University of Louisville - Thoroughbred Yearbook (Louisville, KY) - Class of 1944 Page 1 of 202
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$275 SOR arts oe Eee ano ss ope Reopen: Se Co-Editors Euizaspetu L. Forr Joun S. JouNnson Business Managers Rutu E. McLean Jean C. Heap | Archives | UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE WAR DEAD Adams, William Frank Ades, 5. Gilbert, Jr. Alford, Iceal William Allen, Ellis Saunders, Jr., M. D. (Member of Medical Faculty) Bennett, John Caldwell, III Benton, M. M. Bornwasser, Charles Paul Brosheer, John Reed, M. D. Brownstein, Sydney S. Burlingame, Paul, Jr. Creamer, John Allen, Jr. Ernst, Charles G. Ford, Wallace C. Gallo, Anthony Hooe, Carroll William Howard, Wilson Kimbrough, Elmer Duke Leopold, Robert Lawrence Lewellyn, Norman Jett Lewman, Jacob Peter Lovelace, Roger William Menges, Herbert Hugo Miller, Lewis H. Miller, Phelps, Jr. Moulton, Joseph S. Neal, Geoffrey Edward Otter, Bethel Veech Peklenk, Carl Sanford Reccius, Marion Martel Reiss, Ralph E. Rigsby, Charles Alexander Roney, Joseph H., Jr. Rosenberg, Charles Schloemer, Frederick John Seiller, Allan Joe Sibley, Harry E. Sprecher, Joseph E. Stein, Tom Warren Walker, Harry Vincent Weiss, Lee Junior White, James Leon White, Robert Gabriel Wilkins, Charles Roscoe Wolf, Arthur Crandall, Jr. Woodruff, Gordon Ezra, M. D. Zollinger, Ernest Thomas LTO MN OP PE I TL = viii tou an = ii fested jungles of the Far Eas bloody shores of France; are giving their lives that we may live the Ameri- can Way. Their deeds cannot and will not be forgotten. To the forty-six men who have paid the supreme sacrilice to be right =e te) 8 for what they and we kngff Naf we can only say, Bey oi „s resolve that they sel vain. a: Dr. Einar Jacobsen and Mr. Paul Druien, Assistant to the President Since his arrival on the Campus a little over a year ago, Dr. Einar W. Jacobsen has done much to improve the University. He has safely guided us through the crisis of war to con- tinue to prepare youth for the new âWorld of Tomorrow.â DEDICATION DR. EINAR W. JACOBSEN The Tresidders have made themselves felt very much in the social affairs of the Campus. Their willing and cheer- ful participation in most of the social events has meant much to their suc- cess. Mrs. Tresidder was the organ- izer of the Navy Chorus. OUR SPONSORS LT. AND MRS. ARGUS J. TRESIDDER With Independent Women O.D.K. Tapping At Dances At the Western Game IN MEMORIAM DR. RAYMOND A. KENT A fighter for the Rights of Man, a Champion of Youth, Dr. Kent was an inspiration to all who knew him. SPEED SCIENTIFIC. SCHOO SprEep ScreNntIFIC ScHoot, the classroom of the prospective engineers. Speed School is one of the newer buildings on the campus. L SPEED MUSEUM A ee | a â The J. B. Speep Museum, gift of the Speed Family to the University. This is truly an asset to the campus. SCHOOL OF: DAV f am a % a 10 aay ea. Via a afi) toy Sd ia aig : =âaBee â â ee es cr eee Sr ey â E= =; . 4 in e â Ve : - = aan a s. ©) | : âoe Se Age Tue ScHoor or Law and location of the Navy V-12 offices. Louis Dembitz Bran- dies is buried under the front steps. IB ADMINISTRATION BUILDING Tue ApMINISTRATION BuILpDING, scene of Registration Day, houses the University Library, and other Administrative Offices. Under these conditions, schedule making can be a pleasure... . That makes five after- . Register for P.T., old men four days, new men five . . . Tough, Jay, but things are And have you been sectioned, yet? noon labs! . . . With all these books . tough all over Bae x An innocent Freshman being neck - - « tied ot Se aes ne âAbandon hope, all ye who enter hereâ Watch your step, Joyce! âTorchy Tessâ Offner swoons âem So you donât believe in evolution? How he can write to one girl, and sit and talk to another CAMPUS ACTIVITIES Dances; Howdy Walk; convocations: campus pic nics; Student Center; campus traditions: all these combine to make the University of Louisville the school we love. Those cardinal and black bows and ties and the Freshmen on Howdy Walk means Freshmen Week is here again. The annual Fry- berger Sing, a pageant of melody and beauty, is held every Spring. And most of all, the gay times in the Student Center remind us of a happy year âone we will never forget. sixty-four dollar question. thatâs the In the springtime, a young manâs fancy turns to what a woman's been thinking of all year A symphony of melody and simplicityâChi the Fryberger Sing. Fraternity winners of the Fryberger Sing Omega, winners of Sigma Chi Sigma. Miss Hilda Threlkeld pours tea in the Womenâs Building, while Mrs. Jacobsen and Mrs. Speed look on, We bet you canât count the lines of guff that are being handed out here. To the sweet and âhauntingâ strains of âMy Old Kentucky Home,â the grand march moved toward the bandstand. Rosetta cuts a rug. How are you fixed for toothpaste? I've seen better legs on a piano. DANCES, BALLS AND BRAWLS A vital and most important phase of our Univer- sity life has been the balls and informal dances held periodically throughout the year. The crowning achievement was the annual Thoroughbred Ball Student Center goings-onâthe perfect leisure time occupation. held the first week in June where âMiss Thorough- bredâ was presented to the anxious student body. The Queen, this year chosen by Earl Carroll, was Leelah RoBards. At the annual Barristersâ Ball Miss Lucille Coldiron, Chi Omega, was crowned âMiss Justice.â The Navy Ball held for the first time in May promises to be a trimester occurrence. âThe Winnerââ-Miss Thoroughbred is presented with the tradi- Shipâs Officers and wives chat and keep cool, while the dancers swelter, tional horseshoe of roses. The dignitaries at the barracks dedication July 21, 1943. The O.D.K. tapping ceremonies. ceremonies, Dr. Jacobsen presides at commencement. Captain Loftquist, Dr. Jacobsen, Rear Admiral Jacobs, Lt. Com. Appleby and Lt. McKerley. The Battalion stands colors at 5 P. M. after four years of hard work - ----- CAMPUS CEREMONIES This year brought several notable celebrities to Belknap Campus. Chief in importance was the visit of Lord Halifax, British Prime Minister to the United States, who received an honorary Ph.D. from the University. At the dormitories dedica- tion in June, 43, we were honored by the presence of Rear Admiral Randall Jacobs, chief of Naval Personnel. The ever-important commencement ceremonies were presided over by President Jacob- sen. Two great leaders meetâLord Halifax, British Prime Minister, and Lord Halifax has tea, while talking over current affairs. Dr. Jacobsen, U. of L.âs president. Great surgeons in the making. Now itâs like this, see. I will lift up mine eyes... The artistâs technique. „ THROUGH HELL AND HIGH WATER A remotely important part of the work at the Uni- versity of Louisville, as in any University, is the attendance of classes and labs. Though generally boring, they are nevertheless necessary evils en- countered thoroughout our process of education. Physics reports, chemistry experiments and C.E. reports are synonymous with headaches, aspirins and sleepless nights. Do you take physics? Very interesting... âTHe PLAYHOUSE Fire Linde Theatre Company ras just completed twelve years of successful drama production in the Playhouse on Belknap Campus under the distinguished direction of Boyd Martin. During the past season the group offered to its interested audiences six plays of varied types, ranging all the way from âThe Damask Cheek,â a nostalgic comedy, to âThe Yellow Jacket,â an Oriental drama presented in the Chinese manner replete with sing-song orchestra, visible but mute property man, and vociferous chorus. Spaced be- tween these were: âThe Great Big Door Step,â drippy with Southern moss and âCajun dialect; âCan- dida,â with an experienced cast that gave Josef Dignan his glorious opportunity to win the coveted medal- lion for the outstanding individual performance of the season; âRing Around Elizabeth,â a hilarious comedy; and âUncle Harry,â a thriller of the first order. While this organization is entering its adolescent period under the name of The Little Theatre Com- pany, its growing pains are over, and there certainly is nothing childish or gangling in its accomplishments. The sixty-five three-act plays presented since its opening in 1932 are positive proof of its mature versa- tility. Pooling of the talents and resources of the Alumni Players, the University of Louisville Players, and the Louisville Players Club made possible a mature group with the use of a theatre which, with alterations and additions, seemed adequate for its needs. This student group had had a glorious past beginning as far back as 1914 when Boyd Martin, of little more than college age himself, convinced the beloved Dean of the then College of Arts and Sciences, Dr. John L. Patterson, that he could carry out the Deanâs ideas of a dramatic club as an integral part of the Universityâs curriculum. Since that day the history of all these theatrical groups, culminating in the present Little Theatre Company, has been in a distinct way the lengthening shadow of Mr. Martin, the I aa man responsible for its birth and growth. His real ability as a director, his electric, contagious en- thusiasm, his abundant vitality, and his deep-seated love for the drama have made it possible for play pro- duction to weather the real life drama of two world wars. It is distinctly fitting that one of the fine arts should have its home on the campus of the cityâs leading educational institution which in itself is the natural cultural center of Louisville. The Little Theatre Company feels it has a genuinely altruistic purpose in keeping the drama alive; in providing entertainment and relaxation during these nerve-racking times; in affording its participants an outlet for their talents and even their pent-up emotions; and perhaps in a small way in helping to bring Broadway just a little nearer Louisville. This drama group is yours for the taking! B e proud of it; for if its past performances are a mirror of the future. There are brilliant years ahead. ALL CAMPUS COUNCIL First Row: Arterburn, Coldiron, Ehlig, Ewing, Fort. Second Row: Friedman, Grace, Head, Hobb, Johnson. Third Row: Parker, Smith, Warner, Whitehouse. OFFICERS COEYIRE NAR ITER: | Ric-crsccccsnsarxcesccemesttcosvecce-sas COWEN) BAR IRR Reai5 oe ravens dehocesccapansesceescstcntek Wa AM -EBRIG 42... Se cee The supreme authority of the Student government is the All-Campus Council of the University of Louisville. The purpose of the council is to further the general welfare of the students and to regulate the affairs common to the ot Sy se ne or Be President ee eae eee ee re Ri ee meee oe! Secretary SE en nn Treasurer students. Each school on the campus is represented by two members on the council. Five other members are elected at large from the schools combined. BOARD OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Row I: Houchins, Howe, Tyler, Standard. Row II; Grace, Fort, Johnson, Harris BOARD OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ..Co-editor of Thoroughbred .......School of Law .......School of Music ...Editor of Cardinal ELIZABETH Fort... LEE J. FRIEDMAN..........-- FRANCES GRACE........---- ROSALIE ETARRIS:. J Se Joun M. Houcuins.......................-Speed Scientific School LAWRENCE L. HOWE.........n::--c-ne--s004 College of Liberal Arts âCo-editor of Thoroughbred JOHN JOHNSON: q2.0222--a-ccs-....200 The Board of Student Publications has jurisdic- tion over the Thoroughbred, the University maga- zine and the Cardinal. A policy formulator, the CHARLES W. LOVELL, JR........-------- Speed Scientific School Dr. ALTON W. MOoRrE.........-----:-:-:0+-+00+ School of Dentistry Davip Ts@QvarByeisâ..oss4c..0- nee School of Medicine fis Ce RUSSERT co bce cecote School of Law, Chairman DOROTHY STANDARD........-2:-2202000-+-+- College of Liberal Arts (GORDON SEYVER=29 oo ose ee College of Liberal Arts RICCAMAE WEDDINGTON...........----+------ School of Dentistry Board strives to adhere to liberal standards at all times. Its chief function is to choose the editor of the Cardinal and to budget this paperâs finances. Co-âŹditors JouN S. JoHNSON ELIZABETH L. Fort HOHE Editorial Staff Grace Caldwell McKenna Spalding Ladt Welch Jindra Mapother Managing Editor FRANCES GRACE Art Editor VIRGINIA CALDWELL Organization Technician MAX LADT Photography Supervisor MARION WELCH Navy Editor LOU JINDRA Technical Director MARY FRANCES McKENNA Co-Chairmen of Dance Committee DOROTHY SPALDING JOHN MAPOTHER Business Managers JEAN CHURCHILL HEAD RutH E. McLEAN Markham Gingles Grace Smith Ray Leep Kleinstarink DeGraw Gotcher Jurgens Merkert Hidvegi Korell Richerson Seiller Wallner James Willis Markham............Medical School Editor Carl Gingles........................--...-..Dental School Editor Frances Grace.............-.-.-------------Music School Editor N. CG. Smith.........cc...-::--c.0:.+0000-s--...Law School Editor PNGICE A RAY ediscesancacesens _.-.-.--.-Liberal Arts Editor (GE 01 al ECCT oon ae oe ge ee eee Speed School Editor Betty Kleinstarink...................... Advertising Manager Doris) DeGra wees serene Advertising Assistant Robert Gotcher } John Jurgens Be 5 ae eee NUS Eat George Merkert Thelma Hidvegi Mary Frances Richerson Dorothy: Kore) ye cs _.....Staff Edwina Seiller | Barbara Wallner UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE C G A 1) : ii a L Cardinal Rounds out Twelfth Banner Year of Publication ol. XII Louisville, Ky. 1944 Publishing for its twelfth year, despite difficulties brought 1936-1937; William A. Stephenson, 1937-1938; about by war conditions, the University of Louisvilleâs official Rhodes Jackson, 1938-1939; William S. Ray, 1939- weekly publication, The Cardinal, is at present headed by its 1940; Harry F. Cohen, 1940-1941; Ewing Arnn, third woman editor, Rosalie Harris, who succeeded Warren 1941-1942: Mortimer Zimmerman, 1942-1943; Klosterman after his induction into the army. In Martha McGreevy, 1943-1944. its editorial columns it has promoted drives for War Loans, the Red Cross, the World Student Service Fund, and advocated tolerance and better relations between India, Russia, China, and other peoples. It carried on a fight to abolish race discrimination, and supported the anti-poll tax bill; furthering many concrete ideas for post-war planning. Expressing an interest in civic activities, it discussed many local problems including the Louisville Area Development Association, and co-educational high schools. The entrance of the United States into World War II and the presence of a U. S. Naval Training Unit on the campus of the University, placed the Cardinal in a new position of responsibility both to the student body and to the University. In close co- operation with Naval Officers âon boardâ, the Cardi- nal has attempted to better relations between naval and civilian students. Realizing that one of the duties of a college newspaper is to present and ex- plain campus problems, it discussed in its columns the point system, sluggish student attitudes, the honor council, and student-faculty relations. WARREN KLOSTERMAN Rosacie Harris January 21-April 7 April 14- Staff Members: Emmy Kate Heyman, Dana Krentzman, Aileen Ray, Joe Witherington, Louise Funk, Dave Gittle- The Cardinal was first published September 16, man, Otelia Wallbrecht, Marion Lukas, Audrey Goldman, 1932, when it succeeded the old Louisville News, a Liberal Arts Kenneth McCrocklin, Margie Cohen, Marilyn Hurst, David ; a f 4 sde Jiro 9 a-eluy, âar pa: 4 4 Publication. First editor of the Cardinal was Charles DeSpain senses Wigan: Aieee inva  BONy - RESSiatey.. Bees â Rossman, Ann Wickstead, Billie Lechleiter. 1932-19325. He was succeeded by J. J. Crumley, 19324-1933. Other editors: Edmund Baxter, 1933-1934; Leon Schlossberg, ABSALOM C. RUSSELL, Director of Publications 1934-1935; Louis M. Cohen, 1935-1936; Robert N. Kelso, Jr., == CARDINAL = Official student publication of the University of Louisville, pub- lished by the students by the authority of the Board of Student Pub- lication on each Friday that school is in session, except for examination periods and holidays. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT ROSALIE HARRIS NANCY JOY HEYMAN . SON VA CURT 2... CAROLYN ABRAHAM . JOYCE PEASE TOM JOHNSON ... ..Sports Editor LIBBY FORT .... Society Editor TEX WELCH ... Cia Bkabentt hte Staff Photographer Editor Managing Editor ...News Editor -Copy Editor ....Feature Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT JAMES MAPOTHER ... Business Manager Heyman Curl Abraham ANNE ARRASMITH .. ...Advertising Manager Mapother Fort Frankel BUAROUD PRAIRIE cisecesineeen a seen Circulation Manager DIVISION OF ADULT EDUCATION FREDERICK W. STAMM The Division of Adult Education was established in 1928 in order to serve better the educational needs of the community through a well rounded program of evening courses to be offered for those unable to attend day classes. As evidence of the need of this program, this Division has grown from an enrollment of 109 students in 1928 to 1,450 for the school year, 1943-44, For the first several years all of the classes were conducted in the College of Liberal Arts. Increased interest on the part of industrial firms and scientific and professional organizations led to increased enrollment and specialized curricula, and, as a result the Division is now offering courses in the Music School, Speed Scientific School, the Col- lege of Liberal Arts and the Graduate School. The value of education for adults has been recognized by a number of industrial firms, and this past year the Division has organized a number of specialized courses to meet the specific needs of industry. The need for specialized war time training was recognized by the United States Office of Education, and this Division is cooperating with the Government by conduct- ing a number of highly specialized classes under the Engineering, Science, and Manage- ment War Training program. This year we have trained over 420 people who are working in war industries in this community. The University through the Division of Adult Education is making available an educational program variable in scope and adaptable to the general and specific needs of the community. Mr. Frederick W. Stamm came to the University in 1931 as a member of the teaching staff in the department of economics, but became director of the Division in 1937. He received an A.B. and M.A. degree from the University of Michigan and M.B.A. from the Graduate School of Business Administration of Harvard University. aa H eS =: GRADUATE DIVISION OF SOCIAL ADMINISTRATION Joun J. Cronin John J. Cronin, Director of the Graduate Division of Social Administration received his B.A. from Boston College and his M.A. from the University of Chicago. Active on campus and in the community, Mr. Cronin is President of the Kentucky Conference of Social Welfare; President of Kappa Pi Epsilon, social science fraternity; President of the University of Louisville Chapter of the American Association of University Pro- fessors and President of the East Louisville Consumersâ Cooperative. He is also chair- man of the Advisory Committee of the Social Service Department, General Hospital and member of the boards of the Consumersâ League of Kentucky and the Western Kentucky Chapter of the American Association of Social Workers. The professional school of social work of the University, the Graduate Division of Social Administration, is one of five accredited schools of social work in the South, one of forty-two in this country and Canada. Students from colleges from such widely separated points as New York City, Southern California, Florida and Oregon have been registered in the Division during 1943-1944. The Division offers a one and two- year post-baccalaureate program leading to a Professional Certificate in Social Adminis- tration and a Master of Science in Social Administration. Mrs. GRACE B. CASWELL 3524 Willis Avenue Louisville, Ky. B.S. Northwestern University 1930. Miss FRANCES R. FANELLI 2214 Dearing Court Louisville, Ky. B.A. University of Louisville 1936. Miss MARGARET Hopper 3532 W. Burnett Louisville, Ky. A.B. Centre College 1942. Miss Rose MIGDAL 1144 S. First St. Louisville, Ky. B.A. New York University 1941. Miss Betsy TAFEL 3019 Poppy Way Louisville, Ky. Miss Mary ELIZABETH O'BRIEN 1019 Cherokee Rd. Louisville, Ky. A.B. Russell Sage College 1935. Mrs. HELEN H. SHERRILL 1853 Overlook Terrace Louisville, Ky A.B. Hollins College 1920. Miss MarGAaRET RINEHART Mockingbird Valley Louisville, Ky. A.B. Indiana University 1943. Miss Lota SLOAN 1936 Ekin Avenue New Albany, Indiana B.S. Indiana University 1939. B.A. Saint Maryâs College, Notre Dame, Ind., 1943. Dr. JOHN WALKER Moore Dr. John Walker Moore, Professor of Med- icine and Dean of the Medical School, is one âprofâ the fellows know they canât âput one over onâ. He keeps the students in lineâno easy matter however you look at it. Much to studentsâ chagrin at times, he can discover a step out of line as surely as a heart murmur. But he is by no means a tyrant. He is a kindly and mischievous chap with a big heart (yet not decompensated). A fascinating lec- turer, an inspiring teacher and a colorful per- sonality, one finds in his character the highest standards of all that is good in the medical profession. FACULTY University oF LouisvitteE ScHoot oF MEDICINE Faculty 1944 JoHN WALKER Moore, B.S., M.D... S. I. Kornuauser, B.A., M.A., Ph.D......... sueeesee-Lxecutive Secretary PROFESSORS EMERITI Puiup F. Barsour, A.B., A.M., M.D.âHosp. College of Medi- cine, 1890. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics. Joun J. Moren, M.D.âLouisville Medical College, 1894 Professor Emeritus of Neurology. J. GarLanp Suerritt, M.DâLouisville Medical College, 1888 Professor Emeritus of Surgery. Epwarp Spriper., M.D.âUniversity of Louisville, 1895 Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics, PROFESSORS Irvin Apett, M.D., A.M., D. Sc.â-Louisville Medical College, 1897, Clinical Professor of Surgery. Bernarp ASMAN, M.D., A.M.âKentucky School of Medicine, 1897, Clinical Professor of Proctology and Head of Department. S. Sparrorp Ackerzy, B.A., M.D.âYale University, 1925. Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Psychiatric Wards and Clinics, Louisville General Hospital and Mental Hygiene Clinic. Apert L. Bass, A.B., M.D.-Univ. of Louisville, 1912. Clinical Professor of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology. James W. Bruce, A.B., M.D.âUniv. of Pennsylvania, 1912. Professor and Head of Dept. of Pediatrics. L. Wariace Frank, A.B., M.D.âUniv. of Pennsylvania, 1914. Clinical Professor of Surgery. Wm. E. Garpner, A.B., M.D.â Univ. of Louisville, 1902. Clinical Prof. and Head of Department of Psychiatry. Owstey Grant, A.B., M.D.âJohns Hopkins, 1911. Clinical Professor and Head of Department of Urology. R, ARNoLD GriswoLp, B.A., M.D.âUniv. of Louisville, 1925. Professor and Head of Department of Surgery. Hersert Hart Hacan, A.B., M.D.âJohns Hopkins, 1913. Professor of Surgery and Acting Head of Department of Surgery. Cuarces W. Hissitt, M.D.âLouisville Medical College, 1897. Clinical Professor and Head of Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Atrrep W. Homsercer, A.B., M.S., Ph.D.âUniv. of Illinois, 1910. Professor and Head of the Department of Chemistry. Sypney E. Jounson, A.B., M.S., Ph.D., M.D.âUniv. of Wash- ington, 1922. Professor of Gross Anatomy, Roentgenologist, Louisville General Hospital. James A. Kennepy, A.B., Ph.D.â Cornell University, 1924. Prof. of Public Health and Bacteriology, and Director of the Bacteriological and Serological Laboratories, Louisville Gen- eral Hospital and the Dept. of Health. MEDICAL SCHOOL Peter K. Knorret, B.A., M.A., M.D.âHarvard University, 1931. Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pharmacology. S. I. Kornuauser, A.B., M.A., Ph.DâHarvard University, 1912. Professor and Head of Dept. of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology. Hamppen C. Lawson, A.B., B.S., Ph.D., M.D.âUniversity of Louisvi lle, 1938. Professor and Chairman of Department of Physiology. Hucu R. Leavet, B.S., M.D.â-Harvard University, 1926. Professor and Head of the Department of Public Health and Bacteriology. Aura J. Mitier, M.D.âState University of lowa, 1921. Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology and Serology. W. T. McConne.t, B.A., M.D.