Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 210

 

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 210 of the 1947 volume:

A le 1947 NORTHERN Dedicated To SEVENTY FIVE YEARS of EDUCATION Dr. Belt Dr. Smith The founder, Dr. H. S. Lehr, of Ohio Northern University retired in l902 and Dr. Leroy A. Belt was appointed President oi the University. ln 1904, Rev. Albert E. Smith was selected tor the posi- tion. The latter served in this capacity for twenty-five years. Upon the retirement ot Dr. Smith the Board oi Trustees elected Dr. Robert Williams as his successor, who held the office ior the iollowinq fourteen years. The present head of the institution, Dr. Robert O. McClure, entered office in 1943. A-. ' .1 Q .V K . v . 1 . 1 Dr. Williams Dr. McClure Dr. Henry Solomon Lehr founder of Ohio Northern University The beloved founder of Ohio Northern University, Dr. 1-1. S. Lehr, was born at Weathersfield, Ohio, on March 8, 1838. He began his teaching career at the age of sixteen. In 1854 he entered Mount Union College where he later received an A.B. degree. After serv- ing in the Union Forces during the Civil War, he was released in 1866 and came to Northwestern Ohio to establish his select school . The choice of location was made due to the wealth, health, and ease oi access oi Ada . The school was established with the educational ideals Lehr had formed as a student, which included: co-education, ability to enroll students at any time of the year in classes suitable to them, non-sectarianism, the honor system for students conduct, and minimum expenses. The first session opened on November 12, 1866, with an enrollment of fifty-six students. ln August of 1871 the name became Northwestern Ohio Normal. The first commencement exercises were held in 1874. There were eleven graduates and each was required to speak or to write a thesis. The name oi the growing institution was changed again in 1885 to the Ohio Normal University. I f Music Was taught from the very beginning, the first instructor of music, Theodore Presser, later rose to unusual prominence in his field. Engineering was introduced but it Was not until the l89O's that it became officially separated from the general college. The Department of Law, in response to a demand from numerous students, was organized in 1885 by l. Rose Lee, a former graduate of the University who became the first Dean of this department. ,un :Q 2 The Department of Pharmacy was established in 1868 in anticipa- tion of legislation which would require all pharmacists to be examined by the state board. The continued expansion led to the construction in 1894 oi a new building for its sole use. The first Founder's Day was observed during Commencement Week of 1897. The University had grown to include thirteen de- partments and an enrollment of over three thousand students. Early in the history oi the University the martial spirit was tos- tered and encouraged. ln 1884, to afford the students the needed exercise as well as to instruct in military science, a department was organized. The non-compulsion plan was adopted and its success was remarkable. ,,..-. . vi--....... ... V ,Y Q A ll N Il The girls sometimes had classes in club swinging . . . and occxs siohctlly there was cr qir1's military compcmyf' l e tl I .1 The old administration buildinq burned in l9l4 and the third lloor was destroyed. lt was then remodeled on a two-story plan and dedicated to Iohn Wesley Hill, Sr. The steeple, a campus landmark, disappeared during the blaze. A number of years later, in l92l, a new clock was finally installed. -1 Y ' , 5 A r ' ' X34 , f'-hgh e.Q,.:...-Jig n Architects sketch including the proposed New Administration Building. To atford better classrooms, Dukes Memorial was also recondi- tioned at this time. ln l923, grounds to the north ot the campus were purchased and a building, dedicated to Warren G. Harding, Was erected tor the College of Law. Before the close ot Dr. Smiths term additional land was purchased for the construction ot Pres- ser Hall which was to house the College oi Music, and the Iohn l-l. Taft gymnasium was being built on the athletic tield. The Franklin Society, established in 1871, and the Philomathean Society, 1879, comprised the two oldest literary groups on the campus. In 1880, for the purpose of creating a medium between the two, the Adelphian Literary Society was formed by Dr. Lehr. Besides acting as sponsors of the 1-lankinson and Deeds Orator- ical contests and the Haskins Debate, the societies also took active part in the intercollegiate debating teams. As an antecdote to this serious acquisition of knowledge, the groups entered in intramural sports and enlivened the campus with their antics. sq.- t fifty Ha r n , 1 I, ' R 'onyx -f i y , ' V! bfi' f ll I. I' .. -. ff 'il'v H 5 we ' ,a H . Tm Y 4 1 F 1 lllkllllllllllillll IXIIIIIIXIIKX HXHIXXIIIII I X llllllllillllill lll W V lg E y 192' gli Lest We Forget 5 is , HATCHET ANNIVERSARY ENGINEERS--PHARMICS l fl IIIll!XXIIIIIlIX1ll1XIllIIXi!lll!1XlmIIIIxxI111lrI1KxI1lxxxxxmxxmmmxzzzxxxu xxxx xllxllllllllllllrlll KE V . lf , .. One of the long remembered customs of the University was the Enqineers-Pharmics Day. Since its origin lay in the rivalry be- tween the two rapidly qrowinq colleqes, combats between both individuals and groups resulted. In 1910 the leaders of the two departments were persuaded to bury the hatchet , which was actually done with pompous and impressive ceremony. For several years an anniversary service was observed in commora- tion of the lost feud. 14 GD f Q, Wg .fi 3 I5 xg Q A. D Q 2Tnn If N I I-EIU! I-IHIJPFU Z0 Mr. Armstrong Ah Stambaugh, Mr. John H. Clark, Mr. Jay E'.t:I'agg?rt, Dr. Robert 0. McClure, Mr. Curtis M. Shetler a sent . The Executive Committee of the lloard of Trustees Ohio Northern shot forward in its seventy-fifth year to attain the highest registration for over a decade. Under the guidance of a capable administra- tor, though over-taxed by an over-flowing house, each problem was adjusted for the betterment of the University community. 19 'F ' I Lg? e??s?E5 S V x . N, l . X.. . l 5:22 H515 t FV' 2:--NN eee - 25' During President Mc- sf I - vu C1ure's four year admin- fi: fl y Q istration many beneficial ' w ff' g E developments have taken i place. Battling against extreme odds from the outset, he has brought the dying embers of a once proud university back to life. 1 President Robert O. McClure M.A., DD., LLD. I1lZz3Zf3E,iiiMillHU? EFoEiflE1'flQfDlEU TIUEE. Fifty years ago a distinguished college president said, 'The future of our Students is not made for them, they must make it for themselves. Your President believes that you, by careful planning., hard work and much sacri- fice, will discover a wonderful future. No 'man is stronger than the obstacles he has overcome. To have served with you during your college days has been a joy. With profound appreciation of ' your worth you have my sincerest hope for happiness and success. ? 'W' 'QI Dean of th 0 College of Pharifuury an al Professor of Dlatoria lllmlicq Donn of the Collage of Engineering and Professor of Civil Engineering . Bl . ., ', v ' 1 1 1 I umm of the Law and Professor of Law ii - .. ,.., hr: I. 'i I 'WL -'xv Dean of the Liiicfral Afris EDU090 and Professor of Biolngy Mrs. Alice E. Webb Dean of Women Ending her first year as Dean in June 1947, she has worked closely with the women's groups in their activities and made revisions in co-ed regulations. MRS. R. L. NOBLE H. L. WALDRON DEAN F. KITTLE H. H.VANNoRsDALL A.B., B.S. B.S., M.S. B.S., M.S. B.S., A.M., Ph.D. Librarian Business Industrial Arts Education ., JA Sl rift ,L-' g:vv+v-L11 U5-iipii .4 'B - Y -1. V1 ' ' ll ,, -'tlwt-1n1v:e:4v'-'41 ?'t.,,,:, ' X yn, Ahwgh WSL' Working as advisor with the In- terfraternity Council, the Student Council and other organizations, he has been instrumental in the suc- ccss of many campus activities. Q' John A. Potter The Rev. Marion E. Tinsler BD., DD. A.B., B.D. Treasurer Assistant to the President WILFRED E. BINKLEY M.A., Ph.D. History and Political Science CLYDE A. LAMB B.S., M.A. Physical Education i - i i 3 ii Y Ev 5 PL, , :X 1 A ll A' .. lj: 'il1'x. -X HD Counselor for Men KARL A. ROIDER B. Mus., M. Mus. CHILDE H. FREEMAN B.S., Lit. D. Music English and Literature ' C X , 4 l-: i i - i t an . - i f U I! N ' ' f' fi ' is -f N ,,- i DOBBINS L. R. HERRICK s f ., I A ff 1, AVL . 'Mk -lr .., . . -f .M . , KA Y ? .W J 1 ' 'h A Qi? ' ' r Q , jr 1 . Q. fl 1 V1 -,W w 1 A 0 QM: -3-.fra , A5 gif .1 'I . . 4 M -.-.1 i,,5.- X RAy-MOND MA. Ph.D. YR '- 24-57, r MSW Ph.D. 1 Phgclyiwl-RZITEVA . .A,- . 'F ..I13Q T .I .2-lgwf . iff 1 .f T515 : . P .Y AL. 'I .- , . if 3 R. H. HILLIARD FRA1Xg.1NBEg1fGER MA., Ph.D. W. P. LAMAL B' MUS., M.A? MRS. W. E. BINKLEY ILO RUTTEELQTY Public Relations ' Sgcfe Alumm UNA ELLIOTT J. A. WEISHAMPEL MARJORIE OMLER A.B., A.M. B.S., M.E. B.S. J' Lors VOL 'Q- A ' CIFENITN ss f, Registrars L I 4 X . A. C. SMITH M.S.. Ph.D. .Q ,Qs V K-4. Nfifsk' 'sr . -. X if Ri-PQ. l' 'V O. E. AccOUN'r1us MRS. O. E, ACCOUNTIUS B S B S 49-X A POROTHY HOLMES RAYMOND KLINE A.B., M.A. B S bmi--at Lg N, . 1 wg 2- JL ff 41 W N Y , --ry A I. B .- -' ,, L4afiQ1i L 1 2m ' V' 5 i 'f' - ' '-- - L .wh 1543, A ',-11 S. JACKSON QE., w g B.A., LL.B. NELSON E. JONES J- B. QUAT B.S., LLB- B.A,, LLIIEAN CLIFFE DBMS B-O., R. CORTEEIEMIYIPHLUNS M. E. MURPHY B.S., M.A. RALP P13 gALTER Mus. KARL ROIDER B.A. 1IxiT11Xf?0LN LIMA BRANCH CIILLEGE I. McLean Reed BS., M.A., D.Ped. Administrative Officer Ohio Northern accepted the challenge to provide a Lima Branch in August, 1946, to accommodate part of the large number of young men and women of the area who were unable to gain entrance to our col- leges. The Branch College, under the supervision of Dr. Harry Vannorsdall of Ohio Northern and the direction of Mr, J. McLean Reed, Superintendent of Lima Public Schools, offered courses for the first year students in Liberal Arts, Engineering, Business Administration, etc. Immediately following the primary ar- rangements, Mr. Reed, together with the cooperation of the LIMA NEWS and its editor, Mr. Robert C. Barton, began a series of articles concerning the Lima Branch to be opened with the regular term at Ohio Northern University on September 9, 1946. With the registration of over 85 students ten days prior to the opening of school, the Superintendent submitted a list of compe- tent high school instructors to teach the classes. All meetings were scheduled be- tween the hours of 4:00 and 8:00 P.M. to avoid any conflict with the regular school at Central High where the Lima City Board of Education had extended the use of the building to the University for these classes. Such cooperation between the Lima schools and Ohio Northern is widely recog- nized as a most conscientious effort to meet the needs of our young men and women. i JAMES BRIGHT ERNEST FRESHWATER STANLEY BOYLAN B.S., M.A. B.A., M.A. A.B., A.M. Mxss HELEN HAWKINS A.B., M.A. Rf Mrss JEANETTE SUART MISS LAURA JAMISON Miss MARY LINNELL B.A. B.S., M.A. A.B., MA is -, ' .Il MERL O. REED MISS MARIE BowLUs HARRY HEI-'FNER ' A.B., M.A. B.A., M.A. B.A., A.M. CLAYTON SINCLAIR ARTHUR FOWLER MISS MARGUERITE DICKMAN FRANCIS BONAR B A R Q B S M A .. . secretary 31 'B mmlbblo mbd Q as , .gf -- -..g.xg FIGHT Fill! BETTER sWOIlLD BBUMFIELD TELLS CLASS Famed Author Speaks on 75th Anniversary 42 ?fLs??.ff E. .ggi hr ri 119' Y'-Q J., 1 ' ,,,. of Ohio Northern ' s 34 The curse of over-specialization has afflicted the whole of our mo- dern educational system. It pene- trates every field . . . It produces all too often the engineer who knows only logarithms and the laws of strain and stress, when he should know how the dam he builds or the road or bridge he constructs, affects or is affected by agriculture, forestry, sociology, economy, trans- portation, distribution . . . assert- ed Louis Bromfield, commencement speaker at Ohio Northern Univer- sity on Sunday, June 2. An able and entertaining speaker, the famed Mansfield novelist had his crowd of 1,200 persons hanging on to every word. Continuing, Mr. Bromfield said, We produce at times in our uni- versities, men who sit behind desks and teach their pupils that when they have finished the course, they have learned all there is to learn about the subject for all time. This over-specialization leads to the mind which confuses plumbing and automobiles with civilization, whereas these things are no more than the instruments which can, if properly used, serve man in his upward climb towards the greater and richer rewards of culture and civilization. In an industrial-me- chanical age, we have reached that point where all too-often, man is the victim and the servant of ma- chinery, instead of being its master, understanding how to use it wisely to attain a richer life and a finer civilization. fC'ontin'u,ed on Page 1842 Ohio Northern celebrated its Diamond Anniversary in 1946 and by proclamation of Dr. Robert O. McClure the celebra- tion continued through the fol- lowing school year. Honorary degrees were conferred upon Dr. E. E. Helms who gave the bacca- laureate sermon and to Mr. Louis Bromfield, principal speaker of the 1946 Commencement Exer- cises. 7 5 YEARS .9 -5? T' ' .a 3 f ,fl - '- - 9. I T5 X 5' ,Q - L . iv l U -3, . . I . 1 A A ff QW , mv i l I 4, - - !- ' N' f X '- . ,D x W' . 1 ' . C A . ' Afsv ,., , , , . 1- ' I I. I 'E :JT ws 3' Y gl .a .1- 1 ' I - xi if .X ' ' . M 5 -- ., , K I- ,. A if if fi if ' .I A Q, I xv ,Q M V '. ' --sl - if 4. ' ' riff: -' , ' ,.. ig, . ' 4 .ly f- 54' First Row: Aquilina, Archer, Ault, Baker, H. Baker, Bahudur, J. Bloom, Bloom. 'Seeond Row: Bowsher, Brush, Bruzzese, Bryant, Carhart, Coppess, Croft, Durbin. Third Row: Freeman, Gallagher, Goldenberg, Grantham, F. Gren, Gullick, Halfhill, Hamilton. PETER AQUILINA, Music Jamestown, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Psi LAWRENCE H. ARCHER, ASCE Lima Delta Sigma Phi HAROIID A. AUI,T, AIEE Lorain Delta Sigma Phi BERYL BAKER, Elem. Ed. Sidney Ind. Girls Club HERMAN BAKER, ASME Newburgh, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Pi STANLEY BERLAND, Pharm. Sharon, Pa. Alpha Epsilon Pi JEAN BLOOM, Nursing Sandusky JOHN BLOOM, Chem. Montpelier Sigma Pi DONALD BOWMAN, ASCE Dayton Nu Theta Kappa, Sigma P NORMAN BOWSHER, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi Delta Sigma Phi i 3.1-F'1-f: ' I , .1323 E . ff: -nt' . . l !T'!i'1f,.. 1 A - 5:2 ROBERT BRADLEY, Ind. Arts Lafayette JOHN BREWER, ASME Ada EARL BRUsH, AIEE Lima Nu Theta Kappa Phi Mu Delta JOSEPH J. BRUZZESE, Law Steubenville Theta Kappa Phi LUCILLE BUSHONG, Phys. Ed Dunkirk Ind. Girls Club PHILIP BRYANT, Pharm. Akron Kappa Psi DWIGHT CARHART, Law Marion Delta Theta Phi FRED COOK, Bus. A. Ada CATHERINE COPPESS, Eng. Greenville Tau Kappa Kappa WILLIAM COFFING, Music Ada J ULES CROFT, ASME Wooster PAUL DEEMER, Bus. Ad. Antwerp JANE DUREIN, LATT Waynesville CARL EDMINSON, Law Wapakoneta ' Hecrp big problem . . . RICHARD EVANS, ASCE Rayway, N. J. Theta Kappa Phi WILLIAM FREEMAN, Sec. Ed. Norwalk Delta Sigma Phi MARJORIE GALLAGHER, Pharm. Rawson Phi Chi RICHARD GOFORTH, Law Ada Delta Sigma Phi WILLIAM GOLDENBERG, ASCE Elizabeth, N. J. Alpha Epsilon Pi WILLIAM B. GRANTHAM, Pharm. Wilmington Kappa Psi FRANK GREN, Phys. Ed. Cleveland Theta Kappa Phi PETER GULLICK, Law . Youngstown Delta Theta Phi JAMES HALFIIILL, Pre-Theo. Lima Sigma Phi Epsilon SAMUEL HAMILTON, Pharm. Farrell, Pa. Kappa Psi FRED. HANNEMAN, Pharm. Ada Kappa Psi LOUISE HEENER, Soc. Lima JOHN HEITZMAN, Bus. Ad. Ft. Jennings Phi Mu Delta SE IOIl 'al' HUP ' If ...Y Q, z 'ian if Sp? ...S- I e I . 5...- . i 4 I, i Q., V, A .. ,.'5:..i.., ef. - V., - ' 1 73544.