u
I
9
If-
2
~ill ~~lve~ter
leo H, lintor~ Alma l. Wil~on Jame~ H, lintor~
THERE ARE CAMPUSES and there are places where buildings of enlightenment stand. Both the friendly excursionist and his host who dwells midst these environs will place in the first category-the institutional location known as the Utah State Agricultural College . Commanding attention, the Northern Utah collegiate area is established on an alluvial plain overlooking sustaining Cache Valley.
ha~ an~on~ tol~ ~ou thi~ ~torij
'l~ii~~~~:'ND'NG College Hill via the highways or the several paths, you, ~
captivated by the natural splendor adorning this arena for educational uick glance to the south reveals a contour to the geologist or engineer, perspective to the artist, and merely a spirit-stirring scene, clearing nnels between examinations of every student. An about face preost entrance to revered Old Main with its vine covered walls. have seen these
t hings will tell you so, and more, too.
strik fantasy. inspir.atiorlll. ._ tI who believe this to tell you of a summer's day their campus is the original turning point of a young man;s fancy; and you may wish to affirm these declarations. To establish the authenticity would only require: a morning pause before the leafy Home Economics entrance to ask a fellow gownsman if he had received the Thursday Life this morning; or, to cross the green acres to the Dairy for a pre-lunch cone or a noonday milk, cheese, crackers.
' ti~
true ~OIlle ~eo~le
\
WITH EQUAL PRIDE they will contrast the quaint and idle turret atop building and barn with the modern doors of the Common's. The agrarian monuments recall the foundation of the College and remain the center of a highly developed research movement concerned with Utah State's specialty-the broad field of Agriculture. Your Logan host will mention, also, the careful planning necessary that provides a constant chain of new blooms and bright foliage throughout the seasons; whether it be flaming-red "Don't Pick Me's" in front of the Main, or large white berries on a barren bush adorning the Engineer's entrance at Christmastide. Tall, stately trees; nearly a hundred species, vividize in life size the standing record of half a century of architectural and landscape whimsy.
ijOU
~
~~~t th~
truth
CONTRAST in century-different construction design is the par-
~,:;;~"" -::'la..ctor which may be applied to any building. Either being especially TTIII""",,,-napted, two of the newer campus additions have a variety of
~~~
of the Women's Residence Hall may be doubled when housing
~:fions are at a premium b y having the gracious dorm-dwellers use just
tly constructed Rural Arts building north of No-Man's Land has housing nearly all conventions, too. The Common's building serves addition to its regular load of student and faculty receptions.
-
THIS SECTION of people classified as Mr. Bigs and home ecers who +read Commons' halls; the tanned and wholesome Ag men-each will acclaim the campus facilities
for
their
particular
needs. Student offices where politicians frequent, the friendly domiciles of Dean Croft and Hendricks where unsuspecting rushees take the final step; double offices where is Student Life and its feeble crew; judging pens where future farmers start careering, where the annual F. F. A. convention centers, laboratories under the sun where a larger apple, healthier berry emerges from-this area serves multiple-fold.
a Ma~e 17
l~r ever~thin~
thi ~ i~ a ~aIll~u~ of tranition DOES THIS LEGION of learners do things of tradition 7
Indeed they do.
Should you be a freshman on registration day, you don the greenling cap and start expressing class spirit that makes strong the class of '44. The campus pulsates as you hello the passing c1assman, although his name you may yet not know.
On
April's stormy day you may plan to endure "A" Day or its inevitable punishment-the fire hose. Your dollars may have been idle in a secret sock awaiting the day when their number would be voluminous enough to make a Senior jacket your property. Perhaps as a skunk you may have spent the pre-Homecoming week preparing an organization float.
YOU MEET at the Blube for a coke. YOl:l stroll past the Smart down the Hill, across green acres to the amphitheatre, and back up to the hollowed step on Old Main's south entrance. At the West Commons you ask if the student body president is around. You observe the oldest tradition that there is no smoking on the
campus.
The
closely-packed
underclock area between classes, the creaky floor in a tucked under art department, the quiet rendeveous on sun.s truck Commons terrace, an engineer making sophomore observations through a "gun," the Keep 'Em Flying truck waiting for future wing winners-this is college unity At Utah State, campus is the thing. Mell.owing,
19
traditioned
campus.
VARIED INFLUENCE on attending Aggies is exerted by each institutional structure. The Institute -
a scene of Sunday devotional services, reguiarly scheduled daily and other
ping-pong tables, rialism
while
co
AT A MAD PACE the Mechanic Arts Building races on, specializing men for the nation's mechanized forces, the nation's communications an d pilot divisions.
The
Animal and Plant Industry buildings, meme ntos of a crises gone by, houses a nhus men and botany brothers-while watching vicious intramural battles or reviewing the C oast Artillery unit. High in the Tower the big bell quickens the pace of th e tarrying Aggie and at high noon chimes ring forth a discordant " Utah State, Our Utah men and
time our~ i~ a beehive 01 nelen~e 21
EVERY CROSS-QUAD
traveler
who ventu¡res from the Old Main toward the East not only sees, but senses the Library. There's something about its trim lines superimposed against the mountains that
speaks
to
the
observer.
And it will beckon to you, too.
WIDTSOE HALL TYPIFIES graciousness in that almost constantly an instructor is loaned, either to the great beyond as was the capable Linford-or to the government for freedom. Strange, indeed, has been its mission, guiding new campus additions on the north and being aware that the future may bring supplementary structures-erected for scientific research, aiding all-out effort.
the
~am~u~ i~ 22
the
thin~
HERE IS THE AGG IE campus-bursting with beauty and tradition; resplendent in Autumn color, immaculate in winter snow, roma ntic with spring flo ra. Here you will find happiness, as you discover that labor is life. As you wend your way through this landscape you will catch the infection of industry. This is where they, of Utah State, start a career and they tell you they LOVE if.
23
a~~ie ~re~inent i~
elmer
~. ~eter~ on
UTAH STATE'S GENIAL PRESIDENT, Dr. Elmer G. Peterson, has a smile and a nod for every Aggie on the campus, whether the most activity-conscious senior or the newest freshman. His friendly greeting typifies his close personal connections with faculty members and students alike . Logan's early morning risers often see President Peterson out on his daily morning walks which sometimes take him far up Logan canyon.
SERVICE TO THE institution, state and nation is the story of Dr. Elmer G. Peterson since he was named president of the Utah State Agricultural College twenty-six years ago. As an officer in the National Association
of
Land-Grant Colleges,
President
Peterson's contributions to the educational field have been innumerable.
O N DECEMBER 8, 1941, the United States entered World War II, America's second war since President Peterson became head of the college. Few Aggies will ever forget th at morning-crowded into chapel, excited by the thought that this was history in the makin g as they listened intently, first to the words of Presid0nt Peterson and later to Presid ent Roosevelt.
At that time, Presi-
de nt Peterson reiterated his faith in democracy and
America's abiilty to
"come
th roug h." Meanwhile he has given his full SU pport to the role of the college in prepa redness aC+ivities-officer's training, both ar my
and
navy,
Civilian
Pilot Training
progra ms, defense training schools, and the im portant "Food for Freedom" program. 27
FIRST ROW: Olof Nelson, E. H. Street, E. E. Monson, Mrs Minnie W. Miller, Hyrum Blackhurst, Fred M. Nye, C. G. Adney. Second Row: Theodore L. Holman, Charles Redd, James S. Prestwich, Ray E. Dillman, Henry 'Peterson, Leon Fonnesbeck
D0
ar ~
o t trll~tee~
IMMEDIATELY UPON THEIR appointment and reorganization, Utah board of trustees delved deeply into the problem of shapollege curriculum to fit the needs of the nation's war effort. hter side, several board members were always able to find . busy lives to attend the social functions of the college. many of the members became quite well known to students.
28
OPERATING ON A VERY-MUCH reduced budget, the board enlarged the training facilities in the industrial arts division, employed fifty new instructors and office workers to conduct this mechanical training program, established a primary radio training center to serve several hundred U. S. Navy and Mari ne trainees, and added numerous courses in other related fields. Under board supervision the new Rural Arts building was completed and opened for use to campus convention visitors. This was the board of trustees -
C. G. AD NEY'S 17 years of service as a member of the college board of trustees, state legislator, and farmer organizer was climaxed when he was appointed president of t he board in 1941. As a farmer he has developed a knowledg e of agricultural problems in Utah that has come to be almost indispensable to the guid ing of Utah's major ag ricultural education institution.
responsible, interested, and foresighted guiders of U. S. A. C.
RUSSELL E. BERNTSON'S duties as executive secretary and secretary of the Board of Trustees range from doling out pay checks on the tenth of every month to serving as an ex officio member of practically every committee on the campus. A hard man to get around when it comes to financial matters, "Bus" nevertheless, has many friends.
29
AS ASSISTANT executive secretary and manager of the college bookstore, Eric Johnson allayed student suspicions when he supplemented the badly depleted studentbody fund chest with a sizeable grant of profits from Utah State's nonprofit bookstore. But even he turns traitor to his pet hobby-the bookstore, and makes frequent trips to the "Bird."
Olre~t th ~ DR. N. A. PEDERSEN, popular and witty dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, retains a strong connection with the English department by teaching courses in Shakespeare, Chaucer, Children 's Literature and Creative Writing.
PROBABLY THE BUSIEST man on the campus during the past year has been George D. Clyde, dean of the School of Engineering , trades and industries, who has supervised the expansion of the industrial arts division to almost ten times its original size.
SUPERVISING ACTlVIT1ES in "the oldest school of commerce west of the Mississippi" is the job of Dr. W. L. Wanlass, dean of the School of Commerce. Co-Chairmaning the lyceum committee is another of his many duties.
DR. R. H. WALKER holds out in spacious offices located on the first floor of Old Main. His is a dual capacity of overseeing the important School of Agriculture and directing the Utah Agricultural E x per i men t Station.
30
~~
v ~ n ~~hool~
DEAN PAUL M. DU NN develops a more personal conta ct with his students in the School of Forestry than the average college dean. Under his guidance the School of Forestry has grown in a decade from a single department to a th riving schooi.
DEAN OF HOME ECONOMICS, Christine B. Clayton capitalizes on a friendly smile and the remarkable ability to make people feel at ease in her presence, to attract a host of friends from without the School of Home Economics as well as within.
UNDER THE WATCHFUL SUPERVISION of Dr. E. A. Jacobson, the School of Education has established an enviable record for placing its graduates in the grammar and high schools of the state. The highly practical vocational education and teacher training divisions come under Dean Jacobson's authority.
EVERY MONDAY AFTERNOON the important Deans' Council convenes in the Board Room where the deans of the seven schools, the dean of men and dean of women and ranking departmental leaders d iscuss informally matters of administrative policy. Aside from these weekly gatherings each of these serve on one or more faculty committees, assignments that sometimes require much time. Several of them still carry large teaching assignments that draw even more heavily upon their time. During the fall and winter quarter freshman orientation series each of the deans in turn lecture to the freshm en on the opportunities offered by their respective schools. Some freshmen maintain it is a course to find the driest speaker, but as a whole the lectures are very informative. The deans' offices, concentrated in Old Main, are scenes of intense activity each afternoon as ma jor stud ents come in for consultations concerning proposed courses of study, filling graduation re quirements and other general advise, often departing from education problems to problems of fin ances, social life, and extra-curricular work. This intimate contact with their students requires that the dean's personable, patient, and understanding. Utah State's seven deans fill these requirements.
31
Service.
EVERY STUDENT MEETS registrar William Bell, or his efficient staff, whose main duties are the conducting of quarterly registration activities and distribution of report cards.
POLITICAL SCIENTIST, Milton R. Merrill, conducts the correspondence study department. and directs the summer session between handling his classes.
FROM THE OFFICE of Wilford D. Porter flows a continuous stream of journalistic endeavor. Porter is classed as tops in class room and behind typewriters.
WILLIAM PETERSON'S long years of experience as an irrigation and geology expert have prepared him for his present difficult job as D ire c tor of
the
Extension
32
"MINISTER OF PROPAGANDA and public works" is an apt title for C. Lester Pockock, director of the department of public relations; he dishes out college news and jobs to needy students. PRESIDENT'S ASSISTANT John C. Carlisle doubles as head of the elementary education department. His efficiency in these capacities and in the class room is felt by all who know him.
~
hi ~ t
~~
t t ~ otti~~r~
ON THESE PAGES are the faces associated with the inscriptions on the plates of so many Old Main office doors. This is the machinery that makes a college function smoothly. The appearance of grades on indexed cards, the story in daily papers about USAC activity, the alumni contributions to homecoming, the Summer Session bulletins -these are
by no
means spontaneous occurrences.
Behind all of these happenings is the work of some official and his staff.
Daily these men continue to accomplish
their work with the result that the school day-lengthening into the school year -
proceeds without a hitch.
POPULAR, witty, strong-when-necessary Dean of Men Jack Croft from his Commons domain doled out housing suggestions, sterling advise, and powerful propaganda on the "right" way for house parties and student conduct. A model man's man, Dean Croft had the solid support of his male charges.
NATIO NALLY KNOWN in connection with the fiel d of vocational ed., Professor L. R. Humphreys held the USAC Alu mni Association preside ncy, hot-seat of faculty extras. DEAN OF WOMEN, Caroline B. H;;dricks resides in the Residence Hall, there keeping an eye on the dorm darlings and the other women's activities. Unafraid to frankly explain her stand on coeducational etiquette , Dean Hendricks deserves a large share of credit for" goodly" campus conduct.
AMBITI OUS youn g Alumni Executive Leona rd McDonald had the colossal job of maintaining contacts with the thousands of Aggie alumni and editi ng the Alumni Quarterly.
33
Ihrou~h ~o~ular ~on~ent the~e leauer~ DROPPING THE GAVEL on Wednesdays, 4:30, is Wayne Morgan to officially open the weekly session of the Student Council. At hand is blonde Marjorie
Paulson, serious-with-business v. p.
Keeping the official score Secretary Elaine Nelson offers alternately conservative and radical opinions. The routine council business seldom causes excessive debate; excitement in the Dansante-budget situation and "legality" of Junior sweaters brought the only sway from the norm of calmness. On the pleasure side of politicians' life are the functions and visits he is "obligated" to take in. No exceptions, Utah State councilmen entertain and visit other Utah college aldermen, attend student functions as officials and hold a few get-togethers of their own. Holding p. o. boxes, Parker's after hour O.K., keys to quiet luxury of council room, USAC student officials enjoy only a few extra privileges; far qualifying them for these privileges is the work which these successful politicians (with exceptions) do. Their title of public servants is exactly as the handle indicates.
:E-PRESIDENT Marjorie Paulson
SECRETARY Elaine Nelson
WAYNE MORGAN-Handsome, industrious, easy-tomeet, super-subtle wit-was kingpin in USAC student body organization. With his infectious drawl, Wayne managed student business, developed college relations, maintained high standing in School of Engineering. Backed in elections by the powerful Ag-foresterengineer combine, Morgan became recognized for his fair dealing, adept handling of touchy budget problem, and sincere interest in student socials.
34
LEFT TO RIGHT: Joe Anderson, Harold Steed, Marge Paulson, G10rge Lacey, Manning, Wayne Morgan, Stan Anderson.
Dic~
Harris, Elaine Nelson, Mel
he l~ ~t u~ent ~OVernll1ent UTAH STATE'S OWN version of democracy is embodied in the student council, consisting of the three student body officers, three one-year councilmen, three three-year councilmen and three faculty advisors, making twelve in all. Most of the business transacted at the council's weekly confabs is of a routine natureappointing student managers, drawing up the much-discussed budget, laying plans for weekly student body dances and socials, and developing relations with neigboring high school and college student bodies. Dean of Women Caroline B. Hendricks, Professor A . N. Sorenson and Professor V. D. Gardner, the faculty advisors, were on hand for most weekly student council meetings: Dean Hendricks-ever vigilant for the coeds' rights, Professor Sorenson -spicing up the sometimes dry sessions with his flowing wit, HENDRICKS, Sorenson, Gardner
Professor Gardner emulating sage advice based on a background of personal 35
participation in student administration.
ON THE WEEKEND of October 25, Aggies -past and present-stirred up the annual homecoming excitement. As the days drew near, tension grew in student circles-tension that found outlet at the one organized hall rally and the dozen impromptu affairs. Undercurrent during the week were the elaborate plans for house decorations which resulted Friday night in honors for the Alpha Chi's, 'chi O's , and S.A.E. In charge of the celebration were alumni chairman Glen Worthington and Joe Anderson, three year councilman, who prodded student enthusiasm and shaped the entire celebration; Joe earned Student Life' !; "Student of the Week" title. When the final curtain had fallen on the '41 homecoming, weary Aggies dragged home-planning a late Sunday sleep and a few hours of cramming to make up for the week's frivolity-each inwardly content to have taken part in such a successful event. 36
,ti ~ ijour nat ~ WI th utah
~tat~
GLAM O ROUS, but later engaged, Jean Crockett
THOUGH THE WINDS BLEW and the rains came
became Miss Utah State while Andrus Hansen and
and the Romneymen lost a heart-breaker to the
Afton Carter, finalists, rivaled certain other campus
Colags, Aggie spirit remained high-verified by this
figures for "beamer" title.
Chi 0
"southern exposed" shore.
IRONI CALLY lPRESAGING the loss of the afternoon 's
WITH MALICE toward only those who started the
football e ncounter was the Sigma Nu's "eat 'em up"
tradition, fatigued engineers spent after-dance hours
cow; cows just aren't carnivorous.
white coating Logan thoroughfares
37
~ll~li~ation~ ~olln~il ONCE A YEAR the college publications council grabs headlines when it makes selections of editors and business managers for the three student publications. However, its functions, if not functionIng, are continuous throughout the year, consisting of making worried applicants more worried by continuously postponing appointments, serving as arbitrator for chance student libel cases, and generally advising the publishing of Student Life, Buzzer, and Scribble. Key faculty man on the council is College Editor Wilford D. Porter, chairman, who is adept at hunting ducks as he is at scoring journalistic successes.
Faculty colleagues of Porter are Dean N. A. Pederson and Dean
Paul Dunn. With voices on the council from stu dent ranks are: publications chairman, Student Life and Buzzer editors, Student Body prexy.
LEFT TO RIGHT: Jerry Olson, Dean Paul Dunn, Wayne Morgan, Wilford E. Porter, Stan Anderson, Sam Bailey. Absent: N. A. Pederson.
CONNECTING LINK between Publications Council and Student Council is Stan Anderson, who insists or:'! the mid-fix "P." Stan, the littlest big man of student politics, revitalized the Blue book, compiled the Student Directory. Noted for droll comments and absence from council meetings, Stan was perhaps the busiest journalist we have yet seen on the campus.
38
STUDENTS trouped to the Dansante before hostilities began.
HARRIS MAKES a heroic appeal for student support.
STUDENT LIFE reported the story and argued the case for the Student Body.
THE COMMONS became a night spot along with National Guard Armory.
firou ~in~ ~tunent an~er
namante
~onHi~t
UNDOUBTEDLY THE MOST violent expression of student ire came early in the year in the Dansante affair. Traditional scene of college activity, the Dansante broke with the moguls of the Social; arrangements when it failed to accommodate with lower rates the Socials arrangers who had suffered a budget reduction. Aroused Dick Harris, Socials chairman, came before the student body on January 16th and laid the case entirely before them. His dramatic plea for student support of the college's action brought sympathetic reaction from the student body. Students watched with interest the ensuing argument between Lundahl of the Logan "pleasure palace" and Student Life writers who boldly upheld the students' cause. With both elements failing at compromise or even hearing, the Dansante became a thing of the past for official student body functions.
To the Commons,
the Armory, the Logan Hi Gym turned the dance committees for scene of their celebrations. The power of united student opinion for the first time in a decade became evident. Councilman Harris was largely responsible for the success which the year's social activities enjoyed after this Dansante violence. Through his management and often actual work, dance sites were always in readiness. Harris also with aid of the BYU social chairman arranged for the May 13th salute to Utah State by Glenn Miller, top national dance band.
., /.~
...
•
Wlnner~
- _..
at winter ~arnival
TO SUMMIT VALLEY trouped a hearty gang of Aggies on Saturday, February 28, to compete and be sunburned at the annual Snow Carnival. Competition centered around two main events for both men and women-the downhill and slalom races. Sigma Chi led by veteran Mac Maser schussed away from the field by placing first in down-mountain, crosscountry, and slalom. Heading the feminine field at the end of the scoring was Alpha Chi Omega, who nosed out Lambda Delta Sigma for the honors.
Foresters, in another close
battle with the Engineers were able to come out a few points ahead to register the best score for the intramural departmental league. Individual honors were taken by Mac Maeser, SC; Loyal Seeholzer, Engineers; Marge Kropfli and Doris Wallin skiing for LDS and ACO respectively. Joe Anderson again came in for arrangement bouquets; even the 2S0-odd spectator sportsmen acclaimed the celebration as tops.
40
STUBBER in a pose that proved quite untypical of the winning Alpha Chi's. JUBILANT SIGS descend upon Humphreys cross-country winner, with coats and congrats. THESE OFFICIALS watched the finish line to record times and points. Upon their accuracy depended the ~
t
r.... ttV
*, /J
1
~I
t f
scores.
¡t. L
._, .)
I
- - -~
SIG EP snow model which ca ptured highest honors in taking the Fletcher cup. This phase of snow activity preceded the ca rnival two weeks and was held on the campus.
worl~-renowne~ arti~t~
on
a~~ie ~ta~e
ANOTHER GLIMPSE of the world's ranking fine artists was provided for collegiates and Loganites in the 1941-42 Lyceum series. World-renowned performance of the finest in ultra entertainment were played on college and tabernacle stages. Again acclaiming the works were all those who attended; again conspicuous in their absence was a vast part of Utah State student body.
JAN CHERNIAVSKY, Russian pianist thrilled the packed chapel with his fine technique; interesting to students was the artist's body positions which seemed to help convey the mood of the music.
ON
THE
TABERNACLE
floor
was
youthful
prodigy,
Ruggerio Ricci Carnegie-debuted violinist. Ricci captured high favor both with his remarkable ability and his un pretentous stage presence.
OTHER ARTISTS rendering unforgettable performances were: Paul Leyssac (lower left), lecturer; Magicia n Lee Gra ble; Margt Bokar, soprano (upper left); Howard Pierce Davis (lower right) world situation commentator;
Impersonator
Do r ot h y
Crawford;
Metro opera tenor, Jan Preece; Lecturer
Louis
Fischer; Doris Eaton Mason, woman lecturer; Tyrolean singers, the Trapp Family (top); Gerald Wendt, lecturer; Lhevinre, second Russian
piano-maestro;
and Dr. Plumhoff, science demonstrator (upper right).
43
George Lacey Harold Steed Joe Anderson Mel Manning Marge Paulson
MASTER MIND behind the ballot box was three-year councilman George Lacey. At every election Lacey's beam was seen hovering just near enough to be sure that everything was on the up and up. Completing a three year career on the council was Harold Steed, budget chairman. Steed's conservative influence in the council has long been recognized as essential. Likeable Joe Anderson, starting his three-year use of council chair, took charge of special events. His ability can be measured by the success which Homecoming and Winter Carnival registered. Mel Manning was in charge of student awards. Distinguished for his infrequent meeting attendances, Manning captured most attention at the award banquet. Most typical of Marge Paulson was her position behind the mike at the Wednesday assemblies. Besides her v.p. duties, Paulson was
assembly censor and introducer.
~olln~ilillen not ~et introull~eu
a~ ~o~i at~~
ar~
th ~
WOIll~n
~tll~~nt~
RED-H EADED RAE SCOTT of Elko, Nevada, guided the Associated Women Students through the most successful year on their books. This organization, boasting an enrollment of the total feminine population, fostere d coed-service men romances with the knitting and letter-writing projects and the dancing party at which Navy and Marine trainees were entertained-but royally. These projects were in addition to naming the "most preferred" man for the fall A WS party, offering student guidance to fres hwomen by the senior sponsor plan, and entertaining the parents at Coed Day during spring quarter. Casanova Sam Bailey of Stud ent Life fame proved to be the Aggie maids' ideal for romance according to date bureau returns. Scotty aided by a partially-efficient committee enlisted the aid of almost every campus coed in the knitting and letter writi ng projects and in the training courses for service in the Canteen, Motor Corps and the "British and Russian War Relief" drives.
President Rae Scott
LEFT TO RIGHT: Ann Ryan, Rae Scott, Carmen Croft, Dee Louise Parker, Ruth Worlton, Frances Kurtz, Ruth Andrus, Cora Mickelson, Fae Crawford , Lucille Campbell, Elizabeth Call.
45
t h~
•
~~nlOr~
SENIORS ARE PROUD of nearly four years of college, but are reticent on the subject of grades. The male part of the class carefully tries "last-times," anticipating
military service, while their
feminine pals discuss freshman boys and their possibilities. This is the year of the syllabus, the thesis, the seminar. A few of the ambitious students talk about staying another year for a master's; others want to stay so they can play Aggie football again.
TOP: President Sterling Peterson. Center: Vice-President
Helen
Wintch.
Secr.etary without hair Conrad
ACADEMIC PARADE: Senior tradition. FORESTER chorines submit to inspection. 46
Bottom. Bertin.
~r onu~t of four ij ear~ HOLDERS OF REALLY good class records wonder about the possibility of making Phi Kappa Phi. The top members of this category consider what they will say in their valedictory addresses. After three year holdouts, some of this select class de:ide to become affiliated; they lead most campus honoraries; enjoy tossing off two-bit words. Thu; they regard themselves as being among the intelligentsia. They exhibit athletic sweaters, clasi jackets, "A" pins, old pipes, often-used book reports. Seniors are chummy with professors. They afford to eat lunch, are far more reserved at the Bluebird a nd athletic functions. They still spend th3 last two weeks of each quarter making up work due the fi rst two weeks. They boast of romantic conquests, of past conventions and field trips, of their vast knowledge encased within two cardboard
slabs. Lovers of sleep, they cut classes to
combat fatigue in the men's lounge, wind up playing checkers. They are idols and pet targets.
SENIOR BUZZER pe rsonalities give out with grins.
TUD SPARKS Salt Lake Thanksgiving game rally.
UTAH'S GOVERNOR Herbert B. Maw speaks.
AGGIES MADE racket for NBC listeners.
47
WAYNE MIRGAN-A mild individualist, Wayne came to the Aggies from the Bear Lake region, Montpelier to be exact, and is the living example of "home town boy makes good." Starting off with the engineers his freshman year; he ended up with one of their degrees and the student body presidency. He lives the first four and one-half days of the week in anticipation of Friday afternoon canyon picnics, and takes Blue Key and the use of a subtle wit seriously.
Abbott
Ella Adamson
Reed Allen
Chall Allred
Chad Anderson
Lee Roy Anderson
Mae Anderson
Marjorie Anderson
Robert L. Anderson
Rulon Anderson
Ruth Andrus
Donald Ashdown
J. T.
ultra " Phi, rean, ing every night of th fussin' around she does, is one
the few who
boosts the Chi a's average with straight A's .
n
•
I
o
r
Chris Axelgard
Sam Bailey
Simon Baker
Dona Ballard
Rene Ballard
Warren P. Barnum
Joh n O. Ba rton
Grace Bateman
Evan Baugh
Esther M. Baurle
Dorothy Beal
Glen Beehling
Co nrad Bertin
Grant Bethers
Ora Bills
Harold Black
Helen Black
Robert Black
MARGE PAULSON-Here is another gal who is a real activity man. Marge adds glamour and grades to AXO. After spending her freshman year at the BYU, she repented, came to the AC and into her own, made Alpha Sigma Nu , took over the citizenship award, took an interest in Phi U, Lambda Rho and collected enough ballots for the student body vice-presidency. She hails from Salt Lake but hopes that isn't held against her.
50
Keith Boyer
Alma N. Brinkerhoff
William Barr Brinton
Emer Broadbent
Lawrence Brough
Thales Brown
Robert Burgoyne
Albert Burton
Roche D. Bush
Warren Caldwell
Chloe Campbell
Lucile Campbell
DICK HARRIS-Old Smiley Harris has manias for inventing nicknames , rushing potential Pi Kaps and worrying over plans for "A" Day. He blew in from Brigham where he twirled the baton for the high school band and wowed the women with his beam. A pol. sci. major, Dick slides a slush pump, gets elected as junior class prexy and one-year councilman , and dyes his hair for little theatre performances.
I
n
I
0
r
Morris W. Cannegieter
Ray R. Canning
Harold Capener
Joan Carter
Marjorie Carver
Elmer Cox
Ralph J. Chadwick
Ariel Chatterton
Adele Christensen
Anthon Christensen
Jean Christensen
Dave Clark
John E. Clay
Genevieve Clayton
Ned P. Clyde
Richard K. Coburn
Wayne R. Collings
Darlene Condie
MEL
MANNING-A
Garland
glamour
boy,
"Smooth" lives up to his name all the way around. He fusses around in advanced military and claims to be a charter memoer of the Cactus Club. He's another one of Romney's stars, an Alpha Sigma Nu, English major, and sits on the council. Also proud of the fact that he is a good Sigma Chi.
Maurine Cook
June Coop
Ivan L. Corbridge
Barbara Cordon
Juliette Cordon
Robert E. Corey
Loyal Covey
Harold Cowley
Pauline Cox
Jon Fred Crockett
Carmen Croft
Faye Crawford
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RAE SCOTT-As president of the AWS, "Scotty's" hangout is the A WS office. She is a Nevada gal, Elko by town, and is proud of the fact. Rae adds to her colloge honors ex-Spur of the moment, open house queen, and Phi U. Her beautiful red hair and KD affiliation are her delights .
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Lawrence Cuskelly
Mae Cutler
Spencer Daines
Parley James Dalley
Aileen Delong
Dwight Dixon
Belva Doran
Nick Joe Drakulich
William Durrant
Edna M. Ericksen
Catherine Farr
Jean Fernnelius
Alvin Ferre
Enid Fishburn
Wilson H. Foote
Ettamarie Fowler
Dean Freeman
Don A. Fronk
HAROLD STEED-Harold hails from Clearfield and took over the three-year councilman job his freshman year. To his long list of accomplishments he claims Blue Key, advanced military, Scabbard and Blade and noisy plaid shirts.
Also Pi Kap
president, Harold majors in commerce, is supposed to be a demon on skiis and has a definite Alpha Chi interest.
54
Glen Fuller
Ellen Gardner
Phyllis Gardner
Keith Gates
James M. Gatherum
Don W. Gay
Ezra Geddes
Don Ray Gowers
Grant P. Grandy
Elmo A. Gray
Eva M. Greenweil
Wanda Haley
HELEN WINTCH-One of the Manti W intches, Helen cornered enough votes for Senior class VicePresident, is one Chi 0 who takes life seriously and gets good grades. Major in Commerce, she will someday make her boss a swell secretary. A Theta Chi and ex-Spur, Elaine ' generally goes to bed early, studies
diligently
and spends waking
hours
in
sports jacket.
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Marge ne Ha ll
Norma Hall
Kenneth Ray Hampton
Rex Herbert Hampton
Marjorie Hansen
Golden K. Hanson
Richa rd H. Ha rris
Mary Hatch
Norman I. Heaton
Royal B. Henderson
Charles B. Henry
Madonna Herbert
Beth He rmansen
Jex Hiatt
Russell B. Hicken
Ineda Hickman
Karl T. Homer
Helen Hudman
SAM BAILEY-Pride of the SAE's "Smiling Sam" was voted by the coeds as the most preferred man on the campus. He claims other glories such as being Student Life editor, Alpha Sigma Nu, Blue Key and a darn good softball pitcher. He also professes to be good at ping pong. Sam takes a long time to shake hands, writes Farm Flashes, wears snappy ties, ghost writes themes for fraternity brothers and drawls like a cowpuncher.
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Virginia Huff
Doris N. Hughes
David K. Hulme
Clyde Fae Hurst
Charles W. Hutchison
Fred C. Imhoff
Glen R. Jackson
Deon James
Charles Jenkins
Charles W. Jensen
Marjorie E. Jensen
Hue Jewkes
J. T. ABBOTT-A mainstay of the Big County tribe, J. T. is business manager of the Buzzer, former student council member, slightly freckled and comes from Tremonton. He lost his Sigma Chi pin early this year. Recipient was a KD. Also a Blue Key man, and active in advanced military. Abbott collects many A's in his Ag major.
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Leo William Jex
Francis Johnson
Genevive Johnson
JoBeth Johnson
Ronald C. Johnson
Jack R. Jones
Francis Ku rtz
Louise Kunz
Lloyd M. Knaphus
Cara G. Klinger
Ruby Kilpack
John R. Killough
Carlos Kidma n
Paul J. Kennedy
J. Norris Larsen
Marian Larsen
Willard R. Larsen
Anna Leigh
CON
BERTIN-Big Con claims to be the un-
conscious instigator of the cue ball hair cuts. He wrestled the top weight for the Aggies, started the year as secretary of his class until average troubles caught up with him. He is proud of Pi Kap affiliation, loud towel shirts and Provo, his home town. Con flirts with all the women, works hard for the pan-hellenic and forever pulls the surprise gag.
58
Dominick LaVerne
Lynn S. Ludlow
Helen Ludstrom
Lillian Lyman
LaMar Mackay
William L. Mathews
Glen Maughan
Willard Maughan
Edward C. Maw
Art V. Maxwell
Charles B. McConnell
Cora Mickelson
ELAINE NELSON-Logan dweller Elaine is another top gal of the Senior class. Claimed by the Alpha Chi's, she also made Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Sigma Nu, polled enough votes for student body secretary. She claims a Sigma Chi pin, the ability to analyze people, an unquenchable curiosity. Elaine studies hard, gets good grades, and generally gets to bed in good time.
