Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1912

Page 1 of 346

 

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1912 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 346 of the 1912 volume:

PUBLIC LIBRARY „ FORT WAYNE . ALLEN CO., IND. INDIANA COLLECTiOfNi ilillll lilj.lliliiill I ' III Jnl I 3 1833 01703 8552 Gc 977.2 In27953 1 ' = ' 12 Indiana University Arbutus THE ARBUTUS THE ARBUTUS COMES ONCE YEARLY, WHATEVER THE WEATHER. THUS IT COMES IN JUNE, 1912, EDITED SOME, PRINTED A GREAT DEAL AND BOUND IN BUCKRAM MUCH LIKE A REAL BOOK. IT IS THE BOOK OF THE SENIOR CLASS OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY THE A I. K THE 12 TUS THE ANNUAL OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY IN JUNE NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE V ' -: Allen County PubVic Ubra f 900 Webstet Street fO BOX 2270 ,2270 Fort WayM. °° WORDS PREVIOUS TO THE BOOK PROPER MOST college annuals are about as interesting as a hardware catalog or a hsh and game report. It is a hard job to make a Six Best Seller out ot a bunch of faculty pictures and some new portraits of the old college buildings. This year ' s editorial crowd, however, has done its best to fix up the old stufl ' in such a way and with such trimmings that it will look like a new dish. We feel real sorry that vye could not get out a loose leaf Arbutus. Everybody in school could then have been editor- in-chief. That would make an ideal book. As it is, the reader will have to use the scissors on personal reflections and such other things that he would have out of the volume before he stores it away with the sea shells and the family album under the parlor table. With this scissors scheme in mind, we ga e up the original idea vve had of printing the book on tin leaves. So here she is. It does not represent our best efforts. We haci to give them to the University. We could have made a much better Arbutus for igi2 if it had not been for our college course. 1523j: ' Binnt: 1 .-., i ixsr BOOK T H A r WHICH I S IN 1 H E BO O K !■ K( )X I ISPll ' X ' K. ' I he Board Walk 4 I ITLE PAGE 5 (.)RDS PREVIOUS TO THE BOOK PROPER 1)1- DICATIOX, To Dr. Augustus Pclilman 7 THE ARBUTUS, By Arthur M. Evans 10 j A FALLEN TREE, Photo 11 I HE FIVE EDITORS 12 I ME BUSINESS BOARD 13 i HE TWELVE ARBUTUS STAFF 14 I . I TERARY 15 Evening Near the Campus 17 E ' lntHng of the Arbutus IS The7C ' s 1 Geology -2 Inhniir Up Against It 24 rorpn. Christi 27 Wli. II I Went Cycloning oil Ih Mow Death 32 An Abridged Romance 3-: fhe Cat Came Back 3 ' ' I X I )I AX A DRAMA 41 1 ; r « Drama Course 43 -in:; .ind Fret 44 W . 1 1 1. Ill ' s Voice 4ij li., iihI Men 47 I Ih I ,..],, lid 4S li- -Hi Mil 111 the House 4 ' :i An lIUe,■ lew with Jeanne Cruwder 50 The Indiana Union Revue 53 ATHLETICS 55 The Hoard of Control 50 -l ' ' ■ 58 M iiill li,iM 59 i„,,rr I liuni|.M.n «) ■ |l,.ii l;-sc 61 ■■[■ ' Men 62 III, I .ii.tball Squad 64 Mi, li.Mtliall Season Review 65 ' loll |.M,,tl,all Men 72 k !i:;NDEAr : □ n i sm Hs gnj ATHLi-rncs-c-.-H iH i.-i . The IM- -■ llman Football Squad 7 ' 1 The I ' .askeihall Squad ,S0 Ba!,ketball Review 81 Freshman Basketball Squad 8-1 On Being Beaten. Ijy President Bryan 85 Wrestling 86 Cross Country 87 The Baseball Squad 88 1912 Baseball 8 ' ) 1911 Baseball VO Freshman Baseball Squad 91 1911 Track Squad 92 Girls ' Basketball 95 The Department 9b Features of the Department 97 Inter-class 98 THE FU DEPARTMENT 9 ) Whiskers 102 Dean Denise ' s Golden Rule lOo Things We Might Have Printed 107 It Ripped 108 Cunning Silvester 112 Ballad of the Fizzle Ship 113 The Rape of the Rat 11-) Low Brow Music 110 The Heart Breakers 118 Thev Talk 12J Prominent Persons 122 THE INDIANA UNION 125 SORORITY SECTION 121 Kappa Alpha Thcta 130 Kappa Kappa Gamma 132 Pi Beta Phi 134 Delta Gamma 13:) Delta Zeta 138 FRATERNITIES 141 Beta Theta Pi 142 Phi Delia Theta 144 Sigma Chi 14i Phi Kaiipa Psi 148 Phi Gannna Delta 150 Delta Tau Delta 152 Sigma Nu 1 54 Kappa Sigma 15 ' i Sigma Alpha Epsilon 15S Pan-Hellenic Council lOD SOCIAL CLUBS lol Emanon 102 Wranglers lo4 Independent Lilerarv Sncietv lo6 The Delphian Club 168 The Indiana Club 170 DEPARTMENTAL CLUBS 173 The Phvsics Club 174 The Economics Club 175 Le Cercle Frangais 17b The Philosophy Club 177 Euclidean Circle 178 The History Club 179 The English Club 180 Der Deutsche Vercin 181 VARIOUS ORGANIZATIONS 183 Phi Beta Kappa 184 Young Men ' s Christian Association 185 Young Women ' s Christian Association 186 The Marquette Club 187 The Woman ' s League 188 The Boosters Club 190 The Lincoln League 192 The Jackson Club 194 The Sphinx Club 195 Alpha Chi Sigma 196 Phi Delta Kappa 197 MUSIC 199 The Orchestra 200 The Glee Cl di. ' .V . ' . ' . ' .V. ' . ' . ' . ' . ' , ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' .V . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' .V.V 204 Babette 207 Edward Ebert-Buchheim 208 THE PRESS 209 The Dailv Student 210 The Press Club 212 ORATORY AND DEBATING 213 CLASS OFFICERS 216 BIOLOGICAL STATION 217 THE FACULTY 221 POSTGRADS 233 SENIORS 237 INDEX TO ALL SENIORS 238 Order: 1. College of Liberal Arts. 2. Law School ( and Fraternities ). 3. School of ] Iedicine. (The Indianapolis Section of The Arbutus.) li.W r;Y D. Y, The Arbutus Chronicle. ADVERTISEMENTS. THE ARBUTUS Among tlic manv spots of interest J j is Arbutus Hill, a short distance from the city. It is named from the profusion ot trailing arbutus which grows on its slopes in the springtime. The tradition is that the arbutus is found now here in Indiana in such abundance, and the fragrant blossom has been selected as the college flower, while the college annual bears the name The Arbutus. Arthur M. Ev.uis, Chicago Record Herald, in on article on Indiana University L, UNDJIArJ lE A FALLEN TREE O C A M P r S inHDEAl 5 9 3 r- A) THE FIVE EDITORS Don- Hkrold, Editor-in-Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS Russell A. Bi Ci.lFFORD ilo LIKE every other Board of Arbu- j tus Editors since Volume One, we have had as our ideal the Best Ever. Ideals arc often fumbled. There arc realities about this job. The business manager, the photog- rapher, the engraver and the print- er ' s devil have had a hand, as well as the inspired scribe. We hope now that this is not the Worst Ever. :nE ' ■ ' 4i : i AMm ' . M ' THE BOARD OF BUSINESS MANA(}ERS WiLBrnl , l- ' ELi,. Uiisnioss .Manager Walter B. Bodeniiafer. President David William McXabb, Secretary Anton H. Wegener, Treasurer ■im iraBiHiraiM L ii_i ' ' k- rv.. i r ' ' ' : ■ -n. ■- ' W ' Kk.. ' 1 2 ¥= Bfe, -- i Ht ' ' flibL. m l «. n O ■i V ' ' . H H s H a ' jHH 4HpHHa EUPiti mM H K j VflBdl B MBP I Br v QTW-] ' Bk I k ' K ' - A ' f B J HT B w t - B m y MK | B iJnR, P|M .-. a 1 ij THE T W ELVE ARBUTUS STAFF 1 L TERA«V V,x„NA l.AwS, iinui, -Medics 1 Ben Hitz (hiv Lcmtnon David - leXabb Bvrl Kirklin MB, ffl Ruth White Charles E. Wilson Clinton Givan bd Faculty ||i 1 Dramatics P ' L1EPART.MENTAI. Clubs Margaret Latham ■ IJ Charles R. Sherman n Warjorie I ' .enchart Chester LeRoy Seniors ,,„,-, Athletics Glen Mnnkclt Music ' ■; . . Philip firaves Gladys Rohinson LorenSanfnnl S. A. Bristol l,ei n Kilmers Xorv al 1 l.irris Religiocs Life Features Bloor Schleppev Soci L Clubs ruATERNiTiES Gkadu.we School Albert Stump gUass Edith Hennel Floyd MacGri ft Ben Wilson Or- torv and Debating Sor..rities Earl Stroup Ruth Edwards 1 Nelle Frank The Twelve Arbutus is indebted to Pro- fessor Henry T. Stephenson for many of its photographs, and to W, M. Steir- nagl e for n,any of its kodak views. 1 Indiana expects every man to do his daddy THE STUDENT BUILDING FR A I- N 1 E HUME ' :□□! 1 EVENING NEAR THE CAMPUS . KARL „r„K,,.„X IX CII.LUWV cluud.s of blue and gold that line The western skies, like royalty ' s rich couch All draped in glory to receive its king, Who, guarded, comes to sleep, — the red sun sinks. It drops, a glowing ball, beyond the woods On yonder hill ; and through that woods of tall Tree trunks it flames like stripes of fire : — A moment rests upon the woodland crest, As if to take one final gaze before Departing, then to nothing slowdy shrinks. Yet, like a memory lingering in the mind. There rests upon the summit of a hill High to the east a glorious crown of light ; And on the hill a home, which seems ablaze. So bright its windows flash their signal fires Back toward the sunken sun that, long before. Had spread the shadows of the western woods Adown the eastern slope, and o ' er the vales. The crows fly west in twos and threes : the larks .■ re hushed, and silent are the thrushes, while The cardinal darts off across the sky To seek its cedar home. In leafy bowers The crooning doves are nestled snug. As if To improvise a milky way on earth. There blinks and flickers down along the vale A stretch of twinkling fire-flies ; and they seem A lake whose trembling waves shake back the light Of stars above. I ' ar through the dampening air The frogs ' clear serenade trills in the dark. The distant headlands fade ; the woods recede ; The nearer copses cower in the dusk ; The fences stretch away into mere dimness ; And last, the western forest slowly blends To darkness. Daunted, all the stars terrene Turn out their feeble lamps ; the frogs all hush. As if to listen to the stillness, and. Listening, forget to sing, and fall asleep. Then night. n DEAri nL HEaiani THE FINDING OF THE ARBUTUS 1 B Y J (.) H X r R I C F. C A R K i 1 As tiie crow flics in tlie evening, it has been a Vtliird of a century since I first saw the Ar- butus in the hills east of Bloomington. Doubtless before this time many men and women had drunk of the fragrance of the little flower, had seen purity in its heart and taken courage, but this was the first time it had its name in the newspaper as being at home in Indiana. The spring of 1878 had been early, then came a blizzard, with a half-foot of snow. I had found the flower one April afternoon; I could not trace it to its proper name; had placed it out of doors for study; then came the storm. But the day of which I write was a perfect day in May. Over all shown the cloudless blue sky. Led by the great teacher, Herman B. Boisen, a party consisting of Judge Robinson, Professor Harris, William Spangler — the poet of the school, who afterward married a farm, a widow with seven children, and a coon dog, in Brown county — a student, whose name I have forgotten, and myself started for the Hurricanes. Near a hun- dred years ago there had been a windstorm through the woods and it had left the name to the wild place. Where the little brook comes from the south, we stopped. At the first draw that comes into this from the east, Herr Boisen threw himself down on the leaves which had gathered there and was telling how much the landscape looked like the Adirondacks when the flower was brought to him with the inquiry: ■■JJ ' clchc Bliimcn 1st JieseF Oh, my dear Carr, he cried, let me embrace you. After he placed the flower to his face and noted its coloring and its fragrance, he continued: I can not be mistaken. It is the Arbutus, the flower of the pilgrims. It was not known before that it grew west of the Adirondacks. From Arbutus Hill we went north to the home of a German from Herr Boisen ' s native land, where supper was served in an orchard with bud- ding blossoms, and later we all went home in a wagon, singing with the joy of youth. r- EiiAj- ' iAir li K A M -- THE SEVEN C ' S Froiii Kip iriir ' s L ' Envoi. When life ' s last lesson is mastered and our knowledge is all cut and dried, When the oldest professor has fainted and the youngest instructor has died; We shall sleep! And, faith, we shall need it — lie down for a minute or two Till we get a professor that ' s easy, wiio shall give us nothing to do. The bookworms shall be conditioned, while those who purchase a book Shall be looked down upon as moss-backs. U ' e shall lounge in the cool Book Nook! We ' ll be given gold keys free-gratis; we shall dangle them (in a c hain. While we traverse the Board-Walk together, or wander down Lovers ' Lane. We shall have real fellows to walk with: — Hebel, and Jerry, and Paul ; ' e shall chatter with them a whole evening and never be bored at all, For we ' ll go to the Crescent together, and we ' ll come home by way of Cook ' s Inn, And we ' ll notice the postcards from Hershcy ' s where others before us have been Li the well-house or down Indiana. And the dean she shall never get next; And our favorite teacher shall pass us, if we tell him we haven ' t a text. Our parents shall think we are working for the joy of the work. From afar They shall send us our checks, never seeing the conditions of tilings as they are! INDliA-L iMMS . Ol i€ . ' ' i GOAT O M 1, R M c K THERE arc- two kinds of men, the is licked before he starts and tiie starts after he is licked. Of the two, the former are in the v; ow who One afternoon last fall a chap owning two college ow ho degrees came into my office with his cufifs scram- bled on the edges and his hair straggling. From lajoritv. the moment that he shadowed mv door I knew that ii!H: J ii he was a licked mortal — but he didn ' t know it, and that ' s where the possibility of a story comes in. He explained to me that he was one of the mil- lion tiiat go out into tiic world every June with a bucket of red paint, and intend to tint the zodiac a warm rose color. His specialty, as his sheep-skin assured pros- pective clients who didn ' t arrive, was juggling the revised statutes and keeping beef trusts out of jail. But he had struck out. Nobody needed him, so his bank book told him. He wasn ' t cut out for the law. Yea, verily. The biggest coin ever minted is a man ' s last dollar, my visitor informctl me, and from tiie looks of him, 1 guess he had some first-iiand in- formation. Where do I come in? I asked naively. You are the man who is to get me a job, you see, came his explanation. What can you do? I entured. Anything, from launciiing a battleship to greasing the tracks on a siiueaky turn. I liked his sand and called up a friend of mine. He was the office manager of a concern that could spend a million, but — watched the nickels. We don ' t need anybody, he answered. I told my visitor the bad news. All right, he replied, I ' ll take the next car. No, tiianks, no money. 1 have enough to get up there. That ' s all I ' ll need. I ' m going to land. And he did. To-day lie came do n to uork, I suppose, in Jiis o n motor-car — at least lie could have if he Furtiiermore, lie is making good witii a big G. Tlie man wlio did not have the nerve to turn iiim down says so — and tlie boss gets his informa- tion from the cash drawer. Three cheers for the fellow who knew how to guard his goat — for verily this is the secret of get- ting y(.)ur meal ticket. In three vears after vou are out of college you will agree with me. Just make a mental note of that. L, DJIAMAJ IDL GEOLOGY liV F L O - D M A c C; R I GEOLOGY is one of the great endurance tests in the curriculum. A student who has made one year ' s credit in geology can go nine days without water, sleep with snakes in his bed, or speak pleasantly to his best girl when she is wast- ing her time walking about the campus with some animated clothes model. Some students sign up in geology to qualify for graduation by having a suf- ficient quota of credits in science. After the cred- its are made a student feels as if he could qualify for anything from memorizing an unabridged dic- tionary to clipping nine seconds off the transconti- nental walking record. Li order to be a good geology student one should have an affable dispo- sition toward prehistoric life, a battered suit of clothes, an unfaltering set of legs, and an inter- minable railroad ticket. The ticket is for use in case of a punctured foot. The most succulent por- tions of the geology student ' s joy are served on Sat- urdays in the nature of field hikes. A field trip is a tour of investigation, conducted on foot, of the various rock formations located in neighboring states. The leader of a geology excursion strikes boldly across the campus into the distant horizon. That gives you some idea of his speed. All along his trail are scattered the geology students. At various inspection points tiie leader pauses long enough for the nearest student to catch up with him and then he explains things. Most of the ex- cursion class is in the distant rear helping the girls over the fences and rivers and fervently praying for second wind. The nearest student and the man with the kodak always make good grades. This is about the regular procedure of a geology hike. The students and the prof are generally to- gether at the starting place and the lunch period, the students contenting themselves at other times with the faint image of their instructor disappear- ing over the summit of some distant hill. At the noon-hour the students catch up with their heart- beats, take a caressing inventory of their injured anatomies, and speculate upon the distance to the nearest railroad station. After enough time has elapsed for the students to get nicely stififened up, the leader marshals the forces and without the slightest sign of fatigue, leads them nine miles out of the way home to show them a hillock similar to the one shown on page 614 in the textbook. Ar- riving at familiar scenes again, the indefatigable nearest student gets himself ready for a dance, with the assistance of four roommates, while the rest of the class go to bed and sleep past their Monday morning eight o ' clocks. X ii- ' r J innitaiatssza LUX ET ERITAS A F U X D A T I X D A ' P E M When first those sturdy pioneers Gave back this forest to the state They planned the pride of future years Whose birth, to-day, we celebrate. Upon these hills beside this stream The flower of Indiana ' s youth First realized their father ' s dream. And saw the dawn of Li,t,dit and Truth. Those fathers little thought the hall They builded then would ever grow To teach and prove that, after all, To live is really but to know. They little knew, when tliey had wrought, Their children ' s children e ' er should see The time when every honest thought Proclaims The Truth shall make vou free! And yet their hopes that men would live To see their motto used and taught Deserve all tribute we can give To those brave champions of thought. They had a faith in fellow-men; They knew that only in the mind Would live the hopes they cherished then- The brotherhood of humankind. May every good our fatiiers wrought Bear rich reward from year to year; May men forever heed tiie thought, The motto, they established here. Shine on, O Light! Forever be A beacon to the nati(jn ' s youth; A guide to all that makes us free; A symbol of eternal Truth. Live on, O I ' ruth, till time has gone! And teach us all to know and love Thy light that leads us ever on To that diviner Light above. — Earl Hudelsox. HHBL Dl€ JOHNNY f Against It WHICH would you rather be: very, very intelligent or able to raise beautiful, delicious, young onions? Surely, that was a hard question for a small bov to answer by himself without any help from his father or mother or brothers or sisters or aunts. But Johnny had just that e]uestion to answer. It was up to him, as they say in slang circles. He could not ignore the (juestion, and it was far from him to laugh at it and consider it absurd, as older folks would have done, ' du can not laugh at things in this world. Even the funny weekly is a serious matter when you get down to the meta- physics of it. Somehow Johnny was young enough to realize all this. I guess childhood is a good time because ciiildren take everything seriously and enjoy it instead of trying to sepa- rate their serious moments and their joy moments like grown- ups. So Johnny honestly and truly was up against it. Which would you rather be: very, very intelligent or able to raise beautiful, delicious, young onions? The way of it was this. Johnny Jenkweltner, to be short about it, had one of those wizard god-mammas who figure in fairy talcs and other useless literature. This is not a fairy yarn, however, so if you have whiskers as long as the finale of a comic opera, do not feel that you have to chuck this and scoot the red and yellow books over on the shelf in the nursery li- brary to make room for it. Really, Johnny ' s god-mamma was not what you would call a regular god-mamma. She had dif- ferent methods. She worked in a sensible manner. She did not say Hocus pocus and bring certain things to pass. This, rather, was Johnny Jenkweltner ' s wizard god-mamma ' s course of wonder working: she asked Johnny what he wanted or [■■■ii-i AF ' jan ' whicli he wanted (she most often narrowing it down to make his choice easy), and he told her, and she told him to get to work and get it for himself, and he did, and surely enough, he always got it. One day Mrs. God-maninia put tliis terribly iiard young onion proposition before Johnny. She iiad a way, you know, of half-way directing Johnny ' s life by the (juestions she asked him. — or able to raise beautiful, delicious, yoinig onions? Johnny scratched his head furiously. It seems to me, he ventured, that that is a ciuestion which would take some intelligence to answer correctly. A fine answer, a mighty tine answer, complimented the mother. .She ilid not always e.xact a precise yes or no reply to her interrogations. ' hat am I going to do about it, then? asked Johnny blindly. Well, the thing for you to do is to go to school and keep on going to school and keep on going to school and keep on getting more and more intelligence until you can decide which you would rather be; ' ery, ' ery intelligent or able to raise the onions. So Johnny started into school. He went t(5 school, and went to school. J3ut he could not decide. Lots of times he forgot all about the question; yet, when he remembered it again, he still could not decide. He kept climbing up higher and higher until he was away up a junior or senior or some kind of post-graduate at a college. For a long time, the young onion side of the answer had appealed to him as ridiculous, but he was not sure and did not decide. Then he began to change, and one day he made up his mind; yes, sir, in favor of the young onions. He had had his eye on some very, very intelligent persons. L HINPL- P ll HES WEI B AUBUTUS ini They buzzed around in the school where Johnny studied and tallied to each other over their tea and thin wafers about such and such an element in Ibsen, or the race problem on Mars, or the utilitarianism of consciousness. All that conversation bewildered Johnny the first time that he saw it changing hands on the campus. It dazzled him just as the fake fancy work on a circus wagon did tiie first time he saw a parade. He made up his mind to hang around the back yards of these intellectual mastodons and grab the crumbs that were swept out the back door. He resolved to stick about and get both ears crammed full. He worked hard at it, and actually became able, after lie had been in college a few years, to do the thing himself pretty well. He was making headway straight for the realm of the very, very intellectual. One day Johnny went down into a basement under a bank to get his shoes half-soled by a shoemaker who had iiis studio d(.) Mi there. As he went down the steps, his mind was op- pressed by the iiuestion of the adecjuacy of modern scientific methods of classification. He tripped, and fell down three or four stone steps. He did not hurt himself, but he was brought to realize that he possessed such a prosaic thing as a toe. He had stumped that toe, and it hurt. There is nothing theoretical about a hurting toe. Althougii tiie pain was brief, it served to jar Johnny ' s state of mind. He went down and sat in his stocking feet while the shoemaker fixed his shoes. The shoemaker said little, and he did not stop to write poetry about his joy, but Johnny could see it in his eye as he pounded tacks. Why not; he was doing his best to keep the human race from getting its feet wet? Then it was that Johnny decided to raise onions. If he could do something to get a joy-gleam like that in his own eye, it would be great. He decided that young onions were the thing. IIL .- i Johnny took his degree and went home and cultivated onions. He proved to be an A-number-one onion raiser. He raised the most beautiful, the most delicious young onions in the county. People came fnr miles to buy his onions. Tiie thing that surprised him most was tiiat wiiat little intellect lie had acquired came in handy in tiic onion business. You do not have to be a higii brow just because you iia ' e read a lot. Johnny was not satisfied with ordinary onions. He sciiemed around to find a way to raise onions de luxe. It was only last week that Johnny had his wizard god- mamma over to an onion banquet. He liad told her tiiat he was going to spring something new in the onion line, and slie was fearfully impatient, altiiough siie was a wizard, until tiic banquet bell was rung, ' i at do you tiiink Johnny served? Odorless young onions, that is what. Young onions without an odor, raised in his own garden. Odorless onions, Johnnv Jenkweltner, inventor. Mrs. God-mamma was tickled almost to death, and Johnny was glad that he had chosen onions as his life job. They say that he is working now on onions with vari- ous flavors, like a soda fountain. By next season, he will be able to furnish you with strawberry onions or pineapple onions, and, maybe, banana onions. F Jm E X D CORPUS c. H R I s r I Y M A A At last! said Benton with genuine relief. TItc expression was called forth by the final attainment of the cathedral square after a half-hour ' s pull up tiie long hill from the quay. The South American sun beat down pitilessly, and Benton and Dingley had felt their flesh cooking beneath the khaki. L DIAJ IMS i It ' s a dismal sort of dump! Dingley said wearily. You have no appreciation for the artistic, Benton an- swered, shifting his artist ' s kit from one arm to the other. Perhaps not, Dingley said. But we ' ve come all the way up here, and I suppose we might as well go into the cathe- dral and sec what it ' s like. They approached the entrance. Unchallenged, they passed under the wide portal and through a lofty vestibule into the dim interior. Far off, before the altar probably, tall wa. candles were burning. The atmosphere was close and op- pressive. As their eyes became accustomed to the dim light the in- terior gradually took more definite form. Faded old pictures of the saints hung along the walls. Before numerous shrines smoky lamps were burning. The two young men surveyed it all in silence. ' l o the artist there were tones and colors. To Dingley, the setting for a romance. A whining voice interiupted their reflections. Senor! Senor! Benton turned. The Sacristan, a stunted, crippled native, stood before them iiolding a candle in his hand. Senor! said the Sacristan, for a piece of gold I will show you our treasure — the picture of the Christ. The picture — Benton began. Oh, Senor! Such a picture! Great, large, magnificent! Benton turned to Dingley. What about it? he asked. This must be the picture of which we heard. Shall we see it? Of course! Dingley laughed. Benton held out a piece of gold to the Sacristan. Show us your picture, he said. The Sacristan hobbled along ahead of them, leading the way out into the entrance hall. From there they entered a dark corridor where the Sacristan ' s candle threw eerie shadows L. lEC ODiiai on the rough stone walls. At the end of tiiis corridor was a huge bolted door. After much clanking of iron tiie door opened. The room within was dark. The caiuilc sent a feeble gleam to the opposite wall, dii which Bentdn made uLit dimly the outlines of a large picture. The Sacristan called and a door on the left opened, admit- ting two natives. Under the Sacristan ' s directions they threw open the window shutters, admitting the daylight. The picture flashed out as if by magic. It was a huge can- vas on which the Christ was represented as being taken down from the cross to be prepared by the women for burial. The most noticeable thing about the picture was the body of the Christ: it stood out with peculiar distinctness ; it seemed almost luminous. Wonderful! Benton cried. The work of some great master. With the eagerness of the artist he examined the painting more closely. In it were subtleties of color such as he had seldom seen before. AA ' ith a magnifying glass he went over certain parts carefully, noting the wonderful technique. Unconsciously he laid his right hand on the body of the Christ. At the same moment a qtiick, angry voice sounded behind him: Beware! It is death, stranger! One of the natives had spoken. Benton started back. The Sacristan ga e a borrihed cry. An old priest came hurrying in. Tumult arose. Cries, curses, imprecations sounded from all directions. From nowhere and everywhere men seemed to come — angry men gesticulating wildly. Benton gazed about him in horror. Dinglev stood surveying the scene with a puzzled look. The tumult increased. Benton, cowering, frightened, aghast, was the center of a wild crowd, each one of whom pointed at him an accusing finger, crving: Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi ! He has dared ' touch the ' bodv of Christ! J i : r; rl ' - iL i M iiDDC Suddenly to Dingley came great light. He forced his way to Benton ' s side. Quick! he whispered. Do as I tell you. Back off from the picture and kneel in prayer. Arise with arms extended in supplication to the Christ. Go througli this ceremony three times, then fall flat upon your face. Bewildered, wondering, Benton obeyed. With his first obeisance tlie chuiior ceased. The people backed away and stood watching him in silence. When Benton had at last fallen face downward before the picture Dingley rushed toward him and raising him up thrust a drawing pad into the poor artist ' s trembling hands. Now draw! he commanded in a low voice. Draw the body of the Christ! Benton obeyed. Dingley turned to the crowd. A miracle! he cried. This great artist, pointing to Benton, had lost the use of his hand. A vision told him to seek this picture and to touch the body of the Christ that again his cunning might be re- stored. Behold! Even now he draws the body of the Christ with his pencil! The crowd pressed about Benton. Sure enough, growing line by line on the paper, the body of the Christ appeared. A miracle! tlie people shouted. God has given us a miracle! Corpus Christi ! Corpus Christi ! THE I-: . D WHEN I WENT C Y C L () N I N G SINCE 1 was no higher than the hub of a blue milk wagon, the good queen Genevieve has been ever faithful in re- warding my diligent efforts. When I learned my a-b-c ' s, I distincth ' remember, Genevieve paid her initial visit and told I iNE ' ilA..! :aDi ??T ft ' 4 H y if t i ' - jy H 8 me to think of what I would like to be for an hour and to say Skrnglmgtsp three times. Outside a beautiful snow had just fallen. I decided to call the bluff of the generous fairy. I said Skrnglmgtsp three times, and, in the twinkling of a star, I found myself out in the snow, a cross-eyed, wooden- legged little boy upon a sled that slid up hill as well as down, as 1 had wislicd. I have learned to have faith in the young lady by this time. One day last term I decided to invite Genevieve by careful preparation of a German lesson. I worked far into the night, and when I had finished the translation of the last sentence, Genevieve fluttered into the room and said: What is your order, please? I believe that I would like to be a cychme a little ■hile, I returned. Skrnglmgtsp, Skrnglmgtsp, Skrnglmgtsp. In a fifth of a second I looked at myself and beheld a full- grown, adult cyclone. I was up in the air, as it were. I hardly knew how to conduct myself as a cyclone. 1 turned to ask Genevieve for advice, but she had flown back to the mines. I flitted over to the roof of the Observatory and rested in meditation upon the dome. A firm resolution came into my mind. 1 decided to go back of the buildings and tear up the board walk. I gathered my cyclonic skirts carefully about me and made my way past Kirkwood Hall. I then started in at the west end of the walk to raise the slats. I had played havoc with about twenty feet when I heard a loud buzz, and turning, I saw Genevieve. I thought you had more discretion, my ciiild, she said sadly. You are a naughty cyclone. If you tear up the board walk, iiow do you expect the Fair Ones of Forest Place to get over to school? If you destroy this thing, how do you expect them to get back when they have been at school long cnougii for us to get tired of them? How — ? :m Enough, dear queen, I replied. Take back your cy- H clone clothes. I want to be an ordinary boy again, a common mortal among the co-eds. THE END THE SLOW D E A r H A TERRIBLE plague broke out one day in the land of Aborama. The same disease had ravished the country once before; and people then called it the Slow Death. It uas a horrible disease: the body slowly shriveled out of shape and size, and this distorted form then gradually became pur- ple. The change of color was always accompanied by terrible agony, until death came as a relief. When the Slow Death again began to devastate the beauti- ful land of Aborama, the peasants flocked to Almora, the cap- ital. There they hoped to keep the epidemic without the city walls. But just when hopes were brightest a slow death was reported in tiie squalid district, and soon the pestilence had spread over that wJK.ile part of the city. In crowded Almora there lived two brothers, Balma and Alba. Balma, the elder, had been given a high government position some years before ; and Alba envied his brother. Envy had grown to wrath, and wrath to iiatred; until, wiien tiie plague appeared, the younger brother ' s ill-feeling iiad de- veloped into a fierce grudge. Mien Alba saw the slow form of DeatJi stalking abr(jad in the swarming city, he conceived a wicked idea. He W(juld kill Balma! Yes, he would kill his brother, hide him a few days till the body colored, and tiien throw the purple corpse into the garden, wjiere it would appear tJiat the plague had iiiu:. claimed another victim. Accordingly the next morning, when the rest of the household were awaiting reports of the fatalities of the previous day, Alba lured his brother into an attic room, and there slew him by a blow on the neck. He concealed the body in an old chest, which he locked before leaving the garret. The next morning Almora was excited with tlie report that Balma, a member of a prominent family and a high official under the king, was missing. Soldiers of the guard searched in ain for a trace of the missing man. At the end of the thin! day the mystery was as deep as ever. During these days of excitement Alba was apparently the calmest man in Almora. He joined in the search, but main- tained almost complete silence. His actions aroused some sus- picion among the guard, but they resolved to watch and wait. In the early morning of the fourth day, while every one else in the castle was yet asleep, Alba stole through the dark halls and up the stairs to the attic. He crept over to the chest, un- locked it, and lifted out the form of his dead brother. After wrapping the corpse in his great army-cloak, the murderer lugged his victim down through the castle again as i]uietlv as possible, stole into the garden, and there deposited the form of his dead brother behind a rose-bush. He unwrapped the body, threw his cloak over his arm, and hurried back through the bushes and out of the garden. A servant of the houseiiold found the corpse of the missing man next morning, and immediately spread the news. A guard found also upon a brier near the dead body a shred of green silk, which was recognized as a piece of Alba ' s scarf. Where was Alba? He was searched for, but could not be found. One of the guards reported that Raima ' s neck was broken, and the guard, in turn, was apprised of the old grudge between the brothers. And now Alba was missing; he was certainly guilty! JINDEA L The guards sought diligently for the suspected murderer. Late in the evening of that day a report came that Alba had been found. A rag-buyer had discovered him in his cellar. He seized the fugitive, bound him, and, late that night, ap- peared at the castle with the captive. Alba was tried before the king fi ' e days later. Eminent counsel was emploxed on botii sides. The pleadings were long and heated. To the spectators it was clear that Alba was guilty. The prisoner sat between his lawyers in utter silence. He showed plainly, however, that he had no hope. He twitched nervously, and his countenance revealed a guiltiness. On the last day of the trial, when the prisoner was led be- fore the king, the people in the room noticed that liis face and bands were a little drawn and w rinkled, and tiiere was a small purple spot on one clieek. The king saw this, too. When the last plea was answered by the last defense, when the trial was over, and the people waited anxiously to hear the prisoner ' s sentence pronounced, tiie king looked steadily at the criminal and said solemnly: I find )ou, Alba, guilty of tiic murder of your brother; and as punishment 1 gi ' e you liberty. T 11 E E X U 1 n R O L BY IIASSA Any one else want a bottle? Last one in this box, boys. J Only fifty cents. The gentleman right over there. Let tiie gentleman tii rough, please. Fifty cents. Thank you. A ow, boys, ni iiavc to open anc thcr box. ' ile I ' m do- ing it, Jimmy will entertain you. jimmv, a coon, wliose color was of a doubtful origin, DEAI J picked up an old travel-battered guitar and sang coon-songs to its plink-a-plink-a-plang. All right, Jim, that will do. Now boys, gather around. Don ' t any one leave; Jim will sing for us again in a minute. I ' ve just opened another box of my famous discovery, Sassa- frola, the only sure cure for rheumatism. This is nnt a patent medicine, boys, and 1 don ' t claim tiiat it will cure anything and everything, but it ' ll knock the rheumatism every time. Look at me, eighty, and as spry as a four-year-old. You wouldn ' t think that I had suffered from rheumatism for years, but I have. For ten years I was as helpless as a babe. Look at me now. That ' s what Sassaf rola did for me, and that ' s what it will do for you, brother. I tried every cure on the market, and when they all failed I experimented with the wonderful iiealing properties of sassafras, and Sassafrola is the result. Tiic regular price, boys, is one dollar per bottle, but to intro- duce this great remedy to suffering humanity, I am selling it for a few days at only fifty cents. ' hile Dr. Elijah Windergast was explaining the magic powers of Sassafrola, three pipes and two cigarettes strolled down the street. Here, fellows, what ' s the old guy ravin ' about? asked Pipe No. I. Some patent medicine graft, replied Cigarette No. 2. He ' s pretty good. Reminds me of my public-speaking class, said Pipe No. 3, sending a funnel of blue smoke into the air. So tiie pipes and tiie cigarettes came to a halt. I say, fellows, spoke up Pipe No. 2, the guy ' s got his spiel down pat. It ' s worth fifty cents to hear him. Better contribute then, suggested Cigarette No. i. Sure; Lm on, and Pipe No. 2 was elbowing his way through the crowd. One bottle, please. I523 U 11 1] EN on AN ■nil All right, young man, you ' ll feel entirely different after one application of Sassafrola. First bathe the affected part with hot water and then apply Sassafrola. All right. Professor, here ' s your fifty. Boys, did you see that young college student buy? You can ' t fool an educated man. Sassafrola is no fake and the college people know it. Two bottles, did you say? One dol- lar, please. Thank you. Say, wjiat are you going to do witii it? queried Pipe No. I of Pipe No. 2. Do with it; watch me. I ' m going to take it to the chem- istry lab and analyze it. We ' ll have some fun. That nigiit Elijah removed his iiair and beard and laid them on the liresser, while Jimmy washed the black from his ears. Pretty good day, Jo, commented tJie doctor to his part- ner, who in private life answered to the name of Jo Murphy, and who, in the privacy of their room, called the celebrated Doctor Windergast, Hank Sanders. Twenty dollars apiece to-day, announced Hank, arrang- ing the coin in neat piles on the bed. The following morning Doctor Windergast and Jimmy opened services at ten o ' clock with a touching little ballad by Jimmy, accompanied by himself. A crowd soon gathered and the halves began to drop into Elijah ' s pocket. Business was warming up in excellent style when Pipes No. 2, No. i and No. 3 and Cigarettes No. i and No. 2 joined the crowd. Gradually Pipe No. 2 squirmed through the small mob and got close enough to the doctor to whisper, Say, Docto r, I bought a bottle here yesterday and I ' d like to help you a little — give a testimonial, see? Sure, boys, and the doctor departed from his regular discourse to say, Yesterday afternoon this young ciiap came sDJIAI downtown all drawn witii rheumatism. He could iiardl - walk. He bou,u;ht a bottle of Sassatrola, and look at him to day. Pipe Xo. 2 placed one hand on the platform and vaulted lijj;htly to the doctor ' s side. Yes, gentlemen, the professor has described my former condition, and look at me to-daw I can not sav enough for the professor and his great disco erv. Here, Professor, accept this little token, and he handed P lijah a slip of paper, whicli Elijah unfolded and read. U ' hat Elijah read was: Your Snssiifrohi roiit iiiis, fr.iirr ,-() per rent .llroliol JO pcrcrnt S isstifnis jiiifc I J per eent Red eoloriiis: .) ' ' ' ' ' ' ' « ' Perfume J per rent Get out of toicn at once. Miile p]lijah read. Pipe No. 2 waxed eloquent. Raising his arm in a broad, forceful gesture, lie grasped F lijah ' s beard and shook it before the crowd. Gentlemen, Sassafrola will not only cure rheumatism, but will produce a full crop of whiskers — ' He never finished. The dignified Doctor ' indergast, minus his whiskers, was endeavoring to catch the fleet-footed Jim, who had a half- block start. After them, fellows, yelled Pipes Xo. 1, Xo. 2 and Xo. 3 and Cigarettes No. i and No. 2, as the excited mob started in pursuit. When each man had run to the extent of his fifty cents he turned and walked back to town. By the time the police force had been notified and had de- cided upon the best manner in which to proceed. Dr. Elijah P. Windergast and Jimmy were kicking up the dust on unfre- quented roads five miles from town. T H E [■: X D ■■D. ' f... Ai B UNDE AN A B R I D G V, D ROM A N C E HE was a no-date man. To-night, however, he was hav- ing a date. He held her hand on the Kappa house porch. He held it for a moment, and then lie let it drop to her side, back to its normal position. The force of graxity carried it back. He told her good-night perfunctorily. Then he beat it to the Book Nook to get a sandwich. He had started out for the evening with a quarter. It had been his plan to take her to the Crescent and come back past the Book Nook and spend the other fifteen cents there. She would probably order a ten-cent drink. She had been in Indiana University society long enough for that. He could take a five- cent drink — and the (]iiartcr would be disposed of. But he had grown reckless downtown, and after the Crescent, he had taken her to the Rex. It was so easy to entertain her at the ure show. That left but a nickel. He was hungry when 1 he passed the Book N( to wait. After he left ' . )k, but L-r, he ' he realized that he would iia ent back. Two or three days later he saw her in Biology Hall. She was radiant. Her eyes shone as only the eyes of the girl with whom you are about to haxe a romance can shine. Her hair was still the same wonderful wad of gold. When she smiled at him, he was so into.xicated that he ran his face into the sharp end of an umbrella that some girl in front of him hail umier her arm. That night he sat huddled over the hot-air register in his room. He had been silent for a half-hour. He looked over at his roommate and said : Aw , I guess I won ' t have any more dates this term. Why? You said tliat you were going to learn to roll cigarettes and have a string of dates this year, just to round out your college education. It ' s no fun. You have to get your date a week ahead, and all that week you are in a strain about the event to come. Things are coming into your head that you are going to say. And you ' re worried if the laundry will get back in time. I ' m done for this term. Your romance has fizzled? Yes — yes, but the rustle of a woman ' s skirt has passed across my life. Thereafter, she was his old girl, ' hen they passed on the campus, he remembered that he had had a date with her — mavbe she