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^^r 1 ^^^B JJJJJW_ SPIRES 1953

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Published by Fhe Associated Student of

Spokane, 1953 ACKNOWLEDGMENT

An annual must catch the spirit of the year. The imaginative work which goes into such a permanent record is just as important as the artistic, literary and technical efforts. For this imagination and originality, the staff is indebted in great part to Father Louis St. Marie, S.J., our moderator. His valuable suggestions and assistance are greatly appreciated. We wish to thank all artists, writers, and office workers who contributed to this publication. A photographer's job is time consuming work. We are grateful for the fine cooperation in this department on the part of the photographers and their subjects. We also wish to acknowledge the work of both printers and engravers. —THE STAFF

Cover— JO ANNEWEIBER MY UNIVERSITY

As the last weeks slip by a senior faces his coming gradu­ To him Gonzaga is the intellectual delight of time spent pur­ ation with mixed emotions. Happiness fills his heart at beinu suing and attaining the truths by which men live. She is the able to look back on four good years spent in intellectual pur­ electric sensation which recalls the bond of fellowship and the suits. Sorrow also comes—as companions launch off on new pleasurable days of university life. careers and higher endeavors, as pathways separate. But far and beyond what Gonzaga herself may mean to the At this point, the closing of his college career, the senior at­ senior who leaves her is the knowledge he takes with him. Gon­ tempts to condense that which fills his mind and heart into a zaga teaches him to be as sound and solid in character as the paragraph, a sentence, a phrase which will sum up just what training and philosophy which he possesses, to use his heart and Gonzaga is and means to the graduate. intellect in the manner in which they have been developed. She tells him he must become Godlike, and that in order to become This is my university—a philosophy of life, St. Al's spires, Godlike, he must become more a man. Gonzaga gives her senior students scurrying to beat the last bell, post exam celebrations a way of life which will lead, perhaps, to temporal rewards, but at Joey's, Boone avenue, a quiet rosary in the chapel." more certainly to an eternal reward. How difficult he finds it to pinpoint just what he means. The only way snch a debt can be repaid is by future actions. RIVALS VIE IN CAMPUS EVENTS The cheers rose from the class of '56, and flames burned high around tests and their booths. Several of the club's booths are pictured below: Men­ the hated green beanie. This was Campus Day, staging of the traditional del Club, Sodality ,Crimont Club, Spurs, and Lettermen's Club. Frosh-Soph battle, and the frosh were out for blood. Barb Redmond and Dick O'Donnell, featured in the Education Club skit, Campus Day served another purpose this year, too. It took the guess­ really lived it up hillbilly style to gain points for that group. Girls' push­ work out of the social calendar. Montana club, C-Day victor, got first choice ball, a new event in the program this year, disproved any suspicion of the of Friday and Saturday night dates. The losing clubs selected their dates frail fragile coed! according to the points gained from their participation m the various con­ Spectators watched from all positions—more fun than a circus. Even lunch time didn't interrupt the proceedings. It was served picnic style, add­ contest did the veteran sophomore triumph. Of course, the victims were ing to the atmosphere of the all day outing. Noon hour entertainment was slightly handicapped by being required to wear their beanies during the en­ provided by the talent contest which featured a variety of talent that only tire game. GU could produce. Alan Scott impersonated himself into first place, closely Law student George Grader was awarded the gooey crown of GU King followed by a fellow Canuck vocalist, Ray Davidson. that night at the outdoor tennis court dance. This ceremony, plus the tal­ The pie eating contest, directed by Mike Mingo, got off to a fine start ent winners of the day, were pictured on television. and a messy, mincey end as Joe Havlovick, representing the Cadet Officers C-Day was quite the affair. The Frosh put up a good fight, but finally Club, ate his way into first place. lost the battle 43-21. Actually, though, it was the spirit that counted and The Frosh-Soph game produced many a hoarse throat and the Frosh definitely had it. This spirit, with which they in turn will inspire many a promising player for Coach Anderson. Only after a hard fought next year's Frosh is part of the Gonzaga tradition. THIS ATOMIC AGE. DIG THAT CRAZY BUG. ARFI ARFI

CASING THE JOINT, • ^i (P4l^\

tIFE AT GU

(Continued) i AR^ •*! * ^IMS^ The Spires is the student's official and f% «#W • * r ~m,.i»»* *%\ 'i only yearbook—which means it comes out ap : !fcfJlHiter^..^r^afaLr , ' once a year. "That statement is mis­ leading," this year's girl editor corrected. x %

"Actually we work on it all year around" . . . which seems logical, judging from <* Or the date it sometimes comes out. , ;v* ( Then there is the independently oper­ i ated Bulletin. It is a newspaper. The

Bulletin is of the students, by the students, ZING ZONG. and for the students. The Jesuits just control it. "We don't need news," said one editor, "the business staff sells ads like mad."

Everyone likes the food in the chow

hall (some freshmen call it the dining hall.) They even fight to eat there. One night there were five fights, but the cook won them hands down.

(Continued next page)

TEN O'CLOCK SCHOLA1S. 11 . 11-

"OLD MAID" ANYONE? INSURANCE. GONZAGA OVER THE YEARS

W hen one is asked to reminisce about his school it is people who are supposed to come to mind— the erudite and colorful professors and the brilliant students who have gone forth to fame and fortune. But at this moment, as I survey a quarter of a century of Gonzaga history, it is not the people that I see but certain places, most of which either no longer exist or exist in such an altered condition as to be hardly recognizable. Yet there was an authentic glamor about all of them. They are the materials out of which a history of Gonzaga might be made; they deserve to be memorialized before time obliterates them completely.

JL here was, for instance, the old McGoldrick millpond and sawmill, the wheezes, whines and whistles of which for many years supplied the background music to the drama of Gonzaga education. A teacher in­ stinctively addressed his class at the top of his voice in those days and everyone lived in a state of suppressed excitement: the mill might at any moment blow up. And as a matter of fact, it did burn up, or very nearly, several times. Thanks to one fine afternoon fire we missed all of Latin class and half of history.

1 he millpond itself, into which at one time or another fell the cream of Gonzaga youth, was a place of rare adventure. We hurried down there at noon and walked logs while we ate our lunches. When we fell in we built bonfires and dried ourselves where Central Pre-Mix now sluices out its trucks. If the authorities came looking for us (the millpond was out of bonds) we hid in the bushes along the bank and hoped for the best.

-Detween the millpond and the university was the Rock Pile. This wonderful no-man's land no longer exists, but if you dig down six inches anywhere north of the engineering building you will find its uneasy bones.

Everything athletic happened on the Rock Pile, usually in bewildering number: there might be six football teams, rang­ ing from the college varsity to the high school pygmies, scrimmaging on it at once. The Rock Pile had no grass at all.

Its surface was compounded of gravel, small boulders, cinders from the Union Pacific tracks, sawdust from the mill, and just enough plain dirt to give consistency to the whole mixture. To be tackled on this surface was a memorable experi­ ence. Gonzaga no doubt owed a great deal of its gridiron success to the ingrained reluctance of its ball carriers to fall down.

JMLoving into the basement of the main building, one came to the dank glamor of the shower room where the echoes of countless departed heroes still lingered. Once there was a swimming pool here and the showers were along the wall. I never saw any water in the pool. They said there was something wrong with it: either the water ran out into Boone Avenue or it ran in from Boone Avenue, I don't remember which. But at any rate there was the pool and it was a nice thing to see.

Uown the corridor, where the ROTC is now, was the lower gym. We played basketball there, specializing in low trajectory shots and trick plays worked around a double row of pillars. It was a dimly-lit, exciting place into which we trooped eagerly when it was too cold or wet outside. There was some muscle-building equipment along the south wall upon which we prepared ourselves for t he rigors of the great world.

IN o place in the building, not even the old library, was more exotic than the Barbary Coast. This was on the third floor behind the chapel—a gloomy, dusty area where one might meet the most unlikely people. Brother

Joe Kaufold, fabulous craftsman, presided there once, like the dour warder of a medieval castle. There was a special gothic atmosphere about the Coast: you expected to open one of its forbidding doors and discover an ancient Jesuit

whom no one had heard of for years.

IN earby was the entrance to the area above the gymnasium. When I was a youth this was wild,

undiscovered country into which one ventured with bated breath: an ultima thule of eternal and tantalizing twilight

where one might explore for many a noon hour.

It is around such places as these that my nostalgia lingers. But they are all changed now. There

are no logs in the millpond; the mill is quiet. An effeter generation practices niblic shots on what was once the Rock

Pile and calls it a quadrangle. They have filled up the swimming pool and moved the showers. Not one Gonzagan in

fifty could show you where the pillars are in the lower gym. The Barbary Coast has degenerated: they have painted it

and put name plates on the doors. The wilderness above the gym has been reclaimed and urbanized: fencers jab po­

litely at each other there while the coeds hold rifle practice.

1 here is a Greater Gonzaga in the making, they say, and the old must give way. Perhaps this is

all for the best. But sometimes, thinking of what has passed away, I become melancholy. I want the sense of the old

Gonzaga around me again. When I feel this way I go down to the fountain on the first floor and try carefully to get a

drink from it. Here is my link with the past. Twenty-five years ago it wouldn't work either.

—JOHN SISK GONZAGA HERITAGE

JL\ big capital G. You would never guess that it means Gonzaga. And just what is Gonzaga, you

might ask. What is it? Why, Gonzaga is a large conglomeration of brick and professors and Jesuits, someone might say.

And he might be right. Maybe, even, if he happened to be an astute fifth-year Latin major, he might recite the Gonzaga

motto, "Deo, patriae, scientiis, artibus." Now you can't help but know what Gonzaga means.

11 ere you are. In a university to get an education. You know its name, Gonzaga, and you know the city, Spokane. By now you know the Gonzaga motto, and you know the school has a coat of arms. If you look closely at

that coat of arms, you will see a lot of little figures which you know should represent something, but you don't know just what. First: See the long sprigs of posies adorning either side of the shield? Yes, they're pretty—but they aren't posies.

The one on the right is a bay wreath. It signifies classic renown. On the left is a wreath of oak representing civic pride.

Every Gonzagan should have both in large doses, it says in the manuals. JUown lower left on the shield is a river and falls w hich just possibly could be the one flowing in back of GU. It is. Many years past, long enough perhaps to use "once upon a time" (although that timeless expression is lim­ ited by convention to fairy tales), a dusky Spokan Indian rested on the south bank of the Spokane river at Division street and looked Northeast to a Gonzaga of forest and rock shining in the new day dawn. Long since, this brave has become only a skull in the morning light. The white man came and covered the Indian's great Northwest with the wide spread­ ing wings of the American eagle. Gradually, the copper Spokan Indian gave way to a brick and mortar Spokane city; but the Gonzaga of his unseeing eyes still exists, a more permanent child perhaps than these "Children of the Sun," the dusky Indians who unknowingly roamed the future campus of Gonzaga.

W^ ell, here it is. A university. But from where did it come? The college named Gonzaga is not lim­ ited to children of the sun and an American feathered eagle. Gonzaga's heritage is historic: It has evolved from many sources. Gonzaga traditionally is old; it is older by far than the scarred brick which bears its name.

vJne bit of ancestry, perhaps Gonzaga's most vital, had its basis in time-worn history—a long, long time ago. Longer ago than any of you can remember; even long before there were Jesuits. This influence was the house of Loyola, in which the Jesuit order had its begirining. Clearly, without the Jesuit order there would be no Gonzaga.

