Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1919

Page 1 of 336

 

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1919 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 336 of the 1919 volume:

PRESENTED HIG CaagJjJLIBIJjARY FORT WJP H£, tP40, INDIANA UNIVERSITY Bloomington -€Vt9I3j rttj|i B.C.Rusli. uo the J ' oiiow Seniors and Students: 3u thiH ArlmtuH mr Iraitr trtrii tn anutmarixp tbr part that Juiiiiana luturrstty ;ilai|rb in tl|r lUTat utar. H? Imitr also tririi tn prrsmit tlir ntl pr pbafiPB nf Mutitrrsttg Itfr luttlt thr hn ir that tl)p bnnk mai| hrina auit krr;i unit in rlnsn tnurl) uiith unur Alma iKatrr. I n B e 1913 Allen County Public Libtam 900 Webster Street ml % 45801-2270 O 1 O -Q iD38 p- m €trnt m tlttarg 2. QIla0Hpa 3. Uama 4. Atljlrttra 5. JHpJiira fi. AJittitmatrattnn r. Arttutttw B. (§rgatttzattona 9. iramattra in. Qlolbgp ICtfp Arrd ' al of First Troops Indiana University is proud of her war record. Indiana men and women feel a great satisfaction in knowing that when Indiana Uni- versity was called upon for men, money, service, sacrifice, or whatever was needed to win the great conflict that she never failed to respond. Parade to University Waiting for the Band Throughout all her histor}- the record shows that Indiana University has believed in preparedness. INIilitary drill has been a part of the curriculum o£ this institution for many years and as far back as 1840. The revi ' al of militarv trainino , however, be2;an as a war measure Welcoming the Radio Men Page Eleven Waiting fok the Induction Ceremony Lieutenant-Colonel), and Captain Arthur T. Dal ton, who is connected with the University at the present time During the summer of 1918 the military at the University was under the supervision of Sergeant Stanley C. Jones. The main interest of Indiana University ' s war history during this period, however, was centered in the R. O. T. C. camp which was held at Fort Sheridan, Illinois. The members of this camp were selected from the colleges of the South and Middle West. The purpose of this camp was to fit these men who were sent as the representatives of their colleges with a knowledge of military training and tactics that would enable them to be of great assistance in carrying on the work in military science at the Universit) during the next year. The gradu- ates of this first camp were not given commissions but were given certificates as cjualif ied military instructors. Page Thirteen RaISIXG the CciLORS At the end of this first R. O. T. C. Camp, the War Department decided to inaugurate a second camp under the name of the Student ' s Army Training Corps. This camp was also held at Fort Sheridan and to it Indiana sent sixty students and ei ht members of the faculty. Dur- ing this camp intense training and instrtiction was given to the candi- dates and they were taught the most advanced principles of modern tactics. At the close of the Student ' s Army Training Corps Camp, twenty-three Indiana men were commissioned as second lieutenants. These men were assigned to various colleges and camps as instructors. I3uring this training camp at Fort Sheridan the government made the sweeping change in its plans that affected the colleges more than Ca?t. Dalton Readimi the Oath Pres. Brv n Tells Soldiers of Duty anything else on the war program of the government. This change followed the change in the nation ' s legislation reducing the draft age to eighteen years, thereby including most of the college men of the country. The new plan of the government was announced at a meeting of the college presidents held at Fort Sheridan, August 30 and 31. The plan was announced by Lieutenant-Colonel Robert I. Rees, chair- man of the War Department ' s Committee on Education and Special Training. According to this plan the go ' ernment was to practically take over for military purposes the organization and ecjuipment of every college I. U. Service Flag Waves Over Troops Pagu Fifteen Delta Tau House — Barracks No. i able to muster a sufficient number of students for military drill. This surrender on the part of the colleges to the government control was to be voluntary, and the relation between the government and the college was to be a matter of contract. A duty rested upon the colleges to provide suitable barracks and subsistence for the members of the Stu- dent ' s Army Training Corps, in addition to academic instruction, the colleges to be reimbursed as agreed upon in the contract with the giovernment. s Page Sixteen S. A. E. House — Barracks No, 3 Indiana University was one of the first to make this contract, and began early to make plans for the housing and feeding of the great number of soldiers who were to be trained here. Beta House — Barracks No. 4 Page Seventeen Vith these developments, military activity became the most marked phase of University life at the beginning of the present college year. Indiana University was selected as one of the colleges which was to have a unit of the Student ' s Army Training Corps, and the young men of this and adjoining States began to make preparations to be in- ducted into the army here, preparatory to being sent to some other training- camp after they had been instructed along special lines at this camp. 1 t ! pARRACK£ f NO 6 r yr- ■•M.ii if? Pif ifi : ' - , - ' K Ell fs. s -l- ' f ' s a «• -V « 1 im Hw nn  ik4i ,„ Kappa Sic House — Barracks Xo. 6 ; Iasoxic House — Barracks Xo. 7 According to the plan of the government the men for the S. A. T. C. were recruited by voluntary induction of such physically-fit men of draft age (members of Class I who registered prior to September 12, 1918, excepted) as could meet the regular college entrance require- ments. Sigma Nr Housk — Barracks X(i. io The men of the S. A. T. C. at Indiana University, as at other uni- versities, were furnished barracks and subsistence by the government. The plan was to have the men receive miHtary training under regular officers of the United States Army and at the same time take academic work. The plan was also to have the work of each soldier under Delta Upsilo.n ' House — Barhacks No. ii Page Twenty A. T. O. House — Barracks No. ij constant super ' ision in order that he might be rated and sent to the training camp for which he seemed Cjuahfied . The first section of tlie Student ' s Army Training Corps to be repre- sented on the campus was the ocational Section. These men com- posed what was called the radio detachment, and were at first under Sigma Chi House — Barracks No. 14 the command of Captain Samuel A. Alulhauser. The first group of radio men arrived September i and the second group on September 15. These men were quartered at first in Assembly Hall and were partly equipped and were mastering the rudiments of military instruction when the men arrived who were to be inducted into the Collegiate Section. Lambda Chi Housk — Barracks No. is Page Twi ' nty-Two Phi Delta House — Barracks No. i6 The Collegiate Section was composed of over nine hundred men. Captain Dalton, who had acted as Commandant during the R. O. T. C. period, remained at the University in charge of the new units. Two Naval Unit first lieutenants and ten second lieutenants were detailed by the gov- ernment to be his assistants. Other commissioned officers were added to the staff later and the total number of instructors, including the commissioned officer at the School of Medicine at Indianapolis, was seventeen. Radio Men at Alpha Hall ' Xa Page Twenty-Four The first task that confronted this staff of officers was the induction of the student candidates for the Corps. The first step taken by the student candidate was the presentation of his academic quahfications and credentials to the University au- thorities and his enrohuent in the college course approved by the War Department. The candidate then filed his application for admission to the Corps. After his application was filed, he was required to undergo a physical examination that was thorough in every detail. In case the candidate passed the physical examination successfully, it was necessary for him to make arrangements with the draft board in his home town to transfer him to the jurisdiction of the Monroe County Local Board, from whom he eventualh ' received his induction papers. These papers were filed with the Commandant at the Uni- versity. The physical examinations for the Student ' s Army Training Corps were started September 26, and all the preliminary steps had been completed by October i. At this time the final ceremony of induction was held on Jordan Field. Both the collegiate section and the Voca- tional Section were included in this ceremony. During this ceremony the members of the Corps were commanded and formed into temporary organizations by the officers of the staff and by students wlio had attended the camps at Fort Sheridan but had not been commissioned. The men were ah called to attention and were caused to stand at attention while Captain Dalton read to them the message from General March, Chief of Staff of the Army, and administered the oath of loyalty. President William Lowe Bryan Supervised Rrcreation Page Twenty-Six Bloomington Motor Corps addressed the newly inducted soldiers and explained to them their duty to put their country ' s cause first tuitil the war should be won. The mammoth service flag of the University was planted on Jordan Field and was waving over the heads of the soldiers. President Bryan pointed with pride to the service flag as symbolizing the active part the University had already played in the war. The radio detachment was fully ecjuipped by this time and was be- ginning to be characterized by the precision and discipline that belongs to well-drilled companies. In the Collegiate Section companies were formed at once, students who had already had military experience were appointed as non-com- missioned officers, quarters were assigned and uniforms and equip- ment were ordered for the entire outfit. Owing to the large demand for equipment the men did not receive their uniforms at once. According to the plan each man was to receive an overcoat, pair of shoes, and two uniforms, one being of Page Twenty-Se S. A. T. C. Hospital heavy woolen material for winter vise. A supply of rifles (old Spring- fields and other makes which had been manufactured in this country for the Russian Go •ernment ) arr ived earl}- in November and were issued to the men. The com se of instruction for the men in the S. A. T. C, as approved by the War Department, consisted of fourteen credit hours of academic work each week and eleven hours of the military. The schedule fol- lowing- will indicate something of the natiu-e of the routine of the men: Reveille 6 :oo Mess 6:15 Drill .7 :oo- 8 150 Academic work 9 :oo-i i :5o Mess i-:i5 Class work and freedom i :oo- 5 :oo Retreat 5:15 Mess 5 130 Supervised study 7:00- 9:00 Taps 9:30 Inspection of the men and of their barracks was held at 8 :oo on Saturday. After inspection the men were allowed liberty for the rest of the day. The men were also allowed liberty on Sunday with the exception of the men who were appointed for fatigxie duty. The academic work during the first term was greatly handicapped by the outbreaks of influenza, which made it necessary that the class work should be discontinued from October lo to November 4. The men were not allowed to go home during this time, however, but re- mained in camp here. They were given extra drill, plenty of super- vised athletics, and an hour of calisthenics each day. By means of this healthv, out-door life which the men lived during the influenza AiRixG THE Sleeping Qitarters epidemic tlie members of the S. A. T. C. were kept in exceedingly good health. Considering the number of men in the units, a very small number was attacked by the disease. A hospital was established in Assembly Hall and skilled medical attention was gi ' en to the men when they became ill. The women of Bloomington performed faithful service at the University Hospital in Assembly Hall, taking great interest in rendering any service which w as within their power to the sick men at that place. The women who comprised the Motor Corps of Bloomington also rendered faithful and efficient service to the military forces at Indiana Universitv. By the time school re-opened on November 4 practically all of the men had been outfitted and were rapidly developing into well-drilled and well-diciplined soldiers. Page Thirty They were divided into four companies, A, B, C, and D. The naval unit was at first part of Company D, but was later formed into a sep- arate group under Lieutenant Richard H. Spencer. For the purpose of convenience, the men in one barracks were, in most cases, assigned to the same company for drill. The fraternities at Indiana University gladly offered their houses to the government to be used as barracks. The fraternity houses were remodeled and refitted in order to meas- ure up to government specifications. All furniture, draperies, pictures and ornamentation of all kinds was removed from the fraternity houses. The floors of the houses were also left bare and they were transformed into regulation armv barracks. Section of the Hospital Page Thirty-One The men were all issued cots and warm army blankets and mat- tresses. The number o£ men assigned to a particular barracks was determined, of course, by the size of the barracks and the amount of floor space. In so far as was possible the members of the same fra- ternit} ' were quartered in the same barracks. The fraternities were reimbursed by the government for the use of the houses, for their depreciation, and for the subsistence of the men quartered in them. The number of men assigned to the barracks changed from time to time ; but at the beginning of the training the numbers were approxi- mately as follows : The Delta Tau House (Barracks No. t ) accommo- dated 52 soldiers; Phi Psi House (Barracks No. 2) had iii men; S. A. E. House (Barracks No. 3) had 50 men; Beta House (Barracks No. 4), 92; Phi Gam House (Barracks No. 5), 84; Kappa Sigma House (Barracks No 6), 58; Masonic House (Barracks No. 7), 37; Kappa Alpha Psi House (Barracks No. 8), 19; Phi Beta Pi (Barracks No. 9), 46; Sigma Nu House (Barracks No. 10), 65; Delta Upsilon House (Barracks No. 11), 61; Alpha Tau Omega House (Barracks No. 12), 52; Dalethian House (Barracks No. 13), 48; Sigma Chi House (Barracks No. 14), 98; Lambda Chi House (Barracks No. 15), 55; Phi Delta Theta House (Barracks No. 16). 45. Flu Patients Huu;iNt; thk Radiator PaKe Thlrty-Tv Alpha Hall Imitaii;s a r.ii-llui They were also in subordinate command of the men in tlieir barracks during the drill hours. Many duties arose for the men in the barracks in addition to the regulation drill. One of the most characteristic duties of army life is probably that of the kitchen police — or K. P. as he is known in the army. In each house a new detail of several men was assigned to the duty each day. Membership on this detail would come regularly by rotation, but in some cases it was gained as a punishment for some breach of the mili- tary rules. Another one of the characteristic duties around the barracks was that of the charge of quarters. The C. Q. was in charge, for one day, of the barracks. In the army he is responsible for seeing that the Page Thirty-Sl: men go to bed at the regulation hour, and is also responsible for seeing that they rise at the proper sound of the bugle. It is also his duty to see that the bunks are in proper order for inspection and that every room is well cleaned and ship-shape. Military life at Indiana University was not all hard work, how- ever. Various kinds of games, contests, and races were invented and tried by the men in charge of supervised recreation. In each house it chanced that sufficient musicians were quartered to organize a sort of amateur orchestra, and this bunch of melody-artists supplied their bunk-mates with a great number of popular songs and the songs that are loved bv militarv men the world over. Radio Men at Work Page Thirty-Seven Indiana University was one of the three colleges in the State where a naval unit was established. On September 27 a naval officer visited the University and selected fifty men, whose induction into the Naval Reserve took place shortly after October i. These men were to have been given intensive training here, after which they were to have been sent to a deck officer ' s school. In addition to these fifty S. A. T. C. naval men there were about thirty men who had been former students in the University detailed here from the Great Lakes Naval Training Station, where thev had just completed three months intensive training. Some of these men were candidates for deck officers, and others were candidates for the Pavmaster ' s School at Princeton University. These men were candi- Page Thirty-Eight dates for commissions as Ensigns in the United States Naval Reserve Force. The naval men were quartered in the Men ' s Gymnasium in what was known as Barracks No. i8. The naval men were under the general command of Commandant Captain Arthur T. Dalton, and were under the special command of First Lieutenant Richard H. Spencer, Lieutenant Spray, and later Lieutenant Whetsell. As the men became more proficient in their military -ork they were classified according to experience and efficiency. From time to time calls came in from various officer ' s training camps, and Indiana University contributed her full share to the needs of these camps by sending to them the men in the S. A. T. C. units here who were best prepared and who possessed the of ficer-hke quaHties necessary for a successful army officer. A number of men were sent to an infantry officer ' s training school at Camp Gordon, Georgia. Others were sent to a coast artillery officer ' s training school at Fortress Monroe, Vir- ginia. These men were, for the most part, undergoing instruction in these various training schools when the armistice was signed and military activities began to lessen in the United States. When the armistice was signed on November ii, 191 8, the entire Student ' s Army Training Corps was turned out for parade at four Radio Men Doing Lathe Work o ' clock in the morning, after the whole city had been awakened by the continuous ringing of bells and the blowing of factory whistles. A more formal celebration was held the next day at ' hich the sol- diers of the S. A. T. C. again paraded. The work of the men in the S. A. T. C. did not slack, however, with the signing of the armistice, but the military work was continued with the same energy and care that had characterized it during the earlier part of the year. Orders came from the War JDepartment, however, that the S. A. T. C. units were to be disbanded by December 21, 19 18. The military authorities set out at once to get ready to execute this order and worked with such efficiency that they were able to discharge every man on the required date. Page Forty-One Indiana Universit} during the Students Army Training Corps period, practically suspended all social activities and devoted its entire attention to preparing the young men in training here for their duties as officers. The onl} social functions which took place at that time were the company dances and variotis military functions. The people of Bloomington were very courteous and kind to the S. A. T. C. men, and through the Community AVelfare Board made life much more pleasant for the men in camp here. Imeld W ' urk Page Forty-Three Thi- Soldier ' s I ' riends The Yoitiig ' Men ' s Christian Association also performed a very un- selfish work in heli)ing to make the lives of the men a little brighter. The Y. M. C. A. furnished leaders who held services in each bar- racks on Sunday morning, and from which the men derived much pleas- ure and benefit. The Red Triangle men also staged free movies for the soldiers and were always ready to do anything in their power to keep the men smil- ing. One of the conveniences furnished the men by the Y was a canteen on the lower floor of the Student Building, at which the men might purchase su])plies and delicacies. Coming Home Fl o Clas rage p ' orty-SIx i i- ' K;i!;i: Drill Later the officials of the S. A. T. C. estabhshed a Post Exchange in the west half of the building occupied by the Indiana Daily Student. Here the men bought coupon books on credit, for Avhich the money was deducted from their pay. This government credit system enabled many men to buy many necessities and comforts which otherwise they Avould have had to do without. The curriculum of the University was, of course, greatly changed to meet the needs of the officer training school. Special courses in mathematics were placed on the schedule for the men who were to go to artillery school. Special courses in map-making and topography were also given. Every department in the University modified its instruction so as to offer something immediately appHcable to the needs of the S. A. T. C. men. Page Forty-Seven ■s g: ' ' ' )y?r-. Shine ' em Up ! Lacing Jack Up Officer ' s Training School Canthdates ] Ien were leaving the University practically every week for some advanced officer training camp at the time of the signing of the armis- tice. Had the war continued possibly not a man beyond the standing of a freshman would have been left in the ' University at the end of the year. After the signing of the armistice and the mustering out of the S. A. T. C. it was necessary for University conditions to swing around again to normal. The fraternity h ' uses, which had been used as barracks, were prac- tically all remodeled and reoccupied by the fraternities. The soldiers and sailors were moved out of the gymnasium and the big house on the hill again became the home of wrestlers, football players, basket- ball men, and the center of all athletics. Athletics had suffered a severe slump during the war period, as it was impossible for the men to find sufficient time to practice for inter- collegiate contests. The S. A. T. C. football team, however, made a very good record in competition against other college and army elevens. Not only along athletic lines, howcA ' cr, but in every other wav the University is swinging back to its former conditions and curriculum. Platoo-X ! Eyes Right Pagi; Fifty-One Armistice Parade Indiana students will always be proud of the fact that when the time came for service that the students of the University, the faculty, anrl everyone connected with the institution gave unsparingly and gladly of their means and their services in a great effort to help lick the Huns. One! Two! Three! Four! Military training during the present semester has gone l:)ack to the R. O. T. C. status. The training is compulsory for freshmen and sophomores. The R. O. T. C. Battalion has been given some splendid training- in drill, tactics, and on the rifle range. Page Flfty-Fou Page Flfty-Fi- r jim -, ' .T.wn:Mir.r-aTrfrfii?rii ' g ' - ' ' ii -A l r ' -i ' u T u -t ir ' . ..