1942 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 40 - University of Idaho Yearbook

371

Click here to load reader

description

1942 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 40 - University of Idaho Yearbook

Transcript of 1942 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 40 - University of Idaho Yearbook

  • -.--rr-,1

    . ' ~, .... . ' ... .

    ,;

  • llHYAN DH. E. A: UAY JIWO!VIb .l : VELEY . . C II (_, HA

    M HS . .J. \v H OVEY W I L LI AM , LEE

    o l(' l H . {; I~ ' , ' COTT I IJ>J'I N .J . A: S SWEET

    E . L. SW I .M \. .

  • On t h c marc h it's a ll in fun n o w .

    Drill -w

  • Spring drill ... t h e sun is hot .. . the rolo u el's bark echoes backfrom tiers of JWcLea.nfield seats . .. y our wool shirt itch es, but you can' t scratch . .. yotL' re at attention.

    PARADE REST

  • l 'rofessor Jlfiliwry Science lutd Todics, Instructor of ophornore Cla.~s

    REGULAR

    I

    A ssisUutt l'rofts.~or Jl1ilitary !jt"i(' tt(e nttd Tactie.~, Instructor )ttttiut Closs

    T he shoulders o n which Ida ho's HOTC problems res t a re those of LIIW T. CoL. C. \V. } O'\'ES, head of the military d

  • I I

    L

    SER VICE

    Behind the milita ry departmen t heads a re the sta ff otricers who supply much of the energy, do the routine tasks, teach b asic classes, and take care of all general work th a t characteri zes th e func tioning of the department.

    T o these men fa lls the yea r-long task of super vs111g dri ll , making clear t he difference between lt> ft face, righ t face, and order a rms; ta rget shooting with the leas t da nger of blowing o ff a s tray hea d; and issuing uniforms neares t to the r ight size.

    First L t. Artllur J . Da vidson A ssistant l'rofcs.~or Jl1ilitary S (ie 11ce

    and Taf'Lics, l n s truf t or of Frcshm(lll Class

    Assis tnn t Professor Militory S fi(n co und Tac tics, l n s t ruftor of Fre.d t nHtll Clnss, Ins tru c t or M ess Jl1a n agem.ent ,

    Pe rshing Rifles All t>iser

    e lso n Assis tnnt l'rof essor M ili wry ciNtCl'

    nnd Ta c tics, I n s tru c tor Freslt nu tn Cluss, R ifle T ecun Coac h

    S w.ff Sgt. Alexnnrle r Jltf. Schmnll, D opnrt m ent Cle rk . Sgt. J . D . /l'( o rgan , Assi:~ tant Military P rope r ty Cus todiMt. S taff Sgt . n obnt t. M eodo r, lns trnctor of Fre.~hman Cl(l .~.~. As.~ i .~ tmll R ifle T e cun Conch. S tn.ff Sgt. A.C. Johnso n , l n s trn c tor S or)hom.ore Cluss. Sgt . Evere tt F. Gre(ltho n se, l n stnut o r Fre.~huw.n Cluss, JPo rn e n ' s R ifle T ea tn Co(l.c h .

    17

  • 18

  • FROM the time they firs t check out " monkey suits" as f reshmen until their final spring inspcc l ion as sophomores, over 600 " basics" enrolled in J cJaho's H. O.T.C. unit answer "Yes, Sir" during roll ca ll.

    For I he 113 advanced course students, s tudcnl s whose goal is a commission, t here are t actical problems, mess ma nagement courses, and summer ca mp applica Lions of " book larnin" to b e mas-tercel. ~ ith present-day advanced s tudents assured of a "position" in the world after gradu a-l ion, these ca ndid pages of Idaho's milira ry li fe a rc mainly devoted to them.

    Camp ftfurrrry's Co. A, Infantry, ge ts p ractical experience in troop transport

  • \rmour \nder~n U enr ) \rd Edwaf'd Benoit T ed Beo ld Hobert Uonomi

    La\\ r~nN" Uratlhury llo> d llro~n Carl Carl80n llawle>' Corl~on Gonion Collinl!worth La wrence Duffin J\1 iltor1 Eberhul"tl Jnmes E118worth IA uis ~ng"trom Allan foster ltudy Frnnklin Louie Gori no

    20

    enior Officers J ohn ll all ll orold llonon \\'illiam lla)t Ceeil llill

    Pet ~ ll eeomo' ieh WM) nt' llul l'lon Fruna.. }( ,.,.,. Jnhn Kerl'ey Uohert K lie" er Kennet h Kormehl lluwttrd t.u n~e:lnnd Norruttu Lu rkin l.ed ie M cCn rthy Vernon M n u ghu S t1u1ley M ill Quentin Munloc k Orol Nearing

    !\el eoon P'a rk Wa) ne f-'f'terson \leh in RiRdon l{obert Robbi n Cody Robertson Vf"rn Rudolph R obert Sea le J ack Smedle>,. M erle Son g~Jtad Ouhl Su tt on V .-rnon Su u oo Rnm ey Syron C hnrles Tho mpson Rohc.:rt Wile).,. Don Wi11ia rn & On ve Wilson William \\' right

    Onnahl IJa~t~~CII Allen lhuiK"her Ceore Uc.ito n.- me .. ett Ed Botlill G~r.M I:Jrown U. J . Campana T . Carpenter J. Chum berlin Gordon Colleu C harlel" Crowe J . Dnhru cn Gordo n O uiley

    Frtwci~ .Oillon M .Ehler

    CADET

    J u n ior Officers Stanle> E ... ~erlic J ohn 1,. Fry \l artin L. i"r) Fred G. Fulton J a) Garner n. T . Creene n o,er c: uern~ey Ouane ll an&en ll oy ll oobin~ C. J ohAmu~,.~~cn C. Jnhn ~~t t on Wnh e,. Klug ll . Koppe" Lconord C. Labine II nrr y L.-wi e8 Jarn cl'l Lewi8

    G. Lan~ley C. Leonard Fred Luken~ ll enry \l eQuade M. McVey Pe81"1 A. '1 tmro-e Williom E. \l onroe II. M oma n Jo"'loyd C. Nixon T. O'Rouark Ceor3e 0i'1und W. Putters.t\n T heodore P ence G. Pennell N. l ,e terman n. l'oller

    Dale Re) uoltls C. Rieman Re n ll.iordan R . Bohin~n J"" 11) an H . Saul'l~l~n Byron L. S1ratto n Ceorge S toddor.l C. Sweet wood J-1. \Va.shl.mrn W. Wc in her g W. Willie Robert S. 'Willia m8 Harry Wil~un 0 . Wishttrt

  • OFFICERS HEC I MENTAL OFFI CEH S

    Cadet Col. Way 11e D . lluclson

    CaciPt Lt. Col . Kenneth T. Kojmehl

    Caclet Major Boyd IJ. Brown . ldjutant

    CariPt Major Milton F. Eberhc1rd Co ntiiHutde r, First Battalion

    Cadet Major Cody C. Robert son Com nw.nder , Second Battalion

    Cade t ft1ajor Uobert 1'. Bono m i Co muw11der, Tllird Battalion

    2)

  • Res ting in the afternoon shade ~vhile tcoiting turn on pis tol runge. ~1ojor IV. A. Hole a tcards Reserve Offi-cers with m.orks rncrn s hip m.edals.

    Ope ruting a .30 culibrP on the nwchine g un rlutge. On the inside of n tunk looking out ut W.S. C. etll('l f doho s tudents.

    Lectrning how et .37 tn. rn. anti-tank g nn ope rui Ps. Wutching the dem.onstru-tionfrorn o .~ufe dis lltiiCP.

    Cornpony street crt C

  • Scabbard and Blade * * *

    LTRA ultra of the military department's R.O.'f.C. s tudents are members of cabbard and Blade, upperclassmen's military honorary. Last fall members of

    the local chapter won the national Scabbard and Blade telegraphic ri fle meet.

    Each year they have an exchange din ner with the P ullman chapter, and sponsor the Military Ball as well as their own cabbard and Blade dinner-d ance and spring picnic. February 16 they assis ted with war-time registration.

    Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant First Sergeant -Liaison Officer -

    OFFICERS

    All \I OUil ANDBilSON

    DoN '~' LLIAltS R u oY FnA KLtN

    ALL AN FosTBn

    CAPT\1'\ \\. B. STANL E Y

    Armour Anderson Milton Eberhard AJiao Foster Rudy Franklin P ete H ecomovich \Vayne Hudson

    Bill Il a)eS Bob Kliewer Fri lz Meagher Stnnley Mills Nelson P ark

    Bob Seale

    H enry Ard Ed Benoit Boyd Brown Cordon Collingsworth

    D on Williams

    Shelby Williams Dave \Vilson Bill Wright

    Gordon Collinsworth, Williarn Wright, Dave Wilson, Robert Kliewer, tl llcnoit, R obert Senle, l'ete Hccornovilch, Way ne lludson, Nelson Park, Boyd Brown, Milt f':bcr lwrrl, J"rif::s Mcngher, IJ7illiarn flayes

    Franlr. K u ru , ll rHiy l'ranklin, Car~ta.in 117. B. Stnnley, Arm.our An

  • 24

    Don llol fler , 1Pay 11P Robin:;o11 , hPrma.n King, K ei th Whitley, Charlf'x Ohn"t:;, /Jurns Newby, Ray Uig by, V(>rl Law, /Jru ce j ep so11.

    Uobert Kormo11 , l~rPd }ohn:;on , Corllon Fos ter, U01w lcl Robin:;on, Jl1tul' KPn-nittg ton, LoRue Gilbert, Bill K err, }ark Bowman , jock /Jerry, Fre d Jl1eech.

    Vincent Nally, Way ne R echlecof)/J, fxel K anne;taurd, Joe Cordon , Joll11 Steile, Etc/on Brou:n , Duau e Toy /or, Robf'rt O 'Connor, Ro.~.~ ,l1oser , R obert Da t:ill, /lorry Whitenwn , Fronk lly k e.

    Capt. Allen FoMf'r, Jl1elvin Ri;tdon, Ge ne Bas.~f'll , Ric hord Campfrtw , Jeon Milor, Lt. John f.'. Lukens.

    CaJJL. /Jertuutl l'o ller, Secotul lA . . fc/jiLLant William j . lloye:;, Lt. Col. Cody C. Robe rtSoll , .llas t er gt. Cliff Thoma s, Second Lt. Clwrles W. S u:eetu:ood.

  • Pershing Rifles * * * *

    A CHANCE to wear a white shirt and cap, march in an exclusive company, and make advanced military all come with membership in Pershing Rifles, national honorary for " basic" in military.

    Featuring Company E's activities this year were two smokers, motion pic tures, and the annual Blue Cord ball where new members received insignia and a kiss from their dates .

    In the final spring drill and inspection each year, Company E presents special formations for reviewing officers.

    Orville Abbott L y nn Aldrich Frank Bales Jack Berry Jack Bowman Elden Brown Dale Birkhaltcr llarvey Butts Clark Chandler Stewart Clelen Bob Davis Blaine Evans

    J ohn Evans

    Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant SeCQII(l Lieutenant

    Edward Gilbert

    Joe Gordon Harley Greaves Don Holder Frank H yke George I oset Bruce J epson Fred J ohnson Axel Kaunegaard Mack Kennington William Kerr P aul King

    Sherman King Gordon F oster

    OFF ICERS

    M E MBE RS

    ALLA FOSTER

    Mt:LVI N RICOON

    RtCIJ A R() CAMPA' A GENE BA SSETT

    Robert Korman Vern Lange Veri Law Gene Littlefield

    Jack Mallery B en Martin Leonard Martindale Allen McCombs Fred Meech J ean M ilar Ross Moser

    Milford Moses

    Vincent Nalley Bill Knipe

    Burns Newby Uobert O'Conner Charles Ohm

    Wayne Ueddecopp Garth Ricks Ray Rigby Ronald Robinson Bill Spaeth John Steile Larry Talbot Duane T aylor

    Harry Whiteman K eith Whitley

    25

  • The h a nds that c catc .. . manicured and grimy

    Hands tha t express . . . with copy ... p ix . . . and lead

    Fas t and agile ... clipping ad mats ... checking copy

    \Vrappin g Args .. . ~cuing h ead s . .. tra cing dummies

    Bundling Arg~ .. . OJlCr a ting linotype .. . proofreading

    Ch ecking thro u g h f'il c!S . . . p ast i n g clippings and pix

  • Smoke is blue in the editorial office ... th e back shop is crying for copy and the ribbon's bus ted ... n e ws and views on carnpus c harac ters .. . and a wet lt erring for 1'NEjrom the boys behind the Underwood.~ .

    DEADLINES

  • 28

    GEM OF THE

    /Job Wethern Editor

    Ed R e n oi t flu s iness iltfllnllger

    A YEAR-LONG struggle aga inst deadlines, censorship res tric tions, rising prices, and campus-wide inertia was climaxed this sprin g when Printer-Oinder Ralph York gave his grin of approval 10 rhe freshly -printed 1942 GE" OF THE MouNTAINS.

