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INDIANA Bl TATE

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OCTOBER. 30., 1q'4-3 - 25 CENT . . . , ,

Set in a carpet of velvety Scott Turf, DEEDS CARILLON is an inspmng sight along the great Miami River at Dayton, Ohio. To visitors who remark about the thick, weedfree grass the answer is-Scotts Seed and Turf Builder grassfood .

Interference with !orward pass. (It J)('nalty on offense, when I nterfer­ ell<'e OC('Urs beyond li ne or scrlm­ maee, 15 Yards and loss oC down.)

PKlllP MORRIS' SUPERIORITY RECOGNIZED IY EMINEN1' .EDICAL AUTHORITIES!

This ft.t.,,-tasting. -cit,orette is also far more considerate of ~ nose and throat ... scientiflcally e,;dllcl far less irritating to the smoker~ ncWe and throat! So-

SCOTT and SONS COMPANY La«Ne Seed ad 7wi/ 6Cedtde'i ~I A B Y S V I L L E , OB IO ·.··_:::_: c.. --··o· ·.·.n·- .. ·-.·T··-.·e····.. ··._· .r,, rs.··.··. .::. 6136 . . ·.. ·.. .. ·...... ·.. ·...... •......

OCT 3 0 , 1 9 4 3 ... Indiana-Ohio State 103 • • October 30, 1943 DEAD James L. Renick, Editor Anne Puchir, Advertising Manager William Guthrie, Circu lation Manager 31 24 A dditional O hio Players ------8 ------3 MISSING ContentsBo McMillin ------S------======------_31 Down to See in Ais 1e eats ------Football Survives A c1"d T est ------9 36 8 H oosier Coac h.i ng S ca ff ------_ 4 PRISONER 2 ~:!:::: ~la~:: -----==------~~~ }~ ~~ Indiana P laying Numbers ------7 I•. ~;f~t::1l~:;;~;;; ~~==~~=--_-_--_-:_--~------::::::_::_:_~~=:,=.=;1 O hio's Service Board ------5-11-29-33 ~~E E:i:: ;:~~::;:::::::::::::_: -----::::::::::-- :: ------National A dvertising Representative THE DON SPENCER CO ., I N C. Madison Ave. New York City official watch for checking the electric timer is Longines, the world's most honored watch. ·. o. ·f .· ' T. ·I : 'C '. .1: ":.-· fi ..- .... L-: P·.. ·-R· o. c·::·· -R.:_i ~ :···.rrr : ·. m

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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * INDIANA and the War

ND IANA University, which in its life-time has for WAVES, SPARS, and women marine reservists. experienced four wars, is today contributing Today it operates entirely for the training of I manpower and backing up the battle lines in a WAVES for storekeeping service. The school has fifth and the greatest of the country's conflicts. a capacity of 1,200 and approximately 2,000 women Founded in 1820 and thereby the oldest major have been graduated from its storekeepers' course. state school west of the Alleghenies, the Hoosier War training at Indiana is not confined to the university has sent its sons to the Mexican, Civil, University's campuses at Bloomington and Indian­ WILLIAM McCARTY 26 Spanish-American, and First World wars. To the apolis. Through ESMWT in cooperation with the 66 LEE CUNNINGHAM 75 Guard Quarter present war it has sent more than 6,000 of its Office of Education the University Bucyrus, 0. Revere, Mass. Hilliards, O. alumni and former students, sixty-nine of whom will is conducting business management courses for war never return. industry personnel in 59 cities of the state, and In addition to the contribution of its own sons through its wide-spread extension system the Uni­ and daughters, "I. U.", as the University is famil­ versity is providing throughout the state training iarly known throughout Hoosierland, has become designed to aid employees of war plants. a vast training center, its classrooms and its cam­ The research laboratories of the University have lti II pus are crowded with soldiers, WAVES, and women been busy day and night since even before the out­ of the marine corps. And meantime it is carrying break of the war, working on contracts, most of them on its complete program for civilian students who secret, assigned by the United States government. adde4 to the military trainees give the University The story of this effort can not be told until after its larg st campus population in history. the war but the University is proud of this chapter The army is represented at Indiana by a special­ in the record of its war contributions. ized training program through which nearly 3,000 The "all-out" war program also has involved the men on active duty status are studying basic engi­ lending by the University of its president, Dr. H. B. neering, foreign area and language courses, medi­ Wells, to the State Department in Washington cine, and dentistry. Seventy-three per cent of the where he is serving as deputy director of the Office women students in its nurses' training school are of Foreign Economic Coordination, and the use by enrolled in the United States Cadet Nurse Corps. the Federal government through the War Man­ The army men comprise the 15 51 st Service Unit of power Commission of the services of its academic the A.S.T.P. vice president, Dr. H . T. Briscoe. Eight members The navy was the first of the armed services to of its athletic department staff are serving with the utilize Indiana's facilities, establishing a Naval armed forces. f Training School at the University in July, 1942. Thus today Indiana University is serving proudly First designed to train navy men for service as yeo­ in this war as it has in the previous wars of the FRANK PARENTI 65 55 WILLIAM MILLER 70 men, it was converted a year ago to a training school Republic for 123 years. Guard End Guard Dayton, 0. Canton, 0 . Wapakoneta, O.

* * ** * * * * * * ** * * * * * ***** * ** * * * * * * * * ** * * ** HENNICKS RESTAURANT AND PIPE SHOP GOOD FOOD At the Gate of the Campu s FOB OVER 31 YEARS

The "Seat of Socialology" for Students and Alumni DICK MEINKE 28 PAUL MALTINSKY 86 WILLIAM WILLIS 99 (Many more new University Activity Plaques on our Walls) Tackle Center Tackle Elyria, O. Wheeling, W. Va. Columbus, O. C4 I [ 5 ] Lynn W. St. John PAUL BROWN

Paul Brown, the man who has given Ohio State University an entirely new concept of football, was Director born in Norwalk, Ohio, in 1908. When he was in the sixth grade, his family moved to Massiflon, and he went through high school there. Despite his of slight stature, he became an outstanding athlete, winning letters in football, baseball, , and track.