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Helen Miles
Dale R. Miller
Frank Mockli
Frank Ray Mohlman
Bertha Monson
Wayne R. Morgan
Bonnie R. Murphy
Alfred J. Neilson
Don Neilson
Dale O. Nelson
Glen T. Nelson
Shirley Nelson
Joseph Nemanic
A. J. Newby
Margaret Nielsen
William Nielsen
Preston Olsen
Newell Olsen
STERLING PETERSON-"Political Pete" first gained recognition as a politician when he was elected soph class prexy, then senior. After that, came Blue Key, Alpha Sigma Nu, and his political science major. Pi Kap house manager, Pete came from Richfield, drives a yellow model A, wears an advanced ' military uniform, says that he spends too much of his dad's money and loves the women one and all.
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Hazel Owens
Irene Olsen
Lee Olsen
Lloyd Olsen
McKay Ogden
Bonna Lue D. Pack
Guy G. Pace
Gerald M. Palmer
Dee Louise Parker
Lynn S. Parker
Glenna M. Parkin
Doris Passey
IN FATHER'S footsteps is Milton R.'s high I. Q. son .
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Harold William Phillips
Hazel Parks
Marjorie Paulson
Jane Peck
Harriet Parks
Ruth Pedersen
Ruth Penrose
Barbara Ann Preston
Hazel Perry
Mildred Perry
Wilmer J. Perry
Betty Pederson
Lucile Pixton
Florence Prince
Sidney M. Priday
Margaret Potter
Thomas Pozarnsky
Dorothy Peterson
A MID-DAY BASK on the entrance of the Animal Industry building, popularly dubbed the "Dairy" where such famed organs as Alpha Zeta and the Ag club function, finds its way into the day's schedule during each season's sun.
Just inside the agrarian
sphere showcases house a unique collection of trophies earned by Aggie judging teams and prize livestock of the college herds.
Marna M. Peterson
Lois. J . Peterson
Mervin S. Peterson
Katherine Rasmussen
Alice Randall
Sterling Peterson
Milton J. Rasmussen
Anna Lou Rees
Clare J. Reed
Ruby Richards
Dean C. Rigby
Denton Stanford Richards
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WITH THE SPRING, came the Navy and the Marines, to add every-service color to the walks of the campus. And, with the Navy and the Marines came competition for the regular college lad when bright days on the social calendar drew near. The Smart Gymnasium gave way to these technician school men after a year of virtual inactivity and provided extended housing accommodations to facilitate larger classes.
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Thomas D. Roberts
Reed S. Roberts
Clay M. Robinson
J. Lewis Robinson
Willard C. Rose
Richard H. Romney
Burt F. Rouse
Ephraim Rosenberg
Jean Rowe
William Rozynek
Doretta Salisbury
Edward L. Scartezina
Rae Scott
Lois E. Sargent
Wilford J . Smeding
Sybil Shumway
Abraham Sidorsky
Lloyd E. Shaw
FORESTER'S PAUL BUNYAN again saw Engineer-Forester brawls waged at his feet.
64
Annabelle Smith
Mary L. Smith
William R. Smith
Harold R. Steed
Elmer Sommers
Elwin Stephens
Margery Stephens
Kenneth Stevens
Ward Stevens
Betty Jeanne Stone
Lora Stratford
Clifford Stock
NOT OF CAMPUS SOCI student who spends his his academic schedules,
he is, nevertheless, with his contemporaries, one of the important people of Utah State.
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Ruth Tyson
Mary Sweeney
Ruth Sycamore
Clyde T. Tarbet
Brian L. Taylor
June Tracy
Ross G. Thomas
Merle Toble r
Ray A. Thatcher
Betty Turnbull
Marvin Sjoberg
Charlene Turner
J. Dee VanOrden
Gordon A. VanEpps
Rex B. Walker
Max E. Wadsworth
Farrell J. Mohlman
James Vanderbeck
Carol M. Wennergren Alvin C. Warnick
Alma E. Watterson Joyce Welker
Raymond Webb Beth Welling
PREXY MORGAN FINDS strength here as senior forester Bob Corey turns on the powerhouse during the Feud flag rush in mid-March. Competitive interest, however, was not manifest as the two dignitaries got together at the Chi 0 house lounge while waiting for respective dates to call off the stall ing act.
:XY MORGAN felt strength of Senior Forester Bob Corey in flag rush.
Arthur Wendell Doris Wallin
Ted M. Wennergren Franklin Oliver Westfall
ANOTHER weary Aggie crowd boards the 6:30 bus for parts unknown.
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Maria n Wilcox
Wallace J. Wightman
Kathryn C. Wiggins
Sibyl Wilkinson
Elden Williams
Davis S. Williams
Bill G. Williamson
Robert F. Wilson
Wayne P. Wilson
Helen E. Wintch
Donald Young
Dale W. Young
Marian R. Eaton
George Peterson
Roy H. Scott
Laurel Stowell
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PASTIME for any class is the extra-hour on the quad. A little cramming, a quick lunch.
PROM COMMITTEE at one of the few times they all managed to get together-save Prom night.
( JUNIOR-TIME most Greeks are on the sending en 1 : the pledge-greeting line. Some Juniors do enter the circle of fraternity existence.
KARMA HILL LACEY and Bill Batt, Prom experts, pee~ at the books. Rugged Bennion was duplicated in clay; men preferred the original.
know what theij wan t RETURNING JUNIORS, at the chronologie center of their collegiate careers, locate their belongings, register, and immediately begin to breathe into Alexander Graham's pet device such syllables as fivetwo-two, eight-nine-five, and six-o-four. They all claim to have the secret of study-social timing, but all soon find the same old difficulties facing them. This is the time of college life when most start looking seriously for a permanent major; a few begin to regret time wasted on "snap" undergrad courses; most quite painstakingly search for more of those "snaps" with which to fill last groups. Juniors held the inside track at elections; most are well known on the campus; many have had class office experience. When spring balloting rolls around the eyes of affiliates and independents turn to Juniors for political hopefuls. Third year men also stand "in" for special Senior scholarships and above campus awards for which competition is only dightly above "cutthroat."
68
AT PKA Kid's party Junior Ruth Smith wasn't rea lly bored-not with "glamour-puss" Tiny ~,l.organ around.
TRADITIONALLY the Juniors take their largest share of the publicity cake at Prom time. Held in the Commons, the 1942 affair was approached by very few formals for excellence. Prom-goers danced to Ed Stoker's NBC orchestra, exploded balloons and gallivanted from spot to spot in the Commons selecting their dance space. Though corsages were out, committeemen Moss, Worlton, Van Dam, Call, Hatch, Lacey, Allen, Nelson, and Batt won orchids for the production.
SMORGASBORD waitresses before faculty vultures devastated the Swedish morsels.
SECOND PRESIDENT Fred Allen
VICE-PRESIDENT Betty Hatch
SECRETARY Doris Van Dam
the
r.L'lrn='''' '''
his of S.A.E.
srAN ANDERSON-Blue Key activity award winner last year, co-sports editor and student council member this year, Stan is one of the corner stones in the Bear River block. The "Little Caesar" is addicted to the use of ten cylinder words, life in general at the S.A.E. house, and three point grades. He also claims to be a ghost writer and earns pin money plying this talent.
LeGrand Abbott Elaine Adams Joyce Adney Russell Allen Glen Anderson
Grant Anderson Lurline Anderson Stan Anderson Harold Armstrong Rela Armstrong
Keith Arthur Edith Ashby Lawrence Aubert Lorraine Baird Betty Lou Balch
Nadine Ballard
Ann Barker
Ethel Barker
Margaret Barlow
Rachel Barlow
Theta Barrett
Della Bartlett
Paul Bartschi
J ames Beck
Paul Brown
Del Mont Beecher
Ray Behling
Winston Benson
David Bernstein
Dave Benton
Ted Bernstein
Bill Bickmore
Don Bingham
Reid Bishop
Keith Blanehard
Llewellyn Bodrero
Allen Bond
Helen Bott
Robert Branges
Marie Briggs
Bernice Brough
Thomas Brotherson
Garn Brown
Grant Budge
Reed Budge
Jean Burch
Dick Burke
Richard Call
Ralph Carlson
Cecil Christensen
Darwin Christensen
Lucile Christensen
Charlene Clark
Melba Clayson
Richard Clayton
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n who prefers the
planted his S.A.E. nero us with
his
ence papers, and seriously. He is believes elections.
LANE PALMER-Another member of the Bear River block, Lane ended the year as president of his class, incoming vice-president of his fraternity, three point average and activity man plus. He can generally be seen scouting the campus in his advanced military uniform for potential Pi Kaps or Student Life News. He is a firm believer in the philosophy of the "more you do the more you can do" and goes about proving it every day.
Harvey Colby Magele Collis Marcus R. Cooley Virgil Coombs Elmer Cox
Florence Crane Leonard Crane Melba Critchlow James Dalley Rachel Dalley
Ruth Danielsen Barbara Davis Estella Davis Jack Davis Mary Decker
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Louise Dixon
Elden Drake
Gail Duncan
NaDean Dunn
H. D. Eyer
N. M. Evans
Josep~
Evans
Garth Evans
Gra nt Esplin
Dorothy Esplin
Roma Lynn Erickson
Alberta Erickson
Earl W. England
Hal Edison
Annora Eskelsen
Dean Farnsworth
Druce Foutz
Wynn Fife
Sheldon Fitzgerald
Jay Foster
Art Fowler
Irene Freeman
Kay Freeman
Gene French
Fa e Fridal
Lydia Fridel
Stanley Fuller
Beulah Gancheff
Dean Gardner
Clifford Carl Gaynard
Donna Gold
Russell Goodman
Drue Gra ndy
Man G reen
Vaughan Green
Marguerite Greeves
Earl H. Griffin
Vera Griffin
Welden Griffin
Daniel F. Griffiths
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spring aftertennis balls
H
's sweater, flashy smile about his business major.
BETTY HATCH-Betty is a perpetual Chi 0, political candidate, and can boast of a fair degree of success. Vice-President in her freshman year, she finished her junior year as vice-president also. Betty is friendliest with the Sigma Chi's in general and a Mr. Romney in particular. She spends summers at Yellowstone and as many mornings as possible in bed.
Westerdahl Gudmundson Frank Hall Beatrice Hansen Clifford Hansen Eldon Hansen
Leona Hansen Marion Hansen Norma Hansen Vaughn Hansen Neff Hardman
Mabel Hartvigsen Reed Hartvigsen Ruby Hartvigsen Doris Harwood Rex Hawkins
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Karrol Haight
Charlotte Henriod
Dean Hicken
Karma Hill
Ralph Hobson
Bernice Holquist
Maye Howell
James Huber
Gwen Hu nsaker
Ruth Hyer
Gwen Hymas
Evan Iverson
Glenn Jabbs
Ross Jackson
Wayne James
Betty Jarvis
Mae Jensen
Norma Jensen
Ruth Jensen
Norman P. Jeppson
Norma Johnson
Vere Johnson
William Johnson
Henrietta Jones
Ma rjorie Jones
Reta Jones
Dell Jorgensen
Dorothy Jorgensen
Elna Kemp
Kathryn Kirkham
Norval Kichen
Marguerite Kropfli
Vern Kupfer
George Lacy
Ellis Lamborn
Rosella Larkin
Clista Larsen
Ernest D. Larson
Imogene Lee
Kenneth Lee
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Doris is swing -a go out of a KD scratch good overage,
is shining. P.S.
FRED ALLEN-Still another Bear River man, "Hog" cornered enough votes for freshman class prexy and came in as second of the three Junior Class presidents. He majors in agriculture but it wouldn't hurt him to major in English. An athlete in the true sense of the word Fred is another Sigma Chi who was on the nowin Aggie football squad.
John Lendersdorfer James Lewis Keith Long Clayton Longhurst Lamar Ludwig
Rea Madison Mildred Madsen William E. Manning Emma Martin Melba Martin
Janice Mather Oriel Matkin Ellen Maughan Flora Maughan Marjorie McCowin
76
George McDonald
Lavar McM illan
Clint Mechan
Eldon Meik
Grant Mendenhall
Trevor Michie
Lael Miller
Wendel Miller
Miller Don
Jane Moss
Luella Moore
Dave Moore
Lamar Monroe
Wendell Muir
Helen Nelson
Wilford Nelson
Bert Newman
Horten Nielson
Wayne Nuttall
Edith Nyman
Mavis Olson
Melvin Olson
Violet Olsen
Verlene Pace
Lynn Pa ge
Lane Palmer
Richard Parkinson
Josephine Parrish
Emma Poulsen
Barbara Perkins
Eldred Poulsen
Ruth Peterson
Grant Po pe
Gordon Porter
Kenneth Procter
Oral Pugmire
Richard Pugsley
Peter Reed
Jack Reeder
Keith Reese
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and baseball He hates to anything that has
FLORENCE CRANE and Ruth Hyer spent registration days stacking up knowledge controls in college bookstore.
Kenneth Rees Merrill Rees Eugene Reeves Melvin Rennie Edward Rice
Lucille Rice Elliot Rich Arch Richards Clyde Richards Myron Rirchards
Ralph J. Richards Ruth Richards Charles Rigby Leah Roberts Jesse Robinson
78
Dean Rogers
True Roundy
Mary E!len Russell
Virginia Ryan
Darwin Salisbury
Moses Samowitz
Grace Sims
Carl Smith
Gwendolyn Smith
Mildred Smith
Ruth Smith
Ferron Sonderegger
Beth Sorensen
John Sorensen
Willard Speed
Verle Spencer
Katherine Sta nford
Helen Stewart
Beth Stock
Phylis Stoddard
Russell Stoker
Owen Stokes
Kay Strike
Vivian Stromberg
Cha rles Stephens
Lela Sullivan
Tony Sutich
Gordon Swan
George Swenson
Kay Taft
Marjorie Tanner
James Tasso
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Horace Tremelling Dorothy Tervort
Quentin Thomas Dean W. Thorpe QUEEN OF THE HARVEST Ball, lovely Jeanne Crockett gathers various tokens after being named to the November position while rating from the collegiate shagsters a signal vote of approval. Helen Tillotson Paul Turner JUNIORS HAVE BEEN KNOWN to frequent the library in various pursuits, with Californian Don Zamzow and Chi 0 Karrol Haight not being excepN1argaret Todd Margaret Tingey
Ryo Uchida Arvil Wadley
tions to the rule. Footnote fantasy, they say.
Veri Wa ite
Glenn Wahlquist
Geraldine Walker
Mary Walker
Beulah Walther
Calvin Warnick
Spencer Wheatley
Jack Whitlock
Laurence Whitney
Lathael Winn
Vernice Wi nn
Barbara Woodhouse
Ruth G. Worlton
Don Worthington
Rulon Yorgason
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THIS COMPLETES the 1942 Junior Class. Poised on the threshold of their final collegiate year, they look into the future with inquisitive eyes. For the men the service of the nation seems especially imminent; the women forsee sparse pickings for the same reason. Both look with regret upon the "beginning of the end" that becomi~g a Senior holds for them. Apprehensively they anticipate the writing of a thesis and the entry into Seminars. Many have definite campus responsibilities to undertake; others are fighting to preserve high scholarships; all are facing life with a little more reality. Whatever the future holds, however, they plan to make the finale, their Senior year, memorable.
8f
the collegiate scene in a flurry of changes, they change everything Each re-enters the institution with three months of concentramore fun around school, how to get higher averages, and where res- cor1centration which each is determined to utilize to good advantage. So they 1
come, for a second year-full of ideas and plans, eager to set the school afire.
ALREADY THE mainstays of both Spurs and I. K., the sophs are seen parading or selling or ushering at every campus function. They sponsor such events as '44 Hello Week, and trot around stirring up smiles and friendships on the campus. They undertake an assembly production which, though bad, is sufficiently better than what the other classes muster to capture the class competition honors. On stationery with a printed "Class of '44" letterhead their business is transacted. In fact, these Sophs, make more racket, display more energy, and command more attention than Utah State has seen in many moons. Blue moons.
President Burns Crookston
THE SOPHS delight in showing-off, to a limited extent, before the Frosh who are still trying to discover what it's all about: they chance familiarity with profs; they casually drift about the quad and Main; they slouch across library desks or Registrar's window. Many Sophs move from first-year batches to fraternity houses; others flee the dorm curfew to apartments and Greek residences. By this time all have picked their favorites in cleaners, lunch stands, and movie seats; have also found a pet pool room. They take Friday dates and Sunday stag shows as a matter of course; they attend church and Mutual with half an eye toward appeasing the home folks. The business of college life, though methodically attached, is swift and fascinating. Secretary Adrus Hansen
V. P. Gloria Harris
Dean Athay
Mavis Astle
Robert Arnell
Mildred Ashcroft
Roberta Anderson
Keith Anderson
Conrad Alder
Bryce Albertson
LeRoy Adams
Bernice Adams
David C. Bagley
Luella Bagley
Dorothy Barlow
Geneva Barrett
Glen Barrett
Ross Barrett
Howard H. Barron
Robert Barron
Marjorie Bateman
Duke Beaty
Clair Bello
Sterling Bench
Matt Benson
Reid Bergener
Stanley Bergreen
Ariel Berntson
Mary Berntson
Marie Berrey
Berna Bird
LeMira Bishop
Constance Blair
Piatt Bliss
Steven G. Bosan
Don Bowen
Irene Bremers
Dean Brown
Amanda Buck
Oleen Bunderson
Maxine Burgoyne
Charles D. Bushier
Elizabeth Call
Wayne Call
Arthur Campbell
Kenneth Cardon
Glen Carey
Jack And e rson
Winifred Amacher
Reo G . Alden
G len G air
Robert Bai rd
Quenten Barker
Ma rgaret Bartholomew
George Barton
LaVar Bateman
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ELIZABETH CALL-Blonde blitz from Davis, " Liz" was president of the Spurs this year and incoming prexy of the Chi 0 glamour gals. She takes her major in p'hysical ed seriously and, in an isolated case, prefers a U man .. In her spare time, Liz hands out A WS preferences, wears a sponser's uniform and cooks good grub at her batching apartment.
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JOE ANDERSON-Joe was elected 3-year councilman last year, after an activity-filled freshman class presidency. Girls say that all Joe wants to talk about on dates is "that winter carnival and how much work it is." Unclaimed by any frat , "Goozer" is a faithful member of the Intercollegiate Knights and is one of the few to keep his sweater clean.
John Carlile
Bernon Carlson
Afton Carter
Bert Caseman
Jack Chatelain
Keith Chadwick
Oleva Christiansen
Ruby Collard
Marzetta Colyar
William Cook
Barbara Cooms
Don Cox
Gordon Crouther
Phyliss Cullimore
Orin Dance
Donna Marie Daniels
LaVere A. Dattage
Mary Jane Davis
Ursula Domina
Wendell Droaby
Mont Dunford
Dorothy Durfee
Walter Durtschi
Bet~ Ann
EI rige
Jon Elliott
Elsie F. Embry
Harold England
Nadine Erickson
Virginia Erickson
Anthon Ernstrom
Ken Farrell
Lloyd Findlay
Barbara Fitzgerald
Harvey Fletcher
Shirley Francis
Boyd Fuhrima n
Clem Fullmer
Gene Funk
Frank Galida
Elaine Gaphart
Margaret Gnehm
Bill Godfrey
Rosalyn Godfrey
Faye Goodsell
Chuck Goodwin
Carma Chambers
Widstoe Checketts
Mary Katherine Christensen
Jea n Crawford
Reed Criddle
Jeanne Crockett
Harold DeLaMare
Daniel Dennis
Marian Dial
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MELVIN ISRAELSON-New duke of the I K's, Mel rides into town each morning from out in North Logan. "Izzy," is P K A's timber, blonde, active on committees, and a permanent election campaigner. He follows in the engineer footsteps of his pop and claims to have potential ability. Mel loves to gab, makes speeches in church, and cut grass.
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BARBARA FITZGERALD-Contrary to her name, Barbara is only one-fourth Irish, comes from Kamas, and is a flunkey in Pocock's sweat shop. She was vice-president of the frosh, is a member of the Spurs and a military sponsor. Brunette, and addicted to advanced military men, having a brother and a boy friend there, is a permanent grinner and loves to jitterbug.
Norris Goold
Leland Graham
Edmund Bubier
Lausanne Gudmundsen
Norma Gudmundson
Richard N. Gunn
Reid Hall
Jar Hami ton
Cloma Hammond
Boyd K. Hampton
MaDail Hancock
Adrus Hansen
Wendell Harris
George Hatch
James Hatch
Ben Hayden
Raye Hayes
Florence Haywood
Louis Hickman
Ernest Hirsch
Dale Homer
Jack Horton
Kent Howard
Stanley Hughes
Melvin Hulme
Dee R. Hulse
Lillian Hunter
Richard Hunsaker
Elden Hurst
Jack Van Hyning
Melvin Israelson
Bobd Jaco sen
Maxine Jenkins
Betty Jensen
Dorothy Jensen
Florence Jensen
Marva Jensen
Ruth Marie Jensen
Alta Johnson
Dean F. Johnson
Leonard Johnson
Max Johnson
Vervene Johnson
Hugh Joslyn
Joseph Julian
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Grant Guymo n
Fay Hadfield
Toshio Hagiwara
Blaine Harris
Gloria Harris
Walter Harris
Gene Henderson
Betty Jane Hendricks
Ray Hiatt
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JEANNE CROCKETT-Beauty of the Chi O's and last year's sweetheart of Sigma Chi, Jeanne reads a hundred pages a week for history major and drags down A's. She takes delight in organizing assemblies and renders a sterling performance in melodramas. Jeanne proudly possesses a Sig pin, long black hair, a swift stride, and the ability to draw forth long, low whistles from male on-lookers.
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LYN LARSEN-Hard-working sports writer on Student Life, "Swede" is the farmer boy from East Garland, who changed his major this year from dairy husbandry to journalism. His most outstanding characteristics are his laugh, perpetual cue ball hair cut and long list of female acquaintances. He seldom attends I K meetings and does his darndest to line up snap classes. Frequently jaunts to Malibu.
Peggy Keller
Marjorie Kloepfer
Reba Kygar
Frank Larson
James Larson
Lynn Larson
Harold Lindsay
John K. Little
Lorna Little
Wendell Lloyd
Oliver Lockhart
Carol Low
Bill Martin
Cammille Mathews
Maudie Mathews
Gladys R. Mattson
Genieve May
Ara MacDo
Evan Memmott
Merlynne Mendenhall
Betty Jane Merrell
Verna Meyer
Dorian Mikkelson
Alice Miller
Harold Miller
Clyde Mockli
Grace Minson
Esther Mitchell
Frances Montrose
Murray Morgan
Alma Morris
Gordon Moses
Anne Murdock
Velda Murdock
Robert Nash
Neil hi Nee ham
Joy Nelson
Reed Nielson
Robert Nielson
Karma Nielson
Rex Nielson
John Noyes
Doris Okelberry
Jean Olsen
Mary Ormond
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Douglas Laursen
Robert Lawrence
Chris Leston
Glen na Lucas
Theron Leishma n
Alvin Mackay
Jam es McFall
Venice McKeachnie
Worth McNiel
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DORIS OKELBERRY-Doris is proud of her Payson High School and claims that Goshen raises the best onions in the state. Inhabitant of the K D blue room, she is a member of both the Buzzer and Student Life staff. Often taking a hand in assembly productions, she is engaged to a Sigma Chi, and maintains she puts plenty of time in on both. She takes her English major with calmness and her cokes at the Bluebird.
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ADRUS HANSEN-Big County gal, "Odry" makes a nice secretary for Burns and the Sophomore class. She owed allegiance to the K. D's and on Tuesdays and Thursdays, wears a sponser's uniform. Some of her spare time is spent debating on varsity squad; the rest is spent in writing to an old Pi Kap flame. She plays th 3 organ for home-town ward every Sunday, and devotes sewing talent to her batch-mate's trousseau.
NaRay Ormond
Louise Ostler
Louise Painter
Blaine Porter
DeRay Parker
Mote Par er
Calder Pickett
Iva Pixton
Jacques J. Pinkard
Marion Pope
Carol Pond
Gwen Pugmire
Alaine Randall
Bernice Randall
Dorothy Redfield
William Reese
Jenna Lou Reid
Wayne Rick
Fred Robins
Richard Robins
George Robinson
Lois Mae Robinson
Joserrhine Ro lins
Lucille Roylance
Anne Ryan
Harold Sampson
John Sargent
Evelyn Seamons
Preston Seely
Delbert Seyboldt
Paul Sharp
Lucille Shepherd
LeGrand Shupe
Burton Silcock
Joy Slack
Lyle Smart
Corinne Smith
Dona Smith
Evelyn Smith
Ted Smith
Marie Sorenson
Arthell South
Shirley Sowards
David Spencer
Phyllis Stains
Ra y Partridge
Cleo Petersen
Winona Peterson
Eloise Pugsl ey
Lila Ralphs
Norma Ralphs
Jack Richa rds
Marion Richards
Dale Robbins
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GLORIA HARRIS-Perpetual Beamer, Gloria held down the So ph V. P. and grinned all over the campus. She pushes the Chi Omegas and brags about some town called Layton. Spare coin is spentkeeping both a Spur and sponser's uniform clean. The Beamer, generally full of pep, works on all the sophomore committees and insists on being home by one o'clock.
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BURNS CROOKSTON-Bringing the nickname of '''Panther'' from Logan high, Burns added titles of freshman class secretary, sophomore class president, and student body one-year councilman in succession. He has short curly hair, a supercilious, dead-pan look and brags about his recent three-point average. His political ability is superseded only by his athletic prowess.
Dale Hutchins
Richard Stevens
Kathryn Stevenson
June Stocks
William Stoddard
Merl Stoker
Dean Bingham
Leland Winger
Lyman Tarbet
Roger Taylor
Anna Marie Theurer
Roma Jean Thurston
Don Erikson
Betty Tousley
Shirley Watland
Elizabeth Wardleigh
Milton Webber
Marietta Welling
Venil Johnson
Marion West
Winifred Wilkenson
Hughes Williams
Alan Wilson
Ray Wilson
Helen Wiscombe
Barbara Wright
Eldon Bingham
Elved Wright
Bruce Nixon
Duard Woffinden
Rulon Wood
Virginia Wood
lIean Woodbury
Unita Woodland
Spencer Wyatt
Paul Woodward
Robert Wright
Guila Wyatt
Murray Ziegler
Kenneth Zirker
Fern Zollinger
Van Neiswendir
94
Edward Summers
Ferris Sweet
Ruth Swenson
Byron Turner
Ganeal Villet
Helen Wadsworth
Spencer Sheatley
Frank Wight
Mack Wilhelmsen
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THESE ARE THE Sophomores. They have advanced one step more toward the achievement of that worldly sheen and educated gloss which a college education lends. Sophomore faces are to be found in almost every activity of the college. They are dramatic material committee stooges, sitter-inners on jam and poker session. They debate, sweep halls, hold offices, play boogie-woogies, join Blue Key and hang pins. Nothing withheld-they are the fully endowed, thoroughly appreciated college public.
FRES
lege profs can
and
t:~;:~~i
duced to them
soon set the the
traditional cry of "useless." They elect officers (with Logan High usually railroading the prexy) from the many new faces about them; they take pride in such titles as "greenlings" and "frosh" and wait in vain for hazing to begin. The famous grooved south step of Old Main fascinates these neophytes; they slide sideways through the half-opened door, rubbing shoulders with Greeks, blue-clad sailors, and the faculty.
the ~ e are
George Nelson, President
Dorothy Nielson, Vice-President
the
tre~hmen
Lois Adams, Secretary
MEN AND WOMEN alike take up the aged custom of washing their own clothes. "T attletale grey" and "dishwater hands" becomes realities and many discover that they can ma ke a shirt or a blouse last up to three days longer than previously.
One assured result is that
makers of creams and lotions to give 'those romantic hands" reap a substantial moneta ry benefit. Most anticipated custom of college is the daily coke at the "Bird." Freshmen took up the custom with a verve that almost, ' but not quite, brought a smile to Mrs. Perry's face.
MA NY FROSH girls move into the dorm where they live to curse the 7:30 limit and to love their roommates. They fill their rooms with dolls, pandas and sentimental knick-knacks; they pack th eir closets with laundry and coke bottles. Consta nt source of awe for frosh is the mystery surrounding the laboratory -
brains -
woudn't it be swell to be a scientist; but how difficu lt splitting atoms and dissecting earthworms.
Edith Aebischer Lois Adams Mildred Adamson Robert Adamson
Betty Adney David Alleman Clayton Allen Garth Anhder
Louise Allen
rly Anderson
Burton Anderson Erma Anderson Eldon Anderson Desmond Anderson
Ken Anderson Lucinda Anderson Beverly Andrews Belva Andrus
MARY LU CAMERON . . . This talent plus gal is from Rock Springs.
Known to her friends as "Love-
'em-all," Mary Lu takes her sponsor duties seriously and brags up the Chi O's.
It is rumored that she
detests humans who borrow, and loves her roommate. Spends good percentage of spare moments following actress trade,
beating
a drum,
favorite tune,
"Casey Jones."
and humming her The rest is spent
pining for an air corps man.
LU LIVINGSTON . . . All that he is, and that is a lot, he claims he owes to Logan high. Lu spends his spare coin keeping an IK sweater clean and his spare time attending Pi Kap meetings. Majoring in engineering, he passes "awake
hours"
plugging
up hoops with
basketballs. Among other talents is clarinet playing. This modest man likes studying, but prefers a blonde , and puts pl 3nty of time in on both.
>
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Dwain Atkin
Grant Ash
Ruth Archibald
Bernice Batt
Mary Austin
Blauer Bangerter
Patsy Barber
Dean Barnhurst
August Aubert
Ken Bateman
Don Bateson
lila Bennett
Jackie Baugh
Alden Baxter
linden Beamons
William Beggant
Elayne Bennett
Russ Bateson
Spencer Bennett
Peggy Bennion
Lloyd Benton
Ramona Bergeson
Tharrell Bergeson
Harry Bernhisel
Shirlee Beutler
Gorden Bigler
Archie Bischoff
Ralph Binnall
Perry Bird
Winifred Bingham
LaWana Bishop
LaPreal Bishop
Mary Bishop
Reed Blaisdell
Harold Blaser
Daren Blanchard
Howard Blood
Floyd Bond
Edward Bowman
Ann Brown
Raphael Bragger
Lynn Bradshaw
Erwin Brierly
O'dill Bradshaw
Morgan Bragger
99
Leland Brown Reed Brown Keith Brough Michael Bruno
Allen Bunker Claire Burgen David Burgyne Owen Burnham
Tom Burrows Grace Caldwell Melba Call Lou Cameron
Alta Mae Carter Shirley Casper Helen Chadwick Reuvo Chamberlain
RAY LUTZ . .. Smiler of the frosh, Ray works hard on the Student Life and was co¡editor during freshman week. Stalking new Pi Kap pledges and telling fair to middling jokes is his favorite diversion. Often late for IK meetings, he manages to pull an acceptable excuse. He doesn't say much about anything except that he is proud of his alma mater, Logan high , and when asked, he will comb his hair.
BEVERLY LEWIS . . . Here's one hundred and eighteen pounds of beauty from Missouri. Then moved to Utah and was graduated from Logan high. With no major as yet, Beverly bowls over "A's" in history classes and claims to ski. She hates to be late for Chi 0 meetings and says that she keeps her shape in shape by eating her favorite food, potatoes and gravy.
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Cecil Cherry
Eva Christensen
Frances Christiansen
Irma Christensen
J. Y. Christensen
Rulon Christensen
Beth Clark
Geneive Clark
Allen Clawson
Lloyd Clawson
Ernest Coles
Alberta Colger
Oris Cook
Marvel Cooley
Lee Cornia
Carol Cox
Ted Crawford
Bertha Criddle
Eldon Crockett
Clark Crook
Jack Crookston
Jane Crookston
Lola Crookston
Robert Cuff
Barbara Curtis
Warren Curtis
Dee Cutler
Darrell Daines
Inez Dalpiz
Evan Dastings
Helen Davis
Lehi Davis
Marion Davis
Ray Davis
Mark Dayley
Mary Dillman
Betty Jean Dorton
Olga Dotson
Lois Downs
Glade Draper
Vera Dubach
Gerald Duncan
Irving Dunn
Marian Dunn
Emery Durand
101
William Durrant Dent Dustin Julia Ecker Judy Edwards
David Egbert Keith Elliot Lyle Elliasen Stanford Ekins
LaMar Empey Jay England Lloyd Erickson Rony Erquiaga
Elaine Evans Ruby Everton Bernall Evans Steward Fever
Reva Fielding Alden Fillmore Marjorie Fisher Doris Fitzgerald
JACK OLSEN . . . Better known as Casanova, Jack spends potential "date" hours in the service of his class-says that he doesn't mind it though. He claims that freshmen don't need a major and sticks by his word, despite efforts of adviser to talk him into one. Like Ray and Lu he is proud of Logan high. Jack professes to be a democrat and says that his chief worry is how to keep the gals away.
HAZEL STODDARD ... Small and cute, Hazel hails from Richmond and is majoring in home economics. The KD's lay claim to her, and she, in theory, lays claim to a good many masculine hearts. She wears a sponsor's uniform and co-commands Frosh cheering with Jack Olsen. She is mildly interested in debate and is proud of the judging she did the high school tournament.