And without St. Ignatius Loyola there would be no Society of Jesus, no long history of teaching and college-founding— no first hatchment of GU's coat of arms. A 16th century Basque, Ignatius Loyola instructed his order to be teachers of good things; to teach the love of God and good habits of devotion instead of religious differences. Feeding the poor and keeping the wolf from the door was the pride of the house of Loyola, a pride still found in Jesuit honor. As he instructed the order in its beginning, so it has remained in its growing. And so is Gonzaga because of his influence. Associated with

Loyola during his fruitful lifetime was the Spanish house of Onez. Carrying in their coat of arms bars of red and gold, the colors of Spain, these same bars today are bonded to the Gonzaga inheritance.

x\lso from the near-dim past, Gonzagans have inherited the right to be called "hunter," because

Gonzaga is from a house of hunters. In addition to a name and a patron saint, the Italian house of St. Aloysius Gonzaga passed on its coat of arms to a future Gonzaga age and a future university shield. St. Aloysius could not have realized that some day in the realm of time his name and character would blend with that of a sun-sprinkled Indian village, and live and grow somewhere a million miles away in another land. For his was the pre-foundation of a university. This ancestor is Gonzaga's fame.

iNow you have it. Gonzaga's bold "G" surrounded by your heritage—a history of location, back­ ground, beginning and name. A history which supports every mother's son and daughter at Gonzaga. Now an inheritance is fine, and every school should have at least one. But this by itself is not enough; there needs be an additional influence that guides and directs. Gonzaga has that influence. Look again at the shield: See the eagle with wings widespread to protect a nation? Now look above the eagle. What is it higher than state that directs a tottering world and an humble university? That is Gonzaga's ideal; that is Gonzaga's purpose. The Jesuit order sums it all in A.M.D.G., a latin motto which means "for the greater glory of God."

1 his is Gonzaga's heritage: St. Aloysius and his hunting family's four falcons, St. Ignatius Loyola's ideal . . . Except for them, the campus of Gonzaga—where the Spokan "Sun Children" once hunted and around which the Spokane city grew—would hold not a university, but only debris on a winding river's littered banks. All this Gon- zago is. You are Gonzaga now. Gonzagans still hunt—but no longer with falcons. By hunting knowledge and satisfying a universal and natural thirst, the mind and heart are freed from bonds of stagnation and intellectual ditch-digging.

Just as every eager frosh enters the university sometimes with trepidation and always with curiosity, so every graduate

should depart with wealth. Because in Gonzaga lies the rare occasion of dispelling mental mediocrity and reluctance of

personality. In his heritage the Gonzagan is never poor.

—BILL CLABBY LAW SCHOOL MAINTAINS HIGH STANDARDS Somewhat set apart from the rest of Gonzaga, stands the law school. man stood at the top of the honor roll in the first semester with a 3:92. This school holds all its classes in the evening between the hours of seven Willy Lockett was the school's best speaker at the legal argument in April. and ten. Regardless of its character as a graduate division .the students have lost very little of Gonzaga's spirit and have had, under the leadership of Al Highlighting the social year was the annual Junior-Senior dinner dance Yencopal, a full year both scholastically and socially. held at the Spokane Hotel. One of the most enthusiastic functions was the On the scholastic side, Blackstone's followers distinguished themselves sophomore picnic at Hayden Lake. Of course, there are the never-to-be for­ in January when 100% of the senior class passed the bar exam. Kieth Berg­ gotten Heidelbergs which were, if possible, better than ever this year. JEANNE FOSTER LEADS BOTH GLEE CLUBS For the first time in the history of the Men's Glee Club, the group had and Keith Tombrink. Joyce Boniface was accompanist. Guest soloists were a feminine director, Miss Jeanne Foster. Although few in number, the club Fran Cardie and Rosa Fichter. evinced the traditional spirit and fine choral work which has made them fa­ To celebrate the fourth year of its existence, the Women's Glee Club made mous in the past. its first tour in February through Montana and Idaho. Under the direction Besides touring between semesters and at Easter, the men gave nu­ of Miss Jeanne Foster ,the club gave more shows than in previous years. merous concerts in and around Spokane during the year including formal Lettie Ann Doran accompanied. winter and spring concerts at the Post Theater. Members of the women's quartet were Betty Cramer. Elaine Wightman. Varsity quartet members were Fred Owens, Connie Walla. Fred Owen Gayle Newman and Joan McKittrick. An appeal to heaven by Roy Kokenge, "Mr. Angel," goes unanswered to the amusement of a ridicul­ Upper left ,Susy Hartman, Cullen Murphy. Upper right, Orv ing audience: Tom Prata, Nancy Cockrill, Helen Crow:ey, Mary Green, Roy Kokenge Orville Miller Miller, Nancy Cockrill. Lower left, Jack Deno. Lower right, and Virginia Lee. Mary Nordale. DRAMATIC GROUP SCORES IN WELL-TIMED PRODUCTIONS This year's little Theatre group, under the direction of Father Leo Yeats. The second play was "Father's Talking," written by Father Yeats. This S.J., presented two plays. The first, "Mister Angel," is the story of an angel is a flashback of two parents as they wait up one night for their daughter. in men's clothing who attempted to get an unborn child, Item, born to a The play tells what they were doing as teenagers in the flapper days of 1928. couple in the theatrical world. This couple, the Boltons, were not interested The story proves that teenagers will be late no matter what generation and in becoming parents, and the situation presented many amusing complica­ what time limit. These two plays were will received by enthusiastic aud­ tions. "Mister Angel" was originally a Broadway play and later was made iences in their performances for the faculty, for the general public, and at into a motion picture which starred Clifton Webb. Fairchild Air Force Base.

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Members of the Little Theatre group practice their linos for the spring Marguerite Iller Part of cast of "Father's Talking," a story of flapper days. Standing play: Bonnie Ackerman, Marguerite Iller, Jack Deno, Beverly Oke. left to right: Pete Busch, Leona Breakey, Don Cerenzia, Tryna Saindon. Beverly Oke Both comedies presented this year were double cast. Seated: Mary Whaley, Sally Kirkpatrick, Orv Miller, George Kunz.

Scene from "Mister Angel." Tom Prata offers a fatherly word of ad- Tryna Saindon Bonnie Ackerman, Bill Bourn, Marguerite Iller, and Mildred Grow plead vice to Helen Crowley, Susy Hartman, and Roy Kokenge. Mildred Grow in vain, as Father, Tom Prata, stubbornly refuses to buy them a radio. ROTC GOES The army needs officers, and Gonzaga helps train them. At least the a teaching staff of regular army officers and enlisted men for help and advice. Reserve Officers training corps does. The ROTC has been a part of Gonzaga "Come over any time," they offer. almost as long as Gonzaga has been a part of Gonzaga—since before the Two years of a compulsory "basic" course condition cadets to army lift turn of the century. It is especially popular in times of war and selective and its rigorous discipline. After completing these two years, cadets are giv­ service. en a choice: to join the advanced corp or not to join the advanced Corp. Extra-active cadets who like to drill and wear white helmets join the Those who stick it out for two years graduate either as reserve 2nd Lieu­ Loyola guard, the GU ROTC drill team. This snappy group marches and tenants or regular army officers. twirls rifles long hours each week to attain their degree of perfection. Boasting a corps more than one half the total male day school enrollment, Directed, supervised and led by the good example of Lt. Col. Franklin B. the military has two types of activities: the academic side offers classes. Simmons, Jr., professor of military science and tactics, the cadets also have The athletic-minded march each Wednesday. First semester Bulletin staff, left to right: Bill Clabby, editor-in-chief; Ginger Bend­ Left to right, associate editors Gene St. Mary, Margaret Dowis, and moderator Fr. er, feature ed.; Marilyn Jans, news ed.; and Jerry Greenan, sports ed. St. Marie, S.J., girl editor Helen Shepard and sports editor Bill Barber. Writers Publish Weekly Spires Published Yearly The Bulletin is Gonzaga's only weekly paper, written and edited by the Your 1952-53 Spires again appears in the new magazine-type form or­ students themselves. Its purpose is to inform the student body of what has iginated last year. Several needed innovations (picture captions, for in­ happened and what will happen around the University. stance have been added. An annual must typify the spirit of the year. Our "Life at Gonzaga" section captures this atmosphere. In unposed pictures, The staff members are all students who love to write, though not many are journalism majors. For their time consuming efforts their reward is the we have tried to cover school scenes familiar to all. experience that is gained behind the scenes of any newspaper: the gathering We wish to thank all the students not on the staff for the help we re­ of news, the writing, the editing, the printing, the proof reading, and the ceived in gathering and binding the annual during the last busy week of joy of seeing their ideas and writing being read by others. school. Without them this annual would be literally in pieces.

Evidently the Bulletin has its grim moments, too, judging from the looks of this quin Editorial staff members register varied expressions as they survey their final choice tet. Left to right: Mike Mingo, feature writer; Jim Rooney, poLtaker extraordinaire; of a cover. Rejected cover designs show in the background. This year SPIRES Barry Jackson, managing editor; Bob Dawson, Mary Nordale, reporters. is occupying new quarters, an office which they renovated themselves.

At second semester Ed Sheldon, second from left, took over as sports editor. Jim The editorial staff and moderator didn't do all the work. Here is the rest of the Cave, center, became editor-in-chief, and Helen Ferry, second from right, stepped staff, left to right: Dessa Starkie, Mary Ann Hanke, Mary Jo Hurd and Mary Nor­ into the news editorship. Joe Butzerin, far left, is business manager. dale. Not shown are writers Helen Perry, Bill Clabby and Louie Baumer. •^Mlck and Colleen Fred Owens and Bonnie Ackerman

Queen of Winter Ball Lefty Doran

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Jumping for Balloons at the Mardi Gras Smorgasbord at the Fftcka Flmg

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w!l i I Co^ s Mr and Miss Friendly Queen of Military Ball Charles Brown and Shirley Feeder We fen Ross SHOW HONORS ST.GPAT

Lent wouldn't be Lent without St. Patrick's Day! And the Irish Shirely "Mary Martin" Feeder washed that man right out of her hair really live it up come shamrock and shillalah time. Fred Owen and Bon­ in the South Pacific scene. At right center, Ginger Bender, Barbara nie Ackerman reigned over this year's St. Pat's Day show as favorite Johnson, Lollie Schimmels and Rose Wallace encourage her. Al Yencopal Mick and Colleen. does a soft shoe dance at upper left. The Senior Vanities came off a bit earlier with Al Scott doing the Green-haired (food coloring) Jack Pain, shown at left center with ad libs and introductions. Ray Shulte is accompanied by Connie Walla in Barb Redmond and Milly Wood ,emceed the performance. This particu­ •liis act at upper right. In the background Dick Skok's orchestra tunes lar scene was from the heart-rending Tragedy of Gloria O'Slobnick. up for between scene novelty numbers. Hit of the show was Dick Ishikawa, victor over a bevy of masculine The Fearsome Four, Paul Russe.l, Bob Lawrence, Ed Sheldon and beauties to be crowned "Miss Universe." George Massart; Ray Davidson; and Fr. Prasch, S. J., also contributed. CLUBS GO SOCIAL

Once glancj at the Social Calendar will show that clubs are the backbone of our so:ial system. Aside from the class functions and formal dances, most activ­ ities throughout the year stem from club projects. Campus Day set the pace in the fall with spirited competition for likely dates on the calendar. All organizations worked closely with the Associated Students of Gonzaga University in co-ordinating the numerous affairs of the year. The tendency was toward small parties and inter-club socials this winter. Yakima, Mendel, Spanish, French, Crimont, DeSmet. Spi rs and Knights get-to- gethsrs were all successful, and club-sponsored mixers were popular. In a well-directed drive to boost school spirit, some energetic freshmen and sophomore coeds organized a Pep Club cheering section, the first of its kind. Also prominent in student body affairs this year was the Mendel Club, a Sacred Heart-Gonzaga combination rising in popularity. The university's ever-increasing Canadian population banded together in a Canadian Club. After an outstanding season, the Debate Club was honored by a bid to attend the Tau Kappa Alpha national speech tournament at the University of Denver. Gaining in social influence are the Spurs, sophomore women's service organiza­ tion. Regional recognition was awarded the Intercollegiate Knights. They captured atrophy as "Outstanding K. O. K. Chapter of Region II' (the Northwest). Their regional convention was held on the campus in April. The grand scale social program planned for the students, however, went down in "grand scale" defeat at the Jack Teagarden dance held in the spring. A very poor student turnout resulted in quite a financial loss and a disappointed student FRENCH CLUB, left to right, 1st row: Rhea Lalande, Elaine Wightman, president. 2nd council. row: James Rooney, Johanna Sutton, Maurice Gales, Sheila Hanlon, Joyce Vanairsdale, William Ilorgan. 3rd row: Norman leaner, Andre Imbert, Mr. Dreyer, Father Schiffner, S.J., moderator, Jo soph Kneer. The French students are gathered in the home of Mr. S. DeGroat.

