i FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ilft THE MICHIGAN IIAIT.V PAE~ VT~'U KAMXJD F1"L co Honoraries Listed Social Fraternities End Bright Year Sigma Delta Pi Melba Lita Abril-Lamarque Eileen Maloney Aigler Lorraine Alma Baldwin Ann Marie Susan Bandler *Sonya Tucker Barsky *Betty Bayliss *Lillian Bickert Judith Williams Brace James Echols Katherine Margaret Eggleston *Miriam Deborah Fischer Carole Lee Goodspeed *Marjorie Norma Greenfield *Sharon Barbara Gross Mary Rose Hall Judith Ellen Johnson Virginia Mary Keller Hugh W. Kennedy Robert Scott Kramp *Joyce Margaret Leonhard *Jane Lida Manning *Patricia Ann Marx Phyllis Jane Peterson Joan Rubin Myron M. Vinocur *Marcia Maurine Waechter Lois Wasserman David Lee Wolfe Carol Wolff Tau Sigma Delta *Sarah Caswell Angell Barbara June Andrix Carter *Nancy Jane Davis *Gerald Eugene Harburn Paul Henry Krueger Jack A. Lardis *Carolyn McKechnie Vivian MacLeod Leroy Benjamin Miller Arthur Peters Oppermann, Jr. John Victor Owen Ralph Urban Price Kenneth Rice Melvin H. Sachs *Aaron Schreier *Rose Marie Elizabeth Simonton Margaret Ann Meade Turnbull Edward X. Tuttle, Jr. Robert Morris Vogel William H, Whittingham Richard Eugene Wiggins Literary Steering Headed this year by Mary Ann Chacarestos; '54, and Albert Cain, '54, the Literary College Steering ? C ommittee has made considerable progress toward its end of cor- relating college activities with stu- dent interests. Conferences were held in the spring and fall semesters to dis- cuss "The Role of the Grade" and "Lecture Courses." Students and faculty were invited to present their opinions at both. Pi Sigma Alpha *Harold Eugene Abrams Curtis Oliver Baker *Eleanor Sue Beebe *Judith Bender *Neil Norlin Bernstein *Maurice Shulman Binkow *Nancy Lee Bonvouloir *Berton Gilman Braun Mary An- Chacarestos Edwin Henning Conger *William Joseph Duffy *Gerald Thomas Flahavin *Peter Bacon Fletcher *Sidney Charles Kleinman David Jay Kornbluh *Richard Allen LaBarge *Charles Mayo LaDue John Carl Leggett Dorothy Helen Myers *Maurice Howard Oppenheim Margaret Ann Plumton *Robin Louise Renfrew Bertram Malcolm Shapero *Margaret Mackenzie Shepherd Ned Benjamin Simon *Neal Arthur Vanselow *Nathaniel Jay Wansker Gretchen White *Ronald Gene Witt *Richard Noel Wolf *Ted Woodstock Wuerthner Chi Epsilon Andrejs Broze Robert Swanson Burd Norberto Jose Calderas Visarl Chowchuvech John Charles Evans Edgar Robert Ferguson Norman Winslow Gabel William Albert Horne Lee Edward Jager *Tawfiq Nicolas Khoury Richard Leslie Lowery *Allan Fred Lubina Jack Buford Matson *Jacque Leslie Pell Stanley Elmer Sattelberg John Litchfield Snyder Robert Neal Tracy Maurice S. Van Auken *Marvin Lynn Zuidema Professional Sororities Alpha Epsilon Iota, Medical Esther N. Arroyo Lambda Kappa Sigma, Pharm-- acy Patricia Pauling, '54P Mu Phi Epgilon, Music Lycille Stansberry, '54 SM Pi Lambda Theta, Education Shata Ling Sigma Alpha Iota,'Music Jane Townsend, '54 SM Theta Sigma Phi, Journalism June Granstrom, '54 Zeta Phi Eta, Speech Melba Abril-Lamarque, '54 E Distinguishing itself first by Alpha Sigma Phi won in the selection as the best Inter-Fra -!Alhate ighmcPhi wn inpthe ternity Council in the United fraternity homecoming display States and Canada, the campus contest, and pledges of Sigma Phi IFC continued successfully, pledg- took the Sigma Chi Foundation ing 705 men to campus faterni- Trophy for pledge class with the ties. best scholastic average. ACACIA Similar honors went to Phi Herbert Wagner, '54, fall Gamma Delta and Zeta Beta Roy Wetterholt, '55, spring Tau, both selected by their na- ALPHA DELTA PHI tional organizations as out- Charles Drake, '55E, fall standing chapters. John Winslow, '54, spring Social Sororities --Daily-Chuck Kelsey YOST HONOR AWARD WINNERS-First row: Daniel C1ine, Richard Bergman, James Walters, Mrs. Fielding H. Yost, Roy Christiansen, Thad Stanford. Second row: Dichard Balzhiser, Douglas Dunn, Richard Belson, Fritz Nilsson, Milton Mead, George Dutter, Roger Maugh. Robert Hurley and Alex- ander Mann are not pictured. 