Wayne State University - Griffin Yearbook (Detroit, MI)
- Class of 1934
Page 1 of 210
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 210 of the 1934 volume:
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Ex Libris CAQOLYN Mama Sway Copyright 1934 by George F. Brennan THE 1934 GRIFFIN mw- -1 , E, 1 m -w ,, -J, mn lvnlllmlelelmlea to Qty! Q QDQJ XV ffffwl '?a55:i'L The 1934 Griffin is more than a mere chronicle of the events and the people of our campus during the col- lege year . . it is the first chapter of a much greater record. the history of Wayne University. Our efforts will have been justified if, for the present and years to come, we have set forth . . at least in spirit . . the story of the first year of Wayne Univer- sity . . a University in which greater achievement has but kindled greater progress. 'Part One Part Two Part Three Part Four Part Five Administration . Activities . . Classes Orqanizations . . Features To Frank Cody. the iirst president of Wayne Univer- sity, we dedicate this book . . . He is sympathetic. understanding, and young in spirit. and it is inevit- able that the University will prosper under his regime. for in him are united the qualities that make for sane. careful. but progressive leadership. D. D. SPELLMAN LIBRARY my L,,..,, ' as G- - , IPI:-1:-T n 1 .:.,, W , Wa. '- :ww L-u, -ww 'vw A ,Am A L... ALA ggfha-.w 12. 1.-L 'gk' V 'fr cfhii-. .wx-ff pf git 1 H. fu'-ff'i5r?zfemznew -.., .,,k,.-,-yemv'.'.. 3 z-A uf. PROMENADE AND ENTRANCE PATTERNS ON THE ROOF , ., . 4. .,,,, .... ,,..,,, .U ,..,,, H THE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION 'A ' ' 5 Gigi-4,, . . - V h N yv,-.j'l' Lis? '.',5-13',lLI' I1-: 5P5' '. - ,', .gl 5f'??'fE f3'-'5' 5' , . ' ag . Q: i3 i- 'TJ '.j-ffl? .' '-7 '15 2' M1 251 '5 'Wi' ' -1-4'59i.,f'15'A' ' -A I 5-3 7'-4, 5-H ,... - V. - ' ' 2 H r- .. .... ,,. .. I k .' -.. fm- '-A, 'Z ma, g --I-M -' V 5 -4 V ...... ' ' ' P - 1'-fn .'l1v2-f : '2a.' ff -v-FS-'M'- 4- . f-f-- .Lf . 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' 1, 1 1 ?Q1111gf2 ' 1 ff. 1?-'11 ' 1 - .X 1 1 - - Y ',- if 1 A, 1 11 111 AR' 1111 1 1 1 1' 11M 11 1' 11':1'7' Y'-mf H11 - 11 211 25111 1 ' M 1 5115111 111111j51111f1f ,1rm111'11.'1Q1i1? 1 1111, '114egg1g1111111111'311111111 1 11 11,11 111111 171,1111111gg1QK kJ'11111111111m11,11-16,11 Ligglgxxaic j1gg91gg11gg1:I111l.11112?l1111111 'X 1' 1 1 '11 1111151 1 f5:1 11:'if5f?ki'if3z1i1g11mA. X1f.11.Pfz.,,- -- H L' , M 11-F3115 1ggfQV5m5sezPw1g2fZE251' ' 1 1111 173315 111 1-?'l f' f' Y11'1'esE'u 1fg'5 11gQ115fgMK'1g:11 11-W' 11 21:15Z1'1f1f2f- H j1i'C1,,,, 11f,m:- ,-6112111152555-11 '- 1 11111 1,1 1 ,111111 ,111 , - .' .Lff5wf35f1.W,.:f 1 1 1 1 .1.. , 'Q 35-E..l? ,17 1 11 THE 1934 GRIFFIN FRANK CODY President The First Year in Retrospect O ME has fallen the task of recording in this volume the significant happen- ings at Wayne University during the year now drawing to a close. Kaleidoscopic changes have come so rapidly that one is likely to lose his perspective if he at- tempts to appraise their significance at this time. Doubtless they will profoundly influence the future of education in De- troit. The initiation of any worth while pro- ject is always a stimulating adventure, and the transformation of the Colleges of the City of Detroit into Wayne University has been especially so, because the culmi- nation of this undertaking brought the realization of ideals long cherished and kept alive by those who have shaped the destinies of the several colleges. Mindful of the fact that the municipal colleges could not realize their greatest possibilities under the existing administra- tive relationship, the Board of Education in August, 1933, gave official sanction to a university o-rganization, the outstanding features of which may be briefly summar- ized: The colleges composing the university group include the College of Liberal Arts, formerly the Colleges of the City of De- troit, the College of Education, formerly the Detroit Teachers College, the College of Medicine, the College of Engineering, formerly a department of the College of the City of Detroit, the College of Pharmacy, and the Graduate School. The constitution adopted by the Board simpliiied administrative relationships by closely allocating authority and placing re- sponsibility. The inherent right of each Page Sixteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN Dr. Charles L. Spain Executive Vice-President college to legislate concerning matters that legitimately lie within its sphere is defi- nitely recognized, while the authority of the university organization over all mat- ters which concern the university as a whole is assured. By designating the Superintendent of Schools as President of the University, and the Deputy Superintendent of Schools as Executive Vice-President, the Board of Education brought the several units of the school system into closer harmony and gave to the University an opportunity for educational leadership which it had not had heretofore. The administrative authority of the Uni- versity is vested in a Council of Deans, in- cluding the deans of all of the colleges. Legislative power lies in the University Council consisting of the administrative oflicers of the colleges together with rep- resentatives chosen by the faculties. The control of the Graduate School is in the hands of a Graduate Council composed of the deans and elective representatives of the colleges offering graduate courses and conferring graduate degrees. The Dean of Students, Registrar, and Librarian become general University officers responsible to the executive of the University. The close of the year finds the University organization functioning smoothly and when all readjustments attendant upon the reorganization have been made it should provide an opportunity for individual col- leges and individual members of the fac- ulties to carry out their plans and solve their problems under favorable conditions. One of the most encouraging outcomes of the reorganization has been the enthu- siasm and energy displayed by faculty, students, and alumni in making necessary adjustments to meet the new conditions. One of the first policies agreed upon was a clear definition of the functions of the Liberal Arts College and the profes- Page Seventeen THE 1934 GRIFFIN Albertus Darnell Dean, College of Liberal Arts sional colleges. It was decided that all academic courses should be offered in the Liberal Arts College and that the profes- sional colleges confine their instruction to their several professional lields. Pursuant to this policy a number of instructors were transferred from the College of Education staff to the staff of the Liberal Arts Col- lege. The Department of Health Education and Athletics, because it performs several functions including teacher training, health education, and the direction of athletics was given early consideration by the Uni- versity organization. In view of the variety of its services and because it serves all ot the colleges, it was decided that the entire department should be placed under one head with authority over the several activi- ties allocated to separate directors. This arrangement follows approved University procedure. Incident to the reorganization it was ,E l Waldo E. Lessenger Dean, College of Education possible to make a readjustment in the Col- lege of Education which has been in mind for a long time. The members of the su- pervisory staff of the public schools now became part-time instructors in the College of Education. Through this arrangement it is possible to secure continuity in the training of students who after graduation teach in the public schools of Detroit. By this plan those who later supervise their instruction in the schools are permitted to give them instruction while they are still undergraduates. The advantage of this plan is obvious. The organization of the University under the name of Colleges of the City of De- troit brought with it agitation for a new and more suitable name. Students and faculty interested themselves in this pro- ject. It was generally agreed that the new name must include the word t'Univer- sityu. A long list of names was considered and debated, and finally with the approval Page Eighteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN 1 i ROLAND T. LAKEY Dean, College of Pharmacy of representatives of faculty, students, and alumni, the Board of Education adopted the name Wayne University. This proved to be a happy choice. It is euphonious and has not only a local significance, but a national one. So widely is Anthony Vlfayne known that the name has been fav- orably received in college circles through- out the country. It is a matter of prime importance for any university to establish its academic standing in the college world. The Liberal Arts College has been accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools for many years and the several professional colleges likewise have received the stamp of approval of their own accrediting agencies. It still remained for Wayne University to secure recogni- tion as a University. Formal application was made to the North Central Association and a representative was assigned to in- spect our institution. Upon the recom- ARTHUR R. CARR Dean, College of Engineering mendation of this inspector, Wayne Uni- versity was on April 20, 1934, officially accredited without any reservations what- ever. In his report the inspector stated that in his opinion the entrance require- ments of Wayne University were higher than the requirements demanded by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. The enthusiasm and initiative of the faculties has been equalled by that of the student body. They not only have taken an active interest' in the selection of a name but through cooperative action se- lected and determined the University col- ors-green and gold. At the opening of the fall term it was found possible through the Mackenzie En- dowment Fund augmented by additional funds provided by Mr. Charles Mackenzie and student activity fees to secure and equip a satisfactory building for men stu- dents-the Mackenzie Union. The men Page Nineteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN IOSEPH P. SELDEN Dean of Students of the University have eagerly taken ad- vantage of this opportunity for recreation and social contacts, and the Union is an unqualified success. Provision was also made for other quar- ters for the Association of Women Stu- dents. The experience of this year has shown the great desirability of such quar- ters and a more convenient and spacious building is being sought for the coming year. During the year, student leaders have labored actively to bring student organiza- tions and activities into line with the Uni- versity organization. A super-student council was agreed upon with representa- tives from all colleges. New rules govern- ing rushing were adopted by the fraterni- ties and a code and penalties approved by the Interfraternity Council. New rush- ing regulations were also set up by the Intersorority Council. An Inter-Alumni Council was organized during the year, IOHN W. BALDWIN Registrar enrolling alumni of all colleges of Wayne University. In May this organization in- augurated its activities with a banquet and ball held at Masonic Temple and attended by several hundred alumni and a large group of representative citizens and offi- cials. Student activities of all kinds have thrived. Forensics, dramatics, athletics, concerts, lectures have all played an impor- tant part. Two high spots were the de- bate between representatives of Wayne University and the University of Cam- bridge, England, and the achievement of Walter Probst in Winning the state forensic championship. Students seeking employment have been assisted by the establishment at the Uni- versity of a branch of the Placement Bu- reau of the Detroit Public Schools. About two hundred students have also received aid through funds provided by the The faculties and officers of the Uni- Page Twenty THE 1934 GRIFFIN VAUGHN S. BLANCHARD Director of Health and Physical Education versity have been active during the year in making and formulating plans looking toward progressive changes. At a meeting attended by representatives of lVayne University and all of the princi- pals of Detroit High Schools, a movement was inaugurated to bring the University and the high schools into closer relation. As a result each high school has arranged a Wayne University day and officials and students of Wayne have visited the schools for the purpose of meeting students of the higher grades and developing among pros- pective graduates an interest in Wayne University. Members of the faculties and officials of the University have joined with various persons prominent in public affairs in De- troit in organizing the Detroit Research MAU DE E. ALLEN Librarian Council. This organization seeks to make available to graduate students the oppor- tunities for research in sociology, econom- ics, and government which abound in this community. In a very inadequate way this outline indicates the progress made during our first year as a University. Much has been achieved, many projects are under way, and many problems remain to be solved. T he accomplishments of the year are due entirely to the loyalty, interest, enthusi- asm, and fine spirit of cooperation shown by both faculties and students. With such community of interest and unity of pur- pose nothing seems impossible of accom- plishment. CHARLES L. SPAIN Page Twenty-one as EEG'- gur '--.ver is .,:,.:x-...J ay., ,W ,. . N..- ,..'. -Q, . .-,.f 15-53122 van: 1, 1:5-.fffui igiib ,, ,. 1 ' ,I 4 -y,--.L:,..1'.:: .-.1 1 .v 1 A 15,1 1, ,' 1-'. ':vf.f.pr-L+, 4511- V - v: TT - .1 , g .F .N ---1 ,L 3 Q-4, - - bf -.nil Ia .-.. ,.-'.a:E.5:EJ'-' 1 Q-4 x4 'P-. Pi - ' ,ha ,. . 1 -, qyrzpg. -'B f rf.-.?+-frf V-ar :if 'xv ,. p91 ni I-new' ,, T .13 'iifE- .1 H6 - , I A 5 X :Q s 13555- aifc- If -A - 21 Q .. 'iiviiff fun: ,, yn Q .xr lie in . film! . . ' 5 . J hw -' 1 Q . V zg, W o .. ,.., ev- 1,-.Y NZ' 1 . WJ, 3 ,.,, 41,4 . , , '.-k 'jig IW J . if, f . H .lg L .rn .:.,I. - b j. Z il n g:'Q, V 3. w I 4-YS f qggyggg, uv um 1 B is mu Q 1 I U ,f.. x , Li: 1. ...J li Nl THE 1934 GRIFFIN .ww ' A Si Mackenzie Union BOARD OF TRUSTEES DEAN JOSEPH P. SELDEN PROFESSOR OLIN E. THOMAS FRANK ANNETTE LEONARD HARDING RUSSELL LIOHTBODY 1 N Hel GY! Page Twenty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Mackenzie Union Building HE fall of the 1933-34 school year saw the culmination of four years of striving. ln 1929 Charles Mackenzie announced a gift of property which was to be used for a union building to provide a common meeting place for the men of the Uni- versity. It was not until 1931 that conditions even warranted organization. At that time a board of directors was organized. When the change to a university set up was accomplished, definite plans for the union materialized quickly and when school opened in September the union opened its doors for the iirst time, with Harry Lange in charge of the house. The building had been leased and the furniture purchased from the funds of the union. During the year the managership of the house changed hands twice, Charl Hitchcock succeeding Lange and Gerald Fitzgerald succeeding Hitchcock. The government of the union has changed from the old Board of Direc- tors to a Board of Governors and a Board of Trustees. The union building provides a much needed meeting place for the University men where they can spend their time and become better acquainted. The union has played an important part in crystallizing school spirit, creating better fellowship and providing a centralizing force for University activities. MACKENZIE UNION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Malicke Liddel Lange Thomas Harding Selden Annette Angelo Goldman Fitzgerald Lighlbody Page Twenty fave THE 1934 GRIFFIN A Women's Building Board Chairman - - ETHEL W. B. CHASE Vice-Chai1'ma11 CATHERINE TREMPER Secretary - - DOLLY BIIETZ Treasurer - DEAN JOSEPH P. SELDEN DOROTHY ALLEN CARMEN DELANEY EFFIE M. DONVNER ELLEN FRANKILA SARA KERR MARGARET MARY LOVE FRANCES B. SANDERSON MRS. MILTON D. VOKES Page Twenty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Women's League HE opening of the Women's League in September, 1933, at 467 West Han- cock, marked the culmination of a long attempt by the Association of Women Students to get adequate quarters for their activities. That there was a need for such a. center of social activity was at once apparent from its immediate popularity and use. Nellie Bunting was appointed house mana- ger and the League has been the scene of many activities in the past year. Open house was held after several events at school and numerous organizations have made it their headquarters for meetings. The A. W. S. auxiliaries have found supper meetings and pot-luck affairs very popular. Wayne women have fond the League an excellent place to study and to make friends. It has coordinated the activities of all the Women's organizations and pro- vided headquarters for alumnae activity. Delaney Frankila Love Allen Bunting M etz Chase Selden Tre mper Downer Page Twenty-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN University Student Council Angelo Gleason Kline Brrrkey Love Bcrkaw Bixby Trcmper Maliclfc M acomber Hill Dorjzuh OFFICERS President - - - - - W ILLIAM MACOMBIQR Recording Secretary - CATHERINE TREMPER Corresponding Secretary - JOSEPH DORJATH Trezzsurer ------ LAWRENCE lX'IALICKIE REPRESENTATIVES FRANK ANGELO LEE HASTINGS LAWRENCE MAI.ICKE :XI-BERT BIXBY ELIZABIZTII HILL WALTER PROBST HELEN CIAGNE CIIARL HITCIJCOCIK MILTON ll.-XBINOXVITZ josepna DORJATII JACK KLINE JQIIN SNELI, ROSEANN GLISASON MARGARET MARY' Love CATIIERINE TREIJPER WII,I.IAM NIACOMBER HEN the municipal colleges were welded into one unit in the fall of 1933, it became apparent immediately that some governing body was necessary that would have jurisdiction over all the colleges. Representatives of the various college councils met together and the present University Student Council was organized. The number of representatives is based on the enrollment in each college but is subject to revision. At the present time the Liberal Arts college has tive rep- resentatives, Engineering and Education each three and Pharmacy two. The presi- dents of the Mackenzie Union and the A.W.S. are also automatically members of the council. The University Student Council President appoints the student members of the various student faculty committees. They also sponsor the matinee dances, and this year tried an innovation in the form of an afternoon dance at the Graystone which vas very successful. The council supervises all class elections, including the circula- tion of candidates' petitions. All posters in the halls must be approved by their committee. The Class Games are under their control as well as the official University news reel. Page Twenty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Board of Student Publications Hummen Scott ltlacomber Crandall' Piggins Certain Sargent Freeman Angelo Rarnsvy Selden Boughton Brennan Hitchcock FACULTY DE.4N JOSEPH P. SELDEN, Chairman PROFESSOR C. C. CERTAIN PROFESSOR ELOISE RAMSEY PROFESSOR E. R. CRANDALL , PROFESSOR WILLIAM A. SAROENT PROFESSOR GEORGE R. HUSBAND PROFESSOR PRESTON H. SCOTT STUDENTS AILEEN BOUGHTON THEODORE HAMIVIEN BEN FREEMAN MARGARET M.ARY LOVE FREn PIOGINS EX-OFFICIO FRANK ANc:El.O GEORGE BRENNAN CHART. Htrcucocx The Board of Student Publications is the final Source of authority in all matters concerning the publications. It is composed of faculty members appointed by the cleans and Student representatives of each college, appointed by the student council presidents. The editors of the major publications are ex-Ofticio members. The Board supervises all Student publications in regard to finances, editorial appointment, and policy. Page Twenty-nine ...a THE 1934 GRIFFIN Detroit Collegian The Detrork Collegian - ...I..,, .... .. ..... .A Y -AV., fglzflllllIx5lZlVli'l' WIVHPS 'l'AR'1'Aus, sn 'ro 12 :nS'll0l,'i1llsv.as'xE llEll:Xjl'IERS llIiA'I' IQ. or D. nmlwmm Ur:uinmOlW',nnr im! WW mg MQ Fa.-..la,L.:u..nv mv.. 'lmqmfghi Frank Angelo William Mouser EXECUTIVE BOARD Editor - FRANK ANGELO I . 4 f. V, SFir.vtSe111cstcr RICHARD FREDERICK Mlmagmg Edna' lSec0nd Semester STANLEY A. BURNS Sports Editor ----- GERALD FITZGERALD W om0n's Editor DORUTI'IY ZIUNGBAECKER Business Manager - WILLIAM S. RIOUSER Auditor - WALLACE BOHN Page Thiriy THE 1934 GRIFFIN Collegian Staff Copy Stall'-John Brinnin, Dolly Metz, Sheila Middler, Karl Shaltenbrand, jack Trebilcock. S ports Stoj-Margaret Benish, Wallace Bricker, Marion Sapala, Ernest Stefani, Heleng Till, john Woolfenden. ' Women's Stag-Helen Boata, Phyllis Bookmiller, Virginia Frost, Margaret MacLean,i Jeanette Weller. Senior Reporters-Virginia Broders, Stephen Dolewczynski, Astrid johannesen, john Mullen, Edward Siemienski, Alice Ronis, Anteo Tarini, Monica White, Charles- Yarbrough. Junior Reporters-Arlone Allen, Frank Applegate, James Boozer, joseph Brechnerj A Ethel Dante, Gertrude Hill, Martin Hoffer, Alfred Jefferson, Marguerite Jensen, Milton Lavine, Andrew Macso, Charles Michalski, Ralph Nelson, Pauline Schneirla, Roy Woodson. Advertising Staff-Edgar Proctor, Cameron Shafer. Circulation-Alfred L. Nelson, joseph R. Montante, Andrew Macso. Ojice Assistants-Marion Scott, Helen Winans. Ron is Sapala Ste fani Bricker ,Tohannesen Tarini Applegate Zink Allen MacLean White Till Boata Weller Bookmiller Winans ' Frost Fitzgerald M ullcn Metz Angelo Mouser Jungbaecker Freeman Broders Page Thirty-one TI-IE1934 GRIFFIN The Griffin George F. Brennan Editor-in-chief Business Manager Activities Editor Administration Editor Art Editor Class Editor Feature Editor Organizations Editor Sports Editors . Faculty Adviser . EXECUTIVE BOARD Page Thirty-'two Lee Hastings GEORGE F. BRENNAN LEE W. HASTINGS . DOROTHY IRWIN JOHN C. IVIULLEN NORMAN HENDERSON HELEN BOATA RUTH BRODER . DOROTHY TRYON GERALD FITZGERALD DOLLY IVIETZ PROF. C. C. CERTAIN THE 1934 GRIFFIN Griffin Staff Editorial Assistants JACK MILDNER, ANTEO J. TARINI, FRANK BIRDSALL, IMIURRAY DOUGLAS, NATHANIEL SHARE, LENORE FILTER, DOROTHY JUNGBAECKER, NIARGUERITE JEN- SEN, GEORGE SAYRE, ROGER WYILLIAMS, FRED POSS, Sales Managers . . JOSEPH R. MONTANTE, HELEN BOATA, BESSIE NICCRACKEN, EDGAR PROCTOR, ADELAIDE THAYER, BEN FREEMAN, CARLO TUZZOLINO, WALTER PROBST, BEN STANZYK, KENNETH BERKAW, HELEN CIAGNE, MARJORIE LYON, RAY COOPER. Bookkeeper LINWOOD S. CULLENS Typist.: MARY LOUISE SCHUCK, VIOLA JONES, MANUEL SIMON Broder Ju n gbaecker Freeman Sayre Mullen Boata Filer Winans Metz Tryon Henderson Brennan Probst Irwin Fitzgerald Page Thirty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN The D Book Editor and Business Manager - CHARL S. HITCHCOCK DAISY DONALD JACK TREBILCOCK NATHANIEL SHARE HELEN WINANS Associates ' GEORGE BRENNAN SHIELA MIDDLER DANIEL MILLER I DOLLY ME:rz Faculty A dvisers: PROFESSOR C. C. CERTAIN DEAN JOSEPH P. SELDEN HE DH Book is published each fall under the authorization of the Board of Student Publications. Its function is to inform the students of the UHIVBFSIIY procedure, regulations, activities, functions, and government. It contalns a complete directory, address space, and a diary. Trebilcock Brennan Share Donald Hitchcock Metz Page Thirty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Inter Class Debate ORE than 50 tyro debaters vied for the University inter-class debating championship this year. Two members of the senior class won the right to have their names inscribed on the trophy that is symbolic of the championship. The two victors were Henry Faigin and Paul Lovchuck. The seniors defeated the freshman combination of Justine Maseth and Robert Davisson in the final debate, which was held before a convocation audience. The upper- classmen defended the negative of the regular question, Resolved, that it is not a municipal function to provide a college education. Besides the large trophy given the University champions, smaller cups were also presented the winners of each class title. The sophomore winners were jack Baldwin and William Ohno. In the junior class Elaine Swanson and Nathaniel Share won the cup. The sophomores were eliminated by the freshmen, and the juniors by the seniors in the semi-finals. ' The tournament was conducted on the two-defeats-and-out basis. To give the debaters practice in case construction they were required to uphold different sides in their debates. Edgar Willis, varsity debater, was in charge of the tournament. His two assistants were Frances Holiday and Ruth Wylie. The debaters were judged and coached by members of both the ments and women's varsity squads. Ohno Baldwin Share Swanson Davisson Mast-tli Faigin Lovch uk Page Thirty fave THE 1934 GRIFFIN Women's Debate HE outstanding feature of the Women's winning debate season was their unsullied record in the oflicial competition of the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech League. The women won all of their four League debates, defeating Adrian, Kalamazoo, Michigan State College, and Western State Teachers College. Albion was the only other college able to boast of a similar record. They also participated in eight other supplementary debates during the tournament, which was held at Michigan State Normal College at Ypsilanti. The squad engaged in a total of 35 debates against 11 different colleges during the season. The only out-of-state trip was that made to Madison to take part in the national Delta Sigma Rho tournament there. The four women who made the trip were Dorothy Irwin, Mary Louise Schuck, Elaine Swanson, and Ruth Wylie. The women debaters were accorded the honor of participating in a demonstration debate with the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, held before the assembled high- school debate coaches of the state. Miss Irwin and Miss Schuck composed the Wayne team on this occasion. Besides those already mentioned Mrs. Elizabeth G. Youngjohn's proteges met the following colleges: Albion, Calvin, Hillsdale, Michigan State Normal, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin, and Wheaton. Mase-th Green Swanson Rembaum Partridge Wood Holiday Bryant Kling Cohen MacCracken Cross Irwin Youngjohn Schuck Woods Wylie Page Thirty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Men's Debate ACING a schedule that was expanded to include nation-wide opposition, Wayne's debaters emerged with a highly successful season, even bettering last year's record. The squad engaged in 25 intercollegiate debates, winning 18 of these. Twelve no- decision debates were also held. Invited for the first time to compete in the national Delta Sigma Rho tournament, held at the University of Wisconsin, Wayne finshed second to Southern California with a record of Five victories in six debates. Thirteen colleges were represented. In the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech League tournament, which took place here, Coach Rupert L. Cortrightis men were able to show a clean slate with eight victories in eight debates. The high spot of the season came in December when Cambridge University of England met a Wayne team composed of William Macomber and David Goldman in a no-decision debate held before a filled auditorium. Another unusual debate resulted when two women from the College of the Pacific surprisingly