University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1936

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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 268 of the 1936 volume:

EX LIBRIS PAG 3 THE CINCINNATIAN ANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI .  PUBLISHED BY ALBERT WELLMANN AND HAZEL BEUCUS IN THE YEAR NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX « « « « « « « VOLUME FORTY-THREE edi cation 1906 saw the beginning of the Cooperative System of Engineering at the University ot Cincinnati. This was, at the time, a darmg experiment hy Dean Herman Schneider. We are all admirers ot courage, inheriting an appreciation ot it from generations of ancestors who fearlessly pressed tcrward m spite of odds, but surely it took m.ore than courage to instigate this new method of education. Only a man of high moral and intellectual caliber could guide the Engineering School through the ravages of the depression and establish it upon a successful and firm foundation. Therefore, to Dean Schneider and his Engineering College. The University of Cincinnati is indebted for a system of advanced education which has brought her tame and ranking among the educational institutions ot the world. Memory, that mirage ot what has been, torever en- hances the present scene. Campus memoirs will always include mental images of the members of the faculty as well as views ot the campus as it was during our school days. Deans, professors, instructors - pastors of our intelligence — all have etched upon our sensibilities the ineffaceable water-mark ot culture. Despite architectural renovations, we like to remem- ber the buildings as they were and appreciate pictures which help us to recall them with greater clarity. New editices are constantly being built and will come to play important parts in school life, but they will never be as dear to the hearts of the old graduates as the venerable halls ct the original buildings. SCENICS • FACULTY • STUDENT ADMINISTF [)N • DEANS • PROFESSORS • ACTIVITIES SCENICS Administrdtion Building ;,?•■ ' - ' ??:Fi : ? ' -A - ' uaaMe Taft Hdll PAGE 15 Wilson Memorial =ij.. PAGE 16 FACULTY PAGE IS RAYMOND WALTERS President Honor to this man, respected equally by trustees, faculty members, and students, and whose leadership lends prestige to OldMcMicken. PAGI 19 A salute to this able and eminently human executive, admired by the entire campus; his influence guides well the destinies of our Alma Mater DANIEL LAURENCE Vice-President AGE 20 Elizabeth Dyer, A. B. Director, School of Household Administration Josephine P. Simrall, B. S. Dean of Women Louis T. More, Ph. D Dean of the Graduate School PAGf 21 Herman Schneider, Sc. D. Dean of the College of Engineering and Commerce and School of Applied Arts AGE Howard D. Roelofs, Ph. D. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts H P M H H B. , ' ' H Alfred Friedlander, A. B.,M.D. W m p s fl L . H H Dean of the l l Hli H %. H H College of Medicine jj HpPP y . Hj Merton L. Person, A. M., LL. B Dean of the College of Law PAGE 23 PAGE 24 Catherine Buckley, R.N.,B.Sc. Director of the College of Nursing and Health Vincent H. Drufner. B, Sc.,C. E Director of Evening and Extension Courses, College of Engineering and Commerce STUDENT ADMINISTRATION PAGE 26 Russel Towers President OFFICERS Russel Towers Sophia Rhame President Secretary Margaret Gillette Robert Atkinson Vice-President Treasurer Gillette Atkir Rhame STUDENT COUNCIL PAGE 27 % Conner Pfruetfer Llovd W. Rhame Kent Watk.ns Eastman Lotspeich DeCourcy McClure Kersker Postle S. Rhame Towers Gillette Atkinson Bugher ENGINEERING William Lloyd William Watkins Clifford Prueffer Theodore Kersker Robert Conner Robert Atkinson TEACHERS Jane Bugher LIBERAL ARTS William Kent Margaret Lotspeich Russe! Towers Sophie Rhame MEN ' S SENATE William Rhame WOMEN ' S SENATE Louise Eastman HOUSEHOLD ADMINISTRATION Dorothy Fitsgerald Margaret Gillette APPLIED ARTS Ruth DeCourcy LAW Carroll McClure ADVISORY BOARD Russel Towers Margaret Gillette Sophia Rhame Robert Atkinson Jean Winston Arthur Postle Arthur W. Holmes, Fresident REPRESENTATIVES PAGE 28 « Ratterman Gustetter Munroe Perm Rhame Hexamer Cooper Bowen Thienng Gillette Huenefeld Angert Eastman Whistler O ' Neill Reiff Bock Dickins Felton Wilson Herschede Pinfold Watfenschmidt EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Dorothy Bocke Laile Eubank Jane Fordyce Estelle Gehrum Margaret Gillette Dorothy Gunlach Grace Hemsteger Dorothy May Lea Klein Martha Jane Pulliam Dorothy Russell Greta Sjodahl Mary Rose Thuman Dorothy Trankler Dons Waifenschmidt Marguerite Whistler OFFICERS Louise Eastman President Dorothy Herschede Vice-President Ruth Pinfold Recording Secretary Jean Angert Corresponding Secretary Helen D. Huenefeld Treasurer WOMEN ' S SENATE PAGE 29 di Knocke Bauer Rarrocco Ballard ADVISOR Arthur Postle MEMBERS Clark Ballard - • Romolo Barrocco • Richard Bauer • Clarence Betz • Douglas Day - ■ George Fahnestock Robert Johnson Walter Knocke Arthur McArthur Bert Moore ■ ■ - Chuhhy Nau ■ ■ Charles Ramey William Rhame Ralph Yeager - - REPRESENTING Co-Op Club Dormitorv Y. M. C. A. Glee Club Sophos University Band Omicron Delta Kappa Intramurals R. O. T. C. Rifle Team Sigma Sigma Active C Club President ' s Council Uiex EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE William Rhame President Richard Bauer yicc-Vrcsident Douglas Day Secy-Treasurer MEN ' S SENATE PAGE 30 FindU Garrison Deekin Wilson MEN ' S TRIBUNAL John S. Findlay ' George Wiesman Joseph Deekin Fred. W. Pressler President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer WOMEN ' S TRIBUNAL Dorothy Trankler Kathryn Wallace Helen Meyer President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer REPRESENTATIVES Cyrus L. Baxter Leo Beckett Otto Baum Paul Huenefeld Elmer Van Horn Peggy Wilson Lucille Garrison APPLIED ARTS TRIBUNALS PAGE 31 e Deveraux Schumaker Day Cheney REPRESENTATIVES SENIOR JUNIOR Harold K. Cheney Harry W. Moeller Joseph Schafer Clarence Bet PRE-JUNIOR SOPHOMORE William C. Deveraux Douglas Day WOMEN Mildred Schumaker OFFICERS Harold K. Cheney Presidan Harry W. Moeller Vice-President Mildred Schumaker Secretdv}- Joseph Schafer Treasurer ENGINEERING TRIBUNAL R. Dewey, President F. Pressler, President CLASS OFFICERS SENIOR CLASS JUNIOR CLASS Virginia Wade, Vice-President Virginia Munroe, Vice-President SNAPS FROM HERE AND THERE— Betty doesn ' t always look this sour, ,iust a bad day with senior cards . - . seems as tho the women ' s debate coach can ' t stand the sight of debatress Durhin , - . smiling Aliie. idol of the Midmi Stopgent . - . two of the seniors the office will miss very much next year, M. J. and Al . . . a very rare shot showing Bill Baldwin with books, very rare, indeed . . . Grischpuss wanted her picture taken (inset shows that famous pug nose) ... the sad look after Wesleyan made their second touchdown. Too bad ' . . . American Red Cross comes to U. C. for life-savmg pictures under the direction of Miss Davies . . . behind those rather expansive mouths are a couple of cute Chi Omegas (Hi! Marge) . . . the blond poli- tician. Smiling John, is caught unawares . . . another Sig Alph caught with a book, Bud Hackney . . . Martha Pet:hold, Diana up to date ... the Army goes to ' Wilson to hear about the chances of peace . . . Iliff really did hear a joke too dirty to publish, strange as it seems . . . Helen Bohmer can sleep well in a chair, see . . . Marian Held in an otf moment, hat slipping and tongue out. SPORTS Nowhere can the enthusiasm ot the University stu- dents in the matter ot outside interests be seen more definitely than in athletic activities. The importance ot success m these activities has not been under- estimated, and their value throughout college has been recognized. As a result everyone has a choice of something to play. With everyone for sports and a sport tor everyone ' ' as our motto, our key words are diversity and complete participation. Sportsmanship, fair play, and cooperation are important incidentals ot an active participation m sports. FOOTBALL • BASKET BALL • BASEBALL • TRACK • S WIMMINC OLF • TENNIS • RIFLE • FENCING • HOCKEY • GREEK GAMES PAGE 36 DANA KING Director of Men ' s Athletics HELEN SMITH Director of VVomens Athletics MEN S ATHLETICS r; i ' 1 V V. r- DANA KING Director of Athletics ASSISTANTS Cohen Mileham Brown Nicholoff The C Club Bert Moore Lan Wong Fred Hoffman Randolph Piephc Bert Fisher Ira Martin Walter Woodard Bryant GrifEn Larry Lihecap Robert Lance Carl Weisman Art Botterell Milton Brooks Robert Brown Lou Cappelle John Daley Charles Emmerich Richard Gulick Warren Hensel William Lloyd Ray Noltmg Gordon Orr Fred Pressler William Raidt London Gant William Miller Clyde Nau Sam Gilliland Bill Schwarburg Bill Feldhaus Paul Kirstein Jim Cook Harry Duncan Fred Yeager Charles Ramey Linus Habv Sid Weiss Merle Welch Ralph Grace Clark Ballard Ed Fox Swede Hanson Bob Jaap Jake Klavner Homer Lange Oliver Lehtinen Carl Leudeke Vance Spencer Bill Summerville Harold Conklin Oscar Erikson Larry Trame Carl ' Williams Bill Baet: Charles Beat: Robert Brown Ben Krentz Joe Pierce Walter Knocke Bud Dawson RUSSEL COHEN Head Coach COACHING STAFF Morrow Lewis Brown PAGE 41 Nau Pressler Cook Yeager Gant GiUiland Douds Emmerich Meguire Cum Razik Lauck Gihboney Haby Ramey Orr ki stem GolJini; Tuebner Feldhaus Noltin Welch Schaps FOOTBALL LETTER MEN Nau Ramey Gilliland Hahy Schwarburg Prcsslei- Gant Douds Feldhaus Tuebner Kirstein Ra:ik Cook Lauck Duncan Gihboney Yaeger Schaps Emmerich Manny Gulick Oeh Nolting McGuiar MANAGERS Balkird Geeding Wilhams Larkbey Brune PAGE 42 CINCINNATI 25 DAYTON CINCINNATI 38 SOUTH DAKOTA The first glimpse of the Buckeye Champs . . . new taces . . . new coach . . . new system . . . new Buckeye opponent . . . everything new . . . new offense turns cut to be a power house . . . line looks like a sieve . . . power overrules weakness . . . Bearcats beat Dayton tor the first time . . . team looks good. Gant Stadium overflowing . . . con- querors of Wisconsin ... a picture beyond realisation . . . forward passes flying all over the field . . . Haby to Ramey . . . Haby connects for ten out of eleven . . . best line play ever displayed on Carson Field . . . Can those Bearcats be stopped? Nau mmgmmm CINCINNATI 35 DENI80N CINCINNATI 7 INDIANA Cmcy scores after seven plays . . . Denison jinx forgotten . . . Gant kicks extra point from 27 yard line . . . Nolting ' s quick kick gams 60 yards . . . Haby ' s block on Nolting ' s touchdown jaunt best bit ot football seen this year . . . Noltmg, Yeager, Duncan outstanding. Stadium filled . . . Cats make a single thrust for victory . . . pass from Gant to Haby to Gant nets single touchdown . . . Yeager con- verts . . . Yeager returns kick-off 97 yards but called back . . . Bearcats stave off five touchdown threats . . . at the crack of the gun men fall ex- hausted . . . greatest U. C. victorv. Haby Raizik A CINCINNATI 67 BALTIMORE CINCINNATI 12 OHIO WESLEY AN 13 Cook Is it a toothall game or is it a track meet? . . . Grace, Shaps, Nolting, Gant, Yeager romp over for scores . . . Yeager returns kick- off tor 88 yards . . . Schwarburg is laid up tor the season with a knee miury . . . Cohen smiles as proteges cavort about on the gridiron. Bearcats score twice in first ten minutes . . . looks like a walkaway . . . Cats relax . . . Wesleyan scores . . . spirited Wesleyan team returns to outplay Cincy . . . Gant severely injured . . . Cats threaten to score . . . Nolting ' s tumble on the three tails into Wesleyan man ' s arms . . . races 97 yards to victory. Schwarburij ' f CINCINNATI 39 MARSHALL 13 CINCINNATI 6 OHIO UNIVERSITY 16 Thundering Herd surprises . . . leads in first quarter . . . Cats turn on power . . . Emmerich gallops 68 yards . . . laterals fly all over the field . . . Haby scores . . . Noltmg scores three times . . . the thunder of the Herd has died down . . . Raizik, Emmerich, and Nolting turn in commendable performances. Buckeye crown to be decided in sea of mud . . . Nolting scores on first play with a dash of 64 yards . . . Bearcats seem to he back in form . . . two blocked kicks paved the way for the Ohio University victory . . . Douds is the bright spot m the Cincinnati line. Guild- Ramey PAGE 46 CINCINNATI 8 MIAMI 7 Feldhaus Cats make last stand in swamp ot mud . . . Gant shifted to line . . . Duncan blocks punt and recovers to score . . . Feldhaus blocks another tor a safety . . . Miami returns to put on a whirl- wind finish . . . Scores once and in position again when gun souiids . . . Again the redskins bit the dust (mud). Yeager HONORARY CAPTAIN RAY NOLTING OMICRON DELTA KAPPA WINNER HARRY DUNCAN Goldins; Pressler WeisE Basket Ball  l SSg!S ' TAY BROWN Head Coach n HONORARY CAPTAIN William Raidt BASKET BALL RESULTS Cincinnati 46 - ' ' Wilmington 29 Cincinnati 14 ' - - Akron Goodyear 43 Cincinnati 26 - - ' Butler 39 Cincinnati 45 ' ' - Alumni 25 Cincinnati 26 - ' ' Ohio Wesleyan 24 Cincinnati 39 ' ' - Dayton 27 Cmcinnat 41 ' ' - Marshall 34 Cincmnat 34 - ' ' Ohio University 29 Cmcinnat 3 ' ' ' Akron Goodyear 41 Cincmnat 36 - - - Miami 34 Cincmnat 35 ' ' - Ohio University 34 Cincinnat 35 ' - - Daytcn 23 Cincinnat 51 ' ' ' Marshall 33 Cincmnat 33 - ' ' Toledo 36 Cincmnat 30 - ' - Ohio Wesleyan 44 Cincinnat 3 ' - Miami 28 Cincmnat 36 ' ' ' Central Normal 46 PAGE 49 LETTER MEN Brooks Hensel Brown Lloyd Cappelle Noltmg Daley Orr Emmerich Pressler Gant Raidt Gulick Willi, im Miller, Manager Nolting A Single pertormance by the hardwood quintet, which had been relegated to the cellar position in the Buckeye (by pre ' season dopesters), was sufficient to convince the tans that they had a right to hope for bigger and better things from the Bearcats. The fans did not err in their judgment. By mid ' season the ' cats had passed the dark horse stage and were established as the most logical contenders for the Buckeye crown. Startling upsets in the first Wesleyan fracas and the Ohio U. contest at Athens placed Cincy at the top in Buckeye com- petition. Thrilling home _A£ victories snatched in the , ' ' j| last minute of play from ' ' ' : Ohio U. and Miami showed the spirit of the invincible Vats at their best — ' ' the team that wouldn ' t be downed . The rest ap- peared to be smooth sailing for Cmcy. Dayton and Marshall were taken in stride, assuring Cincy a share in the championship. Llovd Then, just as an un- disputed crown seemed Gulu-l: Emmerich Premier within reach the cats met their Waterloo at Delaware. Hit hard hy the ineligibility toll and playing under unfavorable circumstances, the boys w ere trounced in a melee ot touls. Oft their stride, the ' cats second-halt comeback was not quite enough to take their final Buckeye contest from Miami. Raidt ' s sensational offensive and defensive tactics won him first place on the All-Buckeye. His unsquelchable spirit did much to keep the team m the running. Less spectacular, but lust as vital to the success of the team, was Bill Lloyd ' s stellar defensive work, his superb team play. He well l ei deserved his place on the All-Buckeye. Lou Capelle started slowly, but finished in a whirlwind. The season was one characterized not by the best team which varsity has ever put on the floor from the standpoint of real bas- ket ball talent, but by a team possessing an indomi- table spirit which made its opponents fight to discover this. • Raidt Cioelle Gant Dalev Brooks PAGE 52 Track MILEHAM Head Coach WADE Manarer MM ' Wade Oeh Kirstein Mueller Raidt Pettit Manning Orr Noltii Hoffman Lushbauuh Rit: Cannon Atkinson Hopkins Mileham Brown TRACK SCHEDULE 1036 April 25 University of Tennessee - - Knoxvillc, Tenn. May 1 Ohio University Athens, Ohio May 8 Ohio Wesleyan Delavv ' are, Ohio May 15 Miami University - - - Oxford. Ohio Mav 22 2J Buckeye Intercollegiate Meet Oxford, Ohio LETTER MEN 1935 Jaap Elliot Hoefer Conklin Gant Lloyd Noltmg Brown Kent McDonald Remle Stafford Wade, Manager Baseball DANA KING Head Coach Goet: Davis Brunst Schwemlein Hogue Emmerich Schivarburg Meyer Collins Trechter Rosen Schaefer Alexander Hansen Farr Castelli BASEBALL LETTER MEN IQJ.i Rogge Schwarbur Evans Shaeffer Klavner Enimench Ashe Rinck Bact Davis CO-MANAGERS Cheney Murphy PAGE 55 April 13 - Oglethorpe University - there April 14 - - Oglethorpe - - there April 15 - University ot Georgia - there April 16 - - Clemson University - - there April 18 - Vanderhilt University - there April 24 - - Ohio University - - there April 25 ■ ■ Marshall College ■ - there Mav 30 May 1 - - Miami University - - here May 8 - - Ohio Wesleyan - - there May 9 - ' Marshall College - - here May 15 - - Ohio University - - here Mav 19 - - Dayton University - - there May 25 - - Ohio Wesleyan - - here Mav 28 - - Dayton University • - here Miami University - - there Benjamin (.Manager.! Fox Burroughs Moores Kothe Albert Zimov Va Brigham (Coach) TENNIS LETTER MEN 1Q35 Saunders Ratterman Ubile Ludeke Fox Buckholz Pierce Lewis Branch, Mcimiger SCHEDULE 1936 April IS - - - - Centre College - - Danville, Ky. April 2Q - • April 20 - - - - Miami University • Oxford, Ohio Mav 5 - - April 24 - - - - Ohio University - - Athens, Ohio Mav 6 - - April 25 - - - - Ohio Wesleyan - - - - ' Here Mav 9 • ' April 27 - - - - Berea College Berea, Ky. May 15 - - - - Antioch College Here - - Miami University Here - - Ohio Wesleyan - - Delaware, Ohio University of Kentucky - - Lexington, Ky. - - Ohio University Here May 22 - Ohio Intercollegiate Matches - G.imhier, Ohio GOLF LETTER MEN 1935 Joslin Boyle Hill Kugler SCHEDULE 1936 April 16 April 17 April 18 April 21 April 24 April 25 University of Kentucky - - Lexington, Ky. - - Centre College ■ - ■ ■ Danville, Ky. University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. - University of Dayton - Dayton, Ohio - Ohio State University - Columbus, Ohio Miami University - . . , Here April 30 Mav 5 Mav 9 Mav 16 Mav 20 May 21 University of Kentucky - University of Dayton - Miami University University of Detroit - Ohio Wesleyan - - Denison University - • - Here • Here • Oxford, Ohio - Here Delaware, Ohio - Denison, Ohio May 22, 23 - Ohio Intercollegiate Matches - Granville, Ohi( RIFLE V SCHEDULE AND RESULTS National Matches— 23rd Place Midwest Matches — 2nd Place Allegheny Intercollegiate League — 5th Place LETTER MEN Bert. H. Moore Lan Wong Fred HofFman Randolph Piepho Bert Fisher Ira Martin Walter Woodard Bryant Griffin INTRA-CITY SHOULDER ' TO • SHOULDER Oppont nts MATCHES U. C. 1386 Miami - - ■ 1338 1290 Miami 1342 1376 Miami - ' • 1348 1262 • Naval Reserve ■ 1276 1294 Mariemont - 1346 1346 Miami - ■ 1363 1344 Naval Reserve • 1363 Young Rotterell Libecai Stott Hutchmgi Lance Griffin Weisman Banshn Rechtenwold Goshorn FENCING LETTER MEN Larry Libecap, Capt. Robert Lance Carl Weisman Art. Botterell, Mgr. SCHEDULE AND RESULTS Opponents U. C. Opponents U. C. 8 ' - - - Purdue - 9 7 - - - Ohio Northern - • 10 101.2 - - - Chicago - - 61. 10 - - - - Ohio State - - ■ 7 9 . . , , Northwestern • • - 8 6 - - Western Reserve • ■ 11 121 2 ' ' - - Illinois - - 41 2 2 - - - • Vanderbilt - ■ • 7 gig ' - - Notre Dame - - - 71 2 WINNERS, ALL-YEAR TROPHY 1927 ' ■ - ' - - Sigma Chi 1932 - ' Alpha Tau Omega 1928 - - - - - - Phi Kappa 1933 - - Delta Tau Delta 1929 - - ' - - - Sigma Chi 1934 - ' Delta Tau Delta 1930 - - - - - - Sigma Chi 1935 - - Delta Tau Delta 1931 ' - • - ■ - Beta Kappa 1936 - ■ Alpha Tau Omega INTRAMURAL STANDING TO MAY 15, 1936 Alpha Tau Omega - Sigma Alpha Epsilon Independents Phi Kappa - - - Dorm Phi Delta Theta Delta Tau Delta Sigma Chi - - - Lambda Chi Alpha Beta Theta Pi 335 235 229 224 208 ' ; 1 78 162 153 ' : 144 96,1 ■ Beta Kappa - - Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Tau Phi - Evening Engineers Triangles - - - Sigma Alpha Mu Acacia . . . . Sigma Delta Rho Phi Beta Delta - Iota Chi Epsilon 711; 551- 441, IS 14 121; -8 -14 -14I; -44 1; Intramurals DIRECTOR OF INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS M, Charles Mileham SENIOR MANAGER Walter Knocke JUNIOR MANAGERS William Shoher Robert Heuck FRESHMEN MANAGERS Julius Hessel Rick Campbell Opponents SCHEDULE AND RESULTS 56 Ohio State - - 28 Wittenberg - 38 - Wayne College 62 Michigan - - 19 Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg Western Reserve Here 203 Total Points - There Jan. IS ■ Here Feb. 1 - There Feb. 7 - There Feb. 8 ■ Here Feb. 15 ■ There Feb. 25 U. C. - - - 10 , . - 45 ■ - ' 44 ■ ' - 21 - ■ - 38 Feb. 25 Canceled Feb. 29 Defaulted 158 SWIMMING LETTER MEN, 1936 Brown Gruen, Captaxn Gutowski King IHff Ritchie Shannon Castelh Salovaara, Manager WOMEN S ATHLETICS Grace B. Davies Women ' s Athletic Association OFFICERS Martha Jane Pulliam Elaine Gunther - - Norma Kabitsch - - Helen Converv - - President Vice-President Recording Secretcir;y Corresponding Secretarv SPORTS MANAGERS Hockey Helen Hutchison Basket Ball Mary Jo Schroder Baseball Nancy Poe Swimming Betty Felton Outing Elizabeth Koenig Fencing Dolores Aviles Rifle Marietta Duke Tennis Jeannette Leuders Archery Gretchen Haller Photographer Ellen Perin Poster Chairman Lucille Garrison Social Chairman Lavinia Ervm Play Day Chairman - - - Gayle Hexamer News Editor Evelvn Winkler :,....p .. irf ' l 1 J JL I W if i; t ML f J % Gdrnso Pos Hutchinson Ervm Luedcrs Pulliam Haller Guenther Koenig Convert Shrocder G. Hexamer ' 3 Individual Sports The so-called individual sports, archery, golf, tennis, fencing, rifle, outing, and dance club, have become increasingly more popular within the past two years because ot the low participant need for one game. These are the activities which will occupy an important place in the use of leisure time m after ' college life. For the most part inter-sorority and individual competition was held with the winning sorority or individual being presented with an engraved cup. Hockey With the fall came the hockey season characterized by fast flying figures in green gym suits, sticks dexterously wielded and of victory and defeat. Many games were played (and enioycJ) m mud but even this did not keep it from being one of the most successful seasons. Winding up the year the Seniors again came out champions with the unusual distinc- tion of being undefeated for the four years and scored against only once. CLASS MANAGERS Freshman - Edith Bittman Junior - - - - Betty Felton Sophomore ' - Elizabeth Koenig Senior - - - - Nancy Poe Swimming On your Mark! Get Set ' Go! And the race is on. Swimming is a very popular sport, especially during the month of November, in which the meets were held. Both inter-sorority and inter-class competition was held with the Seniors coming out ahead. The swimming program was further motivated by an Invitational Meet with Ohio State University and A Demonstration by Mrs. Lenore Knight Wingard, the famed Olympic Swimmer. CLASS MANAGERS Freshman Sophomore Junior - - Senior - - Helen Wehking Emily Leimann Ellen Perm Helen Convery Basket Ball The dreary outdoors makes no difference to the excitement in the Girls ' Gym during the basket ball season. After several weeks of practice, intet ' sorority, inter-class, and intra ' College games were begun. In the mter-sorority tournament Alpha Chi Omega downed sorority after sorority and finally won the cup. The Teachers ' College came out ahead m the uitra-college games, and again the Seniors came thru with flying colors in the inter-class tournament. The season ended with the annual Basket Ball ' oanquet, followed by the traditional Alum-All Star Game. CLASS MANAGERS Freshman - - - Dorothy Ervin Sophomore - - Dorothy Abraham Junior - - - - Ellen Perm Senior - - - - Nancy Poe Baseball Strike one- Strike two — Strike three — and the batter is out ! ' . ! This baseball season was marked by some unusual pitching, especially from the Freshman class. Those freshies certainly put the upperclassmen in their place — even the once victorious Seniors could not do their part. Some of the games were played indoors, hut m spite ot this a good time was had by all. CLASS MANAGERS Freshman - - - Barbara Biechler Sophomore - - Jeannette Leuders Junior - . . ■ Ruth Wilson Senior - - - - Nancy Poe Greek Games FRESHMAN CHAIRMAN Virginia Horton SOPHOMORE CHAIRMAN Icannette Leuders The tniLlitioii.il Gieek Games Contest was held Kdarch 24 ' ith many Freshmen and Sophomore girls participating. The contest in the dance, athletics, and sculpture proved most interesting to participants as well as to spectators. The colorful chariot race climaxed a successful day with the Fresh- men coming out ahead with the biggest majority known in the history of the event. CAMPUS COUPLES— Varge and Cmny, the girl with the Phi Delt instincts . . . the Tri Delt inseparables — Patty Minnihan and Hyral Walker — with George Wright and Ed Hoifman . . . Marge Wheeler (What am I bid for this car?), really a swell gal, tho, and Pete Kersker . . . Duncan says Ruthie is the real thing but we all know Harry , . . Jane Head and her dancing Al . . . Louise Morris and some guy from a lumber camp. Kent, I believe it is - . . Prexy Dewey and the latest m a long line of Durbm girls . . . the late feature editor (we think she ' ll be fired before this comes out), Alice Piper and her man Harry . . . Mr. and Mrs. Editor {Al and Dottie to the freshman) . . . Fresh Pamt, Co-op Day, iootball center and Cincinnatian ' s W. Clyde Nau, as seen with his tamer, Bring em Back Alive Richter . . . financier Warrington and the Louise Eastman . . . ex-editor Gilbert and Sandy scowl for the camera . , . Kay Osborne and Butch Buhmann of Fresh Paint . . . the maker or women (Campus Debs) Purdv and Binny leaving school . . .last, but not least, Janie Ireland, the three- ring circus all in one with Doug Graf, Student. The R. O. T. C. trains a select group of future pro- tessional men m the principles of military science so that they may help torm an efficient army in case of a national crisis. The students m the R. O. T. C. con- sider their military training an opportunity and a pleasant duty. These men appreciate the importance of the preservation ot law and order in the army. This may well apply to civilian lite. Permit us to quote on the old subject of love ot war. We do not love war, we hate war; that ' s why we ' re in the R. o. T. cr COAST ARTILLERY • ORDNANCE • C ETS • OFFICERS • PERSHING RIFLES Military Faculty • MAJOR LAWRENCE C. MITCHELL, C. A. C. Prctesscr ot Military Science and Tactics • MAJOR R. V. LADD, C. A. C. Supply Officer • CAPTAIN H. P. HENNESSY, C. A. C. Adjutant • CAPTAIN R. M. SMITH. ORD. DEPT. Recreation and Liaison Officer Captain Hennes y Major Mitchell Major LadJ Captain Smith Pershing Rifles A National Honorary Basic Course Military Fraternity, founded by General Pershing, 1894, at the University of Nebraska to promote military efficiency and leadership. Captain and Statf PAGE 70 Lieutenant-Colonel MacArthur Cadet Colonel Spooner Honorary Lieuttn mt C Marion Endebrock The Cadet Staff assumes full respon ' sibility for the success of the Regiment on the held. This group ot men has been selected by the military faculty on the basis of their qualities of leadership and knowledge of military principles. Colonel ' s Staff, Section I Cadet Colonel Lieutenant-Colonel Adams In the work ct the Cadet Staff, the hcnorary colonels play a prominent part through their inspirational sponsorship of all military functions. Honorary Colonel Audrey Listerman Colonel ' s Start, Section II Ordnance Department SENIOR MEN Baldwin, Bruce B. Beavon, Harold A. Bond, Ernest E. Carlsen. Theodore C. Foote, Walter R. Getter, Robert E. Kautman, Earl P. Moran, Wilbur L. Newkirk, William B. Schreiberg, Lester Shayeson, Maurice W. Stoddard, William A. Coast Artillery Unit PAGE 73 SENIOR MEN SECTION ONE Ackner, Ned E. Cheney, Harold K. Cloke, Howard M. Everett, Charles T. Garber, William E Gerig, Ferd L. Gulden, William C. Hausknecht, William E. Henke, Arthur N. Kaunit:, Frank M. Kraft, Henry B. Luneke, Carl A. McArthur, Arthur P. McCrone, Willard P. Meehan, Joseph A. Mitchell, John E. Neuhaus, Charles I. SECTION ONE Ponte, Joseph Smith, Donald W. Spooner, Earle K. Wilson, Alexander M. Winterhalter, Frederick M. Wong, Lan J. Worseck, Paul J. SECTION TWO Adams, Charles O Ades, Robert E. Amiot, Roger A. Askren, Leroy Barkalow, Frederick B. Braun, Irwin W. Button, Paul S. Conklm, Harold W SECTION TWO Daniel. Russell J. Durst, Norman J. Eckstein, Paul A. Getz, Robert P. Gnnstead, Carl E. Hegman, Robert L. Hornung, Homer G. Jaap, Robert M. Jacobs, Yale Johnson, John H. Le Valley, Lewis H. Schwmg. Robert G. Smythe, James F. Stuck, Donald S. TuUsen, Volney