    For Editor Bob Wethern a repettous process of handing out work to taff heads was ended. For a s taff of female preponderance, a season of late permissions. odd jobs, and p horo-mounting was over.

    J ntroducing a "vest-pocket" size, more color pic tures and a color cover by labeli ng them as "modern t rends," F.di lor \V ethern hoped Lha t they ''ould go over wi th s tudents ... feared that tudent con ervatism about such changes would result in sniping.

  • MOUNT AINS

    Don Carlson AssocintP Btlit or

    Dr11nrny-('opyi11~ .~tuff 111 work

    Divi sion po~e proojin~ ol Sym s- York

    Al S olisbury of We.~tnn Eng roving .~ trngg iPl< with Cern t>roblf'm

    Printe r Rolph Yorlr loolr.~ o ver Ce ttt t>rm~f.~

    Clwrlie Dimond, cr Cem photogrophy in s titu-tion for 22 yPor.~

    JWore of du.rnrny-cotJy itrg staff

  • 30

    Day le Molen 'ports editor

    /Jill Srurdeen Co-editor of photogruphy

    Shirley Clark l'hoto-rnottnting edit or

    Tont Clttnpbell Activities editor

    Claire Bracken Activities editor

    Lmlrl llarnilton Administration editor

    Lorene Rach Office staff editor

    l'rancis Hardin Organi::mtions editor

    llou:ard Cooper Co-editor of photography

    To OllCA N JZE s taffs capable of carry in g the work-burden o( assignments handed down from the " head office" was the task of GE'l minor editors.

    They found that fact and data gathering, name checking, picture scheduli ng and photo-mounting are all produc tion ac ti vities which must mesh gears properly in order to e ven come close to meet ing an elas tic deadline schedule.

    MINOR EDITORIAL

  • BUSI NESS STAFF HAPIO \ NO EFFICIENT organization of a s taff hy Business M anager Ed Ocnoitlas l fall was the bi ggest fac tor of the 1912 GE,t's financial success. M anagcr Benoit s tarted things o fT with a regis trar ion-line sale that topped a ll previous marks and continued to spur his s taff until a n order for 1920 GEMS- a n all-time hi gh- was sent to Syms-York Printin g Company in February.

    Increased space costs and tightening p urse s trings did no t faze other en terprising b usiness staff heads, who sold more space to adverLisers and orga nizations than for man y years previous. From his hi gh-geared s taff, Manager Benoit picked Bill Campbell, Spencer ll css, and Warren Lauer as assis tant business managers.

    Trul y a behind -the-scenes orga niza tion, the bus iness s taff was seldom to be found at the GE:u office hu t ra ther on the campus or down town in canvassing ca mpaigns.

    l'auline lhnvley and 1Te len Foster, circulation; Don Swon und llelly ton Core/on , orguni::sntions; S h ennan Kin g (tnd Spence Hess, clus.~cs lttlfl fivinf,f f.(rontls Winifred Chri.~tian son, serre Utry ; Bill Campbe ll (tlld Mary Fran Mar.~lwU, lUlver tis ing und Sltles; Nick Luner and K eith Dnniels , photog rntJity

    31

  • 32

  • Knox Croi~ Monogin~ E~litor

    Copy d eslf mernl>er.< rheck s tories

    slfondny ufternoon's lt ead writing crew is hard a t work

    Jnrk Morrix, student linoty p e OfJerator,

    sets lt go /ley for The Argonn11t

    Art /Jroumlow, Argu-rtttu t 's bark-s hot~ king , h oncl-sets u l1 eod

    Tl1 e Circrtllltion s to.ff wraps Argonautsfor mailing to dis tcwt points

    33

  • 34

    Lore n e Bales IPonten's e ditor

    Lacld fla milton R e -tcrite and nig ht e ditor

    Elizabe th Brac k e n Ne u:s e ditor

    Frit::: Meag h e r Nig ht nnd n e w s e ditor

    Catherine M c Gregor nnd Dorothy Bny n e

    Copy d esk co-e ditors

    Lo re n e Rac h Exclwnge editor

    Bob IJonorni ports e ditor

    Tltomns Cnmpbe ll Dny e ditor

    BEmN D the head men on The A rgonaut were the s taff of sub-editors who had their own share in handling the fl ow of news across the desks. To them fe ll the t ask of insti lli ng a mbition in rrpor ters, a nd seeing that campus news was ga thered properl y.

    They rea d copy on s tories, checked na mes in the uni versity directory, wrote headlines, and s traight ened out facts over the telephone. When tbjugs went wrong, a share of the bla me fell upon their shoulders .

    MINOR STAFF

  • ARGONAUT J\1 E"llEil of The A rgonaut business sta ff had a probl em to keep them guessing during the year : t ha t of buil ding up ad vertis ing revenue to meet deple ted national advertising income, wh ich fell off during the yea r. Business Manager Armour Anderson and his assis tants, Tom Sneddon and Dick R yan, solved the problem by concentratin g on local merchants to keep their a llotted space full.

    Circulation of The A rgonaut was the main function of Patsy M cGrath on the business s taff. She saw that pa pers were wrapped, sta mped, and addressed and mailed to various parts of the \\ Orld where ex-Idaho s tudents are now living.

    Paul Easterbrook bore the brunt of deli vering the " handbills" to a ll ca mpus residences and o ther sp ots where s tudents congrega te. Forced to lead a dizzy pace to keep up \\ith the weird antics of the news s taff, the husiness force of The Argonaut did an ad mirable job.

    Pntsy M c Gruth Circ ulotion tn

  • 36

    FRESH MAN HAN DBOOK

    Fronces llllrdin, Fresltnlfltl 1/onllbook editor, lws been thipping off fingertwil pol-i.dt on typewriter lwyx for f cloho pnblicntion.~ .~i ntc ht'r .freshtnnn cl(lys. 1/ er rrt>u t i ve geniu.s proclu tetl " Naive Ann," sparkling Ar-gonllu L fentnres , ant:/ Cent copy ... her corresponding t e mper(lntent g (lve edit ors {!rny hllirs. " De(ld[ine" is one tcord 110t in her vocnb-lllory .

    II O)I ESICK, befuddled fro h fi nd easy ola

  • The s trin gent " do's and don 't's" of coed life are outlined in the A \V handbook each year for t he benefit of freshmen women a nd new s tud ents. I t is a lso used as a guide book for upperclassmen, refreshing their memory on the oft-tim es forgotten lore of moral and social rules and regulations a t ldaho.

    Known as the Coed Code, the book is published each ) car by the ssocia ted ~ omen tudents, and a copy goes to every ne" \\ Oman on

    the ca mpus. The bookle t delves into de ta il on dating, ex tra fl Jnme.~, ;1. Jli' .S. Handbo o k E~fitor , tnffl$ /lo m e Et her uwjor but yo11 coulcfn't prove it by fl er activity li.~t. Sh e prexies the The ta h o 11se and l'hi U(J.~ifon Onticron, i.~ o m c tnbcr of M ortar flon u f , 11111f club-i>lPs in nff doi11gs of l dnho Atnetzotls. Tl1e Tl1 etn. sis-terhood re mai11s 11 ,; tit prPssed ... en ff s /1 er " Li tile Nell."

    A. W. S. HAN DBOOK 37

  • Idaho Forester * * *

    K e nne th JlfcCinnis, Cordon J osly n , Frank Kalk, Dacid eabe rg, R oger Hungerford, Dotwld Killoug h , Abralw 111 ErliJ.. R oger Guernsey, Ly le Price, T e rry l'oy n e, Vincent l'o d e r, Pllil lfabib , Hug h ft l cNaug lton , Paul Easterbroo k , Eugene

    pen cer

    38

    ONLY FORESTERS savvy the intrica te de tails of their yearly publication,

    The i daho Forester, which enjoys a circula tion as b ig as tha t of any o ther s tudent ed ited magazine or paper. The magazine deals \\ith the fi eld of

    fore try, going into both i ts techni ca l a nd commercial viewpoints.

    Resul ts show that fores ters arc able to do other things than identify

    types of pine. All work on the magazin e is done b y students in the school

    of forcstr} . Editor for this year "as Phil H abib, and P au l Ea terbrook acted as business manager.

  • Idaho Engineer * * *

    Ray R einlwrdt, George S malley, Don Holder, Robert Dye Fred LeClair, Don Bolton, J erry S kiles, Gene Lunt ey, John Nelson, Don Konen , George Oslund, Robert Fortin

    Pmo;; \ N O JOY of the college of en~ineering is its semi-annual publica-tio n, The I daho Engineer, showing that the slip-stick a rtis ts can do more than expound on weight y quota tions.

    The self-supporting publica tion deals with engineering 111 specialized phases, going into every field. To the lay man it's deep, bu t to the engi neer it cl a rifies many things. A goodl y group of engineers abandon their t ex ts long enough to gather n ews, solicit ads, and do all the other taks involved in pulling a magazine to bed. J ack elson was editor, and D on Konen business manager.

    ~9

  • Naruy )nne Stnfforrl, H e len JJi ilson , Norma Lou Jl1c il1urray, E li::sabPth llracken, Francis 1f s with a vengea nee could be the ter m applied to members of The ta Sigma, wome n's journa li sm honorary . Argonaut and Ge m workers, these women were o ut to de mons trate b y ac tion that men alone don' t represen t the field of journa lis m.

    Their bigges t activity was the annual The ta Sigma Argonaut published in th e s pring.

    \ !embers arc Elizabeth Brad,t'n . president; Frances Jl a rdin, "' a ney June t a fTord , H elen Wi l on, Norma Lou \ l ac:\Turra), a nd \Tartha \ l ac Ta m ara.

    Sigma Delta SIG\1' D ELT A propaga tes the un

  • I

    y n ls - York loo k over pltge pro of

    press n e tt n lli vision

    West e rn e n g rn cin g ex-p erts t o u c h up cut .~

    Throug h I his ftdtlres.~ing tnoc hin e go A rgom11tls to tne n in the .~ervi l'e

    1'h e flt~nou s Argon a ut bns k e t bnll teo m . . . ltltvnys defeat.~ W .S. C. E verg reen fi tw . . . no "rinJ(er.o~" ... h o n e."t t

    /

  • Applying the "paint job" before curtain time Kappa S ig a nd Theta intJamura1 d eb a te winners

    Blaine Eva n s and Hen Kinney get rebuttals r ead y

    ~lore paint, more p e n c il . .. characters made to order A dtamatic moment in the p la y, " The Little Foxes"

    Vet Dennis Sa ' a~

  • Af t er two weeks of hecwy rehearsal this is it ... th e sp o t flicks on , t.ca nders a cross the s tage and s tops ... tlte rurtain's beginning to m.ove ... how does rny hair look, J osephine . .. .Josephine, where are you ?

    ON STAGE

  • P ep Band m e mbers a c the " big noise" at rallies

    P a rt of mob watch in g Fio- Rito's entertaine rs

    Getting r eady to s win g out a t a home footba ll game

    The m ilita r ) band and majore ttes m a rch on the fie ld S tud y in b lack and white ... a t the P ep Ba nd Show

    F a m o u s Hele n J eppson smiles a t h er Idaho a ud ie n ce

  • Reeds, brasses, drtuns and s trings . . the band trrunpe ting ousa of a unday afternoon, the orches trn scraping T sclwiko w sk y on a rnennfiddle s ec tion . .. no, George, w e don ' t do this eight to the bnr

    DOWN BEAT

  • MUS I U Ray tnoncl E. Lo wrenson ,

    piano atul organ ins tructor; Prof. ;tfvah A. Ueec her , tntt s ic departlltent heacl; Jl1iricltn II. Lilfle, cello nnd theory instructor.

    Jl1y rtle Leotltt.nl , ct.ssi.

  • ORCHESTRA * * *

    C u \ C l c their former routine, University y mphony Orches tra members ch alked up

    a record year , climaxed b y their b eing in vited to pl ay at one o f the K ellogg Communi ty

    Concert series. Students hep to M ozart, Bach, e t a l. a rc eligible for membership in this

    group of musicians.

    ewcs t innova tion of the group around ca mpus music circl es was the s tarting of an

    annual musicale featuring concerts and arias fr:o m operas, a nd s ta rrin g s tudent solois ts .

    T hey were also co-p artners in t wo concerts with Va nd alcc,s, Treble Clef, and the

    ni versity Singers. The orchestra is t ra diti onall y present with somber music a t Bacca-

    la urea te a nd Co mmencement.

    Professor Carl C laus is conductor.

    SINGERS * * *

    FoR~fERLY a mixed group, this year the ni versity Sin gers was made up of t wenty-nine male voices. Under t he direction of Professor \Valls the chorus joined hands with the Va nd aleers a nd Treble C lef to present several recitals.