-'f'wi'i . .Mg 2 leg: 'i ' ' . I . ' B' 1' v , l 'What sr , lg' lie 1 'QQ 'V if .u., A PQI.. f- ' I Efgyjlmx I- hifagpi i .ni ,. .ti ,, x . , . ' tr- .i ,f haf !,f ui . , , r '7 ' 1 Jrxjiiiru A ,. ' Y x-,.,.i. An A. ...M A. - - J, . I' - 'Fifi' .2 ' ' Liv, . ,s V' . .1 2- , ,.. , . . X . ,X- slilrlif' . 1' ' . 4-,l : 44, I N J, 5 'Cy' X . y .A A 1' mx ' I li' , I Q lx 2' 4 mv Gi ll 'X L B' f A iv' ge f t 4 1 1 1 -, ,. ds.. iff-paafv. .sneer a' I ri+- ' - A Y L' ' V , if --A 'X 1 'j Ls., x ' . if N First Row: Hanneman, Heitzman, Hinds, Hubble, Huddle, Huey, Houston, Jones. Second Row: Kleinoeder, Koch, Kusta, Liles, Lombardo, Lowman, McDevitt, McKinney. Third Row: McNerny, Maxfield, Miehls, Motter, Muhlman, Oberly, Parker, Payne. ROSEMARY HINDS, Speech FRANKLIN LILES, ASCE Forest Nu Theta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi, MILDRED MOTTER, Speech Ada Theta Phi Delta Theta. Alpha Phi fra. Yin' - If -. iii ill ' i I A A V, 53 . H. - -. I I L g!! ' . ' 5' :J , '. , W .I ' R . F, , if 1 -A sf ,nw - - I lfiffi- 3' .' N f -fs - A , s 1 lllfi 1 I ' :' ' if , A-cg, .4 .. H ,!,, ,:F.rE p JE? 2' ,IA Ll ', , ' Q . I ' I, I:'5 ' f 'flfi A 6. gg . I g 1- ,. I I 7 g lla., . I1 ll X 5 I V' P ' -X ' ff' A V .' I f A-,-X 1 11 Again .. 5' Q A Q? T-'AF' A Uh? 1 ,SQL . ,1' ., -.::d. jf V' J A4 l I 4 .-.f iif bdfa 4 ,f ji Dayton Phi Chi CHARLES HOSENPELD. Pre-Law Martins Ferry Amvets CHARLES HUBELE, Bus. Ad. Harrod PAUL HUDDLE, ASME Ada Nu Theta Kappa Phi Mu Delta DALE HUEY, ASCE Ashtabula Delta Sigma Phi CHARLES HOUSTON, Bus. Ad. Lisbon Delta Sigma Phi CYNTHIA JONES, L.A. Forest Hills, N. Y. Tau Kappa Kappa JOHN KEMPH, Pre-Med. Lima ROBERT KLEINOEDER, ASCE Lima Nu Theta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi THEODORE KLINGER, ASCE Strasburg Nu Theta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi RAYMOND KLINE, ASME A Xenia Nu Theta Kappa KENNETH KOCH, Law Ohio City Sigma Delta Kappa RICHARD L. KRABACli, Law Lima FREDERICK KUSTA, ASME Macedonia Nu Theta Kappa Sigma Pi NELSON LAULESS, Phys. Ed. Ada VINCENT LOMBARDO, ASME Ada Delta Sigma Phi CAROL LOWMAN, Sec. Ed. Ada EARL MCDEVITT, Pharm. Salem Kappa Psi FRANCIS MCCRATE, Phys. Ed Columbus Grove LORELLA MCKINNEY, Sec. Ed Lafayette Ind. Girls Club JOSEPH MCNERNY, Law Zanesville Delta Theta Phi JAMES MAYER, Law Bluffton FRED MAYLEW, Law Toronto Sigma Delta Kappa QUENTIN MAXFIELD, Pharm. Fremont Phi Mu Delta JAMES MEALS, Law Springfield CHARLES MENOUGH, Eng. Racine HARMON MIEHLS, Music Spencerville Kappa Kappa Psi Phi Mu Delta ROBERT MORIARTY, Bus. Ad. Elyria Theta Kappa Phi Three rushinfs HOWARD MUHLEMAN, Ed. Ada Delta Sigma Phi KENNETH OBERLY, AIEE Bluffton Nu Theta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi MARIE PARKER, LATT LaRue Phi Chi WILLIAM PETERSON, Phys. Ed. Forest Delta Sigma Phi THOMAS PERKOWSKI, Pharm. Conneaut Kappa Psi JAMES POOLE, ASME Bellefontaine Delta Sigma Phi EDWARD POTTER, ASME Ada Nu Theta Kappa .1-.?..::.,l-, f Ml i s.. I x I al- K 1 Y bl -., i , D I .fav , .gl 5: 1' A f. , - P, I ,,,f1L, A ,VV .,-N I M if his f n II .Ee .u..,-I ' f ., T ,a ,F l ll l 0 .X 4 FJ gi si' 75 ' is qt 33 Q - ya- 'Nm-v -agg- if 'l W l wi V N VA , 'ay,:fr .'. I 'Xa 'Ui WQ JP-'14 -. . A Ii ' 1 Eze-,., J First Row: Perkoski, Poole, Potter, Powell, Purtell, Rader, Rady, Rice. Second Row: Rider, Rittenour, Schmied, Schwall, Shingler, Shryock, Sidey, Thobaben. Third Row: G. Thomas, J. Thomas, Vaubel, West, Wilkinson, Wright, Young Zellar. Zimmerman. WILLIAM POWELL, ASCE DEFORD SCHWALL, Pre-Law CHARLES THORABEN, ASCE Elyria Wauseon Ada Delta Sigma Phi Delta Sigma Phi Sigma Pi MARILYN PURTELL, Bus. Ad. MARY JANE SCHWARTZ, Nurs. JEAN THOMAS, Chem. Lima Lima Forest Phi Chi RICHARD SCHULTHESIS, ASCE Tau Kappa Kappa FRED RADER, Law Lima GEORGE THOMAS, Law Mansfield MILTON SHANK, Music Akron Sigma Delta Kappa Kenton PAUL TOBIN, Law ROBERT RADY, Law Sandusky Sigma Delta Kappa ROGER RICE, Bus. Ad. Tiltonville Sigma Pi BENJAMIN RIDER, Pre-Theo McComb JOHN RITTENOUR, Law Piketon Delta Theta Phi JAMES T. SCHAEEEER, Pharm. Salem Kappa Psi LOREN SGHOENBERGER Upper Sandusky Sigma Delta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi JAMES SCHMIED, Bus. Ad. Madison, N. J. Kappa Kappa Psi MAURICE SHINGLER, Phys.Ed. Seward, Pa. Phi Mu Delta ADRIENNE SHRYOCK, Psych. Pittsburgh, Pa. Tau Kappa Kappa JO ANN SIDEY, Phys. Ed. Wapakoneta Theta Phi Delta EDWARD SMALLWOOD, Pre-Law Cleveland ADRIENNE SMITH, LATT Ada GEORGE SMITH, Law Spring Valley FRANK SNYDER, Phys. Ed. Carmichaels, Pa COLLINS STACKOUSE, Phys. Ed. Tupper Lake, N. Y. Delta Sigma Phi THOMAS STEELE, Phys. Ed. Toronto Delta Sigma Phi Chapel call . . . please. the grass? SE Illll East Liverpool HERMAN VAUBEL, Law Wapakoneta Sigma Delta Kappa GUSTY P. WEST, ASCE Hollidaysburg, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi CLARIBEL WHITE, Music Napoleon Phi Chi GEORGE WILKINSON, Pharm Highland Park, Mich. Kappa Psi PERRY WISE, Pre-Law Van Wert WARREN WOLF, Pre-Law Tiffin Delta Theta Phi Delta Sigma Phi WILLIAM T. WRIGHT, Pre-Med. Ada Delta Sigma Phi JACK YOUNG, Pharm Akron Kappa Psi ROBERT ZELLAR, Law Philo Delta Theta Phi FRANCIS ZUPAN, AIEE Lima u. 5 ya. ,-fin:-ii L U. A ., .5 I I . 1, 'Pm N N Mui' I V: - f I 75 as Q' ' K 'D 'fl Aii itfw-ff' ' A '4' all fl' ' ' P sb fl: u - ...bl E- , I fi:-3' V Z . I-lt? 1 I. 'i v- g., , , . A L ' -. ' f I ' A . 3-A.. 1' A A - 'il ,. ...LI Y. ', -., 'Il V A l 1 -A K' ca Q-A A , ' I I ran We A 1 L-5' M ' t Us I Q dl! li 'gn ' ' 1- 0:2114- 5.9 . 4 ' ,f 4 A 5: 5 p I 1 I ,i-WTQQ l ' . . 2 l .. .' Lai J .,..f4!l' First Row: Arbaugh, Callahan, Cavin, Conner, Holmes, Hunt, Myers, Oxley. Second Row: Rizor, Rogers, Rodocker, Shaw, Sherk, Tehan, Trueblood, Zlotnick. DAVID ARBAUGH MARSHALL ,Rooms Bellville Ada Delta Theta Phi Delta Theta Phi S1gYHa4Ph1 EPSIIOY1 RICHARD RoBms0N DENNECS CALLAHAN Marietta ronton R R Delta Theta Phi oc?f?cks?,l23gKER ALVACFHGCAVIN Delta Theta Phi a zz J S Delta Theta Phi viggfkofgz' PAUL CHORPENING Sigma Delta Kappa Ashland , CHARLES SHERK Delta Theta Phi Findlay WILLIAM CONNER Delta Theta Phi Ada , Jomr TEHAN Delta Theta Phl WILLIAM HOLMES LILLIAN TRUEBLOOD COIUTVLUUS , Montpelier Delta Theta Phi Tau Kappa Kappa JAMES HUNT WALTER WI-IITE t Lzma Wayne Slgma Delta KHPPH JULIUS ZLOTNICK KAI MATSUOKA. Youngstown Sacramento, Calif. DAVID MYERS Celina De1ta4Theta Phi GEORGE Oxm-:Y Fremont Delta Theta Phi BARBARA RIZOR Findlay Theta Phi Delta Pledge duty? A Taj -U . -A: -1- .4 lgkjzgmlnu UNIIIB LA -..1-Nh' '-I . J A- L Iv 1111 'Q --2 -Lv :Pvt G i 1. I Q: -H t gs .f-sn. -I 5 .- SHIV I 'Ill IFE! X . pq 1,4 2 .A 1552- E iii-I ' L I . ' -1 L H Y 5' Ss, Sy X 41 J . f 'm If N , A, -is ' I A ' lim, All any . p f . A Q A gif' . , X fa- , 1 I X' W , , X . ,p , t, . , p, First Row: Allcroft, Andrews, Butler, Bailey, Bennett, Burkhardt, Brookhouser, Beuter, Baker. Second Row: Cusumano, Cable, Clark, Crites, Conover, Elder. JAMES ALLCROFT, Bus. Ad. Kenilworth, N. J. Sigma Pi LAWRENCE ALLISON, Ind. Arts Salineville ROGER ANDREWS, Law Lima Sigma Delta Kappa WILLIAM BAILEY, Pharm. Akron Kappa Psi JEANNE BAKER, Elem. Ed. Dayton Theta Phi Delta MARY BAXTER, TT ED. Lima RICHARD BENNETT, Law Lima Sigma Delta Kappa JOHN R. BECK, Law Findlay Delta Theta Phi ROBERT BEUTER, Pharm. Bellaire Kappa Psi ROBERT BOBLITT, Pharm. Springfield HENRY BOWERS, Law Nelw Philadelphia, Pa. CARL BROOKHAUSER, ASME Elyria Delta Sigma Phi JOSEPH BRUNETTO, Bus. Ad. Piqua 1 I CHARLES BUCK, Law DeGraff Delta Theta Phi JOHN BURKHARDT, Law Toledo Sigma Delta Kappa LOWELL BUTLER, Pharm. Ada Sigma Phi Epsilon . CHESTER CABLE, Law Lima Sigma Delta Kappa VIRGINIA CLARK, Pharm. Alger Theta Phi Delta GEORGE COAKER, Pharm. Orville ARTHUR CONOVER, Chem. Sea Girt, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi RICHARD COWAN, Physics Willshire Phi Mu Delta ROBERT CRIDER, Bus. Ad. Lima GROVER CRITES, Law Lima Sigma Delta Kappa - WILLIAM CUNAHAN, Law Youngstown Sigma Delta Kappa Amvets PHILLIP CUSUMANO, Pharm. Cleveland Theta Kappa Phi ROSEMARY DOTY, Pre-Law Lima Theta Phi Delta Hurry up and wait . . civle style UNIIJB Cunahan, Duvall, Evans, ROBERT DRAKE, Law Findlay Delta Theta Phi JOHN DUNLAP, Sec. Ed Utica Phi Mu Delta ROBERT DUVALL, Pharm Bellaire Sigma Phi Epsilon TYSON ELDER, Pharm. Wapakoneta Sigma Phi Epsilon PAUL R. EVANS, Law Celina Sigma Delta Kappa SOFRON FECHETE, Law Youngstown Delta Theta Phi GENE FETTER, Phys. Ed. Marion Theta Kappa Phi ROBERT FLOREA, Pre-Dent. London Amvets JOHN FOLTZ, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi Sigma Pi WILLIAM FUNK, Law Athens BERNARD HARRISON, Pharm Toledo Alpha Epsilon Pi ROBERT HOERLE, Law Ada Sigma Delta Kappa Amvets Q'- vs. ll? 6 P fa X' -L F M f . - - fir FTE!-f,,'L, 0- .-'T H .., ,j .. fi ly 5' f l A, i f 9 1 L R A A , ba, ,in 'Q I l . -Y-hr A 5- A I X M rj, . ts V 7: if-W wi r A iw' A ,I J - ' E ' 55 'A I i Eb A '- - . . fl i- Y . -aa.. '51, f.F 5. 1R ','f4.., P' 1' 1 ii s- ' ' - iff ' First Row: Foltz, Hunter, Hoerle, King, Kusta, Ladd, Leshy, Lewis, Motter. , Second Row: Monroe, Mabee, Nichols, Penn, Purdy, Purvis, Rees, Reese, Quinn. WILLIAM HUNTER, Pharm. Lima Sigma Phi Epsilon RAYIVIOND HURSH, Bus. Ad. Bellville Kappa Psi JEAN KINKLEY, Nurs. Lima Ind. Girls Club DONALD KHNIG, ASME Jackson Center Phi Mu Delta JOHN KUMMLER, Law Toledo Delta Theta Phi LADONNA KUSTA, El. Ed. Ada CLEO LADD, Phys. Ed. Oakwood GEORGE LESHY, Law Bridgeport Sigma Delta Kappa CAROLL LEWIS, Law Russells Point Delta Theta Phi Sigha Phi Epsilon LUCILLE LEWIS, L. A. Lima BERNARD LONDON, Pre-Dent. Ada KENNETH MCCLEARY, ASME Findlay ROBERT MABEE, Pre-Law Mansfield Sigma Pi, Amvets EDWARD MADIGAN, Pharm. Linesville, Pa. Kappa Psi ARTHUR MARCOVICH, Pharm. E. Chicago, Ind. FREDERICK MAY!-IEW, Law Ada Sigma Delta Kappa ALBERT MONROE, Soc. Nevada Phi Mu Delta, Amvets CLAIR MOTTER, Bus. Ad. Ada ARVINE NICHOLS, Law Canton Delta Theta Phi GENE NICHOLS, Law Ashland Sigma Delta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi IRENE NICHOLS, Law Ada ALBERT OPATRNY, Pharm. Cleveland Kappa Psi JANICE PARK, Pharm. Jamestown, N. Y. Ind. Girls Club HOMER PELLEGRINON, L.A. Toledo BARBARA PENN, L.A. New Vienna DONALD PURDY, Law Celina Delta Theta Phi CHARLES PURVIS, Pharm. New Haven, Ind. Delta Sigma Phi JAMES QUINN, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi JOHN QUmN, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi Were you bored Miss Herring? UNIIIB RICHARD RECKER, Law Ottawa GEORGE REED, Law Urichsville RALPH REES, Pharm. Geneva Kappa Psi VIRGIL REESE, ASME Lima Nu Theta Kappa RICHARD RINEDOLT, Law Arcadia Delta Theta Phi PAUL RIZOR, Law Ada Delta Theta Phi Delta Sigma Phi WILLIAM ROWLAND, Law Athens DORIS ST. LOUIS, Ed. Bellefontaine Phi Chi CAROL SAMMETINGER, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi CARL SCHELICH, Law Celina HARRY SCI-IIPPER, Pharm. Lima Phi Mu Delta EARL SCI-IMIDT, Law New Carlisle. Sigma Delta Kappa LOREN SCI-IOENBERGER, Law Upper Sandusky Sigma Delta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi E: .sw I girsg Row: Quinn, Schipper, Shaffer, W. Shaffer, Sheeter, Schoenberger, Snider ny er. Second Row: Stedcke, St. Louis, Thursby, VanAtta, Warner, Weiner, Williams, R Wright, W. R. Wright. I V I l r -wr' X Rh . DEFORD SCHWALL, Law Wauseon Delta Sigma Phi JAMEs SHAREER, AIEE Forest Phi Mu Delta Nu Theta Kappa WAYNE SHAFFER, Law Wauseon Sigma Delta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi G'EORGE.SI-IEETER, ASCE Delphos ROGER SMALL, Law Defiance PAUL SNIDER, Phys. Ed. Spencerville FRANK SNYDER, L.A. Carmichaels, Pa. CLIFFORD SPAID, Eng. Bellevue MARJORIE STEDCKE, Music Celina Phi Chi GEORGE THURSEY, ASME Pittsburgh, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi EUGENE TOMLINSON, AIEE Lima do for one .... What cz college education can WILLIAM TURNER, Law Lima Delta Theta Phi Sigma Phi Epsilon ROBERT VANATTA, Chem. Green Springs ANDREW VLAHOS, Law Akron Delta Theta Phi JOSEPH VONKLINGLER, Law Ada ROBERT WALDORF, Pharm. Canton WILLIAM WEAVER, Law Bryan Sigma Delta Kappa THOMAS WERE, Law Ada Delta Theta Phi Delta Sigma Phi EDWARD WHITE, Pre-Med. Risingsun WILLIAM WARNER, Pharm. Zanesville Kappa Psi WALTER WIENER, AIEE St. Marys VERNON WHILIAMS, AIEE Ada Nu Theta Kappa WARREN WOLF, Law Tiffin Delta Theta Phi Delta Sigma Phi ROGER WRIGHT, ASME Ada WILLIAM R. WRIGHT, ASME Bellefontaine JACK T. ZELLER, Law Glenmont Sigma Delta Kappa U I0ll gg-w 'Yr- A as A ' . Riii iii gg i i ' , A 'v,' tg I' D , . ul .,i3...r TOP LESLIE ACKERMAN Ind. Arts Ada WAYNE AILES Engineering Pemberton FOREST ALBERT Pre-Dent. Payne LAWRENCE ALLISON Ind. Arts Salineville WILHELM AMs'rU'rz Pharmacy Bluffton ROGER BARRICK Pre-Law Minerva EUGENE BEELER Bus. Ad. Lima REBA LOUISE BUEss Elem. Ed. Forest in in EW RW - ERE.: G ' Y , Ay L - Y 4 V - A A L J ,Q G- 1 .Qf-:Fig . use . -ew! . - . A 4 f' f f , - ,A . H A : 1-gf A , . '-1 ' 'X R ' A , ,. I , f i -r - . ,E - A Ee' A f e 4 ' H- R Z -A + I . , A . . A H AV 1 . 4 - ra ' ' J 'sgir' r I - H - E V A: nt' 'h 'N 3 aff. 1 'N' 'R' M, l i - ' X Q I K ii . XE. ,,Er Mis .',. F. . 'X A -T X1 :Hi - ' l if-' 1 ii Bi ff L X ' if MIDDLE RICHARD BOWLING Bus. Ad. Lisbon JACK DEE CAREY Music' Ada CHESTER CHAMBERS Pre-Chem. Luckey DEAN COOPER Pre-Chem. New Rochelle, N. Y. CHARLES W. DALEY Pre-Law Lima SHERMAN DALLAS Bus. Ad. Ada ARTHUR DAVIS Pre-Law Mogadore GARY- H. DODDS Engineering Cardington THEODORE DROUGHT Engineering Geneva simply loves cold weather 0PlI0 UBES BOTTOM EVELYN EICH Pharmacy Poland JACK FRYSINGER Engineering Lima J AMES GANNON Pre-Journ. Xenia EARL GINGRICH Engineering New Carlisle CHARLES GOULD Pre-Law Canton ROBERT GRIFFITHS Pharmacy Dayton ROWENA MAE HARRIS Pharmacy Zanesville RAYMOND HURSH Bus. Ad. Belleville .'-fr a-- 1 -ef ,EWR '- 5- -2' . gli uf , iw if ':,. .. ..-..-'.,'...i. 1 w :3,kE. E .,. . R y -.H .. 1 ,I . 2 an 5 Q .V . .. Wxl. . W ' W f X 'U'i' . fH4f13l ' I i 'T .I 9 ' . 4,, 4 P -V ,I li F l '+' ' .. .F ' '. .. Sf. ' fare.-.Z'5,f:i ner: ' ' '1 . We . -. ,ren , I. I J -I., A X! , X 'I I I, ' m ' M 5 . .' I ' 1 L ' f l , ' ,I .4 'J , in Y hr ,, 1 v ,E A .2 ,5 r ' 9- 1 X T N xx N. ISN, . . W 4 H: .. ' I, h -Ak fl ' l. W M 1 X . - ' A -9-f 4 I I '1 ' 3 'f V i A ' A v' , J -.. -' - M 6 , .I 1 .N 3, I Q NA.. ' ' X -. 1 I? ' - W V, MN ' ' mr. T' -. 5 . i if r'-R lfdh! V, :U-HJ' 'Q xii . 'fr i ' .,, ,fig . , 342, ffh ' ' ' lil I , - Umar . 1112 J' .ml-TM-I ,I lT:Tff L' ' . - ., . ' 'Q 1' ., H , ful I e V 2 B 5, N 1 .T 1 U .I W 614 I l in - n if i Ki ii VP R' i if ' 'Y l . L' lj - 61' I, I. .af . N J' I1 T - ' - 4: . . ' if . I. xl , J' h- I I ' - 5 ' , .' 1 - N Emi ir 'f A , 11? . in A1 ' . iifif .L L.I.' 9' ' TOP MIDDLE BOTTOM NOIEMAN JENNINGS HAPERSET MARTIN DONALD ROBERTSON ngineering armacy Pre-Law Lima Cleveland Cleveland JUNIOR .LEICISISEN RICHARD F. MOON HARRY SHEPARD Bus. . Pre-Med. Engineering Elida Upper Sandusky Richmond Hill, N. Y. KARL JOHNSON Engineering E. Orange, Vt. LoIs JOHNSON Elem. Ed. Alger FRANK A. KOENIG Pre-Law Wapakoneta RICHARD LAUCK Engineering Findlay RALPH LEONARD Pharmacy Lakewood HARRY LITWINOWICZ Pharmacy Cleveland ARTHUR MARCOVICH Pharmacy E. Chicago, Ind. Two fcrces Enuf said? ROBERT L. NOBLE Pharmacy St. Marys CHARLES NORTON Pre-Law Fremont DONALD M. O'BRIEN Pre-Law West Union ERIC M. OLSON Engineering Pt. Allegheny, Pa. JOHN G. POCHAL Bus. Ad. Farrell ARDEN ROBERSON Phys. Ed. Ada UPHO ROBERT SREES Bus. Ad. Lima ARTHUR SPII-:GAL Engineering Oceola JOHN T. STEWART Pharmacy Greenfield EDWIN R. VASEY Pharmacy Hubbard CLAY VANWINKLE Pharmacy Mt. Vernon JAMES E. WALTERS Pharmacy Ada RUSSELL WRIGHT Pharmacy Ford Cliff, Pa. GBES M8 1 .., .eee f 1 I Milf rl W -w . g V Y HN 'mv W , A V All sy 'I X if ,. 6 If U L1 fi, lm '46 fl N . R . ' lgg gf . .T 4 V ,. . . 'LW' -.gift - --1 W ' -- , . ,J ' -:' bv . ay ' . QL., ' 5?'i. f A 4 4 1 '-ri 'N' T . . 41- ll ff, fb .T -Q ' X . 1' 1 I z .