Van Valkenburgh, Robert M. Williams, Craig G, Journalistic work at the University has proved a popular activity, and it is so because it provides many outlets tor the student to he a leader instead of a toUower. Students involved in press work are getting a valuable experience in journalism and in addition are submitting excellent reading matter for other students. Our publications include THE CINCINNATIAN , The Bearcat, and ' The Co-op Engineer and show our realuation that the magazine and newspaper are becoming more and more the medium of education to the Americin. THE CINCINNATIAN • THE BEARCAT • THE CO-Ol NGINEER • BOOKS • NEWSPAPERS • MAGAZINES Ha;el Beucus, Business Manager Albert Wellmann, Editor The Cmcmnatian Felheim Nau Warrington Ervin Cmcmnatian Staff Arthur W. Holmes W. Clyde Nau Lavina Ervin Marvin Felheim William Miller ■ Richard Lorbach Robert Amidon Mirium Rubin - Dorcus Meyer - Eleanor Needles Clo O ' Neal - • Helen Coe - • Estelle Krolfifer Mary Jane Egan Alice Piper - • EDITORIAL STAFF Miiiwgiiig Editor Martha Jane Pulliam - • Women ' s Sfiorts Managing Editor Dorothy Ervm - • • • Women ' s Shorts Managing Editor James Cook Men ' s Sports Editor of Photographs Willard Mulford - - - Men ' s Sports Photographer Joe Salovaard Men ' s S;iorts Art Editor Betty Cairns Semor Editor Art Editor Peggy Derrick Assistant Senior Editor Art Assistant Marion Rule Assistant Senior Editor Art Assistant Marion Endebrock - ' Secretary Art Assistant Jane Ireland Circulation Manager Art Assistant Florence Harpenon ■ - T-jpist Copy Editor Betty Jane May • ■ ■ • Tv isi Copy Editor Elicabeth Chambers • • Tvfnst Feature Editor Ida Seit: Tvpist Jerome Guiseiii Robert Shelb STAFF ASSISTANTS Myron Spenser Janet Johnson D. Ervin Jenkinson Amidon Johnson Spenc Cairns Chambers Felheim Schick Endebrock Shobcr Pulliam Thomas Warrington lohn Ruehlmann - - BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Business Manager Douglas Day • - - Adtertising Manager Jed Small ■ ■ - Emerson Ullrich . - ■ . Asst. Adfcrfismg Man Advertising Manager Asst. Advertising Man James Murphy BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Aubrey Wright Tom Kennedy Altred Edelsen Stanley Lipensl Russel Holland PROFESSIONAL W. Carson Webb Studio - Photography Mel Bcrstein Art The Bohnett Co. - - - Printers Repro Engraving Co. • - Engravings Jack Casper. Business Manager Robert Spivack, Editor The Bearcat Keefe Bertenshaw Thierins Best The Bearcat Staff Norwood C. Ge Harold M. Vinacke PAGE 79 Faculty Advisor EDITORIAL STAFF Helen Bertenshavv John W. Keete Roberta Theiring Sidney R. Best Wilbur L. Wright Alfred D. Meitus Evelyn Winkler - Frank H. Malloy - Marione Reitf - - Associate Editor Associate Editor MdTiiiging Editor hianaging Editor Dramatic Editor Shorts Editor Women s Sports Ediv J ews Editor J ews Editor Ralph Yeag Una Jane Rupp Eleanore Ulmer Elwood Siegel Manon Endebrock Dorothy Meyer Marion Kleine Betty Parker - Katheryn Kreeger Virginia Munroe ' - Intramural Editor J lews Editor J ews Editor Photographic Editor Headline Editor Headline Editor Art Editor Exchange Editor Society Editor Societ Editor EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Lee Jentleson Mildred Wilson Arthur Lammer. John Ner! Hotfman Immerman Alpcrn Glenn Wilhamson Haven ji Kleine Taucke Toepke Richmond Mencke Schaeter Gillette Jentleson Endebrock Meyer Best Theinnj:; Greenebaum Eisenberg Nerl MoUoy Westerkamp S hulte hilberg Krecge WiUon Kilberg Isaacs Keete Winkler Lammers Fo en Marks V: : Frankel Fallon Vaeger Telker Stohl Chambers Reitf Meitus Rosen nacke Gvvinn Manning Charles Gillett Jack Manning BUSINESS STAFF Advertising Manager Auditor Kathryn Hilberg Christine Fee Circulation Manager Feature Advertising Editor Berenice Rosen Christine Fee Ethel Dunson Jane Hilberg Evelyn Hardin BUSINESS -ASSISTANTS Leon Bohn Stanley Eisenberg Sylvia Hurwitz Brvce Nichols Ravella Frankel lulia ZuU Lea Klein. Business Mana er The Co-operative Enp ineer Published Quarterly hy the Stud;nts and Alumni of the College of Engineering and Commerce BOARD OF CONTROL Charles E. Kaufman, Ednor-m-Chej Charles Kautman, Editor Frank J. Messmann Maiirtging Editor Clark Ballard - - • Lea Klein Business Manager Prof. C. W. Park Catherine Bever Ass ' t Bus. Mgr. Prof. N. C. Geis Harold K. Chene - Prss. Eng g Tnb. Prof. D. Cook - ■ Pres. Co-op Club Editorial Adviser Business Adviser An Adviser Dave Meeker Associate Editor Robert Norris Associate Editor Ricahrd Schievvet: Associate Editor Ruth Kroger Alirojiii Editor Robert Deshon Art Editor Dorothy Fisgu? Exchange Editor Robert Reis £.vcliiiiige Editor Dan Geeding As.sistflnt Editor Robert Graef A.s.sistant Editor Joseph Schaefer Assistant Editor Charles Spring Assistant Editor Charles E. Kaufman Leo E. Weiler, Jr. Edith Ann Elliott Art Fasold ■ ■ ■ ■ Paul Huenefeld Joan Hurley - • • Mildred Schumaker LaV ' era Steins - . Norma Wellman - Mary E. Neuhardt Alta Newton - • Winifred Richards - - E.xecutiiJe Sec Advertising Mgr. Assoc. Adv. Mgr Asst. Adv. Mgr. As!:t. Art Editor Asst. Art Editor Exchange Mgr. Exchange Mgr. Circulation Mgr. Asst. Circ. Mgr. A.vrt. Circ. Mgr. Asst. Circ. Mgr. ASSISTANTS Marcella Amann Irene Bell Julia Clear Adolph Goodman Winifred Huntington Bertha Kettering K ' lunel Kuyper Donald Montgomery A. F. Pennak ' Marian Phares David Rosenberg Helen Schafstall Elaine Schifrin Betty Jane Sellers Edna Torchia Elsie Walter James L. Weiler Marge Whitne) ' Betty Winston Susanne Wolfe Deshon Elliott Hurley Park Schumaker Geis Beyer Norris Kroger IN PURSUIT OF LEARNING— Ginny Wade, Southern drau ler and Fresh Fainter, studies a hit between rehearsals .... Marg Lotspeich and Dottie King actually go into the library but Willie Feldhaus merely passes by Bettv Gustetter. Mummer ' s prexy, surprised at the books .... Monica Nolan is a great tennis player but just ask her about her bowling (this picture was posed because she never opened a book before) .... Sutfin scholar goes over a brief in the law library .... another awfully swell Theta, Ginny Winston, saying, Now Dick! Don ' t take my picture .... Don Gilbert caught in an off moment .... the law school ' s Charlie Weber — humorist ( Whata y ' say, Etuhlbarg ) .... K.KonfriedOtto, debater. beats out a case .... a law school class room showing all the boys sleeping peacefully with that Radical Schwerdtfeger in the center of it all ... , Wagner and Deichmann said there was no film in the camera but there was .... a graduate student. I believe the name is Lincoln, prepares to study .... the former Adele Lynch now studies law rather than psychology. NIGHT LIFE Night Lite, where fellowship and tuxes and sott dresses and love and liquor and top hats and music are puddled together into a potent cocktail and sipped under a hla:e ot lights. Night Lite, where we learned to seem witty when our shoes hurt and graceful when our dates were on our shoes. Night Lire, where we learned to drink like gentlemen and he adoring without meaning it. Nmht Lite ' DANCES • PROMS • FIRST NIGHTS LIGHTS • MUSIC • FLOWERS THEATER PAGE 86 The Fresh Painters Present PRODUCTION COMMITTEE Faculty Adnsor - - Dr. Phillip Ogden Tic ;et Manager - - - - Jack Wolfe General Cliflintuu. - - Elmer Strasser Assistants Co-Stiide-it Directors Jack Williams, Al Monty, Jr. Virginia Wade, Clyde Nau Business Miinnger - - Robert Buhmann Stdge Mdiiiiger . . . . John Emig Co-Direi tors, of Publicitv Eleanor Uimer Sid Re.st f.vecitrire Secrttar- - ■ Kay Osborne Student Dancing Director Myrrl EKvood Assistant Student Directors Jean Richter, Joe Schaefer, Christine Fee Accountant - - - Kenneth Hittinger Promotion Albert Cohen Program Jack Casper Mildred Wilson, Emerson Art Ass stants Ullrich, Skeeter Strasser Nan Johnston hiixitimt busmen Managers Ruth Walters Dick Bayhs, Kay Hilberg, Rita Romelle Jane Hilberg Jane Schmidt General Secretariis Ruth Sandburg Jean Voss, Mary Roarck, Stage C ew Richard Kammer Martin Townsley Cliainnan (if Music - Herman Kirschner Brion Sawyer Asixitanti Dave Cohen, Walter Sulcer Robert Willis Masters 0 Wardrobe Robert Stewart Richard Kohl. Rowell Hoffman Robert Thompson yiMtresi of Wardrobe ■ ■ - Eileen Sayrs George Bennett Master of Prof ert es ■ ■ John Harth George Zorini Mistress of PropertKi ■ Ruth Shannon Hugo Dieckm.in Assistants Janet Van Luenen Tom Danner Immanuel Marx August Bunthotl Seamstress - - - Mrs. Clara Campbell Earl Schroeder Chairman of Makeup ■ Virginia Kapfer Harry Moeller A,«istanis Angela Thiel, Dorothy Krug Dan Thompson Ruth Ballman, Ruth Borsh, Fred Poetker Virginia Mun: Bill Ammon Professional Direction by John Redhead Froome. Dances and Costumes by Madame Hahna Feodorova. Orchestra Under Direction of Merrill B. Van Pelt. Score Arranged and Orchestrated by MarsdenGribbell. Settings bv Wilbur Wright. Quack, Quack CAST OF CHARACTERS IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE Student Dick Powell Bystander - , - - Bob Pinkerton Limius T. Saddlebags - ■ Jack Marks Allen Grant - - - Robert Lindsey Dean Dick Westerkamp Captain Bi ll Mulford Mau Harston . . . ■ Bill Pettit Doc Hands Monty Richards, John Nerl Philomena - Mary Constance HoUen Minnie . . . . Mary Ray Kemp ' Wia-r tyme - . . . Mary Antram a i Mariorie Gruber Wild Bill McArdle - Dick Westerkamp Girl ■ ■ . . Mary Virginia Meyer Albert Donald Doyle Sxz Man - - - . Oliver Larkby first Man (Scene l ) ■ Bob White Second Man - - Dick Westerkamp Tfi.rd Man ... - Oliver Larkby fourth Man ■ • . Monty Richards fir t Woman - Marv Virginia Meyer Ss.coy d ortxan - Marv Rose Thuman Old Man .... Bob Pinkerton Man Al Dorenbush Top Uat {Seem IV) ■ Everett Walters Vvrst Kla.vonian Second ¥ axon c.n Third Kla.vonian . foun] Jvlaxonian • . Bob White Monty Richards Dick Westerkamp - Donald Dovle First Page (Scene i. Act ID Evelyn Winkler Second Page - . . Manorie Grubber Third Page . . Mary Rose Thuman Vov.n] Page .... Betty Patterson Hm Stinf(leschnialti • - Jed Small M. Brulletonnc .... Bill Pettit Mamapopulotis . . - Bob Amidon Signor Plioni .... Bill MuUord Toininenson John Fay £1. Tiidor Ford Sudan . George Allen Charhe Sum Fun . . OHver Larkby Sir .Anthony Wailmg ord-Dn Wilbur Wright German Diplomat [Scene ID . Jed Small Flun e Ben Andrews Di.i c Sid Best Duchess Lucille Schick §ueen Mane . - . Betty Patterson Tracf; 0 icial (Scene III) . Dick Powell Messenger .... Monty Richards First Man John Nerl Second Man .... Donald Doyle Clerk of Course ■ ■ ■ Everett Walters Hitler John Fay Haille Selassie ... Bob Amidon Mussolini .... Walter Suher k ' .ng Eduvird Bob White King Victor Finmanue! • Oliver Larkbv Herman Bill Pettit Sprinter .... Immanuel Marx Sr r nters Immanuel Marx. Dick Wester- kamp, Rowell Hoffman PAGE 87 Secretary Dance Virginia Tracy Ruth Duncan Ada Alpaugh Elsa Trefsger Meyer Jean Hennegan Eleanor Small Fntzie May Baker Steg Janet Rosenberg ' AGE 88 MUIMIIMIEIR5 GUIILID universiTy of cincinn Ti EXECUTIVE STAFF Betty Gustetter Preside?!! E. Gerald ToufF Business Manager Bob Eagen Publicity Manager Florence Bohmer Production Manager John K. Rose Director William S. Henderson ■ - ■ ■ Asst. to the Director Frank R. Byers Director Emeritus William S. Clark Faculty Advisor John K. Rose Bohmer Gustetter Touff PAGl BUSIXESS STAFF Asst. Business Manager - Jack Bear Program Chairman - - - Rosalind Rodgers House Manager ■ ■ ■ ■ Al Haberer Ticket Chairman - - - Allen Mont:, Jr. Secretary May Louise Pray PRODUCTION STAFF Stage Manager . - . . Property Manager - - - Make-up Director - - - Arts and Crafts Director Reader Denning Peaslee Clo O ' Neal Virginia Kapfer Ruth Walters Evelyn Winkler Victonan Fops Faun . Once In A Lifetime With an exceptionally large supplv ot talent available, the Mummers ' Guild began what was to prove a most commend- able season with Once in a Lifetime , the hilarious comedy of Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. The play concerns itself with the adventures of three down- and-out vaudevillers: Evelyn Winkler, Jack Marks, and Robert Eagen. who decide to establish a voice school for movie actors and actresses following the introduction of the talkies. George is the eternal source of trouble, as he con- tinually has the most absurd ideas, one of which is to fall in love with Susan Walker (Mary Rose Thuman). Everything comes out for the best, however, including this romance with Susan whose scatter-brained antics, including a side-splitting Alien Corn Widely contrasted to their comedy roles in Once in a Lifetime , Mary Rose Thuman and Robert Eagen again took the boards for Mummers, this time to head the cast of Alien Corn , Sidney Howard ' s tragedy of transplanted souls which refused to grow in alien and inhospitable soil. The drama deals with the ambitions of Elsa Brandt, who desires to become a great con- cert artist. She is held down by the pro- vincialism of the small American town where she must make a living for herself and her father by teaching music to the stolid stu- dents of a small mid-western college. Her life is further complicated by the devotion of Julian who recogni:es her talents and offers to devote his life and meager resources to furthering them. Elsa, however, does not love Julian. All to her sorrow, she discovers that she is in love with Harry Conway, a rich married man. When Julian commits suicide, Elsa comes to realize what her life can and should mean and so she determines to go to Vienna and work out her own future. rendition of Boots , had the continuous semblance of spontaneity, which is a cardinal requisite of good comedy. Such a large cast makes it difficult to do justice to the variety of performances, some good and some mediocre. In passing, however, it is fitting to point out the work of the vivacious Betty Gustetter as the syndicated newspaper woman who does, finally, come down off her high horse. Other clever bits were contributed by the competent Margaret Lotspeich as Susans small-town mother, Sid Dwoskin as the excitable Herman Glogauer, Virginia Foertmeyer as the formally clad but stupid secretary, Stanley Posthorn as the foreign movie genius, and the capable Robert Lindsey who displayed another facet of his skill in the character of the forgotten playwright, Lawrence Vail. Once m a Lifetime Dramatis Persi Beau Brummel Climaxing, m the true sense ot the term, then- season, the Mummers ' Guild Board showed foresight and intelHgence when they made use of the abiUties of their outstanding star, Stanley Waxman, in Clyde Fitch ' s Beau Brummel . The studied, precise, and flaw- less performance of Mr. Waxman was, of course, only a vindication of repeated asser- tions concerning his histrionic ability. Extremely sympathetic in his role was Robert Lindsey, as Brummel ' s man-servant, Mortimer. A sophomore of proven ability, Mr. Lindsey was more than a mere comple- ment to the star. His characterisation had the finesse ot studied excellence. As the pompous and arrogant Prince of Wales, Robert Eagen was again in his element. His comedy interpretation was at once colorful and amusing, without, however, descending to commonplaces. Stanley Post- horn, also in a comedy role, was individual and appealing. His humility created a character both pathetic and humorous, delicately shading between outright pathos and too broad comedy. The women ' s roles were convincingly handled by the lovely Muriel Kuyper and the accomplished Betty Gustetter, with Evelyn Winkler and Josephine Lerman in minor roles. No discussion of the performance would be complete without a mention ot praise of the colorful women ' s costumes which were executed by the Misses Marian Kleme, Mary Rose Thuman, Ella Fredricks, and Virginia Winston, and for the scenes, especially the Mall, which was so admirably designed by Director John K. Rose. Beau Brummel holds court . Naivete — behind the yawn Much Modern Monotony . PAGE 92 Faculty Presents Torchbearers The main interest in all presentations ot the Green Room Cluh is always the players themselves. Students look forward from one production to the next just to see the faculty cavort. This year, however, the pedagogues in grease paint had a first- rate comedy to offer which held as much audience interest as did the players themselves. Torchbearers , George Kelly ' s rollicking farce, was a natural for the Green Room Club- bers, tor in this satire on amateur actors the worse they seemed the better they were. We gleefully remember Dean Roelofs and Miss Bisbee, Miss Smith, and Mr. Rad- clitf, Miss Coops and the rest of the erudite cast mugging and strutting their various ways through the hilari- ous farce play which Author Kelly has inserted m his satire. Perry Kratz directed the play and, from where we sit four months afterwards. It seems m.isihtv tine work. Qviadres Presents ' Three-Cornered Moon Three-Cornered Moon provided all the insane humor and vivacity needed for a successful production of the talented Quadres Dramatic Group. The cast, headed hy Donald Spencer, Roberta Henderson, Bill Jones, Louise Underwood, and Robert Wrenn, literally romped all over the stage while injecting their own ingratiating personalities into the characters created by Playwright Tonkonogy. After a rather faltering rehearsal period, hindered by a change of directors, the group whipped into shape a mighty entertaining comedy. DANCE r l-J: ' J ' y PAGE 96 Omicron Delta Kappa Junior Prom Ruth DcCourcy As a fatting climax to the social season came the O. D. K. Junior Prom featuring the happy music ot Joe Sanders, the oleletthander and his original Kansas City Nighthawks. A distinct innovation was the sub- duing of the Gibson Ballroom lights to a soft seductive blue. The tra- ditional coronation of the Prom Queen placed the tiara upon the golden tresses of the lovely Ruth DeCourcy of Theta Phi Alpha. The committee in charge ot this m.ost successful of campus functions was Theodore Kersker, chairm.an; Harold Cheney, Richard Bauer, Al Wellmann, Clarence Scranton, Robert Johnson and Sidney Isaacs. The Gibson Billroom, February 22, lOr S Junior Prom THE COMMITTEE Theodore Kersker, Chairman Harold Cheney Richard Bauer Clarence Scranton Robert Johnson Sidney Isaacs Albert Wellmann T. Kersker, Chai Dorothy Trankler, Chaitman Mortar Board Christmas Dance Reflecting the joyous and yuletide spirit ot the collegians, the Hall of Mirrors of Netherland Plaza provided a perfect setting for the winter formal. Throwing convention to the wind, no queen of the school was elected. This memorable fact lent that much mere tim.e tor the dancing teet m harmony with the m.elody ot the renowned Bob Veon. The occasion was duly solemnized by the pledgingotSigm,a Sigma. Five men were summ.oned into the mvstic circle. Sophos Freshman Reception A true opening of the college year was the Sophos Freshman Reception held in the Hall of Mirrors. Guided by that master of rhythm and swing, Michael Hauer, the truckin ot the Freshmen was mixed with the more dignified bolero ot the Seniors Changing, but still retaining their tradition ot electing the queens ot Virtue, only one, the embodiment of all three Virtues, Miss Lois McGmnis, was elected. PAGE Lois McGmnis, Queen PAGE 100 Military Ball Once again the R. O. T. C. puts on all its fine regalia and dips to dreamy rhythm, proving that the army would rather face a woman than a cannon. Bert Langlor, Chairman ot the Ball, provided us with entertainment afforded by the presentation of the new Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel, drill team competition, presentation of awards, and the Pershing Rifles drill team. Cadet Officers ' Ball The cream ot the army has its day and struts itself before the flattering eyes ot Cmcmnatrs most charming. A glamorous affair marked by mirth- ful sobriety. To add to the finishing touches, the most gallant of gallants were summoned into the ranks of Scabbard and Blade. PAGE 102 Nancv Gorden Em meers Ball The Engineers put on a truly gala affair. In night cluh style the Roof Garden of the Gihscn hlotel made the ideal setting. The blatant rhythm ot Ace Bngode ' s orchestra led the way tor the joyous occasion. Ten contestants strived tor the cov- eted honor ot the Queen of the Quadrangle, but the balloting showed Miss Nancy Gorden to be the choice ot her loyal subiects. Ulex Spring Dance The traditional Ulex spring brawl was transtormed into a ball ot grandeur under the chairmanship ot Jim Cook. The Hall of Mirrors again reflected the scene of festivity guided by the rhythmic baton ot Buster Locke. Inaugurating a new tradition, Ulex awarded trophies to the outstanding Senior woman and man. Those receiving this award were W mona Magwood and Albert Wellmann. At the stroke ot twelve the members ot Omicron Delta Kappa Fraternity summoned nine Junior and Senior men into their honor circle. Winon.i Mjtrwood Albert VVellniann PAGE 104 BOATRIDE COMMITTEE William Kent, Chairman Robert Conner Louise Eastman Ruth DeCourcy Margaret Lotspeich Sophie Rhame Varsity Boatride Then there ' s the Boatride . . . the last word in campus hilarity . . . love at Its lightest . . . repartee at its wit- tiest . . . ulgy men at their worst . . . sparkling music . . . sparkling water . . . sparkling cceds . . . Greeks and Barbs laughing together like lite-long friends. Rhame Lotspeich Eastman BEHIND THE SCENES— Eagen says Aw shucki when askeJ for a tew words for the press .... Gus, Postie and Pinkie watch the progress of Beau .... a couple of Fresh Paint shots — Herm Kershner, hard-working accompanist, and Power Behind the Throne Strasser .... Jean Richter did a bit of everything for Jack Froome .... Boh Lindsey can sing Mammy , too (note Walter ' s acting in this part) .... Jack puts a few girls thru their paces while the author talks to Marks .... Postie had a tooth pulled. See where it was ' ' .... Winkie wears that collegiate paiama outfit while she, Marks and Lindsey watch the rehearsal and Mary Ray Kemp the camera .... Winkie can even tell Wil Wright how the set should look .... the unsung hero of many performances at Wilson — George .... dress rehearsal .... two of the chorus pose tor a newspaper photographer .... Roberta Henderson and Don Spencer go over lines at the last minute for the Quadres show .... Fresh Paint ' s Alumnae Chorus .... the lead, Mary Antram .... Betty said that after she got up there, there was nothing to sit on but we got her uo there. Providing social life for those who desire it, Greek ' letter organi2;ations tultill a definite need in campus lite. Education progresses when we are with people as well as when we are among text books or other medians ot learning. At times our minds may he susceptible to the imbibing oi knowledge, even though we are en- gaged in amusement and recreation. When humans are thrown together they will develop common interests and it their contact extends over a sufficiently long period ot time they will think and act much the same. It is therefore a well defined conclusion that our social lives are important m educational processes. Since social life is a larger part or our daily Ufe, we must choose our amusements and triends and plan tor leisure with the utmost ot care. HONORARIES « FRATERNITIES • SORORITIES PROFESSIONALS • ORGANIZATIONS HONORARIES Sigma Sigma FOL ' NDED 18QS U. OF C. HONORARY UPPER-CLASS SOCIETY Sigma Sigma unites men of merit, without regard for fra- ternity or other affiUations, for the purpose of serving and in- spiring loyalty to the University of Cincinnati. It has pledged Itself to remain a local organi- zation that It might bet ter realize this aim. MEMBERS IN FACULTY Ralph W. Bursiek Frank W. Chandler Robert Gowdy Robert E. Hynes Howard K. Justice Daniel Laurence V. Bradley Roberts ACTIVE MEMBERS Jim Cook Harry Duncan Bob Eagen John Findlay Don Gilbert John Hellebush Bob Johnson Bill Lloyd Clyde Nau Fred Pressler Frank Purdy Bill Rhame Victor Strauss Russ Towers Larry Trame Carl Williams Wilbur Wright 1898 FOUNDERS Walter Eherhardt Robert Humphries Parke Johnson Russell Wilson 1S99 Charles Adler 1900 Adna Innes 1901 Henry Bentley A. Hickenlooper Smith Hickenlooper 1902 Coleman Averv Hush Bates Earl Gold Stanley Granger Edwin Hutchins Robert Kreimer Charles Peters Ramsey Probasco Stuart Walker 190? Eustace Ball Edgar McAllister Har%ey Shepard William Stnetman 1904 Albert Baker Robert Buck Adolph Fennel Carl Gantvoort ViUie Kirkpatrick 190. ; Lester Collier Howard Jones Bert Lyon Fred Melhope Paul Richardson Calvin Skinner Arthur Wadsworth 1906 Frank Buchanan Robert Caldwell William Fillmore Edw-ard Forbes Alfred Kreimer Walter Shafer Curtis Williams Frank Wilson 1907 Edward Hurley Thomas Kite Brown McGiU Robert O ' Connell Frank Payne 190S Merlyn Aultman Fred Flach William Foley Walter Heint: Bates Williams 1909 Havward Ackerson WiUiam Kite Edward Rowe Charles Williams 1910 Ernest du Bray Ted Hyndman 1911 Chrtord Hall Alden Hart Ralph McComas James Taylor 1912 Harr ' Buchanan William Hall Walter Heuck Leslie Johnson Franklin Mitchell Vance Towler 1913 Richard Goettle Robert Heuck William Hill John Maescher 1914 William Engdahl Chauncev Hand Chester Klein John Shentr Bert Stansberv Chauncev Tilden Neil Wright 191. i Leonard Baehr Arthur Gordon Norman Kohlhepp Norman Lyon 1916 Howard Behle Victor Fishback Henry Hoppe Roy Palmer Harold Porter John Reece Edward Robinson Herbert Schroth 1917 William Ellis Karl Hetsch Carrol Lewis Joseph G. Morris lames Pease Bayle Richardson Anton Schneider 191S Harold Altamer Walter Haehnle Herbert C. Jones Howard Justice Carl Lund Carl Markgrat William M. Myers Edgar Powers Herman Rogert Millard Romaine Harold Talcott Earl Widau 1919 J. Robert Dorsey V. Bradley Roberts Francis Wright 1920 Hugh M. Bowen G. Carlton Brown Carl W. Frev W. Donald Hall Cyrus R. Osborne Cornelius Pet:hold Robert Sarvis Edvi. ' , C. Stnetelmeier Alfred Wen:el 1921 G. WiUard Breiel Edgar D. Coons Chase M. Davies Daniel Fries Allison B. Ideson Edward Lee Mever Phillip M. Meyers Fred Schierloh Robert Todd Edward Wagner 1922 Edward Gabriel Arthur W. McClure Howard E. Metiger Wylmer L. Scott Randall Walker 1923 James Beaman Lewis Gregory lack Harrod William Havelaar Rossiter Hobbs Ellsworth Ireland Joseph Linneman James G. Nippert Michael Palmer John Petchold 1924 Nathan D. Bachmai Walter S. Becker Ben L. Bryant Morton P. Francis John Z. Heiser Robert E. Hvnes Oliver T. Rhodes Edward L. Roth Erwin S. WoUson 192.=; H. Lynne Barber George Bradner AnthonvMc Andrei Warren Marvin Louis Nippert William Schmid Kelly Y. Siddall 1926 Fred D, Berger Chas. E. Franklin Edwin K. Levi James R. Paislev Weslev Schmid 1927 John Bachman Evan Chatfield Harry Franklin Richard Jervis Robert Maddux 1928 Richard D. Bryant Arthur Fennekohl Ranald West 1929 Richard Bolton Ellis Crawlord Richard Dial Dan E. Earley Albert Mayer 1930 Charles Adams Harrv C. Anderson Harold D. Bohl C. Thomas Clifton Donald Crone Frank Dost Richard Fran: John G. Gayman ' Jack Grieshaber L. Wm. Hammond Ralph Holterho.f, ' 96 Lawrence Levi William Nieman Frank X. Owens, Jr. 1931 Brad Alhn William Berwanger Ralph Bursiek .Arthur Hallett Erie Hanson Silvenus Kunr William Leach Carl Muth Earl Soesbe Herbert Starick Richard Steves 1932 Walter Conner Richard Dexter Paul Grischv Paul Heckel Carlton Lunsford Robert Nau Harry Rabe Nathan Solinger Fred Tower Robert White 1933 W. Ged Brown William Gllllland Cliliord Goldmeyer John Griffiths Wm. Groppenbacher Bernard Levin Edwin Lidseen Louis Mendel Gordon Strauss Dan Tobin Robert Wright 1934 Mel Bernstein Herbert Brown David DeVore Duncan Frame Phillip Heil George Kramer Louis Levy Sidnev MuUikin David Porter 193. ' ! Will Atkinson Carl Austing Robert Galbraith George W. Hill Bob Hoefer Kos Kemper George Levengood Bernard Levin Ken Parker Wayne Rich Leon Saler Don Sayrs Edward S. Simrall George Smith Walter Tuttle PAGE 109 PAGE 110 Pructcr Fahnestock .inton Koolage Omicr on Delta Kappa 42 CIRCLES HON ' OR ACTIVITIES AKD LEADERSHIP SOCIETY FOUNDED igi4, WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY CINCINNATI ALPHA THETA. EST, 1931 MEMBERS IN FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION Norman P. Auburn Samuel O. Beall Francis H. Bird Robert W. Bishop Sanford Brown Frank R. Byers John P. DeCamp Merton L. Person Robert V. Hoeter Joseph E. HoUiday Joseph H. Kindle Philhp Ogden Louis A. Pechstem Arthur S. Postle Mortimer Powell James A. Quinn Herman Schneider Spencer Shank Dr. Paul W. Sutton Raymond Walters allarJ Isaacs W.itklns Bishop Towers OFFICERS William W. Koolage Robert W. Bishop President Secretary Russell R. Towers Harold K. Cheney Vice-President Treasurer Merton L. Person Adi isor STUDENT MEMBERS Robert E. Atkinson Fred W. Pressler Clark T. Ballard Clifford J. Pruefer Richard H. Bauer Charles W. Ramey Harold K. Cheney Joseph S. Schaefcr Robert Q. Conner Philip W. Scott G. R. Fahnestock Clarence H. Scranton Edwin F. Fox Robert G. Spivack Sidney Isaacs Elmer Strasser Robert M. Jaap Harry D. Strothman Robert C. Johnson Russell R. Towers Theodore M. Kersker Lawrence E. Trame William W, Koolage William G. Watkins Carl A. Ludeke Albert H. Wellmann Frank J. Messmann Robert N. Ziegler Wcllma Trai Euhank Bertensha ForJyce Ervin Wide Vm Leunen Eastm, Clllette Tranklc r Gunklach PAGE 111 OFFICERS anet V.m Lucnen President Lavinia Ervm Vice-President Dorothy Gunklacli Secretary Margaret Gillette Treasurer Laile Euhank Historian Mortar Board MYSTIC 13 CHAPTER HONORARY SENIOR WOMEN ' S FRATERNITY ACTIVE MEMBERS Helen Bertensha Lavinia Ervin Louise Eastman Laile Eubank lane Fordvce Margaret Gillette Dorothy Gunklaeh Dorothy Trankler Janet Van Luenen Virginia Wade FACl ' LTY ADVISORS Ada Hart Arlitt Josephine P. Simrall Helen N Smith MEMBERS IN FACL ' LTY Josephine P. Simrall Helen N. Smith PAGE B.irrctt PanJorf Lushbaugh Breuleaux Best Rosenberg Day Fasold Rahe! Mueller HONORARY MEMBERS Tay Brown Arthur W. Holmes Edward Welsh M. Charles Milelia ACTIVE MEMBERS Sophos HONORARY SOPHOMORE ACTIVITIES FRATERNITY FOUNDED 1Q3K AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Arthur Barrett Sidney Best Fred Breuleaux Douglas Day Art Fasold Robert Heuck Varge Jones Robert Lmdsey Allen Mont: ChfF Mueller Henry Otterman Edward Pandorf Alfred S. Paul Randolph Peters Walter Rahel David Rosenberg Jorma J. Salovaara Ed Stern lack Wolf PLEDGES George Allen George Bowden Frank Davis Jerome Guiseffi Gordon E. Iliff Bill Keinath Tom Kennedy Milton Margolis Jack Marks Dick Pennington Don Robbins Jed Small Curtis Varland Louis Wiegele Valkenhurgh Braun Xcwkirk Button Bvrnt Emit Holmes Worseck GrinsteaJ Cheney Spooner Getter O ' Neil Adan-3 Masssy Stoddard Scranton Schn eke Ades Five Jones Zonni Peas ' .ee Neuhaus Wong Kaufman Abel Suther and Eekstein Dewey Finkvoss ACTIVE MEMBERS Scabbard and Blade 71) CO M P A N I E S FOUNDED 1904, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN HONORARY MILITARY SOCIETY C COMPANY. 