. Connie 289 Hysom. John 58, 157. 356 ICE, TED 59. 165 Iden, Thelma 45 Imes, Gene 60. 173 Immenschuh. William 368 Imming. Gerald 274, 368 lott. Marvin 60, 168 Ira. George 60. 280 Ireland, James 165 Ireland. Robert 171 Irish, Gary 43, 174 Irsik, Bill 269 Irwin, Mary 43, 130, 283, 356 Ise. John 74 Ivie. Jerry 174 JACKA. PHILIP 61, 178 cks. Hugh 173 ckson, Anne 133, 368 ckson. Beverly 43. 54, 129 ckson. Bob 60. 168. 265 ckson, Donald 34 ckson. Jim 60. 173 ckson, John 269 ckson. Monte 55. 145 ckson. Richard 177 cobs, Robert 163 cobson. Jerry 172 derborg. Ronald 58, 158 mes, Don 57, 154 mes. Jerry 175 mes, Myrlen 58 mes. Winifred 52 mison. Birdene 52 nney. I.vman 286 nousek. Frank 58. 158. 280 nousek. Lucile 142 quith. Terry 156. 368 rrell, Kos 59. 171 rrctt. Mary 55. 143 rrett. Shirley 146, 368 rvis, Juanita 52 effers. Patsy 132 Mfrey, Ann 54, 128 lellison, Kenneth 159 ' enkins, Lyle 150, 274, 279. 281, 368 enkins, Marian 132, 368 ennings. Sandy 165 ensen. Don 43, 282, 356, 369 enson, Don 167 ester. Jerry 166 ester. Nelson 280 ester, Tommy 56, 148. 280 ochims, Edie 52 ohanson, Janis 54 ohn, Jo Anne 52. 134 ohn, Miriam Sue 289 ohnson, Alberta 53, 124. 136, 278 ohnson, Barbara 54, 278 ohnson, Bill 174, 177 ohnson. Bud 43 ohnson, Charles 152 ohnson. Christine 140, 369 ohnson, David 59, 171 ohnson, Don 156, 170, 279 ohnson, Donna Jean 52, 134, 357 ohnson. Ed 277 ohnson, Jody 130, 270, 356 ohnson, John 43 ohnson, Johnny 46 ohnson, Jordan 151 ohnson. Lee 163 ohnson, Martha Jo 43, 53. 138 ohnson. Phil 156 ohnson, V. J. 171 ohnson, Virginia 265 ohnson, Wallace 60. 170. 280 ohnson, William 369 ohnson, Wcs 157, 190 ohnston. Bruce 171, 279 These WICHITA Jayhawkers salute THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1953 George Armstrong Armstrong Creamery Marcellus M. Murdock The Wichita Eagle Jack Petrie Petrie ' s Clothing Co. Arthur O. Schreck . Stockyards Cash-and-Carry Lumber Co. J. B. Zavatsky Innes Department Store Palmer Oil Company Steffen ' s Dairy Foods 386 ordan, Dottie 45, 54, 281 ordan, Scott 61, 176 orn. Wallace 153, 286 oyce, Barbara 147, 278, 369 uco, Chaffey 340 udson, Carol 51 udy. Dick 154, 282 ungk. Warren 170 unod, Charles 279, 369 unod, Norman 180 urden. Jerry 168, 265, 331, K KAAK, BOB 3. 157, 282, 347 Kaaz, Mary Ann 51, 133 Kaff, Gale 157 Kagey, Connie 40, 43, 137, 368 Kahre, Leroy 274 Kahre, Roy C. 275 Kalber, Douglas 164 Kallos, Greg 173 Kallos. Don 173 Kane, David 60, 168 Kane, John 57, 154 Kaner. Alice 52 Kansteiner. Beau 280 Karbank, Herbert 163 Karen, Gerber 139 Karras. Bill 152. 269 Kaspar, Carol 53, 140, 281 Kassebaum, Phillip 165, 285, 368 Kastner, Jim 61 Kauffman, Al 286 Kauffman, Fritz (Fred) 170, 276, 368 Kaufman, Ed 164, 369 Kay, Doug 128. 175, 282 Kay, Morris 78, 161 Kay. Robert 161 Keady. Janeice 52 Kearse. Katherine 369 Keefer. Robert 148 Keen. Kenneth 60. 168 Kennan. Larry 178, 287 Keeter, Julianne 54 Keine. Lellie 43, 50, 278 Keith, Bradley 161, 369 Keith, Charles 165 Kellam, Sally 133 Keller, Carol 50 Keller, John 66 Keller, teland 164 Kelley, Allen 157, 190 Kelley, Dean 66, 157, 190 Keller, Marv 167 Kelley. Maureen 125, 129 Kelley, Melvin 369 Kelley, Ralph 59, 166 Kellis. Wes 175 Kellogg, Darrell 161. 369 Kelly, Ann 54, 281 Kelly. Galen 177 Kelly, Ralph 265 Kelso, Myron 286 Kendall, Marilyn 138, 357, 369 Kendall. Sylvia 55, 142 Kendig, Harold 165 Kenney, Bob 5, 66, 70, 157, 357 Kennedy, Bob 43, 174, 282, 369 Kennedy. Tom 265, 268, 287 Kennett, Tom 287 Kension, Jean 146 Kent, Bud 162 Kent, Wilbur 59 Kepler, Betty 52 Kermashek, Eugene 368 Kerr, Jerry 156. 368 Kesler. Janet 51, 128 Kesner, Mick 60, 168 Ketterman, Joan 131 Kibler, Bob 61, 175 Kidd. P. H. 277 Kiddoo, Sally 51, 132. 357 Kiehl, Ralph 150 Landers, Skip 60 Kimball, Gwen 289 l.andes, Don 178 Kiene, Llewellyn 129 Landess, Bill 122, 157 Kilgore, Celia 43, 137 Landis, Carol 125, 370 Kimbell, Charles 165, 276 Landis, Mike 152, 269 Kimmel, Jacqueline 50, 130, Landon, Barbara 138 355 Landon, Jack 166 Kincaid, Tack 57, 156 Landon, Nancy 137, 271 Kincaid, Jo 54 Landress. Betty 43, 44, 129 Kindig, Jerry 58, 160 Lane. Charles 156 Kinemond, Gary 147 Lane. Lauri 54, 269 King, Frank S. 280 Langer, Sonya 52 King, Harriet 132 Langerman, Paul 60, 170 King, Jack 57, 152 Langsjoen. James 370 King, Ralph 287 Larkin. Bert 150, 274, 275. King. Richard 368 370 King, Wanda 54. 281 Larkin, Wilbur 61, 270. 279 Kinkead, Suzie 42, 141, 356 333 Kinney, George 59, 165 Larson. Bud 61 Kinry, Jane 52 Kirby, Merlin 163 Larson, Larry 59 Lassine, Sidney 149 Kirchhoff, Dick 287 Lathrop. Carl 61 Kirk. Lloyd 153, 279 Latimer. Bill 158 Kirkparrick, Bruce 128. 171 Lauber. Datha 123 Kirkpatrick, Charles 171, 355 Laughlin. Bob 167, 286 Kirkpatrick, Loy 369 Lauterbach, August 128, 168 Kirsch. Jack 153, 279 Kisling, Hasard 176 Lavcry. Jim 162 Lavy. Mary 53, 356 Klanderud. Barbara 144 Law, Clair 61, 280 Klassen, Dick 152, 276 Lawrence, Martha 138 Klassen, Keitrich 369 Lawrence, Mary 54 Klempnauer, Marilyn 54 Lawrence, Ray 156, 282 Kliewer. Paul 161, 164 Lawrence, Roy 47 Kline, Bob 160 Lawson, Paul 20 Kline, Richard 60, 169 Lawton, Keith 16 Kline, William 369 Lay, Allen 57 Kliver, John 163 Kloaz, Karl 18 Laybourn, Joyce 14 1, 285 Leach, Gwynne 54 Klobassa, Carl 172 Klusmire, Charlotte 146, 369 Leach. Mary Agnes 371 Leaderbrand, Lee 371 Knauss, Kathleen 43, 51, 126, Lechner. Herbert 150 133, 357 Legler. Gene 1 56 Knauss, Earl 155, 286 LeGree, Dick 276 Knepp, Gerald 61, 176, 279 Knight, Kay 268 Lehman, Gary 161 Lehmann, Kay 123. 130. 238 Knight. Mary 53, 138 Knightly, Bob 128, 168 Lehmberg. Stanford 150. 371 Lehning. Lela Mae 53 Knitig, Keith 277 Lehnus. Don 57. 