Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 370

 

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 370 of the 1937 volume:

■ HH I toifcJ I - hwM ■ ' _ . ' .£ z J-nmiaL oj ins. Student oj _Jdxai JzcnnoLoqicciL C-OLLzqi Jjuhuock. Jexai Ediioi y 1 1 tflon te umz _ I anaqi CUirbook[ :- )Mcmbcr c 937 tf $ . V • Q)% ;■ f { - ,,-. ■ - JO ' lE.LSJOld Pages of this book are the figurative films upon which have been developed a detailed account of events in the twelfth year of Texas Technological College. Unawares, per- sonnel and visitors of the college have co-operated in making it a true, unposed repro- duction of daily and nightly life in Texas ' youngest institution. Simultaneously with preparation of this, the twelfth volume of Texas Tech ' s student yearbook, candid photography has come into its own. Without losing the brilliant indi- viduality of the college planted and growing on the Mesa of the Matadors, this book has followed the 1937 trend in picture-making. Traditions of annual publication demand that some pictures be posed, but hardly a page is without one candid photograph. The campus is its studio. Its readers are its subjects. Portrayal of the true Texas Tech is its aim. It is the book with the eyes of myriad cameras. It is The Candid Camera Edition of LA VENTANA. L-OLLdLJZ fza£ui£5. rfctlaLtU,! ftfllttLCi iJ sxianaLltLeA J%aanizaHon± _ ydvsxtiAlnq Raqmond t( ooJis t 3,OOOth student to register in j exas | ecnnologiceu College in IQ30-37 session, is greeted 04 I— ' resident oradj-ord rC n pp J— zdLeatLon Behind Texas Technological College lies a glorious dozen years of inspired perseverance, rewarded by realities of a rapidly growing institution. From an initial enrollment of 1,048 in 1925-26, the College this year reached a zenith of 3,000 in a single nine months ' term. Ahead of Texas Technological College loom prospects brighter than the fondest dreams of her fathers. Spiritually, she has attained an enthusiasm characteristic of her pioneer foundations. Materially, much remains to be anticipated. It is toward that further spi r- itual and mental development, toward a bigger and better Texas Tech, that The Candid Camera Edition of LA VENTANA is dedicated. y aa i fcr • vv — [FFF r ' f IF w rr ii in mmtwiifitt J J v ' y? ' pa ■.- .■ ' s m m f fct L- . «K?; •8 Br m ■ ' ■ ' m .1 -•« 1 1 11 ±Jn dvyzniorLanz BEN F. CONDRAY. Jr. HAROLD KOOS COLLEGE CALENDAR TWELFTH ANNUAL SESSION 1936 F S i 2 I !. 910  16 r, 123 24 i30 3 T i| 6 7 ! 13 1. );20 2 27 28 BER 3 4 no n 517 li I121I2E ) 3R i 1 2 J 8 ( 1 1511 I 22 23 J29 3C 1 1 3ER 4 51 6 1 12 13 8)9 2 ' September 14, Monday, Entrance examinations for students not meeting the regular admission requirements. September 15-16, Tuesday-Wednesday, Registration of all students. September 17, Thursday, Classes begin 8:00 A. M. Late registration regul- ations in full force. September 17, Ihursday, Open house for all students by the churches of Lub- bock, 8:00-10:00 P. M. September 20, Sunday, Special sermons for students in all Lubbock churches. September 22, Tuesday, Opening Convocation for all students cind Faculty. Annual address of President, 11:00 A. M. September 25, Friday, Annual reception to all students by President and Mrs. Knapp and the College Administrative ' • nj.cil, 8:00 P. M. November 11, Wednesday, Holiday. r November 14, Saturday, Mid-Semester ioj£ RPtristrar ' s Office, 5:00 P. M. November 25, Wednesday November 30, Monday, December 22, Tuesday, rts due in Regi t« 6:00 P- M. M. :am j D ations for the first all atudeDts for the second semester. r students not meeting the regular ad- regi: January 4, Monday, Cla January 23-29, Saturday semester. February 1, Monday, Registration t En tram. , x minations mission requirements. February 2, Tuesday, Second 8«mestei classes begin S:0u A. M. Late regis- tration regulations in rrn rSrce. March 24. Wednesday, Annual Presenta. ; on, Seven Last Words by Duboise, presented by Professor Blitz, crchestra, and Chorus. March 25, Thursday, Easter Recess begins, t 00 P. M . March 26, Friday, Mid-semester reports due in the Registrar ' s Office, 5:00 P. M. March 30, Tuesday, Classes resumed, 8:00 A M. May 27-June 3, inclusive, final examinations for the second semestei May 30, Sunday, Baccalaureate Sermon. M iy 31, Monday, Commencement Day. June 4-5, Friday-Saturday, Entrance examinations for students who cannot meet the regular admission requirements. June 7 Monday. Registration for first term summer school. WlO WllO ■-I 1 ■ ' ' 1 in jacuLti THE ALLENS . . . Enthusiastic, exuberant, efficient, fair, industrious— these adjectives describe Mr. and Mrs. James G. Allen, best- loved couple on the campus . . . domes- tically inclined despite eight hours a day on college duty . . . love art, music, lovely home and yard . . . generous with youth- ful but sagacious advice . . . Jimmie coach- es Red Raider varsity tennis squad, teaches English, plays piano beautifully . . . Mrs. Allen assists in Information Office, secre- taries for Mr. Cecil Home . . . teaches journalism, sews in her spare time . . . pleasing host and hostess . . . came to Texas Tech eleven years ago, plan to stay . . . find time out for six weeks in school each summer . . . Texas natives . . . min- gle well with students, faculty . . . home family consists of one seven-year-old boy, like both his parents . . . college family: Thousands of students in their classes. THE GATESES . . . Courteous, accommo- dating, modest: Dr. W. B. Gates, Professor of English; Mrs. Eunice J. Gates, Acting Head Professor of Foreign Languages . . . hold Master of Arts degrees from University of Michigan, Doctors ' of Philosophy, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania . . . typical polished gentleman and cultured lady of Texas Tech . . . ex-assistant Dean of Men is interested in all literature, especially Shakespeare . . . maintains, uses small woodwork shop . . . personally supervised building of new home last summer . . . sends thrilling chills ateng student spines with his vigorous classroom reading of drama, poetry . . . Mrs. Gates was born in Brazil . . . learned to speak Portuguese as soon as English . . . now authority on Spanish, Portuguese . . . col- lects Spanish trinkets, keeps extensive file of Spanish clippings . . . charming, envigor- ating classroom personalities that facilitate learning, endear them forever. THE HOLDENS . . . Low, rambling adobe house . . . Indian relics . . . Indian murals . . . Indian atmosphere everywhere in home of Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Holden ... he is Acting Head Professor of History and An- thropology, Curator of the West Texas Mu- seum . . . director of archaeological re- search for the College . . . President of the Centennial Committee in this district . . . Mrs. Holden is Instructor in Orientation and Use of the Library . . . both interested in archaeology . . . spend summers excavat- ing buried Indian villages, touring Europe . . . home contains pieces of Yaqui Indian furniture, the results of Dr. Holden ' s super- interesting trip into the primitive regions of Old Mexico ... all Tech sympathized dur- ing Mrs. Holden ' s illness . . . Doctor Holden has authored books on archaeology, West Texas lore . . . typify West Texas person- ality. West Texas hospitality. nc; wl ui jacuLtu Cosmopolitan . . . sociable . . . friendly . . . efficient . . . O. A. ST. CLAIR, Head Profes- sor of Industrial Engineering, Engineering Drawing, and Industrial Education . . . born in Atchison, Kansas . . . holds Bache- lor of Arts Degree in Electrical Engineering from Armour Institute of Technology, Chi- cago . . . had twenty-five years of practical, invaluable experience as engineer before assuming duties in north end, second floor, Engineering Building . . . member of Amer- ican Association of Mechanical Engineers . . . Society for the Promotion of Engineer- ing Education . . . good engineer . . . good professor. ADA VIVIAN JOHNSON . . . Associate Professor of Home Economics Education at Texas Technological College for eight years . . . democratic . . . accepts responsibilities . . . does everything she promises to do . . . holds Bachelor of Science degree from South- west Texas State Teachers College . . . M. A. from Columbia University . . . taught in grade school five years, high school two years . . . Acting Head of Home Economics at Texas State College for Women one year . . . friendly . . . smooth, even temper . . . member AAUW, American Vocational As- sociation, American Home Economics Asso- ciation. K. M. RENNER . . . Head Professor of Dairy Manufacturing . . . goes about his business in a quiet way . . . gets every- thing done and done well . . . native of Brooklyn, Iowa . . . Bachelor of Science from Iowa State College . . . Master of Sci- ence, Kansas State College . . . educational director, Texas Cream Improvement Associ- ation . . . Educational Adviser, West Texas Cream Improvement Association . . . keeps in constant touch with dairy work off the campus, the world over . . . under his gui- dance, the Department of Dairy Manufac- tures has taken its place as only land grant college in America that offers complete work in field. Practical experience in newspaper field, a thorough knowledge of theory combine to make CECIL HORNE fit snugly into his job as Director of Journalism, Director of Infor- mation and Employment, Director of Public- ity, Chairman of the Men ' s Housing Com- mittee . . . good-natured . . . considerate . . . likes a good joke . . . enjoys golfing and game fishing . . . came to Texas Tech in 1926 after twelve years on newspaper, two years as Head of the English Depart- ment at Dean of Goodnight Academy, and two years as Business Manager, teacher of journalism at Montezuma College. ? •■. lultu Artistic . . . efficient . . . capable . . . MISS MARTYE POINDEXTER has brought individ- uality, originality into the Applied Arts De- partment . . . head for two years . . . mem- ber AAUW, Phi Beta Kappa . . . studies, collects miniatures as hobby . . . holds Ph. B. degree from University of Chicago, M. A. from Texas State College for Women . . . Associate Professor, Applied Arts, North Texas Agricultural College for eight years . . . possesses, displays wholesome sense of humor . . . good taste in dress, teaching, homemaking . . . knows how to make in- side of a house artistic, friendly, comfortable . . . her work, her students ' work attract nationwide attention. National President of Block and Bridle . . . Director of Livestock Exhibits, Texas Centen- nial Central Exposition from July, 1935, to January 1, 1937 . . . Head Professor of Ani- mal Husbandry . . . W. L. STANGEL . . . rejected position with Soviet Union . . . born in Stangelville, Missouri . . . holds Bachelor of Science degree from Texas A. M. College, Master of Science, University of Missouri . . . universally liked . . . co-op- erative . . . Chairman of Athletic Council . . . member of Animal Husbandry Depart- ment, Texas A. M., nine years . . . came to Texas Tech in 1925 . . . member of Sig- ma Gamma Delta, American Association of Animal Producers, American Genetic Asso- ciation. Born in Paris, Tennessee . . . attended high school in Longview . . . has Bachelor of Science degree from Texas A. M. College in Civil Engineering . . . had six years ' practical experience as resident and con- struction engineer . . . spent one year in- structing in Chemical Engineering at Texas A. M. . . . came to Texas Tech in 1932 . . . G. W. PARKHILL . . . Assistant Pro- fessor of Civil Engineering . . . all-round man, teacher . . . students feel results of unbounded generosity of time, effort . . . Parky is the same behind the professorial desk or the transit . . . easy-going, un- assuming, talks little, does much. Prof to all students . . . has brought the Texas Tech band out of the kinks and put it on the map . . . holds Bachelor of Music degree from Hardin-Simmons University . . . did graduate work at the American Conser- vatory, Chicago . . . past President, Texas School Band and Orchestra Association . . . thoroughly liked, admired by bondmen, all students, faculty . . . has spectacular but sincere baton technique . . . thinks of big things in big terms . . . does big things in a big way . . . lenient with bandmen . . . on occasion, he commands awe with omi- nous rap of his magic baton ... his whole- some grin goes well with his bright new uniform . . . D. O. WILEY. JizriLnd tliz c£ C£)ZE1 JACK HIGHTOWER . . . Texas Tech is his favorite baby ... he has watched her grow for twelve years . . . knows every mud-puddle, every light switch on the campus . . . takes active part in everything, official or unofficial, for the good of the college . . . his cheery Irish laugh, tales of his youth form welcome interludes for late workers in laboratories, on publications. J. H. GRIMSLEY . . . bears the prosaic title, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, that belies the part he has played in beautifying the campus with meager funds, insufficient aides . . . labelled by all who know him: Hardest- working man at Texas Technological College . . . beauty of his character is expressed in the vernal blaze of color in miles of larkspur around the Circle, spotted all over the campus. Page 26 C7XEClttiL T S± DR. BRADFORD KNAPP TOMAS G. POLLARD W. T. GASTON SPENCER A. WELLS MRS. W. R. POTTER MRS. EMMA G. MEHARG CLIFFORD B. JONES jDoard of J Lxzcton OFFICERS OF THE BOARD CLIFFORD B. JONES, Chairman, Spur SPENCER A. WELLS, Vice-Chairman, Lubbock W. T. GASTON, Secretary, Lubbock MEMBERS OF THE BOARD Term Expires 1939: Mrs. J. G. Haley, Midland; Mrs. Emma G. Meharg, Plain- view; Joe T. Sneed, Jr., Amarillo. Term Expires 1941: Mrs. W. R. Potter, Bowie; Tomas G. Pollard, Tyler; James M. West, Houston. Term Expires 1943: L. L. Steele, Mexia; Spencer A, Wells, Lubbock; Clifford B. Jones, Spur. Page 28 Pi£±ubnt DR. BRADFORD KNAPP . . . known familiarly to faculty and students alike as Prexy . . . spends time, energy, and efforts for advancement of Tech . . . spends weeks forming plans to put over ideas ... is an economist of the first rank . . . proves facts and theories with figures . . . listed in Who ' s Who for over twenty years . . . educator . . . lawyer . . . agriculturist . . . Presbyterian ... is especially interested in the technical division of Tech, but gives others equal chance . . . headed the recent Safety Driving campaign . . . loves football and sports . . . played football hirmelf in Vanderbilt and lettered . . . efficient . . . dignified . . . loves Tech and Tech students. Pago 29 The Administrative Council is snapped mood — the sunshine and tresh aii probably being accountable cyydhilnlitzatLvz (LoiinclL MEMBERS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL W. P. CLEMENT, Registrar W. A. JACKSON, Chairman of Graduate Division J. M. GORDON, Dean of Arts and Sciences and of Men O. V. ADAMS, Dean of Engineering W. T. GASTON, Business Manager of the College MARGARET W. WEEKS, Dean of Home Economics ELIZABETH HOWARD WEST, Librarian MARY W. DOAK, Dean of Women ARTHUR H. LEIDIGH, Dean of Agriculture BRADFORD KNAPP, President Page 30 First Row — Claude Thompson, Wilmot Eaton, Helen Lehmberg, George Carrithers, Joe Alford, Roy Dunn, Winbum McA lister. Second How— Earl Glover, Van Scheid, Forrest Baumgardner, Jack Helms, Hugh McCullough, Eron Gafford, Priscilla Davis. Third Row — Clarence Rannefeld, Wayne Vaughn, Harold Gierhart, Iris Bailey, Jimmie Bailey, Ann? Williams, Marie Shook. chtudznt Council The Student Council is the student legislative body of Tech, chosen to repre- sent enrollees in matters affecting student activities and to co-operate with the college administration in all affairs pertaining to students. This body stresses democracy and fair play in all decisions. It is made up of the President, Vice- President, and Secretary-Treasurer of the Student Association, Student Repre- sentative to the Athletic Council, presidents of all classes, and one representa- tive from each class in each of the four main divisions of the college. Page 31 J- £am . . . . DEAN JAMES M. GORDON . . . friend as well as dean . . . has helped several neph- ews and nieces through Tech . . . kind, helpful with problems . . . listed for seven- teen years in Who ' s Who in America . . . Rotarian . . . Democrat . . . Presbyterian . . . Mason . . . educator . . . loves his home, his family . . . has taught in rural schools . . . been president of colleges . . . taught philosophy . . . likes chicken-raising, hunt- ing, fishing . . . not conceited or self-con- scious . . . can think from student ' s point of view . . . jolly with friends and secretaries in his office ... is tolerant of other person ' s ideas and habits . . . above all, likes to talk and can do it well. DEAN O. V. ADAMS . . . intensely inter- ested in his school, his division, the whole college . . . tries generously to improve everything he contacts . . . active in recent Safety Driving Campaign . . . not dogmatic . . . gives opinions, but does not require their acceptance . . . sees valid humor where others fail . . . Member, Kiwanis . . . Masons . . . American Society of Chemical Engineers . . . Society for the Promotion of Engineering Scholarship . . . Tech Masonic Guild . . . was Head Professor of Civil En- gineering before he became Dean . . . su- pervised publication of all-inclusive Engi- neering bulletin last summer . . . has a spa- cious, almost homey, office. Page 32 • • • • - dcUli DEAN MARY W. DOAK . . . mother of a thousand and five children, all girls . . . tactful . . . gracious . . . does not lose her self-control or poise in the presence of bur- glars and disgruntled coeds alike . . . directs campus social life from her tidy office . . . leads well-balanced life . . . reads classic as well as recent authors ... of Virginian descent . . . member Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Kappa Gamma, Quarterly Club, sponsors Las Leales . . . energetic, yet calm . . . determined, yet reasonable . . . sympa- thetic and helpful . . . likes gardening and making hooked rugs . . . enjoys watching logs burn in an open fireplace in the evening . . . likes South Plains sunsets. DEAN ARTHUR H. LEID1GH . . . sincere publicity agent for the college, but wants the publicity and credit to go to someone else . . . helps college and students grow and progress . . . teaches his boys to work hard . . . knows them all by name, as well as their home towns and abilities . . . calls them in for a stern lecture and then sends them away with his crinkling laugh ringing in their ears . . . purses his lips and squints at his listeners . . . likes his students to visit him . . . likes to take Sunday drives in the country to see crops . . . favorite hobby: plant breeding . . . jokes with students out- side of class . . . likes to tell jokes on pro- fessors in his department . . . supervises his office carefully . . . reads on occasion . . . dislikes seeing his name in print . . . likes statistics . . . teaches as many classes as other Aggie staff members. DEAN MARGARET W. WEEKS ... a Texan born in Canada . . . ever-anxious for bet- terment of Texas Tech ' s Home Economics Division . . . works hard . . . has to budget to keep from spending too much money on home, lawn, garden . . . likes people, their problems . . . not self-conscious . . . express- es herself easily and well . . . friendly . . . a nice person to know . . . good equestri- enne . . . member, Associated Women Stu- dents . . . Double Key . . . Quarterly Club . . . office frequented by other faculty mem- bers . . . business discussions with her are pleasant . . . thinks every girl should learn to manage her own home. Page 33 S. T. CUMMINGS G. L. McCREARY J illUZEl: ICE . . . The Business Office . . . handles all the finan- cial matters concerning Tech . . . supervises ail the buying . . . handles all money collect- ed or paid out by the college . . . funds from athletics, library, dormitories, publications, de- partments, bookstore . . . has charge of all the property of the college . . . obviates the neces- sity of individual accounting departments for the different divisions . . . headed by W. T. Gaston and staffed by a group of efficient helpers. W. T. GASTON Business Manager Page 34 v HL i UHIf B mUB |L T BP it ' llii B v Sflfefc dt iihcni ([ Office of Registrar . . . one of busiest, most efficient spots on campus ... in its endless records, countless files, student lists are found stories of success, failure, mediocrity of all Tech students, past and present . . . under di- rection of Warren P. Clement, who has been Registrar since 1933 . . . handles, records, no- tifies students, prospects of credits, hours, ab- sences, grades, catalogs, bulletins . . . offers advice, consultation to students in trying times of schedule-arranging . . . publicizes good news of honor roll, bad news of failures, mid- semester reports. W. P. CLEMENT Page 35 L f J- diaxbnznt c T£ad± JULIEN PAUL BLITZ Music ALLAN L. CARTER English MABEL D. ERWIN Clothing and Textiles E. F. GEORGE Physics R. C. GOODWIN Chemistry W. A. JACKSON Government J. N. MICHIE Mathematics CHARLES V. BULLEN Electrical Engineering RAY L. CHAPPELLE Agricultural Education A. W. EVANS Education H. F. GODEKE Mechanical Engineering M. E. HEARD Acting Head, Textile Engineering F. A. KLEINSCHMIDT Architecture and Allied Arts RAY C. MOWERY Acting Head, Animal Husbandry Page 36 J diarhnsnt cTTzadi JAMES H. MURDOUGH Civil Engineering IONNIE McCRERY Foods and Nutrition LEROY T. PATTON Geology and Geological Engineering KENNETH M. RENNER Dairy Manufactures OSCAR A. ST. CLAIR Industrial Engineering, Engineering Drawing, and Industrial Education P. W. CAWTHON Physical Education for Men E. L. McBRIDE Acting Head, Agricultural Economics I. f. Mcdonald Director of Extension RUTH PIRTLE Speech C. E. RUSSELL Horticulture and Plant Industry R. A. STUDHALTER Biology BEN F. CONDRAY, Jr. (Deceased) Economics and Business Administration Page 37 jacuLh. MRS. LOUISE C. ALLEN Journalism ARCHIE J. BAHM Philosophy and Sociology RAY L. CHAPPELLE Agricultural Education ROGER CLAPP Mechanical Engineering GERALDINE CLEWELL Home Economics Education MRS. MARY W. DOAK Dean of Women BONNIE K. DYSART Education 1 y JAMES G. ALLEN English JULIEN PAUL BLITZ Music L. C. CHRISTIANSON Mathematics HENRY P. CLAY Agricultural Engineering MRS. WILLIAM DINGUS Lalin VENTON L. DOUGHTIE Mechanical Engineering MAURICE ERICKSON Economics and Business Administration Page 38 3 auLh y EUNICE JOINER GATES WILLIAM BRYAN GATES Foreign Languages English ENOCH FRANKLIN GEORGE Physics HARRY FREDERICK GODEKE Mechanical Engineering ROBERT CABANISS ELIZABETH HAWLEY GOODWIN Applied Arts I Chemistry and Chemical 1 i Engineering 1 kit MAURICE EARL HEARD CARL HENNINGER C Textile Engineering Foreign Languages : WILLIAM CURRY HOLDEN History RUTH HORN English CECIL HORNE English and Journalism EDNA N. HOUGHTON Architecture and Allied Art ORVILLE BRACKETT HOWELL Horticulture DOYLE D. JACKSON Education Page 39 jaauLttj J. W. JACKSON Government WILLIAM ALBERT JACKSON Government RUTH LOUISE JOHNSON ADA VIVIAN JOHNSON Foreign Languages Home Economics Education OSCAR A. KINCHEN History FLORIAN ARTHUR KLEINSCHMIDT Architecture and Allied Arts MILTON FREDERIC LANDWER Biology JOHNNYE GILKERSON LANGFORD Physical Education ROBERT I. LOCKARD Architecture and Allied Arts E. JOSEPHINE LOONEY Clothing and Textiles J. N. MICHIE Mathematics RUFUS ARTHUR MILLS English RAY C. MOWERY Animal Husbandry JAMES HAROLD MURDOUGH Civil Engineering Page 40 ucuLh y iulius f. Mcdonald Extension FLORA McGEE English LEROY T. PATTON Geology and Geological Engineering MART G. PEDERSON Dairy Manufactures ANNAH JO PENDLETON Speech FRANK A. PETTIT Military Science and Tactics RUTH PIRTLE Speech MARTYE POINDEXTER Applied Arts ELLSWORTH HARVEY PLANK Economics and Business Administration R. F. REDDING Textile Engineering KENNETH MILLER RENNER Dairy Manufactures WILLIAM B. RICHARDS Military Science and Tactics TRENT CAMPBELL ROOT Economics and Business Administration C. E. RUSSELL Horticulture and Plant Industry Page 41 jaauLtij }. T. SHAVER Education and Psychology RAYMOND SIDWELL Geology BEN F. CONDRAY, Jr. (Deceased) Economics and Business Administration FRED W. SPARKS Mathematics O. A. ST. CLAIR Industrial Engineering, Engineering Drawing, Industrial Education R. A. STUDHALTER Biology W. E. STREET Industrial Engineering, Engineering Drawing, Industrial Education MRS. ELIZABETH YOUNG Social Director, Women ' s Dormitory MRS. BENNIE ELIZABETH H. MAMYE L. BUFORD WEST TWYFORD Social Director, Librarian Foods and .fen ' s Dormitory Nutrition R. S. UNDERWOOD Mathematics E. L. McBRIDE Agricultural Economics VALERIE SCHNEIDER Chemical Engineering HERROL J. SKIDMORE Military Science and Tactics A. B. STREHLI Foreign Languages D. O. WILEY Music, Director of Band Page 42 zaduatsi 4%aduatz6. CLARENCE A. COLE Valera TRUMAN HINES Lubbock RUBY JO POPEJOY Lubbock FRED GRIFFIN Grapevine HOWARD HURMENCE Lubbock THOMAS H. STEWART, Jr. Lubbock SPENCER P. WHIPPO Perry ton MINA MARIE WOLF Stamford Pcge 45 £ 2lOTl TALBOT LEDBETTER President MARY ELIZABETH STANFORD Secretary-Treasurer GEORGE TATE Vice-President N I R MORRIS (SCRAPPY) ALFORD Slaton B.B. A. Secretary-Treasurer, W r a ng 1 o r s ; Double T. CECIL IVAN BRASHEAR Lubbock Agriculture B.S. Plant Industry Club; Track ' 36: Double T. WESLEY BURNETT Graham B. A. JEAN BAIN Floydada Home Economics B.S. Tennis Club; Y. W. C. A.; Economics Club. Home ELIZABETH BRYANT Kress B. A. Capa Y Espada; I. R. C. WYNONA BURNETT Browntield B. A. Education Society; Capa Y Espada; Y.W.C. A.; College Chorus. AL RAY COOPER WINNIE LEE COLEMAN ( Balls Childress H Engineer B. A. M B. S. in M. E. k M Chairman, A. S. M. E.; Secretary. Engineering Society; Secretary, S. P. E. S.; Secretary, Men ' s Dormitory Association; Alpha Chi; Los Cam- aradas. WILLIAM J. DAVIS IMOGENE COTTON i i Abernathy Fori Worth 1 1 B. S. in Education Engineer — i Y.W.C. A.; College Chorus; Bibli- B. S. in M. E. cal Literature Club. Engineering Society; LA VENTANA; A. S. M. E. NORMAN W. EMFINGER Lubbock Engineer B. S. in E. E. A. I.E. E. S. S. FORREST Lamesa B.A. Page 49 N I R. KENDRICK GREEN LORA LEE GOWDY Lubbock Jacksboro Agriculture Home Economics B.S. B.S. Home Economics Club. H. L. HAAG ROBERT H. HALE Midland Lubbock B. A. B. A. Basketball. JEROME HARKEY RUBY ETHEL HAYDEN Lone Oak Pickton B. A. Home Economics 3r Key. B.S. Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A JARRETT HERVEY ANNA FERNE HUDSON Greenville Da hart B. B. A. B. A. College Orchestra. PAUL V. JONES LA VONNE KYLE Dallas Lubbock B. A. B. A. MORRIS LAINE Spur B. A. Toreador; Press Association. ELVA MAE MILLS Sterling City B. B. A. Las Armonias Club; Tennis Club. Page 50 N I R JOE MAPES Dimmitt Engineer B. S. in C. E. Engineering Society; A. S. C. E. MYRON McCORMICK AmariUo Engineer B.S. Los Camaradas. AUDRA L. MITCHELL Winters Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club; Plant Industry Club. R. L. READ Silsbee B. A. President, Los Camaradas; Press Association; Inter-Club Council. JLINE REED CHARLOTTE RATLIFF Fhydada Lubbock B. A. B. A. Las Chaparritas; Book Reviewers; College Orchestra; Sock and Buskin MABLE RUSSELL CLYDE A. SHULTS Levelland Lubbock w B. S. in Education B. A. ! j W ALLENE SALSER WILLIE LOUISE SMILEY Lamesa Roaring Springs mSi B. S. in Education B. S. in Education . A. A.; Education Society. Esperanto; Education Society; I. R. c rn M WILMER SMITH DORIS TOWNSEND Tahoka Lubbock B. A. Home Economics B.S. Las Leates; Forum; Double Key; Alpha Chi; President, Home Eco- nomics Club. Page 51 N I R ALICE ADKISSON Abernathy B. A. ANNABEL ALLEN Lamesa B. B. A. Las Vivaraches. BILLIE ALLISON Rockwood Engineer B. S. in Chem. E. Chemical Engineering Society; gineering Society. MANUEL AYERS DAN ARCHER Spearman B. B. A. En- M Shallowater f l Agriculture •TM B.S. 5 1 F. F. A.; Agricultural Club; J Armonias. Las A. S. C. E. H. LEON BAILEY Siaion Engineer B. S. inC. E. Engineering Society. IRIS BAILEY Conroe Home Economics B.S. Student Council; Double Key; Home Economics Club. STELLA BEARD Lubbock Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. MARY ETTA BEAN Amarillo Engineer B. A. Alpha Chi; Las Vivarachas. BONNIE BELL L ubbock B. A. Las Armonias. F. F. A. C. B. BENTLEY Lubbock Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club. EMMA DEAN BINGHAM Aspermont B. S. in Education Las Vivarachas. Page 52 N I R JEWEL BISHOP Winqate B. S. in Education W. A. A.;Tennis Club; Education So- ciety. PAULINE BOREN Snyder B. S. in Education H. A. BOZEMAN, Jr. Lubbock Engineer B. S. in C. E. A. S. C. E.; Engineering Society; Tennis Club. GENEVIEVE BRAGG Rochester B. A. Y. W. C. A. STEVE L. BROCK Browntield Agriculture B.S. Block and Bridle Club: Agricultural Club. LENA BELLE BROWN Megargei B. A. San Souci. HARRY BLOCKER, Jr. Lubbock Engineer B. A. in Architecture Gargoyle Society. PERRY BOWSER Lubbock Agriculture B.S. Band; Alpha Chi; Agricultural Club; Secretary. Plant Industry Club. LOIS BRADFORD San Angelo B. S. in Education W. A. A.; A. W. S.; Esperanto So- ciety. FANNIE B. BRATCHER Lubbock B. A. Alpha Chi; Las Armonias. HERBERT BROWDER Wealher ord Agriculture B.S. F.F.A.: Block and Bridle Club. MATTIE BROWND Lubbock B. A. Capa Y Espada; S. P. 0- R-: College Chorus. Page 53 N I HARRY Wm. BUCKLEY Fort Worth Engineer Bachelor of Architecture Los Camaradas; President, Gargoyle Society; Engineering Society. MARIAN BULLOCK For( Worth B. S. in Education Ko Shari; Literary Society; Tennis Club; Inter-Club Council; Sock and Buskin; College Chorus; Alpha Chi. K S. BUNDY EDWIN BUTLER Lubbock Lubbock B. B. A. B. A. Pre-Law Club. MUTON O. BYNUM Lubbock Engineer B. A. Gargoyle Society; Engineering So- ciety. MURL CALWELL Petersburg B. A. WILLIAM JUNIUS CARTER Childress Engineer B. S. in M. E. Debate. ANNA JUANITA CHANCE Lubbock Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club; W. A. A. JOE J. CALDWELL Abilene Engineer B. S. in E. E. Chairman, A. I. E. E.; Treasurer, Alpha Chi: Vice-President, S. P. E. S. LOVETA CARMICHAEL Kenna, New Mexico Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. ROBERT CASE Petersburg B. B. A. Varsity Basketball. ROBERT D. CHAPMAN Waco B. A. Page 54 N I R S. ROSCOE CLARK VADA COLE Lubbock Lubbock B.A. Home Economics Keraas. B.S. Home Economics Club; Double Key PAUL CONEWAY MARY COOPER Hereford Lamesa Engineer B.A. B. S. in M. E. Engineering Society; A.S. M.E. MARY KATE COUCH VERNER C. COUCH Pecos Pittsburg Home Economics B. B. A. B.S. Band; Tennis Club. Double Key; Alpha Chi; Home Eco- nomics Club; LA VENTANA; W A. A.; Las Leales; A. W. S.; Y. W. C A. MAURICE COWAN JEAN COX Lubbocl: Lubbock Agriculture Home Economics B.S. B.S. President, Dairy Club; Agricultural Home Economics Club. Club; Double T. IRENE CRAIG LEROY CREWS Winters Lubbock B. S. in Education B. B. A. Y. W. C. A. Double T Club. LEON CRUTCHER GWEN MARR DAVIS Loraine Plainview B. A. B. A. President, Alpha Chi: President, I. Sans Soucl; Sock and Buskin; Book R. C: Pre-Law Club. Reviewers. Page 55 N I RUBY DEAN DAVIS LYLE DONALDSON Lubbock Lubbock Home Economics Engineer B.S. B. S. in E. E. Home Economics Club. A. I. E. E.; S. P. E. S.; Engineering Society; Alpha Chi. B. C. DRINKARD Snyder Agriculture B.S. F. F. A.; Agricultural Club. GRACE THOMPSON DYESS Lubbock B. S. in Education W. A. A.: Y. W. C. A.; Biblical Lit- erature. MILDRED DUNLOP LubbocJc Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. WILMOT EATON RuJe B. A. Vice-President, Student Council; President, Inter-Club Council; Silver Key; Publications Committee. JOE ELDER BETTY FARLEY Cuero Groom Engineer Home Economics Bachelor ol Architecture. B.S. Home Economics Club; Double Key ROBERT FIE LDER Abilene B. S. in Education Vice-President, Band. BETTY FINSTERWALD WheeJer B.B. A. Las Armonias. N FLACHE CLARIBEL FORD Lamesa San Antonio B.B. A. B. A. Page 56 N I R KL1PSTEIN FRY DUANE FUOUA Lubbock Amarillo B. B. A. B.A. W.A.A.; Y.W.C. A.; Tennis Club; Band; Pre-Med Club. Biblical Literature Club. ARTHUR EARL GAMBLE JACK GARLINGTON Lubbock Littletield B. B. A. B. A. Wrestling. JUDGE GARRETT GURTHAL GILLIGAN Bellview, New Mexico Austin Agriculture B.A. B.S. Band. Basketball; Plant Industry Club; Agricultural Club. JUNO GLASSCOCK MARY EUNICE GRAHAM Mu eshoe Farv ell B.A. Home Economics President, Esperanto Society. B.S. Las Armonias; Esperanto Society Home Economics Club. G. B. GREENFIELD LELA FRANK GREER Shamrock Wilson B. B. A. B. S. in Education W.A.A. FLORENCE GRIFFITH MELVIN GRIGG Lamesa Lubbock Home Economics B. B. A. B.S. e Economics Club. Page 57 N I ANNIE LETHA HAMILTON Browntield B. S. in Education LA VENTANA; Pre-Law Club. HAZEL HARRED Quemado B. A. DAN H. HEIERMAN Imperial Agriculture B. S. Dairy Club; Agricultural Club. DONALD HENRY Lubbock B. A. President, I. R. C; Pre-Law Club; Capa Y Espada; Alpha Chi. WALTER HICKS Corpus Christi Engineer B. S.inT.E. Keraas; Phi Psi; Inter-Club Council- Engineering Society. JAMES H. HILL Clovis, New Mexico Agriculture B.S. HAROLD HAMS Midland B. A. Press Association. PAULINE HAWTHORNE LuJbbocfc B. S. in Education College Chorus. JACK HELMS Plainview B. B. A. Band; Student Council. JOAN ERNESTINE HERRING Lubbock B. S. in Education Sock and Buskin. CLARENCE E. HIESERMAN Iowa Park Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club. LOUISE HODGES Lubbock B. A. Page 58 N I R DYSART HOLCOMB Wellington Engineer B. S. in Chem. E. S. P. E. S.; Engineering S o c J Chemical Engineering Society. B. HOLT Colorado Engineer B. S. in T. E. Wrangler. PEGUES HOUSTON Stanton Agriculture B.S. Block and Bridle; Agricultural Club. CHAS. M. HOWELL Lubbock Engineer B. S. in M. E. A. S. M. E.; Engineering Society. TOM N. HUTCHINSON Lubbock B.B. A. President. Centaur Club; Inter-Club Council. H. A. HOLCOMB Wellington Engineer B. S. in Chem. E. Engineering Society; S. P. E. S. W DORIS HOPPING Lubbock B.A. A. A. ROBERT HOUSTON Lubbock Engineer B. S. in M. E. A. S. M. E.; Engineering Society; S. P. E. S.; Alpha Chi; Manager, Engi- neers ' Show. LELDON HUDSON Wellington Agriculture B.S. Block and Bridle; Agricultural Club; F. F. A. CALLIE REE JACKSON Lubbock Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. JACK S. JENKINS Leve. Engineer B.S. Engineering Society; Kemas Club. CAMILLE JOHNSON Sudan B.A. Page 59 N I {CATHERINE JOHNSTON ESTHER JONES Lorenzo Dallas B. B. A. Engineer . A. A.; Literary Society; Ko Shari. Bachelor of Commercial Art Engineering Society. JEANNETTE JONES Clarksville B. A. President, Las Chaparritas; Presi- dent, Women ' s Dormitory Associa- tion; Book Reviewers Club; Press Association; Forum; Inter-Club Council. NANCY LOU JONES Dallas Engineer Bachelor of Commercial Art Engineering Society. IMOGENE KEFFER Shaltuck, Okla. B. A. STANLEY KENNETH Ausfin B. A. Centaur. MASTON JONES Lubbock Engineer Bachelor of Architecture Los Camaradas; Gargoyle. R. V. JONES Big Spring B. A. Silver Key; Alpha Chi; Sock and Buskin. WAYNE L. KELLY Morse B. B. A. MARY ANNE KIMBLE Floydada B. A. Las Chaparritas; Book Reviewers. JAMES H. KIMMEL JOHN L. KING Lubbock Lubbock B. A. Engineer B. S. in E. E. Engineering Society; A. I. E. E.; S. P E.S. Page 60 N I R ELMO KNUDSON Cliilon Engineer B. S. in M. E. President, Engineering Society; S. M. E. RAYMOND LAMB Burkburnett Engineer B. S. in Geol. E. President. Geological Engineering Society; Engineering Society; Sigma Gamma Epsilon. MAXINE LANGFORD San Antonio B.A. WELDON GARRETT KOLB Lubbock B.A. Pre-Med Club; College Orchestra. CYRUS A. LAMDRUM :nna B.A. . M. C. A.; Pre-Law Club; I. R. C LEROY LEATHERS Lelia Lake B.A. HELEN LEHMBERG Mason B.A. President, Forum; Secretary. Student Association; Alpha Psl Omega; Alpha Chi: DFD; Sock and Buskin; Debate Club. HILLERY A. LESLIE Kress Engineer B. S. in E. E. A. I. E. E.; Engineering Society; S. P. E. S. RUBY LEE LEARY Lubbock B.A. Press Association; LA VENTANA Literary Society; Toreador. TALBOT LEDBETTER Brady Engineer B. S. in Textile Engineering President, Senior Class. JOE FRED LEMONS Silverton B.A. RUTH LEWIS Lubbock B.A. President. DFD; Inter-Club Council Alpha Chi. Fage 61 N I BARBARA RACHAEL LINDSEY Abernathy B.A. Ko Shari. LLOYD LIPSCOMB Lubbock B.A. Los Camaradas. JIM LINDSEY Lubbock B.A. Inter-Club Council; Student Council; President, Silver Key; Editor, Torea- dor; Press Association. EUGENIA ELINOR LUNDELL Lubbock B. B. A. HECTOR MACKAY, Jr. TRAVIS MARTIN Lubbock Wesfover B.B. A. B. B. A. MARTHA MATHIS MARY MATHIS Lubbock Lubbock B.A. B.A. S. P. Q. R.; Alpha Chi. S. P. Q. R.; Alpha Chi. W. C. MEBUS R. C. MITCHELL Torniilo Loctney Agriculture Agriculture B.S. B.S. Agricultural Club. Agricultural Club; Block and Bridle Club; Double T; Kemas; Livestock Judging Team. GRACE MONTGOMERY MARIETTA MONTGOMERY Tahoka Tahoka 3. B.A. B. B. A. Page 62 N I R CARL MOOSBERG LEE ROY MOSLEY Lubbock Winters Agriculture B. B. A. B.S. Kemas. President, Agricultural Club MARY LEDA McADAMS WINBURN McALISTER Lockney Floyd, New Mexico Home Economics Agriculture B.S. B.S. Home Economics Club. Agricultural Club; F. A. A.; Block and Bridle Club; President, Junior Class, 1936; Manager of La Remuda, 1936; Livestock Judging Team; Dairy Judging Team; Student Council. ALENE McCRUMMEN HALL McCRUMMEN Lubbock Lubbock B.A. Engineer B. S. in E. E. S. P. E. S.; A. I. E. E.; Engineering Society. TRUETT McCUISTION BILL McDAVID Stamlord Amarillo Agriculture Engineer B.S. Bachelor of Architecture F. F. A.; Agricultural Club. Gargoyle Society; S. P. E. S. HOYSE McMURTRY C. H. McNEESE Vigo Park Lubbock Engineer Engineer Bachelor of Architecture Bachelor of Architecture Gargoyle Club; S. P. E. S. Gargoyle Society; Engineering So- ciety. JESSE RUTH McWHIRTER LA VERNE McWHIRTER floby floby B. e Home Economics W. A. A. B.S. Home Economics Club; Dou: Page 63 N I R M MRS. SARA SUE TOM NABORS II McWILLIAMS Cisco 1 Lubbock B.B.A. m B. A. Las Chaparritas; Sock and Buskin; Alpha Chi. KLINE NALL Lockney B. A. College Chorus. MADELINE NEVES Lubbock B. A. Las Vivarachas; Book Reviewers; Alpha Chi. LEE NORRIS Hamlin Engineer B. S. in M. E. BROOKSY SPURLOCK NYSTEL Lubbock B. S. in Education JOYE PACE Littlelield Home Economics B. S. Home Economics Club. LEONA NALL Locicney B. A. Alpha Chi. VIRGINIA NOELL Lubbock B. S. in Education Capa Y Espada; Alpha Chi; Las Armonias. C. C. NUNNALLY O ' DonneJl Agriculture B.S. Block and Bridle; F. A. A.; Agricul- tural Club. CLIFTON OLIVER, Jr. Amarillo B. A. Band; College Orchestra. CORA VIRGINIA PALMER May Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. Page 64 N I R mm MORRIS PALMER Albany Engineer B. S. in M. E. A. S. M. E. EDWIN DAVIS PARKER Wellington B. A. Kemas. ESCAR PARKER Roby Agriculture B.S. Kemas; Agricultural Club; F. F. Band. A.; W. JOSHUA PARKS Cleburne Engineer B. S. in E. E. Engineering Society; A. I. E. E. CECILE PARSONS Amarillo B. A. Press Association; President, Women ' s Dormitory Association; Forum. LOIS PAULSEL San Antonio B. S. in Education W. A. A.; Tennis Club; Press As- sociation; Y. W. C. A. ED. D. PARSONS Amarillo B. A. President. Amarillo-Tech Club; Y C.A. BILLY PHILLIPS Hereford B. B. A. Band; Alpha Chi. PAULINE PHILLIPS Lubbock B.A. Ko Shari; Alpha Chi; Literary So- ciety. J. T. PINKSTON, Slaton Engineer B. S. in M. E. A. S. M. E. BENJAMIN PRIEST RusJ: Engineer B. S. in M. E. A. S. M. E.; Engineering Society. FRANCES DICY POWELL Santa Anna Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. Page 65 N I JOSEPHINE POWELL Lubbock B. A. DFD; Toreador; Press Association; LA VENTANA. NELL MARIE POWELL PosI B. A. ROSE MARIE RANDERSON Abilene Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. WINSTON REEVES Plainview Engineer B. S. in Industrial Engineering Engineering Society; Band; Editor, LA VENTANA. 1 p. v F. H. RICHARDZ Dalhart RALPH RIDDEL Aspermonf f ™ B. A. Agriculture %H Los Camaradas; Pre-Law Club. B.S. Agricultural Club; Block and Bridle te LVa Club. HELEN ROHRER Springfown Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. POLLY RUMPH Baird B. S. in Education CONNER X. RUSSELL Tyler B. A. President, Y. M. C. A.