    Carl Clause (/irect s the Un i ve r s ity's y mpho n y Orch estro .

    Firs t place uinne rs in t he an 111wl p o kun e ""' s i c f es-titul ore : }Otllltl e Pinlt>y, piano solo; Rirlwrcl urles, pi a n o co n ((>r t o ; lllflrion l'artn er , con t rulto . .. S u tn-ttter school m,tt.idans JJra c-ticc on tlrt> totttpus llntm .

    Uobert Wntl. le oti. the Un ivers ity S ingers.

    T he U niversity Singers en tered Fred Y ari ng's a tional Pleasure ti me Glee Club

    contest a long with eigh teen o ther glee clu bs from the western district . Willie in Spokane

    to make recordings for the C hesterfi eld judges in ew York, the group gave a 15-min ute broadcast over St ation KFP Y.

    55

  • ,

    Vandaleers * * *

    PnEmER singing group on the ca mpus is the red-robed Vandalecr Cappella choir ,

    directed by Professor Alvah A. Beecher. C hr is tmas Ca ndlelight ervice, a spring concert,

    and a Lour of northern high schools and civic club ha ve established wide-spread recog-

    nition for the group. This year they part icipated in a faculty-sponsored Red Cross

    bencfi l program.

    Treble Clef * * *

    F\lllLY recent innova tion to t he ca mpus music organiza tions is Treble Clef, women's

    inging group.

    Open Lo any woman interested in such a musical grou p, Treble Clef is under the

    direction and guidance of :Meitha Hileman. The chorus makes public appearances and

  • 58

    PEP BAND :\1 AESTRO }ACK L EIS H)tAN led the s il ver-and-gold clad P ep Band members through an event-laden year of bigger ' n' better pep rallies, grid classics. and baske tball games. which culminated in the annual rug-cutting Pep Band shO\L

    The Leishm an -Gugnoni production look the audience to a desert island, where P ep Band members in the guise of a shipwrecked crew bumped into a flock of hula cuties. A thin plo t was carried a long by good music and the hula and tap choruses.

    Pep Band trip of the year took the members to Boise, where they played for the Idaho-Montana State footba ll game.

  • Sigma Alpha Iota \1 S ICA LES displaying their talents are fos tered hy members of igrna lpha rota, na tional women's music honorary. A " B" average in music subjects and a 2.5 grade average are requisites for members tapped twice a year.

    \ t embers co-sponsor a student recital, sprin g song fes t , and \1cLea n field sing with Phi Mu Alpha members .

    Phi Mu Alpha P 111 Mu Ar.PUA, male counterpart o f SA l , boas ts a versa t ile group capable of either carrying on " long hair" discussions or play ing swin g in campus bands on weekends.

    A 2.5 grade average, an interes t u1 musie, a nd two mu sical acti vities a re pledging requisites.

    Cnrol /Jnuult , j eun Mann , }o Anne Tre tner, illmw .l1ycr.~, Cnrolyne Norris, Etelyn Eberhard, Lois S tone. anll }oonne Finley.

    1/elen Bullock, Jlfarion H eoth , Mi.~s ,l/eitlw 1/itemrw, Jlla .~ine Jlfulroney

    TPrry Crl,bb, jac lt Rag land, Russell/J(,{(/win, Clwrle.~ Strom, Donald Ileal.~, John Cook, Doug lo.s ComJ~bell.

    Do nold Mifltr, l vor llounwn , Louis McKay, lloberl lf/ulls, l'rof. Alt'uh lleet:her, Delut j. F. J\1essenger.

    59

  • 60

    LIVE TOCK J UDG I ' G TEAl\1 K eit h Jlflrrlinson , h e lby Williams, Wayne 11/Lon, llo1mrd llorrison, Jllll x 1/ou :son, Lllwrence Brllclbury, Dr. IJ7. Jlf. Beeson, rouf"lt.

    DA I HY l'H.OD CT S J D G I NG Tf.Al\1 Quentin Murdock, Floyd Broadhellcl, D r. D. R. Theophilus, collch: Viggo Jlllltl!

  • Judging Teams * * *

    Fo n university judging teams gave their subje

  • 64

    LI KE\BL E GEOilGE GREE:-IE took over Ia I year as the firs t full-time a thle tic head in un iversity his tory. Eight years service as coach and athletic director at Lewis ton or mal well qualify Greene for hi s present pos t.

    Greene has plenty of work to do in his new job, but the hard-driving ath-lc tie head seems to thrive on i l. Besides supervising varsity athletics, he directs ph ysical ed uca tion programs for both men and women.

    * * *

    Tall , gray-ha ired FRA:-ICES ScrnnoT li ve and breathes football the yea r 'round ... and his teams pa y off divi-dends every fall. '\ orking with virtually the sa me tea m which in 1940 had won onl y one ga me, ehmidt in his first sea-son at Idaho molded a team which won

    Wllft er } . Price Assi11tan t Football a nd

    Bllske tb111 Coach

    fonr games, lost fi ve for the b est Vandal grid record since the year 1937.

    a ndal fans were satisfied to call the season a success a nd now arc waiti ng to see what kind of touchdown tricks Coach chmiclt ca n pull out of his pad of play-d ia gra ms when [da ho enters into full P.C .C. competition ... confid ent 1 hat I he "big time" is nothing new to "Smitty."

    C rLy P. Wicks Head Basketball and Baseball

    Coach

  • VANDAL COACHES * * *

    \liKE llY\'i' coa

  • Senior Managers and Minor Coaches

    66

    Jl"yn n e Longeteig, baseball; Earl 1l1onroe, basketball; Gene Lunty, trac k; H ershel Berente r, basketball; /Ierman R e nfrou:, football LaVe rn B ell, rtrestling; Bill Piedmont, su:imrning

    Out of the lime li ght but " Johnny -on-the-spot" "he n a thle tic seasons roll a round, the tea m managers work long hours night after night pi a} ing nursemai d to athletes and equipment a like. Senior managers travel with the tea ms, eceive a red-le tter sweater. Junior managers get black-letter swea te rs.

    Assis tin g I daho's m en tors in the capaci ty of s tud ent s working toward s mas ter degrees were La Vern Bell and Bill P iedmont. B ell hcl peel Coac h Fra ncis Schmidt with his grid charges a nd Piedmont instructed Idaho's s wimmers .

  • Yell Team and Majorettes

    Dorothy ffartcood, Bru ce Gordon, 0:1:1ie Walch, R ex Phillips, Peggy Davis . .. Walch , Peggy Ttcay, Viola JJ7i cks, t~hillirJs, K enny IJergqnist Bill Barnes ... }tt(ly R upp, Leona Tulppa, Iren e T nlppa, Billie K eaton, Priscilla Done, Jean Bonneville

    tud ent enrollment dropped perceptibly but Idaho spirit sky-rocketed under the energetic leadership of Yell King Ozzie Walsh, who mad e Vand al rooters rall y-conscious. Ozzie dreamed up a lot of yell-rousing ideas to keep I daho cheers coming despite none-too-successful athle ti c seasons. Rex Philli ps s tepped into Ozzie's spacious sneakers when he and his assis ta nts left school at the semes ter.

    Drum Major Bill Barnes beaded a crew of high-s tepping Va nda l m ajorettes in half-Lim e entet"lainmcnt a t grid games. Featuring new formations, tbe baton twirlers high-lighted appearances of Idaho's military band.

    67

  • Cougar JH' H )'CI'S arc Ull~Wt'J'td ... na,is ltops the pass. Vondcrha ( 17) sca mpc~ th ou g h \Villamette's line . Behind l hat spl a~h and "onta na tackler is ~{anson . Tew h ey (:H) and a lkacat att~ s hoL of an Idaho pass. First an d la~ t Idaho tou c hdown agai n st T.:tah's R ed s . A hi~ hol t open ~ ... a nd \li cklich goes over once m o c. Ftanklin (2 l) is a ll !->cl fo1 the p ass coming his wa).

  • I reme mber the f all . and sounds of battle from N eale stadium .. . l big b ack hugging a pigskin to his ch es t . .. a tired line craw ling up out of the mttd . .. y ott won' t; know the players w ithout a program .. . oh, yeah?

    FIRST DOWNS

  • llOJV 23

    (44) Vic llerllus (17) IJo b l'mHit' rlwrr Gn 'l'o n y .-h c ltc nbrener En rl J'ic IJerll l (:l6) utoic/s u woulcl- be U t e luc kie r l o mote in o n C n y Arle lt (22) U t o h lriJ~Ie- l ll nul stnr.

    Vuntlol. l'tcs

    8 ......... T o t a l Fi r~> l Down ~> ......... 15

    77 . . .... Yard s Ga ined b y Hus h in g ...... 225

    19 ..... For" a ni P a sses \tte mp ted ..... 14

    5 .... For" a rc I l'a s!'es Com plc t ccl . . . . . 4

    112 . .. . .. . Yarcl >< Gu in ed h y l'usscs ....... 8-~

    35 . ..... 1\\ c u~e Y a rdage o f l'unts .. .. . . 34

    20 . ..... . Y arcl >< Los t IJy J>cn u lti es .. . .. .. 60

    70

    Row 23

    Idaho-Utah Homecoming Flop E r GnT T II OUS \ NO andal homecoming fans converged on

    Ieale s tadium to see tah 's marauding Redskins mar open-ing ga me fes li vities "ith a 26-7 win over Idaho. Pl aying their firs t game under Coach F rancis A. Schmidt, the Va n-dals led until the final quarter.

    After a scorele firs t period, the I daho gridders opened scoring " ith Bill \licklich di ving over to culminate a 7'1-yard drive. End \lilo Anderson con verted. and I daho had a 7-0 halftime l

  • Ducks Duck Vandals Viciously PLAYI NG their fi rs t night ga me in nine years, the Vandals fell before the powerful Oregon team 21-7 in the mud and slime of Eugene's l l.ayward field. D efinitely on the upgrade, the Vandal hO\\ ed a s tu bborn resistance agains t a sup-posedly far superior team.

    Oregon s truck two mi nutes after the opening kickofT when :Roblin went 62 yards on the famecl " bootleg" reverse to the Idaho J 1-yard line, then drove over after two I daho penalties. In the second period Mecham scored for the D ucks on a 35-yard run.

    The Vanda ls re ta lia ted by m archin g from tbe Oregon 35- a fter II a nk Crowley ecovered a fumble- for a touch -down wi th Bill M icklich goi ng over from a spread for ma tion. Oregon 's fina l tall y ca me in tbe game's last two minu tes.

    Exceptional defensive and offensive play of h v Konopka, ac ting captain a nd tackle, and Micklich drew praise from Oregon specta Los.

    Jlondol.~ Webfeet :1 ........ . Total First Dow n s ......... 13

    68 ...... Yards Gained b y Rus hing ...... 315

    13 ..... Forward Passes Attempted..... 1

    2 ..... Forward Passes Completed..... 0

    20 ... ... . Yards Gained b y Passes .. ..... 0

    40 ...... Average Ya rdage of Punts .. .... :l9

    7 ....... Yards Los t b y Penalties .... . .. 50

    Ctn I Pr Tony Aschenbrener (3) ond Left llalf Mon .~on (5) rlnsP in on Oregon's f 'nllback Dunlti{J (:11) after Quc&rterback Hecomovirh

    ntis.~PI< c tockle. (4) Pe te ffecomovich

    (41) /lilt l'iedmont (31) Hank Crowley

    71

  • {46) /Jill Lfwkey (6) Dale Clark Gonzaga's RiRht llalfback Hrown (7)fails to Mtop Mirklirh from diving over t he first Idaho touchdown of thP evt>r1ing.

    Vandals H~tlldogs

    13 ......... Total Firs t D own s . . . . . . . . . 7

    155 ...... Yard s Gained by Hus hin g ...... 89

    13 ... .. For" a rei I' asses \ ttem pled. . . . . 16

    7 .... For" u rd tusses Comple t ed..... 6

    97 ...... Yards Gain ed b y P asses ....... 72

    35 ...... Avera!(C YartlR!(C of Pun t s ...... 35

    85 ....... Yards Lnst h y l'c n u lties ....... 35

    72

    Bulldogs Lose Winning Grip H E LD COR E LE for two consecutive years by powerful Gom-.aga elevens, the \ andals ca me hack with a 21-7 triumph over the Zag un der the lights Spokane.

    Ida ho scored in the second quarter after P ete H ecomo-vich had intcrccpt

  • Vandals Swifuh Form on Utags A TlliRTEE -POI T drive b y a revived Va ndal tea m, after thirty minutes of list less firs t-half play, resulted in a 16-0 Idaho win over U tah Sta te a t Logan. A 20-yard field goal by place-kicking Milo Anderson in the second period gave l da ho a 3-0 half-time lead.