âUniversity of Louisville, 1918. Clinical Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Joun Waker Moore, B.S., M.D., D.SeâUniversity of Penn: sylvania, 1912. Dean, Professor and Head of Department of Medicine. Staff Executive, Louisville General Hospital. WILLIAM Barnett Owen, M.D.âUniversity of Louisville, 1903. Clinical Professor and Head of the Departm ent of Ortho- pedic Surgery Auice N. Pickett, M.D.âWomanâs Medical College of Pennsyl- vania, 1909. Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Executive of Division of Obstetrics. Frep W. Rankin, B.A., M.D., M.A., D.Sc.âUniversity of Maryland, 1909. Clinical Professor of Surgery. James B. Rocers, A.B., A.M., M.D.âUniversity of Louisville, 1927. Professor of Anatomy. R. GLEN SpuruinG, A.B., M.A., M.D.âHarvard University, 1923. Clinical Professor of Surgery. CuarLes Dwicht Townes, M.D.â-University of Louisville, 1924. Clinical Professor and Chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology. SENIORS y b di Abplanalp Baker Balkema Bickel Bisig Blackburn Bland Bobroff Booker Carroll Chiles Cowle Diamond Enelow English Eskind Fisher Forsee Gilliam Greene Hall Handelman Hart Hogg Hulett AsPLANALP, ARTHUR A.âArlington, N. J.; Phi Chi; Capital University, B.S., 41; Internship: Ohio Val- ley Gen. Hosp., Wheeling, W. Va. Baker, Cart G.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Alpha Omega Alpha; V.P., Freshman Class, â41; W. B. Saunders Chemistry Prize, â42; Assoc. Ed., Ephemeris Medica, â44; University of Louisville, AB., °42; Pres., Sigma Alpha, °40; Trustee's Scholarship, â38-40; Speed Scholarship, â41; Internship: Milwaukee County Hosp., Milwaukee, Wisc.; Phi Kappa Phi. BALKEMA, CATHERINEâLafayette, Ind.; Purdue Univer- sity, B.S., â29; Internship: Indianapolis City Hospi- tal. Bicke, J. EomunpâCorydon, Ind.; Phi Chi; University of Louisville, °38-°40; Internship: St. Margaret Hosp., Hammond, Ind. Bisic, CHARLES J.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; University of Louisville, A.B., °41; Internship: St. Joseph Infirm- ary, Louisville, Ky. BLacKBURN, Howarp R.âParkersburg, W. Va.; Univer- sity of Louisville, A.B., â41; Internship: U. S. Navy. BLAND, CHARLESâSonora, Ky.; Phi Chi; B.S., Tulane University, â41; Kappa Sigma; Internship: T.C.I. Hosp., Fairfield, Ala. Bosrorr, ARTHURâNew York, N. Y.; Phi Delta Epsilon; A.B., New York University, 40: Internship: UW. 8: Navy. Booker, Davin E.â Kevil, Ky.; Alpha Omega Alpha; Re- search Assât. in Neuroanatomy, °43; A.B., â39, Mur- ray State Tchrs. College, Ky. Carro_., EUGENE J.âPittsburg, Pa.; Phi Beta Pi; B.S., 41, Duquesne University; Internship: Mercy Hosp., Pittsburg, Pa. Cuites, NoauâCorryton, Tenn.; A.B., â42, University of Tennessee; Phi Delta Theta; Internship: United States Public Health Service. Cow e, ArcH E.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Student Bac- teriologist, â43; Student Roentgenologist, °44; A.B., University of Louisville, °41. Diamonp, Henry D.âNew York, N. Y.; Phi Delta Epsi- lon; A.B., University of Louisville, â41; Sigma Alpha: Internship: U. S. Navy. ENELOw, ALLEN J.âHollidayâs Cove, W. Va.; Phi Delta Epsilon; Research Assât. in Physiology, °42-°44; Ad- visory Comm., Ephemeris Medica, â44; A.B., West Virginia University, 42; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Sigma Delta; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Internship: Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, III. ENGLISH, Max RosertââNew Albany, Ind.; A.B., De- pauw University, â41; Delta Upsilon; Internship: U. S. Navy. EskInp, Harotp C.âProvidence, Ky.; Phi Delta Epsilon; Internship; St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville, Ky.; A.B., Washington University, 41; Alpha Phi Omega. FisHer, Loren L.â-Sissonville, W. Va.; Phi Chi; A.B., West Virginia University, â41; Sigma Nu. ForseE, NorMAN E.âJeffersonville, Ind.; Internship: U. S. Navy. GituiaM, MELvin RANDOLPHâ Danville, Ky.; Internship: United States Public Health Service; Centre College; Sigma Chi; Phi Beta Chi. GREENE, JOHN FRANKâSandy Hook, Ky.; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship: Louisville General Hospital: Morehead State Teachersâ College. Hatt, WitiiaM P.â-Elkton, Ky.; Phi Chi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Atwood P. Latham Memorial Prize in Anatomy, 42; Assât. Editor, Ephemeris Medica; In- ternship: Nashville General Hospital, Nashville, Tenn.; Western State Teachersâ College. HANDELMAN, NATHAN I.âNewark, N. J.; Phi Delta Epsi- lon; Assoc. Editor, Ephemeris Medica, °44; Intern- ship: Louisville General Hospital; B.S., Seton Hall College, 41. Hart, James C.âMurray, Ky.; Internship: Louisville General Hospital; Phi Chi; A.B., Murray State Col- lege, â41; Phi Kappa Phi. Hocc, STEPHEN P.âJackson, Ky.; Alpha Kappa Kappa. Hu ett, PauL M.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Internship: St. Margaret Hospital, Hammond, Ind.; University of Louisville, A.B., °43. MEDICAL SCHOOL SENIORS Johnson Jones Kaplan Kaufman Keeney Keith Korvell Levin Linton Marcum Mardis Markham Martin Mayer McLeod Meyer Mikita Murphy Overbey Patrick Radmacher Riley, G. Riley, J. Scott Smiley Snowden Stith Sturgis Wilson Withers Jounson, Gorpon S.âSalt Lake City, Utah; Phi Chi: Student Roentgenologist, °44; Internship: Holy Cross Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah; University of Utah, A.B., â41; Zeta Phi Zeta. Jones, Max P.âStansberry, Mo.; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Chi; Treasurer, Senior Class: Internship: Kansas City General Hospital, Kansas City, Mo. KAPLAN, SHERMAN R.âMiami Beach, Fla.: Phi Delta Epsilon; Internship: Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Ill.; University of Florida, B.S., °41. KAUFMAN, SEYMouR F.âBrooklyn, N. Y.; Phi Delta Epsi- lon; Internship: Morrisania City Hospital, New York, N. Y.: University of Louisville, A.B., °42; Sigma Alpha; Woodcock Society. Keeney, ARTHUR H.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Advisory Comm., Eph emeris Medica, 44; Internship: Louis- ville General Hospital; College of William and Mary, B.S., 44; Theta Delta Chi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi. Keith, DAvip YANDELL, Jr.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Sgt.-at-Arms, â41-43; Internship: United States Marine Hospital, Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y.; Hampden Sydney College, B.S., °40; Theta Chi; Chi Beta Phi. KorvELL, JOHN C.âSeattle, Wash.; Phi Beta Pi; Intern- ship: Swedish Hospital, Seattle, Wash.; University of Washington, B.S., °40. Levin, ErwinâCleveland, Ohio; Phi Delta Epsilon; In- ternship: University of Chicago Clinics, Chicago, IIL; Baldwin-Wallace College, B.S., 39; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; Harvard University, M.A., 41; Ohio State University, â41-42. Linton, NorMAN G.âJamestown, Ohio; Student Roent- genologist, â44: Internship: Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio; Ohio State U. Marcum, Max H.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Class Repre- sentative, â44: University of Louisville, A.B., °41; Kappa Alpha; Sigma Alpha; College of Cardinals; Interfraternity Council, °41. Marpis, RicHarp E.âLouisville, Ky.; Internship: St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville, Ky.; University of Louisville. MarkHAM, JAMES Wi5LLisâLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Student Pathologist, 44; Thoroughbred, Medical School Editor, â41-42, 44; Editor, Ephemeris Medica; Internship: Cambridge City Hospital, Cambridge, Mass.; Purdue University, B.S., â40; Sigma Phi Epsi- lon; Sigma Delta Phi. Martin, Roy A.âGlasgow, Ky.; Copy Editor, Ephemeris Medica: Internship: Nashville General Hospital, Nashville, Tenn.; University of Louisville, A.B., 42; Sigma Alpha; Sigma Alpha Award, °41. Mayer, Ltoyp D.âBrooklyn, N. Y.; Phi Delta Epsilon; Business Mgr. and Assoc. Editor, Ephemeris Medica, â44: Internship: Coney Island Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.; University of Louisville, A.B. 41; Sigma Alpha. McLeop, ALLENâNew York, N. Y.; Internship: St. Clareâs Hospital, New York, N. Y.; University of Louisville; Sigma Alpha. Meyer, Dexter, Jr.âBradford, Ky.; Class Secretary, 41-°44; Internship: U. S. Navy; A.B., Transylvania College, â41. Mikira, WILLIAM B.âWeirton, W. Va.; Alpha Kappa Kappa; Internship: U. S. Navy; A.B., West Vir- ginia University, 42; Phi Beta Kappa. Murpuy, DouGLias R.âVenice, Fla.; Phi Chi; President of Class, â41-44; Internship: U. S. Navy; A.B., Uni- versity of Louisville, â42; Sigma Alpha. Oversey, DavinâLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Class Treas- urer, â41-43; Assoc. Editor, Ephemeris Medica, °44; A.B., University of Louisville, â41; Sigma Chi Sigma; Internship: St. Elizabeth Hospital, Covington, Ky. Patrick, Rosert R.âNorwalk, Ohio; Alpha Kappa Kappa; Internship: U. S. Navy; Dension U.; Kappa Sigma; Blue Key. RADMACHER, B. FrRaNKâLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; In- ternship: U. S. Navy; A.B., University of Louisville, â41. Ritey, Georce H.âHebron, Ky.; Phi Chi, Secretary °42- °43, Presiding Jr. â43; Internship: U. S. Navy; A.B., Transylvania College 41; Phi Kappa Tau. Ritey, JAMEs M.âMaysville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Internship: Christ Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio; Transylvania Col- lege; Kappa Alpha. Scott, JoHN H., Jr.âPikeville, Ky.; Phi Chi, President Senior â44, Judge Advocate °42-°43; Internship: Wheeling General Hospital, Wheeling, W. Va.; Stu- dent Anesthetist, °44; B.S., Morehead State Teach- ersâ College, °38. Smitey, Gorpon L.âGrand Rapids, Mich.; Phi Chi, Treasurer, 43; Advisory Comm., Ephemeris Medica, 44; Internship: Butterworth Memorial Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich.; University of Michigan. StitH, JAMEs B.âBrandenburg, Ky.; A.B., University of California, 41. Srurcis, Donatp D.âAnn Arb or, Mich.; Phi Chi; In- ternship: U. S. Navy; Michigan State Norman Col- lege: Phi Sigma Epsilon. Witson, CHaArves F.âHarrisburg, Ill.; Phi Chi; Intern- ship: U. S. Navy; A.B., Culver-Stockton College, °43. MEDICAL SCHOOL ADDITIONAL SENIORS Apams, PAutâSalt Lake City, Utah; Internship: Thomas Dee Hosp., Ogden, Utah. ALLEN, CHARLES E.âDanville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Center Col- lege, A.B., °39; Omicron Delta Kappa; Beta Theta Pi; Internship: Jefferson Davis Hosp., Houston, Texas. ANNEST, LronipasâDecla, Idaho; University of Utah; Internship: St. Joseph Hosp., Tacoma, Wash. AsHurst, JAcK C.âSomerset, Ky.; Alpha Kappa Kappa; University of North Carolina; Internship: St. Josephâs Infirmary, Louisville, Ky. BisHop, Harry A.âLouisville, Ky.; University of Iowa, B.S., °33; Internship: St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville, Ky. Bruce, CHarLEs O.â-Eminence, Ky.; B.S., â41, Western State Teachersâ College, Ky.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Beta Pi; Internship: St. Joseph Infirmary, Louis ville, Ky. Co.uier, Henry S:âLouisville, Ky.; Alpha Omega Alpha, Vice-Pres., 43; W. B. Saunders Chemistry Prize, 38; A.B., °38, University of Louisville; Sigma Alpha; In- ternship: Louisville General Hosp., Louisville, Ky. Student Anesthetist. DENHAM, HarryâVanceburg, Ky.; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Chi; B.S., University of Kentucky 40; Omicron Delta Kappa; âKâ Club; Internship: Louisville Gen- eral Hosp., Louisville, Ky. Doerr, JouNâLudlow, Ky.; Phi Chi; Student Bacter- iologist, 44; B.S., University of Kentucky, 41; Sigma Chi; Internship: St. Elizabeth Hosp., Covington, Ky. DurHAM, WILLIAM C.âCentral City, Ky.; B.S., Univer- sity of Kentucky, °41. Dykes, RopertâTaft, Calif.; A.B., University of South- ern California, â41; Internship: U. S. Navy. GRANQUIST, CarL O.âPort Orchard, Wash.; Phi Beta Pi; Sgt.-at-Arms Senior Class, 44; Internship: Swedish Hosp., Seattle, Wash.; University of Washington. GREENFIELD, GERALDâBrooklyn, N. Y.; Phi Delta Epsi- lon; Internship: Coney Island Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.; B.S., University of Kentucky, °40. Hew ett, JAMES S.âDanville, Ky.; Internship: Metho- dist Hosp., Indianapolis, Ind.; A.B., Center College, 41; Phi Delta Theta. Heywoop, CHARLES W.âSnowflake, Ariz.; Phi Beta Pi; Utah State Agri. College: Alpha Epsilon Delta. HEFFRON, CHARLESâMetamora, Ohio; Phi Chi; Intern- ship: Louisville General Hosp.; A.B., Vanderbilt University, 41; Phi Kappa Sigma. HottzMan, ALAN M.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Assoc. Editor, Ephemeris Medica; Internship: Anker Gen- eral Hospital, St. Paul, Minn.; DePauw University, A.B., °41; Delta Tau Delta; Sigma Delta Chi; Delta Omicron Chi. Jupp, THomMas R.âLaVerkin, Utah; Internship: U. S. Navy. KIRCHNER, WALTER A.âLouisville, Ky.; Phi Chi; In- ternship: Jefferson Davis Hospital, Houston, Texas; University of Louisville, A.B., 42; Sigma Chi Sigma; Sigma Alpha; Interfraternity Council. KoLs, WILLIAM PaytonâLittle Rock, Ark.; Internship: Louisville General Hospital; Baylor University, A.B., â41. Kruse, CHARLES A.âSeattle, Wash.; Internship: Swedish Hospital, Seattle, Wash.; University of Washington; Seattle College: Alpha Epsilon Delta. MiLLer, WALTER B.âCreelsboro, Ky.; Internship: U. S. Navy; Western State Teachersâ College. Moore, Georce Dubey, Jr.âLongview, Texas; Student Anesthetist, 44; A.B., Baylor University, °41; Intern- ship: St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville, Ky. Moore, HERMAN R., Jr.âAnchorage, Ky.; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Chi; Internship: U. S. Navy; A.B., Uni- versity of Louisville, 42; Sigma Alpha. Petway, WILLARDâPaducah, Ky.; Internship: Louis- ville General Hosp.; B.S., Murray State College, °35. RicHarpson, RospertâGlasgow, Ky.; Phi Chi; Intern- ship: U. S. Navy; B.S., Western State Teachersâ Col- lege, °41. Sarre, M. CatvinâDanville, Ky.; Phi Chi; Internship: Bethesda Hosp., Cincinnati, Ohio; A.B., Transylvania College, 42; Alpha Alpha Tau. Stoan, W. EuGENEâOblong, IIl.; Phi Beta Pi; Internâ ship: Methodist Hosp., Indianapolis, Ind.; University of Illinois. SNOWDEN, RayMonp C.âRichmond, Ky.; Phi Beta Pi, President, â44; Internship: Methodist Hospital, In- dianapolis, Ind.; Eastern Ky. State Teachersâ College. Srewart, FRANKâOceana, W. Va.; Internship: Charles- ton General Hosp., Charleston, W. Va.; A.B., West Virginia University, °38; Beta Sigma Mu. THorRPE, VircitâHudson, South Dakota; Alpha Omega Alpha, President, °44; Vice-President, Senior Class, 44; B.S., University of Wyoming, °41. WeppLe, EpwarpâSomerset, Ky.; Alpha Kappa Kappa; Internship: Louisville General Hosp.; University of Kentucky; Eastern Ky. State Teachersâ College. Wen, SypNEY F.âPassaic, N. J.; Phi Delta Epsilon; In- ternship: Michael Reese Hosp., Chicago, IIl.; College of William and Mary; Sigma Pi Sigma; Theta Chi Delta. WEINFURTNER, BERNARDâAshland, Ky.; B.S., More- head State Teachersâ College, °41. WitHERS, JoHN C.âDixon, Ky.; Phi Chi; Internship: Louisville General Hosp.; B.S., Western State Teachersâ College, 42. YAZUJIAN, JevonâTrenton, N. J.; Appleton-Century Prize for Chemistry, °43; Internship: Mercer Hosp., Trenton, N. J.; A.B., University of Pennsylvania, °41. EPHEMERIS MEDICA Journat or Generar MeEpIcINE Published by the Students of the University of Louisville School of Medicine Row One: Baker, Enelow, Haley, Keeney. | Row Two: Markham, Mayer, Schmidt, Smiley LIST OF STAFF Editor JAMES WILLIS MARKHAM Assistant Editor WiILuiAM P. HALy Business Manager Litoyp D. MayER Circulation Managers Burton HALey, WILLIAM CLARKE, RicHARD SCHMIDT Advertising Managers BERNIE WeEIss, Guy CUNNINGHAM Copy Editors Roy A. Martin, JosEpH HorrMANN Sophomore Representatives Guy CUNNINGHAM, VIRGIL GOODMAN Ephemeris Medica is a medical journal, pub- lished quarterly, in which students present articles of professional interest in quite the same manner as they would for journals of well established reputation. This year is the first one for Ephemeris Medica, and we are proud that it is one of the very few medical journals published by students in this country. The purpose of this publication is to promote greater interest in the medical science among stu- dents by bringing to them a more personal contact with the profession and giving them an opportun- ADVISORY COMMITTEE r Gorpon L. SMILEY, Chairman ARTHUR H. KEENEY ALLEN J. ENELOw ' KEITH PEARSON ; WILLIAM P. HALL ' James WILLIS MARKHAM 5 : ; { DR AL MINER tac ae Faculty Advisor ' t : ity to practice the art of medical writing. The journal contains reports of cases, reviews of the literature, articles on research and clinical | notesâall written by students, with some excep- tions. The Advisory Committee chooses the articles to be published and determines the policies of the organization. The name of this journal was suggested by Dr. Emmet F. Horine, known as a bibliophilist and classicist as well as a cardiologist. The circulation is among medical students, internes, faculty, alumni, practicing physicians, and libraries of other medical schools and hospitals. ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Ankeny Appleton Bowen Burkhart Cawood Chambers Combs Condar Craft Crafton Crider Deimling Denton Ellestad Gardner Gwinn Hayes Hogg Hinter Kincaid Lester Luchette Majnarich Mikita Moore John C. Ankeny James C, Appleton John C, Ashurst eT H. Bowen Edward Burkhart Walter L. Cawood James J. Chambers Gene N. Combs Henry W. Conrad Theophalus G. Craft George B. Crafton Earnest F. Crider Charles Deimling Clarence Denton Myrvin H. Ellestad Hoyt D. Gardner John L. Gwinn Robert A. Hartley Oscar J. Hayes Stephen P. Hogg Tesse M. Hunt Sylvester G. Hunter Owings W. Kincaid Hobart Lester Richard A. Lewis ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA ALPHA NU National Organization founded at Dartmouth College, September 29, 1888 Alpha Nu Chapter founded at the University of Louisville June 5, 1909 MEMBERS Albert A. Luckette John Majnarich William B. Mikita John C. Moore Tom Neeley Mullis Charles I. Patrick Robert T. Patrick Charles W. Reed John James Riddle Harold A. Rowland William V. Schulte Wilson R. Scott William H. Sewell Mullis Reed Riddle Schulte Scott Sewell Shadle Smith Stratton Vaughn Wilke Witten, Witten, Oscar W. Shadle William W. Shepherd William H. Smith Earl H. Stanley Wayne H, Stockdale Hershel R. Stratton Dorris L. Upchurch Davis H. Vaughan Edward V. Weddle Joseph C. Wilke Wendell Witten Raleigh E. Witten Patrick C. Patrick R. Rowland Shepherd Stockdale Upchurch R. W. ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA National Honorary Medical Fraternity COLLIER DIAMOND GREENE HART JONES KEELEY OFFICERS NESE CGESy GUTOR EB eo ca sce fe saceire cesar etree tics Meena tere ee ee Ee eae oe Tee Sey re President IABNRY (COLITER: cacsusscabonsicbenusssecsesetcnuteesen a sesaceecdse ee oe eres Vice-President DAVID (EM OORER -osscc coast -Sececee 2 EE cb RES eaten ee ee ee 5 Secretary ADDITIONAL MEMBERS William Ames Carl Baker David E. Booker Harry C. Denham William P. Hall Hollis Johnson Alpha Omega Alpha is a non-secret Honor Medical Society, the aims of which are the promo- tion of scholarship and research in medical schools, the encouragement of a high standard of character and conduct among medical students and grad- uates, and the recognition of high attainment in medical science of practice and related fields. Thomas Judd Roy A. Martin Herman Moore David Overby James Riley The most prominent requisite of membership is high scholarship in a broad sense. Equal to these qualities comes moral character in its broadest aspect, including unselfishness, appreciation of ob- ligation, reliability and honesty in all affairs of life. No student shall be excluded on the grounds of sex, race, creed, or color, nor shall unpopularity among his fellows or teachers be a bar to his election. PHI DELTA EPSILON Albert Berg Bernstein Bobroff Diamond, H. Diamond, L. Enelow Eskind Goldin Gordon Handelman Hoffman Kaplan, B. Kaplan, S. Katz Kaufman Kor n riech Levin Mayer Noshpitz Berellis Wein Willnar ADDITIONAL MEMBERS Abraham Buckberg Martin Friedman William J. Rashkind Morris A. Sklansky Irvin Chamovitz Gerald Greenfield Seymor Ribot Bernard W. Weiss 72 PHI Abplanalp Baker Bickle Bisig Bland Cowle Fisher Hall Hart Hulett Johnson, G Jones, Max Keeney Keith Marcum Markham Murphey Moore, H. Overby Richardson Riley, G. Riley, J. Scott Smiley Sturgis Wilson Withers Best PHI CHI National Organization founded at the University of Vermont, 1889 Established at the University of Louisville, 1894 Friedman Haley Hansen Hess Keeley McClendon Moore Ploetner Ryan Schmidt Wagner Boldrick Cassady Cunningham Davis, Russell Hanes Jones Johnston, Mac Ramsey Robinson Stuckey OFFICERS JoHN Scott ...Presiding Senior JACK KEELEY .- : Pe eater pies pteosiee Ă© ....Presiding Junior ROBERT MCGLENDON |o.2cc..occteceseek 0 coker tet sabato tesco CR ELON Mac JOHNSTON ceveeeeeee-'] TEASUTET ADDITIONAL MEMBERS Charles Allen Henry Foster Don Manuel Charles Schearer William Armbrewster Lee Grant Portet Mayo Merle Sharpe Richard Davis John Hauser Ralph Minges John Somerville Harry Denham Charles Heffron Jack Norford Kenneth Stinnette John Dettman Shelby Hicks Robert Nolan Charles St. John John Doerr Sam Hutchinson Carl Nutini John Thomas Robert Dykes Walter Kirchner Howard Pratt Frank Voels Richard Knudson Jack Ross lames Wygal Neal Fleming 3 â Charles Likens Charles Salyer The Real ThingâAn Amputation Ech-h-h!! Cadavers!! Something Profound, No Doubt? The Docs Stuff Their Faces Find Something? gh FUTURE SAWBONES The University of Louisville Medical School is rated with the first in the United States, the stu- dent course is filled with book work, lab periods and practical experience in hospitals and interning. 7 „O0RGRGIG F aanaaane aadavan Col. Triplett Shows Points of Interest to a Student Ah, Tis a Pity to Cover âNatureâ ar | Dr. JoHN T. OâRouRKE Dr. John T. O'Rourke, Dean of the School of Dentistry, is a graduate of the school he now sup- ervises. He has brought much attention to the Dental School with his advanced ideas of dental education. His new plan suggesting that the ad- mission requirements and first two years of the dental course be the same as that of the medical course has recently been adopted by the University. DENTAL SCHOOL First Row: RICHARD I. ANDERSON (Lawrence, Mass.); Tufts College. FRANK H. DePIERRI, JR. (Nashville, Tenn.): Van- derbilt University, A.B. HASKET C. DEYTON (Green Moun- tain, N. C.) Delta Sigma Delta, President Sophomore Class, 42-°°43; President Junior Class, °43-44; President Senior Class, 44: Worthy Master of Delta Sigma Delta, °43-44; Berea College, °38-41; Morehead, °41. WILLIAM P. DULEY (Adiairville, Ky.); Psi Omega, '42-°44; Phi Delta, 43°44; Vice-President Psi Omega, °43-°44; Secât.-Treas. Phi Delta, 43-44; Kemper Military School MORTON THOMAS EDWARDS (Mt. Pleasant, S. C.); Vice-President Junior Class, College of Charleston, S. C. OFFICERS OF I Einar WILLIAM JacosseNn, A.B., M.A. (University of Califrnia) Pu.D. (Columbia University) President. Belknap Campus. Joun T. O'Rourke, B,S., D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Dean. 2220 Valley Vista Road. PROFESSORS Puiuip E. Biackersy, Jr., A.B., D.D.S. (University of Louis- ville); M.S.P.H. (University of Michigan). Professor of Oral Pathology and Diagnosis. 129 East Broadway. Joun P. Curp, Jr., B.S., D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Professor of Restorative Dentistry. 129 East Broadway. A. W. Hompercer, B.S. (University of Wisconsin); M.S. (Uni- versity of Illinois); PH.D. (University of Illinois). Profes- sor of Chemistry 2368 Carlton Terrace. Frank Berarp Hower, D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Professor of Anesthesia and Exodontia. Heyburn Building. E. C. Hume, D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Pro- fessor of Oral Surgery. Francis Building. P. K. Knorret, B.A., M.A. (University of Wisconsin); M.D. (Harvard University). Professor of Pharmacology. 101 West Chestnut Street. S. I. Kornuauser, A.B. (University of Pittsburgh); M.A.; Px.D. (Harvard University). Professor and Head of the De- partment of Anatomy and Histology. 101 W. Chestnut Street. H. C. Lawson, B.A. (Davidson College); PH.D. (University of Chicago); M.D. (University of Louisville). Professor and Chairman of the Department of Physiology. 