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Jack Fitzgerald
Lowell Flamm
Bessie Fordham
Joyce Frampton
Virginia Frank
Roma Freeman
Roy Frick
Viva Funk
Rulon Gardner
William Gentry
Arthur Gottfredson
Wilma Gunn
Kleta Hale
Val Halgren
Adel Hall
George Hall
Norma Halladay
Vail Hatt
Elwin Harrison
Kay Hampton
Charles Hansen
Cleon Hansen
Gertrude Hansen
Grant Hardman
Lucille Harris
Louise Haynie
Sterling Hayward
Jack Hendricks
Jal Henrie
Dorothy Hess
Quentin Hicken
Carlos Hickman
Dot Hickman
Hazel Hiner
Don Hobbs
Todashi Hoda
Bill Hodgesen
June Hodsen
Merrill Hoffman
Veri Hoffman
Lilly Holyoak
Elina Homer
William Hones
Keith Hooper
Flora Howard
103
Murray Hoyt Ethel Mae Hugie Grant Huffaker Wallace Hughes
Ray Hulet Eros Hunsaker Richard Hunsaker Lawrence Hunter
Lloyd Hunter Reed Hurst Rex Hurst August Hyer
Marjorie Hyer Joyce Hymas Theo Hymas Esther Jackson
George James Margaret James LaMar Jansen Burke Jensen
LOIS ADAMS . . . Lois, a Theta U from Davis, held down the secretary's
job for her class. Active in
W. A A, she is full of life, and usually willing to divulge a roommate's secrets. She possesses strange beliefs in table-raising and ouija-boards but maintains that she is not superstitious. Some have heard her talk in her sleep but they claim she doesn't say much.
GEORGE NELSON ... Here is the pride and joy of the frosh. All around athlete, this big blonde headed his class and busted tough lines for the frosh gridders. George spends spare time palling around with his Sigma Chi "cronies" and escorting a good date. He claims that he can string a darn good line and disputes rumors that he doesn't study assiduously on his premed major.
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LaVan Jeppson
Dan Johansen
Barbara Johnson
Eulla Johnson
Ida Rae Johnson
Renee Johnson
Alta Jolley
Bonna Jones
Max Jones
Richard Jones
Merlyn Jones
Rodney Jones
Ruth Jorgensen
Clare Judd
Cora Justis
Jay Callas
Gwen Keetch
Beth Keller
Hoyt Kelley
Winifred Kennard
Ann Kennedy
Delbert Kidman
Tom Kitchen
Anna Kloepfer
Claire Knudsen
Leone Korth
Robert Krueger
Peggy Lagos
LaRee Lamb
Howard Lamborn
Claire Larsen
lIa Larsen
Jack Larsen
Nedra Larsen
Phyllis Larsen
James Leatham
Warren Leatham
Norman Lee
Virginia Lee
Beverly Lewis
Evelyn Lindberg
Betty Lou Lindholm
Lewis Livingston
Edith Lloyd
David Lofgren
105
Douglas Long Katie Loosle McKay Loveland Betty Lowe
Dorothy Lundahl Ray Lutz Ann Lyon Veri Madison
Gibb Madsen Renn Madsen nk Magliacco
~~id,'~"h iI~ii1~~'f=.
6.
Malmgren
Ethel Manning Wayne Marble Preston Marchant Freddie Markle
Joan Mathews Arnold Mecham Merle Mecham Ardis Memmott
DOROTHY NIELSON . . . Dark-eyed Dorothy vicepresidented the frosh and started a major in secretarial science. Sponsor for the soldiers, Dot was voted sweetheart of Sigma Chi and is the sweetheart of one Pi Kap. She was also acclaimed the outstanding Alpha Chi pledge; but despite all this, her roommate says that she needs a few lessons
In
housekeeping.
Her charming smile is just one of the many things which add up to make her one top gal.
At the foot of the east hall dorm stairway four freshmen dorm-dwellers stop long enough to exchange a few bits of campus gossip and to be caught (frankly, quite aware) by your Buzzer Photog.
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Ann Merrill
Francis Merrill
Donna Mickelson
Helen Michaelsen
Patty Miles
Genii Miller
Jerry Milligan
Priscilla Milligan
Beverly Miner
James La Montveater
Marjorie Morris
Radia Morrison
Lynn Mortensen
Ralph Mortensen
Blaine Moser
Jean Moss
Boyd Moulton
Veda Mae Munk
Walker McAlliste r
Elaine McArthur
Brice McBride
Louise McBride
Rosemary McFarland
Marie Mcintyre
Dave McMullin
Dean McNeil
Vernon McNeil
Lawana Nebeker
Aline Nelson
Carol Nelson
Guy Nelson
Leon Nelson
Myrtle Nelson
Vona Vee Nelson
James Newey
Mrs. Alma B. Nielsen
Alta Nielsen
Doris Nielsen
Dorothy Nielsen
Jay L. Nielsen
Milton Nielsen
Milton Nielsen
Thomas Nielsen
Billie Jean Nixon
Donna Nuhn
107
Cliff Olsen Doris Olsen Jack Ol~en Jerry Olsen
Lorraine Ornell Ronald Ottesen Kent Oveson Ralph Pace
n
n
Peterson Clifton Perry Heber Perry
Carol Peterson Martha Peterson Max Peterson Reid Peterson
THE LIBRARY enters the freshman's life via an orientation lecture and the heartfelt plea of faculty advisers.
Frosh learn briefly of the
Dewey Decimal and the card file systems. They discover by their own hook that the library rooms and corridors provide choice, but forbidden, spots for that idle hour chatter.
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Harold Plank
Gerald Plowman
Rex Plowman
Roma Poole
Edgar Posner
Grace Postman
Kathleen Prater
Willis Prestwich
Anna Price
John Price
Sam Price
June Pugmire
LaVerda Ralphs
Maurine Randall
Wyman Redd
Don Reddish
Gale Reed
Emelyn Reading
Beth Reese
Afton Reeve
Mike Rehar
Ruth Marie Richardson
Cleone Rigby
Flora Rigby
Clotel Riggs
Conrad Ripplinger
James Roberts
Burton Robinson
Mary Robinson
John Roderick
Larry Rogers
Wendell Roskelly
Mavis Roundy
LaRae Russell
Lyman Salisbury
Faye Sandberg
Glen Sargent
Shirlene Saunders
Kyle Schow
Wanda Schow
Mae Schwartz
Phyllis Scoffield
Edna Scofield
Gilbert Searles
Loyal Seeholzer
109
Shirley Skanky Lee Sharp Geraldine Shields Madge Shippley
Robert Siddoway Stella Sims Ben Slack Alice Smith
o:...I. . .:e
Sorenson Sorenson Squires Emma Lou Stander
Sherma Stanfill Gwen Steffensen Frank Stephens Verlin Stephens
Dorm girls fill in those "long" evenings (until lights out at I I :30) with ping pong, telephone wooing, and occasionally studying. Mrs. Alice Samson, their beloved English house-mother, responds faithfully to a battery of bells and buzzers, paints throats, and entertains waiting boy friends. Life at the dorm, though hampered by restriction, is gay and exciting; Frosh girls love it.
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Arnold Stevens
Jeanne Stevens
Wanda Stevens
Fred Stewart
Ned Stocks
Afton Stoddard
Carl Ray Stoddard
Hazel Stoddard
Lyngby Stoker
Delworth Stout
Allan Stratus
Gerald Stromberg
Beth Swenson
Willard Swenson
William Tanner
Arnold Taylor
Dell Taylor
Harold Taylor
Ira Taylor
Joyce Taylor
Lorin Taylor
Paul Telford
Gordon Tervort
Melvin Thalman
Alan Thomas
LeRoy Thomas
Robert Thomas
Gwen Thompson
Robert Toolson
Lorene Toone
Beverly Tripp
Maston Trotter
Ruth Turner
John Ureak
Horace Mann Waddoups
Leah Wadley
Georgia Wahlin
lIean Waite
L. R. Waker
Don Walters
Udell Wankier
Max Ward
LaVar Ware
Gloria Warren
Dewain Washburn
h ill
III
Dorothy Watterson Ray Wattis Alta Beth Wayman Ross Weaver
Ted Weber Kathryn Weeks Blaine Welling Cyril Whatcott
cox Dorothy Williams Frank Williams George Wilkinson
Edna Willis Bill Wilson Mariam Wilson Mary Wilson
FIRST ACT of almost every freshman woman is to fondly place the bromide image of her high-school b. f. in a conspicuous spot, after which she proceeds to forget the same. At the dorm this latter deed is aided by the opening of the lavish reception room each afternoon
and
evening
for
coeducatioMI
habitation. At other times the reception room becomes the scene of somewhat corny harmonizing, weaving La Conga lines. and pre-final
cramming.
h m
r
f
Wayne Wilson Wanda Winn Rosalie Wolfe Melba Rae Wood
Rulon Woodbury Ken Woodward Joseph Woolley Maurice Wright
Dale Yost Louise Yose Dean Winters Dan Zohner
Mark Zohner Grant Zollinger Orson Zollinger Vendla Zollinger
FRESHMAN TED eRA WFORD treats Sophomore Mary Jane Davies to a cone-typical of first year men is this tendency to swing out into upperclass talent for date material. In fact, by the end of first quarter, all cI:us barriers are completely destroyed and interclass dating IS
"in"
This atmosphere at Utah State is
welcomed by Freshmen because it offers them opportunity to smartly begin their college careers.
e
n
...
THE CURRENT WAR of 1812 is "quiet bickering" to the ears of a certain Connecticut inn-keeper compared with the nagging of his energetic wife, Iva Pixton. The British are led by an American traitor up the nearby river where they destroy American ships. At the strange appearance of a young man, who is later accused as the traitor-Thankful Pond, Karl Taylor, and the innkeeper cook up a scheme of accusing the wife, Susan, in order to shame her and inhibit her nagging, of having an illicit love affair which resulted in the birth of a son who has returned in the person of the stranger. The stranger, Dean Farnsworth, tumbles for the inn-keeper's beautiful daughter, and thereby enters into competition with the lo::al smoothie, Bob Anderson.
v a r ~ i t ij
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II 0
0t ~
I
In
THE DOUBLE PAYOFF comes when Susan, confronted with a "son" senses her husband's cunning a nd clut ches the boy to her breast, and when the brave daughter-heroine shows her suitor, Anderson, t o be the traitor, thereby exonerating the stranger and preserving his life for her own matrimonial ends. Laugh-clouding the scenes were a trio of Connecticut militiamen, a duo of Redcoats and the local female low-lifer, Virginia Bateman.
DIRECTO R HALBERT GREAVES shows the fine technique of handling a scene to Peggy Bennion, who alternated with Betty Lou Balch in the fem inine lead.
THE HYPOCHONDRIAC wife of a certain Mr. Average American, Dave Latimer, is so possessed with the idea that her departure from life is imminent that she decides to choose the next mate for her husband. As the spouse's luck would have it, the choice is a poor specimen of womanhoodstrictly speaking, a drip. Surprised, then, is a mild-expression for the reaction when the old bag, Lausanne Gudmundsen, takes a turn for the better-begins to roll her sox and to twitch to boogie-woogie, and as a result, suddenly has an attraction for Latimer. As a double life is contrary to existing laws, there is nothing left but for good old Uncle John, Oleen Bunderson, to turn up and conEXAMINING STAGE MODEL are Thomas Morgan,
vince wife Barbara Dunn, that she is a normal soul and that she should devote herself to
set
designer-builder, and Myers, dramatics head.
her
hu~nanu'~
her husband . Completing this happy scene is the appearance of Dean Eyre, old flame
wit e
- - directed by Chester J. Myers
118
of the droop-turned-vamp, who post-haste re-engages her heart.
I a u i e ~ 01 the j u r ~ - - directed by Floyd Morgan A CERTAIN YOUNG French doll, Yvonn3 Yvette (Grace Swenson to you) is accused of abruptly ending her husband's life, and is brought to trial. Prosecuting attorney, Karl Homer, produces a crowd of witnesses who circumstantially prove she did rub out the hubby, but she, in emotional and accented outbursts, swears she didn't. Then, with the audience baffled as to her guilt, the court rests the case in the jury's hands. The jury quickly votes guilty; that is, all but one society matron, Sunny Swenson, who is one per cent tender heart and ninety-nine per cent obstinacy. For two snoring nights and cursing days she holds out and gradually by subtlery, bribery, and sweetness changes nine of the eleven guilty votes. The jury foreman, Robert Anderson and a witch who should have gone out the W.T.C.U., Marian West, refuse to vote not guilty until the foreman is roped in on a put-up murder possibility and gives in, bringing the straight sister with him.
119
"~a
i ~ i e~ 0 n lhe ~arlra~k" - -directed by Mrs. Ruth M. Bell
VIVACIOUS AUNT MAUDE, Eldora McLaughlin, comes bursting one day into the house of her brother, Burns Toolson, to find a love-sick adolescent son, Widstoe Checketts, unwilling to return with her to college, a disappointed but beautiful daughter about to marry a droop she doesn't love, and a child-weary, noise-weary, peace-loving father, anxious to get his progeny out so he can "get to know his wife."
THEN COMES the bill collector I For something approaching thirty hours and a few minutes, this persistent soul remains in the house waiting for the rather irregular parent, Mr. Slater. Natural thing for an idle young bill collector with a beautiful girl like Mary Lou Cameron around for that long is to fall in love with her. This he does. They "lived happily ever after" comes when Checkett's crush, Katie Loosle, is moved to the college town; Cameron tosses the d roop for bill-collector Miles Carlson and the old man is left alone with his wife, Lausanne Gudmu nsen.
120
"t h ~ romanti~ - - directed by Dr. Halbert Greaves
MISTRESS OF THE HOUSE in Madrid in which he r four male grandchildren stop to eat and sleep between gay flirtation and other romantic pursuit is Virginia Batemen as Dona Barbarita. Her one grandaughter, Grace Swenson, is quite miserable, however; she has just reached the debutante age and yearns for romance, but is su bject t o the continuous teasing of her four brothers who consider her yet a child. Incessantly she reads the sentimental babbeling of a curre ntly po pular author-K. T. Homer and secretly longs for an affair with the man.
WITH UNUSUAL chairmanlike courage, Councilman Dick Harris finally said, "Well, we've put A day off long enough. Tomorrow we have it, whether it rains or not." It didn't rain. Past postponements had been frequent, and the event was scheduled as the probable final "A" day for the duration. Early arrivals looked for the soft jobs, late arrivals did likewise, both wound up shoveling, digging trenches, or grubbing weeds. Lots of people worked, executives watched and strolled around, I K's played jump-rope, and sluffers suffered the water penalty. Walks were laid, slopes were cleared, shovels were leaned on with WPA finesse.
Labor
Lies
Licks
AT NOON, tardy and non-workers were shackled and thrown in the water hose, guided by the muscular arms of Chris Axelgard and his vigilante partners. "Student Lies" were distributed, and the lovable IK-Spur combination handed out lunches, one to each, two to some.
Wary Aggie assembly-goers laughed freely, but were super-quick with dodging.
~a~ren traniti~n
"AI! Aggie laborer.
THE ASSEMBLY was as rowdy as ever. Pitching arms were discovered; M. C. Jim O'Toole, "Tiny" Morgan, and Warren Caldwell found themselves on the receiving end of eggs, tomatoes, and super-creamy pies. Dirty clothes and faces cleaned, the mob moved headquarters to the stadium where they watched sorority relays, a rather uninspired game between the Blues and Whites, and a freshman-sophomore sandbag rush, frosh winning. Harris's perfect day got hotter than ever, ending with a workmans' ball at night, work clothes and cut-ups in order. KD pins colors on track hopeful The water cure.
Foreman Taylor surveys
Lunch for laborers.
au~ ien~ e~ thrill e~ to" ri ~ ole tt 0
II
FOR THE TENTH consecutive year, Professor Walter Welti combined the efforts of more than two hundred chorus, cast, orchestra and production staff members to produce a grand operaa feat that few colleges in the nation can boast. With the help of Professor N. W. Christiansen, the college orchestra, Miss LuDean Rogers, coach-accompanist, and other faculty and student production experts, Welti turned out a show praised unanimously by those who heard it. Verdi's "Rigoletto" was the choice, and Morris Cannegeiter, with false nose, hunched back and jester's toy, masterfully handled the title role. Few who saw the production will forget Cannegeiter's aria (shown above in rehearsal and in performance) when he pleaded for the return of his kidnapped daughter before the court nobles. Again thrilling opera-goars was the inspiring "Rigoletto" quartette. (lower left) Claudius Doty, '41 grad, returned to sing the male romantic lead, but was replaced by Laurence Whitney when stricken with laryngitis after one performance; Whitney, in almost story-book fashion, played remarkably for the rest of the stand. 124
~h oru~ ~hin~~
FRESHMAN OLGA DOTSON, an operatic natural, brought thunderous applause in the feminine lead. Able portrayals were given by George Lacey, as Sparafucile (facing page),
Golden
Hansen,
Alice
Randall,
George Peterson, Kenneth Lindsay, Robert PaulsE:n, Bertha Monson, and Gladys Mattson ... Not underrated in their performance was the chorus. Composed of the entire force of the chorus classes, the group gave fine support to the leading singers. Dancing, singing, jesting among themselves they kept the spirit of the opera constantly alive. In addition to the excellent work done in the opera the chorus offered its talents to many other events of campus note. They presented an assembly concert in the fall and an oratorio, Elijah, in the Spring. Here, too, Professor Welti captu red praise from listeners and admiration for performers.
DIRECTOR Walter Welti
in annual
~ro~u~tion
Ensemble, sender of long-haired beats, relaxes for a moment with idle horseplay.
In the pit below
th e ij
LuDean Rogers, piano charge, checks fingering of Shirley Watland, talented keyboard technician.
Directors Christensen and Steen, artists in their own right, scrutinize a score before rehearsal.
126
colleg e opera-singers was the orchestra -
vigilant, practiced, sweating. Their work was superb.
•
~ hal 1 h a v e m u ~ I
~
FROM THE FIRST violins comes the undercurrent tremolo; the baton swings in short, quick arcs with a cautioning finger following in its wake to control the volume. The arcs quicken and shorten; the hand now fairly disappears; then stops-and with it all sound; in one long unfaltering swing the hand and baton rise together; then pause; then drop; with spasmodic beat they pound up and down while crash of drum and blare of horns keep rhythm. It is living, moving music. Integral part of USAC life was the wid~ music program; for every musically inclined individual there was some field of music to interest him. The band, the pep-band, the choruses, orchestra, ensembles, individual lessons-each offered to Aggies an opportunity for music education. Not devoted entirely to the "practicing-musician," the department was constantly functioning for one's listening pleasure . . . Innovation of late in the year were the Tuesday noon musicales. Not requiring attendance of anyon~, not widely publicized, these Vickers-arranged programs attracted every Tuesday a small, but enthusiastic, group of music-lovers. Performing were leading soloists of the college on instrument and voice. Novel presentation in mid-year was the piano duet recital featuring Blanche D~schamps, Shirley Watland, and Miss LuDean Rogers, instructor of piano. The two piano work brought highest praise from an awed student body ... From the music on the "legitimate" side to the currently consumed boogie-woogie went student fancy at will; in demand were those whose talents included the "science of hot licks." Campus dance bands which boasted solid sending were on the "give" the year' round. All-inclusive, this music was adequate for everyone-listener or participant, jam artist or symphonut-and grew even more important as a campus feature.
127
~olvin~
national
ill~'11
DEBATERS LAUNCHED upon a busy year early in the fall as they undertook the Utah State edition of the Rocky Mountain Forensic League conference. Careful preparation provided a smoothly-run convention for the delegates from all the Rocky Mountain colleges. (Right) C. U. goldenboys pulled most skullduggery in railroading certain measures through the legislative assembly. All in fun, though. Proceeding to the final day was one of four Aggie teams entered in the tournament at Weber College. Clay and Fonnesbeck were one of the last to go and registered a consoling victory over the tournament winning U. S. C. debaters.
UNFETTERED, SELDOM serious Don "Rollo" Bowen and Jack "McGraw" Anderson propounded solutions for national ills only Bowen, Anderson, and Harmon Perry would dream up.
STUDIOUS, QUIET Wells Allred teamed with the only woman on the squad, smooth, good-and intellectual-looking Adrus Hansen of Elwood, through one tournament_
ALSO PARTICIPATING, though not as partners, were Senior Glenn Fuller, experienced Aggie speaker, and Frosh Jerry Olson, who early fled the ranks for Buzzer duties.
HANGOVER PARTNERS from high school, Howard Blood and Desmond Anderson, handsome, deep-thinking, frosh saw action in several forensic events.
JOURNALIST, faith expounding Lane Palmer divided attention between myriad extra-class activities while partner Evan Iverson again proved himself a ranking extemporaneous logician.
LATER IN THE YEAR, with depleted funds somewhat replenished, Fonnesbeck, Clay, Iverson, and Palmer trekked coastward to the annual College of the Pacific meet in Stockton, California. Junior college speakers took in the Regional Junior college meet at Price, Utah. Neither tournament found USAC debaters in final rounds. The annual college high school tournament in the spring gave prep school speakers a look-see at State and an opportunity to compete for trop hies. Last college forensic participation of the year came in State Capitol Representatives' Chamber, where Utah college speakers tried their hands again at political maneuvering . . . Efficient, econ theorizing, superb arguer Evan B. Murray, official coach, threw puns, sarcasm, and ideas to debate enthusiasts. His role as "brain-truster" for debate squad was strongest part of a funds-lacking team. Contributing to the general welfare of forensics were Dr. Halbert Greaves and Dr. F. D. Daines, long-strong supporters.
the
~ 011
COUNTED ON HEAVILY for leadership were John Clay and Alan. Fonnesbeck. Fonnesbeck, Agora Club dictator, was the leading college debater. Hand-thrower Clay held purse strings as well as managerial duties.
e~ e 129
~e~ater~
Colonel Cross
Lieutenants Bunker and Neilson Lieutenant Bullen, Captain Ward .
Sergeants Daly, Moore, Cazazza, and See
HEADED BY Colonel Matthew A. Cross, Utah State R.O.T.C. men had the trying job of attempting to plant military information into the unreceptive heads of basic students. Drill sessions every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon revealed that it took patience and hard work to push the green freshmen and sophomores around the quad.
Lieutenant Nielson, with a typical army man's hard-boiled
exterior, was once again popular with the first year students, while Lieutenant Bunker struggled with the cocky sophomores. Powerhouser Sergeant Daly did most of the shouting in the gunshed Winter Quarter, and students soon learned to respect his ability and his temper. Late in the year Lieutenant Ward received his captain's bars along with congratulations of the entire department .
the
•
aIllerl~an 130
f.
O.
1. ~.
automaton~ STRAINING MUSCLES and minds, basic students tried most of the time to catch the command and to translate it into the appropriate action. Their hours in the sun netted results, though, as t oward spring review whole batteries executed simple commands with little error. Improvement in cadet commanders was felt, too, by trainees. Favorite "rest" pastime at year's beginning was to chuckle at a commander's mistakes or to curse his obstinacy-at year's end, however, most of the advanced men commanded the admiration of their charges. Winter quarter brought field house and gunshed seSSions, frightening and fascinating to new recruits, followed by hot spring afternoons back on the quad.
the ~
are
arm
~
nOll
n~
GRADUATING FROM their training as Military Officers, the men listed below stepped into the U. S. Army as second lieutenants. Considered by military authorities as indispensable to the war effort and by coeds as magnficent were: Samuel L. Avis, Chris T. Axelgard, Evan A. Baugh, Keith S. Boyer, Ray R. Canning, Harold R. Capener, David T. Cbrk, Ned P. Clyde, Elmer C. Fox, Dean B. Freeman, Mervin Hall, Royal B. Henderson, Lynn B. Hollist, Ray C. Hugie, Clyde F. Hurst, Leo William Jex, Preston D. Johnson, Ronald C. Johnson, Don C. Kidman, Richard S. Lattin, Russel Liston, Dominick M. Laverne, Glen L. Maughan, John B. Millard, Dale R. Miller, Albert W. Mitchell, Jr., Guy G. Pace, Sterling K. Peterson, Denton S. Richards, Dean J. Rogers, Richard H. Romney, Roma O. Saltzgiver, Jr., Lloyd E. Shaw, Harold C. Steed, Clifford D. Stock, Neil Wilcox, Robert F. Wilson, Edward S. Scartezina ... Even more magnificent were future Second Louies, honor-graduates: Joseph T. Abbott, Robert E. Corey, Ezra W. Geddes, Kenneth R. Hampton, Rex H. Hampton, David K. Hulme, Melvin L. Manning, Glen T. Nelson, John A. Shaw.
~r a~ti~ ~
for
•
~r~~l~lon
WITH THE SUN beating down and their guns screwed in every possible direction, drillmen stand as straight as possible and await t he whistle at 2 P.M., ending the drill session. They pray that the officer won't notice those wrinkled coats, missing buttons, and unsewed overseas hats. They polish belts on their sleeves and shoes on their pants leg; with bored expressions they hear "six to the front and three to the rear" and "don't anticipate the command" a hundred times.
"At ease" and "rest" bring that opportunity to admire the
sponsors, breathe deeply, and ask the time. This is military science, American style.
BIG SURPRISE to the military dopesters was the appointment of John A. Shaw to the high-andmighty post of Cadet Colonel, based on grades, military attitude, discipline. Shaw returned from a two-year L. D. S. mission to take his place at the head of the advanced military men. On the left Colonel Cross congratulates Shaw following the announcement of his appointment at Cadet Hop.
133
ann
~lan~
MILITARY MEN BAND together in exclusive Scabbard and Blade. Staff-advised by Captain Stock, their student commanders were Ned Clyde, past, and Max Rogers, incoming. The initiation process finds prospective members saluting each other under the clock, periodically announcing the time, and mock-drilling in the halls.
Clyde Hurst, Captain Ned Clyde, Clifford Stock, Chris Axelgard.
(REAR): Pace, P. Johnson, Geddes, Peterson, R. Hampton, K. Hampton,. Hugie (Front): Captain Stock, Romney, Corey, Hurst, Abbott, D. Rogers, Stock, Clyde.
(REAR): Coburn, McDonald, McClure, Murray, Whitney, L. Rogers, R. Caine, Budge. (Front): Freeman, Baugh, Mitchell, Miller, Hanson, Bishop, Fletcher, Pugsley.
(REAR): Geauque, Schopper, Long, Samowitz, Sneddon, Benton, James, Thorpe. (Front): Lewis, Batt, Stoker, Jaynes, Hanson, G. Anderson, Call, Hilton.
PICKED BY Advanced Military men each year is the Sponsor Corps, choice array of feminine talent. Though the sponsor is the only military figure on the campus other than the colonel deserving a salute, her place is far from a bed of roses. With Dick Romney calling commands, she drilled about twice as hard as basics; she bought her own uniform and was required to attend weekly meetings, drills. Nevertheless the Sponsors were looked up to and admired by everyone on the campus; their marching ability compared quite favorably with their male counterparts. The largest Sponsor unit in the ninth corps area, the Utah State blue-clads were prominent figures at every military function. Their precision review highlighted the Military Ball, they added considera ble color to the Tuesday, Thursday drills.
Harriet Parks, Elaine Nelson, Vera Griffin.
MEMBERS: H. Parks, E. Nelson, V. Griffin, B. Hatch, R. Hyer, F. Montrose, C. Mickelson, R. Richards, K. Stevenson, H. Steward, A. Hansen, A. Ryan, G. Harris, H. Stoddard, K. Loosle, I. Pixton, J. Frampton, D. Nielsen, P. Bennion, R. Everton, B. Batt, M. Bernston, C. Blair, D. Bergeson, R. Thurston, A. Carter, U. Woodland , E. Nelson, E. Call, M. Call, M. Cooley, K. Anderson, M. Cameron, B. Tripp, M. Roundy, B. Fitzgerald , E. Manning, C. Pond, E. Wadleigh, J. Ray, S. Buetler, J. Slack, P. Ballinger, M. Tanner, R. Poole.
-.
ACTIVITY OF THE military men was not confined to the drill field of the plotting room alone. True to military tradition the officers reveled at their own private party, the Cadet Hop. It was here the student regimental officers were named. In the upper photo we see the officers passing along the reception line at the Hop. There were special parades-Homecoming, Coed Day-that were all just another drill to men jn the ranks, but were gratifying to officers and department officials. Of course, relief extraordinaire at any time was a momentary chat with sponsors.
reI
i e f fro m
rOll tin e
AFTER WEEKS of preparation the military department presented its annual display of precision drilling at the military ball. The only school function to be held at the Dansante after the schism in t hat quarter, the ball was, as usual, a social highlight. The the me, "Victory's Ours with United Powers" was chosen in a campus-wide contest won jointly by Kenneth Hampton, Joyce Adney, and Joy Nelson. The grand march, led by dignitaries of state , school, and department, proceeded without blunder-the entire affair, in fact, was without a hitch, and therefore a credit to its planning committees.
ALWAYS POPULAR, the refreshment table served punch without the spike.
ABOVE, the grand march as it emerged from the military arch. AT LEFT, the crowds arrive at the ball ready for an evening of fun .
BANDWAGONER Ineda Hickman jolts the typewriter wickedly in turning out her widely-read column. Ineda is old-timer of life staff.
DRAWLING Sam Bailey, Editor, grins at "Chief-grafter," Bus in ess Manager Dick Romney. Affectionately known as Sam and Dick, these boys successfully steered Student life through a cut-budget year.
a~ ~ ~ ari n~ w~ ~ kI~ wa~ ~ [u~ ~ n[ Iif ~,
CALDER PICKETT, Verle Spencer, and Rex Plowman once-over a national magazine with
typical
journalists'
enthusiasm--un.
LAN E PALMER and Gwen Hunsaker, chief contenders for '43 editorship, obscure much-abused assignment boa rd, Student Life tradition.
IDLING THROUGH pigeon holes are Genevieve Johnson and Beth Wakely. Pigeonholed was poor copy-that is, sometimes.
COLLABORATORS Stan Anderson and Bryce Roe whip out their famous "caustic" observations with unbatting eyes.
NEWSHAWKING by telephone are Doretta Salisbury and Maxine Burgoyne. Telephone often saw service in a social capacity.
•
~am~ll~ Or~anl~m IN SPITE OF paper shortage, the rise in prices, and the draft, Student Life rolled off the presses and into the halls Thursdays at eleven. This SAE-controlled publicity tattler gave vent to latent journalistic talent and a salary to the Editor. The staff convened weekly to consume a bushel of apples, draw cartoons on the assignment b03rd, and run down the faculty whom they lauded publically_ Inevitably copywriters got the publicity; Romney got the advertising, and Bailey got the Farm Flashes. Tuesday and Wednesday nights Lifers gathered at the print shop to drink cokes, swap creative writing themes and read proof_
Female reporters undermined the
AWS and student politics to get Editor Sam elected "Cinderella Man." Bailey was the conformer; Henriod, the informer; Palmer, the reformer-thus yellow journalism was executed, elocuted, and sometimes even read. Nevertheless Student Life, the power behind the throne of college info, had its environs decorated with cups-symbols of excellence from the R.M.I.P.A.
EVIL STAFF watches another issue of Student Life "in bed."
the l~~l Duzzer HECTIC, INDEED, is a year in the life of an annual that undergoes the drafting of the Editor, pin-hanging of the Business Manager, and the snipping of the budget. Yet that is the one-word story of the 1942 Buzzer. Hectic.
Lyn Larson, copy; Anne Murdock, copy; Charles Henry, statistics; Florence Heywood, copy; Don Bowen, copy; Calder Pickett, copy.
Editor Grant Bethers Business Manager J. T. Abbott Managing Editor Jerry Olson
FROM THE patch quilt of thoughts evolving from the heads on these pages came an assortment of ideas-unusual photo angles, clever work combinations, efficiency operations schemes, persuasive sales techniques. Thrown together or pulled together, these ideas Margaret Ann Wilson , moral support; Gloria Harris, General; Don Black, photog ; Mary Walker, office; Anne Kennedy, office; Melba Call, business.
were hashed over, tried, retried, discarded or retained until the book you now examine developed. 140
..
Jean Carlos, business; Lausanne Gudmunsen, office; Charles Henry II, publicity; Florence Crane, office.
~ re ate~
Cha rlotte Henriod, copy
lor
I u t u r e reI ere n~ e
Haven Barlow, business
Doris Wallin, office
Ruth M. Richardson, general
Wilma Gunn, office; Lois Adams, office; Doris Okelberry, busines ; Katie Loosle, business; Roma Poole, business.
BEHIND ALL THIS exchange and revisal of notions was the guiding thought of preserving an accurate, unpretentious, in-the-typical-manner reminiscencl1 of life at the Utah State Agricultural College for the year 1942. Determined to deliver no bouquets to undeserving hands, ready to give due recognition, the staff expects no more than this your judgment of this creation .
In
•
1n ~ U ~ ~ 0 r tor at hIe t i ~ ~ CENTER OF BOTH the athletic endeavor on USAC campus and red ink on USAC books is the fieldhouse, monument to man's physical conditioning. Serving as an all-season accommodation for every sport save jai-Iai and ice hockey, this gargantuan structure steals the thunder of "historic" Smart gymnasium in no uncertain terms. On its courts, over its mats, around its track parade the best athletic talent of the college; its spacious gallery hugs the throngs that come to see C. U., the nation's top hoopmen, and drowns the crowds that cheer intramural contest. With but one equal in the conference, the field house is a paragon of praise in the timeless worship of the body beautiful.
