University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK)

 - Class of 1945

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University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1945 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1945 volume:

if THE BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE. UNIVERSITY OF PRESENTS 1945 if LAURIE LANGFORD LISBY VANBRADT Co-editors CLEO WOLFE Bminen Manager ED SHEDLOSKY Aniftant Bminen Manager COPYRIGHT 1945 fe TULSA ANNIYER ARY In an .I Q , .wr 'Qi' Q A W K s V, ,- ' a 'D Z. 'I A , ,,.' kv in ,,,.w4 V552 pksuw , .. ' I 'S' sr 'Y ' A M v -, 7 J' KAVK 3511. , l - ' if 'EE' --J NWSM LL 1 3, ' M ,Q h 1 ff.. Q h , ' V K K . iafa A N . . , ' Q K' ' h l he 'fi g W ' i K ,NN ., :Lil -J ali! 2, ,nf fm W A 'A-11 My ,,, , W ' Q K, X n ' wa -A , Z' 5,-N ' fwaggzfggas- 1 4 U1 'fi , - 1:45-12' . 13 ' lf iffsiifigslsziillmz- .Aff-V : , f I 'V 4 3, 'M K J' , - 9 ff' xr , fl-1 :W '23 : - ' W Q, n 5 J. a . , :W Q 4, Q -' vi' W Q, ,, 0 K T W , K wa j .X fp Mg bQ N'ks A ff Mrs ff gm 1 , .E 'sf if N ., ,qw 2- 1 id 55 4? ,, The official annual which this year Coin- ineinorates the Golden Anniversary of the University of Tulsa. Two years of college life are depicted in this edition. ,tn a 7' 'pri' aww Our story began 50 years ago-in 1894 -in a small frontier town on the sprawling prairies of what was then Indian Territory, where Henry Kendall College was founded. The original Ken- dall College was small and bare, with only a few bleak buildings ..... But that was yesterday. Today the University of Tulsa campus is a show l We are proud of our native stone place of Tu sa. buildings, the popular Union, and our well-kept campus .... But that is today. Tomorrow we will see a greatly enlarged campus with eleven new buildings, more endowments and equipment to ' T orrow serve the ever-increasing enrollment. om will see our greater University o f Tulsa. l513cQAL's12 the principles upon which this University was founded are powerful and universal-Because these principles have guided the builders of this University and have heconie a part of the thousands of us who have studied here-And because these principles are the eternal hope of the hundreds of our fellows now in wars-we dedicate this Golden Anniversary Edition to the ideals of XVISDUM, FAITH, AND SERVICE, which have for fifty years guided our University, its faculties and its students+and which will direct it through a glorious future. -i,.., if Because we take pride in the half century of progress made by our University as an educational, cultural, and social center of the Southwest, we desire to share this heritage with others. On this, our Golden Anniversary, it is fitting to suggest by words and illustrations the devel- opment of the University of Tulsa from 1894 to 1944. D gil :'t::'- Although this yearbook has been assembled and pub- gy ,S A 1' 53 , W 'rfllct lished during a time of great world conflict, which has . , T f iff , created situations demanding emergency measures, the J f? L 4 - . . . . . M63 I N.. 1945 Kendallabrum yet attempts to depict this signifi- 4 ill I cant era in the history of the University. During the two- year span represented in this edition, we have seen air force, army engineering and quartermaster corps students come and go on to war. We ii- N 1?-3-,-2-:Z-. have seen our students and faculty leaving for service. We have seen two powerful football teams star in New ---: :m5 .::r' mile: .E C-rw Az: -4,- -.-.gt 1 Year's Day Bowl games. And we have watched plans :H if? , develop for a great expansion program. We have felt the war-time tenseness and quickening of pace, and we . ' il ' 'N -5 ,, f as 2 have known the tragedy of fellow students lost in the I I Nc war. But we have also felt a warm pride in the way our University has faced the reality of the difficult present and has bravely planned for a glorious future. Our University has had a colorful background and unusualhistory. State, church, business, industry and many individuals have contributed to this history and have made possible this story of growth and devel- T. Ufs STCDRY . 50 Years of Progress As we observe the Golden Anniversary of the University of Tulsa, we take justifiable pride in its record of progress in education. The University of Tulsa has grown up with Oklahoma until today it is recognized as one of the out- standing educational institutions in the Southwest. V 'ix ' :-'E' 'f' :7 4'z: -:,,, l H mv' 'JZ 2 HJ ' f its , z, llfl 'rr ' opment. The foundations of the University of Tulsa were laid in the spirit of wisdom, faith and service, with equal rights for all. Its creation was consummated by the missionary's zeal and its sta- bility assured by the support of business and industry. More than a century ago ' President James A. Madison in- structed government agents to establish schools among the In- dians of Oklahoma and Indian Territories. The work was begun a in 1816 by missionaries, who later operated more than forty schools among the five civilized tribes. 1 As Oklahoma grew, cities 1,1 .fr bjf.-iffgs a,,,,g5.L1, A thrived and the population in- . , , ,,tc y, , ,rs ,., w ,Q 7 -Y K Q MM Q., -Aja creased. There was a great need for higher education in the state, so in 1894 the Womenls Board of Home Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States merged the assets and staffs of its schools into one college located in Muskogee. Thus, Henry Kendall College opened its doors in 1894 and awarded its first degrees in 1898. Under the administration of Dr. W. A. Caldwell, first president of Kendall College, the College began the story of progress in education' which is today carried forward by the University of Tulsa. i A Kendall College offered social life as well as intellectual pursuits A to its students. Activities as varied as fine arts and athletics were im- mediately introduced. to At the time Henry Kendall College was founded in Muskogee, Tulsa was a small but thriving town. pl-lowever, it offered land, buildings and financial support of -. .. Tulso Ufs such proportions that after several years the Presbyterian Synod of Oklahoma voted to move the college to Tulsa. E i In 1920 the Board of Trustees decided to broaden the scope of the college pro- gram, and the University of Tulsa was created. Eight years later, by action of 4 i l S T the Synod, control of the University was vested in a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees although the University continues to be organically connected with the Presby- terian church. Today the University of Tulsa includes the Henry Kendall College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Fine Arts, the College of Petroleum Sciences and Engineering, the College of Business Administration, the School of Law, the Division of Graduate Study, the Downtown College, and the Summer School. We have com- pleted fifty years of progress in educa- tion. . . and our story is just beginning! There is a bright future ahead, prom- ising even greater ,,,. ., A , Story achievements in the next half- century. By giving its students an op- portunity for higher education in many fields of endeavor, the University of Tulsa is helping to train the leaders who will build the better world of to- morrow. With an outstanding faculty and administration, with full accreditation, with expanding facilities and curriculum the University of Tulsa gives Oklahoma its pledge that pioneering days in this state have not ended. By providing better education for a better future, the University of Tulsa, in its Golden Anniversary year, is truly the Univer- sity of Golden Opportunities. fliyloricfzl llzictffiw' ff11'11iJfvc'zf lil71'0lfgl7 lb: courtesy of zhe GTUZJXCZZ Afzzizizwrfzzfy flL'fi1',l:ffL'.l' Cmxzzlzittcc. Dain! fl, L, LIIEQCII. Clmiwmzzz. ,N , 44 ' f e-,il-' 'Pm ..f , - I .:,i':.T,,, -...,'Ar2 A xxx., ,W X 1 gf' ,1f ,?' fr- -- M f-. 'Mm 'v ,ww . 1 '5 i ,M f :ix 1 X' , TT-- 1 . it r .V ,, M...-,.. .1 - ..,-X K P'-if f ! I 'rj' 'if Cf- F' .N-Ma ' it f K df T7 2 -' f '! 45 ,Iwi 1 ' .,ff-- 'i L . ff' fa aff, ,fn af 1' 4 .i - ef' - ,ur , 2 L, , gf 1 k . 1 f, . .. ., i 22: 1 A K fl K in K' gui fi 3 lv M M' I .. .. , 1 .f A ,f L., . ff-' ' L ,-v-59411:-g,,f'.-1: ' V 'all' Q i ' 1 'Ani'-.ap ',f1,. La ' , , 1 2 l . ,., , -ra, - I TOP-The Women's Dormitory is one of the new buildings to be built as a part of the Golden Anniversary Expansion Program. This dormitory will accommodate sixty-one Women students. OPPOSITE PAGE-The Petroleum Engineering Building was presented to the University of Tulsa by Waite Phillips, Tulsa oil man and philanthropist. BOTTOM-The Auditorium, Gymnasium and Field House will include adequate facilities for physical training and will permit partial conversion into a spacious auditorium. ' ' P1 ye' all F , 'A fi i - 1 ff 'R Nl i ff? ff, i 5. V 1 5. l if -,. Q , L f 5' R- fa A QW 2 V Sf c rf ' 1 wi , J i -ww M M 1 tg, ' J '5' 41. 1 1 i ' ,, if... ga im? 1 ' 2 ' PM fir Q, 9 5 6 , ' ii Q ,....,.a i WW- ' Ji ' .ff 'Puff T mf' Q ' 5 i 3 4 W 'K fu .fl-M-X ts- A -Q' i f- ,h A- 1 W-f t .Q V P ' S ' P ' ' ' 5 '7 f ua: , f-H-vf: 'il' -i f1 'i A 1 , via ff ' -:s-J... sa P - Q X -at l . f 'N - --,f . -fy ' Y 4 ff - - r ,N ,EW 'A Mt'.'::::::..4 -- N ' 'W It viifci S--if W-'H' . - f Q' . 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'M WJ? w f ,ffm - '--'X ,rj s ml' E.. fnllnsarahdwlr 1 Q - f 'Ne h-S.-.... ,rgffvvagx ...up warm- . bf M .---. .,,,,!,:,.,,i.Z,.J,,i--,,,,,'A MM. Wagyu t ., -- ' 'fm ' 'ff-L' ffff-armani aa. , TOP-The Men's Dormitory will greatly increase campus housing facilities. This building will provide accommodations for 125 men students. OPPOSITE PAGE-The McFarlin Library, erected by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Martin McFarlin, was the first of the modern buildings and has set the pace for all future buildings. BOTTOM-The completed Student Activities Building will include, in addition to the cafeteria, a lounge, social hall, alumna room, Student Council and Religi- ous Activities rooms. ,f x M i- V -V L xxx f ,f . g N 1,-,Q,.g, qi' f., . ,, - Q ' x , ,I F . W ,F ,ffm ...fa ,ii ,f J, ,fy I' I! I 12' ,f --1 L f ri ,qff my fi' 5 i' '1' J 'f .' ff' f ,ufv ,. ff 7 f W E M ,f r it -'A-45 K J ' V 5 'A 'X if fi W ,, I .v ' . - ' A -' A A W fa . vi r lf? 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MM M jeg X .Q -is-rv: ,325 N 3 ..-f-M 4 '-ffm' 'f ..,,. ..,, + ffpqffewyzie a..'fs2Hfs ,ff 'u ii' 'J if ,,.,...Y a ., , Jyfe, , . , , Na., .mf-ea-..41'-f-vffW..a..,,... of 'Af' sf M .. -. d ,, vw, I -N-,Liga - -Q. M0 .., 194:-h :fa fc! t W,..,,Q-A V , K 'w.,,,,,,, TOP-The Home Economics Building will answer demands for the training of young women in home-making. A practice house will be included in this building. BOTTOM-The Natural Gas and Synthetics Building will be essential in the de- velopment of the College of Petroleum Engineering which has already gained great prominence. lcd, I l w l l l i l L. s ,, M.. .yi .5-.a,m,,,.BA N .. . ,..,+,a. K V h. ,.,..,yFf X ,- V f , aff V I-fa 'A 'V -..f-mar pf fffmff.. ew, .,,-. ' - ,,A,f.f?.,, I '.: f,,'f'5' . , ' f .f , 9 ,.g919lliVN, , , . ...se -4 f fiimzwafww N ,M reaenfing . . 'Ir THE FACULTY COMMUNITY COUNCIL STUDENT COMMITTEES CLASSES ORGANIZATIONS PUBLICATIONS D Q11 :Eff-' WF, 1 ' A ? ff - ' wi! N! Z 4: 4 N. xii MA qi?-:L Eiffxx ,Q-.,Z...-2 wma sf mfg. Q X S Q if 5 Q -n my , 3, Q W- 1 as wil K E W 1, . ,gp wi - ,Sfgf aww? H A Y KS is X, 753 1, is f , :N 'S M , Q ,, mwwwwm, , .nw-www .7 M Ml OKJQIT, nnivemarg THIS UNIVERSITY, fifty years ago, dedicated itself for Christ and the State to Wisdom, Faith, and Service. Those words were blazoned on its seal. Through the years those words have not changed, but they have taken many new mean- ings. There was a time when we thought of discarding that seal. We asked for new designs. There was a grimness, a bleakness, a lack of grace, we thought, in such a dedication. The starkness of the English words for Christ and the State, of Wisdom, Faith, Service, how much better would be a Latin motto, a more elaborate phrase. But today, beginning our second fifty years, poised on the brink of a great future, in a world that has demanded our all in the name of Christ and the State, the fullest measure of Wis- dom, Faith, and Service, we proudly cherish our seal and rededicate ourselves to Christ and the State. It is time, as we begin our 51st year, to re- examine the record made during the past 50 years. We see in this record the growth of our University from a group of Indian Mission schools situated at and near Muskogee, Indian Territory, to the Henry Kendall College in 1894. In 1907, the year of statehood, Henry Kendall College was moved to Tulsa. The col- lege continued to grow and expand until in 1920 the name, through the addition of other colleges, was changed to The University of Tulsa. In 1928 complete Synodical control was relinquished, and since that date the Univer- sity has operated under a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees but continues to be related with the Presbyterian Church, U. S. A., its founder. Today, after fifty years, the University of Tulsa is a fully-accredited, debt-free, growing institution of higher learning comprising many colleges and professional schools and the grad- uate division. The University is celebrating its Golden An- niversary by inaugurating a a5,ooo,ooo.o0 ex- pansion program. This will provide twelve DR. C. I. PONTIUS buildings and equipment, costing 552,600,- 000.00 and 352,400,000.00 to be added to the endowment. Upon the completion of this expansion pro- gram the University of Tulsa will take its right- ful place among the great universities of the Southwest, with a limited enrollment, high standards of work, and a continuing quality product of graduates. The light of the future is the candle of the past. Our candle sheds a brilliance into the future that surpasses the fondest dreams of the founding fathers and discloses a challenge to the present to give its best for the full realiza- tion of this vision. DR. C. I. PONTIUS, Chairman, Trnxtee and President, University of Taira 50135- C. I. DUNCAN . . . secretary-treasurer of the University of Tulsa . . . plans the budget and tends to legal matters. BERYL HANCOCK . . . business manager of the University . . . supervises all spend- ing and has a hand in the budget. J. E. FELLOWS . . . registrar of the Uni- versity . . . Director of Summer School . . . and Assistant Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. gawk. af M . Ju.: C. I. DUNCAN BERYL HANCOCK J. E. FELLOWS W. E. MORRIS, JR .... director of public relations . . . puts our best face before the public . . . and desires only a greater Uni- versity of Tulsa. lN'lARY CLAY WILLIAMS . . . director of student personnel and counselor to women . . . vvorl-is for the extra-curricular devel- opment of the students. HARRY NW. GOWENS . . . director of the Downtown College . . . offers educational advantages for people of the business world. W. E. MORRIS, JR. ADMINISTRATIQN A DEAN R. L. LANGENHEIM D A L H CR1s vELL DEAN R. L. LANGIENHEIM . . . Dean of the College Engineering University. of Petroleum Sciences and . . and vice-president of the DEAN E. H. CRISWELL . . . Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences . . . and pop- ular professor of English. DEAN L. S. MCLEOD . . . Dean of the Graduate Division . . . and head of the psychology department. 50125 DEAN M, M. HARGROVE DEAN A. L. LUKKEN DEAN M. M. HARGROVE . . . Dean of the College of Business Administration . . . trains the future statisticians and secre- taries. DEAN A. L. LUKKEN . . . Dean of the College of Fine Arts . . . and a fine musician . . . proud of his future opera stars and composers. DEAN SUMMERS HARDY . . . Dean of the School of Law . . . former Chief justice of the Superior Court of the State of Okla- homa. DEAN SUMMERS HARDY TOP ROW-Ieff lo rigblx Edgar Albin, Mary Allen, B. D. Barclay, Harriett Barclay, Ross H. Beall, Florence Blackmore THIRD ROW-fcffl to rigbt: Nels Bailkey, Sidney Born, O. Brothers, Paul Burhod, H. D. Chase, Helen Coover. SECOND ROVV--left to rigbl: T. W. Coover, E. Eikenberry, Roger Eenn, Henry Ernka, Rachel Gardner, Robert Gardner BOTTOM ROVU-left In riglvl: Ellen Goebel, Julius Heeren. Ben Hennelce. Ellen Henneke, O. W. Hoop, E. A. Howard. Bw, Ollie jclcullfy TOP ROW!-lofi In rigbl: Harold Hughes, Ralph Kaufmann, bl. Charles Klorz, Tosca B. Kramer, Florence Luklcen, Eugenio Maddox. THIRD Rowgfclfl to 1'fg!.7f.' Carol Mason, R. L. lvliirhieson, Nellie Melton, Caroline Meyer, VJ. S. Milligan, Anne Morrow. SECOND ROW'-lefl to riglvt: A. N. Murray, W. L. Nelson, R. A. Nitringer, jenn Ousrerhout, Earl Perrijohn, Boyd Ringo. BOTTOIW ROW-left to rfgbt: Helen Ringo, Aduh Robinson, Hurry H. Ryan, Grady Snuggs, E. S. Tanner, Ralph Ventch. CCDMMUNITY RESPONSIBILITIES as a governing body of the University of Tulsa are taken over by the Community Council . . . it acts as a labora- tory for democracy . . . the campus community idea emphasizes the need of students and fac- ulty working together . . . besides giving every one a voice in government and stressing indi- vidual participation . . . membership is com- posed of three faculty members, five non-affili- ated and off-campus Greek students, and a rep- resentative from each of the Greek-letter organ- izations . . . each one of the seven committees is headed by a Council member and, conse- quently, through committees the Council has its fingers in all the campus activities . . . the president is elected by the entire community . . . Kenneth jorns was first president to be elected by this method . . . after he left school, Nip Goodnight followed him into office and car- ried through this year . . . the main emphasis during the Goodnight regimen has been reviv- ing interest and enthusiasm . . . of somehow pepping up school spirit which has sagged the past couple years because of the war . . . the Council has been pretty successful in achieving the goal this year despite all the stumbling blocks . . . the entire community became more interested . . . Several occasions the Browsing Room of McFarlin Library didn't have enough seats to capacitate the flocks . . . after setting 'ts lofty aims the Council elected Phyllis Gaddis 5052- OFFICERS: CLYDE GOODNIGHT Qleftb ,,,P7'6'.fid67Zl PHYLLIS GADDIS S ....tttt Vice-Presidenz BETTY CHANEY Crightj ttt,t,tt Secretary T. W. COOVER t,tt.tt.,...tt.,,.ttt Treczmrer to take over when Nip was away on football trips . . . jean Harmon as secretary . . . turned over the bank account to Mr Coover . . . Nip then appointed his committee heads and put them into operation .... jenny Robinowitz resigned as Assembly Chairman . . . later to accept chairmanship of the Class Activities Committee . . . jean Harmon resigned as sec- retary and was appointed to wrestle the alter- nate bells and multitude of assembly prob- lems . . . Betty Chaney was elected as the new minute taker . . . johnny Kerr kept the Council informed about the men's athletics and Rita Ruth Meyer did the same for the women . . . Fred Davis faithfully reported the Board of Pub's troubles . . . under Martha Lou McCon- nico, the Student Promotions Committee kept every week-end during football season filled with pep rallies, parades, and bonfires . . . the Council sponsored victory dances after the night games . . . and went half 'n half with Let- termen in presenting the gala Homecoming Dance . . . Council voted the Kendallabrum its appropriation after a tough Struggle of try- ing to decide what committees should be rep- resented . . . the Union clean-up campaign caused quite a stir . . . plans were made for an inauguration of new officers at the next election ...all in all. . . it was a busy year ..one in which Council members can be proud of their endeavors. COUNCIL TOP ROW- left to right: Betty Antlerson, Connie Cook, T. W. Coovct, Bill Coulter. THIRD ROW- Ief! to right: Fred Davis- jim Donahoe, Phyllis Gatldis, Jean Harmon. SECOND ROW- left to right: O. W. Hoop, John Kerr, Reita Ruth Meyer, Betty Lou Pelton. BOTTOM ROW- left In l'iKQhf.' Jenny Rolninowitz, Glen Smith. Mary Clay Williams, Cleo Wolfe. Member not present: Eva Zoe Henson. -rm ,GQ -bk Hw- Nw - .gy 5 'Q , 1 J. Q Q . :3 fs as www w AX gf? p -1 fa ,QW -eff P 4' 4 6 N 'WJ Y 'if'4ixk x 2 1 A 5 'QQ ex'-.5 XX :Q I, IQ.: 'ikby x :.- , cf. W L Si 4 f ' WgQv, dy' if 'tb xt 2535i E, it M' ' ff' - - , V o 2,5 f .I,.. 1 b-., , N X f .1ff':f2'7-'fqg'.'iSq f f N K fff fix -X 5241.1 ,f ff' XA X M , XX-x- d, 'AA he af? 5, Glass of 79-44 Qwl HU, sEN1oRs A l ii ag. -udp l... ll E21 V 'lggrf ,' fgf A Big smiles from Ruth Greene, football queen of 1943, and her attendants. CLASS OF I944 BARRETT, DORIS LUCILLE . . . Arts and Sciences. BISSELL, CHARLES MILTON . . . Engineering, Engineers' Club. BOWLES, ORA LEE...Arts and Sciences, T, U. Y , Community Council, President, '43, Senior Staff, '44, Kappa Delta Pi, Whos Who, '44, Phi Gamma Kappa, '44 BURGOS, LEONIDAS . . . Engineering. BUTHOD, MARY ROSE , . . Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, A Cappella Choir, Phi Gamma Kappa, '44. CLINE, DOROTHY JANE...Arts and Sciences, Spanish Club. CORDERO, LUIS. .. Engineering. DAVIES, A. DONALD...Arts anal Sciences, Pi Kappa Delta. DAVIS, MARY JANE. . .Arts and Sciences. DORNEY, MARIAN ,... Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Collegian, Editor, '43, '44, Community Council, Vice-President, '43, Hurricanes, '43, Pi Gamma Mu, Spanish Club, Vice-President, '43, Publications Board, Chairman, '43. EDWARDS, MARILYN ...Arts and Sciences, A Cappella Choir, Lo-Lo-Mi, Vice-President, '43, President, '44, Lantern, Alpha Rho Tau, Pi Gamma Mu, Who's Who, '44, Kappa Delta Pi, Phi Gamma Kappa, Senior Staff. FISK, MARGIE LEE .,.Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, A Cappella Choir, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Kenclallabrum, Commerce Club, Kappa Delta Pl, Phi Gamma Kappa, Lantern, Who's Who, '44, FLOURNOY, DORIS . . . Business Administration, Delta Delta Delta, Commerce Club, Kcndallabrum, GATES, MARYEMA . . , Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, President, '44, Hurricanes, Alpha Rho Tau, Senior Staff, Phi Gamma Kappa, Who's Who, '44. HARRIS, ROSE JEAN , . . Arts and Sciences, Alpha Rho Tau. HIBBARD, HELEN . , . Business Administration' Phi Mu President, '44, A Cappella Choir, Orchestra, Commerce Club, Communltv Council, Pi Gamma Mu, Hurricanes, Senior Staff, Phi Gamma Kappa, Who's Who, '44. HOLMGREN, LEE.. ,Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, Spanish Club, Hurricanes, Pl Delta Epsilon, Phi Gamma Kappa, Senior Staff, Who's Who, '44, HYDE, MARY RUTH . . . Arts and Sciences. KELLY, MAXlNE..,Business Administration, Phi Mu, Spanish Club, Lantern, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Kappa Delta Pi, Phi Gamma Kappa. LEACHMAN, LUClLE...Arts and S ' s, K D lt ' Spanish Club, Pi Delta Epsilon. memes appa C a' MATHEY, DAN . . . Engineering, Engineers' Club. MCCAY, ROBERT. . . Engineering, Engineers' Club, Sword a,U'?O,SKwgOlPhi4'Gamma Kappa, Community Council, 1944 g? - aa l ,Q Make Wily for the army!! MEDINA, FRANCISCO . . . Engineering, MOOTE, MADELINE . . ,Arts and Sciences, Lo-L0-Ml, Alpha Rho Tau, Community Council. NICHOLSON, MARTHA SUE,,.Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, A Cappella Choir. ORLANDI, SAMUEL . , . Arts and Sciences. OUSTERHOUT JEAN PRINGLE . . .Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, Vice-President, '44, A Cappella Choir, Kendalla- brum, Sigma Alpha Iota, Lantern, Panhellenic Council, Senior Staff, Kappa Delta Pi: Women's Choir, Phi Gamma Kappa, Who's Who, '44. PENTERMAN, MARY . . . Engineering, Delta Delta Delta, Lantern. POLUMBUS, E. A .... Engineering, Phi Gamma Kappa. PONTIUS, BETTY JANE . . . Business Administration, Chi Omega, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Kendallaprum, Commerce Club, Phi Gamma Kappa, VVho's Who, '44, PRICE KATHRYN ...Arts ancl Sciences. ROARK, VIRGINIA , . . Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Alpha Iota, A Cappella Choir, Publications Board. SEARS, MARIANA. ., Fine Arts, Chi Omega, Sigma Alpha Iota, President, '44, SHORE, RUTH . ..Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, Vice-Presi- dent, '43, '44, T. IJ. Y , Pi Gamma Mu, Senior Staff, Kappa Delta Pi, President, '44, Phi Gamma Kappa, Who's Who, '44. SMITH, AILENE . . .Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, Vice- President, '43 President, '44, Spanish Club, Publica- tons Board, Pi Delta Epsilon, Hurricanes, Pi Gamma Mu, Senior Staff, Phi Gamma Kappa, Collegian. STEINSON, HELEN RUTH . , . Business Administration, Chi Omega, A Cappella Choir, Kenclallabrum, Commerce Club. TACK, LUCILLE ..., A rts and Sciences, Chi Omega, A Cap- pella Choir, Spanish Club, THOMAS, REBECCA...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Vice-President, '44, A Cappella Choir, Commun- ity Council, Spanish Club, President, '44, Sigma Alpha Iota: Hurricanes: Collegian Business Manager, '44, Alpha Rho Tau, Phi Gamma Kappa, Senior Staff, Who's Who. '44. THOMPSON, VIRGINIA . . , Business Administration, Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Community Council. WHITELEY, WANDA . . . Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, A Cappella Choir. WHITWELI., MARCIA , . . Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, President '44, Collegian, Community Council, Senior Staff, Panhellenic Council, Phi Gamma Kappa. WILDMAN, BARBARA , . . Business Administration, Phi Mu Vice-President, '44,' Commerce Cluh' Pi Gamma Mu, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Phi Gamma Kappa, ZOLLER CLAIRE.. .Business Administration, Chi Omega, Commerce Club. gl SENIORS OF 1944 NOT PRESENT AKIN, HUGH BOUGHTON, JANICE BROOKE, ROBERTA BUCK, WILLIS A., JR. CLINE, WAYNE HAROLD COLLINS, DAVID COLLINS, PI-IILSON D., JR. DANIELS, ALICE FALLON, PATRICIA HARWOOD, ANN MALLORY HENRY, HERBERT ARTHUR HILDUTCI-I, GLORIA HUNTER, EVA MARIE HUNTER, JAMES N. JACKSON, MILDA RUTI-I JONES, V. EDGAR JORNS, KENNETH LAIN, O. ROBERT LANTZ, WILLIAM LEHMAN, LEOTA MASON, ROBERT ALLEN MCKINLEY, JOSOPHINE M. MCLEMORE, GRACE MEADOWS, MARIE MONTGOMERY, AILEENE TAYLOR MORGAN, JOAN NOLA OAK, MARY LOUISE O,DELL, MEUREL LIPE PURCELL, BEULAH ANITA REYNOLDS, RALPH LEDBETTER ROBERTS, MARY CHRISTIAN SAWYER, CORA FRANCES SCHUTTLER, MAUDE MARIE TALLMAN, BETTE ANN rx-.f.!-xi, 'f - , X , aw- W 7? x+ 'L if V x N, , Z 1 l 3 ' U 1' LN ' Ji QE' hh. I ' 1 - -6? ' WEM- I mfimxxxxxxx f YQ If ff? W' 'K Q 6 1-ff -Ng 5u5,,,.Q Glass of 7945 --,lit-Ist SENIORS llll. 4 ' L.7Pf1'ff It didnt take Sum Lu and Jackie long to get acquainted. APPLEBY, JUNE . . .Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega. ARCHIBALD, RICHARD . . .Arts and Sciences. BARTLESON, J. FRANK . . .Arts and Sciences. BLAIR, CATHERINE..,Arts and Sciences' Chi Omega, President, '45, Collegian, Kendallabrumf Community Council, Panhellenic, Pi Delta Epsilon, President, '45. BLANKENBURG, PHYLLIS . . .Arts and Sciences, Span.sh Club. BOWLING, BETTY...Arts ancl Sciences, Kappa Delta, A Cappella Choir, Alpha Rho Tau. BOWSHER, LANORAH . , . Arts and Sciences, Engineers' Club, T, U. Y , Lo-Lo-Mi. BOYD, BETTE . . .Arts and Sciences, Lo-Lo.Mi, BROWN, CARL...Arts and Sciences, Hurricane, Assist- ant Manager. BRYAN, BETTY LOU...Arts and Sciences' Delta Delta Delta, President, '45, Collegian, Campus Correspondent for Tulsa World, Psychology Club, Panhcllenic. BUENO, LUlS...Engineering, Pi Kappa Alpha, Vice- President, '44, Engineers' Club, Spanish Club. CARRIGER, MARY MADGE...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta. CLARK, LESLIE. . . Engineering, Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice- President, '44, Engineers' Club, King Pat, '45, CLARKE, MADGE...Arts and Sciences: Delta Delta Delta, Pi Delta Epsilon, Alpha Rho Tau, Collegian, Business Manager, '44, Workshop. CLEEK, BEVERLY . . . Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega: Pi Delta Epsilon, Board of Publications, Collegian, Busi- ness Manager, '45, COULTER, BILL. .. Engineering, Kappa Alpha, Vice- President, '44, Sword and Key, Vice-President, '44, Phi Gamma Kappa, Engineers' Club. DIEM, DOROTHEA...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Workshop. DUNN, GEORGIA LOU .. .Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, T. U. Y , Lantern, Kappa Delta Pi, President, '45, Pi Gamma Mu. FORSTER, JANE ...Arts and Sciences, Psychology Club. FOSTER, PRlSClLLA...Arts and Sciences, Ott-Campus Greeks, Workshop. FRIESS, PAT...Arts and Sciences: Off-Campus Greeks. 1945 XX'e'rc off to another bowl . . . Nolan gets 21 lift. GALLAGHER, GWEN . . . Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, Vice- President, '45, Kappa Delta Pi, T,U. Y . GOODNIGHT, CLYDE.,.Arts and Sciences, Alpha Tau Omega, Lettermen, Vice-President, '45, Community Council, President, '45, Football Tri-Captain, '45, Who's Who. GRAY, SAM . ,.Arts and Sciences, Pi Kappa Alpha, Let- termen. HARRY, JEANNE . . . Fine Arts, Kappa Delta, Lantern, A Cappella Choir, Senior Staff, Sigma Alpha Iota, Vice. President, '44, President, '45, Panhellenic, President, '44, Kappa Delta Pi, Vice-President, '44, Who's Who. HARRY, JEANETTE , , . Business Administration, Kappa Delta, President, '45, Lantern, President, '43, Orchestra, Community Council, Senior Staff, President, '45, Pan- hellenic, Band, A Cappella Choir, Commerce Club, Pi Gamma Mu, Who's Who. HASKELL, DORIS SUE . . . Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, A Cappella Choir. HILBORN, JEAN,..Arts and Sciences, Lo-Lo-Mi, Vice. President, '43, President, '45, Spanish Club, HLJME, LAURA ...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, A Cappella Choir, Lantern. lGLEHART, CHARLES , , . Engineering, Lambda Chi Alpha, Engineers' Club, Sword and Key, Vice-President, '44, President, '45, T.U. Y , Phi Gamma Kappa, Who's Who. JONES, ELLlS.,.Arts and Sciences, Alpha Tau Omega, Community Council, Lettermen, Football Tri-Captain, '45 KERR, JOHNECE , . . Business Administration, Delta Delta Delta, Commerce Club. KERR, NANCY...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Pi Delta Epsilon, Workshop. KESSLER, ALVlN...Engineering, Band, Orchestra, Kap- pa Kappa Psi. KIGUCHI, SAM , . . Engineering, Engineers' Club. KlNZIE, BARBARA...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, LUHN NOLAN ...Arts and Sciences, Alpha Tau Omega, Vice-President, '44, Lettermen, Basketball. McCONNlCO, MARTHA LOU . . .Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, A Cappella Choir, Sigma Alpha Iota. McKNlGHT, DORIS JEAN.,,Arts and Sciences, Kappa Dc-lta, Lantern, Sigma Alpha Sigma, Spanish Club, President, '45. MEDlNA, JULlO . , , Engineering. MEYER REITA RUTH ...Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, Community Council, Publications Board, Pi Delta Ep- silon, Vice-President, '45, MCRGAN, EUNlCE...Business Administration, Phi Mu, Commerce Club. ' S SENIORS 'ill llll- - . eff if f A Dr. Caldwell, first president of Henry Kendall College, is honored at commencement exercises. MITCHELL, CHARLES...Arts and Sciences, Football, Basketball. NAYLOR, MARTHA BELLE. . . Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Vice-President, '45, Spanish Club, Geo- logy Club, Senior Staff. NEFF, BlLL,.,Arts and Sciences, Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice-President, '43, President, '44, '45, Community Council, lnterfraternity Council, President, '44, Pi Kappa Delta, President, '44, T. U. Y , Vice.President, '44, President, '45, Sword and Key, Vice-President, '45, Phi Gamma Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu, Who's Who. ODNEAL, BETTY . . . Business Administration, Pi Gamma Mu, A Cappella Choir, Sigma Alpha Sigma. OUSTERHOUT, MARJORIE. . .Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, Pi Gamma Mu, Lantern, Senior Statt, Who's Who. PASLEY, VIRGINIA . . . Arts and Sciences. PERKINS, DOROTHY . . .Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, Pres- ident, '45, Panhellenic, Senior Staff, Sigma Alpha Sig- ma, T.U. Y , Commerce Club, Psychology Club. VAN EMAN, MARJEAN PERKlNS...Arts and Sciences, Delta Delta Delta, Kappa Delta Pi, Vice-President, '45, Pi Gamma Mu, Alpha Rho Tau, Vice-President, '45, Phi Gamma Kappa, Sensor Staff, Who's Who. POOLE, MARY MARGARET,.,Fine Arts, Sigma Alpha Iota, Lantern, Phi Gamma Kappa, Senior Stall, Who's Who. PRATER, ROBERT . , . Arts and Sciences. QUINLAN, EILEEN , , , Arts and Sciences, Lo-Lo-Mi, Work- shop. ROBINOWITZ, JENNY . , , Arts and Sciences, Community l Council, Kappa Delta Pi, Women's lntcrmural Associa- tion. SALAS, FRANK... Engineering. SHEDLOSKY, ED , . . Arts and Sciences, Pi Kappa Alpha, Lettermen, President, '45, Kendallabrum, Assistant Business Manager, '45, Board of Publications. SNYDER, ELEANOR ,. .Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, Lan- tern, Senior Staff, Alpha Rho Tau, T. U. Y , Com- munity Council, Who's Who. SWEET, LYSBETH . , ,Arts and Sciences, Chi Omega, Vice, President, President, '45, Panhellenic, Kendallabrum, Collegian, Kappa Delta Pi. TEIS, CECELIA . . .Arts and Sciences, Phi Mu, WADE MAURICE . .,Arts and Sciences, Lettermcn, Bas- ketball. WARREN, JOHANNA ...Arts and Sciences, Workshop, WOLFE, CLEO. . . Business Administration, Chi Omega, Community Council, Kcnclallabrum, Business Manager, '45, Board of Publications, Commerce Club. WOODARD, BlLLlE...Arts and Sciences, Kappa Delta, Lantern, Debate Club, Spanish Club, Community Coun- cil. 5 :W if Y f E F Qx 5 5 ' N K X Q ZAWW 975 f X 9 , WY' .s ' .2 . A 5:5 E: .. -J 1, - X- K C 5 an ,7 57 S 5 CWQSS Cf 7946 ALMEN, BILL .. Business Artmlnlstratlon AULD, TERRESSA Arts and Sciences BAKER, MARIANNA Arts and Sciences BEARDEN, BILL Enguneerlng BISCHOFF, MARY Arts and Scfcnccs BOLLINGER, MARGARET Arts and Scrences BOLLMAN, PAT Business Admlnrstratlon BUI-IL, ART . . .Arts and SCICHCCS CADMAN, BILL. Arts and Sciences COLLINS, TOBY Engnnecrung CURTIS, JEAN .. Arts and Sciences CUTTING, MARJORIE Fine Arts DAUGHERTY, BETTY Arts and Sciences DAUGHERTY, CHARLES Arts and Scrences DAVIS, EVELYN Arts and Sciences DIETRICH, DEDE Arts and Scrcnces DONAHOE, JIM. Arts and Scrcnces DONAVAN, J. MAC Arts and Screnccs DONS, CHERRIE Arts and Sciences DOVER, ROXIE. Arts and Sciences DUNKIN, MARTHA KATE Business Artrnlnlstratlon ELKINS, DEAN. Engineering FENT, MARCELLA Business Artrnlnrstratlon FORNER, JOE., Busuness Admunrstratlon FRANCIS, NORMA SUE Frne Arts GADDIS, PHYLLIS Arts and Sciences GLASER, SARA LOUISE Frne Arts GRAHAM, LUCY Arts and Scrences HANSEN, BOB. . Engineering HAYDEN, KATHRYN Arts and Scrences HENSON, GLORIA Arts and Scrences HERRICK, ANN. Arts and Scrences HURT, VERA MARGARET Arts and Scrcnces IOBE, VASHTI .. Arts and Sclences JONES, LAURAY Eine Arts KOWALSKI, AL. Engineering LIVELY, JEAN ,. Business Administration MCDOWELL, BOB ,J It r IHIIIIIIII f gltf 2 Sorority prcsntcllts m xkc plms for rush MCMULLIN, DON .. ,Business Administration MONNET, PATRICIA. . . Arts and Sciences MOORE, DARLENE ...Arts and Sciences PATTERSON, LOUIS . . . Engineering PAYNE, BILLEE . , . Arts and Sciences POWERS, ELEANOR . . . Arts and Sciences PRAY, JEAN. . .Business Administration PRICE, CORA. , .Arts and Sciences RENEAU, DOLLY JANE . . . Business Administration ROY, EUGENE . , .Arts and Sciences SADLO, KATHRYN . . . Fine Arts SERFLING, JAN ,. .Business Administration SKEEHAN, PAT. . .Arts and Sciences SMITH, ALLEN . , . Business Administration SMITH, GLEN . . . Business Administration SPRINGER, VELLA RAY . . . Arts and Sciences STANLEY, C. B .... Business Administration SULLIVAN, GEORGE . . . Engineering SWINDELL, BETTY . . .Arts and Sciences THOMAS, JACK , , . Business Administration THORNTON, JACK . . . Engineering TLJBBS, DORIS . . .Arts and Sciences VERKINS, BOB , . .Arts and Sciences WALKER, BETTY. . ,Arts and Sciences WALKER, LEO. .Engineering WARREN, NATALIE . . . Arts and Sciences WHALEY, PHIL . . . Engineering WILSON, CAMP. .. Business Administration WINN, MARY K .... Arts and Sciences WOODRING, JEAN . . . Fine Arts WRIGHT, HAROLD . . . Engineering YADON, JO , . . Arts and Sciences YAMANE, AMEY . . , Arts and Sciences YEAGER, DICK . . . Arts and Sciences YEAKEY, MARY ELLEN ...Arts and Sciences YEARGIN, OLEATA . , . Arts and Sciences ZINK, JILL . . .Arts and Sciences 1945 I 'The warm spring sun brings back bicycles, tennis . . . and shorts. if ,,,-Q 14' .l -?2i1w1i I was The ftepf of Mcliarlin Library become a popular .vpot on the campm between thofe cram Jenrom. K, Q I ' ' N S P , ,. N. k h 1 I-if, L X f xi ,, x I - Vw -1 w IL. Q - 1 ffffffiifg W. N I ,,ll,,'I:: v f . Q i,:ff,ff'ff I 1 Q WL, . .Q v 11,1 ' ' ' Q, ,.-E .- 33- ' I . I ' Q 5' 4 gf E . - - ' X ? E . . . . . , F , - Q - I , ' ' fi. 1 n Q1 QQ J que Qfclss of 7947 ALLRED, BETTY . . . Arts and Sciences ANDERSON, ANDREALEE . . . Business Administration BARTLETT, MARTHA . . . Business Administration BASSETT, BILL.. . Engineering BINFORD, BETTY . . . Arts and Sciences BORNE, ADELE. . .Arts and Sciences BRIDGE, LEONA . . . Arts and Sciences BROAD, LILLIAN RUTH.. .Arts and Sciences BROWN, BETH , , , Arts and Sciences BUTI-IOD, HELEN . . . Arts and Sciences CHANEY, BETTY. . . Business Administration COLCHENSKY, RAE ANN . . .Arts and Sciences COMAN, JOELLA . . . Arts and Sciences COMFORT, PEGGY . . .Arts and Sciences CONWELL, BOB . . . Business Administration COOK, CONNIE . . . Engineering CRANS, JACKIE . . . Arts and Sciences CRIDER, DORIS . . . Arts and Sciences DAVIS, FRED.. .Arts and Sciences DIXON, JULIA. . .Arts and Sciences ELLIS, WANDA . . . Business Administration ENDRES, DICK ...Engineering ERICKSON, BETTY . . .Arts and Sciences FERGUSON, AURILEE . . , Arts and Sciences FIELD, ERIC . . . Business Administration FLEEGER, TOM ...Engineering FOAT, GRACE MARY . . . Business Administration FOGLE, GLENNA . . , Arts and Sciences FONDREN, KATHLEEN ...Fine Arts FRESE, MARGARET ...Arts and Sciences FULTON, BUNNIE ...Arts and Sciences GARRETT, GLORIA... Arts and Sciences GIBBONS, ANNA . . .Arts and Sciences GLASS, HELEN . . . Arts and Sciences GOODMAN, ANNABELLE. . .Arts and Sciences GRANT, JEAN . . .Arts and Sciences GRAY, VIRGINIA. . . Fine Arts GREENE, RUTH... Business Administration GUSTAFSON, ELON . . . Engineering HARMON, JEAN . . . Arts and Sciences SOPHOMORES S fIiili liiili fa EE Ii ees -sgffff QCA IN TIME To COME . . the play with a message. HARVEY, BETTY LUE . . , Arts and Sciences HARVEY, RUTH... Arts and Sciences HATFIELD, JERRY . . . Engineering HELLINGHAUSEN, BOB . . . Business Administration HENDERSON, DON . . . Business Administration HENSHAW, JEAN . . . Fine Arts HILL, AILEEN ...Business Administration HIROSE, FRANK. . .Arts and Sciences HOOVER, MARY HELEN .. .Business Administration HUDLIN, MARTHA . . . Arts and Sciences HUGGINS, HAZEL . , . Arts and Sciences HUME, JESSIE . . . Arts and Sciences HYDEN, MARGUERITE . . . Arts and Sciences JACKSON, JANET. , . Arts and Sciences JACKSON, MARY MARGARET . , . Arts and Sciences JACOBY, DOROTHY. . , Fine Arts JENKINS, DON ...Engineering JESTER, JUNE . . . Arts and Sciences JOHNSON, JEANE . . . Arts and Sciences JOHNSON, BILL , . . Business Administration KEITH, JOE , . . Business Administration KELLEY, JOHN , . Business Administration KELLY, DOROTHY. . . Business Administration KERR, JOHN . . . Engineering KLENTOS, ANNA . . . Arts and Sciences LAGRECA, SAM. . . Engineering LAIRMORE, JOYCE . . . Business Administration LALANDE, JOE . . , Engineering LANCASTER, JEAN . . .Arts and Sciences LANGFORD, LAURIE ...Arts and Sciences LAWYER, BETH . . . Arts and Sciences LITTLE, ANN . . .Arts and Sciences LONGHURST, JO HELEN . . . Arts and Sciences LUDEWICK, PAT , . .Arts and Sciences LYTLE, BETTY. ,.Arts and Sciences MAAS, DON. . .Arts and Sciences McCLELLAN, MARJORIE . . . Arts and Sciences McFETRIDGE, BOB . . .Arts and Sciences McKEE, HUGH ...Business Administration McKELLAR, MARY . . . Arts and Sciences 1945 li ' 5 iff' I 'The story 'of Woodrcuxv VUiIson and the lesson we should learn from it. , . ....,,, sms. . av -6' If s 'tk nn MCKINNEY, JOHN . . . Arts and Sciences MCLESTER, EVA MARIE. . . Arts and Sciences McPIKE, ESTER ,. .Arts and Sciences MCWILLIAMS, BETTY . . .Arts and Sciences MERSHON, MARGARET. . , Business Administration MILLARD, ROSE MARIE , . . Arts and Sciences NEWELL, MARVORIE . . . Arts and Sciences NEWTON, JOAN ...Business Administration OBERFELL, BOB . . . Engineering OGDEN, JO KATHERINE ...Business Administration PAUL, ELIZABETH ...Arts and Sciences PITCHER, MARGARET ...Business Administration P ITCOCK, NORMA ...Arts and Sciences POWERS, PAT , . .Business Administration PRICE, MARY ELLA . . , Fine Arts ROARK, MARY KATE. . .Arts and Sciencs ROBERTS, BLODWI N . . . Fine Arts RUSSELL, ALLYNE , . .Arts and Sciences SANDERS, ANN . . .Arts and Sciences SAWYER, FRED . . . Arts and Sciences SHEEHAN, RUTH . . . Arts and Sciences SHEPPARD, CONNIE. . . Business Administration SHUMWAY, SUSAN , . . Arts and Sciences SMITH, JEANE . . . Arts and Sciences SPEARING, ED . . . Engineering SPENCER, BUCK.. STEWART, JOANN .. STUBBS, BOGNER. THURMAN, PAT .. VANBRADT, LISBY . Arts and Sciences ,.Arts and Sciences ,Arts and Sciences ...Arts and Sciences WALTON, ALICE . . . Arts and Sciences WETZEL, KATHERI WHEELER, BOB , .. WHITE, VIRGINIA WIBLE, MARGERY WILLIAMS, MARY WILLIAMSON, CLA NE. . .Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences ...Business Administration ...Business Administration JANE . . . Fine Arts UDINE . . .Arts and Sciences WINTLE, JIM. .. Engineering WOLFE, RENA . . . Arts and Sciences Iiilli IIIII - SOPHOMORES 1 ' 5,5 . . 2-li eclpflff The pause that refreshes .Business Administration 2 VN XX V' X7 , db is W ' 4 'Gif x 4 '4 ., N Z f f if J 5.5 X 3 r Us Qfczss of 7948 MY, -vs. ADDISON, KENNETH . . . Engineering ADLER, HELEN IRENE . . . Business Administration ALLEN, NORMA . , .Arts and Sciences ANDERSON, BETTY . . , Arts and Sciences ANDREWS, MERCEDES . , . Arts and Sciences ARMSTRONG, NATHAN. . .Engineering ASHCRAFT, BOB . . . Engineering ASHWILL, DOROTHY . . . Arts and Sciences ATTAWAY, LILLIAN . . .Arts and Sciences ATTAWAY, ROBERT . . . Business Administration BAKER, JESSIE . . . Arts and Sciences BARRY, MAXINE . . .Arts and Sciences BAULDRIDGE, MARY ...Arts and Sciences BECHTEL, JOAN . . . Arts and Sciences BEGGS, NANCY . . . Arts and Sciences BELL, JEAN . . ,Arts and Sciences BELL, JLJANA LEE . . . Arts and Sciences BERGMAN, JACK . . . Engineering BEVINS, LEON . . . Business Administration BILLINGTON, JACK.. . Engineering BLACKWOOD, ROGER . . . Engineering BLAINE, DAWN , . . Fine Arts BLAIR, CAROLYN ,. .Business Administration BLAIR, ELIZABETH . . . Arts and sciences I BLOOM, BILL.. . Engineering BOONE, J. R .... Arts and Sciences BOTKIN, CAROLYN . . . Fine Arts BRADFIELD, ELIZABETH . . .Arts and Sciences BRAMMER, PATRICIA . . . Arts and Sciences BRAUN, MARILYN 4. .Arts and Sciences BRAUNLICH, CAROLYN , . ,Arts and Sciences BRITE, GEORGE . . . Fine Arts BRITE, RICHARD .. .Arts and Sciences BROWN, MARY . . . Business Administration BROWN, WALTER . , .Arts and Sciences BRLJNNER, RICHARD . . . Engineering BURCH, JEAN . . . Business Administration BURNHAM, GENE ., .Arts and Sciences BURNS, HARRY . . . Engineering BURNS, TOMMY.. ,Arts and Sciences FRESHMEN 'iIII'.IIliI. 2 -Jef fi ffm Baud Queen Marion Rogers is appropriately congratulated. BURTON, MARTHA... Arts and Sciences BURTT, ANN . . . Arts and Sciences BUSHNER, BUBBLES . . . Fine Arts BUTTERWORTH, KENNETH . . . Business Administration BYFIELD, VIRGINIA ...Arts and Sciences CAMPBELL, CLEDA . . . Arts and Sciences CAMPBELL, FRANK . . , Engineering CANTRELL, NORMA LEE.. .Arts and Sciences CARL, MARGARET.. .Arts and Sciences CARLSON, JOHN . , . Business Administration CASTILLO, LAURENE. . ,Business Administration CEASE, MARY LYNN .. .Arts and Sciences CEFALI, TONY , . .Arts and Sciences CLAR, JOHN ...Engineering CLARK, JIM. , .Engineering CLAYTOR, ED . . . Engineering COLEMAN, FRANK. ,,Arts and Sciences COLPITT, DORIS . . . Arts and Sciences COOK, MARY JANE. . .Arts and Sciences COPE, MARILYN . 4 4 Arts and Sciences CRABTREE, EUGENE . . .Arts and Sciences CRANDALL, ORA. , .Arts and Sciences CROSS, JACK , . , Engineering CROSSLAND, ED . . , Engineering DALTON, VIVIAN , , . Business Administration DAMERON, PEGGY.. . Business Administration DAVIS, ORALEE , . . Business Administration DAW, MARYLE . . . Business Administration DEAN, DOROTHY. . , Arts and Sciences DEDMON, JACKIE. . .Arts and Sciences DENTON, JESSIE . . . Arts and Sciences DICK, PAUL.. .Arts and Sciences DORROH, KATHLEEN . . . Fine Arts DOWELL, JOHN . . . Arts and Sciences DRAY, DOROTHY . . . Arts and Sciences DUKE, BEBE LEA . . . Arts and Sciences DUNN, MARGARET... Business Administration ECKER, DAN , . . Engineering ELDER, JOHN . . , Business Administration ESKRIDGE, BOB . . . Engineering 1945 I 'TIF III L se, A if IDL? 'Glen Smith crowns Marilyn Braun band queen of 1944. if-K! ....-- EYESTONE, BETTY JO .. .Arts and Sciences FARNSWORTH, NORA . . .Arts and Sciences FARRELL, CATHERINE. . . Fine Arts FAUCETT, MARY ELAINE . . .Arts and Sciences FERVOY, JACKIE . . . Arts and Sciences FETTE, MARY JO. , . Business Administration FIELD, MARY ALICE , , .Arts and Sciences FIELD, LAWRENCE.. . Engineering FINCHER, PAULINE . ,. Business Administration FLEETWOOD, CARLISLE... Engineering FLOYD, TOMMY . . . Business Administration FOOTE, MAXINE. . .Fine Arts FOREMAN, SUE ANN . . .Arts and Sciences FOWLER, MARY NELL . . .Arts and Sciences FULTON, GLORIA . . , Engineering FULTON, JIM.. . Engineering GEBHART, MARY . . . Fine Arts GEPPELT, WILMA JEAN . . .Arts and Sciences GILMORE, BILL.. .Engineering GIROUARD, DICK . . .Arts and Sciences GLASSCO, FRED . . , Engineering GOODSON, I-IORACE . , . Business Administration GORDON, OUIDA . , , Fine Arts GRIGG, FORREST . . . Arts and Sciences HAAS, PATRICIA . . . Business Administration HADLEY, MARGARET . . . Arts and Sciences I-IARKNESS, BETTY . . , Arts and Sciences HARRIS, JUNE. . . Business Administration HARROLD, BARBARA , . . Business Administration I-IAYDEN, JOANN ...Arts and Sciences HAYES, JIM . . . Engineering HENTHORNE, MARY . , . Arts and Sciences HILLMAN, LEO . . . Engineering I-IINMAN, NANCY. . .Arts and Sciences HOGARD, EARL. . . Business Administration HOLCOMB, DAN , , . Arts and Sciences HOLEMAN, BETTY.. .Arts anci Sciences HOLLAND, TOM . . , Engineering I-IOPPE, ILA FERN . . .Arts and Sciences HORN, EDDIE . . . Business Administration ,L FRESPIMEN ii'IifI'lii 3 T2 'lit :Llp f sl' I The spacious living room of Kemp Hail is ii favorite gathering place. HOUCHINS MARY Arts and Sciences HOURIGAN PAT Enqrneerrng HUBBARD JUNE Flne Arts HUDSON MORSE Busrness Admlmstratlon HUNTER BILL Arts and Sciences HURLEY ANN Arts and Screnccs HUSTEDDE EDNA Arts and Scscnces IHRIG, BETTY LOU Busrness Admlnlstratron IOBE, VICTOR Arts and Scrences JARRETT BILL Englneerrng JOHNSON BONNI Busxness Actrnlnxstratlon JOHNSON SARA LU Arts and Scrences JOHNSON JANE Buslness Aclrmnsstratlon JONES, BILLIE RUTH Busrness Admlnlstratlon JONES, FRANCES Arts and Sclences JONES, JEANE Arts and Sctences JONES, BUDDY Enguneerung JONES, PEGGY Arts and Sciences KEMNITZ GLORIA Arts and Sciences KENNEDY CARROLL Busrness Admlnnstratron KERNS GERALD Engxnccrtng KIFER, ODEYNE Arts and Scucnccs KIRKLAND BOB Business Admrnlstratlon KIRKPATRICK JOHN Engtneerlng KLINTWORTH BILL Engnneerung KONDOS SYLVIA Arts and Scucnces KUYKENDALL RUBY Business Adrnlnlstratton LAEORTUNE BOB Engtneertng LAMB, LAMM LANE, LATTY LEAHY LEWALLEN MARY Arts and Sclc-nces LISLE VERA Arts and Sctences LONGHURST ELIZABETH Arts and Sciences MACHNER NORMA Bustness Admtnrstratton MAHER DAVID Enguneerrng MALLEN MARILYN Bustness Admtnustratlon MANEVAL MAX Englneernng I 9 4 5 Rcmcmbcr those Ummm Brxdge UD games MARSH, MAX . , . Engineering MARSH, PHYLLIS . , . Arts and Sciences MARTIN, LORENA. , , Arts and Sciences MARTIN, MARGARET . . . Arts and Sciences MASON, DICK . . , Arts and Sciences MELINDER, KATHRYN . . , Business Administration McAFFERY, PATTY . . . Arts and Sciences MCCRACKEN, BETTY MAE. , . Business Administration McDOWELL, ANN . , , Business Administration McEARLAND, LEOTA . . . Arts and Sciences MCGEE, COY . . . Engineering MCGUIRE, KATHLEEN . . . Business Administration McINNES, JUNE . . , Business Administration McKEE, TOM . . . Business Administration McMAHON, CARROL . . . Business Administration MILLER, MARY LOU . . . Business Administration MILLER, PHYLLIS . . . Fine Arts MILLS, SARA LOU . . .Arts and Sciences MITCHELL, CORETTA . . . Arts and Sciences MOORE, BILLIE JANE , . . Business Administration MOORE, ROSEMARY . . . Business Administration MORAN, JOE. . . Engineering MORGAN, NEIL , , , Engineering MORGAN, REUBEN , . . Business Administration MOSELEY, DICK . . , Engineering MOSS, PERRY. . , Business Administration MOULDER, DICK , . . Fine Arts MOWERY, BILL , . , Engineering MOYER, JERAULD. . ,Engineering MURRAY, SUE . . 4 Arts and Sciences NABORS, BOB . , . Arts and Sciences NEAL, GEORGE. . .Arts and Sciences NEELY, RUTH . . . Arts and Sciences NEFF, MARY JUNE . . ,Arts and Sciences NELSON, MARQUE . , . Business Administration NICHOLSON, DOROTHY , . . Arts and Sciences NORDIN, MAVIS 4 . . Business Administration O'HERN, LARKIN , . . Engtneering OSWALD, BOB. , . Engineering OWENS, JAMES.. .Engineering FRESHMEN S Iiili fs 1 - I E ee HH 221 -Llp If 1' F ff The IIVnrrfoz .i' Hlfifmmf hits the road to tour army C211TlpS. PALLEIN, MARY ANN . . , Arts and Sciences PARISHO, ILENE . . . Business Administration PATE, CHARLES . . . Engineering PATTERSON, NORVEL , . . Engineering PEARSON, JUNE . . . Arts and Sciences PELTON, BETTY LOU ...Arts and Sciences PHILLIPS, BOB ...Engineering PHIPPS, KENT. . .Arts and Sciences PLUMLEE, LEAH , . .Arts and Sciences POLK, HOMER . . . Arts and Sciences POLLARD, JIM , , . Business Administration POWELL, MARY . . . Arts and Sciences PREWITT, FELTO. , .Arts and Sciences PRIEST, PATSY ,. .Arts and Sciences UNIDENTIFIED PROPPS, CAROLYN . . .Arts and Sciences PRLJITT, WANDA . . . Arts and Sciences PULLMAN, BARBARA. . . Engineering QUINN, JIM , . . Engineering RAY, JUANITA . . . Fine Arts REDMAN, HELEN. .. Business Administration REEVES, FLORENCE . . , Arts and Sciences RICE, PATRICIA . . .Arts and Sciences RICHARD, JOE. . .Arts and Sciences RICHEY, FRANCES. . . Arts and Sciences ROBERTS, BETTY . . . Fine Arts ROBERTS, DOLORES . , . Business Administration ROBERTS, DON . , . Engineering ROBERTS, HELEN . . . Arts and Sciences ROBERTS, JEAN . . . Arts and Sciences ROSE, PAUL . , . Arts and Sciences ROSZEL, RONNIE . . .Arts and Sciences RUSKOSKI, ALBERT. . . Business Administration SCARBOROLJGH, JESS. , .Arts and Sciences SCHMALHORST, BILL . . . Engineering SCHMIDT, WALTER. . ,Engineering SCHULER, JACK.. .Business Administration SCHWENDEMEN, CHARLES . . . Engineering SCOTT, DAN . . , Engineering SCOTTI, HELEN . . . Business Administration 1945 G ,Ji'ih.'IliWii Football Queen Virginia Swain and her lovely attendants. SIMMONS, WILLIAM . . .Engineering SIMON, MOLLY . . , Business Administration SIMS, MARGARET . , ,Business Administration SKEEHAN, BILL. , .Arts and Sciences SKYBERG, MILDRED , . . Fine Arts SMITH, CHARLES . . . Engineering SPRINGER, BENITA . . .Arts and Sciences STEINER, LOIS , . ,Arts and Sciences STITES, JEANNE ANNE . . . Arts and Sciences STOVER, HOWARD... Engineering STUART, BOBBY JACK.. ,Arts and Sciences SUDER, VIOLET . . .Arts and Sciences SWAIN, VIRGINIA. . . Arts and Sciences SWANEY, HAROLD.. ,Arts and Sciences SWINDELL, RUTH .. .Arts and Sciences TAYLOR, CORIENE , , 4 Business Administration TEAL, MAYE . , . Arts and Sciences TERRY, AMANDA JUNE , . , Fine Arts THOMAS, STANDLEE . . . Fine Arts THOMPSON, VIRGINIA . . . Business Administration THOUVENELLE, MARTHA.. .Fine Arts TODD, VIRGINIA. . . Arts and Sciences TOLER, BOB . , . Arts and Sciences TRABAND, ROY . , . Arts and Sciences TUBBS, LOIS . . . Arts and Sciences LJNDERWOOD, JAMES , . . Engineering VINSON, JACK.. ,Business Administration WALKER, GORDON .. ,Engineering WALKER, MARY , , .Arts and Sciences WALLACE, JO ANNE , . . Arts and Sciences WEBB, JEANNE . . , Fine Arts WELCH, BETTY , . . Business Administration WEST, MARION . . .Arts and Sciences WHITE, JOYCE . . , Arts and Sciences WHITLOCK, DON . . . Engineering WILFORD, MARY . . .Arts and Sciences WILLIAMS, PATTYE , . ,Arts and Sciences WILLIAMS, LYNDA . . . Business Administration WINBURN, MARGIE . . . Arts and Sciences WOODSON, FRED.. .Arts and Sciences WOODWARD, MARTHA.. .Arts and Sciences WORLEY, DOROTHY , . ,Arts and Sciences WORRALL, KENNETH , . . Engineering WORSTELL, BETTY . . , Arts and Sciences WORTLEY, MARION . , .Arts and Sciences WYATT, JOHN . . 4 Engineering YEAGER, MARY JANE , . . Arts and Sciences YOUNG, BETTY JO 4 . , Arts and Sciences Abbott, William Leslie Adam, John Brydon Adams, Elmer W. Akin, Brown J. Akin, Hugh Lewis Aizawa, Hatsuro Alban, Milden Amos Alexander, Hiram Marshall Alexander, Howard Alexander, Jim F. Alexander, Leon Allen, Bill H., Jr. Allen, David W. Allen, Harvey F. Allen, Haskell Allen, John Melvin Allen, Mitchell Allen, William Graham Allen, William O. Allende, David Alley, David Roy, Jr. Allred, John Alspaugh, Joe Tidwell kA1spaugh, Robert E., Jr. iAlvis, Paul D., Jr. Amstutz, Ray Warren Annex, Paul Autry, Fred Autry, Jack Bailey Anderson, DeWitt Wilbanks Anderson, John Brander Anderson, Samuel Herbert Andrews, David Avon Andrews, Delmar Jennings, Jr. Ashcraft, James R. Attaway, Harold Rex Aubrey, William Kenneth Austin, Jess William Austin, LeRoy Syl Avery, James Bennett Axton, Marion Francis Ayers, Jimmy William Babbitt, Jack Bachtell, Robert Graves Bacon, Chas. F. Bacon, Kenneth Harrison Bahos, Ted Bailey, Philip Nathanial Baird, Robert Miles Baker, Jimmie H. Baker, Robert Earl Baker, Robert Lee Baker, Theodore B. Baldwin, Billie Elliott Banister, Richard Carl Barnes, Charles Lewis Bartholomew, Marvin Frank Bartholomew, Ray Strothur Barton, Charles Kelly Barton, John Page Bass, William Robert Bass, Willis Francis Bassham, Eugene Batchelor, Dick Bates, Thomas Reed Bauer, George Franklin, Jr. Bauer, Richard John Baxter, fBillyJ Glen William Baze, William P. Beane, Joe William Beaver, Floyd Verden Beck, Fred Logan Behning, Paul D. Bell, George Francis Bendel, Ralph G. Benear, Bert, Jr. Benefiel, Chester James fChetJ Berger, Charles A. Bernier, John Roger Berry, James Sherman Billings, Cyrus Leighton Birmingham, Ovid N. Blackaby, Bruce Blaine Blackman. Joseph Sheldon Blackwell, Herman Caldwell, Harold Leroy Q ,,., Caldwell, Keith J. 4, Campbell, Colin Clyde ' ' Campbell, Doris Janet Hill, Campbell, Edmund Burt f K 'gfrlg Camplbell, Glenn L. I Cgrv-2, 3 - G I , -X:-ig' Q ,..- gf' Camp ell, Kenneth E ston --r' f l'Campbell, Robt. C. ,V , Campo, Henry Andrew - I sp? Candler, Arthur Van Buren, Jr ',,4, 'Qg5X ,, Nerf ,1, TCargile, Nolan B. :ff-fag? can, William Joseph, Jr. 'f2 rl? I -- c I ci c 1. 1' ,figgpsw ' Y qtlkggy V- Aff. arpen er, varence oe V7 i Hwang, , Ui ff: Carpenter, Richard Dean I - ,QA 12455 Carpenter, Richard William Ss- 55514 Carr, Howard John , If! ,,.., ', 'S' Carson, David E. M ' . -A Carter, Nathan S. affwg - Carter, Oral Lee, Jr. 47,11 .Xhk I . f-'4,,whl',i,:l,i ' Carter, Orris Earl Q'l16lllafe5 ana! j0l'l'l'lel' .QUJBHEJ .gn m farg eruice 4 Killed 'J' Missing as of April 5, 1945. ji Prisoner. Blaicher, Don Fred Blaine, George Morrison Blair, Albert Patrick 'l'Blair, Joe M. Blair, Percy Fox Blair, William Frank Bland, Richard Parks CDickJ Bland, Richard Winfield Blank, Winfield Bruce Blankenburg, Robert L. Blazer, James Norwood Bleakley, W. Bruce Boerner, Burris A. Boggess, Donald Dee Bomford, Sue Bomford, Wright, Jr. Bond, Ridgely McClure Bonnet, Tom Edward Borden, Leroy Rogers Borgeson, Wallace Albert Borochoff, Jack Edwards Botkin, John Norman Boucher, Fred Harold Bovaird, William J. Bowen, Carl Edward Bowen, Troy Bowlin, Paul Forrest Bowlin, Robert E. Bowsher, Arthur LeRoy Boyd, William Wray, Jr. Boyer, Charles Clifford Boyles, John W. Boyls, Ted W. Bradshaw, Glenn W. 