did too. He was interested in what fellows went to see her. He gloried in her triumph as the bar-maid in the college play. He was glad to hear that she was starring in her classes. He had a sort of, well, a sort of romantic attitude towards her. ' Tis as well to have loved and quit as to have become more heavily involved. THE E X D THE CAT C A M K n A C K come back, hold him or NO, he savagely rcllected. he would Come back, why? What was there 1 attract him? Three months before, George William Spriggs had landed in Bloomington to attend the University. Fresh from the scenes of his high school graduation, fresh from the idoliza- tion of his little brother and proud mother, his head crammed .3] UN E) HAN. with all the knowledge of a high school senior, he had come here. And what had been his lot? He, the pride of his relatives, the acknowledged leader of his class, had become the butt of all the near-wit of his sopho- more friends. His wise saws sprung at the table had been laughed at. He had been kidded, and subjected to involun- tary plunges in the bathtub. His room had been stacked. He blushed with shame at the memory of his convict-style hair-cut. And now he sat on his trunk, apart from his friends, and resolved never to come back, never to endure the hardships of a freshman ' s life again. No! He would stay at home. The best men he knew did not believe in higher education, anyway. George William Spriggs had enjoyed seven days of the vacation. The first day had been spent in handshaking and smiling, the other six in the company of the only girl in the world. Still there was something lacking. He hated to admit it, even to himself, but he missed the rough, good-natured man- ner in which Happy Sanders awakened him. He missed the two-block run to breakfast and the joy of eating against the clock. He missed even his classes. He missed Big Smith ' s wise arguments on the subject, Why doesn ' t the stomach digest itself? He wondered if Jones found chemical com- pounds in the butter at home. He realized that he had en- joyed the jokes at the table, even if he had been the cause of them. He almost wished that some one would stack his room. Home ways seemed crude and devoid of life. He wondered if tiiey had bonfires in the winter term back at school. How he longed for another class scrap. He decided he really owed it to himself to go back. A man needs at least a year of college training. Besides, next term he would not iiave to fight Demon Algebra. ' A ' ell, Gov, he remarked that night to his father, guess I ' d better be thinking of going back, eh? IDIAI J Actresses will happen even in the best ot families THE DRAMA WE are all natural born Sarali Bernhardts. But we do not all get a booking. The dra- matic wccding-out process is a long one. Some of us ha c haii enough when we fall out of a trapeze in the barn-lutt revival of Barnum ' s circus, but most of us have to get the hook hard and often be- fore we realize that we are not quite Eddie Foys. They have to pull us back out of the spotlight a number of times before we are ready to concede that we are shooting away over the heads of the audience. Some of us have to go up against a Strut and Fret try-out before we give up. The only thing that keeps us all from going on the stage is that we want a home of our own. So we yield to Fate, and are content to pay $1.50 to sit ut in front and see how poorly the other members of (jur profession perform. Z BIAJ] - F. TARKINGTON BAKER ctor in the New Drama Course and NEW DRAMA COURSE WITH the opening of the winter term of school, there was added to the curricuUnn a course in dramatic instruction. Tlie course is under the direction of F. Tarkington Baker, dra- matic critic for an Indianapolis newspaper. Mr. Baker has been in this sort of work for manv vears and is very competent to take charge of a class of this kind. It is the intention of the course to lead the stu- dent to an intelligent understanding of good plavs. It is one of the aims of the course to teach the stu- dent to judge a play, not from the literary stand- point, but from the dramatic point (if view. At the end of each term tlie students are ex- pected to close their work by writing a short play in which the things that they have learned in class are practiced. The class is working in conjunction ith Strut and Fret, the dramatic club. It receives practical ideas of the stage by attending the rehearsals given bv the club. JiNE ' iA r STRUT AND FRET STAFF Paul McNutt, President Deo Horton, Vice-President Gladys Lee, Secretary Charles Sherman, Business Manager Wilbur Glover, Stage Manager MR. CARLYLE TO STRUT AND FRET; i p Pmlm-e ' Produc,- ' y a Were it hut the pitifullest mtinitesimal fraction of a ProJnccIt! DL REORGANIZED STRUT FRET T HIS is an age of reform. Along with the initiatix ' e and referendum, the recall of judges, the paving of Bloom- ingon streets and other anarciiial measures, comes the reform of Strut and Fret, the last stand of conservatism. Under the direction of F. Tarkington Baker, the one of- ficial and authorized dramatic club of Indiana University has opened the gates. It has been amplified, augmented, poked up and shaken down. It has been led to recognize the exist- ence of talent in the most unheard-of places and to resume its pristine policy of making two actors grow -here but one grew before. The constitution has been altered, the membership limit omitted and the arbitrary dividing line between girls and men left out. It has been made possible for the club to take in those who have ability in other lines besides mere acting. Scene painters (and shifters), sketch and play constructors, stage managers, musical directors, truthful press agents and honest business managers all have an equal chance with the reigning star and the comedy old woman. Plays are now double cast in order to get the best actor for each part, and the care bestowed upon the smallest details re- sults in productions of professional finish. The club has adopted the policy of purchasing its own scenery and properties. It already has a good start towards the equipment of a theater of its own. 3 INDIAN ■ DEAN A I STRUT A X D F R F. T f V l MICE AND MEN K il MADELEINE LUCETTE R V L E - mm HARRIS GRAND Friday, Novemher 22, 19 12 «  THE PEOrLE IX THE PLAY BLOOR SCHLEPPEV Mark Embury (sclinlar and philosopher) Bloor Schlci.pey Roger Goodlake ( friend and neighbor) Deo H.Ttoii Captain George Lovell (his nephew) Paul McXutt i Ivit Barniger (a fiddler) Fred Trueblood Peler ( Embury ' s servant) Humphrey Barbour Joanna Goodlake (wife of Goodlake) Anna Harper Mrs. Deborah ( Embury ' s housekeeper ) Helen Spain Peggy ( Little Britain ) Jeanne Crowder Matron (of the FoundHng Hospital) Mary Craig Beadle (of the Foundling Hospital) Ralph V. Mitchell Molly (a kitchen maid) Glulvs Lee Orphans of the Foundling Hospital ; Gayle Marshall Mary Louise Bagot Ruth Herdrich Georgia Sembower Maurine Starling Gladys Lee Bernice Robinson leanne Crowder Mary Wells Act I-Mark Embury ' s study. Act II— Living room in Mr. Embury ' s house. Nearly tuu years have elapsed. Act III— Masquerade ball at Belsize house. Act IV— South cottage at Hamstead. Si.x weeks later. ° ;Li| J] UN DEAR. STRUT AND F R E T THE LEOPARD Under the Dii F. TarkiiiKtoii Bake HARRIS c; R A N D = Tuesday, March 12, 1912 CAST OF CHARACTERS James Rand, son of Senator Rand Paul V. McNutt David Ennisley, socialist college professor. Charles R. Sherman Stephen Rand, United States senator Lawrence Bennett John Bride, a Scotchman and retired builder Louis Plost Ludovic Karasac, a mill product Frederic Durham Thomas Davis, a politician Ralph W. Mitchell George Hayes, of the Rand Cotton Mills. .Robert G. Patterson Sergeant Kinney, a detective officer Lee McDonald Denietra, wife of Ennisley Ruth Herdrich Louise, secretary to Professor Ennisley Marjorie Benckart Ellen, a maid. . ' . Gayle Marshall Acts— The tirst act takes place about 7 p. m., after dinner Saturday night. Between the first and second acts an hour is supposed to elapse. The third act takes place on the same night an hour before the dawn. Scenes— The scenes for the three acts are in the home of Senator Rand near the Rand mills in the suburbs of Chicago. Time— Present. « • Special scenery for the production was built by Harry Bol- ton, of Indianapolis. Stage and lighting effects arranged by the club ' s stage and business manager. THE LEOPARD is one of the strongest plays that Strut and Fret has ever presented. It was secured for Strut and Fret by Mr. Baker, and had never been presented upon any stage. The author and the real name of the play are unknown. It is to have a New York production next season. ID IIA. J : lM TNi -?4: l¥ ?1-:t | j d i 1 THE presentation of The Servant in the House is exceedingly difficult because the play is one of character rather than of plot. Con- cerning tile wisdom of selecting sucii a pla -, T w Daily Studt ' ut publisiied tlie following: First of all to be commended is tile courageous, yet common- sense point of view shown in the selection of a play. Apparently those in ciiarge of the matter decided that to attempt a fine thing and risk failure is better than to do a more ordinary thing with the assurance of a certain ordinary success. The result has certainly justified their decision. Possibly the secret of tjie success of the per- formance was tjie fact that the actors had tiiem- selves been influenced by the ' itality, the ilynamic content, and tiie high seriousness of Kennedy ' s masterpiece. The successful the character and s House is an e ent of importance in tiie history of the drama at Indiana. tation of a production of g of The Servant in the T HE HOUSE THE INDIANA CLLB TH1{ SERVANT THE HOUSE BY CHARLES RANN KENNEDY =  MEN ' S GYMNASIUM Saturday, February 10, 1912 =?= n:RS(ixs IX rill-: i ' i.av lanu ' . r. n.MHln Mak,-ln II.;. 11. 1). llir . ln.t Rrvercn.l. ihc L-nl l:isliM|, ,,f l.aiica-liiir lesse Gall.iwav Uk KcMTind W.lhani Snivlhe, Vicar Fred Gorman . unt.e. ilK- -icar uife Cora Hennel Mar . iluir niece Susie Thro Kiil.ert Snnth, ..f neci varv rccupati. n Fred Myers Rn.yer.. a p.iMc linv Clement Steignicier -Maiisnn, a l.utlcr Albert Stump Ti.ME— . n early morning in spring. Pl. ce— An English country vicarage. « - Ukder the Direction of Miss Hennel UN B IAN. JEANNE CROWDER AN INTERVIEW WITH JEANNE CROWDER Editor-in-CIiicfs Note- photograph taken only 1 it is absolutely necessary, the papers. This interview without her knowledge— in She abhors publicity, an ' was secured without he pite of the fact that she i YOl ' want M know h(iw 1 felt the lirst time 1 was (in the stao;c? Oh, how shall I tell you? Jeanne Crowder pulled at her pearl lavalier in a little way all her own. If you could have seen me with the half-dozen American Beauty roses that came after the first act, I wouldn ' t have to go to all this trouble of explaining to you, she went on, with a little wave of her hand that indicated quite clearly that she was just dying to go to the trouble of explaining. You see they were the first roses I had ever got from a man in mv life, and would you believe it — mother had to hint the next day that it wasn ' t quite good form to carry six roses down- tow n when one was going to shop. I have never been so happy in my life as I was over that play. My happiness was all the greater because it was rooted in disappointment, for my success was as Maria, the maid, and I had insisted upon playing Lydia Languish. You — Lydia Languish? I gasped. Oh, yes, she said, with killing calmness. I nearly pulled my nose off ' trying to make it long because some one who wanted to be nasty said he couldn ' t imagine Lydia with a snub nose. Why, I spent whole days trying to look pale and blase. But here the picture of her plump, gymnastic little self as Lydia o erwhelmed her and she put her head over on the dressing-table and shook. ■TDHAI J Well, she said. recovering he self, I to college, and Strut and Fret hac the nei give a plav in which had no part. I was s that I turned down a bid to their measlv show. Then they gave Sweet Lavender and put me in for Lavender, a pleading, beseeching part that suited me about as well as Lydia Languish. For weeks, I threw myself before chairs and poured out my heart to their stifif backs. Later 1 threw myself before the sisters. Sometimes they cried. n that case, I always took them to the Book Nook. Just then her roommate broke in: These shoes will rub blisters, they ' re so big. Fm sure that isn ' t going to juirt me, an- swered Jeanne, dodging a powder puff. ' hy don ' t vou get them to fitr she said as she limped painfully t(j her trunk. Mine do. Those pictures r Do vou like them? I think they are horrid. ' Fhen she leaned forward and looked at herself carefully. Not one good pic- ture. If just one inch were good looking, bet Fd make the most of that inch. Fll ha e to go downstairs to curl my hair. Don ' t talk till 1 come back. At the door she turned. Got a good one on Cornelia last night. Tom asked me how I burned my finger. I told him I did it curling Cornelia ' s hair. Coming back in a few moments, she said, ish I knew what dress was going with me to the dance to-night. ' Fhat dumb little pink thing? Very well. Rose and black tulle in my hair with a pink dress? Are you crazy? 1 — not susceptible to persuasion! and she placed her hands on her hips, stuck her left foot forward, and winked with both eves emphatically. ' es, just one moment, she said softly in an- swer to a call from downstairs. Then turning to me, placing her forefinger perpendicular to her forehead, she said, Now it ' s up to me to make up my mind what to wear, and she began jerking out llimsy little dresses from everywhere. Fll not wear that. It looks like a rail fence. This blue one was new just fifteen years ago. Yes. Oh, yes, Fm all ready. Of course, Fm ready. Just a minute, till I turn out the light. Hook me into this pink dress, won ' t you. I think perhaps you will Hnd the hooks running up the back. She put her slippers into her bag, stuck her Strut and Fret pin on, and reached for her e -ening coat. — L L. INB)IiAN. E I N AMERIKANISCHES DUELL T.USTSPIEL IN EINEM AUKZUGE AUI-I EFIHRTVOR DEM DEUTSCHE N VEREIN ■=?° Mittvvoch, den 24ten Januar 1912 Im Studenteiu ' ebaLuie LE CERCLE FRAN AIS LE MALADE IMAGINAIRE M O L I E R E ] ERSOXEX Hele.K ou Sum ( Freiherr von Rodtr Alfeld (Maler) Charlotte (Zofc Ijli Diener TheaterdiTLktortn Requisitennuisli-i widow Mivs support li Mil pla, W-.S u ,. Frl Ih.r, Ruth Ht-rr Guirgc Hxsh.p Hcrr Waltir Hiittmaun Frl Mabd Er«ui lUir llottiid Smith 1, und I I 111 1)1 Llsli llui Dnndd lKt CAST (JF CHARACTERS Argan. the imaginary invalid Artlmr L. Eaton Beline. Argan ' s second wife Daphne Hoffman Angelique, in love with Cleante Mae Trovillion Louison, Argan ' s little daughter Marion Morris Hcraldc, Argan ' s brother Everett McCullough Ch,inle, Angeliqne ' s lover John M. Smith ,M, Diafuirus. a doctor Robert Lang I li.imas Diafoirus, in love with Angelique William Vogel M. Purgon, Argan ' s doctor Robert Lang M. Fleurant, an apothecary William Vogcl de Bonnefoi, a notary Shirley Seward T.iinette. servant in Argan ' s house Lois Stewart ■= Le ilaladc Imaginaire is one of Alolierc ' s best comedies, and deals with a man who thinks he is very ill, his second wife who wishes to profit by his will, having persuaded him of this. He wishes to marry his daughter to a phy -ieian, but she opposes. The father finally gives her to the man she loves, •after he has discovered, by pretending to be dead, the hypoc- risy of his wife and the true affection of his daughter. !r ' !:. J ' TA J 1 H E INDIANA L N ION- REX ' L ' K The Ne-.v University Sho-.c ziT last the folly of an annu j been realized and this al minstrel show has year has seen the in- tn)ducti(in of something new in the line of athletic benefits. Miene -er a show is given for the beneht of athletics e ' ery one, of course, must go and it is a real hardship to make an innocent and inisuspect- ing student body go and hear the reason why a chicken crosses the road in a dialect that resembles Norwegian rather than the language of the negro of the sunny south. For years the other scho,,ls .)f the middle west have been giving real-for-sure musical shows, and Indiana has this year come into her own. The Revue is a good idea. It took because it contained snap. There were no waits, no drags. In short, something was going . n all the time. Als.), that which was going on was good. The customs ol the school and the ear ' s exents were burlesi|ued in as thorough a manner as though Bert Williams and iiis whole band of Follies had been here. The parts were well taken, the songs well sung, and the music the latest. The Fnion Revue is established, and will have developed into a tull-fledged tradition after the show ne. t year. IIHDEAN. r H ¥. L K O I A R D RE T OLD THK students of the Rand Medical School are on a strike because the faculty has asked tiicni to dissect a leopard. Professor Ennisley, an aiiti-vi ' iscctinnist, lias tnUi the boys that it would he unbrotherly to cut up on a guileless leopard. Professor Rand, of the medical school, who is a candidate f.)r the dedication ..f the college annual, has about made up his mind to excuse the students from dissecting the leopard in order to win their votes in the coming election. One night, about this time, Kerosene Ladoga, one of the students, throws a bimi out of the medical laboratory, and Professor Rand, in a spasm of gratitude, not onlv excuses the hoys from the task, but buys a cillar for the leopard and has his stenographer wash its spots off with typewriter gasoline. Then he signs the anti-vivi- section pledge, just as the day dawns intermittently. A DR. M. TIC CRITICISM Cicrtrude, the Funnel l ' actory Girl, pre- sented at the Creamery last night, was good. It was a strong play from beginning to end, and there was not a dull minute in the whole show. Ihc plot was well drawn, and the characterizations were true to lite. The scenery was appropriate, as well as elaborate, and the lighting effects were effective. The only weak spot in the show was the hrst act, which did not come up to the standard of the other two acts. The dramatic effect of the sec- oiui act was weakened greatly by Gertrude ' s fmn- bling around in her siiirtwaist for the papers when she said her line, ' T ha ' e tlie papers. She said afterward that the delay was due to her having sent the papers to the laundry in tlie afternoon in the pocket of her other shirt, but the explanation was too late to save the act. The tiiird act was superiUious. The story ended properly at the end of the second act, and there was no excuse for dragging it out. On the whole, however, the per- formance was excellent. Special credit should be accorded the North Side Furniture Store, wlio loaned the kitchen cabinet, whicli added much to the realism of the third act. AX EXCESS OF WOM.W ofessor Jenkins was speaking of tlie old dra- triaiigle of two men and one woman. A stu- jent, with strong stag inclinations, observed: ' That ' s too manv women. ma iWENR-v ts Kerr. 1 CAFE o O o O O O O O 12. e: 2 l cf ' ' OREAT whitc:waY ' IDEAI J The Comedy ot Errors is never appreciated when put on by the home team H K A T H L K than fifte Wl IJr. C P, lliilcliiiis Prof. C. I. SL-nil,Mwur Prof.U. G. WV-alhirly Prof. C. M, Ik ' pl.urn s i. ni.-i-liiii ..I :lh 1 iiK riiice Basketball Commit- l,r.;-i,knt of the WustLTii Inter-Collegiate Gymnastic c came here in the fall of 1910 as director of physical 11 he was given charge of the course in hygiene also. i_NDLA N _E I u NCLE.hike Buskirk is the patron saint of athletics and athletes at Ind iana. He is tii guardian i 1 || rclan Field. H is the neve -km ckint; hooster. J () R D A X FIELD JORDAN FIELD is a .threat expanse, and a -reat expense, situated behind the power house and north of the Row. The classic Jordan River, which lends its name to the Held, idles along its edi e. After a hard rain it is difficult to distin- guish the ri er from the fielif. Jordan Field has lost more games for Indiana than the weather and all the other causes put together. Jordan Field contains a football gridiron, two baseball diamonds, a cinder path, a tackling dumnn and a dog poinid. A graveyard is always handy for use in football season. On any balmy spring afternoon the casual ob- server may see a track team, freshmen and ' varsity baseball squads, inter-frat teams, spring football squad, rival class teams and a public-speaking class on |ordan F ield. 1 :niD ' Iia-P ' _ ANDY GILL CAPTAIN OF FOOTBALL TEAM CAPTAIN OF BASEBALL TEAM 4XDY GILL phiycd his hist foothall x _ game Novcmher 25, iqii. Tliat statement means a h t to the Lidiana stu- dents. Down here at Lidiana they have carx ' ed out a big wide space in the hall of fame — the biggest that was ever given to a name in athletics here — and in it is chiseled T. A. Gill, ' 12. He has a big heart, a ready smile, a football brain, and — he plays the game. Andy was football captain in 191 1 and baseball captain in 1912. TB EAin MERRILL DAVIS CAPTAIX OF BASKF riiALI. TEAM MERRILL DAVLS, captain of the IQ12 basketball team, played on the ' x-arsity three years and (jn the ' varsity football team for three years. Davis is a man with a small body but with a mi, i;hty big power to use it. Davy Hghts hard all the time and sometimes the referee catches him at it. Then Davy stamps on the side lines. INBEAT ' GEORGE THOMPSON CAP-|-A1N OF CROSS COl-NTRY TEAM Gh;ORGE DENNIS THOMPSON runs like a clock, all the time, rain, snow or sun. He never changes his stride, his speed or the expression of his face. No one ever worries about his diet, as he is always in training. Tommy was the first of tiic Indiana team to finish in Con- ference Cross-Country run at Madison, 1910, and finished eighteenth of fifty men at the rini at Iowa, igi i. ' L aW H: DON ROSE CAPTAIN OF TRACK T E A M DON BOSE is distinctly a product of the coaching of Hiitciiins. In his first year of ' varsity vori he grew from 56 seconds to 51 seconds. Tliis year lie should cut 51 decidedly. He is a strong ruiHier, with excellent endurance and good style. Perhaps an explanation of his speed can be found in the theory that his nose breaks the wind. 11 f ' ff it . The I Men Tup Almi.LK 1; .T1UM Stotter Coleman l.oinani Ed Davis Chattin Alclnl...-.h Bodenhafer Artmaii Cill Trout Staytoii C ' uniiin haiii ] Iunkelt Freelanil .Ak ' s.sick jNIorrison Tones Kent Shock-lev Flemminc: I iiaves Dose Hunt Wliitaker i LA l ■. tmmM 12 1 ' ii  ,ii — r ' ■ ■ LJ D( )rDLE •■!•• MEX 1 M ■ ■_ 1 G ' 1 Cunninnham : 1. Davis Kin c 1 AXTEDILUMAX -T ' ?iIEX 1 Shocklev, track, ' 99, ' 00, ' 01. ' 02 Kent, football, ' 02, ' 03 ■■J (The only survival of the four- Iclntosh, baseball, ' 02, ' 03, ' 04 year eligibility rule on the campus.) ••r- MEX Gill, football, 00, ' 10, ' ii Trout, football, ' ii baseball, ' 10, ' i i, ' 12 Ed Davis, football, ' 11 King-, football, ' 10, ' 11 : track, ' 11 Jones, football, ' 11 J Flemming, football. ' 11 Morrison, track, ' 11 M Cunningham, football, ' 08, 09, ' 10 Draper, track, ' i i ||{ baseball, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11 Bose, track, ' 11 fejj Bodenhafer, wrestling, ' 11 Graves, basketball, ' 11, ' 12 jji Messick, football, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11 Chattin, basketball, ' 07. 08 ' 1 Cy Davis, football, 09, ' 11 Munkelt, basketball, ' 12 Loop, football, ' 1 1 Stayton, basketball, ' 12 =.,, Coleman, football, ' 11 Ereeland, basketball, ' 11, ' 12 y Whitaker, football, ' i i . t. .Iter, basketball, ' lo ' fJI Artman, football, ■] I McCullough, basketball, ' 12 ' nj Hunt, football, -11 | y IXDIAXAP(JLIS MEDICS H AL Davis, football, '  ). ' lo, ' ii DannUher, baseball, ' 10, ' ii basketball, ' lo, ' ii, ' 12 Sholty, football, ' lo, ' ii L__ CAITAIXS 1 1 Gill M.Davis 1 1 King r.Mse 1 ., Shocklev (unninuliam 1 | -V r The ' Varsity _NID ' EA? Hunt Cv. Davis I ' lL-lllllliliq- Strickland, trainer l-: 1 )avi King Lcniianl Mcssick Cunnins liani ( iill. captain Truut M. Davis L.,„p I ' .ilcman Whitaker 1 = Slid. Ion. coach 1 :nn RED F O X r N 1 VE Rs IT • ' i ' E L 1. LEAD E R FOOTBALL O NE day last autumn, after Jinimy liad is- sued his last call for volunteers, and when he felt rock certain that all the heavies and Iiidiaiia ' s crop and pronounce a verdict. They found not an oversized bunch of eligibles, and about half of these looked as if they had been jpeedies had come to the rescue, a committee of raised oi wise ones appeared on Jordan Field to look over took out :ream putts s schedule t Thereupon the committee look for consolation. Chi- ilNpiTAN. cago, Northwestern, Illiii ones embraced eacli otiic tliree siglis, and tainted dc s, Purdue! The wise syin pathetically, gave ' heii the report appeared the next day it read as follows, Let all flowers be unloaded at the gym door; no hot time for Indiana this fall. The following day Jimmy bought a new cor- (iurnv hunting suit, buckled on his cartridge belt, and came mit with a much enlarged and sparkling vocabulary. Strick burned the flowers withmit oi- ders from his chief, and all that the committee saw the next time was a card tacked on the g -m dour, which read something like this: All candidates report daily at 3 o ' clock sharp. DEIWL ' W SKV-PILOTS OPI The curtain was yanked u ;. S()X mber allow a few of the cloth from UePauw to show what Cotton Berndt had taught them. With Mer- rill Da is in the Hospital with blood poisoning, King on the bench with a complication of mental derangements caused b facultx rules, and with Gill shifted from his natural einironment at half, to (|uarter, Indiana got ijuite a workout. Some- body slipped ' alker a forward pass that didn ' t be- long to him and he scored. DePauw 6, Indiana o. But Flemming, playing at full, ploughed through for a touchdown, and Gill kicked goal. Andy drop-kicked for three points later. Sheldon ' s raw line had to hump itself to break even. Messick showed good at backing up the line from his center position. Miit and Flem came across all right for their rtrst varsity game. The score was 9 to 6. It was evident that Andy Gill was handicapped at quarterback. He was not given a chance to show his dodging ability. But with the Chicago game only a week off, it was necessary to keep the Irishman at the helm. THE HOSPIT.AL SQL ' . D GOES TO CHICAGO The Maroons walloped Indiana 23 to 6. They were oldei ' , heaxier and more seasoned, while In- diana had a bunch of cripples. Whitaker hobbled up and down the field with a sore leg. Storms was knocked out in the first few minutes, and Steckel had a mean ankle. Andy played the last ten min- utes with a dislocated shoulder and crushed ribs. Cy Davis was injured. In spite of all this, Flem dragged the ambulance o er for a real touchdown and Gill kicked goal. Flem played a perfect game at backing up the line. TK.NCR PK.XCTICE WITH FR.WKl.IX In the Chicago game the poor old Indiana line was like a sieve, so, in the marathon with Franklin on October 14, Sheldon did a lot of switching to find the weak spots in the machine. Hunt and it- ij--: . IS HEUX CE BmQfiUirUS Mellett were tried at quarter, King was given a chance at full and ran so far and so fast to keep from stepping on tlie Franklin b ns that he got winded and actually took time out. Hartke and Bock subst ituted for Cy Davis. Wise, Artman and Stayton were shunted into the line long enough to be watched. Loop was used at half, and Trout and Whitaker succeeded Merrill Davis, who got back into the game for a short time. Phoebe and Ed Davis were the only ones who played the entire game in their regular positions. Flemming scored four touchdowns. Ed Davis, Loop and King each made one touchdown. Gill kicked one goal. King kicked three goals and one drop-kick. Score 42 to o. The lineup lookeil strong, although there was a noticeable lack of the team work which characterized the igio winners. ' . TKk C. K- I ' . I. . T . {iR ' l ■ERX The Crimson team was sent to Northwestern a week later. It was the first game with the Purple in eleven years. A victory looked certain, but some one stuck a bomb under the dope bucket. The game was plaved in a held of mud, which made it more of an exhibition of deep sea diving than of football. The battle was desperate, but the Indiana line was miseiabh weak. Andy was forced to kick out from behind bis own goal six times and to run out twice, in the last ten minutes of play. He repeatedly followed up his own punts and stopped the man. Lamke, on an end run, was chased ten yards back of his scrimmage line by King, who let him get away, was missed by Whit, knocked off Davy ' s tackle, and bore down on Andy with an interfer- ence of two. Andv dove into the bunch and grabbed Lamke ' s foot, but the interference jumped into the middle of Andy ' s back, and the score was 5 to o. Sheldon devoted the ne.xt week to perfecting one grand shakeup. Cv Davis was pulled in from end to guard. Jack Jones, a substitute, got Da- ' is ' old job. Flemming was put at guard, al- though lie had been starring at fullback. Andy Gill was placed at his former halfback berth. Whitaker was worked at quarter and King at full. RIFF c;am1 ' . with w. sni. (;ni On the following Saturdav the Washington L ' niversity team, coached by Gayou -Indiana ' s arch fiend of old -arrived from St. Louis. Thev tackled harder than anv other team nlavcd bv the Crimson the entire season. The Cayou backfield was strong, speedy and aggressive. For three-quarters neither team could score. The ball was kept in midffeld. But the break came i iJ I 4 -! ! ?r4 ! V- l |gEB[ n the final period. The heir own tiiirty-tive-yard ttcmpted, and like wa visitors had the ball line. A forward p: a flash Merrill Da ' leaped intercepted the ball and sped for a touch- down Gill kicked goal A fe minutes later Indiana woiked the ball to the same spot, and this time Gill shot a beautiful pass to Davis who again made a sensational run through a broken field for a touchdown. Gill kicked goal. The score was r 2 to n. The whole game was terribly impolite, and, as one newspaper account said, a ' ashinL!:ton player participated in the entire game with an un- jointed finger. The work of the Crimson eleven was a pretty thing to see. Team work was noticeable in every play. The line held as it had not held all season. Jack Jones, at end, won the hearts of all the rooters. He refused to be bo.xed, and time after time broke up the ' ashington plays before they began. Cole- man took care of Washington ' s strong right half in superb style. He used his head well in going down on punts. His quick recovery of a blocked punt was good. Cv Davis and Flemming more than made good as guards. Harold King hit the line hard and gained many yards. Whitaker showed that he had found his place. Gill was where he had won fame and he was as shifty as ever. Merrill Davis pla cd his first full game of the season and saved the day. The Washington game gave Cream and Crim- son stock a distinct lift and cleared up some of the shadows that had clung over Jordan Field since the first game. It was plain to be seen wliat men would Start against Illinois. The Suckers had beaten Purdue and expected to humble the Crimson. All over the West the sentiment was in favor of Illinois. WIXDV CONTEST WITH [XOIS Remembering Chicago and Northwestern, the rooters, nearly 2,000 strong, packed the trains to the city. They made their contributions at the bo.x oflice, sat down on the mourner ' s side of the dia- mond gridiron, reverently removed their red hats, and prepared to see the beginning of the end. But it never came. Jimmy emitted a smile. His bovs went in for a fight. ' I ' hey got it. Indiana plaved Illinois to a standstill. In the first half. Hall, of Illinois, had the wind in his favor, and by continual punting managed to keep the ball in Indiana territory. The fierce struggle had its effect upon the play- ers. In the last half Indiana had everything in its t INDEAF A iET favor but the wind. Time after time did Indiana work the ball to the shadow of the Illinois goal, where both Gill and King attempted to score by the air route. A gust of wind beat Indiana. Indiana went through tiic game with but one change in the lineup, and that was only temporary. In the last half Whitaker was injured and taken out, Gill going to quarter and Loop to half. How- ever, Whit was able to come back soon and Gill went back to half. The charging of our line was strong. ming repeatedly broke through to tackle i line of scrimmage. He corked the hole. Under the circumstances Indiana liad content with a tie, but no fair critic could be u the Crimson the game technically. •lem- 1 the •ud ' . ■;i-m i ' . M The Crmison had played as a unit and Coach Sheldon and Director Hutchins smiled as thev thought of the Purdue game. Two weeks re- mained in which to knock off any remaining rough edges. The hrst week was fraught witii many good results. Team work was developed to a fine point and the players were rounded into per- fect condition. Then came the last week of the season. Wliit- aker developed a bum shoulder the first night. Gill sprang a charley horse. Jones sustained a se- vere injury in tackling. Coleman was laid out in a headlong tackle and lay groggv for hours. But the height of the misfortune was tiie word that Jimmy Sheldon ' s father was dying and that Jimmy would be forced to leave the sc]uad. The team was left in charge of Doctor Hutch- ins. But the men had depended too much on Shel- don, and they were lost without him. THE PURDUE G.AME On November 2:;, thousands of Purdue rooters, Indiana visitors and alumni thronged the town. It was Home Coming day for Indiana. If ever the evil fates held a winning hand against Indiana, it was on this glorious football day. They played one trump after another against the Cream and Crim- r. U FUl. Despite Uncle Jake had lain on the field al condition. :) bales of straw which L-k, it was in miserable Gill kicked olf to Hutchison, who returned the lall to his twentv-five-yard line. In four plavs ' urdue was forced to punt and Indiana ' s line :NDi[ iM : . upra F blocked the kick. M. Davis scooped up the ball and ran twenty yards to the Purdue twenty-five- yard line. King then smashed through Winston and evaded three tacklers for a touchdown. Less than three minutes had been rciiuired tn score, and the Indiana rooters cheered wildly. Both the Crimson and the Purdue followers had sm visions of another 36 to 3 victory for Indiana. But with that touchdown went the energy of the In- diana eleven. Ed Davis was taken out for slugging. Jack Jones was dangerously injured and was carried off the field. With these two mainstays on the side- lines the Crimson was further demoralized. Quar- terback Hutchison of Purdue took advantage of cvcrv opportunitv, and soon had the Crimson on it was in the ; makers went ahea had forced the ba Here the old Inc twice the line held, by Hutchison, the :ond quarter that the Boiler- Pounding the line, Purdue to the Indiana ten-yard line, ma spirit exerted itself, and Then a trick play was worked quarterback himself carrying the ball around Indiana ' s right end for a touch- down. Oliphant kicked goal. Score, 6 to 5. The third (]uarter found the Purdue players cnnfident, and althciugh the Crimson fought with desperation, the series of dazzling fakes and passes used by Hutchison gave the Old Gold and Black another touchdown. Later in the quarter Oliphant broke through and ran to Indiana ' s five-yard line. Here, in three desperate stands, Indiana took the hall from Purdue, the Boilermakers gaining only one vard in three downs. Indiana rooters called for a touchdown in the last quarter, but the Crimson could not respond. Oliphant continually punted and the Indiana hacks were unable to gain consistently. A few- seconds before the end, Andy Gill caught Oli- phant ' s punt and dashed fifteen vards on what might ha c been a sensational rini for a touchdown, hut a Purdue tackier finally got him, and the game It was the first victory for Purdue over Indiana in four years, and the monster crowd of Boiler Pounders made the most of its opportunities. The atmosphere was considerably agitated by tiiem. Likewise the financial market. As the two teams played that day, the best team won. As Indiana should have played had she shown the same class as in the ' ashington and Illinois games, the best team did not win. □□ TISSUE. ' S U M MARY OF H E S E A S O N Seven games were played. Indiana won three, lost tliree, and ie.l (ine. Se eiitv-fi ur points were scored, aga nst fortv-si bv tlie opponents. Gill made eight points. King made sixteen. Flemming made thirty. Ed Davis made five. Loop made five. Merrill Davis made ten. Of the eleven men who started in the Purdue game, si. played their last game tor Indiana. A 1 r e a d ' the Slogan for Next Year Has Been Selected. It is: ' ' Wipe Purdue Off the Map. J .u SM w :r- ij d wiii II II il ■ ' ' V 1911 FOOTBALL MEN | DAVY A TERRILL DAVIS has a full-pressure ji Vl smile. That his playing is of the same ! [ order, his opponents ami the score will testify. i Is a regular outhelder on catching forward | ;i passes. ,| jj in 10 i ED ' H TT ' D DAVIS is rated as one of the coming V. i XL All-Western linemen. Ed is big and .t ' . bulky, but is very fast and handles himself ; i well. No plav goes ' erv far through him. 1 j CY Y DAVIS, the Bloomtield blonde, loves V to play with his sock down. Cy is al- most as long as the line of scrimmage, but his | 17S pounds hold him doun. Good work at guard. ' ; 1 p f ifa ji ==siii!Niii)ii .ri, ..:.i m m 19 11 F O O r B A L L ME N KIXGY HAROLD KING made that lone touch- down on Purdue. When lie gets keyed up on all six cylinders he goes some. Hard- Headed Harold ' s high step makes him a mean thing to tackle. LANGY FRED LANGSDOX is another of the second squad who worked daily for the team. Mien given a chance he resp inded with good work. NA ' ill be on the job next year. ARTMAN CLARENCE ART. L N never could get used to the rules prohibiting his favorite toe holds. Struck his pace at Northwestern, where he played a driving game. . Liy be back next fall. .r-i m HSHsani 19 11 FOOTBALL FEEB ALLEN GEORGE MESSTCK showed _ that a center could do more than merely pass the ball. Li spite of the serious injury received in the Washington game, Feeb ne er lost the smile. SHOLTY LLOYD SHOLTY, the Indiana devotes just thirty minutes p( tpolis medic, per day to ar- iiiing; ten minutes for breakfast, ten r and ten for supper. Always in con- M E N NVHIT BERRY VH1TAI ER tilled the long- felt want at quarter. He gave a splendid exhibition of pluck in playing the Illinois game witJi jiis right collar-bone twisted around where the left one ought to be. J 19 11 F O O 1 B A L L MEN FLEM FLOYD FINTON FLEMMING, New Albany, runs like a one-lunged ice wagon. Scored on Chicago. Flem was used as full- back early in the season, but later went to tackle, ' ill be captain next year. STECK CHARLES STECKEL plaved in several ' ' arsitv games and showed promise. Steck is hea v and powerful, and, w ith the ex- perience of the past season, should be readv for the w histle next vear. JAKE JAKE HUNT was the midget of the s.juad. His bouncing, bounding, tumbling style of play was popular with the bleachers. Jake ' s best stunt is to duck under a tackier for a good gain. nnc 19 11 FOOTBALL MEN JACK ACK JONES was tlic Hnd of the season. It it were possible to dedicate the athletic ctioii, Jack would get tlie votes. His work appreciated because he played on nerve and )t on phvsique. TROliT ARTHUR TROl ' T was the non-breakable _ member of the squad. Herman was getting his bumps, but he refused to be stopped. He did some lightning work, and is a sure tackier. COLEY CHESTER COLEMAN was mentioned by Walter Eckersall as one of the best ends in the west. Coley ' s near-flying tackle was a tiling of beauty, and he had the ner -e to pull it off. olINDnAI -..L - aHIMSESi 19 11 FOOTBALL M E N HAPPY WILLIAM WISE was one of the hard- working linemen who gave his best to the cause. Happy worked at center, guard and tackle, and was always on the works. Is a sophomore. TrRLp:Y IRA TLRLEY showed up well as fuUhack on the second team and gained many yards through the freshmen and ' varsity. Turley is a sophomore and has two good years aiiead. STAYT CHESTER STAYTON worked in tiic backtield and in the line, and was a good man in both positions. Made a good impres- sion in the DePauw game. Stayt trained at the Book Nook bar. L ' LA.r 19 11 FOOTBALL M E N SLEWFOOT ADAM LEONARD, the jriaceful guard, _ ' _ had a busy fall: studies on Monday, public speaking on Tuesday, date on Wednes- day, hygiene on Thursday, picture show on Friday, football on Saturday, and sermon on Sunday. LOOP OMER LOOP was one of the patriots who responded to Sheldon ' s call for oluntecrs after the season had started, and has a cinch on a backfield job next ' ear. HARTKE CHRISTIAN HARTKE, despite his first name, is a wicked player. He is fast, determined, and strong. Played most of the season on the second squad. Dependence is placed on him for next season. o_  A,=?l wm m i  m . ?f 2J -t ' S.yS : - THE FRESHMAN SQUAD With Adam Leonard as a tackling dummy and Thomas A. Gill as the goal of their ambitions, the huskies of Fhip Hill went through their first season in the shadow of the tall smoke stack, with all hands at the guns. Most of them have applied for regular jobs next year. J The ' X arsity Basketball Squad Kase, coach I ' leniniins Davis, captain I ' reelnml Graves [cCullniio-h Munkelt Chattin Stayton iliINID.lAjq ;. BASKETBALL WITH the bang of the pistol at the close of the Wisconsin game, terminated a disas- trous season for the basketball team of 191 2. The sciiediile of seventeen games was a hard one, and often necessitated the playing of two and three games in a week. The services of James Kase were secured; and with two veterans on the squad, Captain Davis and Graves, Kase began to whip a team into shape that would battle for conference honors. Practice did not begin until the opening of winter term. On januarv 16 the arcs were turned on so that L ' lUOIANA P IIILIP GR.WKS is the cleanest player and the hest point getter on the team. He hits the basket from most any old place on the floor. Phil prefers dodging to bruising and con- sequently makes a few goals, plavs center. A ' NOIANA Hh 1-:S l ' REEL. - D plays a Iv game and is exceptionally ever in handling the ball. Haynes ■esn ' t think that basketball is any nk tea affair. Plays f.irwar.l. IIVOiANA GLHXX AlUNKELT, u, though handicapped si m on account of lack of weight. up fiir it in speed. He is an imi factnr in breaking up the opp. Graves rA.N i.1 B A S K E T B A L L CONTINUED Butler could see the baskets. Butler found them The quintet braced after the Rose Poly defeat for twelve points and Indiana got a majority of and hung one on Ohio State 34 to 19. In a fierce only three points. That same week DePauw was walloped over the home floor 23 to 15. The fol- lowing week Purdue brought down her wonderful bunch of basketballers for a practice game. They rubbed it in, while the score board registered 54 to 18. The first game on the road went to Rose Poly, with the score of 4:; to 1:4. battle on the home floor Indiana was nosed out by Chicago by the narrow margin of 20 to 16. The boys fought hard but to no avail. In the most exciting game of the season Indiana won over Illinois in a strenuous overtime session, her only conference game. On the next road trip the team split even by defeating Earlham 21; to 13, and losinir a wrestling match with Butler 2 to 17. CHESTER guard, is keep down the o]jixinL-nts ' scures. Though his first year on the team he displayed cahbre. His black hair and flashing eye get the co-eds. ;ett McCULlough. utii lady ' s man of the squad brushes his hair back and lilushes every time he makes a goal. He alter- nates at forward or guard and often smothers his man to no score. D FLEM.AHNG, the big guard, keeps the situation al- ways well in mind. His dribble and accurate aim throw the enemy into a panic when he gets the ball. He is Ruff. UN E ' EAT- A. . B A S K T H A I. L C () N T I N Captain Davis received injuries in the latter game that compelled him to retire for the season. The next sally was into the northwest, where the team lost both games to Wisconsin and Min- nesota by the scores of 49 to 10 and 3S fo 7, re- spectively. The large, slippery floors and the ear of travel aided in the crushing defeats. Hardly recovered from the long trip, the team attacked Illinois and Chicago on strange tloors and lost. The next week the thousand per cent Purdue Gl. •|)l•■. (-HATTIX, sub tnrwanl. altluuigh handicapped by an in- jured knee, never failed to register when placed in the game at the critical time. He has a gond eye for the basket gang allowed Indiana to watch the automatic reg- ister. Indiana evened up with Rose Poly the next week in a prettv game by the score of 29 to 16. The last two games of the season on the Crim- son ' s floor were the most hotly contested of all, and it was only the superior experience of Min- nesota and Wisconsin that gave Indiana the short end of both close scores. Lawler was mainly re- sponsible for the Minnesota count, and a little Ger- man called Stangel was the stumbling block for Kase ' s men in the Wisconsin game. The team was a fighting one, and it was that indomitable spirit that won six out of the seventeen games played. Captain Davis was an excellent example to his team, and it was his fight that in- stilled much of the pep into the team. U M M A R ' .S K A SON 19 iidrana 34 ndiana 16 ndiana 24 ndiana 25 ndiana 17 ndiana 10 ndiana ndiana iS ndiana 2.2 ndiana II ndiana 2ri ndiana 17 ndiana 21 i;utlcr 12 DePainv 15 Purdue 4 Rose Polv 4S Ohio State 19 Chicago 20 Illinois 21 Earlham 13 r.utler 23 ' isconsin 49 Minnesota 34 Illinois 41 Chicago 36 Purdue 4 Rose Poly if ' . Minnesota 2i ' i5consin 34 ( Ipponcnts 505 % INE ' Ha. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SQUAD The Fifteeners are the Best and Biggest Bunch of Bouncing Babies, with the Ruffest Neks and the Hardest Heads, that have been allowed to toss the ball into the bottomless nets at either end of Hutchins Hall for some time. Coached by Cunningham, they have shown class all season, and thev will be the ' varsity next vear. HHT- ON BEING BEATEN B Y P R I- SIDE X T I! R ' A X ONE of the compcnsatiDiis for defeat — and every I man must sonietiincs lose — is to find out for your- self whether vou are made of steel or pewter. If vou are one kind of man, defeat will crumple you up; you will whine or sulk or swear at somebody else; and vou will (]uit. If vou are another sort you will discover in vourself, under the chagrin of defeat, one of the deep- est jovs of a man, — the joy of finding that you possess an unbeaten jieart. The great thing about Washington is not his victories in battles. He won few victories. The thing which lifts him into place with the few great world leaders is that through years of defeat upon defeat, he kept together a little army of men who were always ready for a fight. It was the unbeaten heart of Washington, more than any- thing else, which won American independence. A defeat can give you a chance to find out whether vou are made of pewter or of steel. ii[NB ' EA,r-L w R 1 : r L I N G L ST _year an I was awarded Walter Bodeiiliafer in wrestling. This was the first of its kind at Indiana. It showed the splendid development of the sport imder Coach Elmer E. Jones, a C man of Columbia University. With the help of Bodenhafer and Senour the sport was greatly strengthened this year. Severe injuries interfered greatly this season, however. The Indianapolis Y. M. C. A. de- feated Indiana twice this year. Indiana won over Illinois, March 30, getting one throw, one decision on points and two draws. The team entered the conference gynmastic tourney at Illinois, April 13. Ed Davis won the western intercollegiate licavv wcii lit championship. Bodenhafer, assistant coac! Ed Davis, heavy weight Carlock, light weight Job, middle weight Howes, bamtam weight Artman, heavy weight Leininger, middle weight Lehman, welter weight Costello, light weight Bonsib, mi. Idle «cie-ht hhnb-hama e; C R (3 S S C O U N T R Y After four weeks of splashing through Monroe county mud and shpping on tlie same county ' s stony roads, the team which was to represent Indiana in the Confer- ence Run was chosen. James Kase chaperoned the boys to Iowa City, and on November 25 they ran their race. The course was hilly, the weather cold and the roads very muddy. It was no fair test of a man ' s ability to run. Yet the team finished in seventh place. Captain Thompson finished eighteenth. Robinson twen- tieth, Jlorrison twenty-first, Mauzy tliirty-sixth and Ri u(k ' hu h forty-fourth. Dr. Hutchins has obtained splendid results. cunsideriuL; that cniss country is but two years old here. Ilutchiiis. c .ach I ' ipcr Roudebush Morrison Mauzy Robinson Thompson, captain = THIS IS P. GE 87 :NDiiAri. 1 ' Varsity Baseball Squad 1912 1 -m Top Row Sec(.m.Ro« Winters El ..n Freel Schultz Tnrlev jMitten RIagee Hoffman Corbett, coach Gill, captain Curtis Martindale Flemming Freeland Tones Messick Coleman •ildman Schuler I.indsey Ingram Trout Frisinger Ramsey Cnderwood :.r.. m S C H K D U L E FOR 1912 Al ' RIL MAY 8— Illinois at Bloomington 4 — Xorthwestern at Bloomington Bf ' 12— DePauw at Greencastle 7— Purdue at Bloomington ■r = 13 — Rose Poly at Terre Haute 16 — Beloit at Beloit He ' r ' i ' m 17 — Rose Poly at Bloomington 17 — Wisconsin at :Madison Sl - ik • ' ' . '  JO — Wisconsin at Bloomington 18 — Chicago at Chicago ■■ k I JM 2(5— Illinois at Urbana 20 — Minnesota at Blooming-ton HkaH 27 — Purdue at Lafayette 24 — Minnesota at Minneapolis B m 30— DePanw at Bloomington 25— Xorthwestern at Evanston TOIIN CORBETT Coach uf 1912 lir.seball Tcm jL-XE r— Chicag T at Bloomington 19 12 PROSPECTS ALONG about the middle of P -briKiry Captain _Andy began to feel the first faint signs of spring, and though snow covered the diamond, he sent home for his mine cap and torch. He tiien went prospecting for material. Finally, a few of the more nervy ones were persuaded to leave their glowing baseburners and come over to the gym for a little play. Jack Corbett, of Anderson, who has played with Pop Anson ' s Colts, Charles Carr ' s Utica team of the New York State League, and who has been coaching Farman University, South Carolina, agreed to take on the coaching job as soon as the weather cleared up a little. The schedule was enough to scare anybody and with the captain the only eligible I man on the premises, the coach had a job before him. The likely ones seemed to be Shultz, Magee, Bagot, Steckel, Cameron, Mitten, Hatfield, Curtis, Freel, Jones, Flemming, Lindsay, Voorhees, Free- land, Lybrook, Shuler, Frisinger, Martindale, Trout, Hoffman, Graves, Turley, Winters, Schultz, Jones, J. .Mellett. ■ ' ;,N. 19 11 BASEBALL SEASON BY defeating Purdue on tlie liome grounds June 2 by a score of j; to 2 and shortly after administering a similar lirubbing to Chicago, the Indiana baseball team wound up the iqi i season in th e .50(j percentage column. Skel Roach, alias Ralph C. of Chicago, had a bunch of nine men who had hail won their I ' s on the diamond the previous season, and a few new ones from whom to pick, a team. Although the first of the season was spoiled by several heart-breaking defeats occasioned by the failure of the team to fall into their pace at the start, toward the last of the season the players ral- lied and finished their schedule in big league form. On the twirling squad, Howard and Winters were the big spitters, with Curtis, Lybrook and Big Kent on reserve. Captain Lewis stood be- hind the bat and was helped at times by Xussel and Schultz. So. Burtt stuck around first, Cotton Berndt on second, Andy Gill got everything at short, and Hov made his debut at third. I ' h, ningha the Icfi ingon ; outfield was in the hands of Heze Cun- m, in the middle of the well, Danruther in , and Winters, Nussel and Driscol alternat- the cinder pile. D LI L L Xpril 15 — Rose Poly at Bloomiugton. ... i ]iril 21 — Lake Forest at Lake Forest. . . 8 ]inl 22 — Chicago at Chicago 6 m 28 — Purdue at Lafayette rain ]iril 29 — Ilhnois at Champaign 5 -May 6 — Northwestern at Evanston. . . . rain [ay 13 — DePauw at Bloomington 9 May 18— DePauw at Greencastle 6 May 19 — Rose Poly at Terre Haute. ... i Afay 20 — Northwestern at Bloomington. 6 May 22 — Afinnesota at Bloomington. . . . rain May 2- — Illinois at Bloomington 12 lunc 2 — Purdue at Bloomington 2 • - — Chicago at Bloomington 3 ? 9 — Waseda at Blooniingt. in 2 - 10— Waseda at Indianai.MJis 2 iINID ' M.ri A.E-. Freshman Baseball Squad T. 11. Row Second Row Bottom Row 1-1.. i-a Ghan Phelps Wriuht Schleicher Tatlock 1 leimis Hale Beetham .Mcnaniel Kunkel -ll,_.ni Prather Schilling Willoughbv Elmore -liet Summers Williams Lee Finnev Love Eiiglehart Cause Fletchall Kirllev Elen.l ■■ ' li. ' liANA I - - ::: -.---T=-...r_ .. i i . .. ■H ™r« .- «.:■•.-:;- ' . -■-s .f- .:. 1 j mM . ' ■ ' .; 1 1  ' ir ' l ' r ' m W:l ' § iH l)tl tj||r] ijMiuiii .ftftMailiP T § i P i mf i, iiiP i ' .ilim M .M V ka. • . .• .i ..: Knowlton l- ;iuber ■ ..-i Thompson Alann, trainer ; Bose Draper ' 1 Lingeman Shoemaker Milliken Eichrodt King, captain Roudebush ■ Pritchard PhiUips ! Curtis Morrison 19 11 Graves Hutchins, coach Track Squad .,jDiiAN. .r y 19 11 TRACK SEASON THE season of 191 1 put Indiana track ath- team. Tliis in itself was such a novel thing for letics on its feet. Things were in a bad wav Indiana that several came out. The crowd wasn ' t for track, as there had been no real team for two very large, but it was willing to work, and if there years. But this particular line of work is what was anything the coach liked, it was more work. Doctor Hutchins dotes on. He began building up Among those present who had been in track a team along in the autumn by having the boys do undress before were King, Bose, Draper, Morri- cross-country work. son, Thompson, Payton and Shoemaker. Besides In the winter he slipped enough money from these, there were some twenty other men of un- the university exchequer to get a new track in the proven caliber. This crowd got together one day gym and issued the call for candidates for a track and elected Harold King to preside as captain. King being the only man who could be called ' varsity, it was necessary to hold tryouts so that he wouldn ' t get lonesome. These took the form of inter-class contests. About the first of May a team was picked from the winners of these. The fol- lowing men were chosen: For dashes, Captain King, Bose, Cochran; for hurdles, Knowlton, Cur- tis, Fauber; for distance runs, Payton, Shoemaker, Morrison, Thompson, Roudebush; for field events, Captain King, Riggs, Milliken, Demmon, Draper, Graves, Phillips and Lingeman. KlXei BRE.AKS TIE On May 13 DePauw came to Bloomington for a dual meet. They were coached by Joe Barclay and expected to win. However, there was a sur- prise awaiting both DePauw and Indiana. By the all-around work of Captain King and Bose the Crimson won 54 ' to 51 . King won four firsts, iDHAN. I! twd of which he had not expected to enter, and for whicli lie had not practiced. The score was tied when it came time for the hroad jump, the last event on the list, and King went in to win. I.OSK TO XORTHWF.STF.k.X The following Saturday, the Crimson met Northwestern in a dual meet at Evanston. In- diana lost by a small margin due to the lack of men to enter in the pole vault and broad jump. Cap- tain King, Bose and Draper won hrst in their events. BOSE BREAKS STATE RECORD The season was closed May 27 by a dual meet on Jordan Field with the Y. .M. C. A. of Indian- apolis. The Hutchinites shi.i ved marked improve- ment and won, 74 to 51. One state record was smashed by Don Bose. He lowered the time for the e]uarter from 51 3-5 to 51 flat. Draper, after winning the high jump at 5 :8, went 5 :io in exhibi- tion. He spiked himself and was forced to give up the attempt to set a new record. Don Bose, who had distinguished liimself in every meet by iiis fast work in the dashes, was elected captain for iqi2. 1912 IRACK SCHKDULK May 4— Indianaiicilis Y. M. C. : . at Dluomiiigton May 1 1 — Earlliam at Richmond May 18 — Northwestern at Bloominslon June I — Conference at Lafayette - Tv n .d ' ' ...■ ■ - i , i _ SENIOR GIRLS ' BASKETBALL TEAM I N T K R- C LAS S C H A M P I () N S S K A S () N 1412 THE senior _o;irls were not only the inter-class champions of the past sea- son, but all six girls of the squad were chosen on either the Yale or Har- vard teams, which were selected from all tlie players of all classes. THE I ' LAVF.RS Kibb - Center Hufstetter, captain Second Center Ycnne Right Forward THE SEASON R,,1,ins.,n Left Forward Seniors, 15 ; Sopliomores, 10 Suit. n Right Guard Seniors, 16; Freshmen, 11 Harris Left Guard Seniors, 16 ; Juniors, 8 Cuzzart and Kmi ' t Substitutes OrTDEAMA I DR. Charles Pelton Hiitchins is a [iractical man with an ideal for hig things. He loves to see the dust fly. He thinks that ' varsity athletics is class leg- islation and believes that the common people should indulge in a little exercise aside from bridge whist and rooting for the specialist in athletics. THE DEPARTMENT DR. CHARLES P. HUTCHINS came here in iQio from the University of Wisconsin, as director of physical training, and bumped up against about as big a proposition as any one would care to iiandle. Athletics at Indiana consisted of training the bcnlies of eleven men on the field and straining the lungs of a thousand rooters on the bleachers. Tiie gymnasium was purely a catalog institution. Doc made things stir, however. He swept the cobwebs off the gym doors, had the windows wasiied, put in a swimming pool, a new floor, an indnor track, and a new bunch of apparatus. He remodeled the locker room, put in new showers, and tore up and twisted around tilings in general. Then he hired James Kase, and later, came Bern- stein. This year the course in Hygiene was added to the department of physical training, and the real work began. That a soinid body is essential to ef- ficiencv ot mind and morals is the tiieory upon which the department works. Its aim is to popu- larize physical culture by making it attractive and by providing plenty of variation in form and kind of activity. y E ' FEATURES D E P A R r OF THE MEN r 1. Hutchins, Kase and Bernstein. 2. An elective system of required work for freshmen, in which the choice is given of fifteen different i .inds of physical activities, in their proper season. 3. Compulsory physical examination of fresii- men, medical advice and corrective exercises. 4. A complete filing system of data from ex- aminations, records of contests and of class attend- ance. 5. Medical and surgical attendance. 6. Normal course, in wiiich a limited numher may do work fitting them for instructors in physi- cal training. 7. Hygiene lectures, text, reports and investi- gation of sanitary conditions. 8. Inter-class. 9. An inade(]uate gyi JA. I RS KASE is a gymnast of the first rank. His shoulder muscles make the freshmen green with envy. Jimmy takes his work, himself and the Benedictine state very seriously. His greatest trou- hK- i ordering groceries over the gym J IN E HAN. ' :4.d l |ttod: W;  h AJ- k: INTER-CLASS red INDIANA has ent athletics. ' itliin tlie hist two years great im- petus has been given a ninxement to bring as many undergraduates as possible into games and sports. Up to 1910 Indiana had no organized department of physical training. The ' varsity teams performed well in the major sports, but the minor sports were neglected. Inter-class athletics consisted mainlv of class dances. The inter-class contests are in charge of the department of physical training, but the active management is given over to committees made up of representatives from each class. The inter-class contests are soccer —for which a real English coach was obtained last fall -push- ball, basketball, wrestling, baseball, track and cross country. A steadily increasing interest is being taken in these sports, and it looks as if class spirit will really mean something here. Felt hats with embroideied numerals are gi en to the winners. Winners of 191 i track were Sophomores; iqi i baseball, Juniors; i(;ii cross coinitry, Freshmen; 1911 soccer. Juniors; i H2 wrestling, Sophomores, and 191 2 basketball was won by the Laws. IKE I AM IT BERNSTEIN is the best trainer tliat Indiana lias had for some time. He puts a crimp in many a long-distance bird who attempts the gloves. Berny is a regular mother to the boys. .3:m ' ' z b. You don ' t have to go to the circus on Dunn Meadow to see queer things Tramp; Hygiene! He IDEAI p iTA ' JHJ Goino;, Goino;, Gone Oh, thou sprightly nymph, tiiou ctiicrcal be- W:- ing, thy flowing locks and sage visage will soon he V seen no more upon the mead of Dunn. Four long years hast thou rolled and wriggled thy way o ' er the kii(.)lls of the campus. Thou art going! No more will we hold our U| -• c siiics at thy merry (]uips and iiuirks. Xo more will thy roundelays come forth from the I ' liion piano. No more joy on the Field of Jordan. Bring forth the bird of night! : - ' V4 Soon Feeb will iiave went. ,,y_, 1 ' fe ' A RIX ' TOR COOK ' .S i. m Hamilton. 1 hear that Vic Cook is going to have a real restaurant. _ - , Cragun. Yes, he ' s goin ' to liave real tea cups wm Going, Coins. Gone instead of shaving mugs. 1 FLY IX HIS Crook Freeland. 1 like college life, but the I ' niversity is an awfid bore to me. h ii . CTI E A busy man: a lainidry agent uho has to prac- tice football at 2 ;:;o p. m., trying to collect at a fra- ternity house near the end of tiie term. 1 DIIA . II— II M II A RE whiskers disappearing? Tliis is an im- portant question, involving the industry of scores of mattress factories all over the country. There are no mattress factories in Mon- roe county, nor shrcdded-wheat mills either, for that matter, but the question is nevertheless impor- tant. A visit to the public square of Bloomington on Saurday afternoon gives an answer. Emphatically no. Whiskers are not disappearing. In spite of the dictates of fashion and the activity of barbers, the time-honored industry of whisker-raising still thrives with unabated vigor among the population of Monroe county. By whiskers is not meant tiic close-cropped, scrubby mustache, which is coming into vogue among gilded youths, nor yet the unkempt, sec- ond-growth stubble which decorates the faces of those unable to buy safety razors; but the good, flowing, patriarchial facial upholstery of our fore- fathers, the kind that makes the use of ear-mufifs and neckties unnecessary, and renders anv face im- per -ious to the most inclement weather, ' hiskers sucli as these, whiskers worthy of the name, are the kind seen on the square Saturday afternoon. Whiskers may be roughly divided into four general types: (i) The banditti, or Jesse James type. This type consists of a mustache only, worn long and drooping, which can, while drinking, be festooned over the ears. It is useful as a weather-vane and for straining the bacteria from the water of public drinking fountains. Fairly common. See Jim Potter. (2) The bourbon, or blue-gra ss tvpe. This type consists of the afore-mentioned banditti type. ENB ' HAru -? i|: ll d i. .y: t ' :l |j tjf31 i combined with a small braiinigan on the chin. It indicates that the family tree of the owner prob- ably sprouted in a mint patch. Usually combined with a dry climate, and founci around Elks homes. (3) The deacon, or bo.xdiedge type. This con- sists of a tine, full whisker, covering most of the main topographical points of the face, but care- fully mowed, raked, and tended. It is sometimes worn to conceal the fact that the ow ner has no chin, but always as a means to dignity. (4) The wild grape-vine, or catch-as-catch- can type. This is the true, American whisker. It is the long, primitive, all-inclusive whisker that reaches from the eyebrows to the tliird button of the coat, and looks Id e a de luxe edition of Lost in the Jungle. It is innocent of comb and guilt- less of scissor, the delight of nesting birds and the despair of barbers. It is worn exclusively as a means of warmth, and is best observed in the fall and winter of the year. Beside concealing soiled shirts and missing neckties, these liirsute adornments haN ' e a distinct ornamental value. The public sijuare of Bloom- ington is as bare and devoid of decoration as a skat- ing rink. No wide-spreading chestnut tree shel- ters the village smithy, no graceful elms soften the glare of the brick street nor conceal the awkward outline of the public hitching rack, no clinging ivy softens the dreary gray of the court-iiouse walls. This absence of foliage in the landscape, however, is amply ofTset by the abundance of facial foliage of the inhabitants, and the eye is insensibly at- tracted from the angular outlines of the buildings to the scenic decorations of the men ' s features. It is idle for songsmiths to compose lyrics about whiskers; it is vain for jokesmiths to grind out parodies of Always in the Way ; it is futile for physicians to point out that they are unhygienic; the habit of whisker-growing is ingrained in hu- man nature, like making love, or gazing upon the grape when it ftzzeth. Some people can not quit. .And besides, it is useful. There is a man in Indianapolis who makes a good living as a chim- ney sweep, just because his whiskers are long and They are not disappearing. :ndea.ii i J TDIAI J THE DORMITORY WINDOWS A BLOOMIXGTON CLASSIC i n I ' d just like to know what makes every old NoTE— The management rcspectf dly requests hayseed, rube farmer that goes bv gaze up at our that th ere be no smoking in lobby of this theater windows, said one of tiie Alpha Hall girls the both before or between acts.— Harris Grand Pro- other day. gram. That is not a hard question to answer. Win- dows are always interesting, if they never reveal 1 anything but draperies, and the dormitory win- ■;j| 1 dows are particularly interesting because thev dis- close something of each girl ' s personality. Sup- i ' iiMJH — Daily Stiiilciit. January 30. IHi ' , aajM P OFFICI.AL RrXXERS 1 For Beta, Paul McXutt. 1 jHIHHIH H For Phi Psi, Russell Racy. Ul For Kappa Sig, Jerry Clcn. a ' ' jHIH i K I liflH !■■ 1 For Phi Delt, Floyd ' MacGnf¥. m K i w ffll For Sigma Nu, Russell Brown. || For Sigma Chi. Byrl Kirklin. 11 For Phi Gam, (juv Lemmon. w m i H ■ ' For Delta Gamma, Jeannette Bartelle. ' J B t H ' For Emanon, Whole Club. mm M AT KAHX ' S AXXEX Customer, buving tickets for a Strut and Fret jH B show — I don ' t like these seats. Can ' t you gi e me j M qHB 1 something good? ■ Clerk — Lady, there are no good seats at a col- lege show. Senior P,-„,l.-Tlie Grct UiniaslieJ t JINDL ' r-L- ■ ' 1 i j Jiti:Mii 4 ii t i ir  ii:idj,47i:i §nnr ' ' ,1 ' . ' ' 3I ' 4 -1 ' si 6t- t- ' sl ' 9 1- iio -yfr- f n - —itj- I ' lie ' ih - i Illllllf(l ' ' iii ' ll ' liirj THK EIGHTEE IXC I •[.E THE eighteen-inch rule is a iil ' w Liiiit of meas- ure invented by the dean of women for the exclusive use of university students. It promises to supersede both the old-fashioned yard-stick and the every-dav font-rule. While the old units of measure were plain wooden sticks with square ends; th e eighteen-inch n,:le is a delicate, invisi- ble, flexible bit of highly ornamented air, with a young man and a young woman dangling at either end. It seems that the public has not been educated to the point of receiving the new invention without being disturbed. The whole system of weights and measures will Jiave to be given a thorough revision to conform to the new rule. Society is in a state oi uncertainty while this revision is being made. The i]uestii)n of finding an inspector to enforce the regulation is a puzzling one. It will take some one with the detective ability of William J. Burns and the most unerring judgment to catch persons who persist in giving short measure inider the new rule. — Hassal Sullivan. Sam Shirk— ' T fell asleep over in the librar I fell asleep on some rock formations. Suns et tan deev nings tar. Then Hygiene for me; I ' ll hay toom eat mife ather face toof ace When nigh hav may dav C. ' iti biz zaversion tore day flunk kor fool He zap toof ret tan foam, ' eIlth at which chee had sen tay way toos kool I ' urn say gain nome. Tuile eye, tan neevning belle. Mine ex daze lessons punk; An maith airb e nose add ness sof airwell M1 nair rife lunk; Forth oat 00k eep me in nay room mand boarding- play Siz check smay bear meef are, I ' ll hay toot elm eye fath hurt to his fay Suat my ex pen says zar! BEFORE THE PURDUE GAME How much are tickets for the Purdue game going to be? Two dollars, one-fifty and one dollar. Where are the one-dollar seats? In God ' s Acre, I think. :NB ' JI aiA.[i ' I S3 : 1 I T RIPPED .V; Op en Letter B ,(M)M . t r ). , IXD., D t:. K Kid M arch 3, 912. ell, I ' ve gone ind done it n ) V I feel like a colt jus broken t h irness H an ess is r ght! s IV, Villi should ha e een Ol r un :le Saturdav n .s llt R ght there n t le mi 1st f tl e fracas and ip the excitement over- nc, when -well, Til put acting just like he was used to it. Yes? Ruth hanging on my arm, too! Of course, I took her. Have to be true to home folks, even if they are a bit — oh, well, you know what I mean. Girls from our burg aint just as classy as they might be. I ' m not knocking now, but you remem- ber that Moore jane from the city — the one ith the Nell Brinkley eyes — who went through in her dad ' s car last summer? Well, you know that there is nothing like that around Miller ' s Corners. But back to the beaten track. You know that I have been preparing for it for about a month. Of course, I am not one of those fellows who has a steady job polishing sorority house furniture, neither do I belong to the dollarocracy, but all the same I do like to put something on then. I spoke for my dress-suit down at the store just a month ago. I never have decided as to the ethi- cal points concerning wearing a rented dress-suit. I thought I would feel like the rest of the crowd was looking for the price mark, but do you know, when I got into the 1 came all my fears, c ci that in its proper place. I won ' t attempt to describe my feelings in those aw ful weeks leading up to the grand event. Fri- dav 1 went to the store and got fitted with trousers. ThcN ' were swell. Just enough peg to give an ef- fect, you know, and still be quite proper. Then T bought a white vest, a nice white silk ii ' dk ' f, a dress-shirt and some imitation pearl studs. Saturdav night before dinner I got shaved, got a shampoo and a massage. I did feel lu.xurious while it was being done, but my face felt sort o ' made up, like I was going on the stage. I was afraid to smile all evening for fear something would crack. I ale dinner as fast as I could and started to get ready about six o ' clock. And the tight was on. ' ou ne -er heard me swear around home, but a fellow learns something when he comes to Like a darn fool I bought a shirt that opens in md the front — and those studs with the patent catch! I put the bottom one in first and had to take it out just again to get the tup one in. After each attempt, thi- the Suede, who was acting as grand marshal, uit. wouhl call for the ' ' dry cleaner and one of the fellows would bring forth the art gum to clean off the finger prints. J mm The next fight was with the collar. One side was all right, but the otT side was as stubborn as a popular co-ed whose date is trying to lead her away from the Book Nook. The Swede Hnally got him hooked by running one arm up under mv shirt bosom and getting a strangle hold. Bill had loaned one of his already-tied bows that hook on and fasten behind. They got that on in about the time it takes to put the colors on one of those ask me pledges, cleaned off the finger prints, and helped me on with mv vest. Then bedlam tore loose. That vest fit me like a kimono. I looked like a bean nole with a sack rc loose. Th looked like a bean hung over it. There was at lea jr where the wa the waist been. I remember now how ii the store with fat Xewkirk, buiuiles mi.xed. .Mv good •dnesday out! ' ell, there was nothing of pins into use and fi.x up : It ' s a fright to think of tin loaded onto a pin at times. ougl e. tra t to ha I was happened and the clerk got an -el sure had ) do but few feet he b v tha The rest is all a blue, iiazy sort of dream. That is, all that wasn ' t a nightmare, ' e got the girls through the ordeal of the cab ride and arrived safely at the Student Building. After half an hour of maneu ' ering and monkey business, during which I uas on a nervous strain — the back of my vest stretching every fiber in it with each breath I took — we got through with the grand march ami got the programs filled. The guy that led that grand march must have been trained under Pro- fessor Beede. The music was great, kid! I wish that you could have been there. It was during one of those slow, dreamv, woozy sort of aeroplane glides, when you don ' t know that ou are dancing and the girl has one of those 1 could go on with this forever looks on her phiz, that the thing happened. Oh, that awful, awful moment when vou feel it slipping, slipping, sli-i— but you grit your teeth and fight it out — she let loose! Say, did your garter ever come off ' when vou were with a girl? But on with the dance! One end dragged on the floor, some one stepped on it, it strained, lie stepped off, and, bang! It flew back at me. The only thing to do was to act like a man and fix it. But one must stoop to con.iuer. I stooped— and the vest ripped. They should have used safeties. U ' hen I straightened up that vest bulged out in front like the awning over a bav window. Of course, the music had stopped and 1 had to lea e the center of the stage under the eves of all. . ly list of adjectives is depleted. I can not de- scribe it. There goes the ten-minutes bell. Yours, Bill. .SIL MI ()CK Bloomington enjoyed an Irish renaissance thi winter: Irish Players, January 27; Casev Jones, ' January 31. HI WATCH out! ' Ba-rooooooooooooooo-ah! — Skinncv Inmaii ' Till ' , MARK OF A rkOF The Union barber shop had been open but a few davs and everybody was interested as to whether or not it would be well patronized. Louis Flost had gone up tor his daily shave, and was in tiie chair. Barber — I think I had a prof in iiere yester- day afternoon. Louis — What makes vou think so? Barber— Oh, 1 don ' t know. Louis — ' ouldn ' t cuss, ch? SENTKNCED TO DEATH At precisely half past twelve o ' clock today members of the Economics Ciuh will he shot at the Morris Studio. EXAMIXATIOXS THERE is nothing like an examination to bring forth novel ideas which can ' t be found in any of the 92,000 volumes in the library. Some professors use time, thought, and discre- tion in grading examination papers, while others arc not so conscientious, and, like the old-time juryman, bring them all in guilty. An examina- tion consists largely of questions and answers. The questions are written in an illegible scrawl over 9,648 square feet of blackboard. Students not pos- sessing an effective acquaintance with a lot of sec- ond-hand ideas buttress up their declining hopes with portable sources of infi.irmation. Lidulgence in this ' arietv of hnesse is known as ponying. A ponv is all right lor a (]uiz, but, carrying out the metaphor, hcn it comes to an examination, most students feel the need of a herd of mastodons. Cramming gives a student bleary eyes and a faint impression of what the prof was gassing about all term. Most examinations begin at nine o ' clock and end in misery. i ° -v- TRANSPORTATION I.t) I) MAeCiRIF ' RANSPORTATIOX TKAiNSrUKl AllOA ' is the thing we study coaches, which will stop at tlie least provoca about 111 EGonomics 27 and swear about when On an accommodation train you can shoot craps we want to leave Bloomington. In Bloomington chew or smoke, take a swig of whiskey, or pla there are two public carriers which will get you poker in any of the coaches the nth degree of ac- out of town, if you are of a patient disposition. commodation. Not many students have crossed the Rocky A transp )lted but fev iig experiences 1 oniington uitii tl Mountains on a pack horse, or ji duroy road in a prairie schooner, of them have had more thrilliiu the tramways wiiich connect Bh home folks. Transportation is partially attained within the corporate limits of Bloomington bv the persistent efforts of six antiquated stage coaches, whose mo- tive power is supplied by gravity one-half of the time and profanity the other. Kach outlit is a separate enterprise and an indidivual aiiiiovance. There is only one class of passengers comuig into Bloomingto n who do not object to the transporta- tion service— those who go into executive session with the medical school Lipon their arrival. Many accommodation trams are run on the Monon. An accommndation train is a coii eyance consisting of a ve ' eran, country-broke, neuras- thenic engine and three prehistoric passenger gines, coaches, sho ins, and a roadbed, msportation conip; impany generally maintains , freight cars, passenger sta- ff is disputable whether the ies operating in Blooming- ha ' dbeds. ■H J ' E .M. J CUNNING S I L E S 1 R THK clerks HI the office of Morgan and Mitt, on the tenth Hoor of the Morgan and Miff Building, had finished their work and gone home. Horace Silvester, pri -ate secretary to Morgan, alone remained. He sat at Ins desk, his head buried in his arms, among a pile of papers. Sud- denly he arose. He reached into a pigeon-hole and withdrew a small steel saw, such as are used by jewelers in sawing metal. With this in his hand, he stepped out upon an iron balcony and pulled the window down behind him. He threw up his head and filled his lungs with the keen night air. He hung his coat on the railing and kneeled on tiie rusty platform. Then he set to work to saw the supporting rods from the bottom of the bal- cony. }iour after hour he toiled. One rod was severed, tiien another, and another. Great drops of perspiration stood upon his face. Madly he drew the rasping blade back and forth, back and forth, even after he was so exhausted that he had to lie down as he worked. The little saw was red with blood from his mangled fingers. The first light of dawn was creeping up over the top of the eastern sky line as he broke the last bond. The massive structure, with its human load, shot like a meteor to the deserted courtyard below, dashing itself into a thousand pieces. Great fun, Silvester. :4]n ' EA.?L ' M I ' HV y i- i ' l feF i l T H K B A L L A D () F T H K 1 ' I Z Z L E - S H 1 1 From tip to tip ' twas a ship-shape sliip That the men set up down town. Like a full-rigged fleet, down Seventh Street They wheeled lier to Dnnudec-.lnwn. The wheels were well-built and die planes wei And she seemed full ready to so ; Quoth the pilot: Full soon as the chimes jin I shall see where the safe winds lilnw. So the college and town gathered rnuml in the Or climbed to the chimneys high, Hoping perchance for a short fleeting glance Of the craft ere it climbed to the sky. There was many a one warned the pilot to shi The obstructions that ' fore him did lay ; But tlie man on the crutch was full sure overn And to the more sanguine did say : Last week the moon in a circle sluion. For I to her orb did soar : Ye ske[)tical men ! And wonder ye, then, Tliat Fm able to master it more? lly the breadth of a hand he cleared the top strand And he felt himself starting to slip. So he turned on more speed as he saileil o ' er the mead In his graceful aerial ship. L!ut the fence got his goat ; and. his he:i He looked for a soft place to land ; But he saw at a peep that we didn ' t kt . pneumatic harbor at hand. That caused it to drop in an apple-tree-top And what didn ' t break had to bend. He fell with a bump when he started to jump. And he saw through his pain-stricken eyes, .Ml battered apart, the pride of his heart — The crestfallen craft of the skies. But he laughed at his luck, and. chuck full of He saw the good side of it all ; — They tell me, quoth he, ' twas a tall apple-ti That cause l man ' s otiikr fall! in his throat, O, they gave it a test with its nose to the west, Then thev turned the impatient thing round. The pilot could feel, as he climbed to the wdieel, . breathless suspense on the down. W bile the spectators wait to 1 While curiosity yearns. They loosen the brakes, and tin A hundred odd millions of 1 rn of Tmmediatelv Which the lencc ran a i ' .vm iAi THE RAPE O E THE RAT HE worshippecl licr bccn angelic witlio doubly divine. 1 1 ' she Ik not tor the stars that twit e ' er be hers; lie onlv km She woidd have Hit with it she was 1 as bald as a Jap- ed her. He cared dared not iiope to loved her and her Often he had asked lier for a sprig of her hair. One little lockletine would have been prized by him more than all the curios in the Smithsonian Institute. She told him always, however, that it was as old-fashioned as a one-horse chaise to ex- change hair, and she was determined to be cur- rent. He returned that he did not care if it was a stone age stunt, he wanted a lockletine. All in vain! She would not venture across with the ex- celsior. One night in the secret of his own chamber he resolved desperately to swipe one. He went out and bought a kit of burglars ' tools and a lawn- mower. Then he called her up by ' phone and made an appointment. Concealing the weapons under his vest, he visited her. When she was not look- ing, he plucked a choice bou(]uet of her heavenly grass. Then lie hied himself thence hastily. He had grabbed the prize, and he was dizzv with de- light. Home again, he stroked the golden wavelets gently and pressed them to his lips. How proud he was of his stolen harvest! He drew near the electric light and looked affectionately upon the tiny curl. Suddenly h right hand flopped to ascended ini groaned and face became pale, his left chest. A his thorax. Sea weed, into a swoon. Upon aw Hi ing, lie llew like a fire chief to the corner botanist. He thrust the lockletine into the outstretched fist of the botanist and sat down upon a bench to await the decision. The long-whiskered plant-man ad- justed a microscope and started his scientific stir. In five minutes he grasped himself lovingly by the beard, looked up at the ceiling, and whispered: •■.S ' ,v; icc ' cif The liair Raffles staggered to his feet. He had made up his mind to bear the truth. Rat! he gasped. Rat! He forgot to fee the botanist, and rushed out into the night, a ruined, broken NJU)liANA[l J ANOTHER Gl ' ESS Father — ' ' Great Caesar ' s post mortem tom! As 1 feared! I gix ' e mv son the advaiuat of an education, and lie returns to me wrecked h whiskey. Son — Not whiskev, father; co-ed fudt c. STLDKXT PKOSE Infested with animated hordes of seething hu- manity, the downtown streets took on the appear- ance of a gala festival day, and sidewalk and street alike were filled with great crowds of tensely ex- cited Purdue supporters good-naturedly rubbing elbows with crowds of equally apprehensive In- diana followers. The whole atmosphere seemed imbued— — Dtii y SliiJfiit, November 25, 191 1. zi)()1.(k;y I (iVM R. TS -Whitaker, Hunt, Gill, Colev, DokM R. TS— Sarah Goldman, Ethel Harris, Irene McClean, Mabel McLellan, Marie Allen. L- lo Room Pests— John Woods, Ralph Ridley, Doc Johnston, Pat Edmondson, Doc Smith. .wv SciKHii. RoDEXTS— Louis Plost, Reginald Ballenger, Big Kent, Jerry Ulen, Jim Douglass. LIBR.ARV Spiders — Earl Hudelson, Carrie Ong. F. MILI. R Seexs— Tubby Ikerd, Georgia Sem- bower, Flovd MacGriff ' . DEAN,..- i ra 3 - : : 4 : gii:Vi 4 JMi En! r A Nightshirt TaraJc— L O W - ] R O W M U S I C B EETHOVEN ' S right and well enough for hllcd with passions deep, and feel their souls with pleasure creep into a plane that ' s high above the ordinary vulgar drove of low-brow rough-necks, when they hear the lofty strains of Meyerbeer. To mc it gis ' cs a classic pain t(j see some people sit and strain their ears, or eke their aching brain to get an understanding vain of what ' s beyond their men- tal plane. Say! let this classic stuff be canned — play Alexander ' s Ragtime Band! ' Tis not for me that Wagner rears melodic structures that for years have baffled every sane attempt to find out wiiat he really meant. ' Tis not for me that oboes squawk, and bassoons grunt, and people gawk at long-haired lunatics who play above our common heads, and say we ' re bone- heads! Let this classic stuff be canned — play Al- exander ' s Ragtime Band! 1 do not give a tinker ' s curse if 1 am ignorant, or worse; I like the syncopated stuff, although it mav be crude and rough. A has Chopin and ' raus mit Bach, sav I, and also turn the lock on Mozart, and tlie other guys witii highfalutin ' melodies. I sav, let all of ' em be canned — play Alexander ' s Ragtime Band! p -.y -p A . LT[iKX. Tl E Freshman — If Biermann flunks me in Ger- man, I ' ll join the navy. ' NE ' liAT I. P I E IN the first place, why should (ine devote time and energy in describing what appears at first sight such a trivial thing as a piece of pie? Let us look well into the subject. Pie has been rightly called the greatest Amer- ican institution, and, along with chewing-tobacco, holds a large place in the hearts of all Americans. There are several varieties of pie, ranging from that delicious product of mother, which, being not a material object, but a section of hea en, baffies description, to the lowly pie of commerce, handed out in Bloomington boarding-houses. I shall attempt to describe the latter. 1 shall totally disregard the aristocratic variety called pie a la mode, pronotniced mud, and called pie with ice cream on top by the vulgar student. Tile Bloomington variety consists, first, of an outside shell, varying in strength and thickness from an ordinary piece of cardboard to a section of armor plate. AH varieties are bullet proof. To aid the consumer, several holes are always punched in the outside shell for finger holds. Around the outer edge of the pie is a raised projection about an inch in height. This projection is always scal- loped and is formed by the joining of the top and bottom layers, which are crimped together hot, like the lids of acuum cans or heads of small boilers. n THE POOR PROFESSOR Professors ' lives are sad and drear. They have to sit in class and hear The ravings of untutored geeks For weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks. (2) Their lot is hard, their fate is crool, They should be pitied, as a rule. Their nights are filled with fearful dreams. From sitting up and grading themes. (3) The student ' s days are gay and free, His nights are full of deviltry. He doesn ' t have to sweat and moil At a professor ' s wearv toil. (4) His withers are unw rung, his heart Untortured by the hateful part Of jumping on some hapless wight. Who doesn ' t know his lesson c]uite. (5) Yet think you that I ' d want to swap My happy life for his poor lot? Think you Fd trade, think you Fd — You ' re darn right I would! —Fred W. Trueblood. IlINlJjHiAl- li- THE HEART BREAKERS I ' 111-: sociilTY of arch lady killi-:rs THE OR G A X [ Z A r I O X OF X E ' F R - T O - D E - D R I V E X - A W A Y S Faculty Member Active Expelled Leslie MncDiU Alumni Adams: Don and Cai Bobby Robinson Carl Cunningham npbell Gm Lcnnno.1 Phil. p Graves Williani M..ore Gm- WeM ScMtt F.Kvards Andv Gill Hcze Cunningham Earl Gold Omer Loop Honorably Withdrawn Ben Hitz Co-op Pittinger Tubby Scott Jerry Ulen Georgia Scmbnwcr E X 1 R A ! Wc present the above as the only moving picture ever pub- lisiicd ill print. It shows faithfully the 191 r freshman-sopho- more scrap from beginning to end. The scrap lasted two seconds, approximately. The picture shows the scrap in its entirety. H DIANA! ACTUAL HVGIEXE RXA r PAPER 1. A water-proof cellar is one tliat won ' t ad- t water. In order not to admit water, any ciiance admission of such Huid must be eliminated. To this the cellar must be water proof. 2. In a room of two windows vent ilation mav ( -A K Or. ' 1 n i 1 kL be obtained by opening one from below, and clos- ing the other from below. The windows should be opposite from one another — one in the ceiling, the other in the floor. If the room is heated by a grate, it should be nearest the window closed from below. 