TRACING THE COURSE of college athletics for the year is the all-powerful Athletic Council. With a voice in its decisions are: (in order) Russell E. Bernston, A. N. Sorenson, Wayne Morgan, E. L. Romney, and G. B. Caine. Morale of Aggie students is always affected
by the
athletic
set-up.
Though
the
major trial, football, failed miserably, Aggie athletes and spectators were appeased with a complete athletic program. From the ballyhooed, commercialized events, football and basketball, through the lesser stars, track, tennis, and wrestling, to the quad intramurals and off-campus skiing upon participation.
prime emphasis is
Pushing the idea that
every person has a place in physical activity, the
powers of
Romney,
Heaton,
USAC
athletics -
Jensen,
Nelson, Gould,
Burnett,
Young, Swenson-exerted their pressure to bring every collegian into the wide athletic program. In the field Aggie representatives scattered their fire; they came close to several all-time highs; they reached some all-time lows.
a ~ 0 III ~ 1et e athleti~
men
~
o~ e n h 0 U~ e UNIQUE INNOVA liON in intramural competition is the Utag Open House scheme. Combination of circus, indoor track meet, and church-party game session, the event features an evening of competition am 0 n g in,t ramural teams in a number of little-publicized events-box hockey, pingpong, tumbling, volley ball, tire wrestling, pyramid building, darts. With at least one contest always in progress, open house fans, melodrama-fashion, sit on sidelines to cheer for favorites, laugh at boners, and acclaim victors. Piling up the biggest aggregate for fraternities at the event was Pi Kappa Alpha; Wellsville and Foresters took honors in the other leagues. SPE-sponsored Betty Lou Green became the queen of the event in balloting and was presented with a sweater, standard intramural award, by Israel Heaton -Director of the Open House. (upper left.)
wom~n~
o~ ~ n
h 0 U~ ~
145
PARALLELING the men's open house event was the dance contest sponsored by the women's intramural department. Competition centered around entries in character, creative, social, tap, and folk dancing. Held in the fieldhouse, the affair took on the atmosphere of a Broadway production as women's campu:; organizations put on a display of grace, costuming, and originality. Kappa Delta, most frequent winner of past contests, was surpassed by the Chi 0 dancers who held first in three of five events . . . At top is the Chi Omega creative "Deep Purple," most effectively costumed dance of the thow; eHectively costumed in another sense were the KD creators (bottom) who tied with "Deep Purple" and the Alpha Chi creation for first in that division. At center is the winning AXO social dance; highlight was Peterson's "discard" of partner.
FROM SMART gym the volleyball tourna. ment moved to the field house where SAE, Engineers, and Jordan became champs. The death struggle of Engineers and Foresters taking a 1¡0 championship victory in water polo; SAE crept upon the Sigs again with another title he re. The spring track meet found the Royal White Cross men beating out Education by a narrow margin.
(ABOVE): Ag Club's winning touch football team. (BELOW): Noonday intramural wrestling starts under the watchful eye of J. T. Abbott. (UPPER RIGHT): Fraternity league basketball intramurals features wins by Sigma Chi over PiKA. (LOWER RIGHT): Clown Con Bertin, student intramural director, does reverting tactics.
STEPPING INTO Coach "Hy" Hunsaker's intramural directorship, Israel Heaton, aided by Student Director Con Bertin, produced an intramural program which ranked with the best on the record ... Pushed off with touch football in which Ag Club, Sigma and Wellsville copped honors, the 'murals quickly took in A and B basketball runoffs. Sigs took both; Ag and Engineers shared B and A respectively; Castle Valley breezed through for the clubs. On the mat the Sig wrestlers again made the grade while Foresters came through with their first win of the year. Open house found PKA, Foresters, and Wellsville emerging triumphant; SPE got the queen. Foresters began to lengthen their stride with a win in swimming; Sigs again blue-ribboned; Castle Valley and Southern Idaho tied for the club tank awards. Sigma Chi ganged up to walk away in the Winter Carnival while Foresters again edged the Engineers.
intramural~ SANDWICHED BETWEEN the spring snows, the softball tournament again was top quad attraction and held, along with springcontested tennis, the deciding counters in all but the fraternity leag ue where Sigma Chi held a substantial margin . . . Honored at the annual intramural banquet were the managers of the participating organizations. Deserving the honors, these managers took difficult jobs when they agreed to have teams in the fieldon time.
Their effort insured the success of the program.
FOR UNATTACHED hopefuls the all-campus tournaments offered competition. These events found many free-lance participants piling up enviable records.
(ABOVE): Spring softball packed the quad.
(LEFT TOP): Winning Sig basketball team , spring.
(LEFT): Fraternity water-polo champs -SAE.
At the Intramural Track Meet.
Women warred on the quad.
IntramuraliH~ too, th~ women SMALLER, BUT WITH no less enthusiasm, is the intramural program for women students. Directed by Margaret "Joe" Goold and student Ruth Andrus, the program provides competition in team sports-
COMMITTEE ON Womens' Intramurals: Ruth Andrus,
as softball and tenniquoits-as well as individual
Ella Adamson, Margaret Goold, Dorothy Tervort, Harriet
events-as crocquet and tennis. The quad after five
Parks, Joyce Welker, Jean Christensen.
becomes the scene for many of these contests (particularly enjoyed by the service men); it is here that the "Big Three"-Darts, Aggiettes, and Speedsters -outdistance the affiliate entries with apparent ease ... Like the male intra muralists, the gals have an award banquet at the Bluebird where manager sweaters and individual awards are given.
Well-
organized and hotly-contested throughout, the program provides just the right relaxation and exercise for the busy college woman.
•
~ri~iron
Ver~IOn
INCONSISTENT WITH THE success of the '41 Stanford Indian T-formation was Utah State's first season with this deceptive method of play. In fact, the 1941 Aggie football season was a loss from almost every angle in which figures were the deciding factors.
Nosediving to the
first complete whitewash in Aggie history, USAC footbailers felt the sting of criticism from almost every quarter. However, a certain loyalty in the studentbody, the strongest fans, put other considerations besides the scores, the averages, the totals foremost in analyzing the season.
FIRST
CONSIDERATION,
THE
COACH.
"Smiling Dick" Romney, in his twenty-second year of football coaching at Utah State, in spite of the season offered
no excuses.
Rather, determined to stage a USAC come¡ back, Romney began laying plans for the 1942 campaign. Players whom he coached had the greatest admiration for him; his influence from his new post of USAC Athletic Director had profound effect upon the college athletic program.
Bearing without wincing or even
cracking his famous smile, Dick Romney went about the business of building the strongest possible 1942 football team. The censorious studentbody admired this in the man.
149
ENDING HIS participant's career in college was Captain Marvin "Dingle" Bell. Injured for a large part of the season, Bell came back to play brilliant football , to remain the campus idol.
CAPTAIN MARVIN BELL
MEL MANNING
CHRIS AXELGARD
RALPH MAUGHAN
JACK MOORE
FURTHER SUBDUING criticism of the no-win season was a common respect for the players.
Working together these Aggiemen had given their all in every game.
Anxious to bring victory home they had sacrificed pleasures, drilled brutally, played desperately. Ever razzed about their defeats, ever begged for victories-the strain was terrific. Not insufficient was their effort, but superb.
150
~e~ onn ~on~lneration - the ~la~er~ (BACK): Coach E. L. Romney, Sam Merrill, John Putnick, Glen Sorensen, Frank Yose, Jean Andrews, Dick Griffin , Manager Jack Anderson, Trainer George Nelson. (Third Row): Assistant Coach Deb Young , Joe Ingersoll, Mel Wood, Dale James, Don Dolquist, Acquilla Allen, Gail Duncan, Nephi Schwab, Ralph Maughan.
(Second Row): Fred Allen, Burton Silcock,
Bill Batt, Ca ptain Marvin Bell, Jim Paulos, Jack Moore, Chrii Axelgard, Bob Choate, Guy Pace, Dee Whitesides. (Front Row): Melvin Manning, Charles Hutchinsen, Hue Jewkes, Ferrin Sondregger, Jack Gilbert, Dick Howard, James Martin, Dave Clark, Burns Crookston, Mascot "Deck."
151
leavin~ the lineu~ LOSING-LOYALTY of Aggie rooters was heightened by the crop of graduating Seniors who were seeing their last struggles on the college field . Many stars of a brighter day in USAC football history were in their midst. Mel Manning, Big County gridder, though injured during the season, bowed from a bright career on the college sport scene. Manning was a red-hot T formation back being tricky and fast on his feet. Reliable Sam Merrill, in graduating took one of the most consistently-good performers from the Aggie line. Chris Axelgard, husky end, left the Romney camp after three years with the Aggie team. Dave Clark, reliable reserve, was another who left the Aggies for the final time.
Aggie ball-packers hit tough going, but churn on.
JOHN PUTNIC
DAVE CLARK
JACK GILBERT
DICK HOWARD
153
~on~olation AFTER THE SHOCK of the goose-egg in the Utags win column and the feeling of loneliness that comes from their place at the foot of the standings has passed, a closer examination of the record of the 1942 football season at Utah State reveals that defeat was not always inevitable. In the season's opener against Paul McClung's mates, the Golden Buffaloes of Colorado, the home boys worked up the dope-upsetting score, 13-7. With a pass interception in the closing minutes of the fay on the threeyard line by the Buff's Texa Reilly breaking up a 68-yard drive that promised the tying counters, Aggies felt that some "fate" had a hand in picking the victor. Heartened by their showing against C. U., the Aggie gridsters went into the practice Idaho U. game with high hopes-hopes that were dashed by the heavier Bengal squad to the tune of 16-0. The Shaunassey T, though looking smooth at times, seemed ineffectual when Utags neared
DAIL JAMES DEAN ANDREW BURTON SILCOCK
AGGIE DRAGNET closes on D. U. sprinter.
154
the r e~ 0r ~ IN THEIR SECOND league encounter, the homecoming fiasco with Colorado State, the Aggies had sure victory ln their grasp but for the Coloag's last minute one-man-gangLewis Dent. When the opening whistle's echo had barely finished reverberating in the Aggie bowl, Freddie Allen, flashy Aggie back, broke away for a 78-yard jaunt worth six points. This margin seemed large enough as Aggies clamored several times close to scoring territory; aforementioned Mr. Dent then came alive in the final canto and with a firecracker team around him quickly pushed over seven points, broke up another Aggie drive via the interception route ... Brigham Young University next took full and decisive measure of the Utags, 28-0. Clicking in every particular, were the Brigham boys as they piled up yardage and score over the sluggish, seemingly dazed Aggie team and left Logan fans in the darkest of depths.
DELAYING action from the fore.
JIM PAULOS MEL WOOD BURNS CROOKSTON
uta~~ ~lum~;
then r e~ 0ver
THE HAPLESS AGGIES in their last home game of the season again bowed in defeat, this time to Denver U. The ballyhooed "Battle of the T's" proved to be a washout as Duncan, Aggie find for the fullback post, followed earlier-in-the-season injuries Bell, Manning, and Twitchell out of action. Duncan's departure from the game seemed to drain the last spark from the Aggies; it was Denver all the way ... "Insult to injury" came in the Wyoming game. Wyoming, doped as the stalest grid-gallopers in the conference, snarled or bluffed their way to a 6-6 tie with the Farmers . . . The turkey-day game was quite a different story. With their pre-game stock about as far under the Redskins' as the barometers would register,
the Utags shocked the
Capital City hilltoppers and thrilled their own followers with an amazing 33-21 score. Racking up their best score of the year, the season's best conference pass offensive and the smoother functioning T of the two, Aggie players took credit for a startling comeback.
GAIL DUNCAN
AQUILLA ALLEN
GUY PACE
BILL BAn
JAMES MARTIN
FRANK YOSE
UTAH AGGIES intercept; everyone in air about it.
AFTER THE U GAME, with no bowl offers particularly imminent, Aggie gridders checked in their suits and turned their attention either to classes or the other athletic fields ... Aggie fans, though disappointed on the whole in the season, still were able to speak of the campaign in other than superlative derogatives. They were satisfied somewhat with Romney's tight-lipped swing toward '42 prospects; they liked the spirit which players always tried for; they were appeased with minor titles of "Highest scorers-on Utah" and "Best pass-offensive for a single game" ... The great mass of Utag Saturday's children left the stands with a hazy notion of waiting until the 1942 team was trotted out. Maybe then they would have something to rouse their not-so-noble cheering to a real thunder.
in DO N DOLQ UIST
thank~~ivin~
finale
GOOD AT OFFENSIVE scoring, but better as defensive men under opponents' baskets, were regular guards Keith Trane (captain) and Melvin (Red) Briggs, both shown here as they anticipate a couple more points for the blue and white team.
Reserve
center Bill Durrant points his eyes toward the ceiling as he prepares to go up after a "jump ball," while regular center Verne Hoffman delicately and accurately handles the ball from a difficult pivot position. Hoffman, a sophomore in Big-Seven competition, was rated among the conference'!; best by many sports experts.
KEITH TRANE
MELVIN BRIGGS
BILL DURRANT
VERNE HOFFMAN
~~ortin~
a new
~oa~h
TAKING OVER UTAH STATE basketball reins but three weeks before regular conference play began, Coach R. W. (Bob) Burnett transformed a green Aggie quintet into a vivid entry in the Big-Seven cage scene. Changing in three days from Stanford University freshman coach to head varsity hoop mentor of Utah State, Burnett replaced H. B. (Bebe) Lee who was called into active service with the United States Navy. The personable Lee had served three months after taking over duties held twenty-three years by E. L. (Dick) Romney, now director of USAC COACH BOB BURNETT
athletics. Coach Burnett, likeable, laughable, heady, gained respect of fans and players alike as he sent victoryseeking teams onto the floor against squads of what was this year one of the nation's toughest conferences.
158
GRANT CULLIMORE and Evan Baugh, regular forwards on the 1942 Aggie quintet, carried a large part of the Farmers' scoring load in the Big-Seven campaign. Both measuring less than six feet, Cullimore and Baugh were speedy, did a lot of deceptive, accurate shooting for the Utags. Backing up the two scooters at the forward posts were the squad's tallest men, Glen Maughan and Orrin Curtis.
Well drilled in
screening and ball retrieving, the two 6 ft. 4 inch men were sent into the game when height was sorely needed under both baskets.
EVAN BAUGH GLEN N MAUGHAN
utah
ORRIN CURTIS
~tat~ ~la~~u na~k~nall
Y CORKS the leaping Baugh.
BRIGGS cramped in action.
WYOMING'S swan song.
•
tini~h In
nUIII nerti ve
THREE SOPHOMORE hoopsters who did their share of playing in waning minutes of Aggie games were Bill Sharp, Roger Taylor, and Dick Griffin. Sharp, left-handed, little, red-headed awed fans with his accurate shooting and speed when he was in the ball game. Taylor, as sure as the surest at making free-tosses, was also speedy, also small. Griffin, who began the season late because of an overlapping football season developed rapidly into one of Coach Burnett's most
BILL SHARP
trusted,
steady,
reserves.
Griffin
ROGER TAYLOR
played at either forward or guard positions.
DICK GRIFFIN
UTAH FINESSE fails to click.
(BACK ROW): G. Maughan, B. Durrant, O. Curtis. (Middle RJw): Mgr. B. Corey, R. Taylor, Q. Allen, B. Sharp, T. Roberts, D. Griffin. (Front Row): R. Maughan, E. Baugh, K. Trane, M. Briggs, V. Hoffman, G. Cullimore, Coach B. Burnett. C. Peterson, Mascot.
RATED AS POTENTIAL cellar-dwellers at the start of the season, the Aggies were soon recognized as a smooth working squad, ended the campaign in fifth place with nine losses, three wins. Twice the Aggies dropped Colorado State, and once they defeated Denver university while losing contests to Colorado, Utah, Brigham Young, and Wyoming . . . Ralph Maughan, Tom Roberts, and Aquilla Allen were three more reserves who showed plenty of promise during the conference season. Maughan, a sophomore, played in nearly every game during the season, started the final contest against the conference champion Colorado Buffaloes. Replacing Mel Briggs, who was ill the last week, Maughan did some brilliant playing as the underdog Aggies battled the Buffs right down to the final gun. RALPH MAUGHAN
AQUILLA ALLEN
TOM ROBERTS
[BACK ROW): Coach Marvin Bell, Kenneth Lindsey, Bill Holmestead, Sergio Alvarez, Tony Sutich, Udell Wankier. (Second Row): Dave McMullin, Owen Burnham, Kenneth Farrell, Ben Slack. Melvin Thalman. (Third Row): Evan Sorenson, Marion Davis, Max Franson, Ted Crawford.
rre~hman
~a~ket~all
UT AG FRESHMAN talent in the casaba art was noticeably lacking this year as a scant trio of fellows showed up well enough to even make a bid for a berth on the '43 squad. Though they didn't exhibit a preponderancee of basketball skill, Frosh did supply a little practice work for Coach Bob Burnett's varsity men. Holding regular workouts under the tutelage of Marv "Dingle" Bell, the greenlings were able to muster among themselves several interesting contests over the year.
Nevertheless, it is with raised eye-
brows that Coach Burnett hopes that some of the fellows may find their stride in time to provide him with reserve material for the coming basketball campaign.
162
p
lre~hman
too t h all
SHARPLY CONTRASTING with the Frosh basketball talent was the year's crop of Frosh football hopefuls. Under Coach Charlie Clark's watchful eye in the Fall, the Freshman gridmen were termed the best group of greenlings to ever dig a spike in the stadium green. Showing up in both fall and spring drills were such boys as Frank (Bus) Williams,
George Nelson, William
(Georgia) Russell, Evan Sorensen, Tony Sutich, and Sergio Alvarez-all backs who showed in their midst both the size and speed to bolster a T-formation. Promising linemen were Dick (Blimp) Folkerson, Merrill Crosby, and Gib Madsen. Contributing more than a little hope for the '42 Aggie gridiron cause, these men promise to push many of the regulars to the limit for starting positions. Ability of the boys showed clearly as they put up lively scraps with the varsity in the fall-emerging once as victors. Romney looks to the material in the Frosh squad to put Utah State back in the circles of championship teams.
(BAC K ROW): Bill Holmestead, Earl Douglas Long, Stanley Jones. (Third Bill Russell, Evan Sorenson, Thad Yost, Tibbits, Sergio Alvarez, Ken Farrell,
James, Tony Sutich, Merrill Crosby, Walker McAllister, George Nelson, Row): Bob Bosch, Grant Ash, Lyngby Stoker, Jack Hendricks, Jack Larsen, Coach Charlie Clark. (Second Row): Merlyn Jones, Wade Munden, Dick Louis Klekas, Cecil Cherry. (First Row): Ralph Clark, Dick Folkerson, Art Gottfredson, Gibb Madsen.
BURNS CROOKSTON
GRANT CULLIMORE
RALPH MAUGHAN
ROGER TAYLOR
CAPTAIN DALE NELSON CHRIS LESTON
SMALL, CONSISTENTLY-FIGHTING, hard-working Aggie thinclads were rated dangerous in Big Seven track participation. Pulling many points into Utag column by sheer drive, these Aggie athletes had best success of major athletic entrees. Handsome Captain Dale Nelson paced the middle-distances, Sophomore flash Burns Crookston cleared high and low hurdle barriers, and all-round Grant Cullimore broadjumped to contribute the valuable counters to the Aggie cause. Not too consistent in performance, Chris Leston tagged the super six foot levels often enough to place first in several meets. Weightman Ralph Maughan, another of the famous Wellsville clan, was a major Aggie point-man as he tallied repeatedly in every meet. Speedy Rog Taylor frequently breezed through the dashes in near-record time. Gordon Porter, politician-manager, held heads, rubbed tired muscles, and tracked stray equipment faithfully during the year.
in the
~~rin~ athlete~
turn to
tra~K
FOLLOWERS OF CINDER sports were heartened when the Aggie crew made its '42 debut against Utah U. New Coach Deb Young placed his men ;n the various events to take advantage of every break, and the Farmers came out on the lean end of a 71-69 score, upsetting heavy pre-meet odds on Utah. Second competition with B.Y.U. found them strong, taking the meet by a considerable margin. At the '42 State meet, Utah nosed out the powerful Aggie and B.Y.U. duo with a 51 V2 to 46% score, with the College Hill serving notice that track is definitely in.
(STANDING): Coach Young, Bell, Ingersoll, R. Maughan, G. Maughan, Twitchell, White, Havens, Johnson, Liston, Trainer Nelson, Porter. (Kneeling): Scartezina, Clark, Taylor, Cullimore, Sharp, Davis, Crookston, Nelson.
LOCKER-ROOM chatter was not slow in giving credit for the excellent season to newcomer Coach Deb Young. Long a bright light in Utah prep circles, Deb came to Utah State, took hold of a not-too-experienced group to produce potentially the strongest cinder squad in the state. Admired and liked by every athlete in his influence, Deb in one year cut for himself a comfortable niche in the Aggie Hall of Fame.
thin~lau~
rat ~
LEAN Glenn Maughan cleared the high-jump bar
DISTANCE-RUNNER Winston Havens was a
with enough agility to rate him high in Aggie
threatening figure in every race he entered;
camp and abroad. Sophomore Joe Ingersoll, ver-
longer distancer Alton Davis kept best two-mile
satile athlete, hurled the discus for Aggie count-
record in the state. Sophomore Chuck Goodwin,
ers while Senior Ned Clyde wound up his collegi-
husky runner, drove hard to push the best tape-
ate track career by stepping over hurdles.
breakers in the conference.
ALTON DAVIS
GLENN MAUGHAN
CHUCK GOODWIN
JOE INGERSOLL
NED CLYDE WINSTON HAVENS
166
a IDo n~
~
tat ~
athl~t~~
LEADING OFF the track season was the Intramural Track Meet in which varsity cindermen circled th e track in "test runs." The IOO-yard dash d rew most enthusiasm from fans as three runners hit th e tape almost simultaneously. (Upper photo.) Breaking the tape are Rog Taylor, Chuck Goodwin, and Grant Cullimore. The last received credit for the win that had the crowd shreiking with excitement . Below, Crookston, star Utag hurdler, holds a two step advantage over Williams and Clyde at the fou rth barrier. The meet, besides conditioning tracksters, served to give Coach Deb Young a peak at his charges under fire.
r 0r
whom th~
toll ~ ~
COACH GOODWIN tapes the hands of a boxer.
"MENACING" Con Bertin in conference competition.
(BACK): J. Duncan, D. Blanchard , B. Cuff, L. Stoker, F. Williams, T. Sutich, K. Taylor. (Front): J. O'Toole, V. Evans, C. Jacobs, C. James, C. Goodwin , L. Ellison.
WRESTLING CAPTAIN Dale Miller works on BYU oppo. nent. Work produced a fall in first period for Miller.
BOXING INTEREST on the campus was revived with much accompanying color during the winter sea¡ son under the direction of Chuck Goodwin, talented Farmer leather tosser who acted as coach of the Utah Aggie squad. Goodwin took a six-man squad into Idaho for meets against University of Idaho's tough Bengal crew and U. of I., Southern Branch, besides entering a team of ten in the Intermountain AAU. Tournament at Salt Lake ..• Individual honors in the A.AU. joust were taken by Lyngly Stoker, light heavyweight, and Frank (Bus) Williams, heavyweight. Stoker punched his way to the Junior Division title in his weight, as Williams won the senior heavyweight bunting without landing a blow after taking the junior heavyweight diadem a year ago. Goodwin lost to Harold Jardine, the standout of the tournament, in the championship round of the senior 147-pound division. He was the winner of the junior welterweight gonfalon a year ago. 168
(BACK): Coach George Nelson , Evan Memmott, G len Jackson, Winston Havens, Tom Pozarnski, Co n Bertin. (Front): Edward Rice, Drew Grandy, Ca prain Gerald Palmer, Dale Maughan, LaMar Mackay
noxin~ a n ~ wre~tlin~ AFTE R TUCKING AWAY their sixth consecutive state collegiate wrestling championship, Coach George Nelson's Utah Aggie matmen dropped the Western Division crown they held a year ago t o Brigham Young University's grapplers. The Wayne Soffe-coached Cougars chalked up 32 points to cop the bunting an d nose out the Farmers by four counters. Coach Karl Schleckman's University of Utah squad wound up in third place with 24 points ... The Farmers opened the season at Salt Lake by bowling over the Redskin matmen 24-6, then sewed up the Utah c ollegiate crown the following week at Logan with an easy 21 -9 win over B.Y.U . ... Co-captain Gerald Palmer, classy /28- pounder, and Tom Pozarnski, rugged I 75-pounder, took individu al weight championships for the Farmers in the divisional meet, gaining fall victories in their final matches. The Ags could have tied the 'Y" men for top honors had one of severdl close decisions gone their way ... Drue Grandy, /943 captainelect, was forced to layout of the divisional affair after turning in some impressive performances against both the Utes and Couga rs. Edward Rice, pinch-hitting for Grandy, came through with a second in the season's finale, however, to aid the Aggie cause. Other seconds were taken by Dale Maughan, 136pounder, who lost a heartbreaker to Utah's Reed Irvine, LaMar Mackay, last year's 136-pound champ competing in the 145pound division , and Conrad Bertin, heavyweight.
CO-CAPTAIN Gerald Palmer receives congratulations from Coach Doc Nelson ; Palmer holds 128-pound title.
nratt
w~ak~n~ UI ~I al ~I ~ wi III t ~ aIII SUFFERING THE HARDEST blow of Aggie athletics due to war priorities was the swimming team. First loss came when Captain Sid Glockner, ace California backstroke artist, was called into the Naval Air Corps.
Duane Henderson,
tank veteran , followed Glockner's lead-into the
ARMY calls leave swimmers in deep water.
U. S. service via the USAC swimming team captain's post. Perry Leavitt repeated the process again and was followed by Gene French, another Californian, in the routine. Even Coach Bern Fernelius felt the urge and followed suit. AFTER LOSING a whole team of captains alone, little could be expected of Aggie sWImmers. Nevertheless, the water athlete. were able to place in several meets high enough to rate double digit scores. In dual meets against the U of U and Weber College they fared thus. Still starring in their ranks were Wayne Christensen, endurance swimmer, all-around Melly Wood, and Cliff Stocks, backstroke.
AGGIE breastroker against W e ber J.C.
S ME D : ~: G , "/o::>:J,
Fr: nch, Coa ch Fc rn : lius.
' ~l tenni~ o.
UOO~ DESPITE THE FEAR of a priority on tennis balls, the Aggie racket-wielders came through this year with a slightly-better-than-usual season, battling it out with BYU for second place in the state. Though the spring weather made workouts irregular, Aggie netters did exhibit some good tennis at times. They suffered two depressing defeats at the hands of the Utes, but showed up well against the Y. With only two men, Captain Baugh and Maughan, leaving via graduation and youthful Dale Lewis, number one singles
CAPTAIN Evan Baugh
player, returning, Coach Perce Smith looks forward to a high position in state ranking next year.
(BACK ROW): Manager Eldon Lockhart, Keith Trane, Clinto1 Nelson, Glenn Maughan, Dale Lewis, Ed Budge, Coach Perce Smith. (Kneeling): Dale Maughan, Captain Evan Baugh, Mac Maeser.
OUTSTANDING ENOUGH to deserve special placement was the foresterengineer feud, traditional battle of wits, brawn, ingenuity. Foresters and Engineer's rightfully acclaimed themselves as sponsors of the biggest fuss on the campus. Hostilities opened with continuous slam-throwing between the two clubs, which lasted until Forestry Week. Here Engineers showed superiority in flag-rush technique of massacre, kidnapped Forester leaders, while Foresters flaunted sacred figures (page 64)
produced successful assemblies,
dance and celebration. Engineers' week found the tripodsmen losing quiz contest but overpowering Bunyan's boys in a boxing contest. Not nitwits, though, the engineer and forester groups buried the hatchet long enough to install S. B. prexy. For a show of spirit, fun, and friendly competition, the whole campus took "hats off" to Engineer and Forester Clubs.
(ABOVE): Slightly denuded Engineers are shown exiting from a plans meeting of Forester.
(LEFT):
Engineers
confidently
anticipate "tangle with foggy foresters." Confidence justified.
llla n~
FOR ALMOST every interest-political, scientific, or pleasure-there is some campus organization to provide unity for all similarly interested. These organizations,
broadly
classified
as
Clubs and Honoraries, take members by invitation, by application, or by storm. Their activities range from dancing to religious fellowship, from hogjudging to sewing, from partying to lecturing. Almost every personality on the campus finds one or more of these organizations fitted to his means and interest.
Powerful politically, financi-
ally, and influentially, these societies are vertebrae of USAC organization.
(TO P): International Relations Club heard famed lecturer.
(CENTER): Dames club, campus married women, honor their hubbies at a Victory banquet.
(RIG HT): Sigma Xi, national research honorary, was installed on the campus with a completely regaled academic parade.
n~l u ~lun or honorar~ memner~hi~ 173
u r SPURS ARE THE SISTER contemporaries of IK's and perform their duties with the same lust for efficiency. They are proud of their white sweaters and skirts and not egotistically maintain that their uniforms are practical and pretty. On the service side, the Spurs help with ushering, sell candy and cider on hot fall football days, and usher during little theater plays ... They also hold meetings regularly, sing songs, go on parties, hold a spring formal, wish for a convention, initiate new members, bargain for a Spur office, and claim that they have a hard time getting gold to make ends meet.
(TOP ROW): Marjorie Bateman, Verna Myers, Peggy Keller, Gloria Harris, Roma Jean Thurston, Ruth Swenson, Winifred Amacher, Phyllis Cullimore, June Rint. (Second Row): Joy Evans, Lucille Roylance, Elaine Stringham, Cloma Hammond, Betty Ann Eldredge, Marion West, Margaret Ann Wilson. (Third Row): Elsie Embry, Afton Anderson, Maxine Jenkins, Corrine Smith, Elizabeth Call, Lois Britzell, Jean Crawford, Anna Theurer, Ursula Domino. (Fourth Row): Jean Funk, Jean Olsen, Maude Mathews, Betty Jane Hendricks, Grace Minson, Barbara Fitzgerald, Unita Woodland.
POCOCK relaxes long enough for National Defense shoe shine.
MEL ISRAELSEN, Duke Russell Stoker, Dale Fisher, Reed Budge, Clinton Nelson
inter~olle~iaH kni~ht~ CHARACTERIZED by white sweaters that generally need cleaning, the IK':; bear a big part of the campus service load, go to conventions, and boast of an undefeated basketball team. With service and loyalty as their motto they usher and sell programs at the football games, entertain with the Spurs during the half in basketball season, jostle campus crowds off the track in the spring, and hold a rowdy meeting every Wednesday night.
(TOP ROW): D. Bagley, J. Plowman, K. Howard, H. Blazer, L. Seeholtzer, J. Fitzgerald, C. Bello, T. Hymus. (Second Row): N. Ormand, L. Stoker, C. Jacobs, O. Burnham, B. Cuff, G. Madsen, B. Barron. (Third Row): J. Hamilton, G. Huffaker, N. Sonne, B. Nelson, R. Lutz, D. Egbert, B. Hodgsen. (Fourth Row): L. Bingham, D. Bowen, B. Caseman, P. Sharp, L. Wilson, L. Livingston. (FIRST ROW): C. Nelson, D. Bernstein, M. Israelsen, R. Budge, D. R. Stoker. (Second Row): D. Fisher, B. Harris, B. Albertson, H. Barlow, S. Bishop, W. Wilson. (Third Row): L. Larson, J. Anderson, E. Gubler, J. Carnessera, G. Smth, P. Bliss.
TOP, SENIOR FORESTERS-(Back): W. Larsen, F. Imhoff, J. Hall, J. Killough, T. Pozernski, D. Rogers. (Middle): E. Stevens, B. Matthews, R. Bushe, F. Zink, President W. Stevens. (Front): B. Rouse, R. Hampton, L. Cuskelly, J. Norris, K. Hampton.
lore~ter~--nun~an neliever~ TREE WORSHIPPERS are the wild and wooly foresters who hail from every state in the U. S. and draw their largest enrollment from east of the Mississippi. They claim the northwest corner of college hill as home and wear plaid shirts faithfully. They flaunted their supremacy with telegrams from famous personages (other than Imhoff), sprayed Old Main with pine cologne, and bedecked her with everything but mistletoe. They got panicky when Typical O'Toole and Bronco-bred
Bennion were abducted,
but they
rallied to put out Student Life and present a successful log-rolling at the armory.
OFFICERS Stevens, Hampton, and Matthews.
TRADITIONAL FORESTER fighters, the engIneers brag about their current victories over the foresters and in politics.
Renown kidnappers,
they "stole" the forester's queen in spite of the guards, won the boxing, claimed the flag rush victory and even wore the foresters' beloved plaid shirts. As a rule they work hard, leave surveying stakes all over the quad, hold an annual banquet, sponsor the Engineers Week, edit Student Life, sponsor a dance and assembly and specialize in r:naking life as miserable as possible for the foresters. They admit that they use caveman tactics to get campus recognition, make outside friends for future jobs, and generally study hard enough to pass. PRESIDENT Ray Hugie, Willard K. Maughn, Dick Lattin, Charles Kelley.
t
en~lneer~
~oliti~al 117
~urve~or~
(BACK ROW): Barbara Ann Preston, Marna Peterson, Bernice Holiquist, Carol Peterson, Marjorie Tanner, Beth Stock, Mary Virginia Briggs, Dona Kingston, Eva Christensen. (Middle Row): Marian Sander, Mary Lou Cameron, Mary Costley, Marion Wilson, Frances Kurtz, Mary Catherine Christensen. (Front Row): Dona Olsen, Betty Jensen, Jean Fornelius, Jucy Rice, Jean Moss.