153 Knobloch, Gene 61, 178 Leibengood, Dana 171 Knorp, Darryl 58, 160 Leinmiller. George 269 Knotts, George 324 Knowles, Dick 57, 77, 156 Lemoine. JoAnn 55. 141 Lemon, Letty 52. 283 Knowles, Wayne 331 Lemon. Vern 170 Knupp, Don 53, 123. 136. 268 Kobler, Dean 61, 178, 280 Leon, Virginia 140 Leonard, Carl 58, 158 Kobler, Bob 178 Koch, Albert 148 Leonard, Jan 51, 265 Leonard. Lew 279 Koeppel, Karl 175 Leondedis, George 56 Kobbeman, Alfred 59, 166 Koker, Doris 145 Leonhart, Joan 43, 50 Leonard. Lewis 165 Kolterman. Irma Lou 54, 281 Lerner, Kenneth 56, 280 Konek, John 78, 157, 270, 347 Leoni. Paul 62. 78, 128, 166 Koontz, Judith 55, 142 LeSuer, Marilyn 54 Kopper, Dean 177 Lett. Ronald 150 Koppers, Louise 144, 369 Kosar, Joe 174 Letteer, Jean 146 Letton, Jane 54 Koslzer, Jan 281 Koukol, Ruth Ellen 55, 145 Levikow. H. J. 149 Lewin. Walter 163 Kramer, Faye 52 Kramer, John 147 Lewis. Bernard 177 Lewis, Bill 57, 155 Kramer, Mitty 277 Lewis, Chester 154 Krause, Don H. 58, 157, 280 Kraus. Harold 178 Kravitz, Lawrence 159, 282 Lewis, Jannith 370 Lewis, Jerry 165 Lewis, Mary Ellen 54. 281 Krehbiel, Bill 166. 286 Lewis, Pat 46, 50, 173, 269 Krehbiel, Cynthia 43, 50, 125, Lewis, Robert 61 129 Lewis, William L. 280 Krueger, Burke 61, 178 Libby, Janet 333 Krueger, Roy 155, 268 Lichty. Nancy 138 Krueger, Tom 155 Lienhard. Bill 66 Krug, Barbara 55, 143 Liggett. Wilson 172 Kubik, J. Fred 287 Lightfoot, James 150 Kuhlman, Bill 147 Lilley, Donna Hobein 45 Kull, Ron 43. 178, 271, 282, Limes. Joe 178 369 Lindberg. Charles 171. 287 Kulp, Marilyn 128 Kunkhouser, Bill 180 Lindemuth, Frank 370 Lindemuth. Sally 54. 281 Kunz, William 369 Lindsay, Dan 43. 174 Kupl, Marilyn 51 Lindsay, Don 61 Kvamme, Else 55. 145 Lindsev, Donna 53 Linn. Dianna 55, 145 Linstrom, Richard 148. 282 Linstrom, William 148 Lipps, Eugene 370 Little. Steve 160 Littell. Roscoe 128, 161 Livingston. Wayne 173 Lloyd; Don 275 LACY, BOB 42, 173 Lacey. Carolyn 143, 370 LaFollets. Bob 174. 356 LaFree, Dick 357 Lagler, Jean 42 LaGree, Richard 157, 370 Lahman, Kay 3, 278 Laman, Muryl 148 Lamb. Bob 162 Lamb. Jim 58. 157 Lamb, Ralph 157 Lambert, Ann 43, 141, 370 Lambert, Cliff 128, 171 Lambert, Kay 141, 278 Lambert, Wayne 61 Lamborn, Larry C. 57 Lance, Tom 61 Lancelot. John 370 Lander. Beverley 54, 126, 281, 330 Locke, Lorena 289 Lodde, Joan 44, 122, 133. 283, 356 Loevenguth. Phil 370 Loftus. Larry 167 Logan. Barbara 128, 133, 284, 356 Logan, Carol 50 Logan. John 177. 280 Lohman. William 57, 155 Lolley. Dick 43. 174 Lonborg, Dane 173 Lonborg. Dutch 339 Londerholm, Robert 175, 287 Long, Earl 159. 371 Long, John 57, 153 Long. Peggy 52 Long. Rita 142 Long. Sondra 52. 281 Li.ngstaff. Bob 147, 279 Longsworth. Anne 371 Longwood, Peggy 136 Longwood. Ruth 53. 124. 163 Loudon. Jack 156 Lnuk. Frank 171 Love. Richard 177 Lovelady, Marilyn 52. 270 Loveless, Mary Gayle 134. 285 Lovellette. Clyde 66 Lowe, Jim 58. 157 Lowell. Beth 128. 133. 270 Lowis. Kay 52 I-ozenski, Rose Marie 55 Lucas. William M. Jr. 61 I.udwig, Wilma Rae 55 I.ukert, Barbara 51 Lund. George 28, 125. 165. 268. 279 Lundry, Joyce 55, 142 Lundy, foe 78 Luplau. Erik 173 Lupton. Ellen Jane 136, 265, 370 Lusk. Joanne 139. 278 Luthy. Annette 53. 140 Lux, Regina 53 Lyle. M. V. 173 Lynn, Max 57. 153 Lynch, Ham 154, 347 Lynch, Marijane 130 Lyon, Shirley 146, 269, 370 Lyons, Francis 156 Lyons, Thomas 165 Lysaught. Jerry 167 Lytle. Bob 158. 287 Me MCALLISTER, BEN 45. 282 McArdle, Lois 50 McBride, John 168, 287 McBurney, Alex 174 McCall, Dick 157, 276, 355, 371 McCall. Jack 173 McCallister. Een 168 McCallum, Edward 57. 155 McCammon, Nancy 136 McCann. Bob 152 McCarty. Cleve 57 McClelland. Don 154 McClelland, Joe 43, 166 McClelland. Phyllis 54 McClelland. William 150 McClenny. Myron 160, 276, 282, 285 McClenny, June 371 McClough, John 282 McClune, Bill 46 McClure. Billie 51 McClure. Seth 60 McCollum, Betty 54 McCollum. Frank 178 McComb, Carol 53. 140 McConnell, Doris 136, 371 McCormick, Eugene 164 McCoy, Anita 137, 269 McCoy. Betty 139 McCoy, Don 158, 286 McCoy, Roger 177 McCoy, Ted 154 McCuilough, John 169. 356 McCune, George 153 McCune, Marltn 57 McCutcheon. Anne 52 McDonald, Charles 59 McDonald, Dick 156 McDonald. Gaye 54, 125. 281 51 . , McDonald. Jack 59 McDonald. Jeanie 46, McDougal, Lynn 178 McDowell, Hanna Mary 134, 371 McEachen. Bill 160. 282 McEachen, Dick 156, 282 McElheny. Steve 56, 280, 286 McElroy, Harold 60 McEvers. Dick 154, 282, 371 McFarland. Diane 132 McFarland, Dick 173 McFarland. Janice 46. 133 McFarland. John 59, 166 McFarland. Kay 52 McFarland. Paula. 135 McFarlin. Annie 54, 281 McGaffin. lane 126. 356 McGilley, John 166, 371 McGinnis, Jean 132 McGinnis. Patricia 371 McGonigle. Dick 167, 282 McGregor. Nancy 370 McGrew. Nathan 61 McGuirc. Mick 57 McGuire. Tom 43. 163, 371 McHugh, Tim 59 Mclntosch, Holland 160 Mclrvin, Arvis 269, 289. 372 McKay. Bill 179 McKeagc. LeRoy 177, 275 McKee, Carol Dee 52 McKce, Kathleen 51. 265 McKee, Lynn 177 McKee, Mike 60 McKenney, George 157 McKernan, Sally 42, 137 McKibben, Mary Ellen 52 McKinney, Collin 61 McKinney, Mary Carolyn 54 McLaughlin, Anne 268 McLeroy, Bud 155 McMillen, John 61 McMillian, Lynne 134 McMillian, Phyllis 356 McMullen. Bob 169 McMullen, Joe 60 McNabney, Pat 132, 372 McNalley. Mike 154 McNeill, Neil 154, 372 McNergney, Connie 140, 288 McVay, Ann 46, 133 McVay, Paula 289 McWilliams, Paul 60 M MA, LirNiNG 159, 274 Maag, Richard 177 Macauley, Don 178 MacCormack, Jack 180 MacDougall, Jordan 45 MacGee, Ed 160 MacGregor, Nancy 135, 266 Machado, Luiz 159 Maclvor, Keith 70, 166, 274, 275, 332, 370 Mackey, Marjorie 54, 268 Mackey, Pat 54 Mackey, Virginia 38, 138, 283, 370 MacLaughlin, Anne 141, 288 MacLeod, Don 163 Maduros. Konstina 50 Magers. Kay 52, 357 Magg, Ed 157 Maguire, Bernard 60 Maguire. Dirk 61 Maher. Theresa 287 Mahoney, Kathleen 146, 278 Mahoney, Mary Ann 129, 278 Mahyers, Mrs. 43 Mai, Rich 276 Major, Eleanor 54 Malkmus, Bernie 178 Mallory, Billie 52 Mallory, Bob 128 Malone, Nancy 129 Maloney. J. O. 31 Malune, Eugene 164 Mammel. Dean 265 Mammel. Allen 370 Manlev. Don 43. 