Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) - Class of 1928 Page 1 of 464
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1 C©IPyiRIICIHlf Jane Ensle Editor-in-Chirf EnMU D Bruner ... fiusinns Manager Robert Huncilman - f - TIME AIDIDUTU II gi S I. ' I STUDENT OF THE FUTURE ¥ J IH IE [ A K IB lU ¥ U S ' 7 T S ' J .: m a Publication of Indiana Ihnversity at Blooming ton, Indiana Publislied by tlie Junior Class V, ' olume T iirty-Five L It ( _ |l IFOIRILWCIPID One of man ' s greatest gifts has been the capacity to forget the struggles of the past and to turn his eyes persistently to the future. This endowment has been responsible for the advances of civi- lization in both material and intellectual development. Thus by the plans and eiforts of men and women whose eyes were fixed upon the future status ot learning has our University become a great institution. We who are now reaping the rewards of their devoted labors pav an appreciative tribute to them, and carry throughout this record of the vcar 1928 a futuristic ideal. IDIEIDIICATIION To Coach -BtUy Hayes, the builder of men, -ice dedicate this book with our sincerest admiration mm CCNiriENlE ' I Administration II Classes III Athletics IV Campus Life V Indianapolis (MJ3jk MM M — V -r- ' jT ' PibiJitllS ■m: :r: fr) ' .i F ' .?; o [11] g rs .cA ' f ' ba 14 i ? l! I f cJfr buiius Adwiuistration E ' ACH FALL brings the neophyte; each spring the finished protluct enters the outer world. hat the product — he who has sought an education — takes with him is the constant problem of our adminis- tration. Achievements of graduates are, in part, mere reflections of the administration. Matters of consequence depend largely, of course, on the ability of the graduate; but after he has come to the institu- tion as a neophyte, taken the various steps in obtaining a higher education, and ventures forth into a different phase of life, the influence of administrative ofliicers and members of the faculty remain with him. Oflicers of the University ' s administrative body, that group which is a vital part of the institution, have spent years attempting to find the ideal of education. As they progress, education pro- gresses with them. Spring finds them with their efltorts, their influence, and their training leaving with hundreds. Fall brings them hundreds to get what others have received. 14 y . - - .• .J . Ci ' f l? I C ' X SaiiforJ Fortner T eter 1871-192S Mr. Teter was born in Noblesville, Indiana, May 21, 1871, and died in Bloomington, Indiana, February 20, 1928. He was the son of Newton and Mrs. Susan (Atkins) Teter. He was graduated from the Noblesville High School in 1 889 and received the degree, Bachelor of Arts, from Indiana university in 1893. He was president of his graduating class in the University and was manager of the first football team, and later its captam. From his freshman days he was one of the leaders in the student body, and his high ideals made him a universal favorite. On April 24, 1895, Mr. Teter was married to Miss Nellie Gertrude Showers, daugh- tei of Mr. and Mrs. William N. Showers of Bloomington. In 1924 Mrs. Teter was elected trustee of Indiana university, the first woman to hold this honor. To Mr. and Mrs. Teter were born two children — Mary Louise (now Mrs. Clyde W. Hare) who giaduated from Indiana university in 1922, and William Showers Teter, a freshman m the University this year. Mr. Teter was sales manager for the Showers Brothers Furniture Company, and for the last twenty-four years was secretary-treasurer of that organization. Mr. Teter had an unusual capacity for friendship. He was enthusiastic in all his undertakings and his activities were wide and varied. He was the first president of the Bloomington Chamber of Commerce, a charter member of the Rotary club, a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, the Masonic order and the First Methodist church. He was a loyal friend, an enthusiastic alumnus, and a de ' oted husband and father. It can be truthfully said of him that he met all the requirements of a good citizen in the widest and best meaning of that term. m llh rSS J, ..W ' ' y. If. f i;. r Preside,, of the Board of Trustees To have been a student at Indiana university at any time In its history has been a high privilege, but to be a student here now with its history and traditions of a hundred years as a common heritage is a far greater privilege. Indiana university has grown. It is an asset of the state, not a liability. It is giving not- able service through its various schools and departments in its hospitals and in special fields of social work, reaching into every county in the state. It is primarily an Indiana institution and is returning to the state much more than the state is putting into it. An enthusiastic and earnest student body, an interested and loyal alumni, unmistakable evidence of increasing public confide the work of the Universitv, rant the prediction that India to the people of the sta I ' ersity will give even more-important and tar-rcaching service than ever --|. W. Filler. 1 LvmVi ■■■■■■■Botto,,: Row: Benja ra C. Bat, F. Long, tlord Tcter, Frank H. Hatfield all, Charles M. Nie- .er, Ora L. Wide; Z w w ■Jm Wiiiiam Loa-e Brya?i Presldenl of Indiana ink-ersily The Mission of the University Scholars are willing to work with endless patience at every conceivable scientific task. The wonder is that the hard-headed twentieth century does NOT deride them but accepts them, pays for them, rejoices in them, and that for a very good reason. The reason is that these far away studies do not remain far away. They fall together, and often in simple ways. They answer for us questions as old and as deep as human curiosity. They sponge out our myths, and give us instead a view of things more wonderful than any myth, which stands fast in the daylight. They give us sight of the world, and of life, and of humanity, in process of creation, and they teach us how to see these always more deeply and more truly. — WiLi,iAM Lowe Bryan. iiri o4 Pbuiiils Deans of AL The office of dean of men was first established at Indiana uni ersity in 1919. The function of this office is to promote the scholastic, moral, and social welfare of our students. This is done chiefly through personal conferences with the students and through conferences and correspondence with parents. Through co-operation with many agencies the ofHce of dean of men has assisted in developing a system of making appointments to prominent offices by student- faculty committees, such as Arbutus editor, athletic man- agers, dramatic directors, etc.; eliminating hazing; sys- tematic inspection of men ' s li ' ing quarters; reducing the dangers in class scraps; administration of student loan funds; building of the men ' s ciormitory and plan- ning for construction of further units; administration tutoring of delinquent students; protection of the student body through listing of suitable rooming places for men, and enforcement of schol- — C. E. Edmondson. What is to be thought of the deans of men? The deans hope that the thought of them may be as kindly as the best good will on their part merits. To the deans of men, the least of their work is what must be done by way of discipline. To them, the University is not a penal institution, but a place where youth and age co-operate, by means of natural contacts, to help the ad ' enturousness of youth to find humanely serious aim and purpose. If the) ' can aid even a little toward that, they have faith that thought of them will be as kindly as they most sincerely wish it to be. C. y. SeM BOWER. cJf plbu Deans of M omen At the present time the position of dean of women is rather well defined on college and university cam- puses. As dean of women at Indiana university I have tried to create a homelike atmosphere for the girls on the campus; and assist in plans for their social life and activities. I have also tried to co-operate with the de- partments of health and physical education in main- taining good health conditions; and most important of all, I have tried to foster an atmosphere which will be conducive to good scholarship and help the girls de- velop into fine women. In this three-fold program I have had the help of i„ - f w .11 faculty, students, alumni and friends of the University. £! ,„„ vJ,un Through their hard work and generous gifts, good housing, second to none in the United States, is now available for fifteen hundred girls. We hope to have this same support and help in mak- ing the space for the recreational and physical educational department second to none. The present equipment was planned in 1906 for 236 girls. The girls want a large gymnasium, larger swimming pool, and more rooms for meetings and extra-curricular activities. The remodeling of the Student building, to meet their needs, is the next project. I hope that the dean of women ' s office will always be a channel through which girls may find aid for self-help, self-expression, and self-improvement. — Agnes E. Wells. As assistant dean of women, I take care of personnel cards for each girl. At graduation these cards show what the girl has stood for on the campus, what she has prepared herself to do, and what she hopes to become. This information is valuable to the dean of women while the girls remain in college, and is of great assist- ance to her in recommending them to positions after graduation. It is also of assistance to the Placement bureau. The keeping of a card catalogue of girls on proba- tion is another of my duties. As many freshmen and sophomores find out, I interview the girls who receive smoke-ups in physical education and those who are re- ported for absence from classes. In general, my work is to aid the dean of women in her attempt to hold the girls to a high scholarship record, and to preserve for her information which is not available from any other source. — Lydia D. Woodbridge. [21] Bursar and Registrar The bursar ' s office is the financial clearing house for all schools and departments of the University. The organization is set up under four general classifications: purchasing, accounting, fees and disbursements, and activities. Under the first head is included also work orders covering repairs, replacements, and general up- keep. Auditing is included in all the four divisions. Purchases for all Bloomington departments are made here. For the Indianapolis center purchases are made by officials accountable to the administration through the office of the bursar, who is member ex- officio of the finance committees of the center. The bursar ' s office is held responsible for the prepa- ration and preservation of all financial reports. These financial statistics form the bases for estimates and budgets, and are the measure of growth in financial resources and financial needs. Through this office direct contact is made with the auditor of state, and the state board of accounts. Here money is collected, disbursed, and balances accounted for. Student activities are assisted and audited here. A special activities manager is a mem- ber of the office force. Working with him is a student auditing committee made up of three students appointed by the bursar. — U. H. Smith. U. H. Smith m It would be a pleasure and an easy matter to write a column concerning some other department, or a vol- ume about the Uni ' ersit ' , but to write about one ' s own office is an embarrassing task. Since I have been re- quested by the editor of the Arbutus to write some- thing I will say two things: First, personally I have seen Indiana university grow from an institution of 144 to 5,742, and officially I have seen the attendance increase from 771 to 5,742. When I first knew the University the president was also the registrar, bursar, and dean as well as holder of minor positions. As the institution grew there was of necessity divisions of duty. The registrar ' s office in any college or university is, in a sense, a barometer as to the institution ' s size and growth. My hope is that Indiana university may have at an early date an admin- istration building adequate for all its needs. Second, my thirty-two years as registrar have been years of genuine pleasure, and this fact is largely due to the uniform courtesy and hearty co-operation shown by the officials, faculty, and stu- dents of the University. Another important factor is the loyal and effective services of faithful assistants throughout all these years. — Johx W. Cravens. John If. Crat ' ens Reghlrar S ' fli yllitinm ylssociatiou % The Alumni association of Indiana university ex- tends congratulations to the Class of 1928, and wel- comes them into the Alumni association. Indiana uni- versity has given its all to ou. Our splendid faculty- has contributed four years of its life to your develop- ment. The tax payers of the State of Indiana have coi:- tributed thousands of dollars for your benefit. Up to this time you have contributed nothing. You have been the recipient of their generosity. But this sacrifice of time, effort, and money has been for one great purpose. President Coolidge aptly expressed the situation when he told the graduating class of Amherst, Greatly have ou been taught — greatly must ou lead. The function of the Alumni association is to pro- President of .Huw,,-. Association vide a medium whereby the loyal sons and daughters of Indiana university can repay in a small way the debt the - owe her by uniting together in a correlati -e effort to fight her battles and assure posterity an even greater Indiana. This obligation cannot be lightly tossed aside — each and every one of us owe it. Indiana university needs your hel-p now. Remarkable strides have been made in the past few years, but we owe it to Indiana university to help make her the leading institution of her kind in the Middle West. The goal is not so •ery far away — with your help it can he done. — Allex G. Messick. m The Alumni office at Indiana university is main- tained for its alumni. Its purpose is to stimulate and promote education; to create for the alumni of Indiana uni ' ersity a cultural background, and to stimulate in the public mind a higher regard for the professions. The office is operated to maintain a contact between the University and its alumni for mutual benefit. The office hopes to be of greater ser- ' ice in the future than it has been in the past. We believe that education should not stop when a person leaves college and that he should be given an opportunity by the Uni -ersity to prolong his cultural contact with it. — George F. Heighw.ay. George F. Heighzcay Alumni Secretary l A,i UM ' - J h m Piiblidty and Publications Why all this publicity.- Is it getting us anywhere? I ' or answer, go back to the university of three cen- turies ago. They burned educators at the stake in those days. Old Bruno suffered this fate for supporting the Copernican theory of the universe. Galileo, inventor of the timepiece, telescope, thermometer, compass, and microscope, had to publish his scientific findings anon- mously and finally was tried as a heretic and forced to recant to save his own life. He couldn ' t hold a uni- versity job because he differed with Aristotelian theories 2,(IOO ' years old. It ' s been several -ears now since they ' ve burned a professor at the stake but not many since they made one stand trial for educational heresy in Tennessee. Elsewhere in these United States the educators are pretty free to go as far as they like without fear of personal violence. Indeed, people spend tax money on ' research workers. Just look at the thousands of teachers, the hundreds of thousands of students, the millions of dollars for the schools! After all, now, our university in a very important sense is just a big publicity insti- tution, for teaching men and women better ways of living. It isn ' t enough simply to develop ideas within the college walls. That was the failure of education in Gahleo ' s day. He made discoveries as astounding as any of today, but they meant scarcely any- ' ' ' ' —- -- ■-.derstood h the Frank R. Elliot Puhluils Din-clor thing to the people of his dav because those discoveries were not understood h people. ' —Frank R. Elliot. muc it isi ofHcc Ivy L. Chamiiess Direa,,T of Publication The publications office sometimes seems to be a ch misunderstood place. It isn ' t the publicity office; The Daily Student office; nor is it the alumni It is the office where official publications are compiled, edited, and sometimes written. It is also the office where an issue of the Alumni Quarterly is pro- duced each three months. The official publications include +6 regular issues each year, varying in size from a 4-page news-letter to the catalog of the University. The regular publi- cations are the Indiana University Bulletin, the Bulle- tin of the extension division, and the News-Letter, each issued 12 times a year; the Studies, which appear quarterly, and the Bulletin of the School of Education, each alternate month. The printing of almost all of these is done under state contract by an Indianapolis firm. Much time and correspondence would be sa ed if this printing could be done on the campus, but this is a dream of the perhaps far-distant future. — Ivv L. Chamxess. ■4 r„ L .A. -V N Library and Extension Division During the past two years, marked impro ' emcnt in the library has been made possible by increased appro- priations for the Uni ersitv bv the state legislatures of 1925 and 1927. In 1925 the legislature appropriated $325,000 for an addition to the library building and for new equip- ment. A new reading room, used at present as a reserve book room, has relieved the crowded condition of the old reading room and has opened the way to the use of the latter as a reference room. The card catalogue and the circulation desk are now housed in a separate room. This separation of the reference, reserve, and circulation departments have made for greater conven- ience to the clientele of the library and for more efficient work of administration. Additional space and equipment have about doubled the seating capacity of the library. It is hoped that the library has entered upon an era of greater usefulness and service for the entire University. — W. A. Alexander. The field of adult education is developing so rap- idly that it is difficult to give a futuristic picture of University extension work without seeming over-con- fident. Perhaps it is enough to say that though the movement in this country as it is now organized is only about a quarter of a century old, extension students in many states actually outnumber those residing on the campus. And for every student engaged in the formal pursuit of a classroom or correspondence course, there are several others who receive less formal assistance — different kinds of aids to home study through outlines, package libraries, bibliographies, motion picture films, and various other types of visual instruction, as well as direct guidance through community institutes, lec- tures, clinics directed by visiting