'l'Bradley, James N. Bradley, John D. Brady, Kenneth L. Brandes, Kenneth Edwin Brannon, Jacque Tolbert Brazier. Robert Whiting Brennan, Joseph Michael Brenneman, Albert Briggs, Robert Lee Briley, Charles Galen Briley, James E., Jr. Brindel, Frank D. TBritt, Brandon J. Brinkley, Thomas Willis 'l'Broach, Robert E. Brocchus, Joseph Ben jamin, Jr Brockman, Henry Charles, Jr. Brodsky, Marion Broome, William Wallace ' Brooks, O. L. Brown, Robert G. Brown, Charles James Brown, Dorothy Louise Brown, Duncan Carlyle Brown, Guy Richard Brown, Jack Gibson Brown, Omer Arthur Brown, Ross E. Brown, Sam Jessie Brown, William Robert Brownlee, James Whitfield Bruce, Howard Bruton, Lee Bryan, Forrest James C JackJ Bryan, Richard Davis Bryce, John Coyle Bryce, Walter Pierce Buchner, Robert Earle Buffalo, Roy fljBuland, Joseph A., Jr. Burchett, Stanley Warren Burdette, James Albert Burger, Duane Raymond Burkhart, Sarah Burkitt, William Cromer Burnley, Ralph Ray Burns, Harry Kenneth Burns, Paul Y. 1Burris, Chas. Wm. Burris, Paul Buddy Bridges, Richard Kidder Mead, Jr. Buthod, John Daniel Bridges, Jack Hudson Butler, Nolan Bridges. William S. fCable, J. Michael Briggs, Gilbert Lahew Caffee, Malcolm Wesley Carter, Robert Neal Carter, Rolland Dan Casburn, Jack Furman Lee Casey, Dennis Patrick Casey, George Cashman, Charles Albert Catching, Robert Monroe Caudle, J. R. Chambers, John Quincy Chancellor, John Nelson Chandler, Edward Hazen Chantry, Wendell Max Childs, Casey Childs, Charles Oscar Chouteau, Jess Leland Chrisp, Lester Christ, Charles Christie, John Richard Chronic, Byron John Chronic, Wm. L. Church, Donald Chesterfield Churchill, Winton D. Clark, Andy Earl Clark, Elmer Lee Clark, John Frank Clark, Roscoe Conkling, Jr. Clark, Thomas A. Clarkson, Stanley Thomas Clasquin, Walter Leroi Claybaugh, Charles Victor Claybaugh, Vernon Chester Clement, Haskell James Clifton, Edward Frankin Clifton, Glenn A. Cline, Wayne Harold Clote, John Whalen Clote, Paul J. . Clote, Tommy Anthony Clout, John Scott Clow, Richard James Cobb, Joseph Raymond, Jr. Coburn, Richard Weldon Cochrane, David Wood ICockrell, James L. Coe, Milton Eugene Cole, Francis Russell Collier, George Albert Collier, Robert L. Collins, Herbert Hamilton Collins, Hugh Taylor Collins, Leo Evan Colton, Bruce MacLeod Compton, John Colton, George Radcliffe 'Conley, Allen J. Conley, Earl Garner Conner, R. Brooks Cook, Merwin Glazier Connelly, Wm. J. Coontz, Edward Catlin Cooper, Fern Graham Cooper, Harden Fenimore, Jr. Copeland, Hillis Donald Copeland, Jim W. Coulson, Jack Leonard Coulson, William Robert Coville, John D. Cox, Harold R. Coyle, George Lawrence Crain, Joel W. Cramer, John Wallace Craver, Frank Steele, Jr. Crebbs, Ben Herbert Crimmins, W. G. Crites, Edgar F. Cross, Norman C., Jr. Crouch, David Crouch, Vernon deNeil Crow, Howard Crump, Laymond Clyde Cullen, Hal League Cundiff, Carl Harrison Cunningham, Wesley Wilson Curfman, John Robert Current, Andrew Max Curry, Dempse Dague, John Clair Dale, Dorris Delores 'J'Daniel, J. Gerald Daniels, Merle Ray D'Arcy, Jerry Daugherty, Joe Bailey David, Herndon Edwin David, James M. Davis, Edwin Wallace Davis, Jesse D. Davis, John Mack Davis, Victor W. Davis, Warren Bryan Davis, Woodrow Wilson Day, Everett O. Day, Guilford Dealy, James Paul Dean, Robert B. Deeley, Jeane Florence DeLuce, Louis Frank DeMars, Teddy Basil Dennis, Marshall DePuy, Katherine Eleanore DeVinna, Maurice Ambrose, Jr. Dick, Edward Raymond Dickey, Lloyd S. Dickson, William T. Dietrich, William R. Dill, George Dixon, William John Dobbs, Robert Lee Dobbs, Glenn, Jr. Dominy, Kenneth Leroy Donalson, Jack 'J'Donalson, Jeff Donnelly, Robert True Dooley, Wesley Leon Dorsey, John Douglas Dost, William Frederick Doty, Max A. Dougherty, William Coonan Doughman, Claude L. Downey, William Patrick Drake, Edward E. Dresser, Robert Mac Drewry, Ralph Tony Duffey, John Beatty Dugger, Charles Dugger, Richard Shelby Dumit, Richard Ray Dunaway, John Roy Duncan, Carl Irvin, Jr. Dundee, Morris Gary Dunham, Ralph Fred Dunham. Robert Joe Dunlap, George E. Dunn, Edwin Lewis Dunn, Evans Hall Dunn, James Phillips l'Durham, Chas. L., Jr. Duston, Dean Dwen, James G. Eakes, Mather M. Eastwood, Glen D., Jr. Eddington, Allen Boyce Eatherton, Mary Virginia Ellis Edmisten, D. H. TEastman, Wm. G. Elkins, Geo. W. Edwards, Estille E. Elkins, James Wm. 'fEdminston, John A., Jr. Elliott, James J. Ellison, Richard Elleson, Bob Elson, James H. Embry, Earl Marvin Emmick, Donald Talbott Engle, James P. Engles, Leo J. Epperson, Wm. B., Jr. Ericksen, Dewey A. Eskridge, Charles J. Eubank, Herman Wm. Eubank, Thomas Carter, Jr. Evans, Kiah Evans, Theodore R. Ewing, Wm. M. Ezzell, Edwin L. Fallon, Ben DeWitt Farthing, Glenn R. Fast, Richard C. Feenburg, Jerry C. Feray, Dan E. Feray, Irwin J., Jr. Ferguson, James L. Ferguson, John L. Fickel, Raymond A. Fields, Lawrence L. Fike, Roy K. Finlayson, John K. J'Finley, Leo John, Jr. Fiske, Wm. E. Fitts, Leon E., Jr. Fitzgerald, Wm. P. Florez, Elsa Cermak Fogle, Ronald W. Fogle, Russell L. Ford, Presley S. Ford, James W. Ford, Wm. T. Foresman, John B. Forsman, Marion B. Forsman, Robert Almer Fortin, J. L. Fostre, Joe L. Foster, John D. Foster, Vernon L., Jr. Fowler, Robt. B., Jr. Fox, Milton E. Frailey, Bransford l. Fraley, Wm. J. Francy, Leonard J. D. Franklin, Truman L. Frates, Rex D. Frazee, Thomas Wm. Freeman, Alva E., Jr. 9' Freeman, James D. Freese, James D. Freese, John T. Freese. Wm. E. Frick, James W. Friels, Eulan W. Friels, Meredith E. Froose, Bernard F . Frost, Jean Frost, Harold T., Jr. Froug, Wm., Jr. at ZlZFryer, Peter J. Fryer, Walter L. FryBarger, Arlington H. Fuller, Don E. Fuller, Robt. W. Fulling, John H. Fulton. Henry, Jr. Funk, James Frumey, Wm. Murl Gannaway. William Robertson Gardner, Richard Earl Garrett, Chester M., Jr. Garth, Brooks Garth, Jimmy Gates, Floyd Thomas Geissler, Paul Miller Gelzand, Louis lrwin Genet, Abel Max, Jr. Gennis, lvan Frederick Gentry, Elmer Lee George, David Crookett George, Dean German, William P. Z., Jr. Gibbons, John Burris Gibbs, James Trowbridge Gibbs, Ross Berkley, Jr. Gibson, Ellis Gentry Gibson, Hoover LeRoy Gibson, Kenneth L. Gibson, Nathan Adams, Jr. Gilmore, James David Gilmore, Robert James Giinlin, James Harold Girouard, George E. Goble, John David Girouard, Paul R. Goerner, Hugh Hale Goff, Harry Everest Goldsmith, James Norman Goodale, George Goodman, Bert Goodwin, H. R. Goodwin, John Gordon, Norman 'Gordon, Wm. E. Gose, Jess Willard 'f'Gorham, Chester A., Jr. Gow, Robert Ill Gowans, Edwin Wilson Graham, Alton Lacy Graham, Donald S. Graham, Lester James Graham, Travis Gid Graves, Gerald Holmes Gray, Don Green, John Lincoln Green, Keith W. Greene, Charles Henry, Jr. Greene, Nelson R. Greenwell, Ivo Rodrick 'Gregory, Forest Grieves, William Arthur Gregory, Reagon Greider, Roger Ellis Griffin, Bertram Leon Griffin, Jack Leo Griffin, James Henderson Grimmett, Bill LaReau Grimshaw, William Ray, Jr. Grove, Milton Bond Grover, David H. Grover, Martin Converse, Jr. Guntheroth, Harry William, Jr. Gurley, Glenn Albert Guthrie, Peggy Jane Haas, Leo Francis Hackathorn, Billy Hadden, James Robert Hagar, William Strohben Hail, Maurice Preston Hair, Charles Hall, John G. Hall, Guy, Jr. Hall, Robert Guy, Jr. Hambrick, Weldon Leroy Hamill, Allen William, Jr. IlIHamill, John R. Hamilton, Ramon Keith Hammack, Thomas Hammer, Willard M. Hammett, David Mills Hammett, Ellis Ted Hammett, John Paul Harris, John F. Hansel, William Edward Hansen, Robert L. Haralson, Prescott Herndon Harmon, William S. Hargrove, Robert Donald 4' Harp, Gerald Harmon, Hamlett S. Heald, Merl J. Hinkley, De Lorma, Jr. iHicks, Harold Harrington, Charles Curtis, Jr Harrington, William A. Harris, Herman Thomas l'Harris, Jim A. Harrison, George Harrison, Helen Harry, Norman McCoy Harter, Harry B. Hartley, Vernon Harmon Hartley, Walter George, Jr. Hartman, Bruce C. Hause, Wayne Ralph Hawk, William McKinley, Jr. Hayes, Fred Lewis Hays, Jack Newton Hays, James Lee Hays, James Robison Hays, Thomas Marshall Hearn, Daniel P. Heath, Harry Eugene Herrick, Joe Love Heller, Harold Lester Heller, Harry, Jr. Heller, Harvey Augustus Heller, William Thomas Helmerich, Walter Hugo, Ill Henderson, Ida Belle Hendon, Fred H. Hendrix, Eugene Maurice Henicle, Glenn R. Henkes, William Conrad Henry, John William Hensley, Frank Cooper, Jr. Henson, Robert Allen Henthorne, John R. Herriman, John M. Heydon, Thomas A. Hibbard, Haines Hickock, Russell Blakely Higashioka, George S. Hightower, Jack Hill, Robert Burns Hillerman, John Parker Hinch, John J. Hix, Hart Hodges, John Hodges, Millard Hodges, Robert Hogan, William Howard Holiway, Robert James Holland, John Ben Holland, Thomas L. it Holland, William Thomas, Jr. Holliday, Kenneth Craig 'rHolt, Richard B. Holt, Wayne C. Honska. Walter Lee, Jr. Hopper, M. C. Hooker, Freeman F. Horne, James Max Hoss, Robert L. House, Monte Sandles, Jr. House, Lewis Randolph Houston, Merton Burton, Jr. 'Howard. Wm. E. Huber, Jack Neil Hudlin, Mary Kathryn Hudry, Ladislav Cteboh Hudson, Robert Wade Hudson, Ted H. Huff, Mavfield Jackson Hughes, Eugene James Hulsizer, William Edward Humphrey, Ross Wayne Humphreys. James Robert Hunclahl. David John Hundahl, Frences M. Hunter, Frank Hunter, Harry Tom Hunter, Mary Frances Hyden, Billy Ray lgel, Pery Ingalls, Ralph Wocher, Jr. Insch, Paul Iovine, Guy Irons, Jeffery Dean Irwin, Gerald Neely Iwasaki, Shogo Jackson, Jean D. Jackson, Milda Ruth Jacobs, Donal Edward l'Jeble, Ralph Jewell, David F. Jobe, William Leonard, Jr. Johnson, Bill Johnson, Charles Teddy Johnson, Dale Johnson, Donald Richard Johnson, Gerald Lee Johnson, Earl Howland, Jr. 'Johnson, Ivan O. Johnson, Joseph Milton Johnson, Mead R. Johnson, Roy Walter Johnson, William Harvey 'Johnson, W. Gerald, Jr. Johnston, Eugene Lee Johnston, James Kendall Johnston, Milton James Johnston, Richard Milton Jones, Charles Edward, Jr. Jones, Frank Owen, Jr. Jones, Rodman Jones, J. L. Jones, Karl Esterly, Jr. Jones, Kenneth B. Jones, V. Edgar Jones, William Lloyd Jorns, Kenneth Lloyd Judd, Jack Judd, James Earle Judd, Saxon Kahl, Robert M. Kaiser, William Frederick Kates, Henry Katopodis, Bill Louis Kaufman, Edward Lee Kaufman, Howard C., Jr. Keilch, John Fitzgerald Keithley, N. A. Kelley, John Lee Kendall, James Clarke Kennon, Troye Almyrl Kent, Charles Fay Kerr, David Jay Kerr, Hawley Coe Kessler, Alvin Kilpatrick, James Edward Kimball, Kent Turner King, Clyde A., Jr. King, James Leonard King, Joe Wallace King, Francis S., Jr. King, William Leland, Jr. King, fPeterb J. S. King, Priscilla Harry Kingslover, Jarrett Kinney, Karl Kenneth Kirkbride, Robert Kevin Kirkpatrick, John Wallace Kirschner, Robert Donald Kitaski, Kiyoshi Klein ohn H. r .J I i Knouse, Edward Kenneth, Jr. l'Koberling, Frank W. Koch, R. J. Jr. Koons, Robert Wesley Korte, Raymond Harold Korte, Robert Ernest Kraft, James Edward Krasatkin. Alex Kroeger, Fred Christian Krumtum, John Kennard Kruse, Victor LaGrone, Don LaGrone, Myron Francis Lain, George Ray Lancaster, 'Wilbur Dudley, Jr. Lanphere, Bill Lamberton, Bill Lambeth, Eugene Lambeth, Gibson Lamprich, Harry Albert Lancaster, Clifford CKipJ Elvis Landes, Guy Murray, Jr. Lane, Chester Howard, Jr. Lane, Robert Daniel Lang, Bob R. Langenheim, Ralph Louis, Jr. Langenheim, Richard Henry Langley, Harold Marion Lantz, Robert Joseph Larimore, Jack P. Lary, Virgil Pendleton Lauer, Earl Andrew Lawrence, Richard Price Lawson, Lowell Floyd Lawyer, Howard Fenton Lee, Harry Fred Leforce, Clyde J. LeGrand, John A. Lelley, Jack G. Leon, Joseph John Leonard, John Reeves Leonard, Richard Wayne Lilystrand, Ted Oscar LeSueur, Alex Armant Lewis, Eugene Wesley Linde, Joe Hodgess, Jr. Linde, Robert James Lindsay, Jack Trent Lisle, George William Lively, William Frank Livesay, Joe Lloyd, Ben Clayton Lockwood, Gerald W. Lockwood, Robert Ralph Logan, Walter Limebarger Logsdon, Krit G. Lombard, John Cecil Long, John Loofbourrow, James Loveless, Richard M. Loving, Gene Albert Lowery, Lewis Claude Lowrey, Orvey Preston Lucas, Clinton Arnold Luckhardt, Harry Alan, Jr. Luckhardt, Roy J. Lukken, Robert Moehlenbrock Lutz, Harry A. Lyons, Hugh Robert Macy, Ernest Warren Marsh, D. Max Mason, James Oscar Maples, Robert E. Morkovitz. Paul Marks Madden, Bill Markwell, Earl David, Jr. 'I Marsh, James W. Marshall, John Bruce Maker, David J. Marshall, Jack Marshall, John Brooks Martin, Karl F., Jr. Martin, William Henson 'Martin, Flovd Neil Hase, John Roscoe Mason, John R. Mason, Robert Matson. George Charlton Matt. John G. Matthews. Clarence Ralph Mavris, John G. Mavris, Nicholas B. McAllister, Bruce Geddes McAllister, Bruce G. at McAllister, David Lockwood McAuley, Walter J. McBee, George Elmer McBee, William McCauley, George R. McClintock, Harold Stanley, Jr. McCollum, Charles Wesley McCormick, Donald David McCormick, James B., Jr. McCormick, John Francis McCracken, Gerald A. McCraw, Bob Lee McCrory, Mac Lee McCullough, Frank Orion McCullough, W. F. McDonald, John Harris McDowell, Thomas Howard, Jr. MacEachern, Jack Potter McEachin, William Alexander McElroy, Jack W. McFetridge, Lois Mae McGinley, Charles Edison McGoldrick, Thomas McHenry, Hollis P. McKee, Calvin Charles McKee, James Gregory McKee, Thomas E. McKissick, William Harper, Jr. McLane, Clem Cleaver McLeod, Alton A. McLeod, Donald Lawrence McLune, Gerald W. McMahan, Robert Charles McMahon, William McMichael, Jack Wm. McMillan, Clarence, Jr. McNamee, Wallace V., Jr. Meador, Moorman Meadows, Sammie K. Mechling, Ross Mehlope, John Frederick, Jr. 'l'Merrill, Tommy Meloje, James Perry, Jr. 'J'Merkel, Howard W. Meyer, Darrell Slover Mildren, Larry Jack Miles, Happy Howard Miller, Hubert Adolphus Miller, Louis Harry Miller, Lyman S. Miller, William Richard Mitchell, Joseph Hurd, Jr. Mills, Jack Mitchell, Juanita Rhea Mitchell, Lindsay E. Mix, Leroy Raymond Mockley, Robert E. Mode, John Rex Moffett, Edwin Booth, Jr. Moncrief, John Murray, Jr. Moncrief, Richard Drury Monery, Chas. Wm. Montgomery, Bob Moon, Nelson F. 'l'Moore, Chas. B. Moore, Lynn Moore, Dell Moore, Truman P. Morgan, Richard Morgan, Edwin Phillip 'lMorris, H. Lyman Morgan, Joseph Patrick Morris, Jack G. Morgan. Robert Edward Morris, William Talbert Morton, Fred C. Morton. Harold Lewis Mott, Brock Moulder, Sanford Milton Muchovick, Raymond Muller, Albert Anthony Mullins, Jess Frank Munsey, Charles Wayne Murphy. John Raymond Murray, Clay Murry, John Stotts Myers, Ralph C. 1Nash, David F. Neely, James Nelson, Barbara Ann Nelson, Bill Martin Nelson, Erick A. Nelson, Gerald Bernidt Nelson, Philip Edward Nelson, Theodore McFarland Nelson, William Bruce Nesbitt, Tom Edward Nichols, Nora Marie Nolan, Hascall David Noland, James Garrett Nuckols, Charles R. Nuckolls, James Earnest Oakes, Walter Francis Ogilvie, Douglas Clark O'Hern, John Larkin O'Hern, William Oiler, David Alexander Oiler, Robert Frederic Olson, Arthur, Jr. Onion, Ralph Irvin Orth, William C. Osborn, Dell Frank Ossenbeck, Frederick Joseph, Jr Ostenberg, Frank Ousterhout, Raymond Owen, James William Owens, Erwina Owens, James Eugene Pack, Yvonne Smith Page, Reavis Matthew, Jr. Paine, Homer Adalia Palmer, Joseph Wellington Palmer, Tom Lee Parent, George Lee, Jr. Parker, Edwin Lee Parker, William Henry Parkinson, Trent, Jr. Parks, Edgar Horace Parks, Robert Hall Parrish, Harry Joe Parton, Oswald Jerome Patterson, Edward R. Patterson, Lyle Ben Patterson, Robert Grady Pattillo, William Harris Patton, Lloyd Eugene Paul, Sidney Percival, Paul Hudson Perry, Lewis L., Jr. Perryman, Phil Ward Perryman, Robert Gentry Petree, Lenox Carlisle, Jr. Peterson, Raymond William Phillips, Biu Dwight Phillips, Donald Ray Phillips, Gerald Ray Phillips, Jack Harold Phillips, Paul M. Phillips, Robert Donaldson Phillips, Robert E. Pierce, Dick Pierce, Herbert Elmer Pischel, Max A. Pitcock, Hollis Wayne Poffenberger. Bill Rogers Polson, Irving Leroy Porter, John C. Powers, Joe Harry Powell, Charles O. Pratt, Charles Rawson Pratt, Emmett Edgar, Jr. Pratt, Paul James Preisler, Helen Patricia Prentiss, Charles Leonard Price, Robert Bernard Proser, Gene Edwin Purdin, Calvin O'Neal Quinn, Frank Anthony Raceck, Edward William Rains, Roy Alfred Ralston, Centuris Kern Ramage, Arthur Bennett Ratclirfe, LaGrange, Jr. Rawson, Charles Rector, Charles William Rector, Wm. Jay Redmond, Robert Franklin Rees, Forest B. Reeve, James Key Reichard, James N. Reiss, Royal Wright Renfro, Pete CHaroldJ Reser, Clarance Reser, Frances Reser, James Lloyd Reser, Mary Margaret Reynolds, Billy Randolph Reynolds, Frederick D. Reynolds, Thomas A. Rhoades, George Roades, Marion Victor Rhoades, Sam Rice, Jack Rice, John Francis Richards, Ashton Leroy Richards, Charles James Richards, Lloyd Williams Richards, Richard Lee Richardson, Warren D. Rickman, John Robert Rider, Kirby Albert Riggs, Harry Andrew, Jr. Ritchey, Joe William Ritterbusch, Walter Henry, Jr. Rittenhouse, Wm. B. Roach, Jack Louis Roach, John Kellie Roark, Edward Lee, Jr. Robards, Don Russell Roberts, Fred E. Robertson, Tommy Blane Robinson, David Vencel Robinson, William John Rodgers, Vernot Rodolph, John Hemphill Roebken, Curtis K. Rogers, Harley Paul Rogers, John, Jr. Rogers, Theodore Lawrence Rook, Luther William Rose, Jack Malcolm Rose, Wayne Ross, Donald Boyson Roszel, Norman V. Rummage, J. Reid Ruskoski, Albert S. Russell, Roy Kenneth Rutherford, Bayless Earl, Jr. Rylander, John Paul Sanborn, George H. Sanders, Ardeene Elmo Sanders, Jack Calhoun Sanger, Randall Ashley Sartain, Gailard Sas, Leo Satterfield, Robert S. Satterwhite, Dale Saultz, Wallace Lee Schad, Harry E. Schellstede, John E. S' Schluetar, Earl Wm. Schwab, Albert E. Scarborough, Jess, Jr. Schwabe, George Blaine, Jr. Schwabe, Robert Vernon Schwartz, Fred B. Scott, Dan P. Scott, William Clyde, Jr. Searcy, Robert Searcy, William Neal Sears, Ferol Dean Seibert, Lloyd Miller, Jr. Selby, Carroll M., Jr. Selinger, Nathan A. Sellers, Arnol Shackelford, Clarence H. Shaffer, Bill Linton Shaffer, George W., Jr. Shaffer, George William Shaffer, Ralph W., Jr. Sharp, Don Nicholson, Jr. Shaw, Robert Louis 'l'Shea, Donald E. Shea, Richard Joseph Sheberts, James Edward Sherman, Frederick Sherman, Roger L. Sherwood, Fred Shick, Robert Lee Shibley, Wm. C., Jr. Shimeall, Warren Glen Shipman, Carl Shirley, Houston Shirley, Tom Shoemaker, Forrest Finch Shoemaker, Richard Franklin Shoenfelt, George W. Shrum, Clyde Shull, Charles Morell, Jr. Siegismund, Robert Wentling Sikes, Raymond Crocker Simington, Frank Simmons, Elmer Rudolph Simmons, James Eldon 'l'Simmons, R. Gaylord Simms, Frank Adams Sims, Hugh Austin Siverson, Robert Singleton, William Woodrow Siverson, Garfield C. Sippel, Mary Margaret Skeehan, Edward M. Skinner, William Thomas Skipper, James Wilson Slifer, William Jay Small, Joseph Eugene Small, Roy P. Smarinsky, Don George Smith, Bill Edgar Smith, Burdette G. Smith, Bob V. Smith, Douglas M. Smith, Edgar W. Smith, Harry Norman Smith, Jordet Townsley Smith, Kenneth W. Smith, Ray Perkins Smith, Richard B. Smith, Roy L. Smith, Riley, Jr. Smith, Samuel Richard, Jr. Smith, Walter A. Smith, William Alexander, Jr. Smock, J. Gordon Smock, Robert Loper Snell, Wilmer E., Jr. Soph, Edward Jamie Sowders, Henry C., Jr. Spangler, Eugene Douglas Spellman, Donald Knox, Jr. Spencer, Vfallace Spillman, George Canon Spilman, Charles Francis Spindler, Donald Garbutt Spink, Mearle M., Jr. Staines, Richard Stanfield, Rowland Stanley, Robert James Stapler, John Brian Starr, Lester Staub, Ralph O. Stebbins, Gerald Leonard Steel, James K. Steelman, William Dale Stegman, James Herbert Steinberger, Paul Wherritt, Jr Steil, Vincent Brady Stem. John William Steven, Wayne Cravens Stevens, Voyne Steward, Chad Jay Stewart, Bill Franklin Stewart, George Douglas 'i'Stewart, Forrest Stewart, James Russell Stewart, Mildred M. tSte-phenson, Clyde M. Stice, Elmer Richard Stigler, Harold Stipp, Meridith Russell Stiver, Harry Edward Stockfish, Benjamin F. Stodgehill, James Ralph, Jr. Stotts, Robert if Stout, Ira Strong, Royal Bernard Stuart, Robert J. Stuart, Roy Jerome Stuart, Ralph Summers, George Edward Sullivan, George M. Sumter, Winona Swain, Claude Balfour Suppes, Pat Colonel F Swais, John Swank, Ray Edwin Swanson, Raymond Harold Swindell, Calvin Miller Swift, Paul P. Tappan, David William Tanner, S. H., Jr. Tatroe, John Arlington Taylor, Earl Everett Taylor, J. K. Taylor, Gerald O. Taylor, P. Dell Tenney, Frank Lee Tennyson, Leroy W. Tennyson, W. J. Tetirick, Ted Wesley Thomas, Aubrey Lee Thomas, Daniel Comstock Thomas, Robert D. Thompson, Jay Edward i' Thomas, Pete L. Thompson, Margaret Elizabeth Thurman, Jack Edwin Turner, Chas. L. Tillman, Jack M. Tingley, Clarence H., Jr. Tomer, John Shaffer Todd, James L. Tooke, William Mays Topper, Alvin Daniel Tribble, Buford Asa Tripp, Tom J., Jr. Trolinger, Enoch Harrison Truesdell, Earl DeClifford Tubbs, Mervil G. Tucker, G. W. Tucker, William Frank, Jr. Turner, Othel Twist, Glenn Jennings Ungerman, Milford Shael Vandersall, Daniel Raymond, Jr. Vandever, Marguerite Griffith Van Haverbeke, Alfons Leo, Jr. Van Vleck, John Franklin Vargas, Alberto Veeder, Harry Leon Vickers, Jim Vincent, Ernest ?Vincent, Walter B., Jr. Wade, Phillips R. Wadlin, Jack Albert Walder, H. E. Wagner, Carl D. Walker, Arthur Lee Walker, Hubert B., Jr. Walker, Rex Eugene Walker, Stephen Calvin Wallace, B. C. Wallace, Conway i'Wallace, Harold C. Wallace, John Francis Waller, Jim Leaman W'alters, Clarence Ditworth, Jr Waltzer, Ross Ward, Frederick Carson Ward, Jack Raymond Watkins, Paul G. Warden, Hubert Pascal III Wassall, Harry Wrn. Watkinson, Alfred Rex Wear, Victor H. Weaver, George Homer Webb, Maurice Webber, Jack Emil Weems, Thomas Allen Weldon, Robert Cole Wells, James E. Wells, Robert Andrew West, Edward Cecil Whitaker, Frederick Slack, Jr. J' White, Chas. R. White, Rex Albert Whitlock, Donald W. Whitelonis, Joseph Sylvester 1Whitney, J. Wilbur Whitworth, Robert L. 'Wickersham, Harold William Wickersham, Jimmie Wickham, John J. Wikle, George A. Wilcox, Chambliss, Jr. Wilcox, Frederick George Wiley, Adam Wilkins, Andre M. Willcockson, Roy Willhour, Richard W. Williams, Charles Victor Williams, Dale Max Williams, Eugene Thomas Williams, Everett Sylvester, Jr. Williams, Harold L. Williams, Raymond Wendell Williamson, Kenneth Williamson, Nelson Howard Willis, George Alton Wilson, Bruce LaMont Wilson, David Albert Wilson, Henry Townseld, Jr. Wilson, Robert Penfield Winchester, Odie Elwood Winfrey, Weldon Bailey Winters, George F., Jr. Witsaman, Cleo Beatrice Witt, Sidney M., Jr. Wolf, Walter Henry Wolfe, Margaret Ellen Wood, Ernest M. Wood, Garfield Arthur Woodard, James Boyd Woodard, William Campbell Woodbury, Wm. G. Woods, Jack Woods, James Alexander Woodward, Robert Barth Worthington, James Mark Wortley, Stewart William Wright, Betty Patricia Wright, Carl Norman, Jr. Wright, Gordon Lynn, Jr. Wright, Harold T. XVright, Joseph James, Jr. Wright, Leo Milfred Wright, Bill Wurth, William Holley 'Wylie, George W., Jr. Wyman, Don Earl Wynn, John Edward Yarbro, Jesse Lee Yeager, Eugene Wiess Yeakey, Bob Hawley Yelton, Emery Otto Yetter, Chauncey R. Young, Harry Wills, Young, John Wallace Zeligson, Robert Zavitz, L. R. ea., Sma l J Z I N Hy -NU N r' L 2 xg I ' A X . I . , : I X X f ff, ld.-:A 4711226-ff-. xf ' x ff' ...,,. 5.5 'i 1.2 COfQCZl'llbZC1fl'Ol'lS In the picture above are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-fefl In righl: Martha Belle Naylor, Jeanne Harry, Jeanette Harry. Dorothy Perkins. BACK ROWf1tfft In riglfrf Maxine Kelley, Mary Margaret Poole, Betty Pontius, Marjorie Ousterhout, Eleanor Snyder. SENIOR STAFF ONORARY scholastic organization for senior women . . . no more than ten . . . no less than five . . . members are chosen annually on the basis of scholarship, char- acter, leadership and service in the campus activities . . . the president of the organiza- tion is always the girl having the highest grade average for her first three years in the University . . . the honor this year went to Jeanette Harry . . . new members are made known each spring . . . when classes are interrupted by old members entering to Tap the new ones . . . always excites the curiosity of the school . . . and the envy of the other girls . . . arriving at a regular meet- X , N x - X ' X - X' X X ' X teh 'iax Huh ing time presented a real problem for Staff members this year . . . finally ended up meeting on Sundays at Miss Willizxnls' home . . . Senior Staff sponsors Lantern . . . members usher at school functions . . . spon- sors the Dean's Honor Roll . . . for students having a B average or better . . . sponsors a Leadership Guidance Conference . . . for the purpose of training potential leaders of various campus organizations . . . Senior Staff lost three of its members who graduated at mid-term . . . Marjean Perkins became Mrs. Edgar Van Eman . . . and the president and secretary . . . Jeanette and Jeanne Harry donned the Navy blue. In the picture above are shown the following members: Dr. A. N. Murray, seated in frontg left to right: Charles lglehart, Bill Neff, Bill Coulter. SWGRD AND KEY XVORD AND KEY . . . senior men's hon- orary society . . . formed on the Uni- versity of Tulsa campus in january of 1938 by eight senior men . . . membership re- quirements are the highest of all campus honorary organizations . . . requiring students to be of senior standing and have a 3.25 grade average . . . or to be of junior stand- ing with a 3.5 grade average . . . the purpose is to promote scholarly attainments and to recognize good traits of character . . . lead- ership and cooperation with the faculty are also stressed . . . an early attainment of the group was the establishment of a menls honor roll to honor outstanding men stu- dents in the University . . . remains a local organization by choice because of its very high standards . . . meetings, always din- ner meetings, held infrequently because of paucity of present membership . . . partic- ipates in annual Awards Assembly . . . helps sponsor the luncheon for high school stu- dents talqing scholarship examinations . . . continues working with the well-liked and capable faculty sponsor, Dr. A. N. Murray . . . active members sometime between '43 and '45 were Bill Coulter, Charles Iglehart, Edgar Jones, Kenneth jorns, Robert Mc- Cay, George Weekly . . . Bill Neff now carries the ball alone along with Dr. Mur- ray . . . future possibilities look vague for the next year . . . few senior men with the standards of Sword and Key . . . as standards continue on the campus members of this group will help set the pace. 5UQ'22i ln the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left to right: Mary Jane Willianls, Betty McXWilliams, Ann Little, jean Harmon, Peggy Comfort, Betty Chaney, Marvorie Newell, Wanda Ellis, SECOND ROW-lef! In rigbfz Laurie Langford, Margaret Frese, Joan Newton, Jessie Hume, Blodwin Roberts, jean Lancaster, Helen Roberts, Lisby VanBradr. BACK ROW-left to -right: Annabelle Goodman, Helen Buthod, Eva Zoe Henson, Virginia Gray, Mary Clay Willianis, Anna Gibbons, Betty Erick- son, Margaret Pitcher. Member not present: Allyne Russell. LANTERN EMBERSHIP in Lantern is the goal of many a freshman girl . . . and it is an honor worth working for . . . as these twenty- four members will agree! . . . Lantern, the Sophomore Women's Honor Society, was founded in 1937 . . . to recognize and en- courage the scholastic achievements of fresh- men women . . . and to promote leadership, character and service among the underclass- men of the campus . . . it is not an organiza- tion with a definite program of work laid out for it . . . but rather an honorary society recognizing high scholastic attainment . . . to be eligible for membership in Lantern, a girl must have reached a sophomore stand- ing . . . and have maintained at least a two- point, or B average for her freshman year . . . officers are selected on the basis of highest grade averages . . . new Lantern members were first honored at a luncheon in l X 'bk ' ,Ql 1d,uJ'v. the fall . . . given by their Big Sister organi- zation, Senior Staff...and their sponsor. Miss Wfilliams . . . since then, they have worked with Senior Staff members . . . in entertaining visitors on the campus . . . ushering at school functions . . . directing tours . . . assisting at luncheons given for students taking com- petitive examinations . . . and helping with other Senior Staff activities . . . the name Lantern is quite fitting . . . for this sophomore honor society is made up of the ushining lightsi' of Tulsa University . . . Many of these girls go on to become members of Senior Staff . . . Lantern members take part in extra-curricular activities . . . and have won honors in scholarship, leadership, and service on the campus . . . Peggy Comfort's grades gave her the honor of becoming president . . . Ann Little was vice-president . . . and the minutes were kept by Jean Harmon. ln the picture above are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left lo right: Mary Allen, Ruth Arnold, H. D. Chase, Charles Igleharr, Dr. Ralph J. Kaufmann, Margie Lee Fisk. SECOND ROW-left to right: Dr. Harriett Barclay, Maxine Kelley, Katherine Hammond, Marcia Whit- well, Dr. Carol Mason, Betty Pontius, Mary Margaret Poole, Jean Ousterhout. BACK ROW-left lo right: Bill Coulter, Dr. A. N. Murray, Dr. L. S. McLeod, Dr. B. D. Barclay, Ada Arnold. PHI GAMMA KAPPA ONORARY scholasic society . . . pro- motes high scholarship on campus . . . or tries to . . . membership is limited to ten per cent of the graduating class . . . members must have sixty hours in residence at the University . . . must be in the high BH aver- age bracket . . . members are selected from the highest ranking students . . . until quota is filled . . . associate memberships are given to outstanding local citizens who are members of high ranking national scholastic societies . . . has petitioned Phi Beta Kappa . . . but must wait for the duration and six months for decision . . . President, Dr. Kauf- mann, was thankful for able Ada Arnold as secretary-treasurer . . . order was maintained by persistent Dean Chase . . . members go hungry to get culture at noon hour . . . or to try to get culture . . . Harry twins, Jeanette and Jeanne, forsook campus after gradua- tion at mid-term . . . put on Navy Blue . . . were objects of envy . . . the members, most exciting experience was having their Ken- dallabrum picture taken . . . Dean McLeod presided in ,514 . . . with Ada Arnold as secre- tary-treasurer . . . this year Dr. Kaufmann pounded the gavel . . . with Ada again as secretary-treasurer. 