HOMECOMING
50c SATURDAY OCT. 31
Cleaner, fresher, S-rooofu.er\
E T T E S
co .. 11., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO ~~~~ COM~ANY
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NORTHWESTERN w ·ir WrLBUR E S - OHIO STATE Job~•F ~ Woodruff NYPP, Editor
Nat" ummel ___ -----A~verti1in M Don Snal Adverti1~--itrculatio! M anaeer
pencer Co., 2!1 epre!entarive anager
The Presld New York 16 ::•~son Ave
Ohio Stnle es\'s Page ' . . .,
orthwesl alls --~i\dcal p~~fil Officials--· __
110 tale Hes - ·- 4 ~""w•s,.rn •;•~m<o, --- S, ' orthwesle layers --- .. G, 8
M•,~••< Brn Uo<,enU, -- - 0 Ohio St and al J-1 • - 12 10 ••••• .,"• P<o,en omewm;O, ---- ' ' <8, "'· " Com · ate--Norlh - - ·- - -coo::::••••• K . r" .. '" si ;i,s - " • ,-.. " • -.; . U ,,~ •• c., ..... ,, f·•~· -- .... "· "· :: The Ba;ens' Records ears - - --- 20, 2 •
~rchin-g e~!~I~ Outlook- - =-·- ----- 22 Hi~•too State Ros tePrersonncl-·--- 2~ ~ ., u - -------- '" V ort~western"l;fersily ea.I - ----- --··--·-·· ---- 34, 335:1
ars1ty osier -----·- ·-
f~~~!~~:J~~~ilo;;-·--=- -_ ~--- ___ :_ - :~ Sw<mm;o, ::•=<meoO- • -- • " The Golf co:f;s°erds ····- - -- --------=-- 64--77
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_-::::.::-·--·· --------- 67 --- 6!1 71
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THE PRESIDENT'S PAGE
I the stands today are thou ands of alumni of Ohio State University. To them I want to extend an especial greeting on this traditional Homecoming occasion. Throughout the campus today and tonight there will be scenes of reunion. I want to join in wishing all alumni a pleasant return to their Alma Mater.
I want al o to extend a welcome to our visitors from the Northwestern University campus. The football rivalry between our two schools dates back to 1913, the first year of the Western Conference. The great attendance at today's game is a tribute to both teams and the fine record of keen competition they haYe demonstrated over the years.
Dr. Howard L. BeYis, President
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W . W . HAYES, Head Coach
WILLIAM S. ARNSPARGER, Tackle Coach
ESCO SARKKINEN, End Coach
HARRY L. STROBEL, Defensive Line Coach
E. R. GODFREY, Defensive Backfield Asst. Athletic Director
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WILLIAM R. HESS, Freshman Coach
DOYT L. PERRY, Backfield Coach
WILLIAM A . O 'HARA, Jun ior Vars ity Coach
Northwestern Officials
DR. J. ROSCOE MILLER
President
TED 8. PAYSEUR
Director of Athletics
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RICHARD C. LARKINS, Athletic Director
ERNEST R. BIGGS, Head Trainer
RALPH GUARASCI, Stadium Supt.
ROBERT C. RIES, Asst. Ticket Director
GEORGE R. STATEN, Ticket Director
MARVIN HOMAN, Asst. Pub. Dir.
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• WILBUR E. SNYPP, Publicity Director
Dr. RICHARD PATION, Team Physician
Dr.
Dr. ROBERT J. MURPHY Team Physician
Northwestern Coaches Northwestern Staff
Directo r of Athletics
THEODORE B. PAYSEUR, Drake, '2 1
Head Football Coach
RO BERT VOIGTS, Northwestern , '39 {At Left)
Line Coach
J OHN KOVATCH, Northwestern, '3 8
Backfield Coaches
DON HEAP, Northwestern , '38 ROBERT Rl:IHSEN, Minnesota , '33
End Coach
WALDO FISHER, Northwestern , ' 28
Asst. Line Coach
ALEX SARKISIAN, Northweste rn , '49
Freshman Coach
ROBERT CLIFFORD, Colorado State, '39
NO RTHWESTE RN STAFF- left to right : Alex Sarkis ia n, assista nt line coach; Don Heo p, ba ckfield coach; John Kovatch, Ii.,... coach; Waldo Fisher, end coach; Bob Reihsen, backfield coach; Bob Cliffo rd, fres hma n coach; Bob Voigts, head coach.
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WILDCAT PROFILES ENDS
BIEVER, JOHN-Northwestern's Most Valuable Basketball player last year . . . has been one of the Big lO's best cage ~uards the past two seasons ... joined the Wildcat gridders m the middle of last season and impressed with pass-catching ability ... was four-sport star at Aurora West high ... Commerce major.
COLLIER, JOE-Co-captain of 1953 Wildcats . . . teamed with his Rock Island, Ill., buddy, Dick Thomas, to form one of Big lO's best aerial combines last falJ . Joe caught 34 passes for 650 yards, a new conference yardage record . . . lied for team scoring lead with eight touchdowns . . . overall season record was 38 receptions good for 749 yards . .. Majoring in Education.
DEMYAN, EDWARD-was regular on NU defensive platoon last fall ... has earned two major letters in football . . . hails from Mansfield, O., where he played on champion Mansfield prep team of '49 ... also lettered in basketball as a prep. Plans to teach.
John Biever McCORMICK, JOSEPH - one of most promising newcomers on squad ... rated a fine pass catcher and a top-notch de
fensive prospect . . . prepped at Fenwick high in Oak Park where he won honorable mention in the all-state grid picks . also lettered in track . .. studying to be a C.P.A.
NlEPOKOJ, ZIGGIE-came fast toward end of last season to win Jetter as defensive end . .. was four sport star at Emerson high in Gary, Ind .... has lettered as pitcher with baseball Wildcats . . . pit('hed no-hitter once in American Legion ball .
TACKLES
ROCHE, JOHN-has earned two major letters in two years of regular play . .. brother of last year's NU captain, Tom Roche, who graduated last June . . . John's the son of a Chicago policeman and plans to study law.
SACKS, SANFORD-got his baptism last year as a freshman and showed tremen-dous promise ... should see considerable action in '53 ... starred in basketball and football at Cleveland Heights high . . . also planning a Jaw career.
SEARCY, MERL--lettered last fall as a sophomore - improved with each game and may rate a starting role off his spring showing ... comes from Michigan City, Ind., where he lettered in track as well as football. Majoring in Commerre.
YOUNG, JOHN-earned a regular offensive tackle post last season as a sophomore . . . very strong and durable . . . prepped at Evanston's St. George where he won all-Chicago prep honors . . . majoring in Speech.
GUARDS
John Rearden
ELROD, RICHARD-moved into a starting linebacker spot in the middle of last season . . . prepped at Riverside Military Academy and lettered in football and track . . . plans to study law.
H IGLF.Y, BOB-lettered last year as a guard on the offensive pl_atoon ... won a_ll-Chicag<? area honors at Lyons Township High School ... His aggressiveness and speed gives him edge for starting role this fall.
HREN, F RANK-was a!"l all-State halfback at Duluth Minn. High, but shifted to line in college ... saw action as Hriebacke; when freshman ... has won two letters in football ... youn~er brother of graduated NU Fullback Chuck Hren . . . Education major.
K ACHATUROFF, D AN-wound up his sophomore season in 1951 as a first string linebacker and was tabbed for a starting assignment last fall when he became ineligible . . . a fine tackler, he is expected to develop into a splendid player In the single platoon system.
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McAULIFFE, MIKF..-earned letter last year as soph and figures to see much action this fall ... prepped at Chicago's Leo high ... an education major.
CENTERS
CALLAWAY, T HOI\IAS-used last year to snap ball on punt formatiou . . . will be used more frequently this fall ... was three-sport star at Gary, Ind. Emerson high . . . lettered as catcher on baseball team.
DAMORE, JOHN-has already earned two varsity football letters ... handles kick-off chores . . turned in excellent linebacking joh last year ... was particuiarly outstanding against Southern Cal .... won all-State grid honors at Riverside-Brookfield (Ill.) high school ... also starred in baseball as a prep ... speech major.
H AFFNER, DONALD-won all-City and all-State football honors at Chicago 's Hirsch high . . also won prep letters in basketball and wrestling ... speech major.
QUARTERBACKS
REARD EN, JOHN-promising signal-caller from Evanston's St. George high ... turned in fine performance in spring drills ... also lettered in basketball, baseball, and golf as a prep.
RONDOU DON-was No. 2 behind Thomas last season . . , lettered i:i football, basketball, tennis, and track at Green Bay, Wis. West high . . was conference tennis champ and all-State in football . . . ha·s lettered in tennis at NU . . . pre-dental student.
THOMAS DICK-moved into starting berth last fall and turned into one 'or best all-around signal-callers in Big 10 . .. threw 10 TD passes and completed 79 for 1225 yards ... set a couple of NU individual records last year .. . played safety_ durmg spring drills and turned in excellent performance . . hails from Rock Island, Ill .... 1953 co-captain along with his high school buddy, Joe Collier ... speech major.
HALFBACKS ISRAELS, LLOYD-an excellent two-way performer who figures to be most valuable under one-platoon system . . . probably will be worked at right half, although he can play any backfield position but quarterback ... lettered in football and track at Riverside-Brookfield (Ill.) high .
McKEIVER BOB-called greatest player to come out of Evanston Township high . . . led Evanston to state high school football title in 1951 . . won all-State mention three years and allAmerican mention once ... also starred in track and basketb!"-11 ... tremendously fast and shifty ... exceptionally robust despite size ... counted on for No. 1 left h a lf duties ... can also pass a nd kick.
RAN ICK E, DICK-lettered last fall at. defensive right half ·. · · being counted on to go both ways tlus re.ar ... missed sprmg drills, however, because of baseball activities ... prepped at Chicago's St. Rita high.
TROGLJO, J AMES - another pint-sized. but highly regarded back . . . looked good at right half during spring drills . . . an exceptionally fine open field runner ... was three-sport star at Hall Township high at Spring Valley, Ill ... earned all-State grid honors . . . predental student.
FULLBACKS
LAUTER, ROBERT - has moved into starting fullback slot after two years as regular left half ... very fast and strong ... seemed to adapt very quickly to his new role in spring driJls . . . was NU's leading ground gainer last season with a 4.3 carrying average . . . smashed allscoring records while prepping at Evanston's St. George ... hustles all the way.
Tom Callaway
WER ER, J ERRY-saw action at right half last year and improved with each game ... starred in Illinois game, racing 67 yards to a TD on first play of game ... counted on to back up Lauter at full ... averaged 5.8 yards per carry for 33 rushes last season
. . comes from Jamestown, N . D .
Homecoming Chairmen- left to right: Roge r Staehle, decorations; John Crawford, queens ; Jack Spengle r, rally; Dick Baisch, general chairman; Dave Katz, dance; James Lapp, publicity. Not picture d ; Nancy Rampendahl, secretary.
Welcome, Alumni! W ELCOME HOME!
Since 1882, Ohio late Alumni have gathered annually with the undergraduate in celebration of our Homecoming tradition. Again this year we meet to renew old friendships and walk again down the paths we o often have tread.
Last evening, thousands gathered around the Ohio Stadium fo r the traditional bonfire rally and the burning of Northwe tern's effigy. The applause shook our campus as Coach "Woody" Hayes introduced the ''Buckeye ".
In our new Ohio Union, 3,000 students danced as they waited for the pre entation of the Homecoming Queen and her court.
At half time today. you'll see our lovely 1953
Homecoming Queen and her attendant . They have bec-n cho_ en in a popular election held annually since The Ohio tate niver ity entered \Vestern Conference football competition in 19 13.
On hand, for the fo urteenth traight year, is Clancy I saac. '39, former cheerleader. to lead the Ohio tat cheering section. Clancy was the originator of the Block "O" cheering section.
After today's game, fraternitie and sororitie3 will hold open house o that you may meet the underg raduates. Plan to see each one of the colorful Homecoming decoration .
Have a good time! The tudent Senate and the Homecoming Committee extend their heartiest welcome all(l invite you to enjoy every minute of our 1953 Homecoming.
w~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 10
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11
Howard Johnson's Ice Cream Slwppes and Restaurants
OF
COLUMBUS, OHIO
• BEFORE AND AFTER THE GAME
AVOID IN-TOWN PARKING PROBLEMS
•
Three Convenient locations
•
East Broad Street and James Road
5090 North High Street
1313 Olentangy River Road
•
FRANK HANSEN No. 35 Guard
J OSEPH McCORMICK No. 89 End
JOHN DAMORE No. 56 Center
NICK CHANDLER No. 32 Halfbock
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MERL SEARCY No. 5 I Tackle
RICHARD MEYER No. 17 Halfback
RON RIBA No. 53 Guard
those who know fine food . . . . recommend
The Maramor Columbus' Nationally Famous Restaurant
LUNCHEON ... COCKTAILS ... DINNER
137 E. Broad St. (2 minutes walk from Broad and High)
Be Sure To Visit Our Unique Gift Shop
ADams 9286
THE
HISS STAMP COMPANY
HERMAN A. BLOOM
President and General Man ager
RUBBER, BRASS AND STEEL
MARKING DEVICES
BRONZE TAB LETS
NUMBERING MACHINES
195 EAST LONG STREET
COLUMBUS, OHIO
TELLINGS
245 E. Town St.
The
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lee Cream
AD. 2171
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THE
SHAW-DAVIS CO. FUNERAL HOMES
34 W. 2nd Ave. UN. 4155-4156
Ambulance Service
Columbus' Newest Funeral Home
and Chapel 4341 N. High St.
LA. 2600
JE. 3600
LATEST CADILLAC
AMBULANCES
Serving the Stadium
since its inception
Henry H. Shaw, Jr. Robert J. Shaw
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
Prairie schooners, headed ior the recently di -covered gold fields were strung out aero s the level lands \\·e t of Chicago, then a sprawling little town of 28,000 persons, when N rthwe tern niver ·ity received its charter in 18:il.
At that time the founders. \Yho were c1v1c and church leaders of Chicago. did not dream that their little cit_v would become within Jess than a hundred year.- the second most populou city in the nation, and their uni\·crsity one of the leading institutions of higher lea rning in the country. But such remarkab le growth was destined for both their city and their universit ·.
In the beginnino- these men : Grant Goodrich. John Evans. and Orrington Lunt among them- aw the need for e ' tabli ·hing a university for the great
1orthwest T erritory which wa then growing rapidly. So they gathered one day in 1850 in the little law office of Grant Goodrich, aero a muddy street from the court house. to lay plan · for the ;, 1 orthwe · tern niversity .. , In January of the following year the ch:uter of the University. a minor detail of the legislati ve grind, passed the Illinois L egi lature and the niver ity came into legal exi tence.