4TH REGIMENT, ESTABLISHED 1Q2 3 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Maj. R. A. Andregg Mai. B. Jones Capt. R. M. Smith Capt. W. A. Baude Capt. R. V. Ladd Capt. C. H. Swick Capt. L.B. Chenoweth Maj. Mitehell Lt. -Col. R. S. Tour Capt. N. C. Geis Dr. H. Schneider Dr. R. Walters Dr. R. C. Gowdy Maj. H. Sibert Capt. E, Werner Capt. H. P. Hennessy Maj. E. S. Smith Maj. S. E. Wolfe John J. Abel Ned E. Ackner Charles O. Adams Robert E. Ades Irwin W. Braun Paul S. Butt on Raymond L. Byrne H. M. Cloke, Jr. Harold K. Cheney Fred S. Dewey Paul A. Eckstein Harrv A. Ernst M. H. Flye Robert E. Getter Carl E. Gnnstead Charles W. Holmes Robert M. Jaap Robert Jones Earl P. Kaufman Frank M. Kaunit; George E. Ted M. Kersker A. D. Massey Robert G. Meguiar Charles E. Neuhaus Wilham B. Newkirk William M. O ' Neil Denning J. Peaslee Stanton H. Petty Harry F. Pinkvoss Victor Raabe Carl H. Schott Clarence Scranton Earle K. Spooner William A. Stoddard J. Robert Sutherlin Daniel Thompson R. Van Valkenburgh Richard J. Van Veen Lan J. Wong Paul J. Worseck Zorini PAGE 114 carpenter Moore McArthur Goebel OFFICERS Joseph S. Schaefer President A. A. McArthur Vice-Presidejit M.les L. Weidig Cor. Secretary Robert S. Goebel Rec. Secretary H.iyden M. Huffman Treasurer Joseph W. Bunting Faculty Adinsor Pi Tau Sigma 16 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q15. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ETA, ESTABLISHED 1926 HONORARY MECHANICAL ENGINEERING FRATERNITY ACTIVE MEMBERS Richard E. Anderson Harold A. Beavon Wilbur E. Berning Theodore C. Carlsen Robert L. Carpenter Craig Edwards Clarence E. Glass Miles L. Robert S. Goebel William J. Heifer H. Mac Huffman Arthur P. McArthur Lawrence A. Moore Harold C. Pearson Joseph S. Schaefer Weidig MEMBERS IN FACULTY Joseph W. Buntint; H. Calvert Messinger Ruel E. Smith Charles A. Joerger Edward S. Smith MEMBERS IN FACULTY Phi Beta Kappa 126 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1776, WILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE OHIO DELTA, ESTABLISHED 18 98 OFFICERS Mr. Seidell Gale Lowrie Mr. Frederick Geier Mr5. George Howell - Mr. Richard D. Bryant Miss Jean Winston - - - President - First Vice-President - Second Vice-President - Third Vice-President - SecretiiT)! Mr. John Downer Treasurer S. J. M. Allen LA. Barnett Eleanor Bisbee Beverley Bond, Jr. William C. Boyce E. Lucy Braun B. B. Breese Frank R. Byers B. N. Carter F. W. Chandler H. M. Cummmgs C. O. Gardner R. C. Gowdy Roy K. Hack Lelia G. Hartman Frederick C. Hicks 1. H. Hoskins M. J. Hubert Estelle Hunt C. M. Hutchmgs Julia Kelly Paul V. Kreider John L. La Monte Jean S. G. Lowrie Reginald McGrane Archimede Marni Clifford W. Mendel G. M. Mernman Paul A. Minault Louis T. More Harry Muegel Phillip Ogden Marjorie S. Palmer C. W. Park Phihp B. Rice Rodney P. Robinson Howard D. Roelofs Meyer Salkover Robert Shafer Helen Stanley Shiro Tashiro Miriam Urban O.C.VonSchlichten William Wabnit; C. K. Weichert Harry L. Wieman Winston MEMBERS ELECTED IN I035-1Q36 JUNIOR RECORD G. von der Halben Virginia Sommer Edward Woliver SENIOR RECORD Charles Armstrong Landon Bachman Helen Bertenshaw Anna Brown Adrian Diamond Mane Etzel Laile Eubank George Fahnestock Marvin Felheim Ruby Flax Jane Howard Dorothy Jones Margaret Lotspeich Miriam Okrent William Rhame Helen Seymour Kaufman Hurtma- CarUen Rcnas Schaetcr Scranton Carrcnte Tau Beta Pi 67 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1885, LEHIGH UNIVERSITY OHIO BETA, ESTABLISHED 1915 HONORARY ENGINEERING FRATERNITY MEMBERS IN FACULTY L M. Alexander C. A. Joer -er R. W. Renn E. J. Barta H. K. Justice Herman Schneider V. A. Baude A. H. Knebel B. J. Shine L. R. Culver H. B. Luther H, W. Sibert H. A. Dangel E. T. Miller R. S. Tour r, . ' . Dunholter W. C. Osterbrock A.M. Wilson R. E. Kundley P. M. Palmer R. A. Van Wye NUris Norns Jacobs enev Gla: ;s Barkalow Shayeson Frey AUendorf Davis CLASS 1936 C. H. Allendoif M. Kaunit: F. B. Barkalow L. H. Le Valley T. Carlsen W. P. McCrone H. K. Cheney R. E. Norns H. W. Conklin H. C. Pearson W. H. Davis G. N. Pierce W. R. Foote L, F. Renas M. G. Frey J. S. Schaefer C. E. Glass R. Schiewet; R. L. Hegman C. Scranton H. M. Huffman M. W. Shayeson V. Jacobs V. TuHscn ' C. E. Kaufman W. Viets M. L. WeiJig CLASS 1937 B. Baumzweiger R. Haller P. S. Button W. Licht R. L. Carpenter J. H. Mans N. R. Dick F. L Messman C. H. EJwarJs C. G. Sattler J. E. Fnt: J. G. Ternll N. Ziatii Beta Gamma Sigma 4 ! CHAPTERS HONORARY COMMERCIAL FRATERNITY CLASS 1936 Hcnrv G. Alexander E. H. M. Gehrum Theodore Jentelson J.imej M. Murphy Vm. G. Watkins, Jr. Clarence E. Watson Paul J. Worseck CLASS 1Q37 Emilv M. Wavman FOUNDED AT UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN OHIO ALPHA, ESTABLISHED 1Q22 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Earl J. Aylstock Ralph C. Bursiei: Francis H. Bird Wilbur P. Calhoun Earl C. Case Dean H. Schneider Raleigh R. Sharrock Charles V. Dupiiis R. Emmet Ta dor H. B. Whalin Norwood C. Geis Leslie J. Schwalhe Arthur W. Holmes Ralph V. Miller Frederick C. Hicks PAGE 118 OFFICERS Flora Bieler Pre5icitr7it Abby Bryant Vice-President Bessie J. Curry Recording Secretary Virginia Rohde Cor. Seceretary Donald Drake Treasurer Estelle Fell Reporter Kappa Delta Pi 5 5 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1911, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ZETA, ESTABLISHED 1917 HONORARY PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION FRATERNITY MEMBERS ELECTED IN 1936 Walter Appel Irma Blase Marie Etzel Charlotte Hutfles Virginia Johnson John Alice Morris Raymond McCoy Frank McKernan Svet Nankovitch Mary V. North Mary Schubart Martha Schuette Benjamin Stites Stella Tenhundfeld G. Von der Halhen Helen Robinson PAGE 119 Pi Theta 1026- 1936 PI THETA, National Honorary Fraternity in Kinder- garten Primary Education, dedicates this page in honor of the tenth anniversary of its founding. ALPHA CHAPTER hereby recalls in grateful memory Miss Annie Laws, Leader of the Class in Parliamentary Law and Procedure, through which Pi Theta was organized at the Cincinnati Kinder- garten Training School, June 1926, and later recog- nized as an honor fraternity in the Teachers ' College, University of Cincinnati. OFFICERS, 1936 Ruth Everett Elma Brocksmith President Custodian Gertrude K. Vinson Vicc-PresiJe.it Shirley Jane Brown Secretary Edwina Woolley Cor. Secretary Frances Thomson Treasurer Members oj the Executive Board Carmen Lahke Fay H. H. McLaughlin Helen H. Bertsch Grace Anna Fry Advisor PAGE 120 Fordyce Tau Pi Epsilon HONORARY CHILD CARE FRATERNITY FOUNDED 1Q20 AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI LOCAL MEMBERS IN FACULTY Dr. Ada Hart Arlitt Mariorie Miles Nell Atkins Beatrice Thompson OFFICERS Margie Flowers Esther Collom President Cor. Secretary Ad:le GolJ, tcin R-cth Cullen Vice-President Treasurer Katheryn St;incr Emily Pribe Secretary Custodian HONORARY MEMBERS Elizabeth Dyer Flora Thurston Dean Josephine Simrall MEMBERS IN SCHOOL Ruth Cullen Mary E. Downing Dorothy Fitzgerald Margie Flowers Jane Fordyce Dorothy Gunkk.eh Mary F. Hidden Emily Pribe Geraldine Raney Eileen Sayres Emma Lou Schroetter Theresa Steiner Clarice Vance Elgie Wollenger PAGE 121 Trankler Coe Horwit; Sanders Wallace Eastman Bowen Hurley O ' Shaughnessy Harte Gordon Koolage Sandberg Whistler Garrison Slater MEMBERS Sigma Kappa Tau HONORARY APPLIED ARTS WOMEN ' S FRATERNITY FOUNDED 1934, AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Emily Bowen Helen Coe-Hanson Louise Eastman Lucille Garrison Nancy Gordon Wilma Harte Ruth Horowitn Joan Hurley Martiuente Betty Koolage C. O ' Shaughnessy Miriam Rubin Mary E. Sanders Ruth Sandherg Dorothy Trankler Frances Veaiey Kay Wallace Whistler MEMBERS IN FACULTY Jesse L. Paul Hope Warner PAGE 122 Sonenshem Vi ' oodhouse Graham Lo ch. is;cr Epstein Johnson Buvinger Beck Loiii;lc Rosen Immerman Lav m on HONORARY MEMBERS Eleanor Bisbee Josephine Simrall Mirum Urban Helen Stanley Alpha Lambda Delta HONORARY SCHOLASTIC FRATERNITY FOR WOMEN FOUNDED 1924. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1931 FACULTY ADVISOR Jean W ' lnston ACTIVE MEMBERS SOPHOMORES Emily Beynng Julia Clear Loretta Doerfljin Amy Lee Diamond Charlotte Ruth Due Ruth Ann EUerman Jane Hoffman Helen Jacobson Nan Johnston Erna Kramer Kathryn Kreeger Estelle Krolfifer Virginia Mann Millicent Moore Martha P. Marjorie Mueller Juanita Randolph Ethel Roodme Alma Rose Bernice Rosen Frances Rosenthal Helen Schafstall Estelle Schneider Grace Schroetter Ruth Louise Schulte Anita Steinruck Lucy Ulmer Irene Wander Margaret Wilke Wilson FRESHMEN Jean Becker Betty Jane Breckner Helen Buvinger Jane Eagen Judith Epstein Eleanor Graham Dorothy Immerman Louise Laymon Louise Johnson Wilma Loichinger Ruth Langley Gladys Shneider Zelda Sonenshein Norma Woodhouse Easton Lindberg Marcus Simon Hoepcr Rosenberg Herbstrcit Lushbaugh Rasper Cam mack Weinstein PAGE 123 HONORARY MEMBERS Robert W. Bishop Frank F. Ferns ACTIVE MEMBERS Phi Eta Sigma 36 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q23, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS CINCINNATI CHAPTER, ESTABLISHED 1Q33 HONORARY FRESHMAN SCHOLASTIC FRATERNITY Paul Assman Corrie Cammack Robert Easton Richard Farr Charles Gall Jack Herbstreit Herman Hoeper Burt Hoffman John Hoge James Jean Lee Jentelson Thomas Jones Ramon Lmdberg Louis Clarence Lushbaugh Robert Maier Charles Marcus Donald Nichol David Peters Vincent Rasper Carroll Reiss David Rosenberg Harrison Seuberling Julius Simon Charles Spring Paul Wemstein Walter Williamson Zimov PLEDGES FACULTY ADX ' ISORS C. V. Park W. S. Clark Philip Berghausen Carl Best Henry Bruck Ardath Burk James Chapman Hugh Funkhauser Jacob Gantner Irving Hirschfeld Richard Klmg Roy Manogue Milton Margolis Dennis Nead Merle Rahmes Don Reik H. von Schlichten Francis Smith Myron Spencer Walter Washburn PAGE 124 BrcoK. Yeager Och Seytfer Orr Ballard R.iiJt Kersker Ulex HONORARY MEMBERS Chick Mileham Tay Brown Norm Auburn Art Holmes Dana King CLASS 1933 Clark Ballard ' Georcre Smith Frank BurJick Jim Hall Bob Hoefer Lou Keppler Ed Lidseen Ray ' Nulsen Morty Powell [ohnnv Schneider Bob Eagan Ted Kersker Rog Pellens Fritz Pressler Harry Strothman Slim Summerville Russ Towers Carl ' ' Williams lohnnv Wvatt CLASS 1934 Carl Austing Jim Cook Clint Courson Bill Doyle Harry Duncan Cliff Pruefer Bill Rharae Bill Schwarburg Larry Trame ' Dick ' Van Veen Ross Atkinson Bob Biedenbende Bill Feldhaus Habe Haby Swede Hanson ' Bill Kent CLASS 1935 Charlie Krueck Bill Raidt Charlie Ramey Merle ' Welsh Cliff ' Woellert Freddie Yeager Ralph Yeager CLASS 1936 Sid Best Milt Brooks Fred Brune Doug Day Andy Douds Gib Gibboney Carl Guinn ■ Walt Knocke Irv Manny Harry Moeller Bill Oeh Gordie Orr Sallie Salovaara Jack Seyfferle • V m PAGE 125 Beyer Pi Chi Epsilon HONORARY WOMEN ' S ENGINEERING FRATERNITY MEMBERS IN FACULTY Manone S, Palmer Florence O. Kindle Helen N. Moore OFFICERS Laurene Davis Lea Klein Estelle Gehrum Prcsidenr Vice-Preiijent Sec.-Treti5urer Ruth Hardy Catherine Beyer Cor. Secretar Pub. Chain, CLASS 1935 Mary E. Costello V. Fauntleroy Charlotte Frev Thelma Frey ' Helen Levison Eleanor Puhl ACTIVE MEMBERS Marv L. Richards Marcella Wilke CLASS 1936 Catherine Beyer Laurene Davis Dorothy Fisgus Estelle Gehrnm Ruth Hardy Lea Klein Verna Niemes Norma Wellman CLASS 1937 Alice Lee Guidon NINE COMPANIES FOUNDED 1926, UNIVERSITY OF S. DAKOTA COMPANY E, ESTABLISHED 1 3 4 HONORARY AUXILIARY TO SCABBARD AND BLADE Catherine Beyer Dorothy Cramer Rachel Cox Laurene Davis M, L Endebrock ACTIVE MEMBERS Dorothy Fisgus Lucille Garrison Grace Hemsteger Elaine Jones Lea Klein Ruth Knagge Audrey Listerman Kathyrn Naber Dorothy Slueter r ' :irol Smithner Fisgus nkler Knagge Listerman Hemsteger Endebrock Smithner Bever PAGE 126 Ogden Lishkewieg Schocklev Lcuncr King Lit FOUNDED 19 0, UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI HONORARY LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS Dorothy King Mary F. Hidden Willie Grace Dickins President S::creta7 Trt ' dsurer Charlotte Schockley Miss Melrose Pitman Program Chairman Faculty Advisor CLASS 1936 Jean Barr Helen Bertenshaw Laile Eubank Dorothy King Margaret Lotspeich ACTIVE MEMBERS Janet Van Leun Virginia Wade CLASS 1937 Wilhe G. Dickins Dons Hexamer Mary F. Hidden Josselyn Liszniewska Helen Ogden Una Jane Rupp Charlotte Schockley ' - ' . Chi Delta Phi 29 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1019, UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AL PHA OMICRON, ESTABLISHED 1930 HONORARY WOMEN ' S LITERARY FRATERNITY OFFICERS Laile Eubank President Vermorgan Lucus Secretary MEMBERS Dorothy King Treasurer Marion Ahrens Helen Bertenshaw Willie G. Dickins Laile Eubank Sylvia Frankel Martha Fulford Marcella Guthrie Grace Hemsteger Dorothy King Vermorgan Lucus Caroline McGinniss Frances Rosenthal Helen Seymour Charlotte Shocklev Mary F. Shoemaker Virginia Winston Rosenthal Winston Schockley Lucus Fulford Eubank Guthrie Dickins FRATERNITIES PAGE 128 ElSf fWWM ' . Ki® Ml a • m m , Atf fl H A L ' Hh I , 7 ? Y ' V y Michael l-.ilbcrt Ponte Manning Chenev lluestein Hcllebush Rhame Tou!f Wilkerson Strebel Statman Moeller Fraternity Presidents ' Council OFFICERS Bill Rhame, 1st Semester Richard Bluestein, 2nd Semester Dick Bluestein, Ist Semester ■ Bill Devereaux, 2nd Semester Mr. Lawrence Preiident President Secretdrv ' Treasurer Secretdry-Tredsurer Fdcuky AJi ' isor DELEGATES ACACIA Robert Englerd ALPHA TAU OMEGA Bob Dewey AMERICAN COMMONS CLUB Victory Raabe BETA KAPPA Chester Moeller BETA THETA PI Bill Devereaux DELTA TAU DELTA Don Gilbert IOTA CHI EPSILON Bruce Baldwin LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Harry Wilkerson PHI BETA DELTA Gerald ToufF PHI DELTA THETA Fred Strebel PHI KAPPA Jack Manning PI KAPPA ALPHA Clarence Bet: SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Bill Rhame SIGMA ALPHA MU Dick Bluestein SIGMA CHI John Hellebush SIGMA DELTA RHO Robert Michael SIGMA TAU PHI Saul Stadtman TRIANGLE Harold Cheney Luther Pandort Bennett Cirpenter Cros. Recktenwold Leye Sattler Williams Bowman eith Bolles Ferguson Haas D. Weinig Slayman Hayes Custer Bohart J. Keete Allen Grimm Hellehush Durnell Zoller Weav T. Keete Powell Kearn Baer Wiegile Thomas :r McClure Norton Sigma Chi 6 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1855, MIAMI UNIVERSITY ZETA PSI, ESTABLISHED 188 2 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Daniel Laurence Sanford Brown Arch I. Carson Arch I. Carson, Sr. Leslie S. Schwallie Frank B. Cross Victor Ray, Sr. Robert Hynes Carlton H. Cnsler Henry Twitchell A. E. Sandburg Walter P. Murrav Tay Brown CLASS 10J6 Richard H. Bauer Jack Keefe CLASS 1QJ7 Richard Durnell William Rhea Alvm Forney Charles Sattler William Kent J. B. Simms Herman McKniglit Alvin Spiess Edgar Bohkart Larry Carpenter Thomas Chapman William Feldhaus Donald Ferguson Max Haas Ralph Hope CLASS 1038 Robert Killen Robert King Clive McClure Richard Powell John Hellehush Phillip Veith David Weinig CLASS 1030 George Bennett Watson Luther Herman Bolles George Mayer Edwin Bowman Randolph Peters Jack Croskey Ray Weaver Jack Williams CLASS 1040 George Robert Baer PAGE 130 V v ft Rossbough D. Peters Sherman Fraser Alstelder Schell Day Vigor Robinson R. Peters Read Griffith Neuhardt Ritter Westcott Baker Murphv Spahn Rhame Sigma Alpha Epsilon 110 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1856. UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA OHIO EPSILON, ESTABLISHED 1889 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Judge R. N. Gorman Harry T. Wieman Roy O. McDuffie Everett S. Yowell ' inaeke Hotten Weisman MacConnell Findla Winder Cooper Davis Nau Ros Goyert Mc Glasson Mellon Swair CLASS 1936 John Findlay John Mitchell Carl Hotten Harry Murphy Robert Miller William Rhame George Weisman CLASS 1937 Richard Buchanan Ted Kersker Jack Christopher Pete Kersker Clinton Courson Howard McGlasson Fred Dewey Clyde Nau Harry Duncan Robert Peters Andrew Frazer Parker Robinson Jack Covert lohn Rucker Charles Griffiths William Schott Ernest Hackney George E. Smith, Sr. CLASS 1938 Russell Eraser David Peters Courtney Grover Reider Schell Nixon Shmlle CLASS 1939 Gene Agnew Ervin Manny Ben Andrews James Mellon James Chase David Rosencrans Douglas Day Jorma Sa lovaara William Granger Charles Schwann Samuel Hoke Tom Swam Paul W arner CLASS 1940 Robert Alsfelder Jack H. Ritter Wade Cooper Jack Rose Frank Davis Paul Rossbrough Bill Gevedon John Schneider Robert Grindly Edgar Vinacke Rodney Helwig Jack Sherman Tom Kennedy Richard Westcott Ben Neuhardt Richard Winder Ed Phillips Richard MacConnell John W. Read Edward Heimann Pmkerton Kirtley jarrett Small Cook McClure Pennington Hudt Lame Earlv Whitehead Fisher Tusker Lov Brumleve Gray Breuleux Warrington Buhmann Davis PAGE 131 Outcalt Foster White Graf Golley Burrows Ullrich Hughes Knmer Devereaux Pettit Warner Heckerman Beta Theta Pi 87 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1839, MIAMI UNIVERSITY BETA NU, ESTABLISHED 1890 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Van Meter Ames G. F. McKim H. K. Dunham V. B. Roberts Alan K. Laing B. J. Shine CLASS 1936 Robert Gruen Miller Outcalt William Lloyd William Viets Jess McCreight Nevm Wagner CLASS 1937 Wilson Brumleve Thomas Foster Douglas Graf Arthur Heckerman John Hussey Robert Kuhn Jack Lanich Thomas Warrington CLASS 1938 Robert Bahman Kenneth Cnttendon William Devereaux Warner Goshorn William Hopkins Albert Kirtley Richard Kohl William Pettit Robert White CLASS 1Q39 Frederick Breuleux Robert Buescher Edward Burrows Robert Fisher Russel Gray James Hughes Charles lannitto |ohn larrett Robert Kreimer William Mulford Robert Pmkerton Walter Rahel John Tangeman Thomas Tucker Emerson Ullrich Cutler Wallace Donald Whitehead PLEDGES William Brown Dean Cockenll William Cook Ralph De Turk Robert Earlv Albert Galle Stanley Hansen Edward Heidt Robert Lowe Thompson McClure Robert Miller Richard Pennington Jed Small Stuart Smith Howard Speer Richard Steffens James Stone James Street Tyler Warnner Lowe Wiggers 132 R. Crutcher Alter Deekin Hanson V. Crutcher Baum Fox Nehn R. Dalton Burkhardt Bahl Berghausen Jo Wn ht Hoffman Streble , ( Urmeii W. Dalton Lanier Poetker Peaslee ichol Boner Scarlett CLASS 1936 Irvin Komnick Everett Walters Fred Strehel Alex Wilson CLASS 1937 Phi Delta Theta 105 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1884, MIAMI UNIVERSITY OHIO THETA, ESTABLISHED 1898 MEMBERS IN FACULTY George Hedger S. Gale Lowrie Ralph Tucker Franklin Alter III Otto Baum Hugh Bohner T. W. Crutcher Joe Deekin Rocrer Hanson Charles Hedges Edward Hotfman Denning Peaslee Jack Scarlett Jack Thome George Wright Charles Bahl Ed Brunst James Elliott John Fay Charles Faxon Varge Jones CLASS 1938 John Mellon Don Nichol Henry Otterman Fred Poetker Richard Rehn Jack Tarr ck Terril Edward Ahrens Phillip Berghausen James Boner Curtis Carmen Robert Dalton CLASS 1939 William Dalton Herbert Fahrenbruck Walter Farrel Allan Fox Robert Heiner Robert Jones Strykcr Porter Hoke Jacobs Heuck Williams Shober Giuseffi Campbell Hessel Kreuck Sulau Strauss Carlsen Havvlev Dorenbusch Kaufman Gilbert Delta Tau Delta 76 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1859, BETHANY COLLEGE GAMMA XI, ESTABLISHED 1909 MEMBERS IN FACULTY B. L. Bryant H. F. Koemg Robert C. Gowdy Mortimer Powell Victor Fishback Rufus Southworth Schwirberg j. Ruehlmann Hixson BowJcn W. Ruchlmann Cook Coughlin Meinken U ' atson Wellmann Huffman Mueller CLASS 1936 Ted CarL en Lew Hixson James Cook Mac Huffmann Alfred Dorenbusch George Kaufmann Robert Eagen Wm. Sch Warburg Foster Egolf Fred Stine John Gihney Charles Watson Robert Heckel Albert Wellmann Fred Yeager CLASS 1937 Eh Alcorn Paul Huenefeld Stanley Bennett Oliver Larkbv Charles Coughlin Wm. Licht Eugene Dawson Stanton Petty Donald Gilbert Fred Pressler Robert Hawley Robert Welsch Robert Williams CLASS 1938 Robert Heuck William Miller Walter Knocke Cliff Mueller Charles Krueck Charles Sulau John Ruehlmann CLASS 1939 Arthur Jacobs Hugh Hutchinson Richard Jones William Ruehlmann Charles Johnson Louis Karg Maurice Hoke Lawrence Strauss William Shober George Bowden Rick Campbell William Henderson Julius Russel CLASS 1940 Jerome Giuseffi Dick Meinken Tom Porter George Walker Louis Stryker Grove Mover; I ickles Haberer Morns Zmk Clark Yeager Walt: Gwin n Trame Picklc ' .-min Holmes Koring Restemeyer Rouse CLASS 1Q36 Albert Haherer Frit: LueJers Pi Kappa Alpha So CHAPTERS FOUNDED 186S, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA ALPHA XI. ESTABLISHED IQIO CLASS 1Q37 Clarence Bet; Larry Trame Charles Clark Elmer Van Horn Albert Fmk Ralph Yeager CLASS 1938 Chester Grove Robert Rouse Jack Klat: Carl Schott Harold Nieman Jack Seytfer William Restemever Gordon Waltz MEMBER IN FACULTY Reginald McGrane CLASS 1939 Robert Applegate Frank Robison Carl Gwinn Dick Shively Fred Holmes Bruce Zimmerman CLASS 1940 Robert Hindmar Louis Koring John Landwehr Louis Meyers George Moore Edward Morris Thomas Page Milton Pickle Ervin Pickles Herbert Zink 135 I, Nuelson Adams Colter Bootes CLASS 1Q36 James R. Glier W. Grimes Kahler Albert H. Kessler William J. Long Charles F. O ' Doniel Richard F. Schiewet: Lambda Chi Alpha 82 CHAPTERS FOUNDED IQOQ, BOSTON UNIVERSITY GAMMA GAMMA 2ETA, ESTABLISHED 1Q16 MEMBERS IN FACL ' LTY Norman Auburn Clarence O. Gardner Frank R. Bvers M Charles Mileham Charles K. W ' eichert CLASS IQS? Charles O. Adams Ralph B. Perkins. Richard E. Anderson Robert S. Willis Harry H. Wilkerson CLASS 1QJ8 Bosken Burton Hoffman Leonard L Arthur Buchman H. O. Euchenhofer Dexter M. Klmc Wallace McLean CLASS 1Q3Q Kenneth Bootes Thomas Colter Charles Coy David L Creahan John GimperJmg lames L. Hughes Robert Maurath Jac Nulsen Harry Shelby Robert Shelby Jack Smith Rod Stewart Harold Wegi Don Bristow Bruce Cowden William Fisher Kenneth Flanden Edward Lee George Martin CLASS 1Q40 Robert Merreli Harry Mittwede Fred Ossenberg James Russell Sherwood Snyder Arthur Utrecht Brill Spencer Felheim Lippert Rosenberg Safdi HirschteU Rosen Stuhlh,irv: Weinberi Margolis Lipinsky Liehschut: Glanzbertr Bluestein Marcus Sebastian ' i :ran Eisenberg Bloom Schitf Lekman Tennenbaum CLASS 1936 Richard Bluestcm Marvin Felheim Samuel Chaltie Henry Glanzberg Alfred Werner Sigma Alpha Mu 42 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1909, COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK OMICRON, ESTABLISHED 1917 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Leo S. Friedman Maurice Levine Joseph Heiman Clarence Luhin Stanley Simon CLASS 1937 Milton Rappaport Robert Sebastiai Stuart Safdi CLASS 1938 David Stuhlbarg CLASS 1939 Lucien Cohen Alfred Edelson Harvey Egherman Harold Gould Edwin Lippert Richard Lyons Milton MargoUs David Rosenberg Myron Spencer Lester Tennenbaum Myron Vigran CLASS 1940 Robert Bloom Stanley Brill Stanley Eisenberg Irving Hirschfeld Stanley Lipinsky Philip Rosen Leonard Schiff Morton Weinberg Sanker Kerr Fasold Manenthal Robinson Avery McClure Benham Rooch Robbins Meier Freiman Barrv Dickman Gerdsen Dinsmore PAGE 137 ■ ' Iota Chi Epsilon FOUNDED IQIO UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI -LOCAL MEMBERS IN FACL ' LTY Ralph Bursiek E- Kenneth Moore W. Harman Wils John DeCamp CLASS 1Q36 Bruce Baldwin Euw.ird Freiman Morton Benham Arthur Hanson Delbert Snider CLASS 1Q37 Rich.u ' d Avery William Klepper Frank Brockardt Carroll McClure Albert Kerr David McNeil Robert Kerr Forrest Romme CLASS 1Q?.8 Lyle C. Atwood John Gerdsen Robert Gasslmg Ralph Gunderson CLASS 1930 John Hoge Carl Hooge Arthur Fasold John Kreit; Chester Mace Ray Manenthal Cecil McLain Don Robins CLASS 1940 Vmce Barry Roy Fink Joseph Cettel William Hamencks David Dinsmore Jack Robinson PAGE 138 Nathanson Euster . Willi-. Schreiber Newman Moskowit; Hirscher Pcrrv Potecha Barrett Moritz Heidingsfeld B. VaUn Stine A. Hirschberg Groban Silverstein Touf Levinson Bear Meitus CLASS 1936 Harry Groban Alfred D. Meitus Daniel Oscherwitz; Phi Beta Delta 41 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1912, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY MU, ESTABLISHED 192 MEMBER IN FACULTY Hiram B. Weiss CLASS 1937 Milton Levinson Nathan Shapiro E. Gerald Toulf Sidney Zimmerman CLASS 1938 Jack Bear Allan S. Morit2;, Jr. David Cohen Morton Perlman Alvin Hirschberg Ben Silverstein Sigmund V.ilm CLASS 1939 Arthur Barrett Ansel H. Moskowitz Sidney Batterson Elmer S. Newman CLASS 1940 Hillard Cravitz Philip Nathanson Sol Kessel Dan Perry Alvin Weintrub CLASS 1941 Theodore Epstein Peter Potecha Bernard Euster Lee Heidingsfeld lulian Moskowitz Jack Schreiber Oscar Stein Herman Swillinger Bernard Valin PAGE 139 Wise Sternshein Albert Guttman Levy Schuhmger Gillet Statman Barrishman Sharon CLASS 1936 Irvin Albert Max Greenland Louis Kreindler Louis Schriher Sigma Tau Phi 10 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1917, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA BETA, ESTABLISHED 1920 CLASS 1937 Myron Albert Jack Banshman Milton Foreman Charles Gillet Lester Kohn Irwin Sharon Sol Statman Joe Wise CLASS 1938 Herman Kirschner CLASS 1939 Jack Guttman Harry Levy J. J. Schubinger Irvin Sternshein J. Robert Wasserman Louis Wise PAGE 140 Conrad Raudebaui h Gantner Jackson Compton Zimmer Tompkins Gundlach Freeh Scott Auc Stratzenbauch Dearborn Mevers Longman Stoddard Cheney Truesdell CLASS Harold K. Cheney Robert Q. Conner Conner 1Q36 John A. Emery Wm. A. Stoddard Get: _ CLASS 1937 Triangle Fraternity 15 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1907, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS CINCINNATI, ESTABLISHED 1921 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Earl F. Farnau Joseph H. Kindle Edward S. Smith Bradley Jones H. B. Luther Herman Schneidei Arthur N. Henke Robert P. Get: Josiah R. Meyer CLASS 1938 Donald S. Conrad George E. Longman H. Van Valkenhurgh CLASS 1939 Ell Dee Compton Dale A. Tompkins D. C. Terrell Davis Page E. Truesdell Richard H. Long Warren L. Wurster Winston O. Freeh CLASS 1940 William Ane Wm. M. Bradford Edgar Copp Stephen C. Dearborn James E. Foxx Jacob G. Gantner Keith W. Gundlach Wm. H. Gunklach James Jackson Ian Mac Gregor T. C. Raudebaugh Robert J. Reed Wendell L. Reich R. H. Schildman Richard E. Scott Henry A. Starbuch E. W. Stautzenbach Frederick