Kent State University - Chestnut Burr Yearbook (Kent, OH) - Class of 1936 Page 1 of 208
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IP p 4WU. S S Mi l H as! | S- fin CfiflAtnaudh 16 Afui ifjL of ftL£ Edward Garrison, EDITOR . . . Harold Wendelken, BUSINESS MANAGER SIGNING THE BILL THAT MADE KENT STATE UNIVERSITY c hes tNVJT DR. JAMES O. ENGLEMAN President of Kent State University ate wax i The burr has opened . . . the University has emerged. Like the rough, sharp covering of a chestnut, the years of pioneering in the field of higher education at Kent have folded back to reveal their culmination. Kent State Uni- versity represents the fulfillment of the wishes, the rewarding of the efforts of those who have worked so enthusiastically, sin- cerely, and earnestly for this once-ridiculed dream . It is the two-fold purpose of this year ' s Chestnut Burr to recognize the achievement of these persevering dreamers, and to mirror the phases of student life in this new univer- sity, as many and varied in form as the leaves en a chestnut tree. t nic aviUiiU UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION CLASSES PERSONALITIES ORGANIZATIONS SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS HONORARIES PUBLICATIONS SPEECH - DRAMA - MUSIC STUDENT ADMINISTRATION CLUBS ATHLETICS FOOTBALL WRESTLING BASKETBALL MINOR SPORTS Off to class with a half-written theme a hurried glance at the assignment. The pause that refreshes . . . a long cool drink, a short warm glance. % ! ! : Fingers of sunlight point through the lacy trees at a boy and girl with much to talk about. A wide rolling campus, trees, sunlight . in the stillness. voices echoing Great buildings erected by the State of Ohio .... for the education of her youth. Springtime .... and the joy of en during friendships. ■? ' : ' KM. i Sr B %! A TA T h C After two decades of unfaltering effort comes the the gubernatorial University springs air radiates new with youth- r r - final flourish of pen . . . ,and the into being. The very interests and tingles ful vitality .... the fa culty is enlarged .... classe s are big- ger and better. Ef - ' fort, indiv- vidual and cooperative, is spurred on - v by the consciousness that we now are big time .... we have the exalted title of University to uphold. Even social affairs as- sume the revolving glamour of University caliber . . we have grown up ... . we are an University. u n i v «$ Administration Classes Personalities ■I W- r • E K 4 r v j g§:i % t laLf Hail to thee, our Alma Mater . . . and to you, her leading men . . . our trustees, benevolent leaders of our footsteps, shapers of our destinies . . . holders of the rusted purse strings .... holding board meetings, to build, to tear down, to hire, fire and gripe . . shiny cars dot- ting the drive like new buttons on a vest . . factions rise and fall behind locked doors .... appropriations made, budgets pared to a rind by the powers-that-be . . meeting adjourned .... hail to thee, worthy quintet. And our profs .... chancellors of the exchequer of knowledge .... new faces every year . . are you Doctor, or just professor? . . . classes more or less boring, but never ending . . . cuts prohibited, rain or shine, life or death . . . dean-calls .... assignments heaped ever higher, climaxed by inevitable examinations . . . grades a pattern in black and red .... props, advice and counsel . . . conferences evolving into acquaintances, mutual un- derstandings, friendships . . . good guy, that prof. . . Hail also to thee, august body. ADMINISTRATION 23 University Trustees Vice president, Joseph B. Hanan, whose home is in Akron, at present connected with the Goodrich company. He is a pioneer critic teacher in Kent ' s early Teachers ' Training school history. Most recent appointee, Roy H. Smith, is treasurer. He is president of the Lamson- Sessions company; Kent ' s commissioned Major in the World War, and former American Legion commander, Post 496. Left to Right: J. B. Hanan. R. H. Smith. J. R. Willi: Zinninger. President of the Board of Trustees, John R. Williams, Madison, Ohio, is Superintendent of Lake County Schools. Active in N. E. 0. T. A., and for two years president of the Ohio Education association. Alma M. Zinninger, secretary many years, calls Canton her home; at present in the English department at Canton McKinley; served as alumni association secretary, and graduate in the class of ' 2 7. Dean Williams, Liberal Arts college, originally from Oakland, Indiana, obtained degrees from Harvard and Indiana University. He was formerly on the Ohio State staff. Dean Blair of the Education college is from Alton, Illinois. He received his Ph.B. at Shurtleff, Alton, his M.A., Ph.D., at Chicago University. He was formerly Superintendent of schools, East Dubuque, III. O. H. Williams, J. L. Blair, Blanche A. Verder, R. E. Dean of Women, Miss Verder, is from Rutland, Vermont. She attended and obtained degrees at Middlebury and Columbia, and studied at Harvard and Oxford, England. Taught in high schools in Vermont and Ne.v York. Dean Manchester calls Battle Creek, Michigan, home. Received both A.B. and M.A. at the University of Michigan. Formerly was head of Mathematics department at Oshkosh Teachers college and Pottsdam Tea;hers college, N. Y. University Deans 25 University Department Heads Left to Right — Arden L. Allyn, M.A. Business Administration Maurice Bourn, Ph.D. Philosophy Arville 0. DeWeese, M.D. Health and Physical Education Margaret I. Dunbar, B.L.S. Librarian Isabelle Hazen, M.A. Latin Willis J. Burner, Ph.D. Spanish Harry A. Cunningham, A.M. Biology Frank N. Harsh, A.M. Principal of High School John E. McGilvrey, Ph.D. President Emeritus Buryl F. Engleman, M.S. in Journ. Journalism and Publicity Amos L. Heer, Ph.D. Director of Training School Raymond E. Manchester, A.M. Mathematics Nina S. Humphrey, M.A. Art John T. Johnson, A.B. Agriculture Left to Right — Bertha L. Nixson, A.M. Home Economics David Olson, Ph.D. Geography and Geology Daniel W. Pearce, A.M. Education and Psychology B. F. Renkert, A.B. Business Manager and Purchasing Agent A. Sellew Roberts, Ph.D. History and Social Science Edith B. Rowlen, A.M. French Christian F. Rumold, Ph.D. Physical Science E. Turner Stump, A.M. Speech Clinton S. VanDeusen, A.M. Industrial Arts Emmet C. Stopher, A.M. Registrar; Director of Teacher Placement and Extra-Mural Activities Chester E. Satterfield, A.M. English Anna Schafheitlin, Ph.D. German Florence M. Sublette, A.M. Music G. Hazel Swan, A.M. Kindergarten -Primary University Department Heads KENT STATE UNIVERSITY . AGRICULTURE Merle E. Wagoner, B.S. in Ag. Assistant Professor ART Harriet Adams, A.M. Assistant Professor Mary Kathryn Boswell, A.M. Assistant Professor E. Ladislaw Novotny, B.S. Graduate Assistant BIOLOGY Const. J. Alexopoulos, Ph.D. Instructor Ethel A. Gowans, A.M. Professor Stephen A. Harb ourt, A.M. Assistant Professor Kenneth L. Kelley, Ph.D. Assistant Professor BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Amanda Lee Thrasher, A.M. Assistant Professor EDUCATION AND PSYCHOLOGY Raymond M. Clark, Ph.D. Professor ; Henry Harrison Helter, A.M. Assistant Professor Lester H. Munzenmayer, Ph.D. Associate Professor Fren Musselman, A.M. Associate Professor Alfred W. Stewart, Ph.D. Professor ENGLISH Florence Gray Beall, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Eric T. Griebling, A.M. Assistant Professor Ada V. Hyatt, A.M. Assistant Professor Edgar Packard, A.M. Professor Edward H. Pake, A.M. Assistant Professor Kenneth Ralph Pringle, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Grace Bussing Sherrer, A.M. Instructor HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION George J. Altmann, M.Ed. Associate Professor Marie Hyde Apple, A.M. Assistant Professor Ruth Isabella Bass, M.S. Assistant Professor Joseph William Begala, M.A. Instructor and Assistant Coach Alice Gwendolyn Drew, A.M. Assistant Professor Elizabeth Ann Leggett, M.D. Associat e Professor Raymond John Novotny, A.M. Instructor and Assistant Coach George Donald Starn, B.S. Director of Athletics and Instructor HISTORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCES Herman DeWitt Byrne, A.M., LL.B. Assistant Professor Thomas E. Davey, M.A. Assistant Professor Mona Fletcher, M.A. Assistant Professor Hersel Wendell Hudson, Ph.D. Professor James Tamplin Laing, Ph.D. Professor Gertrude Lawrence, Ph.D. Instructor Eleanor Ann Meyer, A.M. Assistant Professor Louis A. Tohill, Ph.D. Professor HOME ECONOMICS Ruth Augusta Blanshan, M.S. Instructor Nona Isabel Jordan, M.A. Assistant Professor INDUSTRIAL ARTS Elbert W. Tischendorf, M.A. Assistant Professor Edward L. Harris, B.S. in Ed. Graduate Assistant, First Semester KINDERGARTEN-PRIMARY Jeanne Parrish Instructor GEOGRAPHY AND GEOLOGY James R. Beck, M.S. Assistant Professor Edna Esther Eisen, M.S. Assistant Professor Deceased, Sept. 20, 1935. MATHEMATICS Foster Lindsey Brooks, Ph.D. Instructor tOn sick leave, 1934-36. Deceased, Nov. 23, 1935. 2S . . FACULTY 1935-36 Frances Harshbarger, Ph.D. Instructor Harold P. Rogers, M.A. Assistant Professor Hugh E. Stelson, Ph.D. Associate Professor MODERN LANGUAGES (FRENCH) Helen Whitman Machan, A.M. Assistant Professor MUSIC Fred H. Denker, M.M. Associate Professor Elfleda Lirtlejohn, M.A. Associate Professor Helen M. McClaflin, M.M. Assistant Professor Roy D. Metcalf, M.A. Assistant Professor Helen B. Snelling, B.M. Instructor, First Semester PHYSICAL SCIENCES Edward M. Collins, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Clarence L. Cook, M.Sc. Assistant Professor Allen W. Coven, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Maurice B. Palmer, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Ronald Burns Spacht, M.A. Instructor SPEECH G. Harry Wright, A.M. Assistant Professor Lola Archer Dougherty, A.B. Graduate Assistant TRAINING SCHOOL FACULTY HIGH SCHOOL Gerald H. Chapman, M.A. Science Vera M. Chapman, M.A. Home Economics (for Miss Scott) George H. Cooke, M.A. Biology and History George A. Damann, M.S. in Ed. Industrial Arts Michel Herchek, M.S. in Ed. Mathematics Amy I. Herriff, A.M. Librarian; Study Hall Doris B. Kinneman, M.A. English Elmer R. Meyer, A.M. History and Social Science Blanche C. Miller, A.M. English Edith M. Olson, M.A. Social Science Nelle Richards, A.M. Commerce Dorothy D. Scott, M.Sc. Home Economics Norma D. Wood, M.A. French SPECIAL TEACHERS Ora Belle Bachman, M.A. Music Adah Broadbent, A.B. Art H. Marjorie Kelly, M.A. Physical Education ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Susanne M. Koehler, M.A. Director of Elementary Training Argra Etta Ruffer, M.A. Supervising Critic, Off-Campus Teaching May S. Neitz, M.S. in Ed. Kindergarten Ruth M. Parrish, A.M. First Grade Myrtle L. Shepard, M.A. Second Grade Ethel Foster, M.A. Third Grade S. Dale Parsons, A.B. Fourth Grade Pearl J. Phillips, M.A. Fifth Grade Laura E. Hill, M.A. Sixth Grade UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Isabelle Dunbar Associate Librarian Elma Brenner German, B.S. Assistant Librarian Mary Elizabeth Mautz, B.S. in L.S. Assistant Librarian Virginia Riley, B.L.S. Assistant Librarian Wilma Hafenbrak Sindelar, B.S. Assistant Librarian Mabel E. Thurston Assistant Librarian EXTENSION DEPARTMENT Christopher M. Scherer, M.S. Instructor William A. Ashbrook, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Edith Tope, A.B. Assistant Professor ■: 0n leave, 1935-36- That dad-derned alarm clock .... that damned eight o ' clock .... enough to break up a collegian ' s happy home . . . the wind-tossed struggle up the Long Walk . . . filling notebooks with trifles and lewd sketches . . . saved by the bell . . . loitering gobs of humanity in the cor- ridors . . . don ' t kick the plaster or the big handsome cop ' ll get you ... a dash to the Brady for an hour-killing coke . . . back up to the grind . . . scowls for the spouting Phi Bete who knows more than the prof . . . waiting for a funny spot in the lecture . . . hand-kissing for a grade . . . finishing last night ' s sleep in the back row . . . bumming cigarettes be- tween classes ... up and down the hill in twos and threes ... or alone . . . back and forth to the library like a shuttle . . . in and out the classrooms . . . round and round the halls, scurrying for bits of knowledge . . . like ants in a sugar-bowl . . . great stuff, this getting educated! 30 CLASSES SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Left to Right: L. ARNOLD, H. HASTINGS, E. LAIRD, R. TUTTLE Lucille Arnold .... president. A flaming temper, matching her hair, won her a place on the university ' s conference championship debate team and finally led to the senior class presidency. School ' s repre- sentative in oratory; member of Chi Pi, Stater staff. Helen Hastings .... vice president. In her own quiet manner, she slowly came to the top to win the vice presidency of her class. A member of the Women ' s League, Off Campus club, and president of Phi Alpha Alpha sorority. Esther Laird .... secretary. Besides being a popular member of the Delta Sig sorority, this young woman carried her popularity over into class elections and was chosen to keep the minutes of the senior class straight. Richard Tuttle .... treasurer Silvery tongued orators had nothing on this fellow. Although he spoke in gentle terms, what he said registered. Besides receiving recognition in his class as treasurer, he is Alpha Phi Beta ' s president, and Blue Key member. 32 TIME MARCHES ON! This year we bid farewell to our Alma Mater. Goodbye not to the state college which we entered but to an expanding state university. The class of 1936 — the first class to graduate officially from Kent State University. Entering college upon the brink of the great financial crisis the class has seen revolutionary changes not only in the college but in the business and political world. Each year our slowly dwindling group of depression-stripped stu- dents has returned to keep up the glorious beginning made in our first year. Our athletic material has outlived two definite regimes of coaching. And in this, our final year, under an entirely new set up, ' 36 athletics have played in games which fore- cast shadows of Kent ' s coming glories in sports. Amateur night, college night, the Pigskin Prom, the Sophomore Hop, winning debate teams, new heights of dra- matic successes, a newly uniformed band, and an enlarged weekly publication have been instituted within our four years at Kent. Each year has found disappointments in the form of sliced appropriations from the school budget. Yet it was at the beginning of our senior year that we saw the dream of accomplishing the result of many years ' work come true — Kent was made a university. And now when the national outlook is clouded on the financial, political, and diplomatic horizons, and when Kent is beginning to gain recognition we must lay down our books and our experiments, to graduate. So the class of 1936 is launched into this questionable world! Left to Right KENNETH ALEXANDER HOWARD ANDREAS RAYMOND ARNETT LUCILLE ARNOLD FRANCES BALDWIN ALTA BANCROFT NORRIS BANCROFT ROBERT BAUMGARDNER JULIA BEGALA RUTH BEITER RUTH BENEDICT HAZEL BOARD Kenneth Alexander Glenmont, Ohio B.S. Kappa Sigma Chi Frances Baldwin Cortland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Band; Glee Club; Phi Al- pha Alpha; Music Club. Howard Andreas Wheeling, W. Va. B.S. in Ed. President Barbarians; Mathematics Club. Raymond Arnctt Ravenna, Ohio B.S. Glee Club. %:„ Alta Bancroft Canfield, Ohio B.S. in Ed. j y? Sigma Sigma Sigi French Club; Horrje Eco- ,. nomics Club; Uriirv ? i$y| | Theatre; Pan-Hellemc; SB Women ' s League; Y. v|jfc ' C. A.; Shark Club ris Bancroft Canfield, Ohio S v0Ha Tau Gan Julia Begala Kent, Ohio A.B. Kent Stater; Chestnut Ruth Beiter Burr; Chi Pi; University Canton, Ohio Theatre. B.S. in Ed. Ruth Benedict Calgary, Alberta, Canada B.S. Phi Alpha Alpha; Home Ec. Club; Cardinal Key; University Theatre; Ger- man Club. Lucille Arnold Windham, Ohio A.B. Student Council; Debate; Pi Kappa Delta; Kappa Gamma; Cardinal Key; Student Faculty Relations Committee; Stater. Robert Baumgardner Lakewood, Ohio A.B. Editor Kent Stater; Presi- dent Student Council; President Ohio Newspaper Association; Sigma Tau Gamma. Hazel Board Canton, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Choir; Glee Club; Univer- sity Theatre. 34 Donald Bolich Cuyahoga Falls, A.B. William Celestino New York, New B.S. in Ed. Varsity K ; Club. Ohio Biology Oscar Dobkin Akron, Ohio B.S. Orchestra; Chemistry Club; Biology Club. Margaret Broad Leota Butler Carlotra Case Masury, Ohio Kent, Ohio Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio B.S. in Ed. B.S. in Ed. B.S. in Ed. Women ' s Athletic Associ- Music Cli jb; Band; Or- ation; Physical Education chestra; Chon ' s; Choir. Club; Omega Phi Delta; Josephine Cotman Biology Club. Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Upsilon, i Qelta, Theta Sigma treas.; Phi Kappc treas.; Debate ; Team; Elizabeth Daskovich Cheerleader; ' Cardjffi Pataskala, Ohio Key, pres.; Studen tCoun- Je nes Crafa B.S. in Ed. cil; Women ' s; League. ' Lakewood, Oh io C o u n c i 1; UrVfVersrty , A ; _. Theatre. ' ' Sigma Tai j Gamma. ; Clarence Eckert Elmer Dunlavy Perry, Ohio Campbellsport, Oh io B.S. in Ed. B.S. in Ed. Kappa Mu Kappa; Football; Wrestling; Manual Arts Club; Phys. Freshman Coachi ng in Agnes Dye Ed. Club; Wrestling; Foot- Football; Delta Phi Sigma; Broadacre, Oh! io ball; Varsity K Club; Manual Arts Club; B.S. in Ed. Phi Epsilon Kappa. DONALD BOLICH MARGARET BROAD LEOTA BUTLER CARLOTTA CASE WILLIAM CELESTINO JOSEPHINE COTMAN JAMES CRAIG ELIZABETH DASKOVICH OSCAR DOBKIN ELMER DUNLAVY AGNES DYE CLARENCE ECKERT Robert Eisel Akron, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Kappa Sigma Chi; Phi Epsiion Kappa; Physical Education Club; Varsity K ; Football; Basketball. Charles Fouser Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Marion Gardner Massillon, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Pres. Barbarians; Biology Club. Doris Faulkner Shelby, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Math. Club; W. Biology Club. Reita Frederick Herman Fischer Tallmadge, Ohio A.B. Edward Fuller Copley, Ohio B.S. in Ed. I Nev Ed. fe W{ J U K aPP a ; lay Sxts Club; Phi Home Economics? Cfab? ' P 0 Ka |£ a ; University Biology Club; 9|jtyersity N pvSojj f Co gmittee. Theatre. Edward Garrison Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigma; Student Council; Blue Key; Inter- Fraternity Council; Editor, Chestnut Burr; Chi Pi. Har - Gilcrest %€ent, Ohio A.B. Blue Key; Student Coun- cil; Phi Epsiion Kappa; Delta Phi Sigma; Football; Student Faculty Relations Committee; Physical Ed. Club; Varsity K Club. Betty Forner Lorain, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Sigma Epsiion, pres.; Cardinal K e y; Chestnut Burr; Stater; Social Committee; Stu- dent Council; Omega Phi Delta; W. A. A.; Physi- cal Ed. Club; University Theatre. Lester Furney Waynesburg, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Sigma Tau Gamma; Var- sity Debate; Dramatics; Oratory; Alpha Psi Omega; Biology Club; Stater; Chestnut Burr; Intra-Murals; Freshman Players, pres. Elizabeth Green Stow, Ohio A.B. Off Campus Club; Alpha Sigma Alpha. Left to Right ROBERT EISEL DORIS FAULKNER HERMAN FISCHER BETTY FORNER CHARLES FOUSER REITA FREDERICK EDWARD FULLER LESTER FURNEY MARION GARDNER EDWARD GARRISON HARRY GILCREST ELIZABETH GREEN Left fo Right MIRIAM GRUEN GEORGE HACH CARL HAGEMAN CARL HALL HAROLD HARDY HELEN HASTINGS MILDRED HEINEMANN MARION HESS BERNARD HEUSER NANCY HOLLISTER LAWRENCE HUBER KARL HUGE Miriam Gruen East Liverpool, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Pi Kappa Sigma; W. A. A.; French Club; Math. Club; Y. W. C. A. George Hach T nsburg, Ohio I.S. Wrestling; Football; Biol- ogy Club. Carl Hageman Tallmadge, Ohio A.B. Sigma Tau Gamma; Vel- vet Curtain; Football; Freshman Players; Uni- versity Theatre. Carl Hall Brookfield, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Harold Hardy Kent, Ohio B.S. Kappa Sigma Chi; Band. Bernard Heuser Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio B.S. in Ed Barbarians; German Club; Student-Faculty Relations Committee. Helen Hastings Kent, Ohio A.B. Cardinal Key; Y. W _ A.; Velvet Curt Un | versity Theatre;1||ii Alpha Alpha. Un K Nancy Hollister Kent, Ohio A.B. Sigma Sigma Sigma; Biol- ogy Club; Band; Orches- tra. Mildred Heinemann C aHuife, -Falls, Ohio _E, pres.; Girls Band pres.; Girls Glee Club, pres.; Chorus; Band; Orchestra; Choir; Kappa Dfttta Pi; Cardinal Key. Lawrence Huber Tallmadge, Ohio A.B. Marion Hess Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Alpha Sigma Tau; Uni- versity Theatre; Physical Ed. Club; W. A. A. Karl Huge Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Manual Arts Club. Left to Right HERMAN JONES FRED HUSTON ALICE JURINGUS JOHN KALKAS DEAN KISSEBERTH JANET KNOTT CATHERINE KURTZ ESTHER LAIRD FRANCES LAUGHLIN HARRY LOHR HELEN LUNDEEN LEO LUTZ Herman Jones Bedford, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigma. Dean Kisseberth Burgoon, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Fred Huston Akron, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Sigma Tau Gamma; Col- lege Quartette; Men ' s Chorus. Janet Knott Twin Lakes, Ohio B.S. in Ed. A.B. Alpha Sigma T-Qu, pres ;- Lowry Hall, pr ' es.;. Velvet Curtain; French r Cl£b; University Theatre, mgr.; Pan-Hellenic; Alpha Psi Omega; Cardinal Key ' Student Council. T Alice Juringus East Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. W. A. A.; Phys. Ed. Club; Omege Phi Delta; Kent Stater; Biology Club; Uni- versity Theatre. Catherine Kurtz LSrain Ohio B.S. in Ed. phi Alpha Alpha; Home Ec. Club; Orchestra; Glee i ' Dub; Biology Club. John Kalkas Wooster, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Intra-murals; Velvet Cur- tain; Delta Phi Sigma; Biology Club. Esther Laird Ashtabula, Ohio B.S. in Ed. K. P. Club; University Theatre; W. A. A.; Delta Sigma Epsilon. Frances Laughlin Cleveland, Ohio A.B. Harry Lohr Hubbard, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigma; Physical Ed. Club; Barbs; Varsity Basketball; Honorary Bas- ketball Captain-Elect; Biology Club. Helen Lundeen Cleveland Heights, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Alpha Sigma Tau; Fresh- man Players; University Theatre; Pan-Hellenic; Art Club; K. P. Club; So- cial Chairman. Leo Lutz Kent, Ohio B.S. Kappa Mu Kappa; Com- merce Club; University Theatre. 38 Ethel Maddock Elyria, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Chi Delta; W. A. A.; Pan- Hellenic. Don Mass Bellaire, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Dohrman Maffett Carrollton, Ohio A.B. Barbarian; Int Wrestling. James Matthews Ravenna, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Kappa Mu Kappa Abe Mancovitz Akron, Ohio A.B. Edgar McCor mi ck f, %io RByf arlja?ians; German Club, president; Kent Stater. M ' W Qn C ' Ub Julia Marshall Youngstown, Ohio B.S. in Ed. W. A. A.; Physical Ed. Club; Julie McKay Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. A.B. German Club; Cosmopoli- Mary Meier Conneaut, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Kindergarten - Primary Club. Bernice Miller Cleveland, Ohio. Mary Muir Warren, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Sigma Epsilon; Pan- Hellenic; University The- atre; W. A. A.; Kent Stater; Chestnut Burr. Wilmcr Munzenmayer Kent. Ohio B.S. Glider Club; Sigma Tau Gamma; University Theatre; Velvet Curtain Players. 