SPURS, left to right, 1st row: Jeanine Ulshak, Harlene Weatherwax, Virginia Lee, Margaret KNIGHTS OF THE KENNEL, left to right, 1st row: Lee Hoover, Greg Baird, James Cor­ Dowis, Wilma Graham, Margnerite Iller. 2nd row: Sally Kirkpatrick, president, Miss Mariani. coran. 2nd row: Don Bongers, Grand Duke, Bill Berger, Dick Hall, Don Meehan. 3rd row: John moderator, Virginia Bender, Marlene Bartlett, Rhea Lalande, Betty Cramer, Joanne Sadesk, Rademacher, Robert O'Connors, Wayne Newcomb, Don Lemieux, Bob Lussier, Mike Mingo, Juanito Simonson, Barbara Cahoon, Helen Shepard. All are sophomores. Joseph McQuade. The K. O. K. were named outstanding chapter of the northwest region.

CANADIAN CLUB, left to right, seated: Fran Cardie. 1st row: Ray Foulin, Fatrick Fagan, CRIMONT CLUB, left to right, 1st row: Margaret Dowis, president, Mary Jo Hurd, Mary Guido Montemurro, Ted Heslop, Johnny O'Neill. 3rd row: Eric Forner, William Rose, president, Jo Filot, Helen Ferry. 2nd row: Clare Chuckla, Mary Ann Hanke, Marilynn Lievero, Donna Raymond LaBlanc, Joseph Sturgeon, Adrian Smith, Sid Joss, Bernard Earthy, Raymond Smith. Meyer. 3rd row: Joyce Boniface, Fat Staunton, Dessa Starkie, Miss Fran Gorman, hoc f jmother, The organization was newly formed during the second semester. Bettl Guiles, Carol Dunnigan. Crimont is the only women's dorm. DEBATE CLUB, left to right, seated: Cullen Murphy, Bonnie Ackerman, Jerry YAKIMA CLUB, left to right, 1st row: Betti Guiles, Louise Cochran, Arline Mehner. 2nd row: Law­ Jager. Standing: Jerry Greenan, president, John O'Rourke. Moderator of the club, rence Connors, Jerry Sauve, Cookie Martin, Jack Little, Don Crawford, Jim Regimbal. 3rd row: William Father Twohy, S.J. is not shown. The debaters were honored by a big to the Tan Himmelsbach, Dick HaU, Gary Suhadolnik, William Bourn, Don Colleran, Gene St. Mary, Bud Schwaegler, Kappa national speech tournament at the University of Denver. Father Frasch, S.J., moderator. All are residents of the Yakima Valley.

MONTANA CLUB, 1-r, 1st row: Con Warren, H. Ferry, Nancy Derick, Letty Doran, Mary Ann McC'be. PHILOSOPHY Club ,left to right, 1st row: James Olson, Andrew Dufner. Theresa Corcoran, Reta McConnell, Carol Shea. 2nd: ' aul Murphy, Sandy Keith, Jim Cave, Jim Corcoran, Fat Lawrence Barich. 2nd row: James Davis, David Stafford, William Himmelsbach, Schindele, M. Hackett, Stan Walsh, Fat Shryne, J. McBride, Tom Mulcahy, Keith Gustin. 3rd: Bill Botch, James Rooney, president, Thomas Macklin. Moderator Father Carney, S.J., not Jerry Monks, Jim Super, Leo Sassano, D. Squires, Bob Fopovich, Jerry Greenan, Steve Matule, Jocko Keeley. shown, is discoverer of GU's fabulous uranium treasure on April Fool's Day.

PEP CLUB, left to right, 1st row: Eileen Hoerner, Bonnie Ackerman, Theresa MENDEL CLUB, L-h., row 1: M. L. Morisette, Kapfer, Vogel, Brown, president. Row 2: Callero, M. Corcoran, ollie Schimmels. 2nd row: Mary Ann McCabe, Maxine Fish, Carol Shea, Hansen, Busch, J. Grant, Kalez. Row 3: Stroschien, Vorlicky, Cafaro, McCarthy, Hallinan, Gardner. Row Marlene Bartlett, Harlene Weatherwax, Mildred Wood. 3rd row: Nancy Derick, 4: Zerr, Codiga, McHugh, Benoit, Adams. Row 5: Ell wart, Nilsson, Batali, Schwaegler, Coyle. Row 6: E. Helen Ferry, Betti Guiles, Alice Bergman, Barbara uahoon, Barbara Redmond. Morris, J. Bennett, J. Brodie, P. O'Leary, Sandmeyer, R. Fuchs, Riley, Plumb. LETTERMENS CLUB, left to right, 1st row Terry Coyle, Vernon Craft, Marion Pericin, ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS, left to right, 1st row: Philip Weivoda, Patricia Prague, president, Richey DeLange, Joseph Havlovich. 2n2 d row: William Schertler, Jerry Vermillion, William Himmelsbach, James McQuiston, Norman Lauer, Jack Deno, James Eiredam, Wil­ Kaye Mihalovich, Robert Richardson, Joseph Kelly. 3rd row: Chuck GoUgoski, Orville Miller, liam Jacobs, president, Richard Nours~. Person with back to camera is Mr. Porter of the Jerry Wells, Bobbie Burns, Dave PowelL Hagel Stock Exchange, who was guest speaker at this meeting of the club.

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DESMET CLUB, L-R, 1st row: Wayne Newcomb, J. Greenan, Lew Davis, Dick Hall, Dan Doody, Maurice Fitzgerald, Dick Nourse, Tom Prata, Dennis Kunz, Ray Lefevre, Paul Stroschein M Scott. 2nd row: J. Van Hoomissen, J. Little, Martin Hackett, L. Corkraa, Ted Pappas, Don Crawford, G. Suhadolnik, Roy Kokenge, Pete Busch, Pat Pagan, Bob Lussier, Jim Svoboda, Gen< St. Mary, Stan Walsh, Bob Birge. 3rd row: Steve Matule, Jim Super, R. Percini. Terry Biggart, M. Weber, Don Hoene, John McBride, Don Colleran, Bill Bourn, Frank Love, Jim Rabdau, Mik« Busch, Vic Lebel, Pat Davis, Tom Connor, Bob Popovitch, Glen Martin, Jocko Keeley, president, Tom Lebel, J. Monks, Jim Grant, L. Connors.

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ENGINEER'S CLUB, left to right, 1st row: Millard Adams, William Flanagan, James Corcoran, Raymond Smith, Robert GAMMA PI EPSILON, honorary society for junior and senior Bryce, Lee Hoover, president, Francis Baird, Gregory Baird, Jocko Keeley. 2nd row: Michael O'Brien, Gerald Monks, Owen irls. Left to right, -st row: Lois Silverstein, Elizabeth Kunz, Parker, Lawrence Knuth, Robert O'Connors, John Rademacher, Robert Kohl, Andrejs Birnbaums, Charles McNeil, Lawrenve hirley ElUs. 2nd row: Carol Peters, Shirley Feeder, Mary Lou Briske. Thomas Lebel. The Engineer's activities included many field trips, their fall Banquet, and spring picnic. tDouglas, and Joan Treibel. SPANISH CLUB, left to right, 1st row: SODALITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN Theresa Corcoran, Eileen Hoerner, Nancy MARY, growing in influence, sponsored a re­ Derick, ArUne Mehner. 2nd row: Mr. Kenneth ligious poetry contest in May and encouraged Baugh, moderator, Terencio Garcia, president, increasing spiritual awareness on the part of Stephen Day, Robert Gariepy, Dick Hall. This Gonzigr. students. Pictured, left to right, group, also known as the Pan-American Club, are 1st row: Jeanie Hewitt, Ann Simondi, was most active around Campus Day, running Ellen Meliah, Maxine Fish. 2nd row: Father an attractive booth. During the remainder of Frasch, S.J. moderator, Gary Smith, James the year, they organized several private par­ Corcoran, William Himmelsbach, Michael ties at homes of the members. Some club O'Brien, president, Michael Welch, Louis Len- enthusiasts are foreign exchange students ertz, William Botch, Robert Gariepy, Frank from Mexico and Guatemala. Windishar, Carter Multz.

EDUCATION CLUB, left to right, 1st row: ALPHA SIGMA NU, honorary society for Ellen Meliah, Ann Simonds, Colleen McHugh, junior and senior men. Members are selected Lois Silverstein. 2nd row: Barbara Redmond, on the basis of scholastic standing, service Arline Mehner, Alice Bergman, Joan Treibel, and citizenship. The society is not active in Betty Clarke, Elizabeth Kunz, Louise Cochran, the sense of social or school service, but ;;_d row: Maurice Gales, Robert Gariepy, membership is a highly desirable attainment. James Hutton, James Martin, William Miller, Honored members are, left to right, 1st row: president, William Schauble, Joseph Williams, Dick O'Donnell, president, James Rooney, Al­ SKI CLUB, left to right: Gerald Van Hoomissen, Raymond Poulin, James Sandmeyer, John Frank Ross. 4th row: Donald Greif, David bert Yencopal, Del Cary Smith, Frank Baird. Dit+er, Anita Pohl, Arline Mehner, Carol Hein, Donna Robinson, Thomas Gardner. These ski Powell, James Davis, Donald Lemieux, Laur­ 2nd row: Norman Lauer, James Kees, Ray­ enthusiasts took several trips during the winter, with one to Sun Valley, Idaho, and the other ence Gooley, Patrick Cavanaugh, Chet Arnzen, to Rossland, British Columbia. mond Murphy, Frederick Owen. Donald Bongers, Mr. Foltz, moderator. The Bulldogs are jubilant over their Championship victory in the district NAIA finals at Cheney. A GREAT YEAR ENDS

This was a good year for basketball at Gonzaga. Coach Anderson when they beat Pacific Lutheran at Cheney to win the right to began the season with veterans in every department, and, though the represent the Washington district in the National Intercollegiate squad was weakened considerably by graduation last year, they came Tourney (NAIA) at Kansas City. The squad dropped their first en­ up with a much better working unit than they had had the season counter of the national tournament to Southwest Missouri State, the before. defending champions and the team that went on to garner his year's The boys opened the season early in December with a road trip crown. to the east. While back there, they met some of the toughest compe­ It was the last season for some of GU's star performers. Bob tition in the country. They dropped three of the four games on that Burns and Chuck Goligoski, the season's co-captains, Hal Van Riper, jaunt, but two of these were by one basket and the other was to the veteran three year performer, Marion Pericin, an outstanding ball- Peoria Caterpillars, defending National AAU and Olympic champs. handler and playmaker, and Kay Mihalovich, hard working forward, The team then journeyed back home where they started to build were lost through graduation. However, Hank will still have many up a formidable record against the best teams that could be found veterans left, around which he may build next year's squad. Ver­ in the northwest. As the season progressed, Gonzaga came to be million, Watson, Wells and Hetherington will give the team enough known as giant killers. True, they lost some games that they never height, and along with the smaller veterans, a few outstanding should have, but they also won a few in which the experts never transfers, and junior varsity material, they should be able to field a gave them a chance. real fighting unit next season.