174 Manion. Bob 166 Mann. John 158, 274, 285, 370 Manney, Joane 54 Manning, Joleen 52 Manning. Pat 154 Manuel. Janice 136, 371 March, Jo Anna 41, 141 March. Ruth Ann 40, 43, 141. 371 Marhofer. Marilyn 52 Markham. Sandy 59, 165 Markle. Dick 147 Markley. Jay 160 Markley, Joan 55 Marr. J. Dennis 170, 286 Marshall, Betty 129 Marshael. Elizabeth 283 Marshall, Bill 174 Marshall, Bobbie 150, 371 Marshall, Carol 47, 53 Marshall. Hal 61, 280 Marshall. Jim 180 Marshall. Kathryn 53 Martin. Beth Anne 52, 281 Martin. Bill 158 Martin, Bob 28, 35, 59, 166, 331 Martin, Clyde 59 Martin, Dave 61 Martin. Don 59, 165 Martin, Leonard 57 Martin, Lloyd 171, 355, 371 Martin, Phil 57 Martin, William 58. 286 Martinez. P. Bill 371 Marty. Anne 43, 129 Marvjn. Burton 20 Marvin, Norman 164 Mason, Cynthia 54. 281 Mason. Francis 14 1 Mason. Janice 51 Mason, Leon 171 Masson. Alex 269 Masson, Robert 58 Matchett. Jcre 57. 153 Mathency, Harry 56 Mather, Carol 54 Mathes. James 161, 286 Matkins. Wanda 51 Matsushita, Sadako 371 387 Matsushita, Sid 140 Matthews, Dean 57 Matthews, Lenore 53, 136 Matthews, Tommy 59, 165 Maus, Connie 129. 285, 371 May, Charles 286 May, John 163 Mayberry, George 150, 286 Mayberry, Veryl 162 Mayer. Bob 41, 166 Mayer, Teresa 278 Mayrath, Nancy 265 Meador, Murray 372 Mears, Carleen 52 Mears, Jim 157 Mechen. Dick 348 Mecklenburg, Karl 56 Medlin. Allen 286 Meek, Joseph 286 Meeker, Donald 155. 268. 282 Meeker, Ron 174, 355 Megaffin, Jane 51 Megredy, Bob 153 Mehl, Robert 165 Mehnert, John 61 Mei, Richard 276 Meier, Bob 172, 283, 284. 344, 372 Meier, Dorothy 52 Meier, Leonard 61 Meils, Lois 372 Melia. Crandall 60. 280 Melkus, Dean 15} Menard, Don 59 Menchetti, Don 178 Meng, Frances 51 Mercer, Rich 128. 168, 348 Mercier, Larry 167 Merideth, John 60 Merrill, Kenneth 180. 276. 282 Merrill. Maz 266 Merriman. Betty 138 Merriman, Earl 170 Merz, Tony 160 Mesker, Lyle 53 Metz, Bonnie 52 Metz, Jack 57 Metz, Marilyn 143. 372 Meyer. Winnie 53. 124 Meyers, Dick A. 58. 157. 280 Meysenburg. Bob 167. 265 Meuhlbach. Marilyn 137. 268, 356 Meysing. Leo 287 Michaeie, George 123, 157, 270 Michaels, Jean 43, 44. 129, 372 Michener, Bill 4}, 166. 265, 344 Michener, Mary 54, 281. 331 Middlekauff, Charles 59, 166 Middlekauff. Mary 134, 372 Mikesell. Bill 57 Milan. Jesse 372 Millard. John 172 Milbradt. Eugene 159 Mill, Max 165 Miller, Adelaide 52. 269 Miller. Dianne 51, 267. 278 Miller. Doyle 180. 275. 372 Miller. Edward 165 Miller, Fred 147. 286 Miller, Henry 56 Miller. Howard 180. 276. 282 Miller. Jimmy 59. 165 Miller. James B. 280 Miller. Jock 154. 268, 269. 282 Miller, Larry 17} Miller, Mary Lou 43 Miller. Marian 43. 143 Miller. Marilyn 53. 136 Miller. Marion 278 Miller. Roger 155. 357 Millman, Roberta 53 Miller. Sally 55. 142 Miller. Sue 54. 324 Miller. Winifred 372 Mills. Belden 56 Mills. Jackie 54. 281 Milne. Steve 169 Milne, Thomas 170 Milton. Dick 287 Mirick. Ruth 146 Mitchell. Alexander 59 Mitchell. Kent 156. 344 Mitchell. Joan 289 Mitchell. Merry Lou 139 Mitchell. Sylvia 54 Mitchell, Wiley S. 276 Mitsakis. Charles 153 Mitsakis. Kariofilis 57 Mock, Norma 137. 270, 372 Mog. Marvin 150 Mohler. Jack 156. 268 Montgomery. Gene 61. 180 Montgomery. Henrietta 330 Montgomery, Susan 51, 281 Moon, Charlie 157 Moore. Dale 162 Moore, Haven 143 Moore. Howard G. 275 Moore. Gordon 59, 372 Moore, James 61 Moore. Kencth 372 Moore. Margaret 146, 269 Moore. Mary Beth 143. }72 Moore. Vaughn 57, 15} Morcau. F. J. Dean 20. 287 Morehead, Jim 175 Morelock, Charles 150 Morgan. Jude 52. 281 Morris. Dick 157 Morris. Don 57. 128 Morris. Jack 17} Morris. Loren 43. 59, 166. 344 Morr Mor Morr Morr s. Millicent 134. 355 son. Bob 58. 158 son, Dick 57, 344 son, Gwen 278 Morr son. Janet 133, 283, 373 Morrow, Duane 373 Morrow, Malcolm 163 Morti, Leonard 147 Morton, Martha 50 Morton. Sheila 51. 281 Morton, Tom 166. 282 Moser, Verne 57 Mosher. Don 163. 169, 373 Moss, Marlene 55 Mossinger, Bill 270 Moxley. Dave 45. 173. 270 Moyer, Paul 61 Mrkonic, George 77 Muehlebach. Marcia 54, 281 Mueller. Adolf 340 Mueller. Fred 155 Mueller. Kay 140 Mueller, Martha 147 Muir. Don 156 Muir. Johnnie 126. 135 Munger. Nancy 126. 135, 278, 283. 285 Munns, Larry 152 Muller. Joe 47, 57 Mulliken. Al 154 Mullinax. Lucy 43. 50 Munger, Murl 60 Munger. Nancy 45 Murphy. Ella Mae 142 Murphy. Franklin D. 16, 17. 27, 41 Murphy. Janis 137. 269 Murphy. Jerry 169, 279 Murphy, Larry 177 Murphy. Marvin 128. 163 Murray, Madison 154 Murphy, Margie 281 Murray, Max 122, 168, 265. 269 Murray, Wanda 142 Murray, Warren 159, 274, 275, 373 Myers Dave 160 Myers Dick 356 Myers Dolores 42, 50. 270 Myers Mary Lou 53 Myers Nancy 53, 140 N NALLEY, VIRGINIA 40. 45, 135, 373 Nangle, John 170, 282, 286 Nanninga, John 60 Napier, Grant 61 Nardyz, Carolyn 40, 45, 126, 135 Nardyz, Mark 59. 166, 280. 344 Nash, Ruby 289 Nason, Courtney 57 Nason. Herbert 16} Neal, Terry 163 Ncasc. Art 276 Nelson, Eugene C. 275 Nelson, Norma Jean 281 Neff. Carolyn 143 Nefsinger, Bill 15} Neighbors, Margie 54 Neighbor, Nancy 373 Nelligan. Katie 44. 45. 134, 372 Nellis. Jim 43, 166, 357, 372 These LAWRENCE Jayhawkers salute THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1953 Norman Edmonds Edmonds Food Store Ship Winter Winter Chevrolet Co. V. C. Rusty Springer Rusty ' s Superette Rusty ' s Food Center L. E. Morgan Morgan-Mack Motor Co. W. H. Semple Hillside Pharmacy Russ Mosser Art Wolf . . Mosser-Wolf Camera Shop Jimmy Cole Cole ' s Food Center 388 Nelson, Clara 134. 