O. Zimmer Pinkvoss Moore Schaefer Branch Woellert H.mnnn Garry Langeler Stewart lordan Rai:ik Westenhort G. IlitF Mahlman Durst Meyer Jensen Douds Lewis Shannon Oeh PAGE 141 CLASS 1 36 Alpha Tau Omega q4 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1865, VIRGINIA MILITARY I N S T I T LI T E OHIO DELTA LAMBDA, ESTABLISHED 1Q22 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Harvey Drach Charles Joerger WiUiam Wabnitr John H- Hoskins Rjlph W. Miller EJwarJ F. White i I ■1 hIH ISiLn rS i f Li ■ Hl Alonso Booth Robert J, Dewey Robert E. Getter Robert Norris Eugene Moore Franklin D. Ruck Joseph Schaefer Parker L. Stewart Carl Williams CLASS 1Q37 Robert J. Davis C. Nelson O ' Neal Neibert Hannon Henry F. Pinkvoss Robert S. Green William F. Raidt Paul Kirstein Albert Schilling Robert P. Brown Axel Jensen Albert B. Langeler Stewart S. Lewis Stanley H. Meyer William J. Rai:ik CLASS IQJS Charles W. Reddish John R. Richardson James C. Rogers Robert D. Spacht Francis X. Shannon Clifford Woellert CLASS 103Q Sidney R. Best Edward Kline John Brune Andrew Douds, Jr. Paul T. Ector, Jr. Franklin D. Hurd Gordon E. Iliff Louis Lauch John Moran William R. Oel Tom Reddish Robert Weiss CLASS 1940 John Fo.x Norbert Mahlman Gordon Garry Paul P. Poliquin Charles G. Jordon Robert Vetter John Westenhoff PAGE 142 R. Kliller Beer R. Johnson Schrall Cole T. Johnson Lynn Eberlv Lance Hamma Frey Patterson Rowe Maddox George Towers Holland Moeller Dieckman Bunthoff Scranton Beta Kappa 4 CHAPTERS FOUNDED iqoi, HAMLINE UNIVERSITY ZETA, ESTABLISHED 192 5 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Arthur V. Holmes Dare A. Wells CLASS 1036 August Bunthoif John Patterson Louis Dubuque Robert Lance Chester C. Moc Maz Rowe Clarence Scranton Russell Towers CLASS 1937 Walter Beer Harry W. Moeller Everett Hanson Robert Schreiber Richard Van Veen Mark Hai CLASS 1938 Oscar Schrol ' CLASS 1939 Frederick Brune Theodore Johnson Hugo Dieckmann John George Russell Holland Daniel Lynn Brion Sawyer Russell Wagner CLASS 1940 Richard Cole Ralph Johnson William Eberle Frank Mattox Robert Vordenberg Zins Steins Bernard W ' atkins Meehan Eckstein Diskin Kildufi Seiwert Feldkamp Wolf Seta Phi Kappa 25 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 18S9, BROWN UNIVERSITY OMICRON, ESTABLISHED 1Q25 Saik ining Vehr Herbert Barkalow Donovan Gutovvski Grigas CLASS 1936 Berning Rods La Rosa Norhert F. Adick Fred Barkalow Paul Eckstein James P. Kallaher Will Joseph A. Meehan Herbert J. Pundsack Mario Seta Wm. G. Watkms, Jr. am Zins CLASS 1937 Wilbur Berning Harry Cassady John Cassady Jack Manning Paul J. Seiwert CLASS 1938 Martin L. Conley William Herbert William Diskin Frank Martina Lawrence Donovan Richard Saik Robert Stiens CLASS 1939 Jack Grote Henry Helmets John Gutowski Phil La Rosa Jack Wolf CLASS 1940 George Bernard Jack Berning Joseph Feldcamp William KilldufF Robert Owens Edward Ozanich Richard Roos Thomas Sharkey Kenneth Swigart Elmer Vehr Robert Wehage PAGE 144 Henn lV- I,.rco Zimmcr Barrow Nerf Throwe r C Cam Tiack R. Cammack Igl. Diehl Vlanowic: Hinson Smith Enseoe Horn Balch Gunkel Lawrence Raabe Ponte Graney Holmes Beavon Smith American Commons Club 11 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q17, DENISOX UNIVERSITY CINCINNATI CHAPTER, ESTABLISHED 1026 MEMBERS IN FACULTY R. A. Anderegg A. Sherwood Kains Francis H. Bird WiUiam A. Crowley Charles M. Moore CLASS 1Q36 Virgil Argahnght Edwin Leubering Floyd H. Diehi Joseph Ponte Lloyd Allen Harold Beavon Howard Cloke Robert Graney William Heifer CLASS 1Q37 Herbert Hinson Charles Holmes Clark Lawrence Robert Leland Carl A. Luneke Victor Raabe CLASS lOJQ Cecil Barrow Corrie Cammack Frank De Marco Claire Enscoe Burritt Fisher James Gunckel Ramon Lindberg John Zimmer CLASS 1940 Gordon Ankney Grant Balch Carl Bode Roy Cammack Jack Henn James Horn William Hurd Andrew Igli Albert Meyers James NefF Mayo Prentice Donald Roth Jack Smith James Smith Thomas Sutor Charles Thrower Emil Vlanowics CLASS iqJ6 E. Barton Bell Robert L. Englert V. Monroi Horst Acacia 2Q CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q04, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CINCINNATI CHAPTER, ESTABLISHED 1Q28 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Walter A. B.iuJe Wayland M. Burgess L. B. Chenovveth William A, Crowlev George M. Enos Nevin M. Fenneman Norwood C. Geis William W. Hewett Ralph A. Van Wve HONORARY T. M. Stewart CLASS 1Q37 Eugene Chapman James W. Roberts James D. Tewel CLASS 1Q3S M. A. Embertson How.ird Rike James K. Hoefling Robert E. Schlegel W. W. Undercoffer CLASS 1030 William E. Arthur Stanley H. Jury William J. Bertsehe J. ],iv Ritchie Joseph A. Clark Raymond J. Roehm C. H. Foertmeyer Edward J. Stegner Robert E. Thompson CLASS 1040 Chester A. Dones Lewrs J. Pierce Elmer Faust Edwin S. Rice James W. Gould Robert C. Shoemaker Walter S. Kirkland Glenn Story Edwin N. Woistman SORORITIES x ' GE 148 Russell Unversagt Leu loncs W. Ison Cul Icn Pinfold Singer Rabkin Hdsemeier Mulford Bond Singer L. Haffner Ratterman Hogan Wade Henshaw Eich Ireland Botwin Hemstegger Dunbar Blum Solinger Kastir Foertmeyer Meyer Teres Shoemaker Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Association OFFICERS Grace Hemsteger President Dorothy Botwin Secretary Ellen Duiih.ir Treasurer DELEGATES DELTA DELTA DELTA ALPHA DELTA THETA Anne Henshaw Ruth Levvc Betty Nutting Marion Unversagt KAPPA DELTA ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Emily Bowen Virginia Foertmeyer Eileen Sayrs Elaine Gunther KAPPA ALPHA THETA SIGMA DELTA TAU Marion Haifner Alice Rabkin Betty Gustetter Marion Jacobs CHI OMEGA PHI SIGMA SIGMA Virginia Wade Bernice Solinger Virginia ZuU Edythe Kasiir KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA DELTA PHI EPSILON Ruth Cullen Sadie Singer Dorothy Trankler Ruth Horwit: DELTA ZETA ALPHA DELTA PI Virginia Hasemeier Florence Ireland Mary Louise Eich May Lou Pray ALPHA CHI OMEGA ALPHA OMICRON PI Helen Bertenshaw Mary Meyer Marjory Reiff Ellen Dunbar THETA PHI ALPHA PI ALPHA TAU Harriet Hogan Ruth Blum Dorothy Ratterman Ida Teres ZETA TAU ALPHA PHI MU Mary Francis Shoemaker Dorothy Russell Dolores Aviles Martha Tulford PI LAMBDA SIGMA Elaine Jones Helen Anne Beyersdorfer S. Mmnih.m Tucker McGinnis Dierckes Frascr McCarthv M. Kiltjour PUtts Bradford L. Kilgour Nottingham Brand Sluss Eubank Havemann McLaughlin Fulton Kamut Euhank Cochrane Huenefeld Kennedy Gere Croslev Henshaw Mithoeter Tavlor Howard .ciUv P. Minnihan Hickman Pinfold Kreeger Adam CLASS 1936 Adah Barber Charlotte J. Croslev Marian Dierkes Laile Eubank Nancy Gere Ann B. Henshaw Jane Howard Edith N. Kennedy Margaret Lotspiech Adelyn Merrell Betty Nottingham Jane Sluss Delta Delta Delta 8 8 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1888, BOSTON UNIVERSITY ZETA, ESTABLISHED 18 92 Eleanor Adam Eleanor Bowman Percy Cochran Martha Eraser Barbara Moeser CLASS 1937 Ruth Pinfold Rita Romell Jane Schmidt Muriel Stndsberg Acnes Teitis Dorothv Nieman Erances Vea;ey MEMBERS IN FACULTY Ruth Sorgel Grace M. Little CLASS 1938 Margaret Colburn Judith McDonald Jean Eulton Ann McLaughlin Laura Ann Kilgour Susan Taylor Kathrvn Kreeger Xdartha P. Wilson CLASS 1939 Maribelle Bradford Elizabeth Brandt Jane Eaton Lauriel Eubank Betty J. Havemann Virginia Kamuf Mary Kilgour Emmy Lou Mather Suzanne McCarthy Patsy Minnihan Fifi Mithoefer Jane Muth Ruth Platts Gloria Tucker Hirell Walker PAGE 150 rl lH B 1 o o ah:. u KUr ' 1 t jjl 1 M S«f, ' K ♦. ill ' ■• ' Vi ' : M m.mm ft iW tt r? i p ' ,(i;S;i m ■ J- 1 M lb. m .. Mevcrs Otto E. Ruehlmann Lenders Kistner Udry ielJ Sandberg Asbury Osborne Dickins Sayrs ). Ervin Schiur W ' hiting L. Ervin Gustin Bowen Thcinns Bugher Mann L. Jenkinson Elsasser Seit- Ledbetter D. Meyer Endebrock Rothaas Kappa Delta 72 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1897, VIRGINIA STATE NORMAL OMEGA XI, ESTABLISHED 1913 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Mrs. Marjorie S. Palcer Miss Helen Stanley CLASS 1936 Edith Allgaier Alverta Gustin Jacqueline Burdorf Helen Coe Lavinia Ervin Winona Magwood Dorothy Meyer Ruth Sandherg CLASS 1937 Nancy Bohart Joan Ledbetter Emily Bowen Kathryn Osborne Jane Bugher Betty Otto Willie Grace Dickms Pat Rothaas Marion L. Endebrock Eileen Sayrs Marion Held Jane Alice Schick Rubena Jenkinson Roberta Theinng CLASS 1938 Electra Amirkhanian Jeanette Leaders Evelyn Barnes Romaine Meyers Ann Elsasser Edith Ruehlmann Betty Franklin Ida Seit: Jane Lawson Marjorie Udry CLASS 1939 Pauline Asbury Dorothy Ervin Jean Grubbs Lee Jenkinson Janet Johnson Jeanette Kistner Janet Mann Dorothy McDaniel Laura Lee Schauer Marjory Whiting Martha Wood PAGE 151 ' Sanford Maham Schraeder Koolage Hubbard Gustetter Gruen Wolfe Goyert Rule Rhame Merkel Gillespie Thompson Schwarburg Baldwin Del Morris Beucus Fitzgerald Rttte HatFner Dillencourt Needles Jung Pyper Luberger O ' Neal Japp, Brutton Hunter Pctne Head Eastman Kern Van Zant Brentson Winkler Mercer CLASS 1936 Kappa AlphaTheta 63 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1870, DE PAUW UNIVERSITY ALPHA TAY, ESTABLISHED 1Q13 MEMBER IN FACULTY Mrs. A. Breckingham Hazel Beucus Louise Eastman Marion Haffner Jane Head Mary Louise Jung Mary Alice Maham Dorothy Sanford Virginia Winston CLASS 1937 Cheer Brentson Dellores Doll Dorothy Fitzgerald Betty Gustetter Annette Handman Betty Koolage Janet Lackner Jean Luberger Louise Morris Betty Petrie Sophie Rhame Albion Ritte Jane Shraeder Elizabeth Tomlin CLASS 1938 Jane Brutton Jane Dillencourt Jane Enckson Doris Haffner Verna Hunter Dorothy Japp Adelaide Kern Carol Peters Betty Schwarburg Martha Stitt Betty Lou Van Zant Mary Louise Baldwin Lunette Gillespie Muriel Goyert Emily Gruen Mary Hubbard Laura Keys Jean Mercer CLASS 1939 Margie Lou Merckel Mary Louise Morris Ellanora Needles Clo O ' Neal Marion Rule Bama Thompson Marjorie Wheeler Ruth Winkler CLASS 1940 Suzanne Wolfe PAGE 152 K. Hilberg Hav5 J. Hilberg H. Telker Krug Petrhold Landaker rrell Ballman ' . Zul Hardin Roark W ' llson Johnston Voss Dinke ' iaker Rothtus V ' ollmer Von der Halben NIaJdux Miller Pernn Tye Borsch Probst McDermott Wallace Christolf Eickholf J. ZuU Waftenschmidt Wasmer Aslakson Jacobs Chi Omega 87 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1805. UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS PI ALPHA, ESTABLISHED 1913 MEMBERS IN FACULTY Cornelia Atkins Rosamund Cook Elizabeth Dver CLASS 1Q36 M.iry Alys Maddox G. Von Der Halben Marguerite Vollmer Virginia Wade Katherine Wallace CLASS 1937 Audrey Alexander Ellen Perm Virginia Gellhaus Jane Hilherg R. McDermott Bcttv G. Patterson Dorothy Probst Mary Kemper Reis Grace Wasmer Dons Waffenschmidt CLASS 1938 Ruth Ballman Ruth Borsch Denise Eickholf Katherine Hilber Nan Johnston Dorothy Krug Mary Roark Marcella Tye Jean Voss Mildred Wilson Virginia ZuU CLASS 1939 Betty Aslakson Betty ChnstofF Marion Dinkelaker Emily Farrell Anne Hayes Betty Landacre Marjorie Miller Virginia Mun: Martha Pet:hold Dorothy Rothfuss Betty Sheen Ellen Audley Stahl Hermine Telker Julie Zull Pnbe Lmd Ogg Nichols Doench Kemp ' an Wclv Shannon Angert Roessler Arr ' eg-ite Pfatfenntter Schridde: Armstrong Wilson CuUen Trankler Kappa Kappa Gamma 72 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1870, MONMOUTH COLLEGE BETA RHO, ESTABLISHED 1914 r Murphv Kis ' .cr Affleck Kchl Fearnaught Pownall Eichert Reuwer Oiven Dittus CLASS 1936 Ruth Cullen Amy Lynn Irene Grischy Emily Pribe Dorothy Trankler CLASS 1937 Estelle Eichert Emilv Mashburn Mary Rae Kemp Margaret Kisker Marian Kohl Jane Martin Peaay Wlls, Betty Owen Virginia Pownall Martha Reuwer Viremia Swindler CLASS 1938 Jean Angert Janet Murphy Florian Applegate Kathryn Roessler Grace Schroetter Jean Affleck Maxine Armstrong Betty Jane Breckner Elaine Dittes Alice Doench Gladys Fearnaught CLASS 1939 lane Nichols Evelyn Ogg Helen Pfaffenritter Martha Jane Rush Ruth Shannon Georgeann Van Wely PAGE 154 Albright Nichols W ' jlker Schmidt H,iller MacKen:ie Hasen eier Horton Kirby Gaston Zackman Schneider Eich Tovvnsend Weber Aug spurger Delta Zeta 5 CHAPTERS FOUNDED IQ()2. XI, E S T A MIAMI UNIVERSITY BLISHED 1916 CLASS 19J6 Virginia Barnum Mary Nichols Gretchen Haller Yoland Schneider CLASS 1937 Mary Louise Eich Mary F. Townsend Christine Fee Mary Ulmer N. Schlessinger Gertrude Weber Eugenia Zachman CLASS 1938 Virgini.i Augspurger Carol Horton Virginia Hasemeier Ehzaheth MacKenzie CLASS 1939 Winifred Albright Marjone McKnight Ruth Gaston Helene Schmidt Betty Kirby Betty jane Ware Sylvania Zimmerman Brown Bottenhorn Fol: Durnin Bachmever Faine Murph y DeCourcey Plagmann Bohmer Dragge McGinnis Cowen Margua Glenn Gruber Munroe Ratterman Downing Powell Eagan Hvnes R. McCov Kathn Hogan Winkler rc ' .cr Lawlcr Vlurphv HolUn Bothmer ilenn Herschede May Harpenau 1 B. McCov M. Stuhlrever Antrem DrutFel Grogan Mover Gntt Schlanser 155 Theta Phi Alpha IS CHAPTERS FOUNDED igi2. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN EPSILON, ESTABLISHED IQIQ CLASS 1Q36 Florence Bohmer Dorothy Herschede Marjorie Brumleve Irene Cowen Jane Glenn Margaret Gruher Harriet Hogan Rita McCov Mary Rose Thuman Evelyn Winkler CLASS 1Q37 Ruth DeCourcey Mary E. Downing Marcella Grift Ellen Meyer Virginia Munro Bettv Pari Margaret Murphy Marjorie Murphey Stella Murray Dorothy Ratterman Chnstel Topmoeller CLASS 1Q3S Marv Antrdin Marv C. HolLin Helen Bohmer Peggy Derrick Marjorie Druffel Jean Faine Betty Grogan Mary Heekin Kay Kathman Betty McCoy Jane Maloney Ruth Riellv Jane Schweer Martha Stuhlreyer CLASS 1939 Rita Bachmeyer Virginia Bottenhorn Frances Browne Jean Burkhardt Rosma Droege Ruth Durbm Jane Eagen Helen Glenn Florence Harpenau Dorothy Hynes Jane Lawler Mary Jo Lehman Betty Jean May Lois Ann McGmnis Adele Plogman Joann Powell Betty Schlanser Eileen Stuhlreyer CLASS 1940 lune Fol: PAGE 156 Ranck Frankhn Sp,Jcr Fasold Fey Kellv l iet: Crammond Gunklach McLaughlin Luckcn D. Hexamcr Hathaway Kleine Brebberman Becker Listerman Hooten G. Hexamer Shru cr Parchman M. Biggers Hoffman H. Biggers Buvir ger Gillespie Guenther Cummins Seitz Schafstall Reiff Bertenshaw AJams Gordon CLASS 1936 Garrison Harte Wilma Adams Gayle Hexamer Helen 3ertenshaw Dixie Jane Hooten Nancy Gordon Audrey L isterman Do roth y Gunklach Racht IR. nek Alpha Chi Omega 5 6 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 18S5, DE PALIW UNIVERSITY ALPHA DELTA, ESTABLISHED 1919 CLASS 1937 Jean Besuden Marjorie Morrison Lucille Garrison Virginia Orr Wilma Harte Marjorie Reiif Dons Hexamer Margaret Thomson Verda Todd CLASS 1938 Til Besuden Marion Kleine Mary Jane Biggers Betty McLaughlin Dorothy Hathaway Dorothy Schulte Jane Snyder CLASS 1939 Jean Becker Helen Biggers Evelyn Brehberman Helen Buvinger Kay Crammond Carol Cummins Virginia Dietz Charlotte Fassold Catherine Fey Ellen Franklin Dorothy Gillespie Martha Guenther Dorothy Hoffman Jane Kelly Janet Lucken Thelma Noelcke Wilma Parchman Helen Schafstall Edith Seitz Jane Shriu er Hawthorne Bierb.iun 1 Chjmlvrs Booth, Ml cller Phares Morn Fulkerth McNeil Lookhorn Strunk Drace Larkbv Krclhttr W ' t Murphy Cratty May Lang Elliot Shoemaler McCUin Klasen Kisker .-i.ckner Muth cJnks Bahlman Knahel Condit Aviles Hicks CLASS 1936 Dolores Aviles Dorothy Klasen Dorothy Davis Frances McClair Mary F. Shoemaker Zeta Tau Alpha 6 5 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1898, VIRGINIA STATE NORMAL SCHOOL ALPHA ETA, ESTABLISHED 1921 CLASS 1937 Virginia Ackner Patricia Kisker Marjone Bahlman Mildred Lang Helen Dunkhorst Margaret Mau Gretchen Grauer Dorothy Strunk CLASS 1938 Mane Bierbaum Rosemary Booth Elisabeth Chambers Olga Condit Edith Ann Elliot Ella Frednks Rae Hawthorne Bobbie Hicks Estelle Krolfifer Virginia Larkby Marjone Mueller Mary E. Muth Miriam Welsh Marguerite Whitney CLASS 1939 Edith Bittman Alice Magee Mary Cratty Juanita Drace Blanche Fulkerth Jane Knabel Mary F. Lookhorn Betty May Rosalind McNeil Betty Jane Morris Ann Murphy Marian Phares Lois Wamboldt Carlier Abercronibie L ' nverzaiZt Stephanotf Taucke Hoffman Brown Wadsworth W ' leJman Lewc -• T i ' . ; I Schumaker Stuff Sanders Guthrie nn Knagge Fagley Fisgus Toepke CLASS 1936 Dorothylou Falls Ruth Lewe Dorothy Fisgus Helen Nuckols Maratha Hoffman Mildred Schumaker Mary Jane Weidman Alpha DeltaTheta 25 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1919, TRANSYLVANIA COLLEGE GAM 1A, ESTABLISHED 1923 MEMBER IN FACULTY Eleonore Nippert CLASS 1937 Marcella Amann Ruth Knagge Mildred Fagaly Naomu Stuff Marcella Guthrie Marion Unverzagt Vivian Wadsworth CLASS 1938 D. Abercromhie Betty Sprong Annabelle Gorman Charlotte Toepke Kathryn Simpson Dorothy Usinger CLASS 1939 Arnett B;ncsh Blanche Brown Phyllis Carher Bertha Kctt;ring; Barbara Sanders Jean StephanofF Adele Taucke Ruth Voss Hammitt EbcrharJt Bauer W ' obel Gunther W ' uoft Tilton Sayrs Downing Summers Bennett Merrier Kruase Ahrens Fortmeyer Etver Hill Hamilton Oesper RoJenbeck Alpha Gamma Delta 4 6 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q04, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY ALPHA GAMMA, ESTABLISHED 1923 CLASS 1QJ6 Marion Ahrens Elaine Gunther Mildred Bennett Catherine Beyer Marietta Duke Catherine Hammitt Charlotte Kundert Dorothy May Virginia Foertmeyer Winifred Nebel CLASS 1937 Ruth Mergler Mary Wuest CLASS 1938 Mary Downing Elinor Krause Lois Hamilton Mary E. Neuhardt Marian Summers CLASS 1939 Audrey Bauer Jean Eherhardt Jean Hastie Dorothy Heatley Marguerite Hill Lois Oesper Dorothy Rodenbeck Mary Sayrs Betty Jane Sellers Ruth Tilton PAGE 160 Schprinti Goldstein Schitrin Jacobs Liepold Burgu M. Hir chbeld Dahlman Sigma Delta Tau 15 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1917, CORNELL UNIVERSITY EPSILON, ESTABLISHED 1Q2 3 CLASS 1936 Marion Jacobs CLASS 1937 Carlotta Freiberg Ruth Oppenheimer Alice Rabkin CLASS 1938 Lillian Burgin Adele Dakemann Betty Rose Eichel Ruth Hirschfeld Henriette Liepold Marjorie Levine Gladys Nabe Mae F. Schpnntz CLASS 1939 Charlotte Stern PAGE 161 CLASS 1936 Miriam Hyams Rosalind Rodgers Bernice Solmger Phi Sigma Sigma 19 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1913, HUNTER COLLEGE LAMBDA, ESTABLISHED 1926 CLASS 1937 Bernice Blooni Sylvia Hurwits Maxine Crigger Edythe Kasfir Janith Frank Elaine Nelson Miriam Ruhin CLASS 1938 Helen Jacobson Sylvia Kantor CLASS 1939 Sylvia Gordon Esther Schwob Sara Lieberman Annette Shiff S. Frankel Monnes Raphaelson Stainboock Sing Silverman Horwit; Saoadin Botwin Nathan R. Franke! Siegel Revelson Kuller 3. Singer Gumenick Fraid Epstein . ' •. Delta Phi Epsilon 2 1 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1917, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY MU. ESTABLISHED 1926 CLASS 1936 Sylvia Frankel Ruth E. Horvvit; Sara Jane Nathan Virginia Raphaelson Sadie Singer Lucille Singer CLASS 1937 Dorothy Botwin Sara Gununiclc Janet Fraid CL Jean Revelson re Sapadin C ' .AS: 1931! Bettie Strauss CLASS 1939 Anita Bninska Jerry Epstein Ravella Frankel Grace Monnes Evelyn PoweLinkv Marcella Rosen Nathleen Segal Gladys Shynder Mildred Silverman Agnes Stamhonck CLASS 1940 Helen Kuller PAGE 163 V ' ( V Roodine Less Okrent Flax Teres Simon Greenberg Blum Ginherg Schuler Winkler Brown Shafer Rothschild CLASS iqJ6 Pi Alpha Tau 10 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1018, HUNTER COLLEGE ETA, ESTABLISHED 1Q28 Ruth Rac Blum Claire Chaikina Anna Brown Ruby Flax Dons Simon CLASS 1Q37 Dons Lempcrt CLASS 1Q38 Frieda Brown Ethel Roodine Gertrude Gmberg Alaine Rothschild Leah Okrent Bernice Schuler Ida Teres CLASS 1Q3Q Mirium Blasherg Dorothy Greenberg Annette Cohn Jeanette Less Florence Shafer PAGE 164 M. Meyer D. Mevcr Whitnev Rauman D. Cramer Cox Sc hli. M. Smith Huwe Mahr Robinson Poe M. L. Mever Koenitr Dunba Krumme Sanders Horton Sterk E. Kramer CLASS 1936 Eloise Archibald Dorothy Cramer Rachel Cox Virginia Hagerdorn Nancy Poe Alpha Omicron Pi 46 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1897, BARNARD COLLEGE THETA ETA, ESTABLISHED 1929 CLASS 1937 Maxine Cooper Mane Huwe Dorcas Meyer Mary Meyer Mary K. Smith Venda Tow CLASS 1938 Evelyn Berney Isabella Bowden Ellen Dunbar Elizabeth Koenig Martha Meyer Alberta Robinson CLASS 1939 Rea Mae Bauman Virginia Horton Henrietta Krumme Ruth Mahr Jane Sanders Dorothy Schlie Margaret Spriggs Tane Sterk Fay Marian Whitney Ci f , f) f tV PAGE 165 Champlin Patrick Auble Wander Kuhl CLASS 1936 Eloise M. George Mary P. Kuhl Lillian Sherman Trianon 7 UNITS FOUNDED 1929. UNIVERSITYOF CINCINNATI TRIANON, ESTABLISHED 1929 CLASS 1937 Mildred Auhle Laurel Hurlander Ruth Betts Alberta Lee Ruth Tillie Prager CLASS 1938 Laura C. Bowen Lucy M. LUmer Vera Clarke Irene M. Wander CLASS 1939 Carolvn I. Chamnlin Lena H. Patrick I - ' IP ' i ) H - ' Sfl fti ■■■■ flr .J t M. MM H K. o o 1 Cp nr Grossman il Altstaettcr Leiman Kappel Himes Cochrane Fulford Schick Esberger Rose Klaver Maienschein Bock Rose Richards Et:el Russell Abercrombie Kabitsch Schvvmg Morrison Schneider CLASS 1936 Mane Etzel Blanche Maienschein Gladys Klayer Dorothy Russell Elizabeth Smith PhiMu 61 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1852. WESLEYAN COLLEGE DELTA ZETA, ESTABLISHED 1931 CLASS 1937 Ruth Ahercromhie Martha Fulford Dorothea Bock Norma Kabitsch Helen Cockrane Winnie Richards Mary Rose CLASS 1938 Ruth Grossman Dorothy Morrison Marjone Himes Alma Rose Emily Leiman Lucille Schick Estelle Schneider CLASS 1939 June Alstaetter Naomi Kappel Natahe Esberger Pauline Smyth Jane Foertmeyer Ruth Weil Sh. nnon ' - Michael Keller Shulte Beaver B. Schaefers I. Schaeters Clear Kapter Brad - O ' Shaughnessy Winston Tegeder Cundall Schroder Thiel K.leve Meyer S veen ' Meneke Hurlev Kicter CLASS 19J6 ELune Jones Mary Jo Schroder C. O ' Shaughnessy U Vera Stiens Anu;ela Thiel Pi Lambda Sigma 7 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1Q21, BOSTON UNIVERSITY ZETA. ESTABLISHED 1933 CLASS 1937 H. A. Beyersdorfer Rosemary Kiefer Joan Hurley Roberta Michael CLASS 1938 Julia Clear Hester Cundall CLASS 1939 Mary Beaver Mane Brady Virginia Kapfer Mary Alice Keller Pauline Kleve Margaret Menke Margaret Meyer Mary V. Meyer Virginia Michael Betty Schaefers Mary Jo Shulte Margaret Shannon Margaret Sweeny Augusta Tegeder Betty Winston Fehl Kcnno Brockolt Eveleigh Zeider Ciarniello Steinh.irJt Wcllman Conncighton Fallon De Giirmoe Lyon Wiser Pray Thauwald i ' owell R. Fehl Kret:er Ireland Naber Noone CLASS 1036 Grace Hemsteger Norma Wellman Florence Ireland Mary Yowell Florence Ziegler Hemsteger Alpha Delta Pi 5 9 CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1S51, TRANSYLVANIA COLLEGE BETA PI, ESTABLISHED 193 5 CLASS 1937 Lillian Ciarniello Jeanette KretKr Eloise De Garmoe Kathryn Naber Eunice Eveleigh Mary C. Noone Ruth Fehl Elsa Vogel CLASS 1938 Eleanor Fehl Janis Lyons Mae Louise Pray Eleanore Ulmer MEMBERS IN FACULTY Frances Jenkins Hope Warner CLASS 1939 Helen Brockhoff Rita Stemhardt Mary Calerdine Dorothy Thauwald Dorothy Fallon Louise Wiser CLASS 1940 Patricia Conneighton Kathleen Cundy PROFESSIONALS PAGE 170 Roul! R. Kerkhoti W ' uerdeman Moore Espel Miller Bear McNaughton Flaxmaver Worseck Barrocco Alpha Kappa Psi MEMBERS IN FACULTY F. H. BirJ A. W. Holmes H. Fred Koenig Ralph W. Miller A. T. Reis Leslie J. Schwallie Berle G. Graham J. P. Brewster ' ,ielkor Wolr Butterfass Schrieber Lauh Parsons Lincoln Daudistel P, Kerkhoff Lewis Kunkel . Barth Bogart Henshaw Apke R. Barth MEMBERS (Honorary) Herman Schneider Ernest A. Roden ACTIVES Virgil Apke Ralph Kerkhoff Romolo Barrocco William Krucker Robert Barth John Laub William Barth Stewart Lewis Jack Bear Andrew Lincoln Ray Bogart R. McNaughton Harvey Butterfass John Meyer Arthur Daudistel Walter Moore Paul Espel Charles Parsons Harold Euchenhofer Carl Reis Jack Flaxmayer John Richardson Albert Henshaw Jack Wolf Paul Kerkhoff Paul J. Worseck Walter Wuerdeman PLEDGES Robert Schrieber Marvin Routf Rice King Jones Fischer Gehringer Trame Brodersen Moeller Lindberg hollar Foote Thome Sattler Gear Maris O ' Neil Tullsen ACTIVE MEMBERS Alpha Chi Sigma 5U COLLEGIATE CHAPTERS FOUNDED 1902, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN ALPHA DELTA, ESTABLISHED 1917 Professional Chemical Fraternity 22 PROFESSIONAL CHAPTERS AND GROUPS MEMBERS IN FACULTY Dr. Samuel B. Arenson Dr. Edward J. Barta Prof. Waker A. Baude Paul W. Dorst Dr. Earl F. Farnau Dr. Hoke S. Greene Dr. John H. Highberger Dr. E. Kenneth Moore Prof. Robert F. Reed Frederick Thamann Frederick D. Thayer, Jr. Prof. Ralph A. Van Wyt Norbert F. Adick Carl Arend, Jr. Fred Brodersen Robert Bruck Elmer Buns Ell Dee Compton Albert O. Fmk Jack F ischer Walter R. Foote Arthur Gehringer Robert Getter Reynold Keck Robert L. Hegman Robert Kile Gordon H. King Erwm C. Krieger Frank Jones Warren Ramon I. Lmdberg Robert LoUar John H. Mans E. Max McGinnis Frank J. Messman Harry Moeller Robert Norris William M. O ' Neil Howard Prine Rodger B. Rice Charles G. Sattler Edwin J. Smith Jack Thome Larry E. Trame Volney Tullsen Daniel P. Waits Richard A. Ward Wurster PAGE 172 Thorlex Miller Morrison Hindenmuth Montgomery O ' Hara Gray Hodcres Dunham Grant Mertins Smith Meyer Remle OFFICERS Gayle Bensford Phyllis Fristoe President Secretary Marie Hodges Treasurer Alpha Alpha Pi ACTIVE MEMBERS Gayle Bensford Helen Crisenberry Helen Ely Phyllis Fristoe Maxine Goodwin Louise Haworth Mane Hodges Virginia Hyde Laura Kuether Elizabeth O ' Hara PLEDGES Evelyn Cogswell Rebecca Dunham Mary Flora Helen Grant Ruth Gray Betty Hindenmuth Nell Mertins Ellen Meyer Betty Miller Thelma Montgomery Goldie Morrison Ethel Remle Ruth Smith Clara Thorley PAGE 173 Sacksteder Moffatt O ' Neill Meckel Stuhlbarg McCarty Schreiherg Toutf LoUar Kinson Stoddard Partridge McGlasson Foote Theobald r McKeever Bruck Kaufman Kleine American Institute of Chemical Engineers Walter R. Foote Volney Tullsen OFFICERS - - Presdent W. M. O ' Neil Vice-President SeliE; H, Isciacs The University of Cincinnati Student Branch of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers was installed in 1926, for the purpose of pro- moting the social and professional acquaintance of students pursuing courses in Chemical En- gineering, both with one another and with men in the industries ot Applied Chemical Science. Membership in the student branch is composed Secretary-Treasurer Asst. to the President of all students registered in the Chemical En- gineering course. For many years the organization has been sponsoring weekly lectures of diversified character, designed to appeal to the students and Faculty as a whole. The past year joint meetings with the student branch of A. I. E. E. have been instituted, bringing about a closer relationship between the two organizations. Mueller Ruttle Seiwert Be her Meet Tour thlen Messmann Saik Shayesen Fischer Jones Schrover Moffet Thiersch Williams Morris Barta Kaufman Osterfeld O ' Neill Foote Issacs Stoddard Koemgsberg Johnson Finney Youni; Tewel Piccuch Werlc Allison Mapes Kassnel Field Sinclair Stryker Hall Taylor Beavon Sherman Smith Freiman Hoke Carlsen Goebel Colvin Ponte Moran Moore Klmg Prof. Bunting Schaefer Hulfman Jetter Fra:er American Society of Mechanical Engineers Joseph Schaefer, Gtneral Chairman SECTION I Harold Beavc Sicretar Richard Anderson Treasurer SECTION II Lawrence Moore Secretary Robert KHng Treasurer Prichard Everett Glass Bond Ri:zo Carpenter Edwards Weidig Hausknecht McArthiir Randolph Bittman Sweeney Felton Leuder, Perm Gunther Convery Haller Nau Abraham Schroder Schulte Hutchison Puliiam Arete OFFICERS Mary Jo Schroder, Prcsuient Nancy Poe, Vice-President Helen Hutchison, Secretary Ruth Schulte, Treasurer Miss Helen N. Smith, Fdcidty Advisor The purpose of the organization is to create an interest Physical Education; and bring the students in this field in and to place and uphold the progressive ideals of into closer relation both socially and professionally. FOUNDED 1928 • • American Institute of Electrical Engineers OFFICERS Robert KiUen, Cliairiiiau Carl E. Grinstead, Vice-Clunrman Ben)amin Baum:;weiger, Vice-Chdirman Yale Jacobs, Treasurer Irvm Braun, Secretary William White, Evening Vice-Chairnian Massey Perkinson Sch.eu-et: Montgomery Bet: Hoefer Brauer Kraft Spooner Moore Newman Gerig Smith Jacobs Williams Schuck Killen Kdunit: Cohen Tilton PAGE 176 L ' Atelier PREMIERE CHAPTER FOUNDED ig28, UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI PROFESSIONAL ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY OFFICERS George C. Wiesman President Carl W. Hotten Secretary John S, Findlay Treasurer ACTIVE MEMBERS William C. Biehle, 36 Lewey T. Lands, ' 37 Joseph W. Deekin, ' 38 David L. Liebman, 38 Richard E. Durnall, 37 Alfeo J. Martina, 38 John S. Findlay, 36 lames K. Pownall, 37 Carl W. Hotten, 36 Fred W. Fresher, 37 ( ;e r. ' cC, W ' le nun. 36 Hotten Scarab 13 TEMPLES FOUNDED, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS OSIRIS, ESTABLISHED 1929 PROFESSIONAL ARCHITECTURAL FRATERNITY OFFICERS W. L. Ahlert President W Arend Vice-President C Lex III and W. A. Siegel Secretaries J. Shannon Treasurer ACTIVE MEMBERS W L Ahlert 36 L. G. Beckett, 37 B. H. Moore, 37 W. Arend, 37 C. E. Lex III, 37 W. Rogers, 39 C L Baxter, 36 G. Mavor, 39 C. Schlacter, 39 J. P. Shannon, 38 W. A. Siegel, 38 MEMBERS IN FACULTY A, K L.iing C.L. Martin Ernest Pickering George F. Roth ORGANIZATIONS PAGE 178 KKr iM I f - I H B - TF-J w i v ■• t ' ' ' s« id §ik [ k. ' H fc. S . 