defeated a menls team here. Wayne met opponents from eight states during the season, and statistics show that the opposition traveled more than 7,000 miles to encounter the local teams. Included among the Z6 different colleges met were Michigan, Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Albion, Pennsylvania State, Carleton, Northwestern, Western Reserve, Wisconsin, Detroit, and Iowa State. Proctor Davis Gotltiin Miller Willis Probst Tarini Hastings Weiss Richter Kline Cortrighl Macomber Share Ianelli Page Thirty 'seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Orcttory Walter Frances David Probst Holiday Goldman FTER having been shorn of both its men's and women's oratory titles a year ago, Wayne regained the limelight in this field when Walter Probst, jr., won the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech League championship at Hillsdale. In the women's division Frances Holiday, a sophomore, was victorious in the Wayne University Contest. She defeated Dorothy Irwin and Mary Louise Schuck to win the 31550 iirst prize. After gaining second place in the divisional contest, Miss Holiday was unable to place in the state finals. Her oration was entitled 'tModern Pioneers. Mrs. Elizabeth G. Youngjohn is the women's oratory coach. After a series of eliminations the three men chosen to participate in the annual Davidow Oratorical Contest were Probst, Jacob Keidan, and jack Kline. Although Probst had been considered a dark horsef' he won first prize and continued his success by taking first place in both the divisional contest and the state finals. This latter victory enabled him to deliver his oration, Homeless America, in the national finals held at the University of Northwestern. David Goldman, former state champion, represented Wayne in the National Peace Oratorical Contest. Goldman placed first in the divisional contest but could garner only third place in the state finals with his oration, Why Is It? Both Probst and Goldman were coached by Rupert L. Cortright, speech instructor. Page Thirty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Extemporaneous Speaking Lee Dorothy Hastings Irwin HIS year marked the iirst time that Wayne University has entered representa- tives in the Extempore Speaking Division of the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech League. Despite their inexperience in this relatively new form of speech compe- tition, Wayne's two representatives, Dorothy Irwin and Lee Hastings, were able to capture second and third places, respectively. The contest took place at Michigan State College in Lansing. Since 15 colleges had entered representatives it was necessary to reduce the field to four iinalists in both the men's and won1en's divisions. Miss Irwin was awarded a silver medal for her second-place victory. In the extempore competition each contestant was given the choice of speaking on one of the two topics offered. In the wo1nen's division these were Education and Crimeg in the men's division, Hitlerism and the N.R.A. An hour before the time he was to speak, the contestant was given some specific phase of the topic he had selected. This was used as a basis for his speech, which was limited to eight minutes. The speaker was then given the intervening time to prepare his talk. Miss Irwin chose the topic of Education while Hastings selected the N.R.A. Mrs. Elizabeth G. Youngjohn and Rupert L. Cortright coached the speakers. Page Thirty nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN University Radio Hour Don D. Miller Director DIVERSIFIED array of topics was discussed over the Wayne University radio hour this year. Programs were presented every Sunday over station WMBC with the cooperation of the station management and under the student direc- tion of Don D. Miller. This year the time limit was expanded from fifteen minutes to half an hour. Four series of talks provided the main feature of the program. Various phases of engineering were discussed by members of the faculty of the College of Engineer- ing. Anther topic of current interest dealt with economies and President Franklin Roosevelt's so-called New Deal program. The critical condition of American education, as well as discussion of the world's political situation, was also brought before the radio public. Besides these topics the programs were completed with musical entertainment supplied by members of the student body. Students in the speech department pre- sented several debates, including both men's and women's teams. The orators and interpretive readers also were represented on the year's programs. To keep Detroit's citizens informed of the happenings of the municipal institu- tion, the programs included news iiashes taken from the pages of the Detroit Collegian. Edgar Willis read these items, while Miller was in charge of the general announcing. Page Forty THE 1934 GRIFFIN Freshmen Debate AYNE's debating activities were further extended this year with the organ- ization of a freshman debate squad. This is the first year in which freshmen have formed a squad of their own. In other years freshmen were eligible for the varsity squad but due to inexperience it was only in rare cases that they were able to participate in any appreciable number of intercollegiate debates. To remedy this situation, Dr. Preston H. Scott, head of the speech department, organized the freshman squad. It has accomplished the two-fold purpose of widening the scope of debating and training material for next year's varsity squad. The freshmen engaged in only three decision debates, and these were against varsity teams from Michigan colleges. This occurred in the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech League tournament which was held here. Showing that inexperience was not necessarily a handicap, Dr. Scott's proteges scored two victories over their older opponents. Besides the three decision debates the squad engaged in no-decision contests with teams from the junior colleges from Flint, Port Huron, Bay City, and Highland Park. They also served as Ushock troopsv for the varsity, taking part in numerous inter-squad practice debates. The freshmen used the same question as the varsity in all their debates, 'lRe- solved, that the powers of the president should be substantially increased as settled policy. Carson Menton Sherman Poelilman Owen Bradley Mackin Gold man Fitzpatrick Evashevski Page Forty one THE 1934 GRIFFIN Women's Glee Club President - Vice-President - S ecretary- Treasurer ADLER, GIZELLA BRODIER, RUTH BROWN, JULIE DIONCA, VIOLET DRAPER, IRENE ELKIND, RUTH FROST, VIRGINIA GUENTHER, OLIVE HOWARD, ELLEN JONES, VIOLA KARNATZ, LUELLA LAUGHTON, MARION MACCLURE, GRETA OFFICERS - DOROTHY SCHROEDER - ELLEN HOWARD LUCY SELDEN MAEZEWSKE, MILDRED MENTE, VIRGINIA MOON, BARBARA POPPEN, IRENE ROEHL, FRIEDA SCHROEDER, DOROTHY SEIBERT, ESTA SELDEN: LUCY STAVER, ELIZABETH TREMPER, CATHERINE VAIL, CATHERINE YAHNE, MARGARET Coles Selden Guenther Mente Jalme MacClure Popper: Broder Frost Howard Schroeder M oon Maczewski Page Forty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN Men's Glee Club President - Vice-President Secretary - Treasurer - Librarian - DAVID BLUMENFELD SPENCER BROWN Roy Coorc ALAN FLEMING RICHARD GIEDEL JOHN HARISOK OFFICERS DIRECTOR JAMES A. GIBB, A.M. MEMBERS BRUCE KNAPP JOSEPH LANGWIN MAURICE LAX ALGER LENZ RICHARD LEWIS ANGELO MICELI ARTHUR WILSON RUSSELL PIHURSKI DAVID BLUMENFELD RICHARD GIEBEL - Roy C0014 RUSSELL PIIIURSKI BENJAMIN POMERANTZ JAMES RICKARD OGDEN VENN ARTHUR WILSON OLIVER WILSON Hartsok Giebel Lenz Brown Pomerantz Cook Wilson Pihurski Page Forty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Crchestra Director JAMES A. GIBR First violin Second 'violin LOUIS STOLLER Cconccrt mastery LILLIAN COIIEN JULE BROWN EDGAR KNISIZL DOROTHY MCPIJAXIL LUCYLLE MEARKLE EVELYN GTTO LUCY SELDEN FRANCES WHITE SAM BARNETT SAMUEL EISENRERG SALIUEL ENUNIER ANNA RICIIMAN Viola Flute MAURICE LAX JAMES BAKER Cello Percussion CARL MOSS MARY ELLEN HOXV.ARD MARGARET ROSSELAND BAIRD JAY JASON TICKTON Bas.voo1z Trumpet EDWARD SCIIEVO JOHN RIEHM Bass ARTHUR WILSON RUTH BURNS LOU CERVENAK DELOS BOSSINGER GORDON BOHN JACK SWEET Clarinet NATHAN GITLIN JOSEPH BAKER ROBERT HIIFFLIAN EVA MAY MCIAFEE JOHN ROSE Tuba ARTHUR WILSON Trombone VICTOR PRATHER ALICE COLES HARRY Wr1TKINS Horn MILTON APTERAR MARTIN MONAGIIAN Page Forty-four THE1934 GRIFFIN Baritone NATIIAN MINKOEE WENDELL H. TAYLOR HARIQX' K. W:XTKINS Trombone CARL C. CIIALK JAMES R. COOPER DOROTHY JUNODAEIQKER RICIIARD LEXVIS ERROL PERRY Horn MARTIN O. MONAGHAN JAMES D. THOIKIPSON Band Director ROY D. MIL1.IiR Flute KENNETII JYOUNG Clarinet ARTHUR O. BAKER SAINT BARNETT LOUIS H. BURGIIARDT NATHAN GITLIN EVA MAY MCAEEE HAROLD L. MACLAUGIILIN JOIIN D, MURRAY ROY PERALTA Saxaplzone AARON ABROMOWICI-I MAURICE LAX ROBERT H. THOMPSON Percussion JAMES GORE MARX' ELLEN Hovx JOSEPH STANTON Tr-umpet GORDON P. BOIIN LOUIS CERVENAK SAMUEL EMMER ROBERTA GAvIN Tuba JOSEPH LANGWIN ARTHUR WILSON 'ARD Page Forty-five THE 1934 GRIFFIN The University Theatre ITH the presentation of A Drama Festival Week, May 7 to May 11, by the University Theatre, the dramatic activities of the year were brought to a unique climax. The attractions of both old and new were combined in the program. Three of Eugene O'Neill's one-act plays of the sea, Ile, Bound East for Cardijf, and Where the Cross is Mode, the morality play Everyman, and Shake- speare's Taming of the Shrew were re-presented with only a few changes in the casts. Wappin' Wharf, however, a f'Frightful Comedy of Piratesf, by Charles S. Brooks, was a novel presentation for the Festival on Thursday evening, May 10th. Glum folks with beards withdrew that evening for it took young hearts to catch the mean- ing and fun of the play. Carol Van Sickle and Henry Silver played the leads with the rest of the cast completed by Joseph Wetherby as the Captain, Esma Dalton as Darlin', Gordon Ewing as the Duke, William Lawrenz as Patcheye, Beth Winchell as Old Meg, and Jack Gore as the sailor captain. The Festival Week closed on Friday evening, May 11th, with Eugene O'Neill's The Emperor Jones. Brutus Jones, the Emperor, was enacted by Robert Hayden: Smithers, a Cockney trader was played by joseph Wetherby, Alfred Jefferson was Jeff g Alfred Stevenson was the Witch Doctor, Lottie Grant was an old native woman, and Leonard Leone was the auctioneer. Mr. Richard R. Dunham directed the presentation of all of the plays. The settings, also designed by the director, were executed by the stagecraft class under the supervision of Ben Samsky. Joseph Wetherby, Carol Van Sickle, Helen Ciagne and Ruth Tager aided as assistants in direction, and the intricate lighting effects were achieved by the stage manager, Mr. Wetherby. The activities of the year were auspiciously inaugurated with Henrik Ibsenls The Wild Duck on Thursday evening, November 16th in the University aditorium. This tragedy in five acts, which is one of the most famous and generously praised of Ibsen's plays, centers around the trials and hardships of a neurotic Norwegian family. Louis Sebille as Hialmar Ekdal, Beth Winchell as his wife, Gina, and Carol Van Sickle as the daughter Hedwig, made up this family. Old Ekdal, father of Hialmar, was played by George McKeough. Joseph Wetherby played Old Werle, and Gordon Ewing enacted the role of Gregers Werle. Others in the cast included Clarence Harrison, Doctor Rellingg Betty Gray, Mrs. Sorbyg and Edward Edstrom, Malvig. The Dover Road, an English comedy of the aristocracy, by A. A. Milne, was presented on February 23. An elaborate setting, with the staff of an English gentleman moving about in picturesque costume, lent a festive air to the very clever Milne dialogue. The fantastic adventure of an English lord and his runaway lady proved most entertaining. Latimer, the host, was played by Gordon Ewing: Leonard, Joseph Wetherby, Anne, Carol Van Sickle, Nicholas, Robert Danse, and Eustasia was played by Esma Dalton. Realism was the keynote of the three Eugene OiNeill one-act plays presented on Friday evening, March 23. The group was under student direction and included Ile, directed by Helen Ciagne, Bound East F or Cardiff, directed by joseph Wetherby, and Where the Cross is Made, coached by Ruth Tager. The casts for each play were as follows: Page Forty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Scenes from Taming of the Shrew and Everyman presented by the University Theater during A Dramatic Festival Page Forty-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN The University Theatre Ile: Captain Keeney, William Lawrenz, Mrs. Keeney, Eloise Hulbert, Mate, Richard McClurg, Steward, William Mouser, Ben, Robert Chapin, Harpooner, Stephen Dolewczynski. Bound East for Cardifz Driscoll, Joseph Wetherby, Yank, Lewis Riefstahl, Cocky, Frederick Shepherd, Davis, Gerald Walker, Scotty, Kenneth Dunn, Olsen, Edward Edstrom, Paul, William Richter, Smitty, Richard McClurg, Ivan, Harry Pechensky, Captain, Clarence Harrison, Mate, Leonard Leo-ne. Where the Cross Is Made:Nat Bartlett, jack Gore, Sue Bartlett, Emily Bigelow, Capt. Bartlett, William Murdy, the Doctor, Harry Goldstein, Silas Horne, Lewis Riefstahl, Cates, Kenneth Dunn, jimmy Kanaka, Gerald Walker. Along a different line and appealing to a different audience, was the morality play, Everyman. This was presented for the first time in the University on Sunday afternoon, April 15th and was arranged for the stage by Mr. Dunham. Carol Van Sickle was assistant director. The cast included: Everyman, Lewis Riefstahl, Voice of God, Gordon Ewing, Death, Jack Gore, Fellowship, Clarence Harrison, Kin- dred, Harry Goldstein, Cousin, Lilyan Tepsic, Goods, David Friedman, Good Deeds, Pauline Fried, Knowledge, Glenn Nesbit, Confession, William Lawrenz, Beauty, Helen Ciagne, Discretion, Ruth Tager, Strength, William Murdy, Five Wits, Robert Chapin. Following Everyman, the Theatre presented Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew with Gordon Ewing and Beth Winchell in the leading roles. This was given on Friday, April 20th. Joseph Wetherby played Lucentio, August Antilla played Tranio and Leonard Leone was Baptista. Bianca was played by Mary Jane Flan- agan, Gremio was played by Saul Schlesinger, Hortensio by Norman Henderson and the two clowns, Biondello and Grumio were played by William Mouser and Frederick Shepherd respectively. Others in the cast included Lucy Selden, Lewis Riefstahl, Stephen Dolewczynski, Frank Telford, Esma Dalton, Joan Barth, Marguerite Cross, Gerald Fitzgerald, William Murdy, and Russell King. Q , Scene from The Wild Duck Page Forty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Frosh Frolic October 27 NORTH GYM FLOYD SNYDER AND Hrs ORCHESTRA NIARGARET MARY LovE HARVEY BERKEY HOWARD Hlass GEORGE BRENNAN IRENE DUNCAN - ELIZABETH HILL gs JOE WETHERBY BETTY RUELE - ROBERT THOMPSDN - COMMITTEE Chairman Tickets Publicity Invitations Decaralions - Prizes Orchestra 1 Thompson Berkey Dorjath Brendan Duncan Love ill H Page Forty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Soph Prom November 29 HOTEL BOOK-CADILLAC-GRAN D BALLROOM RAY GORRELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE ROBERT EMERICK - - - - Chairman LEE HASTINGS - Ballroom JENNIE RACZYCKI Orchestra ADELAIDE THAYER Publicity MARTHA XVI-IITE - Invitations FRED VVOOLFRNDEN - Tickets Page F Ety THE1934 GRIFFIN Alumni Icrbberhop December 8 TULLER HOTEL RUSS ARMSTRONG AND HIS COLUMBIANS VICTOR SPATHELF ALICE GULLEN 2 COMMITTEE TVESLEY LINDOVV f ' RUTH DONALD - JAMES BUCKLEY - Amen BALDWIN - DAVE BEAUVAIS - - Chairman - Tickets Entertainment - Publicity - Guests - Floor Page Fifty-one THE 1934 GRIFFIN I -Hop February 16 GENERAL MOTORS BALLROOM JESSE HAWKINS AND HIS VIRGINIA'NS W ILBUR XVILKINSON CHARLES ARNOLD VIRGINIA BAKER - WILLIAM EIVIKE 2 RICHARD PAPELIAN 5 ROBERT JONES - ANNE MCKAY - KENNETH XVOODROW COMMITTEE Chairman Orchestra Favors Publicity Advertising Invitations Tickets Page Fifty-Two THE 1934 GRIFEIN F rosh Flurry April 20 GENERAL MOTORS BALLROOM BOBBIE W OODRUFF AND HIS ORCHESTRA JOHN MULLEN - PHYLLIS BOOKIVIILLER ERIC MORRIS RAY HAMMER - JAMES RICHARDSON ELAINE SLOMAN - LOUIS WVINTERHOFI' COMMITTEE Chairman Publicity Tickets Ballroom Invitations Orchestra Page Fifty-three THE1934 GRIFFIN A. W. S. Formal March 9 COLONY CLUB HANK FINNEY AND His ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE VALERIE PIERPONT - - JEAN DUNCAN - NONA NIATON - -. - - - BETTY POTTS - - Ballroom and I CATHERINE TREMPER ---- Chairman Publicity Tickets nvitations Orchestra Page Fifty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Engineers' Ball December 15 NORTH GYM SAMMY DIBERT AND His ORCHESTRA JOSEPH DORJATH - NIARY voN ROSEN GEORGE TIMMONS GLEN HOWELL - ELMO LIDDEL - COMMITTEE Chairman Invitations Decorations Publicity Orchestra Page Fifty-five THE 1934 GRIFFIN Phcrrmic Ball April 13 NORTH GYM BUDDY FIELDS AND Hrs ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE RICHARD PAPELIAN WANDA BONK JENNIE RACZYCKI ' BEN FREEMAN - LAWRENCE MAT.ICKE - WALTER SMALARZ Chairman Tickets Publicity Decorations Orchestra Smalarz Malicke Freeman Bonk Papelian Page Fifty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Pedagogues' Prom April 27 OAKLAND HILLS COUNTRY CLUB PAUL NEILSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE JANE ELIZABETH MORSE - - Chairman ELEANOR DEVLIN - - - - Orchestra IRENE DUNCAN - - Tickets and Programs ELIZABETH HILL - - - - - Publicity :NLARY MARGARET JOHNSON - Ballroom CONSTANCE MARCOTTE - - Invitations Devlin Hill Marcotte Johnson Morse Duncan Page Fifty-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Senior Ball May 18 GENERAL MOTORS BALLROOM GEORGE KING AND HIS ORCHESTRA KENNETH BERKAW GEORGE BELANOER IRENE FOSTER - ELMO LIDDEL LOUISE NOLAN - ROBERT THOMPSON COMMITTEE Chairman Tickets Programs Publicity Invitations Orchestra Berkaw Nolan Foster Thompson Eage Fifty-eight Liddel Belanger THE 1934 GRIFFIN Interfraiernity Ball ON Redman, and his nationally famous Orchestra, supplied the music and entertainment for the annual Interfraternity Ball held, this year, at the Gray- stone ballroom, On March 16. The beautiful setting, music, and large atten- dance made this one of the most successful dances of the season. A balcony, Over- looking the dance iloor, and divided into booths for the separate fraternities, was one of the attractive features. The high-spot of the evening came when the Interfraternity Scholarship Cup was awarded to Epsilon Sigma. George Brennan, President of the Interfraternity Council, which sponsored the dance, made the presentation to Joseph Dorjath, presi- dent of Epsilon Sigma. The committee in charge of the dance was: BURTON SMITH ------ - Chairman GEORGE BRENNAN - - Publicity JOSEPH DORJATH - - Ballroom ROBERT JONES - Tickets ROBERT THOMPSON - Orchestra Page Fifty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Swingout ROCEEDING in their traditional march in caps and gowns from the Public Library to the University Auditorium, over 900 seniors participated on May 17 in the first Swingout exercises since the institution was renamed Wayne University. The main speaker of the program was Prof. Alfred L. Nelson, head of the department of mathematics. Prof. Nelson's topic was '4The Meaning of a College Educationfl Dr. Frank Cody, president of the University, presided. Swingout'l was the title of the talk given by Ray Cooper, senior president of the College of Engineering. The presentation of the class memorial to the University was made by Herbert Spathelf, senior president of the College of Liberal Arts. The executive vice-presi- dent, Dr. Charles L. Spain, gave the acceptance speech. i Following the main address by Prof. Nelson, the announcement of various honors was made. The honor announcements are withheld until the annual Swing- out exercises. These were the elections to the MacKenzie Honor Society, the Scholar- ship Honor Society, the Karyatides, and the Alpha Theta Sigma Award. The University orchestra and the University chorus provided the musical inter- vals. The orchestra played Gounod's L'La Reine de Saba for the processional, and IvIendelssohn's Festival March for the recessional. Page Sixty Men's Athletics THE 1934 GRIFFIN Intramurals N order to provide the greatest amount of athletic participation for the greatest number of students, the Intramural Department this year launched the most comprehensive program yet attempted and one which has been met on all sides with enthusiastic comment and well wishes. With the organization of the University as a group of colleges, natural divisions heretofore lacking clarified the situation considerably and competition between these units was stressed in participation, player-interest, and administration. Intramural Director Newman Ertell secured a huge plaque to be designated as the All-Sports Efiiciency Trophy, a perpetual award symbol of supremacy over the entire field of athletics activity. All of the colleges of the University were represented in competition, with an arbitrary ruling providing for Business Administration majors competing as such, and for the iirst time in the history of the inctitution the College of Medicine and Surgery appeared on this campus in athletics. Approximately fourteen hundred students participated in some three hundred contests of the eight different sports, each man contributing in points to his respec- tive college for enrty as well as for ability-award, so that each college was thus represented in the final standings. Individual medal awards in the form of chain-fobs were presented to the winners of the various competitions, with team trophies going to the championship colleges for their exhibits while the All-Sports Trophy remains in the custody of the depart- ment as a central figure for Athletic Wall at the south gym. Activities '1 general were grouped in three classes of fall, winter and spring sports, the first and third being alike in comprising baseball, horseshoes, tennis, golf, and swimming, with track added to the spring program, while the winter calendar embraced basketball, boxing, wrestling, and volleyball. To expedite the handling of such a vast undertaking, experimentation finally resolved into a board of student managers supervising that sport in which they had the greatest possibilities under the supervision of a senior student manager directly responsible to Director Ertell. The highlight of the year was the college basketball tournament held every Friday night for sixteen weeks, interest in the later stages being responsible for con- siderable attendance at the games. Page Sixty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN Intramurals HE spring activities were marked by the addition to the program of teams representing the faculty, and a new and more spirited competition was in evi- dence for the balance of the year. While the entire program was hampered considerably by lack of facilities and equipment, enough headway was gained to make certain a continued interest for the new program now being formulated for the next school year. Basketball Volleyball Horseshoes Golf Tennis Ping Pong Doubles Hockey Playground Ball Swimming Golf Championships College: Law School Fraternity .' Open Arabs Closed Sphinx Club Gas House College: Liberal Arts Faculty Faculty: Dr. Phelps Student: Z. Zawadski lVIixed Doubles: Eileen Wood, Upper Class: D. Moss Freshman: G. Levy Student: M. Schriedel A. Landau Class: Junior Club: Gas House Gang College: Engineering College: Liberal Arts Frank Taugner Page Sixty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Boxing UFFERING from the common ailment of all sports, the lack of facilities, the boxing fraternity of the University this year made considerable progress: in the number o fentries, the reception accorded by spectators, both student and visitor, and particularly in the calibre of skill displayed. An open tournament found favorites of other years returning to the ring, while an entirely new venture, a novice tourney, brought forth a number of promising youngsters from the freshman gym classes to serve warning to the vets of stiffer com- petition in the future. The fact that four of the contestants were Golden-Glovers of other years, the highest type of amateur competition, augurs Well for the sport, especially in light of the defeats of two of the experts on the way to the the top. Added to this is the assurance of completion of adequate training quarters for next year. 