101 West Chestnut Street. a) : Second Row: Epstein, Fedric, Finley, Foit, Frankel Second Row: ALEXANDER EPSTEIN (Brooklyn, N. Y.); Alpha Omega Fraternity; Secât, Alpha Amega, °42-°43; University of Alabama. ROBERT M. FEDRIC (Charleston, Miss.); Phi Delta Prosthetic Fraternity, 43-44; University of Mississippâ. JAMES A. FINLEY, JR. (Lawrenceburg, Tenn.); Florida South- ern College, B.S. DONALD F. FOIT (Ironton, Ohio); Marshall College. JOHN M. FRANKEL (Louisville, Ky.); Alpha Omega Fraternity; Sect, Alpha Omega, °43-44; University of Louis: ville. NSTRUCTION HucGu R. Leave tt, B.S. (University of Virginia); M.D. (Har- vard University); DR.P.H. (Yale University). Professor and Head of the Department of Public Health and Bac- teriology. 101 West Chestnut Street. Aura James MiLier, M.D. (State University of Iowa). Pro- fessor and Head of the Department of Pathology. 101 West Chestnut Street Raymonp E. Myers, D.D.S., B.S. (University of Louisville): F.A.C.D. Prefessor and Director of the Department of Restorative Dentistry. 129 East Broadway. Joun T. O'Rourke, B.S., D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Professor of Oral Medicine. 220 Valley Vista Road. WiLtiAM Marcus Ranpba.L, D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Professor of Prosthesis and Oral Anatomy. 1035 South Second Street. J. B. Rocers, A.B., M.A. (University of Kansas); M.D. (Univer- sity of Louisville). Professor of Anatomy. 101 West Chestnut Street. J. L. Setpen, D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Pro- fessor of Orthodontics. Heyburn Building. ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS J. R. Busterrer, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Associate Professor of Complete Denture Prosthesis. 129 East Broad- way. H. E. Carswett, B.S., M.S., PH.D. (University of Wisconsin). Associate Professor of Chemistry. 101 West Chestnut = FACULTY If So usth Fae First Row: Gernert, Goldstein, Griesbaum, Hamrick, Haydu First Row: EDWARD B. GERNERT (Louisville, Ky.); Delta Sigma Delta; University of Louisville. MEYER GOLDSTEIN (Augusta, Ga.); Alpha Omega Fraternity; Augusta Junior Col- lege. BRADLEY E. GRIESBAUM (Alden, N. Y.); St. Bon- aventore College, B.S. CLARENCE T. HAMRICK (Charles- ton, S. C.); College of Charleston. JOSEPH F. HAYDU, JR. (Omar, W. Va): Virginia School of Technology. Second Row: Herman, Hewetson, Hunter, Jaffe, Keeton. Second Row: ROLAND BARRY HERMAN (New York City); Alpha Omega, Beta Delta, Phi Delta Honorary Prosthetic Fra- ternity; Vice-President, Alpha Omega, °42-44; Editor-in-Chief, Beta Delta; City College of New York. DUTTON J. HEWET- SON (Bellevue, Ky.); Delta Sigma Delta; Vice-President, Fresh- man Class; Vice-President, Senior Class; Xavier University. DALE OWEN HUNTER (Manchester, Tenn.); Psi Omega; University of Tennessee, B.S. PAUL JAFFE (New York City); Alpha Omega: President, Alpha Omega, °43-'44; Secât, Alpha Omega, °52°43; West Virginia University. MELVIN KEETON (Daysboro, Ky.); Delta Sigma Delta; Senior Page of Delta Sigma Delta, °44; Murray State Teachers College, Eastern State Teach- ers College, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville. OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION JosepH P. Hort, B.S. (University of Kentucky); M.S., M.D. (University of Louisville); PH.D. (University of Chicago). Associate Professor of Physiology. 101 West Chestnut Street. Hoimes T. Knicuton, D.D.S. (Tulane University). Associate Professor of Bacteriology and Oral Pathology and Diagnosis. 101 West Chestnut Street. Geruarp LeHMan, Dr. Ing. (Technische Hochschule, Munich); M.D. (Berne). Associate Professor of Pharmacology. 101 West Chestnut Street. KENNETH R. Prerrrer, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). As- sociate Professor of Restorative Dentistry. 129 East Broad- way. ASSISTANT PROFESSORS Russe_t F. Griver, B.A. (University of Kentucky); D.M.D. (University of Louisville). Assistant Professor in Restoraâ tive Dentistry. 129 East Broadway. Jutian C. Hartowe, B.A. (Berea College); D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Assistant Professor in Oral Surgery. 129 East Broadway. Stuart K. McCrary, B.S., D.D.S. (University of Kansas City). Assistant Professor in Restorative Dentistry. 129 East Broadway. Warren S. RenM, Jr., B.A., Pu.D. (University of Texas); M.D. (University of Chicago). Assistant Professor in Physiology. 101 West Chestnut Street. Pau G. Roore, B.S. (Kansas State College); PH.D. (University of Chicago), Assistant Professor in Oral Histology. 101 West Chestnut Street. DENTAL. SCHOOL Grapie R. Rowntree, M D. (University of Arkansas); M.P.H. (Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health); M.S. (University of Louisville). Assistant Professor of Public Health. INSTRUCTORS J. A. Atkinson, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Instructor in Orthodontics. Starks Building. M. M. Botton, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Instructor in Oral Pathology and Diagnosis and Oral Medicine. Heyburn Building. Epwarb J. BUECHEL, Jr., B.S., D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Instructor in Restorative Dentistry. 1336 Bardstown Road. ALTon W. Moore, D.D.S. (University of California). Instruc- tor in Oral Pathology and Diagnosis. 129 East Broadway. A. S. Nicuo.son, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Instruc- tor in Restorative Dentistry. Francis Building. R. P. Overstreet, D.D.S. (University of Louisville). Instructor in Restorative Dentistry. Fincastle Building. Grorce W. Pepico, Jr., M.D. (University of Louisville). In- structor in Physical Diagnosis and Principles of Medicine. Brown Building. Ropert L. Sprau, D.D.S. (University of Louisville); F.A.C.D. Instructor of Restorative Dentistry, History of Dentistry, and Practice Management. 970 Baxter Avenue. J. E. Winter, B.S., M.D. (University of Louisville). Instructor in Pathology. Heyburn Building. ASSISTANT INSTRUCTOR Letitia S. Kimsey, B.S. (University of Louisville). Assistant Instructor in Bacteriology. 101 West Chestnut Street. SENIORS First Row: Kessell, Kuhn, LeSeure, Lutes, Morris. Second Row: Naumann, Noel, Palmore, Parker, Pearson. Third Row: Ranson, Richardson, Safriet, Sanders, Schneier Fourth Row: Schuppert, Stemm, Straight, Whetstone, Wilkerson. Fifth Row: Winter, Woody, Zeff. DELTA SIGMA DELTA Anderson Brooks Caudill Elliott Fanning Finley Foit Giglia Hagerman Harting Hawkins 3 Henderson Hewetson Kreutzer Lake Lewis Lutes Myers Neeley F Schmidt Seay Smith, A. Smith, H. yi Titsworth Traeger Urbiztondo Watts Webb Whitaker Wilkerson Woody Zealy | OFFICERS IROGNEY WHITAKER Wo.cctet aves Se eer pS oe ee eee Grand Master PR SRR TCE OE NTONY ote ete ease) nate se es ere Worthy Master DonaLD For .... Richard Anderson Neal Benjamin James Brooks Milton Caudill Hasket Deyton Emrich Elliott Robert Fanning Robert Fedric James Finley MEMBERS Joseph Haydu John Henderson Dutton Hewetson Melvin Keeton Joseph Kreutzer Charles Lake William Lee Dan Lewis Thomas Lutes Francis Sisson Amos Smith Henry Smith Hugh Smith Otto Smith Wilson Stemm Paul Sydow Howard Titsworth Kimble Traeger Donald Foit Robert Morgan Pedro Urbiztondo Edward Gernert Charles Morris William Watts James Giglia Robert Myers Paul Webb Wade Hagerman Robert Naumann Rodney Whitaker Roy Harman Shirley Neeley Charles Wilkerson John Harting William Oakley Lyda Woody Winford Hawkins William Schmidt James Zealy Joseph Seay Scribe Treasurer ) PSI OMEGA BAGBY CHEAP GENTER GINGLES JUSTICE KELLER MAGRILL MARTIN STONE STRAIGHT COOPER DOWELL DOWNING DUFF HALE HILL HUNTER KESSELL KUHN LAMBERT MOSS MUNGER SANDERS TYREE VAUGHN WATTS DULEY JONES MAGGARD SHOCKLEY WHITE OMICRON CHAPTER OFFICERS RANTS âSHOGKIGHYÂź orc. ua eee ee eel Grand Master BOB IA OSS re osc rasa pes cece ee eee Junior Master SARL WIRE Ee a ects A ire BETA ee eres Non caren ae Secretary MAURICE DOWNING 5.27: 2 ttis. de Recrui siya OH Apa SENIORS VV lisa OU eee ee Kentucky Forrest Rui coon. ee a Kentucky Dale Hunter ..... Tennessee Blake Sanders .... ..Kentucky larry Kessel enn teste cece West Virginia Jacoby Straight!2.2 2 hae Florida JUNIORS peu Beelers cr..cccshs te anes ...Tennessee Glyani laraberties- cee Kentucky James Cheapraec eee Kentucky Edward Martin ............. sevens Tennessee Robert Cooper ... ..Kentucky Gorman Munger ... ..Tennessee Chint: Dowell) .co522: ows Kentucky Frank Shockleyâ s2:.:c.sc-ue Kentucky JehnpDithtes aan West Virginia OeBpIN Stone ao ere eee oe Kentucky Cari Gingleste see ee Kentucky Samuel Tyree . ..Kentucky Charles Hopper ..... ....... Tennessee Frank Watts _... ..Kentucky JaGkan PUStICe be ates eet ea Kentucky Robert White Tennessee Joseph 1K ORG ee ace ose eccaree Kentucky SOPHOMORES aqih ap byes cee ate Indiana Eimore Fill a. Pee Tennessee Jack Bean ......... Bea es spate Kentucky Joseph: Jones): eee Kentucky Glenn Garwell 2..2225cccs ss Kentucky Philip Keller .2252iecan eee Tennessee Maurice Downing ........-.......-..- Kentucky Vernon Maggard: 2 iiccneee Kentucky ranks Coenterys 2c. cus ee eee wees Ohio TeaPEy IVE CZer ee e eey New York William Graves .. : Tennessee Robert Moss ...... .... Tennessee emai baler .ne eee ....Kentucky James Vaughn Tennessee FRESHMEN Jasmes: Au Camig: sates atte neste Kentucky Edward! Weshic: 2. s-ccaccaccacseserane Kentucky LS ELHE Sgr (tr eaten oe eee ie Alabama Edward Minniiear .......-....-----c0--n0 Indiana Robert Clagett ... ..Kentucky james dMinsanns2 to ee Florida Gharles Daniels)... ee Kentucky Pom Pryse See ee Tennessee Oi Darr De eee West Virginia Clemons (Ruth) 22.2 eee Kentucky Kennethi bord vesesesescces ser Kentucky Robert Rives Kentucky Sone Gantt) ae cesar Kentucky Horrest kag owe. yee Kentucky Spencer Gedestad -North Dakota Paull Trickett 2.2 Kentucky Joevbannanve-2 6-2 West Virginia William Whatley ..................--- Alabama Herschel Hughes .............-------- Kentucky Charles Withers .............. West Virginia Dan Johnson ...... West Virginia William: Wolfe -:- Ohio Chester irate i.e ete Kentucky ALPHA OMEGA Epstein Frankel Goldstein Goodman Herman Hochberg Jaffe Largeman Schwartzburg Zeff Zimmerman OFFICERS HOSERH ICMR ERG tee cote con conser cpap en eens eeeeel Chancellor UE MOR RRAAN ee arte eee, 5. Aa he ee ee eae Vice Chancellor RICHARD ZIMMERMAN .......4....-2.-00:0-2-20ceeee--eceeeees Extra-Fraternal Scribe IPHIROMRE ESM ORRUSE: goc2-25ns0h- oP on aH. ce ney eee tees Intra-Fraternal Scribe HAROLD SOTLAND .............------- pA NES tn ake Pree oa Treasurer ADDITIONAL MEMBERS Stan Hirsch Sanford Krapkoff Murray Stock Heiner Hoffman Harold Sotland BETA DELTA Foote Hunter Jaffe Kuhn Lambert LeSeure Woody Zeff OFFICERS BORREST XEN scien eee _----s---P resident ROLAND HERMAN ... ae Vice-President TEYIDAY NV COIN oa aoc ace eee ete aa cae ene severe CCH ECETS ADDITIONAL MEMBERS Roland Herman Robert Richardson Pil DELTA Cooper Duley Fedric Gingles Kessell LeSeure Martin Schneier Straight Titsworth OFFICERS PORREST (KUHN). 2: -cccceccerete-oe see ee oe ee TOSICEME James B. LESEURE......... ante ee SP Vice-President ASA 1 a) SApe D) 03 0 4 ene RBerpe em es ace Hee MERE eee Secretary-T reasurer ADDITIONAL MEMBERS Roland Herman Charles Hopper . and somebody lost a tooth A knotty problem to be ironed out in Pharmacology Lab. .and if I were you... Dentist or Veterinarian? Mak ing store teeth FUTURE TOOTH-YANKERS The life of a dental student is varied and inter- esting. In addition to lab work and exams at the school, practical application of learning is carried out at the Dental Clinic under the careful super- vision of professors. Some of the Dental students are part of the Naval program now in effect at the University, with the rating of apprentice seamen. Upon graduation they become Lt. (j.g.âs). The A.S.T.P. program has been discontinued. âA good jobâ âfinal check by the instructor in the Dental Clinic L 3} Opie f ai iy v , BX ae bene Tee wee wee. Med and Dent apprentice seamen stand inspection Saturday afternoon â Bill Oakley does his bit Af 7 FACULTY ABSALOM C. RusSELL A.B., 1928, Berea College; LL.B., 1930, Yale University. Special Agent, Bureau of Investigation, Department of Justice, 1930-1936; private practice in Frankfort, Ky., 1936-1938. Instructor, School of Law, University of Louisville, 1938; Assistant Professor, 1938-1939; Asso- ciate Professor since 1939; acting director since 1943. Fraternities: Tau Kappa Alpha, Delta Theta Phi, Phi Alpha Delta (Honorary). Student Publication, University of Louisville. ATHOL LEE TAYLOR A.B., University of Louisville, 1939; LL.B., University of Louisville, 1941; U. S. Army Air Corps, 1941-42. Prac- ticed with the law firm of Mahan Mahan, Starks Build- ing, Louisville, Ky., 1942. Assistant Manager, Ken- tucky, Virginia Division, Mutual Benefit Health @ Ac- cident Association. Member of Kentucky State Bar. Member of College of Cardinals, Phi Alpha Delta. Chair- man School of Law Honor Council, 1939-41; Member of Briefing Service, 1939-41. Mr. Linpsey R. JEANBLANC, Professor of Law Graduate Blackburn College, 1932; A.B., 1935, Univ. of Illinois; J.D. with honors 1937, Univ. of IIl.; LL.M., 1938, Fellowship Student, Columbia Univ., School of Law. Admitted to practice in Illinois in 1937. Asst. in Business Law, Univ. of Ill., College of Commerce, 1935- 37; Head of Business Law Department, Univ. of Ala., Coll. of Commerce, 1938-42; Assoc. Prof. of Law, Univ. of Ala., 1941-42; Summer Sessions in 1939, 1940 and 1941; Assoc. Prof. of Law, Univ. of Louisville since July, 1942. Contributor to Illinois Bar Journal, Virginia Law Review, and Current Legal Thought. Member American Bar Association. Member of Delta Sigma Rho (Nat. Forensic Fraternity). Member of Phi Alpha Delta. Friedman Hardin Rubin Carpenter Hadd Hanish Lewis Rappaport Rosenberg Smith Corl Dahl SENIORS FRIEDMAN, J. LEE (Anchorage, Ky.); Chairman of Law HARDIN, L. BERNICE (Carrollton, Ky.); Senior; Law Honor Honor Council; Law Student Council; All Campus Council; Council D 4 ; +e aS NS Sittin ms , Phi Alpha Delta Justice; Board of Student Publications; RUBIN, JOSEPH (Louisville, Ky.); Senior; Law Student Coun- Who's Who Among American Universities and Colleges; President of Freshman Class: Senior Award for Outstanding Graduating Senior. B.S. Commerce, University of Ken- tucky. JUNIORS cil; Phi Alpha Delta; Secretary; All Campus Council. B.A. University of Louisville. CARPENTER, FAY (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; Psi Chi Omega; RAPPAPORT, GILBERT (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; I.R.C.; Kappa Beta Pi; Transfer from Illinois University. Beta Tau Chi. HADD, EDWIN J. (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; Law Honor Coun- ROSENBERG, MARIE (Puyallup, Wash.); Junior; Transfer cil; Phi Alpha Delta, Treasurer; B.S. Business Administra- from Stanford University. tion, University of South Dakota. SMITH, NEWTON C., JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; Phi Alpha HANISH, SIDNEY (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; Beta Tau Chi; Friends of Recorded Music; PEP; Vice-President of Fresh- man Class. LEWIS, J. BERNIE (Louisville, Ky.); Junior; Phi Alpha Delta; Law Honor Council. Transfer from Missouri State College. Delta, Vice-President; President of Freshman Class; Co- Chairman of Barrister Ball, Chairman of Fryberger Sing, 44; Chairman of All Campus Council; Chairman of Uni- versity Open House, Law Editor for Thoroughbred; Sigma Chi. Transfer from Indiana University. FRESHMEN CORL, WILLIAM T. (Webb City, Mo.); Freshman, V-12; DAHL, MARY LOUISE (Louisville, Ky.); Freshman; B.A., Cardinal Business Manager, PEP; Sigma Nu; Transfer from Northwestern University. LAW SCHOOL University of Louisville. Friedman Hanish Lewis Smith PHI ALPHA DELTA NATIONAL LEGAL FRATERNITY Lurton Chapter National Law School Fraternity founded at University of Chicago, 1902 Lurton Chapter founded at University of Louisville, 1935 FRATERNITY OFFICERS SRR BROGD MAN cecennps ever no-avecesntes N. C. SMITH.. JosEPH RuBIN Epwin FIADD. ........â.....-.- D5 ae sees Justice eae -Vice Justice aoe dolerk -Treasurer MEMBERS L. R. Jeanblanc A. L. Taylor James B. Lewis A. C. Russell (Hon.) Pledge, James M. Ingram Phi Alpha Delta is a national legal fraternity having chapters in each of the larger law schools in the country. Phi Alpha Delta is the outgrowth of a Law Students League organized in the nineties of the last century at Chicago College of Law, in informal organization of law students whose rights to admission to the bar of Illinois was jeopardized by drastic changes in certain rules of the Supreme Court of the State. Phi Alpha Delta is a pro- fessional fraternity interested in the stimulation of higher scholastic standards, maintenance of high standards of ethics in the practice of law, and in the wholesome frat- ernizing of those engaged in the study of law. The Lurton Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta at the Univer- sity of Louisville School of Law after remaining dormant for one year, due to decreased enrollment is again func- tioning as an active student organization in the Law School with a minimum of active members, whose purpose it is to keep the Chapter alive and active throughout the war. We future lawyers of America read books . . . look up cases in the reserve library . . . prop our feet up on the tables in the good old professional manner . . . smile for the birdie . . . and take time out for a snooze. VA â Maal oe DEAN DwiGHt ANDERSON DWIGHT ANDERSON, Pd.D. (Cincinnati Conservatory of Music) Head of the Piano Department EVELYN ALDRICH, B.M. (University of Louisville) Teacher of Piano. WARREN BABB, B.A., M.A. (Harvard University) Instructor of Theory. DONALD BENNETT, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. (University of Wis: consin) Lecturer in Acoustics. HELEN BOSWELL, B.S. (University of Louisville); M.A. (Co- lumbia University) Lecturer in Public School Methods. W. LAWRENCE COOK, A.A.G.O. (New England Conserva- tory) Teacher of Organ, Piano and Theory. GRANT GRAVES, B.M. (University of Louisville) Teacher of Piano. J. BERTRAM HARMON, B.S. (McKendree College) Teacher of Voice. GERHARD HERZ, Ph.D. (University of Zurich) History and Aesthetics. SCHOOL OF MUSIC PAISULT Y. Dean Dwight Anderson of the Univer- sity of Louisville Music Schoolâan impres- sive title for a gentleman who is no less impressive himself. Not only is he a super- lative pianist with a brilliant record of recitals all over America, but he is also noted for his progressive and far-reaching plans in the field of education. Under his efficient administration the School of Music has been improved in many ways, not the least important of these being in- creased cooperation and integration with musical circles in the city. CHARLES J. LETZLER, Pupil of Anton Witek, Berlin Teacher of Violin. ERNEST E. LYON, A.B. (Marshall College); M.M. (Eastman School of Music) Orchestral Instruments, Orchestration, Counterpoint, Direc- tor of Band. SARAH McCONATHY, B.M. (Louisville Conservatory of Music) Teacher of Piano. KATHERINE MOON, B.M. (Syracuse University) Teacher of Piano. EMMA NOE, Graduate of Cincinnati Conservatory of Music Teacher of Voice and Acting Head of Voice Department. KARL SCHMIDT, Pupil of Professor Emeritus. Teacher of Cello. GRACE WHITNEY, Pupil of Bruno Steindel, Alfred Wallen- stein Teacher of Cello. ROBERT S. WHITNEY, Pupil of Leo Sowerby, Eric DeLamar- ter, Dr. Albert Noelte, Rudolph Reuter Lecturer in Composition, Analysis. SENIORS Adams Grace ADAMS, DORIS CARMEL (Louisville, Ky.); Piano; Sigma Alpha Iota; Friends of Recorded Music; Chorus; Music Student Council; Band; Chaplain of Sigma Alpha Iota. ANDERSON, MARTHA (Louisville, Ky.) ; Public School Music; Sigma Alpha Iota; Vice-President of Music Student Council; Friends of Recorded Music; Chorus; Band; Orchestra; Treasurer of Sigma Alpha Iota. FITZ- MAYER, KAY (Louisville, Ky.); Violin; Sigma Alpha Iota; Friends of Recorded Music; Music Student Council; Orchestra; Courier-Journal Scholarship; Trustee Scholar- ship; Zudie Award. GRACE, FRANCES (Louisville, Ky.); Voice and Public School Music; Chi Omega; Panhellenic; Sigma Alpha Iota; Art League; Delta Phi Alpha; Friends of Recorded Music; Thoroughbred;+ Chorus; P. E. P.; W. D. C.; Little Harris Reinecke on Fitzmayer a Anderson Kranz Theater; I. R. C.; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Womenâs League; Music Student Council; All Campus Student Council; Womenâs League Cabinet; Social Chairman, Womenâs League; Board of Student Publications; Manag- ing Editor of Thoroughbred; Music School Editor of Thoroughbred; Secretary of Freshman Class; Treasurer of Junior Class; Chi Omega Secretary, Rush Captain, Social Chairman, Pledge Mistress; Sigma Alpha Iota Vice- President; KRANZ, LLOYD ELAINE (Louisville, Ky.) ; Public School Music; Sigma Alpha Iota; Friends of Recorded Music; Chorus; Music Student Council; Band; Orchestra; Editor of Sigma Alpha Iota. LEWIS, JULIA ANN (Owensboro, Ky.); Voice; Friends of Recorded Music; Chorus; Newman Club. Chairman of Fryberger Sing. SCHOOL OF 4AcsiC 7 b SIGMA ALPHA IOTA National Organization founded at the University School of Music, Ann Arbor, Mich., Adams Anderson Badger Eckardt Fitzmayer Grace Hobb Kranz Milberger Wagner Weber Bette Adams Doris Adams Martha Anderson Harriet Badger Dovianna Barrens June 12, 1903 Sigma Nu Chapter founded at the University of Louisville Sigma Alpha Iota is a national music fraternity for women. It is the oldest and largest fraternity of its kind in the United States and includes many famous artists in its membership. Vite d Le OFFICERS KATHERINE HOBB ...--------0--secesonsenseensenssensenesnnctneanaeenentÂź ce Pass President FRANCES GRACE ....--------+---0- - ELISE WAGNER ...----------0+----- MarTHA ANDERSON ..-.--------- TORTS AIDA NAS oh seer eee eoa scat tact toconncesnrnraerge eee MEMBERS Ruth Eckardt Katherine Hobb Olive Milberger Kay Fitzmayer Lloyd Kranz Sara Scott Frances Grace Lois La Compte Elise Wagner Selma Hamlet Jeanne Larkey Carolyn Weber George Henry Sue Virginia McGehee OFFICERS ESPHER JMET? 220508 ce MarTHA ANDERSON . iA 0 6 09. fat (8 0p 7 Aurea a a The School of Music Student Council is the governing body of Music School. It is a branch of the AllCampus Student Council. The members are elected once a year by the student body, and each class has two representatives on the Council. One of the most important things the Council does soi ae Sassen Sunda as aeica sneer President BN AO ae ME Vice-President ee eee Secretary-Treasurer is to sponsor a series of concerts on the campus. It strives to present unusual concerts of artistic merit. We have had as artists Hilda Jonas, harpsichordist, and Maurice Dumesnil, pianist, who gave an all- Debussy program. These concerts have always been financial as well as aesthetic successes. THE UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA Conducted by Mr. Rosert S. WHITNEY The University orchestra is open to all students interested in playing in ensemble work. MEMBERS Helen Newland Ruth Scheidt Mary Catherine Smith Helen Sweazy Martha Anderson Kay Fitzmayer Katherine Hobb Betty Lou Hodges Marilyn Hurst Elise Wagner Lloyd Kranz THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE BAND Mr. Ernest E. Lyon, Director The University band is an all campus organization. Instru- mentalists from all schools are invited to participate. MEMBERS Martha Anderson Ruth Eckardt Katherine Hobb James Langston George Reed Thomas Bailey Ray Foster Harold Johnson Jeanne Larkey Gladys Scheffer Dorothy Bates Cal Gerde Mary Johnston Jane Lorenz Kenneth Schrader Anita Boss Ellis Gottlieb Dan Kaleher Murrell Mann Sara Scott Duane Blunt Ray Head George Kee Billie Martain Mary C. Smith Dewey Cunningham Henry Heimerdinger â Betty Keher Dorothy McCaffrey Elise Wagner Ruth Day Gerard Helder Pat Kessack Stanley Morris Robert Will R. W. Doerhoefer Joe Herde Jesse Kliewer Charles E. Oney Maeg Witmer Caroline Donley Elizabeth Hines Lloyd Kranz Joe Owens Georganna Wyman Bettye Ann Young THE UNIVERSITY CHORUS Mr. Rospert WHITNEY, Conductor The University chorus is open to all students who like to sing in groups. One need not be an accomplished singer, to become a member. MEMBERS Dorothy Botkin Dorothy Day Ruth Day Pat Ferris Frances Grace Mary Johnston Lois LaCompte Jeanne Larkey Julia Ann Lewis Sue Virginia McGehee Ester Metz Alice Meyer Helen Newland Marilyn Peterson Helen Scheidt Mary Catherine Smith Roberta Spencer Selma Turner Carolyn Weber Lf 5 i : : : Molly Yunker e, © rg is â : ; Lucille Coldiron â(ibs GEE aA PR se AY NS ers EE EOOeeeeeeeererrre | MUSIC SCHOOL Portrait of Peltier and smoke stack . . . Lyons and band pep things up . . . Herzâs gymnastic exhibitions . . . steady nerve, old boy . . . my, what a beautiful set of tonsils. 