-Y. W. C. A.; Biblical Literature Club. CRYSTELLE SCUDDER Slaton B. A. Sans Souci; W. A. A.; Sock and Bus- kin; Y. W. C. A.; Leiderkranz. W. L. SASSER Bonham Engineer Bachelor of Architecture Engineering Society; Gargoyle So- ciety. TERRY SHAHAN Lipscomb Engineer B. S. in C. E. A. S. C. E.; Engineering Society. Page 66 SENIORS KATHERINE SHANNON Levelland B.A. Sock and Buskin: W. A. A. JOHN W. SHAVER Lubbock B. A. Alpha Chi. VEDA SHAW JIM SHEEHAN Idalou Friona B.A. Engineer B.S.inT.E. Kemas; Phi Psi; Engineering ciety. So- ANNA J. SHUTTLESWORTH Sudan Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. HELEN SIMS Chillicothe B. A. Secretary, Ko Shari; W. A. A.; Liter- ary Society; Press Association. JOHN L. SIMS MELVIN SISK Plainview Slaton B. A. B.A. CLYCE G. SMITH Sweetwafer B. B. A. DOROTHY SPENCE Palestine B.A. W. A. A.: Tennis Club; Las Leales. MARY ELIZABETH MAYVIS STRICKLAND | STANFORD Hereford Silverton Home Economics F Home Economics B.S. B.S. Home Economics Club. r + DFD; Home Economics Club. v Page 67 N I R EUGENE G. STRUVE Hah Center B. A. President, Pre-Law Club; I. R. C; Young Democrat; Las Armonias. MARY ANN SWEPSTON Floydada B. S. in Education Alpha Chi; Capa Y Espada. WYNONA SWEPSTON Tulia Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. GEORGE M. TATE Lockney Agriculture B.S. Block and Bridle Club; Agricultural Club; F. F. A. MERLE LORAINE TAYLOR MYRTLE TEAGUE Eastland Slaton B. A. B. A. Sock and Buskin; College Chorus. Band. SAM TEAGUE THAD H. THOMAS Browntield Lubbocfc Agriculture Engineer B.S. B.S. Eng neering Society. ARTHUR THOMPSON Hereford B. B. A. Band. CLAUDE J. THOMPSON Lubbocfc B. A. President, Student Council; Presi- dent, Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Col- lege Club; Publications Committee. BEN THOMPSON Lubhock Engineer B. S. in E. E. Alpha Chi; Engineering Society; A. I.E.E.; S.P.E.S. EUFA TIDWELL Munday B. A. Page 68 N I R COY THURSTON TINDEL LARRY TRENARY Brownsboio Parnoa B. A. B. A. Pre-Law Club Kemas. LEO C. TRIMM HAZEL LEE TROTTER Belen, New Mexico Lubbock Engineer B. A. B. S. in T. E. Band; Engineering Society. CLAUDE TUCKER, Jr. CARRIE BELL TURNER Meadow Lubbock B. A. B. A. Pre-Law Club. FANCHER UPSHAW AmariUo B. B. A. Band; Tennis. FELIX WALKER Lubbock B. A. Silver Key. BURNICE WALKER LMletield B. A. Business Manager, Toreador; Presi- dent, Kemas: Press Club; Inter-Club Council. PAULINE THOMPSON WALKER Taholta B. A. W.A. A. EDNA WALTERS Taboka B. A. Y. W. C. A.; Biblical Literature Club. FRANCES WALTER Lubbock B. A. Page 69 N I R HOWARD C. WEATHERBY Lakeview Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club; F. F. A. LUCILLE WEATHERBY Miles B. A. LORA LEE WEDDLE MARGARET WETZEL Bonham Tahoka B. A. B.A. Alpha Chi; Education Society; Capa Capa Y Espada. Y Espada; Junior Council; Y. W. C. A. WELDON WHITEFIELD Friona B.A. RUSSELL WILKINSON, Jr. Lubbock B.A. Basketball; Debate Club; Press As- sociation; Toreador; Double T. J. DEAN WILLIAMS Mount Pleasant Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club; Dairy Club. HOOD G. WILLS Fluvanna Agriculture B.S. F. F. A.; Block and Bridle; Agricul- tural Club. J. JEFFERSON WILEY Lubbock B. B. A. FLOYD E. WILLIAMS Hamilton Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club; Block and Bridle Club; Band; Student Council. NANCY MARGARETTE WILLIAMS Sylvester Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club; Double Key; Tennis Club. BETSY WILSON LubbocJc B. S. in Education DFD; Education Society. Page 70 N I R ALVIN ATTAWAY WOODROW BAIN Hewill Bula B.A. Engineer Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Saddle B. S. inC. E. A. S. C. E.; Engineering Society. JACK PATRICK BOSTICK ALLENE BOWERS Fort Worth Lorenzo r B. B. A. Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club. K z- 4 CHARLES CLARK ELOISE CLARK Cisco Tahoka B. B. A. B. A. Centaur. CLIFTON COLE BERTLE DOTY LubbocJ: Cisco Agriculture B.A. B.S. Block and Bridle; F. F. A.; Agrirul- tural Club. C. E. GRESHAM BILLY GRIMES Wewiin Greenville Engineer Engineer B. S. in C. E. Bachelor of Architecture A. S. C. E.; Engineering Society Wranglers; Gargoyle Society; Busi- ness Manager, LA VENTANA. MAYNARD HALL L. H. BATTON WAYNE HARDY Lubbock Comanche LubbocJc B.A. Agriculture B.A. Kemas. B.S. Kemas. Page 71 N I ARLINE HARRIS O. B. HAUGHT Lubbock Lubbock B. A. B. A. a Chi; Collsge Chorus. Los Camaradas. CLINDON HOARD Ireland B. S. in Education Sock and Buskin. MARGARET J. HOLLOWAY Lubbock Home Economics B.S. KATHRYN HUDMAN BRUCE JENNINGS Lubbock Daviila B. A. Engineer Las Leales; Pre-Med Club. B. S. in E. E. ELEANOR JUNGMAN Munday B. A. Las Leal=s; Press Association; Ten- nis Club; LA VENTANA; Toreador; W. A. A. MELVIN MITCHELL Winters Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club; Plant Industry- Club. VIRGIL KOLB Grapeland B. A. EUNICE McREYNOLDS Patricia B. S. in Education Y. W. C. A. ALTON L. OWENS Litlletield Agriculture B.S. Football; Plant Indus- try Club. PHILIP ROBBINS Rankin Agriculture B.S. Agricultural Club. LEE SMITH Lubbock Engineer B. S. in Chem. Engr. S. P. E. S.; Chemical En- gineering Society; En- gineering Society. Page 72 N I R ARPHICE SPIKES Lone Oak B. B. A. Wranglers. GLENN STEVENSON Lockney B. B. A. Kemas. CHARLES A. STILL Fori Worth B. B. A. Wranglers. Wm. PAUL TEMPLE Temple Engineer B. S. in T. E. Phi Psi. MARTIN E. TRUE Lockney Engineer B. S. in M. E. Engineering Society; A. S. M. E. ALIXE WEATHERS Tahoka B.A. ROY WILMETH Spearman B.A. Vice-President, Centaur. THEODORE A. WILSON Co cord. Okla. B. S. in Education MARY WILSON Lubbock Home Economics B.S. Home Economics Club; College Or- chestra. MYRTLE WOODFIN Snyder B.A. JANE WOODRUFF Lubbock B.A. DFD: Pre-Law Club; Sock and Buskin; Debate; Alpha Psl Omega. ROBERT S. WOODRUFF Santa Rosa, New Mexico Engineer B. S. in C. E. Engineering Society; A.S.C.E.; S.P.E.S. BILLY YEATTS Abilene B. B. A. Silver Key: Sock and Buskin. Page 73 • u Oy o ' . i LU1LOZ1 GEORGE CARRITHERS President LILLIAN HEARD Secretary-Treasurer HERSCHEL RED RAMSEY Vice-President JUNIORS... ANICE ARMSTRONG Idalou Home Economics WILLIAM H. BANKS Dollar. NAOMI BILLINGS Fori Stockton J. DAPREL BRANTON Ralls Engineer BETH CHATHAM Toyah TRAVIS FOSTER Piling StaT WINIFRED AYCOCK Rosebud BILLIE BURTON BAYLESS Lubbock HENRI SUE BOONE Lubbock DALE BUCKNER Lubbock Engineer LULA GRACE COOK Gainesville DEBBIE CROUCH CHARLINE DAVIS Seminole Plainview Home Economics CHARLES D ' SPAIN RUBY ELLISON McLean Lubbock EARL GLOVER Roymondville Agriculture OVID BAKER Garlard Engineer DON BENSON Lubbock Engineer CHARLES BORDEN Hereford Engineer MARY MERLE CARPENTER OJney C. W. CRAWFORD. JR. Memphis GERTRUDE DAY Lamesa TOM FIELDS Groom EDWIN GREEN Borger Page 77 ...JUNIORS MILLARD HALL Stanton Engineer WINFRED D. HOLLEY San Antonio Agriculture k ,L RAYMOND LEE JOHNS Slaton MARY FRANCES KENDRICK Lubbock Home Economics DORIS MONTGOMERY Darrouzeft austine Mcdonald Lubbock Home Ecpnomias OUIDA PENTECOST Winters ORVALENE PRICE Brownfield Home Economics HOMER E. HENSLEE Hereford Engineer VINCENT HOBBS Perryton JtI GUYRENE HORTON JAMES H. HOWARD rl Hurlwood Borger :A Home Economics Engineer ALMA JONES Stanton LLOYD C. MILLER Tulia Agriculture LESTER MUELLER Roscoe Engineer MAXWELL D. NUTTALL Borger Engineer JOHN R. PIERCE Lubbock Engineer VONDELLE PRIDEAUX Lubbock CARL JONES Portales, New Mexico JUANITA MONTEITH Clayton W. TURNEY MULLINAX Pampa RUTH MARIE PAYNE Lubbock HAZEL POLLARD Snyder JOHN R. RAGLAND Paducah Engineer Page 78 JUNIORS DOROTHY ABERNATHY Lubbock ROY ARMSTRONG Rising Star Agriculture RUTH BARNARD Lubbock BETTY BIZZELL Lubbock BILLIE BLOOM Lubbock Home Economics } ?$■ HAZEL LOUISE BRYANT Ralls Home Economics W. H. BULLOCK Artesia, New Mexico A. J. CARPENTER, Jr. Vernon Page 79 PHYLLIS ALFRED PoIJr, Nebraska ERNEST G. BAILEY Lubbock Agriculture I. H. BAUMGARDNER Weiiinglon Agriculture VIRGINIA BLACK RopesviUe LILA MARIE BRANNEN Aspermont MONROE BUCHANAN Spearman Engineer W. A. 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ELDRIDGE Cuero Pampa Home Economics Engineer HOYT EUDALY Grandfalls FRANCES FINCH AmariUo MAX1NE FRY Floydada SOPHIE ALICE HARDGRAVE Lubbock FRED B. HARRELL Lubbock Page 81 RUBYE FARLEY Lamesa NEIL C. FLEMISTER Dallas Agriculture HAROLD FULGHUM Terrell GUY W. GINN JOYCE GLASS Lockney Ciosbyton Engineer CEDRIC GRAGG BARBARA GREEN Lubbock A ust in Engineer Home Economics H. L. HARDY Throckmorton NORMAN HEATH Lubbock JOHN EMMETT Hoswell, New Mexico Engineer HERBERT FIELDS Sonera Agriculture A. T .FOWLER Brown field Agriculture MARIE GEORGE Lubbock ELTON GOEN Floydada J. W. GREENE Snyder Agriculture DEAN HARMAN Agriculture LLOYD HEGGEN Abernathy Engineer JUNIORS ARTIE HICKS Lubbock INEZ HOLLIMAN Wellington Home Economics MARY MELCHER HOWELL Knox City JACK HUFFMYER Odessa ARTHUR DALE JACKSON Lubbock VIRGINIA BETH JEFFORDS Seymour ROBERT EARL JOHNSON Dalhait AUSTIN REGINALD JORDAN Fori Worth ROSE HIGGS Gruver HELEN HOLLINGSWORTH Childress ROSE E. 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BAUMAN Munday Engineer NEDRA BERRY lov a Park Home Economics MARVIN BOTTLINGER Ireland MARY ALICE BRENT Dallas REBA BROWN Posl ANNE BUCKLEY Fori Worth Home Economics MARIORIE BURDETTE Lubbock Page 115 ..FRESHMEN THELMA CARTER Darrouzett ? $ BEVERLY CHAMLEE Gatesville EDDIE CLIFTON Estelline MARIOR1E COFER Dallas Home Economics ANN COLEMAN Lamesa J. D. COPELAND Estelline Engineer NELLE VEE COWAN Lubbock JOYCE CRAVEN Lubbock LOUISE CUMBIE Roby O. L. DARDEN, Jr. Post Engineer JOHN COGDELL LEWIS COLE Ciowell LeveHand Agriculture CATHERINE COLLIER JACK CONROY Lubbock Cleburne Home Economics Engineer fK COUPLAND CELESTE CORNWELL Rusk Lubbock Engineer Home Economics BILLIE L. COX Wink EARL CROW Ajbernafhy BETTY CURRY Tulia MARIORIE DAVIS Spearman FRANK CRAVEN Lubbock Engineer NITA CUDD Memphis LOIS MARIE DANIEL Post MOLLY DAVIS Lubbock Page 116 FRESHMEN... NANCY INEZ DAVIS PRISCILLA DAVIS Lubbock Fort Worth Home Economics GLENN M. 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GILLISPIE Sham rock Morse Engineer MARY GOROM LEE EDWYN HALE Forf SfocJtfon Lubbock ROSEMARY HAMPTON Pampa Page 117 SHELBY HARPER Lubbock DOROTHY JEAN DAY Claude GRADY DODD Briscoe Agriculture ROY DUNN Abilene CHARLES HELEN FOOTE Petersburg Home Economics EMMARIE GIBBS Sweetwater BETTY ALICE GORDON Lubbock BOB HAMILTON Memphis CLAUDE HARRIS fioby illura ...FRESHMEN HELEN HARSTON Dallas Home Economics JOHN HATCHETT Hailingen Engineer PARRISH HEATH Lubbocfc TURNER HIBBITTS Albany Engineer BETH HOUSTON Stanton Home Economics REAGAN HOWELL Lubbock Engineer ELOISE JACKSON Dallas Home Economics SIDNEY IASPER Panhandle HARSTON ROY HASTINGS Dallas Hereford Agriculture ROME HOLLOW AY Lenorah ' Agriculture J. S. HENNINGER Lubbock LORRAINE HOWDESHELL Dallas Home Economics ERNESTINE HUDGENS Paducah Home Economics CATHERINE JAMES Baird Home Economics RAYMOND JONES Lamesa CLAUDE L. HOOKER Albany CATHERINE HOWELL Lubbock BLANCHE HUGHES Pecos LOUISE JARROTT Lubbock WILLIAM JONES Tulia Engineer Page 118 FRESHMEN... JERALDINE JORDAN Blackwell CRYSTAL KENNEDY Muleshoe WILL H. KILGORE Mission Engineer ROY L. KREBBS Wilson E. H. LINDSEY Pearsall Agriculture I. L. MAGINNIS Quanah JEAN MARTIN Lamesa GEORGE KELTON MadisonviUe Engineer ELLEN KENNEDY Dallas Home Economics DUGAN KING Sudan RAYBON LAM Sudan Engineer L. D. LIVINGSTON El Paso SSELL LOVE CARL LOVELESS Lubbock Decatur Engineer Engineer ROBERT MANN Pampa Engineer EDITH MASTEN Plainview Home Economics Page 119 MRS. NORR1S KELTON Alpine Home Economics CATHARINE KERN Nazarefh BUSTER KIRK Spearman Engineer I. C. LANDRUM Fluvanna MARY PAUL LONG Hollis, Oklahoma MARY IO LUNA Plains EMILY MARTIN Mason HERSCHEL MAXEY Lubbodt Engineer ...FRESHMEN ANNETTA MAY Sweetwater Home Economics NELLIE MEERS Pampa MARY LOUISE MILLER Hermleigh Home Economics EDGAR MYATT Pampa Engineer MARY JO MULLER Vernon I. D. McCRACKEN Tulia Agriculture J. VERNON McKAY Humble BLANDINA NEATHERLY Lubbock EVELYN MEEKMA Olfon Home Economics JULIUS MEREDITH Big Wells WILLIAM H. MILLER Snyder Engineer JACK MYERS San Angelo VIRGINIA MULLER San Angeh W. H. McCULLOCH Lamesa Engineer ERLINE McKINNEY Childress CLAUDE M. NEWELL Las Vegas, New Mexico Engineer FLORENCE MEEKMA OJfon GAY MILLER San Angelo BILLY MITCHELL Sweetwater WAULDENE MYERS Electra Home Economics KAY McCOY Baird Home Economics JEAN McDAVID Amaiillo AUBURN McWHIRTER Roby Engineer DOROTHY NEWELL Odessa Page 120 FRESHMEN... GERRY NORR1S Haskell ALMARINE NUNNALLY O ' Donnell Home Economics VIRGINIA OTTMERS DELILAH GAIL Aspermont Home Economics MURRY PATTERSON Big Spring RENA PERSONS Quitaque EVELYN PLUMMER Hereford Home Economics MARY KATHERENE RICE Lubbock ALMA DEE ROBERSON Lorenzo NORMAN ORR Stanton CATHERINE PATTERSON McLean LOUISE PAYNE Sfalon SIBYL PIRTLE Tahoka CLYDENE POLK Littlelield Home Economics MARY PRICE AFTHUR REINHART Pampa Del Rio Home Economics Engineer L. A. RITTER Sweelwafer ELIZABETH ANNE PRICE Lubbock Engineer JAMES F. RICE Lubbock Engineer HARRIET ROBB Pampa ANNIE ROONEY Fori Slocklon AGNES ROWLEY Fori Worth Page 121 ...FRESHMEN ROY W. SANDERS Hobbs, New Mexico PEARL SCARBOROUGH Petersburg Home Economics ROBERT SCOTT Slaton EMMA LOU SELF Honey Grove Home Economics M ft VALORIS SHAFFER Friona Home Economics WINNOLEE SHARP Vernon Home Economics BOB SHELLBERG Fori Worth Engineer JAMES SHORTT Shamrock Engineer ELVIRA SMITH Slaton {CATHERINE SPEED Athens RUTH ELNA SPRUILL Lamesa EMILY ANN TEEPLE Dallas Home Economics OLETA SHELTON Nocona BEATRICE SIMMONS Clarksville GEORGE T. SMITH Fort Worth LOIS MAE SPEER Dickens JULIA STILES C arfcsvi ' IIe CAROLYN THOMAS Post HOPE SHOOK O ' Donnell Home Economics GERALDINE SLIDER Comanche VANCE SMITH Littlefield Agriculture ANN FRANCES SPROULE Gaiveston J. VERNA STREET O ' Donnell Home Economics A. J. THOMPSON Lubbock Page 122 FRESHMEN... DOROTHY THORNTON DOUGLAS TIBBETS Farwell Siiverfon Home Economics EARL TRIMBLE FERRELLINE TUCKER Lubbock Lubbock Engineer ELMER WALL, Jr. DOROTHY WALLS Knox City O ' Donneli Home Economics DALE WALKER IAYNE WARD Lubbock Amarillo Home Economics BETTY JO WATSON I. D. WEBB Ralls Abernathy NORMA WEST DORIS VIRGINIA Lubbock WHARTON Home Economics Panhandle EUGENE WHITT GLENNA WHI7FILL Terrell Lockney Home Economics ADA WILLIAMS BRY Lubbock HAZEL TODD Crowe I 1. Page 123 SYBEL NELL WAGGONER Dimmitt Home Economics CHARLES WALKER Plainview Agriculture WILLIAM WARENSKJOLD Cleburne Engineer IMOGENE WEBSTER Lubbock 1ARIORIE WHETSTONE Plainview CLARK WICKS Clovts. New Mexico EDWIN WILLIAMS Da, ...FRE SHMEN KENNETH ASKEW O ' Donnell MARY BOZARTH Liberal, Kansas ROY CHAPMAN Ralls Agriculture EVELYN ELLINGTON Bledsoe Engineer JOYCE GILL Littlelield Home Economics WILLIAM W. HALL Hale Center Agriculture JOHN H. HALLIDAY, Jr. Ft. Worth LILLIE HARRISON Byers FLOYD KERSEY Trousdale, Okla. Agriculture CECIL MEDLIN Lamesa Engineer BEN MOORE, Jr. O ' Donnell MAX McCLURE Spur NELDA FAY McELROY Ralls VIOLA BAIN ABREY W. BINGHAM Bula Call Creek Home Economics Agriculture MARYEDNA BURCK Mineral Wells ALMA LEE HANKINS Lubbock GERTRUDE LANEY Lubbock MARY ALICE CARNES Dallas Engineer FRED DAY DONNA DUCKWORTH Plainview Lubbock Agriculture FRANK J. GREEN IRENE HALL Littlefield Hale Center Agriculture Home Economics HELEN E. HANSCHU Darrouzeff Home Economics ELRAY LEWIS Browntield N MOORE R. V. MOREMAN Ennis Browntield Engineer M McSPADDEN G. V. PARDUE Lamesa Lubbock Engineer Page 124 FRESHMEN.. THELMA BLANCH PARKER O ' Donnell WARREN SPARKMAN Childress LILLY MYRL SIMMONS Lubbock Home Economics GERALD SPRAGUE Canadian ELIZABETH TADLOCK Wilson WILLIAM TREADWAY Greenville LOUISE WEIL Hale Center Home Economics ELAINE WILSON Julia TOMME WELCH Shamrock FRANCES WILSON Lubbock WILLENE WIMBERLY Lubbock MAURINE WINFREY Rolls LOIS WOODUL Lamesa Home Economics BILL WRIGHT Vernon Engineer MINNIE WILL WOOTTON Slaton NEIL H. WRIGHT, Ir. Lubbock JULIUS SMITH Colorado VIRGIL D. STONE Holliday MARY LOUISE WALKER Fori Worlh Home Economics HARLAN JAY WILLS Eola Agriculture CEPHUS WILSON Fori Davis Engineer GEORGE WILSON Princeton Engineer JANE WILSON Lubbock WAYNE W ' NKLER Pampa . Engineer COLETA INEZ WISE Jfockwood Home Economics J. C. WORKMAN Lubbock FREDDIE MARIE WORLEY Canadian OUENTIN WRIGHT Parte ANNETTE WULFMAN Lubbocir Page 125 1. PLAY. Everybody out to work at playing on playday. 2. RED HOT! Metal goes in here and comes out there. M. E. ' s practice but not on trumpets. 3. PAGE McFADDEN! Faye Hodge, Idell Bacon, Linna Gilmore display perfect pos- ture at girls ' Playday. 4. TOPS. Bouquets decorate girls for year ' s achievement. Smiling Dean Weeks con- ducts annual recognition day service. MAY 2 — MAY 21 1936 • MAY 22 — SEPT. 14 ROYALTY. Multicolored cottons replace royal purple as King Ersel Matthews and Queen Margaret Heard reign supreme with their court at Cotton Carnival in May. ROSES. Graduates Dorothy Neuhardt, Mary Geniece Hardberger, Geraldine Wicker, Lillian Parish, Virginia Brown and Evelyn Sloan pose with Director Tom Pol- lard and his famous Tyler roses. COMPASSION. Lillian Heard gives full attention to Anita Matheson. — From The Cradle Song. CORONATION. Queen Cotton Margaret crowned by Attorney Durwood Bradley. 5. HANDSHAKE. A. A. Harding, University of Illinois, congratulates Director Wiley on the success of the second annual Summer Band School. 6. MARCH. 1936 seniors inhale deeply be- fore they take a firm grip on coveted sheepskins. 7. SEMICIRCLE. Footlights emphasize white of summer band uniforms. 8. BELLS. Strong cables hoist victory bells, gift of class of ' 36. 9. CONVENT. Cast of The Cradle Song pause in the biggest hit of the spring play season. 10. SHOVELS. Mentor Peter Willis Cawthon and President Bradford Knapp celebrate ground-breaking for the new horseshoe stadium. • . :kk x v- K )r - in ' v • •• ■ml A TEKflS CHTTLt . mJP I. Jo] i jf n (b ■ . £ ¥i n JBl IT m BRfln P II w ® cd i nn n He 531 Sic P-f 1936 • TEXAS CENTENNIAL V 1. HERDER. These Ideal Muttons can ' t wander far hemmed in by wire fences and watched by a Techman. 2. ICE COLD. Kenneth Frazer rests from the Centennial sun and swigs a cold sody. 3. VIEW. Playing fountains greet Techsters at the State ' s Birthday celebration. 4. COMFORT. Oofie Abraham, ex-stu- dent, holds tight to a Tech pennant for support. 5. MARKERS. Professor Gus Ford has ar- ranged displays of Texas cattle brands centered by Stephen F. Austin ' s marker. 6. VENDOR. Roy Ooley makes artistic ar- rangements for his fruit stand. 7. GARBAGE. Rex Johnson and Carl Harris clean house in the cow barn. 8. DAIRYMAN. Winburn McAlister props his chin on the railing, entertains visitors. 9. RANGER. Billy Lewis removes practically everything but the boots and relaxes from acting as a guide. 10. AIDE. Carl Harris cannot appreciate the problems of the milkmaid, for he uses a modern electric milker. 1 1 . HIGH SPEED. James Buchanan operates the Rocket Speedway and between runs takes Adelaide, the young lady of the tub, for a cooling spin. 12. BUTTER. Leldon Hudson churns with vigor, smiles for the customers. 1936 • BOTANY TRIP 4 -v 1. BREAKFAST. Bacon and eggs at Trini- dad, Colorado. Ruby Dean enjoys her Java. 2. CLIFFS. Botanists make lab materials of small plants on this cliff in Kit Carson Na- tional Forest. 3. BON VOYAGE. Summer Botany Field Trip, just before starting for the mountains. 4. NON-SHAVER. John Marr, student assist- ant, swears the black on his face is a six weeks ' beard. 5. SNOW. Bob McCarnes and other trip- pers play in the snow on Pike ' s Peak. 6. WATER BOY. Clifton Strong Man Pat- terson laughs at the sissies who carry only two buckets of water at a time. 7. CLASS. Sleep is unheard of in this labo- ratory meeting. Dr. Paul D. Voth is in- structor. 8. WATERFALL. Hilma Joyce likes her sum- mer dips in icy mountain streams. John Marr only wades. 9. LUNCH. A mountain boulder is the dining table at Boulder Falls, near Boul- der, Colorado. 10. EARLY BIRDS. A sunrise breakfast on the dunes at the Sand Dune National Monument in Colorado. 1 1 . HOME. People sleep here at an eleva- tion of 8,000 feet. 1. FIRST. More than 3,000 students follow her past auditor ' s cage. Lorine Manning of Fairview, Oklahoma, pays her fees. 2. MUSEUM. Spencer Wells and President Bradford Knapp lay aside pens of author- ity to shoulder shovels in the ground- breaking ceremony for the new museum. 3. DATE. Eldon Maxwell sets the pace as he calls for Jean McDavid in a sweet little biplane. 4. SMILES. Two principals in La Remuda — Dobbin and Queen Helen Lehmberg prac- tise for the night ' s performance. 5. REMINISCENCES. Ex-Matador Jack Dur- ham tells of good old days at 1936 Home- coming. 6. POLO. Student Prexy Claude Thompson, star in the La Remuda donkey polo game, thrusts at an opponent. 7. HAWAII. Three Silver Keys swing into the hula-hula that caused Dean Major Bowes Gordon to apologize: Each club is responsible for its own number! 8. OYEZ! OYEZ! Manager Winburn Mc- Alister ' s golden tones peal forth: Shore a purty dress and features of La Re- muda. 9. CHECK. Laveme McWhirter works with packed filing cabinet. 10. ENTHUSIASM. Mack Scoggin goes for the ball in a donkey polo game. 1 1 . STEADY. This co-ed had to have steady nerves to get over the line first, carrying an egg in a spoon. 12. FAMOUS. Members of the Manhattan String Quartet are interviewed by mem- bers of journalism classes. 13. EARTHQUAKE. Head Physics Professor George and Graduate Assistant Florence Robertson can predict, almost locate, earth upheavals with this apparatus. 3% : v ,■■•■. ' ..- •.■■■■. v ' ■■■ ' .-;. ■• ' , 1936 • LOYOLA TRIP 1. CHECKERS. A bad headache or deep thought necessitates this pose for Johnsie Jo Steele in a drowsy game of checkers. 2. OVATION. Coach Pete Cawthcn reads fan telegram. 3. QUICK WORK. Duane Fuq.ua, along to help furnish noise, gets a letter from home at one of the stops. 4. ZEPPELIN. H. A. Watson grins after an exploring trip of his own aboard the Good- year Baby Blimp. 5. READING. Paul Coe finishes his maga- zine over the young lady ' s shoulder. 6. SUNSHINE. The first stop in California. Part of the band gets off to stretch. 7. GAZE. Sam Teague sticks his nose in the air and doesn ' t miss a thing. 8. NEWS. Techsters read advance publicity at Needles, Arizona. 9. JUMBLE. No soft beds, so these fellows provide their own cushioning. 10. REST. Morpheus and a pullman pillow solve the problem of today ' s rest hour for Broadway Browning. PARADE. The band forms for public showing in Los Angeles. 12. RECREATION. No aces up sleeves or on the table. 13. LINGERING. A co-ed, a collegian. 1936 ™ • NOV. 17 — NOV. 21 1. WHO ' S WHO. Winston Reeves, Demp Cannon, Winburn McAlister, Conner Rus- sell, George Tate, Elmo Knudson, Wilmot Eaton, Jim Lindsey, Claude Thompson, Lillian Heard, Lois Spraggins, Jeannette Jones, Helen Lehmberg, Doris Townsend, Arch Lamb, and John L. King are recog- nized for doing things on the campus. 2. INFORMER. Cedric Gragg, in the har- ness, announces football game to the press box. 3. MARRIED. Student housekeeping is suc- cessful when hubby dries dishes — and can still manage a smile. 4. SENATOR. Jo Powell and Mary Howell get the dope on Senator Robert LaFollette by personal interview. 5. MATCH. Things are close for the masked marvel and his opponent. The referee is getting first hand information. 6. PIG ROAST. Professor Howell supplies himself with dunking equipment, Casey Fine follows. 7. EXTREMES. A long reach is demon- strated as Jim Tom Casey and Claude Francis combat at fun nite. 8. MUSIC? The W. A. A. bonfire back- grounds co-ed choristers. 9. PROFESSOR. Jimmy Murdough con- sumes popcorn and a Red Raider football battle with interest equally divided. 10. COWBOY STYLE. Zella Reigel and Mar- garet Baskin sing between bites at W. A. A. Chuck Wagon Supper. 19 36 • ?■■■■■ • NOV. 22 — NOV. 30 1. COFFEE. Home Ec ' s entertain in the Practice House. 2. DOLLS. Dorothy and Dorothy manufac- ture marionettes with the aid of hammer, nails and plaster of Paris. 3. ANXIETY. Only at a grid game does the Candid Camera see this. 4. MAKEUP. A well powdered nose is es- sential at any good football game, as shown by Lillian Heard. Willard Simpson watches the game. 5. UNCONCERN. Back of the knees can be found Shelba Jones. 6. SALESMAN. Know your players, weight and height but no telephone numbers, cries the program hawker. 7. HURRY. The co-ed hides behind the cup. 8. BARBARA. Scientifically cared for by 12 mamas, she smiles often. 9. JOY. The Practice House baby shows off three bright new teeth. 10. EATS. A balanced diet is included, every bite under close watch. 11. FISH. The between-halves shoe race for entertainment of grandstands. 12. WARM. Pop Godeke surveys the situ- ation at hand. 13. STUDY. Family life and homework result in smiling faces for Mr. and Mrs. Kline Nail. 1936 • DEC. I — DEC. I I 1. COMEDY. Speech pupils present Big Hearted Herbert. Eron Gafford, Rex Web- ster and Father ' s portrait take the center of the stage. 2. CONGLOMERATION. Freshmen and Sophomores have informal Hodge Podge in the Gym. 3. WINTER. Sans Souci presents pledges amid snow, smilax and Christmas trees. 4. PEEK-A-BOO. A Civil Engineer lines up with the Administration building. 5. INFORMER. A question is asked and an- swered here. 6. FORMAL. Silver Keys decorate in red and silver for this part of the social calendar. 7. DIRECTOR. Ruth Pirtle, Speech Head, megaphones sideline directions to cast of Big Hearted Herbert. 8. LOVE SCENE. A Fish, a Girl, and a Cop, a story with a surprise ending. TINSEL. Everyone goes informal for this Christmas dance. 2. ANIMAL HUSBANDRY. Aggies visited here while on the Oklahoma A. M. campus. 3. DUCKS. Good football players make good hunters. Demp Cannon, Red Ramsey and Tox Wiginton have proof. 4. TREES. Ned Bradley and his boys furnish music for this formal at the Lubbock during the Yuletide season. 5. ATHLETES. Sumner Reed plays mentor to a group of Silver Key huskies. 6. BASKETBALL. Another inch stretch would put the ball in the basket for the winning team. 1. GIFTS. Saint Nick pays Duck Inn a pre- Christmas call. 2. ENGAGEMENT. Helen Lehmberg watches the sparkles of Mary Virginia Whitehead ' s diamond. 3. SURPRISE. The Guardian Angel of Duck Inn shows off a new linen table cloth. 4. PUNCH. That ' s good stuff, smiles Mary Leda McAdams. 5. NO FAIR. Helen Jane Grafke tries to es- cape with two helpings. 6. PARTY. Women ' s Dormitory celebrates the season with punch, cookies, and Christmas carols. 7. REFRESHMENTS. Food-laden table at- tracts scores of Dorm residents at Christ- mas party. 8. CAROLS. Foster mother to 320 girls, Mrs. Elizabeth Young adds her voice to Silent Night. 1. CONVERSATION. Mechanical Engineer- ing seniors, J. T. Pinkston and Ed Barkham solve problems with words. 2. JAVA. A bucket serves instead of a dripo- later as Lee Norris makes coffee over a Bunsen burner. 3. SESSION. Mrs. Marshall instructs Chemis- try 220, Qualitative Analysis. 4. TWELFTH NIGHT. Home Economics stu- dents elected Floy Glenn as reigning power for post-holiday festivities. 5. MODEL T. Centennial Special is admin- istered much needed refreshment by Own- er Johnny Ragland. 6. BATH. No mud in sight, Johnny Wells takes soap and water kind for beauty. 1937 • JAN. 12 — JAN. 18 1. GONE. The contents of these beer bottles have disappeared, and Jack Jenkins is yet able to study. 2. SOCIAL HOUR. Fern Messick and Mary Dee Miller enjoy the sun and the lounge. 3. SKATES. Preparing to take a chance on a broken bone or two. 4. KEMAS. Shields centered with a K form the decorations for the Kemas formal. 5. BY CRACKY! A shotgun and Floyd Wil- liams play the leads in the Aggie wedding in the Boys ' Dorm. 6. DIAL. The man with the curved pipe hunts a good program. 7. AWS. Dot Cook negotiates the trek across the campus for the convocation nominating AWS officers. 8. DOCIE DO. Duane Fuqua directs the mu- sicians as Cabbage Heads swing their partners at their dance in Men ' s Dormi- tory. PROP. The table supports 14 chins as these femmes drink themselves under by- degrees. Note: H.O was the drink quaffed. 2. RHYTHM. Emily SoRelle, Myrtle Teague, Johnsie Jo Steele, Mildred Morris, Ruth Jameson, Duck Inn Orchestra, furnish mealtime melody. 3. SPRING. Duststorms call for houseclean- ing. 4. MAIL. Uncle Sam ' s Sub-Postoffice has Mrs. Edna Z. Brown and daughter Mary Elizabeth on duty. 5. NUMBER, PLEASE. Three co-eds attempt a community phone call. 6. FACTS. The mirror never lies, so a con- scientious lady takes its advice in the mat- ter of makeup. 7. KNITTING. The Champ and Martha play at working, work at playing. 8. TAP! TAP! This young lady uses the kitchen for dance steps. No dish washing for her. 1937 • JAN. 25 — FEB. 7 1. HOUSE OF DAVID. Herbert Rule, Buster Kirk, Rip Green, Bob Sedwick show their Dead Week accomplishments. 2. TICKETS. Wayne Brown and Wilmot Eaton take Dr. W. A. Jackson ' s money for a band concert ticket. 3. SHAVE. Claude Thompson gets his by re- quest of Grace Stengel at the hands of Barber Joe Taylor. 4. WHISKERS. A bumper crop raised by Morris Shady Laine. 5. FOOTBALL. Double T graduates Jim Neill, Charles Duval, Tox Wiginton, Bill Hol- comb, Winford Baze, Broadway Browning, and Sponsor Pete Cawthon. 6. REGISTRATION. Nearly three thousand students go through this two-day grind. 7. CONCERT. Pennies From Heaven fol- lowed this breakdown by the La Fonda Fiddle Band. VALENTINES. Las Chaparritas presented pledges at annual Valentine dance with Hearts in three quarter time as a decora- tion scheme. 2. COTTON. Legislators pulling staple in a Textile lab. THUNDERBIRD. Blue and silver lights lend mystic atmosphere to KoShari presentation. LOOM. This device for making the crop of the South into fabric is examined by the Legislators. 5. LEGISLATORS. Residents of Women ' s Dormitory are luncheon hostesses to the Texas Legislature Delegation. 6. LABORATORY. Legislators examine clo- verleaf highway intersection model in the Civil Engineering Lab. 1937 • ARCHAEOLOGY TRIP I 1. EXPLORER. Dr. W. C. Holden eats toma- toes from a can after a morning ' s work. 2. MASK. W. G. McMillan is demonstrating the latest thing in West Texas dust masks. 3. EARLY RISER. Henry Clay Bailey tries to lace his boots without waking up. 4. LIGHTS. W. L. Pearson, graduate engi- neer, furnishes the electricity for the trip with a small power plant. 5. DUST. Choking silt hinders those who at- tempt to sift artifacts from the dirt. 6. CLEANLINESS. Gordon Moore washes be- hind H. C. Bailey ' s ears. 7. REST. The group gathers around the campfire for relaxation after a day ' s work. SANDWICH. Dr. C. E. Wagner, on loca- tion at the cave, pauses a while for dinner. 9. JOLLY. Gordon Moore finds a fellow camper amusing. 1. DOUBLE T. With orchestra members at- tired in grid togs, Double T members have formal at auditorium. 21 DAYS. Campused for shooting fire- crackers in the halls, these girls celebrate each night by sticking a pin in one of the 21 balloons. PATRIOTIC. Wrangler Club members have annual George Washington formal with decorations in red, white and blue. 4. ENGINEER. Herbert Rule, rod man, helps locate road in canyon. 5. VISITOR. Business Manager Gaston pur- sues his favorite outdoor sport, visiting the Aggie school. SURVEYORS. Professor Parkhill, students use delicate instruments to get correct re- sults. 7. CONFERENCE. Dr. Holden, Miss Flora McGee, Opal McMahon, Eleanor Jungman hold an impromptu meeting at the south side of the Administration Building. 8. SISTERS. Mickey, Betty and Martha Tan- ner add extra rhythm to the music of Ned Bradley ' s orchestra at the KoShari dance. Li FULL DRESS. Torch and Castle entertain their ladies with a Military Ball. 2. RECORD. Kenneth Woods is the 3000th student to pass the auditor ' s window, thus setting a registration mark for Tech. BALLOTS. To see that their student publi- cations are run efficiently, Linda Treadwell, Angel Van Home, and Bette Krauss turn in their votes. 4. VOICE. Lee Byrd, company representa- tive, Miss Ruth Pirtle, Gerald Hinchey and Lillian Heard, students, discuss the voice- recording device at hand. R. O. T. C. Frances Turner reigns in white as honorary Cadet Colonel. HARPIST. Professor Julien Paul Blitz dis- cusses the evening ' s program with Alberto Salvi, Artist Course guest. 26 — MAR. 4 (M- -■„ 1. BANQUET. The Aggie School and chosen ones have dinner together at the annual Aggie Banquet. 7. AUTHORITIES. Doctors Holden and Wag- ner at West Texas Museum opening. 3. CAMERAMAN. W. G. McMillan photo- graphs beauty elects in natural color MAKEUP. Supplying a dab of powder in the proper place and a touch of color some- where else is Miss Ruth Pirtle. 5. MEMBER. Mrs. W. A. Jackson registers Lt.-Gov. Walter Woodul for membership in the West Texas Museum Association. RECESS. Students gather on the second floor of the Administration Building to dis- cuss cutting ten o ' clocks and going for coffee. BICYCLES. Jane Woodruff and Betty West get taken for a ride. 1937 MAR. 5 — MAR. 9 ENGINEERS. Chemical, Mechanical, Elec- trical or what have you? Students oi the slide rule have annual banquet. GUEST. Donald Henry, IRC leader, and Amy Heminway Jones, Carnegie Institute of International Peace, exchange greetings at IRC convention. LEADER. Directing the Texas Tech Band in new red, black and gold uniforms is Pro- fessor D. O. Wiley. BUILDER. After presenting his famous marionettes in The Mikado, the director helps to tear down the sets. SPEAKERS. Government Professor H. C. Pender and two IRC speakers find a few moments between meetings for conversa- tion. RELAXATION. Men ' s Dormitory residents gather in the lounge for a few moments of bull session. 7. MEETING. Dean Margaret Weeks, Miss Jonnie McCrery and IRC guest, Mrs. Bur- ton W. Musser, chat for a while before ban- queting. 1937 MAR. 10 MAR. 14 V I y 1. AMATEUR. X Y Z . . . X Y Z . . . S O S. Electrical Engineering is more than a course. 2. DOMESTIC. Bill Jarvis economically washes his trousers and hangs them out the window to dry. 3. LABORERS. Taking ditch digging serious- ly are W. Burney, M. Ratrell and F. Lemley. 4. CRITIC. Murals of feminine pulchritude are not hard for Skiles Thomas to judge. 5. MODELS. Marvin Petty enjoys a good pipe and toy airplanes in his spare time. 6. SLIDE. Some daring miss can ' t resist the temptation of using the smoothly worn ban- ister for a quick means of transportation down stairs. 7. SPRING. Las Vivarachas have presenta- tion in a garden scene, rustic benches and all. 8. INTEREST. The coach seems to be the cen- ter of attraction but the underwear is rather obvious. 1937 MAR. 15 APRIL 5 FAN. Prexy Bradford Knapp is amused at one of Tech ' s cage games. 2. EXPLORERS. KoSharis Pauline Phillips, Anne Buckley, Frances Reel and Mary Louise Walker take to the mountains on their annual initiation trip to Santa Fe. 3. DECORATION. Perry Bowser, W. D. Hol- ley, Tech nurserymen, prepare realistic table centerpieces. LEFT. Marian Hurmence utters a cry of dismay as dance partner Ben Thompson leaves her in the middle of the dance floor. Joe Caldwell in true Sir Galahad style rushes to the rescue. OUCH! But bees won ' t sting if you go about it in the right way, Professor Howell and his student assistant demonstrate. VINEYARD. Pledges are presented in an arbor scene, with purple grapes, green leaves and white lattice by D F D ' s at their formal. PLEASURE. Helen Lehmberg and Profes- sor Maurice Erickson smile over a mutually enjoyed process, dancing. 1937 • SPRING BAND TOUR REST. Rex Tynes, Curtis Jarratt, J. T. Rob- erts, and Clovis Clough, relax on the high school lawn at Cisco. 2. CAN. This Pabst container is overgrown but Arthur Thompson handles it with ease under the close watch of Willard McSpad- den. 3. SUPPLIES. Fred Stout aids in transporting the music and stands to the concert hall. Professor D. O. Wiley, director, follows. CANNON. Visiting on the campus of Hardin-Simmons Rex Tynes, Arthur Thomp- son, K. C. Pritchett, a former enrollee of Tech, and Billy Phillips. They find the Hardin-Simmons cannon a convenient stopping place. 5. STROLL. These bandmen take time off from their concerts for a walk with the girl friend. 6. CAPTURE. This young lady doesn ' t have a chance, for Gurthal Gilligan and Robert Fielder see that she is well taken care of. 7. CAVEMEN. This Wichita Falls lassie doesn ' t have to worry about walking, for Jack Helms shows off his brawn and muscle. MONOPOLY. Robert Fielder won ' t be sat- isfied with one. He thinks he can manage two at least. 9. DONATION. H. A. Watson carefully counts out money for band men ' s lunch. Dessert will have to be omitted today. 1937 • JOURNALISM CONGRESS PICNIC. Jo Powell and Mary Howell ob- serve closely and Virginia Knapp takes a picture. 2. YELL. Doris Montgomery laughs as Ray Wimpy Simpson yields to his Tarzanic instinct. 3. FOOD. Picnic complete with red ants, sand and other essentials. Mrs. Jimmy Al- len, Journalism Instructor, takes hers smil- ing. 4. NAVIGATORS. Emma Nelle Thatcher, Mary Howell and the rest of them would have to navigate or sink if they fell off the pier at Lake Dallas. 5. RESULT. Tanner Laine takes Sylvia Smith boat riding, and Sylvia has to wipe mos t of Lake Dallas off her face. 6. TALK. Jo Powell, with a friendly hand on her shoulder, explains a major problem to prexy-elect, Maxine Fry, the girl of the bandana. 7. HIDEOUT. Argo Peek takes the lady-friend to a private nook for lunch. EDITORS. Chaney Miller, editor of the 1937 Yearbook at TSCW, and Burgess Dixon, editor-elect of The Toreador for next year, pause in the business of picnicking for Chaney to dry off after boating. 1937 • ENGINEERS ' SHOW 0 rt W SHOW. Engineers climb to the roof and adjust the huge lighted sign on the Engi- neering Building. 2. AIR. Advertising from the sky with a box. kite is part of the annual Engineers ' Show. 3. KITE. Engineers go back to the oid games and build a kite to fly. 4. SOUVENIR. Copper ash trays, designed by Charles Howell, made by engineering students, are official souvenirs. Morris Palmer, Cedric Gragg keep shop. z .y s. 5. OBSERVATION. W. H right, engineer, does some close work. 6. DESIGN. This one, being executed by a student, will be woven into cloih on this Jacquard loom. 7. STRAIN. The facial expression evidently helps to turn this generator crank. 8. METAL. Clyde Pierce pours sizzling hot castings in the foundry. 1937 • APRIL 6 — APRIL 19 1. ANCIENT. Dr. John Clark, discoverer, Dr. W. C. Holden and Bill McMillan, aid in the careful unloading of an elephant skull found in recent explorations. 2. GARDENERS. Agriculture students gain practical experience in the Aggie gardens. 3. POW-WOW. Block and Bridle Club have a picnic at the Lubbock Country Club. Billie Fisher gets a good laugh from something. 4. CAREFUL. Members of a Dairy Manufac- turing class use this equipment for steriliz- ing and bottling milk. 5. SONGSTER. Margaret Turner, local news- paper woman, and Professor R. A. Mills, Artist Course head, greet Rose Bampton of lovely soprano voice. 6. JOKE. Opal McMahon and Burgess Dixon have a good laugh on somebody or maybe Opal is having it on Burgess. 7. CONCENTRATION. Serious minded stu- dents crowd the library at all hours, 8 o ' clock in the morning till 10 at night. 8. PUNISHMENT. Winburn McAlister takes his hazing from Margaret Wood at the Ag picnic. 1937 • APRIL 20 — MAY 2 GUNNERS. Some R. O. T. C. ' s do target practice underground. 2. QUEEN. Smiling Jewel Bishop reigned as Fiesta Queen and represents Tech as Miss Texanita. 3. STUDY. With Sergeant Richards instruct- ing, Cadets Ryan and Chamberlain learn the essentials of machine gunning. 4. UNIFORMS. Sergeant Richards guaran- tees correct fit as he issues R. O. T. C. garbs. 5. ARMS. A well oiled gun is one of the most important things, and Cadets Ryan, Smith, and Chamberlain give theirs a thorough cleaning. 6. REFRESHMENTS. Students make a bee- line for the College Bookstore for coffee and rolls between classes. 7. TECHNIQUE. Captain Pettit and Sergeant Richards use diagrams for this discussion of military tactics. This motley crew takes time from card games and bowery dancing or a word brawl J u ( vsnhxn a Professor F. A. Kleinschmidt and Mrs. C. E. Hooper pause tor refreshment Erma Stokes smilingly acts as caretaker tor the punch barrel. OZ5. to a j axtu A long bar, plenty of beer, alias punch, Madam Zulch, plenty of startling murals, gaudy colors and all the rowdy, gay and bright life of the good old Bowery were present when the Gargoyle Club, com- posed of members of the Commercial Art depart- ment, threw their annual Bowery brawl in the Com- mercial Arts Lab of the Engineering Building. Plenty of hilarity and noise reigned for club mem- bers, faculty members, guests and last but by all means noisiest, the bartenders. One lab was turned into a bar serving grapejuice from realistic beer barrels. A frothy glass could be bought for $5.00 worth of genuine paper money. Card games, fair and otherwise, were in constant progress, with the loser paying. RIGHT: Cedric Gragg and Roberta Hunt have true artistic souls as they study the murals on the wall. They might be held up at any moment at the point of a sinister looking miniature pistol by a Bowery bad-man, so they are on the lookout. ABOVE: The rattle of dice can be heard in almost any corner with the skilled and unskilled playing at rolling the bones. Bill Davis makes preparations to win and cheerfully takes paper bank rolls from his oppo- nents in payment. LEFT: Harry Blocker counts his money to see if he can afford to go under the light to visit Madame Zulch. Mr. Blocker is showing the latest fashions. BELOW: Wearing an apron splashed with grapejuice suds and a skull cap, with top knot and everything, Dan Moore is an efficient bartender. He can carry more than one cup at a time, but they are paper ones, not steins. LEFT: Mary Alice Games and Travis Westmoreland demonstrate dancing of the bowery type. He says, Come on, let ' s swing awhile, instead of the more graceful, Please, may I? { [ankattan i i l LJL w E . . Hb ' 4 K| - M tMWr r m 1 3% P HE I - A vf MyP TEJ m X- ■ PC s - ■£ 4l - ' ■ •i i t • v Sm. M - fefr.--- B BrW .