nurses, and through various other expert services. In Indiana, for instance, last year nearly six thou- sand students were enrolled in extension classes, and an additional 1,900 were working on courses by mail. Some 150,000 people were served by the visual instruction department alone, and 18,000 people were aided through contests and discussions conducted in the schools. With totals as large as this acquired during a period of sixteen years, the extension division can cer- tainly look forward to a much larger enrollment as people generally realize the many services at their disposal. — R. E. Cavan.augh. 1 , ■- m: cAiPbuiius ,v riatfe - - College of Arts and Sciences The College uf Arts and Sciences is the oldest of the group of schools whose union in one organization makes up the University. It was called into being by the desire of the citizens of Indiana that their children might be taught what men have done and thought through the ages, and might enter life with an under- standing of the best that men of their own generation were thinking and striving for. Throughout its century of service the college has had in its faculty men who have on the one hand loved learning and given them- selves with open mind to all who have sought to offer new truth or to criticize what our fathers had held for truth; and who have at the same time loved youth and delighted to lead its venture into a larger life. The objective has always been to train men in the processes of constructive thinking and to open to their view the larger fields of human thought rather than to teach encyclopedic facts. The College of Arts has never sought to teach its students to any special extent those facts and skills that might be used in gaining a livelihood through business or the professions, but rather to give such basic training as would make broad-minded, disciplined men who could make their way to leadership in business or the professions when they turned to these. Its course of study is rich in its satisfactions in later life, in the fellowship it brings with men of finer feeling and disciplined thinking. — S. E. Stout. A. Rothrock ' Aril and Sden Dnisioii of service some thirty years ago has made the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences the official will) passes upon the credentials of all undergraduate students who apply for admission to Indiana university. One dn ' ision of the office of the Dean is de ' oted almost wholly to administering admissions to the University. The credentials of the hundreds of students coming directly from the high schools are carefully examined, records of scholarship made, deficiencies in entrance re- iiuirements noted, and cards of admission issued. H ' X HHBjj Students coming from other standard colleges and L B norntal schools are classified, and allowed such advanced ■■1 credit as each application merits. During the present M ' ear 326 students, representing 96 different institutions of learning, applied for advanced standing. These 96 educational institutions represented in our student body are distributed among 27 different states of our coun- try. Students coming from other colleges must pre- etters of honorable dismissal, together with certificates showing a satisfactory col- tcoid, before they are granted admission to the University. Memoranda of the stu- ad anced standing and all entrance credentials are kept in permanent files in the dent ' office of the Dean A. Rothrock. [26] WJ ' L i School of Medicine Until recent!}- the great majority of doctors were educated in the 403 private medical schools which for a longer or shorter period have existed in this country. Since the year 1900, 362 of these schools no longer exist, and only 12 new ones have been added, while since that year the number of tax-supported schools has increased from 21 to 32. These are training an ever-increasing majority of the medical students. The result is that in the future if a state wishes good ph -si- cians she must educate them for herself. The medical school should have teaching wards for each major subject of practice. We still lack a psychi- atrical clinic for the very earl - mental cases, wards in which skin cases can be adequately treated, and special wards for the surgery and medicine of diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat. We need also a clinical build- ing for the two upper classes, around which all the hospitals will cluster, which will house the offices of the heads of the departments, the general offices of the medical school and hospitals, the library, and the lecture rooms, recitation rooms, and laboratories for spe- cial research for the two upper classes. Then the present medical school building would serve splendidly the needs of the second year. And finally, we need a building for public health and environmental medicine in which will center the social service department and the department of public health and hygiene. — C. P. Emerson. rUi P. Emerson i Medkal School at ludiailapolis The acute problem of the freshman ear of the School of Medicine at Bloomington is that of caring for ever-increasing applications for enrollment. For the year 1926-27 there were 350 applicants for ma- triculation in freshman medicine. For the year 1927-28 there were 460 applications for matriculation in the freshman year of the School of Medicine. Of these 460, only 1 1 5 could be accepted. Of the 345 refused students, 32 had credentials quantitatively satisfactory, and 29 others made unofficial statements of their pre- medical work which led us to believe that their creden- tials were satisfactory. There is no doubt that our fresh- man enrollment could have been between 150 and 180 this -ear without in any way lowering our entrance re- quirements. It is very evident that in the near future provision must be made for increased enrollments in the fresh- man )ear of the School of Medicine. This can be ac- complished only by an addition to Owen Hall or by the erection of a new building that will more nearly pro- vide accommodation for those pressing for place in our school. QAinbvtu% ' M Frederick R. Hens hat, Dean of School of Dentist ps School of Dentistry When the Dental Educational Council of America rateci Indiana university School of Dentistry as a class A institution, it was agreed by the trustees of Indiana univer- sity that the first new building in Indianapolis should be a dental school building in the medical group. When this building is constructed it will be modern and complete in every detail of arrangement and equipment, affording full opportunity for both teacher and student. The University ' s medical center will then consist of the dental school, the medical school, the Riley, Long and Coleman hospitals, and the nurses ' training school, together with all the other activities that naturally arise in a great health center. The removal of the dental school to the University group is highly desirable from many standpoints. Dentistry has ceased to be merely a mechanical occupation, calling for highly special- ized skill in restorative operations, although that phase of the profession is just as essen- tial as it ever was. Because of the new knowledge of disease as established by modern investigation and research, it has become recognized that dental conditions and diseases are inseparably con- nected with general or systematic conditions, and that, therefore, the dentist must be prepared and trained to take his place as a specialist in the art of medicine. In order that such training may be acceptably given the dental student, it is impera- tne that he have access to the scientific laboratories as well as to the training that can be given only in the hospitals. Under the new plan this can all be accomplished to greater ad -antage than is possible with the present arrangement. The close co-operation of the medical and dental departments can only be had when the schools are situated on the saine campus and in proper relation to the hospitals. It is the aim of the trustees and administrative officers of Indiana university to have the best c ental school in America; therefore, the future of dental education in Indiana is felt to be very bright. ' — F. R. Henshaw. - ' ■d,. ' W ' W ' P PjuI V. McSutt ! ■., oi School of Law School of Law The Indiana university School of Law, the oldest of the state university law schools west of the Alleghenies, and the oldest of the professional schools of Indiana univer- sity, was formally opened in 1842, and with the exception of a 12-year suspension from 1877-1889, it has been in continuous operation. It has been a member of the Associa- tion of American Law Schools since the formation of that organization, and has appeared on all lists of approved law schools issued by the Council on Legal Education of the American Bar Association. The aim of the School of Law, giving effect to a provision in the statute of 1838 under which Indiana university was organized, is to provide a well rounded education in the science of law. As a professional school, its design is to afford students the best possible preparation for actual practice in any state in which the principles of Anglo- American Law prevail. In keeping with these purposes, the law school has maintained consistently high standards of admission and graduation. In addition to preparing students for practice, the law school seeks to make definite constructive contributions to the science of law. It has editorial supervision of the Indiana Law Journal, the official publication of the Indiana State Bar Association, and is in charge of the research work for the Indiana Corporations Survey Commission. The members of its faculty have written case-books, textbooks and articles dealing with practically all fields of the law. — Paul McXutt. It ) School of Education The School of Education has the status of full equality with the other professional schools of the University, exercising full liberty in determining its courses of study and curricula leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education. Graduate work is organized in each of the following fields: supervision of elemen- tary education, rural education, secondary education, school administration, educational psychology, history and philosophy of education, and vocational education. Courses are offered in these fields leading to the degrees of Master of Science, Master of Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy. The School of Education has for its major functions the preparation of graduate students for work in administration, supervision and instruction in public schools, and ioi the work of instruction and administration in normal schools, colleges and univer sities; the provision of special training for teachers who expect to teach in the elementary and secondary schools 5 the carrying on of experimental work in elementary and secon darv education, and the operation of a bureau of co-operati ' e research with a view to aid mg in the improvement of school practice. — H. L. Smith. WW 4 ' m School of Commerce cwd Finance This school is an expansion of the old one-term course in political economy which in the early 80 ' s was taught by the professor of philosophy. In 1885-86 a professor of economics and sociology was added to the department of history and political science. In the following year a separate department of social science and economics was established. It expanded during the next fifteen years, and in 1902 a number of business courses were introduced. The School of Commerce and Finance as a distinct part of Indiana university was authorized by the board of trustees in 1920. In taking this step the board recognized that it was the function of the state Uni- versity to discover and train for effective participation in social life the business administrator as well .is the teacher, the lawyer, the doctor, the scientist, the engineer, the writer, the artist, the political ,ind religious leader. There was a conviction that there existed an urgent need for the same kind ot systematic training in business that is demanded in the older professions. The constantly growing complexity and sensitiveness of business make it very difficult for the young man who enters this calling directly from high school to obtain a broad and comprehensive understanding of busi- ness principles and relationships. The chief objecti e of the School of Commerce and Finance is to train students to analyze and think out the situations which confront business men, so as to be able to formulate policies and to make sound busi- ness judgments. The ever-recurring task of the businc- man i to make prompt and accurate decisions. To do this he must understand a multitude of relationships; the relation of his particular business to other enterprises that supply materials, market his products, provide funds, assume risks, or furnish transportation facilities; his relation to competitors; his relation to cyclical movements; his relation to his physical environ- ment, and finally his relation to society and the government. Here is material for a curriculum disciplinar in character, cultural in its implications, and adapted to individual and social needs. As a means of contrib- uting to the breadth of training, our curriculum requires the study of economics, political science, ethics psychology and English literature, Avith freedom to elect other subjects in the College of Arts and Sciences. The business world is recognizing more and more the value of the training provided by the collegiate schools of business. Their readiness to accept our graduates shows their willingness to co-operate in a most cordial and practical w.ay in effecting an easy adjustment of college graduates to business life. The progress which our 378 graduates have made encourages us to believe that the training which they ived here h.as been of material benefit to them. - f — W. . Rawles ■jMMMi: Cn r hii ' tms . W. Merrill of School of Ml School of Music In 1921 the board of trustees of Indiana university established the School of Music, appointing Prof. B. Winfred Merrill dean. Since that time the school has grown rapidly to its present enrollment of more than 1,100 in regular music classes and 90 degree students. The School of Music gives its students a complete education in the science and art of music and prepares them for professional careers. It furnishes exceptional advantages for graduate work to teachers, artists, and other professional musicians for opportunities for advanced and intensive spe- cialization. At present, however, the School of Music is able to offer these exceptional opportuni- ties to only a very small per cent of the music students of the state of Indiana. The demand for music education through the University of this state insures for Indiana the largest music school in the Middle West. Adequate housing for such a school is provided for in the present building plan for Indiana university, and until this is realized it is impos- sible to add faculty and equipment, or have a larger enrollment than that of the past three years. The University orchestra under the direction of Dean Merrill offers an opportunity for the serious study of the best in orchestral literature. During the past years the devel- opment of the orchestra in size and efficiency has made it an important factor in the musi- cal life of the students. Supplementing the University orchestra is a second orchestra under the direction of Miss Winifred Merrill. Vacancies in the first orchestra are filled from this group. The ensemble class, composed of the advanced students in violin, viola cello and piano is also organized and directed by Miss Merrill. The men ' s glee club and girls ' glee club are student o rganizations under the direc- tion of Douglas D. Nye and John L. Geiger, respectively. The University chorus is composed of the members of both glee clubs and all Univer- sity students who wish to enroll. Conducted by Prof. Edward Bailey Birge, and assisted by visiting artists, the chorus presented the Messiah for this year ' s study. -B. W. Merrill. % w rz. Qj ' m ' n t us Fernaudiis Payne Dean of Gradual School Graduate School The Graduate School is so merged with the other schools and colleges of the Univer- sity that it does not stand apart as the School of Medicine or Law. Its faculty consists of men and women who teach graduate students and who give part of their time to research or constructive work of some sort. These teachers are found, for the most part, in the College of Arts and Sciences, but they may be In any of the special schools, and will be found there more and more as graduate work develops in these schools. The students in the Graduate School are those who have completed a college course and who wish to continue their studies, usually in some special subject, or closely related group of subjects. In some instances this work is done merely for the sake of learnrng; in others the student has some profession in mind. The method of teaching in the Graduate School is different from that of the Univer- sity. Here the student is taught to rely upon himself more and more and upon his teacher less and less. He is taught to use the literature of his field, to evaluate, and to thmk independently. Most important of all, he is trained in the methods of research. Our Graduate School is just as great as the teachers who make up its faculty plus the equipment which the University gives these teachers for doing their work. Lack of space forbids telling what we have. A word as to what I hope the future may bring: The students are already here, and they are coming in still greater numbers. I hope I may see larger numbers of great teachers and scholars in all departments and schools. While build- ings and equipment are secondary, they are essential and first quality work cannot be done without them. I hope I may see more buildings properly equipped to provide greater facilities for teaching and research. Further, I hope I may see graduate teaching and research grow more in the professional schools. Along with these changes, I hope to see a more scholarly attitude among faculty and students. -Fernandus Payne. I sA 4 ' ' i m i Z [ii] Itidhuia of the Future T„ HiRTV THOUSAND State cciucators and students o£ Indiana university are the inspiration of a mighty dream — a dream that looks a quarter of a century or more into the future of the educational system of the great Hoosier state. They dream of a super-university. They dream of a university for the education of millions of Indiana men and women in centuries to come. Their dream is not unfounded. They do not dream of a university of towers, or of phenomenal architecture, as the artist of modern times is wont to paint in his depiction of dreams of a future man-made city. They do not dream of a university that would be the product of scientific discov- eries, or of scientifically applied knowledge. What science promises to do for civilization is too abstract. This dream of education is concrete. It