~hratere~
a WOIllan'~ W0r1~
AT PHRATERES meeting the unaffil has fun with the greek and a coed learns the meaning of collegiate democracy. No doors are barred, no blackballs-an application, a handshake, a pledge ribbon and you're in. To some it serves as sorority, to others activity, but to all pleasure.
Never-a-dull-moment-girls,
Phraterians
always have an iron in the fire and a date on the social calendar.
WANDA HAlLY, Marian Sanders, Mary Costly, Mary Katherine Christensen, Lucy Rice. (Seated): President Francis Kurtz.
178
hom ~
e~on
~ra~ti~al ~r~am ~irl~
WELDED INTO ONE organization are both the girls who take Home Ec with matrimonial intent and those with eyes on a career. At their bi-monthly meetings they eat, hear lectures pertinent to Home Econ. Sprees with the Ag Club are not the least of their inroads against the masculine world, though the greatest is certainly their marked culinary talent.
(BACK): L. Little, C. Croft, F. Johnson, M. Berry, V. Murdock, B. Randall, M. Randall, H. Parks. (Second Row): M. Madsen, D. Gold, B. Weeks, R. Richardsen, W. Winn, H. Chadwick, M. Anderson, L. Wadley, L. Sullivan. (Third Row): V. Pace, R. Hyer, J. <?Isen, E. Adams, R. Richards, K. H. Lacy. (Fourth Row): V. Huff, M. Wilson, V. Olsen, L. Holyock, H. Parks.
(BOTTOM ROW): Violet Olsen, Senior President; Ruby Richards, Beulah Wather. (Back Row): Wanda Winn, Leah Wadley, Junior President; Rosalie Wolf.
WACK ROW): D. Van Dam, D. Hughes, M. Heaton, F. Crawford, M. Sweeney, R¡ Crane, P. Gardner, F. Allred, M. Robinson, L. Hunter, B. Gancheff, M. Dou;d y. (Second Row): L. Downs, R. M. Jensen, V. Winn, N. Ballard, G. Funk, T¡ . allard, L. Pixton, J. Young, R. Wolf, V. V. Nelson, H. Wadsworth. ~ h'Ad Row): M. Hammond, E. Fishburn, R. Armstrong, O. Pugmire, J. Adney, . dney, B. Holtquist, D. Watterson. (Fourth Row): B. J. Stone, I. Lee, M. Cutler, V. Lee, C. Klengler, M. Costley. 179
WITH THE ADDITION of a newall-girl chapter during the year, Lambda Delta Sigma increased its membership to exceed three hundred, comprising the largest single organization on the campus. Claiming the most complete cross-section of Aggie students, LOS has a diverse membership, not restricted to Latter-day Saints-as commonly believed-and not composed of a large majority of missionaries ... The Utah State Lambda Delta Sigma is but one branch of a national organization. Under the leadership of kindly, well-liked Dr. Hunter, the executive committee outlined a social calendar complete in every respect. Brightest spots of the social year were the Christmas, Spring, and Sweetheart Balls. At the Sweetheart affair, Joyce Welker, German-speaking southern Utahn, was presented with the crown of the Sweetheart of LOS and honored with the locally-composed sweetheart song . . . Informal parties and "hob-nobs" of every sort are the standard rule. Of course, centering this whirl of social activity is the LOS Institute. With accommodations for chatter, recreation, rendezvous, or meditation, the Institute offers the members of Lambda Delta Sigma the ideal location for their varied activity.
lamD~ a
(BACK): Doris Passey, Kenneth Proctor, Katheri ne Rasmussen, President Joyce Welker,
Dr.
Hunter,
President
Ray
Canning, Lucille Campbell, Dean Eyre. (Front): Ruby Hartvigsen, Eloise Pugsley, George Armstrong, Maurine Cook, Barbara Cardon.
~ e 1t a ALTHOUGH THE SEVEN distinct chapters of the local Lambda Delta Sigma branch hold some athletic competition , LDS as a body participates in t he regular intra mural program of the colleg e . The 1941-42 cam paign seemed rather hopeless for male members as they failed to come throug h in a single event. Quite a different story was that of the feminine participation, however; wome n of LDS made a strong bid in the Dance Contest, the Snow Carnival, and other intramural activities .. . Members of LDS enjoy what is perhaps the best-rounded aim of the college organizations.
(BACK ROW): Grace Anderson, Harriet Parks, Helen Hovey, Cora Thorrell , Jane Peck, Ruth Pederson, Ineda Hickman, Anna Leigh, June Coop, Marjorie Hansen, Charlotte Henriod, Marjorie Paulson, Ruth Smith. (Second Row) : Elaine Nelson, Margaret Erickson, Adrus Hansen, Betty Pedersen , Annabelle Smith, Marion Wilcox, Florence Crane, Jean Rowe, Jean Christensen. (First Row): Betty Lou Balch, Gwenn Hunsaker, Karma Hill Lacey, Francis Johnson, Doris Okelberry, Carol Wennergren Clay, Phyllis Stoddard.
em~~rean
Ilterar~ tonhhearer~ PRESIDENT Annabelle Smith, Betty Pederson.
THESE WOMEN of literary bearing boast the leading campus writers and readers as fellow-members of Empyrean. Student-Lifers, students of Lit, amateur critics, they sponsor a poetry contest for the Scribble, campus quarterly-turned-annual. Meeting monthly for lectures, book reviews, and usual feminine chatter, they adore" different" food, spicy plays, most books, M. Q. Rice, and Marion Nielson. Attempting to keep a living interest in literary works, they at least attain this goal in their membership.
182
Iou rth eHate
lournali~ti~ ~ouln
ne
~
AFTER TALKING around the idea for lieveral years, Utah State journalists finally banded to form their own honorary, the Fourth Estaters.
Men voted to keep out
women and let them have their old Lambda Rho, but kindly Editor B. swung the deal for the girls. Parties are frequently planned and seldom consummated; the secretary growls endlessly about no dues being paid.
Members gloat over their membership,
and the stiff entrance requirements, but elect some neophyte journalists to their ranks. Publisher Bailey tries to maintain parliamentary procedure, as he wields his ink-bottle gavel, but very few of the members condescend to give up play-by-play comments on Bailey's movements.
The Estaters managed to glom on to the elite of campus journalists; they control college publications.
SAM BAILEY, Stanley Anderson , Evan Iverson, Beth Wakely, Bryce Roe, Doretta Salisbury, Gwen Hunsaker, JoBeth Johnson, Ineda Hickman, Lynn Larsen, Margarete Kropfli, David Bernstein.
PRESIDENT Sam Bailey, Ineda Hickman, Lane Palmer.
183
f 0 ur
h t h ~ r u r a I art
(BACK ROW): Clyde Richards, Arthur Wallace, Clair Bello, Fred Cornaby, Alan Thomas, Robert L. Cuff, Kenneth Proctor. (Second Row): Eros Hunsaker, Betty Adney, Joyce Adney, Miriam Wilson, Helen Wadsorth. (First Row): Afton Reeve, Larene Toone , Rosalie Wolf, Lillian Hunter.
IDEALISTICALLY AIMING to help former 4-H club members and leaders get established on the campus, members turn out to be social lights of the ag and home ec departments. Once in a while they get back on the original track. They maintain connections with the extension service, boss the show at state conventions. Exhibitors of prize animals and growers of prize vegetables and grains,
many members are here on Sears-
Roebuck scholarships. They boast champ cow-milkers and bulldoggers, frequently indulge in stock shows, horse shows, claim they are not to be confused with Future Farmers of America.
184
FRED CORNABY, Joyce Adney, Clyde Richards (President), Marion Richards , Kenneth Proctor.
t AIR-MINDED LADS, CAA students work hard to complete their hours for the end of school, usually stay on for a couple of weeks to complete training. They are excited over the first solo, discuss their rockiest landings, wake-up in the morning and scowl at cloudy skies. The boys are proud of their "Flying Farmer" bus, anticipate graduation into advanced training, talk about air-pockets and wind resistance. ORIN DANCE, Daniel Dennis, Tud Tarbet, President.
PRIMARY students.
SECON DARY students.
01 brl~ham
~elta ~hi
PROUD OF THEIR remodeled, redecorated, cooperative home, Delta Phi consists of returned
L. D. S. missionaries who wear derby hats, Pi Kap ties, and swing
canes
during
goating. OFFICERS - Sam Hilton, LeRoy Adams, Alva Snow, Wallace Wightman, Dean Gardner.
They are all good story tellers, love to participate in class, and
work up questionable assemblies. Fond of athletic com petition, the boys stand fairly hig h In
intramural
Many
are
point
colu mns.
cha racterized
by
Texan drawls, going-going-g one hair lines, and frequent visits to the Institut e.
(BACK ROW): Don Nielson, Woodrow Anderson, Milton Rasmussen, Dean Gardner, Dale Young, Lawrence Whitney, Lewellyn Bodrero, Jack Watkins, Elliot Rich. (Middle Row): Charles Fish, Preston Marchant, John Bailey, Del Beecher, Dale Hutchins, Alva Snow, Arvil Wadley, Arthur Wallace, Terrance Hatch. (Front Row): Wallace Wightman , LeRoy Adams, Donald Cox, Mark Zohner, Samuel Hilton, Wynn Fife. 186
Ag Club
an~olut~ AG INTERESTS of the college are organized into two clubs: Ag and Ag Econ. These boys are mostly ex-high school F.F.A. students and 4-H enthusiasts. Purpose of the group is to bind a common interest in agriculture. Their home is the Animal Industry building where they proudly hang out at noon, carry huge tomes to Feeds and Feeding; sell ice cream, and judge hogs; meetings are held at noon, when Ag topics are assimilated. They believe in the importance of agriculture in America and elsewhere. Oh yes; they make cheese.
WAYNE WILSON, Dr. Thomas, Preside nt Douglas Strong.
AG ECON CLUB-{Back Row): J. Storet, C. Dixon, G. Rich, R. Wangsgaard, Dr. J. F. Blanche, E. Jensen, Professor D. Broadbent. (Middle Row): E. Hyer, G. Nelson, G. Armstrong, E. Lamborn, Dr. W. P. Thoman, G. A. Carpenter, W. F. Norton, H. Barren. (Front Row): J. M. Bailey, D. C. Strong, W. Wilson, R. Magelby, P. Hueffner, E. Broadbent, P. Poulson, G. Ahnder.
~
ear 1 a k e
BOASTERS OF TWO past student body presidents, Bear Lake clubbers are easy to get along with, enter enthusiastically into minor intramurals. Activities include parties each quarter, dancing or just eating events. Members meet twice a month, have programs, talk about the good old days at Paris, Montpelier or Fish Haven. They are students of both Utah and Idaho, claim swimming ability, scoff at tales of "monsters in the lake." In need of a motive for organization, they claim "effort to keep Bear Lake people acquainted with each other."
TOP: Melvin Hulme, Mae Jenson, Lloyd Findlay, Grant Grandy, Warren Caldwell, Gwen Pugmire.
(BACK ROW): P. Sorenson, J. Pric3, J. Barfuss, M. Berry, K. Cook, D. Parker, F. Stephens, D. Burgoyne, M. Hulme, M. Wilhelmsen, D. Woffendon, G. Wilkes, L. Arnell, W. Morgan, L. Rich, M. Loveland. (Second Row): L. Shepherd, M. Jenson, A. Collings, G. Keech, B. Perkins, B. Stock. Oral Pugmire, M. Stephens, E. Rich. (First Row): W. Collings, H. Lindsey, L. Findlay, H. Lamborne, A. Bischoff, L. Thompson, F. Bond
BOTTOM: Robert Burgoyne, President; Maxine Burgoyne, Grant Gr~n dy, Warren C;!ldwell, Gwen Pugmire.
(BACK ROW): Marjorie Hansen, Dorothy Petersen, Ilene Woodbury, Betty Lou Balch, Joyce Taylor, Marjorie Tanner, Mrs. Myers, Sunny Swenson. (Fro;,t Row): Don L. Jones, Dick Stevens, Max Wadsworth, Royal Henderson, Warren Caldwell , Dr. Greaves, Eldon Jacobsen.
t heta alpha phi uraIllati~~ MEM BERS OF Theta Alpha Phi dramatics fraternity consider themselves potential Barrymores and Cornells. Stage managers and prop boys, they long for opportunities to flout their thespian ambitions. They are selected on a basis of dramat.ic activity, even stoop to occasionally ushering at Little Theatre presentations. One party a quarter is the extent of social activity. Their Bible is Burns Mantle, and their schedules are loaded with speech classes. Adviser is Dr. Chester J. Myers. Now celebrating their sixteenth year of campus activity, they are national, culturally aspiring, and delight in dabbing their fingers in make-up.
MEMBERS: Karl T. Homer, Royal Henderson, Warren Caldwell.
~ommer~e IN THE MANNER except for fifty cent cigars of their ideal, the Wall-street financier, the members of Alpha Kappa Psi convene regularly around the banquet table to satisfy in one meeting both their desire for association with their commerce-major friends and their abdominal hunger. Annually sponsoring the stock-market contest, the A. K. Psi boys attempt to pick the be:;t "bull and or bear (not wolf)." They require a "B" average for membership, meet bi-monthly. With one big party each year they depart from their control box of the Commerce Library and take in tri-school A. K. Psi blow-off.
VAN EVANS, Don Mitchell, Norman Jepson, Kay Freeman, Dean Freeman, Roy Scott, George Armstrong , Wilford Smeding, Glenn Jabbs , Horace Tremmeling, David Hulme.
190
L
DAVID HULME, Kay Freeman, Dean Freeman, President Roy Scott.
GRANT BHHERS, Ineda Hickman, Elaine Nelson, June Coop, J. T. Abbott.
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"ALPHA SIGMA NUS"-the twelve apostles of extra-curriculum who gain membership with varied activity and high average. These six Senior eds and coeds impress Freshman with their "A.S.N.T.Y.," get around a great deal and work even more. As a group they're too busy to hold many meetings, but their parties are solid enterHA RRIET PARKS, Carmen Croft, Sam Bailey, Marge Paulson.
tainment. A tufted emblem on their senior jacket shouts, "We're the cream of the crop-at Utah State we really rate."
MEL MANNING, Harold Steed, Karl T. Homer, President, Sterling Peterson.
ELDON DRAKE, Alvin Warnick, Wilson Foote, Joseph Quayle.
(BACK ROW): Spencer Daines, Wayne Wilson, Professor Stoddard (Advisor): John Barton, Homer James, Joy Anderson, Clyde Richards, Jim Huber, Ward Stevens, James O'Toole, Ray Ral ph (Second Row): Tom Brotherson, Joe Quayle, Wilson Foote, Alvin Warnick, Eldon Drake, J. T. Abbott, Fred Carnaby, Wendell Pederson. (First Row): Lee Neilson, John Bailey, Keith Arther, Ralph Chadwick, Albert Mitchell, Paul Turner, Lynn Barker, Clyde Richards.
out~oor III e n
z eta
UPPERCLASS STUDENTS, Alpha Zeta boys base membership upon departmental scholarship are the inner circle of both Ag and Forestry students. Socially they are noted for their spring formal. They hold parties with femme pals of the Home Ec Department, are supposedly outdoor men. They go into ecstasies over anything pertaining to their activities, are the future food-suppliers of America. Meetings are not too frequent; membership announcements are wordy and enthusiastic.
Pet hangout is the dairy,
where they lobby and plan crushing spring elections and engineer feuds. For achievement, a scholarship award goes to top sophomore student.
192
lamll~a rh~
~etti~oat ~enman
"FOR WOMEN ONLY" Lambda Rho, journalism society, is heckled by male Student Lifers who claim there's no place in journalism for women-barring Dorothy Dix. LR refutes this by exhibiting Scribble Editors and "A's" from Moyle Q. in their midst. Their programs are rumored stimulating; secretly the gals are bored by Salisbury's con¡ versational antics. Their short story contest proved a headache but gathered prestige. Cider fans, they meet monthly purely for refreshment pleasure.
If you possess a
two point average and stick your nose in the Student Life office quarterly, you have a good chance to land a bid. Opportunists, they'd all like to be Steve Wilson's, Loreli, but will probably end up writing obituaries or daily horoscopes.
Jo Beth Johnson, Margaret Ann Wilson, Joyce Adley, Doretta Salisbury, Unita Woodland , Marion Page, Doris Wallin, Gwen Hunsaker, Ineda Hickman.
Doris Wallin, Ma rge Kropfli, Jo Beth Johnson, President.
193
(BACK ROW): Lane Palmer, Roy Scott, Sterling Peterson, Aaron Amacher, Paul Thomas, George Lacey, Ralph Richards, Wayne Morgan, Ned Clyde: (Front Row): Ha rold Steed, Clyde Tarbet, J. J. Theurer, Eldon Jacobsen, Professor W. D. Porter, Merrill Daines, Sid Pridey. Absent, Grant Bethers, Major B. B. Blair.
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REPUTED to be the campus big-wigs and brain-trusters, the Blue Keys sponsor monthly formal dinners, moan about library lights, and give an award to the outstanding freshman.
In their ranks
they claim class officers, genii filled with ambition, and numerous Pi Kaps. Members are chosen from juniors and seniors on the basis of campus activity, grade point-average and personality. Their life is filled with academic worries, formal dances, good grades, campus projects, arguments about penny J. T. ABBOTT, Major B. B. Blair, Roy Scott, Eldon Jacobsen, President.
ante subjects, big words, ready wits.
194
SOCIAL SCIENCE honorary with junior and senior membership, the Pi Gamma Mu takes its aim, the promotion of interest in the social sciences, with seriousness and holds regular meetings to prove it. They often discard the academic mask however and throw some really good parties, in the form of canyon picnics and mid-day luncheons. Membership is limited to upper classmen, with a few graduate students tossed in for spice and wisdom. The Pi G Mus have a lust for
hearing
lectures and hashing out
problems in the panel discussion. JOHN BAilEY, Wilma Hulse, Grant Grandy .
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(BACK ROW): Jos. A. Geddis, Wayne James, Wayne Collings, Chas. R. Fish, Walter Jagyi, Angelo Collis. (Front Row): John M. Bailey, Wilma Hulse, Carmen Fredrickson, Grant P. Grandy.
(BACK ROW): laurence G. Whitney, Alten Davis, George W. Armstrong, Wayne P. Wilson, Robert L. Rallison, Roden G. Shumway. (Front Row): Aileen Delong , Barbara Henderson, Willa Daniels, Ann Thornton.
BACK ROW: H. Armstrong, L. Winsor, D. Kram, J. Killough, J. Norris, W. Stevens, R. Bailey, J . Gatlerem , R. Busche. Middle Row: J. Smith, M. Samowitz, K. Hampton , M. Roge rs, M. Green , J. Nemanic, O. Spencer, Prof. Rasmussen. Front Row: Dr. McLaughlin , Prof. Barnes, Prof. Kelker, R. Hampton , Prof. Smith , Dean Dunn.
I
01
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XI SIGMA PI, ringleader in the "revised" floor show at the Engineer's Ball, is an honorary for Foresters, which promotes friendly relationships among students in that field and maintains a high scholarship in forestry. Their plaid shirts are their recognition pin and they swear by the Great Bunyan and O'Toole. - XSP has an edge on ,government jobs in the summer and they sweat on the range as a means of lab application to winter textbook knowledge. Each fall quarter, they pledge uppercassmen with two point averages and spend the rest of the year engineering disinterest in the engineers.
James Hatherem John Killough Mose Samowitz Rex Hampton
the t a
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~teno~
HOW TO SIT on the boss's lap, read his mail, and deceive his wife is discussed by female Commerce majors at monthly Theta Chi meeting-on the sly of course. Professors clamor for their services; students hound them to translate shorthand or to type theses; but they go to the movie to see how glamour girls put across the eternal "Wife vs. Secretary" struggle. They collect dues to finance the Theta Chi scholarship given to the Junior girl with the highest average in the School of Commerce. War pressure has caused many TX's to vary their traditional procedure of job-refusal for husband pursuit, and to take their place in the national war machine.
FRONT ROW: Mae Anderson, Winifred Larsen, Mavis Johnson , Janice Mather, Ruth Shipley, Mrs. West, Gwendolyn Smith. Back Row: Helen Wintch , Ineda Hickman, Elaine Nelson, Bertha Monson, Helen Lundstrom, Norma Hansen , Florence Prince, LaRee Kerr.
LEFT TO RIGHT: Helen Lundstrom, President; Norma Hansen, Secretary; Jo Beth Joh nson, Reporter; Florence Prince, Vic;ePresident.
)97
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NATIONAL AND HONORARY, Phi Upsilon Omicron attempts to further the professional woman attitude among home economics students, occasionally succeeding. The fraternity awards fifty dollars each spring to the outstanding underclassman in the department. Most hope to make good wives, after they teach high school girls the arts of the needle and frying pan. Cook experts and lovers of sewing they require the upper ten percentile of the department for membership. Social life includes Founders' Day school; intellectual life, their consumer education reports. Their hangout is the cafeteria with occasional visits to the sewing lab.
Ambitious members spend
much of each quarter doing term papers on nutrition, or some similar class annoyance.
PHYLLIS GARDENER, President; Faye Crawford, JoBeth, Johnson.
(BACK ROW): Elaine Adams, Miss Page, Marge Paulson, Ruby Richards, Marjorie Anderson, June Tracy, Verlene Pace, Miss Olson, Violet Olsen, Karma Hill, Madonna Herbert, Ruby Kilpack, Rae Scott. (Front Row): Kara Klinger, Faye Crawford, Ruth Hyer, Phyllis Gardener, Harriet Parks, JoBeth Johnson.
198
~hi ka~~a ~hj OFFICERS: Leonard McDonald, Margaret Henriques, President Wanlass, Alice Senob, J. Duncan Brite. .
(BACK ROW): Alvin C. Warnick, Kenneth R. Hampton, Rex Hampton, Lynn S. Parker, Robert H. Burgoyne, Elmer Archibald, Glen T. Nelson, Dwight Dixon. (Second Row): Roy Scott, Faye Carol Crawford, Helen Lundstrom, Carmen Croft, Ella LaVere Adamson, Jane Peck, Ineda Hickman, Irene Olson, Doris Naomi Hughes, and Ray A. Thatcher. (First Row): Alan Fonnesbeck, Clyde Tarbet, Robert Corey, Charles S. Steen, Grant P. Grandy, Art V. Maxwell, Newell Preston Olsen , and Glen J. Behling. Absentees: John M. Bailey, Emer E. Broadbent, Genevieve S. Clayton, Carma Hunsaker Croft, H. Max Cutler, Earl Dean Evans, Elaine Nelson, Frank Parsons, Wilford W. Sagers, Barbara M. Walters, Arthur Frank Wendel and Dee Louise Parker Wetzler.
DISTINGUISH ED BY "A" grades, this rare clan is representative of every college department, the upper one-tenth. They reign supreme at honors and awards assemblies, and are cocks-of-the-walk at commencement. National, and on this campus for eleven years, they name members each spring. President is Dean Wanlass, who presides at the one annual meeting and at the initiation ceremonies. Top member is valedictorian, others wear ribbons at graduation. jobs after presentation of sheepskins.
199
Members anticipate immediate
TOPPING THE LIST of "blood in the eye" competitions at Utah State was the struggle between affiliates. As vicious as the "Battle of the Argonne" are the yearly tussles waged on the Greek intramural field, on the rush front, and in artistic competitions. Inevitable beginning of affiliate interest is the bidding process. Utah State's unique hill-descent for men and dawn awakening for women are classic examples of originality. In the sequence to the left we see the new pledge striding down the hill; "Ohs" and" Ahs" from the sorority filled gallery add to the tenseness. As the "Greeks-to-be" nears the lower extremity of the walk a hush falls upon the assemblage. The triumphant shout of the pledge, the echoing boom of the chosen fraternity, the swift seizure and jubilant shoulder-iourney follow with lightninglike rapidity. It is over; another brother has been taken into the circle.
200
ON THE LEFT the aftermath of the sorority bid excursion is shown. New sorority pledges stir when L09an roosters are just sounding to take out their bids, be sanctified in special ceremony, and honored at the Sig Derby. The sphere of fraternity life is as engaging and intriguing as any part of college activ~ ity. It provides rivali'Y in everything from corporeal specifications (above) to high-hu rdling ability. Fraternities offer confidants for personal troubles or confederates for an occasional party; wardrobes for special date or warring for political pre-eminence. They entertain one another at exchange dinners (lower left) and unite for a common end: witness the Sig-SAE attempted block. They specialize in discord at Pan-hellenic and in harmony at frequent serenades (lower right-try page 208 for final developments). They cram for finals in spectacular style; they hold wacky parties; they respect pin-hangings; they despise outside ridicule.
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MARY L. SMITH , Carol Wennergren, Elizabeth Call, Nedra Datwyler, Annabelle Smith, Dee Louise P. Wetzler, Frances Johnson , Phyllis Stoddard , Ruth Worlton.
FRANCES JOHNSON, Nedra Datwyler, Phyllis Stoddard, Ruth Worlton.
THE LADY GREEKS, making up the Women's Panhellenic, firmly backed out of election combines, seeing no value for them. They boss all sorority rushing,
organized a women's panhellenic dance,
enforce "8" averages for pledges. The girls eliminated too-fancy costumes for the Swing Sing, which was coope', ative with Men's Panhellenic. Meetings are held twice a month and exchange dinners are held at respective sorority houses, where sorority publications are discussed with an eye toward friendlier campus relations.
women ' ~ ~an-helleni~ ~oun~il
(BACK ROW): Van Hendricks, Dave Bacon, Jack Caine, Burns Crookston, Dick Lattin, Jack Shaw, Keith Ray, Rene Ballard. (Front Row): Merrill Reese, Con Bertin, Ronald Johnston , Paul Barchie, Jack Horton, Bob Branges, Laurence Aubert.
MALE GREEKS of the campus, the Men's Panhellenic council, have heated arguments on Greek electi on combines, ten-minute meetings. This year a one-man delegation went to the Colorado interfr aternity convention. Working with sorority women, they sponsored the Greek Swing Sing, debated whether ice cream or doughnuts should be served. Dues helped to pay for the men's scholarship cup, awarded at the Swing Sing. Social event of the year was the Panhellenic dance.
RENE BALLARD , President; Dean Frischknecht SPE.
III en'~ ~anhelleni~ ~oun~il 203
TOP ROW: Dee Louise Parker, Jean Rowe, Elaine Nelson, Helen Lnudstrom, Doris Wallin, Marjorie Paulson, Jean Christensen, Hazel Owens, Annabelle Smith, Enid Fishburn. Middle Row: June Tracy, Janice Mather, Willa Smith, Beth Sanders, Ruth Worlton, Helen Stewart, Connie Blair, Unita Woodland, Margaret Ann Wilson, Blanche Deschamps. Bottom Row: Florence Crane, Marion West, Dorothy Jensen, Alice Miller, Mayron Page, Dorothy Wanlass, Elizabeth Wardleigh, Louise Painter, Betty Jane Merrill, Mary Louise Hale.
TOP ROW: tv1ary Berntsen, Elaine Siddoway, Afton Carter, Jessie Ray, Betty Ann Eldredge, Beverly Tripp, Dorothy Neilson, Ann Kennedy, Lausanne Gudmundsen, June Stocks. Middle Row: Mary Walker, Jackie Baugh, Grace Minson, Carol Peterson, Ruth Smith, Shirley Buetler, Charlotte Henriod, Francis Christiansen, Ethel Mae Hugie, Louise Haynie. Bottom Row: Alice Smith, Mildred Adamson, Emelyn Rea ding, Shirley Francis, Lorraine Baird, Elaine Evans, Betty Jean Dorton, Helen Wiscomb.
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WITH AN EDGE on skiing talent and vocal ability, down town two blocks from the PiKaps and a block from the "five and dime" live the Alpha Chis. Said to pass chocolates every other Monday, the girls have more pins than any other sorority, and hold the longest meetings to air their pet gripes, such as losing the scholarship cup by .008 of a point. AX was downed by fraternities for her political independence, but put on an assembly to shame Ziegfeld and win back the masculine graces. They had bad luck with their snow modeling, but, after two girls froze their hands, claimed victory-cinching the Winter Carnival Cup. They chalked up less than a hundred points on the intramural chart, but attributed it to the fact, "we aren't the athletic type." Since moving from their old neighbors, the Sigs, they seem to show a PiKap preference and can be seen any morning with one hundred twenty other people riding the eight o'clock Creeper. They sacrificed two annual dinner parties and a fashion show to buy a share in America's defense and possess three hundred seventy-five dollars worth of defense bonds.
t a a
Jack Horton
Paul Bartchi
Steve Bosan
Thomas Kowalshi
Paul Tilford
Douglas Quale
Ross Jackson
William Hendry
Joseph Grant Robinson
Trevor Michie
Kenneth Proctor
James E. Beckett
Stewart LeFerre
Kyle Schow
James Mont Veator
William Reese
206
a
HANGOUT FOR AN enterprising colony of out-of-state men is the Beta Kappa house on Second East. In a front room as long as the line that some of the brothers wield, the real noise of BK is evolved. Here wrinklin, unique form of vigilante punishment (consisting, as shown below, of a pickup by the hair), miscellaneous games of chance, Saturday celebrating and Sunday recovery-or vice versa-can usually be found in progress simultaneously. The Beta Kap's car display approaches the SN parking lot brilliance. They hold meetings as the fancy strikes them, attempt to observe study hours, claim the tallest brother on the campus, and swear by their house mother. The fellows brag of a history on this campus that fairly outshines the brightest fraternity satelite of the present season. It seems that some, as yet unrevealed, closet skeleton has kept these boys from currently capturing highest affiliate honors, but they are pluggers and are determined to again see the day when Beta Kappa is engraved on every cup and scratched on every sorority phone pad.
207
DOWN ON FIRST SOUTH reside the dwellers in the Chi 0
"Castle of Cardinal and Straw," a
house easily accessible to Dick's where the gals gather for a daily coke. With the rooms decorated in single colors and named appropriately, the Chi O's are able to strut about in southern splendor for "our neighbors in the maroon room are stopping by for tea and tid-bits this midnight." Distinctive names for not only their rooms but for each girl was almost achieved as the sisters managed to capture the S.P.E. "Queen of Hearts," "Miss Utah State," and "Spur of the Moment" titles. The Chi O's pulled no punches in taking the Dance Contest and in intra-mural competition. Their assembly ranked high in student favor-particularly Jane Moss's strip tease. At the "Bird," on the ballroom, under the clock-Chi O's were always very much in evidence, which is just another way of saying that Chi Omega oomph is definitely "on."
~ hi
OIlle~a
BARLOW seals the bargain.
CHI 0 FORTUNES always good-but racay. VORTEX of sorority life: the telephone.
FIRST ROW: Ineda Hickman, June Coop, Joan Carter, Helen Wintch, Marna Peterson, Mary Smith, Betty Pedersen, Anna Lou Reese, Maude Mathews. Second Row: Marjorie Hansen, Barbara Ann Preston, Marian Wilcox, Mildred Hayward, Alice Randall, Margaret Snow, Rachel Barlow, Imogene Lee, Shirley Hickman. Third Row: Elizabeth Call, Gloria Harris, Lucille Roylance, Kathryn Anderson, Jeanne Crockett, Carmen Croft, Anne Ryan, Catherine Farr, Beth Wakely. Fourth Row: Roma Gene Thurston, Mae Cutler, Jane Moss, Henrietta Jones, Karol Haight, Emma Martin, Betty Lou Balch, Rosella Larkin, Louise Dixon. Fifth Row: Margaret Todd, Veda Mae Munk, Julia Theurer, Dot Hickman, Kathryn Kirkham, Druce Foutz, Wilma Gunn, Barbara Dunn, Virginia Lee. Sixth Row: Edith Pond, Frances Montrose, Martha Peterson, Sherma Stanfill, Polly Parkinson, Mary Lu Cameron, Naomi Dillman, Alta Mae Carter, Shirley Skanchy. Seventh Row: Beverly Lewis, Marian Musser, Patricia Smith, Beth Keller, Carol Peterson, Judy Edwards, Gwen Thompson, Carma Chambers.
209
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AS IMPRESSIVE RUSHERS they're unequalled, but they spare no mercy to "probies" (as evidenced in pictures below). They own the most beautiful s::>rority house, but practically live at the Bluebird. They're said to be congenial with Sigma Nus but place no priority on other fraternities. They live in the mad blue room and are disciplined by bath tub dunking administered by their more vigorous sisters. They made a good showing on the athletic field, captured the scholarship cup, and showed creative talent in snow-sculpturing, sharing first honors. They love Annie, the cook, and idolize Mrs. Woolley, house mother, who is soon to leave the fold. A continuation of the exterior, the huge rock ( ) fireplace is still too small for their numerous cups. Their phone is busy 80 per cent of the time perhaps due to the fact that the "Sweater Girl" and "Open House Queen" are in their midst. "When you turn the lights down low" is the signal for a rendition of their sweetheart song which is hummed by a wide majority of fraternity men. Daggers worn as their identification is no indication that they're a fighting brood, but to the last, they'll defend the KD honor.