-ZS . ' txina I uaxtst Warned that a Lubbock audience might walk out if it does not like a program, the Manhattan String Quartet on October 12 was surprised at encores de- manded after each of the three parts of the musicale . . . encores of such popular numbers as Carry Me Back to Old Virginny and the old English bal- lad, Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes . . . cell- ist took it good naturedly when a string broke dur- ing an impressive selection . . . quartet consists of first and second violinist, violist, and cellist . . . all Americans educated in this country . . . first American string quartet to make a tour of Europe . . . first string quartet from any country asked by the audience to give an encore during a chamber music concert at The Hague . . . fifth consecutive tour that the Manhattans have made in this territory under the management of the National Music League and Lucius Pryor Concert Service, and the second time that the unit has trekked South this year . . . during this tour the quartet visits the South for several weeks . . . then prepares for another Euro- pean tour through Russia, England, France, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Hungary, and Italy. Xa VoCLth Audience applauded Wisconsin Senator Robert M. LaFollette, who spoke here November 18 on The Washington Scene, when he said that we should maintain peace at any cost . . . stated that one of the biggest fallacies existing in the country is the idea that the crisis would have worked out in its own way . . . we have never drifted out of an economic crisis in the past, but have been pulled out by capi- tal expenditure purposes, he added . . . also that during the boom period corporate surpluses piled up until they mounted to many millions of dollars . . . the stock market boom wiped out huge blocks of purchasing power which would have helped carry us through the economic crisis . . . while en- tertaining a press audience in his hotel suite, LaFol- lettte stated he felt certain that the majority of popu- lar and electoral votes in the general election would re-elect Roosevelt, but that the overwhelming ma- jority came as a surprise . . . the result was signifi- cant because it indicates that the nation ' s voters are no longer influenced by fear, blind prejudices, and other methods employed in the Republicans ' cam- paign, LaFollette said . . . agreeing with the Ad- ministration ' s social security movement has been 16 to 20 years behind in this country, and that reason was one of the contributing factors to the crisis sev- eral years ago ... of stocky build, the Senator hardly looked the part of the prominent statesman he has played in the Senate since elected to suc- ceed his father in 1925 ... he is scarcely five and one-half feet in height . . . thick shaggy black hair greys at his temples . . . has initiated much progres- sive legislation . . . respect has been paid the Sen- ator as a deep thinker and profound economics stu- dent . . . leadership has brought him constant at- tention in the daily newspapers of the country . . . it is said that he is one of the few men whom the other senators like as a private citizen and respect in public character . . . strong supporter of New Deal activities . . . combines many of the qualities that get him in the world of politics . . . has most level head in the senate, a keen observer of Wash- ington affairs said . . . always knows what he thinks . . . never becomes excited, never loses poise, never made vain by success . . . aware of virtue of hard work . . . takes defeat in good part . . . characteristically forceful orator. jDokumix -Jyttjl- The last on the fall semester program was a return engagement of Bohumir Kryl, world ' s foremost cor- netist, with his 40-piece symphony orchestra . . . appeared here in 1933 . . . Margary Maxwell, so- prano soloist, who received world recognition in American and European operas, starred on the pro- gram . . . American born and American trained, she has an international reputation . . . her recent success in France with the Grand Opera Company of Bordeaux highlights a colorful career . . . Ed- ouard Blitz, 13-year-old cellist, son of Julien Paul Blitz, music department head, soloed during the eve- ning ' s program . . . Edouard, who is recognized as one of the top-ranking musicians of the South Plains, declined an invitation to join Kryl ' s orchestra in Oklahoma because of another engagement . . . unrivaled as a virtuoso and conductor, Kryl is rec- ognized by countless musicians of world fame . . . called most remarkable cometist in world ... or- ganization now making a coast-to-coast tour, is en- tering upon its thirty-first season . . . during this time, Kryl and his orchestra have covered over one million miles and played twelve thousand concerts . . . year after year he has appeared in more than a hundred colleges and universities in repeat en- gagements. The orchestra that brought color from Old Mexico to the campus. dvyzzeado i Jitiiaa Clad in the Charro Mexican cowboy costumes and gay, colorful apparel of China Pob- land or the peasant girl, musicians of Angell J. Mercado ' s Tipica Mexican orchestra played romantic mood s of the Latins January 7 . . . the glamorous and enticing music of Spain, Cuba, and Argentina . . . costume colors are based on the Mexican national flag, red, white, and green ... a number of soloists featured on programs . . . Lolita Valdez, Mayan type of beauty, caught the spirit of the native music in her soprano voice . . . Custavo Carrasco, a Latin-American tenor . . . with gay abandon, the Ojeda dancers in embroidered costumes contributed their authentic Mexican dances . . . radio experience, broadcasting over NBC a program sponsored by Mexican government . . . orchestra selected by governmental officials for these good will programs as a means of expressing Mexican music to the Americans . . . native Mexican instruments flavor their programs . . . the strange and dramatically effective instruments of the Tipica orchestra in- terpreted vitality, spirit, and animation of all Latin music . . . probably the most unusual of these is the salterio, handed down from the time of Poet-King David, greatly resembles the zither and has a soft and peculiar sweetness of tone . . . since those ancient days few changes have been made in the construction of the salterio ... it has over one hundred strings with the scales arranged in a complicated manner which makes it difficult to play . . . Senor Mercado also featured other unique and rarely known instruments, including many of the percussion type ... El quiro is a very popular instrument made of dried pumpkin ... it is several feet long with a number of grooves on its surface ... a weed stick about the size of a pencil is rubbed on these grooves, producing rhythmic and peculiar sounds ... to complement and enhance the program of the orchestra, outstanding soloists sang, played and danced . . . ANGELL I. MERCADO gjjp ' ' . Brought heavenly strings oi mammoth harp to ears ot college. Alberto Salvi, known as the world ' s greatest harpist, and his instrumental quintet gave classics of Mozart, Chopin, Bach, Hadyn and other composers of immortal music February 24 . . . opening attraction on Spring Artist Course ... his version of Mighty Lak A Rose, played as an encore, brought more applause than any other number . . . quintet includes flute, violin, cello, viola, and harp ... his life and musical abilities are one . . . born in Venice, the son of a celebrated Italian harp maker . . . grew up in an environment full of possibilities to make him a great artist ... at age of thirteen, then known as the spirit of the harp, Salvi won Royal Scholarship of the Naples Royal Conservatory, in a nation-wide competition . . . this honor assured his musical education ... his harp, a magnificent golden instru- ment of extraordinary proportions, was recently insured for $20,000 . . . harp, six inches taller than the regulation harp, has a range of more notes than a piano on enlarged board . . . guarded at all times by a man whose one duty is never to let it out of his sight . . . the the harp, constructed by Rudolph Wurlitzer Company for exhibition at the Panama Pacific Exposition ten years ago, winning first honor at the display, travels in its own trunk, especially built and lined with soft padding. -Jonu y a%a i ■9 JW actons: ttsi Tony Sarg ' s Marionettes presented by Earnest Briggs March 8 . . . afternoon, Mark Twain ' s fav- orite and widely famous works, Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer . . . evening, Lewis Carroll ' s Alice in Wonderland and Mikado, puppet ver- sion of that famous operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan . . . speech students helped pull strings at the local showing . . . curtain raised at performance ter- mination to show awed audience the power behind the throne . . . scenery for all plays designed and executed by Sarg ... he draws designs for dolls and Charles Searle, who has been with the com- pany since it began, makes the heads . . . music written and arranged by Richard Williams with costumes by Pearl Caigue . . . marionettes made of plastic wood, carved and painted . . . each puppet has at least nine strings so that the heads, eyes, legs, arms, hands, feet, and bodies can b e worked in a perfectly natural manner . . . $125 is actual cost of the famous dolls . . . from the Texas Centennial Toad Stool theatre a sixteen-year-old exotic Arabian marionette in Sarg ' s production of Sinbad the Sailor was presented by Dave Prichard, director and manager of the one and only Tony Sarg show, to Professor Ruth Pirtle last fall. Jtiamliton Rose Bampton, baby star of Metropolitan because of vocal versatility . . . debut on twenty-third birth- day four years ago . . . began as contralto five years ago but last year scored triumphs in music- capitals of Europe as dramatic soprano . . . rare genius of the species opera singer, a real American girl ... is proof that opera stars are no longer distinguished by middle-age and buxomness . . . tall and willowy with a quick, graceful step . . . appeared here April 19 . . . accompanied by blond Nils Nelson, violinist, pianist . . . feature point of entertainment schedule, declare collegians . . . sang group of well known old English songs con- tinuing with numbers by Wolf, Struss, and Franz . . . gifted with a personality of charm that utterly captivates her audiences . . . least pretentious prima donna on tour today . . . popular radio star, gracing Bing Crosby ' s and Bob Burns ' program the third day after leaving here . . . has fondness for college groups . . . keenly interested in youthful singers who long for a try in professional field . . . warns them of inconveniences . . . believes singers should have actual experience with concert, opera, oratorio, and appearances with orchestra before aiming at highest marks ... in her case she was equipped with a thorough technical knowledge and experience of public appearances . . . advocates as much sleep as possible, simple foods, and plenty of water . . . prefers washing neck with a depend- able soap and thorough rinsing with cold water several times to cold cream . . . does not have time nor inclination so far to bother if she has lines or wrinkles, and is not going to worry about them, she says . . . loves picture shows . . . r Official greeter for all students when they go to Tech Studio to have their photographs or LA VENTANA: Mrs. J. C. James The man who stays behind a por- trait camera: J. C. }ames, owner o Tech Studio. J a vzntana hzaki . . Hello, Dummy. Dummy yourself. Who are you? Oh! You are last year ' s LA VENTANA dummy and you know just what I ' m going through, do you? I ' m sure you couldn ' t have had as much trouble as I have. You see I ' m the new Candid Camera edi- tion of LA VENTANA. I simply can ' t get any rest, for they debate hours and hours over one of my pages. I can hardly wait to see how students will feel when they see all my Candid Camera shots of themselves. Let me tell you about all the things I have already been through. The first part of it was very interesting, I really didn ' t know that there were so many different kinds of faces in the world. All the students who have individual pictures in this annual went to the Tech Studio, where Mr. J. C. James photographed them. Mrs. James took great care to see that they were properly identified. While they were making individual pictures of the students for classes, clubs and things like that, the LA VENTANA staff photographers were making Candid Camera pictures of the students on the cam- pus and in the various activities they had taken part in. At the time all this picture taking was going on members of the business staff were contacting mer- chants for advertising in my book. Other members of the staff were carefully making tentative plans for my dummy. When they completed these plans and the pictures started coming in they were de- veloped, printed and the best ones chosen to be used. Photographer William J. Davis makes an individual candid picture of another class president. Ait Editor Ben Benson lays out this section of The Candid Camera Edi- tion of LA VENTANA . I appeared to get more and more mixed up. I was measured constantly, as if they thought that I might grow or something, and much to my surprise I did. I was far beyond their first plans so they had to add some extra pages to my dummy. Everytime I would be all settled, more good pictures would come in. These pictures were taken to the dark room and given all kinds of beauty baths that made them come out with a fine, clear finish. In the meantime staff members had gotten their assignments and were preparing to start on their copy. People sat around and mumbled about the purposes of the Y. W. C. A. and the history of the Tech Press and other such stuff. Someone was always asking someone else, Do you know who this one is? It seemed to me they really didn ' t know anyone, but after all there are over 3000 students in the school to get acquainted with. They wrote and wrote, and measured and measured and meas- ured and measured, and I know that I have been copy read a million times at the very least, but I don ' t mind that, for by all means I feel that I mustn ' t have the tiniest error. My proofs all came back in plenty of time to be put in the printer ' s dummies, there were 24 of them. Everyone practically stayed up all night and all day the week before these dummies were ready. Of course there was all the pasting and measuring and writing to go through with again, but the job is finally finished. Now I have a complete story of this year ' s college activities. This part has not been bad, in spite of my having to stay awake almost all the time. To say the least there has always been something happening to create excitement. I ' m not worried about losing any of my beauty from lack of sleep for I will go through several beauty clinics before they are through with me. I ' m to go to the engraver in a few days. Yes, the very best, Southwestern Engraving Company. They are the ones that make the perfect ' Sweco ' plates. One of the old annuals told me about it, and, al- though this is my first experience of this kind, I ' m not the least bit nervous. I ' ve heard them planning with the service department of ' Sweco, ' and every - Business Manager Wilson Grimes lays out ads thing has been worked out so carefully I ' m sure there won ' t be a bit of trouble. Well, goodnight, I just must get some sleep be- fore tomorrow ' s trip. The trip wasn ' t so bad after all but I didn ' t see a thing, and the train was rough. The utter lack of respect for higher education is appalling. Oh! I ' m being handled more carefully now. I can see that these people know a good thing when they see it. I certainly feel out of breath after having all my plates made so quickly, it would have taken even less time if they hadn ' t used so many different things on me to see that I measured just so. I was a little worried about the ' Dragons blood ' they used in the zinc etching, but it was much nicer than it sounded, for it protected me from that nitric acid. The saw on the beveling machine was so bright and sharp I was worried but it was so quick I didn ' t even feel it. Now that my plates are mounted on these sturdy blocks of cherry wood I feel much safer. I ' ll Phofographer Cedric Gragg op- erates enlarger Photographer Ray Simpson sur- veys the Beautilul Tech picture to he placed on page 5 Editor Winston Reeres tries to make order lrom chaos have to hold my breath on this one, I am going to be measured to see if I measure two one thou- sandths of an inch to type high. Thank goodness! I was. I wouldn ' t have liked to go under that planer they use for the ' overweights. ' Here I am being examined again. I really don ' t see any use in it for I came here to be sent com- pletely through the plant, but I do have a feeling of satisfaction, knowing they think I am so important. No little thing can be wrong. They are so careful, I ' m even afraid they ' ll disclose all my private life, if I have any left after all this. I ' m certainly getting to be a globe trotter. Imag- ine me in Chicago. My covers are to be made here at the Molloy plant. Well, here I am, I ' m glad to know that other LA VENTANAS have visited before me. They ' ve given me a letter of introduction, you know. We begin in the room where the Fabrikoid ma- terial is stocked. There are certainly a lot of rolls of this stuff, and a section for every color. Ah, here ' s mine, and if I do say so, the best looking of the lot. Well, I ' m certainly excited to know that my covers are to be given an extra amount of attention. It will give me more time to look around. Since I ' m to be padded, my cover is first lined out and processed. It sounds like the third degree, doesn ' t it? Really it ' s very nice. They take me to the graining press where they put a textured background on me. My design is original, and they are very careful as they emboss it on my cover, for not a single brick in that west tower must be the tiniest bit off. This coloring business should be exciting. They are giving me one of my beauty treatments. This mask I have on is a little tight but the new airbrush they are using to apply my secondary color is cer- tainly the thing. I really feel sorry for those old annuals that were published before this thing was invented. I like this overtoning, or finishing oper- ation is called, they are giving me. It will add years to my durability, which of course, you know, we annuals consider one of the essential parts of our good looks. They are almost through with me, but they have to make the cases and insert all this padding by hand. Now that that ' s done I guess I ' ll have an- other one of those final inspections. Yep, I guessed right, but I haven ' t had a mistake yet. They really should just box me up and send me on. I ' ll be glad to rest a little. They are packing me carefully, and Mounting pictures . . . Left to right: Mary Catherine Couch, Marie George, Futrelle McCIain, Emma Nelle Thatcher, Annie Letha Hamilton, Mary Ann Stanberry Last minute preparations . . . Le I to right: Eleanor Jungman. Fred Harrell, Elizabeth Stokes, Mary Bynum Cobb. Mary Howell now I ' ll get a good night ' s sleep. I hope there are some more dummies on this train in the morning so I ' ll have someone to talk to. I think it would be so interesting to compare my manufacture with an- other annual; people are always talking about their operations. Well, hello, dummy, I ' m so glad to know you are here. Where are you from? Oklahoma, well! We are neighbors, I ' m the LA VENTANA dummy from Texas Technological College and I ' m on my way to the Economy Advertising Company at Iowa City, Iowa, to get published. This i s all certainly exciting, isn ' t it? I haven ' t done much traveling before this, and everyone has been so considerate of me, there hasn ' t been a bit of trouble. We did have quite a time deciding on my inks and type faces though. Of course you know how many there are to choose from. But with the com- bined efforts of my Editor and the publisher and the engraver, I got the very best, I like it so much, it ' s a beautiful doubletone green and my type face is the new modem Memphis. Surely hope my cuts are there when I get there so I can get started right away. The only thing about this business is you never have any rest, people certainly get things done in a hurry. Well, here we are. Goodby, Okla- homa. I reckon I ' ll be seeing you later around the plant. So, this is the Economy Advertising Company, is it? Mighty fine looking place. Hum, those ma- chines look more wicked than the rest I ' ve seen, Conlerence . . . Lett to right: Lora Lee Weddle, Reeves Henly. Josephine Powell. Elvira Smith Oitice, Southwestern Engraving Company, Fort Worth wonder what they are for. I ' ll take ether for mine. Hey, wait a minute! I ' ve hardly had time to get my breath and they have already started. Now I ' m just as lost as I was in those other places. Some- body they call ' Forty ' keeps saying they ' ve got to get me in galley proof and into the proof room for some reason. Hooray, back already. If there aren ' t many changes now maybe I can get on the presses. I hope there ' s no delay. You ' re going to lock me up? What for? What have I done? Say, you can ' t do that. I ' ll have you to know. . . . Oh, well, why didn ' t you say so? How was I to know that you meant putting the type in a form to go on the presses? And what ' s all this talk about register? They are always worrying about the dumbest things. Say, I ' m sure getting beautiful ... all printed up on these big sheets. Everybody says I got a won- derful press job, too, and the register is perfect, I guess it ' s a good thing that they did worry about it after all. Looks like some of my pages are upside down, though. Hope they fix that. I ' d look sort of silly with one page going one way and one going the other. Oh, so that ' s how you do it . . . fold it in sections. Well, that ' s pretty clever. I ' m beginning to look like a book. And now where to? Oh, up to the bindery. Well, I ' ll be bound (say, how ' s that, pretty good, eh? Picked it up from Jim, the Press foreman). This looks pretty interesting. Wonder what they do up here. They say, first I ' ve got to have my inserts and my end sheets tipped in, whatever that means. Oh, I see now. It ' s all those special sections, like the beauties and the campus views, and the section di- viders, and the end sheets are the ones that go on the inside of the cover later. Now that that ' s all fin- ished I ' m being gathered into complete books. If they wouldn ' t go so fast I could get my breath, but I guess it ' s a good thing for I don ' t have time to be frightened, when I think of being sewed together I do get a little worried. That wasn ' t bad at all. They just sewed me all together on tape and then cut the separate books apart. Guess I ' m pretty important. They ' re all work- ing on me now. What kind of a machine is this? Oh, the trimmer. I ' ll feel better when all my pages are cut and trimmed. Gee, that glue is awful. They Camera rooms, Southwestern Engraving, Fort Worth . if ±.ti ' certainly aren ' t taking any chances on my coming apart. They are giving me a lot of exer- cise. They bang me with a ham- mer to ' round me. ' But now they have ' backed ' me. Yeah, I won- dered what it meant too. I learned they mean spreading my back so the cover will fit. Say, those are cute. What are they? The artist designing covers lor ' The Candid Camera Edition o LA VENTANA Headbands, huh? Oh, I see, they hide all the rough edges. That ' s pretty swell. I never knew there was so much red tape about binding a book. Oh, boy, here are my covers, they really turned out to be beauties and they fit perfectly. Well, come on, let ' s get them on. Say, do I look grand! I can hardly wait to get out of this book press. Machinery in the S. K. Smith Cover Company Well, goodbye, boys. I ' m on my way back to Texas. After all there is no place like home. Hope they like me. Yeah, thanks. I don ' t see how they could help it either. You ' ve all been mighty nice to me up here. In fact, everyone has treated me swell in all the places I ' ve visited. If you ' re ever down my way, stop in and see me. I ' ll be around. I ' ll really be glad to get back home. Of course I ' m awfully excited about being finished and all, after all I ' ve gone through, but I want to be distrib- uted so I can find a nice quiet corner and rest. Most intricate designs emerge trom the with every detail complete I was laboring under severe disillusions when I thought what I did about rest. It has been two weeks since then and if I weren ' t so level headed I Covered with a proteztive mask, covers receive overtone spraying Expert hands spray, brush coloring on LA VENTANA covers Floormen in the Economy Advertising Company , Iowa City, Iowa, make up LA VENTANA, place its type in the lorms Well-trained pressman operates press that prints the line work oi division pages, inserts Presses begin rolling, and LA VENTANA is pass- ing another barrier to its completion LA VENTANA comes through giant presses in large sheets. Switt wheels turn blank paper Into finished sections would have gotten a superiority complex by now. People have made so much over me. They were really careful about who got a copy of me, only those who had exactly the right slip of paper were the lucky ones. When I finally got to my real own- er, he certainly looked me over in a hurry to see his picture, and the next thing I knew people were scrawling all over my lovely new pages with pens, pencils and even a lipstick print here and there. Now that my owner has put me down for a minute, I ' ll see if I mind all this stuff, let ' s see what this one says: ' Johnny, dearest, may I be candid, like this lovely annual? I will always be your little tootsie wootsie. ' Well, it looks like I got into something there, but . . . Thanks for the compliment. Back Row: Waggoner Carr, Alton Hankins, Junius Carter, Roy Hugh Jones, Warhck Can Front Row: Betty Dale West, Hazel Polldfrd, Mi§s Annan Jo Pendleton, Jane Woodruff, Johnnie Birdwei Victory bells rang loudly when Junius Carter and Alton Hankins stole second pl honors in the Savage Debate Tournament conducted by Southeastern State Teacher ' s Coll in Durant, Oklahoma, March 6 . . . Each debater was awarded individual medals in trophy cup for the school . . . Hankins and Carter were defeated by SMU . . . Other teams entered were: Hazel Pollard, Johnnie Birdwell, Jane Woodruff, Betty West, Senior women; Waggonor and Warlick, Men ' s Junior College team . . . Fifty Southwestern schools competed . . . An- nah Jo Pendleton, Professor of Speech coached the teams . . . Debate question: Resolved that Congress shall have the power to fix minimum wages and maxi- mum hours for industry. a gold J r Tech J ANNAH IO PENDLETON, Coach Page 203 ONE-ACT PLAY Back flow: Ruth Pirtle, Lee Byrd. Center flow: Dorothy Mann, Maxine Mullican, Noel Edgar Thompson, Lillian Heard, Billy Yeatts. Front Row: R. V. Jones, John Harding, Helen Lehmberg, Eron Gattord. Presenting Evening Dress Indispensable, a comedy by Pertee at the Texas Intercol- legiate Dramatic Tournament and Twenty-five Cents by Eric Harris in the Southwestern Alpha Psi Omega Dramatic Festival at El Paso March 29 to April 3, Texas Tech players received honorable mention from judges . . . Eron Gafford was rated high on good diction . . . Members of the cast of Evening Dress Indispensable : Gafford, Lillian Heard, Noel E. Thompson, Helen Lehmberg . . . After gaining permanent possession of the Dramatic Tourna- ment trophy last year by virtue of three consecutive wins, Tech failed to place in cast contest . . . Both plays, coached by Miss Ruth Pirtle, Speech Department Head . . . Members in Festival contest in- cluded Gafford, Rex Webster, Dorothy Mann, Billy Yeatts . . . Even though high score was not made, col- leges and universities considered Tech ' s cast one of the best. RUTH PIRTLE, Coach Page 204 ENGINEER ' S SHOW Above: Charles M. Howell, souvenir director; Lee Norris, mechanical engineering laboratory: Martin True. mechanical engineering shops; Frank Fellows, lighting and communications: H. A. Leslie, electrical engineering; Charles Wilson; Leon Bailey, civil engineering. Below: Robert Houston, general manager; Bill Davis, publicity manager; Clarence Rannefeld, chemical engineering; Howard McNeese, architecture and allied arts; Frank Eddins, textile engineering; George Thomas, geological engineering. Tech ' s ninth annual Engineer ' s Show was brought to conclusion at ten o ' clock on the night of April 17 ... A check of attendance figures showed 7,200 persons had visited the buildings, and studied the hundreds of challenging exhibits in the two-day exposition . . . Said Dean O. V. Adams: I am well pleased by the quality of exhibits and the evident appreciation of the public for them . . . Attending: Engineers from other states, teachers from over Southwest, editors from Texas and New Mexico, students from 14 counties . . . Displays of the show: Electrical students pre- sented popping giant tesla coil of 2,000,000 volts . . . Mechanicals showed steam turbine operating at more than 3,600 revolutions per minute . . . Civil Engineers displayed machinery using concrete and steel beams and columns besides their show of traffic lights, high- way construction . . . Industrial lads showed the pro- cesses of blueprinting . . . Weavers in loom rooms wove material . . . Artists went wild with mural and freehand painting . . . Prehistoric dinosaur haunted Chemistry Building . . . ROBERT HOUSTON General Manager Page 205 THE BAND .? t t ;l tf f Z V '  H fVJ ► h 11 First Row: Perry Bowser, Eorl Braley, lohn Brooks, Paul Coe, Billie Lee Cox, J. C. Douglass, Robert Fielder, Gurthal Gilligan, John L. Gillispie, Lee Edwin Hale. Second Row: Shelby Harper, H. Roy Hastings. V allace Hawkins, Norman Heath, lack Helms, Reagan Howell, Carl Hyde, Curtis larratt, Bill Jones, Carl Jones. Third Row: Albert Lair, Ed Leidigh, Bill Lemons, Jr., Ewing Long, Robert Mann, R. E. Martin, Jr., Max McClure, Harold McDaniel, Willard McSpadden, Billy Noyes. Fourth Row: Chiton Oliver, Billy Phillips, Marvin Priebe, Jesse Reed, Eldon Scott, James Shortt, Phillip Sterrett, Robert Lee Stone, Buddy Wilson, Fred Stout. Filth Row: Arthur Thompson, Asher J. Thompson, James Thompson, Rex Tynes, Everett Vanderburg, Dale Walker, H. A. Watson, Roger Watts, Ed Tonn, Bryan Williams, Bill Wright. California, here we come, and travelling Matador Band struck the West Coast in a burst of music . . . Travelling continued with the annual tour which included 850 miles and 18 concerts in West Texas cities Featuring four guest conductors and playing in the midst of a two-day band clinic with high school and college band directors from over state in attendance, Tech ' s 102-piece musical clan gave its annual Christmas con- cert at Lubbock High School Auditorium . . . Ambition and loyalty for its par-excellence musicians, led stu- dent body to a drive for new togs to outfit first-class horn footers . . . Spirited campaigning made a dream come true . . . Enrobed in military style uniforms of scarlet, black, and gold . . . colors flying . . . typify- ing Tech ' s spirit and action, and rooted in gay, roman- tic hues of Old Spain, the Matador Band presented its first concert in snazzy new dress March 10 ... A crowded gym received the concert with shouts of en- ROBERT FIELDER Assistant to the Director Page 206 THE BAND The Band Turns Out in New Uniforms to Have Its Picture Made thusiasm . . . Encore after encore was given before Techsters allowed the musicians to put away their brilliantly polished brass instruments . . . Cheering teams on all athletic contests, greeting all visitors and delegations, band members still found time to go social long enough to sponsor an All-College dance . . . D. O. Wiley, Prof . . . tops among band directors, gives a musical body to Tech which is indispensable to students, fac- ulty, town, and team. One of the summer attractions: the band gives an open air concert each week on the Green south of the Administration Building . . This summer several well known directors will be guest members of the organization . . . Bright . . . tuneful . . . composed of the best talent in the land . . . good soloists . . . Tech band is one of the most attractive organizations of its kind . . . and is making a reputa- tion for itself and for Tech. D. O. WILEY Director Page 207 THE COLLEGE CHORUS Practicing ioi the Easier oratorio, Seven Last Words of Christ, is the chorus directed hy Protessor Blitz. College Chorus has grown in three years from small unorganized, unenthusiastic group to well-polished singing unit of three hundred trained voices . . . Prof. Julien Paul Blitz, Head Professor of Music since 1934, sponsored, led chorus in entertaining, inspiring per- formances in special church services . . . Became favorite unit of city for such specials . . . Third rendition of Dubois ' beautiful oratorio, The Seven Last Words of Christ, was broad- cast Easter morning over local radio station . . . Accompanied by College Orchestra . . . The Easter cantata is outstanding performance of whole musical organization . . . Soloists: Gordon Gaines, Elton Plowman, Christia Cowan . . . Other on-the-campus performances: Sunrise Easter Service . . . Women ' s Recognition Ser- vice May 18 . . . Affords thorough training in en- semble singing . . . Draws attention of music lovers all over South Plains . . . JULIEN PAUL BLITZ Director Page 208 THE COLLEGE ORCHESTRA The College Orchestra, a las set to the college, assembles tor a practice session. Faithfully symphonizing every Wednesday night, the College Orchestra continued its popularity and found great demand in Lubbock and the surrounding towns . . . Directed by Professor Julien Paul Blitz, Head of Music Department, the group gave concerts for: City Federation, West Texas State Teacher ' s Association, Crosbyton High School Commencement exercises . . . Paramount entertainment of the year: Accompanied College Chorus in the third annual presentation of The Seven Last Words of Christ (Dubois) . . . Cooperated with Chorus in concert performances and oratorios . . . CHARLOTTE RATUFF President Page 209 AGGIE JUDGING TEAMS Above: International Team, Leldon Hudson, Pegues Houston, Coach Ray C. Mowery, Raymond King, R. C. Mitchell, Ralph Riddel, Winburn McAlister Below: Grain Judging Team, Ernest Bailey, Audra Mitchell, Cecil Brashear, Carl Moosberg, A. W. Young Competing with 26 colleges and universities in Canada and the United States, Texas Tech Senior Livestock Judging Team placed fourth in the International Collegiate Contest in Chicago November 28 . . . Placed first in judging sheep, second in ranking horses, eighth in judging cattle, tenth in rating hogs . . . Raymond King ranked seventh among the 135 contestants . . . Ray C. Mowery, Professor of Animal Husbandry, coached the team . . . Members of the Senior Grain Judging Squad who en- tered the Kansas City Crop Judging Contest, Novem- ber 23, annexed eighth place honors . . . The squad was composed of Carl Moosberg, Ernest Bailey, Cecil Brashear, Audra Mitchell . . . Competed with twelve college and university teams . . . Coached by Dr. A. W. Young, Associate Professor of Agronomy . . . Teams visited the largest grain center in the world. RAY C. MOWERY Coach Page 210 AGGIE JUDGING TEAMS Above: Senior Dairy Cattle Judging Team, Raymond King, Casey Fine, R. C. Mitchell, Winburn McAlister Below: Junior Livestock Judging Team delegated to Denver, Archie Meekma, M. J. Williams, R. C. Mowery, Dean Harmon, Lewis Dunlap, G. C. Shearer Tech ' s first Senior Dairy Cattle Judging Team . . . competed in National Dairy Cattle Judging Contest in connection with Texas Centennial, Dallas . . . ranked sixth among 20 othe r teams from colleges in the United States and Canada . . . Junior Livestock Judging Team vied with six other teams in the National Western Livestock Show in Denver January 16 . . . placed sec- ond, just 18 points behind the Colorado Aggie winners . . . high in judging horses and breeding stock . . . second in fat stock . . . second in total contest . . . M. J. Williams ranked third in individual ratings in the con- test . . . another junior livestock judging team won sixth place March 1 1 in contests at the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show, Fort Worth . . . and at the same time the Dairy Cattle Judging Team won first place honors, defeating Texas A. M. three points. Page 211 R. O. T. C. mwi The new ROTC unit reports tor regular Friday atternoon drill. The senior ROTC unit of Texas Tech is one of the thirty such units established in the United States this year, Captain Pettit, professor of military science and tactics said . . . Colonel E. A. Keyes, Civilian Components Officer of the Eighth Corps, Fort Sam Houston, rated Tech ROTC as first class excellent as he reviewed the corps . . . took part in the Engi- neers ' Show this year . . . social bright spot on their boots: presentation of Miss Frances Turner, Honorary Cadet Colonel at the ROTC an- nual ball March 5 . . . Pettit came as new captain this year . . . Uniforms and military equipment for 150 men ... 