3. Cauterize the water with one pound of dyna- mite. 4. Proprietary medicines should be used be- cause they taste good and give you the habit. They should not be used, because they cost money. ;. Linen is sterilized by heat. It is first washed, then put in a steamer, and fina road to drv. It is then sterilize sterilizing is to infect the sheet The two kirn swill eat each otl FU.NXTIUX lut in tilt Anothc The Student Building is the ' alf way ouse for the Phi Psis and Phi Delts on their long journeys ber veen town and home. 1 INDIAN. r THEY TALK WHY did you come to Indiana? Because 1 iiad tinisiicd high school and there was nothing left to do in our town but get married, and I didn ' t have a case. Of course, your parents were dunifounded when you suggested coming here. No, they weren ' t. They were glad to think that 1 wanted to do something. But your mother — didn ' t she want you to go east to a finishing school or — Oh, no; she thinks Bloomington is quite far enough away from home. Your father raised all kinds of a row, though, I imagine — wanted you to go some place where vou would be carefullv chaperoned. A man never likes to see his own daughter come to this sort of place. D.iesn ' the? Well, now, does he? Just tell me the e. act words your father said when nou told him you wanted to come down lie re. P e said— (pause) he said 1 would have to wear my old SLiit this winter again and that 1 would have t(i give up a visit to Iowa that 1 had planned. Don ' t voLi lind the girls here rather common. ' ' Common? You mean — Ordinary — not quite up to our standard, don ' t you know — a bit crude in some ways? ' ell, hardly. I never did know that you shouldn ' t prop (Hir knife until 1 came here. Don ' t you miss the little things you always took as a matter of course at home, private bath, machine, and — say, now, don ' t you catch yourself looking for grapefruit at the breakfast table? Haven ' t so far. I don ' t miss a private bath and machine because we haven ' t either at home. Care for golf? ?sever ha -e played. Ever ride bareback? Bloomington must be a beastly place to shop in. Can ' t say. Haven ' t bought anything since I ' ve been here. Say, where have vou been since vou came here, that you ' ve missed the coaching that the freshmen get? Tell me. 1 want to know. Oh, Eve been in the cellar. I ' ve been here tw(5 months and this is the first date E e had. Eater. I ' x ' e waited f(. ur whole ' ears for you. 1 had decided that yoLi would ne er come, and, now that you ' re here, take this pin — take it, I say. You won ' t wear it? Oh, yes, you will. When a man has waited four years, he has got some pretty strong arguments ready. Take it! I ' ll promise you, you ' ll wear it. :ndiam-. inni jTr {i d ' i: -vy:  - fe i i B PERFECT REPOSE FADIXG Crook Freeland — They ought to cliarge about When the new storm doors were phiced at the two-doUar hiboratory fee in Paul Clements mu- entrance to Science Hall, the campus gloom agent c course and furnish hammocks. remarked: There go our chances for a new gym for the next two years. SULPHURICALLY SUBLIME A young English instructor was heard to re- mark, fall term: I am writing a h of a paper on ' The Sublime and the Beautiful. ' He — What is the hardest thing in coUeg It — Dopintr out the easiest ct)urse. PROPOSALS FOR MEMBERSHIP The roommate of a newly elected Strut and FVetter asked him if he had been officially ad- mitted to the organization, to which the freshlv honored one replied: Well, no, but I ha e been to a meeting, so I guess I am in, all right. Did they vote down Kathleen Stilwell? No. Then it wasn ' t a regular meeting. THE AUTHOR A young woman handed in a home-use ticket at the library desk filled out as follows: tie: ' The Bible. PRECEDE XT English Prof, to Sigma Chi Crecelius - don ' t see any reason why you shoidd llunk in thi course. Crecelius — ' ell, 1 fliniked in it last term. BROKI ' Walt Heazlitt— I have father ' s good will. J F R O M I N E N T PERSONS Ji)hn Mclk ' tt admits that, next to Guy Lemmon, he is the mnst unpopuhir man in scIidciI. Micn l -()fessnr Scmbi) ver lias an especially fine point to make, he uses baseball metaphors. Doctor Johnston insists that he is not an honorary member of the Press Club, and the Press Club is willing. Alva Hughes calls everybody old man. When Professor Aydelotte, father of ' ilIiam Aydelotte, age some odd months, finds a tack missing from the upholster- ing of a chair, lie holds up his English classes until he locates the tack. l ' l(ivd I ' demming and Andy Gill scrap over the comic sup- plement c ery .SLUiday. Russell Sharp is authority on everything indigestible. For down-to-the-minute gossip, you can invariably rely on Tubbv Ikerd, Hays Buskirk and George Henley, all native sons. Flo l .MacCjrifi- thinks that the purpose of a college oflice is to he run for. [canette Bartelle is a good departmental club joiner. Mrs. Stephenson makes H. T. warm the water when there is a kitten to drown. Ruth Kdwards ' friends describe her laugh as hopeless. Russ Racey: I ' pon the solicitation of my many friends, I ' .nsenteil to allow mv name to be used as a candidate. ■ BE AN A I J JexkixS: Woman Suffrage. Sembower: Baseball. LiXDLEV: Democracy, with a sn Stephexsox: Camera. JOHXSTOX: Diiily Student. HUTCHIXS: Hit ' er up. Aydelotte: Willyum. Throckmortox : Dog. Eigexm.WX : Children. HaggertV : Fourth dimension of t DeNise: Eightcen-inch limit. Hardixg: History 1, chain gang. Brvax: Previous engagement. WOODBURX: Jury duty. Damssox: My daughter. Pell: Plums. Gill: Being ruff. McNutT: Stage presence. Big Kext: ? PlosT: Hair. Driscoll: Half a twins. . TIP Mr. Foreman— Mr. Goss, what does S on this point. ' ' ' Elmer Goss— I don ' t know. Mr. Foreman— Well, you i Light t .) know Seager, c)u kni) , wro ' e t ic tex book ig in this cdLirse. WELL-KXOWX FIGfRLS Greek Special $0.25 One cab 1 .00 Dance ticket 1.50 Season ticket 5.00 Fatimas 20 Union card i .00 Special assessment ? Flowers 3.49 Shines 10 Dress suit, rent 2.50 Contingent fee 5.00 Strut and Fret 35 Laundry -4 ' ' 47 II-NBHAR iiB iXlSSS ESS Bfl ilBU IlllS nn: MCE FELLOWS Tubby Ikerd and Delta Gamma Overman were in the Book Nook one day early in the year. Jeff Griffith and Jack O ' Harrow thought that it was a good opportunity to kid the rising young Indiana avenue bard. As Tubby passed out with his date, Jeff said, in a dignified tone : Hello, Stanley. As Tubby drew nearer the door, Jack said: Hello, Tubby. Tubby greeted them with a condescending How-do-you-do? Outside the Book Nook, Miss Overman asked Tubby who the boys were. Tubby answered : Oh, they are pretty nice boys. They are poor boys, though. They wait table over at my boarding club. THE FOUXTAIX PEX A fountain pen does away with the old-fash- ioned girl who used to go to the three-hour tortures at the end of the term loaded with an ink bottle, blotter, pen wiper and two kinds of steel pens. The f(.)untain pen is one of the four great burdens of the college world. The other three are co-eds, ticket sellers and studies. For, just as there are some people who can not run an aeroplane without taking a spill, so the inveterate fountain pen user is likeh- to be one who slings free ink from the Co-op all o er other people ' s things. The fountain pen jerk has been a familiar mo- tion for some time. It bids fair to work an evolu- tion in the muscles of the human arm. The in cntoi- of the foimtain pen got his idea from the ei dit-dav camel. L lINr ' HA.! ]r Bloomington barber shop rates : shave and monologue, ten cents THE INDIANA UNION servesIndianaUniversity in every possible way. Its idea is best expressed in the words of John Whittenberger: Boost, boost, boost Indiana, everywhere and at all times. NDCAr r INDIANA UNION OFF I CERS FOR 19 11-12 Paul iMcNutt, Guy Lemnion. First Vic Russell A. Brown. Second Vic Ralph Richman, ■ George Gill President c-President e-President Secretary DIRECTORS Faculty Member C. J. Sembower Undergraduates E. S. Brumbaugh Byrl Kirklin R. S. Racey Glen Munkelt Clarence Artman Everett Lett Louis Plost John Sweeney Alumni IMember Then, F. Rose .here tlie prizes won by and tlic loafing room, and an over- latives. These irt donated bv ing IS the trophy room, Indiana teams are kept Comfortable seats are provided, worked piano is kept to bother the rooms are dec.irated bv works of members of the faculty. In the rear of the trophy room is the pool room, which is open to members only. Here are tliree pool tables and one billiard table. A reaciini:; room, containing the best magazines and newspapers, is maintained on the second floor, in tile red room. On this floor is also the office of the board of directors and the newly installed bar- ber shop. On the last Saturday of each term the Union holds its term dance. Each dance is a feature. The one in the fall is a football dance, in the winter a po ert ' dance, and in the spring the affair is made uniiiiie in some manner. 1 H E INDIANA UNION THE Indiana Union is the big brotherhood of the University. Its membership is open to the men students, the faculty and the alumni. Its purpose is to further the spirit of democracy at Indiana by providing the means for social contact of all the men. The Union was founded in the winter of igog by the late John Whittenberger, who was elected its first president. It was housed in the east wing of the Student Building and still maintains its quar- ters there. On the first floor of the Union side of the build- L IN DEAN. lSM l li iHir q 4 M i n n c Each term a big meeting is held at which some person of national repute in some field is present. This year George Fitch, of Siwash fame; Harold Johnston and otiiers spoi e. Some diversion by way of a wrestling or boxing match i)r music by the University orchestra or Glee Glub is provided. Eats are also much in evidence. An entertainment series was given both this and last year. The Union presented this season Bea- trice Forbes-Robertson, the Kneisel Quartette, William Allen White and Horatni Cnnell. Bv the work of the present Uninn bnard the membership was boosted this year hundred mark. Its members now- all of the male population of the cai man in school is the Union aim. Another big step this year was the establ the six ; nearh Ever ment of the Hospital Fund, by means of which the hospital expenses of any member are paid by the Union. This was established through the liberal- ity of President Bryan. Plans are on foot which will give the Union a home of its own by the time the next batch of fresh- men arrixe. At the annual election this winter the next of- ficers and board of directors were selected. They are: President, Hubert Hickam; first vice-presi- dent, Emmett Brumbaugh; second vice-president, Wilbur T. Gruber; secretary, Everett Lett; treas- urer, Robert Patterson; faculty director. President ' . E. Bryan; alumni director, Theodore F. Rose; directors, Paul V. McNutt, Wilbur Glover, Ev- erett iMcCullough, Ralph Richman, Eouis Plost, Albert Stump and Floyd Ramsey. JiNDlAP wwm !i INDIAN. The rush, and after that the open houses LIST OF MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred Twe Jeanne Crowdcr Ida Chenoweth Willa Palmer Margaret Latham Georgia Sembower Nineteen Hundred Thu Ruth Dochlnian neteen Hundred Fourteen Mildred Marsh Elida Allen Mar}- Louise Mauzv Ruby Washburn IrmaWverbacher Harriet Mitchell Erema Wilk DorotbvTIiurnburuh Louise Keller M. Rubv -ills neteen Hundred Fifteen Avis P.rvan Hazel Bertscb Helen Jeffrey Ruth Herdrick F-dith Gronendyke ? iij)]IANAE: Kappa Alpha T h c t a Mirror ' ' . Kappa Alpha Tlieta maintains a scliDlar- ship fund to aid wearers of tlie kite in ad- vanced study abroad. Tliis fund is supplied bv contributions of alumn;p, assessment on the active chapters, and by the royalties from a copyrighted play written b - the I .eland Stan- ford chapter in collaboration. HWhen the water pipes are not frozen, and the gas is working, the local chapter occupies a home in Forest Place, just northeast of the board-walk. The third-rt.mr windows of the house serve as a point of vantage lor the Thetas when there is an athletic contest on Jordan Field. • -Fheta colors are black and gold. ' Fhe tlower is the black and gold pansy. •I Kappa Alpha ' Fheta was founded at Dc- Pauw in January, iSjo. ' Fhat chapter soon showed its good judgment by establishing a chapter at Indiana in the same year. L -f INID ' JIA?! . . -. - _., . Nineteen Hundred Twelve Samuella Norman Ruth Woolery Daphne Hoffman Carrie Ong Mary Wright Ruth Edwards Nineteen Hundred Tiiirtee.- Kathleen Stilwell Helen Beck Marv Craig Hazel Fitzpatrick •Cliapm inetee.n Hi Gencv Ruth ■ Hazel Dillon Kate DePew Cecile Hanna Gertrude Brady Helen Barbour Ruth Telfer Mabel Erwin Ruth Lockhart Nineteen Hundred Fifteen Ruth Moffett Hazel Etzold Gladys Lockhart Helen Van Camp Mary Louise Bagot Edith Hoadley : ji. ' LA.riA m :H A : W- ?! ' l k ' h I Kappa Kappa Gamma Transcript H Kappa Kappa Gamma has blazed the trail among women ' s fraternities at Indiana in the matter of owning homes. The chapter botigiit a Forest Place residence tiiree years agd. 11 The Kappa fl.nver is the tleur-de-lis. The colors are blue -ligiit and dark. H Kappa Kappa tiamma was founded at Monmouth, Illini)is, in i Sjo. There are at present thirty-seven active chapters. The last one established is at Tnronto, Canada. H Delta of Kappa Kappa (himma is the of- ficial cognomen of the local chapter. That makes it the fourth clnapter established. It was founded in 1S72. It is the oldest contiiui- •; The local chapter has occupied a house since 1802. w LIST OF .M E M P. !•: R S NiXETEEN Hundred Twelve Ruth White Ruth Ikerd Ahiia Schlotzhauer Ida Marie Wilson Josephine Thomas Marie Kneale Louise Espy Marv X.isl, Maud Lifers 1 l. ' l . l ' |!1: ,,n- Helen Ikerd 1 ' . Anna Harper Pearl Phillipe _M,:I ' ,,I|. : I ' .Ml.l.M k Marquerite Butler AiiMiXMll artwriMht Gladys Cottin Olive Montgomery NETEEN HuNDEED Fourteen Winnette Emery Ruth Kins Caroline Wccms iD ' ]iA.n . Pi Beta Phi C. h r o n i c 1 e H Pi Beta Phi is the oldest of women ' s col- lege fraternities, having first seen the light of day April 28, 1867, as the I. C. Sorosis, at Monmouth, Illinois, near Siwash. It rose to the dignity of a Greek-letter organization in 1888. HThe Pi Phis have invaded Canada and initiated the stolid French-Canadians into the mysteries of the society. HThe local chapter was founded April 13, 1893, under the cJiapter name of Indiana Beta. At present the chapter home is located across from the campus, on the corner of Sixtli street and Indiana avenue. :d -wmc md ' ' I ' lie fraternit llower i The fraternity colors are silver blue. 11 Pi Beta Phi has been the Hrst sorority to establish schools. Several of its own institu- tions are to be found to-day m the mountain districts of the Carolinas. _ 1- . :_,_ ' c ' f% mKf Ifeiij ■ . ' i S .. KBEAr- ' l i.! THETA CHAPTER OF DFITA G MM LIST OF MEMBERS Post Grad Eupha Folej ' Nineteen Hundred Twelve Louella Cordit Louetta Cordit Gladvs Lee Rubv Heckler Ch Hundred Fourteen ne Biller Helen Hoyej ' Katherine Bowman Margaret Banta Hazel Robbins ineteen- Hundred F Katherine Tinsley Panline Malonv Gavle Marshall Berneice Robinson . nna 0 ■erma Rutli FA-knian MahleDaltnn Anna Abel May Ghorniley Elizabeth Harper DEAMAr Notes on Delta ( j a m m a €SMs: 3iiiF il Delta Gamma has the unique distincti(_)n of being the only women ' s fraternity which has a male member. George Banta, wiio was instrumental in putting the fraternity on a na- tional basis, and who directed Delta Gamma ' s invasion of the North, is the man. H Delta Gamma was founded at the I ' ni- versity of Mississippi in 1S72 ami was broui dit north in 1878. 11 Delta Gamma now has twenty-two active chapters and nineteen alumn;v chapters. The local chapter, known as Theta of Delta Gamma, was founded in iS )S. 1: The board-walk terminates 111 tiic Delta Gamma front yard. The house is bnundcd im tlie north by the Theta house, and on the south .SZNDEAN, IN CHAPTER OF HKI. lA ZI LIST OF MEMBERS Nineteen Hundree TU ' ELVE XiNETEEx Hundred Thirteen Nineteen HuND Grace Alexande Gladys Robinsoi Flae Balliuger Frances Durrenburger Caroline Hildebrand Gladys Marine Nineteen Hundred Fourteen Ada May Burke Frances Hankemeier Merle .Maxwell Elizabeth Oden Helen Patterson Helen Shingler Blanche Cook E.CIa,rcJ,ill Katherine Ke Flora Ruth ' 4Nj i-W s S t o r V () f D c 1 t a Z c t a , Delta Zeta is the last of the Miami fainilv. The Alpha chapter was nri anized in Octdbcr, 1902. The local chapter was installed May 22, 1909. 1 The pink rose is the flower of Delta Zeta. The colors are old rose and Nile green. I The chapter house at present is located at the corner of Idiird street and Indiana avenue. II Delta Zeta is the only Greek-letter frater- nity located at Indiana which can boast of having one of its charter members yet in the active chapter. U Delta Zeta is the infant Greek-letter so- ciety at Indiana University, but it is already Hrmly established in the front ranks of local sororities. T H K G R 1 E K L E T T E R lUT L L D O G TO .MAINTAIN a a.llc-c fraternity, tw.i thuv i are ab- solutely necessary: a charter and a bulldog;, if a frater- nity were forced to do without one, it had better i e up its charter. A fraternity niitj;ht possibly get along without a charter, but it would be a mighty weak college lodge without a bulldog of some nationality. THIS IS ' : E La.: . K- ' Wri ' ii-l } A fraternity is always glad afterward that it did not get vou :ETA THETA PI 1€ 1 © TalLLIV . l. ETEli. UUNDKED TlIIKTEEX XiNETEEN HONDUED FOURTEEN NINETEEN IIUNDKED FiFTI William A Rawles Hubert H. Hamia George H. DeHority Robert W. Marshall Charles M Hepburn Scott E. Buell Charles M. Piper Bvron S. Cowing Charles D. ' CampbcU H. Louis Mauzy Ru sL■ll IT, Strickland William C. Mathews Albert Ralib Paiil V. McXutt I ' rccKric F, Durham John J. Daus Dr Allison Maxwell Paul E. Fisher Cl.in.le . l. Hwing William A. Kunkel, Jr Georse W. R. Hughes K-naKl R. Scott Paul L. Maddock Nineteen Hundeed Twelve Albert L. Rabb John H.Morris PirnrFS Paul Y. Davis Benjamin D. Hitz James Boyd Ross Dunn DIAM pv ' B0n About 1 c t a T li e t a Pi ' H Four alumni of the local chapter of Beta Theta Pi have given names to Indiana I ' ni- versity buildings. Maxwell, Wylie, Owen 1 and Kirkwoud Halls are their substantial 1 monuments. M li Beta Theta Pi was the first national fra- 1 ternity to cultivate the field at Indiana. The n local chapter was established by Thomas B. y Graham, August 27, 1845. The chapter was 1 inactive from 1851 to 1855. y H Beta is also the eldest of the Miami tribe 1 having local chapters. The fraternity was = founded at Miami I ' nivcrsity, Oxford, Ohio, in 183Q. A ■. |L, .,.-«■. . 11 ' ith the characteristic disregard of ex- M - ' i i|fe w penses attributed to college students. Beta Bt ■■■A Sfsn - K Theta Pi has chosen the American Beauty ' K. ■■ ' feylBpf WJiist ■ •■ ■ j j?J9P Rose as the fraternity flower. Light shades of W,fe j f SfftHfl ' MSB pink and blue are the colors. ' :, bHH|h 3H H Members whose names arc familiar with ' fi H HB the average under-graduate arc Paul .Mc- _ nnpumpi Nutt, president of the Union, and Paul Da- |Bi - - ; 1. VIS, varsity football man. : ■. V n T A X A A I. P II . MEMBERS Faculty Dr. Robert E. Lvons Herman Lester Smith James M. Sheldon Leslie M. MacDill Nineteen Hundred Twe Fred W. Beck Paul R. Hawley DonO.Herold JliUard C. Kent Miller C. Kent Emmett M. LaRue Floyd MacGriff Leon B. Rogers iNETEEN Hundred Thirteen Scott R. Edwards Havnes J. Freeland R,:.nakl V. Kent Clvdc Mrirrison _Mcrlc U ScMtt Walter S. Heazlit Eli S. Jones Samuel S. Shirk Sherman Minton Everett C. MacGrifl J. Harold Xaus Bernett Leist ilax K. Leckne Charles E. Free W ' Y. sketch of the Phi Delta Theta Tj Argent and azure, which, being trans- lated, mean white and sky-blue, are the colors of Phi Delta Theta. The white carnation is the fraternity rtuwer. TI The local chapter, designated Indiana Alpha, is the oldest continuous local frater- nity. It has been constantly active since its installation in 1849. UPhi Delta Theta is another offspring of that prolific progenitor of fraternities, Miami University. The original chapter was founded in December, 1848. H Phi Delta Theta has seventy-three chap- ters in the United States and Canada, with an aggregate membership of nearly nineteen thousand. il Four active Phi Delts wear the 1 . They are Jack Jones, and Miller Kent, football; Haynes Freeland, basketball, and Civde Mor- rison, captain-elect of the cross coiuitry team. Floyd MacGriff is business manager of the Student. :NDiiAri. ii b i i: i ig 5 R vy.w ;i--iA i .d g [inr]r mmQUQM Oi de@eei esoddQoe eoeo @o ■HuNmiEDTwi- Hiir:.co A. lIulTii Charles .rs™,:,. Ernest H. Linilk- Lewis S. Davis Carl H. Eigennia Donald S. Dixon Charles J. Van Tassel Conrad Arnkens INETEEX HL-VllBEn FoU Floyd R. Kirklin Glenn B. Ralston ETEEN Hundred Fifteen Pledges Tames W. Lee Walter H. May Alfred M.Foellinger P.artii Crecelius Shirlev Seward Jiii;iiAn i □1 i]l:HEI. ' T G:E2 B ll3fiSl!I?eiS C o II c e r n i n g Sigma C ' . h i Fraternities are regarded as old institu- tions at Indiana University, yet Joseph G. McPiieeters, a charter member of Lambda of Sigma Chi, one of tiie oldest of Indiana ' s fra- ternities, is still among Bloomington ' s acti e citizens. li -Miami rniversity is the birthplace of Sigma Chi. The Alpha Chapter was tnun.ied there Jime 20, 1S55. 1 Sigma Chi at Indiana was the hrst frater- nity to build its own home. For some ears the chapter has occupied a handsome stone structure at Seventh street and Indiana a e- nue, overlooking the campus. 1! There are si.xty-three active chapters of Sigma Chi, besides forty-two alumni chapters. ' IThe fraternitv colors are blue and gold. The flower is the white rose. IHNID L- I A [NDIANA BETA OF PHI KAPPA PS] ft fl f ?| I Nineteen Hundred Twelve Russel S. Racev Merrill S. Davis Robert C. Hamilton Lawrence R. Frecl Allen G. Messick Nineteen Hundred Thirtee: Hubert Hickani George W. HcnUv, Jr. FredW. TnR-1,1 1 LIST OF il E M B E R ; Nineteen Hundred Fourtee; Charles D. Ran Geofifrev F. Griffith Russell F. Burton E. Rogers Smith Allen V. Buskirk Havs Buskirk John W. O ' Harrow Horace W. Fox James Faris John Hall Woods James Robinson Nineteen Hundred Fifte Matthew Winters D.-inald R. Thornburg Clififord Xewell Oliver L. Scott Frank Faris C. Grear Tilman Chester Loughry Arthur Krause James Frenzel Reginald Jlowr Willis Hickam :HL:i:iAr ' ' iA Pertaining to Phi Kappa Ps TI Phi Kappa Psi will move in the fall to its new four-story home on East Third street. The building, a handsome brick structure, was completed this spring. H The f raternit ' was founded at Washing- ton and Jefferson College, February iQ, 1852. The sweet pea is the fraternity flower, and pink and lavender are the colors. H The local chapter, designated Indiana Beta, was established in 1869, during the res- toration period for Greek-letter fraternities, after the Civil War. 1 ' Phi Kappa Psi now has forty-three active chapters and forty-one alumni associations. Among the pniminent alumni of the local chapter are such men as Nat U. Hill, former state treasurer; W. L. Taylor, former state at- torney-general, and Francis E. Baker, of the United States Court of Appeals. TIThe chapter now has two P men in school, Merrill Davis, basketball and foot- ball, and Allen G. Messick, football. INBHAN.- 3 UiAt :: k S: { :-A-W ' i ' U ikt ] I D □ L J a S 1 OF MEMBERS XETEEX HUXDRED THIRTEEN Robert G. Patterson Rav V. Clark Robert S. Payton Francis E. Reed ilorrell M. Shoemaker XETEEN Hundred FouETEEN Lacey L. Schnler Nineteen Hu Bayaril T, i c iNETEEN Hundred Fifteen George Harding Fleming Hayniond John Hill Constance Mcilullan M. Hopkins Albert Eschelman W a.Nne Mitchell IIST Gkad Ernest V. Shocklcy illNB ' ArlAll ][I]aiiSII 2B] Phi Gamma Delta R e ' i e w liPhi ike the Gamma Delta fabled Ph(rnix, prepanns to rn )m her ashes. ii, ti) construct a nt ts home which v ago. T The chapter is plannir stone house on the site of destroyed by fire two year; 1 Phi Gamma Delta was first organized at ' ashington and Jefiferson, May r, 1848. The fraternity now has forty-eight chapters, and over thirteen thousand members. Th IS established at In- One of the charter Zeta chaj diana, May 15, 1 members is still living. H Phi Gamma Delta has alumni prominent in all walks of life, from statesman to slabs- men. Some of them are Lew Wallace, John Clark Ridpath, Charles W. Fairbanks, New- ton D. Baker, J. Wilbur Chapman, Meredith Nicholson, Frank Norris and Christy Mat- thewson. il Prominent members of the active chapter are Berry Whitaker, football; Bob Patter- son, manager of the Glee Club; Charles Sher- man, manager of Strut and Fret; Frank El- son, president of the Boosters Club. P]iTNE ' i:AM 1 L r I 1 JL X T O F MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred Twelve nnij.iniin F.Hatfield Ad.lis K, Summers Harr - li. Knowlton James R. Mitten Nineteen Hundred Thirteen Donald L. Bose Nineteen Hundred Fourteen Nineteen Hundred Fiftee Hugh A. Barnhai-t Lyman K. lirackett Otto C. Fnuleliart Nerval K. Harris Thomas P. Huran John W. Jordan Hugh P. Lawrence Richard Simmons Joseph M. Stephenson John H. Van Reed Donald F. Vlict NB]IANA£ Delta T a u Delta Data 11 For fifteen years. Delta Tau Delta has lived in a chapter house, with a chapter vary- ing from twenty to twenty-five members. At present the chapter is located in East Bloom- ington, on Third street. A stone residence on Dunn Meadow will be erected within a few years. TI Delta Tau Delta was founded at Bethany College, Bethany, est Virginia, in iS g. During the Civil ' ar it remained a Southern fraternity exclusively, but in iS6() bcLjan the invasion of the North, and the Beta Alpha Chapter at Indiana was established in 1S74. il The colors of the fraternity are purple, white and gold. The pansy is its flower. 11 Among the prominent alumni of the chap- ter are George and Worth Brehm, illustrators, of New York City; Dr. Charles Hortlofif, of Evansville; Ephraim Inman, Oscar L. Pond and Gen. John Ward, of Indianapolis. H Champ Clark is a Delta Tau. A i B 1 1 Hlkii u i -jif- ■ 1 HUHDEAN. IKS MHi ; T A f: t a of si r. i LIST OF M E M B E R S Jnmc-, I ■ Clavtnn 1 Russdl . ClinlMul Tliomas , II 11 1,1 Austin Km, W i lit H iiiiiltun kiMii nd IicksonMi Lc Iieiknd N AiKkrsnn DwightPooliLi en-,iin ll iniMS M N u N r Andy Gill is a Sit ma Xu. Another prom- inent member of the acti e chapter is Floyd Flemming, ' varsity football man. I Sigma Nu was the first fraternity to oc- cupy a house at Indiana Inixersitv. The chapter mo ed into its lirst home in iS(;4, In June, i()ii, a two-story stone resilience was purchased and remodeled by the fraternity, for use as a permanent chapter home. T; The Hrst chapter of Sigma Xii was founded January i, iS6g, at N ' irginia .Mili- tary Institute. There are at present si. ty-si. chapters. II The colors of Sigma Nu are black, white and gold. The fraternity (lower is the white rose. TI The local chapter was formed April 14, 1892. It is known as the Beta F ta Chapter. ' A L IL r i E! H H Mjhfi i:ra?E, BETA T H E T A OF KAPPA S IC. M A A ■- , j lJi .Xa pii ' 37 r iwll i ' • kivlir ' ill iB k- ' UIBfll .1 Hi 1 1 ' - • ' w {mm ' I HF ' Sftt ff  f f - m t % 1 r ' % % % 3 BSf T ' ) f ' f 1 y 1 ■ LIST OF MEMBERS ■liMliiuMiiiBiiiiiiiilM HiBHi it mmmmmmSKM 1 1 Nineteen HixDKED Twelve Xineteex Hundked ForRiEEN Nineteen- Hundred Fifteen ffl John M. Weir 1 Marvin E. Curie 1 r L Drin r Melvin Rhorer |i| Jtrrv Lien Claude JI. Be.lser lil H F ultiim Russell Voorhecs Freil C. McAdams ij CarTKolIniever 1 1 E. I. Tlinmpsi.n Clarence Stewar.l 1 Herbert Horner ffl Nineteen Hundked Thirteex Ansel A. Richards M C. H. Crennan Everett ilcCi.llough Davirl Presfin Charles Saver.v DeXoyelles Nutter Noel Antrim Bvron T. Post M. L. Mendeiihall George Hvsl,,,, John M. Smith Pledges Tames Kevnard Frank Messner Clyde K Slart nian Russell Richeson Parks Nutter C. N. Keith o djianae: Karl Hyde With Regard to Kappa Sigma HThe fraternity colors of Kappa Sigma have lots of life — scarlet, white and emerald. The flower is the lily of the valley. II Credit for the first chapter is usually given to the University of Virginia; the date was 1867. H In 1887, Beta Theta of Kappa Sigma was organized at Indiana University, but died after a brief existence. In February, 1900, a new charter was granted. U Kappa Sigma has seventy-eight active chapters, five more than any other national fraternity. I The local chapter has occupied a chapter house practically ever since it was found ed. At the beginning of the fall term, iqii, the chapter moved into its own home at 61 S I ast Third street. II Draper is a wearer of the 1 , having dis- tinguished himself in the higii jump last year. Ml liNE ' EAI i .i j i: s , :.j t i ;v.v i iHiaai: INKIiy Faculty Dr. A. C. Shipp Post Grad Cecil R. Petcrsoi Charles M. Ro Wilbur Glovei Russell Zoh C. M. William I IcxriRED Twelve s-nKFJl I ' OURTEEN NETEEN Hundred Fifteen John F. Casey Nixon R. Lawhead C. Lewis Pierce Wallace S. Savior Clevis Spriggs Valter .McCarty Donald A. Ba i:NDi: i L- i • B bMt : ft ' i ° -t ¥OT i On S g Alpha E p H A rapidly aging bulldog, Dywyki, is the last relic of the time when the youngest chapter of the Pan-Hellenic council was the Dywyki Club. II The Gamma Chapter Epsilon received its charte cry of the Old Settler s was in the spring of 1907. H Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded at the University of Alabama in iS;6. [- or i|uitc a while it was a southern fraternit), but some time ago it was extended northward. Sigma Alpha hin the mem- ts. The date cal chapter has occupied a three-story frame structure on East Third street. The place may be recognizcti b ' the tall, llutcd columns of the portico. ' ' The colors are royal purple and gold. Tile flower is the violet. ' AVilliam McKmlcv, former president of the I ' nited States, and Augustus E. Wilson, goxernor of Kentucky, are members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. :[]Nr THE PAN -HELLENIC COUNCIL THE PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL ART. 3 of the Pan-HcUcmc .Issocmtion Constitution pro- _ _vides, The purpose of the Pan-Hellenic Council shall he to establish the best relations between the nine frater- nities holding; membership in the organization. The coun- cil meets fortnightly to act as an advisory board in all mat- ters pertaining to inter-fraternity life at Indiana University. Although the council and its workings are comparatively new at Indiana, it has done more to create a spirit of friend- liness among the fraternities at Indiana than anything else could have done. NB ' L M V.M BERS Paul E. Fi ili Floyd MacC; P.vrl R. Kirk- Beta Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta Sigma Chi Phi Kappa Psi Plii Gamma Delta Delta Tail Delta Sigma Nu tew i w U f XiS = z ., ' - G C .- JllN]U)liAI k [t is all a matter of college course E M A N O N LIST OF MEMBERS Clyde N. Cliattin Howard R. Lukens Paul H. Schmidt Oscar P. Harman Alva X. Tavlor Jnlin C. Mcllctt GeorRe E Gill Llovd O. Slioltv Xi.xETEEN Hundred Thirteex D. Laurence Bock Donald R. Mellett Clarence Bock Nineteen Hundred Fourteen iNETEEN Hundred Fifteen Clifford O. Dice Joseph P. Grav Rolla K. Thomas William N. Strack Guv W. Scott Ralph Hamilton NBEANA J s Maiinioini I t H Seventy-six members of Emanon have been graduated from the University in the eleven years since tiie organization was founded. Of this number, all but three are living. H Emanon was founded January 22, 1901, as a purely social organization. 11 The colors are purple and gold. The Marechal Neil rose is the fl(jwer. U Emanon has occupied its present home, on East Kirkwood, since 1904. Several Emanons have reached distinc- tion. Among these are Mayor Fields, of Bed- ford; Mayor Bloom, of Columbia City; Pro- fessor Haseman, of the University of Nevada; Professor Banta, of the Carnegie Institute; Professor Caldwell, of the University of Louisville; Assistant State Statistician Walter Moore; Leroy P. Samse and Rusty Wal- lace, physical directors. 11 Emanon reversed is No Name. INB ' IAR 1AM(£LIEMS Some Wrangler P a r a g r a p 1 [ There were thirteen men at the first meet- ing of the Wranglers in 1902, so the member- ship was restricted to this number upon sug- gestion. This idea was abandoned two years later. H The Wrangler Club was originally a lit- erary and debating society, but has since ex- panded until now it takes a general interest in all University activities. H The home of the club, on East Kirkwood avenue, has been the Wrangler House since 1906. Before that time the club met in a hall downtown. HJohn Whittenberger, founde president of the Indiana I ' nioii, w gler. 11 Other well-known ' ranglcI are Denver Harlan, Albert SchnK Louie Lewis. nd first I Wran- nd INB ' EAN.- 1 Tcssic Hall Inez Penn Grace Tallman Nelle Walker Marv Kirbv Hubert L. HuddlesI William Vosel Anton H. Wegener James Elmer White J. Allen Jones Hugh Brown Robert C. Holland LIST OF JI EMBERS S ' ETEEN Hl ' NDRED TwELVE XiNETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Clara Harlan Annie Laurie Graham Alma Fredricka Kirby Mae Glockner Grace May J. Laurence Goodin Walter S. Danner Edward Markwell Christian Hartke iNETEEN Hundred Fourteen Gertrude Bucher Marv Loveless Ruth Hommersbaugh Bernard Ravdin Orville Hubbard Fred Langston Milo Sonierville Lloyd D. Claycomb INETEEN HUNDEEE Edith Weedinan Myrtle Andersoi Ormal Ferguson Paul Dilley Merle Wall Lillian Hillis Bertha Wilson Gle i IDEAr-L l EMMiEM The Independent I.iterarv Society 11 The Ineiependent Literary Society is rep- resented in the University faculty by Samuel B. Harding, Schuyler Colfax Davisson, T. L. Harris, Mrs. Alice D. Goss, A. L. Foley, R. R. Ramsey and G. D. Morris. U Robert J. Aicv, president of the I ' niver- sity of Maine, was one of tiie founders of tiie Independent Literary Society. Independent was organized in 1883, and reorganized under its present name two years later. i] The Independent men iiave a home at 5114 East Kirkwood avenue. The girls live at 214 East Sixth street. TIThe society colors are apple-green and white. The purpose is literary, dramatic and social. The Independent Society also stands for a democratic spirit among the University students in general. H Independent lias an average membership of forty. :riB iiAr- ' THE DELPHI Nineteen Hundred Twelve Victor Olliver Madge Janet Yenne Charles Emery Reed Lillian Imogene Van Dale Russel Pritchard Harker James Dailey Sturgis James Vinton Shannon Irene Pauley Lncile Graham Howe Nineteen Hundred Thirteen Telfer Lemar Mead William Levi Moore William Edward Littlefield John George Capouch Jennie Alwilda Cooper Xi; Hundred Fourteen Gleonard Harrison Jones Edgar Clarence Davis Midge McMillin Harmon Albert Jones Bruce Welker McCullough Ethel Fave Richardson Nineteen Hundred Fifteen Pauline Clark George Earle Irwin NBIANA. U] A)himm. [t- ii A Few Li n Tl Of five students graduating in the class of 191 1, Magna Cum Laiide, three were Del- phians — Miss Pearl Cravens, Miss Ellen Houtz and Charles O. McCormick. Two 191 1 Delphian alumni were elected to Phi Beta Kappa. TlThe Delphian colors are old gold and sil- ver gray. The motto of the society is Finis Coronat Opus. HThe Delphian Literary Society is a non- secret organization for men and women. Its purpose is the development of lite ' rary ability and the fostering of good fellowship. 11 Delphian was founded January 14, 1905. The meetings were first held Hall. H At present the Delphian h East Kirkwood a -enue, social meetings are held the Kirkwood IS at 202 terarv and ir- B ' IIAN. LIST OF MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred Twelve Nineteen Hundred Thirteen Nineteen Hundred Four Merritt Kroft Carl Schultz Susie Thro Catherine Zimmerman Margaret Wright Leonard Steimley Irene Howe Fred R. Gorman Wilafred Howe Albert Stump Archie Schultz Earl D. Roudebush Benjamin F. Pence Winfred Wagoner Charles Hire Thomas T. Breitvvieser H. C. Smith Glossie Goddard Roy R. Roudebush Vern Tames Oscar Grimes Harkv V. Houseman Ralph D. Wellnns Heber C. Martin Bess Burron lis Blanche Summers Blanche Wellons Elsie Conn Bess Burroughs Hazel M. Lrbrook Fred I. Mvers Marie Gofbreath Joseph J. Kucli Nineteen Hundred Fifteen Ruth Zimmerman Lucile Gillig Ina Shordon Raymond V. Pence C. J. Steigmeyer Walter James Ross Snapp Bernice Nethercutt Lena Rowe Jesse J. Galloway Edith Hennel Edward W. Long ONE ' L mdSaiiniai ng t li e I n d i a iKi C ' 1 u b HThe Indiana Club gives annually one im- portant play, in addition to the half-dozen or more shorter plays presented at regular meet- ings. Tliis year The Ser -ant in tiie House was presented. If The club has two annual iioine-cnniings for alumni — one in the fall term at the time of an important football game; the other in the spring term, when the annual picnic is held. 11 The purpose of the Indiana Club is three- fold — social, literary and dramatic. Regular weekly meetings are held in the club hall in the Bradfute Block. The programs at these meetings consist of literary and musical num- bers, debates, plays and the reading of a weekly club newspaper. HThe Indiana Club was founded in Sep- tember, 1905. Mrs. ■illiam Rawles is the club patroness. IN DEAN A T TOWARDS M A NIDI AN A L DEPTCLIBS Act right in company so you will know how to act at home 1,„ ■ V 1 The P h • s i c s CI u b Il LIS r OF M E il B E R S Faculty Nineteen Hundred Fourteen Dr. A. L. Foley Dr. R. R. Ra.iisev Prof. J. B. Dutchcr Post Grabs M.E.Hi.fiford R. Millikan E. H. Thomas H. Davis J. Jordan E. P. DeVoe B. R. Belsey Dayton Ulrey T. W. Records S. 0. Rhea Nineteen Hundred Fifteen G. W. Warner Herbert Smith TNSTRUCTION b e V n d the Nineteen Hundred T« elve _|_ classroom in phys sciences is the aim Club. The club w; .887. cs and relative of the Physics s organized in J. H. McClcllan E. R. Glenn G. G. Speaker Nineteen Hundredth Charles Hire Charles H. Skinner IRTEEN Officers Hugh E. Brown, President John E. McClellan, Vice-President Charles H. Skinner, Secretary-Treasurer THIS IS PAGE 174 RJTn TT -(v T T •■ ' . V There is not m ich romancc about a girl from your oz JII tO ' Mt Iif 1 HP . y T i 11 Ib ' K! ' v l ' K ' l F Br ' ' i M i uri wEl J WKlKtIm Ih HI iHHh 1 u ■■ V i i The Economic s Club 1 LIST F AIFMBFRS 1 Faculty Ninete en- Hundred Thirteen ■,, ' ' 1 U. G. Weatherly C. J. Foreman W. A. Rawles U. H. Smith John A. Lapp B.K.Armstrong .] ; Annie Laurie Graham 5 il.L. Mauzy ; W.L.Moore |i .M. R. Murphy | TNFORMAL discussions of eco- _!_ nomic questions and addresses by out-of-town economists comprise the Nineteen Hl-kdred Twelve M. Bailev George Gill W. A. Hacker T. D. Hall Jennie Kibby Robert Mann Floyd MacGrifif Russell Racev Charles Reed ' Ralph Richman Leon Rogers A. N. Tavlor MarvNash i ' Rnbert Patterson 1 1 C. M. Williams Elsie Thompson Nina Almond Floyd Ramsey Officers Russell Racey, President George Gill, Vice-President T. D. Hall, Secretary J programs of Economic Club meet- ings. 1 1! .: [ : iLi ' Ji r-i L I —--- Look upon Ill-die, ivith awe, for, lo. I have handled a dead gent L e C e r c 1 e F r a n c a i s MEETINGS of Le Ccrcle Frangais offer to the mem- bers practice in Frencii conversation and various means of widening tiieir acquaintance with French speech and customs. The club presents a play in the language annually. I E:e J- i[ LIST OF MEMBERS Grace Alexander Md.lred Marsh Nina Almond Everett McCulIough Jeanette Bartelle llo naldMellett Helen Beck I.ihn.Mellett Russell Burtnn . l.iri:aret Paddock Zena Caldwell Wdla Palmer Charles Piper IdaChennwelh Shirley Seward Paul Clements Edwin Smith Jeanne Crnw.ler Tohn Smith Hazel Dillon Kathleen Stilwell Elba Fickle Lois Stuart Nelle Frank Mae Trovillion Daphne Hoffman Dorothy Thornburg Cecile Howe William Vogel Robert Lang Xelle Walker Elizabeth Maines ONDEA! rsit to make brain out of adamant ■— A 1 n- F rrrr— -- i 4 ■P ,1 41 EC 1 r  .n 3 L ' J mk,h I ■11 I Hxi B Bs l m wmk JSk L P a ' . u m mf 1 HHBF ■a J ] The P h i 1 o s o p h - Club L 1 S T Facultv O F MEMBERS XiNETEEN Hundred Twelve Ernestll.Liiidley Warner I-ite Melvin E. Haggertv Willi.im K. Wright Charles J. Sembower Frank C. Senour Lucy Bowen Post Grads William O. Trapp Katherine Easlcy Walter C. Mavne Robert S. McElhinnev Marion Hoffman Zena M. Caldwell Oliver C. Artman Margaret Latham ' 1 HE Philosophy Club aims to X be one of the most liberal de- partmental clubs. Persons interested in philosophy as a phase of life and thougiit may attend the meetings of the club, whether in the department Daniel W. Pearce Eupha M. Folev Samuel E. Shideler George H. Hyslop ThontasJ.Breitwieser Walter E. Hisey William O. Grimes Susie F. Jacques XiKETEEN Hundred Fourteen Russell W. Gever Claude M. Bolscr or not. ' 1. _ ir IID ' LATJ ... J All the Icaniiiii ' t make the folks ii:ht ;,■ „• get back hon -■ •J ' Euclidian Circl CREATION of a greater inter- est ill matiiematics among stu- dents of the department is what the Euclidian Circle strives for. LIST OF MEMBERS Faculty Nineteen Hundred Twelve XiNETEEx Hundred Thirteen D. A. Rothrock L L Steimley Harohl Wolfe S. C. Davisson Anton H. Wegener James Vinton Shannon U. S. Hanna Earl D. Rourlebnsh Cornelia Osle R. D. Carmichael R. Harrison Schoonover Harriett Gertrude Brooks Ruth Ikerd Ravmnnd Jackson Magee Post Grads Marie F. Allen Cora Hennel Ray Cromwell Marv Kneale Leslie MacDill William Lee Pennington T E Mason Ira Sylvester Turley C. T. Hazard Geneva Pearl Janney Frank Morris Thomas Henry Qiiigley Everett Harrison Craig ilerritt Kroft Elizabeth Renwick Officers John Earl Smith Warren Russell Spencer Lee Sutherlin Leslie MacDill, President L L, Sleimlev, Treasurer Ruth Ikerd, Secretary As soon as a girl gels Strut and Fret she tries to loot; like a , The Historv Club QUESTIONS of teaching, writ- ing and interpreting history are discussed at meetings of the History Club. Men who have addressed the club this year are Doctor Buck of the University of Illinois, Dr. Albert Bushnell Hart and Dr. Paul Ha- worth. L I S T OF M r M P TR S James Albert Wocllnir „ 1 1 Samuel Bannister H;,r nit; 1 r .■ mos Shartle Hcrshey 1 1 wer Thomas LeGrand Harr s 1 1 Unit Losan Esarev Chnksl l.n nlL k jl Adam Ahi Leonard Arthur JulmsCra.g Sharon S. Ulrev EarlE c UtKe e Rclla MihniiTrv.in liter Mils uDaMs 1 ir 1 rt German V,11: :■ ■ . • ■ •: ' .ov 1 1 Tr r-,3ton ' ' la? Hope Wliitc.iiiil) Grail,- , Lin Ihilhi Dorothy Louise Williams John Willnm Cravens The Phi Dclt si.-orc that he saw the board i. ' alk. and still insisted that he li ' as 1 The Enorlish Club DICKENS ' centennial was cele- brated by the English Club this year. The club presents plays, otifers prizes for literary productions, and holds occasional meetings of a literary nature. LIST I- .M E -M B E R S Post Chads XlXETEEX Hr.XDEEDTHIRTEE Helen Spain Marguerite Paddock Russel Owen Earl Huddleson Alma Schlotzhauer Louetta C.nl.er Russell Sharp Georgia Sembower Camline Hildebrand Cecilia Hennel . lbert Stump Irc.ie McLean Edith Hennel Edith Walker Don Mellett Frank Senour Fannie Williams M.auricc Tu.M Edward McDonald .Marie Nelson Sanmel Davulsou Ben Hitz Xellie Burke XiNETEEN Hundred Twelve Fred McCartnev Lola Langstou Bloor Schleppev Marv McCloskv John Mellett Forrest Morris Katherine Easlev Robert Hamilton Guy Lemmon Margaret Latham Riitb White Ida Marie Wilson Josephine Tliomas Kathleen Stilwell Carrie Ong luanctte Bartelle SaniiK-l Bristol Rns.dl Brown Clara Corns E T G..hl I. W. Hel.el SanuK-llaX.,rni.in XlXETEEX HrXI.KEI.Ful-KTEE Chloe Sincr Christine Hiller Rnlli Reeves Merle Maxwell John Sweeny tela Scott in! oil life bv the u ■.f the teii-thiitv bell }m • - D e r Deutsche e r e i n M E .M B E K : Ex-Officio Member Bert John Vos Carl W. F. Ostha Eugene Leser Ernest H. Biermi Alice D. Goss John A. Hess Charter Members Frederica A. Kirby Mildred C. Kroft Erna Irene Oehlkuch Lillie Lucile Sanders Ruth Smith Dollie X. Sutton Frank JI. Andrews Adalene Coffman Jessie A. Covell C. E. Conant Harry Grove Ruth ] Flora Merl Wall Walter T. Woody Elizaheth Griffith Tessie Culbertson Mrs, ik-rtj. Vos To familiarize its members with German life, German liter- ature and German conversational forms is the purpose of Der Deutsche Vercin, which was founded only last ovember. The . C. E. Conai . K. M. Andr , J. O Frank INDIAN. ■Evci-vbodv rise will iiiakr •d irrar aiiytlnii- STORY OF A COLLEGE FRESHMAN A COLLEGE freshman once approached a grain of sand and laid his weeping face upon its expansive bosom. The grain of sand stooped low and placed its hand upon the locks of the sorrowing child. U ' hat is it? quoth it. I have been sent, returned the freshman, by an upper-classman to apologize to you for living. I have been told to ask you to have mercy on my insignificance. That ' s all right, said the grain of sand. Dry tliat tear. The freshman hastened back to the upper-class- man and told of his journey to the grain of sand. It told me tiiat it was all right for me to exist, and it had mercy on my insignificance. It told me to dry my tear. Did you drv it? No. ' Well, dry it now. But it has dried itself. Weep another and dry it with a chamois skin. Then paint it blue and roll it over to the L ' nion poolroom and use it for the cue ball in a game of left-handed French pool. IINBEAR Heaven pity the college stoinaeh V DIOUS ORGANIZATI0N5 Exclusivcness is for the included PHI BETA KAPPA PRESIDENT E. A. GROVER of the United Chapters of Plii Beta Kappa established the Indiana Chapter of Thi Beta Kappa, the Gamma of Indiana, January m, ) . Certain members of the faculty who were members of Phi Beta Kappa from other institutions became charter members, and others of the faculty were associated with these as foundation members. A number of alumni and seniors ha e since been elected to mem- bersiiip. A limited number of seniors and candi- dates for advanced degrees are elected each year Horace A. Hoffman, Vii Edgar R. Cumings, -Pri. ' sidc Secreta on the basis of scholarship and culture, half of the new members being chosen at the Thanksgiving meeting if the society and half at the commence- ment season. The annual address of the president of the chapter was given November 24, iqii, by Prof. James A. ' oodburn, on the subject, Nullifica- tion and Popidar Sovereignty. The commence- ment meeting of the chapter will be held on June 1 1;, 1912. The orator will be Paul Shorey, Pro- fessor of Greek at the University of Chicago. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The Officers and Charles M. Hepburn and Harold W. Johnston SENIORS ELECTED AT COMMENCEMENT, WU Dean L. Bar: Grace L. Bra Pearl Cravei Katharine Cro£ Homer W. Diit Louise Emhree Frank E. Ger Marguerite F Verne O. Hai Edith A. Hen V. Huutz ' B. Johnsto; :e E. Lloyd :r M. Nie Clayton Ulr Claude Whi GR. DUATE STUDENTS ELECTED AT COMMENCEMENT, 1911 M. Ellis : J. Callow. Aubrey L. Hawkins Will Scott I W. Van Metre Barbara May Bailey Zena Ma}- Caldvyell SENIORS ELECTED A ' l Ida Alberta CI Daphne Hoffii O. L. Raber Zourie Sutton ND AP With some sirls. the -tliirtv bell is akmvs too late THE Y . M . C . A . OF 1911-1912 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF THE Y. W. C. A. Ralph Richman. Byrl Kirklin. Robert S. McElhi S. C. Dodds, William L. Bryan U. H. Smith J. J. M. La FoUette Jamus A. W ' oodbun President Vice-President Walter B. Bodcnha Clarence Artman Earl Rondebiish PERHAPS of all the innovations attempted by the Young Men ' s Christian Association this year, the most successful was the holding of serv- ices at Bethel Chapel, north of Bloomington. A student speaker, accompanied by the more faithful and the Y. M. C. A. Quartette, went to the chapel on Sunday afternoons and there met the people of that community. The quartette consists of Marker, Bodenhafer, Richman and Jones. lender the direction of Robert AIcElhinney, the rooming and employment bureaus rendered to both students and citizens a service that can not be overestimated. ' eekly meetings uiuier the leadership (if dif- ferent faculty men were resumed, and in several organization houses Bible classes were organized. The Y. M. C. A. of iQii-igi2 had not the en- rollment of over eight hundred that the Y. M. C. A. had a year ago, but those who were members were active workers and rendered the student body and the citizens of Bloomington service of real value. No effort was made this year to raise a large budget, because it was felt that the time was not ripe for a larger association. Instead of that, the efforts of all were engaged in perfecting the less expensive but truly beneficial phases of the work. At the time of its formation, the task of the association was not only to supply the nucleus around which to build the Christian work of In- diana, but also to supply the men of the I ' niversity with some sort of social recreation. But the Uni- versity grew, and with its growth the task of sup- plying the combined social and spiritual needs of the men expanded, until a division became neces- sary. Then came the Indiana l nion, which as- sumed the field of social woik. A fellow can get tJirom h Pitrdiic on one shirt i M 2. 0 ll jj r bf ' ■ p ' Hiii iHSSiU Dll ' b a c H YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Ida ChenoH ctii, Helen Beck. Mildred Jo, us FFICERS OF THE Y. W President TFiE Young Women ' s Christian Association means to promote the religious life of the girls, and help them to put the principles of Chris- tianity into the rush of every-day college life. It would give a broader and more personal interest in Christian work through the classes in mission and Bible study; furnish a social life that unites all classes and organizations of college girls; assist girls to find employment and places to room and Ruth Reeves Mary Craig. I.nla Ghornil. ■ Board Membe board, and co-operate in every way possible with the churches of the city. The association was organized in Indiana Uni- versity in 1891, and from that time its work, of building up the spiritual life of the University has been steadily progressing. The weekly associa- tion meeting — Vespers — to which all girls are in- vited, is held in the Y. W. C. A. auditorium of the Student Building. IINID ' LII W doing tiothing, Indiana janitors slioiv perfect team -a ' arlc r i E; ' jl l ' H|L 0 T7 K jHk k V 911 . j J L - -A-i ai K . fc. Ht V Mi ' ' HriBPW ' iHL Axfll V I B K. ' .ali . Bl ■pp B v ' r V M ' B ' ' . 4 Vi% i Hk K F Si K ' H r poLbh k L v 1 Bn BiB Ki HLJv ' l flUAj 1 Ht K I 1(i j B In ' ' Ll r ' K il Hi H H B JHis Bl lH B ' i B K Bl l □ 1 H K M A R O I K 1 r K CLUB 1 The Marquette Club was organized at Indiana University in y 1907. The purpose of the club is to bring about better ac- ' i! quaintance and fellowship among the Catholic students. LIST OF MEMBERS Mary Louise Bagot Joseph Cassell Mary Alice Hugan Lee McIMnald 1 Emma Batman Rose Daily Marie Kempf Arthur Micheli Gertrude Brady Frances Durrcnbergcr Edwin Kime Harriet Pilger Catherine Bowman Agnes Evans Joseph Kuch Charles Rutiuan Jeanette Bartelle Lawrence Frecl Carl Kollmeyer C. J. Steigmeyer Marv Bowman Elizabeth M. Griffith Henry Lyons Myr.in Smith Genevieve B..wkis Andrew Gill Joseph Wethrington Walter Treanor E.lward Bagot Geoffrey Griffith Pauline Mal.my Susie rhrn Charles Backer Mae Glockner Mary Mocruian A. JAHlrich Re.salieBorgman Xellis Marie Greely Edward McDnnald Ruhv Washburn Marjorie Benckart Raymond Honan C. W. McCartv Guv West Joseph Costello Frank Holzhauer Mary McClosky Ari.e Which Adelene Coffman Lee Hazelwood John McThath Mary Wells 1 1 Robert Conway Social sul ' rcniacy is a imittcr of transparency of hose THE WOMAN ' S LEAGUE THROUGH the oi-aanizati.)!! of the Woman ' s League every woman student may co-operate for the best interests of the L ' nix ' crsity. By work- ing in the league a girl often has opportunity for administrative training, which might be of great value to her after her college days are over. Ac- tive membership is open to all women students connected with Indiana lMii ' ersity ; to resident alumna ' , and to wives of men students. All faculty women are eligible to associate membership. The league was organized in the winter of i8q6. Almost all the college girls, who were then only about one hundred in number, were mem- bers. The first meetings were held in Mitchell Hall, with a small e.xecutive board, since at that time there were only three sororities and one lit- erary society. During the fifth year of the life of the Wom- an ' s League, Mrs. Frances Morgan Swain, always intimately associated with the organization, started a movement to erect a woman ' s building. Through the efforts of the league in the years that followed, Mrs. Suain ' s plan resulted in the erection of the Student Building, where the league has a suite of rooms, including the two west parlors of the building. DiAriAr just like «■( ( - at himcdalc 1 WOMAN ' S LEAGUE BOARD FOR 1911-1912 Irene .McLean, President Mary Nash, Treasurer Grace Alexander, Vice-President Sarah Goldman. Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Margaret Latham. Kappa Alpha Theta Grace Alexander, Hazel Fitzpatrick. Kappa Kappa Gamma Lola Brooks, Mary Nash, Pi Beta Phi Imogene Van Dalen, Delta Zeta Independent Delphian g Fannie Williams, Delta Gamma Catherine Zininicrniai Indiana i L ' XORGAXIZEU 1 Sue Jacques Marion York 1 HalcieFair Irene McLean li Bervl Cofifinaii Xellie Burke n May Bailey Sarah Goldman ffl Ali ' IS(iK ' l; )AKL) FOR ORGAXIZED GIRLS 1 Miss Snodarass, Kappa Alpha Theta Mrs. Cummings. Delta Zeta i Mrs. Morris, Kappa Kappa Gamma Mrs. Goss. n Mrs. Van Hook, Pi Beta Phi Mrs. Cogshall, |l Mrs. Andrews, Delta Gamma Mrs. Rawles. Independent Delphian Indiana ADVISORY BOARD FOR CXORG.AXIZED GIRLS MissBerrv MissColhns II Mrs. Semh.nver Mrs. Hoffman MissConklin 1! It ; [.. II ' . 1, A: - z. mm slal ' lc marcs malcc the TO B ST ALL IJ N T V Is R S T -1 ' INT K R E S T S jpj ■. ' ' KMmn- ■nil [ ft ' H ' ' li ' 1 1 11 I - v. I ' j ' ■■ nl ,1 k M !■ M i; 1 i s 1 1 [ 111 1, i;(;i( i s i i: k Walter Bodenhafer Russell Gever Lester Corva J L. Goodi.i Marvin Curie Earl Keves Frank Elson Bvrl Kirklin Melvin Fickle William Littlefield Paul Fisher Omar Loop Lawrence Frecl Dr. C. P. Hutchins Jerry Ulen Miller Kent Charles Cr S CLUB Philip Lutz Raymond Magee Wilbur Pell Flovd Ramsey Earl Roudebush Raymond Rubush Alva Taylor ampton leave home — khiiomu THE BOOSTERS CLUB THE city of Bloomington has one Boosters ' Day each year, but every day is Boosters ' Day with the Boosters Club. And its days are all days of twenty-four hours. In 1909, several men of the I ' niversity decided to form a small club whose purpose should be to take the initiative in all things pertaining to root- ing. They agreed to call this organization the Boosters Club. Its constitution provided for one representative from each fraternity and each social organization in the University. In addition, the senior class was allowed to elect four repre- sentatives to be chosen from the unorganized stu- dent body, and the junior class was allowed to choose two such representatives. The club has been instrumental this year in bringing about more organized rooting at all ath- letic contests and in encouraging the establishment of traditions. Last year and this the club pro- moted interscholastic basketball tournaments for the state championship which were most success- fully conducted. The financial obligations of the club are de- frayed by donations of the student body, whose generous support alone makes possible the good work of the Boosters Club. Eternity is brief compared to a college pla T H F, LINCOLN L F. AGUE Students ill the University ivh,, adlicru tu the principles of the Republican party may take nienibership in the Lincoln League. The Lincohi League brings to the University notable speakers from time to time, and works in conjunction with the local and state OFFICERS Howard R. Lukens, Wilbur G. Nolin, George W. Henlev, Jr., Se President Vice-President INBL Tin- abscnt-iiiliulcii profcsso bccoiniiic; oiif-of-datc T HE LINCOLN L E A c; U K ' S K 1. 1 ' I b I. l l AT THE G Y M N A S I V M F E H R U A R V T W N NATIONAL CONVENTION TILTH NINETEEN TWELVE L Xot all married students arc in the Married Students ' Club THE JACKS O N THE JACKSOX CLL ' L! is thv Ik-mncrmic chil: sity. It brings to tlic University from time to Democrats of the state and nation, who address it day. In campaign years the club assists the state ; gani atiiins in keeping the local student vote in line. UIFICERS Lawrence H. Bennett, President Everett E. Lett, Vice-President Oman J. Six, Secretary-Treasurer promment ENECUTIVE BO. RD ational or- Russell F. Racev, Chairman John C. Mellett Ralph E. Richnian -Merle M. Dunbar No, Maggie, the Economics Club is not a Larkin Soap circle M ' la ' Wi hj:ii.m LIST OF MEMBERS Everett McCiillougli Robert Hamilton Hubert Hickam Ben Hitz Byrl Kirklin Rogers Lee Miller Kent Paul McXutt Allen Messick Inhn Morris R.ihert Patters, lerrv Ulen HarVvr.ertich iM-ed P.eck Don Dixon Scott Edwards Frank Elson Havnes Freelam Andy Gill l- Jnier Goss Wayne Hamdto IRTY X the Sphinx Club, an organization two y old. Promotion of good-fellowship among ternity men is the object of the club. The 6 o ' c chimes recital is a Sphinx Club idea. OFFICERS 1911-1912 Miller Kent. President Merrill Davis, Vice-President Elmer Goss. Secretary i]:p4E ' EA.r-i. Object of the English Club: to foster liteiary ability and promote indi -zijiq iir = : ™ 1 ' uiiiiiiiiiiQBmamksiighi i - 1 . J ' i 9 1 ' ' m- ' l itfe g u ■Mh HtI , j PLi H frTM Pr g K ' j F V iH H |k ' H fl| H El jjl kX H ifl 1 1 1—1 % W 1 Alpha Chi S i or m a n LIST OF .MEMBERS F- CULTY XiN-ETEEN Hundred Tw ELVE Xi-XETEEN Hundred Fo jrteen II T 7F:EKLY mcctin,t, ' S arc held VV by Alpha Chi Sigma at its house on Lincoln street. It is a fra- ii ternity of chemists. It was born at Dr. R. E. Lyons Dr. L. S. Davis Dr. C. E. May Prof. 0. W. fero Dr. F. C. ilathe John R. Kuebler Vance S. Cook Ralph J. Mitten wn Harry B, Knowlton s Millard C. Kent Ernest B. Curtis Clayton E. Tanke Nineteen Hundredth Raymond Cox Wayne Hamilton Clyde Morrison De.xter Neal Roy Klenck Walter B. Jones Post Gr.- ds Russel . ' . Nees rteen Edward V. Long Thaddeus W. Culme J. 0. Frank r Madison, Wis., 1904. The local chapter, Epsilon, was organized 1907. = UNDEA iTAr 1 A girl has to vary her Book-Nook capacity to suit her popularity ■|; 1- 9 .ir- ?: !!!. ' 11 il m Q kMMmta mkm mm 1 r- w m w K 1 L , % % % 1, K . r ,J; 1 im ' Mm- u ■ . ' ■■Bmhl -.. .. i i Phi Delta Kappa LIST OF MEMBERS D. W. Pearce Joseph C. Edwards E. B. Rizer R. M. Trvor N. O. Pittengcr Harry L. Foreman Alnurs C. Burgin Walter A. Davis Winifred E. Wagoner L. A. Pittenger Claude L. Clawson E. A. Ashbaugh Earl E. Ramsev William L. Pennington W. A. Jessup Robert E. Swindler Elmer E. Jones D. W. Horton Mason E.Hnfforrt W. W. Black F.D.Martin Sanuiel E. Sliideler Y}Hl DELTA KAPPA is the officers X educational fraternity, and is one Harold Lit ' t ' eii, Secretary of the latest of Indiana University ' s RL%fckett7 ' orrespondingSecretary fraternities. Tt was organized in 1909 as a successor to Phi Kappa Mu. L ' INDEAM : worked his tcnv Ihioui h Piirdiir -with a laiiiulry ag m THE LIBRARY ' FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW il]I]- ' fI] nA..fTA.l Lots nj ■rill takr a fraternity , It you have lived with a cornet player, vou can stand anvthing iWK rr . ' THE UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA THE musical standard of the Lhiiversity has been elevated greatly by the efforts of the orchestra. It has played only the most notable compositions, pieces which, when heard once, al- ways lead to an appreciation of that which is worth while in music. :nbi[ANA - Il ' s a lour; lioard wnll: that lias no s ooiiiiig J THK UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL Dr. C. D. Can npbell Director Paul H. Cl™ ents. Concert Master First Violins Second Horn Paul H. Clements Austin Corey LorenA. Sanford Helen Hovey Trombone Harold Wolfe Addis K. Summers Jessie Ried •Cello Second Violins B5-ron Cowing Anna Overman First Clarinet Aaron Rogers Samuel Bristol Carl Brand Roy Schmidt Second Clarinet Clifford Miller James Sturgis Piano Oboe Frederic Durham Francis Bray Paul R. Hawlcy Bass Violin First Cornet Leonard Steimley George Wandel Drums Second Cornet Robert Hamilton John Krug UNB ' IIAM. is not nh ' ovs like ikiii candy fv T H R U N I y K R S I T BAND THE b;ind this year was lortunatc in bcinu; al- most one-third reed instruments. This made possible the accomplishment of a higher grade of music than heretofore. The band played for all athletic games, accompanied the football team to Chicago and Indianapolis, and gave outdoor con- certs during the spring term. The membership in- cluded several soloists who were featured (jften with band accompaniment. r L Forty-five ho irs and a pin is all the education 1 H E I S 1 1-: R S 1 1 U A t D P E R S Russell P. I arker, D rect..r | CORXETS . ,.Tos 1 Georcre Wcindcl Myron Smith Wl John Kriig .V ' F.Cory 1 John Keck F.. R. Glenn 1 Clav Phillips J.O.Frank M C- E.Davis Chester Loushry R. M. Love - Lerox- Sellers Dr. C.H.May 1 Cecil Russ M.T. Patton 1, Claeixets ' i- Carl Brand B.SK.TONES 1 James Stnrgis Russell Grindle 1 H.H.Horner John Marshall Samuel Bristol Jacob Jor.lon Tt-„..vs i 1 J. H. Hare P. G. Cox L. L. Steimley Russell Geyer Charles Steckel R. K. Thomas Drims Trombones C. S. Kollmever Walter Danner George Sutton Roy Klenck Paul Schmidt E. H. Hare Ross Snapp 11 I E. B. Van Dorn W. R. Spencer G. B. Ramsey girls earc for THE L N I E R S I T Y G E E E CLUB Merle S.Scott Frank Lindsay Leonard W. Mace Louis B. Sawyer Second Tenor Karl Kollmeyer Glenn McDaniel R. W. Mitchell Russell Voorhees O. P. Harmon Geoffrey Griffith PERSOXXEL ector R. G. Pa terson. Manager First Bass Ql-AETETTE Russell Geyer Charles R. Sherman Walter Heazlitt Byron Cowing Emmett La Rue Harold King XL S. Scott Russell Geyer Russell Voorhees Wayne Hamilton Soloists Second Bass Wayne Hamilton Joseph Cassell Fred W. Engle Estvl VanDont Hubert Hanna Fred Turner Merle S. Scott Wayne Hamilton Specialties Fred Durham, Piani Don Herold. Cartoon Paul Clements, Violir NiD ' ' ,JiAr A •. ' hat to do « ' ; hiiiisrif «■ ; ■ Not a dull moment in the entir  program Columbus Rfpiiblicaii. The best entertainm -nt given he Shclbyville Morning A eics. Indiana University may well f el proud her glee club this yea f. Rnshvlll Jackson i, The club scored a .H.linct trii n,ph here .VczoAlbanvXcw. THE N E W INDIANA (} L E E C L U B After a lapse of five years Indiana is again Jl represented by an excellent glee club, which can be ranked with the best in the middle west. The club is composed of twenty men; and the pro- gram consists of popular music, interspersed with college songs and medleys. The club is under the direction of John L. Geiger, who for the past fourteen years has di- rected glee clubs throughout the country. It was due to the excellent work, of the director that the club was able to reach its high standard and com- pete ably with other glee clubs in the state. Under the supcr ision of Geiger the club made a most successful tour through the southern part of the state during the Christmas vacation, singing at Bedford, Jefi ' ersonville, New Albany, Seymour, Columbus, Rushville and Shelbyville. On every liand the club met with a warm reception, topping off its successful tour by a concert given at the University on the evening of January ni. On its spring trip the Glee Club visited the fol- lowing towns: Orleans, Cannelton, Rockport, Ev- ansville, Princeton, Washington, Vincennes, Sul- livan and Bloomfield. — Cn.ARLES R. Sherman. L jNDIiAN i The most comfortable persons on a hay ride are the hor 1 THE COLLEGE GLEE CLUB n • F L o ' A GLEE club is not necessarily a joyful organi- zation. It seems incredible as well as impos- sible that the same voices which furnish the raw material for a college veil at a football game could ever be put through enough drills and trills to send forth harmony, and in this fact may be found the excuse for the existence of a glee club. A glee club is a stubborn attempt to prove that this can be done. The unmelodious vocal attachment of the ordinary college youth being a matter of ac- cepted tradition, village folk are willing to part with a dime or a quarter in order to witness the noveltv of an aggregation of advertised gleesters in action. Glee clubs seldom accept return- engagement propositions. To organize a glee club it is necessary to find twenty men, versed in the correct manipulation of formal attire, who can be hypnotized into believ- ing that they can serenade an audience, a pianist, one specialty man, a man to beat time, and a man- ager to beat the hotel-keeper. The redeeming fea- ture about a glee club is that the business manager and the specialty man are not required to sing. A glee club spends lots of money on laundry and railroad fare, and annually ruins the acoustic properties of many good churches. Were it not for glee clubs and football teams, many colleges would h ave to do something really scientific in or- der to gain publicity. :ndl ' J Uttlc botany student, is that which throws iif ichcii yon plant a pleasant evening Mm i MARY FISIIE B A B E T T E A R O M A T I C COMIC O P E R A Book and Lyrics b.v Harry B. Sniitli Music by Victor Herbert HARRIS t;RAND OPERA HOUSE, MAV 2, 191J CAST OF CHARACTERS synopsis of scenes Babette, a village letter writer Kathleen Stilwell Act I. Garden of Van Tympel ' s lionse near A Vinette, daughter of Bait Mary Fisher j jj . roadside inn near Brussels INIarcel, a painter, in love with Babette Merle Scott Mondragon, a soldier of fortune Wayne Hamilton . ' - Versailles. Eva, his wife Bernice Kinser Period. Scventccnlb century. Van Tympel, a clock maker Frederick Durham Baltazar, a professional conspirator Horace Fox niKFrtiox The King of France Paul McNutt Guzman, a Spanish officer John H. Van Reed Charles U. Campbell, Director Schnapps, a tavern keeper John Geiger F™ W. Elson, Business Manager Captain Walther Charles Piper ' G. Patterson, Assistant Manager Katrina Ruth Edwards Hamilton Coleman. Stage Manager Apprentices GeotYrev Griffith and Mvron Smith Charles R. Sherman Press L , t ' lit the soft pedal oil your Hariard PRESIDENT BRYAN ON EDWARD E 1 E R T - B U C H H E I M HE gave his life to a great art. He had the joy of believing in that art. He had the joy of devot- ing himself to that art. He had the joy to which most men are excluded, that of having the knowledge of what the great masters have written. He had the joy of being able to realize and to produce. There are few greater jovs than the joys of the artist. He had the joy of service to his fellow men. There are no services more beautiful than to make one ' s fellow men realize bcautv. EDWARD EBERT-BUCHHEIM MR. EDWARD EBERT-BUCHHEIM died januarv 3. For the last four years of his life he was instructor in the piano at the University. Dur- ing most of that time he gave regular Monday evening concerts, which were attended by many of the students. He was a composer of note, the best-known of his works being Spielmannsleider, a collection of vocal selec- tions; Valse, Serenade and Tubelpolka. He dedicated one of his compositions, called Campus Rustlings, to the student body of Indiana University. olINB ]IAriA 12 Popular college editors are not. They can ' t L, .■i Bloointngton laundry girl lost her hand in a shirl shredder last zacek THE DAI L S r I D E N T 4s the library is tiie hiboiatorv of the Kn-lish department, _ _ so the Daily StiiJiiil is the experiment station of the Journalism Department. Any student who has taken the theo- retical work in class and spent a term or two in practice work on the Stuih-ut can edit with ease any of the large metropolitan newspapers or magazines. The class of 191 2 deserves the credit of creating and turn- ing over to the University the largest and best Daily Student that the school has vet seen. In the fall term the paper was enlarged to H e columns, with a proportionate increase in lengtii. In winter term, the sheet was changed once more, this time to si. colinnns, with another and corresponding in- crease in length. John Mellett is editor-in-chief. He is the advocate of what some people would like to call lost causes, but he generall - lands with both feet. He never hurries. Floyd MacGrifT is business manager. He has black hair and a loud lafT. He is one of those tireless bundles of energy who are never happy luiless they are making somebody sore. For the success of the paper this year credit is due in a large measure to J. ' . Piercy, the new instructor in Journal- ism. His advice not only helped the stall over several rough spots, but was a great aid in directing the polic of the paper. At the close of this year the Daily Stmliiit is foinid forging ahead as a power in student affairs and a mouthpiece for stu- dent ideas. The paper has reached its present position In the toil, the sleepless nights and the sacrifices of a ery limited nimiber of men. The past year has stood for the institutional- izing of the Daily Student. ' in. Jaw. Bones is XOT a eo-c 1 j I U JkA !OT| ill jH jj gjI g 9K ' 3IHm ' V B V- I Pff 1 B ' K ' 1 E JKM R I B E S 11 ffii«rf-_ r :. , sc T HE PR K S S C L U B Paul Fisher Earl Gold Don Herold ONSl ' MPTION of pimento cheese sand- Russell Brown Philip Graves FlJ ' vdRa ' Insl ' . ' v | V wielies is not tlic object of tlie Press Club, ;iltli()Ui;li it does liold nieetini s e ' ery two weeks at which pimento cheese sandwiches are given grave 1 attention. Nor is it a pedestrian club, although it John Mellett EarlHu.kK.ni Don Mellett Robert Hamilton Charles Sherman H. T. Sullivan Larrv Freel James C, In , f Dwiijht Cra. im Russell Sharp Edgar Curry Fred Trueblood Charles Crampton ' 1 has annual Spitzfahrts and hikes to Spring Lamb. „„.„,..„,.... Ill Now and then it does sumething really serious, like dining with ' illla l Allen White, entertaining George Fitch, pidmoting a home cnming or hold- M.E. ttaggertv Frank . vdclotte C. J. Senihower S. B. Harding U. H. Smith Richard Rice H. T. Stephenson ing a blanket hop in its .iwii Resurrection Dav. 1 11 J be Ihc most l cifcclly rciitihitcl lollc r biiihli. 12 r We come to college for an education. We leave with a pose DEBATING .■bai UNPRECEDP:NTED intLTollcy the past vear at Indiana. Two trian,t;ular Cdntests were sched- uled. The Hrst was tlie Annual Tri-State EeaL ue Debate, held March 8, IQ12, between tlie I ' niversitv of Illinois, Ohio State Uni- versity and Indiana. The affirmative team was successful against the Universitv of Illinois negative team. The negative lost a close con- test to Ohio State, tlie judges ' decision being two to one. The men who represented Indiana in these contests were Albert Stump ' 12, Ralph Richman ' 1 , S. E. Davidson 13, John Sweeney 14, Earl Stroup ' 12, and ' alter Treaner ' 12. Tlie other triangular contest was between ' abasii College, tiie University of Notre Dame and Indiana. It was held .May 27. Besides these two triangular contests, there was a dual contest with DePauw University on May 10. The men representing Indiana in this debate were Benjamin Scifers ' 12, Preston Cox ' 13, Philip Lutz, Jr., ' 12, Ered Gorman ' 12, G. R. HiUis ' 14, and Ellis Thomp- son ' 12. I N T E R - C L A S S DISCUSSION The Inter-Class Discussion is the annual cn- test which carries with it no prize except the honor that it attaches to the winner. It was won this year by Albert Stump, of Cromwell, In- diana. .Mr. Stump is an Indiana Club man and a member of Delta Sigma Rho. He has repre- sented Indiana on several debating teams. THE B R ' A N R I Z E Prize Contest is iield annually Day, January 20. Tlie prize The Brya on Eoundatio is the interest on two hundred and fifty dollars, whicji sum was established by William Jennings Brvan. The winner this year was Lawrence Bennett. The subject was The Short Ballot. . lr. Bennett is president of the Jackson Club. INDIAN. J iiiaL;- in,i ht 01 1 V - CLASS O F F I C: K R S S E X I O R Earl K. Kcyt.,. r ' rusi.liiit Hnu: -llI.ukal , Vlcc-ri-L-si k-nt Rulli WmmIuv. Sccrc-tary Earl RMiiilduish. Treasurer J I • X I O R Ihll.erl llu-kani. i ' re ' -ident E. E.Jnlms,,,,. ' ,CL -President Eaiil .N R.H. Walte V. T. I M (J R E Preside -ice-Preside Secreta Treasur ERESH MAX Otto EiiRleliart, Preside Artlnir Cliapniaii, Vice-Preside Ruth Mntt ' ett, Secreta Fre.l W, KukIc, Treasur lii ' lil o ' cluci: and not a hiitton on this sliirl. (Jnicl:. OV av ,, ,.• iwcdlc PpDDDD PUDDDI HP ' ban, pna ban QifrDDHBbmp nmai Dori Her oL.L :hdiiana Summer positions but most are jobs THERE were sixty students at the Indiana University biological station at ' inona Lake last summer, sixty of whom had a good time. The biological station is peculiarly a place where study and fun mix themselves in right proportion. The biological station is primarily a field labo- ratory where the student may study nature at first hand. The courses are arranged accordingly. Laboratory and field work are intermingled so that nei ther becomes irksome. To the research student is offered the opportunity of working in anv line ' i ' he hours at the station are from eight until four, w th an hour off for the noonday meal— which e vervbodv eats, the lake atmosphere being appetizi ng. Eight until four is enough vork for anv one in a summer day. At four, everybody gets into the lake. Some swim. Others splash ; but no Juliet before breakfast Is not the one merely walks the beach, as they do at Atlantic Citv. Tennis, golf, baseball and rowing arc op- tional. The biological station was established in 1894 at Wawasee Lake, where it remained initil iSc S. Since 1898 it has been at Winona Lake. The sta- tion was planned for research work, and only se- lected students were admitted the first year. Since then, courses have been ofifered, and the station is now open to all Lniversity students. Zoology has been the principal subject studied, and at the pres- ent time is the only subject in which courses are offered. The word they use is: delightful, if you think that that is extravagant, ask some fello who ;is there last summer. Ask johnny Woods, whose highest joy is to carry suit-cases for the station girls, even though thev contain rocks. L A library date is stolen fruit COLD ROOM COMMODORE PEARY ' S pulse-warming vacation jaunt up North Pole way was a pipe. If the commodore truly has a desire to show the public that he is death on frigidity, he should ar- range to spend some winter, when he has nothing else to dd, in the room of the average college stu- dent. It would not he hard to find the room. The room might be selected at random. After some blindfolded, disinterested party had picked out a room, the commodore, if he were sincere in his pre- 1 with a good supply of gum globules and soda crackers and le first hour of spring. That would be a test for his chill-proof s, the commodore would find his following greatly enlarged, ho had heretofore c]uestioned the ability of the noted arctic :ible iceberg would immediately proclaim him a cold-weather man. could mo t dav , f summer t( a re a 1 trial like n in the countrv e bes t of an in ' tensions as an ic stay from the la; whiskers. Aftei Every college man prowler to get wonder. This is not a challenge to Peary. Peary probably deserves to enjoy the pleasures of fame al- ready. Not many other men have got along with cold feet so successfully. But if Peary is confident of his ability to come back, and if he lusts after glory of a more enduring sort than he gained by dis- covering the North Pole, this is extended to him as a suggestion. Peary is a man who has won much respect from his fellow countrymen, and if there is any question in his mind about his hardihood, far be it from anv one to force him to endanger his title as the heavyweight snow-shoveling champion of the world. it might be wondered, then, why college youths can live in such cold places. It must be held in mind that the college student is young. Warm blood gurgles through his system. And second, he by no means stavs in his room any great length of time at a time. He is seeking no medals as a bliz- zard buster. When the first breeze of winter blows, the student chooses the warmest poolroom in the city and declares it his headciuarters for several months to come. His room is deserted except as a place wherein to slumber. At night he piles his cravenette on top of the thin stack of covers and shivers until dawn. Widows and orphans do not constitute the whole of the suffering. :N DIANA ■ III, t,ossibli- 7cay of hariii,i: co-rtliu-alimi with, nit i irls 12 The faculty is a necessity SOME INDIANA BOYS B Y pre; A iM L () W K 1 ' INDIANA U BRYAN THE ' are all sorts. Sunic are strong as bul- locks, and I am glad for that. Some are brim- ming with good humor, and, of course, I liiic them for that. Some are puny to see, and I like them at and th( lirst even for that. Some of tiieni speak or sing lege stage; and when they ha i not with the audience, but am older brother, eager for them to can, daring the audience not to 1 las it seems )r play on the col- their turns I am with them, like an io better than they ke them. Some of them I know well, as such things go — which means that there are depths on depths in e -ery one of them I ha -e never glimpsed. Some of them 1 scarcel - knou- at all and yet know well enough to bank on and go around the world with. There, for example, on the eleven — 1 have not talked with him twenty minutes all told, but over and over at the worst minutes of the game I have seen his soul and body turn out just the right, gritty, etfecti ' e lunge, all ox ' cr before he knew what he had done -and 1 would like to walk with him into a battle, anv kind of battle. There on the campus -I had afterwards to ask his name — 1 saw another one of them with his odd- ilNDHAriA Pajamas looking sister on the one side and on the other side a girl (wiiom he must not marry) witli iter pretty nose in the air. And lie? ' as just a gentleman without etiort, witliout self-consciousness. And I would like to iia e this one on the other side in tliat battle. And then there are fellows I don ' t know at all. But when they get into my landscapes siiall 1 not take stock of tiiem? And one brief vision may make them mine. There is an eye that does not whimper and quail. Tiiere is a chin that does not apologize. There is a carriage that means valor and self-confidence and not a drop too mucii con- ceit. Sometimes within the space of tiiat brief vision it comes to mc what his father must think of him. 1 know the leaping pride wiiich the old man tries to cover up with a rough dice but whicli he can not keep out of his face. And 1 know that lie could not tell the bov what lie feels unless one or the other of them were about to die. I don ' t know wiiat this one will be -doctor, law- yer, merchant, chief — but never, with that eye, a cowardly whelp. 1 have hope of him so long as he is not that. If he fights in the open for a cause which 1 repel, his cause is partly mine. Miat he renders to Ca ' sar witii valiant soul — (jod will own his share of it. There is no otJier tiling in tiie world that makes me more glad than one of my boys wiiom 1 believe in through and tiirough. I will tell you wliy. 1 sometimes get blue as Hamlet over the sin and misery of mankind and I think of Browning ' s Childe Roland and 1 think oi a book I know, but iiave never read, on ' I ' iie Damnation of tiie .Majority. Then 1 tiiink of some men 1 have known — X and Y and Z ( I say tiieir names to myself as I write), some gray now, some already gone, some still in the thick of it, all of them with faults enough so that I can keep within reach, but not one of them a man who could furnish a substitute for the reason that we wanted just him. I think of these men and I turn to the bovs that are hurry- ing up to join in tlie battle and 1 see that tiiis one and tiiat one are also of some splendid sort — men to make your heart leap and I am ashamed of my- self and ashamed of Hamlet and I thank God that I was born just here so as not to miss knowing these men, and I enlist for the war, glad to fight it out in their compain, willinij to share their fate. not cat potato clii s confidcntidUy 1 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS TRUSTEES O l OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY INDIANA U N I V E R S I T • Wii.LiAM Lowe I ' .kvan, rix-si.k-m. Edwix Cork, BhK.niington. Term expires l ' )12. 1 A.B., In.liana Univi-. sity, 1SS4; A.ll., ISSO; Ph.D., Clark Univer- Samuel R. Lyons, Richmond. Term expires 1912, 1 .Mt.v. 189J; LL.D., Illinuis College, 1904: LL.D., Hanover College, ions Theodore F. Rose, Vice President, Muncie, Term expires 1912. • JosEPH H. Shea, Seymour. Term expires 1913. j[ HnR, , E .- ddisun Hoffm.. n, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Ira C, Batman, Bloomington. Term expires 1913. jj ' an l Professor of Greek, James W. Fesi.er, Indianapolis. Term expires 1914. ! . .B., Indiana Universily, ISSl: . .1I., Ilarvai-a Uiiiveisit.v, 1W4. Benjamin F. Shivelv, President, South Bend. Term expires ENficH George Hogate, Professor of Law and Dean of the School of Law. 1914. Robert I. Hamilton, Vincennes. Term expires 1014. L A.E., .Allegheny College, IS J; . .M., 1S75 J Charles P. K.merson, Dean of tlie Sclmnl ,,f Meilicine, In.lian- p apolis. 1 !,, . .l; . A.ohcrst, 1S94; M.D., Johns Ilopko-S UnivorMty. 1S ' J9. i Wn.i lAM l-AAxs Jenkins, Librarian. 1 ,- All.. In, liana University, 1891: A.ll., LeIanJ Stanford Univer- P (jl Cari. H. Eigenmann, Dean of the Graduate School, Professor of It! , ZoologA- and Director of the Biological Station ; Curator of in 1 iciithyologj ' , Carnegie Museimi, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. ! A.B., Indiana University, 1S86: A.M., 1887; Pli.D,. 1889. 1 W 111 lAM A. Rawles, Assistant Dean of College of Liberal Arts sm 1 and Professor of Political Economy. i. A.B., Indiana University, 1884; A.M.. 1895; Ph. P., Columbia jT Wk Iniversity, 1903. P - W Joii.N William Cravens, Registrar and Secretary to Board of . 7 .V.Il., Indiana University, 1897. t Ulysses Howe Smith, Bursar and Instructor in Accounting. t y (oa.UmIe of Department of Commerce, Eureka College, 1S88: . .r... Indiana University, 1893. Carrie Louise Denise, Dean of Women. 1 Ph.D., Grinnell College. i ' ' ' ..oN,aer..Ke..ra,.. Dean of Women Ij ' 1 1 Jl r -I JL ' i. 1 A motorcycle is a public nuisance propelled by di. ' :turbauce of the pc A D M I N I S T R A r E R S OF A N A UNIVERSITY I! ™ The first tiling xoii look for at an open house is an opening for eseafe A fraternity jnvclcr is knoivn by: I. The line he i The line he spreads THE FACULTY OF INDIANA UNH ERSITY William Luwe Bryan. Ph.D.. LL.D.. President. Horace Addison Hoffman, A.M., Dean of the Onicge of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Greek. Enoch George Hogate, A.il., LL.D., Dean of the School of Law. Carl H. Eigenmann, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate School. Carrie Louise DeNise, Ph.B., Dean of Women. William A. Rawles, Ph.D., Assistant Dean of the College of Lib- eral Arts. John William Cravens, A.B., Registrar, and Secretary t.j the Board of Trustees. Ulysses Howe Smith, A.B., Bursar. IN- Everett Hagcerty, Assistant Professor of Psychology lid Director of the Psychological Laboratory. Professor of Comparati Ulysses Grant Weatherly, Professor of Economics and Soci; Science. A.B., Indiana University, 1890; A.M., 1S91; Ph.D., Cornell Ui veislty, IS97; Litt.D., Colgate University, 1910. Ulysses Howe Smith, Instructor in Accounting. Graduate of Department of Commerce. Eureka College, ISS A.B., Indiana University, IS93. Clarence James Foreman, Instructor in Economics and Soci; Science. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, IS95: M.S.. 1S96: . .M Michigan University. 1901; Ph.D.. University of Wisconsin. 1911. C. Everett Conaxt, Acting Associate Professor of Coraparati Philology. . .B., r.awrence College. 1892: A..M.. Lawrence CollLge. 189 Ph.D., Chicago University, I9U. Albert Frederick Kuersteiner, Professor of Romance Lai guages. A.B.. University of ( incinnati. 1888; Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins Ui versify. 1904. George D.wis Morris, Associate Professor of French. A.B., Indiana University, 1890; . .M.. 1895: Dr., U[iiversity Paris. 1912. . ssociate Pmfessor of Roniani Charles Alfred .Mose.mii Languages. Vm A. Lapp, Lectu ■ on Social Legislation. WiLBLR AdELMAN CoGSHAI B.S., Albion College, David Abbott Drew, Ii B.L., B.S., Law JiiTiLiiA Conklin, Instructor in French. A.B., Indiana University; .A.M., 1904. Ruth Redfern Maxwell, Acting Instructor in French Harold Whet.stone Johnston, Professor of Latin. . .B.. Illinois College, 1879; A.M., 1882; Ph.D., 1891: I.H.D.. Kcnyon College, 1898: LL.D., Illinois College, 1909. from Fcbruar, I leave from August 1, 1911, to August 1, 191. Indianapolis, will be found in the It is the lici ' lit oi every real student iA i- ■ ambition to hare a nervous hreakdoie 6@4 H E 1 A C L L r Y OF INDIA N A U N I Idea for a truly c.xrhisk ' C dramatic society: one rcadc r THE F A CULT ' CONTINUED Harold Wright Gilmer, Instructur in Latii A.B., Monmouth College, 19u-t. Elmer Ellsworth Jones, Professor of tl losopliy of Education, 1901; Pli.D., Columbia University, 190S. William Wesley Black, Professor of Elcii Graduate Indiana State Normal Sciiool, of Illinois, 1S9S; A.M., 1899. Walter A. Jessup, Professor of Education, A.B., Earlham College, 1903; A.M., Ham Bert John Voss, Professor of Gcrmrui. A.r... University of Michigan, ISSS: Ph.D., Johns Hopkins U] Eugene Leser, Assistant Professor of German. Graduate of Gymnasium of Sonderhausen, 18S2; . .M. and Ph. I University of Berlin, 1887. Alice Diven Goss, Instructor in German. A.B., Indiana University, 1908. Charles Diven Campbell, Assistant Professor of German a ' Associate Professor of lusic. A.B., Indiana University, 1898; Ph.D., University of Slrasbur Ernest Henry Bierman, Instructor of German. A.r,., Leland Stanford University, 1897: A.M., Indiana sity, 1907. Carl H. Eigenmann, Ph.D., Professor of Zoologj-, Dean Graduate School. Fernandus Payne, Assistant Professor of Zoology. A.B.. Indiana University. 1905; A.M., 1906; Ph.D., C. University, 1909. Enoch George Hog. te, Professor of L;i v and Dean of the Sc of Law. . .l ' ,., -Mlegheny College, 187:1; A.M.. tS7,i; LL.D., 1909. Jesse J. II. LaFollf.tte, Professor of Law. Willi. m Henry Beeler, Associate Professor of L;iw. LL.D., Indiana University, 1903; LL.M., Yale Univcrsi Charles McGcffey Hepbcrn. Professor of Law. A.E., Davidson College, LL.C.. University of irgnii Archibald XI. Throckmorton, Professor of Law. Burton Dorr jMyers, Professor of Anatomy. Ph.B., Buchtel College, 1893; A.M., Cornell Univcrs M.D., University of Leipsic, 1902. Augustus Grote Pohlmax, Professor of Anatomy. M.D., University of Buffalo Medical School, 1900. William J. IIoenkhaus, Professor of Physiology. A.B., Indiana University, 1894; A.M., 1895; Ph.D., Un Chicago, 1903. Will David Howe, Professor of English. A.M., 1S97; Ph.D., 1899. Charles Jacob Sembower, Professor of English. A.B.. Indiana University, 1892; Ph.D., University of vania, 1909. Henrv Thew Stephenson, Associate Professor of Engli B.S., Ohio State University, 1894; A.B., Harvard I Frank Aydelotte, Associate Professor of English. A.B., Indiana University, 1900; A.M., Harvanl Univer B.Litt.. Oxford University, 1907. . ndre v Tennant Wylie, Instructor in English. . .B., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. Cecilia Barbara Hennel, instructor in English, A.B.. Indiana University, 1907; A.M., 1908. t. KTiiUR Bivens Stonex, Instructor in English, A.B., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. RniiARD Ashley Rice, Assistant Professor of English. A.B., Williams College, 1S99; A.M., Harvard Universil . nxa Brockmann Colli.vs, Instruc tor in English. A.n., Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1908. Edward Daniel McDonald, Instructor in English. A.D., Indiana l-niversity, 1910; A.M., 1912. Joseph W. Piercy, Director of Work in Journalism. Indianapolis Sentinel, Kansas City Times, Indiiinapo Contributor -Vtlantic. Century and other magazines. :npiiana y. ,-c can- uf the ii ami the wc-ck.- il n THE FACULTY 1 — CONTINUED r Davis Myers Mottier. Professor of Botany. John L. Geiger, . ssistant in Music. ij A.l!., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., 1S93; Ph.D.. University Charles Pelton Hutchins, Professor nf Physical Training for James Van Hook, Assistant Professor of Botany. Men. M.D., Long Island College Hospital, 1897. : A.B., Indiana University, 1899; A.M., 1 900. James A. Kase, Instructor in Physical Training for Men. ! Frank Marion Andrews, Associate Professor of Botany. A.B., Indiana University, 1894; A.M., 1895; A.M. and Pli.D., Arthur Lee Foley-, Professor of Physics. University of Leipsic, 1902. A.B., Indiana University, 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., Cornell Uni- Sciii viER Colfax D.wisson, Professor of ilathematics. vcrsit.v, 1907. A.B., Indiana University, 1890; A.M., 1893; Sc.D.. University John Benjamin Dutcher, Assistant Professor of Physics. of Tubingen. 1890. A.B. Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. Davii. Andrew Rotheock, Professor of Mathematics. Rolla Roy Ramsev, Associate Professor of Physics. A.n.. Indiana University, 189 3; A.M., 1893; Pli.D.. University A.B.. Indiana Universit.v, 1895; A.M., 1898; Ph.D., Cornell Uni. of Leipsic, 1898. versity, 1901. y Ulysses Sherman Hanna, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. John P. Foley, Mechanician, Ul 1 A.li.. Indiana University, 1895; A.M., 1896; Ph.D., University R of Pennsylania, 1905. Xj Robert Daniel Carmichael, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Louis Sherman Davis, Professor of Chemistry. 1 A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., 1892; Ph.D., University M of Marburg, 1896. M ll A.B., Lineville College. 1S9S; Ph.D., Princeton University, 1911. Robert Ed vard Lyons, Professor of Chemistry. 1 1 CoRA Barbara Hennel, Instructor in Mathematics. A.B., Indiana University, 1889; A.M., 1890: Ph.D.. University of U Vf=: -A.C. Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1908. Heidelberg, 1894. H [_! ' tKENXETH Powers Williams, Instructor in Mathematics. Oliver W. Brown, Associate Professor of Chemistry. LJ It ' . lfreii .Mansfield Brooks, Professor of Fine Arts. D.S.. Earlhara College. 1895: A.M., Indiana University, 1896. 