Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI)

 - Class of 1906

Page 1 of 191

 

Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1906 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 7, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Page 10, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 11, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Page 14, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 15, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Page 8, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 9, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Page 12, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 13, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Page 16, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collectionPage 17, 1906 Edition, Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 191 of the 1906 volume:

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LAE 5 ' I HE ' av l L 3 JJ Uhr Aurnra Svvninr Gllamff Annual mirhigan Stair Nnrmal Gfullvge igpziilauti, IEIUE. Gm Qigfimmw Q., Mwxhmnm, Mann, Smignllwr, mum Qgrienh, Khin Wuliuamm ik hzhirmkmh by M-pe gihiknrs. ml, .. X X . X .. I mf? , gig, QM 1 J 0 QM f X A farewell and a gzeelmg and a szngle Backwazcl gl mae wlule on the threvlzold A LSL., ,g,,.1J-L slanclmg 5255 JJ 7 llem nes and hopes half sal all joyful 7 Q-N J mmgle flzen forth to fzelcis unlrzed at fate s commcmdmg X-!-- 1905 A q Our C allege lzfe :ls happy rrfculleclzons Hearz' f1Lenrls'hm8 Scenes' uell knoun and pzctu1c.s pleasant Vellou ed Ilzru mzsis of lzme fn our reflcclzrms Hall and farcucll to greet the llvmg presenl ' M5737 X, K I ix: I K 'Jr' Q lx X XX In X 1 . X, K 1 X X 'x K gil Ly' NS x , X I I X-N vas 'Ulf KK Z x I EQ XA J' . , 11,1 ima K 'X'-X. . . . . ffl, fx I D 5 i 5 i i . 1 A 2 . ' THE NIAIN BUILDING irhigzm Stair urmal nllrgv L. H. JONES, A.M., PRESIDENT Stain Egnarh nf iihuraiiun HON. W. J. MCKONE, HON. DEXTER M. FERRY, JR., President, Vice-President. HON. L. L. WRIGHT, HON. P. H. KELLEY, Treasurer. Secretary. HON. PATRICK H. KELLEY, Superintendent Of Public Instruction. THE PRESlDENT'S HOIVIE PRES! DENT I. H4 JONES Igrvaihvnt E. 15. 31111125 ' v ' D 0 ir A 0 X 9 nf , ,,. -XFX, f N THE early his- W, Q i li tory of our country 0 0 ' 1 0 a family of Welsh X! 1 1 , lx! Quakers by the f . f ' 0 name of Jones came lv p - If A to America an d i ' 9 V4 O settled in the Caro- , N 'sf 4 E 'v t C! linas. Alittle later, s. is L ,gg H probably being Q f Q ' 5 fv-htm , ' 0 ' crowded out by slave labor as so many of the small farmers and free laborers of the Carolinas were, they joined the movement westward and found anew home in Tennessee, near Knoxville. Here they remained until the early thirties, when the head of the familv became active in the anti-slavery movement and so antagonized the slavery sentiment of his neighbors that the family was driven out of Tennessee and moved northward into Indiana. Of this stock L. H. Jones was born-the grandson of the anti-slavery agitator. His early education was in the common schools of the state, and in one of the many academies which preceded and corresponded to the high schools in our western states. From here he was attracted to the Oswego Normal School, the representative of Pesta- lozzianism in this country at that time, where he was gradu- ated from both the elementary and advanced courses. From the Oswego Normal he went to Harvard, where he had the rare opportunity of studying science under the great naturalist, Agassiz. With this great teacher, Mr. Jones' work was turned so strongly into the scientihc lines that when he left Harvard to begin his professional career. it was to take the chair of natural science in the State Nor- mal School at Terre Haute. After spending four years at Terre Haute, Mr. Jones was called to a position in the high school of Indianapolis, and a little later was made principal of the Normal Train- ing School of that city, where he served for eight years. He was then made superintendent of the Indianapolis sys- tem of schools and in this position, during the ten years following, he gained a training and experience which fitted him for the accomplishment. of a task in the schools of Cleveland, Ohio, which was of very great significance in the history of public education of the United States. The problem of directing successfully the school system of a great city and at the same time conciliating and harmon- izing the discordant and many times selfish political forces that are placed in authority over the superintendent, is a well nigh hopeless task. There is a constant temptation for the superintendent to View every policy in the light of its effect upon a political clique rather than upon the schools. while the superintendent who honestly seeks to serve the schools too frequently falls a victim to the politician. Thus in many of our cities the superintendency has come into the hands of Wire pullers, to the innnite detriment of the schools. Only in rare cases have really great educators succeeded in holding these positions for a sufficient length of time to work o11t a successful policy. And, even where they have in a measure succeeded, they have been con- stantly hampered by the tactics of the ward politician. The mixing of politics and education, and the lack of central- ized authority and responsibility have seriously weakened the educational work of our great cities. This was the situation that Mr. .Tones found at Indian- apolis and he met it with courage and skill. He developed comprehensive plans for building up and systematizing the schools of the city. He determined that his teachers should stand or fall upon their merits as teachers-not upon the number of votes that they could control. In doing this he found it necessary to use about one-half of his time in securing authority to carry out his plans, but in spite of this dificulty he placed the schools of Indianapolis among the very Hrst in the country. In the meantime, the people of Cleveland had deter- mined to overthrow the old system which had reached the liniit of endurance. The old board of twenty-one members was abolished and a new council of seven was created, with a director as president, who had authority to appoint and remove the superintendent, while to the superintendent was given authority to employ, promote, or dismiss his teachers without appeal to the board. The superintendency was offered to Mr. Jones and he saw its possibilities. Here was an opportunity for an educator to devote his entire time and energy to the internal interests of the schools. His theory was that if a superintendent should once show the people what could be done under such conditions they would never be satisfied with a lower standard. He undertook the task and achieved a remarkable success, so that Cleveland has served as a model to other cities in the reorganization of their school systems. V Of Mr. Jones' work as president of the Normal College, but little need be said as many of his policies are only now beginning to bear fruit. Before coming here he had received exceptional training for his work. As a student in the common school, academy, normal school, and university, as a teacher in the high school, as principal in the normal training school, and as superintendent of two great city systems, he had had an opportunity to view the problem of education from every angle. Soon after coming to Ypsilanti, he realized the 'unity of the educational system of the state and, as a consequence, a large part of his effort has been directed toward bringing the Normal College into vital relation to the schools of the state, and many of his policies which seem to be following different lines ind their unifying principle in this idea. Of his personality since he is with us we shall not speak. It is enough to say that we love and respect him. J. STUART LATHERS. . E lililnrua A. Barbour if II 4 AM asked by the management of the A AURORA to write a Word corfcerning 355 . ' Professor Barbour, to whom this volume is dedicated. The task is at once an j easy and a pleasant one. I have only to use, with some elaboration and cir- cumstance, the familiar platform formula: A Professor Barbour needs no introduc- Q Q51 tion to this audience. i For who in the large audience which the AURORA addresses does not know lx ii our well beloved Professor of English, i and who does not associate him at once 55 and intimately, not only with this insti- i tution, but also, and especially, with his distinctive work here? Indeed, Pro- fessor Barbour is most easily imagined in the midst of his books, and with the glow of literary exposition upon him. For his temperament and gifts are distinctly literary. In this world of mislits he is one of those blessed souls who seems born to his work. And when one comes to think of it, what personal satis- faction, and what economy of effort this fact implies. For to have by nature a gift of effective utterance, to make immediately and surely the literary judgment that the world will finally ratify, is no mean economy. What a saving it is to be rid of the distraction of the temporary and the local, to have no need to waste energy in correcting a perverse judgment or a native admiration for the meretricious. A man of romantic grain may become a very great teacher of English. but what discipline he has to undergo before he comes to possess the sure taste, the serene spirit, and the large culture which will fit him to become a safe guide to those who would, through literature, look into the very soul of the race. All of which is only a long way of saying that Professor Barbour was born to his trade, brought up to it, and has since practiced it with eminent success. But it often, perhaps usually, happens that the life Work of a man has little in common with the prevailing dis- ciplinary studies of his early life. And here again Pro- fessor Barbour was fortunate. For, whatever may he thought of the old literary or classical course of our col- leges as a preparation for affairs, most men will acknowledge that this course, as imitated by our fathers from English models, is an excellent preparation for the analysis and appreciation of style, and, if supplemented in later years by wide reading and large sympathies, for a sound study of belles-lettre literature. When Professor Barbour passed through college, the modern side of education, which has since had such wonderful expansion, was practically unknown. So he got the best education of his day and made the most of it, and this happened to be the best pos- sible course for him. For my own part, I have always been in the habit of attributing no small part of his success as an expositor of classic English to his interest in the Greek of his college course. Thus gifted and thus fitted for his work there is no wonder that Professor Barbour has had unusual acceptance in his chosen field. Indeed, few men in the state have ever won a more wide and generous recognition in this field. As the high priest of a noble profession, worshipping at an ancient and enduring altar, it has been his joy to see mul- titudes of young people bow with him at the shrine of immortal beauty. Personally, too, he has made hosts of ardent friends and admirers among the young people of the state, who feel that life has become something nobler and richer for his teaching. But the study of artistic literature has not absorbed all his energies. He has great interest in educational, philos- ophical, and moral questionsg has a keen sense of justice, and is ever ready to place his talent at the service of the ever-losing and ever-Winning cause of righteousness. Hence, as an occasional speaker throughout the state, on commencement occasions, at inspiration institutes, and the like, I M Fis a most attractive and welcome figure. His use- fulness this direction seems to be limited only by his strength and the time at his disposal. Biographically, I am not aware of anything especially signincant in the life of Professor Barbour. He was born, brought up, and educated in Michigan, a fact which. how- ever fortunate for Michigan, ought hardly to be imputed to him for righteousness. He is a lover of sport, and an expert in athletics, but has hitherto modestly managed to keep out of the championship classg and as he seems to make no point of his athletic prowess, I will not. And this reminds me that Professor Barbour is a very manly man, averse to laudation, and sure to be restless under analysis and exploitation. He must, however, permit me to add that I am only giving feeble voice to the feeling of a great multitude of people, who will heartily join me in wishing him still many years of happy and useful work among us. EDWIN A. STRONG. H f'-LX -'1--1:7f'- L- -q r--V , ,V -f ' -- yxf .f K , -- f Wm IIIIIIIIIIHI f 5 N 1 4 mml'I1IllllIlllllllllllml11un.... i '- A i A,,f-1'm'l 'l mlm!'. .lIl- J J ? XV W f' A N Z 5 . 51 X Elhmrultg W 'l f illlllllllllllm ml 'mlm Il ml N , 1 N ' . ' xiii., X 1 iifl.l ' A' l X X'F'i1 f M fy 4 X I, Mr M r f 4 2 m mm X - AuW Wi,., 1.:ii:: 1 ' lil lull 'lm uluuza m fini al ? K . WJ Ellyn Iliarnltg xr: x ZN GLANCING back over our two-year course at E the Michigan State Normal College, we ask f N ourselves the questions, What have we V learned? How have we grown?,' What are We Etted to do? 2 ogg That we have gleaned certain facts and truths from text-books and from lectures, we know, but what they are we cannot say, we feel that we have grown, socially, intellectually, and spiritually, but by what processes, and under just what circumstances, we have never until now paused to consider. Has our outlook upon the world been broadened, have our sympathies been deepened by the amount of actual knowledge acquired? To a small extent only. The greater part of our growth and development must be attributed to our daily associations, to the silent influence of those with whom we came in contact. It is said that culture comes from a wide association with men and books. If this be true, the degree of culture must, of course, depend upon the kind of men and the quality of books. We have been associated in a way with all our fellow students, but the greatest influence has been exerted over us by those under whose instruction we have worked, who have directed our reading and helped to mold our opinions,--the members of our College faculty. From our loved and respected President to the humblest assistant instructor, they are men and women of keen intellect and broad sympathies. They have stimulated us to the for- mation of high ideals of life and usefulness, and have encouraged us in our efforts to realize those ideals. We have enjoyed privileges of personal contact and fellowship with our instructors not found in other similar institutions, and we know that we shall appreciate the resulting beneits more and more fully as the years pass. We desire to express our appreciation, but what shall we say? Can words repay the debt of gratitude we owe to our faculty? Assuredly, no. They have devoted them- selves to the training, instruction, and inspiration of each student, in order that he might, in his turn, train, instruct, and inspire those under his care. Let us prove ourselves worthy of their efforts by our devotion to our profession, by our zeal in the cause of education, and our loyalty to our Alma Mater. L. MARGUERITE LUX, '06. No egotistic strife: But garlanded around his name, We read, A helpful life. PRES. I.. H. JONES. DANIEL PUTNAM, A.M , LL.D., Emeritus Professor of the Science and Art of Teaching, was graduated from Dar-tmouth College in 1851, and taught in the New Hamp- ton Academy the tvvo years follovving. He was Professor of Latin in Kalamazoo College from 1854 to '58, and again from 1866 to '68, holding the position of superintendent of the Kalamazoo public schools during the intervening years. He was also county superintendent of Kalamazoo county No selfish motives prompt his acts. The patient father to us all Will ever dwell in n1emory's hall: For all the good that he has done- Inspires the heart of each true sou. DANIEL PUTNAM during his last year in Kalamazoo College and had been chaplain of the Kalamazoo asylum for the insane for a number of years. In 1868 he accepted the position of Professor of Pedagogy in the Michigan State Normal Col- lege, and in 1897 received his LL.D. degree from the University of Michigan. He is the author of books on psychology and various other subjects. As pilgrims journey to a shrine, A blessing there to gain: So' students journey to this sage And never go in vain. They learn of educators great, And deep philosophy: But feel his life a greater force In strength and purity. CHARLES O. HOYT, Ph.D., began his professional career in 1877 as principal of Blisslield High School. He held this position until 1881, when he was made superin- tendent of schools in Wyandotte, Mich. From 1886 to 1896 he held the position of superintendent of schools in the three cities, Grass Lake, Jackson, and Lansing. In 1896 he received his A.B. degree from Albion College, and during the following year was superintendent of the train- ing school at the Michigan State Normal College. From 1897 to 1899 he was associate professor of psychology and has held his present position as Professor of the Science and History of Education, for the last six years. From 1901 to 1903 Professor Hoyt studied at the University of Jena where he received his Ph.D. degree. Tis not by prayers or speeches That he his sermon gives: But the lessons that he teaches Are found in the book he lives. SAMUEL B. LAIRD, A.M., B.Pd., Professor of Psy- chology, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1874. He held the position of superintendent of schools in the following places: Wayne, 1874-75: Tawas City, 1876-855 East Tawas, 1885-905 Lansing, 1896-99. Since 1899 he has occupied his present position. He received the degree of B.Pd. from the Michigan State Normal College in 18955 in 1903, A.B. from the University of Michigan, and in the following year, A.M. from the same institution. How he straightens out the pathways! Of its fears the mind he frees: Quickly calms the raging billovvs. On the students' troubled seas! DIMON H. ROBERTS, A.M., Superintendent of the Training School, was graduated from the State Normal School of Courtland, N. Y., in 1887, acting as assistant in the pedagogical department of the same during that year. From 1887-88 he was superintendent of schools in Caze- novia. N. Y., and from 1892-95 was principal of the high school of Pueblo, Colo. He then went to Winona, Minn., as superintendent ofthe training department ot the State Normal School, from which position, in 1900, he came to the one which he now holds. Mr. Roberts re ceived the degree of A.B. in 1892, and that of A'.M. in 1895, from Amherst College, and also did graduate Work in education at the University of Colorado. 'Tis not always time that binds us To our friends we hold so dear: In our hearts he found a welcome Ere had passed a single year. NATHAN A. HARVEY, Ph.D., was graduated from the Illinois State Normal University in 1884. For three years he was superintendent of schools in Pittsfield, Ill., and later went to the University of Illinois as a student. From 1890 to 1896 he was instructor in the Kansas City High School, and then accepted a position as head of the Depart- ment of Science in the Superior State Normal School, Wis., which he held four years. In 1900, he took the degrees of A.M. and Ph.D., at Illinois Wesleyan University. During the next four years he was vice-principal of the Chicago Normal School, director of extension Work and lecturer on psychology. Mr. Harvey has held his present position as Professor of Pedagogy and Institute Conductor since 1904. I'd think his days would toilsorne be With many a sharp and flat, With staff and bar and signature, And everything like that. But he seems to find in simplest song FREDERIC I-I. PEASE, Directorof the Conservatory of Music, is anative of Ohio, his father being one of the founders of Oberlin College. Here he obtained his academical education. Taking up music as a profession, he came to Ypsilanti as a teacher of the piano, and in 1864 was elected Professor of Music in the Normal School, a position ,Which he has since held with distinguished suc- cess. Professor Pease continued his own studies under able masters, and early sought a leave of absence which he spent in staadying and visiting various European schools of niusic. As a result of his ability and effective work, the Normal College Conservatory, which he organized in 1880, is now recognized as one of the leading schools of music in the state. Some pleasant thought to help along. One cannot look upon her face With its halo of silver hair, Without reading the depth of character So plainly written there. JULIA ANN KING, Professor of History and Civics, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College gfiin 1858. She taught in the high schools from 1858 to 1875, and from this time to 1881 was superintendent of schools in Charlotte, Mich. The following year Miss King accepted her present position. as head of the Department of History, which she has now occupied for twenty-ive years. RUTH PUTNAM A CAROLINE TOWN ER RUTH PUTNAM, Assistant in the Department of Music, is a graduate of the Michigan State Normal College and Conservatory. She was a piano pupil of J. H. Hahn of Detroit and also of Rappoldi-Kahrer in Dresden, Germany. She studied harmony and composition of Remmele and of Braunroth, and later, in Boston, harmony and counterpoint of Homer Norris. 