Athletics After being graduated from high school at the age of 16, Paul entered Ohio State and was a mem­ Oh :o State University ber of the freshman football and baseball teams, but soon found that his 140 pounds were not enough for Western Conference competition.

Consequently, he transferred to Miami University at Oxford, where he played in football and outfield in baseball for two seasons. At Miami he gained quite a reputation as a field general and * a forward passer. After receiving his diploma at the age of 20 he entered the coaching field, accepting a position at Severn, a prep school for the United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis.

He remained there through two very successful seasons, winning 15 games and losing but one. It was only natural that when Massillon High School In 1912 Lynn W . St. John took over his duties as director of Ohio State authorities began looking for a new coach, they University's athletic program. At that time the department consisted of a picked Paul Brown. groundskeeper and a football coach. "Saint," as he is best known, immedi­ ately began to build Ohio State's athletic destiny on a firm, foundation. In The very name of Massillon is nearly synonymous 1913 he hired Dr. John W. Wilce as football coach and he gained ad.mission with football now, but the situation is a far cry for the university into the Western Conference. By 1916 the Bucks had won from that when Paul Brown took over in 1932. The their first Big Ten football title fully justifying St. John's action. athletic physical plant and equipment was run down; St. John has been the guiding genius behind the growth and development spirit was low, and the team had been a loser for of Ohio State's well known physical education department as well as its com­ the pro­ petitive sports program. During his tenure the physical facilities of both several seasons. He immediately launched departments have grown apace with the expansion of the university. gram which has made Massillon a by-word wherever record at Massillon When Ohio State's giant horseshoe stadium was completed there were football i played. His total many skeptics who claimed that it was too big, that it would never be faled. was 81 victories, six defeats and two ties. Last season 287,639 people filed into Ohio Stadium. The most recent de­ promises other than that Ohio State velopment in St. John's intelligent planning was the completion last year of Making no a 36-hole golf course ranked among the finest in the land. would have a well-drilled, fighting team, he went to work to install his system and style of play. The Today "Saint" heads a staff of more than 60 members. His influence has been felt and recognized from coast to coast in the athletic world. He has result was a very successful season. Last year he given unsparingly of his time to serve on national committees to improve the won the National and Western Conference titles. standards of competitive athletics.

[ 6 ] [ 7 ] BO MuMILLIN FOOTBALL SURVIVES ACID TEST Alvin Nugent (Bo) McMillin, who starred on the () ven two d ecades ago that upset Har­ ele OLLEGE football, kicked around since Pearl " Football and other intercollegiate sports were vard's h ighly- touted squad, 7-0, this sea­ enemies and other originally by students," Major Griffith son begins his tenth year as Harbor by " peacetime started C self-appointed pallbearers," has survived its added. " College administrations later assumed SU · of Indiana University football teams. Bo is now the dean of Western Conference " various acid tests" and the 1943 season seems pervision over the games, to exercise needed con· coaches in years of service, having been destined to be one of the most successful in the trol. The Harvard instance proves that football at the Hoosier institution longer than history of the pigskin sport. and other games belong to the students and if the any other present Big Nine coach. M c­ , the boys will organize Millin, after graduating from Centre, colleges relinquish control went to Shreveport, La., for three years This appraisal was offered today by Major their own teams, as they did back in the early days as head coach and then served at Geneva John L. Griffith, commissioner of athletics for the of intercollegiate competition. College in Beaver Falls, Pa., for another Western Conference, who added that football's . In his nine years at In­ play football. three seasons greatest victory since the United States entered the " The American boy wants to diana, McMillin has built up an enviable seen been over influences, both within and The game was his idea originally. We have record. His teams have won 20 confer­ war has scores of examples since the war started that boys ence games over the nine-year period without colleges, that would banish the game from . Crowds and which nearly approaches the " pre-Bo'; the American scene even in peacetimes. will play just for the sake of playing record of conference wins for Indiana. glamor are incidental." " Many of the old peacetime arguments against has asked no favors since football have been revived since Pearl Harbor," Pearl Harbor, the major said. On the other hand, Major Griffith recalled. " One of the fallacious the game has contributed in many admitted ways arguments of the opposition was that if a handful to American victory. Despite definite handicaps, of boys were not allowed to play in intercollegiate the game is still carrying on. The current season competition-such as football, basketball, track and will be more successful because football will prove baseball-more students would get a chance to that it is even more valuable in wartime than in participate in wid espread intramural activities. peacetime. " Since Pearl Harbor this argument has popped " Crowds on an average may be smaller in up to show that if football, which admittedly con­ 1943," Major Griffith reasoned. " Transportation ditions varsity team members, were abandoned on limitations will confine attendance for the most part a~ intercollegiate scale, more of the men students to local football enthusiasts. The days when rail­ awaiting call by the armed forces would benefit roads ran twenty-six special trains on one Saturday physically from de-emphasized intramural sports. afternoon from to Champaign are gone for y. " T h e argument is no better in wartime than it the time being. There are no special trains toda o was before the war," Major Griffith continued. Many schools are sending the teams away on tw one "Schools such as Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana, or three different trains so as not to crowd Purdue and others which are carrying out their train. intercollegiate schedules have intramural programs " Nevertheless, a survey of attendance at the just as compreh ensive - if not more so - than early 1943 college games indicates the public wants schools which have abandoned intercollegiate pro­ to see football and will find its way to games. grams." Michigan and Northwestern played to 40,000 and The maJor recalled that at Harvard Univer­ it appears that 70,000 will see Michigan and Notre e and sity, where intercollegiate football was dropped for Dame. More than 25,000 watched Ohio Stat d 1943, s tudents organized their own team and have Missouri and a like number saw Notre Dame an hurled a challenge at Yale. Georgia Tech."