Young Chicago. a lready brawling and bu tling. lacked the quietness which the e men thought n ce--a ry fo r _tudy; so they sought out a place a little
di tance from the city. Finally they selected, twelve miles north of Chicago, a beautiful oak grove bordering Lake "Michigan ; and here they began the con. tructi n of the fir~t building-a building which hou eel both clas rooms and student during the fir t
14
years. This \\·ooclen ·tructure surmounted by a cupola to give academic di stinction and known today a · "Old College,'' contained ix cla room , where ·tudents recited Latin and Greek plotted their geometric problems. and heard lectures on philosophy and rhetoric.
Hardships piled up b fore the ea rly progress of the institution fo r the swamp surrounding the campus had to he drained. underbrush had to be clea red away, and new buildings had to be erected as the tudent body rapidly gre\\'. By 1869 coeducation. an innovation that \Yas frowned fiercely upon by the conservative East, wa in ·tituted at the University.
Xorthwestcrn Uuiversity today includes eleven schools, with a full-time enrollment of 7,500 studen t and a faculty numbering approximately 1,500. The two important unit · of the University are at Evan -ton and Chicago. On the 75-acre campu at Evanston are the College of Liberal Arts, the Technologica! In titute, the Graduate Sch ol, the chools of Commerce, Education, Engineering, 1'1'Iusic, and Speech. and the Medil l School of Journali m.
On the Chicago campus are the l\Ied ical, Denta l, :rnd Law school . Here are al o the evening divisions of the chool of Commerce and J ournali 111.
a nd the University C liege. which offer evening cour es in busine s, liberal art , speech. education and music to thou ·ands of tuclents each year. The medical. dental, and legal clinics, from which ten of thousands of Chicagoans annually ecure profe -ional a id and advice, ar al so located on the Chicago campus.
BAND PRESENTS
JACK 0. EVANS, Director
FORREST D. STOLL, Assistant Director
FORMATION
MEMORY TUNES
CHARLES L. SPOHN, Assistant Conductor
JAMES E. BODMAN, Drum Major
MUSIC E TRA1 CK____ _____ ____ _ _______ _________________ "Ohio Bugle March"
----------------------------------------------------------- ______ "Go, U orthwestern" FROM THE GAY INETIES _________________ __ "Down By the Old Mill Stream"
Mill with Water ·wheel FROM THE TURN OF THE CENTURY __ " Jn My Merry Oldsmobile"
At1tomobile FROM THE FIRST WORLD WAR . __________ "Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning"
Bugle FROM THE ROARING TWE TIE __ _____ "Chicago"
Dance Routine FROM THE DEPRESSIO _________ ------· _____ "B roth er, Can Yot1 Spare a Dhne"
Large Bag of Dollars changing to small bag of cents
FHOM THE PERIOD FOLLOW! IG ________ "June is BttStin' 011t All Over" World War II
U HALL WITH SIDES BULGI1 G OUT __ "Round on th e Ends and High in th e OHIO (SMALL ROU D O'S WITH Middle"
TALL HL __ -------------- ---------·--- _______ __ "CARMEN OHlO''
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(CC) GEORGE JACOBY No. 73-Tackle
BU CKEYES
MICHAEL TAKACS No. 62- Guard
Photos b y House of Portraits
JOHN BORTON No. 20- Quarterback
JAMES REICHENBACH No. 63-Guard
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DEAN DUGGER No. 83- End
(CC) ROBERT JOSLIN No. BS-End
" No, No, Doc! If you want to revive him fast , let him get a whiff of the aroma of these del icious, golden crisp Buckeye Potato Ch ips!"
rtrn©~ilrn COAL COMPANY, INC.
COLUMBUS, OHIO
• *POCAHONTAS
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17
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MEADOWBROOK
Jnn Finest Food and Mixed Drinks
CHICKEN • FILET MIGNON CHOICE STEAKS • DELICIOUS CHOPS
SEA FOODS 4785 E. Broad at Hamilton Rd .
15 Minutes from Broad and High DOuglas 1228 • DOuglas 0224
Don's Sandwich Shop Corner of 17th Ave. and N. High St.
* FULL MEALS
SHORT ORDERS SANDWICHES
JOHN SMITH No. 52 Tackle
ROBERT HIGLEY No. 62 Guard
JERRY WEBER No. 28 Fullback
EDWARD DEMYAN No. 90 End
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DONALD RONDOU No. 24 Quarterback
FRED NOSAL No. 87 Guard
FRANK HREN No. 49 Guard
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS• CHICKEN IN A BASKET • PIZZA • EUROPEAN SOUP
SALAD AND SANDWICH PLATES • SHRIMP, LEMON SOLE OR RED SNAPPER (Fresh Daily)
WE MAKE OUR OWN ROLLS AND PIES
Your Old Favorite- Completely Remodeled
DOERSAM1S Restaurant ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES
45th year at Broad-High
Everything For Every Sport
Harley-Davidson
Sporting Goods Co.
A.cros! from the Campus
1824 N. High St. Phone WA. 4711
DAVID DAVIES, Inc. Meat Packers
Columbus, 0.-Zanesville, 0.
Serving All Ohio
Ohio's Favorite Meat Products
Look for the Diamond-Shaped
Double " D" Emblem
19
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Bucks and Wildcats • Q E of Ohio State' olde t football rival r ies is the time.-honored series with Northwestern University, :i. aridiron relationship which began in 1913-the Buck ' first year a a member of the \Vestern Conference.
Today's meeting is the 31st between the 40-yearold rivals and Ohio State has the edge in victorie . 20 to nine. There was one tie, a scoreless duel in 1938.
The Buckeyes have conquered Northwe tern's \Vildcats in a streak fa h ion, winning from three to five contests in-a-row. Ohio has won the last four meetings and the last even of eight contests. An extreme characteristic has appeared in the 30 previous dashes between the two schools; th Buck winning usually in easy fashion, while the North western triumphs have come by narrow margin .
Ohio State took the Wildcats into camp with monotonous ease the first five times the teams played, 1913 through 1917. Northwe lern actually was hut out the fir t three times and again in the fourth meeting. A startling 58-0 Ohio State victory to inaugurate the series stands as the most one-sided verdict either school has gained. That opening game marked the first vear Ohio State was included in the ~Testern Confer~nce and the Wildcats were invited to play at Columbus. orthwe tern managed to taste
JIM LANGHURST was unstoppable for the Bucks in 1939 when th·e Wildcats were beaten 13 to 0. Ohio State then went on to w in the Big Ten title.
20
Bill de CORREVONT was the Northwestern hero in 1940 when he scored th e only touchdown of the game to beat Ohio State 6 lo 3.
its first victorv over the Bucks in 1927, winning 19-13. .
The 1916 game assured Ohio State of the Big 10 championship, when the immortal "Chic" Harley proved too much for the Wildcats in a 23-3 game. Both teams entered the clash unbeaten and Northwestern scored its fir t point of the series, a field goal drop kicked by "Paddy" Driscoll to give the 'Cats an early lead.
Northwestern ended the Buckeyes' domination in 1927 by a 19-13 score at Columbus with "Tiny" Lewis' two touchdowns leading the way. The Wildcats dropped the 1928 game by a 10-0 score, but came back to gain decisive wins the next three sea-
• • • • An Honorable Series
FRED (Curly ) MORRISON was a terror to the Wildcats in 1949 when Ohio State won 24 to 7 . The Buckeyes later won the championship and a Rose Bowl victory.
sons for their longest \\·inning string of the rivalry. Although Northwestern went away with an 18-6 victory in '29, a 99-yard run by "VI es" Fesler, now the Minnesota coach, wa the feature on the Ohio State side. "Pug" Rentner sparked the 'Cats to victory in 1930 and '31 and scored their lone touchdown in the 20-6 loss al sorbed in 1932. Rentner tacked up TD runs of SO, 45, and 60 yards during his three easons against the Buckeyes.
Ohio State made it four straight victories over the Wildcats through the 1935 conte t. But in 1936 at Evanston, the 'Cats lipped to victory by a 14-13 score and earned the B ig 10 title that season after the prized laurels had gone to the Bucks the previous
21
year. Johnny Kovatch, pre ent XU line coach, set up the first Wildcats touchdown by recovering a Buck fumble on the five. The Wildcats' final and deciding touchdown was scored by the present backfield coach, Don Heap. "Tippy" Dye pas ed for both Ohio State TD's.
The Ohio State win in 1937, by a 7-0 score, was a big moment in Buckeye hi tory, for orthwestern hadn't lost a conference tilt since the end of the '35 campaign . The lone tie of the serie resulted in a scoreless battle in 1938 and the conference-championship Buckeye team of '39 blanked the ' ats, 13-0.
The \Vildcats came back to cop the '40 and '41 contests by narrow margins. Bill DeCorreYont scored the lone touchdown in a 6-3 battle in 1940 and it was a case of brilliant passing by Otto Graham that guided Northwe tern to a 14-7 conque t of the Bucks in 1941. Bob Motl and Bud Haa e gathered in Graham a rials for the two touchdowns.
Gene Fekete, present a sistant backfield coach for Ohio tate, and Paul Sarringhaus were the shining lights in the Bucks' 20-6 victory of 1942. But Graham came bclck to grab the spotlight and spark
orthwestern to a 13-0 win at Evanston in '43, which marked only the econd time the 'Cats had shut out Ohio State. The Buck Yictory of '42 was
( Continu ed on Page 78)
LELAND (Tiny) LEWIS scored two touchdowns for Northwestern in 1927 when the Wildcats beat the Bucks 19 to 13.
THE COMMISSIONER SPEAKS BY K. L. WILSON
Big Ten Conference Commissioner
Q UT IDE the fine points of the playing rule for football itself, I know of nothing which i more confused or confusing in the public mind than the regulations which govern intercollegiate athletics. Most of the confusion stems from effort to regulate recruiting and financial aids to athletes. I have felt it would be u eful, f r those friends of college athletics who will read this program, if I tried to set down the basic rule of the Big Ten in those fields, in simpler terms than appear in the legalistically-phrased code book we have, so there might be a better understanding of them. their purposes, and their application.
It showld be understood, of course, that these rules apply only to Big Ten schools. Other Conferences and independent institutions may, and to a large extent do have, different regulations.
RECRUITING. It is an interesting fact that all colleges today conduct intensive programs to recruit students generally. \Ve who are in athletics are quite aware, however, that probably the most intensive recruiting is done among prospective athletes. To regulate that activity we have adopted certain restrictions upon our coaches and other school employees over whom we have direct control.
The underlying philosophy in our recruiting regulation is that a boy should be permitted to make the freest and most intelligent choice possible of the college he wants to attend, since it may be the mo t important decision of his lifetime. To assi t such a choice, boys are encouraged to visit campuses with their parents, to inspect facilities and meet staffs. In fact, their meals and lodging for two nights may be provided by the school on the occasion of a campus visit. But all interviews between coaches or other employees and prospective athletes must be conducted at that time, on the campus. In other word , coaches may not go off the campus to visit boys or their families in an effort to induce enrollment at a Big Ten school. The only other permissible contact, aside from the campus interviews, is limited to correspondence explaining educational and financial opportunities.
I am often asked about the part of alumni in recruiting. Our rules, of course, cannot govern people outside the em-
22
ploy of our schools. Moreover, we think it is a healthy thing to have alumni with sufficient pride in their schools that they will want to interest prospective outstanding students to attend them. As a re ult it is common practice and our rules do not seek to prevent alumni from bringing boys to the campus to in pect the school and talk with the staffs, including coaches. Where we do draw the line, however, is in the collection of funds among alumni or others to end a boy to the campus or otherwise to compensate him.
FINANGIAL AIDS. There is a very common misunderstanding of the financial assistance Big Ten athletes may receive, growing no doubt from the fact that we have traditionally sought to pursue the amateur ideal in athletics even while that term has come to have very confused meanings. It is true that we bar oll unearned financial aid from outsiders, other than parents. But it would be ridiculous to deny athletes access to the approximately $1,750,000 that Big Ten chools make available each year to assist undergraduates with various special qualifications in obtaining their educations.
\Ve have two principal standards that govern financial aid:
First, any financial as istance (other than from employment or from the boy's family) to an athlete must be awarded by the 1·egular scholar hip committee that awards aids to the student body generally. Thus we outlaw alumni or other funds set up independently to assist athletes, although alumni and other organizations may collect funds and turn them over to the school for award in accordance with regulations of the Conference and the local scholarship committee.
Second, no athlete may receive any scholarship or grantin-aid unless he first qualifies in accordance with minimum academic requirements. To qualify for aid in excess of tuition he must have been in the upper third of his high school class and while in school maintain a B-minus average. To qualify for aid only in the amount of tuition he must have been in the upper half of his high school class and in college maintain a C average.
A third standarci is also employed, as the total amount of aid to athletes at any school must not e..xceed, in approximate proportions, the aid awarded to non-athletes.
A great many athletes in the Big Ten (about 650 last year ) are receiving scholarships (and I emphasize that term in its original and true meaning) in accordance with these standards and qualifications. We think very highly of the system, because the fundamental bulwarks against abuse are the academic integrity of the institution and the demonstrated academic proficiency of the recipient.
Obviously, however, many boys do not under these terms qualify for, or there is not available, as much aid as they need to see them through college. Many, therefore, depend upon work programs and earn ings. Because work can easily be a form of undercover ubs idization we insist that athletes who are working must (1) be performing useful work; (2) work for the full time they are being paid; and (3) be paid no more than the going rate in the community for similar work.
I do not have space in this article to describe how we attempt to enforce these regu lations-from detailed reports of aid awarded and job he ld and the filing of academic tran cripts for all athlete to the employment of special investigators. or can I discu s here the constant effort to improve standards and practice by corrective as well as disciplinary action.
I will only ay that while we cannot claim perfectionany more than can be claimed in any line of human pursuit, our chools and our coaches do a pretty good job-far better than is popularly believed-in observing the regulations and the underlying, cardinal principle that intercollegiate athletics are a part of the educational program and are justified only so long as they are conducted within line of sound educational procedure and policy.
Godfrey 1n
E. R. (Ernie) Godfrey, popular defen ive backfield coach of the Buckeye and :issi tant athletic director, is rving his 25th year as an Ohio tate football teacher. Having joined the staff of hi alma mater in 1929. Ernie i one of the veterans of \i\Testern Conference coaches.