'tCauliHower Rown believes itself justified in seeking intercollegiate ranking. THE CHAMPIONS Bantamweiglzt EDMUND WASKOWITZ Lightweight NATHANIEL LEACH Welterweight - ELMER COUSINEAU Middleweight THEODORE BROOKS Lightheavywcight - MERRILL ROTH Heavyweight NIARVIN SCHWARTZ Page Sixty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Wrestling LTHOUGH wrestling at the present time is strictly an intramural sport, it it gives great promise of becoming one of the outstanding sports at Wayne University. Under the leadership of Coach Edwin Red'l Elliot, a former National Intercollegiate champion while at the University of Michigan, the team has already, in its few years of existence, developed several individual stars. During the last season, the team had only three meets, two with Cranbrook and one with a U. of M. team. These matches were not very fruitful, the Tartars winning only one contest, but later in the season, they came to their peak in the Detroit A. A. U. meet. In the Detroit A. A. U. tournament, two championships and two runner up's were garnered. Edward Marcus, captain of the team, showed the way by winning the 135-lb. division title. Soon after this triumph, Steve Megregian, former State high school champion carried away the 155-lb. title. The two unsuccessful finalists were Bill Teichman, 125 lbs and Nate Levitt, heavyweight. In addition to these the team consists of Henry Spitzer, Edward Stocker, William Longeway, and Adam Widlak. Teich man Megregian Chalk Ostergren Waldhorn Longeway Marcus Elliot Hart Page Sixty five THE 1934 GRIFFIN Swimming ULMINATING the efforts of three years by those students particularly interested in the sport, an informal swimming team was organized this spring that afforded great promise in the one meet it was possible to schedule. Working without coach, manager, or adequate facilities, but assisting one another to the best of their respective abilities, the men Ubackwashedn Detroit Tech with a tankful of firsts to win 40-17. Not exceptional times in any sense, individual members nevertheless turned in performances that compared favorably with the National Collegiate marks set a few weeks later at Ohio State U. Indications point to a considerable increase in interest for the new year, and the splashers are now hopeful of major-sport recognition to lift them from Intra- mural activity where they clearly demonstrated their superiority this year. Woulfenden Peirce Molianpt Emke Hubbard Kelm Leonard McClurg Page Sixty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Hockey I-IE tirst fruits of the Intramural program in the interests of Varsity athletics is the proposal to branch out into Intercollegiate hockey competition. Origi- nally a modest venture sponsored on the petition of a few individuals of the student body, the sport gathered considerable momentum, and with a limited appro- priation from the Intramural budget a rink was constructed and flooded and a minimum of equipment prchased. Under the direction of Theodore Pratt, special instructor in the College of Engineering, and former University of Michigan defense star, the un-uniformed sextet performed very creditably in a four-game schedule, dropping tow tilts to Cranbrook Academy and winning two from Detroit Tech. ' Next year Coach Pratt will have as the nucleus for his club Alex Yankowsky and John Bashur at center-ice, Harry Seigel and Whitney Spellman at left wing, George Barrie and Wallace Bricker at right, Marvin Schwartz and Charles Kuhn at defense, and Ralph Spellman and John Kuhn in the nets. Barrei Yankowsky Siegel Morton Bashur Spellman Pratt Kuhn Page Sixty-seven THE1934 GRIFFIN Athletic Board in Control FACULTY PROFESSOR EVERETT R. PHELPS, Chairman PROFESSOR W. FREDERICK GERHARDT DR. YVILLIAM V. SESSIONS MR. RALPH J. MILL PROFESSOR E. W. BICFARLAND MR. GEORGE BIEADE PROFESSOR DAVID L. HOLMES MR. VAUOIIN S. BLANCHARD EX OFFICIO DR. CHARLES L. SPAIN DEAN JOSEPH P. SELDEN STUDENTS MARION SAPALA :LWERLE SULLIVAN HERBERT SPATHELE GERALD FITZGERALD CARLO TUZZOLINO RICHARD PAPELIAN Page Sixty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Athletic Board in Control ITH the general reorganization of the University, the Athletic Board in Control was likewise revamped and a general overhauling begun of all matters pertaining to athletic policy, as set forth in the preamble to the constitution. Specifically, such matters are in the nature of schedule-making, bud- get-determination, eligibility, awards, and kindred affairs. Representation of the various colleges is afforded faculty and student body alike as is the case of other governing bodies of the University, with the addition to full membership of Mr. Vaughn S. Blanchard, as head of the Department of Health Education, and Athletic Director David L. Holmes. In addition, Dr. Spain and Dean Selden are members ex oflicio. A decided division is materializing between Intramural and Intercollegiate activities, both in concept and purpose. It is only through the Athletic Board in Control, as related previously, that various Intramural activities may pass into the realm of Intercollegiate sports. Appreciating the growth the University is bound to achieve, a desire to keep pace athletically has led the expression by the Board for higher calibre competition and consummation, if at all possible, of Athletic Director Holmes' long-cherished plan for a conference of Municipal Universities. Holmes Blanchard Sullivan Sessions Papelian Tuzzolino Phelps Mill Fitzgerald Page Sixty mme THE 1934 GRIFFIN Cross Country NDOUBTEDLY, the most successful sport aggregation at Wayne Univer- sity is the varsity cross country team. During the last two years the team has established the enviable record of having suffered no defeats. The pros- pects of the team at the beginning of the fall campaign were jolted considerably when it was learned that the crack Wayne combination of co-captains, Ray T rainor and Ted Brooks, was to be broken up by the inability of Trainor to practice and compete regularly, thus ending their traditional dual finish of breaking the tape hand in hand. . On the team's opening encounter with Adrian and Detroit Tech at the River Rouge course, the Tartars piled up a perfect score of 15 points against S3 points for Detroit Tech and 65 for Adrian. The next meet was a return engagement with Detroit Tech, when, using only reserves, the Wayne team won 16 to 39. Here Collis Cantine and Robert Stern starred. The highlight of the schedule was Wayne University versus Oberlin University. Here, the stellar performer was Ted Brooks. This, combined with the last minute spurt of Sockley Kaminski to capture fourth place by one foot sufticed to bring victory to the Tartars 24 to 33. The next opponent was Loyola of Chicago at Chicago, where Brooks and Kaminski again starred, bringing victory 18 to 39. Ray Trainor returned to run against the University of Chicago, the first Big Ten opponent, and a.gain he and Brooks locked arms at the finish and shared first place to lead the team to victory by a 16 to 43 score. At the annual dinner given in honor of the team by Coach Holmes, eight gold shoes were given to the members of the team, including' joseph Montante, the man- ager of the team, whose private boast is that he has never managed a losing team. Charles Rabinowitz has been chosen captain of next year's team. Page Seventy THE 1934 GRIFFIN Football ETENTION of Coach Joe Gembis and fervent interest on the part of the student body and players alike gave strong pre-season evidence that long- awaited success on the gridiron was soon to be realized. That it was not entirely so was due in great part to a too-pretentious schedule which included two teams of far greater caliber than reputation. Nevertheless, the home schedule was a complete suc- cess, for in winning two home games the first victories in the history of Kelsey Field were recorded. Indeed the home stand was devoid of defeats, a third game resulting in a tie. On foreign fields however, a. different story resulted. Five defeats were suffered, but to the everlasting credit of the team, fighting spirit increased as the margins of defeat widened and coaches Gembis and Flora expressed themselves as being highly gratified by the work of their charges. The opening game, a night affair, and the first of the kind for the majority of the men, was lost to Wittenberg by a decisive 33-0 score and all but crushed the morale of the squad. But a scoreless tie with Toledo U. served to steady the club, yet not enough to withstand the onslaughts of Defiance, Kalamazoo, and Central State Teachers, all of whom were treated to exciting moments while winning. Hope College, victor in a one-sided affair after the previous meeting, visited Kelsey Field .anticipating an easy victory but was rewarded with a 3-O setback before an appreciative audience. This tilt marked the first home victory in five years and was the cause for considerable jubiliation among the players and their loyal followers. The following game with the too-powerful Valparaiso eleven proved beyond a doubt the mettle of the Varsity as they struggled against heavy odds and earned the plaudits of their opponents while undergoing a 33-O setback. A week's rest for the final game at home was the sole tonic needed by the men of Gembis as they determined to wind up the season with a long-sought victory, and the Black and Gold of Defiance College served the purpose to the team's taste. Revolting against the fate that decreed defeat, the Green and Gold came through with a smashing Z3-6 win and more than justified the faith the coaches had often expressed. In the melee of victories and defeats, the play of five seniors stood out consistently in all departments of play. George Malesky, center, Sy Berent, tackle, Burton Smith, guard, Boyd Stockmeyer, end, and Carlo Tuzzolino, quarterback, all shared in the limelight that accrues from outstanding performances. However their seniority gave them no monopoly on the laurels, for they were forced to share with Fred Bens at end, Carleton Phillips at guard, James Demarree, quarterback, and some sixteen others who helped to make up one of the most interest- ing football squads of recent years. Page Seventy one THE 1934 GRIFFIN Football As an added feature of the program for rejuvenation of football at Wayne Uni versity, spring practice was resumed after a discontinuance of five years The first call issued by Coach Gembis was answered by thirty-two men, the malority of whom were new men. As a finale to this spring session, a regulation football game was played between Gold and Green teams picked by the coaching staff Wittenberg . Toledo .... Defiance . . . Kalamazoo . Central State Hope ..... Valparaiso . Defiance . . . 1933 Results 33 Wayne . . O Wayne .. 13 Wayne 26 Wayne 26 Wayne O Wayne 33 Wayne . . 6 Wayne Flora Dobbins Gold Malesky Batson Zegolis Vrbanich Gaca Beeman Braxerman Fitzgerald Phillips Page Seventy-two McDonnell Patterson Mutter Gembis Bruno Seip Schwartz Smith Bercrt Bens Jodway Kulka Sauer Yankowsky Demarree Stockmeyer Tuizolmo THE 1934 GRIFFIN Freshman Football THREE-GAME schedule for the Freshman football team found improve- ment in every department of play as the season progressed, but not quite enough to score anything but a moral victory. Swamped by Port Huron I. C. 38-0 in the opening game which saw six frosh playing their first game of foot- ball, the team responded in fine style for the annual Cranbrook tilt, and a spirited battle by Coach Ertell's charges had the preppers on the short end of 2-O for a good part of the game. A collapse on defense, however, let two touchdowns slip over in rapid succession for a 14-2 victory for the suburbanites. The climax of the campaign came in the Assumption contest, where both teams, in their efforts to wind up the season with a win, battled all over the gridiron to finish in a scoreless deadlock. It was in this contest that both Coach Ertell and Varsity Coach Gembis were justiiied in their beliefs that a number of very promising candidates were available for next year's intercollegiate schedule, indications are that the entire squad will report in the fall. Young jaros Olafson Rabinowilz Ostergren Taylor Turner Dandell Konety Hammer Ertell Widlak Rcdinger Powers Traynor Steinberg Jacobson R. Perkins Keywell Aaronson W. Perkins Evans Walters Tomaiu Hamel Lindenbaum Page Seventy-three TI-II-11934 GRIFFIN Basketball OT a particularly impressive record in itself, the 1934 books show a bit of improvement over the campaign of the previous season with a final summary of nine victories and defeats eight, as compared to seven and ten of '33. Faced with a 17-game schedule, Coach Newman Ertell had seven veterans re- turn to this year's squad together with a few promising newcomers, and prospects were bright for a highly successful season. The team started off with a rush, defeating a strong Alumni team in the ninth annual season opener, and a few nights later swamping Kalamazoo College under a Z0 point margin. This was followed in turn by a six-point victory over a strong Hillsdale College quintette, and the outlook for the remainder of the year looked very good indeed. But Earlham College changed the complexion of things considerably. Admittedly the strongest opponent to be faced when the schedule was compiled, they proved to be even more so on the floor, and a general demoralization of the club was very much in evidence from that point on. The Hoosiers displayed a high class of ball and had no difficulty at all in winning by a double score. This loss was followed by. the greatest debacle of many seasonis when the Var- sity Went down to a 1-point defeat at the hands of Assumption College after holding a 7-point lead with less than 10 minutes to play. From that game on to the end of the campaign Coach Ertell juggled his squad Ertell Fitzgerald Belanxzer McKnight Munson Sapala Stephani Spathelf Stockmeyer Ditkoff Pavsner Page Seventy-four r THE 1934 GRIFFIN Basketball time and again in an effort to get back into winning form but at no time was a definite first team in evidence. Throughout the season the work of a few men stood out at various times, but oddly enough the good games of all were seldom simultaneous. The loss of Co-Captain Cy Berent and Walter Seiferlein at the close of the first semester proved a severe blow to the club and injuries to others at inopportune times added to the disappointments. Three other men finished their collegiate careers with the final game at Olivet, Co-Captain Boyd Stockmeyer, Herbert Spathelf, and Carl Maier, rounding out three years of Varsity competition and leaving a decidedly gloomy outlook for next year. Bud Belanger will also be among the missing when Ertell calls out the candidates, having completed his pre-medical study here. Only one regular is available next year, Captain Elect Charles Ditkoff, and around him as a nucleus must an entirely new outfit be groomed from the reminder of the squad, all of whom gave promise in the short time they performed. Marion Sapala, Bill McKnight, Tom Munson, Hyman Pavsner, jay Whiteley, and Edward Barth, will have an opportunity to break into competition, together with a number of freshmen of promise. The Season's Record Wayne... ...Z8 Alumni ...23 Wayne .. ... 37 Kalamazoo .. ... 17 Wayne . . . 25 Hillsdale . . Wayne . . . 17 Earlham . . . Wayne . . . ZO Assumption . . Wayne .. . 24 Central State . . Wayne . . . 24 St. Mary's . . . . Wayne . . . 33 Armour Tech . . . . . . Wayne . . . 26 Assumption . . . Wayne . . . 16 Kalamazoo . . . . Wayne . . . 15 Armour Tech . . . . . . Wayne .. . 28 George Williams Wayne . . . 22 St. Mary's ...... . . . Wayne .. . 24 George Williams Wayne 29 Bowling Green Wayne . . . 38 Central State .... . . . Wayne . . . 22 Olivet .... . . . Page Seventy-five THE1934 GRIFFIN Freshman Basketball HUNTED from pillar to post, or from gym to gym at least, and hampered con- siderably thereby for lack of adequate practice facilities, Coach Norman G. Wann nevertheless piloted his frosh charges to the most amazing record yet hung up in first-year basketball annals. At one stretch Winning nine games in a row, the yearlings finished the season with 24 wins and 5 losses, one of the latter un- fortunately being the finale of the campaign. Carrying at times 12 to 18 men on the squad, Coach Wann's greatest concern was to properly group his players, and because of their almost equal abilities, and the fact 15 were awarded numerals, any attempt to classify those outstanding would be almost foolhardy. Wann believes the members of the squad to be all of potential Varsity caliber. Wann Cllicorell Rosenthal Schmitt Steinbcrger Cornell Kazenko Dwyer Zeigler lVarren Broshay Boxin Berris Tigay Scllenck Page Seventy-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Track HE most disheartening response recorded in recent years greeted the track call issued late in January by Coach David L. Holmes to start his sixteenth season here. With only Leroy Dues, '33 captain, definitely missing, by graduation, Holmes early had visions of a bumper year in view of the comparatively light schedule. But outside activities, employment, transfers, and the like so depleted the ranks only a handful of athletes were on hand for preliminary work-outs and the first indoor meet. However, running in the Hillsdale Field House, the Green-and-Gold thinclads crashed through to a surprising 78-25 victory, and the gloom around the South Wall was dispelled considerably. Slams in three events, the quarter, half, and 2-mile, were only a part of the clean sweep of the running events. Two field house records were hung up by Wayne, Ted Brooks showing his heels in the half and the relay team of Schelter, Beck, jackel and Hughes doing likewise. Four days later Bowling Green State College visited the campus to suffer a dis- astrous setback. The Bee-Gees were able to garner only one first and two seconds to finish on the short end of 87 to 17. Only a three-way tie in the high jump botched a clean sweep for Wayne. The first outdoor meet was also the first defeat as the University of Toledo cap- tured the long triangular tilt of the campaign with 76 points to 742 for Wayne and IZM for Adrian College in a nip and tuck affair that was not decided until the last jump of the last man in the last event of the day. Ted Brooks continued his winning ways, 'tlron Manlingw for first in the three tough races, the half, mile, and two-mile runs. But Ernie Grimm, Holmes' protege for decathlon honors, decided on a bit of scoring himself and so annexed firsts in the shot, javelin and broad jump, a second in the discus, a tie for the same in the pole vault, a third in the high jump, and a foruth in the high hurdles for 222 points. Dropping of three men from the squad possibly inspired Grimm to greater heights, for in the next meet with Kalamazoo College live firsts and a tie for a sixth proved conclusively he is a contender for national decathlon honors. Seconds and, thirds however made up the hulk of the scores and Wayne was able to chalk up another decisive victory. Hillsdale then journeyed to Belle Isle, where all of the home meets were run, to Page Seventy-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN receive another trimming, this time 82 to 49. Captain George Hughes and Fred Schelter pressed Grimm for scoring honors here, each having only 2 less than Erniels 18. Preparations were then in order for the iinale of the season against Central State Teachers at Mt. Pleasant. Coach Holmes expressed a genuine satisfaction at the results of the campaign, and was particularly impressed with the showing of a number of frosh as they romped to easy victory over Cranbrook Academy. Apparently track prospects are looking up! And the W Club is helping to pave the way as they inaugurate the first annual Wayne Relay Carnival. Designed for the high schools of the metropolitan area and environs, entry lists totaled more than twenty schools with some 400 contestants listed for competition in what should prove to be the highlight of local track athletics. Schedules March 14, 1934-Wayne 7823-Hillsdale ZSX3 March 17, 1934-Wayne 87-Bowling Green 17 April 28, 1934-Toledo 76-Wayne 742-Adrian 122 May 5, 1934-Kalamazoo at Wayne May 18-19-State Meet-East Lansing May 26-Wayne at Mount Pleasant june 1-C.C.C. Meet-Milwaukee June 7-8-N.C.C. Meet-Chicago Saunder Votta Brooks Mullins Rabinowitz McElroy Simms Helm Guro usky Hubert Beck Schwartz Jackel Hughes Holmes Jamkowski Patterson Grimm Rey Brusliay Pagota Perla Johnson Bach Birdsall Page Seventy-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Tennis Squad HE Varsity Tennis Team enters their spring campaign with a very promising team. On the roster there are three veterans returning from last year's team, Herbert Spathalf, Don Moss, and Cy Kaplan. In addition to these seasoned performers, Coach Wann has the star doubles combination of Gershon Levy and Harold Kaplan, Sophomores, who are listed by the United States Tennis Association as the fifth ranking junior doubles team in the United States. With this nucleus and with the addition of Robert Meyers, Paul Chomicki and Roy Ossman, it is expected that the team will be extremely successful. The spring schedule for the team includes Kalamazoo College, Western State Teachers, Earlham, Albion and Michigan State Normal. So that the team could get the benefits of an early start spring practise on the Bieliielrls Indoor Courts was begun long before the natural outdoor season started. The team will compete in the State Tennis Tournament in June. , fu Al Ossman Ehrlich Meyer Levy Wann Spatlielf Cliornicki Zikowski Page Seventy-mme THEEISS4 GRIFFIN Men's Golf Team HE Wayne University golf team returns to Intercollegiate competition this spring with excellent prospects. With an all veteran team led by Captain Frank Taugner and Zigmund Zawadzki, the two leaders of the team, who shoot in the 703s and in addition Edgar Proctor, Russell Armstrong and Carl Hoffsten, who are not far behind the two stars, Coach Newman Ertell hopes to make this their most successful season. This assumption can be readily accepted if one reviews the successful season they had last year, when they won three out of five matches plus one tie with Albion in at return match after badly defeating them once. The team will play home and home matches this year with the University of Toledo, Michigan State Normal College, the University of Detroit, Albion, and, possibly, the University of Pittsburgh. In spite of this tough schedule, it is the belief of Coach Ertell that the Tartars will have a most successful year on the greens. l Proctor Taugner Ertell Hoffsten Zawadski Page Eighty Women's Athletics THE 1934 GRIFFIN I l l u l Women s Athlehc ASSOC1G11OD CABINET President . . DOLLY E METZ Vice-President . EDITH LEVITT Secretary . EVELYN POLLOCK Treasurer . . WINIFRED HERPEL Faculty Adviser . . . M. THERESA PETERS COUNCIL HELEN LEsI4O REBA MACCLAREN GRACE NICCLUSKEY HELEN NIASSEY ANNE PAYOR JANET RUNYEON ETHEL SMITH JOSEPHINE STANEK ANN TABACH SYLVIA AICHENBAUM MABEL BATES MILDRED BIDDLE LOUISE BLANCHARD NELLIE BUNTING LUCY DALE NIARY DANIEL SYLVIA DEEEVER HELEN DIOSI ELIZABETH HARRINGTON GERTRUDE VOELLMIG MARION HARRIS JEANETTE XVELLER MARY JENKIN ELIZABETH W OLTER DOROTHY KRENZ The W. A. A. Council is composed of the class representatives as well as the heads of the various sports which compose the intra-mural program for women. The organ ization is Open to all the Women in the various colleges and sponsors an athletic as Well as a social program. 1 Dale Lesko Harris Blanchard Krenz Massey Payor llIacClaren Tabach. Jenkin, Harrington, Runyeon, McCluskey, Biddle, Weller. Dc-fever, Voellmig. Bates, Hunting Aichenbaum Daniel Diosi Levitt Metz Herpel P'ulx'er Smith btanelx Page Eighty-two THE1934 GRIFFIN Archery ARCHERY is coming into its own at Wayne University. The fall archery season attracted twenty-one archers. During the first semester two tournaments were held-a novelty shoot and an open tournament. The novelty shoot featured William Tell tactics. In the open tournament Ruth Waters, sophomore, placed firstg Margaret Fletcher, freshman, placed second, and Martha Affeldt, junior, third. Another tournament resulted in victories for Margaret Fletcher and Dorothy Henderson. Janet Runyeon was the Women's Athletic i Association Head of Archery this year. janet Runyeon Fletcher Runyeon Henderson M nrey Dickison Page Eighty-three TI-1131934 GRIFFIN Badminton BADMINTON is one of the sixteeen recog- nized activities on the W.A.A. program. During the year several tournaments are held, including a singles and a doubles tourna- ment. At Play Days, badminton is one of the most popular sports and equipment is much in demand. Men, too, enjoy playing this game. Grace McCluskey, sophomore, was the WAA. Head of Badminton. Grace McCIuskcy Bates Gurovsky lNlcCluskcy Weller Dickieson Page Eighty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Baseball BASEBALL is the outdoor game of the spring season just as volleyball is the indoor team game. Managers for each class together with the W .A.A. Head of Baseball draw up the schedule of baseball games, which are inter- class and East side-West side. The inter-class games are of major importance on the baseball programg six of these are played as well as three East side-West side games. The deciding game of the East-West series is usually held at the Recreation field at Belle Isle. Josephine Stanek was the W.A.A. head of baseball this year. losephine Stanek Shimman Hart Massey Smith Correll Biddle Harris Blanchard Stanek Aichenbaum Strohmer Bates Page Eighty-five THE 1934 GRIFFIN Basketball THE East side-West side basketball tour- nament was won by the East side this year, with Grace McCluskey as manager of the East side team. The basketball interclass tourna- ment played off in the second semester resulted in a victory for the sophomores, with the fresh- men as runners-up. The sophomores, piloted by julia Zukowski, won all three of the games they played, while the freshman women, under the leadership of Ruth Knight, won two games and lost the third. The losing classes were the junior and senior groups. The juniors, managed by Frances Hart, won one game out of three, and consequently, took pre- cedence over the seniors, led by Winifred Herpel, who met with three defeats. Mabel Bates, a junior, was the Womens Ath- letic Head of Basketball. Mabel Bates Wolter Correll Holtz Zukowski Biddle B1cCluskey Page Eighty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Bowling BOWLING, for three years an activity in the Women's Athletic Association, has proved exceedingly popular with the women of the University. A Bowling Club with seventeen charter members was formed in the fall. It was i soon found necessary to consider adding a wait- ing list from which new members were subse- quently chosen. The juniors with Elsie Waier as high scorer C3951 won the individual class tour- nament, held at the Garden Bowling Alleys. Helen Till, sophomore, was second with 391 and Elizabeth Wolter, senior, placed next with 357. Elizabeth Wolter was the Women's Athletic Association Head of Basketball. Elizabeth Wolter Wolter Hen ish Till Page Eighty-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Dancing THE high light of the .Dance Club program this year was the session of folk dance instruction presented by Mary Wood Hinman. Several hundred students assembled in the Womenls gym for these lessons as they attempted l to imitate the swing and rhythm of national folk dances. A tea sponsored by the Dance Club for all members of the Women's Athletic Association proved very successful. Sylvia Aichenbaum was the W.A.A. Head of Dancing. Sylvia Aichenbaum P'izer Cohen Kahn Langenderf Aichenbaum Rothman Page Eighty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN de Tuscan as an exhibition bouts. Lucy Dale Fencing THE Fencing Club this year secured Bela instructor and under his guidance held several Twenty women and sixteen men participated in the program of the Club. Members met every Tuesday afternoon in the north gym, where practices and routines were gone through. Men and women in the fencing classes carried out an integrated pro- gram which is the new set-up for Health Educa- tion classes in the University. Lucy Dale was the W.A.A. manager of fencing. M ooru Rembaum Urquhart Till Weller Dale Page Eighty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Golf THE fall open golf tournament was held October 28, 1933, at Glenhurst Golf course. Margaret Benish, with 49, was the winner and Myrtle Correll and Marion Harris were next with 52 and 53, respectively. A mixed two-ball foursome, a new event, was held on October 19, 1933, at Hawthorne Valley. This proved popular with Margaret Benish, Sylvia Defever, Marion Harris, M. Livingston, Margaret Mary Love and Eileen Wood. Miss Wood, with 85, was low. The spring golf program included a golf play-day, open to any women of the University who had had some experience in playing the game. Sylvia Defever was the W.A.A. head of golf this year. Sylvia Defever Zukowski Koay Benish Smith Love Blanchard Harris Correll Dcfever Page Ninety THE 1934 GRIFFIN Hiking THE Hiking Club sponsored a number of interesting trips this year, including one across the Ambassador Bridge, another through the Zoological Gardens, a hike over the News Trail, and a Winter Skating Party at 1 Rouge Park. The Club boasts fourteen faithful members. Every hike is open to all the women in the University. Plans are being made for the annual hike- picnic which is held late in May and partici- l pated in by all the members of the Women's 5 Athletic Association. This hike is usually held i at Belle Isle and is often followed by a canoeing g I party. Elizabeth Harrington was the W.A.A. head of hiking this year. Elizabeth Harrington Ll s - Currie Lockcman jcnkin Dickieson Harrington Page Ninety-one THE 1934 GRIFFIN Hockey FIELD hockey featured inter-class play which the sophomores won, with Frances Hart as class manager. The results of the tournament Were: won lost tied Freshmen 1 1 1 Sophomore 2 1 Junior 2 1 Senior O 3 The hockey season was keenly enjoyed and records show a total turn out of forty-seven Women hockey players for last fall. The annual l East side-West side hockey tournament planned to follow the inter-class tournament, was not Dorothy Krenz completed due to Weather conditions. Dorothy Krenz was the W.A.A. head of hockey. Meyers Biddle McCluskey Till Hart Weller Correll Page Ninety-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN Ping Pong PING Pong, new this year as an orglnizzd activity of the W'omen's Athletic Association, is one of the most pop- ular activities on the W.A.A. sports program. A tournament held the first semester consisted of 31 matchesg Ruth VVylie, a sophomore, was the winner and Mar- garet Benish was runner-up. In the spring semester an intra-class tour- nament was held which finally developed into an inter-class tournament. In these matches winners in each class took part in the inter-class tournaments. Ping pong tables have been used regularly for mixed doubles. The manager of this activity this year was Ieanette Weller. leanette Weller Benisll Weller Stern Wylie l Page Ninety-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Swimming THE Griffin Tanksters, swimming club of the University, this year completed one of their most successful seasons by winning the National Telegraphic Swimming Meet for Wayne University. Of the six events on the program Wayne made almost a clean sweep through the indi- vidual efforts of two splashers, Doris Shimman and Astrid johannesen. Miss Shimman later went on to capture the national 100-meter breast stroke title, in Chicago. Miss Shimman also holds the national 100-meter back stroke title, defeating Miss johannesen, ex-champion. Twenty-five women passed the Red Cross Life-Saving Tests. Louise Blanchard was the W.A.A. Head of Swimming. Louise Blanchard Page Ninety-tour Morgans Till Pulver Dickieson 'MacClaren Shimman THE 1934 GRIFFIN Tennis THE tennis program has developed to a point of inter-class competition. Open tournaments for both those experienced and inexperienced in team play are held each semester. Pyramid tournaments and ladder tournaments are included in the tennis schedule to furnish experience for those new to match-playing. Thirty-six matches were played off in the spring tournament. Entrance into the matches is open to all the women in the University. Dur- ing the spring tennis season, mixed doubles proved exceedingly popular. Gertrude Voellmig was the W.A.A. head of Tennis this year. Gertrude Voellmig Koehler Hill Metz Voellmig Lockvman Page Ninety-five , 5 Qswiggl T. 3-Q: -ruff 7-V, -y.1..::4..., ,ya na- ff- ...., ,..,.:-.9 - - .