80 freshmen students enrolled in the military train- ing corps . . . new building contains storage, supply room, class room, rifle room, and basement range. CAPT. FRANK A. PETTIT Page 212 LA REMUDA IK By photographer s trick, La Remuda managers shake hands across sombreroed head ot Queen Helen Lehmberq. Enthusiastic audience witnessed second edition of La Remuda, annual aggie show spon- sored by the Block and Bridle Club . . . Assisted by Agriculture Division . . . Held in Tech Stadium . . . Little International, livestock exhibit of 100 animals of college shown . . . R. C. Mitchell, member of club, explained methods of judging . . . Prexy Thompson ' s Big Shots beat Playboys led by Ray Stiff in a wild game of donkey polo ... in horseback football, Billy Neal ' s Veterans trimmed the Greenhorns led by Arch Lamb . . . Dorothy Spence, of Las Leales, won the horseback egg race over her five opponents . . . Helen Lehmberg of Mason was crowned queen at the end of the ceremonies, coming with her escort, McAlis- ter, into the spotlight where a typical western roundup was staged in miniature style . . . proceeds from the show and all-college dance following went in sending the Senior Livestock Judging Team to the International Meet in Chicago in November . . . One of the largest crowds ever to attend Aggie show appeared in 1 936 . . . WINBURN McALlSTER Manager Page 213 J- uijLiaationi • m • : %• • 4a • JJT X « ■ Bj___ - i __ i«J — ■ • 1 1 fc f -fe - 1 ■  E m i fl H T 1 TEE TOREADOR JIM LINDSEY Editor Readers from Mars could get a good picture of life and tone at Texas Tech from ' The Toreador ' , said Nation- al Scholastic Press Association in grad- ing semi-weekly sheet . . . ranked Ail- American in association contest spon- sored by journalism quad of Univer- sity of Wisconsin . . . Toreador is bright and friendly, they said of typo- graphy . . . Twice-editor Jim Lindsey with his staff and seventeen news- hawks rolled off semi-weekly news- BURNICE WALKER Business Manager sheet and four special editions . . . aggressive, enterprising editorials . . . Colorful departmental sections . . . carries down town advertising ... is a self supporting institution . . . Opposed: Pink teas in Men ' s Dorm lounge . . . parking on drives . . . careless student voting . . . Lip-ser- viced: increased student activity fee . . . new band suits . . . naming of Tech dormitories . . . expanded state funds . . . Junior Chamber of Com- JOSEPHINE POWELL Society Editor merce ... a college magazine . . . Financed by student subscriptions . . . Pecuniary boom due to Burnice Walker, business manager . . . Editorial staff: Paul White, managing editor; Morris Laine, associate editor; Burgess Dixon, news editor; Josephine Powell, society editor; Lorena Owens, associate soci- ety editor; Mary Howell, feature editor; Mary Cobb, copy editor; Ruby Lee Leary, religious news editor; and R. B. Pardue, staff artist. TECH ' S SEMI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Dixon, junior journalism major from Greenwood, Miss., was elected at student ballot for editor of 1937-38 publication. Second year of advanced reporting class swung into work of gathering, writing news from all over campus . . . Under supervision of Mrs. James G. Allen, Journalism Instructor . . . Meets at one o ' clock Monday, Thursday afternoons . . . Each reporter assigned to separate beal . . . Held respon- sible for all news that breaks in his territory . . . Goes over to what Lindsey calls The Oven at one o ' clock . . . Gets special assignments, tips from instructor, editor . . . Sticks copy paper under arm, pencil over ear . . . Covers offices, students, profes- sors, organizations that make up his beat . . . Often takes full three hours of laboratory period to gather, prepare news . . . Returns to office . . . Waits for typewriter . . . Makes carbon copy of each news story he writes . . . Besides regular news beat, he must attend meetings at night . . . Staff often works into wee hours . . . Course car- ries three-hour credit . . . Requirement for jour- nalism graduate . . . Toreador staff co-operated with Journalism De- partment to get practical experience on downtown dailies . . . Four members each week worked on Charles A. Guy ' s Avalanche and Journal . . . Found fast, efficient work valuable prologue for profession as newspapermen and lady journalists. Other staff members: Betty Bizzell, Bertie Doty, Maxine Fry, Harold Hams, Fred Harrell, Artie Hicks, Woodrow Holt, Don Miller, Thomas Miller, Futrelle McClain, Cecile Pcfrsons, Pauline Phillips, Helen Sims, John Harvey Scoggin, Marym Watson, Russell Wilkinson, Marie Zimmermann, LaVonne Kyle, Doris Montgomery, Eleanor Jungman. A part ot the stall ot Tech ' s Semi-Weekly Newspaper hard at work to give the students the news ol the day m DID 1ERA EDITION WINSTON REEVES Editor In the past few months the country has been swept by a new fad which might be called the Candid Camera Craze. It makes no difference whether he be capitalist, banker, student or messen- ger boy; when a person once is bitten by the bug there is little hope for recovery. The all-seeing eye of the Candid Camera is no respecter of per- sons in its unmerciful portrayal of char- acteristic poses and moods. WILSON GRIMES Business Manager It is around this idea that the 1937 LA VENTANA has been built. Some changes have been made which we hope will add to your enjoyment and to the interest of the book. Because of lack of cooperation of some depart- ments we have been forced to reduce some sections, while other sections have been greatly increased. The 72- page feature section, composed mostly of unposed pictures of Tech personali- ties at work and at play, has a special division of 16 pages of magazine lay- out. FRED GRIFFIN Associate Editor Another point of interest to many will be the fact that there is no art work. All division page titles, division pages, and introductory pages were made by photographic processes. The little feature, LA VENTANA Speaks, is intended to convey to the reader in an interesting way an idea of the great amount of work done and the steps this book goes through from the time it begins to take form in the editor ' s mind to the time it is delivered to students. LA VENTANA The Editor and Business Manager lake this opportunity to thank an efficient and most willing staff, a staff that has worked without complaint and into the awakening hours of the morning many times in the past nine months to give you this book. We offer you the 1937 LA VENTANA for your approval and will feel fully repaid for our labors if you are pleased. The 1937 staff consists of the following: Winston Reeves, Editor; Wilson Grimes, Business Manager; Horace Benson, Art Editor; Fred Griffin, Associate Editor; Marie George, Assistant Editor; Reeves Henly, Sports Editor; Mary Ann Stanberry, Feature Editor; Josephine Powell, Society Editor; Mary Howell, Activities Editor; Eleanor Jungman, Personnel Editor; Fred Harrell, News Editor; Mary Catherine Couch and Lora Lee Weddle, Assistant News Editors; Mary Bynum Cobb and Lorena Owens, Copy Editors; Elizabeth Stokes, Administration Editor; Annie Letha Hamilton, Senior Editor; Futrelle McClain, Junior Editor; Emma Nelle Thatche r, Sopho- more Editor; Marjorie Whetstone and Elvira Smith, Freshman Editors; Ruby Lee Leary, Assist- ant Activities Editor; Ray Simpson, Cedric Gragg, William J. Davis, Earl Trimble, Photogra- phers; Lawson Stiff, Assistant in Advertising. Top Row: Fred Harrell. Annie Letha Hamilton, Cedric Gragg. Mary Catherine Couch, Marie George. Middle Row: Ruby Lee Leary, Elvira Smith, Mary Ann Stanberry, Mary Bynum Cobb, Futrelle McClain, Marjorie Whetstone. Bottom Row: Lora Lee Weddle, Elizabeth Stokes, Mary Howell, Emma Nelle Thatcher, Josephine Powell, Eleanor Jungman. PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE Candid shot of the Publications Committee: STANDING: President Brad ord Knapp, R. A. Mills, Dean O. V. Adams, Dean ]. U. Gordon, Dean A. H. Leidigh, Cecil Home. SEATED: Winburn lAcAlister, Claude Thompson, Wilmot Eaton, Hugh McCullough, Helen Lehmberg, Ray Stilt. One of the most effective committees ever appointed on Tech campus . . . Sec ond year that students had representation on committee . . . Five faculty members: Cecil Home, R. A. Mills, A. H. Leidigh, J. M. Gordon, O. V. Adams . . . Student members: Helen Lehmberg, Wilmot Eaton, Winburn McAlister, Ray Stiff, Mack Scoggin, Hugh McCullough . . . selected on September 21 by Student President Claude Thompson . . . managed LA VENTANA and Toreador as two separate and independent publications . . . Jim Lindsey, Burnice Walker, Winston Reeves, Billy Grimes, Editors and Business Managers of Toreador and LA VEN- TANA, respectively, served as honorary committeemen . . . President Bradford Knapp acted in ex-officio position . . . determined policy of financing and budgeting college publications . . . serving free gratis, the committee formed the vertebrate that helped to hold the semi-weekly Toreador and the candid camera edition of LA VENTANA in good condition . . . guaranteed democratic spirit. JAMES M. GORDON Chairman Page 220 TEXAS TECH PRESS Tech Press employees, Lett to Right: Floyd Raymond, Superintendent Harry M. Crain, Foreman Wilmot Eaton, Sylvester Reese, Eugene Jaynes, Wayne Sellers, Travis Foster, When the presses roll and the linotypes click in the Texas Tech Press, the college is as- sured of perfect printing. The press has been in operation since 1934 and is superintended by Harry M. Crain. It is one of the self-sustaining departments of the college, making profits by careful business transactions, buying in large quantities, and by employing a competent force. The plant has an estimated value of $25,000 and is well equipped with modern machinery. The print shop serves as a laboratory for students of journalism and employs an all-student force. The Toreador, college catalogues, football programs, and all official college materials are printed in the shop each year. HARRY M. CRAIN Superintendent Page 221 PRESS ASSOCIATION Qfr ' .iQQ First row: Betty Bizzell, Pauline Coe, Burgess Dixon, Travis Foster, Maxine Fry, Harold Hams, Artie Hicks, Mary Howell Fred Harrell, Carl Hyatt, Eleanor Jungman, Roy Krebbs, Ruby Lee Leary. Second row: Addie Lee Lindsey, Jim Lindsey, Futrelle McClain, Josephine Powell, Eugene Rainwater, R. L. Read, Wayne C. Sellers, Emma Nell Thatcher, Marjorie Whetstone, Paul White, Burnice Walker, Marie Zimmerman, Pauline Staitord, Justine Limroth. Third row: Gordon Hanna, Ruth Callan, Juanita Sentell, Doris Jobe, Anna Louise Clayton, Helen Sims, Mary Louise Price, Jeannette Jones, La Vonne Kyle, Lois Paulsel, Rena Persons, Bertie Doty, Lois Marie Daniel, Marilynn Fry. Fourth row: Isabel Warren, Vida Harston, Mary Ann Stanberry, Lorene Thomas, Charles Beal, Marie George, Henri Sue Boone, Jane Wilson, Kay Donahue, Glenna Fae Sadler, Russell Wilkinson, Ronald Ware, Doris Montgomery , Mary Beth Clark. by Initiated by straw vote on Roosevelt-Landon Presidential campaign in November, climaxed return of twenty -five members from Southwest Journalism Congress in Denton April 18, activities of the Texas Tech Press Association under Wf leadership of Toreador Editor-elect Burgess Dixon has been dynamic, manifold, progressive . . . Speakers: Harry M. Crain, Superintendent of Texas Tech Press; -. .- Charles A. Guy, Editor, Lubbock Avalanche-Journal publications . . . Cecil Home, Director of Journalism . . . Evelyn Babb Boyd of Avalanche-Journal woman ' s staff . . . C. W. Ratliff, former Toreador editor, now Night Editor of downtown daily . . . Brightest social attempt: Second annual stagette dance in Men ' s Dor- mitory . . . Men iired by the wayside when they had to dance all evening . . . Sponsored All-College Dance . . . Dream of organization: Separate journal- ism department . . . Has worked toward goal for years . . . Seems near realization . . . Opens doors to all students interested in journalism . . . Supplies most of staffs of both publications . . . Meetings have BURGESS DIXON , , President professional air. Page 222 HUGH BO WILLIAMS, Graduate Manager of Athletics . . . When it comes to money, Bo really knows his business. COACWING STAFF P. W. (PETE) CAWTHON, guiding star of Matador gridders and Director of Athletics at Texas Tech for seven years . . . Head Coach at Austin College before coming to West Texas, his proteges number among best mentors in Southwest . . . His Pete Cawthon drawl, close-cropped hair make him a figure apart . . . His motto, Be the man your mother wants you to be, ex- presses warmth of nature matched only by his sunny accent . . . His teams are expo- nents par excellent of the Notre Dame style of play . . . Their victories have helped make Pete a national gridiron figure . . . Organized Touchdown Club last fall for pro- motion of football appreciation among downtown quarterbacks. RUSSELL T. (DUTCHY) SMITH . . . Athletic Business Manager, Varsity Line Coach . . . One of best examples of Cawthan products, Dutchy starred for Austin College Kangaroos . . . Coached at Amarillo High School . . . Started building stalwart forward walls of Red Raiders material seven years ago . . . Since then he has produced consistently fighting lines, especially proficient wingmen . . . Ranks at top among students of Rockne style of wingplay . . . Unassumingly labors at tasks of business managership . . . Dutchy ' s worn baseball cap, driving voice are indelibly stamped in memory of many a Tech lineman. BERL (BRUNO) HUFFMAN . . . Coach of Varsity Basketball, Freshman Football . . . Acquired sobriquet Bruno this year, his second as Picador mentor . . . Outstanding player for Trinity University . . . Formerly coached at White Deer and Lubbock High Schools . . . Breaks in prospective gridders by training them in the Matador system . . . Under him basketball has gained popular impetus during the past two years . . . His winning quintets pack them into the gym . . . Also coaches the deshabilles in the proper manner of treading the cinder track. ATHLETIC COUNCIL From Lett to Right: Charlie Duval, Dr. W. A. lackson, W. E. Street. W. L. Stangel, P. W. Cawthon. R. T. Smith, H. F. Godeke: .The Athletic Council meets in office o President Bradford Knapp. Ultimate success of Texas Tech athletics rests primarily upon the untiring shoulders of the seven member Athletic Council . . . Ably led by Chairman W. L. Stangel, who returned to Tech to head the Council following the death of Professor B. F. Condray. Members include: Chairman Stangel, Head of the Animal Husbandry Department; P. W. Cawthon, Director of Athletics and Head Football Mentor; Ft. T. Smith, Varsity Line Coach; W. A. Jackson, Head Professor of Government; H. F. Godeke, Head Professor of Mechanical Engineering; W. E. Street, Professor of Industrial Engineering; and Charlie Duval, Student Representative. Selects athletic department personnel, recommends athletic budget, passes on awards, schedules contests, checks eligibility of players . . . Perennially contrib- utes some lasting monument to the college ' s athletics . . . Group of almost forgotten men . . . Labors ardu- ously to promulgate athletic prowess of Tech ' s Red Raiders . . . Dynamic force behind every winning Matador team. W. L. STANGEL Chairman Page 226 DOUBLE T ASSOCIATION Back Row: George Philbrick, Alvir. Katrola, Fred Byrd, Maurice Chernosky, Captain Lewis Jones, R. C. Mitchell, Leioy Crews. Middle Row: Phillip Biashear, Frank Gusick, }. W. West, Cotton Wiginton, John Case, Raymond Babe Curfman, Pete Owens, George Winter, Alton Owens, Paul Morris, Herschel Red Ramsey. Front Row: Russell Wilkinson, Judge Garrett, Winiord Baze, Charlie Duval, Bob Case, Tox Wiginton, Leslie Browning, Jim Neill, Hugh Snodgrass, Captain Demp Cannon, Bill Hohomb, Wayne Wilkins, Morris Scrappy Allord. CHARLIE DUVAL President WINFORD BAZE Vice-President EDWIN SMITH Secretary-Treasurer Composed solely of athletes who have earned letters in any sport . . . Organized after the first football season following the establishment of Texas Technological College . . . Meets each week at the football players ' domicile, La Fonda. Sponsored the annual Double T informal dance . . . Under its auspices, the district A. A. U. boxing tournament was held in the Matador Gymnasium . . . Produced Gridiron Resume, annual fun-night fea- turing a three-act play with an all grid-hero cast . . . Play proceeds went for furtherance of Association ' s program. Strives to create unity among the wearers of the Double T . . . Ever alert to advance the cause of ath- letics at Tech . . . An organization to which all Mata- dor athletes aspire. CHARLIE DUVAL President Page 227 YELL LEADERS Head Yell Leader Arch Lamb, Bud Thompson, and Paul Grandma Bowers Three extremely agile young men whose pleadings and antics coerced students and Red Raider fans into shouting themselves hoarse for the Matador gridders . . . Head Yell Leader Arch Lamb ably assisted by Paul Grandma Bowers and Bud Thompson. Lamb responsible for organization of Saddle Tramps, male student cheering unit . . . Thompson former fish yell leader . . . Clowning Bowers real help when it % came to eliciting shouts from mouths of Tech support- J ers . . . Worked together as flawless trio . . . Knew their jobs and did them well. Yelling strength of rooters augmented by Saddle V g K Tramps . . . Under Lamb ' s guiding hand the section fc ,, did much to make vocal support of ' 36 gridders pre- eminent. ARCH LAMB Head Yell Leader Page 228 SADDLE TRAMPS The Crimson and Black clad male cheering unit, the Saddle Tramps Male cheering section, first of its kind at Tech . . . Created under the direction of Arch Lamb, head yell leader . . . Bright spot in crowd at every home game . . . Influenced cheer- ing of other spectators . . . The pep squad grew from ten charter members to a body of more than two score cheerers . . . Students become Saddle Tramps by unanimous vote of existing members . . . Those elected receive physical education credit for their work. Novelty of organization won widespread recognition for Raider teams and Tech . . . Bril- liant splotch of scarlet shirts and black trousers, with yelling of Saddle Tramps, intensified the Matadors ' will to win . . . After first year should be firmly established as integral part of Raider sideline athletics. Pago 229 ootuall BILL HOLCOMB. Fast- est big man on squad, rackle. Got off to slow- start, but consistent plugging earned pro contract. LEWIS JONES. Co- captain. Scrapping guard. Second year letterman. Bids to be power in ' 37 Matador line. Knows the game. WINFORD BAZE. Full- back like coaches dream of. One-man grid machine. Swaps Scarlet and Black for Cleveland Ram suit. JIM BROWN. Playful guard. Won first letter at Tech this year. Can dish it out, and take it, too. Stood out in spring training as poten- tial star lineman. One more year at Tech. LESLIE BROWNING. His graduation disrupts famous Browning-Browning tackle combina- tion. Three-letter gridman. Really great of- fensive man who ropes wildcats, judges live- stock for diversion. Memories of Broadway will not soon fade. On Tech ' s annual Parents Day, Matadors turn back Oklahoma Aggies, score 12-0. TEXAS WESLEY AN Rams invaded Lubbock September 19 and lost to the Raiders, 26-7, in grid season opener . . . First game played in Texas Techno- logical College ' s new horseshoe stadium . . . Halfback triple-threater, Jim Neill, paved way for majority of Red scores . . . Showed 4,500 spectators the running form that won him All-American mention. TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY ' S Horned Frogs temporarily bogged down in early season competition when Slingin ' Sammy Baugh ' s passes failed to click against Tech in rain-drenched Matador Stadium September 26 . . . The Scarlet and Black gridders won, 7-0 .. . Length-of-field drive at opening of second half led to single score ... Jim Neill skirted end for counter, Hemsell booted conversion . . . Last quarter passing spree by Frogs couldn ' t overcome Tech lead . . . Baugh ' s arm filled night air with wet footballs that couldn ' t connect . . . Rushing, fighting Matador line played havoc with Frog boots and passes . . . Game dedicated new stadium in big way . . . Victory bells rang all night. OKLAHOMA CITY UNIVERSITY sent her Goldbugs into the Raider back- yard October 3 to find out whether it were true what they said about Tech after the TCU upset . . . Apparently rumors were confirmed, for the Goldbugs were engulfed by the Red tidal wave, 34-6 . . . Tech shock troops started melee, but were replaced by regulars before end of first period . . . Before Matadors got set, Sooner city quarter tripped 51 yards to one-yard stripe . . . Goldbugs scored on third attempt . . . Matadors came back strong, passed and plowed way to lopsided victory. r. HERSCHEL ' ■RED RAMSEY. Plucky end. Won mythical awards in both varsity years. Captains the Matadors his senior term. JESSE BROWNING. Younger half of Flu- vanna tackle duo. Has one more year of eligibility. Likes it rough, straight. TOX WIG1NTON. Burly, hustling center. Shone at pass defense. Won three football letters. Left good name when he doffed uniform. MAURICE CHERN- OSKY. Bright young halfback with a good foot- ball head. Mo- mentous moment: When he intercept- ed a Loyola pass, returned 62 yards for counter. Can be counted on for bril- liant year. ALTON OWENS. Turned in good season, his last, at guard post. Worked hard. Fought hard. Was mainstay when danger threatened. Made good record after transfer from Wayland Jaycee. Lett: Oklahoma ASM and Tech scrap it out Fight: Neill skirts end to score on Aggies WICHITA UNIVERSITY handed the Plainsmen the first lacing of the season in Kansas, October 9, downing the Techs, 6-0 .. . First of several defeats that pulled the Raiders from top spot and shoved them down near the cellar-line by the end of the season . . . Texas passing and running attacks ran aground in sea of Kansas mud . . . Wheatshocker lateral pass in third period carried pigskin to 8-yard line and scoring position . . . Powerful Kansas fullback rammed through the Matador line for the lone score of the grimy game. CENTENARY ' S Gentlemen caught the Scarlet and Black team on the end of an extremely short cycle of luck . . . Smarting from defeat at hands of the Wheatshockers and playing money ball for 8,000 Homecoming fans, Tech ' s gridders fought their way to a 12-6 win over the Gents October 24 on Matador Field . . . Neill passed three times from behind Tech goal before interception led to Centenary score . . . Matadors came back with drive that deadlocked the teams at half, 6-6 .. . Iced down the game in third period when Neill to West pass brought final tally. OKLAHOMA ' S A. M. invaded Matador Field November 6, only to be re- pulsed by the Raiders, 12-0 .. . Game was highlight of annual Parents ' Day at Tech . . . Both teams favored aerial route . . . The Aggies flipped the pig- skin adeptly down the gridiron to the Raider 2-yard line for only real A. M. threat . . . Tech linemen came through to halt incursion . . . Tables turned, the home boys showed their parents how it should be done . . . Neill to West was good for one counter . . . Neill scampered around end to pick up the re- maining six points of the afternoon. ED SMITH. Color- ful little halfback. Jinxed by Old Man Injury — came back for more. Profi- cient passer. JIM NEILL. Highly touted, justly so. National fame All- American mention won good pro job. Led attacks against topnotch teams. J. W. WEST. Bright spot. Loyola injury stymied hot start. Good year looms. GEORGE PHIL- BRICK. Holds hopes at one end. Has two full sea- sons ahead. CHARLIE DUVAL. Best blocking back. Tops in booting. Not bad passer. Inval- uable asset to any man ' s team. Depend- able in the pinches. Prexied T T Associ- ation. Active on and off the greensward. One of the boys who followed Cawthon- Smith regime from Sherman to Lubbock. A. B. RED MURPHY. Tackle and punt blocker de luxe. Only sophomore to re- ceive varsity letter this year. Crashed through to down DePaul punt behind Catholic goal for Raider score in 13-6 Tech defeat. Two years more. DePaul ' s Blue Demons deleat the Matadors in the season ' s last game on Tech Field. LOYOLA UNIVERSITY of Los Angeles staged a third period rally to come from behind and take the invading Texas Tech Matadors, 26-7, on Armistice Day . . . Third repulsed Red Raider invasion of coast by Loyola . . . Raider Chernosky raced an interception 52 yards in the first quarter for the only Tech score . . . Texas led Californians 7-6 at the half, but a fumbled lateral by the Plainsmen on the second half kickoff started a near slaughter . . . Usual Matador stamina seemed lacking . . . Texas lads did little to stem tide of points amassed by Catholics during second half. DePAUL UNIVERSITY passed to a 13-6 victory over the Raiders November 20 in the last game of the season on Matador Field . . . Defeated team ex- celled in every phase of game except counters . . . Piled up 15 first downs to 3 for Catholics . . . Pass completion good for first count for lads from Chi . . . Interception and sustained march resulted in additional seven points . . . Raiders scored single tally when Abe Murphy, sophomore tackle, broke through the Blue Demon forward wall, blocked a Catholic punt behind the DePaul goal line for Matadors ' only score. L GEORGE WINTER. Fulfilled highest hopes at fullback. Stocky, southpaw passer. Snaky, deceptive ball carrier. Changes to quarterback this fall. FRANK GUZICK. Fiery center with good prospects. Mixas it hotly in every game. Voted most popular gridder. PETE OWENS. Spectacular guardsman. Noisy, but knows his business on the gridiron. Has another year that should bring out the best. DEMP CANNON. Closed brilliant grid career as Raider helmsman. Ambidextrous pass- er. Adroit field general. Matador fans will miss his egg head. RAYMOND BABE CURFMAN. Car- ries on long family tradition. After two years at end, will be transferred to fullback post for his one remaining season. Loyola ot Los Angeles in fourth period rally swamps invading Raiders. 26-7. LOYOLA UNIVERSITY of the South took up where DePaul ' s Blue Demons left off . . . Bruised, battered, and somewhat bewildered by loss of last home game, the Matadors invaded New Orleans Turkey Day to drop the Loyola tilt, 14-0... Charlie Duval, J. W. West, and others absent from Raider team due to injuries . . . Tackling and blocking of Techs not up to par . . . Defeat shat- tered all hopes that Frog victory precipitated. UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA ' S Blue Brigade failed to pursue course of victory followed by three preceding Tech rivals . . . Matadors tied the Wildcats 7-7 in Tucson December 5, culminating a season fraught with vicissitudes . . . Trailing seven points at the opening of the last period, the Raiders uncorked an aerial offensive that stormed the redoubts of the Blue Brigade and captured a tying score . . . The Arizona fracas rang down the curtain on the 1936 Texas Technological College grid season. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Freshman lootballers demonstrate the stult o which Varsity squads are made. The Texas Tech Picadors aided the varsity gridders in dedication of new Matador Field by trouncing Abilene Christian College ' s second team, 15-0, September 26 . . . Gene Boswell, ex-Lamesa High School athlete, ploughed through the Christians ' line in the second quarto for first score on the soggy gridiron . . . Dexter Walthal raced a boot back 56 yards for the second freshman counter ... A slippery ball slid off an A. C. C. punter ' s toe and rolled out of bounds behind the Abilene goal for a Tech safety. Following the first battle, the freshman squad received a three weeks ' respite due to a cancel- lation of play with Wayland College . . . On October 16 the Picadors dropped into Canyon to overwhelm the West Texas State Teachers College Calves, 27-0 . . . Boswell, aided by Charles Calhoun and Dwight Lindsey, was again a potent factor in the freshman victory . . . Calhoun ' s promising toe kept the play in the Calves ' territory a greater portion of the encounter. Still filled with the urge to travel, the Picadors journeyed to Lawton, Oklahoma, to battle the Cameron State Agricultural College to a scoreless tie . . . Berl Huffman ' s freshman squad slightly outclassed the Sooner team, but neither side possessed sufficient power to push ball across . . . Aggies vainly resorted to passing attack in final stanza in effort to obtain tally. Picadors moved into Sooner state for second time — to engage the Altus Junior College . . . The former territory evidently was a jinx for the Texas youths, for after sixty minutes of fum- bling play they emerged on the short end of a 28-7 count . . . Highly touted Altus team passed smoothly to the only defeat handed the Pics. Climaxed season by sinking the Eastern New Mexico Junior College eleven from Portales to the tune of 29-0 . . . Again Boswell and Calhoun proved their potential worth to the Red Raiders by ripping their way through the middle of the junior college line for long gains . . . Games furnished Tech followers preview of material from which future Matador grid teams will be carved. Page 236 SPRING TRAINING Coach Dutchy Smith takes a switch to an ollensive tackle ' s legs to stimulate drive. Tackles, guards try to keep otlensive linemen Uom coming through. Pete shows some ol the boys how it ' s done — and do they take notice! Dutchy watches the forwards get in shape lor the School ol Mines allray, Fiesta night. Spring training started almost as soon as Christmas holidays ended . . . Charac- terized by Coach Cawthon as poorest since I have been at Tech . . . Squad of prospective ' 37 gridders put through paces by Coaches Cawthon, Smith, Huffman . . . Season came to sad end for Tech supporters with 10-7 defeat at hands of Texas School of Mines at the Matador Spring Athletic Fiesta April 30. Many former Picador gridders got first taste of varsity play in this upset . . . Tarbox ran the Muckers ragged . . . Charlie Calhoun demonstrated that he can heave and boot the pigskin . . . Veteran line seemed tired against the Miner forwards . . . George Winter, Senior fullback, lugged the mail at the quarterback slot and did some nice blocking ... Ed Smith, playing out of his regular berth, emerged from the encounter with cracked ribs. Coaches not overly enthusiastic about this fall ' s prospects . . . Green backfield didn ' t shape up in spring workouts . . . Vet forward wall didn ' t get going . . . Mainstays who graduate will be missed by the Raiders this fall . . . Weather and injuries obscured real talent in spring training period, but coaches feel that better than fair season looms for ' 38. Pago 237 ' jDaikstljaLL BOB CASE. Six- foot-one center. Great on follow-up. Lettered twice as Raider eager. Has one year more. COTTON WIGIN- TON. An outstand- ing guard. Good floor player. Adept long-shotter. Back next year. LEROY CREWS. Senior forward. Let- tered two years. Plenty hustle. Splendid defensive and offensive play- PAUL MORRIS. Smallest squadman. Adroit trickster. Can keep down score of opposing forwards. An efficient basketeer. Two cage letters. Will guard ' em again next winter. ELMER TARBOX. Six-foot forward. Soph- omore. Starred on freshman basketball squad. Gave veteran Raider cagers a run for their money. Two more fruitful years in store. Left: Morris nets one against Arizona U. Right: Snodgrass scores on Arizona State. Texas Tech ' s Red Raiders failed to recapture the Border Confer- ence crown this winter . . . Disastrous ten-day road trip cost the Matadors all shots at the championship . . . However, whirl- wind finish on home court pulled the travel-weary Techs from fourth position to second berth when tabulations were eventu- ally completed. JUDGE GARRETT. Forward. High point man for past two seasons. Scored 177 points this winter. Mats will lose great eager with the graduation of Judge. HUGH SNODGRASS. His last year as Raider guard. Great erick shot artist. Turned in excellent year ere he doffed Scarlet and Black. Rolled up points for the Matadors. WAYNE WILKINS. Came from behind to develop into fine floor player. Worked off excess weight to gain speed. Should make the Matadors a good man next year. RUSSELL WILKIN- SON. Six-foot-four center. Hampered in early season by illness, but came through for good record his last term . Good tip-off man. Hard running, straight shooting in court play. Curly will be missed plenty next season. Left: Snodgrass again — against Southern Cal. Right: Garrett tallies in battle with coast. . s Returned home in February with long string of losses to their credit as result of swing around border loop . . . Finished off Tempe Teachers in fine style upon their invasion of Raider back- yard . . . Ended season by taking University of Arizona in stride the following nights . . . Four straight wins at home . . . Garrett, Snodgrass, Wilkinson, and other hardwooders dropped ball through the basket from every possible court position. 66 SEASON REVIEW Back Row: Bob Hale, Judge Garrett, Russell Wilkinson, Wayne Wilkins, Cotton Wiginton, and Herbert Curry. Front Row: Killer Colley {Manager}, Woodrow Powell, Elmer Tarbox, Hugh Snodgrass, Bob Case, Paul Morris, Leroy Crews, and Coach Berl Hultman. Began season by taking opener with semi-pro club . . . Dropped hard fought contest with visiting Trojans of Southern California in next try . . . Journeyed to Oklahoma City and went to semi-finals in tourna- ment sponsored by Daily Oklahoman . . . Won both games in Abilene with A. C. C. . . . Split Border Conference opener on home hardwood with Flagstaff Teachers . . . Successfully repelled invasion of El Paso Miners by taking two-game series . . . Took to road where they failed to register much . . . Broke even on games with New Mexico Aggies and Tempe, Arizona, Teachers . . . Didn ' t come out so well with Flag- staff and Tempe . . . Came back home to end season with four wins that pulled them from fourth to second place in conference running . . . Hugh Snodgrass placed on all-Border Conference team for second con- secutive year . . . Judge Garrett led Matadors in scoring by tallying 177 points . . . Elmer Tarbox, sophomore sensation, stood out in play . . . Paul Morris received notice during Border Conference swing and named on second all-conference team. Nine cagers won letters . . . Leroy Crews, Judge Garrett, Hugh Snod- grass, and Curly Wilkinson will be missed from varsity five next year . . . Coach Berl Huffman ' s cagers, three-time winners of conference title, rolled along to passable season, even though Tech does not wear the coronet this year . . . With five returning lettermen, Matadors will definitely be in running the coming season. Page 242 FRESHMAN SEASON Back Row: Raymond Milner, Truman Neal, Frank lac kson. Rex Williams, Gene Boswell, Kenneth Madry, Harvey Milner. G. W. Webb, F. M. Sachse, and Frank McDaniel. Front Row: Harold Lynn, Melvin Ratheal, Stanley Fisher, H. G. Wills, Coach Aubrey Butts, Fabian Lemley, Cecil Bateman, Julius Meredith, and Harris Cheek. Coach Aubrey Butts ' Picador cagers swept through a whirlwind sea- son . . . Emerged triumphantly . . . One of most successful seasons the freshman basketeers have enjoyed . . . Took 22 out of 25 games played . . . Before Anton tournament boasted 1 7 wins to 1 defeat . . . Came out third at Anton . . . Scored 761 points to total of 508 for oppo- nents . . . Thirty point game average. Wayland College edged out on the Pics by one point at Plainview to administer only pre-tournament licking . . . Geron, Sachse, McDan- iel, Jackson, Neal, and Webb led net tossers for the freshmen . . . Illness cost Butts ' boys the services of Gene Boswell, all-state guard from Lamesa High School. From the Picador ranks should emerge several brilliant cagers hopeful of filling the shoes of Crews, Judge Garrett, all-conference Hugh Snod- grass, and Curly Wilkinson . . . Next year ' s varsity largely dependent on Pics for material. Professor Aubrey Butts . . . Coached the freshman team to victory . . . Once great place-kicker for Matador grid teams . . . Hung up uniform in 1933 to coach Picador cagers and obtain an education . . . Gets B. B. A. degree this year . . . Enters coaching field in a West Texas high school. Page 243 uzox c jikUtlci TRACK Standing: Elmei Tarbox, Maurice Cowan, Bob Case, Marsh Farmer, Ralph Balfanz. and Coach Hutlman. Kneeling: Fish Carter, John Case, Wallace Fields, Harris Cheek (Manager), Russell Cook, and Reginald Jordan. Coach Berl Huffman ' s thinly clads went through half the season minus mainstay Maurice Cowan, Border Conference pole vault record holder . . . Infection kept him from field until Drake Relays at Des Moines, April 24 . . . Decidedly reduced number of Raider points in Ft. Worth meet and Texas Relays. Case walked away with honors at Ft. Worth Fat Stock Show and Exposition meet . . . Copped first awards in mile and 880 . . . Tarbox, sophomore Matador, placed in two events in the same tourney . . . Balfanz, former Abilene High School flash, took second in 440 . . . Marsh Farmer, Ft. Worth youth, showed home folks that he could carry the Scarlet and Black well . . . Placed with Jim Neill in 120 low hurdles. Farmer and Case went to Austin to run in Texas Relays . . . Competition considerably stronger than at Ft. Worth . . . Big names of country running . . . Case grabbed fourth in 3,000 meter event . . . Don Lash, Indiana cinder cruncher, hit the tape first in the same race. Cowan back clearing the bar in Drake Relays . . . Entered Des Moines events with Case and Farmer . . . More big names . . . Ran in Border Conference meet at Albu- querque, May 8. Red Raider track teams lose great vaulter with Cowan ' s graduation this year . . . Next spring ' s thinly clads include Farmer, Case, Balfanz, and Tarbox — now thoroughly sea- soned veterans . . . Other hopefuls coming up from freshman runners. Page 246 TENNIS P % 1 V I ffcbM L ' • tmmmmmmrMi IfBBBBBCBI !■•■■ !■■■! ' Mill MM W« I !■■■! !■«■ ' ■■■! MM« ■■ !■■( ««• ' •■« • ■■■ ■«• •« .. i ft til ' ii • i, ■  • in ■i ■i i, ii n m ii  ■  ' ni« i i r a • Mi- ■■• • ■■■ S3? I  ' ..«• •! 1IHHII IMIIMl r  H ' I ■I ■ I I ■ ' I II ■ ■ 1 II £ IB I PI ■■IB I ! ' . ' Bl H! 9 • - - i i t KB! Coach Jimmie Allen, Hector Mackay, Fancher Upshaw, Benton Payne, Captain Hairy lordan, H. A. B ozeman, Aubrey McCarty, and Wilson Chapman. Led by Captain Harry Jordan, Matador racqueteers trekked to Austin to take part in all- Southwestern invitation tourney early this spring . . . Exchanged volleys with San Mar- cos Teachers and Texas University netmen — and lost . . . Jordan chalked up the only Tech victory by trimming the No. 1 singles star from North Texas State Teachers College. Returned from the capital city tournament greatly improved due to tutelage of H. M. MacQuistian, Dallas pro . . . Triumphantly dedicated the college ' s new varsity clay courts April 10, trouncing the W. T. S. T. C. Buffaloes nine out of ten matches . . . Emerged this spring from fall season mediocrity into one of best net squads in several years. All-school and freshman tournaments held under supervision of Tennis Coach Jimmie Allen in an effort to discover potential court material among Tech undergrads . . . New courts south of Doak Hall restricted to varsity use . . . But stands erected on west side- line for benefit of spectators . . . Driving play that forces opponents behind own back- line is Coach Allen ' s favorite style . . . The squad ' s spectacular court flash added to the rising popularity of tennis on the campus. Page 247 GOLF Lindsay Telloid, Bob Hale, Glenn Stevenson, James Douglas, Coach J. W. Jackson, and Jack Carlson. Broke even with T. W. C. this spring on 36 holes . . . Won three; lost three . . . Doubles matches: Carlson and Douglas, Tech, lost to Willoughby and Smith, 3-2; Hale and Telford beat Fisher and Jordan, 6-5 .. . Singles play: Carlson lost to Willoughby of T. W. C, 7-6; Douglas dropped match to Smith, 7-6; Hale of Tech defeated Jordan, 3-2; Telford won over Fisher, 5-3. On same road trip encountered T. C. U. golfers . . . Victorious in encounter, 4-2, on 56 holes . . . Doubles: Carlson and Douglas lost to McBride and Jordan, 2-1; Hale and Telford won over Stroud and Dunlap, 4-2 .. . Singles: McBride, T. C. U., defeated Carl- son, 8-7; Douglas stroked Jordan, 10-8; Hale beat Stroud, 7-5; Telford took Dunlap, 6-4. Team participated in Border Conference matches in Albuquerque, May 7, 8 . . . Lack of services of Allen and Stevenson in Ft. Worth hampered Techs seriously . . . Allen defi- nitely out for entire season, but back next year . . . Senior Stevenson back in shape for New Mexico go. Coach J. W. Jackson turned out splendid team, composed mainly of sophomore strokers . . . Bob Hale, senior golfer, only letterman on squad . . . No. 2 man, Stevenson, also graduates this year . . . Rest of squad — Allen, Telford, Douglas, and Carlson — sophs with bright years of collegiate competition ahead. Page 248 BOXING Dine While ' s battering right goes up alter Matador light-heavy wins in District Golden Cloves meet. Runner-up welterweight Lewis Watson, Tech, stands fay as Golden Glover Hennington raises arm in victory. Rudell Russell, Golden Glove bantamweight runner-up trom Tech, and winner Guthrie. Bo Sexton lilts list ol Wynell Cox, Tech treshman and middleweight winner o same tournament. Coach Killer Coitey gives Cox some pointers in body punching while boxing class looks on. Almost elevated to rank of major sport in point of popularity this year . . . Two glove slinging tourneys highlighted the fistic season — West Texas Golden Gloves meet and district A. A. U. bouts . . . Both events packed spectators into Matador Gymnasium . . . Wynell Cox, Tech middleweight, district Golden Gloves champ ... In the same tourna- ment, Dixie White appropriated light-heavy honors to win recognition as a Matador fighter . . . John Buck, Tech middleweight, district A. A. U. winner and ranked as one of two best pugilists in Gulf A. A. U. tournament at Houston . . . Earned right to fight in junior meet at St. Louis. Milton Killer Coffey, ace Matador leather tosser, named boxing coach at Tech . . . His teams acquired finesse lacking in most collegiate pugilistic circles . . . Killer also was mainspring of Raider teams ... A fighting coach ... He captured West Texas- New Mexico A. A. U. crown . . . Won top honors in every meet he entered. Chances are good for fine season next year . . . Tournament winners Cox, White, Buck will be back to punch bodies for Tech . . . Other topnotchers expected to be in Raider ranks. Page 249 W. A. A. Under supervision ot W. A. A., members engage in varied sports. Shuttleboard, skating, tennis, and volleyball are only a tew ot the activities enjoyed by numerous groups ot girls similar to those pictured above. Women ' s Athletic Association . . . Provides medium for coeds ' participation in sport? other than those included in physical education department ' s curriculum . . . Sponsors archery, volleyball, extra-curricular tennis, baseball, swimming, horseback riding, ping- pong, skating, and bicycle riding. Annual cabaret party for new women students presented under its auspices . . . Puts pledges through merry initiation paces . . . Gives perennial pledge party and party honoring senior members . . . Yearly play day attracts widespread attention . . . All Tech women eligible to participate in event . . . Winners receive ribbons for awards. Mrs. George Langford, Miss Zella Reigel, and Miss Margaret Baskin are association sponsors . . . Headed by Elise Tucker, president, the organization endeavors to give its members the benefit of otherwise privately competitive sports. Page 250 FENCING Part ot Texas Tech fencing squad sets up a match on the lawn in front ot the Textile Building while Instructors Buchanan and Baker stand by at the lar end ot opposing lines ot lencers and seconds. Second year that this sport has been under way at Tech . . . James Buchanan chief instructor . . . Assisted by Ovid Baker, former member Southern Methodist fencing squad . . . Some fifteen foil and mask enthusiasts take an active part in the sport . . . Until now, fencing confined to intrasquad ma tches. Trim, active youths make brilliant array in white uniforms and black masks . . . Interest in this minor athletic activity steadily increasing . . . Next year may possibly bring matches with other college fencing teams . . . Squad members encouraged through physical education credit given for participaiton. Page 251 ym SL:: ' ' : .1 ill — Il i L Wio i Wk 10 Claude Thompson . . . President of the Student Council . . . back of every student movement for the betterment of Tech . . . graduates in Geology in June . . . must have executive ability . . . has served in that capacity as President of College Club three years . . . Vice-President one year . . . Secretary-Treasurer one year . . . President of Sigma Gamma Epsilon this year, served as Secretary one year . . . member of Inter-Club Council, Publications Commit- tee, Artist Course Committee . . . listed in Who ' s Who by Sigma Gamma Epsilon . . . enjoys dancing, card games, all kinds of sports . . . inspires admiration and con- fidence by the sincerity of his manner . . . hopes to work for an oil company next year . . . Registrar ' s Office . . . this answer often greets those who call Mary Thomas at home, or in the Registrar ' s Office where she works four hours daily . . . President of Double Key, honorary home economics society . . . congenial . . . friendly . . . diplomatic . . . courteous . . . has a ready smile for every- one . . . makes A ' s in spite of many extra- curricular activities . . . won Pan Hellenic award for scholarship when she was a Freshman . . . honored two years by Alpha Chi, honorary scholarship society . . . spends holidays in Galveston, if possible ... at- tractive . . . interested in cooking and home- making . . . second highest ranking scho- lastic in the Home Economics Division . . . Wilmot Eaton . . . Tech Press Foreman . . . Vice-President of Student Council . . . member of Publications Committee ... on Board of Directors of Silver Key social club . . . known to everyone as Willie . . . modest . . . friendly . . . plays piano beau- tifully . . . resents being called Wilmot . . . has lou d but pleasing taste in clothing . . . stays neat and well-groomed even though he works in print shop many hours every day ... is an excellent newspaper- man and plans to stay in the game . . . has almost foresaken piano for linotype machine . . . will be Foreman of Tech Press next year . . . makes the honor roll . . . has never flunked a course although he has little time to study . . . MISS g. MARY PRICE Mo k Wk 10 One swell person is what everyone says about Jeannette Jones, senior journalism stu- dent . . . President of Women ' s Dormitory- Association . . . Las Chaparritas . . . mem- ber of Artist Course Committee . . . Forum, women ' s honorary club . . . Book Review- ers Club . . . enjoys solitude and good books and magazines . . . lovable . . . modest . . . efficient ... an A student . . . wants to teach school and travel exten- sively . . . likes bright colored sports clothes and simplicity in any form . . . likes Mil- ton ' s sonnets . . . Oscar Wilde ' s comedies . . . Norma Shearer and Frederic March . . . finished first semester and went to Clarksville to keep house for her family . . . turned down two good school teaching jobs . . . Wayland Merriman, junior civil engineer . . . Vice-President of ASCE . . . member of Engineering Society and Alpha Chi . . . has B plus average . . . carries full course and has worked on NYA for three years . . . does drafting work for townspeople . . . likes poetry . . . conversation . . . studies human nature . . . witty . . . thinks modesty is over-emphasized . . . tolerant . . . philosophical . . . amiable . . . dislikes formal affairs . . . thinks he is a pessimist, but fails to be convincing . . . wants to go to South America ... as a Freshman, attended Engineer ' s banquet as date of another boy but gave himself away by accepting an after-dinner cigar . . . admires Myrna Loy and Simon Simone . . . enjoys sports only as spectator . . . one of those people popularly referred to as the salt of the earth . . . W. D. Holley, Manager of Tech Green- house . . . junior horticulture major . . . only Aggie to make A average last Spring . . . averaged A minus for three years . . . President of Plant Industry Club . . . likes working with plants . . . true disciple of Luther Burbank . . . spends leisure time reading books and magazines on plant life . . . wants to be plant patholo- gist or landscape architect . . . does good imitations of Bob Bums . . . smokes a pipe constantly . . . will go to Michigan State, Ann Arbor when he leaves Tech . . . likes all kinds of sports . . . has soft Western drawl . . . doesn ' t believe in studying on Sunday . . . knows what he wants and is capable of getting it . . . MISS JEWEL BISWOP Ww Wk 10 Mac is what his many friends call him . . . friendly . . . energetic . . . faithful worker . . . Winburn McAlister . . . Senior animal husbandry major . . . Manager, La Remuda . . . won individual honors in In- ternational Livestock Judging meet in Chi- cago in November . . . enjoys horseback riding, hunting, fishing, and swimming . . . member of Student Council . . . Aggie club . . . Young Democrats . . . hobby is judg- ing livestock, but wants to be a good rancher . . . does not like to read . . . earns part of college expenses by working in Animal Husbandry department . . . Who ' s Who Among Students in American Colleges lists his name . . . smokes a pipe ... a cheerful Hi greets everyone he meets . . . Burnice Walker . . . Business Manager of The Toreador . . . considers education the most important thing in life . . . likes to ramble through libraries . . . collects first editions of old books . . . has 2700 books in his own library . . . ambitious . . . hopes to be an advertising man on a metro- politan daily . . . likes checkers . . . has made all his expenses since entering college . . . graduates in June . . . believes in frankness of expression . . . good politician . . . reads extensively . . . possesses ability of organization and leadership . . . likes to argue about anything . . . President of Press Club in 1935-36 . . . President of Kemas Club . . . member of Inter-Club Council . . . friendly . . . aggressive ... a swell fellow . . . Robert Houston, senior mechanical engin- ee r . . . Manager of the 1937 Engineer ' s Show . . . Treasurer of the Engineering So- ciety . . . Member of ASME, Alpha Chi and SPES . . . listed in Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities . . . spends his leisure time in his home work shop for which he made all the equipment . . . likes machine design, physics, and chemistry . . . B student . . . won fresh- man lettering award . . . has a job next year with General Electric Company at Schenectady, New York . . . likes the Reader ' s Digest, hunting, baseball . . . would like to be an executive in some branch of engineering . . . likes quiet people . . . unassuming, accommodating, and natural . . . was student assistant in the Physics Department this year. m MISS LILLIAN MCARD Mo i Wk 10 Charles Merrell Howell, senior mechani- cal engineer . . . good exponent of the more picturesque language . . . uses inevitable phrases spoken in slow Southwestern drawl . . . student assistant in Physics Workshop two years . . . built telescope, designed Engineer ' s Show ash trays . . . does wood- work, woodcarving . . . Former Vice-Presi- dent ASME . . . likes to hunt . . . calls himself a mechanician . . . would be happy on desert island with good whittling knife . . . sings in pleasant bass . . . phil- osophizes: He who expects nothing will in no wise be disappointed . . . can never lose the grin with which he shows pleasure and contentment . . . his pipe is a part of him . . . has collection of several score . . . A darn good guy . . . R. C. Mitchell . . . Aggie Club President-elect . . . sociable . . . good natured . . . democratic . . . member of dairy judging team . . . senior livestock judging team . . . was member of judging team which won second place in Fort Worth Frontier Celebration . . . affili- ated with Block and Bridle . . . Aggie Club . . . FFA . . . Kemas, social organization . . . thinks social life is essential in college education . . . stands up for his own rights . . . employed by NYA in Animal Hus- bandry Department . . . interested in Tech and supports all issues for its betterment . . . calls acquaintances by first names . . . apportions time equally between academic, social, and other extra-curricular activities to obtain a well-rounded education . . . Lois Skeeter Spraggins . . . extremely busy . . . President of Association of Wom- en Students . . . Secretary of Forum . . . member of Artist Course committee . . . was President of Junior Council last year . . . active member of WAA . . . vivacious . . . energetic . . . frank . . . likes all sports, especially swimming . . . places getting married and having a home and kids first in life . . . likes organ music . . . chose major because it offers courses in everything a girl is naturally interested in . . . thinks happiness something that must be shared before it is complete . . . five feet one inch tall . . . weighs one hundred pounds . . . listed in Who ' s Who in Ameri- can Colleges and Universities ... a typi- cal Tech student . . . MISS LEILA MAY ZORNS TC k « 20 Jarring Jim Neill of football fame . . . received honorable mention on Centenary ' s all opponent team . . . was selected to play on the college all-star team of the South- west against the Chicago Bears in Dallas . . . has C plus average . . . would like a day off to go hunting or fishing some- time . . . will play professional football next Fall with the New York Giants . . . plans to come back to Tech in the Spring to complete work for a degree in history . . . friendly . . . easy going . . . likeable . . . hopes to be a university football coach . . . received All-American mention . . . doesn ' t believe money is the most important thing in life but says it goes a long way ... he goes his way quietly . . . smiling . . . modest. Iris Bailey . . . Home Economics senior with B. A. degree from Rice Institute . . . member of Double Key . . . Phi Beta Kappa . . . Senior Home Economics representative to the Student Council . . . thinks making friends the most important and the most in- teresting thing in life . . . likes peculiar people . . . does not like to stay inside in afternoons between sundown and dark be- cause it makes her feel depresseed . . . likes walking for exercise . . . has A minus average . . . friendly . . . neat . . . likeable . . . has highest scholastic ranking in Home Economics Division . . . cheerful . . . full of fun . . . overflowing with zest for living . . . works in library . . . has unusual taste in hats. . . likes her friends to be consistent . . . Al Ray Cooper . . . ASME prexy . . . Secretary Men ' s Dormitory Association . . . Secretary SPES, honorary engineering soci- ety . . . member of Los Camaradas social club . . . capable . . . friendly . . . efficient ... is serving second year as student ad- visor in Men ' s Dormitory . . . considerate . . . every inch a gentleman . . . unassum- ing . . . tends to his own business, and does an excellent job of it . . . conscien- tious . . . has singleness of purpose . . . can make excellent speeches on moment ' s notice . . . thoroughly liked and admired by all who know him . . . will receive B. S. degree in Mechanical Engineering in June . . . makes the honor roll . . . calm and collected . . . MISS EMILY MARTIN Mo i W 10 Every inch an electrical engineer . . . knows every phase of his racket . . . from tying wires together to working out most intricate talking light beam . . . has worked in downtown radio shops . . . highest ranking scholastic in Engineering Division . . . makes excellent grades with- out working solely for them . . . bright red hair, freckles . . . good indication of his re- freshing personality . . . Joe J. Caldwell, Jr. . . . second Tech student to win scholarship to Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . . happiest when he is explaining some of his apparatus to the uninitiate . . . often works all night . . . has friends all over the campus . . . Treasurer, Alpha Chi . . . can talk a blue streak, keep working . . . driv- ing force behind electricals ' part of Engin- eers ' Show four years . . . will be credit to Texas Tech after he gets Master ' s degree from MIT . . . Home Economics Club President . . . Doris Townsend . . . reticent . . . modest . . . friendly . . . shy . . . efficient . . . member of Las Leales, service club, Forum, honorary organization, and Alpha Chi, hon- orary scholarship society . . . goes about in a quiet way getting things done very well . . . listed in Who ' s Who Among American Colleges and Universities . . . Plans to teach school after graduation . . . favors everyone she meets with a coy smile . . . likes to dance . . . member of Double Key, honorary home economics society . . . until this year has worked her way through school ... is active in religious work . . . within five minutes she wins one ' s friend- ship. Arch Lamb . . . has successfully held the most difficult job on the campus . . . that of Head Yell Leader . . . combined personality, ability, ingenuity, and hard work, and emerged with an organized cheering unit for Texas Tech . . . the Saddle Tramps . . . friendly . . . energetic ... a hard worker . . . enthusiastic . . . dairy manufacturing major who works in that department for a living . . . possesses typical West Texas hospitality and congeniality . . . good natured . . . witty . . . radiates college spirit and good will . . . somewhat of an orator when it comes to rousing Tech stu- dents from a state of lethargy to one of fren- zied yells of loyalty to Tech . . . happy-go- lucky fellow. MAXINE FRY nc i wfz 10 Lillian Heard . . . the girl with the smil- ing Irish eyes . . . junior speech major . . . National Dairy Queen, 1936, selected by Governor Allred . . . Queen of Athletic Fiesta last year . . . twice selected for beauty page in LA VENTANA . . . Junior Class Queen . . . Secretary-Treasurer of Junior Class . . . Vice-President of Las Cha- parritas . . . member of Alpha Psi Omega . . . Sock and Buskin . . . Debate Club . . . has B average . . . student assistant in Speech Department . . . likes golf but is too busy to play . . . thinks plays and dancing are fun . . . speaks in a low, well-modu- lated voice . . . has stage aspirations . . . democratic . . . modest . . . quiet, but never morose . . . gay, but never noisy . . . wears colors that emphasize her dark, Sylvia Sidney type of beauty . . . Best backfield blocker on Tech Varsity Football Squad for two years . . . Athletic Representative to Student Council . . . President of Double T Association . . . Charlie Duval . . . thinks football is fun . . . likes intramural baseball . . . nice, friendly grin . . . easy to get along with . . . likes dancing but no formal dress for him . . . likes Tech because people don ' t try to go high cotton . . . hates to talk about himself . . . admires people with stickability . . . has it himself . . . feels that he is the captain of his fate . . . an- other Sherman boy who followed Coaches Cawthon and Smith to Tech . . . graduates in Business Administration in June . . . will coach next year . . . French descent . . . fond of horseplay that wins and keeps many friends . . . Helen Lehmberg . . . President of Forum, women ' s honorary society . . . smiles as if she means it . . . likes Edna St. Vincent Millay ' s poetry . . . hobby is horseback riding ... La Remuda queen this year . . . has B plus average . . . likes dramatics . . . looks like she feels good and is glad of it . . . swims . . . hikes . . . dances . . . active in both social and honorary clubs . . . Secretary of Student Council . . . mem- ber of Alpha Chi . . . Alpha Psi Omega . . . plans to teach various phases of speech when she finishes college . . . was recog- nized as A student her freshman year . . . friendly . . . just a swell all-around student . . . affiliated with DFD social club . . . gets degree in speech in June . . . individual mannerisms distinguish her from other coeds . . . could be recognized even in silhouette . . . MISS MARTHA JO JENKINS n i L i wk 10 Jim Linsdey . . . senior journalism stu- dent . . . two years editor of Toreador . . . sends staff members and student re- porters scurrying with Get on the wood ... is always ready to help put over any new measures that mean progress for Tech . . . wants job as sports writer on a metro- politan daily when he graduates . . . Presi- dent of Silver Keys . . . member of Student Council . . . appointed member of Student Traffic Commission by Governor James V. Allred . . . member of student government executive committee of Texas . . . considers friendships most essential factor in achiev- ing happiness . . . manifests great executive ability . . . busy . . . friendly . . .indi- vidual . . . aggressive . . . alert . . . defi- nitely a leader . . . only Toreador editor ever to be reelected . . . Toreador won All-American rating this year . . . Modest . . . friendly . . . unassuming . . . silent . . . Elmo Knudson, President of the Engineering Society . . . mechanical engin- eering senior . . . has job with Hughes Tool Company in Houston after graduation . . . reads newspapers religiously . . . enjoys smoking cigars with feet propped on table . . . works in Men ' s Dormitory for a living . . . listed among Who ' s Who Among Stu- dents in American Colleges and Universi- ties . . . never talks about himself except when questioned . . . sometimes moody and pessimistic . . . kids friends continu- ally . . . member of ASME, national society for mechanical engineers . . . wants to work for oil company in South America and visit the Hawaiian Islands . . . conservative . . . cool . . . calm . . . his square jaw and flashing eyes account for success of Engineering Society this year . . . the typi- cal blond Scandinavian . . . George Tate, all around Aggie, animal husbandry major . . . President of Block and Bridle, Vice-President of the Senior Class . . . member of FFA, Aggie club . . . you see him coming from the Aggie barns looking as if he had just stepped from the band box . . . suppressed ambi- tion: travelling . . . hopes to be a rancher . . . likes country people and O. Henry ' s books . . . reads The Country Gentleman . . . thinks being able to adjust oneself tc his surroundings is one of the most import- ant prerequisites to happiness, success . . . would like to go to South America to in- spect, learn new cattle ranching methods, agricultural developments there . . . every- one likes him because he is modest, sincere, and just George . . . listed in Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, 1937 . . . MISS PRISCILLA DAVIS . . ■Billy Up FDHT UJ ORTH FRONTIER FIESTA MlHyWP ■ Fort worth April 24th, 1937. Mr. Winston Reeves, Editor, La Ventana, Texas Technological College, Lubbock, Texas. Dear Mr. Reeves : The task of sele series of little head easy to judge. As a tuve bow legs and inc several hundred , the down to three or four of the judge ' s indlvi ed a much more diffic teen applicants are d the reel of film was application for a pos much more pleasant ex campus. cting your eight beauties presented a aches. Beauty contests are generally rule the preponderance of applicants ipient moustaches. Out of a group of contest very quickly narrows itself applicants and then it ' s merely a question dual preference. Your reel of film present- ult problem. At least fourteen of the six- efinitely pretty - and I mean pretty. When run of f for me, my first impulse was to make t-graduate course. I couldn ' t think of a istence than spending six months on your I sent my selections in very timidly. I am not at all sure that I didn ' t wrong at least six of your applicants. In the future I would prefer not to ju ' ige your contest. I got goggle eyed looking at the same reel of film trying to make up my mind. FORT WORTH . . . THE FRIENDLY CITY — WANT TO BE A BEAUTY? The cry went around that There ' s going to be a beauty election. Social club members got their heads together and decided which of their own girls they would back at the polls. Other organizations and independents seized hold of a chance to politic again. Two elections were held. The first time 25 co-eds were selected by popular vote. Col- legians voted again to cull nine candidates. Technicolor movies were made of the chosen sixteen personalities, excepting one. The reels were okayed by college officials and LA VENTANA staff members. The final choice was up to the Master Showman Billy Rose, who consented to the task. oaiaL CJjxu INTER-CLUB COUNCIL First Row: Wilmot Eaton. Lee Michie, Jim Lindsey, George Carrithers, R. L. Read, Ralph Snyder Second Row: Burnice Walker, Walter Hicks, Tom Hutchinson, Roy Wilmelh, Lewis Kerr, leannette Jones, Emma Dean Bingham Scoggin Third Row: Lila Marie Brannen, Ruth Lewis, Linda Treadwell, Lena Belle Brown, Mary Katherine Agerton, Doris Johe, Marian Bullock Meets on fourth Mondays . . . eleven member-clubs with two representatives from each . . . one of most active years . . . helped Student Council in band uniform campaign, investi- gated possibilities and attitudes for Greek letter societies on campus, recently considered sample petition for changing rule in Tech Constitution against frats and sororities . . . influenced changing system of averaging gradepoints and semester hours of social club affiliates, accepted registrar ' s method . . . Constitution requires that council members are bidded to social club formals . . . changed two weeks ' rush season to ten days beginning the first day after fall semester registration . . . officers have access to club files in library . . . consider cooperative clubhouse . . . women ' s division sponsors socials for affiliates of girls ' societies, especially at Christmas time when con- tributions are made to charity . . . serves as balance between clubs and administration . . . men ' s division gets together unofficially . . . Mrs. Doak, sponsor . . . ' if . r whispering campaign for all-club dance. WILMOT EATON keeps the printers on the wood Page 274 SANS SOUCI First Bow: Lena Belle Brown. Crystelle Scudder, Marjorie Elder, Mary Boss Edwards, Mary Katherine Agerton, Lynn Bain, Billie Bloom Second Bow: Kaliina Brewer, Ellen K. Clapp, Gwen Marr Davis, Christine Harris, Corinne Bailey, Gibbs Beazley, Henri Sue Boone. Third Bow: Evelyn Bumside Koger, Charlotte Cone, Kay Donahue, Hermione Holcomb, Catherine Howell, Emogene Johnston, Gay Miller Fourth Bow: Virginia Muller, Elizabeth Anne Price, Emma Lou Sell, Betty Smith. Ann Sproule, lane Wilson, Minnie Will Wootton Individual entertainments, buffet supper dance and formal dinner with bronze and white color scheme, snow bound scene presentation dance . childish crayola scribble on five-cent tablet paper . . mum football centerpiece . . . Martha Jo Jenkins, LA VENTANA beauty choice by Rose . . . second in Home- coming Major Bowes ' Amateur Hour starring Margery Clevenger, Polly Jones, and Chris Harris . . . five girls recognized in 1936 service . . . diminutiveness seems to be prerequisite for presidency . . . Marjorie Elder, Junior Council head, is AWS prexy-elect . . . led clubs with 19 pledges . . . Jane Wilson presidents Literary Society . . . Hermione Holcomb, Junior Queen candidate . . . ranks third in fall semester social club grade-point averages . . . traditional tea dance as farewell . . . Anne Sproule and Gibbs Beazley con- tended for Fish Queen . . . data for complete club history is being collected . . . scrap book kept each year . . . formal bids given rushees for pledging . . . Clevenger edited Books in Review. . kid party dance bids were in a Homecoming luncheon, chrysanthe- LENA BELLE BROWN An Outdoor Gill Page 275 SILVER KEY First Row: Jim Lindsey, Jerome Harkey, Eugene Alderson, Lee Michie, Richard Snyder, Sumner Reed Second Row: Dudley Brummetl. William Eades, William Laine Edwards, Billy Bulord, E. P. Driver, Dale Walker, Troy Pickens Third Row: Wilmot Eaton, Robert Allen Hill, A. J. Carpenter, Jr., Neil Wright, Jr., R. V. Jones, Morgan T. Jones, Willard Simpson Intramural football champs . . . staged hula-dance-trio number on Homecoming Major Bowes ' Amateur Hour . . . formal dance decorations remind one of Midnight Blue, a bit of art perfection representing the versatile talent in the group . . . musicians, journalists, aggies, actors, ladies men . . . Former Member Ned Bradley and band swing out with tuneful rhythms in down- state night spots . . . R. V. Jones and Billy Yeatts, Sock and Buskin President and Vice-President . . . opened Broadway clubhouse with reception for outstanding campusites . . . Wilmot Eaton, Inter-Club Council President, Student Council Vice-President, Tech Press Foreman, Publications Committee member, listed in Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges . . . members connected directly with school publications for five consecutive years . . . Prexy Jim Lindsey, second reign as The Toreador editor, Who ' s Who subject, Chairman, Executive Committee, Texas Student Government Conference, honorary Student Council member . . . seventeen presentees escorted by Keys . . . Pledge Morris Tan- ner Laine, The Toreador Business Manager-elect. JIM LINDSEY Hearst ol Texas Tech Page 276 KO SHARI Iff f f U..M. sf w First Row: Doris lobe, Marian Bullock, Helen Sims, Frances Cooper, Nell Walker, Belle Krauss, Natalie Crosby, Katberine Johnston Second Row: Dorothy Walker, Queenelle Sawyer, Ceraldine Younqblood, Helen Hollingsworth, Natalie Tandy, Martha Ver non Smith, Rachael Lindsey, Sophie Alice Hardgrave, Agnes Rowley Third Row: Lois Marie Daniel, Manorie Coler DuVall, Ellen Kennedy lohnston, Ann Buckley, Beverley Chamlee, Geraldine Jordan, Elray Lewis, Mary Alice Carnes, Helen Harston Fourth Row: Vida Harston, Ferrelline Tucker, Frances Wilson, Frances Real, Ceraldine Norn ' s, Ceraldine Slider, Mary Louise Walker, Dr. W. C. Holden Pledges required to read book about namesakes . . . attractive traditional Indian dinner and autumn dance for rush parties . . . Nell Walker, Vice-President, Women ' s Dorm . . . initiates at ancient Arrowhead Kiva in New Mexico . . . this year ' s delegation visited Ernest Thomp- son Seton, famous animal story writer, and Indian ruins at El Rito de Los Frijoles, scene of book, Delight Makers ... six affiliates in 1936 Women ' s Recogni- tion Service . . . Sponsor Mrs. W. C. Holden directs two European tours this summer . . . Sponsor Doctor Holden speaks lovingly of club members as the brats . . . sports campus torch singer, Bette Boop Krauss . . . Doris lobe, reelected Prexy, Inter-Club Secretary, Forum member, Alpha Chi member . . . Katherine lohnston, Forum member and AWS Vice-President . . . Martha Vemon Smith, lady-in-waiting in Junior Queen ' s court . . . three members in Alpha Chi . . . Leila May Zorns, three times LA VENTANA beauty . . . plan annual summer reunion here . . . Elise Tucker, WAA Presi- dent. Learned In Ten Easy Lessons Page 277 COLLEGE CLUB First Row: George Carrithers, Claude Thompson, John Hiner Wilson, Edwin Putnam Second Row: Fred Stickle, Ralph Brown, Jimmy Blair, Johnny Pierce y ' t Dedicate this page to the late Ben F. Condray, club sponsor . . . President George Car- rithers led classes in sophomore and junior years . . . smoker during rush season . . . Padgett Maddox, Inter-Club Vice-President, and Fred Sam Stickle, Hobbs hobo, candi- dates in Ugliest Tech Boy Contest . . . revived custom of giving tokens to dates at annual formal _. ■ Christmas dance . . . famous for Sunday night sup- M[ s . pers . . . Claude Thompson, Student Council Presi- Br _ :-. dent, Sigma Gamma Epsilon President, listed in Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges . . . look forward to spring picnic . . . bunch of hard working boys ... Ed Putnam, appoin- tee reporting to Randolph Field in July, and Johnnie Pierce, Alpha Chi members . . . Mack Scoggin, Senior class President and Publication Committee member until his Xmas wedding . . . Paul Grandma Bowers, Yell Leader and Saddle Tramps Vice-President . . . Carrithers, Artist Course Committee member and Sigma Gamma Epsilon Secretary . . . ten coeds presented by CC ' s. GEORGE CARRITHERS Plays Colt y Page 278 DFD w rP w Cfa mm First Row: Ruth Lewis, Dorothy Abernathy, Beatrice Seiiz, lane Woodruff, Virginia Knapp, Eron Gaiiord, Grace Stengel Second Row: Anne Ruth Williams, Virginia Carlock, Romayne Dodson, Billie Sudderth McCollum, Louise Fortenherry, Pauline Stafford, Julia Moore Bradley, Merle Haynes Third Row: Mary o Muller, Josephine Powell, Betsy Wilson, Mary Elizabeth Stanford, Eloise Smith, Helen Lehmberg, Linda Treadwell, Janet Barnett Fourth Row: Ina Bacon, Ada Williams, Molly Davis, Louise Jarrolt, Katherine Kersh, Ernesteen Lockhart, Eva Knight, Dorothy Lynn Filth Row: Harriet Robb. Mary Price, Mary Virginia Whitehead, Helen lane Grafke, Moy Cocreham Wigin- ton, Emily Martin, Mary Katherine Rice, Annah Jo Pendleton Engraved silver bracelets, annual awards to best member and best pledge, Beatrice Seitz and Ernesteen Lockhart . . . Sponsor Penney presented with club program dancing was rush season feature . . . Grace Stengel, Sophomore class Secretary and Women ' s Dor- mitory Association President-Elect . . . five members in 1936 Women ' s Recognition Service . . . Senior Class Secretary Mary Elizabeth Stanford . . . pledges hon- ored affiliates with formal dinner . . . Helen Lehmberg, La Remuda Queen, Student Council Secretary, Forum President, member of Alpha Chi and Alpha Psi Omega frats and Publications Committee, appeared in Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges . . . Katherine Kersh, Sock and Buskin Secre- tary, Alpha Psi Omega member . . . Jane Woodruff, Alpha Psi Omega member, Debate Club Vice-President . . . Eron Gafford, Student Council and Alpha Psi Omega member, Debate Club Secretary . . . Ruth Lewis, Alpha Chi Prexy . . . Emily Martin, LA VENTANA beauty, Miss Mirrophonic . . . Mary Price, Tech ' s most beautiful. went to pin . . . RUTH LEWIS Plays Organ in Father ' s Church Page 279 LAS CHAPARRITAS First Row: Frances Campbell, Maxine Fry, Lillian Heard, Margaret Heard, Mary Anne Kimble, Roberta Lee Hanson, Sara Sue McWilliams, Frances Elaine Price. Second Row: Vundelle Prideaux, Charlotte Ratlitl, Mary Florence Van Home, Jeannette Jones, Betty Pack, Isabel Warren, Gloriadel Bowen, Mary Alice Brent. Third Row: Priscilla Davis, lean Fagala, Marilynn Fry, Betty Alice Gordon, Barbara Hagan, Gladys Hall, Erma Nichols, Nannie Margaret Overton. Mary Ann Slanberry. Fourth Row: Mary Beth Whiteman, Guida Wilson, Carolyn Thomas, Annette Wultman, Julia Stiles, Maurine Winfrey, Rose Jean Rodgers, Sid Gracey, Mrs. George Langford. Three sets of sisters . . . Sponsor Langford, Johnnye to all the girls, never misses meet- ing . . . matinee dance before TCU game . . . highest ranking social club in fall semester grade-point averages . . . five girls in 1936 Women ' s Recognition Service . . . Maxine Fry, gracing LA VENTANA Beauty section, secretaries Press Association, Vice-President-elect Women ' s Dormi- tory Association, Student President-elect, candidate for Junior Queen . . . annual affairs include Armistice Day morning dance, farewell dance and slumber party, Valentine presentation, patronesses tea dance . . . Lillian Heard, LA VENTANA beauty, Texas Queen at National Dairy Show at Centennial, listed in Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges, Junior Class Secretary and Queen . . . Jeannette Jones, club Prexy, Women ' s Dormitory head, Forum and Artist Course Committee member, appears in Who ' s Who . . . Frances Elaine Price, AWS Vice- President-elect, Junior Queen ' s attendant . . . Marilynn Lj Fry, Freshman Secretary-Treasurer and Fish Queen. JEANNETTE JONES An Executive tor Any Organization Page 280 WRANGLERS First Row: Lewis Kerr, Charles Still, Morris Aliord, Thomas Buoy, John L. Denney, Wilson Grimes, Clarence Dorsey. Second Row: Robert Shaw, J. B. Holt, Arphice Spikes, James Baker, Barney Grata, Wesley I. Wallace, Brady Warren. Third Row: Al Fielding, Porter Parris, Robert Dowell, Samuel Beiach, Murray Patterson, T. H. Bunch, lack Sharpe. Began rush season with sport dance after TWC game . . . give monogrammed woolen blankets to newlywed members . . . J. B. Holt, senior textile, instructor in local dyeing and cleaning school . . . have a clubhouse on the avenue alumni ranks . . . Vincent Foster, oil company Vice- President . . . Ralph Penny, GMC District Manager . . . Frank Emison, 1931, Field Manager of Lone Star Gas Company . . . Jim Cloud, former Dickens County Judge . . . Hop Halsey, former President, studying law at Texas University . . . Former Member Austin Davis, 1936, Randolph Field senior . . . active during summer . . . last year frolicked at Centennial and Casa Manana, best convention yet, members declare . . . plan similar parley . . . keep accurate files on members . . . Wilson Grimes, LA VENTANA Business Manager . . . annual affairs embody traditional George Washington formal dance, Christmas dinner dance, farewell banquet, all-day picnic . . . fourteen Wranglers escorted presentees . . . send news letters to ex-members and alumni. . lawyers, doctors, executives in LEWIS KERR Puis the Go in Cars Page 281 KEMAS First Row: act Bosfick, ParJcer Brown, W. H. BujIocJc, fioscoe Clark, Billie Dougherty, James Forbis, Jerome George, Wayne Hardy, Charles Heard. Second Row: Walter Hicks, Charles Hudson, James Hullman, Carl Hyatt, Jack Jenkins, Reginald Jordan, Chandler Mathis, R. C. Mitchell, Lee Roy Mosley. Third Row: Edwin Parker, Sylvester Reese, George Schultz, Wayne Sellers, James Sheehan, Glenn Stevenson, Larry Trenary, Burnice Walker, Roger Watts, Escar Parker. Fourth Row: Maynard Hall, Reagan Howell, W. T. Lanham, Jack Myers, Connolly Neal, lames Rice, L. A. Ritter, Davney Rogers, James Thompson, C. J. Wicks. Pledged greater number of men than any other social club . . . never compelled inactive by dean ' s office . . . outstanding characteristic of organization is number of good dancers . . . quote members . . . R. C. Mitchell, Aggie Club President-elect, member of Livestock Judging Team which won second place in Fort Worth Frontier Celebration . . . rush season ' s activities in- cluded breakfast and dance . . . Jerome George in race for LA VENTANA Business Manager . . . first and second pledges, James Huffman and Roscoe Sleepy Clark, and charter member, Walter Hicks, active members now enrolled in college . . . annual affairs, spring festival and formal dances, senior ban- quet . . . files kept on each affiliate . . . keep files on members rating entertainments of other clubs . . . President Burnice Walker heads Business Managers Division, Southwestern Students Press Club, Business Manager of The Toreador, former Press Association President . . . cooperate in intramural activities . . . big brothers selected according to pledge pins. BURNICE WALKER Browses Among (he Boots Page 282 LAS VIVARACHAS First Row: Marian Hurmence, Madeline Neves, LaVerne Roach, Louie Wright, Wynelred Warren, Lila Marie Brannen, Mary Frances Standefer, Katherine Neal, Emma Dean Scoqqin. Second flow: Belly Lou Price, Virginia Stova i, Annabel Allen, Geraldine Gibson, Ruth Pirlle, Joyce Craven, Catherine Collier, Birdie Fae Partain, Helen Brown. Third flow: Opal McMahon, Mildred Morris, Kay McCoy, Ruth Clark, Ruby Lee Buchtien, lean McDavid, Sue Cornwell, Eloise lackson, Emily Teepie. Ranks high scholastically . . . second rating with 2.89 in grade-point averages for wom- en ' s clubs ... six girls in 1936 Women ' s Recognition Service . . . Madeline Neves, Alpha Chi Vice-President . . . Mary Etta Bean also rates honorary scholarship society dinner and dance in rush season . . . formal installa- tion of officers . . . Marian Hurmence, reelected presi- dent, assumed last semester duties of former President Emma Dean Bingham, now Mrs. Mack Scoggin . . . Marian lady-in-waiting in Junior Queen ' s court . . . presentees appeared in rustic garden . . . enjoy small get togethers . . . Lila Marie Brannen, Secretary of AWS, Women ' s Dorm Self-Governing Association Secretary . . . July reunion in Dallas . . . Mothers ' Day tea, annual affair . . . Eileen Graves Heineman, alumna, with New York Province Town Players . . . Jean McDavid in Freshman Queen ' s Court . . . Raider- ettes, soft ball team . . . sponsor float in Athletic Fiesta . . . four members on Loyola special train . . . this year ' s pledges began wearing pledge pins . . . one senior member. formal 1 MARIAN HURMENCE Swings Oul on Campus Tennis Courts Page 283 CENTAUR First Row: Tom Hutchinson, Junius Carter, Stanley Kenneth, Bob Watson, Kenneth Clinton, Warren Nobles. Second flow: Robert Newell, Roy Wilmeth, Joe Stanley, Jack Carlson, Charles Clark, Ansell Thomas. Third Row: James Stallings, Bill Callan, Neal Chapman, Rupert Triplett, Herschel Maxey, Sid Stout. Fourth Row: Joe Altord, Freddie L. floe, Arthur Date Jackson, Robert Mann, Eddie Chiton, Wayne Winkler. First active spring in years . . . ranks second in fall semester grade-points among men socialites . . . plan reunion this summer . . . met last July in Wichita Falls for gala assembly . . . hang out at College Avenue pent house . . . traditional bam dance colors rush season . . . Junius Carter, champion debater, former Debate Club Prexy . . . Wendell Watson, Pre-Med Club Secretary . . . Joe Alford, Sophomore Class Presi- dent, ramrodded successful hodge-podge, first class president planning enthusiastically for more than one class social function, member of Student Council . . . royally entertain alumni at annual Homec oming . . . hobbies: aviation, Boy Scout work, poetry, acting . . . Bud Thompson, first semester Sock and Buskin Presi- dent, won honorable mention for best characterization at Texas Inter-Collegiate Dramatic Tourney, El Paso, cast in all Pirtle winning plays, stimulates cheers at football games . . . active alumni association . . . Mother ' s Day breakfast and reception . . . eleven Cen- taurs presented coeds to social clubs. TOM HUTCHINSON Amateur Aviator Page 284 LOS CAMARADAS r atfM First Row: R. L. Read. Myron McCormick. Lloyd Lipscomb, Herbert Rule, F. H. Ricbardz, Kendall Onstott. Second Row: Douglas Blanton, Harry Buckley, Leonard Earnest. Winston Mclnnis, Ralph Snyder, Lloyd Morgan. Third Row: Al Ray Cooper, Cecil Overby, Owen Loyd, J. B. Ratlitt, Roy Forkner, Maston Jones, William Miller. Several alumni attending law school at Texas University, others scattered about in U. S. . . . Al Ray Cooper, Men ' s Dormitory Association Secretary, ASME prexy, SPES Secretary . . . highest scholastic average of men ' s social clubs, fall semester . . . Marshall Formby, former Toreador editor, Dickens County Judge . . . usually have four dances, rush week ' s, semi-formal, formal, and spring dinner dance . . . picnic is tradi- tional entertainment . . . new sponsor, Casey Fine, is club enthusiast . . . four sets of brothers now on active roll . . . several graduate architects . . . Kendall On- stott, Secretary Phi Psi textile honorary frat . . . formal dance teminates hell week and initiation . . . lots of brotherhood, yet snaking on fellow members is not un- common . . . Myron McCormick, Vice-President, Men ' s Dormitory Association . . . Harry Buckley, Gargoyle Society President . . . considering second summer re- union at Christoval . . . four members escorted presen- tees . . . R. L. READ Brings ' em Back Dead Pagt : :; LAS ARMONIAS First Row: Hoyt Eudaly, Walter Coulson. Raymond King, Curtis Jcratl, W. D. Holly, Manuel Ayers, Norman Davis, Lloyd Miller, lack McDonald, J. G. Lindley, Edward P. Lynch. Second Row: Jim Wiman, Albert Nard Lair, Lloyd Heggens, Frances Kendrick, Iris Bailey, Ruth Marie Payne, Virginia Noell, Mildred Alldredge, Delilah Manire, Betty Finsterwald, Jimmie Bailey. Third Row: Bonnie Bell, Fannie B. Bratcher. Geneva Stewart, Jewell Jennings, Virginia Waldrip, Mary Evelyn Pickle, Gladys Schantz, Hazel Louise Bryant, Elva Mae Mills, Dorothy Coard, lone Killough. Fourth Row: Valeta Alldredge, Kathleen Noell, Austine McDonald, Fred Stout, Eunice Graham, Hassler Strickland, Eugene Struve, Dollie Clements, Doyle D. Jackson, Ruth Louise Johnson, Bennett Curry. Unique social club, embodying membership with both men and women . . . organized Spring, 1936 . . . grade-point average, 3.22 for fall semester, higher than Senior Class, holding fifth place in list of college groups . . . purpose, to promote worthwhile friendships among men and women students interested in social activities other than dancing . . . special entertainments in- clude fall sport supper, October open house, April for- mal banquet, and excursion . . . journeyed last spring to Carlsbad Caverns, plan similar trek to Palo Duro Canyon . . . Mildred Alldredge, Delilah Manire, Double Key members . . . Jimmie Bailey, Austine Mc- Donald, Virginia Noell, and J. G. Lindley, Alpha Chi (members . . . Frances Kendrick, Athletic Fiesta court, S TMj 1936 . . . Norman Davis, YMCA-YWCA Vice-President — . . . represented in 1936 Women ' s Recognition Service . . . Stewart Sewell, Philip Sterrett, Eric Rushing, Dean Harman, Kathleen Crawford, Edna Walters, new mem- bers . . . Harman, Livestock Judging Team member . . . Manuel Ayers steers unusual partying . . . austine Mcdonald Spends Spare Time Making Scrap Books Page 286 Camjiu± C u t i LAS LEALES First Row: Eleanor Jungman, Doris Townsend, Hazel Pollard, Willena Nelson, Mary Catherine Couch, Pauline Edgett. Second Row: Betty Bizzell, Virginia Will, Mary Howell, Roberta Hunt, Debbie Crouch, Kathryn Hudman. Charity begins on the campus: Las Leales, girls ' service club, sponsored benefit dance on December 17 . . . proceeds went to Lubbock poor . . . formal initiation in May wrote finis to year ' s doings . . . sends news letter to women graduates . . . thirteen members . . . four in Alpha Chi . . . four in Forum . . . three in ■■h k Double Key . . . President Eleanor Jungman, senior journalism major from Munday . . . unselfishness, key- note of society . . . cooperated with American