- 'lf-!Ff.?5'l if 'qt -TLS ' 4 N 'f'1JfM'fH'! f' I-'. .,, E, , K rvlu' ,J - M4343fg41AMM . M, Q ff-52. 1 ,. 1. . .. ' 2,515 , , S-3' 1 i ' 0 W . x. :Q - ILL-. V Q if If l :Et ...Bi it , 5 Q .Y . E A Vg NIE A T -!i..:!.M I sr V .4 ,Q g V 4 5 uix V ini! it b W... A. T.. . . . va . 'f'7 'QE I ' .. wg 6- Pl . .Y we F fh ef' 'af - mf' EW, A 'iff 6' ' -3--' ' 4. ' in fe' ...-. I T .-'J we ' I T A M v. .. ZIZ - 'V ' mf ljgy, 1, I ' if- lfjjgl A 'i i ,fxwvuw A , . 6-.A .X . ii-L wif: 3333 1 ' 'ii 1 i TOP MIDDLE BOTTOM EVERETT ALBORN JAMES BANKS NORMAN BRAUTIGAM Pharmacy L.A. Phys. Ed. Findlay Ada Botkins FRANK ANAST WOODROW BARCLAY WALTER BINKMAN Pharmacy Pre-Forestry Bus. Ad. Findlay Bluffton Celina H1-:Rm-:RT ARLT EDWARIJ BARANOWSKI WALTER P. BROWN Engineering Pre-Law Pre-Theo. Kenilworth, N. J. Cleveland Jeromesville STANLEY ARTER BETTY 'BEATTY BERNICE BUCHNER Pre-Med Pre-Med L.A. Crestline Latrobe, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. DONALD ARP CLYDE. BENTIETT NED WYLIE BUSH Engineering Engineering Sec. Ed. Lowellville Upper Sandusky Botkins ROBERT AUKERMAN JOHN BLACKWOOD BERNICE BYRNE ' Engineering Phys. Ed. Pharmacy Lima Bellefontaine E. Liverpool JOSEPH BAKER ELWARD BLETZACKER- ANTHONY CALTAGIRONE Pre-Law Bus. Ad. Pre-Med. Marion Mt. Gilead Lowellville FRES Study period a la Turner Hull L ww as-B .saw 1 N ' D' f -.4 -.:. - - .. -,f '- O- '- '1ii', ' 'Wifi ' if 3 2 . 'ffl . . I.,-1 - .fa If as-, 4, . 'Z EY? QE RQ gui HQ 3 in. lu.. ,JM 11' ' :I A E ' w w : -22 : 1 K I , ' - ,, 'S . L, 1. .. 'Bef R 1' 'f 1 .e QQ-gl .--' 1' - A - ' , ,, -. MALE.. Y... , , A, J g QM, TOP MIDDLE JAMES CAMBELL HERBERT Cox LOWELL DnsRLE Pharmacy Pre-Law Engineering Uhrichsville Arcanum Cincinnatti GEORGE CHOURIS PAUL CROSBY RICHAIRD DrxON PV?aSrSn??cy Plgfjbsld. Engineering a z on e zma Figs CHURCH MARY FUNNIc1:'GHAM DONALD DOME ys. Ed. E em. E . Engineering Bristolville E. Cleveland Kenton GEORGE CLABAUGH NORBERT DAv1s ROBERT DRAKE PLrej?Chem. B15 Ad. Engneering a ayette zma arion ROBEET SLARK EQRIL DEN1sON BETTs5E1DUEE1Evo1RE ec. . armacy . . Celina Findlay Cloverdale WALLACE COLEMAN EDWIN DENZEL RALPH DUNBAR Phys. Ed. Engrneering Pharmacy Ada Pt. Washmgton, N. Y. Youngstown JOHN COLLIER WILLIAM DERRY WARREN DUNCAN Engineering Pharmacy Engineering Rochester, N. Y. Barnesmlle Lzma m1i l'l: i14 Branch College Engineers . . . Yeh. we know it's posed! FRESH in f 1 1 . i Z '5- 1 XS' '95 I KX .ei TOP ELWOOD EDINOE Phys. Ed. Sylvania ROBERT ELLIOT Pre-Med. Ada ERNEST EVANS Engineering Celina JACK EWAN Pharmacy Bryan JAMES FELLER Engineering Findlay DUANE FENDER Phys. Ed. Ada DEAN FERRIS Pre-Law Youngstown R MIDDLE HERBERT FISHER Pre-Law Wellington ANN FREDERICKS L.A. Youngstown WAYNE FROST Engineering Findlay GORDON FRYE Engineering Oak Harbor THOMAS GAGLEY Pre-Law Ada FRANCIS GAIETTO Engineering Tiffin LAWRENCE GAIETTO Engineering Tiffin FRESH Two pretty gals and A Stage! BOTTOM THAD GARDNER L.A. Ada EUGENE GRABER L.A. Plain City GORDON GRAYBILL Pre-Law Massillon EDWARD GREN Phys. Ed. Cleveland HAROLD GROVER Pre-Med. Toledo JAMES HEAKEN Pharmacy Uhrichsville HENRY HINDS Pre-Law Lima 'Q rw' Y :D ff: V f . Q '-N 1 if 1 A' L7 iff f I I 'T' H ally EA N I it...- 'si TOP MIDDLE JACK Hovls GEORGE KIRK Pharmacy Pre-Journ. Youngstown Princeton, Ind. WESTON HOOK ELROY KITZLER Bus. Ad. Engineering Honolulu Carey WALLACE JENKINS ROBERT KNOX Pre-Law Engineering Lakewood Conneaut WILLIAM JOHNSON ROBERT KROFT Phys. Ed. Engineering Lorain Ada LESTER JOHNSON ROBERT KUHN Engineering Engineering Ney Greensburg, Pa CORA BELLE KAUFMAN PAUL E. LACY I Music Pharmacy Ada Anna DOROTHY KEMPHER RICHARD LEE Elem. Ed. Engineering Lafayette Mt. Gilead Wywbf f?Ljy2'g 'f 1 1 5?1,:.y?,,i.?,f-Ei, ' lj, I NL., Lb . 5 E -- k s. -R I - ' J' m'if' . 'J' He's not airaid . . . ' - 1, -- - k'1J'!1'g,,, 4' 'J ' ' u . g I it never goes off . . ' we --, 33. . I FRESH -- . 7, Q I- 151' BOTTOM RICHARD LEPLEY Pre-law Bucyrus GEORGE MAMBOURG Engineering Ada JAMES MART! Pharmacy Fair Oak, Pa. CALVIN MEINKE Pharmacy Findlay PAUL MCALLISTER Pre-Law Marion GEORGE MCCOY Engineering Ada. GEORGE MCDONALD Engineering Lima RICHARD MCGARVEY Phys. Ed. Bellefontaine I 1 . 4.51 -I Qv- fr:-Y L . E351 I aw, x urmubxf ,W mil ' I A ,gly- REEF 1 RZ '1 Hull., La- , if Q . QQ, Y 'N A gf LEM? :QV , J- vi' I , .f. X fe -1 42-7 ,i I if , 'fmill ' if rf- A ' , , Y fi, A I A 1 I' A g 452 . iffy 4 ij 1-fl' , , ' , U 3 '-as . - ' F f' 'lf' I' A 'X-F -Q V . A i i' ' gn A. g g i! A iff- Tl Ai , 3,11 - vga-, A I A- : ' fr - K R,-FA ' Q V 5, R R.: -1 Q X A vi X w +5 ' O' . ' ' 3 . ..:. : . 'v-Q eslgg 5, ' .Z ' 135 4 li? i' -ieflfxr A up . 5 ' fflifl' R A' f L '51, - 'r B TOP PENELOPE MASTERIDES Music Campbell KENNETH MILLER Pharmacy Fostoria DALE MITCHELL Engineering Bellefontaine J OSEPH MITCHELL L.A. Pittsburgh, Pa. GIFEORD MOREY Engineering Poughkeepsie, N. Y. HARRY MURRAY Bus. Ad. Bellaire DAVIS MYERS Pre-Law Pioneer FBES E MIDDLE LEWIS NICHOLS Pre-Theo Kenton ROYCE NICHOLAS Pre-Med. Lima RAYMOND NIEBES Pharmacy Mentor MARTHA NOBLE Elem. Ed. St. Marys LDEN NONNAMAKER Pre-Med. Rawson FRANK PALMER Engineering Waukegan, Ill. LOUISE PHALEN Pharmacy Troy Izzcrtt sooo . . . BOTTOM WALTER PI-IALEN Pharmacy Troy ROBERT PFIRSCH Engineering Bucyrus' MACK PREDMORE Pharmacy Zanesville THEODORE PARSELL Pre-Law Marion BURREL REX Pre-Journ. Harrod THOMAS ROEEY Pharmacy Urichsville ARDEN Ross Ind. Arts Ada JERRY RYMER Pharmacy St. Clairsville L55 J., . E Y : sa iw Q H E 2 H K or -LE. is-f A A R O 1 1 wr I A '.. .wi Y! al gn L . .M rfucl-Univ., , ,Y ei: mvi-Iwi'- .f , , ' w I IL '- . -,I Y X in - Kr gl Gr ik, cw la , 11 ay ' 'if if , 1 L , A K . I 1 w Q' ,F 6 A Q- ' ?g', .ZI- ,Y as iii ,. A , I .Oi 5 I .. ' 1 1. 'R L 1 3 -:': f L 4-.' f , ' iv' v ,Q R Y' X I, 2 Wx, , ' if , A f - R TOP FRANK SANDERSON Pre-Forestry Grover Hill CHARLES SASS Education Port Clinton CHARLES SCHEIEER Pharmacy Bucyrus LUCILLE SHENK L.A. Elida JOSEPH SPROUL Phys. Ed. Waynesfield MARVIN STALEY Ind. Arts Sidney STEPHEN STANFORD Engineering Massillon DONALD STEPFIELD Pharmacy Doylestown s--'-- warn' fa 'N' X X if 4 i , . , X ,lean Ru. w 1. . 1. 'A - gi if f ' WL, , L .-.. fxf, wr fl g'f..g,5, 5 Z I MIDDLE ROBERT STEVENSON Phys. Ed. Alger IRVIN STRAYER Engineering Spencerville HAROLD SWARTZ Pre-Law LeMoyne HELEN TAIFALIDAKIS Pharmacy Youngstown WALTER THAYER Pre-Law Conneaut EDWARD TAYLOR Pre-Law Dayton JOSEPH THOMAS Pharmacy Martins Ferry HARRY THOMPSON L.A. Adena i Brcrnch college again. What's he lookin' ai? av, I x ZX. 1 f'l hh 5, R 1 V X 5 ., 1 Y I I us x ' f' U, 5? 'Q '4-E q x 64? 11 it if ll' ' 'Sn-., .K g f,- , if 14' K - .. :ix , V. ,X I BOTTOM ROBERT UNDERWOOD Bus. Ad. Ada TED WALKER Pre-Law Coshocton DALE WELTY Engineering Pandora JANE WERST English Sidney ROBERT WHITAKER Pharmacy Lakewood GEORGE WILLIAMS Phys. Ed. Utical HAROLD WINKLER Pharmacy New Philadelphia ROLLINS YALE Pre-Forestry Ada FRESH L Y' DONALD E. AMMON BARBARA ANGELL ROSEMARY ARNOLD REGINA BENNY RONALD D. BISHOP CARL D. BOWMAN MARGARET BOWMAN MARY BRENEMAN CARL BREzOvITs ROBERT P. BRUIN ROBERT T. BURNS DONALD BUTTS CHARLOTTE BUDD THOMAS E. CARR CAROL JANE CLARK RICHARD D. CLOVER JOHN B. COLLINS, JR. JOHN W. CORNWELL ROBERT CRAIL ALEX DEJOHN JACK D. DOTY WILLIAM J. DUFFY LEON A. DUNNING MARGARET L. EVERSOLE RICHARD FIKE ULRIC E. FINDLAY RICHARD W. FISHER DONALD FRAIL FLOYD R. GORMAN ROBERT E. GORMAN OLIVER B. HADSELL ROBERT S. HALL CLAIR JOSEPH HIGGINS DONALD W. HOFMANN IRIS B. HOHL FRED H. HOWARD ROBERT E. HYDE DAVID F. JONES EDWARD L. KANE EARL KIMPEL, JR. JAMES M. KING HAROLD E. KNUPP JOHN J. LAROTONDA ERWIN C. MAURER, JR. LIMA BB CII KENT MILLER MARGUERITE MILLER RUSSEL O. MILLER NORMAN NEELY HERMAN R. PARENT SYDNEY R. PAUL ROBERT D. ROETHLISBERGER JACK H. ROLEES JAMES E. ROMEY THOMAS R. SCHROEDER ROBERT E. SIIVIMONS JAMES R. SINIFF ROBERT W. SMITH JAMES M. THOMAS MURIEL TEITELBAUM REED THOMPSON LEON L. VANAUTREVE JAMES O. WAYSACK ROBERT F. WEIS ROBERT E. WILLET WINONA WINEGARDNER ELMER E. WILLEKE CULLEGE 1 A 4 'N r ' if' f . ' I 1 ., w Yigiifj 534 C The Music Department, under the direction of Professor Karl A. Roicler, has this year moved rapidly towards its pre-war position in the music Worldi The presentation of many professional artists as Well as a full year of student entertain- ment. placed music as one ol the more important parts of University Life. 54 F! 1 . 1,549 nf! mf-Ju fm ,A X 9 --5 1 F Ima lfllWl i 1 f l l NK-Lf' Lmmfmwf' 4- '- sf ,QL ' , Lge , The Ohio Northern Chorus-Choir is maintained to represent a dis- tinct cultural phase of University life and to make possible the enjoy- ment of good music. It is traditional for the organization to give sev- eral local concerts and to make out-of-town performances each year. Karl A. Roider, voice professor and head of the Music Department, displayed much interest and worked endlessly for perfection in the Well-balanced group. 56 1 ' 'fx A '1'f'ff-QR' X1 ,f - ': QWWN. 1RUl, - 2Em WW UW l, :,, xg ,,- A ,, 1 J xmk, 541.7 4 L1N! - NJ! .Lljjib lf 'lhey visiied mcmy cc nearby ciiy DUONPIANO CGNCERT Nationally known pianists were featured early in March under the sponsorship of the Music Department. Harry Watts and George McNabb, members of the faculty of the Eastman School of Music, presented a delightful and varied program ranging from Bach to Gershwin. Watts 6. McNabb 5 5,5 ery- 1-- ,V-V Vm? af' I 11 4- .V I L ,fl J' V irglihsaygf 3 . , V V-n xii., 'Wi' W' f lt V1' VI FL 4 I Q I V 5, fm VV V V V V V -,W J V - V ' 'F FMT' ' ' 'll K ,Q 9 E v.- fj' eVIA ' .I- lp 9 -fu Aff - A . ' , V 1 t f liif . 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' ff 'J J K t l ,Vlf f' ' V ' sVV':V' V'fV',V ,f , V', IJIVAVV ffl, Y 'J VfQgfr'f W V1 1 ,MJ ff :QT-13, V- M ,V,f ,g7,j3V'V,VV,,f.3,Vf,! ,V VQ,V'V 'yy V! ,ff 13, my 'J V -if ,VW N919 VJ ' , 1 VV' .F ' 3137? VVYATIVV V fjfff V' Vw' flffnf i ' JJ mf' W, ,!,1.V ,V' M ,N-,N ' 1 5 V ,Vf V, V 4,7 ,VA-, V, , V 11,1 V , -V -V-Vi: rg V . 1, 4 m vw V, V. '- X V,V'1 IV UV X35 ' MV f'44yf N W -f:.fVVVfk1Vi'fW fjff , xjrlz V ., YV, I V- '- V- V .A,Q1.',-1 Vjf DX ' V211 Q1 ' 14 ll V' V., cfm, Lili! l V VQCVEAVHV-'X VV VV Vg: MV ,if V V , ' , , ,prf-' 5 , ' VVAV' ,filf , - -N, , PJ IVV 'Jig ' 1' 'V' Vf ,Wfi-'VV 'ff :Lf KV - iff 1 f, 4-SAT rf V' 'V I :V V Vwrff Vs vw-.VV 1'-' if-H -Vu: VV VV, .V V VV V VVVVV VV VV- M VV ,H f,1VA Vw 'Vw 'VV XVVV VVVv'r,Vf!,V V VV 'if-CV. 9 H f W ' W V, 75' Rv 'xV'1,::-FW' H' X' , V -, , VV V VVV 7' . V V 'Vu VVV VU VV I N x VL 'V'!4L1fxfVf fi:1,JV,VV.V.w- V Vw-iii if ,ff ' V-X 5 U N , N K' V ,ff xx CTV, ,, jp, 3 X , ,Cixi IV' AA. I Cd, 4. V1 ML'-jk H ' 7,7 'Ki 'V J ,191--'if ! j15?.'fl if Vf VV , R A-I, 4 VQVQVVV5,-V, XV' fif,5f,:fj-if V V RV V.-P1 Li VW H f' VV V if TVN Vfiwlf' '77-Q., f x'V. ff 'V I! ffl MPRJV, 5 I -ii! ,,', V V, - V V 4:--, -V 1. JV ' 1 ,Vf V V K ' Ll 'V!g,1!V'! '?51f x': 'f?', 1'fV',Z4L' V'Qfi'gif:9, ii -- -- ,QV , 59 ., V, Ali, 747, V 'N-ffrf' L 11. f Q I I down Main St. charged the four hundrecl . . . After backing up the football squad during several games and being a prominent part of the Homecoming Parade, the University Band presented a concert in Lehr Auditorium during the winter quarter. Mid-year graduations diminished the group but after having regained its strength early in the spring, the band presented its last concert of the year from the lawn of Presser Hall in May. ypt yplce... ' a ai g -si 5 5 Q , .1 h 5? , 2 Ai fl 'f nz f 1 if I. 1 -fa A lr lruiin 1 -' ii fi ri-- J. x L :LL 'ki , ,J 1 .. ,. -lk --- .--w -K--., -4 N....., -. -v-.1 --W H, V1.5 A Q T-13 PI.. 3 ., ,L Hi.. ,., J- Yi., , Miss Mary Phillips accompanist Prof. Wm. Lamale organist Mrs. Lynn McClelland contralto Mr. James Baker bass Miss Nadine Speer soprano Mr. Dale Marshall tenor Prof. Karl Roider director F' cd:-.Q il as mfl asf T Q EE Lf 'yji fm, M pg L, Ll l.r Annually the University's Music Department presents the yuletide masterpiece, Handel's Messiah Many voices other than those of the student choir were included in the chorus. Following the presen- tation this year, a reception was held in Alumnae Hall in honor of the guest soloists. 63 ft -v-r . Prof. William Lamale teaches Miss Florence Rea the necessary finesse for organ-ization. Tenor William Coffing and Marjorie Stedcke as seen from the Wings in Lehr Auditorium. f National Honorary Band F'l'CllfGT7'LiiT3J Peter Aquilina Prof. Karl Roider Gerald Shuster Edward Taylor Q, I.. f fi? XX! N Q, SZ It was through these extra-curricular organizations that students of the Uni- versity truly developed their classroom knowledge. Without the many clubs, associations, etc., no institution can breathe the life that makes its name im- mortal to the graduate. 1 A I - A il V , . my, ,,,-A W Il L w V A e i ts al swf i i if rf-'w' i X- av, f., A, 1 t 'nn - V X. I' - 35 , Ca , , , ' i .. ' K 'J ' .:-3 A A ' il ' A 454, 1- if PQF- f A , f 1 j A :v 13941 H 1.4-.cf l eg- 4 A , Badalian, USNR, Coppess, Army, Cunahan, Army, Gillespie, Navy, Haytcher, Army, Hicks, USNR, Hollinger, AAF, Hunt, AAF, Jensen, Army, Karnes, CG, Koenig, AAF, Kreisher, Navy, Mahoney, Army, Powell, Navy, Rodocker, Army, Sears, NAC, Sellers, AAF, Shingler, WAVES, Shryock, AAF, Trueblood, USNR, Trueblood, MC CWRJ, Walls, Army, Watson, Navy, Wojciechowski, Army, Zeller, AAF, Mabee, Navy, Florea, Army, Monroe, Army, Niles, Army, Dr. Hilliard, Navy. Cmiss1ngD Crowe, Army, Dawson, Navy, Dodd, Army, Gambill, Navy, Hoerle, AAF, Hosenfeld, Army, Sousley, ASF, Wisner, USMC, Myers, AAF, Lally, AAF, Knapp, Army. Replacing the veteran's organization of 1946, the Harry E Gossard Post No. 62 of the University Amvets came into existence at Ohio Northern dur ing the fall quarter. They took part in the chapel Armistice Day SGIVICSS presented interesting films, assisted in social affairs and aided in veteran s relations. QNNIW is Q aff' L ll my 1,15 IAA X fighting cs new kind of war the Battle of ONU MPH li 1 i ,. ,,,, .. it , L as I . if ik? , , .,,,, , ,, US NESS ,S S I e T Misses Pugh, Metzger, Naveau, Lincoln. Standing: Dallas, Murray, Motter, Haytcher, Bowling, Spees, Dankworth, Hursh, Bahadur. The club was organized late in the winter quarter and though in embryo it had a well planned calendar from its beginning. The purpose of the group is to inform business minded students by introducing successful business men of the nation. X Xi .. A 4 , teacher lecrrns now N, I C' I 11-X L - Sn. C, S 68 110' Q X - I' N Wojciechowski, Hinds, Motter, Sidey, Maj. Deming. TIIET LPII PIII i Theta Alpha Phi, the national honorary dramatic fraternity, was opened in 1921 to every student on campus who was interested in dramatic Work. Membership was based on dramatic ability and activity in stage groups. Its purpose was to develop the techniques of the theatre in its members. Q 00005 F 'au i 69 if ll 00 o 'ii 0 'H Q 0 vi O 55 ', X1 S I UBTIIEB PLAYER l E? 9 Q ga Half :V 'v Sitting: McAtee,.Kennedy, Mathews, Carr, Taifalidakis, Sneary, Motter, Hinds, Sidey. Standmg: Aquilma, Fisher, Gillespie, Baker, Shyrock, Fredericks, Butler. One of the few old campus organizations that remained alive during the war years, the Northern Players presented two plays in 1947. The Ryan Girl appeared in February and Blithe Spirit in May, both under the able direction of stage veteran, Major Cliffe Deming. Membership in the players group is open to all students of the University interested in the theatre. no. this way! 70 N sa?-ar USTBIAL 3 1 1 .I BT CL First Row: Workman, Ladd, Ross, Allison, Hutton, Ackerman, Williams. Second Row: Fry, McCoy, Rothchild, Shingler, Ridley, Pellegrinon. Third Row: Advisor Kittle, Gallagher, Staley, Crosby, Brandigan, Dahill, Topliff. Absent: Johnson, Brautigan, Polite, Church, Hayden, Miller, Steele. One of the newer organizations of the campus, the IAC has grown stead- ily since its origin during the winter quarter. Under the advisorship of Prof. Kittie the group meets frequently to discuss the handling of woods and metals. XHII N X P' ,,',,,,...