One of their greatest moments came when they defeated the At a banquet honoring the team at the close of the season, some Chieftains from Seattle U. Up until that time, the Chiefs had lost of the boys received more laurels to add to their honors. Bob Burns but one game in College competition. Another big moment came when was given the team's Inspirational Award for the second consecutice the Boone avenue quint dropped Utah State, which a week later won year. He was also chosen as honorary captain for the season. Jerry the Christmas Invitational Tournament at Madison Square Garden. Wells won the trophy of the team's most improved player. To these The boys achieved their crowning glory, however, on March 4th, and all the others we give congratulations for a fine season. & \ 1- f/// Here is the 1952-53 edition of the Gonzaga Bulldogs. Reading from left to right, Manager Lewis Davis, Manager Jerry Shaw, Rich DeLange, and Kay Mihalovich. we have: Bob Richardson, Bob Burns, Chuck Goligoski, Jerry Vermillion, Harry Wat- The picture in the center shows Coach receiving the trophy that his ton, Jerry Wells, Arch Tolis, Gary Hetherington, Marion Pericin, Hal Van Riper, boys won at Cheney, along with the right to go to Kansas City.

Marion Pericin goes around and up for one of his contortionist lay-ins during the Whitworth College nas always been the closest thing to an arch-rival that Gon­ Eastern Washington game. Gonzaga dropped this tilt, but made up for it with an zaga has. This year the Bulldogs took both ends of the two game series. The cut earlier victory in which they regained control of the coveted "Cage" bowl. shows the Pirate captain. Jim Doherty, dumping one, with Jerry Wells up to stop him.

Captain Bobby Burns plays a game of chase with an unidentified Utah State Chuck Goligoski wrestles for the ball during a tense moment in the second man during the home game with the Utes. A week later Utah State grabbed first Whitworth game. The Bulldogs found that it was everything they could do to place honors in the Madison Square Garden Christmas Invitational Tournament. pull a victory away from a fired up Pirate squad that was bent on revenge. ^^^ ''•MB ••r ' JgT

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In the finals of the district NAIA, Jerry Vermillion gives the loggers from 1Practicall y every membe*r oSf the Zag squad is fighting for a loose ball in the PLC a lesson in the fine art of shooting the hook shot. Jerry is a master in this second game with Eastern Washington. It was hard playing such as this that en­ particular department, as all of Gonzaga's opponents will readily admit. abled the Bulldogs to win a berth in the National Intercollegiate tournament.

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Arch Tolis and an unidentified member of the Peoria Gonzaga was at a great disadvantage against the "Rip" Van Riper goes high in the air to pot one Cats fight over a loose ball. The Cats, former Olympic towering caterpillars, but Gary Hetherington demon­ against PLC. Victory in this tilt sent the Bulldogs to champs, took both games of the series. strated the Zags fight to overcome the odds. Kansas City for the National (NAIA) tourney. Johnny O'Brien, Seattle U's great All-American, pots Jerry Vermillion pulls down a rebound in the third game of the Seattle series. Gonzaga won this one, but a left-handed shot against the Bulldogs. Gonzaga gave Seattle's Johnny O'Brien set a new northwest record the next night as the Chiefs came back for revenge. Number Seattle one of their four losses this year. 20 in this picture is Stan Glowaski, who looks fair to be Seattle's next star.

A host of Bulldogs fight it out with Portland's M. H. Vermillion up with another of his fabulous hook Chuck Goligoski leaps for a shot, with Portland's McGilvary for ball possession. The two teams split and shots. This time it goes over the head of Seattle's McGilvary hanging on for the ride. Chuck was one of the both went to the Nationals at Kansas City. Stan Glowaski. Jere had 32 tallies in this game. scoring stars on the Bulldog contingent this year. GIRLS' RIFLE TEAM. A new activity inaugurated this year proved itself to be very impressive, set a fine precedent for future Gonzaga coeds. L-R, kneeling: Betty successful. The girls' rifle team, under the direction of Captain Lex Byers, com­ Clurk, Wilma Graham, Dessa Starkie, Capt. Byers. Standing: Ruthie Fisher, Juan- peted in several matches around the Inland Empire and, though their record wasn't its. Simonson, Mary Jo Pilot, Nancy Derick, Donna Meyers.

BASEBALL TEAM. Fielding a team comprised of a large number of freshmen, ing: Lew Davis, Kenny Plumb, Don Crawford, Bill Rowe, Maurice Fitzgerald, Joe Gonzaga's team had a short but successful season. George Chalich found Kelly, Joe Murphy, Dick Hall. Standing: George Chalich, Joe Schauble, Coach An­ time not only to coach the team but also to handle the catching chores and lead the derson, Bob Esterl, Pat O'Malley, Steve Matule, Weith Gustin, Dave Squires, Ed Fal­ team in hitting. Rain caused the postponement of several ball games. L-R, kneel­ lon, Jim Kahdau, Tom Mulcahy, Bob Richai*dson, Clem Morisette. -• i' >\ IJ

REVEREND CIEMENT H. REGIMBAL, S.J., DEAN OF FACULTIES; VERY REVEREND FRANCIS E. CORKERY, S.J., PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY; REVEREND JOHN F. GUBBINS, S.J., VICE-PRESIDENT. FACULTY CONSIDERS STUDENT PROBLEMS Did you get a little sales talk before you came to G. U. ? No doubt, a The faculty consider it their job to advice the students and assist them certain phrase cropped u > during the conversation—"individual attention." outside the classroom. Many professors act as club moderators, giving a To be known to your profs only as a number among hundreds of others helping hand to student council projects. didn't appeal to you. And now you know that, at Gonzaga. "individual at­ Besides all this, they find time to contribute lectures, articles, and serv­ tention" is not just a catch phrase. ices in the civic interest.

Rev. James V. Linden Mr. Norman P. de Pender Rev. Clifford A. Carroll Rev. M. G. Flaherty Miss Claire DiUon Rev. Arthur Dussault, S.J. S.J., S.T.L., Ph.D. LL.B. S.J., A.B., M.A.. S.T.L., Ph.D. .J., A.B., M.A., S.T.L., Ph.D. B.S., M.A. Public Relations Regent of Law Dean of aw Dean of Economics and Business Dean of Education Dean of Nursing-

Rev. P. £. Harrintgon, S.J. Mrs. C. B. Rochlitzer Rev. WilUam J. Prasch, S.J. Miss Emily Ehlinger Miss Phyllis Abbot Mr. Harold Wegner, A.B. Dean of Men Dean of Women Chaplain Law Librarian Registrar Assistant Treasurer Rev. William J. Carney Mr. Theodore Dreyer Mr. David A. Downes Rev. Van P. Christoph Rev. William T. Costello Rev. Pred Daly S.J., A.B., M.A., S.T.L., Ph.D. B.A., M.A. S.J., A.B., M.A., S.T.L., Ph.D. S.J., A.B., M.A., Ph.D. S.J., B.S., M.S., Ph.D.

Mr. John Paglia John Peterson Mr. Preston Onstad Mrs. Margaret Ott Rev. Joseph P. Nealen Rev. Timothy O'Leary B.C.S. A.B., M.A. S.J., B.S., M.S. S.J., A3., M.A., S.T.L., Ph.D. Rev. Louis H. St. Marie Mr. Archie P. Sherar Mr. Donald R. Ryan Mr. James J. Rooney Dr. Lydia O. Savedoff Rev. Leo J. Robinson B.S., M.A. B.A., M.A.. Ph.D. S.J., A.B., M.A., M.A. Ph.B. S.J-, A.B., M.A M.A., Ph.D. Ph.B,, LL.B., M.A.

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Mr. WilUam Toy B.S.F.

Mr. William J. Weishar Mrs. Marilyn B. Stanton Mr. WiUard J. Roe Mr. Clare E. Turner B.S., M.S. B.S . M.A. A.B., LL.B., LL.M. A.B., LL. B.

ROTC staff members, L-R, seated: Maj. Alton Weigley, Col. Franklin Simmons, Jr., Capt. Lee Martin, Sgt. Joseph Fincher, ST., Sgt. William Laynor, Capt. Robert Ken- commanding officer; Capt. Raymond Nelson, Jr., and Capt. Lex Byers. Standing: yon, Miss Marilyn Charlson, Sgt James Roth, z>gt. Lawrence Teale, Sgt. Ivan Cahoon. ALUMNI RECEIVE DEGREES

HONORARY degrees of Doctor of Laws were conferred on two distinguished Gonzaga alumni, Dr. Burgess Gor­ don and Thomas D'Arcy Brophy, at commencement exer­ cises May 24. Both are graduates of the class of 1912. Mr. Brophy has been president of the American Heri­ tage Foundation since its beginning in 1947. The first project of this society was the Freedom Train, which carried American historical documents to citizens all over the country. For his patriotism and efforts to promote good citizenship, Mr. Brophy has been honored by many national organizations.

Dr. Gordon, president of Womens Medical College of Pennsylvania, is listed in Who's Who and American Men of Science. Well-known in medical circles, he has served on the staffs of several Eastern hospitals. He was com­ manding officer of hospitals in Iran and India during World War II while in the U. S. Medical corps. One hundred fifty-one men and women received de­ grees at graduation this spring. Perhaps the class of Thomas D'Arcy Brophy, candidate for honorary de­ 1953 will produce some individuals as outstanding as Alumnus Dr. Burgess Gordon, also receiving an hon­ gree fo Doctor of Laws, has received awards from those returning to be honored. orary degree of Doctor of Laws, attended Harvard the American Legion and the Sons of the American University and the St. Louis University medical Revolution. school.

Ammm\ DONALD A. AGOST LESLIE G. ALLEN ROBERT L. ANDERSON FRANCIS E. BAIRD URBAN C. BARTHOLET DONALD H. BARTLETT MARJORIE E. BOLTON JOHN C. BOWE Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Economics & Business Chemical Engineering Economics & Business Civil Engineering History Economics & Business Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Yakima, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Kennewick, Wash. Walla Walla, Wash.