1 K JeS LT I Barr Ranck Shockley FultorJ Fordyce May Dickin? Gunklach CTNcill Cullen Y.W. C. A. OFFICERS Dorothy May - - Dorothy Gunklach Jane Fordyce - - Rachel K. Ranck Mary Frances Shoem. Dixie Jane Hooten Ruth Cullen - • ■ Miss Marv Klemm President Vice-President Chairman of Freshmen Chairman of Program Recordmg Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Executive Secretary CABINET COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Emily Bowen - - Sophie Rhame Ruth Lowry - - Charlotte Shockley Jean Barr - - • Jane Rupp - - - Mary Alice O ' Nei Maxme Cooper Martha Fulford Marguerite Whistler Dorothy Klassen Willie Grace Dickins Finance Social Student Industrial World Fellowship Music Campus Fellowship Coimiiuiiitv Seri ' ice Trdx ' eling Troupe Publicity Publicity Religious Appreciation Membership pi ri] k £ 8« ' K ' l ' w ' ■ ifl f7 JB. ,. , « e a 7 ' r ? ' fW V - %r — .  A ♦ k ' ■% ' ■ PAGE 179 Courson Maris shop Rarr Fahnestock BallarJ Bachman Keete Moeller Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS AND CABINET Richard H. Bauer Clifford J. Pruefer - Robert Q. Conner - George R. Fahnestock John H. Mans - - - Chnton S. Courson - Charles W. Ramey - Clark T. Ballard - - Douglas Day - - - - Harold K. Cheney Harry D. Strothman John S. Findlay - • John W. Keefe - - • Landon H. Bachman Robert C. Buhmann Robert L. Meckel • • M. Harold Flye - - Robert C. Johnson - Harry W. Moeller - President First Vice-Pvesidoit Second Vice-Preside?it Secretary Treasurer I lembership Social Hospitality Current Affairs Devotional Sen ' ices Social Service FvesliDiaii Reldtioiis PltbllCltY Religious Education Stuient Relations Music Extension Intercollegiate Relations Handbook, BOARD OF MANAGEMENT Louis A. Pechstein, Cliaimuni G. W.AmmermanJr. Richard H. Bauer Francis H. Bird Robert W. Bishop Wallace S. Espy Earle E. Eubank Merton L. Person G. J. Grieshaber Edward A. Henry Ralph L. Jacobs Robert C. Johnson Joseph K. Kindle Dana M. King William W. Koolage P. W. Sutton, M. D. EXECUTIVE STAFF Robert W. Bishop Joseph E. HoUiday Miriam Hatton ' - Executive Secretary Assistfljit Secretary Office Secretary PAGE 180 Orchestra MERRILL VAN PELT— Director OFFICERS Arthur Johnson President Mary A. Keller Vice-President Darrel Massey Treasurer Ling Wong Secretary Roger Rice Librarian VIOLINS TRUMPETS Roger Rice, Arthur Johnson Cojicertmeister Darrel Massey Ben Baumziveiger Robert Fink Monroe Winn Fred Wmterhalter Betty Kirby Sam Sonenshem FRENCH HORN CELLO Wm. Montgomery Richard Lyons TROMBONE CLARINET Mark Davis Mary A. Keller FLLJTE DRUMS Imm.uiuel Marx Ray Podesta SAXOPHONE PIANO Marguerite Harcourt Ling Wong PAGE 181 Seta Skillman Pundsack Munninghofi Schweer Hogan Antram Hurle Cundall Jones Meyer Trame Beaver Harpenau Stuhlreyer Wersel Kapfer Kleve Murray B. Schaelers J. Schacteri R055 LaRosa Sweeny Brady Shannon Zins By water V. Adelsherger WuesthofF Schulte Keifer Vol! R. Adelsherger Fallon Newman Club OFFICERS Monsignor R. Marcellus Wagner - - Chaplain Rev. Norbert J. Miller Chaplain Herbert Pundsack President Celeste O ' Shaughnessy .-..-. Vice-President Knagge Women ' s Vigilance Committee SENIOR CHAIRMAN Dorothy Trankler JUNIOR COUNCIL Wilhe G. Dickins Helen D. Huenefeld Edith Ann Elhot Ruth Knagge Sophie May Rhame SOPHOMORE COMMITTEE Jean Angeit Florian Applegate Virginia Augspurfer Helen Bohmer Betty Cairns Jane Cooper Marjorie DrufFel Betty Franklin Jean Fulton Thelma Gosney Dorothy Hathaway Virginia Hasmeier Rae Hawthorne Marjorie Himes Jerry Jacobs Sylvia Kerrigan Bertha Kettering Elisabeth Koenig Etna Kramer Jeannette Leuders Marjorie Mueller Mary E. Neuhardt Helen Schafstal Margaret A. Schmidt Betty J. Schwarberg Martha Stitt Sue Taylor Eleanor Ulmer Jean Voss Bernice Williams PAGE 183 Kramer Havemann Patterson Eubank Otto Margoli; Schwerdtteger Glansber; Eubank Merckel Bertenshaw Debate Council OFFICERS William Rhame President William Schwerdtfeger - - Secretary Marvin Felheim Treasurer and Manager Virginia Wade Women s Re resen ' we B. C. Van Wye Faculty Advisor Arthur S. Postle Director of Debating Stanley Moebus Asst. Dir. of Debating Donald Yelton Asst. Dir. of Debating Carl Rich -- ' ----- Alumni Ref)resent itii ' e MEN ' S DEBATE SQUAD Jack A. Casper Arthur Cheshensky John Erickson Marvin Fclheim Henry A. Glan;herg Konfried K. Otto William Pettit William Rhame Wm. Schwerdtfeger Leonard Slut: Starbuck Smith, Jr. Delbert Snider Sidney Zimmerman WOMEN ' S DEBATE SQUAD Helen Bertenshaw Laile Eubank Grace Hengehold Erna Kramer Betty G. Patterson Mary Rose Thuman Virginia Wade Doris WafFenschmidt Eckerle Marx Amman Stewart Miller Ribarm Gregory Stiefler Johnson Hans Doak Chapman May Podesta Lissenden Walker R. Fink Minturn Rollefson Kellog R, W. Fink Massey Merckel Davis King Rohan Siehl Montgomery Mans Fahnestock Savrs Burnet Abel Van Pelt University Band TRUMPETS Barrel Massey George Longman Clarence Scranton William Pugh Bruce Shuey Robert Curtiss Arthur Johnson George Bradley Joe Davis Forrest Leever Walter Williamson Edward Fleckenstein Norman Durst Marvin Arthur Marion Fry Bruce Shade Fred Wagner Robert Doak Robert Hans Jerome Doernberg Charles Merckel Harold Wenig Edward Utz Chester Dones Marion Graham James King SAXOPHONES David Klarer Orville Rollefson Phillip Stiefler Roy Miller Clayton Doughty PERSONNEL TROMBONES George Fahnestock Edwin Fmk Mark Davis John Mans Karl Schlachter Paul Eubanks Richard Long Walter Kirkland Richard Westcott William Gunklach Brian Sawyer Curtis Carman ALTO HORNS Wm. Montgomery Richard Fink Gene Painter Jack Stevens Frank De Marco Donald Siehl Sylvan Burke Donald Roth James Chapman Wilson Rohan PICCOLOS Donald Frye Robert Eckerle Bruce Kellogg Immanuel Marx BARITONE Carl Best CLARINETS Howard Kuhn Edwin Rice Dan Waits Glenn Story Leroy Gregory Robert Walker Jack Rollefson Nick Ribariu SOUSAPHONES Phillip Scott Max McGinnis Robert Fink Lester Rupp Robert Stewart William Belt; DRUMS Homer Van Atta Ray Podesta John Stewart Ed Stegncr John May Fred Riley Robert Devenish Louis Schlosser Jack Lissenden John Walker CYMBALS John Abel OFFICERS Geo. R. Fahnestock President Russel Smith Drum Major W. D. Montgomery Vice-Preside7it Eileen Sayrs Sponsor Mark H. Davis Secretdr;y Phillip W. Scott Student Director Edwin A. Fink Treasurer Merrill B. Van Pelt Director Theodore Kersker Drum Major R. A. Anderegg Faculty Adviser MANAGERS Bruce Minturn William Ammon William Hopkins T.iylor Schmidt Wilson Stiimpc Abr,iharn Franklin Schwarberg Sjodahl Williams Koenig Schulte Wig Wag FOUNDED IQM FACULTY ADVISOR — Miss Jean Winston SOPHOMORE COUNCIL FRESHMAN COUNCIL Greta Sjodahl Clwinnaii Barbara Biechler Chairman Betty Franklin Vice-Chairman i-j„u n ,, c . Helen Diggers bicretary Bernice Williams Secrctars ' Betty Jean Schwarberg TrcasHr.r « ' « Wehkmg Treasurer Dorothy Ahrah.tni Betty J. Schwarberg Helen Biggers Rosem.iry Hope Jean Angert Greta Sjodahl Barbara Biechler Marian Rule Betty Franklin Ardath Stumpe Alora Distler Mary Jo Schulte Elizabeth Koenig Susan Taylor Jane Eagen Ruth Shannon Margaret A. Schmidt Bernice Williams Dorothy Ervin Helen Wehkmg Ruth Schulte Mildred Wilson Marian Geisler Dorothy Winters Geisler Ervin Eagen Rule Schulte Hope Winters Wehking Biechler Biggers Shannon Distler J. Morns Nelson Kji Ben: Gritfith Beard Johnson D. E PathofF North Ciarnello Schuettc Borcherding Diers Denton McEviUey Held Nieman Armbrust Fisher Gruseck Morrison Ledbetter Mergler L. Morns Sehubart Bugher H. Ruehlmann Pownall Kindergarten Students ' Club MEMBERS Margaret Armbrust Ruth Bateman Anna Beard Irma Blase Lillian Borcherding Jane Bugher Kathryn Burkart Evelyn Ciarnello Marjorie Cowell EUenora Cramer Alice Denton Melvina Dickerson Viola Diers Doris Evans Natalie Evans Marguerite Fisher Sarah Griffith Virginia Hagedorn Marion Held Martha Hoffman Bessie Hosen Helen Klein Marion Kolks Marv C. Joan Ledhetter Betty Martin Mary McEviUey Jane Milligan Louise Morns Marjorie Morrison Lois Nelson Hilda Nieman Virginia North Betty Parker Ruth Potthoff Grace Pouder Virginia Pownall Dorothy Probst Helen Ruehlmann Esther Rothaas Mary E. Sehubart Martha Schuette Irma Seyfferle Maefred Shepard Dorothy Sint; Christel Topmoeller Grace G. Tudor Wersel OFFICERS Mary E. Sehubart President Natalie Evans Vice-President Jane MiUigan Secretary Virginia Hagedorn Treasurer Louise Morns Ass ' t Auditor MEMBERS IN FACULTY Harriet Z. Cambell Frances Jenkins Grace Anna Fry Mary G. Waite Noone Hasemeier Torchu Foertmeyer Rose Walters Randolph Rose Woodhouse Naber Krutlaup Douglas LeJerer Lueus Lehman Fehl Crow Stiens Ammo Wellman Richards Uehrum Niemes Klaver Chovvsky Co ' Ep Club OFFICERS Estelle Gehrum Nanc y Gordon President Vice-Presideyxt Winifred Richards Secretar -Tredsurer MEMBERS IN FACL ' LTY Mrs. M. S. Palmer Miss Melrose Pitman The Co-Ep Club IS an organization embracing all Cooperative women students m the College of Engineering and Commerce and the School of Applied Arts. The purpose of the club IS to bring together in closer re- lationship the students of these two schools, just as they are brought together in the fields of art, industry, and science. There are three social functions each year; a re- ception for the freshmen, a dance m con- lunction with the Co-Op Club, and a banquet in honor of the graduates m the spring. Shafstall Wayman Kuller Bottenhorn Harcourt Whitne Beyer Schumaker Fisgus Neuhardt Cameron Strauss Stainboock Kettering Brockhoff Davis Klein Elliott Cross Smithner Klopp Clear Schleuter Wilke 1 uiffl i f t ( |f V K — cv a Huiiman Kaufman Hanson Chenc ■ H. Murphy Schaefer LloyJ Foote Mannintr Murphy Gosshng McArthur Groban Co- Op Club OFFICERS Clark T. Ballard President Jack Manning Vice-President Robert Gossling Recording Secretary Chester C. Moeller - - - - Corresponding Secretary James M. Murphy Treasurer CO-OP CABINET Harold Cheney Newton Dick Walter Foote Harry Groban Charles Kaufman Joseph Schaefer Everett Hanson Arthur McArthur William Lloyd Harry Moeller Harry Murphy The CO-OP CLUB is an organization whose member- ship includes all men in the College of Engineering and Commerce. Its purpose is to sponsor social activities and to bring the men of the college together periodically for fellowship meetings. An intensive study ot school subjects is not made entirely to produce a thorough knowledge ot tacts to be recalled to mmd at any time. Knowledge is, ot course, the vehicle in which we ride towards some degree of education. But tar more important than learning are the habits developed by conscientious work day by day. It is quite evident that our habits, which are the outcome ot the process of acquiring an education, are the paramount things that we take trom our school lite. It will be through our past ex- periences that we will know precisely how to act m tuture situations and crises. It good habits will cause one to act with discretion, habit training is the important teature ot school lite. FRESHMEN • SOPHOMORES • PRE- JUNIORS • JUNIORS  SENIORS : , I Dorothv E. Acklev, NcJ E. Ackncr, Wilma D. Adam, lean Adamson, William L. Ahlert Cert, m Journalism Com. E B, S. B. S. B. S. Phi Kappa Epsilon Scabbard and Blade Alpha Chi OmeKa Scarab Marion Ahrens, George Albers, Edwin C. Albrecht, Henrv G. Alexander, Adam G. Allen B, A. Cert, in Arch. Cert, in Acc ' t. Com. E. B. M. Ipha Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Phi Chi Chi Delta Phi Walter F. Allen, Carl A- AllenJorf, Edith S, AlK aici, Eloise Archibald. M. E. Armburst Cert, m Acc ' t. C. E. B. A. B. A. B. S. Tau Beta Pi Kappa Delta Alpha Omicron Pi Delta Kappa Sigma CLASS 36 Miriam Ashcnift. R. N R. E. Atkinson, Glen Augspurger, Com. F.. Com. E. ..inJoii llidiman, Charles Baet:, Bruce Baldwin, Clark Ballard, Herbert L. Ballard, B. A. Com. Eng. M.E. Com. E, LL. B. Sigma Chi Phi Beta Kappa . ' rederick Barkalow, Virginia Barnum, lean Barr, R.i Iph Barton, Richard Bauer, C. E. L. A. B. S. Chi Delta Phi B. A. Com. E. Mildred C. Bennett, B. A. Gavle Beristord, R. N. Helen Bertenshaw, B. A. Alpha Chi Omega, Tau Kappa Alpha, Mortar Board, Phi Beta Kappa, Chi Dela Phi CLASS 36 Richard Blucstein, Charles Boecklev John W. Boers. B. A, B, M. Cert, in Gen. Bus Sigma Alpha Mii Tau Kappa Alpha Florence Bohmer, Mary L. Boettinger, B, S, ■ B. S. Theta Phi Alpha Phi Kappa Epsilon larv O. Bovlan. Ernest E. Bracher. Gordon Bradburv. Albert L. Braunstem. Frar il; X. Brearton, B, S. Cert, in Acc ' t. Delta Sigma Pi Com. E. B. M. Phi Delta Epsilon LL. B. CLASS ' 36 ith O. Brenner, Anna Brown, lacob W. Brown, Robert C. Bruck, B. S. B. A. LL. B. Ch. E. Pi Alpha Tail Sigma Tau Phi Alpha Chi Sigma M iMmMM ' M . Eugene Budden, lacqueline Burdorf. Charles S. Burnett. Claude N, Burton, Samuel Butchk Cert, in Acc ' t. B. S. Kappa Delta Com. E. B. M. B. A. Harold N. Callaha Cert, in Acc ' t. Delta Sigma Pi Harold J. Campbe ' Cert, in Acc ' t M. E. Delta Tau Delta Esther Carnes, R. N. loaquin B. de Cal;o, Alice I. Chapman Cert, in Finance B. S. Arthur Chesherskv. Ethel Chomsk E el n Ciarniello B. A. Com. E. B. E. CLASS ' 36 C. C. Cbrk, Isadorc CLivton, Helen Coe, Albert Cohen, HaroU W. Conkl Com. E. B. M. B. S. Kappa Delta E. E. E. E. Eta Kappa Nu Tau Beta Pi hrm.i ( -oil B. S. Helen t ' onver ' . B. S. Arete lames L. Cook, B. S. Delta Tau Delta Ulex Phi Epsilon Kappa Frank D. Cooke, LL, B. Iota Chi Epsilon lames V ' . Coombs Phi Chi arl H. Coplan, Gilbert H. Corlett, Edi;ar M. CorriU, Irene Cowen, Rachel M. Cox, LL. B. B. A. B. A. B. A. Theta Phi Alpha B. A. Alpha Omicron P Guidon CLASS 36 Alpha Omicron Pi Guidon Charolette I. Crosley, B. S. Delta Delta Delta James M. Croswell Cert, in Acc ' t. Ruth B. Cullen, B. S. Kappa Kappa Gamn Tau Pi Epsilon Kenneth Cu ner Ch. E Miriorit M Dile, B. A Alpha Chi Ome a Mu Phi Epsilon Edwin Danford, B. M. Russell Daniell, Aero. E. iW Dorothy C. Davis, Laurene Davis, William H. Davis, Grace Denier, Mar ' E. Devaney, B. A. Com. E. C. E. Cert, m Industry Cert. in Sec ' l Pract Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Chi Epsilon Tau Beta Pi .Alpha Tau Epsilon Alpha Lambda Delta Guidon Delta Kappa Sigma Donald W, Dc-vcv. K 1 nil 1 ,1 l Brunner Dickmaii. Flovd H Diehl. E. E- H A L i LL. B., B. A. C. E. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Tau Omega Delta Kappi Sigma Iota Chi Epsilon .American Commons Cluh Paul Dietrich. Paul E. Dingle, William R. Dohertv. George Dollenmayer Cert, in Ch. E. B. M. B. M. Cert, in Gen. Bus. Acacia Phi Delta Theta Phi Rho Sigma Alpha Kappa .Mpha CLASS ' 36 Alfred E. Dorenhusch. Fraser Douglass. Thelma Dou; B. A. B. S. ■ Com. E. Delta Tau Delta E. K. Drake, B. S. Iota Chi Epsilon Delta Sigma Pi Grace Dng s, Cert, in Sec rPract. Edward P. Drohan. Louis E. Dubuque. Marietta B. Duke, Robert B. Duncan. Han •V E. Dunholter. B. M. M. E. B. A, Com. E. B. A. Beta Kappa Alpha Gamma Delta Delta Sigma Pi lames M. Duprce. Rich .ard H. Dui rcll. Norman 1. Durst, R.C Eagen. B. A. Louise Eastman, Com. E. B. A. E. E. Sigma Delta Rho Eta Kappa Nu Delta Tau Delta Sigma Sigma Ulex Sophos B. S. Kappa Alpha Thet; Sigma Kappa Tau Mortar Board CLASS 36 Paul A. Eckstein, Com. E. Phi Kappa Mar lane Lg B. A. Charles F. Egolf, B. A. Delta Tau Delta Alpha Kappa Kappa George B. Eldridge, M. E. Beta Theta Pi vrri ElwooJ. lohn A. Emerv, RoK-rt Eii-lcrt, Donald W. Eitcl. La inia Ervin, B. A. Com. E. B. A. Com, E. B A Triangle Acacia Kappa Delta Mortar Board Mane Et:el. Laile Eubank, B. A. Dor s M. Evans, Kathc ine K. Evans. Charles T. Everett B. A. PhiMu Alpha Lambda Delta Phi Beta Kappa DclaDeluDelt.i, Chi Delta Ph.. T,iu Kappa Alpha, Alpha Umbda Delta, Lir , Mortar Board. .Mpha Kappa Delta, Phi Beta Kappa B. S, B. S. M. E. Tau Kappa Alpha G.R.Fahnestock,R.A. Phi Eta Sigma Kappa Kappa Psi Omicron Delta Kappa Phi Beta Kappa Dorothv Lou Falls, B. S. Alpha Delta Theta M. L. Felheim, B Tau Kappa Alpli.i Sigma Alpha Mu Phi Beta Kappa Sophos lohn S. Findlay, B. S. Lou s I. Finkelmeier, lack Fisher, Dorothy T. Fisgu Sigma Alpha Epsilon B. A. Ch. E. Com. E. Sigma Sigma Phi Chi Alpha Delta Thet Sophos Pi Chi Epsilon L ' Atelier Guidon CLASS ' 36 ' AGE 2CX) critc Fisher, Ruhv Flax, Mar vC. Fleischman. Miroie L. Flowers, Melbourne H. Five B. S. B. A. R. N. B. S. Com. E. Pi Alpha Tau Tau Pi Epsilon Scabbard and Blad Phi Beta Kappa Varsity Rifles Vincent H. Focke, Cert, in Acc ' t. Virginia Foertmever, B. A. Alpha Gamma Delta Alpha Lambda Delta Tau Kapp.i .Alpha James A. Fogarty Cert, in Acc ' t. William T. Folev, B. S., B. M. Phi Gamma Delta Nu Sigma Nu Walter R. Foote, Ch. E. Tau Beta Pi Alpha Chi Sigma Jane Fordyce, B. S. Franc s M. Forster. Sylvia Frankel, I, ru k Freier, Myron Freilich, Alpha Omicron Pi B. M. B. A. R. N M. D. Mortar Board Chi Delta Phi Alpha Lambda Delta Delta Phi Epsilon Tau Pi Epsilon CLASS ' 36 Edward Freiman, M. E. lota Chi Epsilon M. Gordon Frey, Geol. Eng. Tau Beta Pi Sigma Gamma Epsilon Phyllis Lee Fristoe, R. N. Alpha Alpha Pi Howard E. Fnedrich, LL. B. George J. Fromhold, B. S. Delta Mu Delta Albert C. Fri B. A. W ' m. H Froschauer. B S , B. M. Phi Chi Fvelvn G. Furnish, R, N. Lucille Garrison, B b Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Lambda Delta Sigma Kappa Tau Guidon Robert 1. Geers, Estelle Gehrum, Samuel GenJelman. Eloise George, Nancy S, Gere, Cert, in C. E. Com, E, B, S-, B, M. B. S, B, A. Betta Gamma Signij Trianon Delta Delta Delta Pi Chi Epsilon A Alk Robert E, Getter, Nancv Gibbons, lohn V. Gibnev, Margaret S- CJillettc. Louis A. GinoccliK), Ch. E. B. A. LL, B, B. A. B. A., LL. B. Alpha Tau Omega Delta Zeta Delta Tau Delta Mortar Board Phi Delta Phi Alpha Chi Sigma Alpha Lambda Delta Scabbard and Blade Henrv A. Glanzberg, Clarence E. Glass. lames R. Glier, B, S. Hvman A. Golberg, B. A, M. E. Lambda Chi Alpha ■ B. A, Sigma Alpha Mu Tau Beta Pi Scabbard and Blade Tau Kappa Alpha Pi Tau Sigma Pershing Rifles Nu Sigma Nu CLASS 36 202 Louis Goldstein, .lost ph CooJman, Nancv I Coraon, IVm-lasP. Ci-al. lohn CJrame B. M. E. E, B. S. B. A. C. E. Phi Delta Epsilon Alpha Chi Omega Beta Thet.i Pi Lawrence Grathvvohl. Herbert W Green Cert, in Acc ' t. B. L Margaret D, Green, Cert, in Journalism Carl E. Grinstead. E. E. Irene t risehv B, S, Kappa Kappa Ga arrv A, Grohan, Com. E. Phi Beta Delta Sonhos Ernest (Trossman. Cert, in Industry Pi Kappa Margaret E, Gruhe B. S. Theta Phi Alpha CLASS 36 chert U. Gruen. Verna R. tnienther. Richard Gu ick. I orothv L ' Unklach, Com. E. Cert, in Gen. Bus. B, S. B. S. Beta Theta Pi Phi Kappa Epsilon Alpha Chi Omega Sophos Mortar Board Tau Pi Epsilon Elaine L. (iunther. .S. Alpha Gamma Delta Arete Alverta Gusti: B. A. Kappa Delta Marion Hatfner, Kappa Alpha Theta PAGE 203 Virginia F HasieJui i B. S. Alpha Omicron Pi I Ha; B. S. Frank L. Hahn, Com. E, Gretchen Haller B. S, Catherine Hammitt. B. A, Alpha Gamma Delta Milton A. Ham C. E Robert Ha LL. B. Walter W. Hasen;ahl, Com. E. Charles U. Ha B. M A. H. Hawley, B. A. Delta Kappa Epsilon Jane Head B. S. Kappa Alpha Theta Robert L. Hegm. Ch. E. ' Tau Beta Pi Alpha Chi Sign- CLASS ' 36 Edward J. Hem lick. Gnice Hemstaijer. Grace E. Hent;ehold, Mary lane Hen ni.uan, Lester H. Henry Cert, in Cr. and Coll. B. S, .Alpha Delta Pi Chi Delta Pi Guidon B. A. Chi Omega B. S. B. S. Anne B. Henshaw. E.-, 1 Mae Herd. Doroth HtrsJiudi Mar N C Hesbelhrock, W ' n- 1. H, Hess elbrock, B. S. R N. B A B A B. A. Delta Delta Delta Theta Phi Alpha Gavle D. Hexamer, Harrv K. Hines, Minnihel Hm ichman. Carl Hochhausler, Ed vard O. Holfmai B. A. B. A. B. A. B. A. B. S.. B. M. Alpha Chi Omega Sigma Alpha Epsilon Nu Sigma Nu Lambda Chi Alph. Phi Chi CLASS 36 Martha ' , 11,,-:, u, Harriet A, Hogan, Ches ter Y. Hogue, Dixie lane Hooter B. S. li. A. C. E. B. A. Alpha Delta Theta Theta Phi Alpha Alpha Chi Omeg; Madelaine E. Horton. Israel J. Horwit: Cert, in Journalism LL. B, Delta Phi Epsilon Alpha Lambda Delta Sigma Kappa Tau Bessie Hosen, B. S. Florence M. Hott, B. A. Alpha Lambda Delta Carl W. Hotten. lane Howard, luhn H. KL Ho«- arJ. Norma H, Hubbard Ha dtn M Huffman, B. S. B. A. B. A. Cert, in Sec Pna M E Sigma Alpha Epsilon Delta Delta Delta Phi Beta Kappa Delta Tau Delta Pi Tau Sigma Tau Beta Pi Sehg H. Isa, Ch. E. Robert M [aj. Com. E. Omicron Delta Kappa Scabbard and Blade Pershing Rifles Gordon lacobs, B. S. Mu Pi Kappa Marion facobs, B. S. Sigma Delta Tau CLASS 36 V.ile l.icobs. Mi Mi lacohson, Theo. E. Jentelson, George lett E. E. H S , B, M. Com. E. M.E. Tau Betj Pi I ' h. Delta Epsilon Beta Gamma Sigma tta Kappa Nu Walter lohansmann, B. A. Alpha Kajipa Kappa ohn H- Johnson. R. C, Johnson, LL.B. Oorothv M. lones. Elaine lones. Robert E. Jones, Com. E. Delta Tau Delta B. A. B. A. c. e: Omicron Delta Kappa Alpha Lambda Delta Pi Lambda Sigma Phi Delta Theta Sophos Guidon Scabbard and Blade Sigma Sigma Clifford H. Juergens. Cert, in Arch. Mary Louise Jung, B. A. ' Kappa Alpha Theta Ruth L. Kabitsch B. S. Charles E. Kaufma Ch. E. Phi Epsilon Pi Tau Beta Pi Beta Pi IXivid H. Kauiman, E. E. CLASS 36 arl Kaufman, John W. Keefe, C;race Keni ev, James E. Kern, E. E. B. A. B. S. B. S. Sigma Chi Alpha Delt Pi Kappa Kappa Psi Scarab IVtc Kcr..kri. Gei -.rsJc S, Ketter, Robert B. Killen, Dorothv King, Ellis F. King, B, A, ■ E, E E. E. B. A. E. E. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Eta Kappa Nu Chi Delta Phi -Lit- Eta Kappa Ni C. Everett Kinm.in. Dorothv Klasen, C.ladvs M, Klav-er, Lea Klein, Robert Kims Cert, m M, E, B. A. Com, E. Com. E, M. E. Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Mu Alpha Lambda Delta Pi Chi Epsilon Guidon Virginia A, Knarr M, Elaine Knoop, Irvin R, Kommiek, William W, Koolage, Herny B, Kraft, Cert, in Bus Man. B. A. Phi Delta Theta Com, E, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Omicron Delta Kappa Eta Kappa Nu Carl A. Kramer, F. Eugene Krehhn Com. E, LL. B, Louis Kreindler, B. A, Phi Delta Epsilon Blanche F. Krumdiek, Cert, in Acc t. CLASS ' 36 Charlotte E. Kundert 1 :A.,rJ II k ' v:; , ' !. Iv.lx-It LllK.- Th.inia L Lees, Lewis LeValle B. S. R A B, S. Cert. in C. E. Com. E. Alpha Lambda Delta Beta Kappa Phi Epsilon Kappa Ruth Lewe, Alfred T, Lieberman, Harrv LiUich. Robert E. Lindeman, Mabel R. Lindsev B. S. B S, Bus. Manager LL. B. R.N. Alpha Delta Theta Phi Alpha Delta Audrev Listerman, B. A. Alpha Chi Omega Guidon William T, Llovd, C. E. Beta Theta Pi Si ma Sigma lohn F. Locke, B. S. Sigma Delta Rho Ethel F. Loeffler, B. A. Delta Omicron William J. Long, Com. E. Lambda Chi Alpha CLASS 36 Charles F. Loren:, M. S. Lotspeich, Harold Lowenstine Edna Ludeke C. E. B. A. Delta Delta Delta Phi Beta Kappa Cert, in Acc t. B. A. Frit: LucJcrs, Amv Lviin, Arthur McArthur, B. A.. LL. B. B. A. M. E. Pi Kappa Alpha Kappa Kappa Gamma Pi Tau Sigma Phi Alpha Delta Scabbard and Blade Sigma Delta Rho Frances McClain, B. A. Zeta Tau Alpha Alpha Lambda Delta Thomas McCo LL. B. Rita A. McCov, less F. McCreight, WiUard P. McCronc. lack M McCUsson, Robert 1, McK, B. A, C. E. C. E. Ch. E. E. E. Theta Phi Alpha Beta Theta Pi Tau Beta Pi Delta Kappa Sigma Scabbard and Blade E. Eric McLefresh. Robert B. Maddox. Marv Alvs Maddu.x, A. Maestropaolo, Winona D. Magwoud. B. A., LL. B. B. A. B. A. B. M. B. A. Phi Alpha Delta Chi Omega Kappa Delta Pi Sigma Alpha Alpha Phi Omega CLASS ' 36 Mary Alice Maham, Blanche Maienschein, Svlvia Mattila, Elmer P. R, Maurei B. S. B. A. R. N. B. S., B. M. Kappa Alpha Theta PhiMu lota Sigma Pi Phi Chi Pi Kappa Epsilon Dorothv L. Mav, Robert A. Maver, Joseph A. Meehan. Leslie A. Meek, Constantine P. Mehas B. A. B S., B. M. Com. E. LL. B. B S,, B. M. Mpha Gamma Delta Phi Kappa B. A. Sigma Chi Phi Delta Phi Carl L. Meier, Ada Ivn Merrill. Howard G. Messiier, Dorothv Mever, Far! D. Mever, B. A. B, A. Cert, in Acc ' t. B. A. Cert, in Gen. Bu Ota Chi Epsilon Kappa Delta Phi Alpha Delta Mdm Robert S, Michael. Co rrine Miller Thomas E. Miller, He en |. Milligan, lohn E. Mitchell, |r. M.E. B. A. B. M. B. S. Com. E. Sigma Delta Rho Sigma Alpha Epsilon CLASS ' 36 Chester C. MoeHer. Thomas Motfott, C. E. B. S. W. D. Monr omer ' E. E. Eleanor Momper, Cert, in Sec. Pract. Willmm M. MooJv, E. Lionel Moore, Eugene Moore. Lawreno. - M •; liii.ivi A Mnnre. B. S. M. D. B, M, B. A. M h H. A. Phi Rho Sigma Tau Kappa Alpha Alpha Tau Omega Pi Tau Sigma Sigma Ch; Phi Rho Sigma Phi Eta Sigma Alpha Kappa Kappa W. L. Moran Harold K. Moss Harrv L. Murphv lames M. Murphv Svet Nankovitch M. E. B. M. Com. E. Com. E. B. A.. B. S. Pi Kappa Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Beta Gamma Sigma Frank A. Nant:. Alvin N.ith B. M. B. A. Winifred Nebel. B A. .Alpha Gamma Delta lohn H. Nerl, B. A. Delta Phi Alpha Marv G Nichols B. S. Delta Zeta Karl G. Nieho!f, Com. E. Sigma Chi Mli Hilda W. Nieman, Roland E. Neiman. B. S. B. A. Nu Sigma Nu CLASS ' 36 :i2 Raymond Noltins;. Robert E. Norris. E. K. Nottingham, Helen Nuckols, Leo Nutini, B. S. Chem. E, B. S. B. S. B. A. Sii ma Delti Rho Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Chi Sigma Tau Beta Pi Delta Delta Delta Alpha Delta Theta John W, O ' Brien. C. F. O ' Daniel, Jr., B. S. Lambda Chi Alpha r Oettii B. A. Florence Okrent. B. A. Miriam Okrent, B. A. Alpha Lambda Delta C. Nelson O ' Neal, B. S. in Com. Alpha Tau Omega William M. O ' Neill, Ch. E. Alpha Chi Sigma Scabbard and Blade A. LCh. E. lane Drew Oridge, B. E. Kappa Alpha Theta George Edward Osier. B. A. Ph. Chi Ralph William Pagel, B. M., B. S. Theta Upsilon Omega Ali ha Kappa Kappa CLASS ' 36 bt. A, Partridge W,i ,nd,i (■„ l ' attcr.soi a. lohn H. Pavne. Harold C. Pearson, Ch. E. B. S. B. A. M. E. A. I. Ch. E. Sigma Chi Alpha Kappa Kappa Pi Tau Sigma Tau Beta Pi Russell E. PenJcrv. Cert, in Gen. Bus. .Arthur F, Pennak, C. E. Delta Kappa Sigma Raymond A. Pflum, Com. E. Vitiiil H. Picck, B. S., B. M. Phi Chi Pi Kappa Epsilon Nancv Poe, B. S. Alpha Omicron Pi Arete losoph Ponte. M, E. .American Commons Club A. S. M. E. William L. Porter M. D. Nu Sn;ma Nu Marguerite E. Prall, Cert, in Acc ' t. Emily Pribe, B. S. Kappa Kappa Gamma Tau Pi Epsilon Paul B. Pritchard, M. E. A. S. M. E. Martha Jane Pulliam, Herbert I. Pundsack, Com. E. Phi Kappa Rachel K Ranck. B, A. Virginia Raphaelson, B. A. Delta Phi Epsilon Frances A. Raschig, B. E. Delta Delta Delta Mortar Board Mrs.G.S.Rattenburv, B. S. Alpha Lambda Delta John C. Ratterman Com. E. C. Thomas Read M. D. Sigma Chi CLASS 36 Willum I-. Rccknian. Lawrence I. Renas, E. E. Daniel M Reploglc, B. S, B, M. V, T. Rhame, R A. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Slk- li.-lJ C Ric Cert, in Marketing LL. B. Eta Kappa Nu Sophos Tau Beta Pi Ulex Sigma Sigma Nick L. Rist, Robert ]. Ritt rhoir, AnthonvW. Ri:- ,, Ralph t. Rolxits EJu irJ L Robln o Cert, in Gen, Bus. B. S, M. E, B E B S B M Phi Rho Sigma IS Rochfeld, Rosalind Rodgers, John F. Rogers, Harry W. Ros.s, lohn P. Rowell. B. A. B. A. Phi Sigma Sigma M. D. Cert, in Traffic 1an. B. M. Alpha Kappa Kapp CLASS ■36 Franklin D. Ruck, Ca nl 1. Ruilman, James Rumpler, A- Conipton Russell, C.E. B. M. Com. E. B. S. in Commerce Alpha Tau Omega Scabbard and Blade Delta Mu Delta Theta Upsilon Omega mM iMA Dorothv Russell, lohn H Riuvo, B. A, Cert, in Retail Mh Phi N4u Alpha Lambda Delta losephT Rv.ui, Cert, in (Sen. Bus. M.irtha E, S.chs. V. E. Sacksteder, jr.. LL. B. Ch. E. Ruth SanJberg, Dorothv SantorJ, DaviJ E. Sauer, William G. Sauer, J. S. Schaefer. M. E, B. S. B. S. M. D., B. A. B, A. Alpha Tau Omega Kappa Delta Kappa Alpha Theta Phi Delta Theta Beta Theta Pi Tau Beta Pi Sigma Kappa Tan Alpha Kappa Kappa Pi Kappa Epsilon Alpha Kappa Kappa Pi Tau Sigma -C Club Carl L. Sch.icuble, John I :;. Scha.fner, S. T. Schcllenhach, lohn A. Sehii mer. Cert, in Mech. Eng, B. S. 11 1 Mech. Eng. B. S. in Ch. E. M. E. Mi: 1 P, Kappa Beta Kappa Robert Schmidt Edy.