1 ally | ânil Y | 53 GRE AN Dr. J. J. OPPENHEIMER LIBERAL ARTS âa a = Dean Oppenheimer has been connected with the College of Liberal Arts for twelve years. Un- der his wise administration the curriculum has been expanded, the faculty enlarged, and the stu- dent body greatly increased. His friendliness and readiness to help people with their problems has won him a warm place in the hearts of all who know him. First Row: Justus Bier, Harlow Bishop, Max Bowman, Audrey Brentlinger, Mary Burton, William Clay, Grover Corley. Second Row: John J. Cronin, Sherrill Ellmers, Mary Jo Fink Herz, Clifford Flanders, Ann Frogue, Sue Hall. Third Row: John Heldman, Gerhard Herz, Ralph Hill, Marjorie Jenkins, Richard Kain, Noble Kelley. Fourth Row: Elizabeth Keith, Leonard Koester, Robert Kutak, Hettie Mae Lehman, Harvey Lovell, Elva Lyon. Fifth Row: Boyd Martin, William Mallaieu, Elizabeth Mayo, Austin Middleton, Walter Moore, Evelyn Schneider. Sixth Row: Frederick Stamm, Guy Stevenson, Hilda Threlkeld, Charles Virtue, Robert Warner, Harvey Webster. ADDITIONAL FACULTY MEMBERS John Broderius Ernest Hassold Ralph Loring Zenos Scott Leita Davy Laurence Howe David Maurer Eleanor Turner Andrew Dustin Frances Goldsmith Charles McMahon Clarence Vernon Akins Bogess Breitenstein Brown Caldwell Corder Coulsen Culver Cunningham Davis DeCosta Deter Dewitt E skridge Estep AKINS, DORISâPhysical Education; W.A.A.; P.E.P.; B.S.U.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Cardinalette Club, Sergeant- at-Arms, Recording Sec., Pres., W.A.A., Sec. L. Sweater, Gold L. BOGGESS, JANELLENâSociology; Chemistry Club; Home Ed. Club; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Panhellenic, Pres.; Pi Beta Phi, Sec., Pres. BREITENSTEIN, CAROLâChemistry; Y.W.C.A.; LR.C.; Womenâs League, Pres.; Methodist Club, Pres.; Religious Council, Sec., Pres.; Pallas Club, Sec.; Chem. Club, Pres. BROWN, JEWELL MARIEâElementary Education; Art League; Little Theater; Methodist Club, Sec.; Women's League; Y.W.C.A. CALDWELL, VIRGINIAâCreative Art; Chi Omega; W.D.C.; Presbyterian Club; Y.W.C.A.; Art League, Pres.; Thorough- bred, Art Editor; Attended Bennett Jr. College, Millbrook, N. Y. CORDER, NELL McCLOUDâHome Economics; Home Ec. Jub. COULSON, BETTY ANNEâEnglish; Friends of Recorded Music; W.A.A.; Art League; Y.W.C.A.; Presbyterian Club; Womenâs League. CULVER, CLARA BELLEâSecondary Education CUNNINGHAM, HELEN â Math.; Womenâs League; Y.W.C.A.; B.S.U., Pres.; Religious Council, Pres.; Math Club, Sec., Pres.; Pallas Club, Pres. DAVIS, EVERETT GERALD, JR.âBiology; Art Club; Biology Club, Pres.; Cast of âOutward Bound,â âEver Since Eve,â âThe Yellow Jacket.â De COSTA, BARBARAâSociology; L.A. Student Council; All- Campus Student Council; W.A.A., Treas.; Y.W.C.A.; Wo- menâs League; Cardinalette, Pres.; Presbyterian Club, Pres DETER, ROY J.âEconomics; Biology Club; I.R.C.; B.S.U.; Cardinal; Art League, Treas., Sec. DeWITT, ADELINEâElementary Education; B.S.U.; Y.W.C.A. ESKRIDGE, MARTHA SPEERâHistory; Spanish Club; Alpha Chi Omega, Oklahoma University. ESTEP, LAURINDAâChemistry; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Wo- menâs League; Sigma Kappa; Presbyterian Club; Chemistry Club, Pres. SENIORS... LIBERAL ARTS SENIORS... LIBERAL ARTS EVANS, EMMA LOUâHome Economics; Pi Beta Phi; Home Ec. Club; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Presbyterian Club, Womenâs League. EWING, BETSY K.âSociology; Panhellenic; Home Ec. Club; P.E.P.: W.D.C., Pres.; Methodist Club; All-Campus Student Council, Sec.; Pi Beta Phi, Vice-Pres. of Pledge Class, Asst. Treas., Treas., Pledge Mistress, Pres.; Y.W.C.A., Cabinet; Sec. of Soph. Class. FIBLE, JEANâSociology; Art League; Home Ed. Club; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; W.A.A.; Presbyterian Club; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Art Club, Sec.; Chi Omega, Vice-Pres. GANNON, MARY A.âEnglish; Friends of Recorded Music; I.R.C.; Newman Club, Pres. GOLDSTEIN, MIRIAMâHome Economics; Home Ec. Club; I.R.C.; Womenâs League; Phi Sigma Tau, Treas., Historian. GORDON, LILLIANâSociology; W.A.A.; I.R.C.; Womenâs League, Treas.; Phi Sigma Tau, Pres.; Vice-Pres. of Soph Class. GROSS, FRED MOULTON, JR.âPre-med.; Transfer from Centre College HARP, MARY ELIZABETHâ-English; B.S.U WEINDL, SHIRLEYâChemistry; Chemistry Club; Delta Phi Alpha; Friends of Recorded Music; I.R.C.; Womenâs League; Math. Club, Vice-Pres., Pres., Theta Chi Dela, Pres. HAZELIP, MARY JANEâEnglish; Friends of Recorded Music; P.E.P.; Little Theater; W.A.A.; Newman Club; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Pi Beta Phi, Rush Captain. HEAD, BILLIEâEconomics; All-Campus Council; Thorough- bred; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Art League; W.D.C.; Women's League; Head Electrician at Little Theatre; Panhellenic, Pres.; Sigma Kappa, Cor. Sec., Sec., Vice-Pres., Pres. HELD, MURRAYâChemistry; Beta Tau Chi. HIDVEGI, THELMA A.âPre-Med. and Chem.; Panhellenic, Biology Club; Chem. Club; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; B.S.U.; Wo- menâs League; I.R.C.; Thoroughbred Staff; Delta Zeta, Pres., Vice-Pres., Pledge Mistress, L. A, Student Council, Treas., Chairman of French War Relief Comm.; Attended W. Va. Institute of Technology. HORNE, MARTHA ANNâHome Economics; Y.W.C.A.; Wo- menâs League: W.A.A.: W.D.C.; P.E.P.; W.D.C. Publicity Chrmn.; Home Ec. Club, Social Chrmn.; Pi Beta Phi, Pledge Pres.; Rec. Sec., Corres. Sec. Treas.; L. A. Student Council, Pres. JOHNSTON, MARY ELIZABETHâElementary Education; Chorus; I.W.U.; W.D.C.; LR.C.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Cardinal; Band; Methodist Club, Sec., Vice-Pres. Evans Ewing Fible Gannon Goldstein Gordon Gross Harp Weindl Hazelip Head Held Hidvegi Horne Johnston 4 Kellerman Kerst Kincaid Kleinstarink Knight Kushner Larkin Mathews McCaffrey McCombs McCormack McDonald McQuillen Newman Oppenheimer Js, KELLERMAN, MARYâPsychology; Art League; Friends of Recorded Music; I.R.C.; Newman Club. KERST, HILDEGARDEâChemistry; Delta Phi Alpha; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Cardinalette Club, Rec. Sec., Cor. Sec.; Chem. Club, Vice-President; Math. Club, reas.; Theta Chi Delta, Sec.; Pallas, Historian. KINCAID, MARIANâSpanish; W.D.C.; French Club; Spanish Club; I.R.C.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Pallas Club; Womenâs League; Delta Zeta, Pres., Treas.; Panhellenic, Pres. KLEINSTARINK, BETTYâHome Economics; Sigma Kappa; Home Ec. Club; Thoroughbred; P.E.P.; Women's League; All-Campus Student Council; W.A.A., Vice-Pres., Pres., Vice-Pres. of Freshman Class. KNIGHT, J. O., JR.âBiology (Pre-Med.); Kappa Alpha; Biol- ogy Club; Cardinal. KUSHNER, ANNETTEâSociology; I.P.C.; Womenâs League; Phi Sigma Tau, Social Chrmn., Sec., Pres. LARKIN, FRANCESâElementary Education; Panhellenic; P.E.P.; Spanish Club; W.A.A.; B.S.U.; Y.W.C.A.; Wo- menâs League; Kappa Delta, Asst. Treas., Pres. MATHEWS, ANNEâEnglish; Home Ec. Club; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Pi Beta Phi, Rush Capt., Rec. Sec., Pledge Supervisor. McCAFFREY, DOROTHY LORENâHome Economics; Biol- ogy Club; Home Ec. Club; W.A.A.; L.R.C.; Methodist Club; Y.W.C.A.; Women's League; Cardinal; Band; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; Thoroughbred; 1.W.U.; French Club. McCOMBS, JUANITA LAND-âSociology; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; I.R.C.; B.S.U.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; I.W.U.; Rifle Club; U. of L. Radio Workshop. McCORMACK, ELEANORâPre-Med.; P.E.P.; French Club; W.A.A.; Womenâs League; Biology Club, Sec. McDONALD, NINAâHome Economics; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League; Home Ec. Club, Membership Chrmn., Treas.; Spanish Club, Vice-Pres. McQUILLEN, HELEN MARY-âFrench; Spanish Club; Latin American Club; Newman Club Womenâs League; French Club, Founder, Pres.; I.R.C., Vice-Pres. NEWMAN, SHIRLEYâSociology; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League. OPPENHEIMER, JEANâPol. Sci., Friends of Recorded Music; W.D.C.; LR.C.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Pallas; Kappa Pi Epsilon; Womenâs League; Chi Omega, Pledge Mistress. SENIORS... LIBERAL ARTS SENIORS ... LIBERAL ARTS PAGE, AUGUSTAâElementary Education, Cardinalette; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; W.D.C.; B.S.U., Vice-Pres.; Women's League, Vice-Pres. PARKER, GWENâChem.-Math.; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Wo- menâs League; Thoroughbred; Sigma Kappa, Treas.; Relig. Council, Sec., Treas.; B.S.U., Sec., Vice-Pres.; All-Campus Council, Sec.; Chemistry Club, Sec.; Math. Club, Vice-Pres. WYMAN, GEORGANNAâPol. Sci.; Friends of Recorded Music; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Canterbury Club; Y.W.C.A.; Wo menâs League; Band. PETERSON, LUCILLE â Elementary Education; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Womenâs League; Woodcock Society; Who's Who Among Students In American Universities and Colleges; Newman Club Pres. RAMEY, ERNEST E., JR.âPre-Med.; Phi Delta Theta; Trans- fer from Centre College. RICHEIMER, JAMESâGerman; Kappa Alpha; Friends of Re- corded Music. ROPKE, ELSAâGerman, Art League; Friends of Recorded Music; Chorus; P.E.P.; W.D.C.; French Club; IR.C.; W.A.A.; B.S.U.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League Cabinet; Pallas; Delta Phi Alpha, Pres.; Pi Beta Phi, Pledge Pres., Historian Pledge Mistress, Vice-Pres.; Vocational Guidance Panel; Trustee's Scholarship. ROSENBLUM, BEVERLYâSociology; Friends of Recorded Music; Art League; W.D.C.; Womenâs League. ROTHSCHILD, MARYâoiology; Biology Club; Art See Chemistry Club; Friends of Recorded Music; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Womenâs League. SALTZMAN, MIRIAMâEnglish-Humanities; Chorus; Y.W. C.A.; Womenâs League SCHARRE, MILDRED ANNEâElementary Education; Pan- hellenic; Art League; P.E.P.; W.A.A.; Canterbury Club; Y.W.C.A.; Cabinet, Pres.; Sigma Kappa, Sec., Vice-Pres., Pres.; Womanâs League, Cabinet; Junior Prom Queen; Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. SLOANE, JESSIEâGerman; Chi Omega; W.A.A.; W.D.C.; Womenâs League; Y.W.C.A.; German Club; Art League; Chi Omega, House Manager, Vice-Pres.; Pallas Club. THOMAS, ALICE LUCILLE--Elementary Education, Biology CLUB; P.E.P.; LR.C.; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Pallas Pres- byterian Club Womenâs League; Kappa Delta, Asst. Treas., Treas., House Manager. THOME, JAMES BERTRANDâChenistry, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Chem. Club; P.E.P. Math Club; Newman Club; Inter-Frat. Council, Sec., Treas.; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Pres. | WALLNER, BARBARA LYNNâPsychology, W.A.A.; Meth- | odist Club; Y.W.C.A.; P.E.P.; Kappa Delta, Sec., Social Chrmn., Historian; Womenâs League, Vice-Pres.; Thorough- } bred; University Social Chrmn.; U. of L. Soph. Rep. | Page Parker Wyman i Peterson Ramey Richeimer Ropke Rosenblum Rothschild Saltzman Scharre Sloane Thomas Thome Wallner ADDITIONAL SENIORS Harriet Bloom Clarence Green John Louis Creech Adam James Harden Alberta Glanz Ann Fallis Jones Ellen K. Godman Mrs. Roy Long Frances Mann Earl T. Tyler Ruth Moss Arthur Unglub Dena Parris Dorothy Willis Mary Catherine Schupp Charles Edward Wilson GB. LIBERAL ARTS STUDENT COUNCIL First Row: Coldiron, DeCosta, Harris, Hayma n. Second Row: Horne, Klosterman, Mahaffey. 1943 COUNCIL Carter Burke Barbara DeCosta Mary Campbell Mary Agnas Ernst Lucille Coldiron Rosalie Harris John Hayman 1944 OFFICERS SASTRY CUES WNY ASIN Sec cree: creat co ete sa cease rene oe aad Sede INVA CVG@IETBYREAN ec cscccsleceasterce-nmoves.onesenre beeen VASNNITE SAD EN DAS LAR Keo desc co os eee sad acecas cea deesceonavs MIGHIRTABA, EAI V EG e, -op-nsdcsib-nacss-nsesasbee eee eeseane eee Martha Ann Horne Warren Klosterman Herman Mahaffey oe ener See oer Ae President adstectpectauasuneces topes Vice-President sree csin Posi tue tau ieicnce eee Secretary Dre ne erat Treasurer First Row: Clark, Doane, Emery, Fitzmeyer, Heyman, Hidvegi, Rossman. Second Row: Seyfrit, Shaw, Spalding, Thurman, Tyler, Warns. 1944 COUNCIL Annie Badham Clark Nancy Heyman Doris Doane Thelma Hidvegi Lloyd Emery Harry Rossman Ruth Fitzmeyer Paul Seyfrit Julia Ann Shaw The Student Council of the College of Liberal Arts is more than a representative body of stu- dents; it is the culmination of an attempt on the part of the College to inculcate into the students a sense of civic responsibility necessary to make them worthy members of the community. Through the Dorothy Spalding Barbara Thurman Gordon Tyler Alice Warns medium of the Council, the student body actively enters into the solving of its own problems; this results in self-government. In addition to its ad- ministrative functions the Council sponsors dances, activities for the Freshmen and student convoca- tions. ââââââŹâą ART LEAGUE Dr. Justus Bier Virginia Caldwell Roy Deter Jean Fible Marie Graves Margaret Powell Marilyn Rollings IVARGINTAD CORED WIRED: osetec.cscdt cues toec cee seate encase cae ee ar ee es ..President IMEARTE GRAVES) cso es Rea ace ot gecaesuceyracncesne eds itaeceoseaaerpnn eto ates Vice-President EP US21 3102) 6) a op ee EE PPS Fisp lag sapaeshcasesiaden kasenetess Secretary Roy DETER Treasurer EAR TSING ROLEIN GS) fos csticash shes a tease ee leaps ses ese att ec eavech rears soars Food Chairman IOTAR PARENT OW) BIT poche cosas oxy ae entre sect tetea vate ev ecaee oeccan tea eenaeentuesv meri: Exhibit Chairman EVR UYU SESE ee eee nantes as day goon czas comee poses gacascasseaoedeapatinecssanccnsetenzzenamncpeod Faculty Advisor One of the newest clubs to be formed, the Art sors exhibits in the rotunda and Dr. Virtueâs office, League strives to stimulate art appreciation on the and gives monthly luncheons at which outstanding campus. To realize this purpose, the League spon- artists from the vicinity give informal talks. BIOLOGY CLUB OFFICERS ERR OID AVIS vce Gres ne eats President JANE HEIMERDINGER ...........- Vice-President AREER ooo nce en: enreeneseee Secretary Organized by Dr. Harvey Lovell, the Biology Club has brought to the campus as speakers men from the state bureau of conservation in Frankfort, members of the medical and dental school staffs, physicians and promi- nent visiting biologists. One botani- cal and one zoological journal, bound and kept for the studentsâ use, have been purchased by the club for the library. en a HOME ECONOMICS CLUB Ash Bledsoe Evans Kleinstarink Major Richerson OFFICERS WOR OTEEY STAN DARIO seco: nae cett suet ero seen President BETTY, GorLINGS -5-25 3. Pad A oe ee Vice-President BETTY INUTEL SRIGHARD SON Gs ce wacteesgnt osc tecaiia eon suc ee aera niece eae Secretary INTAR TORTES GARAPROND 2. ot case ise ce ts ee, Treasurer CABINET MEMBERS Dorothy Ash Betty Kleinstarink Mary Lois Bledsoe Virginia Major Emma Lou Evans Mary Frances Richerson The purpose of this club is to bring together the girls of the Home Economics department for educational and social purposes and to promote welfare in the department and on the campus. Annually, this organization sponsors the Jenks Memorial Drive, the proceeds of which are set aside to erect a building for further work in the line of nutrition on the campus. ge CHEMISTRY CLUB OFFICERS ATIC HE IWWIARINS 2stecadeoicirasrap eae President we CELIA KISHNER .........-.----- Vice-President GWENS PARKER, 2 5.c-ctesg sd Secretary z= W@W Wit EHLIc .............---------- Treasurer $L: 4 Dr. Grover L. Cor ey...Faculty Adviser . . 1 The Chemistry Club was the first departmental club founded at the University of Louisville. Since 1919 it has been open to all students inter- ested in chemistry. The club at its monthly meetings strives to keep before its members the developments and opportunities in the field of chemistry. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB OFFICERS HAZEL WRIGHT «..2-:---00-22s0 00--0 oe er are eee President BRTTY: (âSIRRING) st ok a ea Treasurer Doris PEDERSEN ........--------- : ..Vice-President SONYA GURE) cocci eee Publicity Chairman IMARIBEIL, UAGRENBERG! 6 occ ceck secccerececeenwerccerone ns Secretary Dr. Ropert A, WARNER.......-..----------- .......Faculty Sponsor MEMBERS Frank Arnold Ellen Godman Marian Loflowitz Marilyn Rollings Vera Bixler Audrey Goldman Hanni Lore Levi Doris Rooney Ashley Brown Virginia Hazelwood Gita Levinstein George Roth Edmund Cava Mary Hervey Doris Lorber Sally Snowden Lucille Coldiron Emmy Heyman Joan McDermott Roberta Spencer Maxie Crawford Nancy Heyman Mary Alice McDermott Frank Spitzer Clara Culver Patty Hilton Ruth McLean Jane Stacy Dorothy Day Dr. Laurence Howe Clarice Miller Sylvia Thompson Mary Dicken Russell Huff Elizabeth Moser Dr. Charles Virtue Ernest Ellison Buelah Jones Elizabeth Moulden Doris Vormbrock Warren Engelhardt Betty Kehrer Bernice Olsen G. K. Ware Dora Fenton Clyde Keifner Jean Oppenheimer Shirley Weindl Calvin Francis Harold Frankel Raymond Fust Dave Gittleman Celia Kishner Esther Knapp Peggy King Dorothy Korell Rhoda Perry Harold Pope Margaret Powell Bill Price Georganna Wyman The purpose of the International Relations Club is to stimulate greater interest on the campus in international affairs affecting the United States. We believe that by a better understanding of these affairs many problems can be peacefully solved which would otherwise lead to conflict. In order to promote better understanding of in- ternational affairs we have as guest speakers prominent leaders in the various fields of inter- national relations. Since the outbreak of the war we have found that increased interest has been shown in problems of international affairs. We, as officers in the International Relations Club, sincerely hope that this interest will continue and will be a basis for better understanding in future years. | In an effort to organize the school spirit of the students of the University, P.E.P. was founded in the fall of 1938. During its years of existence, P.E.P. has sponsored pep rallies, bonfires before home football games, organized motorcades to nearby towns to watch the Cardinals play and has staged victory parades after games. Since football activity has practically been nil on the campus the last few seasons, P.E.P.âs main function has been to sponsor a peppy group of cheerleaders. This group was much in evidence during the fast and furious basketball season of °44. At the Sports Roundup in February, Betty Kleinstarink presented her colleagues with recognition medals for their vim, vigor and vitality. With a perspective football team in view, we know that P.E.P. will increasingly work toward putting new life into the campus, and demonstrating by their whole-hearted support that the University of Louisville is something to be proud of PVE. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION OFFICERS Ae nee ae President Pg Rese Getae reece Vice-President MARY ANN GLOSSOP....2...- eescc-ecse0---cerenes Secretary rs eee oy a tear Treasurer The Baptist Student Union is an international organization sponsored by Southern Baptists. For thirteen years the B.S.U. has been active on the University of Louisville campus and has been prominent in encouraging religious activities. OFFICERS bee bspeeets conaserenee sees ieease SRLOSIGERE CE ie Pee eee eo Vice-President eed ee cetea rset se Secretary OE egies ee ar 7 ee eee Treasurer With a program of fellowship, recreation and church attendance, the Canterbury Club since 1939 has been serving the Christian cause of the University of Louisville campus. Raf METHODIST STUDENT LEAGUE OFFICERS (EBRD RTIPSE OW MER. co retearcreve dates sgixeesessa Seager ee President Mary JOHNSTON .......... oe ge rer pry oreo Vice-President jE 6 C1 cia | Ue}: (Coa cae ee ee Re he fy Secretary-T reasurer The Methodist Student League's program is designed to strengthen the relationship between school and church, and is directed toward making Christianity work in various aspects of everyday life. It is interested in equipping its members better âfor the living of these days.â OFFICERS MARY. At CANNON 8 cect enad eek a oe a AD Ri Se President SAMUEL BoNnasso Vice-President PATRICK JOHNSON, cece ssc aces acca cancecs nee nae cones eae Secretary Betty DOECKER ..........- Ee ae EER Te Cena Treasurer Founded at the University of Pennsylvania in 1877, the Newman Club became active at U. of L. in 1937. It provides a religious, intellectual, and social stimulus for the Catholic student, attempting to follow the tenets of its patron, Cardinal John H. Newman. Monthly Communion breakfasts, weekly discussion meetings conducted by the chaplain in the Religious Cen- ter, supper-dances and picnics are the chief features of a well-rounded pro- gram. WOMENâS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION waâ Padi ee Bakrow Felknor Kleinstarink McLean OFFICERS VED EID SU ARRLNRS ocsaemnsteseee atin sar a re wa a eas ase tan ap ces President BRIE, AGUA Scat cnc ep es casa cs aces capac nance cachet papeewcnanacuae Vice-President PERSIE MURAI RMN Seles ogee as ae ae ren eae ny ee Sua a SECM TM co cae ea Secretary TUOGISE, EELR NOR) secccess cae tes eee eg as eae camel pe vena cnc avaeee med oeereatnee ee Treasurer Plead OF Teno) ic cccare Meee Mary Frances McKenna Headiof Basketball a: cr or totacerereascceee Louise Felknor Head! of Table. Tennis........-.......... Bee ay oe Jane Lorenz La LeNe lolita iihraVenttnioqee eeeee oe Set Oe sone eet Fee Anne Hughes ipl Yolfosal siya laveiu snjeQ Saher ocee ase ay eee Patricia Kessack Plead OLGortballl © 5. eeat sci es Se ee Doris Eisenmenger | GLE Ra Wo hs Covel oy epee nee ee ee are Betty Kehrer dis (ora Kot el 205789 (lore epaee oe nerve eres Betty Collings ead:of Wolley balla. 7 S..00 nto Doris DeGraw Catt OL ATC Bey peers eta erent Joyce Ritchie The primary purpose of the Womenâs Athletic Association is organizing and promoting womenâs athletics on the campus, and to promote good sportsmanship among all women interested in sports. This organization is governed by a cabinet composed of 14 girls who meet at the beginning of the fall term and draw up an athletic and social schedule for the year. The cabinet then meets once a week during the school year to discuss cur- rent problems which arise as the season progresses. For participation in these sports girls are given points which accumulate until there is a total of 500 for which a seal is won. When 1,000 points are earned an âLâ sweater is given, and a small gold âLâ pin is awarded for 1,500 points. The W.A.A. has been fortunate in having Miss Sue Hall as its advisor. She has brought us many grand ideas and has helped us in making the W.A.A. a dynamic organization. Every woman on the campus is eligible for mem- bership, which can be obtained by paying twenty- five cents dues each trimester. This membership entitles a girl to participate in the W.A.A. athletic and social program and to be eligible to vote and hold office. The W.A.A. started its program this year with a tennis tournament. The Sigma Kappaâs won, with the Cardinalettes running a close second and Pi Beta Phi coming in third. Edythe Lepping man- aged this sport. Table Tennis was the next sport in which Kappa Delta came in first, with Sigma Kappa second and Chi Omega third. The head of this sport was Barbara Moorman. The Badminton tournament started off with a bang, but after the first round the gym caught on fire so the tournament was ended abruptly. Ruth McLean headed this sport. The second trimester started right off with a Volleyball tournament. Cardinalettes won this sport with the Sigma Kappas and the Chi Omegas running a close second and third. Head of this sport was Betty Kleinstarink. Basketball was won by the Cardinalettes this year and the Sigma Kappas came in second and the Chi Omegas third. Louise Felknor was head of this sport. A Swimming meet was held at the Y.W.C.A. this year, with the Cardinalettes first, Sigma Kappas second, and Pi Beta Phi third. Anne Hughes was head of this sport. The Bowling meet was held at the Madrid Bowling Alleys. The Sigma Kappas came in first with Chi Omega second, and Pi Beta Phi third. Head of this sport was Betty Collings. The Archery tournament got off to a big start and Jane Lorenz came in first with Joyce Ritchie as runner-up. Joyce Ritchie headed this sport. W.A.A. received permission to have charge of concessions at all the basketball games held at the gym, and also at all the dances. Louise Felknor acted as concessions chairman and was aided by the cabinet and the W.A.A. members. All the organizations on the campus compete with each other in each sport and the three winning teams are given points toward the Presidentâs cup that is awarded at the end of each year. l INDEPENDENT WOMENâS UNION Knapp Moorman Tresidder Moulden OFFICERS BARBARA MoorMAN .