    Tbe Vanda ls ca me back in the second half with two long marches for t ouchd owns. Earl Chandler tallied in the third per iod on a 19-yard reverse. Bill l\1icklich made the last touchdown when he plunged 14 yards to pay dir t.

    Onl y serious Aggie threa t came late in the game agai ns t Idaho reserves. The U tah team drove to the Vandal four-ya rd line before losing the ball on down!'!.

    J'anclals Farn~ers

    8 ......... Totul First llown s ... .. ... . ll

    248 ..... Yurd s Guinc d lly !h as hi ng .. ... UI7

    13 ..... For,.. ani Pa~laifltl pPr-jl'ct ftom b locking.

    73

  • (23) J oe Multo (2 l ) Uu r/y f'ronklin (37) Jack 1'ewhey l'lull f.(i ll f.( Bill ll1ic klic h (8) luggPd tltP {pat h er for tr 12-ytrrd goin before hP un.~ dow11ed on tlu> II' i/ln m e lle /9-ynrd li11e.

    I ~,,/u/s IIPnrcats

    11 ......... Total First Downs. . . . . . . . 8

    90 ...... Yards Gained h y !Cushi n g ...... 74

    :11 ..... Forwa rd Passes \ llemptc d ..... 19

    14 ..... Furward Passes Cumpll'lc

  • Prelude to Beaver Bowl Win A ' I OAHO three-game '~inning s treak meant nothing to Oregon State's Rose Howl ehampions at Corva llis, with the Beaves slapping down the Vandals 33-0. Bouncing hack from a previous W.S.C. defeat, the Beavers look eontrol earl y in the ga me.

    uiTeriog from the loss of two injured lettermen, Dale C lark and Rudy Franklin, the Vandals were s till ahle to hold Oregon State to a ten-minute s tandstill before J oe Day, Beaver fullback, went 37 yards to score. Oregon ta lc scored again in the second quarter , then clinched the game ''ith three counters in the las t half.

    trongest Vandal drive came in the second period, when H oward Manson, sophomore halfback, completed eight Fmc-ccssive p asses. The aeria l drive carried Idaho to the Beaver 14-yard line before a fourth dow n pass intended for George

    ixon went astra y. .Manson threw twelve passes the firs t ha lf, comple ting eight for mos t of Idaho's yardage.

    Vorulnls

    7 ......... Total First Downs ......... 18

    12 ...... Yurl>< Gained h y Hushin ~-t ..... 298

    24 ..... Funvurd l'asscs Attemt>l

  • (:HI) Rny Davi .~ (10) Earl C luwdler Ray Dcavi.~, Varr
  • The Stein Stayed at Missoula M o A n A POTENT Montana football team proved too much for a lis tless Va nd al squad as the Grizzlies sloshed their way to a 16-0 victory. T he Grizzlies' win once again gave Mon-tana p ossession of the " l ,iu lc Brown Stein," traditiona l sy mbol of gridiron supremacy between the two schools.

    The rain -soaked turf s topped the deceptive Jdaho allack "ith the exception of two scoring threats in the firs t and four th q uarters . Vandal fumbles proved costly as the Griz-zlies recovered five J daho bobbles, twice balli ng Vandal marches, and twice se tting up Montana scores.

    The initial Grizzly score came in the first period when sophomore Arnold Sco tt broke loose for 57 yards through the entire Vandal team . Fu llback Eso Nara nche bucked over from the t hree-yard line for the second tall y, then con-cluded the scoring with a 25-yard field goal.

    l

  • Row r

    irniserl nrm,s indicate l'ullback Mitklidt '.~ firs / of jive touchdowns ognin.~ l ,,,., /Jobf'nl ,~.

    J 'ottdn/.~ Hobcats

    18 .. .... ... T o t a l Fir"l Uu" ns......... 3

    ~25 ...... Yards Gained h ) Hus hing ...... 29

    18 ..... F o r"a r d l'a,,.,es \llc mple tl ..... 13

    I ... . For" ar

  • llopkin" flips one up from the s ide a~ainst "issorui

    Frcckkincl whips und e r the hoop ... a Savage trailing

    Thompso n se t s for pus h s hot b eyond an Oregon guard

    Gilmur pus hes Steele's ann in an lclaho- Was h. mixup

    Frcd c kind pu~hcs one up while Turner blocks a guard

  • Along looping s hot fro nt nti.d- court ... a ball trc mbli11g 011 the bask e t 's ritn ... throaty roars Jro tn the crowd .. th e blare of the p ep band, the fla s h of ntajore ttes .. and yon're sweating a little under the collar

    PUSH SHOTS

  • Missotui's Forwo.rd Contf.tntz (21) drops one in despite the guarcling effort of /Jig Ray Tttrne r.

    Top to bottom: Ernie Graner eyes the hoop for ct gift toss while Montanans and George Steele look on.

    R ay Turne r lctys one u p on the b ackbo(lrd unde r the noses of two Jtl mit nu.tn Mission(lries.

    For (ln unidentified V(lnd(ll , t his was one of the rougher spots i n the Cheney S(lv(lge gcune .

    82

  • Pre-Conference Play * * * * * *

    WI Il TMAN

    Ha y Turner was in old-time form as be bucke ted 13 points to lead t he Idaho cagcrs to a 29-23 opening ga me vic tory agains t Whitman a t Walla Walla. The Vanda ls made it two in a row with a 32-23 triumph over the Missionaries on the Memorial Gym courl.

    CII EN EY

    C heney's pint-sized Savages handed the Idaho fi ve their initial defeat b y a 36-27 score at Cheney. Turner continued to spearhead the I daho attack \\ i th 15 p oints. Revenge \\a swee t as the Vandal cagers ran roughshod over C heney here for a 51-33 victory. Turner, T ed Thompson, a nd orm Frede-kincl scored 19, 14, and 10 points respectively.

    M l ''OURI

    1\ ftcr ba ttling on even terms \\ i th the Vandals for th e firs t half, Missouri 's barns torming Tigers col-lapsed in the second period and the Wicksmen cha lked up a 40-28 triumph.

    MO TANA

    Three of the four ~fontana ga mes ended in and al victories. The 6rs t two ga mes pla yed here were eaS) for the Gem Staters, a they won by scores of 49-28 and 41-25. At Missoula, M on Lana took the first 55-35 a fter piling up a 30-14 half-time lead. Ida ho guards found their scoring punch in a 42-29 Vandal vic tory the next night as they scored half the Vandal point s.

    GO ZAGA

    The Idaho hoops tcrs won one a nd lost one to Gonzaga, losing the firs t 31-34 at Spokane, then evening the series 38-35 at Coeur d'Alene. Cent er Turner scored 30 poi nts in the two contes ts.

    LEWI TO NORMAL

    In their only game \\ ith Lewis ton 1ormal , the Vandals scored an easy 10-27 victory.

    Coarlt Guy Wicks, J ohn Uyan , Norm Freclekincl, Von TlOJ>I~itrs Manager H ersh e l /Jer(' trlf' r , Cliff B e nson, Jack Newell , 11ob Uosenberry, Rny Turner, George S tee le, 1'Nl

    1'h o ntJJSo n , Joe Pieclrnont , Ernie Crruwr, Mnnager Earl Jl1onroe

  • George Steele an(/ Von Hopkins go up for the rebound with Cougar Coil Bishop (10) ... Rny Turner (22) ond Cliff /Jenson ( 18) owait further deve lopments.

    Oregon Turn('r while Georpe S t f'e le gets a B f'(lt'f'r Cf'orge M cNutt (22).

    SCORES w.s.c. SEUI ES o.s.c. SEU I ES

    Nn 111c: c tC FT T l' a lite : c FC Tu n e ............ 4 2 1 20 62 Thomps on ......... 4 19 B e n so n ............ 4 I() 2 22 Turn er ........... 4 15 Thompson ......... 4 9 0 Ul Leclc ............. 4 6 S t eele ............. 4 6 3 15 J lopki n s .. ......... 4 5 Hopkin., ........... 4 I 3 11 Be n son ............ 4 3 Fredckintl ......... 4 :1 0 6 F rcd c kind ......... 4 2 Cran e ........... 3 1 1 :1 C ra n e r ............ :I 3

    Nc"cl l. ............ 2 0 Totuls ........ 54 29 1:!7

    Tot a ls .. ...... 53

    84

    1"1' 1'1' 4 42 5 :15 6 18 4 14 4 lO 4 8 0 6 1 l

    28 l:lt1

  • Two States Se r1es * *

    V\"10\ L 11001' Tn won their firs t ga me fro m Washington late since 1940 by sq ueezing out a 30-28 decision over the Cougars a t Pullman in the firs t ga me o f the series. Slowing the Cougar fas t brea k do\\ n 10 a walk, the Idahoans ic Vntulnl s ttuting jivP Mtuul.~ at attention ~vith the trou;c/ before t h e ot~PnittK rvhis lle of o home gnme -with W. S.C.'s Cortl{ar.~ ... hlalto's y t>ll team and W.S.C.'s l'is itittg ttwjore t te.~ xtand in the bnc k ground.

    /Jig Ray Trtrtt er (22) re r eiiJCS a e_ass and prepares to break c&rOttllrl hi.~ off-balanced f.:ougarJgnnrd. Snclt ttwtuu IJer.~, toupiNI tvi th his tricky lef t-hnndecl hook shot, e ttoblecl /Jit< I

  • Foru:u rcl T ecl Thompson (5) s n eol.s thro u g h Oregon ployers f or o loy - in ... ,\ o rm Fre cle kincl (6) rc:otclr es from tlteforegrouncl.

    Cen ter R Turner . . . . . .... ... 4 18 17 53 Tur n e r .. . ....... .. 4 17 8 42 T h o m p s o n . . .......

    " 12 :3 27 T h o m pson . .. . .... . 4 15 0 :lO

    De n son . . . ......... ~ 11 I 23 S teele ............. 1 12 3 27 ll opkins .......... . ~ 6 1 13 B e n s o n .... ........ 4 8 2 18 Frcd ek ind ......... tl 4 3 11 Hopki n s . ... ....... 4 3 6 12 lloobing ... .... . ... :J 2 1 5 Fred ekin d . ....... . 4 :l 2 n S tee le ............. 4 1 2 ~ Newe lL .. ... . ..... . ~~ 1 0 2 T o tal ......... 58 21 137 Ho sco berry .. ...... 2 1 0 2

    Tot a l ... . . .... 56 28 140

    86

  • Oregon-Washington Series \VA UJ NCTON' Huskies, sensations of the eastern cage circuit in their holiday lour, found the underrated Vandal squad a " tough cookie" in the season's ope ners al Sea ttle, but still managed to win both ga rne 36-28 and 40-33.

    li ce Edm undson's crew made it three s traight ,,Jtcn they outscored the Va nd als 44-37 on M emorial gymnasium court. !Iusky height took its Loll after fla y Turner was ousted on fouls in t he las t half.

    With George Steele and Turner teaming up in scori ng and on the back-board, the Vandals knocked the Sea ttle five out of a firs t place deadlock with a 39-32 triumph in the fina l game.

    0nCON' 53-39 victory over the Vandals in the season fina le a t E ugene was al most los t in the sh uffle as big Ra y Turner sharpened up his shooting eye and blasted northern division scoring records into obli vion with a 192-poin t total.

    ced ing nine points in the final game to smash ~ ally Palmberg' old mark, curl y-hea ded Ray twined 13 counters before going out on personal fouls.

    The Web feet Look an early lead to defea t the Vanda ls 50-30 in the third game. The two-game series in Moscow ended "even-s teven" with the Vandals pu lling the firs t out of the fire 38-36, the Ducks ,, inning the foll owing night 35-30 despite an 18-point Turner scoring spree .

    An Ore~on 8t,tf' plny f'r use.~ George S teele's (12) s houl-df'r to boost himself llfJ Lowords the ball ... Other ployf' rS are T ed TltontfJSOtt (5) and John Mandie (18) on the left liiHl Uay Turn e r (22) and Lew B eck (11) on the rig Itt.

    S t eelf' jumps ' way off the floor to get a rebound and lool>s (lrou nd for n Von dol receiver in the second O.S. C. gome ployefl 011 M e morial gy m court ... O. S.C.'s John Jl1(ffrdi( Ito.~ clwnge(l his jersey to Number 28.

  • Atkinson paws un th e hats fo his favol'itc dub

    Tee! Ka1a's first s hin e ... in the ring o infidd

    Catcht Kan1 IH'ings hom

  • In the spring, if y ou.' re lis tening . . y ou.' ll hear the rra ck of o bat . . . see o s nwll object arching hig h out of Jt.1c -Leon fi eld ... baseboll's a gam e p layed ;, the !
  • Tutorin g t ltt> 1941 bn.~ebnll t eam u os Forres t Twogoocl's la.'lt l clnlw conclting duty before moving o n to cut Froncisco Uniter.~ity.