Hoosier Coachin« Staff-- H~~ Coach Bo M c!""illin; Paul ( Pooch ) Har rell, backfield coach; 6 Wilham T hom, assistant coach ; a nd Johnny Kovatch, line coach. [ 9 J [ 8 J ROBERT WILLIAM DUNIV GENE CLARK 82 HECKER 20 ANT 68 Halfback Center End Olmstead FaUs, Cuyahoga Falls, 0. Columbus, O. 0. lti II

DEAN SENSENBAUGHER JACK REDD 35 DON KAY 30 33 Tackle Halfback Guard Uhrichsville, Columbus, Ohio Marion, 0. 0.

T eamwork! .. . American teamwork will bring us victory! We know and under­ stand teamwork in this country . . . we learned it on the gridiron for instance. It takes eleven men doing eleven jobs as one to make a winning team. It takes the same thing in the grim game of war we're playing in the air today. There's an all-American team on every American bomber that roars over enemy country. Bombardier, navigator and pilot ... working with split-second precision and cool courage ... working as one man to bring u a home-team victory that will endure. Yes, the "three musketeers" of the air are demon trating to our enemies the power and force that are O y in an all-American team! • - S AIR FDR c· 11 1 ARM ES

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KE E P FI T . . . N. OT F A T! • You con easily keep fit and lose fat-the HOLLY­ WOOD BREAD way! It's the easy and safe way to THE DEA N & BARRY CO reduce, without drugs, bock-breaking exercise or • strict diets. Here's oil you need to do: simply substitute 2 slices of HOLLYWOOD BREAD for fattening foods-­ at every meal. Yes, 6 slices a day! It's filling but Manufa cturers of not fattening. Baked without lord, grease or animal FRANK TORAK 83 JOSEPH KEMPF 79 ART LEHMAN 50 fats. Besides it supplies the energy in 8 garden and End Tackle End sea vegetable flou rs--none of them fattening! Slenderize the HOLLYWOOD BREAD way. Start now.

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THE COLUMBUS, OHIO WOMANS BAKING CO . MAin 5268 DON DWYER 64 ED SIDWELL 88 PAUL HERRON 78 Guard Tackle Guard [ 13 ] [ 12 ] TODAY'S 1943 • • • ALL AMERICAN • • • ROSTER No. Name Pos. ivt. Home Tow,i Higl, S chool Coach A MESSAGE TO FELLOW 0. S. U. FANS : GUARD 90 Warren Amling _ .. LG 187 Pana, Ill ------Ken Chittum Owned and O perated Our N ational Safety 50 Gordon Appleby ____ C 175 Massillon ______Paul Brown by 0 . S. U . Men 40 Matthew Brown ---- FB 162 Canton McKinley --1ohn Reed Hugh E. Nesbitt DEFENSE WORKERS ARE IN DIRE 85 Jim Campbell _____ RH 174 H uron ------Mel Clark 0 . S. U. '14-Pres. i(I TACKLE NEED OF TRANSPORTATION 82 Gene Clark ______RE 170 Columbus Central __ * the enemy 75 Lee Cunningham __ RG 180 Revere, Mass. ______T im Collins i( IF YOU HAVE AN I OLE CAR- 32 Paul Davis ______LH 171 Middletown ______Elmo Lingrell SEE US AT ONCE 55 Jack D ugger ______LE * 189 Canton McKinley ---1o hn Reed i( END 68 Bill Dunivant ______c 157 Cuyahoga Falls ____ Carl S pessard We will give you a high cash dollar for it the war 95 Jerry Feddersen ___ LE 190 Sandusky ______Wal. Glenwright or a still higher trade-in value on a new * 64 Bob H all ______LG 182 Toledo Libbey _____ Bill O rwig i( post war car. 96 Bill H ackett ______RG 177 London, O hio ______Jacob Von Kane! * CENTER 20 Bob Hecker ______RH 160 O lmsted Falls _____ ..Norm Schoen 60 Ronnie Hefflinger _RG 174 Napoleon ______Cliff Nelson on War Bonds TWO LOCATIONS 30 Jasper H arris ____ LH 162 Canton McKinley ___ H erman Rearick 80 Don Kay ______LT 186 Marion Harding ___ Vic Dorris T he boys will 84 Bud Kessler ______RE 181 Worthington ______Frank H owe Harold R. Wood, O.S.U . '31 611 E. Broad St. • 1505 E. Main St. Vice-Pres. & Gen, M gr. carry the ball. 34 Ernest Lehman ____ RT 190 Toledo Waite -----Jack Mollenkopf 38 Bill Lonjak ______C 165 Cleveland W . Tech._Charles Blickle 86 Paul Malcinsky _____ C 180 Wheeling, W. Va. ___ Everett Brinkman • 24 Jim Marker ______LT 188 Columbus Rosary ___ Pete Beck 26 Bill McCarty _____ QB 158 H illiards ______Mr. Tarnholtz 36 Bob McQ uade ____ LH 157 Columbus Aquinas __ frank Zadworney 28 Dick Meinke ______LT 187 Elyria ------Roy Clymer i'O Will'iam Miller ____ LG 174 Wapakoneta ------Paul Schafer SMITH 94 George Neff _____RG 184 Bellaire ------] ohn Neimic 44 Glen O liver ______FB 162 Cols. Univ. H . S. __ ...Bill Williams 65 Frank Parenti ____ RG 164 Dayton ------Bill Stover & 22 Ernest Parks _____ RH 190 Canton McKinley ___ Herman Rearick 21 Ernest Plank ______LE 189 Bexley ------Carlton Smith COLUMBUS , OHIO 35 Jack Redd ______LG 170 Columbus North ---Mike Hagely 33 Dean Sensenbaugher LH 175 Uhrichsville ------Chic Maurer LEE 45 Gene Slough _____ LH 155 Findlay ------Carl Bachman 120 E. BROAD 27 Emil Slovak ------FB 158 Oak Harbor ___ ---Sam Owen 66 Cecil Souders _____ RE 188 Bucyrus ------Elden Armbrust COLUMBUS, OHIO 92 Ray Stackhouse ___ RT 199 Dayton Roosevelt ___ Bobby Coburn 93 Joe Stora ______RH 152 Shadyside ------Bill Ellis ENGRAVINGS ad COLOR PLATES • 72 John Stungis _____ QB 180 Powhatan Point ____ Dan Piloseno Distributors For 74 Jack Swart:abaugh _RT 187 Toledo Scott ______Robert Retigg RAWLINCS SPOT-B l LT 76 Howard Tiefke ----~C 174 Fremont ______Les Binkley PHOTOGRAPHY-ART SPALDINC O'SH EA 98 Russell Thomas ___ RT 199 Charleston, W . Va. __ Lyle Rich • 11 Albert Williams ___ QB 184 Canton McKinley __ F, Swartzwalder 99 ______LT 199 Columbus East _____ Ralph Webster Wholesale arid Retail 25 Howard Yerges ___ QB 160 Grandview ______George Hood