Godfrey entered Ohio State in 1911 and played football and basketball as an undergraduate. Following his g-raduation in 1915, Ernie coached for one year at \i\Too5ter High chool and then was appointed head coach at Wittenberg College, Springfield, 0.
Godfrey had a fabulous I I -year record with his Lutheran teams. having three undefeated sea ans and in three other year he lo. t only to Ohio State. Only once did he fail to win the Buckeye League crown.
ince joining Ohio State, Godfrey has been the kicking tutor in addition to other coaching dutie . His work in this department is be t attested by the fact Ohio State has won more games through place kicks than any other school in the Big Ten. In recent years, the Bucks likewise have tallied the mo t field goals. He also has served as scout, the current year being the fir t in many sea on he ha not spied on the rival elevens.
Godfrey has helped develop many all-American guards and tackle , including Joe Gailus, Regi. l\Ionahan, Inwood Smith, Gu t Zarnas, Lindell Houston, William Hackett, \Varren mling, \,\Tilliam \\Tillis and Robert '.\fomsen.
25th Season
23
Godfrey has had many exciting moment in his coaching career but he still like to cit as his bigg~st thrill an occasion ,,·hen \\ ittenberg up et Ohio \Yesleyan at Delm,·are in the mid-twenties. His under-manned and underdog team won the game in what was one o[ the tate's bigaest urprises of that decade.
A tirele s \Yorker in b half of Ohio State Univcr-5itY he often is referr d to as ''l\Ir. Buckeye.'
Ernie Godfrey, as he appeared 25 years ago in his first year on the Ohio State football staff.
The Health Center
M AJOR addition to the buildino-s of the Ohio State niver ity during it expansion program of the la t three years is the new Health Center for treatment, teaching and research in the healing art$.
Located directly south of Ohio tadium in the southwe t corner of the campus, the Center consists of five new buildings and two older structures. From left to right. they are: the Ohio Tuberculo is Hospit::il ( front left), the Columbus Receiving Hospital ( rear left), the new University Hospital and the Dentistry Building.
Building in the right foreground include the new Optometry Building, Starling-Loving Ho pita! and Hamilton Hall.
The new bnilding in the Center, co ting $17,600,-000 are part of a building program at the University, which, since 1948, has added a dozen new buildings and major additions to several other tructures. There are approximately 100 permanent buildings on the campus.
The new niversity Hospital, ri ing 11 stories and providing 600 hospital beds, is the largest of the
24
five-building center. The new D ntistry Bui }cling, firH of the Health enler group to be completed, ,rn -put into use late in 1950. The ne\\' $300,000 Optometry Building was dedicated in 1951.
The Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital, built and operated by the Ohio Health Department in cooperation with the university, is a 300-bed structur . It admitted it first patient on July 30 of 1951. La -t of the new buildings to be completed is the new Columbus Receiving Hospital, an 140-bed structure for the care and treatment o( psychiatric patient . A tate \i\Telfare Department unit, operated in cooperation with the university, this new ho pita] received its first patients in November of 1951.
Be ide serving the people of Ohio in patient care and treatment, as well as medical and dental re. earch, the Center provides the finest of clinical training facilitie. for young people at the univer ity studying medicine, dentistry, nursing and related fields. From its portals will come hundred of trained graduate every year to take their places everywhere m erving the health needs of humanity.
25
THE OHIO UNION Q HIO tate niversity student appropriately played an important part in the planning of the University's Ohio Union Building. Students al o share in directing the operations and activities of their $4,000,000 "dream," situated in the southea t section of the campu on N. High St.
Although tudent requests for a new Union had been voiced in the late 1920' , it wa not until 1946 and 1947 that a campaign brought results. At that time a petition received 14,325 student signature within five days-all endorsing the idea of a new structure to replace the old Union, which elated from 1909, and offering to pay five dollars a quarter in fees to finance the project.
The four-story structure, supervised by Director Frederick Stecker, is approximately 400 feet long and 200 feet wide. Its 192,982 square feet of floor pace include recreational, social, cultural and eating facilities, as well as office space for student activity groups and numerous other conveniences to erve the extra-curricular needs of the University's thou ands of students.
The basement le,·el, where most of the recreational facilities are centered, has 16 bowling alley , an 18-table billiard room, eight table-tennis courts, a card room with 24 tables, photographic dark rooms. and a hobbies room.
On the ground floor, lightly below street level, are two ballrooms, a cafeteria, kitchens. a oda fountain tavern, and the Franklin Room. The ballrooms, each of which accommodates 1,000 couples, can be joined by raising a mechanical eparating wall. In the cafeteria, three serving lines facili
tate speedy handlin.,. of the 584 customers who can be erved at one seating. The Franklin Room is designed
primarily as a dining room for commuters who bring their lunches. The tavern has tables and booths for 180 persons.
26
Its interior finish, as well as that of the Franklin Room, is of cherry paneling. The tavern has a flagstone floor and a huge corner fireplace with a copper hood.
The building's first floor has an outdoor terrace. with a dance area, overlooking Mirror Lake Hollow to the west. Facing the terrace are two lounges. This floor includes also a third lounge, a Conference Amphitheater, eating 253, a chapel, a ouncl-proof music room, a browsing library, administrative office , a powder room, rest rooms, a balcony overlooking the ballrooms, and the main lobby. Five listening booths for recorded mu ic are a part 0£ the music room. The library, for leisure use only, contains new papers, periodicals and best- eller . The }.fain lounge contains a large double wood-burning fireplace and writing desk . In the lobby i the Union's Information Desk.
The second floor has a medium-sized dining room and a lounge, which opens to the we t onto the "Tip-Top Terrace," where food and refreshments are served. Also on this floor are 19 student activity offices, a file room and 18 private dining or meeting rooms. The tudent offices house tuclent and Union governino- bodie , dramatic and publication groups, and numerou other extra-curricular organizations. The offices are furnished with natural birch de ks. chairs, work tables, typing table and storage units. The dining room accommodates 105 persons and adjoins the lounge, which contain a memorial fireplace given by the Class of 1948. Two wall are cork covered from floor to ceiling, with special lighting for art e,xhibit and special di plays.
By their enthusiastic acceptance of the new Union and through their participation in its activities, the student body ha paid tribute to those who led in it planning and building.
27
The William Oxley Thompson Memor i a l Library at Ohio State University was named for the University's fifth president. The $2,500,-000 project added the eight-story tower and wings (at the left) and other improvements. The library now contain s nearly 900,000 volumes.
.-----NORTHWEST1ERN SONGS:-----University Hymn
Hail to Alma Mater!
We will sing thy praise forever ;
All thy sons and daughters
Pledge thee victory and honor.
Alma Mater, praise be thine,
May thy name forever shine!
Hail to Purple, hall to White,
Rail to thee, Northwestern!
GO! U Northwestern Go! U Northwestern! Break right through that line. With our colors flying, We will cheer you all the time, U! Rah! Rah !
Go U Northwestern Fight for victory, Spread far tJ1e fame of our fair name Go Northwestern, win that game!
Go! U Northwestern! (Whistle)
(Yell) Go ! Northwestern Go.! (Whistle)
(Yell) Go! Northwestern Go.! Hit 'em hard! Hit 'em low !
Go! Northwestern Go! (Repeal chorus)
28
Push On Song Rise, Northwestern, We' ll always stand by you. Go, North western, We will ever clteer and sing for you to Win, Northwestern. Our hearts will ever yearn For the purple banner waving high For Northwestern.
(Yell) Varsity, Varsity, Hit 'em bard and low,
Varsity, Varsity, Go Northwestern, Go u Rah, Rah! u Rah, Rah ! U Northwestern Rah!
(Repeat chorus)
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
THE MEMORIAL LIBRAR.Y
T HIRD large t project in the multi-million dollar expansion program of Ohio State University begun in 1948 was the enlargement of the Main Library to provide adequate, up-to-date facilities for a tudent body approximately five times as large as the number enrolled at the time the original building was erected.
The $2,500,000 project, completed in 1951, added six new reading rooms for graduates, undergraduates and faculty members, a "brow ing" room for the casual visitor, a completely equipped lounge for staff members, numerous rest rooms, a receivinoroom, a bindery preparation room and a large room for binding work. Through remodeling of the present structure, it also provides numerous new and improved library features, including the addition of conference and seminar rooms.
Perhaps the ingle most important feature of the enlargement is the eight-story tower large enough to house more than a million books. In building a tower of this ize, the University not only takes care of present urgent needs but provides for the future as well. Many of the approximately 900,000 volumes currently listed in the 22 campus libraries were formerly stored in almost inaccessible places. ixteen years hence, at the average rate of book increases, the number of volumes will be doubled.
The book tower is located on the Neil Avenue side of the present building, and is flanked on the north and south ends by extensions of the two wings on the west side.
Approximately 122 by 54 feet, the tower consists of eight stories, the top six of which have two stack levels for each main floor. Around the east and west walls of each level are about 40 tudy cubicles, or carrels, primarily for use of faculty members and graduate students. Each level will also have two typing carrels, sound-treated to prevent annoyance of others.
Among the other tower features are a freight elevator to operate between the basement and the first floor; two public elevator. to run between the basement and all other floors ; and a continuous automatic carrier to carry book to and from the circulation desk on the first floor and all 12 stack levels.
For the heavier volumes and those too mall to be handled by the automatic carrier, an electrically operated "dumb waiter" operate between all floors .
Ba ernent floor of the tower i devoted to a receiving room, a bindery preparation room and a room for the binderv work. In the two latter rooms is handled the enormous amount of work necessary to keep the thousand of books in good repair as well a the binding of periodical . theses and doctoral dissertations.
The new addition is air ondition d from the second floor through the top floor.
On the second and third floor of the west addition, which have been extended ome 75 feet toward Neil Avenue, are located fou r reading rooms, designed particularly for the use of graduate students and faculty. Each room accommodates 90 persons and has some 6,500 reference volumes. In addition, the graduate readers have direct acces to the tower stacks through connecting doors.
The ground floor of the north eil Avenue wing is given over to a student lounge or " browsing" room, containing current periodicals, rental books and selections from the library stacks. The same floor of the ·outh wing has a staff lounge for women, equipped with locker rooms, a shower, a kitchen and a quiet room. A similar, but smaller, room for men staff members adjoins the student lounge.
Two new undergraduate reading rooms are provided in the wings which have been added on the east ( or oval) side of the building. Each has a eating capacity of 130 students.
Remodeling operations of the present Library structure have effected numerous changes to facilitate student usage and staff work. The e include moving the circulation de k and card catalogs to the main floor, the use of pneumatic tubes to send call slips from the circulation desk to all tack levels and establishing an information de k on the ground floor near the main entrance.
The building has been dedicated as the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library, in honor of the fifth president of Ohio State. The Main Library was built during hi pre idency .
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 29
• • • • Four Records Still Standing
ONE of Ohio State uni Yer ity's 1110 t widelypublicized athlete ha been the great Jes e Owens, who e running, hurdling and jumping proYided no parallel in the middle thirtie .
Born in Danville, Ala. Sept. 13, 1913, Owens later went to Cleveland where he attended grade school and East Tech. High School. As an Ohio tate ace under Coach Larry Snyder, Owens became known as the "world's fastest human", a title none denied.
The only athlete in the hi tory of the Olympic Games to win four gold medals, Owen , after 18 years, can point to four of hi record till tanding.
Je e achieved his greatest heights in the track realm on May 25, 1935 ,,·hen, at Ann Arbor, Mich., he br ke three world record and tied another. He was timed in 20.3 for the 220 yard dash, ince lowered to 20.2; was clocked in 22.6 for the 220 yard low hurdles, since lowered to 22.3, and was caught in 9.4 seconds in the century, only recently lowered to 9.3.
J e -e's greatest effort ,,·a in the broad jump, where he cleared 26 feet, 5-q. inche , a record which still tand , the oldest mark remaining in the college track and field archiYe .
The following year, 1936, Owens scored his famou triple crown in the lympics at Berlin. Three were in lividual efforts and the fourth wa while competing as a member of a relay team. Hi broad jump mark of 26 feet, SfB inche still stand a an Olympic record. So does hi 20.7 seconds in the 200 meter da h. Hi 10.3 econds in the 100 meter dash has b ·en equalled but not broken.
Owens joined Ralph Metcalf, Foy Draper and Frank \i\fykoff to win the 400 meter relay in 39.8 econd , a record which still stands de pite the great
field of c\a h men developed in recent y ars.
A member of the Illinois state athletic commi s1011, Owen i a frequent Homecoming vi itor.
~~§l§il§l!!ill!il!~!fil!!ill§\§l§l!!il§l!iill!il!1ilfil!fil!!ill§l§l§l§il!!il§Ciil~ln]§l§1§1Qillfil§]§!Qj\§]§l!fil§l§b!)~~
30
Ohio State Track and Field Records
Jerry Welbourn holds the University record for the pole vault - 14 feet, 1'/, inches.
100 yards .... ___ Geo. impson 1929 Jesse Owens 1935
220 yard ____ Je se Owens 1935 440 yards -···-··---·Harley Howells 1938 880 yards ·····--·-··· Charles Beetham 1936
Mal Whitfield 1949 One :.1ile ---······-··Len Truex 1951 Two Mile ·---·· Len Truex 1950 120 Yd . H.H . ... Lloyd Duff 1947 220 Yds. L.H. _ Jesse Owens 1935 High Jump ___ Dave Albritton 1936
Mel Walker 1937 Broad Jump ....... Jesse Owens 1935 Pole Vault ___ Jerry W elbourn 1952 Shot Put --· ..... Joe Morgan 1949 Di cus ---------·- Bill Miller 1949 Javelin ··-····-······· Homer Smith Hammer ·-·-···· .... Earl Johnson
1932 1932
:09.4 :09.4 :20.3 :47.2
1 :50.3 1 :50.3 4 :09.7 9 :12.S
:13.9 :22.6
6'9%" 6'9%"
26'8Y<i" 14'1Y<i"
5214" 167'4"
188'8Y<i" 150'6"
31
440 Relay -·-····· 1942 (Dave Trepanier, Dallas Dupre, Robert Vv right, Ralph Hammond) :41.3
880 Relay -·····- 1942 (Leroy Collins, Russ 01 en, Robert Wright, Ralph Hammond) 1 :25.9
One Mile ·----·····-· 1939 (Durwood Cooperider, Harley Howell , Jack Sulz-man, Robert Lewis) 3 :14.1
Two Mile _______ 1947 ( :-1 ark \Vhitaker, Ed Porter, Rus Owen, Bill Clif-ford) 7 :44.2
Sprint Medley .. 1951 ( Gen Co 1 e, Howard Kunz, Frank Zubovich, Len Truex) 3 :23.4
Shuttle Hurdle __ .l 946 (Bill eibert, Lloyd Duff. D i c k :\I a x w e 1 1 , Robert \,\T right) :59.4
Lenny Truex holds the University record for the mile run- 4:09 .7.