- FROSABTE! PRARRIG oo. coche eevee ELIZABETH MOULDEN ........-.--- bre 2! IBGRN) RON APP ees ecsc chats crtadtoceae esas Mrs. ARGUS TRESIDDER..........-.--------- Throughout the Universityâs history the inde- pendent women have formed organizations which have died out after a short time. However, in the fall of 1943, the Independent Womenâs Union was formed. Since that time, the group has been very successful, showing much campus spirit in entering all college activities. The girls have regular meet- Se eg en President eg ree ea Vice-President en ne ee Secretary Ca er TO Treasurer Be eco ee sa a ease Sponsor ings and dinners, and periodically hold social func tions. Results of their hard work are evidenced in their getting members elected to the Student Councils, participating in the Fryberger Sing and being first place in scholarship among the girls groups on campus for the spring trimester. WOMENâS LEAGUE First Row: Bledsoe, Colvin, Dalton, Hilton, Kirchner, Major. Second Row: Page, Ritchie, Ropke, Sage, Vormbrock, Wallner. OFFICERS VIRGINIA KIRCHNER ...........220--0--0----- BARBARA WALLNER .......----002-20--0--0--- MarIBEL LAUFENBERG ............--------- PATRICIA, EEE TION oon cosa-o teense ee ee OEM FRESE eM ed ....-President acken gies cesseeeeeeeeeeeeeee Vice-President Pt ee, AAO ee Set enero Secretary een eee Se ets Tee eS Treasurer CABINET MEMBERS Mary Lois Bledsoe Doris Breitenstein Virginia Colvin Agnes Dalton Patricia Hilton Since its founding in 1908, the Womenâs League in membership drives each semester has drawn to- gether a large group of campus women, both sorority members and independents. These girls meet at monthly luncheons where good food, busi- ness, and a program are the order of the noon hour. Most of the business of the organization is con- ducted at regular cabinet meetings, presided over by the president. The yearly program usually con- Virginia Kirchner Maribel Laufenberg Virginia: Major Augusta Page Joyce Ritchie Elsa Ropke Lennamae Sage Doris Vormbrock Barbara Wallner sists of a Freshman Tea to welcome the new stu- dents and introduce them to the faculty, a vice- versa dance, and general attention to the welfare of all U. of L. women. An outstanding feature of this yearâs program was a panel discussion in which some prominent Louisville women discussed with members of the Leagu e problems which we as col- lege women face during wartime. a3 a YOUNG WOMENâS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION First Row: Altsheler, Chambers, Collings, Colvin, Fort. Second Row: Fowler, Glossop, Knapp, Major, Moser. Third Row: Sawyer, Stephenson, Stiglitz, Weber. OFFICERS BSG UISE OAWSER es Ace ee eens eae see en ete President LEAN iE eA T2965 20 ke Me eI eae caer eineâ Aa a a om Vice-President RODE Te LATS EEL COM DEE Rise vor ease ll ce de ees oe rag Pa tc ee Secretary ESTE CCL TINGS a a a a se ca Se eects seaes eae Treasurer CABINET MEMBERS Marie Altsheler Mary Ann Glossop Betty Stephenson Colleen Chambers Helen Knapp Julia Stiglitz Virginia Colvin Virginia Major Betty Weber Elizabeth Moser The purpose of the Y.W.C.A. as stated in the this life possible for all people. In this task we constitution is âwe unite in a desire to realize a full seek to understand Jesus and to follow Him.â Ac- and creative life through a growing knowledge of tive on the campus since 1921, this clubâs outstand- God. We determine to have a share in making ing project each semester has been the âY Family.â RELIGIOUS COUNCIL Breitenstein Fowler Parker Stevenson OFFICERS CaroL BREITENSTEIN President CAPRI DE ROW MER sce Svante An, St ey ee ee ee Secretary GWEN PARKER ....... EO hee ee Sane ee PO ye RE a EN bee ase Treasurer Representative of the unity of purpose and spirit among all of the religious groups is the Uni- versity Religious Council. Members of the counâ cil are from the Baptist Student Union, Canter- bury Club, Christian Youth Fellowship, Methodist PEERED, RATE ey eet ee are Faculty Adviser Student League, Newman Club and Presbyterian Club. This year the organization is particularly proud of the new Religious Center where any group may have inspirational worship services. WAR DEFENSE COUNCIL OFFICERS MARGARET OPENER jocccces o.cohete gear IWEARIBED: JGAUIPEN BERG seco ida scee lest cre scene nce Seas et Vice-President PEGGY wERAN REIS 3c Sictice ee ecen coccosease crac The War Defense Council, founded at the Uni- versity, has in every possible way done outstanding work in furthering the war effort. Blood Donor Drives and Red Cross Drives have been successful ly sponsored, and over $20,000 have been sold in SE Sa ate Po President ate GB Tacen ap teen eed Secretary-T reasurer War Stamps and Bonds. Also among its notable achievements has been the entertainment of Service men at the U. S. O. on U. of L. Day every Satur- day afternoon. FORD LEE WILKINSON, JR. Dean It is quite fitting that at a time such as this, when Speed School is training future officers in the United States Navy, a past lieutenant-commander in that same Navy should be its dean. This man is Ford Lee Wilkinson, Jr. As a graduate of the Naval Academy in 1918 and a past naval officer, Dean Wilkinson has obtained an understanding of the problems which face the future officer. This understanding has aided him in his direction of Speed School activities. After graduating from the Naval Academy, he received his M.S. from Columbia University. Upon retiring from active naval service in 1927 he practiced as a consulting engineer before going to the University of Tennessee as head of the De partment of Mechanical Engineering. He became Dean of the Speed Scientific School in 1938. SPEED SCHOOL FACULTY W. M. HAMMONS Assistant to Dean SPEED SCHOOL JOSEPH A. AYERSâB. S. (Meridian Male College); B.A., M.A. (West Virginia University) Associate Professor of English, H. H. FENWICKâB:S. in M.E. (Purdue University) Associate Professor of Engineering Drawing. RAYMOND J. FOSSâB.S.C.E. (South Dakota State School of Mines) Instructor in Civil Engineering W.R. GALLâB.S. in M.E. (University of Tennessee) Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. JOHN M. HOUCHENSâB.A, (Georgetown College) Assistant Professor of Co-ordination and Correlation. W. R. McINTOSHâB.S., M.S., C.E. (Rose Polytechnic Insti- tute) Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. FACULTY S. THOMAS PARKERâB.A., M.A. (University of British Co- lumbia ) Instructor in Mathematics. EDWIN W. PAULâA.B., M.A. (University of Louisville) Instructor in Engineering Drawing. WALTER L. STARKEYâB.M.E. (University of Louisville) Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. RALPH 8. TROSPERâ B. PED. (Berea College); B.S. in M.E. (University of Kentucky); M.S. in M.E. (University of Ten- nessee) Professor of Mechanical Engineering. GORDON C. WILLIAMSâB.S. in CH.E., M.S. in CH.E., PH.D. (University of Wisconsin) Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering. FACULTY WITHOUT PICTURES CARL ADAMSâB.S.E., M.S. (University of Michigan) Assistant Professor of Physics. WILSON R. BARNESâB.CH.E., M.CH.E. (University of Louisville) Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering. DONALD M. BENNETTâB.A., M.A., PH.D. (University of Wisconsin) Associate Professor of Physics. WILLIAM S. BOWMERâA.B. (Ambhurst College); M.A. (Uni- versity of Louisville) Instructor in English. R. C. ERNSTâB.S. (North Carolina State College); M.S., PH.D. (University of Minnesota) Professor of Chemical Engineering and Director of Industrial Research. SAMUEL T. FIFEâE.E. (University of Cincinnati) Professor of Electrical Engineering. W.M. HAMMONSâ Assistant to the Dean. LAURA KERSEYâA.B. (Shorter College); B.A. in L.S. (Emory University) Librarian. M. G. NORTHROPâE.E., M.E. (Cornell University); M.S. in E.E. (University of Michigan) Professor of Electrical Engineering. JOHN HUGH SIMESTERâB:S. M.A. (University of Toronto) Associate Professor of Mathematics. JAMES I, STEVENSâB.CH.E., M.CH.E. (University of Louis- ville) Instructor in Chemical Engineering. WYLIE B. WENDTâB.C.E., C.E. (University of Kentucky) Professor of Civil Engineering. FORD L. WILKINSON, JR.â(U. (Columbia University) Professor of Mechanical Engineering. (University of Saskatchewan); . Naval Academy); M.S. pot, oO VAUGHN N. ANDERSON (Louisville, Ky.); Chemical En- gineering; Inter-Fraternity Council; Theta Tau; Vice-President, Theta Tau; President, Theta Tau; P.E.P.; Speed School Student Council: A.E.Ch.E.; College Basketball; Vice-President, Inter- Fraternity Council. ROBERT BILLIG (Louisville, Ky.); Me- chanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Recording Secretary, A.S.M.E. S. M. BINKLEY (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; Baptist Student Union; A.S.M.E.; Transfer from New York University. C. E. BROWN (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical En- gineering; A.S.M.E. CHARLES W. BUCKMAN (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Theta Tau; Treasurer, Theta Tau. CHARLES F. BUSH (Jeffersonville, Ind.); Mechan- ical Engineering; Speed Honor Council; Sigma Tau; O.D.K.; President, Sophomore Class; President, A.S.M.E.; Vice-Presi- dent, Sigma Tau. CHARLES J. CRUSH (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; Theta Tau; Newman Club; A.S.M.E.; Engineersâ Ball Committee; Corresponding Secretary, Theta Tau. PETE JAMES GIANACAKES (Louisville, Ky.); Chemical En- gineering; Triangle; Speed Student Council; A.E.Ch.E.; Presi- dent, A.I.Ch.E.; Corresponding Secretary, Triangle. EUGENE FREDERICK JACOBS (Kansas City, Mo.); Chemical Engineer- ing: Theta Tau; A.E.Ch.E.; Corresponding Secretary, Theta Tau. DAVID KLING (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E. JOHN R. MAPOTHER (Louisville, Ky.); Mechani- cal Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Inter-Fraternity Council; Speed Honor Council; Kappa Alpha; Corresponding Secretary, Kappa Alpha; President, Kappa Alpha; Cardinal News Editor; Fresh- man Handbook Editor. ROBERT NEVITT (Louisville, Ky.); Electrical Engineering; A.S.E.E.; Treasurer, A.S.E.E.; Friends of Recorded Music; Newman Club. RICHARD M. PARRISH (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Vice Chairman, A.S.M.E.; Theta Tau; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; O.D.K.; Regent Theta Tau; Corresponding Secretary, Sigma Tau; En- gineersâ Ball Committee; Freshman Class Treasurer; Junior Class Secretary. JOHN TRAPP (Louisville, Ky.); Chemical En- gineering; A.I.Ch.E.; President, A.I.Ch.E.; Kappa Alpha. ZENO ZABBAN (Acqui, Italy); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Speed Honor Council; Latin American Club; Sigma Tau; Sigma Tau Sophomore Award; Historian Sigma Tau; Art League; Theta Tau; Vice-Regent, Theta Tau; Corresponding Secretary, Theta Tau; Vice-President, Freshman Class; Secretary, Sophomore Class; President, Junior Class; Two Trustee Scholar- ships. SPEED SCHOOL SENIORS JACKSON HENDERSON ABLES, JR. (Vicksburg, Miss); Mechanical Engineering; Navy Chorus; A.S.M.E.; Lambda Chi Alpha; President, Lambda Chi Alpha; Inter-Fraternity Council; Colonel Club; Track; Transfer from Mississippi State College. THOMAS RICE BAILEY (Kenova, W. Va.); Electrical En- gineering; A.I.E.E.; P.E.P.; Band; Sigma Tau; President, A.LE.E.; Transfer from Marshall College, Huntington, W. Va: STUART M. BERMAN (Louisville, Ky.); Mechanical Engineer- ing; Inter-Fraternity Council; Triangle; Speed Honor Council; A.$.M.E.; O.D.K.; Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; Presi- dent, A.S.M.E.; President, Sigma Tau; President, Triangle; President, Sigma Tau; President, Speed Student Council; Convo- cation Committee; Engineer's Ball Chairman; Social Committee Chairman RICHARD ALLEN BOLLS (Indianola, Miss.); Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E.; Pi Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Battalion Commander; Transfer from Mississippi State College. JAMES H. EMERY (Fairmont, W. Va.); Mechanical Engineer- ing; Kappa Alpha; Sigma Tau; Presbyterian Club; Transfer from West Virginia University, Morgantown, W. Va. TOM T JOHNSON (Louisville , Ky.); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Kappa Alpha: P.E.P.; Speed Student Council; All Campus Stu- dent Council; Vice-President of Junior Class; President of Karotis Fan Club. BENJAMIN KUCHENBROD (Louisville, Ky.); Chemical Engineering; Triangle; P.E.P.; A.I.Ch.E.; Navy Social Council. PAUL VICTOR LA COSTE (Bay St. Louis, Miss.); Civil Engineering; Kappa Alpha. MAX A. LADT (Clarkesdale, Miss.); Mechanical Engineering; Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Mu Epsi- lon; Tau Beta Pi; A.S.M.E.; President, A.S.M.E.; Navy Chorus; Sigma Tau; Omicron Delta Kappa; Baptist Student Union; Trans- fer from Mississippi State College. CHARLES W. LOVELL (Louisville, Ky.); Civil Engineering; Inter-Fraternity Council; Board of Student Publications; Triangle; President, Triangle; P.E.P.: Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; A.S.C.E.; Vice- President, A.S.C.E IRVIN H. LUTZ (Louisville, Ky.); Chemical Engineering; Speed Honor Council; President, Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; A.I.Ch.E.; Theta Chi Delta. JAMES CLARKE MACK (Dickson, Tenn.); Mechanical En- gineering; A.S.M.E.: Vice-President, A.S.M.E.; Secretary, Senior Class: Sigma Tau; Transfer from Tennessee Tech. WILL CUM- MINS MORRISON (Dickson, Tenn.); Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.: Transfer from Tennessee Tech. HAROLD EUGENE POPE (Victory, Ky.); Mechanical Engineering: A.S.M.E.; I.R.C.; Methodist Club; Transfer from University of Kentucky. FRANK McLEOD REAVES (Martinsburg, W. Va.); Mechan- ical Engineering: A.S.M.E.; Theta Tau; Canterbury Club; Re- ligious Council; President, Senior Class; Phi Sigma Kappa; Trans- fer from West Virginia University. ERNEST THOMAS (Vicksburg, Miss.); Mechanical Engineering; Transfer from Mis- sissippi State University. CLYDE K. WARNER (Louisville, Ky.); Civil Engineering; Inter-Fraternity Council; Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.; Canterbury Club: Speed Student Council; Triangle; Vice-President, Triangle; All Campus Council; Chair- man, All Campus Council; O.D.K.; Engineersâ Ball Committee; Social Committee; A.S.C.E.; Secretary-Treasurer, A.S.C.E.; Presi- dent, A.S.C.E. ROBERT M. WATTS (Louisville, Ky.); Me- chanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; Navy Chorus; Speed Student Council; Sigma Tau. ALBERT DOUGLAS WINQUIST, JR. (Brooklyn, N. Y.); Chemical Engineering; P.E.P.; Canterbury Club; Transfer from Virginia Polytechnic Institute. RODERICK L. ZELLER, JR. (Huntington, W. Va.); Civil Engineering; Triangle; A.S.C.E.; Basketball; Student Council; Chi Beta Phi (Honorary); D-Rho-D-Theta (Honorary); Transfer from Mar- shall College. SPEED SCHOOL SENIORS vy AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS EDWARD DUETEFARIEZ, 22 cic0coecb-+wuttsnjecnvacesss ve meess JosEPH STRATMAN .. ROBERT JOHNSON ........... Ggaitere Cer eA ee ten fe mes PYRE OA ISRIN GS Eps aad ane Ee ee The Louisville Student Chapter A. I. Ch. E. has had to suspend for the duration of the war one of its most interesting activities, that of plant visita- tion. In the past, inspection trips were taken to Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati and the Charleston, West Virginia area. This year it has planned to have a local inspection trip. The society has continued its policy of having tk Nora Mace A en a eI i SE Chairman Vice-Chairman Fake ee Ne esa Secretary ates Treasurer feet see lv aOR eh ree. Councilor outstanding industrialists, engineers and faculty members of the community address the chapter at its monthly meeting. Society activities have been reduced to a minimum and the famed Christmas party was not given last year. An active group of officers are planning a busy year emphasizing the relations of the Chemical Engineer to war and post war industrial problems, rr rer errr aim AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS OFFICERS SPEOMAS DALUE Vike ee eae ete Chairman ALEX GERBA .......- PUSS teee Vice-Chairman JENNIE Lou WEDEKIND.........--.---------- Secretary PERU RARE eset reteans ete Treasurer The student branch of the A.I-E.E. was organ- once a month at the Speed Scientific School. Each ized in 1928. The purpose of the branch is to year a conference of all the Southern District stu- promote interest in electrical engineering among dent branches is held at one of the engineering | the students. Meetings are held approximately schools in this district. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS OFFICERS CLYDE WARNER, JR........-..-------00-e0-00+0+ President CHARLES LOVELL, JR............-.--- Vice-President RIcHARD BOLLS ...........----- Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS George Ainslie Richard Moorman George Beard Willie Grey Neal Donald Bornstein William Parsons John Chafin William Porterfield James Chance Edwin Pratt Louis Coady Charles Pullin Ralph Corrin Arthur Tafel Charles Fairless Gilbert Weddington Paul LaCoste M. C. Welch | C. C. McDonald Roderick Zeller, Jr. | The American Society of Civil Engineers is the ing students a contact with the current procedures j student branch of the national organization of the of the civil engineering field and to promote fellow- A.S.C.E. Its purpose is to afford the civil engineer- ship and honesty among the members. i | AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS oe The American Society of Mechanical Engineers is a student organization at the Speed Scientific School and is under the jurisdiction of the National Senior Branch of the A.S.M.E. This group offers a ae re Ride OFFICERS CHARLES F. BUSH.....2......-.......-.--.....-Chairman RICHARD M. PakRISH................Wice-Chairman ROBERT Go BILLIG:...-..2-) 4... ecretary CHarLes W. BUCKMAN coseee-es ] reasurer H. H. FENwIck _......----Honorary Chairman an opportunity for those men who are more deeply interested in engineering than their fellows to cul- tivate and express their technical inclinations. Spee SCHOOL STUDENT COUNCIL Ainslie Anderson Berman Gianacakes Hill Warner Ley Lovell OFFICERS DIT UART BERMAN .ccce cuseccdSizeccecuctestst testa Chairman GEYDE WARNER, JReccsicccc sents cerned Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Pete J. Gianacakes James Ley Charles W. Lovell Clyde Warner George Ainslie Vaughn Anderson J. B. Hill Stuart Berman Robert Johnson The Speed School Student Council is a represen- tative group with members selected from each class and from the four professional societies. The coun- cilâs chief function is to cooperate with the ad- ministration, faculty, and students in formulating policies which are to the best interest of the school. In this role it must be the impartial judge of peti- tions presented by faculty and students. These are the book-worms . . . they worked hard .. . they glued... BOOKMAKERS they wrote . . . they telephoned . . . they figured . . . they discussed . . . they typed . .. they snacked . . . they put the book togetherâhere âtis. Sisi 8) LEC (RICAL Ve iy - CAL SRING Through these portals walk perspective engineers, Making mud pies books and slide rules Your figures are off ... and Columbus discovered America Doesnât this shock you? fp FUTURE ENGINEERS OF AMERICA Speed School prepares young men to be Chemi- cal, Civil, Electrical or Mechanical Engineers. The trade-mark of these students is the slide rule, that handy little gadget, that does most everything ex- cept talk. Forming a large part of the study are labs, where the engineers learn by doing. Most any time you might find yourself obstructing the view of busy surveyors about the campus. In the past, co-op work supplemented the curriculum, but has been curtailed since the Navy men have been here. Calculating calculus Trosper in the files your guess is as good as mine... Joyce brought a bit of Hawaii to U. of L. . . . Bernice assured the audience that âI Love Youâ . . . sailors were fed and entertained at open houses . . . the freshmen were put through their paces . . . three silhouettes on the walk The Photographer gets mugged . . . portrait of White Hall. Ng PANHELLENIC COUNCIL lie cine eee Boggess Clark Coldiron Colvin Hagemann Head Leachman McLean Pouchot Ritchie OFFICERS RRC E ESS INESOORI ED Saettacts ete toe vache te ia an eae Rh Ne ee ae President RuTtH McLEAN Vice-President DASARI IRENA WIT pe see 8S ens ee eee ee ee Secretary ISWETUVEAGORDIRON cs cree eee secon eee: OS es EM oe AE eae RRS en Ee Treasurer Janellen Boggess Annie Badham Clark Lucille Coldiron MEMBERS Virginia Colvin Harriette Hagemann Jean Churchill Head Dorothy Leachman Ruth McLean Eleanor Pouchot Joyce Ritchie All the Greek letter sororities on the campus are bound together in the Panhellenic Council. The purpose of Panhellenic is to promote good-will and cooperation between these sororities. It aims to keep sorority life on a high plane, and to help to maintain high social and scholastic standards throughout the college. The membership of Pan- hellenic is composed of two representatives from each groupâthe president and the rush chairman. CARDINALETTE Founded at the University of Louisville, October, 1934 Akins Ash Billig DeCosta Duncan Eisenmenger Felknor, F. Felknor, L. Hilton Horst Jaegle Kerst Link Lorenz Maier Page Sawyer Scalf Schalk Seiller Shaw Stephenson Thatcher Wagner Willis OFFICERS PSORISSPM TIRING) cos ceecnnsccrad cee scsnseecpoeapsesy sate ance sĂ© raierod tg S0d CaPRC OS pots ene ee President ELTGES WAGNER: sastscerstecnesceesee sascss tases pease ence ice aet gee ens Peamneprees ee EV ELON ACTOR GLEESON: ca saceree ce Sees ae pss sag a oe sd cae tem atu ee Sateen gerne coanauecocuenee Treasurer f. CHI OMEGA Bledsoe Brownell Caldwell Christian Coldiron Edwards Ferris Fible Fort Funk Grace Ingram McKenna Miller Myers Offner Oppenheimer Pedersen Powell Ray Ritchie Sloane Spalding Snowden Taliaferro Thompson Uland Weber Wheeler Young BETA GAMMA National Organization founded at the University of Arkansas, April 5, 1895, Fayetteville, Ark. Beta Gamma Chapter founded at the University of Louisville, April 30, 1929 OFFICERS LUCIEE COMDRON, 2.400. an- SRE ge ae RO Frio herent President JESSIE SEOARE © xcc-cea. ct Sores ea ener ee Vice-President JANE THOMPSON .... -.-Secretary BIB IER HORT ee. cicscees ie cetsee se endow ative ives casaoe ne atone eee Treasurer Mary Lois Bledsoe Frances Brownell Virginia Caldwell Betty Christian Lucille Edwards Patricia Ferris Jean Fible Louise Funk Frances Grace Nancy Ingram Mary Frances McKenna Clarice Miller Mary Jane Myers MEMBERS Margaret Offner Jean Oppenheimer Doris Pedersen Margaret Powell Aileen Ray Joyce Ritchie Dorothy Spalding Sally Snowden Lavergne Taliaferro Virginia Uland Betty Weber Anna Wheeler Bettye Ann Young wns ty KAPPA: DELTA Breen Collings Cook Cotton Doane Freeman Gober Johnson Kessack Larkin Marmor McMullen McLean Moser Oster Parsons Pouchot Rollings Sage Scearce Seng Thomas, B. Thomas, L. Wallner Wittmer KAPPA DELTA National Organization founded at Virginia State Normal, October 23, 1897 Alpha Xi Chapter founded at University of Louisville, April 14, 1928 OFFICERS UU EIMGD RAN) 2 ort. A Jotakenaewasenee eV OSTOENE BEETS COLINGS 20. a ee ere Le Vice-President MARTHAWANN SENG. = co 4 258 ot ee Secretary NINE CHIT ON on Gee Ere te eee ee Treasurer MEMBERS Evelyn Breen Elizabeth Moser Bette Collings Billie Oster Ruth Cook Martha Parsons Anne Cotton Doris Doane Patricia Freeman Margaret Gober Nancy Johnson Eleanor Pouchot Marilyn Rollings Lennamae Sage Prudence Scearce Martha Ann Seng Patricia Kessack Betty Thomas Frances Larkin Lucille Thomas Betty Marmor Barbara Wallner Ruth McLean Maeg Wittmer Patricia McMullen PL BETA: Pl Altsheler Arrasmith Arterburn Bakrow Boggess Boggess Carpenter Clark Evans Ewing Gore Harris Hazelip Heitmeyer Horne Hughes Lechleiter Lindsay Major Matthews McCulley McMeekin Morris Mullin Reager Reid Richardson Ropke Stacy Thurman True Wickstead Williams KENTUCKY ALPHA CHAPTER National Organization founded Monmouth, Illinois, 1867 Kentucky Alpha Chapter founded October 9, 1925 OFFICERS NP ASHES RENEE NOS Rp see Neer etc eee President IESE OR Gi ea 2 Sees sec eae es ee erence Vice-President MARTHA ANN HORNE.........