'U' Sports Year Echoes T riumphs__ Voting in a permanent return to the fall rushing system, the Uni- versity's 20 social sororities en- tered competition for all-campus and individual honors, and gain- ed several achievements. Adelphi, a new local group on campus, affiliated in May with Delta Phi Epsilon national soror- ity. Alpha Phi won first place in the homecoming sorority dis- plays, while Alpha Chi Omega and Delta Delta Delta took Michigras honors for float and booth. Alpha Omicron Pi was the highest-ranking sorority in Michigamua ichard E. Balzhiser, '54E H. Thomas Benner, '55E John E. Codwell, '54Ed John A. Corbett, '54BAd Phillip L. Flarsheim, '54 Robert Fly, '54 James J. Haas, '54 Donald-P. Hill, '54BAd Willard J. Ikola, '54Ed Roger C. Kidston; '56L Eugene P. Knutson, '54Ed Peter Lardner, '56L Harry H. Lunn, '54 Clifford A. Mitts, '54 Norbert Nalan, '54Ed Robert D. Neary, '54BAd Howard N. Nemerovski, '54E Richard E. O'Shaughnessy, '55E Raymond Pavechevich, '54Ed F. Michael Scherer, '54 Robert M. Schrayer, '54 Thad C. Stanford, '54 Jay H. Strickler, '54 Thomas C. Treeger, '54 Eric W. Vetter, '54 By JACK HORWITZ In University sports history, the year will be remembered for many thrills and excitement and a few saddening disappointments. Biggest event on the sports scene during the year is the foot- ball season. Michigan's gridders finished an unimpressive fifth in the Western Conference, yet the record of six wins and three losses for the season brought some hope for next fall. THE WOLVERINES won every home game and lost all of their contests on the road. A setback by Outstanding L 7 7 !" Minnesota, a 21-3 thrashing at the hands of the Orange and Blue in Champaign, Illinois, and an "al- most" win from the Spartans at Michigan State, (who squeezed out a 14-6 victory of the battling Wol- verines), were the downfalls of the gridiron team. Although the Rose Bowl trip was out of reach, the Maize and Blue gained a morale building lift from a 24-O victory over Ohio State in the annual rivalry. Hockey seemed to draw a great amount of attention from the stu- dent body during the winter sports schedule. The Michigan pucksters fought hard to gain the coveted trip to Colorado Springs and the N.C.A.A. tournament. successive year. The Wolverines gained a ninth place tie with Purdue with a record of three wins and eleven losses. Michigan wrestlers faltered in their bid for a repeat Big Ten championship. After losing only one match in dual meet competi- tion, the grapplers captured a sec- ond spot in the conference cham- pionships. AFTER TAKING the Big Ten' title in the 130-pound class, Nor- vard "Snip" Nalon went on to gain a repeat victory in the NCAA championships. Coach Cliff Keen lost one of his mainstays of the wrestling team when Dick O'Shaughnessy, 1953 heavyweight champion in the Big Ten, was hurt and could not finish the season. Track competition provided a startling upset in final results. Michigan, rated one of the top three teams in the country pre- vious to the Western Conference indoor championships, fell to a poor third, finishing behind Illi- nois and Indiana. Michigras concession booth com- petition. Presidents of their sororities this year have been: ADELPHI Elinor Dunn, '54 ALPHA CHI OMEGA Rodney McDonnell, '54 ALPHA DELTA PI Beatrice Johnson, '54 ALPHA EPSILON PHI Jacqueline Schiff, '54 ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Barbara Steinko, '54 ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Joyce Collins, '54 ALPHA OMICRON PI Phyllis Peterson, '54 ALPHA PHI Katherine Wakeman, '54 ALPHA XI DELTA Laura Hoffman, '54 CHI OMEGA Joan Merrill, '55 COLLEGIATE SOROSIS Karin Lexen, '54 DELTA DELTA DELTA Judith Johnson, '54 DELTA GAMMA Louise Olmstead, '54' DELTA SIGMA THETA Lavern Crump, Grad. GAMMA PHI BETA Joyce Roper, '54 KAPPA ALPHA THETA Jean Davenport, '54 KAPPA DELTA Betty Ann Gruschow, '54 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Sue Nassett, '54 PI BETA PHI Ruth Blight, '54 SIGMA DELTA TAU Joy Whitman, '54 Drui ds Richard Beison, '54 Harry Blum, '54BAd Kenneth B. Cutler, '54BAd Reudi P. Gingrass, '54 Robert J. Golten, '54 Paul W. Greenburg, '54 Robert S. Hurley, '54Ed Gordon L. Hyde, '57M William S. Kaufman, '54 Ivan N. Kaye, '54 James E. Labes, '54 George F. Lynch, '54Ed Robert E. McGrath, '54Mu Roy Pella, '54BAd Kenneth C. Rice, '54A&D Bronson C. Rumsey, '54BAd Leonard B. Sanford, '54 Michael F. Wolff, '54 Richard N. Yirkosky, '54 Women's Residence Halls With the University's female population on the upsurge, the first pressing need is to find a place for each entering woman to stay. This year saw two innovations in women's housing: the conver- Junior iFC Organized to acquaint new fra- ternity pledges with Inter-Frater- ty Councilhaffairs, the Junior Ir began the year with a Fresh ArCamp rejuvenation program, in cooperation with Junior Pan- Under outgoing Junior IFC pre- Ssident Bob Knutson, '56, 2,000 hours of work and 9,000 square feet of paint were applied during the November project, designed to prepare the camp for underprivi- leged children. Concentrating again on com- munity service, in the spring the Junior IFC plans to carry out sim- ilar work on the VFW Camp for children near Ann Arbor. The group's new president is Mitchell Zucker, '55.o Sc rollI Affiliated senior women's honor- ary: Diane D. AuWerter Barbara Bos Karen Fagerburg Lee Fiber Harlean Hankin Mary Hodges Laura Hoffman Beatrice Johnson Judith Johnson Joan Kleinpell Gretchen Meier Sue Nassett Janet Netzer Phyllis Peterson Virginia Pike Eue Riggs Ann Schmitz Sue Shafter Jackie Shields Barbara Steinko Jane Thompson Sue Trometer Katie Wakeman Sarah Weed Junior Panhel When rushing conclnded the 420 sion of West Quadrangle's Chicago House to women students for the first time, and the opening of two new League Houses, Geddes and Oxford. Residents of Prescott House distinguished themselves at the League's Installation Night by capturing many of next year's positions on Assembly. Martha Cook women won last spring's Lantern Night sing and other residences participated actively in individual and collective af- fairs. Guiding their houses this year were the following presidents: ADELIAdCHEEVER HOUSE Mary Wedge, '54 ALICE LLOYD HALL Charlotte Pritchard, '54 ANGELL HOUSE Giloria Duwe, '55 HINSDALE HOUSE Marilyn Gordon, '54 KLEINSTUECK HOUSE Marilyn Stelt, '54 PALMER HOUSE Beatrice Hill, '54 BETSY BARBOUR HOUSE Susan Dunbar, '54 CHICAGO HOUSE Terry Burke, '56 COUZENS HALL Carol Alford, '54 GEDDES HOUSE Joan Apolyar, '54 HENDERSON HOUSE Priscilla Wass, '54 JORDAN HALL Winifred Sarr, '55 MARTHA COOK RESIDENCE Vonda Genda, '54 MOSHER HALL Muriel Claflin, '55 NEWBERRY HOUSE Donna Westerlund, '54 PRESCOTT HOUSE Mary Jo Park, '54 STOCKWELL HALL Loraine Moote, '54 TYLER HOUSE Eunice Coleman, '55 VICTOR VAUGHAN Janet Kahlenberg, '54 Senior Society Independent senior women's honorary: Sue Alderman Mimi Blau AeGMaize and Blue hockey team was down in the standings of the West- ern Hockey League at mid-season. Yost w ards They needed every victory