'Miss Putnam has taught music in Lafayette, Ind., Lake Forest, Ill., and two years in the Michigan State Normal College. ' CAROLINE TOWNER, Assistant in Music, studied in the Conservatory of Music at the Michigan State Normal Col- lege, with Mr. Marshall Pease and Professor F. H. Peaseg also at Boston, with Mr. Wheeler. She spent two years in Germany as a pupilt of Herr Haag, and returned in 1893, as a member of the Conservatory faculty. Since 1904, Miss Towner has been substituting in the Department of Music for Mr. Minor E. White, whois abroad on leave of absence. FLORENCE SHULTES, B.Pd., Instructor in History, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1883, and received her B.Pd. degree in 1901, from the same MARY ELPUTNAM l BERTHAG. Busan. institution. She also did advanced work in the University of Chicago during the latter year. Miss Shultes was pre- ceptress in the Centerville High School from 1883 to 1887, when she accepted a position in the Department of English and History in the Traverse City High School. In 1892, she was elected to her present position. MARY B. PUTNAM, Ph.B., B.Pd., Instructor in Civics and Economics, is a graduate of Michigan State Normal College, and the University of Michigan, receiving her B.Pd. from the former, and her Ph.B. from the latter. She was a teacher in English in the State Normal School, Mankato, Minn., and held a similar position in the Ccintral High School, Minneapolis, Minn., until 1892, when she accepted her present position. BERTHA G. BUELL, B.L., Instructor in History, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal Collegein 1893, and the next three years was a high school instructor. She received her degree from the University of Michigan in 1899, since which time she has held her present position A man of books: his mind is filled With thoughts of writers old, who may have lived in poverty, Yet left us mines of gold. E g He loves to share in sports: And often spends his holidays On the links and tennis courts. FLORUS A. BARBOUR, received the degree of A.B. from the University of Michigan in 1878, and that of A.M. fcausa honorisl in 1900. From 1878 to 1880, he was principal of the high school at Coldwater, Mich., and the following year was principal of the Central Grammar School at Grand Rapids. During the next four years Professor Barbour was superintendent of schools at Coldwater, and in 1885 accepted his present position as Professor of Eng- lish. And thou h he Funds deli ht in these, Teacher. orator, reader-but past the pale of these, A genial and a kindly friend, whose every power doth please. J. STUART LATHERS, B.L., Professor of Reading and Oratory, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in the year 1893. After graduation, he was prin- cipal of Memphis schools for two years. From 1895 to 1899, he was a student in the University of Michigan. where he took the degree of B.L. He then entered the Michigan State Normal College as Instructor of English, two years later being made Associate Professor of Reading and Oratory. Three years ago he was made head of the department, which position he now occupies. ABIGAILPEARCE ALMA BLOUNT ESTEI-LE DQWNING ABIGAIL PEARCE, Ph.B., B.Pd., is a graduate ofthe Michigan State Normal College, holding her B.Pd. degree from this institution. In 1895, she received the degree Ph.B. from the University of Michigan. Miss Pearce served as preceptress in two high schools before coming here to occupy the position of supervisor of the primary grades in the training school. She has held her present position as Instructor in English since 1888. - ALMA BLOUNT, Ph.D., was graduated from Wheaton College, Ill., in 1886, with the degree of B.S., receiving that of A.B. four year later. She taught in the preparatory department of that college from 1886 to 1892. ln 1896, she received the degree of Ph.D. from Cornell University and after teaching two years, studied at Radcliffe College. She also taught a year in Lawrence, Wis., and in 1902 accepted her present position as Instructor in English. During the year 1904-5, Miss Blount did research work in the British Museum and Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. She has held a scholarship and a fellowship from Cornell, and also a fel- lowship from the Collegiate Alumnae. ESTELLE DOWNING, A.B., was a student in Olivet College from 1890-92. She then taught for three years in Traverse City, and in 1898 was graduated from the Mich- igan State Normal College. Since that time, she has held her position as Assistant in the English Department. In 1902, she received the degree of A.B. from the University of Michigan. MARY DERBY graduated from Olivet College and Chi- cago University, receiving the degree of A.B. and A.M. She taught in the Eaton Rapids Schools three years and in Coldwater one year before coming in 1905 to her present position as Assistant in the Department of English. MARY M. MASTER was graduated in 1904 from the Cuinnock School of Oratory, Northwestern University. Since that time she has held the position of Instructor in the Department of Reading and Oratory in this institution. This man with all his Eastern lore Brings us its charms, and many more: And we never hear his kindly voice. But that it makes some heart rejoice. RICHARD CLYDE FORD, Ph.D., began his professional career in 1888. as Superintendent of the White Cloud schools. His next teaching experience was in 1891, when he was master in the Anglo-Chinese School, Singapore, S. S. He went the following year as a student to the University of Freiburg, in Germany. The degree of Ph.B. was conferred upon him in 1894 by Albion College, where he remained five years as Assistant Professor of German. The following year he again studied abroad, receiving the degree of Ph.D. at the University of Munich. Mr. Ford then accepted the position of Professor of French and Ger- man in the Michigan Northern State Normal School, which place he resigned in 1903 to accept a similar position in our institution. . Known to him are all the sages Of the days of long ago: Oft he's read the classic pages, With their beauty all aglow. But tho' skilled in ancient language, Yet his heart is ever young, And to all it speaks a message, Understood in every tongue. BENJAMIN L. D,OOGE, A.M., Ph. D., Professor of Latin and Greek, was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1881, and received his master's degree in 1884. From 1881 to 1883 he was principal of the Cold- water High School, and the following year Instructor in Latin in the University of Michigan. He accepted his present position in 1886, since which time he has spent two years in study and travel abroad, receiving the degree of Ph.D. from the University of Bonn, in 1901. He is the editor of Colloquia Latinag Viri Romxg Easy Latin for Sight Reading, Caesar's Gallic Warg Second Year Latin, Helps to the Study of Classical Mythologyg Cicero, Select Orationsg and Latin Composition. He is also one of the revis- ers of Allen 8: Greenough's Latin Grammar. He frequently contributes to various educational periodicals, and holds the office of secretary and treasurer of the Classical Association of the Middle West and South. IDA FLEISCHER NIARYJ. LONIEARD Ina FLEISCHHER, B.P., Ph.D., was a teacher in the Saginaw Schools from 1887 to 1889. Three years later she was graduated from the University of Michigan, with the degree of Ph. B., receiving her Master's degree two years later from the same institution. She was an instructor in the Ludington High School until 1894, and the following year, preceptress. From 1895 to 1897, she held a similar position at CouncilBluffs, Ia. Miss Fleischer received the degree of Ph.D. from the University of Gottingen in 1900, and the next year held the position of preceptress, and Professor of Modern Languages in Western College, Toledo, Ia. Miss Fleischer has held the position of Instructor in German in Michigan State Normal College since 1901. MARY JOY LOMBARD has been a student at Harvard Annex, also at the Universities of Berlin and Chicago. She was graduated from the Northwestern University in 1901, after which she taught in the schools of Calumet Mich., and Elgin, Ill. Miss Lombard was elected Instructor in French and German in the Normal College, in 1903. O. O. NORRIS JESSIE LEE ORLAND O. Noiuus was born near Plymouth, Ind., Jan. 24, 1875. His early education was obtained at country schools and in the Three Oaks High School. He graduat- ed from the Michigan State Normal College in June, 1900. For nearly ive years he taught Latin very successfully in the high school at Troy, Ohio, accepting his present position as Instructor in Latin in this institution in January, 1905. .TESSIE LEE, Assistant Instructor in Latin, was grad- uated from Ionia High School in 1903, and from the life certiiicate course in the Michigan State Normal College, in June, 1905. She was appointed to her present position the same year. HELEN BROWN MUIR was graduated from the Mich- igan State Normal College in 1873, and taught in Battle Creek, Mich., from that time until 1886. She was a special student at the University of Michigan during the year 1888- '89, and accepted her present position as Instructor in Latin and Greek in the Michigan State Normal College in 1889. Miss Muir was absent on leave during the year 1905-6, but will resume her duties in September, 1906. Though he deals with squares and circles, Secants, Siues,and tangents, too. Deftly measures lines and angles In a way but few can dog 'Moug the things he cannot measure. Skillful though he bein arts, Are the love. respect. and honor. Dwelling in his students' hearts, i ELBIER A. LYMAN, A.B., Professor of Mathematics, Was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1886, With the degree of A.B. The next year he was assistant superintendent in Paola, Kansas, and until 1890 was prin- cipal of the high school in Troy, Ohio. He was instructor in ,mathematics in his Alma Mater from that date until 1898, when he accepted his present position. U What cares he for printed pages, with their dusty lore? To his mind, there is a volume which Contains much more: 'Tis the book great Nature opens in this world of ours: With all her wondrous lessons in hills and streams and flowers. MARK S. W. JEFFERSON, A.M., was an. astronomer in Argentine Republic from 1883 to 1886. He was graduated from Boston University with the degree of A.B., in 1889, after which he held a position for a year as instruc- tor in the Mitchellls Boys' School, Billerica, Mass. During the next two years he acted as principal of the high school at Furness Falls, Mass., and the three years following as superintendent of schools at Lexington, Mass. In 1897 Mr. Jefferson took the degree of A.B., at Harvard, and of A. M. a year later. During the next three years he was sub- rnaster in the Brockton, Mass., high school, accepting his present position as Professor of Geography in 1901. J. C. STONE ADA A. NORTON C. P. STEINILE FRANK JENSEN D. H' DAVIS JOHN CHARLES STONE, A.'M., Associate Professor of Mathematics, began his work as a teacher in the rural and graded schools of Illinois. In 1896-7 he was tutor in mathematics in the University of Indiana, and the following year was head of the Department of Mathematics and Phy- sics in the Elgin, Ill., High School. Mr. Stone was head master in mathematics at Lake Forest Academy, Ill., until 1900, when he came to the Michigan State Normal College as Assistant Professor of Mathematics, being made Associate Professor in 1901. . . ADA A. NORTON, Ph.B., Ph.M., was graduated from Albion College in 1877, receiving the degree Ph. B. She was preceptress in the Northville High School, 1877-8, and in the Quincy High School, 1878-9, after which she was Instructor in Mathematics in the Ypsilanti High School un- til 1890, when she accepted her present position as Instruc- tor in Mathematics in the Michigan State Norm-al College. In 1894, she received the degree of Ph.M. from Albion College. 1 CLEMENS P. STEIMLE began his work of teaching in the Atlantic Mines, Mich., High School, of which he is a graduate. After four years there, he entered the Michigan State Normal College, graduating from the life certificate course in 1902. He spent the year 1902-3 at Albion Col- lege and the next two years was principal ofthe Hillsdale High School. In 1905 he accepted his present position of Assistant Instructor in Mathematics, and receives the degree B.Pd. with the class of 1906. FRANK JENSEN, B.Pd., is a graduate of the Peng- water, Mich., High School. After teaching two years in the rural schools of Oceana County, he became a student at the Michigan State Normal College, being graduated from the life certificate course in 1904. The following year he received his 'B.Pd. degree, and will receive his A.B. de- gree with the class of 1906. For the last two years Mr. Jensen has been an assistant in the Department of Math- ematics. . DARRELL H. DAVIS, Assistant in Geography, was grad - uated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1897, after which he taught for four years at Rives Junction and Horton. He was graduated from the University of Mich- igan in 1903. During the time that he was a student in the University, he acted as assistant in the Botanical Laboratory and held the Stearns' Fellowship in botany. After his grad- uation he taught for two years in the Geography Depart- ment of the Seattle High Schools, coming to his present position in 1905. I wonder if there is a book In which he has not cast a look: Or e'er a subject in the world f In which he has not thoughts nufurled. A model. he, of deep, broad mind: But with his wisdom more we find, The genial friend of student clan, The perfect type of gentleman. EDWIN A. STRONG, A.M., was graduated from the Cortland Academy in 1854. Four years later he took the degree of A.B. from Union College, and in 1862 that of A.M. From 1858 to 1862, he was principal of the Grand Rapids High School and again held the same position from 1873 until 1884. He was superintendent of the public schools in the same city from 1862 to 1871, and was instructor in science in the Oswego Normal School, N. Y., for the next two years. Professor Strong has held his present position as Professor of Physical Sciences for the last twenty-one years. How knows he of the daisy's tales Or words of robin's song? ' What tells him where to rind the nests The waving boughs among? It is that generous nature Her secrets will impart To th0se who earnestly will work, And live near Nature's heart. WILLIAM HITTELL SHERZER, Ph.D.. Professor of Natural Sciences, was ateacher from 1878 to 1881. He entered the University of Michigan in the spring of 1883, graduating in 1889. From 1885 to 1888 he was principal of the West Saginaw High School. In 1889 he received his B.S. from the U. of M., in 1890, M.S.3 and in 1901, Ph.D. In 1891 he was principal and science teacher in Houghton High School and special student in the Michigan School of Mines at Houghton, and, 1891-92, instructor in geology and paleontology in the U. of M., coming to his present position in 1892. Since that time he has spent one year as a student at the University of Berlin. Q F F. GORTON B. W. FEET JESSIE PHELPS MARY A. GODDARD 5. D. NIAGERS FREDERICK R. GORTON, PH.D., Assistant Professor in Physical Sciences, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1892, and has been connected with the department since that time. In 1899 he received his B.Pd. degree from the Normal College: in 1900, his B.S., in 1901, his M.A. degree from the University of Michigan, and in 1905, his Ph.D. degree from Berlin. During the time spent in Berlin, he did some very important original work which attracted much attention in the ,scientihc world. BERT WILLIAM PEET, M.S., was graduated from the Michigan Agricultural College in 1892. Immediately after graduation, he accepted the position of instructor in biology and chemistry in the Grand Rapids High School, where he remained ive years. In 1898, he received his M.S. degree from the University of Michigan, and was assistant and instructor for two years in that institution. Since 1899, Mr. Peet has been Instructor in Chemistry in the Michigan State Normal College, and this past year has been Assis- tant Professor oi Chemistry. .IESSIE PHELPS, M. S.. was graduated from the Uni- versity of Michigan in 1894, receiving the degree of B.S. During the next two years she taught in tl1e Sault Ste. Mari?e High School, and then returned to the University from which, in 1898, she received her M.S. degree. Since that time she has held the position of Instructor in Natural Sciences in the Normal College. MARY ALICE GODDARD. B.S., Instructor in Botany, was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1900, with the degree B.S., and has since occupied her present position. SAMUEL D. MAGERS, M.S., graduated from the Illi- nois State Normal School in 1886. He accepted the posi- tion of high school principal in Fayetteville, Ark., the same year, and two years later became principal of the Hamilton St. school, Houston, Texas. In 1895, he received the degree B.S. from the University of Michigan. After occupying his former position at Houston one more year, Mr. Magers accepted the principalship of the normal and high school in the same city. Here he served five years, andin 1901, received his M.S. degree from the University of Chicago. In the same year he came to the Michigan State Normal College, as Instructor in the Department of Natural Sciences. His conscience is his only guide: His best his greatest pride WILBUR PARDON BOWEN, M.S., was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1886. He immediately re- entered his Alma Mater as instructor in mathematics, hold- ing this position for tive years. During the next three years he acted as directed of the gymnasium at the Univer- sity of Nebraska, and from 1894-1900, he illed the same position in the Michigan Normal College. In 1900 he took the degree of B.S., and, the following year, that of M.S. at the University of Michigan. The next year he was instructor in physiology at the same institution, and in 1903 accepted his present position as Professor of Physical Education. , ,Sl , 1 - -Vr- z 1 r ' .E May she e'er her virtues bear Ski, . xv With that friendl ', gracious ai 'f '. if N 'L i r, 5 r 3: N rg , 'ff '52 L EQ 4 MRS., FANNIE CHEEVER BURTON, Director of the Women's Gymnasium, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1883, following which she was preceptress of the Northville High School for a year. Her present position was accepted in 1895. Mrs. Burton has been a student in Harvard and Chautauqua at various times, receiving the degree of M.Pd., in 1904, from the Michigan State Normal College. I INEZ M. CLARK LOTA i-LGARNER ETHEL. ci-iii.Ds INEZ M. CLARK was a student in the Michigan State Normal College from 1895 to 1898. She taught two years in the Plymouth and French Landing schools, and was again a student in the Normal from 1900 to 1901. She took her position as assistant in the Women's Gymnasium in 1901, graduating from the Chautauqua School of Physical Edu- cation in 1903. ' BERTHA GooD1soN, the Ins-tructor and Supervisor of Drawing, was a student in the Detroit Art School in 1890 and 1891, and graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1894. From that time until 1896, she was pre- ceptress of the Vicksburg, Mich , High School. From there she went to Marquette as a supervisor of drawing, where she remained until 1900, when she accepted her present posi- tion. At different times, Miss Goodison has been a special student in the Prang School, Chicago, and Harvard Summer School. She has also studied under Wm. Chase, at the Shinnecock Summer School, L. I., and during the last summer, under Raphael Collin. at Paris. LOTA H. GARNER, Assistant in the Department of Drawing, was graduated from Olivet College in 1884, and from the Literary and Art Department of Oberlin, in 1887. She studied and taught art in Springield and Toledo. Ohio, from 1888 to 1894. After specializing in drawing in the Michigan State Normal College, Miss Garner took her present position in 1902. ANNA H. OLMSTEAD was graduated from the Cleveland School of Art in 1896, and from the Chicago Art Institute in 1901. She was in Paris as a pupil with Mucha in 1903, and has held her present position as Instructor in Drawing, since 1901. H- ETHEL CHILDS, Assistant in Drawing, was gradu- ated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1902. Since that time she has attended a summer school at the Art Insti- tute, Chicago, and taught in the Department of Drawing of this institution for two summer quarters. Miss Childs was supervisor of drawing in the Marquette schools two years before taking her present position in 1905. ill arultg uf tht Eraining Srhnnl Eintnn li. lRnhrr15, Sttprrixttvitheitt ENIELYN GARDNER EMELYN GARDNl4IR, critic teacher for the seventh grade, is a graduate of the Oneonta State Normal School, N. Y., and also holds an A.B. degree from Chicago Uni- versity. For tive years she occupied the position of pre- ceptress of a high school in the state of New York, and was at one time vice-principal of the grammar school in Racine, Wis. Following this she was principal of the high school at Geneva, Ill., and was superintendent of the city schools in the same place for three years prior to the acceptance of her present position in 1905. MARY MINERXTA STEAGALL, ED.B. PH.B., held the position of principal ofthe high school at Robinson, Ill., from 1891 to 1893, and graduated from the Normal School at Normal, Ill., in 1896. Following this, she was princi- pal of the high school at Chester, Ill., until 1899, coming in 1900 to H11 the position of fifth grade critic teacher in the Michigan State Normal College, where she remained until 1903. Receiving her degree of Ed.B. from the Uni- versity of Chicago in 1904, and Ph.B. in 1905, Miss Stea- gall returned to our institution as critic in the high school department of the training school. NIARY E. WILSON MARY ELLA WILSON is well known at the Normal, having graduated trorn this institution in 1898. The years 1898-03 were spent in teaching in the Jackson, Mich., pub- lic schools. In 1903 she became critic teacher of the fifth grade in the training school of the Michigan State Normal College, and still holds that position. EDNA T. COOK, S. B., critic teacher in the eighth grade, was graduated from the Os Wego State Normal School, N. Y., in 1896. During the three years following, she held positions in Escanaba, Mich., Highland Park, Ill., and West Superior, Wis., accepting a position of critic teacher in the Eastern Illinois Normal School in 1899. Miss Cook received the degree of S. B. from the University of Chicago in 1904, and came to her present position the same year. - ABIGAIL F. ROE, critic teacher for the sixth grade, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal College in 1892, after which she taught for a year in Cadillac. Miss Roe held the position of commissioner of schools for Emmet County, from 1894 to 1896, spending the following year as a special student in the University of Michigan, and accepting her present position in 1898. ELISABETH B, NICLELLAN ADELLA R. JACKS ELISABETH BEALS MCLELLAN. the critic teacher for the fourth grade, was a graduate of the Bridgewater, Mass. Normal School in 1887. She had charge of the Department of Drawing of the Oneonta State Normal School from 1889 to 1891, and of the Department of Science of St. Gabriel's Church School, Peekskill, N. Y., from 1891 to 1895, after which she was principal of the Model Schools of the State Normal College at Florence, Ala., until 1898, and of the State Normal and Industrial School at Milledgeville, Ga., till 1903. From 1903 to 1905 she was a special student at Cornell University, coming to her position as acting critic for the the third grade in 1905, and to her present position in the autumn of the same year. Miss ABIGAIL LYNCH. THIRD GRADE Cnrrrc TEACHER. ADELLA R. JACKSON tailght in the primary grades of Corunna and Owosso, Mich., before coming to her present position in 1896, as critic teacher of the second grade. Since that date she has spent the years of 1901 and 1903 as a student, first in Clark University. and then in the Emerson School. Boston, Mass. ON MARGARET E. WISE HESTER P. STOWE .MARGARET E. WISE, the critic teacher of the first grade, was graduated from the Michigan State Normal Col- lege in 1887, after which she taught in Charlotte, Mich., for two years, accepting a position in the Grand Rapids City Training School in 1889. She remained in this institution until she came in 1893 to fill her present position. HESTER P. STOWE was graduated from the Pestalozzi Froebel Haus, Berlin, in 1888, and from the Chicago Kin- dergarten College in, 1891. For four years she was head assistant in the Grand Rapids Kindergarten Training School, and for one year was the kindergarten resident in the Northwestern University Settlement, Chicago. Miss Stowe has held her present position as kindergarten critic teacher since 1896. LYDIA L. HERRICK was graduated from the Normal Department of the Indianapolis' Kindergarten Training School in 1901. For three successive years she was employed in Michigan City, two years as principal of the Free Kin- dergarten, and then as supervisor of the Public Kinder- gartens. Miss Herrick has been assistant kindergartner in the Michigan State Normal College since 1904. ALICE I. BOARDIVIAN p ALICE I. BOARDMAN, Supervisor of Manual Training, is a graduate of Mt. Holyoke College, and of the Sloyd Training School, Boston, Mass. She taught eight years in Hampton Institute, Va., and spent the year 1901 travel- ing abroad. Miss Boardman has held her present position since 1902. MISS CLYDE E. FOSTER, Supervisor of Music, was graduated from the American Institute of Normal Methods IH. E. Holt's School of Musicl, Boston, Mass. She has also studied voice with the best teachers in Boston, New York, and Chicago. At different times she has held posi- tions as director of music in the public schools at Fargo, Fargo College, and the State Agricultural College, North Dakota, and also at the Moorhead Normal School, Min- nesota. During summer sessions, Miss Foster has taught at the University of Minnesota. She came to her present position in 1899. H ELEN E KN EI P HELENI32 KNEIP, Assistant Kindergartner, was graduated from the Chicago Kindergarten Institute in 1900, and three years later from the Detroit Washington Normal. She has spent four years teaching in the Detroit schools and six months in the Franklin St. Settlement. Miss Kneip accepted her present position in 1905. , BERTHA GOODISON, SUPERVISOR OF DRAWING. EDNA BARLONV, ASSISTANT IN MANUAL TRAINING. GRACE FULLER, Supervisor of Domestic Science and Domestic Art, was graduated from the three years special course at Pratt Institute, in 1905, since which time she has held her present position in the Michigan State Normal College. I INEZ CLARK, SUPERVISOR OF PHYSICAL TRAINING. .f. THE TRAINING SC HOOI. THE CONSEFQVATORY OF MUSIC Y' -Y 'il f Q PQ 'V' M NA K 1 . x X! W- V :Tv D 1 X x I , r A 4- M ' ' t 1 ' fl I I qw G2 FP I l - I I . iff W Z ., xi ' K f jf X HE! 61112 lgnailanfi Glhnral Snrivrg EAT-Y'7 U5i . . . HE Choral Society consists this year of 0' ,f', .gf two hundred eighteen members. It was 'l I f i '1-nz-5' uf'-rfb organized as usual early in the fall quarter. Most of the new students who coine here have heard of the great advantage of belonging to the chorus and of the excel- lent training to be received from its direc- tor, Professor Pease, The greatest care is taken to select the best voices from among the several hundred anxious applicants for