-2.---:-000---+- SE ee eee ace er PR Secretary ANTAG EAR BR SUSR IN cesarean sete one ses et aw cane A PY EOSIN: MEMBERS .| Marie Altsheler Ann Arrasmith Alice Arterburn Ann Bakrow Helen Boggess Janellen Boggess Caroline Carpenter Annie Badham Clark Emma Lou Evans Betsy Ewing Janet Gore Mary Rhodes Harris Mary Jane Hazelip Marian Heitmeyer Martha Ann Horne Ann Hughes Vincentia Lechleiter Joyce Lindsay Virginia Major Ann Mathews Virg McCulley Rosalind McMeekin Mary Hardin Morris Peggy Mullin Patricia Reager Doris Reid Betty Ruth Richardson Elsa Ropke Jane Stacy Barbara Thurman Lois True Ann Wickstead Ann Williams te SIGMA KAPPA Blalock Clem Crutcher Dalton Danhauer DeGraw Diebold Durnil Francis Gavin Glossop Graves Hagemann Harding Hart Head Heckaman Huber King Kirchner Kleinstarink Mahorney McDermott Parker Pease Peterson Scharre Sikking Standard Stiglitz, Warns Wedekind West White Woodside Estep ALPHA THETA CHAPTER Sigma Kappa founded 1874, Colby College Alpha Theta Chapter founded July 5, 1922 OFFICERS MEBDREDISCHARRE! S002, Ae cae a ee ee | ae President RAN CHURGHIUISTIRADS 5, 22 :.., sak Rite ee Vice-President MariE GRAVES .... Secretary VER GIN TAU RIRCEEMER == Se S,, BUN Ot Ne es en, A Treasurer MEMBERS Betty Blalock Patricia King Adele Clem Virginia Kirchner Evelyn Crutcher Betty Kleinstarink Agnes Dalton Joan Mahorney Molly Danhauer Rita McDermott Doris DeGraw Gwen Parker Martha Diebold Joyce Pease Martha Durnil Nancy Peterson Ruth Francis Mildred Scharre Mary Catherine Gavin Martha Sikking Mary Ann Glossop Dorothy Standard Marie Graves Julia Stiglitz Harriette Hagemann Alice Warns Frances Harding Jennie Lou Wedekind Jean Hart Mary Ann West Jean Churchill Head Louise White Marilyn Heckaman Peggy Woodside Margaret Huber Lindy Estep DELTA Buskirk Cattina Chambers Colvin Gardner Hidvegi Isgrigg Kincaid Kleinmeyer Leachman Olsen Orndorff Payton Showalter Turner Volk Vormbrock Mansfield BETA GAMMA CHAPTER National Organization fowaded at Miami, Ohio, October 24, 1902 B eta Gamma Chapter founded at the University of Louisville, September 1, 1928 OFFICERS IDSROTEEY RACHIAIANG oti Bee sR oe Fee eR President HUEEEL NEA) EMIDVBGY 2c aces ios ere esses .-Vice-President BSERNTIGH CONSE Nig ogee eas hee aa ceneeeees OOCTCLATY VPA ESTOS ON OE Kee oh se a ie ee Treasurer MEMBERS Martha Buskirk Margaret Cattina Colleen Chambers Virginia Colvin Verna Gardner Thelma Hidvegi Lucille Isgrigg Marian Kincaid Agnes Kleinmeyer Dorothy Leachman Bernice Olsen Alice Orndorff Shirley Payton Jane Showalter Selma Turner Mary Ellen Volk Doris Vormbrock OFFICERS LILLIAN GorDON .- ch sagen Liye ie oe Bose TOE SANE ARRIGO t cos yovies asa ecer cee: Sue Nae tee, NR ae JUNINETUR IRUSHINVER oa .cccscsanneccceoeeerrectieeen MiriAM GOLDSTEIN ........---------2--+---- MEMBERS Sylvia Epstein Miriam Goldstein Lillian Gordon Annette Kushner Doris Larber Marian Rose Lefokivitz PHI SIGMA TAU RARE tas SOS Ae Secretary veveeee-es-'] TEASUTET Shirley Manfried Anne Lee Markowitz Dena Parris Dorothy Pearson May Pink Frieda Rieser Epstein Goldstein Gordon Kushner Larber Lefokivitz Manfried Markowitz Parris Pearson Pink Rieser ak KAPPA First Row: Ainslie, Corwin, Dysart, Gernert, Hardy, Hendershot. Second Row: Knight, James Mapother, John Mapother, Perry, Richeimer, Sacra. Third Row: Williams, Springer, Tafel, Taylor, Trapp, Tyler. Fourth Row: Bennett, Raber, Emery, Fowler, Hayman, Hibbard. Fifth Row: Hill, R. Johnson, T. Johnson, LaCoste, Lynch, Petty. BETA OMICRON Kappa Alpha Order founded at Washington and Lee University in 1865. Beta Omicron Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order founded at the University of Louisville, 1921. I John Mapother II Tom Johnson III George Ainslie TV Arthur Tafel V_ John Trapp VI George Williams VII Rigdon Petty VIII Stuart Hendershot IX James Emery MEMBERS Bud Ainslie Charles Taylus William Corwin John Trapp Richard Dysart sordon Tyler Bud Gernert James Bennett Ewing Hardy Philip Raber Stuart Hendershot Joseph Fowler Joe Knight John Hayman James Mapother John Mapother James Perry James Richeimer Robert Sacra George William Robert Springer Arthur Tafel Robert Hibbard J. B. Hill Roger Johnson Thomas Johnson Paul LaCoste Robert Lynch Carlisle Petty we SIGMA CHI SIGMA Founded at University of Louisville, April 12, 1924 Arnold Bauer Bernaola Blockson Cassidy Cowley Duley Ehlig Ellison Englehard Gray Hand Haycraft Winter McCoy Miller Mondeau Wright Zoeller Rossman Seyfreit Snyder Spellacy Wagner OFFICERS sh Gat YO 9 1 (eee ne tev ect ea President IDIGK: BIGCRSON: 35, ae _-w----5eCTetary KOEN YOREAND sxcsecsectoccesasceancd acesnued Beret S: Vice-President (AUDA ZORLGER 2470 foto lh ee _......-T reasurer MEMBERS Frank Arnold James Cowley Robert Gray E. D. Miller Paul Seyfreit Paul Bauer Jack Duley Kenneth Hand Eugene Mondeau David Snyder Ramon Bernaola William Ehlig James Haycraft Louis Wright Jack Spellacy Richard Blockson Ernest Ellison James Winter Allan Zoeller Norb Wagner Frank Cassidy Warren Engelhard Bryan McCoy Harry Rossman TAU KAPPA EPSILON Carr Colberg Curry Enriquez Johnson McCrocklin Nuckles Smith Sterling Thome Torres Turner ALPHA CHI CHAPTER Tau Kappa Epsilon founded January 10, 1899, Illinois Wesleyan University Alpha Chi Chapter founded September 12, 1942 OFFICERS ARTETA ees bo Ne oe eee aa President LYNN: SUBREING: 5.2: Seca stacnste ie ee eer etary WILLIAM CuRRY Vice-President KENNETH NGCROCKRING 34. 5c ee ees Treasurer MEMBERS Allen Brown William Curry Louis Giesel Kenneth McCrocklin Lynn Sterling Frank Carr Wallace Enriquez Leroy Gruner Robert Nicholes Bert Thome Ballard Cassidy Edward Fust John S. Johnson Joseph Nuckles Louis Torres Giovanni Colberg John Gerent Edward Linneman Charles Smith Jack Turner Pedro Colberg d On THETA TAU Adams Agee Anderson Buckman Caldwell Clark Cornwell Crush Cunningham Deane Ditto Reaves Handmaker Hughes Jacobs Leep Mattei McCarthy Neal Norris Parrish Schmidt Stroehmeier Watson Weber Wolf Zabban Ziegler DELTA BETA CHAPTER Theta Tau founded November 15, 1904, University of Minnesota Delta Beta Chapter founded May 20, 1939 OFFICERS FRIGERARD: PARIS ER cscs asus e cae ae ects cscs se cago cigs ee ca aoe er aaa Regent PEEING) PURBBAIN eps Stcce pete ots cath eatepeantp scans Ss taterge rn tee tt ts Sena Sy opemserc naga oy nee vekeeteSb ee Vice-Regent OSEGARIGE BED OOREMANY secede es cae sie OO Be od ere ac sea Sete arcs rel eean cee aeevaboes Treasurer MEMBERS James Adams Richard Cornwall Allen Handmaker William Neal George Weber Thomas Agee Charles Crush Philip Hughes James Norris Joseph Wolf Vaughn Anderson Dewey Cunningham Eugene Jacobs Richard Parrish Zeno Zabban Charles Buckman Eugene Deane Gus Leep Howard Schmidt Robert Ziegler Gordon Caldwell Robert Ditto Dominic Mattei Robert Stroehmeier Joseph Clark Frank Reaves Jerome McCarthy Philip Watson TRIANGLE National Social Fraternity for Engineers founded April 15, 1907 Louisville Chapter established March 22, 1941 Bauer Berman Billhartz Coady Nalley Gianacakes Haragan Hughes Johnson Kuchenbrod Lovell McKinley Mendicino Minns Myatt Straub Warner Whitehouse Will Zeller OFFICERS STUART BERMAN ey â Se ae eee Ai, yon ES .....-President CLYDE WARNER ..........------- Banca Noe aI ca e ah ee eee Vice-President WILLIAM LOVELL nis See eee oer pr ee ; wovuenne---OECTELATY RoBert WILI es baba eee asia heed Treasurer MEMBERS Leo Bauer Oswald Fremd Ben Kuchenbrod Frank Mimms Howard Whitehouse Stuart Berman Pete Gianacakes William Love Donald Myatt Robert Will Edward Billhartz Robert Haragan William Lovell Richard Nalley Roderick Zeller Louis Coady William Hughes Stuart McKinley Earl Straub Robert Ernst Robert Johnscn James Mendicino Clyde Warner, Jr. BETA TAU: CHI Beta Tau Chi founded at the University of Louisville in the fall, 1939 Bornstein Friedman Gittleman Goldstein Hanish Held Issacs Kommer Levy Loeser Mann Russman Schneider Shenson Slyn DONALD BORNSTEIN ZOLLMAN KOMMER Davip GITTLEMAN Davin GOLDSTEIN Donald Bornstein Herbert Friedman David Gittleman David Goldstein Sidney Hanish OFFICERS MEMBERS Murray Held Arthur Issacs Zollman Kommer Louis Levy Stanley Loeser PA TL SV Oe AED, EEN OE NOR ef RESEND Srey es cemceeaa Secretary BS Te Oe no Ue see is aes ba aes cpa cassette eeu RNS Treasurer Bernard Mann Milton Russman Louis Schneider Leonard Shenson Allan T. Slyn KAPPA PI EPSILON MEMBERSHIP LIST 1943-44 = FACULTY Dr. Charles F. Virtue, President, Philosophy. Dr. Robert A. Warner, Vice-President, Social Science. Dr. Laurence L. Howe, Secretary-Treasurer, History. Prof. John J. Cronin, Social Administration. Prof, L. R. Jeanblanc, Law. Dr. Noble H. Kelley, Psychology. Dr. Robert I. Kutak, Sociology. Dr. William C. Mallalieu, History. Dean J. J. Oppenheimer. Miss Annie L, Pruitt, Social Administration. Prof. A. C. Russell, Law. Prof. Frederick W. Stamm, Division of Adult Education. Dean Hilda Threlkeld. Lt. Argus Tresidder, Navy. Dr. Kenneth P. Vinsel, Political Science. Dr. Harvey C. Webster, English. gee on Dr. Charles W. Williams, Economics. 4 OFF-CAMPUS MEMBERS mal Miss Regina Cohn, Social Administration. Mr. Tarleton Collier, Journalism. Miss Evelyn Z. Phelps, Social Administration. Miss Louise G. Robertson, Education. Mrs. L. J. Sherrill, Social Administration. Student Associate MembersâOn Campus Miss Jean Oppenheimer, Political Science. Miss Mary Lou Trigg, History. Student Associate MembersâOff Campus Miss Ruth C. Davidson Mr. Raymond Schultz Mrs. Nellie S. Hayse Miss Norma Schumacher Miss Margaret Hopper Mrs. Sally S. Stiglitz Howe Mrs. Jeanette M. Palmer Miss Carol L. Wedekind Mr. Chester Pfeiffer OMICRON DELTA KAPPA 4 Virtue Warner Berman Ladt Lovell Mapother Moore Parrish Sherman Whitehouse Zeller OFFICERS SSRI ATS ER MEAN yeas eo ed ce ey snare an eae PS oh, ears ere President RICHARD HaRviIn ....Vice-President CHARLES VIRTUE .......-- ..--.--Secretary-T reasurer MEMBERS Stuart Berman Richard Harvin John Mapother Guy Stevenson Ford Wilkinson, Jr. Charles Bush Einar Jacobsen J. J. Oppenheimer Argus Tresidder Wilson W. Wyatt Gene Carpenter Samuel Lancaster Richard Parrish Charles Virtue Roderick Zeller Robert Clark Carl Langenhop Frederick Stamm Howard Whitehouse â John Zurfhuh Charles Farnsley Beta Epsilon Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa is members on the basis of character and achievement the successor to the College of Cardinals. A in scholarship, social and religious affairs, athletics, national honorary leadership fraternity, it elects publications, speech, music and dramatic arts. PALLAS: GLUE Breitenstein Cunningham Kerst Kincaid Oppenheimer Ropke Sloane Thomas OFFICERS leah COUN INGE A Miata = iene ee a ere ee eee Chairman GAROL BREITENSTEIN -.-â :-.-0c--n ceccocsensesvseccewentnserceneasteesacsessutacsucdessco SECT CLQNDICD TEASUTET HILDEGARDE KERST ........ Pea lage nse net yp asa a eee aectene en eee ee eae ESL OTIOLT MEMBERS Carol Breitenstein Marian Kincaid Jessie Sloane Helen Cunningham Jean Oppenheimer Lucille Thomas Hildegarde Kerst Elsa Ropke The Pallas Club is an honorary organization for Fund, used to make loans to students in all schools senior women. They are chosen on the basis of of the University. The ultimate goal of the Pallas scholarship, character and service to the Univer- Club is to make Mortar Board, a national honorary sity. Each year the club sponsors a tag sale, the organization for women. proceeds of which go into the Joe Steiger Memorial we SIGMA TAU Row One: Bailey, Berman, Bolls, Bush, Emery, Lovell. Row Two: Mack, Parrish, Trap, Watts, Zabban. OFFICERS STUART BERMAN .......---0-:--+-0-+++-- BM a gat ce oe Rar aia gee President CHARLES BusH . Een NS se Pee Me Mee epee Me th ........Wice-President CHARLES LOVELL Ce, ee orn ae x SOR Or RE) SERRE ARTE, een E Recording Secretary RGEEARD ac ARRISHT poste eg bce coe Besac hve asap taal eciicees Beene Corresponding Secretary JOHN TRAPP .24...2... Be a aaa a Oto adc fecoa «a seo Sep ete Sian EU COSTAL OT, ZENO ZABBAN ....-.-.- Pic cae ges Pt pen eis asa Sea Scene ee a oa SEO THUY ROB BRI, SCARS geet sean lta at ee eres deste eee Sergeant-at-Arms Sigma Tau is the national engineering honorary Practicality is a measure of the capability of the fraternity at Speed School. The requirements for man to apply his engineering knowledge in the membership in this organization are scholarship, solution of practical problems. The public spirit- practicality and sociability. In scholarship a can- edness of the man is the indication of his sociabil- didate must rank in the upper third of his class. ity. THETA CAl DELE First Row: Berner, Robards, Cunningham, Duley, Ferguson. Second Row: Kerst, Kishner, Lawrence, Levi, Lutz. Third Row: Roth, Weindl, Trapp, Moore, Flanders. OFFICERS SHIRLEY WEINDL....... ee President WARREN SLACK ........-- Vice-President HILDEGARDE KERST - ...... Secretary JOHN: TRAPP: Secs pecceee sree Treasurer The Alpha Gamma Chapter of Theta Chi Delta was char- tered November 14, 1934, on the University of Louisville Campus. This fraternity is a national hon- orary chemical organization open only to chemistry majors or minors and chemical engineers who have completed three terms of chemistry with a minimum 2.00 standing in chemistry and a minimum of 1.75 in other work. The aims of the fraternity are: to foster the interest of chemistry on the campus and elsewhere; to aid its members to maintain their standings; and to help other stu- dents with their chemical work in any way possible. MEMBERS Vernie Lawrence Hanni Lore Levi Irvin Lutz Leelah Robards Clifford Berner Carol Breitenstein Helen Cunningham Jack Duley George Roth Warren Slack John Trapp Shirley Weindl Thomas Ferguson Clifford Flanders Hildegarde Kerst Celia Kishner INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL Anderson Bornstein Ehlig Hill Levy Lovell Mapother McCrocklin Thome  Warner Wolf OFFICERS INV) UB) 5 Pon Od ÂŁ4) (2 yen en pee A lB RE PA President wate Vice-President ecretary-T reasurer CLYDE WARNER ... Ve ELAR. acess sc coca tac cos wc 0 asec cebu ae ees pose c cameramen MEMBERS Louis Levy William Lovell John Mapother Joe Wolf Kenny McCrocklin all business and functions of fraternities as a whole, to foster a better understanding and spirit among the organizations and to cooperate with the Uni- versity in keeping fraternity life on a high plane. Kenny Hand J. B. Hill Vaughn Anderson Donald Bornstein The Inter-Fraternity Council is the central fra- ternity-governing commission on the campus. Its membership is composed of two delegates from each campus fraternity. Its purpose is to conduct Or SEP S OFFICERS LT. STILLMAN E. McKERLEY, U.S.N.R. Commanding Officer Springfield, Mass.; B.S., University of New Hampshire; Ed. M., Bos- ton University. Director of Research and Administrative Assistant to Superintendent, Springfield Public School System, Springfield, Mass. Arrived from U.S.N.R.M.S. Columbia University, New York, to put the U.S.N.T.S., V-12, U. of L. into commission. LT. EDWARD C. KEEFE, U.S.N.R. Executive Officer Larchmont, N. Y.; A.B., M.A., Ohio University; attended Columbia School of Law, Columbia University. Formerly attached to the Dis- trict Security Office, 8th Naval District, New Orleans, La. Recently transferred to serve as commanding officer of Navy Academic Refresh- er Unit V-5, Murray State Teachers College, Murray, Ky. LT. ARGUS TRESIDDER, U.S.N.R. Educational Officer Buffalo, N. Y.; A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Cornell University. Served on faculties of University of Kansas, U. of Tennessee, Cornell Univer- sity, Madison College, Va., City College of N. Y.; arrived at U. of L. on October 15, 1943, from Seamanship Dept., U.S.N.T.S. Cornell University. Lr. G. M. Catpwett (MC), U.S.N.R. Medical Office: Radford, Va.; B.S., Roanoake Col- lege; M.D., University of Virginia. Physician at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Came to U. of L. from U.S.S. Shubrick, Atlantic Fleet, No vember 21, 1943. Lr. (jg) Dororny Henry, U.S.N.R. Supply Officer Atlanta, Ga.; A.B., Duke University; Navy Supply Corps School, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass. Has served as supply officer here since June 18, 1943 es Lr. (jg) DouGias Tay or, U.S.N.R. Athletic Officer Plaquemine, La.; A.B., University of Mississippi; M.A., Louisiana State University. Football coach at Plaque mine High School. Came aboard on June 8, 1943, from N.O.B., Key West, Fla. SHIPS COMPANY Front Row: Lt. Taylor, Lt. Caldwell, Lt. Kubly, Lt. McKerley, Lt. Tresi Ider, Lt. Henry Second Row: Beyers, Ray, Swindler, Cummins, Olson, Diersing. Back Row: Maggard, Pugh, McAfee, Casey, Church, Davitt, Young Kp Ables Abrahamsen Achorn Hughes Adcock Anderson Apted Arnold Aulde Auron Baccus Bailey Baker Barber Beckner Beldc on Bell Bennett Benson Berman Billharz Blackerby Blackman Blunt Boggess Bolls Bonasso Boston Brackenwragen Breathitt Brookins Brown, J. Brown, W. J. H. ABLES, JR. (Vicksburg, Miss.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Transferred from Mississippi State College. ROY F. ABRAHAMSEN (Chicago, Ill.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering. F. P. ACHORN (Biloxi, Miss.); Speed School, Sophomore, Ch.E.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Trans- ferred from Mississippi State College WILLIAM G. HUGHES (Mt. Pleasant, Tenn.); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; Triangle; A.L.E.E. JACK H. ADCOCK (Knoxville, Tenn.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Speed Honor Council. JOE WESTLEY ANDERSON (Seminole, Okla.); Liberal Arts, C.E.; Formerly attended the University of Oklahoma. ROY R. APTED (Seattle, Wash.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Engineering. FRANK H. ARNOLD (Buechel, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; Sigma Chi Sigma; Chemistry Club; P.E.P.; ILR.C.; Newman Club. BENJAMIN J. AULDE, JR. (Franklin, W. Va.); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; Phi Sigma Nu; Transferred from Potomac State School of W. Va. BEN AURON (Chicago, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Commerce: P.E.P.; Newman Club. CHARLES LUCIAN BACCUS (Eddy- ville, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic. THOMAS RICE BAILEY (Kenova, W. Va.); Speed School, Senior, E.E.; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; Band; A.I.E.E.: Chairman of A.LE.E.; Transferred from Marshall College. LEO M. BAKER (Alton, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Deck; P.E.P.; Christian Youth Fellowship. GENE D. BARBER (Paintsville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; A.LE.E.; Sigma Chi Sigma; Transferred from Berea Col- lege. FRED BECKNER (Whitesburg, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; Chemistry Club; Baptist Student Union; Transferred from East Tennessee State College. ARTHUR W. BELDEN, JR. (Birmingham, Ala.); Speed School. Sophomore, E.E. SAMUEL V. BELL, JR. (Liberty, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; A.I.E.E.; Transferred from Berea College. JAMES STAUBER BENNETT (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Kappa Alpha. JOE NEAL BENSON (Jackson, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, M.E. STUART M. BERMAN (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Inter-Fraternity Council; Triangle; Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; O.D.K.; A.S.M.E.; Campus Convocation Committee: Chairman of the Engineersâ Ball for 1944; Chairman of Campus Social Committee; President of Speed Student Council; President of Sigma Tau; President of Omicron Delta Kappa; Presi- dent of Triangle Fraternity. ED BILLHARZ (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Triangle; Speed Student Council; Campus Cardinal Track Team; Treasurer of Junior Class, YEAGER BLACKERBY (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sopho- more, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi Sigma; Chemistry Club; Presby- terian Club; Junior Councilor; Social Committee; Vice-President of the Presbyterian Club. THOMAS BLACKMAN (Klamath Falls, Ore.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. D. E. BLUNT (Grantsville, Utah); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering; Band. WILLIAM ALLEN BOGGESS (Versailles, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic; Formerly attended Tri-State Engineering Col- lege. ALLEN RICHARD BOLLS (Indianola, Miss.); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; Phi Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; A.S.C.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. SAMUEL PETE BONASSO (Clarksburg, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre- Medical; Newman Club; Liberal Arts Student Council; Formerly attended Fairmont State College. JOE CALVIN BOSTON (San Antonio, Texas); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. S. G. BRACKENWAGEN (Brookings, S. D.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. HARVIE W. BREATHITT (Lakeland, Fla.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, E.E.; P.E.P.; Presby- terian Club, EUGENE MARVIN BROOKINS (Duncan, Okla.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering. JAMES LAWRENCE BROWN (Minneapolis, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Chemistry Club; Transferred from Macales- ter College. WILLIAM EDWARD BROWN (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; Triangle; Secretary of the Fresh- man Class. Bruce Buggy Butler Campbell Carigan Carleton Carter, H. Carter, R. Chance Chandler Chaney Clements Coady Colyer Cook, E. Cook, f: Corl Cressman Cunningham Dalton Davis Deprosporo Parry Dotson Droz Duley Dunbar Ellington Elliott Watson Emery, J. Emery, L. Enelow Re! CHARLES RAY BRUCE (Speedwell, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Physics; P.E.P.; Methodist Club. WILLIAM JOHN BUGGY (Blue Earth, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Chorus; Newman Club. ALLEN H. BUTLER (Memphis, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Mathematics; P.E.P.; Spanish Club; Baptist Student Union, PRICE C. CAMPBELL (Louisville, Ky.): Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical. PATRICK H, CARIGAN (Liberty, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic. JOHN L. CARLETON (Seattle, Wash.); Liberal Arts, Sopho- more, Pre-Medical; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; Chorus; Pres- byterian Club. HOWARD FRANKLIN CARTER (Pontotoc, Miss.): Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. ROBERT P. CARTER (Franklinton, La.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Delta Chi; Methodist Club; Transferred from Louisiana State College. JAMES H. CHANCE (Wheeling, W. Va.); Speed School, Sophomore, C.E.; P.E.P.; A.S.C.E.; Trans: ferred from Bethany College. JOHN CHANDLER (Union City, Tenn.); Speed School, Sophomore, Engineering; Alpha Tau Upsilon; Transferred from Mississippi State College. JOSEPH G. CHANEY (Horse Cave, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. CLINTON E., CLEMENTS (Havensville, Kan.);- Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. LOUIS DAPPED COADY, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; Triangle: Thoroughbred; P.E.P.; Newman Club: Navy Chorus; A.S.C.E. LEQ ALLEN COLYER (Anchorage, Ky.): Liberal Arts, Freshman, Mathematics. EMERSON E. COOK (Columbus, Ind.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic. JOSEPH COOK (Newark, N. J.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Mathematics. WILLIAM T. CORL (Webb City, Mo.): Law School, Freshman, Law; Chorus; P.E.P.; Presbyterian Club; Cardinal; Sigma Nu; Business Manager of the Cardinal; Formerly attended University of Arkansas and Northwestern. ROBERT A. CRESSMAN (Columbus, Ohio): Speed School. DEWEY J. CUNNINGHAM (Los Angeles, Calif.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Theta Tau; Band; Navy Dance Band. P. E. DALTON (Beacon, N. Y.):; Liberal Ans, Junior, Pre- Medical; P.E.P.; Little Theater. ROBERT LEE DAVIS (Jack- sonville, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Pre-Medical; Transferred, from Illinois College. QUINTO DE PROSPERO (Morgantown, W. Va: Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Newman Club: A'S.M.E.; Trans- ferred from West Virginia University. JOHN PARRY (Arnold, Pa.