50132- -1? In the picture above are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left In right Louise Scott, Kathleen Burns, Dr. Harriett Barclay, R. Grady Snuggs, Katherine Ham- mond. Pat Green. SECOND ROW-left to fright: Jeanette Harry, Dr. Carol Mason, Marjorie Ousterhout, Margie Lee Fisk, Maxine Kelley, Betty Pontius. BACK ROW-left to right: Betty Odneal, H. D. Chase, Bill Neff, Dr. L. S. McLeod, Dr. B. D. Barclay, Martha Lou 1NIcConnico. Pl GAMMA MU ATIONAL social science honor society . . . promotes scholarship in the social science field . . . members study social condi- tions . . . to be eligible students must have an all-over BH average . . . with a major or at least 40 hours . . . in a social science field . . . prexied by Professor Snuggs . . . mem- bers met with T. U. Y . . . sometimes out- standing local citizens are made honorary members . . . annual award of medal to out- standing senior in social science field . . . secretary Marjean Perkins became Mrs. Edgar Van Eman in mid-year . . . initiation always a big event . . . Dr. Bailkey juggled the N NN X A N Lxsx -X-xxx 'iii ideal funds as treasurer . . . still had to sprint to pay Kendallabrum bill . . . probably helped by Dr. Harriett Barclay as corresponding sec- retary . . . members are all such busy people that meetings were hard to schedule . . . usually werenlt held . . . terrifically hard to keep on the subject when meetings were held . . . probably because it is a social science group . . . officers for this year included Professor Grady Snuggs, president . . . Mrs. john Hammond, vice-president . . . Marjean Van Eman, secretary . . . Mrs. Harriett Bar- clay, corresponding secretary . . . and Dr. Nels Bailkey, treasurer. ln the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW4!ef11r1 right: jean Pray, Kate Minx. Cornelia Campbell, Enid Allen, Doris jean McKnight, Dorothy Perkins. SECOND ROXVKIMI in riyhf: Laura Edna Sisler, Louise Scott. Margie Lee Fisk, Dorothy Pointer, Maxine Kelley, Cleta Darnold. BACK ROW-Iefl in right: Mary Ann Saunders, Arlita Gilmore, Claire Blauner, Florine Harker, Ruth Apple, Louise Curtis, Betty Pontius, Betty Odneal. SIGMA ALPHA SIGMA 1i'1'A CHAPTER of Sigma Alpha Sigma . . national honorary secretarial science or- ganization . . . active and alumnae members met together this year . . . but meetings were infrequent because bowling, bridge, concerts interfered . . . exchanged ideas and informa- tion on secretarial procedure . . . new jobs . . . and husbands in service , . . for a special proj- ect this year . . . assisted with jangos gift boxes for service men and women going through Tulsa on Christmas Day . . . and distributed the boxes at bus terminals and train stations . . . boxes were collected at the Christmas party at Dorothy Pointer's . . . and Cootie came into its own that evening . . . with the dice rolling long and furi- ously f... in March we enjoyed coffee, dough- nuts, and bridge at the Phi Mu Lodge . . . Jean Pray, Doris McKnight, and Betty Odneal attended the Leadership Conference in April . . . with a picnic as an added attrac- tion . . . and at the end of the year we had initiation for the new members . . . these pro- fessional and social connections are invalu- able aids to our work. 5 Ui?- ln the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left 10 right: Eleanor Snyder, jo Yadon, Mary Ellen Yeakey, Marvorie Newell, Gloria Henson. BACK ROW'-left to 1'igbt.' Annabelle Goodman, Helen Roberts, Eva Zoe Henson, Cora Price, Lisby VanBradt. Members not present: Marjean Perkins Van Eman, Beth Lawyer, Madge Clark. ALPHA Rl-IO TAU LPHA RHo TAU was founded at the Uni- versity of Tulsa in 1930 . . . activities began this fall with five members from last year, under the inspiring sponsorship of Dr. Adah Robinson . . . for their opening social event the A R T 's visited the Irish home of W. E. Bernard . . . this year seven girls were invited to pledge . . . the crowd roared at the Ugiganticl' float the A R T's had in the home- coming parade . . . at the Christmas party . . . members presented Madge Clark's and Joan Yadon's comic skit to the alumni . . . Mary Ellen Yeakey with the aid of a few pillows became Mrs. Santa Claus . . . Mar- vorie Newell valiantly came through with the mashed potatoes just in time for the dessert . . , a main function of A R T's is the sponsorship of art exhibits . . . presented an- nually is the exhibit of alumni paintings . . . 5055 this year the paintings of Madeline Tune and Katherine Slater were chosen . . . at another exhibit artist Paul Corrubia played auction- eer for A R T and sold over a hundred dol- lars worth of paintings . . . proceeds went to the scholarship fund . . . A R T also spon- sored an exhibit made up of the work of Paul Corrubia's class in crafts and prints . . . an- other A R T feature was the exhibit of the famous Prairie Prints . . . the weekly meet- ings were held Friday noon in Tyrrel Hall with each member bringing her own lunch . . . the A R T group would be incomplete without their helpful advisor, Dr. Harriett Barclay . . . A R T's purpose is the further- ance of appreciation of art . . . Mary Ellen Yeakey served as president . . . Marjean Per- kins was secretary . . . and Cora Price, treasurer. ln the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-feft to riglvf: Mary Jane Williams, Mary Margaret Poole, Jeanne Harry, Norma Sue Francis, Bev- erly Conn, Pat Green. BACK ROW-left in right: Kathryn Sadlo, Martha Lou McConnico, Blodwin Roberts, Mary K. Winn, Marjory Cutting. Members not present: Lou Botefuhr, Grace Campbell, Kathleen Fondren, Margaret Frese, Aileen Gates, Ann Jackson, Jean Parker, Helen Roberts, Dorothy Croft, Dorothy Jacoby, Jean Wloodring, Virginia Gray, Virginia Rylands. SIGMA ALPHA IOTA AKING PART in many Tulsa musical events . . . members of Sigma Alpha Iota had a year full of concerts . . . recitals . . . parties . . . did their part in the war effort . . . raising over three hundred dollars for the benefit of Army and Navy hospitals . . . being vocalists . . . pianists . . . flutists . . . . organists . . . members are all music majors or minors . . . must have a B average to be initiated . . . national organization is out- standing professional music fraternity for women in the country . . . more than seventy active chapters and thirty alumnae groups . . . honorary members are foremost women musicians in America . . . celebrating its twen- ty-first birthday this year . . . Sigma Gamma chapter contributed a great deal to the musi- cal life of T. U. and the city . . . Christmas Vespers at Trinity Episcopal Church drew a capacity crowd . . . who enjoyed choral, en- semble, and solo numbers presented by active and alumnae members, robed in red and white . . . highlight of the year was the pre- sentation of popular duo-pianists Boyd and Helen Ringo . . . in a concert at Convention Hall with the university orchestra . . . pro- ceeds were used to purchase musical instru- ments for wounded service men . . . other events of the year were a rush party and musicale held at the home of president, Jeanne Harry . . . entertainment of visiting delegates to the National Federation of Music Clubs Convention . . . patroness initiation and musicale at the home of Mary Jane Wfilliams . . . recitals given by Jeanne Harry, Kathryn Sadlo, and Mary Margaret Poole . . . Partici- pation by all members in the Bob Shaw con- cert . . . officers for the year include . . . Jeanne Harry, president . . . Norma Sue Francis, vice-president . . . Mary Margaret Poole, secretary . . . Kathryn Sadlo, treasurer. 5032- Members of the hand include: Flute and Piccolo: Marjorie Cutting. Helen Roberts. Richard Brite. Kathleen Dorroh. Fay Rogers: Olme: W'anda lfllis, Catherine Farrell: Clariner: Jean Lively. Robert Lamm. Gerald Kernes. Mary Mills. Richard Nlorrison. Robert ffslzridge. Paul W'allarl:. Patty lVlcAffrey, June Pearson. Don Linde, Paul Dick. Betty Holeman. Wilma Latty, Doris Colpitt: Bars Clrninet: Virginia Gray: film f.'l.m'1nf: Horace Goodson: Barnron: Jeanette Harry. Mary' Ella Price: Alla Saxaflwnez Allen Cox. Molly Somon. Eugene Crabtree. Shirley Lane: Temn Saxopl7om': Bill Hunter: Bariiom' Saxophone and Drum Majczr: Jo Katherine Ogden: Corners: Maxine Foote. Bill Pate. Standlee Thomas. Alvin Kessler. Ivo Nelson. Billy Wfallcer. Betty Roberts. Roddy Fenn: Horns: Bill Morgan. Tommy Hollaiid. ,lean Curtis. Dan Ecker. Jr.. Betty .lane Xvorstellz Tmmlmnrx: George Brite. Paul Swift, john Mcragne. Charles lglehart: Baritoncsz Byrl Nichols. Joanne wfallace. Glen Smith: Batter: Louis Patterson. Truitt Xvilhelm. Douglas Hill, Drums: Art Buhl, Eddie Horn, Gerald johnson, Betty Lue Harvey. Lawrence Stith: Hill Lyra: Patty Priestg Din'clor: Roger Penn. BAND EMBERS were dazed with lack of sleep from drilling beneath the last rays of the moon at 7 A.M., under the able baton of Jo Kathrine Ogdon, first girl drum-major in T. U. campus history . . . Mr. Fenn was the essence of patience on dashing in to morning practice at 6:59 only to find that the last bass drummer had been drafted right in the height of the football season . . . rain, sleet or snow the band was found on the Hurricane battlefield sidelines with strains of XWait 'Til The Sun Shines, Nellie . . . the umpires gritted their teeth under the fire of comment on their professional abilities . . . fifty-three members and Mr. and Mrs. Penn tried to believe their eyes when they actually found themselves sup- porting the T. U.-Ole Miss game in Mem- soar phis, Tennessee . . . all were present and accounted for with Band Queen Marilyn Braun doing regal honors . . . there were un- forgettable haps and mishaps coming and going . . . Glen Smith had inevitable daily announcements at sessions . . . the drum sec- tion and Tommy Holland kept the band in stitches . . . old members dropped in from time to time on surprise furloughs . . . with parades, basketball games, pep rallies, meet- ing our heroes and sending them off, Quar- ter-back Club meetings, radio broadcasts, horse-shows, students, assemblies, and bat- tling with the O. P. A .... the T. U. Band was unquestionably the busiest organization on the campus this year . . . and Art Buhl, president, deserves a lot of credit for it. . - ,,A. X-W xwf-V tweak-WM - M: . .,.,.. , ,fi at Nlcmlwrs of the orrlivslra: Iiirtl Vi'ol1'r1: Tosca Berger Kramer. Eva Hunter. lit-vrrlv Conn. Phyllis Nliller. Katlxrvn Sadlo. Virginia Gray. Kath- leen Dorroh. Norma Raymond. Xvaviie Harrison. Gloria Frazier: Scrum! Vmlz-:: Betty' Roinbaugh. Laurent- Killmvr. Carolyn llotkin. Nlarv K. Xvinn. Plivllis lklarsh. Mildred Skvbt-rg. lit-tty jo Allvrtv. La Valle Gore. Rav Harris. Nlarv Ann lN'lorst-. Nlarv Carolyn Faslcen: liiolixz Rosalin- Smith. llubbles Bushner. joe Neict- W'ilson. -lack Sherwood. hlarv l.cu llrite. Georgiana Price: Cfellifz lflimlwth Haves. Geraldine Buland. Bern' Roberts. hlargarct llollinger. Nlarion Xvest. Otto XY't-isnt-r. Emily Smith. Barbara Gates: lla--tr: XV. A. Fishback. lklarv Margaret Poole. Xlargarrt Carl: Flair: Marjorie Cutting. Ht-len Roberts. Richard Brite. Joan Ft-nn: Ohm: Carol Pearson. Yi'andn l'illis. Catherine Farrell: Cltzrmcfz Bolt lxlilxfallv. Richrvxl lxlorrison. -lean l.i',clev, Allen Cox. lklax Barlvr: fi.:--owl: George l-lanson. George liurkitt. ,lranvite lolarrv. Nlnr' Ella Price: Hmm: Eddie Ti-rrv. Bill Nlorgali. I-:an Curtis. Glyn Havs. lit-rtv ,lane Viiorstellz 'I'z'1m1rw1: Nlaxini- lioon-. George Dunn. lvo Nelson: Tnfnzlwnt: George llritv. Paul Swift. john Tipton, Richard Xvinfrevz Tului: Louis Patterson: lltriziiuziftzz Art llulil. Betty Lui- Harvev. Eddie Horn. Mvrtlt- Bannister: llnutlorz Roger Frnn. CDRCHESTRA H12 UNlX'lillSI'I'Y or TULSA Symphony Orchestra is climbing higher and higher on the ladder of recognition . . . every Tues- day night found the seventy-two instruments competing with each other . . . Betty Roberts tried to keep up with the lost music, Wzinda Ellis tried to keep up with absent members, and Roger Penn tried to get everyone to keep up with him . . . for the first time in its history, the orchestra membership included enough on-campus talent to present a varsity performance . . . the students enjoyed the ot- chestra's program on the Christmas assembly ...the concert given with the A Cappella choir for the United Daughters of the Con- federacy was a complete success. . . later, the concert given with Helen and Boyd Ringo had an appreciative audience and received the acclamation it deserved. . .everyone got a big thrill playing for Bob Shaw, Fred Walr- ing's choral director...there is a tentative decision that Tulsa U's own symphony or- chestra is to be the nucleus of the summer Starlight Concert program . . . the orchestra looks back on a year of success and looks forward to a brilliant future. 5932 '1 x x - -x lx-xxx -xg. ln the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left In rigfvlz Catherine Farrell, june Pearson. Marion West. Vera Lisle, ,lo Anne Wallace. jean Wfoodring, Mary jane Yeager, Bettie Odneal. Margaret Pitcher, Mary Gebhart. Cora Price. Kathleen Fondren, Jane Snyder. SECOND ROW-left I0 right: Ruth Greene. Dawn Blaine, Margaret Carl, Bubbles Bushner. Agnes Pritchard., Jean Roberts, Nancy Hinman, Grace Mary Foal. Pat Powers. Mil- dred Skyberg, Frances Jones, Betty Jayne Worstell, Juanita Ray. Marion Wortly. Claudine Williamson. Phyllis Miller. THIRD ROW- lefl lo righl: Glenna Fogle, Pat Brammer, Beth Lawyer. Kathryn Sadlo. Dorothy Jacoby, Elouise Byfield, Norma Sue Francis. Virginia Gray. H len Buthod. Sue Anne Foreman. Norma Lee Allen R th N l , B lt H lc ' . BACK ROW l'fl I ' bl' E h M P'k . FI' b h e . u ce y e y ar ness - t in ng , st er c 1 c . lza et Longhurst, jeane Jones, Ouida Gordon, Jo Helen Longhurst, Dean A. L. Lulcken, Sara Louise Glaser, Helen Slcmp, Aileen Hill, Betty Lytle. Martha Thouvenelle, June Terry. WOMENS MODERN CHQIR HEN you get sixty girls together any- thing can happen, and usually does . . . thus was formed the Women's Modern Choir . . . we'll never forget . . . Cora Price checking the roll and distractedly asking Who's Jean? . . . the inevitable voice that was always off key . . . the witty comebacks of Mary jane Willianus and Betty Jeanne Sage . . . the hour of waiting at Philbrook in order to sing ten minutes . . . all for the love of music . . . the Dean's anxious coaxing of Aw, come on girls, put something into itl' . . . singing for the junior Chamber of Com- merce and the Downtown Quarterback Club . . . the Thanksgiving float which fell apart in the middle of the parade . . . the swell job our librarians did . . . swishing formals at Convention Hall . . . Glenna Fogle always bringing up Student Council . . . gum-chew- ing between songs . . . Jane Snyder cutting up at the piano . . . being introduced as the Mes 5035- Modern Wonmenls Choir . . . always the ques- tion of what to wear and another ques- tion equally popular When do we go to Gruber . . . the ten lone altos . . . Grace Foat inventing a fourth part . . . the appearance or six boys second semester who took an awful lot of kidding and were swell sports about it . . . the wonderful job Tiny Pitcher did as president . . . S. A. I. selling raffle tickets to choir members, and Joann Lemon win- ning . . . ping, ping, ping, in the Holiday for Strings song . . . the Dean's way of express- ing himself, we especially liked those dances . . . the competition of the workmen's hammer during the entire year . . . the choir stands which were always too short . . . our year being highlighted by the appear- ance of Bob Shaw, who directed a choral convention . . . all in all, it's been swell and hope to see you next year. .n the above picture are shown the following members' FRONT ROW+left In right: Norma Lee Cantrell, Lois Tubbs, Vashti lobe, jim Donahoe, Virginia Swain, Elizabeth Sweet, Dorothy Perkins. SECOND ROW-left lo righl: Natalie Warren, Sylvia Kondos, Vera Margaret Hurt. Mary Helen Hoover, Jill Zink, Doris Tubbs, Anna Klentos. BACK ROWflefI to rigbiz janet Jackson, Benita Springer, Pat Monnet, Betty Daugherty, Betty Lou Bryan. J. Mac Donavan. PSYCHOLQGY CLUB FTER reaching the profound decision that our campus was in dire need of an organization exclusively for the future psychologists of America CAhem!l . . . we met one Friday afternoon with Dean McLeod . . . and produced the necessary credentials for an O.K. from the Community Council . . . the purpose of the organization . . . to further the interest of the vast psychological field and its subdivisions . . . jim Donahoe was elected president, not because he is the only boy in the club, but because we felt that he was the person for the job . . . qualifications for mem- bership were set forth... lO hours of psychol- ogy or a major or minor in the field of psychology . . . under the direction of pro- gram chairman, Vashti lobe, we witnessed many entertaining and informative programs . . . we went to hear the master-mentalist, Dunninger, at Convention Hall . . . we came out just as puzzled and confused as before! . . . how does he do it? . . . our word-association test proved to be very enlightening and we understand its importance in diagnosing men- tal abnormalities . . . we found out if we are introverts or extroverts, most of us placing ourselves in the middle of the personality type . . . we learned something of Houdini and the mystery of seances . . . Dean Mc- Leod entertained us at his home and we exclaimed the entire evening over the hot ginger-ale punch . . . social chairman, Betty Daugherty, provided us with delicious cookies . . . Virginia Swain as secretary reminds us of what we did at the last meeting . . . and Patty Monnet keeps the money straight while Betty Lou Bryan writes our publicity stories . . . we are looking forward to a charter grant from the national psychology fraternity, Psi Chi, as soon as we are qualified. 5935 In the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-felt lo riglyl: Ruth Greene, Aileen Hill, Margaret Dunn, Margery Wible, Virginia Harrold, Pat Boll- man, Jean Pray, Kenneth Butterworth, Joan Newton, Dorothy Perkins, Cleo Wolfe, Sally Rogers, Jan Serfling, Mar- garet Pitcher. SECOND ROW-lefl io right: Grace Mary Foat, Pat Powers, Norma Machner, Maryle Daw, Irene Adler, Laurene Castillo, Lynda Williams, Eunice Morgan, Betty Chaney, Johnece Kerr, Eleanor Sears, Carol McMahon. THIRD ROW-left to right: Glen Smith, Ed Horn, Joe Keith, Betty W'elch, Jeanette Harry, Anne Morrow, Helen Coover, Pat Haas, Mary Mills, Martha Kate Dunkin, jean Lively, Martha Bartlett, Earl Hogard. BACK ROW- left to right: Don McMullin, W. E. Morris, Jr,, Albert Ruskoski, Bill Almen, M. M. Hargrove, Jack Thomas, joe Forner, Bob Kirkland, Bob Attaway, Allen Smith, John Kelley. COMMERCE CLUB OUNDED on the University of Tulsa cam- pus in 1929 . . . an honorary business fraternity, became active again this year . . . Dean Hargrove sponsored a picnic to arouse the students' interest . . . even when the pic- nic was delayed several times because of rain, there was a good turn-out . . . president, Pat Bollman, rushed frantically around every month to arrange a place for the monthly dinner meetings and always seem to plan the meeting for the night of a basketball game and then prayed for a good attendance at the dinner . . . the wonderful Christmas party at Hargroves, . . . everyone sat on the floor and played spin the milk bottle and roared at Mrs. Nittinger enjoying her torture'i as she gave a very able rendition of her alma mater song . . . passed out joke gifts Cone of them was a real package of cigarettesj . . . X PQRBQ X -bi, ' ,QL 1d.ecJlt the students finally realized the profs were really good ol' Joes . . . and the best treat of all was Mrs. Hargrove's date cake . . . one big dress-up affair at the Bradford Hotel . . . sold tickets to make sure that our treasury could stand the strain of more speakers . . . collected dues in the middle of the term Clike pulling wisdom teethj . . . and for the grand finale . . . the box supper dance given in the gym for the Engineers . . . with Dean Hargrove raffling off boxes . . . the best skits from the Round Up came over from Rogers for a return performance . . . the Webster square dancers insured a good time for everyone . . . all the students appreciated the serious side of the club as the guest speakers told about the future jobs and the requirements of the business world. In the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-lefl to right: julio Medina, Charles Iglehart, Dick Enrlres, Jerry Hatfield, Jim Wintle, Pete Clark, Bob McDowell. SECOND ROW-left to riglaz: Ramon Darta, Gordon Walker, Tommy White, Bill Coulter, Gloria Fulton, Connie Cook, Bill Basset, Jack Leahy, Charles Nabors, Max Maneval. THIRD ROW-left to right: Sam Kiguchi, Frank Salas, Gabriel Rodriguez, Leo Walker, Kenneth Worrall, Bill Mowery, Buddy jones, jack Cross, Bill Pate. FOURTH ROW-left to right: Ed Claytor, Jim Clark, Phil Whaley, Don Reid, Dean Elkins, jack Bergman, Jack Billington, jerry Moyer, Glen Southard. FIFTH ROW-lefl to right: Dick Brunner, Neil Morgan, Sam LaGreca, Bill Bearden, John Harris, Winston Holt, Frank Campbe1l,Jim Quinn, Lloyd Crocker. BACK ROW-left to right: John Kerr, Bill Klintworth, Bob Oswald, Bill Schmalhorst, Dan Ecker. ENGINEERS' CLUB NGINEERS' CLUB . . . founded in 1931 . . . has been dormant for the past two years . . . but was opened again this year with a real bang . . . just take a note of the shamrocks around on St. Pat's Day . . . purpose of the organization is to further the interest in engineering and engineering problems . . . and to keep the Engineering Flag as long as possible . . . Charlie Iglehart reorganized the club at the beginning of the year . . . but left at mid-semester to take up his beloved geology . . . Dr. Murray and Dean Lange-nheim were the god-fathers of the club . . . Engineers' Week the climax of the year . . . and a record was set by the flag still being in the possession of the Engineers and Queen Pat kept safe and sound . . . Jackie Dedmon, crowned Queen Pat, and Leslie Clark, chosen King Pat by reason of his high grades, reigned over the Annual Engineers' Ball . . . sidewalk dec- orations roused the ire of the football play- ers . . . resulting in the new style hair dresses . . . Burr one and Crocker jumps up . . . others losing their pretty locks were jim Wintle, Bob McDowell, joe LaLande, Neal Morgan, joe Moran, and jack Bergman . . . burr club established . . . membership only through receiving a burr from the hands of a football player . . . Dr. Murray and Dean Langenheim made permanent members . . . returning service engineers were welcomed with an engineering congenial hand . . . officers for this year were jim Wintle, presi- dent . . . john Kirkpatrick, vice-president . . . Dick Endrees, secretary . . . Jerry Hat- field, treasurer . . . and Leslie Clark, program chairman. 5033 N x A ln the picture above are shown the following members: TOP ROW-left to right: Catherine Blair, Madge Clarke, Beverly Cleek, Betty Daugherty. BOTTOM ROW-left to right: Evelyn Davis, Nancy Kerr, Rita Ruth Meyer, Mary K. Winn. Pl DELTA EPSILON 1 DELTA EPSILON . . . oldest and largest national journalistic fraternity . . . founded in 1909 at Syracuse University . . . local chapter was chartered in 1941 . . . boasts distinguished membership . . . Oswald Gar- rison Villard . . . Arthur Brisbane . . . and other journalism notables . . . Mr. Morris is our local faculty sponsor . . . chapter de- pleted of male portion by war . . . all-girl contingent holding forth on the campus this year . . . prexy Blair leaving school because of ill health . . . returning the second semester to carry on . . . june Turnbaugh deserting the campus for physical therapy school at Gal- veston . . . Catie trying to get everybody together for meeting . . . with little success . . . trying to decide on a project . . . coming Xxx N tx x -Xxx -X-xxx 'ESX 321 ef 5095- to no conclusion . . . chapter usually sponsors high school journalism contest each spring . . . taking in new members to liven things up a bit . . . and so it goes . . . with Cleek pleading the cause of the Collegian . . . Madge Clarke and Nancy Kerr applying their literary talents in the Workshop . . . Rita Ruth Meyer worrying over the minutes for the Board of Publication . . . and being vice- president of Pi Delta Epsilon, too . . . Betty Daugherty taking care of the finances . . . the members pleased because they were allowed individual pictures in the Kendalla- brum . . . and the whole organization doing its best to sponsor interest in the two publica- tions at the University of Tulsa. ln the picture above are shown the following members: TOP ROW'glefl to fight: Kenneth Butterworth, Toby Collins, Eric Field, Clyde Goodnight, Sam Gray, Bob Helling- hausen. SECOND ROW-left to right Ellis jones, Al Kowalski, Sam LaGreca, Nolan Luhn. Charles Mitchell, Felto Prewitt. BOTTOM ROW-Iefi in right: Ed Shedlosky. Allen Smith, C. B. Stanley, Maurice W'2lLlC, Leo Walker, Camp Wilson. Members not present: Glen Burgeis, Dick jones, Barney White. K4 Y! HE T CLUB . . . because there was a definite need for a social organization of brotherhood among the members of the football squad . . . the varsity players banded together to form the T Club . . . after several informal meetings these players for- mally adopted a constitution in October, 1944 . . . and elected Ed Shedlosky to be their first president . . . Nip Goodnight was elected vice-president . . . Ellis Jones, sec- retary . . . C. B. Stanley, treasurer . . . Barney White, sergeant-at-arms . . . and Eric Field in charge of publicity . . . with splendid cooperation from Coach Frnka . . . and thorough planning by the HTH Club . . . their first dance was both a social and fi- nancial success . . . at the Chamber of Commerce dining-room on the night of that disastrous A. 84 M. game . . . spirits picked up during the evening and everyone had C LUB a grand time . . . all freshmen footballers were automatically made pledges . . . iden- tified by green caps . . . shaved heads . . . and referred to by the varsity as fish . . . and these fish had pledge duties . . . very different from the duties of frat pledges . . . the duties were confined to lunchtime in the Union . . . for everyone to see and hear . . . the fishl' either sang . . . gave his life history . . . or told what a good football player he was . . . while standing in the middle of a lunch table . . . and speaking in a very loud voice . . . the HTH Club is looking forward to next year more opti- mistically than ever . . . a large member- ship is assured . . . pins are being ordered . . . a room is being furnished in Harwell gym for meetings and entertainment . . . and the Bull is behind his boys all the way. 50-312- In the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left to rigbl: juana Lee Bell, jim Underwood, Shirle Lamb, Maybelle Wfhitley, John McKinney, .Ioan Bechtel, Mary Lynn Cease. SECOND ROW-left 10 rigfolz Laurie Langford, Jean Welub, Doris Colpitt, Peggy Comfort, lla Fern Hoppe, Jean Smith, Glen Smith, Dick Archibald. THIRD ROW-Zell to right: Louis Pat- terson, Kathleen Dorroh, Glenna Fogle, Marguerite I-Iyden, Madge Clark, joe Moran, Nancy Kerr, Ben Henneke. WCDRKSI-IGP Meet me in the T. U. Viforkshop, Meet me on the stage, Bring your hammers, nails, and wrenches, Itls the latest rage! We'll all dress up in blue jeans, And build the flats just right. Meet me in the T. U. Wforkshop, We work there every night. Last year Hay F ever and H olititzy were both given as drawing room comedies . . . and mighty well received! . . . with the increase from two men to ten this year . . . we have been able to produce a full season of plays . . . Hilary Henneke made her debut in My Siiter Eileen . . . Ain't that a pan-ky . . . those were the days of Zoomboy Addison and Signing-offu Johnson . . . In Time In Come we hope to have bigger and better houses . . . the play with a message . . . Jim Underwood wins the academy award for his X -bk ' ,QL 1d,ecJlv. performance in that play . . . it was fine! . . . The W4zrri0r'J Hzzrbtzml hit the road after two local performances . . . I say! the R.A.F. boys thought it was a bit of all right . . . not to mention the enthusiastic receptions at Gruber and Crowder . . . Note! fan mail! . . . of this play we remember most . . . combing Cope's hair . . . riding in trucks, buses, and jeeps . . . visiting the P. X. . . . giving performances on any and every size stage . . . food . . . Mary Houchinls men! . . . and the workshop songs . . . the fourth and topping production of the season was Shakespeare's Zllercbfznl of Venice . . . Allyne Russell's Portia . . . very nice!! . . . the most delightful play we have worked on . . . and so-with Ublood, sweat, and tears we say . . . goodbye . . . and may all your children be stage hands. HE PURPOSE of this organization is the members now in service . . . missed by T. U. In the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left to rigfatz Norma Lee Cantrell, Virginia Swain, Dorothy Perkins, Bill Neff, Margie Lee Fisk, Margaret Bollinger, Lois Tubbs. SECOND ROW-left to rigbl: Gloria Fulton, Wanda Pruitt, Doris Tubbs, Kathryn Sadlo, Gwen Gallagher, Eleanor Snyder, Elizabeth Bradfield. BACK ROW-Jef! to right: Doris Colpitt, Jeane John- son. Carolyn Braunlich, Charles lglehart, R. Grady Snuggs, Earl Hogard, Ann McDowell, Maryle Daw, Llary Jean Neff. T ll 77 . three-fold purpose of any NYU organiza- tion . . . mental, physical, and spiritual de- velopment . . . this purpose manifests itself in the educational, social, and spiritual pro- gram of the T. U. Y . . . the social activ- ities are different from those given by most campus organizations . . . overnight trips to Parthenia with program planning and all the fun . . . monthly picnics and square- dancing at the T. U. YU grill on the campus with McMullin, Hogard and Prexy Neff getting all the food . . . sponsoring the Freshman Mixer to get bashful men and blushing coeds off to a good start . . . and the Co-ed Prom . . . Cora Price and Beth Lawyer planning this year's around the 50th year Ante-Post theme . . . rush dinner given for new members . . . Dorothy Perkins and Bill Neff getting out the Student Handbook . . . Jean Hilborn and Gloria Henson pack- ing Christmas boxes for former T. U. Y Y ers this year are such members as Wright Bomford, Carl Duncan, Bill Wright, Kenny Jorns, Bill Chronic, John Allred . . . all now in service . . . high light of the year was ringing the bell in Kendall Hall again to announce the beginning of weekly chapel services . . . outstanding men such as Har- old Walker, Rabbi Wessel, Stanton Lauten- schlager and Robert Swanson were among our speakers . . . Religious Emphasis Week was a success with Dr. Stimson from Cin- cinnati present for a week to stimulate our thinking . . . and help us with our problems . . . weighty cabinet caucus on the purpose of T. U. HY and its place on the college campus . . . officers for this year are Bill Neff, president . . . Betty Swindell, vice- president . . . Dorothy Perkins, secretary . . . and Art Buhl, treasurer . . . R. Grady Snuggs is faculty sponsor. 