-4 ITITIIIUIN DIO CL - ix- 4-v , - vu-. ,wi ' . Sitting: Bushong, Dibble, Lowell, Advisor Walter. Standing: Ernsberger, Amstutz, Ailes, Council, Williams, Oberly. Missing: Halfhill, Blaine, Carnahan. One of the smallest but most technical groups on campus, the Northern Radio Club was again an extra-curricular name in the fall quarter. Due to war-time restrictions on amateur transmission the old organization was forced to disband in 1942. The purpose of the men responsible for station WSAOT today is to put Ohio Northernon the amater radio map as well as to give themselves practical application in their future profession. but did it work when they finished? 73. tgps Student llristiail ssociation First Row: Thomas, Cowan, Bushong, Brown, Motter. Second Row: Stedcke, Winter, Noble, Sager, Miss Lincoln. Third Row: Rider, Haines, Vannorsdall, Mitchell, Fisher. Absent: B. Baker, L. Bennett, Carr, Chambers, W. Creps, Danner, DuDevoire, Eich, C. B, Kaufman, D. Miller, A. Monroe, Risner, Sheeter, W. Shingler, Zimmerman, St. Louis, Buess, Harris, Kempher, H. Rider, Sloane. Basically a religious group, the activities presented by this organization were of a far reaching influence on the campus. Such programs as their Fine Arts Appreci- ation Hour, international relations through World Brotherhood programs, and their sharing in the World Student Service Fund Campaign and sponsorship of the Christ- . mas Vespers pageant, contributed im- mensely to the rejuvination of campus life. ii11in'ilup.. F110 MTIIE N ATIVITY The Christmas Vespers Pageant was presented in 1946 by the Student Christian Association. A Northern tradition, the Pageant was presented in several parts: a reading by Major Cliffe Deming entitled Why the Chimes Rang g The Nativity , an original orientation by Ben Riderg and a group of appropriate selections by the Chorus-Choir. The entire program was conducted in a pious atmosphere created by candlelight which was used throughout the ceremony. It brought to the audience the significance of the season in which it was presented. 75 Brown, Underwood, Nichols, Rev. Tinsler, Dean Potter, Rider, Hare. Absent: Carna- han, Halfhill, High. ' INISTEBI L ASSUCI TIO Organized in 1916, the association was recently reactivated in the University. With Rev. Marion Tinsler as advisor, they met Weekly with the purpose of develop- ing spiritual life and discussing the prob- lems connected with their field. Rev. Rider-to be. 16 WIVIES C UH First Row: Bowling, Oxley, Dallas, Bryant, Rothchild, Smith. Second Row: Hodson, Foltz, Lotzbaugh, Dodds, Hutton. Third Row: Beuter, Hausbrach, Todd, Potter, Croft. Fourth Row: Chorpening, Mahoney, Ailes, Jennings, Maurer, Black, Brush, Han- naman. With the influx of war veterans and their families in 1945, a new club was established which promised to last several years. Made up of the Wives of University students, the ,group met bi-weekly and presented edueational as well as recrea- tional prograrns. It was still a growing or- ganization at the date of publication. Mrs, lvlfliitely sews it up :lor Bill . . . 77 Sitting: Bloom, Conover, Wood, Prof. Accountius, Doty, Van Atta, Cooper. Standing: Byrns, Boblitt, Kelly, Johns, Varner, Clark, Brinkmeyer, Cochensparger, G 'ff'th . ri 1 s Absent: Chambers, Whitney, Marcovich, Keller. The anniversary year found the Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society reorganizing on North- ern's campus. Working for a bigger and better organ- ization,-they held frequent meetings to gain practical knowledge of the science of chemistry. Some of the discussion topics Were: What to Expect, in Graduate School , Industrial Chemistry , and Relation of Chemistry to Pharmacy . Qu Ci 'Qs X be ' Q Doc Smith . . . piano man X X!! If 21 ' 7 X O O IO! -9 - if ll ' LN 9 ,,,,. -- . 3+:. 4-',,,..-1' 3, . ,. I ,.,..f-- - M M ' : ' s Y 3 1, f uf , '- Amy,- -K P ' :fi ,,. .psf A' 1, Egg .91 ff, I . A' ' W- 'fig - ,. . ' -'. U ' V . iwul E ' V if ,. ,, If ' ' W' . Q e HW' wa., ., Q, T Li? 5g? 9f'w at ' 1-Q11 S ' .- ', Q: Q .1 . . SQ 3 7 ,Iva Y .rf -vii J ,..- pf . ,fr ,,.,-f' , .., ullf i 49 qfgfinv., ,m,,,,LX, L rv'-W-my-,,E,4,-1-v f ?' ' as - 79 ', 'if x.. , ' ' . .' , I , 3 'S I . .46 ' ' '5 I , 55:5 . A 5, 341 i A 1 N ,, .3 K !fyi l.7mAIr . A- ' li . -3:14 1 ff l? ' ... ' ' gi, . vw wg, ., M ,,. I 1 Q X ' ,'ff--'ff' ,., H ', ' ' 1 A , ' ' .- Jr N X ' Q JF., ' 5 .jab M pm 'I A -3? f x 4 L 5 f V . Ny 'E W I 'l Nh P L -I . ,,N , Q' Q, a . 1 1, D . ,V 7 V H . V V 5 4 - x K ' f . , ,J if ' , 9' V H. I hx ' V ,A Vp -I -, , 411, wr 4 K -was--Lf,,,.,.-.,f,,, , ,, Q X -5' + 3 ' M flf ' - Y if X1 if -. xr t 1 N H1 'V 11' n 2,-J -'.L ' :sl l ' 1 19 iff , ., 4' 'A - '-' If 43:4 , Q : vt' . 1. lx: . 1 , 1 k ,ff 5 'h 5 l f' I !,,,-ff' I x , 1 , ' ' I -nr W ' I ' x v sr - - W K 1 X x xg A :X A I Q Y U M 3 2 N 4 1 I 4' 1 N e MII' P7 W? PM- lf -J nf J 5 X f' f W 4 Qi ,..-a Iohn Wesley Hill Memorial 80 WP ENGINEERS EXEC CUUNCIL TIVE Earl Brush Sec. and Treas. Vice President and and freas. of AIEE fe 1 1, If m,: ,51 'L ,L . 1' Qifwezef.:-.ff2 . ,Q . ff ef -. e ig -K i V l f, -.5.e--rf Pres. of ASME Lawrence Archer President and Pres. of ASCE Miller Liles Potter Forsyth Powell VP ASME Vice Pres. ASCE Sec. ASME Sec. AIEE Treas. ASCE Bushong Oberly Goldenberg Donkelaar Pres. AIEE VP AIEE Sec. ASCE Treas. ASME Each of the several branches of the Engineering College were represented by their officers on the Executive Council. The Council met to discuss problems confronting the Engineering College and was responsible for the direction of Engineers' Week. They also sponsored the Engineers' Ball, an annual highlight taking place in February. . Archer, Brush, Huddle, Kline, Kusta, Kleinoeder, Klingler, Liles, Potter, Oberly, Reese, Shaffer, Williams, Bowman, Ailes, Dean Webb, Prof. Weishampel, Mr. Walter. NU THETA KAPPA Under the leadership of Dean Webb and assisted by Prof. Weishampel, the honorary fraternity regained its pre-war strength. Informal supper meetings, during which technical questions were discussed, were held at frequent intervals. Membership includes high ranking students of the several departments of the College of Engineering. gf' xg I jf , if . I. E. E. The Ohio Northern student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers is a professional society for undergraduate students. Its purpose is to create greater interest among the members of the department of electrical engineering. Bi-weekly meetings were held during which speak- ers and motion pictures were presented. could you fix my lamp cord? 83 xx v .1 I -1 F1 as X ' ' - Q I- . H 'uhh' ..,. X ' Mm , In Ymsf Q, M ,mx-D N- - -Q-- f X mm--W .-N..,.m, V' CEL A ' ,Q N W --N---wmmx Ikllllw ,,,- ' gin- '15 Mqgy -- W X Q X. W, M rs ' ..... . '35 ..Q.... W m f 5 m .,......m :px M M Eid .4.,... Q L.. ,.,. j,,jg, 4 .QNX V 3 K Q My f-r k ,FG Q -wwxxxxxx X vq... 9' X --.S N W... .Q 5 X. ' -1- -'X xx X - E. Q5 l X it - x ff PQ N X ' D Q X N t X X 6 m 5 I! I I I E E ,,,.L.l. 5 iil 152 R, S ML- !E? 'R ijp fi . I , 'N,-.4 iii, iN x f ff S 5 El ME X X : ' I S X fp! , X HIi2f.iF - Qs' : ' X X U f , Ti I - !, l x N w my, m 4 2 Jn ' 7 , , x-J 'N f l -AXNX E Q XX x Wwwv IIA Ea- X 5 1 QQQ A f -. E 04, av' 00,0 '.d A W ,, ,, Qu '. 'WV f . 1 f H.. D , , A.S. . . This department, the second largest in the Engineering College, overcame the difficulties of crowded classes confronting them at the beginning of the year. Under the able supervision of Prof. Weishampel, the Ohio Northern student branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was greatly aided by further additions to the faculty. cx slip-stick kid 85 V 5 f S AEZMSX -r-it L 4 Cl Q35 E , L. A l W'VA .S.C. . The student branch of the American Society of Civil Engineers met bi- weekly to consider the technical problems of the profession. Frequent- in- spection trips were made to various industrial plants throughout the area. Membership was open to all students of the civil engineering department of the College of Engineering. It's a problem . . . I!'s a problem . . . UNl0ll B ll ASSIICI TIO The Junior Bar is made up of all students in the College of Law. Member- ship is automatic upon enrollment in this college. The purpose of the Association is the furtherance of legal knowledge through Contact with guest speakers of the profession. Dean says . . th' law is . . . fl axe 411 ' Ili inf P A A 9 k I ,QS . I 433 If v , I N A lngv ifx , x lil ' -Ili iq , 1 - . A W .1 D114 'lfbmjiii If .1-W 4 '4' My 1 Wgg L 'gl Ln will 1-'Q-,fri H --1. . 1 , ,Ax --r. Warren G Harding College of Law 3 -9 I I X . Seated: Payne, Hunt, Shaw, Tehan, Carhart. Standing: Rader, Vaubel, Zeller, Koch Cunahan, Conner, Zellar. fAbsentj Rady, Waller, Mayhew, Rodgers. Nichols, Evans, Burkhardt, Foltz, Meyers. TUASTMASTEB The Toastmasters Club was organized in 1934. Its purpose is to improve the forensic abilities, both in form and externpore, of its members. Throughout the year the group has met regularly and has fullfilled the purpose for which it was organized. 9 ...,, ,mu- O ' I f, .wawwff W 'A 'V .1 Q1 1f:y,,i :':f'f:':v. pwvfgf' ll , 1 ' V neg ? T ' 1U ,-Q J' -- -, 1 ' Suufiv 'I if '1 jr - Q- -W, , ,, . .. ' ,F.:?3Zf4g:?-?i'-.':3i ' 'X wr , ' A 2 1 1- ,T T J ing ,U seae' L' ' J ,ry ' lf- .e ,4- if! ' - Q . 1 ,cxw . . . o way! A 5 13 -ef 'X q fv- , . --- .-.1-f l Richardson, Rodocker, Robinson, WLOK Director Ulrick, Daly, the Shylocks. DIO DEBATE One of radio's most controversial topics was the subject of a lively debate over WLKO, NBC affiliate in Lima, on January 31. Students comprising the debating team were guests of the radio station to debate the topic: Radio Commercials Should Be Abolished . At the request of Ralph Elvin, managing director of WLGK, the collegians pulled no punches in expressing their views, and the resulting debate aroused great interest among listeners. No decision was given. The program was a standout among the public interest broadcasts carried by the station. Sf 005 7 XX Zllk Nha as' 91 WILLIAM SHRYOCK editor and business manager GEORGE MACDONALD . assistant editor and cartoonist 'f f'7-f- 11' lu Nr' 9 Ai at N lfiw 43 f X wt? iq 5, - N H K Q G 69 UIITIIER Production of the 1947 Northern was begun late in February following the appointments of the main staff officers for a second time. Due to the work previously completed of a business nature, a new precedent was set by discarding the office of business manager and incorporat- ing that position with the one of editor. Two assistant editors were named to carry the de- tailed editorial load leaving the editor free to carry out the overall plan for editorial and busi- ness policies. The Student Publication Office was organized with an eye into the future, hoping that the annual yearbook and the University bi-weekly newspaper, The Northern Review, would be supported by one efficient staff synchronized to produce better publications. Though impractical in a large institution due to the many students applying for this extra curricular work, such an organization would work with greater effi- ciency at Northern due to the small number of applicants. The need for this plan has not been recently recognized but has been apparent for many years. Northern expenses are defrayed in several ways, bpok sales naturally being the largest. The pre-subscription plan used in 1947 saved a heavy last minute sales campaign and relieved the business manager of much unnecessary worry. Space sold to campus organizations and adver- tisers contribute a considerable portion. It is hoped that in the future several shows and dances will be sponsored throughout the year, each contributing to the production of its spon- sor, The Northern. 92 J ovcs UNnERw0on Layout UBTIIER A considerable portion of the credit must be given to the pictured members of the Northern's staff, but there are also others who aided in the production of the book. Leslie Gambill, Donald Vannorsdall, Peter Aquilina, Jack Cahill, James West, Harold Fridell and Charles Daly are only a few of the long list of those who contributed their time, five minutes to fifty hours, to the compilation of this' material. Q f r- ,i I4 U fu? ADRIENNE SHRYOCK Ji-:RRY SHUSTER BERNICE BUCHNER JANET FINKEL P1'00f Reader Ph0t0HI'aDl15' Advertising Writer U FRANK MAHONEY Assistant Editor, Cover Designer ASSUCIATIU 0F WUME S UDEN S A. W. S. Board MARY ALICE SPAR MILDRED MOTTER Mas. A. WEBB CATHERINE COPPESS Treasurer President Advisor Second Vice Pres. DOROTHY IMLER CLARIBEL WHITE Secretary First Vice Pres. Organized in 1929 to assist the co-ed in her campus life, the Association of Women Students has become an important part of the University. All women students are members and the A.W.S. Board, its governing body, is chosen by open election. The majority of the Association's functions are mandatory for the co-eds although many of its original purposes have been discarded. During the school year activities supervised by the Board in- cluded: the Recognition Dinner, the Leadership Dinner, a Christmas Formal Dance, and the Freshman Hell Week for Women. Snowflake Dance 3 1 Muhleman, Bolton, Lamale, Mabee, Bowling, Heitzman, Meihls, Deemer, Schwall, Wise, Rider. .XX J .X Q Z tl f ' f i 'ffl W SURVEY - , E J Su aww if fe Q qf X' V Prior to the fall elections of November 1946, members of Dr. Wilfred E. K Binkley's Political Parties class made a house to house canvass of Ada's jx Precinct 'D'. The survey was conducted in behalf of the Republican party - fi for their poll book of the area. The project took two weeks to complete and f though the individual routes were relatively small, the men found that more I than one trip was necessary to obtain hearings from the citizens. Many of -Q 6 X 41 the Ada voters in this precinct played 'hard to get' by saying they were t non-partisan. The final figures showed pro-Republican sentiment and the ' ' N amateur politicians pictured above showed sore feet. 95 'WN f f 4 H 'V W xxx XX A y W WU CIcO bjbj Z U2 'iw'-L Phi Chi M- Q, 5-- ,.,+ -V g-S+g,,mgu Wm WL ...,,4,-,...-1-.y,,,.-'- '-,. ,,,-,f,,.,-... 7 ,,,f-fn..- f li, ..., ..,,,,, if 6g0'lfl L 0 'them Pm Dalia IOO 2' N' ' as-1, I ag, is an-.Q h....... .- --.,, xk , iii , W, mrimt iix, -X. TIISKI Phi Delta an mu y Lee N A x ix 'X HV' V-,,,- 1-- 41 4:- ,-,,.,f ...-4 gif' lf'-F ,,..1 lff 1' K 1 K l W . i X , ,. f' - g.,z's..Qf:- r - - 1 .QQ v-A. 'L5.:,4j.2.Q'Eg f' A ' . xl ' 5--533'f5e1! .AE -4 .' ii H : 1,2 fi f Y ' - -rw 59 if WP : fwafffx ,.,i- ? . 1- ' 'nuhfw Y, UA 'V 96 , ..4,.' 2: .,jf,'L1,.Y9'L ' 'A V1 -'L'-friivifsiiagviix' A . r i wm 'H 's...f'v - -,-E-em ' f' 1 agp 1 2 9 f 5 1: 5 1 1. r g . atm ,V 5,-,H gr - ,,,Kf'S9vi5?f1i'K' ., i-7,,.f3??if?f,'a Q NB-5. rg? X rv 2-T' H M -ax X 1 ff 'N-pw, xi 1 1 ,-'J ','ed-'flip !,' F.,- ' ,.,,.-f xv .lr-In-3,1-,d,,,-: Y,,,- in W1 WA ecwf 102 lui i--ku, - 'wer I ,f 'L TW Ewan Kappa A CLPIQQIW los b N 4 V -All-RA T -Qlfxgmskxiib ' , 1 x W X 1 VT,-,,,i.-f,,,,f,, iv, f 7 -- ., Y , , . ,-v- .., - . 1,-. ,.?,,, -,hv,,.,.m N ' M .QS-, t X '. .- 3, ,.-f 'Xxx 4 W4 . ,ZX - 7'uQ.' 1,1 - if . Qty- fl f f - -'ring x'3'2fy ' K' qfr fr V X 1 w , l , X N .1 , .I N f r Y. U W V.. ,x M111 fgmi, git, 1 ' G ,' i i, . w ' u X' H ,lffff i'LJH.'l+-.3',iJff!l K 12611: W 7, , Y , - 411- gl I 1 M J V I I I I If I V I ' Ph1Ch1 du A gn 0 on 105 Wea 61000 ' .pllli .qs-f I ' 0 independentAC:1r1's Club ' Q EULJLOVL 1069 PART WWW.. HN E CUUNEML Standing: Virginia Clark, TPDQ Doris St. Louis, PCQ Marjorie Stedcke, PCQ Adrienne Shryock, TKK. fisting: Winona Shingler, TKKQ Mildred Motter, TPDQ Mrs. Alexander Webb, visor. Under the supervision of Mrs. Alice Webb, Dean of Women, representa- tives of each of the sororities on campus meet regularly to discussiproblems and government of their organizations. Through their efforts a minimum of conflicts have been maintained. f x g .g 9 I E 1 '- he ,fi il- 1'- ff? ii' A L ,. J V Y' .