cannot be an illusion or an error because it seems to be possible; and it is easily probable that the consummation of this dream may be reached. Nothing in imagination which would give a vivid impression of a magnificent unix ' er- [34] c4 p bu sity should be left out if one is to vis- ualize a tremendous 1950 Homecoming of Indiana universit) ' — a Homecoming which would be the peer of 35 other such celebrations — a Homecoming which would mark the close of the greatest quarter of a century of progress that education in Indiana has ever known. At this Homecoming there would be a sensational football game between the strongest teams in the nation; there would be a battle in the massive concrete stadium which would be the attraction of more than 90,000 persons from all over the Middle West; there would be a mammoth pep session the night be- fore the game in a huge university audi- torium; there would be a magnificent Homecoming dance on a spacious dance floor of a large university union build- ing; there would be a pow-wow cli- maxed by a bonfire that would be enough to light the campus of the greatest uni- versity of the country; there would be Homecoming celebrations of many fra- ternities and sororities whose homes would form a colony costing over a million dollars, there would be a spectacular game with all the parading of a noted Indiana band — a band not of a hundred pieces, but augmented fivefold; and most of all, there would be an INDIANA VICTORY. V ictory in truth it would be. A tremendous triumph on the gridiron would be only the victory of the hour. The University would revel in a gigant ic success. To 50,000 alumni it could show what a quarter of a century of intensive drilling and driving does for a state school. To 50,000 alumni it could actually show itself as a super-universitv T ,e OuJ h-Jugle From the Ai [3S] The Home- of Pren,lei:t Br .. Already has the University started on its stupendous campaign which bids fair to end in that victory. Indiana uni- versity is growing rapidly on a site where there is every possibility of a con- tinued expansion. Nothing can stop it. Last November, when hundreds of alumni congregated on the campus for the Homecoming festivities, there were many visible signs of that development which seemed to herald the realization of their dream of victory. It seemed that the campus was actually a forerun- ner of that super-university. Many vis- itors found, besides general improve- ment of streets in the campus, remodeling and repainting of some buildings, that the growth of the campus has found a new boundary which is now the most beautiful street in Bloomington, Jordan avenue, a thoroughfare lined with 14 costly organization homes of fraternities and sororities. This newly created colony was the attraction of every vis- itor to the campus. Without a doubt it appeared to some proud alumni that the first part of this great quarter of a century program of development had already taken shape. For the first time they saw a large concrete stadium, dedicated two years before, filled to capacity; they saw a future cluster of limestone buildings in the southern part of the campus where already arose the two amazing structures, Memorial dormitory for women, and Com- merce hall, both products of the memorial building campaign; and they saw, too, the Men ' s gymnasium and a new addition to the library. These are noteworthy examples of the beginning of a tremendous age of development. Obscure from the glamor of a buzzing university, yet tucked away in the most dignified spot on the campus — a retreat for dignity itself — is the beautiful home of the chief executive, William Lowe Bryan. As hundreds of visitors drove through the campus admiring its autumnal beauty, they could not miss a glance into the sedate estate of the President, where a colonial home sits on a stage of natural beauty so characteristic of the campus. ' ictory is only in the offing. The Homecoming of 1950 will center its activities about y. I Field House Under Construction tf y .. M Aerial View of Memorial Hall one gigantic building that is now in the making. Hundreds of students and alumni have pledged over a million dol- lars for the erection of a magnificent Union building to contain every facility needed for the modern university, and to be a model for all other educational institutions in the country. The location has not been announced, but the build- ing itself has been planned and univer- sity men and women are proud of those plans. What a help it will be in spelling that word victory when its erection is finally realized! Athletics, with the new field house planned for the development of every sport in which the school participates, — scholar- ship, religious education, science, business research, education and extension — all are promised victories. Ten years into the future is as far as the dreamers have had time to look, and yet, if the program for that period is carried out in detail, it will bring about a vast improvement on the campus, although it may be trivial with what the quarter of a century may bring. On the campus alone are planned a large new power plant, an addi- tion to Wylie hall; a building for the ever-expanding school of education; an addition to Owen hall; a building for the geology, zoology and botany museums and ciepart- ments; an auditorium; an administration building; a building for the school of music; a building for the school of journalism; and finally a group of small buildings, the most important of which will be an addition to Science hall for the physics department. Seven or eight other buildings are planned to be erected in the university area in Indianapolis. .■11 this will be done in ten years. With such an auspicious beginning, such a great group of plans, and such an excel- lent opportunity afforded the university, there is nothing but ultimate victory — victory for the students of the present, of the past and of the future. Victory is looming every- where. It will be a gigantic victory for all the vital elements of citizenship in Indiana; it will mean a winning university and a triumphant Indiana. 11 t! mi ' n in Profosed Union Building V ttempts have been made to portray student life in its several phases, depicting divers changes in the beliefs and unbeliefs of the thousands passing through the institutional centers of the world each year, but the never changing foundation of a university is composed of its four groups — the classes. Brotherhoods and sisterhoods — fraternities and sororities — fade off into the horizon as the hundreds who compose the various classes, those who are graduated the same year, come back to their alma mater. Students may become members of organizations, and they may belong to a different political faction, but they all belong to one of the four groups which form the basis of their university. Each year a new numeral is added to the list of the alumni, and entered on the records of the University. Once a member of his class, however, the student who leaves I. U. this year will bear Indiana, ' 28, until eternitv Z - W.-Ji ir bviius% M ■V y m .. ■■jS C [39] . -:; S k £Sc J ' )H C. Al.l. DREDGE Anderson . . B. History I.L. B. Law 1 Acacia; Phi Delta Phi, sec; tary, ■25- ' 26; President Fres man law cl.i 4. •34 -25: I.inco league .rrr.t.rv -1 ■:;, pro dent, •- ' -■■■■- 1 ' 1. i club, Sf. r, - , ■, ,11. ' 26- ' 27; -c ,; . ! -, n ' l. ' l! ' n ' t ' ' liH. ' i ' r l ' , ' n:,,mltu dent ' (■.tito ' r of jndi ' ana ! Jn-irnal. M KioN Aker Reelsville . . B. ClH-mi!try K.nppa Delta Rho; Alpha Chi Sigma 1 M AUDE Arthur Cra ford5ville A. B. E,,glhh Alpha Omicron Pi; German club A- 1 ! ' i ■1 V : 1 ■l ' ' ' ] M ARGARET AnDERSON Noblesville A. B. Malhematks r I ' r: Fred W. Anglin Leesburg- B. S. Commerce Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi ; Beta Gamma Sigma Ri_ TH C. Anderson Kort Wayne A: B. Englhh Kappa Delta: Arbutus st; ' 26; Coed editor Arbutus, ' 3 Daily Student staff, ' 25 ' 2 Women ' s Panhellenic counc ■2o- ' 2S: El Ateneo Espan ' 2(i; Tree and Ivy Planti Carrie Lee Alf Dublin, Virginia A. B. English Alpha Chi Onu- Spanish club h m M A. B. C i,-mis ry Kappa Sigma Alplia Chi Sigma; Phi Delta Kappa. ■■:_ ' :; Mm:.- ui Mij: -i-;,i£ ' ; ,i ' Cl.tM BUCHER Mgm.i Chii Footb.iU, -24- 26; Baseball, ' 24- ' 28; Sen- or class president; Sphinx :l„b; Track, ' 24- ' 28. Alpha Kappa Psi ; Ga , 4 f [41] jS Thora Aileen Bodey Rising Sun A. B. ErigUih Audrey Benner Elkha t A. B. English Y. W C. A. cabi net , W. A A. Board; Mem ori 1 Regl- ment. county chai rni n; J.m- .or c ass, secret ry I. U. Seatrix Bumpas Kappa Delta; Arbut 26; Student Interests Marie Bagnoli Indianapolis A. B. English Theta Phi Alpha (Mrs.) Arthelma R Bynum Bloomington A. B. Malhemalhs Euclidean circle Geneva Burvvell Churubusco A. B. English Mabel R. Beaver and Political Sci( K atharine Boc Osgood A. B. English -KHOP Ph Y i Mu; Cosmopolita W. C. A. cabinet n club; Student I Dorothy Isabel Busby Lapel A. B. Home Economics Home Economics club H Catherine Jane Brown Goshen A. B. Psychology | 4 Alpha Chi Omega; Y. W. C. f] A. cabinet, ' 27- ' 28. : • ' ,1 NiLAH V. BYRU Anderson [43] o4-inbuiius . % Mkri.in M. Ha Sigma Chii Delta Sigma Pi; Chi G:imma Tau jzAPbutus II 1 : Lamna HniN LiiKis- TENER Monroe B. P. S. M. Music Glee club; W. A. A. i Gcr man club; Chorus; Studcn Interests committee, count; chairman. Margaret Ellen Caubli A. B. English Nellie A. Clark Bloomington B. P. S. M. Music Beta Sigma Omicron; Out- ing club, president, ' 27- ' 28 ; W. A. A. board, ' 26- ' 2S. Mildred Clinton Yonkers, N. Y. A. B. English Alpha Chi Omega, Cosmu politan club, secretir -trcis urer, ' 27- ' 28i Classical club, ' 27- ' 28i English club, ' 28, Y. W. C. A. sub-cabmet, ' 1 Ruth E. Custer Columbus A. B. English Alpha Chi Omega; Pleiades, secretary, •27- ' 28; Jordan River Revue, ' 25- ' 26; Campus Affairs, ' 26; Arbutus, sopho- Junior Prom Jcnt Interests Mildred J. Cornell Bloomington Antrim S. Catterton Kenosha, Wis. A. B. Econ Si);nia Nu ; Sphinx club F..„ik- 11, ' 25- ' 26- ' 27. Ruth Cortfriend .•J E. Home Eco Gladys Radcliffe Chew Bloomington B. M. Pipe Organ Wallace Henry Coles Niles, Mich. B. S. Accounting Alpha Kappa Psi ' 25- ' 26; club. James Avas Cooley Scottsburg A. B. Mathematics Irene Coate Kokomo B. S. Commerce A. W. S., president; Senior class, vice-president; Phi Chi Theta, treasurer. H [46] CA L aiS i £ ' ■ -. Alice Adaline Ci.ikton Peru A B. English RGiNiA Lee Cox Bellevue, Ky. A. B. English Alpha Omicron V Frank W. Carter B. S. Commerce Alpha Tau Omega; Alpli Kappa Psi; Basketball, stu dent •25- ' 2( club. Grace Cacfman Gallipolls, Ohio A. B. Zoology Zcta Tau Alpha Dorothy Elizabeti Drane Greensburg B. S. Co„:merce Phi Chi Theta Ethel M. Davidson Star City A. B. Home Economic. Hume Economics club ernon Harlow Duke Gary A. B. Economics Theta Chii Alpha Kappa Psi. Theodore R. Dan Sigma Alph.i Mu, F Kappaj History and : Science club, preside ' 28; Interfraternity Freshman Law cla president; Demurrer SuERRiLL S. Deputy Dugger B. S. Co,nmerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; Alpha Kappa Psi. Haleord E. Dawson Sigma Pi; Delta Sigma Pi Sphinx club; .Aeons; Unioi board, ' 26- ' 27; Track, senio .Martha E. Dippell Huntington A. B. English Kappa Delta; Daily Stude club; B : A M. ..f ., ; . f r. A Cri-ensburg A. B. English Phi Omcgn Pi; Y. W. C. A., cabinet, •27- ' 28, sub-cahlru-t, •26- ' 27i English club, presi- Jcnt; Classical club; League of Women Voters, secretary, •26- ' 27, •27- ' 28. Al GUST 1. DiAN Gary A. B. AiitJ omy ijuii Physiology Theta Kappa Psi Robert Dkkisbach Fort Wayne B. S. Physics Sigma Nu; Scabba Blade; Band majo Jordan River Revu |unN- Joseph Daniei B. S. Co Commerc Band . r Ir R n r W ALrtR M E- M- RushMlk i B Htuory Alpha Tau Omeg Wrestling team, ' ' . ' 28; Y. M. C. . ' 26- ' 27, ' 27- ' 28i Mm(v Ruth Eaki- ;. X. lUsli.ry I? El.DRIDCE Royal Centre A. B. History History and Political S. club; Le Cercle Frai Glee club, ' 27- ' 28i V. , ' IAN ' E. Eli.iS r.ench Lick .-i. B. English Alpha Omicron Pi Mori linarJ, Y. W. C. A. cabin Katherine Eckert Osgood A. B. History Phi Mui Pi Lambda Theta; Phi Beta Kappa. 1 ' ,. Paul Emert Indianapolis B. S. Commerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Kappa P i. €. [49] WtM cSMju 1 7 ' - 4a- i KtLso Franklp i. B. Malhemalic. Mary Elizabeth Ferguson BoonvlUe A. B. English Kappa Alpha Thet.i Junior class officer; Pleiades; A. W S. council, ' 26- ' 27. John Ellis Fell Greentown A. B. Economic! Lambda Chi Alphas Gamma Eta Gamma; Chi Gamma Tau; Y. M. C. A., ' 25- ' 26; Band, executive committee, ■24- ' 25. Kathryn H. Freeman Winamac - ' B. S. General Business Theta Phi Alpha; Phi Chi Theta; Coed Rifle team, ' 27- ' 28. n I 1 , - Clarence B. Forkner f Terre Haute - B. S. Accounting Delta Sigma Pi; Wrcsll,,,. , Union board. 4- - Martha Catherine Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Chi Mary Kathryn Grant Fort Wayne A. B. Latin Kappa Delta; W. A. A. Memorial drive, ' 2 5- ' 26; Stu ch: Carl E. Graha Elverda Theresa goffinet Tell City Lela L. Greenwood Oxford A. B. French Phi Omega Pi; Y. W. C. A sub-cabinet, ' 27- ' 28 ; Le Cercle Francais; Pan-Hel, secretari and treasurer, ' 27- ' 28, repre- IsABEL Good % ' jM c f ba itius Tall E. Hamilion Oaklandon A. B. Mathematics University b.-ind, ' 2 University orchestra ; C politan club, president F.LWooD L. Heine Fort Wayne Theta Chi; Skull and Cr centi Basketball, suphom. managers Junior Prum cu Mildred |. Hamilton Linton A. B. Psychology Kappa Kappa Gamma Gayle J. Hunt Richmond A. B. A,u,to„n ' and Physiology Phi Beta Pii Skeleton club Lawrence W. Hess Nancy Hurd Frankfort A. B. English Phii Sigma Delta Phi; Garrlck club; Pleiades; Jordan River Revue, ' 2+- ' 25 i Campus Affairs, ■27- ' 28. M ppj NoRRis Edwin Harold Indianapolis A. B. Economics am! Sociology Phi Kappa Psi Mary Hirsch A. B. Geology Pi Beta Phi; Commerce club Irene Irwin .■!. B. Home Economics Delta Delta Delta; Seni Home Economics club, prei dent, ' 27. Kathryn Isbell Elkhart J. B. English Kappa Alpha The Walter M. Isenberg Gary B. S. General Business Studio Players, ' 27- ' 2S , Lady Windermere ' s Fan; Peg O ' My Heart; Shall We Join the Ladies r Fred O. Jeffers Coalmont LL. B. Lciio cJff ' ibui. - - , -r) , M- 4 Nelson Morris Jc Orleans B. S. Co,, Delta Upsilon; Beta Gamma Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Base- ball, Harold S. Johnson Monrovia A. B. History Miriam Johnson MES Johnson Fairmount B. S. Commerce Phi Kappa Psi ; Beta Gamma Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi, Basketball, senior manager, Skull and Cr li- :iM If i [57] Vivian Ji;i-i-krs Ireland A. II. Roljny Marshall Jo: Chicago, 111. A. B. Ecovo Alva M. Ki.ine Indianapolis A. B. E,!£lis : Reta Thet.i Pi Opal Kemper Frankfort A. B. English Norman R. Kem New Castle B. S. Accou„i:,:g Julius Elmer Klee Indianapolis LL. B. Law Delta Thet.1 Phi Rl.M I.I. Kll. n N, v . ll..,n,v A. H. Economc! Sigma Chii Sphinx clubj Boosters ' clubj PanhcUenic , ' 25- ' 26i Interfrater- , ' 28; Football, freshman, ' 23, ' 2 l Memorial drive, ' 11, Ci ML: l cJf-f buiius ' W- -L - M John Max Li Kokomo irector, ' 28 i Tlut A. B. Ei:gl:s , and Fr, Le Ccrcle Francais, pr William Taft Lesf Eta Sigma Phi, nati president i Scabbard Blade; Classical club; I dean Circle; Rifle te Shall We Join the Ladie Freshman cross cou Ruby E. Miller Kern J. Mi Sigma Nu; Beta Gamni, Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi ; Russell McDermott n FitKi) p. Mustard Rensselaer .). B. ; o;v Dek.i; Senior Malcolm C. Malleite Chicago, 111. A. B. F,u„u„:;.! Dilt.i UpMlnn; Junior Prom Ji.iiini.ni, ' 1 ' , Jordan River Rc-iui-, publicity ' director, ' 27; Arbutus, organization editor, ' 27. « Sheldon A. Meef Whiting B. S. Commerce Delta Upsilon Marv McGinni! Columbus A. B. Etiglis , Delta Delta De Altha Mercer Bloomington m m ianuel F. Miller Brazil A. B. Economics ,ind Delta Tau Delta; Student Interests 5 ' r 4in t iifiii% ' V i r- 7 MlLDKliD MaV Indianapolis A. B. French Pi Beta Phi; Spanish Lc Cerclc Francais; Si Interests committee. Lucii.i- AuEos Mkans ShclbyviUe B. P. S. M. Music Pi licta Phii Jordan Ri Revue, ' 27; Campus Aft.i ' 27; Glee dub, ' 2 - ' 2S. Hazel Alzada Mc A. B. Mathcnuuii! Euclidean Circle; Francais; Plivi W. C. A.; Iiul Virginia Alice Mt) i Chi Omega; Y. W. C. A., president, ' 27- ' 28, cabiin-t. ' 26- ' 27; Cosmopolitan club Jane Carolyn Mi Ln Porte A. H. English Delta Delta Delt. A.; Outing club, secretar.v, ' 26,s«im, ' 27; Campus Affair Daily Student stall Ruby Gladys Mitchei Morjranto n A. B. Che ;,}, ,■Pf- IHERT VV. MlI.I.KR Indianapolis . ,. S. I..KL Lambda Chi Alpha: Phi Delta Phi; Scabbard and Blade; Skull and Crescent; Major R. O. T. C ' 24- ' 25; Demurrer club. ' 28- ' 29; Orator Sen- Law class; Member Board of Editors of Indiana Law Journal, ' 27- ' 28, ' 28- ' 29. Glex Elsuorth Mord Fort Wayne I.L. B. La:v Gamma Eta Gamma John Neu ion Mitchell Bloomington A. B. Geology Charles McCartney Chillicothc, Ohio LL. B. Lax Gamma Eta Gamma Gladys Martin Lapel A. B. English Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board, president; A. W. S., dent, ' 27- ' 2S; Student Inter- Edna Marie Muller Vincennes B. P. S. M. Mu!: - ICappa Kappa Gam Girls ' Glee club, ' ZS- ' IJ Orchestra, ' 27- ' 28. A. B. Ps chology and Philosophy Phi Beta Kappa; Psychology club, president, ' 27- ' 28. feA William C. Miller Bloomington English Beta Theta Pi; Freshman class, vice-president; Sphinx club; Skull and Crescent; g team, ' 26- ' 27, cap- 8. if I s.My ' . ._■.:Mc - t iJi s ' :iil4 LliNNA RVTH M A. B. English S:gm:i Kappa Mary Melton Tipton A. B. Bolany Delta Zetai Pleiades; W. A. A.; Intramural board. Marjorie Louise Morris A. M. Lai in Pi Lambda The Sigma Phi; Classic.! Roy Evertt Meredith A. B. History History and Political Scien club; Cadet club; Euclidc; Circle. Roberta North Bluffton A. B. History Kappa Alpha Theta; Pie iades; W. A. A., ' 24- ' 25 Jordan River Revue, ' 25- ' 2 William W. Nicf Physiology lizabeth Neely Indianapolis A. B. French Delta Zeta; Pleiades; Le Cercle Francais; El Club Es- RuTH Newcomb Logansport A. B. Mathematics Euclidean Circle Martha N.