    Left to rig ht : "Ttvogie" reminds Umpire Cf'orgc Clink 11wy be his eyesig ht isn't s o good. W. . C. rnnner

    score.~ 011 n widf thro w to horne plote ond Catcher Ted Kara.

    f>it c ll f' r Di ck S n yfl cr tcnt c hes c low one go by in the lflo s hin gto n ser ies. Looks like " Twogie" lost til at argument tt'i I It U m -pire Clink.

    First Uo se mcrn Oti s " Roo /;" 1/ilton s loms out o line-drice in the rr'o s ltington series. Cntc/1er Ted Koro t o u c h es first bose . . . u trifle lo Le.

    90

  • "

    BASEBALL UNABLE to coordinate hilling and pitching, Vandal bascballc rs were able to win onl y three games while losi ng twelve to fini h in the northern division cellar. The season marked the finish of the I daho coaching career of Coach Forrest Twogood, as the colorful

    a nd al mentor bowed out after five years of tutoring Idaho diamond representa ti ves.

    O.S.C. SE UI E

    Pour-h it pitching by Ve teran Dick Snyder gave the Va nd als their on ly win of the Oregon State series by a 2-1 score in the second contes t on t he home fie ld. T he Beavers won the fi rs t three games, two at Cor-va llis, 14-6 and S-4, a nd one here, 7-3.

    O HEGON EHI E

    A last-inning dr ive which neLted seven runs gave the l daho nine an uphill 8-7 victory over Oregon's title-win ning tea m in the mud of McLean fie ld. The Ducks' potent balling attack gave them the first t\\O ga mes at Eugene by scores of 16-5 and 19-9. The final ga me ''as canceled beca use of rain.

    W .. C. Elt l ES

    Washington ta te took four s traight games from the Jdaho tea m in decisive fashion. The Cougars won 3-1 in the opening game on the Vandal fie ld. The other three contes ts were played at Pullman with the W .. C. batsmen wio oing, 9-2, 9-l , and 6-5. The final doubleheader provided a dismal climax for the fa rewell appearance of a Twogood-coached l da ho team.

    WAS III NGTON S EIH ES

    Batteri ng out 15 hits behind Snyder 's four-hit shutout hurling, t he Vandals knocked Washington 's ll uskics fom the top of the conference heap with an impressive 8-0 vic tory in the last game on the home rlia mond. Washing ton ''on the first two games at

    ealllc 8-5 and 4-3, capitalizing on errors in the second ga me to nu llify D al Bechtol 's fine pitching effort, t hen squeezed out a 7-to-5 victory in the third ga me.

    LETTER ME

    D ICK ' YOE II

    OTIS J III.TON

    Hou S"'"'"

    DAL BEC IITOL M . EII I.E LLOYD

    C II ARLES ATK I NSON

    DALE Cr.ARK MAT LF.WIS

    JlAIIO LO J E KIN S

    A t. Tt E O\IUN

    Jl\t F OSTim

    Teo K AnA ITALO CACC I A

    DoN R EED

    91

  • .Joe Pied mont Lo;;;;cs a s pc1u ... C lark s pl'ints in thii(I

    ~li t o Andcson h cav(s the di;;cu s far . .. far ... away

    Breaking finish lapt';; was a habit with Phil Le ibowitz

    Coach H ya n s h ows Phil how to a d(l in c h es to hi s s trid e

    Do w n tlw runway spl'int;; high-vaulting 'Jakela

  • Fnces strnined in effort ... n dns h 's concentrnted drive ... n mile's slow, lung-burning grind . .. the twisting, n ll-out snnp of the s hot .. . discu s ... jn velin. Stnrnina a,nd swent ... conditioning nnd chnrley horses

    SHOT PUTS

  • TRACK SUMMARY ' LAND E H'llt E R ELAYS

    Vandal track and field men opened their 19 11 sea-son with a second place in the fourth annual Inland Empire Relay carnival in the Washington La te armory. The Idaho thinclads won four events rn fini shing b ehind Washing ton State and ahead of Whitman.

    IDAHO - WHITMAN

    Running in the mud and rain at Walla Walla th e Idaho tracks ters defeated Whitman 73 -57, win -ning nine event s to six for the Missionaries.

    Idaho's ace distance runners swept the lon ger races, while Whit man picked up points in the sprints. Leibowitz was a double winner for Idaho, capturing the 440-yard dash a nd the 880-yard run.

    IDAHO- W.S.C.

    A powerful Washington S tat e team proved too much for the Id aho eindermen in an easy 91-40 vie-tory at Pullman. Leibowitz equal ed his nothern di vi-sion mile record ''ith a 4:12.2 tim e, then sha lle red

    Lew eely's old Idaho half-mi le record by four sec-onds with a 1:52 .3 effort. D yrgall \\ On the two-mile run in 9:32.5.

    IDA no-o. .c.

    n Idaho invasion of Corvallis ended disa trously when th e Va ndals fell before Oregon State's Uea vcrs 76-55. Three meet records were broken and one equaled as Oregon S tate took nine of the fift een first places. D yrgall lowered 1 he meet two-mile rec-ord with a 9 :40.2 effort, whi le Hell equaled the sho t-put mark set by Berg of Idaho in 1935.

    IDAIIO-CIIE ' EY

    With Phil Leibowitz in th(' infirmary, the Idaho scanty-clads were forced to the limi t to edge Cheney 67-64 . .Both teams won seven events, but Va ndal dis tance s l a rs accoun ted for 1 he vic tory rmugin. Sprinter Dale C lark, wh o alternated between base-ball and track ac ti vity, garnered nine points to tie with n ell and \nderson for high point honors.

    IDAHO -M ONTANA

    Vanda l track and fi eld men fini shed tlwir dual meet season losing to M ontana 68 to 63 on Mc Lean Field. The G rizzlies took eight of the fourteen fi rs ts .

    Liebo"itz, released from the infirmary only three da ys before, shaved l\\ 0 econds off his o wn mee t record in the 880-yard run.

    When Leibowitz snapped this tat~e in 4:09.3 he luu) jini.~hef.l theffJS ti'~:

  • Dnle Clur lc .~llrfJri.~P. North e rn Div is ion sprint s tars by pluc inl( fonrth in th( 100-yor
  • TR AC K NOHTH ERN OJ I ION

    The result of a season of hard work by Coach .\like Ryan and the Idaho team beca me evident at the northern di vision championships at Pullman when the Vandals fi nishcd third with 30 and 2/ 5 points ... highe l total ever compiled b y an Idaho team in the divisional meet.

    Leibowitz successfully defended his mile cham-pionship by wi nnin g in 4:20, while D yrgall turned in a fas t 9:28 two- mi le victory. Anderson won the discus, and Makela and Kerby fini shed in a five-way tie for pole vau lt honors.

    Other 1 J aho point s were scored by Clark, White, Dwyer, Bell , and Ryan.

    PAC IFI C COAST

    Paced b) the sensa tiona l performance of Phil Leibowitz, a Len-ma n Vandal team scored 14 points to fini sh fifth in I he Pacific Coast championships.

    Idaho led Oregon, ~ ashington, Oregon State, .\{on-lana, and t:.C.L.J\. in scoring.

    Leibo,,ilz set a new coast mile record of 4:09.3, fastest ou tdoor mile in the nation in 1941. Vic Dyr-gall uno ffi eially beltered the Idaho two-mile record with 9:21.5 in finishing second to oel Williams of W .. C., wh ile Bob White ran a 4:19 mile in fi nishing fou rth in the mile run. Other Idaho points ca me when Bell fini shed fourth in the shotput and Ander-soon took fifth in the di scus.

    HI C TEN-P.C.C., AND NATIONALS

    Hunning und er wraps Leibowitz jockeyed into third place in the Big T en-P.C.C. meet mile race. D yrgall fail ed to place in the two-mile event.

    One of the rank in g favorites in the .C.A.I\. , Lei bowitz slum ped badly in fa iling to fini sh among the lop men.

    lligh-jlyitr l( Ceorl(e .llakela twd Darrell K e rby rlisployed o Juw c kfor t"CIIIItill;t aboee the 13-foot nwrk lost s p rin;t to go tiHr points for ldo ho in tlwt eeent. They fin ished in ofite-tnt.Y tie for fJOie tault honors at the .Vorthern Dicision m eet ... llt ertwtin;t betu:een boseboll ond trock os ldolto's "onre-in-a-rdtil('" sprinter, Dole Clark copped tlturlt -needecl points in tile dosl1 eeents. An oil-around athle t e, C lork tcon feller . in football and baseball as tcell as truck.

  • Jlil' Dy rg al.l jini.~he.~ .fi.rs t in I h e Northe rn Div is ion two-n t ile run ... /Jill Pi
  • Harriers Go Undefeated * * *

    T op: lda lw harrier.~ (left) get a late start in the I'CC m.eet at I/ ill Jltiliwry Acacle m y but .finish in front of pack. Bottom.: Van dal and Wl1itm.an ,l1issionary harrie rs stride arourul A1c Lean field's track before taking or.Lt over the h illy crosscou n try course.

    WASlllNCTON STATE

    Va ndal harriers took their firs t s tep towa rds an undefeated season with a 20-42 victory over Wash-ington S tale, th eir sixth over the Cougars in seven years. Ida ho l"Unncrs ca ptured six of the first seven places, a lthough Cougar ocl Williams placed firs t, edging out Vic Oyrgall 19:37. Bob White, Bob Dwyer, LaMarr C hapman, Sted Johnston, and John Thomas fo llowed Dyrga ll a nd Williams in.

    WHI TMAN

    With all lette rm e n on th e sidelines, Vandal reserve easil y defea ted Whitman 20-43. Seven of the firs t eight places went to Idaho cross country representa ti ves. Roy Griffin, Whitman freshman, beat I daho's J ack Ragla nd by six seconds, finished in 17:15. Following R agland were Sam Auger, Bill F teeburg, Pa ul Thome, Jim Babin, Bob M cLaugh -lin, and OaJTCII Dolgner.

    98

    l\'10 'TANA

    Runnin g on a makeshift course after heavy rains had turned the Idaho course into a quagmire of mud , th e Va ndals down; d Montana 21-41 to main -tain their undefeated record. John Thomas, Francis McG uire, and ted J ohnston finished in the first three spots ahead of Montana's rmstrong. T ime for Thomas was 18 minutes Aat.

    Bon D" YEn

    J o u "> T no" \ S

    TEO J OH"' TO~ Fn \ ' CIS M cGUIRE

    V I C DYRGALL

    Bon W u rTE

    LA.MAtm C u AP MA

  • Win Championships Again * * *

    Bac k row, IPjt to right: Ed Thurston, Harold Stroschein, John Thomas, Jack Ragland, Sted Johnston, If/alL Ettinger, Bert J~1engher, LaJlfarr Chaptnan, J>aul Thome, Coach Jl1ike /ly nn. Front row: Cene Luntey, Bill Free -burg, Bob D wyer, Bob White, Francis ft1cCt~ire, Jack ft f c Laughlin , ntn Auge r.

    P. C. C. FIFTH consccu ti vc Paci fi e coast intercollegiate cross coun try championship came easy for the Vandals as six of M ike Rya n's dis tance stars finished in t he firs t ten. Ida ho scored 19 points for a new team record, whi le Lanford and Oregon State trailed far behind with 70 a nd 72 points resp ec tively.

    Machineli ke Vic Dyrga ll monopolized individual honors, fini shing firs t in 20:15, well ahead of team-mates White and Dwyer. D yrgall's time was only six seconds o tT the old record of 20:09.5 set by Ore-gon talc' Don Vaillcncour t in 1939.

    Vandals Chapman and Thomas were less than a minute behind the firs t three Idaho finishers, to give the cha mpion five of the firs t seven places.

    A. A. U. * * Ru 1 c one hour after the completion of the col-legiate grind and on the same course, the Vandal thincl ads paced the fout-mile orthwes t A.A.U. championship meet. Iron man D ytga ll set a blister-ing pace for the field in cha lking up a n ew record of 20:51 for his second vic tory of the clay.

    o lea rn Litle was awarded, a lthough Idahoans fin ished in the firs t seven places. For his individual efforts D yrgall received a trophy . R agland, Ber t \ l eagher, White, C hapman, Ward Stroschein, and Thoma fin ished behind the Brooklyn star.

    T he Idaho performance was the firs t t ime i n modern cross country h is tory that the sa me team had participated in two meets on the same day and won both.

