Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) - Class of 1918 Page 1 of 332
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£ -% l mi ' ' tjf- .jfntj 7jo the J ' ellow Seniors and Students ®lif 191H ArbutU0 is a pirturr bnnk. Wf haup pu- ;ngrii thr rrapnnsthiltttPH it liaB tlirust upon us; mag gnu noui alHit putny it aui fnrpurr kppp it as a rrmrm- branrr nf bags eprnt at Juliana Muiuprsitg ! V ' 5 3Lla es 6 LraiL? 7n)euixc 8DrDar)iEa ' l:iDr)5 ? College Lr if € !i I1 EZ ARBUTUS 3 K 5 W liar ®tm B at J n Jn t a n a H Page Nine Ei 1918 2 Ijj BATTERY F Cai ' TAix Williams will be renieiiibered as the organizer of Battery F. who was so efticicnl in L etliiii;- results with his men, wliile ;il the same time he kept their Inve and respeet. 1 lis remarkable character has been a big ' factor in ivin - Batterv F its standin . M Paijv T ' -n 1918 = I] BVTTER ' F of Bloomington was organized under Captain Ken- neth Williams in April of 191 . Bryant Gelespie and Humphrey Barbour were made senior lieutenants. Claire Scott and Henry Springer were elected as junior lieutenants. As Gelespie and Springer were too young to receive commissions, Scott and Barbour became se- nior lieutenants, while the junior lieutenancies were given to Earl ] Ioore and Alan Buskirk. The battery was mustered in in ] Iay, and they were well drilled by the early part of August, at which time they left Bloomington for Fort Benjamin Harrison, and then to Camp [Mills on Long Island. Battery F sailed for France after school began in the fall, and are now in the trenches. E Page Eleven 1918 UN K IN ARBUTUS i ROSTER OF BATTERY F I 5 t h F. A. C iiiJiinissioiu-J (.JJJiicis ( apt. Kenneth P. Wlllliims Setona Lieut. Alan V. Uu.skirk First Lieut. Earl K. Moure U cond Lieut. Harold J. Kemp Vlrtl Lieut. Humphrt-y . I. Harbour Xoii-Coiiiiitissioucd Officers t First Sgt. Carl R. Bottenfield Sup. Sgt. Henry R. Springer Mtss Sgt. Lee H. Hottel Sgt. Thas. J. French Sgt. Othnitl R. Chambers Sgt. George Reed Sgt. Elnitr Wray Sgt. Harry P. Schultz Sgt. Fretl A Oonkte Sgt. Samuel Seaney Sgt. Kenneth V. Hughes Sgt. Glenn R Reed Corp. Carl R. Rted Corp. Daniel Kauffman Jes.se Adams Cecil Bailey Evert Barnard Rufus Beasey Lewis Benn Harry Benstm Frank Elac-kwell Russell Bogart Andrew Bragger Earl Bruce Carl Burks Joseph Burns Audley Byers Matthews Carpenter Henry Carr Joseph Cassell Elmer Chambers Hobart Chandler Clyde Chesser Kenneth Cline William Cogswell Prentis Connor Ira Criswell Frank Crohn Edwin Cunningham Raymond Davenport Theodore Deckard Leo Decker Fred DeVllblss Edward Dierklng Guy Dlllman Warren Dillman Frank Dobson ( ' harles Eagun Homer Edwards Robert Eller Warren Eller Emil Farls Ralph FlgK Allan F ' lndllng Harry Fisher Jesse Folk Raymond Folk Raymond Fowler Fred Funk EIL- wftrth Gangwer Roy Gardner Howard tJodfey Clay fIro.HM Deff.-rn Hacker Charles Hall Geobi-I Hall Rnh.-rt Hall I ityton Hamer Mindal Hamilton Robert Hardy Corp. ( orp. Citrp. Corp. (. ' orp. Corp. Corp. Corp. Corp. Corp. Corp. Corp Corp. Corp. Corp. Hartwig Mottler Fred W. Stuart Thos. H. Rawles Edgar O ' Harrow Ray E. Fultz Park H. Campbell Charles Cauble Francis Rankin Leon Rogers Roger Barbour Roy C. Fenlers Herbert Smith Burton Woolery Albert Pattison Kenneth May Priz-ates William Harris Jeff Haskins Lawrence Hatfield Ley hew Hellenburg George Hendrickson Merl Higgins LeoUa Hinkle Roland Hite Donald Hunter Jess Hurst Joseph Hurst Otto Inman Joe Irvin Jennings Jackson Nicholas Jacobs Arthur James Charles Jones Tony Kashon Lance Kell Kenneth Kelley Ralph Kemper William Kinser Gilbert Knight Carl Koons Charles Koontz Floyd Lee Max Legge Clyde Linton Janres Love Fern Lucas Ivan McKee John McVey Glen Marshall Wallace Martin William Martin Harry Massy Paul Maxwell Ell Mik - JanV ' S Miller Paul Mitchell Kenneth Moat Frank Morris Earl Murdoch Andrtw Mussel man Ray N.al VlrKll Nevlns Lewis Nicholas Virgil Ooley Claud Palmer Paul Palmerion Harvey Parish Rav Parks William Patrick Mariln Pearson Martin I ' Inack Ray Pitcher i ugf Twelve 1918 Corp. James S. McAfee Corp. Charles C. McArdle Corp. George Vestal Corp. Francis D. Hepp c irp. Verlin Holloway Cii( k Lannls E. Thrasher CiM.k Uoy c. Fatsinger Cnok Ralph Hall Cook John Richardson Mech. John Heitger Meih. Frank Stewart Bugler Cullen B. Barnes Bugler Leon Kees Bugler Charles Zuck Gay Poling Robert Potter Russell Ranard John Rector Alva Reed Robert Reed Elvyn Regesler William R, Reid George Reitenour Russell Rice Forest Richardson Edgar Robinson Marion Rogers Clarence Russell Fred Scales Robert Schooley John Scliwartz Ora Sciscoe Silas Sciscoe Andy Sejna Lazar Seracu I.,loyd Setser Au. ' itln Seward Elmer Sherwood Vetus Shirley Edwin Simmons Dwight Singer Fred Skirvin Hobart Smith Ralph Smith Raymond Smith Clyde Snoddy Charles Sorge Alfred Southwell Paul Spear Carl Splcer Edward Springer Charles Stuart Leslie Stump Paul Summers Lloyd Swickard Willlum Tatum Glen Teague vVubrey Thomas tluy Thonrpson John Trabue Edwar i Turner l.vo Plm .lohn I ' rsu Joseph Venable Sam X ' llale Francis Wells John Wert Ray West James WIdner Denis Wilson lOlmer Wilson Ij ARBUTUS 1 5 •vl Claire Scott First Senior Lieutenant Humphrey Barbour Second Senior Lieutenant IN X Earle Moore First Junior Lieutenant Alan Buskirk Second Junior Lieutenant i Page Thirteen 1918 Bl uo ( )n Auyust 5th a threat crowd i)f townspeople and University l)eople gathered at the Alonon depot to bid the soldiers in Eat- terv F goodbve. Amidst tears and cheers the train of khaki-clad lads left r.looniinij ' ton. l-IIK l ' ° ' lll li ' i ' ll 1918 1 I1 I. U. AMBULANCE UNIT Bash, Douglass Bauman, Dennis Birtsch, Robert Chester, Hull Davidson, Frank Dukes, Vance Forsyth, Rex Gray, Harry Grim, Reuben Huncilman, Harry Hunsicker, Elmer Hutton, Samuel Kerr, Joseph Kessler, Harvey Landess, Wyeth Lang, Walter McDonald, William Peterson, Charles Pollock, Wylie Russell, Dale Raber, Claude Thornburg, Byron Walters, Basil ' asem, Louis arner, Clifford IN Page Fifteen 1918 T , ARBUTUS lK •_ll ! I Whr- . - -ai fe?-ii V V- v i W .ir, I ' lUil ,-i.ifc-|.V T — .to- « i n|!9v tk Taken of the Ambulance L ' nit while it was encamped at Allenidw n. Pennsylvania. The unit sailed for France in January of this year and is now seeing ' active service. . Ci.d.- ic Shave Dil MciM.si. D.w Camp SiKi;i:r at . i.i.i.. iuu . Pago Slxtfcn 1918 K I: V mbiilnncc Scruice iVcuis v Wariiiiig--O.S.SoliliBrs Must Wnl D isclose Valuable MllitarV Secrets II iir iiiu . at ia;-a_frsrT-i , Cliffrd T. Warner, ' 17 holds the position of city editor of the eight-column, eight-page news distributor. Basil L. Walters, ex- ' i8 is news editor of the weekly sheet. He is a member of Headquarters Section 617. The Ambulance Service Xews, pub- lished weekly by the soklier.s at Allen- town, Pennsylvania, is hailed by the In- ternational News Service as the pioneer camp newspaper of America, and the Na- tional Board of Journalism credits it with l eing- the best. It is a sixty-four-column pa- lmer, chuck full of camp news, features, art work, cartoons and stories of ambulance driv- ers. A pictorial supplement and a cartoon strip of Buck Private Jones add to the sheet ' s popularity. A staff of seven has put it out for eleven months and cleared over three thousand dollars. Its mailing list in- cludes President Wilson and his Cabinet, all army officials, all training camps here and abroad, members of the consular service all over the globe, colleges, and several thousand paid subscribers. H E Page Seventeen 1918 .iBl OS t N-l 1. U. GIFT FLAGS liuliana L ' nivcrsii_ - sliulcius ami facully women ])resented to the Ambulance Cor])s two i iii s of standard size, one Red Cro ' s, tlu- other collet e, which it is permitted to carrv with it into action In army regulations. Each of the flaT;s is of heavy flag- silk, twen- tv-five by nineteen inches, with an inch and a half gold fringe, and each will be mnunled iin a six-foot standard. The design of the Red Cross flag is the familiar red cross on the white field. The University fla ' is di- i(led diagMnall} ' into two triangles, one of white and the otliei- of red. The red field contains the University seal. The letters of the unit printed in yold are in the white field. Chaki.ev ' s Still Carkyinc On Pago n:iKhtoen 19 X k M DIJ Up with Your Right Hand TRAINING CAMP WHEX the announcement was first made of tlie first Reserve Officers Training Camp to be held at Fort Benjamin Harrison, at Indianapolis, beginning on May 15, 19 17, and lasting until August, there was a rush on the part of Indiana University students and alumni, Avho wanted to do their part for Uncle Sam. ( jf the hundred or more students wIk ) applied thirty-one were admit- ted. These men received full university credit so that they would not be handicapped on their return to school after the war. Those Ikkisistible Uniforms ! ii i ' ase Nineteen 1918 r- .. . ' ' .ui 9 .h jih 4 M I. U. Men in First Tkai. ].m, Cami ' . I-uki Hakkisu.n The camp was to have opened on the eighth of May. but owing ' in the laro-e number of applicants it was delayed until the fifteenth of May. and lasted till August fifteenth. Oil. lulwin V. Glenn, wlm Cdunnandcd the tn t])s on the Mexican border a ear ago, was ])laced in command. The cam]) at l irt 1 larri- son was used for the men of the R. f X T. C. from Indiana. ( )Iii(i .and Kentucky. There were five thousand men from these . ' states. The rei|uirements for admission were strict — only men o er twenU ' years and nine months of age, who ])assed a very rigid ])hysical and mental exann ' nation. being ;idmilted. A ery large ])ercentage ot the Indiana I ' nixersily students ])assed these exaniin;itions. The first month of the camp all men received the same instruction, such as .s(|uad and company movements. At the end of the month they were divided iiUo five br.anches i the service, giving them sjiecial tr.aining in tlu--e diffei-eiU (le] ;irtments. The five de])artment-; were the inf;intr ' . c;i alr -. field .artillerv. engineers and coast artillery. The I ' ugi TwL ' nly 1918 men who were placed in the coast artillery were sent to Fortress Ion- roe, A ' irginia, to complete their training. Besides the regular drilling that the men were given, military tactics were also studied, requiring nnich time to be spent with text books. In spite of the amount of work, the men enjoyed the life. Never a week went bv without several company dances being given in Indianapolis. The three professors of I. U. who were in the first camp recei •ed commissions as captains, Professors Seavey and Campbell in the in- fantry and Prof. Joseph Wright in the coast artillery. Practically every part of the State was represented by Indiana Uni- versity students and alumni in the first camp. Among the more promi- nent students who received commissions are the following: IN Page Twenty-One = 2 19i u f Cajnains — William I), i ' .cck-r, Clark Springer, I ' aiil I 1. Wciland and Travis Williams. First Lieutenants — Archie 0. Krehart, Eniil W. Mcdiy. Allen T ' . -Maxwell and William Ochiltree. Second Lieutenants — C. S. lUishman. Eug ' ene J. Cadue. 1 Inward Clark, Frank R. FJliolt, Otto En ;iehart, X ' edder Card, Ral])]i C. Hast- ings, E. E. Lindlev, Everett P. AlcC )y. I- ' real MchUosh, Louis 1 . Mur- chic, Spencer C. I ' ope, Xoel C. Ruddell, Xorman Sclilemnier, Wavne Schmidt, Clem J. Steis.;mever, William .M. Strack, Chester K. Wiley and Ivan Zarin.; . . tter a lew weeks ' inlerxal the second l eser e ( )t ' ficers ' Trainiu ' (am]) was uprned, in die latter i)art of Au,i; ' iv-l, and continued until alioui TlianksLiLiuL; . The oi)enin;4 of this cam]) found ninel ' men from Indiana L ' niversity who had successfully passed the examinations and were acce])led. Ai?ain the faculty was re])reseiited hv three of its members, viz.. Profs. Paul ' . McXult and C. W . Snow ,ind Instructor V 1 ' ii K ' T wen I y - T wo 1918 DH M n yi }.Iatthe v Winters. A few of the better known students who entered this camp were the following: Joseph K. Barclay, Ray D. Casey, John D. Diggs, Raymond Haffner, Alader H. Hamborsky, Christian H. Hartke, John H. Keck, Prentice Knox, Harlan McCoy, Herman B. Xnssbaum, Earl M. Peckinbaugh, Ernest A . Shockley, John L. Slick, J. ' ard Starr, Calvin Perry Stone, Sherman Clinton, Cope Hanly and Jack Blackburn. Alany of the Indiana men who received commissions were stationed at Camp Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky, and at Camp Shelby at Hatties- burg, Mississippi. Others were stationed at the various cantonments in the countrv. Page Twenty-Three lyio ARuuiuc: V:; The first Iiuliana L ' liiwrsil}- man tn land as a L ' nilcd Statc soldier in l ' ranco was I- irsl Lieut. Ted jnhnson, son nf I Icrald Whetstone Johnson, for years at the head of the Latin Department of hicHana L ' niversity. Lieutenant Johnson landed in l-rance as an officer of an infantry regiment. 1 le had served as an officer of the Indiana national Suard (in the . k-xican border and was at the officers ' school at Fort Leavenworlh when the 1 ' ershint;- exiiedilion was made uj). Lieutenant Johnson is twenl -three ears old. I FiKST Kkvku.lk C.M.I. Page Twoiity-Four m D IJ E7. . s Capt. Joseph A. Wright was a member of the Jour- nalism Department of In- diana University. He at- tended the first training camp and received the com- mission of captaincy. He is now at Fort Afonroe in Coast Artihery. His ad- dress is Capt. J. A. Wright, C. A. N. A., Fort Monroe, Portland, Me. .AL3.J0R Morton C. mpbell is a member of the faculty of the Law Department and is on leave of absence dur- ing the war. Major Camp- bell attended the second training camp at Fort Ben- jamin Harrison and received a commission of captaincy, but was promoted to mnjor the first of the year. He is now with the Depot Bri- gade. His address is Fifth Training Battalion, 159th Depot Brigade. C.vpT. W. A. Se.wey was a member of the Law Faculty of Indiana Univer- sity : he is now on leave of absence at Camp Zachary Taylor. Captain Seavey w-as elected to the faculty again this year but withdrew to attend the second Train- ing Camp, where he re- ceived the commission of captaincy. His address is Company M, 334th Infan- try, Camp Taylor. y IJ Page Twenly- Five 1918 M . RbuTUS V YARN SHOP In tlic West Parlurs ni the Stiulciit UuiUliiis is the University Yarn Shop, wlicrc girls may learn to knit as vveil as to receive yarn tor knitting. The Woman ' s Leagne originated the idea of having a real sliop at the University and it has since developed ra])idly. s The first shipment of yarn was received in March and since then there have been two ■more shipments, ninety-ei,ght ponnds being received in the last one. As the .Arbntus goes to press there are two hnndred girls who knit there now and there is plent - of material for more workers. The shop is open on Tuesdays and Fridays from 2 130 to 5 130, when beginners may come to the shop to receive their material and learn to knit. In the last shipment, sweater yarn was also received, so that beginners might learn something easier than socks. . s a token of appreciation, the war mothers and girls of the University, under the direc- tion of Dean Ruby E. C. Mason and the Woman ' s League, sent Christmas boxes to all the Indiana University boys in service. Each girl chose a soldier from the list of boys in ser- vice, to whom she might send a bo.x. Several weeks of preparations preceded the packing of the boxes. The girls knitted sweaters, wristlets and socks for the soldiers and the war mothers n ade 6-iS pounds of fruit cake and candles. Greetings from Dr. Bryan were in- cluded with the other gifts. The climax of the undertaking was the preparation of the 1)0xes for shipment, when the girls met to pack over six hundred of them. Letters from the boys show how the gifts were appreciated in camp and trench. CAMPUS WAR RELIEF FUND The Wiiinan ' s League BoTrd. desiring to increase the efficiency of the women of the University in war relief work, authorized a finance conuuittee in b ' eliruary to insure ma- terials for the great nundier of hours of war work service pledged by the women students at the second semester registration. This conuuittee had charge of the raising of a Campus War Relief Fund, which was contributed by the students and faculty. The sum of $550 a month was pled.ged for the remainder of the semester. This amount is used to provide material for the Red Cross Surgical Dressings Shop, the Campus ' arn Shop, the French Relief and V. W. C. . . Civilian Relief. I ' iii;.- Tw.tilySIx 1918 fei M RED CROSS WORK SHOP In lay, 1917, Indiana University sent Louise Stubbins and Elizabeth Sage to Chicago for an intensive course in the making of surgical dressings. They returned prepared to teach others, and at the beginning of the summer session they offered a Red Cross course in that work. The same classes were offered in the winter semesters. Early in Xovember there was opened in Kirkwood 4 a Red Cross workshop, where coeds and townswomen might come to prepare gauze dressings and bandages for use overseas. So eagerly was the opportunity seized that between that time and April, igi8, thousands and thousands of pieces were shipped. The workers crowded the one room until the big room, Kirkwood 3, was added to the shop. There are tables now to accommodate more than one hundred and fifty women at one time. The uniform is a white apron and white cap. Miss Sage and Miss Stubljins are per- mitted to wear read gauze caps and their assistants may wear blue gauze. 5] Page Twenty-Seven 1918 SVl BUTUS X M Miss Georgia Finley, formerly instructor in the Home Economics Department, re- (X ' i (.cl an appointment from Washington as cliief dietitian of Base I l()si)ital Xo. t,2. The hospital sailed on December 3 and is now seeing service somewhere in I- ' rance. Uefore Aliss Finley left, the wnmeii nf the I ' niversity ])resented a wrist watch to her at the same time that llu ' ' i)rescnled comfort kits to Battery 1 . I ' liK ' - ' r ' wiiily-IClKhl 1918 = Ii r EZ AT 5 Capt. Arthur T. Dalton H Ei Page Twenty-Nine 1918 K MILITARY SCIENCE fV Al ' rpartiiK ' iH n{ Miltiary Science and Taclics was estahlislu-d in Indiana L ' nivcrsity during- the s])rini;- semester of kjiJ. The rnixersily was a1)le to C(ini|)ly with all the Government re(|nirements till ' a l cser ' e ( )rficers ' Training ' C ' (ir] s and a trainin ' ,;- cnr])s was dlfi- ciall_ - installed. C ' apt. t ani])l)ell Kin , of the Seventh lnl ' antr -, was detailetl hy llie (iovernnient to estahlish the military dei)arinient. I ' n- der his (hrection three companies were organized and drilled in tiie scliool of tlie sokHer, school of the s |nad and school of tlie com])any. 1 ' rill rl ' held e er ' niornini; at :i3. When the weather did not permit ont-of-door drillino instruction in first aid was given in the gynmasiiini. On Friday of each week the companies were drawn up in battalion formation and were reviewed 1)y Ca])tain King. In Xo einl)er, Hjij, Capt. lulwin j. Xowlen, also of the Seventh In- fantr -, was detailed to take the place of Captain King, who had been called into active service. Captain X ' owlen supervised the drill of six companies, three of which met in tlie morning and three in the after- noon. During the months of bad weather Captain Xowlen lecturetl on the Infantry Drill Regulations, Interior Guard Duty and i ' rolilems in . rtiller - Work. In January, Captain Xowlen was relieved from detail at Indiana Cnixersitv and was called intf) actix ' e service with the Piih-c Thlrlv riYQ rank of lieutenant-colonel. In his place Capt. Arthur T. Dalton was detailed to the University. Captain Dalton took charge in January of 1918. The 9:30 period was set aside and classes moved up to make a regular time for all the companies to drill together. The six companies were formed into bat- talions and a regiment. Student officers were appointed to command the regiment, with rank according to their class, ability and former training. Officers ' school was established on londay and Thursday afternoon, and non-com school on Tuesday and AA ' ednesday. Dattal- ion parades and regimental parades and reviews showed the great prog- ress the student-soldiers had made. Uniforms were secured for every man, and when in March Major M. B. Garber came to inspect the regi- ment he termed their progress little short of remarkable. By order of the ' ar Department Sergt. Stanley Jones, retired, came to act as an assistant to the commandant. Captain Dalton. Much of the credit for the progress is due to Captain Dalton, who has made a place for him- self in the hearts and respect of everyone in the University. E Page Thirty-One 1918 W ii s  «4|.,i J ij- A REAL RESERVE OFFICERS ' TRAINING CAMP In ihc Reserve Officers Trainin: ' Cor])s at Indiana L ' niversity the Government is trainini men to be officers in the future armies of the United States. Indiana University has complied with all the Govern- ment requirements for the establishment of the Training Corps and Indiana University studen ts given all the op])(irtunities of the R. ( ). T. C. When the student completes his full cnurse iit the Military Science and Tactics Department, and receives a dii)li)nia from the L ' ni ersity. his name is i)laced on the Government li t ol those eligil)le to recei e commissions in the Reserve Armv. I] P.iBo Thirty-Two 1918 y You should count yourselves as in spirit enlisted men in the United States Army. Your first thought every day should be in what you can most effectively serve your coun- try in the greatest crisis in its his- tory. If we are worthy to enjoy the liberty won for us b Wash- ington and b Lincoln, we must now fight for it anew. —WILLIAM L. BRYAN. E 1Q18 IN SOLDIER VERSES TNI ' . I;i i iralik ' allnilinii dl liicrarN ' rrilics has hccii drawn Inward llic jMirlry written since the war l)e,i;an. All thniu,;Ii the a cs poetry has hcen liie medium fm- the expression of fine emolion. And now we have ])oelry — fine |)oetry — written In ' sokhers wlio ha ' e L ' ( ne to fi ht. and hy mothers, sweethearts and sisters who keep the hdiiie fires lini ' ninii ' . The fi illowino- Sokher A ' erse was written by I ' rank l)a id (in. formerly hjiL iish instructor here and now with the Indiana I iiixiM-sit v Ambulance ( ' iiri)s in France: S()iJ)ii:i-: i-,KSi-: C() ■Tl ST.s A I ' lcnki ' . Xt-ar tlic arlior ' s trailing vine. Clad in purest wliite, I ' air hair draped across tlie lirnw. So you st. ' md tonight. Stand and gaze out at the tsrs Tlirough your wistful eyes, W hich for hrilliaiicy outdo Sunmicr ' s jeweled skies. - Stretched full lengtli upon tin- rod In a camp of Mars, 1 lift pleading hands ;Mid eyes To the self-sanu ' stars. Tin; Two Sk.vtriks Wrapped in the darkness of night. Drowsily waiting the light, lie paces his lie;it alone Sudden his path is with violets lilui-. The drizzly rain is the spring ' s soft dew- And he thinks of naught hut home. iSathed in the grafi ' s dull glow, I ' ar away from the foe. She dreams of the hattle afar — The wiiul is a sigh of pain. The sha lows are forms ( f (he shiiii And she thinks of naught hut w.ir. I ' .VIIKR THK Sr.VliS As I lie upon my cot Gazing at the skies, -Stars fade out and 1 discern I ' airy forms arise : Here and there they dart across Heaven ' s darkened dome, Tri|i with winged feet the stairs — Siliiith, turn home. Reveille I I look ahout, Uright my cot appears; Ulankets w-et with dew, said Jim : Dew? I quavered — Tears! Fairies (piit their play last night And with tear drops sealed Ryes, which if they wake again Wake on Moody field. .Mkmoio Dreams of a path-marked caminis Love of the things th;it l st : Truth springing up like the I ' hoeni. h ' rom ashes gray of the past: A word like a light connecting Xew paths with the old we ' ve trod, .Some of us call it nicniorv - Others call it Cod. - 1-rank Ihividsoii l ' jiK - Thtrty-Ki ' lir Serjeant Kenyon Stevenson, ex- ' iS, was to have been editor of the m iS ArlnUns, l)ut he was caUed ti the colors in September, u;! , and entered the 325th Field Artillery at Camp Zachary Taylor. He acted as clerk in that bat- tery until Jannar}- of this year, when he entered the third officers ' training- cam]i. Tn all the book work and drill work of camp life he has excelled. His training school is almost at an end now (A] )ril, [ )i8). While in the L ' niversitv, Afr. Stevenson was always to be found where there was construct- ive work to do. He was editor-in-chief of the Daily Student ' iG- ' iy, was business manager of the Hoosier and was one of the two junior assistants of the Arbutus. He won the inter- class discussion of 1916, and was a member of the Sigma Delta Chi, the Union Board, History Club and Writers Club and of Tan Kappa Alpha . ]Mr. Stevenson was an economics major and a member of the Sigma Xu fraternity. sp;rgeaxt stevexsox r n Aless call is the most welcome one to the soldier except taps. W here he eats, what he eats or how he eats it, does not make so much difference to the soldier as just that he g-ets to eat. f % .:i ' ¥ r Some Mess! . Page Thirty-Plve iyi8 Ki U WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY AT INDIANA UNIVERSITY 73 1 ' . ' ' tl ' .S upplvin,; ' I ' nclc Sam ' s forces with no less iliaii twelve Indiana University is also doini;- her jiart in another a_ - toward win- ning the war. h arly in the year a wireless tele. ' raphy class was organ- ized nnder I ' rof. !• . A. Molhw in order to jjrepare men tor service in the Sii iial Corps. This course soon hecame one of the most popular in the University, especially for men who expected to be dratted he- fore the end of the vear, and within two weeks after the course started over thirt ' had enrolled. The course was not limited to L ' niversity students and c|uite a num- ber of men from Bloomins,lon took advantag ' e of the chance to train for a commission while waiting- to be called. Before the tirst semester was finished se eral of the men had left the class and - ome ol these are now in the Signal Corps, ])rohahl - on account ot the wurk taken here. The course was coiuinued the second semester and will he cotitimied as lono- as the Government has need for men in this branch ot the ser- vice. Out of the class there are probably a score of men now who would be able to pass an examination for entrance into this branch ot the arniv, and all are of the o])inion that the course is one oi the best things that exist, patriotically speakint; ' , at Indiana. I ' m;.- ■riiiny-SIx 18 M SM ' I ' ' .S npplvin,;.; ' Uncle Sam ' s forces with no less than twelve lundred men during the first year of America ' s part in the war. V (g First Row — Waynick, Eash, Harding, IcUt, oung, Uusli, Irelan, i ' cck. Second Row — Green, Forsythe, Kunkel, Smiley, Barnes, Hylton, Spraurer, Purple. Third Rozu — Richardson. Heaton, Boruff, DeiMotte, Lingle, Deer, Buchanan. l- ' nvriii f ' tJtc — Li ' ibert, Maier, Xeiswanger, Johnson, Xortham, Reed, Stonecipher. I- if til Roxi ' — Kerr, Cadou, Schaupp, ' arner (director), Huntington, Fisher, Heighway, Brown. THE UNIVERSITY BAND Without the Indiana Univer.sity Band all the athletic contests would fizzle out, so far as pep is concerned. The band is one of the biggest joy-making factors on the campus. Under the leadership of Archie Warner the band has just completed the most successful year of its existence. Its personnel has been enlarged and its organization im- proved. Perhaps its most important function has been the great part it has taken in the drilling of the soldiers. Marching to a band has added zest to the military training. Page Thirty-Seven = I] Ei 1918 LiK M STARS IN OUR SERVICE FLAG INDIANA ' S ROLL OF HONOR Adams, Don Ci., ' i i Adams, Howard W ' .. ' 06 Adams. L. M. Cainpliell, ' og Addlcman. Claude H., ' iS Ader. Jacol). 14 Adkiiis. Willard F... ex- ' ii Aikman, Everett M. Aker, Robert R. Akin. Raymond. ' 06 Aldridge. Schuyler C. ex- ' l8 Alexander. Ezra D. Allen. Ross E.. ' 13 Allen. Walter O., ' ig Allenbaugh. Arlcigli E. Allenbaugli, Carl J., ex- ' i Altmann. George J. Alvis. Ebnoiid O.. lO Anderson, Farnuni. cx- ' iQ Anderson, Ered L.. ex- ig Anderson. Ered X.. ' 13 Anderson, Hanson H.. ' 11 Angleton, Laurel M., ex- ' l6 Anthony, Virgil E.. 15 Arnett. Emmctt W ' .. ex- ' 16 Arnkens. Conrad S.. ' 15 Aydelotte, ' ill E.. Jr.. ex- ' o; Badders. Ara C, ' i.S Bailev, Paul P. Raker. Charles I.. ' 14 Raker, Frederick C, ex- ' ig Baker, Harold S., ex- ' 18 Baker, John E., ' 10 Bain, Benjamin B., ex- ' i8 Balch. H. Emmett. ' 18 Baldwin, Howard M.. ' 13 Baldwin. Ross O.. ex- i3 Barbour, Humphrey M., ' 15 Barbour, Roger M.. ex- ' ig Barclay, Joseph K.. ' 05 _ Barkman. Irvin W., ex- ' JO Barnes, Arlie R., ' 15 Barnes, Cullen B., ex- ' i8 Barnes, Claude M.. ex- ' i7 Barnhart. Hugh A., ' 15 Barnhart, N ' irgil !■' ., ' ' 7 Bartlett, Clifford L., ' 14 Bartley. Donald A„ ' 12 Bauer, Carl H., cx- ' i8 Batchclor, Chester A., ' 02 Bayard, George R., ex- ' l8 Reamer, Gail H., ex- ' ig Bechtold. Wilbur C. cx- ' i6 Beck, George J., ex- ' ig Beck, Roland, cx- ' ig Beck, William M., e ' i.i Bedwell, Jesse E., ex- ' i7 Bcelcr, Raymond C, ' 10 I ' .eeler, William D., ' 17 lleetham, John C, ' 16 r.eidon, Birt, ' 17 Bell, Bruce B., ex- ' i5 I ' .ennett, Lawrence II., ' ;- ' liickel, David .A., ig Biglcv, George .A., ex- ' i7 Riils, Robert M. Bingham, Charles, ex- ' 20 liinzer. Edward. ' 17 Piirely. Maurice, ex- ' 12 Birmingham. Peter J. Blankenship, Ernest G.. ex- ' 07 I ' .Iank, Ralph I., ' 15 Hlew, Micliael J., ' 15 Hlough, Eloyd M., ex- ' ig Blue. Thomas G.. ' 1.=; I ' lything. Jefferson 1).. ' 01 I ' .obliitt. J. Douglas, ' cn) Bock, Clarence L.. ' i r.oetticher, . ibert ' ., cx- ' 20 Boliannon. McKinley J., ex- i8 Boleman, Edward, ' 17 Bollenliacher, J. Carlisle, ' 06 Bond, George S. Boonstra, Edwin B., ex- ' 20 l orchardt, Bernard F.. ex- ' i Born, Firmer R.. ex- ' i8 Boulden, Herbert G.. cx- ' 20 Bouman. Dennis. ex- ' 20 Boruff. Glenn T.. ' 16 Boston, Floxd H., ex- ' i5 Bottenfield, i. arl R.. ex- ' ig I ' .owers. Lee Metzler. cx- ' i8 Bowman, George O.. ex- ' ig Bow-man. George W.. ' 12 Bowser, Franc is K., ' 17 r.owser, Harold J., ex- ' r8 Bowser. Hcrschel P., ' ig Brackett. Lyman E., ex- ' 15 Brammer, Harlo M., cx- ' l4 Branch, Emmett F., ' g6 Brayton, Frank A., ' 12 Breitwicser, Thomas J., ' 12 I ' .retz. Ross B.. ' 06 Brincr, Kenneth, ex- ' ig Brooks. Fred R.. ex- ' T8 Bross. Harmon, ' 17 l?rower. Dean, ' ig Brown, Ira Otho, ' 17 Brown, Ray G., ex- ' i8 Brown, S. Leroy, ' 05 Bryan, Robert, cx- ' ig Buckley, Roy D., cx- ' oo Buckner, George D., ' 16 Buehl, Robert V. Buell, Scott E.. cx- ' i3 I ' lulson, Eugene L. Burns. William A., ex- ' i8 Burgman. James E., ' 16 Buroker, Paul, ex- ' ig r.urrows. ' oyle -M., ' 14 Burton, Enoch, ex- ' ig lUirton, Everett Tyler, ex- ' i8 Buschmann, Chas. Severin, ' 17 Buskirk, Allen V., ' 15 Bulter, Raymond A.. ' 08 Byers, X ' orman R. Byrne, Basil U., ex- ' 18 Cadou, Eugene J., ' 17 Cimeron. Don F., 07 Campbell, Clayton C. Campbell, Ernest, ex- ' io Campbell, Harold, ex- ' 2I Campbell. .Malcolm. ex- ' l8 Campbell, Morton C. Campbell, Park H., cx ' 20 Caplinger, Carmon ()., ex- ' i8 Capouch, George W., ' t3 Carmichael, Orin B., ' 13 Carnduff, .Arthur, ' 07 Carr, .Arthur X., ex- ' l8 Carson, Ivan, ex- ' 18 Carter, Floyd R.. ' ig Carter, Kent, ex- ' 2o Carter, Laurue D. Cary, Russell L., ex- ' i7 Casey, John F., ' 16 Casey, Ray D., ' 16 Casey, Stanley M., ' ig Cassady, Vernal. Cassell, Joseph C, ' 11 Cauble, Cliarles, ex- ' ig Cauble. William C, ' g8 Chandlers, Othnicl R., ex- ' ig Chancellor, John E., ex- ' i8 Cb.indlcr, .Arthur C, ex- ' ig Chapman. John M.. ' 17 Chaiijiell, Francis R.. ' 17 Chesser. Clvde B.. cx- ' l8 Chester, Hull W., ex- ' 20 Choate. Emmet C, ' 14 Christie. Clem S., cx- ' i4 Christie. Donald C. ex- ' l8 Clauser. Eldo H.. ' 1 1 Clark. Cecil P., ' 17 Clark, Edmund D. Clark. Howard. Ir., ' 16 Clark. C. Oliii, Clements. Clark 1 .. ex- ' ig Clvne, George W., ' 16 C.ible. Paul B. Coerper. Carl F.. ex- ' i7 Cogswell, William W.. ex- ' ig Thlrl -KiKllt Cohen, George C, ' 07 Cole, Ira, ' 19 Coleman, Chester F., ex- ' i4 Conkle, Fred A., ex- ' i8 Congieton. Thomas C, ex- ' ig Connor, Chr-rles E.. ' 10 Connor, Prentice W., ex- ' 20 Connelly, Paul C, ex- ' ig Conover, Milton, ex- ' i8 Cook, Rolla v., ex- ' i7 Cooper, Herschel H., ex- ' i7 Cordrey, Frank Beck, ex- ' 20 Corya, Harold W., ' 17 Corya, Lester, ' 15 Cottingham, Charles E. Cottingham, Malcolm, ex- ' 19 Cottingham, Norris, ex- ' 19 Coval, Willis N., ex- ' o5 Cox, Bair F., ' 17 Cox, H. ISIonford, ' 19 Cox, Preston. ' 13 Craft, Kenneth L., ' 16 Cragum, Dwight B., ' 13 Cravens, Bernard K, ex- ' 20 Creamer, Charles R., ex- ' 20 Creighton, Kenneth, ex- ' i9 Creviston, Russell C, ex- ' l6 Crickard, Earl R.. ' 21 Cripe, Joseph, ex- ' i3 Crossen, Henrv F., ' 17 Cunningham, Lyle, ex- ' ig Curry, Claud A., ' 18 Curry, Edgar, ' 13 Curry, Harold E., ex- ' 20 Curtis, Charles A., ex- ' ig Curtner, ; Ivron L., ' 11 Dailey, Field T., ex- ' T6 Daubenheyer, Miles F.. ' 07 Davenport, Raymond E., ' 18 Davidson, Samuel F., ' 13 Davis, Albert R., ex- ' ig Davis, Edgar C, ' 15 Davis, Emorald, ex- ' iq Davis, Harold M., ex- ' ig Davis, Leslie L, ex- ' ig Davis, Merrill S., ' 08 Davis, Parvin L, ' ig Davis, Paul Y., ' 12 Davis, Walton P.. ex- ' i8 Davison, Lawrence H., ' 15 Day, John T., ' 15 DeBruler. George R., ' 98 Decker, Harvey B., ' 16 Decker Leo C. ex- ' i8 Deerhake, William A., ' 08 DeHaan, Peter, ex- ' 2o Dehority, George H.. ' id Detwiler, Calvin B., ex- ' 2o Deupree, Herman G., ex- ' o8 Devilbliss, Francis F., ex- ' i2 Devoe, Elmer P., ' 16 Dierkinar, Irvin S., ex- ' i7 Diggs, Elder W., ' 16 Diggs, John H., ' 16 Dinimick, Erwin, ex- ' i8 Dixiin, I ' Vank H., ' 11 Doeppers, William . ., ' 16 Dostal, Bernard S., ' 15 Dougherty, Earl J., ex- ' 18 Downing, Roger Q., ex- ' 20 Drake, Benjamin H., ex- ' 12 Draper. Frank A., ex- ' 2o Drieshach, Clyde F., ' 03 Dryer, Charles S., ' 13 Dukes, Vance, ex- ' 20 Dunlap, Harold F. Dunn, Frank H., ex- ' i3 Dunn, Ross, ex- ' i6 Dunning, Lehman M., ' 08 Dinvelius, Raymond C, ex- ' 18 Duzan, Harry V., ' 17 Dntchess, Charles E. Eager, Sherman W., ex- ' i2 Eash, Cornelius E., ' 10 Eastman, Xicholson J., ' 19 Eaton, ' ernet E., ex- ' 20 Eddington, Harley, ' 17 Edwards, Chester H., ' 14 Edwards, Eugene A., ex- ' ig Edwards, Joseph C, ' 12 Edwards, Scott Robert, ' 14 Eicher, Olen E., ' 16 Eikenberry, ' irgil L.. ' 15 Eley, Thomas C, ' 16 Filer, John O., ' 19 Elliott, Frank R., ' it FIlis, Bert E., ' 19 Embardt, John W., ' 11 Engiehart, Otto E., ' 15 Enochs, Rex Paul, ' 15 Ensminger, Leonard A. Enzor, Ora K., ' 17 ErehTrt, Archie D., ex- ' i7 Essex, Don L., ' 17 Furit, Deering H.. ' ig Ewart, Howard W.. ex- ' ig Ewing. Claude M., ' 16 T aris, Frank B.. ' i; Paris, James ]McDill, ex- ' ij Farlow, Merton A., ' 08 Farr, Fred E., ex- ' ig Feagans, Robert C. ex- ' i5 Fellows, Lloyd W., ex- ' ii Fenters, Roy C, ex- ' ig Fenwick, Herbert, ' 20 Ferguson, Luther S., ex- ' i7 Fers-uson, Ormal J., ' 17 Fields. Merritt, ex- ' i6 Fike Forest A. Findling, Allan, ex- ' 20 Finley, Georgia E. Finney, Melvin Ray. ex- ' i3 Fisher. Roy G.. ex- ' i6 Fleming. Tom, ex- ' i6 Poland, Roscoe R., ex- ' oj Folffer, Harry T., ' 17 Folk, Raymond, ex- ' ig Foltz, Charles T., ex- ' i8 Force, Ernest W., ' 14 Ford, George W.. ' 14 Forry, Frank, ' ig Fortner, Wade H., ' 13 Foutz, Willis Don, ex- ' 20 Frank, John K., ' 17 Fraze, James W.. ex- ' ig Frazer, Will, ' 16 Free, Robert C, ex- ' i7 Freed, Herman E., ex- ' i8 Frederick, Karl A., ' 10 French, Don R., ex- ' i4 French, Thomas J. French, Virgil French, J. Wymond Prenzel, James P., ' 16 Prisbie, Hallet B., ' 13 Fulk, Murl P., ' 14 Fulkerson, Oliver H., ex- ' oo Funkhouser, Plmer Punkhouser, Paul, ex- ' 20 Furnihs, Pdward S., ex- ' 20 Gaddy, Puclid T., ' 19 Galvin, ' iliam M., ' 15 Gambill, Grover, ex- ' 20 Gann, Dewell, Jr., ' 11 Gard, Vedder, ex- ' i7 Gardner, Dr. Fletcher, ex- ' gi Gardner, Kenneth, ' 06 Garton, Harry V. Garner. Howard A. Gastineau, Frank M., ' 16 Gates, Leslie P., ex- ' i7 Gehres. Robert W.. ex- ' ig Geyer, Russell, ex- ' i4 Gheen, Olaf, ex- ' i8 Gift, Weklon A., ' ig Gilbert, Ralph W., ex- ' ig Gilbert, W ard O., ex- ' i6 Gill, Bernard P., ' 16 Gill, George P., ' 12 Gill, Heber J.. ' 17 Oilman. Lawrence H., ex ' ig Gillespie. Bryant W.. ex- ' ig Glascock, David A,. ' 15 Glaze, .Arthur, ex- ' io Goar. Everett L., ' 07 Goff, Horace P., ex- ' i8 Goodman, Dan V., ex- ' i6 Goss, Arthur, ex- ' 15 Goss, Elmer D., ' 12 Graessle, Harold P., ' 16 Graham, - ' Mois B. Graham, Nathan P. Grant. Deloss, ' 17 Grantham. Guy E., ' 09 Graves, Orville M., ' 19 Graves, Philip M., ' 12 Gray, Garold N., ex- ' ig Gray. Harold N., ex- ' ig Gray, Harry P., ex- ' 18 Gray, Herman B., ex- ' ig Green, Charles H., ex- ' i6 Green, Claud D., ' 12 Green, Lowell M., ex- ' 04 Green, Robert, ex- ' 20 Green, Tom W., ' 17 i Page Thirty-Nine iyl8 ±Ci i uo I (irtnoiro. Louis B., cx- ' i4 Griffith. James W., ' 17 (irini. Iveub.n. ex- ' i8 (iri iiT. Otlo W.. ' 10 Gross. I ' lay. i-x- ' i8 Grossiiicklc. kus ell L. Grosvcnor. Julius J.. ' 11 Guedi-l. Arthur E., ' 08 Gutclius. Charles B.. ' 05 Guthrie. Francis C. Gwinn. Harry O.. ex- ' i6 ll:i(lU-y, Alfred W.. ' lo lialfiKT. kaynioiul K.. ' i; I la.i;,m.Tt -. .Mclviu E.. ' 02 II aim. K. ' crnon I iainiliauKli. I ' aul .A., ex- ' i; I I ale. (ieorg; C. ' 15 Hall, ' riiurnian D.. ' 12 llanier. Dayton S.. ex- ' 2o 1 lamer. MarU E., ' 15 Hamilton. Calvin R., ex- ' i.s Hamilton, Orville G., ' ip Hamilton. Mendall, ex- ' 20 llamnious. Foy H.. ex- ' jo Hancock. Hobert T.. ex- ' 20 Hancock. Robert V., ex- ' iij Manny. Frank M.. ex- ' 20 Harj. Albert V.. ex- ' l6 Harding. George L., ' 15 Harding. Losey L., ' 15 Harding. Myron S.. ' 19 Harless. Clarence M., ex- ' iS Harlos. Cecil, ex- ' ig Harrcll. Hahnemann ' ., ' 17 Hargrave, Homer, ' 17 Harris. Hugh E.. ex- ' i7 Harris. Robert F.. ' 15 Harris, S.amiul M.. ex- l6 llarri nn. Irwin F.. ex- ' i2 1 larrold. Wrlin. ' 14 Harshman. Louis P.. ' 17 H.arter. Harry H., ex- ' o8 Hartke, Christian H., ex- ' i.? Harvey, G;orge R.. ex- ' i2 Harvey. Ralph J., ' 17 Hasler, Edward G.. ex- ' 20 Hastings, h ' rank H.. ' 17 Hastings. Ralph G.. ' 16 Hatfield. Lawrence. ex- ' 20 Hathaway. Russell G.. ex- ' io Hauss. Roliert R. Havice. Jay F.. ex- ' i8 Hawley. Paul R.. ' 12 Haworth. George, ex- ' 09 Hawthorne. David E. Hay. Alaric. ' 17 Hayes. G. Had:n. ex- ' i7 Hayes. John V.. ex- ' i5 Hays. Everett L.. ' 17 Haymond. Lleniing C, cx- ' i=; llebcl. J.ihn W.. 12 I leaky, George V.. ex- ' ri) Hcaton. .Mian S.. ex- ' 20 Hcndcrshot. Wilfred G.. ' 15 Henderson. Lawrence E. ILnney. Max V.. cx- ' ig Hepburn. .Andrew. e.x- ' 20 Hernandez, keniberto A. Hersh. R. Clinton. ex- ' 20 Hershberger. Esmond V.. ' 1. IK-uring. Byron, ex- ' iy ller hey. Lewis B.. ex- ' 2i Hewius. Warren ' .. ' ii Hiatt. Edgar R.. ' 14 Hiatt. Russell L. Hickam. Horace M., jx- ' o7 Hicks. Elmer C. ex- ' i? 1 lickson. Fred E.. ' og llihgtower, Pleasant R.. ' 17 Hilldrup. Don G.. ' 13 llillis. Glen. ex- ' l8 nines. Dorsey M.. ' og Mines. Harlej ' C. ex- ' ii Hire. Charles. ' 17 ' Hire. Charles. ' 15 Mitz. Benjamin D.. ' 12 Hockensmith. .Albert D.. ' 17 Hocker. .August S.. ' 17 Hodson. F ' lovd L., ex- ' 20 Hoffman. Clifford W.. ex- ' 20 Miilland. Dr. (ieorge F., ex- ' g? Hiillingsworth, Benjamin II. Hollingsworth. Herman 11.. ' 17 Holmes. Claude D.. 08 Holmes. Lawrence G.. ex- ' 18 Holmes. William W.. ' 13 Hoopingarncr. D. Eugene, ex- ' 1 8 Hop])enrath. Merle W. Horner. Herbert H.. ' 14 Hottel. Henlev T., ' 17 Motlel. Lee H.. ex- ' i8 Howard, Lynn W.. ex- ' iS Howard. William H.. ' ig Hoy. Clifford R.. 13 Huiibard. John M., ex- ' 2o Huber. Lee. ex- ' l8 Huckleberry. Roy. ' 14 1 luclson, Fo.trer J., ' 19 lluffines. Thomas R. Huffman, . lbert L .. ' 17 i luff man. I ' .dward. 