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Pre-Medical: Navy Chorus; P.E.P.; Varsity Basketball. ERNEST N. DOTSON (Marmet, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.: P.E.P.; A.S.M.E.; Transferred from Marshall College DALE DROZ (Fairfield, Iowa); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. JACK RAY DULEY (Adairville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi Sigma; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; P.E.P.; Theta Chi Delta. GWINN C. DUNBAR (Garlin, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic JIM W. ELLINGTON (Ashland, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, M.E.: P.E.P.; Transferred from Ashland Junior College. PAUL H. ELLIOTT (Houston, Texas); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Canterbury Club: Formerly attended Texas A. and M. University and Berea College. PHILIP B. WATSON, JR (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Sophomore, Ch.E.; Theta Tau; Newman Club: Navy Chorus: A.I.Ch.E. JAMES H. EMERY (Fairmont, W. Va.): Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Kappa Alpha; Sigma Tau; Presbyterian Club; A.S.M.E.; Transferred from West Virginia University. LLOYD C, EMERY (Paducah, Ky.); Liberal Arts; P.E.P.; Liberal Arts Student Coun- cil; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Transferred from Vanderbilt University. MORTIN L. ENELOW (Hollidays Cove, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Phi Sigma Dela; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Chemistry Club; Bausch and Lomb Scientific Award; Transferred from West Virginia University. Englehard Estler Fairless Falk Fanz Fawcett Ferguson Fisher Fowler Francis Fraser Frasher Galloway Gatton Gerde Givens Godar Gotcher Graziano Gregg Grenga Gross Haller Hamm Handmaker Hanson Haragan Harber Hardt Hargrove Harvy Hatmaker Hayman Ga WARREN ENGLEHARD (Aberdeer, S. Dak.); Liberal Arts, Senior, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi Sigma; Biology Club; I.R.C.; Newman Club; Basketball; Formerly attended the University of Minnesota. DAVID SMITH ESTLER (Huntington, W. Va.): Speed School, Junior, M.E.; P.E.P.; Transfer from Marshall Col- lege. CHARLES FAIRLESS (Trenton, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; P.E.P.; Baptist Student Union; A.S.C.E.; Transfer from University of Tennessee Junior College WILLIAM FALK (Moline, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre- Medical; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Transfer from the University of Iowa. MARTIN CARL FRANZ (Brookfield, Ill); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; P.E.P.; A.I.Ch.E.; Transfer from the Illi- nois Institute of Technology. JAMES FLETCHER FAWCETT (Belle, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; A.S.M.E.; Transfer from West Virginia University NORMAN GLENN FERGUSON (Scarbro, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Physics; Chorus; P.E.P.; Baptist Student Union; Band, ROBROY DOAK FISHER (Jonestown, Miss.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, English; P.E.P.; Canterbury Club; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Transfer from Mississippi State College. JOSEPH WILLIAM FOWLER, III (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Kappa Alpha; P.E.P CABELL FRANCIS (Stanford, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Kappa Alpha; Chorus; P.E.P. ; Christian Youth Fellowship; LR.C.; Transfer from the University of Kentucky. I. N. FRASER (Waverly, N. Y.); Speed School, Freshman, E.E.; Navy Chorus: Transfer from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. KENNETH FRASHER (Louisville, Ky.): Liberal Arts, Fresh- man, Basic; Baptist Student Union. HOWARD LAWRENCE GALLOWAY, JR. (Baltimore, Md.); Speed School, Freshman, CHARLES LEROY GATTON (Buechel, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Engineering. MAX CALVIN GERDE (Minneapolis, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Sopho- more, Pre-Dental; Band; Transfer from Hamline University. Basic; Canterbury Club. AMBROSE W. GIVENS (Lawrenceburg, Ky.): Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Varsity Basketball. ALOYS A. GODAR (Hardin, Ill.,); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; BE Pa Newman Club; A.LE.E.; Transfer from St. Louis University. BOB GOTCHER (Fayetteville, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical: Chemistry Club; Thoroughbred; Biology Club: P.E.P.: Methodist Club: Sigma Alpha. RALPH P. GRAZIANO (Oak Park, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; Navy Chorus; Newman Club. WARD REESE GREGG (Dallas, Texas): Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic; Formerly attended Chillicothe Business College. JAMES BENJAMIN GRENGA (Newman, Ga.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering. FRED MOULTON GROSS, JR. (Ashland, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Transfer from Centre College. MARK NEVIL HALLER (Montgomery, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; Transfer from West Virginia Institute of Tech- nology. WILLIAM HENRY HAMM, JR. (Rockwood, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Formerly attended Tennessee Poly- technic Institutee ALLAN EDWIN HANDMAKER (Louis- ville, Ky.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Theta Tau; P.E.P.; A.S.M.E. GARFIELD C. HANSON (Worthington, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Canterbury Club; Navy Dance Band; Transfer from Worthington Junior College. ROBERT M. HARAGAN (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Triangle: Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.: Newman Club HARRY GORDON HARBER (Loyall, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Engineering. KENNETH G. HARDT (Louisville, Ky.): Speed School, Freshman, Basic. BROOKS LYNN HAR- GROVE, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; P.E.P. AUBREY B. HARVEY (Clarksville, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Deck; Pi Kappa Alpha; Transfer from Ohio State University. J. C. HATMAKER (Sharps Chapel, Tenn.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering JOHN S. HAYMAN, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Kappa Alpha; Presbyterian Club; Liberal Arts Student Council. Heaton Hibbard Hill, J. Hill, T. Honaker Hoskinson Houle Howard Hubbard Jahn Jindra Johnson, H Johnson, | Johnson, | Johnson, R. Johnson, I v2) Johnson, R. Johnson, T Juergens Karotis Kayser Kee Kidney King Kinker Klahr Kos Kuchenbrod LaCoste Lacy Ladt Langston Larson [ee J. S. HH. WILLIAM S. HEATON (Clarksdale, Miss.): Speed School, Sophomore, M.E. ROBERT WILLIAM HIBBARD (Hunting: ton, W. Va.): Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical: Kappa Alpha; Transferred from Marshall College. JAMES B. HILL (Louis- ville, Ky.): Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; Inter-Fraternity P.E.P.; Speed Student Council. THOMAS E. HILL (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Chorus; Newman Club. HAROLD HONAKER (Huntington, W. Va.): Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Navy A.LCh.E.; Transferred from Marshall RONALD C, HOSKINSON (Brandenburg, Ky.) Council: Kappa Alpha: Chorus: College. ROLLIN J. HOULE (Forest Lake, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Chemistry Club; Newman Club; Varsity Basketball; Transferred from the College of St. Thomas JOHN D. HOWARD, JR. (Birmingham, Ala.); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Transferred from Howard College. ALTON A. HUBBARD (Rusk, Texas); Speed School, Junior, M.E. PAUL EDWARD JAHN (Aurora, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic. LOUIS J. JINDRA (Cleveland, Ohio); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Chemistry Club; Thoroughbred; P.E.P.; Sigma Alpha; Navy Editor, Thoroughbred. HAROLD H. JOHNSON (Caro, Mich.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic; Band. JOHN A JOHNSON (St. Paul, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical: Chemistry Club; Chorus; P.E.P.; I.R.C.; Varsity JOHN S. JOHNSON (Bridgeton, N. J.): Liberal Arts, Junior, History; Thoroughbred; P.E.P.; French Club; Spanish Club; Little Theater, Methodist Club; Editor, Thoroughbred; Tau Kappa Epsi- lon; Transferred from Asbury College. RAND C, JOHNSON (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Biology Basketball: Transferred from Hamline University Club; P.E.P.; Canterbury Club; Navy Chorus; Sigma Alpha. ROBERT L. JOHNSON (Chicago, Ill.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Triangle; Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; A.I.Ch.E.; Secretary of A.I.Ch.E. ROGER S. JOHNSON (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Kappa Alpha; P.E.P.; Cardinal, Cir- culation Manager; Vice-President of Junior Class. TOM JOHN- SON (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Kappa Alpha; P.E.P.; Speed Student Council; All Campus Student Council; Vice-President of Junior Class; President of the Karotis Fan Club JOHN L. JUERGENS (Belle Plaine, Minn.): Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Thoroughbred; P.E.P.: Theta Chi Delta: Transferred from Macalester College. STANLEY HER- MAN KAROTIS (East Pittsburgh, Pa.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.: Transferred from West Liberty State Teachers College. ECKHARDT WILLIAM KAYSER (Oak Park, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; I.R.C. G. W. KEE (Ripley, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.: P.E.P.; Baptist Student Union; Band; A.S.M.E.; Transferred from Tennessee Technical Institute. ROBERT E. KIDNEY (West De Pere, Wisc.); Liberal Arts, JOHN FORBES KING (New Rochelle, N. Y.): Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Transferred from Stevens Freshman, Basic Institute of Technology. DON R. KINKER (Louisville, Ky.): Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Methodist Club; Varsity Basketball. CHARLES DEAN KLAHR, JR. (Erie, Pa.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Navy Dance Band; Transferred from Stevens Institute of Technology. RUDOLPH S. KOS (Milwaukee, Wisc.): Liberal Arts, Fresh- man, Basic BEN KUCHENBROD (Louisville, Ky.): Speed School, Senior, Ch.E.; Triangle. PAUL V. LACOSTE (Bay St. Louis, Miss.); Speed School, Senior, C.E.; Kappa Alpha; A.S.C.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. HOWARD W. LACY (Cov- ington, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Chemistry Club; Methodist Club; Delta Chi; Transferred from the University of Kentucky. MAX A. LADT (Clarksdale, Miss.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Thoroughbred; Navy Chorus; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; Baptist Stu- dent Union; O.D.K.; A.S.M.E.; Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; President of A.S.M.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. JAMES FRANKLIN LANGSTON (Starkville, Miss.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; Chorus; P.E.P.; Baptist Student Union; Band; Transferred from Mississippi State HAROLD B. LARSON (Rockford, Ill.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering College. Lascheid Lawrence Leavell Leep Lefner Lehman Leigh Leiniger Lester Levin Yelton Litterist Lock Lohn Lovell Lutz Lydick Lynch, G. Lynch, H. Mack Mac Neur Malone Martin McCary McGowan McKay McKenney McReynolds Mendicino Merkert Mimms Minnich Mondeau VINCENT C. LASCHEID, JR. (Pittsburgh, Pa.): Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Deck; P.E.P.; Navy Dance Band; Newman Club: Sigma Nu; Transferred from Bethany College. WVERNIE C LAWRENCE (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Med- ical; Biology Club; P.E.P.; ILR.C.; Methodist Club: Theta Chi Delta; Treasurer of the I.R.C. HUGH NELSON LEAVELL (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Deck. GUS. W. LEEP, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Theta Tau; Navy Chorus; Christian Youth Fellowship: Historian, Freshman Class; Vice-P resident, Sophomore Class: Speed School Editor, Thoroughbred: Treasurer, A.I.Ch.E.; Treas- urer, Theta Tau. THOMAS W. LEFNER (Louisville, Ky.): Speed School, Freshman, Basic Engineering. W. F. LEHMAN (Wetumpke, Ala.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E. ROBERT EARL LEIGH (Maywood, IIl.); Liberal Arts, Fresh- LUTHER E. LEININGER (Tipton, Ind.); Speed ARCHIE L. LESTER (Texarkana, Texas); Liberal Arts, Junior, Biology; Biology Club: Alpha Omega: Formerly attended Texarkana College man, Basic School, Freshman, Basic Engineering HAROLD O. LEVIN (Chicago, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; P.E.P. DONALD LEE YELTON (Kansas City, Mo.); Speed School; Freshman; Engineering. RICHARD W. LITTEREST (Decatur, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre- Medical; Friends of Recorded Music; Christian Youth Fellow- ship; Baptist Student Union; Accompanist, Navy Chorus; Form- erly attended James Millikin University HAROLD VICK LOCKE (Greenville, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, E.E GEORGE L. LOHN, JR. (Charleston, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Deck; Beta Kappa Chi; Transferred from W. Va Institute of Technology. CHARLES W. LOVELL, JR. (Louis- ville, Ky.); Speed School, Senior, C.E.; Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil; Triangle: P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; Board of Student Publications: A.S.C.E.; Vice-President, Inter-Fraternity Council; President, Triangle; Secretary, Sigma Tau; Vice-Presi- dent, A.S.C.E IRVIN H. LUTZ, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Senior, Ch.E.; Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.; Sigma Tau; Theta Chi Delta; A.I.Ch.E.; KEITH A. LYDICK (Wheeling, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Sopho- more, Deck; P.E.P.; Navy Dance Band; Sigma Nu: Transferred from Bethany College. GEORGE DAVID LYNCH, JR. (Rome, Ga.): Liberal Arts, Freshman, Mathematics. H. R. LYNCH (Bronxville, N. Y.): Speed School, Sophomore, Engineering; President, Speed School Honor Council. Chi Psi: Transferred from Stevens Institute of Technology. JAMES CLARNE MACK (Dickson, Tenn.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Sigma Tau; A.S.M.E.; Secretary of Senior Class; Transferred from Tennessee Polytechnic Institute. GRANT MAC NEUR (Oakland, Calif.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Deck; Trans- ferred from Standard University. GLENN PATRICK MALONE (Montgomery, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Newman Club; Transferred from College of St. Thomas. WILLIAM HEFLEY MARTIN (Martin, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Chemistry; Chemistry Club; Methodist Club; Sigma Chi; Formerly attended University of Tennessee; Trans- ferred from United States Naval Academy. RICHARD O. McCARY (Kilgore, Texas); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; P.E.P.; A.LLE.E. JOHN W. McGOWAN (Hopkinsville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Meth- odist Club. JAMES DANIEL McDAY (Mercer, Pa.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic Engineering; P.E.P. E. L. MCKENNEY (Erlanger, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, E.E ROBERT WILSON McREYNOLDS (Lewisburg, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic Engineering. JAMES S. MENDICINO (Webster, Pa.); Speed School, Freshman, C.E.; Triangle, P.E.P GEORGE L. MERKERT (Minneapolis, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical: Chemistry Club; Thoroughbred; P.E.P.; Phi Delta; Transferred from Hamline University. FRANK EWENG MINNS (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Sophomore, C.E.; Triangle, P.E.P. JOSEPH R. MINNICH (Weston, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; P.E.P.; A.LE.E. EUGENE H. P. MONDEAU (Pensacola, Fla.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi Sigma: P.E.P. Moore, H. Moore, W. Morgan Morris Morrison Mundhenk Murphy Myers Myre Neal Nelson Nuckols O'Neal Oney Owen Pachuta Pack Padgett Parker Parkins Parsons Paulk Payne Petty Pommrehn Pool Pope Porterfield Povlich Price Prisk Ptak Pullin fe HARRY MOORE (Edgewood, Pa.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.: Newman Club; Basketball: A.S.M.E.: Formerly attended Mis- sissippi State College. W.B. MOORE (Jackson, Miss.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Chemistry Club; Chorus: Baptist Student Union; Theta Chi Delta; Chorus; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Pi Eta Sigma, President; Transferred from Mis- sissippi State College. JESSE P. MORGAN, JR. (Newport, Tenn.); Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; A.LE.E. CHARLES STANLEY MORRIS (Somerset, Ky.): Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Band; Formerly attended University of Kentucky. WILL C. MORRISON, JR. (Dickson, Tenn.); Speed School; Junior, M.E.; Transferred from Tennessee Technical Institute. JAY CURTIS MURDHENK (Ingomar, Ohio); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; Delta Kappa Epsilon: Battalion Commander: Formerly at- tended Miama University, Oxford, Ohio. PATRICK JOSEPH MURPHY, II (Maysville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Pre-Medical; Navy Chorus; Newman Club. WILFRED I. MYERS (Heilwood, Pa.); Speed School, Freshâ man, Basic Engineering; P.E.P. T.T. MYRE (Paducah, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Transferred from Paducah Junior College. WILLIE G. NEAL (Lebanon, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; Theta Tau: A.S.C.E.; Formerly attended Tennessee Technical College, Cookeville, Tenn. RICHARD HAROLD NELSON (Des Moines, Iowa); Speed School, Fresh- man, Engineering. F. J. NUCKOLS (Tuscaloosa, Ala.); Liberal Arts, Pre-Medical; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Transferred from Uni- versity of Alabama. L. W. O'NEAL (Paducah, Ky.): Liberal Arts, Pre-Medical; Transferred from Paducah Junior College. CHARLES EDWARD ONEY (Ceredo, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; Chorus; P.E.P.; Band; A.LE.E.; Transferred from Marshall College, Huntington, W. Va. CLYDE CHARLES OWEN (Corpus Christi, Texas); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Formerly at- tended Texas College of Arts and Industries, Kingsville, Texas. MICHAEL A. PACHUTA (Mt. Carmel, Pa.); Speed School, Freshman, M.E.; Transferred from Stevens Institute of Tech- nology. RALPH ULYSSES PACK (Paintsville, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering. F. E. PADGETT (Ludlow, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Pre-Dental; P.E.P. LEO PARKER (Alva, Okla.); Liberal Arts, Senior, Pre-Medical; Dance Band; Formerly attended Northwestern State College. ROBERT E. PARKINS (Fayetteville, W. Va.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Sigma Tau Alpha; Transferred from West Virginia Institute of Technology. WILLIAM EUGENE PARSONS (Point Pleasant, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; Formerly attended West Virginia Institute of Technology, Montgomery, W. Va. FREDERICK D. PAULK, JR. (Pulaski, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Formerly attended Tennessee Polytechnic Institute, Cookeville, Tenn. ROBERT G. PAYNE (Columbus, Miss.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.: Baptist Student Union; Cross Country Team; A.I.Ch.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. CARLISLE RIG- DON PETTY (Lynch, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre- Medical; Kappa Alpha: Biology Club; Chemistry Club; Canter- bury Club; Liberal Arts; Student Council RICHARD POMMREHN (Williams, Iowa); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Mathematics. EDWARD LEWIS POOL (Eunice, New Mexico); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Dental. HAROLD EUGENE POPE (Victory, Ky.): Speed School, Senior, M.E.; I.R.C.; Methodist Club: A.S.M.E.: Formerly attended University of Kentucky. WILLIAM C. PORTERFIELD (Bridgeport, Ohio); Speed School, Sophomore, C.E.; P.E.P.; A.S.C.E.; Sigma Nu; Trans- ferred from Bethany College, Bethany, W. Va. R. P. POVLICH (South Milwaukee, Wisc.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Deck. WILLIAM RAY PRICE (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sopho- more, Pre-Medical; Navy Chorus; I.R.C. ALBERT O. PRISK, JR. (Ely, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Chemistry: Formerly attended Ely Junior College. RUDY PTAK (Minneapolis, Minn.): Liberal Arts, Pre-Medical; Biology Club; Chorus: Newman Club; Theta Chi Delta; Sigma Alpha; Trans- ferred from St. Thomas College. CHARLES PULLIN (McKees- port, Pa.); Speed School, Sophomore, C.E.; Kappa Alpha; Trans- ferred from Marshall College. f J Purcell Raber Randolph Ramey Raney Reaves Wilcox Riggenback Rightmeyer Williams Roberts Rossman Ruhlman Sachs Sather Schmidt Winquist Seger Sherman Singleton Skall Slater Sloan Smith, D. Smith, E. Smith, J. Smith, M. Snow Spellacy Spencer Sprouls Stapp Witherington DONALD I. PURCELL (Rector, Ark.); Liberal Arts, Fresh- man, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi; Transferred from the University of Arkansas. JOHN P. RABER (Los Angeles, Calif.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; Kappa Alpha; Biology Club; Chem- istry Club. FRANCIS E. RANDOLPH (Elkhart, Kan.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Engineering. ERNEST McLEOD RAMEY (Ashland, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Senior, Pre-Medical; Phi Delta Theta; Transferred from Centre College. JACK E, RANEY (Cleveland, Ohio); Liberal Arts, Preshman, Engineering. FRANK McLEOD REAVES (Martins- burg, W. Va.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Theta Tau: Canter- bury Club; A.S.M.E.; Religious Council; President, Senior Class: Phi Sigma Kappa; Transferred from West Virginia University. HOWARD J. WILCOX (Philippi, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; P.E.P.; A.I.Ch.E. JOHN E. RIGGENBACH (Chicago, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Engineering. H. D. RIGHTMYER (Vine Grove, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre- Medical; Baptist Student Union; Navy Chorus; Sigma Alpha; Vice-President, Baptist Student Union; Transferred from Camp- bellsville Junior College. CHARLES C. WILLIAMS (Detroit, Mich.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical; P.E.P.; Formerly attended Paducah Junior College and Wayne University. EUGENE C. ROBERTS (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic. HARRY CHARLES ROSSMAN (Minneapolis, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Sigma Chi Sigma; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; Newman Club; Cardinal; Liberal Arts Student Council; Trans- ferred from Macalester College. RICHARD J. RUHLMAN (Warren, Pa.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Transferred from Stevens Institute of Technology. D. A. SACHS, III (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Political Science; Sigma Chi; Transferred from Centre College. HOWARD L. SATHER (Cottonwood, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Transferred from Macalester College. HOWARD M. SCHMIDT (Maywood, Ill.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Theta Tau; A.S.M.E.; Attended Mercer Uni- versity; Transferred from Illinois Institute of Technology. A. D. WINQUIST, JR. (Brooklyn, N. Y.): Speed School, Senior, Ch.E.; P.E.P.: Canterbury Club; A.I.Ch.E.; Transferred from Virginia Polytechnic Institute. JEROME J. SEGER (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Freshman, Engineering. WILLIAM C. SHERMAN (Oak Park, Iil.); Liberal Arts, Junior, English; Inter-Fraternity Council; Sigma Chi Sigma; Friends of Recorded Music; P.E.P.; French Club; I.R.C.; Navy Chorus; Vice-President, Sigma Chi Sigma. WILLIAM ALBERT SINGLETON (Shelby, Miss.); Speed School, Junior, Ch.E.; Alpha Tau Omega; Trans- ferred from Mississippi State College. PAUL ALEXANDER SKAFF (Charleston, W. Va.); Speed School, Junior, E.E.: P.E.P.; A.LLE.E.; Treasurer, A.LE.E.; Transferred from West Virginia University. A. DALE SLATER (Louisville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre- Medical; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; P.E.P. WALLACE SLOAN (Lexington, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Physical Edu- cation; Christian Youth Fellowship; Varsity Basketball; Battalion Adjutant; Transferred from University of Kentucky. D. SMITH (Smithtown, N. Y.