(15 J ( 14 ) After the 6a,ne OHIO STATE Join old friends for PLAYING NUMBERS a few hours of re­ laxation and en­ • joyment at the No. Name PO.I 11 Williams, Albert ______QB 20 Hecker, Bob ______RH 2 1 Plank, Ernest ______LE 22 Parks, Ernest ------·------___ RH 24 Marker, James ______LT 25 Yerges, Howard ______QB 26 McCarty, William ------QB 27 Slovak, Emil ______FB 28 Meinke, Dick ______LT DINNER and DANCING in the 30 Harris, Jasper ______LH 32 Davis, Paul ------___ LH 33 Sensenbaugher, Dean ______LH ~ .~ · 34 Lehman, Ernest ______RT TRAVEL DOWN MEMORY LANE 35 Redd, Jack ______LG To The Music of 36 McQuade, Bob ______.:______LH BILLY BISHOP 38 Lonjak, William ______C Featuring 40 Brown, Matthew ______FB ALICE MANN, Soloist 44 Oliver, Glenn ______FB 45 Slough, Gene ______LH 50 Appleby, Gordon ______c 55 Dugger, Jack -~------LE Gus Lazaro ond his ensemble playing eoch evening with dancing Saturday evening. 60 Hefflinger, Ronnie ______RG 64 Hall, Bob ______LG THE SPANISH ROOM 65 Parenti, Frank ______RG and COCKTAIL LOUNGE 66 Souders, Cecil ______RE For a delightful luncheon or dinner 68 Dunivant, William ______C ln a quiet and restful atmosphere 70 Miller, William ______LG 72 Stungis, John ------QB 74 Swartzbaugh, Jack ______RT 75 Cunningham, Lee ______RG 76 Tiefke, Howard ------~------C 80 Kay, Don ______LT 82 Clark, Gene ______RE 84 Kessler, Bud ______RE 86 Maltinsky, Paul ______C 90 Amling, Warren ______LG 92 Stackhouse, Ray ______RT 93 Stora, Joe ______RH 94 Neff, George ______RG 95 Fedderson, Jerry ______LE 96 Hackett, William ______RG 98 Thomas, Russell ______RT 99 Willis, William ______LT