17 1 luffnian, Lester D.. ' 14 Hughes. G:-orge W. R.. ' 13 I Inghes, Herbert G. Hughes. Kenneth ' .. ex- ' jo Humes. Charles D. Humes. Robert T.. ex- ' 17 lluuiplirxs. Mervyn G.. ex- ' l2 Humrichouser. Henry L.. ex- ' 18 Huncilman. Harry. ; ' x- ' ig llnnsicker, Elmer ,ex- ' iS 1 hint, Lee I ' ., ' 00 Hunter, Donald V.. ex- ' 2n llunlington. Ralph, ex- ' ig Hurt, I ' aul 1- .. ' 13 llutchins. Frank F. Hutchinson. Robert O.. ' 14 Hutton. I amuel. ' 17 Hyde. Karl C. 15 TaKo Forty 1918 Hypes, hrancis E., ' 13 Hazlewood. Lee D. Ilyslop. George H.. ' 13 Ikerd. .Stanley. ' 15 lkin . Ray G.. ' 17 Ingram. Homer D.. ' 13 Irwin. John C, ' 08 Jackson. Earl W.. ' 15 Jessup. I awr.;nce. ex- ' 1 8 Johnson, [- ' red B.. ' 02 Johnson. Morris H., ' 09 Johnson. Raymond C. ' 16 Johnston. Edward S.. e.x- ' i7 Johnston. Eugene H.. ' 14 Jones. Charles, ex- ' jo Jones. Clarence K.. ' 14 Jones. Glconard H.. ' 15 Jones. Harry L.. ' 16 Jones, Herman C. ' 15 Jones. Thomas Monroe. ' 98 Jon;s. Walter K.. ex- ' 2o Jordan. John W.. ' 16 Jordan. Wilson K.. ex- ' 20 Joseph. Jackiel W.. ' i i Juday. Glen W.. ex- ' ig Kahan. Harry L.. ' 17 Kahin. George S.. cx- ' i3 K.-ihler. Maurice V., ' 6 Kahn. Howard. ' 08 K.iufmann. Daniel, ex- ' ig Kauffman. Harley M.. ex- ' l8 Keck. John Hamilton, ' 11 Keeling, F ' orrest E.. ex- ' 19 Kees. Leon, ex- ' ig Kellchcr. Melvin B.. ex- ' i8 Keller, Ovid W.. ex- ' 2i Kelly. I ' rancis J.. ' 02 Kelly. George H.. ex- ' l3 Kemp, Harold J.. ex- ' i2 Kenipf, Grover A,, ' 10 Kemper. Ralph W.. ex- ' io Kenne(I -. Elmer, ex- ' ig Kent, George R., ' t6 Kent. Donald W.. ' 13 Kent. Millard C. ' 12 Kidil. James G.. ' 13 Kilnian. Joseph E.. ' ig Kimball. George W.. ' 00 Kiine. Edward M.. ' 14 Kinunel. Prcsby H,. c - ' ig Kincaid. .Mvin. ex- ' i8 Kincaid. Arthur. ex- ' i ) Kinman. Guy M.. ' i t Kinnick. Benjamin F.. ' 17 Kiplinyer. John H.. ex- ' o4 Kirklin. Ryrl R.. ' 14 Kirkpatrick. Russell R.. ' 17 Kirschnian. Charles J., ' 16 Kittenger. Theodore .V.. ex- ' oo. Kuowlcs, . . F.nsel, ex- ' 20 Knowleton. Harry R., ' 12 Knox, Prentice R., ' 17 K..lb, Earl J., ' 17 Koons, K.ir! M,. cx- ' i? Krause. Arthur C. ' 15 A, Gex, John Joseph Pershing General coniniamling American Expeditionary forces in France, who is in com- mand of Indiana University men across the seas. H l ' aK ! Fiirly-One 1918 Ll s ' = ' J Kriisc. Walter K.. ' ly KiR ' hliT, Alfred Leon, ex- ' ig Kiicliler. Jolin R., ' 1.2 Kiilins. Ccei! L., ex- ' i5 Kurtz. Ralph E.. ' 17 Kuss, Bert R.. ex- ' l8 K te, lidwiii G. Landess. W yeth. ex- ' 2i Landretl). Austin, ' i.? Lane, William P .. ex- ' JO Lange. Walter, ex- ' 18 Laiiliam. Tames H., cx- ' o8 Larkiii. Bernard J. Lauglilin, Buller. ' 14 Lavengood, Lawrence W .. ' 17 Lawhead. ixon R. Leas, John A.. ' 08 Leasure. John K., ' 16 Lee. Glen A., ex- ' 16 Lceth. Herman B.. ex- ' i8 LeMar. Grcster H.. e - ' io Lemmon, Guy, ' i- ' Lett, F, erett. ' 13 Licber, Otto W ' .. ex- ' 16 Light. Mason R., ' lO Lindsey. F.rnu-1 F... ex- ' 15 T,indsey. J. lr:;nk. ' 13 Lingcnian. I ' yron X., ' 16 Linrrcman, Leslie R.. ' 17 Littell. Joseph J. Little. F.dward ( ).. ' 07 Little. Wendell D. Locliry. Ralnh L.. ' u Lockridge. F.rirl B.. ex- ' o7 Loftin. Rnhcrt L.. ' 17 Long. Frank F. Lorch. Basil H.. ex- ' 20 Loughniiller. William E.. cx-iS Love, Robert L. ex- ' l5 Lukcnbill. Emery D., ' 17 Lutes F.. ' 16 MacXeill. William J.. ex- ' 20. McAdams. l- ed. ex- ' ii McArdle. Charles C. ex- ' i8 McF.ride. Stanton. cx- ' i8 McCalic. Frank L. ex- o2 McCart. Donald K.. ex- ' iS McCartney. JTarry H.. ex- ' i2 McClanahan. John W .. ex- ' io McClelland. Don C. ' 00 McClintic. Broun S.. ' 05 McClure, Robert L., ' 17 McClure. William L.. ex- ' 20 McCool. William F.. ' 17 teCormick. I ' erris J.. ' 15 McCoy. Eniil W.. ' 17 McCoy. Everett I ' ., cx- ' l! McCurdv. W;dton R.. ex- ' 16 MoDill. Leslie. ' 11 McDonald. William. cx- ' i7 McGinn. Glenn, ex- ' io McGriff. Everett C. ex- ' l.S Mclndno. Ralph E. rcIntosh. Daniel C. 13 Mcintosh. Freal. ex- ' i6 Milntyre. Harry C. ex- ' i3 .Mi ' Kahan. Don M.. ex- ' o7 McKain. .Maurice C. .McKinli . Lester. ' 17 .McKiniiey. I ' .arl J., ex- ' jo . lcKinne . Walter b ' .. ex- ' il McXabb. Clarence K.. ' 14 McXabb. David W .. ' 13 McXabb, George B.. ' 16 McXeal. Raymond L.. e.x- ' 20 McXutt. Paul .. ' 13 .McReynolds. J. Wesley, ex- ' if Madenwald. l ' rederick, ex- ' 2i Magaw. James W., ' 06 M.-msfirld, l- ' reeland. ' 17 Mar(|netti ' . Martin 1... ' 15 .Marsh, Jolni . ., ' o() Marshall. Floyd, ex- ' 17 Marshall. Glen. cx- ' 20 Afartin. b ' rsie S,. ' 17 Martin. Wallace. ' 17 Martin. Waiter D.. ' 07 Martz, Clayton, ex- ' ig y ay, Russell C, ex- ' 2r Massey, Robert KoUin, ' no Masters. Robeit J., ' 16 Matthews. Fre ' l S., ex- ' 20 Matthews, Walter X.. ' 17 Maurer. Will ' 16 Maxwell. .Mian B.. ' 16 Meadcr. Mack F... ' ii Messick. .Mien G., 12 Miller. Brvson H., ' to Monroe, Edward, ex- ' ig Moore. Bruce V.. ' 14 Moore. Prentiss D.. ex- ' i8 Moore. Roliert G.. ex- ' 20 Mnrdock. Harvey L.. ' lO Murdock. Harvey R.. ' 10 Murphy, . rthur G.. ' 10 Murphv. ' an P., ex- ' ig Xeed. Harry. e. - ' l5 Maxwell. Leslie Howe. ' 06 A ' axwcll, Paul. ex- ' 20 yinw Kenneth C. cx- ' 20 Mellett. William L.. ex- ' i7 Menart. Edward H.. cx- ' t6 Mendenhall. l- ' dgar X.. ' n Mctcalf, (leorge B. Metcalf. John E., ' 93 Milburn. Rav F., ex- ' l7 Miller. Paul W.. ex- ' io Miller. Ravmond C. ' 16 Miller. William T.. ' 16 Minton. K ' oscoe. ex- ' 20 Minton. Sherman, ' m .Mitchell. I-arl IL. ' 17 Mitchell. Paul X.. ex- ' 18 Mitchel. Raymond E. Mitcliell, Roscoe . .. ' 07 Mitchell. Wavne O.. ' 16 Afoore, Ben B. Moore. F.. Earl, ex ' iS ' oore. Robert M.. l I Moore, Will C. ' 12 .Moore. William. ' 16 Morris, Charles, ' ot) Morris, Frank D., 16 Morris, George W., e. - ' l3 Morris, Paul A., ' 17 Morrison, William R. Morton. Walter R. Moser. C. Joyce Moshenrose. Paul E.. ' 12 Mossier. John D.. ex- ' i6 .Motley, Langhorn W.. ex- ' i7 Mottier, Hartwig. ' 17 Mourer. Harry H.. ' 13 Mowrcr Schuvler. ex- ' jo Mullett. DeWiU T.. ' 17 Mumford. Eugene B., ex- ' po .Mnusey, Cary Everett, ' 14 Murcbie. Lewis K., ex- ' l8 Murdoch. Earl. cx- ' 20 Murphy. Ellsworth C. ex- ' i4 Murphy. Harry E.. ' 16 Murphy. Samuel. ' 07 AFurray. Dwight H.. ' 17 Musselman. .Andrew J.. ex- ' l7 ALvers, Allen G., ' 17 Myers, Fred, ' 14 Myers. Roy ' . Myers. Walter R.. ex- ' oS Xafe. Cleon .A.. ' 17 Xaugle. Raymond . . eely. Robert H.. ' 08 Nelson. Edwin C. ex- ' 17 Xewby, Glenn H.. ex- ' in Newcomer, Frank ' . Newland. . rthur E., ' lO Newlon. Carl B.. ' n Newman, .Mvin E.. ex- ' 10 X ' ewman. John R. Newton. Harry G.. 05 Xewton. Howard L. Nimal. Harold W.. ' 14 X orman. Hu h. ex- ' i8 Xorman. Olin B.. 06 Xorris. Wilbani W.. ' 17 O ' Brien. Cecil S.. ' 1 ? Ochiltree. William X ' .. ex- ' i7 O ' Dell, Harrv C. ' 13 _ O ' Harrow. Edgar, ex- ' io O ' Harrow. John W.. Jr., 14 Oliver. Ravmond. 17 O ' Xeal. Perry E., ' i. O ' Xcill. John L. ex- ' 13 O ' Rourkc. William S.. ex- ' lO Osternian. C?rl .A.. ' 16 Ormsbv. Joseph P., ' 11. Overshiner. Lvman, ' 15 Owen, . rnet H.. ex- ' l8 Owen. R. W ' im, ' to Owens. Paul L., ex - ' to PaP ' e. Lafayette Palfrey. Thomas R.. ex- ' i8 Palmerton. Paul. ' 17 Pancoast. Donald, ex- ' lS Patrick. E( ' win D.. ex- ' i6 Patterson. Rdiert G., ' 13 I ' liKr I rl -Two J ' attisiin, Albert .M.. c. - ' l8 Paytciii, l-razit-r J.. cx- ' 20 Pjiyton. K(il)crt S., ' 14 Pa ti)ii, illiani, t-x- Jo Pearson, Martin Liitlicr. cx- ' ja Pelililcs. Myron, ex- ' 19 Peckiniiaugh, Earl M., ' 16 Peek. Richard T., ex- ' ij Pence, Rcnjamin F.. ' 13 Pendleton, George H., ' iji Perry, Oscar B.. ' 97 Peters, Byron J.. ' 16 Peters. Jesse J. Peterson, Cecil R.. ' 11 Peterson, Robert H., ' 17 Petranoff. Theodore ' . Petty. .Monzo . .. ' iS PettiboTie. Claude R.. ' iS Pengh. Milbur. ex- ' is Pfaff. Dudlev A. Pfaff. Orange G. Phillips, Clay A.. ' 13 Phipps. Lciand K. Phillips. Ralph C. ex- ' 16 Phiilips, Walter K.. ex- ' io Pickerill. Horace M, Pichkardt. Bert. ex- ' i2 Piper. Charles l.. ' 14 Pitcher. Ray, ex- ' 20 Pitkin. McKcndree C. ' 19 Ploenges. Louis. ex- ' i8 Phunmcr. Hal T.. ex- ' i8 Poland. Raymond H.. ex- ' i9 Pollock. Wylie. ' 17 Pool. Harper. -x-2r Pope. Spencer G.. cx- ' iS Porter. John R.. ' 17 Posey. John. ' 12 Post. Byron T.. ' 16 Prosser. Robert S., ex- ' r9 Pulfcr, Foster H,. ex- ' i6 Ralier. Claude. ' 17 Rabcr, Oran L.. ' 12 Racey, Russell S., ' 12 Rady. Byron S. Ragsdale. Harrison C. Rainbolt. Oral P.. ex- ' 20 Randol])h. Ralph C. ex- ' 10 Rawles. Thomas H.. ex- ' i8 Rayl, Roy. ' ex- ' i7 Read. Lyndon P... ex- ' i8 Reagan. I ' ranklin P.. ' 13 Rcdmon. John. ' 16 Reed. Carl B.. ex- ' ig Reed. Frances K.. ' 16 Red. George, ex- ' ig Reed, Jewett V. Reed, Paul B., cx- ' 20 Reed, Robert, ex- ' i9 Reed, William C. Rees, Benjamin C. ' 08 Reeve. Bryce B.. ' 19 Reeves. John Robert. cx- ' 20 Reifeis, Carl C, ' 19 Reilcy, William E., ' 06 Reifeis, Louis !• . Keinhard, John J.. ' 06 Reynolds, Mayd, ex ' 20 Reynolds, Jasper, ex- ' 18 Reynolds, John Wesley, ' 14 Rliinehart. Barton . .. ex- ' lS Rhodes. Russell. ex- ' i9 Rice. Thurman B.. ' 14 Rich?rds. lildon Z.. ex- ' i8 Rice. Thurman B., ' 14 Nichards, I ldon Z.. e - ' i8 Richardson, Lciand M.. ' [6 Ricketts, Joseph W . Kigg, John F. Risley. Flliott C. ex- ' jo Kitchey. James O.. ' 16 Koark. t)akley F.. ex- 20 Kobbins. Louis H.. ex- ' i8 Roberts. Floyd X.. ex- ' r.s Robertson. .Veil V.. ex- ' i6 Robertson. Raymond M., ex- ' iS Roliinson. Basil Robinson. Claude .A.. ' 16 Robinson. John S.. ' 12 Rogers. .Andrew Jackson. ' 10 Rogers, Donald B.. ex- ' 19 Ro,gers. Leon. ' 12 Rogers. Marion, ex- ' 19 Ropp, Eldon R. Ronsheim. L. Milton. ex- ' l7 Rose, Enibree R., ex- ' u Ross, Cecil D,. ' 15 Ross, Melville. ' 11 Royce. Stirling, ex- ' l4 Rubush. Raymond, ex- ' i5 Ruch, Percv V., ' 06 Ruddell, Xoel C, ' 17 Rndesill, Cecil L., ' 16 Kiiehl, ' ictor E., ' 07 Rumble, Claude B.. ' 17 Rupel. I ' rnest. ' 17 Russell. Dale. ' 17 Sadler. Will R..;i7 Salm. Conner K., ' 17 Sanford, Loran A.. ' 11 Saunders. Benjamin H.. ex- ' i6 Schafer. Don W.. ex- ' n) Scheibelhut. Leo C. ex- ' i7 .Scliilling. George A.. ' 15 .Schintzins. Henry J.. ex- ' i9 Schlenker. , mor H.. ' 16 Schlieker. Grant A., ex- ' 20 Schlenuner. Xorman C. ex- ' i? Schmidt. Wavne W.. ex- ' i8 Schooley. Robert. ex- ' 20 Schoonover. Rex H.. ' 12 Schuler. Herman E.. ex- ' i9 Schiller. Lacy L.. 15 Schultz. Harrv. ' 16 Sclnvarlz. Junius T., cx- ' i9 Schwartz, Russell P., ' 17 Scifres. BeniaMin M.. ' 13 Scofield. John B.. ex- ' 2o .Scott. Clair H.. ' 17 Scott, Guy W., ex- ' i,i Scovell, Robert, ' 09 Scriljuer, b ' rank, ex- ' 18 Seaney, Samuel, ex- ' 19 Seavy, W arren .A. Segar. Louis H.. ' 10 Sellers. Leroy E., ' 13 Seright. .Myron J., ex- ' l8 Setser. Lloyd E., e.x- ' 20 Seward, .-Xustin, ' 17 Seward, Shirley, ex- ' i5 Seyhert, Joseph D., ' 19 Shively, George, ' 16 Shaffer. Howard R.. ex- ' 20 Shenk. George B.. ex- ' ig .Sherman. Charles R., ex- ' l4 .Sherwood, Elmer, ex- ' 20 Sherwood. George C, ex- ' i8 Shook, Benjamin E., ' 19 Silks, Okla W., ' 17 .Sicgel, Harold, ex- ' T7 Simpson, Richard H., ' 11 Sims. Harrell W., ex- ' i9 Singer, Dwight, ex- ' 20 Sipc, X ' irgil D. Slagle, Lorenzo O., ' 10 Slick. Glen P.. ex- ' ig Sluss. John W. Smelser. Herman W.. ' 14 Smiley. Lester B.. ex- ' 2i Smith. Carl T., ex- ' i9 .Smith. Charles S.. ' 17 Smith. Claude E.. ' 16 Smith. Everett E., ' 07 .Smith. Frank S.. cx- ' i8 Smith, Henry L, ' 13 Smith. Herbert. ex- ' r7 Smith. J. Donald. ex- ' l9 Smith. James L. ' 08 Smith. J. Mason. ' 13 Smith. Olin [., ex- ' i9 Smith, Roscoe G., ex- ' l6 Smitli, Roy L.. ' 16 Smith. Samuel R., ex- ' i8 -Smith. Troy. ' 17 .Snapp. Ross. ' 1,=; .Snow. Charles W. Souder, Charles G.. ex- 03 Spear. Paul. ex- ' 20 Spencer, George A.. ' 17 Spencer, Harold S.. cx- ' i6 Spooner, John P.. ' 00 Spoor ) lillard. ex- ' 20 Springer. Henry C, ' 17 Springer, Henrv R.. ex- ' ig Starr. J. War(l. ex- ' i8 Startzman, Chile K., ' 15 Stauffer, Sanniel R., ' 13 Stavton. Chester .A.. ' 15 Stcch. C. Clifton, ' 14 Steele, George TI., ' 08 Steele, Howanl I . Steele, Merrill I . Steigmeyer, Clem J.. 75 Stevenson, Kenvon, cx- ' i8 Stillwell. Robert L., ex- ' l8 I ' :iKP I ' urty- I- ' mir -i lO ' « 1 M 1918 Stciut, Cfcil C. i ' x- ' i8 Stoutc, Walti-r M.. ' i,? Struck. William X.. 15 Straiib, Klmcr F.. e. - ' i9, Stuart, William Kusscll, ' i8 Stumi). AllKTt, ' i- ' Stunkard. Hugh W., ex- ' 19 Stiitcsmaii. Frank M.. Jr.. cx- ' i8 Sumcrliii. Harold S., ' 17 Summers. Paul K., cx- ' jo Summers. Salee C. Sumualt. W. Roy. ex- ' T7 Sutlierlin, Cecil G.. ' 13 Sutherliu. Lee, ' 14 Sutton. George S.. ' 15 Swain. James O.. ex- ' 20 Swank. L. Forrest. ' 19 Swartz. Ralph C. ex- ' 20 Sweet. Austin, ig Talbot. John F... ' 08 Tarbox. Orton E.. ' i.5 Tate. Homer E.. ex- ' io Tavlor. John M.. ' i ' ) Teifer. Robert S.. ' 16 Telford. Percy K.. ' n Templeton. Wayne K.. ' 19 Terrv. R. VanDien. ex- ' l7 Test. ' Frederick C. ' 89 Tharp. James B.. ex- ' 17 Thorn. James T. Thomas, .Mva G.. ' i? Thomas. Arden H.. ' o ) Thomas. Gordon A. Thomas. Walter. ' i9 Thompson. Burton A.. ' 06 Thompson. Charles 1 ' .. ex- ' 18 Tliomiison. Georse D.. ' 14 Thompson. Ralph F.. ' 16 Thornbursj. Bvron. ex- ' i9_ Thornbursh. Donald W.. ' 15 Tlnirston. Harrison S. Titus. John .. cx- ' o9 Toelle. Wallace. ex- ' 20 Tovev. Trevian R., ex- ' 20 Tr.abue. lohn W.. ex- ' i9 Tracv. A ' rchie M.. ex- ' 18 Treaiior, Walter E.. ' i_ ' Trueblood. Fred W.. ' 13 Trueblood. ' ancc H.. ' 13 Tucker. Carroll J.. ' 14 Tucker. Forrest G.. ' 14 Turner. Howard K.. ' 19 Turner. Walter I ' ... ' oi; Ullrich, . rlie J.. 13 Unger, Wood, ex- ' ii ' ance. Charles H., ex- ' i9 Vandement. Walter T.. ' i- ' ' anTassel. Charles J., ' 1.? N ' anTaler, William R., x ' x- ' ij X ' arner, X ' ictor I. X ' each. Lester W. Vellom, Ralph, ' i X ' estal, George W.. ex- ' - ' O Vogel, William L., ' i- ' ' ade, Ernest E., ' 17 Waid, Llovd D.. ' 16 Wakefield. Walter H.. ex- ' iCi Wakefield. Walter J.. ' 13 Wales, Ernest DeWulf. Wales. Homer L.. ' 10 Walker. Merton. ' 14 Walker. Raymond L.. ex- ' i, Wall. Merle L. ' 15 Wallace, William P.. ' 17 Wallfcr, Raymond L.. ex- ' io Walters, Basil, ex- ' ip Walters. Jack E.. ex- ' 19 Wandel. George Thomas. ' 14 Ward. Llovd D.. ' 16 Ward. Aferle Scott. ' 17 Warfel. Frederick C. Warne, Kelsie R., cx- ' 20 Warner. Clifford, t Warner. Harold. ' 15 Waseni. Louis. ' 16 ' ashbrun. Wendell J.. ' 10 Weaver. Chalnier H.. ' 12 Webb. Cecil E., ex- ' i9 Weer. Hillard L.. ' 13 Weesner. Edward J., ex- ' io Wcesncr. Rollis S.. ex- ' 20 Wegmiller. Harold, ex- ' 10 Weiland. Paul H.. ' 17 Weir. John M.. ex- ' i4 Weller. Charles A.. ' 16 Wells. Francis, ex- ' 18 West. Ben. ex- ' 20 West. Henry, ex- ' 20 Wetzel, Louis O.. ' 16 Weyerbacher. Arthur F.. ' 09 Wheeler. Garnelle G.. ex- ' 20 Whicker. Harold ' .. ex- ' io Whitaker. Berry M.. ' 14 hite. I ' rank L.. ' 14 Whitehead. Cecil I- ' .. ' 12 Whitehead. John -M.. ' 16 W hitehead. Roy O. Wliiteside. Henry 11.. ex- ' l8 W iecking. h ' red. ' 18 Wildman. Otis, ' 15 Wilcox, John, ' 11 W ilcy, Chester E., ex- ' l9 Viley, George D.. ex- ' ip Wiley. Harrison S.. ex- ' l8 Wilev.Wiliam C. ' 17 Willett. Harold P.. ex- ' 20 Williams, Kenneth P., ' 08 Williams, Ray. ex- ' i2 W illiams. Roliert D. _ W illiams. Travis B.. ' 15 W illiams, Walter W., ' 15 Willkie, Lewis W., ' 13 Wilikie, l-ioliert T.. ' 09 Wilson. Charles E., ' 14 W ' il-on, Denis. ' 16 Wilson, Robert E., ex- ' i6 Wilt, James Xapier, ' 17 Windes, Dudley W., ' 14 Winklepleck, Aaron .M.. ' 15 inters. Matthew. ' 1.5 Wise. Walter -A., ex- ' lo ■olfe. Raymon C. ' 1 r Wood. George. oS Wood. Howard S., ex- ' 17 Woods, John H.. ' i Woodward, Glen B., ' 17 Woodward, Ralpli, ex- ' l3 Woolridge, Bvron, ex- ' i8 Woolery, Burton, ex- ' 20 Worsey, . rlington S.. 15 Worthington. Joseph K. Wright. Joseph .V. Wright. Walter W.. ' 08 Wundram. William H.. ' 19 Wygant. Marion D. Wynn. James A. N ' enne, Harlan S.. ' 16 ' onIlg. luhvard M., ex- ' 20 ■Ndung. I ' red L.. ex- ' r Zariu . Ivan .A., ' i. Ziegler. Lloyd H.. ' 14 Zimmerman. Benjamin 1 .. ' 98 Zinkan. Thomas E.. ' in Zinn. Clarence, ex- ' i.S Zoller. Karl H.. ' 17 Zuck, Charles 1... ex- ' l8 Palti- Forly -Six u INDIANA UNIVERSITY MEN IN Y. M. C. A. WORK Bifldle, Ward G., i6 Blew, Michael J., ' 15 Boisoii. Anton T., ' 97 Brown, Claude F., ' 04 Byruni, Arlo, ex- ' 19 DiirKoe, Claude E., ' 08 Kikenherry. Dan H., ' 11 Cirton. Paul, ' iS Kendall, Herbert W., ' 09 Lcffg, Byron S., ' 14 McMnrray, Floyd I., ex- ' i7 Pittenger, Walter E., ex- ' 12 Kynicr, Thomas A. Stephens, Clarence E., ' 96 Stewart, Albert F., ' 91 TatliH-k, ' ilnier L., ' 17 Taylor, John S., ' 10 Woody. Walter T., ' 13 V M TitAMiv Tkami ' . Tramp, thi. Bovs .Vuk Maikhjxc I vy I ' ani ' Furly-KlKht 1918 - = ■' S ■; TV- Abmtut0tratt0n i l! U. AR N Bo a r f Visitors James P. Goodrich Governor of Indiana. Edgar Daniel Bush, Lieutenant-Governor. Jesse E. Eshbach. Speaker of House of Representatives. Horace Ellis, Superintendent of Public Instruction. Richard K. Erwin, Moses B. Lairy, John W. Spencer, [.Judges of the Supreme Court. Lawson M. Harvey David A. Myers, A 1918 Board of Trustees Ol-IICHKS TiiioiKiKK I . RosK. President. Jamis . I-i-.sLKR. I ' ice-Presideiil. Jon.N . Ckavk.ns, Secretary. l-j)ui Cork, Treasurer. . ii:. ii ' ,I ' :r.s Ika Colkman Batman, Blcoiiiinj ton. I ' kank Hki.ton Hatfiki.i), Rvaiisvillc Jamks W II. I.I am 1 ' ' i;si.f.u, Indianapolis. RomcRT li.A Ham ii.TD.v, N ' iiicciincs. Bknjamin I ' KANKi.iN LoNc, Logaii.sport. Edwin Corr, Blooniington. Thkohork I ' ri:i.in(:hiv. ;i;n Rusk, Miincie. Samit.l Kdwin Smith. Richnioml. L V EXECUTIXI . COMMITTF.E Tlif PrcsiiK ' iit of llic University ami the two nsidint nicmln-rs (it the Board. I ' uK.- Klfly -Twii 1918 OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION [- AND INSTRUCTION William Lowe Bryan. Ph.D., LL.D., President. Horace Addison Hoffman. A.M., Dean of the College of Liheral Arts. Enoch George Hogate, A.M., LL.D., Dean of the School of Law. Carl H. Eigenmann, Ph.D., Dean of Graduate School. Charles Phillips Emerson, A.B., ALD., Dean of the School of Medicine (Indianapolis). I Henry Lester Smith, A.M., Dean of the School of Education. [}y Ruby Elizabeth Campbell Mason, A.M., Dean of Women. [ William A. Rawles, Ph.D., Assistant Dean College of Liberal Arts. John William Cravens, A.B., Registrar and Secretary of the University. Uly ' sses Howe Smith, A. B., Bursar. Thomas Aubrey- Cookson. Assistant Bursar. John J. Pettijohn, AB., Director of Extension Division. Will Da id Howe, Ph.D., Director of the Summer Session. Burton Dorr ]My ers, A.I r., I LD., Secretary of the School of Medicine (Bloomington). Edmund Dougan Clark, ] LD., Secretary of the School of Medicine (Indianapolis). John F. Barnhill, M.D., Treasurer of the School of Medicine (Indianapolis). James Edwin Parker Holland, M.D., University Physician. Fernande Ida Juxia Hach.at, M.D., Assistant University Physician. Robert E. Neff, A. B., Registrar of the School of Medicine and Auditor of the Robert VV. Long Hospital (Indianapolis). IvY ' Leone Chamness, A.B., Editor of University Publications. FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL Arranged in the different titles by order of University seniority. William Lowe Bryan, President. A.B.. Indiana University. 1884: A.M.. 1S86; Ph.D.. Clark University. 1892; L.L.D.. Illinois College, 1904: L.L.D.. Hanover College. 1908. Rev. Amzi Atwater. Professor Emeritus of Latin. A.B.. Indiana University. 1886: A.M., 1869. Horace Addison Hoffman. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Greek. A.B.. Indiana University. ISSl; A.M.. Harvard University. 1884. James Albert Woodburn, Professor of American History. A.B.. Indiana University, 1876; A.M.. 1885; Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins University. 1890; L.L.D., Colgate University. 1909. Carl H. Eigenmann. Dean of the Graduate School, Professor of Zoology, and Director of the Biological Station. A.B., Indiana University, 1886; A.M.. 1SS7; Ph.D.. 1889. Robert Edw.ard Lyons. Professor of Chemistrv. A.B.. Indiana University, 1889; A.M.. 1890; Ph.D.. University of Heidelberg, 1894. l Arthur Lee Foley, Professor of Phvsics. ( A.B.. Indiana University, 1890; A.M.. 1891; Ph.D.. Cornell University, 1897. ' - David Myers JIottier. Professor of Botany. A. B.. Indiana University. 1891; A.M., 1S92; Ph.D.. University of Bonn. 1S97. Ulysses Grant W ' eatherly, Professor of Economics and Sociology. A.B.. Colgate University. 1S90; Ph.D.. Cornel! University. 1894; Litt.D.. Colgate University. 1910. Burton Dorr Myers, Professor of Anatomy. Ph.B.. Buchtel College, 1893. A.M.. Cornell University. 1900; M.D.. L ' niversity of Leipsic. 1902. Samuel Bannister Harding, Professor of European Hisbtory. A.B . Indiana University. 1890: A.M., Harvard University. 1894; Ph.D., 1898. Amos Shartle Hershfy, Professor of Political Science and International Law. A.B., Harvard University. 1S92: Ph.D.. University of Heidelberg, 1894. Bert John Vos, Professor of German. A.B.. University of Miehigan. ISSS; Ph.D.. .Tohns Hopkins University, 1892. William A. Rawles, Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Polit- ical Economv. A B., Indiana University, 1884; A.M., ISOTi; Ph.D.. Columbia University, 1903. Page Fifty-Three 1Q18 M DIL V Carl Wilhelm Ferdinand Osthaus, Professor of German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Hildesheim, ISSO; A.M., Indiana University. 1890. Schuyler Colfax Davisson, Professor of Mathematics. A.B.. Indiana University, 1890. A.M.. 1892; Sc.D., University of Tuebingen, 1900. David Andrew Rothrock, Professor of Mathematics. A.B.. Indiana University. 1892; A.M.. 1S93; Ph.D.. University of Leipsic. 1898. William J. Moexkhaus, Professor of Physiology. A.B.. Indiana University, 1894; A.M.. 1895; Ph.D., University of Chicago. 1903. Louis Sherman Davis. Professor of Cliemistrv. A.B., Indiana University, 1S91; A.M. 1892; PhD.. University of Marburg. 1890. Alfred Mansfield Brooks, Professor of Fine Arts. A.B.. Harvard University, 1S94; A.M., 1899. Will David Howe, Professor of English. A.B.. Butler College. 1893; A.B., Harvard University, 1895; A.M., 1897; Ph.D. 1899. William Frederick Book, Professor of Educational Psychology. A.B., Indiana University, 1900; Ph.D., Clark University, 1906. i Charles Jacob Sem bower. Professor of English. k A.B., Indiana University. 1892; l h.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1909. Edgar Roscoe Cumings, Professor of Geology, and Secretary of Faculty. A.B.. Unio n College. 1897; PhD.. Yale University, 1903. Robert Josselyn Leonard, Professor of Vocational Education. B.S., Columbia University, 1912. A.M., 1914. Selatie Edgar Stout. Professor of Latin. B.S., Grand River College, 1891; A.B.. Villiam Jewell College, 1901; PhD.. Princeton University, 1910. William Baird Elkin, Acting Professor of Philosophy. A.B., Manitoba University, 1889; Ph.D.. Cornell University, 1894. Joseph William Piercy, Professor of Journalism. A.B, DePauw University. 1913. Ewald Ortivin Stiehm, .Acting Professor of Physical Education for Men, and Director of Intercohegiate Athletics. A.B., University of Wisconsin, 1909. William Evans Jenkins, Professorial Lecturer in General Liter?ture. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Leland Stanford Junior University. 1894. Juliette ALaxwell, Director of Physical Education for Women. A.B., Indiana Uni ' ersity, 1883; Graduate, .Sargent ' s Normal School of Physical Training. 1890. George D.wis Morris, Associate Professor of French. A.B.. Indiana L ' niversity, 1890; A.M.. 1895; Docteur de I ' UniversitS de Paris, 1912, Frank William Tilden, Associate Professor of Greek. A.B.. Hamilton College, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1897. GuiDO Hermann Stempel, Associate Professor of Comparative Philology. A.B., state University of ' Iowa, 1889; AM., University of Wisconsin, 1894. Charles Alfred Mosemiller, Associate Professor of Romance Languages. A.B.. Indiana University, 1890. RoLLA Roy Ramsey, Associate Professor of Physics. A.B.. Indiana University, 1895; A.M. 1898; Ph.D.. Cornell University, 1901. Oliver W. Brown, Associate Professor of Chemistry. B.S.. Earlham College. 1895 A.M.. Indiana University, 1896. Frank ALarion Andrews, Associate Professor of Botany. A.B., Indiana University, 1894; A.M. 1895; B.A.M. and PJi.D.. University of Leipsic. 1902. Lillian Gay Berry, Associate Professor of Latin. A.B., Indiana University. 1899; A.M., 1905. Henry Thew Stephenson, Associate Professor of English. B.S., Ohio state Umiversity. 1894; A.B, Harvard University, 189S. Wilbur Adelman Cogshall, Associate Professor of Astronomy. B.S . Albion College. 1895; A.M.. Indiana University, 1902. Ulysses Sherman Hanna, .Associate Professor of Mathematics. A.B.. Indiana L ' niversity. 1895; A.M. 1898; Ph.D.. University of Pennsylvania, 1905. Charles Diven Campbell. Associate Professor of Music. A.B.. Indiana University, ' l89S ; Ph.D.. University of Strassburg, 1905. Frank Greene Bates, Associate Professor of Political Science. B.L.. Cornell LTniversity, 1891; Ph.D. Columbia LTniversity, 1899. Frank Curry Mathers, Associate Professor of Chemistry. A.B.. Indiana University, 1903; A.M.. 1904, Ph.D.. Cornell Llniversity. 1907. Clarence E.arl ALay, Associate Professor of Chemistry. A.B, Indiana University. 1904; A.M., 1905; Ph.D.. Columbia University, 1908. Fernandus Payne, Associate Professor of Zoology. A.B.. Indiana University, 1905; A.M. 1900; Ph.D., Columbia University. 1909. T L bel Thacher Wellman, Associate Professor of Home Economics. A.S.. Wellesley College. 1895. Edna Gertrude Henry, Director of Social Service (at Indianapolis). A B.. Indiana University, 1897; A.M.. 1914. Edgar George Frazier, Associate Professor of Puhlic Speaking. A.B.. Tabor College. 1900. s 1 John Benjamin Dutcher, Associate Professor of Physics. A.B.. Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907; Ph.D., 1915. Page Fifty-Five 1918 l4 •■•x ' - l € 1918 y ' . w Ji V John Hill. Associate Professor of Spanish. A.B . Vanderbilt University. 190S; A.M.. 1910: I ' li.D.. University of Wiscon.sin. 1912. George Fullmer Reynglus, Associate Professor of English. P ' h.B., Lawrence College. 1S98. Ph.D., University of Chicago. 1906. Preston Albert B. rba, Associate Professor of German. A.B.. Muehlenberg College, 1906; A.M., Yale University, 1907; Ph,D , University of Pennsylvania, 1911. William Newton Logan, Associate Professor of Geology. A.B., University of Kansas. 189G; A.M., 1S96; Ph.D., University of Chicago. 1900. Garland Greever, Associate Professor of English. A.B.. Otterbcin LTniX ' ersity, 1902; A.M.. Har ' ard LIniversity, 1910. James M. Van Hook, Assistant Professor of Botany. A.B. Indiana University. 1S99; A.M., 1900. Ernest Henry Biermann, Assistant Professor of German. A.B., Leland Stanford University. 1897; A.M.. Indiana University. 1907. JoTiLD.v CoNKLiN. Assistant Professor of French. A.B.. Indiana University. 1897; A.M.. 1904. jVl Will Scott. Assistant Professor of Zoology. S ' A.B.. Indiana University, 1908; A.M., 1908; Ph.D., 1911. Robert E. Burke. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts. Graduate of Pratt Institute. 1907; A.D., Indiana LTniver. ity, 1913. A.M.. 1914. Fred A. i loLBY, Assistant Professor of Physics. A.B.. Baker University. 1904; A.M., Cornell University, 1908; Ph.D., 1910. Elizabeth S. ge. Assistant Professor of Home Economics. B.S.. Columbia LTniversity. 1917. Albert Ludwig Kohlmeier. Assistant Professor of History. A.B.. Indiana LIniversity. 1908; AM.. Harvard University. 1911, James Grover McDonald, Assistant Professor of History. A.B.. Indiana University. 1909; A.M., 1910. (] Irs.) Alice Diven Goss, Assistant Professor of German. A.B.. Indiana University, 1908; A.M., 1913. John Ambrose Hess, Assistant Professor of Gern;un. A.B.. University of Kansas. 1908; A.M., 1910. Frank C. Senour, Assistant Professor of English. A.B., Indiana University. 1911; A.M., 1913, Jacob A. Badertscher, Assistant Professor of Anatomy. Ph.B.. Ohio University. 1909; Ph.M., 1910; Ph.D.. Cornell University. 1914. Ray Shearer Trent. Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology. B.D.. Vanderbilt University. 1907; A.B.. Emory and Henry College, 1913. Cora Barbar, Hennel, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. A.B.. Indiana LIniversity, 1907; A.M.. 1908; Ph.D.. 1912. Ruby Eliz. eeth Campbell Mason, Lectnrer in English. A.B., Toronto University, 1895; AM.. 1899; Graduate, Ontario College of Pedagogy, 1896; Special Teachers ' Certificate, Oxford University, 1910. Ulysses Howe Smith, Lecturer in Accounting and Business Practice. Ceritficate. Department of Comrrrerce, Eureka College. ISSS; A.B.. Indiana University. 1893. James Abraham Kase. Instructor in Physical Education for Men, and Acting Director of the Men ' s Gymnasium. Graduate. Chautauqua School of Physical Education, 1909. ] L ry Ethelda Roddy, Instructor in Physical Education for Women. Graduate. Chautauqua School of Physical Education. 1905. Anna Brockm. n Collins, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1897; A.M , 1909. Edgar Allen Menk, Instructor in Latin. A.B.. Indiana L ' niversity. 1907. Mason Edward Hufford. Instructor in Physics. A.B., Indiana University, 1911; A.M., 1912. Katharine Armor Brown, Instructor in Physical Education for Women. ' J K. ' therine Easley, Instructor in Englisli. ( A.B., Indiana University, 1912; A.M., 1913. ( ' Clarence Edmund Edmondson, Instructor in Physiology. A.B.. Indiana University. 1906; A.M., 1912; Ph.D., 1914. LoGrtN EsAREY, Instructor in Western History. A.B.. Indiana University. 1905; A.M.. 1909; Ph.D., 1913. Will Taliaferro Hale. Instructor in English. A.B., Vanderbilt University. 1902; A.M., 1902; A.M.. Columbia University, 1912; Ph.D , Yale Uni- versity, 1914. Mary McCloskey, Instructor in English. A.B.. Indiana University, 1912; A.M., 1913. Simon Ercile Twining, Instructor in Economics and Sociology. Ph.B.. Notre Dame LIniversity. 1913; A.M.. Indiana LTniversity, 1914. Georci.v Elizabeth Finley, Instructor in Home Economics. B.S.. Lewis Institute. 1914. , . Horace William O ' Connor. Instructor in English. A.B.. Harvard University, 1910; A.M., 1913. Jean Pierre Le Coq, Instructor in French. Lie. fe Lett., University of Paris, 1903; Lie. en Phil., 1905. Page Fifty-Seven IN 1918 I UC5 k ' M Q18 D ' =- . Jl Daphne Margarita Hoffman. Instructor in French. A.B. Indiana University. 1912: A.M. Welleslty rollege. 1913 ■N Paul Weathf.rwax, Instructor in Botany l l A.B.. Indiana University, 1914; A.M., 1915. (Mrs.) Hedwig Gruen Leser, Instructor in German. Graduate. Lehrerinnenseminar. Berlin. Ernest Marshall Linton. Instructor in Political Science. A.B., Butler College. 1911; A.M.. Indiana University. 1912; Ph.D.. 1915. Tobias Dantzig. Instructor in Mathematics. Lie. s Sc University of Paris. 1910. Ralph Leslie Rusk. Instructor in English. A.B.. L ' niversity of Illinois. 1909; A.1 I.. Columbia L ' niversity. 1912. George Clyde Hale, Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University, 1915: A.M. 1915. Clyde Arnett Malott, Instructor in Geology. A.B., Indiana University, 1913; A.M., 1915. Florence Lyon, Acting Instructor in Spanish. J A.B.. Indiana University, 1916. s 1 James Ernest Moff. t, Instructor in Economics and Sociology. h A.B.. McMaster University. 1914; A.M., LTniversity of Chicago, 1916. Jose Albalade.to, Acting Instructor in Spanish. Frank Marion Treat, Instructor in Physics. Edith Cadwallader Williams, Instructor in Home Economics. A.B., Smith College. 1S97. George R. Havens, Instructor in French. A.B., Amherst College, 1913. Carlos C, Castillo, Instructor in Spanish. B.S ., University of Illinois, 1914. Faculty of the School of Education Henry Lester Smith, Dean and Professor of School .■dniinistration. A.B., Indiana L ' niversity, 1S98; AM., 1S99: A.M., Columbia University. 1910: Ph.D., 1916. William Wesley Black, Professor of Elementary Education. Graduate. Indiana State Normal School. 1892; A.B., ' Univei ' sity of Illinois, 1S98. A.M., 1S99. William Frederick Book, Professor of Educational Psvchologv. A.B.. Indiana University, 1900: Ph.D., Clark University. 1906. Robert Josselyn Leonard, Professor of Vocational Education. B.S., Columbia L ' niversity, 1912; A.M., 1914. Hubert Guy Childs, Associate Professor of Education. B.S.. L ' niversity of Minnesota, 1S97; AM., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1911. Mabel Thacher Wellman, Associate Professor of Home Economics. A.B.. Vellesley College, 1895. Elizabeth Sage, Assistant Professor of Home Economics. B.S., Columbia University, 1917. Georgia Elizabeth Finley, Instructor in Home Economics. B.S., Lewis Institute. 1914. Edith Cadwallader ' illiams. Instructor in Home Economics. A B., Smith College, 1897. CRITIC TEACHERS Earl Emory- R. msey, Critic Teacher in Physical Geography and Zoology. A.B., Indiana University, 1902; A.M.. 1910. Earl Hudelson, Critic Teacher in English. A.B.. Indiana University. 1911: A.M.. 1912. Elmer Otto Wooley, Critic Teacher in German. A.B, Indiana University, 1907; A.M., Harvard University, 1913; Ph.D.. Indiana LTniversity, 1915. ■Faculty of the School of Medicine OFFICERS WiLLi. M Lowe Bry ' an, Ph. D., LL.D., President of the University. Charles Phillips Emerson. A.M., M.D., Dean of the School of Medicine. BURUON, Dorr Myers, A.M., M.D., Secretary at Bloomington. Edmund Dougan Clark, M.D., Secretary at Indianapolis. John F. Barnhill, M.D., Treasurer at Indianapolis. Robert E. Neff, A.B., Registrar, and Auditor of the Robert W. Long Hospital. FACULTY AT BLOOMINGTON Robert Edward Ly ' ons, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry. Burton Dorr Myers, A.M., M.D., Professor ofAnatomy. Page Fifty-Nine 1918 r1 Wu.i.iAM J. .Mt)K. KH. rs, Pli.l)., Professor of PhysioloKy. Clarknch Ivvki, M.w, Ph. I)., Associate Professor of Chemistry. J.vcoii .X. Hadkrtsciikk. Ph.D., . ssistaiit Professor of .Anatdiny. Clarence Edmlxu Eu.mo.ndson, Ph.D.. Instructor in Physiology. FACULTY . T I . D[. APOLIS General William Harrison Kemi ' Kr. iMiieritus Professor of the llislorv of .Medicine. .M.I).. l.iiiiK i,-!laii(l I ' lillpgo Hospital, isr..-,. LiTiiF.R Dax. Waterman, Emeritus Professor of MecUcine. .M.l) , .Meilkal folli-go of Ohio, ls.i3; A.M. (Honorary), Miami miverslty, 1S92. Joii.v F. Harnhill, Professor of Rhinology, Otohjgy, and Laryngology. .ML).. Central College of rhy.sielan.s ami .burgeons, 1S8S. Alemdert Winthrop Bravton, Professor of Dermatologv and Syphilology. U.S., Butler College, 1,STS; M.K,, IS.s;;; M..S., Iniliana University. 