- o-r- ysf j rfryiTTSTi -i; Members of the Student ' s Army Training Corps The following is a list of the men who composed the Student ' s Army Training Corps at Indiana University : Adams, Paul B Adams, William B Adkins, Arthur S Adkins, John F Adler, Lyman Agger, Seneca J Airgood, Charles G Abner, Ray C Allee, jewel D Allison, Joseph F Alums, Virgil . Anson, Fred Aust Andrews. Clyde W Anthony, Lowell Herbert Arbuckle, William Syril Armstrong, George E Armstrong, Robert J Ascherman, Everett Ash, Rudolph T Atkins, Clarence C Atkinson, Enoch Francis Atkinson, Grameiel L Auble, John Woodard Axlerod, Abe Bacon, Xewell I Baer, Wayne G Backner, Henry George Baker, Kenneth B Baldridge, John Edward Baldwin, Frederick C Banks, Hobart W Bannerman, William C Banta, David G Barker, Claude V Barnett, John Dewey Barrett, Charles I Bartle, Glenn G Bartle, Ronald L Bassett, Arthur O Bastian, Jules E Batman, Gordon W Baum, Herbert Glick Beard, Floyd G Beasley, William T Beckett, Ronald R Becknell, Stanley W Becknell, LeeRoy Merrel Bedwell, Marion H Beehler, Irvin A Begert, John Edward Bell, Donald E Bennett, Clyde A Bennett, Roy Ray Bergen, Hugh Guille Bess, Guy R Bicking, Clifford O Billman, Max Wolfe Bittendender, Paul Blackburn, Erwin Blair, James R Blakeslee, Paul Beecher Bland, Everett T Blann, Ralph Guy Blasdel, Webstei; E Blessinger, Benno F Boes, Ovid Thomas Bohn, Ervin Lewis Boleman, Henry B Boltin, Edwin D Bond, Wilbur K Bone, Irvin D Bonewitz, Charles B Boring, Sydney R Bourn, Frederick Edward Bowen, Edgar Roland Bower, A. Ferris Bower, Daniel T Bowers, Clarence L Bowman, Waldo M Bowman, Wilbur E Boyd, William M Bozoarth, James T Bradt, Wilbur E Brayton, John R Breitmeier, Paul C Briner, Harry Lomax Brodhecker, Rolland Brosier, Myron J Brown, Archiless M Brown, Bernard W Brown, Charles T Brown, Harry K Brown, Leonard J Brown, Thomas C Browne, George O Brunner, Emerson J Bryce, John D Buchanan, George P Bundv, Howard P Bunnell, W ' alter C Burden, Carlysle Burgan, Robert F Burgess, Harold P Burkle, Herbert William Burnett, John A Bush, Joseph K Bussard, Robert Bussey, Lee F Bussing Irvin Joseph Butcher, Gilbert B Butler, Noble C Butt, Charles R Page Fifty-Seven Buttorff, Gordon F Byington, Erroll Caine, Ernest McCain Camp, Bennie A Campbell, Ewing H Campbell, George R Canar, Forrest Carmichael, Donald G Carmichael, William E Carpenter, Carl B Carson, Ernest Paul Carson, Floj ' d H Carson, Paul C Carter, Lowell R Carter, Rush W Casebeer, Paul Bevan Castor, Orville L Ca lor, Truman E Chadwick, Carl Cheever, Charles E Chesser, Arra D Clark, Merle Clark, Roy Clark, Walter Reed Closson, Ralph W Clawson. Chester L Clevenger, William G Click, Eric A Cloutier, Vernon Coerper, Henry J Cofield, Kenneth R Cogshall, Wilbur B Cole, Stacy Coleman, Robert D Colin, Jesse R Collier, Paul Wayne Collins, Russell Henry Comstock, Glenn E Conner, John F Conrad, Carl Richard Conrad, Clarence R Conrad, William P Conway, Glenn Coplen, Donald Corbin, Delbert William Corbin, Gilbert Henry Cotton, Emile Louis Cox, Alvalon Conway Cox, Irvin W Cox, Wilbur J Cox, Willis B Craig, William H Craighead, William H Crandall, Joseph R Cranmer, Carl Cleo Craven, Joseph Creager. Forrest Creamer. Robert D Cromer. William F Crone. Dewey B Crowder, Donald C Cnmmins. Robert F Cummins, Scottie Otto Cure, Elmer Treat Cushman, Sheldon D Dailey, Ogden U Daughertv, Elwood B David, Hershel A Davidson, Cecil K Davidson, Dvvight Louis Davis, Dewey A Davis, Joseph H Davis, Olin William Davis, ' illiam Fred Davis, William E Day, Newell Clifford Deakyne, Hollis W Dearmin, Roliert M Deer, Leon T Deihl, ' ictor DeMotte, Camilius B Denman, Dean C Denny, Lawrence Denny, Wesley J Dettweiler, arren A Dewey, Domer Eugene Dimmett, Welborn S Dittgen, Leo T Dixon, Everett J Dobbins, William H Dobvns, Porter D Drake, Cline D Duncan, Wallace H Dunlap, Edward R Durman, Donald C Dyar, Paul Alfred Eaglescon, Wilson ' Eden, Gilford Lewis Elder, Frank L Edris, John H Ehresman, Ernest F Eisaman, Cecil Leroy Ek, Palmer Gernel Ellington, Keimeth G Elpers, Wendell H Elrod, Floyd H Emrick, John Howard Engle, Herbert T Engle, Russell Bishop English, Glenn G English, Winfield S Esarey, Logan Espenlaub, George H Estell, Chester F Etter, Earl R Euler, Philip H Fair, Harold Foster Fair. John Russell Farling, ' irgil G Feist, Clarence Alfred Ferguson, Russell O Field, Isadore J Fisher, Eugene D Fisher, Hernia A Flack, John C Fleming, Herbert C Fletcher, Gordon ' Flint, Sandy A Forsythe, Harold K Fowler, Glen Harold Foyst, Joe Gilbert Frakes, James Russell France, Forrest C Frankman, Herman J Franks, Estell A Franks, Eugene. Frazier, Harold L Frazure, Monroe C French, Nelson Frohman, Raymond Carol Froman, Ray S Frushour, George G Fuchtman, Arthur John Fugit, Kenneth John Fulk, Orville Fulton. Maurice G I ' ulton. Sanuiel Gagle, Paul D Gaisser, Dewey E Garris. George C Gasaway, Donald E Gates, Lythwin O George, Donald Jeremiah George, Lawrence Gilpen, Hubert F Gitlin, Max M Givens, Donavan H Glentzer, Ira J I Glentzer, Orva E Goeke, Victor Herman Goldner, Irvin James Goldner, Roy E Goldsbery, Truman . Goodwin, Benjamin Leo Graham, Edward H Grandy, Frank H Grant, Dewey Gray, Robert Minor Grayston, Alfred K Greathouse, Hugh Greeley, Erwin H Green, John J Greer, James Arnold Griffin, Price N Grimsley, .Albert S Guyer, Karl M Habbe, John E Hackathorn, Cecil M Hackett, Harry Hadden. Claude Eugene Hadley, Myron H Haffner, Earl W Halford, Rov T Halleck, Charles A Hancock, Dewey G Hancock, Paul Alliert Hanna, Mark Hanna, Roger Julian Hansen, Ralph E Harcourt, -Allen Kenneth Hardin, Philip N Harding, Matthew D. Jr. Hardy, Russell Leo Harper. William Harper, William R Harrell, Marshall Allen Harris, Benjamin F Harris, Paul Revere Harrison, George C Hart, Joseph Francis Hartman, Harry R Hartman, Russell H Harton, Charles Russell Haskell, Roy M Hatfield, .Andrew Robert Hausdorfer, Walter B Havens, Harold B Hawkins, Geoffrey G Haworth, Dillon ll Haymaker. Robert L Havs, Paul Wilford Heal. Paul E Heimlich, Herbert H Held, Chnton L Henderson, Byron R Hendricks, John C Herr, William ' Hert, Allan Hickman, Russell K Hicks, Chester Arthur Hilbish, Roy Arthur Hill, Howard Edwin Hills, Elijah J Hinkle, William Clav Hinkle, ' illiam York Hinton, Tames Hirsch, Harry H Hite, Ralph Rominger Hobson, George W Hockersmith, Harrv H Hoff, Earl Ellis Hoffman, Arthur L Holdeman, Claude V HoUenbeck, Louis J Hollett, Harmon B Holmes, Harold Holtzman, Paul Chambers Hoover, Jesse H Hope, Herbert O Houghland, Harold C How, Louis Howard, Arnold James Howson. Herbert Huff, Asher D Huff, Marvin P Hume, Howard S Hungerford, George Hunt, Raymond Samuel Huntington, Alfred T rage Fifty-Eight Huntington, John Llovd Hurt, Cleo D Hurt, Laverne Huston, Harrj ' H Hutton, Albert West Hyatt, Arvil Hyatt, James L Hyer, Vernon William Imhoff, Lynn Adelbert Ingerman, Colbert C Irelan, James S Isay, Milton luppenlatz, Clelland C Jacobs, Oden D Jenkinson, William E Jenner, J. DeForrest Jewett, George Rae Joest, William Francis Johnson, Dewey E Johnson, Fenelon M Johnson, Glenn A Johnson, Malcolm C Johnson, Merle Johnson, Robert Anthony Jones, Albert T Jones, Chester R Jones, Ernest F Jones, John R Jordan, Owanno Cleon Judson, James E Kamm, Bernard A Karges, Ben Edward Kattau, Harold O Keane, William G Keeler, Frank F. Jr. Keith, Cleveland F Kelley, Ray Rudolph Kempf, Gerald F Kempner, Joseph S Kenney, Muir Wells Ivercheval, John M Kerr, Harry Robbins Kieser, Harvey J Kilpatrick, Kenneth W King, Peter Campbell King, Thomas I Kinnaman, Allen Kinnaman, John F Kinsey, Cliff Kirby, Roy A Kirshman, Russell L Kistler, John C Klamer, Ralph C Kleindorfer, Roscoe L Klise, Levi Wade Knight, Henry Alfred Koch, Edward Frank Konrad, Walter P Kratz, Fred William Krause, Walter B Kretsch, Russell W Krukemeyer, Ben Louis Kruetzman, Victor I Kyle, John William Lahr, Elden G Lahr, Elven S Lahr, John Paul Lakin, Charles Ross Lamb, Ralph Taylor Lambert, Kenneth W Lane, Ival Isaac Lane, Lester A Lang, Lewis E Lanman, Everett L Lanning, Lawrence M Lanum, Cecil Dillon Lashley, Lowry Laubscher, William F Laudig, Mark A Layman, Paul Leggett, Charles C Lennis, Herschel William Lesher, Everett Levey, Neil H Levi, Thomas Lewis, John Wallace Libbert, Edwin Lee Linder, John Franklyn Lindley, Charles List, Harold E Litten, Lloyd B Lohrei, Jesse D Lowe, Clifford C Ludtke, August Otto Lucas, Elmer L Luette, Julius R Lynas, John Richard Lynch, William Aaron McAtee, Jesse Willis McBrian, William James McCarty, Virgil IcClain, Tracy Earl McClure Walter R McConnell, Robert W McCown, William C McCoy, Herschel B McFaddin, Howard C McFaddin, Hugh D McGarrell, James Joseph McGinnis, Alan Robert McGrew, William H ■McGunegill, Raymond M Mcllwaine, Robert E Mclntyre, John William McKee, Paul McKinney, Giles McKnight, Wesley McLaughlin, Frederick L McMullen, Francis Hayes McVey, Lloyd R MacLennan, Donald Lloyd Mack, Carl Fred Maidlow, John S Maloney, Robert C Mann, Merrill O Marker, Harvie A Marquardt, Frank H Marshall, Basil McCoy Marshall, James R Martin, Guy Martin. Jesse A Martin, Paul H Mason, Charles R Mason, Maurice W Masters, Charles A Masters, Howard H May, Alfred Henry Mav, Jonas Thompson May, Ralph E Maynard, Kermit R Mays, Lewis Victor Meiser, Marlin Diehl Mendenhall, Carl R Mendenhall, Clarence D Mengedoht, Lanville H Merritt, Max B Merritt, Max B iMessner, Frank G Meyer, Bradford Meyer, George W Michael, Harvey Darwin Mikita, Andrew IN ' Iiles, Alva Bruce Miller, Arthur L Miller, Earl Thomas Miller, Grester Dewey Miller, James E Miller, Ralph George Miller, Restus J Miller, Warren H Miltenberger, Mark D Mitchell, Abbott B Mitchell, Walter Lester Moffitt, Bernal Kline Moll, Conrad S Moore, Carl C Moore, Emerson J Moore, Herschel Dean Moore, Norman C Moore, Raymond E Moore, Thomas P Moore, Wilfred D Morin, Howard F Morris, Theodore James Morris, Wendell E Mosny, Joseph Mott, Norman H Mulford, James P Mullen, Everett Alfred Mumaw, Charles V Mumbower, Forrest E Munger, Edgar Oscar M.urphy, Lloyd J Musgrave, George M Musselman, Omer E Myers, Robert J Myers, Russell R Myers, Thomas Berry Nash, Joseph P Neal, George Dewey jS eedham, Leslie E. Page Fifty-Ni Neese, Berylin Frank Neff, George H Nelson, Glenn H Nendel, Arthur P Neuschaefer. Malcolm A Neuer, Carl B Newby, Samuel Hunt Newett, Edward L Newhouser, Lloyd R Newkirk, James R Newman, Frances X Newton, George Dallas Nicliolson, Hugh W Null, Leslie E Oakley, Robert Lynn O ' Connor, Glenn L Oldham, Donald Olinger, George M Olmsted, Ralph E Orcutt, Robert Dewey O ' Rourke, Carroll Orstadt, Paul A Oskins. Kenneth L Owen, John E Owens, Harlan L Painter, Harry H Painter, Joseph R Palmer, Carry Jay Vincent Parker, Elmer William Parker, Russell M Parr, Charles E Parrett, Herbert D Parrish, Sylver R Parsons, Dwight H Pastner, Stanley Earl Patten, John Alden Patterson, Carl D Peck, Franklin B Pectol, Harold H Peden, Ernest A Peden, William J Peterson, Boyd Petig, Charles E Pfeiffer, Edward D Phares, Paul M Phillips, Deloss W Pifer Arlow R Pike, John R Pilger, Robert James Pitman, Roy Gilbert Pitts, Frank William Piatt, Herschel Dee Plotner, Richard H Plummer, Doyle Augustus Polhemus, Oscar M Poland, Maynard F Porter, William B Poulter, Charles A Prentiss, Nelson H Pressler, Carl C Price, Harold E Price, John Luther Pro, Russell T Proctor, Walter Edward Protsman, Rosco e E Pruett, Herbert G Pruitt. Clarence M Puckett, Cecil Puckett, William O Purcell, Oren J Quillen, John Leo Quinn, Lester Hale Ragon, Max T Ramsey, Clyde Ratcliff, Gilbert A Ray, Lawrence V Ray, Scott Herbert Redd, Herman James Reed, Franklin Jr. Reed, Norman J Reed, William Leo Rees, Edwin A Reese, Jay Dean Reid, Frank G Renner, Howard Rhea, Gilbert D Rhea, James C Rhoton. J. William Rhudy, William Porter Richey, Clifford Otto Rider, Homer I Riggle, Noble A Riggs. William Arthur Rindchen, Carl J Ringer, Horace R Ringer, William R Roberts, William G Robertson, Blaze Robertson, Hugh L Robinson, Frank E Roby, Ralph W Rodgers, Victor William Roderick. Alahlon Paul Rogers, Harry Lawson Rogers, Robert T Rosasco, Leo A Rose, Charles L Roseberry, Thomas N Rosen, Charles Samuel Rosenberger, Howard W Rosenheimer, G. M. Ross, Edwin Joseph Ross, Harry Plummer Ruble, Samuel Runcie, Roy G Runyon, Josiah C Rupel. William W Ruse, Clifford T Salan, Sam Sanders, Hubert B Sandoz, Harry H Sappenfield, ' ictor S Sarig, Harold Allen Saunders, Knapp O Saunders, Reese R Schan, Ellsworth Alex Schenk, Clarence Herbert Schmoe, Earl K Schneider. Clarence F Sconce, Byce Scott, Dilver D Scott, Samuel I Seeberger, William G Seifert. Benjamin W Seller, Cecil L Seright, Paul Otis Shannon, Otis C Sharp, Albert Dean Shaul, George L Sheffler, John E Shepard. Hugh R Shirley, Harold J Showalter, Benjamin G Sidey, Roland John Simon, Clifford Simonson, James J Sinclair, Ocel E Sinclair, Robert D Skinner, Walter Allen Slade, Donald S Slater, Valance U Slinger, Harry Andrew Slough, Ernest T Sluss, Davis H Smallwood, Robert B Smith, Byard H Smith, David L Smith, Dudley Smith, Elmer Vernon Smith, Lawrence E Smith, Merril M Smith, Russell Smith, Russell Warren Smith, Stanley Wesley Smurr, W. Edwin Snead, Melvin D Snick, Everett Snider, Byron Snoke, Clifford Walter Souers, Fred Spencer, Dale Banks Spohr, Paul Springer, James H Springston, Charles L Stafford, Tauncey E Stahl, Orvcl R Stahr, Robert L Stanley, Albert Floyd Stanley, Russell O Steffen, Julius T Stewart, Fred L Stockdale, Don Bearl Stocks, Eugene T Stoeffler, Walter Stonecipher, Hiram E Stoner, Alvin Owen Storen, Mark Jr. Stottlemyer, Raymond Stoughton. Oren Kenneth Strader, Orville E Stratton, John H Strauss, Herman S i Strodel, Frederick C Stroud, Curtis Stubbs, Grady Greer Sturgeon, Clark H Sturgeon, Lea Arthur Sturgis, Charles Ernest Sullivan, Harold R Summers, William C Surber, Dvvight P Swartz, Howard B Sweeney, Clarence T Swihart, Leonard F Tate, Walter Edward Taylor, Charles E Taylor, Zenor Frank Teats, Louis F Templeton, Philip H Terhune, William H Terry, Otis William Teter, Eber A Thatcher, George D Thatcher, Maurice C Thomas, Frederick A Thomas, Howard E Thomas, Max V Thomas, Ray Cecil Thomas, Walter Landen Thornburg, Robert Duglas Thornburg, William D Till, Charles H Tipps, Arthur Birl Tolbert, Lester C Tolle, Laurayne A Townsend, Nelson C Trent, Paul R Trimble, Albert Haley Tripp, Delbert H Troth, Lowell A Trueb, Charles M Trueblood, Raymond A Truman, Charles W Trumbo, Charles T Turner, Homer H Van Arsdal, Clarence Vance, Basil Franklin VanDeman, James W Van Lear, Dewey S Van Osdol, Dwight Gary Victor, Harold Richard Vos, John H Voyles, Harry E Wainscott, Clinton S Wales, Eldon M Walk, Frank H Walker, Guy Paul W ' alker, James B Walker, John H Wall, Guy O Walters, Marvel W Walters, Robert C Washburn, Nathan T Waskom, Hugh E Waskom, J, Edward Weatherwax, Harold L Weaver, John S Webb, William Henry Weber, Edgar H Webster, Leonard E Weddel, Floyd O Weese, Edwin P Weil, Jerold E Welch, Francis B Welton, Paul Lyle Weller, Frank Ivo Wendel, Irvin William Wenderoth, Homer C Whinery, Wilbur M White, Kipling Campbell Wiggins, Herbert O Wiley, Verl S Williams, Chelcie W Williams, Leonard S Williams, Wendel Paul Williams, Winthrop W Willis, Burnet Ed Willis, Fred William Wilson, Arthur J Wilson, George Dewey Wilson,Hugh A Wise, Howard G Wise, Paul J Wood, Chester William Wood, Coy Wood, Harold Maxwell Woodniansee, Paul Grey Woodward, Forrest M Wright, George E Wundram, William Henry Wyand, Ralph B Yaste, Virgil Yates, Davis Baptist Young, Albert Gaines Young, George F Young, James D Zeller, Richard Ziegler, Newell R Zimmerman, Abraham Zimmerman, Leo Zipser, Albert Zollars, Robert H Page Sixty-One Other Indiana University Students Who Have Been In Military Service and Have Returned to School: This list includes only the names of those men who have given in their militarv records to the office of the Alumni Secretary. Isenbarger, Bland, ' 22 Jeffries, Urban B„ ' 21 Judson, Edward, ' 22 Keeling, Forrest E,, ' 20 Kelso, Robert R., ' 21 Kunkel, Edward P., ' 22 Landreth. Austin, ' 19 Lee, Glenn A.. ' 20 Lehman, Estel, ' 23 Lehman, Ralph S., ' 22, Levell, Frank H., ' 19 Loomis, Robert M., ' 20 McFadden, John M., ' 20 Merritt, Max B., ' 22 -Miller, Arval H., ' 21 Mogge, Arthur R., ' 19 Morris, Theodore J., ' 21 Rhodes Russell R., ' 19 RoUison, William D., ' 2 Rose, Embree R., ex- ' iS Ross, Ben R., ' 22 Ruch, Lester G., ' 19 Rush, Benjamin C., 19 ' Sample, John C., ' 20 Schumann, Justin, ' 20 Sherwood, George R., Smith, Samuel R., ' 19 Spall, Carnie, ' 19 Starr, J Ward, ' 19 Starr, Edgar M., ' 19 Stevenson, A. Jewell. Stidham, Gurney H., Stormont, David, ' 19 Summers, Bruce M., Taylor, Ralph H., ' 20 Thorne, Forest G., ' 21 Ticen, Fred V., ' 19 Turman, C. Kenneth, ex- ' iS Walles, Max, ex- ' 2i Warrick, Homer, ' 21 Wilkinson, Clarence E., ' 18 William, Russell S., ' 2i Williams, Marshall, ' 19 Yaras, Herman, ' 21 Young, John L., ' 21 List of Indiana Men Who Were in The United States Navy Allen, Herschel Archibald, Paul Beam, Paul Beckes, Ellsworth Boggs, Lowell Branson, Harry Briggs, Ray Broadstreet, Virlyn Brown, Virgil Buck, Thedis Burton, Ralph Carter, Jean Carter, Hugh Chastian, Loren Childs, Floyd Clymer, Paul Cook, Haskell Cox, George Dawald, Victor Dillnian, Wilbur Edington, Robert Franklin, Wallace Fuller, Wade Gallowa , Wayne Goldinan, Buell Gray, Herman Grimes, Charles Hanshoe, Paul Harrod, Gardner Harvey, Vern Hendron, Robert Hermsen, Hess, S. Jack C. Hook, Joseph Houk, Royse Howard, James Hylton, Lertie Jean, Ted Jeffries, Marion Julius, Russell Kacey, Howard Kegley, William F. King, Cecil Kirk, Alfred V. Knepper, Robert Litton, Carl Lefner, Louis Lowman, Lester McClure, Walter McPike, William McDonald, Buell Marcovitch, Paul Merkling, Staate Merrill, Halstead Miller, Arvil H. Miller, Sayers Moss, Fred Myers, Robert Nysewanger, Robert Northam, Walter Page, Richard Saul Peckham, Ralph Rutherford, Harold Row, Perry Rollison, Robert Ryan, Ralph Snider, Dwight Snider, Herbert Swan, Walter Spencer, Herbert Smith, Gregg Smith, W. S. Smith, W. A. Sutheimer, Alvin Teeters, Eber Thompson, Robert Uland, Harry Wade, Frank Webb, Cecil Winslow, Ralph W illman, Oscar Wooten, Melvin Wright, Morton W ' right, M. M. York, Howard Naval Reserve at Indiana University Archibald, Paul C. Beam, Charles P. Beckes, Ellsworth W. Branson, Harry R. Briggs, Ray H. Brown, Virgil E. Broadstreet, Thomas V. Buck, Thedis M. Burton, Ralpr N. Carter, Hugh M. Carter, Jean V. Childs, Floyd Clymer, Francis P. Cook, Haskell M. Cox, George A. Dawald, Victor F. Dillman, Wilbur M. Edgington, Robert P. Franklin, Walter W. Fuller, Wade Galloway, Wayne C. Grimes, Charles J. Goldman, Buel Hanshoe, Paul Harrod, Gardner R. Harvey, Verne K, Hermsen, Albert G. Hendron, Robert D Hess, S. Jack Houk, Royse P. fean, Theodore Jeffries, Marion T. Kacy, Howard W. King, Cecil V. Kegley, William T. Kirk, Alfred V. Knepper, Robert R, Litten, Carl J. T owman, Lester L. Maier, John V. McClure, Jacob H. McPike, William W. Marcovich, Paul Merkling, Lionel S. Merrell, Halstead L. Miller, John S. Miller, Arval H. Myers, Walter F. Neiswanger, Robert M. Northam, Walter J. Page, Richard S. Peckham, Ralph Retherford, Garlan F. Rollinson, Cleve Row, Perry S. Ryan, Ralph A. Smith, George H. Smith, Gregg Smith, Walter A. Spencer, Herbert M. Snyder, DeWitt R. Snyder, Herbert L. Sutheimer, Alvin Swan, Walter Teters, Donald F. Thompson, William G. LHand, Harry E. Wade, Aubrey W. Webb, Cecil S. Wells, Willis C. Willman, Oscar Wooton, Melvin E. Wright, Morton E. Wright, Mark M. Winslow, Ralph York, Howard R. Page Sixty-Three |u T ' ■ iMt m I u m B ' : m 5 ? iRs ■ Rest ! Rookies Pretty Soft Life Wash IJay Page Sixty-Four Patching ' em Up On Guard Another One Gone Page Sixty-Five Lieut. Keiiyon Stevenson, who was elected Editor of the 1918 Arluitus Init was called to military service, has made a distinguished record. He is now engaged in writing a his- tory of his Division, having first made a signal success in writing the history of his regiment during its service in France, LiEtJT, Kenyon Stevenson (fl n es i ' age Sixty-Seve Rudyard Kipling knew the great men of our time, and with the poet ' s insight could tell the true from the false, the dross from pure gold. During the Great War the names of man) ' leaders and would-be leaders went round the world, yet when Theodore Roosevelt died, Kipling wrote : Concerning brave captains Our age hath made known P ' or all men to honour. One standeth alone. Of whom. O ' er both oceans, Both peoples may say : ' Our realm is diminished With Great-Heart away. ' Page Sixty-Eight Class Roll Adams, Bertha lone Allen, Agnes Marguerite Armstrong, Shirley Bear, Donald Beul Black, Margaret Borland, Aimee Ruth Brand, Ethel Blanche Brock, James Ephriam Brown, Mary Annette Brown, Ruth Mae Bowers, Ruth Burkle, Alma Mabel Burkle, Anna Ruth Byrne, Basil Underwood Cage, Hazel May Call, Fred Erneldo Carter, Margaret S. Castle, E. Pearl Clevenger, Lucille Clevenger, Maurine A. Coblentz, Helen Elizabeth Condit, Pauline Coombs, Beatrice Donna Corr, Opal Virginia Coulter, Nora Belle Cox, Aldalon Conway Cox, Irvin Walter Cox, Pauline Ferol Danhour, Gretchen Leeds Day, Vivian Deputy, Mary Lois Dodson, Mary Emily Duguid, Genevieve Duguid, Lora Janette Dunlap, Edward Ralph EUer, Thora Elizabeth Eisner, Erna Dorris Embich, Edwin Carroll Esarey, ] Iary Logan Farley, Frances Pauline Fechtman, Louie Elizabeth Fleming, Mary Lois Flood, Eugenia Jane Force. Catherine Ruby Force, Gleda Mae Ford, Leo Matthew French, JMary Ahmo Frisinger, Mary Irene Glaze, Arthur L. Goldner, Irvin James Good, Marianna Grantham, Esta Lela Hahn, Alta M. Harkins, Frank Smith Hasler, Abbie Henke, Clyde Overbeck Hermsen, Albert Giistav Hiner, Fredericka Hoar, Jacob T. Hoffman, Mary Caroline Hollingsworth, Odette Gladys Hoopingarner, Eugene Julius, Russell Scott Kern, Miriam King, Cecil Victor Kinnick, Mary Kiser, label Gladys Kunkel, Kenneth Landreth, Austin Larm, Ethel Amanda Lee, Faith K. Lemper, Genevieve Mary Leser, Mrs. Hedvvig Grun Lewis, Florence, Lingle, Robert Logan, Mary Anita Louden, May Elizabeth Lyons, Esther Marie McAllister, Elizabeth Jane McCollough, Eunice McLain, Harry McMath, Frances Burnham Macy, Fowler Edwin Marshall, P ' rances Elizabeth Mason, Grace Esther Means, Ruby Caroline Mellott, Bernice Carroll Mitchell, Abbott Blunt Mogge, Arthur Mobs, Emma Mottier, Wanda Norman, Ruth A. Nuzum, Clara Josephine O ' Bryan, Eugene Osborn, Daniel H. Osborn, Louise Parrott, Grace Eleanor Parson, Minnie Alice Peckham, Ralph E. Penrod, Corinne Lucile Peterson, J. Dwight Ragsdale, Mildred Rannells, Lois Anna Rawles, Thomas Howard Ray, Elizabeth R. Reed, Doris Mary Reinheimer, Helen Betty Relander, Mabel Catherine Rice, Alleen King Robbins, Mabel Harris Rody, Dessie Yiola Roop, Edna Chloe Row, Perry Quentin Rush, Benjamin Charles Russell, Mary Emma Sawin, Nell larian Scearce, Jane Allen Schloot, Mary Alice Schober, Norma Marie Shepard, Lloyd Shirk, Cornelia Shoemaker, Maude Scott Small, Esther Smith, Byard Hale Smith, Mary Elma Spall, Carnie M. Spencer, Herbert Marsee Starr, Edgar Melville Starr, J. Ward Stempfel, Robert Siegfried Stockdale, Bearl Donald Stockdale, Paris Buell Stonecipher, Sibyl Stormont, David Lytie Strout, Lydia Elizabeth Stubbins, Louise Hall Sturgis, Elmore D. Sweet, Mary Keziah Sytz, Florence Thomas, Louise Johnson Thompson, Eunice B. Trent, Helen Louise Trook, Elizabeth Roda Tullis, George Henry Turner, Mary Marguerite ' eatch, Harry Lawshe Walker, Marv Josephine Warner, J. C. Welborn, Jesse Florence White, Ruth Wilson, Esther Lois Wilson, Ina May Winslow, Ralph Zeller, William MacClellan Zimmerman, Leo M. Page Seventy Turner Macy Hiner Brock Turner. Mary Marguer- ite. Indianapolis. Eco- n o m i c s. Economics Club. Shortridge Club. W. A. A.. Baseball ' 16- Macy. Fowle Converse. ] Phi Gan Edv ' 17. So ima Delta. Eco- nomics Club. History Club. Pan-Hellenic. Capt. Interclas.?; Base- ball ' 16. Baseball ' IT. Hine Delta Freda. Rushville. Delta Delta German Club ' 16- ' 17. Women ' s League Board ' IS- ' IS. Vice Presi- dent W. A. A. ' 17. Bas- ket-ball ' IS- ' ie. ' 17. ' 19. Hockey ' 16. ock. James Ephriam. lesboro. Mathematics, irried Students Club. Rannells. Lois A. Indi- anapolis. English. Pi Beta Phi. Shortridge Club. Gleda Mae. Loo- Welborn. Jessie I English. Delta ence. EUvood. C: ma. Wo -n e n ' s istry. Delta Zet League Board ■17- ' 18 1% French Rannells Force Welborn Hl i SiSinin: Page Seventy-Two Page Seventy -Three Pag-e Seventy-Five Page Seventy-Six n ' JlillliNllllllllllll llllrllllllllllin illllllllllllllllhllJ llllllllllll l llllllllllll llllllllllllllllHlllinTT T R? Page Seventy-Seven Page Seventy-Eight Page Seventy-Nine Page Blehty Page Eighty-One Page Eighty-T Page Eighty-Three Page Eighty-Four Page Eighty-E ve rage Bishty-Six Page Eighty-Seven Page Eighty-Eight Page Eighty-Nine Page Ninety-One Page Ninety-Two SlautH I age Ninety-Fo Page Ninety-Five I age Ninety-Six Phi Delta Phi Phi Delta Phi, the legal pioneer fraternity, was founded at the Law School of the University of Michigan in 1869, and for over three de- cades enjoyed the distinction of being the only fraternity in the legal world. At present forty-six active chapters are located at the leading Amer- ican law schools, and strong Alumni organizations now exist in seven- teen of our largest cities. Foster Chapter was installed at Indiana University Law School in 1900. In keejjing with the national character of the fraternity, mem- bership in the chapter is based primarily upon scholarship. The fra- ternity enjoys comfortable rooms iri Maxwell Hall. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Ro2v Chas. M. Hepburn J. J. M. LaFollette Scott Rowley J. L. Parks Second Rozv Fred Weicking H. B. Gray Phares Hiatt Kenneth R. Duncan Third Rozv Clarence Wilkinson Ploward Bucks Carl Weinhardt Carl Girton Fourth Rozv Clyde Reed Henry Blattman John Edris Ralph Winslow John McFadden Page Ninety-Eight Gamma Eta Gamma Gamma Eta Gamma was founded at the Universit} ' of Maine by Judge Gardner of the Boston Bar, who was then Dean of the Law School at the University of Maine. The fraternity strives to uplift the profession and to maintain high ideals among the students of law. Since the organization of Gamma Eta Gamma it has grown rapidly among those schools which recjuire the accredited two years pre-law work and three years of law work for the Bachelor of Law degree. Scholarship and prominence in school activities are considered in eligi- bility for membership. The local chapter of the organization was organized in 191 1. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Rozv Second Row Ralph Cochran Ralph Lowder Wayne Gtithrie Alvin Sutheimer R. C. Kennedy Alvin Stiver A. J. Stevenson Buell McDonald Page Ninety -Nine Atljlrttrs Page One Hundred DiEECTCR EWALD O. StIEHM A Period of Dangerous Tension The athletics of the year 1918-IQ may perhaps be best characterized as a year of gloomy uncertainty. This was not alone applicable to athletics at Indiana, but in general to every form of sport in every institution in the United States. The strict regulations of the S. A. T. C, the shifting of schedules, the cancellation of games upon a moment ' s notice, and the shipping of star athletes to training camps on the eve of important games, as well as the general tendency to neglect sports for the greater game of licking the Kaiser, made the year of 1918-19 a period of dangerous tension which it is a credit to have passed through and survived rather than in the light of any star players developed or wonderful team-work. Had not the football authorities made the wise move of allowing freshmen to participate in intercollegiate games, it is doubtful whether or not any college in the country could have mustered a team deserving the name. It saved the sport at Indiana University. On the other hand, the S. A. T. C. rulings forced Director Stiehm to cancel cont ests with Detroit, Wis- consin, Minnesota and Iowa, while the flu ban was responsible for the Wabash game being called off, and when the Conference schedule came to be recasted, Indiana was left out in the cold. However, by the end of the season a team was developed that soundly trimmed De Pauw, who had defeated our ancient rival, Purdue, earlier in the season. The basket-ball team got a poor start, due. to several unpreventable causes, liut found their stride at the last of the season, and finished well up in the Conference standing. Pros- pects for good base ball and track teams are exceedingly bright, and now that peace is come, the aggressive athletic policy of Jumbo Stiehm and his assistants is sure to bring honor, fame and victory to Indiana University. h Page One Hundred Two Captain Tubby Julius Page One Hundred Three Tof Row — Coach Stiehm, Hanley. Beeler, IiIcLain, Boggs, Harper, Stahr, Hess. Asst. Coach Rathbun. Middle Ro ' lk} — Asst. Coach Evans, Maynard, Lohrei. Capt. JuHus. Dalzell. Espenlaub, Uhlan, Trainer Ferguson. Bottom Rcz — Buck. Kyle. Habbe. !Marcovich, Kilpatrick. Kercheval. Review of the Season The 19 19 football season started with only four regulars left over from the star team of 1917 — Hess, Julius, Faust and Pierce; but a goodly number of men who formed the frosh squad of the preceding year showed up in the harness, and fifty-five freshmen answered the first call issued by Coach Stiehm for yearlings. Director Stiehm worked hard to get his men into condition, but with so many outside influences, it was hard for the men to take the interest so usuallv mani- fested in the sport. The A ' arsitv lined up against the Freshmen on September 28th, and had little difficulty in defeating the first-year men by a 16 to 6 score. On October the third, the control of football passed into the hands of the W ' ar Department, whicli immediately i Hundred Fou passed regulations limiting the time to be devoted to practice, the time to be spent upon trips, and the number of trips to be taken by the team. These regulations Avere made to apply to every football team in the countrv, and at once apprehension was felt among football authorities that immediate steps must be taken to revise schedules in conformance with these regulations. However, Director Stiehm A-ent ahead with his plans, and secured a game with Center College of Danville, Kentucky, to be played at Bloomington, October 8th. But, at the last minute. Center College notified Director Stiehm that thev would be unable to make connections that would enable them to conform with the S. A. T. C. rules, and reach Bloomington in time for the game. Coach Stiehm at once got in touch with Andy Gill, former Crimson star, who is mentor of the Kentucky State eleven, and arrangements were made whereby Kentuck}- State should play on October 8th, in place of Center College. Kentucky State University 24, Indiana 7 When the two teams lined up on the field, the Crimson found them- selves facing a team of veterans, nine of whom had played at least two years of inter-collegiate football, and the Wildcats from south of the Ohio lived up to their name, taking the offensive from the first kick- off, and running up three touchdowns and a drop-kick, while Indiana scored on a long forward pass from Kyle to Dean. About this time the influenza situation became serious, and the con- test with Wabash was called off, and the sport suffered seriotisly by cancellations all over the country. The Conference schedule commit- tee met, and when the results were published it was found that Indiana was left out in the cold, her games with Wisconsin, Alinnesota, and Iowa all beino- cancelled. Page One Hundred Fi ' Coach Stiehm kept the squad hard at work, and arranged games with Camp Taylor and Fort Benjamin Harrison, while the game with De Pauw stood as in the original draft of the schedule. Camp Taylor 7, Indiana 3 After practicing a month without an intercollegiate contest, Indiana journeyed to Indianapolis to meet the Camp Taylor eleven, which was composed entirely of men who had started on college teams throughout the country. This combination had gone through their previous games without a score being allowed the opposition, and the Crimson realized that it was facing a tough proposition. The Camp Taylor eleven man- aged to score a touchdown in the first half, but in the second half Indiana had everything her way, Faust scoring a drop kick, and would have won the game if they had had five more minutes of play, the ball being in Indiana ' s possession on Camp Taylor ' s two-yard line when the final whistle blew. Fort Harrison o, Indiana 41 Coach Stiehm was called east to attend a school for y thletic In- structors of the S. A. T. C. and Assistant Coach Evans took the reins, and with the same combination that played Camp Taylor ran riot over the eleven that represented Fort Benjamin Harrison on Jordan Field a week later. Kilpatrick and Maynard were the most brilliant stars, while the rest showed that they had the stuff of which gridiron stars are made. Preparations were at once started for the game with De Pauw, who had an unusually strong team, having defeated Purdue earlier in the season, and walked over St. Louis and Wabash by over- whelming scores. De Pauw o, Indiana 13 A following composed of every De Pauw student came down the Monon with the Tiger eleven. They were confident of reversing the history of nineteen years of heart-rending defeats at the hands of the Crimson. But they were doomed to disappointment, for the Indiana Page One Hundred Six eleven was master of the situation at all times, and touchdowns by Habbe and Kilpatrick sufficed to win. The Tigers were sent back up the Monon down-hearted, sadly singed and short of their tusks. In spite of the obstacles, the spirit evinced by the Crimson team in every contest, the spirit that has prevailed in every branch of sport at Indiana since Director Stiehm came to manage affairs, and the final result, were enough to classify the 1918 football season a success, for the total scores read — Indiana 64, Opponents 31. If the 1919 team has the same fig-hting spirit, now that the obstacles caused by the war are removed, the record will doubtlessly be a greater success. Summary of Scores Indiana 7 Indiana 3 Indiana 41 Indiana 13 Totals 64 Kentucky State 24 Camp Taylor 7 Fort Harrison o De Pauw o Totals T,i Page One Hundred Seven KVLE Kyle clove through tl ' C Habbe hue for many a long gain. Kyle was used at the fullback position and vva5 a dangerous man on the offensive plays. H. ' filled Faust ' j siloes at quarterback when Frank left school. The little quarter was also a good field general and carried the ball him- self many times for sub- stantial gains. Dunuv.a;; The giant center played Donovan played end and was one of the fastest men on tlie team. His ability to pick forward passes out of the air resulted in many touch- downs for the Crimso . eleven. a stellar game this year at Center. He played his second year on the Var- ity and has the reputa- tion of being one of the best- centers in the con- ference. Pase One Hundred Eight BOGGS Boggs came out of hi? hop this year and did some good work. His defensive work on the line was a tower of strength to the eleven. D. LZELL Dalzell played his usual consistent game this year. Dal is a mighty head} ' player and his work in the line also wrought much damage to the opposing elevens. M.AYX. RD ilaynard was plunging fullback of the team. Crimson fans felt sure of a long gain when they saw Maynard grab the ball, duck his head, and start to hit the line. He never failed to get throu.gh. Ktliwtrick Killy was the sensa- tion of the year. He was one of the best half- backs in the conference. He was the fastest play- er on the team, a good dodger, and a good tack- ier. Kilpatrick has three more years on the Var- sity and should win Con- ference recognition. Pa e One Hundred Nine AUST LoHHKI Cracker played a Lohrei was used at Ceii- mighty heady game at ter after Pierce left the quarterhack last fall. He University and he filled was a memher of the the hig center ' s shoes in last year ' s Varsity and fine shape, won his I both years. He was always on the job when it came to re- turning punts and dis- played good ability as a field general while di- recting the team from the quarterback position. Kkhchkvai. Kercheval lived up to his high school reputa- tion and played a mighty good game at end, being able many times to gain ground bv getting on the connecting end of a for- ward pass. J 11. n Captain Tubby piloted the 191 eam through the grid- ron season. He played his third year at guard. Julius prevented many a score by his snappy de- fensive work. Page One Hundred Ten Coach Dana M. Evans Coach Evans, the mentor of the Crimson five, easily outranks all other basket-ball coaches in the State. His thorough knowledge of the game, his years of experience, his knack of handling men, and keep- ing up the spirit of the team in spite of continued defeat, as well as his abiHty to formulate a defensive for the opponent ' s attack, stamp him as a basket-ball coach of the first water, and the remarkable come- back of the Indiana five in the last part of the season is in no small measure due to his efforts. m Page One Hundred Eleve Captain Pete Phillips laakrtball Page One Hundred Twelv The Varsity Top Row — Coach Evans, Smith, Buckner, Busby, Dobbins, Wakefield, Bottom Roiv — Lohrei, Jeffries, Zellar, Captain Phillips, Dean, Byrum, Trainer Ferguson. Review of the 1919 Basketball Season Indiana ' s basketball squad got away with a poor start, and it was not until mid-season that it struck its stride. The influenza and the late starting of practice were unavoidable handicaps that did not affect other teams, but the finish of the season showed Indiana standing sixth in the Conference, ahead of Purdue, Iowa, Ohio State, and Wis- consin. The Crimson team had the distinction of holding the Min- nesota five, who went through their schedule with a clean slate, to One Hundred Thirteen the closest margin, in a game played in the New Gymnasium, Febru- ary 22, the score being 20 to 14, Indiana leading at the end of the first half. One peculiarity of the Crimson five, was that it put up a much better brand of basket-ball on visiting floors than in the New Gym- nasium. The game with De Pauw at Greencastle, March 6th, was one of the best exhibitions of the Crimson fighting spirit that has ever exhibited itself. De Pauw ' s unusually strong combination started a rally in the last five minutes of play, but wonderful defensive play on the part of the Indiana gua rds held the score down, and the gun went off witli Indiana the victor by one point, seventeen to sixteen. Indiana should have a wonder five next year if the men who played on the freshman team of 1919 return to school. Kyle, the former Gary wizard, as well as Maynard and Donovan, would be strong contenders for positions on any basket-ball team in the country. Page One Hundred Four Jeffries A Duet of Basketball Stars The scores for the season are At Minneapolis Jan. At Iowa City Jan. At Ann Arbor Jan. At Toledo Jan. At Bloomington Jan. At Bloomington Jan. At Bloomington Jan, At Bloomington Feb. At Columbus Feb. At Cincinnati Feb. At Bloomington Feb. At Bloomington Feb. At Bloomington March At Greencastle March At Bloomington March At Madison March as follows : n Minnesota 35 13 Iowa State 14 20 Michigan 28 21 Toledo 25 24 Iowa State 21 27 De Pauw 21 31 Franklin 19 7 Ohio State 22 15 Ohio State 31 17 Cincinnati 24 22 Minnesota 20 24 Wisconsin 29 3 Notre Dame 11 6 De Pauw 16 II Michigan 16 15 Wisconsin 12 Indiana 13 Indiana 23 Indiana 22 Indiana 32 Indiana 10 Indiana 17 Indiana 35 Indiana 21 Indiana 37 Indiana 38 Indiana 14 Indiana 16 Indiana 29 Indiana 17 Indiana 24 Indiana 22 344 _ 370 Game with Wabash, January i8th, cancelled on account of influenza. Page One Hundred Fifteen al Basketball pictu Everett Dean, the reli- able forward and center of the 1919 Varsity, came up the Monon from Salem, Indiana. He was the mainstaj of last year ' s freshm;in squad, played a promi- nent part in every V ar- sity contest this year, and many of the games in the win column are a proof of his acurate basket-shooting and team-play. He also plavs football and base- ball. Jess Lohrei comes from Goshen, Indiana, but lack of e. perience kept him from winning a letter this ysar. He has the making of a star, and will be a valuable man for next year ' s team. He was used at center. Arlo Byrum, of Ander- Joy Buckner, although son, returned from ac- he lives at Poneto, in- tive work in the army diana, secured his High Y. M. C. A. to play back School experi;nce by guard. He won a letter playing four years on in 1917, and is captain- the Bluffton High elect for next year. School team. He played on last year ' s freshman team, and was used in several important games at center and forward I Lawrence Busby, who sometimes admits that he resides in Lapel, In- diana, played three years of High School basket-ball on his home town team. However, inexperience with the collegiate style of play- ing kept him from win- ning a letter this year. However, in the few games in which he was used, he showed flashes of stellar form. Center is his natural position, and he will be a good man for next year ' s Varsity. William Dobbins is a local product and a sophomore in school. He was used by Coach Evans in several close games. Urban Jeffries resides in Rockville, Ind. He played at both center and forward. He also won a letter last year, and is also a star pitcher. Trainer Ferguson is the man who keeps the Varsity basket-ball men in fighting trim, and the Old Man , as he is affectionately called, has few equals when it comes to bone-set- ting, fancy rub-down, and mending sprained ankles. Page One Hundred Seventee William Zellar liv;s in Brazil, and came back from the naval aviation school at Pensacola in time to play in the I ' irbt DePauw game. This is his last year on the Varsity, and he won his letter for the first time on the 1918 squad. Byard Hink Smith, although playing his first year on the Var- sity, is a senior in the University. Hovifever, he played two years with Earlham at for- ward. He held down this position on the 1919 Varsity, and his scrappy floor work was an im- portant factor in the showing of the team. H; played three years with Decatur High School. . rdith Phillip is a na- tive of Amo, Indiana, (Hendricks County), and was the leader of the 1QIO squad. He puts every ounce of his en- ery in the game, and is a tower of strength botn on offense and defense. He plays floor guard, but you can find him in the midst of the fray ev- ery minute of the con- test. He will be back next year. VVorthington, Indiana, lays claim to being the home town of Mark Wakefield, forward on the 1010 Varsity. Ill- ness kept him from making some of the trips, but when in con- dition he could always be depended upon to score when the points were needed. The Freshman Team Top Row — Wray, Donovan, Maynard. Middle Row — Coach Ferguson, Kyle, Kercheval, Johnson. Bottom Row — Beehler, Dewey, Ruckelhaus. Page One Hundred Nineteen Captain Davk Stormont r Btltng I ' agc One Hundrod Twenty The W ' restlinc. Squad Review of the 1919 Wre ling Season Wrestling has always been one of the most popular brands of sport at Indiana University, and positions on the squad are hotly contested. The personality and knowledge of Coach Rathbun also has a great influence in making the mat game popular at Indiana. Coach Rathbun knows the game from A to Z, and is able to teach the Crimson grapplers all the tricks of the sport. Dalzell, captain of last year ' s squad, as- sisted in the coaching of the team this year. The first meet of the Crimson wrestling team was on the night of February first, with the strong Y. M. C. A. team for opponents. The Crimson won all but one bout, and the final score was i6 to 3. Mumby and Yeager were the stars of the meet, the former showing superior skill. Page One Hundred Tv On February sixth, the Crimson squad journeyed down the Monon to West Baden, where they put on an exhibition meet with Detachment Number One of the Hospital Corps who were caring for the wounded soldiers recuperating there. The meet took place in the famous ro- tunda of the West Baden Hotel, and the Indiana University team had little difficulty in defeating the soldier aggregation, by three falls to one. Mumbv and Yeager were again the stars. Director Stiehm sent Mumby to the Conference meet, but it was his luck to draw for his opponent in the first round the man who proved to be the champion of the 158 jjound class. Mumby wrestled under the handicap of a sprained wrist, and at that was eliminated on a close decision. One Hundred Twenty-Two Swi wimmmg Owing to the great advantages of the large swimming- pool in the New Gymnasium, and the expert advice of Coach Rathbun, the instruc- tor in swimming, swimming is perhaps the most universal form of exercise at Indiana University. A fraternity has been organized by Mr. Rathbun, the qualifications for the membership of which are the fulfillment of certain required tests of speed, endurance and fancy swimming, as well as excellence in diving and plunging. No team was sent to the Conference meet at Evanston, 111., this year, but the next year is sure to find Indiana well at the front. Page One Hundred Twenty-Three Where Indiana ' s Athletes ake Made Above is a picture of the A ' arsity locker room in the Xew Gvni- nasiuni. There are over two hunch ' ed lockers in this one room, and rooms openini ' into it contain showers, a steam bath, and ru1:)-down apparatus. Every convenience and ajipliance known to trainers is here for the use of the men who rei)resent Indiana University on the football .gridiron, the basket-ball door, the wrestling mat, the baseball diamond and in track and field athletics. Indiana L ' niversity ' s tiymnasium is the most modern and up-to-date in the State, and would com])are favorably with any institution of its size in the a .untry. Handball courts, a jo by ()0 swimming pool, plenty of shower baths and a gymnasium floor ecjuipped with new equipment are here for the use of the students of Indiana University, and the po])ularity of the gymnasium si)eaks well for the wisdom of the Trus- tees and State Legislature who enabled such a building to be built. Page One Hundred Twenty-Four HaB baU Page One Hundred Twenty-Plve Tol Row — Teeters, c f ; Driscoll, 1 f : Julius, c ; Wooten, p. Middle owi— Coach Scholler, Butorff. 