Asso- ciation of University Women in selling tickets to George Kittredge lecture on Shakespeare and IRC convention banquet . . . main bib and tuckers: annual reception, Valentine dinner, buffet supper . . . Doris Townsend, Vice-President . . . Willena Nelson, Secretary . . . Hazel Pollard . . . Sponsors, Dr. Knapp, Deans Gordon, Weeks, Doak . . . drafted program for next year . . . affiliates in all divisions of the college . . . selected on basis of scholarship and leadership . . . ELEANOR JUNGMAN Page 288 ALPHA CHI $W f f $f? ft Ht 1 . ' I Firsf How: ris Bailey, Jimmie Bailey, Mary Etta Bean, Betty Bizzell, Perry Bowser, Fannie B. Biatcher, Marian Bullock, William Burck, Joe J. Caldwell, ]r„ Mary Clark, Mary Catherine Couch, Leon Crutcher. Second Row: Charline Davis, Lyle Donaldson, George Dupree, Pauline Edged, Robert Fielder, lack Gar- lington. Earl Glover, Arline Harris, Donald Henry, Artie Hicks, Louise Hodges, lohn larvis. Third Bow: Doris lobe, Eleanor lungman, Imogene Keller, Wayne Kelly, J. G. Lindley, Owen Loyd, Martha Mathis, Mary Mathis, Wayland Merriman, Lester Meuller, Barney McCasland, Dan T. McDonald, Merle McMurtry. Fourth Row: Laverne McWhirter, Madeline Neves, Virginia Noell, Lee Norn ' s, Ed D. Parsons, Billy Phillips, John Pierce, Ruby ]o Popeioy, Edwin Putnam, Clarence Ranneleld, William Richard, Winton Rochelle, Mable Russell. Filth Row: ohn W. Shaver, Wyleta Smith, Sid Stout, Mary Anne Swepston, luanita Thacker, Ben Thompson, Doris Townsend, Rex Webster, Lora Lee Weddle, Paul White, Virginia Will, Marie Zimmermann, R. A. Mills. Not for sake of scholarship alone, this Alpha Chi to the upper ten per cent of the scholastic students of the campus a year ' s program of enlightening lectures by prominent faculty mem- bers . . . Art developing of a personality, cultural subjects discussed at meetings of the Tech chapter of Alpha Chi . . . Leon Crutcher, senior Pre-Law student, as president . . . Sent five delegates to regional meet at Canyon where Sponsor R. A. Mills was elected Pres- ident of the Inter-State Conference . . . Student active members are chosen from the upper ten per cent of junior and senior classes . . . initiated 53 new members and re-honored nine old affiliates . . . Feasted at an- nual banquet at Hilton hotel . . . Opposed: Bigotry, narrowness, distinction on any basis save that of real genuine worth . . . More than 500 students have been admitted since organization in 1929 ... is noted for its thorough initiation service that grills candidates via I. 0- test. organization, reached out and brought LEON CRUTCHER President Page 289 A. W. S. First Row: Virginia Black Landwer, Lois Bradford, Katrina Brewer, Marjorie Elder, Merle Haynes. Second Row: Kathryn Johnston, Mary Jo Muller, Frances Elaine Price, Cecile Parsons, Grace Stengel. Representing every woman student on Tech campus, the Association of Women Students was formulated into a cross section league of representatives from all girls ' clubs . . . Ad- vanced leadership among a greater per cent of women . . . Blew breath of life into hope for Women ' s Student Center Building on the campus . . . Sent three delegates to biennial National Convention of Association of Women Students at Los Angeles dur- ing Easter holidays . . . Carefully advised by Dean Mary W. Doak and guided by the steady hand of di- minutive Lois Spraggins, Senior Home Economics coed from Sherman . . . Gave all-girls dances in Women ' s Dormitory . . . Played big sister to Junior Council . . . Encouraged high morals among women students . . . Sought to bring out leadership on campus by suc- cessfully supporting woman student for president . . . Lip-serviced: Making Freshmen girls feel at home on campus, training students for leadership, recognizing outstanding women in activities and scholarship . . . Staged Howdy day to finance trips to national con- vention. LOIS SPRAGGINS President Page 29C JUNIOR COUNCIL BETTY BIZZELL DOROTHY SPENCE Taking the stump to tell girls in Freshman orientation classes about the history, traditions, clubs of the college, Junior Council promotes confidence in first-year students . . . Acquainted new girls with the campus by specially prepared talks from members ... All Junior girls having a C average are members . . . Fifteen Sopho- mores are selected who meet with standards of Juniors . . . Made contacts with Freshman girls and encou- raged participation in campus activities . . . Prexied by Marjorie Elder, South Texas Home Economics coed from Cuero who maintained Junior Council ideas . . . More than 100 Junior girls served on council that made more than one Freshman girl feel she could keep on living . . . Works with Association of Women Students when Association head deems it necessary . . . Meet- ings were held in confidential and enthusiastic style . . . Drifting away from figure-headed organization, Texas Tech ' s Junior Council found a place for Fresh- men girls who could not find themselves . . . service- able . . . inspiring . . . confident . . . straightforward. MARIOR1E ELDER President Page 291 CHEMICAL ENGINEERS f fill f f f Firsf i?ow: Arthur Reinhart, Billy Noyes, Melvin Legge, Frank Cravens, , Raybon Lam, Gerald Foncannon, Julius Smith, Ralph Brady. Second Row: Robert Mann, , Leon Blair, Ed Leidigh, Keats Kaiser, Wayne Vaughn, Dick Sullins, Winton Rochelle. Third Row: John Sheehan, Clarence Ranneteld, William Richards, Leo Corley, Homer Henslee, Dan McDon- ald, lames Litton, Monroe Buchanan, Edward Tonn. Fourth Row: H. L. Hardy, lohn Merritt, Ovid Baker, Kenneth Clinton, Billy Allison, Lee Smith, H. A. Holcomb, Dysart Holcomb, Howard Hurmence, Every member of the Chemical Engineers could pass the acid test for chemical effi- ciency if given a laboratory examination . . . Distinguished from other clubs by their re- quirement of making members appear in club meetings with impromptu speeches on chemical processes . . . test-tube fillers met on first Mondays in _ «|a Chemistry Auditorium . . . Billy Allison, Brownwood ..;■ I senior, acted as President of the club to which all chem- ical engineers belong . . . Sanctioned: Programs for £| JP benefit of engineers who wish to enter field of Chem- ical Engineering after graduation, meetings to encou- rage majors ... to make worthwhile contacts with men already in the profession of chemical usage . . . Would stimulate need for better trained engineers . . . Stage annual picnic in the Spring . . . Attended meet- ings of Science Club . . . Vice-presidented by Dan T. McDonald . . . Secretary, Ovid Baker . . . Faculty Sponsor, Dr. V. Schneider . . . Faculty members of the Chemistry Department presented papers and gave lec- tures on field of chemical warfare, commercial chem- istry, and ethics of the vocation. BILLY ALLISON President Page 292 PRELAW CLUB First Row: Eugene Slruve, Lewis H. Earl, Donald Henry, Maurice Wright, Leon Crutcher, Sid Stout, Ansell Thomas, lames Forbis. Second Row: Aubrey Wilson, Fulton Thomas, Annie Letha Hamilton, Carroll E. Liliard, Jr., James Denton, Frances Elaine Price, I. G. Lindley, Lawson (Buddy! Still. Third Row: Bryan Williams, Wallace Hawkins, Cyrus Landrum, Dudley Brummett, lane Woodruff, Edwin Butler, Coy Tindell, Douglas Tibbets. Hung jury was the last straw of two mock trials benched by Pre-Law Club . . . Presided over by Chief Justice Donald Henry, the Pre-Law Supreme Court tried Jim Lindsey, Editor of The Toreador, because Sallyport called Leila May Zorns snake . . . Emily Martin ' s alleged abductor, Bryan Williams, was defendant in second trial . . . Group works to knit pre-law students and toward better understanding of their study . . . Club meeting speakers: Durwood Bradley, Judge E. L. Pitts, Dr. W. A. Jackson, City Attorney Robert Allen, H. C. Pender, and Dr. Montell E. Ogden . . . Social splurge: Annual banquet in Women ' s Dormitory April 17 . . . Truett Smith, former member, main speaker . . . Rex Webster, popular campus vocalist, repre- sented club in Homecoming Amateur Hour . . . Gen- eral fun: Annual picnic at Buffalo Springs . . . Sends several grads each year to law schools at University of Texas, other topnotch colleges and universities . . . Require hot campaign speeches at each club election . . . Take active part as individuals in campus politics. EUGENE STRUVE President Page 293 f f § v First Row: Kyle Adams, L. B. Assiter, Euline Bullard, Earl Bialy, lean Bain, Willard E. Bauman, Wynona Burnett Second Row: Genevieve Bragg. Mattie Lee Clay, Dorothy Coard, Carlyn Conn, Imogene Cotton, Mary Catherine Couch, Irene Craig, Third Row: Norman Davis, Charles Helen Foote, Klipstein Fry, Emma Gathing, Ely Green, Gordon Hanna, Ruhy E. Hayden. Fourth Row: John Halliday, Arbea Fay lones, Virginia Kerby. lone Killough, Doris Kirk, Lloyd Miller, Edith Masten, Grace Lee Mahoney. Are you in love? asked Paul Popenoe, noted family relationist, in his addresses on Tech campus which were sponsored by the joint Y organizations . . . Speaking on Successful Marriages in College, Pope- noe peaked the year of the two Christian Societies . . . the YMCA-YWCA is open to all students on the campus in sympathy with the purposes of the international work . . . Tech division secured Paul Weaver of Stephens College, Missouri, for a series of lectures on Philoso- phy and Religion . . . Could boast of 80 members dur- ing the year . . . Sent delegates to Hollister, Missouri, to National Conference of Y workers . . . Conner X. Russell, Tyler ministerial student, was President the first semester . . . Lora Lee Weddle, Bonham Senior, suc- ceeded Russell when he left school . . . Had budget of $1200, apportioned carefully to cover expenses . . . Had CONNER RUSSELL First Semester President JLL Page 294 Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. First Row: Ft. E. Martm, ]r., lessie McAllister, Elizabeth Miller, Geraldine McFarland, W. T. Mullinax, Mary Louise McDonald, Austine McDonald. Second flow: Eunice McReynolds, Dan Moore, Dorothy Newell. Ed Parsons, Winton Rochelle, Evelyn Plummer, Conner Russell. Third Row; Grace K. flea. Marian flogers, T. H. Stewart, Jr., Pearl Scarborough, Warren Sparksman, Richard Sparks, Katherine Speed, Dorothy Thornton. Fourth How: Iris Thornton. Coleta Wise. Lora Lee Weddle, W. H. Wright, Frank Wilson, Betty o Watson. Edna Walters, Dr. Archie I. Bahm. charge of the Older Girl ' s Conference of High School girls which was attended by 125 South Plains lassies . . . Visited sick students . . . Has Board of Directors composed of faculty and Lubbock business men . . . Fern Babcock, Regional Secretary of Y visited the campus . . . Sponsored a mixer each month in dormi- tories . . . Hallowe ' en party . . . tacky party . . . spring celebration . . . Has members from every de- partment of the school . . . Heard Lubbock business men and ministers at semi-monthly meetings . . . Ably sponsored by Dr. and Mrs. Archie Bahm . . . Besides all-college mixers, a Freshman party was given by the clubs . . . The local chapter wishes to attain in the best way possible an understanding and appreciation of religion in a broad sense, Lora Lee Weddle ex- plained. LORA LEE WEDDLE Second Semester President Page 295 FORUM First Row: Pauline Edged, Mary Howell. Doris Jobe, {Catherine Johnston. Second Row: leannette lones, Helen Lehmberg, Cecile Parsons, Doris Townsend. Keynote is keeping out of print, avoiding publicity . . . Limited to fifteen girls of junior and senior standing . . . headed this year by Helen Lehmberg, Mason speech senior . . . Sponsored six Fireside Forum programs covering subjects ranging from hobbies to etiquette of travel . . . Pushed Women ' s Recognition Service . . . Urges expansion of leadership and democracy on campus . . . Members heard local priest expound on religious beliefs of the day . . . Impressive conclave: Annual initiation of new members . . . Vice-president, Jean- nette Jones; secretary, Lois Spraggins; Met: Monday nights to knock out kinks of campus difficulties . . . Represented by heterogenous groups of coeds . . . value is the word for Forum, a college dean is quoted as saying . . . New members announced and honored at Recognition Service . . . Dean Mary W. Doak, Spon- sor . . . Members required to maintain good scholastic standing . . . Secretary and Secretary-elect of Student Body are Forum members . . . A.W.S. President is Forum affiliate . . . Other club presidents represented . . . All girls live in hopes of becoming a Forum mem- ber. HELEN LEHMBERG President Page 296 PLANT INDUSTRY First Row: Earnest Bailey, Cecil Brashear. Perry Bowser, Gene Barnett, Judge Garrett. Second Row: W. D. Holley, Lloyd Miller, Audra L. Mitchell, Melvin Mitchell, Carl Mooseberg, Alton Owens. Popularly known as the P. I. club . . . meets more like a class than any other club on the campus . . . sponsors a crop and grain judging contest within the department ... in the spring for students interested in this field of agriculture . . . Melvin Mitchell, senior Winters student, planted himself into the presidency . . . The Plant Industry club blossomed out on March 20, 1936, for the purpose of raising funds to support the senior crop and grain judging team . . . officers for the second year besides Mitchell were Cecil Brashear, Vice-President; Perry Bowser, Secretary-Treasurer; C. E. Russell, Head Professor of Plant Industry, is sponsor ... I consider the P. I. club one of the most beneficial of any on the campus as quoted from Dean A. H. Leidigh. MELVIN MITCHELL President Page 297 DEBATE CLUB ♦- z First Row: Lewis Earl, Rex Webster, Artie Hicks, Maurice Wright, Alma lones, Eron Ga ord. Second Row: Jane Woodruti, Lillian Heard, Helen Lehmberq. Hazel Pollard, Mary Ruth Holt, Johnnie Birdwell, Gladys Pratt. Third Row: Will Beth Dodson, Ernesteen Lockhart, Arthur Dale Jackson, Junius Carter, John P. Kilgore, Carl Hyatt, Ranell Chaney. Separately organized from debate teams, the Texas Tech Debate Club aims to further interest in intercollegiate debate . . . Discusses the annual debate question . . . Formal argu- mentation . . . hopes to discover new talent among Tech students . . . Sponsors intercol- legiate Debate Team . . . Meeting twice monthly, the Tech arguers sponsored Alton Hankins and Junius Car- _™ _____ ,. f er Hazel Pollard, Johnnie Birdwell, Betty West, Jane Woodruff . . . Annah Jo Pendleton, Professor of Speech, I_fcgZ| _ sponsors the club that is open to all students of the col- lege who are interested in debate as an intercollegiate activity . . . Membership is not limited to students of the college teams . . . Local clubs sponsored fourteen in Durant, Oklahoma contest . . . Club aids students who expect to become high school debate coaches . . . Practical . . . Junius Carter and Alton Hankins served as Presidents, first and second semesters, res- pectively. JUNIUS CARTER President Page 298 A. S. C First Row: C. E. Gresham, Terry Shahan, H. A. Bozeman, Cecil Overby. H. L. Bailey- Second Row: Clytus Paris, A. F. Reese, Joe Stanley, Joe Mapes, R. S. Woodrutt, W. Bain. Third Row: Herbert Rule, John Emmett, Group Picture, Wayland Merriman, Fred Langdale. Placed fourth burning candle on its birthday cake of advancement . . . Claims member- ship as student chapter of American Society of Civil Engineers that sprang from local organ- ization Texas Tech Civils . . . Sponsored by the professor with the contagious smile, J. H. Jimmie Murdough, head of department of civil en- gineering . . . Promotes brotherhood by contacting ac- quaintances with American Society of Civil Engineers, top men of engineering units . . . Social hot spots of season: envigorating smoker in downtown hotel and formal feast for inauguration of new officers . . . Helms- man Joe B. Mapes steered mates through pacific and accomplishing year . . . Mapes with Wayland Mer- riman as second mate and Jack Quinlan as keeper of f the logs, cooperated with school of engineering in cast- ing the Ninth Annual Engineer ' s Show . . . The high- way builders open membership to underclassmen for vocational guidance. IOE B. MAPES President Page 299 O • IT . £j . O . Firsf Row: ohn L. King, loe J. Caldwell, Jr., Al Ray Cooper, Lee Noiris, Jr., Hoyse McMurtry. Second Row: Ben Thompson, H. A. Holcomb, Hall McCiummen, Lyle Donaldson, Robert Woodrutt. Third Row: Robert Houston, Lee Smith, Clarence Ranneteld, Bill McDavid, Dysart Holcomb, H. A. Leslie. Edited thirty-four page bulletin of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Scholarship . . . Made up of the upper eight per cent, according to grade-point averages of Junior and Senior Engineers . . . The four-year old organization has applied for membership in a National Honorary Scholastic fraternity . . . Headed by John L. King, Senior Electrical Engineer, it tends to promote and give due recognition in the Division of Engineering . . . Their thirty-four page publication con- tains information about the division and about the Scholarship society . . . Vice-President Joe Caldwell . . . Secretary Al Ray Cooper . . . Sponsor H. F. Godeke, Head Professor of Mechanical Engineering . . . Mark Townsend, 1936 graduate received scholar- ship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . . Joe Caldwell and Ben Thompson, 1937 graduates, have received fellowships at the Boston school. Page 300 PHI PSI First Row: Darrell Branton, Millard Hall, Walter Dillard, Jr.. M. E. Heard, Walter Hicks, James Litton. Second flow: Ersel Matthews, Kendall Onstott, H. C. McKenna, fl. F. Bedding, lames Sheehan, Willard Paul Temple. Phi Psi, Textile fraternity, Kappa chapter, has most colorful iniation service on the campus . . . Seven prospective members go through dyeing vats . . . Become members and are honored at a buffet supper . . . This year ' s new members are Arthur Foster, Charles Wilson, Harold Cocanougher, Frank Eddins, E. V. Boynton, Rudell Russell, Harold McDaniel . . . Leo C. Trimm, Senior student, made trip over South . . . Ex-members scattered in Southern Textile mills . . . Ersel Matthews, first semester President . . . Darrell Branton, second semester President . . . Promotes good fellowship a- mong Textile Engineering students . . . Agent of the advancement of art in textile manufacture . . . Spon- sored Cotton Carnival . . . Crowned Cotton Queen . . . Made awards to outstanding members . . . Tech chap- ter is only one west of the Mississippi . . . Members must have C average, sophomore standing . . . M. E. Heard, Acting Head Department of Textile Engineer- ing, sponsors the group. ERSEL MATTHEWS President Page 301 A. S. M. E First Row: Jim Kelley, William E. Jones, Howard Beachamp, Howard Buchenau. Martin True, Berry Jacobsen. Second Row: Lester Mueller, Al Ray Cooper, Paul Coneway, Henry Meredith, Max Nuttall, Lee Norn ' s. Third Row: J. T. Pinkston, Ben Priest, Robert Houston, Hugo Richter, Bill Wright, Charles Howell, Hugh Ayres. Regional trek: sent delegates to sectional convention and took off second honors with Henry Meredith, Junior student, presenting a paper on Design of a Natural Gas Burner in an Internally Firing Boiler . . . Third place ranking was won by Tech ' s own Charles Merrell Howell with his dissertation on The Conversion of Medium Sized Oil Engine to a Gas Engine . . . Na- tional society is second largest in the United States . . . Sponsored laying of a second bronze plaque in the south cloister of the Engineering building, honoring St. Patrick, the patron saint of all engineers . . . Ap- pointed Freshman members of the association to keep the plaques clean . . . Quit blasting forges long enough to listen to technical, other absorbing talks on the profession of mechanical engineering . . . Awards a book from the national organization to outstanding student of ASME . . . President Al Ray Cooper, Senior student from Ralls . . . Aided Engineer ' s Show by lend- ing hand in their department . . . Department Head H. F. Godeke tendered his services as society sponsor AL RAY COOPER President Page 302 A. . 1 • Hi • ti . First Row: Joe J. Caldwell. Jr., Hillery A. Leslie, John King, Lyle Donaldson, Hall McCrummen. Second Bow: Norman Emlinqei, Ben Thompson, George Dupiee, Joshua Parks, Philip Sterret. Third Row: John Pierce, Lloyd Heggin, John R. Ragland, Cedric Giagg, Edward P. Lynch. Directed by Chairman Joe J. Caldwell, the sixth year of the American Institute of Electri- cal Engineers was climaxed with colorful banquet given senior electrical engineering students by junior members . . . Nicknamed A I Double E . . . Most ambitious accomplishment: Sixteen members attended Southwest District AIEE meet in Dallas last fall . . . Sponsored: Electrical division of Engineers ' show, managed by Hillery A. Leslie ... In- cluded giant 2.000,000-volt Tesla coil with staggering potential in artificial lightning . . . Caldwell devised, operated talking light beam that reproduced uncanny sounds in uncanny way . . . Electricals were respon- sible for the huge E of revolving lights that attracted passersby to the show . . . Chairman Caldwell be- came second Texas Tech graduate to win scholarship to Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . . Twenty- four active members . . . Five in Alpha Chi . . . Seven in SPES . . . Other officers: Frank K. Fellows, Vice- Chairman; Leslie, Secretary-Treasurer; C. V. Bullen, Sponsor. JOE J. CALDWl Chairman Page 303 ENGINEERING SOCIETY weammsmmmKmatatmjk itJitAM araiiK ' it- ' -- ' - --- - - - - ' - - - Enrollment in the Engineering Division means membership in the Engineering Society. Engineering Society takes pride in having largest roster of any departmental society ever on campus . . . Ending one of most colorful years in the ten years of brilliant history of University of West Texas . . . Organized and formed into the Engineering corporation . . . Maintains a loan fund for worthy engineers ... In- sists on scholastic and social endeavors . . . Termi- nated social season with Engineers ' Picnic at City Park for so-called Hazy Engineers who had spent their school year over sweltering forges ... on brilliant dynamos . . . over spinning looms ... or with eyes on compass . . . Takes charge of three perennial ac- tivities of the society: A formal dance ... an elite ban- quet with women present . . . and their annual pic- nic . . . Formed into corporation in 1935 by a half- score of representative engineer leaders . . . Elmo Knudson, Scandinavian Mechanical, served as Presi- dent of the 600 members. Tends toward establishing cooperative spirit a- ELMO KNUDSON President mong all departments of the division . . . For the third Page 304 ENGINEERING SOCIETY Part oi the several hundred members oi the Engineering Society are shown here. time placed first in Homecoming stunt . . . This year featured a hospital scene in Home- coming Amateur Hour that brought Homecoming loving cup into permanent ownership of Engineering Society . . . Brought movies on engineering subjects that were shown to mem- bers . . . Made contacts with leading construction men of Texas . . . Helped place division among the select groups of schools in the country . . . Has alumni in all fields of engineering . . . Several have obtained scholarships to Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology . . . Issued New Deal program for engineers obtaining liberal education . . . Furthered extensive reading for members . . . Maintained loyalty among members . . . Encouraged participation in campus activities . . . Keeps in touch with graduates . . . Cooperated with publicity for the division and for col- lege . . . Fraternal organization with closely knitted membership . . . Professional highlight: Work on Ninth Annual Engineer ' s Show. LEO CORLEY Vice-President Page 305 GARGOYLE SOCIETY First Row: Maston Jones, Bill McDavid, Frances Turner, Lillian De Shazo, Hoyse McMurtry, Harry Cummings. Melzine Rockey, L. V. Assister, James Shortt. Second Row: Emogene Johnston, Bill Sasser, Don Benson, Harry Buckley, Muton Bynum, Harry Blocker, Wilson Grimes, Julia Pollard, Betty Pack. Third Row: Joe Elder, Margie Ragle, Rosalyn Bass, F. A. Kleinschmidt, R. 1. Lockard, Natalie Tandy, J. D. Copeland, Ross Wayne Dowdy, Evelyn Ellington. Fourth Row: Gerald lake, Edwin Forrest, Elizabeth Anne Price, Katrina Brewer, George Wilson, Dale Buckner, Earl Trimble, James Curry, Dan Moore. A fine world it would be without artists to drarw pictures and architects to plan homes, so they were asked for, and they were given . . . Tech got her share of both that are organized in what is called the Gargoyle club . . . For members of architecture and allied arts depart- ments . . . Dropped paint brushes and T-squares to stage perennial Bowery dance in drawing room where scene of lottery and East Side dancing occurred . . . Out-of-doors: picnicked at Two Draw Lake near Post on May 16 . . . Entertained: by Miss Alice Beckett, Lub- bock Senior High School teacher who told about trip to revolutionized-t orn Spain with illustrations of motion pictures . . . gave a prize at end of school to most out standing freshman in the departments . . . Observed Yuletide and had Christmas party . . . cooperated in bringing Sandzen art exhibit to the West Texas Museum . . . Eighty members of club . . . Harry Buckley, Fort Worth student, was president first semester . . . Suc- ceeded by Maston Jones, Lubbock . . . Lives up to what is said about it . . . Encourages professional interest in the field of architecture and art . . . R. I. Lockard, Pro- HARRY BUCKLEY fessor of Architecture, sponsored the group. President Page 306 BLOCK AND BRIDLE First Row: R. C. Mitchell, Herbert Browder, R. C. Mowery, Merle McMurty, Pegues Houston, A. T. Fowler, Ralph Riddel, C. C. Nunnally. Second Row: Walter Coulson, Steve Brock, Clitton Cole, Hood Wills, Burrell lackson, Floyd Williams, Archie Meekma, Leldon Hudson. Third Row: W. B. McAlister, John H. Baumgardner, Lewis Dunlap, Dean Harmon, George Tale. Neill Flemister, lohn larvis, Raymond King. Block and Bridle Club was the power behind the throne in putting the second annual La Remuda on its feet . . . Creators of Animal Husbandry Department established it four years ago in hopes of raising standards of that department . . . W. L. Stangel, sponsor, served as Head of National Block and Bridle Clubs and directed livestock exhibits at Texas Centennial in 1936 . . . Spon- sors: Annual Sophomore-Junior Livestock Judging con- test . . . Feasted at annual banquet . . . Member of Na- tional Block and Bridle Club and sends delegates to National Convention . . . Monetary support from La Remuda of October 10 financed judging team s to Kan- sas City and Chicago . . . Winbum McAllister, The Monarch of Aggieland, was master of ceremonies . . . Has members on all livestock judging teams . . . serve tasty sizzling barbecues . . . George Tate, Lockney Sen- ior, headed the campus unit this year with a steering staff of Leldon Hudson, Vice-President, and C. C. Nun- nally, Secretary . . . Considered as honorary club for Animal Husbandry majors. GEORGE TATE President Page 307 AGGIE CLUB First Row: Ray L. Chappelle, Manuel Ayeis, Herbert Browder, L. H. Batton, B. C. Drinkard, R. C. Mitchell, C. B. Bently, W. B. McAllister. Second Row: Leldon Hudson, Escar Parker, Truitt Sides, George Tale, Howard C. Weatherby, Hood Wills, William Hall, Johnny Key. Third Row: Walter Coulson, Dean Harmon, ]oe Randolph, Truett McCuiston, Billy Coalson, I. W. Greene, C. C. Nunnally, Alton Owens. Ran and played with Home Economics girls May 6 to end their season of recreation . . . Played an important role in sending International Livestock Judging Team to the International Livestock Judging Contest in November . . . Sent team oif by honoring them with smoky- sizzling pig roast . . . High light of socials: Annual Ag- gie Club Banquet at Women ' s Dormitory with mob of 350 alumni, ex-students, members, guests . . . Social calendar included: Annual dance, Aggie-Home Eco- nomics party, and picnic dance at Lubbock Country Club . . . Faculty adviser, Mart G. Pederson who spon- sored club, had 130 paid members . . . First semester prexy Carl Moosberg preceded R. C. Mitchell, helms- man for second semester . . . Maintains loan fund for members of club who need tuition funds . . . Observed twelfth natal day this year . . . Entered W. D. Holley in amateur contest at homecoming celebration in Novem- ber . . . Holley plagiarized contemporary Bob Burns on his Tech-made bazooka . . . Helped on perennial Block and Bridle La Remuda Rodeo . . . Presented: Medals to most outstanding division members. CARL MOOSBERG President Page 308 F. F. A First Row: Manuel Ayeis, Gaston Bailey, Gene Barnett. Forrest Baumgardner, John Baumgardner, C. B. Bentley, Zane Brewer. Steve Brock, Lane Black. Second Row: Chiton Cole, Maurice Cowan, Walter Coulson, Cloyse Drinkard, Louis Dunlap, Glen Eldridge, A. T. Fowler, Dan Heirman, lames Hill. Third Bow: Henry Houston, Pegues Houston, Horton Howell, W. D. Holly, Burrell lackson, lack tones, lohnney Key, Raymond King, Arch Lamb. Fourth Row: William Mebus, Archie Meekma, Audra Mitchell, R. C. Mitchell, Lloyd Miller, Melvin Mitchell. C. A. Moosberg, Winburn McAllister, I. D. McCracken. Filth Row: Truitt McCuiston, Winston. Mclnnis, C. C. Nunnally, Alton Owens, I. R. Payne, !r., Richard Phillips, I. Russell Read, Ralph Riddell, Phillip Bobbins. Sixth Row: Van Scheid, Truitt Sides, Richard Sparks, Richard Snyder, George Tate, T. . Taylor, Howard Weatherly, lack Welch, Dean Williams, lim Wiman. The four-year-old Cyril Luker collegiate chapter of limited to students who are meeting the Smith- Hughes requirements of Agricultural Vocational teaching . . . was prexied by Cloyse Drinkard and Dean Harmon . . . Aims: To develop aggressive worthwhile agriculture leadership, to en- courage thrift and scholarship and to advance the cause of vocational agriculture in the United States . . . Ray L. Chappelle, head professor of Agricultural Eco- nomics, was faculty adviser for Tech Chapter . . . The Cyril Luker chapter was host to several hundred South Plains high school vocational agriculture students . . . Dean Harmon said: The objective of this organization is supplementing the regular agriculture course in the purposes of the national organization . . . Activities sponsored by the chapter this year: County, district contests in Chapter-conducting, one-act play, debate, news story writing. the Future Farmers of America is CLOYSE DRINKARD President Page 309 DAIRY CLUB  ,-. i ■ 111 ftwffP W hite-clad Dairy Club members operate a tull-time lactory. Old cheeses, new cheeses, round cheeses, square cheeses . . . Four-year-old Texas Tech Dairy Club rode high at the annual April Panhandle-Plains Dairy Show held in Plainview . . . Displayed their dairy products made in laboratories of the Texas Tech Dairy Manufacturers Department . . . Made innovation by showing motion pictures of dairy plants and dairy equipments . . . Fea- tured club program that showed 25 varieties of cheeses . . . Last supper of the social season was a banquet in Women ' s Dormitory where leading alumni, and special guests addressed club members . . . Five members toured strategic points of Texas and visited over 50 dairy plants, making personal contacts with leading Texas dairymen, learning new tricks of the trade . . . Maintained concessions of dairy products at annual Engineers ' Show . . . Sponsored annual invitation hop at college dormitory . . . Helmsman for Fall semester was Maurice Cowan . . . Spring activities guided by Samuel Hill . . . Mart G. (Pete) Pederson was faculty sponsor . . . Three members with name of Hill held of- fice in dairy industry throughout milk station of Texas. MAURICE COWAN President Page 310 HOME ECONOMICS CLUB ' . ifitf HF 3 fifjv % ' lfw Wlf|f|tf| | | W fli it tf « i a LF $ i ? Lf £ 0PP ft fsi ' • «uf -• ■ fLf «.f BBP Q ra ' uft First Row: Edifh jAfcarman, Mildred AUdredge, Anice Armstrong, Jimmie Bailey, Iris Bailey, Jean Bain. Stella Beard, Doris Benge, Billie Bloom, Nedra Berry, Mary Beth Boyd, Geraldine Brownlee, Hazel L. Bryant, Beatrice Buchanan, Anne Buckley. Second Row: Maryedna Burck, Loveta Carmichael, Mary Margaret Carter, Edwinna Cearley, Juanita Chance, Geraldine Clewell, Oleta Cole, Vada Cole, Frances Cooper, Mary Catherine Couch, Jean Cox, Debbie Crouch, Bennett Curry, Para Cobb, Virginia Carlock, Oleta Claiborn. Third Row: Mrs. Ruby Dean Davis, Virginia Donnell, Marion Draper, Beryl Dull, Mildred Dunlop, Pauline Edgett, Marjorie Elder, Jean Fagala, Betty Farley, Christine Fincher, Thelma Fisher, Ernestine Francis, Helen Foot, Emma Gathing, Floy Glenn, Minnie Gore. Fourth Row: Eunice Graham, Barbara Green, LoraLee Gowdy, Helen Hanschu, Elizabeth Hawley, Margaret Hemby, Dot Henderson, Allene Bowers Henry, Ruth Heyden, Mary Higday, Louester Higgins, Her- mione Holcomb, Beth Houston, Inez Holliman, Callie Ree Jackson, Eloise Jackson. Fifth Row: Katherine James, Jewell Jennings, Vivian Johnson, Arbea Fay Jones, Amye Kerr, lone Killough, Geraldine Lanslord, Jev ell Little, Josephine Looney, Dorothy Lynn, Doris Loyd, Delilah Manire. La Trice Messick, Wilma Milburn. Virginia Millard, Annie Faye Miller. Sixth Row: Edith Masten, Mary Leda McAdams, Kay McCoy, Dorothy McCuistion, La Verne McWhirter, Willena Nelson, Virginia Otter- mer, Joye Pace, Cora Palmer, Gladys Pierce, Evelyn Plummer, Gladys Poe, Dicey Powell, Mary Price, Orvalene Price. Seventh Row: Anna Pearl Puett, Helen Priebe, Martye Poindexter, Nita Polk, Marie Randerson, Vione Randle, Ima Dora Richards, Mary Lou Richards, La Verne Roach, Helen Rohrer, Rose Rooney, V irginia Robertson, Mary Scott Seward, Lillian Simmons, Annie Shuttlesworth, Hope Shook. Eighth Row: Winolee Sharp, Marie Shook, Cleta Bell Smallin, Jackie Snelson, Doris Spann, Mary Frances Standefer, Mary Elizabeth Stanford, Elizabeth Sterrett, Pearl Stone. Mayvis Strickland. Wynona Swepston, Dora Strawn. Emily Teeple, Iris Thornton, Mary Elizabeth Titus, Frances Titus. Ninth Row: Doris Townsend, Mayme Twyford, Dorothy Thornton, Frances Waikup, Sybil Nell Waggoner, Louise Weil, Norma West. Anne Ruth Williams, Margaret Williams, Coleta Wise, Mary Wilson, Ruby Wood, Louie Wright. Mina Marie Wolf, Annie Louise Watkins. Treva Young. DORIS TOWNSEND President Page 311 WOMEN ' S DORM ASSOCIATION With the Other Hall, These Gills Compose the Body o 320 Co-eds Who Call Women ' s Dormitory Home. ' JEANNETTE JONES First Semester President The Women ' s Dormitory Self-governing Association caused a demonstration of law and oraer this year that would make many a city government look like nursery school . . . Ably led during the first semester by Mayor Jeannette Jones, the Council and the House Senate passed, enforced rules which made the small city of 320 inhabitants a delightful place to call home . . . All business closed and a holiday was declared for each of the year ' s social highlights: Mammoth Thanks- giving banquet, Yuletide pajama gathering, informal dance, annual spring formal blowout . . . Cecile Par- sons continued government of, by and for the femmes Page 312 WOMEN ' S DORM ASSOCIATION Half the Women ' s Dormitory Personnel Immediately Alter Lunch during the second semester . . . Occasional dinner pro- grams lent spice to flat routine and proved talent to be epidemic among tribe . . . Constant effort to make ver- itable garden of the residence-hall was expended by Vice-President Nell Walker, Secretary Lila Marie Bran- nen ... By day and night, Mrs. Elizabeth Young acted hostess, cared for sick, maintained homelike atmos- phere in the giant domain . . . Crown of year ' s pro- grams: movies and talk by Eben G. Fine, traveler and lecturer, on Rambles Through Rockies, which was art exhibition poem, sermon rolled into one. CEC1LE PARSONS Second Semester President Page 313 TENNIS CLUB • m f %f f , ,. r f f f First Row: Jewell Bishop, H. A. Bozeman, Mary Carpenter, Klipstein Fry, John Halliday, Vida Harston, Artie Hicks. Second Row: Mary Ruth Holt, Sue Hood, Juanita Johnson, Melvin Legg, Gay Miller, Elva Mae Mills, Ben Moore. Third Bow: Virginia Muller, Dora Nell McCarty, Bill McDavid, Geraldine Norn ' s, Owen Lloyd, Thelma Parker. Fourth Bow: Lois Paulsel, Frances Beal, Joe Bichardson, Melzine Bockey, Agnes Rowley, Marie Shook, Dorothy Spence, Paul Vinyard. Enthusiastic Tennis Club members entered the second year of organization with such zeal characteristic of tennis players . . . Sponsored by J. G. Allen, the tribe aims to create suffi- cient interest in the game to establish it as a major sport for both men and women on the campus . . . Staged colorful sports dance in Gymnasium featuring athletic equipment in decorations . . . Spon- sored dormitory dance . . . Held two intramural tour- neys for boys and one intramural contest for coeds . . . Built two courts for Varsity members south of Women ' s Dormitory . . . Hosts to visiting Varsity teams . . . Prex- ied by Aubrey McCarty, Lubbock racqueteer . . . Vice- President, Harry Jordan . . . Minute keeper, Lois Paul - sel . . . Thousands of townspeople, campusites, visiting regional High School delegates viewed exhibition match put on at giant Athletic Fiesta . . . Members are seen at all times of the day in shorts or slacks serving, lobbing, smashing balls in heated games or pausing at the College Bookstore for refreshments. AUBREY McCARTY President Page 314 PRE-MED CLUB First Row: Gerald York, Joe Richardson, Jack Carlington, Charles Brown, Mrs. Virginia Black Landwer, Helen Ruth Elliot. Second Row: Thomas Hilburn, Kathryn Hudman, Paul ones, Weldon Kolb, Dan Smoots, Duane Fuqua. Cross-bones and skulls. Biology and labs, late hours and formulas tell tales that there are Pre-Medical students on the campus . . . Prexied by Clarence Mast, the Tech Pre-Med club conscientiously attended meetings of their club to listen to prominent South Plains physicians and Tech faculty on the modern problems of surgery, medicine and other phases of medical training . . . Ex- ists because of the need of a unifying agent, to create a common interest among the Pre-Medical students and to give them an opportunity to get an expansive vision of the scope of the field and profession of Medicine . . . Annual banquet was staged by the club . . . Sponsored all-college dance . . . ' twud be a dead world without doctors, so Texas Tech serves as a training ground for saviours of the future . . . Encourages high scholarship . . . Sponsored by Dr. R. C. Goodwin, Head Department of Chemistry . . . Ardell N. Taylor, Vice-President . . . Wendell Watson, Secretary, served as aides to Presi- dent Mast. CLARENCE MAST President Page 315 MEN ' S DORMITORY That Hall o Men ' s Dormitory Residents Who Live in West Wing HENRY MEREDITH President Four engineering students were chosen officers in the men ' s dormitory governing association ... in an elec- tion held the first week of school . . . Officers elected were Henry Meredith, president; Myron McCormick, vice-president; Al Ray Cooper, secretary; James Alex- ander, treasurer; Morris Palmer, historian; and Don Henry, parliamentarian; the Association sponsored monthly dances and semi-monthly Sunday after- noon programs . . . Tech faculty and Lubbock busi- ness men lectured and conducted roundtable dis- Page 316 MEN ' S DORMITORY East Wing residents get together on the iront steps. Social Director Mrs. Bennie Butord peers out from the center cussion on Sunday afternoons . . . Mrs. Bennie Bu- ford, housemother for three years, maintains affection- ate and motherly attitude toward her 320 sons . . . As- sociation provides disciplinary system for boys and their campus home . . . Christmas tea given for faculty members . . . tea given honors seniors ... to provide musical entertainment pianos were kept in the lounge and in the dining hall . . . Six student advisers regu- lated conduct of the boys. STEPHEN BROC1 Vice-President Page 317 LIEDERKRANZ First Row: Crystelle Scudder, Anna Feme Hudson, James Henninger, Joyce Glass. Second Row: Bill Bragg, Gerald York, John H. Halliday, Norman On, Ruby Ellison. Most definitely exotic club on campus . . . Organized to promote appreciation, enjoy- ment of German folklore . . . Encourage love of music from Deutschland . . . Spend most of meeting time singing, tunes, lyrics from land of beautiful beer gardens . . . Carl Henninger, Associate Professor of Foreign Languages, sponsored group . . . Told stories, facts of Germany . . . Monthly conclaves centered around peace problems of the world . . . Der Fuehrer ' s threats against world friendliness make good point of departure for diplomatic discussions centering around German influences . . . Stimulation of interest in German languages incidental aim, accom- plishment . . . Climaxing blaze of color for year: Gala international costume dance . . . Emphasized lighter side of a stiff course . . . ' German picnic with every- thing was summit of outdoor activity for group . . . Brought parks of Berlin to Plains of West Texas . . . f v James Henninger presided . . . Ruth Black was Vice- Hf m President . . . Gerald York, Secretary-Treasurer . . . 