210
FIRST ROW: Harriet Parks, Frances Rawlins, Elaine Sandburg, Helen Hudman, Shirley Watland, Rae Scott, Margaret Erickson, Marie Fowler, Virginia Clyde, Dona Marie Daniels. Second Row: Adrus Hansen, Kathryn Wiggins, Betty Jane Hendricks, Virginia Bateman, Phyllis Stoddard, Frances Johnson, Chloe Campbell, Ursula Domina, Doris Okelberry, Jean Crawford. Third Row: Peggy Keller, Helen Michaelsen, Jean Clements, Mary Jane Davis, Doris Van Dam, Ellen Maughan, Marjorie Hyer, Venna Micheles, Dorothy Jean Peterson, Jeanne Allen. Fourth Row: Ann Louise Barber, Geraldine Walker, Louise Yose, Hazel Stoddard, Carol Nelson, Merlyn Mendenhall, Helen Tillotson, Katie Loosle, Doris Fitzgerald, Betty Lou Lindholm. Fifth Row: Virginia Carlson, Gwenneth Steffensen, Wanda Schow, Tharrel Bergeson, Beth Clark, Patsy Barber, Melba Call, Roma Poole, Cloma Hammond, Joy Evans.
211
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a I i v ~ I ~ laffiD~a ~ hi IN THE DOMAIN of Lambda Chi, which has the distinction of being the only local Greek letter on the campus, live the members of this small, but active fraternity. In every inter-fraternity competition, these brothers made entry often to offer stiff competition to their larger and better-known rivals. They take turns helping with the dishes, and have a particular fancy for staying clothed in their sleeping apparel until late morning and early afternoon. In the sequence of pictures below, these Lambda Chis show a few more of the multitudinous activities that occupy days and nights of a fraternity man. The phonograph is an indispensable contrivance to be found in every houses' front room. According to scientific estimates, the turntable of the average fraternity machine makes enough revolutions per week that the outer rim travels fourteen times the distance from stadium to the Commons. Of course, in a man's world, a man's mag such as Esquire is sure to capture at least its share of attention. Certainly not the least in a brother's existence is the mauling of pledges to test them for the strength requisite for a new number. Below, the paddle, symbol of fraternity activity, is held in anticipation of a near meeting with the "lucky" goat.
212
Ronald Johnson Lloyd Olsen Merrill Rees
Dale Miller Glenn Sanders James Yardley
Travers Allen George Hatch John Barton
Ross Barrett Clifton Perry Walter Harris
Robert Cuff Lee Gibson Owen Burnham
Jack Taylor Tad Paxton
ON THE RIGHT, Lambda Chi's show to a potential brother what a few of the alums were likeall the time glibly telling of the brother's achievements.
This is fraternity life, typical of any
campus-a world of rushing, rites, brotherhood, and practical jokes.
213
Harold Steed Jack Caine Paul Thomas Sterling Peterson Reid Bishop
Conrad Bertin Richard H. Harris Norman Howells Aaron Amacher Harold Gutke
Royal Henderson Grant Bethers Dave Clark David K. Hulme John Reese
Warren Caldwell Guy Murray Robert Wilson Eccles Caine Ral ph Richards
D:xon Larson LaMar Mackay Lane Palmer Robert Caine Ralph Carlson
Haven Barlow Reid Hall Bryce Albertson Preston Seeley Boyd Fuhriman
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~I IF YOU WANT a darn good date call 522 and from their collected miscellany they'll
guarantee anything.
To hold a respectable house party and a beer bust is their frequent practice made possible by the annex; the ad ~ a cent creek comes in handy for discipline and as a hangover remedy. Conformed extremists, they
decline to
tolerate mediocracy, and boast the biggest membership on the campus, plus subtle political mechanisms. In their possession are innumerable parking tickets and questionable automobiles which afford them opportunity to show BOWERY PARTY: no beer.
the mechanical ability about which they brag.
THREE POINTERS USUALLY seek refuge with the Pi Kaps, a nd after pledging, display their individuality in room d ecoration. Each week they change their lingo and their a pproach, wear obnoxious hats and claim "you can always t ell a Pi Kap by his tie." Many a lass has thrilled to their vocalizing of "Honeymoon," and has taken the matter seriously because they've hung more pins than any other Greek.
KID'S PARTY: milk was served.
Paul Huchel Frank Wight Oleen Bunderson George Haskins Jacques Pinkhard
Samuel Price Kent Howard Robert Siddoway Wilford Murray Gerald Plowman
Ray Lutz Shirley Bishop Don Zamzow Howard Blood Vernon Carlson
Darrel Daines Wallace Anderson Chuck Goodwin Paul Hansen Ray Hayes
Robert Toolson Richard K. Pearse Wyman Redd Lewis Livingston Raymond Whittaker
Hoyt Kelly Ted C rawford Wesley Smith Sidney M. Priday
AROUND THE pool table, on the basketball court, at the Alpha Chi house, the S.A.E.'s get around. Guaranteed to make the headlines of Student Life by nucleating the staff, they talk a lot, project even more, and claim to be the youngest campus national. They started the new year out right by being quarantined for measles, Ray Wilson heading the movement.
THREE BALL in the side pocket.
FIRST ROW: Ned Clyde, LeRoy Prestgard, Clinton Nelson, Wayne Eldredge, Jack Shaw, William Batt, Dick Call, Bill Powers, Edward Scartzina, Val Halgren, Lee Sharp. Second Row: Jay Staten, Jay Hansen, Ralph Smith, Robert Wright, Bill Martin, Dick Lattin, Robert Wennergren, Chall Allred , Calder 'Pickett, Arthur J. Fowler, Dale Lewis. Third Row: Morris Rich , Chris Leston, Bryce Roe, Sam Bailey, Stan Anderson, Jack Schwaneveldt, Blaine Heusser, Harold DeLaMare, Wendell Droubay, Homer Jaynes, Dick Ricci . Fourth Row: Ray Wilson, Clifford Stock, Val Crane, Harold Miller, George Wilkinson, Merlyn Jones, Russel Bateson, Maurice Merrill, LeGrande Shupe, Jim Hatch, Myron Fonnesbeck
216
BRIGGS on the night before the C. U. game.
G E 0 MET RIC snow scul pture fashioned by the S.A.E.'s
'''WHISKEY'' poses one.
POUTICALL Y, THEY combine with the Sigma Chi's; they have more trophies than any other fraternity. Most of their hours are spent in their made-over house which is ideal for house parties. They moan about having no alums on the faculty and not having cars, but ride with pleasure in Lattin's jallopy and Stock's "green streak." It gives them indescribable pleasure to invite a brother's sweetheart to dinner and each practice upon her their famed kissing technique. Toward dusk, they wax sentimental and gather for an acapella rendition of "Violets."
They
afforded good competitive material for the Sigs, winning water polo and being runners up in touch-football and basketball. By manner of passing the buck, Sigs claim them to be the worst inebriates on the campus, but, in spite of everything, "President McKinley was an S.A.E."
2 17
~ hi MEN OF THE Royal White Cross live in the number one spot on Utah State's fraternity row. From their talent farms in Big County and at Logan High they draw many members who come to push or cheer the Sigs to leadership in almost every inter-fraternity activity. With a corner on athletes almost as complete as the best executed J. P. Morgan monopoly, the Sigs gathered in most of the championships for
major intra-mural events.
They
staged the Sig Derby, funfest in which new sorority pledges were honored and inevitably choice chosen.
"Sweetheart Alpha Chi,
of
Sigma
Dorothy
Chi"
was
Neilson was
named for this honor and overnight the intake on already swamped phone number 1261 was doubled. Sigs sounded their political trombone loudest in class politics where they held three of four presidencies.
FIRST ROW: J . T. Abbot, Merrill Daines, J. A. Theuer Jr., Karl T. Homer, Clyde Tarbet. Second Row: Dick Romney, Harold Capener, George Peterson, Fae Hurst, Melvin Manning. Third Row: Ted Wennergren , Nick Drakulick, Chris Axelgard, Jean Carlos, Bill Twitchell. Fourth Row: Ed Budge, Grant Cullimore, John Sorenson, Lyman Tarbet, Fred Allen. Fifth Row: Burns Crookston, Grant White , Roy Humpherys, George Bullen, Orsen Bankhead. Sixth Row: David Moore, Clair Bello, Dale Homer, Alan Wilson , Sherwin Maeser. Seventh Row: Widtsoe Checketts, Conrad Alder, Richard Parkinson, Dasil Mathews, Eldred Peterson. Eighth Row: Alma Sonne SIGS celebrate by surrealism. 218
THOUGH employing a skillful rush technique but "shot" serenade tactics, the Sigs nevertheless managed to get a gang of promising pledges and still had many absentee pins around.
IG DERBY : hit with tomato gets a kiss.
SHAPE and size-carefully considered.
FIRST ROW : Bill Leatham, Dudley Emmett Dick Griffin, Dean McNeil , Clarence Randall, Norman Salisbury, Sidney Cardon. Second Row: Grant Esplin , Dean Brown, Norman Sonne , Frank Hanson , Gib Madsen , Louis Klekas , Richard Tippets. Third Row : Rulon Gardner, Reed Hurst, Don Bateson, Dick Howard , Jim Martin , Charles Jenkins, Wade Mund e n. Fourth Row: Bob Nelson, Wendell Roskelley, George Nelson , Dean Thornberg, Reid Ped e rs e n, Jack Gilbert, Jack Crookston .
219
n~w .on
th~
hill
I
l~ ~l~ma
nu
THESE "DOUGH-BOYS" of the campus live in the Castle and park in its shade the smartest string of automotive vehicles in the valley. Their search for the famed secret passages in the Castle has netted nothing more than several odd-looking panels (or at least that's all the outsider is shown). At any rate the house has a thousand weird nooks and quaint features that keep the newcomer stare - crazy. After one year of occupancy, the Sig Nu boys have improved the structure considerably from the crumbling giant deserted by the Alpha Chi's.
FIRST ROW: Robert Corey, LaVan Hendricks, Ezra Geddes, Robert Anderson , Karl Taylor, George McDonald, James Hiner, Reed Budge, Max Johnson, Earl James, Ja mes E. Sorenson. Second Roy{: Ariel Berntson, Piatt Bliss, Lyman Gabrielsen , John S. Daniels, Edmond Guhler, Oliver E. Lockhart, Robbin Hanson, Robert Kruger, Richard I. Stevens, Rulon Yorgason , Elmer Jacob. Third Row: Mario n Dunn, Ferris Sweet, Dent Dustin, Jay Hamilton , Tom Burrows, Kyle Stephens, Thomas Kitchen, Austin Hubba rd, Lawrence Whitney, Luther Winsor, Blaine Moser. Fourth Row: Keith Brough, Melvin Pennie, Jack Hendricks, Nagel Palmer, Bob Anderson, Dale Johnson, Bill Wallace, Lewis Sadlier, Robert Taylor, Reid Bergener.
220
HERE'S the fireside scene.
BROODING trio wails.
STUDY HOUR-the sign was lifted from Chi O's.
EVERY AFTERNOON the brothers hold informal open house in their front room where they bring their gals to perfect dance steps to the tune of the best record shelf on the campus. Traveling in small gangs they can generally be found either at Dick's, Caspar's; or the Chi 0 house, where, as at all sororities, their serenades are appreciated. Although not over-run with muscle-men, they point to trackster Roy Taylor as an example of SN ability.
Thespians,
scholars, playboys, and fashion-plates-these are White Star boys.
22 1
FIRST ROW: Jon Crockett, Sam Merrill, Charles Henry, Jack Moore, George Barton, Wilford Smeding, Ray Randall, Rene Ballard, Fred Robbins. Second Row: Dean Frischknecht, Mack Wray, John Clay, Robert Carlson, LaMar Monroe, Robert Branges, D. G. Nelson, Blaine Harris, Lynn Page. Third Row: Lawrence Aubert, Hal Edison, Roden Shumway, Keith Wray, John Allen Beaty, David S. Williams, Domick LaVerne, Robert Choate, Wayne K. Tuttle. Fourth Row: Elden Drake, Jim McFall, Edward Consalvi, Frank Yose, CI air Kanen, NaRay Ormond, August Aubert, Wayne Call, Warren Holmgren. Fifth Row: Lester D. Barrus, Lyman Bingham, Michael Bruno, Wayne Taylor, Udell Wankier, Gene French, Earl Tuttle, David Latimer.
HOUSE party picnic.
~ hi e~~ilon ~ro~laim~ CLAIMING NO RELATION between their good rep and their distance from Jack Croft's office, the Sig Eps typify the hard-working, up-and-coming fraternity. They throw novel house parties, and are always decking the house for the next spree or cleaning it out after the last. They observe study rules strictly and keep tab on tubbings just as strictly. They claim to have the prettiest pin on the campus and show a distinct preference for Idaho beer. With artist Sam Merrill as a brother they are always in the final judgment for artistic endeavor-having won the snow sculpturing contest for the second successive year. On the election of Pat Smith as Queen of Hearts, they dreamily sang romantic "Sig Ep Girl" to their charter sweetheart. Pat is shown below as she was awarded the honor and the accompanying gift.
Sig Eps are
always considered a serious threat in intra-mural athletic competition. They passed, stroked, and tossed their way to the semi-finals in touch football, water polo, and basketball. They inaugurated Sunday softball sessions with the navy men, bought their share of defense stamps, and lived the life of model college brotherhood.
SIG EPS hear Louis cool Pastor.
SOC VEE ANN rumpus pen.
223
QUEEN of Hearts finalists.
theta
u~~ilon ~eman~~
attention
CRACKING THE POLITICAL field with 42-43 vice prexy Karma Hill (plus a "Lacey"the logical conclusion of SAE pin hanging), the Theta U's made their place on the campus indeed noticed. They were the only Amazon tribe to pick a Dream Man, naming Frank Wight for the honor.
Enough fraternity pins (and the following choco-
lates) came to rest here that the daily block dash for the five-to-eight bus was a "figurative" necessity. Thetas invaded classes with a high scholarship past record; evidencing their place in the high scholarship bracket was placement of Jane Peck in Phi Kappa Phi. The aged enigma "When does a sorority girl study?" is answered by the Thetas in the sequence below. Act I shows Pledge Peterson first being distracted from her pursuit of knowledge by the public showing of a new formal. One thing of course leads to another, and so after they contrast Russia's war move with Jay "blitzkrieg" Green's conduct, food is in order. Scene" shows us the quiet midnight purge of the icebox. In the last spot we find our tired pledge wearily attacking her lessons with the clock approaching one and her roomie tucked comfortably beneath the down.
224
FIRST ROW: Carol Wennergren, Jane Peck, Cora Mickelson, Shirley Nelson, Louis Peterson, Genevieve Johnson, Karma Hill , Lora Terry. Second Row: Gwendolyn Smith, Nedra Datwyler, Mae Anderson, Norma Ward, Hazel Perry, Evelyn Seamons, Maxine Jenkins, Corrine Smith. Third Row: Elaine Adams, Jane Flint, Charlene Turner, Marjorie Carver, Ruth Pederson, Marjorie Jones, Betty Jean Stone, Reta Jones. Fourth Row: Ruth Peterson, Margaret Barlow, Theda McB ride, Gene Coombs, Bona Jones, Betty Smith, Belva Andrus, Dorothy Lundahl. Fifith Row: Lois Adams, A nna Lyle Price, Donna Mickelson, Barbara Perkins, Violet Olsen.
frOID
w~~t ~~nt~r WEE WILLIE WINKlE Thetas.
225
MEMORIES n MEMORIES" IF THE JUNKMAN'S OLD CAR WHEELS COULD TALK, WHAT HAPPY STORIES THEY'D TELL. YES, OUR ENGRAVINGS TALK IN THE 1942 BUZZER.
THEY TELL OF CAREFREE COLLEGE DAYS
AND HOLD THOSE HAPPY MEMORIES.
BUY BONDS, WORK
AND FIGHT.
COMMERCIAL ART &ENGRAVING CO. 1220 MAPLE - LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
226
MAIN AND CENiER
MAIN AND FIRSi NORiH
\ 02 NORiH MAIN
FRED'S FLOWERS
AMERICAN FOOD STORES
BAUGH PLUMBING Chief of Values
FRESH MEATS - VEGETABLES
S. E. NEEDHAM, Jeweler
GROCERIES
"In the middle of the block at the sign of the clock." Phone 1300
Logan, Utah
7~e ~""I/*t PillceJ te ~tep
• • •
RATES FROM-$1.50 without bath $2.00 with bath TRY OUR AIR-CONDITIONED COFFEE SHOP AND BALLROOM
350 ROOMS - 350 BATHS RATES - $2 to $4 NEW AIR CONDITIONED COFFEE SHOP and DINING ROOM
WE
OFFER
YOU 228
HOSPITALITY
BEST IN THE WEST
Produced by
Produced only by
Independent Coal and Coke Company
United States Fuel Company
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City.
A letter from home, and a photograph of one who is dear-these are priceless to our boys in the service. Let us make a photograph of you from your Buzzer negative, or have a new one taken at our studio. Nothing will be appreciated more.
~rUDI~ 490 North Main
Logan, Utah
229
DEPENDABILITYA NECESSARY ACTION FOR THE PROGRESS OF ANY WORTH -WHILE INSTITUTION.
Utah Photo Materials Co.
13 PASSENGER TRAINS AND BUSES
Incorporated ESTABLISHED 1909
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES
In and Out of Logan Daily Providing Fast and Frequent Service TRAVEL VIA "U.I.C." AND SAVE
W. EARL lYMAN, Manager 27 West South Temple
Salt lake City, Utah :
New High Ball L.C.L. Freight Service from Salt lake City and Ogden to Brigham, Wellsville, Hyrum, logan, Smithfield and Preston and intermediate points
SERVICE IS THE BASIS OF FRIENDSHIP
This new service provides delivery of shipments at destination the same day they are shipped from Salt Lake City or Ogden.
then we are "A FRIENDLY INSTITUTION" because we carry
Established 1892
"Everything for Office and Schools"
The Utah -Idaho Central Railroad Corporation
Utah -Idaho School Supply Company 155 So. State
Salt lake City
230
Z
m
~
::z: o c ' ''' m
TRADITIONALLY
UTAH
AGGIES
PREFER
THE
SALT LAKE CITY
NEWHOUSE-WHERE BEING A HOST IS AN ART LET US ARRANGE THAT PARTY YOU ARE PLANNING The Beautiful MIRROR ROOM-Smart Social Center of the West
The
NEWHOUSE HOTEL 400 Rooms 400 Baths Rates $2.20 to $4 MRS. J. H. WATERS, Pres. J. HOLMAN WATERS W. ROSS SUnON M~~agers
IF YOU WANT ... DANCE PROGRAMS
INVITATIONS
ANNOUNCEMENTS - See -
J. P. SMITH & SON Supporters of Utah State for Over Fifty Years
ENGRAVERS
PRINTERS LOGAN, UTAH
c. c. ANDERSON "Where Cache Valley Trades With Confidence" DRY GOODS APPLIANCES FURNITURE LOGAN, UTAH
B 0 0 nUS
Complete Line of Small Shop Tools ...
FORHOMEAND SCHOOL LlBRAR'IES
POWER TOOLS
School Supplies, Party Favors, Greeting
Driver-Dewalt-Delta-Oliver Sliksaw Lufkin Precision Instruments Black and Decker Lincoln Arc Welding Equipment
Cards, Fountain Pens, Pencils, Stationery, Gifts, etc.
Deseret Book Company 44 East South Temple
Industrial Supply Company
Salt Lake City, Utah
121-131 Motor Avenue
232
Salt Lake City, Utah
"A Favorite Spot for Aggie Shoe Styles" Between 24th and 25th on Washington Boulevard Ogden, Utah
SAMUELS
SHOE STORE
For Your Entertainment and Pleasure CAPITOL THEATRE ROXY THEATRE LYRIC THEATRE Logan, Utah POPULAR PICTURES AT POPULAR PRICES.
233
Colorado Animal By-Products Company
ROYAL BAliERY • FOR FUTURE ALL-AMERICANS-
Manufacturers of
• FOR TASTE AND HEALTH ..
Golden Brand IMPROVED MEAT SCRAPS TANKAGE and BONE MEAL
"MARVEL MAID BREAD" 118 NORTH MAIN
Garland, Ogden, Salt Lake City, Spanish Fork, Logan, and Heber City
After the game ...
Winget's Ice Cream Co.
DICli'S CAFE
"We Freeze To Please"
for • DELICIOUS FRIED CHICKEN • TENDER STEAKS • SANDWICHES • FOUNTAIN SPECIALTIES • FOOT LONG HOT DOGS IWhere Quality and Prices haven't changed) 40 South Main
ICE CREAM . . . ICES . . . SHERBETS PUNCH PARTY ODRERS A SPECIALTY
Car Service
DAIRY, CREAMERY
THE BLUEBIRD and ICE CREAM Logan, Utah
MACHINERY and SUPPLIES
MONROE & CRISELL 19 NORTH MAIN and
Portland -
COLLEGE HILL
Salt Lake City
234
It's cooperation from friends like you that makes our work a pleasure.
YOURS FOR VICTORY!
Bennie
Max
IJEGN & BRUNSON PAPER DECORATIONS .. .
DUALITY
CARNIVAL GOODS .. .
STYLE
CARPENTER PAPER COMPANY
VARIETY
Salt Lake City, Utah
LEVE t-I·S 1."
LOGAN BIKE & SPORT SHOP
...." . .
, or ("
r~ I ... ' I
...
1
\"
•
Distinctive College Styles
North Main Street - Logan , Utah
JARMAN'S SHOES FOR MEN ...
L. C. Smith and Corona Typewriters
Repairing All Makes Rentals
. . . RED CROSS SHOES FOR LADIES
235
I
LOANS
BENNETT' S
FARM RESIDENT BUSINESS PROPERTY AND F.H.A.
PURE
INVESTMENT BONDS SURETY BONDS
PAINTS
WINDOW, PLATE,
JUDICIAL BONDS
and AUTO GLASS
FIDELITY BONDS
INSURANCE
Distributors for
Rawlings Athletic Equipment ABSTRACT
OF
TITLE
LOGAN HARIJWARE COMPANY
TITLE INSURANCE
UTAH MORTGAGE LOAN CORPORATION
Logan, Utah
WHOLESALE
LOGAN, UTAH
CASTLE
GATE
COAL
The Choice of Discriminating Buyers Mined by
UTAH FUEL COMPANY Salt Lake City, Utah DEPENDABLE DEALERS IN CACHE COUNTY SELL
CASTLE
GATE 236
COAL
RETAI L
J
RECREATIONAL BOWLING
LOVINGER
"Bowl for Your Health"
Logan Bowling Alleys
DISINFECTANT
Main Street
COMPANY MONSON MARliET lJealer in
HIGHEST DUALITY FoolJ Offers Congratulations to
311-319 South West Temple St.
AGGIE STUlJENTS
Salt Lake City, Utah
THE DINNER HORN
FOR YOUR APPETITE DELIGHT ..
LOGAN'S LEADING INDEPENDENT Demand the pure and
FOOD STORE
delicious candies Logan, Utah made by
Distributors for that famous SHAWWALKER "Built Like a Skyscraper" Office Furniture and Equipment
SHUPE-WILLIAMS CANDY CO.
Steve's Office Supply 2414 Washington Blvd.
Ogden, Utah
Ogden , Utah
237
Congratulations
THE PRICE OF
TO GRADUATES and
FREEIJoM
Best Wishes TO ALL STUDENTS
Here in America we are still free. But
U. S. A. C. Booll STORE
our future is only as secure as our willingness to plan, to work, to save. We have undertaken the mightiest war program in the world's history ... and to it we must dedicate our brains, our
SWEET'S
labor, our money-unstintingly.
Salt Lake STAMPS BUY WAR WAR BONDS
BARS and SPECIALTIES on Sale at The Book Store QUALITY
and
SEARS RoEBUCIl & CO.
VALUE
This Book Is Bound in a .. .
IlINGSIlRAFT COVER Iling-sport Press, Inc. Ilingsport, Tennessee
238
GENERAL
TIRES
• HAWKINSON TIRE RE-CAPPINGI • EXPERT RADIATOR CLEANING AND REPAIRINGI • PERFECT CIRCLE RiNGSI • EXIDE BATIERIESI • DU PONT AUTOMOBILE PAINTI • TIMP KIN NEW DEPARTURE BEARINGI COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE PARTS
Central Auto Parts &Tire Co. Phone 88 227 North Main -
Logan
GRANT BATESON
RAY SIDDOWAY
LARSON & BIRCH
BUS TRAVEL HELPS YOU and Your Country, tool TRAVELING by Super. Coach today is both good judgment AND good Americanism. What could be an easier way to save money for Defense Bonds than to do all your traveling by luxurious , air· conditioned Super.Coach. It costs much less than driving, and you 'll make your car last longer •. • saving tires , parts , and vital war materials for Victory • • • serving yourself and your country, tool
Wholesale CANDY MANUFACTURERS and JOBBERS
UNION PACIFIC STAGES
Logan, Utah
The Overland-Wonderland Route
WE PRINT STUDENT LIFE
J. L. EARL Manager and Owner
239
PEMBROKE COMPANY
DRUGS ... Fountain - Lunch - Kodak - Films You are always welcome at the
Modern Drug Store 109 North Main
OFFICE OUTFITTERS Salt Lake City
Logan, Utah
PHOTO BLUE COMPANY
Cache Sheet Metal Works F. W. JACKSON
Salt Lake City
207 Ness Building
H. R. JACKSON
74 W. Center St.
Written, Printed or Drawn Subjects Created, Reduced, Duplicated or Enlarged
Phone 81
Planograph Printing - Blueprinting - Photostats Engineering Supplies - Mammoth Photo Enlargements Artist Supplies
Logan, Utah
FOR ...
PEERLESS
Perfect Registered Diamonds
A UTAH COAL
Gruen, Elgin, and Hamilton Watches Eastman, Bell, and Howell Cameras
"THE COAL WITHOUT A PEER"
Gifts with personality
Produced and Distributed by
-
PEERLESS SALES COMPANY
VISIT-
CARDON JEWELRY COMPANY For 70 years Logan's favorite jeweler
240
is not as simple as it looks. Organizing a successful publication requires coordination, adhering to principles of good layout, color application, photographic appeal; all part of the media used in helpful guidance. Our objective, obviously, is a method pursued upon satisfactory and continuous customer relations leading to the permanency of the institution.