3 1) ; Jeffries, p: Campbell, p; Sutheimer, 1 b; Rath- bun, Asst. Coach. Bottom Row — Faust, r f ; Dennis, c; Capt. Kunkel, p; Dean 2b; Rauschenbach, s s. PROSPECTS FOR THE 1919 SEASON From the day when the first call for men for a baseball squad was issued, March 4th, it was evident that Indiana would have a baseball team that would be a winner. The new coach, Harry Scholler, a former Crimson star and veteran minor leaguer, arrived to take charge of affairs on April ist, and the very next day Kay Kunkel shut out the Indianapolis Indians, and on the day following the Crimson rallied in the eighth and took another game from the Indians — 3 to 2 — tieing the series. Hanover, State Normal, Rose Poly and Wabash were Page One Hundred Tv handed beatings in quick succession ; but the Crimson infield wobbled at South Bend in the third inning, and gave Notre Dame a lead that was just one too much for a rally in the ninth to overcome. Parks, of Michigan, held the Crimson to one lone hit, a single by Driscoll in the ninth , while his team-mates had little difficulty in finding Kunkel, but a shift in the line-up so strengthened the team to enable the Crim- son to triumph over the Michigan Aggies and Michigan State Normal on the following days. Returning home from their northern trip, Indiana again faced the Michigan Aggies, and the supreme pitching sufficed to make the sole marker of the game count for a victory for the Crimson. On the fol- lowing day Wisconsin proved helpless before Kunkel ' s slants, while Indiana hit Miller to all parts of the field. The Badgers stayed over Sunday for a return game, and the Indiana nine piled up what looked to be a comfortable lead in the first few innings, but the Badgers rallied in the ninth, coming out on the long end of a 4-to-3 score. Indiana fans Page One Hundred Tv are confident that with a fair share of the breaks the Crimson nine will finish the season witli a credible record. On paper tlie Crimson team looks almost invincible, but there is a high Probable Error in baseball, and predictions are hard to make. Captain Kunkel, W ' ooten, and Jeffries are a fine pitching staff, while the infield, composed of Sutheimer at first, Dean at the keystone sack, Dennis at short, and Butorff at the hot corner, compares favorably with any Conference combination. Driscoll, the leading- hitter and base-runner of the nine, with Teeters and Faust, takes care of the out- field. Results of Games and Schedule larch 31 — At Bloomington Indiana April I — At Bloomington Indiana o April 2 — At Bloomington Indiana i April 4 — At Bloomington Indiana 3 -April ic — At Bloomington Indiana 10 April 1 1 — .At Bloomington Indiana 4 -April 18 — -At Bloomington Indiana 6 -April 24 — .At Crawfordsville Indiana 3 -April 25 — -At South Bend Indiana 5 April 26 — At Ann Arbor Indiana o April 28 — -At East Lansing Indiana 6 April 29 — At Kalamazoo Indiana 10 May 2 — At Bloomington Indiana I May 3 — At Bloomington Indiana 6 May 5 — -At Bloomington Indiana 3 Indianapolis 8 Indianapolis 9 Indianapolis o Indianapolis 2 Hanover 5 State Normal i Rose Poly 2 Wabash i Notre Dame 6 Michigan 6 Michigan -Aggies . . . . o Michigan Normal .... 2 Michigan Aggies .... Wisconsin i Wisconsin 4 Totals Indiana 58 Opponents 47 (Won 10. Loit 5) f-6y Schedule of Games to be Played May 10 — -At Bloomington Indiana vs. Notre Dame May 17 — At Bloomington Indiana vs. Ohio State. May 20 — At Bloomington Indiana vs. Franklin May 23 — .At Columbus Indiana vs. Ohio State. May 24— At Cincinnati Indiana vs. Cincinnati University. May 30-31 — At Iowa City Indiana vs. Iowa State. June 10 — At Bloomington Indiana vs. University of Havana. Page One Hundrtd Twenty-Eight awiiiiiaiiaifiiirtTi iirtifiifcTiiiffftr ' linin TinttiiinhMiiii Individual Baseball Pictures Kenneth M. Kunkel Captain Kay was elected cap- tain of the Crimson nine for 1919. Kunkel per- forms in tlie box and his pitching ability has been invaluable to the team. Under his leadership the team is starting on what promises to be a success- ful season. Kay lives at Kokomo, Indiana. Alvin Sutheimeu Suttie has been playing a good game this year at the initial sack. His fast work has cut off many a runner from getting a good start on the trip to the home plate. He is playing his second year on the varsity. Suttie comes from Evansville, Indiana. WlLLARD RaUSCHENBACH Red was captain of the 1918 team. He was used first at short this year, and is working behind the bat at the present time. Red is always able to hold up the Crim- son pitchers when he is working at the backstop position. He is also a mighty handy man with the bat. He lives at Stil- well, Indiana. HoBART Dennis Hobe started the sea- son at backstop, but was later switched to short, where his work has been mighty good. Hobe also manages to slip in for a hit or two once in a while. He lives at Wina- mac. Page One Hundred Twenty-Ni: Urban Jeffries Jeff has been pitching some mighty good ball this season. The Crim- son twirler is playing his second year on the Var- sity and is going better this year than ever be- fore. Jeff also makes a good attempt to win his own game by clever wielding of the stick. He lives at Rockville, Indi- ana. Melvin Wooten Wooten is a Gar} ' boy. He has been used in the pitchers box several times this season and never fails to give a good account of himself. He showed up especially well during the games with th; Indianapolis In- dians. Gordon Buttorff EwiNG C- ' VMPBELL Buttorff picks off some Campbell is another of hot ones around third base. He covers the ground well, has a good peg to first and shows up well on the batting average. the Crimson twirlers. He was a member of last year ' s freshman team. He lives at North Ver- non, Indiana. Page One Hundred Thirty-One UdN ' ALll TkTEI. Teter won everlasting fame when Coach Guy L. Rathbun has had he made his sensational one- better material to work with this handed catch in the Wisconsin jear and he has turned out a team game. He is also doing some of which Indiana fans are justly pretty clever work with the big proud. Coach Rathbun has a stick. He is playing his first year splendid record as an athletic an the Varsity. He lives at coach. He attended the Chicago Sheridan. Indiana. Y. M. C. A. Training School and New York Physical Normal, and has been a prominent Y. M. C. A. physical director for a number of vears. U H. RKV SCIIOLLEK One of the big reasons why Indi- ana has a good baseball team this year is Harry M. Scholler. Schol- ler is a former Crimson star and a veteran minor leaguer. He sacrificed his personal and busi- ness interests to come back to Iielp coach the team, and the effect of his coaching may be seen in the playing of the Crimson nine. rage One Hundrt-d Thirty-Tv The 1919 Varsity Top Row — Coach Evans, Taylor, Gray, Wakefield, Swindle, Fletcher, Trainer Ferguson. Middle Rozv — Embrich, Cole, Boggs, Kacy, Loomis, Gates, Clymer. Bcttoin Row — Bohn, Phillips, Keeling, Capt. Briggs, Mogge, Williams, Piircell, Stormont. Prospedts for the 1919 Track Season Track is another favorite sport of Indiana University. Coach Evans handles this branch, and is thoruoghly versed in all branches both track and field events. When the first call was issvted the outlook was far from brilliant, but the return of men who had been in service boosted the prospects, until by the middle of April the cinder fans were assured that Indiana would be capably represented in this branch of sport. Page One Hundred Thirty-Three Bohn Purcell Keelina Captain Briggs is the Crimson ' s best bet in the hundred and two- twenty yard dashes; Loomis looms up large in the four-forty, and Keeling can be counted on to do big things in both dashes and the broad jump. IMogge is always dependable in the distance runs, as is Wil- liams in the high jump and hurdles. Phillips excells in both shot-put Page One Hundred Thlrty-Fou Phillips Loomis Taylor and discus. So it can be readily seen tliat Coach Evans has a well balanced team. Coach Evans is also working hard with his freshmen, and some of them, notably Conrad and Johnson, are showing themselves to be of high caliber. The schedule for the season is as follows : Paue One Hundred Thirty-Five J S Wakefield Capt. Briggs Coaeli Evans April _ ' (i — Franklin vs. Indiana, at Hlooniinglon. May 3 — W ' aliash vs. Indiana, at Blooniing-ton. ] Iay lo — Ohio State ' s. Indiana, at ISlc xunington. ] lay 31 — Stale Inter-Collegiate, at ' a])ash. June 3 — Conference Aleet, at Chicago. I Page One Huiulnii Thirty-Si: Gray Cole Stormont Crimson Point Getters Page One Hundred Thirty-Seven Tol ?oit, ' — Lynas, Conrad, Fugit, Shirly. Mason, Toliiison, Hancock, Colin. Bottom Row — Burgis, Maynard, Brown, Warrick, H. Warrick, Sauer. Blair, Coach Ferguson. The 1919 Frcsliincii Track Squad Page One Hundred Thirty-Eight Coacl Julius ungerford G. Corbin D. Corbin Frakes Hanna Eisaman Messiier Esarey The fast Masonic quintet, with a record of eleven victories and only one defeat, gained the honors in competitive basketball, and inci- dentally the silver basketball trophy of the series. Strong opposition was furnished by the Sigma Nu, A. T. O., and the Phi Delt quintets. The Kappa Sigs stood third in the percentage column. The deciding contest was won by the new champs from the A. T. O. ' s by a 6-to-3 count.The Sigma Nu five loomed up as a power- ful contender for the trophy, and ministered to the Masons a 2 to i defeat in a game featured by tight guarding. The contests, which were staged at the New Gymnasium on Tues- days and Saturdays, were well attended. Close guarding featured the whole series. The winners played clean, consistent ball. They had no individual stars, but played as a team. 0man 0 AtljbttrB rage One Hundred Forty Women ' s Athletic Association Purpose The purpose of the Women ' s Athletic Association is to promote interest in gymnastic and athletic activities among the women of the University, as a means of promoting physical efficiency, scholarship and good fellowship. Membership A-Iembership in the Association is limited to vindergraduates who have obtained lOO points under the W. A. A. point system. To retain membership 50 points must be earned each semester. Page One Hundred Forty-One Women ' s Athletic Association Honors Hockey ' lOO Soccer lOO Basketball lOO Baseball lOO Swimming lOO Sub-team 25 Sub-playing one-half in two games 25 Squad 10 [Manager 20 Second year on team 50 Third year on team 75 Fourth year on team 75 Hikes 25 First year gymnasium 100 Second year g}ninasium ::;o Third year gymnasium 75 Fourth year gymnasium 75 Apparatus 50 W. A. A. play committee 365 Publicity committee 25 Special committees 75 A sweater is awarded when a girl has obtained 1,100 points, of which not more than 150 may be executive points. The James Danviii Maxivell Medal This medal is to be given annually to an undergraduate woman of the University. In awarding it consideration is to be given to high scholarship, participation in University activities, manners, neatness, speech, principles, sincerity and sufficient attainment in physical train- ing to have won an L U. sweater. Page One Hundred Forty-Two Top Row — Robbins, Coblentz, Davis. Middle Row — Agger, Castle, Van Cleave, Simmering. Bottom Row— Brown, Snyder, Carmichael. Women ' s Athletic Board OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION Helen Coblentz President Mabel Robbins Vice-President Virginia Carmichael Secretary Pearl Castle Recording Secretary Norma Schober Treasurer HEADS OF SPORTS Dorothy Simmering Basketball Louise Van Cleave Hockey Luella Agger Soccer Marietta Sicer Baseball Doris Davis Tennis Frances McMath Swimming Gladys Snyder Hikes Page One Hundred Forty-Three I Vaksity Soccer Team To ' y?o;c ' — Cobl entz, Carter, Osborn, McConnell. Second Rozv — Brown (coach), Simmering, Gates. Castle. Third Row — Agger, Davis, Snyder, Van Cleave. Class Teams Seniors Armstrong Condit Carter Coblentz Castle Deputy Davidson Hasler McCuUough McMath Kobbins Jnniors Sophonwrcs rreslinieii Dakin Agger Arnistron Gibson Donglass Brooks McFarlin Davis Cook Osborn Heald Daum Snvder Magley Gates Voods Payton Hall Smith Kamp Simmering McConne Van Cleave McFarlin Redmond Sample Hockey Champions Tol Row — MoMath, Schober, Coblentz, Carter, Eisner, Force. Bottom Roiv — Deputy, Fechtman, Davidson, Brown (coach) JilcCuIlough, Castle. Hockey Teams Seniors Juniors Sop wnwres Fresluncn Armstrong Alward Carmichael Andrews Condit Clayton Davis Bishop Carter Day Garret Brllard Coblentz Hall Graham Fithian Castle Neal Harvey Gross Deputy Von Tress Johnston Green Davidson Williams Loveless Jones Eisner McMillen K earns Fechtman Sicer Moist Hasler Pietv McCullough Settle McMath Walton Schober Force Basketball Champions To i Roiv — Leah Ziiuler, Anna Brandon, Victoria Gross. Bottom Row — Brown (coach), Agnes McConnell, Margaret Moist Paee One Hundred Forty-Six Jutrs I ' ase One Hundrea Forty-Seve 1 Ni: v Mkiiiiai. S( imiii. Umiki: CoxsTiu ' Cni Page One Hundred Forty-Nine s WILLIS D. GATCH, A.B. I.D. Prof, of Surgery Willis 1). Gatch received the A.B. degree from Indiana L ' niversity 1901, and the degree of M.D. from the Medical Department Johns Hopkins L ' niversity 1907. He was resident house surgeon at Johns Hopkins Hospital 1907-1911. He was resident surgeon at L ' niversity Hospital, ' ashington University, St. Louis, 191 1. He has been the professor of surgery at Indiana L niversity School of Medicine since 1912. Page One Hundred Fifty Dr. Harry L. Foreman Page One Hundred Pifty-One c. R. sii. i-:ffI ' :r. m.o. I ' kof. (H ' Til i:i . i ' i:rTics Or. Shacffcr was liorn at Worms cm the Rhine, Xov. o, i8(i(). He alteiuknl the ( ivninasiuui tliroui;!! Tertia ami alsn Technieal C ' ollei ' e. lie came to hulianapnhs Oct. i, iSSj;. and attended Shortridge High School for one } ' ear. 1 le then hcgan the study of IMiarmacy, and while in the nrng Store he studied Medicine for seven and one-half years, lie was graditated from huliana Medical College in i8go, and tciok sjiecial work at Metlical l ' ii.irtment of C ilunihia L ' niversity, being gradualeil in iSw- ' . lie hcgan the i ractice of .Meilieine Oct. i, i8gj. In i()c he studied abroad in the Clinics at lierlin, X ' ienna and Copen- hagen. 1 le began teaching at Medical College in i8()3 as assistant in . natomy. anil later taught .Ahiteria Medica I ' harmacologv ami is now Professor of TberaiK ' ntics. Mr. Schaeffer was the originator of the L linical 1 .aboi-ator_ - ot llobb ' s Hispensary atid super ised its working for lour vears. Pase One HumlreJ Firt -Two S 1 Dr. ScifAEFri [! Page One Hundred Fifty-Three HARRY L. FOREMAN. A.B., I.D. SuPT. Indianapolis City Hospital Harry L. Foreman was born in Hartford City, IncL, July 30, 1883, and was reared on a farm near Dundee, Ind. He attended the district school and was graduated with second highest grade in the county. After completing his High School training, he entered the Marion Normal College, but began teaching before finishing his work. For three years he was principal of a consolidated High School in Howard County, Ind., during which time he obtained his B.S. degree by attend- ing Summer Courses at Indiana University. While a student at the Uni ' ersity Dr. Foreman was also Supervising Principal in the Bloom- ington Public Schools. He took his A.B. degree in 1913 and was graduated from the School of Medicine in 1917. He served one year as interne in the Robert W. Long Hospital, receiving the degree M. D. Ciiiii Laudc in 1918. For three years he has been assistant in Surgical Pathology and Instructor in Anatomy at Indianapolis. Dr. Foreman was appointed Superintendent of the Indianapolis City Hospital March 15. 191Q, after having served six months as Medical Director. He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa, Alpha Omega Alpha, and Xu Sigma Xu fraternities. Page One Hundred Fift s Phi Rho Sigma Tlie members of Phi Rho Sigma fraternity who are in the gradnat- ing class this year are as follows : First Row — Huffines Lukenbill Ikins Second Row— Hawthorne Schuler Porter Third Row — Carter Vvnn Harrell I ' afe One Ilundrea Flfly-Six Pag-e One Hundred Fifty-Sev Page One Hundred Fifty-Eight Page One Hundred Fifty-Nine Page One Hundred Sixty Robert W. Long Hospital Training School For Nurses The Training School for Nurses at Indianapohs is a part of Indiana Uni- versity School of Medicine. The di- dactic courses are given by members of the faculty of the School of Medi- cine and of the College of Liberal Arts, and the practical training is ob- tained in the Robert Long Hospital. All applicants for admission must comply with the entrance recjuire- ments of Indiana University, and also special requirements with reference to health and physical development. This school, therefore, aims to meet the maximum requirements of any of the States, so that its graduates may be eligible to practice as registered nurses in any part of the country and thus be unrestricted in the choice of their work. Mrs. E. P. Clark Supt. Nurses Page One Hundred Sixty-One Class oi ' 1019 and Bkhsihk Ci.imc at Lomii Hosmtai. Page One Huiulri ' cl SIxty-Tv Dr Edn G Henr Director of Social Service Department The Social Service Department, although it belongs to the College of Liberal Arts, and is primarily a teaching department, has six activi- ties. Its daily routine work consists in the social care of all free and part pay patients of the Robert W. Long Hospital, and such patients as are referred to it in the Indianapolis City Dispensary. In the Robert W. Long Hospital it undertakes to furnish such social information and following as may complete the cure and care of the patient. In the Dispensary it gives onl) miscellaneous service and such work as may be done in the process of teaching students. The department also provides : ( i ) class and volunteer experience for the students in the School of Medicine: (2) teaching for junior students of Training School for Nurses, and six weeks of practice work for senior nurses; (3) a two-year course in social service for under- graduate students of the University; (4) opportunity for practical training in social service for graduate students who at the same time may take advanced degrees in the department. This last is the best work offered by the department, and in these days of growing demand for social workers is too little known. Hundred Sixty-Five , H JirTTr m i i iiiiii ii miiii II I I ni l I I II 1 1 i i i MimfHini 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 i iHl „ ,. _. Page One Hundred Sixty-Seven Page One Hundred Sixty-Eight Page One Hundred Sixty-Nine Page One Hundred Seventy The Indianapolis City Hospital The Indianapolis City Hospital has too few visitors — visitors who are concerned in the hospital for its sake and welfare. There are few hospitals in the Middle West that are as interesting, or have as much history connected with them. It has a normal capacity of 500 beds. The wards are large, well ventilated, and lighted with a sun parlor in connection with each one. The equipment is very complete and modern, and is kept so by constant repair and additions. The walls of the wards contain beautiful paint- ings by famous Indiana artists. The entire hospital has just been re- finished and redecorated. A new and modern contagious ward has recently been put into com- mission, and cares for all contagions except small-pox. Two venerial wards have also been recently opened ; they are under the supervision of the U. S. Public Health Service. All groups of contagious and in- fectious cases are cared for in the most approved manner for the pro- tection of all concerned. All food in the hospital is purchased, prepared and served under the direction of a trained dietitian. Courses in dietetics for the nurses are given here, and special diets are prepared by them, under proper super- vision. The interne staff consists of sixteen young men who obtain their positions through competitive examinations. They are here to learn, and are surely working hard. Every case possible is studied carefully ; a complete history is taken and all necessary laboratory and X-ray work is done. The interne staff is assisted and counseled by a visiting- staff of the most able physicians and surgeons in the city. The clinical material is unlimited, both in variety and number of cases. A house physician and surgeon are always in the hospital whose duty it is to supervise the care of all patients and to aid the internes. Page One Hundred Seventy-One ' ' T An interneship here is one of the most desirable in the State or Mid- dle est. The Nurses Home in connection with the Training School for Nurses is located in very attractive quarters. Thev have a spacious assembly and class room. This school is recognized by all State boards of registration, and was established in 1883. It is the oldest and one of the most efficient schools of the State, and one of the oldest in the United States. Any young woman contemplating taking up the ennobling profession of nursing would find it well worth her while to visit the institution and learn the advantages of training in a general hospital and one which gives the broadest education. We, who happen to know, have no hesitancy in saying that the remarkable results obtained by the work of the hospital is largely due to the thorough and conscientious efforts on the part of its new Super- intendent. We would also like to wager that he will be prominent in its further development and growth. The Social Service Department is new in this hospital, but i ts influence and activi- ties are being widely felt. It is doing ex- cellent work both for the hospital and for the comnnmity at large. It keeps in inti- mate touch with all cases while in the hos- pital and follows the cases after leaving tlie hospital. The work is in charge of Mrs. Ruth H. .Miller, a graduate of Indiana University 15, and of social service in ' ale Univer sity Uos])ital at New Haven, Conn. She has already demonstrated her abilitv for and adai)tion