-in Schnat:, Yolande Schneider, Lester Schreibera, Marv lo Schroder, B. A. B, A. Ch. E. B. S. Delta Zeta Scabbard and Blade Pi Lambda Sigma Arete CLASS ' 36 Hi Richard Schroder V ' lartha Schuette, M. R. Schumaker, Wm. D. Schwarburi;, B. E. Com. E. B. S. Kappa Delta Pi Alpha Delta Theta Delta Tau Delta Pi Theta Ulex C -laire Schu-einfest, B. S. Dorothy SwiniJ, B. A. PhiMu Delta Phi Alpha ' -il Phihp W- Scott. C, H. Scranton. C, E. LL. B. Omicron Delta K.ippa. Tau Iota Chi Epsilon Beta Pi, Scabbard and Blade, ™, T u I ' Kappa Kappa Psj, Delta Omicron Delta Kappa ,;,,J, 5; j .,, appa Fred D. Scyphers Mario Ralph Seta. B. S. Phi Kappa Scarab M. V. Shaveson, Ch. E. Tau Beta Pi A. I. Ch. E. CLASS 36 Frances E. SherarJ, Lillian Sherm B. A. B. A. Delta Sigma Theta Trianon M. F. Shoemaker, B. A. Zeta Tau Alpha Chi Delta Phi Melvm Shorr. B. S. in Aero. E. Phi Eta Sigma Dons Simon, laa, E, Sills;.-!, SaJic Singer, Doroth ' Sintz, Eugene B. Su ' e, B. A. B. M, B. A. B. E. B. M. Pi Alpha Tail Alpha Omicron Pi Kappa Delta Pi Pi Theta Sigma Tau Pi Lois K. Slater, B. S, Alpha Lambda Delta Sigma Kappa Tau LkhMtm lane Sluss, Delta Delta Delta Donald W. Smith, E. E. Russell Smith M. E. Elizabeth Smith, B. A. Phi Mu A. Smvth. IVlbert A, SniJer. Wendell L. Snvder, Bernice Holin.jer, Virginia D. Sommer B. M. B. A. Aero. E. B. A. B. A. lota Chi Epsilon Phi Sigma Sigma Alpha Lambda Delta Phi Beta Kappa Donald A. Spencer, Robert G. Spivack, Earle K. Spooner, Arthur H. Spreen, B. A. B, A. E. E. B. M. Kappa Alpha Psi Omicron Delta Kappa Scabbard and Blade Eta Kappa Nu Nu Sigma Nu CLASS ' 36 218  M MaNinc c;tlni. Cert, in Int. Dec. Alpha Tau Epsilon Joseph M. Steinmet:, C.E. Delta Kappa Sigma Parker Stewart. B. A. Alpha Tau Omega Robert M. Stiene C. E. La era E Stiens. Com. E. Pi Lambda Sigma Delta Tau Delta Alpha Kappa Kappa amin F. Stites. B. A. William A. StoJaard, Ch. E. Triangle Scabbard and Blade J. Karl Stover Fred W, Strebel. B. A. Phi Delta Theta Sophos Domld S. Stuck. Milton B. Stuo ■cheli. Bvron C. Stuhlman. Ella S. Sudbn nk. Paul R. Surtac, Aero. E. B. M. Phi Chi B. S.. B. M. Sigma Chi Alpha Kappa Kappa B. S. B. A. CLASS ' 36 Rov C. Surtees, Edwin C. Sutton, lulia C. Surnhrock, loseph W. Tansey Cert, in Acc ' t. B. A. Phi Chi Cert, in Sec ' l Pract. B. A. PAGE 219 Sophia Marii : T.itc. ' ack MavhelJ Teed. Mane Anna ' Felecsan, Angela Thiel, lohn M. Thiel, B. S. Com. E. Siijma Delta Rho Cert, in Sec . Pract. B. S. Pi Lambda Sii ma B. M., B. S. Isabel Thompson, William Thornell, lohn B. Toepfer, Russell R. Towers. Dorothy Trankler, B. A. B. A. M.D., B. S. B. S. B. S. Blue Hydra Beta Theta Pi Delta Tau Delta Beta Kappa, Ulex Kappa Gamma Kappa Alpha Kappa Kappa Nu Sigma Nu Omicron Delta Kappa Sigma Sigma Sigma Kappa Tau Mortar Board Mildred Tudo B. S. Volnev Tullsen, Ch. E. Tau Beta Pi Alpha Chi Sigma Richard C. Uible. LL. B. Phi Delta Theta Sophos lack L. Valm, B. M. Lewis Le Valle) ' , Aero. E. Tau Beta Pi .MIIM Jane T. Van Leunen. E:ii d ' elemirov. G.vonderHalben.B.A. W ' lUiam V ' lets B. A. LL. B. Chi Omega Aero. E. Hon. Literary Society Phi Beta Kappa Beta Theta Pi Mortar Board Alpha Lambda Delta Delta Phi Alpha Tau Beta Pi CLASS ' 36 lohn Cirv ' it;or, LL. B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chi O.Tiega Mortar Board Tau Kappa Alpha Karl E. Wagner, LL. B. American Commons Club Kathrvn C. Wallace, B. S. Chi Omega Sigma Kappa Tau Everett Walters. B. A. Phi Delta Theta Clara A. Wannmger Cert, m Sec. Pract. FreJerick M W.irren LL. B. Phi Alpha Delta F. lean Wasmer. LL. B. Chi Omega Phi Delta Delta Alpha Lambda Delta Wilham G. Watkins, Com. E. Phi Kappa Beta Gamma Sigma Omicron Delta Kappa Charles F. W.itson. Clarence E. Watson. Stan ev 1. W Com. E. Com. E. B. A. Delta Tau Delta Beta Gamma Sigma Edward G. Weber, LL. B. Alpha Tau Omega Phi Alpha Delta Scarab Miles L. Weidig, M. E. Pi Tau Sigma Tau Beta Pi CLASS ' 36 Marv lane Weidman. Alfred L. Weiner, Louis A. Welln B. S. B. M, B. S. Alpha Delta Theta Sigma Alpha Mu Norma M. Wellman, Com. E. Alpha Lambda Delta Alpha Delta Pi Pi Chi Epsilon Albert H. Wellnunn, Elmer R. Werner. Caroh n C, Wilhams. Ha old E. Williams, Howard F. Willia B A. Com. E. R.N. E. E. Cert, in Int. De Delta Tau Delta Pi Kappa Phi Eta S ' -gma Omicron Delta Kappa exanderM. Wilson. iessie C. Wilson. Eim r 1 Windi ch. A. T. Winkelmann, Evelvn Winkler Aero. E- B. S. B A. LL. B. B. S. Phi Delta Theta Cert, in Acc ' t. Theta Phi Alphd Guidon irginia M. Winston, Harrv M. Winter, F. M, Wmterhalter. Lan |. Wong. Anastasia C. Wood, B. A- M. E E-E. B. S. B. E. Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Kappa Psi Pershing Rifles Alpha Lambda Delta Chi Delta Phi Scabbard and Blade Pi Theta Paul I. Wer.tJ Wi ' burL Wruht Ih. rt H Wuellner, Ralph F. Yeager Com E B A Ce t m Me .h. E. _ B. A. Alpha Kappa Psi Sigma Sigma Pi Kappa Alpha Beta Gamma Sigma Ulex Scabbard and Blade CLASS 36 L. M. Youns.crm.in. lohn L. Yowell, Marv T. Yowell, Florence J. Zieiilcr, E. S. Zimmermar B. A. LL. B. B. A. Com. E. Cert, in Acc ' t. Phi Epsilon Pi Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Lambda Delta Alpha Delta Pi Pi Chi Epsilon Delta Sigma Pi CLASS ' 36 Raymond Adams, B. A. Robert Ades, Com. E. George Alcoke, Com. E. Ilia Alexander, B. S. Roger Amiot, Com. E. Walter W. Appel, B. E. Ruth Argabright, B. S. Charles Armstrong, B. A. Helen C. Ash, B. E. Harry T. Atkins, B. M. Delores Aviles, B. A. Marjorie Bahlman, B. S. Ruth Bateman, B. S. Cyrus Ba.xter, B. S. Anna Beard, B. E. Harold Beavon, Com. E. Arnold Beck, B. S. Joseph Beckman, B. E. Mane Bell, B. E. Alice Ben:, B. E. Irvin Berier, B. A. Robert Black, B. A. Rose Blau, R. N. Mandell Blcch, B. S. Rae R. Blum, B. A. Daniel Boeh, B. M. Donald Bogart, B. A. Helen Bolt:, Cert, in Gen. Bus. Alonso Boothe, Com. E. Ernest Bond, Com. E. Lillian Borcherdmg, B. E. John R. Branch, B. A. Rafael P. Bricca, B. M. Eliabeth G. Brill, B. M. Mary E. Brinker, B. E. Charles Brinkman, B. A. Harold Brooks, B. S. Jean Bruckner, B. A., B. E. Majorie Brumleve, B. A. Gwen Buchanan, B. E. Paul A. Bunn, B. M. ' August Bunthoff, B. A. Bernard Burgin, B. A. Kathryn Burkhart, B. S. Mary Eileen Cairns, B. A.. B. E. C. A. Campbell, B. M. Catherine Campbell, B. E. Thomas Carr, B. A. Theresa Castelli, B. E. Thomas Coldeway, Com. E. Robert Conner, Com. E. Rebecca Cotton, R. N. Marjorie Cowell, B. E. Frances Crowley, R. N. Bernice Dale, B. E. Walter Davidson, B. E. John W. Delaney, B. A. Alice Denton, B. E. Adrian Diamond, B. A. Viola Diers, B. E. Gladys Ellerhorst, B. A. Isabelle Lee-Elsey, B. S. Donald Ertel, B. S. W. George Etzel, B. E. John Enright, Ch. E. Stewart E. Fern, B. A. Anna Louise Fife, B. E. Edwin A. Fink, Com. E. John W. Fleming, B. E. Robert J. Fonts, B. A. William G. Fran:, Cert, m R. E. Frederick Freihofer, B. A. Margaret L. Friary, R. N. Eugene B. Friedman, B. M. Moses Frox, B. M. Ralph W. Fuchs, Cert, in Acc ' t. Norman F. Gaetz, Cert, m Adv. Robert M. Galbraith, LL. B. Hyman Galikin, Cert, in Ind. Emery J. Gates, B. A. Charles Giannetta, E. E. Sam J. Gilliland, B. S. Jane Ghn, B. A. Arthur F. Glos, Cert., in Ch. E. George M. Gohs, Ch. E. Ben Goldberg, B. A. Maxine L. Goodwin, R. N. Sarah J. Griffith, B. E. Herman Guastine, B. E. William C. Gulden, Com. E. Randall B. Haas, B. M. Laura F. Hahn, Cert, in Gen. Bus. Laurel E. Harlander, B. A. Edward C. Haskell, Cert, m Ch. E. William Hausknecht, Com. E. Robert L. Heckel, B. A. Harry B. Heiman, Cert, m Gen. Bus. Irving Heimann, B. A. William Heifer, Com. E. Richard G. Hengehold, Cert, in Ad Peter S. Herberhol:, B. A. Frank Herschede, Com. E. Harvey W. Hessler, B. M. George H. Hick, Cert, m Ch. E. Edwin L. Higgins, B. A. David Hilckman, LL. B. Margaret Ann Hile, R. N. Allen C. Hinson, B. E. Leslie H. Hitman, Com. E. Mane Hidges, R. N. James A. Hoerner, Com. E. Clair P. Hoffman, LL. B. Harriet Hopkins, Cert, in Gen. Bus., Sec ' t. Pract. Nell Hopkins, Cert, in Jouni. Carl Hotten, B. S. Robert B. Howard, Com. E. Charlotte M. Hutfles, B. E. Edna James, B. S. Daniel C. Jenkins, LL. B. Anne M. Jennings, R. N. John J. Johnson, Cert, in Bus. Man. Lawrence A. Johnson, B. A. Virginia K. Johnson, B. E. Leland T. Jones, B. E. Roderic Jones, LL. B. William L. Jones, B. A. Edward E. Julien, B. A. William G. Kahler, Com. E. Hyman H. Kallas, Cert, in Arch. Wolfang Kallter, B. A. Frank M. Kaunit:, Com. E. Marjorie M. Keller, B. S. Charles F. Kiefer, B. A. Clarence E. Kinman, Cert, in M. E. Marguerite E. Kinney, B. E. Charles N. Kirby, B. E. Jack Klavner, Com. E. Helen K. Klem, B. S. Anna Marie Klitsch, R. N. Marion Kolks, B. E. Paula Krent, B. E. Dorothea Kriemer, B. S. Franklin KroU, Cert, in Journ. Henry O. Kruse, B. A. Mary Pauline Kuhl, B. A. Floyd N. Lantzer, Cert, in Radio Eng Alice Lee, Com. E. Herschel Lenin, B. S. Leo Licktenberg, B. S. Julius Lieberman, B. S. David J. Liebman, B. S. Israel Light, B. S. Ardis L. Lacker, R. N. Arthur L. Lotz, Cert, in Acc ' t. William C. Lowry, Cert, in C. E. Carl A. Lunecke, Com. E. Helen J. Mathews, R. N. Sara Matthews, B. A. Morman D. Mayne, B. A. David N. McBnde, LL. B. Hugh T. McCarty, Com. E. Raymond F. McCoy, B. E. Mary McEvilly, B. E. Wilbert A. McKeever, Com. E. Frank McKernan, B. E. Alfred D. Meitus, B. A. PAGE 223 CLASS ' 36 Harry R. Mendlesohn, B. M. Joseph R. Meyer, Com. E. John A. Meyer, Cert, m R. E. Robert B. Miller, B. A. Frank Monoker, B. A. Harold R. Moore, B. E. Roscoe D. Moore, Cora. E. John Alice Morris, B. E. Maynard R. Murray, B. M. Clyde W. Nau, Com. E. Mary G. Nichols, B. E. Harry W. Niehaus, Cert, m Finance Mary Monica Nolan, B. A. Enid P. Nott, B. E. Ralph G. OConner, Cert, m Acc ' t. J. Sheridan O ' Hair, Cert, m Acc ' t. Eli-abeth O ' Hara, R. N. George Olt, B. E. Maurice Osterfeld, Com. E. Charles Parsons, Com. E. Grace A. Payne, B. E. Mary E. Perkins, B. E. John S. Phillipps, LL. B. George N. Pierce, Cora. E. Marguerite Piatt, B. E. Elizabeth Pomeroy, B. S. Grace Pouder, B. E. Robert Puttman, Com. E. Donald Raach, B. A. Esther L. Raber, LL. B. Harold E. Radahaugh, Cert, m Arch Ralph R. Read, B. E. William E. Regus, Cert, m Acc ' t. John Rieser, Cert, m M. E. Lillian R. Rabmowit;, B. A. John P. Rose, LL. B. Milton Rosenbaura, B. A. Ellen M. Ross, B. A. Alfred Rubendunst, B. E. Lester Russin, B. M. Roland P. Ryan, LL. B. J. Robert Sagmaster, LL. B. Joseph A. Sarka, Cert, m E. E. Herman Schaalraan, B. A. Fred B. Scharringhausen, Cert, m Ace t. Leo B. Schemmel, Cert, in Acc ' t. Richard Schiewitz, Com. E. Richard L. Schneck, Cert, m Radio Eng. William Schnicke, Cora. E. S. David Schwartanan, B. A. Franklin G. Senpt, Cert, m Bus. Man. Irraa Seyfferle, B. E. Helen V. Seymour, B. A. Maefred Shepard, B. E. Harold S. Shields, Cert, m M. E. Robert Shoup, LL. B. Rena S. Snyder (Mrs.), Cert, m Journ. Howard L. StofFregen, Cert, m Finance Paul Stapleton, LL. B. James P. Stanton, Cert, m E. E. Margaret M. Stefel, B. E. Elmer G. Sternberg, B. M. Roland E. Stieringer, Cert, in Gen. Bus. Ralph C. Stocker, Com. E. Fred StofFregen, Com. E. Elmer E. Strasser, LL. B. William Summerville, B. S. William R. Tali.iferro, Cert, in Land. Arch. John H. Taylor, Cei t. in M. E. Stella Tenhunfeld, B. E. Delbert Theobald, Cora. E. Glenn Thiersch, Com. E. Dorothy M. Thorns, R. N. Mary Rose Thuman, B. A. Edward T. Thuming, Cert, in Acc ' t. Owen M. Toennies, Cert, in Acc ' t. Arthur Toronske, Com. E. Maholm Townsley, Com. E. Kathryn Turtle, R. N. Robert ' Van Rolkenburgh, Cora. E. Martha Vogel, B. M. Raymond H. ' Vonderherde, Cert, in Ch. E. George Wade, Com. E. Robert W. Walker, Cert, m Acc ' t. Maurice Walsh, B. M. Bert Webb, B. S. Leslie H. Weimann, Cert, m Acc ' t. George Weisman, B. S. Sidney Weiss, B. S. M. Charliss Wersel, B. S. Cornelius C. West, Cert, in Acc ' t. Paul H. Westerraeyer, Cert, m E. E. Clarence Whiteford, LL. B. Harry H. ' Wilkerson, B. S. Lillian Wilkler, B. E. Carl E. Williams, Ch. E. Chesley L. Williams, Com. E. George N. Wohlfeil, Cert, m M. E. Alfred Wolf, B. A. Edward Woliver, B. A. Robert Wunsch, Com. E. Mary E. Wycoff, B. E. Clara M. Yoder, R. K. Harrv W. Ziegler, Cert, m Gen. Bus. William E. Zins, Com. E. Allen A. Zobav, Cert, m Acc ' t. C ASS ' 36 . H FICTION P SPORTS CLOTHES ART • HrMOR CARTOONS PRICE FIFTY DOLLARS A VARSITY TRADITION June, 1936 SHIPLEY ' S 6t the sign of the . . . Genial Trayed Gentleman Junv. lit.ta Edited by Alice Pvper Iacx yxxn i,ti • THE IAbAZI E I FOR THU E I ■•-.t-TilEE Publishers: The Bohnett Co. CiNTI., 0. Entire Contents Not Copyright, 1936 by Eaquirrel. Inc. No rights reserved. Title not Registered. U. S. Patent Offic Coiiteiif9 for liiiie. 1!I3I ARTICLES P «. ' SATIRE Page Analyses Absurd ' ? Helen Berten haw 17 Monologue Robert Eagen 19 The Hunger of Travel Robert Eagen 1 5 The Connoisseur Stanley Waxman 1 1 DEPARTMENTS POETRY Correspondence: The Pound and the Blurry 4 Hello, There No One in Particular 12 SPORTS Contrih uors: Backstage. . Theatre: Review of Revues . Dorothv Kma Bath to Worse .Alfred Mcitus 9 FICTION See a Pin H. Dale Richardson 1 3 ! TRENDS IN DRESS Suggestion .Alice Pyper 2 1 | Seen on Campus Rubin and Pyper 20 Autobiography of jheysaidit couldn ' t be done. 1 hey said the idea was bigger than the staff. They said that Brevity would win the Derby and that there were greater institutions than the five-cent hamburger. Now we have before us a Hearst publication which shows Bold ' enture a head in the lead at the finish — which would mean absolutely nothing if we hadn ' t seen him win with our own eyes — and we have also a batch of statistics which prove that in the year nineteen hundred and thirty six, A. D., T. V. A., the hamburger stands did a three hundred percent bigger business than the churches. And — a little to the left of your scotch-and-soda and directly posterior to your ashtray — you have a copy of ESQUIRREL. If you wish to contest the first two assertions, names and telephone numbers will be furnished on request. (If you are tall and blond call the office and ask for Clert. Call in anyhow. ) It ' s been a mad, busy year! The time, the worry, the care spent on this little magazine! The typewriters that have been broken! The drafts that have been dis- carded and discarded until four janitors have asked for references to the Luny Bin. (We are happy to report that they are well and happy.) The heated discus- sions over the smallest detail! — Nothing was too tedious, too exacting for us to work with. At last it has been placed in your hands. (Oh, you lucky, lucky people!) It started in September. The staff was chosen after weeks of pouring over petitions. The requirements were almost beyond hope of fulfillment. References were demanded. Typical (juestions were these: What brand do you smoke ' . ' . . . What brand could you lie persuaded to smoke ' ? . . . Do you have a car? . . . New . . . ( !|d . . . (If old, skip this question.) What do you drink ' ' Scotch , . . gin . . . beer . . . milk ' . ' . . . Do you know at least three of the fol- lowing: . wholesale liquor dealer? . . . A head waiter? . . . A jiKlge ' ? . . . Anybody with a fifty-dollar-a-week allowance ... (If so, how well ' ?) -Marion Devereaux ' ? . . . Do you have: A relative on the faculty ' ? . . . A rich uncle? . . . . pork-pie hat? . . . .Matched golf clubs? . . , . nything else? . . . Can you do any four of the following: Tell jokes? , . . Dance? . . . Buy drinks? . . . Run errands? . , . .Magazine work? . , . (Optional) Gradually, thoughtfully positions were granted and the office burst into activity. October found us painting the desks, bargaining for rugs, matching lamps with filing cabinets, desk sets with waste- baskets. In November we found the blue ashtrays and added the plaid drapes. Even at this early date things were fairly humming. The radio came with December. Things had ri.sen to such a note of hysteria that after C ' hristmas we knew that we simjily H.- D to relax or go stale. (All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, if we may coin an expression.) So in January, we attended a few classes, found a new place to eat and waited for February. With F ebruary came the engraver who |)resented quite a problem until we dis- covered that he had new magazines and played a terrible game of twenty-one. ( He was good for fi ' e dollars a week , which kept us all in cigarettes.) So throughout the month we kept the engraver busy. It was about the first of March that the strange voice fiegan calling up at short intervals to swear at us. It n-as pretty good fun until about the middle of .April when .someone identified him as the printer. Then it got to be pretty annoy- ing. ( )ne day toward the end of the month Joe, who takes care of the copy, was called to the phone and there w as that man again going on in the same coarse, ungentlemanly • -ein. Joe listened for a while and then in his haughtiest manner said, Listen, Mr. Mason, you take care of your busi- ness and I ' ll take care of mine, which we thought was pretty funny coming from the copy editor. May followed April this year, which was unfortunate because we had planned to devote our time to graduating in May. But in the same magnificent spirit displayed from the beginning of the year we all jiitched in and whipped up a magazine that will make Esquire turn livdi with envv. The Pound and the Blurry Cincinnatian of lOofi University oi Cincinnati ( incinnati, Oliio Cientlemen . . . We are very lilad to give ' ou jjermission to devote an issue of your ma,t ;azine to a parody of l ' ]sc[uire. We would lilce to suggest, liowever, that j ' ou avoid the mistake that several other college magazines have made in making the cartoons and humor too salacious. A ' e would be intei ' osted in seeing a coj y of the issue and appreciate the interest in Escjuire which jjrompted your letter. Cordially, ARNOLD CIXCRICH, Editor Here ' s Luck . . . and Luxury Congratulations, Class of ' 36, and the best of luck ' And wfien you re out of scfiool and out for tfie best of living . . . fiere s luxury. At tfie Netfierland Plaza. The downtown headquarters of wise seniors and knowing graduates. But you don t have to make a fortune before you stroll in to enjoy the illustrious food of our three famous restaurants. Or the spirited drinks of the Cocktail Terrace and the Pavilion Bar. Or the top-flight orchestras and enter- tainers in the Pavilion Caprice. For here the tariff is as low as the fare IS lofty. Drop in and see for yourself. N ETH E RLAND PLAZA CINCINNATI ' S MOST LUXURIOUS HOTEL. ..V DIRECTED BY NATIOhJAL HOTEL MANAGEMENT CO 800 ROOMS FROM $3 00 PALPH HITZ, Pi Good Scholdrs Generally speaking, good scholars are heaithyscholars dnd for good health you will never find a better article of diet than French-Bauer Ice Cream. Eat some daily. FRENCH -BAUER INCORPORATED DELIVERIES ANyWHERE PArlcway 6027 THIELEN THE FLORIST Flowers for all Occasions 220 w, McMillan st. CINCINNATI PRIVATE EXCHANGE: CHcrry 1612 LOU BAUER Sales rV KU Service SIXTH AND BROADWAY CINCINNATI June, 1936 : ' a!0 t PHEP BACKSTACE WITH ESQriRREL , ' ,.  rl K,nj, u We asked Dorothy King to do the theatre for us, assuming from her previous work that that was her field. We weren ' t prepared for her exjilosion: ' ' The hell with all this axe grinding — why doesn ' t some- one give me a chance to wTite fiction? Well, maybe we will some time. In the meantime see if you like Review of Reeues. We did. In real life Robert Eagen is as whimsical as his Hunger of Trueel and at the same time as desperately serious a.s Monologue. Mr. Eagen would never make a lawyer for he cannot cloud an issue. He sees it too clearly, and his lack of prejudice enables him to present it graphically. Yet he is never ponderous. Rather, complications — and they are eternal in the life of a college student — are only a challenge to his superb wit. Donilhi Kiiiij Mien we pursued . lfie Meitus on the subject of contril)uting a pertinent com- ment on summer sports we reminded him of the standard set by previous commen- tators in the articles appearing in this magazine. We realized that he was a bit of a reactionary at the time. Hence the suggestion, . fter talking with him for several moments we felt that he had quite a grasp on his subject and ceased to worry. He also appeared rather sane. His contribution arrived simultaneously with the last call from the printer, which may indicate something. Alfie Meitu Stanley Waxnian, author of The Con- noisseur appealing in this issue, is one of the University ' s most striking personal- ities. He, who above the vast majority of others on the campus could be a B. iSI. (). C, has always remained slightly in the I:)ackground. With a softly spoken word and a gentle smile he has watched the .Sojihomoric cavortings of self-appoint- ed B. M. O. C. — and as a result of his careful, quiet observations we have bits of his delicious, but not vicious, satire to amuse us. Helen Bertenshaw, a pleasingly sophisti- cated, fun-loving person, is never happier than when lightly making fun of her acquaintances and royally ribbing their shortcomings. And more, they sit back and laugh with her! .She collects novel cameras with which she takes the most graphic of pictures. If you see a gently harassing article or an emliarrassingly candid snapshot look clo.se liy for Miss Bertenshaw. Ifwew(Hild,s:i I hal H.Dale Richardson enjoys s ininiini: .iiid the theatre — that she coHiTis iii:iirhl)(ixes and writes be- cause there are so many things to wTite about — you would gather that she is a perfectly normal, healthj ' young lady — which is not much of a send-off for any one. Miss Richardson, with her amazing sense of humor, her cryptic remarks about nothing in particular, and her amused tolerance of everything in general, is definitely a vivid personality. Her .See .4 Pin might have been written about you. Quiet and lovely, with soft brown eyes and a wistful smile — no one would suspect Miriam Rubin of the soul of a cartoonist and a gift with the pen. If Van Buren had not first glorified the bluebird we are sure that sooner or later Miss Rubin would have recognized its possibilities. And her harem gals, suggested by E. Simms Camliell, are gracing the walls of the engraver ' s office right now. We asked her to tell us what things she enjoys most and she accused us of trying to fill space — which proves that she is as iiio(le.st as she is talented. TRUSSES - BRACES - SUPPORTS - ULTRA-VIOLET RAY LAMPS - EXERCISERS - REDUCERS - STIMULATORS GAUZE - COTTON - CELLUCOTTON - ELASTIC STOCKINGS AND BANDAGES - CHEMICAL AND SCIENTIFIC APPARATUS - SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS AND SUPPLIES HOSPITAL QUALITY Health and Sicl -Room Supplies Cost no more than others AT W O C H E R ' S We are in business for YOUR HEALTH 29-31 WEST SIXTH STREET CINCINNATI, OHIO MANUFACTURERS OF HIGH-GRADE SURGICAL EQUIPMENT Thoughts of Spring bring thoughts of ICE CREAM JADED APPETITES Sprins fever-ish palates spring quickly back to energy when you serve Nature s most delicious food- dessert. PURE FRUITS blended with rich niilk and cream and tantalizing ingredients produce the dish which appeals instantly to young and old. NO DESSERT can take the place of Ice Cream at meals, ' tween meals or after meals. To get the greatest enjoyment out of Ice Cream, use FRECHTLING ' S SEALTEST Ice Cream— made m a model plant, and every ingredient thoroughly con- trolled by constant laboratory protection. FRECHTLING ' S SEALTEST ICE CREAM COMPLI V.ENTS CF THE LUX ELECTROLYZER SERVICE INCORPORATED I Electro- chemical l! Water I Purification i Engineers CLEVELAND, OHIO From Bath to Worse Tli( « ' aroful 4 l ! ierv4 ' i mIzi ' m up SiiiiiiiK ' r I ' ajxIiiiK M. plai ' in oju ' li ill Us own l li.« «iii ' iil I ' lililiv Ii4 l ' bi, ALFIE MEITr S WITH the a.lvent of Summer s|)(irts we wouia like to jioiiit out tliat Summer good and Summer not. There- fore we feel it our duty to evaluate these sports so as to enable you to choose tlie one in particular that liest suits you. Take Swimming — there are many ways in which this sport can benefit those who partake of this invigorating exercise. First consider those who delight in donning a brief garment and swaggering up and down while the men and cats make various remarks such as, Isn ' t she built? and Look at the huzzy showing off! Here the individual reaps the sole benefit of developing her fallen arches, but does so only as long as she continues walking. As soon as she seats herself on the sand her mind begins to roam. And as she sits and day-dreams she becomes broad- ened; a state which smart women will always avoid, n ' est-ce pas? Those who indulge m swimming ])urcly for the good Old Sol, should be careful lest they get too much of these actinic rays. Because once they get to actinic up, one ' s body will resemble the baked potatoes Mother made. A good pre- ventative that can be used to avoid sun scorch is the following recipe we suc- ceeded in procuring when we were in Florida a few years ago. It will be exactly three years on .July 31. Anyhoo, the sun was so strong on the beaches that when the tide came in, you could hear the sizzling sound for miles up and down the Gulf of Mexico. So a friend of ours tipped us off to a remedy that would aid in keeping off the injurious rays of the SUT. and alldw tlio.sr that were lienclicial to (■liter, such as tlic . lpha, Beta, ( iamnia and Kosher rays. The recipe, which won the Poltzer Prize for advancement in the Prevention of Sun Scorch (that ' s a hot one, eh?) is as follows: Take the whites of six goose eggs, a bouquet of flours, the oil from your crankcase. and a dash of liulverized mothlialls. Place in a con- venient container such as your neighbor ' s swimming pool, and beat unmercifully until a livid hue of bluish black. Then siphon into paper liags and store uiilil needed. Dosage: Two liags — one undir each eye. Now that we have informed you of a sure-lire way to avoid solar sears, li ' l us turn to tlie next type of swimmer. This species is of the no-.Sooner type That is, they are of the sort that have no Adonis-like frame and consequently when they go to the lake, seashore, or local bath-house they are no-sooner in their suits than they get beneath the |irotective sheet of aqua opaca. In order to ward off the cramps due to the frigidity of the water, these budding mermaids and mer- men display their muscular ability swim- ming to and fro. thither and wither. Some use tlii ' crawl wliirh probably gives the water an :iwful itcli Tho.se who are fortunate enougli to be able to afford a trip to the seashore may, in addition to the various forms of water sports, participate in surf-board riding. This is really a great treat, ' v recall with mingled feelings of pain and joy oiu- A . exiieriences with the waves and a siirf- lioard. It probably surfs us right but nevertheless, the only waves we will retain our interest in are those froin the hands of girls. (Woo woo.) Among the otlier warm-weather sports, Tennis, another that deserves mention. It is a sport like this that is down our alley because it can be operated at a net ])rofit and yet not liecome too much of a racquet. However, there is always the prevailing d.uiger that one may become balled up — I Hit let ' s not court such ideas. Innunier- alile aspirants hesitate to begin their game. But to wait Tilden is very unwise. How do you expect to learn a Lott and Stoeffen things on the cloth-covered sphere ' . ' N We can ' t say much in favor of golf. ■ ' ou see, no advertisements are permitted to be printed if not paid for in advance. . nd furthermore we use X-70, no fuelling. So if it ' s oil right with you we ' ll let Phil Baker plug his own product. (The radio listeners can plug their ears.) It is with a great deal of timidity that we broach the next sport. On second thought, we will not even mention it because it might instill certain ideas in our readers which might entail our getting It in the end, .so hoping that our appraisal of the sports played during the Summer was of some help we close. Oh, yes, what we had in mind and didn ' t mention wasSquash. June. 1936 ' Gee— it ' s a THRILL ' .! June, 1936 The Connoisseur Life is sucli a stupid- ly annoying itoni. isn ' t it? Or is it? b„ STANLEY J. WAXMAN ■ SATIRE ■ ACROSS the expansive ballroom floor swarming with gay couples whose names are writ large in the Social Register, a young man make his way. He reaches the broad marble stairs that lead up to the terrace above. In a moment he is at the top and hesitating. He is going no- where in particular and is undecided whether to get there liy going to the right or to the left. He goes straight ahead, having caught a glimpse of graceful femininity leaning languor- ously on the balustrade, be- low which a charming garden lies quiet. He is not acquainted with the lovely young girl, but the month is May, and music is play- ing, and he is a blithe young fellow. He approaches the source of attraction and uncere- moniously, with a voice that is soft, says: How do you do? These words have been spoken with such delicacy and with such mellowness that they have seemed as a part of the music that she has been listening to. So she is not startled and turns slowly, looks at the young man for a moment silently, inquiringly, expectantly, and then says: I lieg your pardon? He smiles. I said, ' How do you do? ' Do what? Do . . . anything. By applying my.self very closely to the subject in hand. You are industrious? Most. Especially when the subject is of interest. And what subjects interest you? Most. Oh, you like life generally. And si)ecifically. You should be very happy. I am. I ' m glad. Are you? Yes. I mean — are you happy? No. Are you capable? Capable? Of being happy? Entirely. Then . ' ..