FLOYD STAHL Head Coach
Basketball
1953-1954 Schedule 1953
Dec. 5-At Butler Dec. 8-At St. Louis Dec. 12-0klohumo, here Dec. 19-At Louisville Dec. 21-At Miami (Flo. ) Dec. 26-0regon State, here Dec. 29-Denver, here
1954 Jon. 4-At Michigan Jon. 6- Pittsburgh, here Jan . 9- Purdue, here Jan . 11 - At Illinois Jan . 16- lllinois, here Jan. 18- At Indiana Jan . 23-At Michigan State Jan. 30- At Pu rdue Feb. 6- Wiscon sin, here Feb. 8- At No rthwestern Feb. 13-Michigan, here Feb. 15-lowa, here Feb. 20- Minnesoto, here Feb. 27- lndiana, here Mor . 1-At Iowa
Paul Ebert Captain 1953-54
Front row, left to right: Jack Graf, assistant coach; Dean Cook, Merrill Hatfield, Paul Ebert, 1954 captain-elect; Tom Williams, 1953 captain; William Wilks, Jack Jones, Terry Smith, Floyd Stahl, head coach. Second row: Ernie Biggs, trainer ; David Leggett, John Miller, Charles Ropes, Charles Annis, Ed Keeling, Dwight Kidnocker, manager.
32
Paul (Stretch) Ebert, Ohio State's all-American basketball center, scores against Illinois.
THE BASKETBALL OUTLOOK O RIO State Basketball Coach Floyd . . Stahl has lined up an attractive 22-game schedule this season, featu ring 11 home games, including seven Big Ten contests. The Big Ten has abandoned the rigorous 18 conference game schedule. in effect last season, for a more workable 14-game program.
Pro pect for an interesting cou rt team are bright, a - the Buckeye will feature a corinrr duo, compo ed of all-American Paul Ebert and sophomore sen ation Robin Freeman. They figure to keep th net izzling this sea on. Thi talented pair will give Ohio State a one-two coring punch which will be hard to equal.
Coach Stahl will ha ,·e three varsity lettermen returning from last year' quad, which won 10 and lost 12. Two of the lettermen, Ebert and Dean Cook, were regulars. John Miller, the other letter winner, has played both forward and center. They will be joined by 11 additional varsity and junior varsity players of last year a well as by ten former freshman prospects. With a nucleus of 24 quad men. Coach Stahl will build his team.
The Buckeye have one of the finest basketball players in the country in Ebert. The agile, ix-foot. four-inch pivot man has re-written nearly all oi Ohio State's scoring records. J n hi fir t sea on oi intercollegiate competition, 1951-52, Ebert scored 443 points. Last season as a junior, Ebert scored 477 points in the regulation 22-game schedule, which set an all-time Ohio State single eason scoring record. This eclipsed the former mark held by another all American, Dick Schnittker who tallied ..J-69 points in 1950, also in 22 game . With the expected scoring help from Freeman, Ebert may break his own record this season. He is certain to break Schnittker's threeyear coring of 1127 points. Ebert has 920 points in two seasons and needs only 208 points to et a new
33
record. Freeman could be one of the fine ·t ··outside shots"
Ohio tate has ever had. A prodigious scorer in high school, he has a deceptive jump shot which has baffled many defen ive performer . Freeman, who tands only five-feet, ten inches, averaged over 32 points per game at Hughe High chool in Cincinnati. His remarkable coordination and endurance will make him extremely popular with hio State fan .
As a running mate to Fr eman at guard, Ohio State will have many good pro pects. D an Cook, who won a varsity letter a a freshman, returns for his third ea on, and i the favorite for the other guard berth. Little Charle Ellis, five-feet, nine inches, who starred for Steubenville High two years ago, is an excellent pro ·pect. A splendid defensive player and an adroit ba ll -handler, E lli s i certain to play plenty of basketball this season. Two junior varsity award winners, Terry Smith and Ed Keeling, will see action in the run-and-shoot, pressing type game to be employed by Coach Stahl this season.
Two sophomores could be the starting forwards. Cleo Vaughn, a six-foot, two inch, all-Ohio athlete from Central High in Lima, and Don Kelley, a rugged, well-coordinated, six-foot, three-inch performer from Cardington, figure to start the season. Both Vaughn and Kelley have fine spring, and even though neither is extremely tall, both boys are highly competent in rebounding. A pair of football players, David Leggett and Tommy Hague, both sixfeet, are fierce competitors. Leggett was an all-Ohio performer for New Philadelphia High, and until Robin Freeman broke hi mark, Leggett held the Ohio high school scoring record. Hague is an agile driver, who is ideally suited for the fast-break offense. Other forward prospects who will bear watching
(Continued 011 Page 78)
Name
Drum Major
Jame Bodman
Assistant Drum Ma jor
David Baker
Manager
Richard Lawre
Assistant Manager
Jack \Vertz
Eb Soprano Corne ts
John Beers, Jr. William Davenport Terry Day Richard Fox Theodore Kinsey John 1Iadison Donald .:llatthew_ Jame Stradley Donald Neff Pete Zimbran
Bb Cornets and Trumpets
Kenneth Abel Kenneth Bagent Dale Baum Harold Bingham John Blankenship Thomas Brannon Larry Brookhart Warren Burr Willis Burt
Personnel Of Marching
High School
Bryan
J ackson-~Iilton
Dayton Stivers
Bryan
Columbus, Linden McKinley .:lfedina
unbury, Big \Valnut Dayton, Fairview Dover
alincville Troy Newark Alpha, Beavercreek Dayton, Fairview
}Iaumee Ro eville Ea t Canton, 0 naburg Canton, Lincoln Ir nton 1 ewark
idney Youngstown, Boardman Columbu , orth
34
Name
J crry Chatfield Donald Corrin \Villiam Darst James Davis James Eikenberry Davie! Glick
Jack Grigsby William Haa e John Hammond Edward Hart Robert Johnson Thomas Kunkel Charles Lang J Im Larimer 1Iarvin Lee Robert McDowell Ralph Montgomery John Moyer James T edved \ \"illiam Onslow James Patterson Norman Penick Glen Pittenger John Ritter Richard Ruhlen Loren Sanders J ernme Scanlin
harles chnurr Edward Stamm Donald Stoltz :\rlen Tewksbury Rolland Wilson Ernest Wolfie
Alto Trumpets
Jack Mann Lee Scherberg
Band
High School
Garfield, Heights Cleveland, John Adams Middleport Barberton Eaton Buckeystown, 1Iaryland:
Frederick Kenton Defiance Lancaster Cuyahoga Falls Alliance Euclid St. Clair ville Lancaster Pendleton. Ind. Florence-Edon Cincinnati, Withrow Columbus. University 1Iartins Ferry Scio Carey
hadyside Man field Napoleon Lima, Central Canton, Lincoln Sidney
anclusky Cadiz Braclforcl Zanesville, La h Zanesville Columbus, North
Chicago, Ill.; Amuncl;en Dayton, FairYiew
Name
Eliot Silbar Roy Stambaugh Donn Vickers
Alto Horns
John Ball Ralph Burkholder Walter Cross John Eubel Norman Gaines Robert Highman Robert Hutson Sterling King
ick Ferrini Vincent Polidora Richard Ricketts William Rutledge Gordon Silver Gerald Snyder F. Paul Spiegel James Strouse Michael Trigg Donald Young
Trombonium
Ordwell Burr Charles Magill Edward Matthews Daniel Sable Ronald Smith Francis Sturms
Tenor Horn
Neville Dietzel
Ross Carle Keith Brengman Allen Hoerner Thomas Hook Alan Johnson
JACK 0 . EVANS Director
High School
Louisville, Ky.; Male Mooseheart, Ill. Columbus, East
Tipp City, Tippecanoe Archbold Columbus, North Tipp City, Tippecanoe Mt. Vernon Hebron Findlay Wauseon Columbus, Central Ambridge Delaware, Willis Lima, South Shaker Heights Columbus, West Columbus, North St. Marys, Memorial Dayton, Fairview-White Columbus, Linden McKinley
Youngstown, Boardman Circleville Marion, Harding Cleveland Heights Xenia, Central St. Clairsville
Youngstown, Austintown-Fitch
Youngstown, Boardman Lancaster Piqua, Central Canton, Central Catholic Delaware, Willis
35
Name
Roger Johnson John Martin Eugene ears Frederick Vaughan
Baritone
John Aldrich Don Ave Don arr Robert Damico Marshall Glickman David Green Robert Markowitz James Martin Duane Miller John Minton Tom Ostrander \Villiam Pangburn Glenn Phillips Phillip Richard Laurance Roush Albert Schafer John Shultz Albert zabo Samuel Zimmerman \Voodford Zimmerman
Bb Basses
James Allen John Cox, Jr.
Albert Muren Calmer Clifford Robert Burns James Burns
Sousaphone
Charles Bear Jules Duga Lloyd Duvall Eugene Ewell Marvin Gale Harold Oberlin Melvin Ponzi Joseph Porter Eugene Reeser Ray Stang Richard Taylor Charles Zumpft
Snare Drum
David Angus Werneth Avril Richard Campbell Nick Demos Robert Fronk Wend ell Jones Herbert Schindler Kent Shepherd Donald \Vinkelman
Cymbals
Richard Beebe Thomas Wolfe
Bass Drums
Judd Bennett Jr. James Cole Jack Feldheimer
ITigh Schou!
Zimmerman, Bea vcrcreek Greenville Malta-McConnelsville Parkersburg, W. Va.
Sandusky Mentor Marysville Dayton, Fairmount Bexley Delaware, Willis Cleveland Heights London Edgerton, t. Joseph Columbus, Univer ity Lakewood Felicity, f-ranklin McDonald West Lake Columbus, North Urbana Urbana Wellington Dayton, Wilbur Wright Dayton, Wilbur Wright
Kenton Timonium, Maryland;
McDonough Barberton, Norton Wadsworth Richmond, Jefferson Union Richmond, Jefferson Union
Toledo, Libbey Bellaire Youngstown, Boardman l ayton, Fairmont Cleveland Heights Mas illon, Washington Painesville, Harvey Marion, Harding East Cleveland, Shaw Elyria Akron, Buchtel Fostoria
Findlay incinnati, Withrow
Lancaster Canton, Lehman Dover Dayton, Fairview-White Cleveland, John Adams Robinson, Illinois Painesville, Harvey
Utica Valley City, Liverpool
Columbu , orth Bellefontaine Canton, Lincoln
All-Opponent Record of
Ohio State University
1890-1952
osu osu Team G.
Akron .... ......... ······--- _ 5 Antioch ... 1 Auburn .... _ . _ -------- 1
W. 4 I
L. T. Pct. 0 .800 O l.000 1 .500
1 0 0 0
California 2 Camp Sherman ____ _ __ 1 Carlisle Indians .. 1 Case .... 23 Central Kentucky ... __ ___ 1 Chicago --------·-··. ______ 14 Cincinnati __ . 11 Colgate _______ __ 2 Columbia ____ ___ ___ 2 Columbus Barracks ----· ·---· . 3
l 1 1 0 0 1
11 10 0 1
10 2 9 2 l O 2 0 2 1
Cornell ____ 2 0 2 Dayton YMCA . _ ___ ___ _ 1 1 0 Denison ........ _ ---· ·--------- 16 14 I De Pauw . _ ----·- ------- . 1 1 0 Drake ______ 1 1 0 Fort Knox . ______ ___ 1 1 0 Great Lakes ··--·-------------····· 2 1 1 Heidelberg -···· ·------· ----------- 3 3 0 Illinois ______ ---------- 41 23 15 Indiana ________ _ __ --------- 34 21 10 Iowa . ______ .. -·-------·--········ 16 8 6 Iowa Seahawks _ ......... ·····-- .. 2 1 1 Kentucky _ ---------------- 3 3 0 Kenyon _ --------------- 22 16 6 Marietta __ ---------------------- 7 6 1 Miami ---·······- ···-· ·-----·----- 2 2 0 Michigan __ . ----------------- 49 13 32 Michigan State --·-·-------- 2 0 2 Minnesota ______ ---··--------- 10 6 4 Missouri ____ . . ......... _________ 9 8 0 Mount Union ......... ---------- 1 1 0 Muskingum __ .. -------·--- 7 7 0 Navy -------- .. ···- . ·------ 2 2 0
ew York University _ ··----- 2 2 0 Northwestern .... . -----·--- 30 20 9 Notre Dame __ .. _ ---------- 2 0 2 Oberlin ....... _ -·····---- 26 13 10 Ohio Medical ··-····· 9 5 2 Ohio University __ ---------- . . 4 4 0 0hio Wesleyan _____ _ ........... 29 26 2 Otterbein 18 13 2 Pennsylvania ---·- ---------- _ 2 2 0 Pennsylvania State _____ . . 1 0 1 Pittsburgh --------·· ·······----· 17 12 4 Princeton _______ 2 0 1 Purdue ---------------· 15 9 Seventeenth Regiment 1 1 Southern California 8 4 Southern Methodist 2 1 Syracuse .. _________ 1 0 Texas Christian ___ 1 1 Vanderbilt _ ······-· ... -I Virginia _ 1 Washington State _. l
3 l l
Western Reserve ..... 12 5 West Virginia .. ·--- ... 4 3 Wilmington ---· 1 l Wisconsin __ __ _ 22 13 Wittenberg .. _______ ___ 15 12 Wooster _____ ... ·-···· 8 -+
5 0 3 l l 0 1 0 0 6 l 0 6 3 2
0 .500 0 1.000 0 .000 2 .522 0 .000 2 .786 0 .818 1 .750 0 1.000 0 .667 0 .000 0 1.000 1 .906 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .500 0 1.000 3 .597 3 .662 2 .562 0 .500 0 1.000 0 .727 0 .756 0 1.000 4 .306 0 .000 0 .600 1 .933 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 I .683 0 .000 3 .558 2 .667 0 1.000 1 .914 3 .806 0 1.000 0 .000 l .735 l .250 I .633 0 1.000 l .562 0 .500 0 .000 0 1.000 0 .750 0 1.000 0 1.000 1 .458 0 .750 0 1.000 3 .659 0 .800 2 .625
Total Games Played 539 Total Games Lost _ 162
Total Games Won _ 337 Total Games Tied _ 40
All-Time Percentage _______ .662
36
• Dining, Dancing and Entertainment night I y in The TOWN and COUNTRY ROOM.