355, 372 Painter, Anne 145, 284 Powell, Carol 356 Richards, Marcelene 54 Nelson, George 172 Palmer, Dick 156 Powell, C. Richard 374 Richardson, Edwin 374 Nelson, Jerry 57 Palmer, Floyd 59 Powell, Jim 61 Richardson, Edward 274. 275 Nelson, Nannette 129, 373 Pankrat, Paul 162, 179, 286 Powers, Kathleen 43 Richardson, Evelyn 139 Nelson, Norma Jean 52 Park, Albert. 150, 279, 374 Powers, Patricia 55, 145 Richardson, Robert 161 Nettels, Curt 57 Neuer, Howard 130, 356 Park, Bill 180 Park, Bob 355 Praimer, Bobbie 269 Pratt, Tom 168, 356, 357 Richart, Frances 52 Richart, Francis 281 SABATINI, FRANK 79, 167 Neville, Mozelle 53, 124, 136, Park. Don 56 Pretz, Mary 139, 269 Richmond, Tom 172 Sachs, Fredrick 56 269 Neville, Nancy 53, 124, 136 Newbold, Richard 60 Parker. Jim 158 Parker, Joan 52 Parker, Philip 58, 157 Priaul, Kenneth 170 Priaulx, Kenny 276 Price, Ann 133 Richter, Jean 162 Rickel, Walt 160, 375 Rickman, Mary Lou 51 Sachs, Bob 147 Salisbury, John 139, 172, 376 Salyers, Earl 150, 275 Newby, Jim 57 Newman, Kay 138, 270 Newton, John 153, 286 Nichols, Don 270 Nichols, Marlene 42 Nichols, Miles 42, 156 Nichols, Raymond 16 Nichols, Sherman 128, 163 Nicholson, Bill 170, 282 Nicholson, Eldon 154, 190 Nicholson, Robert 373 Nienstedt, Martha 50, 355 Nixon, Joe Lynn 177, 286 Nicklaus, Dorothy 146 Nielson, Donald 170, 373 Nitz, Jim 157, 373 Nofsinger, Bill 57 Nold, Robert 373 Nordstrom, Dick 157, 276, Parker, Wayne 164 Parkerson, Jeannine 278, 289, 374 Parkinson, Harlan 165, 285 Parshall, Dorothy 54 Parsons, Mary 55, 145 Parten, Marvin 59 Parton, Dick 61 Passmore, Bill 59, 280 Patterson, Bill 158 Patterson, Cynthia 55, 268 Patterson, Harold 347 Patterson, Pat 190 Patterson, Paulyne 146 Patterson, William 163 Pattinson, John 148 Parton, Dwight 177 Paxton, Mary 54 Payne, Bill 166, 344 Price, Dee Ann 51, 355 Price, Arlene 374 Price, Bill 172 Price, Bud 154, 269 Price, Shirley 54 Priddy, Helen 139 Priest, Frank 165 Pringle, Don 160 Prochaska, Sam 169 Prosser.John 154, 282 Pruyn, Gil 61 Puliver, Sandy 53 Pulliam, Bill 165, 347 Pulliam, Joe R. 375 Pulliam, Robert 375 Pulliver, Sandy 270, 285 Pusitz, Thelma 144 Ricky, Thomas 160 Ridder, Tom 167 Rieder, Don 148, 279 Riederer, John 43, 128, 166, 375 Riege, Roberts 54 Rieger, Betty 53, 136 Rienhart, Dick 173 Rigdon, Donna 146 Riggs, Harold 375 Rigor, Mary 54 Riley, Dave 168 Riley, Gary 57 Riling, John 375 Rimann, Gayle 52 Rinehart, Bill 156 Ringer, Judy 50 Riggler, Marilyn 141, 375 Rimer. Harold 153 Samons, Don 271 Sammons, Ron 153 Sammons, Wanda 140 Samson, Frances 147, 376 Samuelson, Shirley 136 Sandborn, Kent 156 Sanders, Stephen 61 Sandifer, Richard 165 Santee, Wes 42, 73, 148, 252, 270, 380 Sargent, Dick 60 Sargent, Jon 58, 157 Satterwhite, Connie 175 Satterwhite. Hugh 270 Sauder, Anita 125 Sauer, Hank 167 Saunders, Don 163 Sawatsky, Gerald 287 Scanlon, Duggan 41 282 Pearce, Bob 61, 280 Riss, Louise 138, 265 arri , r atnerine 15, ill. Norman, Jim 59, 268 Norrie, Barbara 54, 281 Norrie, Pat 54, 281 Norris, Frank 174, 270, 332, Pearn, Bill 153. 274 Pearson, Carolyn 54 Pearson, John 155 Pemberton, Lee 45, 156. 279 Q Ritchie, Scott 125, 165 Ritter, Tom 43 Rivard, Mark 154, 268 Roach, Richard 176 288 Schafer. Charles 162 Schafer, Jerry 128, 175, 283 Schafer, Tom 57. 153 373 Norris, Mack 57, 153 North, Kathryn 132, 373 Notestine, Sharron 281 Nothdurft, Dianne 52, 281 Nottingham, Dave 286 Nottingham, Joan 142 Novotny, Rose Marie 143 Null, Eric 174, 276 Null, Margery, 55, 356 Nulton, Bfll 154, 271, 372 Pemberton, Shirley 52 Pence. Billie Beth 139 Pendelton, Helen 43, 141 Pendleton, Janet Ann 146 Penfold, Mary Lou 133, 374 Penny, Lois 374 Pennington, Marge 356 Perkins, Jim 61 Perkins, Nelson 42. 172 Perkins, Sam 161, 276, 374 Perring, Barbara 52 QUARRIER, JOHN 56 Quick, Cynthia 136 Quinley, Margaret 133 Quinn, Gretchen 128 Qumn, Sue 134 Quigley, Stephany 54 R Roark, Roger 58 Roberts, Al 59, 165 Roberts, Bud 168, 268 Robertson. Flavia 53 Roberts, Glen 277 Robertson, Jerry 81, 172, 344 Roberts, Kay 134 Roberts, Marilyn 130, 375 Robertson, Roger 157, 375 Robertson, Ruth Ann 54 Roberts, William 128, 150 Schanze, Jean 126, 160 Scharzel, Carol 55, 142 Schauf, Don 167, 287 Schaulis, Ruby 53, 140, 281 Schauvliege, Mary Jo 139 Scheer, Jeanne 287, 376 Scheideman, Blaine 125, 165 Scheideman, Dale 126, 165 Scheideman, Douglas 376 Schell. Parrel 148, 275 Scheloski, Donald 376 Perry, Carlos 282 Robertson, Ben 177, 280 Schenk Rex 60 Perry, Cecie 52 Perry, Janice 130, 355 Robertson, Bob 279 Robb, Elizabeth 53 Scheuerman, Rosemary 145, 376 Perry, John 153, 347 Perry, Jim 172, 279 Peschka, Alan 165, 374 RADFORD, RAY 155, 280 Radrick, Ron 43 Raines, Ben 375 Robbins, Dick 172 Robinson, Lloyd 279 Robinson, Mary Helen 140, Schindling, Jane 130, 355, 376 Schirmer, Jerry 157 Schliecher, Charles 54, 287 OAKS, VIRGINIA 52 Oborny, William 59, 162 O ' Brien, Larry 43, 174, 282, 331 O ' Brien, Marsha 52, 270 O ' Brien, Steve 160 Peschka, Rollin 280 Peterman, Charles 154 Peters, Carol 51 Peters, Kirma 54 Peterson, Bill 271 Peterson, Charles 60 Peterson, Marlene 288, 289. Raines, Lela 43, 53 Raley, Frank 275 Ralston, Marcia 51 Ramaker, Joanne 54 Ramirez, Anita 53 Ramsey, Bob 177 Randall, Dick 287, 374 375 Robinson, Rowland 279 Robison, Dan 59, 166, 344 Rodgers, Jack 166, 179 Rodkey, Frank 47, 128, 156 Roenbaugh, Doris 135, 375 Roenbaugh, Virginia 54 Schlothertack, Jo 289 Schlotterback, Thomas 288 Schlundt, Howard 276, 376 Schmalzried, Cleta 54 Schmalzried, Luella 139, 278 Schmid, Al 167 Schmid, Donna Lee 139 Ochs, Don 160, 372 375 Rash Alta 146 Rogers, Bruce 147, 280 Schmidt, Bill 128, 355 Ochs, Jay 147, 280 O ' Daniel, Georgia 50, 122, Peterson. Hans 155 Peterson, Martha 18. 