4 Left to Right ETHEL MADDOCK DOHRMAN MAFFETT ABE MANCOVITZ JULIA MARSHALL DON MASS JAMES MATTHEWS EDGAR McCORMICK JULIE McKAY MARY MEIER BERNICE MILLER MARY MUIR WILMER MUNZENMAYER 39 Wilmer Patterson Killbuck, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Mary Pfingsgraff Youngstown, Ohio B.S. in Ed. George Porosky Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio A.B. Gerald Read Akron, Ohio B.S. in Ed. University Choir; Club; German Club Glee Freshman Football; Vars- ity Football; Barbarians. Varsity K ; Kappa Mu Kappa. Royal Reynolds Ravenna, Ohio B.S. in Ed. University Choir; Glee Kenneth RobenstiS|r, Club; Music Club. Mogadore, Ohio A.B. Christine Roberts i w — . JSuy foaa Falls, Ohio V_ ' rieta j ' Sigma Upsilon, .- ' f -:r - iSres. §1ee Club; Univer- se .siiy Choir; Cardinal Key; j - ' . . University Theatre; Pan- Ella Roberts Alliance, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Pi Kappa Sigma; French Club; German Club; W. A. A.; Women ' s Glee Club. Hellenic; Chorus; Stater Chestnut Burr. Marjorie Russell New Castle, Pennsylvaniu B.S. in Ed. Delta Sigma Epsilon, pres.; Chi Pi; University Theatre. Nelson Solathe Macedonia, Ohio Aloys Sacksteder Sandusky, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Harold Schamp Canton, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Sigma Tau Gamma; Lambda Chi; Manual Arts Club; Men ' s Glee Club; president University Quar- tet. Left to Right WILMER PATTERSON MARY PFINGSGRAFF GEORGE POROSKY GERALD READ ROYAL REYNOLDS KENNETH ROBENSTINE CHRISTINE ROBERTS ELLA ROBERTS MARJORIE RUSSELL ALOYS SACKSTEDER NELSON SALATHE HAROLD SCHAMP Left to Right JANE SEAGER DOROTHY SEIDEL MICHAEL SERENE ANAMARY SIEMON RUSSELL SLUTZ CLAUD SMITH JANE SMITH MARGOT SPENCER FLORA SPRAGUE HAZEL STARR WENDELL STRIBLEY ELSIE SWAN Jane Seager Youngstown, Ohio B.S. in Ed. A.B. Kent Stater Editor; Card- inal Key; Student Council; Chi Pi, president; Student Faculty Relations Com- mittee. Dorothy Seidcl Ravenna, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Sigma Sigma Sigma; Home Economics Club. Michael Serene Youngstown, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Biology Club, pres.; Kap- pa Sigma Chi, pres.; Glee Club; Blue Key; Kappa Delta Pi, pres. Anamary Siemon Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Chi Delta; W. A. A.; P. Club; Pan-Hellenic. Russell Slutz Navarre, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Barbarian; Biology Club. Flora Sprague Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Varsity Debate; Pi Kappa Delta; Kappa Gamma; Cardinal Key; Women ' s League. Claud Smith Cuyahoga Falls, A.B. Cte Dne Smith KjntV ' bio Kappa Mu Kop gs.; Uni- versity Theatre; ' - Kent; Stater; Alpha Psi Orrfe .4 Hazel Starr Ravenna, Ohio B.S. in Ed. French Club, pres. Bgma Alpha; ' .French Club; Commerce ■' Cltabf Women ' s League; Orchestra. Wendell Stribley Kent. Ohio A.B. Band; Orchestra; Univers- ity Theatre. Margot Spencer Hiram, Ohio A.B. Alpha Sigma Alpha. Elsie Swan Akron, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Theta Sigma Upsilon; University Choir. Left to Right DOROTHY SWEANY FRANK TABORSKY JOE TABORSKY GRACE TITTERINGTON ROXANE TULLSEN RICHARD TUTTLE ADRIAN VAN WYEN OLIVE VENN MARIE WALSH NAUDINE WATERS DONALD WEIR HAROLD WENDELKEN Dorothy Sweany Dellroy, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Home Economics Club; La Fe. Roxane Tullsen Youngstown, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Biology Club; French Club; Kappa Delta Pi, Marie Walsh Youngstown, Ohio A.B. B.S. in Ed. Frank Taborsky Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigmo. • V Joe Taborsky Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Blue Key; Phi Epsilon Kappa; Student Faculty Relations Committee; Athletics. pr ' sS, Com- Richard Tuttle Kent, Ohio A.B. Alpho Phi Beta; University Spglol mittee; Inte ifVaternityf Council; Blue K ' efpMnl- versity Theatre; Bcjnd; German Club; CosmopblU tan Club; Student Faculty Committee. Naudine Waters Kent. Ohio A.B. Lambda Chi; Home Eco- nomics Club. Adrian Van Wyen ; IjEforcLfOhio • - ' B,S.. m Ed. GteS Club; Male Quartet; .Choir. Donald Weir Hudson, Ohio A.B. Sigma Kappa Team; Tau Gamma; Pi Delta; Tennis Debate Team; University Theatre. Grace Titterington Madison, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Olive Venn Lockwood, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Band; Orchestra; College Choir. Harold Wendelken Kent, Ohio A.B. Sigma Tau Gamma; Vel- vet Curtain Players; Treas. University Theatre; Treas. Junior Class; Stu- dent Council; Business Manager of Burr; Basket- ball Manager. -.2 Paxton Whitmire Kent, Ohio A.B. Football; Kappa Mu Kap- pa, pres.; Commerce Club; Varsity K ; Blue Key. Frances Wiggs New London, Ohio A.B. Y. W. C. A.; Pres. Sum- mit Hall. Alexander Young Kent, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Kappa Mu Kappa, pres.; Varsity Football; Varsity Basketball; Inter-Fratern- ity Council; Varsity K Club; H. P. E. Club. Ruth Whittlesey Kent, Ohio A.B. Cardinal Key; Alpha Sig- ma Tau; Off Campus Women ' s Club. Dorothy Williamson |j|Jj Cleveland, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Alpha Sigma Tau; , Omega Phi Delta; Woman ' s Atft letic Assn.; Phjrsical Edu- cation Club. 3? Dorothy Jane Young WS I East Cleveland, Ohio - A.B. B.S. in Ed. Chi Delta Sorority, pres Y. W. C. A. pres.; Chi Pi; Off Campus Women ' s Club; Cardinal Key; Women ' s League; Glee Club; University Choir; Cosmopolitan Club; Mixed Chorus; Kent Stater; Cleveland Club; W. A. A. LeRoy Widowski Mayfield Heights, Ohio A.B. Football; Basketball; Baseball; Pres. Freshman Class; Pres. Sophomore Class; Pres. Junior Class; : ' : Blue Key; Kappa Mu %- appa; Pres. Kappa Mu Kappa; Biology Club; | hys,-|a Club; Inter- Frate ' rni y Council. y Paul Wise Streetsboro, Ohio - B.S. in Ed. Sara Young Mantua, Ohio B.S. Phi Alpha Alpha; Biology Club; Off Campu= Women ' s Club; H. P. E. Club; Band. Dorothy Wiegand Steubenville, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; French Club. Winifred Wise Kent. Ohio B.S. in Ed. Mabel Zurcher Wilmot, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Lambda Chi; Home Eco- nomics Club; Biology Club. Left to Right PAXTON WHITMIRE RUTH WHITTLESEY LEROY WIDOWSKI DOROTHY WIEGAND FRANCES WIGGS DOROTHY WILLIAMSON PAUL WISE WINIFRED WISE ALEXANDER YOUNG DOROTHY JANE YOUNG SARA YOUNG MABEL ZURCHER Albert Green Akron, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Glenn Jordan Willoughby, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigma; Phi Ep- silon Kappa; Manual Arts Club; Band; Glee Club; Varsity K Club; Phys- ical Education Club. John McCort Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio B.S. Vernell Dawson Hudson, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; W. A. A.; Physical Ed. Club; Home Economics Club; University Theatre. Fred Scott Ravenna, Ohio Riley Runk t . Cuyahoga Falls, Ohi. ' $P-- B.S. in Ed. Delta Phi Sigma; %£nt Stater, Varsiti MJ ' SjpS University Soa f Comn lt h tee; Inter -sijjFraternilyj . Council; Univeh Jjy Th atre. Jones a ' venijfe, Ohio AjS |ma Tau Gamma . B.S. in Ed. Kappa Mu Kappa; Foot- ball; Wrestling. Elizabeth James Lancaster, New York B.S. in Ed. Delta Sigma Epsilon; Omega Phi Delta; Wom- en ' s Athletic Association; Physical Education Club. Blanche Miller Bedford, Ohio Zeta Tau Alpha; Club. Loris Troyer Walnut Creek, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Sigma Tau Gamma; Glee Club; Chorus; Madrigal Club; Kent Stater. John Gidley Ravenna, Ohio B.S. in Ed. Physical Education Club; Kappa Sigma Chi. John Watkins Kent, Ohio. A.B. Left to Right ALBERT GREEN JOHN McCORT VERNELL DAWSON FRED SCOTT GLENN JORDAN RILEY RUNK JAMES JONES ELIZABETH JAMES BLANCHE MILLER LORIS TROYER JOHN GIDLEY JOHN WATKINS 44 SENIORS NOT PICTURED Vcrdean Armstrong B.S. in Ed. Canton, Ohio Paul Brake B.S. in Ed. Mqssillon, Ohio ' llrl.ni, Ohi; l fin Ed. Cleveland, Ohio Julia Wood B.S. in Ed. Canton, Ohio Harold Steckel B.S. Akron, Ohio Mrs. Sarah Davey B.S. Kent, Ohio JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Left to Right: P. BOYLE. W. WARDELL, L. V. CAPEL, H. DANFORTH Paul Boyle .... president Steadiness, characterizing him on the basketball court, also won for this tall blond the leadership of the Junior class; President of the Physical Ed. club, a member of Delta Phi Sigma, plays football and baseball. William Wardell .... vice president That determination to some day become a wrestler also made the class wake up and notice a man fit for office. He was elected vice president and is a member of Alpha Phi Beta fraternity. La Verda Capel .... secretary Quiet, meek but still water runs deep . .whatever the depth, this young woman has shown that she could capably take minutes at any meeting. She is a member of Phi Alpha Alpha. Helen Danforth .... treasurer Bottled up energy; small but mighty, may describe the treasurer of the Junior class. She is president of La Fe, W. A. A., basketball manager and feminine member of the Holmes-Dunlavy tumbling team. THREE DOWN AND ONE TO GO! Only one more year at Kent. Only one more year to show what we ' re made of . . and one more year in which to win our laurels, for next fall we triumphantly claim our right as seniors at Kent State University. Three years we ' ve worked and griped and plugged along for this climax of becoming seniors. And now we approach it with slight regret, but with blind anticipation. What a life we ' ll lead, what a university we ' ll build. Foot loose — no seniors to step on our plans. But we ' ll step on yours, you cocky sophs, you who are almost juniors, just wait! Yes, thinking back, we began right. We won our first bag rush, and then did a good job of showing the school that all frosh aren ' t quite so timid. We spread our class in all the fields of learning and activity. Last year ' s Battle of Music and this year ' s Pigskin Prom were examples of our carrying on the social traditional events of the univer- sity. Many first class athletes and scholars who will continue the upward trend, now well established, are within our ranks. We ' ve settled down since our gay recklessness of underclass days, and this year we ' ve shown what studying really can do in making the junior! Our prospects are bright, for with another year under family finances, carefree college hours, and who knows what the world may turn to ... . we ' ll be all set. Another year, our last at Kent, to lounge, to rule, to win! David Alden Kent, Ohio Arthur Allen Sebring, Ohio William Anderson Kent, Ohio Philip Angelo Canton, Ohio Eleanor Bader Youngstown, Ohio Raymond Baker Akron, Ohio Philip Bambaci Harrison, N. Y. Aurora Biasella Steubenville, Ohio Dick Bplidi Ar%dW« i, Ohio PaoUJoyle W ' e Mj£v Bill Bro MK l to ' rjdee. Oty Harold Briola Arr cidg , ' Pa. Jayne Buckmaster Akron, Ohio La Verda Capel Salem, Ohio Virginia Carpenter Shaker Heights, Ohio Norvin Carter Painesville, Ohio Madeline Catlin Ravenna, Ohio Paul Chappelear Ravenna, Ohio Elizabeth Clark Kent, Ohio Minnie Cohen Youngstown, Ohio Mary Colby Youngstown, Ohio Helen Conkle Coshocton, Ohio 3 fe J S — Kenneth Domonn Farmington, Minn. Helen Danforth Akron, Ohio Nellie Diday Mingo Junction, Ohio Ralph Dyke Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Louise Eberwyne Windham, Ohio Laura Eddy Silver Lake, Ohio Richard Eickleberry Tallmadge, Ohio Bernira Elliott Youngstown, Ohio Eleanor Faloon Cleveland John Farinacci Cleveland, 1 Ohio %t,j d Leaffe Fields • ■? ft rjfgwj Londonj Qhi ? Dorothylr ' jlzgeiald f V ' Kent, Ohio ;- J. Franklin FouJfel Kent, Ohio ' Jesse Freeman Canton, Ohio Eleanor Fuller Willoughby, Ohio Francis Galati Akron, Ohio William Gamauf Copley, Ohio Herbert Gifford Ravenna, Ohio Herbert Gill Twinsburg, Ohio Victor Gilly Ravenna, Ohio Albert Godfrey Kent, Ohio Buell Graven Akron, Ohio Don Griffin Akron, Ohio Richard Griffin Akron, Ohio Newton Guise Munroe Falls, Ohio William Harrington Kent, Ohio Margaret Hastings Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio William Helmboldt Monessen, Pa. George Holmes Tallmadge, Ohio Robert Horton Rootstown, Ohio Mary Irvine, Stedfcenvtyte,. Ohio Adelwia Jacolenne _ a Ue, .Wo Rosalie Koftifu ' ' ' ' Berlin Center, Qhro - ■■• - ' „«y - f „ • I Robert Katxentneyer Keht Ohiay Velma Kauffman Cleveland, Ohio George Keck Ravenna, Ohio Edward Kegler Alden, N. Y. Joseph Kerka Cleveland, Ohio Ruth Klein Ravenna, Ohio Eugene Korb South Euclid, Ohio Jean Lilie Cleveland, Ohio Frances Lothrop Cleveland, Ohio Silas Ludt Youngstown, Ohio Dorothy Luikart Ravenna, Ohio Edith Molposs Youngstown, Ohio Lucy Marcellette Garfield Heights, Ohio Ethel Markley Burbank, Ohio Treva Markley Atwater, Ohio Wilbur McAlister Louisville, Ohio Jane McSorley Lakewood, Ohio Rebecca Mears Uhrichsville, Ohio Ruth Merrick Kent, Ohio Robert Miller Norwalk, Qhjiil fc Wallace Mitten CuyahogasFaHs, Ohfo Edith Montecalvo - - f RaV gtna, OhrixS .- - La Verne Moore | Kent, Ohioi ' V Raymond Moran tjlw ' Akron, Ohio ' ' Ruth Morrell Cleveland, Ohio Jean Moyer East Palestine, Ohio Dick Neal North Kingsville, Ohio Marjorie Osborne Youngstown, Ohio ' ■Ruth Oviatt Kent, Ohio Joseph Page Cleveland, Ohio Margaret Palfi Kent, Ohio Winiferd Palmer Kent, Ohio Laurel Parkinson Kent, Ohio Beryl Pease Bay Village, Ohio Jane Peet Lakewood, Ohio Virginia Petty Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Don Ranney Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Frank Ritchie Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Filomena Roberta Rootstown, Ohio Leona Mae Rodgers Bergholz, Ohio Ledo Ross Campbell, Ohio June Rummell Y ° U Nj| 0hi ° John m k Ma$qroneck,1N..Y. ( ° Ravenrto r Bhio ' §T LillidWScr.ofieldjf YoufSgstawi, 110 i Jr Doris Schroyer Warren, Vhio Fulton Scott Ravenna, Ohio Stephen Sedlacko Struthers, Ohio Eugene Shank Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Howard Shook Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Don Siddall Ravenna, Ohio John Simpson Kent, Ohio Chester Sokoloski Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Marian Spelman Kent, Ohio James Spratt Akron, Ohio 52 Orlo Sprunger Wadsworth, Ohio Marie Srambaugh North Canton, Ohio Mary Jane Stewart Shaker Heights, Ohio Asthore St. John Elyria, Ohio Margaret Stopher Kent, Ohio Ada Swan Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Deborah Teas Hudson, Ohio Martha Thompson Garfield, Ohio Elisabeth Troeger Defiance, Ohio Starr Van 1 den Cleveland Heights, Ohio Aatyanopj. Falls, Ohip -i; W%om V atfeitC? T H |.hi lia de I ph ia,, ,Oh ' io Peter WaVrin A, ' Luella Wells Elyria, Ohio Wilfred Wilenius Mantua, Ohio Ervin Williams Stow, Ohio Rosalie Wolfe Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Jeanetre Woods Ravenna, Ohio Mary Jane Woods Ravenna, Ohio Joseph Wright Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio William Young Massillon, Ohio John Zupan Cleveland, Ohio SOPHOMORE DEGREE CLASS OFFICERS CHARLES TERRY President Kent, Ohio BEN McGINNIS Vice-President Youngstown, Ohio MARY ELIZABETH ELGIN Secretary Kent, Ohio MICHAEL POLLI Treasurer Mayfield Heights, Ohio ERNEST WILLIAMS President Newton Falls, Ohio EMMET RILEY Vice-President Dover, Ohio COMFORT MALOTT Secretary Macedonia, Ohio JANET KAISER Treasurer Youngstown, Ohio SOPHOMORE DIPLOMA CLASS OFFICERS 54 PAST THE HALF WAY MARK! Sophomores — the half way mark in our college career. About to become upperclassmen, we are confronted with a mixed feeling, of remorse .... at leaving behind us our first two years at Kent; of expectancy . . . for what the next two years will bring. Last year we were naive freshmen, bewildered and dazzled as all frosh. But this year we came back to the famili ar campus to greet old friends, to dabble in activities, and to get an education. Best of all we came back in order that we, as do all sophomores, could tell the freshmen what , and how to do it. Truly the second year is necessary, yet the most unin- teresting of the four years spent in college. It is a year of worrying. Athletes, playing their first year of varsity, worry- ing about games; committees worrying about sponsoring the Sophomore Hop. Worrying about classes, elections, queens, propaganda, dates, and exams. Most of all worrying about ourselves! In reality we have only marked time this year. True, two years of studying have changed our vague thoughts into more concrete and definite channels influenced by our per- sonal interests. Two years on the campus have tried to teach us who and who not , what and what not. Yet we ' ve still been underclassmen, following paths of juniors and seniors. Superior to freshman — but only in that at- tempted-sophisticated way that even freshmen understand. With a little more experience, a little more concentrated study, a little more exerted push — we ' ll be juniors. Upper- classmen. Content with the world after passing through our probationary first two years. Pastorale Connie goes wildwoodsie and communes with Nature . . . and alone, too. New! A Circular Bar. But Mj ' Biie gr and her there % pals will; food fyi th aren ' t efiougk-;,ta£s ,-to. Tiekle infe. J| Bob Buf er s,e£ms rather pleased at •tffijfjg out on a fender. Ladies ' Day. This feminine nine could no doubt take over the De- troit Tigers any time. Teacher ' s-pets. Jonesie has a small class but they seem to like it. Happy? Go Lucky! Jane and Doc look like a Lucky ad, or perhaps Bodies by Fisher . First You Kneel. Then Dick Mack will read the next step in How to Propose to a Michigan Blonde . Williams for Smile Queen. Ernie must be fixin ' to uphold the old Gamma po- litical traditions. Left. Top to Bottom: M. Conn; M. Bucher. F. Brlggs, E. Koeppe. R. Thompson, A. Beatty; B. Butler; J. Seymour, A. Hranko. D. Runk. B. Phllius, E. Scarnecchta. E. Danko. F. Pulsford. I. Newell, L. Burge. Right. Top to Bottom: L. Jones, A. Nelson, J. Redlnger, W. Ault. H. Levinson; J. Fawcett. D. Hommon; A. Weatherford, D. Mack, J. Mendlola; E. Williams. 56 Snapshot of a Snapshot. Dottie Arthur can ' t keep her mind on her own photo- graphy. And It ' s Leap Year, Too. A few of the girls getting some really strenuous exer- cise. Clinging Vines or Wall Flowers. With their backs to the wall they can still smile. You ' ll Never Get to Heaven. Jane Ebel got there , but poor Westcott is still on the first rung. Do, Re Mi. Three gurruls in a boat — and the oars broke. And She Had a Little Curl. Dorothy should be seen (Whew!) Tug-of- Warriors. Two gal-power with couple of fare passengers. Dressed for Jim. And this quintet certainly looks gym-nasty. Left, Top to Bottom: D. Arthur. E. Riley. B. Hoffman. M. Baumberger, M. Farm. R. Fullmer; H. Queale, C. Peters. M. Moomaw, D. Munger. I. Imbrie. L. Spillman; M. Weaver. V. Harpman, V. Loyer, B. Banyc; J. Ebel, G. Dorsey, E. Shaffer, H. Season, B. Manchester, H. Westcott. Right, Top to Bottom: E. Burton, L. Immel, H. Nighman; D. Racine; J. Young, R. Grosvenor; F. Womsley, S. Bramley, E. Wilson, A. Wansack; L. Elwonger, M. Deem, M. Ruddy, T. Bowman, R. Grabenstetter. Grin Warfare. Each one of the lodies seems to be trying to out- smile the other. Scanlon Scandal. Dottie goes berserk and tries to do o Statue of Liberty. Curly-Tops. This bunch of wavy-hair- ed lads would make Clark Gable plenty worried. Dark ' n Handsome. Garner ' s got that uh-oh look in his eyes. Stop, Thief! Montalto and Dowding hold up a couple of women — and no cop around. This sligntjy blase ijuoriet vhqlfthe scqre wps 7 Bored to Tears. tjyb T- ttyV tfaey knewi iflV s ,1 Poohed Outf . Atp The ladies sn tc ' h a bit of siesta between ennervating classes. For Ladies Only. Not a burlesque show but a slice of a gym class. Left. Top to Bottom: E. Judy, W. Shepherd. E. Jenior. L. Kadlng. P. Wllkins, D. Willmot, T. Wldder. A Beck; D. Scanlon; M. Gordon. S. Gardiner. S. Kaczor. W. Evans. H. Shaffer; M. Garner. Right. Top to Bottom: G. Montalto, E. Scarnecchia, R. Drage, R. Dowding; G. Murray, B. Scott, M. Knouss. D. Blair; R. Poetter. G. Roth, V. Bonclla; A. Rimer, B. Phllius, D. Ream. M. Workman, R. Staple. 58 Tail Tau Tau. Siegfried, Goss, and Colby out to sink their Taus into a man. Heyjfefej Con it be -that Lynette ' s actually beings taken for a 1 ■' ?--. %w - T ' Ambush. I They ' re wgifing for the handsome ( eyhope) own- er of the Hd,ck. Seven, Come ' leven. A bunch of bench warm- ers who can smile about it. Don ' t Get Ahl Wet! Jane protects the girls but leaves Sherman holding the bag. Atlas, Sampson, and Car- nera. But their real tags are Gill, Critz, and Creese, and they ' re the kind that Ber- narr MacFadden turns out. Wuxtry, Wuxtry! Wilson has a nose for news but the girls don ' t seem to rate him on page one. Let ' cr Luse, Ken. And Sedlacko and Parker won ' t have any trouble keep- ing an eye on the ball. Left, Top to Bottom: V. Siegfried, R. Goss, M. Colby; L. Seeds; D. Rodick. C. Barber, E. Oyer; M. Timmons. E. Jackson, D. Opalid, M. Miller, J. Kaiser. G. Ackeret. Right, Top to Bottom: M Thompson. M. Williams, J. Ahl, H. Schmidt, H. Scherman; R. Gill. J. Critz, E. Creese; R. Wilson, M. Senerchia, A. Irving, J. DeLeone; S. Sedlacko. P. Parker. K. Luse. Seven Queens of Hearts. Which is more than enough for any deck. Two Janeij and a ; - ' Wt ft ms$ bewitch i Kg -ftJStr pdpersr ' m. Br Two and Twb Moke Fore. We ' d suggest these divot- diggers use a pitchfork, not a mashie. Aw, C ' mon Fellas. Even the cute little birdie couldn ' t coax a grin from this duo. Foot-Loose and Fancy-Free! If Shotwell ' s not well shot, she can roll her own. Reigning in the Rain. It looks as tho Grobowski were about to be dethroned. The Valley Forge Lads. They look capable of bringing in large net returns. Left. Top to Bottom: E. Roberts. E. Jansen. R. Jones. B. Copthorne, L. Glbbs. C. Hutson. A. Pope; J. Megert, J. Reeder, J. Lelghton; N. Chaddock. A. Searl, C. Bush. J. Cole; L. Schoffman. R. Killian. Rieht, Top to Bottom: E. Shearer. J. Shotwell, P. Grlenie; Z. Grobowski, P. Swedish, L. Randies; K. Reynolds. J. Benfer, C. Turner. C. Arnold. H. Peck, R. Lawrence. Ain ' t We Got Fynn? Dottie cuddles up to the whole globe, while Helen and Maxine look for other prospects. Clear the Way! A mixed foursome about to toboggan down to the library. Spree on a Match! And if Pamer, Galehouse, and Diller need more matches, the Brady always has some. Riesterer Turns Rooster. Oscar cocks a quizzical eye from his precarious perch. Behind the Eight Ball. She ' ll miss her cue if she doesn ' t have enough of the old sweet stuff on the ball. Don Juan, Two, Three. Raymer ' s doing O. K., even if his victims don ' t seem overwhelmed. Two Jean shoulde she ' s made Happy by George. Sold Out! Mellert gets up and bars the door, but the girls have a way with ' em. Right, Top to Bottom: O. Riesterer; M. Reynolds. E. Lave. R. Blair. V. Costarella, J. Fisher; E. Jordan, E. Raymer. V. Woods; W. Dunlap. H. Helling, H. Dye. G. McCamentt. B. Graven, S. Pink, T. Manko; R. Pinyoun, J. Evans, G. Dike; R. Murphy. G. Mellert, A. Davis. B. Atchinson. M. Graybill. What ' s to Do About It? The boys and girls look a bit pensive ' bout sumpin — maybe an exam. Four Wheels But No Breaks. Sundae seems to lack a little pull, but it ' s an uphill tug. Page a Tree Surgeon. The girls go squirrelly and start looking for six other Elbow-Benders at the Bar. The Floradora Sextet — but let ' s leave the sex out of this. Puzzle. Figure out how many one umbrella will.jceejp dry if it rains. !)