• Famous for Fine Food Outstanding Service Hospitality
COCKTAIL LOUNGE COFFEE SHOP AND GRILL
Private parties arranged on short notice.
Harry L . Ludwig President and Managing Director
• • •
: For pre-game • fun . . and • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
post-game celebrations
.. 655 ROOMS
w ith BATH
FIREPROOF GARAGE
Select THE SENECA ~ One of Columbus'
Finest Hotels
For Your
PLEASURE
After The Game
Dance Tonight at 9 P.M. to the Seneca's Own Orchestra .
• YOU WILL ENJOY THE FINE FOOD AND LIQUORS, AS WELL AS THE
FAIRNESS OF SENECA PRICES . Garage and Plenty East Broad at Grant of Parking Space' Handy to Everything
250 Rooms and Su ites Phone MAin 2341
Your Host
Jam.es H. Michos Pres . and Gen. Mg r.
E. ELFORD
~ SON, INC. Contractors
COLUMBUS, OHIO
Compliments Of
Columbus
Taxicab
Association
COLUMBUS TAXICAB ________________ fL-2623
EAST SIDE ___________________________ ____ fE-5511
GREEN ________ _ ___________________ AD-4141
HILLS ____ __________________ _____ __ MA-1313
NORTHWAY ____________________________ UN-1191
RADIO ___________________________________ AD-2222
RED TOP ___________________ _________________ FL-2623
SAFETY __________________ __________________ fl-2623
YELLOW _________________________________ AD-4141
SMITH-STEVENS
TAILORING CO.
• CUSTOM TAILOR ING
• DRY CLEANING
o AL TERA TIONS
• FORMAL WEAR RENTALS
1894 N. High at 16th Ave.
Opposite OSU WA. 9373 Don A. Smith & John S. Stevens, Co-owners
==o=="'"'-"'= =csc,"'l
H
j gh~. q~~flc'lest !f{otef ~
~~~ 37
.
BUCKEYES
RICHARD HILINSKI No. 70-Tackle
GEORGE ROSSO No. 47- Halfback
ROBERT WATKINS No. 45-Fullback
ROBERT BOND Na. 46- Halfback
Photos by House of Portraits
38
JERRY HARKRADER No. 44- Halfback
THURLOW WEED No. 24- Place-kicker
" Never Saw Him Throw It So High"
McCLURE NESBITT
MOTOR CORP. 1505 E. Main St.
Complete One Stop Service • 24 IIour
Towing
Harold Wood President
Your Friendly
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH
DEALERS
WOOD NESBITT
INC. 611 E. Broad St.
OHIO STATE PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
No. Name Position
88 TOM HAGUE LE 73 GEORGE JACOBY (CC) LT 62 M IKE TAKACS LG 59 KEN VARGO _ c 63 JIM REICHENBACH RG 70 DICK HILINSKI _ RT 80 DICK BRUBAKER RE 22 DA VE LEGGETT QB 40 HOWARD CASSADY LH 45 BOB WATKINS RH 47 GEORGE ROSSO FB
THE BUCKEYE SQUAD 11 Boudrie, RH 59 Vargo, C 12 Auer, RH 60 Weaver, RG 14 Augenstein, LH 61 Ramser, LG 15 Knecht, FB 62 Takacs, LG 19 Howell, LH 63 Reichenbach, RG 20 Borton, QB 64 Williams, LG 22 Leggett, QB 65 Jones, LG 23 Gage, QB 66 Roberts, LG 24 Weed, QB 67 Stewart, LT 28 Booth, QB 68 Riticher, RG 30 Hans, FB 70 Hilinski, LT 33 Brilliant, FB 71 Rader, LT 34 Spears, FB 72 Schumacher, RT 35 Gibbs, FB 73 Jacoby, RT 36 Campbell, FB 74 Stoeckel, LT 40 Cassady, LH 75 Whetstone, LT 44 Harkrader, RH 76 Verhoff, RT 45 Watkins, FB 77 Swartz, LT 46 Bond, FB 78 Ebinger, RT 47 Rosso, RH 79 Machinsky, RT 48 Shedd,RH 80 Brubaker, RE 49 Young, RH 82 Ludwig, LE 50 Ruehl, C 83 Dugger, LE 51 Krisher, C 84 Hesler, RE 54 Nosky, LG 85 Joslin, RE 55 Thornton, C 87 Collmar, LE 56 Dawdy, C 88 Hague, LE 57 Nestich, C 89 Guzik, LE 58 Mott, C 92 Ashton , RE
CHESTERFIELD BEST FfJR YfJV
h KING - SIZE
GA~TTES
U(;(.tn • MYtRS TOBACCO CO
NORTHWESTERN PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
No. Name Position
88 JOE COLLIER LE LT
't LG c
RG RT RE
78 JOHN ROCHE '-63 RON RIBA 56 JOHN DAMORE _ 87 FRED NOSAL 79 JOHN YOUNG 80 JOHN BIEVER 22 DICK THOMAS 46 BOB McKEIVER 30 DICK RANICKE 15 BOB LAUTER
QB LH RH FB
THE WILDCAT SQUAD 14 P. Smith, RH 15 Lauter, FB 17 Meyer, LH 18 Troglio, RH 22 Thomas, QB 23 Lentvorsky, QB 24 Rondou, QB 25 Rearden, QB 27 Niepokoj, RE 28 Weber, FB 30 Ranicke, RH 31 Morman, RE 32 Chandler, LH
33 Glassman, FB 35 Hansen, RG 39 Otto, FB 43 Nimrod, RG 45 Israels, RH 46 McKeiver, LH 47 King, RH 49 Hren, RG 50 Delaney, C 51 Searcy, LT 52 J. Smith , LT 53 Riba, LG
54 Callaway, C 55 Sacks, LT 56 Damore, C 57 Haffner, C 59 Van Horn, C 61 lngolia, RG 62 Higley, LG 63 Kachaturoff, LG 65 Remien, LG 71 Krueger, RT 73 Fuller, LT 74 Zagol , RT 76 Lyons, RT
77 McAuliffe, LG 78 Roche, LT 79 Young, RT 80 Biever, RE 82 Haskin, LE 83 Swatos, RT 85 Moyers, LH 86 Peterson, LE 87 Nosal , RG 88 Colli er, LE 89 McCormick, LE 90 Demyan, RE
CHESTERFIELD BEST FfJRYfJV
Copyright 19)}. t.,""'" & Mnu To&Aooo (.o.
A Scotts Lawn provides a bouncy outdoor carpet for the little people in your life ....
Its cool green color adds charm to your home, increases the value of the property. Maybe not a must but why be satisfied with less- when a pleasing Scotts Lawn is so easy to achieve.
Write for free LAWN CARE bulletin service. These t imely pam• phle ts enable the amateur to g e t prolessjonol lawn results.
O M St:iitl &- SONS co ~ AiJwz 1870 al ?11.aJuµ.oilJJz, (jJti.o
Also Ridgefield, N. J. - Palo Alto, California
DAVID WILLIAMS No. 64-Guard
BUCKEYES
HOWARD CASSADY No. 40- Halfback
Ph.otoB by Ho1Ue of Portraits
DONALD STOECKEL No. 74- Tackle
RICHARD BRUBAKER No. 80- End
43
JERRY KRISHER No. 51 - Center
FRANCIS MACHINSKY No. 79-Tackle
It costs less to resurface with IISPHIILT . .. Modernize worn out pavements with asphalt . Its durable and shock resisting qualities are particularly suited to withstand the traffic wear on business streets. Asphalt concrete roads are safe~, too. For salvaging old pave-ments or building new ones, asphalt always costs less .
NON-SKID LONGER-LASTING
ASPHALT gives you that
velvety-smooth ride
PLANTS :
CANTON CLEVELAND FINDLAY FLAT ROCK LOOI
MARION MASSILLON SANDUSKY SPORE WARREN
44
rrlaitJM. ]h.Jz ]JUUn
That 1s, Wilke makes
The Team a Stronger one!
•
Footba II men Like
Wilke's meats.
•
We sell better meats ...
the kind you'll want
on your own table.
ll. Wilhl ?r/Juth, !Jnc.
Wholes ale and Retail
175 E. Rich St.
THE
FORT HAYES
COLUMBUS
• * •
350 Rooms
All With Bath
• * •
Columbus Cocktail Lounge
Attractively Appointed Coffee Shop
Beautiful Crysta·l Dining Room
All Public and Guest Rooms
Air-Conditioned
• * •
Recommended in Duncan Hines' Books,
" Adventures in Good Eating" and
" Lodg ing fo r a Night".
R. I. GRIFFITH, Managing Director
45
STADIUM
INFORMATION
Permanent eats: 71,131. Total seating capacity, 78,677.
Construction cost: $1,341,000. Financed chiefly by gifts aggregating $1,083,000, pledged by 13,000 persons.
Seats in Section A: 31,318; Section B, 14,320; Section C, 20,917. "A" Boxes, 2,828; "B" Boxes, 1,748. Total permanent seats, 71,131.
Temporary seats: South stands, 3,625; field bleachers 3,921. Total temporary seats, 7,546.
Seats between goal lines: 29,175.
Height of wall : 98 feet, three inches; length, 752 feet, 6 inches; ground area, 10 acres. Circumference, one-third mile. Material: Concrete and steel. Seats in pres box, 140. Radio and Photo Booths: 17.
ARCH,ITECTURAL FEATU RES
Eighty-seven concrete and steel arches, each 13 feet wide and 56 feet high.
Towers at the open and north entrance each 100 feet high and 36 feet square.
A half dome 86 feet, six inches high and 70 feet in diameter.
Twelve ramps feed 112 aisles.
SERVICE TO P ATRO S
Emergency medical treatment is available in special first aid quarters back of Sections 11 and 12 in "B" deck. A mobile station also is available on the ground at the northwest section of the stadium under "A" deck. Pay telephones are located on the ground floor and also outside the ticket office at the southeast corner of the stadium. A lost and found department is maintained at the Ticket Office until after the game. Losses should be reported at this office and articles found should be turned in there or to an usher. Address Inquiries to the Athletic Ticket Office.
RADIOS AND MOVIE CAMERAS
Wes tern Conference rules forbid spectators having either portable radios or movie cameras in the stands. These may be checked at the Ticket Office and claimed upon departure from the game.
P UBLIC ADDRE SS ANNOUNCEME NTS
o announcements are ever made over the Stadium public address system except under the gravest circumstances, such as serious illness or accident. Kindly refrain from requesting this service.
GAME TIME
All games in Ohio Stadium begin at 2 p.m. EST. Gates are opened at 12 :30 p.m.
Specialize in Good Health by Shopping at Those Dairy Specialists
ISALYS ICE CREAM! DAIRY PRODUCTS! LUNCHES!
When YOU B uy Ice Cream
BUY THE BEST!
350 Stores in Ohio,
Pennsylvania, West Virginia
The
Virginia Hotel Long a trad ition w ith university students and
football followers, has kept abreast of chang
ing t rends a nd today offers
EXCELLENT- MODERNIZED
ROOM ACCOMMODATIONS
The finest food, prepared under the supervision of an out
standing Dietitian and served in lovely, redecorated Dining
Rooms.
And beverages-prepared for you by men who have served
our Patrons here over a period of several years-in our
de lightful Mayfair Cockta il Lounge and Bar,
- Every Modern Hotel Convenience-
Third and Gay Streets Main 3101 " One Block North of Ohio's Historic Capital"
Bill DUNN, Manager
46
Dairy Specialists
34 Dairy Stores in Columbus
Sandwich Shops
Fastest Service
* Tops In Food
Before and After The Game
* 1912 N. High St. 12 E. 15th Ave.
Between 16th & 17th Gate To Campus
7 A.M.- 12:30 A.M.
Never Closes 7 A.M.-2:30 A.M. Fri. & Sat.
BUCKEYES Photos by HolLse of Portraits
JOHN AUER No. 12-Halfba ck
DAVID LEGGETI No. 22- Quarte rbock
JACK AUGENSTEIN No. 14-Fullback
47
JACK GIBBS No. 35- Fullback
CARROLL HOWELL No. 19- Holfbaclc
ROBERT HESLER No. 84- End
DONALD HAFFNER No. 57 Center
ZJGGIE NIEPOKOJ No. 27 End
ROBERT LAUTER No. 1 S Fullbock
JOHN ROCHE No . 78 Tackle
48
RICHARD RANICKE No. 30 Halfback
KURT KRUEGER No. 71 Tackle
JOSEPH COLLIER No. 88 End
BUCKEYES
ROBERT THORNTON No. SS- Center
No. 82- End
ROBERT ROBERTS No. 66- Guard
Ph ot os by House of Portraits
49
DONALD SWARTZ No. 77- Tackle
THOMAS HAGUE No. 88- End
RAYMOND RITICHER No. 68- Guard
ROBERT McKEIVER No. 46 Halfback
JAMES TROGLIO No. 18 Halfback
BOB MORMAN No. 31 End
MIKE McAULIFFE No. 77 Guard
50
ROBERT KING No. 47 Halfback
WAYNE GLASSMAN No. 33 Fullback
JOHN YOUNG No. 79 Tackle
THE
Broad and High is known the country over as the center
of football fever. The Deshler for years has played an im
portant part in "after game" celebrations. The Deshler
Hilton is at your service. Enjoy pleasant associations, in
triguing cocktails, tempting foods with us this evening.
Old friends of this fine hotel will find its unique individ
uality singularly unchanged, while its excellent service and
gracious hospitality will be enhanced by high Hilton stan
dards of perfection.
51
JAMES SCHUMACHER No. 72-Tackle
BUCKEYES
THOMAS SPEARS No. 34-Fullbock
Photos by House of Portraits
KENNETH VARGO Na. 59- Center
WILLIAM BOOTH No. 28- Quarterback
52
DAVID WEAVER No. 60- Guard
JAMES RUEHL No. 50- Tackla
of Buckeye Fans are listening to TOM MANNING and JOE MULVIHILL
Ohio State football broadcasts over WTAM
Cleveland have become an institution
with sports fans for 25 years. Like
millions of Buckeyes, depend on these broadcasts by Tom Manning for excitement,
color and exacting play-by-play reporting.
If you can't attend every game,
remember to set your radio dial at 1100 on Saturday afternoons this Fall.
THE BANKERS LIFE AND CASUAL TY CO. whose famous White Cross Plan protects millions of people against the risk of sickness and accident, brings you these games over WTAM, Your Community Station, with
./
NESCAFE New, 100% i_nstant coffee, with pure coffee jet exploded into gems of rich, savory Nescafe.