- thalie Xdrman Bloomington A. B. Fine Arts Girls ' Glee club; Lillian E. O ' Bannon A. B. Mathematics Chi Omega; Pleiades; Sti dent Interests committee; ! W. C. A. cabinet, ' 26- ' 27. LLNE Eleanor Ormsby «V _ Bloomington A. B. Philosophy Delta Zeta w ' aul M. Oluer Fort Wayne LL. B. L„ ' .v C. Dale Owens PoscyvUle A. B. Physics Kappa Delta Rho; Phi Beta Kappa; Debating squad, 26- •27; Neizer Medal; Eucli- dean Circle; Physics cluh, president, ' 27- ' 28; Y. M. C A. cabinet, ' 26- ' 27- ' 28. •RNELL Clyde PLANf Logansport B. S. Commerce and ¥nu Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi Mable Fern Pitt.nl LaPaz Eta Sigma Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Classical club Jessie Holland Pinnick West Baden A. M. Lathi Eta Sigma Phi; Pi Lambda Theta; Cosmopolitan club; Cla club. John E. Pitzer Kokomo B. S. Commerce H Carroll O. Pitcher Martinsville B. S. Accoutiii„z ce Amelia Pe A. B. History Alpha Delta Pi; Unive Orchestra, ' 25- ' 26; Hi: and Political Science i.pH Graham Palmer Washington A. B. English Phi Gamma Delta Margaret Alice Poor Etna Green A. B. Mathematics Memorial drive, ' 24; W. A. A.; Student Interests com- mittee, ' 28; University or- chestra; Euclidean Circle; Daily Student staff, ' 27- ' 28. h lorence G. Pearse North Liberty A. B. Home Economics Phi Omega Pi; Home Eco- nomics club, president, ' 26; Women ' s Panhellenic, ' 27; Home Economics prize, ' 26; Arbutus Beauty section, ' 27. chard Frank Polk Gary R. S. Physical Education A WlJ: 4 u c iaM, Jir biiius V f% Fl.oVD AVKKV Pkyi nimmiington A. B. Clumhlry Alplm flu Sigm:l -.iA Ann Pktro 14 A. B. Home Economics Pill Beta Kappa; Omici Nu; Indiana club; Ho. Lois L. Peterson Decatur A. B. Etiglish Delta Gamma; Studio PI ers; Taming of the Shre cast; Girls ' Glee club. Franklin Petry, Jr. Lowell LL. B. Law Ai.EiA Geneva Pelt New Harmony B. S. Home Economu Home Economics clut Ellen Elizaisli ii Pk Richmond A. B. Home Economic :u .Almeda Price Wayne A. B. Engl is : Zi-t.i Ta V. W. C. A. Ralph K. Pinnick West Baden A. B. Mathematics Cadet Lieutenant Colonel, es W. Peterson General Busine J- M ■s ' •rw - d.i f y Irene Pielemeier Freelandville A. B. L ii ' i W. A. A.; All-Campus M al dri Katharine Brown Pagi Indianapolis A. B. History William S. Robertson Salem A. B. ChcmiitTS Thcta Chi; Phi Chi; Alph; Chi Sigma; Senior manage Intramural athletics. Dorothy Rader Bloomington A. B. Latin Eta Sigma Phi; Classical club, president Minnie Remley Waynetown A. B. English Gamma Phi Beta Jane Rosamond Risser North Manchester A. B. English Delta Gamma; Theta Sigi Phi; English club; Wome Panhellenic representative. Fi.lEN RooDA Gary A. B. English Kappa Kappa Gamma; . . A.; Spanish club; Jord River Revue. I.dVlJE Rhudy Boonville A. B. French Delta Delta Delta; Women ' : Panhellenic representative; Le Cercle Francais. Florence Lila Roth Boonville B. S. Commerce Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Chi Theta, president; Women ' s Panhellenic representative; Y. W. C. A.; Outing club; Girls ' Commerce club. R mona Rho.ads Darlington A. B. Latin Classical club Sarah Ruge Lowell A. B. Home Economics Chi Omega; Omicron Xu W. .A. .A. ; Home Economic club. i Martha Roth Bloomington A. B. History PI Beta Phi ±. [67] i mj.,. l c f buiius 1.1 Dow L. Richardson Van Buren A. B. English Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Delta Chi: Aeons; Union board, ' 26 ' 27- ' 28, Daily Student staff, ' 2S-26, associate editor, ' 27, 1927 Arbutus, Herbert Rhchev A. B Ch,-t .:Hn Roy Rogers M idibun A. B E,:s;l WlLLl-VM E. RiLCKEN Mt Vernon P i. D. Botany Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delt.i Kappi Herman Ramsey Wadcs ille Richard E. Ray Delta Sigma Pi; Sphinx clubi Union board; Chair- man Senior Invitation com- mittee; Varsity football; ra Reynolds C.IcMlWOod A. B. English Kappa Alpha Thcta; Ple- Prom committee, ' 27; Fresh- man class treasurer; Wo- men ' s Panhellenic represen- HoRACE E. Rankin Bloomington A. B. Geology Sigma Gamma Epsilc ANCES KEAM Euclidean Circle PAri, Stewart icENE F. Springe Sullivan B. S. Education Phi Gamma Delta; Sphinx club RESTON E. Smith Kokomo B. S. Commerce X fr TtTi r t.o4 PbiJiuS ' ' - TjO m M-. Sr7 Pali, E. Spurgeon A. B. Political Scrcnce Acacia; Gamma Eta Gn: Y. M. C. A., vl«--pre?l Viuon board. Beula Sake A. B. History Kappa Delta; Plii Bet Kappa; History and PolitI Esther Lucille Silli Home Economics club Raymond Speer Phi Omega Pi; Eta Sigi Phi; Classical club; U verslty Orchestra. Dorothy Louise Scogg Bloomington A. R. Engliih Jiniir ' . r Vf- ' . ■a . )m.i WmrcoMB Sare Hloomington A. B. Malhemalics Scabbard and Blade; Y. M. C. A. cabinet; Euclidean Cir- cle; Le Ccrcle Francais. [70] [71] tr.T — - fesEEC u a s Marilita Taylor Rochester A. K. l..uin Dclt.i Delta Delt.i Classlcil club. Joseph R. Todd Bloomington A. B. Economic. Sigma Nu Gladys Tarkington Bloomington A. B. Geology Glee club, ' 24 Helen Toay Underwoi Fort Wayne A. B. Psychology Kappa Kappa Gamma; Garr club; Psychology club; as George M. Urey Ashley A. B. Physics Kappa Delta Rh Gamma Tau; Universal bandj Physics club; Math Dorris Marie Under wood Athens, Ga. A. B. Mathematics % f - ,i V . ,. m lim [75] Thomas G. Wtsi fall Hartford City A H. Chemistry Acici,! Alpha Chi Sign DtBORAU R. Wallace Knightstoun A. B. Euglish Chi Omega; Y. W. C. A. sub-cabinet; District chair- Donald A. Young , liellcfontaine, Ohio A. B. Economics Delta Upsilon; Sigma Delta Chi, Editor The Daily Stu- dent ; Editor Red Book, ' 27. ,, HlKOJI Yanagida Kobe, Japan f ' A A. B. Chemislry ' H f Cosmopolitan club jfc W S Robert M. Zalser IP Indianapolis J B. S. Commerce SmM Phi Gamma Delta; Captain, 7W 3i Swimming team, -e- ' l?; ' Football; Swimming team, ' 24- ' 27. % [77] To an undergraduate It seems that the senior year would be one of rest and gentle peace after the struggles for fame and notoriety of the sophomore and junior years. But the seniors themselves note no revo- lutionary differences. Little tasks like thesis writing and practice teaching make them cast longing eyes to those former days when they were so happy and so carefree. Thus it goes — every class thinks another promises better things. The senior class has given, and continues to give, many things to its alma mater. Among these gifts are new Phi Beta Kappa keys, corduroy trousers of varying degrees of cleanliness, law canes, and new alumni. Without any one of these, Indiana would not be the same place. From this class come all the presidents, too. There are house presidents, club presidents, honorary presidents, and all the other kinds of presidents one reads about in the newspapers. Presidents are always seniors; it adds so much to the presidential office. The class of 1928 can leave the campus with the certain feeling that they have done bigger and better things. The athletes have distinguished themselves since 1924. This class along with the other s contributed time and effort to the campaign in behalf of the state schools in 1927. These are but a few of their achieve- ments. To name them all would be useless, for these deeds have already passed into the history of the Uni- All that remains now is to say salve alque vale — hail and farewell. And good luck. ' illiam Lowe Bryan Senior Reception The Senior Reception for faculty members and seniors was held by President and Mrs. Bryan April 28 in the Men ' s gymnasium. Following the usual custom the gymnasium was transformed from its usual appearance into a place of beauty by decorations. Last year the trans- formation was effected by an old fashioned garden. A small, white vine covered cottage was erected at the south end of the building as a background for the entertainers. The walls were decorated with vine and chrysanthemum covered trellises and the ceiling, in keeping with the general scheme of decoration, was a canopy of strands of green and various shades of yellow. The guests entered through a white arch at the entrance and passed to the left where the receiving line headed by Paul Rector, senior president, greeted them. Entertainment was given by the Glee club under the direction of Prof. D. D. Nye and by two student entertainers, Eugene Ramey, who sang several numbers, and Mildred Cornell who played several piano selections. sc Juniors With sophomore year apprenticeships over, the junior class really begins its years of achievement. Per- haps the most important products of the class are the Arbutus and the Junior Prom. The Prom was threat- ened with financial troubles this year, but the officers of the class made it possible bv assuming the liability for any loss. Those members of the class not engaged in publishing the Arbutus, or giving the Junior Prom, found many other worthy activities to enter. Juniors are in everything, and rightfully so because the junior year is the logical one for the most activity. Having been on the campus long enough to get firmly established and yet not in danger of leaving by graduation like the seniors, they assume the offices of honor and responsi- bility, or at least as many .is they can conveniently get their hands on. Many members of this class have entered athletics to the great advantage of Indiana ' s teams. Scheid, Wells, Harrell, Bennett, and Garrison are but a few of the junior roll of honor. If a record of past achievements is any prophecv of the future, one can safelv sav that these juniors continue to make themselves heard of in their senior rear. Surelv a bright future is ahead of them. Junior Uzc Chss Ojficers Clarence Deltsch, president i Lewis Welland, Ralph Shoemaker, Russell Hu fi ■k- -,. ■jmte JC :. ' c£ Alien II a Grigihs Prom Quc, „ Junior Prow Featured by fear of no Junior Prom, the rescue of the social event by the Prom chairman and three others, and the increased business of pressing establishments, haberdasheries, plastic surgeons, beauty parlors, and barbers, the premier dance of Indiana university ' s somewhat drab social season came and went Friday night and Saturday morning, April 20 plus. !VIcKinne s Cotton Pickers, of Detroit, Gene Goldkette ' s dark complexioned representatives, assisted by the medieval decorations, the tuxedo of Charles Bennett, halfback extraordinary and president of the junior class, and, of course, the gown worn by Miss Arlenna Grigshy, t he Theta ' s Prom Queen this year, made the dance altogether successful from the altruistic point of view. With the fear of not making their grades removed, members of the sophomore class pinned on the new badge, and set forth to win more honor for themselves and Indiana university. As the result, we see sopho- more managers of athletic teams, sophomore assistants on the Arbutus, and reporters for the Daily Student on every hand. This is the great class for apprenticeships, which bear fruit in the more advanced positions members of the class will hold in the next two years. Considering such well-known names in athletics as McCracken, Strickland, Gill, Catterton, Faunce, and Magnabosco, and a good many more, it is easily seen that this class of 1930 is really worth something on the sport page. Those not inclined toward strenuous sports have helped put over Campus Affairs, the Jordan River Revue, and other worthy things that have come up during the year. In addition, the class has under- taken to give the traditional Sophomore Cotillion in a style fitting such a distinguished class. This is really the coming class of the University. With the year of apprenticeship finished, the whole school can expect great things from this group. After the showing of the sophomores this year, even the most cynical will have to admit that the old school can still hold up its head for a few years longer. i Freshmen The freshman class is always more or less of an unknown quantity. Its worth is still to be tested. The class does few things as a whole except hold the annual election in the fall and sponsor the Freshman Ball in the spring. This is the class which upperclassmen look down upon as incompetent and trifling, but it is also the class which the school must look to for its future leaders. And the freshmen always have the con- solation of thinking about the dumb sort of material which will follow them. With the complete disappearance of hazing and of the Freshman-Sophomore scrap, the newly arrived freshmen turned their energy elsewhere and succeeded in outdoing the upperclassmen in shady campus poli- tics. After one ticket was barred because of crooked work in gathering the petitions, it was generally conceded that the new generation was truly Hoosier in its early comprehension of political science. With politics safely in the background, the members of the class of 1931 have made themselves felt in practically every activity on the campus open to them. The freshman athletes have been a cause of pride to the whole campus. In other activities such as dramatics, debating, and scholarship, we find freshmen showing the upperclassmen how it is done. So it ' s not such a had sort of class after all. !l Fie fiman Uzv Class Officers Theodrre Dann, Charles White, Ward Dildine, Howard DcMe ' rsC ' j . : k .c 5.,: Athletics A, .LTHOUGH CRITICIZED and often misjudged, the present system of intercollegiate athletics is a vital part of the University. During the last few years, with the advent of a new coaching staff, Indiana ' s athletes, for the most part, have gained prowess in the world of sport. While an education is regarded as the salient point in attending a university, Indiana university has a broad scope, and her coaches are training hundreds of young men daily for the betterment of bodies as well as minds. Fall, in its picturesqueness, and football, are coming to be synon- ymous with students of the institution. Each year better teams are brought to Memorial stadium, and the Crimson face stronger oppo- nents in the different sections of the country. Indiana ' s students, like students of any university, are interested in the athletics of their alma mater, but a kind of loyalty that has been in the offing has come to be a reality, which means success for Cream and Crimson warriors. - n fi ' :y HEN THE Field House, which is now under construction, is completeci a great advancement will have been made in the development of our physi- cal plant. This building will provide for indoor football practice, track work the year ' round, ample seating capacity for basketball games, a place for early baseball practice, a general recreation place for all students, and at the same time release the gymnasium for intramural athletics and physical education fully twice as much as at present. As money becomes available it is my hope that we may construct at least two concrete tennis courts, about 25 additional clay tennis courts; outdoor handball courts; other football practice fields; and grade the present golf course, making intramural baseball and indoor baseball fields and a soccer football field which may also be used as a speedball field. A new varsity baseball diamond is planned for the near future. It is possible that such a field may be placed at the eastern edge of the campus, just south of the stadium. If we are to maintain a high standing in the Conference in all sports, it is necessary that we have both a high grade coaching staff and first class physical equipment. It is my intention to improve the physical plant as rapidly as possible and keep the quality of our present fine staff. I want to do everything possible to give Indiana university an opportunity for the best teams in all sports, and at the same time provide opportunity for the improvement of the physical welfare of the entire student body. — Z. C. Clevenger. l4 ' l cA p buius Pat Page Football Coach Athletics Trainer Ferguson 1 DiA A pits its coaches against the world. Not given to mag- nificent speeches or forays of verbal advertising, these coaches yet instill the basis of sincere admiration in their closest fol- lowers and the critical public alike. Their business keeps them in the field; there they accomplish the purposes expected of them. Indiana coaches have crashed through. They are giv- ing us bigger results every season as far as winning figures are concerned; but most gratifying of all they are cementing into the student body that elusive spirit of co-operation, the lack of which for years has made the Cream and Crimson the butt of many jokes. A remarkable interrelation of sports has been stressed since Indiana acquired its present coaching staff. Football men are urged to go out for basketball, wrestling, or swimming during their idle months. Basketball men are urged to play baseball and football. Wrestlers go out for football. Versatility, the objective of athletic climbers, is being developed in leaps and bounds. No rotarian affluence inspires Indiana to praise of its coaches. Cold figures do not lie. Note that E. C. Hayes has given the Hoosiers the most respectable standing in Western Conference track and field athletics they have ever had. Add to that the winning of the Southern Relays, and the winning of the state track championship from Notre Dame last spring. Basketball reached its highest peak this year when Everett Dean made a Big Ten champion out of a group consisting of a few juniors and many sophomores. Last year second place % -% 1 I was Indiana ' s share at the finish; and two years ago Indiana was rated in the gold star class. Dean has never coached an Indiana basketball team to lower than second place. Pat Page, with characteristic views on how to play football, last season turned out the most sensational team known on Arbutus Hill for years and years. Football here, measured orthodoxically by newspaper space given it, was a great suc- cess; but the most definite tribute comes straight from the hearts of Pat ' s fellow-countrymen — the students of old I. U. They have the assured feeling that new years will bring not one or two Minnesota games every year, but a whole retinue of them — games that will walk in the night before the glazed eyes and harried minds of our opponents. W. H. Thom gave Indiana a fine wrestling team this year. He developed individual stars among the undergraduate ranks who will be back next winter. Thom is an expert wrestler, valuable as an assistant football coach, and indispensable be- cause of his penchant for fighting and providing for future athletic years. Wally Middlesworth, still as much an all-around star as he was in his student days, helps Page with football, and Dean with basketball and baseball. Middlesworth is ideal for the task of easing temperamental freshman stars into the ranks of the varsity without shredding their confidence or their school spirit for them. Otto Strohmeier was Page ' s assistant in football. His fighting attitude and h is knowledge of the game were distinct assets. Paul Thompson coached the swimming team under the handicap of having too ordinary material, but he, like the rest of the staff, has definite plans for the future. Everett Dean ethall and Baseball Coach E. C. Hayes Track Co ' ach I 1 Ul . ' ■w:--? % ■' f ir bvlus .ti .- ii- ;C : k ' «. n fe Herman B en Captain of Football (By Appo:nt„:e,,t) ! ||B -«s  ai ■.it ' ' ' m k - ' S 1l Bi i ifei George Davis Captain of Baseball, ' 27 Robert Correll Captain of Basketball Robert Peffer Captain of Track, ' 27 m M m ' iC ' . m i z mm ' ifinTrnTnrriT i rBiMHn . ' M-.cAr buius -I I P-ii:. Directing Piactire ■I M cJI-plbvlus W. .