_ _ _ _ _ PARAGOn PRinTinG co. 122 West on Second South
Salt Lake City. Utah
~tuu~nt Abb o tt. J . T. 48. 57. 14 0. 218 A bbo tt. L eg r a nd e .............. 70 A d a m s . B e rni ce ...... .......... 8 4 Adam s. E la in e .......... 70. 22 5 Adam s . Hu g h L . ................ 8 4 A d a m s . L o is 96. 98. 104. 225 Ad a m so n . E l la L . ............ 48 Ada m so n . Mildr e d P . 98 . 20 4 Adam so n . R o b e rt K . ........ 98 A dn ey. Be tt y J a n 98 A dn e y. C. J oyc e ................ 70 Ae bi s c h e r . Edith E. ...... .. 98 AI b e rtso n . A . B r y c e 84. 214 Al d e r . Con r a d ............ 8 4. 218 A ld e r . R eo G. .. .................. 85 A ll a n . C lay t o n .. ................ 98 A ll e m a n . Dav id ................ 98 A ll e n . Aq uill a C ...........1 56. 1 61 A ll e n. Fr e d 69. 76. 1 53 . 21 8 A ll e n . Tra v e r s .................... 2U A ll e n . R eed R. .. ........ ...... 4 Al le n J ea n .. ...................... 211 All e n. Ru sse ll H ............. 70 A ll e n. L o ui se .................... 98 Allr e d. C h a ll ............... .4 8. 216 Allr e d . F ri e d a l s a b e l ...... 98 A llr e d. 'W e ll s M . ................ 1 28 Am ac h e r'. A a ron C . ............ 214 A m ac h e r . V.' in i fr e d .......... 5 Amund so n . M a rj o ri e .. ...... 98 A nd e r so n . B eve rl y M a e .... 98 A nd e r so n . B urto n C . ...... 98 A nd e rso n, C h a d K . .......... 48 And e r s on , Des m o nd 98, 1 29 A nd e r so n , Eld e n J . 98 And e r so n , Erm a H . 98 70 A nd e r s e n , G l e nn C. A nd e r se n , G r a nt F. 70 And e r so n , J a c k ........ 85, 128 And e r so n , J os. A Jr. 44 , 85 A nd e rso n , K a thr y n .......... ~09 A nd e r so n . K e ith ................ 84 And e rson , K e nt D . ............ 98 A nd e r s on , L ee Roy ........ 48 A nd e r so n , Lu c ind a Coy 98 And e r s on, Lu r lin e H . .. . 70 And e r so n. M ae ........... .48, 2~5 A nd e r so n , M a rjo ri e ........ 48 A nd e r so n , R o b e rt L . 48. ~2n And e r se n , R obe rta .......... 84 A nd e r so n, Rul o n A . ........ 48 A nd e r se n , Stanl ey P . ...................... 38, 70, 1 39, 216 And e rso n, ' '\Ia ll ace J r ... .. 215 Andr e w s, Be v e rl y L . ...... 98 Andr e w , D ea n C. .. .......... 1 5 4 A ndrus. Be lva ............ 98. 225 A ndru s, Ruth .................... 48 Anhd e r , Garth ] v o n .... ... 98 Arc hiba ld. Ruth 99 A r m s t ro n g. H a r o ld '1'. .. .. 70 A rm s tron g, l e la ... ... .... 70 A rn e ll , R obe rt M . ........... 8 4 A rthur, K e ith .................. 70 A s h , Cec il G r a nt .. ......... 99 As h by, Edith ................... 70 As h c r o ft , Mild r e d ........... 8 I A s hd o wn , D on a ld ............ 48 As tl e , M a vi s ...................... 8 4 A th ay, D a n J . .................... 84 A tkin, J o hn D w a in ........ 99 A u b e rt, A u g u s t A ........ 99. ~22 A ub e rt, L awre n ce .... 70 . 222 Au s tin , 'Ma r y J . ................ 99 A x Ig'a rd , C hri s 49. ] 50, 211
Bag ley. David C. .. .......... 8 4 B a il ey, Lu Ii a .................... 84 Bail ey. S a m H . .................... 49 . 56 , 131, 21 6 Ba il'. G l e n .......................... 5 B aird . L o r a in e .......... 70, 204 Ba ird. Rob e rt Ab n e r ........ 85
in u~ X B is h op, S hirl E' Y E. ............ 2 15 B is hop, V. Re id ............ 7 1. 214 B lack , Har o ld K. ............ 49 B l a c k , H e l e n ........ ............ 49 B lack. R o b e rt M . ............ 49 B la i r, Co n stan c e ........ 84 , 204 B la is d e ll , Ree d R. ............ 99 B la n c h a rd . Dar e n B . ........ 99 Blan c h a rd, K e ith H . ........ 71 B la s e r H a r o ld D. .. .......... 99 Bli ss, P ia tt H. ............ 84. 220 B loo d , H o w a rd L . 99, 129, 215 Bo d re r o, Ll e w e ll y n ............ 71 Bo nd, All e n T . .. ................ 71 Bo nd . F loyd T ................... 99 Bosan , George . ........ 84 . 206 Bo tt, H e l y n .......................... 71 Bo w e n . Do n L es li e .... 8 4. 128 Bo wm a n, Edw a rd 1\1. ........ 99 Boye r , K e ith S ................. 50 Brad s h a w . L y nn N ie ls e n 99 B r a d s h a w . O' d e ll B e r g· s tro m ................................ 99 B r aegge r, Mo r gan G . .... 99 Braegge r , Rap h a e l ...... .... 99 B ran g e s. Ro b e rt J .... 7 1. 222 B r e m e r s . Ir e n e J . ............ 4 Br ie rl ey. J a m e s J. ............ 99 B ri ggs, M a ri e ............... ..... 71 B ri ggs, M e lvin T ............. 158 Br ink e rh o ff, A lm a N . .... 50 B rinto n , ' '\1m . B . ................ 50 B r oad be nt, Elm e r E . ........ 50 B r o th e r se n . Th o m as M .... 7 1 B r o u g h, B e rni ce ................ 71 B rou g h . F r a nklin K . 1 00, 220 Bro u g h , L a wre n ce D . ........ 50 B rown. Ann e M . ........ ........ 99 B r o wn , D ea n B ............. 84, 219 B r o wn , Ga rn A ................. 71 B r o wn , L e la nd J ............... 100 B rown, Pa ul H . ................ 71 B r o wn , Reed ................. ..... 100 B rown , Th a les C . .............. 50 Brun o, Mi c h ea l .................. 100 B u c lt, A m a nd a .................... 8 4 Bud ge, Ed w in C ........... .. 21 8 B ud ge, Gra nt .................... 71 B ud ge, R eed W . ........ 71 . 220 B ull e n , G e orge H . ............ 21 8 B und erso n . 0 1 e n W . 84, 215 B unk e r , B. li e n ................ 100 B urc h , J ea n V . .................. 71 B ur ga n , Cl a ire G . ............ 100 Bu r goy n e, 1 av id S . ........ 1 00 B ur goy n e , Max in e .... 8 4, 1 39 B UI·goy n e. R o b er t H . ...... 50 B urk , D ic k ........................ 71 B urnh a m. Owe n ........ 100, 213 B urn s , Mi c h ea l .................. 222 B urro w s. Th o m as W 100, 220 B u r t o n , A lb rt W . ........ 50 B USh , R oc h e D. .. .............. 50 B u s hi e r , Cha rl e s D ............. 84
Ba k 1', Ba r'z ee C ................. 85 Balt e r'. fli mo n L ................. 4 9 Bal c h , B tty L o u .... 70, 20!l Ba il a r d, Do nn a ................ 4!1 Ba l la rd , Nad in e ................ 71 Ba ll a rd , R e n e Nob l e 49, ~22 Ba n ger t e r, B la u e r L . .. .. 99 Ba nkh e a d O r se n Vi' . ........ 218 Barb e r An n L . .. ...... 71, 211 Ba r bel', Pa t sy ............ 99 , 211 Ba rk er. Eth e l H . ............ 71 Barl o w. Do r o th y ............ 84 Barl o w . H ave n J ..... l H, 214 Barlow , M a r ga r e t L. 71, 225 Ba rl o w . Rac h e l ........ 71, 209 Barnhurs t , 'W ill a rd D . .. .. 99 Ba rnum , W a rre n P . ........ 49 Bar r a tt, G le n C . ................ 84 Bal'l'e tt, G e n e v a ................ 84 Barr e tt, Ross ............ 8 4, ~] 3 Ba rr e tt. Th e t a .................... 71 Bar ro n . Ho w a rd .............. 84 Barr o n , Ro b e rt M. ... ....... 84 B a rru s L es t e r D .............. 222 Ba rtc hi, Pa ul E . ............. ... ~06 Barth o lom e w , Marga r e t.. .. 85 Bar tl e tt. De ll a .................. 71 Ba rto n, Geo r ge A ............. 85 Barto n . J o hn O ......... 49. 2] 3 B ar t s c hi . Pa ul ................ 71 Bat e m a n . K e nne th (; . . .. 99 Ba t e m a n . L a V a I' ........ ..... 85 Ba t e m a n , i a rjori e .......... 84 Bat e m a n , Virg ini a ... .49, 211 Ba t eso n , Do n Ca rte r 9). 21 9 B ateso n, R u sse ll , B . 93, 21 6 Batt. Ber ni ce ................ ... 99 Batt, ' '\I iili a m L ee .... l 56, 216 BaUl' le, E s th e r M . .......... .. 49 Bau g h . Eva n A . ........ rU, 1 59 Bau g h , F r a n ces ............ UU , 204 B ax t e r. Ald e n John ......... 99 B e a l, D oro th y .................... 49 Bea t y . J o hn A ll e n ...... ~ 4, 222 B ec k, J a m es S . ................ 71 Bec k e tt, J a m e s E . ........... ~ 06 Beec h e r, De lMont 71 B egga nt, 'Willi a m (19 Be hlin g, G l e n J . 49 Be hlin g Ray J . ................ 71 Be ll . M a r v in ............ ..... ... 150 Be ll o , C la i r L . . ....... . S4, 21 8 Be n c h , S t e rling ................ 84 Benn e tt. El ay n e F . ............ 99 Be nn e tt. Lil a M . ................ 99 Be nn e tt, S p e n cer ................ ~9 Be nni o n , P ggy M . ............ ~9 Ben so n, M a tthew Jr ..... .... 84 Be n so n Win s ton L . . ..... 71 Be nto n , Dav id E. 71 Be nto n , Ll oy d J ay 99 Be r ge n e r , Re id H . .... S4. 221 Be r geso n , Ra mon a ............ 99 Be r g e so n , Th a rr e l ~ n n ...................................... U9, 211 Be r g r ee n , S t a nl ey V,r . .... 84 Be rnhi se l, H a rr y .............. 99 B e rnhi se l. T e d B ............. 71 Be rn s t e in , Dav id A . ........ 71 B e rnt so n, A ri e l J r . .... 4, 220 B e rnt so n , M ary ........ 4, 204 Be rr e y, M a ri e ...................... 8 4 Be rtin J . Co nrad ............... .46, 49, 58, 14 6, 214 Be th e l'S, G r a nt .... 49, 14 0, 214 B e utl e r . S hirl ee M ..... 99, 204 B ic kmo r e , ' Vi lli a m D . .... 71 B ig' lE' r', Go r'd o n Od e ll ........ 99 B ill s , Ora 1\1 . ...................... 49 B in g h a m , Do n R. .. .......... 71 B in g h a m, L y m a n D ......... 222 B in g h a m , 'W inifr e d .......... 99 B inn a ll , J. Ra lph .............. 99 B i r d, P e rr y G . .................. 99 B i rd. V e rn a ........................ 84 B iSCh o ff , Arc hi e A ........... 99 B is h op. L a i'r e a l ................ 99 B is h op, L aWa n a ................ 99 B is h op. L e Mira .................. 8 4 B is h o p, Ma r y L o ui s e ...... 99
e Ca in e . G. E cc l es ................ 214 Ca in e, J o hn T . .................. 214 Ca in e , Ro b e rt P . ................ 214 Ca ldw e ll , Grac e .................. 100 Caldw e ll , \OVa l'l' e n T . 50, 214 Call . Eliza b e th 84 . 85, 209 Ca ll , M e lba ................ lI)O, ~11 Ca ll, R ic h a rd ........ 70, 71 , 216 Ca ll , \OVayn e \OV. ........ 8 4, 222 Ca m e r o n, M a r y Lu ............................ 98, 100. 209 Ca mp be l l, A rthur A . ...... 8 4 am p be ll. B l a n c h e ............ 100 Ca mp b e ll, C hl oe D . .... 50, 211 Campb e ll , Lu c il e ................ 50 Cann g ie t er. Mo rri s \0\' ..... 51 Cannin g, I ay R. ................ 5 1 Ca p e n e r , H a r o ld R. .... 51. 216 Ca r do n . K e nn e th R ......... 84 Ca r do n, S idn ey B. .... luO , 21 9 Ca r ey, G l e n A ..................... 84
242
Car li s l e , J o hn J . .......... ..... 86 Carlos, J ea n B. .................. ~ I Carl se n , Mil e s ................... 11111 Ca rl so n . H a lph. F . .......:71 , 214 Ca rlso n , Rob e ry 0. .. ...... 222 Carl so n , V e rnon W. SS, 215 Ca r s on, Virg ini a .... l OO , 211 Carte r , A fton ............ 8G, ~ U4 Ca rte l', Alta ............ 100, 20 n Cartel'. Joan .............. 51, 209 Car ve r , M a rjori e L . ~, 1 , 22 5 Case m a n . A. B e rt ............ 86 Cas p e r, Shirle y ................ 100 C h a dwi c k , H e l e n B .... ... 100 C h a dwi c k. Ke ith E . .. ..... 86 C h a dwi c k . Ralph J . .. ..... 51 C h a mb e l'iain . R e uvo ........ 100 C h a mb e r s. Carm a .... 87, 209 C h a t e la in, J a lte E . ............ 86 C h a tte rto n . A ri e l B ......... 51 C h e c k e tts, F. Widts o e 87. 218 C h e rr y. Cec il A ................. 10 1 C h oa t e. Ro b e rt Ca lvin .................................... 1 53, 222 C hri s t e n se n, A d e l e ............ 51 C hri s t e n se n , A nth o n B ..... 51 C hri s t e n se n , Cec il N ....... 71 C h r iste n se n . Dar w in C ..... 71 C hriste n se n , Irm a ............ 101 C h r is t e n se n , J ean ...... 51, 20 4 C hri s t e n sen. Lu c il e ............ 71 C hriste n se n . M a r y K. .. .. 87 C hri s t e n se n , O l e v a C. .. .. 86 C hriste n se n. Rulon .......... 101 C hristianse n , Eva ............ 101 C hri s ti a n se n , F r a n ces .................................... 1 01, 204 C hri s ti a n se n , J . Y . ............ 101 C lark. Be th ................ 1 01, 211 C la rk, C h a rl e n e ................ 71 C lark, David T . 51 , 15 3, 214. C la w so n . A la n T ................. 10 1 C la w so n . Ll oy d Y . .......... 10 1 Cl a y , J o hn E . 51, 129, 222 Clayson, M e lba ................ 71 C lay ton, Gen e vi e v e ............ 5 1 C lay ton, Ric h a rd L . ........ 71 C le m e nts. J e an S . .............. 211 C l y d e , N e d P ..... 51 , 1 66, 216 C ly d e. Vir g ini a ................ 211 Coburn , Ri c hard K . ........ 51 C o lby. H a rv ey L ................. 72 Co l es, Ern es t T . ................ 101 Co ll ar d , Hub y .................... 86 Co llin gs, \OVay n e R ............. 51 Co llis, Mage l e .................... 72 Co l yar , A lbe rta L . ............ 101 Co l yar , Marz e tta L ......... 86 Co ndi e, Da rl e n e ................ 51 Co n sa la i, Ed ...................... 222 Coo k . Maurin e .................. 5 2 Coo lt . O ri s K aa .................. 101 Coo k, W illia m L ............. 86 Coo ley , M a r c u s R. ............ 72 Co ol ey, M ar v e l .................... 101 Coo mb s , Barba r a .............. 86 Coo mb s, Ge n e .................... 22 5 Coo mb s Virg il .................. 72 Coo P. Jun e .................... 52. 209 Co rbrid ge. Ivan L . ............ 52 Co rd o n , Ba rba r a ................ 5 2 Co rd o n , Juli e tte ................ 52 Co r e y, Robe rt E . ...... 52. 220 Co rni a , L e o P ..................... 1Ill Covey, Loya l .. .................. 5 2 Cow i e )' . G e o r g e H . ............ 5 2 ox . Ca l'o l .......................... 101 Cox . Do n a ld B. ................ 86 Co x. El me r C ..................... 51 Co x , Elm e r E . . ................. 72 Co x. Pa ulin e S ................... 5 2 C r a n e . F lo I' n ce A . .... 7 2, 204 C r·a n e . L e o n a rd H . ............ 72 Cran e, V a l B . .. ................. 216 C r a w fo rd , Faye ................ 02 C r a wfo rd, J ea n .......... 87, 211 C r a w fo rd , T e d ........1 01, 215 Cr iddl e, Ber th a ................ 101 C riddl e, J o hn R. ................ 87
~tuu~nt in u~ x Critchlow. M e lva ............ 72 Crockett. Eldon ................ 101 Crock e tt. J eann e 87. 89. 209 C roc k e tt. Jon Fr e d .... 52. 222 C r of t. Ca rm e n ............ 52. 209 Crook. Clark J. .. .............. 101 C r ookston. B urn s B. ............ 82. 93. 155. 164. 218 Crool{ston. J a n e ................ 101 Crookston. J o hn R. .......... 101 Crooksto n. Lola ................ 101 C r·ow th e r. Gordo n ............ 86 C uff. Rob e rt Lote .... 101. 213 C ullim o r e. Grant J . .................... 78. 159. 164. 218 C ullimore . Phy lli s .............. 86 Curtis. Barbara .................. 101 Curtis. Or rin F ................. 1 59 C urtis. WalTe n G . ............ 101 C usl, e ll y. S. L awren ce ...... 53 C utl e r . De J . ...................... 101 C utl e r . Ma .................. 53. 209
Da in es. Dane l ............ 101. 215 Da in es. M e rrill C ............. 218 Dain e s. Spence r H anse n 53 Da ll ey. Jam es Adw in ...... 72 Dall ey. Par l ey Jam es ........ 53 Da ll ey. Rac h e l .................... 72 Da lpiaz. In e z Francis .... 101 Da n ce. Orin David ............ 86 Daniels. Dona Mari e 86. 211 Da ni e l s. John Ste v e ...... 220 Da ni e lson. Ruth ................ 7 2 Dattage. L e v e r e A. .. ...... 86 Datwyl e r . e dra ..... :.......... 225 Davis. Barbara Francis .... 72 Da v is. Ete ll a ...................... 72 Dav is. H e le n ...................... 101 Da vis. J ac k R u gg .... 72. 166 Dav is. L. Ray .................... 101 Davis. L e hi .......................... 101 Davis. M a rion J ................. 101 Davis. Mary Jan e ........ 86. 211 Day l ey. Mark Y ................. 101 Dec ker. Mar y .................... 7 2 DeLaMare. Harold .... 87. 216 DeLong. A il een ................ 53 De nnis. Dani e l S . ............ 87 Desc h a mps. B lan c h e L ..... 205 Diia l. Mary ........................ 87 Di llman. Mar y L eo n a ...... 101 D illman. Nao mi ................ 209 Dixo n. DwIgh t .................. 53 D ixon. Louis e ............ 73. 209 Dolq uist. Don .................... 157 Dom ina. Urs ul a ............ 86. 211 Dom inick. LoVe rn e ........ 222 Doran. B e lva ...................... 53 Dorto n . B e tty J eann e .................................... 101. 204 Dotso n. O lga H e l e n .......... 101 Dow ns. Lo is ........................ 101 Drake. E ld on N ........ 73. 222 Draku li c h. Ni c k Jo e 53. 218 Draper. G lad e B. ............ 101 Droubay. 'W e nd e ll P . 86. 216 Dubac k. V e ra Mae ............ 101 Dunca n. Ga il ............ 73. 156 Dunca n. Ge rald ................ 101 Dunford. Mont B. ............ 86 Dunn. Barbara ................ 20 9 Dunn. Irv in g ...................... 101 Dunn. M a rion Robert .................................... 101. 220 Dunn. NaDea n .................. 73 Durand. Embry J . ............ 101 Durfee. Dorot h y V . .. ...... 86 DUrrant. 'Wi lliam Jr. 102. 158 Durrant. W illiam M. 53 DUrtschl. 'Walter H ......... 86 Dustin. Dent ............ 102.
220
Fullmer. C le m C. .. .......... 86 Funk. Ge n e .......................... 86 I' unk . Viva L eo n e .......... 103 Eaton . Marian R. ............ 67 Edison. H a l ........................ 222 Edward s. Judith ........ 102. 209 E g b e rt. David , V. .. ........ 102 Eldn s. Stanford Ray ........ 102 Ekk e r. Juli a M ................. 1 02 Eldr e dg • Be tty Ann 86. 20 4 Eldr e dge. 'Wayn e J ........... 215 E lli ott. Jon G r ee r ............ 86 Ell iott. K e i th ,'Ya ll ace .... 102 Elli so n. Lyl e L a rkin ........ 102 Embr y. Elsi e F lore n c ...... 86 Emm e tt. D udl ey .............. 219 Emp ey. LaMar T ............. 102 England. Earl Wm . ........ 7 3 England. Harold "V . ........ 86 En g la nd . M. J ay ............ 102 Eri c k se n . A lb e rta ............ 73 Eri c kson. C lifford L ....... 102 Eri c k s n. Edna M . ............ 53 Eri c kso n. ad in e .............. 86 Eri c k so n. Marga r e t .......... 211 Eri c l{ so n. Roma Lynn ...... 73 Er ic kson. Virginia ............ 86 Ernstrom. Anthon ............ 86 Erqui aga. Tony ................ 102 Eske lse n . Annora ............ 7 3 Esplin. Do r othy ................ 73 Esplin. Gra nt M . ...... 73. 219 Evans. Berne ll "Vard ...... 102 Evans. El a in e D . .... 102. 204 Evan. Garth Dav id ........ 73 Evan s. H. JO y ................ 211 Evan s. Jose ph .................... 73 Evans. VaNyl e M . ............ 73 Ev e rton. Rub y .................... 102 Eyr e. H. Dea n .................. 73
Gab ri e lsen. L y man C ....... 220 Ga lid a . Fra nk R. ................ 86 Ga n c h e ff. Beu lah .............. 73 Gard n e r . Dean C ............. 73 Gard n e r . Ell e n ................ 54 Ga rdn e r . P h y lli S ................ 54 Ga rdn e r . Rulon B. .... 10 3. 219 Gat es. K e ith ........................ 54 Gath e rum . J a m es M . ........ 54 Gay. Do n ' 'Y ....................... 54 ay nard . C lifford Ca rl .... 73 Gedd es. Ezra ............ 54 . 220 G e ntry. ·Wm. L ................. 103 Ge phart, El a in e .................. 86 G i bson. L ee W'illi s .......... 21 3 G ilb e rt, Jac k ............ 15 3. 219 G n e hm, M a rgare t .............. 86 Godfr ey. R osa l yn .............. 86 Godfrey. "Villiam R ......... 86 Go ld . Donna ........................ 73 Goodman. Ru se ll M a x .... 73 Goodse ll . Fay e .................. 86 Goodwin. C hu c k L aVaI' ............................ 86. 166. 215 Goo ld . Norris W . .............. 88 Gottfredson. Arthur H ..... 10 3 Go w e rs. Don Ray ............ 54 Gra h a m . L e l a nd ................ 88 G rand y. Dr u e Royal ........ 73 Grandy. Grant p . .. .......... 54 Grant. Guymon ................ 89 Gray. Elmo A ..................... 5 4 G r eav es. Margu e rite ........ 73 G r ee n . Max ........................ 73 Gre e n. Vaughan .................. 73 G r eenw e ll . Eva M . ............ 54 Gri ffin. Earl H . ................ 73 G riffin. Ri c hard A . ............................ 152. 16 0. 219 Griffin. V e ra .................... 7a G riffin. Welde n ................ 73 Griff ith s. Dan ie l J . ............ 73 Gub l e r. Edmund ........ 88. 220 G udmundson. L a u sanne M . ........................................ 88. 204 G udmundson . o rm a ........ 88 Gudmundson. VV es t e rdahl 74 G unn. Ri c hard N ............. 88 Gunn. Wilma ............ 103. 209 G utke. Harold .................... 214 Gu ymo n . Gra nt A ............. 89
Farr. Cath e rin e ........ 5:J. 209 Farnsworth , D e an ............ 73 FarT e ll. K e nn e th A . ........ 86 F e rn e llu s. J ea n W . ............ 53 F e rre. A I vin ........................ 53 Fi e ldin g. Reva P e arl ........ 1. 02 Fife. , 'Yynne Basil ........... 73 Fi llm ore. Id e n C . ........... 1 02 Find lay. Lloyd ................ 86 F is hbur·n. Enid ............ 03. 205 Fi s h e l'. Marjar ie N . .. .... 102 Fitzge r a ld. Ba rbara .r. 86. 87 F itzg raId . Do ri s .... 102. 211 F itz g e r a ld. J ac l, Fl"lnk 103 Fitz ge rald. Sh e ld o n ....... 73 Flamm. Low e ll S . ............ [ 03 F l e t c h e r . H a rv ey R. ........ 86 Flint. Jan e ......................... 225 Fonnesbec k. L e on Alan 1 ~9 Foote. ,,\Tilson H . ............ 53 Fordh a m . B ess ie M ............. I0 3 Foster. Arvil J . ............... 73 Foutz. Dru ce Tadin e 73. 209 Fowl e r . Art F r ank lin 71. 217 Fow le r . Etta mari e .... 53. 211 Frampton. Joyce E ......... 103 Frank. Virginia ................10 3 Franc is . S hirl ey ........ 86. 20 4 Free m a n. Dean B e rt ........ 53 Freeman. Ire n e ................ 73 Freeman. Kay E ............. 73 Fr ee m an. Roma Ir e n e ...... 103 Fr e n c h . Gene .................... 222 Fre n c h . L e nwood E . ...... 73 F ri c }(, Roy ........ ___ .... _...... _... 10 :~
H a dfi e ld . Fay .................... 89 Hagiwars. T oshlo B. ........ 89 Haight. Karrol ............ 75. 209 Hal e. K e lta ........................ 10 3 H a l e. M a ry Loui se ............ 205 Hal ey. "Vanda .................... 5 4 Hal g r e n . Spe n ce r' Val .................................... 10 3. 217 Hall . Ad e le ........................ 10 3 H a ll. Frank L ev i .............. 74 Hall . Geo r ge C h arles ........ 10 3 Ha ll. Marge n e .................... 55 Hall . Norma ........................ 55 H a ll. Re id J e nkins .... 88. 214 H a ll a day. Norm a J .......... 103 H a milton. J ay Marti n 88. 220 Hammond . C loma ........ 88. 211 Hampton. Boyd K ............. 88 Hampton. Ka ...................... 10 3 Hampton. K e nn e th Ra y .... 55 Hampto n . Rex H erbert.. .. 55 Han c ock. MaDall .............. 88 Han se n . Adrus ................ 83. 88. 91. 1 28. 211 Hans e n. B e atri ce E . ........ 74 Han se n . C le on e L y le ........ 10 3 H a n s n . C lifford ................ 74 Hanse n . Eldon 74
Fridal. Fae ........................ 7 3 Fridal. L yd ia ...................... 73 Fr is c hkn eckt. W. Dean 222 Fronk. ' Vi lli am Don ........ 53 F uhrim a n . Boyd ........ 86. 214 Full e r. G le n E. ............ 54. 128 Full e r . Stanley R. ............ 73
"V. ............
243
Hanson. F r anl, M .............. 219 Hanse n. Ge rtrud e ............ 10:1 Hanse n . Charl es ................ 103 Hanson. Go ld e n K . ............ 55 Han se n . Jay L e l a nd ........ 216 Hanson. Leon a ................ 74 Hanson. Marion .................. 74 Hanse n. Marjorie ........ 55. 209 Hansen. Norma .................. 74 Hanse n. Pa ul K . ................ 21 5 Hanson. Robbin R eed .... 220 Hans e n. Vaughn E . .......... 74 Hardman. C. N e ff ............ 74 Hardman. G r a nt L ........... 10 3 Harris. D. Blain e ........ 89. 222 HarriS. Floria .................... 89 Harris. Gloria ........ 83. 93. 209 HarriS. Lu cil l e .................... 1 03 Harris. Ric h ard H . ........................ 39. 51. 55. 214 Harris. VITa l t e l' A . .. .. 89. 213 Harris. W e nd e ll R ............. 88 Harrison. Elw e n ................ 103 H a rtvigse n . Mabe l E . ...... 74 H a rtvigs e n. Ree d W . ........ 74 Hartvigse n . Ruby ............ 74 Harwood. Do ri s ................ 74 Haskins. Geo r ge W . ........ 215 Hatch. Be tty. L o uis e ...... 69. 74 Hatc h . George H ......... 88. 213 H a t c h. Mary ........................ 55 Hatc h . R. Jam es ........ 88. 217 H a tt. Vail F r ank ................ 10 3 Have n s. Warr e n , 'Y in s ton 166 H ayd e n . Be n L y nn ............ 88 Hayes. Charl es R. ........ 88. 215 Haynie. Louis e .......... 10 3. 204 Hayward. Mildred .............. 209 Hayward. Ster ling R. ....103 Hawkins. A l ex .................... 74 H eat on. Norman ................ 55 H e nd e rson . Ge n e ................ 89 Henderson. RoyaL ...... 55. 214 H e ndri c ks. B e tty Jan e 211 ........................................ 89. H e ndri c ks. E . L aVan ...... 220 H e ndri c k s. John R. .... 103. 220 H e ndr y. VlTilli am .............. 206 H e nri e . Argyle Jal ............ 103 H e nri o d . Charlotte D . .............................. 75 . 141. 204 H e nry. C h arl es H . .... 55. 222 H e rm a n so n . Beth .............. 55 H e rbe rt. Madonna ............ ~~ H e ss. Dorothy .................... 1 03 H e u sse r . Blaine R ............. 216 H ey wood. F lore n ce ............ 88 Hiatt. J e x L eo n ................ 55 Hiatt. H ay .......................... 89 Hi c ken. Dean Ray ............ 75 Hi c ken . Quentin E ........... 103 Hic k en. Russ e ll B ............. 55 Hic kman. Car los ................ 10~ Hi c kman . Dot ............ 10 3. 209 Hi c kman . In e da 5 138 209 ........................ 49. 5. • Hi clunan. Louis C ............. 88 Hi c kman. Shirl ey .............. 209 Hill. Karma ................ 75. 225 Hin e r. Haz e l ........................ 103 Hin e r . J ame s .................... 220 Hirsc h. Ern es t C ............. 88 HobbS. Do n a ld .................. 10 3 Hobson. J o hn Ralph ........ 75 Hodgson . William D . ...... 10 3 Hodson. LoiS Jun e ............ 103 Hoffman. M e rril V . .. ...... 103 Hoffman V e rI L ............. 1IJ3 Hoffman. V er n e ................ 158 Holmgr e n. "Varr e n G . .... 2 ~2 Holyoal,. Lily L ............... 103 Home r. Hom e r. Hom e r. Honda.
Dale "III......... 88. ~ l Elna ........................ 10J En.d T ............. 55. 21!) 'lo d as h i ............ . .. 103
Hon es. "ViJli ",m ............ .... l 03 Hoop e r . K ·~ ith R. ............. 1 03 Horton. Jac l. Earl .... 88. 206
Hu~ent Howard, D i c k ............ 15 3, 21 ~ Howard, Fi< ' ra ................ :lv3 Howard, ~ Ke nt ........ 88, 21 5 How e lls, Jb.n e .................... 75 How ell s, Norman .............. ~ 14 Hoyt, Murray G ................ 104 Hubbard, Au s tin R. .......... 220 Huber, Jam es R. ................ 7 5 Hu c h e \' Paul E. .............. ~15 Hudman , H e l en .......... 55, ~ 1l Huff, Vir g ini a L . ............ 56 Huffak e r, Grant B. ............1.04 Hugh es, Doris N . ................ 56 Hugh es, Stanl ey S......... 88 Hugh es, ''''allace D ......... 104 Hugi e, Eth e l Mae .... 1 04, 20 4 Hulet, Ray .......................... 1 04 Hulm e, David ...... ........ 56, 214 Hulm e, Melvin John ........ 88 Huls e, D ee R. .................... 88 Hultqui s t, B e rni ce E ....... 75 Humph e rys, R o y W ......... 218 Hunsak e r, Eros ................104 Hunsak e r, Gw e nn ........ 7 5, 1 39 Hunsak e r, Ri c h a rd .... 88, 104 Hunte r , Lawr en ce ............ 104 Hunte r, Lilli a n .................. 88 Hunt er, Llo y d .................... 104 Hurst, Cl y d e F ......... 56 , 218 Hurst, Eld e n Grant .......... 8M Hurst, R ee d M e rl e .... 104, 219 Hurst, R e x L eRoy ............ 104 Hutchison, Charl es W . .... 56 Hy er , Edgar A . .................. 104 H ye r, Marjori e .......... 1 04, 211 Hye r , Ruth .......................... 75 H y mas, Gw en ...................... 75 Hymas, Joy ce L . ................ 1 04 Hymas, Th eo Alfred ...... 114 H y ning, Jac k ...................... 88
Inge r soll , Jo e ............ 15 3, 1 66 lsrae l se n, M e lvin .......... 87 , 88 1 v e rson, Eva n .................... 1 29
J Jabbs, Gl e nn "" . ................ 75 Jac kson , E s th e r ................ 1 04 J ac kson , G l e n R. ................ 56 Jac kson. Ros s ................ 75, 206 J acob, Elm e r A . ................ 221 Jam es, D eon ........................ 56 Jam es, G E' orge R. .............. 104 Jam e s, John Dal e ............ 1 54 Jam es, Louis Earl ............ 221 Jam es, Marga r e t Claire .... 104 Jam es, "Vay n e ''''illi a m .... 75 Janson, Ch a rl es L a Mar .... l 04 Jarvis, B e tte ........................ 75 Jayn es, Hom e r .................... 217 J enkins. Ch a rl es ........ 56, 21 9 J e nkins, Maxin e ........ 88 , 225 J e nse n , B ett y ...................... 88 J e ns en, Burk ...................... 104 J e ns e n. Charl es W ........... 56 J e ns e n, D oroth y ........ 88, 20 4 J e nse n, Flor en ce Mae ...... 8 J e nse n, Mae ........................ 75 J ense n . Marjori e ................ 56 J ens en , Marva .................... 88 J ens e n , Norma Ell e n ........ 75 J e ns en , Ruth ...................... 75 J e n se n, Ruth Mari e .......... 8 J eppson, LaV e rn .............. .. 105 J e ppson, N o rman P ........... 75 J e wk es, Hu e ................ 56 , 156 J ex , L eo William ............ 57 Johans e n, D o nald .............. 1 05 Johnson , Alta Naomi ........ 88 Johnson, B a rb a ra .............. 1 05 Johnso n , D al e N . .. .......... 220 Johnson, Dea n F . ............ 88 Johnson, Eula .................... 1 05
John so n , Fra n ces ........ 57, 211 John son , Ge n e vi e v e
L a r so n , ' ''' ill a rd R ............. 57 L a tim e r , I a vid ................ 222 L a ttin , D i c k ........................ 211; L a urse n, Do u g l as O . ........ n L a v e rn , Do mini c k ............ 58 L a wre n ce, R o b ert A . ........ 91 L ea th a n , J a m es .................. 105 L ea th a m , W a rr e n ............ 105 L ea th a m , ' ''' m. D ............. 21 9 L ee, Im oge n e .............. 75, 209 L ee, K e nn eth G . ................ 75 L ee, N o rm a n ...................... 105 L ee, Ve r g ini a ............ 1 05, 209 L e F ev r e, S t e w a rt .... 102, 206 L e i g h , A nn a ...................... 57 L e i s hm a n , Th e r o n R ....... 91 L enk e r sd o rfe r , J o hn D ..... 76 L es t o n , C hri s ........ 91, H 4, 21 6 L e wi s, Beve rl y 1 00, 105 , 209 L e wi , Da l e .......................... 217 L e wi s, J a m es W ............... 76 Lind be r g, Ev el y n ........... 105 Lindh o lm , Be tt y L o u 105 , 211 Lind say, H a rold G . ............ 90 Littl , J o hn ........................ 90 Littl e, L o rn a ...................... 90 Li v in gs t o n. L wi s
.............................. 57, 13 9, 225 J o hn son , Id a M ae .............. 105 John son. J oBe th ................ 57 John son , L eon a rd A ......... 88 J o hn son, M a x ............ 8, 220 J o hn son , " o rm a ................ 75 J o hn on , R e n ee .................. 105 J o hn so n, R o n a ld C. 57, 2t:l Johnson, V e r e H. .. .......... 75 Johns o n , V e r ve n e .............. 88 John so n , ""illi a m J ess ...... 75 J o l ey, A lta .......................... 105 Jon es. B onn a L . ........ 1 05, 225 J o n es, H e nl' i e tta ........ 75, 209 J o n es. J ac k R. .................... 57 J'o n es, M a rj o ri e .......... 75, 225 Jon es, M a x God fr ey .......... 1 05 J o n es, M e rl y n C ....... 105, 21(i Jon es, R eta ................ 75, 225 J o n es, R i c h a rd R. ............ 105 J o n es, R o dn ey L . .............. 1 05 J o r ge n se n , D e ll E. ............ 75 J o r ge n se n , DO I'o th y .......... 75 J o r ge n se n, R uth ................ 105 J os l y n , Hu g h S . ................ 88 Judd, C l a r a ........................1 05 Juli a n , J ose ph .................... 8 Ju s ti ce, Ali ce C ................. 105
............................ 98, 105,
215
Ll oy d , Edith ...................... 1 05 Ll oy d, ' Ve nd e ll M . ............ 90 L oc k a rt, O liv e r E ..... 90, 220 L o f g r a n , Dav id E . ............ 105 L o n g , A. K e ith .................. 76 L o n g, Do u g las L. .. .......... 106 L o n g hurs t, C l ay t o n .......... 76 L oos l e, K a ti e ............ 1 06, 211 L ove l a nd M c K ay .............. 1 06 L o w , Car o l ............................ 90 L o w e, B e tt y ........................ 10 6 L u cas, G l e nn a .................... 91 Ludl o w , L y nn S................. 58 Ludwi g , L a M a r ................ 76 Lund a hl , Do roth y .... 1 06, 225 Lund stro m , H e l e n .... 58, 20 4 Lutz, R ay ............ 100, 1 06, 21 5 L y m a n , Lilli a n .................... 58
/{ K a ll a s, J ay P ..................... 1 05 K a r e n , C l a ire ...................... 222 K ee t c h , G w e n ...................... 1 05 K e ll e r , Be th ............ 105 , 209 K e ll e r , M a ri a n P . ........ 90, 211 K e ll e y, Ho y t Fra nl, 1 05, 215 K emp, Eln a ........................ 75 K e nn a rd , ' ;V innifr ed ........ 105 K e nn ed y, Ann e ........ 105, 20 4 K e nn edy, P a ul J ................. 57 Kidm a n. D e l b e l·t J . ........ 105 ], idm a n , Carl os .................. 57 Killou g h , J o hn R. ............ 57 Killpac l< , Rub y .................. 57 ]"rkh a m, M a l·tha K. 75, 209 Kitc h e n , N o rv a l T . ............ 75 Kitc h e n , Thom as L. 1 05, 220 Kl e k as, L o ui s J . ................ 219 Klin ge r , Car a G . ................ 57 Kl oe pfe r , M a rj o ri e ............ 90 Kl oe pfe r, A nn a F . ............ 1 05 Kn a phu s, Ll oy d M ............. 57 Knud son, C l a ir .................. 1 05 K o rth, L eo n e ...................... 105 K o w a lshi , Th o m as ............ 206 Kro pfli, Marg u e rit e ........ 75 Kru ege r , R o b ert T . 10 5, 220 Kunz, L o ui se .................... 57 Ku pfe r , V er n K in g ........ 75 Kurtz, Fran ces ................ 57 K yga r , R e b a M a r y ............ 90
~[ ackay, Al vi n .................... 91 M ac k ay, L a l\Ia r S..... 58, 214 M a d se n , G ibb R. .... 1 06, 21 9 ~[a d se n , Mildred ................ 76 l\ia d se n , Rea M ................. 7 6 l\la d se n , R e nn D . ................ 1 06 M a di so n . V e ri .................... 1 06 M aes 1' , Sh rwin M. .. ...... 218 M ag li acco, Fra nk R. ........ 106 M a hlm a n , Fane ll J ......... 65 M a lm g r e n , J. K e ith .......... 1 06 ]\fa nnin , Eth e l 1ae ........ 106 l\Ia nnin g, Me lvin L .