50-Lia , My ,- , I ,gm , -, , r , t- 4 'A ' , l , it E 'W -. we-f ... t , In the picture above are shown the following members: ' iillfx QW' 5 wif. A Wi if lik I - ' i A .f A Ll,, 3 -exe: TOP ROW-left to right: Irene Adler, Margaret Bollit1ger,Lanorah Bowsher, Bette Boyd, Elizabeth Bradfield, Glenna Fogle. Virginia Harrold. BOTTOM ROW-lefl to righl: Jean Hilborn, Esther McPike, Eileen Quinlan, Connie Shep- pard, Vella Ray Springer, June Terry, Mary Ellen Yeakey. Alemhem not prerenzx Jean Conkwright, Lucy Lee Culp, Eva Zoe Henson, Elizabeth Saunders, Helen Slemp, Leota Holcomb, Joyce White. LO LO M1 Huis: woMuN DECIDE to be independ- ent, then anything can happen . . . in 1937 we were the Barbs,' . . . in 1938 as just Independent Women , Dr. Ellen Goebel became our sponsor and we started getting hep', with the National Independ- ents . . . in 1942 we became Lo Lo Min, which is an old Indian word meaning friend . . . so with us this was a big year . . . re- member those radio programs that were sup- posed to be rehearsed . . . Val Springer ar- rived with the script at the last minute . . . Glenna Eogle, Mary Ellen Yeakey, Eva Zoe Henson, and Margaret Bollinger sang off key . . . jean Hilborn suddenly found herself wouldn't stick to the script . . . then that Christmas formal with a sample of South playing a solo . . . Eileen Quinlan who just American amour . . . everytime we had a party someone was always late with the 50551 key . . . Bette Boyd recruited talent for the U. S. O .... and the Co-Ed prom . . . Lanny Bowsher told us about Arthur . . . that little Nsuggestionn box . . . Lucy Lee Culp tried to keep order in the mad house . . . jean Conkwright hunted someone to clean up the place . . . we owe our gratitude to Miss Mary Clay Wfilliams for obtaining a clubhouse for us this year . . . and to Helen Slemp for furnishing it . . . we thought we would never get that venetian blind from Montgomery Ward . . . and remember how we voted not to buy silverware . . . after all, fingers were invented before forks . . . this successful year was made possible by the hard work of our efficient officers . . . Lucy Lee Culp presided . . . and Margaret Bollinger helped out as vice-president . . . Eileen Quinlan kept the minutes . . . and Irene Adler took over the treasury. x ',SX I Vu --qv , Q4 +A ' A, ' ,S IJ n 1,5 : I f E t , I' x QQ f 71 wwf I Q ' W4 WN, N X we 'xx' V X 1 jf N SQ gDl,lb!l.CCZfl'Ol'lS 19115 KENDALLABRUM S T A F F C0-Editor Lisur VANBRADT , Co-Editor e , LAURIE LANGFORD Mfzmzger , , ., e a , , CLEO WOLFE Airimmz Alamrger C C ED SHEDLOSKY Smff Phozogwzpherriut FRED SAWYER HE KENDALLABRUM . . . official year- book of the University of Tulsa . . . published and managed entirely by students with approval of the Board of Publication . . . two years covered by one book . . . celebrating our Golden Anniversary . . . editors elected by Board of Publication in In the picture below are shown the following members: ,Tf LISBY VANBRADT spring . . . and being informed that all seniors of ,514 must have their pictures taken in one week . . . which also happened to be week of finals . . . the book is drawn up in August . . . and then changed regularly until the date of publication . . . mad rush for pictures at first of year . . . you would think FRONT ROXV-left lo righl: Cleo Wcnlfe, Virginia Swain, Mary Kate Roark, Betty Chaney, Evelyn Davis, Virginia Thompson, Margaret Sims, Virginia Todd, SECOND ROW'--left In riglalz Mary McKellar, Mary Anderson, Violet Suder, Martha Kate Dunkin, Bunnie Fulton, Lysbeth Sweet, Ann Sanders, Ruth Greene. BACK ROW'-left to rigbxx Laurie Langford, Pat Bollman, Nancy Beggs, Jeane Smith, Peggy Comfort, Pat Powers, Mary Nell Fowler, jean Ann Stites, Lisby VanBradt. Members not present: Suzanne Scruggs, jim Crankshaw. N DN X xl Lxxx - X-Nix PNB-XX X 'bk 'til Huh F. 5 it 1 LAURIE LANGFORD CLEO WOLFE ED SHEDLosKY they would go when it doesn't cost a cent . . . but they don't . . . and then opening Brown-Dunkin on a Sunday to finish it up . . . and then there was the faculty . . . who wanted their pictures in the book . . . but couldn't quite find time to have a picture made . . . can't you possibly use an old one? . . . that cold, snowing Sunday . . . when all organizations had their pictures made . . . and even the shutter on the camera froze . . . please, turn your collar down and take your hands out of your pockets . . . and stop shaking for just one minute . . . the beauty contest . . . with Petty as a judge . . . and the day we learned the winners . . . as did the rest of the student body . . . pictures . . . the bone of contention all year . . . stand- ing in line at daybreak getting films . . . usually, no films . . . and when Fred's camera was broken . . . no camera . . . so the frantic search for pictures . . . any pictures . . . sharing tiny offices with the Collegian at the first of the year . . . but when the Army moved out, all publications moved into the basement of Robertson . . . and had a whole suite of rooms . . . which we kept so nice and tidy . . . and where anything could be found , . . except something we were looking for . . . switching of members of the business staff to the Collegian . . . pledges selling ads to get merits for sororities . . . and Cleo being thrown out of offices only to bounce right back in . . . and setting records in selling advertising . . . trying to have each organ- ization write its own copy . . . and pestering everyone 'till they did . . . our sincere ap- preciation to everyone who worked so hard with us . . . the untiring efforts and patience of Mrs. Gene Yard and Mr. R. C. Walker at the engraving company . . . and the valu- able time Mr. Morris put in, advising and working with us . . . Pat Power's depend- ability . . . Ginny Thompson and Peggy Comfort always ready and willing to put in long hours . . . and Mary McKellar's hard work . . . and the artistic talent of Suzanne Scruggs . . . with all this fine cooperation the 1945 Kendallabrum was published . . . and presented to the students . . . and the thrill of seeing the first page roll out of the press made up for all the headaches . . . so here it is . . . and we hope you like it. 5095 THE CCDLLEGIAN STAFF ,lf . f fe ,W . ,. Editor eettee BILLE15 PAYNIZ Arrimmr Effimr t t to SARA LU JOHNSON Alfzmgwf e eete BEVERLY CLERK gg .A.Hi.ffzI7'.7f Mfzmzger PAT BOLLMAN ' Place: Print Shop. . 2:15 A. M. Deadline, Wetlnesrlzly afternoon, 3:00 . . . Time: Friday morning . . L no Copy . . . final deadline, Friday morning, 3:00 A. M .... still no copy . . . staff fev- erishly pounds out a Couple more lines . . . l'm starvedu . . . Does anyone have one more eigarettefl . . . Sara Lu, wake up, we ln the picture helow are shown the following memh FRONT ROVU+feft in right: Helen Buthod, Virginia BILLIAE PAYNE can go home in just a minute . . . next week, everything will he different . . . we're going to get all the copy in early . . . next week we must get some ads . . . next Week, Wfednes- day afternoon . . . no copy . . . ad infinitum . . . first few issues . . . no staff . . Billee Payne and Gerald johnson ehump off . . . Gerald gets ads, Billee doesn't get the stories ers: Swain, Sara Lu johnson, Norma Lee Cantrell, Nancy Beggs. BACK ROWgfell to right: Billee Payne, Beverly Cleek, Ann Sanders, Betty Daugherty. Laurie Langford. Members not present: Pat Bollman, Ora Lee Davis, jan Serfling, Smith, Pat Skeehan. ,Mildred Skyherg, hlargaret Younkin, Maxine Barry, jeane 50331 SARA LU Joi-1NsoN BEVERLY CLEEK PAT BOLLMAN . . . Billee gets the stories, Gerald doesnlt get ads . . . not enough life on Thursday nights at the print shop so Beverly Cleek is invited down under the guise of assistant business manager . . . meanwhile, no assistant editor, so for a change Payne has to work . . . Eureka . . . Sara Lu johnson applies as cub reporter . . . Eureka . . . Sara Lu Johnson is assistant editor . . . Sally Lu is only sixteen years old . . . Sally Lu has never been in a print shop before . . . Sally Lu hunts for the age-old type-lice . . . Ahhhh, those Thursday nights . . . the Navy decides Gerald is indispensable . . . Gerald goes to Great Lakes . . . Cleek moves up in rank . . . Pat Bollman comes to the print shop . . . the family is complete . . . somewhere along the line the Collegian staff got to move back into their old offices . . . spacious privacy . . . no phone . . . corners for Petty conspiracy ...i Petty gets rough . . . Petty gets sweet . . . who writes Petty? . . . I'd like to sock his nose . . . we don't know either . . . every week someone mysteriously sends the copy in by carrier pigeon . . . big trouble . . . printed letter anonymously . . . whole school in up-roar over Union clean-up . . . Collegian comes to rescue and messes up entire program . . . quiet at last . . . but don't forget Wednesday afternoons . . . I just canlt write this head - you try it for a while . . . Billee, can you type this for me . . . Dean Lukken doesn't want this run this week . . . Ye gods, where's the copy . . . lets run over to the Union for a minute . . . but that story isn't in yet . . . and through it all, a small but noble staff . . . to Helen Buthod, with her wonderful features . . . to Norma Lee Cantrell, beating sorority presidents over the heads to get stories . . . to Bob Lamm, always on hand with Lambda Chi news . . . and George Neal, plugging away for Pi K. A .... to Mildred Skyberg, always ready to help . . . to Fred Davis, on hand with the benefit of his experi- ence . . . to Margaret Younkin, new the sec- ond semester . . . and to all the journalism students who labored over the Collegian . . . thanks! . . . but most of all . . . thanks to Mr. Morris, our ideal . . . Thurs- day night again . . . no cigarettes . . . run up to Laurie's . . . not enough copy . . . no ads . . . printers are next door . . . I'm sleepy . . . Where is Petty? . . . okay, kids, we're all through . . . the presses can toll! 5U13'42i ln the above picture are shown the following members: C. I. Duncan, Laurie Langford, Cleo Wolfe, Lisby Van- Bradt, R. A. Nittinger, Fred Davis, Billee Payne, Beverly Cleek, Sara Lu johnson, W. E. Morris, Jr., Ed Shedlosky. BQARD of PUBLICATIQNS HE BOARD OF PUBLICATION . . . or- ganizes and supervises all campus pub- lications . . . composed of students and fac- ulty members . . . settles all matters con- cerning either the Kendallabrum or Collegian . . . serves as an advisory council for the benefit of the editors and business managers and makes all position selections . . . with the approval of Community Council . . . seldom delves into the editorial policies . . . chairman appointed from the Community Council . . . the secretary is chosen from the Community . . . editors, assistant editors, business managers and assistant business man- agers of the two publications and three faculty representatives complete the group . . . Fred Davis, jr. was chairman through- out the academic year . . . Reita Ruth Meyer was secretary during the fall but Pat Powers took over second semester . . . faculty mem- bers W. E. Morris, jr., C. I. Duncan and R. A. Nittinger retained their board mem- bership . . . Newcomers included Collegian 5059- editor Billee Payne and her assistant, Sara Lu johnson . . . business manager Gerald johnson who was early called into military service and replaced by Beverly Cleek and assistant Pat Bollman . . . Kendallabrum editors Laurie Langford and Lisby VanBradt . . . and business manager Cleo Wolfe and assistant, Ed Shedlosky . . . meetings were carried on as usual . . . minutes misplaced . . . members forgetful about attending . . . complaints about noontime confabs when there weren't enough cigarettes to stave off hunger pangs . . . Davis pleading for punc- tuality, then always coming a little late . . . Wolfe and Cleek having something else planned at meeting time . . . Meyer never present and then Powers striving valiantly but vainly to keep her shorthand up to the speed of the fast-talking members . . . all members express their sincere appreciation for the time granted the publication prob- lems by Morris, Duncan and Nittinger. ic QQMGJMWU n .., , , W , , ..l.. rerienfing . . ' 'k FEATURES BEAUTIES WHO,S WHO ATHLETICS SUGAR BOWL ORANGE BOWL GREEKS 43 ff f-li A A WSI E . F4 - gm K 9 1 an SW? ,Magi 1 K. M ii' 4 ,KA Get tl load of More 50051 . . . Jcren bezzzzfias' . . . with bmim . . . Ike object at the extreme right if zz cifzfilimz. Another school year rambles along . , . and thoughts scramble into an album of picture memories . . . off to football games . . . parties . . . studying for exams in the library . . . or in the Union . . . all this and the spirit of the University of Tulsa, too . . . fun is always around. . . 31 . L 'f Pmzff llnjipjf Bi1'!f11f41j', P1'6',fjC!C'7If . . , Irflfcfl lllclkcj' ffflllf 10 by fl good ffffxw' in fl7w1fj.s'lry , , , or ffm if fbi! yew cl fffllfble ll7l7lfL'C'l'J'4ll'jf- oxiclaliwz of ll bcfuffiffflf1'iemfJ'bip . . . I-' ' 1 f - ld ,QL 1- 4 yil' awk H205 Q Wai- Ole! Glory waves high and hard lo mime zhe men who keep her flying. Air Corp! lmiazeer tells it mer . . . and then decide 20 mmzezwer the mmcler. 5053 . . . and it was fun . . . to have those men of the Air Forces flattering our campus with their knowledge . . little marching feet and all . . . size ten . . . grind- ing cumpus daily . . . 7:50 classes for them . . . Studying hard to make sure that the little man in Thore gzfyr with their thozfghzif 012 Iheir 1L'i7Zg.f pu! lheir mimif 012 their hoohf . . . ro it loohr. x if 5-ggi 5 Tbe men behind the men behind Ibe 'ZL'j7Zg.f . . . fbeir rfe.s',5.f rf01z'I fly . . . bm' their work belpr keep the propeflefif l'IH'77j7Ig. .J Berlin washed out . . . the time passed quickly . :intl then they were gone . . . it was tough sending them into the wild blue yonder . . . but yonder wasnt ull that was blue . . . so were we.. . LF' yimvr Tbe Union ret'ei1'e,v fbe Air Corp mffzlzfle . . . flriffl A11 apple pie fur your l'ZJ0llgZ7l.l' . . . rl Hilfe lfzffe 0 one mbleleaf clmler. beck borne . . . could we fell you tba! for zl Jmile. 50? 1 Ni 1 There, there, fella . you know the two step, clmft yon . . . the Trl Delta' :tml Phi Mm pack them l7Z for their pledge zlmzce. Hello, freshmen . . . how could we ever start school without you? . . . full rush . . . pledging and open houses . . . ood times in the mukinv . . . ledfes D building up tension on their wulkout . . . there was no pretense of trucking down the elmructers . . . we got there first .... A72 clcftfofz hot ficlyf riff . . . George CU4ZCC1Z.7l'!Il6J . . Frccl hefzrzl the flick mul war c1f1'inff.x' . . . izzfet trier html for tt clegffee in hriclge. fleptczr .fomher 1'e11z0r.ve. 50 tk 1bLuz9-. Chi 071l6gtl'J' While CLll'7Zllfj07Z Dance 'war a fl0lL'67'i7Zg Jzfcceif. All through the year Alma Mater tipped her thoughts to the Golden Anniversary of T.U .... colorful campus recollections . . . boosting plans for another eventful year to follow . . . everyone with more serious thoughts than just having fun . . . but keeping the place lively for the guys on the way back .... Cbeeiflefzzlerf Hoppe mul Gebbmt rejoice glozvifzgly after the Ormzge Bowl viclofy. A mzfffc in liefzfflcozfx 71Zr17Zkj7ZfZ . . . beauty Jervirzg clozzfile duty. scifi .-I. Kappa Dellar climax an eventful 7'lY.l'b 1661072 wil b t f .. newer! . . . at open home followifzg Nerw' knew lbey grew 011 barber . . . Gooclfzeff, Gebbarl . . . the grin if .fzzpe1'flzz0zu. 50521 frmmzl tm . Uncle Sfzw'J' trzfeft green Chi Omegak plczigmg. Surrounded by new people welve learned to have fun with . . . to dance with . . . to talk to . . a hand- shake from a newcomer . . . a smile . . . and then we know what T.U. is all about . . . we were in on the first fifty years . . . and they weren't the hardest . . they were the greatest .... swam--....' rt :N Tim Beltyr am! zz George ciircmir 11111125 for the Pcl7ZbLUl:7lfC Dmzcc. D012 mul Mary Jwiiig it at the Limihlliz Chi party . . . Chi O ciilief even enjoy Jtiiclyiiig. Seeing you in all the old familiar places , . . cramming for examing . . . a thought beyond conception in the fall of the year . . . snow-blanketed campus, with little flowers wearing blue jeans popping through . . . parades once again decorating the streets . . . eager eye-catchers becoming queens . Two celehmtom' go all wrt in iziiilefzzf walk out fllf iiewi' nf Oifmige Bowl hill. All family for the big pimzile . . . with flowers miil uficle Jmilef. 50152-1 l 0 J Alfwztize cyef zmtcb the game . . . bn! lbc C!l7lZC1':l A'!cntf.l five .s'Zwu'. ' H i -': I:'.-'livifizi 'I . , , -. -,:,.,,f-,,i,,.5',-:fu - 3 .H ..-- - -M a i.-fi. i S sz Katie le4z.lu' for al cbecr . . . om' befor' Everybody crowding to see famous pigskin plays . . and straining a loyal vocal chord for the team . . . football phenomena stormed the opponents goal steadily through the season . . . campus colleagues convened after the games at sorority open houses. I11zp01'tmzl Izzzmzcfr at img parly vers 9 rtvv November 25, 1944 Laurie Langford, Editor of Kendallabrum, University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Dear Miss Langford: The great number of pretty girls di the University of Tulsa doesn't atten ng tend to make the task of selecting six d pin-ups a simple one by any means, an reading personality from a photograph is a risky task, at best. I h with submit one man's So, ere opinion, in order of choice, with the sincere hope that the campus consensus might coincide: Mary Ella Dietrich, t Vir inia Swain, Pauline Grace Mary Foa , g Fincher, Joan Bechtel, Dorothy Perkins. Am enclosing a print, which I trust will serve your purpose for the i a e of the beauty section, from open ng p g which your engraver can make a black and white half-tone plate. With every good wish for a highly successful KENDALLABRUM, I am Yours Gordially, 5. . George Pet GBP m NSE? lion! no D A? cou Rv A E Nonfn-45 o K L No i 0 ox, n 9 J 0 0 - . ' 24 Clntbcu' by SEIDENBACHS Photograph by LEROY RANDALL XXffX X 2 3 ff 1 O ifid lecle ibiefriclz T ?3Q4? X ,N w ' 5.4 , Q ,f X X f m x . 2 :- L55 VCLCQ CLIF? Oaf Kappa Delta XX U ff' f , 7?XYV X C.'lUfX7C'A fly VANDLCVIZRS ljlmlogmzjrb by LEROY IQANDALI Clnlbar by BROWN -DUNKIN Phnlogmpb by LEROY RANDALL XXIff i ,avg fy OMLIL1 E ff XMXN idd irginia wa in Chi Omega X 4' if r gig W fkmfsii, ,W A . kg. .. 4. f sf if fi fi im Q, was as yvifwf dv? I C A i545 lfaugne inc er Phi Mu Q f 4 2 ' YMW G ffm ffffffigw X13 STR lilQ'I S lvlrffffxgmfzfn fly I,IiROY R,,xN1u,x1.I 40 in 1559 Clolbcy by PALACE Pb olognzpb by LEROY RANDALL X S HA X fm XX i156 oan ecAfe Chi Omega J idd 0r0fAg ,X erLin5 E , 1 S' Sis s 17 2 up gm QT? H- ' 'siif XX K ff f , .0 K, 0 0x .'e --,, f I, x- - ff y XX C,vIflfbC'.l fly ISROXVN-DUNKIN Ijfmfngmllnln by LEROY RANDALL 'U S Lfqllllll lllfllll K C112 Olxfvgff ITUOTBALI. QUEENV OF I9 15 Chosen by members of the football squad 2 Ml QPUUIIC' Kfzlbjm Delia FOOTBALL QUEEN OF 19-iii Chosen by members of the football squad 70761 ri on pug 0115 Dcflff Dcfffz Dcfllz BAND QUEEN OF I9 Chosen by members of thc band 1 Warifyrz, Munn PM Alf! BAND QUEEN OF 19,15 Chosen by members of thc baud lNlARjIEAN PERKINS VAN EMAN, Delm Delft: CLi.Yma GOODNIGHT, alias NIP , Alpha lim Delta, is known around school as a sure Onzega. held two coveted positions on the AU in any class. She deserted the campus at campus. He was president of Community mid-year to become Mrs. Edgar Van Ernan. Countil and tri-captain of the football team. WI-IGS WHS Bois MCCAY ORA LEE Boxxmiis -IEANETTE HAIIIRX' JEANNE HAIIIRY HliI.l2N HIBI3AlilJ KENNETH JOHNS CLYDE LEFORCIE BlE'I I'Y PONTIUS WHCYS WI-ICD AT THE CHARi.ifs IGLI-iHAR'I'. Ldmbdrf Chi ilplnz xm BILL NEFF. president of Ldlllbllcl Chi Alpha, liI.I-UXNOR SNYIHER. PM Mfr. has been active in president of Sword and Key until he grid had a finger in every campus pie as presi- all phases of school activities. She also had uated mid-term. He deserves a lot of treti dent or vice-president of every organization an upper hand in seeing that all students for getting the Engineering Lluw oil of which he was a member. xx ere properly enrolled. again. : .mzvl 'wmv . s,r- IN I944 MARii.YN EDWARDS IVIARYIZMA GA'r12s JEAN PRINGLI3 RUTH SHOR15 Riziaizc1c1A THoix1As Liars l'lOLMGRliN MARGIE Lee FISK BIARY hlARGARE'I' POOLE is a member of GLEN SMITII. Pi Kappa Alpha. is active in rhe Senior Staff and Sigma Afplnz Iota. She is Wforlxshop as well as being president of an aceomplished musician as well as a fine Inter-Fraternity Council and Kappa Kappa student. Psi. UNIVERSITY oi TULSA MARKIURIE OUS'I'liRHOUTl12lS been a leader in Clif Omega since her freshman year. Her high grades in a pre-med course earned hc-r the honor of membership in Senior Staff. W VIIZANNII HARRY. Kappa Drlm. is a second year member of XX'ho's W'ho. She was presi- dent of Sigma Alpha Iora and a member of many honorary org.1anizations. On grad- uation at mid-term she left for training in the Vyaves. I W ,M , 5li ff-'mifgr-' x 1-W ., jizANET'riz HARRY was really a B, W. U. C. as president of lxlzpjm Dalia and Senior Srall. Now she has joined the WLiN'CS to do her part, Q' fa .3 .VW WW .r ww' i .11 we 2. I -A , . 'mm ,X .Ka ,E wiiilm. f aa I, reii ,. , -'fill lbs - ' I A V, K A Y gf, A In the picture above are shown the following members: BOTTOM ROW-left 10 1'ight.' Frank Edwards, Forrest Combs, Thomas LaCoste, Bill Cadman, Pat Patterson- Andy Serino SECOND ROW-feff lo riglvlx Don McMullin, john Mudd, Bill Morgan, -lack Vinson, Buck Spencer, George Striplin THIRD ROW'-fc!! lo right: Gilbert Watscnn, -lim Crankshaw, Tom Creekmore, Robert Lawson, john Catlett, Frank Volcf. TOP ROW-fcff! lo rigblx Ewuin Wfilliams, Bruce Spratling, Bob Verkins, Robert Moore, Toby Collins. VETERANS, ASSOCIATION u'r15RANs Assoc31AT1oN of the Univer- sity of Tulsa . . . newest organization on the campus . . . organized March 20, 1915 . . . with 25 charter members . . . the number of veterans of this war returning to the Uni- versity is increasing every day . . . nineteen were enrolled the first semester . . . and fifty men who have seen service enrolled the second semester . . . the College of Petrol- eum Sciences and Engineering attracted the largest number . . . but there are veterans enrolled in all colleges of the University and the Downtown College . . . all branches of the armed services are represented . . NNN x LX ,ADX X 'Tal 1d,209'L. several of these men have seen combat . . . while the majority come from Tulsa or near- by communities . . . some come to the campus from as fat away states as California and New York . . . the purpose of this associa- tion of veterans is to bring speakers from various organizations . . . particular the Veterans Administration . . . to the campus for the purpose of discussing veteran's prob- lems . . . the officers are . . . Bill Cadman, president . . . Bob Verkins, vice-president . . . Pat Patterson, secretary-treasurer. . . . Frank Edwards, chaplain . . . Dr. Ross H. Beall is the faculty advisor. n J .-7 ' 5 ' A ,mf f f , ,fm mm. i 4 - 1 we A X 1-7, J Zmlg X' f-v nl 12 ' B L4 'Q -X Q A I lx v 1 hdiuui :R xx MN 5 4 X - Al ' , 'V V 15 flrhfefzcs COACHING STAFF Wrtlter S. Milligan, fz.s',ri.s'lr11ztfoolbfzll M couch, Henry Frnka, befm' fmzcb 111111 tiff?