a place in the chorus. Each voice is care- fully tested by conservatory teachers and a selection made of the best. Then upon a given night, the several hundred anxious ones congregate in the chapel to await the reading of the lists and the assignment of seats. This year there were a great many disappointed people turned away because of a lack of room. From this number, a small chorus of about forty voices was organized and received some excel- lent training from Miss Clyde Foster. At first, one might wonder how all these Voices are to be harmonized and made to produce the excellent quality of tone and the strong dramatic effects which reflect so much credit upon Professor Pease at the annual rendering of some one of the great oratorios. Before the chorus attempts the work of the oratorio, Professor Pease tunes the chorus with the same skill and care that a master does his violin, soft- ening, subduing, chording, and drawing out the richer, purer qualities in the voices. This year our work began on Haydn's Creation which was given the twelfth of February. The part of HGabriel was most artistically sung by Anito Rio of New York City, Uriel , by Professor Lavin of the Conservatory Faculty, Raphael by Francis Campbell of Detroit. The voices were accompanied bv Miss Ruth Putnam at the piano, Professor York at the organ, and by selected members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, with Adolph Rosenbecker, Concert Master. The chorus is now working on The Earl King's Daughter by Gade and the Black Knight by Elgar, which are to be given during Commencement week. Among the memories of our student life, there can be none that will give us more pleasure and satisfaction, than those of the two hours a week spent under the skillful, patient training of Professor Pease. Here Work was com- bined with many a funny incident and hearty laugh, some- times at the expense of the men as well as the Htenorsf' And in the coming years, there will be no figure which stands out more clearly in our memories of college life, no influence which has done more to broaden and stimulate. than that of our beloved instructor, director and composer, Frederic H. Pease. KATHRYN L. FULLER, '06- Glunmeruaturg nf Hingis Elfrrhrrir iii. lgrzwr, EfI'PITl1I' Zllarnlig 1Hie111n MISS BELLE BEARDSLEY MR. LA VERNE BROWN MISS RUTH PUTNAM WMISS CLARA BRABB MRS. JESSIE PEASE l MR. F. L. YORK IFMISS MAY GEORGE fbrgan MISS FRANCES STRONG MR. F. L. YORK MR. FREDERIC H. PEASE 'Hinlin liinlunrvlln MR. HENRI ERN MR, H. W. SAMSON MISS ABBA OXVEN 'Hnirr Qluliurr anh Singing MISS CAROLINE TOWNER MR. WILLIAM LAVIN MISS ISABELLA GAREISSEN MR. MILTON COOK MRS. FREDERIC I-I. PEASE MRS. ANNIS D. GRAY Blfalian MISS CAROLINE TOXVNER xSubStitute for Mr. Minor White, absent in Europe for two years. M Absent, on leave, in Europe. FREIER im1l?II,5 Clbnartriie ff First Tenor- Second Tenor- First Bass- Second Bass- FRANK SHOWERS. LYNN HOBART. FRED DALEY. MILTON COOK fl, X ,ff I!! f 'll VkJo-ut I illbf ll X vii? ' 1 Ml n , pi1Allhy5 I. mn- Svninr Gllaaa WO YEARS ago another great body of students who l were to be the class of 1906, began the work which is now finished. With that true iidelity to the class, which is the mark of greater faithfulness in larger duties of life awaiting us, they looked upon this place as the one place, now as the only time, and the problems met and vanquished by their class as ike things worth doing. And since our attitude toward life is of vastly greater importance than mere events, however great, these two years have not only developed a class of which we are justly proud, but have been epoch-male ing in the lives of its individual members as well. The class spirit that made a contest for the supremacy of class colors, a foot ball game, or a class chapel day, an event for the exer- cise of all one's energy and enthusiam, and that has caused the Red and White to Boat victoriously two successive years, has put the champions of the Red and White in the front rank in scholarship, and in all events connected with the more im- portant work of the college. We rejoice in all these happy experiences of the past, and we are glad for anything in our record that may have brought greater honor to our college. But the greater accomplish- ments of these two years remain unseen except as their fruits shall reveal them. The days that are past have witnessed the forming of ideals, the crystallizing of life purposes which the coming years are to test and try, improve and perfect, and their realization shall, one day, be the greatest tribute we can pay our Alma Mater. May this offering of a high ideal real- ized be the inal tribute of each of the class of 1906. Cassria B. CUTLER, 'O6. President-Valedictorian-B. F. Pittenger, Shelby. Athletic Mgr.-Leroy Brown, Clarkston. English ana' Oratoryf Webster, Pres. Oratorieal Assn., Physieal Seieneef Webster, Atheneum, Left ffiela' Base Creseent,'Phi Delta Pi, Y. M. C. A., Won First Ball, Right Half Foot Ball, Y. M. C. A., Kappa Place in Debate, 1906. Phi Alpha. Vice-President-Prophet-Edith L. Hoyle, Cedar Springs German ana' Englishf Pres. Portia, Vice-Pres Olympic, Vire-Pres. Oratorieal Assn., Shakespeare Y. W. C. A., Normal Choir. Secretary-Lula Orr, North Branch. ' Orator-Ira F. King, Ypsilanti. ' Generalg Y. M. C. A., Lincoln, Obfmpic, Phi Delta Pi. Soloist-Milton Cook, Ypsilanti. , Voealg Pres. Conservatory Senior Class, Normal Choir, History and English: Y. W. C. A., Olympie, 'A 1, Shakespeare. Kappa Hu M a' Treasurer-Roy S. Head, Milan. ' Y Yellrnaster-Historian-Guy Snuth, Tipton. jllafhgmafiggf Cgnfgr Bag,-keg Ball, Phi Dggm Pi, Generalf Normal Choir, LibraryAssistant, Y.M. C .A ., Phi Delta Pi, Oratorical Assn. Kicker-Guy Brown, Clarkston. English ana' History,' Webster, Athenenm, Y. M. C. A. - ' Poet-Mildred Corbett, North Adams. Kappa Phi Alpha' , History ana' Englishf Crescent, Library Assistant, Sergeant-at-Arms-W. Glen Lew1s, Butternut. Y. W. C. A. NormalChoir, Associate Eaizofzvofmaz Natzlral Sciencef Y. IW. C. A., Olympic, Center Poot College News, Assistant Editor Anrora. Ball, .Normal Choir. Chairman EX. Com.-Albert Walcott, Shelbv. Salutatorian-Anna Louise French, Kalarnazoo. ' Physical and Natural Srieneesg Lincoln. Crescent, HiSl0fy and 571312-Yllf IV01mal Choir, Lzbravjv Assist- Y. M. C. A., Normal Choir, Oratoriral Board. 41125, Pi KGPPU 5ig1 1ll, Aurora 50fU'f1'- 1 E Bernice Akey-Colon. Isabel Fallas - Grand Rapids. Music a11dDrawiug,' Normal Choir, Treble Clej. V PiIZ710,' Normal Clzoir, Kappa Si. Frances Amy Cole-Ypsilanti. S Edith Stewart-Pi eon. 3' Music and Drawirzgf Normal Choir, Alheueum, I Teacher's Piauog Crescent. Porlia. Winner ou Flying Rings in Meet. Kathryn L. Fuller-Fenton. , . n Rebecca Metcalfe-Jackson. Public School Musicj Normal Clzozr. Teaclzer's Piauof Normal Clzoir, Crescent. Florence Crane-Hinsdale. Ethel BeChte1jYpS11ant1. . I Music and Drawing: Normal Clzoir. 1 Music ana' Drawzugg 1Vormal Choir. Eugenie Mereness-Ypsilanti. . Nettle Olsen-St. Joseph. Mzlsic and Drazoiugg Cresceul, Normal Chozr. . Public Scllool Musicy Normal Choir. Jessie Wheeler-Athens. Katherine R1:1en-Plnckney. . Public School Musicg Afheneum, Normal Choir. . Pzauog Normal Clzozr, freble Clegf Lucile Esther Brown-Ypsilanti. Sadie Wheeler-Manton. Music and Drazoiugf Normal Choir, Aurora Board Public School Music aucl Euglislz. Harinovzious Myslics. Albert L. DeG'reene-Addison. Agnes M. MCAuli'Efe-Negaunee. Public School fllasirg .Normal Clzoir, Olympic. Fygnfh and Enggisjlh . ' D t- 'l '. - - Mfs GfaC1sl..xE:zDZiz2:.3?t1 Mabe1lL-Cggggpglaylt A Dolly Thorburn-Holt. . Pianoy Normal Clzoir, Treble Clej. Lena B0Tgme1e1 'Petef5buTg' . German and Englzshy Y. W. C. A., German Club Aureha Murphy-Negaunee. I l . Reading and Uratovqvg Atlzenezzra. Eggie M, Cl1l'f16'RlChTHOUd. Winfield S. Stanley-Hillsdale. Kmdwganm' Generaly Normal Choir, Kappi Phi Alphag t-T ' . Capt. Second Basket Ball. Pearl E' H1lg3Z1?iE,fga,,,L,,?WaS Clty Dora E. Harley-Ludington. - - ' Hiswyy and English- Carrle M. Sheldon-Qumcy. I Genertllj Y. W. C. A., Cresfelzl, lWz'nerzfa Carrol F. Banghart-Mayv11le. A Gefzeraly Library Assistant, Websler, Olympic J955le V- H9-f1'Y-Hubbeu Adzzerlisifzg Manager Normal Jwzos. Eflghfll- Ina B. Osborne-Warren. Maude E. Yates -VVashington. Ge1zerzzl,' Aiheneum. Librdvjz Assisianzf. M'atlzemaL'ics,' Normal Choir, Firs! Cenler Siar Edith Funk-Bear Lake- Easke! Ball, Winner of jirsi place in High Mafhemalics, . . Jump' C. Athelia Phi11ipS-P1ainwe11. Elm E- GgffSTE0Ckf0fd' Generalf Allzevzeum, Library Assisiaazi. M d S enwa ' - au e tevenson-Bronson. Albert WagS,2gELya?2SLb5lQ2Zy5iCal Seimas, Y' A74 C. A. Mathemaiics and Physical T 7'az'ni1zg,' Normal Choir Normal Chair, Websfer, Pres. Crescent. Veva M. Culbert-Hanover. G . ' Z' . . . Grace L. Ryerson-Holton. . mem ' F I Club Hisiary and Eazglislzg N0r1na! Chair, Crescevzi. Claflbel E- Glasa-Denton. Minerva, L'ib7'tZ7fV Assisiawzt. Engfuh and 657771471- Lillian M, Gary-Ypsilanti. Frances G. Childs-Hudson. ' Mafhgmafifsu Lalin and Germang Y. W. C, A., Porlia, Libreujf Assisfanf. Mabel Long-Dearborn. . l fWaflzemcztz'cs,' Normal Choir, Stripe Bzzskel Ball, Elza Terpennlng-Brown Clty. Hypaiia. Hisiory. Ethel Peake-PO1 C13.Ud. 1 Bernice QWQUS-Ofignl -7W0fh5mK1ffC5,'L1b7'll J' A551-Wfvll, Y. W. C. A. Englislzg Y. Wi. C. A., Library Assisfaizl, .Normal Winifred S. Dean-Saginaw. ,Cham Olympbc' English. Ira W. DHVIS-FOWIEYVIIIS. , Gmeralg Y. M. C. A., Atlzeaezmi, Library Assistant. A1166 A' Hg:,ZS,QH?'Wgl1'C A Jessie Edna Potter-Thompsouville. ' ' ' ' ' Nalural SCZ'67ZC6,' Library Assisiavzi, Minerva, Y. W. Carl V. Johnson-Vandalia. C. A-, IVUVHIGZ Cflvif- .Matheiaiaticsy Obfmpic, Library Assisfami Eva A. Grant-Fowlerviuel Laura A. Terry-Ortonville. ffirzdfijgartefz. Geizeralg Y. W. C. A., Portia, Olympic. Mabel F, Owen-Orion. , , , Gefzeralg Y. W. C. A., .Normal Clzoir, Olympic. Julla G. M3111SOH-HCSDGTIH. M B C H. Y .1 t. Domestic Science. ' ' O ms' PS1 an 12 Generalf Olynzpzc. Lillian B1auche.Smith-Berville. Carrie A, H311-Ludington. Eflgllifl- General: Y. W. C.A. Sadie Godd-HTd'IH112lY City- Edna Beryl Peters-Manistique Domestic Seieneey Illinerua. Hislorjf. Grace Submit Cottrell-Detroit. Helmi Margaret Warren - Calumet. General. Ifv7:7ZIZl6I1gTIl7'f67Z,' Allieneum. Cora Roehm-Ypsilanti. Mabel Abrams-Brighton. U German and .Wfaihemalies Ge f 'll-' Normal Chou'- - - Rosa Hagenbuch-Three Rivers. Lula Mann-Wllllamston. . . , Englislzy Y. W. C. A., President of Hypalia, Edilor- Domesnf N?Men6e' Y' W' C' A' in-Chief ofAurora, Library Assistant. Anna Brady-Detrolt. . Lalin and Germany German Club, C7'ESL'?lll, Illanager Jennie L- BUftOn'Bent0n Harbor- Senior Club Swinging, Winner of Individual Club EiXg!flis!i,'Z?eZ1ianAClzib, Aurora Baara', Reporter for Swinging, Forward Sm, 3651865 gall' orma e e e s. . . Alt L. h B. R .5 g w Lourse Aumert-Grand Raprds. 9. lC '- lg api S. I General. German and Englzslzp F. I. Club. Bessie Ballard - Cedar Springs. ' Bertha Staley-Ypsllantl, Kinclergarlenp Y. W. C. A., Creseent, L1'bJ'd7j! Assist- Physieal Training. ' ant. h Herbert G. Schell-Oxford. Erma P. Weller-Rockford., Geazeralg Normal Choir, Olympir, Y. XVI. C. A., Kappa Generalp Y. W. C. A., Normal Choir, Sedy Afheneam. Pl 'Al 12 . . . . ZZ, P a Helen Pearl Bullls-Maple Raplds. A Elizabeth M- O Toole-Beuevui , Latin and Eaglishg Hypatia, Cresceai, Library Geaeralg Forward .Siar Basket Ball leam. Assistanf. Irving H- KiTChCf-WGbSf6I, N- Y. - Mary E. Bartlett-Harbor Beach. Nflfflffll 551571555 NUVWUZ CVZOW, 5 - IV. C- A-. Kindergarten' Olympir, Library Assistaal, Y. W. C. A. Atlzeneam. - - Elmer A. Gilman-Eaton Rapids. . Edna Byfdgjfjgf St' Joseph' Mallzemaiies a1za'Science,- Y. M. C. A., Norma! Choir, E J will Alfhenezmz, Fbrward Basket Ball. . . 1 man- ontague. Generalf Aurora fllgr., Websler, Y. IPI. C. A., F. I. Mabel R- Hmt-South Haven' , Club, Phi Delta Pi, Normal College News swf. Mflfh-'fmflfffsf Library Afmffmf- Bertha E. Taggart-Bronson. Lila Herr-Benton 'Harbor. Scienfe and !WaZlzematies,' Y. W. C. A. Iwamgmaiws' Frank Atkinson-Reese. Irene Ferguson-Alrnont. Generalg Y. M. C. A., N0r1na!Clznir, Websfer Club. .frlallzemalzcsi V- W. C. A Helen M. Clark- Lansing. Ethel Henry-Lexington. Kina'ergarz'en,' Y. W. C. A., Athenennz. General. Ida Le Clerc-St. Ignace. LUCY J0neSfAUd0Vefw O- En gh- 5 12 I Kzndergarten. - - L Sophia E. Dunham-Alma. Clara A' P51VPLgLZ2f,QEi??g1Qr'W C. A Mathernalics and Englishf Crescent, Minerva, Library Jessie E. Knoll-Dundee. A History and English Etta Abrams- Brighton. General. ' Mae Pearl Mowers-Portland. . English and History,' Elizabeth Wetherell Wayne. Latir and German Asszsfant. - Ila I. Bush-Goblesville. Kindcrgarz'en,' Van Buren Co. Club. Marie F. Heald-Hartford. Lating Library Assistant. Louise Fitts-Evart. Library Assistant. English and History. Lulu Wilson-Oxford. ' French and Latin G fa-. 1 .. . .lv ,IE U .I tg, V . A I , 1 5- .. 'V 1 .v.,- I ,FIQ h in I: I 1 ,k., I -Mia I 1 VN V .V M f l a . Y 4? F i t e L .et it l ' A' --... i A A - V , .,A'M 555 1 -,,,: W ?' , Y W ' ' 1 Y l C : ' Myra E. Jackson-Ovid. Englislty Forward Star Basket Ball. Esther L. Devin-Buchanan. Latin and Germany German Club. Bertha Viola Turner-Petoskey. Latin and Germany Y. W. C. A., German Club. Nina S. Olds-Ypsilanti. Kindergarten. Cassie B. Cutler-Saranac. Kirzdergartenf Y. W. C. A. Illinerzfa. Leila Lowe -Adrian. History and English. Mary J. Nackerman-Elk Rapids. Generali .Normal Choir. Mary Elizabeth Hartwell-Charlotte. Generaly Atheneunz. Belle Knight-Blissheld. Generalg Y. W. C. A., Atlzeneunz. Helen M. Chapel-Parma. Generalf Portia, Library Assistant, Y. W. C. A. Mabel L. Etheridge-Quincy. Public School lllusiey Normal Choir. Marguerite O'Co11nor-Lapeer. General. Mabelle Palmer-Metamora. .Music and Drawingg Crescent, Normal Choir. Sarah L. Hughes-Northville. I Kindergarten . Sarah M. Jennings-Eaton Rapids. I E. Eloise Hess-Dundee. I Generaly Hypatia, Y. W. C. A. General. Sidnah M. Fast-McLean, Texas. Irene Crawford-Ypsilanti, Geizeral and Drawingg Y. W. C. A., Normal Choir, General. Minerva, Cygsfmlg. Aikeneum. L . R b k E t R -d 1 - OVISH Ora EC 1 2. OI1 apl S. Zelma E' Eglin-Slaglnaw' Kindergarlen,' Y. W. C A. J ' D .. ' U Ora B. Peake-Portland. ,uha J Stlggfdefgzlggz? I Illallzemalicsg Library Assislanl, Y. W. C. A. Carrie H. Nicholls-Lake Linden. Honora Cranley-Scottville. Kindergarlen. Lalin. Florence Heilner-Howard City. F1051 McMi11en-Ypsilanti. 1 I .Kindergartenf Y. W. C. A., Atheneam. Generalg Normal Choir, Library Ass-zsiant, K W. C.A Robert A. Bannen-Lanston. 1 Cabinet' Jllalhemaliesy Lincoln, F. I. Club, Alternative on .Mary Borgmeier-Petersburg. Debaling Team. - German and Englishf Y. W. C. A., German Club. Susan R. Smith-Denton. Maud Maxield-Allegan. French and English, Sigina Nu Phi. G571e aZ- , , , Howard C. Prine Springport. Ethel Fa1f'YP511aUt1- Nalural Seienceg Phi Della Pi, Nalnral Science Kmdgygarlm, Assisianl, Normal Choir, Y. M. C. A., Pres. . Shakespeare Club, Treas. Oratorieal Assn., Right Katheryn E. Justnna-Grand Haven. Tarkle F001 Ball. ' Latin and Germany Sigma Nu Phi. Elizabeth CfO11iI1'-B1Hi11S- . Mathemaiics,' Parfia, Y. W. C. A., Seey. F. I. Club. Mafgflfet H0PDhaU-LaUS1Ug- Sheldon E. Culver- Milan. Kindergarleng Jllinerva, Creseeni. Generalf Y. M. C. A., Library Assisiani, Oraiorieal Board, Normal Choir, Websfer, Olympic. Gayle L. Crego-Brooklyn. - Maud Hale-Hesperia, Engligh and jygfgfy. Mathemaiies,' Oceana Co. Club. . . Leo F. Long-Tekonsha. Sophla Thee1'De'ff01f- Physical seiem, forward Baske! Baa, K M. C. A., General. , Websier, C reseeni, Shakespeare Club, N0r1nalCh0ir, . Phi Delta Pi. Margaret Barton Detro1t. Blanche Ledimky-Bucyrus, O. Gmfaf- Generaly K W. C. A., Library Assismnz. Ethel A. Wheelock-Saranac. Carrie E. Wellington-Springport. English,-N0r11za!Cb0ir, Cresrefzt. Geueraly Y. W. C A , N0rr1zalC!20i1 Florence Marie Look Detroit. Maude Sutherland. . A , . KZH'd67gG7f67Zi Aormal Chozr. Blanche E' M. Bonner-Newaygo. Claude L. KH1ff6H'Bf1ttOH. Engfish and Hz'sz'nry,- Y. W. C. A.. F- 1- Club MdlhE77Zdf?6S,' Crescgrzf, K M. C. A., Library Assist- .N0r1rzaZCh0ir. fmt' Phf Delta PZ' Mabel A. Titsworth-Lapeer. Fern NeWk1rkfCh1CagO, Ill.' Evzglislz, Y, W. C. A., Library Assislant. D awf'f-gf KHPW PH- William N. Bfaley-Ypsimmi. Q Lula Purdy-Harbor Beach. Phvsical Seienceg Kappa Phi Alpha, Cap! Foot Bal! Ki1za'ergarten,' Y W. C. A. zVorma! Choir, Library Assistani. Mable Mc Millen-Howard City. Anna Broesamle-Ypsilanti. General . lfYi7l0'E7:g'!l7'fE7Z. Mary V. Leeman-Chelsea. Lily E. Goodhevv- Ann Arbor. Generalg Y. IV. C. A., .Normal Choir, Allzeneam. Drawing. 1 Eileen Estelle Taylor-Saginaw. English and Hist0ry,' Crescent, Stripe Basket Ball, Normal C hair. Arthur E. Cross--Caledonia. Generalg 17. I. Club, Athenearn. Julia O'Neill-I-Iubbardston. General. Elma De Land-Flushing. General . Amy L. Barnard-Durand. Kina'ergarten,- Y. W. C. A., Crescent, Library Assist- ant. - Charles Walker-Plainfield. General: Library Assistant. Nettie C. Tripp-Ludington. Kin dergarten . Grace M. Carpenter-Orion. ' Mathematics and English. Mary Louise Miller-Eaton Rapids Jllatheinatiesg Pres. Hypatia Fall Quarter. Hattie Wilson-Marlette. English. A . Josie Page-Grand Rapids. Drawing ana' History. Alice R. Keuzler-Saginaw. English and Latin. Alta E. Howard-Concord. Kindergarten . Nella E. Dietrich-Laingsburg. I Generalf Hypatia, Library Assistant. 4, ,f wi : Wi .... Q r . c1 ' - K aff.. 5. Harold Babcock-Sandusky, 4 ' Florence R. GOlduD'H0mer. . Q Generalg Lincoln, 1V0r1nal Choir, Kappa Phi Alpha. Mathemalics. Mildred Orr-North Branch. I Romelda G, Bamme1..Bay City, GEHEVGL' Y. W. C. A., Olyniplf. mndgygfaylgn. E. H. Wisner-Clayton. - - - - Physical Slime- Y. M. c. A. Elizabeth Sjgffjirgffgiflantl' E. Marguerite Lux-Mears. . . Englislzf Aforanal Choir, Shakespeare Club. Ahce C' ClgiBg,1g?EdeU' Wallace A. Ferguson-Newton Falls. 1 ' l Generalg Lincoln, Y. M. C. A., Afbeneum, Second Orpha Shlfger-Frontier. eneral. Basket Ball. Mary Elizabeth Hartwell-Charlotte. Generalg Athenenm. Cassie M. Spillane-Durand. Generaly Cresrent, Library Assislanl. Barbara Hess-Elsie. Generaly Library Assisfanl. Josephine Huyck-Clio. Kindergarleng Sigma Nu Phi .14- 4, ' 'ei Nana Fraser-Medina G Mm! ' Bess E. Munro-Portland. K English and Hzslory,' Library Assisfanl. Charles A. Webster-Metamora. . ' Physiral Ed1.mzm,- Kappa Phi Afpha, Mgr. and Lf-fx Bertha 14116112 Atk111-PSf0SkCY- End Fool Ball, Guard Baskel Ball. Madffn Lfmg7Wg55f Y- W- C- A- Amy Ballard-Cedar Springs. Frances Hunter-Adrian. Illallzemalics and Englislzg X W C. A., Portia. Lafin ana' Germany Normal Choir. Charlotte M.-Howard-Jackson. Helen Mae prentiCe-p0ntiaC. HZ5i07y' General. Mary Frar1gMEZ1lrtlS Dundee- Florence A. Corbin-Ashtabula, O. . ' I l Idvzdergarlen. Charles MISUCT-OllSV11l6. Generalg F. I Club, Treasurzr Lincoln Club, Allze- B355 M- Van, Auken-Hartford' , neum, Won Second Place in fnler- Club Debate. Klfldffgafffni Llbmfl' A5515fam'- ' ' Sarah M- Jennings- Eaton Rapids. Margaret M. L. Mcnonard-Au Sable. GKWWIYJ Y- W C- fl-. Hyjlflfill Lalin and Mazflzernalicsg Library Assistant IQ C 1 Retta G. Purdy-Caro. Charles C. Colby-Armada. Geogrfzphyg Arm of Honor, Normal Choir, Left Frances Mullen-Mass City. Tackle Foot Ball, Mgr. Base Ball. Gmfflll- Jennie L Matteson-Dexter. M th zf' ,- F. I. Cl b. Dora Smallegan-Central Lake. Ed G B a mm ws .u Hwzch and Lum. na . lossorn-Cedar Springs. Hzslory and Englzslzg Crescenzf. G. Ruth Turner-Jackson. W. Walter Davis-Muskegon. Kindergarlenf Normal Choir G'eneral,' Norvnzzl Choir, Creseenl, Arnz of Honor. Hiram H. Chapman-Ypsilanti. Bess Van Allken-Hartford' Matherfzaties and Seieneeg Allzeneunz, Y. M. C. A., Kmdefgayien- Library Assistant, Plzz' Della Pi, Mgr. Basket Ball. Bessie M. Hicks-Allegan. English and Hisloryf Normal Choir, Shakespeare Clnb. U Alban C. Woodard-Milan. Kathe1Y I1 HCS-Allen. EPhysieal Scieneey Arm of Honor, Normal Clzoir, Mgr. Gf'fN'1'07- ' Mailing Depl. Normal College News. Elsie B. Jones-Negauuee. English and French. Della Prideaux-Lake Linden. fllliauual Urainiug Sfrniutz English. ' I , , Isabelle I-Imkle-Hillsdale. Bess B. Wright-Elk Raplds. Mafzaal Training. Matlzeinatics ana' English. I Mrs. F1Ore e Dev?-ies-Manton. . ' l ' ' D ' . Eliza P. Stark--Ann Arbor. Mb 1 A Crggga Hqfzgzieand mwwg . ' - - 3 6 . ' . General, Captain Star Basket Ball, Library Assistant. Alanna! Training? Afaymal Choir. Belle Morrison-DeWitt. Ilfannal Training and Drawing. Lute E. Foster--Tekonsha. George G. Morgan-Qolornak I Generalg leigh: Emi foot Buzz, Kappa PM Azpha. Manual Tmwfmg' , VFW Ph' Alpha' Edna M. Barlow-Ypsllantl. Earl Stewart-Elba. Asst. Instructor in Manual T rainingy Normal Clzoir Jllathevnatirsf Webster, Mgr. Mailing Dept. Normal 1 H. Ethel Childs--Ypsilanti, College Afews. I Asst. Instructor in Drawingf Zeta Phi. Louisa A. Andrews-Paw Paw. Cora Arnot-Mt. Clemens. Irene Bebeau-Rockland. General. Emma P. Birdsall-Saline. General. Cora L. Bowen-Ypsilanti. Lalin anfl German. Physical Eelnealion and flfan nal Yraining. Anna E. Britton-Newago. Alalnral Seienee ana' Geo? raphy. Celia Brown-Plymouth. General. Nettie Frances Burke Shelby. English. Maude Cameron-Ypsilanti. General. Jett Carroll-Bay City. llineleigarfen. Emma L. Childs-Ypsilanti. Domesiie Seienee. Mabel Leone Clark- Denton. Lalin ana' German. Emerson S. Clem-St. Paris, O. Nalaral Seienee. Nellie Clement-Coldwater. Lalin ana' German. Agnes Imogene Collins-Toledo, O. English anel Hislory. Viva Crosby-South Lyon. General. Clara Crossman-Camargo, Ill. German ana' English. Mildred Cornish-Lawton. Kina'ergarfen. Caroline Crane-Ypsilanti. General. Venola Dennis -Ann Arbor. Drawing. Ruth Dunbar-Grand Rapids. Physical Erlnealion. Celestia Eddy-Ypsilanti. Lalin. I Mabel Egeler-Wayne. General. Winifred Faulkner-Grand Rapids. General. . Florence Felton-Dorr. ffislory ana' English. Edna Filley-Ashton. General. Zayda B. Fish-Constantine. Domeslie Seienee. Edith Gabriel ' Owosso. English and German. Winifred Gibbons-Urbana, O. General. Edith A. Godfrey-Jonesville. Ainelergarlen. Ermah Greer -Northville. Mavzzial Training. Leila Hall-Chesaning. Malhemalies. Della E. Hale-Springport. Nalzlral Science. Emily Swift Hale-Detroit. ffindergarlen. George C. Handy -Ovvosso. lllalhemalies. Fanny Harding-Martin. Mary Harmon-Birmingham. Kinelergarlen. Lena M. Harrington-Olivet. Lalin. Gertrude Heisner-Bay City. Kinrlergfarfen. Bertha Hinkson-Detroit. General. Edith Holcomb'-Traverse City. Kinclergarlen. Emma Holmes-Ypsilanti. Kindergarien. Leslie E. Horen-Ypsilanti. Lalin. Anna Houle-Rockland. General. Adelia Hoag-Springport. General. Bessie Hubbell-Ypsilanti. Drawing. Berthal-Iutson-Ypsilanti. General. Edna Jackson-Davisburgh. Nalaral Seienee. Adeline .Tones-Detroit. General. Mary Evans .Toy-Millington. Hz'siary. Genevieve Kelley-Bay City. Ifinclergarlen. Claribel S. Kennedy-Lansing. Lalin. Merle Kenyon-Tecumseh. K'ina'ergarlen. Lottie L. Lamb-Fenton. fllalhemalies. John W. Langdon-Allenville. General. Leila Lawrence-Lowell. fllalhemaliesf Donna Lee--Elsie. lfindergarlen. Irene Le Sage-Butte, Mont. flislory ana' English. Nellie Looker-Ann Arbor. fiinflergarlen. Agnes Taylor Loomis-Ypsilanti. Dameslie Seienee Mabel C. Lovvnsbury--Ypsilanti. Kinrlergarlen. Viola Lusby--Ann Arbor. Kinelergarfen. Ruth Mann-Belding. Lalin. Elsie Meyers-Three Rivers. General. Ella Miller-Detroit. General. J. Ford MeBain-Dalton. lWaz'henzalies. Maud McColl -Escanaba. General. Jessie NIcDonalcl-Marshall. General. Alice McGregor-Ypsilanti. Frenclz and hlislory. Mae McNamara-St. lgnace. Hislory. Maribelle Newcomer-Memphis. A!Z.7ZIlI61fQIZ7'I'67l. Edna Jessie O'dell-Port Huron. General. Bessie L. Park-Kalamazoo. Hz'slo1fy and English. Elizabeth Parmalee-Morrice. K'z'nfle1jgarlen. Nellie Penoyar-Bangor. Donreslic Scz'ence. Lulu H. Price-Almont. General. Rose Frances Martin-Detroit. Hz'sfory ana' Englislz. Leah Ray-Buchanan. Lalin and German. Eva H. Reynier-Grand Rapids. General. lone Reynolds-Paw Paw. Drawing. Carrie M. Riddle-Plymouth. K'z'na'erga1len. Fay Rutson-Detroit. lWaZlzenzalz'cs. Ida G. Sayles-Ypsilanti. German. Bertha Schaffer-Ann Arbor. Lalin. Margaret Scoutten-Laingsburg. General. Clara Srnallidge-Grass Lake. General. A. Ezoa Smith-Tawas City. Ethel Smith-Charlevoix. General. Mabel M. Smith-Ypsilanti. 