to doing good social work. Mrs. Ruth H. Milleu Page One Hundred Seventy-Two Phi Chi NU CHAPTER Founded 1884 Colors — Green and White Flower — Lily of the Vallev MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Dr. O. G. Pfaff Dr. M. N. Hadley Dr. R. C. Schaeffei- Dr. E. D. Clark Dr. David Ross Dr. N. E. Jobes. Dr. V. H. Moon Dr. N. J. Barry Dr. H. R. McKinstray Dr. L. A. Ensminger Dr. A. S. Neeley Dr. Sidney Hatfield Dr. J. A. Badertscher Dr. Alfred Henry Dr. J. R. Newcomb Dr. John Pfaff Dr. E. R. Kaiser Dr. W. E. Tinney .Dr. H. K. Lang ' don Dr. R. C. Ottinger Dr. H. S. Thurston Dr. L. D. Carter Dr. A. F. Weverbacher Dr. T. C. Hood Dr. A. L. Thurston Dr. Elmer Funkhouser Dr. W. P. Garshwiler Dr. F. C. Potter Dr. C. F. Neu Dr. C. E. Cottn-gham Dr. C. D. Humes Dr. A. E. Sterne Dr. H. G. Homer Dr. A. B. Graham Dr. J. W. Wright Dr. Frank Morrison Dr. Carl Kabich ACTIVE MEMBERS Ira Cole Bert Ellis Joseph D. Seyberc C. J. Moser R. P. Schwartz Olka Sicks Claud A. Curry Merrill F. Steele Bryce B. Reeve W. H. Spieth E. O. Alvis Byron Nixon David Bickle Robert R. Acre C. P. Clark P. J. Birmingham M. V. Kahler John R. Nevi nam John Filer Walter Thomas Ralph J. Harvey (Those Not in Picture) William Reed Alonzo Petty Harley M. Kauffmati Page One Hundred Seventy-Five Phi Beta Pi INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER The members as they appear in the picture are : First Row — Keever Barnes Hays Second Rozii- Crosseii Davis Loftin Norris Page One Huiulred Seventy-Six Phi Beta Pi OMICRON CHAPTER Indianapolis Founded 1891 ( ' olors — Emerald Green and White. Flower — White Chrysanthemum MEMBERS ON 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. M. Stout Dr. Bernard Larkin ACTIVE MEMBERS Otis A. Kapp Louis F. Reifeis Harold F. Diinlap Roy V. Myers A. E. Newland Howard F. Steele Hobart C. Keever • Foster J. Hudson Arlie R. Barnes Henry F. Crossen Ed C. Davis Everett L. Hays Robert Lee Loftin W. Ward Norris (Those Not In Picture) Harry W. Carton James W. Griffith Russel L. Hiatt Wesley M. Happenrath Charles LaKaff George McNabb Raymond A. Naugle Frank U. Newcomer Eldon R. Rapp Virgil D. Sipe Page One Hundred Seventy-Seven Phi Beta Pi ALPHA ZETA CHAPTER Blooming ' ton Alpha Zeta Chapter of Phi Beta Pi is closely allied with her sister chapter, Omicron, at Indianapolis, where the Medical School proper is located. Alpha Zeta was organized in 1908. MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — P. C. Carson Russell Kretch Melvin Snead John Lewis Floyd Mitman James L. Wyatt Fourth Column — Dewey Bunting- Paul Hancock Floyd Stafford Cecil Davidson Pavil Wilson Robert Grey Second Column — Vernon Flarvey Harry Kerr Otto Bakemier Charles Poulter Gardner Harrold Roy Kruse Fifth Column — Claude Hadden George Jewitt Charles Trumbo Ralph Burton Dillen Flaworth William Wundram Third Column — Leonard Swihart Walter Tate Coy Wood Ernest Jones Warren Detweiler Basil Carson Sixth Column — George Rosenheimer Albert Cloud Nelson Prentiss Fred Thomas Orval Miller Harold McKnight Page One Hundred Seventy-Nii Phi Rho Sigma PI CHAPTER Founded 1871 Colors — Cardinal and Old Gold. Flower — American Beauty Rose MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY G. S. Bond Dr. H. K. Bonn Dr. Louis Burkhardt 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. Ferguson Dr. J. N. Hurty Dr. B. F. Hatfield Dr. Daniel Layman Dr. R. J. Kemper Dr. A. C. Kimberlin 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 Shimer Dr. C. R. Strickland Dr. W. S. Tomlin 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 Column — Paul Casebeer Claude Pettibone Harold Corya Wendell Washburn Second Column — Robert Bills Ben Moore Edgar Webber David Sluss Third Column — E. Vernon Hahn Elsworth Beckes Joseph Littell Glenn English Joseph Killman Fourth Column — Paul Wilson Stanley Casey Gordon Batman Howard Turner Fifth Column — Ray E. Whitehead Donald Dryer Wynn Owen Franklin B. Peck Page One Hiindred- Eighty-One Nu Sigma Nu INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER The members of Nu Sigma Nu of the Indianapolis Chapter as they appear in the picture are : First Row — Enzor Decker Harshman Long Second Row — Kirschman Buckner Byers Gaddy Page One Hundred Eighty-Two Nu Sigma Nu BETA ETA CHAPTER Founded 1882 Colors — Wine and White MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Dr. C. P. Emerson Dr. J. Don Miller Dr. W. D. Gatch Dr. H. R. Allen Dr. L. P. Drayer Dr. J. T. BarnhiU Dr. B. D. Myers Dr. W. J. Moenkhaus Dr. W. F. Hughes Dr. H. C. Parker Dr. Edward Kime Dr. L. H. Segar Dr. R. E. Lyons Dr. C. E. Edmonson Dr. J. W. Ricketts Dr. J. A. MacDonald Dr. J. C. Sexton Dr. L. Maxwell Dr. G. B. lackson Dr. F. F. Hutchms Dr. Geo. Boesinger Dr. Robert Moore Dr. E. O. Lindentnuth Dr. E. DeWolfe Wales Dr. Chas. O. McCormick Dr. F. E. Jackson Dr. S. L. Davis Dr. N. P. Graham Dr. H. L. Foreman Dr. Eugene Bulson ACTIVE MEMBERS Euclid Gaddy Harvey Murdock Philip Bowser Robert Millis Walter Moenning M. C. Pilkin Orville Graves Lyman Pearson Victor Sprauer L. F. Swank Verne Terley Frank Farry William Templin T. B. Rice O. G. Hamilton W. P. Martin H. W. Gorton Cleon A. Nofe Eugene L. Bulson, Jr. G. D. Buckner N. R. Byers H. B. Decker O. K. Enzor L. P. Harshman C. J. Kirschman F. E. Long (Those Not In Picture) P. M. Davis P. P. Bailey C. E. Dutchess L. E. Henderson Homer Woolridee L. H. Ziegler. Page One Hundred Bighty-Three In Memoriam HORACE MANN PICKERILL H. M. Pickerill died in the Robert ' . Long Hospital at Indianapolis Dec. 17, 1918, the cause of death being ' pneumonia. Pick received his early education at Georgetown, Ohio. He attended Cornell Uni- versity, from which school he received the A. B. degree. He served as assistant in the Bacteriology Department of the Agricultural College at Cornell and was assistant in r)acteriology at Indiana University School of Medicine at Indianapolis. From the time he entered the University in 1916 he established a record for scholarship that few could hope to equal. Not only was he a scholar but a man who was held in the highest respect by his instruc- tors and class-mates in the Medical School. He was the originator of the Masonic fraternity at Bloomington and a member of Nu Sigma Nu. A mtnt0tratt0n Page One Hundred Bighty-SlK President William Lowe Bryan Page One Hundred Bighty-Seve Board of 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. Ervi ' in, Moses B. Lairy, JoHl W. Spencer, Lawson M. Harvey, David A. Myers, Judges of tlie Supreme Court. Board of Tru ees OFFICERS Theodore F. Rose, President. James W. Fesler, Vice-President. John W. Cravens, Secretary. Edwin Corr, Treasurer. MEMBERS Samuel Edwin Smith, Richmond. Ira Coleman Batman, Bloomington. Frank Helton Hatfield, Ev?nsville. James William Fesler, Indianapolis. Howard Sandison, Terre Haute, Benjamin Franklin Long, Logansport. Edwin Corr, Bloomington. Theodore Frelinghuysen Rose, Muncie. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The President of the University and two resident members of the Board. Page One Hundred Eighty-Eight Administrative Officers William Lowe Bryan, Ph.D., LL.D., President. Horace Addison Hoffman, A.M., LL.D., Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Enoch George Hogate, A.M., LL.D., Dean Emeritus of the School of Law. Carl H. Eigenmann, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate School. Charles Phillips Emerson, A.B., M.D., Dean of the School of Medicine, (Indianapolis). Henry Lester Smith, Ph.D., Dean of the School of Education. Charles McDuffey Hepburn. A.M., LL.D.. Dean of the School of Law. Agnes Ermina Wells, A.M., Dean of Women. William A. Rawles, Ph.D., Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Edgar Roscoe Cumings. Ph.D., Acting Dean of the Graduate School. William Wesley ' Black, A.M., Acting Dean of the School of Education, Selatie Edgar Stout, Ph.D., Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. John William Cravens, A.B., Registrar and Secretary of the University. Ulysses Howe Smith, A.B., Bussar. Thomas Aubrey ' Cookson, Assistant Bursar. John J. Petti.tohn, A.B., Director of the Extension Division. Will David Howe, Ph.D., Director of the Summer Session. Burton Dorr Myers, A.M., M.D., Secretary of the School of Medicine (Bloomington). E.DMUND DouGAN Cl.vrk, M.D., Secretary of the School of Medicine (Indianapolis). John F. Baknhill, M.D., Treasurer of the School of Medicine (Indianapolis). James Edwin Parker Holland, M.D., University Physician. Fernande Ida Julia Hachat, M.D., Assistant University Physician. Robert E. Neff, A.B., Registrar of the School of Medicine, and Auditor of the Robert W. Long Hospital (Indianapolis). Ivy Leone Chamness, A.B., Editor of University Publications. Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts ity, 1892; L.L.D., Illii Colle William Lowe Bryan, President. A.B.. Indiana University, 1884: A.M., 1886; Ph.D.. Clark Uni 1904; L.L.D., Hanover College, 1908. Rev. Amzi Atwater, Professor Emeritus of Latin. A.B., Indiana University. 1SS6; A.M., 1869. Horace Addison Hoffman, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Greek. A.B., Indiana University, 1881; A.M., Harvard University, 18S4. James Albert Woodburn, Professor of American History. A.B.. Indiana University, 1876; A.M., 1885; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1S90; 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 Edward Lyons, Professor of Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University, 1SS9; A.M.. 1890; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, 1894. Arthur Lee Foley, Professor of Physics. A.B.. Indiana University. 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., Cornell University. 1897. David Myers Mottier, Professor of Botany. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A. M., 1892; Ph.D., University of Bonn, 1897. Ulysses Grant Weatheri.y. Professor of Economics and Sociology. A.B., Colgate University, 1890; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1894; Litt.D., Colgate University, 1910. Burton Dorr My ' ers, Professor of Anatomy. Ph.B., Buchtel College, 1S93; A. M., Cornell University, 1900; M. D., University of Leipsic, 1902. mos Sharttle Hershey, Professor of Political Science and International Law. A.B., Harvard University. 1892; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg. 1894. Bert John Vos. Professor of German. A.B., University of Michigan, 1888: Ph..D., Johns Hopkins University. 1892. William A. Rawles, Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Political Economy. A.B., Indiana University, 1884; A.M.. 1895; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1903. Carl Wilhelm Ferdinand Osthaus, Professor of German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Hildesheim, 1880; A. M., Indiana University, 1890. Schuyler Colfax Dwidsson, 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.. 1893; Ph.D., Univ William J. Moenkhaus, Professor of Physiology. A.B.. Indiana University. 1S94; A. M., 1895; Ph.D. Univ Louis Sherman Davis, Professor of Chemistry. A. B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., 1892; Ph.D., Univ. Alfred Mansfield Brooks, Professor of Fine Arts. A.B., Harvard University, 1894; A.M.. 1899. Will David Howe, Professor of EngHsh. A.B., Butler College, 1898; A.B., Harvard Uni ' rsity of Leipsic, 18 rsity of Chicago, 1903. ity of Marburg, 1S9G. iity. 1895: A.M.. 1897; Ph.D., 1899. William Frederick Book, Professor of Educational Psychology. A.B.. Indiana University, 1900; Ph.D., Clark University, 1906. Charles Jacob Sembower, Professor of English. A.B.. Indiana University, 1892; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. 1909. Edgar Roscoe Cumings, Professor of Geology, and Secretarv of Faculty. A.B., Union College, 1897; Ph.D., Yale University, 1903. Selatie Edgar Stout, Professor of Latin. B.S., Grand River College, 1S91; A.B., William Jewell College, 1901: Ph.D.. 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 Oktivin Stiehm, Acting Professor of Physical Education for Men, and Director of Intercollegiate Athletics. A.B., University of Wisconsin, 1909. William Evans Jenkins, Professional Lecturer in General Literature. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1894. Joseph Abraham Williams, A.M., Acting Professor of Psychology. Arthur Treadwell Dalton, Professor of Military Science and Tactics. Paul Leland Haworth, Ph.D., .Acting Professor of History. John Burton Phillips, Ph.D., Professor of Economics and Sociology. F_lijah Clarence Hills, Ph.D., Litt.D., Professor of Romance Languages. AVilliam Newton Logan, Ph.D., Professor Economic Geology. Juliette Maxwell, A. P.., Director of Physical Fducation for Women. George Davis Morris, Dr. d ' LT., (Paris), Associate Professor of French. I- ' rank William Tilden, A.M., Associate Professor of Greek. GaiDO Herman Stempel, A.M., Associate Professor of Comparative Philology. Charles Alfred MosEMiLiER, A.R., Associate Professor of Romance Languages. RoLLA Roy Ramsey, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics. Oliver W. Brown, A.M., Associate Professor of Physics. Frank Marion Andrews, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Botany. Lillian Gay Berry, A.M., Associate Professor of Latin. Henry Thew Stephenson, B.S., A.B., Associate Professor of English. Wilbur Adelman Cocshall, A.M., Associate Professor of Astronomy. Ulysses Sherman Hanna, Ph,D., Associate Professor of Mathematics. Joshua William Beede, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Geology. Charles Diven Campbell, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Music. Frank Greene Bates, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Political Science. Frank Curry Mathers, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry. Clarencl Earl May, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry. Fernandus Payne, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Zoology. Mabel Thacher Wellman, A,B., Associate Professor of Home Economics, F;dna Gertrude Henry, Ph.D., Director of Social Service (Indianapolis). Edgar George Frazier, A.B., Associate Professor of Public Speaking. John Benjamin Dutcher, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics. John Hill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Spanish. George Fullmer Reynolds, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English. Gustavus Garland Grkever, Ph.D., .Associate Professor of English, Jacob A. Badertscher, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Anatomy. Page One Hundred Ninety James M. VanHook, A.M., Assistant Professor of Botany. Ernest Henry Biermann, A.M., Assistant Professor of German. JOTiLDA CoNKLiN, A.M., Assistant Professor of French. Will Scott, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Zoology. Robert Elisha Burke, A.M., Assistant Professor of Fine Arts. Elizabeth Sage, B.S., Assistant Professor of Economics. Albert Ludwig Kohlmeier, A.M., Assistant Professor of History. Kenneth Powers Williams, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. James Grover McDonald, A.M., Assistant Professor of History. Frank C. Senour, Assistant Professor of English. A.B., Indiana University, 1911; A.M., 1913. Ray Shearer Trent. Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology. B.D., Vanderbilt University, 1907; A.B., Emory and Henry CoUege, 1913. Cora Barb.JiR.a Hennei,. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. A.B., Indiana University, 1907; A.M., 1908; Ph.D., 1912. Ulysses Howe Smith, Lecturer in Accounting and Business Practice. Certificate, Department of Commerce, Eureka College, 1888; A.B., Indiana Qniversity, 1893. James Abraham Kase, Instructor in Physical Education for Men, and Acting Director of the Men ' s Gvmnasium. Graduate, Chautauqua School of Physical Education, 1909. Mary Ethelda Roddy, Instructor in Physical Education for Women. Graduate, Chautauqua School of Physical Education, 1905. Anna Brockman Collins, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1909. Edgar Allen Menk, Instructor in Latin. A.B., Indiana University, 1907. Mason Edward Hufford, Instructor in Physics. ffl A.B., Indiana University, 1911; A.M., 1912. ' Kath. eine Armor Brown, Instructor in Physical Education for Women. Katherine Easley, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1912; A.M., 1913. Clarence Edmund Edmundson, Instructor in Physiology. A.B., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1912; Ph.D., 1914. Logan 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., Tale 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 University, 1913; A.M., Indiana University, 1914. Georgia Elizabeth Finley, Instructor in Home Economics. B.S., Lewis Institute, 1914. Paul Weathf.rwax, Instructor in Botany. A.B., Indiana University. 1914; A.M., 1915. (Mrs.) Hedwig Gruen Leser, Instructor in German. Graduate, Lehrerinnenseminar, Berlin. EARNEST Marshall Linton, Instructor in Political Science. A.B., Butler College, 1911; A.M., Indi: Uni iity, 1912; Ph.D., 1915 ToBi.AS Dantzig. Instructor in Mathematics. Lie. 6s Sc, University of Paris, 1910. Ralph Leslie Rusk, Instructor in English. A.B., University of Illinois, 1909; A.M., Columbii 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, A.B., Indiana University, 1916. James Ernest Moffat, Instructor in Economics and Sociologv. A.B., McMaster University. 1914; A.M., University of Chicago, 1916. Jose Alealadejo, Acting Instructor in Spanish. Frank Marion Treat, Instructor in Physics. Edith Cadwallader Williams, Instructor in Home Economics. A.B., Smith College. 1897. •Stephen Sargent Visher, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Geology. Joseph Alexander Wright, A.B., Assistant Professor of Journahsm. Danna McKean Evans, Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Men. William H. Scheifley, Ph.D., xA.ssistant Professor of Romance Languages. Maurice Garland Fulton, A.M., Acting Assistant Professor of English. Agnes Ermina Wells, A.M., Lecturer in Mathematics. Alta Given, B.S., Instructor in Home Economics. Charles Wilbert Snow, A.M., Instructor in English. Michael James Blew, A.M., Instructor in Chemistry. Kate Daum, A.M., Instructor in Home Economics. Thomas Edward Nicholson, A.M., Instructor in Psychology. Florence Beeson King, B.S., Instructor in Home Economics. Guy Leslie Rathbun. Instructor in Physical Education for Men. (Mrs.) Mabel Smith Reynolds, A.B., Instructor in English. Claude M. Bolser, A.B., Instructor in Journalism. Bennett M. Hollowell, A.M., Instructor in English. Marie Rose Lauler, Acting Instructor in French. George Pickett Wilson, A.B., Instructor in English. Grace Maxwell Philputt, A.M., Instructor in French. Ethel Stilz, Instructor in Home Economics. AIary Catherine Murray, A.M., Instructor in Social Service (Indianapolis). Elizabeth Tandy, Ph.B., Instructor in Social Service (Indianapolis). Collye Fredward Sparkman, Ph.D., Instructor in Romance Languages. Alice Margaret Bowers, Ph.B., Instructor in Home Economics, and Manager of the Uni- versity Commons. Antonio Alonso, Acting Instructor in Spanish. Mary Carolyn Brown. A.B., Instructor in Physical Education for Women. (Mrs.) Adeline Hunter DeMare, A.B., Instructor in French. Elsie Estell Pell, A.M., Acting Instructor in French. (Mrs.) Ellen Scott, A.M., Instructor in English. Mary Bertha Stark, A.M., Instructor in Zoology. Elbert Elvin Magoon, Instructor in Commercial Branches. Lydia Dudley Woodbridge, A.M., Instructor in French. Harold Eichholtz Wolfe, Ph.D., Instructor in Mathematics. Edward Meyer Pitkin, A.B., Instructor in Anatomy. Paul Montgomery FIarmon, A.M., Instructor in Physiology. ( Mrs.) K.ate Milner Rabb, A.m., Acting Instructor in English. Faculty of the School of Law Enoch George Hogate, A.B., LL.D., Dean Emeritus of the School of Law. Charles McGuffey Hepburn, A.B., A.M., LL.B., LL.D., Dean of the School of Law and Professor of Law. Jesse Jennings Mills LaFollette, Professor of Law. Morton Carlisle Campbell, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. Warren Abner Seavey, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. James Lewis Parks, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. Scott Rowley, B.L., LL.B., LL.D., Acting Professor of Law. Faculty of the School of Medicine OFFICERS William Lowe Bryan, Ph.D., LL.D., President of the University. Charles Phillips Emerson, A.M., M.D., Dean of the School of Medicine. Burton 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 Rohert W. Long Hospital. Page One Hundred Ninety-Two FACULTY AT BLOOMIXGTON Robert Edward Lyons, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry. Burton Dorr Myers, A.A ' L, M.D., Professor of Anatomy. William J. Moenkhaus, Ph.D., Professor of Physiology. Jacon a. Badertshcer, Ph.D., Professor of Physiology. Clarence Earl May, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry. Clarence Ecmund Edmondson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology. INSTRUCTORS AXD ASSISTANTS AT BLOO: IINGTON P.-vuL Montgomery Harmon, A.M., Instructor in Physiology. Edward Meyer Pitkin, A.B., Instructor in Anatomy. Gerald Fidelis Kempf, A.B., Assistant in Physiology. Llxille Marg.- ret Dodds, A.B., Technical Assistant in Anatomy. FACULTY AT INDIANAPOLIS General William Harrison Kemper, Emeritus Professor of the History of Medicine. John Asbury Sutliffe, B.S., A.M., M.D., Emeritus Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. John F. Barnhill, M.D., Professor of Rhinology Otology and Laryngology. Alemeert Winthkop Brayton, Professor of Dermatology and Syphilogy. Albert Eugene Bulson, Jr., B.S., M.D., Professor of Orphthalmology. Louis Bueckhardt, M.D., Professor of Obstetrics. Edmund Dougan Clark, M.D., Professor of Surgery. Lewis Park Drayer, A.B., A.M., M.D., Professor of Pediatrics. Joseph Rilus Eastman, A.B., A.M., M.D.. Professor of Surgery. Charles Phillips Emerson, A.B., A.M., Professor of Medicine, and Dean of the School of Medicine. Willis Dew Gatch, Associate Professor of Surgery. A.B., Indiana University. 1901; M.D., John.s Hopkins University, 1907. Thomas Corwin Hood, Professor of Ophthalmology. B.S., K ' abash College, 1S81; M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1SS4; A.B., Wabash College, 1885. John Newell Hurty, Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Science. Phar.D.. Purdue University, 1SS8; M.D., ' Indiana Medical CoHege, 1891. Frank Frazier Hutchins, Professor of JMental and Neryous Diseases. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1892. E. Oscar Lindenmuth, Professor of Dermatology and Electrotherapeutics. M.E., Bloomsburg Literary Institute and State Normal School (Pa.), 1897; M.D., Medico-Chirur- gical College of Philadelphia. 1906. George Washington McCaskey, Professor of Medicine. M.D.. Jefferson Medical College, 1877; B.S., DePauvv University, 1881; A.M., Depauw University. 