1 Frank Curry Mathers, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. [11 ; , .B., Harvard, 1894; A.M., 1899. A.B.. Indiana University, 1903; A.M. 1904: Ph.D.. Cornell Uni. M Ri.iiEKT C. Burke, Instructor in Fine Arts. versity, 1907. i Graduate of Pratt Institute, 1907. Clarence Earl May, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. 1 ;L- Sa.miel Bannister Harding, Professor of European History. A.B., Indiana University, 1904; A.M., 1905: Ph.D., Columbia r A.B., Indiana University, 1800; A.i I., Harvard University, 1894; University, 1908. [ Fli.D., 1898. Juliette Maxwell, Director of Physical Training for Women. { ;, James Albert Woodburn, Professor of American History and A.B., Indiana University, 18S3; Graduate Sargenfs Normal j! Politics. School of Physical Training. 1890. :! A.B., Indiana University, 1876; A.M., 1885; Ph.D., Johns Hop- Lucy Tufts Bowen, Instructor in Physical Training. ' liins University, 1890; LL.D., Colgate University. . .B,. Western College, 1906; Graduate Physical Training, Olier- Thomas Legrand Harris, Instructor in History. Im College. 1910. 1 . .B.. Indiana University. 1S93: . .M.. 1S95; A.M.. Harvard Uni- IMaky Ethelda Roddy. Instructor in Physical Training for virsity, 1899. ' onien. i Amos Shartle Hershey, Professor of Political Science and In- Graduate Chautauqua School of Pliysical Education, 1905. ternational Law. A.B., Harvard University, 189- ' ; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, MiMi Hicks Garesche, Instructor in Physical Training for 1894. Women. 1 •Absent on leave from January 1 to August 1, 19i:. t Absent on leave from August 1. 1911, to August 1. 1913. J -Min-iiT 4NA- Tin- Xalioiial OnU ' r ,,f Tin Cut Bacteria ' .vHI hold its , TEACHING FELLOWS AND ASSISTAN H RR l RKH slstmt 1 l 1 Everett N TH NiEL Ben M I n t im HVGH E ERETT BroW N 1 RuSbELL A.iCLbT Brown 1 i il 1 r iinmj; f • L0NZ0 CHRENCE BlRCIN l I 1 ( )rth IHK-, P LL Henr Clements W m t iiit in Musk CHARLEb Edward Convor B Teaching Fellow in Plu St nle N(.e Cook Teaching Assistant in Chemistr Everett H rrison Crug B ResenrUi Fell, w m Chum 1 H VDDELs Willi AibON Cllaier B Ttichin, Itll u in Clvrlme Edmlnd Edmondson r TLidiiii, rdl w in olog LoG N Es REA M Research Fellow in llisiun Elb -Vmelh Fickel Siistint in omen s G mnisnini EiPH M F I KB Tochm, Fill w m Bhilos mhx Jesse I ' M 1 1 11 w in C,Lclo , MVRV 1 in Litin Rlss, 1 sic Mm 1 1 1 How m Zoolog CLIFT( ImiM il ii M-ithemitic John Willi vm Hebfl A 1 li Edith Ameli Hemnel 1 1 II w m Botnn lON70 Ln«D HiCKSON 1 1 iil.liL Spenkmg MuneS Howvrd B Tei ehm. ell 1 V m EcMitmas WiLi FREn Howe Assistant in W o nen 5 Gymnisiiim m el of swimming F m UiiHs.N r FeRh nj IlI IV 1 Fn_li h Mvs N 1 II 1 1 I 1 InsKs John C l i Mti lett sMst nit m Joiirmlism ToHN HvRRisoN MiNNKk I Cruie Teacher i: lphei s Ri ssell ees M Teaching Fellow LHNRiEs Elmer Owens M Teaching Fellow W 11 n oRENE Palmer B Teaching Fellow ii Mathcm n Chemi- 1 Botanx Chemist Philosoph EarlE R m sE ' , B Cr Blolog Thomas W I R LPH F AlAR ' , R Gla Will RISSELL A.I F i SlIMl I) NiEL Wilson Pearce B ssislant Fermen L aton Pickett B Critic Tc Lemlel A.RTHLE PiTTENGER AM Grille Te icher m English Teacher in Ph sical Geograph Teaching Fellow in Ph t 11 Public Speaking 111 Orthogenics Insical Training for Alcn img Fellow in English SvMLEL Erwin Shideier AE Teaching Fellow m Elemen Education Helen Gail Spain AM 1 caching Fellow in English Chveles Hvddon Splrceon AB Teaching Fellow in Zi Ir, Ci UD Earl Sutton M Teaching Fellow m Botan Robert Esel Swinilel r isl nit in TIi torj W ILLI AAI OsC R I I V Ron Milton 1 ki llistor DaATCN LlRES I I I les LIBRARY ' OFFICERS William Evans Jenkins, A.M.. Librarian. Louise iLAXWELL, A.B.. Assistant Librarian. Inez F. Sachs. A.B.. B.L.S.. Reference Librari; Anna B. Gelston, A.M., Cataloguer. Nina Almond, Assistant Cataloguer. Grace Bray, .A.B., Assistant in Order Departn Irene MacLean, Assistant in Classification De John M. Roberts. Assistant in cha Eugene V. Beamer, Desk Assistant D.avid W. McXabb. Desk Assistant Bessie Lynn, Desk .Assistant. Maurice Adkins, Desk .Assistant. Lester Coeya, Desk Assistant. John Ewing Edmondson. Clerk to Rcgisti Thomas Cookson, Bookkeeper. Robert E. Neff, Clerk to Bursar. Mellie Parker Greene, President ' s Secre OTHER OFFICERS Saeah De.nnv Kirbv, Stenographer. Lillian Seaney, Stenographer. Ethelyn Johnson, Stenographer. loH.N I ' ouTEK Foley, Mechanician. Henry Corr, Assistant Mechanician. Eugene Kerr, Superintendent of Buildings. William Ross Ogg, Keeper of Grounds. can-fi,! that yc shall kuoi. ' him hy his smell THE FACULTY ONE of the first difficulties discovered by the new student at the University is the faculty. He is al- most sure to come into contact with it in one way or an- other before he has been in the University a sini le year. Before the student has finished his college course, he has, under tiie most fa -i)rable circumstances, encountered the faculty several times. It is well nigh impossible to go through the I ' niversity without meeting and, as is very often the case, learning the names of at least a few facultv members. All attempts, up to this time, to attain an A.B. degree without recognizing the existence of the faculty have met with failure. Every one who has been gradu- ated from Indiana I ' niversity will acknowledge, if tact- fully approached, that he has had to go up against the faculty at some time or other during his college career. INDIANA iNDHArL wh en in coiie g ' one fo(H on the floo THE GRADUATE CLUB OFFICERS Jesse J. Galloway, President Daniel W. Pearce, Vice-President Mason E. Hufford, Seer etary-Treasurer L I S r (J F MEMBERS Mason Edward Huftnrd Willa Norene Palmer Lola Ella Vance Jesse James Galloway Ira Elver Lee Daniel Wilson Pearce Marie Ver-Nooy Mary Alice Gilbert EdwardWesleyL.nl- William Lee Pennington Mrs. Marie Andrews Mrs. Hope W. Graham Leslie MacDill Sliirley O. Rhea Alonzo Clarence Biirgin Mary Theresa Harman Mabel Eliza McClellan Jesse Artiveldt Sanders Hal P. Bybee Clifton T. Hazard Mary C. Miller Samuel Ervin Shideler Claude Leigh Clawson Cora Barbara Heiniel Alpheus Rns el Nees Ernest Vivian Shockley Walter Allison Davis Edith Amelia Hennel Charles Elmer Owens Charles Haddon Spurgeon Logan Eseray John Ambr.,.e Hess Robert Earl Swindler Eupha May Foley ' int i a past as soon as some one holds Iter hand in a cullcgc pla THE GRADUATE CLUB THE Graduate School has of late years become a prominent part of Indiana University. It had its beginning in i8Si, when the first ad- vanced degrees were conferred. In the vears 1881 to 1893, inclusive, the University graduated four- teen doctors of philosophy, ninety-nine masters of arts, and twelve mas- ters of science. In ig()4 there took place a segregation and formal organization of the Ciraduate School, and in iqo8 the office of Dean of the Graduate School was created. In i()i a graduate club was founded to establish closer relations among the graduate students, and with the members of the faculty. The meetings are in part social, and in part devoted to the presenta- tion of papers by members of the club, giving the results of investigations carried on bv the authors. Occasionally addresses are given by visitors of prominence, and bv members of the facultv. GRADUATE STUDENTS OF INDIANA U N I E R S I T MRS. MARIE OPPERM. N ANDREWS. Bloomiiigloii. A.B. 1902, A.M. Wellesley College 1903, Le Cercle Frainais. Der Deutsche Verein, Delta Gamma. Sigma Xi. Band 1909-191 1911-191- ' . Assistant in Eiluc; HAL. P. BVBEE, Roclicilcr (Geology), A.B. (Fall Term) 1911, Researcli Fellow in Geology. CLAUDE LEIGH CLAWSON, Bloomingtoii (Mathematics). A.B. 1910. Teaching Fel- low in Mathematics 1910-11, A.M. 1911, Graduate Student in Education. PAUL HENRY CLEMENTS, Indianapolis (History). CH. RLES EDWARD CONNOR, Tcrre Haute (Physiology). A.B. Cum Laude 1910. Teaching Fellow in Physiology 1911-12, Phi Beta Pi. HELEN MARG. RET CONNOR, Tare Haute (Latin). A.B. Indiana State Normal 1911, Fellow in Latin. EVERETT HARRISON CRAIG, Scymcir (Chemistry). . .B. (Fall Term) 1911, Re- search Fellow in Chemistry. THADDEUS CULMER, Bhomiuston. CLARENCE EDMUND EDMONDSON, Blaomineton (Physiology). A.B. 1906, Delta Tau Delta, Nu Sigma Nu, Teaching Fellow in Physiology. JOSEPH CORRINGTON EDWARDS, Bloom- iiiSloii (Education). B.S. Moores Hill College 1907, Phi Delta Kappa, Teaching Fellow in Economics 1911-12. LOG. N ESEREV, EU IIA M.-VY FOLEY, Bloomi Iff ' , (Psychol- Ogy). A.B. Leland Stanf ord University 1910. Delta Gamma, Sigm 1 X , Teaching Fello V in Psycholog -12, Philosophv Club. JOSEPH OTTO FRANK, Labanon. A.I 1909, Alpha Chi Sigma, German Club, Un ersity Orchestra I90S-09, Berliotz Scho, and Conservatorium, Cologne, German 1905. , JAMES GALLOWAY, ; (Geol. ogy). .VB. 1909, A.M. 1911, Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Xi, Indiana Club, Indiana Academy of Science. President of Gradu- ate Club, Teaching Fellow in Geology. iRY ALICE GILBERT, Cincinnati. Olito (Latin). A.B. Ohio Wpsleyan 1911, Fel- low in Latin, 191 1-1 t :hD ' EAN. always feels like the Unhcrsity is going to kids (iRADLATK SIT I) KX IS OF INDIANA T N I V ER S I T V — C O N T I N L ' Kl) (Matli- JESSE ARTIVELDT SANDERS, Can MARY THERESA HAR.MAN. BUwm (Zoology). A.B. 1907 (Botany). 1909 (Zoology), Sigma Xi. CLIFTON TERRELL HAZARD, iri iiii Ohio (Mafliematics). B.S. W ilm College 1906. CORA BARBARA HENNEL. Era mathematics). A.B. 1907, A.M. Indiana Club, Phi Beta Kappa, Eu DITH AMELIA HENNEL. Eraiis-.-ille (Bot- any). A.B. 1911, Indiana Club. Phi Beta Kappa, Botany Club, Arbutus Staff, Eng- lish Club, Spanish Club, Teaching Fellow in Botany 1911-12. 1HN AMBROSE HESS, Bhwmington (Ger- rsity 1910, Phi Beta Kap- in German, President of Der :in, Le Cercle Francais. T MARSHALL LINTON, Bloom (Political Science). A.B. Butler 1911. T.-iu Kappa .Mpha, Fellowslii] D WESLEY LONG, Corlhiid (CI f). A.B. 1910, Indiana Club, . ' Sigma, Teaching Fellow in Chemi M. BEL ELIZ. McLELLAN. (Latin. A.B. DePauw L ' niv State Fellow 1911-12. M- RV CHARLES MILLER, (English). A.B. 1909, Le Ccri English Club, Arbutus Staff 1 ALPHEUS RUSSELL NEES, Fn DANIEL WILSON PEARCE, Bloomhigton (Education). Assistant in Philosophy, Philosophy Club. Phi Delta Kappa, Mar- ried Students ' Club. WILLIAM LEE PENNINGTON, The Ridge. Kentucky (Education). B.P. Kentucky State University 1909, Phi Delta Kappa, CECIL RAY PETERSON, Hobart. FERMEN L- YTON PICKETT, Bloominglon (Botany). A.B. Cum Laude 1910, Phi Delta Kappa, Assistant in Botany 1910-11. Botany Critic in Practice School 1909. THOMAS W. RECORDS, Bhomington (Phys- ics). A.B. 1901, Football Team 1900, . s- sistant Director of Athletics 1900, Gradu- ate of State Normal 1S97, Teaching Fellow SHIRLEY 0. RHE , Holdrege, (Physics). A.B. DePau V Univ Physics CI b. Phi Beta Kappa RUSSELL ALGER SHARP, Charleslown (Eng- lish). A.B. 1911. Teaching Fellow in English 1911-12. Phi Delta Theta. SAMUEL ERWIN SIIIDELER. Huiifiiigloii (Education). A.B. 1909. Phi Delta Kap- pa, Teaching Fellow in Education 1911-12. ERNEST T TAN SHOCKLEY, (History), A.B. 1909. Phi Gamma Delta, History Club, Track Team 1899-1902. Captain Track Team 1902. Glee Club 1900-01, Or- chestra 1902, Daily Student Staff 1900-02. CHARLES HADDON SPURGEON, Nobles- i-ille (Zoology). A.B. Franklin College 1905. Assistant in Zoology Franklin Col- lege 1905, Assistant in Embryology Univer- sity of Chicago 1907, Professor of Biology Drury College 1907-11, Teaching Fellow in Zoology Indiana University 1911-12, ROBERT E. RL SWINDLER, Bhomiiiglo HENRY HERBERT TRUEBLOOD. Plaiiirille. ROLL- MELTON TRYON, Bloominglon. DAYTON ULREY, North Manchester (Phys- ics). A.B. 1911. Physics Club. Teaching Fellow in Physics 1911-12. LOLA ELLA -ANCE. Noblesville (Zoology). A.B. DePauw Univeisity (English) 1907, State Fellow in Zoology 1911-12. Fellow in Zoology Biological Station Summers of 190S-09. M. RIE VER N00 -, La Porte (History). A. B. Knox College 1909. History Instructor Rochester College 1909-1911. NE JIAI-IA. J III do stTiiictiiiic. iiiistaki :NDnAr ' The pedigree under your picture won ' t buy buns for the babies - 1 INDEX T () A L L S E N I O R S M5 Garrett 0. Driscol Harley V Houseman Cecile Graham Howe 262 11.111} Aldrich Katheiine Easley . Ruth Edwards . . . E Mane Allen ... 259 1 liner Claience Aitman ... .63 Pearl Hvatt 257 .. 243 ... 278 Frank W Elson B llliver Marion Bailey Lhester Leonidas Eailey W. L. liallard Haleie Fair F J .. 242 El I 1 1.) Ruth Foster ...... Nell . I. Frank.... Fifine Z. Funk... == .. 2o6 K Miller Crawford Kent Millard Crane Kent Earl Everett Keyes Jennie Kibby Vesta King 253 Fredrick William Deck Everett Nathaniel Bennett ... 279 j 1 1 hi ™2 ' S J- Lieitviiesei ' j1 Lola Ghormley . . . .. 250 A Samuel Ki istul ' ill ... .66 Mae A. Glackner.. Winifred Llewellyr Glossie L. Goddard Earl T Gold Goad .. 254 0. 276 .. 253 Mary Alice Kirby Bvrl K. Kirklin...! 257 1 Hugh Eveiitt Bio«n 1 1, ' ' ' ' ,! ' ' ' ' j! kussell A. Brown , o Mildred Carrista Kroft l.iiimet bteuait Biumb..u ,h ... 261 L Emmet Morris LaRuc 280 Zcna May Caldwell Frank R. Goldman Sarah B. Goldman ' 65 n ' i t n ' I R Cl k Elmer David Goss. .. 268 Rogers Anderson Lee ■ Laura Bery. Coffman ... 257 Mabel Hanna Greg William A. Hacker Jesse Geneva Hall Thurman D. Hall. Robert Clark Ham Russell P. Harker. Charles Leroy Ha Oscar Pendleton H Adam Ahi Leonard 26. 1 H Reed A. Lctsinger Harold Litlell Forrest Eugene Livengood 262 2-S l.Litha Elizabeth Cox ... -61 .. 254 Everett Craig ... 260 V , ' ' 77 Je=. e Ciouder Ian .. 258 M Ernest Bam Curtis ... 249 .. 248 John Marshall 275 Jessie A. Covell ... 245 Paul Ramsey Haw Walter C. Mayne Henry F. A. Meir ::::::: 249 -,,, Charles Broadway Hanruther Bertha Sylvia Hiatt Alonzo Loyd Hiekson .. 262 Allen George Messick 276 Walter E. Hisey.. Daphne Margarita .Marion Hoffman . MIT .. 266 I f T I) k 1 , H ' Kl ' h 11 l . ' , James Donald Dougkss ... 275 Hoffman .. 254 Will C Moore ' 70 ) IT A T -I .. .. .here the nkkcl sho iiu-ritahU- III the r r John Heritage MorrU 267 Elizabeth Renwick L.H. Risley 269 276 AlvaN. Taylor Chester Leland Teeter 1 1 250 281 ' Janet Morrison ,-„ Mc Fred Morton McCartney John H. McClellan Mary McCloskey Robert S tewart McElhinney Floyd MacGriff Lonnie Dert McKeel Arthur Lawrence Mclean David William McNabb N 243 256 266 278 ....;... 276 Gladys Robinson Leon Barnhill Rogers William Curt Roll Earl D. Roudebush S Lucile Sanders Loren Sanford Bloor Schleppev 260 267 : William Oscar Trapp Walter E. Treanor Mae C Trovillion 256 1 William Henry Tschannen U Jerrv Morton Ulen t Glen Lynne Underwood V ' 1 Paul Herman Schmidt ' . 275 Georgia Frank Semliower 2 Samuella Norman 26S Wniiam Fredrick Vogcl : 255 ■ 250 ChloeSiner 265 John Earl Smith 245 ....24S. 277 267 ;? y Guy Green Speeker Warren Russell Spencer Gail Myers Stapp Leonard Leo Steimley Roscoe Owen Stotler Earl Bundy Stroup Albert Stump James Dailev Sturgis Addis Knoefel Summers 252 .:.... 265 262 269 244 248 279 Anton H. Wegener 1 M L..U,.. I.,i,„l ii, U, strand 267 U n Robert Poer 1 Thomas Henry Ouigley 1 Russell S Race jli Ralph Ahwo Ranck -| Charles Emer Reel Ernest 0. Asher 281 2S2 sc 295 Ruth Woolery... . rsi C. E. Sumner 279 -ifiS 1 Y Madge Janet Yenne 268 Zourie Sutton T 243 Z ' 54 r LlaMnn ElUuorth Tanke 241 HOOL OF MEDICI? E 301 llarrv M. Pell Lawrence P.radley Raridan 302 {i Ma C Barrett 300 Archie V. Mines ; ' ' George W. Bowman Frank A Erayton 296 Gilbert Austin Hoppes Walter Karrer Schlosser Louis Harold Segar 298 Clifford E. Cox Chester Demaree 302 295 ; ' o ° Lloyd Sholty ilj JJ: James W. Duckworth T. Charles Erame Lucie G. Forrer R. M. Funkhouser . . . 300 297 Lloyd Chester Marshall Harvey Wave Miller Minor Miller George Luther Mitchell Paul E. Moschenross Robert Louis Nattkcmper 302 ' ... ' . ' . ' . 296 297 298 296 ,„ ' , 100 1 Chalmer H. Weaver Alfred Carson Williams ::::::: 296 Claude D. Green 301 -«. -NDK. N.- V ' - jVt-(7r _v all the i;irls would be more ijifcnstimr If thry had not been up so laic the nli;ht bcfoi :i i !!iiiii5ii °naE:i!-;!J:sn::-::ii;a:!i:gai1 V g MB I oooooooooooooo o r s — N i n e t e e n T v e 1 li;is a real residence done anything ver ES, Richiiiuiid. n vou ask any one what lie knows about L le says. ■ ' She went to the Siwash social with L: Larrv, when interviewed, said that Miss Gates IX 11 )X H GtVAX. I.awrnu-i-bin-g. l.axv. Si-ma Xti. Rlieinhard CInb. History Club. t bithin ( ;i an is familiarly known to his brothi Jnliii I ' .ii b because he has to shave eight times a lie ,i cvs lielween pedagogy and law. : AXK W. ELSON, Clnrhiiid, Ohio. Romance Languasjes. Phi Gamma Delta. Sphinx I ' i.-idoit Boosters Club. Business Manager Rob Rov I ' .usuKss Man;iger Babette 1912. I ' Kon lias a physique like an undershing roadstc i Mvs riylii ii|, the hills like most rars on the straighl wbi ' ii II Clinics to pulling a proposition to a successful ' Til KDW.XRDS. i c ,vr, Laiiii. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Ruth Edwards has a transcontinental grin, an ex; aiid l.uigh and unfailing good humor. She is not nea .uliiiimy as a Latin major ought to be. E. KL E.VERETT KEVES. Per llislorv .and Pnlilical Scie Phi Beta Kappa, cut Senior Class. W iaiin-Ohio Debatiim : IN Bin AN A. ris -a ' ilh tight o ' clocks never get their false l:i fi I Walter C. Ma oooooooooooooo Seniors Nineteen Twelve I.Tl-R C MAVXF.. r,tl ii. Philosophy. Philosophy Club. ilayne is a bunch of nerves and has ai cgarding psychological subjects. Howeve okitely strange girl to the Slwash social. JE.SSIE- . COVELL. i ' . ' .1 ,V ,. Jessie Covell has angular features and an angular ilis- position, but upon acquaintance betrays a genial charm, .Slu can broaden her a ' s in . lma Mater unblushingly. JOHN E. RL SMITH, Lazvrcncchurg. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. John Earl Smith is a pedagogical recluse. W ' lien not stuthing Education elsewhere, lie spends his time stud ing Education at the Library. CL.WTON ELLSWORTH T.- NKE, Pcndlclon. Chemistry. Sigma Nu, Alpha Chi Sigma, Theta Nu Ep- Tanke is a typical Sigma Nu. as he never has a date. He takes a passive interest in University affairs. He has a judicial temperament in dealing with freshmen. r, KRIE ONG. Columbus. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma, English Club, Board of . R( ) S ULRHV. .V,.W , .1 ,, lus as he looks, even though joke as earnestly as George m who has eateii at the Gil- Clayton Ellsworth Tankc O O O O O O O €■ o o o o o o Xotliiiit: liijs quite such a stroui; l crsoualily as hotel soap J HHSS HID Seniors — Nineteen Twelve Geology. Delta Tail Delta. Zeta Delta Chi. Booster Club. .Melvin Fickle ' s two heaviest courses in the Universil have heen Music and Stradley ' s, excellent preparator studies ftir the stone industry which he has thought of as 1-:LT1I. FOLEY, BloomUigton. Philosophy. Delta Gamma. Eupha Foley graduated several years ago, but she has been seen around the University the past winter and. since she has lots of pictures at the photographer ' s, it is not sur- prising that she got in with the seniors. R. LPH MITTEN. Worthinglou. Chemistry. Delta Tan Delta, Alpha Chi Sigma. I ' liiver- siiy Chemical Society. Alilteu is a south-mitt on the ' varsity. He gets up at six cvrry lUMrnnig much to the disgust of his brothers. Was in . n Miia I line years, where he had daily fights with centi- jieiks, raUlesiiakes, scorpions and lizards. RUSSELL A. BROWN, New York City. English. Sigma Nu, Board of Arbutus Editors, Press Club, Board of Directors Indiana Union, English Club. Russell Brown is matron of the Sigma Nus, one of the sob sliugers on the Student and a fellow conspirator on the Twelve Arbutus board. He is quiet, but go-gets-it. (— Hcrold.) )A ALBERTA CHENOWETH, Blnainhigfun Latin. Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi Beta Kappa, Le Cercle Fran(;ais, Der Deutsche Verein, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1908- 09-10, President Y. W. C. A. 1911-12, Treasurer Woman ' s League 1910-11, Arbutus StafT. Ida Chenoweth was so busy the past winter with Phi Beta Kappa, the Woman ' s League and her departmental clubs that she forgot to turn her reversible coat a single IIEROLD, Bloomiichl. English. Phi Delta T1k-i,-i, Edil.ir-in-Chicf Vni Arbu- s, Press Club, Sphinx Club. Don Herold ' s That ' s good denotes enthusiastic and iroarious approval of copy. A quiet ignoring of it means lense disgust. He loves to run loose with his hair mussed. -Brown.) :ndiiama ■ iJ , ' - 7 on her S f- m. looks and live with her S a. Ida Albtrt Chenoweth OOOOOOOOOOOOOO r rbara May Bailey oooooooooooooo JQ Seniors Nineteen T vv e 1 ' kl ' :ii MOKlOX M.CARTXEY, «, English, English Ckib. In spite of total blindness, Fred McCartney ha record during well be proud of. Tliat ' s more tha . India... is cheerful 1 be said of the il, Rli. R. .A1. Y l: lLEY.Luza-l!. Latin. Phi Beta Kappa. .May Bailey is a devotee of shinney. She also di Greek and Latin. I L KLEY V. HOUSEMAN. Hartford City. Chemistry. Indiana Club, Chemistry Club. Houseman went through his two scraps, has Leonard ' s Mill, Arbutus Hill and the Cascades, filled all other requirements for graduation, so versify hands him his walking credentials. KOIiERT CLARK HAMILTON, Viiiccinies. English. Phi Kappa Psi, Press Club, Sphi Since Ik- was a summer mission man on the Indianapo- lis Star. I ' .ob Hamilton has walked like a war correspondent. Ham is the racket artist of University dances. He can play Santa Claus all at once. ZOURIE SUTTON, Bloomington. Latin. Phi Beta Kappa, Der Deutsche Verein. Zourie Sutton is crazy about dancing, but that what got her into Phi Beta Kappa, although one of tl ditions is general culture. Zourie fosters amateur i through the shin shattering period. J, WILLIAil HEBEL, Auburn. English. Sigma Chi. Bill Hebel, the fusser-philosopher, carries five h Doctor Fite and ten hours of Delta Gamma. He is the Sluss avenue bnngalogicians. I aBS •.m V mmmmmMi William Hebel. OOOOOOOOOOOOOO ■ the Student Building piano icfcf a horse, there would be ' vork for the S. P. C. A. SVLmj- Jt 1 Mil. oooooooooooooo Seniors— Nineteen T w e 1 v RALPH KUEr.LER. M.nint rcnioii. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. Kucliler will awake some day to find that he has gr il from Indiana University. It ' s a great lest of ahilii . LC1E FAIR, Clay Lily. English. Halcie Fair is addicted to big ha EARL BUNDV STROUP. SdnicrilU: Law. Gamma Eta Gamma, Delta Sigma Rho, Indiana- DePanw Debating Team WU, Indiana-Ohio Debating Team 1912, Arbutus Staff 1912. Earl Stroup is the silver-tonguer shoveler of Scircleville. He has a voice like an old alnmnns, and the dignity of an ambassador. He swells the enrollment of honorary fr.i- ' .ENJAMIN D. HITZ, Indianapolis. English. Beta Theta Pi. English Club. Sphi Winner First Prize English CUib Short Story Con .Xuthc.r Scnic.r Plav 1910. •A- ' . XCE COOK, Orestes. emistry. Alpha Chi Sigma, ncc Cook lives in the Che mes boards ont. He is short i else is his long suit. t2 OOOOOOOOOOOOOO c sfccd ' ' ay. but a icccssily oil the Soiithc MBieiiiiiisagiEamitaajaBBeaii V EffVjasr I oooooooooooooo Seniors— Nineteen Twelve JOHN ROSCOK CLARK, ir.nllniigt.ni, Maihcmalics. Phi Delta Kappa, Eucli VII.L. NOREXE PALMER, Ligo RRY ALDRICH AU ' diciiH-. Harry Aldricll ; a receding person, who would not dis f in the HowHng Host. He has discoverei is all the more reason that a nian shoiiU WILLIAM A. HACKER, Cleveland, Ohio. Economics and Social Science. Economics CUih, I Ddta Kappa. If tlurc is any advantage in heing married, Hacke iKcc i explained. His dignity is the distinguishing ch; actiristic ,,f the Education Department. CHARLES BROADWAY DAXRUTHER. Ifest B,nieii. Medicine. ' Varsuy Baseball Team 1011. Danruther endeared himself to baseball fans by a m; L■lous catch of a low drive, winning the Purdue game rnO. He chews any brand that you can. ARRY ERNEST WOODBURY, Plyi Medicine. Ernest Harry Woodbury is taking ' juth. ChirlcsBroaJvvivD., oooooooooooooo : IN DEAN. It akciiys sounds just n bit fiiiiiiy to hear a collcsi: ' M i .k i i j:uwat]p n Ernest James Asbaugh Seniors— Nineteen Twel ' e 1 ERNEST J. ASBAUGH, Muruii,. Education. Married Students ' Club, Phi Delta Kappa Ernest Asbaugh reads the Educational Reviews at t MARGARET REBECCA LATHAM. Bloominglon. English. Kappa Alpha Theta. Enghsh Club, Philosophy Club, Woman ' s League Board, Arbutus Staff. Margaret Latham is alive sixty minutes per hour, mini- mum. She and her mother scrap about which is which. Peggy is the best little salad factory in Bloomington, but she can not decide whether to be a sob sister on a city daily or a kindergarten professor, or to take up double blessedness. CHARLES EMERY REED. Logansfort. Economics. Delphian, Economics Club, Philosophy Club. Charley Reed once chased a plough on the stony hills overlooking the Wabash. He went to Wittenberg college for two years, where he specialized in religion. He is al- ways busy. LEONARD LEO STEIMLEY, Attica. Indiana Club. Euclidi; Mathematics, sity Band, Univer Leonard Lc. : snooze per dav please. He has blinking through lore than three hours ' other Edison record, ;s in the Observatory a telescope, all alone. GRACE TALLJLAN, Moiiliccllo. English. Independent Literary Society. Grace Talhiian rehearses for pedagogy th( High School. She U RENCE HILL BENNETT, Indianapolis. Political Science. President Jackson Club, Winner lliv Prize 1912, Strut and Fret. History Club. Lawrence Bennett goes in for history and histrioni He walks maliciously, but is pleasant under the icing. 1 made a big noise as Silent Murphy in the College Wido DEAF I. oooooooooooooo ' ( company in Ohio each spring n-ini n Tiifc.i ; iwy=jo-h inJ H i Harry Bass Knowlton Clifford H. Moore oooooooooooooo Seniors Nineteen Twelve KKV B. KNUWLI Knowlton linlds the endurance record for attendance at rack practice. Curlv does tite liigli-luirdle aeroplane glide ike a wasp. JE.XNXE CROWDER, IndianafoUs. Jeanne Crowder is a regular little stcani roller. She is the real manager of everything with which she is connected. She gets away with drama, politics and professors. CLIFFORD H. MOORE, Princctou. History. Associate Editor 1912 Arbutus, History Club. Moore, catalogued as C. H., wore out six pairs of i DIS KNOEFF.L SUMMERS, yl i7;T«go. M. t ' i ' !i i!i ' 11 ' lta Tau Delta, Euclidian Circle, Un than most Delta Taus. He ia Ogle since they took Span ELIZABETH RENWICK, Manticclh. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. EHzabcth Rcnwick is a firm believei; in the possibilitie of miilnii ht oil and is a canon in physics, though her ma jor is not that subject. CHESTER B. LeROY, Strcator. III. English. Daily Student l ' )10-ll-12. Press Club. LeRov is a member of the trouble trust. He has a habi of getting in bad with those Malice toward all. charity fo ' SSSSlM V gJEfSPi-rSaSi.tllA ' Chester B LcRoy OOOOOOOOOOOOOO o]:MDIlA.MAi J A button on the bosom is x ' orth two in the button ho.i ' ' ' 1:lAbafeJk- ' Wilbur Frank Pell oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twelve English. Indiana Club, English Clnb, Ddta Sigma 10, winner Inter-Class Discussion 1912, Indiana-Illinois ;bating Team 1911, Indiana-DePatnv Debating Team 1911. . ' Mbert Stump is the best Stump speaker e.Ntant. He has ikc-p-set, pianola voice upon which lie i fond of playing. 11 WOOLERY. Bloomiiigtoii. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Botanical Club, Secretary Class 1912, Ruth Wook son present at home girls whc v, secretary, has often been the senior class meetings. She is o did not grow up into a college u ' ILBUR FRANK PELL, ■ K. II l;. GULI). L X, l -rrc Haiifc. English. Secretary Woman ' s League 1911-12. Sarah Goldman is as brunette as moonless midnight. Slu used to bum around with Bloor Schleppey, so she must Ix Oscar Harman l.-k- hi . - m- !:. .i b .lin I). R. feller. He went .l-un ui i m nld glee and came up again uriniiiiij ; i ilie new. anon reclaimed him fr.im W l.-li i . Il l ' . i.VNxNETTE BARTELLE, Toledo, Ohio. .Mathematics. Delta Gamma, El Centro Espam.l Cercle Francjais, Euclidian Circle, English Club, Marq Club. Altitudinous Jeannette Bartelle was the first girl to a shredded wheat hat this spring. Her laughter is o block-awav kind, and she is a departnicni.d clnb fan. Oscar Pendleton Ha OOOOOOOOOOOOOO li; :e ' [) rf be a job as model for an illustrated soiiii eo)iipai, i linilESHS fjwigwiawiffgaiBsgsai v  j-ss ' 1 1 E 1 ... St Bain Curtis tf l 1 p M. Graves H Hj 1 Htnry F. A. Meir oooooooooooooo Seniors Nineteen ' ] w e 1 v : CURTIS, Marlinsvillc. . Alpha Chi Sigma. Curtis is the Sybarite who introduced i iig pillows to the Harris-Grand gallery. iiisiii per ades I. U- Curley is to blani ' HILIP M. GRAVES. Orl,-aii to hav u Delta. Zeta Delta Chi. Tau Epsilo CSS Club, Boosters Club, Basketba nil 1910-11-12. the fall, picks out the most spectact ual case. Spring term, he gets rid « ; a clear field the next fall. lENRY F. A. ilEIR, Bloomingtu,,. Botany. Graduate Indiana Si ' l ' !, lirad ' if Science Department Evansvilk I - I 1 f 11. On leaveof absence 1911-12. Instrui ; I.. i,.,..,iia Uni- versity Summer 1911, Teaching 1 1:. ' ,% I ' ll IJ. Henry F. A, Meir has a child called Algetha, which must be a botanical term. Meir, Mrs. Meir and Algetha and the other child may be seen on Sunday afternoons, taking moving pictures of the bursting buds. . l. RION HOFFMAN, Iiidiai aH s. German. Delia ,,phy Club, Gamma, Der Deutsche - erein, I ' liilus- Though she is 1 Liftman four yea the dear s to grad uate. ece, it h ' aken Marion ROBERT POER. Oc History. Hislo y Club. Robert Pocr 1 most pretentious but he is an entlin cks only a w .astic support alking stick of being the he class. It is incredible, r of Indiana athletics, and CELL M. FRANK, Petcnburgh. Romance Languages.- Delta Gamma, Le Cercle Eran- i;ais. El Centro Espanol, Arbutus Staff. N ' rlt. ilu- beautiful cloak inodel, has to come to Bloom- iiil;Imii Ii way of the E. T. H., and she should be given .111 A II. hir tiiat if for nothing else, Nell ' s conv sviiiiiliniiK ' . She laughs like a McNamara bomb. OOOOOOOOOOOOOO INDIAN , called off on ciccount of darki HB :i:V« Bi:;V! B ADBDTUS nnc r oooooooooooooo e n 1 o r Nineteen Twelve ;e (;e e a hall, AL A N. TAYLOR, Faniwrshiirg, Economics. Emanon, Economics Club, Boosters Club. Bruno Taylor radiates between the Library and Alph; Hall— for the last two years, in fact. Occasionally he ma; be found at the Emanon House, where he belongs. LOLA E. GHOR.MLEY, Bloomiiigloi,. Mathematics. DeUa Gamma, Euclidian Circle, Y. W. C She 1 iley was the first of the Ghormley family to ma. They have populated the sorority since, nington girl by her own free will. WTNFRED ETHESTAL WAGONER, Kingman. History. Indiana Club, History Club. Three striking things about Wagoner are: his name, his walk and his case. His name got him a man for the Si- wash ; his walk got him his case; and his case— got him. 11EL1 -A E. CL ZZART, .-Uuicrson. Education. Bcliva sounds like the name of a lady aeroplanist, bul Miss Cuzzart is too heavy for such frivolity. FORREST A. MORRIS, Elbcrfeld. English. English Club. We could not Place Forrest. I -asHi a V ( BS3iaBaiai!iai!Siisia OOOOOOOOOOOOOO HjHDEAr A fraternity house is a problem, l efore .i ettiiif;. getting and gottc inna tMf T i i y ii:i VhJH. i i oooooooooooooo Seniors- N teen T vv e 1 v KAY CROMWELL, _ ■; v C .v. ALithematics. Euclidian Circle. Oliver Cromwell is a quiet, unobtrusive soul, trying to conceal the fact that he once attended the state normal . He buys Prince Albert by the large jar, and cultivates an aggressive pompadour. RUTH IKERD, Bhomington. iLathematics, Pi Beta Phi, Euclidian Circle. Ruth Ikerd has had a very hard time in getting through the University without any one finding out that she is Tubljy ' s sister. ARTHUR J. CRAIG, Seymour. History. History Club. ish Dopartr . lioltcr known as an educator than a stu rsit} ' . His questions contain more infor ■ 1 answer, given in any class of the Eng TIO.MAS J. BREITWIESER, Tipton. PhiloMiphy. Indiana Club, Philosophy Club. Tom I ' .reituii srr. kiMuii ,;, Bndweiser, brought culture and learning tn I;I. -iiiiimi. i,, from Danville. He has a voice like a still, mnuiil.ulu nr hi, Imt not intentionally. AXXIE GERTRUDE WILLLAMS, Bloomficld. English Club. Woman ' s League REX HARRISON SCHOONOVER, l!-illiamsport. ilathematics. Euclidian Circle. Re. Schoonover has a smile like the keyboard of a piano, but in spite of that he can not get in good with the CM-c.l i.Mpidatinn. Swarms with Lang and Bluhm. H UN .TM I • ia ■.™ V mismsmsms ss-issss3mm Fannie Gertrude Willi The Bloomficld theatrical season zeas light this year, e.veel t for a blind ors;an-grinder everv Saturday oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twel SL ' IHEKLIN, Banihndgc. Mathematics. Delphian. Euclidian Circle. When asked to describe Siithcrlin, one of the Delphian: 1(1 that he had been around a year and liad not displayei M. RY ALICE KIRBY, ;iiicaK . until her Student V (i SPEEKER, Ucsl L„f,i S|Keker ciiuld not see boiler making a minute. : I.MUulu imle.a.ne. Half of college, anvwav, is in being fr.MU the heme folks. a-RA ELIZABETH WISTRAND, Hast Cliicagu. III. lOllX -McCLELLAN, Auburn. I ' liysics. Physics Club. .Inlrn McClellan has a snule like a rip in a circus lie re,i!ards his school work as a part of his collegiate .nid consequently makes speed with most of his profs. :LARA corns, Darlington. English. English Club, Clara Corns has large, automobile eyes and a large, tomobile voice. She took part in a hazing party one tin ( i.v i; toii li task for a co-cd -.cith - ii.f.sTi- to become l opiiUir Seniors Nineteen Twelve .( ' , Chemistry. Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Chi Sigma. lillard Kent can dissect an automobile with as much ease as the ordinary person takes a croquet mallet apart. Like most New Albany people he is radically Southern. JOUX C. MELLETT. IndiaiiafoHs. Fivjli-I. iMu.ni.Mi TV,... rinh. Le Cercle FranQais. Eng- lish ( !ili ■■ I : li. ; I ' liisoo, Freshman Football and i;a-cl.:: I II ' - -,, I ;i,;,Ki Union 1909-10, Director Jacl.-. I I ■ i ■ || - M. ut 1911-12. J. .jinny . lelku i. ilie le.i-ilas. Appeal-to-Reason editor of the Student. He has the right temperament for a stu- dent editor : be can be happy, though unloved. DONALD A. BARTLEY, Oaktozvii. Mathematics. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Euclidian Circle. Don Hartley is a hypnotist. Comes in handy in rnshins season and other critical moments. He hypnotizes the Sun- F. RL D. ROUDEBUSH. .Vohl. srillc. lies. Indiana Club, Arbutus Staff. Board of M. C. A. 1911-12, Boosters Club, Track 1911, rv Team 1911. ;ELLE LUCILE walker. Bloominglou. l ni;li.li. Independent Literary Society, English Club, Le Xelle Walker is one of those lucky Bloomington girls who escape the hardships and perils of boarding-house life. .WEI.LVN GOAD, Sulphur l-uolball should be settled b arbitration im w a wT aEffla ss-asagg S! v K-yaija j i Evcretc N.uhmicl Bf: n oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n c t c c n T w e 1 - e •:rett n. bexxett. ntto,,. Jledicine. Nobody ever called Bennett. Nathaniel. Nevertheless e has friends. Hays Buskirk and Bennett buy clothes from he same circus supply company. Use no hooks. I ' HERINE MARIE ZIMMERMAN, Noblcsfillc. English. Indiana Club, Woman ' s League Board 1911-12. Katherine Zimmerman is not one of those co-eds who light be suddenly embraced between the Well House and ■ tlur parts of the campus. She is made after Dean DeNise ' s •RAXK ilORRIS. Pekin. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. I ' . Mrirris could easily be popular if his sucli a students appreciate. His chief pastii lalniratiTv. but it is occasionally broken by s lUR.MAN D. HALL. J r.v Economics. Sigma Chi Thurman Hall looks 1 Economics Club, ce a college man, anyhow, and He received his early training APHXE MARGARITA HOFFMAN, Bloon A gun in every line. Daphne Hoffman may be called an ambulating Encyclopedia B. Her most violent emotion is expressed by Oh, merce ! iEGRGE EVERETT GILL, Bloomington. Economics and Social Science. Emanon, Economics Club, Sophomore President 1909-10, Board of Indiana Union Directors 1909-10, Treasurer Indiana Union 1911-12. If George Gill has never cor ■thod of accepting a formal ir ve at least heard him introdu :d you as to the proper tion to a reception, you recitation by his char- ase in which— Thurman D. Ha Daphne Margarita HoHma OOOOOOOOOOOOOO PlIINID ' L rrry landlady ' s pride to have it said of her that she 12 r iimMSii sffieaKSffiSffilvH ssL I Marv McCloskey . Madge Janet Ycnnc oooooooooooooo Seniors Nineteen Twelve samit:l nKisroL, n.mrh,,,!. English. EiinHsh Club, University Band, University Or- chestra. Sam Bristol is the onlv bona fide member of Clement ' s nni,ic class. His esthetic nature won him credits in Eny- lish, and hard work got him laurels in ilitchell Hall. .MARY .McCLOSKEY. English. The English Department had to revise the spring term schedule so that tliev could get in some new courses that Mary McCloskey had not taken. MADGE JANET YENNE, irashiiigtoii. Latin. Delphian. Madge Yenne is not over fifteen minutes tall, but she creates her share of the disturbance in a basketball or hockey game. She was a chorus girl at the Siwash social. GUY M. LEMMON, Shclbyville. English. Phi Gamma Delta, Sphinx Club, Vice-Presi- dent Indiana Union 1911, Director Indiana Union 1910-11. English Club, Lincoln League Cabinet, Arbutus Staff. Guy Lemmon is floorwalker at the University book store and grand marshal at all class social functions. He calls all the Thetas by their home-town nicknames. lodshi ,EAFY JANE DECKARD. .■ Botany. Botanical Club. A dictograph could not get anythii WILLIAM FREDRICK VOGEL, BuoncjiUc. History. Independent Literary Society. Le Ccrclc Eran- i;ais. History Club. William Vogel has made good with Drs. Harding and Woodburn, and that is half the battle. Vogel takes his col- lege work seriously, but opens up occasionally to fun and I ,33 V lifts.- ni William Fredrick Vogel OOOOOOOOOOOOOO Hamlet is the tragedy of tackling a family frohle bcM Stewart McElhi. Stella Frincheon Hunt I oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n Twelve (;i ' ; i-: ' A jaxxey, .ih ' .v,iiuiii,L Mathematics, Euclidian Circle. Geneva Janney is the best authority on boarding clulis in town. Her chief distinction lies in the fact that she has never eaten more than once in the same place. ROBERT STEWART McELHINNEV. Princeton. Philosophy. Secretary Y. M. C. A. 1911-12. President I ' lnlnsophy Club 1912. Robert McElhinney owns the Y. M. C. A., and is major- ini; in Christianity. He is the local ELLA HUXT, Paris Crossing. German. Der Deutsche Verein. Stella Hunt uses four eyes and thinks in fo guages. She haunts Kirkwood Hall and is warm v Romance Language Department. Liidy Wegener was elected treasurer of the Arbutus d because he said he would watch Pell. He qualified he .Arbutus job by trading out Junior Book advertise- FRED R. GOR LW, Burnctrs Creel;. History. Indiana Club, History Club, DePauw Debat- ing Team 1911-12. Fred Gorman never winces when Dr. Harding shoots a question at him. Probably he is the only man in school who doesn ' t. When wound up, be talks. WILLIAM OSCAR TRAPP. Hoboken, N. J. Philosophy. Assistant in Philosophy 1911-12, Philosophy Club. Dutch Trapp lives out of the state, but he would distin- Hinsh himself even if he were a Bloomington boy. He talks the Hoboken tongue, and has a philosophical stoop. William Oscar Tr, OOOOOOOOOOOOOO Yoii have to sta until io: o i Si Laura Beryl Col I Paul Yakcy Davis oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s - N i n e t e e n Twelve .AURA l;i ' :kVL CCH-FAIAX, Sah-m Englisli. Beryl Coffman ' s laugh almost gi times. Beryl lost ten pounds and last spring by running to Hygiei boarding club. AUL YAKEY DAVIS, Bloomficld. PEARL HYATT, JVashinglon. iledicine. Delphian Literary Societv, Secretary Skulls 1910-n. Pearl Hyatt is one of those eccentric girls who tackle courses in the medic department. Her mottoes are: Early to bed, and Don ' t overwork. GENEVA MAY HUFFSTETTER, Cli,iHcsto ' ,.v. Geneva May Huffstette; is ' basketball team. Besi nt, which goes to prove that yoi eased through school just becau as on the champion senior that. Geneva is a good stu- alvvavs have to ■e an ' athlete. BYRL R. KIRKLIN, Gaston. Medicine, Sigma Chi, Phi Rho Sigma, President Sphinx Club 1910-11, Vice-President Y. M. C. A. 1911-12. Presi- dent Society of Skeletons 1911-12, Board of Directors In- diana Union 1911-12, Pan-Hellenic Council, 1910-12. ByrI Kirklin, who is never seen without a fresh hair- cut, can communicate with his Pi Phi Juliette by wireless. He sits in the Sig front yard and throws signals with a hand mirror, on sunshiny days. GRACE ALEXANDER, Indianapolis. Geneva May HuHstel Grace Alexande, OOOOOOOOOOOOOO INDIA! The days of tin- night caters are numbered iBJilBIBStisiiBiifflS a V Bali SSf | Charles Leroy H,. Harriet Elizabeth Mo WilliJ.n Henry Ts, oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Tvvelv CHARLIES LERClY HARLAX, Coniu-rsz ' Ulc. l-:.liicaliiin. Phi Delta Kappa, Married Students Cliili llARKlin ' ELIZABETH MOORE, Bloomington. Harriet Elizabeth Moore has taught school tor s. years, and is going to school lierself now for the pnri of climbing out of a rut. WILLIAM HENRY TSCHANNEX, Fort Wayne. Tschannen ' s real name is Shannon but he spells with a T as a disguise. Hist I Tschannen spent thre years in Pontiac Prison. He is therefore the acknowledge king of Dean Hogate ' s roughnecks. RUSSELL P. HARKER. Parker. ,ENA BLANCHE SUMilERS, Osslan. English. Indiana Club. Woman ' s League Board 1011 Blanche Summers has that rare and rich ability t. good, honest work without raising a tremendous ujtr For the last year or two, she has gone to school one t RUSSELL S. RACEY, ]-inccnncs. Econ.imics. Phi Kappa Psi, Minstrels 1909, Y. M. C. A, Cabinet 1910-11. Y. M. C. A. Board of Control 1911-12, El Centro Espanol, Vice-President Jackson Club 1910-11, President Economics Club, Director Indiana Union 1911-12. Arbutus Stafif. Russell Racey finished his heavy career as a politician by binding the presidency of a departmental club in his (.ninr year. Russ is a persistent humorist. OOOOOOOOOOOOOO The CO. ' :! of a Jiiaii DENDL-a-J ch ' pciids hvi cty upon whctlic SSiliiafiiiffiiianffl VB BiBi ' I I Mollu- Ku I Marie Allei Fannie Myers Dashiell OOOOOOOOOOOO0O Seniors — Nineteen Twelve AKJLLIE KING, Union Cily. Medicine. Mollie King has distinguished herself among the medico li.v burning the early morning petroleum. She lives on a farm when she is not going to college. . I. RIE ALLEN, Bainbridge. Mathematics. The only Dorm inmate who does not belong to the pic- ture show brigade is Marie .Mien. Marie does not dote nuich on close-coupled conversation. FANNIE MYERS DASHIELL, Moun-s Hill. Latin. Woman ' s League, Y. W. C. A. Fannie M. Dashiell has a Roosevelt smile which sin- uses generously. JOSEPHINE JUNE THOMAS, Vinccnm-s. Education. Pi Beta Phi, English Club, Assistant in Or- thogenics 1911-12, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Josephine Thomas has admirably survived the tea-cup stress and strain and the fury of the social struggle at In- diana, and has inaintained her health and disposition through it all. JANET MORRISON, Indiancfol Education. Janet Morrison spends mos ' ism room getting out her lesso RUTH K. WHITE, Greetisburg. English. Pi Beta Phi, English Club. I siHi vsij V mmsms isms s w f f msssm Ei oooooooooooooo ;:ndi[ai] L The scrap next year ic-;7 he lield in the bine room nnder the auspiees nf the Fin Arts Depamnent )0000000000000 Seniors — Nineteen Twelve DON G. HILLDRUP, IViudfall. Chemistry. Don Hilldrup is the sky terrier of the Chemistry Depart- ment. Slats has a special acquaintance witii the hotel keepers at Lake Winona, and yet he lives. VESTA KING, Union Cily. English. Vesta King does her own stndying. She was ne er known to tronble any one. Her chief asset is sisters. LEON BARNHILL ROGERS, Bloominglon. Economics. Phi Delta Theta. The Monon played no sad role in Leon Rogers ' college education. As the oldest local resident of his class he knows all the town kids, and all of Bloomington ' s defectives. EVERETT CRAIG, Seymour. Chemistry. Everett Craig knows no limit to hard work. Although a Chemistry major his brother says he knows more Eng- lish than two-thirds of the English majors, which is rather a reflection on Everett. ETHEL HARRIS. Linton. Botany. Botanical Club. LILLIAN mOGENE VAN DALEN, Mulberry. Latin. Delphian Literary Society, Der Deutsche Verein. Lillian Iniogene Van Dalen, whose middle name must be the saddest thing in her life, is the bursar of the Delphian club. She tells everybody when to get up, answers the ' phone, and otherwise displays remarkable executive ability. 