[ 16 1 INDIANA FB Allerdice 37 LHB RHB Hoernschemeyer 42 Mangold 11 QB Cannady 38 LE LT LG c RG RT RE Hoppe Herron Coffee Tavener Ravensberg McCune Pihos 87 :-8 60 57 61 76 82 ENDS 79 Kempl 64 Dwyer BACKS 43 Alford 80 Faller -65 Wade 50 Lehman 88 Sidwell 67 Deal 10 McDonnell 70 Al~xandcr 73 Stocker 11 Mangold 81 Crouch 15 Davi 83 Torak GUARDS 19 Leroy 87 Hoppe CENTERS 22 Kipple 89 Rubinelli 12 Kennelly 24 Orfanos 16 Battreall 40 Wills 26 Sanders TACKLES 35 Carney 41 Simchick 33 Schienbein 60 Coffee 54 Brinton 37 Allerdice 76 McCune 61 Ravensburg 57 Tavener 38 Cannady 77 Sowinski 62 Ciolli 58 Sfura 42 Hoerns'mayer 78 Herron 75 Smith 68 Martin Field Judge-R. H. Rupp, Lebanon Valley Linesman-Paul Goebel, Michigan On Every Reid • es er 1e OHIO STATE FB Davis 32 LHB RHB Sensenbaugher 33 Parks 22 QB Williams 11 LE LT LG c RG RT RE ON THE FIELDS OF FRIENDLY S TRIFE Dugger Willis Miller Appel by Hackett Thomas Souders 55 99 70 50 96 98 66 ARE SOWN THE SEEDS ENDS 92 Stackhouse 65 Parenti 32 Davis 82 Clark 74 Swartzbaugh 96 Hackett 20 Hecker 55 Dugger 98 Thomas 26 McCarty WHICH ON OTHER FIELDS 95 Fedderson 99 Willis CENTERS 36 McQuade 87 Komer 84 Kessler 50 Appleby 44 Oliver 35 Redd 27 Pearson 22 Parks 68 IN OTHER YEARS 66 Souders Dunivant 33 Sensenbaugher GUARDS 38 Lonjak 45 Slough WILL BEAR THE FRUITS OF VICTORY TACKLES 75 Cunningham 86 Maltinsky 93 Stora 80 Kay 64 Hall 76 Tiefke 72 Stungis 34 Lehman 60 Hefflinger 11 Williams 24 Marker 70 Miller BACKS 25 Yerges 28 Meinke 94 Neff 40 Brown Referee--Fred Gardner, Cornell **** Umpire-R. W. Finsterwald, Ohio U. Copyrighr 1943. LIGG(TT & MYtRS TODACCO Co. A F T E R T H E ''GUN'' IN DIANA \~ -cJ ' \ .) /~ I PLAYING NUMBERS GET TOGETHER -AT THE • Alew VICTORY ROOM 5 No. Name Pos. 1 O John McDonnell ------______B 11 Don Mangold ______B ASPHALT 15 Paul Dav~ ______B PAVES 16 Gene Battreall ______G THE WAY ... 19 Paul Leroy ______B • 22 William Kipple ______B FOLLOW THE CROWD TO THE 24 George Orfanos - ______B SMARTEST AND LIVELIEST SPOT Here and throughout the world, those 26 Chester Sanders ______B 28 Robert Taylor --- ______E IN TOWN. DANCE MUSIC BY TOP whose job it is to push the attack and speed 33 Edward Schienbein ______B FLIGHT ORCHESTRAS . . the day of Victory are finding a world of 35 Harold Carney ______G 3 7 James Allerdice ______B uses for Aspha lt, the paving material that IN DIANA-OHIO 38 John Cannady ______B 40 Jack Wills ______C is always dependable. On ai r fields and 41 J ulius Simchick ______C vital highways, Asphalt makes for speedier, 42 ______B 43 Neal Alford ______E more economical and last ing surfaces. 50 Art Lehman ______E When the last enemy has been blasted to 54 James Brinton -~------C 57 John Tavener (C) ______C DELICIOUS FOOD & DRINKS AT POPULAR PRICES perdition, Asphalt, the paving material of 58 Tom Sfura ______C For more than chree-quar­ 60 J. C. Coffee ______G today, will have a permanent place fo r it­ ~~m ·/ ters of a century, Longines 61 Robert Ravensburg ______G 62 Frank Ciolli ______G self in the bright new tomorrow. ~~Jl!llllll~ . Watches have been made to 64 Donald Dwyer ______G a high standard of timekeeping excel­ 65 John Wade ______G lence. A Longines Chronometer, fifty NEVER A COVER CHARGE PLANTS : 68 Jack Martin ______B CANTON years ago, was the first factory made 70 Ramon Alexander ______E COLUMBUS timepiece to win an observatory ac­ 73- Daniel Stocker ______G NEIL ROUSE FINDLAY curacy award. Thousands 75 J ohn Smith ______C • of cercifi-:­ Virgil C. Murphy, Mgr. GARFIELD * * cates for accuracy have since been 76 J esse McCune ------~ "Just across from the Capitor' * KENTON awarded to Longines timepieces by. 77 Joe Sowinski ______T LODI observatories here and abroad. Re­ 78 Paul H erron ------T M ARION 79 Joseph Kempf ______T SA NDUSKY cently in competition at a great gov­ 80 Neal Faller ______T BALTl MORE, MD. ernment observatory, a series of 81 Jack Crouch ______E THEO. DeWITT, Presi dent SAVANNAH, GA. Longines strap watches won first place 82 ______E HOTEL HOLLENDEN Cleveland 83 for precision. LONGINES-WITTNAUER Frank Torak ______E NEIL HOUSE Columbus 87 Frank Hoppe ______E WATCH co., rnc., New York, Mont­ HOTEL LANCASTER . Lancaster, 0 . 88 Ed Sidwell ______T real, Geneva. BARON STEUBEN . Corning, N. Y. 89 P eter Rubinelli ______E £011gi11es- Witt11auer Watches [ 21 ] ICE 1943 • • • Indiana • • • Roster