JOHN L. BRINDLE THOMAS J. BRUKETTA GLENN R. BURCH JOSEPH G. CAIN JOSEF R. CAMBERN VINCENT A. CODIGA DONALD J. CONNELL THEODORE CORONTZOS Political Science Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Philosophy Economics & Business Medical Science Economics 4 Business Psychology Elmhurst, New York Ellensburg, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Port Alberni, B. C. Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Great Falls, Mont.

MYLES C. COSGROVE GEORGE P. CRAIG ROY E. DAHL DARRELL R. DAVIS JAMES H. DAVIS FRANK J. DEVER JAMES A. DICKESON MARY LOU DOUGLAS Civ/7 Engineering Economics & Business Chemistry Nursing Science Education Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering English Wesfboro, Mass Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Butte, Mont. Spokane, Wash. Missoula, Mont. •••HP"

JAMES A. DREIS STEWART J. EGGERS SHIRLEY M. ELLIS RAYMOND J. ENNEKING JAMES T. FINLEN ROSS L. FINLEY RUTH L. FISHER DONALD E. FITCH Education Sociology ^ Economics & Business Mechanical Engineering History Law Education English Spokane, Wash. Chewelah, Wash. Great Falls, Mont. Keuterville, Ida Butte, Mont. Lockwood, Mo. Muenster, Texas Spokane, Wash.

TERENCIO J. GARCIA ROGER K. GIGLER PHILLIP M. GLENN EDWARD E. GORDON RICHARD E. GREBE DONALD V. GREIF PATRICIA A. GRIFFIN BETTY L. HASPEDIS Political Science Economics & Business Economics & Business Economics & Business Economics & Business Education Nursing Education Nursing Education Guatemala Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Lewiston, Ida. Spokane, Wash. , EILEEN HOBAN CORNELIUS E. HOGAN IRVIN HORAK RICHARD J. HOSS RICHARD L. HYNEMAN WILLIAM A. JACOBS JAMES M. KEES GWEN G. KENNEDY English Medical Science Education Economics & Business Economics & Business Economics & Business Education Nursing Science Wallace, Ida. Butte, Mont. Spokane, Wash. Helena, Mont. Seattle, Wash. Nezperce, Ida. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

PATRICIA A. KENYON AKIRA A. KISHI ARTHUR R. KNEER JAMES B. KREBSBACH ELIZABETH M. KUNZ KATHERINE A. KUNZ ANN E. LANE WESLEY G. LANGFORD Nursing Education Nursing Science Mathematics Economics & Business Education Nursing Education Nursing Science Electrical Engineering Lewiston, Ida. Cascade, B. C. Spokane, Wash. Esmond, No. Dak. Wilbur, Wash. Wilbur, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

HARLAN M. LARY CHARLES M. LAUERMAN ROBERT P. LAWRENCE ANTHONY K. LEE J. DONALD LEMIEUX WILFRID G. LOEKEN VIRGINIA E. LOFGREN DONALD i. MCALLISTER Mechanical Engineering Economics & Business Education Chemical Engineering Education Economics & Business Nursing Science Spanish Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Harrah, Wash. Hong Kong, China Butte, Mont. Camas, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Wilbur, Wash.

FLOYD J. McCOLLOM WILLIAM R. McGINNIS JOAN M. McKITTRICK GEORGE F. MASSART DONALD G. MEEHAN OLIUS P. MICHAELS DAVID B. MILLER WILLIAM MINTHORN Economics & Business Economics & Business Nursing Education Economics & Business Sociology Education Civil Engineering Civil Engineering Spokane, Wash. Couer d'Alene, Ida. Spokane, Wash. Moses Lake, Wash. Everett, Wash. Cataldo, Ida. Spokane, Wash. Pendleton, Ore.

NANCY MULLEN MICHAEL J. O'BRIEN RICHARD J. O'DONNELL LOREN J. O'TOOLE RAY M. ORCHARD FREDERICK S. OWEN THEODORE G. PARKER EROS A. PASUTTI Nursing Science Chemical Engineering Education Philosophy Philosophy Economics & Business Chemical Engineering Economics & Business Seattle, Wash. Spokane, Wash. New Orleans, La. Plentywood, Mont. Spokane, Wash. Colfax, Wash. Glasgow, Mont. Trail. B. C.

CAROL L. PETERS ROBERT W. PETERSON HUGH E. QUINN JOHN L. RAND WALTER J. RAYMOND BARBARA A. REDMOND THEODORE J. REGIMBAL SISTER XAVIER RICHARDSON Economics & Business Mechanical Engineering Economics & Business Electrical Engineering Education Education Physics Helena, Mont. Portland, Ore. Spokane, Wash. Butte, Montana Baker, Ore. Helena, Mont. Dishman, Wash. Moxee City, Wash. Nursing Science we*wmsa^SmWSBm»^sm

THEODORE W. ROBINSON JAMES V. ROCCA JAMES F. ROONEY DAVID RUDNICK MAX R. RUMMELHART M. PAUL RUSSELL THOMAS T. SAWAI ROBERT SCHERMERHORN Political Science Economics & Business Sociology Economics & Business Education Economics & Business Civil Engineering Economics & Business Washington, D. C. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Metaline, Wash. Kennewick, Wash. Honolulu, Hawaii Spokane, Wash. WILLIAM J. SCHERTLER RAYMOND C. SCHULTE LESTER J. SCHWAEGLER JOHN B. SHIELDS RAY M. SIMONSON RAYMOND B. SMITH PHILIP A. SPRY HENRY J. STEIN Education Philosophy Medical Science Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Economics & Business Chicago, III. Spokane, Wash. Yakima, Wash. Butte, Mont. Otis Orchards, Wash. Comox, B. C. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

MYRTLE O. TALBOT LORNA M. THORNTON MARY ANN TOEPEL JOAN M. TREIBEL MICHAEL M. TSOI ROBERT H. TSOW SIGVAL E. TVEDEN CLYDE J. WALKER Nursing Education Economics A Business English Education Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Economics & Business Economics & Business Spokane, Wash. Coeur d'Alene, Ida. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Hong Kong, China Taipeh, Formosa Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

ROBERT G. WARDIAN MICHAEL E. WELCH ELAINE A. WIGHTMAN JOSEPH T. WILLIAMS HAROLD F. WINDERL ROBERT S. ALPAUGH ROBERT BEERS HERMAN U. BRASS Electrical Engineering Economics & Business French Education Mechanical Engineering Law Law Law Spokane, Wash. Sultan, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Gibbon, Ore. Richland, Mont. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

JAMES P. CONNELLY MICHAEL J. CRONIN CARL DIANA LUCILLE S. DIBBLEE LAWRENCE V. DUFFY RICHARD E. DULLANTY FRANCIS W. DURNAN VIRGIL F. FLOCH law Law Law Law Law Law Law Law Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Olympia, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Molson, Wash. •jsjsjpjHsjsjsnsBg

GEORGE L. GRADER MATHEW D. GRIFFIN E. GLENN HARMON RICHARD A. HILTON CLYDE C. HOUSTON ALF M. JACOBSEN RUSSELL C. JEFFERSON WILLIAM G. KELLEY Law Law Law Law Law Law Law Law Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Port Orchard, Wash. Tacoma, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Vancouver, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

ANNE K. LANDE BRUNO O. LUUKKONEN WILLIAM H. MARSH RALPH MILNE JAMES E. MORGAN HARVE H. PHIPPS RICHARD L. PITT WALTER F. POOL Law Law Law Law Law Law Law Law Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Aberdeen, Wash . Lewiston, Ida. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.

JOHN T. RAFTIS W. STANLEY RIDDLE FRED SHELTON Del Cary Smith ROBERT W. WALKER JOHN A. WESTLAND ALBERT J. YENCOPAL Law Law Law taw Law Law Law Colville, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Ronald, Wash. LEADERS LEGISLATE PETERS HEADS AWSGU Relaxing after a heated student council The coeds worked for a stronger voice discussion are, left to right, student in campus affairs this year. The Asso­ body officers Jerry Jager, sergeant-at- ciated Women Students of Gonzaga arms; Loren O'Toole, vice-president; University were led by, left to right: Don Adams, treasurer; and Shirley Ruth Fisher, councilor; Carol Peters, Feeder, secretary. The Associated Stu­ president; Tryna Saindon, frosh repre­ dent council was occupied with the man­ sentative; Liz Kunz, vice president;] agement and coordination of social af­ Boddie Cahoon. treasurer; and Ginger fairs and with the organization of Cam­ Lee, secretary. pus Day. Another important respon­ A picnic and a tea in the fall wel-1 sibility was the distribution of charity corned incoming girls. And the Flika funds and the sponsoring of charity Fling, a tolo dance, enthusiastically re­ shows. ceived, wound up their activities in the spring.

YENCOPAL PRESIDES CLASS CONSCIOUS These four smiling class presidents pic Officers of the future lawyers who fill tured below led their groups in varie G. U. classrooms every evening are, left activities. They are, left to right: Pai to right: Robert Holtzclaw, secretary; Russell, head of the senior class; Jerry George Grader, treasurer; Robert Mc- Hagen, ruler of the freshmen who put Kanna, vice-president; and Albert Yen- on the Frosh Frolic in the fall; Dick copal, president. These fellows organ­ Noble, whose sophomores made a profit ize the Heidelbergs, mock trials, legal for the first time on their annual Win­ arguments and whatnot that future law­ BAUMER PRESIDENT OF ASGU ter Ball; and Pat Riley, junior class yers delight in. Also popular with the prexy. The juniors gave the traditional law school are the Young Republicans As president of the Associated Students of Gonzaga University, Louis Baumer has Junior Prom for the graduating seniors. and Young Democrats' Clubs, which worked for unification this year. His goal of an improved social program was par­ Initiation of the frosh naturally falls were, naturally very active around elec­ tially realized as more clubs employed orchestras at their mixers and more small to the sophomore class, who also spon­ tion time in the fall. inter-club parties were instigated. sor a charity drive. Adami, Henry C, Wallace Ida. Anderson, Robert E., Spokane Batali, Dino S., Harrah, Wn. Bell, William L., Spokane Bent ley, Ernest A., Spokane w Students Betzendorfer, Joseph Q., Tacoma

Bishop, Richard C, Newport. Wn. Bjerke, Otto H., Opportunity Blair, Robert E., Santa Cruz, Cal. Brennan, Joseph E., Spokane Britell, Erwin P., Spokane Burke, Bernard K., Spokane Carley, Ira B., Olalla, Wn. Cassis, Thomas V., Spokane

Chastek, Francis R., Spokane Christianson, Robert J., Seattle Clark, Maurice C, Spokane Cockrill, Leonard M., Yakima Dawson, Edward A., Richland Day, Harry H., Spokane

Quadrangle

Denman, John O., Spokane Derrenger, William H., Spokane r\ **«*r\• a* fh Deschane, Robert J., Pasco Doran, Robert J., Butte Drake, Paul G., Spokane Duncan, Walter W., Davenport, Wn

Dwinell, Robert R., Spokane Ferrara, Marilyn R., Everett Founder, Theodore R., Spokane Frohmader, Fred O., Tacoma Goodrich, John B., Spokane Graham, Robert E., Spokane Grant, William J., Spokane Hall, Robert J., Coeur d'Alene