■. ' People. Oh. Annoying! Most. Can ' t you do anything about it? No. Everything ' s been done, I ' m afraid. I ' m afraid. They regard each other with fearfully discouraging looks of futility. She has a certain amount of faith in the human race, but she is angry with it because it just will not take advantage of its oppor- tunities. They could be such . . . well . . . such delightful animals. Oh, yes. Very, he agrees hastily. Mankind is really very nice. It ' s such a splendid idea, I mean. Indeed it is. But some of the members of the Human ,S(K ' ioty ... ( Igghlihhgg! he shudders, •rh, she sighs. Tsk, tsk, he shakes his head. ■Well ... It ' s su ' li a pity. So njuch hard work gone to waste on . . . mi iriv cscurl. Inr example, They are both disconso- late. She is stoical though: .Just have to take the bitter with the sweet, I suppose, Yes. Grin and bear it. I hate people who grin. I never do. Vuu iiev ' r hate people wild grin? No, no. I never grin. Oh. They grin at each other. Would you like to dance? he asks. With you ' . ' Well, I . . . 1,1.. n ' t think anyone el.se is around just now. In that case, yes. I imagine it woulil be verv - Can you usually your imagination? Usually. Shall we Shall we what? Go into the ballroom. Oh. X-no. I thought you asked nie to dam I did. Hut. to tell the truth. I wa ing conventional. I really hate dam • Do you really? Yes. ' I ' m so glad. I do, too. ' Xo. ' Yes. ■Why- ' ' Because so many people likr it. Wliv I have a peculiar susceptibility to terpsichorean vertigo. A terrible dis- comforting condition when an attack comes on, I a.s.sure you. Continued on page 24 Hello, There June, 1936 Thii jiUow is mii((mg a speech. It 15 not a good speech and he is not much of a fellow. An how, It ivas fun glutting the dots on his vest. Some are soup and some are pol a. That 15 a tit-tat-toe game under his rigdt pocket. This .starC ii out to he something else. Something with a defmite tang, a hit of savoir-faire . . . If It didnt have a pa er in its hand we might call it Spivac . Maybe it could he Spivac with a paper. He did have something to do with a paper once. This IS a man and a horse. The have never met before. The man is m the R. O. T. C. Loo}{ closely for ou will never see a horse an T. C. m the sayne picture again. We thinh that is a tail m hac}{ of the horse. Or maybe it is an arrow pointing to Farres. The man n the bac} ground is Senator J ye. Here is a ynan at a table. He loo s li}{e a corkscrew. }Aayhe he has the fitters. Whatever he is drinking is in a stein. Maybe he is Rudy Vallee. We irondcr where his friend is going. We hope he gets there pretty soon. Goodbye, now. - ' Here is a professor. He has )nst told a joi e. How he IS waiting for the students to laugh . If he weren ' t a professor we would thin that he had said somethuig very funny. That IS not a carrot-top on his head. Oh, you j id ' This is drawn with a semi ' Circle . The top and bottOTn are put on afterwards. The buttons ma}{e us thin}{ . . . That is, thin that he is a bandmaster. With less hair he could be Van Pelt. His feet practically never get wet when it rains See A Pill A senior g ' al who has 0von up liopo fiiKlN a fraiornity pill and js ' oti to iLeep it by HARRIET DALE RI€HARD! ON ■ FICTION ■ Oh, I suppose I ' m having a good time. Program dances aren ' t so bad. At least j ' ou have a partner. Reg is nice, too. I ' m glad this is his dance. I don ' t know what I ' ll do when Pete comes. Probably go tongue-tied anil .step on his feet, as usual. Tau always gives nice parties. This is such a lovely house. I wish some alum would will us the old homestead. That reminds me, even if Marian is my sorority sister, she could have shown a little decent surprise. It ' s humiliating to he so notoriously available for blind dates, in the middle of your senior year. But why should I kick ' ? I was just thinking that this would be a good place to spend an evening when Marian called me. I ' m very much oljliged to Reg for com- ing down. Did you drive down, Reg ' ? ' ' Of course he didn ' t. Marian told me that. No, I suppose it would lie pretty cold. But I ' ve always said we had the coldest campus in the United States. Yes, I love basket ball. That ' s a lie, but Marian said he plays. On the fifteenth ' ? I ' ll be sure to be there; I never miss a game. My fifth lie this evening. Isn ' t society wonderful? This is Pete ' s dance. Here he comes. Oh, dear, what shall I tW - nil it ' s going to lie a waltz. 1 shall jiass out on the spot. Do 1 look serious? But I ' m having a wonderful time, . little tired maylie. Oh, no, please let ' s hnisli this. I love that song. Xo, I ' m not hinting for you to sit it out . . . Thank goodness, that ' s over. ( )ne dance with Pete u|isets me for a week. Now I ' ll have to go around school trying to get that tune out of my head. Funny how different fraternity lirothers can be, and yet still look alike. I could tell a Tau a mile away. I don ' t know what it is, but it ' s there. It ' s the same with any of them. ' Home Sweet Home ' again. My, this evening went fast. You ' re quite a dis- tance from home, aren ' t you, Reg? I ' m so tired I could scream. Yes, isn ' t it hot in here. I ' ll run up and get my coat — .shan ' t be but a minute. The first off the t .TlUBiH floor, as usual, wliile tlie rest are clapping for an encore. 1 don ' t want an encore. My feet hurt. Cooler out here in the hall. Hope I shan ' t disturlj anyone . . . There ' s some- thing shiny right there on the step. I wonder what it is? Oh, it ' s a pin. A Tau ]iin. Whose is it? P. F.? Pete Farmer, of course. So I have accomplished what no other woman on the campus has been alile to do. I have Pete Fanner ' s pin. I never had a fraternity pin in my hand liefore. Marian has had hers for a year. There ' s a rumor she even bathes with it on. Here. I mustn ' t stand here all night. Reg will be waiting. I ' ll just put it in my purse until I come down. Then I ' ll give it to Pete. I wonder if he ' s mis.sed it yet? Or if some pledge had it. That must be it. Pledges are always losing your pin. Right out there in plain sight. It ' s a wonder it wasn ' t stepped on. Well, here it is Monday morning, and I still have Pete ' s pin. But it isn ' t my fault if he had gone before I came downstairs, is it? Still I needn ' t have worn it all day •Sunday, under my Uouse. Well what of it ' ? It didn ' t hurt anyone. 1 haven ' t told a soul, not even Marian. 1 thought I ' d call her Sunday, but I ilidn ' t. I ' or a while it seemed funny, me with Pete Farmer ' s pin. It is funny, too; iMit it ' s the kind of a joke that ' s too good to tell. I ' ll just give the pin back to him this morning, quietly, and that ' ll be the enil of it. I have it right here, in my ]iurse. Usually I .see him after this class, or some time during the morning. I ' ll just walk up to him and say, Present for you, Pete. Mdn ' t he be surpri.sed! There ' s the bell. I wonder if he ' s missed it et. I wonder how a professor ever gets the delusion that anyone is interested in French history. Of course I read the chaiiter. hut 1 can ' t remember a thing that was 111 II. I ' ll just sneak my pur.se open and take a look at the pin. The causes iif the French Revolution were . . . (Ill, will this never end ' . ' I can ' t sit still another second. It ' s eleven-ten. It ' s so hot in here. Now it ' s eleven-fifteen. I ' ll ju.st take another peep at the pin. Last time I ' ll ever see it. The bell at last. I thought I ' d never live through it. Bother! I dropped my gloves again. ' ' Thank you. Mike. Yes, of cour.se I ' ll be down this afternoon. You know you couldn ' t get the Xuvs out without me. Dr. Jones would call that hyiierbole. ' ' Yes, lovely time, thank you. You Taus are all good dancers. Now I ' m going to see him. I always do, after this class. There he comes, down the hall. -Allen is with him. Oh. I can ' t do it now. Not with anyone around. I ' ll wait until noon. Maybe I can speak to him then. G-good-morning, Pete. ' Lo - llen, Now they ' re past. No, of cour.se he didn ' t give me a queer look. It ' s just my guilty conscience. He couldn ' t pos- sibly know I have it. There ' s M arian. I must speak to her. Oh, Greg ' s beat me to it. Well, I won ' t interrupt. ' Lo, people. I ' ll run along to class. Continued on page 22 June, 1936 Ah kin read hit but durned ef ah kin pernounce hit June, 1936 The Hunger of Travel Wlioroiii C ook ' i paiii|ililets are torn to little pieces, aii«l east to the four winds by ROBERT EAIjiEX ■ ARTICLE ■ T AM afraid that John and I were very ■ - bad tourists. We drove from Cincin- nati to San Francisco and must have passed almost c% ' ery worthwhile attrac- tion which the great West has to offer, but still there is very little of importance that I rememlier aljout the trip. Of the hundreds of towns and cities that we passed through, I cannot recite the popu- lation nor the principal industries of any. From the names of the geysers in Yellow- stone Parl , Old Faithful alone remains in my memory, and I must admit that during our entire stay in that land of sulphur and school teachers I didn ' t take a single note of geological import. We left Salt Lake City without so much as inquiring as to the location of the famed Tabernacle, and even in Hollywood, I didn ' t recognize a single movie star. Yes, I am afraid that Thomas Cook would consider us ver ' liad tourists. The trip was not altogether a failure, tliough, for in retrospect, a great many places and thing.s — mostly unimportant — do tumble into consciousness. It is odd, but I find that most of these memories are intimately associated with restaurants or eating establishments. Perhaps this is because most of our stops during the day were for hincheon, or mayl5e it is because of a peculiar theory of mine. Where Mr. Rusldn felt that the culture of a country was most directly reflected in the archi- tecture of that country, I have always thought that one of the surest indices to the culture of a given locality can be fotmd in the restaurants of the place. This theory is an idle fancy, but during this past summer I did find much to substan- tiate it. Restaurants, when viewed with a scientific eye, became strange composites. The employees and patrons were usually a good section of the type of people; the main course invariably suggested their capacity for imagination; artistry could be judged by the salad; the amount which patrons left for tips and the manner in which the waiters gathered in the offerings definitely establislicil their financial posi- tion; and their sophistication and adapta- bility could always be gathered from the way in which they accepted my coiii- panion ' s order. John is one of the most erratic eaters 1 know, and his idiosyncrasies were of inestimable assistance to me in forming my opinion of manj ' of the cities where we stopped. Reno, I discovered, to lie nothing more than a startled little Nevada county seat really unsophisticated beneath its unhealthy flush of neon lights and a bit bewildered at the pudgy ladies and slightly inebriated gentlemen who have swarmed down upon it to take advantage of its laxity. I reached this conclusion the morning we left the city. We were ordering our breakfast; and John, in his most disarming manner, demanded two chocolate malted milks and a piece of Danish pastry. The waitress, caught off guard, reverted to type and shuddered. I immediately branded the town as being essentially naive despite its new court- house and ultra modern hotel. Mv conviction was verified while we were in Hollywood. There John had chili con carne for breakfast, but the waiter, a thorough cosmopolitan in one of the most cosmopolitan cities I have ever visited, did not even falter when my friend added a glass of beer to his order. Hollywood was living up to its glitter of bright lights and phoney-coney island sophistication. I found it diflicult at times to select the one establishment in a city which was truly representative of that city. I was almost deceived in San Franci.sco- We iKid dinner in the main dining room of the Sir Frances Drake. M the l)ottom of I hree marble steps which led down into the salon, stood the immaculately lirittle head waiter. .As we descended, his eye- brows rose .slightly, and his lips curved into the unique and unintelligible smile which is as much a part of a head waiter as are his menu and white bow tie. We iiillowed through the checker-work of peo|ilc. He moved with a cat-like grace toward a .small table at the end of the room. A string quartet was softly playing the surging strains of a Strauss waltz, Whh an easy motion he clicked on the small wrought-iron lamp on the table as we sat down, Tlie music stopped. There was a llutirr ol itiiplause, and then the bridled hum of conversation. This, I thought, was San Francisco — a sauve though .slightly anemic citizen of the world. I discovered my mistake the next day. We had luncheon at Fisherman ' s Dock, and there I really found San Francisco. Fisherman ' s Dock is a lusty, noisy, bustling place that overlooks the Bay. There, fish dealers haggle over prices, and the air is often fetid when supply exceeds demand. .-Vround the corner, though, there is a row of little restaurants where preparing lobster is an art and eat- ing is done with a gusto. The lolisters are cooked in the street over charcoal grilles and are served with little ceremony. But the salt in the air and the noise in the street and the earthly lust for life which permeate the place combine to make the flaming and ugly creatures a delicacy seldom to he had. This was San Francisco. Continued on pane 24 June, 1936 Theta Phi Alpha! Why sure you ' ll be Prom Queen Analyses Absurd? Character rea«lin at a ni kol a  «« oo| by an amateur iiNveliosinalvKt by HELEX BERTEi !$HAn ■ ARTICLE ■ PSYCHOLOGISTS have resorted to many methods in an endeavor to catalogue personalities, yet the most com- monplace of personal habits, the most revealing of practices, has thus far been neglected in these attempts at analyses. I refer to that national indulgence, the act of eating the ice-cream cone. There is no act so completely un-self-conscious that affords such perfect character revela- tion. Each person has some individual method of attacking the ice-cream cone, but there are fundamental characteristics of approach that indicate the personalities of those that employ them, and no true student of human nature should overlook this fact. The ol servation that comes from a desire to jierfect techique has led one to realize that much may l)e deduced from the simple act of eating the ice- cream cone. From a fairly wide field of experimentation, I have discovered that there are certain unmistakeable types of person recognizable from their method of procedure. The man who curls his tongue around the outside edges of the cone, at the same time preserving the perfect igloo contour of the cream, is one who delights in hoarding, in deriving the greatest possible good from every possession, who hates to see any element of change take place. In politics he is the conservative who fights any change in the slalus quo: in education he is the intellectual who nevertheless fears new methods: in the home he is the hustiand with the squeaking pocketbook. On the whole he is a harmless person, but one who likes to preserve the smooth- ness of the old order of things, failing to realize that this fear of change, this miserly desire to have and to hold foiever, is resulting in tremendous waste. A type much more to be feared and avoided is the person who takes one look at the ice-cream cone and then viciously proceeds to destroy its appearance by biting and pushing with the tongue until the conical surface has been reduced to a yielding plane. Such a man or woman infallibly exhibits communistic and social- istic tendencies that are rather awful. Imbued with dominant wills and conquer- t ' ir r-?- ' - ing instincts, the flat surface cone-eaters nevertheless have a tragic weakness, the inferiority complex, that urges them to direct all their efforts to a leveling-off process in an effort to attain equality with those at jiresent above them. In literature and religion they are iconoclasts; in poli- tics they are radical; in society they are boring. It is always well to escape persons with tendencies toward cone-eating at a flat rate unless one has the fortitude and stamina necessaryto withstand a vociferous attack on anything and everything at hand. In direct contrast to the flat-surfaced eater is the .sentimental pyramid-liuilder. The species is a little unusual if one .searches for the extreme advocates, luit there are pyramid-builders in great number who are content to have rounded tops or domes instead of aspiring to the perfect peak of perfection. The absolute, imcomprising person of this class is the one who works the ice-cream into a perfect point by maneuvers that no one under- stands. He is a dreamer, an idealist in the extreme, and tends to lie so introspective that he fails to realize that he is not alone in the world. Generally speaking, he l(i OS to shape the ice-cream into a delicate anil symmetrical point and then imagine liiiw like it is to the thread of life, to the ninnient ' s passions, or to any other perish- :i1)1p philosophic wonder. Lost in the spiritual lieauty of contemplation, he fails to appreciate the fact that the insecurity which stimulates his moody thought is distre.ssing to the souls of companions who worry about such niunilane affairs as clothes and carpets. The more moderate pyraniid-lniilders are those who lap the cones with whole- hearted zeal and those who sensuously insinuate their tongues around the ice- crcaiii. The former, if they are of the lowiT ihis.sps, generally are accomplished musicians of the coffee-cup or soup-spoon variety; if they have been culturaUy educated their innate element of unre- strained excitement whets itself in a gush- ing enthusiasm over anything at all, and thi ' v like to make speeches. The latter type 111 moderate pyramid-liuilders are those who adore the springtime. They delight in romance and sweet love; their rather voluptuous inclinations are revealed in the languorous, sen.se-pleasing, indul- g nt methods of smoothing out the cream. Vet one type remains: the pioneer . merican type, the type that stands for rugged individualism and achievement. The cone-eater pioneer is the dauntless soul who courageously buries his teeth in the cold cream and bites it with grit and determination. He is the man who will walk a mile for a Camel, who will suffer for enjoyment because he feels he is mak- ing a step in the right direction. Such people are honest. God-fearing, hard- working. Xo task is too great, no hard- ship unendurable. Pleasure and pain are one to them. For through both they march onward. These, however, are onl ' a few of the interesting personalities revealed by ice- cream eating. There are many other groups, and within each exists subtle shades of difference. It is my suggestion that every man should offer an ice-cream cone to his proposed business associate, to his banker and to his fiancee! June, 1936 All right — NOW!! Monologue 5! |iok4 ' ii l  a | r4 IV$ iM r vli4  «if  oiivol  po l ill Klia l4 vN. idlv iiirniii;£ tlio | a  of a hook h„ ROBERT EAOEN ■ SATIRE ■ PARDON me, sir ... I came in to speak to you aliout . . . that exami- nation paper 1 wrote . . . you gave me an F on it, sir . . . and I wanted to explain how it was . . . that is, sir, how it hap- pened that it was so poor ... It was poor ... I know that . . . but I thought perhaps you would listen to . . . not that I would expect you to change the grade . . . but I thought that . . . well . . . my work- ing every night . . . and the lioss having me do extra jol s during the time that I could be studying ... I thought that maybe, sir, you ... or rather if I would explain it to you . . . you would . . . Oh I know what j ' ou think about working and going to school not mixing . . . and school being a serious busines. . . . and the fax- payers ' money . . . and ;i liberal educa- tion for only a few . . . but . . . Ou see, sir, Dad . . . well, he doesn ' t have much interest in school and . . . and we don ' t have a lot ... or even much . . . money . . because he . . . that is Dad . . . doesn ' t work all of the time . . . Mother was the only one working . . . except me . . . and I didn ' t help much because I spent most of my money going to school . . . Iiut I was able to help a little these past few weeks . . . by not riding the car home from work . . . In his eagerness he has leaned closer and closer to the professor. He suddenli siraighlvns liiinself. It ' s only a few miles walk and . . . but gee, sir, I don ' t want to solj-story you . . . I just wanted to tell you that I am serious about going to school . . . ' ou see, I ' m not going to be like Dad ... I want to be able to . . . well, to support the woman I marry and . . . children ... I won ' t have my wife ... in a laundry . . . That was a poor paper, sir ... I thought that I knew the answers ... I had tried to study . . . lietwiTii times . . . but I gue.ss that doesn ' t work very good . . . well . . . because walking home every night , . . I was sort of tired ... I gue.ss . . . oil, It ' s silly for me to tell you all about this ... I ilnii ' l (|iiite know why I ' m doing it . . . really, sir. 1 was tired . . . and I thought that I had studied enough . . . and I ' m really not dumb . . . you see, sir. Dad ... he never got very far . . . and 1 don ' t want my wife in a Iaun lry 1 want to be something more than . . . than one of those fellows like mother ' s l)rother . , . nothing ever but work, and . mos and Andy, and the ball game on Sunday . . . I don ' t want peojile to think I ' m stupid . . . The in-ofessur turns a hiif of the luiuk which he has been reading and tin sinnloir at his back seems to slirink as lie linns closer lo his reading. Listen, sir, . . . wait a moment . . . tell me what you think . . . no . . . gee ... I didn ' t ask you to change my grade, I . . . just wanted you to understand that I wasn ' t letting down on everything . . . that I wasn ' t just trying to bum my way along . . . that I am really serious . . . and . . . but I have to work ... It ma - not mix with school and I may be stealing from the taxpayers . . . liut so are those other fellows who are too lazy to study . . . and who can pay for term papers . . . Vou don ' t know about that ... do you ' . ' . . . Well 1 had an offer of ten dollars to write a term pajier for a fellow . . . lots of fellows write them and sell them . . . there ' s one senior who guarantees a B on the papers he writes ... he charges more than most of the others . . . because he has been here longer . . . and he knows what the different profs like ... I could have cheated in that exam, too . . . you ' re an easy one to crib on . . . almost as easy as,, Id Doe Hall . . . but I didn ' t ... I iliin ' t know why not . . . now . . . .Maybe yoii hiiee to cheat a little to get along . . . .Maybe it ' s honesty that stopped Dad . . . Well, I could have cheated . . . when you were reading that thick green book ... it looked like a nuirder mystery ... I e(juld have then . . . but I thought that you might catch me . . . and emljarrassme like nu did that little colored girl during the iiiid-term ... I could have slugged you for that . . . she wasn ' t cheating anymore than that big guy that sits behind her . . . but he plays footl)all ... I guess that makes a difference . . . when the -Mumni are behind the team and expect all the boys that are paying gooil money for to pass . . . well. I liet I know more about that suliject than most of them . . . the muscle-bound dim wits . . . you ' d think they were puppies the way they romp around . . . showing nS before the girls . . . those who will look at them . . . But I guess that they ' ll graduate and get good jobs afterwards . . . selling bonds ... if lieople are buying bonds when they get out ... or coaching somewhere . . . work- ing three months a year and getting more money than most fellows can earn in a whole year . . . well I didn ' t crib this time . . . but the next . . . .