7 W Small membership did many things. RUBY ELLISON President Page 318 SIGMA GAMMA EPSILON First Row: Claude Thompson, George Thomas, George Carrithers, Hugh McCullouqh, Alvin Attaway, Barney McCasland. Second Bow: Raymond Lamb, Clarence Cole, Jack Hultmyer, Deane Rogers, Wichita Sheldon, Manson Allen. A prospector, donkey-pack, gold pan, digging picks spell initiation day for Sigma Gamma Epsilon, local chapter of Alpha Beta, Geology fraternity . ship after they accompanied Helen, Mexican burro, pledge expedition as they panned for gold . . . Aims to further: Social, scholastic, scientific advancement of its members and extension of friendship between mem- ber schools . . . local chapter has near score members with Dr. M. A. Stainbrook, Professor of Geology, as sponsor . . . Claude Thompson, Senior Geology student, served both semesters as President of the fraternity on Tech campus . . . one meeting each week . . . St ag banquet . . . Smoker each fall for looking over pros- pective pledges . . . The fraternity has national con- vention every two years, and is attended by Tech chap- ter .. . Other officers: George T. Thomas, Vice-Presi- dent; George Carrithers, Secretary. . . Six Geology majors took member- over the campus on the Geology :LAUDE THOMPSON President Page 319 BOOK REVIEWERS f f t Firsf flow: Dorothy Abernathy, Mary K. Agerton, Iris Bailey, Virginia Carlock, Priscilla Davis, Maxine Fry, Marie George. Second flow: (Catherine Johnston, Mary Anne Kimble, Ruby Lee Leary, Madeline Neves, Frances Elaine Price, Bridie Fae Partain, Ruby Jo Popejoy. Third Row: Charlotte Ratlilt, Linda Treadwell, Mary Florence Van Home, Mary Beth Whiteman, Nell Walker, Anne Williams, Emily Martin. Fourth Row: Gretchen Liser, Nan Overton, Charlotte Cone, Sara Sue McWilliams, Mary Ann Stanberry, Betty Alice Gordon, Helen jane Gratke, Marian Bullock. Rounding out second full year on campus . . . Girls ' literary group with large, growing membership . . . Draws constituents from all classes, social, and academic divisions . . . Hear sparkling reviews from versed literati on campus . . . Encourages student critical read- ing . . . Covers all periods of writing . . . From Gone With the Wind to The Last Puritan . . . Forty-five members . . . Meets each first and third Tuesdays . . . Each session brightened by open-minded open forums . . . Brings distant literature closer . . . Heightens true value of reading . . . Minimum of social activities . . . Closed year with tea May 5 . . . Charlotte Ratliff, presi- dent, is gifted violinist . . . Secretary Ruby Lee Leary edits religious news for The Toreador, writes for LA VENTANA . . . Appropriate sponsor: Miss Elizabeth H. West, who knows more about books, inside and out- side, than any other Texas Tech personage . . . Gwen Marr Davis directed programs . . . Promises to be- come center of feminine literary activities. CHARLOTTE RATLIFF President Page 320 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB First Row: Donald Henry, Cyrus Landrum, J. G. Lindley, Eugene Struve, Rex Webster. Second Row: Rose E. Hubbard, Nellie Katherine Speed, Lewis Earl, Elizabeth Bryant, Mary Melcher Howell, Leon Crutcher. Third Row: Arthur Dale Jackson, Ruth Marie Howard, Maurice Wright, James Denton, Truman Hines, James Forbis. Democracy, dictatorship, defense, detour around war. Peace promoter Donald Grant of Edinburg, Scotland, stole the show at the conflab of International Relations Clubs of West Texas and New Mexico staged on the campus March 5 and 6. Other speakers: Amy Heming- way Jones of Camegie Endowment for International Peace, Mrs. Burton W. Musser, Utah State Senator. Members of local club presented papers on pertinent international questions. Discussions centered around Hitler, Mussolini, other foes of peace. Grant ' s bright sayings, spoken in traditional Island English, and his twinkling Scotch eyes reminded visitors of the Duke of Windsor, former King Edward VIII. Convention cul- minated year fraught with international discussions of highest import. Steering committee: Don Henry, Presi- dent; Cyrus Landrum, Vice-President; J. G. Lindley, Sec- retary; and Dr. Montell Ogdon, Sponsor. Page 321 BAPTIST STUDENT UNION ' Ml firs flow: Dr. C. E. Hereford, L. E. Waite, Corinne Brown. W. P. Clement, Paul Sparkman. Second Row: Albert Battel, lames Litton, Ruby ]o Popejoy, Dean Williams, Ruby Ethel Hoyden, Fannie B. Bratcher. Third Row: Bonnie Bell, Grace Brooks, Virginia Noell, Imogene Webster, Pauline Reed, Truitt McCuistion. Baptist Student Union is south-wide in scope . . . Has organization on every campus in the South . . . Objects and activities of the Baptist denomination are kept in clear view foi college students . . . the Tech chapter of the Baptist Student Union will be host to the State Convention in its annual session to be held in Lubbock October 29-30, 1937 . . . The Council acts as an executive committee by unifying and correlating the work of the unit organization . . . Seeks: To stimulate more active participation in the religious programs of the church . . , Paul Sparkman, Tech unit President, said: We are attempting to obtain interest from all Bap- tist students registered at Tech by bringing all churches together in a body . . . Corrine Brown, full-time Student Secretary, was mainspring in BSU set-up . . . Social high-spots: Ended yeai with last suppering at an elaborate spring banquet on May 7, and a union picnic at City Park . . . It ' s a successful campus that can bring 400 people under one roof to work as the Baptist Student Union did . . . Registrar W. P. Clement served as faculty adviser to the assembly of Baptist churches. Page 322 SOCK AND BUSKIN Fiist Row: Ruth Applewhite. Katrina Brewer, Marian Bullock, Ann Coleman, loyce Craven, Betty Curry, Lois Marie Daniel, Cwen Man Davis, Priscilla Davis, Will Beth Dodson. Nina Opal Ellis. Second Row: Thelma Ford, Marilynn Fry. Eron Catlord, Elizabeth Green. Gladys Hall. Christine Harris, Lillian Heard, I. S. Henninger, Ernestine Herring, Mary Ruth Holt, Mary Howell. Third Row: R. V. Jones, Katherine Kersh, Helen Lehmberg, Ernesteen Lockhart, Maxine Mullican, Sara Sue McWilliams. Dorothy Nabors. Ruth Pirtle, Hazle Pollard, Gladys PraK, Charlotte Ratlill. Fourth Row: Rose lean Rodgers, Crystelle Scudder, Elvira Smith, Nellie Katherine Speed, Georgia Wadley, Rex Webster, lane Woodrull, Virginia Will, Billy Yeatts, Marie Zimmermann, Loraine Taylor. Thirty is not written for Sock and Buskin when club meetings are over . . . boasts theatrical reading . . . Sock and Buskin symbolizes comedy and tragedy, names held over from early dramas in which Sock (low heeled boot) and Buskin (high heeled boot) played important parts . . . Members produce plays for club meetings . . . Guest speaker: Dr. W. B. Gates on Gielgud ' s Hamlet, as seen on New York stage . . . Club stage managers for first go-round: Noel E. Thompson, President; R. V. Jones, Vice-President; Dorothy Mann, Secretary . . . Jones headed a club fifty-strong second semester . . . Social zenith: All-college dance, club picnic, Christmas party . . . Folk danced to instructions of Mrs. J. G Langford . . . Saw colorful demonstration of tactics by Dr. L. T. Patton in Lubbock Hotel . . . Ruth Pirtle, versatile head of Speech Department, energetically steered club through bright and happy sessions . . . Members of Sock and Buskin took active part in judging one-act plays during the Interscho- lastic League meet held at Tech for high schools April 16-17. Page 323 ?K . ' ov ZE THE 1937 A 4 ENTANA Advertisers INDEX TO LA VENTANA ADVERTISERS « A A. A. A 350 B Barrier-Durham, Inc 328 The Booterie 334 Bowen ' s Drug Stores 344 Broadway Theater 350 c Clark ' s Drug Store 346 College Cafe 344 Craig-Gholson Company 333 Crook ' s 350 D David J. Molloy Plant 348 F First National Bank 339 Furr Food Stores 346 G Good Eats Bakery 347 Grollman ' s 334 H Hackel ' s Ready -To- Wear 346 John Halsey Drug Store 340 Mark Halsey Drug Store 338 Hanna-Pope Co 343 Hemphill-Wells Co 329 Hester ' s Office Supply Co 338 Higginbotham-Bartlett Co 347 Hilton Hotel 332 Household Supply Co 343 Hub Clothiers 338 I Jarett ' s Cinderella Shop 336 Jeanne ' s Beauty Shop 340 K King ' s Jewelry 343 S. H. Kress Co 340 Kuykendall Chevrolet Co 340 L Levine ' s 330 Lindsey Theaters, Inc 349 Lubbock Bus Co 352 Lubbock Chamber of Commerce 337 Lubbock Fruit Vegetable Co 350 Lubbock Hotel 339 Lubbock National Bank 330 Lubbock Sash Door Co 347 Lubbock Tailoring Co 347 M McCelvey, Roberds Walker 350 Montgomery Ward Co 346 N Newsom-Gibson Paint Paper Co 340 P Patton ' s, Inc 343 J. C. Penney Co 333 Piggly Wiggly 344 R Ribble ' s Flower Shop 352 s Sansom Paint Paper Co 350 Santa Fe Railroad 331 Scoggin-Dickey Motor Co 352 Sears Roebuck Co 336 Sherrod Bros. Hardware Co 350 Southern Auto Stores 334 South Plains Coaches 350 T Texas Tech College Bookstore 335 Tech Drug Store 334 Tech Press 348 Tech Studio 351 Texas-New Mexico Utilities Co 345 V Varsity Bookstore 347 The Vogue 347 w Walton ' s Man ' s Shop 352 West Texas Gas Co 342 West Texas Hospital 341 Wilson, Randal Kilpatrick 350 Neil H. Wright 334 Wylie ' s Dm? Store 328 THE 1936-37 PARADE OF EVENTS AT TEXAS TECH Presented by Candid Camera Edition of LA VENTANA 1936 AUGUST TWENTY-NINTH . . . Ad-packed eleventh annual Homesick Edi- tion of The Toreador leaves campus for homes of last year ' s students . . . Attractive Dr. Eunice J. Gates becomes acting Head of Foreign Languages Department, succeeding popular C. B. Qualia, moved to University of Kansas . . . Giant solid-floored, 15,000-capac- ity horseshoe stadium nears completion . . . SEPTEMBER TENTH . . . Bright prospects greet Coach Pete Cawthon as he toots opening horn for 1936 Red Raider season . . . Bruising schedule faces scarlet- clad footballers, with only one warm-up tilt be- fore Sammy Baugh and his fellow-Sugar Bowl champs invade Mat arena for temper testing dedication . . . Over 50 tip-top gridsters start brushing up today . . . FOURTEENTH . . . Breath of notorious Ad building sallyport shortens . . . Workmen start closing traditional corridor . . . FIFTEENTH . . . Green-capped freshmen help break another enrollment record at Texas Tech . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . Students from flood-logged, water isolated San Angelo besiege Avalanche-Journal of- fices seeking news of home folks . . . NINETEENTH . . . Led by dazzling Jim Neill, Tech smothers Texas Wesleyan Rams 26-7, in season opener . . . display a smooth running and passing at- tack . . . TWENTY-FIRST . . . Dormitory boys name leaders . . . Engineers dominate selections . . . Henry Meredith, Cle- burne, President . . . Myron McCormick, Ama- rillo, Vice-President . . . James Alexander, Breckenridge, Treasurer . . . Al Ray Cooper, Ralls, Secretary . . . and Donald Henry, Lor- enzo, Parliamentarian . . . Cecile Parsons, Amarillo, Secretary . . . Nell Walker, Memphis, Vice-President . . . and Jeannette Jones, President, are officers for Women ' s Dormitory Self-Govern ing Associa- tion . . . TWENTY-SECOND . . . New students and transfers are wondering where the desert is, and old timers are silent- ly bewildered as rainfall records fall after a week of intermittent cloudbursts . . . Dean Gor- don goes home to change dripping clothes after wading to gym to see if conditions are as bad as reported . . . TWENTY-FOURTH . . . Ground broken for West Texas Museum building . . . President Bradford Knapp and Spencer A. Wells, Vice-Chairman of Board of Directors, wield shovels . . . Classes call these students to duty as officers . . . Fish: Roy Dunn, Wingate, President . . . Truman Neal, San Antonio, Vice-President . . . Ellen Kennedy, Dallas, Secretary-Treasurer . . . Sophs: Joe Alford, Vera, President ... El- mer Tarbox, Higgins, Vice-President . . . Grace Stengel, Menard, Secretary-Treasurer . . . Juniors: George Carrithers, Brady, President . . . Herschel Red Ramsey, Chillicothe, Vice- President . . . Lillian Heard, San Angelo, Sec- retary-Treasurer . . . Seniors: Mack Scoggin, Lubbock, President . . . Talbot Ledbetter, Brady, Vice-President . . . Mary Elizabeth Stanford, Hereford, Secre- tary-Treasurer . . . TWENTY-FIFTH . . . Who ' s Who in America lists President Bradford Knapp, Dr. A. B. Cunningham, English Associate Professor; Dean James M. Gordon of men and the Arts and Sciences Division; Dr. W. C. Holden, acting Head of History Depart- ment; S. S. McKay, History Professor; Leroy T. Patton, Geology Head; and Clifford B. Jones of Spur, Chairman of the Board of Directors . . . TWENTY-SIXTH . . . Rampant Red Raiders . . . 12,000 fans . . . Fighting Horned Frogs . . . Score: Tech 7- TCU . . . Stadium dedication is success . . . LUBBOCK ' S Most Popular Department Store I tanicKDurhciin DEPENOABLE MERCHANDISE ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW (Incorporated) PAUL BARRIER, Mgr. The Best Place to Buy Hose You can depend on our hose giving you the very best service that you could expect Phone 213 If you want serviceable hose for school wear or the sheerest hose for dress wear, you will find just the kind you like in the newest shades DOWNTOWN .... IT ' S ALWAYS AT WYLIE ' S . . . THAT YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS . . . TAKE YOUR DATE AFTER THE SHOW OR DANCE . . . THAT YOU GET SUCH GOOD FRIENDLY SERVICE m AIR CONDITIONED OPEN ALL NIGHT WYLIE ' S DRUG STORE 1007 Main Street Phone 1082-83 Page 328 Page 329 wLm f a xrcs talk «J FORWARD WITH TECH ' Shopping at LEVINE ' S Is a Foresight to Thriftiness THREE BIG FLOORS OF DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE M PRICES TALK Levin eS MOVING FORWARD WITH TEXAS TECH The Lubbock National Bank is proud to be a part of the progress of Lubbock and West Texas BECAUSE The constant growth in numbers of its depositors indicates progress. Its entire organization is friendly and at all times eager to assist the public. Its officers are capable men who have a thorough understanding of banking busi- ness and West Texas. LUBBOCK NATIONAL BANK LUBBOCK. TEXAS PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTY-EIGHTH . . . Two weeks ' activity begin for rushees of social clubs . . . DFD members, rushees, escorts dine, dance at Hotel Lubbock . . . THIRTIETH . . . Las Vivarachas give semi-formal tea-dance at Hilton . . . OCTOBER FIRST Dance given by Los Camaradas members drive . . . . in new SECOND . . . Mexican dinner . . . Ko Shari Club . . . Hotel Lubbock . . . Doris Jobe, Rule, President . . . Kemas step in semi-formal . . . THIRD . . . Oklahoma City University Goldbugs came . . . and saw . . . but did little else about the powerful Matador running and passing attack . . . Score 34-6 . . . Neill, Ramsey, Cannon, West stand out . . . San Souci buffet supper precedes grid contest . . . Centaur barn dance held after game . . . Popular Governor Allred names Lillian Heard National Dairy Queen . . . Livestock Judging Team takes second place at Fort Worth Frontier Centennial . . . FOURTH . . . New officers make bow at formal dinner of Las Chaparritas as rush season ends . . . FIFTH . . . Publications Committee okays Toreador budget, names versatile Helen Lehmberg Sec- retary in first meeting . . . SIXTH . . . Old Glory waves above Tech campus as it is raised for the first time this semester by the newly-formed ROTC unit . . . SEVENTH . . . Men left out as WAA stages annual All-Girls cabaret party in Gym . . . Special guests are freshmen and transfer women students . . . NINTH . . . Y mixes students in mixer . . . Page 330 PARADE OF EVENTS TENTH . . . It ' s something nothing can be done about . . . the scarlet-clad warriors of Texas Tech go down in mud before attack of inspired Wichita Wheatshockers . . . Parade, queen ' s court, livestock judging, donkey polo, horseback foot- ball, all contribute to success of La Remuda ... A great show . . . Likeable Winbum Mc- Alister directing . . . TWELFTH . . . First Artist Course performers . . . Manhat- tan String quartet ... at Lubbock High School Auditorium . . . THIRTEENTH . . . Senior Livestock Judging Team leaves today for Kansas City for American Royal Contest . . . Herbert Browder, Pegues Houston, Leldon Hudson, C. C. Nunnally, Ralph Riddel, Hood Wills, and Ray C. Mowery, Team Coach, com- pose group . . . FIFTEENTH . . . Book Reviewers names Charlotte Ratliff head . . . Ruby Lee Leary is Secretary-Treasurer . . . SIXTEENTH . . . Las Armonias receive in the home of Dr. and Mrs. D. D. Jackson . . . SEVENTEENTH . . . Unconventional Julien Paul Blitz presents Jim Lindsey, Toreador head, with a waste basket . . . says it is to place my articles in — you throw them all away . . . Coach Jim- mie Allen ' s varsity tennis squad crosses rack- ets with Hardin-Simmons netters . . . Tech loses . . . Senior Livestock Judging Team looks them over in American Royal Contest in K. C. . . . takes eleventh place . . . Ralph Riddel grabs second individual honors . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . Miss Ruth Pirtle, Speech Head, returns from Centennial with a Tony Sarg marionette she bagged . . . LOW FARES - EVERY DAY - EVERY WHERE ONE-WAY FARES 2c PER MILE Good in coaches or chair cars only 3c PER MILE Good in all classes of equipment NO SURCHARGE IN PULLMANS ROUND-TRIP FARES Ride the train for SPEED COMFORT SAFETY ECONOMY I 4 5c PER MILE each way 30 day limit, good in coaches or chair cars only 2c PER MILE each way 30 day limit, good in all classes of equipment 2 ' 2 e PER MILE each way 6 month limit, good in all classes of equipment M. C. BURTON General Passenger Agent AMARILLO. TEXAS Page 331 iillll ■ ' UMIIII 1 ' 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 ■ ■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 !  minimi ll ' IIMIIII nun 1 t i I 1 i i 1 i j THE HILTON ' Lubbock ' s Pride HILTON HOTELS ALSO IN DALLAS. EL PASO. ABILENE, PLAINVIEW PARADE OF EVENTS NINETEENTH . . . Toreador sponsors a Literary Digest, but with truer results . . . Roosevelt gets 88 per cent of straw votes cast by students . . . Geological Society gives smoker . . . LA VENTANA rates first class honors from Na- tional Scholastic Press Association . . . Willie Eaton, capable foreman of Tech Press, elected President of Inter-Club Council . . . Bud Thompson, Eron Gafford, Katrina Brewer play roles in American Business Club ' s comedy Coast to Coast at Lubbock Senior High School Auditorium . . . A. S. C. E. treats pros- pective members to a smoker at Hotel Lub- bock . . . TWENTIETH . . . Dean Margaret W. Weeks returns from visit- ing her sick mother in Ottawa, Canada . . . Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honorary geological society, holds smoker at Hilton . . . TWENTY-SECOND . . . YM-YWCA ' s initiate 50 new members . . . TWENTY-THIRD . . . Exes and alumni invade campus . . . Home- coming celebration one of most spectacular in history of the college . . . begins with pep rally and broadcast in gym over Texas Quality Network . . . Homesick alumnus in Michigan writes that he heard program . . . Major Dean Gordon Bowes holds threatening gong in amateur program hour as campus clubs present stunts . . . Engineering Society grabs $25 first prize . . . TWENTY-FOURTH . . . W. A. A. members and alumnae breakfast at Hilton . . . many other clubs have special events for returning exes . . . Victory bells toll defeat of Centenary Gentlemen, 12-6, by Red Raiders . . . Area newspapermen tour the campus . . . visit Tech Press . . . Alumni, ex- students, faculty members, and guests gather in Women ' s Dormitory . . . President Knapp and Mart Pederson talk . . . Holmes Webb, Abilene, presides . . . Page 332 J. C. PENNEY CO. INC. Where the College Student Shops and Saves • QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT THE LOWEST PRICES • We Appreciate Your Business PARADE OF EVENTS SEVENTH . . . Engineers . . . annual Ball . . . City Audi- torium . . . confetti, serpentine, and balloons . . . EIGHTH . . . Red Raiders turn determined faces toward Los Angeles . . . combat Loyola Lions Armis- tice Day . . . Band leaves on special train carrying 200 fans . . . ELEVENTH . . . Disaster overtakes rambling Red Raiders as Lions of Loyola claw out 26-7 win after trailing the Matadors 7-6 at the half . . . ROTC unit makes first public appearance in Lubbock, par- ticipate in Armistice Day Parade . . . TWELFTH . . . Petite Emily Martin, Miss Mirrophonic, ap- pears at theater in Pampa for installation of new sound equipment . . . Similar appear- ance made in Lubbock theater week ago . . . THIRTEENTH . . . Las Armonias Club stages theater party . . . FOURTEENTH . . . Aggies sponsor all-college tromp at gym . . . PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTY-SIXTH . . . Fifteen electrical engineers attend South- western Convention of A. I. E. E. . . . Dallas . . . new ideas . . . fun . . . THIRTIETH . . . Disturbances galore as witches and other eerie Tech students roam the darkness . . . Ko Sharis, Las Chaps, Y associations and Home Ec Club among those organizations celebrating Hallowe ' en . . . NOVEMBER SECOND . . . Texas Tech grand jury decides that snake is a libelous word ... so Jim Lindsey, Torea- dor editor, must stand trial as a result of a complaint by Leila May Zorns . . . THIRD . . . Sock and Buskin, dramatic club, initiates 30 new members . . . SIXTH . . . Red Raiders trounce Oklahoma A M 12-0, to impress fathers and mothers on first Parent ' s Day program . . . GREETINGS Where else but at Craig- Gholson ' s can you get such well informed assistance in proper clothes selection? • Craio;- Gholson CO. Lubbock The Woman ' s Store Page 333 PARADE OF EVENTS FIFTEENTH . . . Silver Keys annex basketball title in Social League . . . Kemas lose . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . Artist Course! Senator Robert M. LaFollette discusses current national affairs in talk . . . TWENTIETH . . . Crippled Red Raiders battle valorously but lose to DePaul 13-6, in season closer for home fans . . . aerial attack clicks for Chicagoans . . . TWENTY-FIRST . . . Picadors set back Eastern New Mexico Junior College 29-0 to end season with three wins, a tie and one loss . . . TWENTY-FIFTH . . . HOL IDAYS! Students leave this evening to go home to roas ' ta ' ky . . . TWENTY-SIXTH . . . Another Loyola football team, Loyola of the South, inflicts numbing defeat on Red Raiders in New Orleans . . . Score 14-0 .. . TWENTY-SEVENTH . . . Competing with 26 colleges and universities, Tech ' s Senior Livestock Judging Team cele- brates Thanksgiving Day by winning fourth place in International Collegiate Judging Con- tests, Chicago . . . These wide-awake aggies compose the team: Raymond King, Winburn McAlister, Pegues Houston, Ralph Riddel, R. C. Mitchell, and Leldon Hudson . . . Coach: Ray Mowery . . . DECEMBER FIRST . . . Ah Ha! You waited too long. Now you will have to pay $1.75 for your LA VENTANA photo instead of $1.25 . . . THIRD . . . College students must learn safe driving lessons now if they are to practice them in the future, L. G. Phares, friendly Highway Patrol Chief, tells studes at convocation . . . Welcome . . . Old and New Students Meet Your Friends at Student Headquarters TECH DRUG STORE The Collegiate Store NEIL H. WRIGHT DISTRICT AGENT SOUTHLAND LIFE INSURANCE CO. Ladies ' Standard Brands SHOES AND HOSIERY 1008 BROADWAY LUBBOCK, TEXAS BACKING TECH IN EVERY RESPECT SOUTHERN AUTO STORES 1012 MAIN STREET LUBBOCK Phone 232 TEXAS WE TREAT EVERYBODY ALIKE AND HAVE BUT ONE PRICE TO ALL GROLLMAN ' S Women ' s Wear Shop Page 334 YOUR MAIL ORDERS!! LATEST BOOKS NEWEST STATIONERY SCHOOL SUPPLIES COLLEGE NOVELTIES ORDERS FILLED SAME DAY RECEIVED $ We Quote Prices on Supplies and Text Books TEXAS TECH COLLEGE BOOKSTORE On the Campus LUBBOCK, TEXAS SEAL STATIONERY COLLEGE JEWELRY PENNANTS ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT SCHOOL SUPPLIES Page 335 PARADE OF EVENTS FOURTH . . . DFD opens Christmas season with traditional Yuletide supper dance at the Hilton . . . Las Vives hold open house and Ko Sharis guzzle Christmas wassail . . . WAA sponsors all- college . . . FIFTH . . . Last game of the season and the Red Raiders, recovering the spirit which turned back TCU, tie Arizona ' s favored Blue Brigade, 7-7 . . . Ari- zona leads until the fourth quarter when Mata- dors loose a passing barrage to tie the score . . . Tech ' s word slingers demonstrate their ability at Winfield, Kansas, by wi nning the Intercollegiate Debate Tournament sponsored by Southwestern Teacher ' s College . . . Alton Hankins, Junius Carter comprise the winning team . . . SEVENTH . . . Evelyn Babb Boyd, assistant society editor of Avalanche-Journal publications, tells Press Association women they must make their own opportunities in journalism . . . Seat Lubbock ' s Most Complete DEPARTMENT STORE • A Store of 4-Star Values • 1105 Broadway Phone 1504 SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. A SHOP COMPLETE FOR CO-EDS Dresses Coats Suits Shoes Millinery Hosiery Lingerie Bags and Gloves JARETT ' S CINDERELLA SHOP A Pleasure To Serve You 1115 BROADWAY LUBBOCK PARADE OF EVENTS NINTH . . . We ' re sorry, but we don ' t want any boys around . . . AWS sponsors all-girls dance in Women ' s Dorm . . . Dr. W. A. Jackson, Gov- ernment Head, explains why King Edward can- not marry Wally and keep his throne . . . ELEVENTH . . . Matador cagers open season against semi- pro Cosden Oilers . . . Tech has a letterman for each post . . . but faces a hard 25-game schedule . . . Tech band clinic with A. R. McAllister, Joliet, 111., as leader begins two-day 1 session . . . The Professor presents the Tech musicians in annual Christmas concert . . . College Club starts formal season with ninth annual dance at Hotel Lubbock . . . TWELFTH . . . Hodge-Podge! Sophomores swing it at an- nual dance in gym . . . informal . . . ging- ham and print dresses and sweatshirts reign as vestments . . . Amarillo-Tech Club members dance at Seaman Hall . . . Faculty recep- tion . . . Page 335 PARADE OF EVENTS FOURTEENTH . . . Kemas stage dance for members and dates at Hotel Lubbock . . . Hardworking Burnice Walker, Travis Hicks, and Roscoe Clark boss arrangements . . . SIXTEENTH . . . Minus Curly Wilkinson, towering Matador center, Tech ' s basketeers succumb to superior strength and skill of University of Southern California Trojans . . . Pacific Coast champs garner 35-17 score . . . SEVENTEENTH . . . Big Hearted Herbert put on by Speech De- partment . . . High School Auditorium . . . three-act comedy . . . sponsored by Sock and Buskin, Alpha Psi Omega . . . Alpha Chi, na- tional honorary scholastic fraternity, initiates forty -five juniors and fourteen seniors ... re- honor one junior and twenty-two seniors . . . NINETEENTH Silver Keys mas dance . . . . ninth annual formal Christ- Hilton Hotel . . . TWENTY-THIRD . . . Mourning shrouds campus as students leave dear familiar scenes and drag reluctant steps from hallowed ground . . . And are forced to spend until January 4 away from precious studies . . . JANUARY FOURTH . . . Classes resumed 8 A. M. . . . W. L. Stan- gel, Animal Husbandry Department Head, returns to campus after directing livestock divi- sion at Texas Centennial . . . again Chairman of Athletic Council . . . FIFTH . . . Funeral services today for Ben F. Con- dray, Jr. . . . ten years Head of the Economics and Business Administration Department . . . died two days ago in Dallas of a heart attack ... a friend who will be missed . . . SEVENTH . . . Artist Course offers extra attraction . . . Mercado ' s Tipica Mexican orchestra . . . features Ojeda dancers . . . recaptures spirit of Latin music . . . ALL ROADS LEAD TO LUBBOCK . . . The Home of the Southwest ' s Leading Educational Institution TEXAS TECHNOLOGICAL COLLEGE Finest and best equipped, most efficiently and capably staffed, largest student enrollment, largest campus of any of the eleven- year-old colleges today. Greatest opportunities in the Southwest await the Farmer, the Business and Professional Man and all who are interested in sane, profitable investments. This is an invitation to you to make your permanent home in Lubbock or the South Plains of West Texas LUBBOCK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND BOARD OF CITY DEVELOPMENT LUBBOCK TEXAS Page 337 .iiijyHii] liillJ III 3 PATRONIZE CLOTHIERS UNIFORMS, SCHOOL EMBLEMS ' Everything A Man Wears PARADE OF EVENTS FIFTEENTH . . . DFD dinner honoring pledges . . . Los Camaradas semi-formal dance . . . Barn Dance entertains Cabbage Heads . . . SIXTEENTH . . . Junior Livestock Judging Team places second in National Judging Contests . . . Denver . . . Kemas stage annual formal dance at Lubbock hotel . . . decorations feature club colors . . . SEVENTEENTH . . . Jim Neill, Brownfield ball toter, signs pro contract to play with New York Giants foot- ball team . . . TWENTY-FIRST . . . Alpha Chi, honorary scholastic fraternity initiates 53 new members ... 9 seniors re- honored . . . TWENTY-SECOND . . . Centaurs crowd in annual formal dance on last night before exam week . . . TWENTY-THIRD . . . Exams! Now is the time for all good men to lose their razors . . . PARADE OF EVENTS NINTH . . . All-College . . . Press Club . . . Gym . . . pencil slingers and sallyporters forget rag as they step to the music of Ned Bradley ' s Orches- tra . . . Toreadors will be sent to legislators while lawmakers are in session . . . each issue depicts college needs . . . Red Raiders ramble off with a victory — two of them — over Abilene Christian College hoopers . . . ELEVENTH . . . Dr. D. W. Douglass, zoology searches for elusive bookworms . . instructor, TWELFTH . . . Students rejoice in anticipation of finals as exam schedule is released for Fall semester . . . THIRTEENTH . . . Usual spring lethargy grips students . . . Counteracted by approaching political cam- paign . . . Dead week ominously halts all social activities . . . Weather forecast . . . Sunny days for salesmen of pencils and blue- books . . . ROYAL PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS With Touch Control Priced at $54.50 and $64.50 May be Purchased on Small Monthly Payments The Typewriter Store 1214 TEXAS AVE. PHONE 78 MARK HALSEY CUT RATE DRUG STORE 1219 Broadway Phone 995 Page 338 fxpffiitnct REflLITM IDEAS, born in the minds of yearbook staff members, can become REALITIES within the pages of a finished book only through the com- petent guidance of those who have EXPERIENCE in the field of year- book production. Realizing this fact, editors and managers of college and high school annuals have been, for more than a quarter of a cen- tury, employing, and profiting by. the experienced service, distinctive art creations and PRINT TESTED PLATES offered by SOUTHWEST ERN ENGRAVING COMPANY SWECO EXPERIENCE assures your IDEAS of becoming REALITIES even greater than anticipated. SOUTHLUESTCRn fOGfiflVlOG compfloy TULSA. OKLA. ©f + YOUR ANNUAL was printed by the C£u P- XZZ6, BOOK l ' UBLISHINIJ DIVISION of The Economy Advertising Co. Iowa City, lovva — — — — _ ■ SEN §2H Sj — 3 PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTY-SIXTH . . . What ' s valence? . . . Now, let ' s see, hablo, hablas, habla . . . Wish I had studied my notes more . . . Aw, what ' s th ' use? . . . TWENTY-NINTH . . . LIGHTS OF MYSTERY A Melodrama in one Scene SCENE: The East Tower of the Ad building on the third floor. TIME: About dusk. PERSONS: Winston Reeves, Marie George, and Horace Benson. MARIE: Winston, dear Winston, come to the tower window and look at the lights moving about the plain below. WINSTON: Marie, those are not lights. Exams are over and the boys have shaved. (WINSTON and MARIE wait for the curtain to fall on their act. They wait, and wait, and wait until finally they drop exhausted on the stage. Note: On investigation, it was learned that BENSON, who was supposed to pull the curtain, had gone over to the darkroom to mount some more feature pictures . . . ) FEBRUARY SECOND It ' s a weary world, agree students and faculty members as they emerge from regis- tration, battered and wan . . . Annual rain falls . . . THIRD . . . Matador musketeers emerge with flying colors from two contests with Texas School of Mines, El Paso . . . team eyes the Border con- ference pennant . . . EIGHTH . . . Students place Lillian Heard first in nomina- tion of 25 LA VENTANA beauty candidates . . . Wrestling, boxing, music . . . other forms of entertainment greet fans attending athletic fun night . . . Varsity and freshmen letters awarded . . . Governor Allred appoints Doctor Knapp a member of his Traffic Safety Com- mittee . . . A SOLID FOUNDATION Customers who have established substan- tial connections with this bank feel that they have a permanent foundation for the financial structure they may plan to build. By reason of its strong position, as evi- denced by resources of more than $3,000,000.00 this institution can and will properly safeguard the funds entrusted to its care . . . As well as maintain unex- celled day to day service for its patrons. FIRST NATIONAL BANK LUBBOCK, TEXAS AL tfr STUDENTS MEET W its usually at the... Ft- HotellUBBOCK LUBBOCK , TEXAS JOHN M.AYRES . MCR. Page 339 Master CHEVROLET- Master DeLuxe The Complete Car — Completely New KUYKENDALL CHEVROLET CO. LUBBOCK, TEXAS 1212 AVE. J PHONE 820 JEANNE ' S BEAUTY SERVICE Lubbock ' s Only Exclusive Beauty Service Featuring Zotos in Permanent Waving and Conteure in Facials NEWSOM-GIBSON PAINT PAPER CO. Paint — Wall Paper — Picture Framing PHONE 2277 LUBBOCK. TEXAS S. H. KRESS CO. 5-10-25c Stores John Halsey Drug Store 1118 Broadway 1330— Phones— 1331 Lubbock. Texas PARADE OF EVENTS ELEVENTH . . . Lora Lee Weddle, Senior and Secretary of Y associations . . . receives deserved promotion to Presidency . . . replaces Conner Russell, not enrolled this semester . . . THIRTEENTH . . . Thirty-four state legislators arrive in Lubbock to see if it ' s true what they have read about a crowded library . . . Senator G. H. Nelson and Representative J. Doyle Settle, both staunch friends of Tech, lead delegation . . . law- makers tour campus, dine in dormitory, re- ceive ten-page edition of Toreador depicting campus conditions . . . Miss Mary W. Doak, Dean of Women, is elected president of the lo- cal AAUW . . . SEVENTEENTH . . . Harold Griffith of Lubbock presents West Texas Museum with a 200-piece collection of arrowheads, knives, spearheads, and hammer stones . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . Silver Keys lick Kemas in touch football game, one of a series in the Social League . . . NINETEENTH . . . Double T members tackle dancing with ease and grace as they hold their annual ball in the City Auditorium . . . TWENTIETH . . . Wranglers . . . annual formal dance . . . military setting . . . Hilton . . . Miss Ruth Pirtle, Speech Head, sponsors group of 30 stu- dents and others ... go to Amarillo . . . see Boy Meets Girl . . . TWENTY-FIRST . . . Seniors announce a clock will be their gift to the college . . . ruin another excuse for being late to classes . . . clock will have four faces to show time to tardy students . . . Tru- man Neal becomes Freshman Class President. TWENTY-THIRD . . . Tech ' s court campaigns end with a 42-34 win over Arizona ' s Blue Brigade . . . Page 340 WEST TEXAS HOSPITAL 1302 Main Street CHAS. J. WAGNER, M. D. Surgery and Consultation SAM G. DUNN, M D., F. A. C. S. Surgery and Genito-Urinary Diseases ALLEN T. STEWART, M. D. Obstetrics, Gynecology, Surgery WM. L. BAUGH, M. D. Surgery and Diagnosis FRED W. STANDEFER, M. D. ROBERT T. CANON, M. D. Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat Bronchoscopy W. E. CRAVENS, M. D. General Medicine Phone 480 DENZIL D. CROSS, M. D., F. A. C. S. Surgery, Gynecology, Urology O. W. ENGLISH, M. D. EWELL L. HUNT, M. D. Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics C. C. MANSELL, M. D. Dermatology and General Medicine M. M. EWING, M. D. General Medicine M. H. BENSON, M. D. Diseases of Children T. L. MORGAN, M. D. General Medicine C. J. HOLLINGSWORTH Superintendent MISS EDNA ENGLE, R. N. Director of Nursing Page 341 PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTY-FOURTH . . . Sidney Moore victorious in Tech ' s part of nationwide table tennis tournament . . . eli- gible to represent Tech at state tourney in Waco . . . Artist Course presents Alberto Salvi, world ' s greatest harpist . . . four other musicians compose his ensemble . . . TWENTY-FIFTH . . . Annual election of publications officers shows these results: Marie George, Editor LA VENTANA; Burgess Dixon, Editor Toreador ; Lawson Buddy Stiff, Business Manager LA VENTANA; and Morris Laine, Business Man- ager Toreador. TWENTY-SIXTH . . . First annual Military Ball . . . sponsored by ROTC unit . . . full dress uniforms worn by members . . . Miss Frances Turner, Abilene, rules as honorary coed Cadet Major . . . TWENTY-SEVENTH . . . Aggies stage annual banquet with popular Ray Mowery, Animal Husbandry Professor, as toastmaster . . . Louis P. Merrill of Fort Worth is chief speaker . . . TWENTY-EIGHTH . . . Judge (alias Arthur Howard) Garrett has leading score for the basketball season with 177 points . . . MARCH FIRST . . . Dr. A. J. Bahm, Philosophy Instructor, plans a field trip to Mexico City during second term of Summer School . . . W. L. Stangel receives a request all the way from Portugal for Ram- bouellet sheep breeding stock . . . ROTC unit commended in report sent to Washington . . . Junior Livestock Judging Team named at Block and Bridle banquet . . . Mowery lists Lewis Dunlap, Clifton Cole, Leslie Browning, G. C. Shearer, and M. J. Williams . . . Apt Broiling Gas gives you the intense heat needed to brown meats so fast that loss of juices is orevented. Full flavor Is saved. Roasting Gas gives you the oven ventilation which produces crisp, juicy roasts. Excess moisture is allowed to escape preventing that flat steamed flavor. Baking Baking requires even heat throughout the oven and unlimited range of baking temperatures, for light, evenly browned cakes, pies, breads. Gas gives both. Frying Perfect, speedy frying requires instant high heat- even spread of heat under the skillet — numberless heat variations. Gas gives all three! Boiling Faster! Gas brings foods to a boil in two-thirds the time or less of other fuels. More flexible, it gives yon the exact shades of heat you need. West Texas (jas Co. GOOD GA VV1XH UfcrtNUABLfc SfcKViCfc Page 342 PARADE OF EVENTS Home Ec major heads AWS for fourth con- secutive year . . . Marjorie Elder, President; Frances Elaine Price, Vice-President; and Pauline Edgett, Secretary-Treasurer . . . Doro- thy Mann named Junior Council prexy . . . DFD ' s celebrate sixth anniversary with dinner at Hilton . . . THIRD . . . Toreador puts out 26-page edition in view of expected guests at West Texas Museum opening . . . Walter F. Woodul and Coke R. Stevenson to present building to Association . . . Debate teams leave for Savage Debate tourney at Southeastern State Teachers Col- lege, Durant, Oklahoma . . . FOURTH . . . J. B. Wilson, President, Kenneth Rollo, Vice- President, head Silver Keys for Spring . . . Ray L. Chappelle, Head of Department of Agri- cultural Education, invites 500 teachers and students to twelfth annual vocational agricul- PATTON ' S INC. • MEN ' S WEAR • Lubbock ' s Outstanding College Store HOUSEHOLD SUPPLY OC. FRIGIDAIRE AND DELCO-LIGHT PRODUCTS 1211 BROADWAY PHONE 1425 Quality Diamonds — Fine American Made Watches — Expert Repairing KING ' S JEWELRY 1020 BROADWAY USE YOUR CREDIT CONVENIENT TERMS EVERYTHING TO WEAR FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN HANNA-POPE CO. LUBBOCK, TEXAS PARADE OF EVENTS ture high school judging contests this Spring. FIFTH . . . Delegates from nine colleges gather here for International Relations Club sessions . . . Don Henry presiding . . . Professor Montell Ogdon founded the organization . . . Lieutenant-Gov- ernor Walter F. Woodul presents museum building to association at eighth annual meet- ing . . . Speaker-of-the-House Coke R. Steven- son talks on The Future of West Texas . . . Many former Techsters come back to college while attending teacher ' s meeting in city . . . SIXTH . . . IRC conference concludes today with lun- cheon at one . . . Mrs. Burton W. Musser, Utah Senator, talks . . . Donald Grcnt from Edinburg, Scotland, wins audiences . . . En- gineers stage annual banquet . . . L. T. Blais- dell heads speakers . . . Lee Norris, proaram committee head, reports sell-out of tickets . . . Bill Holcomb and Winford Baze, last year Pago 343 PARADE OF EVENTS Cawthonmen, sign professional football offers . . . Woodul and Dr. Grayson N. Kefauver, Leland Stanford University Dean of Education, talk to students at convocation . . . Alton Hankins and Junius Carter win second in Southeastern State Teachers College debate tourney . . . EIGHTH . . . Fourteen campus organizations sign for volley ball tourney starting today . . . Cy La- Master directs . . . Tony Sarg ' s dolls entertain at second Artist Course number . . . NINTH . . . Jean Ayres directs Council of Women Gradu- ates Club sponsored by Quarterly Club . . . working to gain recognition by American Asso- ciation of Universities and Colleges . . . TENTH . . . Convocation to nominate candidates for title of ugliest Tech male is held . . . answers chal- lenge of Joe Frederick, TCU, that he is the ug- liest ed in Texas . . . Tech student leaders are confident that we have the worst looking men anywhere and deplore the ease with which the Tech candidate will lay low the TCU aspirant . . . Silver Keys tramp Wranglers, 13 to 0, for Social League touch football title . . . ELEVENTH . . . Digging in an ash heap near the mouth of the Pecos River to search for possible paleonto- logical remains is the purpose of an expedition led by Dr. W. C. Holden leaving today . . . other expedition members are: Pres. Hubert L. Allen, Mayor Ross Edwards, Dr. Charles J. Wagner, W. L. Pearson, and W. G. McMillan. Students are: Winston Reeves, James Huffman, Henry Clay Bailey, Gordon Moore, Clifford Gibbs, and Harold Crites . . . TWELFTH . . . Dairy Cattle Judging Team leaves for Cow- town . . . Silver Keys knock off Main Street touch footballers to take intramural trophy, 19- . . . YOU GET EXCELLENT MEALS AT THE COLLEGE CAFE On The Avenue BOWEN ' S DRUG STORES CUT PRICES — EVERY DAY LUBBOCK, TEXAS SPRING MENUS ARE EASILY PLANNED AT PIGGLY WIGGLY Page 344 DURING THE LAST ELEVEN YEARS 1925 — Tech opens September, 1925. with a first year enroll- ment of 1043, setting a record for first year enrollment in a higher educational institution. Admitted to full senior college standing with the Association of Texas Coliegas. 