-, Worflfr Worry; WtptxJr LooK jike tjhe ot her .tktree are in a rog ' g os well as Sammy. •- i , Stargazin ' . Being indoors doesn ' t stop these feminine astronomers from getting practiced up. Left. Top to Bottom: J. Benfer, J. Buchanan. N. Jackson, M. Renner; S. Ciancio. M. Fling. B. Boyett. G. Ensminger; V. Hosea. A. Beard. T. Cramer. R. Nims. D. Canfteld, E. Agae: C. Lyman. E. Simpson. J. King. H. Klmes, I. Newell, J. Wishart. Rieht, Top to Bottom: M. Boesger. c. Peters. P. Hendee. A. Cary; J. Young. D. Ray. G. Pugh. S. Fogg; A. Davy, D. Fricke, L. Johns. D. Smith, B. Kemp. E. Wise, M. Whipple. 62 Victorious — The gals are getting into shape to step on a few male necks. Bump ' p!fr%, ;; here ' s the Veason three of a kijjd beat tvigj pair. lfe ' 4 Wrksrs They triust tfe — there ' s no other ' reason y hy it should take sewen l( p hold up one lamp post? ' i. Hood-Riding, Riding-Hoods. If Parmigian ' d get a sup- erstreamlined car he could accommodate more passen- gers on the radiator. Full Up! With Don aboard it like there won ' t be for any Moore. looks room What ' s Wrong With This Picture? The empty space is for a man who ' ll make a sixsome. Whistler ' s Daughter. Ginnie Faloon cocks her head like the birdies she imitates. They Won ' t Dance. So Comfort and the rest seek comfort on the lawn as they sit the next one out. Left, Top to Bottom: M. Knouss, M. Tozer; K. Miller, L. Koba, E. Luke, C. I Hamilton, L. Schofield, R. Parmigian. Right, Top to Bottom: M. Brannon, D. O. Cobb, J. Buck, B. Herbst, N. Mulligan; R. A. Young. Watch Ben Swat! No hits, no runs; but if McGinnis connects with Winemiller it ' ll be his error. Pick-up. Cutting very cuttingly lures the lads into his limou- sine, with Sq den- and Stew- art looking ' to bifVr luctant. Scheck and Double Scheck. I n_ m0okro=4i kei th ' i M shou fn ' t t ' dEe ahstfjjT watsen Bob. K J(- Stooping; '  a cortqi er v S® Smith dnd K .Poll! booking for clovers _ collar J littons, or what ' ,, yto The Three Fates! The girls look a bit pen- sive, but it might be the Want Ad. Snap of two lasses looking for a bicycle built for two. An Ice Sport. If Lacy, Elgin, et al. were looking for a good skate, they seem to have found one. There Goes the Bride. Is Horton offering Louis Siegrist Congrats or condol- ences? Any Plumbing? Or maybe Andregg and his pals hove some stolen jewels in that kit Ship Ahoy! Ginny Raysor, Jeanne Church and the others, wait- ing for shiDS that pass in the daytime. Garcon! Bud Hausmann looks more like a belligerent strike- leader than a smoothy wait- er, but the customers look satisfied. Yeah Man! A bunch of the Round and Round boys whoop ' er up as Johnny Ervin steps forward to do a Bill Robin- son. Left. Top to Bottom: F. Winemiller. B McGinnis; R. Snyder. H. Stewart. J. Josephus. H. Cutting; D. Werner, I. Kumlin. M. Keppler. R. Graf. E. Sackett, L. DeSimio. C. Courtwrlght, R. Scheck; J. Smith, M. Poll!; M. Klrkbride, G. Mlddleton, E. Yoder; N. Clark. E. McCartney. Right. Top to Bottom: B. Lacy. M. E. Elgin. E. Likens. F. Weir. M. Heeley; J. Jenkins. H. Rossetti. K. Hall. L. Siegrlst. H. Chapman. P. Horton: C. Andregg. P. Deevers; F. Wood. V. Raysor. J. Church. C. Norton. L. Warren: G. Barkalow, H. Bittner. P. Pearson. G. Hausmann. H. Brown, C. Sheehe. F. Sykes, C. Philius; P. Miller, W. McBsne, J. Ervin. K. Schmidt, S. Fisher, W. Lang. Hold ' Em Dale. Strohl and an automobile demonstrate how the former stops his wrestling oppo- nents. Souvenir. An idea of what you saw on the campus when we were a girl ' s normal school. Sun Gets in Their Eyes. And so the girls squint — and very becomingly, too. Space Reserved for What? And we ' re inclined to wonder if the girls are also reserved. Over the Top! A pair of high-steppers who just finished the climb from the library. War-Paint. Dorothy Jones and the rest of the puff-wielders in the act of getting all pret- tied up. Safety in Numbers. Davidson seems about to pull a couple of .44 ' s on the girls, but are they worried? Barmaids. About to do their version of Tennvson ' s Crossing the Conundrum. v Vmat-Jias j 6 bore legs _;ahd srrules? ..Answer;: Eight girls iri gyrn scufst L pkJh ' for some Romeos, to cfcct bitjs f a balcony scene. %fc,m Betty Beware. Thy male escort might be married. Arithmetic Problems. Picture of a short line that is five smiles long. Left, Top to Bottom: D. Strohl: M. Einsel, M. Bray. H. Gary, L. Dunning, E. Graber, E. Thompson, D. Wise, R. Snyder; D. Ryerson, R. Babb, A. Horwath, D. Thomas; A. Evans, A. Erb, W. Prysock, V. Gray, R. Hafely; C. Bradler, A. Davey; D. Jones, A. Warner, M. Creed, G. Adams, R. Adovasio, M. Deetz, A. Drantz. Right, Top to Bottom: A. McCloskey, E. McCorkle, E. Hixenbaugh, R. Davidson, L. Ewell, M. L. Ritter, E. Reynolds; G. Dorsey, D. Opalic, D. Rodich, T. Foster, E. Chapman; E. Danko, H. Vesy, R. Weiss, E. Reynolds, L. Day, L. Burge, S. Cannon, R. Snyder; O. Seiter, E. Ferrari, L. Andre, E. David- son; B. Scott, K. Hoskins; E. Prazak, G. Turk, E. Thompson, G. Kyle, V. Gartshqre. 65 FRESHMAN DEGREE CLASS OFFICERS JAY MILTNER President Painesville, Ohio BILL NOLL Vice-President Youngstown, Ohio JEAN DIETRICH Secretary Ravenna, Ohio BETTY BERGMAN Treasurer Youngstown, Ohio MIRIAM MILLER President Massillon, Ohio BERNICE KING Vice-President Ashtabula, Ohio ELOISE RITTMAIER Secretary Brewster, Ohio MILDRED PARKER Treasurer Cleveland, Ohio FRESHMAN DIPLOMA CLASS OFFICERS 66 FRESHMEN DAZE! Introducing ourselves .... the largest trosh class ever to enroll at Kent. Four years from now we ' ll graduate .... a product of purely Kent State University. The first all- university class! Last fall with quivering thoughts we gathered at Kent; gathered from the four corners of Ohio and from near-by states, to begin our advanced studies in specialized fields. From our remote villages and cities we were jumbled together, amazed and a little frightened, to find ourselves in such new environment. Dashed from the heights of dignified high school and finishing school seniors, our pride somersaulted and left us either meek and timid or else too cock sure. No matter which, those splashy upperclassmen soon began to tell us. In the midst of our bewildered members we ' re finding we rub elbows with star athletes, with talented dramatists, with valedictorians, all a little green, yes, even to the honor society pins on sweaters, and high school rings! Strange experience, this being a freshman! New friends, new faces, new haunts, new studies. What profs for which classes? Upperclassmen rushing one minute and snubbing the next. Rumors and inside dope. Oh how to learn all our first year. Trying the university and being tried by it! Now, less than a year since we enrolled, we ' re beginning to find ourselves. What a change we ' ve registered. Life isn ' t all the gay hub-bub we ' ve read and thought about. We study too. Study and live and play now as college men and women do. Four years from now? Watch us . . . watch Kent State University. UNIVERSITY FRESHMEN IN THE . Freshman Degree 63 Freshman Degree . . COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Freshman Degree UNIVERSITY FRESHMEN IN THE . . 7C PfOS HSSfflnSEP COLLEGE OF EDUCATION ..4 Freshman Diploma It ' s K. S. U. now . . . but still an aggre- gation of individuals in intimate contact . . . with always the select few elevated to a pedestal, objects of deference or envy . . . made desirable by politics, talent, or luck . . . the grin-showing key- flipper, a born big-shot . . . every girl a queen . . . the Brady-bred feminine con- tingent with alluring figures (?) and red patent-leather lips (!) ... nurtured in booths murky with smoke and gossip . . . the Den crowd of nickel-dropping, rhythm-hipped youngsters. Feminine strategy in securing a leap-year prize . . . an athlete broad of shoulder and fame, a journalist dispensing wit and barbed epi- grams, a pipe-clenching man-about-town ... or just a rather nice guy . . . the nightly constellation of couples that shines from the campus, the Merrill steps, the cannon, the library . . . Uh, ah, will you-er-wear my pin? . . . ephem- eral boy-girl affairs that flare brightly, fade, die, to burst forth again with new fuel . . . potpourri of personalities . . . K.S.U.! 72 PERSONALITIES Miss Kent Slate Mary Margaret Finnicum Bernita Elliott Homecoming Queen Janet Knott Most Popular Woman 76 Harry Gilcresr Most Popular Man gK Helen Strouse Pigskin Prom Queen 78 Jfttata Peggy Spencer Smile Queen Left to Right Mary Finnicum, James Jones; Dorothy Jones, Leo Lutz; Jewel Leighton, Kenneth Luse; Jeon Moyer, Kenneth Jacobson; Mary Lou Krebs, Wendell Stribley; Phyl- lis Baker, Sam Fogg; Jayne Buck- master, Bill Helmboldt; Ralph Weaver, Grayce Murray; Margie Palfi, John Simpson; Christine Roberts, Ralph Slates; Jo Cotman, Bill Harrington. Sly Moments in the Lives of Great Loves . . . Vamp ' Till Ready. • .Waich Your Cadenzas! --S£? ' r Left to Right- Jane McSorley, Harold Briola; Peggy Spencer, Dick Bolich; Doro- thy Arthur, Roy Pinyoun; Betty Bergman, Eddie Kegler; Helene Densmore, Dick Mack; - Jean Raupple, Bill Bradley; Jane Ebel, Don Ripley; Catherine Palmer, Harry Cutting; Bunny Elliott, Robert Baumgardner; Rosalie Hamilton, John Benfer. h joiners, even in th . . their membership organizations, honorar 1 ' activities foreshadows in the social life of munity. The invalu I curricular hustle a however deplor by the professor smoothes the rough e dges personalities .... makes them mixers .... enables students to utilize their academi knowledge. So meet the future chamber-of-com merce member .... the expectant executive . . the traditional school teacher . . . , ' the prospective employee .... the collegiate joiner Human beings are con genial animals . . . essentially collegiate state in clubs, social es and all-campus later participation their corn- able extrc nd bustle ed at times 1§ from good f ?; ! ' Tfl T-e h c joiners, even in tb .... their membership organizations, honorar activities foreshadows in the social life of munity. The invalu curricular hustle a .... however deplor hv the professor smoothes tK oersonalities Human beings are con genial animal? . . . essentially collegiate state in clubs, social ! ies and all-campus later particin 1 their com able extrq; nd bustle f ?ed at times ! rough e dges . . . . makes them mixers .... enables students to utilize their academi knowledge. So meet the future chamber-of-com-, merce member .... the expectant executive the traditional school teacher . . . M e prospective employee .... the collegiate ner. ORGA fl Social Organizations Honoraries Publications Speech - Drama - Music Student Administration Clubs o S 85 J t 54 6 - -W€4r WE- ; v ; L •• « ' «♦•- ' All hail the Greeks . . . pin-garnished, gay Joe College and his gal-friend . . . merit and datability judged according to insignia worn . . . the House, where friendship ' s melting-pot is stirred and kept bubbling .... rushing season, bids, acceptances .... pledge pin, token of faith and endeavor .... hickory panel, token of stern, unrelenting discipline . . . the Pin ... to plant or not to plant . . . brothers and sisters .... Through the Years. The Dance ... a band beating out quivering, provocative rhythms . . . soft lights cast capering shadows, kaleidosco- pic on the floor . . . receiving line, decor- ous, dressed-up, unamused . . . girls chic and gay in decollete drapes and flares or suggestive simplicity . . . liquid intermis- sion . . . the dissonant murmur of excited voices .... again the band . . . and again we go ' round and ' round and ' round . . . theme song, last dance . . . outdoor air refreshing, fragrant, tangy . . . the long walk lit up with moonlight and glowing cigarettes . . . confusion, sensation . . good night, sweetheart . . . there ' s the clock striking . . . good night again. 88 SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS 89 DELTA PHI SIGMA FOUNDED IN 1924 Officers Harry Gilcrest President Don Ranney Vice-President Harold Briola Secretary Thomas Manko Treasurer Norvin Carter . . . .Business Manager Dr. Amos L. Heer Advisor Honorary Members Prof. James R. Beck Prof. C. E. Satterfield Prof. E. Turner Stump Dr. O. H. Williams Prof. G. Harry Wright Seniors: H. Gilcrest, J. Kalkas, R. Kat- zenmeyer, F. Taborsky, E. Gar- rison, E. Dunlavy, R. Runk, A. Godfrey, G. Jordan. Juniors and Sophomores: H. Briola, J. Kerka, D. Ranney, F. Ritchie, N. Carter, B. Helm- boldt, A. Cox, J. Wright, P. Boyle, G. Korb. Omitted: R. Bolich, O. Cobb, B. Gressard, B. Getz, H. Lohr, D. Mack. Pledges: W. Keller, H. Nickerson, H. Gill, S. Gardiner, R. Lewis, D. Gardner, R. Maxwell, D. Pal- mer, J. Dunson, R. Chapman, R. Nischwitz, P. Hazen, D. Hoskin (active) , T. Manko (ac- tive), R. Cox, G. Shriver, R. Wick. Pledges 0. Shuman, V. Faccinto, C. Rapp, O. Simons, E. Jolli, C. Hine, F. Wood, F. Kennedy, J. Jenkins, H. Dunlevy, P. Deevers. Omitted: E. Kempf, J. Armour, L. Lewis, D. Strohl, S. Brown, E. Weisel, R. Oyler, N. Oehling, G. Pringle. KAPPA MU KAPPA FOUNDED IN 1922 Officers Roy Widowski President Clarence Hinkle Vice-President Gerald Read Secretary Douglas Rogers Treasurer T. E. Davey Advisor Honorary Members Dr. J. E. McGilvrey Dr. A. Sellew Roberts Prof. Elbert W. Tischendorf Prof. Eric T. Griebling Dr. Kenneth R. Pringle Mr. Edward Harris Seniors: C. Hinkle, C. Eckert, A. Young, R. Widowski, E. Fuller, C. Smith, L. Lutz, R. Johnson, G. Read, B. Simpson. Omitted: D. Ripley, F. Scott, D. Terrill, P. Whirmire. Juniors: J. Simpson, R. Moran, G. Bark- alow, D. Rogers, B. Young, F. Scott. Omitted: R. Dyke, M. Harrington, N. Sanner, J. Scharf, R. Scheck, C. Sokoloski. Sophomores: S. Fogg, B. Graven, R. Butler, M. Renner, L. Koba, R. Diller. Omitted : J. Benfer, W. Harrington, R. Snyder, C. Terry. Pledges: R. Whitman, M. Manfull, N. Benson, S. Sherman, J. Mat- thews, B. Fritch, D. Butler, H. Brown, W. Barkett, J. Deeds, D. Renen, V. Lindsay, D. Homer. Omitted: W. Bradley, W. Celestino, J. Cooper, R. Drage, S. Fackler, H. Harrington, E. Harris, G. Haus- mann, C. Hutton, E. Kegler, N. Littlepage, W. McAlister, J. Mc- Cort, C. Pope, C. Sheehe, R. Spielan, L. Terrill, A. Van Weyen, R. Voth, R. Weaver. ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA OMEGA OMEGA CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1926 Officers Dorothy Fitzgerald President Marian Spelman Vice-President Jane Smith Secretary Ruth Klein Treasurer Vernell Dawson Editor Miss Helen McClaflin Advisor Patrons Mr. and Mrs. Ross Schram Dr. and Mrs. A. Sellew Roberts Seniors: V. Dawson, J. Smith, D. Wie- gand, H. McGuigan, J. Spencer. Juniors: R. Wolfe, B. Kauffman, M. Stambaugh, M. Spelman, R. Klein, D. Fitzgerald. Sophomores: J. McGuigan, D. Arthur, J. Beckley, S. Klein, P. Grieme, J. Ahl, J. Shotwell, L. Shuman, P. Hendee. Pledges: L. Immel, G. Gettrust, L. Seeds, V. Myers, P. Johnston, H. Jacob, H. Koerpel, M. McNab, R. Van Fleet, J. Davis, H. Zerbe, M. Dunfee, P. Spencer, J. Tatgen- horst. DELTA SIGMA EPSILON TAU CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1926 Officers Betty Forner President Jane McSorley Vice-President Bernita Elliott Secretary Mary Jane Stewart Treasurer Mary Muir Chaplain Mrs. Ruth Kelly Advisor Miss Ruth Blanshan Advisor Patrons Dean and Mrs. John Blair Mr. and Mrs. E. Turner Stump Mr. and Mrs. James Beck Seniors-Juniors: M. Russell, M. Muir, B. Forner, B. Elliott, J. Peet, E. Laird, J. McSorley, J. Buckmaster, M. Stewart, E. James (omitted). Sophomores: J. Raupple, B. Scott, M .Elliott, D. Scanlon, R. Snyder, H. Gray, J. Seymour, L. Schofield, S. Cannon (omitted) . Pledges: J. Rummell, S. Rummell, D. Fricke, B. Kemp, D. Elliott, M. Lahiff, P. Mohn, V. Green, E. Singer, V. Petty. Pledges: K. Stevens, B. Stewart, B. Berg- man, D. Dixon, R. Lytle, M. Winchell, R. Reesh, E. Adams, R. Brunstad, D. Knapik, M. Strahl, M. Ray. ALPHA SIGMA TAU ETA CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1927 Officers Eleanor Bader President Helen Strouse Vice-President Ruth Whittlesey Rec. Secretary Helen Lundeen Cor. Secretary Betty Manchester Treasurer Miss Harriet Adams Advisor Miss Laura Hill Advisor Patrons Dean and Mrs. R. E. Manchester Mr. and Mrs. Dick Donaghy Seniors-Juniors: M. Hess, H. Lundeen, A. Bia- sella, R. Merrick, E. Bader, A. Swan, H. Season, D. WM son, J. Knott. 1am- Sophomores: M. Finnicum, J. Evans, V. Sieg- fried, B. Hoffman, R. Goss, P. Baker, J. Buck, M. Keppler, R. Whittlesey (senior), H. Strouse, B. Manchester, D. Fynn, R. Tozer, E. Shaffer (omitted). Pledges: E. Saum, J. Dietrich, G. Cook, H. DeWeese, V. Wallis, D. Sea- son, E. Duff, J. Megert. Pledges: R. Bushong, J.Hankamer, B. Lauderbaugh, J. Leighton (ac- tive), M. Watson, I. Follin (ac- tive) , M. Colby, (active) . SIGMA TAU GAMMA IOTA CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1926 Officers John Farinacci President William Herr Vice-President Wilmer Munzenmayer Secretary Jay DeEulis Treasurer John Zupan Business Manager E. C. Stopher Advisor Honorary Members Dr. A. W. Stewart Dr. A. 0. DeWeese Prof. R. B. Spacht Prof. B. F. Engleman Prof. A. A. Allyn Dr. J. L. Blair Prof. F. H. Denker Seniors: H. Wendelken, J. Jones, L. Troyer, W. Reed, H. Schamp, D. Weir, D. Kisseberth, C. Hage- man, W. Munzenmayer, G. Dike, S. Ludt. Omitted: J. Craig, R. Baumgardner, F. Huston, L. Furney, N. Bancroft. Juniors and Sophomores: K. Jacobson, W. Herr, 0. Ries- terer, R. Eickleberry, J. DeEulis, J. Farinacci, H. Stewart, B. Mc- Ginnis, F. Winemiller. Omitted: R. Blockinger, J. Zupan, J. Smith, L. Eschenberg. Freshmen: T. DeEulis, E. Williams, R. Gill, G. Keck, L Shook, J. Schaetzle, W. Beitzel, R. Hurd, J. Dixon, A. Miller, N. Monastra, D. White. Freshmen: C. Russo, D. Zink, H. Hanson, P. Gulgin, R. Beck, J. Toma- sheska, H. Mull, P. Ryan, R. Gates, D. Fulton, A. Podwojski, T. Shultz, W. Biggins, T. Watts. Omitted: A. Hall, J. Miltner, T. Bell, B. Hines, A. Lipstreu, H. Ransaw, K. Murphy. rP s SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA ALPHA BETA CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1925 Officers Margaret Palfi President Winiferd Palmer Vice-President Dorothy Seidel Cor. Secretary Nancy Hollister Rec. Secretary Charlene Buell Treasurer Miss Mona Fletcher Advisor Pa trons Mr. and Mrs. Emmett C. Stopher Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Elgin Miss Carrie Hines V Seniors-Sophomores : M. Elgin, V. Raysor, J. Ebel, D. Seidel, N. Hollister, B. Lacey, M. Conn, A. Bancroft, D. Hommon, L. Huge, D. Jones. Juniors: C. Buell, M. Palfi, M. Stopher, M. Fletcher, W. Palmer, B. Kun- ert, J. Moyer, D. Teas, R. Oviatt, E. Clark. Pledges: V. Hay, J. Lustig, B. Peck, C. Hulbert, H. Madden, F. Barn- beck, V. LaVVand, W. Wykrent, E. Clement, R. Hudson, R. Hes- son, D. Winemiller, J. Burroughs, R. Parsons, V. Florenz, M. Bucher, D. Tigner. 96 THETfi SI G Mil UPSILON ETA CHAPTER FOUNDED IN 1926 Officers Christine Roberts President Dorothy Heminger. . . .Vice-President Mary Louise Krebs Secretary Josephine Cotman Treasurer Margaret Ruddy Editor Miss Mary Kathryn Boswell .. Advisor Patrons Mr. and Mrs. Eric T. Griebling Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Tischendorf Mr. and Mrs. G. Harry Wright Seniors-Juniors: E. Montecalvo, M. Boswell, J. Cotman, D. Heminger, C. Roberts, E. Swan (omitted), C. Montecalvo (omitted). Sophomores: B. Richardson, M. Krebs, M. Ruddy, G. Middleton, D. Racine, M. Brockhaven. Pledges: M. Parker, L. Hausman, B. Ir- win, M. Osborne, T. Garland, J. Petersen, M. Lovejoy. PI KAPPA SIGMA FOUNDED AT KENT IN 1926 Officers Edith Malpass President Ella Roberts Vice-President Ella Roberts Rec. Secretary Evelyn Agae Cor. Secretary Treva Markley Treasurer Miss Virginia Riley Advisor Patrons Prof, and Mrs. T. E. Davey Dr. and Mrs. L. H. Munzenmayer Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Wise Seniors-Juniors: M. Gruen, E. Malpass, E. Rob- erts, T. Markley. Sophomores: E. Agae, D. Canfield, R. Nims, D. Stanley. Pledges: N. Dominick, C. Lyman, F. Leit- ner, C. Barber, L. Hauserman, E. Fuller (omitted) . 93 PHI ALPHA ALPHA FOUNDED AT KENT IN 1930 Officers Helen Hastings President Sara Young Vice-President Janet Kaiser Rec. Secretary Grace Kyle Cor. Secretary Betty Kurtz Treasurer Miss Doris Kinneman Advisor Patrons Mr. and Mrs. Fren Musselman Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Harsh Seniors-Juniors: L.Capel, F. Baldwin, E. Kurtz, R. Benedict, H. Hastings, S. Young, R. Schmalz. Sophomores: E. Janson, M. Howard, G. Adams, G. Kyle, A. Warner, M. Knouss, J. Kaiser. Pledges: J. Darby, R. Frederick, M. Rum- baugh, M. Irvine, M. Blattman, G. Ackeret, M. Zurcher. ALPHA PHI BETA FOUNDED IN 1931 Officers Richard Neol President Nelson Salathe Vice-President Edward Schneider Secretary Paul Parker Treasurer Robert Miller Cor. Secretary Dr. H. E. Stelson Advisor Honorary Members Prof. H. A. Cunningham Prof. Edward Pake Dr. David Olson Prof. M. E. Wagoner Officers: R. Neal, N. Salathe, E. Schnei- der, P. Parker, W. Wardell. Juniors and Sophomores: E. Shank, H. Scherman, M. Polli L. Majick, E. Raymer. Pledges: C. Mirto, J. Layman, G. Corbett, G. Wrentmore, R. Dellner, G. Pugh, B. Hammer, Jr., J. Cogan, E. Wade, J. Scobie, J. Hopko. Omitted: A. Mancovitz, R. Miller. Officers Donald Kinsey President Marion Gardner Vice-President William Gamauf . . .Athletic Director Wilber Hammock Treasurer BARBARIANS First Group: B. Heuser, H. Baughman, M. Hammock, H. Andreas, M. Gard- ner, M. Swinehart, R. Slutz, W. Gamauf, D. Kinsey. Second Group: E. Riley, R. Lash, F. Nicolosi, D. Ray. Third Group: H. Bell, B. Noll, R. Horton. 101 CHI DELTA Founded ot Kent in 1935 Officers Dorothy Jane Young President Helen Schmidt Vice-President Anamary Siemon Secretary Ethel Maddock Treasurer Asthore St. John Marshall Miss Jeanne Parnsh Advisor Patrons Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Altmann Seniors: A. Siemon, D. Young, E. Mad- dock, J. Parrish. Sophomores and Juniors: H. Schmidt, A. St. John, L. Moore. Pledges: M. Rhodes, D. Braucher, J. Young, J. Treat, E. Luke, H. Schneider (omitted!. 102 Officers Helen Danforth President Adelina Jacolenne. . . .Vice-President Esther Prazak Secretary Lucy Marcel lette Treasurer Miss Ruth Bass Advisor LA FE FOUNDED AT KENT IN 1934 Patrons Dean Blanche A. Verder Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Clark Group One: E. Prazak, A. Jacolenne, L. Mar cellette, R. Bass, H. Danforth. Group Two: D. McDaniel, K. Yurchison, B. Westlake, E. Hazlitr, L. Taicht, R. Hafely, D. Harrington, V. Schantz, V. Loyer, M. Bennett, T. Bowman, L. Berger. © A C i 0 ? 4 ft B !? u Group Three: N. Diday, R. Kalafus, F. Pulsford, R. Weiss, V. Wagner, J. Lilie, M. Deetz, J. Woods. O e% O The honorary . . . glorified club .... scorned by non-members . . . and sought by non-members . . . ingratiating hand- kissing to obtain a recommendation . . . pulling political wires to wangle a bid . . . the bid . . . affectation of indiffer- ence and indecision . . . nonchalant ac- ceptance . . . dues exorbitant . . Where in hell does the money go? . . . pins flourished on selfconscious chests . . . Oh yes, I was initiated last night. Just another honorary! . . . attending free dinners . . . not attending meetings . . . except to play politics in election of offi- cers . . . talking up the organization as a great service to the campus . . . run- ning down honoraries on the whole as so much deadwood . . . throwing sophisti- cated dances . . . hiring illustrious speak- ers ... or quasi-illustrious speakers . . . standing firm and supercilious in the face of periodic waves of investigation and condemnation . . . big-shots . . four- teen-carat gold-plated decorations on the bosom of the campus . . . members of a glorified club. HONORARIES Blue Key Active men on the campus who excel in scholarship, leadership and character are invited to join Blue Key National Honor Fraternity. The principle of the organization, Serving, I Live , is the keynote of all the projects carried on by the local chapter. Seated Left to Right: Dean Manchester, Prof. Satterfield. P. Engleman, D. Ranney. R. Widowski. J. Zupan. Standing Left to Right: J raborsky. M. Serene. H. Gil- crest, H. Briola, R. Tuttle. Prof. Allyn. P. Whitmire. R. Moran. Hand kissing . . . Back slapping . . . Wire pulling . Left to Right: Dr Pringle, J. Cotman. G. Di ke. F. J. Sprague, E. Schneider. L. Ar- nold. R. Wilson. Prof. Wright. Phi Kappa Delta The Ohio lota chapter of Phi Kappa Delta, National Forensic Fraternity, was founded on the campus in April 1934. At present the organization will have sixteen active members who have gained this recognition by their outstanding achievements in debate, extempo- raneous and public speaking. 