No. N ame Positio11 Class W rigltl H riglt t J1 0111 e Tow11 10 John McDonnell ______COAL Back Freshman 170 5-10 Chicago, Ill. 11 Don Mangold ______Back Freshman 160 5.9 Cheviot, 0. AND 12 George Kennelly ______Guard Senior 170 5-10 Indianapolis 15 Paul Davis ------___ Back Sophomore 168 5-10 Lowell 16 Gene Barcreall ______Guard Freshman 163 5-10 Indianapolis Stoker COAL 19 Paul Leroy ------~p& Back Freshman 155 5-8 Bicknell ''1-la>tlAJ ' 22 William Kipple ______Back Freshman 167 5-11 Terre Haute 24 George Orfanos ______Back Now Protects Old Gold Freshness Freshman 170 5-10 East Chicago 26 Chester Sanders ------Back Freshman 185 5-10 Brazil 28 Robert Taylor ______End Freshman 166 5-11 Griffin, Ill. * The rHwtta ef lmpertlal 33 Edward Schienbein ______Back l•lfl •I JH.lb li 1h•.f lty Junior 153 5.9 Indianapolis lMd•t'• Di9e1t In July of Iott Y" '' when fl ... "'" 35 Harold Carney ______Guard Freshman 195 In ,.rcentatH, , how that Old G•ld w•1: 5.9 Wabash 14% LOWER in nicolin• 3 7 James Allerdice _____:______Back Freshman 170 5.9 Indianapolis MURRAY CITY 10% LOWER in throot­ irritating tars and resins 38 John Cannady ------Back Freshman 190 5-11 Owensboro, Ky. than th• • verag• of lh• 6 othff b,ondt tHtecf 40 Jack Wills ______Center Freshman 170 5-10 Griffith COAL & ICE CO. 41 Julius Simchick ------Center Freshman 168 6-0 Campbell, 0 . 1334 42 EDGEHILL ROAD Robert Hoernschemeyer ______Back Freshman 177 5-11 , 0. UN. 1151 43 Neal Alford ------End Freshman 152 5.9 Owensboro, Ky. UN. 1152 50 Arc Lehman C•GIR ______End Freshman 187 6-1 Cedar Lake f ftE S 54 James Brinton ______Center Freshman 170 5-11 Louisville, Ky. 57* John. Tavener (Cape.) ______Center Senior 195 6-0 Granville, 0 . 5 8 Tom Sfura ______Center Freshman 166 5-10 East Chicago 60 J . C . Coffee ______Guard Junior 195 5-9 Evansville 61 Robert Ravensburg ______Guard Freshman 168 5-10 beUevue, l(y. 62 Frank Ciolli ______Guard Freshman 170 5.9 1..;ampbell, U. T H E UNIT ED PRO VI SI O N C O. 64 Donald Dwyer ______Guard Freshman 170 5-10 Chicago, HI. 65 John Wade ______Purveyor to (.;,uard .t'resnman U:S) b-0 Lmcon 67 ,, .t

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[ 22 J [ 23 J Additional Ohio Players THE SHAW -DAVIS· CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS

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L WILLIAM LONJAK 38 THE TELLING-BELLE VERNON Co. Halfback CLEVELAND, O. 245 E. Town ADams 2171 BOB HOERNSCHEMEYER 42 JAMES BRINTON 54 CAPT. JOHN TAVENE!t 57 Back Center Center r 24 1 [ 25 ] As Time Passes- Completed 1922 OHIO STADIUM Stands as Positive Evidence of the Enduring Strength Possible to Attain in Concrete by Using

MARBLE CLIFF LIMESTONE SAND AY after day, football 's unsung MARBLE CLIFF CRUSHED LIMESTONE D heroes, the scrubs, go out and take their beating from the varsity. THE MARBLE Theirs is a rough grind, with plenty of CLIFF QUARRIES CO. work and hard knocks, and none of COLUMBUS , OHIO the fun and glory of the varsity player. But their grind is not as tough as that of the woman who needlessly scrubs her youth away over the weekly wash­ ON board. Promote your wife ta the varsity! UNCLE SAM'S Take her off the scrubs! Let US do the scrubbing! It's our TEAM business to do it quickly, safely and economically. tlu "'"" d "n. t<> 'f "ut Jtlen.dJ I • YOU'LL win friends when you recommend either o( M i lls' Restaurants in Columbus. Quality foods, FRANKLIN· AMERICA~ -- ICE CREAM really interested service, substantial values • insure IS IN PERFORM THE COMMISSARY THE IVORY SOAP LAUNDRY THE 7 BASIC SERVICE FOOD GROUPS IN THE OF THE NATION I and ZORIC DRY CLEANING CO. NATIONAL NUlAITION TAKE a million persons, multiply them by AD. 6251 three meals a day and you have the picture PROGRAM T A BL E ~·,~d~~ ffi":t DA Y AND of the service being carried on for the home SE RVICE c-lll l@_fJU ti NI G HT front by the restaurants of Ohio. Add ration· • ing of food and shortage of labor · and £J 19 NOR TH HIG H STR EET you'll admit they are doing a swell job ! ~ Sewtee ... s~ 10% ~ , ALS O I N CLEVELAN D A ND CI N CI NN ATI ...... QUICK SELF - SERVICE THE OHIO STATE • MOORfS1ROSS RESTAURANT 577 N. FOURTH ST. COLUMBUS, 0 . 77 SOUTH HIGH STREET RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION COLUMBUS ICE CREAM [ 26 ] [ 27 ] R. WILKE

RUSSELL THOMAS 98 JERRY FEDDERSEN 95 RON HEFFLINGER 60 Tackle End Guard Q Charleston, W. Va. Sandusky, 0. Napoleon, O. u lti II A M SAFETY COURTESY SERVICE L E GREEN CABS I ADams 4141 A JOHN STUNGIS 72 BUD KESSLER 84 MARKER 24 JAMES Quarter End Tackle • T Powhatan Point, 0 . Worthington, 0 . Columbus, 0. HILL CABS T MAin 1313 Y . • s RADIO CABS ADams 2222 • COLUMBUS, NORTHWAY CABS 1191 OHIO UNiversity GLEN OLIVER 44 ERNEST PARKS 22 WILLIAM HACKETT 96 [ 28 ] Fullback Halfback Guard ,.... ______Columbus, O. Canton, O. London, 0. [ 29 ] DOWN TO SEE IN AISLE SEATS By Harrold C. Eckert, '25 Theatre Editor, The Ohio State Journal