■k2 it -- - - -jafiiL£-ivi ' :„.jjiL. Football T, O. . . Siro imeier Assislanl Coach isccndcncy of football at Indiana this year was sharply outlined against the sombre background of the many unsuccess- ful seasons of the past. Rarely recognized as weak because it had not outgrown its infancy, football here has rather played the part of a potentially great sport unable to co-ordinate its resources j lacking in some vague way the initiative and strate- gem that makes great teams out of little ones. A Spain beside an America — an Indiana beside a Michigan; such has been the popular conception for decades. The seers of the Big Ten never gave credence to statements by rival coaches that they fear the Hoosiers. Well pleased at the turn of affairs last fall, which included the tying of a gargantuan Minnesota team, 14—14; the defeat- ing of Northwestern, 1926 champions, 18—7; and frequent other examples of brilliancy and strength, Indiana now antic- ipates zealously whatever may come in the future. Doubtless that future will contain its quota of defeats for Indiana even as it does for the most illustrious teams; but the significance of accumulating power will atone for that. Indiana teams have never betrayed their fighting tradi- tion. Sunk into the most dismal defeats imaginable; suffering not only insult but injury from other schools in the Conference, our teams have always fought to the end. They fought for Cotton Berndt, and Jumbo Stiehm, and Navy Bill Ingram, exactly as they fight for Pat Page. But the era has brought l k i-:r:.. ,.-Vf - ' i m,.: I 4- new football sense to the Hoosiers, and they play the game conscious of the fact, fully believing their opponents are not too formidable anci not too great to be humbled. This con- sciousness was always healthy, restraining itself from spreading into rash optimism; it was the inner sense that put the vicious- ness of a bulldog into every play. Coach Page led the Cream and Crimson gridmen into the greatest schedule in the history of the school. Kentucky was tough, but fell; Chicago collected its reeling senses long enough to regain a lost victory; Minnesota found a new partner in the dizzy heights of stardom; Notre Dame came from behind to win by a close margin; Harvard was held insufficient until the last ten minutes; Michigan State was easily overcome; and Northwestern crashed before Indiana, preluding Purdue ' s victor} ' . More people saw Indiana play than ever before in a single season. Three times — at the Minnesota, Notre Dame, and Purdue games — Memorial stadium was taxed to hold the spec- tators. At Chicago, Northwestern and Harvard, vast crowds watched the Hoosiers in action. The nation heard about Indi- ana, but what was happier, the state of Indiana became inter- ested in what Page and his outfit were doing. Sophomores and juniors comprised the bulk anci ability of Indiana ' s squad. Practically every sophomore letterman starred throughout or at diflFerent times during the year. De- pendability as well as marked versatility characterized their work. With this year ' s freshmen they will play big time foot- ball when the season opens next fall. Roiert Talbot i M dowcd by the pall of Confe ky State for f ' rivalry betv R. O. T. C. Indiana, 21 ; Kentucky Slate, ominy, the upstarts other than the Mc Fi c first do Mis gained by Kentucky in an early uprising stung Indiana into a counter attack which ended only as Chuck Bennett ripped oil a 33 yard run Xor the first touchdown of the year. The Mountaineers stuck their tongues out again at Indiana in the second period, but the Hoosiers drove them to their three yard line, the half closing before a score materialized. Reinhardt twisted loose for a 60 yard return of Kentucky ' s kickoff in the second half. Bennett passed to Reinhardt from the 40 yard line, and then circled right end for a second touchdown. Indiana scored the only field goal in the Conference all year when Reinhardt booted the pigskin over from the 30 yard line. Hellman pounced on a blocked Kentucky punt for another touchdown in the final quarter. Hoosier passing, tackling, and interference splendid throughout. It was a good way to start the year. W ' i, ft McCrafken Recedes Long Pass for 40 ' ard Gain m Kentucky Game J y ... MSl -r Mh z Z r- M [92] Indiana, 0; Chicago, 13 October 8 and the day of the Chicago game arrived together with hope for Indiana and mis- givings along the Midway. Special trains carried cuckoo contingents of brazen backers to Chicago. Thirty thousand saw the game. In the first half, although it ended 0-0, Indiana consistently outplayed Chicago. Reinhardt startled cash customers of the Midway A. A. by returning the kickoff to his own 30 yard line. Indiana tallied a first down, and Reinhardt crashed the gate for 32 yards around right end. Two more first downs were scored before Chicago ' s line stiffened with its back to the goal. Catterton ' s attempted field goal was short. Later, Indiana was again pointed for a touchdown when a pass fizzled on fourth down. After gaining comfortably through the line in the third period, Chicago essayed a pass which was good for six points. Hard, punishing football scored another touchdown against the tiring Indiana team in the final quarter. Indiana ' s test in big time play was disappointing only to those whose emotions had run away with them before the contest. The Hoosier line responded nobly to every situation, despite two touchdowns scored against it. Chicago was menaced by the invader at every turn. m J huliai a, 6; Notre Daiue, 19 Not the Four Ho downs and a point at Me] throughout the whole year first kickoff. Reinhardt ran 45 yards to the goal throu game, giving Indiana a 6-0 lead. Niemic, first of the 1927 gridiron equestrl; first play of the second period, and kicked goal Pagemen then squatted on the turf and with Ii the rest of the half. The third quarter was not old when Dahni through left tackle to score again for the Irish luminan,-, Christy Flanagan, cross bucked f , but three others as good, were better tl irial stadium In the fourth game. The :xcellent weather prevailed and almost 20,000 fa , galloped around left end for give Notre Dame a slender a iltable courage held the upstate ard for n football players, rost the third and brightesi n additional and fin.i Disappointment lent a touch of great Two defeats, a tie game, and — were considered jubilantly by : cellar and scrape off the opprobri such tough opponents as Minneso ded the exhila) I the performan n of Indiana ' s great start, but f the Hoosiers against the Irish, victory — a mediocre assortment under ordlna jmnl returning to see Indiana pull out of the Conference n of decades of subservience. Especially gratifying against , Chicago, and Notre Dame, were the hard tackling of the Indiana forward tasks of the game. nd its penchant for performing ■ith cArf ' BH DnilJSng Ind ' iaiia. 6; Harvard, 26 The band wa; heavier, H,,r ed at Harvard. While the all-American Indiar frenzy of admiration, the Page coached footba successful, a stand against the onslaughts of worst numerical defeat «- sweeping 50,000 easterne i staging as brilliant, if ' resher Harvard eleven. ..uJ forced the issue in the first few minutes when Crosby swept the right win; iJuldwn, and Brown kicked goal. Odds were almost evened, when in the ncx iciinttt skirted the sideline and lunged over the goal with tacklers hanging to him linJcr of the first half contained climaxes which will go into the famous categor ttcn history. Only those who saw the game will know exactly the measure o fight to stem the Crimson tide, or how viciously Harvard struggled to hold its tin; h quarter was well under way bef . Rather than be v.inquished by ed Brown for Harvard, and In thf chdo the spa im aspect of defeat stalked into the Hoosiers chose to pass. It ten minutes the Intellectuals had sain produced extenuations which soothed the heart and rebuilt the hopes of the ite out at Arbutus Hill. The team was considerably crippled from its arduous had made a weary trip to Cambridge; and had not played badly after all. Only nkindness had caused hurried passes to fall into Harvard ill a big portion of the year India ia, 33 ; Mich]ga i State, 6 Coming back from the East tired and brui: before meeting Michigan State at Memorial stadli and a flock of Dads and Indiana boy scouts. played a big part In the tallzed his chance to such an extent that it won Bundy, Trobaugh, Shields, Baker, Todd, Magr well and by the close of the first half had piled Michigan took the ball on Its own 2+ yard vered by Harrell deep in State territory a min n. Magnabosco passed to Faunce on the 15 on the next play. HarrcU tossed the pigskir eased through the week ' s practice of chilly winds, low temperatures, . ' , and one of these, Faunce, capi- :ring berth in the next two games, o, and many others performed unusually 14-0 lead. ! after Indiana ' s first drive, but a fumble later, p.ived the way for the Initial touch- i line, and Faunce ran the ball across the Magnabosco for the extra point. i ' ' Seven more points were tallied by the Hoosiers In the seco doughty sophomores cleaved their way to glory through the MIchi shone through his ability to swing around the ends and toss and his work was spectacular. Although Michigan State scored six | its lead comfortably In the third period, and by quitting time 1 of the year. Michigan planting the In nd period, during which the receive passes. Occasionally .oints, Indiana had increased laJ amassed its largest total H i - A ' t f M. Trohaugh IH Indiana, 6; Purdue, 21 Almost 25,000 persons saw Purdue defeat Indiana in Memorial stadium. The Boilermakers were on the defense with the first play, and from then until the close of the first half were an unorganized eleven, cons tantly yielding ground to the offensive tactics of Page ' s backs and an assertive Hoosier line. H.irrell st.i.tcJ tlir .n.il.inche when he ran 26 yards from an ambuscade on the midfield salient. Fauncc crocked Purdue ' s rljit tackle :nid Ralay and Bennett repeated first downs. Reinhardt laced through center fur a touchdown. Purdue came back with vengeance in the second half and without ado scored a touchdown and kicked goal. Welch dedicated the fourth period by hurdling through for a score on the second play; and when in the closing minutes Harmeson snuggled up to a pass and ambled easily across the last chalk line, the issue was definitely settled. Welch kicked the point and soon afterward the Old Oaken Bucket was relinquished for another year ' s siesta in the lioilerniiker tropin- n.i.m. besi ured, but Pur. I. U. liearts after such cd 111 in short, was merely Sl,- ' Mimc . y j -n rt .- i Fresh man Football A. the football lyrics of Indiana uiii crsity is one added in 1928 and dedicated to the freshmen. Its lines are inscribed in the wild accents of a hopeful people who have searched vainly many ears for a sa ior frcMii the tyranny of Michigan, Illinois, and other coalitions. Wearers of the green this year were jewels in the making — and for the most part they were diamonds and not emeralds. They gashed the easy carpet of H Memorial stadium with decisive cleats, and left Jordan ■' • ' -— field, where they held forth each afternoon all fall, ■' a gluey plot of mud. Indiana ' s startling and upstarting ' ' ' ' freshman football team was all that was said of it. Perhaps more. Auspiciously the freshmen smacked Pat Page ' s first and second and third teams during practice throughout the year, and after everything was over they socked the sophomore team by the margin of a touchdown, in a game that has become an annuity. That alone was record breaking. The frosh were big. Any time Coaches Middlesworth or Thorn wanted a big line, it was soft picking to call out a dozen or more gridders each approximating 200 pounds in weight. Practically all of them knew plenty about the game before the season opened, but they accepted learning eagerly, and absorbed their teachings with a thoroughness that was best displayed in their nightly sallies against the team which Pat Page named the varsity. There was hard work for the freshmen, but they gave as much as they got. More than three full teams were in uniform on the last night of practice, and, when their combined i bulk w is stretched fore and aft on the sideline bench for the sophomore game, the descending gloom of evening painted about them the shadows of a new Thundering Herd. Edward Hughes was elected captain in a post season poll. Hughes at full back is one of the best prospects for varsity next year. He has all the qualifications for becoming a ten yard plunger against Indiana ' s Big Ten opponents. J. W. Unger was judged by a committee to be an outstanding player among the frosh. In addi- tion to natural ability he was rated high scholastically and had an excellent attitude on the playing field. At the first basketball game of the year he was rewarded for his attributes with a gold watch. Thirty-three other freshmen were rewarded for their ability with the cus- tomary numeral sweaters. The freshmen arrived in Bloomington early last fall, and spent a week at Camp Bed- ford for conditioning and drill in fundamentals. There, also, they were acquainted with the fundamentals of Pat Page ' s gridiron style, and given a taste of scrimmage. It was valuable training and doubtless will become a definite part of all future essays in football here. Following the close of the season in November, Coach Page put his hopefuls to tack- ling geology, English composition and kindred ills, that they might be eligible next fall. Indiana ' s varsity performed well, but from the freshmen standpoint, 1927 football was an outstanding event. Pete Straub Field Secretary m M .1 ,-, , Squj.I Law- Medic J.W( .wo well oiled football machines, one representing the Laws, and the other the Medics, fought out their ancient grudge on Jordan field late in September, just to show the world a few traditions have not gone by the board. While the varsity was at Harvard, the Medics staged their own little exhibition of pigskin strategy, and dissected the Laws for a 12—6 victory. Early in the first quarter the Medics pushed over a touchdown on straight football, and in the second quarter scoreci again on a recovered fumble. Discard- ing oral arguments, the barristers retaliated in the third period with a touchdown. No more touchdowns were made, but there was some additional scoring, led by Captain L ' ish of the Medics, and Captain Jerry Redding, of the Laws. Poland, Myers, Matthews, and Irish were outstanding for the winners; Wei land, Johnson, Stohr, Myer, and Redding were the losing stars. Carl Winters, a prospective jurist, played an exceptionally tight game. Sergeant Gibson as referee was rescued near the end of the game. ■I: ■US !a A1 ' m Stiitisticcil Resume of Football FINAL STANDINCS Illinois - . 5 Minnesota . ' Michigan 3 Chicago -— 3 Purdue - 2 Ohio 2 Northwestern 2 Indiana 1 Wisconsin 1 Iowa 1 October October October October October No ember 5 State, 7. No ' ember 1 ern, 7. November 1 INDIVIDUAL SCORING .ost Tied Pet. (1 1 LOGO 1.000 2 .600 3 () .500 2 .500 3 .400 3 1) .400 2 1 .m 4 1) .200 + .200 SEASON RECORD 1 — Indiana, 21; Kentucky, 0. 8 — Indiana, 0; Chicago, 13. 15 — Indiana, 14; Minnesota, 14. 22 — Indiana, 6; Notre Dame, 19. 29 — Indiana, 6; Harvard, 26. Indiana, 2 i ; Michigan -Indiana, 18; Northwest- 9 — Indiana, 6; Purdue, 21. Points Chuck Bennett 24 Paul Harrell 24 George Reinhardt 15 Branch McCracken 12 Deke Garrison 7 Art Hellman 6 Frank Faunce 6 W. Catterton 6 Paul Balay 2 John Magnabosco 2 Total ZT04 In four Conference games, Indiana gained 730 yards through the line, for an average of 3.69 yards. Purdue averaged only 2.63 yards, and Minnesota only 3.49 yards for the year. Paul Harrell topped the Conference in a ' erage yards gained on each play, with 7.19. He carried the ball only 21 times, but some of his runs were exceptionally long. At Northwestern he ran 77 yards from scrimmage for a touchdown. Chuck Bennett carried the ball 66 times and gained 243 yards for an average of 3.68. Balay averaged i.5 ards; Reinhardt, 3.26; and Herman Byers, 3. At the close of the season the following awards were announced by Coach Page: medals to Harrell for best long distance punting; to Balay for his two place kicks in the Minnesota game; to Reinhardt for the only field goal by a Conference team (against Kentucky); to Byers for his pass- ing in the Minnesota game; to Randolph for accurate center passing; to Harrell for the longest pass completed ( a 45 yard heave in the Notre Dame game); to Hull for being the fastest running linesman; to W. Shields as the most aggressive lines- man; to Chuck Bennett as best all around running back in games and practice. Letter awards were made to 27 men as follows: Seniors — Herman Byers, A. Catterton, Art Hellman, ' ictor Salmi, W. R. Stephenson. Juniors — Charles Bennett, Carroll Butts, Richard Garrison, Paul Harrell, Earl Hill, Jewett Hull, Robert Matthews, William Moss, Clare Randolph, Ralph Weaver. Sophomores — Ward Baker, Paul Balay, W. Catterton, Frank Faunce, Branch Mc- Cracken, John Magnabosco, George Rein- hardt, Carrol Ringwalt, William Shields, R. L. Todd, R. J. Trobaugh, Robert Tal- bot, manager. ■...