1'z'no'er,Qarlen. Nina G. Smith-Big Rapids. General. W. B. Smith-Ubley. H. W. Snyder-Albion. Roy E. Sprague-Farmington. !l4az'lzen7az'1'cs. Bernice E. Sprout--Marthaville. La. Drazoing. Elizabeth Steers--Ann Arbor. Lalin and French. Bess Stephens--Stockbridge. English and Hz'slo:'y. Leo Stephens-Milford. flfalaefrzalfcs. Blanche Stewart--Middleville. lWaz'henzaz'z'cs. Jessie C. Swain- Ypsilanti. Donzeslzc Science. May J. Thomas--Grand Rapids. Hz'slory. Connie Taisey-Rapid City. Dorothy Thonipson-- Grand Rapids. German. Grace Townley-Ann Arbor. Edith M. Travis-Elsie. K'z'nele1garlen. Rachel Verrier-Rockland. General. Ella Walceield-Howell. General. Josephine Wallace--Detroit. Irene Wallin--Bay City. Kinelergarlen. Henrietta Walrath-Bay City. A'z'nclergarz'en. Henry Walsh-Cedar Springs. lllalhemalics. Carrie M. Welden--St. Lqnace. General. Flora J. Whitbeclc--Plymouth. Lalin. Arizona B. Wirnple-Owosso. Dozneslic Science. Belva P. Laffrey-Marine City. General. Bess C. Wood--Charlotte. Lalin and German. Lora Wright-Grand Blanc. N. Elizabeth Wright--Hudson. Mafnemalz'cs. Mabel Bernhard--Barnesville. Public School Mzcszc. Zina Calahan--Sturgis. llfnsic ana' Drawing. Ethel Clarke-Ypsilanti. Singing. Margery Alexander-Cleveland, O. Public School lWnsz'c Irene Murray--St. lgnace. Pnolfc School lllusic. Laura Spaulding-Lyons. Singing. Mabel W. Scott Zach--Ypsilanti. lllalneznalics. Eva L. Montgomery-Ionia. English. - .fi l I .. 1+ v ,f 5 ' Ji.- f1Fi,- fl , v f -:Q--1 1 E' Q 95 LI. ,i. 13? I. 'L ful .572 f.-5gTL+ 2112!- :a: f ..f Tiff - - 1--Wi - - - -1f ' W -i ,Elff-5-i lk 'fi ii, dafgiu, : Ei f, F1 V -ff - -- ig. -?i .. f-1.2 -- , Q ' . if-..:,1,:f V, if i'-g - - Ei , -EE?-i X , 'T '-5 .ri -?-:- W d :f'i,f - -7 J- 5'-'.':1' . 'IT' '--,Z -1 wt- if- ,Y ' N W' ' f ffwgx- i -HA-i,14-Q, ff-143' H2-if g 7- 'gj ff V.- ir , - 1 - -514 N 4 Q- 4 V g 'i -K 7 f I Ee X i Q'N EE ff :? 1 f 2 if f 'AW 3 P' ,f f Q, H1 522, 5 M, in-1: ii-fi' .gl-'ic' Q 4 ,f Qlf 2 : f z W' yy M 1- iz if 4 . 41 w Q -gllijfiliff EY U W7 JWFW i g :jfl ,' 1 Wy ug ' Z ': . 7 -'lf XM W 5 e?1:i2EgiW Mf' E E A 1 + - - ' My ,-2 li Mi- ff iuzqfwj f E 'Fi fa-1 Swniur Evgrrr Gllaaa I-IIS June, the Senior Degree Class will leave its Work for larger fields of labor. The members of the class have been sturdy, diligent students of the Normal College for four years. They have met with the joys and sorrows, gains and losses, which fall to the lot of all students. But it seems as though their successes have more than outnumbered their reverses. You have but to look at the records of this small but noted class. Noted? Yes. The Senior Degree Class of 1906 is the most remarkable class ever permitted to wear the green and White. Both of its members' have been assistants in the Normal, one in the Department of Mathematics, for the past two years. and the other in the Science Department. In surpasses any other class in that one hundred per cent of its members are young men and all the class are mem-- bers of the Phi Delta Pi Fraternity. It may be said that the young men are Of quiet ways, And students of old books and daysg also that Their hearts are in their work, and the heart Giveth grace unto every art. BERNICE SARGENT. 'O5.. Sion, fag X Fr .x1,,a4 93 1 f ' X sr ,jlwvi ' ii .5 XI 1 ' -My gtk . , K' . 5 ' ' ,- xfxgx -,.-T Q Srrninr Evgrwe Gllanz ANKJENSEN C. D. CARPENT A X XXX Ilnninr Evgrma 0112155 X f .wax s - X Q XX --+R, f X X .k Q 3 f- '-f ll -,., . a- ,4 7 i If i ds ' fd iii ,liii il-l+ee ttttl ' - wllll r llllm fflll iilii X l 4 Milf ,y I if , wx, X X J S5 , 'lQ'f'lQ xi, , i ' 1 V' l,',fipi' il Xlikli X Y 1 . ,f ,fl , Q 4 r. mx X V 'ix ' h ,. t1V,ffy.jL' QNX A ,Wx A A i x ' , Q ,' .- M R , a l pi -N l .r illd wi ll 'l I'ib ?fZ' l l: 1 154512 sr. i. h Nkx 1' ff 0 'I W i M ll a 1 ' X itll l ihlfajii- .J 4:21 gg 'L' t-ef-NAU al,,,gk! '11 Fa' 4 - ,- FE-- sik, e--- -g ee? - Y,--N . - ., June of 1905, brought commencement to the largest class which has ever left our Alma Mater. To each one the time and the Word were significant, but to a certain number it was especially full of meaning. It was a slogan urging us on to- fuller preparation for life, a call bidding us 'idrink deep Who- had but tasted the Pierian spring. It was this thirst for knowledge that brought and bound the class together in a united effort to attain more fully ,the ideal of complete living. This class is known as The Junior Degree Class. Though small in number, it has amost promis- ing future, its members being people whose ability has been recognized in all the various lines of college activity. It stands for thorough, aggressive Work and high scholarship. ever put- ting forth its most earnest effort to acquire the noblest and best in life. May our being in close touch and sympathy with our- Alma Mater have an ever broadening influence on each of us, and, as We separate to meet life's problems, let the perfection of life be our ever-guiding star, till, like Ernest in the Great Stone Face, at life's end we shall End ourselves changed in to the likeness of that which We have loved and followedt MARY PARKER, '05. Eluninr Evgrma 0112155 President-Valedictorian-H. C. Cooley, Ypsilanti. Prophet-Harry P. Jcmes, Marceuugl Gmgyal' Scientzyicg President Athenemn, Norma! Choir Treasurer-M. B. Travis, Clarkston. Linwln- Otwnpic, Normal Choir, Library Assistant, Plzi Delta H, t , L EH L , Y ,I t, Pi, IS orlan- . a oomls D51 an 1. Julius H. Moeller-Hinsdale. . Mathe1naties,- Assistant in Physical Training. Latin and Gerznany Webster, Normal Choir, Kappa Poet-C C Miller Battle Creek PM Alphfz' General, ,Webster, .Normal Chair. Orator-W. L. Walling, Onaway. Physica-t Scienceg Atlzenezirn, Assistant in Physical Science. Vice-President-Jean McKay, Ypsilanti. Ancient Languages, Nbrrnat Choir, Library Assistant. Secretary- C. Bernice Sargent, Ypsilanti. IWatlze1naIics,' Assistant in Mathevzzatics. 214 . nZZ.5:gE:fE 1 f ffff' ' 5.5559 . Qiifiii. + 1 I. :V ' - 5:55 ' -:5 'f'1.-. 2 ,-if V . 'V' 1 'fizfii fwggffgg v.. . 4112. ...fm ' V rf? B Zlnninr Ergrvr Clllanz S. Edith King-Ypsilanti. Carlton W. Greien-Marcellus. g ' Natura! Seievzcef Creseenl, Pres. Illirzerva, Assistant Ph3'-Wm! 5fZf f'f'f ANWWWZ Chow' uf-5 in Bofcwy. Park H. Smith-?!'pSiia11ti. Genera . Anhui' L- Smith-Reed City- Mary Parker-Traverse City. Generally Crescent, Norvnal Clzoir, Websler. Physira! Seience and Illafhemazfies. Clemens P. Steimle-Atlantic Mine. I Richard Broecker -Hadley. Illaihemaliesp Norma! Chair, Phi Delta Pi, Assistant Modern Languages. ini Illatlzematies. , U G. C. Carpenter-Brpnson. - Esther Pomeroy-H1104 Hawaii. Physica! Sczencef Normal Chozr, Assislcmt in Ph sim! J' Hisiory and Englishf Science. , EPHS Deamcfypsglgigfilom B Q, Carrie Crane-Ypsilanti. ezzera ,' oar . G-mefag' Sidney P. Trathen-Houghtonq M t L k ood-Pittsford Mathematics and Physical Sez'ence,' Olympzt, N01'11zal argare OC W . ' ' Chaim PM Delia Pi- General, Porter: Club. Lottie L. Lamb-Oak Grove. W. H. Bath-YDS11f1Ut1- Mathema!ics,' Aformal Choir, Librafjf Assisiafzi. General. v M x fy y , . 1 MVN I6 :SYN u H f X QQ, 1 -'Y' S w :Y W N X WW? ,aff My f ' H X,'!w1,!gW -Hi IV if ', NW kpw WE, A X L MN ikq,,:Mnll,uYlMf,S lj Q W? :m ?'W WIfl 9 X G,KWQi-myxx rliglr Xl' WW N: wx qgyf v 6 If xk fmf I ww W EV X xg f f! X gi Q Us W 1 xvligagsi lf' x AM . H fly i y, fw55Nj wh qlxulgwf 4 JIWM J U N 1 0 R E Q GREE 1 23 X DE PROM E F JH X gfffix I I .Uumnr Rah! Rah! 'O7! Rah! Rah! '07! Rah! Rah! '07' R5 Gllaaa Rah! Rah! '07! Rah l Rah ! '07 ! Rah! Rah ! '07 I -ah ! the illustrious Junior Class of O6 as they have T is scarcely necessary to give a detailed account of , ,l , '- assumed a place of the highest importance since their organization. However, as it would be a great wrong to posterity to leave no record of their unparal- led victories, this sketch will endeavor to emblazon on the annals of history an epitome of their glorious exist- SHOE. The organization of the class took place early in the ,f -X - 5TilT5 720flG1f1L C0 A of 2 fqii ll - 'q w fill - M 'M 'X fijD llllll it Q i V 1 V I 4. ' mmm ll ni .nm X X ,' . f X XX - --- Xi f N JU NIO R, br college year, with over four hundred members, a large number of whom show unusual class spirit. The first manifestation of their superiority over their upper class- men was seen in front of Starkweather Hall at the rush, when the Senior colors fell into the hands of the alert Juniors because the Seniors Were not watchful enough in the defense of their flag after being victorious. Other occasions have proved them equally capable of carrying oft the honors, as was seen by the impressive spectacle presented on Junior chapel day, which will long be remembered. That it was a royal occasion Was manifest by the purple and gold. The whole exercise. including the march of the large body of students bearing their colors, the beautiful selection rendered by the Choral Society, and the gratifying tribute by President Jones, was one Worthy of only such a class as this. Having thus acquitted themselves honorably as Juniors, nothing but success can be predicted for them as Seniors, since the greatest characteristic of this class- has been their growth in spirit and strength. ANNE STAPLETON, 'O7. i Riluniur Qllawz Bag liariiripaniz Zluniur Qilaaz Gbffirrra ORATOR-WILLIANI E. OLDS PRESIDENT'MAUR1CE LATHERS ESSAYIS'F-'MELVIN E. MATTERN VICE-PREs1DRNT-THEODORA MOSHER SALUTATORIAN-EARLE J. ENGLE SECRETARY-EDWARD M. STEIMLE HISTORIAN-LUELLA MUNSON TREASURER-FRANK HARRISON PORT-EOLAH M. BROWN YELLMASTER- DWIGHT WILSON SOLOIST-EDNA MILLER CHR'N. Ex. COM.-MVRTLE CRAM Xftggxtw 3 gi? f f , Q iriiffu . , Y ' 1 f ' -1 g A s- w 'iff , J ,ml X k r . WX 3 or -- 5 gl X 7' - 1' ' H 1' l A l., w l , X, ' x H : Ig lv KN Q X 'Ti'-A - ' iii' Xi x X-Jl F 3 in ily, re 'Q-if ' Y' 5' Y 0 Ike 1Z:7'6S!Z77ZE7Z.'1 Come, my friends and would-be successors, and we will show you through the rooms in which you are to recite next year. We Sophomores have enjoyed being in them, and the professors and teachers have profited by our wis- dom. In this room we recited geometry, and it has been a pleasant study. We resign it to you gladly. Though a few of our number will study it again with you, do not think it is for any other reason than to be with you and help you. Now we will show you the English literature room. Can you not tell by the atmosphere that in this room only pleasant and proitable things are spoken of? We are surely sorry to leave it. Here, we recited our physics, which has been our anchor. Without it to hold us down to study we should have been haranguing the Seniors, who would have listened attentively to our discourse. Yes, of course, the Juniors have been jealous of us, for it is only natural that the weaker ones should be envious of the stronger. Poor, ignorant Freshmen! We will tell you the cor- rect way to act as Sophomores. First, do not organize your class until we, Me Jzmiors, have organized ours. Always show due respect to us, your superiors. Always stay at home evenings and get your lessons perfectly. That is the way the class before you did. You know they were strong enough to ignore absolutely the junior class, but you are not. We have done so much good in our work the past year, that the whole faculty are glad we are to be with them still another two Vears. We hope, though we have our doubts, that at least some of them will be glad to keep you with them. Now, good-bye Freshmen. You have listened respect- fully and we are sure that you have profited by our talk. M. LESHIA UNDERYVOOD, '08, Svnphnmnrr 0112155 Gbffirrrz PRESIDENT. -----'- MINNIE M. LAMBIE VICE- PRESIDENT - - LESHIA UNDERWOOD SECRETARY AND TREASURER - - ETI-IEL A. RICARD WW gy l 'CM 'XMKXK f-x 5 f 6 Qq -TU S if gi., I RESHM .E U ,O 5 Ghgunizniinnn Uhr Ubraturiral Aaanriaiiun HE Oratorical Association has become one of the , permanent features of Normal College life. Clubs may come, and clubs may go, but it goes on forever. The purpose of the Association is to furnish actual practice in oratory and debate. It is composed of three literary societies-the Crescent, the Atheneum, and the Olympic, and the Lincoln, Webster, Portia and Minerva debating clubs. Other recently organized clubs are ready for admission. The past year has been particularly successful, both as regards the work at home and the contests abroad. The final home contest in oratory was held in Normal hall December 8, with the following entries: Harold E. Wil- liams, Lincoln, The Flaming Torch , Julius C. Moeller, Webster, Alfred the Great , Irene-Crawford, Minerva, Port Arthur , J. F. King, Lincoln, Martin Luther , Ray Coman, school-at-large, K'The Railroad Rate Ques- tionmg and W. L. Walling, school-at-large, 'lThe Power of Thought. The winners were Williams, Moeller, and Walling. ' The final debating contest took place in Normal hall, - 1 March 2, with R. A. Baunen and Charles Misner represent- ing the Lincoln Clubg Benj. Pittenger and E. J. Willman, the Webster, M. C. Lathers, the Olympic Society, and W. E. Olds, the Atheneum. Pittenger, Willman and Olds won out, and became the team of the intercollegiate debate with M. A. C. On March 2, at Alma, occurred the state intercollegiate Oratorical contest. Because of the unfortunate illness of Mr Vlfilliams, Mr. Moeller represented the Normal College, defending her honors nobly, and figuring well in the results. The M. N. C.-M. A. C. joint debate at Lansing, May 18, is an event long to be remembered. Accompanied by a crowd of over four hundred enthusiastic students, the debating and base ball teams journeyed to the capital city in a special train. The Normal team upheld the negative of the question, 'iResolved, that railroad rates in the United States should be fixed by a national commission, and succeeded in converting two of the three judges. After such successes the Collegeis justly proud of her Oratorical Association, and hopes that the future may dupli- cate the victories of the past. BENJAMIN PITTENGER, 'O6. Q19rz1turira1 Anznriatinn Gbffirnrz PRESIDENT-B. F. PITTENGER SECRETARY-IVA BLISS VICE PRESIDENT-EDITH HOYLE TREASURER-HOWARD PRINE MEMBER OF STATE ORATORICAL BOARD-GUY C. SMITH Qbratnriral Glnntlzziantz HAROLD WILLIAMS'l1ThC Flaming Torch JULIUS H. MOELLER- Alfred the Great. W. L. WALLING'c4Th6 Power of Thought. RAY COMAN KcThC Railroad Rate Problem IRA F. KING- Martin Luther. IRENE CRANVFORD-U Port Arthur. Bnhating Guntrzinniz QUESTION-Resolfverl that railroad rates in the Unfited States should be timed by a nationial commission. Uhr Gram GDilgrr GHIITDHTSIUTK First Place-B. F. PITTENGER, 'O6. R. A. BANNEN, '06, Alternate Second Place-E.J. WILLMAN, '06, MAURICE LATHERS, '07. Third Place-WM. OLDS, '07. C. E. MISNER. 'O6. mrhairr Evhaiing Qllnh S THE Webster Club rounds out the sixth year of its ' existence, it adds to its proud record of the past and makes a most auspicious showing for the future. The efforts of the club during the past year in oratorical and debating circles have been such as to reiiect credit upon its active members, arouse pride in the hearts of its alumni, and bring honor to the institution of which it forms a part. The club was organized in 1901 for the purpose of giv- ing young men of the College an opportunity to think rapidly, and then to express their thoughts clearly and forcibly in intelligent discussions of the problems ofthe day. This has also been the guiding aim of the club dur- ing the past year, and the skill in debate which may be acquired with this end in view, under our efdcient critic, is shown by the effective Work of Messrs. Pittenger and Will- man, the Webster men who won iirst and second place respectively in the final debate. Another Webster man, Mr. Moeller, represented the college in the intercollegiate oratorical contest held at Alma. Though eiiiciency in public speaking is the desired result of membership in the club, yet it is not the only beneit accruing from the same. The Weekly meetings of the club create a feeling of fellowship and cement bonds of friendship which endure far beyond our college days and will greatly add to the joy of living, when in later years memory recalls them to view. Comprised of men of ability, of integrity, and of energy, the work of the club is destined to extend beyond its circle in the Normal College. For wherever you End a Vlfebster man, there will you find a well-directed effort to raise men to the highest standards of citizenship by teaching them to think clearly and intelligently on the vital questions which confront us as a nation, and to act in accordance with their opinions when formed. The members of the club have stood for industry, scholarship, and high moral character in all their eiorts of the past, and with these as their respective standards, the men of the Webster Club hope to remain a power for good in the College, and to further the cause of good citizenship in the world at large. melmivr Brhaiing, Qllnh Fall Quarter PRESIDENT- G. C. BRONVN V1CE-PRES1DENT- M. M. PEET lfbffirmers W inter Quarter M. M. PEET C. F. BANGHART Spring Quarter E. J. WILLBIAN C. F. BANGHART SECRETARY- S. CULVER J. C. MOELLER E. A. STENVART TREASURER' R. N. BROWN F. H. ATKINSON L. E. WEsTcoTT EDITOR- B. F. PITTENGER G. C. BROWN E. J. ENGLE Hllrmhvra Earle J. Engle Guy C. Brown Clarence West Leroy N. Brown George B. Miller Leo E. Westcott Ray S. Head . A. L. Smith Leo F. Long Earl A. Stewart Charles AWalker Martin B. Travis Sheldon Culver Carrol F. Banghart Julius H. Moeller Warren D. Byrum Benjamin F. Pittenger C. C. Miller Max M. Peet E. J. Willman F. H. Atklnson Maurice Lathers PRESIDENT, VICE -PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER - EDITOR - YELLMASTER Fall Quarter Einruln Brlmting Olluh Cfalfftrvrz I. F KING H. P. JONES W. A. FERGUSON J. W. LANODON R. A. BANNEN H. P. JONES Ilfimfei' Quarter H. BAECOCK R. COMAN - W. E. OLDS C. E. MISNER R. A. BANNEN H. P. JONES illllrmhrrz R. A. Bannen Hugh Aldrich Ray Coman Rav Clink Theodore Flintoff W. A. Ferguson Harry P. Jones John W. Langdon Chas. Misner Floyd Sullivan Franfli Mosier William Olds Frank Perrine Ira F. 'King Albert Walcott Ray Withenbury Harold Babcock Melvin E. Mattern Lute Foster Harold Williams Sidney P. Trathen Lynn E. Weston Warner Bates Spring Quarter R. A. BANNEN R. COMAN L. E. WESTON T. W. FLINTOFF F. PERRINE H. P. JONES llinrnln Bvhaiing Ollnh I VERY organization as Well as every individual should stand for some principle or ideal. Ever since its organization in 1900 the Lincoln Debating Club has had for its standards efhcierxcy in public speaking, loyalty to the college, and earnestness in its work. One incentive to debating Work has been removed, that of one credit in the college for a year's Work in the club. Yet. in a sense, this is a gain for the club, because, now, membership is sought only by those who wish to enter to prepare for greater efficiency in life's work. The Lincoln Club has shared richly in the successes of the college in oratory and debate. The record from its very inception has been a most creditable one. This year one of its members, Mr. Harold Williams, won first place in the oratorical contest. In all its relations to college life it has faced defeat as bravely as it has borne victory modestly. Our members who leave the college this year Will deal more wisely with the real problems of life for having belonged to the Lincoln Debating Club. The memory of its associations will be one of the richest of their college life. And the strength and inspiration born Within its influence Will yet inspire and strengthen in their life work. - W. A. FERGUSON, 'O6. MQ, x, 1' ' 5,5 'iw ,. ...f. M1 I H, X X 'L, X - kmx . 3 - 'Ki v v ! , dy PORTIA CLUB lgurtia Glluh HE Portia Club dates its organization from April, I 1901. Its purpose is to train the members to quick and accurate thinking and to enable them to express their thoughts readily. Each year has brought to the Portia girls that culture which comes from social intercourse and the discussion of the interesting problems of the day. Such questions as that of the Hxing of the rail- road rates have been discussed during the past year with as much earnestuess and enthusiasm as Portia herself would show if she could only talk in our halls of Congress. The same quickness of speech and readiness of wit that was shown by the fair lawyer of Padua is found among the Portia girls. This is especially true when an unwary Shylock dares to cross their path. He is vanquished so quickly and easily that never again does he reappear upon the Held of action. However, no Bassanio ever appears as there is alwavs a guardian Angell near to protect those under her care. ELIZABETH CRONIN, 'O6. Qbffirrra Fa!! Quarter Ilfirzfer and Spring Quarfers PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER CHAIRMAN OF PROGRAM COMMI EDITH HOYT,E FRANCES CHILDS HELEN CHAPEL AMY BALLARD NH2T,T,IE CLEMENT EDITH HOYLE ELIZABETH CRONIN FRANCES CHILDS IDA SAYLES EDNA PRINE UDIIIP1' fllllrzmhrra Rena Angell Susie Bennet Iva Bliss Elil10I Gage Margaret Lockwood Ruth Smith Laura Terry Mable GHSS v , .-.952 , Y, 54 . '-'i'542J-M31 V , 132 . gfgdzgqdz,-1,1 V ' ,. E Q '.,,ag'i:-. . , fr127Q::1f:' ,L af .5 4 -' - ,QW 2, , gf,-:-fa 'w Pl'-iff:zf,:z7w2Mv1gf:.ffr,.,i '1 t 44,15 -,,g9jrpl,1 ,ww-n'1W,' 1- yfM, -1 Y ,Q--,g4412'9'.-621. -1 ' ' 'Y - 'rug f'f4Lf.z,::Q, f 4' Qyf 6Lcf?,ci'4gy314wff1,:, ny I 2, .sf 'ia ,y fl , J -L .1 -,my-W A A.. ,- Al, ',G,,:c,,15g 'f f ,mf-f ,Q-g , ' 'ir' 144' 4 IVIINEFQVA CLUB illltnvrua -TTR god-mother, the divine Minerva, set for us an illustrious example of the value of debate. You know the story--how it was decreed that to the god or the goddess who produced the article most useful to man should be granted the honor of naming a Grecian city -how Neptune produced the horse and Minerva the olive tree. The gods were ready at once to concede Neptune the desired privilege, but when the contestants in turn dis- cussed their creations, it was Minerva who won all listeners by her wise presentation of the utility of the olive tree. i As devotees of Minerva, it is the desire of members of this club to emulate her in dignity of address and wisdom Glluh of speech. With this in view, it is our present policy to add to the customary program of essays, discussions of current events, debates, etc., short talks on subjects of immediate interest. This will embody the discussion of current events and the essay work as previously taken up, and, we trust, will prove benehcial both in its preparation and presentation. While the social side has been considered secondary in club affairs, still it has not been absent, and it is the inten- tion of the members to give expression to this phase by closing the year with a banquet as a tribute to the friend- ship among old members and as a welcome to the new. S. E. KING, Junior Degree. G tbffirera Fall Quarter PRESIDENT - GRACE RYERSON VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY - BLANCHE STEVVART, TREASURER Mabel Thomas Irene Crawford Margaret Hopphan EDNA JACKSON Blanche Stewart Ina Gabriel Edith Gabriel Carrie Sheldon Edna Jackson IV1Inte1' Quarter IRENE CRAWFORD RUTH BACON SADIE GODDARD SOPHIE DUNHAM illilrmhrra Grace Ryerson Rutl1 Bacon Jessie Potter Spring Quarter EDITH KING ALICE HALLIDAY MABEL THOMAS MABEL HOOLIHAN Mabel Hoolihan Sophie Dunham Alice Halliday Mabel Selkirk Sadie Goddard Edith King Floy Ramsdell x xXxXX X mx xxv NN 49, UI' I, 1 X f 5 ff Z, 2- ,1 fr ff f A 7 .10 1. xx. .X Q--X '- -TY ' xxx? ,Q .X-X Q X Gblgmpir ROBABLY no other college organization gives so great an opportunity for discipline along so many lines as does the literary society. The oldest, and perhaps the best known of such societies, in the Michigan State Normal College, is the Olympic. Although every fall there are more applicants for membership than can be accepted. visitors are always welcome at the meetings. An interesting feature of our entertainments during the winter quarter was a contest between the boys and the girls of the society, which continued through two programs. Although the girls closed their part of the contest with Everybody worked but the boys, And they stood 'round all dayg Thought that DeGreene could win out 4 Svnrivtg With a reading, anyway. Trathen played a solo, Lewis a story told, Collins read from Riley, But the boys were-sold, they did not publish the judges' report. The boys treated their opponents to fudge and popcorn at the following meeting- Nuf said. As this year closes, many of our members will seek other fields of labor, but we trust that they will have received much which will be of service to them in their life work. and that they may ever bear in mind our motto, True Culture, Self Culture. SUSIE BENNETT, 'O8. PRESIDENT, - VICE-PRESIDENT, - SECRETARY, TREASURER, - -, CHAIRMAN PROGRAM COMMITTEE. I Gblgmpir Gbffirwa Fall Quarter I. F. KING EDITH HOYLE LAURA TERRY - MAURICE LATHERS IVA BLISS - Winter cmd Spring Quarters ALBERT DE GREEN IVA BLISS SUSIE BENNETT MAURICE LATHERS MYRTLE CRAM l N 140 B.C. the great Roman Emperor, Hadrian, or- ganized an academy for the purpose of furthering