1882: M.S., Purdue Unlversltv, ,-j 188S; M.D., Medk-al College of Iniliana, 1S79. K -i Albert Ei ' GENk Bulson, Jr., Professor of Ophthalmology. B.S.. Mlehlgan Agrleultural College. I.SSS. .M.D., Rush Medlial College. IS9I. Lofis BuRCKHARiiT. Professor of Ohstctrics. M.D., I ' nlversity of Zuerieh, 1S90. Edmind DofGAN Clark. Professor of Surgerv. .M.L).. Hellevue Hospital Medieal College. 1S31. Lewis Park Draver. Professor of Pediatrics. AH.. Hanover College. 1S!I2; A.M.. IS ' .M ; M.D-, Indiana Medieal College, ISOD. Joseph Rilus Eastman. Professor of Surgery. AH.. Wabash College, ISUl; M.D.. University of Berlin, ISHT: A.M. IHonorary), Wabash College. 111(1.-,, Charles Phillips Emer. ' on. Professor of Medicine, and Dean of the School of Medicine. AH.. Amherst College. 1S9-1: M.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1891 ' . Willis Dew Gatch, Associate Professor of Surgery. A.B.. Indiana University, 1901; M.D., Johns Hopkins ' Universily, 1907. Thomas Corwin Hoon, Professor of ()i)hthalmologv. U.S. Wabash College. ISSl; .M.D., Jefferson iVIediral College, 1884; A.B., Waliash College, ISS. ,. John Xevvell Hurty, Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Science. Phar.D.. Purdue University, 1888; M.D.I Indiana Medieal College. 1891. Frank Frazier Hutchins, Professor of Mental and Xervous Diseases. M.n., Indiana Medical College, 1892. E. Oscar Linhenmuth. Professor of Dermatologv and Electrotherapeutics. M.E., Bloomsburg Literary Institute and State Normal Sehool (Pa.). 1S97; M.D.. Medico-Chlrur- gieal College of Philadelphia. 190(i. Ernest Hiram Lindlev, Professor of Philosophy and Psychology. A.B., Indiana University. 1893; A.M.. 1894; Ph.D. ' Clark University! 1897. George Washington. McCaskey, Professor of Medicine. M.D. Jefferson Medical College. 1877; B.S.. DePauw University. 1881; A.M., DePauw University, 1884. Frank Athon Morrison, Professor of Ophthalmology. A.n.. Butler College, 1895; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1880. John Holliday Oliver, Professor of Surgery. .M.I)., Indiana Jledieal College. 1881; A.M.. Wabash College, 1907. Orange Garrett Pkaee, Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1882: A.m ' ., Wabash College. ];i07. Miles Fuller Porter, Professor of Surgerv. .M.D.. .Meillral College of t)hlo, IS7S: A. .%!. (Honorary). Franklin College. 1882. C. Richard Schaefer, Professor of Therapeutics. M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1890; M.D.. Columbia University, 1892. Albert Eugene Sterne, Professor of Mental and Xervous Diseases. A.H.. Harvard University, 1887; A.M. (Honory). University of Strassburg, 1889; M D.. University of Berlin. 1891. loHN . snuRY SuTCLiFFE, Professof of (lenito-Urinarv Surgerv. B.S., Brookvllle College, 18G9; M.D.. Hellevue Hosplta ' l Medical ' College, 1872. A.M., Jtoores Hill College-, 187.1. Ja.mes Henry Taylor, Professor of Pediatrics. A.B., DePauw University. 1878; M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1878: A .M , Del ' auw University 1881, William Niles Wishahd, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1874; M.D.. Miuinl Medical College, 1876; AM, Wabash college, 1890. Frank Barbour Wynn. Professor of Medicine. A.H., Del ' auw University, ls«:i: MI)., dhlo Medical College, 1885; A.M., Del ' auw I ' nlversity, 188(5. Samuel Evingston Eahp, Clinical Professor of Medicine. B.S.. MeKendree College. 1879; M.L.., 1879; M.S., 1882: M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1882. Thomas Barker Eastman, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B., Wabash College, 1890; M.D.. Central College of Physlclans ' and Surgeons. 1893 .■,.M Wabash , , C.dlege, 190r,. f Charles Eugene Ferguson, Clinical Professor of Ohstetrics. M D., Indiana Medieal College, 1892. Page Sixly 1918 IL Alois Bachman Graham, Clinical Professor of Proctology. A.B.. Hanover College. 1891; M D.. Indiana Medical College. 1894; A.M.. Hanover College, 1S95. Fkedlric Carroll Hkath, Clinical Professor of Ophthalniologv. A.B., Amheist College. 1878; M.D., Bowdoin College, 1884; A.M.. Aniher.st College, 18SG. Albert Karl Kimberlin, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Indiana Jledical College, 1888. Thom. ' s Benjamin Noble, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B , Wabash College, 1890; M.D.. Miami Medical College, 1893; M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1894. LaFayettu Page, Clinical l ' ro es ' r of Rhinologv, Otology, and Laryngology. A.B., Columbia Christian College, 1882; A.M.. 1885; M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1838. Charles Robert Sovvtiei:. Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Central c ' ollege of Physicians and Surgeons, 1898. Ernest DeWolf Wales, Clinical Professor of Rhinologv, Otology, and Lar ngology. B.S., Harvard University, 1896; M D.. 1899. Henry Frederick Beckman, Associate Professor of Obstetrics. M.D., Northwestern L niversity, 1904. Frank VV. Crecor, Associate Professor of Dermatology. M.D., Indiana Medical College. 1S94. William Henry Foreman. Associate Professor of Medicine. A.B., Indiana University, 1895; M.D , Central c: ' ollege of Physicians and Surgeons, 1901. Norman Emmett Jobes, Associate Professor of Snrgerv. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1897. Amelia R. Keller, Associate Professor of Pediatrics. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1893. Virgil Hollanb Moon, Associate Professor of Patliologv. . .B . Kansas University, 1909. M S.C., Kansas University, 1910; JI.D., Rush Medical College, 1913. John Earhart Morris, Associate Professor of Surgery. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1896. David Ross, Associate Professor of Surgery. B.S., Central Normal College, 1891; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1895. John William Sluss, Associate Professor of Surgerv. B.S , DePauw University, 1890: A.M., 1894; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1893. J. Bernard Turner, Associate Professor of Pharmacology. B.Sc. London 1894; Ph.D., Goettingen. 1899. George Samuel Bond, Assistant Professor of Medicine. B.S.. Earlham College, 1903; A.B., L-niversity of Michigan, 1905; M.D., 190S. John Quincy Davis, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. A.B. Butler College. 1896; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1899. Thomas Warren DeHass, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine. M.D., Ohio Medical Collese, 1883; M.D.. Bellevue Medical College. 1888; M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1904. Sidney ' J. Hatfield. Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D.. Hospital College of Medicine ((Kentucky), 1902. Goethe Link, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Central C ' ollege of Physicians and Surgeons, 1902. John Alexander McDonald, Assistant Professor of Medicine. M.D., Rush Medical College, 1901. Paul Frederick Martin, Assistant Professor of Snrgerv. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1S9S; M.D., Columbia University, 1900. Charles Frederick Neu, Assistant Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. M.D.. Western L ' niversity (London. Canada), 1894. John Alfred Pfaff, Assistant Professor of Gvnecology. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1898. Jewett Villeroy Reed, Assistant Professor of Surgery. B.S.. Kentucky State College. 1900; M.D.. Johns Hopkins University, 1904. William Shimer, Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Sanitarv Science. A.B., Butler College, 1902 M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1906. Oscar Noel Torian, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics. A.B.. University of the South. 1896; M.D., University of Pennsylvania. 1900. Homer Henderson Wheeler, Assistant Professor of Proctology. M.D.. Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1897. George Edwin Boesin(;er, Instructor in Pathology. M.D.. Indiana University, 1914. LECTURERS, ASSOCL TES, AND ASSIST.ANTS, AT IXDLANAPOLIS Ralph Bamberger, Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; LL.B., Indiana Law School, 1896. Charles Sumner Bond, Lecturer on Photomicrograph v. M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 18S3; B.S., Earlham College, 1887; M.S., 1887. William Burnett Kitchen, Lecturer on Life Insurance and Examination. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1903. Max Bahe, Associate in Mental and Nervous Diseases. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1896; Doctor of Psychological IMedicine. Uni- versity of Berlin, 1908. Page Sixty-One 1918 il = Edward ArcrsTi ' s Brown, Associate in Clinical SurRcrv. A.H.. ItutliT l-iill.-Kc. ISiir.; ML).. Itiillan;i .Mc,ll(:il (■(illi-ci-. ' l SI ' S. Charles Lawrknck CAisAi.ziiR, Associate in Surgery. Elton R. Clark, Associate in Pharmacologv. A.B, Hutler (■llfge. 1916. Pail Barxett Coble, Associate in Rhinology, Otology, and Larvngologv. .M.LV. ronlral (iilicge of I ' li sii-lans ami .Surgi-on.s, 1 105. George W. Combs, Associate in Proctologv. .M.D.. Imllnnn Me llial College. ISSJ. Charles Eli Cottingiiam, Associate in Mental and Nervous Diseases. . LU.. Indiana Medical College. IS ' .la. John Mil ton Cinningham, .Associate in Clinical Medicine. A.H.. Butler I ' ollege, 1!I01. 11. D., Inillana Medical College. 1904. Bernard Erdman, Associate in Genito-Urinarv Surgery. M.n.. Indiana .Meilieal College, 1897. John Demp. ev Garrett, Associate in Clinical Medicine. A.n., Miami CniviTsit.v. IS ' .iS; M.D.. L ' niver. iity of lilinoi.-!. 1902. William Province Garshwiler, Associate in (jcnito-Urinarv Surgcrv. A.B., Indiana Cniversity. 1S92: M.D.. Imliana Meilieal College. ' lS9C. Murray Nathan Hadlev, Associate in Clinical Surgerv. B..S., Earlliam College. 1S9S: M.D., Indiana Medieal College, 1903. Homer Gcv H. mer. .Associate in Genito-Urinarv Surgerv. M.D., Indiana .Medical College. 1904. Alfred Henry, Associate in Clinical Medicine. M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1907. Walter Docglas Hoskins, Associate in Pediatrics. .M.D., In.lian.i Medical College, 1894. William I ' ranklin Hughes, Associate in Ophtlialniologv. .M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1902. Henry .Albert Hutcheson, .Associate in Clinical Surgery. M.D.. Imliana Medical College. 1903. Gust.avus Rrown Jackson, .Associate in Obstetrics. M.D.. Hush Medical College. 1902. Edgar Fayette Kiskr, .Associate in Pediatrics. M D.. Indiana Medical College. 1903. Edwin Stanton Knox, .Associate in Clinical Medicine. Ph.B.. DcPauw University. 1S93; M.D.. Indiana .Medical College, 1896. Daniel Wu.vderlich Layman, .Associate in Rliinologv, Otology, and I.arvn.gologv. B.S.. Butler College. 1893; M.D.. Columbia University. 1898. H. RRY Kemper Langdon, .Associate in Clinical Medicine. B.S., DePauw University, lS9li; M.D.. Indiana Medieal College, 1899. J. Don Miller, Associate in Clinical Medicine. A.B., Indiana Univer.sity, 1904; M.D., 1908. Ada Estelle Schweitzer, .Associate in Bacteriology. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1907. .Albert David Thoburn, .Associate in Pliarniacology. Ph.G.. Chicago College of Pharmacy. 1894. John Raymond Thrasher, .Associate in Patliolo.gy. A.B., University of Michigan. 1903; M.D.. Central College of Phy. icians and Surgeons. 1 . Harrison Sylvanus Thurston, .Associate in Clinical Medicine. M.D.. Indiana Medical CoUege. 1904. Arthur Louis Walters. .Associate in Pharmacologv. B.S.. Purdue University. 190C; .M.D.. .lohns Hopkins LTnlversity, 1912. Edward Mansfield .Amos, .Assistant in Medicine. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1891. Ernest O. .Asher, .Assistant in Obstetrics. M.D.. Indiana University. 1912. M. D.. ,11.11 latidr. 1911. Maurice Jo.seph Rarrv, .Assistant in Clinical Medicine. M.D.. Indiana I ' niverslty. 1908. PL KRY Kraylor Bonn, .Assistant in Gvnecologv. M.D., Indiana University, 1908. Frank Alembert I ' .pavton, .Assistant in Dermatology. M.D., Indiana University. 1912. Clayton C. Campbell, .Assistant in Medicine. M.D.. Central College of Physicians an l Surgeons, 1904. James Charles Carter, .Assistant in Pediatrics. AH.. Del ' auw University. 1909; .M,D.. Harvard University, 1913. Larue DePew Carter, .Assistant in Xervous and Mental Diseases. M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1904. William Scott Dow, .Assistant in Clinical Meilicine. U.S.. Purdue Uldversity, 1902; .M.D., Indiana Universily, 1909. Lehman L Dinning, .Assistant in Clinical Medicine. A.B.. Princeton University, 1906; .M.I),. ln Uana I ' niversily, 1909. John Henry Eberwink. .Assistant in Clinical Surgerv. .M.D., Purdue University School of .Medicine. 1907. Leonard .Austin Ensmin(;er, .Assistant in Surgery. M.D., Central College of PhyHlcIana and Surgeons. 190.S. Page Sixty-Two David Wayne Fosler, Assistant in Clinical Surgery. Ph.G.. Purdue University. 1902; JM.D., Indiana Medical College. 190. t. Elmer Funkhauser, Assistant in Patliologv. A.B., Valparaiso University, 1909; B.S.. University of Chicago. 1913: M.D.. Rusli Medical College. ' 1915. Nathan Paul Graham. Assistant in Medicine. M.D.. Medical College of Ohio. 1S99. Arthur Ernest Guedel. Assistant in Clinical Medicine. M.D.. Indiana University. 190S. RoLLiN Guv Hendricks. Assistant in Gynecology. -M-D.. Central College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1903. Charles Dolph Humes. Assistant in Mental and Nervous Diseases. B.S.. iloores Hill College. 1903; M.S.. 1905; M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1906. Frederick Ellsworth Jackson, Assistant in Surgery. A.B.. Indiana University. 1908; M.D.. 1910; cum laudc. 1914. Clarence Kenneth Jones, Assistant in Dermatology. B.S., Oklahoma University. 1912; M.D.. Indiana University, 1914. Robert James Kemper, Assistant in Clinical Surgery. M.D., Indiana University, 190S. Jane ] Ierrill Ketcham, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. A.B., Western College, 1903; M.D.. Indiana Medical College, 1906. Bernard John L. rkin, Assistant in Ophthalmology. A.B.. St. Mary ' s College, 1910; M.D.. St. Louis University, 1912. C. RL Heber McCaskey. Assistant in Rhinologv, Otology, and Laryngology. M.D.. Indiana University. 1908. Ch. rles Owen }iIcCoRMicK, Assistant in Obstetrics. A.B.. Indiana University. 1911; M.D., Harvard University. 1913. Homer Roland AIcKinstry ' , Assistant in Clinical Surgery. Ph.B., DePauw University. 1903; M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1906. Augustus LaRue Marshall, Assistant in Ophthalmology. JI.D., Indiana University, 1905. Leslie Howe Laxwell, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. A.B.. Indiana University, 1906; M.D., 1909. Robert Lartin Ioore. Assistant in Pharmacologv. A.B., Indiana University, 1911; M.D., 1913. Eugene Bishop Mumford. Assistant in Surgery. B.S-, University of Wisconsin, 1901; M.D., Johns ' Hopkins University. 1905. Alonzo S. Neelev, Assistant in Gynecology. M.D., Kentucky School of Medicine, 1904. Ross Clement Ottinger, Assistant in Gynecology. M.D., Indiana Jledical College, 1907. Frederick ' aile Overman. Assistant in Rhinologv, Otology, and Laryngology. M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1906. Everett Ervin Padgett, Assistant in Clinical Surgerv. M.D., Rush Medical College, 1905. Frederick Clyde Potter, Assistant in lental and Nervous Diseases. M.D., Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, 1909. Joseph Warren Ricketts, Assistant in Medicine. M.D.. University of ilaryland, 1909. Louis Harold Segar, Assistant in Pediatrics. A.B., Indiana University, 1910; LD., 1912. W. LTER MosES Stout, Assistant in Obstetrics. A.B., Indiana University, 1913; M.D., 1915. Clarence Randall Strickland. Assistant in Clinical Medicine. A.B., Indiana University, 1909; M.D.. 1909; cum laude, 1910. Thomas Littleton Sullivan, Jr,, Assistant in Gynecology. M-D., Indiana University, 1908. S. LEE Clarence Summers, Assistant in Pa thology. B.S.. Indiana L ' niversity, 1915. Alpheu s LeRoy ' Thurston, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. A.B.. Indiana University. 1907; M.D.. 1910. ILLIAM Edgar Tinnev, . ssistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D., Indiana University, 1911. Arlie John Ullrich, Assistant in Medicine and Surgery. A.B., Indiana University, 1913; M.D.. 1915; ciiiil laude. 1916. Frederick Carl Warfel, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. M.D., Physio-Me4ical College. 1905. Charles Alfred Weller, . ssistant in Pathology. A.B., Valparaiso University, 1909; B.S., Indiana University. 1916. Arthur Ferdinand Weyerbacher, Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D.. Indiana University. 1909. John Tipton Wheeler, Assistant in Clinical Surgery. M.D., Eclectic Medical Institute, 18S9; Indiana Medical College, 1907. J. Kent W ' orthington, Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery. A.B.. Haverford College. 1903; M.D.. Johns Hopkins University, 1908. Joseph William Wright, Assistant in Rhinology, Otologj ' , and Laryngology ' . M.D., Indiana University. 1911. Page Sixty-Three (?l 1918 Training School for Nurses (Mrs.) ETHhX Palmkr Clarkk. Director. R.N.. I ' nlverslty Hospital (Baltimore, lid.), l ' .IOi;. Xellik Gates Brovv.v, Instructor. R.N.. Hartford Hospital (Hartford. I ' onn). 1010. Mai-de Estixle MiLi.KR, .Assistant .Sti])crintfii(lcnt of Xurses. R.N.. University Hospital ( ( Haltlmorn. lld.l, 1911. Blanche Helen Kackna, Second .Assistant Superintendent, and Sui)crvisor of House- keeping and Diets. R.N.. St. l.uke ' s Ho.splial (Cidar Kuplds, Iowa), 1912. f II n ni c m r i a m . i.i ' .i:kt Fri-:i)i;i u k Kikkstki.xkk, I ' rdfe.ssor (if l (iiiiance l-;in;j, uag ' es, .A.B.. Uni ersit - of Cincinnati. i888: PIi.D., Johns Hopkins University. IQ04. u I ' iLKi Sixly-l ' tiur Ltl l ' 1 - J- . « t ■; . A t If I 1 1 r B [-J CuACii E . i.ii U. Stikhm Ewalil (Jiimlio) Stiiliiu came to Indiana from . elir ' ka Univi-rsity and bccana ' Dircotor of Intcrcolli-Kiate Atlilotics, Acting Director of Physical Kdncation and Head Coach of Football. Mis success as Ci ach of l-Oothall at Xcbraska was nothing less than phenome- nal, and the results of his past two seasons at Indiana University give promise of still greater results. Coach Stiehni is a graduate of Wisconsin, and while there won his letter in football, basketball and track. His coaching has attracted nation-wide attention and he is considered one of the foremost coaches of IntercoIIegi; te . thletics in the United .States. DAWN OF A NEW ERA IX the past two years Athletic Director Jumbo Stiehni and his staff of capable assistants have brought forth the dawn of a new era in athletics for Indiana University. Xever before in the history of the State School have Indiana ' s athletic teams shown as much real spirit and fight. The big mentor has taught his men not to know when to stop fighting, and this one fact, more than anything else, prophesies the future of Indiana ' s athletics. The decisive and clean-cut victory over Purdue on Xovember 24th last was a startling revelation of vhat a team can do when it gets blood in its eye. With two of his stars barred at the eleventh hour, Coach Stiehm faced what seemed the almost hopeless task of reorgan- izing his offense : but he won, and what is more, Indiana found out what she could do when she fights, and ■J to o tells the story. ] Iany of Indiana ' s athletes have gone to put forth this same fight into the more noble, more strenuous and more heroic game of ar, but their spirit still remains and the younger men who are left feel the spirit of their courage and ability, and the Dawn promises to break forth into the Day. Indiana ' s athletic supporters were shown by the 19 18 Basketball team what a group of new men can do when properly coached and fully inspired by the spirit of the X ew Era. Indiana ' s athletic teams are no more in the class where thev are content with almost winning — they have the taste of victory and the fighting spirit, which promise much for the future of our athletics. IN V K Page Sixly-Seven u; INDIANA ' S GYMNASIUM The New Gymnasium, allliouoh only in its third }ear, has ahxady been the scene of as many ihrilHng battles as the famous No Man ' s Land. Two State High School Basketball Tnurnaments have been staged in it, to say nothing of many Conference Iwttles. Many of the warriors, h(i e er, have gone to battle somewhere across the seas. Pagu Slxly-Elght WINNER OF ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP MEDAL Dewitt Mullett, of Colunibia City, var- sity football and basketball man, was awarded the Western Conference Athletic Scholarship IMedal for the year 1Q16-17. The trophy is awarded each year in each of the Big Ten schools to the best scholar ath- lete. The winner is chosen by the Athletic Committee with the ratification of the University Board of Trustees. Mullett was the star end on the 19 16 A ' arsity football team and proved a back guard of all-con- ference class on the 19 16- 17 ' arsity basketball team. Hearing the call to arms, ] Iullett joined the colors last spring and is now testing his brawn on the battle field. WINNER OF GIMBLE PRIZE Wilbur J. Dalzell, of Lawrence, Indiana, was awarded the Jake Gimble Prize for the year 191 7- 18. The prize consists of the interest on $500 for one }-ear and a gold medal. It is given each year to the student in athletics, of the Junior or Senior class, who shows the best mental attitude on the athletic field. Dalzell has been a member of the wrestling scjuad for three years and was a mem- ber of the 1917 football scjuad. M M i] Page Sixty-Nine 1918 THE I MEN ' S ASSO- CIATION Tlu- iiri_;anizati(in which keeps the ■■1 Men in touch with each oth- er and the L ' niversity is the T .Men ' s Association. Founded .some years ago by George M. Cook, it has ennliinied tn grow and wield a niightv influence tor tlie weltare III I iKhana ' s athletics. ' DacT ' Cuok lias been its ])resident s ince its founding and his untiring efforts ha e borne splendid results, lie is one of the alunmi ineiubers ol the Athletic Association and has been a constant worker for the Cniversiiy. He is the editor of the ' 1 ' ] len ' s Xoles, ' imblished several time- a year for the purpose of keeping the alunmi I .Men in touch with I ni- versilv activities along athletic lines. Go.Kta-; il. CuuK hi: Tkiiriiv Room Pago Seventy y 3? t b a 1 1 N ' i 1918 2 JJ LnnKixc Into the Futikk REVIEW OF THE 1917 SEASON WI KX C ' dacli l wald ( ). Sliclini tnok cliai-.L;c nt the fniill)all squad Oil September 201I1 Iiis entire squad numbered only twelve men. .Man - Crimson athletes were serving the Red, White and Dine and only three veterans were numbered among the number wlm reported. It looked as though the war had ])la ed ha oe with lootball ])rospects, but Stiehni hail a micleus in the men whd had |ila_ ed nn ihe l ' reshman team and he was equal to the occasion. I le welded his small s(|uad into a real fighting unit and Indiana enjoyed the most successful foot- ball season since 19 10. I ' lige Seventy-Two M Indiana 50, Franklin o Franklin was no niai.ch for the Crimson and went d wn to defeat by tlie score of 30 to o. The men worked smoothly to- gether and the fans were at once convinced that the team would show unusual form in later contests. Indiana 51, Vabash o The Scarlet came to Bloom- ington with the expectation of victory. However, they proved ' ' ■' l ittle resistance to the powerful Crimson attack, and the Hoosiers marched down the field for one touchdown after ancither. It was not until fiftv-one points had been registered and the entire second team had been put in that they were stopped. With only one more game before the opening of the Conference schedule at Minneapolis, hope ran high, and Crimson fans already began to predict a victory in the first Big Ten contest. Heuring Goes .Around End V M ilL -r Page Seventy-Three 1918 L . ' — J St. Loiis DawxKi) Indiana 40, St. LdUis o St. Louis proved to be the strongest team of aii} ' to (late. It offered strong re- sistance, but the Crimson :ittack ran up a score of forty points. However, it was a costly victory. Sev- eral of the star players were injured and it was evident that Stiehm ' s men would have to go into their first Conference ' anie handicajiped by se- rious injuries to Captains 1 huhawav and l-Averi. i 1 iiin (ii i-. (.UhK rsi I :iK - Si ' venty-Four Hess Lii i.- ( sv. the Ohio State eame onlv Indiana 9. Minnesota 33 With Captain Hathaway out ni the game and two of the hnenien injured, it looked as though the Gophers were ahiiost sure to win. However. Indiana was not wilhno- to concede them any- thing Hke a victory, and according to IMinnesota papers gave the powerful Gopher eleven the scare of their football lives — holding them to the score of 13 to 9 in the first half and scoring nine points to their six in the second quarter In fact, the Crimson scored more ])oints on Minnesota than any other team in the Conference. The Gopher backs pro -ed too strong in the last half, however, and the Crimson went down to defeat. With two weeks off. Crimson fans were wondering as to their strength with last year ' s Conference champions — led by All- American Chick Harley. Indiana 3, Ohio State 26 It was one real exhibition of football and the ability of one man. Throughout the first cjuarter, while Harley was out of the game, Indi- ana completely outplaved Coach W ' ilcie ' s men and he was compelled to put in his star halfback. With Harley in the game things began to look different, and dodging and sidestepping Indiana ' s tacklers, he piled up tw-enty- six points — every one that Ohio State scored, in fact. Indiana succeeded in scor- ing by the aerial route near the end of the game when Captain Hathaway executed a perfect place kick. Indi- ana had the satisfaction of scoring as many points as any other Conference team against the Buckeyes, who again won the championship. Hath Makes Three Points Page Sevent.v-Five iI E ilviii Kii Ks (jo.M- Aftkh Ton iiiJiiu n I.NIJIAXA KkKIM, Oi-K I XIII . _:;5, i )Kl ' Ar v o Tilt ' .Mcllidclists came In Illndniinj lon confident of victory, hnt ihcir hopes were crnell} ' sliallered. ' i he Crimson attack opened n]) and iduk vengeance on them for the two previons defeats. Indiana t,j. I ' rKDri-: o ( n the e e of tlie !)attle I ' nrchie protested two of Indiana ' s star plav- ers. and it looked as ihon ii it were all off. Coach Stiehm faced the task (if com]iletely reorganizing ' his offense and defense. The hi, ; ' coach, hnwever, pr(i ed eipial to the occasion, lie corralled his men and instilled a fighlint; ' spirit inln them that was ne -er hefore e(|nalle(l in an Indiana team, flaying as they played at no other time dnring the season, Indiana comi)letely outplayed their old-time rivals. itiiiii l- I Kill I ' III HI I liMI V I . I ' ;iK. Siv.nly-Slx Y ' W FOOTBALL FOR 1918 James A ' . Ingles, tackle and mainstay of the Crimson team, has been elected to lead the 191 8 eleven. Captain Ingles is a Jn- nior and for the past two seasons has been one of the hardest work- ers on the Crimson teams. Fie is full of fight and should be able to keep his men in fighting trim throughout the season. PROSPECTS Three-fourths of the 19 17 squad have joined the colors, and Coach Stiehm is again facing the task of moulding an eleven out of practically inexperienced men. This year ' s Freshman eleven should furnish excellent material and with this year ' s result in mind. Crimson supporters arc predicting a successful season in 1918. Cai ' Tai.x J ImjLES INDIANA ' S FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 1918 September 28 — Open. October 5 — Detroit at Bloomington. October 12 — Wabash at Bloomington. October 19 — Wisconsin at Minneapolis. November 2 — Minnesota at Indianapolis. November 9 — Army Camp Home Coming. November 16 — DePauw at Bloomington. November 23 — Iowa at Iowa City, Iowa. Home Coming. IN 5i Page Seventy-Seven 1918 f t § f -« My ' tWiy t r t ff i THE M)17 FOOTBALL TEAM To ' Row — Stiilini (head coach), Hcuring, Kcevcr, Hess, Howard, Bowser, Ferguson (trainer). Middle Rozi. — Minton, Ingles, Ewert, Pierce, Julius, Hathaway (captain), Risley. lioltoni ' Ro7 . ' — Kathhun (assistant coach), Faust, Cravens, Evans (as- sistant coach ). An ;il)un l;iiicc of ])hysical CDurai v ami still L;r(. ' atcr (Ictcniiiiialion are r(. ' (|uiretl lo cnahle a man id ])la ' fnutball throughout tJK ' k ' n tli I if the season. Mere are the men who nr i e(l the euts and stuck it through till the end. The} ' are tlie men who foiiglu Indian.a ' s hattles on the fooiltall lield and mneli credit is theirs. Phbi- Siv.niy-ElKht N[NE FOR THE TeAM ! Nd 1918 Hathaway. Krssi i.i. C Playing his last year on the varsity Hath was at his host. He was a power of strengtii in the line. Inglks, James Jimmy I ' as learned all of his footliail under Coach Stiehm. He v as one of the hardest workers on the team and was the imaninuius choice for captain of loiS eleven. Jn.us, Rl ' ssixl Julius has finished his second year i t guard of the Crimson eleven and has p r o v e d unusual ability to stop plays headed his wav. .Mi- H).N ' , RoscoE Mintou was a bi.i; soph- omore recruited from last year ' s freshman eleven. He distinguished himself this year by his ability to run the ends and thro w forward passes. HlKKl.Sl., liVKil.N Byron was the speed de- mon of the Crimson. He used this speed to ad- vantage in the Purdue Rame, when he circled the Hoilerniaker ends for long gains. I ' ll-KC- K. j. . l]-.S 1 1. P abe was the young- est and biggest man on the team. He played his first year on the Crim- son, and proved himself to he one of the best cen- ters Indiana football fol- lowers had seen for some time. RlSl.K ' l. lil.LUJT C. Ris performed at end on the varsity last fall. His speed and ability to run interference made him one of the most de- pendable performers on the team. I- i, 1-K. . K .- lthough Faust was the smallest man on the team, he played a snapp. game at (piarter. Page Ktshly 918 Howard. Lyxn W . Cravkxs. Bernard K. Bowser, Harold Tubby was the most Beiiiiv ran the team Bowser played halfback consistent ground gainer well at quarter. He was on the Crimson eleven, considered the best quar- After distinguishing him- terback in the State, self as one of the best fullfacks that had ever donned a Crimson uni- form, he was ruled ineli gible before the game with Purdue. last fall and hit the line for consistent gains. He played his last game of football with the Crim- son against Purdue. Keever, Charles H. Keever is a Junior and played second year in the back field. He played his best g a m e against Purdue. N y. Hess, J. ck S. Playing end, Hess pulled several forward passes out of the air which net- ted long gains for the Crimson. EwERT, Howard Ewert was one of the most aggressive players in the line. He stopped many plays that came around his side of the line and was considered the hardest tackier on the team. K M ii Page Eighty-One 1918 J FRESHMEN FOOTBALL Coach Ratlibun had a large Freshman squad to work with last fall. Although not equal, perhaps, to the squad of 1916, this year ' s Fresh- man team kept up the g-ood Avork and gave the Varsity all they were looking for in the way of practice. It is rumored that on one or two occasions thev defeated the A ' arsitv, but that is not conclusively kndwn. u First Column — INIaloney, Ches- ter, Cunningham, Pfeiffer, Anderson. Second Column — DnComb, Harris, Riesenberg, Leonard, Third Column — JNIcCaw, How- ard, Ridenour. Elsrod. Fourth Column — Geiger, Dean, Hoadlev. ' !■Dl-tch Krause Assistant Football Coach 1 Fifth Column — Dennis, Kacey, Buck, Browning, Mathys ( captain). Page Eighty-Threo lyiC: Ilarlcy goes over for the first touch- down. Tliroiigh Center for Five Yards An Incomplete I ' ass Cravens brings llarlcv down. I ' Iciilv 111 ' acliiiii marked (In- ()lnii Slate j anic at Indianapitlis. In fad, il was up and al ' em ri-(im ilie woi ' d n. TIk- Crinisun i;a ' c (. oacli Wilcic ' s men a i ond lun fur llieir ni(inc . 1 larlcy Ikmul; ' ihc only man will) could pcnctrale the Indiana line. rnK IClBhlx -Kc.vir IN lask tbaU THE 1918 BASKETBALL TEAM Cnacli I -ans had hut one I .Ahan with, which (i start liis liaskelltall team and the prospects were ncit hoyjeluL Mowever, good material was (hscovered in last year ' s Freshman si|uad, and with the faitiiftil ])ractice and careful coachin; ' , the team succeeded in urpi ' isin; ' eN ' eryone with its record. Top Kozc Evans (coach). Zcllars, Huxford, Ingles. Jeffries, I ' erguson and Trainer. lidlloiii Riy c Easton, Pliillips. I ' .owscr (cap- tain). X ' onTress. Stalir, Mac- I ' arland. ■iiK ' KlKhiy-Sbc , -v, b: REVIEW OF 1917-18 BASKETBALL SEAS.ON Dana jNI. Evans was Stiehm ' s choice for ' arsity Basketball and Track Coach and Assistant Football Coach. He came to In- diana from Beloit College, where he used to be an opponent of Coach Stiehm at Ripon. He has had many years ' experience in coaching and training ath- letes and knows athletics. At the beginning of the iQi - i8 Basketball season, Coach Evans had only t ■o men on his squad who had played intercol- legiate basketball. He succeed- ed in imparting to his men his thorough knowledge of the game, and the Crimson ended the season in a five-sided tie for fourth place with Ohio State, Purdue. Chicago and Illinois. Every Conference game that was lost was close and in either of the three games lost three baskets would have turned the tide. With the exception of Captain Bowser, ever}- member of the squad will be eligible to play next sea- son. AVith Phillips as the 19 19 captain, a strong quintet can be expected next year. Seven men qualified for monograms under the ruling of the Athletic Committee. The}- are as follow : Captain Bowser, Phillips, Zellar, Von- Tress, Jeffries. Easton and Stahr. THE RECORD OT THE SEASON Dana M. Evans Coach of Basketball and Track Manchester i8 I. U. Central Normal 6 I. U. DePauw 20 I. U. Wabash 9 I- U. Michiga- 17 I. U. Detroit Univ It I. U. Ohio State 28 I. U. 45 49 26 20 21 24 Opponent ' s Total 271 DePauw 22 I. U. Ohio State 23 I. U. Iowa 25 I. U. Wal.ash 28 I. U. Michigan 20 I. U. Rose Poly 7 I. U. Iowa 13 I. U. 24 21 20 18 21 43 II Indiana ' s Total 374 Eighty-Seven 1918 l llll I PiiiLip H. BinvsKK Captain •Phil finished liis athlet- ic career at Indiana Uni- versity when the lyiSbas- tcethaU schedule was finished. He captained the team in fine style as well as playing a good game at center. .Mthough handicapned by sickness, the Crim- son captain finished his best year in the net game. Bowser ' s home is in Syracuse, Tnd. Enw.Mui C. ' c)xTkkss. Although playing his first year of intercolle- giate athletics, Von was there w i t h the goods at all times and was one of the surest shots on the team. His value was shown in his ability to bring the ball out of dangerous terri- tory. He comes from incennes, Ind. Arpith Lowell Phillips The center of the of- fense and defense was built around this sturdy floor guard. Phillips played in every minute of every conference game and liis remarka- ble endurance and hard playing made him de- serving of the captaincy for the 1919 basketbril quintet. Before enter- ing the University, he was a star on the . mo High School team. WlLKKKli .M. . 1( l- ' .VRL.V.NU Mac did nto finish the season with the squad, but answered the call to arms and entered train- ing in the Great Lakes Training Station the first of Februar -. He aided niateriallv in the Crimson ' s victory over the Michigan five at -Ann . rbor. His home is in V ' incennes. TaKi- ElBhty-Klght -v M James W. Ingles Jiinniy did not get in enough games to re- ceive his letter under the ruling but gave good ac- count for himself while in the play. His out- standing feature was a field basket caged from the center of the floor in the Wabash game at Crawfordsville. He be- lieves there was some mistake. He replaced Stahr at back guard. He comes from Indian- apolis. WlLL, RD J. St.vhr One of the smallest men on the squad but one of the hardest workers — in the • anie every minute. Very seldom the Crim- son ' s opponents would have an easy shot and the low scores that were made show the good guarding of Stahr. He not only played a good game at back guard but would go down the floor and caee his usual bas- ket. In the Ohio State p-ame he received a sprained ankle, which kept him out of the game only a short time. Hagerstown, Ind., is his home. WlLLI. M RlCH. RD Easton Substituted in the two Michigan games. Dick prodfced in fine style with field baskets, whicli won the games for the Crimson. At the first of the season he was used only in the last part of the games because of his endurance, but he played every minute of the last game with Iowa and made eight of the eleven points scored against the Hawke es. He was for- merly a Blooniington H ah School star. Urban B. Jeffries Jeff changed off with Captain Bowser at cen- ter. He played his best games with the Ohio State five at Blooming- ton and the Iowa quintet at Iowa City. He is ex- tremely light for the piv- ot position, but worked hard in every game he entered. His home is in Rockville, Ind. William M. Zeller Playing his second year on the varsity, Bill dis- played remarkable abil- ity in caging the ball un- der the basket. He was the high-point scorer on the Crimson quintet and his baskets came at times when the games were in danger. He is a hard worker and much can be expected from him next season. His home is in Brazil, Ind. Page Eighty-Xine Ci ' THE 19 18 FRESHMEN TEAM C ] Top Row — Wilson. DeHnrity, Dol)- liins. McCaw, Mays, Wakefi eld. HoIIdiii A ' otf — Kiiiik, I ' .iicUiier, Thorn, Lohrei, Dean. Dennis. C (i;h-1i Ualhlum had a sU ' diil; l ' ' n. ' liiiian ,-(|ua l willi which tn Wdrk, and he dcwl- (ijjcd a lasl (|uiiiU ' l, which .ua c liic arsity many hard i;anic-- . Several nf die men are excellent jjro.