Hansen, Frank M., Spokane Harding, James A., Spokane Hartinger, Haro.d T., Lemmon, S. Dak. Hartwich, Douglas R., Seattle Henderson, Thomas H., Lacey, Wn. Higgins, Harold H., Spokane Holtzclaw, Robert JL., Spokane Johnson, Biorn G., Spokane King, Joseph S., Spokane Jones, James A., Spokane Kamb, John G., Mt. Vernon, Wn. Kelly, Marcus M., Spokane Kucklick, Alfred J., Spokane Kumbera, William O., Omak, Wn. Layman, John G., Seattle Ledwich, John J., Yakima Lewis, Harry, Seattle Libsack, Laurence, Odessa Luscher, William G., Spokane Lynch, James C, Tonasket, Wn. McCabe, George N., Cut Bank, Mont. McDonald, Lowed H., Wapato, Wn. McGavick, Don, Tacoma McKanna, R, J., Greenacres, Wn. McNally, James P., Spokane Marpert, Ron, Seattle > Norman, Richard L., Spokane Nuxoll, Wesley, Greencreek, Ida. - *rIM» ^^ fr* *-* ^% O'Connor, John L., Spokane Olsen, Charles W., Portland Olson, Donald N., Spokane Pain, John K., Seattle C Peterson, Ralph N., Millwood, Wn. Picou, F. F., Houma, La. m Radwick, Ruby, Spokane \&^w -*m I V« Reeves, Jack G., Spokane y^. & ^7 Ryals, Rembert, Richland Ryan, Ernest M., Spokane Savage, Thomas A., Spokane Schauble, Albert J., Spokane ..in ^ , '. m^Sm SL Ft Schultz, David B., Olympia Schultz, Gerald, Hamilton, Mont. Schweiger, Paul J., LaCrosse, Wn. Shearer, Emmett J., Spokane Sherwin, James, Kalispell, Mont. Simpson, John R., Everett ,Wn. Swanson, Swan E., Seattle Tampourlos, James, Spokane Tanksley, Raymond R., Spokane ^ |P^ ^^ ^M^ Swyter, Gordon C, Mohler, Wn . Welsch, Winton, Spokane Wieland, Herbert E., Opportunity Winn, William A., Pasco Winton, James D., Spokane Woods, Ace E., Spokane ik'w Woods, Leslie L., Okanogan. Wn. Wynecoop, T. E., Wellpinit, Wn. Buse, Lawrence L., Waterville, Wn.

Campbell, James H., Spokane Curran, Francis R., Spokane Special Students ^ - ^ Dwire, Joseph M., Shelby. Mont. Elder, Alan L., Denver Ettenborough, Gerald L., Spokane Ferguson, Ralph R., Spokane Lai Kin, James E., Spokane Ledray, Wi.liam, Osoyoos, B. C. Loch, Frank J., Great Falls McCaughey, James R., Grad., Spokane ^ ^1 Millheisler, Robert L., Coeur d'Alene Mortimer, Mary J., Oakland Midler, Hans-Georg F., Spokane Naccarato, K. D., Priest River,. Ida. Phillips, Franklin D., Spokane Rice, Hollis E., Spokane Riski, Leo L., Spokane Rogalski, Anthony, Moscow, Ida. Rogalski, John, Moscow, Ida.

Sutton, Johanna F., Grad., Spokane Toba, Paul S., Spokane Weigand, Harold J., St. Maries, Ida. Thompson, Harold S., Spokane Teale, Lawrence W., Spokane Abramson, Hazel E., E. & B., Spokane

Abramson, Hazel E., E. & B., Spokane Adams, Donald V., P.-M., The Dalles AH'ano, Elanore S., Educ, Spokane Andrew, John E., Eng., Spokane Arnaldo, Ernest C, Eng., Opportunity Arnzen, C. L., Educ, Grangeville, Ida. Bauer, Richard F., Eng., Spokane Bellmont, Delores J., P.-M., Spokane Biggar, Kaye H., E. & B., Spokane Bock, Duane H., E. & B., Spokane Bongers, Dona.d F., Educ, Hooper. Wn. Brock, Patsy L., A. & S., Spokane Brogan, John J., Educ, Spokane Brown, C. C, P.-M., Grandview, Wn. Brown, James W., Eng., Spokane Burnham, Charles A., Eng., Troy, Mont. Burns, Robert J., E. & B., Spokane Cain, J. G., A. & S., Port Alberni, B. C. Carr, Pauline C, M.-T., Spokane Cavanaugh, Patrick W., Educ, Butte f>ir Chalich, George, Educ, Veradale, Wn. Clabby, W. J., E. & B., Weiser, Ida. Clarey, Charlotte E., A. & S., Spokane Cochran, E. Louise, Educ, Walla Walla Coyle, J. Terry, P.-M., Bremerton Craft, V. E., Educ, Grants Pass, Ore. Croteau, John A., P.-L., Spokane Dawson, James E., P.-D., Coeur d'Alene Deli Rosemary E., P.-M., Portland Derr, Mark L., Educ, Spokane Dillman, Dick W., Educ, Auburn, Wn. Dittex, John F., E. & B., Yakima

HH Dufner, Andrew J., A. & S., Spokane Ki eh horn, Edgar G., Eng., Spokane Etten, Donald H., E. & B., Spokane Fallon, Edward F., Educ, Spokane Fallon, Robert J., A. & S., Spokane Feeder, Shirley A., A. & 8., Spokane

Desmet Hall Fladager, Dean A., Eng., Spokane Fritz, Richard B., A. & S., Spokane Gallaher, G. Arlen, E. & B., Portland Garcia, Terencio, A. & S., Guatemala Gemberling, Bernadine L., N.E., Spokane Goldrick, G. A., Educ, Cut Bank, Mont 1/ Gottman, R. C, E. & B., Spokane Gotz, H. J., A. & S., Coeur d'Alene #% j§S|f*l JM|^^ Guske, Lester J., E. & B., LaCrosse, Wn. Guy, Richard P., P.-L., Spokane 3"^ m r Hanlon, S. M., A. & S„ Penticton, B. C. Hanrahan, F. J., A. & S., Watervliet, NY. Harnois, Nina A., Educ, Spokane TT i' V^iV^fe ^ Haspedis, Betty L., N. E., Spokane Havlovick, J. L., Educ, Ronan, Mont. Himmelsbach, W. A., E. & B., Spokane Holland, John P., A. & S., Bovill, Ida. f ' ^* ^^« ^^1 r^ Ishikawa, Richard M., Eng., Spokane Jaeger, Thomas C, Educ, Spokane Jans, Marilyn A., E. & B., Sprague Johnson, J. F., E.&B., Headquarters, Ida. Joss, Sidney S., P.-M., Osoyoos, B. C. Kale/., Robert L., P.-M., Spokane Kelly, Joseph Q., Educ, Ephrata Knowles, Donald E., E. & B., Spokane Lee, A. K. W., Eng., Hong Kong, China Leone, Maxim us, Eng., Clayton, Wn. Lewis, Donald L., E. & B., Spokane Little, E. D., E. & B., Helena, Mont. Lock wood, John E., A. & S., Richland Longman, R. L., E. & B.. Tiskilwa, 111. Lyon, Gerald D., Eng., Yakima McDuffie, Keith A., A. & S., Spokane

Miller, Louis G., Eng., Pomeroy, Wn. Miller, Orvide, E. & B., Venice, Cal. Mollerus, Fred J., Eng., Richland Morisette, Clem J., Educ, Othello, Wn. Morozzo, Katherine M., N.E., Yakima

Galler Hall

Morris, Larry A., Eng., Spokane Murphy, Thomas R., A. & S., Spokane UN Murray, D. W., Nurs., Spenard, Alaska Nechodom, Warren S., Eng., Spokane —I Nicholson, Robert H., Eng., Nelson, B. C.

Nuxoll, G. T., A. & S., Greencreek, Ida. Olsen, James O., Educ, Spokane HH J^% **^V Owens, Frederick J., Educ, Spokane W If Pember, R. A., A. & S., Deer Park, Wn. Pendergast, P. A., A. & S., Portland Phi.lips, Richard W., E. & B., Spokane Pignanelli, Frank E., Eng., Spokane Pohl, Anita A., E. & B., Spokane Porta, Albert F., Eng., Spokane Poulin, R. E., E. & B., Nelson, B. C. Prague, Patricia L., Educ, Spokane Richardson, R. R., E. & B., Opportunity Riley, Pat J., P.-M., Seattle Riley, William L., A. & S., Pasco Robinson, Jerry L., Eng., Pasco Rossi, Luis E., A. & S., Guatemala

Sandmeyer, James D., P.-M., Yakima Shull, S. A., A. & S., Lewiston, Ida. Silverstein, Lois G., Educ, Spokane Smith, Adrian G., Eng., Comox, B. C. n A A cP*C*^^ Smith, Roger J., Eng., Spokane Thomfohrde, John C, E. & B., Spokane Tidland, Fred W., Educ, Washougal, Wn. Tighe, Arthur G., N.E., Havre, Mont. Tombrink, Keith B., A. & S., Boise Troy, Thomas A., E. & B., Havre, Mont. Vanairsdale, J. H„ A. & S., Newport, Wn. Vance, Mary K„ M.-T., Ellensburg Vedelago, Vic V., P.-M., Spokane Walla, Conrad, A. & S., Vancouver, Wn. Weisser, Daniel R„ Eng., Creston, Wn. Wells, Jerry D., E. & B., Portland

Adams, Millard R., Eng., Spokane Anderson, V. JL., E.&B., Cut Bank, Mont. Baird, Norbert E., Eng., Spokane Ball, Thomas G., P.-L., Spokane Barich, Lawrence, Educ, Roslyn, Wn. Barker, William J., P.-L., Spokane

Barry, Arthur L., M.-T., Spokane Bartlett, Marlene Y., Educ, Spokane Batali, Marco S., P.-M., Wapato, Wn. Bender, Virginia F., A. & S., Spokane Benoit, Jim L., P.-D., Yakima Berger, William L., Eng., Spokane Bergevin, A. Gary, P.-D., Spokane Bishop, , Dewey A., Eng., Opportunity

Boniface, J. M., Educ, Lewistown, Mont. Boykin, Charles K., Eng., Spokane Boyle, Ray A., E. & B., Spanaway, Wn. Bryce, Robert, Eng., Spokane Busch, F. M., P.-M., Lewiston, Ida. Cahoon, Barbara A., Educ, Spokane Callero, Vern L., P.-M., Seattle Cardie, F. C, A. & S., Bellevue, Alta.