the interests of science, art and literature. Hadrian named the institution in honor of Athena, the Goddess of Wisdom and Learning. The Atheneum Academy thus founded flourished for many years and even to-day the Word Atheneum stands for all that is high in the realm of mental culture. The Atheneum Literary Society of the Michigan State Normal College has alway striven to maintain these high ideals of perfection. Besides the usual Work of literary soci- eties, oratory, impromptu speeches, parliamentary drill and debating have long been features in Atheneum programs. The society feels justly proud of the Work which her sons have done in oratory and debate. One member, W. Laverne Walling, secured a prize in the final oratorical contest, While another, William Olds, was awarded a Well earned place on the debating team which carried such consternation to the hearts of M. A. C. A society having such a wealth of traditions behind it must of necessity be conservative, and yet this conservatism does not aim at exclusiveness. While membership is gained qllpl, only through invitation, still members are encouraged to present the names of friends and desirable acquaintances to the membership committee. In this way a large waiting list is maintained from which names are elected as vacan- cies occur. Largely as aresult of this policy there are no warring factions Within our fold but, instead, there is a strong fraternal feeling which binds the members together in a manner not commonly felt in similar organizations. That this is true is evinced by the fact that the Atheneum was the only literary society which marched in a body to the linal debate. This she did with flying banners of crim- son and White and encouraged her debaters not only by her presence, but by songs and yells and waving colors. This is the glorious past. What of the future? We who leave the society soon, carry with us not only the recol- lection of happy hours together, but carry also engraved upon our hearts the Atheneum motto, H Resolve and Conquer. As for the society herself, we know that by endeavoring to realize this motto she will continue in the future as she has been in the past, the foremost exponent of literary culture in the Michigan State Normal College. HARRY P. JONES. Junior Degree. Aihmvnm Ubffirvrz Fall Quarter Winter Quarter PRESIDENT - - GUY BROWN - HARRX' P. JONES VICE-PRESIDENT E. S. CLEM - E, S, CLEM SECRETARY - - ERMA XNELLER - ERMA WELLER . TREASURER - - H. H. CHAPMAN - FRANK BATES CHAIRMAN EX. COM. - WALLACE FERGUSON - XVALLACE FERGUSON SERGEANT-AT-ARMS ---- G. A. CLUMPNER Tlhv Qlrrarrnt Svnririg HE Crescent Society as a 0 ' I literary organization has mf-f' .ng ever striven to be of the f U 1 greatest benefit to its mem- , Lots 1 bers, and has been an equal 5.15 .JA credit to the Normal Lyceum, to which it be- . longs. It was organized May 13, 1881, and, accord- K ing to its preamble, was , g jj established for the pur- pose of cultivating our 'ryx ljff intellects and for our mutual improvement in literary 'R QX work. Thus, although the Crescent is the young- est of the three societies, ,, it has long since reached ,lglf E the level of the others. l, i The motto of the or- ganization is Hmutual im- provement, mutual enjoyment, and being so appropriate to its line of work, as well as so signifrcant in itself, it needs no explanation. The past year has been a very successful one in the history of the society, and has been one of improvement as well as enjoyment, Of the programs given this year, all have been instructive and entertaining, but the two which should be especially mentioned are the Mock Trial, and the play HMrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, each of which was greeted by a crowded house. Only those who have enjoyed the privileges and bene- tits of a literary society in a college know how to appreciate them as they should. They bind their members together with an indehnable feeling ofl friendship and good fellow- ship in such a way as none of the other college organiza- tions do. We must have some other field for productive work besides our regular routine of lessons, and it is such a field that the Normal Lyceum furnishes. Many are the friends made in this way, and many are the pleasant memories and associations carried away with us, some of them never to be forgotten. No small part of the privileges of college students is lost when they fail to ally themselves with some branch of the Normal Lyceum. The members of the Crescent Society have appreciated their opportunity and derived great benefit from the year's Work. EDNA G. BLossoM, 'O6. Q A Glrwrrni Gbffirvm Fall Quarter IVfmz5er Quartm' PRESIDENT - - B. F. PITTENGER - ALBERT WALCOTT W VICE-PRESIDENT - IRENE CRAWFORD - AMY BARNARD SECRETARY - GRACE RYERSON - - IRENE CRAWFORD TREASURER ALBERT WALCOTT R, L. WITHENBURX' Uhr lggpatia Qlluh connection with our Normal College is the Debating I - M Society. Here, more than any place else, the stu- dent learns self reliance and gains the ability to talk freely, if not fluently, before an audience. For some time in this institution the boys claimed the sole right of debating. VVhether Or not this was because they lacked in self reliance more than the Opposite sex, who stood shoulder tO shoulder with them in their classes, and so were more in need of such drill, they did not say. However that may be, they hnally had to give 'way and when the ball was Once set to rolling, it did not stop at once, but kept on until now the number of girls' debating clubs is greater than that Of the bOys'. The Hypatia Club was last to make its appearance among the debating societies. It was organized in the fall Of 1904 through the efforts of Miss Mabel Cross, and at NE of the most important classes of organizations in e. ,s i i . i I Once took its place among the active clubs Of the institution. Among its members are numbered some of the most zealous workers of the college and it is to such members that the club owes its rapidly increasing strength. Few of its members remain more than two years in the club,but each year the vacant places are filled by new Ones, while the Old members depart feeling that here they have gained something which will always stay with them and help them in whatever line Of work they may take up. Will such a club live? It cannot well dofotherwise, for those things which do good and which prove themselves a benefit will not be allowed to dieg and we feel sure that should we ever return to this institution we would here at least find one corner in which we could feel at home. HELEN BULLIS. Qbffirrra Fa!! Quarfer PRESIDENT - LOUISE MILLER VICE-PRESIDENT - LULA MANN - SECRETARY - NETTIE BURKE EDITOR - - SARAH JENNINGS TREASURER - CECILE FULLER Charlotte Lustlield Wivzler Quarter LULA MANN - LILLIAN HOLLAND WINNIE COLLINS CALLIE WHITE - - SARAH JENNINGS Gbthrr illllvnihrrn Sjarifzg Quarter LILLIAN HOLLAND THEODORA MOSHER HAZEL MAC DONALD XVINIFRED TOWNER SARAH JENNINGS Lottie Carson Nella Dietrich Edna Maflen Mabel Long L Uhr Shakraprarr Glluh men and women, its purpose being to give each member the culture which comes with the true appreciation of dramatic literature as we find it in its cul- mination. The club has studied two plays this year,-the comedy, Much Ado About Nothing, and the tragedy, Othello. The work has proved very interesting and helpful to the members, leading them to realize the true greatness of Shakespeare. One meeting was devoted to the tragedy, Richard HL, the representation of which by a famous actor a number of the members had the privilege of seeing. The club is also social in its characterg and, after all HE Shakespeare Club is an organization of young have become of stronger mind and warmer heart as a result of the study of the great dramatist, many are the pleasant times that are enjoyed by his worthy disciples If upon any occasion a member is enjoying himself too much, there is always one who is willing to rise to a point of order. Thus dignity and propriety are preserved in our circle. The club has been a success this year, and we hope that the work will always be carried on with the same degree of helpfulness and enjoyment as it has been hereto- fore. Bass E. STEPHENS, 'O6. Gbitirrra PRESIDENT - - VICE-PRESIDENT - Howra R D PRINE BENJAMIN PITTENGER SECRETARY - JULIUS H. INIOELLER Blflrnthrru Bess Stephens Edna Prine Myrtle Cram Howard Prine Edith Hoyle Leo Long Ray YVithenbury Maurice Lathers Sidney Trathen Julius H. Moeller Jennie Wamsley Harold lVi11i2mS Marguerite Lux Lulu Orr Besse Hicks Belljilmill Piftellgef SHAKESPEARE CLUB th 2 if r , t XY 4 ,ggi I X - -' :U . fu! y .G uf? 'rein '1 ff ff ,. ll ii If X X 6. g ii 9' f 1 X fl K 7' 2 if 1 X, K l f X -' ' iw 1 fl X , W it ' l ' X X as i fl ti lr Q xxx 1 K nf i f X ill, Mi ao if a X gvamgm we x f egffrf lg ,Q ff X ii ik if rf 'X ' ' Y' K!!! X lj I Qi lx XX X, I I Ta- - G AS MAIKRANSCHEN, which was organized in Enough cannot be said in praise of the program com- l902,' has proved itself most successful in the past mittee and the members of the Faculty in the German depart- year. 'Every two Weeksit has held meetings which ment who have Worked so faithfully to make the club a have been well attended by the German students. Success, The aim Of the Organization is to have the 5tUdeUf5 It is the desire of the Maikriinschen members that the become acquainted with the songs of the German Father- Club Wm Continue its excellent Work. ' ' ' U the German lan- K FRIEDERIKA EGGERT, O6. land and also gain readiness in speaking guage. The programs which are carried out in German are entertaining as well as instructive. PRESIDENT, VICE - PRESIDENT. SECRETARY, - PROGRAM COMMITTEE CE12rman Glluh Obffirvrn Fall Quarter FRIEDERIKA EGGERT ANNA BRADY BERTHA ATKIN HUGO KIRCHOEER MARY BOROMETER - JENNIE BURTON Wintef Quariev' FRIEDERIKA EGGERT ANNA BRADY LYLE E. GORTON MARY BORGMEIER JENNIE BURTON IH. 31. Ollnh . ARLY in the year about forty students who had pre- ' A pared for the Normal at the Ferris Institute met and organized an F. I. Club, in order to perpetuate the ties of friendship that had been formed. No regular time was set for meetings, but on con- venient occasions social gatherings were held at Stark- weather Hall. The happy evenings spent with the Ann Arbor F. I. Club, both at Ann Arbor and at Starkweather, were one of the most enjoyable features of the year. At one of these meetings we were highly pleased to have with us one of our most popular and efficient instructors, Mr. Masselink. Another evening, never to be forgotten by the par- ticipants, was when sixteen from the Normal went to Romulus to hear Mr. Ferris lecture. At a reception held at the close, we had the pleasure of spending an hour with Mr. Ferris. We all came back from this enjoyable trip knowing that we were well repaid, and more determined than ever to press on with our work. As the year draws to a close it is the sincere wish of the members that the club may be more enthusiastic and prosperous as the years go by. May Mr. Ferris and his splendid corps of teachers long continue their noble work, and may the many students who have come under their instruction have the opportunity of receiving the profes- sional training offered by our own Ypsilanti Normal. ' . A. E. CROSS, 'O6. IH. ll. Glluh Ubffirrrz PRESIDENT - A - - C. E. MISNER VICE-PRESTDENT - VIVA CULBERT SECRETARY - ELIZABETH CRONIN TREASURER - GLEN LEWIS VIEW OF NORMAL HALL FROM CROSS STREET bd STARKWEATHER HALL AND THE SCIENCE BUILDING lgnung HllPII,5 Qlhriarian Amr-nriatinn N this day of Organizations, no other world-wide movement has had a more marvelously rapid and healthy growth than the Young Menls Christian Association. In its Hfty years of existence it has reached almost every country in the worldg thousands Of the strong young men Of these lands have been added to its ranks through the city, railroad, Or college departments. We are proud that our college is doing its part in this great Organ- ization. - To those Of us who have been interested in Christian work, the name S,tarkweather has become full of mean- ing. At its first big reception we threw Off our reserve and, for the first time, began to feel ourselves a part of tlIe college. We met men there who will be our lifelong friends. Bible study has brought us into closer touch and has broadened and deepened our religious ideas. Sunday ad- dresses have brought to us the experience of Older men and have made more Erm our purposes in life. Some have been fortunate enough to represent the Association at state and national conventions. To such, Lakeside Or HNashville,' calls up inspiring thoughts. As students, this Christian fellowship has shown us the things that make a man strong. As teachers, we have gained some of the underlying principles of the greatest Of all teachers, Jesus Christ. G. C. SMITH, 'O6. Glahinri Chffirrrs PRESIDENT GUX' C. SMITH VICE-PRESIDENT--GLEN Lawrs CORRESPONDING SECRETARY-'-I. F. KING RECORDING SECRETARY--W. E. FERGUSON TREASURER'-L. F. LONG Qlliairnwn nf Qlrnnnnittrva DEVOTIONAL COMMITTEE--I. F. KING MEWIBERSHIP COMMITTEE-'GLEN LEWIS BIBLE STUDY COMMITTEE-HOWARD PRINE MISSIONARY COMMITTEE-H. E. WILLIAMS MUSIC COMMITTEE-S. P. TRATHEN EDITOR-B. F. PITTENGER SOCIAL COMMITTEEQGUY C. BROWN Nl. C. A. CABIN ilgnung Imnmvnki Qlhriaiittn Aaanriaiinn HE Young Women's Christian Association perhaps exerts more influence upon the student life than any other organization in college. 4Through the Association the young women come in touch with all that is best and noble in the school, receiving inspiration also from contact with other associations, as the chapter is only one in a great world association. The regular devotional exercises are a great source of help to many college women, and in the Sunday meetings, led by the members of the faculty or by persons not con- nected with the college, a great many things are said which will remain with those present long after school days are past. The Bible study work is a very important factor in the Association. Several classes have been organized this vear for the purpose of studying the life ofthe Prophet Jeremiah These classes help the student to realize the value of sys- tematic Bible reading, and give her a broader knowledge of the Sacred Book. A class is organized each year for the purpose of studying the work of missions and their needs. This class has aroused great interest and has helped to diffuse the true missionary spirit among its members. The social side of the work has been strongly empha- sized, several social functions having been given at Stark- weather Hall this year. The annual reception for new students was held soon after the beginning of the fall quarter, and since then there have been a number of At Homes which were enjoyed by large numbers of the students. The cabinet girls have entertained their com- mittees at Starkweather Hall. and these little gatherings have done much to form a closer bond among the members. The May Morning Breakfast has become an established feature of the college year, and is one of its most attractive events. The aim ofthe Y. W. C. A. is to help the women to lead the useful life , to aid them in attaining their ideals, and to give them broader spiritual knowledge. BESS E. STEVENS, 06. 7 Gbffirrrs PRESIDENT - - X7ICE-PRESIDENT TREASURER - SECRETARY - ELEANOR GAGE - IVA BLISS SUSIE BENNETT ETHEL PEAKE Qlliztirlnvn nf Qlnnxmitirvti DEVOTIONAL COMMITTEE , BIISSIONARY COMMITTEE - . ABIEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE FINANCE COMMITTEE - BIBLE STUDY COMMITTEE SOCIAL COMMITTEE - INTERCOLLEGIATE COMMITTEE MUSIC COMMITTEE - POSTER COMMITTEE LAURA TERRY CASSIE CUTLER IVA BLISS - SUSIE BENNETT AMY BALLARD - IDA SAYLES FLOY MCMILLAN - MABEL OWEN MARION WHITE -If 'i ,pff fmt Y. W. C. A. CABINET Eh? Nnrmul Glnlhegv Nmna Staff ROBERT M. REINHOLD GUY C BROWN - MII,DRED CORBETT - E. J. WILLMAN - CARROL F. BANGHART EARL F. STEWART - - - GENERAL MANAGER - MANAGING EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR CIRCULATION MANAGER ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT - NIAILING DEPARTMENT ALBAN WOODNXTARD - H. C. COOLEV. - CORA HULL - DWIGHT WILSON the college paper and the larger the 1IlSt1tL1tlOI1 the more indispensable does the periodical become. Its province is too great to be treated in this short para- -Nli of the indispensable adiuncts to any college is graph, but there are two things under which all the other, benefits might be classed: it tells the students What their fellows are doing and the world What the institution is doing. This, in brief, has been the policy of the Normal College News, its soundness being attested by the place the publication occupies today. The change in the operation of the paper instituted three years ago, when it Was changed from a monthly to a weekly gazateer, has so far been modified that this year three issues of the month have taken the form of a wide-awake and breezy newspaper, the fourth number being in the shape of a pedagogical magazine containing the best treat- ment upon educational subjects in the middle west, and pos- sibly in the whole country. In fact the publication has grown to such an extent that the State Board of Education has seen fit to make the general manager a member of the faculty of the institution. The paper is not aloof from the student body nor the faculty, for the newspaper issue is published wholly by the students, the editing of the magazine number being in turn in charge of a committee from the faculty. The support which the paper has received from the students and the faculty is an evidence of their interest in the project and of its worth to themselves and the institution. For the first few years there is no question but that there were many difficulties, but the coterie of editors per- sisted and at last there are no breakers ahead. The year now closing has been the most prolific and successful in its history and though the outlook does not reveal exactly a land flowing with milk and honey, still a long, steady growth is assured. The News is no longer a creation of a day, a term, or a year, it is a force, a power and a portion of the machinery of the great institution which cannot be dispensed with. l GUY C. BROWN, 06. .-.-....1.........i.. Newspaper Q NORNIAI. COLLEGE NEWS STAFF Elihrarg Staff LIBRARTAN-G. M. WALTON ASSISTANT ALICE BARNES ASSISTANT G. C- SMITH ASSISTANT E. V. ANDREWS ASSISTANT E. J. O'DELL SCIENCE BUILDING RIVER SCENE i iliarirra Sigma Established 1894 Colors: Du'guoz'se and Gold Flower: Daffodzl IDHUTOTICSS Mrs. Fannie Cheever Burton Sorores in Jfacultate Siorores in 'dlrbe Ml5S Inez M- Clark Mrs. Kate Tliompson-'Westfall Miss Lydia L. Herrick Mrs. Lena Knapp-Mellrncanrp , Miss Charlotte Krug M155 Helen Klleilfl Miss Cora Bowen Miss Stella Baker Sorores in GOllCQlO Ruth Ophelia Dunbar Julia Marian Richardson Zayda Belle Fish Margaret Scoutten kabeue A1105 Hartley Elizabeth Beal Steere Eulalie V. Garrison Petra Lundteigen Anna Louise French Catherine J. Cook Jean E. Deming IDICDQCD .GDCUIDCFS Sarah Lowden Margaret Shovverman chapter 1RoIl ALPHA: MZ'ChZgd7Z N0r1nal College BETA: Alva, Oklahoma GAMMA: Mf- Pffafdni, Zllich. DELTA: Cheney. Wash. Bessie Hubbell Susan Smith Beulah Wright Ethel Shepherd Emma Childs Sigma Nu 1513 Organized l897 Colors: Yeflozzf ami' Whz'!e. Flower: Mazguerite. IDHYYDHCBS Mrs. William H. Sherzer Sorores in Jfacultate Miss Bertha G. Goodison Miss Alice I. Boardman Miss Jessie Lee Sorores U1 Gollegio f Katheryn Justenia Josephine M. Huyck Nellie Looker E. Louise Harper Irene Wallin Hazel Snyder Blanch H. Rexford Lola H. Kyle Florence Smith Dorcas Reber Maud M. McColl Louisa F. Palmer- Mary Harmon Agnes T. Winch Beulah Jackson ester wma:-41: KAv3: Dsvaovr. Colors: Viale! and Whife Miss Van Buren Julia Antoinette Van Cleve Cora Mae Hull Edna Jessie O'Dell Eleanor Ann Barmby Zeta 1511i Established 1899 Flower : Viale! lDEllf'L'Ol'lC55 Miss Walton 'll7lOTlfFlClfl'06 !lD6l'I1l36lf5 Miss Childs Miss Andrews I Flctive !lDCml9Cl'5 Elsie Meyers Neva Rosalie Swartout Leone Rose Waterman Goldie Margaret Mitchell Mary Evans .Toy Pauline Elizabeth Swyny Lulu Helen Price Irene Le Sage ' v I' , .sew MV , V5. K : A ' .FV E W .I ., .,,, ,, JUL Y 43, Q - my 4 Q! 92-5,15 ' 55: XGA -, W -,:5:f42' 3' - f . ...M ' ,, fs! ' X9 ' 4 .112 I . f gi-Kp , E' ,, ' N j 'Zi 42 if 's 42? y at I 35 . 13 At my 6. , K I Mrs. E. A. Lyman Alpha Sigma Elan Established 1899 Colors: Emerald and Golrl. Flower: Yellow Rose. ID8tfI'Ol1C5565 Miss Ada A. Norton Sorores in jfacultate Miss Ella M. Wilson Nina Beebe Pearl M. .Tillson Helen Woodwortli Leah Anna Ray Lina J. Ward A AI4PHA : Sorores in Gollegio Agnes Imogene Collins Lila M. Lawrence Marybelle Newcomer Ethyl M- Sober Donna Lee Anne Stapleton Ilblebgeb lllbember Kate McDonald GDHDYCI' 1RoIl . fllichzlgfan Slale N0117zal Lolleqe BETA: Gertrude Ethel Heisner Donna Lucile Phillips Miss Abigail Pierce Miss Lota H. Garner Margaret B. Hollister Katherine E. Lewis Edith C. Pierce Henrietta M. 'Walrath Rose McDonald Mounl Pleascml Nolfffzal Schonl. S K H. 'X Barmnninna illigatira Established 1900 Colors: Cerise and Wfzile Flower: Cd77ZlZfZ.07L llbatronesses Mrs. Benjamin L. D'Ooge Mrs. Frederick H. Pease Sorores in Jfacultate Mrs. Jessie Pease Miss Ruth Putnam Miss Isabella Gareissen Miss Abba Owen Miss May D. George Sorores in UIUC Mrs. Charles Sweet HCITO6 .HDCIHDCY5 Ethel Clarke Fay Allen Marjory Alexander Edith Jones Mable Bernard Elzina Calahan Lucile Brown Maude Davis Mable Gass Vivian Gilpin Bertha Lovensen Ida D'Ooge Elsa Jennings La Verne Garrett ublebgeo members A Iva Bliss Zoa Howells Helen Pease Helen D'Ooge Helen Fletcher Nw ' W f'4 V X I 3 A E . ,?..1.-a.- i-, 1L.-, Colors: Claribel Kennedy Fern Newkirlc Jane Seligman Arizona Wimple Nellie Newkirk Pink, Green, and W!zz'!e. Miss Caroline Towner Laura Spaulding Grace Abbott Leah Livingston Edna Miller Alma Thompson Kappa 5 Established 1901 llbatronesses !ll36l11b6t'5 i Flower : Apple Blossom. Miss Clyde E. Foster Irene Murray Natalie Pague Lou Braisted Belle Beardsley Edith Travis Lida Bradford Isabel Fallas Pansy Sheldon Sue Trible -,Q g Xj' 1 Ervhhz Qllef Established 1905 . 91 Colors: Purple and Pear! Gmy Flower: English Violet llbatronesses Mrs. Annis D. Gray Mrs. Nathan A. Harvey flD6lTlbCl'5 Della Crotty Bessie Alexander Berenice Akey Mina Coggeshall Inez De Pew Cora Frazelle Edith Daggett Ethel Tonipsett Ruby Phillips Katherine Ruen Luvella Shields Dollie Thorburn Ethelyn Walker Bertha De Spelder Wanda Scott Ethel Chapman I ,gf A M ff 2 . 51 gk 5 CL Ye ' ' 7 3 .M 2 Q3 2. 4 . , . ga 'A - fi f , lr 551-ff' 1' I W . XL ,3 .5-' 1 . 'Q '-'3 ' -X Mia! J . .k..'.X. A v ' imma, , ...gk .N-Q, Q R ? Idhi Evita Iii Established 1894 COLORS: Pink ann' DVMM FLOWER: Pink Cfzr1zaz'z'ou Iilatrnn DR. C. O. HOYT HHPIIIIJPIE B. Travis H. E. Willianls F. Jensen J. L. Cutler S. P. Trathen E. J. Willman H. C. Prine E. J. Engle R. L. Wirhenbufy L. F. Long C. D. Carpenter H. H. Chapman C. P. Steinlle B. F. Plttenger R. S. Head R. M. Reinhold C. L. Kniffen M. C. Lathers G. C. Srnith I. F. King D. L. Wilson J. S. Lathers Ghapirr illnll ALPHA-lWz'chiga:z Norlfzal College BETA'M!. Pleasant Norlvzal School .- 'G-mfsnr., q w'wn' ,aa 4-+fQ,, Lg 5 I A1 1 1 -me 'r , -1 s I 1 , 1 , , 31 Q 1 w 4 1 ' '51 Y ' .,,, is Fi : ., . . Y .- , . A , , ' ' - , - .' ' ' f1,',, ,,3 ,-F, - ..-4 ..,,..- Ju WRIGHT, KAV L GO. DET:-20:12 . ,. 31..