- pects for nexl year, and with their ])reliniinary trainin; sliould he a hij; ' asset t i the team. PaK ' Nltinly = 2 ' r U BU s University CoMMiTirE ix Charge George M. Cook : Ewald O. Stiehm, Ath- letic Director: U. H. Smitli. Bursar. Referees Bert Westover, Justin Maloiiey, Merle Ab- l;ett, Chester Reagan. State High School Association Board of Control E. E. Ramsey, President, Blooming- ton : George H. Rietzel, Treasurer, Brownsburg: A. L. Elabarger, Hart- ford City ; R. C. Johnson, Roches- ter : Huber King. Knightstown : A. L. Trester, Permanent Secretary, lartinsville. HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TOURNEY The 1918 State High School Basketball tournament was the most successful of any held at Indiana L niversity. The crowds filled the New Gymnasium to its capacity and as the games progressed the large seating facilities would not accommodate the people wishing to witness the games. The competition in this tommament has never been equalled. Although Anderson and Lebanon stood out as the strongest aggregations, manv other schools had teams of which they could boast. . Bloomington, Huntington, [Martinsville, Rockville, lontmorenci and Rochester had good teams in the tournament. i 1918 Tof ' Row — Stevens, Curtis (coach), Martin, D c m a r iJDtloiii Row — G. Gsrdner, Grater, Smitli, J. Gardner. iH.ii,a,mri. !i:u. GoLdwin (tr;iincr), Adams. THE WINNING HIGH SCHOOL FIVE T,cl)annirs lli, ' -;Ii . ' - chndl leani relaincd ils IkiM mi the Slate title in Basketball lur i()iS. The eliain])i(inslii]) .;anie was ])la ' e(l Ix ' lween Lebanon ami .Vnderson, and the final eount of 24 to 20 in favor of Lebanon was not determined until five niinntes of extra plav had been li;id. The first half was exlreniel}- close, with Lebanon havinsaf the sliLiht ed.s e on Anderson, ij to S. The second half was featured by the brilliant playing- n . danis, of Lebanim, ;inil C ' .annim, of Ander- son. With three minutes to play, the score was _ ' () to H) in faxnr of Ander.son. White tied the score with a free throw. Time ended jo to 20. Coming; ' back with a s])url in the ii ertime i)eriod, Lebanon secured twd held oals, and with them the lille. Lebanon now leads all other Indi.ana hiL;h ' ■chools in .Siale Pi.-isketball ( ' hampionshi])-, hav- inp ' won three onl of the eiuhl loin-n;mients. i l iU ruK Ninety -Two N4 Bastian Sliirk Ridenour Brodheckcr Pierce (Captain) PHI DELTA THETA QUIXTET Dobbins INTERFRATERNITY BASKETBALL History repeated itself and the Interfraternity basketball tourna- ment was again a nip-and-tuck race between the P hi Delta Theta and Sigma Xu quintets. The series ended with these teams in a tie, both having won twelve games and lost one. Sigma Xu seemed to have the edge, because of having defeated the Phi Delts 15 to 3 during the tournament. Delta L ' psilon, however, had succeeded in defeating Sigma Xu 14 to 12, and this tied the series. In the Championship game between Phi Delt and Sigma X u, Phi Delt came back strong and succeeded in wiping out the sting of last year ' s defeat by the score of 1 1 to 5. Sigma Xu was playing without the services of their cen- ter, while Captain Pierce of the Phi Delta startled the crowd with three bas kets from the middle of the floor. Page Ninety-Three 1918 K i 1 1 ... ' 1!asi iti;ai.i. I ' i.dok — Mi-.xV G -MXAsuNr SwiMMINi; I ' liol. — Mkn ' s (il.MNAMlM 1 a s b a 1 1 i-j 1918 THE 1917 BASEBALL SQUAD Slaniiiiuj - l ' ' rf;uson ( traiiifr), I ' liscliiiiaim. Hottenfielil, Smith. Ridley. Rust. Xelson, KuiiUlt ' . W ' liismaii (coacli ). Sitting — S c h in i d I . Isciihowcr. Scluder, RausclKMibacli, Suayiic, lohnsou, Kayl. Tile rc])Utali(m il Indiana in the vnrl(l fif ( iille:;e hascliall was not only sustained, hut strengthened, last spring hy the excel- lent showing of the Crimson nine under the direetion of Coach Whitman. Some sterling jilax-ers were (lc elo])ed as the weeks passed, and victories were scored over every Conlerence team l)layed, among whom were Illinois University. ( )hio State L ' niversity (Conference Champions). Iowa L ' ni ersiiy and I ' ui-due Cnixersity. The outstanding feattire of the season was the i)iicliing of Cai)tain ' T i ' ' - F.d Ridlew Twelxe letters were aw.arded. VugK Nliu ' ty-Slx REVIEW OF THE 1917 SEASON n Indiana ' s 1917 baseball team finished third in the Big Ten Conference. The season was featured with a memorable seventeen-inning victory over Purdue i to o and a 7 to 2 victory over Ohio State ' s championship nine. Indiana being the onl}- Conference team that was able to send the Buckeyes down to defeat. Before the start of the regular season a Southern trip was taken in Big League style, during which the best teams in the South were met, including such teams as the University of Kentucky, University of Tennessee. IMercer College. University of Georgia, Georgia Tech and ' anderbilt. As a result of this preliminary training the ■Whiz-men returned in fine shape for the start of the Conference race. Big Ed Ridley Baseball Captain, 1917 y. The first Conference game was played on April 2 1 st and resulted in an 8 to I victory over Northwestern. Captain Ridley was never in •danger. A return game was played with Northwestern at Evanston on May 4th, but lost 5 to i. Kunkel pitched good ball, but the team suffered from cold and too much Crissman. The Purple hurler struck ■out 15 men and allowed but 4 hits. The next day the Crimson jour- neyed to Iowa City, where a ninth-inning rally won for Indiana 5 to 4. Two victories followed in three days and Indiana supporters began to see visions of a Conference Flag. The first victory was over Ohio State 7 to 2, and was the only defeat Ohio State suffered throughout the entire season. The other victory was over Illinois 5 to o. Captain Ridley worked in both games and pitched remarkable ball. These vic- tories put Indiana in a tie with Ohio State for first place in the Con- ference, and the next game, on May i8th, with Ohio State, at Colum- bus, was recognized as a championship game. Ridley pitched his third game in six days, and allowed but six hits, but lost 7 to 2. Illinois won Page Ninety-Seven :ij V M e:: 1918 llie next yaiiie S t(_) i — Ri(llc heiu.L; Imckcd hy mw hit and six ermrs. This put Indiana out of tlic race as far as the chanii)i( nshi]) was cnn eerned. This fact was overlooked, however, when the team sta 2,ed a re- niarkahle coniehack and won tlie never-to he-fori otten seventeen-inn- ins ' s ' une over tlie l )oilennakers. Kunke! started on tlie niound lor ln(Hana and ])ilehed rnnless 1)all for nine innings. Neither side had scored, so W ' hisnian sent Ridley in to hold P urdue. The eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth innin. s came and still no scores. Hurinu- the fifteenth and sixteenth iimini s the rurdue Imrler weakened and in the seventeenth Curley Ray! cracked out a clean douhle, which sent ever the onlv run of the yame. THE RECORD OF THE SEASON u.. I u.. 2 u.. O I .. () l;.. I u.. 2 u.. 8 Kentucky L ' niv. . Univ. of Tenn . . . Mercer Univ. . . . Univ. of Georgia. Georgia Tech. . . . anderhilt Univ. . Xorthwestern U. I. U....I 3 u.. I 5 [ ' .. 5 9 [ ' .. 7 8 u.. 5 9 u.. 2 2 u.. I I u.. r Xorthwestern U. . . 5 Univ. of Iowa 4 Ohio State 2 Univ. of Illinois ... .0 Ohio State 7 Univ. of Illinois. . .8 Purdue Univ 2 Purdue University. . .0 ( Sovontt-i-ii Innings) I ' liK ' ' Nlnit -i;iKht . 5 r - BASEBALL FOR 1918 M Guy L. Ratlibun came to Indiana from Nebraska, where lie was closely associated with the regime ol Athletic Direcor Stiehm. As football assistant and coach of swimming, wrestling and baseball, he supplements the athletic staff gathered by E. O. Stiehm for the train ing of Indiana ' s athletes. He attended Chicago V. M. C. A. Training School and Xew York Physical Normal and has been for years a prominent Y. ?il. C. A. Physical Director. His coaching record in academic and col- lege circles is ratlier uniciue, he having developed over a score of championship teams in all lines of sports. Under his tutelege this year ' s eleven should uphold In- diana ' s previous standing in Conference basebad circles. Red R. uschenb.- ch Baseball Captain 1918 Guy L. R. thbun Baseball and Wrestling Coach WiLL. RD R.wscHENBACH, better known on the diamond as Red, ' and the only letter man on the 1918 baseball squad, was appointed captain of the Crimson nine by action of the Athletic Committee. The Crimson captain won his letter playing third base on the 1917 team, but Coach Rathbun opened the season with Red at short, and then the plucky player took the backstop position. Captain Rauschenbach dis- played ability as a leader on the field and did his part behind the bat and with the big stick. He comes from Stilwell, Ind. BASEBALL SCHEDULE April 12 — DePauw at Bloomington. April 15, 16, 17, 18 — Indiana at Bloomington. April 19 — Iowa at Bloomington. April 20 — Notre Dame at Bloomington. April 26 — Open April 29 — Michigan at Bloomington. May 3 — Notre Dame at South Bend. May 4 — Valparaiso at Valparaiso. May 6 — Western State Normal at Kalamazoo. May 7 — Michigan Aggies at East Lansing. May 8 — Michigan at Ann Arbor. May 10 — Open. May 14 — DePauw at Greencastle. May 17 — Ohio State at Columbus, Ind. May 24 — Ohio State a t Columbus, Ohio. May 26 — Rose Poly at Terre Haute. V M Page Ninety-Nine •si e. n t 9 . -i,%!M X i V -jyb i . : -. V THE 1918 BASEBALL SQUAD Here arc llic men who fou. lu Indi- aiKi s hasfliall 1)attlcs during- the presenl seasdii. With unly one 1 man hack. Coach Ratlihun had lo liuild uy an en- tirely new eleven of men without pre- vious ex])erience in intercollegiate con- tests. Standing — l ' ' erguson (trainer), Hiatt, I ' .atniaii. Katterjohii, Gilliert. Case- bccr, Kccvcs, Carson. Pcclcliain, I ' ' anst, Contur, Rathlnni (coach). .V( i (,i - -Ridley. Driscoll, Isiess, Det- wcilcr, l- ' crguson, Maccy. Rausclien- l)acli (captain). Julius, Sutheimer. y PhKL OtH- Iluiidrt ' d Q liii 4 If ' r f -l ' rtiif ( Katter TUBBV ' Pete Jack Casey Jeff KATTER Cecil C. Katterjohn started the baseball season in center field. This is Katter ' s senior year in school, and his first year on the Varsity, having been kept off the squad in previous years by sickness. He comes from Huntingburg, Ind., and bats and throws left-handed. TUBBY Russell Scott Julius was one of the first men to report for indoor practice, and although a big man, is very active around first, and alternates with Captain Rauschenbach behind the bat. He lives in Bloomington. PETE Phares Newton Hlatt is playing his second year on the Varsity, and with his clever fielding and base running, he promises to be one of the mainstays of the Crimson through- out the :gi8 season. Pete hails from Richmond, Ind. JACK Jack Driscoll, one of the stars of last year ' s Freshman squad. Jack is a consistent hit- ter and his arm proves deadly to a runner trying to score on a fly. He came up the Monon from Jeffersonville and is a dependable man. UN CASEY Paul B. Casebeer started the season at third base. Casey not only plays a good game in the field, but gets his share of hits. He lives at Newport, Ind. JEFF Urban B. Jeffries developed into one of the first string pitchers, and his curves kept the opposing batters guessing. His home is at Rockville, Ind. M Page One Hundred One 18 lI Carsox ■•Pf.ck ' l.ATMAN Suttik Ckaiki:r C ARSON Ernest Pati. Carsox, playing liis first year on tlio X ' arsity. was used as a general utility man liy Coach Ratlibnn. IlronUston. Ind.. is his home. •■PECK Ralph E. Peckham, a Junior, was used in many positions by Coaeh Rathbun, but when Rauschenbach was shifted to the backstop position he was shifted to short. He coir.cs from Monroeville. Ind.. and is proud of it. BATM.W GoRiiox W. P.ATMAN. of last year ' s Freshman team, developed into a snappy second base- man, playing his position to iierfeetion and putting lots of pep into the work of the team. Mitchel, Ind., is his home tnwn. •■SUTTIE Ai.viN SfTHKiMKR. although handicapped by sickness at the opening of the season, played a good game at the initial sack. Suttie hails from F.vansville. ■•CR.VCKKK Fraxk F. Faust, the midget southpaw twirler, did good work for his first year on the Varsity. He has the knack of fielding his position, and can hit ' em when they ' re needed. He claims Covingtim, Ind., as a home town. REEVF.S Rri ' ce F.VRfM Reeves, a pitcher and utility infielder, was handicapped li injuries early in the season and was unable to show up to a good advantage. V I ' liKi- Ollf Huiulncl Two 1918 ® r a r k ii E 1918 K THE 1917 TRACK SQUAD TIic ii;i7 Track Team ii])licl(l the Imn- nr of Crimson on track and field very creditably. Coach Cohn (levelo] ed a r„M- ' r.-niattman, Thomas. Mogge arl]()iir, Kcmiiut, Hcuriiig well-hakmced team, which competec wiih - uch strono a,2 ij;regations as Xorlh- vvestern and ()hiu Slate, iu. ht niono- IU ' rams were awarded in die fnllnwin - men: Ca])tain l ' (ii)e, I leminu;, Wil- liams. Luther, KeeHny, .Miller, Crosby, and Acre. Middle c ' dtt— Julius. Smith, Webb, I.ahr. Lowden. Keeling. Ivagleson, Ciihn (coach). liotlom Row — Wallace. Sellers. Har- Krave. Pope (captain). I.indsey, car. Kellelier. Page One Hundred Four A Tr = REVIEW OF 1917 TRACK SEASON Coach Cohn had seven I men around which to build his track team and led b}- Captain Pope the Crimson had a well-bal- anced team by the time season opened uj). The first meet with the Ohio State at Bloomington was won by the close score of 66.5 to 59.5. Heuring- was the star for In- diana, winning three firsts. Hit hard b - enlistments in the army, Indiana could ml} send an eleven-man team against North- western, at Evanston. But, notwithstand- ing, the men made the strong Xorthwest- ern team go some and held them to a j to 78 score. Indiana representatives at the Conference meet on June th at Chicago scored three and one-half points. fSi Spencer G. Pope Track Captain BvKuN . ' . Heuring The biggest point getter on the team was Heuring, who scored fifteen points in the Ohio State meet, thirteen against Northwestern and three in the Confer- ence meet. He also took second place in the Conference indoor meet. He is rec- ognized as one of the fastest men in the Middle West in the dashes. Heuring holds the State High School record in the 440-yard dash. He has enlisted in the Xavy at Municipal Pier, Chicago, and his less will be keenly fe.t this year. The man who is expected to fill Heur- ing ' s place this year is Mrt Collier. He hails from Kansas and was the star of the Freshman team. He made Heur- ing step out several times last year and is expected to make a name for him- self and Indiana in Conference circles this year. Page One Hundred Five M. ' t Collier 2 El 1918 PROSPECTS FOR 1918 N y AiMiii K l . MiKiOl-; was captain n ilic cross-counlrv team lor 1917. i a llrii - ' s lias been chosen cajitain for ncxl fall. The ])n) i)ccls I ' nr the track icani Idiik prdiuisinii ' for this spring ' . We arc ' cr - fortunate in havin - the val- uable services of l ana 1 1. Evans for coach. No letter men in track are in school, but ( ' oilier and I5rig o-s in the (lashes, lUillock and Inlow in the pole- ault, :md Pierce in the weights, are aluablc men from the last year ' s iM-eslmian arsit ' . TkAC ' K SCUICDULE March - ' 2-2: . — Conference Indoor A I eel at I-lvanston. ' Ma ' 4. — I )el ' auw at Uloominglon. .Ma - 1 I. — Open. May 18. — Ohio Stale at Columbus, O. Ax.:; ! .Ma ' - ' 3. — ( )pen. Inne S. — Conference Meet at Chi cauo. .• klHl K AllX.I.K Cross-Ciiiiiitry Captain 17 l :tKi- ( )iu ' Huiiiiri ' d Six 1918 z7. AT V y y 1 VARSITY TRACK SQUAD Yager, First Row — Ferguson (trainer) Pierce. Dunlap, Mogge, (coach ). Second Ro ' lv — Clvmer. Purcell, Collier, Inlow Loomis, Evans Bui Indiana won the track meet from DePauw on May 4 )y the score of 8s to 55, hut lost to Ohio State at Colum- bus 67 to 59. The feature of the lat- ter meet was the taking of firsts in the hundred, two twenty, and quar- ter mile by Collier, Mug g in the two- mile, I ' urcell in the broad jump, Bul- lock and Inlow in the pole vault, took first places at the Ohio meet. Two Indiana records on the home track were broken this year, INIogge making the two-miles in 10:19, four seconds less than the pre- vious record ; Collier lowered the 220 record to 21.4. Collier and Briggs made excellent showing in the dashes at the In- door Conference Meet held at Chicago March 2} . Page One Hundred Seven V i lQlS il Evans (coach) Suayne Briggs Fayton Osborne Mogge (captain) VARS TY CROSS COUNTRY With very little material with which ti work Cnach Evans turned out a Cross Country Team that made an excellent showins - against the strong Ohio State aggregation. Arthur Mogge was elected captain. The principal meet was the one with Ohio State at Bloomington on Novemher ist. The race started at the Assembly Hall, covered live miles and ended at the Golf Links, with ( )hio State at the long enil of a 37 to i8 score. The time was _ ( minutes and 50 seconds. Page One Hun lrf(l Eight EZ AP WRESTLING WRESTLING was hit as hard by the war as any o£ the other sports, and onl} three of last year ' s team that won second honors in the A ' estern Inter-Collegiate Meet re- turned to school. Hook, Dalzell and Stormont formed the nucleus around which Coach Rathbun built his team — with Hook as captain for the sec- ond time. The wrestling schedule which orig- inally included Illinois, Purdue and Xorthwestern was badl}- damaged when each of these teams cancelled their meets. Xorthwestern waited until the team had weighed in and was at the station to catch the train for Evanston before telegraphing their cancellation. A western trip to Ames, Iowa, on March 2d, and Iowa University at Iowa City on March 4th. Ames won 16 to 5. The Crimson braced against the Iowa University team, however, and were defeated only 11 to 10. Dal- zell and Stormont both secured falls. The Indianapolis Y. M. C. A team. Joseph Hook Wrestling Captain under the direction of E. C. Davis, former Indiana coach, next came to Bloomington for a 15-to-o defeat. Mumby has been elect- ed captain for the 191 8 season. M Choke Him ! Page One Hundred Nine E 1018 VARSITY WRESTLING SQUAD rndcr lliL- - killful cnachiuii of (iuy Rallilmn, liidiana had a crcditalik- wrestling team. Iiicliana was ri ' ])rc- sentcd in the W esiern meet at Ames and hiwa h - Sliiniium m the 175 Ih. elass. . lumh - in the 13S-II).. I )ah ' ell in the 143 Ih.. Ihnik in the 1, 5 Ih.. and unn ' in the i_ ' 3 Ih. elass. ' ' ( ' ' Roii — Kathbun (coach). ih il (captain). Second Kp7V — Stoniioiit. DalzcH. .Miimhy, Vager. Kutti m Rinv — Inlow, ' oun.u. I ' liRc l ni- Iliiiiiii ' fd Ton L?2Jl ARBUl 1-uKi; ! GOLF THE University is especially fortunate in iiavino a g ' olf course which, although almost new. has been improved until it is now in excellent condition. The popularity of the game has spread among faculty and students until the course is now almost continually in use during the spring and summer months. The scene in the above pic- ture is an almost daily occurrence and proves that the men are not the only ones who are interested in the game and know how to pla ' it. The girls, as well, are becoming adepts and can do the course in bogy with the best of them. The Golf Club has quite an extensive membership, and several championship matches are being planned for this spring. The Golk Links Page One Hundred Eleven } W Heave Ho I THE FRESH-SOPH CLASS SCRAP H1 ' RE are a couple of scenes fnun the anniril I- reslimaii-Soi)h( iiiore Class Scrap, which is held each year before the first foothall game of the season. Instead of the old-time free-for-all fight, there has been substituted the safer, but more decisive push l)all contest. The idea is for one side to push the ball nver for a touch down against the other. The Freshmen are here seen to be getting the better end of the bargain, and for once have it on the Sophs. The pictiu e below prob- ably explains the reason, for it will hn plainly seen that the Freshmen have superior numbers b} ' about three to one. iiijj ■- --J %  , - _v ' ' V ' ' ' «5i ' ' ' ' A ' ' f- «| Ji ' ST REFOKr: thf. R.xttlk. Mothkr! I ' lige One Hundred Twelve 018 r H ma n ' 0 A t If I 1 1 r M 1918 !Z WOMEN ' S A THLETIC ASSOCLATION ilic purpose il the W union ' s Allilctic As iii ' ialiuu is in pmnidti ' in- terest in j Ainnaslic and athletic acti ilies anmn the yuun,! - wnnien ut the L ' ni ersity. Ideals The ideals of the Women ' s Athletic Association are: I ' hysical effi ciencv. scholarshi]). and ood fellowshi]) among the women ot ilu I ' niversity. M cmbcrshil lembershij) in the Association is limited to undergraduates who have obtained too points under the W . A. A. i)oint system, (iraduate members, former sttidents and members of the faculty, may become as- sociate members by paying the annual dues. Honors Hockey i oo Basketlxdl i oo Tennis lOO Swimming Team lOO Swimming learned in one semester _ ' 5 Baseball i co Four ten-mile hikes 50 Ten five-mile hikes 50 Twenty three-mile hikes 50 Squad member 10 Sub teams _ ' t Snl) plaxing oiU ' half in two games 2 ' = Manager 10 Second ear on team SO Third year on leani 75 Fourth _ ear on team 75 Second ear gymnasium 50 Third yeai gynniasium 75 Freshman honor lOO Sophomore honor j ' junior hiiiior 7_S |- our events uut of eight on apparatus 5a A nuiiicral is aw:ii(Kil Idr cadi . oo puims. . n I, U. sweater is awarded for eacli 8(X) pdiiits. ! :i - I )iM- Hmuli-ril Kdiirtt-rti Top Rem ' — Coblentz. Brown. Eastwood, Williams. Second Row — Stone, Castle, Hemmersbaugh, Spangler. Third Roi — Alexander, VanCleave, Schmidt. WOMANS ' ATHLETIC BOARD OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATIOX Ruth Alexander President Lena VanCleave ' . Vice-President Grace Spangler Secretary Josephine W- ' ngfieid Williams Treaburer HEADS OF SPORTS Elizabeth St jne Hikinc; Pearl Castle Hockey Mary Hemmersbaugh Swimniin,g Emma Schmidt Basketball Helen Coblentz Baseliall Bernice Eastwood Tennis Katharine Brown Director of Athletics Page One Hundred Fifteen IIJ Top Row — Spaii;-;li r, ka , . I ' jchli ' irii. Mcl- arlin. |- ' .a t V ' imiI, I ' .r.iun. Lurr , aiiLUa c. Maish. Second Row — Smith, Deputy. Stephenson. Reed. Osborn. Duguid. Bierly. F. Hpuss. Thomas. Third Roiv — Simmering. Castle. Snyder, M. Hauss, Gibson, Woods, Finch. G. Eiclihorn, Hasler, Evans, Hoffman, Robl)ins. McElroy. Fourth Ron: — Howard, McFarlin, Davis. Shoemaker. M. Loveless, Shore. Shore. Hemmersbaiigh. Llovd, Schmitt. Bottom Row — Simmering, Miller, Kestner, Foslcr, Johnson, Woody, Workman, McMath, Wilson, McMillan. HOCKEY SQU. D L- ' J 1917 HOCKEY TOURNAMENT Frrslinian 2 SophoiiiDre I Freshman - 3 junior o S i])Iir)m(irc o Senior 3 Junior o Senior 2 Freshman o Seni( ir 2 r-1 rngf One Hundred Slxti-cn yicJ Top Roiv — Bottom Ro HOCKEY CHAMPIOXS McElroy, Hauss, Brown (coach), ' aiiCleave, Xewnian, Alexander, McElroy. w — Stone, Eichliorn, Smith, Rypma, Maish. HOCKEY TEAMS Elta INIaish (captain) Lena VanCleave Ruth Alexander Ann Smith Elizabeth Bierly Bernice Eastwood (captain ) Mary Deputy Mabel Robbins Eva Stephenson Doris Reed Pearl Castle (captain) Irene Howard Emma Schmidt Grace Spangler Louise I IcFarlin Dorothy Simmering (captain) Luella Agger Caroline !McMath Josephine Moore Louise ' anCleave Alice Heald Seniors Enid Eichhorn Erma McElroy Elizabeth Stone Frances Hauss Katharine Rypma Juniors Lesta Curry Louise Thomas Frances McBath Abbie Hasler Elizabeth Ray Sophomores ' elma Gibson Sara Woods Louise Osborne Grace Eichhorn Alma Snyder Freslimen Agnes Johnson Leona Kestner Alice Heald X ' irginia Carmichael W ' ilma Lloyd Clara McMillan Isabelle McElroy Edna Xewman Lena McFarlin Ada Davidson Genevieve Duguid Caroline Hoffman Mary Henimersbaugh Ruth Simmering Dean Finch Mildred Hruss Anna Shore Alma Davis Mildred Fosler Chloe Shumaker Charlotte Wilkie - Page One Hundred Seventeen Agger u M Kestner Lloyd ( Capt. l SimiiKrinj; BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS J. . lc. L-ith CLASS TEAMS Seniors Centers — Katherine Kypma. Kiitli Aiexander Forwards — Agnes Slialey, X ' iola I ' ield Guards — Elizabeth Stone, Erina McElroy Subs — Isal)elle McElroy, Margaret Canine. I ' rances Haiiss Jiiuiins Centers — Helen Coblentz, Frances McMatb Forwards — Bernice Eastwood. Abbie Hasler Guards — Mary Deputy, Mabel Kobbins Subs — Erna Eisner, IHorence Sytz. Lesta Curry, l- va Stephenson So ' lionmrcs Centers — Mary HenniiersliaURh, Pearl Castle Forwards — Emma Schmidt. Grace Spanglcr Guards — Velnia Gibson, Sara Woods Subs — Louise Mcb ' arlin, Maude Shoemaker, Louise Osborne Frcsliiiu ' ii Centers— Alice lleald, Caroline McMath Forwards — Dorothy Sinnnerini;. Wihna Llnyil Guards — Luella AKKer, Leona Kestner Subs — Virginia Carmichael. Winifred W ilM n. .M.irietia Sicer, I ' ran ces He ' lil, Agnes Johnson l ' ;tK ' -  ■■Huinir-Ml Klghtoon :i VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM Top Row — Simmering, Brown (coacli). Second Rou ' — Schmidt, Stone. Castle. Tliird Rov. ' — Coblentz (captainj, McElroy. INTERCLASS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 5 Junior Freshman Sophomore 26 Freshman 17 Freshman 18 Sophomore .21 Senior 12 Sophomore 11 Junior 20 Senior i Junior 12 Senior iq Page One Hundred Nineteen 1918 I li.i.i;. C ' oi ' .i.KXTZ was ihc winner til ihc ciillcyc swimming- championship contest, in which Katherinc Rawle , 1 Iclcn ( ihlcntz, anil ( ' lara l ' ' (ller. winners of the 1915, nU and hm tournaments, respectively. ])arlicipatcil. In the H)i8 tournament, in- stead of swimming for indi idnal cham- pion hips, class teams tomiicte in the tour- nament. HeLEX ConLKXTZ CONTESTANTS 1918 SWIMMING TOURNAMENT Frances Hauss Agnes Slialey (captain) Keillors Etiiel Stuteville Viola Field Margaret Carter Lorena Ray (captain) Xornia Schoher I- ances McMatli Subs — Frna Eisner Marx- 1 )eputy Maliel Kol)l)ins So ' Iioiiniycs Mary Hennne-sliaugh (captain) Subs — Fannie Clayton Fearl Castle X ' elnia Gibson N ' crda Voder Sara Woods Freshmen Lnella Agger Mary F ' lctcher (captain) Winifred (jrahani Di rotty Simmering Subs — Esther lackson Teg O ' Sleara Irene lietsell Caroline Mc.Matli i age One Iluinind Twenty iZ Al I ' i) I ' ll V 1 JUNIOR CLASS STUNT ' I ' lu- Juniiir Cla s Slum was awardcil the W . A. A. banner al the- annual W. A. . . N ' audevillc. l)ccausc of its (iri ' inality and excellence nf ])resentati()n. Tlie stunt was coached by llernice East- wood, assisted l)y Florence Svtz and Ada Davidson. Who Said Topsv: Mll.n KN S l.l TIS ■■I-ll ' l V-SKM N ' AKirTri I ' lig. cm.- Huri(lr ' l Twcnly-Two A r 1 1 u i 1 1 THE ARBUTUS BOARD OF EDITORS I ' hancks M. Hauss, ] ' :(Iiliir-iii-( ' liicf, J. vMd.Ni) I ' hknch, Josephine PiKiav, (iuAn: Mii.i.kx, Lim.i; Gkw HvKON N. LiNGEMAN, Iiulianapolis Editor. PttKO One Hundrt-M Twi-nty -Fniir s ARBUTUS BOARD OF BUSINESS MANAGERS WiLLiAir Russell Stuart President jAisrES Wilson Young Secretary Horace G. Wysong Treasurer C. L. RuDESiLL Indianapolis Member Will D. Howe Faculty iMember Ira C. Batman Trustee Member Page One Hundred Twenty-Five 1918 il ! 4 STAFF 1918 ARBUTUS Military Editor — Louise Hervey. Associate Editors — Roscoe Fleming. Lorena Degiier, Sam Loiulen. Mary Mullinnix. Art Department — Charles Rush, Ruth Innis, lax Billnian. Photographs — J. C. Warner, Ray Briggs, Ira Baumgartner. Frank Leveli. Press — Mrs. Edessa Innis, Gordon Batman. Men ' s Athletics— Wendell Washburn, Joe Muuk. William F, Kegley, James Butler, Wilfred McFarland, Dwight Peterson. Women ' s Athletics — Ruth Alexander, Be? trice Le y, Florence Sytz. Dramatics — John Hastings, Enid Eiclihorn, Carl Cirton. Law School — John Edress, Irwin Dinmiick. Medic — Harry Robins Kerr. Music — Jack Berman, Ethel Larm. Joke — Lawrence Wheeler. Woman ' s Activities — Carrie Glavon. Jcihanna Peterson. Mary Hershe ' . Rachael Brownell, Shirley Armstrong. Departmental Clubs — Esther Hurst, Faith Lee, Marion Kiess. Indianapolis ledical Staff — Robert Hauss, John Leser, Roliert Masters. INDIANAPOLIS MEDICAL STAFF Robert Masters Robert Hauss John Leser Page One Hundred Twenty-Seven lyio tr- s ' 1 W ' inslow Farr Hervev THE INDIANA DAILY STUDENT The earliest co])ies of The Inthana Student ' in ])reservatiiin are dated 1867. The paper then was an eight-paj e sheet, i)ubHshed under the auspices of the Senior and Junior classes. The publication was abandoned for a time durino- tlie seventies. In 1882 it was re ived by Prof. W. j. I ' .rxan ( nnw President I ' ryan ). W. W. Spangler and Clar- ence Goodwin. One of the editors in 1885-86 was Ernest I ' . Bicknell, now of inter- national fame in connection with the Red Cross. Professor C. I. Sembower was one of the editors in i8i)i-i8 ;2. and P)Ursar U. 11. Sniiih held a like honor the following ' year. In iSi; The Student ' was chanced from a monthlv to a weeklv and took on more of the char- t.cter of a news])aper. In 181 7 it was made a semi-weeklw and a year later became a daily. Since that lime The .Suident has mo ed into a building of its own with c |ui]imem and machinery second to none in the Middle West, and is now one of the be l among college newsi)a])ers. These in charge of TIk- Studeiu ' during the ])ast _ -ear were: rirst Semester J. Wymoiul French Editor-in-Chief Frederick- Farr Business .Mana ' cr Second Setiiesler Kalpli W . W ' inslow F(htor-in-Cliief H. Lonise Hcrvcy Business .Manager VtiKf .tlir Muinlri ' il Twt ' tily-EtBht n 18 Top Row — Sallade, Butler, Plogstertli, Wheeler, Mays, Winslow. Second Row — Crippen, Robbins, Mrs. Innis, Ray, Piercy. Larni, Hervey. Third Row — Kegley, Penrod, MacFarland, Trent, Frencb, Wheeler, Peterson. STAFF OF THE INDIANA DAILY STUDENT The Indiana Daily Student Staff is organized on the same basis as that of a nietropoHtan daily. It is composed of about forty mem- bers to whom work on the Student affords valuable practical training in journalism. Beginning with the Summer Session, during which the paper was published semi-weekly, it has been important to note that the Coeds have laken more active places in the business and editorial affairs of the paper. At this time Louise Hervey assumed the reins of Business iNlanager and was largely respons ible for the summer editions. Coeds have charge, at present, of the duties of Business Manager, Managing Editor, Feature Editor, and the Copy Editors. The Service Flag of the office has twenty-one stars for men who have entered the service since the entrance of the L ' nited States into the war. IN y Page One Hundred Twenty -Nine 1918 V THE RED BOOK The one best seller on the cani- ims is the Red Book. It is the most used as well as the most useful book from the student ' s standpoint. This year ' s I ' ook was put. out by William K. Stuart and was classed by the In- diana l);iily Student as follows ; Xot because it is customary to say so. but because the fact is self- evident, do we make the assertion that the igi7-i8 Red Book is bigger and better than ever. .Ml features of last year ' s edition have been revised and corrected — made more complete in every respect — and new features have been added to make the edition more than ever a student bible of complete information. .Among the new features were: The home address of each student; the student directory pages, coiilain- in.g the name, rank in school, hcnue address and Blnomington address and telephone nund)er of every student : an organization directory, containing the name, address, telephone number and president of each organization ; a complete roll of the members of each organization : a directory of all college boarding houses, with their addresse and purveyor; a hiker ' s guide. and the Conference basketball schedule. ii.i,i. . i R. Sti ' . rt, the editor-in-chief and busi- ness manager of the Red Book, has had considerable e. perience in such work, being a member of the staff (if the Daily Student for two years and ISlooni- ington corresi)ondent for the .Associated Press. IK was on the staff of the i )i.S and the ii)i6 . rbutus. associate editor of the iyi7 Book and is the president of the Board of Business Managers for this year. He also is a member of the .Sigma Xu. I ' hi Delt.i Phi and Sigma Delta Chi fraternities. M.I.I M K. S I I U I I ' uK - Oni ' IluiKlrcil Thirl.v First Row — Davis, Weinhardt, Owen, VanOsdel, Kerr, Highwa.v. SecDiid Row — ' Stonecipher, Snider, Northam, Brown, Cadou, Spencer. Third Row — Moward, Miles, Geiger, Peterson, French, Mitchell. THE MEN ' S GLEE CLUB The jNIen ' s Glee Club is composed of the best voices in the Univer- sity. It is under the direction of Mr. John L. Gerger, who is the coach. The Club takes ])art in the Foundation day exercises and fre(|uentlv ap- pears at convocation. Mr. Dwight Peterson is the manager. lAj Page One Hundred Thirty-One THE INDIANA UNION The Indiana Union is the hig democratic organization oi the Univer- sity, composed of nearly every man in school. It represents the stndent in its biggest undertakings. The Union conducts a high class and expensive Entertainment .Series in which some of the best talent of the day is presented to the students for a nominal price. A barber shop and pool room are maintained in die Student Building for the benefit of the members. This organization has endeavored to increase its powers and widen its scope for usefulness in the last year. It is the ambition of the Union to have a home of its own on the campus by the time Indiana L ' ni -ersity celebrates her centennial in 1920. The officers and boards of directors for the past year were : OFFICERS Courtland Isenhower President H. Bryson Miller Secretary Fred E. Wiecking Vice-President Wendell Waslibnrn Treasurer First Rozv — Wendell Washburn Fred E. Wiecking Frank Levell Ralph V. Sollit -Arthur R. Brown Second Row — ■■Edward Ridley Courtland Isenhower Carl J. Weinhardt H. Bryson Miller Tliird Row — V ' illiam A. Cogshall Joseph T. Ryan Howard K. Turner Ardith Phillips Marion Kiess Page One Hundred Thirty-Three Ei 1918 THE BOOSTE R ' S CLUB The Boosters CIuIj was organized for the purpose of boosting Indi- ana University, especiahy its athletics. It is one of the most active and energetic clubs on the campus in carrying on the University ' s work. The annual function of the Boosters ' Club is to direct the sale of the athletic season books, and to manage the State High School Basketball Tournament. For the second time a special souvenir booklet concern- ing the University and its athletics was published for the tournament visitors. The officers for the first semester were: Joseph Ryan, president; L. France Conter, vice-president; H. B. Miller, secretary; John M. Mc- Fadden, treasurer. For the second semester the officers are : Frank H. Levell, president; L. France Conter, vice-president; H. B. Miller, secretary; John M. McFadden, treasurer. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Ralph Cocliran, Indiana Club Joseph Ryan, Delta Upsilon Howard Lahr, Lambda Chi Roy Shank Second Column — William F. Kegiey, Sigma Chi David Stormont James Butler, Daletbian France Conter, Phi Delta Theta Herman Strauss Third C olumn — William R. Stuart, Sigma Nu Frank Levell, Masonic House Bryson H. Miller John Carithers Fourth Column — Marion Kiess Edwin Sellers, Delta Tau Arthur R. JMogge, Alpha Tau Omega Isadore Fine John McFaddin, Phi Psi Fifth Column — Omer Kent Smiley Whinery Charles Grimes John H, Edris, Kappa Sigma V M } I1 Page One Hundred Thirty-Five i IP 4G K THE SPHINX CLUB The Sphinx Ckib is an organization composed of thirty upper class- men selected from the Greek-letter fraternities. A baseball game in the spring is usually selected as the time for the spiking committee to make its way through the crowds and tie the black and white ribbons of the club on the persons chosen. The organization is purely social, and was organized about seven } ' ears ago by the Book Nookers of that day. The Club members ' claim to distinction is based upon the hats they wear. The black and white hat of winter and the white and black hat of spring are alike clamorous, and announce the approach of the wearer while he is still some way off. Fred S. Weicking is president of the organization this year. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Ro ' lC — Frank S. Harkins H. Philip Bowser L. France Center Alan R. jNIcGinnis Ralph E. Peckham Second Row — Erwin W. Dimmick F ' red A. Wiecking Edward S. Ridley Courtland M. Isenhower Tliird Rozv — Howard K. Turner Byron Huering F. Bernet Leist Wendell J. Washburn Frank A. Throop Foiirtli Row — Alfred H. Ellison Bernard K. Cravens Henry E. Blattman William Russell Stuart Fifth Row — T. Matson Collier Edwin A. Sellers James W. Ingles Alvin Sutheimer Lvnn W. Howard lfe jj Page One Hundred Thirty-Seven 1918 KC THE Y. M. C. A. It has been the aim of the Young Men ' s Christian Association dur- ing the past year to do its full part in helping to win the war. Asso- ciation officers were among the first to respond to the country ' s call. Former General Secretary T. A. Rymer is now Assistant Camp Secre- tary of Army Y. M. C. A. at Ft. Sill, Okla., in charge of a force of forty men. Chas. F. Thompson resigned the presidency to enlist and is now in France. E. Arlo Byrum resigned the vice-presidency to become Y. M. C. A. Recreational Secretary at Camp Taylor, Iventucky. Other Cabinet men in service are : P. R. Hightower, Mike, Blew and Floyd Reynolds. The Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. organized a campaign and together raised over $10,000 on the campus for the Students ' Friendship War Fund. Social service work was not neglected. Gospel teams were organ- ized and sent our. A successful Poor Kids ' Christmas Party was held. This affair led to the organization of a Sunday school for poor boys, which meets each Sunday afternoon in the City Hall. An intensive University-wide Bible Study Course was conducted. A permanent Y. M. C. A. Quartette was organized. Weekly meetings for men were held on the campus. I I ! I u Members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Roii — John D. Hastings John V. Maier Arvil P. Barr Lyman P. Pierson Stanley AI. Casey Second Rozv — ■Lawrence W ' lieeler J. ymond French Rnthven H. Byrum Smiley M. Whinery Ernest R. Baltzell Tliird Rozv — Hiner J. Thompson Hohart Rogers D. L. Eaton R. Harris McGuire Charles H. Kern IL. Page One Hundred Thirty -Nine : 1918 t . _ , I ' irsI v ' oji ' - -Coble, Swaiison, lUTshey, Ripnian, Scarce. Degner, Coffey. Srcoiid Rati. ' — Sytz, Mason. Williams, Walkiip. Weber. Peterson. Luck. Third Roic — Falkner, Force, Lee, Russell, Brown, Cox. WOMAN ' S LEAGUE OFFICERS, 1917-18 .Mar Hersliey I ' resuknt Johanna Peterson X ' ice-President Louise Stubbins Treasurer F.va Swanson Secretary i n ' s LiAi.n; .Maskih 1 ' . mj I UK« ' Our lIuiHlnil Kurt.v h, ' 1 First Roiv — Hemmersbaugh, Coble, Eastwood, Kice. Second Row — Schmidt, Janes, Davidson, Holliiigswortli. Third Row — Hoffman, Canine, Glascock. THE Y. W. C. A. fn) The Y. ' . C. A. activities during tlie past year have greatly in- creased hecause of the war activities of the campus. The Association, together -ith tlie Y. M. C. A., launched and carried to a successful conclusion Indiana University ' s quota for the Student Friendship War Fund for the benefit of prisoners of war and to carry on ' . M. and V. W. C. A. war work. The Association is active in civilian relief in Bloomington, as well as continuing the usual devotional, Bible, and mission work. In addition to this, a special discitssion course was arranged upon the Relation of Christianity to Democracy. The officers for the past year are : Margaret Canine President Mildred Hatch Vice-President Emma Schmitt Secretary Odette Hollingsworth Treasurer Page One Hundred Forty-One Il!l first Rozi ' — Aiulersoii. Haiiiiali, Haiiiiigartnt-r, ilkic, Loomis, Orr, Simons. Miller. Second Rozc — Highman. Elliiiwood. Tutcvviler. Hurst. Slinkard, Coiulit, Kolh. Third ?()if — Trent. Gray. Davidson. Owens. Johnson, Corey. Snodgrass, Lauer. I ' oiirtli A ' oji ' — Smith. 1 lollinKswortli. Stockton, Kichhorn. Shore. Gaskins, Girton. • ' ( ' iiii. ' Weinharclt. I.iliert. 1-alir. . ' -tran s. Ringer, Crammer. THE GARRICK CLUB The Garrick ( lul) is composed of stiuleiUs who have shown (h-amatir al)ilitv in some play incsenled in ])uhhc. ' Hie cliiet aim of the C lub is 1(. iJiomole interest in (h amatics in the L ' ni ersity In the ])resentation of plavs, as weh as h - ln-in ; instninienlal in hrin iuL; actors to the I ' ni ersit ' who wotild not othei ' wise come. The officers of the ( ' hih are Kiiid Kiihhr rn President k. Harris .MeChiire ' iee-President Panl (laskins ■• Treasnrer Helen Trent Seeretary Pagi! One lliiinlrfH l '  r1,v-T vo ' : i Top Row — McGinnis, Essig, Plumber, Ettcr, Hershc}-, Kern, Colile, Kixcr. Second Row — Biatt, Scarce, Paterno, Corr, Goldman, Gray, Baltzell, Chambers, Kiang. Third Row — Huflman, Huddelson, VVysong, Judy, Brayton, Good, Hendren, Calvin Fourth Rozv — Hurst, Foxworthy, Kolilmeier. Bates, VVoodhurn. Hersliey, AlcDmiald, Elliott. Fifth Row — Butler, Kodera, Deckard, Garstki, Katterjohn. HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB This organization has been formed not only for the practical puri)ose of discussing subjects that are not touched upon in the class room, but also to promote a greater degree of fellowship between the students themselves and between the students and the professors in the depart- ments. Membership in the Club is open to the faculty and to Seniors and Juniors majoring in the departments of History and Political Science, without invitation ; other m ajors, post-graduate students and interested students may be invited to membership. Meetings are held on alternate Thursdays, at which faculty members and students partici- pate in the program. Two annual affairs are the mid-year baiu|uet and the spring picnic. The officers for the present year are : Prof. A. L. Kohlmeier President Freida Coble Vice-President Heinian Blatt Secretary and Treasurer Page One Hundred Forty-Three V M luitloiii A ' oii ' — Cascu, SwiiifU ' il. Ciaskiiis. Keail. Second Row — Morgan, Ludlow, Wysong, Chilcts, Templeton, Siegfried, Esary. Thiid h ' ow — Allen, Wideffer, Waggoner, Stuart, Levell, Faust. Fourth Row — Kattcrjohn, Branimer, Sliowalter, Etter, Smith, Moffat. Carpenter, Rucli. Fifth Row — Gift, Hamilton, Kennedy, .Acre, Carithers, .-Xbhot, Pitkin, Terrill. T H r-: TRAVELERS ' CLUB riu ' TraN ' elcrs ' C ' lnl) is an Mri anizatioii cnmpdscd of sludcnls ami lacultN ' iiK ' nil)LTs l)eliin!.; ' ini.; ' { tlir .Ala- diiic (irilrr. r.aiii|iK ' ts arc liclil duriiij; ' the war, at which a speaker troiii the lacuhy, a s])eaker from tile city, and a s])eaker from outside the city are asked lo rcsiiond to toasts. There are fiftv-five Masons in the University. Tlie officers are : Horace Wysong Eminent Traveler Paul Gaskins Senior Wayfarer Harlan . cre Junior Wayfarer I- ' rank Levell Secretary Merle Sliowalter Treasurer I ' liKc Oni- Ilunilrt-il I- ' nrty-Kour Top 7?ozc ' — Rosen, Austria: Cochran, U. S. ; Garstka, U. S. : Rivera, Pliilippine Islands; Hervev, U. S. Second Row— Chu. China: Paterno, Philippine Islands: Kirng, Chnia : Daiitzig, Russia; Marison, Canada. Bottom Row— LeCoq. France; Eggman, U. S. : Blatt, Russia: Axelrod, Russia: Carrascoso, Philippine Islands : Kodera, Japan. THE COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club is an organization of foreign students for the purpose of promoting- brotherhood and cosmopolitan interests among- representatives of foreign countries in Indiana LTniversity. In January, 1918, the local chapter was granted a charter from the Inter- national Cosmopolitan Society. The officers are : Heiman Hlatt President Carl Eggman . ' Vice-President Pierre LeCoq -. Treasurer Georgiana Marison Secretary S V M ll Yj Page One Hundred Forty-Five i 1 18 i2 l- ' irst Kozi — Lariii, Wilson. Louilcn, I ' fall. Acre, Kxpina. Iliiiitcr. Second Rozc — Bcugiiot, Mrs. Esarey, Eichliorn, Adams, Meid, Zariii.s-. McMillan. Third Ron. ' — Honiaday. Ehrie. .Anderson, Xoble, De.xter, Weaver. I-ourlli Rote — Field. Kelly, . slniry. Wise, Reeves. THE ENGLISH CLUB The lCnL;ii.sli Club is an ors;anizati« n composed ol En lisli majors, post-ijraduate students, and others wlio are esi)ecially interested in this department. Meetings are held hi-monthl , which are devoted entirely to discussions and programs of a literary nature. The basis lor the programs of this year is the study of American authors. The officers elected to ser e for this year are: Pleasant R. 11 inIUower President .■nn Irene Ik-ugnot Vice-President Mrs. Edcssa Innis Secretary Sibyl Weaver Treasnrcr Pari One lluiulr - ! Forty-Stx ' 2. m First Rozi- — ' Weatliers. Sniitli, Levy. Baker, Riser, Skell. Second Rozv — Denny, Stevens. Buskirk, Glaze, Ryan, Duncan. Mason. Third Rozv — Evans. White. Hersliey, Deputy, Brown. Wise, Martin. Fourth Roii. ' — Stahl. Goldman. Rosenberg, Pfaff. Wilkinson. Weber. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Le Cercle Francais i.s composed of members of the French Depart- ment and a limited number of the best students in French who are eHg- ible on invitation. Le Cercle meets on alternate Thursday evenings for practice in conversational French. Topics are discussed which bear upon French problems and progress in the war. The social side of Le Cercle is also encouraged. The Fete Des Rois is celebrated annually, according to the French custom. French playlets are presented fre- quently by members of the organization. Lois Stewart is president of Le Cercle. Page One Hundred Forty-Seven Li I] rirsi Rozi ' — Potter. I.anlKini. liin.-li, l ' hrif. StapU-tun, Ralston. Small. Spunccr. Second Kou ' — VanClcavc, Densford. Stevens. Force. Ragsilale. Wilson. Trent. Drollinger. Third Row — Snyder, Eichliorn. Lahr, Anderson, Stormont, Adams, Thomas. Fourth Row — Professor .Andrews, Professor VanHook. Dr. Mottier, Mr. W ' eatlierwax. - Ileii, Acre. THE BOTANY CLUB The Botaii}- Clul) was or ani cd in H)i i, ami i c mi])! i cd nf laculiy members, majors in the (le])artnicnt, and nUieis interested in botanical subjects wlio niav be invited to niembersbip. Recent problems in botan- ical science are discussed and social meelin. s are liekl lre(|uently. Floyd E. Beghtel is president. I ' HKf Ont- llunilri ' tl Forty-KlKht first 7?0ti ' — Lemper, Ray. Eastwood, Ledbetter, Rouse, Mellott, Peake. Second Kent. ' — Good, Dauni, Farley, Glaze, Hiatt, Muelchi, Green, Third Ron ' — Hattery, Miss Sage, ; Iiss Weilman, liss Givan, Walker, Hurd. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB The Home Economics Club is a club organized for the purpose of discussing current events of interest in Home Economics. Majors in the Department of Home Economics, and other students upon the recommendation of the faculty of the department are eligible to mem- bership. The officers are : Grace Hiiiisberger President Orpha Ledbetter Vice-President Page One Hundred Forty-Nine r::l Tofi Run — Wilson, Earp, Wood, Elliott, Coleman, ilson. Second Row — Rabb, Sangernabo, Brown, Tutewiler. Janes, l ' llin vood, .Sliipnian, (ierkin. ' 1 lurd Row — Parrott, Ellison, Woody, Lalir, Henderson, Me.Math. Ray. Fourth Row — Ecetnian, Jolnison, Walker, Crippen, Da , Hopkins, Payne. I THE SHORT RIDGE CLUB The Shortrids;c Clul) is a cluh coniixiscd of stiulcnls wild Iiavc at- tended Shortridi e llit h ScIiddI at Indiaiiaixili.s. The purpose ot the Clul) is mainly social, and is the means of renewing old aeciuaintances, as well as making new ones. ' i ' he officers fif the ( ' luh are: r.yrcin b lliiit President Jose|)bine Walker Viec-President Julia Tntevviler Treasurer Harold ictor Secretary pi , I rr ruKi ' One- llunilnci Klfly Top Rozv — Lemper, Coll, Dietz, Green, Black, Booty. Second Roiv — Kozicak, Lemper, Ehrie, Seberger, Barrett, O ' Xeal, Broyles. Third Row — Patenio, Talbot, Garstka, Carrascoso. THE MARQUETTE CLUB The Marquette Club was organized in 1907, primarily to bring stu- dents of the Catholic faith into closer social and religious relations. Meetings are held twice a month for social times, and for the discussion of current literature and ])roblems ])ertaining to the church and re- ligion. The officers elected for this year are : Antonio Carrascoso President Irene Ryan Vice-President Stella Rouse Secretary Frances Brosnan Treasurer UN Page One Hundred Fifty-One 1918 H MM H HH ■jj HH V r i | H ' ' HV I K 7 j H HV ' ai P i H H m- M M Ij J K J . i - 4 H l -iril ys ' ozt ' — Keissinger, Holmes, Hvaiis. Coffey, . oniian, Begeman, Page, Dcgncr. Second liovj — Adams, Guthrie, Riley, Durrenberger, Walker, Cook. McKlroy. McElroy, Third Ron: — Bachelor, Hasler, Baker, White, Hopkins, Post, Xuzum. Fourth Ron: — Baltzell, illiams. Ur. Stout, -Miss Berry, Mr. Menk, Swami. THE CLASSICAL CLUB The Classical Club is an (ir anization (if upper classmen of the Latin and Greek deparlnicnts. Its pur])Ose is to further the study (if classical languages, and to prdUKite n ' ond iellcw shi]) anion ' the students. Meet- ings are held once a month and are intended to have both a social and cultural valtic. The programs consist of Latin games, songs, or short plays, and readings or discussions (in classical subjects of broad general interest, or such as are not treated in class (ir lecture. The officers for this year are: Helen Hcppkins President Lorena Degncr ice-Presidcnt Josciiliine Walker Secretary Walter Swann Treasurer Page One Hundred FlfI.v-Two First Row — Cochran, Lcoiiard. liincry, McDonald, Kern. Second Roll ' — Smith, Moorehead, Byrum, Lahr, Thompson. Third Rozi. ' — Byrum, Grandy, Wysong, Hook, Miller. THE EVENER ' S CLUB The Eveners Club i.s an organization, the members of whicii are chosen from men in the University who have made ah or part of their expenses in school. Its meetings are of both social and business nature. A loan fund is maintained for the benefit of any students who wish to borrow money. The Club also cooperates with the Young Men ' s Christian Association for employment of any men who may desire it. The officers of the Club are: Charles Kern President Gregg Smith Vice-President Ruthven Byrum Secretary Ralph Cochran Treasurer Page One Hundred Fifty-Three J.X UvJ i:;! V aw .u i Top kim. ' — Baker. Jokcj., Williams, Ford, Vorliis. Mohs, Ludlow, Hodihalter. Second Row—Meek. Maish, Denny, Swain, Williams, Conrad, Groebl. Third Row — Swain, Eller, Fechtman, Vorkman, Fields, Snyder. I- ' ourlh Row — Tabor, Hornaday, Kolb, Morrison, Polk, Spangler. THE GIRLS ' GLEE CLUB The Girls ' Glee Clul) is selected troiii the lars er (lirls Chorus. The CUil) is under the directiim i t Mr. John I,. Geii ' er, who organized it ori inalU- and is its coach. The (lirls ' Glee Club takes x rX in the J ' oundation Dav exercises, and at times appears jointly with the .Men ' s Glee Club at Convocation. ' J I ' iiKc I In.- Ihiii.lr. ' .l ri fly ■■• ' our t918 T UK I I. i j li . ■ W !_- - Copyright Shaw tS Cosnc The Well House • w 7 ■- -t ; • ' ' 5 ■' P ' (. r (H I a f a Com MKXCKMKXT I917 Al.l ' MM H. Xnn.T IQI I ' HBf Oiii- Hundnil Flfiy-SIx [ Ii ■.-L i  r.? - :- • ' • •••. w ' 9 r .y  '  s ,v . ■5ssw( m SB ■y )I7 CoMMKN ' Cr.MKXT ScENES jL xO Mri.i.i:.Nix Pri-sident Smith Treasurer ' ii ' (.--Presitli-nt SKXIOK CLASS l)l-i-lCF.RS CORHV Secrctarv CLASS ROLL Abbott. Talbcrt Ward 173 vVrhwalni. Graeo 161 Acre. Harlan CJuincy 171 Alexander. Kuth Isabel 166 Anderson. Iva Elvira 174 A.sbur,v. Eunice 173 Baer. Flo.vd AVIL-ion 171 nal er. Edith I(!8 Batehelor. Isabelle 175 Bierly, Elizabeth M. 173 Bioomfield. Grace B. 172 Bow. ' 4er. Harold John 181 Bray ton. Ruth 167 Briggs. Ray Herbert 174 Brothers. Chester R. I6.1; Brown. Marie I7.T Buriage. Henry Matthew 163 Butler. James Hannan 172 Calvert. Truman B. 161 Calvin. Elsie 167 Canine. Margaret B. 166 Carithers. John Wait ISO Carnes. Homer C. 171 Carnes, Ross Edgar 171 CarrascoHO. Antonio T. 180 Coble. Mary Freda 159 Coffey. Marie I.ola 171 Coffey. Lucile Hester 166 Copple. K. V. 169 Cook. Faustlne 162 Corey. Hattle Elinor 163 Corr. Eiina June 168 Crlckard. Kuth X. 175 Crlppen. Alice May 174 Curry. I.esla Florence 163 Ualzell. Wilbur Jennings 173 Davis. I.uther D. 160 Deal. Wava Ella 160 Diane. I ' hena Ashley 169 Decker. Kuth Kelsey 169 Degner. I urenii Ivy 159 DuKUid. Uraie Ellen 169 Dlmmlck. Irwin Wallace 181 Dunlaii. Klhil I ' lara 164 Durr.nlierg.-r. .lane H,.lle 161 Kggmati, Carl .Manscm 161 IChrle. .Mary Catherim- 160 F:iehhorn. Enid Etta 162 Eitel. Maria Henrietta 160 F;iliott. Alice 163 Elliott. Ruth 170 ■Esary (Mrs.). I aura 161 Essig. Khlrl B. 168 Etter. Perl Austin 160 Evans. Anna Louise 164 Evans, Minnie Frances 163 Faulkner. Kc nneth 168 Fee. Kathryn Irene 167 Field. Viola 164 Fine. Isadore Jacob 164 Fleming. Koscot; Bain 174 French. J. W.vmond 172 Garrison. Floyd M. 170 Garstka. William V. 167 Gerhard. Elsa 174 Gliiaspy. John Haskell 16S Goldman. Buel 166 Graebner. Herman 159 Gray. Lucile Charman 172 Halleck. Lura Ardell 169 Hampton. Edith Sidney 159 Hatch. Mildred Letitia 170 Hauss. B ' rances Marie 172 Hershcy. Mary Fraaces 170 Hcrvey. Bertha Louise 173 Hiikam. Willis. Jr. 179 HlKhman. Edith 162 Hikes. Olive 166 HIte. I. Mildred 162 Holcomb. Roger L. 172 Holmes. Lela Marguerite 168 Hook. Joselih Charles 181 Hopkins. Helen Dale 170 Hornaday. Alelhea A. 161 Hottenstein. I ' aullni- B. 175 Huclelson. Laura ]6. Huffman. Franci-s 174 Hunsberger. Grace .M. 164 Hurd. Jessie Helena 161 Hurst. Esther 161 Innls. Edessa Carroll 171 Innls. Kuth 174 Isenhower. Courtland .M. 180 Ju i l. Ella .Mjiurlne 171 Judy. Celia Elizabeth 169 Katterjohn. Cecil C. 175 Kelle.v. .lesse Arthur 174 Kelley. Nelle Mae 16S Kent. Omer T. 172 Kiang. Tze Yuin 164 Kiess. .Marion 170 Lahrmann. Ethel 160 Lahr. Howard .Melvin 172 Ledbetter. Orpha M. 170 Leist. Francis Bernet ISO Levey. B.atrlee Zelda 166 Loree. Edna Day 165 Lowden. Samuel Marion 169 Lowe. Julia Elva 159 Lowe. W. D. 160 Luse. Okla 175 .McCaughan. Alpha B. 167 .McFarlin. Lena Maude 167 .McGinnis. Marvel Marian 167 McMillan. Gretta 167 .Maish. Ella May 162 .Martin. Grace Nealy 162 Meek. Nellie Fern 161 .Meld, Clara Kuth 169 .Mellen. Grace 16S .Merced. Felino Lorenzo ISl .Meriwether. Sirdastlan 175 .Miller. Jeanette 164 .Muelehl. Slgrid 162 Mulllnnix. .Mary Rebecca 169 Newman. Edna 168 .N ' iehrugge. Ella Kuth 165 Noble. .Mary Wllmle 160 O ' Hyrne. Roseoe C. 180 Overman. Nellie Fae 166 Owens. Evelyn I orean 164 I ' ad.loek. Gertrude M. 169 I ' arker. Gail 160 I ' ar.sons. Ethel Ellen 170 Paterno. Simon Ramos ISO I ' cake. Hazel 164 I ' etcrscm. .lohanna Sophia 164 I ' etersim. Terry Sylvanis 165 I ' l ' ttibone. Claude R. ' 173 I ' lcrcy. Josephine K. 163 ITaff. Earl A. 167 Plummer. Rosella E. 163 Porter. Sarah Margaret 169 Post. Lois 159 Proctor. Edward Walter 175 Ray. Alice Ethel 170 Read. Lyndon Bartlett 173 Reeves. Mary Kathryn 168 Riddle. Charles Kenneth 172 Ridley. Edward Steele ISO Rlnehart. .Mary olive 173 Risinger. Katie Mae 175 Rouse. Stella Marie 163 Ryan. Joseph James ISO Rypma. Katherine 163 Schaupp. Ralph 162 Sehwalm. Grace 161 Seagle. William Wlnfrcd ISO Shaley. Agnes Brewer 167 Showalter. Merle F. 163 Smith. Lee Thomas 171 Smith. Rebekah Anne 169 Spencer. Ada Verne 166 Stevens. Alice 165 Stimson. Margaret E. 165 Stone. Sara Elizabeth 169 Stone. William Hersehei 166 Stuart. William Russell ISO Stuteville, Ethel 174 Swain. Frances Willard 170 Swanson. Eva Gustava 171 Teter. Garnet! Floyd 175 Thornburg. .Myla 171 Turner. H. K. 162 Van Cteav. ' . Lena 166 Wagner. Charlotte Erwin 174 Washburn. Wendell J. 175 Weathers (Mrs. I. G. F. 166 Wheeler. Mary Rawles 165 White, olive Rosalind 165 Wilkinson. Clarenee E. 159 Wis.-. Hlanihe 160 Woliolt. .Miirgucrlte 161 Wohlfeld. n.riha Jean 160 W.vsong. Horace t ' laman 173 Young. James Wilson 172 Zimmerman. Margaret R. 162 Page One Hundred Fifty-Eight 1 MuLLiNNix, Mary. Jltica- Mathematics. Pi Beta Plii. Euclidean Circle, Psychology Club. Theta Sigma Phi, Basketball ' i5- ' i6, Hockey ' i5- ' i6. Senior Class Presi- dent, Associate Editor IQ18 Arbutus. Lowe, Julia Elva, Cynthiana. English. English Club. Coble, Mary Freda. New Aut usta. History. Vice-Presi- dent History Club ' 17, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet ' i7- ' i8. Woman ' s League Board ' i7- ' i8. Hampton, Edith Sidney. Richmond. English. Meid, Clara Ruth. Riishrillc. English. English Club. Post, Lois. Sult hur Sfrings. Latin. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Classical School. Wilkinson, Clarence Edwin. Kockfort. History. Kappa Sigma. French Club, History and Political Sci- ence Club, Demurrer Club. Deane Phena Ashley. Carlisle. German. Degner, Lorena Ivy. Winamac. Latin. Vice-President Classical Club ' i7- ' i8, Der Deutsche Verein, Woman ' s League Board ' i7- ' i8. Phi Beta Kappa. .Associate Editor Arbutus 18. Graebner. Herman. Indianal olis. Chemistry. Masonic Fraternity, Alpha Chi Sigma, Chemistry Assistant. Page One Hundred Fifty -Nine i 1918 l.i i;, W. D. Economics. Pahkkk. Gail. Cohiinhiis. (Icrniaii. Delta (ianima. Khuik. .Makv Cathkkixk. Wiiuniti ' . I- ' iifjlisli. Botany Cliil). Iui8li li Club. Maniui-ttc Clnli. Dkal. Wava Ella. Lagianiic MathtMnatics. Eu- clidean Circle. Laukman.v . Ethkl. Brou ' iistowii. Home Ivconomics. Sigma Kappa, Home Economies Cluli. Etter. Pkhl .Al ' Stix. Bloomiiigloii. History. In- diana Club, History and Political Science Club, I ' .ot- any Club, Travelers ' Club, Phi Delta Kappa. W ' nuLFKM), Blrtha. Blociiiiiigloii . Romance Lan- ,L;ua!{es, l.eCercle I ' rancais, Deutsche N ' erein. Wise, Blamhe. Frankloii. English. l- rcnch Club, English Club, Friday Musical Club, Phi Beta Kappa. Xoiii.i , .Makn ' Wil.mik. linliiiiHifolis. English. Span- ish Club, iM li.sh Club. I ' jTi.i., . 1 ui Hi;. kii:tt. . Crceiiiasllc. Mathematic;. I ' liKi ' Ori ' ' llun lr ' l Sixty r Meek. Nellie Fern, ll ' aldron. Home Economics. Hi ' RST, Esther Murtel. Macv. Delta Gamma, History Club, Staff 1918 Arbutus. HoRN. DY, Alethea August.- . North Manchester. Durrenberger. Jane Belle. Bedford. Latin. Delta Zeta, Classical Club, Marquette Club. WoLCOTT, Marguerite. Rushville. Philosophy. Kappa Alpha Theta, Psychology Club. E SARYj (Mrs.) Laura. Blooiiiington. English. Eggm. n, Carl j L ' nson. Pendleton. Chemistry. Cos- mopolitan Club (Vice-President ' l7- ' i8). ScHWALM, Grace. Logansfort. HuRD, Jessie Helena. Walton. Home Economics. Secretary Home Economics Club ' 17. Calvert. Truman Bland. Cohonbiis. Page One Hundred Sixty-One 1918 ' I ' lKM-K. lliiwAKii K. Mnntiii-llii. Miilicinc. I ' lii Gam- ma Di-lla. Sphinx Cluli. Iliii. I. M ii.iikKii. (irrcnsbiiig. Home Economics. Home I ' .connmics Club. Mi ' i:i.cni. Sk;kii). Tell City. Home Kconomics. Secre- tary Home Economics Club ' 17, Vice-President Ger- man Club ' 17. M u riN, Gu. ci-; Xi;. LV. Corydon. German. Der Deutsche Wreiii, LeCercle Francais. Phi Beta Kappa. I!h,n i , EiniH. .1 . I ' cnioii. English. Delta Gamma, l- ' .n,ylisli t hib. (jai rick Cluli. S( ii-MiT. K-M.rii 11 11,1., I. mil ( ' ' tiTV. PhilosojiliN. I ' .ii HihiR.v. Enid Ett. . Marklc. English. Delta Delta Delta, iMiglish Club, President (iarrick Club ' i7- ' l8, Woman ' s Athletic .Association, Pan-Hellenic, Grad- uate of School of E.xpression Xorthwestern Univer- sity ' r5. I!;isketball team ' i()- ' i7. Hockey team ' l6- ' l7. ' l7- ' iS, . rbutus staff. Zi. i . ii;u. i. . M u . u ' r Ki 111. Soblcsvillc. English. Indiana Clnb. Cook. h . isTi. ic DoucL.AS. Ikniisvillc. Latin. .Maish. 1- ' .ita . 1. v. 1- ninhfort. German. Delta Delta Delta, Garrick Club, W. . . . ., Baseball 17, Hockey ' iX. University Chorus ' i7- iS. I ' uKf Onu llundriil SIxly-Two EuRLAGE, Henry Matthew. Earl Park. Clieiiiistry. Masonic Fraternity, German Club, American Cliem- ical Society, Alpha Chi Sigma, Chemistry Tutor and Assistant. Elliott, Alice. Greenfield. English. Corey, H. ttie Elinor. Argos. English. Kappa Alpha Theta, Browning Club, Garrick Club, German Club, Secretary Psychology Club ' i7- ' i8. Secretary Senior Class. Rypma, Katherine. Grecuzvood. English. Delta Delta Delta, English Club, W. A. A., Baseball ' 17, Hockey ' 17, Basketball ' 17, ' 18, Woman ' s League Board ' i7- ' i8. Rouse. Stella Marie. St. Louis, Mo. Home Economics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, President Home Economics Club ' 17, larquette Club. Showalter, Merle Franklin. Middletowu. Chemistry. Treasurer Travelers ' Club ' i7- ' i8. Phi Delta Kappa, Assistant in Chemistry. Evans, Minnie Frances. Club. Mot: Hill. Latin. Latin Plummer, Rosella Elizabeth. Columbia City. History. Der Deutsche rein ' i6- ' i7. History and Political Science Club. Curry, Lesta Florence. IViuehesler. Home Econom- ics. Home Economics Club, Hockey ' 18, Basketliall ' i3. Piercy, Josephine Ketcham. Blooininglon. English. Kappa Alpha Theta, English Club, Ballad Society, Vice-President Writers ' Club ■i7- ' i8. Secretary Theta Sigma Phi ' i7- ' i8. Arbutus Board of Editors, Student Staff ' 17, ' 18, Editor Woman ' s Page first semester ' i7- ' i8. Page One Hundred Sixty-Three , . M u . ' s Dl ' NI.ap, Ethel Ci.ar.n. Princeton. English. Petf.rson, Johanna Suphia. Blouinington. History. History and Political Science Club, President Spanish Club ' iz- ' iS, Vice-President Woman ' s League ' i7- ' i8, Winner A. C. A. Oratorical Contest 1916, Arbutus staff 1918. Peake, H. zel Ruth. Clarkshill. Delta Zeta. Field, Viola. Jasuir.ille. Englisli. Hunsberger, Grace Marc.-vret. South Bend. Home Economics. President Home Economics Club 1918. Miller, Jeanette. Lafontaine. History. Kappa Kappa Gamma, History Club. Fine, Isadore Jacob. Evansvillc. Economics. Demurrer Cli ' ib, Economics Club, Boosters ' Club, Tau Kappa .Alpha, Extension Debates ' i6- ' i7. Evans, Anna Louise. Spicchmd. English. Pi Beta Phi. Browning Society, Girls ' C;iee Club ' i6- ' i7. Owens, Evelyn Lorean. Bedford. English. Pi Beta Phi, English Club, Girls ' Glee Club, Garrick Club, Graduate Xorthwestern School of Oratory. KiANC, TzE YuiN. Hanyang, China. Political Science. History and Political Science Club, ' ice-President Cosmopolitan Clul). LL.P.. ' alparaiso University. V M I ' liBi ' One Hunilri il Slxly-Kour , M Brothers, Chester Rod ibaugh. Goshen. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma, Spanish CUib. Stimson, Margaret Elizabeth. Terre Haute. Mathe- matics, Delta Delta Delta. Wheeler, Mary Rawles. Indianapolis. English. Kap- pa Alpha Theta, Psychology Club, Shortridge Club. LoREE, Edna Day. Geneva. Philosophy. Delta Gamma, Women ' s Pan-Hellenic ' i7- ' i8, Glee Club ' 15, ' 16, ' 17. NiEBRUGGE, Ella Ruth. Terre Haute. Home Eco- nomics. Home Economics Club. Peterson, Perry Sylvanus. Rolling Prairie. History. Phi Delta Kappa, B.S. Valparaiso University. Stevens, Alice. Columbus. Romance Languages. El Club Espanol, Pres. LeCercle Francais ' 18, Botanv Club. White, Olive Rosalind. Sedalia. English. Classical Club, Graduate Indiana State Normal ' 13. HuDELSON, Laura. Princeton. English. Canine, Margaret Elizabeth. East Chicago. Mathe- matics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Euclidean Circle, French Club, Browning Society, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet ' 16, ' 17, ' 18, President Y. W. C. A. ' 18. Page One Hundred Si.xty-Five X 18 Goldman, Bi ' ix. Monroe City. History. Secretary ' l6- i-, Vice-President LeCercle Francais. History and Political Science Cln1 . Plii P.cta Kappa. Si ' ENSEK, . ii. Vkksk. IVolcoU. Zoologv. P.otanv Clnl). Lkvkv. P e. tuick Zi:i.n. . Gary. Romance Languages. LeCercle Francais. .Vrliutus staff. OvERM.AN, Xeli.ie I ' ak. Fountain City. (ierinan. Dentsclie ' ereiM. . i.ex. xiier. Kith Isahei,. Hoszk ' cII. Philosopliy. Kap- pa Kappa (janniia. Psvcliologv Club. Garrick Club. V. . . A. Hoard ' le- ' i;. President V. A. . . ' i ' - ' iS. ArlnUns staff lyiS. Sto.ve. William 1 Ikhsihel. Sf cnt-cr. F.ni;lish, Plii Delta Tbota. 1 Men ' s . ssociation. ' Pulnr in En- Sllisb. W KATHERS. Gektrtiie Imiuck. Ladoyo. Romance Lan- guages. LeCercle Irancais. CoFFEV. Li ' cn.E. lilooininglon. Latin. Classical Club, Woman ' s League Board. Hikes, Olive. Cliarlcsloicn. Matluniatics. ' a- Clea e. Lena. Botanj. I ' tiKc Ono Hunilriil Sixly-SIx l- Bravtox, RiTH. Iiidiaua olis. History. Kappa Kappa Gamma, History and Political Science Club. ScHALEY, Agxes. Tcrre Haute. English. Delta Delti Delta, English Club, Senior Basketball Team. Fee, Kathryx Irexe. Blnoiuiiuiton. Mathematics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, History Club. Euclidean Circle. Calvix . Elsie. Xashrillc. History. Delta Zeta, His- tory Club, Glee Club. McF- RLix, Lex. M. rnE. U ' illiains. Home Economics. Treasurer Home Economics Ciub ' i7- ' i8. McCauchax, Alpha. Blooinington. Mathematics. Euclidean Circle. Pf. ff, Earl A, Auburn. English. English Clul), Psy- cholog - Club, LeCercle Francais, Ballad Society. McGixxis. Marvel Mariax. Blooinington. History. History and Political Science Ciub. McMiLLAX, Gretta Marie. Xorili Vernon. English. Garstk. , William ' alextixe. LaOtto. History. Cosmopolitan Club, Marquette Club, History and Po- litical Science Club, B.S. ' alparaiso University. Page One Hundred Sixty-Seven ii J] E 1918 Bakkk, Edith. .IrHiujton. Romance Languages. Le Cercle Francais, Classical Chili, Plii Beta Kappa. Faulkner, Kennkih. CraTcfordsvillc. Chemistry. Mellen, Grace. Boonville. English. Pi Beta Phi, En- glish Club, Hockey ' i6, .Arbutus Board of Editors. CoRR, Edna June. Btootninijton. English. Kappa Al- pha Theta, History Club, English Club. Xkwman, Edna. Tell City, (icrnian. Senior Hockey. Rkiaes, Mary Kathryn. U ' ilkiiisou. English. English Club, Garrick Club, Woman ' s League Board ' i7- ' l8, B.S. Central .Xormal College. EssiG, Shirl Bern. rd. Atlanta. History. Keli.ey, Nei.i.e Mae. Ei-ans l.andinq. English. En- glish Clul). Holmes, Lela MAUdUEKiTE. Mitchell. Mathematics. Euclidean Circle, Classical Club. GiLLASPY, John H. skell. Cruthersville. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. I ' liK ' One Ilundrecl Slxty-KlKht CoppLE, Rov ViRciL. Matliematics. Paddock, Gertrude Martha. Grecnivood. English. Pi Beta Phi, English Club, W. A. A., Basketball ' i6- ' i7. Halleck, Lura Ardell. Rensselaer. German. Alpha Oniicron Pi, German Club, Glee Club ' 16-17. Decker, Ruth Kelsey. Brazil. Home Economics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Home Economics Club, Glee Club ' 14, ' 15. Smith Rebekah Anne. Indianapolis. Mathematics. LeCercle Francais, Phi Beta Kappa, Hockey ' 18. LowDEN. S.AMUEL Marion. Foimtaintown. English. English Club, Writers ' Club, Phi Delta Kappa, Inter- class Basketball and Baseball, ' arsity track ' 15, ' 16, ' 17, University Orchestra ' i4- ' i5, .Associate Editor Arbu- tus staff. DuGuiD, Grace Ellen. Blooinington. iVIathematics. Porter, Sarah Margaret. Greenshnrg. English. Pi Beta Phi, English Club, Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College (two years). Stone. Sara Elizabeth. Brvant. English. English Club, W. A. A. Board. Judy. Celia Elizabeth. Carthage. History. History and Political Science Club, Psychology Club. i n m illllllllEfi S ll t Page One Hundred Sixty-Nine 1918 lli;nsHF.v, Mahv 1 ' r. xci;s. lliniiiiiclstotfii. Pa. Historj ' . lliHtory dull. Women ' s League Board iCi- ' i-, Presi- ikiit dnicn ' s League Hoarcl ' iz- ' iS, Plii Heta Kappa, Arliutus staff. Ray, Ai.ick Ktiikl. Bedford. Mathematics. L.iiclicleaii Circle. IJoi ' Ki.vs, HhXE.v Dalk. IndiaiHif ' olis. Latin. Pi Beta Plii. President Classical Club ' iz- ' iS. Botany Club, linivvning Society, Shortridge Club. Pbi Beta Kappa. IIahh. .Mii.drkii Lktitia. Logansporl. Chemistry. Kappa .Mpha Theta. Phi Beta Kappa, Chemistry As- sistant ' i6- ' i7, ' S ' . W. C. -A. Cabinet ' i6- ' i-. ' l7- ' i8. l-.i.i.uiT. Kith. .Vcit ' Harmony. History. Delta Gam- ma, History and Political Science Club, Le Cerclc Francais. Sw.MK. Fkancf.s W ' n.LARii. Blooiniihitiiii. Home Eco- nomics. Home Economics Club. Indiana Cluli, Or- chestra, Cdee Club. Kiiss. .Mauion. Fort Wayne. Econonucs. Spanish Club. X ' ice-President Economics Club ir- ' iS, Indiana L nion, Boosters ' Club. ice-Prcsident Senior Class, Secretary . rbutns Staff ' i7- ' t8. l.KiiBKTTEK. Orpha -M. Liberty Center. Home Eco- nomics. ' ice-President Home Economics Club iS. l ' RSo s. Ethf.i. Ei.i.k.x. Ehi ' ood. English. English Club. Garrison. 1 ' i.ovi) M. Lafontaine. Mathematics. French Club, iMiclidean Circle. Garrick Clidi. li.S. Muncie .Vormal Institute. PresicKiU Married Students ' Ciub. PaKe Ono Hundred Seventy Baer, Flovd WiLSd.N. Lafayette. Mathematics. In- diana Club, Enclidcau Circle. Innis. Edess. C. rroli.. ililroy. English. History Club. Secretary English Club, Theta Sigma Plii. Glee Club ' i6- ' i7. Associate Editor . rbutus, Student Staff. C- RXES, Homer C. Blooiiiington. Economics, . lpha Tau Omega, President Economics Club ' i - ' iS. Thorxburgh. M. rv MvL- Martiiis-i ' illc. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Acre, H. rl. x Qlimv. Slumls. P)Otany. Masonic Fra- ternity, Botany Club, Englisli Club, Travelers ' Club. Phi Delta Kappa. S.MiTH, Lee Tho.m.ns. flaia. Chemistry. Masonic Fraternity, . ssistant in Geology, Treasurer Ciass of 1918. S v. xsnx-, Ev. GrsT. v. . Claits ' iill. German. P.otany Club, Deutsche ' erein. Woman ' s League Board iqt6- 17, Woman ' s League Secretary 191 7-18, Phi Beta Kappa, Hockey 1915-16. C. RXES, Ross EnG. R. French Lick. Coffey, M.vrii-: L(il. . Xasl:iillc. English. Page One Hundred Seventy-One i ' S LS.S ' = J f-1 lirTi.FR, James Hannan. Linton. History. Dalcthian. History Club, Boosters ' Club, Arbutus Staff, Daily Student Staff, Karlbani (Extension) Debate 1917. IIauss, Frances M akm:. ScUcisburg. German. Pi Beta Phi, German Club, Athletic Association Board 1916- 1;. I ' .asUetball ' l5- ' i6, ' i6- ' i7. Hockey ' lS- ' l6, ' l6- ' i7, ' i7- ' uS, ] ' ' ditor-in-chicf IQ18 Arbutus. Fkknch, J. WvMo.N ' D. Lawrcnccbitrij. English. Sigma Xii, Garrick Club. Writers ' Club, V. M. C. A. Ad- visory Board and Cabinet, President Sigma Delta Chi, (jlee Club ' 15, ' 16, ' 17, Chairman Senior Memo- rial Committee, Arbutus Board of Editors, Editor- in-chief Summer Student 1917, Editor-in-chief Daily Student first semester 1917, City Editor, Circulation .Manager. GiMV, Li I n.K Charman. RushriUc. Philosophy. Kappa . Ipha Theta, Secretary Garrick Club ' i4- ' i5, French Club, Secretary Psychology Club ' i6- ' i7, Browning Society, History Club, Pan-Hellenic Con- ference, Glee Club, Secretary Sophomore Class ' i5- ' i6, - ' rbutus Staff ' 17, Board of Editors ' 18. L iiu. lldWAUii Mki.vi.v. Mjrklc. Botany. Lambda Chi Alpha, Der Ueutche ' erein. Botany Club, Evcn- ers ' Club, Boosters ' Club, Gymnastic Competition ' 16- ' 17, b ' reshnian Track ' 16, Varsity Track ' l7- ' l8. rii,(Jo.MKii:i.ii. Gkack P . .l  )ii-iV. English. English Club. VofNfi, James Wilson. Ozvcnsz ' ille. Political Science. .■Mpha Tan Omega. Polity Club, Demurrer Club, Pres- ident Tan Kappa .Mpha ' i7- ' i8. Phi Delta Phi. Winner William Jennings Bryan Prize ' 17, X ' arsity Wrestling Team ' 18, Varsity Cross Country ' 17, Interclass Base- ball ' 1$. Extension Debates ' 75, ' 16, ' 17, Secretary .-Xr- Imtus Board of Managers, Union Revue ' 15, Junior Place Pipe Orator, Chairman Senior Class Day Com- mittee. lloi.coMii, RocKK L. Oiikland Cily. Chemistry. .Mpha Chi Sigma. KiNi. (). ii;k L. Hro ciisloti ' n. Economics. Economics (lull, Boosters ' Club ' 17, ' 18. UiiMni. Ki x.Ni Til. Lazvrencebiirg. Chemistry. Delta Tan Delta, . u Sigma ' u. Skeleton Club. Page One Hundred Seventy-Two r i Hervey, Bertha Louise. Logansport. Sociology. Pi Beta Phi, Secretary Economics Club, Theta Sigma Phi, Arbutus Staff, Chairman Senior Siwash Com- mittee, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet ' i5- ' i6. Business Mana- ger Daily Student ' i - ' i8. Student Staff ' iS- ' i6, ' i6- ' 17, ' i7- ' i8. Cosmopolitan Club, Socialist Club, Presi- dent Student Volunteer Band, ' Garrick Club. Wysong, Horace Claman. Lebanon. History. Ma- sonic Fraternity, History Club, Treasurer ' i6- ' i7 and President ' i7- ' i8 Travelers ' Club, Treasurer Eveners ' Club ' i7- ' i8. Treasurer Phi Delta Kappa ' i7- ' i8. As- sistant to Bursar ' i7- ' i8. Student .Auditing Committee, Treasurer 1918 Arbutus Board of lanagers. Brown, Iarie. U atcrloo. Philosophy. Psychology Club, El Club Espanol. Abbott, Talbert Ward. Otwell. Chemistry. Masonic Fraternity, Travelers ' Club, Alpha Chi Sigma. Pettibone, Claude R. Crozvn Point. Anatomy. Phi Psi. AsBURV, Eunice. Coahnont. English. Bierly, Elizabeth. Elicabcth. Latin. D. lzell, Wilbur Jennings. Lawrence. Physics. Physics Club, Varsity Football ' 17, Freshman Wres- tling, Varsity Wrestling ' 16, ' 17, ' 18, Winner Gimbel Prize ' 18. Rinehart, Mary Olive. Boston. English. Verein, Glee Club, Woman ' s League. Deutsche Read, Lyndon Bartlett. Petersburg. English. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Travelers ' Club, Glee Club ' i5- ' i6, ' i6- ' i7. i Page One Hundred Seventy-Three J Af CRn ' Pix, Ai.iCK May. Indinnafolis. Enplisli. Sliort- ridge Club, Glee Cliili. McihIkt of Student Staff. Kki.i.kv. Jkssk Arthi ' k. Evans Londiny. Clieinistry. Al|ili:i Xi Sigma, Glee Club 14. 1 1 ri ' F.MAN. b ' RANCES. Mineral. History. liRiccs, Ray Herbert, Clinton. Economics. Pbi Delta Tlicta, Economics and Sociology Club, History and Political Science Club, Gamma Eta Gamma, I ' resli- man Varsity Cross Country ' i6- ' i7, l- resbman arsity Track ' 17, Varsity Cross Country iz- ' iS (captain- elect ' 19), Varsity Track ' 18. Arbutus Staff. Amikksc). . IvA Elvira. Ildn ' ardsport. English. Delta Delta Delta, English Club. Garrick Club. IiNXis. Kith. Rnshvillc. Philosophy. Kappa .Mpha Thela, I ' hiiosophy Club, Arbutus staff. Wai.nkr, Charlotte Erwix. Chicaiw. 111. Languages. Kappa Kappa Gamma. I ' ' li:miN(;. K isroE I ' .mn. Moorcs Hill. Sti ' TEVille, Ethel. Rockf ' orl. . natoniy. Skeleton Club (Secretary ■i6- ' i7l, Spanish Club. Gerh. kI). Els. . A ' (7iri()ic7. Home Economics. I ' liKi ' On.