--; ' , ' ' ' ' ,,,,,,, . ' ' . ' ' ' : : :oJAL:: ,,,,,,., . :::1100:: ,,,,,,.,. ••••••• ,,, . .,,,, •:, t 9 9 8 8 .
ec,•ast&
9$ :\\~t9, S
50,000 WATTS CLASS IA CLEAR CHANNEL
CLEVELAND, OHIO
llOYD ISRAElS No. 45 Halfback
DAN KACHATUROFF No. 63 Guard
SANFORD SACKS No. 55 TACKLE
WARREN HASKIN No. 82 End
54
RICHARD PETERSON No. 86 End
STEPHEN DELANEY No. 50 Center
RICHARD THOMAS No. 22 Quarterback
" The Seasons Pass ... The Years Will Roll" ... how true ... yet it seems as only yesterday you sat in the Student Section, yelling at the top of your young voice, cheering on your fellow classmates. How nice it is, regardless of how far you may have since traveled, to be home once again among fellow grad-uates ... to renew old acquaintances and make new friends ... all united in one purpose, to help "the team" to vic-tory. We are happy you are here ... Welcome Home!
Printers of the O.S.U. Football Programs
32-40 WARREN ST. UNiversity 4185
• • •
COLUMBUS 8, OHIO
NEWARK, OHIO AM & FM
FOR THE BEST IN SPORTS
~LOO 1430
PROFESSIONAL, COLLEGIATE
AND HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS
55
rroo 100.3
BUCKEYES
JACK CAMPBELL No. 36-Fullback
RICHARD NOSKY No. 54-Center
RICHARD YOUNG No. 49-Halfback
Photos by House of Portraits
56
WILLIAM MOTT No . SB-Center
DONALD DAWDY No. 56-Center
ROBERT WHETSTONE No. 75-Tackle
Time out ... Have a Coke
FINE STATIONERY
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
Varsity Drugs 16th Ave. and High St.
Del Rio
Restaurant STEAKS- SPAGHETTI
Phone Kl. 0117 1276 W. 5th Ave.
Columbus, Ohio
57
- it.<>m the
Ot.dlnat.rl
At Meal Time
• Continuous Service
6:30 o .m. - 9:00 p.m.
BREAKFAST- LUNCH- DINNER
Sunday Service Especially Delightful!
~··· ..9?~ 19 4 Dinin1 N. HIGH ST. Room,
As Time Passes- OHIO STADI U M Completed 1922
Stands as Positive Evidence of the Enduring Strength Possible to Attain in Concrete by Using
MARBLE CLIFF LIMESTONE AND MARBLE CLIFF LIMESTO NE SAND
TH E M ARBLE CLIFF QUARRIE S CO . COLUMBUS , O HIO
The Complete Bakery Lin.e! The Womans Ba king Company is an exclusive
baker of fine bakery products for restaurants,
hotels, schools, and institutions.
For 61 years baking 54 different items of
good to ecit baked goods. Regular route serv
ice six days a week. Emergency service at
anytime. We are as close as your telephone.
EVergreen 9564
THE WOMANS BAKING CO.
Karl F. Faelchle II, '38, President
58
ALL NEW
GRANDVIEW INN 1127 Dublin Rd.
Come See The Most
Beautiful Dining Room In Ohio
•
The Best Steak Dinner in Town.
• Chicken- Sea Food-Frog Legs
All Legal Beverages
Open Until 2:30 A.M.
No.
11 12 14 15 19 20 22 23 24 28 30 33 34 35 36 40 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 82 83 84 85 87 88 89 92
OHIO STATE ROSTER
Name Pos . Wgt . Hgt . Age Class
Boudr ie, James -----------LH 182 5-11 20 Junior Auer, John ----·----·······---- RH 178 5-7 18 Sophomore Augenstein, Jack ______________ FB 192 5-10 19 Sophomore Knecht, Gilbert ------·····------FB 185 5-10 20 Junior
*Howell, Carroll ___ . __________ LH 168 5-9 20 Jun ior ** Borton, John ____________ QB 196 6-1 20 Junior
*Leggett, David -····-----··QB 192 6-0 20 Junior Gage, Ralph ___________ QB 170 5-10 19 Sophomore
*Weed, Thurlow _______________ QB 145 5-5 20 Junior Booth, William ·-·----·-·---····----QB 180 6-0 19 Sophomore Hans, Joseph _ _________ LH 165 5-8 22 Sophomore Brilliant, George _________ fB 189 5-7 19 Sophomore Spears, Thomas _________________ fB 197 6-0 18 Sophomore Gibbs, Jack _______________ FB 180 5-10 22 Junior Campbell, Jack ---------------FB 194 6-2 19 Sophomore
*Cassady, Howard ---------------LH 172 5-10 19 Sophomore Harkrader, Jerry -------···-··-RH 172 5-9 19 Sophomore
*Watkins, Robert ____________ FB 190 5-9 21 Junior *Bond, Robert -·-····---------RH 184 5-11 20 Sophomore
* *Rosso, George ---------·----RH 176 5-10 23 Senior Shedd, Jan ______________ RH 168 5-10 19 Sophomore Young , Richard _____________ RH 164 5-10 21 Junior
*Ruehl, James -------------···---RT 218 6-3 23 Junior ** Krisher, Jerry _______________ c 221 6-0 20 Junior
Nosky, Richard _________ LG 200 6-1 21 Senior *Thornton, Robert ___________ c 189 6-0 21 Senior
Dawdy, Donald ___________ c 220 6-1 22 Senior Nestich , Mortin ____________ c 194 5-11 19 Sophomore Mott, William _____ c 213 6-4 21 Junior Yo rgo, Kenneth --·-········----c 190 6-1 19 Sophomore Weaver, David -····-··--------RG 190 5-8 19 Sophomore Ramser, Richard _________ LG 197 5-10 19 Sophomore
**Takacs, Michael ___________ LG 209 6-0 23 Senior ** Reichen bach, James ____________ RG 202 5-10 20 Junior
Williams, David ___________ LG 198 5-11 20 Junior Jones, Herbert - -------------LG 182 5-10 20 Sophomore
*Roberts, Robert ··--·-·-···-·--- LG 188 5-1 1 21 Senior Stewart, Roland _______________ LT 205 6-1 19 Sophomore
* Riticher, Raymond ____________ RG 225 5-10 20 Junior Hilinski, Richard ___________ LT 230 6-2 22 Junior Rader, Ted ____________ LT 216 6-3 24 Sophomore
*Schumacher, James __________ RT 208 6-0 21 Junior **Jacoby, George (CC) __________ RT 210 5-11 21 Senior
Stoeckel, Donald ---··-··-----l T 206 6-0 19 Sophomore Whetstone, Robert _____________ LT 199 5-11 19 Sophomore Verhoff, Jack ----------------RT 250 6-4 18 Sophomore
*Swartz, Donald ----···-·--····LT 224 6-1 20 Junior Ebinger, Elbert -·····-------·RT 235 6-3 19 Sophomore Machinsky, Francis ___________ RT 209 6-0 19 Sophomore Brubaker, Richard ____________ RE 198 6-0 21 Junior
*Ludwig, Paul ----------------LE 206 6-3 19 Sophomore *Dugger, Dean --------··-------LE 204 6-2 20 Junior
Hesler, Robert ----------------RE 193 6-0 19 Sophomore ** Joslin, Robert (CC) ---·····----RE 188 6-0 22 Senior
Collmar, William __________ LE 170 6-2 19 Sophomore *Hague, Thomas --------------LE 198 6-0 21 Senior Guzik, Frank ---·-·····--·-------LE 194 6-3 21 Sophomore Ashton , William ------------------RE 190 6-2 20 Junior
• Indicates Letter
59
Home Town
Columbus Mansfield Loudonville Lima Portsmouth Alliance New Philadelph ia Pa inesville Columbus Youngstown Columbu s Columbus Wheeling, W. Ya . Columbu s Lima Columbus Middletown New Bedford, Mass. Akron Pittsburgh, Pa . Columbus Columbus Cumberland, Md. Massillon Lakewood Willard Cincinnati Youngstown Proctorville Martins Ferry Hamilton Shadyside Massillon Massillon Pittsburgh, Pa. Columbus Zanesville Ashland Toledo Cleveland Wadsworth Massillon Toledo Hamilton Barberton Columbus Newark Hamilton Uniontown, Pa . Shaker Heights Marion Charleston, W. Ya . Hamilton Middletown Martins Ferry Rocky River Cleveland Piqua
''looks'' like a million
THE DEAN & BARRY CO. COLUMBUS, OHIO
FLAVOR
AGED 4 YEARS
IN WOOD
James Vernor Co.
FE. 5385
60
and AFTER the game
Enjoy the best in
Ice Cream, too at home
or at your
favorite
fountain!
liordens
The NEWEST
RESTAURANT 77 S. HIGH STREET
-your good-will by rendering a satisfying and efficient food service.
An enlarged dining place of superb beauty. See the Master Mural depicting the Beautiful and Historic Ohio.
Other Miiis lleslauranls In Cleveland and Cincinnati. In Detroit, Greenflefd's Restaurants under same management.
History of The Ohio State Seal
SEAL
COAT-OF-ARMS
T HE latest ver ions of the Ohio tate Uni ,·er ity ea! and the Coat-of-Arms were designed by University Architect Howard Dwight Smith. accepted by the Faculty Council and officially approved by the Board of Trustees.
The new insignia represents a simplification of the seal designed by the late Profe sor Thomas E. French, '95, adopted by the Board of Trustees, April 7, 1940, and the coat-of-arm , accepted November 5, 1938. All the basic symbolism of the e two insignia de igned by Prof. French a re retained in the simplified designs.
Joseph ullivant, member of the first Board of Trustees of the old Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, designed the initial seal which \\'a accepted by the early trustee March 8, 1 71, and had been u eel continuously until 1940.
The official seal of the Ohio State niversity (adopted April 1-t. 1952) i intended on ly to be in black and white: the coat-ofa rm has been designed fo r color as follow :
Official ca rlet and gray color on the coat-of-arms a re pecified in the l\Iun el Color Chart (officially accepted color guide of the . Bureau of tandards ) as :
arlet- Red 5. 0-R -t/ 12 Gray-Neutral N-6. 5/ 0
Colors a - they appear on the coat-of-a rms are: Face of the shield is in ca rl et. with the "O'" in sil\'er
o ra y.
Book i · in go ld, a · i · al ·o the pyramid with carlet Aame, foliage around hield and motto ribbon at bottom .
Buckeye leaf and fruit is in light green. , i\Treath at bottom of pyramid is in scarlet and ilver gray ( the plain area i gray ).
THE FOOTBALL MANAGERS
left to right: Bob Herman, Dayton, sophomore; Mori Zahler, Dayton, junior; Norman Young, Forest Hills, N. Y., Junior; Jahn Cole, Dayto,,, senior manager. Absent from picture: Don lewis, Galion sophomore.
61
NORTHWESTERN ROSTER
No. Name Pos. Wgt. Hgt. Age Class Home
14 Smith, Poul ·----------·- _________ HB 155 5-8 25 Junio r Milwaukee, Wis. 15 Lauter, Bob ········-·············----··F B 185 5-9 21 Junio r Evanston 17 Meyer, Dick ·-·····-··········-----HB 165 6-1 20 Junior Dave nport, lo . 18 Troglio, Jome s ········--·-····--·-··· H B 170 5-9 19 Sophomore Spring Vo lley 22 Thomas, Dick ---··-·--------QB 177 5-11 21 Senio r Rock Island 23 Lentvorsky, Francis _____ QB 160 5-9 19 Sophomore Whiting, Ind. 24 Rondou, Don -······-···-·····-----QB 193 6 21 Senior Green Boy, Wis. 25 Rearden, John --·········--·-···QB 175 6 19 Sophomore Evanston 27 Niepokoj, Ziggie ·····-··················-E 195 6-2 21 Junio r Hammond, Ind. 28 Weber, Gerold -·-·············-··-·FB 185 5- lOY, 10 Junior Jamestow n, N. D. 30 Ronicke, Dick ___ --------····HB 190 6 20 Junio r Chicago 31 Morman, Bob -------· ·----·E 180 6-1 20 Sophomore Chicago 32 Chandler, Nick . ··-··--·----HB 175 5-6 22 Senior Chicago 33 Glassman, Wayne __________ FB 194 5-101/, 20 Sophomore Lo Porte, Ind. 35 Hansen, Fronk -···········------G 185 5-10 20 Junior Chicago 39 Otto, Gerold ---········-···---FB 200 6 20 Junio r Kankakee 43 Nimrod, Richard G 180 5-11 20 Junio r Skokie 45 Israels, Lloyd ····--··-······-----HB 190 6 21 Senior Brookfield 46 McKeiver, Bob -···-·····-------HB 160 5-7 20 Sophomore Evanston 47 King, Bob ------···········--·----HB 185 6 20 Sophomore Fond du Loe, Wis. 49 Hren, Fronk --·······---···---G 190 5-10 20 Junior Duluth, Minn. 50 Delaney, Stephen _____________ c 205 6-3 19 Sophomore Michigan City, Ind. 51 Searcy, Merl ---------------T 200 6 20 Junior Michigan City, Ind. 52 Smith, John -----···················-······ T 245 6-4 20 Sophomore Cleveland Hts., 0 . 53 Ribo, Ron ------·-------G 200 6 21 Junior Evanston 54 Calloway, Thomas ····----------C 228 6 20 Junior Gory, Ind . 55 Socks, Sanford __________ T 220 6-3 20 Sophomore Cleveland Hts., 0 . 56 Damore, John ------·-·····---···-·c 210 6 20 Junior Riverside 57 Hoffner, Donald -·-·······-··-----c 205 6-2 21 Senio r Chicago 59 Von Horn, Jerry -----·-······--c 200 6-1 20 Sophomore Green Boy, Wis. 61 lngolio, Robert _________ G 185 5-11 19 Sophomore Chicago 62 Higley, Robert __________ G 200 6 19 Junior Brookfield 63 Kachoturoff, Don -···--------G 225 5-11 23 Junio r Gory, Ind. 65 Remien, Jerry ···----·-····------G 190 6 19 Sophomore Wilmette 68 Anderson, Roy --·-·······--------G 194 5-11 20 Sophomore Chicago 71 Krueger, Kurt ---·--·······------T 205 6-2 20 Sophomore South Bend, Ind. 73 Fuller, Art ---··-·----T 198 6-3 20 Junior Kewanee 74 Zogol, Ed T 210 6 19 Sophomore Dow ners Grove 76 Lyons, Bernie --···-·-······----T 225 6-5 19 Junior Chicago 78 Roche, John ···-····-------------T 225 6-3 20 Junior Chicago 79 Young, John ------·-·------T 215 6-1 20 Junior Chicago 80 Biever, John ------·-------------E 185 6-3 19 Senior Aurora 82 Hoskin, Warren - ·-----------E 195 6-3 20 Junior Cleveland, 0 . 83 Swatos, William - --· T 200 6-4 21 Senio r Berwyn 85 Moyers, George .... ·····-··----·--HB 190 6-Y, 19 Sophomore Hinsdale 86 Peterson, Richard _________ E 190 6-1 20 Junior Chicago 87 Nosa l, Fred -----·············---·····G 208 6-2 19 Sophomore Chicago 88 Collie r, Joe ------- ........ _____ E 190 6-2 21 Senior Rock Island 89 McCormick, Joe --····-·····---E 190 6-2 19 Sophomore Oak Pork 90 Demyan, Edwa rd -·····-··--··-E 200 6-3 22 Senior Mansfi e ld, 0 .