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Chorus, Newman Club; Transferred from Stevens Institute of Tech nology. E. P SMITH, JR. (Norwood, La.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Deck; P.E.P.; Baptist Student Union. JOHN R. SMITH (Bowl- ing Green, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre-Medical; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; P.E.P.; Secretary, Navy Chorus; Trans- ferred from Western State Teachers College. MARION LEWIS SMITH (Hopkinsville, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Sophomore, Pre- Medical; Navy Chorus; Beta Theta Phi; Transferred from Van derbilt University. LLOYD GEORGE SNOW (Miami, Fla.); Speed School, Fresh- man, Engineering. JOHN A. SPELLACY (Marble, Minn.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Law; Sigma Chi Sigma; Newman Club; Attended College of St. Thomas; Transferred from University of Minnesota. GLENN E. SPENCER (Seattle, Wash.); Speed School, Freshman, Basic Engineering. GEORGE J. SPROULS (Philadelphia, Pa.); Speed School, Sophomore, M.E.; Transferred from Stevens Institute of Tech nology. ANDREW W. STAPP (Knoxville, Tenn.); Speed School, Junior, M.E. JOSEPH A. WITHERINGTON (Dyers- burg, Tenn.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Pre-Medical; Navy Chorus; Methodist Club; Cardinal. Swaim Taylor Tedford Templeton Thomas Trammell Walters Ward Ware Warner Zeller Trahern Watts FRANK SWAIM (Huntsville, Ala.); Liberal Arts, Junior; His- tory. HUGH M. TAYLOR, JR. (Morristown, Tenn.): Speed School, Sophomore, E.E.; P.E.P.; A.L.E.E. J. A. TEDFORD (Sulphur Springs, Texas); Liberal Arts, Sophomore. JACK CARLOS TEMPLETON (Huntington, W. Va.): Liberal Arts, Junior, History; Band; Orchestra; Phi Tau Alpha. ERNEST THOMAS, JR. (Vicksburg, Miss.); Speed School, Senior, M.E.; Transferred from Mississippi State College. DEWEY WILTON TRAMMELL (Clinton, S. C.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, Basic; P.E.P.; Presbyterian Club. JOHN M. WAL- TERS (Homer, Ill.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, C.E.; Navy Chorus. HOWARD T. WARD (EI Paso, Texas); Speed School, Sopho- more, M.E. GRAYMOND KEITH WARE (Hartford, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Freshman, English-History; I.R.C.; Baptist Student Union; Navy Chorus. CLYDE K. WARNER, JR. (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Senior, C.E.; Inter-Fraternity Council; Triangle; Speed Honor Council; P.E.P.; Canterbury Club: Speed Student Council; All Campus Council: O.D.K.; Convoca- tion Committee; Engineersâ Ball Committee; Social Committee; Secretary-Treasurer, A.S.C.E.: Chairman, All Campus Council; Chairman, Speed Honor Council; Secretary-Treasurer, Speed Student Council; Treasurer, Canterbury Club; Vice-President, Triangle; Vice-President, Senior Class; President, A.S.C.E. GEORGE KENNETH WEBER (Louisville, Ky.); Speed School, Junior, M.E.; Theta Tau; Newman Club; President, Junior Class; Football, â42. MARION CARLYLE WELCH (Houston, Texas); Speed School, Junior, C.E.; Art League; T horoughbred; Cardinal; A.S.C.E.; Formerly attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology. RODERICK L. ZELLER, JR. (Huntington, W. Va.); Speed School, Senior, C.E.; Triangle; Varsity Basket- ball; A.S.C.E.: Chi Beta Phi; Transferred from Marshall College. CHARLES ANDERSON TRAHERN (Earlington, Ky.); Liberal Arts, Junior, Pre-Medical: Kappa Alpha; Navy Chorus; Christian Youth Fellowship; Transferred from Transylvania College. R. M. WATTS (Louisville, Ky.): Speed School, Senior, M.E.: Sigma Tau; Speed Student Council; Historian, Senior Class. 6 P. M. retreatâand another day is officially ended and if a building happens to get in your way, just blow it up Admiral Jacob's guard of honor at the dedication of dormitories Ainât we neat? Larry Hukill decorated for service on the Fall over! FALL!!! âEnterpriseâ LIFE IN THE NAVY In the past year the University has become nautical. Every morning at 0800 a color guard raises the flag, and at 1800 lowers it again. The fifth of every month is pay day, and the trainees line up in front of the Law Building to participate in the ceremony. We have other ceremonies too. Probably the greatest single event of the year was the dedication of the dormitories by Rear Admiral Jacobs. Drilling, inspections, chow, and work, all sprinkled with bits of recreation, constitute the bulk of the activities of the navy men at U. of L. Giving out the smokesâLuckies? The Captain on his monthly hunt for dirty T-shirts and covers - | did the women get in here? Hey, Mackâarenât you forgettinâ something? Up and overâup and over. This builds specimens like Thomas Turpin Johnson (the RED-ROCK kid) Oh, how we love to go swimming! ... and, theoretically, this builds muscles . . . Es. L, A part of the Physical Fitness Program of the navy is the obstacle course. After scaling a wall, we are confronted with several ingenious devices designed to build physiques but which result, as often as not, in bruised shins or assorted lacera- HS Se = RD ee tae tions. After playing Tarzan on the trellis and sprinting around half of the track, the hand rail is ideal to dissipate any energy that we may have conserved. All work and no play, however, makes âMacâ a dull sailor; therefore swimming, football, soft- ball and baseball supplement the obstacle course. Biting the dust . you too can have a figure... The first obstacle â the worst is yet to come GILLAM GIVENS SLOAN DAVIS PARRY WHITEHOUSE HOULE VORDER- BRUGGEN University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University University OTTE of Louisville....43 of Louisville....37 of Louisville....37 of Louisville...40 of Louisville...37 of Louisville....51 of Louisville....34 of Louisville....47 of Louisville....48 of Louisville....35 of Louisville....69 of Louisville....50 of Louisville....54 of Louisville....63 of Louisville....37 of Louisville....38 of Louisville....54 of Louisville....57 of Louisville....87 of Louisville....56 JOHNSON Georgetown ........------------ 21 Bowman Field.............-..-- 39 lilacs Gone) apt eee ee 43 Byansuile er s.0.. ee 41 IDGL Cd ee te eet acs 62 Bowman Field................-.53 Western Kentucky..........54 Byansville aetna cartes 44 Godman Field GeorpetOwmny .- serene Port Knox. ee ee 38 Morehead zee cen eee 67 Godman Field ................39 Western Kentucky ........ 31 Morehead... a6 Wiatrshall et cee 68 Jefferson Boat Works......34 Nichols Hospital ........... 22 We of Ie, Medics27... 39 KINKER ENGLEHARDT ZELLER BASKETBALL Ten wins and ten losses this year finally produced a University of Louis- ville basketball team that could hold its own against the best opposition available in this section. Formed almost entirely of V-12 trainees, (only one regular, Howard Whitehouse, was a civilian), the hard- wood quintet this season entered compe- tition with more confidence than can usually be found in U. of L.âs teams. True, there was only one holdover from the previous seasonâs squad, but some six of the boys had seen action in various schools before entering the service, and it was hoped that under the direction of Chiefs Church and Casey, a winning squad could be formed. The âSea Cards,â as they were soon dubbed, started fast, easily taking the opener 43-21 from George- town, but then came the deluge. The team lost six straight. They just couldnât bring home a win. In games away from home they dropped two two-point overtime battles to a strong Bowman Field outfit that was sparked by All-American Dick Kesling. They lost to Fort Knox by six points and to Evansville by one point in close struggles and were soundly trounced by both Berea and Western before the spell was finally broken. Evansville came here on the second half of a home and home arrangement and went back on the short end of a 47-44 score. They went on to take a highly regarded Godman Field squad 48-35, and it looked at last as though the Cards had hit their stride. Here, the bad fortune which has so often dogged Louisville teams in the past reared up again, and on the eve of an important road trip, the team was riddled by a flu epidemic that swept the barracks. Although Johnson and Zeller, mainstays of the team all season, did not even make the trip, the keyed-up Cards played their finest brand of ball to lead the Mountaineers of Berea at the half, only to tire badly in the latter stages of the strug- gle and go down to decisive defeat. The next week the Black and Red came back to crush Georgetown and continued their winning ways to even the score with Knox. Buoyed by these wins the Cards went into the Morehead game with no little confidence, only to have their dreams shattered by a one-man scoring machine named Cooper who poured in thirty-nine points to equal the efforts of our two high point men and, incidentally, set a new K.I.A.C. scoring record. The score was 67-54. Still groggy from this stunning setback, they went on to play listless ball against Godman Field and the score was twenty-three to twenty-three at the half. âEncouragementâ from Chief Casey at that time, greatly changed their outlook and they proceeded to win 63-39. The next game marked the high point of the season. Western came to town slated to win as it pleased. In the game at Bowling Green, the Hilltoppers had run over Caseyâs boys in a breeze, and they were certainly slated to repeat. The Cards, however, had finally decided to play their best brand of ball, and results gave some indication of the season U. of L. might have had if the breaks had come a little more often. On the short end of a 21-15 score at the half, the Cards tightened their defences even more in the second canto and slowly crept up into a tie midway in the last frame. Western, worried by the low scor- ing, became a bit over eager and Rod Zeller inter- cepted two Western passes, firing the ball each time to Jack Johnson. Two quick baskets put the game on ice. The game lasted five minutes after those strokes, but Westernâs spirit was broken, and U. of L. won 37-31, taking Western for the first time since 1937. ss ef oz wy ) Cewe Flying high from this unexpected victory, the Cards left on a road trip to Morehead and Marshall determined to knock off two more of the big ones, but fate had not willed it so. On their own floor More- head turned in a win of 57-38 and Marshallâs Toothman and Glass sank the Cards 68 to 54. While waiting for a return game with Marshall, the Cards kept on edge by trimming Jeffersonville 57- 34 only to be disappointed when transportation difficulties forced a cancellation of the Marshall game. A Nichols Hospital team responded nobly when called upon to fill the gap, but they were no match for the eager Red Birds who took them by 87-22. The season was finished by a game with the U. of L. Med. School for the Varsity sweater fund. The Doctors did their best, but the out-of-condition Cardinals loafed through by 56 to 39. ep JOHN HELDMAN, JR. Director of Athletics âJolly Johnâ as Mr. Heldman is affectionately called by most of the fellows, is one of the most-liked members of the faculty on the campus. Always ready with a cheery word, or to help out in the administration of any of our sports, Mr. Heldman is also one of the busiest of the faculty. In between his jobs as coach and Athletic Direc- tor, he finds time, somehow, to referee basketball in this part of the State, having become one of the most popular officials. LT. DOUGLAS TAYLOR Athletic Officer Hailing from deep in the swamps of Mississippi, and being very proud of the fact, Lt. Taylor has done all in his power to foster the interest of Athletics among the Navy boys. Through his suggestion, the winter basket- ball tournament was begun and completed successfully. Before entering the Navy, Lt. Taylor was a Football Coach in Mississippi. WALTER CASEY Ch. Sp. (A) The fact that Casey comes from Boston, and that he is Irish, no one but his wife holds against him. The thing we do hold against him is that 0600 bell every morning. Casey was one of the Basketball Coaches. BILL PUGH At. S. Ic. Bill is the fellow we associate that friendly, âGood morning, boysâ with. Friendly, full of fun, and all out for the fellows, Bill is one of the most liked members of the shipâs company. BILL BAXTER Ath. S., 2c! The little man who tells us he has the muscles. But no one yet has had the nerve to find out whether he has or not. Well liked, in spite of his calisthenics, we all count him among our friends. Tabulation of the intermural results for the school year of 434 found that Kappa Alpha, using both Liberal Arts and Speed School students, had captured the âover-allâ intramural award for the sixth straight year. This award is made on a point system, each team receiving a specified num- ber of points for finishing in one of the first three spots in the various competitions during the year. A glance at the record shows that TKE had taken touch football last fall with K.A. and Theta Tau not far behind; K.A. won out in basketball, fol- lowed by Theta Tau and T.K.E., and then went on to sweep the volleyball tournament, trailed again by Theta Tau and by Triangle. In an exceptionally hard fought softball season, Theta Tau finally won out over K.A. and Triangle, and then came second to Triangle in track and field, with K.A. coming in the third slot. This left K.A. with two firsts, two seconds and a third; Theta Tau with one first, three seconds, and a third; and Triangle with one first and two thirds. The civilians ran into uniformly bad luck when they played the Navy teams for the All-Campus championships in each event. Two teams com- INTERMURALS posed of civilian all-stars lost to Companies 4 and 6, first and second respectively in Navy play, by six to five and seven to four. Company 2, which beat Company 4 for the basketball title, took K.A. forty-one to twenty-five in the basketball play-off; while in volleyball Company 4, again winner over Companies 1 and 2, beat the K.A.âs in straight games. Since the barracks teams did not play soft- ball in the spring semester, there could be no play- off between league winners, but a team of Navy trainees met a similarly chosen civilian outfit and came away with an eight to three win. Company B, after a two weeks fight, won out in the Navy track field events, but insufficient time in the wan- ing semester did not permit a meeting of Navy and civilian winners. The task of determining a winner in Navy in- tramurals was far easier than where the civilians were concerned. Barracks B, combining Com- panies 3 and 4 took every event except basketball and furnished the chief opposition to the winner, Company 2, in that seasonâs play. All in all Bar- racks B was outstanding, with Barracks A and C competing for second place honors. GIRLâS SPORTS Through a program organized by the Women's Athletic Association, girlsâ sports have become inv creasingly important on the University campus. Interest has been displayed in gym classes beyond the required two terms, until at the present time we find many upper class students auditing sports activities in which they wish to become proficient. Classes are planned not only to aid the University girl in maintaining a healthy body through regular exercise, but also to teach lessons in sportsmanship and fair-play. Bowling classes are held at one of the local alleys under the instruction of Miss Hall and Miss Elmers, ant. Played on a Round Robin schedule, Bowling is one of the newest tournaments. Learning to break all kinds of records, the Swimming class is put through its paces at the Y.W.C.A. pool. The annual meet held at the Y.W.C.A. or Henry Clay consists of swimming, diving and novelty events. Basketball teams formed by the girls are enough to put the boys to shame. This activity is an intramural sport which arouses interest, enthusiasm and original cheers. Belknap Robin Hoodesses are much in vogue during the Archery season in the spring. This activity is particularly good for improving posture and strengthening her assist muscles. The tournament rounds are played on the range provided by the gym. Perhaps the newest gym class to be added to the curriculum is Modern Dance. Guaranteed to keep you in A-1 condition, the class features leatards and all sorts of fancy steps. At the conclusion of the course, classes perform dances which they have written and perfected. Softball is played on the two diamonds beside the gym. The tour- nament is Round Robin, with many unknown âBabe Ruthsâ coming forth from obscurity. Other classes worthy of mention are Badminton with rackets, birdies, nets and courts furnished by the athletic department. Golf is a closed tournament offered during the summer. Classes are held on one of the public courses. The only interscholastic sport is Hockey. The season is closed by a Hockey Sports Day given for the University of Kentucky, Transylvania, Centre, Ursuline, Nazareth and Comets. A winter horse show is part of the annual program of Horseback Riding. Equipment and facilities are avail- able for student use. Tables are supplied in the gym for Table Tennis classes and matches. Tennis classes and tournaments are held on the Triangle Park courts. Last of all Volleyball is an intra-mural team sport featuring an A and B team for advanced players and beginners respectively. _ I Miss Justice âââââââ De ESR © SESS RS as Oe Lucille Coldiron CHI OMEGA Miss Choroughbred Leclah Robards INDEPENDENT Mary Jane Myers CHI OMEGA a Bertie Jean Clark INDEPENDENT 1G Norma Jean Hart SIGMA KAPPA Barbara Moorman INDEPENDENT Anna Lee Markowitz PHI SIGMA TAU Martha Ann Horne PI BETA PHI Ro setta Stansbury CARDINALETTE Lenamae Sage KAPPA DELTA Jane Showalter DELTA ZETA OUR JUDGE We were fortunate this year to have as our judge for the title of âMiss Thoroughbredâ Mr. Earl Carroll, author of the slogan âThrough these portals pass the most beautiful girls in the world.â We thank Mr. Carroll very heart: ily for his consideration in making this selection for us. We wouldnât have wanted his job. A COMPLETE INSTITUTION FOR SERVING THE DENTAL PROFESSION Also a Branch at the DENTAL SCHOOL Brook and Broadway MR. J. RAY KENNEDY in charge, who will always be glad to assist you in every way. T. M. Crutcher Dental Depot INCORPORATED 640 South 3rd Street LOUISVILLE, KY. Serving you has been a pleasure, a pleasure we hope will con- tinue throughout your career. To this end S. S. White representatives and authorized dealers everywhere stand ready to assist you. Do not hesitate to contact these men or write us direct. If you are not already acquainted with our equipment financing plans, request your copy of âPractice in Modern Surroundings.â oo Wite OFFICE PLANNING THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. 211 S. Twelfth Street, Philadelphia 5, Pa. The creation of an inviting, taste- fully furnished, efficiently arranged office that will win and hold the patients who come to you, will be easier, less costly, if you take advantage of the free office plan- ning service every S.S. White dealer will be glad to offer you. aad ye _| eS J ak a ti â Ne ka a an end in itself, but preparation for the future, âducation is What it learned about Champion paper caused the staff to choose this stock for this yearâs Thoroughbred. This little lesson in paper quality will be helpful throughout the years, for whatever your paper needs may be, thereâs always a wide variety of Champion quality grades from which to choose. THE ROWLAND PAPER Co. 107-109 WEST MAIN ST., LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY DR. DOUGLAS ABELL DR. MAURICE BUCKLES DR. IRVIN ABELL DR. GORDON BUTTOROFF DR. DONALD M. BENNETT DR. H. ASA DEWEY DR. MAX BOWMAN MR. MRS. GORDON GRACE DR. JOHN BRODERIUS DR. E. L. HENDERSON HUBER HUBER TRANSFER CO. CARDINALETTE MOTHER'S CLUB CHI OMEGA ALUMNAE CHI OMEGA MOTHER'S CLUB DELTA ZETA ALUMNAE ASSN. KAPPA ALPHA MOTHER'S CLUB KAPPA DELTA ALUMNAE KAPPA DELTA MOTHER'S CLUB PHI BETA PI MOTHER'S CLUB SIGMA CHI SIGMA MOTHER'S CLUB SIGMA KAPPA ALUMNAE ASSN. SIGMA KAPPA MOTHER'S CLUB TAU KAPPA EPSILON MOTHER'S CLUB THETA TAU MOTHER'S CLUB The BROWN HOTEL LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY HAROLD E. HARTER, Manager Compliments of DENNIS BROWN 1418 Starks Building General Agents THE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE co. FOREE DENNIS J. WELBURN BROWN oO Associates G. Hope Haas C. E. Cronimus Chester B. Hall Phil H. Ryan John D. Stengel In Service a a ee Compliments of BRILL PHARMACY First at Chestnut and RECTANUS DRUG CO. Makers of VERIBEST RUG AND CARPET CLEANER Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry Medals â Trophies â Plaques Favors --- Costume Jewelry SCHOOL AND COLLEGE RINGS L. G. BALFOUR CO. âKnown wherever there are schools and collegesâ 615 South Ist Street FactoryâAttleboro, Mass. â Offices in Principal Cities YOURS FOR an EARLY VICTORY and then the PEACE That MUST Follow KENTUCKY LAUNDRY 614 Barret Ave. WAbash 3345 STUDENTS Any Meal At Any Hour We Never Close SARATOGA GOOD FOOD âSERVED BETTER PHONE JAckson 9326 Chestnut at Second Louisville, Ky. Intelligent living demands careful protection of your finances and property. Why not investi- gate our monthly payment plan for insurance premiums? It is especially convenient for students, âInsurance for Every Needâ Liberty Insurance Agency ADOLPH REUTLINGER, President 660 S. 4th ST. JAckson 0115 GEO. C. RICHARDS CO. Manufacturers of SCHOOL AND COLLEGE JEWELRY We make the Speed School Ring TROPHIES, MEDALS, SERVICE PINS 633-35 East Main Street Louisville, Kentucky COAL AND BUILDING MATERIAL R. C. Tway Coal Co. Incorporated JAMES COAL COMPANY Incorporated VOLKMAN KERLIN 2601 South Third St. MAgnolia 4400 Victory First! and then a new ENT- Tr oS ae RADIO THE OTIS HIDDEN CO. Wholesale Only â Louisville, Ky. We Telegraph Flowersâ WM. B. CRAIG Ekeueust CORSAGES, CUT FLOWERS, POTTED PLANTS, FUNERAL DESIGNS hone FRanklin 1773 1001 BROOKLINE AVE. Compliments of KENTUCKY HOTEL 5th and Walnut Phone WAbash 1181 PANKE MONUMENT CO. A. C. SCHARRE, PROP. 817 EAST JEFFERSON ST. Near Shelby St. Louisville, Ky. With Best Wishes from SEARS, ROEBUCK CO. 8th and Broadway LOUISVILLE, KY. ed MR. MRS. DAVID H. JOHNSON DR. W. T. McCONNELL DR. C. W. KARRAKER STOLL OIL REFINING COMPANY DR. ROBERT KELLY MISS HELEN SWANN DR. HERMAN MAHAFFEY DEAN THRELKHELD DR. A. M. MITCHELL DR. ESTHER WALLNER DR. ROBERT WARNER Congratulations and Good Luck VYlse the New ee ENRICHED CLASSES OF âFORTY-FOUR OBELISK FLOUR PLAIN OR SELF-RISING ' â Contains an abundance of The Alumni Association Witosnine cad: Minerals rie Beil University of Louisville Save the VALUABLE Coupons ACKNOWLEDGMENTS To the following people who aided us greatly in the publication of the 1944 Thoroughbred, we are indeed very grateful. Without their cooperation and help, the Thoroughbred would still be a dream of the future. To Mr. Paut Druten for his help in many different ways. To Dr. Assotom C. RussELt, Director of the Board of Student Publica- tions, for his encouragement and assistance. To ALL THE STUDENTS OF THE University who supported us financially and attended the Thoroughbred Ball. To Lrs. McKervey, KeEere, AND TRESIDDER AND Lt. (j.g.) Taytor for their cooperation in the securing of the Navy Pictures. To Dr. Cuarves F. S. Virtue and Mrs. Frances GotpsmitH for their willing and able assistance in preparation for the selection of Miss Thorough- bred. To Mr. W. S. Rinenart of the Fetter Printing Company, for his able assistance and timely suggestions in preparing this edition for publication. To Mr. Ropney Wit of the Standard Gravure Co. for his cooperation and patience with the problem of engraving. To Miss Frorence Gruneck, Miss Gertrupe Lyon, Mrs. ALMA Evans, Miss Doris MorrparGcer, and Miss Karen Hexistrom of the Kaufman-Straus Studio for their help and patience in making the pictures for us. To Frances Grace, Max Lapt, Vircinta Catpwe i, âTExâ WeEtcH, Lou Juypra, and Mary Frances McKenna for coming through when the pressure was on and the âchips were down.â To the rest of the THoroucHsrep Starr for doing the thousand and one things that make a yearbook a success. And last to a little Gkemuin or GreMuins who were always sure to show up when we were stuck and needed some special help.
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