- 43.12 V 1:49, 1. Fwy., 3-.15-f. 'ff e.!F:.:v-1: , 'sw' 'l A 31 1 -. , . .-,-, -ir, N? . 515' 'R'-. , a i s 1 ff'-'!94 1552, 1 if 4 l , , EEXTTIQ S W 1+ cz 11 :rea Ei? fi? ' sf Y Si K e f 5 fl ' .sgfia ! mga 'Ze Q53 Q, H 21 J 1 fx Q D fi QQ? x, V, H 5 x M- My 1 L X 1 ??21Qi73fs if H131 , ir 13 Q. . W , THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Liberal Arts Class of 1934 OFFICERS President - - - - HERBERT SPATHELF V ice-President - - DOROTHY IRVVIN Secretary - MARGARET MARX' LOVE T1'easzo'er - - BOYD STOCKMEYER STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES KENNETH BERKAXV HELEN CIAGNE WILLIAM MACOMBER CARLO TUZZOLINO COMMITTEE CHAIRM EN Senior Ball Swing-Out Skip Day - - Senior Bouquet - Social - - Cap and Gown - Ring and Pin - Photographs - Memorial - - KENNETH BERIIAW - DON NIILLER - FRED PIGGINS - CARL NESS - ROBERT THOMPSON SHERILL DEAN SMITH - EVELYN SCHVVARZ WILLIAM VAN DUSEN DOROTHY IRXVIN ' JOHN SNELL Page Ninety-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Education Class of 1934 OFFICERS President - - , - - ELIZABETH R. HILL Vice-President - - DORIS SHIMMAN Secretary-Trcaszwcr - - - SALLY KRAETICE Social Chairman - MARY-MARGARE1' JOHNSON STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES CATHERINE TREMPER ELIZABETH R. HILL ROSEANN GLEASON HE Senior Class of the College of Education, through the guidance of its officers, was active in all college affairs of the past year. The College of Education was well represented on the University Senior Class Committees. The members of these committees were: Carmen Wheeler, Swing-Out, Sherill Dean Smith, Chairman Cap and Gown, Kathryn Bush, Cap and Gown, Irene Foster, Senior Ballg Mary Daniel, Ring and Ping Nedra Draper and Irene Foster, Skip Day, Carmen Delaney, Banquet: and Sally Kraetke, Finance. Doris Shimman, a member of the Senior Class, Won the National A.A.U. lOO-yard breast stroke title on April 12. Jane Morse was Chairman of the committee that arranged the Pedagogues' Prom. The other members Were: Mary-Margaret Johnson, Eleanor Devlin, and Elizabeth R. Hill. Paul Lovchuck, and Henry Faigin won the University lnter-Class Debates. Several prominent positions were held by members of this class, including: Carmen Delaney, President of Intersorority Council, Mary Daniel, Co-chairman of A.W.S.- Union Danceg Catherine Tremper, Member of Board of W omen's Building, Recording Secretary of Student Councilg and Sherill D. Smith and Kathryn Bush, Co-chairmen of Tea for Senior Women. Page Ninety mme THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Pharmacy Class of 1934 OFFICERS President - ---- JOHN L. SNELL Vice-President - ANGELINE KUPCZYNSICI Secretary - - - RENA BflILLER Treasurer - - BEN Z. FREEMAN Student Council ROBERT BOWYER HIS year has been a memorable one for the members of the Senior Class of the Pharmacy College because of the untiring efforts of their officers. They were: john L. Snell, Presidentg Angeline Kupczynski, Vice-President: Rena Miller, Secretaryg and Ben Z. Freeman, Treasurer. Robert Bowyer was elected to represent the Class of X34 on the Pharmacy Council. The Senior Class was represented on the Board of Publications by Ben Z. Freeman, Treasurer of the Class. Freeman was also in charge of the publicity for the Pharrnic Ball, which was given in the North Gym, on Friday, April 13. Buddy Field's Orchestra rendered the music for the occasion, which was the outstanding social event of the season for the Pharmacy College. ' Page One Hundred THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Engineering Class of 1934 OFFICERS President - - - - - RAY COOPER Vice-President - - MARY VON ROSEN Secretary - - CARL TURNQUIST T reasnrer - ROBERT ll'L-'ICCLAREN STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES RAY COOPER MARY VON ROSEN CARL TURNQUIST LTHOUGH the Engineers of the Class of '34 were never organized as a unit before, they worked in complete accord with Ray Cooper, Presidentg Mary von Rosen, Carl Turnquist, and Robert MacClaren, the Other officers. During the first semester the Senior Engineers decided to wear a uniform Orange sweater, in Order to strengthen class spirit. joseph Dorjath was Chairman of the Second Annual Engineers' Ball. This affair was instigated by members of the Class of '34. Robert MacClaren was made Editor-in-chief of the Buzz-Saw, the Engineers' own newspaper. The scholastic ability of the class is attested by the number of students gar- nering all A's during the first semesterg Howard Hess, Ernest Kirkendall, and Mary von Rosen, being the scholars. E EEN Y Y A One Hundred One THE 1934 GRIFFIN Adler, Gizella A,B. Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4. Band, 4, Glee club, 4. Allen Dorofh M , y . AB. Pi Kappa Sigma, 1, 2, 3. 4, Treas- urer, 2, 3. College Players, 1. Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 43 Recording Sec- retary, 3, President, 4. A.W.S. Cabinet, 4. Women's Building Board, 4. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4: Secretary, 4. Junior Girls' Play, 3. Antczak, Marcella S. I. AB. Bagnall, Florence I. AB., Mich. L. C. Sigma Sigma, Z, 3, 4. Junior Coun- cil, 3. Senior Board, 4. Junior Girls' Play, 3. I-Hop Committee, 3. Chairman A.W.S, Formal, 4. Class President, College of Education, 3. Bailie, Dorofhy E. AB. Zeta Chi, 1, 2, 3, 4. Bates, Anne A.B.g Mich. L. C. W.A.A., 1, Z. French Club, 1, 2. Homeroom Club, 3, 4. Literati, 4. Berkaw, Kenneth A. AB. Arab, 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President, 3: Secretary, 4, Executive Council, 4. Class Treasurer, 1. Opera, Irene. 1. Liberal Arts Student Council, 3, 4: Corresponding Secretary. 3: Soc- ial Committee, 3. J-Hop Chairman, 3. University Council, 4: Social Chairman, 4. Student-Faculty Social Commgtee, 4. Senior Ball Chair- man, . One Hundred Two Aichenbaum, Sylvia Lee B.S. W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4g Council, 3, 4. Angelo, Frank AB. Gamma Phi Delta, 3, 4. Collegian, Editor, 4. Mackenzie Union, Pres- ident, 4. Alpha Tau Beta. Presi- dent, 4. Il Circolo Italiano, 3, 4. HD Bopk, Editor, 3. Griffin, Ed- itor, 3. University Student Council, 4. Asmus, William Henry AB. Chega, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4. Gas House Gang, 4. Cap and 'Gown Committee, 4, Baller, Lloyd Harding AB. Cross-Country, 1. Track, 2. Stu- dent Club, 1, 2, 3, 4. Balchum, Olga A. A.B. Y.W.C.A., Z, 4. German Club, 3, 4. Benner, Frank C. BS. Chemistry Club, 1, 2, 3, 45 Presi- dent, 4. Berris, Sylvia AB. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Boata, Helen AB., Much. L. C. French Club, 2. W.A.A., 3. Les Precieuses, 4. Sigma Alpha Sigma, 4. Y.W.C.A., 3: Cabinet, 4. Sigma Gamma Pi, 3, Cabinet, 4. Collegian, 3. 4. Griffin, Senior Class Editor, 4. Boughton, Aileen A.B. Sigma Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Intersorority Council, 4. Board of Publications, 4. Bunting, Nellie I. BS. Women's Building Manager, 4. Home Economics Club, 1, Z, 3, 4: Treas- urer, 3: Vice-Pre-sitlent and Business Manager. 4, Style Show. Director, 3, 4, Author, 4. Delegate to Home Economics Stale Convention, 3. W.A.A. 1, Z, 3, 4, Council, 3, -1. Bush, Kathryn Margaret AB, Sigma Sigma, 4. A.W.S. Formal Committee, 3. Collette of Education Formal Committee, 3. Junior Girls' Play. 3. College ol Education Union, Treasurer. 4. Cap and Gown Com- mittee, 4. Kindergarten Club. 3. 4. Art Club, 3. 4. Senior Board, 4. College of Education Council, 4. A.lV.S. Mixer, 2. Campbell, Ralph Harold B.S. Ciagne, Helen E. AB. Delta Gamma Chi, 3. 4: Correspond- ing Secretary, 4: President, 4. Inter- Class Debating Championship, 3. College Theater, 3, 4. junior Girls' Play, 3. Junior Council, 3. Newman Club, 3, 43 Recording Secretary. 4. Liberal Arts Student Council, 4. Sen- ior Board, Treasurer, 4. Clarke Ruth L BS Alpha Sigma lfau, 3, 4. Newman Club, 3. 4. A.W.S. 1, 2, 3, 4. Col- legian, 4. Bosco, Paul F. AB. Il Circolo Italiano, 2, 3, 45 Vice- President, 4. Spanish Club, 1, Z, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4. Brown, jeane Ann A.B. Zeta Chi, 2, 3, 4, Recording-Secro tary, 3, 4. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4. College Theater, 2, 3, 4, College Players, 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer, 4. Junior Girls' Play, General Chair- man, 3. Interpretative Reading Con- test, 3. Inter-Class Debating, 2. Burns, Stanley A. A.B. Collegian, l: Assistant News Editor, 2: Copy Editor, Z, Make-Up Editor, 3: Managing Editor, 3, 4. D-Book, Associate Editor, 3. Interclass De- bating. School Finalist, 2: Junior Class Finalist, 3. Mock Democratic Convention, 3. Manager. Collegian Press Convention, 3. Alpha Tau Beta, Vice-President, 4. Butz, Gordon Ely A.B. Student Christian Association, 2, 3, 43 Vice-President, 4. Men's Mixer Committee, 3. Carter, Marion BS. lo l-l.Ec. Homeroom Club, 3, 4. Library Club, 3, 4. Cicala, john I. BS. in ME. Engineering.: Society, 1, 2, 3, 4. So- ciety of Automotive Engineers, 1, 2, 3, 4. Cole, Barbara Ruth AB. Literati, 3, 4. Senior Board, 4. 066 Hundred Three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Coles, Alice AB. Orchestra, 2, 3, 4. Glee Club, Z, 2, 3, 4. Band, Z, 3, 4. Considine, Edith AB. Coppersmith, Rose AB. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Cullens Linwood Sharp A B Sphimi, 3, 43 Secretary, 3: Treasurer, 4. Orchestra, 1, 2. Griffin, 4. Dain, Floyd Russell AB. Alpha Delta Psi, 1, 2, 3, 4. Varsity Cheer-Leader, 1, Z, 3. Davidson, Allen Blair B.S.m EE. Football, 1, Z, 3, 4. Engineering Society. 2, 3. 4. Epsilon Sigma. Z, 3, 4. J-Hop Committee, 3. Dawson, Marjorie lane AB, Zeta Chi, 2, 3, 4: Corresponding Secretary, 3: Treasurer, 4. Freshman Commission, 1. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4. Cooney, Margaret Murray BS. Cooper, james Raymond BS. in AE, Engineering Society, 2, 3, 43 Presi- dent, 4. Engineers' Ball Committee, 3, 4. Soph Prom Committee, Z. In- tramural Baskctball, Z. 3, 4. Presi- dent Senior Class, College of Engi- neering. 4. College of Engineering Student Council, 4. Cross, C. Clair AB Currie, Florence L. AB. ll'.A.A., 1, 2, 3. Daniel, Mary AB. Basketball, 1. Swimming. 1. Vl'.A.A., Council, Z. Literati, 3, 45 President, 4. Nature Study Club, 3. 4. Junior Council, 3. Junior Girls' Play, 3. Senior Board. 4. A.W.S. - Union Dance, Chairman. 4. College of Ed- ucation Student Council, 4. Davis, Donald Kempton BS. in AE. Sigma Rho Tau. Z, 3, 4, President, 3. Varsity Debating, 4. Defever, Sylvia Marie BS. in HEC. Home Economics Club, 2, 3, 4. Women's Golf Champion, 2. W.A.A. Council. 4. Phi Upsilon, Vice-Presb dent, 4. One Hundred Four THE 1934 GRIFFIN- Deiss, Agnes L. AB. DeVauIt, Warren BS, in Clmlf. Engineering Society, 3, 4. DiLoreto, Panfilo C. BS, Il Circolo Italiano, 3, 4. Chemistry Club, 4. Draper, Nedra A. B5 Delta Gamma Chi. 3, 4. W.A.A., Z, 3, 4: Vice-President, 3, Council, 2, 3. Sophomore Cabinet. 2. Junior Council. 3. Senior Board. 4. Kdgn. Clulb, 3, 4. Natural Science Club, J Dunn, Lewis Edgar AB Ecklund, Beverly Elise AB Art Guild. 4, Vice-President. 4. Emerson, Louise Barbara BS. Home Economics Club. 1. 2, 3, 4. Phi Upsilon, 3, 43 Treasurer, -l. Delaney, Carmen St. Cyr AB, Alpha Sigma Tau, Z, 3, 4: Presie dent, 2: Historian, 2, Corresponding Secretary, 3. Inter-Sorority Council, 1, 3, 43 President, 4. Sophomore Cabinet. 2. junior Council, 3. Sen- ior Board, 4. Chairman, A.W.S. Freshman Tea, 3. Women's Build- ing Board, 4. Student Council, Col' lege of Education, 4. Art Guild, 4. French Club, 4. Devlin, Eleanor Mary BS. Alpha Sigma Tau, 2, 3, 4: President, 3. Inter-Sorority Council, 2. College of Education Student Council, Vice' President, 4. University Activities Committee, 4. Art Club, 2, 3, 4. Dorjath, joseph, lr. BS. in ME. Epsilon Sigma, 2, 3, 4, President, 3, 4. Engineering Society, 2. 3, 41 Treasurer, 4. Engineers' Ball Com- mittee, 3: General Chairman, 4. Inter-Fraternity Council. 4. Senior Banquet Committee, 4. Frosh Frolic Committee, 4. Interfraternity Ball Committee, 4. University Student Council, 4. Dronzek, Belle Elaine A.B. Ebeling, Wilbur L. B.S. in AE, Alpha Delta Psi, 2, 3, 4. Engineer- ing Society, 1, Z, 3, 4. Intramural Basketball, 4. Ehrler, Lillian Iohanna AB. Home Room Club, 4. Ethredge, lames B. BS. in CHE. Engineering Society, 2, S, 4. CCC C'ET+I1IlYQl rl THE1934 GRIFFIN Fadely, Ellen Elizabeth AB. ?'.lg.C.A., 1, 2. College Theater, Filer, Lenore Marie BS. Alpha Sigma Tau, 1, 2, 3, 4, Treas- urer, 3, 4. Griffin Staff, 4. Frankila, Ellen I. BS. in H.Ec. Home Economics Club, 1, Z, 3, 4: Secretary. 3: President. 4. Phi Up- silon. Historian, 4. Womerfs Build- ing Board, 4. Gallagher, Margaret Mary AB. Pi Kappa Sigma, 3, 45 Recording Secretary, 4. Inter-Sorority Council, 4, Secretary-Treasurer, 4. Rho Chi, 3. 4. Kindergarten Club, 3, 43 Presi- dent. 4. Varsity Debating, 5, 4. Senior Board, 4. College of Educa- tion Student Council, 4. Newman Club, 3, 43 Treasurer, 4. Gamma Eta, 3, 4. Gauthier, Lorraine Yvette AB. Geddes, Garfield AB. Ghcsquiere, Frank Thomas AB, Chega, 4. Cross Country, 3. One Hundred Six Faigin, Anna AB. Kindergarten Club, 2, 3, 4, Vice- President, 4. Natural Science Club, 3, 4. Foster, Irene Ellis AB. Delta Gamma Chi, 1, 2, 3, 4. Fresh- man Commission, 1. Sophomore Cab- inet, 2. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4. Natural Science Club, 3, 4, President, 4. Freeman, Ben Zion BS. in Ph. Cross-Country, 1. Track. 1. Col- legian, 4. Griffin, 4. Board of Pub- lications, 4. Class Treasurer, College of Pharmacy, 4. Pharmic Ball, Pub- licity Chairman, 4. Gardner, Lawrence William BS. Sigma Gamma Pi, 3, 4. Orchestra, 1, Z. Collegian, 3. Gebhard, john W. AB. Gershenson, Rose AB. Rho Chi, 1. 2, 3, 43 Vice-President, 1: Social Chairman, 2, 3, Treasurer, 4. Gleason, Roseann AB. Gamma Eta, 3, 4: Secretary, 4, Uni- versity Student Council, 4. Student- Faculty Social Committee, 4. Home Room Club, 3, 4: Social Chairman, 4. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Goldberg, Herman L. AB. Collegian, 3. Campus Club, 3, 4, Vice-President, 4. Intramural Box- ing Champion, 3. Gordon, Belle Bernice AB, Library Club, 3, 4. Home Room Club, 3. - Gross, Sara I. AB, Kindergarten Club, 3, 4. Gunter, Donald AB. Hart, Charles Edward BS. Hill, Elizabeth Ruth AB. Senior President, College of Educa- tion, 4. A.W.S. Cabinet, 4: Treas- urer, 4. Freshman Commission, 1. Sophomore Cabinet, 3. junior Coun- cil, 3. Senior Board, 4. W.A.A.. 2. 3, 43 President. 3. College oi Education Formal Committee. 3. 4. Collegian, l. University Student Council, 4. Howell, Glen H. B.S. in ME. Pi Kappa Delta, 2, 3, 42 Treasurer, 3. Sigma Rho Tau. 3, 4. Varsity Debating, 1, 2. Emzinverinu Society, 3, 4. University Social Committee, 4. Goldberg, Hymen AB. Gornbein, Abe S. AB. Alpha Mu, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4. Guenther, Olive Mildred A.B. Orchestra, 2, 3, 4. Glee Club, 2, 3, 4. Haggerty, Homer Hugh BS. in ME. Student Club, 2, 3, 4. Engineering Society, 1, 2. 3, 4. Hess, Howard Martin B.S,in EE. Sigma Rho Tau, 5, 4, S. Engineer- ing Society, 1. Z, 3, 4, S. Student Council, 4. Track, 1, 2. Howard, Mary Ellen AB, Orchestra, 1, Z, 3, 4. Glc-e Club, 1, 2. 3, 4: Secretary, 3, Vice-Presb dent, 4. Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4. Band, 1. Z, 3, 4. Hunter, Cornelius Mustell BS. One Hundred Seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Irwin, Dorothy june A.B.g Mich. I.. C. Sigma Sigma, 1, Z, 3, 4. Class Vice- President, 1, Z, 3, 4. Freshman Com- mission, President, 1. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. Junior Council, 3. Sen- ior Board, 4. A.W,S. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3. 43 Secretary. 3: Vice-President, 4. Women's Varsity Debating, Z, 3. 4. 2nd Place Mich. Intercollegiate Extent. Spkng Con.. 4. Grifhn Staff, 5, 45 Organizations Editor, 3, Activ- ities Editor, 4. lohnson, Mary-Margaret A.B. Pi Kappa Sigma, 5, 4. Home Room Club. 3, 4. Social Chairman, Sen- ior Class, College of Education, 4. Kemter, Norine May BS. Alpha Sigma Tau. 2, 3, 4. Student Council, College of Education. 3, 4, Social Chairman, 3. Class Vice- President, 1, Social Chairman. 2, Treasurer. 3. Natural Science Club, 3, 4: President, 4. Kirkendall, Ernest Oliver BS. in Ch E. Epsilon Sigma, 3, 4, Secretary, 4. Engineering Society, 3, 4. Swim.:- Out Committee, 4. Koskinen, Elsa Avis AB. W.A.A. 2, 3. 45 Banquet Committee. 3. Art Guild, 1. Varsity Varieties. 4. Krokos, Eugenia I. AB. University Harpist, 1. 2. 3, 4. Orches- tra, 1, Z, 3, 4. Band, 2, 3, 4. Glee Club, 1, 2, 3. Chorus, 1, Z, 3. 4. German Club, 2, 3. Kurfzman, Marjorie AB. One Hundred Eight jaworski, Louis Walter A.B. gross Country, 1, 3, 4. Track, 1, jones, Helen M. AB. Kirby, Edward W. BS. in Ch.E. Engineering Society, 5, 4. Kose, Mamie E. AB. Kindergarten Club, 3, 4. Y.W.C.A. 2, 45 Cabinet, 4. Natural Science Club. 4. Kraetke, Sally D. A.B. Alpha Sigma Tau, 2, 5, 43 Chaplain, 2: Recording Secretary, 3: President 3, 4. Class Secretary, College oi Education, 3, Treasurer, 4. Gamma Eta, 3, 4. Kupczynski, Angeline BS. in Pharmacy Lambda Kappa Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Class Treasurer. College of Pharmacy, 35 Secretary, 35 Vice-Presideiit, 4. Lantz, Mercedes Elizabeth AB. Sigma Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Junior Girls' Play, 3. Chorus, 1, 2. THE 1934 G'RIFI4'IN Lasker, lennie BS. in l-l.Ec. Home Economics Club, 2, 3, 4. BS. in CE. 3, 4. Interim- 4. Engineers' Committee, 4. Engineering Society, 2, 3. 4. Mac- kenzie Union Board, 4. Senior Ball Committee, 4. Liddel, Elmo, George Epsilon Sigma, 2, ternity Council, 3, Ball, Chairman. 35 Lohie, Viola Sylvia AB. Sigma Gamma Pi, 4. Love, Margaret-Mary AB. Class Secretary, 1, Z, 3, 4. Junior Jumble Chairman, 3. Frosh Frolic Chairman, 4. Freshman Commission, Secretary, 1. Sophomore Qibinet, Secretary, Z. Junior Council. Secre- tary, 3. Senior Board, 4. W.A.A., Council, 1, 3: President, 2. A.W.S.. Cabinet, 3, President. 4. Board of Publications, 4. University Student Council, 4. MacClaren, Robert H. BS. in CHE. Epsilon Sigma, 4. Engineering So- ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4. Editor Buzz Saw , 4. Class Treasurer, College of En- gineering, 4. Cap and Gown Com- mittee, 4. Macomber, William H. AB. Pi Kappa Delta, 3, 4: President, 4. University Student Council. Presi- dent, 4. Varsity Dcbating Team, Z. 3, 4. Michigan State Oratorical Contest, Second, 3. Maier, Carl William AB. Basketball, 2, 3, 4. Gas House Gang, 1, 2, 3, 43 Premier, 4. Lcvenson, Marion AB. Lipsitz, Tillie AB. Lovchuk, Paul A. A.B. Pi Sigma Alpha, Z, 3, 43 Vice-Presi- dent, 4. Inter-Class Debating Cham' pion, 3. Maas, Carol Grace AB. Delta Gamma Chi. 2, 3, 4, Cor- responding Secretary, 33 President, 4. Glee Club, 1, 2. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4. Intersorority Council, 4. MacLean, Margaret Mary AB. Sigma Gamma Pi, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cabi- net, 4. Collegian, 2, 3, 4. Griffin, 33 Senior Class Editor. Les Pre- cieuses, 2, 3. Mahaffy, Erdine L. B.S. In l-l.EC. Home Economics Club. 1, Z, 3, 43 Social Chairman, 3, Corresponding Secretary, 4. A.W.S. Cabinet, 3. Phi Upsilon, 3, 43 Secretary, 4. Malesky, George H., Ir. BS. in ME. Football, 1, 2, 3, 4. Gas House Gang, 2, 3, 4. One Hundred Nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Mantyla, Helen AB., Mich. l.. C. A.B. McCandless, Muriel Les Precieuses. 4. Y.W.C.A., 4. AB. 3, 4. Griffin. 4. Opera. Irene-.' 1. McCrae, Helen Emma Rho Chi. 4. Chorus, l.y2. Mente, Virginia Perry A.B. Glee Club, 1. Z, 3, 4. Messner, Vivian Thomas B5 Gamma Eta, 3, 4. Miceli, Angelo BS Cross-Country, l. 2. Glee Club. 4. Chemistry Club, 4, Vice-President. Miller, Don Dalzell AB, Varsity Debating. Z. 3. 4. Director of University Radio Hour. 4. Math Club, 1, Z. 3, 4. Pi Kappa Delta, 2. 3, 4. French Club. 1. 2, 3, 4. Swing-Out Committee, Chairman, 4. One Hundred Ten Marquis, Donald Peter B.S. in Ch.E. Engineering Society, 5, 4. McCracken, Virginia R. AB. Sigma Sigma, 2. 3. 4. Varsity De- bating, 3, 4. College Players, Z, 3, 4. Junior Girls' Play. 5. A.W.S., House P'arly, Chairman, 4. McKay, Sarah lean A.B. Rho Chi. 2. 3, 4: Treasurer. .Sz President. 4. College ol' Education ?tugent Council. 4. French Club. Merliss, Frances Gene AB., Much. L. C. Christmas Festival, 3. Home Room Club. Z, 3, 4. Literati, 3, Vice- Presiclent, 3. Collegian, 4. Meyer, Walter .Arthur B.S. in ME. Engineering Society, 2. 3, 45 Treas- urer. 3. Sigma Rho Tau, Z. 3, 43 Secretary-Treasurer. 4. Mickiewicz, Mary B.S. in HEC. Home Economics Club, 1. Z, 3, 4. Miller, Rena BS. in Pharmacy Lambda Kappa Sigma, 3, 45 Vice' President. 4. Class Secretary, Col- lege of Pharmacy. 4. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Minkoff, Emma AB. Sigma Gamma Pi, 4. Home Room Club, 2, 3. Moore, Walter G. AB. BS. in HEC. Neidorff, Ruth Home Economics Club, 2, 3, 4. Neun, lack I. AB. Arab, Z, 3, 4, Secretary. 3: Presi- dent, 4. Interfarternily Council, 43 Corresponding Secretary, 4. A.W.S.- Union Dance Committee, 4. Senior Ring and Pin Committee, 4. Senior Party Committee, 4. Olender, janet AB. French Club. 4. German Club, 4. Poskel, Rose AB. Pierpont, Valerie AB, Alpha Theta Sigma, 1, 2, 3, 43 Secretary, 2, Treasurer, 33 Vice- President, 4. A.W.S.: Social Chair- man. 4g Chairman A.W.S. Formal, 4. Opera, 'tIrenc, 1. Mitchell, Yvonne Winifred BS. Home Room Club, 3, 45 Vice-Pres- ident, 3. Morse, lane Eliizabeth AB. Pi Kappa Sigma, 1, Z, 3, 45 Secre- tary, 2, Vice-President, 3. Inter- sorority Council, Z, 3. Opera Irene, 1. Glee Club, 1, Z. Jun- ior Women's Play, 3. College of Education, Student Council, 45 So- cial Chairman, 4. Senior Board, 4. Kindergarten Club, Z, 3, 4. Chair- man, College ol Education Formal, 4. Ness, Karl Eugene BS. in Ch.E. Epsilon Sigma, 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer, 3, 4. Engineering Society, 1, 2, 3, 4. Chairman Senior Banquet Coln- mittee, 4. Nolan, Louise Ann AB, Zeta Chi, Z, 3, 4. Freshman Com- mission, 1. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board, 4. President. A.W.S.g Cabinet, 4, House Party Committee, 43 A.W.S.- Union Dance Committee, 4: Auxil- iary Dance, 4. junior Jumble, 3. Opera, Irene, 1. Senior Ball Com- mittee, 4. Parks, Annie B. AB. Sigma Gamma Pi, 3, 4. Pawlick, Melanya AB. Collegian, 2. Mathematics Club, 5, 4. Pierson, Louise A. AB., Mich. L. C. Sigma Gamma Pi, Z. 3, 4, Program Chairman, 3, President, 4. French Club, 2, 3. Y.W.C.A.g Cabinet, 3: Treasurer, 4. One Hundred Eleven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Plggins, Frederic Ford AB. Sphinx, 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice Magistrate, 3, 4. Class Treasurer, 2, 3. Man- ager Frosh Football, 1, Manager Varsity Basketball. 2. Gas House Gang, 3, 4. Board of Publications, 4. Griffin, 3. Polk, Samuel S. AB., flxfliclw. I.. C. Pi Tau Sigma, 2, 3. 4: Pledge Com- mittee, 4. Collegian, 1, 3. Ransom, Katherine AB. Richter, William lulius AB. Varsity Debate, 3. Inter-class De- bate Champion, 5. Interfraternity Council Award for Debate, 3. Robinson, Mildred F. AB. Alpha Kappa Alpha. Geography Club, 2, 5, 4. Hume Room Club, 3, 4. Rosenfeld, Beatrice Sybil- AB. Mathematics Club, 4. junior Girls' Play, 3. Roush, Marion I. AB. One Hundred Twelve Plues, Elaine Helena A.B. Rho Chi, 2, 3, 4g Treasurer, 4. Literati, 43 Secretary, 4. Przybysz, Anthony BS. in Pharmacy Reed, Alita B. AB. Rivers, Gordon AB. Rose, Florence 1. B.S. in HEC, BS. in l-l,Ec. Rosin, Gertrude Home Economics Club, 2, 3, 4. Runyeon, janet A B. Zeta Chi, 1, Z, 3, 4. W.A.A. Coun- cil, 4. Chairman, A.W.S. Charity Party, 3. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Savoie, Willie C. BS., Mich. I.. C. Schmidt, Charlotte A. B. Schwarz, Evelyn Marion AB Zeta Chi, 1, 2, 3, 4, President, 4. Inter-Sorority Counoil, 4. Sopho- more Cabinet, 2. Junior Council. 3. Senior Board, 4. Senior Ring and Pin Committee, Chairman, 4. Opera Irene, 1. A.W.S. Mixer, Chair- man, 2. J-Hop Committee, 3. Scofield, Louise A. AB. Pi Kappa. Sigma, 1, 2, 3, 4, Press Agent, 1, 23 Treasurer, 5, 4. Home Room Club, 2, 3, 4. Seefred, Alice Florence AB. Alpha Theta Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Seitferlein, Walter AB. Gas House Gang, 2, 3, 4. Basket- ball, I, 2, 3, 4. Shames, Irene S. AB. 1 i i Schloff, Kathleen AB., lvlich. I.. C. Schulert, Lleanor E. AB. Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4. International Relations Club, 3. 4. Model League of Nations Assembly, Ypsilanti, 3. Schweigert, lrma Anna AB. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Scott, Marion Elliot A. B. Collegian, 3, 4. Segal, lonas Benjamin AB., Mich. l.. C. Sigma Gamma Pi, 3, 4. Seuffert, Frederick ,E. BS. in CHE. Pi Alpha Phi, 2, 3, 4. Share, Annette AB. Sigma Theta Delta, 2, 3, 4. One Hundred Thirteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN Sherefkin, Anne H. AB. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Shields, Helene Sigma Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Smeed, Esther BS Sigma Sigma, Z. 3, 41 ViCf'-ll'rPSl- dont, 4. Smith, Ethel Virginia BS. l'i Kappa Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Swimming Club. 2, 3, 4: President, Z: Vice- Presiclcnt, 3. Freshman Commission. 1. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. W,A.A.. l. 2. 3, 4: Council, 3. 4. College of Education Student Council 3, 43 Cabinet, 3: Secretary, 4. Smith, Esther A.B,g Mich. L. C. Smothers, Muriel AB. Spathelf, Herbert E. AB. Class President, Collerze of Liberal Arts, 3, 4. Friars, Prior, 4. Chair- man. Class Games, 3, 4. Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4. Track, 1, Z, 3, 4. Tennis, 1, Z, 3. 4, Captain, 4. Student Council, College of Liberal Arts, 3, 4. Athletic Board ol' Control, 3. Q One l-lundrecl Fourteen AB, Sherman, Pauline AE. lllathematics Club, 3, 4. A.Vl'.S., ll, 2, 3, 4. Der Deutsche Club, S, Shimman, Doris May AB. Pi Kappa Sigma, 3. 4. Swimming Club, 2, 3, 45 President, 3, 4. W.A.A.. 1, 2, 3, 4. Council, 3, 4. Class Vice-President, College of Ed- ucation, 4. Smith, l. Bertus BS, in AE. Engineering Society, 4. Smith, Helen Marian BS in l-l.Ec. Home Economics Club, 3, 43 Re- cording Secretary, 4. Smith, Sherill Dean AB, Sigma Sigma. 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 33 Social Chairman, 4. Kinder- garten Club. 3, 4. Sophomore Cab- inet, 2. Junior Council, 3. Senior Board. 4. Junior Girls, Play. 3. Y.W.C.A.. 2, 4, Cabinet, 4. Uni- versity Council. 4. Snell, Iohn Lincoln BS. in Pharmacy Phi Delta Chi, 2, 3, 4. University Student Council. 4. Class Presi- dency, College of Pharmacy, 4. Stern, Estelle Molle AB, Home Room Club, 3, 4. Sigma Gamma Pi, 3, 4. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Stockmeyer, C. Boyd AB. Arabs, 2, 3, 4. Class Treasurer, College of Liberal Arts, 4. Gas House Gang. 2, 3, 4. UD Club, Z, 3, 4. Track, l. Manager. Fresh- man Tennis, 1. Intran1ural Wrestling Champ, 2. Football, 1. 2, 3, 4. Bas- ketball, 1, Z, S, 4, Captain, 4, Sykes, Zelma Marilyn AB. Delta Sigma Theta. 4. Home Room Club, 3, 4, French Club, 1, Z. Szuba, Olga Victoria AB. Chorus, 1, 2, 3, 4. Thompson, Pauline BS in I-l.Ec. Timmons, George BS. in CHE. Tondee, Cornell Chenault BS. Kindergarten Club, 3, 4. Tucker, Helen BS. Alpha Sigma Tau, 1, 2, SQ4. Col- lege of Education Student Council, 3, 4. Chairman, Harvest Festival, 4. Collleec ol Education Art Club, 2, o, . Straesser, Walter Edward BS, in EE. Szczesny, Irene Lillian A B. Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4, Membership Chairman, 3: Vice-President, 4. Les Precieuses. Z, 3, 4: Tre-asurer, 3. Junior Council. 3. A.W.S. Cabinet, 3. Collegian. 2. 3. Summer School Student Council, Treasurer, 3. Grif- tm. 3. Tager, Ruth E. AB Freshman Commission, 1. Sopho- more Cabinet. 2. junior Council. 3. Showboat Cabaret, 3. junior Girls' Play. S. College Theater, 4. Verse Speaking Choir, 4. Thompson, Robert H. AB. Arab. 2. 5, 4: Vice-President, 3. Interlraternity Council, 4: Social Committee, 4. Soph From Commit- tee. 2. Band, 1, 2, 3, 4. Frosh Frolic Committee, 4. Class Social Chairman, 4. Tobias, julian S. AB. Ili Tau Sigma, Z, 3, 4: Treasurer, 4. Collegian, 1, Z, 3: News Editor, Z: Managing Editor, 3. D-Book, 3. Student Council 1, 2, 3, 4. Mac- kenzie Union Board, 4. Inter-Class Debate. Champion, 2. Varsity De- bate. 2, 3. College Theater, 1. Z. 3, 4. Alpha Tau Beta, 2, 3, 4. l'i Kappa Delta, 3, 4. Friars. 4. Tremper, Catherine Ella AB. Delta Gamma Chi, 1, 2, 3, 4: Cor- responding Secretary, 23 Vice-Presi- rlent, 3. 4. Sophomore Cabinet, 2. Junior Council, 3. A.W.S. Council, 3. Women's Building Board, 4. Class President, College of Educa- tion. 3. Student Council, College of Education, 3, 4, President, 4. Opera Irene, 1. J-Hop Committee, 3. University Student Council. 41 Re- cording Secretary, 4. Glee Club, 1, 2, 3. Turgeon, Arthur C. AB. French Club, 2, 3, 4: President, 3, 4. Italian Club, Z, 3, 4, Sergeant- at Arms, 4. One l-lundrefl Fifteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN Turnquist, Carl Harold BS. in ME. Epsilon Sigma, 1, Z, 3, 4. Sigma Rho Tau, 2, 3, 4. Engineering Society, 1, Z, 3, 4. 1 Van Dusen, William K. AB, Swing Out Committee. 4. Soph Prom Committee, 2. Student Club. 1, 2. Van Sickle, Carol Leah AB. Alpha Theta Sigma, 1, 2, 3, 4, Corresponding Secretary, 1: Inter- sorority Council Representative, 3: President. Z, 4. A.W.S. Cabinet. 4. Intersorority Council, 3, 4: Rusbin: Chairman, 3. College Players. 3, 43 Vice-President. 4. Opera, Irene, 1 Junior Jumble, 3. Weiss, Dorothy Elizabeth A.B. Wilson, Arthur Frederick AB. Pi Alpha Phi, 2, 3, 4. Orchestra. 1, 2, 3, 4. Band, Z, 3, 4. Glee Club, 1, Z. 3, 4. Chorus, 1, Z. 3, 4. Opera, The Red Mill, 1: Irene. 2: Musical Director, University Radio Hour, 3, 4. Winkler, Marvel Elizabeth AB. Alpha Theta Sigma, 2, 3, 4. Library Club, 3, 4. Wolter, Elizabeth Grace BS. W.A.A.. 1, Z, 3, 4. Women's Health Education Club, 3, 4. One Hundred Sixteen Vail, Harry T. BS. in CHE. Engineering Society, 4. Von Rosen, Mary BS in ME Class Vice-President, College of En- gineering, 4. Student Council, Col- lege of Engineering, 4, Secretary, 4. Engineers' Ball Committee, 4. Senior Ring and Pin Committee, 4. Wainer, Sylvia AB. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Wetherby, joseph C. . AB. Kappa Chi, Z, 3, 4, Secretary, 3: Vice-President, 4. Interiraternity Council, 3, 45 Recording Secretary, 4. Friars. 4. College Players, 2. 3, 43 Secretary, 3, President, 4. Col- lege Theater, 1, 2, 3, 41 Assistant Director, 3: Technical Director, 45 Business Manager, 4. Director, Sum- mer Theater, 3. University Social Committee, 3. University Activities Committee, 4. Director, Model World Court, 3. Opera, Irene, 1. Wilson, Ethel Olive AB. Pi Kappa Sigma, 1, 2, 3, 43 Editor, 2: President, 3, 4. Intersorority Council, 3, 43 Secretary-Treasurer, 3. College of Education Student Coun- cil, 3. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Witte, Phyllis AB. Woodle, Miriam Theresa AB. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Library Club, 3. 4. THE 1934 GRIFFIN Woolfenden, Helen A.B. Ygay, Melquiades M. AB. Newman Club, 1, 2. Zack, Ann I. A.B. Home Room Club, 3, 4. Zelock, leanuette Eugenia AB., Mich. I.. C. French Club, 1. Z, 3. Spanish Club, 2, 3, 4. Glee Club. 2. Kindergarten Club, 3, 4. W.A.A., 1, 2. Yarbrough, Charles Clinton BS. in EE. Sigma Rho Tau, 3, 4: Vice-President, 4. Collegian, 4. Griffin, 4. Yoskowitz, Sanford S. AB. Sigma Gamma Pi, 2, 3, 4. Zagel, Leah Vivian AB. Band, 2, 3. 4. Chorus, Z, 3, 4. German Club, 4. Chase, Evelyn AB. Onezligmgeo Seventeen TI-IE1934 GRIFFIN College of Liberal Arts Class of 1935 OFFICERS President - - - - HARVEY BERKEY Vice-President - DAISY DONALD Secretary - - - JEAN DUNCAN Treasurer - - NATHANIEL SHARE STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES IVALTER PROBS1' CHARL S. HITCHCOCK MILTON RAB1Now1Tz HIS year has been one of great activity for the Class of '35, due to the leader- ship of the Class Officers. ' Ed Proctor and Russ Armstrong played varsity golf 3 and William Emke and Read Peirce were swimming champs. The Women's Athletic Association elected as its President, Dolly Metz, a Junior. Several members of the Junior Class received recognition in the field of forensics. Walter Probst took iirst place in the State Oratorical Contest. Milton Rabinowitz, David Goldman, and Probst were members of the Men's Debating Team. Other prominent positions held by juniors were: Charl S. Hitchcock, Manager of the Union, George Brennan, Editor of the Griffin, President of the Interfraternity Council, and Daisy Donald, President of the Junior Council, Chairman of the Varsity Varieties. The most successful dance of the year was the J-Hop. It was given February 16, at the General Motors Ballroom, with Jess Hawkins and his Virginians rendering the music. The committee, headed by Wilbur Wilkinson, included Kenneth Wood- row, Ann McKay, Virginia Baker, Charles Arnold, William Emke, Richard Papelian, and Robert jones. ne Hundred Eighteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Education Class of 1935 President - Secretary Treasurer - Social Chairman Student Council OFFICERS - IRENE DUNCAN CONSTANCE MARCOTIE DOROTHY SCHETZER LILLIAN WEISMAN - IRENE DUNCAN NDER the guidance of an energetic group of officers, the junior class of the College of Education has completed another year of work, sport, and pleasure. The ofiicers were: Irene Duncan, Presidentg Constance Marcotte, Secretaryg Dorothy Schetzer, Treasurerg and Lillian Weisman, Social Chairman. Irene Duncan was also the Student Council Representative for the class. The Juniors assisted in arranging two social affairs which were given primarily for the Class of 1935: junior Class Tobogganing Party and Christmas Party. Lillian Weisman was in charge of invitations for the Christmas Party. A breakfast, which took place at Belle Isle, was arranged by Lillian Weisman, social chairman of the class, and her committee. Several members of the College of Education Class of '35 were on the many committees arranging the social affairs of the year. They were: Ann McKay, invita- tions for the J-Hopg Constance Marcotte, invitations for Pedagogues' Promg Irene Duncan, tickets and programs for Pedagogues, Promg Nona Maten, tickets and pro- grams for A. W. S. Formalg and Irene Duncan, invitations for Frosh Frolic. Orme Hundred Nineteen THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Pharmacy Class oi 1935 Bashur Kaplan Smalarz Ruskin Hayes Wickowski Paruszkiewicz Plocger Kantor Kineline Papelian Bonk Cohen Malicke Gieraltowski Gelman OFFICERS President ----- LAURENCE I. MALICKE Secretzzry-Treasurer - - SAMUEL W. COHEN Student Council - REGINA GIERALTOVVSKI HE successful year of the junior Class was due to the competent leadership of Laurence J. Malicke, Presidentg Samuel W. Cohen, Secretary-Treasurerg and Regina Gieraltowski, Representative on the Pharmacy Council. Walter Smalarz gained recognition in the held of sports by earning the position at center on the iirst intramural all-star basketball team. The Orchestra Committee for the Pharmic Ball, which was headed by Smalarz, engaged the services of Buddy Field. The other members of the Junior 'Class represented on the Pharmic Ball Com- mittee were: Richard V. Papelian, Chairmang Wanda Bonk, Invitations and Ticketsg and Laurence J. Malicki, Decorations. This was the first major dance sponsored by the Pharmacy College. Several third year Pharmics were active on University Committees. They were: Sidney Gelman, Activitiesg Richard V. Papelian, Athleticsg and Laurence J. Malicki, Mackenzie Union. One Hundred Twenty THE 1934 GRIFFIN Q College of Engineering Class of 1935 OFFICERS President - - MERLE SULLIVAN Vice-President THEODORE HAMMEN Secretary - - EARL ZEIGLER Treasurer - ROBERT BAKER STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES MERLE SULLIVAN EARL ZEIGLER ERLE SULLIVAN, President of the Class of '35, with the aid of Theodore Hammen, Earl Zeigler, and Robert Baker, the other class officers, organized the Juniors for the first time with an eye to a strong unit as Senior Class. The President and the Secretary, Merle Sullivan and Earl Zeigler, represented the Junior Class on the Student Council of the College of Engineering. Class spirit was intensified by the adoption of uniform jackets of black moleskin. Theodore Hammen was elected President of the Gliding Club, an active organi- zation for the purpose of building and flying motorless planes. The scholars of this class were James Tracht, Jack Morton, and Robert Carter. They were on the All-A list for the first semester. One Hundred Twenty-one THE1934 GRIFFIN v College of Liberal Arts Class of 1936 OFFICERS President - - - - AFTON SAUER Vice-President - - ADELAIDE THAYER Secretary - - - FRANCES HOLIDAY Treasurer - - DOUGLAS ANDERSON STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES MARION SAPALA LEE HASTINGS AFTON SAUER HE Sophomore Class was able to accomplish much during the past year, not only because of the cooperation of all its members, but because of the untiring efforts of its officers. The Sophomore Cabinet, which is composed of women students, was very active this year. The President of the organization was Adelaide Thayer, and the Secretary-Treasurer was Frances Holiday. The Class Games, which were held in October, were won by the second year men. Several members of the class were active in forensic affairs. Joseph Kerzman was on the Varsity Debating Squad. Frances Holiday came out second in the Semi- finals of the Michigan State Oratorical Contest. The athletic teams also received support from the second year men. Afton Sauer held a position on the football team, and William McKnight and Tom Munson played varsity basketball. The most important Social event of the season for the Class of '36 was the Soph Prom, which took place the day before Thanksgiving. The Prom was given in the Grand Ballroom at the Book-Cadillac Hotel, with Ray Gorrell and his orchestra furnishing the music. me Hundred Twenty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Pharmacy Class of 1936 Taub Schulz Kulscliman Cohen Hurwitz Ozinski Feinberg Maicki Tarnacki Kaczycki OFFICERS President - - - - RICHARD l.l'lAICKI Serretary - - - SAM FEINBERG Student Council - ROBERT CAMPBELL HE Sophomores of the Pharmacy College were piloted through a year of work, sport, and pleasure under the guidance and leadership of their class officers. Richard Maicki, Presidentg and Sam Feinberg, Secretaryg were inspirations to their class. Robert Campbell was honored by the second year students in being elected to the position of Sophomore Representative on the Pharmacy Council. The Pharmacy College was represented on the University Social Committee by Jennie Raczycki. She was also in charge of invitations and tickets for the Pharniic Ball, which was held on Friday, April 13. The Pharmacy Class of '36 also did its part in the held of sports. Sid Cohen, one of the members of the class, was on the basketball team. One Hundred Twenty-th ree THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Engineering Class of 1936 OFFI-CERS President - - - - - JACK KLINE Vice-President - VINCENT AYRES Secretary - CARL GRIMSTAD Treasurer - - PHILIP BLACK STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES JACK KLINE CARL GRIMSTAD GENUINE spirit of interest and enthusiasm has marked the attitude of the Sophomore Engineers at all times. This feeling, once intensified by the elec- tion of class officers and the inception of a definite college class, continued undiminished through the balance of the year. Jackets of blue corduroy, with the characteristic orange insignia of the Engineers predominating, helped to unify the group and to bolster the spirit of the class as a whole. . PaulfLawrenz and Jean Bailey made quite a splash in swimming circles. Lee Hastings distinguished himself by membership on both the Varsity Debate Squad and the University Student Council, and also by his post as Business Manager of the Griffin. Jack Kline was both a member and the Manager of the Debate Squad, and served on the University Council. ne Hundred Twenty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Liberal Arts Class of 1937 President - - - WILLIAM SLOMAN Vice-President - - RUTH KNIGHT Secretary - - - DOROTHY HEIDEMAN Treasurer ---- ROBERT PERKINS Student C ourzcil Representatifve - HAROLD Weiss HE members of the Freshman Class may look upon the activities of the past year with much satisfaction due to the leadership of William Sloman, President, with the cooperation of Ruth Knight, Vice-President, Dorothy Heideman, Secretary, Robert Perkins, Treasurer, and Harold Weiss, Student Council Represen- tative. The Freshman Commission, composed of twenty-one girls, also proved of great assistance. Arlone Allen was President of this organization. Much enthusiasm was shown in the held of sports. The first year basketball players had a favorable season in that they won nineteen games and lost only four. Another successful group was the Freshman track team. The track men displayed their ability by winning the intramural meet. The activities of the year culminated in the F rosh F lurry, which took place on April 20. The affair was a project of the Class of '37, and was arranged entirely by the Freshmen. john Mullen acted as General Chairman of the committee in charge of the dance. The other members were: -Tim Richardson, ballroom, Elaine Sloman, invitations, Ray Hammer, tickets, Phyllis Bookmiller and Eric Morris, publicity, and Louis Winterhoff, orchestra. One Hundred Twenty fave THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Pharmacy Class of 1937 Harris Essner Dasher Riker Stonik Gilewski Macwsky Bedell Mayors Brown Phardel Bielawski Mieszczyuski Chappas McCabe Zukowski OFFICERS President - - - PERRY CHAPPAS Vice-President - - NORMAN BTCCABE Secretary-Treasurer - LOUISE lllIESZCZYNSKI Student Council - JOHN BIELAVVSKI HE Freshman Class of the Pharmacy College elected as its officers for the year: Perry Chappas, Presidentg Norman McCabe, Vice-Presidentg and Louise Mieszcynski, Secretary-Treasurer. John Bielawski represented the class on the Pharmacy Council. The Freshmen sponsored a Pharmic Phrolic for all the students of the Pharmacy College. The affair was given on Friday, November 17, at the Miltrude Apartments. Perry Chappas, Chairman of the Phrolic, was assisted by Louise Mieszczynski, Vice- Chairman. This proved to be the outstanding social event of the year for the Frosh Pharmacy students. The Class of '37 of the College of Pharmacy will be remembered, among other things, as one of the largest entering classes in the history of this college. p One Hundred Twenty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Engineering Class of 1937 OFFICERS President - - KENNETH lVIUDIE Vice-President - - HUGH GEORGE Secretary - FRED OLMSTEAD Treasurer - EARL TEMPLETON STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES KENNETH NIUDIE FRED OLMSTEAD HE F rosh Engineers were welded into a strong class-conscious group through the activities of Kenneth Mudie, President, and the other Class officers: Hugh George, Vice-President, Fred Olmstead, Secretary, and Earl Templeton, Treas- urer. Mudie and Olmstead also represented the Class on the Engineering College Student Council. A toboganning party and Weenie roast at River Rouge Park, during the Iirst semester was Well attended. The Class also had charge of the school Christmas Tree, which was placed above the front door. George Pipper, high nian in the psychological entrance examination, and Fred Olmstead, who was one of the twelve highest in the Frosh tests, upheld the scholastic ability of the Class. It is hoped that the Engineering Class of 737 will continue its strong organiza- tion in the ensuing years. One Hundred Twenty-seven ,E,, -:rv .L,:,,1..,-:'--' 'Z ,,,.,qQ ,.-- - - .... ,Q-Ng,:.m1 .,:. H It .A - 1 . .. . - ' -A-Q - .-' .1. - ,P A b .vS.nQ V- , ' '?'f'QU ' -'J L gijb 3,it..5 : ' fix ff' ff ffl? 1- gap 1 ., -I 72irffkl V '85 y ,-. f'j 5s.g 1 1 Xb' 4' f, 1 1 Q: A in ' 1 . Ii Q x if kfijrf :f f 1 'Z 5 ' - 4 ,A M J . - ' .gi i ' 0 A l - 'Wt ' 5 ' Q' ff 4? 'S 'i l, t I ., xv: qv- I V - 175255 In -V-E-L, f '.. ' W f- H v :wx , , 4 ' 'lu.,1 , s J I 4 0 1 7.:1Bw N,-X 3, ,gk Q , gf fx D r 4 .A . U1 AP 1 fA. , Ll 'mjx M 3. X. , XQ11 . -N., , . rx. , Fi THE 1934 GRIFFIN l Frank Angelo FRANK ANGELO - DAVID GOLDMAN CARLO TUZZOLINO GERALD FITZGERALD ELMO LIDDEL - Mackenzie Union BOARD OF GOVERNORS President ---- FRANK ANGELO Secretary DAVID GOLDMAN Liberal Arts College Representative Liberal Arts College Representative Liberal Arts College Representative - College of Education Representative - College of Engineering Representative LAWRENCE MALICICE ----- College of Pharmacy Representative HE Board of Governors of the Mackenzie Union is composed entirely of stu- dents, representatives of all the colleges. They have complete charge of the social program of the Union. All matters of policy as well as all questions of conduct or use of the building come under their jurisdiction. 1I.'XCliliNZlli UNION BOARD OF l'7IREC'l'OllS ltlaliclte Licldel Lange 'flwinas llarcling Selden Annette Angelo Goldman I-'itzgeruld Liglitlmdy me I-lurndred Thirty THE 1934 GRIFFIN Association of Women Students Margaret Mary Love ARLONE ALLEN DOROTI-IY ALLEN WINIFRED COINIPORT MARX' DANIEL DAISY DONALD President - Vife-President - Secretary - Treasurer - ETHEL CABINET JEAN DUNCAN IRENE DUNCAN ELIZABETH HILL DtJROTI'IY IRWIN OFFICERS :XIARGARET DIARY LOVE - DOROTHY IRWIN - JEAN DUNCAN ELIZABETH HILL SPONSOR W. B. CHASE, M.A. NIARGARET MARY LOVE LOUISE NOLAN YALERIE PIERI-ONT ADELAIDE TH,-XYER CAROL VAN SICKLE Allen Thayer Daniel I. Duncan Nolan Compnrt .Donald Allen Pierpont Hill Love Irwin J, Duncan Yam Sickle One Hundred Thirty-one THE 1934 GRIFFIN President - Secretary - Treasurer - DOROTHY ALLEN JEANE BROWN KAY BUSH HELEN CIAGNE BARBARA COLE MARY DANIEL MARIORIE DAWSON CARMEN DELANEY NEORA DRAPER IRENE FOSTER Senior Board OFFICERS - LOUISE NOLAN DOROTHY ALLEN - HELEN CIAGNE MEMBERS MARGARET MARY GALLAOHER BETH HILL DOROTHY IRWIN HELEN JONES MARGARET MARY LOVE JANE ELIZABETH MORSE LOUISE NOLAN EVELYN SCHWVARZ SHERRILL SMITH CATHERINE TREMPER Smith Hill Maas Irwin Foster Daniel Dawson jones Delaney Sulw-'arz Brown Allen Nnlan Ciagnc Love Bush One l-lundred Thirty-two THE-1934 GRIFFIN President - Secretary - Treasurer - VIRGINIA BAKER VIRGINIA BRODERS WINIFRED COMFORT JEAN DAVIS DAISY DONALD IRENE DRAI-ER IRENE DUNCAN JEAN DUNCAN GERTRUDE FUCHS GRACE MAIEAN I unior Council OFFICERS MEMBERS - DAISY DONALD - JEAN DUNCAN WINIFRED SMITH NONA MATEN ANN MCKAY RUTH MCKIERNAN DOLLY METZ BETTY PO'rTs MARY LOUISE SCHUCK AGNES SMITH WINDTRED SMITH DOROTHY TRYON MONICA WHITE Tryon Mcliicrnen Mahan Brodcrs Potts A. Smith I. Duncan Fuchs Matcn Draper Schuck W. Smith Donald J. Duncan Baker Comport One Hundred Thirty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Sophomore Cabinet OFFICERS President - - - - - ADELAIDE T HAYER Secretary-Treasurer - MEMBERS ELEANOR BIERKAISIP JEAN BRA1DwOoD RUTH CLOSSON JUNE DOIIERTY KATIiERINE HOFFMAN DORIS HOWE FRANCES HOLIDAY RUTH KIMBALL ESTHER KING BETTY KUHLMAN MARTHA WHITE - FRANCES HOLIDAY BETTY MACRAE MARJORIE LYON BARBARA MOON BETTY MCCULLOUGH BETH PROCTOR JEAN REITHARD MARGARET ROGNER JANE SHEPHERD ISABEL TAYLOR ADELAIDE THAYER McCullough Kimball King L yon Moon Buelow Doherty Closson Proctor Rogner Reilhard Holiday Thayer Hoffman Shepherd One Hundred Thirty-four THE 1934 GRIFFIN Freshman Commission Preszdent - Ifzce President - Secretary - Treasurer - ARLONE ALLEN PHYLLIS BOOKMILLER RUTH BRODER DOROTIIY BROWN JOAN CONKLIN OFFICERS MEMBERS CATHERINE EICIIELBARGER DOROTHY EVANS PAULINE FRIED VIRGINIA FROST ALICE GOODRIGII ELIZABETH GRANT AGNES HIGKS - ARLONE ALLEN - JANE MOSSER - HELEN STEGE RUTH TACKABURY GERTRUDE HILL ELEANOR HILLIER VIRGINIA KIMBALL RUTH KNIGHT PIIYLLIS KULL REBA MACCLAREN MARY MOREY JANE MOSSER MARGARET ROONEY KATHERINE SAYRE HELEN STEGE RUTH TACKABURY Llchclbarger Rooney Hicks MacClaren Kull Bookmiller Broder Grant Hill Conklin Brown Goodrich Hillior Morey I rxcd knight Mosser Allen Siege Tackabury Sayre One Hundred Thirty-five THE 1934 GRIFFIN College of Education Art Club 1933 EDITH BERGER ERDA XNEUSTHOFF ELINORE STEARN GERTRUDE HENNES EDXVARD ANTHONY EDITH BERGER LILLY BOSZCZVNSKI KATHRYN BUSH KATHERINE CAULEY VIRGINIA CIIILDERS EVELYN COHEN CARMEN DELANEY ELEANOR DEVLIN MURRAY DOUGLAS ESTIIER FENSTER OFFICERS President - Vice President Secretary - Treasurer - SPONSOR JANE BETSEY WELLING, MEMBERS DINA GREENBURG VIRGINIA HANLON GERTRUDE HENNES ELIZABETH HILL JOSEPHINE KENGES BEN KROLL EUGENIA MOTT SHEILA MIDDLER DOROTHY PULVER VIRGINIA RAEPE HELEN REED M I 93 4 EVELYN COHEN GERTRUDE HENNES - HAZEL UTz GERTRUDE TONCRAY PHILIP RESNICK KATHLEEN SCIILOEE MARY SIIIVIGKAS BLANCHE SINGER SHERILL SMITH ELINORE STEARN GERTRUDE TONCRAY JULIUS TRATTNER HELEN TUCKER HAZEL UTZ ERDA WEUSTIIOFE Pulver Schloff Cohen Shivickas Boszczynski Tucker Raepe Cauley Reed Hen nes Bush Delaney One Hundred Thirty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Engineering Society President - Vice-President Secretary - Treasurer - ARTHUR R. CARR, PH.D. ERIC ANDERSON JEAN BAILEY FELIX BINDNARZ ALBERT BIXBY DONALD BOUCHER ROBERT CARTER LAWRENCE CLEMENTS RAYMOND COOPER CAMILLO D'AMIcO ALLEN DAVIDSON WARREN DEVAULT RALPH DICK JOSEPH DORJATLI KENNETII DUNN JAMES ETHERIDGE EDWIN BOOTH HERMAN BROWN WILBUR BURROUGHS ELMER CRAIG ALEXANDER MCCURDY OFFICERS - - RAYMOND COOPER - ELMO LIDDEL - ALBERT BIXBY - - JOSEPH DORJATH SPONSORS ERNEST B. DRAKE, M.S. WILLIAM SARCENT MEMBERS TED HAMMEN REEVE HASTINGS BURNETTE HECK GLEN HONVELL RAYMOND HURT HAROLD JOHNSON EUGENE KALBELEISCH GEORGE KEEM BRUCE KIMBALL EDWARD KIRBY ERNEST KIRKENDALL ELMO LIDDEL ROBERT MACCLAREN EUGENE MACCRACKEN WALTER MEYER CHARLES MICHALSKI PLEDGES THOMAS MATIIEXY'S ROBERT MEYER DONALD PEIERCE JOHN REDINGER KENNETH SIVIITII ROBERT MOORE ERIC MORRIS KENETH MUDIE KARL NESS ARTHUR PAIGE GEORGE PIPPER THADDEUS RELZLOTF BURTON SMITH LELAND SRIGLEY MERLE SULLIVAN JOHN TAYLOR CHARLES TURNQUIST HARRY VAIL DONALD VOIGTS CHARLES YARBROUGH PHILIP TABB JOHN E. TEMPLETON OLAVI WANTIN KENNETH WOODROXV Micliclski Dick Voigts MacCracken DeY:iult Boucher Moore D'AmicO Frazier Drake Clements Ness Haggerty Bixby Howell Yarbrough Bednarz Sargent Kirby Timmons Kirkendall Dorjath Cooper Liddell ilIacClz1ren Cicala Marquis Vail Hammen Meyer Fuchs Sullivan Etheridge Hurt Muclic Morris Carter One Hundred Thirty seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Gamma Eta OFFICERS President - - - ELVERA DALQUIST Vice-President - - - GRACE MAHAN Secretary-Treasurer - NIARGUERITE MATHER Historian - - - - NONA MATEN Social Chairman CATHERINE LAMESFELD SPONSOR ALICE CAMERER, M.A. MEMBERS ELVERA DALQUIS1' GERTRUDE DENENBURG V1-:RNA DENNIS MARGARET GALLAGHER ROSEANN GLEASON SALLY KRAETKE CATHERINE LAMESFELD GRACE MAHAN NONA MATEN MARGUERITE MATHER VIVIAN MESSNER RUTH MITCHELL JOSEPHHJE STONE Messner me Hundred Thiriy-Qiglwf Gleason Lamesfeld M Lther Dalquist Dennis Gallagher THE 1934 GRIFFIN BERT HUDGINS, Ph .D. Gas House Gang WILI.IA1vI Y. SESSIONS, Ph.D. OFFICERS King - - WILLIAM GLASS Premier - - CARL MAIER Chief Escribe - - BURTON SMITH Treasurer - - GEORGE IVIALESKY Royal Bouncer - - ' - CARLETON PHILLIPS .Minister of Foreign A fairs - FRED PIGGINS Chief of Vigilance - - XVILLIAM BRAY SPONSORS DONALD MACLACIILAN, M.S. MEMBERS WILLIAM ASMUS WILIIIAM ATKINSON GEORGE BARRIE TRENTON BATSON FREDERICK BENS JEROME BIEBER WILLIAM BRAY WALTER BRICKER THEODORE BROOKS WILLIAM GLASS ARTHUR GRANT BEN GRUENFELDT CARL HOFFSTPLN ERNEST DEISS ROBERT EMERICK JACK IRWIN DUDLEY JEWETT VICTOR JODWAY CARL MAIER WII.LIAM MIXIER GEORGE MALESKY EDWARD MARCUS NORINIAN MCCABE JACK MORTON ALFRED NELSON GORDON PAYNE HAROLD PELL CARLEION PHILLIPS PLEDGES WALTER MCDONNELL YVILLIAM MCKNIGHT FRED PIGGINS AETON SAUER WALTER SEIEEERLEIN WALTER SEIP BURTON SMITH BOYD STOCKMEYER MERLE SULLIVAN FRANK TAUGNER RAY TRAYNOR JAY WIIITELY ALEX YANKOWSKI GEORGE ZEGOLIS TOM MUNSON ROBERT MITCHELL McCabe Fixzgins Bat-lon Mr:KniglIt Bricker Holnlburg Buns Brooks Munson Atkinson Barrie Emcrick Morton Scip Zegolis Stockmi-yer Biebsr Yankowsky Sauer Pluillips C, Maier Glass Smith Sciffurlein Tzuxgncr Sullivan I-Iuffslen Payne Asmus W. Maier lIcDOnm-l liulku Gruenfs-ldt Nelson Une Hundred Thirty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Home Economics Club President - Vice President - Recording Secretary OFFICERS Corresponding Secretary - Treasurer - EvA DONELDSON, B.S. OLIVE GOODRICH, A.B. KATIIRYN