they could garner to get back into the race for the N.C.A.A. playoff berth. A 0-0 draw with Michigan State Honored forhigh scholarship on February 19 dimmed the hopes and good citizenship are the 14 of the team, but, a 3-2 triumph the recipients of Fielding H. Yost floigngtkp hi lyf Honors Awards, given annually to i g night kept their playoff junior and senior athletes. Winning of the award for the THE FINAL CLINCHER came second time are Richard E. Balz- with a 6-3 victory over the Mi- hiser, '54E, football; George S. nesota Gophers, who then led the Dutter, '54BAd, football; Roger E. league, and the Wolverines were Maugh, '54E, track; Milton E. off to the seventh straight trip to Mead, '54, basketball and Thad C. Colorado Springs. Stanford, '54, football and golf. Other recipients include Rich- In the N.C.A.A. playoffs, Rens- ard A. Beison, '54, football; Rich- selaer Polytechnic Institute end- ard J. Bergman, '54E, gymnastics; ed the three year reign of the Roy H. Christiansen, '54, track; Wolverine sextet over the na- John D. Cline, '55, football and tional crown. RPI went on to baseball and Douglas B. Dunn, '54, take the crown after beating hockey. I Michigan in the opening tilt. Robert S. Hurley, '54Ed, foot- ball; Alexander W. Mann, ,'55, Swimming and basketball shared tennis; Fritz R. Nilsson, '54Ed., the spotlight with hockey during track and James H. Walters, '55E, the winter months. The 20 year swimming. reign of Matt Mann II as Wolver- Dating back to 1940, the awards ine swimming coach came to an were instituted when the com- end as he launched one of the mittee in charge of the testimon- fastest swimming teams in Mich- ial dinner commemorating Yost's igan history. fortieth year of service to, the Michigan's bid for the Western University submitted a plan for Conference championship was the honor awards to the Regents. stopped cold by a powerful Ohio The annual prizes are given to State crew at the Big Ten Cham- recognize the coach's many years pionships. The Maize and Blue of service to the University and finished second, over 25 points to encourage citizenship and behind. scholarship= among undergraduate * * * students. WITH JACK Wardrop and Chosen by a committee of five, "Bumpy" Jones leading the team, winners must have completed not Michigan wound up second again less than five semesters of col- behind the Buckeyes in the NCAA lege with better than a 2.5 aver- championships. age, be outstanding for their moral Among the biggest disappoint- character and good fellowship and ments of the sports year was be regularly competing in some the ninth place finish of the phase of the varsity sports pro- bhetballhsqadefithsonh gram. Students must also "show basketball squad for the second real capacity and promise of lead- ership and success and intellectual Profess i ona I capacity and achievement." Recommendations are made by the various coaches, with the com- MEDICAL mittee then making the final se- Alpha Kappa Kappa lection. Judges for the awards David P. Jahsman, '55M were acting Dean of Students, Nu Sigma Nu Walter E. Rea, Prof. Herbert O. Philip C. Anderson, '55M "Fritz" Crisler, Registrar Ira M. Phi Chi Smith and Prof. Arthur E. R. Lyle Allis, '54M Boak of the history department. Phi Rho Sigma Award winners were also hon- Thomas Franklin Kerns, 454M ored with a banquet in April. Phi Delta Epsilon George L. Blum, '55M W vern* * * Y rnDENTAL Junior women's honorary: Alpha Omega Lorraine Baldwin Samuel Nagel, '54D . . ,, Sue Beebe Delta Sigma Delta, Mimi Buck James A. Marty, '54D Jill Coleman Psi Omega Becky Conrad William C. Later, '54D Trnthu Fink * * * Michigan's strength was shown on the mile run, which John Ross took easily, the shot put, where Olympic star Fritz Nilsson cap- tured the title, and the 1000-yard run in which Pete Gray and Roy Christiansen finished second and fourth. 