1884. Frank Athon Morrison, Professor of Ophthalmology. A.B., Butler College, 1895; M.D., Indiana Medical Co ' llege, 1880. John Holliday Oliver, Professo.r of Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1881; A.M., Wabash College, 1907. Paul Barnett Coble, M.D., Assistant Professor of Rhinology, Otology, and Laryngology. John Dempsey Garrett, A.I3., M.D., Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine. William Province Garshwiler, A.B., I.D., Assistant Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. Murray N. than Hadley, B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery . FloMER Guy Hamer, M.D., Assistant Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. Alfred Henry, M.D., Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine. Orange Garrett Pfaff, Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1882; A.M., Wabash College, 1907. Miles Fuller Porter, Professor of Surgery. M.D., Medical College of Ohio. 1S7S; A.M. (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 Nervous Diseases. A.B., Harvard University, 1887; A.M. (Honorary), University of Strassburg, 1889; M.D., University of Berlin, 1891. Hundred Ninety-Three James Henry Taylor. Professor of Pediatrics. A.B.. DePauw L niversity. 1S7S; 11. D.. Indiana Medical Colle 1S7 A.M., DePau Un William Niles Wishard, Professor of Genito-Urinarv Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1874; M.D., Miami Medical College, 1S76; A.M.. Wabash ( 1890. ■ Frank Barbour Wy ' NN, Professor of Medicine. A.B., DePauw University, 1883; M.D.. Ohio Medical College. 1SS5; A.M.. DePauw Universitj Alois Baciiman Graham, Clinical Professor of Proctologv. A.B., Hanover College, 1891; M.D., Indiana Medical College. lS94; A.M.. Hanover College. Albert Karl Kimberlin, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1888. 1 homas Benjamin Noble, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B., Wabash College, 1890; M.D., Miami Medical College. 1893; M.D., Indiana Medical ( and Larvhgoloo Medical College, 1 1901. Medical College, 1913. LaFayette Page, Clinical Professor of Rhinology, Otolog A.B., Columbia Christian College. 1882; A.M., 1885; M.D., India Charles Robert Sowder, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D.. Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1898. Ernest DeWolfe Wales, Clinical Professor of Rhinology, Otology, and Laryngology, B.S.. Harvard University, 1896; M.D., 1899. Henry Frederick Beckman, Associate Professor of Obstetrics. M.D.. Northwestern University. 1904. Frank W. Cregor, Associate Professor of Dermatol ogy, M.D.. Indiana Medical College. 1894. ' William Henry Foreman, Associate Professor of Medicine. A.B., Indiana University, 1895; M.D.. Central College of Physician.? ai Norman Emmett Jobes, Associate Professor of Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College. 1897. Amelia R. Keller, . ss ' ociate Professor of Pediatrics. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1893. Virgil Holland Moon, Associate Professor of Pathology. A.B.. Kansas University. 1909; MS.C. Kansas University. 1910; M.D., David Ross. Associate Professor of Surgery. B.S., Central Normal College, 1891; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1895. John William Sluss, Associate Professor of Surgery. B.S., DePauw University, 1890; A.M.. 1S94; M.D., Indiana Medical College. 1893. Edward Nicholas Kime, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Anatomy and Surgery. George Samuel Bond, .Assistant Professor of Medicine. B.S., Earlham College. 1903; A. B., University of Michigan, 1905; M.D., 1908. 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 College, 1883; M.D.. Bellevue Medical College, 1888; M.D., Cer 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 College of Physicians and ' Surgeons. 1902. John Alexander McDonald, Assistant Professor of Medicine. M. D.. Rush Medical College. 1901. Paul Frederick Martin, Assistant Professor of Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1898; M.D.. Columbia University. 1900. Charles Frederick Neu, Assistant Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. M.D.. Western University (London. Canada). 1894. John Alfred Pfaff, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1898. Jevvett 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 Sanitary 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 Pennsylva Homer Hender-son Wheeler, Assistant Professor of Proctology. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1897. George Edwin Boesinger, Instructor in Pathology. M.D., Indiana University. 1914. Page One Hundred Ninety-Fou 1900. Prof. Charles Diven Campbell ■ Prof. Charles Diven Campbell, head of the Department of Music of Indiana University, died Saturday ' morning, March 29, 1919, following a week ' s illness of double pneumonia. Prof. Campbell had been in charge of the Department of Music since 1910. Mr. Campbell was born at Anderson, Indiana, August 3, 1877. From 1894 to i8g6 he attended Heidelberg College, Germany, and. from 1896 to 1897, the University of Heidelberg. He then returned to this country and in 189S he received his A.B. from Indiana University. In 1900 he again went abroad and attended the University of Strassburg, at the same time acting as an in- structor in a private German school. He received his degree of Ph.D. from the University of Strassburg in 1905. The following year he spent at Harvard University. He became a member of the faculty of Indiana University soon after leaving Harvard, coming here as an assistant in the German department. Dr. Campbell married Miss Elizabeth Grimes at Brazil, Indiana, August 15, 1917, who with an infant child survives him. Professor Campbell was a member of Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, and of the Columbia Club at Indianapolis. Page One Hundred Ninety-Five c xi x x Page One Hundred Ninety-Six Board of Editors Top — Ethel Larm, Ralph Winslo w, Helen Trent. Bottom — Florence Sytz, Herbert Spencer, Norman R. Byers. Page One Hundred Ninety-Seven Ijijard of r.rsiXKss Manai;i-;rs Toy— Mabel Robbins, J. Dwight Peterson, Frank Levell. Bottom — Lacey Lee Schuler, Dr. Wm. D. Howe, Ira Batman. Page One Hundred Ninety-Eight Staff 1919 Arbutus First column : AA ' heeler, Smith, Briggs, Castle. Second colunm: Alellott, Hollingsworth, Simmering, Richardson. Third column: Condit, Cox, Grimes, NIc NIath, Corr. Fourth column: W ' illiams, Strauss, Johnson, Edris. Fifth column : Rush, Alsman, Batman, Page. Junior Assistants: Alsman, Strauss. Art : Corr, JNIellott, Rush. Feature : Wheeler, Alsman, Strauss, Smith. Medics : Batman. Law : Edris. lusic: Grimes, Johnson. Departmental Clubs : Condit. Women ' s Activities: A ' illiams, Cox, Castle, Hollingsworth, Sim- mering. Athletics: Briggs, Richardson, Page. rage Two Hundred The Indiana Daily Student The Student was originally published under the auspices of the Athenian and Philomathean literary societies as a semi-monthly pub- lication. Unson Carter, of the class of 1867, was one of the founders. During the period of the Civil War the publication was suspended. W. L. Bryan revived the paper in 1882. In 1893 the publication was changed to a w-eekly, and in 1898 it became a daily with all the ear- marks of a real new-spaper. Chic Jackson and Don Herold, both of whom attained National fame as cartoonists and editorial writers, were associated with the paper in later years. During the Great War, the Student, unlike a great number of college papers, did not suspend publication, but kept up almost to its pre-war standards. This was done to a large extent through the co- operation of the girls, and for the first time, dvu ' ing the Winter Term of 1919, the Student had a woman for its editor-in-chief. During the year, women held the offices of editor-in-chief, associate editor, managing editor, city editor, feature editor, co-ed editor and copy editor. Those in charge of the paper during 1919 were: Editor-in-Chief — Herbert Hope, Ethel Larm, Dwight Peterson. Managing Editor — Ethel Larm, Helen Trent, Dallas Newton. City Editor — Dallas Newton, Elelen Trent. To[ Row — Clayton, Peterson, Butler, Saunders, Boggs, Osborn. Second Row — Jones, Harvey, Johnston, Cook, McCIain, Stonecipher. Third Rniv S ' ctr, McKee, Robbins, Larin, Alsman, Piercy, Lauer Bottom i ow— Johnson, Little, Spencer, Bierhauss, Newton. The Indiana Daily Student Staff Work on the Student serves as a laboratory course in practical journalism for the staff. The staff is composed of about thirty mem- bers and is organized on the same basis as that of a metropolitan daily. During the Summer Session, the paper is published semi-weekly. The Student has built up a reputation second to none in the Middle A ' est and is now one of the best among college newspapers. Page Two Hundred Twc Top Row — Highway, Wells, Houston, Ritchey, Wood, VanOsdel. Zecond Row — Geiger, Burkle, Smith, Moffat, Honk, Gates. Third Row — Daily, Craig, Stonecipher, Harvey, Johnson, Lynas, Collins. Bottom ?oic— Peterson, Armstrong, Henderson, Jones, Lee, Stevenson. Men ' s Glee Club The Men ' s Glee Club is composed of about thirty of the best singers in the University. It has been managed the last two years by J. Dwight Peterson. The club this year is also, the male part of the University Chorus. It is usually heard several times during the year at Bloom - ington and in the spring there is one and sometimes two trips through the State. Page Two Hundred Three The Indiana Union The Indiana Union is an organization of, by, and for Indiana Uni- versity men, created for the purpose of fostering fellowship, furnishing adequate club quarters for its members, for supplementing all organi- zations and factors which create a high type of Universit} ' life. Among the good things that the Union does is the maintenance of lounging and reading rooms in the east end of the Student Building. A barber shop and billiard parlor are parts of the Union ' s activities. This year, the Union has directed much of its time and efforts in ad- vocating student government for Indiana University. Plans for the completion of this project are now being formulated iDy the Board. The Union is governed by officers and directors elected by the en- tire membership each spring. OFFICERS. Ralph E. Peckham President Ardith L. Phillips A ' ice-President Walter C. Scott Secretary Frank S. Harkins Treasurer The members of the board as they appear in the picture are as fol- lows : First Column — Fred Wiecking Everette S. Dean Russell Julius Carl Weinhardt Third Column — Herman Strauss John Edris Ralph Esarey David Stormont Second Column — Weslev Mumbv Robert O ' Hair ' Gordon Batman Professor Cogshall Fourth Column — Ralph Peckham Ardith Phillips Walter Scott Frank Harkins Page Two Hundrt-tl Fi ' The Bookers ' Club The purpose of this organization is the promotion of interest in all matters tending to strengthen I. U. spirit and the unity of the student body. Organized originally with the aim of conducting the State Basketball Tournament, the Club has broadened its functions and has been perpetuated. This year, after the breaking up the S. A. T. C, the club has financed the Christmas training of the basketball team, supported the Baseball Benefit Dance, promoted Pep Sessions, and ad- vocated student government. The membership comprises one representative from each fraternity and local organization and ten men chosen from the Association of the Unorganized. The officers for the first half vear were: John H. Edris, Prcsiidcnt. Walter C. Scott Vice-President. Herman S. Strauss, Secretary Allan R. McGinnis, Treasurer The officers for the second half : Arthur R. Mogge, President. Russell S. Julius, Vice-President. Herman S. Strauss, Secretary. Ralph W. Roby, Treasurer. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Ralph Cochran Edward Kunkel Harry AIcLain P. C. Carson Russell Julius Second Colunin — ■ Edward Dunlap Arthur Mogge Herbert Houson Herbert Snyder Melvin E. Wooten Third Column— Hubert Saunders Gerald F. Kernpf Lionel Merkling Glenn Comstock Fourth Column — Ralph Roby Charles Mason David Stormont Herman Strauss Edward Gates Fifth Column — James Brown John Nie Walter Scott Clarence Atkins John Edris Page Two Hundred Seven The Sphinx Club The Sphinx Club is an organization composed of about thirty men selected from the Greek letter fraternities. The persons chosen to be members of this organization are usualh selected at some baseball game in the spring and the spiking committee makes its wa} ' through the crowd to tie on the black and white ribbons. The organization is purely social and was organized about seven years ago. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Row — Williams, Wiiislow, Blatmann, Gordon, Fisher, O ' Hair Second Row — Shenk, Brown, Edris, Mays, Peckham, Kunkel. Third Rozv — Weicking, Smith, Ingles, Neiswanger, Hendricks. Fourth Row — Kacy, Center, Asby, Harkins, Comstock, DriscoU. . Fifth Row — Weber, Mendenhall, Pierce, Sutheimer, Shan, Scott. Page Two Hundred Nine Young Men ' s Chri ian Association This year the Young Men ' s Christian Association has sought to ad- just itself to conditions in many ways similar to those in a cantonment. Besides the cabinet and general secretary, the Association has had a building secretary furnished by the War Work Council, who has su- pervised all the activities of a service counter such as is maintained in a regular Y hut. In November the Y. M. and Y. W. raised $7,400 for the United War Work Fund. In May the men on the campus pledged one-half of a $4,000 budget for an enlarged program in 1919-20. Recognizing that the ideals defended in the World War are still in a large measure to be conserved, the Association has, through its World Problems Forum, enlisted the interest of many students in Christian world reconstruction. This Forum secured men to speak who have been in intimate touch with the social, educational and religious needs of the various parts of the world, and who could describe great fields of opportunity for American Christian students in foreign lands. One significant tangible expression of the Y interest in a world fraternity for Christian liberty was a gift of $1,500 to Mr. A. L. Miller at Lahore, India, for the men and boys there. Two traditioal social events of the year, the Freshman Stag Social and the Every Man Bancjuet, were a decided success. Eighteen free motion pictures were shown with a total attendance of 7,000. One hundred sixty-five Bible discussion groups Avere held with a total attendance exceeding 2,000. . The members of the cabinet, as they appear in the picture, are : First Rozc — - Robert Hatfield Hubert Saunders Jean Carter Byron Elliot Second Rozt — iNIarkham WakefieL W. E. Upliauss Arlo Byrum Gordon Batman Third Row — Russell Collins Robert Sinclair Frank Grandy David Stormont Fourth Row — Edward Pitkin Harry Little Charles May Elmer Springer Charles Wiltsie Hundred Eleven Woman ' s League Board Top Ron- — Etliel Larm, Grace Davis, Gertrude Miedeir.a. Mildred Begermaii. Martha Swanson, Louise Osborn, Margaret Cox. Second ?c7f— Josephine Walker, Abliie Hasler, Frances McMath. Louise Stubbins, Julia Fennell, Dessie Rody, Vivian Williams. Bottom Rozij — Bertha Adams, Florence Sytz, Eunice Thompson, ; Iary Brown, Faith Lee, Madelon Gallaher, Gleda Force. OFFICERS Pkesident Louise Stubbins Vice-President Gleda Force Secretary .Vivian Williams Treasurer Mary Emma Russell The ])urpi: se of the League is to promote better acquaintance among its members, both active and associate, and to bring about greater unity and nuitual helpfuhiess among the women students of Indiana University. All big Co-Ed activities are carried on through this organization. The League also takes an active interest in providing entertainment and amusement for every college woman. Every girl a Woman ' s League member, is the slogan for next vear. Page Two Hundred Twelv Top Row — Thomas, Thomas, Hemmersbaugh, Eisner, Logan, Donald. Boltom Row — Hollingsworth, Clark, Rice, Meidma, Davidson, Hassler. The Y. W. C. A. The Y. W. C. A. activities, aUhough handicapped ckiring the past year by existing circumstances in the University, have been many and varied. In the civihan rehef work the Big Sister movement has attracted more attention than any other work. Night schools for working girls have also been maintained. The Association has also been active in its usual devotional, Bible and Mission work. Top Row — Orchard, Wilson, Trent, Larm, Davidson, Brown, L. Thomas, T. Smith. Middle Row — Fiest, Polk, Deputy, Lauer, C. McMath. Tutewiler, Condit, Kennedy. Bottom Roil — Collins, Strauss. Lihbert. Ringer, Jackson. Castle, Fennell. Hollingsworth. Garrick Club The Garrick Club i,s an organization to promote interest in dramatics in the University, and to give expression to this interest by the pre- sentation of plays. Members are chosen because of dramatic ability shown in some play presented in public. This ability can be displayed by coaching, costum- ing, playwriting, or managing, as well as by acting-. The officers of the club are : Ada Davidson President Helen Trent ' ice-President Mary Deputy Treasurer Odette Hollingsworth Secretary Pauline Condit Business Manager Page Two Hundred Fourteen Top Row — M. Cox, Snepp, Coggswell, RoUison, Sigler, Byrne, Eisner, Reed. Third Tiow — Thompson, Goldman, Coombs, Hoffman, Kiser, Gibson, Grier, Turner. Second Row — Esarcy, Stier, P. Cox, Van Gieson, Condit, Conway, Rush. First Row — A ' lacy, Painter, Good, Kohlmeier, Woodburn, Haworth, Bates, Esarey. History and Political Science Club The History and Political Science Club is an organization to further good fellowship among the members and to provide an oppor- tunity to discuss subjects of vital interest informally. Membership in the club is open to faculty, seniors and juniors, who have elected History or Political Science as their major, without invi- tation, and to other students by invitation. The mid-year bancjuet and the spring picnic are the two annual af- fairs to which every member eagerly looks forward. The officers of the club are : Doris Reed President Pauline Condit Vice-President fane Searce Secretary and Treasurer Page Two Hundred Fifteen J of ■ ' ' t ' lt ' — Xorman, United States: Cocliran, United States; Cotton, United States; Ead, Syria ; Burgess, United States ; Teter, United States ; Hemmersbaugli, United States. Middle Rozi. ' — Hans, United States ; Leech, United States ; Upliaus, United States ; Tomsich, Austria ; Panlilio. Philippines ; Stout, United States. Bottom Roiv — Corpus. Phihppines : Ramos. PhiHppines; Condit, United States; Piatos, Philippines; --Monso, Spain; Jee, China. Cosmopolitan Club The Cosmopolitan Club of Indiana University was granted its char- ter in 19 18. The object of the club is to promote and strengthen uni- versal brotherhood and friendship, but above all, to instill among its members the spirit of Cosmopolitanism. [Membership to the club is invitational. This year twelve nation- alities are represented by the student and faculty members. They are — French, Italian, Russian, Austrian, Spanish, Peruvian, Chinese, Canadian, Bohemian, Scotch, Filipino and American. Meetings are held bi-weekly and matters tending to advance the Cosmopolitan movement are discussed. The officers of the club are: Jose Javier Piatos President Cecile Janin Vice President Mary Hemmersbaugh Treasurer Ruth Norman . . • • Secretary Alfredo Ramos Business ' Manager Samuel Brown Chapter Editor 7 o RoTi! — Snyder, Small, Adams. Hensk-_ , StDrmcint, Thomas. Middle Ro ' iii — f ' Featherwax, Prof. VanHoo ' k, Prof. Mottier, Prof. Andrews, Anderson. Bottom Row — Lockwood, Bell, Force, Raasdale, Trent. The Botany Club The Botany Club is made up of members of the faculty, majors in the department of Botany, and anyone interested who has been invited to join. Meetings are held bi-monthly. These gatherings not only promote interest in scientific education, but further the social interests of the club. Catherine Force ■ ■ • • President P. ' ge Two Hundred Seventeen Top Row — Farley, Wellman, Given, Bowers, Williams, Brown. Middle Row — Sawiu, Clevenger,, Walker. Bloom, McMath, Castle, Archer. Bottom Ro ' cV — Good, Carter, Hemmersb ugh, Vorliees, McFarlin, EUer, Ellis. H ome Economics Club The Home Economics Club was organized in 191 3 for the purpose of l ringing together faculty, students, and other persons who are especially interested in the suljject of Home Economics. Majors in the dei artment and a few others, upon recommendation of the faculty, are eligible to membership. The officers are : Frances Farley President Maurine Clevenger Vice President Elizabeth Ray Secretary Pearl Castle Treasurer Page Two Hundred Eighte Top Roiv — Byron Elliott, Evanston Earp, Robert Coleman, Grady Stubbs, Dewey Young, John Turpin, Harold Wood, James Simnionson. Third Rozi. — Florence Smith, Alma Denny, Ruth Lauer, Kathleen iMcKee, Rowena Harvey, Dorthy Foreman, Grace Parrott, Dorthy Payne. Second Rozv — Catherine Frye, landell Brown, Ruth Farmer, lary Turner, Evelyn Ship- man, Hazel Lockwood, ' ivian Ross, Josephine Walker. First Rozv — Pelagio Villarin, Esmond Cotter, Samuel Brown, David Sluss, Theodore Morris, Walter Stiner, F ' rancis Brosnan. Shortridge Club The Shortridge Club is a social organization for the purpose of furthering the interests of Shortridge High School and Indiana Uni- versity. It is composed of all those who have attended Shortridge High School. The officers of the club are : Grady Stubbs President Catherine Frye Vice-President Louise Thomas Secretary Samuel Brown Treasurer Page Two Hundred Nineteen Tol Row — Hasler, Dobson, Xorman, Colter, Begeman, Hiner. Armstrong, Relander. Middle Row — Nuzum, Stubbins, Means, Rody, Stonecipher, Adams, Brown. Vottom Row — Walker, Dr. Tilden, Dr. Stout, Miss Berry, Mr. ]Menk, Trent, Turner. The Classical Club The Classical Club is an organization of upper classmen of the Latin and Greek departments. Its purpose is to further the study of the classical languages. Meetings are held the first Monday of every month. The programs have both a social and cultural value. The officers are : Ruby Means President Ruth Norman Vice-President Abbie Hasler Secretary Bertha Adams Treasurer Page Two Hundred Tw Tofi Rozk) — Shively, Glavin, Dean, Parker, Carter, Rice, Hoover, Mcssiier. Third Row — Ringer, Elkin, Book, Nicholson, Pressy, Good. Second Ro ' cn ' — Voyles, Piercy, Mason, Louden, Carmicliael, Condit, Hachat, Hahn. First Row — Hansford, Barringer, Hollingsworth, Alullinix, Mrs. Pressy, Hauss, Thomas. The Philosophy Club [Membership in the Philosoi:)hy Club is open to the faculty members of the department, to advanced students in Psychology or Philosophy, and to others on invitation. The purpose of the club is to make possible informal discussions on subjects which can not be treated in the class room. Faculty members from other departments frequently brino- to the club the philosophical or psychological aspect of such stibjects as Biology, Economics, His- lorv and Education. The officers are : Pauline Condit President Odette Hollingsworth Vice-President William Ringer Secretary-Treasurer Alta Hahn Chairman Program Committee To(i Row — Archer, Logan, Clevenger, Norman, Chalfant, Heald, Hyatt. Second Row — Hans, Conrad, Means, Harrison, Lemper, Polk, Black. Third Row — Hull, Lee, Brown, Alward, Iden, Cox. Fourth Row — Xeedham, Piatos, Ramos, Delatorre, Alonso, Strauss, Wortman. El Club Espanol El Club Espanol is composed of members of the Spanish department and the best students in Spanish who are eligible on invitation. The club meets on alternate Tuesday evenings. All conversation is carried on in Spanish, many current problems are discussed, and the social side of the club is encouraged by means of Spanish plays and games. The officers are : Herman Strauss President Grace Parrott Vice-President Lulu Harris Secretary Ruth Norman Treasurer Page Two Hundred Tvi Top Row— JuVms, Carmichael, Swan, Dunlap, Mogge, Liitte. Fourth Row — Yager, M ' acy, Mever, Talbot, Bear, Rauchenbach. Third Roic-Mohs, Whetsell, Condit, } litcbell, J. Thomas, L. Thomas, Cox. Second Rozv — Turner, Mason, Trook, McLain, Weatherly, Moffatt, Phillips. First Rcw — Strauss, Sturgis, Peterson, Shepard, Miller. xonomics Club The Economics Club is an organization composed of the faculty and seniors in the department of Economics and Sociology. Membership is also open to a limited number of juniors in the departments by invi- tation. Meetings are held bi-weekly, at which subjects of social and economic character are discussed, programs of cultural tendencies are ren- dered and the better acquaintance of the members is furthered by in- formal social evenings. The officers are : Harry McLain President Elizabeth Trook Vice-President Grace E. Mason Secretary-Treasurer Top Row — Snyder, Harrison, Pliebus, Clark, Ballard, Meidema, Lyton, Wilson. Second Roiv — Nafe, Grantham, Arnold, Davis, Smith, Thomas, Greene, Harrison. Third Row — Beck, Willoughby, Anderson, Williams, Corr, Eikenberry, Daum, Sample. Fourth Rozii — Reed, Veach, Henderson, Rea, Davidson, Miller, Walton. The officers of the Girl ' s Glee Club for the year 1919 have been: President — Lois Grimes Vice-President — Lula Harrison Secretary-Treasurer — Opal Corr Membership Committee — Sof rano. Jennie Davis; Alto. Esther Lyons; Contralto. Norma Schober. The Girl ' s Glee Club has taken part in the Lhiiversity concerts this year in connection with the University Chorus. The Glee Club alone had a part in the Memorial Service for Dr. Charles Diven Campbell. Hundred Tv 7o ' lioii. ' — Ziitt, I ' rill. Fodte. Aleeker, Tremble, Hiestaiid, Sauer, Laiin-an. Second Rozv — L. Reed, Greener, Sarig, Hanna, Quinn, Brodhecker, Richards, Glaze. Tluird Roiv — Rlindes, Bush, List, F. Reed, V ' anOsdol (Director), Jerrold, Stoiiecipher, Shirley, ' ytten1iach. Bottom 7?