-.' ,..Y' , H X , . K' . Ni V -A A-:QW ? g t . 1 fr s i , In I. f 14:- i ' I A ' 'EZ N- ' ' :A Y M. Y riff 1 ..- 4 xt., A ' l hiliig, First Row: Arthur, Baker, Burgess, Bushong, Conner, Eich, Harrison. Seeond Row: Kaufmen, Kempher, Langehberg, McKinney, Naveau, Noble, Park Third Row: Pugh, Risner, Sager, Swetland, Stakely, Williams, Woodward. Independent irls' lub if HELEN PUGH Ada EVELYN EICH Poland JANICE PARK Jamestown, N. HELEN BURGESS Lima Y. Q-Qu' MARTHA NOBLE St. Marys LORELLA MCKINNEY Lafayette CHRISTINE ARTHUR Lafayette Jo RISNER Carey MARY SAGER La Rue DOROTHY KEMPHER Lafayette COLLEEN CONNER Lafayette CORAEELLE KAUFMAN Sycamore They entertained the future famous 108 , Lois JOHNSON Alger JEAN WILLIAMS Lakeview LAVERNE STAKELY Ada BERYL BAKER Sidney JANE WOODWARD Dunkirk JANE SWETLAND Belle Center GOLDIA NAVEAU Napoleon LUCILLE BUSHONG Dunkirk 24 Q-H' L F 4 G39 ggi-fu. g y...- Vv' 'lr X ' 2 '53 ' , gift:-F 5. .- Q ig: -A. , r x ' , 'N up K V gfvnx., ' :W :.-j ,ML 'x Danner Jones Shenk Herring Varner, Mathews, Shryock, Underwood, Shingler, Muntain Wittenberg Taifalidakis, Thomas, Coppess. AU KAPP KAPP .effi- ACTIVES Dono '- Ajmmws PLEDGES DORIS DANNER Detroit, zgcm LEOMA JEAN WITTENBERG Kenton 5.-swifziiii frfenf07b SALLY Jo VARNER - ' OYCE NDERWOOD Warren Adil ADRIENNE PIGOSSI SHRYOCK . ff J ELEN TP-IFALIUAKIS Bridgeville Pa. N ' ' I - , 01-'fflQSt0w'll CATHERINE COPPESS New ' Greenville IRENE ,. I - JEAN THOMAS Dem' f IC Q, Forest ' U ' - WINONA SHINGLER 011 'A Seward Pa. 'r J lf! T B G2 lu- -f zm jg 2 4 L onT1'TT' og 109 , r , Af?-A f L' J 1 . we - ,M - r . e F I ,fx 1- -' . V , a a' 1 ' , Q xr . . A ' -I ' 'IIA ' I - ' ' W i N f . A 1 - -: 1 f 2-' r r , -' N.. ' q X 'Ng ' X' -, v w 1 I X., W -.5 -F N. 1 y 1 7 Y 7 7 1 J 1 G I U15 5' , 0 1 o ' 1 9 - Q TR 11 I Wouldn't believe it .... would you? . . . R- QU. 35 Sr' D 1 N l bf 'H D' Q-' sr .A , mg:-71, Q em ffe 1 'L ,A , , W , 1 395' 'P ll - -U Sf- . , ' -5. A 5- -1 5, , A gl 'X .,, V,,. . X.. ' is A 'A ' Q ' 1'- 'Vx . ,.., F . n -A 5 5,3 i P f QQ' ' 'is l p A I -'Fr e 1 5 A A-1 1 'ii 9- First Row: Sidey, Clark, Baker, Doty, Rouhier, Campbell, DaPore, Freuh, Kelts. Second Row: Rea, Spar, Schwall, Wood, Beatty, Brinkmeyer, Ebersole, Graeser, Hays. Third Row: Heinrich, Kennedy, Kerr, Kline, Little, McAtee, Morrison, Pfaus, Randalls. Fourth Row: Coppins, Sloane, Zimmerman, Bachert, Motter, Clark, Creps, Miles. ,fifxs 5 , I ld 4 , UA, , dv GRA: I ULN QL: ik If I , ACTIVES Q FLDRENCJQFB A7 UE, alla EILEEN HEINRICH Jo ANN SIDEY W5 jffffgfy Em Lima Wapakoneta V, 'il LL-Q-J ll U A B VERLY KENNEDY VIRGINIA CLARK if 1 'xxnhg-,X drysfuille Alger 7, MARIAN FRIDDELL ,S BARA KERR JEANNE BAKER Iligndlay 5- XQ aK Dayton f, P TH Iggy-'N QQ Y LINE ROSEMARY DoTY K n ' L.!Ca,ledonia Lima I ' A , MA LICE SPA MARILYN LITTLE MIRIAM ROUHIER l, da La Rue Justus I - - s SCH A L Joy MCATEE MARGARET CAMPBELL , A - Schenectady, N. Y. Sidney - JEAN MORRISON MARJORIE DAPORE olarl Lama Findlay ETTY B FRANCES PFAUS CAROLYN FREUH atrobe Canton Lima K u R MARIAN RANDALLS MARIAN KELTS Ada Ada Warren A I E EBERSOLE ca za .Nd ANI GRAi:SBB, SLOANE 1 ma s vm A-fa Was VIRGINIA COPPINS Ada MARGARET -S -ff' ?., IERT L53 Q N. Y. J MOTTER PLEDGES J EANNE CLARK .ff Alger RUBY Jo CRI-:Ps Fronl ycxrcl porhroit . . ff'-ANN MILES Love in bloom Lima IIO 1? Q.. l1',a T.. f ,r -- rx fx? 5.. -f .r Q- 5 . QMS +20 I 1 6 ? 'T 'Y vp A 3 3 5 2 f 316 I ,Sf M X E K ,An it First Row: St. Louis, Miller, Stedcke, Jenkins, Sneary, Winter, Gallagher, Crawford. Second Row: Byrne, Swartz, Shirley, Winegardner, Harris, Haines, Eley, Coates. Third Row: Parker, Imler, Hamakawa, Metzger, Rath, Hood, Creps, Bennett. Fourth Row: Hinds, Horst, Carr, Finkle. ' A s -ff-3 2 . ACTIV at 2 IH :. : TTY JENKINS DoRs ST. Louis 5315325 Myrna- ' T071 Bellefontaine - ' i ' DINE ELEY MARJORIE S'rEnc 1: :fmnmrmw ynesfleld Celina CLARIBEL FILLIN R 51: , PLEDGES N apoleon j EECEOU CARR ?fe'g:,ig2sTEga . . 2 . 1 I ORIA HORST 1 ' 1- - ' DOROTHY IMLER ibnralifm.-Q ado F Lima suilnlim llxq ix m 'I EZI' I1q'KEL ROWENA HARRIS G1-il -il' mm Zanesville ji ' 1'-4 swiss: . ETCHEN SWEET TAUYUKO HAMAK A 6 1 fini! Q ., llevue Hilo, Hawaii li S I' Eg. fl f - ' il ' EUNICE Hoon - 1' .--' Frazeysburgh ' -' P M Xl MARIE PARKER A La Rue 7- ' I E 3 ai CAROLYN WINEGARDNER ' ' ' ' P' Waynesfigld :J.i.:--:-' 5'--.nav Z LUELLA SHIRLEY Wll10llk0'fl0fl1 Zanesville LUCY BENNETT ELoIsE CRAWFORD Lima Ada UCILLE COATS MARJORIE GALLAGHER N 'Ml Rawson I'Il lust ci workin' gal 'Zi I-JHZEUEII-3 X X X-.. J Q . S? f X525 '41 I TERFII TER ITY CUUNCIL Brewer, Prentice, Warner, Goldenberg, Wilson, Rev. M. E. Tinsler, F. Gren, Schwall. The Interfraternity,Counci1 is an old part of the extra-curricular activi- ties of Ohio Northern. It' is made up of one representative from each frater- nity and a faculty advisor. The Pan-Hellenic Council is the female counter- part of this group. ' Representatives are elected by the brothers for their knowledge of campus protocol and ability to deal with campus pri blems. Primarily de- signed to work only with interfraternity business, the group replaced the Student Council until the latter was reorganized late in April. Despite the short notice given them, members of the Council successfully planned and executed the events for Homecoming Weekend. i H5 T.X gkbmqk . XX H it yi' Q1! . fl -1 .Xb .' , . , sn... i X - ,,.f- v . xv- L ' f E' 'r,. A f 1- , .ia M, ,- ,. M fr. -- . . ,L ., X, . 1 A LF ,E ii A A 'NT A 2+ 711- , Tl A. . 'L A Q-af 1 4 U, sv. - , . n- :R i gy 1 -i J, LL , ., -'Qi . X in I4 'E A If Q if IJ' X gn' - X. P X XX ag- H X lf' s, X , H 1 ukfi. X- 'gf A . '47 i ' . . Li? ' 1:2 ., - . A. ' 4? - . Q-A if X L- -'k' 79 f .1 X 'M .1 , X j, 6' X-XXXX,XXX X X X A Q lax: X,XXgXXXXX . tm i , XXXi Ni L X A, N X ' - V4 Af X XXI X ,in g,x Y X W 23. gg , f '-'I X X H . i Q X' l gg' if i' T . .fff vw 1 if A fx -.- 525 . ' A -' 'zgz 1 E ' I -'V ' ' f' XXX . 1 -1- N T' , if ,f X -I-1 , C . XXX X . X , '.Q.,5i.' - ' l L ffiffl' 'Z' . A ' . sf L XXX X vf,X ALL, I .Q Nl - . L X Q-X.i,EX P lf.. X QXXX XX X X-I X , . X X . ' ' N XNN X , L X ZXXX A A T X X X 'N Ti 3 V.. g 7? N 7? - 5: T W G' O lf' N 2 ' 'E' - .. iw. va 'F NJ A ' ' - .. .1 1 'r' , i '- 5' -f er. ' le . . . N -. X , XXX V YXXXJX XXXL X ,X f X ' ' L. l A 1 - 'N 3 A. D,fiLWfzE:1.1 L- A .4 . First Row: Archer, Ault, Bowsher, Brookhauser, Capell, Chenowith, Chouris, Collins. Second Row: Conover, Corwin, Crawford, Dankworth, Davenport, Dick, Donkelaar, Dracos. Third Row: Fredericks, Pond, Gilder, Gobin, Hadaway, Omler, Huey, Kerr, Killian. Fourth Row: Klienoeder, Kubic, Lauck, Purvis, Randalls, Luberger, Maier, Marsico, Masnaghetti. DELT LAWRENCE ARCHER ROBERT KLEINOEDER - 1nn-uA.11gn:anm:sunmn- ROBERT DONKELAAR Lima Lima --H, Sidney HAROLD AULT EICH TH 1XRIgCH?'LAS Dlfmcos L ' I' ' t , . Cgz?.Z1DRooKHAUsER gg y fgjggogg JOZLN QSJEEISSS Elyria Shiloh CHARLES HOUSTON li :fag -gXX?SEX7zH K-ERIE d Lisbon ' A J mln u ' , ayney 71, , VINCENT LOMBARDO f X qimfgy H , LE 11' '3 DANIEL KUBIC Cleveland EX st E X gIcKeesIgiXort, Pa. KENNETH OBERLY L' i :1a...'AR U ' L 1-..:,a.. , OBERT AUCK Blu fton V Lorain A Findlay WILJLIAM POWELL SHA .1 WP ,QVIAQIQAGHETTI El ' -1 'w'- .. E 1-ic sm e DEZQZSD SCHWALL ul 4' 5 ? : 1 .XEXHN MCSANDLISH W se n 1 ui d ornsvz e GSQLTYOWEST X oMA ' E Q ORBEST MILLER Hollidaysburg, Pa fl, I Toronto x hy O fa- fm JAMES POQLE ' 1 COLLIN HOUSE j wi NALD NASH X Bellefonmine XX Tn er a e N. Y and Rapids, Mich. . eg WILLIAM ETERSON jj' NELSON H . orest x uclid .' L '- -v A ' CHARLES O,BRYANT 'ww Rgampq QYLLCX Qt ?irmin6yham, Ala. 1cH - i ' . S OHN MLER Tiffin Ada X ROBERT DAVENPORT DONQLD POND Mt. Blanchard Elyria .nh gr-n..rrL:.4.,.f,-:-A.-r--LC,-,'.:. g. L1 Anybody go! cz transit? 'I 16 HARDLD REMSBURG Tiffin 1 1 gi A 1 . ' 7 A . , V . sf .- N A A 'f- ' - - f f W ,, I - X 4 : I Q 1 8 -I Y Q , 11- F 'A 'R N . - A ' A .gs .' ' w v 1 It A 1 'ze X ' ':' A e: ff'1 ful A H V ,,Qx.Ql2- Y i l iv Q I H1 Z' 7 , 6' A ,A CIR Q 'Q 1 W I - gf: ,va 5 ' ' W Q5 Q. Va. I ,L Q: ' J: , ' ' I Bs.,-, T. . rg f 1 .. :M I In f . 175 T . 3 13 7:5 iii!! ' Nik ' 1 ff '! .- w . . .1 H nf-A . A A 1 A A -T 6 - . ' . 7 1- . ' 4. -3 Y 2 A A' 'V 'Q 97341 kg 1 EJ -ve ' fr- i 7 : A -SI-,'v'Bf'1 r Y X 'E B1 First Row: Miller, Remsburg, McCand1ish, Nash, Nelson, Nichols, Oberly, O'Bryant. Second Row: Rider, Rizor, Rothchild, Russel, Ryan, Schoenberger, Schwall, Richard- son, Shuler. Third Row: Sutherland, Thursby, Turner, VanHo, Weber, West, Wolf, Wright, Zimmerman. BELT S GM PIII national social fraternity HOMER RUssEL RAYMOND KLINGLER RICHARD HADAWAY llgindlay Strausburg gly'f1f1 K OBERT RYAN EUGE - -., HOLS EORGE ILLIAN Quincy As Long ISlU.'l'Ld, N. Y. IEJIOREN gCI-ISENIIZERGER J gioBgR'rkLUBERGER 1' i5 ?'!:.Q 141' i an 'LLS y Cffsmucgnsggngn . SAMUEL MARSICO Detroit, Mich. Elyrw WAYNE SHAFI.-ER ' ' r A 1 -.E O ROBERT POWELL Wauseon 2 ' . ' v L rg 'y Elida CHARLES SUTHERLAND Q H AR I:'FN OT D I ASA ,CORWIN gvella, Pa. W tr if ic ,' Llbefgy EORGE THURSBY , ' T ARR - ' OLF EORGE HOURIS Pittsburgh, Pa. 'hl'U Ti l ,y VBS!!-9SillO11T LAWR W 3 H ILLIAM URNER Pettisljzlggg EBER E5 U ' 'gi I s S n gt. Ggeadl-I 9 QD L ENC Z ffm T , ' 1 f OMAS RAWEORB Yay: sto?1mIM lv' AN Bella ' 'Q Outh Euclid NORMZXN Bowsn -1 1 HA ICK J. WVTT0 MAIER Ada ' A ' ' 1 ' ' ,xv If assillon PAUL CHENOWIT Q 'S' Q H R E ERICKS fs ij RICHARDSON gauseon fm A ,- . 4 h RANT CONOVER 'vp 5353 HN Sea Girt, N. J. LAWRENCE BOLTON Steamburg, N. Y. ROBERT JUDSON Ada ROBERT GOBIN Ada sl ....We11...i- II7 ,, , , f Y. Z..-'l v., L ' C., slr ff' J V 6 .' ' ' Q ,JE if l 0- ' E I '. 'Q -,Q-I 'fs 4 X, L, , V ifl-12-1 , J T J -fr 4 L -1 L M 5- u Yagi F 'Q A - gg ' V ,- QVZE X M115 - ' ' T . A ' x' F72 A ' A ,. E 32' 5 - ' Ki ' ' ' '15 ' V 46? ta 6' ' F.. Y I lt' -vw f ,5' if , Va. -6- s 2 L A 4 ' A ' , vu! -5 -1- A fe, ee -f X V , W V ' ' liege: A f iv'-5, - 1 1 E D I all L 5 fi X 'A I' Q I' L. J .ed F 4 MF A A 3 -1 5' s ,. Q if L , , :I . - X 3 , . - N Q X .W '-,. , . xg ' L. ' , 3, A 5' A JN 'wk F I f E I Z., X T w .ng 1 7 Q 7 it, , U usiimx ef .,:f 3 Q 1 -J A - 1' 5 X Q '- Tv 'L . I ' First Row: Betts, DeLuca, Benson, Balchak, Cusumano, Dahill, Dahling. Second Row: E. Gren, F. Gren, Gombar, Hall, Haikim, Kennedy, Lauber. Third Row: Leonard, Mestemaker, McGuire, Powell, Smyth, Stang, Shea, Ulman, Baranowski. TIIETA national social iratemity PIII ACTIVES J OSEPH H EDWARD POWELL BILL SMYTH Newar New Washmgffm Cleveland JOSE : 1 SKI IEl1ElWA?D EREN JIM BENSON Cle , lf: eve an LaRue F T 1 - : is ROBERT MCGUIRE Bon GOOD l - ' X trobe, Pa. Ft. Jennings JACK SHEA U X ' f ENE FETTER RALPH LEONARD Ash ln 'W 9 Y. ' Marlon Lakewood GUSTY GOMBAR Lakewood ED BARANOWSKI Cleveland 1 :fi ' 42111: li 1 '-'S fl Il 3 ff t.'J'-en g lg i ug 5. 19571 i --Xl .E lEEES3?rl5iQF'lluIH , . eve an CHARLES HA KIM ' elandl 1 ,Q LAS LAUBER ,,, v V . J osEPH ROGERS Cleveland JOSEPH ULMAN Fostoria PLEDGES Elyria STAN BOGDEN Cleveland DEANE BETTS Seaford, Delaware KENNETH DAHILL Toronto EUGENE D,INNOCENTE Lorain ' :fi s X X 1 A , ' M L , ,IRI 1:::aaa:::..:i.' .T 1 ' -I-I 1'JfY'l's1'l' I I --,- --rs. .sg - ,f slr v R gm I J :Lf - 14,1 I ' n Ei., 57' ' - : n 5, , . , - l RUDOLPH BRADA -1.4 1, nal 1 lqfthflf-Ill? yr ! i' IV N .............. ... L 1 I I 'I . 91 E . . ' Uli X i - F: 'J' ' N0 .N 1 1 Y J 'U '4 1 1 Q rt' I . ,. JI.. Look tough don't they! Well .... ihey are v I ,I - .- ':Jg'7,vI-, t , - v . 0 Rfk: I QU T? - 'M 6 7 .If-'l I . 2 A ' - ill r ' ml' I 'I - 1. ll 1 l ,LZ -' QL.. I I.,. Zi, , .L '- Ju- I A lv T91-iffs 6 ., ..-.1235 f , if A ll if LW' l e ' f r: 'R T 'T' .- 'L - L . A .. H ., N 5 '. li Q' if ' 4 it L75 I 'h V iz. .B A 4, ,r Zz . I 'W ' ' .-,J Kf' W ' ' T I . I I w i l' I I ', ' l 'A D 3' 'ilu All -. W f i l ' A F Atv I, In lf A Ai ' Kflixwgf L' is Y' png ! X , . L 1 I N , kg if J 'ggi A- ' ill ll A I ' . l. ' s A A X 3 A .I , wg A 'N Y .xl ' V y- - , , ti- . I WI I 1 6 '44 oral A ' 4 -l H X ZA'-Q A . SF ' V4--' if ff bl 'Z5'.l '. 'T ffl V ' W' ul , ' ' 1 if 1 ' ' A -l C ' Y .I r: vm hx A Q K-LJ Q H I l I my . , , , 1 X . . ,, . Y l , f , ll l, li . . V 1 E 1 ill .9 ,W K' , V7 i 5 5' I , x Q' t A V A 11 165, yi First Row: Beuter, Brown, Bryant, Bailey, Chalfin, Coppins, Early, Funck, Gallagher. Second Row: Hamilton, Hanneman, Huntermark, Hill, Hall, Hasbrouck, McDevitt. Miller, Mannino. Third Row: Mattmuller, Madigan, Moore, Opatrny, Warner, Parcher, Raeburn, Rees, Stoldt, Schmidt. Fourth Row: Stahler, Smith, Smucker, Vorhees, Whalen, Hall. ncdio n ale lpharmacyl GE N M CI-I s 1? ACTIVES WALTER EARLY PHILIP BRYANT Cm-dingfo-n, Akron WILLIAM GRANTHAM gig-:DERICK H ANNEMAN B s gillilmingtgn a ' ' uewslnm wax I J 01-IN HALL SAMUEL HAMILTON - Orr-ville Earreglf ga. HENRY I-I ON DONALD HASBROUCK ARL c EVITT n Youngstown Salem B ' MATTHEW MATTMULLER EHOMAS FERKOSKI R B gem Bealeih, Florida onneau RT EU E HOMAS oBY JAMES SCHAFFER Bellaire Uhrichsville .glam W RICHARD HMA .LAREK VORHEI-:s EORGE ILKINSON 35'-I., . ron Hignzfgld Park, Mich. fag, ROBERT WHALEN JACK OUNG '- can ,-ragga. rain Akron We Be QI X QA: ME SEIBOLD IRAY BERRY ED -fl M GAN ' 1' X ima Q VIEW' - : . WEYLAND BROWN OBE- :Q S J Cuyahoga Falls Q ' aytoi 3 5 HOMER CHALFIN 3 R LPI-I 'l-,re XJ McGuffey L9 e 'ua RICHARD DoRN e TE Lg 5 Brookville . -- ld -P X W'ha1'5 cookin' WILLIAM FUNCK 'r ' N ,W . A - Doc I Sharon, Pa. N J S ma Q ' ' ' ROBERT GAl.LAGHER ' LLIA - - - - 4 ' Chillicothe Za SUEZLLA 'Q EILMUEL MooRE XSIIAIELI E L TO71, . 'WIS ' J. RICHARD V. MANNINO THOMAS HUNDERTMARK Mt. Vernon Conneaut ARDEN MILLER JOSEPH SMUCKER Sugar Creek Bellefontaine ALBERT OPATRNY ROBERT STAHLER Cleveland Bellefontaine RAYMOND PARCHER EOEIALD STOLDT e evue Bucyrus RONALD COPPINS Lakewood nr lr C . i f ,. ..1.5A 1. il 2 , - nv A qi- g If 1 -gsm , . 'E was :, H ' :4'HE. ', ,,v' -A . gc' V I f . , l. , . 2 - ,w - yi? ., - I .F ' vc W N ' .1 by if 1 A 2. SI! at if ,. Q. uf- sk 4 Ii. - A Ar: -Q, C GL -f- K - f : - , c- 45:1 ,- , , - - 4, ja Mig, ,, Q. , VM I . 5-J 11 ' ' ... ' f CT A f f.f ' l. ...f .LM I .1 -' ew X ' A Q I t ' A Lf Q'-fi! A - Y L f H :L V 'V is , In I V! 1.5. , 1 L'-FPA, if f I r f ami .fh-- s, ' 'fe 'Q I Wj C Af - N 1.',r 7 , X ik ' K. A' ' -' . E , W X If W 1 .5 . ' I N., X xx Y ' 'A 1 kg.. V' x Q Q VI A ' ru .Q A -A, kv If 7,14 E. 'xx ' V I V, S jj, I Q-H11 ' L 'lm' A - I I ,fe 17113 rw I 4 . i 1,..,AE 1 . J' ,L .. S. Q .,' , I IF '7 U13 A if A j 'fries i,,. :Gai ff. , I1 Ml I-'X . pf! 9 'V , ,r . iff. V N AN -Q1 :Z 5. A -i U nh? I ,AI Two cats: one hep . . . First Row: Bertram, Boyd, Brush, Cahill, Conning, Cowan, Dunlap, Grossman, Heitzman, Huddle. Second Row: Hutton, Kaufman, Kidd, King, Mauck, Maxfield, Meihls, Mitchell Monroe, Powers. Third Row: Prentice, Reel, Ridley, Roberson, Schaffer, Schipper, Williams, Smith, Sproul, Strasbaugh, Sutton. Fourth Row: Todd, Vannorsdall, Workman, Augsburger, Ewan, Griffiths, Hayden, Karnes Mathews Miller. . A PIII 7 ' Hr - n u' :fai n 1 I lil -A JOHN HUTTON , :tv .5 QAUL HUDDLE Utica - i n, f. . remont CARL POWERS ' - . T110 ' QJJENTIN MAXFIELD Cardington Spencer-ville Lima JACEI SIIYIITH ai 74 Wh Q. y, .LQZZHN DUNLAP De Taf 'a vi f , ' . 'LCG CHARLES WORKMAN 2 - 2 f 2 - - CHARLES 'STRASBAUGH Edinburg Edon West Unity JOHN HEITZMAN -Ft. Jennings HARMON MEIHLS Spencerville MAURICE SHINGLER Seward, Pa. JOHN CAI-IILL Cleveland one pickled. LX if :Jr I ALD VANNORSDA B ea AR s GROSS AN e taine LBE MoNRo cl-In-P Lima JOSEPH S U Wayn DONAL Bellm DONA J I s ITCHELL astle Pa ERTR PLEDGES JOHN RIDLEY Barberton RUEL A. SPECK Pemberville HENRY MILLER Canton WILLIAM HAYDEN Canton HAROLD AUGSBERGER Bluffton CLYDE KIDD Forest BERNARD KAUF1-'MAN Lisbon GEORGE WILLIAMS ' tica Dayton JACK EWAN Bryan AR P W a. f I - I E e , . Q ff l' :- '. 