41 Rashleigh, Perry 153 Rathsack, Herb 160 Rogers, Eileen 288, 289, 375 Rogers, Gene 153, 252, 271 Schmidt, Dick 42, 47, 128, 156, 270, 271 264, 278 Odell. Jerry 53, 150, 279 O ' Dell, Jim 56, 159. 275, 280 O ' Dell. Geraldine 147 Peterson. Neil 148 Peterson. Phil 175, 274 Petitt. Phil 168, 265, 276 Phelps. Dorothy 375 Ratner, Cliff 154, 287 Ratslaff, Maxine 130 Rathbun, Jake 173 Rausch, Marv 157 Rogers, Gerald 154, 287 Rogers, Jack 41 Rogers, Kenneth 154 Rogers. Larry 123 Schmidt, Jim 152 Schmidt. Reinhold 172, 284 Schmidt, Wilbur 376 Schmidt. William 171 Oden. Hillary 153 O ' Farrell. Tom 57, 280 Phenninger, Mark 164, 177 Phillips, Ben 161 Raw, Jeanette 51 Rawline, Virgie 140, 288, 374 Rogge, Karleen 55. 142 Rogoff, Martin 149 Schmidt. Willard 159 Schmiederer. Sue 54 Ogg, Harry 58, 160 Ogilvy, Jill 122, 133. 372 Oglesbec, Dwight 373 Phillips, Dick 147 Phillips, Innes 154, 356 Phillips. James A. 150 Ray. Harold 154 Reager. Betty 270 Reams. Jack 57. 153 Rohwer, Kathy 269 Ronald, Joyce 132 Roney, Patricia 141, 128, 265 Schmitendorf. Jim 350 Schmitz. Gene 59. 162 Schneider, Stanley 150 O Grady, Pat 42 Oldham, William 373 Phillips. James E. 150 Phillips. lac Kay 51 Rebein, Bob 287 Redd, Carol 52 Roney, Rocelyn 52 Rooney, Barnard 160 Schnell. Farrell 274 Schnierle. Anneliese 143, 283. Oliver, Carolyn 143, 373 Phillips. Lewis 165 Reed, Bob 154, 282 Rooney, Ned 171 288. 376 Oliver, Jay 43, 174, 269 Oliver, Jim 61 Oliver, Julia 142 Oliver. Tom 279, 285, 373 Phillips. Ronald 56 Phillips, Scott 275, 375 Phoenix. Tom 59. 165 Piatt. Shirley 39. 53, 271, 278. Reed, Cornelius 374 Reed. Jan 53 Reed. Marlyn 134, 374 Rees, Barbara 51 Rooney, Noel 58, 160, 265 Roop, Sue 135, 278. 375 Roots, Bonita 45, 55, 142 Rosario, David 286 Scholten. Harriet 51, 281, 283 Schrag, Joanna 47, 130 Schrag, Vernon 158 Schroeder, Joan 51 Olsen. Ronald 57, 155 284 Reese, Allen 21 Rose, Jack 156 Schroeder. Mary 53. 140, 281 Olson, Artis 54, 281 Olson, David 283 Olson, John 163, 169, 373 Pickerill. Jack 59 Pickering. Jack 162 Pierson. Marilyn 51 Reese. Nancy 138, 265, 270 Reetz, Gretta 42, 50, 129 Rehkop. Al 280 Rosenan, Shirley 43. 129, 344 Rosenlund. Jerry 59. 166 Rosenwald, Vicki 140,271, Schroeder, Roger 175 Schroers, Bob 43 Schuetz, Lou Ann 53 Olson, Robert L. 163 Pierson. Pat 54 Reich, Gil 38, 39, 41, 81, 166, 278. 285 Schulte, Patricia 55, 283 O ' Neill, Gene 59 Opie. Glenn 165, 287 Orendorff, Barbara 373 Orlowske, Wayne 59, 166, 280 Pierson. Ray, Jr. 168 Filler, Joan 138, 265, 268, 270 Pinkney, Nancy 374 190, 344 Reida, Vada 147, 374 Reiff, George 283 Reiger, Betty 128 Roshleigh. Perry 57 Roshong. Richard 148, 375 Roskam. Don 157 Ross, David 57 Schultz. Don 60, 280 Schumacher. Edna 54. 281 Schumacher, Herb 173 Schumacher, Winnie 136 Orme, LaVette 146 Ormond, Eleanor 126, 142 Pitman, Nannette 52 Pittman, William 374 Reiland. Bob 59 Reiland, Harold 357 Ross, James 44, 171 Ross, Leah 132, 375 Schumann, John 280 Schutz. Carl 160 O ' Rourke, Jim 166 Platter. Ben 126. 284 Reiland, Harry 167 Ross, Richard 61 Schutz. Earl 344 Orrick, Gayle 54 Orth. Faydean 54. 265, 331 Platter, David 165 Plummer, Lorna 51, 281 Rein. Jack 43, 166, 332, 356 Reitz, Ann 50 Rossman, Dick 174 Roster. Dick 162 Scupin, Jean Ann 138, 268, 344 Osborn, Jennie 50 Plummer, Norman 28 Remark, Don 167 Roth. Bob 122, 166. 265 Schwader. Rita 43, 44. 129. Osborn, Lynn 148 Osborne, Rosalee 44, 122, 133. Plummer, Pat 55 Poe, Mary Frances 53, 140, Remsburg, George 59, 165 Rench, Wuanita 55. 142 Roth, Ronald 177, 375 Roth, Rose Marie 55, 142. 281 268. 376 Schwantes, Suzanne 54, 281 265 Oshima, Haruka 147 281 Pokorny, Bob 164 Rendigs. Sally 51, 357 Renfro, Robert 61 Rothrock. John 57 Rubins. Alfred 375 Schwartz. Joe 57, 344 Scott, Dean 57 Oswald, Orland 61 Pollom. Marilyn 136, 288 Rengel. Marvin 128. 168 Rubin. Phillip 56, 280 Scott, Dick 177 Owen, Beth 52 Pontius. Dean 59 Renick. Bill 128, 168 Ruble. Rosanne 136 Scott, Jack 175 Owen, Jack 61 Pool, Marvin 169. 279 Renner, Ferald 374 Ruder. Hearn 167 Scott. Jadeen 55. 265. 268 Owen, Phillip 161, 282 Owen, Rosemary 43, 129 Owen, Sadie 139 Owens, Dean 173, 276 Poor. Martha 51, 281 Pope, Joann 54 Pope, Robert 274, 275 Poppe, Orville 80, 160 Renner, Joe 128. 161, 269 Renner. Sally 46, 51 Resseler. Dick 154 Reubel. Roseann 124 Ruehlen. Marvin 376 Ruses. Ed 268 Rumsey. Dick 59. 166 Runyan. Ann 52 Scott. Jerry 154, 269. 355 Scott, Johnna 278 Scott. Kay 43, 53 Scott. Phyllis 43. 128. 141. Owens, Vfuliam 373 Porch, Mary Beall 53 Reuber, Melvin 163 Runyon, Delores 139 288, 377 Owings, Paul 152 Porter. Bill 287 Reusch, Clifford 164 Rupp, Robert 56 Scott, Sue 129 Porter, Don 157, 374 Reuse. Ed 344 Rush. Pete 165, 276. 350 Sealey. Mona 281 P Porter, Jim 356 Porter, John 274, 374 Porter. June 130. 374 Reusch. Joyce 53. 136 Reynolds. Richard 60 Rexroad. Althea 53. 270, 285 Rush. Nancy 55 Rushfelt. jerry 170.286.376 Russell, Kay 137. 376 Searl. Richard 56 Scars. Bruce 175 Sears, Dick 173 Porter. Marcia 52 Rhodes. Sandra 55, 145 Russell, Mary Lou 288 Sebesta. Sam 377 Porter. Margaret 55. 142 Rice. Fred 173, 271, 276, 285 Russell. Nancy 52 Sechrist. Gilbert 163 Porter. Merwin 58. 280 Rice. Rex 61 Russell. Veda 131 Scever. Galen 59 PACE. ROBERT 374 Porter. Ruth 145 Rich. Dan 60. 344 Russing, Suzanne 269 Seidl. Jane 54 Padgett, Gary 168 Post. Shirley 139 Richards. Billie 143 Russing, Zannie 136 Seiwald. Donald 176 Pagedas, Tony 277 Pott. Tom 60 Richards. Bob 59, 165 Ryan, Paula 55. 