- Arm nf ignnnr ' Established 1895 Colors: Red amz' Black Flower: Dark Rea' Cczrnaizlnz IDHYFOII Dr. B. L. D'Ooge Jfratres in Ctollegio C. S. Hodge C. S. Hunter J. J. Seaver D. H. Davis w. W. Daxris C. Q. Colby G. Q. Handy J. L. Morris B. F. Harrison J. E. McCarthy B. F. Holmes Delos Holmes Jfratres in 'dlrbe C C. J. Barlow F. H. Gorton D. I. Lawrence Mervin Green FLOWER Harold V. Babcock Guy C. Brown Hugo Kirchhofer Winfield J. Stanley Kappa 15111 Alpha Established 1904 Amerzkmz Bfdidfjf COLOR-Raya! Pmfjnle IDHTEOYI Professor Dinion H. Roberts Active HDGIIIDCFS William N. Braley Laverne H. Brown Leroy N. Brown I. Milton Cook Charles DeShon Lute E. Foster Julius H. Moeller George G. Morgan 5, Herbert G. Schell Charles D. Walker Charles A. Webster Edwin Upharn' Elie Eliratvrnitg HAT is the fraternity and what benehts are to be derived from such an organization in college? X This question has been discussed in all its phases and yet, in spite of these discussions, this organization still flourishes as an exceedingly important factor in college life. Attempts have been made in the past to eliminate these societies from the college, but without avail. From the time the student first makes his choice and accepts the pledge, until the day upon which he receives his diploma, he feels that he is not living for himself alone but that every brother or sister is entitled to a personal interest in him and desires to guide and counsel him in the best possible way. What a student is in college is determined largely by this heart to heart contact. The older members in a way set his ideals for him and at the conclusion of his course he glances back over his college days and says, I would not have done as I did had I not been a member of a fraternity. The formation of character is not the only beneht to be derived from such an organization. Fellowship and per- sonal contact sometimes change the Whole life of the mem- ber, resulting in the broadening of mind and the low- ering of that self-esteem which is so injurious to manhood. That feeling of pride in the members of the chapter to stand in the foremost ranks in college is an incentive that makes each member willing to do his share to bring this about. A fraternity that does not place scholarship as its most important aim and a fraternity member that does not endeavor to raise his standard of scholarship so that there can be no question but that such and such a fraternity has good students and discipline, has failed to reach one of its most important functions. A fraternity should incorporate in its code of ethics the cultivation of college spirit-that the name of the college is to be upheld-and the higher it rises the more credit will be reflected upon the fraternity. At the same time, the alumnus is kept in close touch with his Alma Maier. The graduate feels that whenever he returns he Ends a college home, and though the members may be entire strangers to him, he always finds a hearty welcome. Let the fraternity have that bond of fellowship that never fails to labor for the beautiful and the good. It is not a club which exists merely for itself without a thought of the other students in college, simply because they do not belong to the same fraternity, but is a society of kindred spirits banded together for the one common purpose of help- ing each other and of building up the reputation of the col- lege which shelters it. Nothing tends to develop narrow ness so much in college circles as fraternity cliques-where one fraternity holds itself aloof from other societies and pavs no attention to outsiders. Let high ideals be planted in the heart of every frater- nity memberg let there be a certain sincerity of purpose, an eagerness for labor, and a consciousness of a common lifeg and then each member may have just reason to say that he has reached forward toward a certain standard intended for such a society. Scholarship, fraternity, and progress should be the three words that should lead each member in his efforts to make his college work of the high- est order, and afterwards lead him on to success in life. When a fraternity can accomplish this it has served its great purpose. O. M. R. ,fb 1 Q54 Q ' gk H29Qf1 - - 215 A Q8 33185 X W Q' 151. X v 3 XJ Z' s Athletic-5 dent when he returns to Ypsilanti at the beginning of the school year is the squad of men on the athletic field preparing to Eght the battles of the gridiron. In the Autumn of 1905 there was assembled here some ofthe best material which the college has had in some years. The Normal has always lacked heavy men, and consequently the score book gives one unacquainted with the facts the impression that the team was badly defeatedg but in the eight games of last season none were played with lighter teams than our own, While in the four lost the opposing men averaged very much heavier. In basket ball much enthusiasm was shown, some good clean sport being witnessed, in which We felt We had our share of victory. The tirst men's team won five of the nine games played and the girls' star team maintained the college record of unbroken victories -NE of the Hrst things to attract the gaze of the stu- The base ball team has done its share in the athletics of the year. Though at first the men were weak at the bat, persistent practice had the desired effect and the team won some hard games. Especially was this true at the Michigan Agricultural College when, hacked by four hundred enthu- siastic rooters, they Won a complete victory. A tennis tournament having been arranged with the Normal School at Mt. Pleasant, the courts were in constant use during the spring quarter. Messrs. Braley and Walker, being the Normal champions, will represent the college at the Central Normal School. The Athletic Council contemplates a few changes along some lines for next year. Some expenses will be cut down, more money being used to improve the new athletic Held and foster other lines of athletics. R. L. WITHENBURY, 'O7. ,Q ZQQA wxygqsg Ns A Lf 'i . , ex Athlviir Aaunriaiiun wfficers , PRESIDENT - - LEROY N. BROW VICE PRESIDENT - - LUTE FOSTER SECRETARY - WARNER BATES TREASURER - Ciouncil PRESIDENT L. H. JONES F. A. BARBOUR, A.SM. D. H. ROBERTS, A.M. - F. R. GORTON, PH.D. B. W. PEET, M S. l S. D. MAGERS, M.S. HDHHHQCIB FOOTBALL-C. A. WEBSTER BASEBALLZC. C. COLBY BASKETBALL'H. H. CHAPMAN B. W. PEET, M. N S Ellnnt mall. Cflram CAPTAIN-WILLIAM N. BRALEY COACH' Don Lawrence MANAGER'Ch3fl6S A. Webster CENTER-Glen Lewis RIGHT END-Luther Foster LEFT GUARD-Charles C. Colby LEFT END-Charles E- Webster MHX M- Peet LEFT HALF BACK-George Whirns RIGHT GUARD-Beft Home RIGHT HALF BACK-ROY Brown LEFT TACKLE-Frank Bates FULL BACK-Burrel McGregor RIGHT TACKLE--Howard Prine QUARTER BACK-W. N. Braley Svnhaiitutra END-Dwight VVilson HALF BACK'E3Tl Engle HALF BACK-Edward Steimle ' QUARTER BACK'GCOTgE Handy Ellunt 162111 Evrhrhulr M. S. N C. O U. of M. Freshman - 20 M. S. N. C. 30 Detroit Business University 0 M. S. N. C. 17 Michigan Military Academy 12 M. S. N. C. 16 Alunini - - - O M. S. N. C. ' O Olivet - - - 69 M. S. N. C. 6 Michigan School for Deaf 5 M- S- N- C- 0 Central Normal '- - 13 M. S. N. C. 12 Hillsdale - 38 ifiaakei Nall Umm CAPTAIN-Rov S. SPRAGUE CENTER R0y S. Head FORWARDS-Roy S. Sprague James L. Morris Leo F. Long Elmer S. Gilman GUA RDS-Clemens P. Steimle Charles A. Webster Blanket 552111 C. 10 C. 3-1 C. - 22 C. 22 C. 41 C. 24 C. 10 C. - 33 C. 9 Srhrhnlv Ann Arbor Y. M. C. Alumni - - Arm Arbor Y. M. C. Adrian - -- Jackson 'Y. M. C. Mt. Pleasant Normal D. A. C. - - Mt. Pleasant Normal D. A. C. - - A A A x gzszzgzszzz O me F5 Ljm 2 5 2151 ?f,:u'I1 3 H I E Q 8 E E Q 5 '-Izmgmo EUmmwT vcwlagl ewz ,,,-E Ujmr9igOf :bf11'U rnlmfll H 'AEE' 2 P-1 mm f-4 5.0 DE' 53 :rs vw' UI mo D1 o PU -A U7 5 3 P1 Z2 '31 I Q Q 2 E Q g E E E i 3 2 Eu-1 Grim 5121222 fi Elerie?- IUU E10 S 9 w og O QQ: O zz:-,gg EZ mm O' Tl- 14 QCD UE 919. -'TUQ ON :sm zzzzzzzzzzz 352159 mall Gram CAPTAIN-JOE MCCARTHY SUBSTITUTE-James L. Morris Euan Bull Svrheilnlr 2 Ypsilanti City 4 U. of M. Ineligibles 8 Cleary College 7 U of M. Ineligibles 2 U. of M. - O Albion - 14 Cleary 4 Adrian D Hillsdale 7 M. A. C. 5 Hillsdale BASE BALL. SQUAD Mirlai' 'iiwakvi Zfiall ' Star 'Geam CAPTA1N4E1iza Stark CENTER-Maude Yates SUBSTITUTE-Elizabeth Ste-ere SUBSTITUTE-Myra Jackson ' FORWARD-Elizabeth O Toole FORWARD-Anna Brady CENTER-Eliza Stark GUARD-Edna O'De11 GUARD'RL1th Dunbar Scbebnle Stars Stars Stars Stars 13 14 23 53 Detroit Western High School 8 Mt. Pleasant - - 11 Detroit. Western High School 17 Alumnae - - - 10 . . J F- fr, f f f , . , 4 Strips Gram CAPTAIN- Hazel Reed CENTERS-Estelle Taylor Mabel Long FORWARDS -Lulu Woolsey Mary' Belle Newcomer GUARDS-Hazel Reed Maude Stevenson' Mabel Zach 4 N 5,-.XJZ -:AR 3'-1 in f .- - . V' xi- HQW IM 1 rvllrlggw ' W W N'a-qhbx-wx . gif 'fff .4 SQ?EiiE-2,1-.N . 'Ky xx K 54 pam -qs1v':Le'w:,f ' 1. J , ' WJ 'lfffllffyfif , 'xxixxx 1 XX 'Wu I Lwnlfpl x.1N -'X- X W' ffwfffil-. X. XX lk, yl Lffqyl-HZL, Q. X W V v,ff:f:X.! QwYWWq wt f 4 W7 W Mx gf I4 ' 1 +A -. 'TAAM K Xxx, In zilvhumrrmun 01114: Mun at Girls' 2-Xthlrtir 11111221 , , V . . ,l A Q X14 X U f f V1 , S Q y V! K, ,g' Qt, V M iff Q9 xl ,' ll , , ff!! ,l Q- lt A ffl, ,fff f we it li iff Liu- -'X I ff f ' , 'f V ' , if K ,- 'I ,an ' 4 r' Sk W4 X 6 f i O ' f 1 , 1 f f fl' ff!! I, .I I, za m y '- f - ,f f r X xl ,a ft r if f' yr S , Q b y a s, Q I fjbf Y, -- , I K gl XX A 1 f' 9 ,f,l- , I- -' ' lj' I I- 41 J ' if , ft f' 1 ft if f 'rx , O lf!!! l ' 'K . ' Y I f l V ll xl X, 0 0 4' p,-4- ,N f -V -- liw f- X VV A .- X i bxc, Uhr Swninr-Eluninr illuah MOST novel and interesting event of the year and 93254 one destined, without doubt, to become an annual feature in connection with this institution, was the Senior-Junior rush which occurred the evening of Nov. 21. For days-and even Weeks-it was apparent to the casual observer that the Seniors and Juniors were thirsting for one another's blood. Only with an air of great superiority did Senior nieet Junior on the campus, and with the same sting- ing insolence did Juniors return the haughty gaze of the upper classmen. Senior arrogance proved too galling for the proud jun- iors and iinally the clash came. One fine morning in November, what should nieet the eyes of all who wandered toward the college but immense posters scattered hither and thither, telling the Seniors of the grave misdemeanors of which the Juniors had found them guilty, and summon- ing them to appear for punishment in front of Starkweather Hall on the evening of the twenty-first. But the Seniors were equal to the occasion. Charge was answered by counterchargeg the clouds of war dark- ened: the challenge was acceptedg fear of impending disas- ter nerved both sides for the confiict and made them cap- able of fighting like veritable demons. Picture to yourself a ine autumn evening. See that great throng assembling before Starkweather Hall. They have come to see the great Senior-Junior rush. There stand the Peggies,,' those sureties of fairness who have come to see that justice prevails throughout the conflict. Nailed to a tree near by you can see the colors flying gaily in the gentle autumn breeze. Around the tree the seniors are linked together, ready to meet the fierce onslaught of the Junior hosts. The signal is given, and with Wild shouts and piercing cries the Juniors burst forth to assail Va 'ffllllllllf their Senior foes and to win the colors nailed fully fifteen feet above the ground. Valiantly do the Juniors attack but as bravely do the Seniors repel. Now the defense seems to weaken and the Juniors appear to gain the advantageg but in the next movement their apparent gain is lost and the battle rages as fiercely as ever. Thus do these indomitable warriors struggle for twenty minutes when the time limit agreed upon brings rest to their exhausted bodies and victory to the Seniors. Y Thus ended the Senior-Junior conflict of the fall of 'O5. The bright sun of fellowship and mutual good-Will dispel- led the dark clouds of dissension, and now Senior and Jun- ior dwell together in friendship 'neath the clear sky of peace. Former wrongs have been forgotten and we all stand today true to ourselves, true to our respective organ- izationsg but above all true to the great institution of which we form a part. JULIUS H. MOELLHR. There was always that one corner XVhere were gathered all the boys, And though they were few in number You'd not guess it from the noise. How those old yells did inspire us! We all felt like yelling, too: Rah, Rah, Rah! and Locomotive! But for girls, ltwould never do. Two such chapel days stand clearest In our memory of them all, For they came back to us yearly, Alway coming in the fall. Senior chapel day was foremost, Seniors love to be, you knowg Juniors followed quickly after- Tlzaz' not always happened so. Qlhapvl Bum Oh! how well we remember The good old days of yore NVhen, at the sounding of the bell, VVe streamed in through the door, Through the door of the old chapel XfVhere we all could weekly meet, To hear the songs and yells and talks, And with smiles each other greet. Following this came the announcements, NVhat came next we might not know, But 'twas always something splendid , Well we knew it paid to go. So we'd crowded through the doorways, Till the seats were illed up quite, Yet we always heard: Those standing, Still may find seats on my right. 4 Next our President stood before us, Sudden quiet filled the air, For we knew he'd something for us And we loved to see him there. At the signal from the piano, America, Stanza IV, we'll sing. That was always his lirst sentence, How we made the old hall ring! H Oh! our memory loves to linger O'er our college days gone past: And though all else be forgotten, Chapel days will surely last. For our hearts were filled with music, And our minds with learning's gold Richer than the pearls and rubies Of the magic tales of old. ELEANOR GAGE, '07, HURON RIVER SCENE At th? illivvting nf manga CHARACTERS DIANA N IOBE NIGHTWVATCHIVIAN SCENE TRAINING SCHOOL CORRIDOR TIME FEBRUARY 6, 1906, 6 P.M. Diana Cin an excited whisperl-Hist! Ni, is every- body gone? I can't keep still much longer. Niobe taloud, drearilyl -I don't know nor care. D-How do you like this change? q N-The moving was rather painful, but I don't care where I am. I donlt think you're a person I enjoy being with, though. D-O, pshaw, Ni! Donlt keep that tear-stricken. woe-be-gone look on your face any longer. It's not the style now-a-days. N- You needn't say anything. You know who caused it. D-Now, let by-gones be by-gones. I'm not sorry for what I did. We Olympus people had to keep you folks down in some way, and if you had twelve more children I don't think for a moment that you'd refrain from boasting of them. It's in a mother. Even the mothers ofthe train- ing school children do it. lSilence on the part of Niobej You haven't asked me how I am pleased with this new place, but Illl tell you. I like it because now I have some- body to talk with. Over in the main building I was elevated so much above you-which is all right, of course, in a way-that my tongue was practically useless, an unpleasant and unusual state of affairs for a woman. N'fShowing signs of interestl Have you sometimes feltflonely. Ihave. I believe I am glad, after all, that I'm here. Even poor company is sometimes welcomed. C D-Casidel That's complimentary, to say the least, Caloudl Company? I think We had plenty of that where we were. By the way, do you know why they moved us? N-We used to say when anything inexplicable hap- pened, The gods decreed it, but I suppose that's out of style, too, so I don't know what should be said-perhaps, President .Tones ordered it. D-Of course. That's back of everything here. But Why did he do it? N-I'm sure I don't know. D-Well, I'll tell you. He was really afraid I'd break my vow and marry some one of the line young fellows who were always standing around me with admiring eyes. They couldn't keep away from me. And I suppose if he moved one of us he had to move both. N-They always collected around me, too. Do you suppose they were thinking seriously of me? Well, I never gave them any encouragement. They might know one of my birth, having had such a noble husband as I have, could never look at them. I wonder if they did care any- thing for me. D-Well, we won't be troubled with any such thing as that now. The boys donlt come in crowds here, besides, there are other things to occupy people's minds in this building. Did you know anything of this place before you were brought over here? N-I should think so. I don't know all about it, but I haven't stood in the corridor all these years with my ears stuffed up. D-I am fairly well informed, too, for often, as the girls passed by, I heard them talking so earnestly of lesson plans, B. Sifcth, mental imagery and child-study papers, that the attention of the young men was drawn away from me for a rninute. I didn't blame them for they couldn't help it, there was such evident concern in the girls' faces. N-I heard a great deal of the critic, but never quite understood what it was. Do you know? D-Yes. It's a person who in three months undergoes the most wonderful metamorphosis of a student-teacherls worst enemy into her best friend. We'll soon find out if that's true. N-There's one thing I'l1 miss here, and that's the library. You used to lose all the fun I had on the nrst Hoor. I've laughed until the tears ran down my cheeks, in the paths worn years ago, to see how quickly the slu- dents rose on tiptoe and began to whisper as soon as they came in sight of that door. I wonder why the students of the rhetoric class never wrote on l'The Stillness of Silence, as illustrated there. D-I can't boast of anything like that, but I had some- thing much more entertaining, to my way of thinking. I could hear the noble disciples of our own Demosthenes as they settled momentous questions of State and School in Room 513 and I haven't had so much sport since Vulcan served us as cup-bearer as I had listening to some of the productions of the literary societies, and the stories told by the professors during their promenades. N-We were very dignified down below. We had the President, the Countcil meetings, the Normal College News staff, to say nothing of the general ofhce where classifica- tion fees were paid and basket hall tickets obtained. Besides I was the last to see the students when they left for home at vacation time, and the first to watch them read the bul- letin boards when they returned. D-Yes, we each witnessed many interesting things. and both grew accustomed to the industrious janitors, the yells, the blue books, and the throng of students going up to chapel, but there's one thing little noticed by you that I'1l defy all the gods and the godesses, including Apollo- besides the musical Orpheus-to equal, and that's the music of the organ lever and the steam pipes. N-That's true. I missed them almost entirely. But I think there are compensations. D-Yes, but there are some things for which I fear nothing can compensate. I've never seen Gym nor Ed, .whose history is so interesting. and never expect to nowg but the worst is, that probably I shall never see again that Senior,-that tall, well-built one-who stood near me so often. You must surely have seen him. His eyes were blue, his hair- N-'Sh, Di, I hear some one. D-I-Ie's coming in here. Oh! its the night watch- man. Now, keep mum! CWatchman enters at left with lantern. He suddenly stops, listens, and looks around sharply.l Watchman-Well, By Hen! I heard somebody talk- ing, sure. fQuick curtain. I JENNIE L. BURTON, 'O6. 5 mr Newer Glam linnur We never can know what the heart can hold, Of the man whose life we scorn. Could the scroll of his thoughts be once unrolled, Our eyes would moisten that once were cold, And our soul spread loving arms to enfold The heart of the man iorlorn. We never can know the sad world's thought From the outside glimpse of things. The secret, deep, that is never bought, The unguessed love that was never sought, The latent genius that ne'er was taught The use of his godlike wings. 'Neath weathering stones on hillsides green Lie neighbor and friend and foe. All undisturbed, in their rest serene, They keep the secret of what they ,ve been, Of the hopes, the fears and the anguish keen, The secrets we never could know. ALBERT L. DEGREENE, '06, Hnknnmn lgrrnra I sing of a battle fought, A fiercer one by far, With a nobler purpose, a braver heart, Than are known on the fields of war. There could be no skilled retreat, No quarter. 'Twas win or die, And each side knew, the coniiict o'er, One on the field must lie. For the foe was cruel as death, A relentless heart of fire, And he fought with the fierce and terrible strength, VVl1ich comes of great desire. The forces opposed had once. Been allies a11d of kin, Now half in revolt refused to fight Yet half would die or win. And but for a General strong, And a Captain who worked his will, The Spirit of God in the heart of man, The foe would be regnant still. O why do ye sing of old, The deeds of Greece and Rome? There's a nobler conflict, a Hercer iight, Man for his God, upholding right, Alone, at home. CASSIE B. CUTLER, '06 You speak of your 'Varsity maiden As a creature most divine, And laud your Albion sweetheart As something superfineg You praise your society debutante With her Venus locks afurl, But the dearest maid, when all is said, Is just a Normal girl. Uhr nrmul fhirl You prate of your coy Olympus maids, Divinely tall and fair, Of Cleopatra's charm and grace Or Juno's stately air, Those mighty dames with famous names May 'erst have held their sway, 'Tis the Normal maid, when all is said, That rules our hearts today! She's neither too good for common folk, Nor yet one whit 'neath parg To tind her peer, is a task I fear, I That will fail tho' you journey far. She's Hrst at the football matches, She Hrst with the base ball nine, She stars the state like a potentate She puts her hands with royal skill To Domestic Science arts, And storms the heart of Normal man With puddings, pies and tarts. She lifts her voice like the nightingale To charm where cares are laid, And soothes and sings your heart away Conservatory maid! When basket ball's in line. Her kindergarten smile is rare As e'er soothed a childish woe, The Normal Ed will testify That he has found it sog And bowing low 'neath shield and plume My lady's knight advances. He crosses swords with U. of M. For favor in her glances. 'With mighty man she keeps apace F In matters scientific' 'rom northern pine thro' southern clilne, , From Pacino to Atlantic, She grapples thought with Tom Carlyle 'Mid unpretentious Squires and dames And other minds prolific. Or pedagogues pedantic, To leave her with one tongue alone - Theres not a face that takes her place Blind Milton once essayed, In all life's pace awhirlg Would that the churl could meet today Then here's to our theme, our regal queen- Uur linguist Normal maid! T ' ' ' he XDS1 Normal Glrll Y , if 55,2 ff ' ,J ,5 v 1 f f . f?Qf'ff'f V' f 71.7 -'l , I. ' X 1 X I 'X , ly . 