1 oooooooooooooo NDKANA . College has many perils, one of i -hich is culchur BjasKiKiisiiaasiisffiiffiiB v isivmhi ' ZenJ May Caldwell 1 QOOOOOOOOOOOOO Seniors -Nineteen Twelve I ' AL ' I ER E. -I ' REANOR, Pch-isbuyg Latin. Tri-State Debating Team. Treanor is a debater of force and won a pla arsity debating team with the five old menibei majoring in Latin and is the best informed man on Doc. Johnston ' s subtleties. lUBERT E. BROWN, Clovcrdalc. Geology. Hnbert Brown dreams best while in his favc of the library. He has discovered that Beeman a much more wholesome tooth-cushion than an ZEX.V MAY CALDWELL, Lebanon. English. Phi Beta Kappa, Philosophy Club, Le CercU Frangais. Zena May Caldwell got a Phi Beta Kappa key by hei faithfulness to front rows and by making it her rule to at- tract the professor ' s attention at the first recitation. .M.AE A. GLACKNER, Lmvrenceburg. Latin. Independent Literary Society, Der Deutschi ' crcin, Marquette Club. Mae Glackner is one of the high lights in the Germai department, and she has lots of influence with the faculty She spent three years without a date, until she found ; Goodin. (Joke. See diagram in Scientific American.) KATHERINE EASLEY, Bloomington. Philosophy. Katherine Easley always sits directly in front of th( professor and never lets a statement go unchallenged. Shi wears mannish clothes, and has a deep-sea voice. BERTHA ELIZABETH COX, O.vford. English. Bertha Co.x ' s eyes warrant her the name of Angc Child . Observers claim that she actually floats while mov ing about the library. of the treasurer of a departmental club to notify members that they belong Bcrlha Sylvia Hiatt oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twelve iERTHA SYLVIA HIATT. Suiiiiuili-illt: Latin. Bertha Sylvia Hiatt is said to be so shy that she h spealis to Iier girl friends on the cainpus. It was a mi for her to take Latin. It is not her forte. .UCILE SANDERS, Oikans. German. Der Deutsche Verein. Early in life. Lackadaisical Lucile Sanders, fron hills of Western Orange County, showed economical encies by charging her friends five cents for ridin.g wit from the country to the high school. ' AUL RAMSEY HAWLEY, Collcg,- Cvrner. Ohio Medicine. Phi Delt; dent Society of Skele chestra 1911-12. When Ram Hawley gets to heaven, he will call for shattered nervous system to straighten out, an unknow disease to explain, and a flute to play upon. The queslin is: will it still be heaven for the others? ECILE GRAHAM HOWE, Bloomington. English. Delphian Literary Society, Le Cercle FranQai: Cecile Howe and a piano can get along beautifully. Ct lAROLD LITTELL, Rome. Education. Phi Beta Kappa ;AIL STAPP, Hope. Chemistry. University Chi Cecilt Graham Ho Harold Linell OOOOOOOOOOOOOO IVhistliiii; has sol ' cd more great problciiis than Philosophy 06 Oilvor Marion B,, Mildred Carristii Krofl Roborl Joseph M.inn oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Tvvelv A ' El MARIUX BAILEY. Il ' anulah. Economics and Social Science. Wanatali sounds Indian. Oliver Marion B lacilurn as a brave. He pursues his peaceful, way through life. He never hurries and never ILDRED CARRISTA KROFT, Gn-cnsburg. Girnian. Der Deutsche Verein. Miidiei! Kroft is studious, and of great euchri- cnntcst. She divides the rest of her time betwe German and embroidery. She prefers church socials ROBERT JOSEPH MANX. , Economics. Economics ( Robert Joseph Mann can will not smile. He lives in I .M, E C TROVILLIOX, BloomUujtan. Romance Languages. Le Cercle E ' rancjais, El CcnirM l-Npanol. W ' li. ' ii Mae lacks in size, she usually makes up in hats. Slir i .IS consistent in carrying out a red color scheme ulmi sill wears red, as Prof. Brooks was in decorating the Georgia Sembower has been the most widely fussed girl a mesmeric line. She is kept as busy as a Swiss bell-ringer with her dates. IVER CLAREXCE ARPMAX. Kobh Philosophy. Ph.liisnphy Club, Foot Olivet Clarence An OOOOOOOOOOOOOO iginal ten-thirty belt Teas a granite club and the young man iK-as Io;k ' in bed for six innu ' .lis aaHiSaMliiaiai B V B V sas- I lOOOOOOOOOOOOO Ifca Seniors — Nineteen Twelve JENNIE KIBBY, Clinton. English. Jennie Kibby talks in bunches, and has a deep seatet fection for her red sweater. She has a great propc for basketball. IRA COE, Bloomh aical Club, Leader Stude Cne is preparing himself for foreign missionary ! by sojourning with the Delta Gammas. That noise th bear, on the west side of the square in the evenings, the Student Volunteer Band. ' A BRILL, Slum: MYRTLE MI Medicine. Myrtle Brill, Brillie for brevity, is one of the Univer- sity sky penetrators. She is known for the unusual state- ments she ventures. IRENE PAULEY, Bloomington. English. No one else in the world but Irene Pauley could sing in the choir at church, teach S. S., lead Epworth League and keep steady co. with a young man, all at the same time. THOMAS CLOSS PETERSON, Hobart. Thomas Closs Peterson has yellow and infrequent hair. He is brief in stature, but among the tall workers in the law ALM. SCHLOTZHAUER, Iiidiaiiafolls. English. Pi Beta Phi. Alma Schlotzhauer tries to keep young by engaging in such frivolities as comic operas, Y. W. C. A., tarantell.t dancing, and pedagogy. 1? FDIA?TZ Harriet hcnt Pauley Elilabeth Schlotiha oooooooooooooo i Cigai-L ' ttcs am! soda ' calcr: hoii boiis and boocc; saiuki ' ichi : and sorority fudge: poison on c-rcry hand oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n Twelve CLYDE XATIIAXIEL CHATTIX, ilioals. Law. Emanon. Freshman Basketball 190S, ' Varsity Bas- ketball 1908-09-12. Clyde Chattin is the eleventh hour guy on the basketball team. He is the only B-I-B man in the University now, which means that he played in the good old days that John Cravens tells about. CHLOE SINER, Pimento. English. English Club. Chloe Siner goes at work as if the night were coming. She seldom lets her good times interfere with her studies. FRANK R. GOLDMAN, Maiiruc City. Law. Frank Goldman is the most consistent business man in school. Shortie is acquainted with more co-eds and has fewer dates than any other two men in the University. JAMES VINTON SHANNON, Tipton. Mathematics. Delphian, Euclidian Circle. Shannon has a voice like the bass drum in Harker ' s hand. If there were only two men who had nerve enough to attend the University, Shannon would be one of them. GLOSSIE L. GODDARD. Rnshville. Latin. Indiana Club. Glossie Goddard gets more fun out of a course, the harder it is. She would not have taken what she did for a major, if she had not thought it the hardest thing in col- lege. She considers less than 25 hours perfect indolence. WARREN RUSSELL SPENCER, Russclhillc. Mathematics. Delphian, Euclidian Circle, University bug, and he sells one Glossie L. Goddard OOOOOOOOOOOOOO A safety raMr is one with -i-hich there is absolutely no danger of harming the beard Hugh Everett Bn oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n Twelve •LOYD iMacGRIFF, Wabash. Economics. Phi Delta Tlieta. Press Club, Business I ager Daily Student 1911-12. Editor Junior Book, Tau silon Pi. Speedy MacGriff makes tlie trip between down town Ruth Edwards seven or eight times a day. His fav pose is a cloud of dust. IVTH FOSTER, Washinglon. P. C. Latin. Der Deutsche Verein. Something funny about Ruth Foster. Sht HUGH EVERETT BROWN. Bloomingto,,. Phvsics. Independent Literary Societv, Physics C Assistant in Physics 1911-12. Hugh Brown does not consider himself properly dre until he gets a stack of blue books under his arm. Br is a physics phenom. Quiet, but grinds exceedingly lal( FIFINE Z. FUNK, Nezf Albany. English. Euclidian Circle. Fifine Funk has library dates. Then she take-; a s and poses for kodak views of the campus. She often tn the Cascades. A large Spearmint consumer. V: Lri:R HISEY, Corydon. Philosophy. Walter Hisey can go about his business quietly Diril M. Y WALKER, Sheridan. EiiRli h English Club. El Centre Espanol. Edith Walker walks to the library constantly. Her walking dress is distinctive ; tailored suit, freshly tailored waist, chic green bow, and a note-book in lieu of a walking stick. I Edith May Walker I OOOOOOOOOOOOOO ilLHli, ' .-: ! is hard to retain through the winter what yon learn in the suinnie Bloor Schleppey 1 .„.P. S e n Nineteen Twelve ■ iSii%« V IBBsSisli )nR SCHLEPl ' KV, Bl.u English. English Club Bloor Schleppey is an actor, poet, artist, composer, alist, politician and bare-back rider. Who will dispute ■ight to wear a Windsor tie and do as he darn pleases? nd Fn -EZ PENN, Logunsport. English. Independent. College life for Inez Penn has been a Seeing Ameri t..ur. She has attended Western, Northwestern and Indiar U.;1LL STAMPER DAVIS, Mar, Merrill Davis, and Fritz, the Phi Psi bulldog, have ' peraments that are very similar, both being nervous vibrant, and alive on both feet all the time, and r around close when there is a scrap. IDA MARIE WILSON, franklm. English. Pi Beta Phi, English Club, Rob Roy. Pert Wilson can not decide just which one of the nnssihle fraternity pins in school she likes best. She )1IN HERITAGE MORRIS, Newcastle. History. Beta Theta Pi, Sphinx Club. John Morris talks as if he thought somebody wei toning. His father came all the way from Oklahoma him started right among the Beta boys. He has retn -liciulders and a vanishing disposition. ;L. UVS ROBINSON, Bio Latin. Delta Zeta, Y. wiigton. . C. A. Cabine Roliinson has Strut and Fret eyes, but she ha the stage and tackled athletics, and has played o and field teams. She also does acrobatic stunt OOOOOOOOOOOOOO i Ida Mark Wils, OOOOOOOOOOOOOO Domestic science — the art of getting along zi.ntli tlic home folks Samuslla McKnight Noi Elmer David G. Mary Crawford Wright oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen T Iv OIUELLA ilcKNIGHT NORMAN, LouisvUlc, Ky. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma, English Club. Sam Nohman has neveh been able to wealize that lege education could be of any pwactical value Louisville. She says she doesn ' t pron ahs. Samuella is irrepressible. ;LI IER DAVID GOSS, Bloomington. German. Sigma Chi, Strut and Fret, Sphin.x Club, Lc Cercle Franqais, Goethe Gesellschaft. Goss will never be able to live down the reputation he made at the Theta fire. He goes to classes between dates. ■illc, Ky. •MARY CRAWFORD WRIGHT, Lou French. Kappa Kappa Gamma. j Iary Wri ght ' s home was Sullivan when she paid her fees and Louisville the rest of the time. She ' s consistent enough as an athletic fan. I ' :MMET STEWART BRUMB. UGH, Bloomingtun. Law. Delphian, Phi Delta Phi, E.xecutive Board Y. M. Emmet Brumbaugh ' s smile gets him results selling scis- sors during vacation. Brumbaugh knows the Law. He is popular with the Delphian girls. IJOLLIE SUTTON, Bloomington. German. Der Deutsche Verein, Assistant in German If ' U. IJ ' .llie Sutton is an active but unofficial assistant in swimming. She is a hike fanatic, and is always unscrupu- lous enough to encourage a county fair. ADAM AHI LEONARD, Hillsboro. History. Football 1909-11, History Club. . dam Leonard is one of the best football practitioners ;ity has had. Hi Dolhf Nadinc Sui OOOOOOOOOOOOOO l lINID ' IiA have Strut and Fret put on a i ood play afte r g SBsa S V sa H I OrU Wright Sm Seniors-Nineteen Twelve VERXE JAMES. Blooiiiiiigloii. Indiana Club. Euclidian Circle. After abstracting his attention from delirious triangles Verne James focalized his consciousness in the direction n discrimination between conscious efforts to develop the in dividual for social efficiency and to make the farm pay. ORLA WRIGHT SMITH, Gosport. Law. Orla Wright Smith docs not have to change cars at Gus ROSCOE OWEN STOTTER, Forest. Law. Emanon, Gamma Eta Gamma, Historj Tennis Association, Basketball 1910-11, Captain Baseball team 1911. Stotter lives on the tennis courts. He subs for president of the tennis association. He is notorious inability and utter willingness to sing. EARL T. GOLD, Bloomington. English. Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Sigma, Pres English Club. When Earl Gold was a freshman, the fraternit halls down town, and lived down town most of tl Earl is now a bit decollete on top of his head. He h in matrimony and the Philippines. 1-RAXK DeWESS MARTIX, Sakm. Frank DcWess Ma OOOOOOOOOOOOOO :ndeana A pu Bessie D. Fisher Raymond Snyder oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nin BESSIE D. EISHER, Chalmers. Pi Beta Phi. Bessie Fisher kept her sncinl batting average low fully. She had a regular positinn nn the list of I chaperon availables. She coml.s her hair more than of the girls. ORAN L. RABER, JVolcottvillc. Botany. Phi Beta Kappa. Oran Raber is a greasy grind. He majored in B so he could make A ' s and Phi Beta Kappa. He did You don ' t know Raber. He was too busy to get acqn doing his college career. RAYMOND HUGO SNYDER. Bloomiugton. History. Delphian Literary Society. Ray Snyder has a gum shoe voice. He was once ( John R. Voris ' henchmen, the only honest Y. M. worker in the ranks at the time. He smokes cigars - WILL MOORE, Alexandra. Medicine. Sigma Chi. Bill Moore has never been quite the same fellow since the eighteen inch ordinance went into effect. He never bought a flower or rode in a cab while he was in school, but still seemed to get away with the ladies. l.OXXIE BERT McKEEL, Gosport. Law. Gamma Eta Gamma. building there. HOWARD R. LUKEXS, Pciidh-ton. Law. Emanon, Gamma Eta Gannna, Vice-President Senior Class, President Lincoln League 1911-12. Lukens is lopsided because he carries more law books, weight for age, than any mar ends Ma.xwell Hall. lERMAX FREDRICK WILKIE, Elwood. Chemistry. The Wilkie Brothers are better known than the Cherry sisters. Herman is in Porto Rico as a chemist for a big sugar company, and the boys now have an international reputation. Herman forgot to have a picture made before he left Indiana, and they do not make them where he is in I BSilia V itmtmSiGms xisss. i: ! Lonnic Bert McKcel 000000000 00;0 00 )n7v situation at Iiidiaua consult tin- old ladies of Bloonilicid -E ' EA-IU r THE LAW SCHOOL The School of Law of Indiana University was the first state university law school established west of the Alleghenies. It was opened in the year 1842. The Law School of Michigan University is seventeen years younger, and that of Iowa, which was the next founded, is twenty-six years the junior of the Indiana school. The Indiana University Law School is a mem- ber of the Association of American Law Schools. The home of the school is in Maxwell Hall, which was built at a cost of $90,000. The library consists of about 7,000 volumes. The course in law is three University years, with the requirement of two years preparatory work in the School of Liberal Arts. The siir-rkvl of the fittest is al! rh ht if you are one of the fittes F h 1 Delta Phi PHI DELTA PHI is the oldest ami largest (if law fraternities. Ill i(;i)(i the Foster Law Club of In- diana University was granted a char- ter and has since been known as Fos- ter Chapter of Phi Delta Phi. It has two rooms in the basement of Maxwell Hall. L 1 -S r ( M .MEMBERS Cl-LTY .Nineteen Hundred Twelve Dean E. G. Hogate .Miller C Kent Prof. C. M. Hepburn Cecil F. Whitclicad Dr. A. S. Hcr Iu-v Tnhn A. Pi.sey Iii.k ' c T. I, A[. l.aFc.llctte I ' reil W. Beck Walter H. Bndenhafcr Prof A ll.Tl,n.ckm,.rtnn Ellis J. -Ih,™,,..., G.cil 1. Draper NETEEN Hundred TiiikiEEN Emmet S. BrumlKumli Russell Harker |,,lni M K.lierts Lonis Plost l.nrenA . .-mfMnl Georsc Henlev. Jr. Wilhur E Pell Lewis Wilkie Jerry M. I ' len Maurice Bluhm Ken Scifres baiHjiii ' i[ c}iluoiis meal justified by the snpertJuous speeches vuhich follow G a m m a Eta G a INDIANA has one of the two western chapters of (jamma Eta Gamma, lionorary htw fraternity. Tlic other is at Michii an. Eta Chapter, liere, was installed in June, 191 I. The organization has quarters in Wylie Hall. .Monthly hanquets are held downtown. (L.. w) Paul H. Schmidt Philip Liitz, Jr. James E. White Merlin M. Dimbar Curt Roll August Hoch Joseph E. Cnssoll John Marshall Roscoe O. Slolter Howard L. Luken; Charles .Sumner LonR. .McKeel A, Llovdllicksou Wilbur G. Nolui Joseph A. Yager David McNabb D. Lawrence Bock Earl B.Stroup Chester L. Teeter Orville Nichols INETEEN Hundred F( (L. .w) Deo Horton Walter S. Danner Howard Toelle . . Loyd Hickson Harlan Yenne Be a live one if it kills WSi u r lames Don.lJ D. Cecil Whitchtad oooooooooooooo Senior Nineteen Twelve ■:S DOXALLi DOUGLASS. Lo inisfoi Law. Sigma Xu, Zeta Delta Chi. Secv.- lie Council 1911-12, Arbutus Staff. Jim Douglass is King Mooch v ' L-r bought the makin ' s in his ;■ Committee on Student Affaii Law School. He [e is popular with l ' . UL HERMAN SCHMIDT, iMorganficId, Ky. Law. Emanon, Gamma Eta Gamma, History Clu Grannuar Club, University Band and Orchestra. Colonel Schmidt is a law, but he gets out his lessons the Girls ' Library. Kodaks. He used to play a drum ihe band, but recently found it undignified. CECIL FARLOW WHITEHEAD, Ekmod. Law. Sigma Chi, Phi Delta Phi, Boosters Club. Seer tarv-Treasurer Jackson Club 1909-10, Director of Unio 1910. A session was held, at which Cecil Whitehead was di cussed, and nothing printable was suggested, except that 1 lived awhile in the Arbutus Flats. ELLIS THOMPSON, Blooimnijton. Law. Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Phi, Debating Team 191 Ellis Thompson is one of the heaviest light-housckee ers among the married students. He has a real resident in Pdoomington. The Kappa Sigs say that he has nevi ilcine anything very devilish. (i. RRETT OSCAR DRISCOLL, Muiicic. Law. Phi Gamma Delta, Freshman hoothaU 190 hrcshman Baseball 1910. ' Varsity Baseball 1911. Driscoll is the only man diere twins apart. He has tl slieer specialization. Jill IX MARSHALL, Galveston. Law. Gamma Eta Gamma, President of Blackf.ird Law Deliating Society 1911-12, University Band. Tohn Marshall will disgrace the Law School. He made only 98; in Civil Pro III. John has played football, base- ball and love: in fact, he is an all around lawver. Garrett O. Driscoll OOOOOOOOOOOOOO von ' t bare cinythiii ' tf hi oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n Twelve KJHX ilARKLE ROUliRTS. Ki,i,jl,tsl. ' :,;i. Law. Delta Tail DL-lla, Phi Delta Phi. John Roberts, keeper of the seals of Maxwell Hall, li.i been in school since the days of Bunny Hare and kn w more about the olden times than John Arthur McPhccttr- Will leave May 15 for pedagogy in the Philippines. I ' LIXTOX H. GIVAN, Lazcxnccbiirg. Law. Sigma Nu, Rheinhard Club, History Club, Arbu- tus Staff. Givan is familiarly known to his brothers ' as John Bush, because he has to shave eight times a week. He wavers between pedagogy and law. LLEN GEORGE MESSICK, Marion. Law, I ' lii Kappa Psi, Tau Epsilon Pi, Sphin.x Club. iM-cshnian bnotball 1908, ' Varsity Football 1909-10-11, -Ml Conference l nO-ll. :Messick is not one of the Mitchell Hall musical crcwd. He belongs to the Student Building strong-arm piano gang. He chews, goes to breakfast without his collar, and i otherwise pretty ornery. T.CIL LEE DRAPER, Ctitlcr. Law. Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Phi, Track Team 1 11 Draper won ' t bite, even if he does look like Mepbisti pheles, Tecumseh and the Sphinx. His specialty is gcttinj: over a bar at six feet in the high hop. D.WID WILLIAM McNABB, Bedford. Law. Gamma Eta Gamma, Board of Managers . rbu tus. Editorial Staff Arbutus, Library Staff. McXabb is bartender at the Library desk. J. MES ELMER WHITE, Boonmllc. Law. Independent Literary Society. White all at one time was Secretary to Dean Hogate Law Librarian, law book salesman, typewriter salesman shorthand teacher, boarding house purveyor, dance pro m oooooooooooooo ■U and iiic at old I. U . ' •EBEaiSS n « Sen Nineteen Twelve IICKSON, Sheridan Aloiizo Lovd Hickson is the successor of Whoop ' Em Up SoHitt as the University wind-miller. He has a set of gestures like the village smithy ' s. VICTOR OLLIVER, Boon-iUc. Law. Delphian. Victor Oliver is the social whirlwind of the law school . SHEL CUXNINGHAM, Alexandria. Law. President Sophomore Class 1909-10, Baseball 1909-10-11, Football 1908-09-10, Assistant Football Coacli 1911, Freshman Basketball and Baseball Coach 1912, Di- rector of Union. Cunny is a teaching fellow in the Department of Ath- letics and Applied Kicking. He has run a football team, a baseball team, and, despite the Evening Emanon, a baskel- ball team. He has recently gone in for matrimony. JERRY MORTON ULEN, Pendleton. Law. Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Phi, Sphinx Club. Skulls, Rheinhard Club, Boosters Club, Cabinet Linciln League 1911-12, Arbutus StaiT 1912, Freshman Football 1907, ' Varsity Football Squad 1909, Director of Union 1910-n. Jcanette Bartelle and Big Kent, with both of whom Jerry Ulen has had to contend, are enough to drive anyone to gray hair, and Jerry has it. WILBUR FRANK PELL, Fairland. Law. A.B. 1912, Phi Delta Phi, Treasurer Freshman Class 1007-08, Boosters Club, Business Manager Arbutus 1911, 1912. Plum Orchard Pell is the only nian who was ness manager of the Arbutus twice in the same makes money at anything from laundry to souve cards. r busi- e. Hi ' postal PHILIP LUTZ, JR., B oonville. Law. A.B. 1912, Gamma Eta Gamma, Press Club, His- tory Club, English Club, Boosters Club, Editor Junior Bonk 1911, Associate Editor Arbutus 1911, Arbutus Staft ' 1910-12, DePauw Debating Team 1912. Philip Lutz, Jr., never runs with his cut-out open. He slips around and does a lot of wortli while things without an) ' dust. Has g ' lt money for some of his stories. I lasiNas VBsiaBiBS « Philip Lutj, Ir. oooooooooooooo The Purdue ' vreck is not the oiilv college ivreck on record SJiiBaasi V aa ss I Forrest Eugene Li Rogers Anderson Lee Walter Blaine Bodenha: oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n T w e 1 v !■( JRRl-.ST I-,. UVEXGOOD, Covni.jtoii. Law. Phi Gamma Delta. Livengood walks as if he were carrying snuK-tliini; he was afraid he would spill He is the local . rniw-n..tch demonstrator. ROGERS ANDERSON LEE, BU omu,gl, u. Law. Sigma Chi, Sphinx Club. . t one time in his college career, Rogers Lee was able 1 1 manage Georgia Sembower and Mary Wright and a llii]iin ' bile simultaneously. If he had saved his Durham sacks he could put out more tent shows than Rfibt. Harris WALTER B. BODENHAFER, KcndallviUc. Law. A.B. 1911. Phi Delta Phi, Boosters Club, Y. M. C. A. li-;n.l, l ' r M ]mi Arbutus Board 1912, Wrestling l :ini I ' Mii II. MhM1 W ' light Conference Title, Inter-Class . ihlri,. I ..,,,,niin . Ml,, lor Senior Law Class. fer uurks equally well on the mat and rostrum. He ARTHUR L. ilcLANE, ShclbyviUe. Law. Secretary-Treasurer Sen McL; gang shrewd. fighting his pipe, is one of the headliners ii front of the Law School between classes, id from Shelbvville. W. LTER L. BALL. RD. Tcrrc Hai Walter Ballard never fails to run down a class refer- ence. Occasionally he leaves the Law School long enough to find out in which direction the rest of the University )W. RI) R. LUKEXS, Pendleton L;iw, Emanon, Gamma Eta Arthur Laurence McLa OOOOOOOOOOOOOO :l Dignity covers a multitude of deficiencies y ir ?i:i V4 iHi i aasessgagiaaeaaiigi V ms sm I oooooooooooooo Seniors Nineteen T Iv M. DL ' XBAR, Li Merlin Dunbar, president of the senior law class, Brya Democrat, and father of a ten-pound bov, gets a degree a la t from Indiana. He entered in 1890 ' and has struggle with Universit.v work ever since. GLEX LYNXE UXDERWOOD. Plyinouth Law. Freshman Baseball 1908. Underwood fooled everybody by not trying out for th ' varsity fence busters this spring. He ' s a gamester. To Carrie Ong to the Siwash. CHARLES E. SUMNER, Indianapolis. Charles E. Sumner lives in Petersburg but he gives hi iiome as Indianapolis, perhaps because that sounds like i was on a better railroad. He is a knight of the round table •RED W. BECK, U v Albany. Law. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Phi, Sphinx Club. Fred Beck never smiles, and you don t blame him afte •,S DAILEV STURGIS. V.;.( -  . Law. Delphian, University Band and Orches Jimmie Sturgis plays in the band and the 1; . M CURT ROLL. Frcdc lames D. Sturgis i OOOOOOOOOOOOOO INDHAN. Co-cds must be wooal. Hence mititrc [ ' roz-iJes hahiliid! Ro E HiMSjainr Emmet Morris LaRi OOOOOOOOOOOOOO S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n T vv e 1 v .EXANUER L. SOUTHARU, Booiiz ' ilU: Law. Vice-president Senior Law Class, Secretary Ii ter-Class Atliletic Committee. Alexander Southard umpires all inter-class and intc fraternity baseball games, and is supreme in Law Sclm athletics since Forest Ingram left. IMET M. L.-iRUE, Ri-ussclavr. Law. Phi Delta Theta, Glee Club. Bill LaRue is the Old Mother Hubbard of Phi Del athomless mystery whc I nigf % -5 V ' mwsmms He the •;CIL RAY PETERSON. Law. Sigina Alpha Epsilon. Being fond of music of the better sort, Peterson spend, his money feeding the nickle-eater at the Greeks ' , lie graduated in 19U, but had to come back to guide the S. A. E. ' s another year, before settling down to housekeeping. WILBUR G. NOLIN, Boswcll. Law. Gamma Eta Gamma, League 1912. Nolin is a personality all in one the law school knows Nolin and the expects great things of him. Oui his friends. l.OXXIE B. McKEEL, Gosport. Law. Gamma Eta Gamma. bunch. Evervbo( v ' hole town of Bo next prosecutor, ' 1:I-;L A. LETSINGER, Bloomficld. Law. Phi Delta Phi. Reed Letsinger carries text books ; pocket. He ' s as much out of place in deacon in the Howling Host. Lonnk Bert McKe. Reed A. Letsinger OOOOOOOOOOOOOO A date is zyz hours of canned companionship, ordered in adv HHIMSiai Orl.l Wrieht Srt Miller Crawford Ken Seniors — Nineteen Twelve 1RLA W. SMITH, Gosl ort. Law. Orla Wright Smith does not have to change cars at Gos port, because that is his destination. He has remarkable ability as an old-fashioned dance caller. JILLER CR.WVFORD KENT, Brookston. Law. Phi Delta Theta. Sphinx Club. Big Kent, the Brookston terror, neglects the Book No..k CHESTER TEETER. Law. Ganuna Eta Ganmia. Spec Teeter is an octopus on the mat. Spec has a In of nerve; he was a recent candidate for an Arbutus job. ITlOiLAS CLOSS PETERSON, Delphi. Law. B.S. Marion 1908. Blackford Debating Society Thomas Closs Peterson has yellow and infrequent hair but among the tall workers JOHN ADAMS POSEY, Eransvillc. Law. Sigma Chi. Jap Posey considers a ten o ' clock class just a little bit premature. He quit chewing some time ago, but otherwise remains one of the faithful. ROSCOE O. STOTTER. Forcsl. Law. Emanon, Ganuna Eta Ganmia, Historv Club, Tennis Association, Basketball, 1910-11, Captain Senior Baseball Team 1910-11. Stotter sings just as persistently as Tubby Scott, but is not so hot with his technique. He gets around better on oooooooooooooo Txvo is an illustrated song; three is a moving pictnr ;q Seniors — Nineteen Twelve -lUBERT L, HUDDLESTOX, Caiiibruly,- Law. Independent, Phi Delta Phi. Hi, kid, or Hello, chappy, old boy. Hud up the walk to Maxwell. On form bears the name of Hubert. LOREX A. S.AXFORD, Tc Hani,: Tan Delta, Phi Delta Phi, Or Law. . .B. 1911. Delta chestra 1907-12. Squint Sanford came to fame in the poem of Stagg Johnston concerning Loren ' s advent in the Monroe county jail. He plays the violin because it does not interfere witli Piper Heidsieck. RALPH ALONZO RANCK, Bloomiiujt.vi. Law. ■ Phi Delta Phi. Ranck was at one time determined to become a Sociolo- gist, but having had his modesty shocked on a research trip to Indianapolis, he decided to preserve the sacredness of his future and become a law. The smallest trick on earth: to put a thumb tack in a bliud man ' s hat e i ■ky l v iJk1 THH MEDICAI. SCHOOL SECTION OF THE ARBUTUS DR. CHARLES P. EMERSON T R. CHARLES P. EMERSON is a de- m BUHSI J X scendant of Ralph Waldo Emerson. He m V -..J yi- B was born in Methuen, Massachusetts, Septem- BSi ■ ' ■ ' SJ HUB fl ber 4, 1872. He obtained his A.B. at Am- K H iierst in 1894. I ' ' 99 ' obtained his M.D. at Johns Hopkins, the center of medical edu- B B l cation in America. By virtue of his record at Johns Hopkins he secured the position of 1 . m l resident house physician and instructor in H HJ I medicine, and assistant physician in charge of tiie clinical laboratory in this institution, in K ' ' . yW t B B 1899-1905. Later he was resident physician KLIx ' ' mm[wIhII H and associate in medicine, and from 1905 to Bb ' ' SH H 191 1 was superintendent of Clifton Springs Sanitarium, New York. He has studied |PSMiB H|Bg|i|HHW | abroad at the Universities of Strassburg, Ba- _ ' ' i H I sel, and Paris. While a professor in Johns Hm W H Hopkins, he published in 1906 a te. t-book on I H I IIl H Clinical Diagnosis. Other works of which i B lH I he is author are, Essentials of Medicine , liR. CHARLES PHILLIPS E.MERSON Pncumothora.x , and ' ' Hospitals for Chil- dren , besides many monographs and articles i; for use in the works of other medical writers ■ and in journals and magazines. In Septem- 1; ber, 191 1, Doctor Emerson came to Indian- apolis, as dean of the Indiana University School of Medicine. olZND miisl In- a hard life to br the child of a psycholoi ist THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE THERE originated in the minds of a number of the progressive members of the Indian- apolis Academy of Medicine not long after the close of the Civil War, an idea that there should be some means provided within the borders of In- diana by which young men might pursue the study of the art of healing. This special need was perhaps brought to light by the scarcity of trained surgeons and physicians during the war of the rebellion. So there swung open, one October morning in 1869, the doors of a new institution of learning, termed by the faculty the Indiana Medical College. The equipment was meager, and the course short. Not long after the beginning of the school, a member of the faculty, Doctor Bobbs, died, leav- ing a sum of money to establish a free dispensary. This monument has grown, and now receives 50,000 patients a year. During the early days of the college another was organized, the College of Physicians and Surgeons . The two united in 1878, taking the name The Medical College of Indiana , and uniting with Butler University by affiliation. It was in the ' 8o ' s that the real scientific work was begun in the college. Chief among the pro- gressive men of the movement were Doctors Bray- ton, Wishard, Harvey, Jameson, Fletcher, and Theodore Potter. In 1905, Purdue L ' niversity took three medical institutions under her wing, with the name of The L Indiana Medical College, the School of Medicine of Purdue Iniversity. The three schools so united were the Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1879, the Fort Wayne College of Medi- cine, 1879, and the Medical College of Indiana, the Butler University affiliation having long since been discontinued. The union in kjoK of the Medical Department of Purdue with the Indiana University School of Medicine marked a great event in the medical his- tory of Indiana. Not long after the organization of this new- school an invitation was extended to it to become a member of the Association of American Medical Colleges. By the benevolence of Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Long, means were provided in 191 1 for a splendid hospital as a gift to the school and the state. ilNBIAr advantage in bciii ; a girl is that ipr the Paii-llrl smok, ON]Ij EaJ-U._ Liviiii in „ fraternity honse. your h,: ■ily l:vcrx:Jicrir ho VNr3j ■l k. Aifjl! THE FACULTY O MEDICINE OF IN F T H E S C H () O L O F DIANA U N I ' E R S I r Y Hen-rv Rihl Ald the Departmc M.D.. Ur D I A X A r O 1 riie Faculty of tlie School of alphabetically Horace Russell Allen. Professosor of Orthopedic Surgery. A.B.. Harvard University, 1S9 ; M.D., Columbia University. 185 John F. B. rnhill, Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhii ology. iM.D., Central College of Physicians an,l Surgeons. ISSS. Alembert Winthrop Br- yton, Professor of Dermatology, ar Syphilology. B.S.. Duller College. 1S78; M.S.. 1882; M.S.. Indiana Universil 1882; M.S.. Purdue University. ISSS; M.D., Medical College of 1 Albert Eugene Bulson. Jr.. Professor of Ophthalmology. Lewis Curn Cline. Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhii ology. M.D.. .lefferson redical College. 1879. Intestinal Surge ry. George J. meson Cook. Professor of Ga M.D.. Kentucky School of Medicine, 1866. Lewis Park Draver, Professor of Pediatrics. .■ .B.. Hanover College. 1892; A.M., 1894; M.D.. Indiana Me ical College. 1895. Ch. rles Phillips Emersc.x. Dean and Professor of Medicine. A.B.. Amherst. 1894: M.D.. .Tohns Hopkins Universit.v, 1899. Jasies Henry Ford. Professor of Surgery. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1872. William H. Foreman, Professor of Therapeutics. A.B., Indiana University, 1895; M.D.. Central College of Phy Medicine at Indianapolis is arranged in the different ranks. Thomas Corwin Hood, Professor of Ophthalmology. B.S., Wabash College, IS81: M.D.. Jefferson College. 1884; A.B.. Wabash College. 1885. John Newall Hurty, Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Sci- ence. Phar.ri.. Purdue Univcrsilv. ISSS; M.D.. Indiana Medical Col- M.ll., Indiana Medical College. 1892. John Johnson Kyle, Professor of Otology. Laryngology Khinology. M.D.. Miami Medical College. 1.S9I). E. Oscar Lindenmuth, Professor of Dermatol. igy, and El. Therapeutics. M.E., Bloomsburg Literary Institute and St; 3-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. George Washington McCaskey, Professor of Medici) .Allison Maxwell, Professor of Medicine. -A.B., Indiana Univelsity, 1S6S; . ..M.. 1S71; M.l .. Mia. I- ' rank .Atherton Morrison. Professor of Ophthalmology. .• .B.. Butler College. 1S95; M.D.. Medical C.llcge of John Holliday Oliyer, Professor of Surgery, and Chain the Department. M.n.. Jledical College of Indiana. ISSl; . .M.. WaKish 1907. Orange Garret Pfaff, Professor of Gynecology. M.D.. Indiana Medical College. ISS2: . .M.. Wabash iriuvi the ten-thirty bell sounds like ei qht-fifteen. you are in I07 JESEiEE THE FACULTY CONTINUED Ernest Charles Reyee, Professor ot Mental and Ner CoNSTANTiNE RicHARD ScHAEFER, Professor of Therapeutics, a Chairman of the Department. John Chase Sexton, Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. A.M., Hanover College. 1881; II-D., Oliio Medical College, 1 M Sluss, Profe; DePauw Uiiivcrsi Sterne, Profes ,M., IS ' M: M,I ' .. Medical Col- Mental and Nervous Dis- A.M. (honorary). University of John Ashbury Sutcliffe, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. n.S., Brookville College, 1869; M.D.. Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1872; A.M., Moore ' s Hill College, 1875. James Henry T.wlor, Professor of Pediatrics. ' ii.[.i- M NiLES Wishard, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1874; A.M., Wabasli College, ISyO; M.D., Miami Medical College, 1876. Frank Barbour Wynn, Professor of Medical Diagnosis and chairman of the Department of Medicine, A.B., DePauw University. 1S83; M.D., Ohio Medical College. 1885; A.M.. DePauw University, 1886. Louis Burckh.vrdt, Clinical Professor of ; Iedicine. M.D., University of Zurich, 1S90. Frederick Rankin Charlton. Clinical Professor of Genito-Uri- nary Surgery. M,D., University of Pennsylv,inia, 1896. Edmund Dougan Clark, Clinical Professor of Surgery. M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1891. SnNIL ' l CSTUN Earp, Chnic , MeKendree College. College of Physicians a M.L., 1879; M.S., Lus Eastman, Cli; LS., Wabash College, Professor of Surgery. ; M.D., University of Be Wabash College, 1905. KER Eastman, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. B.. Wabash College, 1890; M,D., Central College of Physici irgeons, 1893; A.M.. Wabash College, 1906. Charles Eugene Ferguson, Clinical Professor M.D.. Medical College of Indiana, 1892. Alois Bachman Graham, Clinical Professor ol of Obstetrics. Frederick Carroll Heath, Clinii il Professor of Ophthalmology. M.D.. Bowdoin College, iSSA; .A.M., George Dvvight Kahlo, Clii M.D., Bellevue Hospil .■ lbert Carl Kimeerlin, Clinic M.D., Medical College of :al Professor of Medicine. Medical College, 1891. il Professor of Medicine. Professor of Genito-Urinary Sur M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1898. SOMAS Benjamin Noble, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B.. Wabash College, 1890; M.D., Miami Medical College, 1; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1894. ipAY-ETTE Pace, Clinical Professor of Otology, Laryngology, Rhinology. A.E., Columbia Christian College, 1882; A.M., 1885; M.IJ., I ana Medical College, 1888. . rry Caldwell Parker, Clinical Professor of Ophthalmolog: M.D., Harvard University, 1901. odore Potter, Clinical Professor of Medi( Charles Robert So«t 1885; M.D.. Ohio Me Clinical Professor of Medicine. Home, Szfccl IJoiiic at a college divif rontv house attic THE F A C U r. T Y C O N T I N IT R D Ernest DeWolf Wales. Clinic:il Professor of Otology, Laryiiol- ogy, and Rhinology. B.S., Harvard University. 1896; M.D.. 1S99. Henrv Frederick Beckman, Associate Professor of Obstetrics. M.D., Northwestern University, 1904. Francis Oswald Dorsey, Associate Professor of Medicine. A.B., Yale University. 1893; M.D., Columbia University, 1896. Professor of Surgery, in cliarge of y, 1901; M.D-. .Inline ll..|.kins Univtr- Anatomy. Professor of Gynecology. f Indiana. 1S9S. iate Professor of A Eerxavs Kennedy, Associatt M.D.. Medical College ( John Earhart lIoRSis, Assoi II. D., Medical College my. India David Ross, Associate Professor of Surgery. B.S., Central Normal College. 1S9I ; M.D.. Medical College of Indiana, 1895. Ch. eles Samuel Woods, Associate Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Science. M.D., Rush Medical College. 1900. John Quincy Davis, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. .■ .B., Butler College, 1896; M.D.. Medical College of Indiana, SiDXEv J. Hatfielii. .Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D.. Hospital College of Medicine, Kentucky. 1902. Frederick S. Hollis, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1896. Harry Kemper Langdon, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology. B. S., DePauw University. 1896; M.D., Medical College of In- Goethe Link, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D.. Central College of Physicians and Surgeons. 190J. John Alexander McDonald, Assistant Professor of Medicini- ' . M.D., Rush Medical College, 1901. Charles Frederick Neu, Assistant Professor of Menta Nervous Diseases. M.D., Western University, London (Canada), 1894. John .Alfred Pfaff, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D.. Medical College of Indiana. 1898. Jewett Villeroy Reed, Assistant Professor of Surgery. B.S., Kentucky State College, 1900; M.D.. .Tohns Hopkii versify. 1904. Oscar Noel Torian, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics. A.B., University of the South, 1896; M.D.. University ol Th O.MAS V. DeHass, Assistant Professor of Therapeutics. ntral College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1904; M.D., College, 1883; M.D.. Bellevue Hospital Medical Col- Homer Rend Wheeler, Assistant Professor of Gastro-In- Walter S. Given, gery. M.D., Centi ssistant Professo College of Physicia of Gastro Intestir s and Surgeons. 1901 . ' s Clyde Shipp, Instructor of Pathology. A.B.. Lebanon College. 1903; A.B.. Indiana olIMIDEAr You arc not trcatiiii; a t ir! right unless yoti ruin her digestion IN October, igoj, tlic Indianapolis chapter of Phi Rho Sigma, Pi Alpha, was formed. The fraternity itself was founded in 1S71 at North- western. Its colors are cardinal and old gold. iNETEEN Hundred 1 Frank A. Brayton Raymond C. Beele George W. Bowm: Clniide D. Green Charles Irwin M. O F MEMBERS XlXETEEN HuND: Cliarles F. Bayer Charles B. Compton Charles S. Dryer Walter W. Gipe Paul T. Hurt Harold O. XlXETEEX HUND Bruce D. Lung Harry O ' Dell Earl B. Rinker John L. Walker Joseph E. Wier iD Fourteen Ralph Lochry [AI-I .I idea of congestion of trafi ity of the free lunch at an open lioitse Ci h 1 I n d i a n a p I MEJr BERS MU CHAPTER of Phi Chi was installed at Indianapolis in 1903. The national fraternity is twenty-six years old, and was found- ed at Vermont University. Its colors are olive green and white. INETEE.V HLXDREnTwE M. C Barrett R. -M. FunklK V, B. Harris V. F. Hickni C. S. O ' Brien E. Mendenhall F. S. Pyke . . V. Hiiies C. B. Spiuh J. E. Walthe J. Stark R. IT. ThoiiK W. Tinsley E. C. Webb E. E. Cabal Qiarles Savery J. W. Van Sandt Alph.x Mu Ch. pter John Day H. Patton J. Reymard dca of soniclhiiig to do is keeping tab on the Thcfas at the library )3 ; l(f)?ff y LI I V5y L f 1 IV I y I I M VKJlf 1 Phi Bet 1 I f! il i ii n a p I i WESTERN University of Pennsylvania was the seat of the founding of Phi Beta Pi, in iSqi. The Indianapolis cliapter is called the Omicron Chapter. It was estab- lished in 1905. INETEEN HlNliKEIl I Ernest O. A-iher ClvfleC liiiiKr Cliffnr.lC.C.ix SterliiiK ' k ll..lTnia: mnor - . Miik-r ' Lloyd C. Marshall P. E. Moshenn.ss Robert I . Nattkemj Inhnll.Knl.i.,,!, i.:,HrnK-er.. Kari.lL LIST OF .MEMBERS REii Twelve Nineteen Hu William W. Holmes Darmon A. Rhinehart Frank C. Mann Dewell Gann, Jr. Wade Fortner Fred A. Kimble ineteen Hundred Fuukteen EN Hundred Fifteen IlNDHANa I father 7u ,. kuowx hi. shirt whfii It from (1 Blooiiiiiii;toii hlinidr Phi Beta Pi m t n g t n F M E M B E R : PHI BETA PI was established at Indiana in 1908. It occupies a lari e, handsome house of its own. There are thirty-one chapters of Phi Beta Pi in all. Though young, the organization is among the foremost of medical fraternities. Robert E. Holland F. D. Martin W. E. Arbuckle ixETEEN Hundred Thirteen Walter M. Stout Chester A. Stavton Eldo M. Claiiser nj-T Grad C. E. Connor T. F. Kollmer George B. Kent Glenn M. McDar Martin Patton E. H. Hare J H. Hare L. D. HufTma M. D. Willcui Louis M. Wii ;d Fifteen nes.Jr. R. L. Smith George E. Irwin W. J. Sheffler, Jr AU the ZK ' orld !(Krs a lover, except hi. N LI S 1 o; ni a N I )i d I a n a p I i 1)1 t II g t II ETEEN ■JDREDl THE Indiana chapter of Nu Sigma Nu is known as tlie Beta Eta Chapter. It was established here in 1908. The local chapter has had sixty-eight members. Nu Sigma Nu is one of the oldest of medical frater- nities. Nineteen Hundred Ti Ara C. Badders Clifford R. Hoy J. Gordon Kidd Robert M. Moore Jap F. Swavne Hillard L. Weer Hundseh Fourteen H llFiU ' EAflA The fo William F. Craft Elmer L. Mertz Edward E. Johnston Clyde K. Startzman C. Gleason Mackey Arley J. lllrich Clarence L. Bock Angus Cameron Don G. Hilldrup Vernie D. Keiser C. Herbert Brune should invent an alaim clocL- 7eith a derrick aftachine Seniors — Nineteen Twelve O. ASHER, G ' l ilicine. Phi Bela lest O. Aslier is I ;PH E. WALTHER. I„tliai:afolis .Medicine. Plii Clii. V.ilther ' s early life was blighted by a trip to the Phil- lines, and nothing pleases him more than an audience lich will listen to his oft repealed tales of how. he foiighl College 1905, A.B, CARL B. SPUTH, Indianapolis. Medicine. Pi Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Phi Chi, Sophomore Scrap Captain 1909, Undergraduate Interne at Protestant Deaconess Hospital 1912. Sputh can elect himself, or anyone else, to any office de- sirable. He is probably the busiest man in the class. b ' ER.WWDE HACHAT, Jlarlfonl Clly. Meilicinc. Le Cercle Frangais, Secretary Senior Class :ER DEMAREE, Franklln. illy speaking, Demaree is a wonder. He came i acquire knowledge, and while he has been le has never lost an opportunity to accomplish taking smears of everything from articular to furunculosis. L Sterling p. Hoffmann. oooooooooooooo :mdiiahai I s%s V Uifc-i fc - !-! ' i ' !™ H i ' ai«seig:- ' Carl B. Sputh Fernandc Hachat OOOOOOOOOOOOOO kilHiig z it ill tin- i roiip at the photoi raplu BssMiSiEaaiifflffi V sirviMi Robert Louis Nattken oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen T w e 1 ' e lAI.MI ' lK H. WKAVF.R. Atihiini. Medicine. Phi Kappa Sigma, iSIichigan Universi Rlio Sigma, Under-Graduate Assistant to Dr. J. H. 1910-11-12, Externe Deaconess Hospital 1912. When Hi is unable to sleep in class, he will ncit any. 1110 else to do so. He is another one of thr . 1 1 ill. and a sworn enemy of peace and order. )R MILLER. Iiniu folu tol ' .ERT LOUIS NATTKEMPER, r. v . .Mi-dicine. Phi Beta Pi. I ' liMii being closely questioned, Bobby wil Is from Terre Haute, but is regarded iiiglii ully and class. He has a serious expression iicss til learn the whyfore of things. iEURGE W. BOWMAN, InduiiwpoUs. Medicine. Phi Rho Sigma. Everybody calls him Wash , except the Under World clinic, to whom he is know s ' lnith ' Si ' .le Dutch. ' USTIX HOPPES. 3ng hair and large ' -. WAVE MILLER, Pc ismf.