145 Sejkora. Joyce 52, 281 Pagel, Shirley 55, 142 Pouksen. Ebbe 162 Richards. Dennis 58. 158 Ryther. Dave 59. 165. 286 Seikora. Lynn 55, 142. 281 Poulson, Ebbe Thve 59 Polski. Alfred 59 Richards. Jim 59. 166 Ryther. Thomas 165 Sclbe. Sally 145 389 Sell, Curtis 61, 280 Sellers, Merl 60, 276, 348 Sellers, Richard 171 Selvig, Mary Lou 51, 357 Serda, Marjorie 140 Settles, Bob 175 Shanahon, Charles 171, 377 Shank, Gene 153 Smith, Irma 277 Smith, James 58 Smith, Jerry 128. 168 Smith, JoAnn 52, 142 Smith, John 57 Smith, Juanita 52 Smith, Judy 140 Smith, Keith 60 Stiles, Georgia 139 Stiles, Joseph 286, 288, 378 Stiles, Phil 60 Stiller, Don 277, 355 Stinson, Bob 59 Stipe. Dan 164 Stites, Dories 53 Stith, Ed 60 Taylor, Charles 172, 378 Taylor, Dot 143, 284, 378 Taylor, Ed 148, 279, 378 Taylor, Jerry 78, 157 Taylor, Jim 60 Taylor, Martha 51 Taylor, Marti 357 Taylor, Mary Ann 54, 281 Underwood, Jane 55 Underwood, John 60 Underwood, Kay 143 Underwood, Marilyn 54, 331 Underwood, Nancy 268 Underwood, Sonny 156 Unrein, Marguerite 144, 380 Unruh, Arch 160, 380 Shanker, Harry 147 Smith, Lud 43, 174, 279. 331, Stith, Wilma 55 Taylor, Robert 170 Unruh, Harlan 380 Shannon, Marietta 50 J56 Stockham. Glenn 58, 160 Teagarden. Walter 274 Unruh, Duane 160, 380 Shanze, lean 279 Shapp, Barbara 129 Sharpnack, Jim 42, 128. 171 Shaughnessy, Kathleen 1 36, Smith. Margaret 55, 142 Smith, Margie 52 Small, Mendel 149 Smith, Murlin 177 Stockton, F. I. 20 Stoeker. Thefma 139 Stoeppelwerth, George 160 Stoff, William 61 Tebow, Robert 58, 160, 286 Teed. Nancy 55, 331, 357 Teichgraeber, Jim 154, 268 Temple, Kathy 51 Uppdegraff, Mary Lynn 41. 141 Urban, Lee Ann 54, 281 Urban, Leonard 274 267 Shaver, Glenn 155 Smith, Max 279 Smith, Nancy 54, 281 Stone, Birgitta 140 Stone, Gerry 59. 162, 286 Templin, Jay 162 Teplitz, Morris 33 Uric, Dave 56 Shaw, Barbara 146 Smith, Opal 142 Stone, Janice 47, 50 Terflinger, Curtis 379 Shaw, Joan 43, 53, 265 Shaw, John 152 Shaw. Marlene 146. 377 Smith, Paul 57 Smith, P. K. 172 Smith, Rex 347 Stone, Ralph 56 Stonebraker, Diane 130 Stoneburner, Caroline 269 Terr. Frank 276 Terrell, Terry 60, 280 Terry, Bob 153 V Shaw. Martha Jane 14 1 Smith, Richard 165 Stoneman, Jean 137, 266, 267. Terry. Margie 45 Shaw, Sis 42, 278 Smith, Sam 60 288 Terry. Marguerite 134 Shawver, Don 166 Smith, Susan 53 Stonestrcct, Gary 61 Terry. Vincent 58 Shay, Jo Anne 54 Sheafor, Douglas 57 Smith, Shirley 138, 146 Smith, Stan 172 Stonestreet, Jack 157, 347. 355 Storer, Ada 288. 378 Texflinger, Ann 289 Thayer, Max 58, 158 VACIN, FRANK 176 Valentine, Max 286, 380 Shearer, Beth 135 Smith, Thomas 376 Storer. Esther 378 Thedcn, Vernie 143, 278, 284, VanBebber. Fred 173 Shears, Jack 166 Smiriga, Steve 167 Stormont, Linda 139 288 VanBebber. Thomas 148, 287 Sheets, Dorothy 265 Smith, Thurston 169 Story, Georgia 140. 378 Thies. Betty 42, 131. 379 Vance, Mike 52 Sheets. Scott 270 Smith, Walter 176 Stout. Carol 136 Thies. Pat 54 Vance, Patricia 134, 380 Shelson, Richard 165. 282, 332 Smith, William 161, 376 Stover, Dorene 378 Thiess. Pat 281 Vance, Sally 52 Shelinbarger, Joan 54 Snyder, Eleanor 52 Stover, Harold 378 Thomas, Barbara Lee 289 Vancedenberg. Georgann 43. Shellhaas. Carol 54 Snelling, Roy 177 Strain. Shirley 133. 378 Thomas, David 379 141 Shepard. Burwell 165. 266 Snook, Orrie 171, 279, 376 Strain. Wilfred 162 Thomas, Florence 145 Vander Lippe, John 287, 380 Shepler, James 57 Shepp. Barbara 43. 288 Snyder, Phyllis 139 Soden. Kathleen 34 Stranathan, Norma Lee 145 Straubc, Max 165 Thomas, John 159 Thomas, Lloyd 177 Van Dyke, Carol 54 Van Lew, James 61 Sherman, Dolores 53 Sohlberg. Susan 54 Strawn, John 154 Thomas, Lonnie 344 Van Meter, Joy 50 Sherman, Jerry 170 Sommers, Bob 57, 280 Strehlow, Chet 155 Thomas, Lon 166 Van Meter. Sam 60 Sherman, Tom 58. 160 Sommers, Dave 172 Steinberg. Don 149 Thomas, Mrs. 43 Van Pelt. James 125, 150 Sherwood. Nathalie 136 Soper, Fred 175 Steinberg. Harold 149 Thomas, R. C. 58, 157 Vaughan, Leah May 55, 145 Shipp, Rita 146 Sorem. Marilyn 128 Street. Jerry Ann 55 Thomas. Ronald 379 Vaughan, Rodger 162, 380 Shirley, Bob 58, 157, 387 Sorem. Rowena 52 Streeter. Tal 58, 158 Thompson, Allen 171 Vaughn, Ann 51 Shockley, Louise 54 Shoemake, Robert 59, 162 Shoerer. Kent 161 Sortor. Edith 54 Southern. Betty 55, 145 Sowers, John 377 Stickelber, Merlin 168 Stricklan. R. James 154 Stringer, Stan 60 Thompson, Bill 57, 155. 270 Thompson, Fred 165, 379 Thompson. Lee Ann 123. 130 Vehlewald. Shirlcyann 51 Venaid. Shirley 54, 281 Verbuggc. Dick 167, 274, 275 Short. James 148 Short, Margaret 53 Short, Reuben 44, 135 Spainhour, Con 279 Spradley, Calvin 160 Sparks, Charles 158 Stritesky. Delores 146 Strong. Terry 147 Struble. Ted 57 Thompson, Margaret 143, 284 Thompson, Mary 55 Thompson. Max 379 Verper. Donald 380 Vetterick, Kay 51. 281 Vogel. Rosalie 269 Shrauner, Ely 162 Sparks. Jim 58. 158 Strumillo. Mary Ann 55. 142 Thompson, Peter 37 Voiland, Fredricia 42, 54, 126, Shrauner. James 279 Shret. Russell 324 Spaulding. Barbara 46, 131. 377 Struzzo. Joseph 177. 378 Stubblefield. Charles 158. 286 Thompson, Shirley 278 Thompson, Suzanne 146, 278, 269. 281 Voiland, Marimae 136 Shrewsbury, Charles 126. 128, Speck, Suzanne 128, 137, 268 Stucker. Eugene 148 379 Volzke, Nita 380 161. 377 Shultz, Joseph 149, 377 Speckim, Bainey 59. 280 Speckman, Carroll 276 Stueck. Marilyn 54 Stunkel. Elaine 52 Thomson. Shirley 145, 379 Thorn. Jim 47. 156 Von Gunten. Charlisa 54 Voskamp, Raymond 155, 279 Shumaker, Wilbur 377 Speer. Wilson 287 Sturdevant, Howard 59, 126. Thornberay, Bill 344 Shumway, Gene 178, 376 Speers, Jerry 158 165 Thorne. Rosalie 140. 