14' Paffa OBERT GRIEEITHS ,,.-. '. .', ' 5? A e . Wie P . C ,,,f Wills EARL BRUSH Lima DONALD KING Jackson Center J AMES SHAFFER Forest IZO RANDALL ROBERSON Ada CARL MATHEWS Detroit, Mich. WAYNE MCMILLAN Decatur, Ind. JoHN KARNES Fostoria ,. :.'u:',,'f1-Ay, gi , 4 I.r5w:l-553516. fag T: X V' Tcaf .M.' 1 I 4 1 1 T ll A .- . Q. , 9 . Iv- W 'L 'w Q- - vw 5 A f f: ' Mgmt N Q I, V Y . , W, JIM, ' 4 ,- V - g , Je., , 1 5,,3 f'Q1? - haf. ' in , - ' 1' 1 41 ' ' ' j , , R - , -fl? Q st an '9 ' M -J ,. kv' M , 3' ' Q . ' ' - 3 q g q. . R ' gm J A bf J ls, 'J ' . - -l .1 R 4... V. ' ,, I 1 ' I x , -, 1 T, Q , - 'Q R .-, , 1, ', . -w, v1 X, wa- 1. , ' ' JfMf5,?9w1 'R 1 'B l ' RTI Z ' J' 1 , ,J O 5 , . J ' , L, , , ' J 'j , I r - ff f fsfdfibdlug A , w b' A- 1 . H 5, -ig. . l.g..,, x of ,L 1 ' ..i1 'T, V ' ' J ' J O O ' , x , -.-R. V. - 1 H, ima' in ' -- ' ' . , I ,N mm - , ' . J N .Y - 6: Us V L-3: 'fi' J? ar- It ig ' w , I X E, 5 ' ' Y ,O +4 gl 3 , , L- v 1 , vp: '1 1 '- - .Kg 1 gli, N-eq A Q, f, Q., ,I ,bf , ' f -' '1' ' -' fi s R xii.: . .: First' Row: Allcroft, .Barnes, Berta, Bloom, Bowman, Brewer, Diefenderfer. Second Row: Gerstenberger, Johnson, Wm, Johnson, Kusta, Lumm, Mabee, Marti. Third Row: McWhirter, Ream, J. Ream, Rice, Stager, Thobaben, Vogel. SIGMA PI CHO 1' i ut 'ty X wx NN, I I f x X X X 'Xxx-1 ' I X EDMQCARIEQLUMM X N- ,ay f 1, M X, X XVQYNI-2 JOHNSON OC y VUGT X . 4- 'xfafq z ' V Cl ions? JNQIABEE X I is f XVILIJIAM JOHNSON U.'l'lS 'LC X X I 'I P'-glfvc-, If 1 K, OTUJLTL QOBERT MCWHIRTER 'Q ' MARION PRICE arren R e 'Pj'--' 6 f f aT'l01l EAI? MOORE K le NEY Ewg 1 , 4iOiHN STAGER azon - RW -- n , Q ' --'IF' a FRANK REAM g -.T 16' EZNALD BEACH Duquesne, Pa. 4 f ,WBQLQ a JOHN REAM .1 - a-mv JAMES MARTI Duquesne, Pa. R N-Bi da f - Fair Oaks, Pa. EDWARD SEYMOUR ARRY qfgh. ,- ROGER RICE Maple Hts. ' kewoo Ada CHARLES THOBABEN 4 I ERI ..--in-. v Bedford ' It fo ROBERT VOGEL l - AN I :f'Pf. S Newton Falls ' la ALBERT BERTA ' p 1,g',! - ' - :Q- Duquesne, Pa. ' 0 0 3' f fivefivefive .... goin' fer five . . . ' ILO N , qw. A W xy .MA N N 1' 1 V 'f T ' . 'li '. A -- Ab- H -' ' I ' - -f Y- 'f I Al 'C ' 5 1- v .JL fifli 95. -. L L' 'Hill .1 ' V X W Y l3f :f: 5 ' V V ' I '7 ..- . . 'N , '-5i nf- Q- I ,A . -if 'ef 12 C A il I 'G faq R- .- ll n , .14 lu., .gy -R f.,.f'fYIi'.,I1 j - 1 I -V -. W 4, ug ful' I 1, 2' 5 li na 3564 ' , BN . ., 'fly A l ' ' . ' .,,' - . '- f- + L - 1 I..L,:' 16.1 lf' I I . .. I 'R I ' EFI : A gg! 5 fl- gr .UI Iii. I, :M . X I. A 1 I A 1 v K' . , ,Q-QQ :gg ,gf ju 1 , I .J 6, I ., , .. -5 ' eu . ,QN X ' ,gg ,- V . VH., + Y ,..'A' lf. A V . p ri U ta . , f K ,yy 'I . 1, . gl I , A A I I J: 4. I -' 'EI . A f fr -.ew - E, f M' lg. 1, Q5 - W ll.-Any! V f 3 . 'Sgr-V j Q I f ' 4, A Q Md ,gi - , -:HI W I -.Q . I v 1 ' L L- 1 i g Q: 1 gs D' 'Lj.q.f 35: ' 51,0-5 A '- ,315 3 fx g . my., ,W , ,li E N. 5 - 5. l ' .A . . Agp! -- ,,. .. , ,v,,4.,, , A ., l... ,, . Q A . f I ' 1 435-.v. .. I .- I if' V453 i ' ,' 2 ,, I ig- ,E K , 'A ?j w- ' X , I . ' H ' Q ' , , +71-. .. . .-1, . , - , . . , .. E ,... ' u.. First Pow: Abbott, Amey, Bair, D. Boop, N. Boop, Brinkmeyer, Butler, Burns, W. Burns, Byrns. fleeiond Row: Collier, Cox, Derry, Dible, Duvall, Elder, Girton, Halfhill, Hinds, o son. Third Row: Hunt, Hunter, Kelly, King, Kinnamon, Klutch, Leist, McCard1e, Mapes Mi er. Fourth Row: Mulholland, Pollock, Richie, Ridgeway, Thase, Thurna, Topliff, West, Wilson, Zink. S GMA 9 Plll , EP s WILLIAM BENNET . X , . x :oh x 1 ' .ff I , 13 W, Ex . f , fg'u'ni1n'X TYSON ELDER Sharon Pa. -2 '-1 w-fl. , W Wapakoneta CI-IARLEs REESE -Qcff fgl - I PRESTON GIRTON Bellaire -- if New Milford KARL MAUL EDD i ' o f JAMES WEST Mansfield Cmcmnatz gary, 1153. ROBERT MAPES , z : : I . L3 Qi' . . . . ., ANIEL ILSON Carey 7 Ada DUANE KINNAMON if K'?,Q MILEURN HINDS Gallon l9!,,,g,,g.g.g.3 333.3 Lima JOHN COLLIER K AJ .5694 vt'e.f9gg5,-9:4243 HAROLD FRIDDELL Rochester, N. Y. X Z b:off:o:o:f,qgox Fmdlay WILBUR KLUTCH 'gf' ff- +2s2gPfo2oxq ROBERT DUVALL Brooklyn, N. Y. fr gpm,-:gf.f g.g.g.g.g4gq Bellazre WILLIAL4 DERRY EAMQMQQQ J QMES HALFHILL Barnesmlle gf - W gag: :I-ZF' Lima f - fa 15 752 CHESTER BURNS Q- A ,,'1E.'1Ezg.32fQ Jamestown, N. Y. QSQQQQIQ JOHN l MCCARDEL , ggyg-5.933 444,355.3 Bellazre jg- .qagiffofojsfofofoj JAMES THUMA .H1 g99!O?Os?O99 LaRue V ILLIA ' URNER LOWELL BUTLER Lima K T, 1 ' Ada --.-f-fi . O 'f---gs DONALD REESE T lj 67 N, u ' , '10 - KZ- Bellaire .. RQQWWG :Amr PLEDGES i' a ,, D EDWARD BYRNS KEITH AIR Gallon Findlay CALVIN TOPLIFF WILLIAM HUNTER LaRue Lima NILES AMEY LAWRENCE KING Ada Lima WILLIAM KELLY Lima HAROLD HoDsON LaRue 1,569,480,021 sldddool 122 ROLAND RICHIE Lzma WILLIAM BRINKMEYER Lima WILLIAM BURNS DeGraff 'Fl . -5 1 U 1 A Z 4 V L ' hz- 'fa X 1 - I 1 ' A' ' '1 M' . ' If P 'U ' ' ' A 'ef w W I I1 5 12 ' I 117.31 4 , Y ,. I . A T . A L. ' ,. if . x ' ' A gawk' , Y 5 , , , - A 5 LA , A X. ' r, .I ' 5 f f 'vin-, f w A L . l W 1 ' . . -N v.-V' I k W1 Y -, . R - - Y , . L . - xv., 5 x , M f n . L . 'z ' - I 'F ii ' v Q ' K 'f9' ' ' - 1 . ' Tl ' f V .A ,f2.1:Q3 .g , ' -2 . - ,, ' . 'UNL' if 'B HIE L '51 J N- 2 ' ' -. V -I. - First Row: Baker, Blinder, Dritell, Finkel, Gallon, Goldenberg, Goldstone. Second Row: Gordon, Harrison, Koukley, Scharfeld, Sloban, Vos, Wohl. LPI! DEPSIL0 0 6 ,r3' -..4'0fx,l0 x 19' 5. -:' lvlrff FP' l LW-X A X-TBP ga Lu 1 Pi j ? 1 1, X ., K1 , , .5 ,e : gl X I Y I J ,L my l X i N, , I X 3 fe' .. ,. X all f rAl! .41 -N 1 'N 'A 0 ACTI 'f Q' 'gl Q' RD FINKEL 'gQ1LL1AMhG163LD aaa.: 6kbetg, N. J. izabet , . 'f a LINDER RALPH SEIDMA eth, N. J. Cleveland V7 ND BAKER Euro? GALLON H wrglg N. Y. Tole o TANLEY ERLAND ?E?NdARD HARRISON L 'Y Y- Newbur h N. Y. o e o '- I OEN IRVI? G GCR N 'E Clevela I Sfliufifek . Y' ' LEDGES Cleveland AN N OHL S?ULbDRff'TE mi LDSTONE E iza et ' BERNARD NI1 Ifqyr B mw' - ' I a- Cleveland H I 05 SANFORD MI Q : N- J' Cleveland hx ONAR SCHARFELD ALEX Koux 1 'A' em Montclair, f qxqwix 1 A A End of the I 23 Lima Run? First Row: Andrews, Bennett, Burkhardt, Cable, Crites, Cunahan, Evans. Second Row: Hoerle, Hunt, Koch, Leshy, Nichols, Rader, Rady. Third Row: Schoenberger, Schmidt, Shaffer, Shaw, Vaubel. Weaver, Weller, Zeller. SGM ROBERT RADY Sandusky FREDERICK RADER Mansfield JAMES HUNT Lima DELT national professional fraternity Geqcrll -- CRITES -' US ,, ff - .. . ' ,T- GALE WELLER 1 I- 1- 1 Mr. Gilgad . E JAMES HAW gg, T Wapakoneta 'Q W 'V '- , ., N FREDERICK MAYHEW , Toronto ' 'fi' A KENNETH Kocl-I f Ohio City HERMAN VAUBEL Wapakoneta 4993 TQ, a b Q vw H I Q, V7 ER flif. 5 X 41 REM u WI QP, xg , H f 7' . W KCMDOV V , AEXETQE Check that center tie . . . I 24 PP PLEDGES - ROBERT HOERLE Lima LOREN SCHOENRERGER Upper Sandusky PRE-LAW PLEDGES WALTER HUNT Lima FRANK KOENIG Wapakoneta ROGER BARRICK Minerva RAYMOND GILLESPIE Sandusky CLAYTON SELLERS Mansfield JOHN SEARS - Bucyrus I .A I .1 .Q A A. f A 1 , 3 au. As' gif.. 'U ,Agn F 6. - i E-I I-il ' l l I ' is n A . A453 . ',,, - . A - 3 A A 4 fs: arg I 'T f '- --' I - 1 ' A A A, N, Epi sf- ' fl 1 I .A A I l ' l J A --A., . in K' I D ' fi Tug? 'V ' I, . 1,1 A .A A I A. ,A .I Q. up c 'T 1 ' sw' -E I 6-,E-4 f, fa A- 5 .V Lf ,A M . 5-nrhtslx G N V If V I 2 , - . lg f .A I 1 I L -A S.. W lm- ' ' gl AA S- - . -1' Q! -- 'Ur' .1 I 'sf -.53 I L- ' A jtgfg' fu 3 A' -' L .AN - -f A -QQ ' - .1 ' . 'DDLII I I '. l First Row: Arbaugh, Beck, Wolf, Callahan, Carhart, Caving Connor, Chorpening. Second Row:,Webb, Fechete, Foltz, Gullick, Holmes, Lewis, McNerny, Oxley. Third Row: Payne, Purdy, John Quinn, James Quinn, Rinebolt, Rizor, Rodocker, Rogers. Fourth Row: Samnaatinger, Sherk, Turner, Vlahos, Drake. BELT ROBERT BAKER Adrian, Mich. JOHN BECK Findlay NORMAN BOWSHER Lima DWIGHT CARHART Marion ALVIN CAVIN Cadiz PAUL CHORPENING Ashland WILLIAM CONNOR Ada ROBERT DRAKE Findlay SAMUEL FECHETE Youngstown CLIFFORD GLATHART Findlay PETER GULLICK Youngstown WILLIAM HOLMES Columbus CARROL LEWIS Russels Point FOREST MACDONALD New Concord JOSEPH MCNERNY Zanesville DAVID MYERS Celina ARVINE NICHOLS Canton THOMAS ORNDORFF Findlay ROBERT Philo DAVID Mansfield CHARLES BUCK DeG1'afgf DENNIS CALLAHAN Ironton JOHN FOLTZ Lima JOHN KUMMLER Toledo i --,al 125 PIII ARTHUR DAVIS Mogadore CHARLES GOULD Canton MAX C. HITT Bryan THEODORE KNAPP Shelby ROBERT MABEE Mansfield CHARLES NORTON Fremont WILLIAM OXLEY Fremont HAROLD RODOCKER Hicksville JAMES C. WILSON Princeton, Ind. These law students really mean business I I I Q-A ' 44' ff gl ,Q if TIN .5 SAL , 'W I L' vw ix 3 ,' xl I . -. ' ' ' i A,Qa1f,'Q i .E-,AX X 'IcxaG oh- ' ' Jsrfp . ,vw .. VJ Fl' - , Y' yt- Q '-l 1 -A 1 i ,'., .J i ' X A ,H N. X W -11 , , , ...- n ff + . - A Q P-1 4 - YH' . Q -- ri,,. , . Q' -1 .4 - 1 A -J .f-1--5 i '2efiEgaE?'2 , I wiv . ,mm J :ff A Q K+ fs-1 V Jffgrg , , . Y , iifflm? mm , ,M 4,.ff5'f:P -ml-'Lis I1 L. ,QM , . ' ' .l Nil! ',L ' 15151. Q .' X ,M J, , .' V - m .Wi . Al . SJ .3 R, aria f f - T Y. A . -'UF Il 'T ' Q.-' ' fi 4 W f,.,.,,,.., -if-, - 1: f A -1 l.:if:, 1:,. A f , ' J F Q + s .., .1-163,14 1 ,N , irf tkgg -1 . W5 We 11151 mu? pfexw ' N0 C!PDrop1-iq! e ccrpi' available lon Y .,v .4- E if ff' , f v -Y ,:-'.-v,-,,o ,Wy V . ' :vfW.'i1fH,, . mi.1:,:-'- .. - ui- yxiif . - tj 1:2 ' ,-Y:'Yf4 ,,i,g,g.5- fit- f. 7. '. ' .rLY'.: e' as-,gig- -iff? w 1 1511: f L, 1 4 ,V A . it fue. A wreck, or C01-11d be U WOmqn ' .nits 1.7 u W J 441 -- Cleopatra in the snow 's ir' - L-'s116w ball 1 - 'So...Whai. 'Sai ' Y 121 D -WY U ha.-ICH Evert' ho . . - L , L, W IN' will I ,S P c tw ,L if ' iZ:' ' ,if , QQ-f 'iw N g ,J i A J a g? . 1 . k 129 The athletic teams of T946-47 were made of different material than those during the years leading to World War II. Being ia more matured group with an average age well above that of former squads, the men worked hard getting into condition. Though many of the final scores were adverse, the players preserved the Ohio Northern reputation of fine sportsmanship. 130 Tum Gym T X viff r L f F f 31 -I UI N lil ,D F Ld 'x,J , N 111,14 Q75 if 9- S XHJ CS- LJ i E11 ggi Y-r ,-, W Y H fix 5-. fi '1 A I, ,1 EES is ,J , 5 ,r ,fx 5 Lx, . ..7 c' .L.' ,QL 1 v l 125255521 1 U , , zgggu 'M li. iessfii EL' he I .v ,-ggfgig ,wr lj-L , M- ,v -. - -,F I-,f: ' . ,1-:W -w--1 '17' .2 -gb . , 5':'?1 .g,Q.-u7, 1,4 - V, . y, :X at .. 57 ns :N . gg, C .QQ --. . . 'Q ww' 1 Ekliiizl 'v a 1 1- V - 4. .. ,. 1 '-ax - -.41 Ain. . ,v r,S . , 'i1:.q--1,.f- Jw.. -'L-u gg- 1 s, M- :,-v--- ' --r, -- .. K V. , . '-. '-- -A' -- -1- - - L- :.,+.-,.-AZJ,-H ,. .,.:X5Y': f , ,. a- '11 - Is-'ef i - -f ' J- ' i'5.v74rpf:Y.,1 -'S 'V--',.:' '- Y -' '- ,,..,M,.,fn,,A. ,H ., ,,n,-':g.l- ..:-,A -yxf ,ht-., 4,2 -.- 3.5--N V-N , - U-Q 1fe4,:,!4aaxa- . ,, .L- .. ' L- f,gi14fai,+f,.,: 1112. 5,9332 Lombardo, Stackhouse, Smyth, Wilson, Hutton, Williams, Turner, Freeman, Lauless. Coach Murphy, Glase, F. Gren, E. Gren, A. Roberson, Rider, Blose, Amey, Brink- meyer, Ridley, R. Roberson, Shingler. . Snider, Hall, Edinger, Strasbaugh, Hornbeck, Gobin, Rothchild, Waites, Dodds, Balchak, Benson, Van Horn, Derry. McCrate, Keenan, F. Snyder, DeLucca, Whitney, Sandy, Davenport, Kauffman, Steele, Rogers. Clyde Lamb 6 Millard Murphy CIIACIIES Lamb, the Athletic Director, has been associated with the University since the fall of 1929. Serving in several capacities, he has been the track coach and assistant coach in other sports, Lefty Murphy, Head Coach and the man who tutored the ONU football conference champs of '42, returned to the University in the fall after army service. The two men are working for better sports at Ohio Northern ,Q ,...lV'M- 9 Q lVVVLi. 5 J ' Ready On The Right Varsily Football Niles Amey Larry Archer Jack Blose Bill Brinkmeyer Bob Davenport Elwood Edinger Ed Gren Frank Gren Berny Kauffman Nelson Lauless Vince Lombardo Joe Rogers ettermen Arden Roberson Maurice Shingler Collins Stackhouse Tom Steele Chuck Strasbaugh Bill Smyth Jim Glase Chuck Rothchild George Williams Bob Gobin Harold Rider Jim Wilson 1' , GAME SCORES l i . PLAYER SCORES Cedarville ......... ONU . . . .19 Smyth ,....... . Rio Grande . . . ,ONU ......... 13 'Lauless . . . . . Ashland .... ..... O NU ...B Q ' . . . . 0 Lombardo . . Findlay .... ..... O .. .. 0 F. Gren .... ouerbein ... ..... ONU. ......... 6 Bavichak .. . Bluffton .... ...., P ONU ..... Q .48 Wilson . . Heidelberg ......... ONU .... 7 . Edinger .... Wittenberg ........ ONU . 13 Stackhouse . . . Mt. Union .'.1. ...... ONU 2 Strasbaugh . 134 A. Roberson 4. . . Rider ......... . L - . -rf -,-,4 .',.-V U I , A, f ,. ' . .'-1 -4 1 ,.'- , F 1.7- ,. Y F., i V, ,V -,,. .mf 4 ,.-1.. ,.r :.,. -..- . . W Mit . Qmvm, , we 19, uw , 1 inf ,.:- V ' . 4 Wf. . ' Qi:-. 1-f-2 ry A . ,- , .. '1 4-. JP, fl . .,.-5 -1-1 A1 J Q' 's 1' uf, ' ' Lg, i' Tp ' - . Q. - 'tw vw . -H...-,.' 'M x , 1-, Ja. ,i. ,, vu- ' V' .,! L-,V fbi. , '. 1, QA, U , I , --3. W4- .,.,e- wp' af' vp, 1 4 my , Y, ..,,,+4,,.w xg U. fan! 51 H , -V 1'Lw:Xff?5EgiX T - . f',., ,i.:f'.' .gn 4' A ,Qw 'gm,'.-,f,:euw,,',w,,sw 4' v 4 X' 1 QA - .. 4: ,. ,A .g,.:1 ,. , , ,, U f, .55 ,.. - fl '..-'www , '- ' sz - -my W ,r - , , -,QQ ' 'fawf' iv V ?E4U4'Y. . ' . - iii, M X , - H :Q I. gig -f ?' WY??f-zeszasggl, - wqwsifg ie X' . ',s,Qzgrg5,E ., ?-Em , 5,2 .1 W 'wx ' wwf, f--,J 1 .- ,. 4 'J 4... Er- .1 .Us , 4 . ' H-sul... ,. -.,5 , M 0' .Y '19- V .r.,- . V --. -1' .' + T.y,J.y -w-'MH mf -, .fqf 1- ' f . . v ' V ,m .Y ' 'Y In -X . Y I- , vw. H, tw A W ' Y . W ' , ...Y . z Q- w W, u., .-L , :L-1. . . ,,,L. , - j':nw'.1 --af 1-ff ,495-24 if rw..,.ff.,L, 11- I1 Mffff'-f, 4, -. - .1 ,a-,'f5S-'1kTsLi,'.'--3, . ff . .....,.4.x,1-gg,-w. A.. .auf ' ,.-ig-,WN x'1.,. 41.-. --QW. ,.,., W M, V Y 1. ...fm b . b 4' f mn, -fu., -A' U 'f15.LI-f..-V njwi'-Lf' jf .- :,!1y!.'1, ,Vg . - .Q .Y1 -.-- .1-xt' ' 113 -v - .'r .Jw ' -f V 'fa B. -'- f H- 41'- . . -- ... 1, -. f .. JL .MA . fs. , .. , . I- M, Q., - L. 1 .4.-. ' , -' . , , , . - .,,,,.. -... - gag-1' , v .3 Z .--J ' f ,,.--' -. LJ., ' Q , . , V A - ,. , , , . ., Q. ,, ,g-. Y ,- Y , '-. ' i -1-1 ww U 'S ' . , , .,M,,,v 1 , ,w- ,u , ' fl-.3 ', -4----. .,,,,. A, ,W ,, ..,,,,: ..,. . ., ..,,., Y 4- G N. A .-A .x -w 4 K - f. -ff Q L Q-4 I 'I ,pf r ' 4. 'i.i!' ..w -f',Q, Q Cf- -. f, I ' ..,' 1 :.-11, '. ,AL . fro.. ,V+ P2 -.,. . . ...M , 4., V F- -1 v Q . S. 7v4,-,Ir ii ,.,, ,t x . I -..r .- V, ,. Aw, , ., fr x....-.:. ..- ' 5Z1,,,3- 47 . .Nw Hwqyww w X w xg? ' w W w r ' X N H W w HX 8 w wvw 1 'xxx E Www 1 W W w na x N M ,, W 55' M4 if Lx lpn We 4 A ii A 4 First Row: Coach Murphy, Rothchild, Stevenson, Church, Miller, Hayden. Second Row: Blose, Killian, R. Wright, Brautigan, Waites, Reed, D. Mitchell, Whitley. ASEB LL After much confusion as to whether or not ONU would participate in in- tercollegiate baseball, the first game was played on April 14. The ball club promised a successful season from the beginning by defeating Bluffton 15 to 4. The men were not only fine swatters but were also resourceful. This was shown by their construction of Wibbler Field, the new diamond. 136 Church, Hayden and Strasbaugh . . . Limbering up . . 1947 3 I-,L -H- r . an , f-at A. aseball Schedule April April April May May May May May May May 14 19 28 l 3 6 10 22 26 28 Bluffton College Indiana Tech.. . . . . .. .there .....here Bluffton College ........... here Toledo Univ. .............. here Indiana Tech. . . .....Ft. Wayne Wittenberg College ....... here Kent State .... ....there Kent State ...... ..... h ere Findlay College Toledo Univ. .. Defiance College Ctwo games, date 137 ....there .. .... there s not set.l 1 VAR ITY ASKETB LL First Row, left to right: John Reed, Arden Roberson, Bill Brinkmeyer, Niles Amey, Robert Stevenson, Randall Roberson. Second Row, Left to right: Robert Davenport, Bill Hayden, Bill Whitely, Hank Miller, ' Fred Church, Charles Strasbaugh, George Williams. JUNIOR VARSITY Q ffl rf ' t ' f- 4 . f r M 1 nz . 