Carroll, J. R., Eng., Aruba, W. Indies Casey, Raymond R., Eng., Spokane Carke, Elizabeth M., Educ, Great Falls Cave, James A., E. & B., Great Falls Clutter, Joe E., A. & S., Spokane Clutter, Thomas L., A. & S., Spokane Cochran, R. Gerald, Eng., Walla Walla Corkran, Leland D., Eng., Great Falls Cockrill, Nancy A., Educ, Yakima Corcoran, Jim N., Eng., Ronan, Mont. Cramer, Betty M., M.-T., Michichi, Alta. Crowley, E. J., P.-L., Veradale, Wn. Crowley, Helen F., A. & S., Spokane Curran, John D., P.-L., Spokane Davis, William N., A. & S., Spokane Delles, Leo E., A. & S., Colville, Wn. Doran, Letty A., Educ, Butte Dowis, Margaret E., A. & S., Richland Druffel, Norma J., A. & S., Colton, Wn. •"-""i; Farrell, R. L., Eng., Fort Benton, Mont. Fish, George F., Eng., Spokane Fujita, Milton T., P.-D., Spokane Gardner, R. Thomas, P.-D., Clayton. Wn. Gmeiner, Richard B., A. & S., Spokane :JM* A Golob, J. Richard, P.-L., Sunnyside, Wn. Graham, Wilma L., Eng., Oroville, Wn. Green, Robert L., Eng., Spokane Greenan, T. Jerome, P.-L., Great Falls Hagadone, Ronald R., P.-L., Spokane Hall, R. T., A. & S., Grandview, Wn. Hartman, Susie M., A. & S., Portland I JS*#* Hess, Bethine J., A. & S., Spokane

Hill, Harold E., Eng. Spokane Hlttner, William A., A. & S., Portland Hoover, E. Lee, Eng., Spokane Jager, Jerome L., P.-L.. Seattle Jackson, Barrie R., A. & S., Spokane m Jensen, Jon R., A. & S., Great Falls Johnson, Barbara H., M.-T., Spokane Johnson, David M., A. & S., Spokane ... I MMm Johnson, William F., P.-D., Wallace, Ida. Johnston, Eunice E., A. & S., Spokane Keeley, Edward J., Eng., Butte Kennedy, Paul S., Eng., Spangle, Wn. Kenney, Patrick L., E. & B., Spokane Keiley, William A., A. & S., Spokane King, Regis C, E. & B., Spokane Kirkpatrick, S. R., M.-T., Kalispell. Mont.

Knnth, Larry L., Eng., Spokane Kratzer, K. H., A. & S., St. John, Wn. Lalande, Rhea C, A. & S., Martinez, Cal. Lambert, Terrance D., Eng., Spokane Lapham, Joseph G., E. & B., Spokane Lebel, Thomas H., Eng., Seattle Lee, Virginia A., A. & S.. Portland Lehman, N. Frank, Educ, Circle, Mont.

Leonard, Ernest M., E. & B., Spokane Leslie, John R„ P.-D., Spokane Lilly, Peter C, P.-D., Spokane Little, James H., E. & B., Spokane Longo, James P., E. & B., Driggs, Ida. McDaniel, Mary A., N.E., Loomis, Wash. McGinn, Patrick J., P.-L., Spokane McGough, Charles B., Eng., Seattle

McHugh, Colleen V., Educ, Sylvan, Wn. McHugh, David C, P.-M., Tacoma McLaughlin, Mike L., E. & B., Spokane McNabb, Joe G., A. & S., Spokane McQuade, Joseph A., Eng., Walla Walla i Mackel, John E., P.-L., Los Angeles Meehan, Peter, E. & B., Philadelphia Mertes, B., A. & S., Chewelah, Wn.

•; Miller, Janice H., P.-M., Spokane Mingo, Michael, P.-L., Tacoma Monks, Joseph G., Eng., Lapwai, Ida. Moore, W. Michael, Educ, Spokane Morford, John A., Educ, Spokane

Quadrangle

Morford, Paul E., Eng., Spokane Morrison, R. W.,Educ, Ft. Benton, Mont. Nestor, Michael W., E. &. B., Spokane Newcomb, W. L., Eng., Priest River, Ida. Newland, Robert C, E. & B., Spokane

Norton, James E., Eng., Spokane O'Connor, Robert R., Eng., Spokane Offer, F. K., A. & S., Coeur d'Alene O'Rourke, John C, A. & S., Spokane Parker, Owen L., Eng., Spokane I Pau 11 in, Virgil E., Eng., Kalispell, Mont. if '•<*w*fir Pettibone, J. D., A. & S., Haines. Ore. V Powell, David L., Educ, Spokane Prata, Thomas R., P.-L., Missoula. Mont. Pugsley, Paul H., A. & S., Spokane Quigley, James F., P.-D., Coeur d'Alene Rabdau, James L., Educ, Genesee, Ida. Rademacher, J. W., Eng., Liberty Lake Reed, Marie E., M.-T., Whitefish. Mont. Rhodes, Richard L., Eng., Spokane Rohrich, James J., E. & B., Spokane ISHHHHHHB r/ X*M Rucker, W. B., E. & B., Geraldine, Mont. St. Mary, G. C, E. & B., Crewport, Wn. Sapp, Larry, E. & B., Havre, Mont. Sassano, Leo, P.-D., Billings, Mont. Schuerman, T. A., Eng., Colville, Wn. Schuster, Kay D., A. & S., Spokane Scott, H. A., E. & B., Calgary, Alta Severino, James C, E. & B., Spokane

Shaw, G. H., E. & B., Juneau, Alaska Shepard, Helen L., A. &. S.. Portland Simonson, J. J., M.-T., Otis Orchards, Wn. Smith, Donald E., P.-D., Spokane ^3 di (*$ Smith, Gary T., P.-D., Jerome, Ida. Smith, Herbert C, Eng., Phoenix Smith, Joel E., E. & B., Spokane Staples, Fred R., P.-L.. Sunnyside, Wn.

S Stone, Ronald J., Eng., Spokane Storey, Francis H., E. & B., Spokane Sturgeon, Joseph S., Eng., Nelson. B. C. Sngihara, Tommy Y., Eng., Spokane Sullivan, John J., E. & B., Spokane

Sun Valley

Swanson .Robert W., P.-L.. Spokane Talmage, Eugene R., E. &. B., Spokane Thomfohrde, M. E., A. & S., Spokane Flshak, Jeanine A., A. & S., Mead, Wn. Yanden Vos, Frank, Eng., Spokane

Vedelago, Frank F., P.-M.. Spokane Vermillion, J. J., Educ, Ft. Benton, Mont. Via, William G., Educ, Spokane Volpentest, Wm. R., E. & B.. Richland Warren, Cornelius D., E. & B., Butte Watts, Frank L., Eng., Spokane Weatherwax, H. M., M.-T., Spokane Weisz, Frank J., Eng., Kootenai, Ida. Whelan, Joseph A., Eng., Spokane Wieber, JoAnne M., A. & S.. Spokane Williams, Herbert J., Eng., Spokane Weller, Geraldine W., N. E., Spokane Wood, Mildred L., N. E.. Cusick, Wn. Wyman, Willard J., P.-M.. Tacoma Yonago, Ronald H., P.-M., Spokane Young, S., Eng., Hong Kong. China

Zopfi, James F., Eng., Opportunity Ackerman, B. P., E. & B., Opportunity Albo, Mary C, M.-T., Spokane Antonick, Joyce M., E. & B., Spokane Baker, Walter R., E. & B., Spokane Barber, William H., P.-L., Portland

Barry, Francis W., P.-M.. Butte Bartholemy, Paul K., P.-L.. Portland Bates, Cubazell, M.-T., Spokane Bauman, Alvin F., Eng., Spokane Beckwith, G. H., Eng., St. Ignatius, Mont. Bennett, Michael J., E. & B., Great Falls Bergman, Alice M., Educ, Spokane Beumeler, Francis E., Eng., Nampa, Ida.

Biallas, James R., Eng., Spokane Bidder, Herman J., Eng., Spokane Biggart, T. G., P.-M., Harrington. Wn. Birge, R. D., E. & B., Harrington, Wn. Birnbaums, Andrejs, Eng., Spokane Blaskovich, David L., Eng., Butte Blum, Wm. F., A. & 8., Sprague. Wn. Bodeau, Loren E., A. & S.. Wilbur. Wn.

Bond, Drew, P.-D., Spokane Bongers, Kenneth E., P.-M., Hooper. Wn. Botch, William D., A. & S.. Missoula Bourn, William H., P.-L., Cle Elum. Wn. Bradshaw, Walter G., Eng., Spokane Brebner, J. C, A. & S., St. Maries, Ida. Bright, John W., E. & B., Spokane Brodle, Jean L., M.-T., Colfax, Wn.

Broulllet, James L., Eng., Spokane Brower, Russell D., A. & S.. Spokane Brown, Roland D., A. & S., Spokane Burke, E. A., P.-L, Tillamook, Ore. Busch, Peter M., P.-L., Lewiston, Ida. Bussoli, Bob J., A. & S., Cle Elum, Wn. Byrne, Patrick S., A. & S., Spokane Byrne, R. G., E. & B., Oilmont, Mont.

Cafaro, John R., P.-D., Spokane Cahoon, James W., A. & S., Spokane Calvin, W. K., P.-L., Miles City, Mont. Carey, Dennis F., A. & S., Yakima Casey, Patrick S., P.-L., Spokane Chalich, Eli, Educ, Veradale, Wn. Christeson, Gerald L., P.-D., Spokane Christman, Roberta J., A. & S.. Spokane Chuck la, Clare H., Nurs., Calgary, Alta Claflin, Merle W., E. & B., Spokane Clavel, Robert L., Eng., Spokane Colleran, Don N., E. & B., Prosser. Wnj Connolly, Patrick J., Eng., Portland Connors, John P., P.-L., Seattle Connors, L. P., Eng., Walla Walla Cook, Richard E., Eng., Spokane

Corcoran, T. J., A. & S., Ronan, Mont! Costello, James T., E. & B., Spokane Cox, Michael M., P.-M., Spokane Crawford, Donald E., A. & S., Yakima Culler, Alice C, P.-L., Chewelah, Wn. Cunningham, Karl W., E. & B., Spokane! Daggett, Stephen R., A. & S.. Spokane Dart, John E., Eng., Osawatomie, Kan

Davidson, R. G., A. & S., Calgary, Altai Davin, Felix M., A. & S., Walla Walla Davis, Earl J., Eng.. Superior, Wis. Davis, W. Michael, P.-L, Spokane Dawson, R. W., E. & B., Washtucna, Wnj

Up in the Air

Dawson, Wm. J., Educ, Coeur d'Alene I DeFellce, Armand V., P.-D., Spokane DeLong, B. L., P.-L., Sedro-Wooley, Wn] Deno, John D., E. & B., Spokane Derick, Nancy L., A. & S., Butte

Dixon, John R., P.-M., Butte Dollfe, Rose L., A. & S., Spokane Donahue, William M., P.-D., Spokane Doody, D. J., P.-L., Deer Lodge, Mont. Dufner, Mary Lou, Educ, Spokane Dunn, Kenny L., E. &. B., Spokane Dunnigan, Carol L., Eng., Los Angeles Dyer, Robert E., P.-L., Millwood, Wn.