288 Shutz, Laura Ann 53, 356 Spencer. Hughes 154 Stutz. Bob 147. 378 Thornton, Lenore 289 Shutz, Sue Ann 43 Spencer, Oliver 79. 174 Stutz, Carol 52. 357 Thornton. Richard R. 61 w Shvotsuka, Ted 30 Spencer. Stan 178, 377 Styles. Phil R. 280 Thoipe, Alice 51. 357 Siebert, Mary Gayle 52. 357 Spivey. Elbert 377 Sullivan, Marjean 141, 265 Thorpe. Steve 59 Siegfried. Kaye 51. 284 Sport, Donna 54 Sullivan, Rex 126. 160 Tice. Donald 148. 279 Sifers, Donald 165 Sikes, Jules 76 Siler, Kathy 140 Simmons. Jim 274, 275. 277 Simons. John 270, 282 Sprague. Harry 56 Springer. Bobby 377 Springer. Byron 157 Springer. Phyllis 54 Spotts. Donna 281 Sullivan. Wendell 173 Sullivan. William 59 Summers, Donna 287 Summers. Shirley 53, 136 Summerville, Sue 54 Tiderman, Mark 60 Tiemeiser, Wayne 277, 347 Timmons, Judy 53 Timmons. Sherman 177 Tink. John 379 WADDELL, JEAN 287, 380 Waddell. Margie 52 Wade. Denni 130, 355. 380 Wagers. Wayne 57. 155 Simmons, Norma 53 Sproul, Ann 134 Suske. Joe 378 Tinkler. Dean 128. 284 Waggener, Sterling 287, 380 Simmons, Otis 154, 376 Simon, John 61, 165 Simpson, Damon 168, 274. 376 Spuehler. Bob 61. 280 Spurney, Frank 61, 280 Squires, Joan 136 Squires, La Vannes 134, 190, Sutorious. Barbara 43, 47. 129 Sutton, Elva 51. 357 Sutton, Jack 378 Svenson. Valerie 147 Tinslcy. Shirley 131. 283 Tipton, Georgia 137. 269. 379 Tkach. Steve 167, 379 Toalson. Bob 152. 347 Wagner, Ann 138 Wagner, Bob 61 Wagner, Irma 381 Wagoner, Joe 58, 160 Simpson, Gloria 377 Simpson, Ken 164, 377 Simpson, John 67 Sims, Ann 14 1 282 Stahl, Dick 58. 157 Staley, Mary Beth 140 Stallard. Al 157 Swaffar, Durian 138 Swain. Marshall 379 Swaim. Rod 160. 276 Swander. Orval 40, 43, 174. Tobler. Bill 169. 276, 379 Todd. Bill 178. 347 Todd. Marv 379 Toedman, Gordon 169 Wahaus, Herb 147 Wahl, Norma 55, 142 Wahlberg. Coralyn 138, 270 Wahlstedt, Art 152 Sims, James 154 Sims, Phyllis 132 Sinclair, Richard 377 Sinha, Ranendra 177 Six, Sally 268 Sioberg. Dick 178 Skaer, Janice 52, 270 Skaer, Joanne 52 Skinner, Bob 59, 162 Skinner, Ellen 145 Skinner, JoAnne 146 Slagle. Marvin 57, 155 Slankard, James 377 Slaon, Marianne 142 Slasson, Don 357 Stamm. Willis 377 Stamper, Harlan 60, 280, 284 Stanfill, William 377 Stanley, Ken 148. 164, 378 Stark, Bob 152, 276 Stark, Gene 167 Starr, Leonard 158, 279. 286 Starry, Sara 44, 48, 128. 137 States. Sydney 55, 269 Stauffer, Rachel 43. 141 Stayton, Marlene 52 Stealey. Helen 50 Steanson. Norma 166 Steckel, Pat 51 Steele, Charles 175 276 Swanson, Carol 125. 129 Swanson, Joann 52. 126. 281 Swartz. Marilyn 132. 283, 379 Sweeney. Allen 59. 344 Sweet. Marilyn 287 Swift. George 274 Swigart. Louise 137 Swisher. Barbara 142. 278 Swisher, Bob 379 Swisher, Jim 169 Switzer, John 286 Swords, Jim 174 Symns, Eddina 50 Smee, Lou Ann 146 Todd. Kathryn 133 Toft. Jim 58 Toland, Dorris 55, 145 Toliver. Adolphus 279 Tolle. James 176. 275 Tomlinson. Bill 57 Toothaker. Norman 177 Torres, Alphonso 164 Tougaw, Larry 148 Townsend. Shirley 145. 379 Transue, John 274, 275 Trapp, Barbara 144 Trego, Robert E. 287 Trent, Chester 164 Tretbar. Harold 163 Wainscott, Scotty 43 Wakefield. Gordon 381 Wakeland. Edward 59, 162 Walder, Bud 162 Waldschmidt, LeRoy 61 Walker, Bud 42. 47 Walker. Clayton 156 Walker, Darrell 57 Walker, Diane 138, 381 Walker, Freeman 279 Walker, Gary 61 Walker, Golda 53, 140 Walker, Robert 287 Walker, Sam 163 Walker, Stuart 60, 280 Wall, Ed 153, 280 Slater, Richard 58. 160 Stecle, Margaret 139 Trombold, John 152, 265. Wall, Raymond 57 Slavic. Ray 167 Slawson, Don 157 Sleeper, Don 164 Sloan, Courtney 170, 279 Steene. Birgitta 53 Steierl, Diane 281 Steinberg, Harold 378 Steinbacker, Joe 277 T 282. 347 Trotter. Barbara 131 Trotter, Johanna 54 Tucker, Barbara Lee 128, 134, Wallace, Ann 45, 52 Wallace, Joe 280 Wallace, Mary 50 Wallace Milton 122 264 285 Slocum, Virginia 5} Smell. William 175. 269 Steinki, Margaret 52 Stemmerman, Lyle 61 379 Tucker, Edmond 60 Waller, Larry 60 Walls Jim 147 Smiley, Norman 60 Smiley, Richard 58, 158, 286 Smith, Anne 142 Stephens, Bill 160 Stephens, Charles 159, 274, 378 TAGGART. MARY 41, 55 Taggart. Nancy 378 Tait. Dick 152 Tucker, Pat 52 Tudor, Betty 50 Turner. Betty 53, 128, 136, Walls! Kay 52 Walter. Lucille 52 Walter Paul 174 Smith, Annette 278, 377 Smith, Aubrey 58 Stephenson, Don 152,268 Stererl, Diane 51 Tajchman, Maxine 55 Talkington, Robert 287 380 Turner. Mike 130 Walterscheid. Geraldine 55. 142 Smith, Bill 283 Smith, Bob 43. 166. 287 Smith. C. A. 60. 280 Smith, Carolyn 51 Smith. Carroll 147. 377 Stevens, Ann 55 Stevens, Bill 61 Stevens, Don 344 Stewart, Bill 172 Stewart, Bob 66. 153, 331 Talley. Joan 52, 281 Tal ley. Robert 171 Tan. Sally 55. 142 Taney. Beverly 52 Tannahill, Ralph 150, 283, Turner, Norton 148 Turner. William 171 Tweet. Barbara 55, 145 Twente, Dorothy 132, 380 Twentc, Elmo 164. 176 Walz, Betty 284 Wampler, Jo 129 Wandling, Dorothy 137 Ward, John 153 Ward, Phyllis 142, 288 Smith. Dean 166. 190. 347, 377 Stewart, Don 58, 59, 160 Stewart, James 274, 275, 378 378 Tanner, Bob 173, 279 Twigg. Allois 52 Tyson, Mary 133, 265 Warder, Robert 134 Warner, Jay 157 Smith. Dick 122, 160. 166. Stewart, Janet 139 Tarr, Frank 276 Warren] Roger 177 344 Stewart, Janice Manuel 283 Tarr. Oliver 378 Wasson ' , Kay 158 Smith, Don 59. 61. 125, 154. Stewart, Jim 154 Tarry. Fred 175 Wassoni William 58 162, 280, 339 Stewart, Joan 136 Tarwater, Donna 281 Waterso ' n, LoRee 147, 381 Smith, Dorothy Ann 55, 128 Stewart. Lynn 158 Tate. Brad 58, 157, 356 Watkins, Ivan 177 Smith, Douglas 175, 269 Stewart, Mary Ellen 55, 285 Tate, Judith 145 Watson, ' Barbara 55, 270 Smith, Ethan 59. 