106 Velvet Curtain University Theatre members, who show talent, interest and the ability to work hard, after their Freshman year are selected to join the Velvet Curtain Players. The organization is purely a local dramatic project and serves as a stepping stone to Alpha Psi Omega. Seated Left to Right: J. Knott. W. Palmer, M. Stopher. J. Buckmaster, J. Moyer, B. Elliott. Standing Left to Right: Prof. Stump. W. Munzenmayer, C. Hageman, G. Dike, Prof. Wright, M. J. Stewart. . . .All for a bid . . . Key Flipping collegians attend . . . Seated Left to Right: P Stonehill, J. Wood, M. Heine- mann, H. Hastings, D. J. young, R. Benedict. Standing Left to Right: J. Seager, L. Daugherty. G. Drew, Cardinal Key In January 1934, Dean Blanche A. Verder founded on Kent ' s campus a chapter of National Cardinal Key for the outstanding women students. The purpose of the organization is Service , and members are selected each year from the group of women who have achieved leadership, scholarship and character in their extra-curricular activities. 07 Alpha Psi Omega The Beta Psi chapter was founded in 1929, and is listed seventy- fourth on the National Roll Call. The students gain entrance by ex- tensive and distinguished work in the activities of the University Theatre. E. Turner Stump, faculty advisor, is also Director of the National Cast. Seated Left to Right: Daugherty, L. Purney, Stopher. G. McDermott, Standing Left to Right: L ;oss, Prof. Stump. Mr. Wright. ;. Dike. Free dinners, few meetings . . . Big shots Seated Left to Right: Miss Koehler. J. Wood. A. Sofranec. B. Luke. M. Serene. R. Tullsen. E. Kurtz. M. Pfingsgraff, M. Stopher. E. Montecalvo. Standing. First Row. Left to Right: H. Israel, Mr. Stopher Dr. Clark. Dr. Munzenmayer H. Lanning. M. Heinemann, L Hoopengarr.cr, Miss Hvatt. A Ruffer, E Lehman. D. B Kn A. Ogg. Standing, Second Row, Left lo Right: Mr. Mu.sselman. Prof. Pearce. Prof. Cunningham. Dr. Ptewart. L. Schaible. Prof. Engleman. J. Werden. R. Skeeles, G. Cowan. Dr. Heer. r, r a ! .o ktfSani ♦ i -•- r • •• •m _- . Kappa Delta Pi Dr. Heer, Director of the Training School, founded the local chap- ter of Delta Beta in May, 1935. The activities of the group are social as well as educational, having two dinner and discussion meetings a month. College of Education students, who have a three point average are eligible for membership. To the struggling journalists, who meet the Kent Stater and Chestnut Burr deadlines, comes the invitation to Chi Pi, local honorary. The group now boasts twenty members and the goal for the year is that of national affiliation. Chi Pi Seated Left to Right: E. Mc- Cormick, L. Arnold, C. Smith, W. Anderson, L. Troyer, E. Faloon. Standing Left to Right: Dr. Beall, A. Wilcox, M. J. Stew- art. H. Westcott, H. Jones, M. Russell, Mr. Weitzel. J. Seager. Prof. Engleman, J. Moyer, G. McDermott, E. Garrison, M. Stopher, J. DeEulis. D. J. Young. ...Gold plated decorations on the bosom of the campus Left to Right: Miss BoMvell. J. Wood, E. Montecalvo, M. J. Stewart. A. Sacksteder, M. Zurcher, H. Schamp. Lambda Chi Lambda Chi, local Art Honorary, was organized in 1926. Mem- bers are selected from the major or minor students in the department. Miss Boswell, instructor, serves as faculty advisor, while Miss Adams and Miss Humphrey are honorary members. 109 Thursday .... the melee around the Stater tables ... a surging, furiously jubilant mass of collegians, converging to grab Kent Staters . . . scathing ama- teur column-conductors sharing space with sob-letters to the editor . . . news wrung from assignments, beats and brag- ging, publicity-mad notables . . . madly clacking typewriters, interviews, write- ups, recopy, deadlines missed . . . genial Jane in editorial confusion, eyes dark- ringed, setting type . . . make-up out of heaven-sent copy . . . proof-reading . . . 0. K., start the presses! And the Burr . . . barometer of 1936 university life . . . applications, an un- decided board of publications, heated discussions, appointments confirmed . . . editor ' s ideas, absurd, costly .... con- ferences with high-pressure, banqueting engravers, promise-making printers, il- lustrious photographers . . . bids, dummy revisions, headaches, finally a balanced budget . . . production wheels begin to turn amid a whirl of picture-taking cam- paigns, measurements, assignments, and welcomed engraving copy . . . disappoint- ments and good-luck . . . the bulging, paste-spattered dummy . . . pleas from copy-hungry printers .... all-night ses- sions of checking, proof reading .... anxiety, optimism .... acceptance .... success ! ! ! 110 PUBLICATIONS Fifteen hundre kaleidoscopi the eyes Edward Garrison Edito.-, Chestnut Burr Haro!d Wendelken Business Manager, Chestnut Burr Back in the bygone days when Kent State University was merely The Normal the long skirted and long haired co-eds decided to publish a yearbook. Searching for a su ' t- able name the first editorial board, noting the chestnut trees dotting campus and surrounding terrain, decided to call its brainchild The Chestnut Burr , opening to afford a full view of college life and activity. Year after year the Burr staggered on, growing in size but not in subscriptions. Interest in Kent ' s yearbook was at a low ebb until last year when editors and business managers presented a plan whereby every member of the Kent State student body would receive a copy of the book. Students voiced their approval of the plan; the university administra- tion reallocated the student activity fee. This year, for the first time, the Chestnut Burr has a universal Kent State cir- culation. Kent ' s 1 500 students receive this photographic review of the year with its biting satire, its novel arrangements, its complete review of Kent State University life and activity. In years to come 1500 students, rooting in the attic, will brush the dust from 1500 Chestnut Burrs and glance happily backward at days that were. chestnut burrs unfold to reveal a view of campus life through candid cameras and caustic commentators Left to Right: Adrian Van Wyen, art- ist extraordinary . . . The copy hound Jay DeEulis . . Haunter of people ' s pri- vate lives, Mac McDer- mott . . . The hustling, bustling photo-getter, Rondo Tozer . . Oral Burke, art .... Eleanor Bader, more art . . James Craig, still more art and a bit of copy . . . The color- ful copywriter, Mary Jane Stewart . . . Dorothy Jane Young, copy batter outer . . . Sam Fogg, the sports scribing lad . . . Pulchri- tudinous secretary to the business manager, Doro- thy Fitzgerald . . . John Zupan, somewhat of an editor . . . Gene Korb and Harold Briola, the busi- ness assistants and ad snatchers ... William Kimbrough Anderson, sports . . . Publications a specialty, Bob Baumgard- ner . . . Margaret Stopher, student administration writer . . . George Urban, handyman . . Helen West- cott, historian . . . The so- rority editor, Christine Roberts . . . Jean Most Anything Moyer . Mrs. Joseph W. Begala, honor- aries. 113 The Kent columns Jane Seager Editor, Kent Stoter Raymond Moran Business Manager, Kent Stater Modestly described in its masthead as a newspaper published for the best interests of Kent State University every Thursday during the college year with the exception of prolonged vacations by a student staff the Kent Stater is the university ' s student voice. Ten years ago when the Stater ' s first edition flopped off the old rotary press to replace the normal ' s first journ- alistic venture, The Searchlight , its editors did not visu- alize the Stater of today. It ' s an alive, alert, active paper, this Kent Stater of today, with its late news, its brilliant columnists, and its cosmopolitan makeup as contrasted with the Stater of 1 926 with its five columns, its lack of journalis- tic practices and its bulletin board appearance. Leaping to seven columns at the beginning of the spring semester and having a student as its business man- ager for the first time, Volume 10 of the Kent Stater begins the University Era of student publications at Kent State. Unhampered by rigid censorship restrictions such as exist in many colleges and universities, and financially supported by the student activity fee the Kent Stater, progressing with Kent State University, will continue to serve the best inter- ests of its university and the student body. 114 Stater .... Four pages, seven .... The news of the week Red thatched Lucille Arnold, news writer . . . Featurist Mary Jane Stew- art . . . Samuel Fogg, the sophomore sporting scribe . . . Roland Voth alias The Belittler . . . Al Seidner, freshman prodigy . . . She of the vitriolic typewriter, Jean Moyer . . . That super snooper, the star of the keyholes Mac McDer- mott . . . Bill Anderson, sports editor extraordin- ary . . . Sports, Sundae Ciancio . . . The ever smil- ing George Urban, cap- able assistant editor . . . He of the perpetual pipe, James Prof. Succotash Craig . . . The sports writ- er who looks like a sports writer, Loris Troyer . . . Ex-editor Robert Sport- ively Speaking Baum- gardner . . . Ruth Klein, front page stuff . . . Eleanor Faloon, news, etc. . . . Drama criticised while you wait by Claud Smith . . . Assistant business manager Dave Alden, ad getter . . . Edgar McCor- mick, poet laureate and Dabbler . . . Helen So- ciety Editor Westcott ... A feature a week, Jay DeEulis. Fall try-outs for debate team . . . sun tanned tongues limbered up . . . selec- tions . . . rejections . . . behold! . . . the team emerges . . . recourse to the refer- ence shelves . . . compiling imposing statistics . . . perfecting intricate phrases and convincing gestures for debate . . . followed by out-of-town trips . . . made memorable by decisions, flat tires, and steak dinners ... ah ! silver tongues. Self-assured veterans and knee-knock- ing novices competing for coveted roles . . . wearisome, night-after-night re- hearsals . . . harassed directors berate and praise . . . smoothing, polishing, perfecting . . . dress-rehearsal . . . pes- simism and trepidation . . . opening night . . . programs a-flutter like restless moths . . . the play is on, helpless victim of an aftermath of caustic comment or kind compliments. Merrill corridor trembles as the or- chestra takes another ear-splitting stab at Wagner . . . one, two, one, two . . . crescendo, diminuendo . . . new uniforms for the marching band . . . amateur soprano or tenor warbling drifts out over the campus . . . Lo, hear the gentle lark. . . . Lo, hear the gentle music department! 116 SPEECH-DRAMA-MUSIC 117 Men ' s Glee Club On Tuesdays and Thursdays these forty boys rehearse the songs they are to sing publicly. Several times they appeared in assembly programs this year. They had a prominent part in the Christmas Musicale. Professor Fred. H. Denker is director. First Bow. Left to Right: H. Dunlavy, G. Mellert. J. Jen- tins. P. beevers, C. Pope. I. Immel. J. O ' Ha.a. Second Row, Left to Rieht: T. Dowding. T. Simpkins. J. Smith. W. Lipscomb, F. Fou- ser. G. Dike. R. Drage. A. Cary. J. Simpson. J. Josephus. C. Fouser. D. Fouser. J. Wilder, V. Borde, R. Davidson. Mr. Denker (conductor). Third Row, Left to Right: R. Ellsworth. W. Little. L. Troyer. A. Warnes. W. Fresh- lev. H. Helling, S. Ludt. R. Dellner. K. Hart. R. Reynolds H. Gifford. W. Ault. H. Schamp. M. Polli. W. Critten- den, W. Mitten. Boiled stuffed shirts Flimsy dresses and voices First Row, Left to Right: N. Dick, H. Nighman. B. Miller. A. Rimer, R, Mears. M. Dunfee, G. Ackeret. A. Davev, M. Allen. F. Baldwin. M. Bedford. P. Sheron. M. Strahl. J. DeLeone. L. Eberwyne. Miss Sublette Second Row. Left to Right: M. Pnngsgraff, J. Treat. M. Daltorio. E. Burton. R. Jaco bs. B. Guttridge. B. Kemp. E. Cor- lett. V. Costarella. I. Newell. T. Markley. L. Stump, R. Weiss, M. Baumberger, E. Haines. Third Row. Left to Right: V. Gartshore, A. Gintert. H. Moseley, V. Gray. A. Erb. S. Klein. C. Castle, E. Asmun, L. Day. M. Nye, D. Meacham, C. Norton. E. Agae, M. Howard, J. Fisher. Fourth Row, Left to Right: E. Swan. E. Ferrari. G. Foley. L. Myers. W. Gamber. A. Stew- art. H. Gray. R. Hudson. B. Phihus, H. Remick. M. Rum- baugh. E. Thomas. J. Wright, J Brundage, P. Gerber. Women ' s Glee Club This organization is composed of sixty girls selected at the be- ginning of the year. Directors this year were Miss Sublette and Miss Littlejohn. Practices were held each Monday and Wednesday. The outstanding program of the group was the Christmas Musicale. 18 University Orchestra Professor Roy Metcalf directs this organization. It has forty- five members. They provide music at the University plays and play in at least one assembly program. Practices are held every Wednes- day evening. It had a part in the Christmas Musicale. irst Row. Left to Right: Perkins. F. Hair, L. Ham- n. S. Fink. J. Farinacci, J. lith. M. Reynolds, B. Kurtz, Second Row, Left to Right: E. Breting. H. Chapman, J. Bur- roughs, W. Price. R. Cunningham. R. Schmalz, A. Parker, M. Messersmith, E. Ingalls, S. Klein, A. Frangos, M. Read. J. Seymour, M. Heine- mann. H. Spiller. M. Ritter, M. Moore, B. Philius, M. Brandon. Fourth Row, Left to Right: P. Moore, L. Wilson, J. Darby. L. Bracy, C. Wall, R. Ellsworth, N. Hollister, L. Butler, O. Venn. C. Philius. H. Briola. H. Gil- ford, T. Foster. Fifth Row, Left to Right: Mr. Metcalf (conductor), W. Helm- boldt, C. Andregg. R. Stribley. Wood winds . . Strings . . Brass . . Braid and buttons First Row, Left to Right: F. Hair. M. Moore, M. Heine- mann. M. Ritter, R. Tuttle. D. McBride. L. Ewell, T. Markley, B. Helmboldt, A. Lennig, R. Reynolds, P. Weiss, J. Wilder, W. Lythgoe. I. Immel, J. Free- man, R. Ellsworth. Second Row, Left to Right: A. Godfrey. J. Seymour, N. Hol- lister. J. Darby. L. Bracy. F. Moore. P. Chappelear, F. Ken- nedy. W. Garwood, C. Wall, G. Milhoan, R. Baker. K, Hart. P. Gahagan, D. Strohl. L. Butler. J. Jenkins. Third Row, Left to Right: Mr. Metcalf ( conductor ) , H. Heinemann. C. Caldwell. S. Brown, G. Jordan. C. Philius. W. Freshley, H. Gifford, O. Venn, A. Parsons. H. Chapman. T, Foster, H. Briola. G. Korb, H. Hardy, J. O ' Hara. G. Lem- University Band Professor Roy Metcalf conducts this band of fifty pieces. Students have heard it at the athletic games this year. The marching band was particularly attractive in its new blue and gold uniforms. William Helmboldt served as the drum major. Men ' s Debate By debating teams in these three conferences: Ohio Conference, Northeastern Ohio Conference, and Pi Kappa Delta, these men amassed a total of approximately sixty contests. Each conference has an official question upon which the discussions are held. This year ' s squad was quite successful. Left to Right: H Glanzer. R. Stribley, R. Conard. R. Gros- venor. D. Moore. Mr. Wright, L. Ross. L. Cooper, B. Lewis. E. Schneider. R. Wilson. Left to Right: V. Bodo. P. Sprague. E. Whitmire, M. Runk. Mr. Wright. F. Waterbury. D. Runk. J. Cotman. D. Smith. lake- believe or make them believe Q Women ' s Debate The women ' s debate schedule follows closely that of the men, but they have only half as many contests and the questions for debate are somewhat different. A selected team represented Kent in the Pi Kappa Delta tournament in Texas. 120 University Theatre The University Theatre, as the largest organization on the campus, continues to produce four major productions annually. Every student is eligible upon payment of the yearly dues. Included in the program each year is the Theatre Formal. It was held at the Portage Hotel in Akron just before Christmas. Left to Right: M. Stopher. G McDermott. Mr. Wright, J. Knott, G. Dike. Prof. Stump. . . . Whether debator or dramatist Seated. Left to Right: J. Diet- rich, G. Gettrust, J. Treat, M. Scully, M. Lawrence, P. Parise, D. Knapik, N. Daub. Standing, First Row, Left to Right: R. Beuck, J. Tallentire, F. Miltner, B. Peck. P. Moore. V. Florenz, H. Koerpel, M. Rhodes, M. Gill. H. Peterson, B. Taylor. E. Ashton, V. La- Wand, K. Cone. Standing, Second Row, Left to Right: M. Morrow, G. Corbett, B. Martin, R. Chapman. Freshman Players Under the leadership of Prof. G. Harry Wright, the Freshman Players constitutes all freshmen interested in dramatics and other speech curricula. The objective of this group is to give several short Dlays each year in assembly and assist the speech department in its leading productions. It is the proving ground for potential university dramatic stars. 121 Government of the students, for the students, and (once in a while) by the students . . . student vox populi ex- pressed through the mouths of brother and sister organizations . . . puny but undespairing efforts to obtain more power and less pressure . . . making new rules to swell an ever-increasing total . . . planning petitions that are destined for an ignominious end in a nice, digni- fied wastebasket . . . planning the social calendar . . . wrangling with conservative profs and advisors over off-campus dances . . . trying to slash off a few ten- tacles of the administrative octopus . . . and cauterizing the wound with ingrati- ating tact . . . acting as intermediaries between the multitude and the Chosen People . . . valiantly attempting to steer the ship of student government away from the shoals of discouragement and dissension . . . subjects for criticism and objects of ridicule from those whom they ' re trying to serve . . . thankful for small concessions . . . but tirelessly, re- belling in the true spirit of youth . . . thankless job! STUDENT ADMINISTRATION 23 First Row. Left to Right: C. Pope. J. Mover. M. Speln Second Row. Lett to Right: C. Terry. E. Williams. P. Briola. M. Polli, E. Garrison. The Student Council constitutes the voice of the student body in directing those matters per- taining to the interests of the students of Kent State University. It is composed of twenty-two members: four from each upper division class, two from the Freshman and Sophomore classes, the Editors of the Kent Stater and the Chestnut Burr, president of the woman ' s league and of the men ' s Union, and the six class presidents. This year the group formulated a Code of Tra- ditions , designed to inculcate into such a compara- tively young university as Kent State customs and rules, observance of which will lead to an enrichment of campus tradition. One of the most important functions of the student council is the efficient and honest supervision of all university elections. Don Ranney was the official representative at the convention of the National Student Federation of America. The Kent State Council became a mem- ber of this organization last year. Two of the most important duties of this group are the annual publication of the K book and the enforcement of freshman regulations. The Student Council is a strong organization, ever growing in power and prestige and always devoted to the best interests of the students. Officers Roberr Baumgardner . . . Pres. Don Ranney . . . .Vice. Pres. Harold Wendelken. . . . The Student Council Pdn-Hellenic Council The Pan-Hellenic association, feminine oligarchy which reigns over the lady-Greeks of the campus, is composed of three representatives from each sorority, and a faculty sponsor who is chosen for a period of two years from among the sorority advisors. All the national educational and local sororities are repre- sented in its numbers. The major function of the group is to regulate rushing, set dates for parties, examine expense ac- counts for rush parties, and to impose penalties in case of failure to observe regulations. For the past three years, Pan-Hell has effi- ciently managed the sorority bridge and tennis tourn- aments, the winners of which receive silver loving- cups. This year the high-light in the activities of the organization was the Pan-Hellenic ball, the first of its kind ever to be given at Kent State. The regulations and decisions of Pan-Hellenic are seldom criticized, and the deference and cooper- ation which it receives indicate that it is one of the most efficient and capable governing bodies on the campus. First Row. Left to Right: O. Roberts. P. Hendee, B. Elliott, E. Malpass. Mona Fletcher (advisor). Second Row, Lett to Right: W. Palmer, M. Palfl, D. Fitzgerald. B. Forner. D. Heminger, C. Palmer. G. Helm, I. Shaylor. Third Row, Left to Right: H. Strouse, E. Bader, H. Hastings. L. Capel. D. Young, E. Maddock. Officers iernita Elliott Pres. ' auline Hendee. . . Rec. Sec. Christine Roberts. .Cor. Sec. dith Malpass Treas. 