"The Official Watch for Timing This Game is Longines- the World's Most Honored Watch"
62
•
BUCKEYES
MARTIN NESTI CH WILLIAM ASHTON No. 57- Center No. 92- End
Ph ot os by House of Portrai t s
TED RADER No. 71 - Tackle
'(J-hk, s ude s taclia,n
63
GILBERT KNECHT No. 15- Ho lfback
FRANK GUZIK No. 89- End
HERBERT JONES No. 65- Gua rd
lARRY SNYDER Head Coach
Track
1953 Indoor Results
Ohio State 23, Michigan 81 Ohio State 23, Penn State 35
Ohio State won 0, lost 2
Conference: (7th tie)
1953 Outdoor Results
Ohio State 70, Miami 77 Ohio State 50.5, Indiana 80.5 Ohio State 55.5, Penn State 66.5' Oh io State 66.5, Purdue 65.5 Ohio State 90, Bold. Wallace 42 Ohio State 52 , Wisconsin 55 Ohio State 52 , Minnesota 46 Oh io State 52, Northwestern 12
Ohio State won 4, lost 4
Conference (8th)
•
CHARLES BEETHAM Asst. Coach
Front row, left to right: Bob Coldren , Kenny Russell , Don Perry, Meade Burnett. Second row, Jae Morgan , 1954 captain-elect; J im Isaacson, Wynn Goodhart, Jerry W·e lbourn, 1953 captain; Paul Dimm ick, Robert Weadick, Larry Snyder, head coach; Back row: Chet Waltrip, trainer; Norman Jackson , Dick Hause, Al Roberts, Dean Dugger, Harold Lezotte.
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MARTY KAROW Head Coach
Baseball
1953 Results
Ohio State 7 , Camp Lejeune 5 Ohio State 2, Camp Lejeune 5 Ohio State 3, Cherry Point 11 Oh io State 4, Cherry Poin t 5 Ohio State 3, Cherry Point 4 O hio State 1, Western Michigan 2 O hio State 1, Western Michigan 4 Ohio Sta te 4, Notre Dame 6 Ohio State 8, Notre Dame O Ohio Sta te 10, Xavier O Ohio State 3, Miami 5 Ohio State 9, Michigan 19 Ohio State 4, Michigan Stale Ohio State 2, Michigan State Ohio Stale 6, Purdue 2 Ohio Sta le 12, Indiana 8 Ohio Stale 10, Indiana 4 Ohio State 0, Wisconsin 13 Ohio Sta te 8 1 Northwestern 2 Ohio State 11, Northwestern O Ohio State 5, Miami 3 Ohio State 1, 1 llinois 2 Ohio State 0, Ohio University 7 Ohio Sta te 7, Minnesota 4 Ohio Sta te 2, Iowa 10 Ohio State 2, Iowa 1
Ohio Stale won 13, lost 13
(Conference-third RICHARD ERNST
1954 Captain
Front row, left to right: Jack Wilson, Joe Ciminello, Richard Finn , Richard Ernst , 1954 captain-elect, Wilbur Rutenschroer, William Wisler. Second row: Richa rd Mylander, James Corn, Jack Jones, Dave Leonhard , Jack Gannon, 1953 captain; William Sachs, David Bechte l, Ronald Roland . Back row: George Busenberg, trainer; Marty Karow, head coach; Paul Burns, Paul Ebert, Harry Rutter, Lowell Wrigley, assistant coach, Harold Rice, manager.
65
W. P. Cushman W. P. Ashbrook Or. D. Obe rteuffer Chairman
PHYSICAL T HE Ohio State ni\'cr ·ity :\fen's Plw ·ical Education Department graduate · approxim~tely fortyfi\'e profc. ional students ach year into the profe -E,ional tC'aching- field and some thr e hundred men annually pr pare themselves to be teachers and :ithlt>tic coach ..
Ohio ~ tat physical ducation graduates are found in all sections of th 0 United tate but most of them are located in the Buckeye tate. In recent years approximately t\\'O hund( d haYe gone from · hio
tate to hio high schools or colleges. ;. fany staff members of Ohio college and universities come tCI Ohio tate for profe: ·i nal preparation in the phy ·ical education field .
Included among hio tat · gra luate are tuart Holcomb, head football coach at Purdue univ rsit) and \Vesley Fe ·ler, h ad coach at :\[inne ota, and former hi.o tate mentor. \V. \V. ( \\ ' dy) Hayes. pre ent hio tate head coach. wa a po t-gracluatr tuclent in phy ical education.
Graduate · from the prof e sional cu rriculum have tudiecl child growth and cl velopment, technique of
teaching, and are adept in a wide variety o[ ports activiti s. They participate frequently in community recreation proe-rams.
The principal function of the department. howeYer. i · to conduct a proo-ram of port in truction for all male fre hmen. Participating a in tructor are thirty-fiv 111 n, inclu ling many of th athletic
T. W. (Bill) Taylor A. J. Montana ro Charles Mand
A. S. Dani e ls l . A. Hen Charl es R. Kovacic
EDUCATION
66
coaches. During the peak f the Cni,·ersity\ enro11ment in 19+7, the hio tate Department of Phy ·ical Education in . truction \\'a the large t in the \\'Oriel, -6-J.O per~on: being under instruction in 180 different ~ect ions of sport .
O rganized cla ·~es are conducted in eighte n -ports, includ ing ~wim111i1w. golf. tennis, handball, badminton, wre!stling. boxing, bo\\'ling, a rchery. Oy-ca,,ting. touch football. ba ·ketball, o ce r. ·quash, lacrosse, and track. The program cur rently enrolls 3400 men.
A 11 freshmen in the C n iversity a re enrolled for academic credit and the faculty of the 'niver -ity accredits this type of in ·truction to\\'ard all degrees.
An important part of th \\'Ork of the di,·ision deals \\'ith men \\'ho have I n injured or are therwi ·e handicapped. Each man ha · a ·p cific program provided for him, taught by a ·taff of highly trained in·tructors. The department al o se rves the rehabilitation clinic of 'niver ·ity Hospital. offering recreational therapy to pati nt ·. The Division of Physical Education also offer · a h gi ne cour e in per ·onal health pr blems to a ll fre hmen.
Richard . Larkins is di rector of the department a nd Dr. Delbert Oberteuffer i chairman of the men's clivi ·ion. Pr fe so r B rnard F. :d ooney i · ·upervis r of ·port instruction cour es. Dr. L. . Hess i · in charge of teacher-preparation: Dr. A. . Daniel ·
UJ ervise · the adapted program fo r the handicapp ci, and Dr. \V. P. Cu hman i · supervi ·or f courses in per onal hygiene.
B. F. Mooney E. B. Trotter Secretory
Norma Burnham Stenographer
The Intramural
LEO G. STALEY, Director
"G A:\11 ·. - fo r [vcryone·· i~ a motto \\'hich could be applied t operaticm of the Ohio tate ni\'er ity intramural depa r tment, one of the large ·t of its kind in the country. Leo G. taley i the di rect r a i ted by Frederic Beekman.
Intramur:11 . port · a rc conducted n an exten ive b:i i during the enti re ·ch I yea r and an abbreviated prouram is offered during the ummer.
During the 1952-53 y a r, activitie were conducted in 25 ports. The fall program includes touch football, bowling, volleyball a11cl table tenni. ( doubles and singles). The winter program provides basketball, bowling, \\'restling, han !ball ( single and double · , squa ·h and weight lifting. An intramural fest ival conclude: the \\'inter actiYitie ·.
H ea vie. t ~chedule is pro\'ided in the _ pring when
67
Department
FRED BEEKMAN, Asst. Director
students haye acce. s to oftball , track wimming. badminton ( sinule · :ind double ) , g If. ( singles. double: and fo ur-man team ) , tenni s, ( single and doubles), fencing and a rchery.
Last summer. a ·oftball league wa conducted. no eligibility rule: being required, but tudent were requested to play only on on team. tudents and facu lty member · pl;i.yed on the ·ame team and fraternities com bin cl \\'ith lndep nclent · to form the . quad .
Ba ·kctball attracted 22 4 partici1 ants last win ter, followed in numb r by 1879 in touch footba ll. oft-ball drew 1560 "tuclent ·.
Ba ·ketball also head cl the team list \\'ith 2 ' ::.quad · in act ion, followed by touch football with 140; !:>Oftball \\'ith 13 and volleyba11 with 107.
MIKE PEPPE Head Coach
Swimming
1954 Schedule
Jan. 9- Wisconsin, here
Jan. 16- 0pen
Jan. 23- At Pittsburgh
Jan. 30- At Northwestern
Feb. 6 - 0pen
Feb. 12- lndiana, here
Feb. 13- At Pu rdue
Feb. 20- At M ichiga n State
Feb. 27- Michigan, here
Mar. 6- Big Ten Meet at Michi
gan
CARL WIRTHWEIN Asst. Coach
Front row, left to right: Mike Peppe, head coach; Morley Shapiro, Ford Konno, Nick Silverio; Bob Clotworthy, 1953 co-captain; Jerry Holan, 1953 co-captain; Dick Cleveland, 1954 captain-elect; Yoshi Oyakawa, Jerry Harrison. Back row, left to right: Irwin Raff, manager; Rocco Cirigliano, David Ford, Jack Van Horn, Kei th Clymer, Jorgen Birkeland, Carl Wirthwein, assistant coach, Chet Waltrip, trainer.
68
OHIO STATE POOL RECORDS 50 YARD FREE STYLE ............. ·- -······----·- :22.1, Henry Koslowski (Northwestern), 1943; Dick Cleveland (Ohio
State), 1952. ( Intercollegiate record) 100 YARD FREE STYLE ......... ____ .. ________ :49.2, Cleveland, 1952. (World record) 220 YARD FREE STYLE ______ ............... 2:06.6, Ford Konno (Ohio State), 1952. 440 YARD FREE STYLE .............. _____ 4 :31.8, Konno, 1952. 1500 METER FREE STYLE ..... - .... - ........... 18 :10.8, John Marshall (Yale), 1951. 100 YARD BACK STROKE ....... _ .. ________ :56.1, Yoshi Oyakawa (Ohio State), 1953. (World record) 150 YARD BACK STROKE _ ___ ...... 1 :32.1, Jack Taylor (Ohio State), 1950. 200 YARD BACK STROKE .............. __________ 2 :05.1 , Oyakawa, 1953. (Intercollegiate record) 100 YARD BREAST STROKE ........ _........... :59.3, Charles Moss, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1951. 200 YARD BREAST STROKE _ ............ _ .. 2:14.0, Jerry Holan (Ohio State), 1953. 220 YARD BREAST STROKE __ ..... ___ 2 :34.7, John Davies (Michigan), 1951. 150 YARD I DIVIDUAL MEDLEY ............ 1 :30.0, Burwell Jones (Michigan), 1953. 300 YARD 11 DIVlD AL 1EDLEY ........... 3:24.2, Jimmy Thomas (North Carolina), 1951. 300 YARD MEDLEY RELAY ...................... 2 :45.3, Ohio tate (Oyakawa, Holan, Cleveland), 1953.
(Applied for World record ) 400 YARD FREE STYLE RELAY ............. 3 :23.0, New Haven Swim Club (Don Sheff, Dick Thoman, Bill Farnsworth,
Ray Reid), 1951.
OHIO STA TE VARSITY RECORDS 50 YARD FREE TYLE ...... -.... ---·-·--· :22.1 , Dick Cleveland, 1952. (Ties Intercollegiate record) 100 YARD FREE TYLE .... .................. .... :49.2, Cleveland, 1952. (World record ) 220 YARD FREE STYLE -· ..... ___ .. _... 2 :06.4, Ford I onno, 1952. 440 YARD FREE STYLE ..... ........ ....... .. 4 :30.3, Konno, 1952. (American Citizen record ) 1500 METER FREE STYLE .................... 18: 11.5, Konno, 1952. ( International record ) 100 YARD BACK TROKE .......... ........ :56.1, Yoshi Oyakawa, 1953. (World record ) 150 YARD BACK TROKE . I :31.4, Jack Taylor, 1952. 200 YARD BACK TROKE ..................... 2:05.1, Oyakawa, 1953. (Intercollegiate record) 100 YARD BREAST STROKE ___ .. _ ........ I :00.5, Jerry Holan, 1953. 200 YARD BREAST STROKE ........ _. 2 :14.0, Holan, 1953. 220 YARD BREAST STROKE .... __ ........... 2 :29.9, Holan. 1952. 150 YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY . .. I :33.6, Jose Balmores, 1950. 300 YARD INDIVID AL MEDLEY .. .... 3 :29.i, Taylor, 1950. 300 YARD MEDLEY RELAY 2 :45.3, (Oyakawa, Holan, Cleveland) , 1953. (Applied for World record) 400 YARD FREE STYLE RELAY . 3:23.6, (Cleveland, Frank Dooley, Konno, Herb Kobayashi) , 1952.
Ohio State's 300 yard medley relay team has applied for a world record of 2:45.3, established against t ime last spring in the Ohio natatorium. l eft to right: Jerry Holan, breast stroke; Dick Cleveland, free style, Coach Mike Peppe and Yoshi Oyakawa, back stroker.