-Ig.iin III, 1,1, y has i ilgiilfonninl h, thclesk. The shniloir nl the  -,, -.v.sor ' .s- Innk has he- einnr larger. Thetuiy.shanie-fnrrd.drawshin-k. . w, gee, sir . . .excuse me ... I suppose that a fellow sort a gets that way when he thinks about something very much ... or wants something very bad . . . it ' s like eating taffy fast when you want to get it all down . . . you get all mixed up in it . . . I ' m sorry I l otheretl you, sir. ... I ha ' e to go now . . . I ' m due in twenty minutes at . . . work. §eeii on Campus There is dlwdys the engineer, thdt tall ii ' ils mdn-of-the-woods who strode down from the mountains into the cidssroom. This engineer is particularly nice, hie doesn ' t have that thing pulled down over his ears. But then he is much more important than the gadget on his head. Let ' s lorget it. hlis smile is a thing of beauty. Since he never appears without his f}Oots we ' ve man- aged to get them on the page, too. _ June, 1936 Rather substantial : l in g, 3ren fdere is a sock. It doesn ' t look as bad as it really is. It would cost us just three thousand dollars to put all the colors of that sock where they belong. Three inches of it between cuff and brogue are what we tolerated all year from the conservative sex. The gal leaving by the back exit is very, very sour. Once she was the toast of the campus. Now a little snip in a ski suit has strolled into the commons and the men can ' t get close enough. So she is taking her racoon coat and fadingout of the picture. Here are two more socks. There are six inches of these socks where there should only be three. No one has time to turn them down anymore. Oh, this mad, mad, worldl Suggestion folh ' fi isn ' t aSI hi i r  ii l  «kilfl4 ' « . S4 iii« liiiio! « « ' « - eiNaiM ' li l ' l sil4 ii;£ llii ' H ' iiil bf, ALICE PYPER ■ FICTION ■ FTI ' ]R all, it was (inly sumeone - - knocking on the door. Shana dropped her math book and rummaged in her purse for a nickel. Mother might stay home to pay for magazines if .she wouldn ' t learn to subscribe for them . . . of cour.so that ' s what it would be . . . The boy with the Sal iinldij Eeeninci Post most probably. . ii l if it were someone else? Four-thirty classes had lieen out for fifteen minutes now . . . and it would l)e about this time . . . But of course it wouldn ' t be. Not any- more. Which instigates the reflection that casual reasoning does much to bring about that indiflferent air so necessary when one opens the door expecting to find almost anything . . . Jim, for example. And it really was Jim! He was always there when Shana had accepted with philosophy the fart that it couldn ' t possibly be aiiymic but the boy with the magazine. It luul worked again (although lately it had not been quite fool-proof). When she wanted to see Jim, she had the nickel for the magazine boy ready. Xow lite was too complicated to allow him to happen along when she was ready for him ; therefore, the knock would lie Jim. Shana put the nickel back in her purse and smiled. And whose unfortunate canary have you just made a meal of, my child? You ' re actually purring ' .lini greeted her lightly. She started to tril Inni :iiid siojiped. One time he would Ikiac undiTslooil . . but now . . . now she knew he would laugh, and lately she had been so afraid of his laugh. It was too amused, too tolerant. It broke the intimacy that she used to feel and still wanted so desperately to feel with Jim. It always made her squirm a little. It intimated that Jim Larenby was laughing because Shane Lorren was silly and a bit childish. She didn ' t want to hear it and so she explained simply that she thought it was the news- boy and asked him to come in. Jim threw down his hat and coat and dropped into a chair. Shana .seated her- self on the sofa across from him. He asked how she was. She wa.s fine. She asked how he was. He was fine, too. W ell what did she know ? Nothing. What did he know-? He didn ' t know anything either. How idiotic! Jim ' s gaze wandered to a magazine with a briglit cover in the rack be.siile hini blly lie picked it u]i and began glancing llirijugh lis pages. Shana wished she could think of .some- thing to say — something that n-ould interest him. She felt now that so few things she said did. .She had to say something, or she would liegin rememlier- ing! Remembering when Jim was not jiresident of his class, president of his fraternity, and the liest-looking boy in school by popular vote. Rememliering the flowers he would send and the sincere little notes that came with them ... the times he had become more than a little incoherent over her hair and her dimple , . . the way he called her Sugar . . . the frantic letters he wrote when she had gone to Florida one winter . . . And now this . . . thiscasualness. . . his facetiovis greeting . . hy. she was crying! Please God don ' t let him look up now! She thought of the term pa|)er due next week . . . that stuffy prof! There! riiat was bettor. Hut why must his hair l« ' SI) blond anil his eyes .so blue? That old fool! . s il sin- even knew five thousand words aUout Sociology. Now if she could just keep up that trend of thought -----. Jim threw the linok aside. o]ien where he had been reading, and fumbled for a cigarette. Have one, Shane? They smoked silently for a minute. I ' ve missed you at the library several days, Jim. Shana offered with a studiedly careless flip of her cigarette in the direction of the ash- tray. Well, .she hail said il. He ' d know now what it ha.l ilmie to her. nol finding him there. F ' or this had lieen their meeting jilace in study hours. Well — it has been several days, I guess. So many things . . . . He trailed off uncomfortably. ' cs . . . ' l rs. I guess you have ... I iiieaii. there have been . . . Why couldn ' t she say something light, l.iantering, about his popularity, for instance? Stuttering around like this! Oh, why worry . . . she was just imagining things. He hud been busy, she knew, managing the fraternity. ]inrliri|i:il iiig in activities. .After all, lie diiliTl have to drop in today . . . probably came to tell her what time he was calling for her . . . for the dance tonight. Nicer than to telephone. She had sudden qualm. Could he have for- gotten? But no ... he had made such a point of asking her last year . . . they had spoken of it since. Everyone expected them to come together . . . She felt lietter. What orchestra tonight, Jim . . . and where . . . and stuff? It seems I ' ve been waiting for this dance for years . . . the last one was such fun. Rememlier the silly program? She laughed and looked at him expectantly. Continued on page 24 June, 1936 Xo. I really mean to give it liaek to him. I just haven ' t had a chance. Yes, I know I saw him twice this noon. l)Ut it just wasn ' t the right time. I ' m sure it was better to |iut it on than than just leave it loose in my purse. I won ' t see him again today anyhow. He never comes around the News office. I won ' t tell him I wore it so what difference will it make? Tomorrow I ' ll surely ret urn it . This place is a perfect madhouse. Everyone in the school has nothing lietter to do parks himself in the News office on copy daj ' . It ' s three o ' clock: nearly over now. The air in here is thick enough to cut. .lust liecause all newspaper men smoke doesn ' t mean they can ' t ojien a window. Here comes .Vllen, I wonder what ' s worrying him now. Mike swears he smokes soft coal in that pijie of his, and I believe it. We all make lots of fuss about getting this precious paper out. .As if anyone read it. except to see if their names are mentioned. Yes, .Allen, I can cut that a little, if you like. What about the write-up of the game ' ? ' )h. yes, you got that. .All right. Retype this for the fifth time. It wouhl be simpler to leave it out. Xo, Mike, Dramat hasn ' t sent over its copy yet. I thought Bud went after it. I wish all these children wotdd go home and let me go home, and let me finish in peace. They talk too much. Wait until they ' ve been around here four years. Well. mo.st of them won ' t stick that long. It ' s three-thirty. Oh, some cool air. Somebody must have come in. It ' s Pete. Oh, it ' s Pete. That pin is smothering me. Oh, what did I want to put it on again for; Xow he ' s talking to Mike. I think I must be losing my mind. That ' s the fourth wrong kej ' l e hit in three words. Oh, he ' s asking about that pin. c wants to put in an ad about it. 1 fci ' l small enough to walk under the desk. He ' s coming over here. ' Lo Pete. A es, here ' s a piece of paper. He ' s writing an ad. X ' ow May is look- ing over his shoulder. Little monkey. Lot of good it ' ll do her. Yes, of course I ' ll tyi)e it for you, Pete. Oh, your pin islost? -A pledge . . . ' ? That must be Bud. He was glooming all over the place about losing a pin. .Maybe it will turn up soon. ' Lost, Tau pin, initials F. P. Finder please return . . . ' It ' s really a vicious custom, letting pledges wear your pin until theirs come. They always lose them. I was really sorry for Bud, though. He felt so bad about losing mine. But it really doe.sn ' t matter that much. After he ' s had a pin four years he ' ll understand. He seemed to be pretty tickled that he happened to get mine to wear. No use letting him order another yet. It may turn u|). This is only Monday after all. Monday, that ' s copy day for tlie Xnr.s. See A Pill Continued from pane 13 lie ought to be at the office now. I ' m so near, I guess I ' ll stop in and see if he is there. I ' ll drive him back to the house if he is. It must be nearly quitting time. I wonder if he remembers to put the ad in the Lost column, like he said ' . ' I doubt it. Gosh, the air in here is enough to knock you o ' er. This room is a mess, anywa ' . Looks like they put all the old junk in here that wouldn ' t fit anywhere else. That de.sk of Mike ' s might have come out of the .Ark. Noah threw it out. Do all these kids hai ' e to talk at once ' . ' .And chew gum and drink cokes while they smoke ' ? What is this yoimger generation coming to ' ? -Lo, Mike. You people all look busy, IHitting the paper to bed. Yeah, I know I haven ' t been aroimd lately. I have lietter .sense. Is Bud around anywhere? ih. he went to the Library to look for Lew ' ? Doesn ' t he know that Lew is nc er anywhere but in the Dramat office? Well, I suppose he ' ll be back jiretty soon. Guess I ' ll wait around a while. Oh. there ' s .Alice, cncr then- In I lie corner. She looked ]iretly Salurday night. Xow she looks white as a sheel. I wish Bud would come. I feel like a fool, hanging around in the way. . ay, Mike, ilid Bud turn in an ad, about a ])in ' ' (•ah, he had mine. 1 iiev( r knew National to be (luite so slow about getting the new pins out . . . . li, I don ' t think anybody hooked it. It ' ll turn up. .Any- way, an ad means sixty cents for your pa]ier. Got something 1 can write on ' He says to ask Alice. ). K. What is the matter with that girl ' ? Does she think I am going to eat her? ' Lo, .Alice: you look tired. A ou shouldn ' t let these tough editors work you so hard. . ay. .Mike says you can give me a piece of paper. 1 want to write an ad. There, that didn ' t take long. Will you type this for me, .Alice? A ' eah, my pin. No, a pledge had it. A ' eah. Bud. Poor kid, he feels awful low aliout it. There we are. ' Lost, Tau pin, initials P. F. Finder please return to Pete Farmer, or the News office. Heward. ' Yes, you better say reward. Well. what ' s so unusual about that ' ? Thank you. Did you have a good time at tlie dance? Glad y.ni did, If 1 liad a su-spicious soul, I ' d think she knew some- thing about this. But of cimrsi ' not. It ' s not that important. Y ' eah, May. Sometime Satm-day. Bud swears he li;id it when he came home to dress, but lie must be mistaken. Mrs. Kent hel])cii iis lnok Sunday morn- ing, and we couldn ' t lind it anywhere ill the house. What is the matter with .Alice ' ? . he looks like she was going to faint . ' ' Why do you think a girl has it. May? She thinks some dame found it at the dance. She would. Oh, because a man would have given it back. Well, any girl that gets that much of a kick out of my pin must be pretty hard up. X ' o, I know darn well she wouldn ' t have returned it. She never returned Mack ' s; but that didn ' t keep her from taking Ed ' s. ■ ' Say, you guruls are too flattering. A ' ou ' U have me blushing in a minute. Oh, here comes Bud. .At last. Gee, I sure was tickled at initiation when I found that it was Pete ' s pin that they gave me. .And then I had to go and lose it. I felt awful about it. He ' s such a swell guy. and he ' s been so swell to me. Then he was so nice about it he made me feel worse than ever. A ' ouldn ' t let me order another, like I wanted to, right away: he kept saying it would turn u|i, or theie ' d l)e plenty of time later. I. ' e ' s a grand guy. I was going lo put an ail in the News as soon as I got bai ' k from seeing Lew, and it didn ' t make me feel any better to find Pete had already done it. I guess it was just as well, though. I was pretty late. I looked all over the Library for Lew, but I couldn ' t find him. I was just going over to Dramat to ludk for him, when I met — Well, anyway, it was awful late when I got l.)ack, and there was Pete waiting for me, and offering to take me back to the house in his car. Of course, I said that would be swell, but I had to go over to the .Annual office to .see — Well, I had to go over to the .Annual office, and he said sure, he ' d wait, so I went on across the hall. When I was coming bac], I saw .Mice standing liy the dour, and just at that second Pete came out . Alice said. I ' etc, 1 want to tell you something. She looked like she was going to bawl. It made me luu1 inside to see her. I said I ' d run along in the office and get my coat. ■ ' ell, that was right inside the door and I couldn ' t help hearing what she said. Honest I eoiddn ' t. .She said, Pete, I have your pin. He said, Have you .Alice? She said, Acs. I found it on the stairs after the dance. I meant to give it back to you right away, but somehow I couldn ' t. Wa.sn ' t that silly? I ' ve been wearing it ever since. Here it is. He said, .Mice, you ' re the first girl that e er wore my pin. Do you know, I rather think I ' m glad of that. She laughed, but it sounded kind of imsteady. She said, Take back your pin, Pete Farmer. We ' re through. He said, I think we ' re just beginning. Well, after that I shut the door the rest of the way. .A few minutes later .Alice came back in Continued on pa«e 24 Review of Revues l)Vliei « iii lo4 ;i o Kiii;£ siiiiis si ilaiii lior Nlill-.siiKikiii;;! liiilo | 4 p iiii. hlowiiijif awjiv ;£roat I I Iim of  $tiiff b„ DAX CJUirK THOTTER DON ' T blame me. They solicited this comment on things dramatic. They said make it like ' an Wyck Potter, and I said I can be no other l)ut myself, and they said nuts! So don ' t blame me. I ' m only a poor, overworked senior who might graduate. Thought you might like a resume of actor Posthorn ' s most dramatic moment to date. No, you ' re wrong. It wasn ' t one of those exhibitions of German wrath in Alien Corn, when the paralyzed hand hung shaking with a realistic emotion, and the lame foot was dragged over the floor till it made you suffer with an imaginary lameness of your (jwn ... It wasn ' t that wonderful entrance in Beau Brumiiui, or when he sat center stage and the audience rocked in its seal and howled with laughter just liecause he did nothing, but did nothing in .such a comical cockney way. No, Postie outdid all this by four small words and a dejected look in a drab class-room on a dull morning. It seems that a certain French professor had been having a l.iit of trouble with two young men in one of his classes Ije- cause they never brought books with them. Having threatened the culprits with ejection on the occasion of the next offence, M. Professeur was prepared to carry out same threat on this dull morning in this drab class-room aljove mentioned. Of course the young blades did turn u]) . . . bright and shining faces, large smiles, clean pocket handkerchiefs . . . same books. And picture Posthorn on the side . . . watching the drama . . . quaking in his boots (size?) . . . Posthorn the Prepared, Posthorn the Punctual, Posthorn the iclose to) Perfect had lost his o%vn volume of Lovely French Lyrics at some dark hour p.x. the day liefore. Sir, he tremeloed timidly, Sir . . . I ' m not in the habit of doing it, you knovv, sir, but. Sir, I have mi.splaced my French book. No doubt the tune was scrilibled in by his dog or chewed up by his little brother. One female in the class found herself in the same predicament, practically, that is. M. Professeur was beyond descrijjtion with ire. The ultimatum aroused groans and faint moans. Jlr. So-and-So and Mr. ' hat ' s-his-Name will please leave the room and Miss Thingamabub and Mr. Posthorn will please follow! It .sounded grand and final to most, liut to the inimitable Posthorn it was only a superb challenge to his unequaled wit. Rising oliediently and with due respect lat least in manner) he asked, ' ' In single Hie, Sir ' . ' I ' m really not supposed to be doing this sort of thing, you know, I ' m supposed to be raking the reviewers over the coals for the things tliey rake the actors over the coals aliout. There ' s Willie Wright . . . Willie the Omnipotent, the ' ersatile. But you can ' t criticize Willie, Ijecause he doesn ' t split hairs. He just has fun, and nobody pays any attention to him but Dickie Leighton. Personally, I think they just Ijicker back and forth on a sort of logrolling liasis in order to have something to talk about. But Willie ' s the right sort. (. pologics to Alfie, and warnings to the Administration that Alfie Meitus will he quarantined. The thing ' s contagious. When I start jjunning something is wrong with the iniiverse.) But back to Potter ' s plane . . . Yes, Willie ' s the stuff. He ' s a reviewer who isn ' t afraid to step out on the stage himself, and then temper his post Iioard- treading scribblings with new attitudes he gets from the other side of the footlights. And then this gifted young man can devise sets, some definitely pleasing . . . some vaguely puzzling. I never did quite get accustomed to looking out over the top of the doctor ' s office into the panorama of a Klaxon public square in Quack Quack. No doulit this is some high form of art with which I am unacquainted, Ijut I ' ll just Ijet you my hat, yes that one hat, that W.W. was trying something out on us to see if we ' d stand for it. I kept wanting to run around back-stage to see the little box that would have to lie attached to the building to keep the skeletons in. Maylie he just ran out of material. Maybe he was trying to pre- serve a note of fantasy that musical comedy, as a form of drama, is fast losing. Maybe he had a l.iad dream. What I ' m really driving at is that as long as he can successfully dabble in the actual art itself, let him write what he plea.ses. And gee whiz, can he wear a monocle! The year ' s brought out the l)cst in ' em. Gustetter proved slic could be soft, Thuman proved she n.ulil In- tragic, Eagen went all the way from a nut- chewing blunderer to a jirince. LimLsey added jirofessional tone. And Waxman . . . well Waxman was Waxman, and we thank him for it. Waxman is the man who takes you seriously and humorously all at the same time. Posthorn, I can well hear him intone in that marvelous voice of his just before the curtain rose on Beau, Posthorn where did you get that beautiful ruffle you ' re wearing? I ' m sure it would look twice as well on me as it does on you. Johnny, make him take it off. And twenty minutes later behold Beau entering from the left . . . adorned, Posthorn meanwhile soothing himself with a pair of bucldeless shoes that would have made Beau ' s feet look a trifle .shorter . . . that is. a trifle of a trifle. But enough is enough, so, with orchids to Rose and orchids to Froome, and plenty l)ig fine orchids to the Greenroom Club for the Torchbearers (particular orchids going to Bisbj ' and Smith and Roelofs) and man} apologies to Potter of Esquire, I close, reminding you that the show will go on. 24 Joe has recently discovereil that pursu- ing a pen in trilnite to the elusive muse is much more soul-satisfying than pursuing a liroom. Swinliurne woulil turn over in his grave with cnvv — You and I When we are sitting in the tireglow. Just You and I alone, And the flickering light falls softly On a beauty that ' s all your own. It gleams where a soft smooth shoulder From a graceful neck sweeps down ; And I would not exchange your beauty For the best-dressed Belle in town. I have drawn tlie curtain closer, And from my easy chair I stretcli my hand out toward you, Just to feel that you are there. And your lireath is laden with perfume As my thoughts round you entwine. And I feel, my pulses beating As your spirit flow.s with mine. And the woes of the world have vanished ' hen Fve pressed my lijis to yours ; And to feel your life blood flowing To me is the best of cures. You have been my inspiration For many a soulful rhyme — And just to think — poor mo — I ' ve been dreaming all the time. h. . ' i-:mk. t joe Continued from pane 22 the olfic ' , looking pretty (|Ui-cr around the eyes. Allen said. Here, Alice. Will you type this last thing, and then we ' re through. She had put on her hat, and she was fixing her mouth as he spoke. .She laughed and she said, in the gladdest voice I ever heard, ' ' Type it yourself, infant. I ' ve got a date. The 4 ' 4 iiiioi! iNdir Continued from page 11 I have no doul t. The only remedy for it is to pre ent it. Yes, of course. WeW. why do you cnnie to such an affair as this, tlien ' , ' ■ 1 can ' t imagine. (Ill, Thill is. 1 couldn ' t imagine until a lllllr while ago. Oh. ■ Hut now I imagine it was because . . . ■ , thev alwavs ha ' e such dell. ■Oh. Would you like some ' . ' If it ' s as delicious as you say it is. I can vouch for its excellency. Are you a connoiseur of rare punches ' . ' I wouldn ' t be so vain as to call myself a connoiseur, but I think I can say with a modicum of modesty that my judgment in that and other matters is invariably impeccable. Other matters ' : ' ' ' Music, for instance. Oh. ■ ' . nd people . . . and persons ... Yes . . . ' ? Take that fellow over there for instance . . . the one looking for someone who is probably hoping not to be found. I ' ve never met him, but I ' ll wager a dollar to a ducat that he Iielongs to the lowest strata of nincompoops, though he is very likely of the highest strata of society. Come . . . let ' s hurry and get our punch. Why the sudden rush ' , ' Because I kiidw your judgment to be impeccalile and I ' m hoping not to lie found. The young figures dash arm in arm from the terrace into the ballroom and are lost from view ' amid the swirling } eo]tle there. The Hunger S Travc I Continued from pane 15 A sailor on a spree. .-V fishmonger with spats. - frontiersman who had struck gold. Xoisy, carnal, violent. Anything but suave and anemic. I lielieved that the whole country can be rediscovered if one is hungry enough. We found the prosaic Middle West in a Dubuf|ue cafeteria. The holiday-conscious national parks in the rough-hewn log restaurants of Yellowstone. The last remnants of the vanishing virile West in a Zane Greyish hash house where the man behind the counter carried the menu on his apron. Mr. Ruskin may be right, but still I should like to believe that the culture of a country is indicated, not by its archi- tecture, liut rather by its cuisine. Continued from page 21 He ground out his cigarette with con- siderable care before his answer came. A ' ell . . . well, you see, Shane . . . that ' s wliy 1 came. I won ' t . . . — he reddened a bit . . . be able to make it tonight. Kind of late to let you know, but I just talked to a fellow . . . uh . . . Drew Hayes. Had him over at the fraternity house. He and his sister are visiting here . . . may come to school next term. Like to make a good impression fin . . . uh . . . Hayes . . . Felt sorry for the girl, too .... Not knowing anyone. I told him I ' d take her tonight . . . might be a good pledge man, you know. He floundered around help- lessly. I see, Jim . . . well, of course ... of course it ' s nice of you ... I know she . . . I mean, he . . . will appreciate it. Tell every! lody hel . . . hello for me. will you ' ' Smile ' Don ' t let him know you care! (111 don ' t care! (iood egg. iShane. He seemed re- lieved. Have to tear now . . . Errand for mother. Glad you understand about the dance . . . .see you around . . . . He was gone. This is dying, . ' hane thought. This numbness. Oh, Jim . . . . She picked up the magazine he had left open on the chair and began to read, hardly recognizing words. Anything to keep from thinking. Suddenly, she gasped, Xo! She was imagining things. .She looked again. Hut she hadn ' t lieen mistaken. The name of the liero of the story was Drew Haves. Who was that lady I seen you with ' : ' That wasn ' t no lad — that was my wife. June, 1936 25 Compliments of A Friend Compliments of THE FOy PAINT CO., Inc. MAtERS OF FINE PAINTS, ENAMELS, VARNISHES and LACOUERS We also stock a complete line of Wall Paper RETAIL DEPT 230 E. Fifth Street Between Mam and Sycamore fOr go to your neishtorhood Foy dealer PURE DRUGS . . . PROFESSIONAL PHARMACISTS Stier s Pharmacy CLIFTON and LUDLOW DISTRIBUTORS E. R. SQUIBB SONS . . ABBOTT LABORATORIES COSMETICS Yardley, Dubarry, Lentheric, Max Factor, FHelena Rubenstem Compliments of A Friend ISAAC KEILSON, President ALEX SCHWARTZ, Vice Pres DAN KEILSON Secy -Treas • THE KEILSON CIGAR COMPANY DISTRIBUTORS OF CIGARS, CIGARETTES CANDIES and SUNDRIES 321-327 EAST SEVENTH STREET  CINCINNATI, OHIO DAYTON TOBACCO BRANCH. ..12 SO. ST. CLAIR STREE ...DAYTON, OHIO June, 1936 Patronize Our Advertisers June, 1936 Compliments of W. B. Compliments of A Friend Compliments of A. A. M. Take a post-graduate course m FUN at CONEY SLAND AMERICA ' S FINEST AMUSEMENT PARK Tfie swimming ' s fine . . . Tfie dinner ' s delicious No finer place to dance Success and appiness to every Graduate • The Commons ' Compliments of L. C. W. The Gibson-Sch emmer Co. PLUMBING CONTRACTORS ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS 1060 Hulbert Avenue Phone MAin 1966 June, 1936 THE GIANT AND THE DWARF by Thomas Kent ULRLNG recent nioiitlis, public utilities have come in for more than their share of bruis- ing. erbal bricks have been hurled at them from all directions. Bouquets have been few and far between. Really, if you were to believe all you ' ve heard, you ' d say the electric bill must be the people ' s biggest burden. But face the facts and hgures emd what do you see.- That the cost of electr icity has come down — down — steadily down for the last twenty years. Today, your electric Ught bill takes but a small part of your income. More than Ukely it is one of the smallest items in your household budget. Then what ' s all the shouting about? You have reason to ask. For beside the nation ' s domestic electric Ught bill stands a colossus that dwEu-fs it. A giant that dips deeper and deejier into your pockets — stealthily takes approximate- ly one-fourth of all you earn . . . takes it in the form of visible and invisiljle assessments. This giant is the nation ' s bill for taxes — and it has grown bigger and bigger year by year. No wonder you wonder, why doesn ' t someone attack the giant instead of the dwarf. Especially when you realize that the country ' s tax bill is greater than the total expenditure for food — twice the annual purchases for clotliing. Five times as much as that for coal and oil. And less NlllloV . ' DO than six per cent of this tax bill would pay for all the electricity used in the homes of America ! H= ;;: :!: The natioiml hill for domestic electricity is less than tliat for cii arettes. Less than the bill for aniitsenients or hair dressing and cosmetics. Yet reformers and headline hunters tvoiild ha- rangue yon into helieiing that the IS ' ation ' s domes- tic electric hill has assntiicd terrific proportions. Published by The Union Gas Electric Company June, 1936 Voice Contdct • • • Telephone wires span the world. Your neighbor across the street . . . equally your neighbor across the sea ... is at the other end of your telephone line. Contact . . . wherever you dre and whenever you choose . . . that is the priceless service of your telephone. THE CINCINNATI AND SUBURBAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 30 June, 1936 The 1936 C C A A ENGRAVED by REPRO ENGRAVING CO. Desisners and Engravers of Nationally Known Yearbooks • 505 ELM STREET CINCINNATI, OHIO Index A Page Acacia 145 10 172 30 156 171 168 158 159 170 122 164 141 144 173 175 174 175 - - ' - 36-38 Administration Building Alpha Alpha Pi - Applied Arts Tribunals Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Sigma Alpha Delta Pi - - Alpha Delta Theta - Alpha Gamma Delta - Alpha Kappa Psi Alpha Lambda Delta Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Tau Omega American Commons Club A. I. Ch. E. - • A. I. E. E. - - - A. S. M. E. - ' Arete , . . . Athletic Directors Baldwin Hall Band - - Basket Ball, men ' s Basket Ball, women ' s Baseball, men ' s Baseball, women ' s Bearcat - Behind Scenes Beta Gamma Sigm Beta Kappa - Beta Theta Pi - Buckley, Catherine 11 - 184 48-51 ' 63 54-55 - 63 78-79 - 105 - 117 - 142 - 131 - 24 The C Club - Cadet Officers, Sec. Cadet OlScers, Sec. Cadet Officers ' Ball Campus Couples Campus Shadows Chi Delta Phi - Chi Omega - - Cmcinnatian Class Officers Clifton Appro.. ch 39 70 71 101 65 16 126 152 76-77 32 14 Ind ex C Page Coast Artillery 73 Co-Op Engineer 80 Co-Ep Club 187 CoOp Club 188 D Debate Council 183 Dedication - - 4-5 Delta Delta Delta 149 Delta Phi Epsilon 162 Delta Tau Delta 133 Delta Zetd 154 Drufner, Vincent H 24 Dyer, Elizabeth 20 E Engineers Ball 102 Engineering Tribunal 31 Esquirrel 225 F Faculty Pla 92 Fencing - - - - 57 Ferson, Merton L. 23 Football 40-47 Fraternity Presidents ' Council 128 Fresh Painters 86-87 Fnedlander, Alfred 22 Frontispiece 2 G Golf 56 Greek Games 64 Guidon 125 H Hockey 62 I Individual Sports 61 In Pursuit ot Learning 81 Intr.imurals 58 lot.i Chi Epsilon 137 K Kappa Alpha Theta 151 Kappa Delta 150 Kappa Delta Pi 118 Kappa Kappa Gamma 153 Kindergarten Students ' Club 186 Ind L Page p y Lambda Chi Alpha 135 - L ' Ateher 176 Lit 126 Laurence, Daniel 19 M Men ' s Senate 29 Military Ball 100 Military Faculty 68 More, Louis T 21 Mortar Board HI Mortar Board Christmas Dance 98 Mummers ' Guild 88-91 N Newman Cluh 181 O Omicron Delta Kappa 110 Omicron Delta Kappa Junior Prom - - - 96-97 Ordnance Department 72 P Pechstein, L. A. 23 Pershing Rifles 69 Phi Beta Delta 138 Phi Beta Kappa 115 Phi Delta Theta 132 Phi Eta Sigma 123 Phi Kappa 143 Phi Mu 166 Phi Sigma Sigma 161 Pi Alpha Tau 163 Pi Chi Epsilon 125 Pi Kappa Alpha 134 Pi Lambda Sigma 167 Pi Tau Sigma 114 Pi Theta 119 Q Quadres Society 93 R Rifle Team 57 Roelofs, Howard D. 22 S Scabbard and Blade 113 Scarab 176 Schneider, Herman 21 Ind ex S Page Seniors 192-224 Sigma Alpha Epsilon - - - - - - 130 Sigma Alpha Mu 136 Sigma Chi - 129 Sigma Delta Tau 160 Sigma Kappa Tau 121 Sigma Sigma 109 Sigma Tau Phi 139 Simrall, Josephine 20 Snaps from Here and There 33 Sophos 112 Sophos Freshman Reception 99 Student Council 26-27 Swimming, men ' s 58 Swimming, women ' s 62 T Taft Hall 13 Tau Beta Pi 116 Tau Pi Epsilon 120 Tennis 56 Theta Phi Alpha 155 Triangle 140 Trianon 165 Track 52-53 U Ulex 124 Ulex Spring Dance 103 University Orchestra 180 V Varsity Boatnde , . - q ysl Walters, Raymond 18 Wig-Wag 185 Wilson Memorial 15 Women ' s Athletic Association 60 Women ' s Pan-Hellenic 148 Women ' s Senate 28 Women ' s Vigilance Committee 182 Y Y. M. C. A. 179 Y. M. C. A. Building 12 Y. W. C. A. 178 Z Zeta Tau Alpha 157 THE BOHNETT CO. CINCINNATI, OHIO I l fi


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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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