ALLEN RACHEL BERMAN BETTY BEWLEY FLORENCE BLAI-:E DORIS BOLAND JEAN BRAIDWOOD DOROTHEA BREWER NELLIE BUNTING BERTIIA CIPTAK WINIFRED COMIPORT MELISSA CROSS JEAN CURRIE SYLVIA DEEEVER ELVIRA DICKIE VALERIE DUNSTAN JEAN DURGAN LOUISE EMERSON BETTY ENDICOTT LILLIE ETKIN JANE FOWLER ELLEN FRANKILA ELEANOR GARVIN JESSIE GIIILIN MARION CHINNOCK SPONSORS MEMBERS PIIYIILIS GOIJUARIJ CAROLINE GREENBAUINI RACHEL GRII-'EITII MARION HAIILEY JEAN HALL JOAN HANCOCK CATHERINE HARTMAN KATHRYN HENIG DOROTIIY HENDERSON ELEANOR HILLIER MARTHA HOLMES ESTHER KAPLAN MARION KIRBY EMILY KOPERA BETTY KUHLMAN PHYLLIS KULL VIRGINIA JOHNSON JENNIE LASKER ANN LEIBOWITZ ERDINE MAIIAFFEX' BETTY MATENSKX' MARY MCGUINESS PLEDGES EUNICE HEWETT ELLEN FRANKILA NELLIE BUNTING - HELEN SMITH ERDINE NIAHAFI-'Y - RUTH MORGAN HELEN A. HLTNSCHER, Ph.D. FRANCES B. SANDERSON, B.S. RUTH MCKIERNAN LILLY LEE MELTZER MARY MICKIEWITZ ALBERTA MOORE RUTH MORGAN RUTH MORGANS MARGARET MORRIS RUTH NEIDOREE MINNIE NEWMAN MURIEL MISIIAN ETHEL OSECIIKIN GENEVIEVE OTT JUNE ROSE JENNIE SIEMIENSKI AGNES SMITH HELEN SMITIEI MARION TIIOMAS PAULINE THOMPSON ELSIE MAIER CHARLOTTE WALTERS VIRGINIA WEBSTER LOUISE WII.LIAMS ILENE VAN BOND Thomas Kull McKiernan Braidwnod Walters Moore Webster Goddard Dickie Matenky Hartman A. Smith Goodrich Lasker Ncidorff Morris Currie Giblin Griflith Defevcr Hillier Stanczak Comport Hadley Bruer Endicott Kopera Morgan Bunting Frankila H. Smith Mahafiy Rose Johnson Grcenbaum Bewley Sanderson Morgans Fowler Simienski Holmes Thompson Rosen Hancock Henderson One Hundred Foriy THE 1934 GRIFFIN Home Room Club ZELLA WILLIAMS OFFICERS President - - - Vice-President - Social Secretary Secretary-Treasurer SPONSORS CLARA CI-IAINIPION, M.A. EEEIE MEMBERS MARTHA AFFELDT HONOR ASSELIN SYLVIA BERRIS AILEEN BOUOHTON LILLY BYRIJSONG EVA CANER MARION CARTER OLIVIA CLARK EDITH CONSIDINE ROSE COPPERSIVIITH EVELYN DOVVLDING LALIA D,ORAZIO IRENE DUNCAN LILLIAN ERIILER DOROTIXY FAIR GERALDINE FAUBER ROSEANN GLEASON LILLIAN GOLBER LAURA GOLDMAN HENRIETTA HACK MARJORIE HOWCROET ANNELLE HUTTON MARY MARGARET JOHNSON MERCEIJES LANTZ ELLEN MACPETRIE ELEANOR MAXIER NAIDA MARICH ELIZABETH MARS1-I CLARE MAYOTTE JUNE MCCLELLAN SARAH JEAN MCKAY MARJORIE NOBLE BESSIE PIETRASZKIEXNICZ MILDRED ROBINSON GERTRUDE ROSENZWEIG IRMA SCHNVEIGERT ANNELLE HUTTON ROSEANN GLEASON - NIURIEL SMOTHERS M . DOWNER, M.A. LOUISE SCOEIELD MARTHA SENCIIUK ANNE SIIEREEKIN HELENE S1-IIELDS MURIEL SMOTHERS MARGARET SNYDER ESTELLE STERN ZELMA SYKES IRENE SZCZESNY CATHERINE TREMPER SYLVIA WAINER FANNIE WEXLER PARLINE WIENER ZELLA WILLIAMS ETI-IEL WILSON HELEN WINANS HELEN WOOLEENDEN ANN ZACK Merliss McKay Shrefkin Coppcrsmilh Ehrler Zack McPetrie Gleason Hutton Williams Smothers Stern Wainer One Hundred Forty one THE 1934 GRIFFIN Kindergarten Club OFFICERS President - - BIARGARET i-NIARY GALLAGHER Vice-President - - - - ANNA FAIGIN Secretary-Treasurer - LOUISE SACKETT SPONSOR JESSIE WEDIN, M.A. MEMBERS FLORENCE BAONALL HELEN BERG EDITH BEROER MAE BLAIR KAY BUSH FLORA CAMERON JEAN CALIPBELL SALLY COWVLEY GRETA DENNIS NEDRA DRAPER ANN FAIOIN MARGARET MARY GALLAGLIER LORRAINE GAUTHIER MARGARET GITRE MARION GITSCHLAG VIOLA GREENBERG SARAH GRASS GEORGIANNA HART MAMIE KOSE MARION LAKIN BARBARA Low CONSTANCE BLARCOTTE JANE ELIZABETH MORSE ROSE PASIIEL BESSIE PEARLMAN CORRINE PIKE ELIZABETH PTASHNICK MARION RAE ALITA REED ISABEL ROSENGARD ANNE ROTHMAN MARION ROUSH KATHLEEN SCHNEIDER LOUISE SACKETT DOROTHY SHETZER SHERRIIL SMITH ESTHER SMITH EDNA THILL ESTHER TI-IOLIPSON ELEANOR TOMES MARION VAN ULIET LUCILLE VEUGLERS GERTRUDE WILCOX MARION WAALKES Dennis Roush Smith , I Gitschlag Gauthier Lakin Greenberg hose Tlull Veuglers LOW Marcottc Gallagher 'Faigin Gross Bush One Hundred Forty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN President - Vice-President - Secretary - Treasurer - - Social C haifman ELIZABETH BARBER ALICE BENN SELLA BUDN11-SKY KAY CHAMBERLAHV BARBARA COLE JANET CURRIE MARY DANIEL HENRIEITA FAIRCHILE IRENE FOLBERT Literati OFFICERS SPONSOR ELOISE RAMSAY, MA. MEMBERS - MARY DANIEL - AGNES NIATTSEVVEY - ELAINE PLUES IRENE FOLBERT - BARBARA COLE FRANCES GRAY ELIZABETH HARRINGTON MARGARET JONDRO AGNES MATTSEXVEY ELAINE PLUES ADELINE SAX CAROLINE SLABY KATHLEEN TAGGAR1' LILLIAN WEISSMAN Harrington Barber Currie Benn Chamberlain Taggart Cole Mattse wey Daniel Plues Jondro One Hundred Forty three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Men's Health Education Club President - Vice President Secretary - JOSEPH GELIBIS, B.S. THEODORE BROOKS ALBERT BROCHE PHILIP BRUNO PAUL CHOMICKI JAMES DEMAREE DANIEL DOBETNS OFFICERS SPONSORS MEMBERS GERALD FITZGERALD ERNEST GRIMM SOL JACKEL CONSTANTLNE L1sowsK1 RONALD PATTERSON PAUL REHN EDWARD SPENCE DANIEL DOEBINS MARION SAPALA FRANK L. OKTAVEC, Ph.D. MARION SAPALA AETON SAUER EDWARD SPENCE RAYMOND TRAYNOR LEO WOLF Patterson Sauer Brooks Grimm Fitzgerald Bruno Chomickr Octavec Sapala Spence Demaree Gembis One Hundred Forty-four THE1934.GRIFFIN Natural Science Club OFFICERS President - - - IRENE FOSTER Secretary-Treasurer - - GRETA DENNIS Social Chairman FLORA CAMERON SPONSORS FLORENCE G. BILLIG, Ph.D. MEMBERS MARTHA AFFELDT CAROLINE BAKER KATIIRYN BUSH FLORA CAIVIERON MARY DANIEL GRETA DENNIS NEDRA DRAPI-:R CELIA ERMON DOROTHY ELLIOT .ANNA FAIGIN IRENE FOSTER VIOLA GREENBERG NORINE KEMPTER MAMIE KosE MARION LAKEN HELEN LESKO ESTHER LEYPOLDT ELIZABETH Loclcwooo LILLIAN MCINTOSH ANNA MARK BERTHA MILLLIAN MARJORIE NOBLE BEss1E PIETROSZKIEWIZ MARION RAUCH ALICE SINGER MARGARET SHCALNEK Mark Rauch Noble Pietraszkiewiz Daniels Greenberg Billig Schetzer Lesko Faigin Jewell Laken Dennis Foster Cameron Draper Affeldt One Hundred Forty-five THE 1934 GRIFFIN President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Social Chairman MARIE CAULEY MARGARET DUNFORD BETTY FINNEY ROSE GERsrIENsoN ELTNOR GORDON ALICE INGERSOLL LUCILLE KREUCIIER CATHERINE LAIVIESFIELD Rho Chi OFFICERS SPONSOR EEEIE M. DOWVNER, M.A MEMBERS ELLEN MACPETRIE HELEN MCCRAE REGINA MOHAUPT MIIILIE PAWLICK ALBA PETTI ELAINE PLUES MARGARET RUPELL - JEAN MCKAY MARGARET YAHNE - ALICE BENN - ESTA SIEBERT HELEN SCHETTLER BERNICE RUSSELL EDNA RUSSELL MAUDE SIMPSON JANE THOMPSON PAULINE WALKER JANE WEITH DORIS WESTLAKE Thompson Ruppcll Weith Plues. K NIacPetrie Cauley Gordon Si mpsun L11 meslield Walker Fm ney L. Russell Ingersoll Gershc-nson Yahne McKay Benn Schettler B. Russell One Hundred Forty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN WOmen's Health Education Club 1 OFFICERS President - - XNINIFRED HERPEL Vice President - - EDITH LEVITT Secretary - - FRANCES HART Treasurer - - MARY ELLEN SMITH SPONSOR RUTH L. MURR.AY, B.S. MEMBERS SYLVIA AICHIENBAUR MABEL BATES MILDRED BIDDLE LOUISE BLANCI-IARD PHYLLIS BRAIDWOOD BETTY CAIN MX'RTI.E CORRELL MOLLY GUROVSKY BONNIE HARRIS FRANCES HART l XVINIFRED HERPEL ELEANOR KIRSCI-IBAUM DOROTHY KRENZ EDITH LEVITT GRACE MCCl.USKEX' MARION MCLEOD HELEN MASSEY SELMA MEYERS MAE PARTRIDGI-1 ELSIE ROGOISE PATRICIA SCHNUCK JANE SHEPHERD DORIS SIIIMMAN ETHEL SMITH MARY ELLEN SMITH JOSEPHINE STANEK DOROTHY STROHMER VIOLET Wmss JEANNE WVOLFE ELIZABETH WOLTEYC Krenz Harris Massey Smith Shimman Sacks Shephm rd Rogoff Cain Grossbart McC1uskcy Biddle Wolter Heideman Stmhmer Stanek A ichenliaum Wolfe Levitt Herpcl Hart Correll KiFSChbHUH1 M cLeOd fx Une Hundred Forty seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Sigma Gamma Pi OFFICERS Proedros - - - LOUISE PIERSON Anti-Proedros - - RUTH ELKIND Grammateus - SARAH ANN CO1-'FIELD Chremataphylax - - - ALEXANDER ROSE SPONSORS HELEN BISHOP, M.A. HERMAN A. CLARK, Ph.D. MEMBERS JACK BALDWIN WILHEMINA BLANCKETT HELEN BOATA JULE BROWN MARCUERITE BROVVN BERNICE BUDZEAZEK ELZIE BRYENT ETIIEL CLAES SARAH ANN COFEIELD HELEN DIOSO VIOLA DIONCA EMILY COLEXVCZYNSKI RUTH ELKIND GERALDINE FAUBER ELIZABETH FISH ASPASIA GEOROES JOHN M. HINKLE REINHOLD KITZMANN MIGNON KLINO GEORGIA KOSMOWSKI LUCILLE KREUCHER VIOLA LOHIE MARGARET MACCLEAN LUCILLE MEARKLE CHARLES MONTICELLE EVELYN OTTO LOUISE PIERSON ANNIE PARKS RAYMONIJ REISS ALEXANDER ROSE HELEN M. SCHETTLER ESTELLE STERN REBECCA TOXVNSEND ABRAHAM WARZAWSKI PAULINE WATKINS OLIVE WOODIilTLL SANFORD SKOSKOVVITZ Mmkoff Blackett Yoskowilz Kreucher Boata Reis Kling Claes Clark Rose Coffleld Pierson Elkind Segal Bishop One Hund ed Forty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Y. W. C. A. CABINET President - - - DOROTHY ALLEN Vice-President - - IRENE SZCZESNY Recording Secretary - GERTRUDE HILL Corresponding Secretary - VIRGINIA BAKER Treasurer - - - - LOUISE PIERSON Finance ELIZABETH BARBER Social - - JEAN POLUTNIK Music - MAMIE KOSE Program DOROTHY PFEIEI-'ER Publicity - HELEN BOAIA Properites - CECELIA BALLUNAS Social Service - IRENE DRAPER FACULTY ADVISERS GERTHA WILLIAMS, Ph.D. ALMA ACKLEY, Ph.D. The Y.W.C.A. at Wayne University is a branch of the larger international or- ganization Of the same name and has the same purposes as the larger organization. During the past year they have helped sponsor two lecture series, one called 'cAfter College-What? and the other dealing with the problems of marriage. Among other projects have been an Intercollegiate Russian Tour, a traditional Hallowe'en party, a Christmas Vesper service and the annual Spring Formal which was held at Dear- born Inn. Polutnik Pfeiffer Ballunas Boata Barber Draper Pierson Allen Comport McClure One Hundred Forty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN One Hundred Fifty Honorary THE 1934 GRIFFIN ,IH A I. Q9 -1 Alpha Tau Beta ' -. . . . 'I Honorary Iournahshc Fraternlty ' x 'N OFFICERS President . . . . FRANK ANGI-:Lo Vice-President . STANLEY A. BURNS Secretary . . GEORGE BRENNAN Treasurer . . . . YVILLIAM MOUSER FACULTY JOHN WILCOX, Ph.D. MEMBERS FRANK ANGELO WILLIAM MOUSER HARRY OKREN1' GEORGE BRENNAN JOHN MULLEN Ammo TARIN1 STANLEY A. BURNS JULIAN Tomas LPHA TAU BETA is the honorary journalistic fraternity at Wayne University. Since its reorganization at the beginning of the school year, the group has been carrying on extensive activities in the interest of publications and journalism education here. The organization has expressed itself offlcially as being whole-heartedly behind the movement towards establishing a journalism unit as part of the Wayne University curriculum and has bent all its efforts toward that end. Mullen O Krent Tarini Burns Angelo Brennan One Hundred Fifty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN F riars EN students in the College of Liberal Arts whose participation in extra- curricular activities and whose evidenced loyalty to the University during their first three years of residence here are worthy of recognition are elected to the Friars, the Junior Honor Society. It has been the tradition in the past to elect seven Friars annually. These juniors meet occasionally with the Senior Friars and promote extra-curricular activities. This season only iive F riars were elected. They are: William Macomber, William Mouser, Herbert Spathelf, Julian Tobias, and joseph Wetherby. Herbert Spathelf was elected Prior. Spallielf Mouser Tobias Macomber Wetherby One Hundred Fifty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN The Kctryatides HE Karyatides, which was established in 1925, the same year in which the institution of the Mackenzie Honor Society took place, is primarily an honor society which affords a means of somewhat oflicially recognizing and acknowl edging the Women in each senior class who have contributed much to the development of the University's activities and other phases of its social, scholastic, and aesthetic features. Those who have been chosen for this honorary group are: 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 One Hundred Fifty-four Florence Wilson Elizabeth McPhail Vesta Sweitzer Mary Lingo Lucile Mason Romelda Wurm Mildred McDaneld Dorothy Philbrick Helen Aumann Jean Persons Mary Stephens 19.30 1931 1932 1933 1934 Elizabeth Hill Dorothy Irwin Margaret Mary Love Catherine Tremper Helen Baldwin Genevieve Philbrick Lois Trapp Lillian Hitchman Helen Tackabury Elizabeth Murphy Kathryn Bowman Alberta Stutsman Alice Baldwin Ruth Donald THE 1934 GRIFFIN Mackenzie Honor Society HE Mackenzie Honor Society was founded six years ago to honor those Seniors who have made outstanding contributions to the progress of the University through their loyalty and interest in non-academic activities. Election to this society is the highest honor a Senior can attain here. Members are chosen annually towards the middle of the second semester by a committee consisting of the members named from the preceding Senior class, faculty members appointed by the Dean, the president of the Society, and one other member selected by the President. Mackenzie Honor Society Members 1925 Newman Ertell 1930 Elmer Pollakowski Donald Leonard Carl Stotz Russell Lightbody John Battv Raymond Pillsbury George Bcgrkaw 1926 A. Cameron Cunningham Theodore English 1931 Clarence Wylie Emil Klewer A. S, Church Albert Litzenberger Victor Spathelf 1927 Kenneth Doherty Wesley Lindow Leigh Pascoe Edward Pigsins 1932 David Beauvais Fred Rasch Wilbert Neiman 1928 James Sheppard Carl Blomneld William Young Paul Lutzier Albert Zuber H- Alllinc FFUUH 1935 james Dunnigan Russell Smith Clarence Mumma 1929 Everett Pauschert Leroy Dues Malcolm Stuart Norman Stockmeyer 1934 Frank Angelo Herbert Spathelf Edward Spence julian Tobias John Lewis Charles Merckel One Hundred Fifty five THE 1934 GRIFFIN Pi Sigma Alpha National Honorary Political Science Fraternity Sigma Chapter OFFICERS President - - - ALBERT D. MATHESON MEMBERS IN FACULTY JAMES H. RUSSELL, M.A. JAY J. SHERMAN, Ph.D. BRYAN RUST, LL.B., M.A. CHARLES W. SHULL, Ph.D JENNIE DAITCH RUTH DONALD REGINALD HUMPHRIES PAUL LOVCHUCK MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY ALBERT MATHESON GEORGIA MILLS ALVIN RESKE JEANETTE SECKER Matheson ne Hundred Fifty-six Lovchuck Sherman Shull THE1934 GRIFFIN Sororities THE 1934 GRIFFIN Intersororiiy Council President - - S ecretary- Treasurer ETHEL W. B. CHASE, Alpha Sigma Tau Alpha Theta Sigma - Delta Gamma Chi - Pi Kappa Sigma ' Sigma Theta Delta - Sigma Sigma - Zeta Chi - OFFICERS - CARMEN DELANEY - - NIARGARET MARY GALLAGHER FACULTY ADVISERS M.A. EMELYN E. GARDNER, M.A. REPRESENTATIVES CARMEN DELANEY SALLY KRAETKE AGNES SMITH CAROL VAN SICKLE HELEN CIAGNE MARIORIE LYON MARGARET MARY GALLAGHER ETHEL WILSON BESSIE PIZARLLIAN BETHIA RAEPE MARGARET APPLEGATE JEAN DUNCAN EVELYN SCHXVARZ MONICA WHITE A. Smith S. Smith Tremper White Schwarz Wilson Raepe Van Sickle Kraetke Delaney Gallagher Mass One Hundred Fifty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN Alpha Sigma Tau National Education Sorority Theta Chapter 1933 SALLY KRAETKE - NOREEN COOPER - BETTY MARSH - VIRGINIA CHILDERS LENORE FILER - OFFICERS President - Vice President - - Recording Secretary - Corresponding Secretary Treasurer - - - MEMBERS IN FACULTY 1934 SALLY KRAETKE DOROTHY TRYON - FRANCES BUEKER BETTY MARSH FLORA CAMERON GERTIIA WILLIAMS, Ph.D. JANE BETSY WELLING, MA. FRANCES BUEKER OLGA BLAZOWSKY LILLY BOSII FLORA CAMERON KATHERINE CHAMBERLAIN RUTH CLARKE NOREEN COOPER VIRGINIA CHILOERS MYRTLE CORRELL DOROTHY KRENZ HELEN MASSEY JOAN CONKLIN LUCILLE LIXEY MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY CARMEN DELANEY ELEANOR DEVLIN MARIE DUNNIOAN LENORE FILER FRANCES HART HELEN JONES SALLY KRAETKE HELEN LESKO JANE McDoNELL PLEDGES BETTY MARSH NORINE KEMPTER MARY LOUISE SCHUCK MARGARET SHERWOOD SYLVIA SOROLLA DOROTHY TRYON HELEN TUCKER VIRGINIA WEBER RUTH SCHILLING RUTH SEDESTROM I KATHERINE HUNGEREORO r I-Iungcrford Chamberlain McDonell Sorolla Weber Lesko Conklin I ryon I Buekeq Bush Jones Tucker Hart Biazowsky Schuck Devlin Filer Marsh Kraetke Cooper Childers Clarke One Hundred Fifty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN Alpha Theta Sigma Local Sorority My OFFICERS President - - - - CAROL VAN SICKLE Vice President - - - VALERIE PIERPONT Corresponding Secretary - - MARY RUTH BAKER Recording Secretary - - ELEANOR SCHWERAK Treasurer ------ MARVEL WINIQLER MEMBERS IN FACULTY TIIELMA JAMES, M.A. HENRIETTA LANG KATHERINE CONOVER OLIVE GOODRICH, M.A MARY RUTH BAKER HELEN BERG DORIS BOLAND MELISSA CROSS CHARLOTTE HAGEN JOAN HANCOCK ANN ANDERSON PIIYLLIS DUQUETTE JUNE FIFE NANCY JEAN FINNY MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY BETTY KUIILMAN AGNES MCCARRON VALERIE PIERPONT DOROTHY SCHROEDER ELEANOR SCHWERAK PLEDGES MARY JANE FLANNIGAN LOUISA KOWALCZEWSKI DORIS PITTIBONE KATHRYN SAYRE ALICE SEEFRED AGNES SMITH CAROL VAN SICKLE ROSEMARY WALLACE MARVEL YVINKLER BETTY STAVER MARVEL SULLIVAN TERESE WASNIK Wallace Schroeder Cross Boland Kuhlman .Sieffcrt Smith Boher Pierpont Van Sickle Schwerak Winkler One Hundred Sixty THE 1934 GRIFFIN - 9391110 - I Delta Gamma Ch1 if 5 Local Sorority if Aw My OFFICERS 1933 1934 CAROL G. MAAS - President - - - HELEN CIAGNE WINIERED G. SMITH Vice-President - WINIFRED G. SMITH RUTH E. MCKIERNAN Recording Secretary - RUTH E. MCKIERNAN HELEN CIAGNE - Corresponding Secretary - - - KATHRYNE HENIG IRENE DUNCAN - Treasurer ------ IRENE DUNCAN CATHERINE TREMPER Intersorority Council Representative - MARJORIE LYON MEMBERS IN FACULTY M. THERESA PETERS, M.A. ELSIE W. THELJVIA BUIELOVV HELEN CIAGNE JEAN DAvIs DAISY DONALD NEDRA DRAPER IRENE DUNCAN IRENE FOSTER VIRGINIA FROST PHYLLIS GODDARD KATIIRYNE HENIG SHIRLEY BREITHER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY ELEANOR I-IILLIER PHYLLIS KULL MARJORIE LYON CAROL MAAS ANN MCKAY RUTH MCKIERNAN MYRTLE Mow MARCELLA POLI FRIEIJA ROEHL PLEDGES AUDREY RIGG TOWNSEND, M.A. MARGARET ROONEY DOROTHY SCHMIDT LUCY SI-:LDEN HELEN STEGE WINTFRED SMITH BETTY STARK RUTH TACKABURY ADELAIDE THAYER CATHERINE TREMPER ELIZABETH WIIARTON Roehl Thayer Davis Selden Siege Schmidt Brcilher Frost Poli Mow Donald M CKHY Goddard Tackabury KuII HiIIier Rigg Tre mper Stark Bueiow Mcliiernan Smith Maas Duncan Lyon Ciagne Townsend One Hundred Slxfy one THE 1934 GRIFFIN . . P1 Kappa S1gma K I Natlonal Soronty . OFFICERS 1933 1934 ETHEL VVILSON - President - VIRGINIA BAKER EVELYN FALK - - Vice-President - - - DOROTHY ALLEN - GRETA DENNIS LUCILLE VEUGLERS - IVIARION LAKIN MARGARET MARY GALLAGHER LUCILLE VEUGLERS - LOUISE SCOFIELD - Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary - Treasurer - - MEMBERS IN FACULTY CLARA CHAMPION, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY DOROTHY ALLEN VIRGINIA BAKER LOUISE BLANCHARO ELVERA DALQUIST GRETA DENNIS VERNA DENNIS EVELYN FALK MARGARET MARY GALLAGHER MARION GITSCHLAO MARY MARGARET JOHNSON MARY JOHNSTON MARION LAKIN CONSTANCE MARCOTTE EVA MCAIPEE JANE ELIZABETH MORSE VIRGINIA PORTER LOUISE SCOFIELD DORIS SHIMLIAN ETHEL SMITH VIRGINIA THORNBURG LUCILLE VEUGLERS ETHEL WII.SON PLEDCES - ELIZABETH BARBER Porter Thorubury Shimman Dahlquist Johnston Marcotte Dennis Utz Morse Gitschlag Allen McAfee Lakin Smith Veuglers Wilson Falk Scotleld Baker me Hundred Sixty-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN Sigma Sigma Local Sorority President - - Vice President - Recording Secretary Corresponding Secre Treasurer - - BLANCHE GODDELL, M.A. OFFICERS tary - - Qu, A , IQ. E E - JEAN DUNCAN NIERCEDES LANTZ - EMILY GULLEN VIRGINIA BURNS - - NIABEL GRACE LAWRENCE MEMBERS IN FACULTY ELIZABETH YOUNG-JOHN, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY MARGARET APPLEGATE FLORENCE BAGNALL AILEEN BOUGIITGN VIRGINIA BR0nERs VIRGINIA BURNS KATIIRYN BUSH RUTH CARTWRIGIIT JEAN DUNCAN ELEANOR GULLEN BESSIE MACCRACKEN ASTRIIJ JGIIANNESEN EMILY GULLEN ELOISE HULBURT DOROTHY IRWIN MERCEDES LANTZ MABEI, GRACE LAWRENCE ELIZABETH MCCALLGUGH VIRGINIA MACCRACKEN JUSTINE MASETH AMELIA MARX PLEDGES RUTII MORGANS JEAN POLUTNIK MARGARET ROGNER HELENE SHIELDS CAROLYN SLABY ESTHER SMEED SHERILL DEAN SMITH GERTRUDE VOELLMIG MARY MOREY ELAINE SWANSON Yoellmig Polutnik Applegate Johannvsen Gullcn Hulbert Cartwright Rogner Bush Bzuznall Boughton Brudcrs Morgans Slaby Wmchel Smith McCracken Duncan Lanlz Irwin Shields Crue Hundred Sixty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN 2. I T1 if-A' -I R ,ii igfiflfi 1933 EVELYN SCHWARZ - BETTY REULE - JEANE BROWN NONA BIATEN - MARJORIE DAWSON DOROTHY BROWN JEANE BROWN DOROTHEA BRUER HET.EN LOUISE CLINE MARJORIE DAWSON JUNE DOIIERTY DOROTHY EVANS JANE FOWLER MARION FOVVLER CATHERINE HARTIMIAN JEAN BRAIDVVOOD RUTH CLOSSON ALICE GOODRIDGE OFFICERS President - - Vice President - Recording Secretary - Corresponding Secretary Treasurer - - - MEMBERS IN FACULTY LOUISE W. CONKLIN, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY IQATHERINE HOFFMAN FRANCES HOLIDAY DORIS HOWE RUTH KIMBALI, ESTHER MARSHALL GRACE MAHAN NONA MATEN JANE MOSSER A LOUISE NOLAN f I BETH, PROOTOR PLEDGES Zeta Chi Local Sorority 1934 EVELYN SCHWARZ - MONICA WHITE - JEANNE BROWN , - NONA NIATEN MARJORIE DAWSON HELEN REED ,TEAN REITIIARD BETTY REULIE JANET RUNYEON EVELYN SCHWARZ ALICE SMITH MARION WAALKES MARTIIA WPIITE MONICA WHITE ' VIRGINIA KIMBAT.L JANE THOMPSON Mahan Doherty Hartman Kimball Cline Holiday Martha White Bailie Wheeler Runyeon Smith Proctor Howe Nolan Maten Brown Schwarz Reule Dawson Monica White One Hundred Sixty-four F rcziernities THE 1934 GRIFFIN Interfraierniiy Council OFFICERS , President - - - - - GEORGE BRENNAN Vice President - - - FRANK TAUGNER Recording Secretary - - JOSEPH WETHERBY Corresponding Secretary - - - JACK NEUN Treasurer - - - - ROBERT S. JONES REPRESENTATIVES Alpha Delta Psi .... JEROME BJEBER WILLIAM GLASS Arab JACK NEUN ROBERT THOMPSON Chega HAROLD PELL Epsilon Sigma , Gamma Phi Delta . Phi Alpha . Shahs Sphinx THEODORE BROOKS JOSEPH DORJATH ELMO LIDDEL GEORGE BRENNAN ROY M. OssMAN SAM WILLIS ELMER ELLIAS ROBERT S. JONES READ PEIRCE BURTON C. SMITH FRANK TAUONER Smith Liddel Peirce Dorjath Brooks Ellias . Qssman Thompson Ta ugner Brennan Jones Neun WllllS ne Hundred Sixty-six THE 1934 GRIFFIN Q Zi Arab - v a Local Frcrtermty Us OFFICERS President - - - - JACK NEUN Vice President - - - HOWARD PRICE Recording Secretary - - ROBERT DINWIDDIE Corresponding Secretary - KENNETH BERKAW Treasurer - - - - CARLETON PHILLIPS Interfraternity Council Representative ---- ROBERT THOMPSON MEMBERS IN FACULTY HARI,EY L. GIRR, M.A. BERT I-IUDGINS, Ph.D. WINTRED A. HARBISON, Ph.D. OLIN E. THOMAS, M.A. RUSSELL ARJSISTRONG WALTER BAKER RUSSELL BADOW KENNETH BERKAW BUEL BINDSHEDLER ROBERT DINXVIDDIE RIDGEWAY BURNS JACK Cox HAROLD JOHNSON ROBERT MITCHELL MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GEORGE HANNA JACK NEUN RONALD PATTERSON CARLETON PHILLIPS HOXVARD PRICE WILLIAM RHODES PLEDGES HALL SMITH BOYD STOCKMEYER STANLEY TAYLOR ROBERT THOMPSON HARRY WALLMAN RALPH PORTER GILBERT SILLIFANT ARTHUR SORENSEN Wallman Stockmcyer Patterson Rhodes Baker Balow Hanna Smith Armstrong I-Iudgins Bindshedler Taylor Thompson Harbison Dinwiddie Price Noun Phillips Berkaw Gibb One Hundred Sixty-Seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Ll e . . , . , : XS JN-S xilk 'K--, L -. 0 X Q President - Vice-President Secretary - Treasurer - Gawlier WILLIAM ASMUS JOHN BASHUR TED BROOKS KARL BROMEL CHARLES DASHER FRANK GHESQUIERE FRANK APPLEGATE ROBERT JONDREAU OFFICERS MEMBERS IN FACULTY Chega Local Fraternity - HAROLD PELL THEODORE BROOKS - JOHN BASHUR YVILLIAM ASMUS RUSSELL PIHURSKI EDWARD VAN HORNE, MA. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY HENRY GLOWNIAK JACK GORE LOUIS JAYVORSKI HAROLD PELL RUSSELL PIHURSKI PLEDGES PETER KAZERKO BRUCE LAWSON ALEXANDER PROCAJLO WVALTER SCHMANSKY BRUCE WARREN ARTHUR WENDLER RAYLIOND WENTE ANDREXV MAZOLTX GEORGE ZEGOLIS Gore Wendler Dashcr Jawurski Procajlo Chappas Warren Van Horne Bromel Glowniak Pihurski Asm us Pell Brooks Bashur ne Hundred Sixty-eight THE 1934 GRIFFIN 5,f Mlm l 4 Ria .,, - IA :mfg lx' Q55 RQ JDx Epsilon Sigma 15 Local Fratermty di R., M 223 QR E Q 'W' fs, 'Sli' P! 'ilk-taps! OFFICERS President - - - - JOSEPH DORJATH Vice President - - THEODORE HAMMEN Secretary - ERNEST KIRKENDALL Treasurer - - KARL NESS MEMBERS IN FACULTY ARTHUR R. CARR, M.S.E,, Ph.D. ERNEST B. DRAK ALBERT BIXBY DONALD BOUCHER GEORGE CONDASH JOSEPH DORJATII KENNE'FH DUNN ARTHUR ELGES THEODORE I'IA1VI1MfEN C. L. BIGOINS ROl3ERT PIKE E, Ms., CEE. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY RUSSELL HAZELTON ERNEST KIRKENOALL ELMO LIUDEL ROBERT BIACCLAREN ROBERT MEYER KARL NESS GEORGE PIPPER PLEDGES WLLLIAM A. SARGENT ROBERT ROGO LELAND SRIGLEY MERLE SULLIVAN JACK TAYLOR EARL TEMPLETON CARL TURNQUIST GEORGE V ANDENEERG Srigley Meyer Sullivan Pipper Taylor MacC1aren Condash Rogo Elges Templeton Boucher Drake Carr Sargent Heck Liddel Hazelton Ness Ha mmen Dorjath Kirkendall Bixby Dunn One Hundred Sixty-nine THE 1934 GRIFFIN 52. 5 ' - D .....,, Gamma Phl Delta Local Fraternity OFFICERS President . . ROBERT P. WEBSTER 5'6Cff?f11f'y . . ROBERT BOHAN Treasurer . . . KENNETH CAMPBELL House Chairman Social Chairman Membership Chairman DOUGLAS G. ANDERSON FRANK ANGELO RICHARD BELOTE FRANK BIRDSASLL MEMBERS IN FACULTY PRESTON H. SCOTT., Ph.D. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY FREDERICK BOYER GEORGE BRENNAN KENNETH CALIPBELL ROBERT F RY JACK MILDNER JOHN MULLEN ALFRED L. NELSON ROY OSSMAN . DAVID KEEVER ROY M. OSSMAN FRANK ANGELO ROBERT WEBSTER WESLEY RENTON GEORGE SAYRE LOUIS SEBILLE WILLIAM A. BLACK DAVID KEEX'ER FRED Poss GLENN TROFAST ROBERT BOHAN GEORGE MCKEOUOII GEORE WEBSTER PLEDGES ROBERT BODKIN LEE HASTINGS DONALD L1NDOw DONALD MCELROY ROBERT STERN OGDEN VENN I Mullen Poss Sayre Troiast Anderson Black Webster Nelson Birdsall McKeOugl1 McElroy Fry Mildner Sebille Keever Campbell Bohan R. Webster Scott Brennan Ossman One Hundred Seventy Kappa Alpha Psi National Fraternity THE 1934 GRIFFIN Id? flllllllllll 'W' xl m4,,,ac r,,1w ' rn. A wmnrw OFFICERS Polernarch - - - - - DELBERT LEE Keeper of Records H. STERLING WILHITE Keeper of Exchequer - - HENRY WALKER Stratigus ------- REID NIIOTLEY MEMBER IN FACULTY JOSEPH P. SELDEN, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY EARNEST MARSHALL REID MOTLEY WENDALL MURPIIY JOSEPI-I REID SIDNEY BOTIIWELL J. LAWRENCE DUNCAN DELBERT LEE JOHN LEVVIS PLEDGES BENJAMIN BLASSENCILE JOHN K. GRAHAM ALFRED JEFFERSON ROBERT JEFFERSON RUDOLPII JOHNSON EFFIE MASSENCILE HAROLD MEEK ANDREW PRICE BOOKER WILKINS HENRY WALKER ROBERT WALKER H. STERLING WILIIITE OAKES WHITE JOHN OATIS CHARLES SIMMS JAMES TAYLOR MARVIN WHITE R. Jefferson Simms Wilkins Blassengile A. Jefferson Price Taylor Irving Gillespie Oalis Fisher Wilhile Lee Motley Duncan One Hundred Seventyione THE 1934 GRIFFIN Local Fraternity President - Vice-President - Secretary - Treasurer - - Sergeant-at-Arms Kappa Chi OFFICERS HAROLD LIEAGHER - JOSEPH WETHERBY MEMBERS IN FACULTY STANLEY BRIGHT - WALTER SEIP CARL BLAND HOWARD DONNELLY, A.B., LL.B. FRANK L. KEMLIER, A.B. ALFRED L. NELSON, Ph.D. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY LAVVRENCE BAILTE CARL BLAND STANLEY BRIGHT EDWARD EDSTROM EDWARD EVANS RAY GUSTAFSON BENJAMIN GRUENEELDT ERNEST LUMLEY PLEDGES GEORGE ADAMS THEODORE BONAHOOM THURMIAN RILEY HAROLD MEAGHER FREDERICK MUNSON CARL NYSTIE JOHN ROSEVEAR ELMER SCHULZ WALTER SEIP JOSEPH WETHERBY RALPH HICKS LEON RAMSEYER Scip Wetherby Meagher Hubbard Gustafson Bland Evans Bailie Nystie Lumley Edstrom Grucnfeldl qlpley One Hunderd Seventy-two THE 1934 GRIFFIN Shahs Local Fraternity sk' 'ld' , I l a i OFFICERS Caliph - - - - ROBERT S. JONES Grand Vizier - WILLIAM NIELIETTA Katib - VINCENT AYRES Pasha - READ PEIRCE MEMBERS IN FACULTY HENRY G. HILKEN, MA, HAROLD E. STEWART, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY RICHARD KLEES ROBERT S. JONES KENNETH LEWIS VINCENT AYRES HAROLD BROWNE THOMAS EVANS PLEDGES DELOS BASSINGER JOSEPH MATTE WILLIAM NIEMETTA READ PEIRCE WAYNE WIEGAND ROBERT WINGERTER Evans Browne Wiegand Niemetta Jones . Lewis Pexrce We Hvfndrf fevgwffy-tlirgg I THE 1934 GRIFFIN vi iv 1933 BURTON SMITH - FRED PIGGINS - LINWOOD CULLENS AFTON SAUER - NEYVMAN ERTELL, A.B. LINVVOOD CULLENS ERNEST DEISS ROBERT EMERICK LOUIS FIELDER LYNN BEARDSLEE GORDON B01-IN SIDNEY DOREY RAYMOND HAINIMER OFFICERS Magistrate - - Vice Magistrate - Secretary - - Chancellor - MEMBERS IN FACULTY CHESTER F. KUIIN, M.A. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY FREDERICK PIGGINS AETON SAUER BURTON SMITH PLEDGES Sphinx Local Fraternity 1934 - BURTON SMITH - FRED PIGGINS - JAMES STROBRIDGE LINWOOD CULLENS WILLIAM V. SESSIONS, Ph.D. JAMES STROBRIDGE FRANK TAUGNER ROGER WILLIAMS RICHARD KULKA ROBERT MCLEOD MARTIN SPENCE Sauer Williams Strobridge TJQISS Emerick Fielder Tnuger Sessions Cullens Smith Piggins Fitzpatrick One Hundigd Sevenfyiiour THE1934 GRIFFIN HA serious obstacle to education is the ever-increasing mass of the university. The more we subdivide the better. But the more spontaneous the cleavage-the more characteristic the constituent groups, the more co- hesive each, and the more manageable. In our fraterni- ties We have even now a germ of marvelous academic potentiality. Our fraternities are American in origin and in spirit. -CHARLES MILLS GAYLEY. One Hundred Seventy-five 1.-,T ,:.,, Lb ,I V :A-Paar-, ,,,,,,u A - V ,-- .... . .Q , , l,?ELz ' css'----'r 1' .,1A, ' 5'-': ?':z,-.g,Q '32'1..i igL W 552-f.4f7QQ'l'-F FF' Yi' 0 ' 1 V w' ' -.1 'k4'g -,'-' 'f- I ' V 'gi-3k2k:.,.Ki ' ' , + y',x O c+?,.'f?:'1 leaf-'ff ffr rw- 4 l ' 'TP L 4:1 'f A W A , . 534:55 6 :jjgf , i'.Iiiiu::' Q .3-. 'nf 5. ' 1' 433. 1,9 Ni- ' .39 AAA' 7' ' J. msg ' 4' Q ' , 4 '- N L4 ima 0 NX L. f. ,Y 1 ,s ' E r ' ,Q 1 My ' -15-ii A , f 5 - ' ':'jx.3 1' 'V ', . .gl , . 1'?u,'L.:l 'NI 5 i ,-.l , V - , 11 119 ' M --wp A ww, fr A' J' - . .figlfljqs j, xg L , . QA xi 1 mi-, ?,5 lziljqaii, C YL K K L, If px li 4 1 F HIIRE 0 an , NMA , r-511111. 425, .Q ff: ' fn If-5 fifiiqliz 7 2 . V .- RQ:- E 1. ', 1 IA 1 x. W' .V I n .1 THE 1934 GRIFFIN HE A Year of the New Deal in Review fav THE ASSOCIATED Paessl Franklin Delano Roosevelt faced 100,030 tense citizens March 4, 1933, in a chill Wash- ington wind. It was inauguration day . . . his lingers touched the Bible . . . he was President. Banks were closed. Presses rolled scrip. The gold standard was fading. Hoarders were watched. Business stood still. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself . . . The new President promptly convened Congress . . . showered messages around its ears . . . asked for the most drastic peace- time powers in history. A year of action had started. Only a foolish optimist can deny the dark realities of the moment . . . Major messages in March: MARCH 9 . . . Control of banks . . . Ha continuation of the strangulation of banking facilities is unthinkable. MARCH 10 . . . Economy in government . . . It is too late for a leisurely approach to this problem. MARCH 13 . . . Beer . . . UI deem action at this time to be of the highest impor- tance. MARCH 16 . . . Farm relief . . . f'An un- precedented condition calls for the trial of new means to rescue agriculture. MARCH 21 . . . Unemployment relief through direct grants to states and through public works. MARCH 29 . . . Supervision of securities sales . . . Let the seller beware . . . Congress balked slightly, but voted him an almost free hand. The people took it calmly when the gold standard was abandoned. When beer came the W. C. T. U. warned, 'fbeer makes women fat.', The first case sent to Roosevelt was given to newspaper men. He urged repeal. Michigan voted first. Others rapidly approved his recommendation. APRIL 3 Message . . . Relief to farmers from mortgages . . . I seek an end to the threatened loss of homes. APRIL 15 . . .Relief to small-home owners. MAY 17 . . . I recommend two further steps in our national campaign to put people back to work. That was the NRA with its Blue Eagle and the S3,500,000,000 public works program. f'We cannot ballyhoo ourselves back to prosperity. Bonus marchers, grumbling over their lot, moved on the White House. They asked for money, he gave them work. He chatted with MacDonald of England to arrive at a clear understanding, and to 54 Hundred Seventy-eight nations he said, the way to disarm is to disarm. They applauded, continued talking and arming. Conservatives berated dictatorship . . . Roosevelt prayers were said . . . repeal speed was urged . . . churchmen attacked him . . . he received his first 21-gun salute. I have no expectation of making a hit every time I come to bat. JULY 17 . . . A milestone . . . textile code No. 1 was effective. He cautioned against overproduction, warned of the fall slump. Then came a running vacation on a bat- tleship. AUGUST . . . Coal strikes, inflation clamor, war in Cuba. Gen. Johnson, code dictator, was ordered by the President to quit work- ing so hard or be fired. He didn't . . and wasn't. SEPTEMBER . . . The coal code was signed, 8,000 pieces of mail arrived daily. bankers pledged support, NRA paraders had sore feet. The President did a little salt-watr sailing. OCTOBER . . . We have a long way to go, but we are on the way. He bearded Legionnaires in their Chicago den, said they should not be preferred over other citizens . . . laid a wreath on Anton j. Cermak's grave. Legislation pried at frozen banks accounts, chiselers were branded, retailers coded. Then gold . . . the RFC started buying newly-mined metal at higher and higher prices . . . Europe was mystified. Al Smith decried baloney dollars . . . others called them rubber . . . Secretary Woodin left his Treasury post in ill health. Roosevelt rejected the western governors' price-fixing plan, created the CWA to shift 4,000,000 from relief to employment rolls. Russia was recognized. Repeal was proclaimed. JANUARY . . . Congress opened, docile, willing. It heard with a few gasps his fiscal policy leading to a public debt of 31 billion by June 30, 19.35. Roosevelt in the closing months of his first year. . .said- It is our task to go forward. Asked-A 50-60-cent dollar, all the gold in the nation, a two billion exchange equalization fund . . . and got it. Pegged--The dollar at 59.06 cents, gold at S35 an ounce. Saved-Steve Zasillakos' Washington pea- nut stand. Observed-His 52nd birthday. Cancelled-Commercial air mail contracts. Said Now that we are definitely in the process of recovery . . . THE1934 GRIFFIN Looking Back BY JAY G. HAYDEN It is difficult to realize all that has happened to the American nation in the 12 months just passed until one digs back in an attempt to write a review of it. The mere record of legislative enactments, Executive decrees, plans and conjurings with prospective plans is staggering in volume and variety. Certainly no other American President ever did half so many things in a single year, and it is doubtful if one of them did as many things in all his four or eight years in office. George Washington, it is true, had the job of setting up the whole Government ini- tially, but the Federal Gov- ernment of that day was puny and touched the inicli- vidual citizen almost not at all, compared with the all- seeing, all-reaching and swift- ly effective organization that ' reaches over the Nation from Washington today. Woodrow Wilson's first term used to be cited as a record of remarkable accom- plishment, but the wiping out in practical effect of most of the democratic safeguards and devices that Mr. Wilson con- ceived--such for example as the Federal Reserve system and the anti-trust lawwhas provided a mere fraction of the Roosevelt performances. EVENTS CONTROL HIM As the year draws to a close, however, there are in- creasing signs of belief, even within the Administrations own circle, that the Nation cannot go on in- definitely motivated by the sort of seismical shocks which so far have been touched off whenever the sought-for economic recovery has lagged. From the beginning, in fact, Presi- dent Roosevelt has seemed to realize that he must, as soon as practicable, get the country back on a more definitely charted course, but each time he has essayed this some new turn of economic events, at home or abroad, has caused him to drag forth the pulmotor. Thus it was the unexpectedly severe defia- tion, produced by his bank moratorium and Government economy measures, that caused him in April suddenly to abandon the gold standard and sanction legislation authorizing currency inflation. Again, when a sharp drop in commodity and security prices occurred in july, he, produced the voluntary Blue Eagle, now almost as fiy-specked and forgotten in Washington as its pasteboard replicas which still hang in grocery, restaurant and laundry windows throughout the land. A third impending slump in early Novem- ber brought forth the CWA, God-given miracle for 4,000,000 families stranded on the reefs of de- pression, but so threatening to the soundness of Federal credit that within three months some less expensive device was being sought to replace it. Latterly even, the Presi- dent's best friends have been wont to inquire how many more expedients of this sort he may have in reserve, and how many more of them the Nation can stand. The Administrations own members have not hesitated to speak of what has been going on in America as a revolution They have missed no opportunity to condemn the social and ec- onomic order which reached its pinnacle in 1929 and to assert that it must be funda- mentally revised with a pur- pose of spreading more equal- Q ly the benefits of civilization. Certainly, in his first year, Mr. Roosevelt has done every- thing in his power to shake American busi- ness loose from its old-time moorings and to rid it of the barnacles collected in its long sailing through the seas of unbridled capitalism. OLD ORDER CHANGING Take for example his frank assertion that there is to be no more free use of money in America, that thenceforward wealth must dispose itself, either voluntarily or by com- pulsion, in interest of the greatest good to the greatest number. By one stroke of the One Hundred Seventy-mme THE 1934 GRIFFIN pen he wiped the gold clause, demanding pay- ment in yellow metal of a fixed weight and iineness, from existing bonds, and by another he revalued the gold dollars so as to put a paper protit of more than S3,000,000,000 in the United States Treasury. In a very real sense, his actions amounted to the taking of a vast toll from accumulated wealth in the National interest. But the shouts of confiscation from such disciples of the old school of Hlaissez faire as Senators Carter Glass and David A. Reed raised scarcely a ripple in the legislation hall where they were spoken. The year had seen practically the whole of American business and agriculture brought under Government control-in how great a measure its subiects just now are beginning to realize. Approximately 300 industrial groups, more than the Nation previously guessed it had, voluntarily have submitted themselves to codes fixing wages and hours cf labor and susceptible of Fixing other costs and prices as well. Farmers leaped at the proposal to reduce acreage in return for Government bounties, only to discover later that the Government has the power to compel crop reductions with or without bounty and that this is a power it is planning to use if necessary to check the ever-growing surplus. Which way now? Henry A. Wallace, Sec- retary of Agriculture, asked as the year neared its end. He pictured the Administra- tion as teetering between two courses, either to pursue the partially established National- ism to a point that would approximate the Fascism or Sovietism of European schools, or to lead the world in a return to the Inter- nationalismu which was the motive power of world progress before 1914. TARIFF SUPREME ISSUE Either the United States must bottle itself up and go about the business of compulsory redistribution of wealth in dead earnest, he said in effect, or it must take down its tariff ne Hundred Eighty THE 1934 GRIFFIN walls as an inducement for admission of Am- erican surpluses into admittedly undersup- plied world markets. That, as it appears, s , ax.. L , .,.. , .-. , '- :,Pf:'.gyN-7 if --iss' sire- . N A is the supreme issue ,' confronting the Ad- ize' ministration as it en- ters upon its second year- The most remark- -' able feature, perhaps, of the new dealfi 35 V so far developed, is the degree to which it is 1 . founded on the per- :1'- 1.1.,Q15g5,, ,,. 'iii sonality of one man. ktF5?5?52f'f?5553 rv- V iii- -111 V15 Franklin D. Roosevelt's political abilities were as underestimated be- fore he came into office as Herbert Hoover's were over-advertised. From the very first, the new President caught the imagination of the American people and of the world by his smiling cour- age and the bold directness of his attack upon the problems which he faced. Much has been said of Mr. Rooseveltls au- tocratic control over Congress, but he has had in fact no more means of such control than any one of his predecessors in the White House. Congress in no sense has abrogated the authority that in the past was sufficient to ham-string almost all of the Presidents. Only Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wil- son, of the more recent executives, were able on occasion to ride rough shod over the leg- islators. Roosevelt has ruled by the use of several novel devices. First of all, he has insisted on Congress doing one thing at a time. He has focused popular attention on his measures by sending them up separately, rather than in blanket messages. Couple with this his re- markable power of radio appeal-he has tak- en to the air no less than 20 times during the year for explanation of his policies to the people-and you have the chief reasons for his success in dealing with the legislative branch. President Roosevelt has won also because his is the only consistently confident voice in Washington. He always gives an impression of knowing exactly where he is going, and why, He has been singularly successful in his relationships with the press, this because he has been singularly frank and open in all of his governmental processes-and plays no fa- vorite. The President again and again has disarmed johnson the Congressional and journalistic opposition by frank admission of his own mistakes, and the shortcomings of his Administration be- fore they were discernible to outsiders. Thus he ordered investigation by the Department of Justice of charges of graft in the CWA and the War Department before there was a word of criticism in Congress. Even more significant, he admitted the weakness of the CWA as a permanent policy, before his opponents had dared to criticize it aloud. Congressmen, steeped in the idea that no politician would dare to take a Govern- ment prerequisite from his constituency, once it had been established, gasped when the President proposed to wind up the CWA as they did when he moved so drastically to reduce veterans' compensation and the sal- aries of Federal em- , ' '- -'E533-25:4E1I1EIE225E1E5E2E2E3E3E1E5' DIOYCS as of his first ws in Office' It was said that no 111f'f'I'1'c'1' Government head could l ,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, tum back from 11 some of currency innaiion, once ir was started, and that the very ex- Eiizfilifmiif istence of the extraor- dinary inliationary g powers, granted him by Congress, would force him to use them. But Mr. Roosevelt did re- trace his infiationary steps, when he re-established the gold stand- ard a few weeks ago, and he did this with surprising ease. Class A TACTFUL IN FIRING He has shown a remarkable facility also in dealing with the differences that have arisen within his Administration circle. For example, he eased Prof. Raymond Moley out of the State Department without losing his support and friendship. He similarly got rid of Sec- retary of the Treasury William H. Woodin, who had proved a decided misfit, with no visible hard feelings. A large number of Treasury officials have been shifted since Henry Morgenthau, Jr., took over direction of the department, but among these only Prof. O. M. W. Sprague publicly proclaimed his disagreement with the President. Sprague's former connection with the Bank of England made his criticisms helpful to the President, rather than injur- ious, in the popular estimation, and it is suggested that Mr. Roosevelt may even have One Hundred Eighty one TI-IE 1934 GRIFFIN MICHIGAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY The Teacherir Friend Offers you a complete line of life insurance including endowments and annuities, also: Group Accident and Health Insurance for members of Teacher's Clubs. All policyholders are entitled to a free annual health audit by our Medical Department. ALEX J. GROESBECK PRESIDENT L. T. HANDS VICE-PRES. AND GEN7L MGR. HOME OFFICE 2988 East Grand Blvd. DETROIT, MICHIGAN STUDENTS As you grow older you will appreciate more and more the reliability of the things you see ADVERTISED OUTDOORS I OUTDOOR ADVERTISING Throughout MiCIZigd7Z,5 Largest Trading Areas One Hundred Eighty-two provoked the professor deliberately to the point of hot retort. The President stepped out to swat Demo- cratic National Committeemen who were playing on their connection with the Admin- istration for personal gain before their activ- 55,,5,i,55,3,5,E,,,,,5,:., ities had been broached by the Republicans. From the beginning he elearlY proceeded en the i5E:,:,1,.,1 assumption that what 2 : 2 5-':,:j:,:,:,:,, : v if illfiii 'N the country needed and desired was swift action. It is doubtful if the . . .2 zfzfirfr' cw.51g5553:jE35:3:5:3:5:55g:3:- American people In all 5:33. -V-gtg: 4ll... aj513:2111215j1l2j2j5121s:51-jazz' E 3-Av '? of their hiSt0ry have had a gloomier awakening than 011 the morning Of Saturday, March 4, 1933, ,:. :,: ,,:,,5.:,,,:5,5. when this second Roose- velt rode down Penn- sylvania avenue to take the oath of office. For more than a year banks had been popping at frequent intervals, each with its accompaniment of business failures. Begin- ning with the closing of all banks in Michi- gan by proclamation of Gov. Comstock on Feb. 13, like general closings had spread from State to State until, on the night of March 3, an announcement by the New York clear- ing House that no banks in the metropolis would open March 4, signalized the closing of every bank in the country. Nor was the complete collapse of the bank- ing system the only evidence of disaster. More than 15,000,000 employable persons were joblcssg a vast number of citizens were threatened with ejectment from their homes because they had no money to pay rent or interest on mortgages, prices of farm com- modities had fallen to the lowest level in his- toryg wages of those industrial workers still employed were daily sinking lowerg relief funds of States and cities, and of all private agencies virtually were exhausted. Cold, and hunger stalked the land. STROKES HARD, SWIFT Most discouraging of all to thoughtful cit- izens perhaps was the apparent impotence of the Federal Government to deal with these conditions. All winter long President Hoover and a lame duck Congress had wrangled, with no result, except to defeat the rather timid relief proposals which the President suggested. Specifically every attempt by Hoover to reduce the top-heavy bureaucracy and its Comstock THE 1934 GRIFFIN crushing burden of expense had been defeated by the combination of Federal employes, vet- erans, and other special groups that were living off the Federal Treasury. The Govern- ment was increasing its debt at the rate of 550,- 000,000 a week. To a nation listening with bated breath, be- lieving that this new President offered the only hope of escape from complete and final dis- aster, Mr. Roosevelt 1 spoke his brief inaugural, He sketched in broad lines the plight of the country and its need for relief and he stated frankly that he would ask dictatorial powers at the first sign of delay by Congress in deal- ing with the situation. He assailed the finan- cial leaders of the country as the money changers, who have Hfied from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. Within an hour after this address was com- pleted, the Cabinet, mostly of men unknown to the county, was installed and a few hours later came the President's first momentous official act, declaring an official bank mora- torium, to protect against further withdraw- al of deposits, and stopping all exports of gold. At the same time, Congress was sum- moned to meet in special session on March 9 and when it did so assemble it passed the President's emergency banking act in a single day. The essential features of this bill were a stringent limitation of domestic gold circula- tion and a virtually complete control by the Treasury over all Federal Reserve member banks. It provided that banks of proven solvency might be re-opened without re- striction and set up a system of conserva- tors to reorganize banks which were sus- ceptible of reopening on a limited basis. The RFC was authorized to purchase pre- ferred stock in Federal Reserve member banks, and the regional Federal Reserve banks were given increased power of cur- rency issue. Subsequently the provisions for assistance by the RFC and the Federal Re- serve were extended to banks operating ex- clusively under state authority. Since the bank holiday, the Treasury has rc-opened 5,200 out of 5,600 National banks, with deposits aggregiating bF17,000,000,000, and approved the reorganization plans of 300 lckes BERKELEY SQUARE at the DEARBIIIIN INN HERE is a man at Dearborn Inn, who prefers to live in the past. You will find him in the immacu- late and shining room that is its kitchen. He is our Chef, and his passion is the recreating of those wonderful old New England dishes invented by your great, great grand- mothers and ours.H0w good they are! OAKWOOD BOULEVARD Opposite Ford Airport Real New England Inns A4.s.4.LA. Demand It of Your Dealer ALASKA ICE CREAM Served Wfberevcr Quality Counts THE STROH PRODUCTS CO. Cadillac 5840 One Hundred Eighty-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN BEAUTIFUL one to four- room housekeeping apartments, furnished or unfurnished. Try our Coffee Shop-famous for 51.00 dinner. For your afternoon party, din- ner or dance, beautiful private dining rooms and ballroom are available. Phone Madison 9500 for menus and prices. We awe!! uv. :Ast - AT WOODWARD 'The bm ham: adducts in Ddmif ' M. V. MACKINNOX, Manager ij--'Fil flbsifif? MQ ,Q - D. D. SPELLMAN STUDIOS PHOTOGRAPHER 4838 WOODVVARD AVENUE cocumam D010 -Nutr: Wausau FOR over a third of a century we have enjoyed the confi- dence and patronage of De- troit's foremost citizens. O Sittings made in the studio of home. One Hundred Eighty-four others. It co-operated with state bank of- ficials in arranging the reopening of 9,500 state banks, and in concert with the RFC has strengthened the capital structure of 5,700 banks by investing near- ly a billion dollars in preferred stock, capital notes and debentures. and with the Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration, which on Jan. 1, insured 54,000,000 de- posits each to the extent of 232,500 Under the President's order reduc- ing the gold content of the dollar, the Treasury 1 became the custodian of I all the gold in the coun- try, enhanced to the val- pmkins ue of S7,0l8,000,000- the largest stock of gold in the world. TRADITIONS SMASHED Vastly more startling to the country than these banking measures was Mr. Roosevelt's second proposal to Congress-the so-called 'feconomy bill, calling for cuts of nearly f5S00,000,000 in veterans' compensation and 55200,000,000 in pay of Federal employes. Here were the two elements of voters which traditionally had wielded greatest pol- itical power. Through 15 years no single ses- sion of Congreess had failed to vote an in- crease in compensation for one or the other or both of them. President Hoover had sought in vain to obtain minor reductions and, as result of the agitation created by his efforts, a huge majority of Congressmen had come into office in the election of 1932 pledg- ed against any such reductions. And here was Mr. Roosevelt, in almost his first official act, not only challenging these elements simultaneously, but proposing re- ductions far beyond anything that had been previously even so much as suggested. It is doubtful if anything in this early stage of the Administration did so much to inspire confidence, at home and abroad, as the speedy victory which Mr. Roosevelt won on this economy issue. The third legislative measure of Roosevelt was the legalization of 3.2 beer, which also was adopted by both houses in record time. Although it is doubtful if they were so in- tended, the first effect of the Roosevelt pol- THE 1934 GRIFFIN icies was to increase the already severe de- tlation of prices and Wages. This was partic- ularly true of the bank- ing bill, which permitted only about half of the banks to open immedi- ately, and of the econ- omy bill, which checked the flow of funds from the Federal Treasury. The continuing defla- tion produced the first serious crisis in the new Administration when, in mid-April, gold hoarding 4:-:-:-:-:-:':'- . -.-.-.- Z ,,.g:g.::::5:5:3:g:: .' :gg assumed Such propor- 1?25i3iii?E5i2iliQiEEisg a iiglgli 'fizri 50115 that the Pfwidffnf 5ilf1i1fifi5:1f1555721:-fISI2'f5EE5E'4. .......,,,..... . ,. 1-E2E1?i2E1E'i'f':'1 -1 N.'12rE1ErE1E1E2Eiii?QE555153535252525553gi3EgE3E3E5i5E5E5E525E5E1 1 ' I:E5E5E5EfE5E5E5E5E5E2E532EiE2EIEIEQIEIEIEIEIEF 'gZ1i:1:f:1:i:i:i:-.- -:7:i:f:1' 3:7:Q:f:2:Q:5,5.E:2:E:f:5:32-gf 12- 12i2E1E1E151E1f 1255:g:g:g:5:3:5:5:3g53.Q:5. i t? V 2:3114 , was forced completely to stop specie payments at home and abroad and to ask Congress for further measures designed to increase credit, Couzens TURNS SILVER PERIL The supreme danger of the situation thus created arose from the overwhelming demand for currency iniiation which was sweeping in from the country. On April 17, a careless- ly drawn bill, calling for the 16 to 1 coinage of free silver, had failed in the Senate by the narrow margin of 43 to 33 and pre- dictions were general that another bill pro- viding for both silver and paper inflation, which Senator Elmer Thomas had said he would call up for consideration, would pass both houses. President Roosevelt met this crisis by sud- denly announcing his support of this latter inflationary measure in a somewhat revised form. Indeed, he added to it by proposing that authority to devalue the gold dollar also be included. As a saving feature the Presi- dent asked only that he be empowered to use any or all of the pending inflationary proposals, provided that the authority to use them was made discretionary. That was the beginning of what has been one of the most 'striking features of this first Roosevelt year and, better than any- thing else, perhaps, it illustrates the Presi- dent's political sagacity. The sweeping grant of inflationary pow- ers, coupled with the stoppage of gold pay- ments, served admirably to check deflation and tum prices and wages upwards. The business boom of the following three months was so pronounced as to cause serious alarm for fear that it was moving too rapidly, this despite the fact that the President has used ROOSEVELT TAILORS CLEANERS, DYERS AND FURRIERS J. PLOTKIN Fur Coats Remodeled-Ladies' and Men's Suits Made to Order. 