- ..jgfsif: ft [104] i w j. .a Everett Dean Baske h„n Coach lANA prolongci.1 its tenure of a high place in high class basketball circles by finishing in a tie for first place in the Western Conference this year. For the second time in three years the Cream and Crimson courtmen fought their way to the top of the heap to win the Gold Star rating. Lady Luck failed to get a look-in on the race, which was won through the unparalleled coaching of Everett Dean, and the inspired ability and fighting spirit of the team. No whim of fate gave to Lidiana any of its ten clean-cut victories; and the two games which fell on the other side of the ledger went by very close scores to two of the best outfits in the circuit. Coach Dean looked at the basketball situation last fall, and found it wanting. The nucleus of the 1927 team had disappeared. Winston, Captain Krueger, and Sible - had been graciuated. Art Beckner was due for retirement after the first semester. Worse than that, there was little prospect of filling the empty places with accomplished players. Branch McCracken, formerly a high school star center, was an unknown qual- ity in Big Ten basketball; James Strickland then was just another sophomore forward; Doug Scheid had had little varsity experience. Captain Bob Correll, Dale Wells and Maurice Starr were the only lettermen from 1927. Indeed, speaking of basketball, it looked black for the Cream and Crimson. Things went along in such a fashion until some time after the season opened. In the pre-Conference warm-ups, Franklin fell by a nine-point margin, 34-25; Wabash was a tougher foe but fell, 30-26; Coe turned out a flop, and Cincinnati was reduced in a free scoring contest. Still Indiana was a doubtful prospect. Many other of the big circuit teams were sitting pretty in comparison. Early in January, when Chicago came to Bloomington, another Branch was discovered M ' - IjMPfl ' mm m.A I [106] .o .fc y s ; I on the Arbutus plant. It blossomed profusely on the night of the Chicago game. McCracken, the sopho- more football star, again had crashed the gates of fame, where rain checks are not given, and showered the Chi- cago basket with 1 1 field goals. Naturalh , Indiana won. That was but a starter. Coach Dean unco ' ered his new satellites one at a time. When it was all o er he had a gymnasium full, and the trustees had decided to build a field house. Down through the Conference season Inciiana clawed a vigorous path. Michigan and Purdue alone salvaged themselves from the wreckage — and they, like all the rest, fell in due time. Crucial games were not in the category of the Indiana squad. To it any team was as any other — mighty tough, until the final gun. Indiana was not only champion; it was the heaviest scoring team in the Big League, likewise holding the greatest margin of points per game over all opponents. Four Indiana men were among the first ten high scorers. Dale Wells, one of the four, proved himself one of the greatest guarding forwards the Middle West has ever seen. The Hoosiers, tying with some other team for first place, are not sorry it was Pur- due. Coach Dean, m his four years here, has never placed a team below second place. Now basketball is at its highest level, with sophomores and juniors comprising the title squad, already Success seems to beckon to the 1 28-29 hardwood scientists. Jim Johnson Senior Manager cJfinh ' ijiiis Ji a 5 Only ordinan ' form was displayed hy Indiana in winning its first two games, both from state teams. Franklin, former state champions, fell on Men ' s gymnasium, 34-25, after giving the Deanmen a strenuous fight during the first three quarters of the contest. Wabash was the next victim, 30-26. Throughout the game the Cavemen forced Indiana to the limit of its ability-. The Hoosiers were looking every hit the mediocrity which had been attributed to them locally before the season began. Still displaying some weaknesses, but vast improvement as well, Indiana defeated Coe college 35-1 + December 21. The Coe defense was impenetrable until late in the second half, when Maurice Starr looped in several field goals and a bevy of free tosses to start his mates on a scoring spree. Coe had many chances at the basket, but was unable to connect. The Hoosiers showed distinct improvement in defensive work, and once going, their offense flashed brilliantly. New Year ' s eve saw Cincinn.iti ' s downfall, 56-41, in a wild scoring melee staged on the Cincinnati floor. Ten players saw action for Indiana, and practically every one accounted for points. Branch McCracken showed his first bit of excellent work by scoring 14 points, and Dale Wells gave a hint of what he was to do in future games, by sinking the leather sphere for the same total. Captain Correll was in stride as well, with 1 3 points. Then, with Christmas vacation and the conditioning games in the background, the Hoosiers launched into the Western Conference season. Everything was to be gained — comparati cIy little to be accounted for. cJI-r bvti. m f 0 i Wt i f v$ Chicago was the victim of the first savage, inspired attack. Led by McCracken ' s short shot attack, the Dean- men piled up a mighty advantage in the final fifteen minutes, after being held in leash throughout the initial session. The final score was 32-13. The burst was sufficient to set the wise men of the West to nodding their heads and winking their eyes. By hitting 60 per cent of his shots, and scoring 24 points, McCracken became at once a hero and a marked man. Only three field goals and two free throws were scored outside of the sophomore center ' s total. Michigan and Indiana dedicated the spirit of basketball to Yost field house the next Saturday. It was the night for both teams to be on. It was also the night for the crowd to go wild. Wolverine stjle domi- nated play during the first 20 minutes, at the end of which Indiana was in the minority ' , 25-19. Successive baskets by Beckner, McCracken, and Correll at the start of the second stanza tied the score, and shortly there- after Wells socked a field goal through the iron hoop. Scheid then ambled up from back guard to toss a two pointer and embellished it with a free throw. Things were looking brighter for the Hoosiers, but as they opened a stalling game, Oosterbaan and McCoy broke through and tied the count again. Once more did Indiana climb to leadership, but Michigan encored their first comeback and took the lead permanently. Michigan finally won, 4-2-41, to the immeasurable relief of a capacity house which was hysterical with One day elapsed, and Indiana was battling Chicago again, this time at Chicago. Indiana came home Tuesday morning with a 3 5-12 victory, and fourth place in the Big Ten standings. After piling up a 26-4 lead. Coach Dean sent in the reserves and let them complete the work. McCracken was held down, but his teammates pooled their resources and fixed the Maroons. Sr More second half brilliancy gave the Hoosiers their third Big Ten victory and second place in the standings, when the Illini crumbled at Men ' s gymnasium, and allowed Wells MiCr.icken, Correll, and Partners (incorporated) to register a 44-29 win. During the opening frame the Su. kcr- played Indiana to a stop. The two outfits started second half pl.iy with an e en 16 points apiece. McCr.uken took the lid off the comeback with a short toss and a pair of free thro v ' . Wells and Correll slipped beneath the basket for points, and Beckner snagged a field goal and some penal t - throws to put Indiana cut of danger. Then Purdue came on the set and claimed the k-.id role. A civil war ensued, and Purdue was victorious, 28-25. A miserably small Boilermaker gym, and the fact that it was Indiana ' s night off combined to make a semi-farce out of the battle of the century. Strickland, a sophomore substitute, provided the only bril- liant spot of the fray when he dripped three field goals through the draperies in the last two minutes of play. McCracken and Beckner went out on personal fouls. It was Beckner ' s last game with the Cream and Crimson before his graduation in February. Wells and Scheid, who held Murphy to a single field goal, were the only stars of the game. Kentucky sufi ' ered in coming to Bloomington for a game immediately after the Purdue accident. The Mountaineers took a 48-29 licking back home to show the folks in Lexington. Strickland, elected to take Beckner ' s place at forward, scored 19 points. McCracken was nine points behind that. Four points was Indiana ' s margin at the close of the first half. Wells, Strickland, McCracken, and Correll scored 44 points almost evenly between themselves as Indiana defeated Iowa here, 50-33, February 11. Surprising the Hawks with a long range bombardment, Dean ' s crew secured an early lead and added to it throughout the game. Scheid opened the scoring with a long shot from mid floor. His toss was followed by a general bombardment on the part of Indiana. Substitutes pl.ayed most of the second half. Instead of continuing as a jinx to local title hopes, Ohio State proved to be meat on the table for Indiana. if 1 sf m- [110 1 The final score, 43-26, gave Indiana a lease on third place in the race. Ohio proved to.be not difficult, but the Hoosiers were not impressive in the victory. Inability to hit the basket ruined their chances to run up a heavy score. McCracken led the scoring van with 1 1 points, and his mates each accounted for a fair share. Gill at back guard sank three neat baskets. Indiana, co-ordinated and powerful, defeated a proud Purdue squad, 40-37, February 18, three days after the Ohio State contest. To the accompaniment of the mad ravings of a crowd of nearly 5,000 persons, Indiana launched its battle. So fierce and unrelenting was the attack, that Purdue ' s ship of state buckled and crumpled, and was hopelessly beaten before the game was nearly over. At one time the Hoosiers were leading by 17 points, 40-23, but long range shooting by Captain Wheeler, of Purdue, narrowed the margin. Strick- land and Scheid were outstanding because of the former ' s 16 points, and the latter ' s 9 points and hi; excellent guarding. There were no towering stars for the victors, because the entire team pl.ayed inspired basketball. Ohio State took another bad fall, on the Buckeye floor, 52-17, and Iowa flopped 49-39 on the Hawk gym. Michigan essayed to pull another one-point victory scene, but Oosterbaan was stopped with only two field goals, and his teammates failed in the crisis. The Hoosiers won, 36-34. The narrowest of escapes was experienced by Indiana at Ulinoi Craig Ruby ' s fighting quintet forced Indiana into an overtime p. with the teams tied at 22. Sensational shooting in the extra se: assurance of at least a tie for first place in the Conference. n the final game of the season. Coach od, after the regular playing time ended on gave the Hoosiers a 27-23 victory, and cJI-Plbvtus ' K i The Season s R December Id — Indiana, 34; Franklin, IS December 17 — Indiana, 30; Wabash, 26 December 20 — Indiana, 35; Coe, 14 December 31 — Indiana, Sd; Cincinnati, 41 January 7 — Indiana, 32; Chicago, 13 January 14 — Indiana, 41 ; Michigan, 42 January 16 — Indiana, 2 S Chicago, 12 January 21 — Indiana, 44; Illinois, 29 Januar ' 24 — Indiana, 25; Purdue, 28 1-INAL STANDINGS Indiana ..„ .10 2 .833 474 331 Purdue .. 10 2 .833 445 309 Wisconsin . 9 3 .750 328 286 Northwestern 9 3 .750 396 344 Michigan . .._ „ 7 5 .583 406 364 Chicago _. - 5 7 .416 266 314 Ohio State ___ . 3 9 .250 330 448 Iowa _— . __ 3 9 .250 iSG 441 Minnesota ___ 2 10 .166 340 410 Illinois 2 10 .166 310 413 ecot I ' ebruary 4 — Indiana, 49; Kentucky, 29 February 1 1 — Indiana, 50; Iowa, ' i ' i February 13 — Indiana, 43; Ohio State, 26 February 1 8 — Indiana, 40; Purdue, 37 February 22 — Indiana, 52; Ohio State, 1 7 February 27 — Indiana, 49; Iowa, 39 March 3 — Indiana, 36; Michigan, 34 March 6 — Indiana, 27; Illinois, 23 (overtime) LEADING INDIVIDUAL SCORERS F. G. F. T. T. P. Oosterbaan, Michigan 57 15 129 Walter, Northwestern 48 27 123 McCracken, Indiana 46 31 123 Murphy, Purdue 46 31 123 Wells, Indiana 39 17 95 Foster, Wisconsin 34 21 89 Wilcox, Iowa 25 35 85 Strickland, Indiana 30 21 81 Gist, Chicago ' iG 9 81 Correll, Indiana 31 18 80 Indiana ' s unusual representation among the indi idual high scorers explains its average of 39.5 points per game. McCracken and Strickland, both sophomores, were greatly responsible for this condition. McCracken led the entire Conference until the last week of the race, when Oosterbaan shelved all contenders for the top berth. Strickland, playing only during the second semester, quickly forged his way to the top, and maintained a secure position there. Wells and Correll stand among the leaders as a result of consistent shooting. McCracken, Wells, Correll, Scheid, and Strickland were named on man ' all-state and all-Conference mythical teams. Letters were awarded to Captain Bob Correll, Captain-elect Dale Wells, James Strick- land, Branch McCracken, Douglas Scheid, Maurice Starr, Donald Cooper, James Gill, and John Leonard. Every letter man will return for a full season next year, with the excep- tion of Correll, who will be graduated in February. ■?: - ?%fc. Coach Everett De.ui JXaii-rah boys razzing the moral victory idea must take the air as the 1927 baseball season is reviewed. Starting with the handicap of inexperience and ordi- nary material, Indiana was fortunate in winning four and losing eight Big Ten games. Dcrr ' s ineligibility threw gloom over the prospects earlv in the year, but in spite of bad breaks and weather, the team made remarkable spurts. Failure to hit in the pinches cost the Hoosiers several one-point victories. Fall practice was held until October 25. ' inter prac- tice started January 1 5, and the season opened March 3 1 with a five-game series at the University of Mississippi. The Southerners captured four of the battles, and one was ti ed, S-S. DePauw was unbeatable and so was Indiana in the hrst home game which ended in a S-S tie, in spite of Ilarrell ' s and Ray ' s home runs. A week later the Meth- odists were beaten on their home lot, 12-0. Indiana gave only 4 hits, and collected 14 from DePauw. Errors helped Ohio State to a 3-2 victory on Jordan field April 22. Faugh allowed seven hits and struck out y i| o4 IP but US ' ' 5 Pf five men. Correll snagged a four-hase swat, but mis- plays let the Red and Gray sweep through to a victory. The Hoosiers eased State Normal out of the picture, 12-3, after which they played a S-S deadlock with the Little Giants, of Wabash. Correll, Davis, and Harrell were heavy hitters in these games. Purdue won, 7-2, on April 29 — a wet day with mud o n Jordan field. In- diana got only three safeties. Misplays at critical moments gave Chicago a 6-5 vic- tory the next day, but there was consolation in seeing Correll connect with a home run and a double. The next encounter found Wabash at the small end of a 6-5 score. Northwestern was allowed only seven hits by Paugh, but two errors paved the way for a 3-1 victory over the Deanmen. Panosh, of the Purple, was almost invincible, giving Indiana but four hits and tightening in the pinches. Retribution had its day May 10 when Indiana downed Chicago 11-5, getting 19 hits. Bucher hit safely four out of five times at bat, and Burke tallied three hits in four times at the rubber. Ten innings were necessary for Iowa to win, 8-7, but errors and untimely free bases did it. Northwestern then added insult to injury by -Ql [115] smacking Indiana 3-2 at Evanston. While Indiana was making seven hits, ojtech fanned nine batters. The winning run was scored in the eighth frame on a pass, a single, and a two-bagger. Iowa, too, felt the Hoosier comeback. The game was played at Bloomington May 31. Paugh gave four hits and whiffed 12 of Iowa ' s best sluggers, while his mates were slashing out a 9-3 advantage. Ohio State won another game, 6-4, but Purdue ' s colors were lowered, 1 1-0, on the Boilermakers ' field. Indiana made 15 hits and Purdue five. Bucher got three hits in four times at I ' .wgh :v_o , - . yg! J : . - ' ieEU -?: -- iyi6fc n bat. The game was called in the seventh because of rain. Commencement week saw the Hoosiers and the Gophers in a twin tangle at Jordan field. Paugh pitched great hall to win the tirst game, 3-2, giving the North- erners three hits. Rain closed the fray in the sixth. oitech went to the showers in the seventh inning of the second game after allowing six men to score. Bell hurled the remaining stanzas and held Minnesota score- less, but Indiana was defeated 9-4. W ' aseda lost a 4-2 decision in the final game at home. Indiana was outhit, but superior base running decided the issue. I-I J rs£ ' J M.a:- Baseball Season Record innings) 4; Mississippi, 6 6; Mississippi, 13 2 ; Mississippi, 3 5; Mississippi, 5 1 ; Mississippi, 1 1 5 ; DePauw, 5 ( Indiana, 1 2 ; DePauw, Indiana, 2 ; Ohio State, 3 Indiana, 1 2 ; State Normal, 3 Indiana, 5; Wabash, 5(12 innings) Indiana, 2 ; Purdue, 7 CONFERENCE INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES Batting Fielding Ray 405 Burke 990 Bucher 302 Correll 977 Harrell 322 Barlow 969 Barlow .:_ 222 Davis 969 Indiana, 5 j Chicago, 6 Indiana, 6; Wabash, 5 Indiana, 1 ; Northwestern, 3 Indiana, 1 1 ; Chicago, 5 Indiana, 7; Iowa, 8(10 innings) Indiana, 2; Northwestern, 3 Indiana, 9; Iowa, 3 Indiana, 4j Ohio State, 6(8 innings) Indiana, 1 1 ; Purdue, Indiana, 3; Minnesota, 2 (5 innings) SEASON INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES Batting Fielding Harrell 41 8 Correll 985 Ray 345 Barlow _„ Bucher 315 Bucher .__ ..980 __ .974 Wells 30 1 Burke 972 Vojtech .285 Bucher 950 Correll .299 Paugh .955 Ray participated in more innings than any other man on the squad. His total was 207. Others who saw most of the action were: Wells, 206 innings; Correll, 196 innings; Har- rell, 186 innings; Tobin, 185 innings; Barlow, 180 innings; Burke, 173 innings; Davis, 148 innings; Paugh, 116 innings; Bucher, 112 innings. Of the pitching staff, Paugh was the most successful of Dean ' s three hurlers. Paugh won four Conference games, and lost the same number; his non-Conference games were split evenly with two on each side of the ledger. Vojtech lost three Big Ten contests without winning an ' , and lost one non-Conference game to balance a non-Conference vic- tory. Apple was charged with defeat in the only Conference game he pitched. He hurled two pre-season games, winning one and losing one. Indiana scored 123 runs to its opponents ' 111 runs. IJ i c f baiius ' ' SS . „ J ia i TI ACK m [119] .,0 qfc 5 1 g|i_.,,, Pn., Track Mjudger. Track and Field ■EELiNG PRIDE ill ouf 1927 track and field team is one of the things an Indiana uni- versity student can do without feeling any pain of conscience. Figures alone speak most efficiently for those who love their school. Let the Southern Relays, the Outdoor Conference meet, the State meet, Purdue university and others speak the lucid tale of Indiana ' s season; our undergraduates know only the exaltation that accompanies its success. Coach Hayes pitted the balance that marked his team against a field of excellent southern athletes at Atlanta, April 9, and the result was a victory for Indiana of 12 points over its nearest competitor, Georgia Tech. Louisiana State, Auburn, and Georgia were others near the top. The Hoosier mile relay team sprang into prominence by win- ning its event in 3-26 1 10 — a feat that was to be overshadowed by the same quartet in Finishing Relay Caftain Robert Peffer the Outdoor Conference competition. Benzel copped a first in the low hurdles; Indiana ' s sprint medley team came home ahead of the field, and Rinehart initiated a brilliant sea- son for himself by heaving the javelin farther than anyone else. Indiana was not quite ready for the Ohio relays a few weeks later, and a cold day helped hold down its total score. Rinehart gave the mid-west a thought when he twirled the javelin 198 feet 83 inches at the Drake relays, however, and a few of his team- mates crashed through for additional points. The 880-yard relay team placed fourth, and the mile relay outfit scored fourth, all against unusual competition. Northwestern ' s crack aggregation measured the Hoosiers for a 71-64 defeat on the Memorial stadium track. May 7. Indiana took seven of the fifteen first places. Fields copped the mile run; Benzel the high and low hurdles; Abramson the 440-yard dash — which was a cleanup for Indiana — Prather the discus; Pepper the broad jump, and Rine- hart the javelin. Prather ' s heave of 134 feet, and Rinehart ' s mark of 190 feet 10 inches were new university records. ' OHijAa: Pope Purdue was defeated 71 1 3-62 2 3 on its own cinder lot. Indiana took the majority of first places, holding a royal flush in the 440-yard dash, which was won by Abramson. The Hoosiers played another big- hand in the two-mile run, when Fields, J. Brattain and W. Brattain came across the tape for a tie. Few of the winners were forced to ex- tend themselves. The state meet, although hard fought, is a matter of history. Its portent was vast, and effected a timely incenti e to the Hayesmen as the - approached the Conference outdoor meet the following week. Indiana was seventh in the season ' s climax at Madison. Min- nesota, Chicago, and Purdue ranged respectively below the Hoosiers ' total of 1 7 points. Our Boilermaker rivals haci to be content with one-third of a point. Indiana ' s best showing was in the mile rela ' , which was won from an accomplished held in 3:21 7 10. Stefh State Track Meet happy significance, championship on the track and in the field in 1927 and a an honor of which it had been deprived by Notre Dame and other con- Besides having a general part of 1928 brought to Indi; spirators for many years. Indiana ' s victory came as the climax to a series of well planned tactics which started with the first event of the meet. Subtler the team worked out its destiny, and the final tally between the pair of leaders por- trays in grim fashion the struggle required of the Hayesmen to win. Indiana, 49 1 5; Notre Dame, 47 7 10, was the note which reverberated with doomful portent among the halls of South Bend ' s New Ireland that night. Dramatically came the climax. The stage had apparently been set for repetition of the old, old story. Notre Dame was leading the Hoosiers by half a dozen points. Three events remained — three moves on Fate ' s big checkerboard — and while half the crowd watched in a stupor, Indiana had jumped three Irish into the king row, and had sewed the championship up so tightly it could hardly be taken out for display that night. They were three great feats, accomplished in a crisis. Other men had their share in the triumph of the day, and other teams made bids for glory. Final scores for all contestants were: Indiana, 49 1 5; lay ■| Notre Dame, 477 10; Muncie Normal, 2; Central Normal, DePauw, 11 9 10. Early in the afternoon Pepper finished a close second to Delia Maria, of Notre Dame, in the 100-yard dash. The result was an ominous portent for Indiana. Then Benzel reversed the situation as he swept past Sturtridge of DePauw for first in the 120-yard high hurdles. Fields copped second in the mile run when Judge of the Irish spurted away from him on the last stretch; Stephenson and Abramson placed second and third respectively in the quarter mile dash; Stevie was nosed out of first place in the half mile by Phillips, Butler ' s phenomenal sprinter; Pepper hooked a third in the 220-yard dash; and Brattain gained a second in the two mile. Other point winners for Indiana were Pope, who took fourth in the half mile; Fields, with fourth in the two mile; Leonard tied for fourth in the pole vault, and Hull, fourth in the discus throw. The Indiana mile relay team conceded nothing to opponents, and romped home winner in 3 minutes, 23 3 5 seconds. Throughout such performances as the winning of the state meet, and in truth throughout the whole season, Coach E. C. Hayes was content to watch his proteges in their official efforts, from the sidelines. Ini- tiative on the field; generalship, effort, and success, he left entirely to the team on the day of the meet. Such faith is not often seen in coaches of big time athletes, but Hayes had that faith and it was vindicated to the uttermost. Th e winning of the state meet marked the beginning of a new era in Indiana university track historj-. Coach Hayes, institutor of a new and pleasing dynasty, has inspired in his school the audacity to look for more success. Phillifs First, Stefhenson Second in State Meet i ' ' (L r buiius ' Cross Country Indiana ' s cross country squ.id last fall was one of the strongest to represent the school in }ears. Around Capt. Harold Fields, Coach Hayes developed a formidable squad with men who were running their first }ear of varsity competition. Brattain and Banks were kept out of most of the meets because of injuries. The first test of the season for the Crimson harriers was the quadrangular meet held at Chicago Octo- ber 22. Wisconsin with a well balanced squad and teams frcin Northwestern and Chicago were entered. Zola of Wisconsin nosed out Fields in a desperate spurt at the finish, while Buck, Brattain, and Clapham finished fifth, si.xth, and seventh, respectively. Wisconsin won the meet with 2 5 points and Indiana was second with 30. Northwestern and Chicago finished in third and fourth places. Th e following Saturday uining the distance in Ohio State ' s men cro; :hc ha m at Ohio State. Captain Fields ca; Clapham, Buck, and Burr hed i c then :ook first in the five third, fourth, and J 28-29 victory oxk Bloomington and the Cr .vere negotiated in 28 n It to aid the Hoosiers in mson squad, led by Captain Fields, won inutes, 10 seconds. Buck, Clapham, the victory over the South Bend aegre- Notre Dame ' s team was entertained ; 27-29. The four and three-quarter mile; Burris, and Cox finished w ell up in the fr gation. Coach H.iyes took his squad to Northwestern to run the morning of the Northwestern-Indiana football game. The four and one-half mile course ran along the lake, but the cool breeze seemed to be an impetus to the trio of Fields, Clapham, and Buck who finished abreast at the tape. Indiana easily won the meet, 18-40. The Conference contest held at the University of Michigan, November 19, ended the activities of the cross country squad. Captain Fields ran a great race in the meet, finishing in third place. Other members of the squad were scattered throughout the field. Wisconsin ' s strong team took first and Indiana finished sixth. The following received letters at the close of the season: Captain Fields, Wallace Buck, Edwin Clap- ham, and Joseph Burris. [126] 5POKT ' jzAr buiius ' ' , Swinnjiing Coar i Piiiil T honifion ndiana ' s swimming team did not turn in as commendable ■X record this year as last. Four out of six non-conf ei encc meets resulted in victories for the Crimson natators, though in con- ference competition Indiana was less fortunate, failing to annex a victory out of five meets. Coach Paul E. Thompson was faced with the task of filling the places of several of last year ' s letter men. The inability to obtain its percentage of seconds and thirds cost the Crimson swimmers several meets. The Hoosier Athletic club opened the season for the Crim- son. Each team got four first places, but Indiana ' s ability to pile up seconds and thirds aided the Crimson in the 35-34 vic- tory over the Capital City squad. Wabash fell, 52-17, in the first meet after the holidays. Wabash ' s only first was in the fancy diving. Thompson ' s men won their third consecutive victory a week later when they paddled their way to a 53-16 score over DePauw. The Crim- son took first in every event. The swimmers lost their first meet of the season to the University of Cincinnati in their pool, being nosed out, 38-31. Each team took four firsts, but Cin- cinnati ' s ability to take more seconds and thirds proved to be the deciding factor. Chicago furnished the opposition for the Crimson in the opening of the Big Ten season at Chicago. The meet was Robert Bolyard 14 jfefii S iy . a . . t m closely contested, with the Maroon team finally emerging with a },G- 1 victory. Captain Miller, with a first in the 200-yard breaststroke, was high point man for Indiana. The medley relay team showed exxellent style in defeating the Maroons in the final event. Michigan, last year ' s confere nce champions, ad- ministered a third defeat, winning, 60-9. The Wolverines took first and second in every event and broke three records. One week later the Crimson defeated the Evansville Y. M. C. A. in its pool, 52-17, in a meet featured by the work of Hodges, Matthew, and Lauter. Illinois with six firsts humbled the Crimson in the next conference meet with a score of 50-19. Winston and Mat- thews set new marks for the Illinois pool in the 50-yard free- style and the 440-yard freestyle e -ents, respectiveh . North- western swamped Indiana under a 51-18 score one week later. Winston was the only Indiana man to score a first. The fol- lowing week Purdue was entertained in the last conference meet of the season. The teams broke even on firsts, each tak- ing four, but the Boilermakers outpointed the Crimson in sec- onds and thirds, to win the meet, 37-32. Lauter, Winston, and Vordermark took firsts in the 200-yard breaststroke, 50- yard freestyle, and 1 50- ard backstroke, to add to their team ' s total. The Hoosier Athletic club was met in the last meet of the season at Indianapolis. The H. A. C. a •enged the defeat ad- ministered earlier by winning, 40-29. Again Indiana took half of the first places, but lack of seconds and thirds proved costly. Captain Bill Miller 4 A Vl l c buiius ' W. IVrestlhig RESILING, infatuated by the charms that has char- acterized other Indiana sports recently, this year aspired to greater heights. Some of them it reached. Mon- mouth, Gary Y. M. C. A., West Virginia, Ohio uni- crsity. Northwestern, and Chicago fell before the W. H. Thorn outfit. Indiana was defeated by Ohio State, Purdue, Iowa State, and Michigan. It was not pretentious, but it was mighty hopeful. Indiana scored 153 points to its opponents ' 101. Fifth place was Indiana ' s share in the Western Con- ference wrestling roundup at Bloomington late in March. Shrader won fourth in the heavyweight divi- ■' sion; Captain Swain first in the 145-pound class; Props third in the 135-pound class, and Eakins fourth in the 115-pound class. Eakins might have had a third but the draw failed to place him against Fuchs of Chicago, whom Eakins had easily defeated during the season. Fuchs snatched the third as a result. Trobaugh, ordinarily a 158-pound man, went to the 175- pound class in the Big Ten meet, and in spite of a valiant showing, was defeated. The Hoosiers face a prosperous season in 1929. Several excellent wrestlers from the current team will return, but from this year ' s freshman class will emerge the talent of real calibre. Unger, Waraska, anci Brannan are expected to bolster the squad, along with others whose names may become as illustrious with the grinding out of victories and defeats. Six men who are eligible for the Olympic tryout finals this July will be in school next year. They are: Brannan, 134 pounds; Swain, 145 pounds; Reed, 158 pounds; Scott, 175 pounds; Wilson, 181 pounds, and Waraska, heavywciyht. cJf p bu Intra-Mural RA-MUR- T. athletics, over which George E. Schla- fer is continually worrying, snapped out of its typically anaemic condition this year and produced a number of noteworthy contests between campus organizations. Campus football enlarged its scope to include not only encounters in the darker precincts of the univer- sity lot, but also some which took place in broad day- light on Jordan field. Sixteen teams entered the grid- iron elimination, and they were reduced to four when cold and wet weather claimed a monopoly on the title. Wrestling, tennis, golf, horseshoes, indoor and out- door baseball, basketball, free throwing, swimming and other sports were sponsored by the intra-mural depart- ment. More fraternity teams took part in the contests than ever before. Splendid co-operation between the athletic department and the intra-mural heads, and better contact between the latter and participating teams were the factors responsible for this year ' s success. The bright prospect is that campus athletics will keep pace with our intercollegiate sports. Geoige Si hiafe I„lra-Mural DIrcci f [131] cJI-mbvtus ,- i Golf Coach Jerry Redding NDER THE coachiiig of Cenild Redding, 1926 varsity cap- tain, the Indiana university golf squad last spring turned in a commendable record, overcoming obstacles which included lack of a good home course, general laxity of interest in the game and inopportune weather. The golfers played five matches last spring against two conference teams and three state teams, winning three out of the five. Nelson, Graham, Blumer, Em- crt, Miller, and Talbot were members of the team that made the trips to the other schools. The first meet of the season was played at DePauw, April 27, and Indiana had little trouble in winning 15-9. Miller was low man for the day, shooting a 72 in the morning and a dS in the afternoon to lead the team to a win over the Tigers. Wabash was the first team to be played on the home course, and Indiana avenged the defeat suffered at the hands of the Little Giants two years ago by winning 16-8. The Little Giants were ahead as a result of the morning pla -, but in the afternoon Indiana came back and won both foursome matches. The meet at Ohio State, May 16, was played in the rain on the Scioto Country Club course, scene of the 1926 national open. Indiana won one twosome match and halved one foursome. Miller was the only man to win his match, while Graham and Blumer halved their foursome. Purdue brought one of the strongest teams in the conference to Bloomington, May 1 8, and won 1 8-6. Lehman, of Purdue, shot a 74 in the morning, and Miller, of Indi- ana, was low man in the afternoon with a 75. All the matches were close, but the experi- enced team of the Boilermakers came through at the proper time to win. DePauw was entertained in the last meet of the season, May 24. Indiana won 16-8, the last foursome match being stopped by rain. Miller anci Nelson showed up well for Indiana. Nelson took fourth place in the state meet at Evansville. 14 . - Tennis J-XDiAXA embarked on one of its most pretentious tennis schedules in years last spring. Lack of adequate courts, how- ever, hindered the squad in its workouts. The tirst meet was played at Franklin, and ended in a i-l tie. Indiana won the three singles matches, but lost to the Bap- tists in the doubles. The next fray was played at DePauw, with the Crimson wielders taking all six matches to win, 6-0. The strong University of Cincinnati team played here in the first home meet and annexed all seven matches. Meyers, the intercollegiate champion of Ohio, played well for Cincinnati. Next the netters journeyed to Cincinnati and lost to St. Xavier College, 4-2. The following day a return match was played ., with the University of Cincinnati, the latter duplicating its performance at Bloomington. Northwestern was the first Big Ten opponent. The match was played at Blooming- ton and resulted in a 6-1 victory for Northwestern. Ohio State won, 6-1, in a match played in the rain. Michigan entertained Indiana there, but the meet was rained out shortly after it had started; likewise, the Purdue meet, after two unsuccessful attempts to stave oflF unfavorable weather, was called off. Regular players on the team were: Pike, Hepburn, Smith, Leser, Miller, and Elliott. ' M . .cA rbuiiis Yell Leaders Y ipc. Artistic yell leaders apiireciation of a pro- Tfie fact remains, however, wading has heciinie an art trtjm which there i partially fill the vacuum that lies between blank murdc peller of enthusiasm. Indiana has yell leaders who do that practice has not brought them to perfection. A Songbook of Indiana Yells might be composed. ' I ' he athletic department could put yell leaders on a respectable basis. Inspired Hoosiers might search their literary depths and drag forth the makings of a few inspirational war cries. The profession is in the muck, and it is not all their part. Captain Cleaxer, of the department of war, was supposed to be in charge of the yell leaders this ear, but he was too busy with the band to culti ' ate the qualit ' of our home- made loud speakers. With the minimum in coaching, the maximimi in inattention from the crowd, and only a sophomoric incentive for doing any better, the veil leaders this year were non-progressi -e. Spirit of the Mob is the ideal yell leacier. He nurses his cohorts along on a moun- tain of frenz) ' ; their madness he synchronizes into a noise which is tangible enough to be pulled through a Waterman pen, and loud enough to wake up an Eskimo who had just gone to bed after an all-night jag. Inferiority complexes breed among Indiana yell leaders when they think how un- clever it is for them to be dressed so unusually before such a large crowd at such an e ' ent. Inferiority complexed people are never leaders. May the profession sometime be recognized — we need yell leaders like we need pub- ic schools! U--h IM. THIS AEROPLANE VI9W WAS ObTAINtD ONLY AT GREAT RISK Of THE i I CARroONISrS LIFE. FLYING ARROWS MADE A [AND APPROACH IMP055 I3I.E. [13S] i Clara Fedler Coed Athletics HE ATHLETIC COED has entered into her own kingdom. No longer need she camouflage behind romance language and home economics. Her ' s is at last a warranted art, for physical education is now a major department, offering a B. S. degree. Last fall saw the hearty coeds bangin g away on the hockey and soccer fields. Under the supervision of the coaches, Miss Clara Fedler and Miss Grace Mob- erly, class teams in both sports were organized. W. A. A. scheduled some games, ft ll which resulted in the juniors driving away to the tentative hockey class cham- pionship. The soccer class tournament, however, ended rather badly since a muddy field did not permit the staging of the final games. Having survived the strenuous activities of hockey and soccer, the ambitious coed turned to the hardwood at mid-semester. The resume of school after the Thanksgiving vacation opened the season for basketball. Organizations were well represented, making some keen intramural competition. There were some good games scheduled in the class tournament, too. The basketball honorary varsity is selected by Miss Fedler, coach, and Miss Coppock, sports head. mi. . .. c taias fSTM . .. r .nr A niche in the physical education department is reserved for the girl whose tastes tend toward the esthetical. The department offers classes in natural danc- ing, folk dancing, clogging, and national dancing — all under the direction of Miss Fox. The natural dancing classes produce material for the May Festival, which is one of the great advents of the year for les danseuses. A clogging class, however, is a coed ' s delight. Here, she may line up to tap in lovely review with the hest of pony choruses. Last year clogging made its debut in the de- partment, and it immediately received the approval of Indiana coeds. National dancing is this year ' s addition to the departmental curriculum; it is a study of the native dances of various countries. The varsity dancing team which is announced each year at the Senior banquet is chosen by Miss Fox and Miss Carr. 14 IjzAr bu, Swimming is a year ' round sport. Classes for beginners and intermediates meet daily at the women ' s pool in the Student building, while advanced swimmers drill two evenings a week under Miss Lazella Zieger in the big pool at the Men ' s gymnasium. The class swimming teams are selected from this special night class. The swimming tournament, as well as the water carnival, which are held early in the spring, are the final proofs of hard grilling and good workouts. Baseball, tennis, and archery are the leading spring sports. In the great national game, coeds have proved themselves as adroit with the bat and gloves as some of the men. The second year for archery revealed some William Tells about the campus. Tennis is always a favorite, although a real tournament is difficult to schedule, since spring weather is a bit uncertain and discouraging. Quoits, another spring sport, is well adapted to the less active coeds. Though this sport is lacking in strenuous activity, it requires no little