- Ilumlreil Si ' vinl.v-I ' i.ur Davis, Luther Dext. Moorcland. Dalethian. HoTTEXSTEIN, PaULIXE BLANCHE. Il ' illuiiiisfort. Delta Gamma. Washburx, Wexdall James. Anderson, Medicine. Beta Theta Pi, Phi Rho Sigma. Spliinx Club, Skele- ton Club, Marquette Club, Treasurer Indiana Union ' i7- ' i8. RisixGER, K.ATiE Mae. Osgood. Crickard. Ruth X.aomi. Blooniinglon. Batchelor, Isabelle. I ' crnon. A. M. Latin. LcsE, Okla, English. Teter. G.vrxett Floyd. Tipion. Philosophy. Psychol- ogy Club, Phi Delta Kappa, Band, Orchestra, Chorus. Proctor, Edward ' alter. Indianapolis. Chemistry. Meriwether, Sirdastl x. Indianapolis. Mathematics. Page One Hundred Seventy-Five M il . 11 i, 1 hV m H V lk i v If r v--. A V ' V r r S H Class Ofi-ickus 1917-1918 18 H a m r I KAN I ' .Ndl 11 (iKIlRlll- IIch; ATIC INDIANA UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL THE Indiana L ' nixersity School of Law was first opened as a de- partment of the University in 1842, the first law school eslahlished west of the Alleghenies. In 1877 this department closed its doors, but re-opened them in 1889. Since then it has risen to its eminent position among other departments of the University, and is ranked among the best law schools of the Middle West. LAW SCHOOL FACULTY Enoch George Hogate, Professor of Law, and Dean of the School of Law. A.B., Allegheny College, 1S72; A.M., 1S76; LL.D.. 1909. Charles McGuffey Hepburn, Professor of Law, and Acting Dean. A.B., Davidson College, 1S78; L L.B., University of Virginia, ISSO; A.M., Miami University, 1S90; L.L.C, Miami University, 1907. Jesse Jennings Mills L.- Follette. Professor of Law. Scott Rowley. A.B., Toledo University. 1901; LL.B.. Toledo Law School, 1903: LL.D.. 1917. C. L. Parks. A.B., Columbia University, 1907; LL.B.. Columbia University, 1910. George Du Relle, Nonresident Lecturer on Federal Procedure. LL.B., University of Louisville, 1874. Phelps D. rby, Nonresident Lecturer on the Law of Bankruptcy. A.B., Cumberland University, 1900. SENIOR LAW CLASS OFFICERS Roscoe O ' Bryne President William Seagle Vice-President Charles Karns Secretary ' illiani Russell Stuart Treasurer Page One Hundred Seventy-Nine Sf.. i;i.k, William Winthlu. ll ' iiunui l.aL-c. Law (J.D.)- Demurrer Chih, (lamina Kta (lamiiKi. A. I!. Winona CollcKf 1915, Junior Court Prize 1917. l-- ' -v Librarian, ' iec-President Senior Law Class. l■; •. •. JosKPH James. IiidianafoUs. Law (SpeciaO, Delia Upsilon, Demurrer Club, .Marquetle Club. Presi- dent Roosters ' Club, P.oard of Dir-etor Indiana L ' liion. Gamma Eta Gamma. HirKAM, Willis. Jk. Spencer. Law ( LL.B 1, Pbi Kap- pa Psi, Phi Delta Phi, Senior Law Class Or; tor. RuiLKV. Edward Steele. .Vcw Albany. Law (LL.B), Sigma Chi, Demurrer Club, Union Board Director, Sphinx Club President I9 6, Varsity Baseball ' 15, ' 16, ' 17, Captain ' arsity Baseball 1917. Cauuascoso, . xtii ui T. it;ia. rUUipfine .« ini( ,f. IsENHOWER, CoriiTLANi) Matson. Martinsz ' Ule. Law (LL.B.), Kappa Sigma, Sphinx Club, Phi Delta Phi, Freshman Basketball ' l2- ' l3. Freshman Baseball ' 13. Varsity Baseball ' 15, ' 16, ' 17. First Vice-President In- diana Union, ' 15 ' 16, Secretary Indiana Union ' i6- ' i7. President Indiana Union ' l7- ' i8. Carithers, John Wait. Pcrrxs- nlle. Law (LL.B), De- murrer Club, The Travelers, Phi Delta Phi, Union Board ' i7- ' i8. Boosters ' Club ' i7- ' i8. (3 ' Byrne. RostoE CoNKLiNG. Brool;vitle._ Law (J. D.), Secretary-Treasurer Demurrer Club ' i6- ' i7. ' i7- ' i8. .■.B. Magna cum laude Indiana Uniyersitv 1915, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, First Prize Freshman Law Class 1916. First Prize Junior Law Class 1917. President Senior Law Class 1917-18. Stuart William Russell. Greenfield. Law (LI-.B), Sigma Nu, Sphinx Club, Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Delta Chi. Boosters ' Club, Vice-President ' i5- ' i6. President ' i6- ' t7 Garrick Club, Trayelcrs ' Club, Demurrer Club, Treasurer Senior Law Class, ' ■. M. C. . . Cabi- net ' ii- ' i6. ' 17, Editor-in-cliief and Business Mana- ger T917-18 Red Book, Interclass Baseball ' l4-[i5. .Arbutus staff ' i5- ' i6, .Associate Editor .Arbutus ' 17. President Board of Managers 1018 Arbutus, Union Revue 1915, Daily Student Staff ' i.V id. . ssociated Press Correspondent. Paterno Simon R. . ' lanila. Philippine I.(liintl. . Law ami Political Science (LL.B), (Iraduate Club. Demur- rer Club. History and Political Science Club, Spanish Club, Cosmopolitan CM). Maniuette Club. . .l ' .. L ni- vcrsity of St. Thnm.is. .Manila. P. 1. j ' liKi ' Onu llunared Uluhly M DiMMiCK, Erwix Wallace, Bloomington. Law (LL.B.) = Hook, Joseph Charles. North Judson. Law (LL.B.), Indiana Club, Demurrer Club. Wrestling V ' arsit.v ' i6, Captain ' 17, ' 18, Interclass Basketball and Wrestling, Arbutus Staff, Treasurer Junior Class ' 17. Leist, Francis Bernet. New Albany. Law (LL.B.). Sigma Nu, Sphinx Club. Phi Delta Phi, Glee Club ' 14, ' 15, ' 16, Pan-Hel. Council ' i7- ' i8. Loehr, William Gray. Warsaiv. Law (LL.B.). Bowser, Harold John. Syracuse. Law (LL.B.). Delta Upsilon. Merced, Felino Lorenzo. I ' ictoria. Tarlac. Philippine Islands. Law (LL. NL). IN Page One Hundred Eighty-One 1 fi] PHI DELTA PHI PHI Delta Phi, the pioneer legal fraternity, was fonnded at the Law School of the University of Michigan in 1869 and for over three decades enjoyed the distinction of being the only fraternity in the legal field. At present forty-six active chapters are located at leading American Law Schools and strong Alumni organizations now exist in seventeen of our larger cities. Foster chapter was installed at Indiana L niversity Law School in 1900. In keeping with the National character of the fraternity, mem- bership in the chapter is based primarily upon scholarship. The fra- ternity enjovs comfortable rooms in Maxwell Hall. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Willis Hickam J. J. :M. LaFollette F. Bernet Leist Truman Knachel Phares X. Hiatt Second Column — Courtland Isenhower Charles AI. Hepburn Fred W ' iecking John Carithers Winsor B. Harris Third Column — William Russell Stuart Enoch G. Hogate George Spencer James W. Young Fourth Cohtjun — Erwin W. Dimmick C. L. Parks Arthur A. Browne Henry E. Blattnian Carl ' einhardt Fifth Column — John Edris Scott Rowle ' John M. AIcFadden Roscoe O ' Bj ' rne Carl J. Girton in Page One Hundred Eighty-Three (n] ragf OtU IIinnir(-il IC1kIU. ' - Four - GAMMAETAGAMMA ml GAMMA Eta Gamma was founded at the L ' niversity of Maine by Judge Gardner, of the Boston liar, who was tlien Dean of the Law School at the University of Elaine. The fraternity strives to up- hft the profession and maintain high ideals among students of the law. Since the organization of Gamma Eta Gamma it has grown rapidly among those schools which require the accredited two years pre-law work, and three years of law work for the liachelor of Law degree. Scholarship and prominence in school activities are considered in elig- j j ibility for membership. ■' ■' The local chapter of the organization was organized in 191 1. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Rovj — Ralph Cochran Ralph Lowder Joseph T. Ryan Alvin Sutheimer Bottom Row — William Seagle W. W. Spencer Ray Briggs [ N, Page One Hundred Eighty-Five 1918 -. I PuBi ' Onf llunilr ' tl lOlRhty-SIx Mthits Indiana Univkksitv Mkhkal THE EVOLUTION OF THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE E ' 1 K ' sttidciit (if liuliana University Sclinnl of Mi ' dieiiic sliduld be familiar with tlie early history of nie iical education in this State. Otlierwise he will not appreciate the harmony and cooperation whicli now exist and whicli are in marked contrast to the old days when rivalry and competition among the different schools were so keen as to lead to a temporary estrangement among the members of the profession. This, together with the fact that the clinical facilities and advantages were divided, was a great handicap to medical education and little permanent good was accomplished. There existed, only a few years ago, three distinct and well recognized medical schools in Indiana. The one at l ' ort Wayne, called the T ' ort Wayne College of Medicine, or.gaiii-ed :n 1879. exerted for many years a profound influence for the advancement of medical learn- ing throughout northern Indiana. The Central College of Physicians and Surgeons was organized in Indianapolis in 1870 and had for its president for many years the late Dr. Joseph Eastman, ,• n cninent abdominal surgeon and gynecologist. The Mtdical College of Indiana was founded in iS6S imder the presidency of John S. Bobbs, the leading India na surgeon of his lay and the father of the modern surgery of the gall bladder. These three schools were united in lyo.S and became the School of Medicine of Pur lue University, the State thus taking over the burden of educating its future doctors of me li- cine. This venture was not a complete success and in 1006 a new school, called the State College of Physicians and Surgeons, opened its doors. The following sunuuer this school became an integral part of the State University and was known as Indiana University School of Medicine. Soon after this, the School of Medicine of Purdue University miiled with this State School, and tlni . after a pericjd of storm and stress, the hopes of the profession for one large luedical schi ol were realized and the advantages of different schools in teach- ing, equipment, and clinical facilities were combined. PUK ' lliliicN ' l Klghly-l ' :!),-)!! n y Students at Indianapolis So today we find the entire medical education of the Stats, centered in one institution possessing clinical facilities at the Bobbs Dispensary, the City Hospital and the Robert VV. Long Hospital, unexcelled by any medical school, and a faculty numbering among its mem- bers the best in the State, as well as splendid full-time teachers brought in from other schools. In a short time this school will be housed in one of the best medical school build- ings in the Middle West, having at its very door a teaching hospital over which it has com- plete control. It is hoped that within a short time a closer relationship will be formed between the University and the City Hospital, a relationship which would be not only for the interest of the medical students, but also for the patients, for where students are best taught how to treat their patients, here the patients receive the best treatment. It is interesting to know that although three years ago St. Louis University had $5,000,000 worth of new buildings and Cincinnati had $3,500,000 worth of new buildings and although entrance requirements for Indiana University were more rigid than that of the other schools, nevertheless the enrollment of this school equalled the enrollment of the other two added together. This shows the confidence the students have in the medical department of their State University. It is with great assurance that we say that the outlook of Indiana University School of Medicine for the future is exceptionally bright. Indiana University will continue tn turn out men who will be fully competent to safeguard the health and life of any cuninuinit in which they may choose to reside. Page One Hundred Eighty-Nine 1918 a r ■- i ' n ■- r !•■ .„•„«:: v? . ' t ■V o Q -J CQ U Q THE NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL BUILDING The new building planned for Indiana University School of Medicine, for the erection of which contractors now are bidding, is to be located northeast of the Robert W. Long Hospital, at Hiawatha and North streets, on the plot of ground (sixteen and one-half acres) purchased by the State for Indiana University. Its general shape will be like a T , the leg of the T , or front wing, facing south. The east and west wings measure 177 feet by 56 feet, while the front wing will be 52 feet by 58 feet. There will be five stories and a base- ment. The entire building will be fireproof, being made of steel and reinforced concrete. It will correspond in architecture to that of the Long Hospital and will provide ample room for three classes of one hundred students each. In the basement will be located the heating and ventilating apparatus, a large receiving room for the freight and a cadaver room. . tunnel leads from an elevator on Xorth Street to the basement. The ground floor will be used entirely for dispensary and social service departments. The surgical department will consist of two operating rooms separated by a nurses ' room and examining room. Three rooms have been provided for genito-urinary and also gynecology, both departments using a common laboratory and supply room for pediatrics. The medical department will have a demonstration room, a laboratory, three e.xamining rooms and a room for mental and nervous diseases. The eye department will have two large rooms, and the ear, nose and throat, two. Obstetrics and prenatal will have three rooms. In the front wing of the T will be located the pharmacy, the dispensary office, the social service department, fireproof stairways, elevator, and a large patients ' waiting room. The patients will enter from Hiawatha Street into this large waiting room, which opens back into a large corridor waiting room. The first floor will be nine and one-half feet above the ground level. In the front wing of this floor on one side of the corridor will ' be located the dean ' s office. On the other side will be a large general office. The vestibule from the front entrance will have a marble floor and marble wainscoting. This wing will be shut off from the rear wing by two pairs of doors. The first, second and third floors of the rear wing will be devoted entirely to the school purposes. On the first floor at the east end there will be a large laboratory for clinical diagnosis, 82 feet by 22 feet and a lecture room 82 feet by 22 feet. On the second and third floors, directly above, similar rooms will be provided for the departments of pathologj ' and pharmacology. To the west on these floors there will be located specimen rooms, special research laboratories and laboratories for assistants and professors. On the first floor to the west there will be a large library and stock room. On the top floor, in the central part, there will be a large operating room, lighted from above by skylights and also north win- dows. Adjoining this on the east there will be a scrub up room and on the west a steril- izing and etherizing room. At each end of this floor will be located rooms for dogs and Page One Hundred Ninety-One smalkT animals. Feed and store rooms arc lighted from above through skylights to prevent noise. The dogs are provided with a large open concrete runway. In the front wing, occupying the second and third fluors. there will he a large auditorium with a balcony on three sides. The seating capacity will be 500. It will l)c lighted from three sides, will have an ornamental plaster ceiling, will he fireproof, and will have an in- clined floor. The lecture platform will extend hack iiitn the rear wall of the auditorium as a vestibule and will he decorated with an ornamental plaster arch, with panels and arched ceilings, . mple exits and fire escapes will be provided for the balcony and main floor. The building will be mechanically heated and ventilated. The lighting and c(|uipmcnt will be of the latest improved designs. . monster clock system will he installed throughout the building, controlled from tlu ' ni.iin office. Telephone and watchman systems will also be installed. The plans also call for a power lunise, to be located hack of the hospital facing Xorth Street. This is to be a one-story brick building with basement 91 feet by 98 feet in dimen- sions. It will contain boiler rooms, fuel rooms, large laundry, refrigerating and ice-mak- ing machinery. It will provide light and power for both the hospital and the medical school and is planned with the view of extending east or west as the future needs may require. The estimated cost of these Iniildings will be about $400,000. It is hoped that work can he begun immediately and rushed to completion in time for school next fall. A.MIlJ.ST CUKKIi.S TIIIO Tli.MN i l ' 1 1 1 . K 1 -i ' l,. 1 l.. l)S I.IOKT li ].i M i.Ml .Nf.Ti i. p, . ri;L.- r . ' • I ' iiKf (itH- nun lr ' i] N ' tin-ty-T vn 1 I1 z7. ARB u w fnl y ' NT Lilly Base Hospital Xo. 32 THE PART OUR PLAYING MEDICAL SCHOOL IS IN THE WAR INDIANA has no reason to be ashamed of the part her medical school is playing in tliis war. Practically the entire student body of the medical school is now in the service, but detailed by Surgeon General Gorgas to finish their medical courses. Last year she gave one-third of her senior class to the navy. These men are making good with such a ven- geance, both ' in the hospitals and upon the battleships, that the surgeon general is now calling for more men of the same caliber. The Lilly Base Hospital Xo. 32 is made up almost entirely of Indiana men. In all, Indiana University School of Medicine has given thirty-five of her faculty and about one hundred and fifty of her alumni to the service. Too much space can not be given these men, who have sacrificed all the joys and comforts of home, have given up their offices and practices and are now offering their lives if necessary in order to lessen the sufferings of our boys at home and across the sea. The demand for trained medical men was never before so great. From across the sea, both from England and France, has come the call for doctors. Our army wants thousands of doctors, and so our medical schools have been compelled to speed up . Indiana University School of Medicine was one of the first schools chosen by the Government to speed up , and has been designated as a war college. Classes will continue throughout the summer and our next year senior class will graduate in February. The men in the service are not the only ones who are helping out in the war. Indiana men back home are working night and day on the different examining boards in order that the men who are sent to the front may be physically fit. Our faculty is spending every ounce of energy it can muster in training students for the service. Page One Hundred Ninety-Three E 1918 ARP TUS w M . I. JUU 1 j)U AKU D. Cl.AKK, M. D., who ocinics from a family of doctors, was liorn in Wayne county. Indiana, in i860, lie received his M. 1). de.t;reo from I ' ellc- ue H(). ' ii)ital .Medical College, . ew York City, in 1K91. He was -V.ssistant Sur- i:eon of John Hopkins Hospital l8()4- i! ' )5, and after this did si)ecial work in the ))cst medical centers of Europe. He held the position of Professor of Sur- gery and Secretary of our School of -Medicine until his departure for I ' rance as the head of tlic Lilly Hasc Hospital - ci. 32. He received his appointment to the .Medical Reserve Corps froiu Presi- dent .McKinley. He is the author of nu- merous articles on the Surgery of the (■all Ijladdcr, Goitre, Ectopic Pregnrncy, .Multilocular Pancreatic Cysts, etc. .Major h ' kAXK F. Hi ' TCHINS, horn in Indianapolis in 1870, was educated at I ' .utler College and Brown University. He received his degree of M. D. from Indiana Medical College in if- ' 92, did l)ost-.gra(luate work in New ' ork City, and was for seven years on the st.aff of the Southeastern Hospital for the Insane at Richmond, Ind. He studied ahroad in iyio-iyi2, and has for several years heen Professor of Mental and . crvous Dis- eases at the Indiana University .School of .Medicine. Major Hutchins is now stationed at Canip Fremont, Palo Alto, Cal., as Division Psychiatrist, U. S. . . I ' asp Olio Hunilri-.l .Vln.l -Four 1918 t ' W E7, Al • I V M Some of the Places Where Indiana Men Are Doing Their Bi i 1918 2 iAj BLi 1 as K m - Q I u; c tJ u - ts S: Ph o. •— t ? X s . «« - J • H . J — j -I v O -DO SU .? J  II.  W C ' ■' ' 1 . «««K 5« lO DIJ E7. « Ri3 w MEMBERS OF SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FAC- ULTY ENLISTED IN GOVERNMENT SERVICE Edmund Dougan Clark. M.D., Professor of Surgery. Major and Director, Base Hospital No. 32. Frank Frazier Hutchins. M.D., Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. Major, Medical Reserve Corps. Alois Bachman Graham, A.M., M.D., Clinical Professor of Proctology. Captain, Base Hospital No. 32. LaFayette Page, A.M., M.D.. Clinical Professor of Rhinology, Otology, and Laryngology. Captain, Base Hospital No. 32. Ernest de Wolf Wales, B.S., M.D., Clinical Professor of Rhinology. Otology and Laryngology. Captain, Medical Reserve Corps. John William Sluss. B.S., A.M., M.D.. Associate Professor of Surgery. Major, Medical Reserve Corps. George Samuel Bond, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Jewett Villeroy Reed, B.S.. M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery. Acting Assistant Surgeon, United States Navy. Paul Barnett Coble, JLD., Associate in Phinology, Otology and Laryngology. Captain. Medical Reserve Corps. Charles Eli Cottingham, M.D., Associate in Mental and Nervous Diseases. Captain, Medical Reserve Corps. Harrison Sylvanus Thurston. M.D., Associate in Clinical Medicine. Lieutenant Junior Grade Assistant Surgeon, United States Navy Reserve Force. Frank Alembert Brayton, M.D., Assistant in Dermatology. First Lieutenant, Ambulance Corps. Clayton C. Campbell. M.D., Assistant in Medicine. Captain, Medical Reserve Corps. Larue Depew Carter, M.D., Assistant in Mental and Nervous Diseases. Lieutenant-Colonel, Medical Corps. Lehman M. Dunning, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Leonard Austin Ensminger. M.D.. Assistant in Surgery. Captain, Jledical Reserve Corps. Paul Frederick Martin, M.D.. Assistant Professor of Surgery. First Lieutenant, Base Hospital No. 32. Charles Robert Sowder, M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine. Captain, Medical Reserve Corps. Arthur Ernest Guedel, M.D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine. Captain, Base Hospital No. 32. Elmer Funkhauser, M.D., Assistant in Pathology. First Lieutenant, Base Hospital No. 32. Charles Dolph Humes, M.S., M.D., Assistant in Mental and Nervous Diseases. Captain, Base Hospital No. 32. Clarence Kenneth Jones. B.S., M.D., Assistant in Dermatology. Captain. Medical Reserve Corps. Bernard John Larkin. A.B., M.D., Assistant in Ophthalmology. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Leslie Howe laxwell, A.B., JI.D., Assistant in Clinical Jledicine. First Lieutenant, Base Hospital No. 32. Robert Martin Moore, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Pharmacology. First Lieutenant, Base Hospital No. 32. Eugene Bishop ilumford, B.S., ALD., Assistant in Surgery. Captain, Base Hospital No. 32. Joseph Warren Ricketts, M.D., Assistant in Medicine. First Lieutenant, Base Hospital No. 32. Louis Harold Segar, A.B., M.D.. Assistant in Pediatrics. Assistant Surgeon, United States Navy. Walter Moses Stout, M.D., Assistant in Obstetrics. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Arlie John Ullrich, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Medicine and Surgery. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Frederick Carl W arfel, M.D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine. First Lieutenant, Ambulance Corps. Arthur Ferdinand Weyerbacher, M.D., Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surge First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Nathan Paul Graham, M.D., Assistant in Medicine. Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. Navy. Robert E. Repass, JLD., Assistant in iiedicine. First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps. Page One Hundred Ninety-Seven A V N 1918 C of OhstL-trics in our Sclionl. is cliairman of Board Xo. 2. These boards take care of all cases referred from otiier cities, cases from local boards in which the registrant appeals from local boards for physical examination. They have examined men from every State in the Union and have had under tlu-ir ob- servation a remarkable variety of medical cases. Each board consists of about ten men who are specialists in their different lines, one dentist and seven assistants. The adjutant Keneral of the State and the con- scription awent can refer cases to these boards. . most important ])art of the medical 1 ranch of the service is the examination of ihe registrant to see whether he is really physically fit to go into the army or navy. Tbe word of the registrant cannot always be taken, so special examining boards had to be created, consisting of the best men of the different specialties, having at their disposal ail the various laboratory tests, x-ray. cystoscope. etc. In Indianapolis there are two such boards, called medical ad- visory l)oards. Dr. Samuel Karp. Clinical Professor of Medicine of Indiana Univer- sity, is chairman of Board Xo. i. while Dr. Henry F. Beckmaii. .Associate Professor PuK.- (Hit- llumln-.l Nltlfl.v-Kli:hl 1918 ? IJ btl Dr. Joseph Rilvs Eastman, A.B., and A.M. (Hon.) Wabash, M.D. Magna Cum Laude Berlin University 1897. Professor of Surgery Indiana University School of Medicine. President of the Indiana State Medical Association. Member of the Gen- eral Medical Board of the National Council of Defense, which is the medical branch of the President ' s Advisory Board. Ch- ' irman of Indiana Committee of the National Council of Defense. Medical Advisor to the Governor in conscription matters. Dr. Charles P. Emerson, .A.B., Amherst 1872, M.D., Johns Hopkins 1899. Resident House Physician and Instructor in Medi- cine and Assistant Physician in charge of the Clinical Laboratory at Johns Hopkins in 1899-1905. Superintendent of the Clifton Springs Sanatorium, Xew York, from 1905 to 191 1. Has studied abroad in the Uni- versities of Strassburg, Basel and Paris. Is now Professor of Medicine and Dean of Indiana University School of Medicine, Medical Member of the State Council of Defense, Chairman of the Medical Section of the State Council of Defense, Member of the Indiana Committee of the Council of National Defense. Page One Hundred Ninet.v-Nine fe Ii E 1918 II ARBUTUS = A ii (A « L-- . PuKf Two HunUrL ' d 1918 a E Z THE SKELETON CLUB THE Skeleton Club is a local organization of medical and pre-medical students in the University. Its purpose is to bring all those interested in the study of medicine in closer contact with each other. The faculty members of the School of Medicine at Bloomington, under the influence of a desire to help their students, give strong support to the Skeleton Club. Meetings are held every second Tuesday evening.- unless there happens to be a coal shortage, as was the case this year. At the meetings there is always a prominent medical or scientific man as guest and speaker. The annual Skeleton Ciub dance, which is one of the most important social functions of the year, was not held, owing to the barring of all organization dances by the committee. During the past school year the membership has reached the one hundred and twenty-five mark. The members last fall chose Fred Gifford, President; Robert Millis, Vice-President; Walter Moenning, Secretary ; Sidney Aronson, Treasurer. The members, as they appear in the top picture, are : Bottom Row (Left to right) Webster E. Blasdel Dean Brauer Ben Shook Roy Shanks Charles Rosen Frank Forey Second Row Earl Zinkan Walter Moening Robert Millis Fred Gifford Dr. Badertscher Sidney Aronsen Bryce Reeves Carl Freed Weldon Gift Third Roiv Hobart Rogers William Spieth Foster Hudson Bvron Nixon Ray Wool folk Otis Kopp John Taylor Howard Turner .Austin Sweet Donald Dryer Wynn Owens Stanley Casey .Austin Marchand Euclid Gaddy The members, as they appear in the bottom picture, are: Bottom Roiv (Left to right) James Kindley Cyrus Clark Edwin ' .Andrews Ralph IcCain William Templin Russell Kretsch Basil Carson Edwin Libbert Arthur Wilson -Alfredo Rivera Second Roiv Laverne Hurt Harry Voyles W ' ayne Templeton Parvin Davis ' ictor Sprauer Carl Reifeis Ralph Burton Claude Hadden Warren Dettweiler Third Row Edmonds Alvis -Arthur Newland Mvron Harding Bert Ellis Ira Cole -Arthur Murphy Orville Hamilton Vaughn Dragoo Cbude Mitchell Harry English I1 Page Two Hundred One 1918 Fourth Row Wallace Toelle Martin Ross Wesley Denney Donald Johnson Verne Turley L. Forest Swank David Bickel John Filer Charles Eash Manuel Constain Ora Holman Fourth Row George Rosenehimer Mack Brown Paul Carson Harold Luckey Verne Harvey .Ary Scircle Carl Pearson H. Bryson Miller ■C illllHIIUIIIUIiriUIIIHIX v M DOCTORS OF MEDICINE AiK. rAN, H kki;tt Mahoi.m. I iidiaiiaf ' olis. l hi Chi, Kappa Sisnia. Skeleton Club. A.H. Waliasli College, Medical Scholarship from Wabash, Assistant Phar- macology Department ' i6- ' i7. Bi ' F.HL. RoBKRT Frkdkku ' . hididiuifoHs. B.S. Indiana University i8. BfRCMAx. James Everktt. Lafayelte. Phi Beta Pi, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. Secretary Senior Medical Class, Externe St. incent ' s Hospital ' 17 and ' 18. EicHF.R, Oi.F.N ErcF.XE. U ' akaiiisa. Phi Chi. Indiana Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16, ' arsity Wrestling. Elev, Thomas Coxrov. Plymouth. Xu Sigma Xu, Phi Kappa Psi, B.S.Indiana University ' 16, Externe Eastman Hospital ■l7- ' i8. Gastixeau, Fraxk Michael. Indianapolis. Xu Sigma Xu, Alpha Tau Omega, B.S. Indiana University 16. Gates, Gkorce Rov. Indianapolis. Phi Beta Pi. Gill, Berxakd Patrick. Pckm. B.S. Indi.ina Univer- sity ' 16. Graessle, Harold Peter. Scxniotir. Phi Rho Sigma, Phi Delta Thcta, Sphinx Club, Skeleton Club. B.S.In- diana University ' 16. Hauss. RoiiERT Beai ' moxt. ScllcrsbHrtj. Phi Beta Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, .A.B. Indiana University ' 15, Treas- urer Skeleton Club ' l3- ' l4. . rl)Utu. ; Staff ' iS. IN I ' liBf Two lluiiilncl Two ir 1918 - i E I] M Hershev. Ernest Allen. IndicDiaf ' oUs. Plii Chi. Skele- ton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' i6. Hughes. Herbert G. Indianaf ' olis. Xn Siema Xu, As- sistant in Phjsiology Lab. 15, Assistant Clinical Prof, of Obstetrics ' 18, Skeleton Club. Lawhead, X ' ixon Roy. Auburn. Phi Beta Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Externe City Dispensary ' i6- ' i8, Ex- terne Joseph Eastman Hospital ' i7- ' i8. Phi Rho Sigma, Phi ■18. B.S. Indiana Uni- Leasure, John Kent. Auburn. Gamma Delta, Arbutus Staff versify ' 16. Ltnceman, Byron Xevvton. Brozi- ' usburg. X ' u Sigma X u, Dalethian, Alpha Omega Alpha. Freshm- ' n Var- sity Basketball ' 13, Varsity Basketball ' 14, Indianapo- lis Editor Arbutus ' 18, Vice-President Boosters ' Club ' 15, Interclass Athletic Committee ' i.t, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. Little, Wendell Deardobff. Whitestcwn. Xn Sigma Nu, Phi Delta Theta, B.S. Purdue University. McKain, Maurice Carlysle. Brozvustou-n. Phi Chi, Skeleton Club, Externe Deaconess Hospital, B.S. Moores Hill. McX ' abb, George Brickworth. Bedford. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. Masters, Robert John. Indianapolis. Phi Chi, Sigma Chi, B.S. Indiana Llniversity ' 16, .Arbutus Staff ' 18, Skeleton Club. Miller, William Theodore, fiidlana ' olis. Skeleton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. ■H Page Two Hundred Three 1918 il Jl Uv3 V MooKK, William. French Lick. Skeleton Club, B.S. In- diana University i6. MdURisoN, William Robert. Lebanon. Xii Sigma Nu, Skeleton Club, A.B. DePauw University ' 14, Scholar- ship in Medicine from DePauw ' 14. MiRPHY, Harry E. Morgantown. Nu Sigm;. Xu, Skel- eton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. XoiiLKTT. Jamks Scott. Valcene. Skeleton Club, Mar- ried Students ' Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16, Treas- urer Senior Medical Class. RiTCHEY, James Osc. r. Rossville. Phi Chi, B.S. In- diana University ' 16, Alpha Omega .Alpha, E.xterne Robert W. Long Hospital ' 17 and ' iS. Student .Assist- ant to Dr. L. -A. Ensminger ' l5- ' l7. President Senior .Medical Class. RoBixsoN, Claude .Alvin. Scdalia. Phi Chi, B.S. Indi- ana University ' 16, Externe Deaconess Hospital, Skele- ton Club. RuiiisiLL, Cecil Locan. Indianafolis. B.S. Indiana University ' 16, Alpha Omega Alpha. Indianapolis Business Manager Arbutus. Smith, Clavde Evervtt. Pendleton. Phi Beta Pi. Skeleton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16, .Assistant Police Surgeon of Indianapolis ' 17, Vice-President Senior Medical Class, Externe Methodist Hospital ' 18. Stevens, Orfila Liebig. Indianapolis. Special .Stu- dent, M.D. Central College Physicians and Sur- geons ' 97. Summers, Clarence Salee. Sniilli ' s Groz ' e. Phi Chi, B.S. Indiana University ' 15. M.S. Indiana University ' 18. .Assistant in .Anatomy ' 13 and ' 14, Assistant in Pathology ' i6- ' i7 and ' i7- ' i8. rv l ' ;iK Two Humlrrd l ' iiur 18 ! £ EZ $ _ Nj ■y Thom. James T. Indiaiial oHs. Skeleton Club, Assist- ant in Department of Surgical Pathology ' 17, Externe Marion County Tuberculosis Hospital ' i7- ' i8. Thomas Gordon Augustus. Greencastle. Xu Sigm Nu, Delta Tau Delta. Externe Fletcher Sanitorium ' 16, Assistant Police Surgeon ' i7- ' i8, Externe City Hos- pital ' 18. Smith. Claude Everett. Pendleton. Phi Beta Pi, Nu, Delta Tau Delta, Externe Fletcher Sanatorium ' 16, Assistan Police Surgeon ' i7- ' i8, Externe City Hospital ' 18. Veach, Lester Wardlow. Staunton. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club, Assistant Police Surgeon, B.S. Indi- ana University ' 18. Weller, Charles Alfred. Dole. Phi Beta Pi, B.S. In- diana University ' 16, Assistant in Pathology Depart- ment ' 17 and ' 18, Student Assistant to Dr. McAIex- ander ' i6- ' i7. Whitehead, John M. Winslozv. Skeleton Club, B.S. Indiana University ' 16. ' illiams. Francis Marion. Club, Indiana Union. Indianaliotis. Skeleton IN Page Two Hundred Five ±Qi8 « 5 - JL BUTU: !• ii .V : 191 = 2: u. Vi ii 1918 rr= ' ARBUTUS 1 Li n Ixl UN Eve Clinic. City Dispensary I XOSE ANIl ThWIAT Cl.INll. ClTV r)i i ' rN nv IQ 4C I1 EZ ARB Sexicr Class City Hospital Section K -J BUTUS Surgical Section, Long Hospital Thk Medical Section, Lose, Hospital 1918 ly si j ARB IN George and Pat at the Citv Dispexsaky J. N. Hurty, M. D., Pilar. D., was born in Ohio in 1852. His father, Josiah Hurt} , was a well known teacher in In- diana and Superintendent of Schools in seven cities of the State. Dr. Hurty, after graduating from the high school at Paris, 111., attended lectures in phar- macy at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy in 1873-74. In 1875 he at- tended a course of lectures in Jeffer- sonville Medical College. He organized the School of Pharmacy in Purdue Uni- versity in 1886 and was the first pro- fessor of pharmacy and dean of the school. He graduated in medicine from the Indiana Medical College in 1S91 and received the degree of Doctor of Phar- macy from Purdue in 1889. He has filled the lectureship on Pharmacy, Chemical Philosophy and Physics in the Medical College of Indiana. He be- came Professor of Hygiene and Pre- ventive Medicine in the Medical Depart- ment of Indiana University, which position he occupies at the present time. Dr. Hurty was made Secretary of the State Board of Health in 1897, which position he now occupies. He is the author of a te-xtbook upon public health which was used in the public schools of Indiana, the title of which is Life with Health. He is the author of many scientific papers and popular articles upon various subjects in chem- istry, pharmacy and hygiene. Page Two Hundred Eleven 1918 m i m. y @ Biii ii.. ; ' i ' ' ' iiii I n«i « iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiy BACHELORS OF SCIENCE Adducman, Clai-iik HiMPHRKv. Ricliiiioiid. Xii l-isjiiia Xu, Skeleton Cluli. Bailey, Pavl Preston. Soiith nrt. Xu Sigma Xii. Phi Delta Thcta, Treasurer Skeleton Club ' i4- ' i3 an l ' 15- ' 16, Lincoln League. P.iLLS, Robert Xoel. Fortville. Phi Rho Sigma, Delta Tau Delta, Skeleton Club, Travelers ' Club, Lincoln League, Lambda Lambda Delta. Indiana Union. V. L C. A. Cabinet ' i6- ' iy, Union Revue Ballet ' 15. ' 16, ' 17. BrLsoN, EuGEN ' K LoRixc. Fort ll ' ayite. Xu Sijjma Xu, Skeleton Club. DrxLAp, Harolu Foster. Loidsvillc. Ky. Phi Beta Pi. Skeleton Club. EiOE.N ' MANN, .Adei.e Rosa. Blooiiiiiniton. Delta Delta Delta. FiKi;, Forrest . i.ekeu. (.icnc ' a. Skeleton Club. French, X ' uioiL. Kilcy. Daletbian Club, Skeleton Club. (Earner. How. Kn . ia ' . . I ndiuiuipulis. Skeleton (Inli. Garton, Harvey W . Tocsin. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club, Indiana University Band Mexican Border ' 16. I ' iiK ' Two Humlrcd Twi-lve 1918 l Il . sSsJ BUTUS 1 Harless, Clarence Minor. Lapel. Skeleton Club. HiATT, Russell Lowell. Nezv Castle. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club. Henderson, Lawrence Edward. Brownsburg. Nu Sig- ma Nu, Dalethian, Freshman Track ' 15, Varsity Cross Country Team ' 15. Kauffman, Harley Marley. Orleans. Phi Chi, Skele- ton Ciub. Mf.tcalf George Club, Phi Chi. Mitchell, Raykond Ervin Union, Skeleton Club. MooRE, Bex B. Sigma. Bradley. Indianapolis Skeleton Mooresvillc. Indiana Indianapolis. Phi Rho Sigma, Kappa Morton. Walter Phillips. Paris. Xu Sigma Xu, Sig- ma Alpha Epsilon, Skeleton Club, Freshman Football ' 13, Freshman Track ' 14, Varsity Football ' 14, Var- sity Track ' 14 and ' 15, Medic Football, Interclass Track, Freshman Scrap Leader. MoSER, Joyce C. Clovcrdale. Phi Chi, Delta Upsiion. Myers, Roy Vern. Kirktin. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club, iMedic Football. IIHIIIHr £ 3lll I nmnzmnnnmnm ii ! iini i ; i ; i ii;i sm ' in =g«iii Page Two Hundred Thirteen 1Q18 ARBUTUS R, .sii Ai.K. Hauuisiin CruTis. I iniuinaf ' olis. Skeleton CUil). Rkifkis, Loris I- ki;ii. hnliuiuif ' olis. Phi Beta Pi, Skel- eton Club. Rug, John Flovh. lndiiiiia[ ' olis. Skeleton Club. Stkfxe. Ho v. ri) Fk.vnk. Indiana ' olis. Phi Beta Pi. Skeleton Club. Stkkle, Merrill Festus. Indiana ' olis. Phi Chi, Si.unia Xu, Vice-President Skeleton Club 17. ' . kn ' ER. ' ictor Is. . c. Erans ' :-illc. Skeleton Club. In- terclass Basketball and Baseball. WixLM. N, H. ZEL Adele. Michigan City. Girls ' Hockey Team ' 13, Girls ' Basketball Team ' 16 and ' 17, Girls ' Indoor Baseball Team ' 17. Whitehe. d, Rov C). Indianaf-olis. Phi Rho Sigma, Skeleton Club. iiiiLRiiKiE. HuMKU. K(tkiinio. Xu Sisjma Xu, Skeleton Club. Wvi.AM, M. Kio. DwicnT. koanokc. Skeleton Club. CuK ' Two Hun lri. ' (i Fourteen 18 w z , s a y vl TRAINING SCHOOL FOR NURSES Indiana University is one of the few schools in the country having in connection, as an integral part of the University, a Training School for Nurses. There is no better way in which the University can serve the State than by turning out nurses who are adequately pre- pared for the profession which at all times comands our esteem, and just now our admira- tion. The didactic courses are given by the faculties of the Medical School and of the Col- lege of Liberal Arts, and the practical training is obtained at the Robert ' . Long Hospital. Miss Maude Miller is acting superintendent of the training school and Miss Xellie Brown is instructor. Out of the ten numbers of this year ' s senior class it is possible that six will not be in the graduating exercises, as they have enlisted for Red Cross work and by that time expect to be in active service. No Arbutus is complete without mentioning the valuable work being done by the Depart- ment of Social Service, under the direction of Miss Edna G. Henry. The greater part of the work of this department of our University is given in connection with the Bobbs and the Indianapolis Free Dispensary and the Robert W. Long Hospital, which provide the prac- tical or laboratory material for the instruction of students, but lectures are also given in connection with the courses in Sociology at Bloomington. The work of the department is two-fold. It serves as a connecting link between the dispensary or hospital physician and the patient in his home environment. Upon the recog- nition of this environment, and oftentimes upon its alteration, depends the ultimate cure of the patient. In the effort to effect this needed change the department comes face to face with social conditions, the study of which forms the basis of its educational work with patients, students and the general public. Medical social service is one of the many expressions of modern preventive medicine, and the Social Service Department, while a separate teaching department of the College of Lib- eral Arts, finds in its cooperation with the School of Medicine its opportunity for the study of those social ills with which it concerns itself, at the same time contributing its share to that field of activity through which so many social reforms have been brought about. 5] 1918 IN fi3y. l3Ul UD Ci-Di ' i). Jlnk Iva. 1 iidianitf itlis. Xursing. York, Ersel. I luiiaiiiil cHs. Xursing. Peakck, Jkssik Juaxita. Riishz ' illc. Xursing. Christian, Eula G. Grcciisburg. Xursing. Castor. Rhine Dill. Portland. Xursing. WdRRKLL, RiTH. CUivtOH. Xursing. ALTZ. l ' ' i.( RENtK. I ' vankUn. .Xursing. Kramer. Khra Marie. Linton. Xursing. Welsh. Mai-he. Loganst ' ort. Xursing. RiTH. I ' lora. Intliiinof ' olis. Xursing. Pagf Two Huiulrrii Sixteen IQ Il ARBUTUS z ■«. I N 1 N M 1918 =57, « i i3IJTUS NX N1 IN M 1918 et; ARBU PHI CHI lU CHAPTER Founded 1884 Colors — Green and White Flower — Lily of the A ' alley MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY « Dr. 0. G. Pfaff Dr. R. C. Ottinsjer Dr. M. N. Hadley Dr. H. S. Thurston Dr. R. C. Schaefer Dr. L. D. Carter Dr. E. D. Clark Dr. A. F. Weverbacher Dr. David Ross Dr. T. C. Hood Dr. N. E. Jobes Dr. A. L . Thurston Dr. V. H. Moon Dr. Elmer Funkhouser Dr. N. J. Barry Dr. W. P. Garshwiler Dr. H. R. McKinstray Dr. F. C. Potter Dr. L. A. Ensminger Dr. C. F. Neu Dr. .A. S. Neelev Dr. C. E. Cottingham Dr. Sidney Hatfield Dr. C. D. Humes Dr. J. A. Badertscher Dr. A. E. Sterne Dr. Alfred Henrv Dr. H. G. Hamer Dr. J. R. Kewcomb Dr. A. B. Graham Dr. John Pfaff Dr. J. W. Wright Dr. E. R. Keiser Dr. Frank Morrison Dr. W. E. Tinnev Dr. Carl Habich Dr. H. K. Langdon ACTIVE MEMBERS (As they appear in the picture) Us) First Row — Claude Robison Robert Masters Edward O. Alvis John R. Reeves S. C. Summers Edward M. Pitkin Second Row— Ira Cole Alonzo A. Petty Joseph Seybert Henry L. Young Bart Bramer Byron Xi.xon Third Rozv — W. H. Spieth Cecil P. Clark G. B. Metcalf C. Joyce Moser James O. Ritchey Fourth Row — William C. Reed Bert E. Ellis Harley Kauffman Cl?ude Curry John O. Filer Merrill F. Steele Fifth Roic— Maurice AIcKain Olen E. Eicher Ernest Hershev O. W Sicks Robert R. .Acre Everett M. .Aikman Page Two Hundred Nineteen 1918 [I 5 1 M EZ $ PHI BETA PI Color; OMICRON CHAPTER Indianapolis Founded 1891 -Emerald Green and White. Flower — A ' hite Chrvsantheniuni v1 MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Dr. S. E. Earp Dr. A. J. Sutcliff Dr. W. H. Foreman Dr. C. K. Jones Dr. P. B. Coble Dr. J. P. Thrasher Dr. C. L. Cabalzer Dr. H. W. .Miller Dr. E. O. Asher Dr. W. U. Stout Dr. Bernard Larkin First Colli III II — Roy ' . JMyers Charles Weller Claude Smith Edward Davis Second Column — Louis T. Reifeis Harry Garton Lester Veach George McXabb ACTIVE MEMBERS (As they appear in the picture) Third Column — Raymond Xaugle Robert Hauss Henry Crossen Foiirtli Column — Howard F. Steele Robert L. Loftin J. E. Burgman Harold F. Dunlap Those not in the picture. Fifth Column — James W. Griffith Russell L. Hiatt Nixon R. Lawhead Frank Newcomer IN Juniors — Everett L. Hayes Sophomore — Virgil D. Sipe Senior — George Gates Arlie R. Barnes William W. Norris y Page Two Hundred Twenty-One ii 1918 :3t-VA JL- w JL U Ul l J ii;i 1918 i I: V, ARb U PHI BETA PI ALPHA ZETA CHAPTER Bloomington Alpha Zeta Chapter of Phi Beta Pi is closely allied with her sister chapter, Omicron, at Indianapolis, where the Medical Schoi)! proper is located. Alpha Zeta was organized in 1908. MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Dr. Will Scott Dr. J. E. P. Holland Dr. C. E. May Dr. F. Payne ACTIVE MEMBERS ( . s they appear in the picture) First Cohiiiin — Herschel Vermilya Herman McLeland Fred E. Gifford Verne Harvey Robert M. Gray Second Column — Cleon Jordan Ralph S. Hanson Russell Burton Otis . . Kapp Walter Kruse Dewey Bunting Third Column — Harry R. Kerr Basil Carson Charles L. Bidwel! Harry Scott Carl C. Reifejs Fourth Column — Russell W. Kretsch Euclid T. Goddy Charles Thompson Nlack E. Brown Foster M. Hudson Harold Luckey Fifth Column — John W. McKinstry William W. Wundram Eugene Newlin Roy Rvmcie Ary B. Scircle Sixth Column — Harold E. Price Paul Carson Warren .A. Dettweilcr Hobart Keever Earl Stickel Glenn English ScventJi Column — Pavil Wilson George Rosenheimer Claude E. Hadden Wesley H. McKnight C. E. Wilson Page Two Hundred Twenty-Three ii 1918 w l 1918 EZ ARr TT V PHI RHO SIGMA PI CHAPTER Founded 1871 Colors — Cardinal and Old Gold. Flower — American Beauty Rose MEMBFRS OF THE FACULTY S G. S. Bond Dr. H. K. Bonn Dr. Louis Burckhardt Dr. J. W. Carmack Dr. J. H. Carter Dr. A. M. Cole Dr. J. H. Eberwine Dr. J. R. Eastman Dr. T. B, Eastman Dr. C. E. Ferouson Dr. J. X. Hurtv Dr..B. F. Hatfield Dr. Daniel Layman Dr. R. J. Kemper Dr. A. C. Kimlierlin Dr. Goethe Link Dr. Herman Morgan Dr. A. L. Marshall Dr. C. H. McCaskey Dr. H. F. Nolting Dr. T. B. Noble Dr. J. H. Oliver Dr. Will Shinier Dr. C. R. Strickland Dr. W. S. Tondin Dr. O. M. Torian Dr. James H. Taylor Dr. F. V. Overman Dr. F. B. Wynn Dr. Lafayette Page ACTIVE MEMBERS As they appear in the picture : First Col II inn Wendell J. Wasldnirn James A. Wynn .• . E. . llenbangh Second Cohinin Ben B. loore Paul Wilson Howard K. Turner Paul B. Casebeer Tliird Coliunn Harold P. Graessler Robert N. Bills Seatanley M. Casey Lacey L. Schuler Fourth Cohnnii Donald S. Dryer J. K. Leasure Wynn S. Owen Those not in the picture: Juniors H. V. Harrell D. E. Hawthorne Thomas R. Huffines Rov I kins E. D. Lukenbiil J. Richard Porter Sophomores Harold W. Corya Francis C. Guthrie C. Vernon Hohn Joseph J. Littell Roy E. Whitehead Claude Pettilione Page Two Hundred Twenty-Five 1918 QiOHJ NU SIGMA NU BETA ETA CHAPTER Founded 1882 Colors — Wine and White n MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Dr. C. P. Emerson Dr. J. Don Miller Dr. W. D. Gatch Dr. H. R. Allen Dr. L. P. Draver Dr. J. F. Barnhill Dr. B. D. ] Iyers Dr. W. J. Moenkhaus Dr. W. F. Hnghes Dr. H. C. Parker Dr. Edward Kinie Dr. L. H. Segar Dr. R. E. Lyons Dr. C. E. Edmondson Dr. J. V. Ricketts Dr. J. A. MacDonald Dr. J. C. Sexton Dr. L. Maxwell Dr. G. B. Jackson Dr. F. F. Hutchnis Dr. George Boesinger Dr. Robert Moore Dr. E. O. Lindenmuth Dr. E. DeWolf Wales Dr. Charles O. McCormack Dr. F. E. Jackson Dr. S. L. Davis Dr. N. P. Graham ACTIVE MEMBERS As they appear in the picture: i1 first Column Robert J. Millis Orville G. Hamilton Walter P. Moenning Paul Preston Bailey Thomas Reitz Frank A. Troop Second Column Frank Forrey Thomas Eley L. E. Henderson Homer Wooldridge Horace ' M. Pickerill Victor J. Sprauer Third Column Eugene L. Bulson Robert Morrison Byron Lingeman Floyd H. Ziegler Frank Long L. Forrest Swank Fourth Column Harvey L. Murdock Walter P. Morton Louis P. Harshman Gordan A. Thomas W. D. Little Harry E. Murphy Fifth Column Cleon A. Xofe Frank M. Gastineau George D. Buckner Thurman B. Rice Herbert Hughes Verne Turley Sixth Column Charles K. Riddle Lyman E. Pearson Orville M. Graves Parvin M. Davis McKendree Pitkin William B. Templin Those not in the picture: Juniors Xorman R. Byers Harvey Decker Ora Enzor Charles Kirshman Sophomores Charles Dutchess Page Two Hundred Twenty-Seven ±e M ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA Al.l ' l l. ( )iiic;:a Alpha is a nrm-secret, fourth year. Medical Honor SocietN ' , nienihershi]) beiiii; l)ased almost entirely u])on scholar- shi|), moral (|nalifications bein a,- satisfactory. The fraternity was orj anized at the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Chicago in i()OJ, and is tlie unh ' society of its kind in the med- ical schools of this continent. It has chajjters in eighteen ot the leading medical schools in the Cnited States and Canada. This organization, while ])ossessing exclusive features as regards scholarship, also adds to these the definite mission to encourage high ideals of thoughl and action in medical schools and to ])roniote the best in professional ])ractice and research. The original nu ' mhers ot the local chapter are: Dr. Charles P. Kmerson Dr. I.ihii 1-. P.arnliill Dr. l . limiii(I Clark Dr. Hurioii D. .Mvcrs Dr W D. (latch ' The graduates are : Dr. Scdtt l . iMlwarils Dr. lieriiaril Kavdin Dr. I.iliii II. Han- Dr. I ' ldwanl . Kiinc Dr. knyal II. I ' .aii.Kliir Dr, Williaiii !• ' . I ' .ariK-s Dr Chestfr . I-razer Dr. Jdhii 1.. (iliMulfiiiiiK Dr. Koiiln-n . . .Scilimmn . U-nihers of the Senior Class elected to memhership are: C Hil l.i j;aii KiiiiiMll JaiiU ' S Oscar Kitchcx K rciii . l.in.ucmaii l ' i Ki- Twti Hundrud Twctily-KU-ht h ®rgantEatt0n0 i1 K A PPA ALPHA THETA KAPPA Alpha Theta was founded at Depauw University, January 2 , 1870. Beta chapter was established at Indiana University the same year. The fraternity colors are black and gold. The flower is the black and gold pansy, and the emblem is the kite. The active members as they appear in the picture are: First Coin inn Charlotte Wilkie Kathleen Berrj ' Dorothy Henderson Martha Wiley Glenna Taber Magdelene Mitchell Grace Parrott Second Column Edna Corr Frances Farley Mary Jane Carr Alleen Rice Katherine Glascock Mozelle Stnbbs Third Column Mary Flora Lorena Ray Josephine Hatch Elsther Jackson Frieda Hershey Marguerite Wolcott Louise Stubbins Fourth Column Maurine Cleveuger Mary Stubbins Xinetta Illingsworth Hope Stein Ruth Innis Lucile White Fifth Column Mildred Hatch Mary Wheeler Julia Tutewiler Ruth White Opal Corr Hattie Corey Elizabeth Snodgrass Si.vtii Column Julia Fennel Gertrude Benner Marian VanXatta Cornelia Shirk Louise Wills Caroline McMath Seventh Column Mary Louise O ' Meara Josephine Piercy Gertrude Ellinwood Helen Gilbert Ada Cordes Martha Rabb Lucile Gray Page Two Hundred Thirty -One 1918 S = 7. ARBUTUS 1Q18 EZ sM BD 1 u o KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA KAPPA Kappa Gamma was founded at Monmoutli College, Octo- ber 13, 1870. Delta chapter was established at Indiana, October 12, 1873. Light and dark blue are Kappa colors. The emblem is the golden kev and the flower is the fleur-de-lis. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Col nil) It Jeaniiette Shrum Jeaiinette Miller Margaret Canine Ruth Cravens Wanda IMottier Frances Cliapnian Second Column Ruth Alexander Marian Griffith Ruth Decker Forest Gilmore Merah Shrum Mary Swazee Lois Post Third Column Sarah Woods Pauline Reed Katlierine Fee Lillian Harris Edith Hendren Eugenia I ' lood Fourth Coiuiiiii Florence Willis Stella Rouse Dean Finch Doroth} ' Small Dorothy I .ucas Carrie Breeden Ruth Bravton Fifth Column Doroth} ' Clymer Madeline Weber Helen Cloblentz Mary E. Louden Myla Thori ' hurgh Olive Downing Sixth Column Lucy Shattuck Eileen Mills Katherine Hahn Mary Sweet Deddy Scilley Florence Dye Martha Buskirk Seventti Column Doris Reed Louise Wigger Carol Hoffman Dorothy Lee Helen Cauhle Eunice McCullough N ' Page Two Hundred Thirty-Three = I] ii 1918 •K PI BETA PHI PI BETA PHI was founded at Monmouth College, April 28, 1867. Indiana Beta chapter was established at Indiana University March 30, 1893. The fraternity colors are wine and silver blue. The flower is the wine carnation and the emblem is the arrow. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column Hilda Clark- Louise Hervey Ruth Orchard Gertrude Paddack Dorothy Freund Anna Marie Ikerd Evelyn Sweeney Second Column Mae Galloway Helen Resener Gertrude Dietz Jeannette Stockton Lucile Harris Elizaheth Workman Third Column Aldean Copeland Helen Barrett Helen Cline Sarah Porter Helen Hopkins Grace Mellen Dorothy Long Fourth Column Frances Hauss Mary Hemniersbaugh Thelma Johnson Helen Walkup Louise Fechtman Marianna Good Fifth Column Anna Evans Louise Thomas Eleanor Ford Doris Evans Marie White Mary Mullinnix Mildred Hauss Sixth Column Margaret Bloor Maude Shuniaker Katherine Hunter Pauline Condit Adria Craigmile Gertrude Garrison Seventh Column Ellen W ' oody Bernice Eastwood Joy Thomas Mvra Allison Marcella Coll Janet Snider Evelyn Owens Page Two Hundred Thirty-Five E iv lS K m 1918 DH Ua ,1,1 DELTA GAMMA S 1 ELTA Gamma was founded at the University of lississippi in ■L- ' 1872. Theta chapter was instaUed at Indiana University in 1898. The fraternity colors are bronze pink and blue. The flower is the cream rose and the emblem is the anchor. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : n First Column Mary Frisinger Clara Tail Frances Fromeyer Wilma Slinkard Lois Logan Bernice Mellott Dorothy Donakl Second Column .Mildred Klink Edna Loree Esther Slinkard Genevieve Frame Esther Hnrst Ruth Carter Third Column Ruth Reed Helen Cravens Esther Stauter Ruth Elliott Mary Cravens Nadine Bippus Mabel Fedler I ' oiUih Column Gail Parker Dorothy New Gladys Webb Alberta Leist Ruth Carmichael Thelma Tucker Fifth Column Jacqueline Swain Bertha Wliitaker Mary Smith Mary Schloot Louise Riggs Marion Nelson Catherine Fry Si.rth Column Naomi Cooper Edith Highman Marian Tripp Virgene Hannnoiid Edith Perry Helen Busse Seventh Column Ruth Bowers Vivian Heuring Ruby Robbins Pauline Hottenstein Ruth Newsonie Gleda Force Doyne Wolfe V, M Yi Page Two Hundred Thirty-Seven DELTA ZETA DELTA Zeta was founded at Miami University in 1902. Epsilon chapter was installed at Indiana, May 22, 1909. The fraternity colors are rose and Nile green. The flower is the pink rose. ij The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column Dorothy Haynes Vera Kern Leah Yenne AureUa Panck Helen Craft Lnella Agger Second Column Frances Fields Dorothy Simering Mabel Robbins Josephine Stengel Charlotte Wheeler Third Column Rachel Brounell Elsie Calvin Grace Mason Hester Fredenberg Helen Wortman Hazel Peake Fourth Column Emma Schmidt F ' ern Riley Eva Alsman Harriet Current Gretchen Neese Fifth Cohinn Ruth Simering Dorothy Spencer Jane Durrenberger Alma Davis Blanche Penrod Dorothj- Hodges Page Two Hundred Thirty-Nine -LV- 18 !■i ALPHA OMICRON PI - ALPHA Omicron Pi was founded at IJarnard College in 1897. P)eta Phi, the local chapter, was installed June 2, 1916. Crimson is the fraternity color and the red rose is the flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Colli inn Jamia Bailev Elizabeth iiller Lelah Wliitted Vivian Day Lee Combs Second Column Alice Heald Lura Hal leek Frances Heald Mae Sbumaker Ethel Bender Third Column Beatrice Combs Hildred Oliver Madeline Snoddy Irene Ryan Helen Duncan Fourth Coliiiiin lary Fletcher Isabelle Weybright Emma McLain Lelah Baker Alyra Esarey Fifth Column Margaret Day Eleanor McCarthy Mildred Douglass Doris Shumaker Pauline Cox Si.vlh Column Shirley Armstrong Frances Duncan Mildred Begeman Edith Huntington Marv Duncan H Page Two Hundred Forty-One Ei 1918 DELTA DELTA DELTA DELTA Delta Delta was founded at Boston University in 1888. Delta Omicron Chapter was installed at Indiana University March 3, 1917. The ])ansy is the fraternity flower, and the colors are silver, gold and blue. The emblem is the crescent. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Col mil II Grace Eichhorn Margaret West Edith Ruff Harriet Smith -Adele Eigenniann Tirzah Smith Second Column Hester Lockhart Ruth Lauer Enid Eichhorn Esther Meel Hester ' aught Third Column Mae Howard Mabel Randall Alma Denny Rachell Stier Iva Anderson Fourth Column Margaret Carter Agnes Shaley ilargaret Stinison Esther Wilson Esther Thomas Fifth Column Josephine Williams Elta Maish Frances McMath Opal Sutton Norma Schober Sixth Column Katherine Rypma Gretchen Miller Martha Denny •Amanda Payton Odette Hollingsworth Laura Padou ■i L Ky In Page Two Hundred Forty-Three 1918 L: =- ' J r 1918 • SIGMA KAPPA SIGMA Kappa was founded at Colby College in 1874. The local I- chajjter was installed at Indiana I ' niversity January 4. 1918. The p fraternity flower is the violet and the colors are maroon and lavender. The emblem is the trianHe. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Column Third Column Eva Gross Olive Poe Jean Taylor Hazel Brown Vivian Williams Marjorie Hull Ruby Means Irene Howard Second Column Mary Baker Zora Miller Fourth Column Carrie Glavin Muriel Loveless Cleo Young Jane Scearce Mabel Loveless Helen Seybold Helen Stephenson Ethel Lahrman B Page Two Hundred Forty-Five ±Qi8 IN THE WOMEN ' S PAN-HELLENIC ' ASSOCIATION I THE Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Association was organized in 1916 to i bring- the women ' s fraternities at Indiana into closer union and to discuss chapter house problems. Its membership is composed of two representatives from each organization. | i The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Row Stella Rouse — Kappa Kappa Gamma Wanda Mottier — Kappa Kappa Gamma Evelyn Sweeney — Pi Beta Phi Anna Evans — Pi Beta Phi Second Roiv Edna Loree — Delta Gamma Bernice Mellott — Delta Gamma Lucile Gra — ' Kappa Alpha Theta Mary Jane Carr — Kappa Alpha Theta Third Row ' ivian Williams — Sigma Kappa Ethel Lohrman — Sisjnia Kappa Charlotte Wheeler — Delta Zeta Grace Mason — Delta Zeta Fourth Roiv Doris Shumaker — Alpha Omicron Pi X ' ivian Day — Alpha Omicron Enid Eichorn — Delta Delta Delta Odette Hollingsworth — Delta Delta Delta I I I Page Two Hundred Forty-Seven s iyic J 1918 !Li 1 v: BETA THETA PI BETA Theta Pi was founded at lianii University in 1839. } ' i chap- ter at Indiana was established in 1845, the first national fraternity at Indiana. Pale ]Mnk and blue are the Beta colors, and the flower is the American Reautv rose. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : I ' iist Column James William Brown Russell Ashby Lowel Wilson Miles Dvvight Gary ' anOsdo! Forest G. Thorne Second Column Wendell J. Washburn Harold Maxwell Wood Robert Harold Bryson Ferris Albert Bovver J. Porter Seidensticker Third Column Earl J. Kilman Carroll O ' Rourke George Fnllen Heighway Edward Carrol Embich Roger Lewis Dailey Fourth Column Hobart Stanley Dennis Charles Weber Walker Lyman D-le Green Frank Smith Harkins Evanson Earp Fifth Column Byron K. Elliott Francis D. Bronson Wiley Whitney Spurgeon Leland Stanford McKeeman Walter William Duft Sixth Column Russeli Owen Ferguson Robert R. Hare Robert S. Stempfel J. Donald Smith John Megee Fleehart Seventh Column Clarence Odell Miller Edward H. DeHority James Gill Gordon Willard Thomas Plogsterth Wynn Spencer Owen Page Two Hundred Forty-Nine 1918 PHI DELTA THETA PHI Delta Theta was founded at IMiami University in 1848. The local chapter, Indiana Alpha, was installed in 18-I9. The colors are argent and azure, and the white carnation is the flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Row Walter Scott France Center William Dobbins Dudley Smith Hiram Keehn Arthur Chevalier Second Row Jewell Geiger Roscoe Minton William Ridenhour Leo Ford James Ingles Chafee Shirk Third Row Frederick Bastain William Wilson Hubert Pierce John Hendricks Robert Phillips Joseph Davis Harry English I ' ourth Row Virlyn Broadstreet Grosvenor Shirk William Lane Rolland Brodhecker Paul Wilson Max Biilman Fifth Row George Sherwood Bon Aspy Ray Briggs Boen DeMotte John Goodwin Bernard Cravens ! r i Page Two Hundred Fifty-One : 1918 1918 rs T - = n M SIGMA CHI SIGMA Chi was founded at Aliami University in 1855. Lambda chapter was installed at Indiana University in the same year. The colors are bine and gold. The white rose is the fraternity flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : V = IJ First Column Lyle A. Howard Irwin J. Goldiier J. Dwight Peterson Elliot C. Risley Second Column Elmore D. Sturgis Carl Ross Mendenhall Wiliam F. Kegley Edward S. Ridley Robert HoUowell, Jr. Third Column Herbert M. Spencer Robert H. O ' Hare Ellsworth A. Shan Charles C. Mathvs Fourtli Column Wiliam B. Porter Lvnn V. Howard Alfred H. Ellison Byard H. Smith Roy E. Goldner Fifth Column Lorn C. Howard Matson Collier John D. Driscoll Charles E. Sturgis Page Two Hundred Fifty-Three ;i W PHI KAPPA PSI PHI Kappa Psi was founded at Washington and Jefferson College in 1852. Indiana Beta chapter was installed May 15. 1869. The fraternity colors are pink and lavender. The flower is the sweet pea. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : first Colli inn Willis Hickam George Espenlaub Hugh Stunkard Ernest Huxford Ewing Campbell Second Column Claude Pettiboue Herbert Howson Burns Davison Bruce DeMarcus Charles Petig Third Column John McFaddin Creston Barnes Gordon Batman Thomas Adams William Zellar Fourth Column Paul Bland Ernest Baltzell Russell Smith Bland Isenbarger Lyman Pearson Fifth Column Justin Schumann Oliver Greer William Purcell Robert Reeves Edward Yon Tress Sixth Column Paul Hanshoe William Terhune John Sample Oscar Frenzel William Adams Page Two Hundred Fifty-Five 918 mE 1918 1k A PHI GAMMA DELTA M PHI Gaiiiiiia Delta was founded at old Jefferson College, now Washington and Jefferson, in 1848. Zeta chapter was installed at Indiana University in 1871. Royal ])urple is the fraternity color. The flower is the hehotrope. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column Paul E. Leffler McKinley ' ance Harold Victor Dudlev A. Pfaff Herschel Clark Second Column Walter W. Orr Edwin Andrews Edward Gates Paul Smiley James R. Emsliwiller Third Column Donald S. Bryer Howard K. Tourner Fred T. Robbins John Hastings Dale Spencer fourth Column Fowler Macy Gaines Young George Louden illiam Payton Henry Blattmen Fifth Column Dallas Xewton Rav Mitchell Philip Walter Cyrus Clark Robert Xeiswaiiger Si.vtii Column Malcolm Johnson J. Maxwell Lowe Harold Bowen Robert Thompson Russell Smith W Page Two Hundred Fifty-Seven DELTA TAU DELTA DELTA Tau Delta was founded at Bethany College in 1859. Beta chapter was established at Indiana University in 1874. The fra- ternity colors are purple, white and gold, and the pansy is the fraternity flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : F ' rst Coiuiiin MacKinlev J. Bolianiion Russell Rl Rhodes William H. Hoadley Irwin W. Dimniick Second Column Paul E. Laymon Nathan T. Washburn Vaughn S. Dragoo Edward Pfeiffer • Frank A. Throop Third Column Irwin D. Bone Roy G. Runcie Robert E. Maloney Paul V. Graybill fourth Cchimn Edwin A. Sellers Lee M. Waynick Arthur A. Browne Charles K. Riddle Windsor B. Harris F if til Column Lester C. Tolbert Glenn A. Comstock Henry J. West Stephen A. Douglas N Page Two Hundred Fifty-Nine t SIGMA N U O IGMA Nu was founded at the ' ir2,inia Military Institute in 1869. Beta Eta ch apter was installed at Indiana in 1892. The colors are black, white and gold. The fraternity flower is the white rose. The active members, as they appear in the pitcure, are: First Colli lull Donald Richardson Leo Reed Floyd R. Xeff William G. McCaw Andrew P. Sallade Joseph Seybert Second Column Harry Kerr Hiram E. Stonecipher Byron Henring James Moffat E?rl Zinkan Third Coluinii Edward Leonard J. Wvniond French Henry Young Cecil Craig Francis R. Wilson Cecil Katterjohn Fourth Column Lawrence Carl Anderson Fred Edward Farr William Russell Stuart Frank F. Faust McKendree Pitkin Robert B. Sinclair Fifth Column Earl Stickel Louis Victor Mays F. Bernet Leist Earl Bettinger Howard Ewert Sixth Column Robert T. Rogers Ralph Winslow Edward M. Pitkin Charles McCorkle Frank Teats Wilfred M. McFarland K i V Page Two Hundred Sixty-One S 1 = 1C I!! ' KAPPA SIGMA KAPPA Sigma fraternity was founded at the University of ir- ginia in 1867. Beta Theta chapter was first installed at Indiana in 1887. The flower is the lily-of-the-valley, and the colors are scarlet, white and emerald green. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Roiv Elwood Burrows Sherman Summers John Talbot Erwin Bohu John Edris Ernest Marxson Second Row Albert Trimble Courtland Isenhower Phares X. Hiatt Elmer Bossert Campbell King Walter ortham Third ?ott ' Richard Eastn-an Ralph Peckhani Eugene Edwrrds Charles Eash Robert Ragle Acre Harold H. Hunter Kenneth Post Foiirtli Roiv Paul Casebeer Grady Stubbs Morris Meise Edward Cadou Franklin Burgan Porter Rhudy Fifth Row Farnuni Anderson Riley Whitman Ellsworth Beckes Clarence Wilkinson Kipling White Noel DuComb Page Two Hundred Sixty-Three SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON SIGMA Alpha Epsilon was founded at the University of Alabama in 1856. Gamma chapter was established at Indiana University in 1907. Royal purple and gold are the fraternity colors and the violet is the flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : 1 First Column Norvelle C. LaMar F. Bruce Peck Ralph Roby Paul Gaskins Thomas F. Reitz Second Column Joseph Frankuian Randall Fisher David H. Sluss Lawrence Baker Frederick A. Weicking Third CohiiiiH Willard J. Stahr William Gilbert Walter Friedrich Edgar Weber Fred Strobel Fourth Cohiiiin Lyndon Read Joy Buckner Robert M. Loomis Paul Heal Howard Casey Fifth Column Harold Davis Carl Girton Solomon A. Wickard Walter Stiner Byron Richardson Page Two Hundred Sixty-Five 1918 ALPHA TAU OMEGA ALPHA Tau Omega was founded at Richmond, Mrginia, in 1865. Delta chapter was installed at Indiana University, December 4, 1915. Gold and blue and white and green are the fraternity colors. The flower is the white tea-rose. N1 The active meml:)ers, as they appear in the picture, are: First Row Homer C. Carnes Parvin M. Davis Robert D. Kelso James Wilson Young Carl J. Weinhardt Harold K, Forsythe Second Row Ralph P. McCain Lawrence Wheeler Robert D. Colman Glenn G. English Arthur J. Wilson Arthur R. . ' ogge Third Row S. Jack C. Hess John L. Voung Everett L. Dean John H. Foster George A. Reeves George W. Hobson Walter W. Spencer fourth Row Carl E. Pearson Harry N. Kerr Hugh J. O ' Connell Herman E. List Julius R. Luette Wilbur Cogsliall Fifth Roiv Howard L Pervine Harold E. List Edwin L. Lihbert Kenneth R. Dunkin Willard G. Rauschenbach Harold E. Bowers Li! n Page Two Hundred Sixty-Seven DELTA UPSILON DELTA Upsilon was founded at Williams College in 1834. The Indiana chapter was installed December 11, 1915. The colors of Delta Upsilon are gold and blue. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column Truman E. Caylor Joseph J. Ryan Frank W. Rogers Leslie F. Hamersly Morton E. Wright Second Column John B. Chester J. C. Warner George J. Ineller Dallas D. McClintic H. ilonford Cox Third Column A. Leon Kuebler Harlod E. Price Jesse D. Lohrei Robert R. Knepper Russell G. Hathaway Fourth Column Ralph C. Mason Dewey C. Shreiner Arthur E. Morrow Thedis ; r. Buck Palmer Ek Fifth Column H. Philip Bowser Harold J. Bowser Percy C. Isenhower Lloyd Shepard Orrin E. Klink Page Two Hundred Sixty-Nine LAMBDI CHI ALPHA LAMBDI Chi Alpha was founded at Boston University, 1909. The local chapter was founded at Indiana University in May, 1917. The fraternity flower is the white rose and the colors are purple, green and gold. The active members, as they appear in the picture. are First Column Bates Hickrod Ira P. Baunigartner Willis Richardson Wilbur Garrison Leslie Saunders Second Column Stanley W ilson Harry Howard James Ireland Claude Wilson Howard Lahr Third Column Floyd Reynolds Glenn Hopper Albert Hermsen Leslie Davis Charles Barrett Fourth C( lumn Erwin Blackburn Frank Reid Edward Magenheinier Herbert Snyder Daniel Osborn Sixth Colu ' iin Harrv Searbv Ray Haskell ' Royal Wotring R. Thomas Payne Orville Graves IN Page Two Hundred Seventy-One « ■THE INTERFRATERNITY CONFERENCE ' I ' HE Inter fraternity Conference is an organization com] osed of A one representative from each of the national Greek-letter frater- nities represented at Indiana University. The local branch is affiliated with the national Interfraternity Conference. The purpose of the Interfraternity Conference is to unite the various fraternities to advance the welfare of Indiana University and to set an example for Greek democracy. The members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Row France Contor — Phi Delta Theta Henry E. Blattman — Phi Gamma Delta William Zellar — Phi Kappa Psi Arthur A. Brown — Delta Tau Delta Second Roii. ' J. Dvvight Peterson — Sigma Chi Robert Stenipfei — Beta Theta Pi Edgar H. Weber — Sigma Alpha Epsilon Third Row F. Eernet Leist — Sigma Xu Ralph Peckham — Kappa Sigma Carl J. Weinhardt — ' Alpha Tau Omega Philip Bowser — Delta Upsilon 1 Page Two Hundred Seventy-Three 1Q18 T FRESHMAN PAN-HELLENIC ASSOCIATI ON HE Freshman Pan-Hellenic Association was formed in 1917 for the purpose of uniting the fraternity freshmen and getting- them acquainted with each other. The niemhers, as they appear in the picture, are : First Roii: Walter Orr — Sigma Xu Andred P. Sallade — Sigma Xu Byron Richardson — Sigma Alpha Epsiion Joseph Davis — Phi Delta Theta Second Row Ewing Campbell — Phi Kappa Psi Ralph IcCain — Alpha Tau Omega Roy Goldner — Sigma Chi Third Ro ' is. ' Roger L. Dailey — Beta Theta Pi William Hoadie% — Delta Tau Delta Grady Stubbs — Kappa Sigma Dewey Shreiner — Delta Upsilon PaBu Two Hundriii Sevcnty-Fivu z 5 1 ' A W V M 1918 l f MASONIC FRATERNITY THE Masonic Fraternity of Indiana University was organized in the fall of 19 1 6 by members of the Masonic order who were stu- dents in the University. Its membership is invitational to Masons and men who are sons of Masons. The fraternity colors are blue and gold. The flower is the pink carnation. M I n ■The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column Edmund Alvis Morris S. Worland Ernest C. Waggoner Arnold J. Howard Samuel B. Poarch Second Column Talbott Wabbott Frank O. Wakefield George O. Hungerford Clarence R. Clayton Harlan Q. Acre Third Column Frank H. Levell Horace C. Wysong Roy M. Montgomery David Faust Harper Pool Fourth Column Lester G. Ruch Douglas J. Wallgren Wayne K. Templeton George A. Spencer Max Bullock Fifth Column Lewis Roark Clyde Montgomery Harry P. Ross Howard L. Krouse Henry N. Burlage Sixth Column Lee T. Smith Russell G . Siegfried Raymond T. Xeideffer Louis D. Kuss Herman Graebner Seventh Column Fay Swindell Edward E. Monroe James Carl Freed Daniel E. Adier R. Harris McGuire Page Two Hundred Seventy-Seven u A THE INDIANA CLUB THE Indiana Club was oroanized in 1905. It combines with its social iHirpose, ideals of high scholarship, and ambition for pro ■ficiencv in dramatic attainments. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : ly First Row Genevieve Dugiiid Floyd Baer Marian Hoclihalter William Green Faith Lee Charles Lililiy Second Rozv Don Stockdale Ethel Brand Fred loss Gladys Duguid John Moorhead Pauline Fay Third Row Ralph Cochran Madgel Conrad Joseph Hook- Laura Duguid Walter Moenning Doloris McDonald Paris Stockdale Fourth Row Myron Harding Willa Swain Cecil King Gladys Snider Orviile Hamilton Phebe Summers Fifth Rozv Mary Venn Claude Powell Ruth Zimmerman Herbert Hope Annabel Glaze Buell McDonald Page Two Hundred Seventy-Nine i U ' - Li A ALPHA CHI SIGMA LPHA Chi Sigma is a national chemical fraternity. It was found- in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1901. Epsilon chapter was estab- lished at Indiana University in 1907. Chrome yellow and Prussian blue are the colors, and the flower is the red carnation. Those eligible for membership are those who intend to follow chem- istry as a career and have made creditable grades in their college study. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Fourth Column — C. R. Brothers J. C. Warner G. T. Boruff H. C. Graebner H. M. Burlage J. A. Kelley W. F. Cromer H. T. Briscoe O, R. Clover Second Column — T. W. Abbott Cheng Chu J. H. Gillaspv G. R. Hamiei Third Column — R. M. Lingle H. P. Goff Chung Li Gregg Smith R. L. Holcom Page Two Hundred Eighty-tine 191« SIGMA DELTA CHI Tlll ' .iild 1 ' rcss ( ' lul) Ik-c. ' uik- Indiana ( ' liai)lrr of Si ' _;nia I )clta ( hi in the sprint ' of l )i,v I he new nrL ani alion is an lionorarx ' C rcck i.cttcr iratcrnity ut national scope t ' or colk ' i;c ' nn-n who intend to make jouiaiahsni a profession. Klio cliaptcr stages tlie aiiiuial BIanl ct Hop to raise funds to tniy 1 litaiikets for tlio seniors of the footliall team wlio have played three years, an l tlie evening of tlie annual honieconnng game is always reserved for ttiis big hop. Sigma I elta Chi had th ' ' jirivilege of staging the fir t dance ever held in the New ' lymnasiuiu. ' vhich proved also tile largest ever held in the University, when the nji P lanl et Ho)) was held upon tlie night of the I ' urdiu- game. ' ! he nieiiihers, as the ajipeai ' in tht ' iiiiMnri ' , are : I ' lrst Rotv John S. Hastings Willis Richardson William Russell .Stuart William I ' logstertli Ralph W ni I ' ' U Srtiiinl h ' mt ' William Kegley J. Wymond I ' Vench I ' Ved I ' .dward I ' arr J. Dwight I ' etersoii Wilfr.d . l. MacDarlam! Iluii.lr.