25 tU 1 H Pi 01 L- 1 A T. E. Davey, Jr Lett to Ki;hl: J. Mlltnc L. Lutz, J. Cra It is the University Social Committee whose duty it is to plan the university ' s social calendar, granting permission to hold on and off-campus dances and so arranging the schedule of affairs that there is no conflict in dates and places. This regulative body, which as a whole meets four times a year, is com- posed of eleven faculty members who are appointed by the president of the university, and twenty-five student members who are delegated as representa- tives of various campus organizations. More directly regulative of university social af- fairs is the executive council of the committee, con- sisting of the eleven faculty members and eleven stu- dents elected from the committee. This group meets once a month. This year, under the chairmanship of T. E. Davy, genial history professor, the committee itself man- aged the dances for the fall and spring Homecoming celebrations, pxturesque Campus night festival, and ' or the newly inaugurat ed Sub-Freshman Day jam- boree. As the enrollment of the university increases, from year to year, the list of dances, teas, dinners, end all the other social events sponsored by campus groups will automatically lengthen. So it is inevitable that an organization with functions and duties such as are within the realm of the social committee will increase in importance, responsibility and prestige. University Social Commitlee Inter-Fraternity Council The Inter-Fraternity council, masculine counter- part of Pan-Hellenic, is an arbitrating body whose word is final in the decision of important inter-fra- ternity questions. It governs the rushing and pledg- ing system. Contrary to the procedure in most col- leges, fraternities under the deferred plan have to wait until the opening of the second semester to rush desirable candidates, the idea being that pledges ' grades must be up by that time. The council is composed of two representatives from each of the four local and one national fraterni- ties. Under the guidance of Jimmy Craig, the council has been active and progressive throughout the school year in regard to its duties and functions. Once a month the council meets to discuss per- tinent questions which arise within its jurisdiction. Meetings are usually held in the library. It can be expected, in the future, that this organization will grow in prestige and importance due to the growth of fraternities and their expanding functions here on the campus at Kent State University. Officers ames Craig Pres. _e Roy Widowski . . . V. Pres. Jelson Salathe Sec. 27 Boring notices read in assembly . . . fancy signs splattered over the bulletin boards . . . The home economics club will meet — . . .hot sessions . . . argu- ments over amendments or new members . . dispensing pom-poms at football games . . . throwing immature dances in the little gym or the off-campus club room . . Parliamentary law sadly para- phrased in meetings . . . the loudest talker gets heard . . . innumerable com- mittees that never deliver and eventually go up in smoke . . . — ,who is an out- standing figure in this field will address us tomorrow evening . . . friction, heated competition, back-biting when two clubs tackle the same project . . . dues two- bits per month . . . everyone in arrears . . . members who never show up after the first meeting . . . the remainder who do all the work . . . giving plays . . . learning songs . . . planning decorations . . . mak- ing posters . . . getting hot under the collar and all to make club ... or kill time . . or collect an imposing list of senior activities for the year book. CLUBS Kindergarten- Primary Club This progressive and creative club has become known for its yearly sponsoring of the Century of Progress Marionettes each fall. Other services this club renders consist of assisting the Emergency Nursery School of Kent, Christmas and Easter parties for the children, plus many luncheon and tea get-togethers. Standing. Left to Right: J. Hughes, H. Lundeen. Back Row. Left to Right: L. Pease. S. Cannon. D. Hommon, D. Schrader. L. Dunlap. J. Fitzpatrick. M. Spelman. Miss Swan. R. Ewald. J. Lilie. M. Moomaw, E. McCartney, Miss Parrish. R. Thompson. V. Wells, M. Bray. Front Row. Left to Right: V Pearl. M. Sternad. E. Hazlitt, V. LaWand. E. Yarian. H. Madden. H. Neale. A. Beatty. R. Van Fleet. M. Graybill. M. Einsel. Selling hot dogs Cheering up the lonesome . . . Seated. Left to Right: Dean Manchester, J. Kasha. R. Full- mer. H. Dunlavy. O. Sprunger. D. Alden. Standing, Left to Right: H. Gill. M. Polli. Y, M. C. A. This brother organization to the Y. W. C. A. has very similar aims and objectives. The group endeavors to create new friendships, to in- vestigate different study problems, to help break down religious and racial prejudices, to provide recreation, and to create inter-collegiate contacts 130 Y. W. C. A. Endeavoring to aid girls in formulating a sane, wholesome way of living, the Y. W. C. A. reaches out to all types of activities — social, service, religious, and study; in service the group strives to fill the gaps on the campus and in the community life where need is felt. Left to Right: L. Elwonger, E. Koeppe, W. Shepherd, D. J. Young. Miss Pai-rish. M. For- ney, A. Rimer, M. Trunkey. Giving teas . . . All in the name of service Left to Right: H. Chapman, H. Peterson, M. J. Stewart, E. Ashton, J. Moyer, Dean Verder, B. Gerspacher, E. Koeppe. M. Brockhaven, B. Richardson. Women ' s League 131 This governing body of the women of the university does all in its power through the action of its Executive Board and Advisor to aid in acclimating all girls, new and old, to the campus, and to work for the betterment of the school in general whenever possible. Manual Arts Club This departmental club strives for better professional training for all manual arts teachers with the realization of the actual place of their department in the school. One of the interesting outgrowths of the club has been the Glider club, composed of boys who construct and fly their own glider. Lert to Rieht: J. Scharf. Mr. Tischendorf. L Brown, E. Dun- lavy. W. Curtiss. A. Godfrey, G. Jordan. J. Layman. A. Van Wyen. P. Wawrin. R. Doan. Mending broken furniture . . . Broken dialects . . . . Left to Right: K. Albreeht, J. McKay. E. Whitmire, H. Kuhlins, E. McCormick, Dr. Schafheitlin. B. Heuser, R. Horton, E. Sackett. I. Sauk- konen. German Club Truly international is this German club sponsored by Dr. Schaf- heitlin, a true German. One of its prime aims is to promote a better understanding and sympathy between the true German ond those study- ing the German culture. Lectures, book reviews, pictures, and personal correspondence help in creating this feeling of international friendship. 132 Biology Club First Row, Left to Right: N. Hollister, R. Oviatt, B. Kunert. V. Petty, E. Kurtz. Second Row, Left to Right: R. Miller, K. Alexander, M. Zurcher, R. Frederick. Third Row, Left to Right: W. Ellett, R. Horton, W. Gam- auf. M. Serene. Fourth Row, Left to Right : Dr. Kelley, H. Shook, G. Hol- lister, R. Tullsen, S. Young. Fifth Row, Left to Right: C Hinkle, Dr. Alexopoulos, W. McAlister. Sixth Row, Left to Right: N. Salathe, O. Dobkin, H. Stull, R. Slutz, J. Page, W. Wardell. Seventh Row, Left to Right: Prof. Cunningham, Mr. Har- bourt, K. Damann. • • • Cutting up worms and frogs with foreign names Similar to the German club, this organization gives to the student of French a practical linguistic background of books, plays, pictures, lectures, folklore, history, geography, and personalities prominent in French life. The club is composed of majors and minors in French and is directed by Miss Helen Machan. First Row, Left to Right: E. Zimmerman, D. Werner, J. DeLeone, H. G. Starr, G. Dor- sey, M. Senerchia, K. Hall. Second Row, Left to Right: K. Hoskins. D. Ray, H. Pierce, J. Young. J. Treat, C. Wheeler. Third Row, Left to Right: L. Eddy, F. Wiggs. E. Davidson, B. Westlake, H. DeWeese, H. Schneider. Fourth Row, Left to Right: R. Tozer, S. Kopach, C. Pan- tilimon, V. Woods, A. Dura, E. Schneider. Fifth Row, Left to Right: D. Wiegand, Miss Machan, Miss ' A. Bancroft. French Club Cleveland Club This group of students coming from Greater Cleveland is banded together to promote the interests of Kent State U in the High Schools of Cleveland, to form the nucleus of an alumni club, and to become better acquainted at parties and dances on campus and in Cleveland. Front Bow. Lett to Right: V. Kaufl man, M. Lawrence. J. Church. B. Banyc. V. Florenz. A. Dura. Sealed. Left to Eight: V Carpente r, F. Waterbury. E. Dura. E. Lockwood. H. Ramser, L. Wray. Standi! lg. Left to Right: A Seldner. E. Faloon, J. Stewart. R. Pinvo un. R. Van Fleet, H. Gill. G. Jordan. A. Davis. M. Polli. S. Canepa, S. Kaczor. L. Stein. A show in Cleveland or a cabin in Ihe pines Standing. Left to Right: E Roberts. E. Likens. M. Gruen. K. Wardman. R. Morrell. E. James. Seated on Couch, Left to Right: H. Porter, F. Lothrop. Mrs. Apple. B. Elliott, J. Buckmaster. Seated on Floor. Left to Right: M. Watson. V. Petty. A. JuringUS, B. Bergman. L. Woman ' s Athletic Association Guided ably by the board of sports managers, this versatile organi- zation embraces practically all the girls in the U . All sports are offered in season — in the university buildings, on the campus grounds, or at the cottage at E. Twin Lake — to develop skill, friendly competition, and alert bodies and minds. 134 Men ' s Union The Saturday News Letter giving all the current information on a variety of subjects is the official organ of the Men ' s Union. The Union also sponsors Dad ' s Day, innumerable smokers and contests from song- writing to chess, and has among its achievements for this year a highly entertaining Amateur Night . Lett to Right: J. Miltner, J. Simpson, B. Butler. S. Fogg, H. Gilcrest, J. Craig, J. Fari- nacci, M. Serene. J. Page, R. Tuttle. (inserted) Dean Man- Smoker Tonight I .... No Smoking Allowed . . . . Off-Campus Club This club offers friendship and jolly times to those many girls who commute daily to Kent State U for courses, and a study room for them- selves and girls who live off-campus. In their cozy club room in Merrill Hall the girls study, hold luncheon meetings, and many social affairs. 135 Cosmopolitan Club This club strives for international and inter-racial understanding by studying problems of world and national importance and attempting to arrive at the true facts of all the cases; and to formulate ideas as to what may be done to solve the problems. , Left to Right: M. C. Wheeler. C. Pouser, J. Ervin. to Ri ht: C. W. Hammer. Ross. Third Rom Hammack. Thomas, F. J, Tallentire. Second Row, Left to Right: M. Runk. G. Moyer. E. Koeppe, I. Saukkonen. E. Indoe, G. Warner. Dr. A. Schafheitlin, E. Hazlitt. Front Row, Left to Right: V. Bodo. H. Kang. P. Horton. E. Schneider. Dean O. Williams. L. Goldwood. E. Thomas. ' tii ib romoiing race relations Family relations Back Row, Left to Right: E. Green. R. Benedict, C. Buell, E. Ochsendorf, A. Dye. M. Moore. M. Zurcher. M. Irvine, D. McDaniel. R. Frederick, H. Zerbe, M. Colby. Miss Jordan. H. Conkle. J. Hastings. Miss Nixson. E. Montecalvo. Middle. Row. Left to Right: E. Kurtz, E. Jordan, C. Monte- calvo. B. Boyett. N. Dominick. E. Malpass. M. L. Krebs. D. Overman. D. Luikart. J. Mc- Kahn. J. Hankamer, R. Oviatt. M. Dyer, E. Oyer. E. Haines. L. C. Terrell. Seated. Left to Right: J. Spencer. M. Apley. J. Woods, G. Gettrust. J. Brundage. E. M. Truscott. L. Begala. H. Koerpel. F. Rhodes. I. Mitchell. N. Waters. L. Eddy. Home Economics Club One of the active departmental organizations on the campus is the Home Economics Club. Its purposes are to foster professional spirit, to sponsor and help furnish the Home Management House, and to serve as a social, and service club, entertaining all from the freshmen and faculty to visiting college organizations. 136 Business Administration Club The Commerce and Business Administration club was organized to- co-ordinate the extra-curricular activities of the student with the aca- demic work in Commerce and Business Administration and Economics. Such activities include lectures on current economic problems, talks before outside groups by members of the club, and efforts to place grad- uates in the field of business. Left to Right: C. Hageman. L. Markley, Prof. Back Row, Prof. Hudson Stewart, T. Allyn. Fourth Row, Left to Right: P. Grieme. K. Hulbert. H. Conkle. P. Horton. R. Schulz. Third Row, Left to Right: M. Stambaugh, J. Smith, D. Fitz- gerald, P. Engleman, P. Pear- Second Row, Left to Right: E. Shearer. F. Fcmer, V. Schoffman. R. Killian, C. Har- First Row, Left to Right: K. Robenstine, G. Shriber, B. Scott, J. Simpson, M. Sener- chia, L. Lutz. Commercial and industrial relations Back Row, Left to Right: L. Stein. J. Romito, J. Scobie, R. Beuck. Third Row, Left to Right: L. Eschenberg. J. King, D. Al- den, M. Brannon, J. Hopko, J. Woods. Second Row. Left to Right: J. Zupan. F. Watkins. W. Hageman, T. Schulz. N. Fu- chik, L. Cooper, D. Zink. First Row, Left to Right: L. Moo-e, J. Batchelder, A. Pod- wojski, R. Griffin, D. Griffin. C. Pope. Business Administration Club One of the chief purposes of the organization is to aid in the devel- opment of the College of Business Administration. The program of the club also includes social activities such as parties and a Commerce Ball. The Club membership totals fifty. 137 138 ta T-e h c change the perpe F Ns - sports calendar grincT Fall and winter .... ball, wrestling and spring and summer . . tennis, baseball and round and round. in the 1936 athletic The college becomes a Uni versity .... but regardless of ual pages of the on undisturbed, football, basket- swimming .... . . track, golf .... Pounded I statistics as an outstanding year a year of unprecedented victory at- to the long-heralded New Deal due to the rejuvenated spirit mani rributed athletics fested in participation and observation of inter collegiate sports .... University athletics have emerged. They are successful. Q Football Wrestling Basketball Minor Sports J-l L ? A o s Football . . . that swaggering behemoth that lurches from its lair every fall and captures the fickle heart of the Ameri- can public . . . thousands sit in drizzling rain to watch twenty-two men tear at each other with the fury of prehistoric beasts . . . glistening bodies . . . steamy shower rooms . . . pungent odor of sweat and antiseptics . . . the coach, a harried master mind pacing the locker room . . . Football . . . turning the multitude into so many rooters or hecklers . . . cheer lead- ers whose grotesque antics draw lusty roars from hoarse throats . . . brass blar- ing between halves . . . the strutting drum major, gaudy in stripes and gold buttons, high-stepping down the field . . . the Alma Mater . . . hats off . . . hair blows and ears tingle in the icy wind . . . refs in wide-striped shirts, blowing whis- tles, blandly ignoring complaints ... If we win . . . goal posts torn up, backs slapped ... If we lose . . . post-mortems in the Brady . . . here ' s what I ' d have done . . . optimism . . . wait till next time . . . football. FOOTBALL We Present Left to Right: Alvon Cox, center; Lyle Warren, end; Roy Widowski, quarter-bock. Poxton Whitmire, tackle; Robert Eisel, end; Herman Fischer, tackle Marvin Garner, half-back; Harry Gilcrest, center; Herbert Gill, tackle. Left to Right: Myron Harrington, guard; Chestsr Sokoloski, guard; Norvin Carter, half-back. Dick Bolich, guard; Don Ranney, half-back; Victor Gilly, end; Ashron Hall, half-back. Gridiron Facts Widowski drives off-tackle for a 20 yard gain in a type of play that was instrumental in defeating Otterbein 6-0 before a record homecoming crowd. With the football season as a proving grounds the new coaching triumvirate of Starn, Novotny, and Begala successfully underwent the acid test and nurtured the Kent gridders to a new style of play so well that they broke all records for scoring at Kent, accumulating 127 points to their opponents ' 108. They won three and lost five of an eight game schedule. It was not an auspicious beginning for the Flashes when they traveled to Mount Union and were thoroughly drubbed by the Purple Raiders. Dopesters had predicted an undefeated season for the Raiders and these predictions were substantiated by their 19-0 win over Kent in a rainy night game. Kent faced the Student Princes of Heidelberg in the first home game of the season and in this clash came the first touchdown under the new regime. Widowski neatly passed to Lyle Warren who scam- pered 14 yards for the score. Although outplaying the Princes, the Flashes failed to take advantage of position and the Princes scored three times. The final score was 21 -6. The performance of the Golden Flashes was nothing short of classic in the feud-infested Akron fray. Kent fans migrated to Buchtel field where they saw the tjlue and Gold completely outclass the heavier Zippers for the full four periods. Three points stood between the Kent team and victory dfter,Earl Hensal had kicked the deciding points from the M -ydrd Hne making the score 3-0 in favor of Akron at the end ofyhe game. It was at this point in -the season that the Kent team began to click . Otterbein fell 6-0 at the Kent homecoming. Scoring at will against Bowling Green the. Flashes smothered them 45-0. The last football game to be played -between Hiram and Kent saw the Terriers fall under a 45-6 score. ' ' The Baldwin-Wallace steam roller was next on the Flash card. Sanity prevented the prediction of a Kent victory but Kent showed a powerful scoring punch and made three stabs over the goal line. The game ended 40- 1 8. The final game of the season saw the Flashes travel to Ashland doped as favorites. Playing in a drizzling rain and on a soggy field the Blue and Gold dipped its colors to the Eagles by a 19-7 score. Widowski made the only touchdown for Kent. Pile-driving Carter finds an opening over guard and gains four yar before being stopped by the Otterbein secondary. Varsity Squad Second Ron Cox. H. Gill, W ' litmire. Third Row. Lcfl lo Right : D. Ranney, M. Garner, H. Gilcrest. N. Carter. R Widowski. R. Snvder, B MeGinni.s. E. Dunlavy. Mr. Novotny, Mr. Begala, Mr. Storn. 5 « e n  « ; Three ' -nodi. ■Cs m -pa fo - ■' •, «4nr-JQ IT lid % %oi ° ...A .aa _,  ° ? .A, J5ifc - First Row, Left to Right: T. DeEulis, V. Lindsay. J. Widowski, A. Sabatino, R. Halsey, B. Beinstein, J. Wicks, R. Cox. Second Row, Left to Right: D. Hoskins, C. Marusic, A. Weatherford, T. Dowding, N. Littlepage. H. Harrington, C. Hutton. Third Row, Left to Right: R. Glazier, E. Weisel, F. Keifer, F. Weir. E. Sullivan, P. Hazen Fourth Row, Left to Right: J. Krizman. J. Luisch, H. LaFountain. E. Simpson. E. Kempf, C. Hine. J. Armour. Fifth Row, Left to Right: B. Butler, L. Schoffman. B. Morgan. P. Ryan, R. Drage. Freshman Squad Wrestling . . . that most primitive form of combat that sends the blood of the red-eyed Neanderthal surging through the veins of the spectators . . . Wrestling . . . formalities and handshaking in the center of the arena . . . formalities cast aside as bodies clash, muscles straining in attack and counter attack . . . the dull thud of flesh on flesh and the gasp of tired lungs fighting for air . . . the crowd grows tense as the struggle continues on a horizontal plane . . . nonchalant, sick- ened or loudly enthusiastic Romans around the arena . . .The referee sprawls and squirms as shoulders near the mat . . . his mighty hand slaps down and an- other victory or defeat is carved in the annals of the university . . . Wrestling . . all types pass in review . . . lean and gawky, chunky and fat, well set and pow- erful; all versed in the lore of hand to hand combat ... a compendium of sweat, sprains, skill, power, spirit, guidance and alertness . . . Wrestling. 152 WRESTLING 153 Red McCort pins Campbell, of W and J, in Kent ' s 36-0 victory. This was the twenty-second con- secutive win of the Kent wrestling team and the finale of on undefeated season. Kent State University Excels in Wrestling An undefeated season — that sought after epitaph that haunts every coach ' s waking hours and recurs in his sleep in blaring headlines that shout a soothing symphony of complimentary publicity. An undefeated season has been written on the records at Kent, and in that most colorful of varsity sports, wrestling. Smashing through ten scheduled meets in a style that has characterized Begala-coached teams the grapplers piled up 274 points to their opponents ' 57. Not included in thsse results is a 17-11 win over the alumni champions. The followers were given a pre-season taste of wrestling spiced by the personal appearance of Coach Joe Begala when the wrestlers scheduled a meet with the alumni champions in the Courier-Tribune charity show. Such stars as Tiger Lukens, Joe Taborsky, Bob Johnson, Fred Scott, Art Stejskal, and Bing Rinaldi were carded on the opposition and when the varsity rapped out the 17-11 victory over these opponents Begala ' s persistent pessimism was shoved aside by the fans ' enthusiasm for the coming season. Begala clipped off a clean decision over Lukens in the feature match of the evening. The first scheduled meet found the Flashes facing an untested Witten- berg grapple squad in Wilis gym. Optimism ran high as the evening drew to a close for the only loss suffered by the Kent men was a questioned decision in the 155 pound division in which Tuffy Harrington wrestled ten pounds over his weight. The final score was 36-3. The customary doubts by Begala preceded the Case match and these doubts were somewhat echoed by the student body of Kent as they viewed the high caliber material from Case. The outstanding matches of the meet saw Eckert, Kent ' s 1 35 pound inter-state champion, wrestle a determined Body for 7:05 minutes before he was able to pin him. Wardell, dwarfed by Case ' s Wright , displayed the touch of a master as he pinned the behemoth in 4:53. The notorious 145 pound Vaughn pinned Buck Dunlavy to give Case five of its ten points in the 17-10 set-back. The team of Miami university of Coral Gables, Florida, travelled from the tropical atmosphere of the south to the sub-zero weather of Ohio and met an equally cold reception as the Begalamen blasted them from their path, 24-8. Miami brought three Florida state champions to Wills gym. Abras, a tanned, lithe 1 18 pounder, pinned Kent ' s Strohl in short order; Girtman, was decisioned by Eckert in the } ' 3 ' 5 , bracket, while E. Sudlow, 145 pound champion edged Red McCort in the 155 pound slot. A highly rated Rochester. Mechanics team was subdued, 27-5, before a record High School day crowd. • Buelt ' G-rsven, 126 pound sophomore sen- sation,, and Smoothie Ecfeert we re both pitted against men that forced them to break their pin habifsT . On the team ' s first road trip., two scalps were brought back to grace the wrestling trophy case. Waynesbtifg, and Washington and Jefferson fell before the drive toward an undefeated season, 26-8, and 27-3, respectively. The twentieth straight victory was won when the Ohio U. bobcats in- vaded Wills gym to be turned back by a 21-3 margin. The lone victory for the men from Athens came in the heavyweight division that saw Wardell lose on a referee ' s decision to Peaspanen. The closest match of the season came when the fans followed the grapplemen to Case and saw them win but four out of the eight matches and only save their win streak through their ability to garner pins. Graven, Carter and Hach gave Kent three falls and Eckert gathered in an advantage over Body giving Kent 18 points in the 18-12 victory. Washington and Jefferson ' s matmen were not received cordially as they were whitewashed 36-0. Featured in this meet was the skill displayed by that wrestler who has won notoriety in Ohio collegiate wrestling circles, Otto Hach. Hach appeared in the heavyweight ranks in place of Wardell and capered around the W and J heavyweight for three minutes and fifty five seconds before pinning him. Kent again captured team and individual honors at the Inter-State meet which held its 1 936 sessions in Wills gym. Buell Graven, 1 26; Clarence Eckert, 135; Norvin Carter, 165; Otto Hach, 175 won first places. Dale Strohl, 118; Ed Kegler, 145; William Wardell, heavyweight were the Kent second place winners. Kent State University Interstate Wrestling Left to Right: Bill Bradley Roscoe Snyder Dale Strohl Walter Lang Joe Begala Elmer Dunlavy Norvin Carter William Wardell Don Tern 1 1 Dohrnman Maffett I 6 Left to Right: Paul Deevers John Mendiola Bill Hines Otto Hach Herbert Gill Bill Mansfield Joe Taborsky Buell Graven Howard Dunlavy Champions Demonstrate How II Is Done Varsity Wresllers First Row, Left to Right: B. Graven, J. McCort, C. Eckert, G. Hach, D. Strohl. Second Row: J. Begala (coachl, H. Dunlavy, E. Kegler, J. Wardell, F. Scott, M. Harrington, G Barkalow Imanagerl. Freshman Wrestlers First Row, Left to Right: F. Nicolosi, J. Armour, D. Butler, E. Riley, H. Mull, W. Berger, T. DeEulis. Second Row: J. Taborsky (coach), M. Bruno, D. McBride, E. Jolli, C. Hine, N. Littlepags, A. Simpson, D. Zink, C. Falcone. Third Row: C. Kainrad, A. Komlody, A. Grogro, P. Polen, K. Gartrell, F. Weir, T. Dowding. Hollow echoes in a barn-like gym . . . the resounding smack of leather on wood . . the squeal of quick-stopping rubber soles ... a whistle shrills . . . trunk-clad torsos leap up, straining to reach the ball . . . then men dart into position, blocking, passing, pivoting, shooting . . . cheers come in waves from the shadowed bleacher mob . . . officials brood solemnly over charts and clocks at a small table, scribbling statistics as the seconds spin off . . . the gun cracks . . . the half! . . . solicitous managers drape the sweating, panting players as they lope off the floor . . . the second half, with its rallying burst of energy and second wind . . . hurried substitutions . . . coaches lose their Sphinx-like poise as the winning