Earthy, Bernard F., Eng., Victoria. B. C. Elliott, Lee E., E. & B., Spokane E»lwart, Gene R., M.-T.. Tekoa, Wn. Ennis, Thomas R., A. & S., Spokane Esterl, Bob M., E. & B.. Salina, Kan. Ferguson, Ed W., Eng.. Spokane Ferry, Helen E., P.-M., Butte Field, Ronald J., Eng.. Spokane

Finch, James M., Educ, Hanna, Wyo. I Fish, Maxlne M., A. & S., Great Falls Fitzgerald, M D., Educ, Mansfield, Wnj Flath, Gerald W., E. & B., Spokane Fleget, Spencer I., Eng., Veradale, Wn. Foltz, George W., A. & S., Conrad, Montj| Forner, Eric A., E. & B., Keremeos, B.C. Foss, John H., Eng., Spokane

Fraser, Mike C, P.-L., Spokane Freeman, Lowell T., E. & B., Spokane I Freitas, William L., Eng., Seattle Gariepy, Robert J., Educ, Spokane Gauthier, 'Armand J.," Eftg., Spokane Gibson, Robert D., Eng., Spokane Gorman, John F., Eng., Spokane Grant, James G., E. & B., Butte

Griffith, Jacquelyn, Nurs., Couer d'Alene Guiles, Betti L., P.-M., Albany, Ore. Gustin, K. J., E. & B., Kalispell, Mont. I Hackett, Martin J., P.-M., Butte Haener, Henry F., Eng.. Grangeville. Ida] Hagan, Jerry D., P.-L., Portland Hall, Harvey J., Eng., Butte Hamer, David T., E. & B., Spokane

Hamlin, John T., Eng., Spokane Hanke, Mary Ann, Nurs., Pendleton, Ore Hanson, Daniel J., Educ, Salina. Kan. I Harper, Richard A., Eng., Spokane Harris, John T., A. & S., Spokane Harsch, Eugene C, Eng., Millwood, Wn.1 Hauck, John N., P.-M., Richardton, N.D.I Hayashi, Minoru, Eng., Spokane

Hein, Carol A., Nurs.. Davenport, Wn. I Heitstuman, A. R., P.-L., Uniontown, Wn.1 Hentges, J. W., A. & S., Chewelah, Wnl Heslop, Edward L., E. & B., Trail, B.C. I Hetherington, Gary V., Eng., Spokane 1 Hewitt, Jean A., P.-M., McNary, Ore. Hill, Floyd E., P.-L., Fruitland, Wn. Hill, Leon D., A. & S., Spokane

Hirsch, R. H., A. & S., Kettle Falls. Wn.1 Hoerner, Eileen V., A. & S., Spokane Hooper, Robert N., E. & B.. Wallace, Ida.1 Hunton, William A., P.-D., Spokane Hurd, Mary Jo., M.-T., Prosser, Wn. James, Harold W., Eng., Oakland Jans, Donald L., Eng., Sprague, Wn. Johnson, Dennis L., Eng., Spokane Jordan, Walter E., Eng., Spokane Judge, Edward A., P.-L., Malta, Mont. Karst, Alex. H., P.-L., Aberdeen, Wn. Keene, Mary C, E. & B., Spokane Kehr, R. D., E. & B., Tillamook, Ore. Keith, Paul M., Eng., Butte Kelly, James P., Educ, Yakima Kennedy, Calvin D., Eng., Denver Kennedy, Keith A., Eng., Spokane Kipp, Mac L., Eng., Cut Bank, Mont. Kite, William E., P.-M., Sunnyside, Wn. Kjar, R. P.-L., Gallatin Gateway, Mont. Kjose, Dick M., A. & S., Spokane Klewono, Dorothy M., Nurs., Latah, Wn. Kohl, Robert M., Eng., Spokane Kokenge, LeRoy F., A. & S., Yakima

Kolbet, Daniel H., Eng., Spokane Kozluk, Paul M., P.-M., Chewelah, Wn. Kuhn, Herman V., Eng., Portland Kunz, George D., A. & S., Wilbur, Wn. Kyle, Robert M., E. & B., Victoria, B. C. LaBelle, P., A. & S., Great Central, B.C.

Music Hall Lahaie, Joan I., A. & S., Coeur d'Alene LaLonde, Daniel, P.-D., Spokane Landry, D. D., E. & B., Chewelah, Wn. Lane, Herbert J.. Eng., Butte Langill, Jack L., A. & S., Trail, B. C. Laurandeau, LeRoy J., Eng., Butte

Lavis, H. Pat., P.-L., Deer Lodge, Mont. Lebel, Victor H., E. & B., Seattle Lefebvre, L., A.&S., Bonners Ferry, Ida. Lefevre, R. J., Educ, Davenport, Wn. Lenertz, Louis J., A. & S., Opportunity Levis, Margaret H., E. & B., Spokane Lievero, Marllynn, P.-D., Cle Elum, Wn. Little, Jack D., P.-L.. Harrah, Wn. Love, Franklin D., P.-L., Okanogan, Wn. Lowery, Charles D., A. & S., Spokane Lynch, Joseph M., A. & S., Oakland MacDonald, Shirley, E.&B., Victoria, B.C. McCabe, Mary A., N.E., Cut Bank, Mont. McCalley, Camille, A.&S., Coeur d'Alene McCallum, Donald A., E. & B., Spokane McCannon, Windsor, P.-M., Spokane McCarthy, William H., P.-M., Spokane McConnell, Reta, N. E., Kalispell. Mont. McCormick, W., Eng., Helmville, Mont. McCullough, Patton B., A. & S., Spokane McGreevey, F., P.-M., Anaconda, Mont. McKennett, Allen F., A. & S., Spokane McLaughlin, R., A.&S., Livingston,, Mt. McNeil, Charles V., Eng., Spokane Macklln, Thomas E., P.-L., Spokane Mahar, Jerry E., E. & B., Spokane Martin, Glen R., A. & S., Yakima Mathison, Clyde B., E. & B., Spokane Matule, Stephen M., P.-D., Butte Mauk, Marjorle E., A. & S., Spokane Mehner, Arline, A.&S., Kennewick, Wn. Mellick, Gerald A., E. & B., Spokane

Meliah, Ellen M., Educ. Walla Walla Merrick, Donald L., Eng., Spokane Merrill, Claude, Eng., Spokane Meyers, Charles L., E. & B., Spokane Meyers, Phillls L., A. & S., Spokane Miller, K. Jack, A. & S., Prosser, Wn. Mills, Eldon L., P.-M., Spokane Montemurro, G. A., Eng., Natah, B. C

Morphy, Michael G., A. & S., Spokane Morris, Joan P., A. & S., Portland Morris, M. Elaine, M.-T.. Spokane Morrison, Michael E., E. & B.. Spokane Moscrip, Jack E., A. & S., Pierce, Ida. Multz, Carter V., P.-M., Yakima Murphy, P. J., P.-M., Fort Peck, Mont. Naccarato, R. H., A. & S., Chewelah, Wn.

Nelson, Billy T., Eng., Spokane Neumann, Gayle M., Educ, Colfax, Wn. Nllsson, Nell H., P.-D., Spokane Nordale, Mary A., A.&S., Juneau, Alaska O'Connor, T. C, E. & B., Great Falls Oke, Beverley A., A. & S., Spokane O'Leary, K. Patricia, P.-D., Paisley, Ore. Olsen, Lloyd W., E. & B., Spokane

Olson, Dona Mae, A. & S., Spokane Otsuji, M. George, P.-M., Vancouver. B.C. Otto, Larry E., Eng., Spokane Palladino, Guy F., E. & B., Spokane Percini, R. L., A. & S., Aberdeen, Wn. Peresslnl, Tony L., Eng., Great Falls Peterson, Gary R., E. & B., Spokane Phelps, Richard L., A. & S., Spokane Plerone, R. Gary, P.-D., Spokane Pllat, Mary Jo, A. & S., Kelso, Wn. Plumb, Ken M., P.-L., Lake Grove, Ore. Poole, Raymond J., P.-L., Spokane Popovich, Robert D., E. & B., Great Falls Pretti, Mary K., A. & S., Seward, Nebr. k—- 1 - -'A v •• He. \M Pupo, Gene J., E. & B., Spokane Raftis, Monica A., A. & S., Spokane

Reeves, T. B., A. & S., Medical Lake, Wn. Regimbal, J. J., A. & S., Moxee, Wn. Reidburn, Richard A., E. & B., Spokane Remm, Larry J., E. & B., Spokane Rief, Sylvester F., E. & B., Spokane Ripley, J., p.-L., Mt. Edgecumbe, Alaska Ripple, Harold L., P.-M., Republic, Wn. Roberts, R. D., A. & S., Hamilton, Mont.

Robinson, Donna R., N. E., Spokane Robinson, G. F., Eng., Plummer, Ida. Roloff, Bill L., E. & B., Spokane Rowe, Bill L., Educ, Fort Benton, Mont. Saindon, Tryna K., Educ, Chehalis, Wn.

Main Building

Sanders, G. R., E. & B., Pasadena, Cal. Schauble, Joe J., Educ, St. John, Wn. Schimmels, Laurelyn K., N.E., Spokane Schindele, P. J., E. & B., Poplar, Mont. Sehmitz, Curtis J., E. & B., Spokane

Schoch, Marvin N., A. & S., Yakima Schroder, James F., E. & B., Spokane Scott, Thomas G., Eng., Spokane Scroggin, Roderick J., P.-D., Spokane Segulla, Gerald V., Eng., Butte Seltz, Anthony A., A. & S„ Boise, Ida. Semenza, L., E. & B., Fort Benton, Mont. Shaw, Roy C, Eng., Opportunity

Shea, B. Carol, A. & S., Las Vegas Shea, Geraldine A., M.-T., Spokane Shigara, Roy S., Eng., Spokane Shryne, Patrick F., E. & B., Great Falls Sills, Richard I., P.-L., Spokane Simmons, Miriam F., A. & S., Spokane Simonds, Anna, A.&S., Priest River, Ida. Skok, Richard L., Educ, Spokane

Small, William H., Eng., lone, Wn. Smith, Ronald P., P.-M., St. Paul, Ore. Snarskl, Gerald J., E. & B., Spokane Sommer, Barbara J., E. & B., Spokane Soran, Mary V., A. & S., Spokane Spencer, Sylvia R., E. & B., Spokane Sprute, K. C, Eng., Keuterville, Ida. Squires, Dave J., Educ, Opheim, Mont.

Stach, Greg J., Eng., NezPerce, Ida. Starkle, Dessa M., N. E., Cheney, Wn. Staunton, M. Patricia, A.&.S., Fort Peck Stewart, D. R., E. & B., Tillamook, Ore. Stockton, Edwin M., A. & S., Kalispell Stroschein, P. L., P.-M., Aberdeen, Ida. Stroyan, Betty J., Educ, Valley, Wn. Suhadolnlk, G. F., A. & S., Prosser, Wn.

Sullivan, Jerome R., P.-D., Spokane Sullivan, John J., Eng., Butte Sullivan, Lorelei A., N. E., Pasco Sullivan, Robert, Pasco Super, J. A., A. & S., Sand Coulee, Mont Svoboda, J. A., Eng., Fort Benton, Mont. Taborek, Edward J., A. & S., Great Falls Tocher, P. A., P.-L., Livingston, Mont.

Van Hoomissen, G. J., P.-L., Portland Vecchlo, John M., E. & B., Spokane Vislntalner, Ben., A. & S., Spokane Vorllcky, Larry N., P.-M., Spokane Walsh, Stanislaus J., A. & S., Butte Walters, George W., Eng., Spokane Watson, Harry C, A. & S., Spokane Wayerskl, Ronald J., E. & B., Spokane

Weber, M. G., E. & B., Uniontown, Wn. Wells, Delmer M., A. & S., Veradale, Wn. Whaley, Mary, A.&S., Grand Coulee, Wn. White, Barbara L., Educ, Spokane White, John E., Eng., Yakima Whitney, Bernard A., Eng., Spokane Wickertshelmer, D. C, Eng., Spokane Wleber, Joseph P., E. & B., Spokane

Witmer, Joe D., E. & B., Nampa, Ida. Wolford, J. J., P.-L, Grangeville, Ida. Yarber, Hariey A., E. & B., Spokane Yoshida, Ronald M., A. & S., Spokane Zampetti, Benny V., E. & B., Spokane Zemek, Don, Eng., Tacoma Zerr, George C, P.-M., Yakima Zulaski, Joseph F., Eng., Tillamook, Ore.