-.l KlKhly- ' I ' w. THETA SIGMA PHI THETA Sigma Phi, the national journahstic fraternity for women, lias at Indiana University a very active chapter. The organiza- tion members are all girls who have done practical news]:)aper or maga- zin e writing. Miss Knapp is a regular contributor to St. Nicholas and other leading periodicals. The publication of The Coed edition of The Indiana Daily Student is an annual duty of Theta Sigma Phi. The members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Row — Mary JVIulliniiix Ethel Knapp Ethel Larm Josephine Piercy I ' agf Twii Hundrpil Eighty-Three Second Rom Edessa Innes Blancli Penrod Louise Hervey Tof Row — Scliaup, Acre, Lee, Wright, Barr, Whinery, Burton, Clayton. Second Row — Vcatch, Ettcr Kolilmcicr. Wysong. Lowden, Morley, Tcter. Sliowalter, Katterjohn. Boltoiii Row — Uphaus, VVoolery, Caulile, Peterson, Sniitli. Williams, Chilils, I lack, Myers. PHI DELTA KAPPA Pill Delta Ka])|)a (iri inatcd as 1 ' i Kajjpa Mu at Indiana L ' nivcr.sity in 11J06. under the guidance of Professor Bergstroni. Chapters are found in twenty of the leading Universities of the United States. Its aim is to encourage research in education, both in and out of the University. Pag( Two Hundred Eighty-Four i}-l - ' I I ---r-:., 01 n 1 1 g SItf BETA THETA PI l- oiiiiik-il : In tlu- L ' ppt-r Aiuks liy a Still Striam. Indiana I ' i Chaptir Class D. ■iimuicrs and I ' roiiiincnl O ' ncrs Hair rs Manuel, Stonewall Jackson. Oliver P. Morton Kacli fall tlic Beta survivors send over to Auld for another gross of pledge pins and start out to do what they can to the human race. No one has yet heen ahle to decipher their pledge system. Some maintain that red cheeks are a striking feature. The Beta pin has two sides, the front and hack. All the pins are jeweled, though some carry a headlight l- ' rank Harkins. Boh Stempfel. and Donald Smith. i)ri( r to his return in his middy hlousc. kejit the hoys in the running. For a wdiile the Betas had the hest knitting team in the conference hut they didn ' t win the hasketball tournament. Pink and blue are alleged to he the fraternity ' s colors. The hhie is apparent. The Betas inhabit a house on East Third Street. Its plaster- ing is on the ontsitle and it is run like a liotel. PHI DELTA THETA Inuiiiled : N es. Indiana .Alpha Chapter Class X. ■. K. Mm lienjamin Harrison, Lewis K. .Murchie. Julius Ciesar The Phi Delts are the only fraternity that maintains a country home at Indiana. Each man owns his own mode of communication w-ith the city and Tom Huffs. The Delts get their mail at the Book Xook and some of them can read it. Contrary to custoni, one of the brothers decided to take a bath during Christmas vacation and left the water turned on the house. The cost was about seven hundred dollars and three weeks ' boardin.g round for the boys. The gang always goes armed, having a nice sword as a prominent part of the pin. Outside of its men in the Sphinx Club the membership wears high boots and sweaters .luring eight months of the year. .A drive out to the Phi Delt house is one of the noted Sunday afternoon amusements of the Universit . SIGMA CHI I- ' ounded : )n The Third Crusade. Indian I.;indida Ch.ipter Class, i . (Draft). Leaders W. J. Bryan, Carrie Nation The one outstanding feature of the Sigma Chi bunch is the fact that they sleep in double decker beds, when they arc able to find their way home. The house is nicely located adja- cent to the campus and only a block and a half from the Nook. Somewhere in the Sig coat-of-arms is the word hoc . This slundd not be confused with any similar word in any dea l language. In fact, the majority of the wearers of the cross are from .America. Many of the familiar faces have been taken away, but Ed Ridley remains as a guardian angel to the group and the baseball team. The boys are a likable bunch thou.gh it is said they have to open a new keg for bathing purposes every now and then. PHI KAPPA PSI bounded : Bluoniington. Indinaa Beta Chjipter Class ? Leaders Woodrow Wilson, Sev Bnschmann The Hotel de Phi Psi is the most prominent building between .Alpha Hall aiul the Delta Tau house. It is built of brick, stone and some other things, and is supported by a nice earth, eight thousand miles in diameter, which the Phi Psis are said to own. This must he taken on faith, but will be supported by the oath of any one of them. .As a rule, the organi- zation pledges the Unit)n Board in the fall and then kids itself along until the basketball tournament, when a general scramble ensues. John .Mcl ' addin assiste l many of the chil- dren into the K. ( ). T. C. and it is said the Phi Psi dining room has a very pleasing a])pcar- ance when ail the officers sit down together. The Phi Psis maintain their own tennis court. The Cniversity keeps one, too. The pin is shield or a shovel. I ' liB.- Two IIuikIi ' i ' cI KlKht.v-SIx PHI GAMMA DELTA I ' ouiulfd : Once. Indiana Zeta Chapter - Class. 1020. Palrini Saint Tlionias K. Marshall The Phi Gams occupy one of the finest of the college hnildings hut it is said that they don ' t cut their front lawn often enough. If it weren ' t for the numher of Delta Gammas tliat have to pass hy there going down to the postoffice and so forth the Phi Gam front porch wouldn ' t be so popular. The third day color of a black eye is the Fiji color and the pin is in the general shape of a tombstone or half a brick or anything. The heliograph is the fraternity flower. Judging again from the front lawn, it might be said to be the dande- lion. The Phi Gams are noted for Sunday night Vic parties, and Hiene Blattman and Johnny Johnson, president of tlie Sophomore class. Blattman is in the law school part of the time. The older members of the group enjoy a great deal of popularity, Ijesides having dates at the Theta house. DELTA TAU DELTA l- ' ounded : Possibly. Indiana Beta Chapter Class, Sub Hcst Man Jim Thorpe Technically, the Dclts pass the Phi Psis. They pass them every day twice. Once when they go down town before breakfast and once when they come back. The Delta Tans live in the last house before arriving in Brown county and are proud of it. Their dormitory is divided into two parts and most of the fellows are assigned regular beds. The Blooniington fire department is a regular guest at the house. He drops in most any time for a chat with the boys. The Delts give house dances and alarm clocks as favors. One of them is Ijeing ' ■nulled Phi Beta Kappa. He only conned six hours. Since Deac Sellers left, Art Browne has had to maintain the honor of the fraternity. The Delts never paddle their freshmen. This year they are using only thirty-two of tlieir fifty-seven varieties of pledge Inittons. SIGMA N U Founded: Honest. Indiana Beta Eta Chapter. Class, Prep. Hero Ananias When the fellows can get away from the Student and Arbutus office the Sigma Nus have fraternity meetings at their spacious apartments on Kirkwood Avenue. Those that aren ' t on the Student pTay fraternity basketball. With the absence of Kenyon Stevenson this vear the remainder of the fraternity has had to do its best about running the University, but Lefty Stuart has done nobly. An extra page was added to the .Arbutus for his benefit. The Sigma Xus are a harmless crew, as is shown by their picture. They have an enviable reputation as far as pledging goes. It used to be saicl that only about sixty per cent, of their spikes turned them down, but by dint of hard work this average has been reduced to fifty- eight. The greater part of the men in the gang are enrolled in the University. KAPPA SIGMA l ' ounded : U. of V. Indiana Beta Theta Chapter Class, Issy ' s. Chief William lMc- ' doo The Kappa Sig house is red w ith green trimmings. The Kappa Sigs have green grass on their lawn to keep up with their color scheme. During the basketball tournament they sent their freshmen over to the Union rooms to sleep on the pool tables. However, Isenhower has a pretty good bunch. He gives a week-end party for the crew once a year at some nice -Martinsville sanatorium. The Kappa Sig is a whole lot like the Tri Delts hut the Kappa Sigs lack enough stars. Besides being represented by a member of the Pan-Hel council, several of the prominent members of the fraternity belong to the Union and V. M. C. .A. Page Two Hundred Eighty-Seven « RBUl I ' aKi- Two Hun lr ' il KiBhIyRlKht 1918 - SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded : o. Just Grew. Indiana Gamma Chapter. Class A. Prominent Man Xone The S. .- . E. g ang is as shrinking as is their cho.sen flower — the violet. It was at one time maintained that the S. . . E ' s. never lost a spike, hut it is now said that they never turn down a rushee. This is prohahly a hit overdrawn. Each man as he returns to school in the fall hrings a nice long prop with him from the farm to put under the side of the house. The Beta house helps to hold the S. A. E. affair upright. Four of the pillars of the fra- ternity are on the front porch. The house sets a ways hack from the street, hut the harn is [-{) very convenient to the alley. The S. . . E. pin is much like the ace of diamonds. The motto of the fraternity was sought after, hut Dutch ' eiking said he didn ' t think they had one unless it was Open another one. ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded : Said To Be. Indiana Delta -Alpha. Class XXXX. Best Bet Irving Bachelor The . T. O ' s. have one of the hest pictures in the book if it wasn ' t for their oldest liv- ing member that appears in the lower right-hand corner. The crew lives down town across from a church and handy to the police station. The Military Section of the .Arbutus is largely A. T. O. through the pictures of Charlie Thompson, which are almost as prominent as he was. The organization indulges in other college sports besides dancing and is known to be fond of hiking. The pin is a double cross. Someone asked Weinhardt the other day what .-X. T. O. stood for and he said that he had been through the iniation ei.ght times and he hadn ' t found out yet. .Alpha Tan is one of the organizations that does not maintain a house. The home has to be seen to be appreciated. DELTA UPSILON Founded : On Rock. Indiana Chapter Class, Hard. President Bill Taft Delta U is non-secret. It can ' t be secret and live where it does on Fifth Street. Most of the members come from Linton, but one of the boys never saw a coal mine in his life. The D. U ' s. extel in captains and porch parties. The group is probably the most known for its social activities. At one time during the year a rumor was afloat that the fraternity would actually give a dance. Xothing developed. I L.AMBD.-X CHF . I,PH. hme ctaoin etaoin ctaoin ctaoinnn Founded : Last Year. Indiana Chapter Class, Fine. The Lambda Chis must be well known before they arc criticised too harshly. Their environment in University Courts is not of the best, but their intentions are good. They live in a yellow house and have a saxophone player. Otherwise it isn ' t their fault. -V. N A, Indiana University WILLIAM L. BRYAN, Ph. D. President I THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Horace A. Hoffman. A.AI.. Dean H THE GRADUATE SCHOOL C. H. Eigenmann, Ph.D.. Dean ni THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION H. L. Smitli, Ph.D., Dean R ' THE SCHOOL OF LAW Enoch G. Hog-ate, A.B., LL.D., Dean A ' THE SCHOOL OF MEDICIXE Charles P. Emerson, M.D., Dean, Indianapolis Bnrton D. A 1 vers. AI.D., Secretary, Blooming- ton M THE EXTENSION DIMSION I. I. Pettijohn, A.B., Director FOR CATALOGUE AND BULLETINS ADDRESS THE REGISTRAR BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Page Two Hundred Eighty-Nine N1 IV i KAPPA ALPHA THETA Sororitv Allcv. Telepboiu- No. 5. 9. P.F.TA CHAPTER I And Proud Of It) Theta is the oldest sorority here. This casts no reflections on its members. The emblem of the girls is a kite. Just why a kite should be chosen for a sorority emblem is beyond the undersigned, but if tlie tluiiisand or so Thetas at Indiana want it, a kite it is. The Thetas have an iron-bound rule on pledging- they never put the ribbons on more than they rush. Several of the better known members have a fine time finding out which fraternity pin goes best with theirs. The war has injured the gang. .Ml are nearly broke since the engraved invitations have begun to roll in. The Thetas have established branch banks in several parts of the city. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Ibid. Call 173- DF.LTA CHAPTER The little Kappa ladies have their residence in Sorority Alley, but most of them hang out around the Xook whenever possible. The organization boasts a ceiler g. par eminence and has attained State-wide fame in women ' s athletics. When not rushing the Phi Psis, the bunch gets together and invites down a number of rushees. All the Delta Gammas don ' t want, they take. Xo one has a thing against the Kappas though they do say the Garrick Club sisters find the opposition kind-a strong. The sorority picture takes on the nature of a cliecker board. Rumor has it tliat the sorority made one hundred and seven dollars and six cents on its table this year, so many of the girls ate at the Chinks and the cafeteria. PI BETA PHI Dixie. Ring 481. BETA CHAPTER The local Pi Phi Chapter is a branch office of the .Alpha Taus. The pin of the organiza- tion is an arrow. This doesn ' t mean that the mendiers are speedy in any sense. They are seen to dart about the campus considerably, though. The Pi Phis have a perfectly terrible time e ach fall filling up their big house, but they usually manage to do so by the middle of the seiuestcr. t)n approaching the Pi Phi House, it is best to go carefully. The girls have tried to hide it and it surprises one to run into it too unexpectedly. The organization main- tains a granrl porch swing and other things. DELTA GAMMA l-raternitv Boulevard. 1086, Please. tiii:ta ch.vptek Each January the Delta (iannna Chapter resolves to go over and join tlu- ' . W. C. . . in a body, but they always fall off the wagon and go to another Union dance instead. It has been maintained that whenever I). G. drops her anchor onto a young lady that y. 1. is on the road to fame and fortune — yes. and maybe a Bjta pin. The Delta Gamma House sits so far back from the street that the Blooniington public lighting system nexer gets near it. The Delta Gamma front porch is very popular. . Hudson spe.-dster from Mar- tinsville is a great help in rushing, don ' t you think? Twd Ilunilr. ' il .NMnrty n The Aeolian Company 237 NORTH PENNSYLVANIA ST. INDIANAPOLIS Manufacturers of the PIANOLA and AEOLIAN VOCALION Pianolas Duo- Vrt Pia Steinway Steinway Weber Steck Steck Steck VVheelock Stroud Wheelock Stroud and Famous Weber Stroud Aeolian and Famous We ber The Aeolian Vocalion Prices $45 to $375. Art Styles to $2,000. MOST CO IPLETE STOCK OF MUSIC ROLLS AND RECORDS riiiillliiMJiiinii I JIM) tiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllulllllllllllillllltllllMiitiii iliitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriii ■The RiRht Teacher in the Right Place. The Educator-Journal , You Desire Advancement | TrAruCDC Arrwrv ' ■' ' ' ' ' P ' ° ' - ' ° deserved promotion, i ItAlntKj AbtJNll WRITE us FOR PARTICULARS [ Read THE E D U C AT O R - J O U R N A L | AND KEEP ABREAST WITH STATE and NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL NEWS f LIVE TOPICS DISCUSSED BY LIVE CONTRIBUTORS I L. N. HINES, Editor; M. P. HELM, Managing Editor. | (Both of Class 1S94, Indiana University.) = 403-4 Newton Claypool Bldg. Indianapolis. Ind. | iiiiMiiiiiitiiiirMimntiittiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiMiiMiiitMMtiiiMiiiiiiiniin ' iiriiiriiiiiiiittiniintMiiiiirMrrriiirrnriiiiiiiniiirMiriiitriiitiiirrriiiriiiriJiriiiiNiiiiiittiiriiiiriMiiiii iiiiiiiirMittiiiiiiiitiiuii a i i HOTEL BOWLES bloomington ' s Leading Commercial Hotel The best between Chicago and Louisville. Conducted strictly on the American Plan. Hot and cold water running in all rooms, electric lights, sanitary plumbing, steam heat and tele- phone connections in ali rooms. Cuisine and service unexcelled. RATES, $2.50; WITH BATH, $3.00 Patronize Our Advertisers V Page Two Hundred Ninety-One yia DELTA ZETA Sororitv AIlcv. 548- RPSILOX CIlAl ' TllK Once a mean man said that Delta Zeta lived more in the alley than in the sorority, but he was mistaken— they divide the lime evenly. Delta Zeta had a big fire jnst before school 1 last fall, so their rushing season was a hot one. They picked iij) several Indiana girls and are still collecting hoard from them. The Delta Zeta front iiorch has been used but once this season, and then the Leota Psi crew didn ' t get by with the initiation ihey were trying I to pull off. ALPHA OMICRON PI S. Henderson. Try S4.3 . gain. rf] P.F.T.X PHI ! ' | The . lpha O ' s arc not far from the best sorority in school, geograi)hic:illy speaking. They have hidden away from the Inisy marts of trade in their suburban bungalow with a fire escape. That fire escape is one of tlie sights of the Indiana campus, b ' veryone is waiting breathles.sly for a fire in the .Alpha O House. The . lpha O ' s are original, if nothing else, and entert.-iin their dates with refreshments. They buy pictures with the money tliat would thus go to the Greek ' s. There are two pine trees in the front yard, but that ' s the only green thing about the bunch. DELTA DELTA DELTA lifth or Kirkwood. 188888888. DELT.V O.MICKOX The Tri Delts occupy a corner or two of a nice flat louse on one of the best strolling streets in P.loomington. The organization is blessed with two front porches, one above the other, but all screnaders are asked to come to the liack door. The Tri Delts have lost manv a date by the trickiness of their telephone number. The group has given tw o recep- tions and one card party for the benefit of the Red Cross. They own a talking machine (mechanical I. SIGMA KAPPA Somewhere in Bloomington. 1456. ? ? ? ? Left out in the cold when the Independent boys went Lambda Chi, the girls could do nothing but get a backward charter of Kappa Sig. .- s it is they are one of the coming sororities of the L ' niversity. Most of their time is spent in coming. The group has a song and everything. BASEBALL Baseball is cither a game or a disease. It is played with nine men on one side and nine on the other, though as a rule the guys on the other side are a bunch of dubs or, if they beat us, a bunch of lucky stiffs. The rule book is emphatic about tlie nine men part, but it is also emphatic about an umpire, who must be present in person or by |)roNy. He usually makes the tenth man for one side or the other. If he ' s for the home team, he has a good eye. If he ' s for the other bunch he ' s a bum, a robber, and ought to be rocked out of town. The idea of baseball is for the pitcher, the man who throws the ball off the hill down on Jordan l ' ield, to sec how many times he can hit a bat that another man, on the other team, holds out before him. It ' s a funny game for, as soon as he begins to hit the guy ' s bat too often, some one takes him out and another pitcher starts. Some men are born baseball players, but others never start until they are dead from the neck up. . baseball team is rated according to the auKmnt of noise it makes while it is on the playing field. This is known as pep. liascball takes a good arm, but not (|uite as g io(l as driving an auto with one hand. However, we aren ' t saying a thing about huliana ' s baseball teams. They seldom have one. Haseball games usually start in the spring, but a good share of them en l up in .i riot. P.ase- ball is said to be the American sport, but rollin ' your own is rapidly displacing it. PjiK ' - Two Hunilri-il NUioty-Two A i T arcel Post System Brings Craig ' s Candies Right to your door at exactly the same price that you can buy them in our store — and your box is packed from candy made the day before vour order is received. We Pay ' Parcel Post Charges To all points in Indiana on one dollar ' s worth or more. lixed Chocolates and Creams, 60 cents : Chocolates, Creams and French Fruits, y cents; Chocolates, 60 cents, 75 cents, and $1. Packed in one, two, three and five-pound boxes. Add five cents for postage on one-pound boxes. Just mail us name and address with check, draft or money order. Your pack- age will go .forward at once. X f ) A T 6 East Washington Street y I I J INDIA NA POLIS M Heal I ' ype rriter FOR THE STUDENT The Remington Junior typewriter supplies the demand for a simpler, lighter, more compact and more portable machine than the present day stan- dard models, but one which will be adequate for correspondence, manuscript and other forms of writing. It answers the demand for this class of work and we are able to offer it at one-half the price of our standard machines. Write or call for free catalog. 6 W«t P) n }!ir lodiaoapolis, (1 ' ' TYPEWRITER COMPANY ' V J Page Two Hundred Ninety-Three 1918 Z£ iK THE MODERN GIRL (As She is Writteni) llur t-yc-s leaped out across the room, Iler lips rushed out to meet him: Her wliite teetli danced from her warm smile, Her hand flew out to greet him. She? A modern heroine. He? . modern hero. Of course, hefore he meets her. He first assemhles all her parts. . nd then -why then he greets her. The guy that hasn ' t a herd of buffalo nickels in his pocket these days can relish the idea of eating his hat. Don ' t kniick the spring termers. Vou may teach sclioiil yourself some day. The dry law has done one thing. They used to Iniy it l)y the bottle. Xow they buy it by the barrel. No one can deny tliat the class of 1920 has a wonderful political machine. They carried every office in the Sophomore election, althnugh it re(|uired hard work to keep Heine Blatt- nian out of the presidency. THECAMPUS Let us survey the campus. We never took a course under Dr. Hanna, but Washington was a surveyor and we might be .great too if we learned Iidw. The campus bounds Bloom- in.gton on the east. We might say that it also supports Pdoomington. The campus is kept in place by the Phi Gam House, wliicli holds down one corner, and the Jordan, which runs about doing the best it can. Of course the Jordan beljjs the trees to leave and helps to keep the campus green by reason of ducking. The campus is where you go wdien you cut a class. Vou also go there to cut samples for Botany. I- ' or every square yard of campus there are two paths and one sign. . t the entrance of the campus there is a sign prohibiting speeding. Several offenders have been noticed — but no arrests made as yet. There are a number of buiUlings on the campus besides .Mitchell Hall. The University flag pole and the University flag, wdien they have one, arc a part of the campus. The canijius furnishes work for a regiment of janitors who spend the fall in picking up stray leaves and pmting them in a soap box, the winter in shoveling snow with a b ' ord, and the spring in watcliing the dande- lions grow. During the greater part of the sjjring the campus is yellow. .Some have been so bold as to say that the campus is part orchard. One does find a great number of pairs there. During the Garfi;dd Order the campus was dark, but a few of the best scollegers knew the way to the Observatory steps by instinct. But, laying all jokes aside, the campus is the foundation of I. L ' . learning anyway. PaKc Two Ilundrtnl Ninety-Four SPAULDING ATHLETIC GOODS Bloomington ■a Hn  PI m H Page Two Hundred Ninety-Five 1918 L! Indiana University | j Center j 1 1 j j Why not make it a Spaulding Center? KEEX KUTTER KUTLERY AXD CUT GLASS ROCHESTER WARE, CHAFING DISHES AXD PERCOLATORS Davis HardAvare Company PHONE 37 213 NORTH COLLEGE CAMPBELL CO. Will Supply Your Wants in Women ' s Wear, Dry Goods and Dry Goods Accessories We invite }0U lady students of Indiana University to make our store your shopping center while in Bloomington. Careful service and prompt deliveries to any part of the citv. ,_ Phone 594 CAMPBELL CO. , IN 3 = IV IO IN M Morris THE FLORIST Decorations and P ' lowers For All Social Occasions Up-to-date in ev;ry particular. Visitors always welcome. Member of Florist Telegraph Delivery. Phone 294 Greenhouse Corner Second and Highland Avenue Cleaning and Pressing BELL McKINLEY Prompt Service Satisfaction Guaranteed Work Called for and Delivered Phone 8g3 415 E. KIRK WOOD T B ALWAYS IN THE LEAD WHEN IT COMES TO THE NEWEST IN CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS €L@TIHini!(S €©. Johnson Creamery Co. Manufacturers of ICE, ICE CREAM AND SHADY BROOK BUTTER Special attention given to orders for luncheons, dinners and banquets. Phone 18S Cor. 7th and Madison Sts. Page Two Hundred Ninety-Seven M S It it is rislit, We hnv; it. Model Shoe Co. High Class Footwear for all Occa- sions Basketball and Teimis Goods Electric Repair Shop MODEL SHOE COMPANY Phone loSr - - West Side Square Fowler ' s ' WE DELIVER THE GOODS Truck Service and Trunk Hauling Phone 2T,s OLAF LOKKE Book Bindery Librar}- Binding Exclusively C pposite the Harris-Grand Bldg. Official Bindery to the University FOR SATISFACTION TRY Kaser SHOE SHOP All Kinds of Repairing 1 20 SOUTH COLLEGE ,-: Nor ways 99 SANATORIUM Consulting Hours (Dr. Albert E. Sterne) (Dr. Chas. D. Humes) By Appointment Only From 10 to 12 A. M. 2 to 4 P. M. llllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltltllllK DRS. STERNE AND HUMES SANATORIUM FOR NERVOUS DISEASES AND GENERAL DIAGNOSIS 1820 East Tenth Street (Facing Woodruff Park) INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Devoted to the solution of all prob- lems in Medicine, particularly Neurol- ogy, based on intensive study, research examination and observation of each individual case. Patients promptly returned into fam- ily physician ' s care ; those, only, re- quiring special treatment, remain at the institution. DR. ALBERT E. STERNE, Medical Director DR. CHAS. D. HUMES, Associate Director Skilled Specialists in close co-operation Page Two Hundred Ninety-Nine lyio MIIIIIIIIIIIJIDIIItlllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIinill ' SANATORIUM Patients Visiting Hours 3 to 5 P- M. Only TELEPHONES Automatic 61-251 Bell. Woodruff 1999 Long Dist. Toll 31 Dr. Sterne ' s Rasidence Phones Automatic 61-128 Bell, Woodruff 2655 1llimillllllllllllllllffll1IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IUIIIIIIIIIIIM in the Interests of Students Open 7 a. m. to 7 p. ni. Basement of N. O. PITTENGER Library Manager Page Three Hundred One Good Scholarship Demands Good Eyes THE INDIANA OPTICAL CO. 224 North Meridian Street Indianapolis Cannot give you good eyes, but can aid you in get- ting good grades by preserving your eyes We do an exclusive prescription and repair work at the lowest prices Have you noticed the stylish appearance of students wearing Indiana Optical Co. glasses? Indiana University Book Store Maintained bv the University Keep in Tuuch with liuliana ' s i ' rogress ' d IXDIAX.VS GRADUATE AIAGAZINE I ' liljlishe-d fdur times yearly In- the Indiana University Alumni Association will keep yon informed on all the movements of importance in the life of Indiana, and will keep you in touch with your classmates. Each issue contains well-written articles on cultural topics, news of the L ' niversity, l ook Reviews of Alumni Authors, and Alumiti Xcws Xotes. To Alumni and Former Students, $r per year. To others, $2 per year. .Vddress The Alumni Secretary INDIANA UNIVERSITY TiiKo Thr e Hundred Two HE D )tadeinit§ HeadqinaFSers amd Mseca r G©©die§ service Page Three Hundred Three For Surgical In ruments SEE US W ' c carry I ' verNtliini;- fur the DOCTOR. XIRSI-:, MI ' DIOA STl ' DI ' .XT and HOSPITAL GIVK US A TRIAL Wm. H. Arm rong Co. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA ConipliiiR ' nts of Tiie PetfiboiiG Rros. Maiuikickirii g Conpeiiw CINCINNATI. OHIO Will) l ' uniislu-(l Oiir Imi s Willi ' l lK-ir . iftv Mililarv rnifunns THE NEW f l.l ' .TTI-l.l.lCIR 6c .SOX. I ' rops. I lnmc (if ilii ' r.est I ' lTcad. C akes ami I ' ics in the City W ' c also cater ti I Panics a nd 1 )ances Willi l ' ancy Cake-, I ' unclies, etc. Get our Prices lielOre Placing ( )rders Elsewhere OLALPrV, OCR -MOTTO Cor, Wash, and d Sl . Phone 140 snniTMT tttniinG EnGIHEER PATH k( )( )M spi ' .ci i.Tii-:s I ' .siiinales i ' lirni- ' heil Cor, 71I1 and Walnul Sts, Phone S ' J PtiKO Three Hundred Four Office 405 Phones Res. 1137 A. M. SNYDER Dentil Office: Henry and Kerr Bldg., E. Kirkwood Avenue. Pure Food Distributors and Seed Merchants Wliitaker Grocery Co. ' e are prepared to serve you well AHITAKER GROCERY CO. The Greeks For Sodas Sundaes and Candies EAST SIDE SQUARE Tkm Monlb CLOTHIXG AXD SHOE COMPANY North Side Square i ' HE EIO IE OF PURE DRUGS J. W. O ' HARROW Phone 3 South Side Square Turner ' s 5c and 1 Oc Store Everv-thing in the line of VARIETY GOODS South Side Square (Bo Ao U)M Wall Paper, Paints, arnishes, Enamel Dance Floor Wax Opposite Postoffice You will be pleased to trade at WA ' LIE AND FLEENER Grocer • and Meat Market 310 S. Dunn Phone 714 or 1584 We sell Richileu Brand T.-as and Coffee Page Three Hundred Five 1918 il WhetselFs Shoe Store v WEST SIDE SQUARE WHLETIC COC LOGAX L. COOAllJS A Good I ' lace to Trade ' Join the Union The Indiana Union ' riio Union stands for Democrauy and clean school life. It is the only organ- ization on the camims to which every live and red-blooded student may and does belong ' . When makinjf out your budsret of ex- l)enses, make allowance for the mem- bership fee of $1.00. The Union supports an Entertain- ment Series, a Moving ' Picture Show, a liilliard Rooni and a Barber vShop. Boo the University by Boo Hng the Union Are You Sleeping Your Way Through Indiana? Are _ ' oii interested in tliini;s thai are happening ' about you? Do you care wlicther Indiana has a winning ' bail team or not ' Are you interested in activities that are iM-ought before the studeiU l)od ihroug ' I: the columns of the Indiana Daily Student? Enthusiasm is essential for ha])])iness and success, (id interested in things now. ' Don ' t sleep ' oui a ' through Indiana. i: h:m ' ii)i :-A AKh; .max and wom w ix ixdiaiXA UXI l- ' .RSnA ' TAKES ■rill ' . IXDIAXA DAII.N ' STUi:)h:NT. DOX ' T I ' AII. ' I ' O SIGX FOkTIIh; I ' AI ' l ' .U Xl-.XT YEAR— AND II ■()l■. v. Gu ADiwnxG Li-rr this xianspaper I ' Oi.- i.ow •()L■. THE INDIANA DAILY STUDEN 1 KSrABLISHKD 1K()7 Pago Three Hundred Six jr 18 i Kodaks AtKlelic d o o d tS Art (5oodtS PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY DRUG STORE EAST SIDE SQUARE T. W. RATCLIFFE Tailor 1 1 1 E. KIRKWOOD PIANOS For Sale or Rent Tuned or Repaired SHEET MUSIC GRANT HAZEL ' S Music Store 103 E. Kirkwood Phone 528 w.o. BLAKELY SON for tlie best in Groceries Phones : 475 and 572 L X! Page Three Hundred Seven 1918 K 1 No credit to anybody One prici- to all SHAFFER CURRY Cash Srocers Fresli Alilk. I ' ruils and W ' elaMcs Phones: Main 144; Main 451 1 00 W. 6th St. City Book and Music Co. IJO X. Walnut I ' linnc .14 Stalionery. I ' ouiitain I ' cns. Atliletic Goods. Laundry Boxes, Kodaks, Books. Popular Ficlinn Typewriters fur Rent To the Teachers of Indiana Tile war CDudilions have made the demand for teachers larger than ever before. School officials are looking to .Agencies to fill die places of those answering the call of Lib- erty. The Xational lulucaiional . gencv has definite calls re(|uiring immediate action. Let u ])ut yoti in touch with one offering ])roiiio- lion. M. R ' l-R. ( h:. iLS()X National Educational Agency 1129 S(ate Life Building INDIANAPOLIS, - INDIANA Bryant 5 Drug Store FOR .sTLDILX r.S ' .sn ' 1 ' LlF.S. ' i()iLi:r . RTKLi ' :s . xi) ST. T10XER ' joj X. Walnnt .St. I ' llonc yS Everett Mays . GOOD I ' L.XLl . TO 1-:. T Short Orders a Specialtv Oi)posite the Monon Depot I ' hone 455 Wo Spocri;ili ;o in Iligli-firado A p pare I For Collo « Vomen at Popular l ri es Marl loi. { ' . ' . .Simpson and iigue .Midd . uils . lso the ' Leilv Wales Dresses O Tago Tliiic Hundred UIght 1918 V « N-: Shaw Cosner BLOOMINGTON INDIANA Official Photographers for the 1917 and 1918 Arbutus CHAS. GILBERT SHAW You can order duplicate prints of any picture in this annual at any time. Our Artistic Campus Scenes Nlake Ex- cellent Gifts. CHAS. MA ' ITY COSXER Page Three Hundred Nine Q18 West Silk- Square JONES ' 99c STORE Sfiuare West Side The Same Goods for Less Money or More Goods for the Same Money AI.l ' MIXL ' .M WARE KITCHEN UTENSILS FAXCY CHINA ena ii :l WARE CUT GLASS BOOKS AND STATIONERY V l re h Candi and I ' hocol:; ..JONES ' 99c STORE WHERE YOU BUY FOR LESS ■■' rcsli Salted Peanuts University Cafeteria LOCATED IN Student Building on Campus SERVES MEALS AT COST TO STUDENTS I ' uKO Three Hundred Ton 118 OS M For Best of Meats CALL HINKLE ' S MEAT MARKET Prompt Service Right Prices A satisfied customer is our best ad. Pliones: 272 and 1356. 208 N. Walnut St. GENERAL HARDWARE F. B. VanValzah Robeson Cutlery, Rochester Metal Wire, Full Line of Aluminum Ware Remington and Winchester Guns and Ammunition Phone 45 South Side Square o LTXXo CDAMEL BLOOMINGTON. IND. Plione 5 2 NORTH SIDE SQUARE Page Three Hundred Eleven E 1918 S Edna L. Moore Elizabeth Duiilap N1 lJ MOORE DUNLAP Chiropractors Office Hours, y-12 M.— 2-5 P. M. Evenings by Appointment nolo E. Sixtli Street I ' Ik me 154 II. G. Harris TINNER I ' urnaces and (General Re])airin ' Phone 1000 Jio c t 4th St. The Eaflle Clothing Co. FOR EXCLUSIVE CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS The llditie (it Society llrand C ' li)lhes West Side Siiiiarc Home Laundry Co. Service and (jualit - (iuaranteed P.. F. LFDXARl). Mgr. I ' hone - ' 5 Cook ' s Educational Agency 7- ' I State Life Bldg. IXDlAXAPOLtS, IXD. Will waive nienibershi]) fee until located for University students. IIOMI ' .R 1,. COOK. Manager. mgm C(Q)llIl C©a HE. DgLARTERS FOR THE BEST OF COALS AND ICE 1 ' ronipi 1 )eli ery . erx ice i ' hone 4_ ' 3 I ' ngv ThriT? Iliinilrtd Twi ' lvc D i: ' i POCKET BILLIARDS Pool HUFF ' S ShoeShinini Room - 5=—— Parlor THE CLEANEST PLACE IX TOWN CHECKS GOOD AT HEXRV KERRS, GREEKS AXD COYLES TOM HUFF, Proprietor Phone =,27 E. Kirkwood ' ' America ' s Greatest Furniture Fac ' ory BLOOAIINGTON, INDIANA MANUFACTURERS OF MEDIUM PRICED Bedroom, Dining Room and Kitchen Furniture W. N. Showers, President ' . Eclw. Shouers, ' . P. and Gen. Mgr. Page Three Hundred Thirteen oie fnl S. F. Teter, Secretary-Treasurer . For the Very Newe Tn WOMl ' .X ' S AXl) MISSKS i ' :. uiX(i . 1 ' I ' ari-:l Sec Exclusive A ' ent (ir Mar-Hof Mi(I(l - Suits Stoute ' s Pharmacy I ' ull line inii)i)r;c(l and domestic toilet re(|uisiles, slationefv, foun- tain pens and drus i ists sundires. l ' rescrii)tions carefully coni]iound- ed. We solicit a portion of your ])atri inai ' c. W. A. Stoute, Prop. Phone No. 235 West Side Square THE HOUSE OF QUALITY AXD PROMPT SHIPMENTS Kiyers:Co. Ptione at our expense Office Phones: Xew Phone .22-237 I ' ell Plioiie Main 4181 43-47-41; Xurih Capitol Avenue, IXDIAXAPOLIS, IXD. Between Terminal Station and State House Deal rs and Manufacturers of Everything ' tdr Scliuuls IMIMESTIC SCIENCE AXD MANUAL TRAIXIXG EQUIPMEXT I ' hvsical and Chemical Apparatus, Primary Supplies r,]obe CI an Air School Heaters. Indiana Maps, Globes and Blackboards. Peabody Schrol Furniture. Wayne Sanitary Horse l rawn and Motor Driven School Cars. WE STR1 E TO I ' LMKSE Robert Frost Daggett ARCHITECT 955 Lemcke Annex, Inmanapinis, n(hana . rchitect lor Indiana L ' ni er iiy Buildings PaKC Thri-c Hunilri: ) Kourloen 1918 It F ij Li Express ike ersoneLliix ofyox r uchool Tddress Service department u fdr booklet ' Personality in QiUe e Jfnnuals j ' l -- - Tn, m ' ' fiJ ' 3he9Mesinfhlsbook p ixiere engraved, by INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING ELECTROTYPING Q)MPANY 222 E.OHIO ST. INDIANAPOLIS.IND. 1 2 Page Three Hundred Fifteen 1Q18 a Conscrvatiim n( X ' ision is tlic rraclicc ul ' ( )i)l imetry = £ 142 X. I ' cnnsylvania Street, Inclianapulis Indiana Breedens FOR BEST SHOES Every Time The Claypool INDIANAPOLIS Home of Faculty and Student Body of I. U. Indiana ' s Leading Hotel Rates $1.50 Per Day and L ' p. HEXRY W. LAWRKXCR. [ ' resident and (ieneral Manager There is a Difference Careful artistic desit ns, careful worknianshi]), careful guard tn maintain high (|uality make o w je elr - different frnm llie machine made sldck tlesi.gns ordinarily shown, ' ll will enjoy the indiviil- uality of (iin- exclusive orii inal de- si ' 4ns. Sclidiil lewelrx. I ' ral jewelry. .Military jewelry. .Slaiii iiirrx ' ru ' d Dance rru ranrs. C. B. Dyer _ 4 Mass. . e.. Indianapniis, Ind. ruKi- Thrci ' Huiiilrccl Slxloon Phones ) Office 737 8-12 A. M. 1-lioneb Residence 640 i -5 P.M. GLEX M. .McDAXIEL Dentist Henry K;rr Bldg. THE STUDENTS FA ' ORITE For All Kinds of Shoe Repairing ' L. H. ROBERTSON 100 E. Kirkwood Hair Treatment, Manicuring ' and Electrical Facial Treatment May H. V. Eagleson Opposite Postoffice Telephone 00 X W. Cor. Square Penrod Pharmacy DRUGS AXD SUNDRIES Cameras. Camera Supplies, Perfvmies Stationery Parker Fountain Pens. Toilet Articles Cigars and Tobaccos Martha Washington Candies Upholstering. Screen Making, Crating Household Goods Satisfaction Guaranteed S. J. JORDAN ' Shop 310 E. -|th. Phone 536 Residence. 408 E. Smith Phone 1181 J. farris Plumbing, Heating, Gas and Eledlric Work and Supplies Mrs. C. R. Pleasant ' s ' AT Opposite Postoffice DR. VERMILYA ' S Pharmacy Drugs and Toilet Articles Waterrran ' s and Conklin ' s Fountain Pens Can:eras and Photographic Supplies Fancy Stationery. Chocolates On Ice EAST SIDE SQUARE Phone 112 1 ffl JL = £ Page Three Hund, ed Seventeen K n 1 he Mttcliclls Iiaz ' c been pniiling over fifty years ' Wm. Mitchell Printing Co. (Established 1859) Edition Printers and Binders Greenfield Indiana special Department for School and College Books and Publications Pagp Thrro Huntlrfd KlghU-en 1918 i TO THE GRADUATE IN MEDICINE Our Policy Our Prices Our Stock Quality and Service. Just a little better. Large and well assorted. 1 • To 1 av; you for a friend and cus- Ur ivCSire tomer long years after your original HoAA Result equipment 1 as been forgotten. Get in our boat — listen to what we have to say — take it for what it is wort ' .: — look at the goods — buy tliem. Another satisfied customer — you tak; no chances because it ' s our busi- ness to satisfy you. DUGAN-JOHNSON CO. 29 ' WEST OHIO STREET INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Physicians — Surgeons — Hospital — Laboratory — Electrical — Supplies and Equipment. THE BEST IS XOXE TOO GOOD FOR OUR CUSTOMER Page Three Hundred Nineteen lyici K m B 3f n r ] r Pax V o b i s c u m ! N1 1918 a;- ,-!• k • . ' ■. , ' ■; , •:•. ' ■•■■■: ' fY,,f ' kmfk:M
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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.