71M F ff V, X flf 'Xi , fy , 1 fi - X!! f f 1 i 'f 2 X XM W ,f X i f i f I ,KU ze f l W1 'AMN 'ff 'Emp f - ' L iv' ff ,LN,. -T ., , B. E. M. BONNER, '06 iliur Evarninga Sake EN miles from the little town of Glenwood in Indiana, -- at a crossroad, stands a country store. A short dis- tance down the road is the schoolhouse, where Deacon Allis, storekeeper, postmaster, parson and adviser in general to the surrounding country, preaches on Sunday afternoons. Some thirty-odd farms complete the little com- munity and afford a steady income to the thrifty deacon. All the ordinary necessities of the household and the lighter implements of the farm are sold at the store, and three times a week the deacon drives his wagon from house to house, trading sugar, tinware or whatever the house- wife may need, with perhaps a package of tobacco for the men, for butter, eggs and garden truck, and incidentally delivering the mail which he brings from the office at Glen- wood on his regular trips to town on the odd days. Aside' from a day at the big fair once a year at Nappanee, and an occasional visit to town in seedtime or when the onions, which are the chief product of the fields, are shipped to market, the farmers seldom go farther than the store or school house. There is nothing in the marsh country to attract the stranger and few outsiders every make their way into the region, except perhaps now and then a new teacher for the school, or some glib-tongued college lad who is selling books or views during his summer vacation. One sultry, summer afternoon, late in August, there arrived at the store a young man, tired-looking and dust- covered. The deacon was away on one of his trips and, as was his custom, had left his niece, a plesant, simple minded girl of eighteen to look after the store. As the man drew his wheel against the front of the building and entered the door, a smile of recognition came over the face of the girl and she greeted him pleasantly. Well, what luck have you had today? she inquired. Hard lineslnhe replied laconically, as he sank wearily into a chair and passed his hand slowly across his forehead. Mighty hard lines, I tell you. But say, he broke in suddenly, and his face took on a cheerier expression as he saw the sympathetic look in the girl's eyes, 'Ido get me some- thing to eat, will you? Don't care what it is, so long as it is something. ' I-Iavenlt had a bite since early this morning and Iim hungry as a bear. Why, for a fact, he went on good-naturedly, I haven't had what you'd call a real square meal in two weeks, not since theone you got for me when I was here before. Pleased with the compliment, she hurried to the kitchen at the back of the store to tell the deacon's wife and, find- ing her gone, she hastily began preparing the meal herself. The man in the chair meanwhile gazed gloomily out the window across the low fields of drained marshland, dotted here and there by houses and barns, but yielding always a sameness of view that was depressing. In his mind he ran over his list of subscribers in the neighborhood and checked off those from whom he had been unable to collect. The more he thought about it, the more despondent he became. The black powder dust and the biting smell of onions everywhere finally became unbearable, and mentally he resolved that, if ever he managed to make his collections and get out of the accursed region, never would he sell books again. even though he should be compelled to leave college. He entirely forgot the girl, until the odor of coffee and broiling meat reminded him of his hunger and brought her again to his mind. There, she said, and smiled, as she showed him to a tiny table on which she had placed the repast she had pre- pared, and poured him a cup of coffee, you may eat-like abear if you like. I don't believe I'll stay, for you cer- tainly look enough like one to make me afraidf' O, yes, do, he answered quickly. I almost wish I were a bear, but I surely would not hurt you. Gee, but this is a great spread you have made for me. Guess Illl just stay around here and board awhile, if your uncle doesn't mind. His spirits rose with his words and ere he was aware of the fact. the gloom of the moment before had disappeared and he was again the jolly college boy and glib-tongued book seller. She vlistened to his banter and stories of school pranks, her face glowing with interest in his exper- iences and ideas, so foreign to her own. It must be fine to go to school, she ventured, as he paused for an instant to spread a piece of bread with butter and jelly. I wish I might sometime. How lucky you are to be able to go. Yes, but hang these blamed deadbeats around here who give a fellow an order for a book, and then when you come for your money, they've either changed their minds or else they raise a kick on the book and flatly refuse to pay for it. You see every book that we have left on our hands takes the profit from another to pay for it. Had four left on my hands in this neighborhood today. Thirteen dollars in cold cash in one day. Mighty poor business. UWhat would you do if there were many such places as this? Shovel sand next year, I guess, he answered with a half laugh. The girl looked thoughtful for a moment, then suddenly as if an idea had come to her, Who are they around here that wouldn't pay? she asked. VVell, for one, there is Mrs. Polan. Mrs. Atwood, on the corner a mile east of here, is another. She said her husband wouldn't listen to having the book in the house. Mrs. John Taylor would take the book, but she wasn't ready to pay for it at present, and said she would send me the money later. Then there is old Frank Geiger way over at the end of the marsh. He said he had no use for a book and, as he didn't intend to pay for it, I might as well move along. Tell you what Illl do, she said thoughtfully after a pause. You leave the books with me and I'll see if I can't get the money for them for you. All right, he replied without giving any particular thought to what she said. You get the money and you may keep half of it as your commission. Wish you good luck. Four months later a discouraged student sat in his room gazing gloomily out of his window. The winter landscape of glistening white, with every tree and housetop a glittering mass of jewels in the sunshine, was as if not in his range of vision. He cared nothing for the beauty of the scene before his eyes. His sight seemed directed inward' and took heed only of his own gloomy thoughts. Mentally he rued the day ambition had taken hold of him and impelled him to begin the struggle for a college career. What was the use of it after all? 'Twould all be the same in the long run. In one more week the term would be over and then he would go, not to return. It was not worth the price. Another student came into the room and tossed him a letter. .The postmark of the little Indiana town, which he remembered as the scene of his summer work, roused his curiosity and led him to Wonder what it might be, but only for a moment, and then with a recurring gloomy and bored expression, he tore open the envelope and drew out the contents. For several moments he stared blankly at the name at the end, then suddenly it came to him that he knew the writer, It was only a brief note and with it was an order for thirteen dollars. HDEAR FRIEND,- I send you to-day thirteen dollars, the money I have received for the books you left with me, Mrs. Atwood and Mrs. Taylor both paid for theirs, and old man Geiger paid for his yesterday. The other book I sold to another person. You will probably find some use for the money while,you are in school. It must be grand to go to college. I hope you will stay there until you are through. Sincerely, PEARL ALLIS. For many minutes he gazed silently out of his window and looked upon the dazzling brilliancy of the world with- out. There was something that he had not seen when he looked before. Slowly he folded the letter, placed it again in the envelope, and turned to the door. i'Where are you going?l' asked the other. To pay my registration fee. R. R. atm F 'R , gg-5 AT gsm.: T 0 Q sv, -QliW.Q,5t- r91r f qs? Uhr ihipmrrrk My ships Went out with their frei ht of lth g wea , The cargo was gathered from east and west, To bear to the waiting lands The rich and the poor gave toll. The work and the thoughts and the hopes and the health Of their life's endeavor they gave the best, Of a million tired hands. And I-I gave my soul. My ships went down with their precious freight And the labor was spent in vain By the rich and the poor and the small and the great, But they go to their task again, With patient plodding they mutely toil A We may build again, on the wrecks of things, 011 cargoes for Ships 0l1tb0UUd, When waves o'er our treasures roll, But down, deep down, 'neatli the wild turmoil But the only loss misfortune brings Of the sea, my soul lies drowned. Is engulfment of the soul. A. L. DEGREENE Mira. Nigga at the Nnrmal ELL now, Miss Hazy, it does seem good to be back ' H home agin, though I had the grandest trip that ever was, an' I ain't any more tired than I was after Chris's benent ball. You see I never looked fer to go on sech a trip, for sence we moved to town I ain't never been away to speak of, nor ain't wished fer it, 'cause it has seemed everlthin' has been jes fitted to make us happy right here to home. But when Miss Lucy wrote to ast me to come up to Michigun fer a visit it seemed like it would be a dretful disappointment for both her and me if I didn't go. Well, I did have the nicest time at Miss Lucy's,-I suppose I orter say Mrs. Bob's, now,-that you ever see. An' the one thing that I injoyed the most of all, I b'lieve, was the day We went over to the State Norman Collige. You see that's where the young folks learn to teach school proper, Miss Hazy, an' it is ies wonderful to see 'em. There's one buildin' they call the Trainin' School, an' I jes sez to myself, How I'd injoy being here to work! An' them young folks jes seemed to think it was grand, fer they stood up before the classes an' smiled an' were so pleasant like. An' then, you know, they have a cookin' room in the suller, an' it did seem so good to smell fried cakes fryin' when we stept inside the door. It was jes like home, you know. I went down to see the cookin' room, an' I declare fer it, Miss Hazy, ever'thin' was cleaned up jes as spick an' span in that kitchen as if they had knowed I was comin'. I sez as much to Miss Lucy, and she S62 they always kep' it that way. It was so refreshin'g an' them girls an' their teacher looked jes that nice in their white caps an' apurns that I jes wisht Mr. Wiggs could of seen 'em. I am goin' to make Asia a white cap an' apurn out of an old sheet that ain't much more good, so she kin put 'em on when .Toe Eichorn comes over to see her Sun- days an' stays to dinner, for Asia likes to look her best then. When we went acrost the yard from the Trainin' School to the big buildin', I says to Miss Lucy,- Jes see all them hansome dandelines! Ain't they jes grand? I-Iow Asia would inioy paintin' a picture of this yard if she could see it, fer We ainit never had so much grass an' as many flowers in all of the Cabbage Patch as they have here. I picked a nice little button hole bokay of the dandelines fer myself, but as I hadn't no pin to spare, I fastened 'em in the back of my hair, an' I know they looked reel perty all day. When we got to the main buildiu' we went down the hall to the libry,-a big room that was half books, and the other half tables, with young folks sittin' around 'em. It was real nice and quiet in there, an' no one even whis- pered. I thought that was fine, an' while Miss Lucy went to ast 'bout some books I set down an' most went to sleep in spite of myself. fllhere's nothin' like readin' to put one to sleep, and it ies seemed to me if I got in there with a book in my hand I could sleep as easy as Cuby does when he is trottin' along with me an' the childern. Well, I went in nearly all the rooms in that big buiIclin', but the ones I spent the longest spell in was the jography rooms, fer they reminded me of Mr. Wiggs. He was always so proud of mv memory for jography 112111165 He thought I was quite an export in it, you know, Miss Hazy. In the alternoon we went over to the gyrnnasticum buildin', ani I declare fer it, I jes wisht you could of seen them girls over there. They had on the queerest dresses- like. The skirts wasn't skirts at all, but jes like the lower part to that blue bathin' suit Miss Lucy give you to use fer patchin' Chris's clothes. Well, them girls was havin' the grandest time,-it made me think of a circus. Some was preformin' on rings that hung down from the ceilin, and some was trying to walk a long two by four plank that was riz up edgeways from the floor on little legs, and others was swingin' nine-pins, an' twirlin' them all 'round in a won- derful Way. I helt my breath fer fear one of them nine-pins might fly suddint-like out of some girl's hand and hit one of them that was walkin' the riz plank. But ever'thin' went smooth and nice. an' perty soon a bell rung an' the girls all lined up on the Hoor an' went through their gymnasticum lesson. I never see nothin' nicer than all them girls a marchin' and preformin' all togetherg it was jes like soldier preformins,-as smooth as clockwork. When we left the gymnasticum buildin' Miss Lucy said we had better take the nex' car fer home. So we walked along down to the nex' corner, goin' slow so we could git a good view of the buildins' from the street. Jes as we got opp'sit a small grey buildin' that we hadn't been in, I heerd a woman scream out jes awful. I grabbed Miss Lucy's arm, for I was that skeered I didn't know what to do. In a minute I heerd another voice-a man's this time-yellin' loud enough to be heerd a mild. At that I started to see what was the matter. I wasn't goin' to have a murderer a-takin' precious lives if I could stop it. But Miss Lucy held me back, tellin' me that build' ing was the Conservary, a place where the young people learn to sing, and that the screamin' was some one practicin' so they could sing high like that woman at ,the theayter did that night Mr. Bob give us the treat. Well, Miss I-Iazy, you can't think how relieved I was to hear the real cause of it, for they was certainly fearsome sounds that followed us as we went on down the street. I couldn't help but think of what them singers have to go through with before they git so they can sing like that theayter womang an' I jes felt how grand it was to have a fine eddication like then1 young folks can git there, in ever'thin', like Mr. Wiggs had. Of course it's not meant for all of us, but we git the benefits of what other folks knows if we are jes ready always to take holt on what we hear and seeg an' I reckon we can git most as much injoy- ment out of the eddication of a person who knows a heap from books as that person gits himself. But there! I must go now, 'cause I see Europeua comin' fer me. and I reckon Australia has been upsettin' the pancake batter over her by the looks of that apurn. But Europena always takes ever'thin' so good-natured, so they ain't no harm done. I've had a ine visit this mornin', Miss Hazy, an' when I come over again I'll tell you more 'bout my trip,-- Yes, yes, Europena. I'm comin' right away! Good-bye, Miss Hazy. FLORENCE ELOISE CHAMBERS. SOIVIE YPSI COZY CORNERS Ellie Nnrmal Glnllege Euan Ellunh OR many years it has been the custom of the Senior classes to leave some sort of a memorial in the institution by which they may be remembered after they have left the College. This year the class have voted to put the price of a memorial into the Normal Loan Fund. and thus make themselves remembered in a more substan- tial way than could otherwise be done. This Loan Fund originated in 1904 with the Senior Class of that year, which left one hundred and twenty-five dollars for the use of Seniors who would be unable to finish their school work without inancial assistance. At the present time there is more than 'dye hundred dollars avail- able in the fund, the whole amount coming from six differ- ent sources. Besides the class of 1904, which started the ball rolling, the Oratorical Association of that year gave to the fund one hundred dollars, and twenty - ive dollars more came from the Senior-Junior indoor meet of the same spring. By bequest Mrs. George Walterhouse added one hundred dol- lars to the growing fund, and the Sappho Club did alast act of kindness in giving to the fund the fifty-Eve dollars remain- ing in its treasury when it ceased to exist as an organiza- tion. In like mannner the Young WOl11Ql1,S Christian Association of Ypsilanti disposed of eighty-'dye dollars. This money is cared for by an Association formed in accordance with an act of the State Legislature of 1899. This incorporation is called the Normal College Scholarship and Loan Association, and has for its officers a president, vice-president, and a board of three directors, elected for three years. At the present time President L. H. .Tones is president of the Association, Dr. B. L. D'Ooge vice- president, and Dr. C O. Hoytsecretary and treasurer. The board of directors is composed of Dr. Hoyt, Professor Julia A. King, and Professor E. A. Strong. The Association is governed by regular articles of organization, by which it is stipulated that the loan to any one person cannot exceed one hundred dollars, and as a matter of fact the amount is seldom as large as that. No loan can be made to any one below the rank of Senior, the purpose being simply to aid those who have done a part of their College work and are Hnancially unable to finish it. The interest charged on this money is Bye per cent, payable in advance, and the amount thus obtained is turned back into the fund. During the two years which mark the existence of this organization, the interest has amounted to about thirty-Eve dollars. The money is all safely loaned, and the notes are always promptly paid. No one fully realizes the worth of such a fund in this institution, for, beyond the members of the Association itself, and the student to whom the loans are given, no one is allowed to know what becomes of the money This alone is fully known: that although the amount is hardly sufficient for the demands made upon it, the Normal College Loan Fund is certainly doing its share of good in the world. HELEN BULLIS, 'O6. X Z f ff f ff X Qff ff X 17 f If ifu if mfs rg 5? Q' pfflj 'I 4721 f If f . f fig wife.. Q, W if ,HA I X M fi, 'mfr fy' X ji 5vuZUr'? fy! Wx! 1 9 f gvli, 'rw f Jul j N14 gif! W 1 f X 1 Q5 5 f NNFSE5 'fx we fig, . 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Wil 'a ' if' H'-'fi ff f .,1:?5ci2, QQNEMif2'?J?4.b-if 1 f Q ' A X Z :if-L-ffff' V X A 'fidgiawallwf '2M3,-gm'711.1555 K 'Z ff' ' J E i'.zf:f'5WW-'Z'f,Q' ,M - 155' I I IV! ? X fag.-K fig.-ifEMff:1:1:'f finer? '5'1?:f12??f1'-i5 5' fm f.-,nw K? ' 1 A 2 ,.ff:'ffQi11',1iy 5 wffi:d?':-'f. 'z'm51.i3Q' '5'-fynwb?Mff'7f.551-., V7-f W f' ' A A -' 4115 fl' A ZW?-16aaaWE2'34p'E'2T f711 fi frlrx MM f f ' ' Q f - fi f f- if 711ff,fJ,QiQ:33y2f,5s:13 . X l I f aw' MQ Xl! J f l'T5'p ,qx,4' E' M, U, U ' - ' , f' 1' ' ' F-9 . , f 4QyMe,Q4H,g, wg X f,ffff ,,ff,' ,jf lffff, , ,A , - 1 V f22W,r4fif -'-Swv' ,ax Q' x0f M' ! , f I f A , X W4- If f ff-1qV 'b l fl .45-g 3-. . HX Q it f W Nu linnghing lllllztttrr Prof. Pease Cat chorus practicel-That word begins with hal, but the way you sing it, it soundslike hell. It is said that Maurice Lathers cries out, I rise to a point of order, even in his sleep. Dr. Hoyt Cat Phi Delta Pi banquetl-And then We have with us one of our old, old boys.-Prof. Lathers. Guy Smith-What do you talk about down at your club? Miss S.-Oh, We talk about what We have to eat. Mr. Smith-Well that's a very poor thing to talk about. President Jones tin chapell-When I look over this audience, it reminds me of a farmers' institute I attended last Week. Mildred Orr-I clon't think I'll ever forget that train- ing school, if I live till the end of my life. Dr. Hoyt Cin Phil. of Ed.. speaking of instinctsl-Do you mean to say that children of Italian parents have more izzseds than those of German parents? Y T C3423 . A4 X. Y ia , 'v' .W H s Nu matter if Hun laugh B. F. Pittenger fin Shakespeare Clubl-This is a soliloquy between Henry VI and Earl of Gloster. Mrs. Btirton-We will now listen to Mr. Kirchhofer, who will sing For All Eternity. H. Prine, Pres. Shakespeare Club-Where will We meet next time? B. S.-Mr. President, I would be pleased to have you come to my house. Miss Lux-Well, I am going to keep still. I haven't opened my mouth for a week that I haven't put my foot in it. Miss B.-She has the most beautiful new coat-it's all lined with White vermine. Herb Schell-The doctor says I'n1 having trouble with my heart. P i'Have you seen Miss Myers? No, did you want her?'l No, but I should like Mr. Davis. Dwight Wilson at Albion baseball game, trying to stir up enthusiasm, starts to say yell, Happy, but instead shouts Hell, Yappy! Hell, Yappy! iixtrauzta frnm the Glgnifa Qlalenhar nf flienirwh Minimum Misery loves company, but company does not recipro- cate. Look before you sleep. Many are called, but few get up. People who love in glass houses should pull down the blinds. Fools rush in and win where angels fear to tread. The quill is as mighty off the wing. Consistency, thou art '1 mule! Economy is the thief of time. A bird on a bonnet is worth ten on a plate. Let him now speak or hereafter hold his piece of information for a good price. What is home without another? A fool and his honey are soon mated. As you sew, so must 'lou rip. A lie in time saves nine. . A thing of duty is an-noy forever. Some are born widows, some achieve widowhood whilst others have widows thrust upon them. Matri-Money is the root of all evil. Necessity is the mother of contention. A word to the wise is resented. Where there's a will there's a law suit. Pride will have a fall bonnet. Pride goeth before and the bill cometh after. There is no soak without some fire water. A little widow is a dangerous thing. All that a boy knoweth will he tell to his roo He laughs best, whose laugh lasts. As thou hast made thy bed, why lie about it? IU Illale Birarh at 1119 Eihrarg illail Please give me the Pop-sci-mo. Then they looked at her card and found that she wanted the Popular Science Monthly. CPop. Sci. Mo.l Student- Miss Barnes, we have ever so many refer- ences in History of Ed. to an author that I can't find in the card-catalogue at all. Miss Barnes-'KWho is the author? Student- Ibid. A Freshman to a library assistant- How much do you get for this job? Miss Wi - I Want iMilton's Paradise Alley.' Junior Degree Student- Please give me the third volume of the 'Theological Seminaryf Shakespeare Student- Please give me Furness' Edi- tion of Hamlet's KMacbeth.' Enxfia Don't count your Els before you get them. Don't examine your prize too closely-it didn't cost you anything. Donlt make your school and salary too large, because it might be in your friend's home town. Don't get too much attached to your ring. It may not be paid for. Don't sit up too late. There will be several evenings after the wedding. Don't climb too high in your family tree, for you may 'rind one of your ancestors hanging to a branch. Elliinga me Slinulh like tn linnm How many olhces Mr. Pittenger holds. How Guy Brown managed to decide between them. Why Prof 'Davis was so fond of his seventh-hour geography class last winter. Whether it is Class Day Parcipitant', or Par- ticipantf' Where Guy Smith went Easter Sunday. Why Mr. Withenbury didn't meet Miss B--. as planned that Sunday evening. If Ira Davis's fifth subject is Practice in Conversa- tion. If Glenn Lewis, the Scientific Bug Man, will get around in time to get in the Aurora. If Mr. Kircher ever found out whether a plant would adopt itself to climatic changes. If Hiram Chapman succeeded in Ending any type- writer ink in town. If Huge Jokes are the only kind of jokes that Miss LeClerc ever sees. The young man 's name who addressed his answer to a sorority invitation to HR. S. V. P.. - 1-Ave., City. Why Mr. Willman would not tell the Committee whether or not he would go to Florida, till the arrival of this telegram:- I ani willing, if you think best. If Sophie Dunham has received a fresh supply of orange blossoms lately. 6511 the Bulletin iiuarh Junior Clubs practice to-night at 4:30. Training- School chapel. Ware suits. Seniors-The Aurora wants your photograph. Will the person who took a Whitney's and Lockwood's Essentials of English Grammar from the Science Building belonging to H. ,C. Prine, kindly return it? Oratorical Board meeting to-night at 4:00. Room 51. Very imporlanf. cTl1E president will be there this time.l Found-A new pair of lady's kid gloves. Owner may have them by calling on Mr. Williams, 3 L3 Ellis St.-i fAnd it is a known fact that ten young ladies called that evening.l Julius is not going alone. KSeen just before the debate.l OBIII' Snngaivrn sinh Zilheir Eliaunriir Snnga I want to be Somebody's Darling.-I-Iarold Babcock. Oh, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing.-Sidney Trathen. Rock Me to Sleep, Mother.-Hugo Kirchhofer. Mush, Mush. - Prof, Davis. I Need Thee Every Hour.-Myrtle Cram. How Can I Leave Thee.-Eleanor Barmby. Dearie-Herbert Schell. Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder.-Pearl Benedict. When the Harvest Days are Over, Jessie Dear.-Guy Brown. Josephine, My Joe.-C. P. Steimle. We'll Never say Good-Bye.-Julius Moeller. Wont You be my Lovey-Dovey.-George Handy. Keep a Little Cosy Corner in Your Heart for Me.- Joe McCarthy. You're as Welcome as the Flowers in May.-Bess Stephens. I donlt know where I'm going but I'm on my Way.- Edna O,Dell. Oh, That We Two were Maying.-Winfield Stanley. When I'm Big I'll be a Soldier.+Milton Cook. I Hates to get up Early in the Morning.-Robt. Reinhold. This list of favorite songs is compiled from a large number handed in. We regret that limited space prevents the publishing of them all. A iKrurriv She was sitting by the fountain, Plunged in blissful reverie, And her eyes were full of dreaming As she gazed across the lea. Maid, thought I, as I beheld her, And remarked the look she wore, You are dreaming of the future And the joys it holds in store. No sad thought of grief or sorrow Fills your fond young heart with fears, You are dreaming of the gladness In the fast approaching years. 1 I drew near at last and asked her What sweet thought her mind possessed Quoth the maiden, I was thinking Of my new Commencement Dress. ' C.C M al lhr A. nf illllrm Glall iliarh GDtl1Pr Baldy Holmes Skim Woodard Rosy Davis Diddle Morris Bill Handy Cassie Colby Doc Holmes Prof. Davis Purgie Sprague Sonny Harrison Mac Mc Carthy Deal: Seaver Uncle Hunter Sarah Hodge Ben Smith what iliuvrghnhg Qlalla 1112 15111 Evlta Formidable Jensen Do Little Wilson Can't Laugh Kniffen Grand Circus Smith Right Sober Head Rattled Mightily Reinhold Much Conceited Lathers Sedately Popular Trathen Chemically Pure Steimle Heartily Conscientious Prine Consarnedly Determined Carpenter Highly Estimable Williams Laughing Frequently Long Illustrious Favorite King Becomingly Facetious Pittenger Right Lover-like Withenbury Justifiably Ludicrous Cutler Eminently Judicious Willman Everlastingly Juvenile Engle Harmlessly Hairbrained Chapman Marvelously Beautiful Travis what the Kappa 1511i Alpha mm Gall iiarli Obllper W. J. Stanley- Winn Guy Brown-'lJerry Leroy Brown-' 'Brownieu Chas. Webster-'iWeb LaVerne Brown- Ted Harold Babcok Bah William Braley- Natty Edward Upham- Putl' Chas. Walker-HWally Milton Cook- Cookie Chas. De Shon-HSol Herbert Schell- Shortie Hugo Kirchhofer-- Dick Julius Moeller- Judy,' li il V 11, A y xllllll X X . X --- ' - V ..