1' - - A. ' le 'f R -- frtfi' ' ew First Row, left to right: Joe If ,q t - -N 4' 'gf-QQ Sproul, Ted Gilder, Jim P 3 , -,Q Fl Benson, George Killian. ' ' A I 3 Q ' A . :X M geconlsl Row, lefga tg gighg: we' 1 y 1 t ob avenport, o oy , . I , . r ' ' f Bill Johnson. George Wil- 8 I u ' i '2'- 1 liams. 138 YY, N 1, -.4 ' v 'il' if: i t. 1. .f Zami?-1 r it Q'- ' :QE ff, 4 1,9351 First Row: F. Gren, Kleinoeder, Shingler, Lombardo, Archer, Steele, Gobin, Daven- port. - Second Row: Kauffman, Huey, Freeman, Rogers, Rothchild, McCrate, A, Roberson, Brinkmeyer, Blose, Church. Third Row: Stevenson, Smyth, P. Snyder, Moon, Williams, Hayden, Strausbaugh, Miller, Bailey, Edinger. N The N Men's Club is composed of Ohio Northern athletes who have earned their letters as members of the squads participating in intercollegiate competition. Its purposes are to promote sportsmanship and to back athletic activities of the University. The annual All Sports Banquet is given in the spring of each year by the Interfraternity Council with the N Men as honored guests. It is at this time that the major sports awards are presented. 139 L 1 vii T7 Au Q, X S l4O SQUAD MEMBERS Betty Jenkins Joy McAtee Deanne Ritter Mary Alice Spar Jack Carey George Killian X a. tai. w ' 1 gp.. ' 'Dopey' Ritter . . . it was broken in .ZX S , i line of duty. One of the smallest squads participating in in- tercollegiate sports, the Cheerleaders worked as hard as did the major teams they supported. Heckled by the lack of funds for uniforms and trip expenses, they solved their financial difficulties by giving a profitable sports dance. They also had a set back while enroute to a basketball game at Tiffin when Ritter suffered more than the Ford coupe or the tree which met quite unnaturally. 141 INT o NF X v o ' ? .f 5 A .o i An extensive schedule of intramural sports is planned nach year for the benefit of the average University student. Miss Jo Ann Sidcy handled the womerfs program and Vincent Lombardo diredied the meds. In consider- ation of the inadequate equipment as the result of post-war shortages, they have done a remarkable job. Vincent Lombardo Jo Ann Side-y I42 -4 1 , V4 lx ',. -WX ' ,-,' Y'-.'uylnf:!m 'J Xl. 'LV 4 JN A' V W X N VxxN Ki X X ,-, V., L, 1 Xxx XR, ,, K W X x a, N -K - . , .. -Y ,A 'vft-V 4' , , , , W, 1 R fx 'x f- ff , '1 .- p , Q .npggg .1 '2 1 25, ,Wi , x - 1 .. - hi 1 gi , '- in , -: -.T 11 ... 4 2' ..Q.h- . ... . . 4. Min. 1 . Q73 fi . ,125 , - 5'-wm-EJ 2525 .1 , -. 1. ,..A.1., LQ' 1-fff if9 'S-ffftjij 5-11 ' h 1 , ..4L,:15f'f .. .,,,. -5 ' 1 Nd T . N., ,, , t 1- i fi L7 If .ln 1 ' : M N a V . - W. V, r-.-..:.,T ' -1 V5- f- . V C 3'1 . Q51 M- ? A ' V. . -,-,rfgfwl ,, ..., Q -:sf .1 f Ay.. f K 'N 5 Ai-. x . - ' - ' r-X: . 'Nw 'xx' , 1 pf' W -fr. 3 T., Ev xx a y 4 k 1 . Ng, N, ,L S . W1 NH A f X 1 I M' .-1 xwxxyymkox x 'Wi J xX Nw. X f , M, bf f' X A9 N 'P sy - ' 1 X' 1 3 KLM-.J-45553. N V w Q fi n x NX N N. N x MW ' K 4 I A ww x, X ' ,r , L 'N MA QL IM 'O ,L .xx 5 4' - I '4'4' , -K X , kklid, M-- W 5, KL51' ' qoinq. . . . gone. aw i x - ti Tiffi -- .-.fh,Ljal,5l'- , -.giyflzx V . '4' V-rf-FFR xx Gren xxxx Mitchell XX-M Bloom Hunter Davenport I N NNN! 1 First Row: Bushong, Sweet, St. Louis, Dudevoire, Baker, Robinson. Second Row: R. Creps, Brynes, Backert, Sidey, Sloane, Kerr, Morrison. Third Row: Miss Omler, Stedcke, Motter, Doty, V. Clark, Fredericks, Kennedy. AA Through their affiliation with the national organization of the Women's Athletic Association, the University's girls have kept pace with the changing field of Women's sports. The members of WAA direct all the Wornen's in- tramural sports program and frequently hold social functions on the campus. w I44 Intramural ports ecard The All-Sports trophy, presented by the Interfraternity Council, was shared by the Delta Sigma Phi and the Sigma Pi fraternities. fraternity Sigma Pi ....... Delta Sigma Phi . . . Sigma Phi Epsilon . . . Phi Mu Delta ....... Theta Kappa Phi Kappa Psi ,...... BASKETBALL Delta Sigma Phi .......... Sigma Phi Epsilon ........ Kappa Psi ......... .... Phi Mu Delta .... . Sigma Pi .......... .... Theta Kappa Phi .... . Alpha Epsilon Pi .... .... golf horseshoes WOII WOI1 WOI1 WO11. WOI1 WO1'1 W01'1 6 4 4 3 2 1 0 final swimming tennis score 5 4.5 1 15.5 4 4.5 4 15.5 1.6 1 5 11.6 1.6 1 3 6.6 1 3 1 6 1.6 0 1 3.6 VOLLEYBALL Phi Mu Delta ..... 1 ........ Won Delta Sigma Phi .... ..... W on Theta Kappa Phi .... .won Sigma Phi Epsilon ......... won Sigma Pi ........... ..... w on Alpha Epsilon Pi .... ..... W on Kappa Psi ....... ..... W on omengs Intramurals basketball volleyball kickbcxll Theta Phi Delta .... lst 2nd lst Phi Chi ............... . . 2nd lst Tau Kappa Kappa ......... 2nd - Independent Girls Club .... Cno placingj 145 iz W u , ,r , , , 322' ' ,GM N .'.1:5'W , ' 1 I i.12w5,i', ' ' ' ' :. ',i.,f:, Hz, - x HQ gqlgiffir ,X Y, W w-w.-,,,-- R... ,,,, . V. ,. . .4-..L my-4:1-1 . MDX' g, 97377:-j ' '-1f'fi.,Q,'51'ffi', -Q r .,,Y-tlfwh Y, . -155 M. - .fm ul f'1'P:fa114-4 ', Li' , -A A:-,-ix-,m.:,v..' 4, -n . r-::f.L-N:-ff . .- , ,. ,.- -. , :X LI :hifi H 5 N fi Jglf, . Q12 QQ- - rf,- : . Qkw' 1 W 1- f - f on .,,1.,,1,g---' H1 -.. .,,-. E f A. iw-f I- :nfgf in vi- ' f 'Azh- ,T f-a Sax . , Q- 1. 1615 .f , 'Lf ff, 1 1 .W .u 1 u ,ii I 335, Q-5' if 'Q' gf W? I AF - .1 1 .'!?,' VII' 4.4 1 :W .I , siE .2f'?f5gi41 ?f1' -' Q--21, f V, Law, :SI f--M V M, X. A V Y Thi' , . A We 1- . 5 . .-fy -Q ,' ' ' ' f1'-429'-- ws., S.: .u.wf:Ls?+ ' -1 ' -ji ,A T .-EQ?-i 1-, - ,y,,53.f- . rf 1 7.1 ifi'g,252'1x ., ,, in 5, . .fax .571 l,, V z-..'. ' ' 4' vc . , , ., . ,, - :Jw Q.,-jfykyf fx jg-xi .5-L.. . .RAM ,.,, J,x.5.,. ..4 3 ,4- -QIWQQQ Mix - 'F ' 1 V , X A M' K -1, IT'S SUMMER TIME 1946 0 u 4 - , if 1' 21 . -, A ...qv a , -. , As- , T, , . 1 J .H g . L ,iq Q . ,, ' mu-1 if V. , T 5, fa F 1 m f .J .J-Sv it ,AQ '1 dk w sf , 'Y 4 ,f f 'S ' f f , fgifv - f Y ,, fx i-K NXNX , gf 1 X 0 fqzx, I ff fitrj 'Zi IIVELL Traditionally the poor 'lFr0:-sh must endure- their punishment at the hands of the merciless sophomores. As you Cam sov. their apparel lacked sox up- peiil. Fresliinen, your day will come. Sorurities and fraternities also have their hazing days . 0 WEEK Q 02,43 'ISI ,pf ff-Tl I ,N , Q B 1 . A I 5 SMWW 1 mal uk, vi 1 'V' -.. ,J Yi 4' -. ,, 1 I 5 Y . N ', Y ,W 1 ' H14 -A: ,f 5. , r, I' I ig f. ....,N ,f 2 I ,J 'W ' C. ' -..', '. ':-:,. X L3 ' Y:-vs.. f ' If 'WMM' ' I Y x - 7-earl! 1, XA 1 . A 1 -5 vg 5: - '35 , rt: 5,2 -L1 1 lm- -Q ova - e , e fem 6 ,'- -Q A- - 'pf j J' Y , K -Q ri mst , X, ,ev o M fag. , , ' .s ,. A , . .1 .-L -1 - A . 1 ,Y U V, fr N ! -' ,V 'ak ',! 1' -N 4 . .NL ' - 7 , I v I ri' ' , 1.7 ' A ' v L 1, M 4 ' 1,99 Q ,V W JN HH-!,' 1' L 57 A' 'V iii !,,54:hA , Tq1K's one of the more unique parties of If ,Qjthef year. iriterior of the house assimilated a hobo UfQjl1Hg1C,1 Thf,' girlsnput on a chorus-like skit honoring the king and que-eh, of the tramps, Sally Jo Varner Bill Wright. The atmosphere was in line with ragged garb, straw, cans for cups and kerosene yignterns-only one thing was amiss. Where was the Mulligan stew? i E If ,UQ ,,VVV v V ' 11 WVU Hi W4 fillql IS! 1 , . N ,-, ' if, .xox 1' x X X x Y . ' X Y y , X N K 1- . fir I U- . S V .. V :Ig ' ..1.U. N 'vii' fm.. X- - ..1 A ,., - ,Q.-,,- . :x::-'I- , fl ng 'EBSQ' '5- ' 1 2F41 ' I- 'J?,5i1'i-L: W, R83- 1 .',.,.- rf 1 . 11-4' ---Y' -H' 1' ' s ' ,.Q.'E'-ef 7 . 5' ' , 1-X.,-f: '34 -A .mf-.. 1Q?,- 3 vr...fA LB in Q W, aff' ' 9 'N --2,-Q! 1 i i 1 ? Hs- W W 1 I X N w 1 I i r 1 w xl f 1 1 V A w w 4 Q x 1 N EXW! ' 'Q- X it S I -,mffv 'afff' 'MW' gawk hifi rr A. A5 , . rr ff. wff 4' Casey at the Bat took an odd twist when presented on Lehr Auditoriunfs stage by the baseball team. Casey -Jack Hovis-put all he had into it but the ending was still the same-he struck out! The 'program was presented to encourage every student of O.N.U to attend the baseball games held at Wibbeler Field. Each game we attended here helped to send the boys to out-of-town games. Also on the program were the three mad musicians and the Sig Ep hillbilly band. 3 'iff J' . i ' vruvul., 5 11 -rg 'A ., A D' ,A 3, .M Q JP, ,.' FN Q , .Q . ww , N - AFL. ...fv- L . .- -.svqn N we-. f'-.i'l?u-- - aff' ' ' - J ff' QQ? , . , 5 1 2527 u- j . W' ' X if' ' I, I . 1 qi A EMA' .X A 4 .N ...- .4. ' I '- I .Ny f 1 ' ' , , , , 1 N 1.7 fv . , ,r -..-,.'- fx :iii 5 .1 ' ' '?G. 2,5f1lM2.1', LIL' AB EB C E all , ff .X E! rv ! 'r -aff, '. 0. ,:: f't:,i ' L ff' sh iv gg , 33. In hxm I f 93? '1 , , The Theta formal cap- iured the spirit of spring- time. Syncopatcci rhythm offered by Bernie Welsh and his band, plus a fle- lightfully jovial crowd, combined to constitute an unforgettable dance. Couples, dressed in gay forrnal gowns, neat suits and tuxe-does, floated over the floor of thc Top Flight Dance hall. Of had their course they usual bit of hilarity. lf . just you think not . . take a look at the Capel! brothers. rx J P0 T 'wi W EB 1' Ui We W 6 I 9 The freshie girls at Turner Hall made their own entertainment for an evening by giving a house dance. Lassies brought out their good lookin' duds and lads their bow ties and sharp suits. A big time was had by all? I UU UU 5 I 1 1, 41, v-- 4 n '. H0 ECO .J .af QW -'B f .,...i' IV! ual Q I I 1 9 i 1 w 1 1 V I 1 I a ! P W l 4 I i 1 6 V If, I vjsqa it at Fgarf? Q' i aim. Qvllvfl XP! ,x 'QHQ' Gaiam 1'-gf-V .,,f-1-x- - 4, 14---, 5' 'fs...Mf , 'bf-1 9' Nl ' ,gf -f 22 - . 1. ,fs-,F Y 1 A . in -..l.,t..,....-..- V W 1 Y r I g2'h,A,, af 556.5 9-n ' igae. gl HU 1. ' -Q -., 1 f .. QP., Q,,4: -.XS-N 1 w X X W www ' x , X A 1 , ,,,! V v w , L 2 50-4 .1 ffm wr- 9 VNYV7' I Ever7,fboclyout! Th:1t was the call of the Student Council on May Day for a good old fashioned clean- up job of llw cmnpus. Fraternities, sororities and in- dependents took mkcs, hoes and brooms in hand and ronlly' wont to town leaving the campus looking Spic and spun by noon. The schoclulccl baseball game with Toledo University. clvdiczltion of the now base- ball diamond Wihbc-lei' Fierlcil-and crowning of the May Day Queen in the :-iftornoon had to be postponed temporarily bocauso old man rain entered, but all wi:-nl as pimms-cl at the dance- held ihat evening in Taft Gym, ll was sponsorod by the baseball loam. Hui Janicv Grazzser, Jean Brinkmeyer. Mary Alice Spar. K O . 1, ... ,x.f. L V, MVK IHIS IS 111 EPQ-SED? QLGIUHEQ 1 un.-H. it . ,,,. X ii We 'I N ' . 1 1. ' I lk , ,I ,' V I' I L 'r , I , ,4 . . ,, . A w V , F I -A H I ' , V , .-' Y .Xiu I I VI H ,V fi f 4-., ,f-- . , , , ,V 1' -. - - sax D . - ' az x 2, 1 Fw 1.,, wi 44+ 'ISK- A W V' Q 'Q 5 wr . 1- Hg' q 9 .5 'J I KAP 0 li ' ,'.v. wi 8 w 5: M. 1 N mio f , ,J .pf L.. , JEANS BND! WHERE MAY 'QUEEN' ' WMRRCHES TO BE CROW NED , ,jx ,. Ja in Y HV, If IQ ,' ' ,-I 1 fsmimnm 'fl af. ,,-,E pi' 'If I I f ww V Y ., f- fe v. f I fr- I,-vi -V, . . TJ:-' ' -, If N' Q JI I K ,,f, 7 ' 1 AM' ia Al ' Ffa ' Ni. I Wy. 4' V :ARK i 1 J N 4 K I. 1 , N. 1' 'I 52 U ., I' 1 QQ - 2 f ' 'SQ kd ' Q 44521 1 8- if '- -- -- '--- -r .,,,.y --.v -.-.. '-,. - L. , -.. ,' TEES 'QQOIIQ2 ' 5 Q' f 544, jp xx, W WX 4 I I H' 1 2x5 gkw X A . S TTL ik .-.114 ' X , ' ST DE G0 EB ME T During the winter quarter, revisions were made on the old student constitution enabling newly created groups fair representation. This was the na- tural outcome of a document designed for a small student body which could no longer be applied due to the growth of the University. After weeks of heated attempts toward revision, the arnmendrnents were accepted in March. Immediately following, class officers were chosen as well as representatives to the Student Council. The latter met in Alumnae Hall on April 2, and in turn, chose the Council offi- cers. As the mid point of the spring quarter ap- proached, the little on campuspwas expecting great things fromthefnewstudent government. Much of the credit for the- reorganigationfiiwent to the Reverend Marion Tinsler, Mehfslffounselor, where it was certainly due after his efforts in that direction. pg' , 1 , All ,. 7 CV V 1 : T 'H' I: 'W ,, X if 5 '-fffzi, ' 5 1 i I 6 I I I ! 1 President of the Student Coun- cil David Marion Myers is a junior in the College of Law and president of the Delta Theta Phi, professional law fraternity. i T L J 1 , -'1 Myers, Zlotnick, Cunahan, Hanneman, Rider, Zink, Brush, Prentice, Madigan, Dorn, Stahler, Sutton, Sellers. V, ,...- rf' 'I Y :gli ' ,Q 'L Strasbaugh, Sutton, Cahill Davenport Halfhill A - V V. . rj, 4 , V x, ,V , , ,, ,, W , ,,.4. , , x ' HEI :Tlx M ? I ll wk 'Z-SN-, - f ni 3 ,.... M. U w 'Big Men on Campu seldom been usediinthe, arbooks of Ohio Northern. In an attempt o fsetlsorne ,,. sort of precedentfto be followed by later years, the men included o fjtlfesle pages are BigMei'1 for rather diversified reasons. For example: Chas. Strasbaligh is one of fthe most outstanding ath- letes in the University as are Frank igfiren, Bernie Kauffman and Larry Archerg Peter Aquilina, one of our leading musieiansg Suraj Bahadur, an unofficial traveling salesman for ONU as he speaks throughout the state before various clubsg Earl Brush, anlizhonor sfudemftand fellow leader in the business of the Engineering College',vvithtArcher.' v. il in lv Q T- Y X l ' 1 Bahadur Thomas, Robertson Aquilina QW N. 4 Monroe Kauffman -H We then picked A1 Monroe, Bob Davenport, Jim Halfhill, George Thomas and Don Robertson, Paul Sutton and Jack Cahill for a mixture of their scholastic abilities, campus personalities, and cooperation in campus affairs. The shot of the Delta Sig porch is not a plug for that outfit but rather of what BMOC look like 'off the recordi. gl w Gren Archer Brush ' . -Fh- Here we have five of the innumerable pairs of personalities who are either temporarily or permanently aligned. Some are shyiand others, well, others are seen everywhere . . . drinking cokes or Whispering over a corner table, walking down the main drag hand in hand or sitting on the steps of Hill waiting for another class. Upper left walk Sue Hamakawa and John Blackwoodg middle, Russell Shively and Lucy Coatesg upper right are Marj DaPore and Keith Bairg lower left, Winnie Herring and Royce Nicholas posingg beside them are the talkative Penny Penn and Don Nash. ' C0 PLES C0 PLES .whoa Due to the large married population at Northern, it would be wrong to devote both of these pages to them 'who ain't'. Consequently, here are seen those who don't hold hands anymore or wear corsages and bouton- nieres to formal dances very often. Reason: Mission Accomplished or, Veni, Vidi, Vici . Upper right is a never-to-be-forgotten symbol 'offthat day'. It is appropriate here. 'Upper left are the Gallons. Isowerfleftjare the Thumas, then the Steeles, and then the Klines. 1 , i ,f p Q fig .J A . 4 P : W -,-.tsl-T, 5 J 4-' '- f if ,vi LW' ,F : 1 J, ,l.,,,'p.-V ' ' uf- ,si j ' fs-if-r f K., 5, 5' 4' r' f X we ,I-f f 1 ,. ,---- ' , f- ' ,pl Z 5 if iAg-,,e.d - Y J V,,.fef,-,ff-,. -Z5 ,X n ,,,,+f-iijgilffg-e if-3 ' V f , -851' ,ga-' ,J ,WJ I, .HI gf If if if e '- ,J me f , wgfref a we .J .ff L, fi 'A xr :, t R uf ' - A ,,,. , 'IN kw -Y-LRF I ici -sql H ifrczfia-::? Y jr- 1 -Y daze, , .111 .fixrd :qi wx?-X is Q1 Liars m5IT9gLf3-.z-,- fer- .Z-eww: e?, iiggfmi 5 A ' .M F -e it r. ee - ai. .X ,,,Vi..,eg,-, -ee . V.-,,u.L.L:e-,,.