    99

  • Club Members * * *

    C n ACE A OER o~ Bos DwY ER B I LL PIEDllO ' T

    DoN ' OEnso Yrc DYRGALL B ILL P I E DMONT

    MERLY ANOERSO R U DY FRANKLIN HERllAN R ENFRO

    M tLO OEit 0 ORi\1 FREOEKI NO Bos SM ITH

    To Y Ascne BRE ER P ETE IlECOMOVICII D ICK SNYDER

    Vo LEY l lorK I s GEORGE S TEELE

    Cun B E so STEDWELL Jou TO Eu10 SuLLIVAN

    VETO B ER LL FRA K KARA J ACK TEWHWY

    E\RL C n \ N DLER M ATT L EWIS Jon ' TnoliAS

    L \ r\1 \R C n \P\l \~ JOE ){ UTA TED Tll0)1PSON

    E n.Nt E R \ ~ER HOWARD J \ ' SO ' R\YT RNER

    TT ENHY CUO \\ LEY BIL L l\h CKLICII B o n ANDERHARR

    R\Y DA\l GEORGE IXO Bon WHITE

    FRED N ICHOLS

    Dean Lewis, IPy nne C.ongeteig, H e nnan R enfrow, Enrl Chandler, D on A n d e rson, Jnc k Tewhey, Bob Vonderhctrr, Mnt C.ervis, } i tn Fo ster , D ic k Snyder, B ob Sm,ith , C.w l1rtr Clwpnwn , Lorry Doug las, Don D ctvid off

    llonlr J ur(ltt , Dnle Cl(l.r/,, Tony A schenbre ner, Joe Pied tnont, U ncly l' ronkli,., Cltu se Anderson, LoVe rn llell, l/(l.nk Crowley, Vi c lle rlltH

  • Minor ~~I" Club Members * *

    AnT AcuFF SuM ER DELA A liE RY J U RA GEORGE REDFOito

    .B UT AKl s EMORY DOANE FRA ' K KARA DALE REYNOLDS

    Do~ A ' DERSON Jnt ELLSWORTH SnER:'IIA ' KI ' G RoBERT RosKELLEY

    KE T BARBER CAllROLL ELMORE ){ SSELL LIN D STRO:It RALPH R s ELL

    STEELE BAR ET'l' )AMES FARRELL MARTI MARQUA IW GEORGE RussELL

    LA Vtm ' BELL ALLE FELD LAU RE cE McGo AG t~E RICHARD S HAVEil

    RTIIU R BE NY ALLA FosTER FRITZ MEAGIIEU Bon E. S:mTH

    BRUCE BROOKS GEORGE HACK ' EY D uA ' E MoRG \N wALTER STEVE~

    Eo\t N O B u DRIS CLAUD E IlA SEN L EWIS ONJ ' 1 BURLs TTON

    WtLLI AU c. CA)lPBELL RALPH ROLLI GSWORTII JACK NUMBERS Do Sw1 EY

    J on CHAMBERLAI WILLIAM HOLZER GERALD O'Co on BYRO T HO)IAS

    PnrLrP Co LEY TA ' LEY Jo E S CLIFTON PA U LEY ELLIS \VICKWARO

    EL:'IlER ]ORDA ' DALE POLLAK

    f>fril. Conley, Bill Ilo lzer, Dick Shaver, Art Benny, George Russell, Clntule lhwsen , LoVern Bell, 1l1nrtin Marquard, Dole Pollltck, George R edford, Ellis Wickware/

    Dalt> Rey nolds, Sumn e r Ot>lana, Bud Donne, Illutk Juran, /Jyron Thoma.s, Le wi.s Nonini, ]i tn Ellsworth, Bert Akins, John Chnmberlain, Elmer Jordon

    101

  • - ' .

    . -

    Canning clntws a bead ... Hrown and Numhcrs skiing

    Jotdan tt tutn s a sttve wilh his e fficie nt forehand

    Jim Ell)';wotth gl'ts ofT a ni ce back di ve against. \\'SC Idaho-WSC f{'nccts jockey for Lhal winning touch 'Hit me hetc, Btiggs," this OSC boxer see m s to ask

    This Cougar didn'L s t ay on the bottom long tnough

  • Firs t sig n of Stunmer ... twanging racque t s ne tting a work-ont before breakfast ... a s kittis h ball whacked a cross t lt e net ... over the fence and down the s treet 'Lcait , il1abel , someone will throw it bac k ... nwy be

    ACE SERVES

  • Vic llerllus, Warre n /Jriggs, Clw se Ander son, Watkin s K e rshaw, Bill TPillia. m :,~, George U11te rnaltre r , Cordon Ross, Torn W e lls, and Coac h Bob Knox

    101

    19~2 P ACIF IC COAST CHA;\IP IO N /Jill Willicuns, I 15 -pound sophomore, mixes i t tcilft Jrl . C.'s M ik e Ne lson

    1912 l'ACIFIC COA ST CHAMJ>JON 1/ea vyueig ht Vic Be rllus, junior fJOwe rhousc, ~ltool t< one o ver Cougar John De Y o ung's l1 cnd

    19 H . CAR BOWL CH A"MPIO Chase Ande rson , light h ea vyweight , and Cou t:nr Eel l(i e nke wres tle around in that f otig uing I It i rd rou ucl

    ,

  • Boxing * *

    AFTER a slow start in d ual compe tition, the Va ndal box ing team moved into hi gh gea r to place third in the Pacific Coast championships, and bring home two individual titles. Fi nancial and transportation d ifficulties forced the Vandals to forego defense of their na tional championship at Baton Rouge.

    ~ i th Knox at the he I m for the first t ime, the Id aho mittmen opened their season by winning six of seven bouts agains t Lewis ton ormal at Lewis-ton. A makeshift Vandal team battled the Loggers to a 3~-3~ draw in a re turn match here.

    Washington Sta te's experienced leather slingers won two d ual meets from I daho. The Cougars took the firs t at Pullman 6-2, then repeated here 5-3. Ve to Berllus floored W .. C.'s Bud D eYoung in the second meet after 40 seconds of the second round.

    Id aho split with Gonzaga, the Bulldogs winning

    * in Spokane 4~-3~, the Vanda ls evening the co unt at Moscow 5-3. Sophomore Bill Williams ka yoed Tony Felice of the Zags, and Chace Anderson deci-sioned Bulldog J erry Cohen in the second meet to gain revenge for old set -backs.

    In a n auspicious home s tart, Idaho defeated Ore-gon la te's touring millmen 5-3. Berllus made his initial 1942 bout a successful one by decis ioning bearded Warren Sima s of the Beavers.

    Bcrllus and Wi lliams ca rried the Vandals to third place in the coast tournament. Williams won 1 he 14>5-pound ti tle, while lanky Berllus took heavy-weight honors. Gordon R oss, Idaho 120-pounder, lost out in the semi-finals, while \V arren Briggs a nd Anderson dropped firs t round matches. Wa hington Sta te won the tea m title with 22 points, follO\\ ed b) San Jose with 19, and Tdaho wi th 16.

    Wilfiums rrtshes in to tie up his Congc'r opponent aft er missin g . .. Shoot yonr right , Dt&rrell Lott, thnt Coug(lr's wi(/e open! . .. Berllus m ea11nres off O.S.C.'s Warre n S imas ... Anderson ties n t> /Je

  • Skiing * * *

    A WELLBALA CEO Vandal ski tea m topped off its eight-meet schedul e wi th a second place in the Pacific Coas t Conference meet at Mount Rainier , second consecuti ve year th ey have finished in that position. Sixth place in th e ational Intercollegiate meet a t Sun Valley al o went to the Idahoans.

    Veteran Phil Conley and Jack lumbers and F reshma n Bill Brown paced Vanrla l indi vidu al work.

    Fencing * * *

    106

    V ANO \L fencers placed third in the northern division fencing mee t at Seattle after recording one triumph agai ns t three defeats in dual meet competition. The Idaho foilmcn spilled Washin gton's Huskies for their one vic tory and los t only to W.S.C.'s championship squad in the di vision meet.

    Captain George Redford paced the Vandals in their ccditahlc di vision showing with five victories in six matches, good for second p lace in indi vidual ratings.

  • lfank J u ran shows Jint Ell:n vortlr llow to k eep nn oppone nt on the bott o m . . . Ellsworth tries som e thi n g differ ent in t h e JP. S.C. m.eet . . . Juran t ries to sepa.ra t e n Cougar's hend front his b ody . . . nalph nnssell apparently doesn ' t like be ing Ott the b o ttom . . . La-Ve rn Be ll, t w o-tirn e Northe rn Di vis io n h ea vyw e ig ht titli s t , jus t Ntn' t .~eent to loo k toug h .

    Wrestling l NDJ VlO A L triumphs took so me of

    the s ting out of a disas trous Va ndal

    wrestling season as L a Vern Bell and

    Captain l lan k Juran copped honors

    in the norlhern division tourney.

    Td aho ma tmen fini shed fourth in

    the di vision meet after Oregon Sta le,

    W ashington, a nd Washington ta lc

    a ll lopped the Va ndals in dual meet

    compelilion.

    Bell won the northern di vision

    h e a vywe ig h t c rown for th e onl y

    Td aho indi vidual title. Jura n, 1941

    cham pion, was runner -up in the 165-

    pound di vision.

    * Jot E L Ls wouTn

    CAnROLL ELl iORE

    H ENRY J RA '

    R ELL LI ' D STRO)l

    LA n E cE McGo ACLE

    R o n En T R osK EL LEY

    R ALPII R ussELL

    WALTEJt STEVENS

    ll TIL S TTON

    LAVER B ELL

    Larry M cGonag le, Bud Elmo re, llank Juran, John Sichlo u:ay, nalph 107 Russell, A llo n Est ep , man ager

    Jim Ells wort h , Buhl S utto n , Reed Tu c k e r, Russ LindM rorn, r -V.- - - 0 .... 11

  • Bill Wrig ht, A1frlt Smtg.~tad, Don Gray, Sgt. Robert L . M eador, /lob S f(l[c , Martin Fry, IJob Robbins, Lnwre n ce Doug la s

    Lt. Otto Nelson, coac h jint C(l.nning, Bart Crt>tt, Annour Anderson, Bob O ' Connor,

    Gene Bns.~e tt , Conlon Dailey

    Swimming Co"SC J E~TIO coaching effort of Stu-den l-men lor Bill Pied moot did little to salvage Idaho's und erm a nned swim tea m "hi c h lost a ll dua l m eets and tra i:ed o ther northern division schools in the cha mpionship meet. Brightest spot, however, was the championship di ving of R alph H olli n gsworth , who we nt undefea ted in dual meet compe ti-tion and fini shed second in the divi sion lll

  • TENNIS VANDAL racket wielders climaxed a somewhat drab tennis season with a s trong fini sh to capture third place in the northern division tille meet .

    lone victory over ~lontana rC\\ arded effor ts of the Idaho team in d ua l competition while they "were taking it on the chin" from W.S.C., ~ ash-ington, O.S.C., Oregon, and Whitman.

    SuMNEn DBI .ANA Eu11m JouoA

    Buo DOANE

    KENT B A IIIIBII

    DALE Po1.t .A K 0AJ.E R E YNOLD S

    GOLF \Vrru o E lone le tterman returning from Idaho's 1940 golf team, Vandal linkmen fou nd conference competition tough and defeated only ~M onta na in a season of seven meets.

    W.S.C. , Oregon State, Oregon, and Washington all outscored the Vandal mashie bri gade, the Cougar squad turnin g the trick twice. 1 n the northern division meet, t he Vanda ls finished las t while Oregon ca rried ofT the t eam title.

    C uRLI E Boru-tN STAN J ON I~S Il uoso IE\1 \ N B11. r. C ''ll'tii~LL

    II \lillY S'iE-\0 c ..... ~ P .\lJLEY BILL HOLZER

    1'op: Bob Uo.~enberry, Dale l'ollt&lc, Elmer J o nhw , llttd Doane, S tunner De luna, Dale Ueynolds, K ent /Jurb er. Botto11t: Do(&ne, Barber, De lana, Jordun , Reynolds.

    1'op: S poh:une's Btu/ lr/ard, national antateur c hamr>ion , 1/ri ves down the l duho .fairway w ltile a stud ent gallery looks on. /Jotton: Corwin Dal'i(/son , Hud N iemun , /larry S n ead , ' tall Jones, Charles /Jore n , William C. Ca mt>bell.

    109

  • A Gon zaga Bullpu p ('oulcln' l slop thi s goalward cllive

    H a lfbac k Thomas

  • Wearers of the 45's and keepers of the c ups .. nutn eral u1in n ers clrea1n of " l " sweaters ... tnetnbers hip ... nwsculinity ... League leaders eye all-school c hant-pionships . .. trophies . . . plaques

    FROSH 'N' MURALS

  • I (

    Back row: Clwrles PierJer, /larry Whitenwn, Del Ou:ens, /Jill Celiber-ti, Joe Kadluboski, Wnlt Ruderfer, George Frick, Lo Vern B ell. Third row: Jerry Eide, /Jill Grey, Clwrles ftastino, Ly le Kerby, R obert Wil-liants, Joe Cole, Fre d John son , Don Whiting. Second r ow: /lob p iker, Harold Bnteson , Wendcllllinc h c liff, Chuck Thonw s, John /i,,.,,.s, /Job Briggs, John LeMoyne, i\1ilt on Unt-s t e in, Frank Schaub. Fonl ow: Jac k Schutte, Art Lnngloi .~, Lnrry Gwartney, 1\1iljord Mo.~c.~, /Jill Brown, Gordon Fribe rg , Ly le l~ngn un, llnrold Seecl.s, Couch .f. A. " Bube" Brow n .