- felit' clireclnr, and O. Brothers, fnzclefiefcf coach. ERHAPS the most amazing record in American football history was set by the University of Tulsa coaching staff. ln their first year, these coaches sent their Tulsa eleven to the Sun Bowl, where it won from Texas Tech, 6-0. Then, in three spectacular years following, their teams earned bids to the 1943 and 1944 Sugar Bowls and the 1945 Orange Bowl. After losing to Tennes- see, 7-14, and to Georgia Tech, 18-20, in the New Orleans Classic, their 1944 Hurri- cane defeated Georgia Tech at Miami last New Year's Day, 26-12 . . . Coach Frnka and his assistants, Milligan and Brothers, have overcome unbelieveable war-time hand- icaps in directing four Tulsa teams to 30 victories and one tie, with only four defeats. This record placed Tulsa fourth of all major teams in the nation for the past five years, and second only to Notre Dame among teams which did not discontinue football. Frnka's teams set national passing records in 1942 and 1944, gained almost as much from scrimmage in 1942 and more in 1944 . . . these great teams enabled many Tulsa players to earn national recognition. Gifted Glenn Dobbs became Tulsa's first unques- tioned All-America player, and national ac- claim came to his chief pass-receiver, Sax Judd. This year Felto Prewitt, center, Camp Wilson, fullback, Clyde Goodnight, end, and Ellis Jones, guard, all received team positions or honorable mention on the All-America teams of the Associated Press, Bill Stern, Harry Wfismer, the New York Sun, Stars and Stripes, and others. VARSITY FGCDTBALL SQUAD FRONT ROW: Red Wade, teilbnck, Dean George, ttnlbtzck, J. R. Boone, nfingbfzck, Max Marsh, tnilbnck: Leo Hillman, ufingbnck, Perry Moss, tfzilbfzckg Ed Shedlosky, zcingbtzck, Leo Walker, 11'lngbtzck,' Coy McGee, tczilbtzck: Bobby jack Stuart, ttzllbtzck, Buck Spencer, ttzilbnck, H. B. C Texj Ryon, trtziner. SECOND ROW: Coach Henry Frnkag Toby Collins, ttzckle: Clyde Goodnight, end: C. B. Stanley, tackle: Ellis Jones, gnnrd: Sam Gray, end: Glen Burgeis, tackle: Felto Pree witt, center: Bob Hellinghausen, center, Al Kowalski, blocking back, Camp Wilson, fnll- back, Barney White, end, Bill Jarrett, end, Line Clflzlfb Mike Milligan. THiRD Row: Bnckfield Coacb Buddy Brothers, Forrest Grigg, tackle: Bob Verkins, zcingbnck, Bogner Stubbs, gntzrd: jack Thomas, gfmrd, Norvel Patterson, blocking bnck: Sam LaGreca, gntzrd, Dick Jones, gnnrd, Allen Smith, fnllbnck, Charley Mitchell, blocking back: Nolan Luhn, end, Nathan Armstrong, tackle, Bob Nabors, center. FOURTH ROXYC' Dick Mosley, fn'llback, Carl Killman, tackle, Carl Buda, gntzrd: Charles Smith, end: Harold Swaney, end, Jim Quinn, blocking bnck, Bob Ashcraft, tackle, Reuben Morgan, gntzrd, Frank Tennant, tackle, Tony Cefali, end, Bob Brindley, tackle, Bob Toler, 'zz'ingbnck.' Don Whitlock, zcingbfzck. TOP ROW! George Neal, tzfrlrtnnt nn1rznger,' Ken- neth Butterworth, nmnnger, Lawrence Fields, end, Eric Field, end, Charles Schwendeman, gnnrd, Dan Holcomb, end, Bill Bloom, gnnrd, Paul Rose, fzzllbnck, Tom Burns, fnllbtzck, Bill Gilmore, ttzckle, Walter Schmidt, center, John Dowell, guard, john Harris, tackle, Joe Rexroat, zwlngbnck, Carl Brown, tzryirttzrzt trainer. FOOTBALL -A-S THE 1944 Tulsa football season rolled around, great things were expected. The Hurricane had played in the 1942 Sun Bowl and the 1943 and 1944 Sugar Bowls. One look at the Tulsa lineup showed T. U. had something, and critics considered Tulsa in the running for national honors. Statements from the two annuals said: Tulsa's Golden Hurricane again will lead the football procession across the western plain this fall,', and Tulsa will be one of the top teams of 1944 -one of the bowl choices again, if you please. With 19 of 28 lettermen returning, there could be little doubt that Coach Henry Frnka had it. Excepting two players, the starting Sugar Bowl line was back. A difficult schedule was arranged for what was hoped would be another good T.U. eleven. There were teams like Kansas, Mississippi, and Miami, the mystery teams of North Texas A.C. and Southwestern of Texas, scrappy Texas Tech, powerful Iowa Pre-flight, and dangerous Arkansas and Oklahoma A. Sz M. One problem that overshadowed others was the need for a good tailback. Only remaining tailback from the '43 team was the veteran, Maurice CRedD Wade. Wade had experience and ability, but how long the injured redhead could stand the gaff was unknown. Another with experience was Dean George, ex-Marine from Western Michigan. Leading freshmen were Tulsa Central's Perry Moss, and Tulsa Will Rogers' sensation, Bobby Jack Stuart. Moss could pass and was a good leader, while Stuart had won fame by his speed. A combination of the two would be just what Frnka was seeking. On September 23 an unheralded team of navy trainees from North Texas A. C. opposed the Hurricane dreadnaught in the opener. They proved too light and inexperienced for the Hurricane, and Frnka used 49 men in the 47-6 triumph. ELLIS JONES Gzmrd SAM GRAY Euzl GLEN BURGEIS Tackle F1zL'1'o PRIEWITT Center CA R L B U DA Crilldftl C. B. STANLEY Tackle CLYDE GOODNIGHT End CHARLES MITCHELL Blocking Back Eu SHEDLOSKY Wirzgback CAMP WILSON Fulllmck PERRY Moss Tuilback BARNEY WHITE End The first score came when Clyde CNipD Goodnight, stellar Tulsa end, caught the NTAC tailback in his end zone for a safety. Then Perry Moss engineered a 45- yard drive and scored. An NTAC end made a circus pass catch and the first quarter score was 8 to 6, Tulsa. In the second quarter Moss' touchdown passes to Ed Shedlosky, wingback, and Goodnight gave Tulsa a comfortable lead. The second half was all Tulsa as the Hurricane really blew. The Moss-to- Goodnight combination clicked again. Then big C. B. Stanley, tackle, blocked a North Texas punt and Camp Wilson, fullback, ploughed over. The third and fourth strings then scored twice. Next to invade Skelly Stadium was the University of Kansas. Statistics, more than the 27-0 score, show the difference between the teams. Tulsa had 24 first downs to three for Kansas, while the Hurricane managed 249 net yards gained to seven. Sensational line play counteracted many Tulsa fumbles. Rushing of Moss and Wilson brought the first score, while the former passed to Shedlosky for the second. Bobby Jack Stuart and Allen Smith took over the tailback and fullback duties, and gave T.U. a half-time lead of 20-0. Tulsa re- serves battled Kansas scoreless in the third quarter, but Stuart pushed over in the final quarter to ice the victory. Dick Jones, guard, and Forrest CChubbyD Grigg, tackle, gave outstanding accounts of themselves in the Hurricane line. On October 14 Tulsa drubbed a scrappy Texas Tech team, 34-7.i This was the identical score of the l943 game. At the end of the three quarters the Hurri- cane led only lil-7, but 20 points were piled up in the last quarter. Camp Wilson led a 95-yard drive in the first quarter, to put T.U. in front, 7-0. Not until the third quarter did Tulsa score again, with Wilson, Moss and Shedlosky driving for the second t.d. The Tech HT formation continued to give our line trouble and the Red Raiders drove 72 yards to score. As the fourth quar- ter started, Red Wade, taking the ball on a double reverse, ran 70 yards to push Tulsa farther ahead, 21-7. Alert line play by All-America center, Felto Prevvitt, gave us the ball deep in Tech territory, and Wilson went over. Wade then passed for the final tally of the night. FOOTBALL Thirty-seven players scuffled off to Memphis for their October 21 date with Ole Miss. Before a disappointing crowd, the first team played only one-third the game. The second and third teams completed a 47-0 rout. In the first quarter Wade passed to Goodnight and Shedlosky for successive touchdowns and Wilson scored once in the second. Fullbacks Wilson and Smith rammed over one apiece in the third quarter. Freshman end Bill Jarrett made two pass interceptions to set up the next two scores. Stanley, Carl Buda, guard, and Prewitt kept Ole Miss in hand throughout, while our blocking back, Charley Mitchell, played great ball offensively and defensively. Seventy miles from Tulsa lies Stillwater, in Stillwater is Oklahoma A. 8: M., and within A. 8: M. are eleven football players. Four are in the backfield, but un- like most backfields, three of these four can run 100 yards in ten seconds or less. This fact resulted in the greatest football game in Tulsa history. But let's get on. Saturday newspapers rated the contest thus: Tulsa has power, the Aggies speed, against a common foe, Texas Tech, A. 81 M. won 14-7, while Tulsa won 34-7. So Tulsa is a four-touchdown favorite. But letls continue. Tulsa kicked off and the Aggies took over on their own 28. On the first play, Bobby CAll-Americaj Fenimore went right, cut left and: A. 84 M. 6, Tulsa 0. However, all was not dark, we had the power and knew it. Tulsa drove 62 yards and Wade passed to Goodnight: 6-6. On such a beautiful afternoon, the Aggies didn't come over to watch a football game, but to win it. So-o-o, a pass, Fenimore to Cecil Hankins, gave the Cowboys a first down on the Tulsa 17. Fenimore ran to the six and then scooted left for the score: 13-6. As the second quarter began, Wilson, J. R. Boone, wingback, and Moss put the ball in good position. Then Moss tossed to Barney White, end, who eluded two tacklers and scored. Ellis Jones, guard, converted and the score was again tied. FORREST GRIGG Tackle BILL BLOOM Guan! BOB HlfLLlNG1iAUSEN Center DICK JONES Guam! Tony COLLINS Tackle NOLAN LUHN End AL KOwALsK1 Blocking Bark J. R. BOONE Wifzgback ALLEN SMITH Fullback BOBBY JACK STUART Tailback BILL JARRETI Em! NATHAN ARMSTRONG Tackle Fenimore returned the kickoff to the 41, from where he and Hankins picked up 30 yards. Then Hankins flipped a pass to Neill Armstrong, end, who leaped into the air and pulled the ball down across goal line: A. 84 M. 20, Tulsa 13. Again T. U. had possession of the ball but a fumble gave it to A. 85 M. on the T. U. 31. Hankins ran to the Tulsa five, and Fenimore hit Armstrong in pay dirt: A. 8: M. 27-13. Tulsa then went 70 yards and counted, Moss to White. On the first play of the second half, Wilson found a hole in the Aggie line and ran to the A. 84 M. 10. Wade passed to Goodnight for a score, but A. 8: M. still led, 27-26. Tulsa then clicked to the A. 8a M. 33, but Wade lateraled wildly and Hankins went for a 67-yard score: 34-26, A. 84 M. A fumble at midfield halted another Hurricane drive. Fenimore shot passes to Hankins and Spavital fthe third 10-second manb, and Watson scored on a quarterback sneak: 40-26. Moss then ran a Fenimore kick to the Aggie 35 and passed to White on the A. 84 M. two. Wilson scored on the next play and Moss converted: 40-33. After the kickoff the Aggies were held at midfield and Tulsa took over. Again the Moss-to-White combination scored. Fans held breath as Moss attempted the conversion. Relax now, he split the crossbar: 40-40. Whew!! All looked safe. But with seven minutes to go, Fenimore looped a desperation pass from midfield. It was deflected into the arms of Hankins, who scooted for the 12th marker: 46-40, A. 81 M. Stuart passed and ran to the Aggie 33 and it looked like T.U. was again t.d. bound, but a Moss pass was intercepted on the A. 8: M. goal line: the only inter- ception of 33 T.U. forwards. It was truly a great victory for the Aggies, who went on to beat TCU in the Cotton Bowl, with only one defeat on their record. It was the first Tulsa loss during the regular season in three years. Statistically, Tulsa had the better of it, but A. 8a M. capitalized on breaks and got the credit. Then came the Saturday of Saturdays-the game with the Iowa Seahawks, favored over the Hurricane by two touchdowns. The Pre-flighters lost the opener to Michigan 12-7, and then had won six straight. CThey increased that total to 10 straight.D FCDCDTBALL The Seahawks took the opening kickoff and drove 72 yards to a score. After that, two long runs and a pass play put them in front, 27-O. It was awful! On the second half kickoff Camp Wilson ran 94 yards for the first Tulsa score, but two long touchdown runs by Bob Cex-TUD Smith and Woodward counteracted the run by Camp.. Not until the fourth quarter did the Hurricane offense click. Bobby Stuart led the team to the Seahawk 22, and passed to Shedlosky for a score, but the Pre-flighters still led 40-13. Tulsa then drove 76 yards via the Shedlosky- to-Stuart, Stuart-to-Jarrett air route to pay dirt. Not to be outdone, Seahawk Samuels ran 91 yards and handed the ball to Dell Cex-TUD Taylor to score. After a fine kick- off return by Mitchell, Stuart then ran and passed Tulsa to the final score. Iowa Pre-flight 47, Tulsa 27. Prewitt, Buda, Goodnight and Jarrett played great ball in the Tulsa line, while the play of Shedlosky and Stuart was outstanding in the Hurri- cane backfield. On Armistice day the Southwestern Pirates, a team that in '43 held Tulsa to a 6-6 draw, moved into town. This team paid the bill for the Aggie and Seahawk victories. After a scoreless first quarter, Wilson broke the ice. With Wade com- pleting passes all over the field, Tulsa went for three more scores, while South- western crossed midfield only once during the first half. Wilson made another long run, an 89-yard gallop across the goal. Nip Goodnight caught the Southwest- ern tailback for a safety. Then, after the Pirates lone score, Dean George passed to Leo Walker for another Hurricane score. A desperation Southwestern pass was intercepted by Bill Jarrett and the lad from Tulsa Webster ran to the score. The final: Tulsa, 51-6. Before Thanksgiving, an Orange Bowl bid was received and accepted to play JACK THOMAS Guam' WALTER SCHMIDT Cefzler REUBEN MORGAN Guard SAM LAGRECA Tackle HAROLD SWANEY Emi NORVEL PATTERSON Blocking Back Llio WALKITR W'i11gb4ck DICK lVlOSI5LlEY Fnflback IVIAURICE WAIDE Tuilback IDIZAN GEORGE Tuillmtk BOISIKY Nmxous CQIIIEI' -2. BILL GILMORIE I Tarkle - ff' Georgia Tech on New Years' Day. In spite of the two Hurricane defeats, Tulsa and Tech were the first two teams selected for bowl competition. More than 16,000 fans came out for the Thanksgiving classic, which became another Hurricane victory. Three quick touchdown marches found Shedlosky, Goodnight and White on the receiving end of Moss' passes. Wade then tossed to White for a second quarter score. Arkansas drew blood when Smith knocked an Arkie pass into the arms of Goodnight who lateraled to Walker, and Leo was caught in the end zone for a safety. In the third quarter Wilson scored the final Tulsa t.d., and for the remainder of the game, Walker had punting practice and line and backfield held Arkansas at bay: 35-2. On December l Tulsa had a preview of the Orange Bowl in a one-sided con- test with Miami U. Four quick touchdowns in the first quarter was about all the Tulsans wanted. However, in the second, Dean George crossed the Miami goal. Miami was held to a 23-yard loss for the first half. In the third, Moss passed to Barney White for a score, and with this catch, Barney became 19445 leading pass receiver. In the fourth, Goodnight took a pass and lateraled to White for another score. Miami had a net gain of six yards for the game. Tulsa was ranked first in team passing yardage, behind only Second Air Force and Army in total yardage, second in pass completions, third in first downs, and made the best passing average for the nation. Tulsa players received All-America recognition: Center Felto Prewitt on the Associated Press second team, New York Sun first, Stars and Stripes first and New jersey Press Bureau first, Ellis jones, great one-arm guard, on Bill Stern's-Look first and AP honorable mention, Camp Wilson, AP honorable mention and Orange Bowl all-time fullback, End Clyde Goodnight, Bill Stern's third, Harry Wismer's team and also AP honorable mention. The squad and coaches voted Charley Mitchell the best blocking and tackling back for the second straight year, Carl Buda the best blocking and tackling lineman, and Freshman Wingback joe Rexroat the most unselfish and best-spirited player. Voting for honorary captain ended in a three-way tie. Tri-captains elected were N ip Goodnight, C. B. Stanley and Ellis jones. Red Wade trier az long pan' to Barney Wfhite, bmi Georgia Tech breakf it rrp. 'Y Ford maker lair record run. SUGAR When Jimmy Ford, then a freshman and now AAF, shot through Georgia Tech's left tackle and went 76 yards for a touchdown, he set the record for the longest run from scrimmage ever made in the Sugar Bowl Classic. He had beautiful blocking, especially from Carl Buda and Ellis jones. x 5 ,- f N...., r I LeF0rce and Ford watch Wade pan. Tech CLlf7f6lf7Z john Sfeber, Referee I. I. Lymb, T.U. Cnpffzifz Dell Taylor, mmf Umpire lobrz Walcior BCDWL Although Tulsa lost to Tech in the l944 Sugar Bowl, l8-20, Frnka's men executed one of the most beautiful and thrilling plays ever seen in New Orleans. It was on a screen pass, Clyde Leforce to Ed Shedloslcy, which completely baffled Tech players as Ed Scamp- ered 15 yards to score. Sberlloyky and Ford rape up for practice. 'Tum wijapy at timer in Bay St. Lozrir Leo Walkeff ufmfnzr up ar Pzmtmg Coach Brozberr looks 012. SUGAR Tulsa football players of 1942 and 1943 will never forget the Reed Hotel at Bay St. Louis . . .or Innkeeper Letissier . . . or Brother Peter, head of St. Stanislas . . . or the sand burrs on St. Stanislas field . . . or the nippy breezes off the bay . . . or those funny little nickle machines. Tulsa player: relax at Reed Holel. Bzrtre1f-half' Dmmway 67Zf67'f6i7ZJA the big fhotrf' Broylef pmzlr ont for Tccb but al penalty mmf blocked pzmt gave Tzzlm a quick score Then, there was New Orleans: the Blue Room of the Roosevelt Hotel, the New Years party at the St. Charles, the incomparable food at Antoine's, hurly- burly Canal Street, the French Quarter, the big river boat trip, the belt buckles, the watches, the ever- watchful Sugar Bowlers. The Povzlizuet mul Frfzkm riivze at the Rootevelt. Tzzlmm pame in Rooretfell lobby. fbi. , .cle e A-swf T Bob Verkim' lirfcr defpezzzlcly lo elude Tecbb' Mickey Logan. The Tulsans played before 30,000 cheering fans as they defeated Georgia Tech, 26-12. The team func- tioned perfectly in the warm sunlight, as starring roles went to Camp Wilson, Ed Shcdloslcy, Carl Buda, Felto Prewitt, Clyde Goodnight, Barney Wliite, Bill - A Jarrett, Perry Moss, and Ellis Jones. Q, i 1 I Q r. 4 Vi, , af wwf g,,.u.niwg,n .ns un in 1 ,i vs.- ,.,.,x ' , B0072g and BffffC1'lL'01'fb ICM! T1fIyL111Af bggk, Tlfful Zl'f1Z.i',' Ffflfcl Gillcllftlfm' :Il lllfzlillf. 1-'1ni'nm.x-sf. Orange Bowl amazes marred tboummix with magnificavzee of belween-half pagefztry. BCDWL Tropical beauty of Miami was at its most colorful as Miss Vernell Bush, University of Miami co-ed, presided over the Orange Bowl festival preceding and between halves of the game. Some 800 bandsmen and beauties Wove an intricate pattern of splendor in the most elaborate supporting show visiting Tulsans had ever seen. . .11 'r .. Tzrlm Crzplfzifz 101101, fpoazrom, mu! officialr. Ju, Sbczllorky :mel Mitcbell baffle Tech part ' fi if .QI rlinile ' gel if K L L , Q J fgfyvl' , xx 7 4- ' , ' Sw 'Q 5 12 if Q fi 3' If 3 Wh , 6355 LV ' :fl if l X f'l-YA lr 13, ' l i W we , Bemfleofm' Verne! Barb reiglzi in .rpfeuzdor ay Orange Bowl Queen. Wiliofz and Sbeaflwky fezzfrzz mlb 41 z'ii'lo1'3 ufzile. GRANGE Sweet memories of victory and of fun in Miami lingered on as Tulsa's footballers rerurneelg winning a big game that caused press men ro file more than 42,000 Words, twice that for 19-fi-i, and playing in the only bowl game broadcast coast-ro-coast and also to service men around the globe. Cbmfipiruzi' fclccf al Ylflflcl Viffoly Party 5 1' , 3' if AR . is if IS f.i .. ...Q . . News' men cfiipiztcb recon! filifzgi' 072 Tfzlm-Tech game frrmz Ormzge Bowl prefr box. Memories were added by travel hardships, home- comings, and the elaborate Tulsa Orange Bowl celebration. There, 5,000 fans honored coaches and squadg and Orange Bowlers, Van C. Kussrow, presi- dent, Will Preston, Tulsa chairman, and R. D. Freeman, personally presented the magnificent trophy. K i i RclfmzealTfzllmzi'JbiL'w'f1fze1' lllfalillihl' mn. Frnkd p1'eJcmJ Honomfy T Zo l'rci'ide1zl Pomim BASKETBALL THE 1944-45 University of Tulsa basketball team began its delayed season under a new coach, P. J. Alyea, who took charge in mid-january, 19-45. The former Phillips University coach, who had turned out many fine teams in his ten years at the Enid institution, inherited a Tulsa squad which was, with the exception of two freshmen, Jimmy Hayes and Willis Lotz, composed en- tirely of football players from the victorious Orange Bowl Golden Hurricane. Four of the players were veterans from the 1943-44 squad. They were: Charley Mitchell, forward, Barney White, guard, and Nolan Luhn and Toby Collins, centers. With only two weeks practice the team began its journey on a rocky, 12-game schedule. After flashing brilliantly for victories in its first four games, the Hurricane had rough sledding the rest of the season, and failed to ring the victory bell in its next eight. In their record of four wins, eight losses, the Tulsa cagers compiled 451 points to 559 for the opposition. Lead- COACH P, J, ALYEA ing scorer on the team was White, who counted 112 points in 12 games. Best point-makers after White were Luhn, with 95 points in 11 games, Mitchell, with 77 points in seven games, J. R. Boone, a guard, who made 51 points in 12 games, Max Marsh, a forward, with 39 in seven, and Lotz, a guard, who scored 22 points in 11 games. ln the picture above are shown the following members: 1 Lefl to right: T. V. Hunter, C, B. Stanley, Nolan Luhn, jim Hayes, Bob Iiskridge, Max Marsh, Charles Mitchell, Bob Conwell, Willis Lotz, Norvel Patterson, Buck Spencer, j. R. Boone, Coach Alyea. EADING OFF against the East Central Tigers from Ada in their first game of the season, Coach P, J. Alyea's 1944-45 Tulsa Hurricane cagers gave a brilliant performance as they romped to a 40-36 victory in the Tulsa Will Rogers high school gymna- sium January 25. Max Marsh, freshman forward, led the Tulsa scoring with 13 points. In its second contest, played on january 31 in the Rogers gym, Tulsa sparkled in what was perhaps its best game of the season when it downed Glennan General Hospital of Okmulgee, 45-44, with J. R. Boone and Barney White setting the scoring pace. Playing a return game against East Central at Ada on February l, Tulsa ran wild for a 44-33 victory in the huge Tiger fieldhouse. On February 5, Tulsa scored its fourth consecutive victory when it defeated Camp Crowder in another home game on the Rogers court, 46-42. Charley Mitchell, playing in his first contest of the season, racked up 15 points to lead the Tulsa scoring. Coach Alyea's former team, the Phillips Haymakers, burst the Tulsa bubble of invincibility when they gave the Hurricanes their first setback of the season in the Daniel Webster gym here on February 6, by a close 31-50 score. Nolan Luhn's 12 points led the team. The Haymakers repeated their performance when they buried Tulsa under a disastrous 59-44 score at Enid on February 13. Mitchell made 19 points in this contest, despite his team's defeat. Apparently losing heart after this second consecu- tive loss, the Tulsans bowed to Camp Crowder, 42-46, in a return game at Neosho, Mo., on February 16. Luhn led the Tulsa scorers with 12 points. A return game with Glennan General Hospital at Okmulgee on February 21, resulted in another 48-57 defeat for Tulsa. White poured 18 points through the hoop to top the Tulsa scoring. Camp Gruber provided the Tulsa opposition in the Webster gym here on February 24, and came through with a 39-22 win over the Hurricane. Mitchell's 11 points was highest for Tulsa. On February 28, Tulsa played its annual game with Oklahoma A 8: M in Avey's Tulsa Coliseum before approximately twenty five hundred spectators. Al- though it started strong, the Hurricane could not cope with the giant, seven-foot All-America Bob Kurland, and lost by a 25-46 score. On March 7, Tulsa again played Camp Gruber, this time at Muskogee, and lost by a 40-48 count. White rolled up 14 points for scoring honors, ln its last game of the season, played at Stillwater on March 14, Tulsa was overwhelmed bv Oklahoma A. 81 M., which ran up a 78-26 score while breaking all previous Aggie scoring records. Mitchell hit the hoop for 11 points to lead the Tulsa cagers in the scoring column. ,iii- 'f '39 In the above picture are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-left to right: Bob McDowell, Dick Girouard. SECOND ROV!-left to right: Dan Scott, Max Maneval, jim Smith. Members not present-Bob La- Fortune, jim Pollard, Jack Cross. SWIMMING TEAM HE SWIMMING TEAM this year was or- ganized by Dick Girouard, who was placed in charge of all men's swimming classes, and gym coach Ellis Jones .... The original plan was to have a team com- posed of the best swimmers from the reg- ular swimming classes and to have this team swim in meets with high schools and colleges in the vicinity .... Speed and stroke trials were held in the swimming classes during November. The best swimmers were chosen in their respective strokes to swim together as a team at a separate workout time from the regular classes .... How- ever, inroads made in the manpower on the team by the armed services soon con- vinced coach Girouard and the remaining team members that extra talent, that was known to be in school, would have to be resorted to in order to have a team strong in all strokes and events that appear in a meet. When this necessity became ap- parent, the members of the team commenced a recruiting drive to get some of the good swimmers who were known to be attending school. This met with some success and with this new strength the team got down to work in earnest, working out every day in the Harwell Gym pool .... At this time it was learned that Central and Will Rogers had disbanded their teams for the duration but letters were sent to high schools and colleges in the state requesting meets .... The men who make up this team are Dick Gitouard, coach, jim McVay, jim Pollard, Bob La- Fortune, Max Maneval, Bob McDowell, Jack Cross, Dan Scott, Paul Girouard, jim Smith, Ray King, Larkin O'Hern, and Jack Bergman. reeks The mother chapter of Chi Omega is at the University of Arkansas where this sorority was founded April 5, 1895. Cardinal and straw are the colors. The white Carnation is the flower. Cl-ll CMEGA THE Chi O's started things off with a bang this year as the men on the campus greeted the new pledges in the usual affectionate manner . . . prexy Catie Blair led the grand march at the White Carnation Dance given in honor of the pledges . . . Virginia Swain, pledge prexy, brought new glory to the chapter as football queen with Marilyn Cope as one of her attendants . . . little Norma Lee Cantrell joined the royalty as attendant to the band queen . . . the members were surprised by a come-as- you-arel' breakfast given by the pledges and the attire of some of the members kept the whole chapter howling . . . the Chi O car in the parade before the home-coming game with A. 8: M. was la Model T gracefully draped with the pledge class and with Betty Chaney's little brother dressed as Our Hero,', Bob Fenimore . . . Mary Kate Roark was elected Sweetheart of Lambda Chi . . . Cleo Wolfe and Beverley Cleek, with the impressive title of Business Man- ager, tried to keep the books balanced for the yearbook and newspaper respectively while Lisby VanBradt served time as co-editor of the yearbook . . . Marjorie Ousterhout was elected to Who's Who . . . frat pins and rings displayed by members gave evidence that there was no love shortage . . . crowning event was the 50th anniversary banquet at the Crystal Ballroom with all the chapters throughout the nation celebrating Chi-O's founding at similar ban- quets the same night. f, 5F!hie!P OFFICERS Prwidwzz .... CATHERINE BLAIR Vice-President . - ...s.. . LYSBETH SWEET 3 Secremry.. . EEEEE MARjoR1E OUSTERHOUT Trefzsfzrer EEEE CLEO WOI,IfE CATHERINE BLAIR P7'L'.l'ftfL'lll Epsilon ammo Qhopter ln the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-'Zen to right: june Appleby, Terressa Auld, Martha Bartlett, Joan Bechtel, Nancy Beggs, Jean Bell, Betty Binford, Catherine Blair, Pat Brammer, jean Burch, Norma Lee Cantrell, Mary Lynn Cease. FOURTH ROW-!c'jl 10 right: Betty Chaney, Beverly Cleelc, Marilyn Cope, Doris Crider, Betty Daugherty, Martha Kate Dunkin, Bunnie Fulton, Gloria Fulton, Lucy Graham, Ann Herrick, Mary Helen Hoover, Vashti lobe. THIRD ROW'-le,l1 lo right: Janet jackson, Mary Margaret jackson, Dorothy jean Kelly. Shirle Lamb. Beth Lawyer, Phyllis Marsh, Betty Mae McCracken, Mary McKellar. Sara Lou Mills, Mary Jean Neff. Marvorie Newell, Marjorie Ousterhout. SECOND ROW-fefl In riglJt.' Eleanor Powers, Wanda Pruitt, Dolly jane Reneau, Mary Kate Roark, Katherine Sadlo, Ann Sanders, Benita Springer, Virginia Swain, Lysbeth Sweet, Doris Tubbs, Lois Tubbs. BOTTOM ROW-felt lo riglal: Lisby VanBradt, Alice Walton, Betty Welch, Katherine W'etzel, Virginia White, Mary jane Williams. Cleo Wolfe, Rena Wolfe, Marion XX'ortly, Betty Jo Young, jill Zink. Member.: not presezztx Jane Anderson, Nancy Gorrell. f ,H , -, D Af' .V . ' P uqhu ,. K - sp ,,,. . , . . ' Mgt ' E A F , A Qzzn . . pp pp, 5, K 8, , e 4, ,gg -fi fs i ,,,.. . 'H - T ' E W if ,,,- i if A W 4 1 , f T W ' 3. ::5- if - a s ,. F . 'jam W If , 'V ii' ' Fix- . in . 5, glf y, I 2 In - ,unl .E p p . it-at T irs ' i, -i.. .5 1 ' i'.. A fr, P Q-ff lf r .' , fl' 1 , i'l s-.. a t ' ' W ' 'i: i L if T ki I A , --I A y .- ,..j- - lll, 3-f .j - N E: f-N s s fa, ex Q 'E E M E F it -E ft at .s V ' .ff f-...ii -P .,., i.-,V . -fl' 4 ,...,, - .,:i ' a s i f'f S L . - ff: ff ' 'R .'