........................ 44, 52, 150 , 218 l\Ia nnin g , \V illi a m R . ........ 7 6 Marbl e. \V ay n e .................. 106 l\Ia r c h a nt, P r es t o n ............ 106 M a rkl e, Fr eddi e ................ 106 Ma l·tin , Emm a ............ 76, 209 l\Ja rtin , J a m es L ......... 156, H~ M a rtin , M e lba V . ................ 76 M a rtin , ' V illi a m B. 90 . 216 l\[a th e r , J a ni ce ............ 76, 204 M a th ews , D as il .................. 21 8 M at h e w s, M a ud e .............. 209 l\1at h e w s, ' V i II i a m L . ........ 58 M a tkin , O ri e l .................... 76 .\Ia th e w s, Ca mill e ............ 90 M a th e w s, J oa nn e .............. 106 l\1:a ttso n , G l a d ys ................ 90 M a u g h a n , Ell e n ........ 76, 211 l\1a u g' h a n , F l ora Jun e ...... 76 Mau g h a n , G l en .... 58, 1 50, 166 M a u g h a n , R a l p h 1 50, 16 1, 1 64 l\'I a u g h a n , " V ill a rd K ....... 5 l\Ia w , Edw a rd C ................. 58 l\Iax w e ll, Art V ................. 58
L acy, Geo r ge " Y .... .44 , 72, 75 L agos, P gg y .................... 1 05 L a m b, L a R ee ...................... 1 05 L a mb o rn . Elli s "" ............. 75 L a mbo rn , H o w a rd J ay .... 105 Larkin , Ro se ll a Ann 75, 209 L a r se n , C lair e .................... 105 L a r se n . C li s t a .................... 75 L a r . o n , Ern es t D ..... 75, 214 L a r son , Fra nl, A ............. 90 L a r se n , ll a l\Jae .............. 1 05 L a r so n , J. L y n ............ 89, 90 L a r se n . J . N o rri s .............. fi7 L a l' se n, J ac k .................... 1 05 L a r so n, J a m es C. .. .......... 90 L a r se n , M a ri a n .................. 57 L a r se n, N edra L o u ............ 1 05 L a r se n , Ph y lli .................. 1 05
l\[ay,
Ge n ev i eve
M c. \.lIi s t e r , 'W a l k
244
L
i n~ ex
................ 90 I'
L .....1 07
M cA rthur , ld a El a in e ...... 1{J7 M cB rid e, B ri ce C . .............. 107 M cB rid e, M a r y L . .. .......... 107 M cB rid e, Th ed a J ............. 225 M cConn e ll , Ch a rl es B. ...... 58 M c Co win, M a rjori e ............ 76 M c D o n a ld, A r a .................. 90 M cD o nald , G eo r ge E. 77 , 220 M cEntir e, M a ri e ................ 107 M c Fall , J a m es L. .. .. 91 , 222 M c F a l' l a nd , Ro em a r y ...... 107 M c K eac hni e, V e ni ce ........ 91 M cMill a n , L ava l' C . .......... 77 M c Mullin , D a v e ................ 107 M c e il , Dea n S . ...... 107, 219 M:c Ni e l, Worth .................. 91 M c Ni e l, V e rn o n ................ 107 M ec h a m , A rn o ld ................ 106 M ec h a m, M e rl e .................. 106 M ec h a m , Z. C linton .......... 77 M e ik, Eld o n E . ................ 77 M e mm o tt, Ard es ................ 106 M emmott, Evan ................ 90 M e nd e nh a ll , G r a nt ............ 77 M e nd e nh a ll , M erl y nn e 90, 211 l\[el'l'e II , B e tt y J a n e .... 90 , 205 M e l'l'ill , Ann a L o u ............ 107 M e l'l'i II, Fra n ces E . .......... 107 M e rrill , Mauri ce W ......... 216 M e rrill , Sa mu e l ........ 15 3, 222 M eye r, V e rn a ...................... 90 Mi c h ae li s, V e llll a LaVoy 211 Mi c hae lse n , H e l e n .... 107, 211 Mi c hi e, Tr evo r .......... 77, 206 Mi c k e l son, Cora ........ 58, 225 Mi c k e l son, D onna G . 107, 225 Mikk e l so n , D ori a n ............ 90 Mil es, H e l e n ........................ 59 Mil es, P a tri c i a .................. 107 Mill e r , Ali ce ................ 90, 204 Mill e r, Da l e R. ............ 59 , 213 Mill e r , Ge n e il .................... 107 l\{ill e r , H a rold D . .... 90, 216 Mill e r , L ae l ........................ 77 Mill e r , "Ve nd e ll .................. 77 :Wi II i ga n, J e rr y R ............... 107 ~.Iilli ga n, Pris c ill a R ......... 107 Min e r , B ev e l' ly .................... 107 Min so n , G r ace ............ 90, 204 Mitc h e ll , Don a ld R. .......... 77 Mitc h ell, E s th e r ................ 90 M o c kli, Cl y d e .................... 90 M oc kli, Fra nk .................... 59 Mohlm a n , Frank R ay ...... 59 l\1 0 nroe, LaMa r R. .... 77 , 22 2 l\{o nson, B e rth a ................ 59 Montrose, Fra n ces .... 90, 209 l\lo ntveat e r, J a m es 1 07, 206 M o ore, Da v id .............. 77 , 218 Moo r e, E. Lu e lla .............. 77 l\[o ore, J o hn R . ........ 150, 222 M o r g an , MUlTay ' ''' . ........ ~ O Morga n , " Vay n e R. 34, 48, 59 M on i s, Alm a L o u ............ 90 MOlTi s, M a rjori e ................ 107 M o ni son, R a di a ................ 107 M o rt e n se n , L y nn .............. 107 M o rt e n se n , R a lph S . ........ 107 Mo se l'. M . Bl a in e ........ 107, 221 l\ioses, G ord o n "" ............. [10 Mo ss, Ca th e rin e J ........... 107 M oss, J a n e J ............... 77 , 20 9 l\Ioulto n , B oy d L ............... 107 Muir, We nd e ll L . .............. 77 Mund e n. ' Vad e L . ............ 219 l\1unk , V e rd a M ae 107, 209 Murd oc k, Do ri s A . ............ 90 Murd oc k, V Id a ................ 90 Murph y, Bo nni e R. ............ 59 Mu r r ay, W ilford B. .......... 215 Murray, ""m . G u y .......... 214 Mu sse l', M a ri o n A ............. 209
N as h , Ro b e rt .................... 90 Ne b e k e r , L a W a n a ...... ...... 1 07 • eedh a m , Ne phi L ............. 90
~tuuent inuex Neilse n. Alfred J ............. 59 Neiswender. Van A ......... 90 N e lson . A i li e n .................... 107 Nelson. Caro le ........ 107. 211 Nelson. Da le O . ............ 59. 164 Nelson. David G . .............. 222 N e l son. Elain e .... 34. 59. 204 e lso n . Geo r ge J. 96. 104. 219 N e lson. G le n T ................... 59 N e l so n. Guy ........................ 107 e lson. H e le n H . .............. 77 N e lso n . K . Jo y .................... 90 e lso n. L eo n K . ................ 107 Ne lso n . Rob e rt .................... 219 e lson. Robert C linto n ........................................ 74 . 216 Nelson . S hirl ey Ann 59. 225 N e lso n . Vona Vee ............ 107 N e l son. Wilford O . ............ 77 N e mani c. Jos e ph J . ........ 59 N e wby. A. J . ...................... 59 Newey. J a m es A. . ............. 107 Newm an. Ber t H. ............ 77 Ni e lson. A lm a Mrs . ........ .107 Ni e l son. A lta ..................... 107 Ni e l se n . Don L amb .......... 59 Ni e l son. Doris J . ..............107 Ni e l se n. Dorothy .................... 96. 1 06. 107. 204 Nielse n. Horten .................. 77 iel se n . Jay L . .................... 107 Ni e ls e n . Karma ................. ~O Nie lse n. M a r ga r e t C . ........ 5~ Ni e l Rcm. Mil ton S. . ....... '. ~. (' 7 Ni( ·I ~c lI . Reed M . ............... ~O ; iE'lsen. R e x ....................... ~O ~;i . :lst- n, R obe rt A .... __ ... _,. ~O 'i(\!>1t)ll. '1 homas A ......... 1 07 l\iel 8f n. 'Wi lli am ............... 59 Nixon. Billie J ean ............ 107 Nixon. F. Bruce ................ 94 oyes. John Keith ............ 90 Nuhn . Donna ........................ 107 Nuttall. W a yne B. ............ 77 Nyman. Edith .................... 77
o Ogde n . As tor M ................. 60 O k e lb e rry. Dor is 90. 91. 211 O lse n . C lifford .................. 108 Olsen. Dor is ........................ 108 Olson . Ire n e ........................ 60 O lson . Jac k ................102. 108 Ols e n. J ea n ........................ 90 Ols e n. L ee ............................ 60 Olsen. Llo yd ................ 60. 213 Olson . J e rry ................ 108. 140 O lson . Mavis .................... 77 Ol so n. M e lvin ...................... 77 Olse n . Newell ...................... 59 Olse n . Preston .................. 59 Ols e n. Viole t ................ 77. 225 Ormond . Mary .................... 90 Or mond . NaRay ............ 92. 222 Or n e ll L orra in e ................ 108 Ost le r. Louis e .................... 92 Ottesen. Rona ld .................. 108 Oveso n . K e nt ...................... 108 Ow e ns. Haz e l ................ 60 . 201
p Pace. Guy .................... 60. 156 Pace. Ralph .......................... 1 08 Pace. V e rl e n e .................... 77 Pacl( . Bonn a Lu e ................ 60 Page. Lynn .................... 77. 222 Pa ige. Maryon .................... 204 Pa inte r . L o ui se ............ 92. 204 Palm e r. Gerald .................... 60 Pa lm e r. Lan e ............ 72. 77. 1 29. 1 39. 214 Pa lm e r. Nage l .................... 220 Parker. Dee Loui se .... 60. 20 4 Park e r. DeRay .................. 92 Park e r. Lynn .................... 60
Pa rk e r . Moy l e .................. 92 Parki n. G le nna ................ 60 Parkinson. Po ll y ...... 108. 209 Parkinson. Richard .... 77. 218 Parl(s. Harriet ............ 61 . 211 Par l(s. Haz e l ...................... 61 Parrish . Jos e phine ............ 77 Parrish . Morton ................ 108 Pa rri s h. Naom i .................. 108 Parto n , George .................. 222 Partin gto n , Ray ................ 93 Passey. Dor is ...................... 60 Pa ul os, J a mes .................... 155 Pau lson. Ma rjori e ................ 34, 44 . 50, 61, 204 Paxman, La Mar ................ 108 Paxton, Tad ........................ 213 Pearse, Richard ................ 215 Pec k , Jane .................. 61 . 225 Ped e r son, B e tty ........ 61, 209 Pedersen . Reid ........ 1 08. 219 Pede r se n , Rut h ........ 61. 225 Penni e , Mel vin .................... 220 Pe nrose, R uth .................... 61 Pe rkin s, Ba r bara ........ 77 , 225 Perry, C lifton ............ 108, 213 P erry, Haz e l ................ 61, 22fi P erry, H e b e r ...................... 108 Perry, Wilm e r .................... 6 1 Peterso n, Caro l E ..... 108. 209 Peterson, Carol E ....... 108, 204 Petersen, Cleo .................... 93 Peterson, Dorothy .... 61, 211 Peterson, Eldre d ...... 77 . 218 Pet erso n. Elmer G ....... 67. 218 Pe t e r se n , Lois ............ 62, 225 Pete rson. Marn a ........ 62. 209 Peterson, Martha A. 1 08, 209 Peterson, Max R . .. .......... 108 Pe t e rsen , M e rvin S . ........ 62 Peterso n , Ru th ............ 77. 225 Pe t e r . o n, Sterlin g K. ............ 46 , 60, 62, 214 P e t e rson, 'W'inon a E . ........ 93 P e tte r so n , Mary ................ 1 08 Phillips, Harold 'Willi a m 61 Pi c k e tt, Cald e r ]1.[..... 92, 216 Pinkard, J acq u es ........ 92, 215 P ixto n, Iva ........................ 92 Pix ton , Lu c il e M . .............. 61 Plank, Harold .................... 109 Plowman, Ge r a ld .... 109, 215 P lo wma n , R e x G ............... 109 Po nd, Caro l M . .................... 92 Po nd, Edith .......................... 209 Poo l e, Roma ............ 109, 211 Pope, Gra nt M . .................. 77 Pope. Marion A ................. 92 Por t e r, Blaine P ................. 92 Por t er. Gor don E ..... 77 . 164 Posner. Edgar S ............... 109 Postma. G r ace .................. 109 Potter. Margar e t ................ 61 Po ul se n , Emm a ................ 77 Power, Th omas W . .. ...... 216 Pozarnsky, Th omas H ..... 61 P r ea tor. Kathl ee n E ......... 1 0~ P r es t ga rd, Ar n o ld L ......... 2i 6 P r es ton, Barabara .... 61. 209 P r es twi c h, Willis .............. 10 9 P ri ce. John R. .................... 109 Pr ice. Anna L yle .............. 225 Price. Samue l S ....... 109. 215 Price, Th e r esa A ............. 109 Priday. S idn ey ]1.[ . .... 61. 215 P rin ce. F lore n ce ................ 61 Procto r. Kenn e th ...... 77. 20 6 1 ugmire. Gwen R ............. 92 P u gm ir e. Jun e .................. 109 P u gm ir e. O r a l R. ............ 77 P u gs ley. Elois e .................. 93 P ugsl ey, R ic hard L ... ___._.. '11
Q Qual e. Joseph R. ................ 20u
Ha l phs. LaVe nda C......... 109 Ra lph s, Lil a May ............ 93 Ralphs, Norma .................... 93 Randall, Alain e ................ 92 Randall . A li ce ............ 62. 209 Randall. Bernice R. ........ 92 Randall, Claren ce C . ........ 219 Randal l. Maurine ............ 109 Randall. Ray F ................. 222 Rasmuss e n. Kath e rin e ...... 62 Ras mus s in. M ilton J . ........ 62 Raw lin s. Fran c is ............ 211 Ray. J ess ie ........................ 204 R ead e r . Jac k N . ................ 77 R eading. Em e l y n ...... 10 9, 20 4 R e dd, Wyman H . .... 109. 215 R e dd is h. Don .................... 109 R e dfi e ld . Do r o thy ............ 92 R ee d , Gale A . .................... 1 09 R eed. J. Clare .................... 62 R ees. Anna Lou ........ 62. 209 R ees, Be th .......................... 109 R ees. Keith ........................ 77 H ees. Kenn e th .................. 78 Rees, M e rrill Cox ...... 78. 21 3 Res. \ Villi a m ............ 92. 206 R eese. J o hn ........................ 214 R ee v e. Afton ......................10 9 R ee ves. Darre ll E ............. 78 GO~· ................ ·........ P!!W ''B l{ <la R e id , J e nn a Lou ................ 92 Reid, Pet e r C ..................... 77 Re nni e, M e lvin v V' ............. 78 R icc i, Di c l( .......................... 217 Ri ce, Edward S ................. 78 R ice. Lucill e G ................. 78 R ic h . Lloyd E ..................... 78 R ic h . Morris S . .................. 216 Ri c h , VlTay n e ...................... 92 Ri c hards, Arc h \ V ........... 78 R ic h a rd s. C l y d e ................ 78 R ic h a rds . Denton S ........... 62 R ic h a rd s. J ac l< .................... 93 Richar d s, Marlon Ri c h .... 93 Ri c h a rd s, Myron M ......... 78 Ri c hard s. Ralph J ..... 78. 214 R ic h a rds. Ruby B. ............ 62 Ri c h ar d s. Ruth ................ 78 Ri c h ardso n. R uth M . 109. 141 Rigby, C h a rl es E . ............ 7 8 R igby. C leo n e .................... 1 0~ R igby, D ean C ................... 62 R igby. Flors Ba rk er ........ 109 Riggs, Clotee le Cec il e .... 109 Ripplinge r. Conrad L . .... 109 Robbins, Dale F ................. 93 Robe rts. Jam es L ............. 109 Robe rts. Leah ...................... 78 Rob e rts. R eed S ......... 63. 161 Roberts, Th omas D ......... 63 Robins, Fre d 1. ............ 92. 222 Rob in s . Ri c hard W ......... 92 Rob in so n. Burton \ V....... 1 09 Rob in so n. Clay M ............. 63 Rob in son. George B ......... 92 Robinson. J. Grant .......... 206 Rob in son. J. L e wi s ............ 63 Rob in so n. J essie S. .. ...... 78 Robinson . Loi s M . ............ 92 Rob in so n. Mary ................ 109 Rod e ri c k John .................. 109 Ro e. Bry ce E ............. 216, 139 Rogers, D ean J ................. 79 Roge r s. L a rr y B. .............. 109 Ro llin s, Jos e phine B . ........ 92 Romn ey. Ri c h ard H . ............................ 63. 1 38. 218 Rose. \ Villard C ................. 63
Putnil(. J oh n G . ................ 152
245
Rosenb e r g. Ephraim ........ 63 Roskell ey. W e nd a IJ.. .. 1 09. 219 Roundy. Mavis J ............. 1 09 Roundy. Tru e .................... 79 Rous e. B urt F . .................. 63 Row e. J ean .................... 63, 204 Roylan ce. Lu c ill e ........ 92. 209 Rozyn e k . William ............ 63 Russell, LaRae .................. 109 Russell. Mary E ................. 79 Ryan, Ann e ................ 92. 209 Ryan. C. Virg ini a ............ 79
Sadlier, Lewis .................... 220 Sal isbury, Norman ............ 219 Salisbury. Darwin .............. 79 Salisbury Do r e tta ............ 63 Salisbury. Lym a n ............ 109 Sampson, Harold ................ 92 Samowitz. Mose s .............. 79 Sandb e r g. Faye ................ 1 09 Sa nd e r s. B e th .................... 204 Sandb e r g. Elain e ................ 211 Sand e r s, G le nn A ............. 213 Sargent. G le n W . ................ 109 Sar ge nt. J oh n Pac k .......... 92 Sarge nt. L ois E . ................ 63 Saunders, Shirl e n e ........ 109 Sca rtizina, Edward L. 63, 216 Scholes. VITa l t e r K ........... 1 09 Schol e s. Wanda .................. 10 9 Sc how. Thomas K ............. 206 Sc how. Wanda M . ............ 211 Sc hw a n eve ldt. John ........ 216 Schwartz, Mae .................... 109 Sc hoffi e ld, P h y lli S ............ 109 Scofield, Edna .................... 10 9 Scott, R ae ....... .4 5. 53. 63, 211 Sc ott. Roy H . .................... 67 Seamons. Ev e lyn P h eobe ........................................ 92. 225 Seam o n s. Lind e n David .... 99 Searl e. G ilbert P. .. .......... 109 Seeholze r. L oya l H ......... 109 See ly. Preston D ......... 92, 214 Sey boldt. D e lb er t E ......... 92 Sharp. David B ................. 160 Sharp. L ee A ............. 109. 217 Sharp. Paul H . ................ 9 2 S h aw. Jac l( .......................... 216 Shaw. Lloyd E ................... 63 Sheph e rd . Lu c ill e .............. 92 Shie ld s, Ge r a ldin e ............ 110 Shipley. Madge ................ 110 Shumway. Roden G . ........ 222 Shumway. Sybil ................ 6a Shupe. James L ........... 92. 216 Siddoway. Elaine .............. 204 Siddoway. Robert R. 110, 215 S id orsky. Ab raham .......... 63 S il cock, B urton W ..... 92. 1 5 ~ Sims. G race ........................ 79 Sims. Ste ll a ........................ 110 Sjob e rg. Marvin L . ............ 65 Skanchy, Shirl ey M. 110. 209 Slac k. Ben L. .. .................. 110 Slac k. Flor e n ce J ............. 92 Smart, Lyl e J . .................... 92 Smeding, ",Tilford J ..... 63. 222 Smith. Annabell e ........ 64. 205 Smith. Bette J . .. .............. 225 S mith. Carl L . .................. 79 S mith . Co rrinn e M ..... 92. 225 Smith. Donna L . ................ 92 S mith. Ev e l y n .................... 98 Smith. Gwe ndol y n ...... 79. 225 Smith. 1ary Ali ce .... 110. 204 Smith. Mary L ............. 64, 209 S mith. Mildre d E. .. .......... 79 S mith . Odessa .................... 110 Sm ith, Pat r ic ia .................. 209 S mith . Ralph F . ................ 216 Smith. Ruth M ............. 79. 204 Sm ith. T ed VV ..................... 92 Smith. Vada M ................... 110 S mith. vVesl ey E ..... 110. 215
~tunent innex Smith. Willa J ..................... 204 Smith. 'William R. ............ 64 Snow. M a .. ga .. e t ................ 20 9 Somm e .. s. Elm e .. ................ 64 Sond e .. e gge ... F e .... on W. ........................................ 79. 15 3 Sonn e . No .. man ........110. 219 So .. e nse n. B e th M. ............ 79 So .. e nson. Gl e n .................... 15 3 So .. enson. Jam e s ................ 221 So .. ense n. John .......... 79. 21S So .. e nsen . Mal"ie .................. 92 So .. e nson. P e ggy J . ............11 0 So .. ens e n. Rob e .. t L .........110 South. A .. thell .................... 92 Sowa .. ds. Shi .. le y G . ........ 92 Speed. Willard .................... 79 Spence ... David W . ............ 92 Spence ... V e .. 1 G . ................ 79 Qui .. es. B e ve .. ly ................ 110 St .. ains. PhylliS .................. 92 Stande ... Emma Lou ........ 110 Stanfill. Sh e rma ...... 110. 209 tan ford . Kathe .. in e ........ 79 State n. VV. Jay .................. 216 Stee d. H a rold C. ........................ 44. 54 . 64. 214 Ste ffens e n . Gw e neth 110. 211 Ste ph e ns. Arnold K. 111. 220 Stephens. Cha .. le s ............ 79 Ste phens. F .. ank D. ........ 110 Stephens. Kenn e th ............ 64 Stephens. Margery ............ 64 Stephens. Ve .. lin C ...........110 Stevens. Elwin '\Vright.. .. 64 Stevens. Jeanne L . ............ 111 Stevens. Ri c ha .. d L. 94. 220 St e vens. Ward .................... 64 Stev e ns. ""' anda ................ 111 Stevenson. Kath .. yn .......... 94 Ste wa .. t. Fr'e d A ................. 111 Ste wart. H e le n ............ 79 . 204 Stock. Beth ........................ 79 Sto c k . Cliffo .. d D . .... 64 . 216 Stoc ks. June A . ........ 94. 204 Stocks. N e d D . .................... 111 Stoddard. Afton Rada ...... 111 Stodda .. d . Carl R. ............ 111 Stoddard. Haze l D. 111. 211 Stodda .. d. PhylliS 79. 102. 211 toddard. Wm. Macl, ........ 94 Stoker. Lyngby A. . ......... 111 Stotc e ... M e .. l ........................ 94 Stok e r. Russ e ll D . ............ 79 Stotc es. Owen .................... 79 Stout. D e lwo .. th ................ 111 Stow e ll. Lau .. el .................. 67 St .. atfo .. d. Lo .. a .................. 64 St .. ike. Kay K. ................ 79 St .. om berg. G e .. ald C . ..... .111 Str·atness. Allen ................ 111 St .. ombe .. g . Vivian ............ 79 St .. ong. B e tty J e an .... 64. 225 Sullivan. L e la .................... 79 Summe .. s. Edwa .. d J ......... 94 Suti c h. Tony ................. ..... 79 Swan. Go .. don .................... 79 Swe e n e y . Ma .. y ................ 65 Swe et. Ferris L . ........ 94. 22 0 Sw e nson. Beth .................... 111 Swenson . G e orge F. . ....... 79 Swenson. Ruth V . ............ 94 Sw e nson. Willard L . ........ 111 Syc amo .. e. Ruth .................. 65
7 Taft. Ka y S . ........................ 79 Tann e ... Ma .. jo .. ie ................ 79
T a nn ". \Villi a m R. ........ 111 Ta .. b e t . Cl y d e T . ........ 65. 21S Ta .. b e t. Lyman 'IV . .... 94. 21S Tasso. Jam e s .................... 79 Taylo ... Arnold .................... 111 Taylor. B .. ian L . ................ 65 Taylo ... D e ll E . .................. 111 Taylo ... H a .. old R. .............. 111 Taylo ... Ira J . ...................... 111 Taylor'. Jac k .................... 213 Taylo ... Joyce H . ................ 111 Taylor. Karla . ................ 220 Taylo ... Lo .. in B . ................ 111 Taylor. Roge l' .................... 94 . 160. 164. 220 Taylol·. vVayn e G. ............ 22 2 Telford . Paul E . ................ 111 T e rry . Lo .. a ........................ 22 5 T e .. vo .. t. Do .. othy R. ........ SO Tervort. Gordon C ........... 111 Thalman . M e lvin J . ........ 111 Thatc h e r. Ray A ............. 65 Theur e r. Anna M ............... 94 Th e ur e ... J. A . .................... 214 Th e u .. e ... Julia .................... 209 Thomas. Jam e s A ............. 111 Thom a s. L e Ro y ................ 111 Thomas. Paul H . ................ 214 Thomas. Qu e ntin ................ SO Thomas. Robert L . .......... 111 Thomas. Ross G . ................ 65 Thomp s on . Gw e n S. 111 . 209 Thornbe .. g. D ea n ................ 219 Thol·p e. Dean ...................... SO Thurston. Roma G e ne 94. 209 Tilfol·d. Paul ........................ 206 Tillots on. H e le n .......... SO. 211 Tingey. Marga .. e t E . ........ SO Tipp e ts. Richa .. d 'IV. ........ 219 Tobler. Me .. l L . ................ 65 Todd. Ma .. gar e t .......... SO . 209 Toolson. Cha .. le s Rob e rt ...................................... 111 . 21 5 Toon e . Lar e n e .................. 111 Towsl e y. B e tty J . ............ 94 TI·a c y . Jun e .................. 65. 204 T .. an e. K e ith ...................... 158 T .. e m e lling. Horace N . .. SO Tripp . B e v e .. ly E . .... 111. 204 Trotte r'. Maston L ............. 111 Turnbull . D. B e tty ............ 65 Turn e r, Byron L . ........ ...... 95 Turn e r . Cha .. le n e ........ 65 . 225 Tu .. n e r. Paul H . ................ SO Turn e r. Ruth ...................... 111 Tuttl e. Earl J . .................... 222 Tuttl e. Wayn e K . ............ 22 2 Twitc h e ll. Bill .................... 218 Tyson. Ruth ........................ 65
\~' addoups . HOI'ace Mann 111 \Va dl e y. A .. vil VV . ............ SO ""' ad le y . L e ah .................... 111 \Vad s wo .. th . H e le n l. 95 Wadswo .. th. Max E . ........ 65 \VahlQuist. Gl e nn A ......... Sl \~' ait e . Il e an ...................... 111 \Vait e. V e ri ........................ 81 'Wakl ey. Elizab e th 1 39. 209 \Valk e ... G e .. aldin e .... Sl. 211 \ 'Va lk e r. L. R . .................... 111 vValk e ... Ma .. y .............. Sl. 204 ""' alk e ... R e x B . ................ 65 vVa llace. John 'V . ............ 220 'W a llin. Do .. is E. 66. 141. 204 \Va hlin. Ge orgia ................ 111 vVa lte rs. Don ......................111 ""ralth e r . B e ul a h L . ........ Sl vVa nl<i e r. U d e ll ........ 111. 222 Wan lass. 1 oroth y C . ........ 204 ""' ard . Max R. .................... 111 vVa .. d. Norm a A ................. 22 5 Wa .. le igh . Elizab e th 94 . 20 4 \~' ar e . La Va .. A .............111 \~:a rni c l<. Alvin C . ............ 66 ""' arni c k. Calvin C . ............ Sl Warr e n . Glo .. ia E ............. 111 ·'Vashburn . D e wain C . .... 111 W a tland . Shi .. le y G ..... 94 . 211 \Vatte .. son . Alma E . ........ 66 \V a tte .. s on . Do .. oth y ........ 11 2 ""' atti s. L ea land Ra y ......112 vVayman. Alta B ............. 11 2 " 'eav e ... Ro ss M. . ........... 112 ""' e bb. Raym o nd .............. 66 \\T e bb e r ~Iilt o n A . . ......... 94 W e b e r. T e d ........................ 112 \V ee ks. K a thry n ................ 112 \Ve lk e r. Jo yce .................. 66 W e lling. B e th ................ ! ... 66 vVe llin g . Blain K . ............ 112 vVelling. Ma .. ie tta ............ 94 ""re nd e l. Arthu .. ................ 66 \Ve nn e .. gr e n . Ca .. ol .... 66. 22 5 \Ve nn e r g .. e n. Rob e .. t ........ 21 6 \V e nn e rg .. e n. T e d M. 66. 218 \V es t. M a rian ................ 94. 204 "·e stfall. F. Oliv e .. .......... 66 Wh a t c ott. C y ril C . ............ 112 \ ·Vh e atl e y. Sp e n ce .. .... SI. 95 \Vhite . Grant ...................... 218 \Vhite . Ma .. y .................... 11 2 White. Randall G . ............ 112 \Vhite sid e s. D ee ................ 152 \"hitlo c k. Jac l< K . ............ Sl \Vhitn ey. L a ur e n ce G. Sl. 220 \Vhittak e ... R ay mond S. ...... ................................ 112. 215 \~' hitwo .. th . Jac k M ees e 112 \\' igg in s . K a thryn C. 67 . 211 Wi g ht. D. F .. a nk .... 95. 21 5 Wightman. 'Wallace J . .... 67 \\' il o x . Donald ................ 112 \~' il co x. Ma ri a n .......... 67 . 209 \Vilhelms e n . Mac k ............ 95 vVil1<inson. Geo .. ge 112. 21 6 \\Tilkinson. Sibyl ................ 67
Uc hida. R y o ........................ 8 0 Ur eal_. John ...................... 111
Van Dam. B e tty ................ 211 Van D a m . Doris 69. 76. 211 Vand e rb e cl<. Jam es L . .... 65 Van Epps. Go .. don A ......... 65 Van O,·d e n . J. D ee ............ 65 Vill e t . G e n e al ...................... 65
\Vilkin s on . ""' inifr e d ........ 94
246
William s. A . Hugh e s ........ 94 \Villiams. David ........ 67. 222 \Villi a ms. Dorothy M . .... 112 \Villiams. Elden ................ 67 \Villiams. Frank R ......... 112 \Villiamson. Bill G ......... 67 'Willi e. Edna ........................ 112 Wilson Alan F ............. 94. 21S \Vilson. Bill ........................ 112 \Vilson. M a rgar e t Ann ...... 205 ""Ti lson . Mary D. . ........... 112 v"ilson. Miriam ................ 11~ vViison . Ray ................ 94. 216 vViison. Rob e rt F . .... 67. 214 Wilson. W'ayn e L ............. 113 'Wilson. \Vayn e P . ............ 67 \\' in ge r . L e land J ........... 94 Winn. Lathael .................... Sl ,\Vinn. V e rnice .................. Sl ,\\Tinn . '\Vanda .................... 113 vVinsor. Luth e r S ............. 221 Wintc h . H e le n E. ....................... .46. 55. 67. 209 Winte .. s . Dean G . ............113 Wisc omb e . H e len ........ 94 . 204 vVoffind e n. Duard ............ 94 Wolf. Rosali e ...................... 113 \Vood . M e lba R. ................ 113 v\food . M e lvin .................... 155 \\' ood. Rulon ...................... 94 \\food. Vi .. ginia ................ 94 \\foodbur y. Il e an ............ 94 vVoodbury. Rulon ............ 113 vVoodhou se. Barbara C ..... Sl vVoodland . Unita ........ 94. 204 \Voodward. Kenneth L. 11~ Woodward . Paul C ......... 94 Wool Ie )' . Jos e ph T . ........ 113 vVorlton . Ruth G . .... Sl. 204 vVorthington. Don C . ........ Sl Wray. K e ith H . ................ 222 \Vray. M ack H . ................ 222 \\fright. Barbara ................ 94 Wright. Elved .................... 94 "", .. ig ht. Maurice .............. 11 :~ \V .. ight. Robe rt R. .... 94. 216 \ ·' ·yatt. Gulla B. ................ 94
Yardl ey. Jam e s ................ 21 3 Yo .. gason. Rulon ........ Sl. 221 Yos e. Franl< A ......... 157. 222 Yose. Louise ................ 11 3. 211 Y e st. Date .......................... 113 Young. Dale ........................ 67 Young. Donald R . ............ 67
Z a mzow. Don a ld F. . ....... 215 Zi e gl e r . Murray ................ 94 Zi .. k e r . K e nneth E ............. 94 Zohn e r . Daniel .................... 113 Zohn e ... Mark .................... 113 Zollinge ... Alvin G .. a nt .... 11 3 Zollinge ... Fern .................. 94 Zollinge r. Orson J ............. 113 Zollin ge r . V e ndla ............ 113
we . three THIS VOLUME IS A VISIBLE SUMMATION OF THEIR ARTS
thank the~e ~eo~le COPY: CALDER PICKETT, CHARLOTTE HENRIOO, DON BOWEN ... PHOTOGRAPHY: DON BLACK, WALTER Z. LILLIAN, JIMMY HODGSON . . . OFFICE: GUNN,
LOUSANNE ANNE
GUDMUSEN,
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MARY WALKER,
RUTH MARIE RICHARDSON, GLORIA HARRIS, DORIS WALLIN,
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