    Ba c k row: Coa c h J. A. " llabe " Brown, /Job /Jurns, Jny G(liiO , llill Jonas, Bob Obendo rj, /Job S tratton , H e rsch el /Jerenter, nwnngPr. Frnnl row: De l Owens, .fohn Evltns, .lint Swnrbrick, /Job lly

  • BASEBALL .FRE 11 " " ' base ba ilers sal vaged the remna nts of a med iocre season by a n even

    split in their four-game series wit h Washington Sta te's firs t-year men. The

    l da ho year li ngs dropped two one-run decisions to Lewis ton orrn al in their

    other games.

    Clark Woods and Keith P arks were winning pitchers in Vandal Ba be vic-

    tories, while the s tickwork of J ack T ewhey, Don Blackburn , a nd Bill M a ngum

    paced the offense.

    MISCELLA NEOUS FROSH SPORTS

    Fresh men golfers split even in the two -meet Washington la te series which

    comprised their season. T he Idaho yearl ings won the firs t ma tch 7~ to 4~, but the Cou ga r KiLLens evened the count with a n 8- to-4 vic tory a t P ull man.

    Tea m members were Br uce Barndolla r , D ean Wackerli, Sund ay Provenza no,

    Bill Mangum, and J ohn P iper .

    .I daho's freshma n tennis tea m broke even wi th ~ ashing ton S tat e's yea rl ings m their only mee t, each squad winning two event . Don Ca rlson and G us

    R anzinger accounted for the Vandal points with wins in the singles. Hod ney

    Fros t wa the o ther Vanda l Babe netter.

    E mula ting the exa mple se t by varsity harriers, the freshm an cro s coun try

    tea m fini shed it two-meet season undefeated. T he Vand al 13abes eked ou t

    a two-point decision over Washi ngton St ate 27-29, a nd roll ed up a 20-43 vic-

    tory over W hitm an. D ave St iclolph and Bob Eyestone were awa rded freshm an

    nu merals.

    114

    E m i l T acousky, George l oset, 1(/(/i -son Foss, Jint Slone, Vi r tor T aylor, John L e ilfoyne.

    John l'ipe r , Dean Wac l.:erli , /Jru tt Burnclollar, S unday l'roven ::on o .

    Elvador Ritte r, Prances f~N, Da vc Senburg, A lle n S tanle.v .

    l J

  • U ppe r ig h t : Chris man's c luu npionship touc h f ootball sqnud. Lower le f t: The ATO' s cue university vo lleyball cluunp s . C nn d ifl scen es : A c tion in the championship fJicay o.ff gume b e tuw en Chris rnan and the ATO's .

    116

    INTRAMURAL C unr 'lk'\ H \ LL I captured its second successive a ll -u ni ver it y touch footb all champion-hip as the 1941-1942 intramural progra m got under wa y. The C hrisma n gridders won

    decisively over P hi D elta Theta 24-0.

    The volleyball crown went to the .T.O. sq uad, which defea ted Chr isman H all I 15-8, ] 5-10 in the finals. In the t able ten nis compe ti tion, Lindley H all ca me out on top by r dging out P hi D elta Thet a.

    W illis weet b asketball t ea ms monopolized honors in that spor t. Willis Sweet I won the C lass hoop t itle with an easy 43-28 vic tory over L . D .. , las t year 's cha mpions. I n C lass B competition Willis Sweet defea ted the Ida ho Clu b 32-19 for the ch a mpionship.

    Lind ley H all triumphed in the riAe contes t, with S.A. E. in second pl ace. P hi Gamma Della swimmers won t he t ank title with a fi ve-poin t margin over Wi llis Sweet.

  • INTRAMURAL L1 DLEY H ,\LL was leading in total intramural points at Gem press time with track, softball, horseshoes, a nd golf yet to be contested. Lindley had 970 poi nts to 950 for A.T.O., while Swee t H all, 943; Kappa Sigma , 885; and Sigma Chi , 800, were close behind.

    Alpha P hi C hi officers during the year were Dale Reynolds, presid ent; Don Robert-son, vice-president; Dick Sny der, secre tary; Dick Harland, treasurer.

    Sweet Hall \\ on i ls third intramura l championship in four years during the 1940-1941 season a it edged out A.T.O., 1575 to 1540. In winning, wee t dethroned Phi D elta Theta, cha mpions the previous year.

    A.T.O. won four intramural plaques during the season by capturing titles in table tennis, Class B basketball , swimming, a nd go I f. Sweet won the volley ball plaque ; Chris-man copped the touch footb all awatd ; L. D.S. won plaques in C lass A basketball and rifle; Idaho C lu b annexed the track award ; Delta Tau D elta took the softball plaque; Sigma Chi and Campus Club split in the horseshoe finals.

    Upper l eft: "B" Leag ue basketball winners tvere S wee t n~en. Lower left: S weet rnen rnade a clean sweep by taking the " A " Leng u e hoop chnmpion~hip. Lower right: This triojront Lindley won the ping p ong title. U pper righ t: Softball action. on the flia rnond betwee n Sweet cw.d Memorial Gy m.

    117

  • .\lod t n Dan{'
  • r

    That' s llfarg ie s triding along the ridg e ... fla s hing a rarqu e t , hitching up her s horts ... swinging three bat s and two hips . . . woman's place is b ehind home plate ... or 1111der a badminton net . .. or on a free throw line

    POINT SYSTEM

  • F IVE wO,lE qu alified for membership in the Women's " I" Club this yea r. Earning the n ecessa r y 1 ,250 point s for their swea ters and memberships were Phyllis Pay nter , Barbara White, Aha \lac )1ul-lin, Vera ell }amc . and Lois Hcam.

    Officer of the athle tic group, sponsor of a special lei ure time activ itit"s program for a ll \\Omen tudcn ts, \\ ere: \Jerle D elp , president ; ll e len Ca mpbell, vice-president; Ve d e Burs te d , secre ta ry-treasurer; and Pat Unternahrcr. hi s torian .

    120

    illarguret ,lly lne, in s truc tor; Jane tte L. Wirt , a ssociate professor und h eltd of Physical Educll-tion for 117ome n ; Frances Bllscom, instructor; illrs . W. 11. /Joyer, inst ruc tor

    Rachel S way ne, Loi .~ R eam, Virg inill Anderson, Alttt JW'ne MuiiPr, l'at Unternohre r, l'hy llis taynter

    illiss Jl1argoret Jl1y l.n e, Marjory Crrtickshank, Verle Brtrstedt , lle le n Cu m.[~bell, M e rl Delp

    1

  • W. A. A. * * *

    UNDER A scoring system devised by the association, women earning 100 points m the after-school hour sports are eligible for memberslllp in the " Tomen's Athletic Association. Wo men earning 1,250 points are awarded women's "1" swea ters. Helen Campbell, who has earned over 2,000 points this year in W.A.A., was presented with an " I" blanket, highest individu al W.A.A. award given.

    The associa ti on pledged 82 women February 17, who made the necessary points. W.A.A. sponsors a p icnic for all freshmen women each fall , a nd an awards banquet in May.

    Ph yllis P aynter is president; Pat U nternahrcr, vice-president; H elen Newman, cor-respondin g secretary; Barbara Long, recordin g secre tary; Rachel Sway ne, treasurer; Mrs. Frances Bascom, advisor.

    Doris Johnson is leisure sports head , M erle Delp, basketball ; Peggy Massey, softball ; Marjorie C hilds, tennis; Beverly Weber, badminton; Rae C leare, swimming; D orothy Ann Outzs, rifle; Mary Fran Marshall, horseshoe and shuffie board ; K ay Paynter, golf; Pat Bowlby, archery; Merrie Lu Kloepfer, ping-pong; an d Belly D etweiler, publicity.

    /Je tty Detweiler, Peggy Massey, Jo Schwenkfehler, Dorothy Ann Out::ss, Lorene Bales, Pat Unternaltrer, Alta 1l1ae 1l1ullin, Mary Fran Marshall, l'hylfi.~ Pay nter, Merl Delp

    lfelen Campbell, Ruth E llen Jackson, Doris Johnson, Ve rrt Nell J lunes, Betty Armstron g

    121

  • SoPHO.'IIORE feminine athletes carried off early honors in W.A.A. class tournament sports for this year l\ith triumphs in both speedball and volleyball tournamen Ls. harpshooting freshmen hoopsters, however, edged them in the basketba ll final s by a 37-36 count. When The Cern was "put to bed" the golf tourn ament had not yet been played.

    W.A.A. contestants who place on first-string teams get 100 points, second team contes tants arc awarded 50 points, and all other partici-pants get JO poi nts apiece. Total points are tabulated for indi vidual sweaters and for " I" hlankcts.

  • THE L.\RCE ' M UE H of women participants in individual tournaments prove t ha t tea m sports a re not the only ones they turn out for.

    Comely sophomore l\l e rrie Lu Kloepfer won the W.A.A. ping-pong title, while top honors in the shuffle board tourney went to Alta Mae :\lullin. \1arjorie C hilds Lopped the horseshoe contestants, and Beverly \Veber won the badmin ton tournament.

    Ma rjorie C hilds a nd Beverly Weber were finali s ts in the tennis meet when The Gem went to press. Corine Williams, E lnora Arms, and Mary Jteynold s were give n archer's ra ting this spring for bow and arrow work .

  • Club m e n amble down the hill for a mid-day lunch Delta Chis polish window paneM in a s pring clean- up

    Nothinp; like a bow tie for b lood, s weat, and tear s Alpha

  • It take15 all kind
  • Bodily Dillon Gugnoni Jonc" Marcbi

    128

    Drown Oi8 n l\t ercer ll ei nJurtlt

    Oeobald .EIIingeon

    Ht~) nes Maier

    cii~Jon S kilc

    DciJ.flulnicr~J E lmore Hoffman ~1anning O'Conner

    Independent Council Fustl>r "rt>spi'CWbft>" politics ... Two representatives from. each iudt>pt>utlt>ut house ... \Teet sometimes.

    OFFICEitS

    Prt>sitfent V iet> Preshlt>nt

    St>crt>tary

    ~frca!utrer

    C \\IPl S Cun

    Ed Bo dil ) C raig \1 a nning Tad :Kiclson

    Fran!. Dillon

    Bud Elmor J erry O'Conner

    FOIINRY II \1, 1.

    Arln Dnbald

    ~l iriam 1\l cycr

    II \ YS II \1. 1.

    Edi th J ones

    .lnA IIO C r. t t n

    J ohn G ibson

    Ed llnnscn

    R ey Rhinchnr L

    Bon ELLtNCSON

    B u o EuronE

    JOY CE MrmCElt

    HELEN HoFMAN

    L.D.S. INSTI T U TE

    J erry Skiles

    LIN DLEY HALL

    l\lose Disotell

    RmENBAUG II H A L L

    Drexel Bro wn orma Marchi

    WILLIS S w EET H A r.L

    B ob Desaulniers

    Virgil TJaynes

    R alph J oslyn

    "~ alt G ug no ni

    Helen Hofm a n J oyce Mercer

  • Interfraternity Council Further: Broth f'rlwod at the polls, fratfj

    ' :- ~ . . ~f ; ~ ~- :_.,...._, . ..._ ''. ' .... _._,~~ : -~

    Eimer&. W. E n1lish Fulton Ha r land lieu Holland Kaufman Ko rman La non \l cColrn Mea, her ~linden :\1 ouut relson !umbers Soule S1ill To wles Webh Weeko Williamson

    129

  • Ander,on Collier James J\iarsball Schmidt

    130

    Dale Duokle Kenworthy

    ~lcl\1urrny Starr

    Bon man Brickson Kim es Rncb Tucker

    Pan Hellenic Council See that little Mary doesn't view "Paradise" prior pledging ... Final arbiter: Dean Olson ... Two representatives p er house.

    President -VIRGIN IA A DERSON

    Vice-President VEnA ELL JutES

    Secretary -Treasurer JovcE T ucKER

    A

  • Alpha Chi Omega *

    Coke- Grover Cuneon Jones .. lleleu }once, .M aril> '' .\l ard a hi Ma BOn f\.foorc Jeuwe ll Stock~Siu ger T omlintJ.On WiUiams

    Urad bur> French Tlale J ouefl, j\f doric i\'laoer R uch Vnrner

    Brainard Gihb Hender80n Leach i\lcCurd> Sclunitlt Vobor;J

    Dahmen Globe Ifill man t.ohrc nz i\leau Sc_l ocnlnls \Vicko

    131

  • A ldeeoa Oakes

    Dieter~ . llalversen Jone"' LClthrQI n;ce ~ .. tart I urner Whiteman

    132

    Ander.-on Ournlljde

    Fn~ re ll nm iltou Jorda n \1otHnt lto b!"rt.-Swnn"on

    \VeiP~hrml Wibou

    A nd rew Cttmpbcll (;lindemnu llunnn Keeton. B .