five stalls for time . . . the seething crowd heckles or gloats . . . undercurrent of sus- pense . . . eyes on the timer . . . the final gun breaks the spell, loosing a pande- monium of exulting or alibi-ing enthu- siasts . . . the general exodus of the crowd . . . exeunt omnes . . . Basketball. BASKETBALL Starnmen ' s That new spirit that has come to Kent with the new coaches manifested itself in the 1936 basketball season as the Flash courtmen hung up their uni- forms after compiling the best record at Kent in nine years. Ten wins and seven defeats. Numbering among the ten wins was a victory over the Akron hoodoo which in itself is sufficient to make a season a success at Kent. To add glamour to the victory over the Zippers, it came as the culmina- tion of a seven game winning streak that grasped the fans in a feverish grip as they poured into Wills gym to watch Kent pitch its inspired forces against a team they had not been able to defeat in nine years. From the opening tip-off with Long John Scharf dom- inating the center circle, the Starnmen had complete control of the situation. Roy Pinyoun, sophomore finery, and Roy Widowski, senior reliable, hit the steel loop with impressive regularity that gave Kent a 22-1 1 lead at the half. The second half saw Akron rally shortly but ineffectively as Scharf played a bang-up defensive game to recover all Zipper shots from the Kent backboard. The much lauded Bill Sturgeon was unable to make more than one field goal through a Kent defense that threw the Zipper offense completely off balance as it shifted into a zone coverage that allowed only Victor Gilly, guard John Scharf, guard Roy Pinyoun, forward Flashes nine field goals to sift through. A hoodoo humbled by a 40-28 score! The Flashes opened the season in fine style as they filtered through the Fenn Foxes for a 34-22 win. The game was a typical season opener with both teams over-cautious and ragged. The score at the half found Kent ahead 13-7. The Blue Streaks of John Carroli provided the Kent fans with a thrilling climax to the first home game. Kent gave the fans a very poor exhibition during the first half as they handled the play in an awkward style. In sharp contrast Carroll clicked like a well oiled machine and sank sufficient shots to make the score 24-8 in favor of the Clevelanders at the end of the first half. The second period was composed of a series of rallies that saw Kent teeter on the winning points only to be dropped in the last minute of play as Garrett of the Streaks mir- aculously sank a long one that arched over the rafters. The final score: 40-39. Another heart breaker was staged at New Concord by the Flash quint as the veteran Muskingum outfit staved off the Kent rally to win 48-46. Findlay, who once defeated Kent 100-12 in the dear dead days, eked out a 32-26 victory over the Gold as the big guns of the Flash failed to connect. Glendall McDermort, forward Paul Boyle, guard Dean Kisseberth, forward Bill Keller, forward Harry Lohr, forward Roy Widowski, guard Fenn ' s invasion of the Kent hard- woods turned out to be more disastrous than their previous loss as the Gold shook off the jinx of three consecutive defeats and crushed them 48-29. Ashland and Kenyon fell in quick order on the following Friday and Sat- urday. The Lords gave Kent one of the roughest games of the season and there was little scoring as the Flashe: won, 19-17. The Eagles were edged in a close game that found Kent at the long end of the 36-40 score at the final gun. Hiram, that traditional rival of Portage county, provided poor opposi- tion for the fast moving five of Kent as they fell before the drive of the Flash winning streak, 43-26 and 42-24. A record crowd filled Wills gym on Kent ' s first High School day to see the Kent five stretch their winning streak to six when they bowled over their sister university, Bowling Green, 27-24. Akron went on the block for what was to be the final success in the win streak. Akron fell and history was recorded. Mount Union broke the record with a 32-42 drubbing. Kent lost the next three; Akron 48, Kent 28; Findlay 46, Kent 33; and Toledo 31, Kent 19. The final two games of the season saw Kent blossom forth at its best. John Carroll was thoroughly thumped, 38-43, and the Ashland Eagle was picked bare in the closing game of the season as it bowed to the tune of 52-21. Four Flashes Follow Through $ ■f bounce Weak pf druins W . rei7n Downed , b Streak, — o 40-39- 34.?o ' _ Varsity Squad 1C6 ' •vi. e $ fa Jl Home Tilts Uoi e L- Ca ra eme Invasion . F «n Will AttJLJ 5 Next w . y i F. Keifer, B. Morgan, A. Lipstr. Fr@shman Squad 57 Spring . . . and the advent of three minor sports . . . Baseballs fly as addicts unleash energies suppressed through the winter . . . the thrill of a well-hit horse- hide . . . uniforms reek of moth balls . . . gloves are oiled and limbered . . . The tennis court is prepared for the invasion of its protagonists . . . managers scrape, rake, roll, line at frequent intervals . . . fans chase and hit, seeking skill by prac- tice . . . Greenskeepers dodge golf balls as the mashie-wielders advance on the nineteenth hole . . . drives hook and slice with contemptuous disregard of the de- sires of the golfer . . . tense moments in matches that rest on the skill of the player . . . Swimming team . . . baby in- fant of minor sports . . . human fish-like forms in splashing action . . . specialists in speed, turns, dashes . . . Intra-mural teams flare in the year ' s finale . . . brotherly love between close competitors . . . fight-talks behind closed doors . . . the omnipresent dispute over an umpire ' s decision . . . smiling winners with shining cups. MINOR SPORTS 69 First Row, Left to Right: F Second Row, Left to Right Ray Novotny. W. Gre.ssard, Coach SWIMMING 1936 For the first time in Flash sports history, a swimming squad represented the school, making not an auspicious, but nevertheless, a resounding splash in Ohio conference waters. Coached by Ray Novotny, they copped one of their six meets. Akron tripped them 48-44, and Fenn followed up, ducking them, 47-28. In the return engagement with the Zipper mermen however, the squad turned in a vic- tory, 50-34. Wooster ' s water-minded Scots scored two wins, 49-35 and 56-37 against the Flashes, and Fenn scuttled the Kent fleet for a second time, 47-37, to conclude the season. In the conference swim meet, three of the four entries qualified to give Kent five points. Gressard, Ranney, and Godfrey were the three who qualified. 170 First Row, Left to Right: E. Celestino. R. Widowski. W. Nye, O. Ott, J. Taborsky. P. Wawrin. Second Row, Left to Right: D. Cassler, P. Boyle, P. Taborsky, D. Harrah, E. Gialucca. Third Row, Left to Right: Coach Peterka. C. Doan, E. McGee, W. Harrington. Fo urth Row, Left to Right: B. Smith, G. Andrews, mgr. BASEBALL 1935 Losing the initial two games when its pitch- ing staff proved erratic, Kent ' s 1935 baseball squad, aided by the hurling of Roy Widowski, converted catcher, produced a successful season, winning six and losing three. Against Muskingum, Coach Peterka ' s proteges fell, 14-6. The same resulted at Marietta, the game ending 10-2. In this game, Widowski took the mound and tossed with remarkable success. Against Toledo, he turned in a four-hit performance, Kent win- ning 5-4. He repeated at Wooster and Kent won again, 8-4. Fenn was crushed under the momentum of a winning streak, 16-3, and an Alumni squad tumbled on Homecoming, 15-2. At Wooster, the Flashes wasted a 4-0 lead and were drubbed by the Scots, 1 9-9, and against Ashland, they fell behind 10-4, but rallying they knotted the count and finally copped the contest, 11-10, when Celestino smashed a hit with runners on first and second. The season ended when Fenn forfeited the final clash. Left to Bight: D. Weir, E. Skillicorn, M. DeWeese. W. Anderson. F RHchie. B. Keller. J. Wolf. TENNIS 1935 The tennis squad at Kent in 1935 suffered a dismal fate, winning only one of seven tilts. Coach Joe Begala, boasting but one veteran, Marion De Weese, built his court of new- comers, namely Weir, Skillicorn, Ritchie, Keller, and Wolff. They were blasted 5-1 by Mount Union in the opener, were spilled 4-2 by Baldwin- Wallace, and were dosed with white-wash at Marietta, 6-0. Against Hiram they copped their only match as they won three of the singles matches and split in the doubles play, to win 4-2. Marietta, a second time, scored a shut out, 7-0, and Baldwin-Wallace again won, 4-2. The neighboring Hiram squad re- turned to avenge themselves and did so suc- cessfully, taking the meet, 7-0, to close an unsuccessful season. The lone spark of hope resulting from the season is found in the fact that with a year ' s competition tucked away, enough men will return to the court wars to place Kent in the win column of the Ohio conference. Left to Right: D. I ri.li. M. Gardiner, J. Zupan GOLF 1935 Offering horrid contrast to the top-flight crew of 1934, the 1935 niblick wielders at Kent found little success in a six match schedule. With Don Ulrich, the lone member of the preceding year ' s successful quartet returned to his knickers, only one victory re- sulted. With him, the team was composed of John Zupan, John Page and Marvin Gardiner, all lacking in collegiate experience. Mount Union struck the first blow, drop- ping the Flash golfers, 1 1 1 2-4 Vi, with Ulrich, Zupan, and Gardiner scoring the points. Mount also struck the second blow, repeating in a return match, 9-7. Wooster ' s Scots an- nihilated the Flashes, 15-1, and Akron fol- lowed suit, winning 10 ' 2-7 ' 2. Stung, battered and bleeding, the quartet pulled an upset when they turned the tables on the Akron Zippers, winning 0Vt.-1Vz. Ulrich and Zupan, scoring nine of the points between them, paved the way to the lone Kent win. The season was closed when Wooster again boomed forth on their bagpipes to win, 15-1, Zupan accounting for the solitary marker. 73 INTRA W I N HANDBALL— DELTS GYM TEAM — DELTS F. Taborsky First Row, Left to Right W. Keller P. Hazen 0. Shuman C. Rapp BASKETBALL— KAPPA SIGS— DELTS W. Keller J. Kalkas Left to Right E. Korb R. Parmigian Back Row, Left to Right P. Angelo F. Taborsky P. Warwin P. Boyle S. Ciancio E. Kempf H. Romito F. Ritchie J. Mendiola T. Manko FALL CROSS COUNTRY — DELTS 1935 BASEBALL — DELTf T. Manko First Row, Left to Right P. Hazen E. Kempf J. Kalkas F. Ritchie HORSESHOES — K.M.K. Bad-. Row, Left to Right Left to Right C. Rapp G. Korb J. Benfer F. Taborsky R. Moran T Manko M Renner W Keller MURALS E R SWIMMING— GAMMAS— BARBS First Row, Left to Right R. Crumley R. Ogrody F. Nicolosi Back Row, Left to Right M. Treat A. Lipstreu T. Watts B. Ryan T. Bell VOLLEYBALL— DELTS First Row, Left to Right P. Hazen 0. Shuman C. Rapp W. Keller J. Kalkas E. Korb Back Row, Left to Right F. Taborsky P. Boyle E. Kempf F. Ritchie T. Manko 1935 TRACK— K.M.K. First Row, Left to Right M. Renner B. Graven R. Moran Back Row, Left to Right F. Scott P. Whitmire L. Lutz 1935 GOLF— K.M.K. Left to Right R. Moran L. Lutz P. Whitmire M. Renner SPRING I ' . .-.- - -.-..-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.---..-.-.-.-.-.- -.-.-.-. KENT STATE UNIVERSITY JAMES OZRO ENGLEMAN, Ph. D., LL. D. President College of Liberal Arts and Sciences OSCAR H. WILLIAMS, A. M., Ph. D. Dean College of Education JOHN L. BLAIR, A. M., Ph. D. Dean °3€?° Approved by State Department of Education for teacher training in the following fields: High School Home Economics Music- Elementary Physical Education Commerce Kindergarten Industrial Arts Art Member of the Ohio College Association The American Association of Teachers Colleges The North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools Low Cost •-- Beautiful Campus --■Good Buildings and Equipment Thoroughly Modern Library -•- Excellent Faculty I . .-U .-. .-.-.-.-. .-.-.-. . -.-.-.-.-. . . .- . -. ■THE i BOWMAN COSTIGAN, INC. I I Courier -Tribune Exclusive Agents for The A. B. Dick Co. MIMEOGRAPHS II I Alert Aggressive Dependable 36 N. Main Street f ■£ PHONE JE. 5169 AKRON, OHIO J ROBERT C. DIX Editor and Publisher ' .■.-.-.-.■i If We Can Help You . . WHETHER YOU go into busi- ness, teaching or something else, questions may occasionally arise concerning trees and problems of tree care. 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Thompson ' s • Prescription Pharmacy and Drug Store • on the Main Corner Phone 1 50 FOUNTAIN SERVICE STATIONERY I-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-, Pardon our Egotism but That Priceless Literary Gem, That Sparkling Example of Journalism, That Accurate Portrayal of Student Life, THE KENT STATER ■Will Keep Your Dear, Dear, Valuable Contacts With the Alma Mater After You ' re Out in the Crool, Crool, World For Only One Buck Per Year Twin Coaches • Twin Coa ches, Manufactured in Kent, continue to serve the Nation ' s principal Centers and also serve Kent and adjacent com- munities. Jftregtone Tires and Batteries Spark Plugs Accessories and Radios MODERN ' § i AL 9 S COTTAGE FLOWER SHOP J J Dairy Lunch « AND • Confectionery WHERE FLORESTRY IS AN ART 5 f 5 5 134 E. Main Street Kent. Ohio 1312 North Mantua St. Phone 74 S NOT MERELY A BUSINESS ,-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-. .-.-.-.-. ' Compliments of Kneifel Grocery Company 142 NORTH WATER STREET Phone 43 Kent. Ohi ■■■II ■: :: o V ? Pho Compliments of W.W. 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Ohio Cleaning Establishment 1 13 N. Water Street Kent National Bank Building KENT, OHIO The F.W. ORTH Company Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio CATALOGUES BOOKLETS FOLDERS I I i Every Student : Need COLOR WORK Supplied at THE CAMPUS SUPPLY STORE POSTAL SUB-STATION No. 1 Student Discount 10°° AND 1 5°i Phone 12 . J 123 W. Main Street By Railroad ,-j-j-j- . ' .-.-. ' -.v.-.-.-.-.: ' .-.-.-.-j-.-.-.-.-.-.-j-.-.-.::-.-.- ECONOMY, . . Is the watchword of the present day. We handle your PRINTING in the most economical way. Saving you the difference. Our facilities make for both speed and quality. Give us a trial and be convinced. Every type of printing service, both business and social. COMMERCIAL PRESS !■THE HOUSE OF COURTESY 5 5 All 1 Ol T f. J ; .; J Adeline s Shoe JAralt ' ' • ' . and Dry Cleaning J KENT LAUNDRY . ■I and Dry Cleaning Co. 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PRESENTS AN OLD FASHIONED LAD WITH NEW FANGLED IDEAS kLajtf 5 « H TO ASSIST YOU IN CREATING AND PRODUCING THE UNUSUA IN SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS fra fe- U mm ©n r juhtidisss o A Acken, Alfred Dawson, Tallmadge Ackeret, Geraldine Jane, Massillon 59, 99, 118 Adair, Evelyn Ruth, Akron Adams, Esther May, Massillon 93 Adams, Evaline Gibarty, Struthers Adams, Grace Elanor, Canal Fulton 65, 99 Adams, Mary Margaret, Fairport Adovasio, Rose Mary, Youngstown 65 Agae, Evelyn Julia, Hubbard 62, 98, 118 Ahl, Jane Louise, Ravenna 59, 92 Akers, Harry Albert Jr., Ravenna 167 Albrecht, Kurt, Cuyahoga Falls 132 Alden, David Caywood, Kent 48, 1 1 5, 1 30, 1 37 Alexander, Kenneth S., Glenmont 34, 1 33 Allen, Arthur Ray, Sebring 48 Allen, Maxine, Amsterdam 118 Allgood, Miriam Louise, Struthers Amstutz, Elizabeth Ann, Orrville Anderson, James Russell, Stow Anderson, Wikiam Kimbrough, Kent 48, 109, 1 13, 1 15, 172 Andre, Lucille, East Rochester 65 Andreas, Howard Frederick, Wheeling, W. Va. . .34, 101 Andregg, Charles Harold, Kent 64,1 1 9 Angelo, Philip Michael, Canton 48, 174 Apley, Mrs. M belle Longcoy, Kent 136 Armour, John. Akron 90, 151, 159, 1 67 Armstrong, Verdean, Canton Arnett, Raymond Lee, Ravenna 34 Arnold, Carl M., Kent 60 Arnold, Sitha Lucille, Windham .. 32, 3 4, 1 06 1 09, 1 1 5 Arthur, Dorothy Ann, Salem 57, 81, 92 Artman, Gladys Mary, Canton Ashton, Evelyn Margaret, Canton 121, 131 Atchison, Bernice Adalyn, East Palestine 61 Ault, William R., Doylestown 56, 118 B Baab, Ruth Elizabeth, Baltic 65 Bachtel, Wilma Catherine, Canton Bacon, George F., Cleveland Bader, Eleanor L., Youngstown 48, 94, 107, 1 13, 125, 126 Bailey, William Thomas Jr., Washingtonville Baker, Gerald Smith, Willard Baker, Phyllis Theodosia. Buffalo, NY 63 80, 94 Baker, Raymond Earl, Akron 48, 119 Baldwin, Donald David, Cuyahoga Falls Baldwin, Frances Lorena, Cortland 34, 99, 118 Ball, Ralph Kenneth, Akron Baltzly, Mary Margaret, Massillon Balyeat, Edwin Lee, Mansfield Bambaci, Philip Francis, Harrison 48 Bambeck, Frances Edna. Louisville 96 Bancroft, Alta M., Canfield 34, 96, 133 Bancroft. N. Norris, Canfield 34 Bania, Walter Thomas, Cleveland 167 Banyc, Betty, Cleveland 57 134 Barber, Clarice Catherine Warren 59. 98 Barkalow, George Edwin, Perry 64 91 Barkett, Woodrow Kamil, Akron 91 Barnes, Carl Kenneth, Cuyahoga Falls Bartok, Elizabeth Kay, Ashtabula Batchelder, John Stoneman, Cleveland 137 Bates, Bruce Edward, Minerva Baughman, Howard Wesley, Ashtabula 101, 167 Baumberger, Martha Gail, Ravenna 57, 1 1 8 Baumgardner, Robert Lorain, Lakewood 34, 81, 1 13, 1 15, 124 Beard, Alta LaRue, Canfield 62 Beard, Ruth Gladys, Columbiana Beatty, Arlene Isabelle, Farmdale 56, 130 Beck, Anna Louise, Cadiz 58 Beck, Jay Kenneth, St. Clairsville Beck, Ralph E., Ravenna 95 Beckley, Jessadene D., Barberton 92 Bedford, Marjorie Martha Norwalk 118 Begala, Mrs. Julia Van Court, Kent 34, 113 Begala, Lillian Marie, Struthers 1 36 Beinstein, Willard, Kent 151 Beiter, Ruth Kingsbury, Canton 34 Beitzel, William Austin, Magnolia 95 Bell, Beulah May, Wayland Bell, Harlow Clark. Everett 101, 1 67 Bell, Thomas E., Akron 175 Belsh, Ethel, Amsterdam Bender, Eva Marea, Geneva Bender, Mrs Lil Harrington, Ira Benedict, Ruth Lenore, Calgary, Alberta Can. ntfaJL rv a,,uU n a . 34. 99, 1 07, 1 36 Benfer, John Gould, Mt. Healthy 60, 62, 81, 17 4 Bennett, Mabel Irene. Conneaut l n Benson, Nelson Maurice, Akron 61, 91 Berger, Lois Aileen, Salem 103 Berger, Wendell, V., Salem 1 59 Bergert, Gladys Muriel. Canton Bergman, Betty Jane, Youngstown . . . . 65, 81. 93, 134 Bersnak, Anton. Akron Beuck, Ralph Francis, Cleveland 121. 137 Beukeman, Robert Arthur, Cleveland Biasella, Aurora Marie, Steubenville 48, 94 Biggins, Arthur William, Minerva 95 Birkner, Alice Louise, Kent Bitterman, Edith Esther. New Philcdslphin Bittner, Hilda R.. Canton Bittner. Hyel Sterling. Akron 64 Blair, Dorothy Jean, Warren 58 Blair, Mrs. Dorothy Thompson. Kent Blair, Mrs. M. Rosina. New Waterford 61 Blattman, Margaret Mae. Leetonia 99 Bliah. Charlotte Ada. Wellington Blockinger. Robert John Cuyahoga Falls 9S Board, Hazel Dean, Canton 34 Bodo, Viola Louise, Salem 120, 1 36 Boesger, Mary Isabelle, North Olmstead 62 Bobinski, Edward Akron Boli. Eleanor Pearl. Canton Bolich. Donald E. Cuyahoaa Falls 35 Rolich, Richard Own Walworth 48.81,90. 147 150 Bombach. Edward Victor Cleveland Boncila, Victoria Elizabeth, Youngstown 58 Border, Virgil C, Akron 118 Bordner, Alice Mae, Massillon Bowen, Jack Clinton, Canton Bowman, Thelma Elizabeth Medina 57, 103 Boyd, Lydia Viola, Wellsville Boyett, Brunei! (Miss) , Akron 62, 136 Boyich, Paul Robert Akron, Boyle, Clarence M., Hammondsville Boyle, Herbert Lee, Alliance Boyle, Paul L, South Euclid 46,48,93, 124, 150, 163, 166, 171, 174, 175 Bracy, Lois Rexine, Norwalk 1 1 9, 1 1 9 Braden, Andrew Dale, Kinsman Bradler, Charles William, Kingsville 65 Bradley, Bill Myers, Dundee 48, 81, 156 Bramley, Sara Elizabeth, Sharon Center 57 Brandmiller, Ellen Carrccher, Youngstown Brandon, Marjone Ann, Lorain 119 Brannon, Mary Esther, Alliance 63, 137 Braucher, Margaret Dolores, East Akron 102 Bray, Marjorie Louise, Steubenville 65, 103 Breen, Betty Jane, Canton Breting, Evelyn Lois, Canton 119 Briggs, Frances Evelyn, Cuyahoga Falls 56 Briola, Harold Daniel, Ambridge, Pa. 48, 81, 90, 106, 113, 119, 119, 124 Brittain, Helen Pauline, Youngstown 63 Broad, Margaret Eleanor, Masury 35 Brockhaven, Mildred, Cleveland 61 , 97, 131 Brooker, Jean Florence, Cleveland Hts 63 Broughton, Frank 0., Peninsula Brown, Emilie Narabeth, Columbia Station Brown, Frank Shenkel, Akron Brown, Girthalee, Lorain Brown, Hugh A., Diamond 64, 91 Brown, Juanetta Dawan, Akron Brown, Lawrence Parnell, Ellet Brown, Lois W., Millersburg 1 32 Brown, Lucille Berry, Burton Brown, Samuel William, E. Liverpool . . . . 90, 1 1 9, 1 67 Brown, Virginia Ormsby, Canton Brownlee, Ruth Geraldine, Youngstown Brundage, Jean Margaret, Akron 118, 136 Brunker, Harry Willard, Massillon Brunner, Luella Jean, Silver Lake Brunner, Ruth Marie, Silver Lake Bruno, Myron Anthony, Ravenna 159 Brunstad, Ruth Elizabeth, Ashtabula 93 Buchanan, John Noel, Newton Falls 62 Bucher, Millicent Ruth, Cuyahoga Falls 56, 96 Buchman, Martha Ann, Canton Buck, Jane Arline, Lakewood 63, 94 Buckmaster, Jayne Elizabeth, Akron 48, 80, 93, 107, 134 Budd, Adeline Harriman, Akron Buell, Charlene Kathryn, Lorain 96, 136 Brake, Paul Cyrus, Kent Burge, Lucile Marie, Wellington 56, 65 Burke, Roy Oral, Kent 113 Burrier, Clara Isabelle, Scio Burroughs, Jane Louise, Kent 96, 119 Burton, Ethel May. Wadsworth 57, 118 Burton, Marjorie C, Newton Falls Bush, Charles James. Aurora Bush, Chester Allison, Aurora 63 Bush, Frances Sabra, Aurora Bushong, Ruth Eleanor, Kent 94 Butler, Dick Earl. Kent 91 , 1 59 Butler, Leota Eleine, Kent 35.119.119 Butler, Robert Perry, Kent 56 91 , 1 35 151 c Caldwell, Charles W.. Ravenna Caldwell, Harriett, Beloit Cam, Mary Louise, Grand Rapids, Michigan Campbell, Ruth Elizabeth, Sebring Canepa, Sylvia Rita, Cleveland Cannon, Shirley Jane, Kent 65, 1 30 Canfield, Dorothy Elizabeth, Youngstown 62, 98 Capel, LaVerda Ethel, Salem 46, 48, 99, 125 Carpenter, Bernice Virginia, Cleveland 48, 134 Carter, Norvin P., Painesville . . .48, 90, 147, 150, 156 Carver, William Goodell, E. Cleveland Cary, Alta Luella, Burton 62 Cary, Alton Robert, Burton 118 Case, Carlotta M., Cuyahoga Fails 35 Castle, Carol Bell, Rome 118 Cathan, James Alton, Chagrin Falls Cathn, Madeline Elizabeth, Ravenna 48 Celestino, William, Mamaroneck, N. Y 35, 171 Chaddock, Ned Burwell, Massillon 60 Chapman, Evelyn Mae, Youngstown 65 Chapman, Helen Anne, Ashtabula .... . .64, 131 Chapman, Hilda Isabelle, Wolf 119, 119 Chapman, Margaret, Cleveland Chapman, Richard Alexander, Cuyahoga Falls 93, 121 Chappelear, Paul Franklin, Ra enna 48, 1 19 Chilcote, Dorothy Katherine, Farmdale Chubbuck, Stephen George, Hudson Church, Jeanne Belle, Lakewood 64, 1 34 Ciancio, Sundae Anthony, Rcvenna 62, 115, 174 Cisar, Anne Therese, Niles Clark, Elizabeth Esta, Kent 96 Clark, Nellie Mae, Kent 64 Clark, Russell T., Cuyahoga hails Clement, Eleanor Ann, Alliance 96 Close, James Franklin. Wadswortn Cobb, Charles Otto, Stow 63, 90, 1 50 Cogan, John Jerald, Ashtabula 100 Cohen, Minnie, Youngstown 48 Colby, Mary M., Youngstown 48, 59, 94, 135 Cole, Elaine Ross, Elyria Cole, Jefferson C, Akron 60 Conard, Wendell Reed, Kent 120 Cone, Kathryn, Perry 121 Conkle, Evelyn May, Wellington Conkle, Helen Louise, Coshocton 48, 136, 137 Conkle, Margery Elizabeth, Medina Conn, Mariam Ella, Cuyahoga Falls 56, 95 Conrad, Fay Margaret, Alliance Cooke, Gretchan Noel, Cuyahoga Falls 94 Cooper, James Marion, Cuyahoga Falls Cooper, Leo G., Akron 1 20, 1 37 Copthorne, Betty Joan, Canton 60 Corbett, Glenn Earl, Detroit, Michigan 103, 121 Cordier, Lois Marie, Mogadore Corea, Joanne Marie, Niles Corlett, Esther Jane, Madison 118 Costarelle, Virginia, Girard 61 , 118 Cotman, Josephine Louise, Cleveland 35, 80, 97, 105, 107, 120, 124 Counts, Virginia Margaret, Brunswick Courtright, Charlotte M., Dover 64 Cowles, Austin Hughes, Stow Cox, Alvon Richards. Cuyahoga Falls ... .93, 146, 150 Cox, Rondel Lewis, Cuyahoga Falls 193, 151 Craig, James Barkley, Rocky River 35, 113, 115, 125, 127, 135 Cramer, Richard Burdette, Suffield Cramer, Thalia Maralyn, Canfield Crawford, lone Mae, Piedmont Creed, Mabel Jeannette, Youngstown 65 Creese, Earl Dewalt, Ravenna 59 Crittenden, Henry William, Burton 118 Critz, John Paul, Wadsworth 59 Cronin, Walter Arlington, E. Liverpool Crumley, Robert Melvin, Warren 175 Culnon, Mary Elaine, Navarre Cunningham, Gladys May, Youngstown Curtiss, Walter M., Ravenna 132 Cutting, Harry McCllean, McDonald 64, 81 D Daltorio, Mary Dora, Macedonia 118 Damann, Kenneth Eugene, Randolph 49, 133 Domkov, Pete, Akron Danforth, Helen Grace, Akron 46, 49, 103 Danko, Elisabeth Frances, Niles 56, 65 Darby, Jeon, Norwalk 99, 1 1 9, 1 1 9 Darrell, Mabel Allean, Canton Daskovich, Elizabeth, Pataskala 35 Daub, Norma Jean, Akron 121 Dougherty, Lola Gladys, Hudson 107, 108 Davey, Mrs. Sarah King, Kent Davidson, M. Eloise, Oberlin 65, 1 33 Davidson, Ronald Hayes, Oberlin 65, 1 1 8 Davis, Anna May, Cleveland 61 , 134 Davis, Bertha Joan, Youngstown Davis, Jean Rebecca, Kent 92 Davy, Alice Margre tta, Bowerston 62, 65, 1 18 Dawson, Vernell Holden, Hudson 4, 92 Day, Edward Archer, Kent Day, Grace Elizabeth, Kingsville Day, Lois, Kingsville 65, 1 1 8 Decile, Tony Thomas, Willoughby Deem, Madaline Anna, Girard 57 Deetz, Kittie Marie, Sugar Creek 65, 103 DeEulis, Julio Gerald, Ravenna .95, 1 09, 1 1 3, 1 1 5, 1 50 DeEulis, Timothy Anthony, Ravenna 95, 151, 159 Deevers, Paul Christopher, Bedford ..64,90,118,157 DeLeone, Julia, Kent 59, 1 1 8, 1 33 Delius, Alton John, Ravenna Dellner, Raymond Pearson, Chagrin Falls .... 