HIS is the weekend we engage our friends by Arthur Schwartz, Ira Gershwin and E. Y. "Yip' from Indiana during the afternoon, and pi:e­ Harburg. T view the Hallowe'en spooks and spirits in the And across W. Broad St., at LOEW'S BROAD, evening. What to do and where to go may be set­ the mazdas are spelling out " The Oklahoma Kid," tled by reading the next few lines. alias James Cagney, or they're blinking a reminder The LOEW'S OHIO theater screen 1s holding Betty Grable is sticking around a second week in Columbia's spectacular sea action and as "Sweet Rosie O 'Grady." yarn, " Descoyer,' starring Ed­ Plans were indefinite at note-gath­ J. C. COFFEE 60 BOB RA VENSBURG 61 JACK CROUCH 81 ward G . Robinson as Chief Boat­ ering time . . . "The Oklahoma Guard End Guard swain's Mate Steve "Boley" Bole­ Kid" is a reissue of an eminently slavski, who infuses the "soul" of successful saga of lawlessness, his former ship, the John Paul made by Director Lloyd Bacon at Jones, into a n ew craft which he Warner's. Cagney's Jim Kincaid helps to build as a ship's welder. (the titular lead) is costarred with Marguerite Chapman and Glenn Humphrey Bogart's Whip Mc­ Ford are the feature's sweet­ Cord. The melodrama's time is hearts. Their romance is impeded 1893, and Oklahoma's fertile soil by Miss Chapman's father, played is open to land-starved pioneers. by Robinson, who doesn't want a Cagney is cast as a lovable out­ sailor to marry his daughter. Cli­ law in the Robin Hood tradition mactic action sequence is the de­ who gives up his devil-may-care stroyer's fight against Japanese existence when his father is killed submarines and dive bombers. by gunmen. Rosemary Lane, Don­ Edgar Buchanan, Regis Toomey, ald Crisp, Hugh Sothern, John bald Ed. Brophy and Leo Gore Miljan and Harvey Stephens are also are in the cast picked by Di­ Harrold C. Eckert, '25 among the supporters . . . Those rector William A . Seiter . . . Co- radio rustics, Lum 'n' Abner, are feature at Loew's Ohio is "The Good Fellows," in "So This 1s Washington," the sub-billed feature with Cecil Kellaway and Helen Walker. at the Broad. "Princess O'Rourke," a fresh and charming pic­ Jean Arthur and John Way~e in "A Lady ture, is running at the RKO PALACE. Directed Takes a Chance," released by RKO-Radio, has JESSE McCUNE 76 FRANK HOPPE 87 JULIUS SIMCHICK 41 been removed to the RKO GRAND for extended Center a~d written by Norman Krasna, the film is an Tackle End playing-time. A horse-collar guy (Wayne's escapist comedy with overtones of timely realism. Duke Hudkins) lands in the lap of a white collar Brown-eyed Olivia de Haviland is in the role of girl (Miss Arthur's Mollie Truesdale)-and the Princess Maria, exiled in New York. Young Rob­ hilarious hi-jinks begin in this bright comedy. Miss ert Cummings is her costar. The film from Warner Arthur is trying desperately to enjoy her vacation, via Rainbow Bus Tours, all expenses paid. She is Brothers is a modern Cinderella fable in reverse, supposed to see America, but after their crash in­ with an airlines pilot (Cummings) falling in love troduction the only scenic wonder for which her with Maria (Miss d e Haviland) , a princess whose Mollie has eyes is Wayne's rodeo hand. They mythical country has been occupied but who poses both have ideas about romance-but Mollie's tie as a penniless refugee seeking a job as an "upstairs into a matrimonial knot. And Duke's a western­ maid." Besides Charles Coburn, the supporting wolf who is rope shy. Laughable, and lovable cast of this frothy comedy of errors includes Jane complications develop as Miss Arthur tries to lasso Wyman and Jack Carson, as the married couple set­ ,qayne. A Large assisting troupe has Phil Silvers, ting the example for our impetuous costars; Harry Charles Winninger, Grady Sutton, John Philliber, Davenport, Gladys Cooper, Minor Watson and Grant Withers, Mary Field and Don Costello ... Curt Bois. Songstress Nan Wynn appears in a specialty sequence, introducing the tune, "Honor­ "Unknown Guest' is added. It uses Victor Jory able Moon,'' written for China War Relief Fund ::nd Pamela Blake.

JAMES ALLERDICE 37 JOE SOWINSKI 77 JOHN SMITH 75 Back Tackle Center [ 30 1 ( 31 J OHIO STATE

SCHEDULE Dec. II-Denison at Columbus I3-Kentucky at Columbus B Dec. HOWARD TIEFKE 76 808 McQUADE 36 GEORGE NEFF 94 Center Halfback Guard Dec. 30-Pittsburgh at Columbus Fremont, 0 . Columbus, 0 . Bellaire, 0 . Jan. I-Great Lakes at Cleveland A Jan. I4-lndiana at Columbus Jan. IS-Indiana at Columbus lti II Jan. 2I-Chicago at Chicago s Jan. 22-Northwestern at Evanston Feb. 4-Purdue at Columbus Feb. 5-Purdue at Columbus K Feb. IS-Illinois at Champaign Feb. I9-Illinois at Champaign E Feb. 25-Iowa at Columbus Feb. 26-Iowa at Columbus Mar. 3-Michigan at Ann Arbor T MATTHEW BROWN 40 GORDON APPLEBY 50 GENE SLOUGH 45 Fullback Center Halfback Arbor Canton, O. Massillon, 0 . Mar. 4-Michigan at Ann B Findlay, 0. Again for your convenience all Home Games will be played at the COLUMBUS AUDITORIUM. Any Street Car or Bus will take you to within one block of the Auditorium. A ALL HOME GAMES START AT 8:00 O'CLOCK COLUMBUS TIME L

1943-44 L ERNEST PLANK 21 RAY STACKHOUSE 92 PAUL DAVIS 32 End Tadtle . Halfback Bexley, O. Dayton, 0 . Middletown, 0. ( 3'2 ) [ 33 ] MEET THE NEW HOOSIERS