()K ' — Lililiert, Xeff, Xoniian, Heimlich, Diehl, Robertson, Rickards. The University Band Althoiio-h organized under difficultie.s due to the S. A. T. C, tlie Indiana University Band has developed into a large, efficient organiza- tion. The band is a potential factor in lending pep to all athletic con- tests and in carrying out other University affairs and events. It played a prominent part in greeting the 150th Field Artillery at Indi- anapolis on Welcome Home Day. No small amount of credit for the success of the band is due to the directors. Dwight Van Osdol assumed the responsibilitv of organ- izing and leading it during the regime of the S. A. T. C, and the winter term. Arch ' arner took over the directorshi] for the spring term. Mu Beta Fraternity The jNIu Beta Inter-Fraternity was founded among college and uni- versity men at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station last summer. When the men in the undergraduate companies were sent hack to theii ' several institutions, chapters were founded in fourteen schools throughout the middle-west, of which numher the Theta chapter of Indiana Uni -ersity is considered one of the most active in the fra ternity. By a s])ecial ruling passed in a meeting of the National Council, January loth, njiy, it was decided to enlarge the scope of the fra- ternity so as to make any man who had been in the service of his coun- try in the Great War eligible for membership, although not necessarilv naval service. The I. U. men who were initiated at Great Lakes were: Ralph Winslow, A ' irlyn I roadstreet, Richard Page, and Herbert l. .Spencer. The other men were initiated here. The pin is a skull with a red and a green eye, bearing the letters ]NJu and Beta, the colors are emerald green and black, and the flower is the red carnastion. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Henry Coerper Thos. V. Broadstreet Forrest Tliorne Herbert Spencer Second Column — Alvin Stiver John Hendricks Dewey Davis Ashley Pieleneir Third Column — Robert Rogers ' Richard S. Page W ' m. Kegley Ralph Winslovv Elmore D. Sturgis Foiirlh Column — Irwin Goldner Paul Beam Ellsworth Beckes Hiram Keehn F ' ifth Column — Victor Mays James Ingles Harry Donnovan Kenneth Post Page Two Hundred Tw Association of the Unorganized Top y?oiei— Wayne Guthrie, Harry McLain, Gerald F. Kenipf, Buel Goldman. Middle Rozi ' — David L. Stormont, L. Staate JMerkling, Edward R. Dunlap, Maynard Poland. Bottom Roiv — Walter Swan, Herman S. Strauss, Hubert B. Sanders. Advisory Board — Association of the Unorganized Another pre-war tradition of the University was revived this win- ter when the old Association of the Unorganized met for the first time since 1916. The association has for its purpose the promotion of good fellowship among the unorganized men, and the support of the Uni- versity interests in general. Every unorganized man in the student body is a member of the association. The Advisory Board is the executive body of the association. The officers are: Gerald F. Kempf President Walter B. Swan Jlee-Presideiit Buel Goldman Secretary L. Staate Merkling Treasurer Page Two Hundred Twenty-Nine Page Two Hundred Thirty Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Alpha Theta was founded at Depauw University, January 27, 1S70. Beta Chapter was estabhshed at Indiana University the same year. The fraternity colors are gold and black. 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 Cohiiiin — Opal Corr Frances Farley Grace Parrott Glenna Taber Helen Thomas Louise Wills Aileen Rice Foiirlii Coliiiiin — Dorothy Foreman Ftelen Gilbert Gertrude Benner Fdna Parsons Jcanette Vorhis Louise Stubbins Marv Flora Second Coliiinn — Julia Fennel Edna Hines Marjorie Kunkel Atagdalene Mitcbel Janet Woodburn Martha Wylie Jean Springer Fifth Coluiiin — Marie Fields Victoria Gross Ruth White Josephine Picrcy Margaret Schumann Helen Sparks Harriet Rawlcs Third Coliiinii — Maurine Cleven ci Anna Johnson Jean McPherson .Margaret Osborn Mary Paynter Flizalieth Trook Xinnette Winters Si.vth Column — Louise .Ashliacker Anna Brandon Mary Jane Carr Htidorphia Xewkii Cornelia Shirk Hope Stein Julia Tutewiler ScTCntli Column — Caroline McMatb Esther Jackson Margaret McClella Elizabeth Ray JNIary White Mary Stubbins Ruth Stubbins Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded at ALinmouth College, October 13, 1870. Delta Chapter was established at Indiana University Octo- ber 12, 1873. Light and dark blue are Kappa colors. The emblem is the g ' olden key and the flower is the fleur-de-lis. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are as follows ; First Column — Louise Xeill Man- Sweet Lillian Hams leanette Brill I ' rauLCs Chai man Fourth Coluinn — Doris Read Wanda Motticr Sarah Woods Madeline ebber Ruth Cravens Second Cohtinn — Helen Doles Helen Coblentz Shirley AlcXutt Louise Culbertson I4elen Barnes Margaret O ' Harrow Third Column — Eugenia Flood Lois Grimes Mary Jessup Martha Grey Craig JIary Peckinpaugh F ' if til Column — Eunice McColIough i Iary Louden Martha iniskirk Emily Reynard Marv Louise Teter S ' i.vlh Coliinn — Caroline Hoffman Pauline Reed Catherine Hahn Su-.in Can field W ' llla K..l.l.ins Maryaret Telfer Scicntli Column — Dorothy Lee Ruth Andrews IMiriani Burkett Irene Hebel lone Butler Page Two Hundred Thirty-Four Delta Gamma Delta Gamma was founded at the University of ] Iississip])i in 1874. Theta Chapter was installed at Indiana l niversitv in 1808. The fraternity colors are lironze, jiink and blue. The flower is the cream rose and the emblem is the anchor. The active members as they appear in the picture are: ' irjl Coin III I,— Bertlia W ' liittaker : liklred KlinU iSernice fellolt Thelnia TiicUer Georgia Doty Dorolhx Donald l-oiiilh Coliiiiiii — Cathryn Kirkhain Julia Kelleher Catherine Frye Dulcie Godlove Jane Fedlar lary Ann Tripp Second Coliiiiiii — Gleda Force Aleen Wolflin Lois Logan IJoniona Smith Doyne Wolf Fsther Jane Slinkard Marv Smith Fift i Cohniin Susette Dunlevty Ruth Carmichaei irginia Gates Mary Frisinger Marion Bockstahler Lucille Dye Louise Feist Tliini Coliiiiiii — Ruth Reed Catherine Force Ann Hunt Mary Schloot irgine Hammond Loretta Jacklex Sixth Coliiiiiii — JIalene Busse Emma Cook Pauline Holtenstien Ruth Bowers Mahle Bergin Josephine Crowdcr I Page Two Hundred Thirty-Eight Delta Zeta Delta Zeta was founded at Miami University in 1902. Epsilon Chapter was installed at Indiana IMay 22, 1909. The fraternity col- ors are rose and Nile green. The flower is the pink rose. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: l-ijst Coluiiin — Charlotte Wheeler Dorothy Simering Miriam Mason Chloe Shoemaker Bertha Phoebus Ihira Coliiiiiii — Eva Alsman Lucille Brownell Mabel Robbins Luella Agger Harriet Current Second Column — Ruth Norman Josephine Stengel Ruth Simering Mabel Brooks Jessie Welborn Cleon Bloom Fourth Column — Imogene Strickland Ruth Petric Frances Fields Helen Wortman Grace Mason Dorothy Modges fiftii Column — Corinne Penrod Mabel Relander Ruth Wilcox Jane Van Natta Dorothy Cupp Page Two Hundred Forty £ v - ' _ 1. ' ' - % 1 1 Alpha Omicron Pi 1 Alpha Omicron Pi was founded at Barnard College in 1897. Beta 1 Phi, the local chapter, was installed June 2, 1916. Crimson is the III 1 fraternity color and the red rose is the flower. The active members as they appear in the picture are : r-nsi Ron — Mildred Begemaii Pauline Cox X ' ivian Day Helen Devitt Myrtle Dixon Rutli Carnes Third Kou Helen Maxwell Beatrice Coombs Valley Messner Shirley Armstrong Mildred Douglas Second Roz ' . — iMary Esarey Elizabeth Miller Mary Fletcher Mvra Esarey Susan Smith Frances Duncan •oiiiih Rozt ' — Lillian Nesbitt Madeline Snoddy Sirsan Smith Louise Rogers Emma McClain Georgia Patten Fifth Row— Flelen Armstrong- Ethel Bender Mabel Heitman Mildred Meneiec Frances Heald iMarv Hall Hundred Forty-T i Delta Delta Delt a Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston I ' niversitv in i8S8. Delta Omicron Chapter was installed at Indiana University Alareh 3, 1017. The pansy is the fraternity flower, and the colors are silver, gold and hlue. The enihleni is the crescent. The active members, as they appear in the picture are: First Rau ' — Tirzah Siiiitli Evalyii Sample ILstlier Lee Lucile Nafe iviaii Rdss Mildre.l Daiim Tliird Roiv — Pauline Benson Lessie Davidson Amanda Peyton Frances McMath Phyllis Miles ccond Roii ' — Laura Anderson Margaret Carter Ruth Martindale Odette Hollingsvvortli Ethel Roberts Ruth Lauer Fourth Rovi — Mary Burris Mabel Randell Alma Denny Mary Kinnick Freda Hiner Jennie Holsapple FiftJi R,m— Lillian Walton Esther Granthan Rachel Steir Xornia Schober Esther Wilson Harriet Smith I Page Two Hundred For Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa was founded at Colby College in 1874. The local chapter was installed at Indiana University January 4, 1918. The fraternity flower is the violet and the colors are maroon and lavender. The emblem is the triangle. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Column — Etta Reeves Wanda Kerii Ruth Dicky Ruby Means Gladys Ragsdale Fourth Cotiiiun — Ruth Clark Dorothy Hull Jean Johnston Ethel Larm Louise Osborn Second Column — Marion Baker Elorence Ballard Carrie Glavin Xellemae Henderson Mildred Ragsdale Jane Scearce Third Column — Mildred Dingle Vivian Willianii Irene Howard Dona Hyatt Susie Kamp Fifth Column — Hazel Cage Marcella Hartnian Laura Jones Helen Trent Lenna Morris Si.rth Column — Mary Green Aones McConnell iMary Read Jlarjorie Hull Lois Clark Muriel Loveless Seventh Column — Mary Reeves Dorothy Rummell Melba Paige Eunice Thompson Beulah Young The Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Association The Women ' s Pan-Hellenic was organized in 1916 to bring the women ' s fraternities at Indiana into closer union and to discuss chap- ter house problems. Its memliership is coni])osed of two representa- tives from each organization. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : l-irst Ro ' u— Charlotte W lieeler Delta Zeta Eva .Alstnan Delta Zeta Vivian Williams Sigma Kappa Helen Trent Sigma Kappa Second Roii. — Louise Neal Kappa Kappa Gamma Wanda Mottier Kappa Kappa Gamma Louise Wills Kappa Alpha Theta -Alary Jane Carr Kappa .Mpha Theta Third Rozi. ' — Mildred Hauss Pi Beta Phi Louise Thomas Pi Beta Phi -Margaret Carter Delta Delta Delta Ruth Lauer ; Delta Delta Delta Fourth Rozi ' — Vivian Day -Mpha Omicron Pi Emma McClain -Mpha Omicron Pi Bernice -Mellott Delta Gamma Catherine Fry Delta Gamma Page Two Hundrprt Forty-Eight Page Two Hundred Forty-Nine Beta Theta Pi Beta Theta Pi was founded at Miami University in 1839. Pi (liapter at Indiana was established. in 1854, the first national frater- nity at Indiana. Pale pink and blue are the Beta colors, and the f low ' er is the American Beauty rose. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Russell Ashby George Hills Carroll O ' Rourke Forrest Thorne Dwight Van Osdel Stanton IMcBride Second Cohinin — Francis Brosman Kenneth Kunkel Alva Miles Frank Harkins William Rawles Robert Stenipel Fourth Column — Robert Bussard Robert Daily Evanson Earp Phillip Enler George Heighwav C. H. Rawles William Plogsterth Fifth Column — Noble C. Butler Wilbur J. Cox John A. Booth Carrol Embich William Hepburn Jay Dean Reese T hird Column — James Brown Edward H, DeHority Russell Ferguson James Gordon Hugh W. Nicholson Norman J. Reed Sixth Column — Ferris .■ lbert Bowe Alden Chester Byron K. Elliot Harold B. Havens Elijah J. Hills Harold Wood Sci ' mth Column — Andrew Hepburn Charles Willsie Eugene Vatet Charles Wilson Jules Bastian Ralph Bruner Page Two Hundred Fifty-On Phi Delta Theta Phi Delta Theta was founded at Miania University in 1848. The local chapter, Indiana Alpha, was installed in 1849. The colors are argent and azure, and the white carnation is the flower. The active menihers, as they appear in the picture, are : First Row- Fritz Bastian Ray Briggs Henry Coerpcr Kenneth Co field John Brayton Bon Aspy Fourlh Rim-— JXIarvel Walters Alvin Newman John Goodwin Leo Ford Max Billman George Neff Second Rozi ' — Virlyn Broadstreet France Center Richard Page Bowen DeMotte Joe Davis Jewell Allee Fifth Row— De Los Phillips Hiram Keehn Dudley Smith John Hendricks John Habbe Rolland Brodecker Tliird Ron— William Right Harry Miller Jay Rhotcn Sandy h ' lint William Dobbins Paul Beam Sixt i Rozt ' — George Sclienk Chaffe Shirk Ernest Caine William Wilson Walter Scott James Ingles Two Hundred Pifty-Thr ngma Chi Sigmi Chi was founded at Miami University in 1855. Lambda Chapter was installed at Indiana University in the same 3 ' ear. The colors are blue and gold. The white rose is the fraternity flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Robert H. O ' Hair Donald L. AIcLennon J. Dwight Peterson Elmore D. Sturgis Delbert Tripp Third Column — Vernon G. Davis James R. Marshall Perry E. Hall Irvin J. Goldner James R. Blair Second Column — William B. Porter Herbert Spencer Ellsworth Schan Byard H. Smith Fourth Column — William F. Kegley Ira Hamilton Frank E. Robinson John M clntyre Fifth Column — Carl !Mendenhall Mark A. Hanna Roy E. Goldner Jack Driscoll Lorn Howard Hundred Fifty-Five Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Psi was founded at Vashington and Jefferson College in 1852. Indiana Beta Chapter was installed May 15, 1869. The fraternity flower is the sweet pea. The colors are pink and lavender. The active members, as the} ' appear in the picture, are : First Colli iini — Ewing Campbell Charles Petig Samuel R. Smith Russell Smith Chester illiams Bruce DeMarcus Fourth Cohiiun — George Armstrong William Terhune Urban Jeffries George Espenlaub John JMcFadden Howard AIcFadden Second Coliiiiiii — Herbert Howsen Richard D. Zeller Russell Hauss Phillip McAllister Hugh McFadden Bratcher DeMarcus Fifth Column — Gordon Batman William Purcell Augustus Wasmuth Arlo Bvrum J. Ward Starr Justin Schumann Third Column — Ernest Huzford Bland Isenbarger Ardith Phillins Harry Houston Oliver Greer Paul Lingeman Sixth Column — Frank Stutesman William Adams John Sample William Zeller Hugh Bundy Emerson Brunner Two Hundred Pifty-Seve Phi Gamma Delta Phi Gamma Delta was founded at old Jefferson College, now Wash- ington and Jefferson College in 1848. Zeta Chapter was installed at Indiana University in 1871. Royal purple is the fraternity color. The flower is the heliotrope. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are as follows : First Column — Heber D. Williams Clellen C. Iiippenlatz Russell B. Engrle Griffith B. Thompson Edwin H. Andrews Oved T. Boes Third Column — Paul E. Leefler Edward H. Tajdor Malcolm C. Johnson Fowler E. Macy Garland F. Retherford Henry E. Blattman Second Column — - Harold R. Victor Edward E. Gates, Jr. James R. Emshwiller Russell H. Collins Robert V. Bierhaus Fourth Column — G. Dallas Newton Robert M. Neiswanger Dale B. Spencer George R. Louden Cyrus J. Clark Fifth Column Wayne O. Mitchell Gaines A. Young Ray E. Mitchell Harry A. Little Hoyt C. Hottel Domer E. Dewey Page Two Hundred Fift.v-Nii 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 frater- nity flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture : First Colli inn — Forest Cahen Xatlian Washburn Russell Rhodes Edward Pfeiffer Henrv Boleman Third Roiv— Charles Folz Ted Rhodes Paul Layman Robert Haymaker Donald Drake Second Rozv — Lee Waynick Kenneth Lambert George Browne Irwin Bone Bvron Boone Fourth Row — Roy Runcie Lester C. Tolbert John Owen Jerry Hoopengarner George Chittenton Fifth Rozv — Pat Maloney Charles Truebb Wayne Xattkemper Benjamin Harris Glen Comstock )igma Nu Sigma Nu was founded at the Virginia Military Institute in i86g. Beta Eta Chapter 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 picture, are : First Coin inn — ■ Kenneth Kilpatrick Mr. James E. Moffat Kenneth Fugit Robert Sinclair Donald Richardson Third Column — Cecil Craig John Kyle Alvin Stiver Dee Jones Second Column — Russell Fair Paul Zollinger Leo Reed Robert Kennedy Harold Wells Fourtli Column Victor Mays Leonard Ruckelshaus Harold Kercheval Hiram Stonecipher Ed M. Pitkin Fifth Column — John Jones Paul Houk Frank Faust Ralph Winslow Robert Rogers Pag-e Two Hundred Sixty-Thr Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma fraternity was founded at the University of A ' irginia in 1867. Beta Theta was first installed at Indiana in 1887. The flower is the lily-of-the-valley, and the colors are scarlet, green and white. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Coluiini — Robert Wiles Noel Richards Clarence Wilkinson Alfred Tremble Paul Casebeer Fourth Column — Walter Northam Gradv Stubbs Rnssell Williams Ellsworth Beckes Ernest Markson Second Column — Robert Burgan Paul Carson Mark Miltenburger John Edris Harry Donovan Richard Easton Fifth Column — Kenneth Post Aikman Foncannon Ralph Peckham Ashley Peilemeier Robett Glass Campbell King Third Column — John Huntington Donel J. Jordan Frank Gibson Irwin Bohn Phares Hiatt Sixth Column — Porter Rhudy Lawrence Lanning Xed Richards Philip Templeton Lawrence Busb- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded at the University of Alabama in .1856. Gamma Chapter was established at Indiana University in rpo . Royal purple and gold are the fraternity colors and the violet is the flower. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Cohiiun — Frederick A, Wiecking H. Joe Frankman Howard W. Kacej ' Norvelle C. La Nar Leo A. Rosasco Edgar H. Weber Third Colninii — Randall P. Fisher Robert M. Loomis Carl B. Neuer F. Bruce Peck James Mulford Paul E. Heal Second Column — David H. Sluss Walter F. Stiner Daniel J. Zutt John C. Turpin Nelson French Fourtli Column — A. Kendrick Grayston Forrest E. Keeling Glenn A. Johnson Ralph W. Roby Carl Girton Fifth Column — Walter J. Friedrich Alvin F. Sutheinier Marion E, Bedwell Thomas C. Brown Joy F. Buckner Fred C. Strodel Page Two Hundred Sixty-Seven Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega was founded at Richmond, ' irginia, in 1865. Delta Alpha 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. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Rozi— Third Roz — Dean Libbert Saunders iMoggee Lynas Bower Coleman Wilson Forsythe Coshall Weinliardt Fourth Rozi— Second Ron: — List Rauschenbach Ivenney McCartv Vriglit English Hobsen Xorman Young- Kelso Duncan Diehl Fifth Row- Trent Bicking Ross Luette Byington Kirschman Delta Upsilon Delta Upsilon was founded at Williams College in 1834. The In- diana Chapter was installed December 11, 19 15. The colors of Delta Upsilon are gold and blue. The active members, as they appear in the picture, are : Fiirst Column — Edgar Starr Robert Knepper Truman Caylor Luther Price William Third Column — Kenneth Turman Roland Sidey Kermit Maynard Lloyd Shepard annerman Second Column — John Warrick Harold Burgess Homer Warrick J. C. Warner Fourth Column — John Voss Charles Mason Greorge Muller Robert Grumieaux Fifth Column — Earl Carmichael Jesse Lohrei Walter Conrad Donald Bell William Harper Page Two Hundred Seventy-One Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Chi Alpha was founded at Boston University in 1907. Al- pha Omicron Chapter was installed at Indiana May 12, 191 7. The fraternity colors are purple, green and gold. The flower is the violet. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Row — Ira P. Baumgartner Willis Richardson E. Wesley IMumby James R. Xewkirk Charles Till Frank G. Raid Second Row — Erwin Blackburn Basil U. Byrne Albert G. Hermsen Herbert Heinlich Herbert L. Snyder Albert F. Stanley Third Rou!