    ~l orhetk ltohinw n

    Arrivee Com nick Guern&e) Jeffers Keeton, V. J\lott Slu~wnack

    Bacheller Dieter. E. Guthman John{Oon K emp Motzko Slot cr

    Alpha Phi * * *

    Purl 011(- jor Red Cross ... Pledges hurried their English composition , upperclassmen took timP out to knit an ajglwtt . Brain Baby Bumside took their frosh scholarship cup.

    Virginiu Anderson 1ormu Diet er

    Christine Fu vre

    Betty J o J e ffers

    Delphine \ldccoa

    \t argurct B ueh eiiPr

    Janice ndrcw

    Betty J o Bal.es

    Eunice Dieter

    Carmeli ta G ucrnscy

    Beverly Cumphcll

    J eanne Glindcman

    Margaret Guthman

    Lucile II ul verson

    largarc t ll umilton

    Be lly HolTma n

    Charlo lle Arrivee

    M argarcl Burnsi de

    adino Comniek

    Put Jl unn a

    S ENIORS

    J N I O RS

    Mary E llen Jordon

    Vir ginia Keet on

    Marion Rice

    Katherine Tuller

    Winona K emp

    Hazel Morbeck

    lacey Molt

    Tielen l otzko

    R oberta Swanson

    Betty Turner

    R osemary \..;' ilson

    SOPHOMORES

    H elen Lothrop

    Edna Lueylle Roberts

    Kathr yn Robi nson

    Rose Starr

    Mary Shewnack

    Virginia Weisbrod

    nne \Yhiteman

    ' RES IIME

    Maxine Slatter

    May Ruford Jones

    Clara Johnson

    :Billie Keeton

    J ean MacRae

  • Albo Oarne@c. J. Ca mpbell Ocoba lcl , Ann Franson ll urring to n. B. llutscll

    144

    Allard flcoch Chri tH ian O eohold , Arl. Greco Jhrri8

    J en ~cu

    A rHier 80n, C. Bohman Com nick Ounlasl Grf' in t r llu YenR Jolui.,(UI, l .. Kuhcl

    Anderson, 0 . Burstedt Cox E rick80n Il a nsen f{;tf.ker Johnson, M. Lo tty

    A nder80n, J. Cald well Cunnin gh am Frank H ar,ring ton, E. Hod ge Kchno Lightfield

    Forney Hall * * *

    Lusty Unds niCwy Treble Clefs ... Linger in home ec labs ... Don shorts for W A A .

    r~ l canor Allurd

    Burburu Bcuch

    V eric Burs ted t

    ll clcu Camphcll

    Kathleen Chris ti an

    Jane Ellen Cunningh am

    J une Cou yd

    J oyce ll ilfikcr

    Louise Kuhcl

    Be lly ~I ackin

    I iria m I aicr

    Viviun Bohmun

    Donna Burditt

    Viviun Culdwell

    Marie Comnick

    l~llcn Cox

    Arlr nc Ocobuld

    Margaret Dunlap

    Alice Fullon

    Madlinc Greco

    Elaine ((arring ton Ma rylu Jen~en

    Lis J ohnson

    S E NIORS

    J U IORS

    Vivian Mooers

    Eva Nelson

    Blanche Onstot

    H elen R obertson

    Mildred Rowe

    Laura Runck

    Barbara Sher win

    Betty Slay ton

    Torma Steele

    June Stein

    Mildred W'es tebdahl

    Mildred Mallory

    Mona M eyers

    Rowena Nordby

    Kathleen Orr

    Liviab Oslund

    Josephine Palmer

    Maxine R eeves

    Hazel R enner

    Lois Richwine

    Mavis Seheupbach

    June Sorenson

    Dorothy Spence

    Virginia Wickman

  • t

    Delta Tau Delta *

    cenic J OIIII , t:iu rooftop bench-courtesy uf igmu Chi ... i\1ost tigorous at their Russian Bull ... For the old lreriwges have pas.,ed a way .

    Kinsley Brown

    Bob Ingrah a m

    R oy Kuehner

    Bill Lconurd

    Allen Ba unchcr

    A vercll Clarl..

    K enne th Crowell

    Wes E vans

    J ohn Gael.. cl

    Dick Gordon

    George Campbell

    K eith Daniels

    Ralph Oidricksoo

    Jack J ullian

    Cecil Bridges

    Bill D cinhard

    Don D ashiels

    D ee Gray

    S tan Varner

    J UNIORS

    SO I'II OliO R E S

    BoiJ Walkley

    Jim ~'okcrsein

    J im Spofford

    D ick S till

    Bob Swisher

    teve Utter

    Fred Grecnlidd

    Bob Korma n

    \V arren Lauer

    Bill R eed

    \\ ayoe R odcbacl..

    Eli Schwalbe

    Bill K enned y

    Bill Mangum

    J esse :\1o m berger

    Isaac l oor

    P aul Laug hlin

    Jim Miller

    Fra nk Murph y

    elson Parker

    Oau(l.('iler Cro"'elt

    t->~ anA J ulinn Lautthlio Moor Sdowolbe V1arner Wa lkley Woke.r&.ieu

    Bridse~t Danielt Gordon Ken ned, Leonard \lurphy Spofford

    Bro"- n o .. hiell Cra) Korman

    ~funum Parl er So ill

    Carn1lh~ll Deinhard G reenfield Kuehner Miller Reed S wi 8her

    Clark D idri lbt"n Tn,;:raham Lauer

    ~lornbertr R odeback Utter

    143

  • \t>Piins llistlino Chri8tirn80n Cauo ll)de McCrn cle Heyuoltl Snvid go 'l'ho mnA

    Wei~er Wil&n

    Ah Oracken, C. Coon II a" ley. E. Kirne8 McMurruy lliedel Si mpson, D. Tre lner Wheeler

    142

    Babcock Bracken, .E. Coppock H awley, P. Lee Mulcahy Robinson Si ru p&On. 1\1_. Ward

    Bacon Drink Cruic-k~honk Hea th M acCallum Nicl ole llul>f' Stull'ord

    Barrett Call Finch H olden \l ac Kay Peuvey Samms Stillinger

    Bed,.ell Cbeoter 1-'owlc H unter " cOcau lletherrord Sanrord Sutcliff

    Delta Gam1na * * *

    " lfa1111ah's" a breezy lass ... Chains o frat pin to h(r flllchor , keeps a Mortar Board badge in the dresser drawer ... /Joosts her house mother.

    J a ne Barrett Elizabeth Bracken Oorotll y Coon Elinore Finch

    Wanda Kimes orma Lou McMurray

    S&N t ORS

    Anne P eavey Mary R e therford

    Cynthi a Samms ancy Savidge

    Barbara Simpson )fary \\' ard

    Patricia \\ eiser

    Betty R ae Appling Kathleen Ash \1 ar y E leanor Bed well Beverly Bis tline t\1 arjorie Cruickshanl.. \la r y Gano P a ul ine Ilawlcy

    Margaret Bacon Claire Bracke n llelcn J eanne Brink i\1 arjorie Call Bc u y Chester Winifred Christianson Marilyn F owles r;;ileen Ilawley

    P a t H eat h

    Belly Babcock P a tricia Coppock Mary R eynolds Judith Rupp

    J UN IOHS

    ll ele n Wilson

    S01' 11 0 '101l ES

    Fit ES II \1 El'

    P atricia Holden

    J eanne llunttr P atsy McGrath Esther Lee icl.ol~

    ' ancy June taffonl B arbara Su tcliff Joanne Tretner

    Adene Jl yde Plavia Lee Constance \l acCallttm Evely n J\l acKa) Arlene J\lcBean E ldene Mulcall y

    Beth R eidel Nancy R obinson

    M.aryella San ford

    Marilyn Simpson Margaret Stillinger Elaine Thomas Ann Wheeler

  • Delta Delta Delta *

    1xotic . .. Acwlcmic- ... JWelodiou.~ ... Commodious (tuartlrs .... Lambd" Chi alliullces ... SA I , Cardinal Ky, lltfurtar Board spo11sorship.

    Olive Bidne

    Lucy Adele Dillingham

    Kay Durham

    Marjorie Ann Brunger M erilyn Burford

    Shirley Clark

    Virginia Clark

    Dorothy E r icksou

    Virginia Bc nnc lle

    Polly Bulkley

    Lorraine Tiallman

    Ruth larie K nolcs

    Maxine Mulroney

    J ean Bonneville

    Be tty Brown

    Erlene Cornwall

    l\liriam Cunningham

    J ean Gray

    \\'ilia Hill

    Marvel H oux

    SENIORS

    JUN I OitS

    SOPHOMOilES

    FRES II\IEN

    Glyde Whitsell

    Ell yne Hallman

    M ari an H ea th

    Kay Schneider

    Eleanor Johnson

    Ita .\l ac Mullin

    Curoly n ' orris

    J oyce Tucker

    Virginia Young

    H elen Sims

    Lillian T egan

    Anne Thompson

    Billie Lou Van llipcr

    Kathleen VI' oodworth

    Eleanor J ohnsto n

    Jl clen Knaggs

    Hose Lessinger

    Ann Potwin

    Pat Potwin

    Ruth Roberts

    Eliza IJeth Sprague

    Bennett Burford Dillinham Heath Knau Norris S ims Van ltiper

    Oidne Clark. S. Erickson H ill Knole8 l,ot"in. A.

    ~l.i.~~f.

    Bonne' ille Clorl.. . \ . Cra) llou:c l.ti'fl.i n wtr

    l'ot~ in, P. Te~n n Woodworth

    Bro \\n Corn~all Hallman. E. Johnson Mullirt Robert" T ho mp,mn Young

    Oulkle> Cunnin~ham lla llmao. 1... Johnston M ulrone) Schneid er Tucker

    141

  • AIW'henbrener Chandltr Greef Kin McGee M(-ses P,l ,.hors S mith Stoue Uolr

    140

    Biebl D a,id80n GrieeM:r Lan"e ~t cLou AIIIin .Mos m ou Petler Mou S piU)tla

    Thomt~ml Webb

    Direhmier Garber ll elblin Larson Mervyn Nelson Peters S teile Unternahrer Wilde

    Ornnon G> lord John&On

    ki~~~k8 I, ace Hu\'olf'M

    Butt Cordon Jordan .Marlin,oen 1\l ortcn'"r" l,arlA S htule l

    Delta Chi * * *

    Snow sculptors ... S"pport an itwalid ew Jersey auto . .. M embers from beyoml borders ... Pirateers.

    se ' lOllS

    Antone A~chcnbrcncr

    Corwin Biehl

    rei l J ohnson

    K eith Martinson

    Goss Gorden

    Rich ard Larson

    H arry l osman

    Harvey Bulls

    Earl Chandler

    Ray mond Helbling

    R obert ~l cLaughlin

    \Yilliam ,\I crvy n

    Hugh M cGee .

    D on ald Birchmicr

    Jack Brannon Evcrell D avidson

    K enne th Gaylord J oh n Curbcr Edward C reef Edward Grieser K enneth J ordan

    K enmLh \\ t> bb

    J UN IOfi S

    SO PII O \I OIIES

    Eugene Thompson

    FIIRS II\I E

    H oward Monks

    Gridley R owles

    R obert Smith

    Edward slur

    M er vin Pasbourg

    Addison Lo ne

    D ean Wilde

    Paul Nelson

    Robert Puce

    K eith Parl..s

    Gerald P ec>dcr11on

    R a lph P e ters

    Leigh Shudrl

    Pal King

    Vern Lunge Hardy L yons

    R obert I artcnsen Milford J\t o~cs William Spae th John Stcilc George Untcrnaher

  • [

    * * * Chrisman Hall

    From editor to athlete . .. Freqtullt firesides ... Thriving larcn . . . Fi 11 c portra it of the Gct~cral.

    D on Andr rson Ray mond Bufus Austin Belnap

    Keith Boy ing ton Don Carlson John Chivers T o m Chivers Carroll Elmore Mil..e Erramo uspe \\ illiam Frir burg J ohn Jl amm

    Richa rd Hodder Stanley Jenson

    Ilerbert Barnes R obert Barosl..a Virgil Bro wn Ke nneth Burghardt J ohn Culvert Lovell Callis ler George Doyle Albert Errasmoupe R obert Fisher Edward Glrormlcy

    Richard Green Jack Gunderson

    Wa lter " Bud" lle nry Frank TT vcem

    J oh n Ala n J onr~ Loren Knutson

    Richard K och Paul Laughlin

    SOI'IIO\IOHES

    Ellis Wick"ard

    Fll RS II\lllN