1926 — Available space for class rooms taxed to capacity. Student Dairy Association organized and became active in helping students through college. 1927 — Gnmnasium com- pleted early in 1927, aiding materially in sports activities. Tech held its first Commencement, awarding 26 degrees. 1928 — New Engineering Building commenced and completed for opening in fall of 1928. Tech admitted to Southern As- sociation of Colleges. At Commencement 105 degrees were awarded. 1929 — First four year class awarded degrees at Commencement. Faculty had increased to 127 members, all of whom had received degrees at leading colleges and universities of America . Chemistry building completed. First Engineers ' Show. 1930 — Tech had third largest enroll- ment of any college in Texas. Toreador ranks first in future Collegiate Press contest. Rare letters of Colonel Goodnight added to College Library. Tech had third largest enrollment of any college in Texas. 1931 — First field course in archaeol- ogy offered. First Tech Coaching School opened which at- tracted national attention. 1932 — Dr. P. W. Horn, the first President of the college, passed away. Tribute paid him throughout the State and Nation. Dr. Bradford Knapp of- fered position as successor to Dr .Horn. 1933 — Three-term system of previous long sessions abolished and two-semester system introduced. Funds made available for building of two dormitories on campus. 1934 — Largest enrollment in history of Tech. 2.684 for the long session. An increase in percentage shown of juniors and seniors. 1935 — Decennial celebrat ion showed substantial improvement along all lines. First Rhodes Scholar selected from Texas Tech. 1936 — West Texas Museum opened on campus. Erection of Tech Stadium. Tech passes 3000 mark in enrollment. 1925 — The present-day generally-used inside-frosted incandes- cent lamp was first produced . . . First electrical transmission of pictures, the forerunner of the system now used in the leading newspapers. 1926 — Inaugurated electric arc-welding of buildings . . . Two-million volt laboratory testing equip- ment was provided for Leland Stanford University to permit full-scale testing of transmission line equipment. 1927 — First radio range for aircraft navigation ( Had ley Field. N. J.) . . . Construction work wis first started on the building of the first 160,000 KW tandem-compound steam turbine gen- erator. 1928 — Introduction of De-ion air circuit breakers . . . The electrically propelled airplane carriers, Sarasota and Lex- ington, developed 210,000 horsepower at a record breaking speed of 34.62 knots. 1929 — The first Diesel-electric rail car for revenue service introduced . . . 10,000 mile telephone conversation (New York to Antarctic). 1930 — An X-ray tube of 500,000 volts was constructed . . . Automatic equipment provided for atomic hydrogen welding. 193 1 — Automatic steering of airplane with wind drift correction . . . Twin motor drive for steel milts. 1932 — Introduced the surge proof dis- tribution transformers — a great forward step in the war a- goinst lightning . . . Inauguration of mercury vapor gen- erators. 1933— Work started on the fi.-st of the 82.500 KVA water wheel generators for Boulder Darn . . . The highest speed elevator in the world built at Rockfeller Center in fork. 1934 — Practical application of sodium vapor lamp to highway lighting . . . The first outdoor installation of a steam turbine generator. This was a 6000 KW unit. 1935 — Electrification of the Pennsylvania Railroad completed be- tween Washington and New York . . . The all metal radio tube made its debut. 1936 — Larqe and substantial increase in use of indirect lighting . . . Electric ref | asses all previous sales . . . Air conditioning becomes of inceas- - business and ind TEXAS-NEW MEXICO Like a chronicle of progress the last eleven years have made enduring history in edu- cation, research, and industry. The com- pany joins your institution in the years that are ahead. UTILITIES COMPANY Page 345 MONTGOMERY WARD The Students ' Store WE ' RE 100% FOR TEXAS TECH AND IT ' S GREAT STUDENT BODY PARADE OF EVENTS THIRTEENTH . . . Las Vivarachas attend annual presentation dance amid garden setting . . . Pre-Law trial looms: Emily Martin kidnapped last night by- George Winters and Pete Owens . . . Lillian Heard selected Queen for Junior Prom . . . Maxine Fry polls second choice . . . Hermione Holcomb and Marian Hurmence place . . . FOURTEENTH . . . First Older Girls ' Conference ever to be held in Lubbock ends with election of new officers . . . Onita Bell Hufstedler, Lubbock, President, Evelyn Harris, Sweetwater, and Monte Harris, Amherst, first and second Vice-Presidents, re- spectively; and Joan Thatcher, Plainview, Sec- retary . . . 112 in attendance . . . SIXTEENTH . . . Double Key, Home Ec honorary society ini- tiates eight new members to scholarly estate . . . Dairy Cattle Judging Team wins first at Southwestern Fat Stock Show, Fort Worth . . . Junior Livestock Team gets sixth . . . PARADE OF EVENTS SEVENTEENTH . . . Ears unwashed and a snarl on his face, Sail-Boat Ears Leidigh roars his challenge to all claimers of the ugliest man title in Texas colleges ... he gets title of Beau Ugly in Tech over ten competitors . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . DFD presents eleven affiliates and three pledges at its annual formal dance in the Allen Auditorium . . . W. O. Daniels mastered cere- monies . . . NINETEENTH . . . Sixty-five lettermen, ex-Picadors, and ambi- tious college students limber up in first workout of spring training period . . . Professor Aubrey Butts and his Freshman Basketball Team finish . . . winning 22 out of 25 games this season . . . Butts is a former Red Raider letterman who gets his degree in Business Administration in June . . . CLARK ' S DRUG STORE Phone 2340 Broadway at Ave. Q Hackel ' s Ready-to-Wear 1006 BROADWAY Where You Find Smart Clothes for Smart Women FURR FOOD STORES LUBBOCK, TEXAS Page 346 ♦-- PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTIETH . . . Coach Jimmie Allen ' s tennis squad in Dallas for practice with SMU netters . . . Austin is next stop for Texas University tourney . . . Tracksters win two firsts and place in four track events at Fat Stock Show ... Dr. Ft. C. Goodwin, Dr. W. M. Craig, and Dr. D. V. Schneider listed in Chemical Who ' s Who . . . Press Club . . . Girl ' s Tag-Dance . . . Men ' s Dorm . . . Gargoyle society . . . Bowery dance in Engineering building . . . TWENTY-FIRST . . . Prehistoric deposits found by Holden expedi- tion in cave in canyon wall of Pecos river . . . 4,500 specimens are loot of group . . . TWENTY-THIRD . . . Home Ec Club studies pottery by slides, movie and talks . . . TWENTY-FOURTH . . . Silver Keys with championships in touch football and basketball lead intramural sport GOOD EATS BAKERY Butter-Kist Bread PHONE 1552 1515 AVENUE Q Higginbotham-Bartlett Co. Lumber and Building Material Paints and Wall Paper Phone 413 LUBBOCK, TEXAS The Largest Stock of Glass in West Texas ALL KINDS LUBBOCK SASH DOOR GLASS DEPT. LUBBOCK. TEXAS e (J oaue Co-eds ' Downtown Headquarters 1018 Bdwy. PARADE OF EVENTS circles . . . followed by Main Street Independ- ents . . . Library building, restoration of salaries to ' 29 level, increase in maintenance . . . asked by President Knapp in pleas before House Committee on Appropriations at Austin . . . Tech netters leave Dallas for Austin com- petition . . . TWENTY-FIFTH . . . Holidays begin . . . nuf said ... no school until March 30 . . . LUBBOCK TAILORING CO. Dri - Sheen Cleaning Guaranteed Moth Proofing At No Extra Charge Cleaners — Dyers — Hatters Rugs Cleaned 1108 BROADWAY PHONE 85 THIRTIETH . . . Grind resumed . after participating Meet, Austin . . . Tennis squad returns Southwestern Tennis APRIL ALL FOOL ' S DAY . . . New library building boasting chair high seats in its one room authorized by the legis- lature . . . Prexy Badford I. Knapp writes book without using a single I . . . Writer of Sallyport ridden out of town on a rail . . . Page 347 PARADE OF EVENTS Dean Leidigh resigns as Dean of Agriculture to specialize in distribution of Easter eggs . . . Pete Cawthon, nationally known authority on the female manifestation of homo sapiens, lectures on women to Ladies ' Society . . . FIRST . . . Paul Popenoe, marriage problems authority, gives three well-attended lectures discussing preparation for marriage in college, how to tell when you are in love, and marrying without jobs . . . THIRD . . , Sport clothes the vogue . . . annual Aggie Dance . . . Hilton . . . Dick Dickerson ' s Or- chestra oompahs for affair . . . Museum Asso- ciation prepares for new member drive . . . Golf tourney tees off at Meadowbrook course . . . Los Ratos win intramural track meet . . . snatch 14 firsts out of 15 events . . . total 96 points . . . Kemas grab second place with 23 points . . . MOLLOY-MADE covers — produced in a plant devoted exclusively to embossed and decorated products by an organiza- tion of cover specialists — represent the highest standard in yaerbook work. Specify Molloy — it ' s your assurance of the best. The David J. Molloy Plant 28S7 North Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois Supplying . . . Texas Technological College and Its Organizations with Quality Printing Assisting . . . College Students by Furnishing a Pay-Roll of $300 a Month. Over $7,500 Paid to 32 Students in 2 Years Prompt Service The Texas Workmanship 1 0011 X? r0SS Efficient PARADE OF EVENTS FOURTH . . . How can he hit it when he can ' t see it? Throw him the dark one! . . . Baseball en- gages members of Social and Independent Leagues . . . FIFTH . . . Joe J. Caldwell, Senior electrical engineer from Abilene, receives scholarship to Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology . . . entitles him to one year ' s work . . . Ben Thompson, Lubbock, senior in E. E., gets half-year scholar- ship . . . EIGHTH . . . Registration of delegates to Texas Associa- tion of Colleges this evening . . . sessions to- morrow and Saturday to be presided over by Dean James M. Gordon . . . SPQR, Latin club, stages annual banquet in Chimayo Room . . . Hilton . . . Ruth Black, Club President, is toastmistress . . . Page 348 PARADE OF EVENTS TENTH . . . Junior Prom . . . friendly Lillian Heard crowned Queen of event ... by George Car- rithers, Junior prexy . . . Twelfth annual aggie high school judging contest attract 66 schools . . . 700 persons . . . Tulia High wins sweep- stakes . . . TWELFTH . . . Fifty-seven members of the Matador band spring-tour West Texas area this week ... go clad in new uniforms . . . Eureka! The first spring flower bravely thrusts head above cam- pus loam . . . THIRTEENTH . . . Marilynn Fry, Floydada, is selected freshman queen for annual dance May 1 . . . Torea- dor receives Ail-American rating by judges . . . three other college papers in same class do as well . . . FIFTEENTH . . . Thirty students leave for Southwestern Journalism Congress at Denton . . . Texas State College for Women is host to gathering. SIXTEENTH . . . Ah! At last! The telegram . . . feverish hands open it . . . the beauties . . . the beau- ties . . . Mary Price tops list . . . Jewel Bishop . . . Lillian Heard . . . Leila May Zorns . . . Emily Martin . . . Maxine Fry . . . Martha Jo Jenkins . . . Priscilla Davis . . . Classes dis- missed from 10 to 2 . . . rooms needed for District Interscholastic League contestants . . . students meet here today and tomorrow . . . SEVENTEENTH . . . Engineers ' Show closes after holding spot- light two days . . . ninth annual event attracts 7,000 visitors . . . Robert Houston directs . . . Bill Davis slings publicity . . . EIGHTEENTH . . . Donald Doherty wins in Toreador Golf tourney . . . NINETEENTH . . . Rose Bampton, young and beautiful Metro- politan Opera singer, ends season ' s Artist Course presentations . . . THE AMUSEMENT CENTERS OF THE SOUTH PLAINS LINDSEY THEATERS - INC. DIRECTION- GRIFFITH AMUSEMENT CO. HAL B. GRADY. Manager RALPH LINDSEY. Secretary ■SEEK FOR THE LEAST Page 349 YOU ARE INVITED — JOIN NOW SOUTH PLAINS AUTOMOBILE CLUB Inc. Local Unit American Automobile Association 1020 Main St. ... Phone 939 Membership, Including $1000.00 Insurance, 3c Per Day Drive With Peace of Mind ASK A MEMBER Coast to Coast Service CROOK ' S 1205 B ' WAY, LUBBOCK Just a Little Sign That We Do Appreciate Your Patronage BROADWAY AND LYRIC THEATRES LUBBOCK, TEXAS PARADE OF EVENTS TWENTY-THIRD Students go to polls . . . elect Fiesta Queen ... to be crowned between halves of Red Raider-Mucker football game at Athletic Fiesta April 30 . . . TWENTY-SIXTH . . . Front walls of three buildings in eleven hundred block on College Avenue fall rousing students from beds . . . THIRTIETH . . . Athletic Fiesta . . . 7,000 high school seniors, athletes, and band members attend . . . Jewell Bishop, LA VENTANA beauty, is queen . . . Red Raiders lose football game to Texas School of Mines Muckers by three points . . . MAY FOURTH . . . Seniors attend reception given by Presby- terians . . . FIFTH . . . Capa y Espada, Spanish club, holds banquet . . . Book Reviewers have tea . . . SIXTH . . . Home Ecs and Aggies join in picnic . . . SOUTH PLAINS COACHES Courteous and Dependable Service JOE BOWMAN, Mgr. LUBBOCK FRUIT VEGETABLE CO. Distributors of Fresh Fruits and Fresh Vegetables SANSOM PAINT PAPER CO. Picture Framing — Artist Supplies 13th at Ave. K — Phone 1027 LUBBOCK, TEXAS I THE SIGH OP GOOD INSUBANCE1 308 Myrick Bldg. Phone 1111 Wilson, Randal Kilpatrick ( Deceased) LAWYERS First National Bank Building LUBBOCK, TEXAS SHERROD BROS. HARDWARE COMPANY Lubbock ' s Sporting Goods Store Page 350 INDEX OF STUDENTS A Abell, Roy, Jr 93 Abell, R. Z„ Jr 109 Abernathy, Dorothy 79 Adams, John Camp 93 Adams, Kyle 96 Adamson, Daurene 115 Adkisson, Alice 52 Agerton, Mary Katherine 96 Akarman, Edith 93 Alderson, Eugene 93 Alford, Joe 96 Alford, Morris Scrappy .... 49 Alfred, Phyllis 79 Alldredge, Mildred 79 Alldredge, Valeta 96 Allen, Annabel 52 Allison, Billie 52 Allison, Frances 96 Alston, Alvah 93 Alston, Jessie Lou 93 Anderson, Jack N 115 Applewhite, Naomi Ruth 115 Archer, Dan 52 Armstrong, Anice 77 Armstrong, Aubrey 104 Armstrong, Fount 109 Armstrong, Roy 79 Askew, Kenneth 124 Askew, Vestel 96 Assiter, L. V 96 Attaway, Alvin 71 Austin, Julia 88 Aycock, Winifred 77 Ayers, Hugh J 96 Ayers, Manuel 52 B Bacon, Ina 115 Bailey, Corinne 93 Bailey, Ernest G 79 Bailey, H. Leon 52 Bailey, Iris 52 Bailey, Jimmie 79 Bain, Jean 49 Bain, Lynn 96 Bain, Viola 124 Bain, Woodrow 71 Baker, James 96 Baker, Ovid 77 Banks, Wilson H 77 Barnard, Ruth 79 Barnett, Gene 88 Page 3S3 Barnett, Janet 115 Barron, Lenora 109 Bass, Rosalyn 93 Bateman, Cecil 109 Bauman, Willard E 115 Baumgardner, Forrest G 115 Baumgardner, J. H 79 Bayless, Billie Burton 77 Beal, Charles 93 Bean, Mary Etta 52 Beard, Margaret 115 Beard, Stella 52 Beauchamp, Howard 109 Beazley, Gibbs 109 Bell, Bonnie 52 Benge, Doris 93 Bennett, Frank 93 Bennett, Reba 79 Benson, Don 77 Bentley, C.B 52 Benton, Eugene 104 Bergner, John 104 Berry, Nedra 115 Betts, Flora May 109 Billings, Naomi 77 Bingham, Abrey W 124 Bingham, Emma Dean 52 Birdwell, Johnnie 93 Bishop, Jewel 53 Bizzell, Betty 79 Black, Lane 115 Black, Virginia 79 Blair, Jimmy 88 Blair, Leon 104 Blake, Bob 79 Blanton, Douglas 93 Blocker, Harry, Jr 53 Bloom, Billie 79 Bolt, W. T., Jr 115 Boone, Henri Sue 77 Borden, Charles 77 Boren, Pauline 53 Bostick, Jack Patrick 71 Bottlinger, Marvin 115 Bowen, Gloriadel 96 Bowers, Allene 71 Bowser, Perry 53 Boyd, Mary Beth 109 Bozarth, Mary 124 Bozeman, H. A., Jr 53 Bradford, Lois 53 Bradham, Arnold 109 Brady, John H 115 Brady, Ralph 115 Bragg, Genevieve 53 Bragg, Wm. J., Jr 96 Braly, Earl 109 Brannen, Lila Marie 79 Branton, Darrell 77 Brashear, Cecil Ivan 49 Brashear, Philip 96 Bratcher, Fannie B 53 Bratton, Bill 93 Brent, Mary Alice 115 Brewer, Katrina 96 Brewer, Zane G 115 Brock, Steve L 53 Brooks, John R 109 Brooks, Zella Grace 93 Browder, Herbert 53 Brown, Helen 115 Brown, Lena Belle 53 Brown, Parker 96 Brown, Ralph M 79 Brown, Reba 115 Brownd, Mattie 53 Browne, Charles 96 Brownlee, Geraldine 109 Brummett, Dudley 115 Bryan, Lorene 109 Bryant, Elizabeth 49 Bryant, Hazel Louise 79 Buchanan, Beatrice 93 Buchanan, Monroe 79 Buchenau, Howard 96 Buchenau, Pauline 115 Buchtien, Ruby Lee 79 Buckley, Anne 115 Buckley, Harry Wm 54 Buckner, Dale 77 Bucy, Thomas 88 Buford, Billy 115 Bullard, Winnie Euline 104 Bullock, Marian 54 Bullock, W. H 79 Bunch, T. H., Jr 104 Bundy, Frank S 54 Burck, Maryedna 124 Burck, Wm. J 88 Burden, Louis 115 Burdette, Marjorie 115 Burkett, Charles 96 Burks, W. A 79 Burnett, Wesley 49 Burnett, Wynona 49 Burnside, Evelyn 96 Butler, Edwin 54 Bynum, Muton 54 c Cade, Jo Dell 109 Caldwell, Bill 96 Caldwell, Joe J., Jr 54 Callan, Ruth 96 Callan, William 109 Campbell, Frances E 79 Campbell, Milton 109 Carlock, Virginia D 96 Carlson, Jack 96 Carmichael, Loveta 54 Carnes, Mary Alice 124 Carpenter, A. J. Jr 79 Carpenter, Juan ita 97 Carpenter, Mary Merle 77 Carr, Lillie Ruth 96 Carr, Mabel 109 Carrithers, George 79 Carter, Mary Margaret 93 Carter, Thelma 116 Carter, William Junius 54 Case, Robert 54 Catching, Evelyn 109 Cearley, Edwinna 97 Chambers, Bon Hardy 97 Chamlee, Beverly 116 Chance, Anna Juanita 54 Chaney, Ranell 109 Chapman, Neal 109 Chapman, Robert D 54 Chapman, Roy 124 Chatham, Beth 77 Cheek, Harold 97 Cheek, Harris, Jr 79 Christian, Joe W 97 Christopher, Katherine 97 Claiborn, Oleta 97 Clapp, Ellen K 80 Clark, Charles 71 Clark, Eloise 71 Clark, Mary Beth 97 Clark, Ruth 93 Clark, S. Roscoe 55 Clay, Mattie Lee 109 Clayton, Anna Louise 97 Clifton, Eddie 116 Clinton, Kenneth L 80 Coalson, Billy 80 Coard, Dorothy 80 Coats, C. B 109 Cobb, Mary Bynum 80 Cobb, Para 97 Cocanougher, Harold 97 Cockerham, Xezvus 109 Cocreham, Moy 109 Coe, Paul 80 Coe, Pauline Farris 80 Cofer, Marjorie 116 Coffey, C. Milton 80 Cogdell, John 116 Cogdell, Weldon K 97 Cole, Aston 80 Cole, Clifton 71 Cole, Lewis 116 Cole, Oleta 88 Cole, Vada 55 Coleman, Ann 116 Coleman, Winnie Lee 49 Collier, Catherine 116 Colwell, Murl 54 Cone, Charlotte 97 Coneway, Paul 55 Conn, Carolyn 110 Conroy, Jack 116 Cook, Dorothy 97 Cook, Lula Grace 77 Cook, Russell 104 Cooper, Al Ray 49 Cooper, Frances 97 Cooper, Mary 55 Cope, Francis 110 Copeland, J. D 116 Corley, Leo J 80 Cornwell, Celeste 116 Cotton, Imagene 49 Couch, Mary Kate 55 Couch, Verner C 55 Coulson, Walter 80 Coupland, Frank 116 Courtney, Joe Ray 97 Coventry, Vaden 97 Cowan, James 97 Cowan, Maurice 55 Cowan, Nelle Vee 116 Cox, Billie L 116 Cox, Jean 55 Cox, Leon 97 Cox, Lucille 110 Cox, Mary 110 Craddock, J. S 97 Craig, Irene 55 Crausbay, Billie 97 Craven, Joyce 116 Crawford, C. W., Jr 77 Crawford, Kathleen 80 Crews, Leroy 55 Crider, Lewis C 80 Crosby, Eileen 110 Crosby, Natalie 80 Crouch, Debbie 77 Crow, Earl 116 Crutcher, Leon 55 Cudd, Nita 116 Cumbie, Louise 116 Cummings, Harry 93 Currie, Herbert 97 Currie, James 104 Curry, Bennett 110 Curry, Betty 116 D Daniel, Lois Marie 116 Daniels, Dorothy 88 Darden, O. L., Jr 116 Dougherty, Billy 97 Dougherty, Olive 97 Davis, Charline 77 Davis, Gwen Marr 55 Davis, Janie Belle 98 Davis, Marie 110 Davis, Marjorie 116 Davis, Molly 116 Davis, Nancy Inez 117 Davis, Norman 98 Davis, Priscilla 117 Davis, Ruby Dean (Mrs.) .... 56 Davis, William J 49 Daviss, Charlcey 98 Day, Dorothy Jean 117 Day, Fred 124 Day, Gertrude 77 Day, Glenn M 117 Denney, Jno. L 104 Dennis, Robert L 80 Denton, James 80 De Shazo, Lillian 110 Dickenson, Christine 117 Dingee, George 104 Dixon, Burgess 88 Dodd, Grady 117 Dodson, Ramoyne 98 Dodson, Will Beth 93 Donahue, Kay 98 Donaldson, Lyle 56 Donnell, Virginia 93 Dorsey, Allen 110 Dorsey, Clarence 104 Dotson, Margaret 117 Doty, Bertie 71 Douglas, James 98 Douglas, Waty Frances 98 Douglass, J. C, Jr 110 Dowdy, Ross Wayne 80 Dowell, Robert 98 Draper, Marian 93 Drinkard, B. C 56 Driver, B. C 80 Driver, E. P 98 Drumheller, Myra 110 D ' Spain, Charles 77 Duckworth, Donna 124 Page 354 Duff, Beryl 117 Dunlap, Lewis 88 Dunlop, Mildred 56 Dunn, Roy 117 Dupree, George W., Jr 80 Dupree, Ruth 80 Dyess, Grace Thompson .... 56 Dyess, Tony Q 80 E Eads, Bill 98 Earl, Lewis H 98 Earnest, Leonard 88 Easley, Gayle 80 Eaton, Wilmot 56 Edgett, Pauline 80 Edwards, Clinton 110 Edwards, Mary Ross 80 Edwards, W. L 117 Elder, Joe 56 Elder, Marjorie 81 Eldridge, Glenn 110 Eldridge, Ray R 81 Ellington, Evelyn 124 Elliott, Helen Ruth 98 Ellis, Nina Opal 110 Ellison, Ruby 77 Elmore, Greta Marie 98 Emfinger, Norman W 49 Emmett, John 81 Emmett, Ruth 98 Eudaly, Hoyt 81 F Fagala, Jean 98 Farley, Betty 56 Farley, Rubye 81 Farmer, Marsh 98 Farrington, Marie 93 Feigenspan, Elsie 98 Fielder, Robert 56 Fielding, Al 104 Fields, Herbert 81 Fields, Tom 77 Fields, Wallace 98 Finch, Frances 81 Fincher, Christine 93 Finnell, John W 104 Finsterwald, Betty 56 Fisher, Billie Pearl 94 Fisher, Thelma Grace 98 Flache, John 56 Flemister, Neill C 81 Foncannon, Gerald 117 Foote, Charles Helen 117 Forbis, James 98 Ford, Claribel 56 Ford, Thelma 98 Page 35S Forkner, Roy 98 Forrest, Edwin 110 Forrest, S. S 49 Fortenberry, Louise 94 Foster, Arthur 94 Foster, Travis 77 Fowler, A. T 81 Francis, Ernestine 117 Franks, Athol 94 Franks, Vernene 110 Fry, Cornelia Klipstein 57 Fry, Marilynn 110 Fry, Maxine 81 Fulghum, Harold 81 Fulton, Mary Othell 110 Fuqua, Duane 57 Furneaux, Chris 110 G Gafford, Eron 98 Gaither, Erma Lee 98 Galbraith, Mae 99 Gamble, Arthur Earl 57 Garlington, Jack 57 Garrett, Judge 57 Garrison, Samuel T 104 Gathing, Emma 117 George, J. Jerome 104 George, Marie 81 Gibbs, Emmarie 117 Gierhart, H. M 117 Gibson, Geraldine 104 Gill, Joyce 124 Gill, Marydell 104 Gilligan, Gurthal 57 Gillispie, John L 117 Ginn, Guy W 81 Glass, Joyce 81 Glasscock, Juno 57 Glenn, Floy 94 Glover, Earl 77 Goen, Elton 81 Goodloe, Barbara 94 Gordon, Betty Alice 117 Gore, Minnie Hazel Ill Gorom, Mary 117 Gowdy, Lora Lee 50 Gracey, Sid 99 Grafa, Barney Gerald, Jr 88 Grafke, Helen Jane 110 Gragg, Cedric 81 Graham, Mary Eunice 57 Gray, Murray 99 Green, Barbara 81 Green, Edwin 77 Green, Elizabeth 110 Green, Frank J 124 Green, R. Kendrick 50 Greene, J. W 81 Greenfield, G. B 57 Greenfield, James 99 Greer, Lela Frank 57 Gresham, C. E 71 Griffin, Joyce 110 Griffin, Louis 99 Griffith, Britton 110 Griffith, Florence 57 Grigg, Melvin 57 Grimes, Billy 71 Grissom, Kenneth 110 Grundy, Bernice 99 Gurney, Harry Ill H Haag, H. L 50 Hadley, Dick V Ill Hagan, Barbara 99 Hale, Edwyn Lee 117 Hale, Robert H 50 Hale, Sidney Ill Haliburton, Leo 99 Hall, Gladys Ill Hall, Irene 124 Hall, Maynard 71 Hall, Millard 78 Hall, William W 124 Halliday, John H., Jr 124 Hamilton, Annie Letha 58 Hamilton, Bob 117 Hamilton, Juanita Ill Hampton, Rosemary 117 Hams, Harold 58 Hankins, Alma Lee 124 Hanna, Gordon W Ill Hanschu, Helen E 124 Hanson, Roberta Lee 99 Hardgrave, Sophie Alice .... 81 Hardy, H. L 81 Hardy, Wayne 71 Harkey, Jerome 50 Harlan, Rosemary Ill Harmon, Dean 81 Harper, Shelby 117 Harred, Hazel 58 Harrell, Fred B 81 Harris, Arline 72 Harris, Christine W 99 Harris, Claude 117 Harrison, Lillie 124 Harston, Helen 118 Harston, Vi 118 Haskins, Geraldine 88 Hastings, Roy 118 Hatched, John 118 Haught, O. B 72 Harwkins, Wallace 118 Hawthorne, Pauline 58 Hoyden, Ruby Ethel 50 Haynes, Joe E 99 Haynes, Merle 94 Hays, Eleanor 104 Heald, Edgar 99 Heard, Charles Parks 99 Heard, Lillian 88 Heard, Margaret 99 Heath, Norman 81 Heath, Parrish 118 Hecht, Leona 99 Heggen, Lloyd 81 Heierman, Dan H 58 Helms, Jack 58 Hemby, Margaret 94 Henderson, Dot 118 Henninger, J. S 118 Henry, Donald 58 Henslee, Homer E 78 Hergert, Ja y Ill Herring, Joan Ernestine 58 Hervey, Jarrett 50 Hibbitts, Turner 118 Hicks, Artie 82 Hicks, Walter N 58 Hieserman, Clarence E 58 Higday, Mary Ill Higgins, Louester Ill Higgs, Rose 82 Hightower, Eulane 104 Hilbun, Thomas A 99 Hill, James H 58 Hill, Robert Allan 94 Hoard, Clindon 72 Hobbs, Vincent 78 Hodel, Estelle 99 Hodges, Louise 58 Holcomb, Dysart 59 Holcomb, H. A 59 Holcomb, Hermoine 82 Holland, Eileen 104 Holley, Winifred D 78 Holliman, Inez 82 Hollingsworth, Helen 82 Holloway, Gehrome 118 Holloway, Margaret J 72 Holt, J. B 59 Holt, Mary Ruth 118 Hood, Minnie Lee 99 Hood, Susie Leigh Ill Hooker, Claude L 118 Hooser, T. J 94 Hopping, Doris 59 Horton, Guyrene 78 Houston, Beth 118 Houston, Merle Ill Houston, Pegues 59 Houston, William Henry .... 99 Houston, Robert 59 Howard, James H 78 Howard, Ruth Marie 94 Howdeshell, Lorraine 118 Howe, J. Floyd Ill Howell, Chas. M 59 Howell, Catherine 118 Howell, David Horton 82 Howell, Mary Melcher 82 Howell, Reagan 118 Hubbard, Rose E 82 Hudgens, Ernestine 118 Hudman, Kathryn 72 Hudson, Anna Feme 50 Hudson, Charles 88 Hudson, Leldon 59 Huffman, James W 82 Huffmyer, Jack 82 Hughes, Blanche 118 Hughes, J. C 99 Hunt, Roberta 82 Hurmence, Marian 82 Hutchinson, Tom N 59 Hyatt, Carl 99 Hyde, Carl 94 I Jackson, Arthur Dale 82 Jackson, Burrell 82 Jackson, Callie Ree 59 Jackson, Eloise 118 Jackson, Joyce 94 Jackson, Lloyd Ill Jackson, Oliver Ill Jacobsen, Berry 82 James, Catherine 118 Jarratt, Curtis 99 Jarrott, Louise 118 Jarvis, Johnny (Bill) 88 Jasper, Sidney 118 Jeffords, Virginia Beth 82 Jenkins, Jack S 59 Jennings, Bruce 72 Jennings, Jewell Leevern 99 Jobe, Doris 82 Johns, Raymond Lee 78 Johnson, Camille 59 Johnson, Dorothy 99 Johnson, Joan Ladd 94 Johnson, Juanita 82 Johnson, Robert Earl 82 Johnston, Emogene 94 Johnston, Katherine 60 Jones, Alma 78 Jones, Arbrea Fae Ill Jones, Calvin C 94 Jones, Carl 78 Jones, Esther Lloyd 60 Jones, Frances V 82 Jones, Jack 94 Jones, Jeannette 60 Jones, Marie 94 Jones, Maston 60 Jones, Morgan T., Jr 82 Jones, Nancy Lou 60 Jones, Paul V 50 Jones, Raymond 118 Jones, R. V 60 Jones, Shelba 100 Jones, William 118 Jordan, Austin Reginald 82 Jordan, Harry 82 Jordan, Jeraldine 119 Jordan, John L 82 Jordan, Lera 100 Jungman, Eleanor 82 K Kaiser, K. B 100 Keeton, Finis Ill Keffer, Imogene 60 Kelley, Jim 83 Kelly, Wayne L 60 Kelton, George 119 Kelton, Mrs. Norris 119 Kendrick, Mary Frances 78 Kennedy, Crystal 119 Kennedy, Ellen 119 Kenneth, Stanley 60 Kerby, Virginia 100 Kern, Catherine 119 Kern, Margaret 100 Kerr, Amye Rhue 83 Kerr, Lewis 83 Kersey, Floyd 124 Kersh, Katherine 83 Key, Johnny 83 Kiker, Joseph Ill Kilgore, John P 83 Kilgore, Will H 119 Killian, Lois Marie 83 Killough, lone 83 Kimble, Mary Anne 60 Kimmel, James H 60 King, Dugan 119 King, John L 60 King, Raymond 83 Kirk, Buster 119 Kirk, Doris Ill Knapp, Virginia 100 Knapp, W. A., Jr Ill Knight, Eva Ruth Ill Knudson, Elmo 61 Kolb, Virgil 72 Kolb, Weldon Garrett 61 Page 356 Krauss, Bette 100 Krebbs, Roy L 119 Kyle, La Vonne 50 L Lacy, J. R Ill Laine, Morris 50 Lair, Nard 100 Lake, Gerald Ill Lam, Raybon 119 Lamb, Arch G 83 Lamb, Raymond 61 Landis, Lula Mae 100 Landrum, J. C 119 Laney, Gertrude 124 Langdale, Fred 83 Langford, Maxine 61 Lanham, W. T 100 Lansford, Geraldine 100 Lawrence, Charles 112 Leary, Ruby Lee 61 Leathers, Leroy 61 Leavitt, Jesse 112 Ledbetter, Talbot 61 Legge, Melvin 112 Lehmberg, Helen 61 Leidigh, Edward 94 Lemon, Joe 100 Lemons, Bill, Jr 112 Lemons, Joe Fred 61 Leslie, Hillery A 61 Lewis, Elray 124 Lewis, Iris 100 Lewis, Loise 112 Lewis, Orval 83 Lewis, Ruth 61 Lickey, Doris 94 Lillard, Carroll Jr 100 Limroth, Justine 94 Lindley, J. G 83 Lindsey, Addie Lee 83 Lindsey, Barbara R 62 Lindsey, Betty 100 Lindsey, E. H 119 Lindsey, Faye 100 Lindsey, Jim 62 Lipscomb, Lloyd 62 Liser, Gretchen 83 Little, Juell 83 Littlepage, Walthal 112 Litton, James 83 Livingston, L. D 119 Locke, John 100 Lockhart, Emesteen 100 Long, Ewing 100 Long, Mary Paul 119 Looman, Margaret 112 Looney, Helen 83 Page 357 Love, Russell 119 Loveless, Carl 119 Loyd, Doris 88 Loyd, Owen 83 Lovett, Madoline 100 Luna, Mary Jo 119 Lundell, Eugenia Elinor 62 Lyle, Bill 94 Lynch, Edward P 83 Lynn, Dorothy 112 M Mackay, Hector, Jr 62 Madera, Mildred 100 Maginnis, J. L 119 Mahoney, Grace Lee 112 Manire, Delilah 83 Mann, Robert 119 Mapes, Joe 51 Marshall, Margaret 94 Marshall, Robert 83 Martin, Emily 119 Martin, Jean 119 Martin, R. E., Jr 112 Martin, Travis 62 Martin, William Krueger .... 94 Masten, Edith 119 Mathis, Chandler 83 Mathis, Martha 62 Mathis, Mary 62 Matthews, Ersel 88 Maxey, Herschel 119 May, Annetta 120 May, Carey 112 McAdams, Mary Leda 63 McAlister, Winburn B 63 McAllister, Jesse 95 McAulay, Doris 112 McCarty, Aubrey 84 McCarty, Dora Nell 101 McCarty, Pauline 101 McCasland, Barney 84 McCcruley, Edadel 112 McClain, Furrelle 84 McClure, Max 124 McComas, F. G., Jr 101 McCormick, Myron 51 McCoy, Kay 120 McCracken, J. D 120 McCrummen, Alene 63 McCrummen, Hall 63 McCuistion, Dorothy 101 McCuistion, Truett 63 McCuistion, La Vola 84 McCulloch, W. H 120 McCullough, Hugh 84 McDaniel, Frank 112 McDaniel, Harold 101 McDavid, Bill 63 McDavid, Jean 120 McDonald, Austine 78 McDonald, Dan T 84 McDonald, Jack 84 McDonald, Mary Louise .... 1 12 McDowell, Lou Ella 101 McElroy, Nelda Fay 124 McFarland, Geraldine 112 McGehee, Gwendolyn 113 Mclnnis, Winston 101 McKay, J. Vernon 120 McKinney, Erline 120 McLachlan, Frances 101 McMahon, Opal 101 McMillen, Lou Ella 113 McMurtry, Hoyse 63 McMurtry, Merle D 84 McNeese, C. H 63 McReynolds, Eunice 72 McSpadden, Willard 124 McWhirter, Auburn 120 McWhirter, Jessie Ruth 63 McWhirter, Laverne 63 McWilliams, Mrs. Sara Sue . . 64 Meador, Jack 88 Mebus, W. C 62 Medlin, Cecil 124 Meekma, Archie 83 Meekma, Evelyn 120 Meekma, Florence 1 20 Meers, Nellie 120 Meredith, Henry 84 Meredith, Julius 120 Merriman, Wayland 84 Merritt, John 84 Messick, La Trice 112 M M M M: M ' -! M M M M M • ' ■ ' M M M M M M chie, Lee 100 lburn, Elizabeth 112 lburn, Wilma Fay 112 Hard, Virginia 84 Her, Annie Faye 112 Her, Elizabeth 84 Her, Ermon 100 Her, Gay 120 Her, Lloyd C 78 Her, Marydee 95 Her, Mary Lois 120 Her, William H 120 lis, Elva Mae 50 lis, J. V., Jr 112 llwee, David D 95 tchell, Audra L 51 tchell, Billy 120 tchell, Hazel 112 tchell, Melvin 72 tchell, R. C 62 Monteith, Juanlta 78 Montfort, Frank 95 Montgomery, Doris 78 Montgomery, Grace 62 Montgomery, Marietta 62 Moody, Mary Beth 112 Moore, Ben, Jr 124 Moore, Bernard 100 Moore, Dan 124 Moore, Gordon 84 Moore, Julia 84 Moosberg, Carl 63 Moreman, R. V 124 Morgan, Lloyd 101 Morris, Helen 95 Morris, Mildred 84 Mosley, Lee Roy 63 Moseley, Richard 101 Moss, Bee 95 Mueller, Lester 78 Muller, Mary Jo 120 Muller, Virginia 120 Mullican, Maxine 95 Mullinax, W. Turney 78 Murphey, Christine 95 Murphy, Johnny 104 Musick, George 112 Myatt, Edgar 120 Myers, Jack 120 Myers, Wauldene 120 N Nabers, Dorothy 84 Nabors, Tom 64 Nail, Kline 64 Nail, Leona 64 Neal, Billy J 104 Neal, Connolly 84 Neal, Mary Katherine 84 Neathery, Blandina 120 Neeper, Ruth 84 Nelson, Virginia 101 Nelson, Willena 84 Neves, Madeline 64 New, Earl 113 Newe-11, Claude M 120 Newell, Dorothy 120 Newell, Robert 101 Nichols, Erma Aleene 101 Noah, Mary Jane 95 Nobles, John O., Jr 95 Nobles, Warren 101 Noell, Kathlene 101 Noell, Virginia 64 Norris, Gerry 121 Norris, Lee 64 Noyes, William Edwin 113 Nunnally, Aline 84 Nunnally, Almarine 121 Nunnally, C. C 64 Nuttall, Maxwell D 78 Nystel, Brooksy Spurlock .... 64 o Ogden, Ann 113 Oliver, Clifton, Jr 64 O ' Neal, Harold 113 Onstott, Kendall 84 Orr, J. M 104 Orr, J. W 84 Orr, Norman 121 Ottmers, Virginia 121 Overby, Cecil 95 Overton, Nannie Margaret ... 1 1 3 Owens, Alton L 72 Owens, Evelyn 85 P Pace, Joye 64 Pack, Betty 101 Padgett, Delilah Gail 121 Palmer, Cora Virginia 64 Palmer, Morris 65 Pardue, G. V 124 Parker, Mrs. Ben 85 Parker, Edwin Davis 65 Parker, Escar 65 Parker, Thelma Blanch 125 Parks, W. Joshua 65 Parris, Berniece 104 Parris, Clytus 101 Parris, Porter P 104 Parsons, Cecile 65 Parsons, Ed D 65 Partain, Birdie Fae 85 Pat terson, Catherine 121 Patterson, Murry 121 Patton, Maurine 121 Paulsel, Lois 65 Payne, J. R., Jr 88 Payne, Louise 121 Payne, Ruth Marie 78 Peek, Argo 95 Pentecost, Ouida 78 Persons, Rena 121 Pfluger, Emmett 113 Phillips, Billy 65 Phillips, Pauline 65 Phillips, Richard 95 Pickens, Troy Newton 121 Pickle, Mary Evelyn 85 Pierce, Gladys 85 Pierce, John R 78 Pinkston, J. T., Jr 65 Pirtle, Sibyl 121 Plummer, Evelyn 121 Poe, Gladys 85 Polk, Clydene 121 Polk, Neta 85 Pollard, Hazel 78 Pollard, Julia 105 Portele, John R 101 Powell, Frances 101 Powell, Frances Dicy 65 Powell, Josephine 66 Powell, Nell Marie 66 Pratt, Gladys 113 Price, Betty Lou 101 Price, Elizabeth Anne 121 Price, Frances Elaine 85 Price, Howard A 85 Price, Mary 121 Price, Mary Dee 101 Price, Mary Louise 113 Price, Orvalene 78 Prideaux, Vondelle 78 Priebe, Helen 113 Priebe, Marvin 95 Priest, Benjamin 65 Prothro, Jack W 113 Pruet, Royce 113 Puett, Anna Pearl 85 Putnam, Ed 85 R Ragland, John R 78 Ragle, Marjorie 113 Rainwater, Eugene 101 Ramey, Decimae 101 Ramsey, Gerald 113 Randerson, Rose Marie 66 Randle, Vione 85 Randolph, Joseph 85 Rannefeld, Clarence 85 Ratliff, Charlotte 51 Ratliff, J. B 85 Ray, Jeff 95 Raymond, Floyd 85 Rea, Grace Kathrine 95 Read, R. L 51 Real, Fran 88 Redford, Logan 101 Reece, A. F 105 Reed, Jesse 113 Reed, Pauline 51 Reed, Russell 102 Reed, Sumner 102 Reese, Sylvester 102 Reeves, Winston 66 Reinhart, Arthur 121 Rice, James F 121 Rice, Mary Katherine 121 Richards, Ima Dora 85 Richards, Mary Lou 102 Richards, William 85 Richardson, Joe 85 Richardz, F. H 66 Richter, Hugo 85 Page 358 Riddel, Ralph 66 Ritter, L. A 121 Roach, Cecil 88 Roach, La Verne 85 Robb, Harriet 121 Robbins, Philip 72 Roberson, Alma Dee 121 Roberts, Bert 95 Robertson, Virginia Ruth 102 Rochelle, Winton 85 Rockey, Melzine 102 Rodgers, Deane 88 Rodgers, Rose Jean 113 Roe, Freddie L 102 Rogers, Davney 102 Rogers, Marion 113 Rohrer, Helen 66 Rooney, Annie 121 Rooney, Elma Rose 85 Rose, Inez 88 Rose, Vernon 95 Rowland, Maurine 113 Rowley, Agnes 121 Rule, Herbert 88 Rumph, Polly 66 Rushing, Eric 113 Russell, Conner 66 Russell, Mable 51 Ryan, Rufus 102 s Sadler, Glenna Fae 102 Saffell, Leon 113 Salser, Allene 51 Sanders, Roy W 113 Sansom, Virginia 113 Sasser, W. L 66 Sawyer, Queenelle 102 Scales, Leonard 113 Scarborough, Pearl 1 22 Schantz, Gladys 85 Scheild, Van 102 Schultz, George H 86 Scott, Eldon 102 Scott, Robert 122 Scudder, Crystelle 66 Seitz, Beatrice 86 Self, Emma Lou 122 Sellers, Wayne C 86 Sentell, Juanita 113 Seward, Mary Scott 114 Shaffer, Valoris 122 Shahan, Terry 66 Shannon, Katherine 67 Sharp, James E 105 Sharp. Winnolee 122 Sharpe, Hugh M 114 Sharpe, Jack 89 Page 359 Shaver, John W 67 Shaw, Robert 102 Shaw, Veda 67 Sheehan, Jim 67 Sheehan, John 86 Sheehan, Lois 114 Sheldon, Wichita 89 Shellberg, Bob 122 Shelton, La Verne 114 Shelton, Oleta 122 Sherrill, Burke 102 Shook, Hope 122 Shook, Marie 114 Shortt, James 122 Shows, Pauline 114 Shults, Clyde A 51 Shuttlesworth, Anna J 67 Sides, Truitt 86 Simmons, Beatrice 122 Simmons, Harvey 114 Simmons, Lilly Myrl 125 Simpson, Willard 89 Sims, Helen 67 Sims, John L 67 Sisk, Melvin 67 Slider, Geraldine 1 22 Smallin, Cleta Belle 86 Smiley, Willie Louise 51 Smith, Betty 114 Smith, Clyce G 67 Smith, Eloise 86 Smith, Elvira 122 Smith, Fern 114 Smith, George T 122 Smith, J. C 86 Smith, Julius 125 Smith, Lee 72 Smith, Martha Vernon 95 Smith, Robert A., Jr 95 Smith, Sylvia 86 Smith, Vance 122 Smith, Wilmer 51 Smith, Wyleta 86 Smoots, Dan 114 Snelson, Ethel Mae 86 Snodgrass, Hugh 86 Snyder, Ralph 86 Snyder, Richard 102 Spann, Doris 114 Sparkman, Warren 125 Sparks, Richard 86 Spearman, George 114 Spears, Loyd B 86 Speck, Wanda 86 Speed, Katherine 122 Speer, Lois Mae 1 22 Spence, Dorothy 67 Spikes, Arphice 73 Spill, Walter 114 Sprague, Gerald 125 Sproule, Ann Frances 122 Spruill, Ruth Elna 122 Stafford, Pauline 95 Stallings, James 102 Stanberry, Mary Ann 105 Standefer, Mary Frances .... 86 Stanford, Mary Elizabeth 67 Stanley, Joe 86 Stansell, Jack 114 Starnes, Maurine 95 Stengel, Grace 102 Sterrett, Elizabeth 114 Sterrett, Philip 86 Stevenson, Glenn 73 Stewart, Geneva 102 Stickle, Fred E 86 Stiff, Lawson 89 Stiff, Charles A 73 Stiles, Julia 122 Stone, Robert Lee 86 Stone, Virgil D 125 Stout, Sid 89 Strawn, Dora 86 Strawn, Horace 89 Street, J. Verna 122 Strickland, Hassler 102 Strickland, Mayvis 67 Stockstill, Margaret 95 Stone, Pearl 95 Storey, W. D 102 Stout, Fred A 95 Stovall, Virginia 102 Struve, Eugene G 68 Sudderth, Billie 86 Sullins, Claude 105 Sweatman, Ann 114 Sweatman, Tom 102 Swepston, Mary Ann 68 Swepston, Wynona 68 T Tadlock, Elizabeth 125 Teeple, Emily Ann 122 Talley, Opal 102 Tandy, Natalie 103 Tarbox, Elmer 103 Tate, George M 68 Taylor, Ardell N 103 Taylor, Merle Loraine 68 Taylor, Norman Blake 103 Taylor, T. J 103 Teague, Myrtle 68 Teague, Sam 68 Telford, Lindsay 103 Temple, Wm. Paul 73 Terry, Willie Rhea 114 Terry, Winnie Faye 1 03 Thacker, Juanita 86 Thatcher, Emma Nelle 103 Thomas, Ansell 87 Thomas, Carolyn 122 Thomas, Fulton 103 Thomas, George T 89 Thomas, Lorene 103 Thomas, Thad H 68 Thompson, A. 1 122 Thompson, Arthur 68 Thompson, Ben 68 Thompson, Claude John 68 Thompson, James 103 Thompson, Lloyd 114 Thornton, Dorothy 123 Thornton, Iris 87 Tibbets, Cullen 103 Tibbets, Douglas 123 Tidwell, Eufa 68 Tindel, Coy Thurston 69 Titus, Elizabeth 114 Titus, Frances 114 Todd, Hazel 123 Tonn, Edward, Jr 87 Townsend, Doris 51 Treadway, William 125 Treadwell, Linda 87 Trenary, Larry 69 Tribble, J. W 89 Trimble, Earl 123 Trimm, Leo C 69 Triplitt, Rupert 103 Trotter, Hazel Lee 69 True, Lorine 87 True, Martin E 73 Tucker, Claude, Jr 69 Tucker, Elise 87 Tucker, Ferrelline 123 Turner, Frances 87 Turner, Loyce 114 u Upshaw, Fancher 69 V Vanderburg, Ellzey 114 Vanderburg, Everett 103 Van Home, Mary Florence ... 103 Van Meter, Frances 103 Vaughn, Wayne 103 Veal, Dean Johnson 87 Vinyard, John Paul 103 w Watkins, Annie Louise 89 Watson, Betty Jo 123 Watson, Bob 87 Watson, H. A., Jr 89 Watts, Roger D 87 Wadley, Georgia 103 Waggoner, Sybel Nell 123 Waldrip, Virginia 103 Walker, Burnice 69 Walker, Charles 123 Walker, Dale 123 Walker, Dorothy 89 Walker, Felix 69 Walker, Margaret 87 Walker, Mary Louise 125 Walker, Nell B 87 Walker, Pauline Thompson . . 69 Walkup, Frances 87 Wall, Elmer, Jr 123 Wallace, Marzelle 114 Wallace, Mumpsy (W. J.) ... 103 Walling, Foy 89 Walls, Dorothy 123 Walter, Frances 69 Walters, Edna 69 Walters, Ernestine 87 Ward, Jayne 123 Ward, Jewel 103 Warenskjold, William 123 Ware, Ronald 103 Warren, Brady 105 Warren, Isabel 103 Warren, OVell 105 Warren, Wynefred 105 Weatherby, Howard C 70 Weatherby, Lucille 70 Weathers, Alixe 73 Webb, Gorman 114 Webb, J. D 123 Webster, Imogene 123 Webster, Rex 87 Weddle, Lora Lee 70 Weil, Louise 125 Welch, Jack 87 Welch, Tomme 125 West, Norma 123 Wetzel, Margaret 70 Wharton, Doris Virginia 123 Whetstone, Marjorie 123 Whippo, Mrs. Carol 87 White, Lyndelle 87 White, Paul 89 Whitefield, Weldon 70 Whitehead, Mary Virginia ... 87 Whiteman, Mary Beth 105 Whitfill, Glenna 123 Whitt, Eugene 123 Wicks, Clark 123 Wiley, J. Jefferson 70 Wilkinson, Russell, Jr 70 Will, Virginia 89 Williams, Ada 123 Williams, Anne Ruth 105 Williams, Bryan 123 A Williams, Coleman 89 Williams, Edwin 123 Williams, Floyd E 70 Williams, J. Dean 70 Williams, John Pay ton 105 Williams, Nancy Margarette . 70 Williams, Pauline 105 Williams, Roger 105 Wills, Harlan Jay 125 Wills, Hood G 70 Wilmeth, Roy 73 Wilson, Aubrey 105 Wilson, Betsy 70 Wilson, Buddy 105 Wilson, Cephus 125 Wilson, C. N 105 Wilson, Elaine 125 Wilson, Frances 125 Wilson, Frank 105 Wilson, George 125 Wilson, Guida 105 Wilson, Jane 125 Wilson, John H 87 Wilson, Mary 73 Wilson, Mary Jo 105 Wilson, Theodore A 73 Wiman, Jim 87 Wimberly, Willene 125 Winfrey, Maurine 125 Winkler, Wayne 125 Winston, Finley 105 Wise, Coleta Inez 125 Womble, Harold 87 Wood, Margaret 105 Wood, Ruby 105 Woodfin, Myrtle 73 Woodruff, Jane 73 Woodruff, Robert S 73 Woodul, Lois 125 Wootton, Minnie Will 125 Workman, J. C 125 Worley, Freddie Marie 125 Wright, Bill 125 Wright, Louie 87 Wright, Maurice 105 Wright, Neil H., Jr 125 Wright, Ouentin 125 Wright, Tina Mae 105 Wright, W. H. 87 Wulfjen, Robert 105 Wulfman, Annette 125 Y Yeatts, Billy 73 York, Gerald 105 Youngblood, Geraldine 105 Young, Treva Mae 89 z Zickefoose, Ivan 105 Zimmermann, Marie 89 Page 360 -t. J c a ■ ■ Tfcz C07Z sirtL. ; ' 47. 7 (T vitit c L ' £t - T-£ ■ I t A - - _  £« -. J tM dJoisasU e %— f ' 3 7. 7 tf ( , I ■ ' : • i, x x - b r o • € S :v= r CU =U UL C cl JL, jL JL, L XJt L - ■ J „ ■ - ' ■ ' J iM m A W


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