-. YL ,J . ' 'ffl . U 3, Who says we aren't contented! V ,f--' ,.., ff ..,, V , -' - fm. fY3Sini.Bi-A...t:-fzil Trailer living has become one of the main sides of habitation as a result of the post-war housing shortage. The three large colonies of government trailers established at ONU to relieve the shortage of apartments which were demanded by the large number of married students, have been fully occu- pied since the day of their availability. The first of the group, Presser Colony, so named due to its proximity to the Presser Hall of Music, was inhabited during the winter quarter of '45-'46. The Lehr and Taft Colonies fthe first is on the west end of Lehr Avenue and the latter just behind Taft Gyml each are about one year old. l u ilf 4. . --.A ... TRAILER Trailer living was first looked down upon by.. rnany of the veteran wives, but their spouses soon assured them that the mobile homes :could be made into comfortable cottages. Before too long, the young couples became acclimated to their temporary hous- ing conditions and found common interests with their student neighbors. Local jokes and 'beefs' arose as ex- i pected. Some were satisfied by the iestablishlnentu oft colonial governments, others such as the daily water carrying detail, remained without prospective abate- llli t ment as jokes. ' l f COL0 IES Sure Ii's Wonderful! f .eww .3 f 4 p A ., I -1 .n - f ,Ui -,7 ' ' .1 A .- f I P 9-fe. On these pages we see eight of the many houses occupied by the stud t en population. It is in these domiciles that they not only gain the knowledge they've come to college for, but also where their best college memoirs are founded. Top left is the Delta Sig houseg top right, Turner Hallg mid-left, the Sig Epsg lower left is the Kappa Psi'sg lower right The Terrace. ' ..1 '-,..,. 3 xx ' Till. ,ff flfif 4 H - - , .. 11?-Q' .rff yy 1:5551 w ,i I , 1' lf 1i'fl15'fl-fQ4.::- . EQ -3 ' ,nk ,ui Q x hgh-, bk - 'uv--'f-. . s-, , v,:,,s '.'f Q - 12'-391.4 1 , s- Y '4i ., .Mg .:'i.,3n-f. 'L- A Q . -- sae. ,,, JK, 1 l ibn. 'f-sfs::Q+ 1s.L,'4--'f': l ' uf . U+f fv'f+iefqi1fg n .5 l' ' bfi .- Y a 1 ' V .' . 9 ' Q A t ' ' b I'a ' - , V f- 1: are---,-s,.s, I i 1: 1 , ,ll it 4 - I , 'I :YA ,F fiery- Q A , 'lg ,, 1. ' , ,eglgjzi-:eff 'f A 1-..,! 4':A,.,M -...wi A s. , li 7 lil-ef, ff' .WA-'E ww Elf' , I 2 1 gt-Q5 . la. a ey-l 'f-- V. .rag - I ,Mini 'Eg'-.3 al gal., 1 -- -V' ' H 7 G-f '9?Q'e 'M Wi f -n':s1a,,, ,, ' -N 5, ' ' nl mvv.---v. 1 i . -' mall. ..,. ,,1f -- ,,, 3- uf n . - -' .-- 1 -- '- ' ,. . v :. ' fgfnfi A ,fc - . !sQ,hv , ' f:f,fews,..-9'9.S?lIf'Li1f! . Xxx X 'MW Kr xx -i BESIDE CES And on this page we have the Theta Kaps house in the upper leftg the-as you see- the A.E. Pi's, upper rightg bottom, the Theta's abode. House dances are given reg- ularly in the fraternity and sorority houses throughout the year. gn: V 1 7 A 0 wry, J QZHMHHWH4 rf H X K6 ,X 9 N, I . UIP 82 DI 'NI 1 AW? HQ Q1 E X-, 183 - 4.4 .u, 4, .'n,1. B110 FIELD CONTINUED from page 34 Some would say this is a world of con- fusion, even of despair . . . It is perhaps an uncomfortable world and one filled with anxieties, economic, political and social, yet it is one of the greatest periods of his- tory When history itself is being made un- der our very eyes, with the passing of each day . . . It would be stupid either to submit through ignorance or indifference to the wrongs of the times or fail to understand what a better world can be and not to fight for it . . . It is impossible in the midst of the con- fusion of these embittered times to give proper appraisal to these currents or to fathom wholly their significance. It may be that we are passing through a period of disintegration, or a period of transition, or We may be in the process of making great advances. One thing is certain-that an- other great War in our times will reduce the continent of Europe to the level of the Dark Ages . . . I84 In this modern age, so closely knit by its industrial character and shrunken to a fifth of its former size by the mechanical inventions, radio, airplane, telephone, etc., the Malay, Hottentot and Russian become our close neighbors and interdependents: In such a world and with such weapons as modern warfare possesses, it becomes clear that We can no more suffer or permit inter- national war. Perhaps the greatest obsta- cle to real world peace and government to- day is the fact that people of the world and its diplomats and leaders have not yet chosen to base their laws and actions upon the real and shrunken world .... In all of this, it must not be forgotten that in a shrunken world, there has been a horizon- tal war in progress and at the same time a vertical War. While nations fought a ver- tical war, there existed with in their own borders, warfare among classes-a hori- zontal Warfare which cut across the heart of every nation in the world. Neither War is as yet settled . . . Again a Molloy-Made Cover is Used on The Northern Best Wishes to the Class ot l947 THE S. K. SMITH CO. 2857 N. Western Ave. Chicago l8, Ill. OHIO-KENTUCKY MFG. CO. Manufacturers of ATHLETIC GOODS HOFELLER. HIATT And CLARK Fashion Park Charter House CLOTHES Lima Knox Hats Ohio HUBER'S Hardware and Furniture Store Everythinq for the Farm and Home Phone l Ada C O L E A N D D O M E Insurance of All Types 117 N. Main Phone 214 Ada ADA FARMERS EXCHANGE Headquarters for PURINA CI-IOWS and FARM SUPPLIES Compliments of THE ADA HERALD Printers of University Publications Compliments of ADA LOCKER SERVICE Home of CLOVER FARM PRODUCTS BALISH FOUNTAIN SERVICE Fine Chocolates and Candy ADA CLUM'S MARKET Groceries and Meat Ada Phone 61 Compliments of ARBOGAST HOTEL Ada Phone 211 BAUGHMAN GREENHOUSE Flowers for every occasion Corsaqes our Specialty So. Main St. Kenton So. Simon St. Ada I8 It seems to me that education has largely failed its obligations for these rea- sons: over-specializationg because our edu- cational institutions have suffered from lack of money and moral support. The schools from the grade schools upward through the university should be placed first on the schedule of public expenditureg it has failed through the academic blight which has always threatened education since the first cave man made pictures on the cave walls . . . The greatest thing a col- lege can plant in any individual is the seed of intellectual curiosity. Education does not end at the door of the university but the university has pro- vided you with the foundation upon which to build the greater structure of intellec- tual growth and aspiration. Go forth to the world that has desperate need of you. fAda Herald, June 7, 19465 X. 1 Tx. . PX -.xx Ou-la-la. Ballet Russe is looking for this. It's cz wonderful life. Absolute comfort. HART'S IEWELRY See Matt CON N'S GEORGE FRANKLIN STORE Sc-lOc-351.00 up Your Patronaqe Appreciated Next to Ccleon Theatre Ada Compliments of THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ADA OI-IIC Compliments of GARDNER'S DRUG STORE Rexal Products S. Main St. Phone 21 THE HABIT RECREATION Soft Drinks, Ciqars and Cigarettes N. Main St. Ada Compliments of H I N D M A N ' S Modern Shoe Repair ADA, OHIO Chiropractor I. THOBURN IOHN D.C., Ph.C. Three-year Palmer Graduate Spineoqraphic and Neurocalometer Service New Location-127 So. Main Street 187 Compliments of KING LUMBER COMPANY Ada, Ohio Where friends meet and bargains reign Your KROGER SUPER MARKET Lewis G. Lowry, Mgr. We Feature Varsity Town Clothes For College Men Come in and Ask for Steck THE LEADER Lima Ohio MAIN 6 SON Pure Oil Products Phone l2-Public Sq. Ada Compliments of I. W. MERTZ Keys made while you wait. N. Main St. Ada Compliments of THE LIBERTY BANK Bank of Service Ada Ohio MOORE'S Everything for AUTO-HOME-FARM Busy Stores Everywhere Robt. C. Park, Owner ll7 S. Main St. MOORE'S NEWSTAND Latest Sports Results Tobaccos and Coniections Ada Ohio Compliments oi MESSICK STORE 5C to SLUO N. Main St. Ada A gruesome twosome M A S Mary Always Sings Cheesecake Ii you knew Susie More cheesecake Our Dah boy. This was left over. Find the 21 items and describe each FULLY. - ' Dr. Dobbins POVENMIRE'S FOOD MARKET Premier foods and Select Meats Lee l-lammon Ohio Northern Alumnus REAM'S HARDWARE 111-113 S. Main St. Ada, Ohio HARDWARE Hardware - Plumbing - Electric Paints - Gifts Have your clothes cleaned the SANITONE METHOD SEI-IL'I S CLEANING CO. 104 N. Main St. Ada Compliments of SIG PEPPER Walgreen Agency ADA RED 6. WHITE GROCERY Meats and Groceries Edward 1. Bosch, Prop. Compliments of H . I . S O U S L E Y INSURANCE Ada, Ohio SOUTH MAIN MEAT MARKET Clark Bridenloaugh Compliments of SUPREME DRY CLEANING 512 S. Main St. Ada THETA PHI DELTA Conqratulates The Graduates of 1947 Compliments ot MARATHON STATION ADA VAN'S GENERAL STORE 223 N. Main St. Service Center Real Estate at I-Iqwys. 69 and 30N Phone 246 ADA Compliments of THE ADA DAIRY CO. Pasteurized Milk Butter - Cheese - Ice Cream ADA 25c for lst hour. 35c-2nd hour. 45c-3rd hour Back from lunch so early! Theni civies sure is slow . . . Compliments of THE VARSITY BOOK STORE The students' trading center We buy, sell, and exchange COLLEGE TEXT BOOKS Opposite Campus Compliments of W E I S N E R ' S COLLEGE INN Opposite Campus DRUGS...BOOKS Fountain Pens Student Supplies DANA E. WELSH WRIGHT'S EXCHANGE 2nd Hand Merchandise 123 N. Iohnson St. Ada Phone 386 To The Graduates oi l94'7: Congratulations and the Best of Luck ADA 5: ODEON THEATRES Charlie Hawk, Mgr. Compliments of THE AHLENIUS COMPANY The Dependable Store Ada Phone 350 Furniture-Appliances GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 28 Public Square Lima Ohio HINDALL 6. soNs O Roofing contractors Two Eos Clothes for Men LI MA, O H I O L I M A W. E. UMPHRESS. Ieweler Fine Watch, Clock and lewelry Repair lU3 West Buckeye Si. Ada, Ohio Compliments of ADA WATER COMPANY ADA OHIO uick, cmd femme too l Whose is it? Iecmie and th light brown h 1 CHI. What is so fascinating? es, they are . . KAUFNIAN-LATTIMER C0 Wholesale Druqgists 1 Laboratory Equipmem trade Kay-ell mark I Columbus Ohio When cr buddy meets u buddy 815 1f6LlfLI 0LlfLf Q 0 0 Seating Capacity, 45,000- i 45 at a Time 423 S. Gilbert Telephone 59 Ada 193 UCIAL September 17 all college mixer dance 18 bonfire, Ada Park 20 infcrmal reception, Taft Gym 27 Phi Chi hayride 30 Amvets first meeting October 1 AWS Dinner, Alumnae Hall 5 A.E. Pi House Dance Kappa Psi House Dance 9 Tau Kappa Kappa Dinner 12 Delta Sig Dinner SCA Meeting 16 Nu Theta Kappa, Dean Webb's 19 Homecoming 25 Sig Ep House Dance Cheerleaders Dance, Brown Bldg. November 1 Phi Mu House Dance Theta Phi Delta House Dance 2 Phi Chi House Dance 4 Messiah practice begins 8 Alpha Epsilon Pi Dance Turner Hall House Dance 9 Sig Ep House Dance Sig Pi House Dance 15 T.K.K. Hobo Hop 16 Terrace Hall House Dance December 4 Turner Hall serenades 7 Sig Ep House Dance Sig Pi House Dance 9 Terrace Hall Serenades 11 Musical Recital, Alumnae Hall 13 Delta Sig Winter Formal 15 Messiah in Lehr Auditorium T.K.K. Buffet Supper 16 Phi Chi's and T.K.K.'s go caroling CALE DAB 194 18 AWS Vesper Service Terrace Hall goes caroling 20 Christmas vacation begins January 9 Music hour in Alumnae Hall Northern Players practice 11 Interfraternity formal dance 12 Theta Kap House Dinner 17 Phi Chi Formal Dance 19 Theta Phi Delta Tea 22 Band Concert 24 A.E. Pi House Dance 25 Phi Mu House Dance February 1 End of Sorority Hell Week 5 Sig Ep supper for Theta's 7 Theta Phi Delta Formal Dance T.K.K. House Dance 8 Engineer's Ball 11 Sig Ep supper for Phi Chi's 12 SCA dinner in Alumnae Hall 14 Delta Sig House Dance Theta Kap House Dance 15 Sig Ep formal dance Sig Pi House dance 18 Sig Ep supper for T.K.K.'s 19 T.K.K. Alumnae party 21 Phi Chi House Dance Phi Mu House Dance March 15 T.K.K. formal dance 18 Duo Piano Recital 22 Kappa Psi House Dance Sig Ep House Dance 28 Indep. Girl and Amvet Bunny Hop 29 Phi Mu House Dance 5 Y ' - -, ROM ti Hhbk QF HN GLU 'PPdN'T .......,-, 0 S 8R'E'E',,. EMERQ ENCE-E cel- L S ONL E,..E, Nam LJ L Er VSV! Hx CE 42522 gulf 'A J Vx ff, fa! f fffff wg,-l w ,xx W 1 -A- Administration ....... Alpha Epsilon Pi .... Amvets .......... Anniversary ...... Amer. Chem. Soc. .. AIEE ........... ASCE ................ ASME ................ Assoc. Women Students Advert. Index ........ Advert. Section ....... -B- Band ..... ...... Baseball .... . . . Basketball .... BMOC ............. Business Club ........ Bromfield's Address . . . cont. ............ . -C- Campus Life .......... Chapel Show Cheerleaders Choir ......... Classes Freshmen ..... Sophomores . . . Juniors ....... eneral 19 .....l23 ...67 5 78 82 ...86 84 .. ..... 94 .....l98 .....18l ...60 .....136 .....l38 .....170 ...68 34 .....l84 .....l67 .....156 .....l40 ...56 45 43 40 196 ndex Law Juniors .... Seniors ........... Lima Br. College .. Commencement ....... Coaches .............. Couples .............. -D- Debate Team ......... Delta Sigma Phi .... Delta Theta Phi .... Duo-Piano Team ...... -E- Engineer's Ball ....... Engineer's Exec. Com. . Events ......... t ....... -F- Football ..... ...... . . Fraternities ........... -.H.. Harding Memorial .... Hell Week ........... Hill Memorial .... Hobo Hop ............ Homecoming ......... -1- Independent Girls' Club Industrial Arts Club... Inter. Frat. Council .... Intramural Sports . . . Intramural Scores . .. - J Junior Bar Assoc.. . . . - K Kappa Psi ........... Kappa Kappa Psi .... - L Lil' Abner Arnble .... - M May Day ............ Messiah ........... Ministerial Assoc.. . . . Music .............. - N Northern Players .... Northern Staff ..... Nu Theta Kappa ..... N Men .................. .... - Q - Organizations ........... .... - p - Pan-Hellenic Council Phi Chi .............. .... Phi Mu Delta ..... Presser Hall .... Poll Book ............... .... President's Message ........ .... - Q - Queens .... ..... .... 197 -R Radio Club .... .... Residences .... .... -S Social Calendar ..... Sigma Pi ........... Sigma Phi Epsilon. . Sigma Delta Kappa. Student Government Student Publications S.C.A. ............ . Sports .... ..... -T Taft Gym .......... Tau Kappa Kappa. . Toastmasters ...... Theta Phi Delta .... Theta Formal ..... Theta Kappa Phi .... Trailer Camps ...... Turner Hall Dance. . Theta Alpha Phi .... -V Vespers Pageant .... -W Wives Club ......... Women's Athletic Assoc A vertisin Index ... A - Ada Dairy ................ Ada Farmers' Exchange. . . Ada Herald ............... Ada Locker Service fClove Ada and Odeon Theatres. . Ada Water Company ...... Ahlenius Company ..... Arbogast Hotel ........... - B - Balish Fountain Service. . . Baughman's Greenhouse . . - C - Clum's Market ......... Cole and Dome ........... Conn's Ben. Franklin Store Cub Restaurant ........... - F - First National Bank ..... - G - Gardner's Drug Store ..... Good Housekeeping Co.. .. .. H - Habit Recreation ..... Hart's Jewelers ....... Hindall and Sons ......... Hindman's Shoe Shop ..... Hofeller, Hiatt and Clark. Huber Furniture Shop .... - J - J. Thoburn John ........ .. K - r Farmj Kauffman-Lattimer Chemical Co.. . King Lumber Co. ........ . Kroger Super Market ..... -L- The Leader ............ Liberty Bank .......... ..M.. Main and Son .......,. Marathon Station ...... Mertz ............ Messick ........... Moore's Store ...,. . . . Moore's Newsstand .... -0- o-K Mfg. co. ......... . ..p- Povenmire's .......... -R- Ream's Hardware ...... Red and White Grocery -S- Sealt's Cleaning Co.. . . . Sig Pepper ........ J. K. Smith Co. ....... . H. J. Sousley .......... South Main Meat Mkt.. Supreme Cleaners ..... -T- Theta Phi Delta ....... Two Legs ............. -V- Van's General Store .... Varsity Book Store .... -W- Weisner's College Inn. . Welsh Drugs ........ Wright's Exchange ..... I R w 1 1 I F J 4 9 200


Suggestions in the Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) collection:

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Ohio Northern University - Northern Yearbook (Ada, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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