4* * * WOLVERINE CINDERMEN are expected to improve their rating in the outdoor meet and should finish a close second to Illinois. The performances of Nilsson and Roy Pella in the Penn and Drake Relays, respectively, and the fine showing of Gray, Ross and Milt Mead in practice meets will tend to give the Wolverines a more im- pressive finish. Facing a tough dual meet schedule, the golfing squad, with its team of three youngsters and three veterans, should finish about third in the Western Con- ference. Michigan's tennis hopes received a lift when the Wolverines met Indiana in the initial match of the season. Although rain washed out the meet after only four matches, Michigan had won two and was winning two others when the downpour came. Indiana rates as the top team in the conference and the Maize and Blue showing against the Hoosiers moves them up high in conference ratings. Sphinx John C. Baity, '55 Anthony P. Branoff, '55 Daniel R. Cline, '55 John D. Cline, '55 Peter A. Dow, '55BAd Donald J. Eaddy, '55Ed Nornan S. Giddan, '55 Ronald F. Gora, '55Ed Paul Groffsky, '55 Eugene L. Hartwig, '55 Stephen J. Jelin, '55 Harold C. Johnson, '55 Burwell C. Jones, '55 Andrew Kaul, '55BAd Paul M. Lepley, '55Ed Harry A. Luchs, '55 Alexander W. Mann,'55 Jay Martin, '55 Richard L. Pinkerton, '55 T. Gregory Schmidt, '55 Grant M. Scruggs, '55 Ned B. Simon, '55 Jonathan H. Sobeloff, '55 Arthur D. Walker, '55 Robert N. Wells, '55 Marvin J. Wisnieski, '55 Vulcans Robert F. Allen, '54E Victor L. Brooks, '54E Gary Dudley, '54E Jack Ehlers, '54E Robert F. Guise, '54E Bruce Haynam, '54E Harold A. Holt, '54E Tawfig N. Khoury, '54E Edward S. Kress, '54E Robert B. MacGregor, '54E Richard S. Manchee, '54E Roger E. Maugh, '54E John S. Munn, '54E Stephen M. Qua, '54E Robert D. Richardson, '54E Reed E. Romine, '54E Richard J. Strozewski, '54E Robert Timm, '54E Frederick M. Waltz, '54E Ronald E. West, '54E Robert Woshitz, '54E Joseph G. Yope, '54E Triangles Joseph J. Atkins, '55E H. Thomas Benner, '55E Robert Constant, '55E David G. Davies, '55E Albert E. Fey, '55E Herbert R. Geyer, '55E Frederick L. Glover, '55E Kingsley P. Joneson, '55E Guy T. Moulthrop, '55E Richard Nyberg, '55E Santo E. Ponticello, '55E Charles A. Stickels, '55E James H. Walters, '55E Thomas Wilcox, '55E Pershing Rifles Pershing Rifles. an honorary ALPHA EPSILON PI Irving Weiner '55 ALPHA PHI ALPHA William Smith, '54 ALPHA SIGMA PHI Al Magnus, '54, BAd, fall Howard Gaberson, '55E, spring ALPHA TAU OMEGA Bruce Martz, '54BAd, fall Jack Karpohl, '55, spring BETA THETA PI Neil Vanselow, '54, fall William Capitan, '54, spring , CHI PHI George Stoner, 155, fall Lee Krumholz, '54Ed, spring CHI PSI Theodore Laitner, '54E, fall Robert Ely, '54E, spring DELTA CHI William Courtwright, '54, fall Robert Stekanas, '55SM, spring DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Gordon Epding, '55, fall Peter Dow, '55BAd, spring DELTA SIGMA PHI Hugh Kabat, '54Ph DELTA TAU DELTA Kenneth Cutler, '54BAd, fall Jack Schaupp, '55BAd, spring DELTA UPSILON Ross Finney, '54, fall George Hellwarth, '55E, spring KAPPA ALPHA PSI Amos Taylor, Spec. KAPPA SIGMA Richard Roth, '54, fall Kirk Duffield, '54, spring LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Richard Sonntag, '55E, fall Richard Good, '56A&D, spring OMEGA PSI PHI Thomas Porter, fall Arthur Bragg, G, spring PHI DELTA THETA John Buck, '55, fall Howard Gordy, '54, spring PHI GAMMA DELTA Thomas Tinker, 54 PHI KAPPA PSI Richard Briggs, '54, fall David Carson, '55BAd, spring PHI KAPPA SIGMA Bruce Boeker, '54E, fall