— J. Paul Lahr Iryin Beehler John A. Burnett, Jr. Ernest F. Ehresman Wendell H. Elpers Fourth Row — Lanville H. JNIengedoht Donald C. Durman Lloyd R, Xewhouser W. Harry Howard Glenn Lahr Grester D. stiller Fiflli Row- James S. Irelan T. Paul iMoore E. Scott Lahr Oryille AL Graves J. Leslie Saunders Daniel H. Osborn Page Tivo Hundred Seventy-Three The Interfratemity Couference The Interfratemity Conference is an organization composed of one representative from each of the national Greek-letter fraternities represented at IncHana University. The local branch is affiliated with the National Interfratemity Conference. The purpose ' of the Interfratemity 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 Rozi ' — Edgar Weber Sigma Alpha Epsilon Jess Lohrei Delta Upsilon Ralph Winslow Sigma Nu Henry Blattman Phi Gamma Delta Second Rcw— Samuel R. Smith Phi Kappa Psi Carl J. Weinhardt Alpha Tau Omega James Ingles Phi Delta Theta Third Rozv — Elmore D. Sturgis Sigma Chi Lee M. Waynick Delta Tau Delta Ellsworth Beckes Kappa Sigma Erank Harkins Beta Theta Pi Two Hundred Seventy-Five Freshman Pan-Hellenic Association The Freshman Pan-Hellenic Association was formed in 191 for the purpose of uniting the fraternity freshmen and getting them ac- ciuainted with one another. The members, as they appear in the picture, are: First Cohiiiin — Wm. Bannerman Delta Upsilon Delbert Tripp Sigma Chi Griffith Thompson Phi Gamma Delta Fault Trent Alpha Tau Omega Second Coliiiini — Alfred Gravston Sigma Alpha Epsilon Kenneth Cofield Phi Delta Theta Hugh McFadden Phi Kappa Psi Third Column — George Browne Delta Tau Delta Tohn Jones Sigma Xu Wilbur Co.x Beta Theta Pi Ashley Pielemeier Kappa Sigma Pa e Two Hundred Seventy-Seven Masonic Fraternity The Masonic Fraternity was organized at Indiana University in the fall of 1916 by members of the Masonic order, who were students in the University. Its membership is invitational to Masons and men who are sons of Masons. The fraternity colors are gold and blue. The flower is the pink carnation. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Coluinii — Clarence Clayton Henry Burlege Lee Hunt Russell Julius Lester Quinn Ray Thomas Fourtli Column Glen Fowler Ralnh Esarev Arthur Miller Frank Grandy Roger Hanna Thomas Myers Second Cohiinn — Paul Dawson Robert Hatfield Dale Robertson Lester Ruch Gregg Smith Mark Wakefield Fifth Column— y lbert Yager Gilbert Corbin Oscar Wilman John Terhune Harry Ross Howard Hill Third Column — Rnssel Frakes George Hungerford Frank Levell Russell Seigfried Lorraine Tolle Cecil Eisaman Sixth Column — John Waterfall Delbert Corbin Clarence Conrad Glen Vlessner Jess McAtee Ira Wilson Page Two Hundred Seventy-Nine The Indiana Club The Indiana Club was organized in 1905. It combines with its so- cial purposes, ideals of scholarship and ambition for proficiency in dramatic attainments. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Coin inn — Fred Moss Harriet Green John Snepp Marion Hochhalter Joe Hook CIvde Reed Second Cohinin — Carl Conrad Wanda Mittank Buell McDonald Irene Webber Tliird Column — Ralph Cockran Deloris AIcDonald Glen Bartle Mary Hartman Don Stockdale Fourth Column — Genevieve Duguid W . T. Green Lora Dugviid Martha King Ethel Brand Fiftli Column — Wilbur Bond Hazel Frazier Glen .Lee Clara Guy Arthur Glaze Sixth Column — Sibyl Stonecipher Ralph Bruce Gladys Duguid Paris Stockdale Faith Lee Herbert Hope Page Two Hundred Eighty-One Sigma Delta Chi The old Press Club became Rho Chapter ot Sigma Delta Chi in 1913. Sigma Delta Chi is an honorary Greek letter fraternity of national scope for college men who aim to adopt the profession of journalism. The Indiana Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi gives a dance every year known as the Blanket Hop. The proceeds from this dance are used to purchase blankets for the seniors on the football team, who have played on the Varsity for three years. Sigma Delta Chi also selects Resurrection Day, the day on which all students and faculty members are to don straw hats. The organization serves the purpose at Indiana University of uniting more closely the men who are leaders in college journalism, and makes for united action in favor of causes that make for the gen- eral betterment of conditions at Indiana. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Column — Willis Richardson Herbert M. Spencer Willard Plogstertli Second Column — William F. Kegley Ralph Winslow Robert Rogers Dallas Newton Third Column — J. Dv ight Peterson Malcolm Johnson Richard Saul Page Theta Sigma Phi Theta Sigma Phi, the national journahstic fraternity for women, has a very active chapter at Indiana University. The organization members are all girls who have done practical newspaper or magazine writing. Every member has been on the staff of the Indiana Daily Student this year. The most successful publication ever published by the Theta Sigma Phi girls was the S. A. T. C. Special edition, an eight-page paper, which was published at the end of the first term. The members, as they appear in the picture, are : First Rnw — Second Row — Eva Alsman Ethel Larm Helen Trent Mildred Hauss Josephine Piercy Mary Mullinix Page Two Hundrc-a Eighty-Four iramattrs Page Two Hundred Eighty-Pi ' The Prologuic — Hodsiicu Amkuican ' llie llnosicr American, a musical comedy dcpictint; local college life in war times, was presented April 30, 1918. it was the first play of its kind ever attem])ted at Indiana University and proved a success hotli dramatically and financially. The proceeds were given to the l ' )r ' an War Fund. Hundred Elghly-SIx Same Old Moon ' One of the most popular numbers in the production of the Hoosier American was the singing of the song, Same Old Moon, by Miss Mary Jane Carr. Page Two Hundred Eighty-Seve Thk llkllW X Clll-XTV HnMK The authors of the skit were: Helen Trent, Odette HolHngsworth, Clara Meid, Enid Eichorn and Iva Anderson. Claude Bolser directed the cast and the costuming. The songs were chosen by John L. Geiger ; the staging was by Charles Hays, and the business manager was Ralph Y. Roby. Page Two Hundred Eighty-Bight Till! ! w f mmk :: Chorus SceiNm The Hoosier American told the story of a Brown county boy who came to the University and, when the war started, joined Battery F. There were several very cleverly staged scenes, including the Brown county home, the Board Walk after a dance, a Bloomington street, and the moon scene. Page Two Hundred Eighty-Nil ' m Thr: Drawixo of the Sword The Drawing of the Sword, a well-known patriotic pageant, was presented by Professor Frazier ' s dramatic classes for two perform- ances, May 30 and June 12, 191 8. The original pageant was given as a second part of the Red Cross Pageant at the Rosemary Theatre, L. I., on October 5, 19 17. It was later repeated at the Metropolitan Theatre in New York. The presentation by University talent was beautiful and forceful, and attained a degree of success which has been favor- ably compared with that of the original presentation and cast. Page Two Hundred Ninety-One Page Two Hundred Ninety-Tw INDIANA UNIVERSITY WILLIAM L. BRYAN, Ph. D. President I THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Horace A. Hoffman, A. M., Dean. II THE GRADUATE SCHOOL C. H. Eigenniann, Ph. D., Dean. III THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION H. L. Smith, Ph. D., Dean. IV THE SCHOOL OP LAW ' Charles M. Hepburn, A. M., LL.B., LL.D., Dean. V THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Charles P. Emerson, M. D., Dean, Indianapolis. Bnrton D. Myers, M. D., Secretary, Bloomington VI THE EXTENSION DIVISION J. J. Pettijohn, Director. FOR CATALOGUE AND BULLETINS ADDRESS THE REGISTRAR BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Page Two Hundred Ninety-Three INDIANA UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE Maintained by the University in the Interests of Students Open 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. Basement of Library N. O. PITTENGER Manager The Greeks For Sodas Sundaes and Candies EAST SIDE SQUARE The Fashion The most Exclusive Shoe Store in the city — everything in shoes and always of the best make. THE FASHION The Only Shoe Store on the East Side of the Square. COOMBS for MEN ' S WEAR and ATHLETIC GOODS LOGAN L. COOMBS East Side Square A Good Place to Trade GOODYEAR WELT SYSTEM Kaser SHOE SHOP All Kinds Repairing Promptly Done 120 SOUTH COLLEGE CAMPBELL CO. Will Supply Your Wants in Women ' s Wear Dry Goods and Dry Goods Accessories We invite you 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 city. Phone 594 CAMPBELL CO. America ' s Greatest Furniture Factory BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA MANUFACTURERS OF MEDIUM PRICED Bedroom, Dining Room and Kitchen Furniture W. N. Showers, President W. Edw. Showers, V. P. and Gen Mgr. S. F. Teter, Secretary-Treasurer THE BOOK NOOK Keep in Touch with Indiana ' s Progress ' Hlymm! QyMte?ly INDIANA ' S GRADUATE MAGAZINE Published four times yearly by the Indiana University Alumni Association will keep you 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 University, Book Reviews of Alumni Authors, and Alumni News Notes. To Alumni and Former Students, |1.00 per year. To others, $2.00 per year. Address THE ALUMNI SECRETARY INDIANA UNIVERSITY Hundred Nil mtmJL ' KIe 1 y a B Lj B y- ... ■L v Dresses Hats Suits Coats Skirts Blouses Monito-Hose Mar-Hofflin Middy Suits City Book and Music Co. Stationery, Fountain Pens Athletic Goods, Laundry Boxes Kodaks, Books Pojsular Fiction TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT 1 20 North Walnut Street Phone 34 HOTEL BOWLES Bloomington ' s Leading Commercial Hotel The best between Chicago and Louisville. Conducted strictly upon the European Plan. Hot and cold water running in all rooms, electric lights, sanitary plumbing, steam heat and telephone connections in all rooms. Cui- sine and service unexcelled. RATES, $1.00 WITH BATH, $1.50 Real Clothes For young men and men who stay young. Style Headquarters Where Society Brand Clothes are sold. The Eagle Clothing Co. If it is Rig-ht, We Have it Model Shoe Co. High Class Footwear for All Occa- sions Basketball and Tennis Goods Electric Repair Shop MODEL SHOE COMPANY Phone 1081 - - West Side Square Drugs, Toilet Articles Cameras, Kodak Supplies, Fine Stationery and Johnston ' s Chocolates. All Kinds of Student Supplies Dr. Vermilya s Pharmacy East Side Square Phone 112 Page Three Hundred One The Univeksitv Cafeteria J. R. McDANIEL Cleaning and Pressing Co. BELL Furniture Mc KIN LEY Undertaking Prompt Service Undertaking a Specialty Satisfaction Guaranteed North Side Square Work Called for and Delivered Phone 582 BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Phone 893 S F R T r F zLi =; 17 T TPT A7nn n UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA LOCATED IN Student Building on Campus SERVES MEALS AT COST TO STUDENTS Page Three Hundred Three ALWAYS IN GOOD TASTE HOTEL LINCOLN CRAIG ' S CANDIES 63 Washington Street INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS Fireproof Modern Equipment Finest Dining Rooms and Coffee Shop in City WM. R. SECKER. General Mgr. Cook ' s Educational Agency 721 State Life Bldg. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Will waive membership fee i University Stude il located for HOMER L. COOK, Manager C. B. DYER 234 Mass. Ave. INDIANAPOLIS School Jewelry Dance Programs Frat. Jewelry Stationery THE HOUSE OF QUALITY AND PROMPT SHIPMENTS Kiger Co. Phone at our expense Office Phones: New Phone 22-237 Bell Phone Main 4181 43-47-49 North Capital Avenue INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Between Terminal Station and State House Dealers and Manufacturers of Everything for Schools DOMESTIC SCIENCE AND MANUAL TRAINING EQUIPMENT Physical and Chemical Apparatus Primary Supplies Globe Clean Air School Heaters. Indiana Maps, Globes and Blackboards. Peabody School Furniture. Wayne Sanitary Horse Drawn and Motor Driven School Cars. WE STRIVE TO PLEASE Hundred Four KODAKS ATHLETIC GOODS ART GOODS Prescriptions Our Specialty WOOD WILES Drug Store East Side Square Choice Meats Can Always Be Obtained at Wallace Souder ' s Meat Market Our Reputation Has Been Established on Service Special Orders Given Our Prompt Attention Wallace Souder ' s Meat Market Phones: 392-408 102 N. Walnut St., East Side Square Three Hundred Five Coll ege W ell, It s about All Over, This College Life, And Soon It will Divide in Twain • The Summer Termers And the Left Overs. ( This Stuff we ' re Losing Is just down One Side And Lip The Other, But we ' ve been Told ' Tis good Filler. AA ell, E ' erybody Is good for Something, We Suppose.) We started to Say That last Fall AA ' e Thought It was Pretty Poor When the S. A. T. C. Whatever that is, Claimed our Heroes. And we Became 4 Hundred Six Pier son s Cigar Store and Billiard Parlor Will be kept sanitary and conducted along- high class lines. Our stock con- tains everything- on the market in our line and will be kept in prime condi- tion. We will endeavor to maintain the hig ' hest efficiency in service. Your patronage is solicited and will be highly appreciated. S. D. Pier son Co. ..Stop and Shop.. WITH THE COLLINS-WOODBURN COMPANY Big, Clean, Up-to-date, Attractive Grocery. red W. Fenneman SANITARY j HE A TING ENGINEER BATH ROOM SPECIALTIES Estimates Furnished Cor. 7th and Walnut Sts. Phone 559 ED WILLIAMS THE I. U. Students ' Jeweler West Side of Square College Jewelry Nocelties Finest Expert Jewelry Watch Repairing Victrolas, Pianos SHEET MUSIC Page Three Hundred Seven Somewhat Weary Of a Date Who kept One Eye On his Wrist Watch, And devoted Both Ears To the Student Clock, Even if lie Did Wear the Psychological Uniform. And even The Sweet Sixteens Grew Tiresome As Coke Providers And Harris Grand Tickets On Wednesday Nights. However, We learned Something Of the Finer Points Of Militarism Including Serge Suits, Silver Bars, Cavalry Boots, Foreign Correspondence, And Little Things Like That. But one Morning We were Awakened Bv something that Sounded Page Three Hundred Eight Not How Cheap But how GOOD— the motto of Rhorer ' s Shoe Store 109 West Side Square The Globe Clothing Co. Northeast Cor. of the Square Stoutens Pharmacy FULL LINE Imported and Domestic Toilet Requisites Stationery, Fountain Pens and Druggists ' Sundries Prescriptions Carefully Compounded Wie Solicit a Portion of Your Patronage W. A. STOUTE Proprietor Phone No. 235 West Side Square FOR BEST OF MEATS CALL HINKLFS MEAT MARKET Prompt Service Right Prices A Satisfied Customer is Our Best Ad. Phones: 272 and 1356 208 N. Walnut St. Page Three Hundred Nil i ! a s ■ It v tr 2| Very Shermanesqiie. And for a Minute We heartily Wished They wouldn ' t Bother About the War At Three O ' clock, - (Not Wilson Time.) But Anyway We Marched Around And had a Holiday. And then, Along with Foreign Lietits. We endured a Siege Of Returned Heroes And Erstwhile Lovers That still Continues In the Best of Circles. And then we Endured The Resumed Educations Of these Once Weres. We had Among Other Things A Hot Election In Which A Tank Corps Career Availedeth Nothing ' We had A Return to the Classics , ' % ' «e = Pane Thne Hundred Ttn ■ - - Tib© Mnilb CLOTHING AND SHOE COMPANY For Style-Plus Clothes North Side Square General Hardware F. B. VAN VALZAH Stoves and Ranges Phone 45 South Side Square J. W. FARRIS PLUMBING, HEATING GAS and ELECTRIC WORK and SUPPLIES -South Side Square- Turner ' s 5c and 1 Oc Store Everything- in the line of VARIETY GOODS South Side Square Chic Millinery Kimbrel Sisters Millinery Shop Bowles Hotel Bldg. A II Students Most Cordially Welcome The Busy Bee Cafe For Short Orders and LUNCH Drop in While Down Town W. D. WELLS, Prop. Kirkwood Ave. Upholstering, Screen Mak ng-, Crating- Household Goods General Repairing Satisfaction Guaranteed S. J. JORDAN Shop 310 E. 4th. Phone 536 Residence, 408 E. Smith. Phone 1181 Page Three Hundred Ele In the Form Of before-the-War Dances, Those Dollar-a-Couple Affairs, And we Admired The Financiers Who put them Across ; Surely, Careers await them Out in the Wide, Wide World. Then, There was Some Talk Of a Union Revue, But Dad Elliot Must have Put The Idea Of the Aspiring Ann Penningtons To Flight, And so We didn ' t Do It. Then Came A Great Social Upheaval And Reign of Near-Bolshevism On the Questions Of Smoke with your Coke, Chummy Dancing, Whether a House Party Is a Party at the House, And when a Sleeve Is not a Sleeve. We Hear Hundred Twelv ' Students ' Headquarters at Leisure HUFFS POOL ROOM SHOE SHINING PARLOR THE CLEANEST PLACE IN TOWN Soda Fountain, the Best of Everything. Checks Good at Fountain. TOM HUFF, Proprietor Phone 527 E. KIRKWOOD Hazel ' s Music Store - - Pianos and PatKe PhonograpKs ' Tne Latest Popular Sheet Music 103 Kirkwood Pure Food Distributors and Seed Merchants Whitaker Grocery Co. Everything Good to Eat We Specialize in High-Grade Apparel For College Women at Popular Prices Mar-Hof, U. S. Simpson and Vogue Middy Suits Also the Betty Wales Dresses SPAULDING ATHLETIC GOODS Indiana University Center Bloomington Why not make it a Spaulding Center ? KEENf KUTTER KUTLERY, COOKING UTENSILS ROCHESTER WARE, CHAFING DISHES AND PERCOLATORS Davis HardAvare Company Phone 37 213 North College May ' s Restaurant Open Day and Night Opposite Monon Depot Phone 455 BRYANTS ' DRUG STORE Students ' Supplies and Toilet Articles Breeden ' s Better Values Phone 98 202 N. Walnut St. I ' .iK.- TlucH Hun.lrpil Foui-t.- [ Charles Gilbert Shaw (Successor to Shaw Cosner) Official Photographer for The Arbutus Duplicate copies of pictures appearing in tliis issue or preceding years can be ordered any time, from either groups or individual Page Three Hundrcil FIfte ' Tis not yet Settled. Then we had The Same Old Stories About Cases, And Georgette Backs, And Spring Time Essays. We had The same Policy Sharks, So-called, After we Thought They had gone Out of Date. There were the Same Freshman Lines, Popular Girls, Social Hounds, Book Nook Kings, Sphinx Clubbers, Parlor Snakes, And Lounge Lizards ; The Same Fireside Philosophers, Pin Crops, Lodge Boosters, College Widows, Etc., Etc., Etc. Well, Well, We Can ' t have Everything All the Time, And that ' s About All For This Year. J. W. Ratcliffe THE STUT ENTS ' UAILOR Over Monroe County State Bank The Sanitary Bakery We Cater to Student Parties and Dances With Fancy Cakes and Punches LETTELLER SON, Props. Bloomington Coal Co. HEADQUARTERS FOR The Best of COALS AND ICE Prompt Delivery Service Plione 425 Every Indiana University Man is a Member of the Indiana Union Democracy is emphasized by this organization, which is the only one on the campus open to every wide-awake and red-blooded student. The Union stands for a bigger and better Indiana. The only united action on any question of vital importance is obtained by this organization, representative of the stude nt body. The Indiana Union supports a barber shop and billiard room in the Student Building. BOOST INDIANA UNIVERSITY BY JOINING THE UNION Pag e Three Hundred Seventeen Seniors and Undergraduates If you are gTaduating in the class of 1919 aud are interested in Indiana University, v:hj not Iveep in toucli with tlie Universit} hy subscribing for tlae Indiana Daily Student ? For the uucler-graduate a bound file of this paper can not be equalled by the best memory book or diary. It is a day by day his- tory of the affairs of the University, a perpetual source of interest and enjoyment. No matter where you sve located, have the Indiana Daily Student delivered bv mail or carrier. The Indiana Daily Student ESTABLISHED 1867 The Palace Shoe Shop THE REMODELED ' Uhe Students Favorite Hotel Tourner Under New Management L. H. ROBERTSON — 109 E. Kirkwood STRICTLY EUROPEAN The House of Pure Drugs 50 rooms with hot and cold water, $1. 10 rooms with bath, $1.50. J. W. O ' HARROW — UP-TO-DATE CAFETERIA Phone 35 IN CONNECTION SOUTH SIDE SQUARE P. C. GILLIATT, Manager. Pag-e Three Hundred Nineteen 1 To the Graduate in Medicine Our lOllCy Qualuy and Semce WUr r riC6S Jufl a Little Belter vJUr otOCk Large and Well Assorted Our Desire How Result To have you for a (riend and a customer long years after your original equipment has been forgotten. Get in our boat — listen to what we have to say---lake it for what it is worlh--.look at ihe goods — buy them. Another satisfied customer — you lake no chances, because it ' s our business to satisfy you. DUG AN- JOHNSON CO. ° ' VJirNYpous.iND. Physicians — Surgeons — Hospitals- -Laboratory — Electrical — Supplies and Equipment. THE BEST IS NONE TOO GOOD FOR OUR CUSTOMERS Good Glasses PRICES RIGHT Mail Order Repair Work Given Immediate Attention Dr. H. R. Easterday Optometrist---Mfg. Optician 804 State Life BIdg. INDIANAPOLIS Home Laundry Co 401 So. Washington St Quality and Service Unexcelled The Right Teacher in the Right Place The Educator- Journal ' ' ' ' ' ' Advancement TEACHERS ' AGENCY Let us help you to a deserved promotion. WRITE UvS FOR PARTICULAR.S Read THE EDUCATOR-JOURNAL AND KEEP ABREAST WITH STATE and NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL NEWS LIVE TOPICS DISCUSSED BY LIVE CONTRIBUTORS L. N. HINES, Editor; M. P. HELM, Managing Editor. ( Both of Class 1894, Indiana University) 403-4 Newton Claypool Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind. Hundred Twenty The Mitchells Have Been Printing Over Sixty Years William Itchell Printing Co. Edition Book Manufacturers GREENFIELD, INDIANA Builders of School and College Books ESTABLISHED 1859 Page Three Hundred Twenty-One ' ■ . ' JoDpii Greamerij Go. Ice, Ice Cream and Shady Brook Butter Special Attention Given to Lunches Dinners and Banquets Phone 188 Cor. 4th and Main St. Cioocl Scholcirsliip Denicinc!:s Good Eyes IncliciRa Opticol Componv 224 North Meridian Street INDIANAPOLIS Cannot give you good eyes, but can aid you in getting 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 the Indkinci Optical Coiiipcinij GkLsses? Page Three Hundred Twenty-Two FOR SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS SEE US WE CARRY EVERYTHING FOR THE Doctor, Nurse, Medical Student and Hospital GIVEUSATRIAL Wm. H. ARMSTRONG COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA (Millinery For nifty up-to-date HATS The Claypool INDIANAPOLIS See Mrs. C. R. Pleasants 1 Hat Shop Opposite P. 0. Home of Faculty and Student Body of 1. U. Indiana ' s Leading Hotel Dixie Taxi Cab Co. Prompt Taxi Service Rates $1.50 Per Day and Up Phone 122 Phone 659 HENRY LAWRENCE President and General Manag ' er Page two Hundre I 1 Twenty-Three hj — = rng ;5 g ' • ' ?  . f ' 4ttUk ' ■ ' ■ ■ ' ■ ■■•■ J ' - ' ' :: Conservation of Vision is the Practice of Optometry Leo Landoy Inc. Manufacturing Opticians 142 N. Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Ind. We Thank You Arbutus Advertisers The Student Body and Faculty will thanh you with their Patronage Page Three Hundred Twenty-rou


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

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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