617 W. WARREN AT SECOND BLVD. DETROIT THE UNION PAPER AND TYVINE CO. Distributors of Quality Printing Papers, Industrial Papers and Twines. 551 EAST FORT ST. Cadillac 8600 DETROIT, MICH. Ulllodern Laundry Service is the Perfect Servant. BANNER LAUNDERING COMPANY A Service to meet every need, a price to fit every purse. 2233 Brooklyn Ave, Cherry 7200 ARTISTS, MATERIAL ARTHUR F. HOERAUF AND COMPANY 525 WOODWARD AVENUE DETROIT, MICHIGAN Cass-Warren Drug On the Campus LUNCHES AND FOUNTAIN SERVICE Day and N ight One l-luridred Eighty hve THE 1934 GRIFFIN If you want to live longer, eat .wa food THE ORIGINAL ea good grotto PHONE CHERRY 1370 Grand River at Griswold DETROIT, MICH. Aneo p FURNACE o1L I LAFAYETTE 4500 BURNS HOME SANHTARHUM DETROIT TEMPLE 1-1630 303, East 1-1631 Kirby Lermz Modern Bzzrbering. School established 40 years. Write for attractive terms. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE 559 Michigan Ave. DETROIT TASTY LUNCHES-PROMPT Sanvxcrz FIRESTONE DRUG CO. PHARMACISTS Phone Columbia 4495 S001 Woonwaim Ava., Con. WARREN DETROIT One Hundred Eighty-six no one of the inflationary devices with which he has been invested. More important, perchance, the adoption of the Thomas bill satisfied the inliationists demand in Congress. It served, in effect, to give the President a nine months breathing spell in Wl'llCll to dC8.l l ,, ,: - K:i:se-, with the crucial currency .,.. situation both at home ' 23 and abroad. Throughout the sum- ,,..,,.... ,. mer and fall, Mr. Roose- ,gg velt continued to talk in an inflationary tone. His Supfeme act in this fe' gard was his rejection of the proposal of the Lon- don Economic Conier- ence to Stabilize Cur1'en'5Yv with the startling pro- nouncement that the United States wanted a Morganthau dollar which does not vary greatly in terms of commodities and which a generation hence will have the same purchasing and debt-paying power as when first established. COLD STATUS PUZZLES This pronouncement seemed to indicate the Presidentls adherence to George F. Waren's proposal of a commodity dollar. Through the late summer and fall this impression increased rather than diminished. Prof. Sprague, James Warren, Dean Acheson and others of the more conservative Treasury officials, one af- ter the other resigned because they could not go along with the Administrations financial trend. Not until Congress once more was on the job and threatening new inflationary mea- sures did Mr. Roosevelt again act. In Jan- uary, he transmitted his special message ask- ing legislation to authorize the devaluation of the gold dollar at least 40 per cent and not exceeding 50 per cent. The intiationists gladly wrote this bill into law but they have been wondering ever since just what they have accomplished in the way of con- crete iniiation. Currency experts say the United States today is back on a gold standard only slightly less stable than that which prevailed before last April. The principal change is that the weight of gold in the dollar has been sub- stantially decreased. The experts point out that American currency today has more gold-backing currency than ever before in history and that the amount of money in THE1934 GRIFFIN circulation has not been increased. In much the same way, Mr. Roosevelt made popular demand, as expressed by the . . majority in Congress, the ww, -, , ::,:.L..:,A.,9,gg basis for drafting his 1'i 'ff'i-f f other measures to deal with business depression. The early weeks of the Congressional session saw the rise of a strong movement in favor of legislation to limit hours of work and to curb sweat shop practices. The Black 30-hour week bill passed the Senate, 53 to 30, on April 6, and the similar Connery bill was reported favorably by the House Committee on Labor two days after. Wallace Enlargement of the Black-Connery propos- al to provide also for minimum wage stand- ards was proposed by Frances Perkins, Sec- retary of Labor, and a new bill, largely fol- lowing the Perkins suggestions, but with a virtual embargo on foreign products not produced under equally favorable labor condi- tions, was reported to the House on May 10. EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM It was in the light of these pending Con- gressional measures, which almost certainly would have passed had he remained silent, that Mr. Roosevelt projected his own un- employment relief program on May 17. In a special message, he asked, first, for a 553,300,000,000 appropriation to finance Fed- eral, State and local public works projects. Secondly, he asked that 'fthe Congress pro- vide the machinery necessary for a great co- operative movement throughout all industry in order to obtain wide re-employment, to shorten the working week, to pay a decent wage for the shorter work week and the pre- vent unfair competition and disastrous over- production. Government action was necessary, the President said, to prevent cut-throat under- selling by selfish competitors. Opposing out- right repeal of the anti-trust laws, he said the public interest nevertheless would be served, if under Government authority and guidance, private industries are permitted to make agreements and codes insuring fair The GRAYSTQNE America? Most Beautiful Ballroom fs! Where music and entertain- ment combine to give perfect enjoyment. .sf Woonwluzn Avia. AT CANFIELD DETROIT When You Think of FLOWERS Think of Breitmeyefs Broadway at the Park Bood-Cadillac Hotel . .. 7881 East Jejerson Ave. O Phone CHerry S380 One Hundred Eighty-seven THE1934 GRIFFIN ,An Invitation competition, subject to dispensable safeguard of power in order to meet check by the in- a rigorous licensing .4 ..., ,. .,.,. 1,--,f.,, Our Educational Department cor- dially invites Student Classes, Par- ent Teachers' Associations, Church Societies, Womens' Clubs and all those interested in home economics and dietetics, to visit our Dairy, where under a guide they can in- spect the various operations in the plant and Laboratory. These educa- tional tours include a lecture. Ira Wilson 6- Sons Dairy Co. g if 'lm mil. in K mis airy umpang X-,, luiliwllall' ,V ,L Ks. QSSUNS xx! Himsa- W-at f -nr. ...N rn , , PYRAM ID OF Q UALITY Plume Euclid 7020 for appointment We supply 34.000 bottles of milk daily to school children in the public schools, DOMESTIC LINEN SUPPLY 81 LAUNDRY CO. 3800 Eighteenth Street DETROIT ri! WE FURNISH CoATs NURSES DRESSES APRONS PILLOW SLIPS I-IoovER APRONS SPREADS TABLE LINEN SHEETS COVERALLS DRESSER SCARFS TONVELS OF ALL KINDS ALSO Prompt and Economical LAUNDRY SERVICE Curtains-Shirts-Blankets A Specialty TEMPLE 1-6700 One Hundred Eighty-eight QW '-'-52 E -2', --::': -,':'1:':2 535152:-, rare cases of non-co-op- -jg5g5g5g5:z:zgf'f, -f'-1 eration and abuse. i Thus were born the . . PWA and the NRA. The fi. A ' ' bill embodying them E vi passed the House, 325 to ,V Q1.,4afj5,f,,.3g 76, 011 Maj' 26, and the 'ggi-'j'. V5-v,:.j ...fy g, Senate, 58 to 24, on june iiiiiiii' Q 9. The only substantial A amendments were the limiting of the licensing power under the NRA -... ., 1 I 'F .:f to one year, authorizing 1:22553 :-. i control over the oil in- E5EEEfE5EfEfZf ,gg if dustry, and giving the Hull President power to im- pose embargoes on foreign imports if these were found to be necessary. The agricultural adjustment act, which parallels the NRA as a means of industrial control, was even more a conglomeration of Congressional opinion. The President broach- ed the subject of agricultural relief on March 16 in a message asking generally for a mea- sure designed to increase the purchasing power of our farmers and the consumption of articles manufactured in our industrial communitiesg and at the same time greatly reduce the pressure of farm mortgages and to increase the asset value of farm loans made by banking institutions. The President described the farm bill as a new and untrod path.' 9 FARM AID DRAFTED The bill presented to Congress was drafted by a conference of SO farm leaders and, like the currency bill, it embodied just about ev- erything any of these could suggest. In a further message, submitted on April 3, the President recommended legislation to pro- vide for the refinancing of mortgage and other indebtedness, and the combined mea- sure finally was signed by the President on May 12. Thus were born the Agricultural Ad- justment Administration and the Farm Cred- it Administration. Other elements of the industrial machine this first Roosevelt Congress set up were the Emergency Railroad Administration, which has operated under the direction of Joseph B. Eastman, former Interstate Commerce Commissionerg the Home Loan Act, provid- ing S2,ZO0,000,000 for relief of city mort- gages, the bill for development of the Ten- TI-IE1934 GRIFFIN nessee Valleyg the CCC program of putting men to work in forest camps, and the ap- propriation of il5SO0,000,000 for direct unem- ployment relief. Other important acts of this Congress were the insurance of bank deposits, up to 5S2,500, jan. lg Federal control of securities issues, and submission of a prohibition repeal con- stitutional amendment, which since has been ratified by three-fourths of the states in rec- ord time. While legislation predominated in this first four months of the Administration, it by no means accounted for all of the activity in Washington. President Roosevelt almost daily was making headlines in other directions. Dur- ing April, for example, there occurred the series of visits by foreign statesmen, begin- ning with Premier Ramsay MacDonald of Great Britain and Eduard Herriot of France and ultimately including representatives of most of the leading nations. When these conferences were initiated, Mr. Roosevelt no doubt had high hopes of the success of the economic conference which was scheduled to convene in June. He was think- ing in terms of removing tariff barriers, settling war debts and stabilizing currencies. He summoned the foreign statesmen for the purpose of discussing these things. just about the time Mr. MacDonald, the first of the visitors, arrived in Washington, however, came the domestic crisis which forc- ed the United States off the gold standard, and by this development the whole course of the Administration was changed. By the time Congress adjourned virtually all of Mr. Roose- velt's international economic aspirations had been thrown out of the window to make way for the Nationalistic development which was to hold sway for the remainder of the year 1934. HIGHLIGHTS MANY Other highlights of the first few months of the Administration were the second bonus march on Washington, May 9, and the in- vestigation of big business by the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate, un- der the leadership of Ferdinand Pecora, which reached its climax late in May with the ap- pearance of J. Pierpont Morgan and a midget, who sat upon the august Morgan lap. Mr. Roosevelt's handling of the bonus marchers offered another illustration of his political sagacity. I-Ie received them figura- tively with open arms. He provided them with food and shelter, receiving their repre- M .Ma New Styles in Custom Hats EACH ONE AN INDIVIDUAL CREATION 47 ,lOhn R CLifford 0722 THE INN at the FOX AND HOUNDS Telephone Birmingham 2026 BLOOMFIELD HILLS FRANCIS H. LEGGETT AND COMPANY Manufacturers Importers and Distributors of PREMIER Foon PRODUCTS 1947 E. Kirby Detroit, Mich. GLEANER LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY INSURES MEN-WOMEN- CHILDREN Modern Policy Forms-Constructive Service Established 1894 Phone Madison 2500 DETROIT, MICHIGAN One I-Iunderd Eighty-nine THE l934 GRIFFIN Michigan Division Revere Copper Brass Incorpomted CHARLES W. THOMAS VICE-PRESIDENT 5851 W. Jefferson Ave. DETROIT, XIICHIGAN FRANK W. KERR CO. The W0rld's Chemical Resources at Your Door Chemicals for All Industrial and Scientific Purposes. Laboratory Supplies and Equipment for Bacteriologists, Chemists and Manufacturers. 422 W. CONGRESS CADILLAC 4241 sentatives at the White House, and ended by either absorbing them in the Civilian Con- servation Camps Or supplying them with rail- road tickets bacl-: home. An attempt to re- vive the bonus as a Congressional issue was overwhelmingly beaten in the Senate. The President similarly slid over the crisis on the war debt issue, which occurred on june 15. He accepted token payments, made in silver, by Great Britain, and a few other of the nations, thus technically keeping these debts alive. Another group of countries, headed by France, did not pay at all. The cdyntrolling factor throughout the summer was the rapid improvement in bus- iness. Whatever may have been the basic causes, the country was coming back at a great rate. In June, wheat crossed the dollar mark, approximately double the price it sold for in February, and prices of cotton and other commodities were advancing apace. President Roosevelt, at the first peak of his popularity, concentrated on organization of the huge industrial machine which Congress had placed in his hands. He named Gen. Hugh S. Johnson to head the NRA and George N. Peek the AAA. Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, was handed the job of reorganizing the oil industry and al- Kia '- X y V Wfbsnzn. HAIL JUST CROSS CAss AVENUE to HOTEL WEBSTER HALL for A SATISFYINO LUNCH OR DINNER IN THE COFFEE SHOP AN INVIGORATING SWIM IN THE POOL OR EOR YOUR CLASS, FRATERNITY OR SORORITY DANCE, BANQUET OR OTHER SOCIAL FUNCTION One Hundred Ninety 4. THE 1934 GRIFFIN loting the 3S3,300,000,000 which had been pro- vided for public works. Henry Morganthau, Ir., drew the highly difficult job of funding farm mortgages and a board was set up to do the same job for the city householders. As many people had predicted it would do, the business boom over-reached itself. In late July occurred the iirst severe crash. Nearly 10,000,000 shares were traded on the New York Stock Exchange in a single day and leading stocks dropped as much as 22 points. Collapse of the wheat price was so severe as to force the Chicago exchange to close. Prices of cotton and other commodities tumbled in almost equal proportion. BLUE EAGLE SOARS It was at this point that Roosevelt set the Voluntary Blue Eagle on its Bight. Based on the assumption that it would take too long codes for all Amer- upon employers of voluntarily to put of reduced working to put into effect speciiic ican industries, he called every class and degree in effect a iixed schedule hours, with no accompanying reduction in wages. Thirty-iive hours a week was pre- scribed for manufacturing industries and 40 hours on all other classes of work, excepting agriculture. INVESTMENT SERVICE DEPENDABLE-FRIENDLY- COURTEOUS Charles A. Parcells 81 Co. 2lfIe111Imr.v Defrnit Stock Egrclzangv 539 Penobscot Bldg. Rand. 3770 BESSIE BOWMAN'S Fashions Buy on my Credit Plan Your Graduation Wardrobe at Moderate Prices Dresses 556.95 and up Coats and Suits 20947 discount Grand Blvd., cor. Cass Trinity 2-2363 Open Evenin LARGE and SMALL BALLRCDOMS .ai for all 4 i School, Sorority and Fraternity - gi 1555 5 s Dinners and Dances. z if 1. h l,'. j' , A1 ---0 - '- , rg :-- In , ka.,r,i:.? I . . . N , 4-P 'gl 3 Delightful Parlors for Bridge Parties f1?aZi'E1i 'li -I 9 - ' f fli . I 211161 TCSS. .?.v1i- I, - Q 3 1. 411 .A..e..:q wir 1 N . .l 5:1 ' '2 4 ' ' ' ' ' . - 2 . Auditoriums fo1.Concerts and Theatricals. When planning your next Social Function phone for our prices- Temple 2-7100. Oi.. The MASONIC TEMPLE One Hundred Ninety-one THE 1934 GRIFFIN WHITE TOWER for Good Things to Eat A Delicious Hamburger 5 cents HBUY A BAGFULH A. E. MALLARD Specialized Plzamzacezzticrzls DETROIT MICHIGAN Othee lfurniiure Office IlILlClllIlCS Quality Printing BUCKLAND VAN VVALD USED OFFICE l'IQllll'MI'IN'l' Cherry 2113-2114 425-433 Shelby at Larned DETROIT Travel by Bus G R E Y I-I O U N D The World's Largest Motor-bus System. Offers the Lowest Excursion Rates At All Times. For Complete Travel IJ1f0l'771!llii071 Call or Write. GREYHOUND LINES Tuller Hotel Depot-LAfayette .5420 One Hundred Ninety-two The Blue Eagle was created as an emblem of co-operation, which only those who com- plied with the President's request would be permitted to display. A popular boycott of those employers who failed to go along with the plan was openly talked of by Gen. John- son and his aides. Compliance boards were set up in every community and the public was invited to 'tcrack down on the non- conformists and chislers. The Blue Eagle undoubtedly did provide a decided stimulation in employment, despite the fact that it was only partially lived up to, and it produced industrial dislocations in many instances which nullilied its benehts. Its greatest single effect perhaps, was to hast- en the enactment of specific codes for all of the larger industries. By Jan. 1, it was claim- ed by General Johnson, SO per cent of all manufacturing and commercial enterprises in the country were included under specitic codes. Coming as it did simultaneously with the slump in farm prices, the Blue Eagle proved particularly unpopular in rural communities. Its effect, it was claimed, was to very greatly increase prices of the things the farmers had to buy, with no commensurate increase in their income. By October this criticism had became so pronounced that the Blue Eagle was lifted from all cities of 2,500 population or less, and from that time forward also the at- tempt on enforce it on small employers in the more populous communities distinctly slackened. When the original agreements ex- pired January 1, no formal renewal of them was demanded, although employers were ask- ed to continue the conditions imposed on pain of losing their right to display the Blue Eagle if they refused to do so. RECOVERY BOGCED Despite a tremendous activity by the NRA, the AAA and the PWA, and an outpouring literally of billions from the RFC in relief of business enterprises and bank depositors, by November 1, recovery again had bogged down. Four million heads of families, it was calculated, still were unemployed, and, with cold weather just ahead, relief by state and local agencies and private charities was prac- tically exhausted. It was at this point that Mr. Roosevelt produced the CWA, most radical of all the expedients he has resorted to. He announced that thenceforward doles would be ended and a self-sustaining job at not less than 21312 weekly wage would be supplied to at least THE 1934 GRIFFIN one member of every family. Beginning Nov. 15, he said, 2,000,000 men would be put to work and by Dec. 15 the full 4,000,000 em- braced in the program would be employed. This program actually was carried into ef- fect on schedule with a result that by the week following Dec. 15 it was costing the Federal Government 575,000,000 a week-an annual rate of nearly ElS4,000,000,000. The effect of this huge outpouring of Gov- ernment money was electric. Communities which in November seemed to be sinking back into the pit of depression, a month later were experiencing a boom. Mr. Roose- velt's popularity grew apace until in the Christmas holiday week he received more letters of commendation than ever before had flowed into the White House in any full month in its history. The obvious problem of the CWA, however, was as to how it could be permanently paid for. In January the President faced the task of presenting an annual budget and even on basis of the then existing appropriation, which was sufficient to carry on the CWA only until Feb. 10, it was calculated that !i510,000,000,- 000 of Government securities would have to be marketed before the end of the fiscal year in June, 1934. Already it was apparent that the task of providing work with Govern- ment funds on anything like the scale con- templated in the CWA would be insuperable. President Roosvelt announced his program for unemployment relief during the coming year. The CWA, he said, would be disbanded completely by May 1. In its place a series of measures, designed primarily to differ- entiate between urban and city districts, has been provided at an estimated total cost of about one-third the CWA rate. The commencement of the 1934 crop-sea- son obviously will mop up a large number of the unemployed in rural districts, PWA em- ployment, already provided for in the 353,300,- 000,000 appropriation last spring, is rapidly increasing, a real stimulation in private in- dustry, such for example as the manufacture of automobiles, is helping the job along. Gen. Johnson declared early in March that the NRA had provided a permanent increase of 3,000,000 in employment. IOB PROBLEM DIFFICULT President Roosevelt is giving much thought to this problem of permanent unemployment and its solution ultimately may be on the lines of Senator Robert F. Wagner's bill, pro- posing to set up a system of unemployment insurance, paid for in large part by a blanket tax on all industry. Theme Covers NOTEBOOK FILLERS USED BOOKS THE BOOKSTORE and Book Exchange of lho Colleges Room 27 Thompson Products, Inc. 7881 Conant Detroit, Michigan Ask for CULT RE Pipe Smoking Tobacco CII111fJlif17Zt.7Zt5' 0 f Larry S. Davidow One I-tundred Ninety-three THE 1934 GRIFFIN Rheaume's Restaurants Serving Excellent Food at Unusually Low Prices. I ustant Service Store Nearest University 4825 Woodward Ave. Between Hancock and Warren WAGN ER Factory Branch: 5535 Woonwfxnn Ave. Phone: Temple: 2-4800 Hydraulic and Jllechanical Brake Service VACATION TIME IS SNAP SHOT TIME Ser' wx for your Plwlogmphic mfvds before s1m1111.er fvueation. DETROIT CAMERA SHOP 325 State St. Cadillac 23.30 FIFE ELECTRICAL SUPPLY COMPANY 541 EAST LARNEU DETROIT, MICH. Wholesale Electrical Supplies One Hundred Ninety-tour On the side of agriculture, the works of the Administration also have not been an un- mixed success. More than fii200,000,000, col- lected in processing taxes from the consumers of foodstuffs and poured back in bounty to the growers of wheat, cotton, corn and other commodities, has not been sufficient to bal- ance the inequality between farm prices and the prices of those things the farmer is com- pelled to buy. Relief of farm mortgagors so far has been so slow as to be largely abortive. The huge surplus of farm commodities, in excess of the domestic market for them, still remains one of the most crucial national problems. With all of his other manifold activities, Mr. Roosevelt found time to work out the long-standing difference with Russia. Diplo- matic relations between the United States and the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics were resumed Nov. 16. Since then an 311,- 000,000 Government corporation has been set up to promote trade between the two nations. Repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment was linally accomplished on Dec. 7, and this, with the previous authorization oi 3.2 beer, is calculated to add at least 55S00,000,000 to the Federal revenue in the coming year. Mr. Roosevelt began the present session of Congress with the startling pronouncement that the National debt may be expected to reach the staggering total of 3i.l2,000,000,000 in 1935 and that S10,000,000,000 must be borrowed in the remainder of the present fiscal year to meet extraordinary expenses and bond maturities. Since then, however, an offset of S3,000,000,000 has been provided by the gold devaluation process. HEADED RIGHT During January, the President presented his currency revaluation program and secured its enactment. He asked that home loan bonds be given the backing ol' the full faith and credit of the Government and urged rati- ncation of the St. Lawrence Waterway treaty. Since the lirst of February he has trans- mitted messages on sugar quotas, stock mar- ket control, Government regulation of tele- graphs. I-Ie has placed a ban on political lawyers and canceled the air mail contracts, proposed a process of long-range planning of river and harbor developments and decreed a new deal for the Virgin Islands. The sum total of events during the year unmistakably has represented improvement in business conditions. Unemployment has de- creased by some millions, farm prices are ap- proximately SO per cent higher than a year THE 1934 GRIFFIN ago. Deterioration of the banking system has been checked and, with the commencement of a system of deposit insurance January 1, con- Hdence in the banks has been restored. Money in the past two months has been coming out of hoarding at a great rate. All of these things tend to ease the oflicial, as well as the private mind. Elmer H. Buchner Advertising MOI STO RMFELTZ-LOVELEY BLDG. Fine Bargainx in slightly mn! Port- able and Standard Tyjzewrilers. All Makes Sold, Rented or Repaired Special Rental Rate to Students DETROIT TYPEWRITER CO. Emma L, Stepke, Mgr. .319 STATE Sl. RANno1,1'1l 4102 NATIONAL TWIST DRILL 81 TOOL CO. 6522 BRUSH STREET Madison 1580 There must be a reason why Wayne L'ni'uez'sity students prefer COLLEGE GARDENS RESTAURANT CASS AT FOREST Come rmfi Self for Yourself Its the Washdays not the Birth- days that make women look 50 at 40. Sani-Wash Laundry Co. Temple 1-6200 A COMPLETE LINE OF TYPEWRITERS S01ll?'RCIltCll'RClI2liI'Cll ALL WORK flL'ARANTEED S1 El,'lAl', DISFOITNT TO STUDENTS FETTER'S TYPEWRITER 3455 Cass Ave. TEmple 1-1030 M clzigmfs Largest, Excluxivc FA ULTLESS CURTAIN LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS Faultless Always CURTAINS-DRAPERIES-LAMPSIIADES -1737 ELMIIURST HOCPARTH 1010 One Hundred Ninety five CASS MOTOR SALES THE 1934 GRIFFIN' Wayne Automotive Dodge-Plymouth Dodge Trucks 5800 CASS AVE. C5 blocks soulh nl' Iloulc-vurdb Phone Mad. 5800 One of largest Service Stations in Detroit. Svc our Used Calrs-All Makes. We trade-IE.Z. Terms. 'Vi-mplc 1-5252 Gasoline-Lubricants The Har-Olds Colnpany Clncorporatcclb Six-OLDSMOBILE-Eight DISTRIBUTORS SALES AND SERVICE llzivid l'. llnrr. I'rc-Sidcnt 4444 Second Blvd.. Dctroil, Mich. 193935 University Q ' Directory : These FIRMS are near GThe Calnpus' Patronize Tl'l0l11! HUDSON TERRAPLANE S.x1.15S AND SERVICE Sales and Guin-rail Ufliccs 4462 Woodwziril Ave. CO' Service and Parts A tl , I 431 NVvSt Cnnlielil . n wrlzvc BUICK ANI: PONTIAC SALES ANI: SERVICE 5752 Cass Avenue DETROIT, MICH. Let 115 introduce 0'zu'seL'Ues to you and your families with our complete line of New Buicks, Pontiacs, and Service Equipment. SALES AND SERVICE Rowley 81 Zimmermann Columbia 1648 5066 Wooowfxnn AVE. DETROIT Columbia 1300 AARON DEROY MOTOR CAR CO. DISTRI BUTORS Phone Temple Z-4770 CHANDLER CHEVROLET COMPANY ...I .-. Il.. fCH EVRQ.LEIf' . , - , NEW and USED CARS All Makes of Cars Sm'vicr'fl and- Rejnzired. 4453 CASS AVENUE Opposite Convention Hall One Hundred Ninety-Six THE 1934 GRIFFIN LUG ssnvlce Eunnnvlna cormnv ana! fls czjqjkalecl organziszialziofzs 1.11 Qelroztf 1.3 slajgcl CHIC! K2Cfl41:f7!JQClf0 assfsl HI 1L0fJI'0fJCU Clf1011 azzalfvrocluchon oflgzargoolg r!es1Qnecl lo czcccnl oi-zfzrzakfgz, IIIICIQIIICIHOIZ cmcj eafucrl !1cznJ!1'ng, more Man 15 cuslomaay 111 Cluflexzl wgzcafzuszs One Hundred N ine l'y-seven THE 1934 GRIFFIN Scholarly Boolcs, Foreign Language Boolcs, Magazines, Text Books, School Annuals, Fine Brochures in studied taste .... these are products of the Ann Arbor Press, at Ann Arbor, Michigan Perhaps the reader ol: this annual can be served in the planning and printing ot a time book or publication. One Hundred Ninety-eight
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