By Jack K. Overmyer

HERE are new figures aplenty wearing the playing in the backfield of Cincinnati's Elder high Cream and Crimson of Indiana University school. HoernEc hemeyer has proved himself a T on the Ohio Stadium gridiron today. Gone triple-threat man in playing the left halfback spot from the Hoosier roster is the 44 of Ali-American that was filled last year by the All-American Hillen­ Billy Hillenbrand, the 22 of captain-elect Lou brand. Hunchy is an excellent passer, and it is Saban, and the familiar figures Fighting hearts on the battle-field need of such Indiana very seldom that his long spirals miss the out­ pigskin stalwarts as Chuck Jacoby, Knocky McKin­ stretched arms of his receiver. to know the home folks are fighting with nis, Jimmy Dewar and others-all of whom would have been appearing here Indiana th today if they had not has, in John Tavener and Pete Pihos, em. been called to the colors of their embattled coun­ two veterans that lend a great deal in the guidance try. of the squad's freshmen. Tavener, a senior, was Now voted one of the Western Conference's best centers is the time for ALL OUT giving to And so it is a new Indiana team-with the ex­ as a sophomore and played almost sixty minutes of ception of Captain back up our boys who are doing the ALL John Tavener and End Pete every Crim.son game last fall. Pihos, a junior, Pihos-that com::s to Columbus this afternoon to made an outstanding record last season as a pass OUT renew the Hoosier institution's fighting. Our Goal long gridiron rivalry receiver and was "drafted" onto the College All­ with Ohio State University. It is a freshman team Star team that beat the professional champion that has been built $1,487 .,000 from Ecratch in four months by Washington Redskins last August. Indiana's head football coach, Alvin (Bo) McMillin From the upperclassman ranks, McMillin has When, last spring, Indiana's coaches found drawn J . C. Coffee, a sturdy little guard that de­ their strong 1942 team members leaving the campus lights in breaking through the opposing line and at a fast rate for ~ervice in the armed forces, they does just that with surpnsmg regularity. Ed began to put into effect plans that had long been Schienbein, a senior back, has also returned to the worked out. Athletic officials were unanimous in squad for the first time since breaking his leg as a agreeing that Indiana University would continue freshman. Schienbein has proved a valuable asset intercollegiate athletics as long as there were any to the team with his shifty field runn:ng. boys available, in the hope that by doing so they would be contributing materially to the nation's Don Mangold, halfback; Jim Allerdice, In­ war effort. dianapolis fullback lineplunger; John Cannady, sturdy blocking back, and John McDonnell, Chi­ Just before the young and inexperienced cago halfback, round out the Indiana backfield Hoosiers opened their 1943 season against Miami, standouts. All are freshmen. Coach McMillin said that "the boys need a few games under their belts before they will play the In the line, freshmen Jesse McCune, Bob ball that I know they are capable of playing." Ravensberg, Frank Hoppe, Joe Sowimki and Frank And after the "few games," the country's experts Ciolli carry the brunt of the assignments. The began to realize that McMillin had come up with reserve squad, consisting of about 30 more boys, · another Indiana team-in spite of the inexperience 1s entirely freshman. -that makes its opponents be overly wary. No, it's not the team that was "scheduled" to The Hoosiers of 1943 are led by Bob meet the Buckeyes today. But in its first season of ( Hunchy) Hoernschemeyer, a five foot, eleven inter-collegiate competition, it has certainly earned inch, 183-pound freshman who only last fall wa · the right to the name "Fightin' Hoosiers." War Chest of Franklin County [ 34 ] [ 35 1 J

For Your The 7th Season! THE PARTY For the seventh consecutive sea­ son, WBNS is proud to bring or Central Ohio listeners the Ohio State Football Gomes. If the HISS times prevent your attendance, tune your radio to 1460 and let DANCE J ohnnie Neblett and Irwin John­ STAMP son bring you every detail. Johnny Jones will be an the air between COMPANY halves to tell the story of the game. Any important news de­ velopment will be brought you HERMAN A. BLOOM during the game. President and General Manager

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tlE year 1943 promi e to be the grimme t, hardc t tention and continual stimulation to get fullest re ults. T year this country has ever faced. Every effort, and You can well afford to give this matter your clo c every dollar of national i ncome not ab olutcly needed personal attention! The actual case histories of thou­ for exi tence, should go into war work and War Bonds. sands of plants prove that the successful working out of In the Pay Roll Savings Plan, America find a potent a P ay Roll Savings Plan gives labor and management a weapon for the winning of the war-and one of the common intere t that almost inevitably results in better ounde t g uarantees of the preservation of the Amer­ mutual understanding and better lab~r relations. ican way of life! :Minor misunderstandings and wage disputes become Today about S0,000,000 wage earners, in 175,000 fewer. Production usually increases, and company spirit plants, are buying War Bonds at the rate of nearly half soars. And it goes without saying that workers with sub­ a billion dollars a month. Great as this sum is, it is not stantial savings are usually far more satisfied and more enough/ For the more dollars made available now., the dependable. bloody roads to Berlin fewer the lives laid down on the And one thing more, these War Bonds are not only and Tokio! going to help win the war, they are also going to do much You've undoubtedly got a Pay Roll Savings Plan in to close the dangerous inflationary gap, and he! p prevent your own plant. But how long is it since you last checked post-war depression. The time and effort you now put in up on its progress? If it now shows only about 10% .ofthe in selling War Bonds and teaching your workers to ave, gross payroll going into War Bonds, it needs jacking up! rather than to spend, wi ll be richly repaid many times This is a continuing effort-and it.needs continual at- over-now .and when the war is won.

* * * You've done your bit! Now do your best!

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