69
ROBERT KEP LE R, Coach '-
Golf
1953 Results
O hi o State 54.5, Alumni 29 .5
O hio Sta te 17, Oh io Un iversity 10
Oh io State 26, W right Pa tterson 13
Oh io State 23 , Purdue 13
Oh io Sta te 25 .5 , Ill inois 10.5
Oh io State 16.5 , Mich igan 19.5
Oh io State 17, Oh io Universi ty 10
Oh io State 20.5, Michigan 15 .5
Oh io State 24, Purdue 12
Oh io State 32 .5 , Mich igan State 3 .5
Oh io State won 9, lost 1
Conference Meet: Oh io State (th ird)
The Ohio State golf team, w ith the trophy emblematic of the 1953 Ohio inte rcollegiate ti tle . Front row, left to right: Coach Robert Kepler, Larry Harper, Mel Woelfling ; back row, Frank Guarasci, Thad Long , Frank Cardi and George Smith.
70
The University Golf Course I
Cl ub House, Ohio State University Go lf Course
O HIO State U niversity has two 18-hole golf courses,-the champion hip Scarlet and another, :i
bit shorter. known a the Gray. Both cour es were planned by the late Dr. A lister McKenzie, world famous golf course designer.
The Scarlet course has a par of 72 fo r men and 76 for women. The regular course i 6810 yard long and the champion ·hip layout is 7120. The ladies' course covers 6315 yard . The Gray course has a par of 70 fo r men over yardage of 5930 and a pa r fo r women of 73 .
T he carlet course has been the scene of several men's and women's intercollegiate tournaments and
the home course fo r the Ohio State U niver ity " home' ' matche .
71
CluL)house facilities include locker and hower privileges fo r both men and women, a restaurant, pro shop and lounge. The lounge i avai lable fo r luncheon , dinner , bridge parti es, dance and special meetings ;md can accomm date up to I 00 per ons.
Two shelter hou es a re available ior group or family picnic . The larger of the e i located in the rear of the clubhouse and is equipped with sliding doo rs, so that it may be u eel in incl ement weather. Approx imately 80 people can be accommodated inside and up to 400 people outside.
R ecreation facilities include volleyball, oftball, hor. es hoes. basketball and shuffleboard . A chi ldren' playground nearby keeps the children entertained.
CASEY FREDERICKS Head Coach
Wrestling
1954 Schedule
Jan . 9- Findlay, here
Jan . 16- Baldwin Wallace, here
Jan. 30- At Michigan State
Fe b. 6- At Illino is
Fe b . 13- At Pu rdue
Feb . 20- Wisconsi n, he re
Fe b . 22- At India na
Fe b. 27- Mich igan , here
Mar. 6- Big Ten Meet at Mich i
gan State DA N WHITACRE 1954 Captain
Front row, left to right: Thomas Knoll, Ronald lax, Tony Stavole, Otto Smith , Jack Milligan , Rog er Moritx. Back row: William Van Atta , Daniel Whitacre, Theodore Kistne r, Ray Tarnowski .
72
1954 Schedule
Jon . 9- Detroit and Oberlin , here
Jon. 15- At Chicago
Jon . 16-Wisconsin and Iowa at Iowa
Jon . 23- Woyne and Cincinnati, here
Jon . 30- lowrence Tech and Cose, here
Feb. 6- lllinois and Indiana, here
Feb. 13- Michigon State and Buffalo at
Michigan Stole
Feb. 20-0pen
Feb. 27- Notre Dome and Northwestern
al Notre Dome
Mor. 6- Big Ten Meet at Iowa
Fencing
ROBERT KAPLAN Head Coach
1953 Results
Ohio State 16, Oberlin 11
Ohio State 18, Fenn 9
Ohio State 8, Wisconsin 19
Ohio Stale 13, Case 14
Ohio State 16, Wayne 11
Ohio State 17, Lawrence Tech. 10
Ohio State 19, Detroit 8
Ohio State 10, Notre Dome 17
Ohio Stole 17, Buffalo 10
Ohio State 18, Michigan State 9
Ohio Stole 16, Indiana 11
O hio Stole 17, Iowa 10
O hio State 20 , Chicago 7
Ohio State 17, Northwes tern 10
O hio Stole 9, Il linois 18
Wo n 11, l ost 4. Fourth in Big 10.
Front row, left to right : Ralph leach, William Edwards, James Furgason, Elroy Beans, Ted Hootman, Arden Englebach. Back row: Robert Kaplan, head coach; Stanley Schneider, Dave Gryvnak, David Olson, Virg il Lucke, Charles Perkins, William Stump, Roland Phillips, Manager.
73
HERMAN WIRTHWEIN Head Coach
Tennis
1953 Results
Ohio State 1, Purdue 8
Ohio State 0, Indiana 9
Ohio State 4, Illinois 5
Ohio State 5, Oberlin 2
Ohio State 4, Kenyon 5
Ohio State 1, Miami 8
Ohio State 1, Northwestern 8
Ohio State 0 , Michigan 9
Ohio State 1, Michigan State 8
Ohio State 4, Ohio Wesleyan 5
Ohio State 8, Ohio University
Ohio State 6, Dayton 3
Ohio State won 3, lost 9
GILBERT MILLER HERBERT JONES
Co·Captains, 1954 Te nn is
Front row left 10 right: Roger Fulker, George Whittaker, Herbert Jones, Keith Hanlon, Bobby Gates. Second _row: ~erma~ Wirthwei~, head coach; Gilbert Miller, Richard Baisch, William Keeley, Frank Hersman, Lee Scherberg, manager; Carl Worthwe,n, ass,stanl coac .
74
1953 Results
Oh io State 45 V2, Mich igan 50 V2
Oh io State 50, Mich. State 46
Oh io State 42, Iowa 54
Oh io State 23, Ill inois 73
Oh io State 84, West . Reserve 30
Oh io State 84, Case 18
Oh io State 40 V2, Indiana 49 V2
Won 3 , Lost 4 .
Fifth in Big Ten meet.
Gymnastics
JOE HEWLETT Head Coach
1954 Schedule
Ja n. 23- West Virginia, there
Jan . 30- Pittsburgh, here
Feb . 6- Michigan State, the re
Feb. 13- lnd iana, here
Feb . 20- Michigan, the re
Feb. 27- llinois, here
Mar. 6- 0pen
Mar. 13- Big Ten Meet at Oh io
State
Joe Hewlett, coach; George Alexander, Andrew Breiner, Edmond Rossi, Thomas Franklin , James Doane, Donald Perry.
75
CHALMER HIXON Faculty Advisor
LaCrosse
1953 Results
Ohio State 3, Cleveland 4
Ohio State 4, Kenyon 9
Ohio State 8, Denison 1
Ohio State 2, Kenyon 7
Ohio State l , Oberlin 15
Ohio State 9, Denison
Ohio State 8, Oberlin 9
Ohio State 3, Cleveland 3 (tie)
Won 2, Lost 5, Tied 1
Front row, left to right : Bernie Reinisch, Larry Daub, Bob Gallup, Robin Schmidt, Don Corrigan, Jim Milford, Howard Berusch, John Cheffy, Charles Kirkpatrick. Second row: Bert Berd, William Arner, Mel Regula, Dick Wootten , Darrell Apt. , co-captain; William Heil, co-captain; Halliday Hayes, Robert Ruppel, James Lecky. Third row: Bob Wilcox, manager, Chuck Sears, Noel Stein, Jim Dorsey, William Wall, Bob Clark, Gordon Kresheck, Mack Thompson, Dick McCombs, Jack Corkery, graduate coach.
76
1952 RESULTS
Ohio State 3, Kenyon 3 (tie)
Ohio State 2, Denison l
Ohio State 1, Earlham 3
Ohio State 5, Ohio U. l
Ohio State 1, Oberlin 5
Oh io State 3, Denison 2
Ohio State l, Kenyon 2
Ohio State 1, Wilmington 2
Ohio State l, Cincinnati O
Won 4, lost 4, tied l .
Soccer
BRUCE BENNETT Faculty Advisor
1953 Schedule
Ohio State 3, Denison O
Ohio State 3, Michigan
Oct. 24- At Kenyon
Oct. 27- Earlham, here
Oct. 30- At Ohio University
Nov. 3- At Ohio Wesleyan
Nov. 6- Kenyon, here
Nov. 13- At Denison
Nov. 17- 0hio Wesleyan, here
Nov. 21 - 0berlin, here
Front row, left to right: Paul Halpern, Gabe Bialy, Tony Zahareas, Victor Sanchez. Second row: Pancho Jiminez, Bob Snyder, Dick McCombs, William Wall, captain; Mike Stern, Vince Martino, Gen11 Yang. Back row, Bruce Bennett, faculty advisor, Larry Davis, Bab Gallup, Bill Bell, Carl Bussey, Bill Keethler, Noel Stein, Gene Bak, John Corkery, graduate coach.
77
BUCKS AND WILDCATS
(Co11tin11 ed fro m Page 21)
scored by another conference champion ' hip aggregation which also rated No. 1 national honor .
Three Ohio tate victorie from '-t5 through 1947 proved to be perhaps the mo t thrilling game of the aging eri es. The Buckeye f ught back from a 14-0 defi cit in 1945 to win out 16- 14 bv virtu of :'.\fax
chnittker' 15-yard fi eld goal with only a minute and eight ec ncls to play. It wa more of the same again in '46, when the Bucks won a ,rilcl 39-27 affa ir.
I held the upper hand by a 20-1 3 score in the third period of that thrill-packed encounter . but J erry K rall , Bob Brugge and Joe Whisler ·hi fted into high gear and drove the Scarlet and Gray to a 39-27 win de pite a brilliant 81-yard ga llop fo r a cor by the Wildcats' \ ' ic chwall.
Oh io tate nipped the 'Cat . 7-6, in 1947 in a contest that won national acc la im as the "sports oddity of th~ yea r.' ' Torthwestern eemed to have a win tucked away, 6-0, l ut on the fi nal play of the "ame, a \ Vi ldcat player fa iled to get off the field befo re play wa re.sumed and O hio late received an-
ther chance. T he Bucks pu heel acros the tying touchdc \,·n following everal consecutiv penalties again t orthwe tern after actual playing time had been concluded. The climax came wh n the attempted kick fo r the extra I oin t was blocked, but Northwe tern was offside. T he Bucks then made the point try good to win . 7-6.
The \ ildcats won the 1948 meeting on the trength of a bri ll iant runni ng display by Sophomore
Johnny Mill r. 1iller ground out 120 ya rds in 14 running tri es and scored twice to spearhead a 21 -7 N victory. It wa a Ro e Bowl year fo r the \ Vilcl cats.
Ohio tate played turnabout in 1949, bea ting Iorth,vestern by 24-7 and gaining the Ro e bowl bid
with the conference champion hip. The 1950 defeat was a bitter one for Iorth
western . The \ i\f ildcats went into their ' 'H omecoming" contest with fou r tra ight wins, but Karl
tur tz' s 95-yard return with the opening kickoff for Ohio tale • tunned orthwe. tern beyond recovery and the Bucks coasted in, 32-0.
All-American \ ic Janowicz ,rn the diffe rence in 1951 in Columbus when he kicked a 16-yard field goal against a driving wind in the final quarter fo r a 3-0 verd ict.
In 1952, Ohio won at E van ton in a 24-2 1 thri ller after trailing 21-7 going into the fourth quarter . Li ttle Tad ·w eed kicked a 15-yard field goal late in that fina l stanza after O hio tied it at 21-21.
BASKETBALL OUTLOOK
( C onti1111 ed from Page 33) are J im Hartley of Columbu . Stan Muroff of ew York and Dave Short of Martins Ferry.
Backing up Ebert at center wi ll be John Miller of Cleveland H eights. Because of his experience , Mi ller will I e called upon to play both fo rward and center . Miller is handicapped by limited high school court action, but ha shown marked improvement at
78
Why buck that line of ca rs a nd
be smeared for a loss at eve ry
traffic pile-up? Take to the a ir
and touch down at Port Colum
bus Ai rpo rt, relaxed and ready
for a n afte rnoon of foo tb al l
thrills . Chec k you r local ai rlines
or travel agent, or call Exeter
2335 in Columbus for sched ul es
and info rm atio n. Next
time, fl y La ke Central.
AI R LINES
TODA Y'S COVER
Feature s a campus scene taken by the Ohio State University photography departm e nt. The picture is from a Sx7 view camera in Kodachr ome . Oth e r official football program covers this fa ll also will feature familia r campus surroundings.
Ohio State. He i a rugged, competitive player. Charles Ropes, who aw limited action last ea on, along with Charle A nni , are center candidate . Both players stand ix, fret , fo ur inche and have looked good in pre-sea on drills. Sophomore Jack Keller , ix -feet, fo ur inches, hows fine promise. Keller is a
fine ''hook shot" peciali t.
As in the past three easons, Ohio tate will be handicapped by a lack of overall height. No player stands over ix-feet . four which means the Buckeyes wi ll be giving away many val uable inches to the opposition. H o\\·ever , with a scoring punch headed by E bert and F reeman . the Buckeyes will give their opponents many anxious moments.
~ Spencer-Walker Press , Inc.
)
DELI Cl OU Scores th rough the years
191 3 Ohio State 58, Nort hwestern 0 1914 Oh io Sta te 27, Northweste rn 0 1915 Oh io Sta te 34, No rthweste rn 0 1916 O hi o Sta te 23, No rt hwestern 3 1917 O hio Sta te 40, No ~thwestern 0 1927 Ohio State 13, Nc 1·th weste rn 18 1928 Ohio Sta te 10, No rih wes~e rn 0 1929 Ohi o State 6, Nori hw este rn 18 1930 Ohio State 2, Northwes1ern 19 193 1 Oh io Sta i·e 0, No rthwest:)rn 10 1932 O hio Si-a te 20, North wesiern 6 1933 O '.,io State 12, Northwestern 0 1934 Ohi o Slate 28, North western 6 1935 O hio State 28, Northwestern 7 1936 Oh io ~tat3 13, No rthwestern 14 1937 Ohio Sta le 7, No rth western 0 1938 Ohio Sta te 0, No rth western 0 1939 O h io Sto te 13, No rthweste rn 0 1940 O hio State 3, No rthwestern 6 1941 O hio State 7, Northwestern 14 1942 Ohio State 20, Northweste rn 6 1943 Ohio Stat8 0, Northweste rn 13 1945 Ohio Sta te 16, Nor ihweste rn 14 1946 Ohio State 39, Northweste rn 27 1947 O hio State 7, North weste rn 6 1948 Oh io State 7, Northwe:;te rn 21 1949 O hio State 24, North weste rn 7 1950 o:i io State 32, Northweste rn 0 1951 Oh io Sta te 24, Northwestern 7 1952 Ohio State 24, Northweste rn 21
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