166 Stewart, Robert 378 Tatum, Connie 52 Watson Betty Lou 54 Smith. Frank 60 Stewart, Tom 57 Tatum. I. eland 171 ULRICH, HUBERT 347 Watson, Dorothy 52 Smith. Gad 165. 276 Stickelber, Marlin 378 Taylor, Arlee 378 Ulrick, Lee 171 Waugh ' Theresa 126 Smith, George 154 Stiles, Don 60 Taylor, Bill 168 Underbill, Julie 53 WayFand, Mike 165 390 Weathered, Jack 60 Weaver, Don 177 Webb, Harry 163 Webber, Darreil 162 Weber, Betty 129 Weber, Francis 147 Weber, James 165 Weber, Jerry 287 Weber, Victor 148 Wegert, Arthur 59 Wegner, Kenneth 381 Weideman, Mary Alice 123 Weidman, Ted 56 Weiler, Janet 52 Weins, Pete 164 Weishaar, Marv 167 Weiss, Wayne 57, 155 Weitzner. Bernard 149, 381 Welch, Gary 59, 331 Welch, Tom 60 Welsh, John 171, 381 Wellborn, Jo 52 Welling, Bill 60 Wellman, Tom 147 Wells, Leon 60 Weltmer, Loren 380 Wenger, Les 126, 165 Wenger, Virgil 165 Wenre, Norman 170 Werneke, Duane 269 WerraH, John 170 Wessell, Diana 53 West, Allane 143, 380 West, Bobbie 139 West, Caroline 136, 357 West. Shirley 53, 136 Westerhaus, Gene 173 Westerhaus, Harry 380 Weston, Geoffrey 271 Westwood, Tom 160 Wetth, Ann Rita 55. 145 Wharton, Bob 175, 268 Whatley, Gregg 286 Wheelen, John 287 Wheeler. Jess 178 White, Barbara 131. 381 White. Chauncey 381 White, Connie 53, 128 White, Harry 152 White, Joyce 52 White, Patricia 146 White. Phillip 58 White, Tom 47. 128. 156 Whitehead, Jerry 58, 160 Whiteside, Bud 57 Whitmore. Richard 58 Whitney, Mary Ann 52 Whitney, Peggy 54, 281 Whitney, Wes 157, 357 Whitson, Max 172 Whittier, Ann 43. 137. 381 Wideman, Mary Alice 42. 136 Widick, Fritz 43, 344, 381 Widick, Herman K. 274. 275 Wiechman, Mildred 51 Wiedeman, Biz }56 Wiedeman, Mary Alice 53, 136 Wigington, Ronald 252, 274, 275, 381 Wilbur, Bob 276 Wilcox, Holly 136 Wildin, Bob 147 Wiley, Alice 52 Wiley, Christine 124, 129, 270, 283 Wiley, Jim 47, 124. 257 Wiley. Kathleen 147 Wiley, Patsy 53, 126. 356 Wilhelm, Paul 274, 275. 381 Wilhelmsen, Kemple 178 Wilkening, John 274 Wilkerson, Thomas 61 Wilkins, Joseph 286 Wilkinson, John 283, 381 Wille, Alvaro 153 Williams Ann 54 Williams Williams Williams Williams Williams William. Williams Clyde 148 Don 190, 280 Dorothy 147 Frank 47, 123 Glenna 287 Joe 56 .. ,.,.,,,,. Marc 180 Williamson, Ollie 154 Williams, Pat 135, 380 Willis, Jack 148 Williams, Clyde 380 Willson, Don 152 Wilms, Bob 178 Wilson, Allen 356 Wilson, Alex 380 Wilson, Beverly 51 Wilson, Bill 38. 39, 169, 381 Wilson, Bob 169 W Wi Wi Vi Wi Wi Wi Wi Vi Wi son, Bryan 180 son, Dan 180, 274, 381 son, Frank 160 son, James 164, 381 son, Ned 154, 269, 347 son, Nora 135 son, Norman 180 son, Peggy 54, 281 son, Phyllis 55 .. ' . son, Richard 381 Wilson, Stan 277 Wilson, Sue 142 Wilson, Tom 355 Wimsatt, Joe 38, 167 Winer, Clarence 149, 381 Winey, Bill 350 Winslow. Ron 178 Winter, Larry 58, 280 Winzer, Myrna 52 Witcher, Don 58 Withers, Bill 47, 173 Witmer, John 381 Witt, Cecil 160 Witt, Jerry 46, 60 Witten berg, Henry 155 Wohlegemuth, Elizabeth 139 Wolf, Allen 149 Wolf, Frank 347 Wolfe, Carol 50 Wolfe, Jack 166 Wolfe, Joe 42, 172 Wolverton, Emily 140 Wong, David 382 oodbury, Woodhull, Shirley 51 Wo , Curt 60 , Woodle, Dorothy 142 Woodruff, Dean 41 Woods, Joe 128, 155, 270, 271, 282 Woods, Tom 169, 286 Woodside, Don 43 Woodson, Don 154, 382 Woolpert. Frances 382 Woolpert, Keith 382 Woodward, Bill 164 Woody. Warren 78, 166, 270 Wooster, Joe 178 Worcester. Patty 54 Worcester, Robert 155, 279 Worley, Joan 51 Worley, P. K. 172 Worthington, Joan 140 Wright, Allegra 52 Wright, Claude 1 54 Wright, Dean 61 Wright, Richard 286 Wright, Sue 53, 136 Wullschleger, Otto 162, 164 Wunsch, Bob 152, 279 Wyman, Jimmy 58, 158 Wyman. John 126 Wynkoop, John 152. 347 Wynn, Howard 58, 160 YANCEY, VIRGINIA 44, 138 Yeoman, Martha 55, 270 Ying, Tom 153 Yockey, Bill 174 Yoder, Sally 51 York, Avalon 140 York. James 161 York, Julie 133 Young, Annette 51, 126, 268 Young, Dan 174 Young, Fred 173, 355 Young, Keith 155, 382 Young, Rich 47, 269 Young, Shirley 139 Youngberg, Irvin 19 Yunker, Ken 160 ZAHN, GEORGE 171, 270 Zannetos, Zenon 382 Zee, Hugo 147 Ziegelasch. Suzanne 51, 270 Ziegler, John 61 Zimmerman, Carolyn 52, 126, 355 Zimmerman, Helen 128, 134, 382 Zimmerman, Joan 44, 54, 281 Zimmerman, Julian 287 Zimmerman, Max 171 Zimmerman, Pal 166, 268 Zimmerman, Pat 43 Zuercher, Bruce 46, 174, 269 Zuercher, Sam 43, 174 These KANSAS CITY Jayhawkers salute THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1953 Sumner E. Fifield . . Greiner-Fifield Lithographing Co. Karl Koerper .... Kansas City Power Light Co. Henry Cate Flour Mills of America Ralph Perry Perry Pontiac Roy Muehlbach Geo. Muehlbach Sons (five convenient locations) Leo Nardyz Flint Casket Co. Roland Record Jackson Motors Don Davis WHB Broadcasting Co. Nor O ' Neill O ' Neill Oldsmobile Co. James McGilley Mellody-McGilley-Eylar Fred C. Allvine Speed Warner Inc Insurance Surety Bonds Kansas City-Topeka-Jefferson City 391 THIS FAMILIAR MODERN BUILDING REPRESENTS THE EFFICIENT PROGRESSIVE SERVICE THAT WE OFFER TO JAYHAWKERS LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK ' since 1865 ' A COMPLETE LINE OF COSMETICS IS JUST ANOTHER FEATURE OF THE SERVICE AT WEAVER ' S 901 Mass. Phone 636 PICKING OUT HER NEW FORMAL FROM THE LARGE SELECTION OF SMART STYLES AT THE The Quality of Our Work Must Meet with Your Approval INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 835 Mass. Phone 771 740 Vermont Phone 432 392 Refresh . . . add zest to the hour KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY I FOR REMEMBRANCE ALWAYS PHONE 151 FOR APPOINTMENT ' 1617
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