- . . A, g W 4' , r ,. ,N L Q p N We T s + T ltts, r- f F af Delta Delta Delta was founded Thanksgiving Eve, 1888, at Boston College. There are now 88 active chapters in the United States and Canada. The colors are silver, gold, and blue, and the pansy is the flower. DELTA DELTA DELTA THIRTY NEW PLEDGEs, wide-eyed but en- thusiastic helped usher in the third war-time college year with Betty Lou Bryan as chapter president . . . lla Fern Hoppe held gavel in pledge meeting . . . Ginny Where did you get all that pep Thompson assisted . . . jean Harmon, the Humes, and Peggy Comfort helped put the beautiful scholarship cup within our pine-paneled walls for the second consecu- tive time . . . Billee Payne and Sara Lu Johnson proved to be top-notch editors for Collegian, Laurie Langford pulling her hair and strings for the Kendallabrum . . . Wedcling bells rang for Marjean Perkins, jean Henshaw, and Mary Madge Carriger . . . Bob came home to see Marty Belle Naylor . . . Jean Lancaster .31 . became a career girl . . . Jo Yadon gave out with her daily biographies of Gene . . . and then there is Evelyn Davis and her johnny . . . Jean Smith turned out to be a second Bob Hope . . . don't forget Mary I'll do the unexpected Houchins . . . the super pledge dance . . . the slumber party and gossip session . . . yes, we admit it!! . . . Jean Ann Stite's and Mary Alice Fields happy go luckyn personalities . . . Bar- bara Kinzie's good-looking dates . . . Allyne Russell and her super acting ability . . . Allyne, Madge Clarke, and Rosie Millard's frat pins . . . the deluxe glamour of Scotti and Mariana Baker . . . Mary Donaldsonis very own Ballantyne. . . and please don't forget our Mother Pat . . . what would we do without her! OFFICERS Preridem ssss S ssssssssssss BETTY Lou BRYAN Vice-Preridem so E . MARTHA BELLE NAYLOR Secretary S S EE..., MAR JEAN PERKINS VAN EMAN Treamrer, A LAURIE LANGEORD BETTY Lou BRYAN Prcriclwzl :Theta Upsilon Qhapter In the picture below are shown the following members! TOP ROW-lefz to right: Marianna Baker, Carolyn Braunlich, Betty Lou Bryan, Mary Madge Carriger, Madge Clarke, Peggy Comfort, Evelyn Davis, Oralee Davis, Dee Dee Diem, julia Dixon, Georgia Lou Dunn. FOURTH ROW-left to figfyh' Catherine Farrell, Mary Alice Field, Mary Nell Fowler, Ouida Gorden, jean Harmon- jo Ann Hayden, jean Henshaw, Mary Henthorne, lla Fern Hoppe, Mary Houchins, Jessie Hume. THIRD ROW-left io riglal: Laura Hume, Ann Hurley, Sara Lu johnson, Frances Jones, Gloria Kemnitz, johnece Kerr, Nancy Kerr, Barbara Kinzie, jean Lancaster, Laurie Lang- ford, Mary Frances Lewallen. SECOND ROW-left lo rigbt: Betty Lytle, Marjorie McClellan, Carrol McMahon, Rose Marie Millard, Phyllis Miller, Mavis Nordin, Martha Belle Naylor, Ilene Parisho, Billee Payne, Marjean Van Eman, BOTTOM ROW-left to riglal: Allyne Russell, Helen Scotti, Ruth Sheehan, Margaret Sims, jeane Smith, Lois Steiner, Jeanne Anne Stites, Virginia Thompson, Virginia Todd, Jo Anne Yadon. Members not prererzt: Patty Belnap, Mary Donaldson, Barbara Guiles, Ann Miller, Eleanor Sears. rr.: - ,. - -. .ff M-f, W E A ,,,,., A ag, A S E gf-j, -., sg 6 F' 353: Qi 2 , Yi E ,......., M, Y' rf V N J, wash ,.,,X ,,v,,. .,:N-:Nt ,r l,.,.,,,gw.., , ,,,. , I my , . A . ,L I , 5-,J K J, -, .url H -V 1' H It In A::-, : ,ilk I , ,, ,. H: K ,i .W A I ,, Q. N N ,,. A .n ff 1 . i 'V A .,,, 'ft if ,V ,wg . Av R .M 1 r. -- ff- A rf, ,, --', , - ' , K Qs. Q 1 i 3 V Q A yyy, Aa , ,r if r a r,,, r ' Dv '9-P' ' ga A f gf ' - ' 1 fr , , '- 1 - . . , ,I :' , ,,,f 'n r- AW .f '3N kf W '. ., . .ev -I if :N mm MV: .. . W V , . n R 5:41 -if Qs, 2 -1-, - , 1.1 . T. fr Ali A 5 'S , ,ft A ' T . A ' ' -- - ' V ' 0 ,rf 'rm l ' ,ffrrf W' 1 17554 any A' ,.. . LTI ,ar Mi it A K A VJ I f .W , I ,..: -, 3 Q ,QI fi' I 'W 1 .,-. ' tif. - - , T 1' f ' Y V KAPPA HE KAPPA DELTAS got off to a flying start with a grand pledge class and a dated up calendar . . . Jeanette Harry, Prexy of K. D. . . . as well as of S. A. I . . . Aileen Hill and Art Buhl were pinned . . . Grace Foat, from Wisconsin, and Betty Erickson still longing for those air cadets to come back . . .Ruth Greene football Queen of '44 . . . and Gloria Garrett and Claudine Williamson with their plans for reviving vaudeville . . . Pat Skeehan and Toby Collins and the motorcycle . . . Pat Powers and Marcella Fent still studying ac- counting . . . Pat Haas football queen attendant and band queen attendant . . . Margaret . . . Tiny . . . Pitcher chosen K. A. sweetheart . . . and among the girls wearing sparklers on their ring fingers . . . At Virginia State Normal Kappa Delta was founded October 23, 1897. The flower is the white rose, and the colors, green and white. There are 67 active chapters. DELTA Jean Woodring, Jo Katherine Ogden . . . Oleata Yeargin singing You're Driving Me Crazy to Jim Graves . . . What is this secret between Billie Woodard, Marcella Fent, Reita Ruth Mayer and Barb Dille? . . . but it's no secret . . . Pat Thurman and Norma Pitcock debating on the Cadet Nurse Corps . . . Jean and Jeanette Harry joining the Waves . . . Mary Lou Miller voted most improved pledge . . and Dorothy Jacoby the most outstanding pledge . . Ruth Harvey and Johnny Kirkpatrick steadies . . . Mary K. fwhere are your duesj Winn still doing a swell job as treasurer . . . June Jester and Bogner Stubbs a devoted couple . . . and Jackie Dedmon and Jimmie Wintle going steady . . . all this and heaven too! O OFFICERS: f if .. Prcridem, u JEANETTE HARRY J i s rsst at in J ri Viva-Premlwzz PAT SKEEHAN K sm Scwemry u uuuuuu RE1TA RUTH MEYER Trefzrfzrer D au D MARY K. WINN JEAN ifrris HARIIY Preridc 111 Beta U psilon Q hapter ln the picture below are shown the following memhers: TOP ROW'-lefl 10 righfx Norma Lee Allen, Andrealee Anderson, Lillian Attaway, Maxine Barry, Elizabeth Blair, Betty Bowling, Beth Brown, Martha Burton, Laurene Castello, Peggy Dameron, Dorothy Dean. FOURTH ROW-lefz I0 rig-5l.' Jackie Dedmon, Cherrie Dons, Betty Erickson, Marcella Fent, Grace Mary Foar, Gloria Garrett, Annabelle Goodman, Ruth Greene, Virginia Gray, Pat Haas, Jeanne Harry. THIRD ROW--left In rlglat: Jeanette Harry, Ruth Harvey, Doris Sue Haskell, Aileen Hill, Martha Hudlin, Dorothy Jacoby, June Jester, Billie Ruth Jones, Jeanne Jones, Elizabeth Longhurst, Martha Lou McConnico. SECOND ROW'-lefl to right: Doris Jean Mclinight, Eva Marie McLester, Reita Ruth Meyer, Mary Lou Miller, Billie Jane Moore, Jo Katherine Ogden, Betty Paul, Margaret Pitcher, Norma Pitcock. Pat Powers, Florence Reeves. BOTTOM ROW-left to riglolx Pat Skeehan, Mildred Skyberryi Joann Stewart, Pat Thurman, Claudine William- son, Mary K. XVinn, Billie Wcuodard, Jean Woodring, Martha Vifoodward, Oleata Yeargin. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Barbara Dille, Norma Machner, Billie Probert. N ' , N 'K -,. I - t'- 'ima - ,. .ff-'sa 'eff'-.ya fan., ' . If ,- 1 if i.1 '- e ' A 'E 4 A 1 f - ,,, ,,:, 'r-, Q - Y , 5' ..,, , i- , I Y -:-- A ' - - E R im .,,, V. M -- fm ,f N .sf i't! ,.N'f 'FNx ' g 11 ,,,, 'TP' f Ne--4, A R A A TM S, ,. ,,,..,..,,s .H ..,. Y A A , x if A ff' V gf B A I A ' -. 5 -- .Ki I rr k - , -.-- , Q fe Vk' ., QQ-E LAM Q' ii W - 2 K- 5 11, A sf A Y - ,, s' at a a, Y - A A Y ,x af , . K A V , A , A A O' P 'W J '22, R A A : A. A , , f 'L is Q Q A - 2 A M M M I lkbv M ,W 1 , 1 :Q 43 ' I .4 V Q vb I 1 , ' -.,:,,, . l ...- A 'gt ' 'T A : ' ' .. , - - eff .:,, ' ' T J ii .ifi A it 4 Asif - ' - - 5, T V Phi Mu was founded March 4, 1852, at Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgia. There are 57 chapters. The colors are rose and white, and the flower is the enchantress carnation. Pl-Il MU HINGS START out with a bang when Braun is chosen Band Queen . . . pledge prexy Gebhart is elected one of the cheer leaders and Lairmore cuts capers as acrobatic cheer leader . . . and then there were Fervoy, Bollman and Buthod selling forget-me- nots Armistice Day . . . rush chairman Schillinger leaves for U. S. C .... Jean Liveley's Ray sends her a ring from California . . Ellis and her fabulous presents from Belgium . . . the walkout, with the pledges Cbless 'emh refusing to show up for punish- ment at six the next morning . . . Mother Tommy's fortune-telling and hot soup . . . Daisy Mael' Gebhart being chosen Queen of the Hay at the Lambda Chi barn dance . . . the Pan-Hellenic dance and the inevitable foul weather . . . the Christmas party with the glamorous Lily Whiters and Torchy Webb . . . and Curtis' violin solo at 5:30 in the morning . . . Perky'1 and parliamentarian Harvey trying to keep order in meeting . . . Swindell's weekly plug for chapel . . . Mershon and Luderwick leaving at mid-semester . . . Betty Mac finally saying yes to Chronic . . . more candy at meeting . . . Bollman keeping busy as president of Commerce club and assistant manager of the Collegian . . Coman leaving to marry her Harold and Buz joining Josiah in Seattle . . . the Founder's Day banquet the night after initiation . . . and presentation of the scholar- ship cup to Carolyn Blair and best pledge award to Vera Lisle. W 'N' M' 'ii .M ' - sua... ,D , :-'N TL -'-'- 'M V Nw fe.. ' ' , OFFICERS: Piremlemf O DOROTHY PERKINS Vice-Preriflem' ooass O GWEN GALLAGHER Searemry O O oooos . ,. s JAN SERFLING Tireamrcr sssa ,JEAN LIVELY DOROTHY PERKINS Preyiclwzt Epsilon ammo Qhapter ln the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-Zefl to riglat: Mary Bauldridge, Carolyn Blair, Pat Bollman, Marilyn Braun, Helen Buthod, Cleda Campbell, Joella Coman, Ora Crandall, Jackie Crans, Jean Curtis, Kathleen Dorroh. FOURTH ROW-lefl to right: Wanda Ellis, Jackie Fervoy, Mary Jo Ferre, Pauline Fincher, Sue Ann Foreman, Phyllis Gaddis, Gwen Gallagher, Mary Gebhart, Helen Glass, Betty Harkness, Betty Lou Harvey. THIRD ROW-left to right: Gloria Henson, Hazel Huggins, Edna Hustedde, Betty Lou Ihrig, Jeanne Johnson, Joyce Lairemore, Vera Lisle, Jean Lively, Pat Ludewick, Ann McDowell, Kathleen McGuire. SECOND ROW-left to 1'i,qbt.' June Mclnnes, Betty McWilliams, Margaret Mershon, Rosemary Moore, Eunice Morgan, Joan Newton, Mary Ann Pallein, June Pearson, Dorothy Perkins, Jean Pray, Carolyn Propps. BOTTOM ROW-left Io isiglJ!.' Delores Roberts, Jan Serfling, Eleanor Snyder, Betty Swindell, Ruth Swindell, Maye Teal, Cecilia Teis, Betty Walker, Mary Walker, Jeanne Webb, Margery Wible. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Josephine Dick, Joanne Payne, Jeannette Reed, Corrine Taylor, Mary Ellen Werthe. O J J R 4 1 T ., , A J- P- so . si - P , P 4 f . , .. A ,. .., ' .U D -ya., fag ,fxw Fr , ' X- 'E ., 4 ,Q ., , . R if - , ' :,, ,, it . T 3' i ,.-' ,V Vy E , any l ,await , ,wa-fsf..,I -I are-,H 1 I , ,ff i ' s I A ai 3. ,Q i 3 ag z -,Fi .,- i ..., , .. , , H is an , W K 3 . Q 1, as my W V I J--Q, w ,ggi , K .t RJ , , I , I i i er' , ,. we Q- ff T '-' 4 T 5 ' ii 1 P3 .V 4. i '+A I Va- :K ..,, 'E ' ' 4 3 ,.,,, , , ,. - , if r , -i.,r - 1 f Q4 T .Zi -'P J R1 . ,.., 4' V .:,, , V 1 ' A ,' m 1 . 3 5 W 'ms PANHELLENIC CCDUNCIL THE PANHELLENIC COUNCIL at the Uni- versity of Tulsa was organized over fourteen years ago . . . and was modeled after the National Panhellenic Congress . . . membership is made up of two delegates from each of the four sororities . . . the president and one other member . . . in 1943-44, Virginia Jackson and Jeanette Harry of Kappa Delta officiated as president . . . other familiar faces of last year's Pan- hellenic were Aileen Hill, Kappa Delta, Tid Gates and Evelyn Davis, Delta Delta Delta, Helen Hibbard Campbell and Gloria Busby Henson, Phi Mug Marcia Whitwell and Jean Pringle Ousterhout, Chi Omega . . . Panhellenic Council of 1944-45 found Jane Schillinger of Phi Mu first filling the chair of presidency, later replaced by Betty Mc- Williams . . . other members are Dorothy Perkins, Phi Mu, Catie Blair and Betty Daugherty, Chi Omega, Betty Lou Bryan and Evelyn Davis, Delta Delta Delta, Jean- ette Harry and Jeanne Harry, Kappa Delta . . . Miss Mary Clay Williams, Dean of Women, is sponsor . . . the group promotes and maintains cooperation among the sorori- ties and supervises all sorority functions . . . regular summer meetings were held to dis- cuss rush activities for the coming fall term . . . sim- plified rush rules were again used . . . each sorority was allowed six small parties and two large ones during the summer rush season, all of these parties being held in the lodges . . . a new idea was put to practical use, that of a Panhellenic open house preceding the parties of for- mal rush . . . formal rush week found an increase of five in each group's quota making a total of thirty places for each sorority . . . BETTY MCWILLIAMS Preyidem out-of-town girls were met and assisted in making friends . . . during the school term, meetings were held weekly on Monday noon in Miss William's office . . . at these meet- ings, sorority problems are discussed and plans for various functions formulated . . . delegates are usually on time due to a self- inflicted penalty of a quarter for all late comers . . . informality ruled during the noon meetings with delegates grabbing a bite to eat between sentences . . . Dorothy Perkins, munching her raw carrot during the noon meetings, was elected the official food-buyer for the rest of the Council . . . Evelyn Davis, secretary, was forever scribbling away at the minutes . . . Betty Daugherty, vice-president, officiated in the absence of Betty McWilliams . . . Jeanne Harry kept the treasury books straight and up-to-date for the Council . . . Betty Lou Bryan was persistently the one to move for adjournment so the group could head for the Union before their one o'clock classes . . . the Annual Panhellenic Ball was again the outstanding formal . . . this year the snow and sleet almost prevented the re- ceiving line from functioning . . . Miss Williams missed chaperoning for the first time due to a bad attack of flu . . . funniest incident occurred during the grand march when several couples got lost wandering in and out of the entrances of the ballroom . . . the Sadie Hawkin's Day celebration was sponsored by Panhel . . . girls donned pinafores and boys wore blue jeans and lil Abner's . . . with awards given to the shyest boy and the most forward girl, the dance was a huge success . . . in the way of war work, the Council also contributed to In the picture above are shown the following members: FRONT ROW-lefl lo righl: Betty Lou Bryan, Dorothy Perkins, Betty McWilliams, Evelyn Davis. BACK ROW- lefl to right: Jeanette Harry, Mary Clay Williams, Catherine Blair, Jeanne Harry. Betty Daugherty. the War Dad's parachute fund and took over the planning of entertainment Satur- day night at the U. S. O .... Panhellenic Council annually sponsors the Panhellenic Workshop in which the new initiates of the four groups are recognized . . . dis- cussions and round tables are held in regard to fallacies in our system of rush . . . scholarship, development of a pledge, house duties, etiquette, and other problems con- cerned with campus life are discussed . . . Panhellenic regretted the loss of Jane Schill- inger to U. S. C. but gladly welcomed Betty McWilliams to the chair of prexy . . . when Catie Blair became ill and had to withdraw from school, Liz Sweet then took over the Chi O presidency and one of the Panhel delegates . . . at the end of the first semester, the Harry twins graduated and joined the Waves . . . soon after, Betty McWilliams dropped out of school to trek to Florida and a husband . . . offices of Panhellenic Council rotate each year, so that each sorority holds a different office each year, the cycle being completed every four years . . . the creed of the local Panhellenic Council is identical with that of the National Pan- hellenic Congress . . . We, the fraternity undergraduate members, stand for good scholarship, for the guarding of good health, for wholehearted cooperation with the col- legeis ideals for student life, for the mainte- nance of fine social standards, and the serv- ing, to the best of our ability, of our college community . . . good college citizenship as a preparation for good citizenship in the larger world of alumnae days is the ideal that shall guide our chapter activitiesf, Alpha Tau Omega was founded September ll, 1865, at the Virginia Military Acad- emy. The local Delta Sigma Xi became Epsilon Lambda chapter May 6, 1944. The white tea rose is the flower, and azure and gold the colors. ALPHA TAU GMEGA USHING PROSPECTS and results pleased all A.T.O.s . . . they took the largest pledge class . . . 31 men . . . and the best, they say . . . joe Forner pinned his best girl . . . Bob Kirkland was loose after quitting the steady dating . . . numerous initiations held through- out semester for pledges called into military service . . . Ellis jones and Nip Goodnight mentioned in All-American . . . and Ellis's girl being crowned football queen . . . Goodnight makes Who's Wfho and remains Community Council president . . . Black and White Formal and Founders Day Banquet among outstand- ing activities of year . . . Hellinghausen, pledge prexy, is missed during his weeks in the hos- pital . . . after injury in the Southwestern game . . . and the favorable comments re- ceived on the A.T.O. floats in the football parades . . . Gerald Johnson pinning best girl with badge loaned him by Forner . . . Bill Skeehan the outstanding pledge . . . eight more pledges taken . . . Verkins' shy admittal that his pin has been given to a campus beauty . . . Davis re-elected president and McVay back to juggle the finances . . . jack Thomas dating one Chi O after another . . . and where do the Tri Delts come in? . . . Conwell finally scoring . . . in the last basketball game of the season . . . Fred Davis and Bob Kirkland dating Tri Delts . . . and loving it! . . . jack Bergman making the best grades in the fall pledge class . . . and getting his beautiful tresses wacked off before the Engineers, St. Patricks Day dance . . . Tommy Floyd's warbling . . . a la Sinatra . . . Allen Smith and his numerous blondes . . . and Nolan and his numerous brunettes . . . Jim Hayes play- ing wonderful basketball . . . Louis Patterson emoted all over the Worksliop . . . and along about March started going steady with the girl of the long blonde hair . . . How sad everyone was when jess Scarborough left for the service . . . he was so swell . . . and they were equally sad to see little K. O. Colman leave . . . Dr. Bailkey holds the respect of all A.T.O.s . . . as they proudly boast him as their sponsor. OFFICERS: President- -. , ., ,, F RED DAVIS Vice-Premlenz -- ..... BOB MCFETRIDGE Secremry , MCVAY Treasurer u.uuou . BOB KIRKLAND FRED DAVIS Preridem Epsilon Lambda Qhopter In the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-left zo right: Jack Bergman, jack Billington, Harry Burns, Frank Coleman- Bob Conwell, Ed Crossland, Fred Davis, jr., Torn Fleeger, Tommy Floyd, joe Forner, Jim Fulton. THIRD ROW-left lo right: Clyde Goodnight, Tom Han- son, Jim Hayes, Bob Hellinghausen, Bill Hunter, Ellis Jones, Bob Kirkland, Jack Leahy, Nolan Luhn, David Maher, Dick Mason. SECOND ROW-left 20 4'iglJl.' Bob McDowell, Bob Mclietridge, Joe Moran, Bill Mowery, Marque Nelson, Bob Oswald, Bill Pate, Louis Patterson, jess Scarborough, Jack Schuler, Dan Scott. BOTTOM ROW-left zo fight: Bill Skeehan, Lee Simmons, Allen Smith, C. B. Stanley, George Sullivan, Jack Thomas, Bob Toler, Bob Verkins, Leo Walker, Jim Wintle- Fred Woodson, Kenneth Worrall, H. T. Wright. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Bill Boswell, T. V. Hunter, Gerald Johnson, Gus johnson, Al Kowalski, Dick McGee- Jim McVay, Barry Murphy, Ed Proctor, Don Ritterbusch, Bill Thompson. J , W , -- ,N .R Ag:-., .K . fs., 4- ,ff-fix. . i sas B. F t -.., -. K K . -,,' 'f,,. Q 5, . T ii 5 ,,,.g 0 ,M q A ea I , S ,..V 5, 5 L f aa. T .rsssrs ,fg.,. ,,,,.- I . .., g Avi QZZ: 6 h E, I kr- , ., I., ,,,,, IQIZ Q I IQN N2 : V . KJ: l +1f.i V 'V i ' ' izgl T ' L 133 H if I ig 2:55 Nqzb QL: I MA p H., EA, 1 m e :g .,., a i- - V T - . . , ,-- -1 1 ' ' si!! . zzgfl ,:A,VV .p '.....- :ggf AVA. ' ...: 1.i -',, '!7 ' ix .' , .,..: : - . ., 1 . , . sa, W - i, W fm ,, me , ts is 1. Ulf-TT .S -2 i i ,.-,..1 L 1 . ' .---2 , , ':' ' ' -M. i','i i . 'Q .-94-fa. . 7 ei, , A. Q ,,,, H pl ,Y ' V ..., A . .. . . f. . g . . g. In , .. .. , - ii-QQ Fa aw, A -- - if ' . ,. i t' , ,.,,- ,Y , li ,513 5 . 7 M n qikil N I Q 4 :-,: 3 KJV . . W . .. by -, K , E: . -if. 3 N ES. ..,,.. ai.. .v: ,E H. :-.. 1 . .iz 2 W .. T i si ,yy at .. , . ai , a i KAPPA :M U CHAPTER of Kappa Alpha . . . which was the first national fraternity to stake fn claim on the campus of the University of Tulsa . . . almost created another l'first . . . as well as a minor riot . . . with the consideration of closing doors for the dura- tion . . . when only four active members returned to school . . . while the others were serving their country either in the armed forces or on the home front. . .Formal Pledging found . . . Tommy White, Jim Clark, Horace Goodson, jack Cross, John Clar, john Kirk- patrick, Johnny jones, David Carson, Dan Ecker, Tommy Holland, Eugene Crabtree, Bob Phillips . . . standing in line sporting pledge shields . . . football season . . . and johnny Jones with four coeds . . . leading the school's Rah! Rahs! . . . and the flash of Fredis camera going continually . . . Jim Clark furnished the brains for the chapter . . . and Jack Cross furnished the beauty . . . When he was chosen K. A. candidate for Tri Delta's Bill of the Balln . . . entertainment was furnished for the entire school when the K. A. first dance was given . . . and the chapter hayride was a thing to be remembered . . . Johnny Dowd furnished smokes for the chapter when he put out his pin on Thanksgiving . . . incidentally, he spent the rest of the year trying to retrieve said cigars after he had Kappa Alpha Order was founded on December 21, 1865, at Washington and Lee University, at Lexington, Virginia. Their colors are crimson and old gold. The red rose and magnolia are the flowers. ALPHA recovered . . . his pin . . . the second semester started off with a bang . . . with Bill Coulter's graduation . . . and our mutual Uncle Sam . . . calling forth Johnny Jones, Tommy Holland, Horace Goodson and Eugene Crab- tree . . . initiation called for serene solemn- ness . . . and presented just that . . . and Horace Goodson furnished the excuse for many a sendoff party . . . when his orders became delayed . . . and he got to spend a few more cherished days at home . . . Johnny Jones spent the first few months of the year talking about his wonderful trip to Miami and the Orange Bowl . . . and upon the occasion of Johnny Dowd's appendectomy . . . frat meet- ings were moved to the Tulsa Osteopathic hospital . . . with open houses there every afternoon! OFFICERS: Pfemigm ttttttttt ,., F RED SAWYER Vice-Premienz .,. ,BILL COULTER Secretary tttt uuuuuuu J OE LALANDE Treamrer, E , JOHN DOWD FRED SAWYER Prericievzt .Mu Qhapter In the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-left to righr: John Clar, jim Clark, Bill Coulter, Eugene Crabtree, Jack Cross, Dan Ecker. Horace Goodson Tommy Holland. BOTTOM ROW-left lo 1'igf9l.' Buddy Jones, john Kirkpatrick, Joe LaLande, Dick Moulcler, Bob Phil- lips, Fred Sawyer, Jack Vinson. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: David Carson, John Dowd, Kraider Van Duesen, Tommy White Kappa Kappa Psi, national band fraternity, was founded at Oklahoma A. and M. Col- lege in 1919. Blue and white are the colors of the fraternity, and the flower is the red Carnation. KAPPA KAPPA PSI KAPPA KAPPA PSI started the year in style . . . electing Marilyn Braun as Sweetheart . . . along with attendants Pat Haas, Virginia Thompson, and Norma Lee Cantrell . . . Marilyn also the band queen, appropriately crowned by prexy Glen Smith . . . and was presented in an elaborate float at a football parade and game . . . a hayride held early in the first semester honoring the eleven new pledges . . . Brite, Crabtree, and Ecker de- clared uunfair to organized hayriders because they attended as stags . . . vice-president and pledgemaster Art Buhl tackled a man-sized job with gusto . . . training the new pledges . . . and then came the band trip to Memphis . . . where Kappa Kappa Psiers received a big dose of Southern hospitality . . . gossip has it that one compartment of the train was practically flooded . . . what with the water fight between Bill Pate, George Brite, Paul Dick, and Bob Lamm . . . anyhow the fellers got back in one piece . . . to celebrate the Christmas season, a Christmas Cnatchurlyj party was held . . . presents were exchanged . . . just ask Horn what he received . . . with the new semester came initiation and election . . . and Glen CF. D. RJ Smith being chosen again to pound the gavel . . . Preacher Buhl trying to reform some of the brothers . . . so Holland takes heed to his words and asks Braun the fatal question . . . to go steady . . . annual Swing Formal held this year at Y. W. C. A. ballroom . . . in honor of members in service . . . Louis Patterson was put in charge of the pledge program at the dance . . . a program that was never presented . . . special pledge court held for Patterson . . . the fraternity looks forward to the day when the service men return . . . expecting many of them back . . . hoping it will be soon. OFFICERS: Prasiflezzr GLEN SMITH Vice-Pffcmlent , ART BUHL GLEN SMITH Prciiclwzt fllpha 531' Qhapter In the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW'-felt to right: George Brite, Richard Brite, Art Buhl. Eugene Crabtree, Paul Dick, Dan Ecker, Horace Goorlsofi, Tom Holland. BOTTOM ROW'-fefl to riglat: Eddie Horn, Bill Hunter, Alvin Kessler, Bob Lamm, Louis Patterson, Glen Smith, Stanly Thomas. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Byrl Nichols, Allen Cox. Lambda Chi Alpha was founded November 2, 1909, at Boston University. The boys from 110 active chapters rec- ognize the white rose as their flower, and purple, green, and gold as their colors. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA ' 4 31N REVIEW . . . knockdown fight over Sweetheart election . . . Margie Lee Fisk emerging as favorite . . . annual Instal- lation Dinner-Dance at Tulsa Country Club . . . ulegsl' Wheeler, plus rest of pledges, wowing members and dates with program . . . Bill Neff re-elected prexy and pinning Fisk . . . and jorns giving up . . . doings in 1944 . . . decide to be extra selective in rushing and pledge only twenty men . . . Dinner- Dance held at Mayo this year . . . pledges program . . . and Mary Kate Roark announced as Sweetheart of '44 that nite . . . Klintworth honors Katie by presenting her with grape- fruit . . . which was part of his apparel in pledge program . . . 'nuff said . . . Mary Gebhart crowned Hay Queen by B. Lamm at barn dance . . . Wheeler celebrates Xmas by pinning Neumann . . . Bill Bearden takes over Presi- dent's gavel . . . school honor roll announced . . . Lam Chi represented by sixty percent of members . . . rush season approaches . . . rushees entertained C ? D by Wallack and Lamm,s version of Road to Mandalay . . . Ivo Nelson elected pledge prexy . . . and Pete Clark crowned King Pat . . . the fellows puzzling over Henderson, Bevins, and Horn's excursions to Claremore . . . John Harris in- sisting that he had nothing to do with the fire in the House basement . . . Dick Brite's wonderful house parties . . . Kerr and his high school women . . . Bearden and his one and onlyw . . . yeah, we mean Mathieson. OFFICERS: Pfefidenz or Looo ,BILL NEFF Vice-Premlefrt so ,. ,JOHN KERR Secretary I L BILL BEARDEN Trezzrzzref' LLL. ,LL,, D ON HENDERSON Q 'X BILL NEFF Prerirlefzi Epsilon Upsilon Qhopter In the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-left lo right: Bill Bearden, Leon Bevins, Richard Brite, Leslie Clark, Ed Claytor, Paul Dick, Jerry Hatfield. Don Henderson. SECOND ROW-lefl lo right: Earl Hogarl, Eddie Horn, Charles Iglehart, Don jenkins, Bill Johnson, John Kerr, Bill Klintworth, Bob Lamm. BOTTOM ROW-leff Io right: Hugh McKee. Bill Neff, jim Pollard, Bill Schmalhorst, Phil Vfhaley, Bob W'heeler, Dick Yeager, John Wlyatt. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: W'inston Brymer, Sammy Chalmers, Bill Guier, John Harris, Kelly McConnell, Howard Stapleton, Paul Swift, Gordon Walker. 3 A , . Pi Kappa Alpha was founded 'i March 1, 1868, at the Uni- versity of Virginia. Their col- ors are garnet and gold. The flower of this fraternity is the lily-of-the-valley. P1 KAPPA ALPHA THIS FALL found many Pi Kappa Alpha brothers from T. U. in the service . . . and the potential members more interested in the war . . . than in fraternities . . . 