Dean Ludwig, '55Ed, spring PHI KAPPA TAU Frank Starbuck, '5E PHI SIGMA DELTA Simeon Brimberg, '55, fall Jerry Kilik, '55SM, spring PHI SIGMA KAPPA Lynn White, '55E, fall Edward Wilik. spring PI LAMBDA PHI Stuart Mittenthal, '54BAd, fall Benjamin Uchitelle, '55, spring PSI UPSILON Ralph Dawn, fall Ronald Horne, '54BAd, spring SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON John Taylor, '54 SIGMA ALPHA MU Stanley Blumstein, '54BAd, fall Mark Jacobson, '55, spring SIGMA CHI Norman Canty, '54BAd, fall John Fildew, '55, spring SIGMA NUl Charles Gilbert, '54BAd, fall Frank Lexa, '55BAd, spring SIGMA PHI Jack Boyce, '54 SIGMA PHI EPSILON Byron West, Spec. A&D TAU DELTA PHI Stanley Berstein, '55BAd fall Max Caplan, '54BAd, spring TAU KAPPA EPSILON Robert Kashmerick, '54E, fall Noel Bisel, '54BAd, spring THETA CHI Roger Willoughby, '54BAd THETA DELTA CHI Kenneth Rice, '58A&D THETA XI David Arnold, '55BAd, fall James Stewart, '54BAd, sp g , TRIANGLE Robert Johnson, '54E, fall Thomas Townsend, '54, spring TRIGON James LaLonde, '54BAd ZETA BETA TAU Harold Abrams, '54, fall Stanley Leiken, '55, spring ZETA PSI Richard Storrer, '54, fall Donald Courtwright, '54, spring Mortar Board *Eleanor Sue Beebe *Shirley Ruth Baylis Sara Miriam Alderman Phyllis Claire Bettmann *Miriam Etta Blau Miriam Elizabeth Buck *Anne iirk Campbell *Elizabeth C. Cohen Rebecca Lee Conrad Dorothy Lois Fink Barbara Heider Martha Hill Donna Jane Hoffman *Mary Catherine Hutchins *Joan Ruth Hyman *Lois Irene Klein *Lucy Frasier Landers *Sally Ann Lorber Margaret Jean Lord AudreyAnn McIntyre Betty Florence Lillian Magyar Barbara Grace Mattison Joan Elizabeth Merrill Dorothy Helen Myers Margaret Ann Plumton *Susan Ruth Popkin Christine Elisabeth Reifel Janet Reinstein Bette Jean Robinson Jacqueline B. Schiff Madge Lucille Stansberry * Marian Tean Swmansn Ca 1* Carniva I One of Best In 'U' History Even before residence groups had cleared away the napkins, lumber and chicken wire they'd used for Michigras floats and booths, officials had pronounced the 1954 carnival "the most suc- cessful ever." Honors went to Sigma Phi Ep- silon-Alpha Chi Omega for the best float, with prizes awarded to Theta Delta Chi-Martha Cook, Phi Gamma Delta-Kleinstueck, Chi Psi-Chi Omega, Phi Kappa Tau-Alpha Omicron Pi and Lamb- da Chi Alpha-Victor Vaughan. BOOTH CONTEST prizes were given to Alpha Tau Omega-Delta Delta Delta and to Gomberg-New- berry. Tau Delta Phi had the prize- winning skill booth, while Michi- gan Dames, a student wives' or- ganization, was judged to have the best concessions entry. Heading Michigras plans as general co-chairmen were Hal Abrams, '54, and Gretchen Mei- er, '54. Committee heads were: Pat Goddard, '56A&D and Ruth Flanders, '56, Decorations; Joyce Lane, '56 and George Kling, '55, Tickets. Sally Fernamberg, '55Ed. and Jerry Prescott, '56, Prizes; Barbara Burstein, '55SM and Bob Gillow, '56, Booths; Roz Shlimovitz, '55, Daily Publicity; Bob Knutson, '56, Concessions; Jane Thompson, '54 and Guy Moulthrop, '56E, Parade. Beverly Falk, '56 and Charles Skala, '55BAd., Secretary-Finance; Sally Huber, '55A&D, Posters; Todd Lief, '56 and Peg Schaible, '54 BAd., Publicity; Dianne Young, '56 and Dave Arnold, '55BAd., Re- freshments, and Betsey Sherrer, '55 with Barney Helzberg, '56, Pro- Fraternities Delta Sigma Pi John E. Carpenter, Grad. * * * EDUCATION Iota Lambda Sigma, Industrial Duane Chamberlain Phi Delta Kappa, Education Philip Lucasse, Grad. Phi Epsilon Kappa, Physical Education Robert Hurley, '54Ed. . . '* , * ** ' '' Sigma Delta Chi, Journalism Oliver Hanninen, Grad. Beta Alpha Psi, Accounting Hugh Hanmerslag, Grad. Phi Mu Alpha, Music H. Jay Thompson, '54SM * * * LAW .P utiy r11 i