1 00, 118 Denison, Virginia, Ravenna Densmore, Helene Dorothy, Grand Rapids, Michigan 81 Depew, Marguerite Eillein, Kent Dermasa, Justine Mary, Cleveland DeSimio, Lena Ruth, Ravenna 64 Devine, Harold William, Kent DeWeese, Harriette Elizabeth, Kent 94,133 Dick, Nathalie Thaye, Windham 118 Dickey, Winifred Beatrice, Conneaut Dickinson, Nathaniel Harding, Canton Dickson, Dorothy Elaine, Akron Diday, Hilda Pearle, Mingo Junction Diday, Nellie Pauline, Mingo Junction 49, 103 Dietrich, Jean Louise, Ravenna 66, 94, 121 Dike, George Walter, Akron 95, 106, 107, 108, 118, 121 Diller, Robert Irving, Stow 61 Dirodis, Francis Thomas, Ravenna Dixon, Dorothy, Ravenna Dixon, Joseph C, Ravenna 95 Doan, Russell, Wayland 1 32, 1 67 Dobkin, Oscar, Akron 35, 133 Dodd, Sara E., E. Palestine Dogan, Anne Eunice, Cuyahoga Falls Dominick, Nellie Alice, Massillon 98, 136 Dorsey, Grace Eleanor, Youngstown 57, 65, 133 Dowding, Richard Robert, Canton 58 Dowding, Tasman Andrew, Canton .... 1 1 8, 1 5 1 , 1 59 Dowen, Leonard Franklin, Painesville Dowler, Verna Mae, Atwater Drage, Raymond G., Navarre 58, 118, 151 Dressen, Edna Mae, Hubbard Dubetz, Michael, Unionport Duff, Eleanor, New Concord 94 Dumire, Kenneth Durwood, Akron Dunfee, Marjory Gaynelle, Akron 92, 1 18 Dunlap, Lucille Amanda, Mineral Ridge 1 30 Dunlap, Wilmer Woodard, E. Palestine 61 Dunlavy, Elmer Myer, Ravenna . .35, 90, 132, 150, 156 Dunlavy, Howard Raymond, Ravenna . . . 1 1 8, 157, 158 Dunlevy, Harry Vance, Brewster 90 Dunning, Lura Ellen, Kilbourne 65 Dunson, James Albert, Cleveland 90 Dura, Alvira Ann, Cleveland 1 33, 1 34 Dye, Agnes, Broadacre 35, 1 36 Dye, Cloyde George, Barberton Dye, Harry Clair, Bowdil 61 Dyer, Mary Margaret, Cuyahoga Falls 136 Dyke, Ralph, Cuyahoga Falls 49, 61, 91 Ebel, Mory Jane, Cleveland 57, 81, 96 Eberwyne, Claudia Louise, Windham 49, 1 1 8 Eckert, Clarence Frederick, Perry 35, 91, 158 Eddy, Laura Elizabeth, Silver Lake 49, 133, 136 Edwards, Marion, Campbell Edwards, Richard Ralph, Cuyahoga Falls Eggleston, Robert Keith, Cuyahoga Falls Eichorn, Mildred Lucille, Canton Eickleberry, Richard Howard, Akron 49, 95 Eiden, Mary Jane, Lorain Einsel, Martha Alice, Struthers 65, 130 Eisel, Robert Harold, Akron 36, 1 46, 1 50 Elgin, Mary Elizabeth, Kent 54, 64, 96 Ellett, Clayton Wayne, Hudson 133 Ellett, Dwight Phillips, Hudson Elliott, Bernita, Youngstown 49, 75, 81, 93, 106, 107,124, 125, 134 Elliott, Deborah, Rocky River 93 Elliott, Mary Jane, Cuyahoga Falls 93 Ellsworth, Richard Homer, Cleveland ....118, 1 19,1 19 Elwonger, Lucy Mary Louise, E. Palestine 57, 131 Emerman, Bertha, Canton Emmons, Edna Nell, Cuyahoga Falls Engleman, John Phil, Kent 1 06, 137 English, Doris Jane, Hubbard Ensminger, George Howard, Suffield 62 Erb, Evanell Lavinia, Youngstown 65, 1 18 Ervin, John Bernard, Kent 64, 1 36 Eschenberg, Louis G., Wooster 63, 137 Evans, Alice Juanita, Canton 65 Evans, Jean Cleve, Kent 61, 94 Evans, Wayne, Ravenna 58 Ewald, Ruth Barbara, Akron 1 30, 1 35 Ewell, Laura Marie, Suffield 65, 1 19 F Faccinto, Vincent, Akron 90 Fackler, Sherman E., Willard Fair, Betty Josephine, Baltic Falls, Clare Weir, Kent Faloon, Eleanor Jean, Cleveland . . . . 49, 1 09, 1 1 5, 1 34 Faloon, Virginia Eliza, Alliance 63 Faloon, Wanda Lois, Hanoverton Fann, Maude Helen, Fairport Harbor 57, 135 Farinacci, John Francis, Cleveland 49, 95, 1 19, 127, 135, 170 Faulkner, Doris Grace, Shelby 36 Fawcett, Jane Elizabeth, Canton 56 Fenton, Nathan Hale, Northfield Ferrari, Eileen May, Piney Fork 65, 1 18 Fields, Emma Leafie, New London 49 Finch, John A., Rootstown Fink, Sherley L, Akron 61, 119 Finnicum, Mary Margaret, New Rumley 63, 74, 86, 94 Fischer, Herman, Tallmadge 36, 146, 150 Fiser, Lena C, McClure Fisher, Dorothy Jean, Canfield 118 Fisher, Sheldon Clay, Bowdil 64 Fitzgerald, Dorothy Louise, Kent 92, 1 13, 1 19, 125, 137 Fitzpatrick, Jane Watson, E. Palestine 1 30 Flanagan, John Patrick, Lyndhurst Flanders, Robert Eugene, Akron Fling, Marion Louise, Lakeside 62 Florenz, Victoria Mary, Parma 96, 121, 134 Fogg, Sam Richard, Kent 62, 80, 91, 1 13, 1 15, 124, 135 Foley, Gladys Helena, Cuyahoga Falls 118 Follin, Iris Arbelle, Kent 94 Force, Joan Jackson, Akron Foreman, William Kirkland, South Park Forner, Betty Alice, Lorain 36, 93, 1 07, 1 25 Falcone, Carmen, Genessee, N. Y. Forney, Maree Evelyn, Madison 131 Forthofer, Ruth Ann, Avon Foster, Thelma, Youngstown 65, 119, 119 Fouser, Charles Edward, Kent 36, 1 1 8 Fouser, Daniel Frederick, Kent Fouser, David Franklin, Kent 49, 1 1 8, 1 36, 1 37 Foust, Willard C, Kent Frangos, Athena, Akron 119 Franks, Pauline Belle, Uniontown Fraser, Isabelle Hortense, Wellsville Frayer, Helen F., Ravenna Frazier, Duane C, LeRoy Frederick, Reita May, Copley 36, 99, 133, 136 Freeland, Roberta Virginia, Elyria Freeman, Jesse Beeson, Canton 49, 1 19 Freeman, Kathryn Rebecca, Uniontown Freshley, Wilson Bryan, Homeworth 1 1 8, 1 1 9 Fricke, Doris Elenore, Kent 62, 93 Friedly, Julia Lee, Bellefontaine Fritch, Frederick Donald, Akron 91 Fuchik, Norbert John, Maple Heights 137 Fuller, Edouard William, Harrison, N. Y 36, 91 Fuller, Eleanor Mae, Willoughby 49 Fullmer, Ralph Carl, Elyria 57, 1 30 Fulton, Dale Elton, Akron 95 Fulton, Glenn Etson, Akron Funkhouser, Jean, Columbiana Furney, Lester, Waynesburg 36, 108 Furtch, Wilbur Carroll, Stow Fusselman, Euola Evalyn, Kent Fynn, Dorothy Jane, Cuyahoga Falls 61, 94 Gahagan, Paul Wilmer, Newton Falls 119 Galati, Francis Vincent, Akron 49 Galehouse, Robert D., Cuyahoga Falls 61 Gallagher, Harry Paul, Akron Galloway, David Louis, Kent Gamauf, William, Copley 49, 101, 133 Gamber, Winifred, Orrville 118 Gardiner, Stanley A., Akron 58, 90 Gardner, Carey C (Dick), Kent Gardner, Marion Edmund, Massillon 36, 101 Gardner, Warren Dennison, Ravenna 90 Garford, Mary Ellen, Elyria Garl, Tom, Kent Garland, Betty Winifred, Barberton Garland, Thelma Anne, Mineral Ridge 97 Garner, Marvin Edward, Louisville 58, 146, 150 Garrison, Edward Emmett, Kent 36, 90, 109, 1 12, 124, 127 Gartrell, Ralph Willard, Leesville 167 Gartrell, S. Kenneth, Leesville 1 59 Gartshore, Vernis Thelma, Yongstown 65, 1 18 Garwood, Horace Wendell, Spencer 119 Gary, Helen Elizabeth, Ashtabula 65 Gates, Marjorie Maud, Andover Gates, Robert W., Wadsworth 61 , 95 Gautschi, Dorothy Louise, Girard Gay, Alice Elizabeth, Andover Geib, Elsie Louise, Canton Geiger, Lois Kathryn, Orrville 63 Gemberling, Clyde Elmer, Kent George, Marion Frances, E. Liverpool Gerber, Pauline Mae, Orrville 118 Gerberich, John Barnes, Cuyahoga Falls Gerig, Lois M., Wooster Gerspacher, Bertha Elizabeth, Cleveland 131 Gettrust, Gene, Kent 92, 1 2 1 , 1 36 Getz, Jean, Kent Getz, William Hanna, Kent 90 Gibbs, Lois Maureen, Sebring 60 Gibson, Annabelle Jean, Suffield Gidley, John T., Ravenna 44 Gifford, Herbert Elbourn, Ravenna . .49, 118, 119, 119 Gilcrest, Harry R., Kent 36, 77, 90, 106, 124, 127, 135, 146, 150 Gill, Herbert T., Twinsburg 49, 90, 130, 134, 146, 150, 157 Gill, Marian Natalie, Campbell 121 Gill, Robert Emerson, Akron 59, 95- Gillett, Ruth Evelyn, Ravenna Gi 1 1 i land, Mary Faye, Centerburg Gilly, Victor Robert, Ravenna . .49, 147, 150, 162, 166 Gingery, Stanley Wallace, Gintert, Mary Annabel, Leavittsburg 118 Glanzer, Harvey William, Cleveland 120 Glazier, Ronald Frederick, Cuyahoga Falls 151 Godfrey, Albert Hoye, Kent ... .49, 90, 1 1 9, 1 32, 170 Goeppinger, Edith Mae, Warren Goldwood, Laila M., Cuyahoga Falls 136 Goodrich, Lucille Ednie, Mingo Junction Gordon, Mable Virginia, Youngstown 58 Gordon, Mary Jane, Portage Lakes Gordon, Mourice, Akron Gorham, Lewis, LeRoy Gorton, Dorothy Evelyn, Burton Goss, Ruth M. M., Conneaut 59, 94 Gougler, Frances Ellen, Atwater Grabenstetter, Rose Louise, Erhart 57 Graber, Elizabeth Arliene, E. Canton 65 Grable, Hugh Raymond, Canton Graf, Rita Belle, Alliance 64 Graham, Anna Margaret, Frazeysburg Grampp, Betty Lou, Akron Graner, Kathryn Louise, Stow Graven, Buell L., Akron . . . . 49, 61 , 91 , 157, 158, 175 Gray, Doris Isabelle, Wooster Gray, Helen Laura, Ravenna 61 , 93, 1 1 8 Gray, Phylis Barbara, Wooster Gray, Vivian Lucile, Canton 65, 1 18 Graybill, Margery Grace, Massillon 61, 130 Green, Albert L., Akron 44 Green, Elizabeth Judd, Kent 36 Green, Elizabeth S., Stow 136 Green, Ja mes Horace, Welshfield Green, Virginia Judd, Kent 93 Greenberger, Charles Maynard, Cuyahoga Falls Grieme, Priscilla Katherine, Cuyahoga Falls 60,92, 137 Griffin, Donald Hane, Akron 50, 137 Griffin, Richard Wilmer, Akron 50, 1 37 Griffith, Thomas Hathaway, Canal Fulton Grobowski, Zigmund Vincent, Cuyahoga Falls 60 Grogro, Arthur Albert, Fresno 1 59 Grooms, Marion, Salem Grosvenor, Richard Browne, Cuyahoga Falls . . .57, 120 Gruen, Miriam Mae, E. Liverpool 37, 98, 134 Guinther, Dorothy Jane, Canton Guise, Newton C, Munroe Falls 50 Gulgin, Peter Tom, Grafton 95, 167 Gurney, Evelyn Marie, Alliance Guttridge, Betty, Youngstown 118 H Hach, George Otto, Twinsburg 37, 1 Hafely, Ruth Jeanette, Girard Hageman, Carl N., Tallmadge 37, 95, 1 Hageman, Wilbert John, Cleveland Haines, Esther Virginia, Grafton 1 Hair, Florence Belle, Kent 1 Hall, Ashton 0., Brookfield Hall, Carl Wayne, Brookfield Hall, Doris Kathleen, Kent Halsey, Robert Geer, Copley 1 Hamilton, Irene Frances, Bellaire Hamilton, Rosalie Elsie, Shaker Heights Hammock, Wilbert Merle, East Canton 1 Hamman, Leona Marion, Valley City Hammer, William Baptist, Jr., South Euclid . . 1 Hamrock, Elizabeth Anne, Youngstown Hankamer, June, Willard Hannig, Albert Adolph, Akron Hanson, Harold Edward, Randolph Hardy, Harold Wesley, Kent Hargreaves, Alvin Earl, Akron Harkins, Russell Allen, Cuyahoga Falls Harmon, Grace, Andover Harmon, Mildred Moe, Columbiana Harper, Kenneth Frank, Ravenna Harpman, Virginia Catherine, Youngstown . . . . Harrah, Clarence C, Cadiz 1 Harrington, Homer Dale, Cuyahoga Falls Harrington, Myron E., Cuyahoga Falls 91, 147, 1 Harrington, William B., Kent 50, Harris, Edward L., Ravenna Hart, Kenneth Rankin, Ravenna 1 Hart, Lois Kathryn, Youngstown Hastings, Helen C, Kent 32, 37, 99, 1 Hastings, Margaret Jean, Cuyahoga Falls Hauger, Hop e Virginia, Niles Houserman, Laurabelle, Youngstown Hausman, Henry Steve, Suffield Hausman, Loretta Mae, Painesville Hausmann, George Rowe, Mentor Hay, Lois Virginia, Canton Haynie, Flora Laverne, Warren Hazen, Paul Frederick, Ashland 90, 151, 167, 1 Hazlett, Eleanor Margaret, Akron 103, 1 Heeley, Marian Ruth, Lorain Heineman, Harold H., Cuyahoga Falls Heinemann, Mildred A., Cuyahoga Falls 37, 107, 108, 1 Helling, Harry Lee, Steubenville Helm, Grace E., Maple Heights Helm, Victor Morton, Maple Heights Helmboldt, William Henry, Westmoreland, Pa. 50, 80, 90, 1 Helmkamp, Ruth Ann, Canton Heminger, Dorothy Marie, Cleveland Hendee, Pauline Louise, Lodi 62, 92, 1 Henry, Wannetta E., Kinsman Herbst, Betty Mary, Canton Herr, William Richard, Akron Herrington, Delia Cora, Chardon Herron, Lowell William, Salem Hershey, Evelyne Dorothy, Hartville Hess, Marion Carol, Cleveland Hesson, Ruth Genevieve, Caldwell Heuser, Robert Bernard, Cuyahoga Falls. .37, 1 Hibbs, John William, Canton Hickey, Mary Lou, N. Canton Hickman, Alicemae, East Sparta Himelrigh, Thelma Viola, Barberton Hine, Clarence A., Painesville 90, 1 Hines, Bill Edgar, Akron Hinkle, Clarence A., 57, 157 65, 103 07, 137 . . . 137 18, 136 19, 119 63, 147 . . . .37 64, 133 51, 170 .63, 81 01, 136 ...119 00, 136 94, 136 95 37, 119 57 37, 171 . . . 151 50, 158 80, 171 18, 119 07, 125 50, 136 134 .64 .96 74, 175 30, 136 . . . .64 ...119 19, 119 61, 1 18 . . .125 97, 125 25, 134 .63 .95 .37, 94 96 01, 132 51, 159 . . .157 91, 133 Hinman, David Rockwell, Ravenna Hixenbaugh, Eleanor Louise, Salem 65 Hobbins, Margaret Emma, Beloit Hoben, June Elizabeth, Cleveland Hoch, Medley Martin, Cuyahoga Falls Hoenstine, Chester Paul, Queen 63 Hoffman, Betty Carolyn, Brookfield 57, 94 Hoffman, Carolyn Isabel, Niles Hoffman, Elde, Glassport Hoffman, Ruth Fishel, Elyria Holben, Helen Louise, Canfield Hollister, Gerald Allen, Kent 1 33 Holhster, Nancy Northrop, Kent .37,95, 119, 119, 133 Holm, Marjone Catharine, Canton Holmes, George Edwin, Kent 50 Holmes, Melville Ward, Stow Homer, Delmar Frederic, Cuyahoga Falls 91, 130 Hommon, Mida Dorcas, Canton 56, 96 Hoobler, Mary Vietta, Massillon Hooker, Dorothy Eileen, Coshocton Hopko, John, Boston 1 00, 1 37 Horning, Clifford Joe, Kent Horton, Paul Burleigh, Rootstown 64, 1 36, 1 37 Horton, Robert Lumley, Rootstown . . 50, 1 01 , 1 32, 1 33 Horwath, Anna Benning, Cleveland 65 Hosea, Virginia Priscilla, Kent 62 Hoskin, Donald Francis, Akron 90, 1 50 Hoskins, Dorothy May, Ashtabula Hoskins, Kenneth Montgomery, Akron 65, 133 Hostetler, Donis Eileen, Alliance Hothem, Mildred lone, Fresno House, Ruth H., Kent Howald, Hans, Narrowsburg, N. Y. Howard, Marian Jeannette, Sandusky 99, 1 18 Hoyt, Doris Jean, E. Liverpool Hranko, Anne Theresa, Shadyside 56 Huber, Lawrence, Akron 37 Hudson, Ruth Marie, Cuyahoga Falls 95, 118 Huge, Karl, A.. Cleveland 37 Huge, LaVeme Ruth, Cleveland 96 Hughes, Judy Elaine, Van Wert 1 30 Hulbert, Corrine, Kent 96 Hulbert, Kenneth Hudson, Hubbard 137 Humbert, Frank Jack, Cuyahoga Falls Hurd, Pauline Marie, Chagrin Falls Hurd, Russell William, Newton Falls 95 Huston, Christine, New London Huston, Fred, Akron 38 Huston, Helene Virginia, Canton Hutchinson, Ray Edwin, Wadsworth Hutson, Christine Helen, Salineville 60 Hutton, Charles Earl, Ravenna 151 I Imbrie, Inez Ruth, E. Palestine 57 Immel, Ivan Dexter, Hanoverton 118, 119 Immel, Lemoine Evelyn, Massillon 57, 92 Indoe, Esther Virginia, Medina 1 36 Ingalls, Aileen Elizabeth, Akron 119 Irvine, Mary Hammond, Steubenville 50, 99, 136 Irving, Annie Gibson, Kent 59 Irwin, Bette lAdal Elizabeth, Niles 97 Irwin, Mildred Mae, Minerva J Jackson, Edith Inez, Youngstown Jackson, Eileen Edna, Burton 59 Jackson, Nellie Janet, LaGrange 62 Jacob, Helen Deloris, Canton 92 Jacobs, Ruth Pauline, New London 118 Jacobson, Kenneth Brown, Youngstown 95 Jacolenne, Adelina, Zanesville 50, 103 James, Elizabeth McCutcheon, Lancaster, N. Y. .44, 134 James, Harold, Warren Janson, Esther lola, East Sparta 60, 99 Jazbec, Ferdinand John, Euclid Jenior, Edna Mary, Randolph 58 Jenkins, John Morris, Brookfield 64, 90, 1 1 8, 1 1 9 Jewell, Elaine B., Farmdale Jocis, Alfons John, Akron John, Lorena Mae Johns, Lois Marjorie, Martins Ferry 62 Johnson, Jeannette Erma, Alliance Johnston, Phyllis, Alliance 92 Johnston, Wilfred Pearl, Chardon Jolli, Edward John, Painesville 90,159 Jones, Alice Marie, Hudson Jones, Dorothy Margaret, Sebring 65, 80, 96 Jones, Gertrude Esther, Warren Jones, Herman Lewis, Bedford 38 Jones, James Hume, Ravenna 44, 80, 95 Jones, Joseph Allan, Louisville Jones, Katherine Gail, Niles Jones, Leah Naomi, E. Liverpool 56 Jones, Rosina S., Warren 60 Jordan, Eleanor Margaret, Barberton 61, 136 Jordan, Glen C., Willoughby ...44,90,119,132,134 Josephus, John, Cleveland 64, 1 1 8, 1 50 Judy, Elma Ruth, Dover 58 Juringus, Alice, Cleveland 38,134 K Kaczor, Stanley John, Cleveland 1 34 Kading, Lila Roberta, Mantua 58 Kainrad, Chris August, Diamond 159 Kaiser, Janet Bea, Youngstown 54. 59, 99 Kalafus, Rosalie Amelia, Berlin Center . . . 50, 103, 175 Kallas, John W., Wooster 38, 90, 1 74 Kang, Han Mo, Hamheung, Korea 1 36 Karper, Paul W., Kent Kasha, Joseph Soe, Wadsworth 1 30 Katzenmayer, Robert G., Kent 50, 70 Kauffman, Velma Berenice, Cleveland 50, 92, 134 Kearnes, Martha Catherine, Kent Keck, George Ernst, Ravenna 50, 95 Keeney. Robert Champion, Fairhope Keep, Radah Rae, Dorset Kegler, Edward Francis, Alden, N. Y. . .50, 81, 150, 158 Keifer, Frank Mansfield 1 5 1 , 1 67 Keller, William, Cuyahoga Falls 90, 164, 166, 172, 174. 174. 175 Kemp, Bernice Mae, Cuyahoga Falls 62, 93, 1 18 Kempf, Eugene Lester, Coshocton 10, 151, 167, 174, 195 Kendall, Mary E., Tallmadge Kennedy, Franklin William, Cleveland 90,119 Kent, Leonard B., Akron Keplinger. Glenn Allen, Dover Keppler. Marjorie F., Dover 64, 94 Kerka, Joseph James, Cleveland 50, 90 Keyfauver, Gladys Mae, Akron Keyser, Daniel Warren, Shadyside Kienzle, Esther Eleanor, Canton Kilbourne, Clinton Edward, Kent Killian, Ralph Joseph, Akron 60, 1 37 Kimberly. Elton Glenn, Akron Kimes, Helen Louise, Kent 62 King, Bernice Julia, Ashtabula 66 King. June, Tallmadge 62, 1 37 King. Marie Magdalene, Sebring Kinsey, Donald Robert, Dennison 101 Kirkbride, Margaret Cecelia, Salem Kisner, Pearl I del la, Massillon Kisseberth, Dean Howard, Sandusky . .38, 95, If Klein, Jean Elizabeth, Fresno Klein, Ruth Naomi, Ravenna 50,82,115, Klein, Shirley Charlotte, Ravenna 92, Knapik, Dorothy Lucille, Cleveland Knapp, Alice Emma, Mogadore Knapp, Francis Joseph, Akron Knott, Janet E., Kent 38, 76, 94, 107, 107, 108, 121, Knouss, Muriel Ruth, Youngstown 58, 63, Knox, Beatrice A., Painesville Knox, Dorothy Belle, Sterling Knutsen, Virginia Martha, Martins Ferry Koba, Leo John, Lorain 63, 91, Kocis, Raymond I., Willoughby Koeppe, Eloise, Berea 56, 131, 131, Koerpel, Hanadean, Cleveland 92, 121 Komlody, Andrew, Akron Koons, Milo Marvin, Greensburg Kopach, Sophia Elizabeth, McDonald Korb, Eugene Barth, South Euclid 50, 113, 119, 17 Koste, Margaret Irene, Martins Ferry Krabill, Ralph Mahlon, Louisville Krantz, Arlene Mae, Dover Krebs, Mary Louise, Akron 80, 9 Kriner, Cora Margaret, Alliance Krizman, John Thomas, Cleveland Kruger, Gertrude M., Kent Kuhlins, Helena Anne, Canton Kumlin, Irma Elaine, Ashtabula Kunert, Betty Katherine, Kent 96, Kunkle, George, Akron Kurinsky, Arpad John, Cuyahoga Falls Kurth, Jean, St. Clairsville Kurtz, C. Elizabeth, Lorain 38, 99, 108, 1 19, 133. Kyle, Grace Eileen, Beach City 65 .64 166 1 18 1 19 121 136 136 159 133 175 136 151 132 .64 133 136 ,99 L Lacy, Bernice Florence, Lakewood 64, 96 LaFountain, Harry John, Cleveland 151 Lahiff, Mary Magdelene, Amherst 93 Laird, Esther Jean, Ashtabula 32, 38, 93 Lallement, Joe Raymond, Kent 167 Lembright, Marian Alice, Canton Landis, Owen Harry, Cuyahoga Falls Lang, Walter William, Randolph 64, 156 LaRocca, Charles Lawrence, Cleveland Larocco, Marie Isabel, Campbell Larson, Eugenia Clara, Youngstown Lash, John William, Barberton Lash, Russell D., Brewster 101 Lauderbaugh, Mary Elizabeth (Betty), Kent 94 Laughlin, Margaret Frances, Cleveland 38 Lave, Elsie Marie, Burton 61 Law, Margaret Kathryne, Warren LaWand, Velma Catherine, Cleveland . . . . 96, 121, 130 Lawrence, John Alvin, Bowdil Lawrence, Margaret Mabel, Maple Heights . .121, 134 Lawrence, Richard H., Kent 60 Layman, Jack William, Painesville 100, 132 Leach, Carolyn May, Kent Leighton, Jewel E., Lorain 60, 80, 94 Leitner, Florida Ohio, Dalton 98 Lennig, Arthur Francis, Jr., Columbiana 119 Lesher, Vivian Ruth, Akron Levinson, Harold Francis, Cuyahoga Falls 56 Lewis, Larry, Akron 90 Lewis, Margaret Jane, Youngstown Lewis, Roger Russell, Kent Lichti, Esther Marjorie, Cuyahoga Falls Liezert, Mary Agnes, Hudson Likens, Eleanore Louise, Ravenna 64, Lilie, Jean Elizabeth, Cleveland 50, 103, Liikala, Axa Rachel, Fairport Harbor Linder, Ada Mae, Alliance Lindsay, Vergil LeRoy, Marion 91, 151, Lipscomb, Willis L, Kent Lipstreu, Allen Leroy, Macedonia 167, Little, Warren T., Aurora Littlepage, Norris Frank, Cisco, Texas 151, Lockwood, Helen Yvonne, Garfield Hts Logan, Pauline Isola, Gustavus Lohr, Harry W., Hubbard 38, 90, 164, Lossee, Lois Jeanne, Trumbull Lothrop, Frances Caldwell, E. Cleveland 50, Lovejoy, Mary Katherine, Neffs Loyer, Vera Bernice, Gustavus Ludt, Silas B., Youngstown 50, 95, Luich, Joe, Mansfield Luikart, Dorothy Lenore, Ravenna 50, Luke, Esther Christena, Cuyahoga Falls 63, Lukins, Alfred Colton, Maysville, Kentucky Lund, S. Paul, Akron Lundeen, Helen C, Cleveland Hts 38, 94, Luse, Kenneth H., Painesville 59 Lustig, Jean Frances, South Euclid Lutz, Ethel Meryl, Louisville Lutz, Leo A., Kent 38, 80, 91 , 1 26, 137 Lyman, Cora Doah, Chesterland 62 Lythgoe, R. Warren, Akron Lytle, Ruth Elaine, Canton 174, 134 130 167 118 175 1 18 159 134 166 134 .97 .57 1 18 151 136 102 130 80 .96 179 98 1 19 .93 M MacLean, Colina Crombie, Ellet McAlister, Wilbur A., Louisville 51, 133, 150 McBane, Ruth E., Irondale McBane, Wallace Walter, E. Liverpool 64 McBride, Donald Earl, Barberton 119, 159 McCamentt, Glen Edward, Utica 61 McCartney, Ellen Nancy, Doylestown 64, 130 McCloskey, Anna Jean, Grafton 65 McCorkle, Emily Jean, Warren 65 McCormick, Edgar Lindsley, Kent . . . 39, 109, 115, 132 McCort, John William, Cuyahoga Falls 44, 1 58 McCurdy, Grace Lucille, Avon Lake McDaniel, Dorothy Lucile, Windham ... .63, 103, 136 McDermott, Bernard A., Akron McDermott, Glendall Wayne, Kent 108, 109, 1 13, 1 15, 121, 163, 166 McGinnis, Benjamin George, Youngstown 54, 64, 95, 1 50, 1 66 McGuigan, Jewel Anita, Kent 92 Mclntire, Jean Carol, Struthers Mcintosh, A. Vern, Chardon McKahn, Laura Jayne, Lodi 1 36 McKay, Julie Alexa, Kent 39, 1 32 McKenzie, Virginia Marie, E. Liverpool McKinley, Jay E., Mansfield McMillion, Margaret Ellen, Dorset McNab, Marjorie Jane, Cuyahoga Falls 92 McSorley, Jane, Lakewood 51,81,93 Mack, Richard Louis, Akron 56, 81, 90 Madden, Helen Sarita, Cleveland 96, 130 Maddock, Ethel, Elyria 39, 102, 125 Maffett, Dohrman Scott, Carrollton 39, 1 56 Maglione, Charles Victor, Akron Majiek, Louis, Spokane 1 00 Malott, Comfort Mae, Macedonia 54, 63, 1 35 Malpass, Edith Leona, Youngstown ..51,98,125,136 Manchester, Elizabeth Ellen, Kent 57, 94 Mancovitz, Abe, Akron Manfull, Daniel Malcolm, Mechanicstown . . Manko, Thomas, Kent 61, 90 Mann, Neil Wilson, Ravenna Mansfield, Richard K., Akron Marcellette, Lucy Virginia, Garfield Hts 51, Maretka, Annie Lillian, Burton Markley, Ethel Althea, Burbank Markley, Treva I lene, Atwater ... 