- i,4....- - it 1 it it fi. I I . Auil in 8 I Qi liiiiuuiagt W! Lg: -L J .lx MQ ' ' lfh, Hi i .15 M ,V ial-I SENTENCE NINETY DAYS TRAINING SCHOOL Efraintng, Srhnnl Nunez Student teacher, in 7th grade-Take the sentence, The pupil loves his teacher. What is it? Pupil-Sarcasm. L. Long- Cyril, where did we leave Christopher yes- terday? Cyril- On page 43. Teacher-Harold, what is the meaning of elocution? Harold-Its the way people are put to death in some states. Teacher-Johnny what was the battle cry which even now brings tears to our eyes? Johnny-In Onion There is Strength. Fifth grade student teacher, to little boy who was sitting with feet in the aisle, and chewing gum- Johnnie, take that gum out of your mouth and put your feet in. J. D. fFirst grade teacherl-What are some of the differences between a cow and a chicken? Little Boy-A cow's tail hangs down, and a chicken's tail hangs up. Teacher-What is an embargo? Eighth Grade Student-Its an act to prevent a ship from leaving the water. Student Teacher in the third grade had been telling her class that once worms had become so numerous as to spoil the crops, and it was necessary to import the English sparrow to exterminate them, The spar- rows multiplied very fast and were gradually driving away the native birds. Tommy was apparently very inattentive, and the teacher thinking to catch him napping said i'Tommy, which is worse to have, worms or sparrows? Tommy hesitated a moment and then replied-i'Please, I never had sparrowsf' The tracks that great men leave behind them Upon the sands of time, Ott show they wobbled round a lot ' Before they got sublime. -Selecfed i5rz1rh frnm ilir Stall-ham This way Colby, this way Colby, Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip!-Whoa! One, two, three, four boys, girls! Hello Guy! Get a message? Say, Hodge, is that new suit paid for? Where's your old girl, Brown? Are you happy, Moeller? Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Whoa! Come on, fellows, get in the game! Nine lrahs for the team! Guard that man! Pretty work, fellows, pretty work! Put'er in Sprague! G Guess that's going some! Look at Web get behind that ball! Cover up fellows! Cover up! Head took a header! Pretty work! Come on Happy! Now you're playing! Good for you Steim! Nine 'rahs for Steim! Wonder if there's any game those fellows can play? Nine 'rahs for the team! what Gbf 51? E. J. Willman- We are going to get the Aurora out of the way this year without anybody tearing hisjhair or having a cataleptic ht. Harry P. Jones wishes it distinctly understood that the middle initial of his name does not stand for PreXy. LaVerne Brown- I am reading 'Little Women' and I think it's just line! Peggies meet at4 P.M. in Room 51. Frank Bates, in Latin Class- That is the best idiotic English I can translate it into. ONE NORMAL GIRL'S PRAYER Oh, give me a pure hearty give me a clean heart, give me a sweetheart, give me Banghart. Miss Di-1 The twenty-second of Feb. That's somebody's birthdayg is it Lincoln's or Washington's? Washington's? Which one, George Washington's or D. C.'s? Srninrha Eriim' Quinn Dear Father:-Once you said, MV son. To manhood you have grown, Make others trust you, trust yourself. And learn to stand alone. Now father soon I graduate, And those, who long have shown How well they trust me, wait their pay, And I can stand a loan. YOUR Durufur. Son. A Narrum Earapr In the inner hall, Where the statue tall Once stood in days gone by, As the twilight fell, ah! strange to tell, Two forms were drawing nigh. Said the scared schoolmaster to the fair schoolma'am I'm like a ship at sea, Exams are near, and much I fear I will unlucky be. Then murmured she, A-shore I'll be, How I Wish that test were o'er! Then darkness fell, and all was well, ' For the ship had hugged the shore. y -C. C. , iliauuritw Miss Terry's favorite hair-Light and curly. Harry P. Jones' favorite fruit-The Cherrie. Miss Steagall's favorite flower-Sweet Williams. Prof. Harvey's favorite pastime-Telling stories. C. P. Steimle's favorite book-Side Talks with Girls. Miss Wamsley's favorite expression- Whee in Maurice Lather's favorite play- Much Ado About Nothing. Guy Brown's favorite General--Lee. Miss Wordenis favorite proportion-Long. Benj. Pittinger's favorite sport-Running for oliice. Earl Engle's favorite stunt-Joking. Ethel Burridge's favorite food-Brown bread. Miss Justema's favorite orator-Webster. Miss Ful1er's favorite flower- Rosebuds. ' Every Frat's favorite book- The Little Game of Freeze-out, or Why We Are the Best. Waiter at Hoag Club- VVill you have some pie? Earl Engle- Is it compulsory? Waiter-' 'No, huckleberry. Miss King in teachers' history class-HWhat does the Constitution say about that? Ray Withenbury- Any person in the United States may have arms about him if he so desires. Junior fin Historyl- The Celts were imaginative and had large feet. Miss Buell- I think what has been said covers the ground pretty Wellf' Clare Hunter Ctranslating in Latinl-' 'The men having killed themselves arose and departed from an unpopulated city. Miss Downing- What does the introduction of this young n1an's romance into the description of 'Spring in a Side Street, add to the story? F. G.- It adds reality. Dr. Ford- At one time 'knave' meant merely 'fe1low. ' One of Shakespeare's fair characters said, 'Farevvell, thou gentle knavef If a girl should say that to her young man now-a-days, he would be in doubt about next Week. Anna French- Which picture shall I send that school board? M-d C---tt- Why, I'll lend you one of mine. Tlljc Ellirzt Qual: nf illnniamin Uhr Sun uf Iditivngrr CHAPTER 1. 1. And Benjamin arose and girded on his purse and gat himself over against the city hithermost nigh unto the region of the Canuck gand he said within himself, Go to, let us eat, drink, and be merry, and delight our- selves in fatnessg and it was so. 2. I-Iowbeit, when he had feasted, and paid an hundred pence for the matinee and an talent and two sheckels for sight of the great whales at Belle Isle, he was again an hungered. 3. And he quoth between himself, Lo, I have unto me but one small sheckel, of the value of six fried cakes. 4. But he forgot and wist not that he would have need of the coin to admit him without the limit of the city. 5. And when Benjamin had gat himself unto the huckster and had bought six fried cakes, and had eaten all of the irst save the hole that was in the midst thereof, it came to pass that his knees smote one upon the other, 6. For he bethought him of the price of admission out of the city. 7. And while he would fain have filled himself as far as the contents of the bag would extend. he durst not. 8. So it came to pass that he returned unto the huckster, saying, 9. Lo, here is thy meatg give me, I pray thee, the live pieces of copper which were mine own. lO. For lo, even the eats ofthe street do turn from thy stuff with a by-word, and an hissing. ll. And the huckster did exclaim ahal aha! and threw down the pieces forthwith. . 12. And Benjamin straightway gat himself into a street car and vamoosed. 13. And it was so. A Eng in ii. IH. 51. On the Campus he is Prexyg In botany he's 'AI-Ia1g As UH. P. Jones in chemistry, We've found a loyal pal. Harry Pf' the fellows call him. I-I. Pembertonf, some say. But in the book he gave me 'Twas just HH.-P.-J. A certain Degree student, he of the fair, curled locks, is taking beginning Latin. He has learned one verb: amo, amare, amavi, amatus. The other day he was call- ed upon to give the principal parts of the verb to walk. Just then some one rapped. and as the teacher stepped to the door he whispered to the man beside him, What is it? Quick! Darned if I know, was the answer. Darned if I know, darned if I nare, darned if I navi, darned if I natusf' proundly recited Mr. Travis. Nurmal Enrgrlupeilia Chas. Colby, day-dreaming in geography class, hears Freshman-A species of green plant that springs up on Suddenly: what makes it so dense, Mr' Colby? Y the Campus every fall. Colby- Its-a-its on account of the abundance of Sophomore-A tin-horn aggregation of would-be Uloistufefi freshman bulldozers. Prof. Jefferson- Well, sir, what do you think the Junior-The quintessence of conceit, and quadruple question was? C011d6I1SHfi011 of CEOUSUJ- Colby- I thought you asked, 'What makes the Senior-The crowning glory of the Normal. - vegetation of South America so dense?' Junior Degree-A Senior gone to seed. Prof. Jefferson-'LWell, we happen to be talking about Cramming-A square meal after a period of mental the D0P1112ti0U Of EUYOPC-H fasting. Miss King- What is a sulky plow? Midgets-A basket ball team made up of Training U Student- A plow that won't go. School children. Pony-An indispensable beast of burden. Bible Study Class-Leader: Where is the River . U Jordan? . W. E. Olds Cin debatej- Isn't that a perfect absurb- M--y B t--:IFS in Egyptln 1ty? Valentine Party-Miss Bacon: Please divide your- Pil M-s Cin libraryl- Have you got a 'Man selves into sections and shoot the arrows at the hearts. Without a Country'? I can't ind one. Q-:Q 0 O or . 4 ' ll l I ,ff Lx, 5 I Qi W as F 1' T7 l l I 4 ,- MW, V4 EPEBH11 iiixec. DEFINITIONS Hot-thermalg red-headed. Fate-isness. Conceal-to cover, as by a quilt. gggsggganiiifggio Pucker as Poor-centless, skinny, emaciated. in kissing. Ah! here is a man. Is the man ill? O, no! A The poor man is hot and weary. ' He is lone-lv and dis-gust-ed. He has come a long distance. He has come all the Way clear back from Lyons. He has got as far as Ann Arbor. He has dust on his shoes. but none in his purse. What ails the man? He has squan-der-ed his spon-du-lix. Alas! What will the man now do? He will now do the street car man. He will administer the grand hailing sign of rdistress to the street car man who will sell him a ride to Yp-si for 7 stamps. The street car man has to pay the rail-road track man the other cent, but he will get his money's worth telling us this gag. He will tell us the poor man's name. He will say it is Smith. Fate cannot conceal men named Smith. We were coming from the picnic, A vvand'ring o'er the land, The moon was shining brightly, I held her little-shawl. Yes, I held her little shawl, QI-Iovv fast the evening flies U We spokes in tones of love, I gazed into her-lunch basket. I gazed into her lunch basket, I wished I had a tasteg Here sat my loving charmer, My arm around her-umbrella. Embracing her umbrella, This charming little miss, Her eyes so full of mischief, I slyly stole a-sandvgich. Miss S-1 Cin Elocution Class-l High pitch is used to express fancy feelings. Mr. De Shon and Mr. Schell, settling their rooms:- Mr. Schell- Now if we only had a settee for that cor- ner, everything would be O. K. Mr. De Shon- What do you want of that? We havenlt any dishes to put on it. Earl Stuart- Why, I wouldn't miss going to Lansing to see that debate and hear that ball game for anythingf, Mr. W. Stanley- Miss --', I am sorry to leave you in tears. Miss '-: Its better to be left in tears than never to be left at all. After the debate at M. A. C. some one was heard to announce, We came up in eight coaches, but it will take at least ten to take us back. Frank Harrison, at mass meeting- I am going to Lansing, and I am not only going, but not going alone, for-T R- C-mk, talking to a U. of M. Law, noticed that he spoke of Upper Class Men, and she asked: 'KWhat do you mean by :Upper Class Men', those who belong to fraternities? Beni. Pittenger-fSenior Class meeting, class choosing pinsl 1 Is there anything else to come up under this pin head? Two days before the M. A. C. debate, a carpenter who was working on the house next door to E. J. Willman's rooms was heard to remark: K'We1l, that fellow in there certainly does pray the longest of any fellow I ever heard. Cherrie Brown Csecond day of schooll- Yes, Ilve got all my books. I got them at Swiggler's on the corner. W. Ferguson, in Senior Class meeting- There is no reason why we should have boys for all these officers. A girl can just as -well act as Vice-President, there is nothing to do in that office. anyway. I nominate Miss Irene Craw- ford. E. J. Willman- Say, old man, if you were going to be married, would you buy a big range that would be an article of furniture, or would you get a little one you could move easily? I am apt to have to move in my profession, you know. When Emerson Clem returned from a visit at his home this spring, he reported that while there he found several fossils and the skull of a pre-historic man. President Senior Class- What are we as a class going to leave the institution? I. F. King- Mr. President, I think we had better leave the institution. She- What makes Chas. Webster limp so? He- Oh, he was walking out on the edge of town last night and fell off. N: I Q11 I, M. IEXI I' II' , III -. I I I I I , I I IIIL, III III I-II . , . I I ,I iff 'Wm I 1 I -Ing, Im I I I IX. fwf illlhtliitlqw' :IW VQX Xa IIIII I WI IIIIXXI I I IIIIII IU'. MQQFII I X II I I l r' I I I' yy ,IX,I'lI HX, I I I S iid? Zia 21 5:1 II 'HIFI I II ' nl I A ,1 I' .III 1 I X , I I I Hll -I-llllll . If XXX ,If 1 I X III III II I IKIII III III IIIIIII IIII JIII III II I III III I IXII YIIII' If I II III ,III I W 'I,' I II ' II I X I III II XI I I , gx Ii IIIII, I XI I 1. III I X . X1 , 4 ' X. X I ' I 'WWI WwIIHj4aI'r Iwwimhthw In XIXII XX I ' , . XXXXXIXXX X, XXX XXX. X X XXX XX X X X XX XXI I I I X I I XIHI XI X I I .XX XXXXX X It XI tghf X I IIIIII III I I I t I III -' 'XIII I p I IXI 'XIIX 'IX I II J K Xl X I X.. Il, II XXI II I IX XIIXAX XIIIII -I X XIIFXX I XII I XIIX WX IIXIIIQII I I II I II ' -2 iIII II I IIIIIIII IIIXXIA I I XIX:-i1IIXl tXX,iAI'XL X QX I XiXI If, ,II IIJ'IIfII IX I I I I I IIIIIII I I I I I I I , I I I I' I I I IIIIII ' I I1 ' I I1 XI II I I I I X I X I JI I I III I IIIXIII I I' ..IIIIIIIIfIIIIIIII I I II II I I If I I I I I I IfIIIII-IIIIIIIIIII. II 'I I -I I I I III I I I I .IIIII , IfI ' If I I f I I I . A XX IX.nfIyfI,i MXL XXX XX X X I I X , IXII . X IIIXfi51'I,IfQ?I I X I I I, I I I I I' I 'IW' I'-'3'II'IIII ..I 'I II I . XI3 IIIIIII .III ' XIX X XIXIX IX II II II :XXI I I 'IIIII :I m LII ' 'II 'Ii ' I .IIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' I IIIIIIII I I .I IIIIMMWWWAQ I Isunhgl Id lgidgif. I IX .Qi Z 'I II I I' :i i - XIIIIX g II I M J' - I g I X ii I I If III II I IXIII li'II!.I .IIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIII III IIIIIIIIIIII THE LITERARY SOCIETY SPIRIT QI9UPI' Glanhih Laughing Bess, discoursing free, Owned with wond'rous meekness, Just one fault, IWhat could it be?j One peculiar weaknessg She in candor did confess, Nature failed to send her NVoman's usual tenderness, Toward the other gender. Foolish Bessie! thus to tellg Had she not confessed it, Not a rnan who knew her well, Ever would have guessed it. She: I've a notion to give you a piece of my mind. He: 'I Don't you may need it yourselff' He: I don't think those lobsters I ate agreed with me. Do you think lobsters are healthy? She: You look very well. E. Steimle: It wouldnlt do for me to play basket-ball with the girls. I would foul all the time. Friend: Why, how. Steimle: 'IBoth arms around. Prof. Lathers: i'What is a tangent expression? Agnes Parks: Something you go off at. Fr-ces Ch-ds: Yes, ours is a ten o'clock house, but it's a twelve o'clock porch. Sidney Trathen: Where is Leo to-night, Howard, is he studying, too? H. Prine: No, one. Miss Downing: What might we designate ourselves to show that this selection was written for us? E-- P1 1 Intelligent people. Fi D- : In a short story only one phase of life is taken up, while in a novel a whole person's11fe1s considered. Prof. Davis: Every year a sheet of water fourteen feet thick is raised from the sea. Freshman: What time ofthe year does this happen? I should think it would be a sight worth going to see. what thr fwninra will En Niue! Heard: L. F. Long will go back on the iarm. ' Guy Brown has an offer to run the earth. CEXpects something betterl. Alda Wade will write a book entitled, The World's Debt to Wade. I. F. King will go at once to Jackson. W. N. Bralev will commit matrimony. GlennLewis? ? ? ! l I -1 l T! Roy Brown will wait for something to turn up. E. J. Willman will cater to Cupid. B. F. Pittenger will come back: the Normal cannot spare him. I Chas. Walker has not thought so far ahead. Charles Webster will join the Sigma Nu Phi. E Wallace Ferguson is figuring on a half interest in the Earth. - C. F. Banghart will answer A Normal Girl's Prayer. R. A.Bannen will take anti,-fat. E. S. Clem will hunt rats and fossils. Max Peet will persevere in his efforts to catch Fish. G. C. Handy will rest. Guy Smith will join a comic opera company. Clare Hodge will talk. -f Harold Babcock will hitch his wagon to a star. li The name of Walter Davis is omitted from this list for a con- sideration of one dollar. Prof. Lyman had been explaining ia very dithcult problem and had put his Work, as he talked, on the board. No one fully understood it, and when he asked Miss Lambgto explain, she said: No, I don't quite see it. Marie Parker jumped up saying: Take my seat, Miss Lamb. Maurice Lathers worked so hard last winter that he used to Cram even at the basket-ball games. C. L. Kniffen, fin Chorusl: I can't sing that Mr. Pease, I have a bad cold. Dr. Hoyt in Sunday School class: Mr. Prine, why do you come to church?', H. Prine: Because some one else does. Morning of February 23rd, Mr. Van Buren: I saw a robin this morning, by hen. L. L-g:- Oh Pitt, you needn't feel so set up over wear- ing that ring: I wore it myself last year. Miss Master, reading to her class: Hark! Hark! it is the cannon's opening roar! Student: 'KOh no, that's only Milton Cook singing the scale. Toastmaster at Phi Delta Pi banquet: I gave this toast - to Mr. Smith because I felt he might have some message he would like to give to 'Our Guests'. So we will listen to Guy C. Smith, The Man With a Message. H. P. Jones, at Mass Meeting: We will now sing 'Poor M. A. C.' Please observe strict tempo. Now let us sing 'Bluebellf We sing it thru once in four-four time, repeat in two-four time, and then sing it thru in the originial tempo. Benj. Pittenger, in debate 'at M. A. C.. As I stated, to - . ix means to establish. Now I think we have fixed the word fix. ' Mildred Corbett: '-'Oh, Indiana is a fine towng I should like to teach there. ' Earl Engle, after' M. A. Cfbase-ball game: K'Why, I Wentclear up into the third heaven. Lf XX ff NX., f . X , 4 NNE ,B la I N, Ii , X' IJ- f'i Y X s s . I 1 X I I -J? W Mx X W f ffm NWN sk 5 X flfflf QV n 3 ,w. N:N rl AQ , D x ,- F - 'D My f N ' W - fig fa - My X B QW NME X , 'f ' 'NX ,,,, -ii' fxjw , -igfla! H is 3 R WT , 4' xxkx W ' ' y ,Ili ' N Q M TIM H+. T wsu' iz, ff? wi M ' ' . ff KMMXENI 1. V KW.. 11.4 H, XS , MX W fir. ' w si. ' 'wlllilfll A 3' MY , ,f 1fl mgf'IWW ll Lp EXW! Q' Q - aQ gWf,w wh E g U 1 , 'Il ifu V W W IW X wail X IM K N Nr! 'N . IM JI 2 a :w z1'-.1i5rww .. aM 1ww m In ,lvl N N N 'INN' ' V f.:'5wr:Qrw X Rx swxk r ,l IW 1 Wll1G1Wr1Wg 'mi 'lm IH ., M V wlnm u L M f IL V I 1 l ,ali f l muw 55 nl' 1 li2'l!i-131V ,MHNII I, 1 1 1 ' I 1 'M A ' ,N 4 QM,-'-M ,X--H . w ww HTF + 5 ' - ii' fm A ff f I X n ibn l I lm ., V' o'l x x I s 1 - 1 l . Y s x , i Xl ll , 1 x Alumni Amanrinlinn 2 909 s.- X- X wv,6?'v7'v'a , X YS N. Mft ,ff 2 .Q .fsifsififiy .30 XX X J ,343 XE -6529 5? X 39 .W rfebff' QV 4? 0 SX-. . 'QF - . XX . NN-in S4.1.551552Eel5:555222525422153212121555522252512 fi 1 I e ' - friffii555533152-35-E::2i5EfE3fi525i'f '-fl.: .::--gfix-MQ:-:. ,Q:g:51,.j:g5z:5:5::za5:5: is :, 1' 4- '-ia i. xx::f.- ::-,g-, ,.: - . '4-'-:-In-1--ifiiit-1-Z '34:7'f547:3:7:7:5:5.57-1 . PW - ,.::.-,:,Ng+ .:5,:351::3:1.51,:,:::g:1:5-3 -,: , 1-, I-1--:1:,:,iw 4.3-qZgg:,:':1:::::v:,:i, -I . 4 QW mis:5Z5ErE5a5sEr3sE5fi25:5E:.: c. . iY'i '2 f . - 1' 3E2E3E5?3?:EE5i5f5f?f5 .f ' 2-:. iii'-Eli?-fl -Y ' 1:-.. 3' .asf I-Z-'4445WW-.-wi-I-5-bi-1:-7 I-24:-Z-72:-I-I-.-Zh. . .-.Q'-C--. H v . - IV- -.rc br '-:acci:-:-:4:-:-:4:-:jc-:fgfzg-S:-2-bxgf ' .-4555E523.5E3EiiiiiiiiiiiiiriifiE5E::5EEfZ ' .1 K Y 41 I lbffirrrs fur IHIIE-H PRESIDENT-THOMAS W. PATON, '93, Ypsilanti. VICE PRESIDENT-RONALD V. KELLEY, '63. Detroit. GENERAL SECRETARY--ROBERT M. REINHOLD, '04 Ypsilanti. TREASURER--FANNIE CHE1-EVER BURTON, '84, Ypsilanti RECORDING SECRETARY-KATE MCKENZIE, '04 Ypsilanti. -Q T ' gifs. I iixerutiuv Ginmmittvn THOMAS W. PATON, '93, Ypsilanti. SAMUEL B. LAIRD, '74, Ypsilanti. WALTER F. LEWIS, '87, Port Huron. FANNIE CI-IEEVER BURTON. '84, Ypsilanti. ROBERT M. REINHOLD. '04, EX-oaicio. Uhr Alumni Aaanriztftnn F THE many factors that go to build up an edu- cational institution, none contains greater possi- bilities of service than a well-organized, active alumni association. As the relation existing between the institution and its graduates is one of close inter-depend- ence, so the benefits arising from such an organization are mutual. The character and standing of the institution are judged and determined by the character and standing of its graduates, and it is to them that it must look for support. The graduate, likewise, is beneiited by whatever benefits the institution. The commercial value of his diploma is determined directly by the standing of the institution in the eyes of those before whom it is offered as evidence of scholarship and ability. Whatever enhances the reputation of the institution also enhances the value of the diploma for its holder. The graduate is deeply indebted to the institution. There exists between the two the relation of debtor and creditor, in which the graduate is always debtor. Though education is nominally free and acknowledged to be the birthright of every child, yet the recipients of col- lege education. are comparatively rare. They constitute a privileged few, and have been given a handicap over their less favored fellow-beings in the race of life. The college graduate owes a debt which he is morally bound to repay. In the great number of educational advantages offered, and the desire to outstrip and reach the top, the obligation is forgotten. An active alumni organization keeps alive interest in the institution and the sense of relationship, whichjleft alone, are apt to become lost as the years go by. Such an organization, by uniting the scattered forces of individual love and effort, can exert a powerful influence in shaping the destiny of the institution by inducing desirable students to attend, by creating public sentiment for it, or even by securing favorable legislation, especially in the case of a state institutiona- The Normal College Alumni Association has existed many years, but it was not until last year that steps were taken to place it upon a permanent basis. In June, 1905, an arrangement was made whereby the Normal College News was made the organ of the Association and the gen- eral manager of the News also became the general secretary of the Association. The membership fee and the News subscription are identical, either including the other. All graduates, former students, and past or present members of the faculty, are eligible to membership. The payment of twenty-five dollars in Eve yearly payments of five dollars each, entitles to life membership. The Alumni Association is a great active force for good. In the first year of its existence it has secured nearly one thousand members, ten of whom are life mem' bers. Though every effort is being made to enroll in its membership as many as possible of the nine thousand students and graduates who have gone out from the Normal College, the hope of the Association lies in the classes that are to come. The members of the class of 1906 cannot do better than unite their strength with that of others gone before, and yet to come, in the service of our common Alma Mater. ROBERT M. REINHOLD. AURORA BOARD Aurnra Enarh LULA MANN, '06-EDITOR-IN-CHIEF. LUCILE E. BROWN, 706-ILLUSTRATIONS E. J. WILLMAN, '06-BUSINESS MANAGER. ANNA L. FRENCH, '06-FRATERNITIES. MILDRED CORBETT, '06--ASSISTANT EDIxTORj LITER- , RAY L. WITHENBURY, '07--ATHLETICS ARY SOCIETIES AND LLUBS. . JENNIE BURTON, '06,-CLASSES I , EFFIE DEAM-JUNIQR DEGREE.


Suggestions in the Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) collection:

Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Michigan University - Aurora Yearbook (Ypsilanti, MI) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

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