26 were pledged the first and second semesters . . . listening partiesl' were held at prexy J. Mac Donovan's . . . during the year many members and pledges left for the army . . . Bobby Jack Stuart headed for West Point . . . to join brothers Reggie Shaw and Bobby Dobbs . . . Bobby jack made a surprise visit to Tulsa in March . . . was welcomed by Pike brothers . . . and by little Betty jo Young . . . Leon Veeder joined Navy . . . Paul Girouard, Ray- mon King and Bill Wfoodbury went to the Army . . . Bob Brindley joined the Merchant Marine . . . Felto Prewitt, Ed Shedlosky, Camp Wilson made Pi K. A. All-American . . . Sam Gray honorable mention . . . annual hay- ride, in fall, a big success . . . and the nu- merous house parties . . . final social activity of first semester . . . the Blue Beard dance . . . Harwell gym crowded with the various Pike harems . . . many Pike pledges had to miss meetings . . . to build airplanes at Douglas . . . February election . . . Charles Daugherty new president . . . Initiation found many pros- pective members . . . serving the country . . . joe Keith couldn't wait to hand over his new pin . . . to Rosie Millard . . . Founders Day Banquet . . . a strictly stag affair . . . was dedicated to the 200 Pikes who have been killed in the war . . . and the more than 12,000 in the armed forces . . . many Pikes distinguished themselves on the campus . . . Glen Smith became Ben Hennekeis leading lady . . . George Neal co-managed the foot- ball and basketball teams . . . Pike football players practically kept the Hurricane going . . . or so they thought . . . Charles Daugherty became outstanding in the speech department . . . Ric Field and Kenny Butterworth drew in the female admirers . . . meanwhile, the Pikes looked forward to the end of the war . . . and the return of their many brothers. T rg, OFFICERS: Prefidem' . .uu. I . MAC DONOVAN Vice-Pferidem to is GLEN SMITH Secretary .... ...B CAMP WILSON Tfefzmrer , . DICK GIROUARD J. MAC DONOVAN Preyirfwzf ammo Upsllon Qhczpter In the picture below are shown the following members: TOP ROW-lef! to right: J. R. Boone, Luis Bueno. Kenneth Butterworth, Charles Daugherty, J. Mac Donovan, Eric Field, Sam Gray. SECOND ROW-left to ffigbt: Dick Girouard, Joe Keith, Max Marsh, Perry Moss, George Neal, Pat Patterson, Felto Prewitt. BOTTOM ROW-left to right: Ronnie Roszeil, Ed Shedlosky, Glen Smith, Bobby Jack Stuart, Bogner Stubbs, Jack Thornton, Camp Wilson. MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Bob Brindly, Bob Bush, Bill Coyle, Paul Girouartl, Ramon King, jim Smith, Leon Veeder, Bill Woodbury, Beryl Nichols, Forest Combs, Tom Creekmore, Ewing Williams, Bruce Spraltling. INTER-FBATERNVFY CGUNCIL HE INTER-FRA'I'ERNI'I'Y COUNCIL is the governing body of the social fraternities of the campus . . . its purpose is to correlate the activities of the various fraternities toward greater service to the University . . . acts as a judiciary body in the settlement of disputes . . . and aids individual fraternities in their various projects . . . has added responsibilities during war time . . .as fraternities face more problems . . . is com- posed of three representatives from each fraternity . . . meetings are held every two weeks . . . offices rotate among the groups annually . . . effort is made to cooperate with the independent men . . . Glen Smith presided over the meetings . . . Fred Sawyer replaced Bill Coulter as vice-president second semester . . . joe Forner kept track of the minutes . . . and Ed Claytor was treasurer . . . members were always waiting for someone to show up . . . and no one ever did . . . the Kappa Alphas were notorious for being absent . . . the climax of the year was the Inter-Fraternity Ball held in the gym . . . and the commercial decorator's dec- orations . . . a cross between a rodeo, convention, and cattle show . . . and a wonderful dance . . . Robert V. Gardner was faculty sponsor during formal rush . . . but next year we hope to have the new dean of men to advise and sponsor us . . . a revision of the rush rules are among the plans for next year. GLEN SMITH l're.i'iclefzt ln the picture below are shown the following members: FRONT Row-leff lo 1'iglJ!.' H. D. Chase, Joe Forner, Bill Coulter, Glen Smith, Ed Claytor, J. Mac Donavan. BACK ROW-feft to right: Fred Sawyer, Dick Girouard, Bill Neff, john Kerr, Bob Kirkland. OFF-CAMPUS GREEKS FF-CAMPUS GIIIEIEKS . . . new organ- ization on the campus . . . promotes the Pan-Hellenic spirit . . . by organizing all the girls on the campus who belong to sororities without chapters at the University of Tulsa . . . sororities represented are Alpha Phi . . . Kappa Alpha Theta . . . Kappa Kappa Gamma . . . Pi Beta Phi . . . the organization was introduced to the campus at an open house in November . . . and members of campus sororities and fra- ternities were guests . . . off-campus Greeks are well represented in all campus organiza- tion . . . Connie Cook is an active member of the Community Council and chairman of the Student Activities Committee . . . as well as being the only girl enrolled in aero- ln the picture below are shown the following members: nautical engineering . . . Kappa Vera Mar- garet Hurt represents us in the Psychology Club and then there are our men . . . Pat Freiss has two johnnys . . . one is her husband in the Marines . . . and the other is her baby son . . . Dede Dietrich . . . Kendallabrum queen . . . wears a beautiful diamond from her man overseas . . . and Connie's attentions are captured by an R. A. F. officer . . . and then there is But joe, you're just like a brother Mon- nett . . . and 'lMusic just ain't my line Warren . . . Pat Monnet pounded the gavel . . . Katheryn Hayden kept the finances straight . . . while Dede Dietrich planned the social functions. TOP ROW-lef! lo right: Connie Cook, Dede Dietrich, Priscilla Foster, Pat Friess. BOTTOM ROW-feft lo riglotx Marguerite Hyden, Vera Margaret Hurt, Pat Monnet, Natalie Warren. The team of '95 - that began thc tradition of great football squatls at thc University of Tulsa. X X I k'2 7 x :sg ae I 'QW ill f X !, X 1 x X 1 gl . X ry Q X X A xx. ilk Q 1 O iz xg fo - ll 3 v - 0 65 Jfldvertlslrzg Be Secure - Insure DEAR PATRONS: Wliiit follows in these pages is commonly known in many of the lesser com- munities as a Razz Section. If by a stroke of fate you have the dubious honor of appearing in this drivel, be thankful you got some good, free publicity. ,af lf you didn t, be even more thankful you escaped ll U RA . . . 6 9 f being knifed in the back . . . -V xe TH E OE. , . . , . Q1 Maximilian, the ill-fated Austrian emperor of ' H . . L? Mexico, once uttered at the age of two, the simple i COMPANY if words Goo vow len. lmmediatel the treat minds . he 7 3 O y 8 2... Iliff - V . . 00 N ggytff' if 1 r i went to work in tn ttempt t cxll ' ,gm 4. .u o ie ii , 1 a o A 321111 i ' Lfiiffj,-12-1???,, , ,Jpffk -. . . what he meant. Lveryone tried to attach hidden PAUL SISK Atlas Life Building TULSA, OKLAHOMA meanings to his innocent words, llveryone had a different explanation of what he meant. All through his life, people followed Maxie around and wanted to know what he meant. But he kept his big mouth shut. Finally he got tired of the mob and went to Mexico. Even here the people accused him of mean- ing more than ugoo, goppleu, when he said goo, fgillffllilltil on Page lioj .. Qi? to Sill 5 l ' LC f W up . at ' 0 ! JW j I I fi arf Tulsa Unlverslty On Your Golden Anniversary On Your Victorious Golden Hurricane On All Your Outstanding Achievements on yourdial KTUL N the youth of the land lies the responsibility for the future of America. On those young and strong shoulders will repose the burden of making the world - a world made up of many sovereign nations 1 a better place in which to live. Where America will stand lil that WOI'ld Cl6p611ClS O11 l'161' yOL1tl'1. To you students of the University of Tulsa, as the future governing citizens of these United States, we look for a future bright with promise and peace. Nlid-Continent Petroleum Corporation Phone 3-7l66 TULSA CAMERA RECORD CO. PHOTOSTAT COPIES BLUE PRINTS ENGINEERING SUPPLIES CITY MAPS KODAKS SUPER-PHOTO COPIES MOVIE CAMERAS 3l7 South Boston Tulsa, Oklahoma D LANDES, SERVER 8 THORNTON General Insurance and Surety Bonds Jhflfvwef Tulsa. Oklahoma UIZITIZZ .l0llll CW 4. 1 i I 1 UQAZZ ..... gopple . Although Max meant no more than what he said, the people would not believe him and he was executed because he would not, even though he could not, give an explanation. He lives in history as a meanie and a rascal, simply because the people were stupid and perverted. This little fable is told to show that no matter what is said in the following pages, people, will misinterpret it and arrive at perverted conceptions of what is meant. Much more is meant than goo, gopp1e , true enough, but nothing more is meant than what is said. When a certain Tri Delt is re- ferred to as a vixen or a cheat, that is what is meant and nothing more. When we say that a Pi KA drinks a lot of tomato juice, we do not take it to mean that he is a bad boy or a drunkard. We mean that he likes tomato juice. If the remark should slip that the Lambda Chi bunch has taken out their stairway from the first to second floors, what else could be meant than that they are slightly wanting in masculine traits? When we say that jack Thornton would give his left garter to know about the mugging that goes CContinued on Page 1585 I NK BURNERS for INDUSTRY Ftoon FuRNAcEs for the HOME UNIT HEATERs for WAREI-louses and STORES i ' it .IOHN ZINK COMPAN NEW YORK . . . LOS ANGELES . . . DETROIT . . . SAN FRANCISCO . . . ST. LOUIS I 4 Simon -,A' EEE-Z:1:g5., 41:14. .-s:1:s:s. 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W , Qt-w egzt, -':25:2:s:5:s:5-: ' 2fIE1E?5fE1EIEf .1:Si2E' ff--H , .th,5:g4g15:1' 4252 +4 'e1'13'4' is -1:1 1- ,:::r:r1:g:::g:- -. 5:g:r:r:rf1:r:r A+ f S9c- +':?qSf'4' V355 4: 152515 '-:J-931525212 ' -1451511252225 35 .. , ow,- 5 ' grgtgrg H .g:f:f:f:f:f:I:I: 'S.:g'5:.-:5:!:f:If. ..E:5 6-fm . 12552525'rr-'IE-EjE5f3E:f:5:1: - ?515I,5:E:5:3:5:, + W.., ,..- E3 . .::,:51g,j 5g:5::f:v-2 5 5: , -54555355332-35: ' : jj E:' f':':-51:2-gziz-V... - 45:31:31 fifififfr- Zrf -522 .rfsf 51.2 zfsff' ff ..:1::.52s :fi -5:S:i:2. ..:F551'z 's:2:s:s2s't.-5: VQVA ,,. P., . ,. Weston Cahforma Sportswear for Men Womcn's California Sportswear OMPLIMEN TS 'i H of l 1 RALPH TALBOT ll 0 O THEATRES l 5 . R I T Z oRP1-IEUM MAJESTIC R 1 A L T o JQAZZ ..... on in the backyard of the Phi Mu house, we mean that mugging goes on in the Phi Mu backyard and he would give his left garter to know about it. We do not mean that he would give his right garter. We realize that it will do no good to defend what we say. We realize that although we say now that we mean only what we say and no more, some people will read more into the words than is there. Some people are like that, and for proof, we refer back to the Maximilian example. We realize that we will probably wind up on the rack, or will be stuffed in a culvert. But our defense will be this. We said what we meant, and if we are maligned for that, it is the prosecution that is evil and perverted, not the writer. Looking ahead, we can see what will happen. Our eyes are open, pending their closing by some rude fist. We listen to the voice of the people in writing this, not to the voice of logic and good sense. Truth is better whispered, not told aloud. But we have a certain duty in exposing the petty lives of those who pass for angels and halo-wearing demi-gods. We fContinued on Page 1605 You know, if my company could GIVE Cfor freej the electric energy to run the average factory, it would amount to only a small percentage of the total operating cost of the factory . . . for in 33100 in manufacturing costs, there is only 82 cents worth of electric power. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY of OKLAHOMA Brown-Dunkin Pays Tribute to 9060014 Oklahoma! progressive life is mirrored in her schools, both public and private. Her colleges and universities are second to none and offer the highest examples of modern instruction and training. We pay sincere tribute to teachers, principals and schools that have helped spread knowledge and un- derstanding in our State. FACTS KV0ll l'l! KNIIXVING All0lf'l' UKLAIIIDIVIA SI7ll00I.S There are approximately 6,602 schools of all kinds in Oklahoma 6,000iCrade Schools 450 High Schools 6 Teachers' Colleges 28 Colleges and junior Colleges 9 Denominational Colleges 75 Parochial Schools 22 Business Colleges 5l.., 4, - .'-!II -I 4 , K - l - 1 ,... 'n i , l l r'.m. I V Jia W r W s T ,lf Wx is X J , 4 1 ii 12 Indian Schools X Public School property in Oklahoma is valued at more than - fb X9 S5lS0,000,000 X 5 W M , There are close to 25,000 teachers in all Oklahoma Schools. ' H There are over 600,000 Children attending Oklahoma public schools, with close to 100,000 other persons attending schools ' of various kinds A! 1 f 1 ' ' , ' F - I I, Nr' V ' i is 'I' 4 is 1 B' I l C x ,Q V K ' f K 1-Y V. Y , 1, .X .pq I sigh Fil ' ith i 9 5 - '- -,.....'-1 ,+..?.M if r -1. l l e W ,-'r 1 l 'l l'1' - A ll i X u 1 Q l , X I l X I is ,.m,..i...1...... ' VO W IX U IX HX TULSN5 DOMINANT DEPARTMENT STOKE 0 YOURT H G MAIN 0 DIAL 2-710i 59 Smart Girls Know All the Short Cuts Order By Phone at SEARS .... More Than l00,000 Separate Items From Which To Choose in Sears Store and Sears Catalog! lust DIAL 81 1 1 Let Sally Sears, Personal Shop- per, do your shopping. You don't need all cash - use your charge account or Easy Pay Plan. ROEBUCK AN D CO. srmzs fy Bd S Fifth at Boulder go E l f 4 . C725 UQAZZ ..... realize that the high-minded intellectuals like Helen Scotti, Dick Mason and Naney Gorrell will not read this expose more than seven times, but nevertheless, there are some persons who will. To these we write. But that brings up another problem. The low in- telligence and moronic attitude of those who are named in the pages to come, forces the use of a simple and devitalized vocabulary. Circumlocution and redundant verbosity must he dispensed with. Polysyllabic words must be deleted, for the fine shades of meaning they could carry would be missed. We must scrutinize the caliginous recesses of our cogi- tating apparatus to render a cogent and irridescent panorama of the annual kaleidoscopic, cataclysmic and catastrophic campus occurrences. LISTLESS? LIST 8 EU. 500N, Wl-' HOPl ! ine mfor Cam CADILLAC . . 0LDSMOBILE GREENLEASE LEDTERMAN, Inc. TULSA La-Agfyawmfnfdmw Tulsa's Year Old Bank extends greetings to the faculty, students, alumnae and friends of Tulsa's 5 0 Year Old University THE FIRST NATIDNAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY CIF TULSA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ORPHEUM CIGAR STORE SPORTING RESULTS LUNCH 309 So. Boston ' Phone 2-2882 BUCKLES Ray and Ruth Flow! Arzfiyli' FRED DAVIS- There is il young lad named Fred A COMPLETE FLORAL SERVICE Wlmcase face never gets red He thinks he's slick I7 Wegl Em Street And is the girls pick Thurs all we wrote and said. VZ! .Mi 4' MII CONSULTING EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICISTS. Ot S S C's personnel, one hundred twenty are graduates representing forty colleges and universities. I D I Hezsrrzograph Semce Gorporaifou CONSULTING EXPLORATIUN GLUPHYSICIS KENNEDY sulinlnc TULSA, OKLAHOMA, U. S.A. TULSA'S QUALITY STORE, SINCE IQO4 FIFTH AND BOSTON The Ma n Hntel ...Salufes Tulsa U7ll U87'A'l.fj' We're pulling for the home team TOOQZQ I . . . We're right in there with the rah, rah for all the T.U. gang To the men and women who represent if, The Mayo proudly hails a greai' university! Y0 julm D. Mango. .Ilunuqinq Ilirm-lur Tulm'J Fineff' 1 Mi ON E Y o o u R D I A L AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANY CBLUEl - MUTUAL BROADCASTING SYSTEM ALPHA TAU OMEGA A.T.O. ii All Types of Operators-from big shots in knee pants to knee pants or-from Conwell to McDowell. These kids think they are really hot-especially the way a few of the so-called Wonderful menl' keep announcing to the World how much money they spend on their cars and how much their Red Hot dances cost each member. Woirderfull I ! If you like that type. The prizes are the Mercy Boys -Fred Davis, Bob McFetridge and the big wind from the South, jim Wiiitle. lf you don't think so ask their true loves. Their meetings consist of McDrool's drooling and Bailkeyis bellyaching. Meeting is then dis- missed for the mad dash to sorority row to show all the Lillie Girly what BIG boys they ure. The A.T.O.'s are trying to win the title of the best drinkers on the campus. Their candidates are --jim McVey, T. V. Hunter and Allen Smith. So 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlllllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlIlIllIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII fur Allen is the only one fhaf has Succeeded- A V FMW IN AT FIFTH STREET 'ir-S THE NATIUNAL 'Q 1 MUTUAL EASUALTY EUMPANY 1' 2 ffl A soundly mdndqed, proqres , , , , , , I 7,6 sive insiiiuiion, Wriiinq dll cds- Y A ,- ug : udliy lines. KX xx X. '. A company in step with the I : ,gf 0 iirnes cmd ihorouqhly idrnilidr ,F ,L s , r- J -PV. .f - -'xy '. ', , .,, :,, 'ew , I .. 1.5 5 'Q - L gals I W ' .- '32, I 'L- .A Ns, - -nf -, fi- ,, , V - N fi .til ,K It dv L A i f..,, ,.. A I lf- ' 1 ,Q , , x I J , ' ' ' .Z I' ' i x 1 C ' ' . il A if ff? . 2 K I 'I f f :ide 'f' I x 1 .9 'Z .i w . HN 'V fe. 'Q - 'u 1 , 1'-,ff Liz.. x i ,Q ' ' wwf: 'YV .h f I, ff' fin ua x , ' Q 1 ' f I 4 .4 fa! E with the insurance needs oi the , public- CLYDE QQODNIGHT- There was 21 young laid named Clyde, IDERRY D. INHQFE And from ull the girls he did hide , He studied so hard President , . . 'Ihur his brznn was marred Witli nothing but peroxide, CORSAGES POTTED PLANTS CUT FLOWERS H10 0lfUQl Clint J TELEGRAPH FLORlSTS l7!oz1'cr5 liz Sermon- lWill1i11 1311115011 i203 S. Hdrvdrd Delivery Service Phone 6-4831 PALACE OFFICE SUPPLY Pioneers in Printing, Lithographing and Complete Office Outfitting Let Us Help You With Your Office Problems 611-613 South Boston Don 't Forget To Buy War Bonds and Stamps wgmgfwifx SPECIALTY Shops within a SHOP .... four floors filled with the FINEST NAMES in FASHION. Listed are but a few of these FAMOUS names. EXCLUSIVELY ours, to be found NOWHERE ELSE in Tulsa! NETTIE ROSENSTEIN Fashions LOUISE BARNES GALLAGI-IER JUDY 'N JILL Junior Fashions PHILIP MANGONE MEYER'S Riding Apparel MARK CROSS Leather Goods CLAIRE MCCARDELL ROYAL WORCESTER China ORREFORS Glass B. H. WRAGGE Clothes HATTIE CARNEGIE Cosmetics PRINCE MATCHABELLI Cosmetics JUVENIA Watches ANDREW GELLER Shoes PALTER DeLISO Shoes THOMAS CORT Shoes HATTIE CARNEGIE Furs LILLY DACHE Hats VERA MAXWELL MADAME TEWI Handmade Lingerie BRYAN Hosiery CARLIN Boudoir Accessories DOBBS Hats ANTHONY BLOTTA EDELWEISS Gloves EDWARD'S Children's Shoes JOSEPH HALPERT ELIZABETH ARDEN BEAUTY SALON QUALITY STREET Clothes HABITMAKER Dresses HANDMACHER Suits NETTIE ROSENSTEIN Handbags and Jewelry I-low To Get the Most from Your Clothes If you can afford the capital investment neces- sary to buy several suits at one time, you will make money on your investment. A suit will last much longer, require far less expense for pressing and will look its best longer if you can let it hang at least a day between wearings. Your total investment in clothes will not be greater-only concentrated in a short period --and your savings in wear and pressing bills will be considerable. C Q TAI Lon s- lwirzelhfe READY'lO'WEAR Philtower Bldg. OFFICE SUPPLIES School Supplies - Mirneoqrcrphs Mimeoqrcrph Supplies I DOWNS-RANDOLPH COMPANY 20 E. 7th TULSA, OKLAHOMA Commercial Printers Publications FICDRII PRIIITIIIG C0. We Appreciate Your Order No Maller How Small Phone 2-2184 8l2 S. Main Tulsa CHI OMEGA Chi O's are in their opinion pretty slick. Okay, girls if you are so red hot-how come you have not been able to capture some of those frat pins that are being given so freely by various raptured men. If they do get one it is for a week, or else you have to scrape rock bottom for any ol' kind - or could it be that they prefer those bars, wings, or anything in uniforms. You know why-cigarettes ETC. ! ! ! ! They don't mind 'cause as they put it You are just jealous. Yep, they are just trying to soothe their souls. Mary McKellar is the one who really seems to outdo herself. She wears those wings constantly and to prove she hasnit bought them she shows up with a Flight Officer, a Lt. and then a captain-all with the same pair of wings, Mary? But not to be out done is Cleo, who first sports a paratroopers pin, then wings, then airborne in- signia. Even Lysbeth Sweet wears that gold bar on a chain around her lily, white neck even though she is going steady with McFet. Then, too, Catie Blair is good buddies with all of them especially if they used to play football and even if they still do. The third times charm is for Betty Binford. After two strikes, the third was a home run that produced the charm-a bright and shining gold football. The Chi O's don't go in for bottles of cologne- just big bottles of silver polish! ! ! To clean those footballs and bars. For Sale!!! One Slightly used staircase Cheap- L. C. A. House Drilling, Producing, l Pipe Line, Refinery and i 5 p General Industrial Equipment and Supplies i 5 . i u p Q 1 Q LUCEY PRODUCTS CUIIPURIITIDII 'hlpullnlh' DIL LUELL SUPPLIES TULSA., oKr.AHonA PI KAPPA ALPHA The Pi Kappa Alpha's are the boys who are known as the prudent knights of alcohol. The brotherhood has developed into past masters of how to skid the rig and loves to demonstrate . . . for example Sam Grey and Ed Shedlosky. The boyx have varied interests-from Camp Wilson's and Felto Pruitt's beer and Douglas girls to Furnich's love of the theater and orchids. Then there is the gruesome threesome of Butt's, Ed and Ric-the damm yanks of the campus . . . who think their line of- Ilm from the east,-makes the little skirts swoon, and sure nuf -. It is customary to mention the Prexy of organizations, so we will-Charles Daugherty and J. Mac Donavan. In closing--a note. Red and Thornton quite trying to be big time operators- knives in the back operations still suits your personal- ity the best. Wanted! ! ! Slightly used canes for the Grand Old Men of Kappa Alpha. DELTA, DELTA, DELTA If little D. D. and D's just clonlt have what it takes to get men their own age-they follow and do as Margie McClellen does and takes them at 17. -But their rationalization of the man shortage is -we make excellent grades-so they get the scholarship cup, and keep the mud-balls flying. When not making Excellent Cshall we say gradesb they can always follow Billie Payne's lead and end up with no rnan. But what is a man? Ex-prexy Betty Lou found her solution in Fred, and Evelen is keeping the homefires for the army . . . But it was up to Harmon to bring home the bacon Cunrationedb for this group in being elected Community Council President. LAMBA CHI ALPHA Nuf sed- Wanted! ! ! A pin for more than a week- -Mary Helen Hoover exif wa ea l 0lfl'l, .1411 agnaleloenclenf Company . 4 4 5 5 Iii' r QF itff UE V .gs r s Q - 1 ' 1 ri' H' IH rigs' u QIIEEEU f ral HHH! Il! T The welcome at this bank is never scaled to the size of one's account. Every service is given with an understanding that comes from many years' experi- ence in meeting individual and business requirements. ATIONAL ANK OF ULSA M BER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CO O ON Congratulations! CLASS 1945 IOHN L. STANLEY ELECTRONIC DEVICES COMPLIMENTS OF - I E1 Q .2 5 Wx!! X ve-. Y W v - . as EEE' D I T 'J' EKWYE TEES KAPPA ALPHA Campus cuties can always tell a Southern Gentle- man by his bright gold TH shirt . . . They wear them everywhere--parades, basketball games, etc. When do they ever get washed? These boys are the one woman type for prac- tically all go steady-however girls, Joe Lalande's faithful Helen Highwater is a thing of the past . . . How come these boys are so serious? The major problem of the fraternity . . . When is Fred Sawyer going to get pinned? PHI MU The Phi Mu's have what it takes or else-they give it away! No one can explain why or what Bollman does in various cars in the Union Parking lot. Let's ask Creekmore or Crankshaw. And speaking of Crank- Shaw we naturally think of Gib Watson and when we think of Watson we thing of Mary Bauldridge- well. that's all! One thing to say for Mary is that she finally succeeded in getting a car with a nice, big, mfr, back seat. The Phi Mu's always seem to get the sweet and shall we say innocent, types for prexies. just look at Perkins and Gaddis. PARRISH 8 CLARK PARTS WHOLESALER FOR CHRYSLER MOTORS PARTS CORP. One of the Largest Stocks in the Southwest DODGE PLYMOUTH Dodge Job Rated Trucks Sales and Service 10th fr Boston TULSA Phone 3-5181 BUILDING MATERIALS ff'-f ..y,. ,Mg ., ,- LUMBER AND S ,. I -if flf' S if PAINTS . ., ROOFING 1 1 Z vARNlsHEs MATERIALS HARDWARE Carpenter for any Size lob HOPE LUMBER 8: SUPPLY CO. 6-2107 2802 E. 11th If No Answer Call 6-2693 Tulsa, Okla. Your DMU Newspaper Costs Only a Few Pennies People pay to get their newspapers, not only because they want the news, but because they don't want to miss the newspaper ads. A single paper costs only a few pennies . . . but when you add it all together the people of the United States and Canada spend 31,716,000 every week-day, plus 53,160,000 every Sunday for their newspapers . . . more than they spend for all magazines, books, and everything else they read combined. Another reason why in war or peace, the newspaper is indispensable. i 0 'Yvxsnt wow. 1 5 we v ?'.. 553225 ,,, Sail'-fig, 2 - - 1. ... ' 1 im 'GNP-X'2s'a.'s3SvKWoN1-'exif 12 X , 5 --. , . 332225:-.i -'E riizzz-.11 .4 12:11-3:2 5 ii - -- r. -:. 9 Qgizhi.-:ti 3 1:12152 5 3. 12114.74 -.:1 1 EEEEEET-12 Ei E EE E ff ' O 'Z C p 'f l N p p KAPPA DELTA First came the Delta solution to the man shortage and now the K. D. --join the Waves-Yet the one who strayed into the Air Corps seems to win the HUVAIRD The shining star of K. D. Pat Hass, by hook or crook, finally caught Kenny Butterworth. What was it Pat, hook or crook? Pat Skeehan excels in every sport except track. She is working hard on it however-the reason . . . to track down some . . . men. And finally there is wonder girl, Ruth Greene, FOR . . , A E who thinks, quote, Pikes come a dime a dozen . . . INSUR NC 4444-dfg What did you do Ruth run out of dimes? CALL alj AGENCY -lt- M. B. VAN Hoost, Engineer M60 Wanted!!! 405 Thompson Building We love 'em and leave 'em-minus-- PHONE 7273-7274 Well it could be signed Chi O but the Delt's are in the running too. l r n I . , X I 1 i i I u W i E' 'l'l0llC0 3 i l ,O Q I l l l 1 l K I 4 l l -1 TEl.EPHOHE 3-7121 CaNeAdJ1Qss...AEROEXCO ' ' 1 ily, , i , ig, 'l F lj' H M 1 l il 'l l i i I 1 1 , l l I i ' Q ulivi li ls ,i '. wily xl .qi ,ii ' ' ilyll l lil Nl im PIIOTUGIII .SURVEYS 1 V LYN DA WI LLI AMS There is a young gal named Willigiixus, Wlio thinks all boys are chill-uns She has a fine line All dirt and grime And when she uses it,-it chills'um. S0 Cmzzfelzient. So I11cxj2e1zri1'e- Ye! So Vital That is your gas service. All you ever see is the friendly blue flame. lt's so easy to use and costs so little that one is apt to overlook the miracles it performs every day. It assures an instant supply of hot water-it cooks and preserves your food-warms your entire home in the winter and keeps it delightfully cool in the summer. Yes . . . the Magic Flame Of Gas brings comfort and health to you and your family. OHLQHOITIQ HQTURQL Gegmffmff Illi - FISHER Automatic Controllers NATIONAL Pipe and Steel Tubes TUBE-TURN S Tees, Reducers, Flanges and Welding Caps ti CHASE Antimonial Admiralty DALLAS . . ODESSA Condenser Tubes Standard Brass Products Service that COVERS the Mid-Continent SKELLY CIL COMPANY I Extends sincere greetings to University of Tulsa and the graduating class ot 1944-'45 JEANNE AND JEANETTE HARRY Wanted!!! There were those twins named Harry, More candy in the Phi Mu meetings-how come those bo 's don't tive us their ins? Who were, oh, so very-very, Y 5 P They chucked their books - Worked real hard on their looks ATO-Better and Better dances-even if they And now as Waves they're making merry. must be at McDrool's. N FORD DEALER SALES-SERVICE 1201 South Boston Phone 3-4161 OkIahoma's Most Powerful Radio Station Congratulates the University ot Tulsa on Its 50th Anniversary And Wishes This Great Institution Increasing Success Through the Years 1,!'ll'lf0'Ul'El' lgllfffllllllg, Tufsfz 3, Oklfzhoffzfz ECDSWELIQS O,b!6lfl077Z6l7.S' Leazdzhg fewclers and SI'!7JL'7'5l7ZZ.lLfl5 IN OUR 57TI-I YEAR o I9 EAST STH AVENUE INSUH!-KNEE BU D5 Hunter L. Martin G. B. Gilliland L. E. Olivier C. E. McFarland H. C. Stehr I. E. Marlow PEARCE. PORTER cmd MARTIN filstublished 19107 NAT'L BANK OF TULSA BLDG. 3-2lOl A. R. Morley Qhrz'stz'nc1's mowers Two Cofwefziwzt Localinm ITOZ S. BOSTON 2012 S. UTICA K' Now that you've had the misfortune to wade through all this barnyard tripe, the editor and her alleged staff hope you've enjoyed it. To the many little people who claimed she stacked the beauty con- test, and to the many more who accused her of having a grouch, the editor extends her wettest bird and wishes them all a lusty and exceedingly damp summer. PETRULEUITI CDRPORIITIDII I 11515 Natural Gasoline EM B L E M AT I C . i 0 P R 0 G R E 5 s The Fourth National Bank Cofzgnzzaffzfci' The UNIVERSITY of TULSA in recognition ot its growth and develop- ment, and pledges kindred progressive banking service to the University and City of Tulsa. FLOWERLAND FORREST P. SI-IOEMAKER 21 East 4th Ph. 4-4355 AIR CONDITIONING COMPANY Tulsa, Oklahoma FAITI-I GARMENT CO., INC. D NE Y . T. I. BRICKNER FIEL STATIO R CO 612 So. Main DRS. I-I. S. CX C. I. HANNIS R. ELMO THOMPSON C O C l:S CW'LJU!!ULl llllL 91'I1Lf9J Q colffggice Ovzfzpamy gvrizzfers:lI1'Z!LogruglzeIrs:Cg1Lgruvens fjIaZiozLc1fy um! mee Cizpplies outhwestern Engraving Company, proud of its part in the publication of the KENDALLABRUM for 1945, offers its sincere congratulations to the staff whose unusual efforts have produced this record of the University of Tulsa in a war-time year. Always a task for labors out of the line of duty, the publication of a superior yearbook in times when crises are ever-present requires unfailing cooperation and meticulous attention to detail. For this publication, which upholds a tradition of distinctive T. U. annuals, the KENDALLABRUM staff merits extraordinary commendation. f 1 ff ac 2 1 if 211 if For SXVECO, wo, this KENDALLABRUM is a milestone in a tradition of distinctive yearbooks. For more than a quarter-century outstanding annuals throughout the nation have been designed and engraved by South- western . . . Offices and plant located on the fifth floor of the World'Building, Tulsa, Oklahoma. m -u.,, A.. 4 2 Q, E.. A J ., 1 -K., e. 13. .M H v - 'Ei ,,, . . 1 f,:.. fr:,14 . , 'nz . 5, . P ' ' A -2 . Zhi-fr. Ji 41.844 , Q.. .4,,4v,w-'H 'V ' -Ex ,. an .-T' Q ' -,?'f' fi-C. ,K : .. ,I Lg- 13,5 3: .1 .Q , 3 ,x,f.,y,, K --fa, . gs. A wil: wdv 7-5 ' :ak M J. ' 'Pr W ff E 'im , L, 5f'::?2'3 L gm. x .42 . .. 5 Si Q Q f , ,wr .. . 'Hi ' X, K D ff xlygjwe gl ,ik iiI f1 ' 4. sn, ,T 'e f' , Q 3 T-1, If v , Jf , wsu, 4, He., ' ...J W, , M. . f -xg . ,f .L wp, . Q., gi . ,ML W' mf- Q --ff, '5'f' ,4-Q 'H ' ' ,iiii--. - 1 ' .f . 4, .Kg , - , ,-:sg- ,, .f 4. . 4- W W m:.f3'f'fi' -v-ailnivffxafw ' ' Q -111 . Q:i53iQ5fifYb'13f ' +42 ag' ' '2-3,3-UZ 5' f3?T3f'A2fifz?.- '-F . A . .- .sew f 'pu-wr-. 1 I ' .f Rv ' H 5 -3 1112 . .fm f J . fi . vgiflil in if V? . . H . N, .3,:- W illy. 495' Q5z ffT5?52 i . -.g1'x:f'1,. . 1, J h y: Lbi'-21' 3' . 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Suggestions in the University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) collection:

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

University of Tulsa - Kendallabrum (Tulsa, OK) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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