5 1 ,98, 118, 119, Marsh, Frederick S., New Philadelphia Marshall, Julia DeFrance, Youngstown Marsola, Laura Marie, Youngstown Martin, William Louis, Steubenville Marusic, Charles, Cleveland Mass, Don A., Bellaire Masto, Evelyn, Youngstown Matthews, Earl Denis, McDonald Matthews, James S., Ravenna 39 Maxwell, Robert James, Kent Meacham, Dorothea Lois, Meade, Robert Bernard, Akron Mears, Rebecca Jayne, Uhrichsville 51, Medkeff, Wilbur Franklin, Cuyahoga Falls Megert, Jane E., Dover 60 Meier, Mary A., Conneaut Mellert, George Frederick, Bedford 61, Mellinger, Edward George, Akron Mendiola, John Joseph, Ravenna 56, 157, Merrick, Ruth C, Kent 51 Messersmith, Mary Belle, Warren . Middleton, Grace, Alliance 64 Milhoan, Garland William, Sawyerwood Miller, Arnold Leroy, Leavittsburg 95, Miller, Bernice Virginia, Cleveland Miller, Blanche Ramona, Bedford 44, Miller, Clarence Baker, Kent Miller, Ermand Anthony, Kent Miller, Helen K., Kent Miller, Laura Anne, Cortland, Miller, Margaret Clare, Cortland Miller, Mary K., Carrollton Miller, Miriam Mae, Massillon Miller, Paul E., Stone Creek Miller, Robert George, Norwalk 51,63, Miltner, Francis J., Painesville 66, 121, 126, Mirkin, Minnie Gertrude, Youngstown Mirto, Carman Richard, Waynesburg Mitchell, Iris Louise, Cuyahoga Falls Mitten, Wallace R., Cuyahoga Falls 51, Mlasofsky, Marie Ann, New Milford Mohn, Portia Mae, Wadsworth Mohr, Robert William, Winesburg Monastra, Nick, North Canton Montalto, Grace Marie, Lorain Montecalvo, Carmella, Ravenna Montecalvo, Edith, Ravenna ... .51, 97, 108, 109, Mook, Alberta Grace, Youngstown Moomaw, Margaret Victoria, Greenfield 57, Mooney, Howard Raymond, Kent Moore, Donald Frederic, Kent 63, Moore, Frances Jeanette, Cleveland 119, Moore, LaVerne C, Kent 51, Moore, Margaret Louise, Poland 119, Moore, Mildred, Ashland 119, Moore, Virginia M., Youngstown Moran, Raymond King, Akron 51, 91, 106, 1 14, 150, 174, Morford, Elizabeth Mary, Kinsman Morgan, Byron Earl, Mogadore 151, Morrell, Ruth Louise, Cleveland 51, 121, Morris, Henry George, Akron Morrow, Mary Alice, Youngstown Morsback, Albert Raymond, Youngstown Moseley, Hazel Lois, Warren .39 .91 175 157 103 121 151 .39 , 91 .90 1 18 174 , 94 1 19 . 97 1 19 150 .39 118 59 .66 .64 133 135 100 136 1 18 .93 .95 .58 136 136 130 120 1 19 102 121 136 167 134 Moyer, Garnet Lucille, Leavittsburg 136 Moyer, Jean Louise, E. Palestine 51, 80, 96, 106, 109, 113, 115, 124, 126, 131 Muir, Mary Elizabeth, Warren 39, 93 Mull, Harold Root, Grafton 95, 1 59 Mulligan, Nancy Ann, Canton 63 Mumaw, Dorothy Ruth, Dalton Munger, Dorothy Livona, Jefferson 57 Munzenmayer, Wilmer Walter 39, 95, 107 Murphy, Anne Rita, E. Liverpool Murphy, Karl Marx, Cuyahoga Falls Murphy, Rex M., Irondale Murphy, Ruth Elizabeth, Negley 61 Murray, Grayce Agnes, Cuyahoga Falls 58, 80 Myers, Bruce Owen, Akron Myers, Laura Ellen, Greentown 118 Myers, Leota Evelyn, E. Palestine Myers, Virginia Sarah, Beach City 92 N Neal, Richard W., Kingsville 5 1 , 1 00 Neale, Helen Elizabeth, Canton 1 30 Neel, Orile Gertrude, New London Nelson, Andre Harry, Mantua 56 Newell, Inza Leona, Mt. Vernon 56, 62, 1 18 Nickerson, Hugh S. Stow 90 Nighman, Helen Lee, Kent 57, 118 Nicolosi, Frank John, Cleveland 101, 159, 175 Nims, Ruth Winnifred, Orwell 62, 98 Nischwitz, Reynold Erich, Strongsville 90 Nixon, Frances Juliabelle, Delaware Noland, Marjorie L., Peninsula Noll, William Henry, Youngstown 66, 101 Norton, Crystal Ellen, Suffield 64, 1 1 8 Nostadt, Pauline Elsie, Orwell Novotny, Elmer Ladislaw, Cleveland Nye, Mary Alice, Windsor 118 o Obermiller, Evelyn Ethel, Canton Ochsendorf, Edith Virginia, Steubenville 136 Odadzin, Eleanor, Atwater Oehling, Norton Cannell, Painesville 90 Ogrody, Robert James, Cleveland Hts 170, 175 O ' Hara, Jack Lionel, Lorain 1 18, 1 19 Opalic, Daisy Kusic, Yorkville 59, 65 Osberg, Dorothy June, Poland Osborne, Marjorie Eloise, Youngstown 51, 97 Osmun, Eula Winifred, North Lima O ' Toole, Thomas, Akron Ott, Orson E., Rootstown 171 Overman, Dorothy Thomas, Loudonville 136 Oviatt, Ruth V., Kent 5 1 , 96, 1 33, 1 36 Oyer, Edna Blanche, Canton 59, 136 Oyler, Robert William, Cuyahoga Falls 96 Overlow, Ann Gertrude, Ravenna Paden, Edith Jane, Steubenville Page, Joe A., Cleveland 51, 133, 135 Palfi, Margaret Yvonne, Kent 51, 80, 96, 125 Palich, Andy, Akron . . Palmer, Catherine Elizabeth, N. Philadelphia 81, 125 Palmer, Paul Wetmore, Stow Palmer, Richard Edwin, Kent 90 Palmer, Winifred Aldene, Kent 5 1 , 96, 1 07, 1 25 Pamer, Frank Paul, Cleveland 61 Pantilimon, Cornelia Jean, Youngstown 133 Papp, Alex William, Fairport Harbor Pardee, Josephine Harriett, Stow Parise, Fanny Elizabeth, Niles 121 Parker, Alice Alberta, Geneva 119 Parker, Mildred Lucille, Cleveland 66, 97 Parker, Paul O., Salem 59, 1 00 Parkinson, Laurel G., Kent 51 Parmigian, Ralph Steve, Ashtabula 63, 174 Parsons, Aletha, Louise, Wakeman 119 Parsons, Ruth Arline, Cleveland 96 Patterson, Eleanor Mae, Chagrin Falls Patterson, Helen Elizabeth, Girard Patterson, Wilmer Owen, Killbuck 40 Pearl, Violet Marie, Canton 1 20 Pearson, Philip Duane, Aurora 64, 317 Pease, Beryl Lynette, Bay Village 52, 1 30 Peck, Betty Winifred, Kent 96, 121 Peck, Harold M., Ravenna 60 Peddicord, Dorothy Virginia, Sebring Peet, Jane Elizabeth, Lakewood 52, 93 Peters, Clara Anita, Niles 57, 62 Peters, Herman Jacob, Cuyahoga Falls Peterson, Helen Elizabeth, South Euclid 121, 126, 131 Petersen, Jessie Ella, Youngstown 97 Petko, Matilda, Canton Petty, Virginia Lucile, Cuyhoga Falls 52,93, 133,134 Pfingsgraff, Mary, Youngstown 40, 1 08, 1 1 8 Phelps, George Robert, Kent Philius, Betty Louise, Youngstown 56, 58, 1 18, 1 19 Philius, Charles Wands, Youngstown 64, 1 1 9, 1 1 9 Phillips, Elisabeth Ellen, Niles Pierce, Helen Jane, Ravenna 133 Pinyoun, Roy George, E. Cleveland 61,81, 134, 162, 166 Pliskin, Abe D., Akron Plummer, Florence Virginia, Warren Plummer, Leonard Robert, Coshocton Podwojski, Alvin Edward, Garfield Heights 95, 137 Poetter, Ruth Wilhelmina, Marshallville 58 Polen, James Paul, Hopedale 1 59 Polli, Michael A., Mayfield Hts. 54, 64, 100, 1 18, 124, 130, 134 Pope, Anna, Sebring 60 Pope, Christ Dimitri, Bucyrus 1 1 8, 1 24, 1 36, 1 37 Porosky, George E., Cuyahoga Falls 40 Porter, Helen C, Cleveland 134 Prazak, Esther Martha, Burton 65, 103 Pressler, Claude Leroy, Akron Pringle, George Edward, Akron 90 Prysock, Wilma Elaine, Toronto 65 Pugh, George Leslie, Akron 62, 100 Pulsford, Florence Mary, Chagrin Falls 56, 103 Pyle, Howard Larry, Kent Queale, Heather Belle, Kinsman 57 R Racine, Dorothy, Cleveland 57, 97 Raff, Dan Alvin, Atwater Ramser, Helen Frieda, Garfield Hts 1 34 Randell, Hyacinth A., Warren Randies, Lee Robert, Cuyahoga Falls 60 Rankin, Donald Wells, Alliance Ranney, Don E dward, Cuyahoga Falls 52, 90, 106, 124, 147, 150, 170 Ranney, James Frank, Silver Lake Ransaw, Harold Charles, Akron Rapp, Carl Frederick, Cuyahoga Falls . . . . 90, 174, 175 Raupple, Anita Jean, Youngstown 63, 8 1 , 93 Raush, Eugene Herbert, Canton Ray, J. Daniel, Canton 62, 101, 133 Ray, Lillian Margaret, E. Cleveland 93, 134 Raymer, Earl B., Conneaut 61 , 1 00 Raysor, Virginia Montgomery, Poland 64, 96 Read, Gerald Howard, Akron 40, 91, 150 Read, Margaret Ruth, Cuyahoga Falls 119 Ream, Doris Virginia, Canton 58 Redinger, S. Grant, El let Redinger, James Fraser, El let 56 Reed, Robert Allen, Suffield Reeder, Jane Madeline, Canton 60 Reese, William Merle, Washingtonville Reesh, Ruth Lovina, E. Palestine 93 Remick, Helen E., Youngstown 118 Renner, Max Harry, Dover 62, 91 , 1 74, 1 75 Reyman, Vincent Robert, Akron Reynolds, Enola Leone, Chcrdon 65 Reynolds, Esther Charlotte, Cleveland 65 Reynolds, Kenneth Willord, N. Fairfield 60 Reynolds, Miriam Ellen, Crestline 61, 119 Reynolds, Royal Olin, Ravenna 40, 1 1 8, 1 1 9 Rhodes, Florence Mertie, Kent 136 Rhodes, Mary Alice, Kent 102, 121 Rice, Jessie Baine, Ashtabula Richards, Adalyn Fae, Hartville Richards, Catharine Jane, Fredericksburg Richardson, Betty Hunter, Canton 97, 131 Richardson, Maxine Kathryn, Chagrin Falls Richey, Thelma B., E. Liverpool Ridinger, Ruth Jane, Youngstown Riesterer, Oscar Daniel, Akron 61 , 63, 95 Riley, Alfred Twyman, Akron Riley, Emmett Lee, Dover 54, 57, 1 01 , 1 50, 1 59 Rimer, Anne Elyizabeth, Dillonvale 58, 1 1 8, 1 3 1 Rinaldi, Joseph Ivo, Kent 127 Rine, Lenora, Kent Ringley, Mildred Avonell, Ragersville Ripley, Donald Bryan, Cuyahoga Falls 81 Ripple, Virginia Maxine, Massillon Ritchie, Frank Lee, Cuyahoga Falls 52, 90, 172, 174. 175 R.tter, Mary Louise, Jefferson 65, 1 19, 1 19 Pittmaier, Eloise Christine, Brewster 66 Robbins, June D., Youngstown Robenstine, Kenneth W., Mogadore 40, 137 Roberta, Filomina, New Milford 52 Roberts, Christine, Cuyahoga Falls . . . . 40, 30, 97, 1 1 3 Roberts, Elinor Claire. Alliance 60 Roberts, Ella Viola. Alliance 40, 98, 133 Robinson, Elizabeth Jane, Hudson Robinsteen, George Manner, Akron Rodgers, Leona Mae, Bergholz 52 Rodich, Dorothy Dawn, Steubenville 59, 65 Rogers, James Douqlas. Gates Mills 91 Rogers, Mrs. Zella B.. Kent Romito, Henry Charles, Ravenna 174 Romito, Herman Andrew Bedford Romito, Joseph Vito, Bedford 1 37 Romito, Stella Evelyn. Bedford Ross, Ledo, Campbell 52. 1 08, 1 20, 1 36 Rossetti, Herman Paul, Canton 64 Roth, Grace Elizabeth, Canton 58 Rubin, Mildred Vivian. Canton Ruble, Evelyn Marie. Glenmont Ruddy, Margaret Callistus, Lowellville 57, 97 Rue, Harriet Ann, Kent Rufener, Carl Ernest. Suffield Rufo, James Sam, Ravenna 1 50 Rumbaugh. Georgia Miriam, Millersburg 99. 1 18 Rummell, June E.. Youngstown 52, 93 Rummell, Shirley I., Youngstown 93 Runk, Dorothy Marion, Cuyahoga Falls 56, 120 Runk, Marguerite Pearle, Cuyahoga Falls .... 120, 136 Runk, Riley H., Cuyahoga Falls 44, 90, 1 27 Russell, Marjorie H., New Castle, Pa 40 93 Russo, Charles Robert, Cleveland 95 Ryan, Paul Augustus, Marion 95, 151, 175 Ryerson, Doris Irene, Havana 65 Ryerson, Margaret Alice, Havana Sabatmo, Albert, Bellaire Sackett, Esther Blanche, Kent 64, Sacksteder, Aloys, Sandusky 40, St. John, Asthore Eileen, Elyria 53, Salathe, E. Nelson, Macedonia 40, 1 00, 127, Sanner, Nolan James, Cuyahoga Falls 91, Saukkonen, Irma Cuellamo, Maple Heights . . 132, Saum, Ellen Jane, Kent Saviers, Marie Eleanor, E. Palestine Scalzi, Constance Josephine, Yorkville Scanlon, Dorothy Patricia, Youngstown 58 Scarnecchia, Elizabeth Ann, Youngstown . . .56, 58, Scarnecchia, Irene, Niles Schaetzle, Joseph Augustine, Akron Schamp, Harold E., Canton 40, 95, 109, Schantz, Virginia Henrietta, Orrville Scharf, John Ernest, Mamaroneck, N. Y, 52, 91, 132, 162, Schaub, Emmet H., Canton Scheck, Robert Earl, Akron 64 Scherman, Howard William, Ashtabula 59, Schield, Reed Lindner, Barberton Schleicher, Mary Eleanor, Madison Schmalz, Rosalia Ursula, Shaker Heights 99, Schmidt, Helen Gertrude, Steubenville 59, Schmidt, Kenneth E., Winesburg Schmidt, Theron Wayne, Winesburg Schneider, Edward William, Ravenna 52, 100, 106, 120, 133, Schneider, Helen Ruth, Canton 64, Schnitzer, Miriam Grace, E. Sparta Schoffman, Lincoln Joseph, Akron 60, Schoffman, Victor Edward, Akron 1 37, Schofield, Lillian Kathrine, Youngstown 52 63 Schroder, Dorothy Ann, Youngstown Schrekengost, Marjorie Eileen, Kent Schroyer, Doris J., Warren Schulz, Rudolph Edward, Warren Schulz, Theron Paul, Garfield Hts 95, Schwarzenberg. Ruth Elizabeth, Williamsfield Scobie James Barrett, Peninsula ' 00, Scobie, Jeanette Laura. Peninsula Scott, Berdine Elna, Alliance Scott, Betty E., Oberlin 58, 65 Scott, Betty M., Rovenna Scott, Charles Gaylord, Kent Scott, Charles Fred, Ravenna 44, 150, 158. Scott, Johney Fulton, Ravenna 52 Scully, Martha Lenore Niles Seager, Jane Sturley, Youngstown 41, 107, 109, 114 Searl, Alonzo Horton, Cuyahoga Falls 67, Season, Dorothy Elizabeth, Cuyahoga Falls Season, Hester Alice. Cuyahoga Falls 57 Secrest, Edith May, Rittman Sedlacko, Stephen Anthony, Struthers 52 Seeds, Martha Lynette, Cuyahoga Falls 59 Seidel, Dorothy Ann, Ravenna 41 Seidner, Albert, Cleveland 115, Seiter, Ona Pearl. Barberton Senerchia, Marie Florence, Ravenna . . . .59, 133, Serene, Michael Francis, Campbell 41, 106, 108, 133, 151 132 109 102 133 170 136 .94 , 93 63 .95 1 18 103 166 ,91 100 1 19 102 .64 136 133 151 167 . 93 .52 137 137 , 93 137 175 , 91 120 174 170 .94 , 94 , 59 ,92 ,96 134 .65 137 135 Seymour, Jean Frances, Ravenna . . .56, 93, 119, 119 Shafer, Carl, Akron Shaffer, Ernestine Louise, Van Wert 57 Shaffer, Harold Dale, Hartville 58, 1 67 Shank, Eugene Leon, Cuyahoga Falls 52 Shaylor, Ida Leora, Ashtabula 125 Shearer, Elmer Curtis, Mogadore 60, 137 Sheatsley, Elizabeth Josephine, Paris Sheehe, Carl, Marion 64, 1 66 Shepherd, Wilda Elizabeth, Akron 58, 131 Sherman, Samuel Louis, Akron 100 Sheron, Phyllis Regina, Independence 118 Sherrill, Verda Marjorie, Poland Shilling, Catharine Marie, Massillon Shoff, Virginia Alma, Akron Shook, Howard Denman, Cuyahcqa Falls . . . .52, 133 Shook, Loel George, Cuyahoga Falls 95 Shope, Hugh Norman, Barberton Shotwell, Margaret Jean, Cuyahoga Falls 60 9 Shriber, George Austin, Akron 137 Shriver, George Elmer, Canton 90 Shulman, Gladys, Youngstown Shultz, Lillian Maxine, Lewistown Shuman, Louise, Stow 92 Shuman, Omar Douglass, Mayfield Hts. ..90, 174,75 Sibala, Jeannette Margaret, Canal Fu ' to- ' Siddall, Don Frank, Ravenna 52 Sidley, Mary Jane, Ashtabula Siegfried, Verna Amber, Loudonvills 59. 94 Siegrist, Louis William, Aurora 64 Siemon, Anamary, Cleveland 41, 102 Silsby, Hazel Fay, South Euclid Simons, Orlie Herbert, Kent 90 Simpkins, Theron Edward, Suffi?ld 118 Simpson, Arthur E., Girard 159 Simpson, Bruce Harold, E. Cleveland 91 Simpson, Elspeth Marian, East Akron 6? 1S 1 Simpson, John B., Kent .... 52. 80 91 , 1 1 8. 1 35. 1 37 Singer, Elizabeth Isabel, Canton 93 Skaleski, Mildred A., Steubenville Slack, Doris Mae, Bedford Sladek, June Marie, Medina Slater, Wilfred Weston, Kent Slates, Ralph David, Ravenna 80 Slemmons, Dora Mae, Navarre Slutz, Russell Charles, Navarre 41. 101. 133 Smith, Claud R.. Cuyahoga Falls 41 . 91 ' . 109. 11 ? Smith, Doreen Charlotte, Canton 62. 120 Smith, Dorothy Pearl, Kent Smith, Elizabeth Ethel. Hudson Smith, George John. New Middletown 64 Smith, Isabel Lucinda. Burqhill Smith, James Thornton. Cleveland . . . 92, 95, 1 1 8, 1 1 9 Smith, Jane Elizabet, Kent 41. 133. 137 Smith, Lois Orinne, Alliance Smith, Martha Barret. Kent Smith, Russell Lyall, Kent Snedden. Betty Alice, Hudson Snider, Calvin William, Kent Snodgrass. Robert Bruce. Northfield Snyder, Ruth J., Canton 65. 93 Snyder, Mildred Eleanor, Creston Snyder, Roscoe, Dayton 65, 1 50. 1 56 Sokoloski. Chester P., Cuyahoga Falls .52. 91, 147. 150 Souders, Delbert Leonard. Akron Spelman, Marian Elizabeth. Kent . . . 52. 92 1 24, 1 30 Spencer, Margot Jocelyn, Hiram 41, 92, 136 Spencer, Mary Ellen, Canton Spencer, Peggy Anne, Grand Rapids Mich 81, 92 Spencer. Sara-Louise, Hudson Soicer, Doris Jane. Akron Spielan, Richard. South Euclid 167 Soillman, Lorraine, Amsterdam 57 Spirtos, Jack, Campbell 136 07, 53, .58 133 34, 137 Sponseller, Elizabeth Jane, Canton Sprague, Dorothy Lucille, Tallmadge Sprague, Flora Jean, Kent 41, 106, 1 Spratt, James A., Akron Spriggel, Keith Brenton, Munroe Falls Sprunger, Orlo O., Wadsworth Stafford, Margaret Davies, Canton Stalder, Charles Edward, Akron Staley, Willard Eugene, Atwater Stambaugh, Marie Kathryn, North Canton .53, Stanley, Dorothy May. Beloit Stapel, Ruth Naomi, Chardon Starr, Hazel Gene, Ravenna Steckel, Harold Palmer, Akron Steckel, Lucile Jeannette, Akron Stein, Lawrence Averal, Cleveland 1 Stein, Kenneth John, Mogadore Steiner, Esther Marie, Orrville Stelson, Mrs. Ada Wool ley, Kent Stern, Arvine Russell, Massillon Sternad, Marcia Jane, Macedonia Stetler, Herman, Doylestown Stevens, Katherine Virginia, Fairport Harbor . Stewart, Anita, Kent 1 Stewart, Betty Jane. Hubbard Stewart, Hugh Barnes. Kent Stewart, Mary Jane Shaker Heights 53, 93. 107, 109, 109 113, 115, 125, 1 Stockdale, David Donald, Ravenna Stockman, Richard E., Kent Stockman, Robert Homer, Stow Stoll, Wilda Griswold, Cuyahoga Falls Stone, Florence Gertrude, Tallmadge Stonehill, Irene Pauline, Robertsville Stonework, George, Campbell Stopher, Maraaret Mary. Kent 53, 96, 106, 108, 108, 109 1 13 I Strahl, Mary Maxine. Ravenna 61, Straight, Lois Dene, Kent Stribiey, Rex Carl. Kent 1 Stribley, Wendell Royer, Kent Stringer. William Lvnn, Kent Strohl, Dale Willis, Greensburg 63, 65, 90. 1 19, 1 Strouse, Helen Inez. Loudonville 78, Stubbins, Florence Lona. Martins Ferry Stull, Harold Forest. Wooster Stump, Gordon George, Akron Stump, Louise Elinor. Cleveland Sullivan, Ernest Ravenna Swan, Ada A.. Cuyahoga Falls Swan, Elsie, Akron Sweany, Dorothy May, Dellroy Swearengin, Gladvs Mae Delaware Swedish, Frank. Kent Swickard, Ruth, Richmond Swinehart, Charles Henry. Cleveland Swinehart, Merle R.. Suffield Sykes, Franklin Duff, E. Palestine Szabo, Marie Jane, Warrensville T Taborsky, Frank. Kent ...42.90,171.174.174,175 Taborsky, Joe, Kent 42,106.157.159,171 Taiclet, Louise, Vienna 1 03 Tallentire, John Richard, Cuvahoga Falls .... 121, 136 Tarr. Olive Rowena, Mingo Junction Tatqenhorst, Jane Ann, Kent 92 Taylor, Darold, Kent Taylor, William, Cuyahoga Falls 121 Teas, Deborah Isabel. Hudson 53. 96 Terrell, Logan Paul, Bellaire 136 1 18 120 158 125 133 1 18 151 i. 94 1 18 .42 101 .64 Terrill, Donald F., Kingsville 1 56 Terrill, Mrs. Lillian Cummins, Kent Terry, Charles Miles, Kent 54, 1 24 Thayer, Elizabeth Muriel, Youngstown Theobald, George Edward, Cleveland Thomas, Annabelle Louise, Cuyahoga Falls Thomas, Doris Irene, Marshallville 65 Thomas, Estella Mae, Ravenna 118, 136 Thomas, Harold Curtis, Woodville Thompson, Eloise Mary, Canton 65 Thompson, Ethel, Canton 65 Thompson, Faye Myrtle, Fredericksburg Thompson, Lois, Cleveland Hts. Thompson, Martha Helen, Garfield 53 Thompson, Maxine Edith, Canton 59 Thompson, Mildred Theresa, Cleveland Thompson, Ruth Dorothy, Farmdale 56, 1 30 Tibbitts, Paul Wendell, Geneva Tigner, Dorothy, Parkersburg, W. Va 95 Timmons, Martha Lucille, Chagrin Falls 59 Titterington, Grace, Madison 42 Titus, Anna Mary, Johnston Tobin, John Walk, Akron Tolla, Julia Pauline, Diamond Tomasheska, Jack Francis, Grafton 95 Toth, Elizabeth Ann, Lorain Tozer, Rada N., Cuyahoga Falls 63, 94, 113, 133 Tracy, Wilma Louise, E. Liverpool Treat, Jane Berenice, Massillon . . . 1 02, 1 1 8, 1 21 , 1 33 Treat, Mark G., Cuyahoga Falls 175 Tretta, Max, Akron Troeger, Elisabeth Wilhelmina, Defiance 53 Troyer, Loris C, Walnut Creek . .44, 95, 109, 115, 118 Truax, Vivian Palma, Shadyside Trulson, Geraldine Cook. Painesville Trunkey, Mary Louise, Shreve 131 Truscott, Ella Mae, Kent 136 Tucek, Elmer Lawrence, Geauga Lake Tucker, Ethel A., Painesville Tullsen, Roxane Mir, Youngstown 108, 1 33 Turk, Gladys Louise, Kent 65 Turner, Charles, Akron 60 Tuttle, Richard M., Kent ... 32, 42, 1 06, 119, 1 27, 135 Ugran, Anne, Youngstown Ulicny, Betty Ruth, Salem Urban, George, Kent . . . . 1 13, 115 V Vagnozzi, Lawrence, Youngstown Vallen, Kathryn Mae, W. Richfield Van Fleet, Roberta Jean, Cleveland 92, 1 30, 1 34 an Iden, Starr Stanley, Cleveland Hts 53 Van Wyen, Adrian, Bedford 42, 11 3, 1 32 Vaughan, Allan, Solon Vaughan, Lewis H., Akron Venn, Olive Ruth, Lockwood 42, 1 1 9, 1 1 9 Vesy, Hazel Eleanor, Orwell 65 Visher, Victor, Ravenna Visti, Laura Sylvio, Fairport Harbor Voth, Roland, Cleveland 53, 1 1 5 Vuillemin, Alfred Ernest, Akron w Wade, Earl Wenman. Broadacre 1 00 Wagner, Elmin David Smith, Hudson Wagner, Virginia Mae, Greentown 63, 103 Wall, Clyde Fremont, Kent 1 1 9, 1 1 9 Wallis, Vera, Eileen, Cuyahoga Falls 94 Walrath, Vernon Arthur, Beloit Walsh, Marie Rose, Youngstown 42 Walter, Ann Laing, Dundee Wansack, Anna, Campbell 57 Ward, Lester Robert, E. Palestine Ward, Vaol, Lorain Wardell, John William, New Philadelphia 46, 53, 100, 133, 156, 158 Wardman, Catherine Jane, Akron 134 Warner, Alyce Elinor, Suffield 65, 99 Warner, Genevieve Mae, Akron 1 36 Warnes, Atlee G., Shanesville 118 Warren, Lyle, Springfield 64, 1 46, 1 50 Waterbury, Francis Ruth, Bedford 1 20, 1 34 Waters, Maxine Lucy, Garrettsville Waters, Naudine H., Kent 42, 136 Watkins, Benjamin Earnest, Massillon 167 Watkins, Fred Herbert, Chagrin Falls 1 37 Watkins, John Reginald, Akron 44 Watkins, Twila Elizabeth, Canton Watson, M. Elizabeth, Canton Watson, Mary Elizabeth, Conneaut 94, 134 Watts, Thomas Campbell, Akron 95, 175 Warwin, Peter, Diamond 53,132,171,174 Weatherford, Arnold, Akron 56, 1 51 Weaver, Mary Rebecca, N. Philadelphia 57 Weaver, Ralph J., Cuyahoga Falls 80 Webb, Lila Jane, Brookfield Weber, Leona Frances, Strasburg Weeks, James Woodrow, Ravenna Weinstein, Harriett F., Farmdale Weir, Don LaMar, Hudson 42, 95, 172 Weir, Frances Anthony, Willoughby ...64,151,159 Weis, Paul Eugene, Lancaster Weisel, Earl, Akron 90, 151 Weiss, Ruby Pearl, Shanesville ....65,103,118,119 Weldin, Walter Reid, Ravenna Wells, Vivian Luella, Elyria 53, 1 30 Wendelken, Harold William, Kent 42,95, 1 12, 124, 166 Werner, Dolly Geraldine, Akron 64, 133 Wertheimer, Bernard Michael, Peninsula Westcott, Helen, Painesville 57, 1 09, 1 1 3, 1 1 5 Westfall, Elizabeth Ann, Carrollton Westlake, Bernice Jean, Marysville 103, 133 Whalen, James Joseph, Kent Wheeland, Doris Regina, Port Washington Wheeler, William Charles, Bedford 133, 136 Wherley, Paul Berdette, Stone Creek 63 Whinery, Elsie Margaret, Salem Whipple, Mary Jane, Canton 62 White, Denzil Wilmot, E. Palestine 95 Whitehead, Eleanor Mae, Massillon Whitman, Robert William, Akron 91 Whitmire, A. Paxton, Kent . . .43, 106, 146, 150, 175 Whitmire, Eileen May, Navarre 120, 132 Whittlesey, Ruth Catherine, Kent 43, 94, 107 Wick, Robert Wasser, McDonald 90 Wicks, Joseph Roger, Ashland 151 Widder, Thelma Mae, Sugarcreek 58 Widowski, Joe, Mayfield Hts 1 5 1 , 1 67 Widowski, LeRoy Herman, Mayfield Hts. 43, 91, 106, 146, 150, 164. 166, 171 egand, Dorothy Louise, Steubenville . . .43, 92, 133 ggs, Frances Louise, New London 43, 133 Icox, Elizabeth Carolyn, Lakewood 61 Icoxon, Sara L., Painesville Ider, James C, Painesville 1 1 8, 1 1 9 lenius, Wilfred, Mantua 53 Ikins, Frances Arlene, Perry 58 llemsen, Jeanette Louise, Stow I let t, Audre Elizabeth, Sebring lliams, Cora Belle, Akron Williams, Ernest Allen, Newton Falls . . . 54, 56, 95, 124 Williams, Ervin Ray, Cuyahoga Falls 53 Williams, Lena Marie, N. Bloomfield Williams, Margaret Elizabeth, E. Liverpool Williams, Maryan E., Cleveland 59, 63 Williams, Ralph Charles, Ravenna Williamson, Dorothy Irene, Cleveland 43, 94 Willmot, Dorothea Ann, Massillon 58 Wilson, Etta Mae, Sebring 57 Wilson. Emma Louise, Kent 119 Wilson, Fraser Eugene, Akron Wilson, Robert Meldrum, Kent 59, 1 66, 1 20 Winchell, Margaret Wilma, Canton 93 Winder, Eva Catherine, Homeworth Winemiller, Doris Marilyn, Akron 96 Winemiller, Frederick D., Akron 64, 95 Wise, Doris Theresa, Ravenna 65 Wise, Elizabeth Mae, Kent 62 Wise, Paul H., Kent 43 Wise, Winifred M., Kent 43 Wishart, Jean P., Winterset 62 Wolf, Jennie F., Wadsworth 63 Wolfe, Rosalie Esther, Cuyahoga Falls 53, 92 Womsley, Florence Elisabeth, Akron 57 Wood, Fred D., Cleveland 64, 90 Wood, Julia F., Canton 1 07, 1 08, 1 09, 1 36 Woods, Jeanette Louise, Ravenna 53, 103 Woods, Mary Jane, Ravenna 53, 1 37 Woods, Virginia Eileeen, Ravenna 61, 133 Woodward, Shirley Ross, Hiram Wootopulos, Helene Marie, Youngstown Work, Clifford, Cuyahoga Falls Workman, Margaret Louise, Copley 58 Wrentmore, George, Lockwood 1 00 Wright, Jean Frances, Oberlin 118 Wright, Joseph, Cuyahoga Falls 53, 90, 166 Wright, Mrs. Lillian Hager, Kent Wykrent, Ann Wanda, Elyria 96 Wynne, Leo P., Cuyahoga Falls Y Yarian, Ellen Marie, Rootstown 130 Yerman, John William, Diamond Yoder, Elizabeth L., Salem 64 Young, Al. A., Harrison, N. Y 43, 91, 127 Young, Dorothy Jane, Cleveland 43, 102, 107, 109, 113, 125, 131 Young, James Scott, Hartville 62 Young, Janet W., Hartville 57, 102, 133 Young, Ruth Amelia, Negley 63 Young, Sara Lenore, Mantua 43, 99, 133 Young, William W., Massillon 53, 91 Yurchison, Katherine, Lowellville 103 Zeltman, Violet Roberta, Strasburg Zerbe, Harriet Graham, Canton 92, 136 Zimmerman, Edna Lucille, Marshallville 133 Zimmerman, Mary Elizabeth, Akron Zink, Dale Edgar, N. Canton 95, 1 37 Zuercher, Barbara Idella, Dalton Zuercher, Venus, Millersburg Zupan, John Carl, Cleveland 53, 95, 106, 1 13, 173, 137 Zurcher, Mabel Ruth, Wilmot . . .43, 99, 109, 133, 136 ■■■-
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