-w mssssimim G.IK-rr .Austin Ho Harvcvr Wave Millei OOOOOOOOOOOOOO oIINID ' EAHa: spend your first three years gettin i; into tliiiijis 12 r eaiBBIi SaBPiSSaSSi V sjiii iiSili I George Luther Mil L oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n e t e e n Twelve lAKRV P., IR ' LSF,. rul.n, Cly. Medicine. Hiilsie is always ready to accommodate everyli even did extra work for Dr. Garret. He is part i. the Plaza Hotel, where he has been carrying .m son n;d research work. many local s ready to ran be rec- ngratiating GEORGE LUTHER MITCHELL, nioomingto his time, has traveled extensively by the side- 1 route. He is a living advertisement for Bull spends most of his time twisting smokes. Lingeman is the Romeo of the class. He does not allow the dismal and dreary aspect of a class room t interfere with his day dreams. XXIE G. FORRER. Uvcrpoal, En ,h,nd. Medicine. Nu Sigma Phi. Lucie Forrer. who objects strenuously to being called li. her first name, is imported, but since her sojourn amoiiL; us has developed into a good fellow. Her one failing is f. nl iiess for cats and cream puffs. OHX S, ROHIXSOX, Xnc Philadclfhia. Iiid. Medicine. B.S. Marion Normal College IW , Phi Beta Pi. J. ' ick Robinson is a happy-go-lucky chap, with an engag- ing smile and pleasing personality. His duties in connec- tion with the city administration keep him busy outside of i l To fuss is one of life ' s sic saaga V a-i spf I m Walter Karrct Schlo oooooooooooooo S e n i o r s — N i n c t e e n 1 ' vv e 1 ' KARRER SCHLOSSER. Brciin-ii. :ine. Freshman B.iseball team 1912. good Iclilosser is called Pete . He is niniodating Dutchman, wlio belie 3f infants. , ' IS COURTNEY REXTSCHLER, S ,-iiccr. -Me.licine. Phi Rho Sigma, Extcrnc at Joser [nvpital. Assistant to Joseph R. Eastman. Dutch is the school ' s chief exponent of the 111 were it not for the fact that he has chosen a vc calling, he would probably be a coming whit C. BARRETT, Kuightsto-.cn. Medicine. Phi Gamma Delta Purdue Unix ■RR FREDERICK HICK. 1. Me. Heine. Phi Chi. PAl ' I. E. MOSCHEXROSS, I„dianal . lis- Me licine. Phi Beta Pi. .Mosh is the class sage. His favorite jiasiime i; argue with the professors, who are usnallv conipellei allow him to settle things to his own satisfaction. L.WVRENCE BRADLEY RARIDAX, Delphi. Medicine, Phi Beta Pi. I eagsa V s smsmmmsm; Lawrence Bradley Raridaji OOOOOOOOOOOOOO :NDiiAriA.r Seniors — Nineteen Twelve ARLES E. IRVIN, Indianafulis. Medicine. Phi Rho Sigma. When it comes to anatomy, Irvin is a malces frequent trips to the North Side. 1 butcher. He JOHX SATER NIXOX, Farmland. Medicine. Externe Fletcher ' s ! Central . ormal College 1908. Nick never has much to say regarding himself, but it underslO ' Hj tiiat he is physician in charge at the Hotel Ci( img ; Farmland. VIRGIL GORDON. Mitchell. Medicine. Wranglers, University Orchestra 1908-09. Gordon has been improving his physical condition dur- ing his college course by gymnastic exercises on the fiddle. Not long ago Dr. Hurty said unto him, Follow me, and I will make you a fisher of men. Medical Scc- R. M. FUNKHOUSER, Incliaiiapulis. Medicine. Kappa Sigma, Phi Chi, Edit tion Arbutus. Funk is a born grafter, and will undoubtedly make gond at something. His tastes are along artistic lines, and he emphatically declares that marriage is not a failure. GEORGE W. KOHLSTADT, Indianafolis. Medicine. Phi Rho Sigma, Externe Deaconess Hos- pital 1912. George Kohlstadt has broken up more furniture and mined more of the school ' s property than anv other m.-ui in the class. . LI ' RED CARSON WILLIAMS, Monon. Medicine. Phi Beta Pi. Weary Williams wants to know. He is one of the boys who rest in the front row and is an optimistic sort, whose greatest interests lie in the field of operative surgery. y oooooooooooooo Gsorgc W. Kohlstidt n oooooooooooooo .:n]D ' ]iap] -- oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twelve kAVMOXD COLE BEELER, Charlcstoi.ni. Medicine. A.B. 1910, Phi Delta Theta, Plii Rh o Sigma, Externe Indianapolis City Hospital 1910-11-12. Toodles is regarded bv tiie class as a miglity good fc-I- l.iw. Altliough small of ' stature, he will be a big man m the lield of radiography. I K.VXK A. BRAYTON, Indianapolis. Medicine, Phi Rho Sigma, Frank Brayton is better known as Dr, Brayton ' s son. although by most of the fellows he is called Speed . If Frank has an enemy in the world, no one has ever fnund (iARXER X, DR Medicine. Everybody golden, his fortune is made. .1. CHARLES EMME, Auburn. Medicine, Externe Indianapolis City Dispensary 191J. He is known to the class as Chas,, and to the facult; members as Emma. Emme was formerly an assistant pu lice surgeon, but was deposed by a street car conductor wiio refused to recognize his badge. jri.r.XX O. WALTER, Middlchut Medicine, Upon his own urgent request, we have consented to refer to Walter as Tubby , He is noted for his v dissipations, and it is to be hoped that he will reform. W. LTER L, VAXD. MEXT, Rushvilh-. iledicine. Vandament won ' t shave himself, and there seems no way to keep him from graduating with whiskers. bacteria do no fluid Hillside. I Bsse V isasHBE assaiaBin OOOOOOOOOOOOOO INE ' Byrum W. Harris | oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twelv CLAL ' DE D. GREEK. Sffiwcr. Medicine. Phi Rho Sigma, President of Senior ( of tlie School of Medicine. Putsie Green is the man who dictates the affairs o: senior class, and who believes in taking life easy, and i ing along the lines of least resistance. . RCHIE V. MINES, Auburn. Medicine. Phi Chi. Hines or Hinev is one of the . iibiirn trio. . ' ling at the German Hoiis HVRL ' M W . H. RRIS, BrUighurst. Medicine. Phi Chi. Falher Harris will endeavor to eke out an existence among the unsuspecting natives of Gary, and for this rea- son he has been studying the Hunyak language. His social service work has made him familiar with the ins and outs of the city. CLYDE CLERMONT BITLER, Delphi. Medicine. . .B. Indiana University 1910, Phi Beta Pi. Bitlcr is the Rip Van Winkle of the class, and is awak- ened only with difficulty at the close of each hour. He i popular with cashiers at various one arm eating houses. W. LTER CHARLES STEPHENS, IVcstfidd. Medicine. B.S. Earlham College 1901, D.O. Pacific Col- lege of Osteopathy 1904. Stevens has been practicing medicine for a number of years, but has thought it worth while to go over some of the course with the present class. LOUIS HAROLD SEGAR, Indianapolis. iledicine. Nu Sigma Nu, Delta Sigma Rho, Vice-presi- dent Senior Class in Medicine, A.B. Indiana Universit ' 1910, Indiana-Illinois Debate 1906. Louie Segar regulates matters of importance connected with the City Dispensary. Most of the class believe that lie is brilliant student. I B ViB V ( lJBBSgiS53H!3!asai OOOOOOOOOOOOOO ■oooooooooooooo Seniors — Nineteen Twel ' e . ' LIFFORD E. COX, iVfw Ai Medicine. Phi Beta Pi. Co. is one of tlie few n . MES W. DUCKWORTH, .1 i his venerable Dutch Apple Pie shoes, Jii cout. He is the pilot of Trusty Bill, the I ryall. No doubt the wets will welcome h vn of sanitariums with open arms. ll.VRRY M. PELL, Bra:il. Pell is a hold-up man for a local medical supply house, ;iuil is a recognized authority on second-hand thermome- ters. He spends his week ends at Rochester. LLOYD 0. SHOLTY, Claypool. Jledicine. Phi Beta Pi, Emanon, Freshman Football Team 1908, ' Varsity Football 1909-10-11. Sholty is a bad man with whom to start trouble. He is quiet and studious, and is known to be very popular with the fair sex. He achieved a reputation by his work on the gridiron. . UGUSTUS CLYDE SHIPP, Franklin. Medicine. A.B. 1910, A.M. 1910, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Phi Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, Instructor in Pathology 1910-11-12. Shipp is a long-haired intellectual giant. He is a good man to get acquainted with, about the time of examina- tions. His position on the faculty has not lessened his popularity with the class. LLOYD CHESTER MARSHALL, Bloimtsfille. Medicine. A.B. Indiana University 1910, Phi Beta Pi, Business Manager Arbutus at Indianapolis, Externe at Fairview Summer Mission. Lloyd is a quiet chap, who usually knows whereof be speaks. He has taken a prominent part in class affairs. Outside of school hours, his chief diversion is trying out new hair restorers. 1 Lloyd Chester Marsha OOOOOOOOOOOOOO : DIIA-I-|A-E D BYM :n]D ' Iiana The week end is usually a weak end nnaasE THE ARBUTUS CHRONICLE 1 W M The Septe university without young folk :iiMunil, sn. ,mi ilus day, the Monon and Southern brought a lot of them to town, from all corners of the ciiniinei-t. and the young folk matriculated at the University central office, and it looked very much like there were going to be collegiate activities at Blooniington. Among those who showed up were a lot of old students who were already pretty heavily involved and who had returned to fulfil some more of the obligations that the University insists upon before it yields a degree. There were also a crowd of newcomers who looked like they wanted to put their foot into something. All in all it seemed to the management that there would still be some demand for loftier education. They were glad that they had trimmed the grass and fixed up for another year. September 22 ; The first day of true scholastic effort, the day pre- vious having been devoted exclusively to negotiations incidental to matriculation. September 23: Open houses and other joyous social affairs were held in the evening. Open houses, which are considered absurd by the sororities, are held by them merely to satisfy the young men, who flock to the open houses merely to accommodate the young The rush reason closed, and the fraternities settled down to re- pent at leisure. Hays Buskirk spent the week end at the Phi Psi house September 25: Dr. Campbell expressed his disappro al nt n, time as music for college dances. He did not go so far, h e ir is to sug,yest the barefoot classic as a substitute. September 27: Carl Kollmeyer was elected freshman scrip c ip tain. It was thought at this time that there was to be a sophcm re freshman scrap. The Society of Skeletons was formed. This is not in jrganiza tion of physical wrecks, nor a baseball team tu play with the tits n senior week. It is the medics ' club. September 28: Try-outs for the Glee Club were held The (jke Club is an athletic organization through which the University hopes to get its violent vocalists under some kind of control One of its objects is to discourage promiscuous quartette recitals. The athletic association books appeared. lany students added line t.i their library. September 29: The editor of the Daily Stmic several days, turning the editorial responsibi er to a fountain pen company. took September 30 : The freshmen had a banner up on a pole down on Jordan field. If the sophomores had not taken it down, there might have been a scrap between the two classes. Kollmeyer, freshman scrap captain, broke the world ' s record for brevity of service in of- fice. Time : 20 seconds. The first domestic science meeting was held. Domestic science means cooking nothing and serving it beautifully. I xha.; THE ARBUTUS CHRONICLE October 3: More plans for the domestic science course were made. The University for years has been helping girls to get hus- bands. At last, it seemed, it was to show them little tricks which would enable them to relieve themselves of husbands, if necessary. Dr. Eigenmann added another volume to his list of te.xts on Ich- thyology. The moving-picture dramatization was not to be ready un- Hanovcr beat Indi; Wabash a clear claim October 7 : Havs V College, 8 t. October 8 : The woman in black appeared. It was thoug many to be only some sorority mourning a lost spike. October 11: The Dunn meadow aviator took a fall. Aboi students, who had previously expressed pany the aviator, were now glad that they had been the invitations were sent out. The Arbutus staff was appointed. The Arbutus studio organization. October 12 : The Boosters started a movement i on the freshmen, in line with the label everything. Sixty-two tried out for Strut and Fret. Fifty-fou Uing ement to put gn pure food move October 13 : DePai game at Crawfordsvil ship. October 14 : Rain preve boys and girls have a hard and Wabash played a nothing to nothing The result gave Wabash the state champion- proposed geology hike. College October 19: The Pan-Hellenic smoker was held. The Blooming- ton fire department should be obliged to stop Pan-Hel smokers. October 21: Marquette beat Wabash, 11 to ' K The game cinched Wabash ' s claim on the state football championship. October 23 : The co-edition of the StiidenI appeared. October 24: Coach Sheldon did not like the inferior attitude the football boys had taken in the game with Northwestern, so he per- suaded all of them to come down onto Jordan field, and, while they were not looking, he shuffled them. Gill was put at half-back, King at full, Fleming at tackle and Whitaker at quarter. Thereafter they behaved very much more like pig hide specialists. October 25: The seniors chose their comic opera corduroys. Cor- duroys will stand a great deal of sitting around, but since seniors do little sitting around, they must have been moved to tlicir ■ electicln by reasons purely esthetic. .An anti-rushing campaign was started by the Student ll.iwever. rent and grocery bills come due; if the fraternities t.ok time in spik- ing new men, their judgment would often interfere with their eco- nomic welfare. October 27 : A campaign for the homecoming at the Purdue game as opened. The athletic association later proposed its clever plan I keep all of the homecomers in Blootnington indefinitely by lifting e ticket prices to $2. Oct t29: Th ess LI A FUJsrEESAl- %g DTDGE FOR MET . : fW ' IAJh 1 T H E A R n V T u s c H R o N I C L E The anatomy department received a dissection of the temporal bone, showing the two semi-circular canals, by means of which the equihbrium is maintained, except upon special occasions. The Squaw Man was given at the Harris-Grand. The show was stopped at the end of the first act. Otherwise the performance was ovember2: The trustees gave permission to the Union to estab- lish a barber shop. There is a good opening in Bloomington for a barber shop with the Victrola attachment. ng the November 4 : Wabash beat Earlham, 12 to championship. Ham Keck antagonized the freshman class on Jordan field and was defeated, being greatly outnumbered. The fight had not been announced beforehand, so there was a large number of freshmen November 9: A mass meeting to aggravate enthusiasm for the Il- linois game was held at the gym. Registrar Cravens told about the good, old days in the old rocking chair, beside the rose-covered cot- NovEMBER 11 : The ' va linois in Indianapolis. November 15 : On thi; Inn were reduced to five November 18: The tui the second great turkey on Jordan field. This w the first being the Fres: November 20: The Red Book appeared. The joke department nsisted of the following lone jest: Strut and Fret is the Uni- rsity dramatic club, members of which are chosen for their his- onic ability. The laws shed fla November 22; Mice and M which Strut and Fret presente dififerent character, 1- the zoological title of a sho ted at the Harris-Grand. It was of from the Wallace-Hagenbeck shows. November 23: The Purdue game approached. Over-confidence :irely disappeared from the football team. This meant sure vic- •V for Indiana, The freshman squad was awarded sweaters. Any one wishing one of lliese nice garments can get one for nothing by going out onto Jordan field and sacrificing his life for four hours daily for nine erconfidence disappeared from ry for Indiana. December 4: greeted with m literary product immation schedule was published and was 1 interest. It was probably the most widely-read at the University during the fall term. December?: The Married Students ' Club met. Exceptions to the no-date night rule are made in the case of married students. December 9: The fall term blue book massacre began. The professor is supposed, in an examination, to attempt to discover how much the student knows, but he usually yields to the temptation to show at this late stage the knowledge which, as a lecturer, he was unable to reveal. De. ber12: Russell Sharp, having deter Ited the Red Book for possibilities. December 15 : The Glee Club left the gay white way for the one- night stands through the southern part of the state — expecting to in- cite a musical renaissance as it passed from rostrum to rostrum. Bloominglon was completely drained of dress suits. THE R 1 U T U S CHRONICLE December 22; The Glee Club closed in Rushville. Tubby Scott had left a string of demolished beds in his path. Fred Durham de- clared that, after eight months ' practice, he could launder his shirt- bosom, cuffs and collar with artguni and get into his dress suit, im- maculate, in r •Jakuaev. th blu rds ; nds with blue books. ■ of a I Heard at the begmn Freshmen up-stairs. Where do you send your laundry? Subscribe for the Daily Student. Going to room in the house this term? How ' d you get by? Seen our new pledge? I wonder what ' s a snap course. January 2: Great improvements were ii during vacation. A couple of clothes hooks Hutchins had a locker moved one foot west, even if he can not have a new gymnasium. The Union barber-shop was opened, county novelty, the silent shave. Dducing the great Monroe JANUARYS: The winter siege of open houses began. January 6: Victor Cook advertised the democratic gathe; Cook ' s Astrium, establishing his popular cafe as the foremo of the Indiana Union. January 9: Dr. Foley was reported to have rcceii ognition of his photograph of sound waves. At last to get evidence against Forest Place serenaders ! ed national r an opportun L.1W students adopted the custom of standing on their feet at t entrance of their professors. January 10: Law students abandoned the custom of standing . their feet at the entrance of their professors. The Glee Club, back on Broadway, played a run of one night the Student Building. All of the girls were tickled to get back town. One girl said: Gee, I ' m glad we are through with the tai stations. No more road shows for mine. . lolanthe was announced as the spring term opera. That loo like a typographical error. January 12 ; Wilson won the str Woodrow, Pert. January 13 : M. M. Dunbar was arrested for running a blind tiger in Maxwell Hall. He was to be tried in moot court on the charge of cruelty to animals. That is nothing to what they do to cats and dogs in Owen Hall. iree reels, was the attraction at been for Zingomar, Colleen linstrels, and the Monroe County ?ason in Bloomington would have :e was held at the Student Euild- JANU.«Y15: Zingomar. in the Harris-Grand. If it had n Bawn, Strut and Fret, the Beta Poultry Show, the past theatrica been pretty slim. January 16: The freshman d ing ball-room. January 17: Strut and Fret decided to get careless with its mem- bership. A member said : Well, I am not so proud of being a mem- ber of Strut and Fret any more. It ' s no longer a proof of political ability to get into it. January 22: The Indiana Union held a mectnig in the Student Building at which Dr. Johnston, professional punster, spoke on an- other aspect of professionalism; salaried summer baseball for Con- ference athletes. Janu.ary23; It was reported that Dr. Cummings read a paper in Washington on The Development and Systematic Position of the Monticuliporoids. Never had ' em bad enough to see anything like that. Dr. Cummings. ' urdue beat Indiana in basketball, 58 t the Indiana team, witnessed the gan A large ( lud- :NBi:Ar u.., THE ARBUTUS CHRONICLE January _ ' 5: The Kneiscl Quartette gave a recital. It was an artistic triumph ; the seat sale enabled the Union to install another , chair in the barber shop, and the quartette played with faultless en- I semble. February 3 : This was the night of the annual PaiUhygatric. The Panthygatric is for the young women exclusively. The young men would like to attend, but many of them do not. William Winter Sherman, dramatic editor of the Daily Sliidcul. published an article on Moving Pictures as an Educator. Ten cents, special, on Saturday, is the higher education. Partners for the Siwash social were chosen. There is a great deal of Siwash in real-for-sure matchmaking. arted a peti Bloomington barber at the Union shop. February 6: The thrilling half-pagc-a-day the Student, continued to appear in the Daily shave -Subs m-pea February 7 : India Illinois at basketball. scared herself nearly to February 10 : The Servant in the House was presented by the Indiana Club. In Bloomington fraternities, the servant out of the house is more often the case. The title of the play suggests a play that should have significant local interest : The . rtistic Tempera- ment of a Fraternity House Cook. February 12 : Perfectly grand eats were announced for a meet- ing of the Woman ' s League. College perfectly grand eats are usually equivalent to a five cent meal at a dairy lunch. The freshmen held a smoker at the Student Building. Many young men took their first step on the descending path. (Tableau: pale youth of about 18 leaning over the rail of a steamboat.) Feb smokin :v 14 ; A meeting of repre front of the buildings m ng of representative students. young men decided tha February 15 : Smoking in front of the buildings stopped. February 16 : Smoking in front of the buildings was resumed. Phi Beta Kappa held an initiation. The rough work was omitted. Hays Buskirk spent the week end at the Phi Psi house. William Allen White was introduced by Paul McXutt. February 20: The Daily Student had a big paro.xysni concerning student representation on the athletic committee. Subscribe for the Sludeiit, the great newspaper serial, continued to thrill the millions. February 24: The county fair, at which polite porch climbing is sanctioned by the Y. W. C. A., was held. The Thetas acted as po- licemen and ran their victims into police court for slaughter with the same grace that they ordinarily show in taking them to the Book Nook. February 26 : Victor Cook closed his inn out. He gave a fres coffee to the boys, as a sort of parting handshake. Step by step, cold water is thrown on the festive life in Bloomington. Mi. me up another metaphor, Steve. article on The Danger ■ to Bloomington, where BRUARV27: The Student published •inj:. The one way to escape is to c February 29: Dante ' s Inferno at the Crescent and a French pho- nograph recital at the French club meeting. March 1 : The Siwash social, the safest and the year, was held in the Student Building. I IN DE AIL T H E A R 1 U T U S CHRONICLE The Delta Tans, after thirty-eight years of they achieved a prominent position among the rented the Gentry house east of town. JMakch 16 ; Lebanon won the state high school tonrnament held nnder the auspices of the Boosters Club. This gave Wabash the state basketball championship. M. RCH 4 : The Wranglers had a fire. Xext kers, a college club or fraternity house i;, the m in the world. March 5; Kathleen Stilwell was ek cted t special revision of the United States c instill not see them. The schedule of winter term exami lations criticized by many as being somewhat dogm March 7; Oiarles R (period) Sherman, in the Daily Student. wrote: His eyes lighted with triumph, then slowly filled with tears, the kind that come from the eyes of a strong man whose one great aim in life has been accomplished; who, clinging to a straw in the great sea of life, has at last been able to climb upon the raft of good fortime. March 8 : An agitation against the everj-l he Well House was started by the Evening En Yale-Harvard game. One continual scream March 9: Jeanette Bartelle appeared in h. March 12: The Leopard was produced at the Harris-Grand. Wilbur Glover presented his electrical novelty, the hesitating dawn. The slogan contest decision was postponed. March 13: Georgia Sembower and Christine Biller appeared in spring hats. March 14 : The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was awarded a loving cup for winning the bridge tournament. A loving cup is a tall vessel, surrounded by handles, which is placed on the fr;iternity man- tel, and used to hold cigar stubs, open-house invitations ami burned- out light bulbs. The slogan contest decision was postponed. Marc 23: The spring Glee Cluli trip began. Patterson talked all afternoon at Orleans to three married women w-ho knocked on their husbands. Hubert Hanna, Dress Suit Hubert, sang through the The Glee Clu French Lick, and. later, too and one coach to Cannelton. March 25: Cannelton. Best girls on the trip. A dance after the concert broke up in a row because Chas. R (period) Sherman re- fused to stop dancing and join a two-step circle with his girl. Paul Clements met a girl in a dry goods store and went over to Hawes- ville on the ferry with her. and exposed himself to the small-pox. March 26 : A river ship was chartered by the club for the trip to Roekport. Kolhneyer got his coat caught in the works and broke the engine. Fred Tourner put a shovelful of coal into Van Dorn ' s traveling bag with his dress shirts. Best girls on the trip. Marc ening : 27 : An open date at the Carnegie library. ville. The fello iris on the trip. spent the March 28 : Boonville. Best girls on the trip. Bob Patterson, Phi Gam, invited a girl up to the Kappa Sig annual. Durham wore tan SOX with his evening clothes. A girl said : That child looks just like his mother had dressed him for Sunday school. Mitchell, the eminent clubman, took his gloves off for the first time since the Club left Bloomington. M. rch29: Washington. Best ements took a bath in a newly d hysterics when she heard the March 30: Vincennes. Best g m turned the piano over, and w March 31; Patte n Church choir. the trip. Ha lud Paul landlady p. Fritzi Scheff Dur- the Glee Club strong nager, appeared I ' ited Alice of Old Vine IHNDIAT- T : 4 Cii ! : W. ' 1:UV41gF I ' - T H E A R 15 U T U S c H R O N I C L E pril2: Bloomfield. The Club shaved KoUme; the Christian Church baptistry (full of water). ilAv2: ■■Babel next best thing t ' (full dress) Grand. May the annual spring term opera, which is ;irls ' hockey game, was given at the Ha and April 3: The Salvation Army abandoned winter quarter; opened their summer engagement on the west side of the squar April 5: The Daily Student reappeared, and the slogan C( April 6: East Third Str Buskirk spent the week end April : Easter Sunday. The April 8: The tennis association held a meeting to discuss the ad- 1 visability of purchasing motor boats. I April 12: Charity ball Boxes, $8. Don ' t shove; women and chil- I dren first. April 22: Five editors for the 1913 Arbutus were elected, and all five, with indiscretion characteristic of youth, accepted. April 23 : Unusual activity in local organ season opened on the public squa pected. :15; Th eapolis orchestra. All the national songs of Sw Twelve Arbutus was published, perhapsically. CTT JUNE Mlc= ;12. Spnng shades in bl ;16: Baccalaureate addr books ofifcrcd at Pittingei . (Sounds like a hygiene June 18: Alumni address, alumni dii rs. Spring term ends. June 19 : Commencement. ' jBnt jL iir IlLNBHAr :tehB ' IIANA LIBUEtY) CLOSED v ' [ u WE BID YOU A KIND GOOD NIGH T T PI ERE is not going to be any more Arbutus this year. This is a formal announcement to tiiat ef- fect. After a few pages of advertis- ing, whicli seem to be as necessary to the success of an annual as the photos of the faculty, we bid you one and all a kind good night. 1 The Arbutus and then the anvil chorus II M I ;? i3i fi2agaiU]iM ID Eighteen Tie. ' enty Nineteen Twelve Indiana University BLOOMINGTON lie growth of Indiana Liniversity during the last fifteen years is shown by the following five-year table: 1896 1901 1906 1911 879 1137 1684 2431 The following publications are issued periodically by huiiana Universit The University Catalogue The Spring Term Bulletin The Summer Term Bulletin The Bulletin of the School of Law The Bulletin of the School of Education The Bulletin of the School of Medicine The Bulletin of the Graduate School The Bulletin of the College of Liberal Arts Any one of these may be obtained on application to the Registrar, or to WILLL ' M L. BRYAN, President ONDEAI The Illinois Central Railroad Is ihe Direct I.tue Belli Indianapolis Bloomington Two comfortable trains in each dii connections at Indianapolis for poi ion niakitii; convenient East and North and at Unex ' celled Limited Trains Maive Travel a Pleasure ' ia The Illinois Central Between Chicaco, St. Louis, Cnicmnati, Louisville, Memphis, New Orleans, Omaha, St. Paul, Minneapolis and many other important points. Through sleepers daily Chicago to Hous- ton, San Antonio, El Paso, Hot Springs, Arlc. , Jacksonville, Ela., Birmingham, Ala. Tourist sleepers to California twice If Anticipating a Trip J Trite A. J. McDocc.ALL, D. p. A. S. G. Hatch, P. T. M. C. R. Pleasants, Agent H. J. Phelps, G. P. A. The Hub ADLER ' S c„„,p,„y CLOTHES SnS 4. NORTH SIDE BLOOMINGTON, IND. SUPPORT YOUR COLLEGE PAPER The Daily Student INDIANA UNIVERSITY SUBSCRIBE SUBSCRIBE r Hj j r-i H. P. Tourner Our Mc.tto is Satisfaction Telephone Number 171 Jeweler and Optician. I.arjrest up-to-date line of Indiana Henry Kerr .leueln-. Watches, Diam.md.s and Silverware. BAKKRS 121 South Walnut Street. Manufacturers of Ice Creams and Water Ices Established 1SS4 1 Southeast Corner Square, Bloomington, Ind. ij II The Trust Company With Dr. Frank H.dland Ph,,ne 150 II il II ■jhe Home for Your Surplus Money W. L. Luck, Optician II Interest Paid on Certificates of Deposit and Savings Accounts (jiasses Fitted hy the Latest Methods. Office Kqmpped w Ith Bloomington, Indiana Up-to-Date Instruments. 124 East Se enth Street, Bloomington, Indiana U| Office Phi.nc 691 Resilience Phnne 1141 Wentvvorth Printing Company Go to Coyles For Meals and Lunches of All Kinds. Ice Cream and 1 1 -,, ■! ' ' I ' ri ' itin. r and Stationery East Side Square, Bloomington, Indiana ■■ B ' College Fraternity Printing a Specialty 1 ' West Side Square, BlonmiiiKton, Ind. if Telephone Number .i i Dr. Vermilya ' s Pharmacy Drugs, Toilet Articles, Students ' Supplies, Cigars £3 Tobacco F. B. Van Valzah Waterman Fountain Pens East Side Square, Bloomington, Indiana Dealer m Hardware and Cutlery, South Side of Square Phone 112 Bloomington, Ind. u Hi ---J Sbmi - -il TNTiJli A,T.j ■. [f— :.:i i AN AD FOR MORRIS Wrought b} ' Don Her old H T ' p e w r 1 t e r THE photographer is minister to our vanity. We should choose our photographer with great care, for, behold, if we get ourselves badly photographed, it is not only ourselves, but a half dozen or a full dozen of our best friends who suffer. Photos go only to those who are nearest us, so when we get ourselves snapped we should hunt the artist who can make us look serene in our Sunday clothes and happy in spite of the photographic ordeal. Emerson said that though we hunt the world over for the beautiful, we shall iind it onlv if we carry it with us. Few of us carry the beautiful with us in our faces. We must sit at a certain angle in a certain light before the right photographer to find it. Morris, by the way, has been the Arbutus photo- grapher since the Arbutus was a pup. :nbiian . The. one good bet— U-Kno CHOCOLATES Indianapolis Candy Co. The EAGLE Sole Agents for High Art and Society Brands of Suits and Overcoats C. H. Marxson The Eagle West side square VISIBILITY SIMPLICITY DURABILITY The New Model Hammond Typewriter TVPE INSTANTLY INTERCHANGEABLE This Machine has Various Styles of Type Thirty-Five Languages on One Machine Every Character in Sight All the Time. This Instrument is Full of Labor-Saving Devices Right Lip to the Minute, Including the Polychrome Ribbon Attachment, Writing in Colors, Double Line Lock and Billing Device. Perfect and Permanent Alignment Guaranteed The Hammond Typewriter Co., Nun iber 189 West Madison Str Chicago, I] DLA.rL- r WILES Art Specialties : Kodaks DRUGS Fine Clothing Furnishings (;() TO THE GLOBE Northeast Corner Square, Bio Phone lull Telephone Number 425 Bloomington Coal Company Miners ' Agents and General Dealers, Dealers in Coal, Cement, Sand, Brick, Ktc. Sole Agents for the Celebrated Black Diamond Coal, the Most Satisfactory Domestic Coal i White Ash. No Clinkers Retail and Wholesale All Kinds of Coal, Both Steam and Domestic See Us Before Placing Your Order Office and Yards, Opposite I. S. Freight Depot, Bloomington, Indiana L r DHANAi Rollies Soft Drinks and Ciders INUKACTl ' REl Bloomington Bottling Co. Phones 487, 1,«4 A. M. Snyder ■ Greek ' s. Plione.s, Home 1137; Office 405 Blooniirif ton, Indiana Electric Shoe Shop Best Equipped Shop for Repair Work in the City 12U South Colleiie A enue Exclusive Styles in Men ' s and Women ' s Footwear Pryor Shoe Store Number 117 West Side Square : BloominL ' ton, Indiana Steinmetz Tailoring Establishment ■ ' ou Will Always Find a Good Line of Woolens A Call From You Will Be Appreciated E. Side Sq., Over the Greek ' s :NBii j-L ' IJ kMEi 4 2iiGSiESM Ml Hinkle Souders East Side Meat Market The Most of the Best for the Least HIGH GRADE FOOTWEAR Model Shoe Company Men ' s, Ladies ' , Misses ' and Children ' s Siioes West Side of Square, Bluomington, Indiana Ph..ne lUSl 1] I -ID Classes a Specialty | R e n t i n 2 of Caps and G o v ' n s to G r a d u a t E. R. MOORE Collegiate Caps, Gowns and Hoods Judicial and Clerical Gowns : Baptismal and Choir Gowns 40lt) Evanston Axenue, Chicaeo Official Distributor of Caps ami Gowns to the 1912 Class ur-i i_i ' ii .i ■■ j-_ B E33 S20S2 SI3?S3ES 1 □ n L The engraviiics for this edition of the Arbutus were made by us. We beheve you will atjree that the illustrations are exceedingly clear and distinct, reflecting great credit to tdeeco guaranteed plates. Write for our Annual pn.position. HIMID ' EAr lA ai KPHE sls EI G APBOTOS rR THE Central Whitaker Grocery Indiana Lighting Company For Anything and Everythine: (iootl to Kat We Also Sell and Rent Dishes Southeast Corner Square, Blo.imin.it..n, Ind. Telepliniie 91 J. N. MONCRIEFF, Managcrr Gas, Electric Heat and Power, Klectric Irons, ' ibrators, Motors, Toasters, Percolators, Hot Plates W. A. Fulwider Co. (JKT THE HABIT EARLY For Lumber, Sashes, Doors, Glass, Sliinyles, Rubber Rootini; Ridge Roll and Valley E S T I M A T E S FREE ■rRADK AT Breeden ' s Bloommgton, Indiana w .K„...,...P., s,c.r ™...c,„„. ...c,..v,„.P„.. Lyman Fulk Monroe County State Bank Bloomington, Indiana Druggist ' est Side Square, Phone 235, Bloomington, Indiana Drugs, Stationery, Toilet Articles, Combs Brushes and Perfumes Sprii ;gs ' Studio W est Side Square For Portraits Worth While P h ., n e s : S t u d i ., ,-; 2 9 ; Residence 1 i 4 4 B 1 o o m i n g t o n, Indiana Tr BE v,.pTA-@ J ]i a Comfortable and Homelike Cool and Attractive Cuisine and Service Unsurpassed The New Denison Hotel Company Thomas Taggart, Fresiiieiit William A. Holt, Manager American Plan, ' I o-tifty to Five Dollars Kuropean Plan, One to Four Dolla IS IS ' I V J i ?(? liliMikJg P H O N K 8 9- ATHLETIC GOODS BELL® BELL Cleaning )rks John W. O ' Harrow Suits, Wraps, Jackets, Portieres, Laces The Home of Pure Drugs Feathers, Kid Gloves PHONK M All Dfllcate Fabrics Cleaned by Impn.veJ French Process for Dry Cleaning. All Garments Rcsbaped and a Rival to New Clothing, Work Done on Short Notice. Called for and Delivered STUDENT SUPPLIES COLLEGE AND FRATERMrV PENNANTS FINE LINE OF SEGARS IN PERFECT CONDITION Bloomington ' s Best Billiard and Po ol Parlor ST R A D L E Y ' S CHOICEST CANDIES IN THE CITV. BOX T O PLEASE THE PEOPLE O E A SPECIAL ' .NA I M m s MJ MjMailiJg iq r Roy J. Bryant Druggist E - E R Y T H I N G IN 1 ' HE DRUG LINE 202 North Walnut Street Dr. Homer E. Strain Dr. Joseph L. Strain DENTISTS Allen Block : Bloomington, Indiana Phniie, Office 203; Rcsi.k ' iirc 3(15, IJ ' W PHONE 5 4 S. E. Carmichacl Son Real Estate Agents LOAN MONEY AT 5 ' ., AND 6 PERCENT WRITE THE VER - BEST FIRE INSURANCE East Side Square Concerning Clothes c ollege is a place of imits, not a place of If-ways. The college man wants his clothes irrcct. whether it is a flannel shirt for itiirday morning or a good suit for the so- rity open house. It is at college that a youngster gives his St thoughtful attentio n to garb. Co-educa- m is upon him seriously for the first time, 111 co-education and other college things 11 for clothes that ar fairly well-scissored It and sewed togethe . He begins to think r the first time of styles, and to fret about s and colors. He is not in college long before he knows. It is to the college man who kn.iws that ihe .Manitorium is playing. The Manitorium is a college man ' s clothes studio that does tilings right or does them over — right the niMst times out of ten. College things at The Manitorium are not necessarily Rah K,ib. The Manitorium looks to the east and f.irliier for the latest styles and the hand- si micst fabrics, with the fact in mind all the time that it is in business for college men — nn Kirkwood Avenue, between the court- In mse and the college. inai! Up-to-the-Minute Wearing Apparel for Men, Women and Children First National Hank [building B 1 o o ni i n e t o n The Quality Shop Sanitary Plumbing He ating Hngineer Expert Reiairing. I Gimnintcc Fi and Spciifiiations. CSct There ' s a Reason. FRKDW. FENNEMAN Batman Hl,.,-k, Seventh and Walnut Streets Indiana Lunch L.atiies Given Special Attention ;e Cream, Milk Shakes Soft Drinks Served Cleanliness is Our Pride H. C. Bruner Campbell Company ilks, Tnmniitisis, Evening Costiime-s, Millinery, F; White Shoes and Cloves ;ET Y O I ' R i ' LOOR WAX FOR YOUR DANCK: Guy A. Da is Dealer in Wall Paper, Paint ai.,1 Painters Supplier tanhroitlery Slainpin.„ ' 225 Nnrth College, Bloonimi;t..n, Indiana L Indiana llniversity Book Store Books and Student Supplies Maintained liv the University in the Interests of Students O C A T K I) IN THE BASEMENT O E THE L I B R A R Y ! ; - s! BOH ' ' in doubt of a present for a graduating friend, just call up by phone ft Sx ' s ' m ' ■ ' ' ' ■ ' ° ' ' telegraph, antl we will deliver the very choicest of flow ers, which  - V ' ' ' ' alwavs the correct articles for the occasion. We are always on hand i ' W wjj with a select line of cut flowers aiui i lants. Our motto is closely followed V f0, f and , Flowers fo7- All OcciisioHi MORRIS THE FLORIST PHONE 294 CORNER SECOND ST H Ki H L A N D A ' E 1 OHIJ ' EAMAE Indiana ' s Leading Photographer Bretzman Indianapolis, Indiana 2 2 2 North Pennsylvania Street VO S E Pianos They supply the artistic element that ailtls to the refine- ment of the home. The Pure Tone and Chaste Designs of the J ' ose combine to please the ear of the musician and the eye of the artist. Besides the Vose we have the Chickering, Behning, Kroeger, Jewett, Stewart, Wulschner and others, also the Apollo, Chickering, Vose, Behning and Stewart Player Pianos. Indiana Distributors tor tlie Victor Talkinij; Machines XviUem evc)X Numbers 229-2, 1 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana ONE ' IiAr iSMS n SdBm :ini: The Work of the Advocate E NEW EDITI()X-RK -ISKD 15V THK AUTHORS Byron K. Elliott William F. Elliott LL I OTT ' S, ' Hie Work of the Advocate, is tilled from cover to cover with helpful and valuable hints and advice to the younc; lawyer, aiul will also he read with interest and profit h the older practitioner. WHAT TO DO OUT 0¥ COUR T AND HOW TO DO IT WHAT TO DO IN THK COURT ROOM AND HOW TO DO IT Elliott ' s, The Work of the Advocate, is delii;htful in literary style ani,l reads as entertainingly as a novel. At the same time, it is intensely practical in its suggestions for the preparation and trial of causes. PREPARATION— Hints and helps for learning and preparing the facts and the law for trial— for framing the theory of the case, etc. THE TRIAL Advice as to when to try by jury and when by the court — selecting the iur — opening the case, etc. THE EVIDENCE— Instrimients of ev idence— presentation of evidence— fallacies and artirtces, etc. CROSS-EXAMINATION— A system of rules for examination of witnesses— suggestions and methods for cross-examination and rc-examination, etc. ADDRESSING THE JURY— Helpful hints upon the argument to the iury, with illustrative references to the methods of the greatest verdict-getters, etc. THE X ' l RDICT— Verdicts and special erdicts— proceedings after erdict— preparing for appeal, etc. ONE ' OLUME, bOU PAGES, CLOTH HlNDlNCi, (ill T ' TOP, S4.00 DELIVERI ' .D, OR 150UND IN TLEXI.BLE MOROCCO, PRICT, S5.on DELIVERED The Bob bs- Merrill Company Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.A. irjniVA m mmmmjismi jm Telephone Number 57 Tcleplioiie Number 475 W. O. Blakely Sons G R o c f: R s Bloomington, Indian; ' The Hollenbeck Press Illustrators, En-jravers, Printers, Binders Northwest Corner of Market and New jersey Stree Indianapolis J. C . LANAJVl • Cab and Fine Livery Turnouts West Seventh Near College Avenue Tclepiionc Xuiiiher 183 Bloominoton, Indiana 1 ..i : iL i HIS store is the Home oi Hart, Schaffner Cif Marx Clothes the best clothes in America. We are Sole Agents for Heid Caps — Superior Underwear -fine imported Neckwear — I mperial and Stetson Hats- and lastly— Agents for the Kahn Tailoring Co. of Indianap- olis—the kind of clothes gentlemen wear. K A H N CLOTHING CO. AND ANNEX L O O M I N G T O N , INDIANA 1 IN ID lL ' .T ' ' , •■■■■_ jIKk lil S The Shop of Distinctive Dress All the latest and newest creations in Young Men ' s Furnishings, and the best to be had in Custom Tailoring. Exclusive designs in Indiana, Foreign and Frat Pennants and Pillows. DIETZ- ASK () L R 1 1 A B F, R D A S H E R F O R W ioh Collars For Best Shirt and Collar Work, Send to The Model Laundry OK INDl.WAPOl Cl.- ri:nce Artm.an, Agent fn; The Indiana Business College of Indianapolis is the -. fi ' The Book Nook WITH yardstick and compass and other intricate apparatus, men of science have proven Bloominirton the center of population of the United States. By common consent, scientific verification being uncalled for, the Book Nook is the center of student population of Indiana University at Bloomington. Attend- ance at the Book Nook is not compulsory, but it has a larger class roll than any other elective course in the University. The soda fountain attracts many, while others come to buy soap, bonbons, or stationery. „ ,, Don Herold. Horsman Tennis Rackets The Horsman Model A-X stands in class hy itself. Don ' t buy until vou have seen it. Write to us if your dealer cannot show it. We are sole agents in the United States for the celebrated AyresChampionship Lawn Tennis Balls U j 19 1: B.allsnow leadv Send for nc v c or distribution. taloRue. E. I. Horsman Co., w ' ' ' If there is nothing else wrong with girl, she runs her shoes over. . No University social function complete without: 1 . Chaperones. 2. Macaroons. Instrument Baos, Medicine Cases, Nurses ' Outfits, Wm. H. Armstrong Company Hotel Bowles Special Caterer to Uni ersity Patronage Tables .May Be Reserved for Special Parties at Any Tii C. Bonn, Manager PHONE 31 iliNID ' L ' lrlAJ :□□! THE TWELVE AQBQTIIS THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS The Great Hoosier Daily Delivered Anywhere in the City of Bloomino;ton at 10 Cents Per Week WiM. J. Sheffler, Jr., Special Agent City Book Store Telephone 34 East Side Public Square ADVERTISING By Don Hero Id OBLIX ' IOX is a wood place for an invalid ' s outing, iiut it is NO place for a man with somethina that the people would need if they knew about it. Oliscuritv is a poor business location. Modesty is expressed nowadays in sincerity of production and straightforwardness of statement concerning the product. The world wastes a good many good years in beating down the tall grass to the door of the man who makes a good mouse-trap and hides it under a bushel or beneath an inverted bathtub. The world wants good mouse-traps but it cannot alTord to hire Burns to hunt them up and poke them out from under bushels. It is a social service to bring your mouse-trap to market and he who performs that service gets the silver. The people WANT TO KNOW. The man who lets them know — who performs that simple duty to the public— gets his reward. To advertise is just a matter of doing things the way things are done. There may come a time when there will be a national footpath commission to lead the procession to the hidden shack of the builder of a good thing, but today it is necessary for the superior producer to make a fuss if he would have folks use the things that are best for them — his things. INE ' EAr L J fes. Parting words of a father to his son: ' Go to college, my boy, but don ' t run for an Arbutus job Autvvicdersehen


Suggestions in the Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) collection:

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915


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