practice to become a skilled player. Intramural organization, which was established last year by W. A. A., has proved to be successful and has added to the general interest in coed sports. Until last year, intramural tournaments were held only in volley ball and basketball, but under the auspices of the new intramural organization, tournaments are now scheduled for all the major and minor sports. This fall, the University welcomed the return of Miss Juliette Maxwell, head of the Indiana department of physical education. Miss Maxwell, who has charge of all special students, is back at her post after a year ' s leave of absence. Last year, departmental affairs were under the supervision of Miss Fedler, who assumed the duties of Miss Maxwell during her absence. li Campus Life U ' niversity life offers more than a scholastic education; oppor- tunities to engage in practices that will prove invaluable in later vears become a part of many students who seek more than curricular work. In some instances students are honored for their professional ability, while other organizations choose those who have done exceptional work scholastically. Members of some campus boards perform duties that affect the entire University and their fellow students, which, after all, may some time decide an important issue. Oftentimes activities of student life at the University are over- done, but it is only an attempt on the students ' part to engage in another phase of their profession. New organizations appear on the campus each year, and in a short time become a part of the Uni- versity ' s varied activity group. All forms of campus activity are shown in this division to depict the numerous phases of student life. [140] [141] Jojii Coughlan o4iplbutius ' 2, lfevf?,y; ' -rW- Woine}i s Panhellenic Council !t First Column Arlcnc Wriyht, Alpha Chi Omega Fran.L SJinuJd, I ' hl Omega Pi Kosamoiul Ki-cr, Delta Gamma Leona Kuhn, I ' hi Mu Jean Green, Alpha Oniicron Pi Fourth Column Kathryn Hoadly, Alpha Omicron Pi Treva Gaunt, Chi Omega Margaret Ferguson, Kappa Alpha Theta Miri ' am King, Pi Beta Phi Margaret Brumbaugh, Alpha Chi Omega Janc Bird, Delta Gamma Second Column Catherine Mevers, Alpha Delta Pi Lora M. Ken lc, Beta Sigma Omicron Eli abctl, Ncch, Delta Zeta Mary Hauk, Phi Omega Pi Florence Filson, Sigma Kappa Joan Coughlan, Theta Phi Alpha Fifth Column Thelma Abell, Beta Sigma Omicron -era Rc noIJ., Kappa Alpha Theta LouIjc Rhudy, Delta Delta Delta Helen Crawford, Zeta Tau Alpha Hazel Jackson, Kappa Delta Ruth Gresham, Theta Phi Alpha Thiril Column Florence Roth, Alpha Delta Pi Mildred NetT, Chi Omega Gcnc -a Williams, Delta Zeta Martha Coombs, Kappa Kappa Gamma Ruth Anderson, Kappa Delta Kathcrine Gause, Kappa Kappa Gamma Sixth Column Ruth Price, Zeta Tau Alpha Mary Travis, Delta Delta Delta Mary Mower, Phi Mu Adelyn Armitage, Pi Beta Phi Oweeta Thompson, Sigma Kappa [143] c4inbuins ' ' : : 0 . Kappa Alpha Theta Founded at DePauw Univcn Local Chapter: Beta Established: 1870 National Chapters: 52 Flower: Bla ck and Gold Pai Colors: Black and Gold Local Address: Forest Place Kathiyn Isbell, ' 28, Elkhart Wilhelmina Herdrick, ' 30, Ind Mary Lou Twyman, ' 31, Indiai Lois Grupe, ' 31, Huntington Roberta North, ' 28, ElufTton Mary Helen Massie, ' 31, Columbi apoli Auburn Betty Whit Sarah Milk-r, ' ?n, Muncic Maxine Burger, ' 31, Coodl.md Mary Cooper, ' 31, Greenfield Arlenna Grlgsby, ' 29, Vincenne; Thora Johnson, ' 29, Gary Elizabeth Ann Lvuns, ' 31, Ehvo iiecond Colum,, Margaret Brodie, ' 31, Ruth Axtell, ' 29, Bloc Charlotte Schofield, ' 3 Virginia Alden, ' 29, Rockvil Elizabeth Ferguson, ' 28, Boo Josephine King, ' 29, Indian- Charlotte Sticr, ' 31, Fort W gton Ma Margaret Myer, ' 30, Renssel.i. Ruth Burgner, ' 31, Veedersbui Man- K.. Brown, ' 31, Madisoi Mirl.im Rainier, ' 31, Auburn Elizabeth lohns.ul, ' 30, Madis Martha Mu Tlurd Column Barbara Whitten, ' 31, Auburn Elizabeth Jarvis, ' 31, Spencer Madalyn Savage, ' 30, Huntington June Jackson, ' 29, Greenfield Margaret Ferguson, ' 30, BoonviUe Gayle Walker, ' 28, Lebanon Ruth Kirhv, ' 29, Bloomington Sixth Column Vera Reynolds, ' 28, Glenwood Julia Resoner, ' 30, Muncie Mary Anne M irtiii, ' 31, Muncie Martha Bnv.i, ' JX, X,-w Castle Scho Kathe ' 29, Ande cAvbiilus h ' )o. . ii ! x. m- m Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded at Monmou h College, 1870 Local Chapter: Delta Established: 1873 National Chapters: 5 2 Flower: Fleur-de-lis Colors: Light and D uk Blue Local Address: 1018 Ea St Third Street first Column Fourll, Column Miriam Miers, ' 31, Bloomington IriUa Donovan, ' 30, Warren, Ohio Elizabeth Kohler, ' 28, Detroit, Mich. Nilah Bvrum, ' 28, Anderson Peggy Culmer, ' 31, Bloomington Mary Elizabeth Naber, ' U, Fairmo Elizabeth Hill, ' 29, Sullivan Pauline GUI- ■- ' ; n rn„es Wilma Duffcy, ' 31, Indianapolis Martha C....n ' 1: ,, ,,.,ton Margaret Jane Hoffman, ' 30, F..rt Wayne Martha Loi, K. , . ' Imliana Peggy Bates, ' 30, Tipton Dorothy Bales, -I ' -.i. Imt Uayne Josephine Haworth, ' 31, Kokomo Lazclla Zieger, ' 29, Owatonna, Mi Eleanor Blaine, ' 28, Indianapolis Second CoUmm Fiflh Column Margaret Clark, ' 29, Salem Florence Rogers, ' 28, Bloomington Agnes McNutt, ' 31, Crawfordsville Jane Hoy, ' 31, Montpelier Mildred Hamilton, ' 28, Linton Lucia Scofield, ' 31, Brazil Nancv BIlts ' 3I, Princeton Maxine Wildermuth, ' 31, Gary Eduln.i r.,-,, . ' l, Peru Mary K.ilil, Kllnk, •: ' !, Linton Toay Underwood, ' 28, Fort Wavne Isabel Stonex, ' 31, Goshen Marcia Dena Rushton, ' 28, Plain field Margie Ackermann, ' 31, Loogootce Doris Dixon, ' 29, Linton Winbourne Smith, ' 29, Salem Third Column Mildred Charters, ' 29, Peru Sixth Column Edith Jones, ' 29, Bloomfield Katherine Gause, ' 28, Indianapolis Gretchcn Haig, ' 28, Bloomfield Emily Brossman, ' 28, Indianapolis Mary Jean Packard, ' 31, Peru Kathrvn Lewis, ' 31, Vincenncs Crystal English, ' 29, Clay City Fl,.ia Hnntrr. ' 31, Indianapolis Eloise Wclhorn, ' 30, Princeton i,.l-t:-- I!,IIm I, -M, Princeton Dorothy Skinner, ' 30, Stockdale Jane lln-ili-, ' 3H, Indianapolis Bonnie Lane, ' 31, Ligonicr Frances Maltlieus, ' 28, Bh.omingtor Lois Mona Rushton, ' 2a, Plainfield Catherine Wasson, ' 30, Muncie Sei ' enth Column Ellen Rooda, ' 28, Ga, V Margaret Pate, ' 3 , B oomlicid Helen Humphrevs ' 29 , Bloomfield Mull . P ' -;. ■•. r, , ' In limapolis M , -, 1, Princeton M,d:ii , 1 .■■,:, ■' ' , 1 . iiisillle Lenore Welborn, ' 2S, Princeton m  t 3 CkC J . Lc p taiius Pt Beta Phi Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 Local Chapter: Beta Established: 1893 National Chapters: 65 Flower: Dark Red Carnation Colors: Wine Red and Silver Blue Local Address: 926 East Third Street Firs Coluun, Fo«rl , Coh,„m Mary Hirsch, ' 28, Attica Dorothy Davis, ' 30, Wabash Margaret Coombs, ' 2Si, Bloomington Mildred Curry, ' 30, liloomington Marv Janice Orr, ' 30, Newburfrh Mary Lois Hammitt, ' 30, Crawf ordsville Elizabeth Lovcland, ' 29, Peru Alice Baker, ' 30, Indianapolis Alice Thorn, ' 311, Indianapolis Nancy Hurd, ' 28, Frankfort Mildred Mav, ' 2S, Indianapolis Mary Reynolds, ' 31, Indianapolis Louise Sample, ' 31, Indianapolis Sarah Schwin, ' 30, Covington Margaret Dunn, ' 2 ' J, liloomington Second Colum,, Fifth Cohimt, Lucile Means, ' 28, ShelbvviUe lone Nixon, ' 28, Newport Isabel Good, ' 28, Warren Mary Cooper, ' 30, Fort Wayne F.milv Pond, ' 3(1, Indianapolis Ellen Helton, ' 29, Bloomington Teannette Stult7, ' 30, Fort Wavne Elizabeth Karsell, ' 31, Bloomington Ruth Fries, ' 29, Plymouth Jenny Lou Whitehead, ' 30, New Harmony Lucile Hirsch, ' 31, Attica Ruth Hannon, ' 30, Whiting Arnell Kendall, ' 31, Crothersville Delores Eisner, ' 31, Seymour TAird Column Sixth Column Martha Rott, ' 28, Bloomington Adelyn Armitagc, ' 28, Goodland Kathryn McDavid, ' 29, HiUsboro Kathryn Becker, ' 30, Brookville Marguerite Wood, ' 31, Warsaw Virginia Thompson, ' 31, Renssela Ruth Hamcrsley, ' 29, Washington Virginia McCarty, ' 30, Frankfort Emma Moss, ' 28, Horse C Kathryn Creigmile, ' 31, Osgood Amelia Dildine, ' 31, Fort W Jean Miller, ' 31, Indianapolis Miriam King, ' 29, Indianapolis Elizabeth Doty, ' 30, Greensburg , - S .fr mam if :JI-pbvlius Delta Gamma Established A Louis School (1, Oxford Institute), 1872 Local Chapter: Theta Established: 1898 National Chapters: 42 Flower: Cream Colored Rose Colors: Bronze, Pink and Blue Local Address: Quadrangle First Column Helen Klein, ' 31, Hammond Dorothy Force, ' 31, Loogootee Dorothy Moore, ' 30, Indianapolis Mary Valetta AUbright, ' 30, Michigan Cit Ruth Schneider, ' 30, Fort Wayne Madeline White, ' 31, D.m.i Constance MiinkcJick, ' 311, Sulliv.m Dorothy Harris, ' 2!), Bloomlngton Second Column Muriel Mattox, ' 30, Terrc Haute Gladys Dennison, ' 30, Indianapolis Rosamond Risser, ' 28, North Manchester Martha Harmon, ' 28, Indianapolis Elizabeth Wells, ' 31, New Albany Julia Niles, ' 31, Mishawaka Claudia Brant, ' 29, Fort Scott, Kan. rhinl Column Marcia McEwen, ' 29, Alexandria Eleanor Murphy, ' 31, Logansport Jane Gottman, ' 31, Noblesville Florence Stirling, ' 29, Fort Wayne Dorothy Ann Calderwood, ' 29, Indianapo Mary Rothr.ick, ' 29, Bloomington Martha McLaughlin, ' 30, Cedar Lakc l) M-,,tl,y I)rn,,t.,n, ' 30, Roche Iris W.ilki-r, ' 30, Indianapolis Margaret Steele, ' 30, Paris, II Margaret Greathouse, ' 30, Ev Rosalie Briney, ' 31, Kokomo Leah Peters, ' 29, Fort Wayne Marthalec McCrcary, ' 29, Inu Fijlh Column Mary Harmon, ' 31, Indianapolii Helen Fulling, PC, Tulsa, Okla Jane Bird, ' 29, Indianapolis Mary Woodard, ' 30, Grayvllle Elizabeth Dobbs, ' 29, Bloomficld Catherine Newman, ' 29, Kerulal Margaret Frazier, ' 28, BI.,nming Six! I, Column Jane Ensle, ' 29, Evansville Heleii Crumpackcr, ' 31, Mich Katherine Keith, ' 30, Brazil Louella Loetz, ' 31, LaPorte Margaret Rose, ' 29, Fort W La Donna Reemsnyder, ' Ma Esthc WFT m W cJf iPbuj ims Delta Zeta Founded .It Miami Univ ersitv, 1902 Local Chapter: Epsilon Established: 1909 National Chapters: 49 Flower: Pink Killarne Rose. Colors: Rose and Nile Green Local Address: 809 Eas Seventh Street rst ColuWH Third Colliwu Ilenc Ormsbv, ' 2S, Ferriday, La. lone Hamilton, ' 28, Newberry Mary Blankenship, ' 28, Paragon Delores Vestal, ' 29, Indlanapo Marie Rice, PG, Lynnville Lucile Lapp, ' 29, Fort Wayne Geneva Williams, ' 30, Fairland Mary Melton, ' 28, Tipton Helen Lynch, ' 28, College Corner, Ohio Helen Joest, ' 31, Mount Vern Gene%a Shirley, ' 31, Danville couJ Cohor.n Fourth Column Elizabeth Neely, ' 28, Indianapolis Dorothy Banner, ' 28, Fort W Margaret Welch, ' 31, Hamlet Jean Trusler, ' 29, Connersvill Genevieve Collins, ' 28, French Liclc Dee Weisinger, ' 31, Mount V Helen Benton, ' 29, Fort Wayne Inez MacElvain, ' 30, Noblesv Lucile Countryman, ' 30, Cleveland, Ohio Georgiana Sowash, ' 30, Crow F ' flh Column Tuanit., C.rnrllcy, ' 28, Paragon Car..hn S rckrtt, ' 2 S, Elkhart MaxiiU ' SdinilcJ.r ■30, Fort Wayne Madge D.ilzell, ' 3 , Kokomo Ruth Partlow, ' 31, Paoli t.; t :i . ' 4 PbiHtiis ' Alpha micron Pi Founded at Barnard College of Columbia University, 1897 Local Chapter: Beta Phi Established: 1916 National Chapters: 3 2 Flower: Jacqueminot Ro se Color: Red Local Address: 703 East Scvc, th Street W First Colunn, Daisy Hinkle, ' 29, Bloomington Marjorle Uecker, ' 28, Gary Cleo Thomas, ' 29, Tcirc Haute Maude Arthur, ' 28, Crawfordsville Edna Sheets, ' 29, Indianapolis Doris ISopp, ' 31, Tcrrc Haute Second Column Joyce Armstrong, ' 30, Springville Gail Glenn, ' 29, Ramsey Elizabeth Personette, ' 31, RrookviUe Mary Kay Geake, ' 28, Fort Wayne Jewell Oliver, ' 30, Mt. Vernon Dorothy Long, ' 30, Angola Elnora Johnson, ' 31, Kokomo Third Column Kathryn Bryant, ' 31, Bloomington Gladys Weeks, ' 28, Gary Loretta Hulman, ' 28, Terre Haute Ellen Stott, ' 29, Frankfort Jean Green, ' 29, Pekin Grace Drabing, ' 30, French Lick Fourth Co lumn Charlotte Shaw, 28, Bloomin Isabelle Holsinge r, ' 31, Goshe Virgin! a Gentry, ' 31, Ligonie Virgin! a Cox, ' 28 Bellevue, K France Conner, 30, Bloomin Bernice Coffin, ' 2 8, Monticellc France Blanton, ' 31, Crawfo Fifth Column AniUe Shaw, ' 30 Bloomingto Florell Holslnger ' 31, Goshei Vivian Ellis, ' 28, French Lick Helene Hendry, 29, Angola Georgi Bopp, ' 2 3, Terre Hau Pauline Hindsley ' 30, Union m Sixth Column Kathryn Hoadley, ' 29, Blooming Miriam Combs, ' 29, Terre Haut. Naomi Nash, ' 30, Rushville Bernadean Bennett, ' 30, Fort Wa Virginia Traxler, ' 31, Fort Wayn Howarda Clarke, ' 31, Oak Park, Virginia Moore, ' 30, Bedford i iJ. u :. Xi H il mm f .3 3 %. Splbvtus m W M H ' A Delta Delta Delta 4 Founded at Boston University, 1 Local Chapter: Delta Omicron Established: 1917 National Chapters: 71 Flower: Pansy Colors: Silver, Gold and Blue Local Address: Forest Place First Column Ted Boyd, ' 30, West Baden Jessie Porter, ' 28, Linton Margaret Holden, ' 29, Fort Wayne Louise Mattingly, ' 31, Terre Haute Rovenc Ticen, ' 28, Colfax Second Colum,, Jane Miller, ' 28, La Porte Marietta Taylor, ' 28, Rochester Mabel Swain, ' 29, Pendleton Miriam Winship, ' 30, Milroy Wilma Ale, ' 31, Winamac Irene Irwin, ' 28, Robinson, III. Third Column Viola Jones, ' 31, Rochester Dorothy Dorland, ' 29, La Porte Sarah Rafferty, ' 29, Robinson, IIL Miriam Mobley, ' 30, Greensburg Christine Heritage, ' 31, Alexandria Alice Anderson, ' 31, Milroy Fo„rl j Column Jeanette Walsh, ' 30, East Chicago Louise Rhudy, ' 28, Rural Retreat, ' Betsy Sharp, ' 29, South Bend Mary Travis, ' 29, Fort Wayne Mary Murphy, ' 31, Morgantown Mary Wampler, ' 29, Bicknell Fifth Column Lenore Enlow, ' 30, Jeffersonville Audrey Smith, ' 30, East Chicago Helen Vestal, ' 28, Anderson Dorothy Miller, ' 30, Fort Wayne BerncU Tanner, ' 30, Milroy Ralpha Curtis, ' 30, Winamac Sixth Column Katherlne Franke, ' 28, Robinson, II Lois Page, ' 31, Terre Haute Martha Helt, ' 31, Dana Helen Campbell, ' 31, Bloomington Mari- Pattie, ' 29, Rockport ' [157] iiphiihis ' c . i m. Sigma Kappa Founded at Colby College, W: 1874 Local Chapter: Tau Established: 1918 National Chapters: 39 Flower: Violet Colors: Maroon and Lavendi Local Address: Quadrangle First Coluwn Margaret Whiteside, ' 28, Fulton, Ky. Elnera Hartman, ' 30, South Bend Helen Grishaw, ' 28, Tipton Ruth Hinkle, ' 29, Bloomlngton Lucilc Porter, ' 31, Hope Lluyd Miller, ' 31, Corydon Second Columu Elpha Slayback, ' 29, Lafayette Helen Spivcry, ' 31, Thorntown Luclle Roth, ' 28, Indianapolis Florence Fllson, ' 29, Terrc Haute Eva Sundholm, ' 31, Whiting Fern Midkiff, ' 30, Waldron Mrs. Ward G. Blddle, ' 29, Blooming Third Coluw,, Mildred Jackson, ' 30, Blooniington Nandes Simon, ' 31, South Bend Mary Jenet Walters, ' 28, Bedford Dorothy Walter, ' 30, Bedford Janet Cuthill, ' 31, Bedford Martha Wilson, ' 31, Cleveland, Ohio Fo„r , Column Louise Townsend, ' 30, Blouniingto Maria Whiteside, ' 30, Fulton, Ky. Virginia Meetz, ' 30, Indianapolis Alice Pauley, ' 31, Indianapolis Geraldine McKee, ' 31, Indianapoll Eloyse Stage, ' 28, Goshen Phoebe Netz, ' 31, Newcastle Fifth Column Oweetah Thompson, ' 29, Heltonx i Mabel Bell, ' 28, Brownsburg Lucile McRae, ' 30, Indianapolis Mildred Schafer, ' 30, South Bend Lillian Stevens, ' 31, Freedom Virginia Gaskins, ' 28, Fort Wayne Sixth Column Dorothy Showalter, ' 31, Indianapo! Kathryn Haehl, ' 28, Shelbyville Juanita Dove, ' 30, Bloomlngton Alberta Homan, ' 31, La Porte Cora Jane Whitehead, ' 28, Brookvi Evelyn Burkett, ' 31, Rome City Freda Withers, ' 31, Fort Wayne .  ■Phi Mu Grew out of the organization called Philo- matheans, founded at Wesleyan College, 1852 Local Chapter: Delta Alpha Established: 1920 National Chapters: 5 3 Flower: Enchantress Carnation Colors: Rose and White Local Address: Quadrangle Fir it CoIu„:„ Gladys Utterback, ' 29, Bloomington Virginia Brooks, ' 29, Wabash Zella Yates, ' 31, Fowler Helen Hughes, ' 31, Columbus Christine P ' Simer, ' 29, Anderson Dorothy Renwick, ' 29, Monticello SeconJ Column Leona Kuhn, ' 30, Wyatt Esther Geier, ' 29, Star City Lora Lackey, ' 29, Indianapolis Laura Stout, ' 31, Mishawaka IVIary Louise Lacy, ' 31, Paris, 111. Muriel Place, ' 29, Whiting Martha Fredenburg, ' 30, Whiting Fourth C,,!,,,,,,, Frances Ross, ' 31, Indianapolis Rachel Correll, ' 30, Bloomington Mary Brooks, ' 31, Wabash Marjorie Lutz, ' 30, Hobart Bernice Pcnrod, ' 31, Bloomington Alice Holton, ' 31, Osgood Juanita Smith, ' 31, Windfall Ftft t Column Mary Thome Mower, ' 29, Green Lucille Anderson, ' 28, Rising Sun Kathcrlne Eckert, ' 28, Osgood Louise Schctter, ' 28, Indianapolis Tuberia Ruchti, ' 31, Hobart Evelyn Charpie, ' 29, Gary Jcanette Botteron, ' 29, Fort Wayn H ;l ack, ' 31 Ha Arna McFarland, ' 29, Fort Wayne Matilda Auman, ' 30, Fort Wayne Beryl Reed, ' 29, Indianapolis Ellen McGranahan, PG, Lawrenceburg Lillian Osborne, ' 29, Crown Point Helen Clark, ' 29, Kempton Ixtli Column Ruby Portteus, ' 28, Raub Charlotte Henderson, ' 29, Wayne Helen Starnes, ' 29, HiUsboro Katherine Bockhop, ' 28, Osgood Inez Garrison, ' 31, Raub Dorothy Coppock, ' 29, Jonesboro Helen Marjorie Wilson, ' 30, Eva [160] tJ II „ -Jl iij V ' Theta Phi Alpha Founded ,U Uni versitv ot Michigan, 1912 Local Chapter: Zeta Established: 1920 National Chapters: 20 Flower: White Rose Colors: Silver and Gold Local Address: 7 1 4 East Eighth Sti eet Agnes Iren e Meussi, 0, Elwood Joan Mnri Coughlan, ' 29, Whiting Ruth Thrin e, ' 31, Leba non Kathyrn H elena Freem in, ' 28, Wina cond Col,n, „ Cecilia IVIo ran, ' 31, S, racuse Marie Bag noli, ' 28, I dianapolis Janice Ger rude Gardner, ' 30, Russc Rosalie Mc Laughlin, ' 31, Frankfort Mary Alice Lord, ' 30, Kewanna T ,irJ Culm,:,: Mabic Alice Dunn, ' 30, Arcadia Alice Josephine Brady, ' 31, Tipton Gertrude Schwab, ' 30, Bloomington Nora Ruth Gresham, ' 29, Logansport Alice Charlotte Kopp, ' 30, Kewanna Four h Colum:: Mary Margaret Lcttelleir, ' 29, Bloomingt( Mirtha Fiird, ' 31, ShelbyviUe Grace Evelyn O ' Neil, ' 31, Whiting Mariana Mullen, ' 29, Pittsboro Mildred Angela Kirschbau, ' 31, Brookville x_ [ 163] - : fc: f h s 10 ' Alpha Chi Omega Founded at DeP.iu v Uiiiversitv, Local Chapter: AIph:i Mii Established: 1922 National Chapters: 50 Flower: Red Carnation Colors: Scarlet and Olive Green Local Address: Quadrangle Opa! Young, ' 29, Ladoga Marhin Wylie, ' 30, Bloomlngton Amelia Howell, ' 30, Greenfield Janet Johnston, ' 30, Remington Mary Emma Adams, ' 30, Goshen Helen Shimp, ' 30, Portland Louise Emerson, ' 28, OwensviUe Barbara Dodson, ' 29, Cambridge Citv Seco,,J Colum,, Mary Bceson, ' 30, Cambridge City Martha Woodburn, ' 30, Colfax Joy Goycr, ' 30, Kokomo Mary Brown, ' 29, Pendleton Corlnne Hanes, ' 28, Wabash Helen O ' Dell, ' 30, M,iriis lne Arlcne Wright, •2 ' l, S.ili-ni Christine Miller, ' 311, K..liumo ¥oinl!i Cluwn Catherine Jane Brown, ' 28, Goshen Mary Shanks, ' 30, Salem Margaret Brumbaugh, ' 28, Elkhart Lucille Hurd, ' 30, Chicago, IlL Frances Foote, ' 30, Chicago, 111. Shirley Worrell, ' 31, Clayton Clara Hunter, ' 31, Bloomington Kathryn Beaty, ' 30, Bluffton Fifth Column Alice Prow, ' 30, Bloomington Mildred Clinton, ' 28, Yonkers, N. Y. Grace Clendenning, ' 30, Frankfort Marjorlc Smith, ' 31, ConnersviUe Virginia Hostetter, ' 30, Denver, Colo Marian Linkmeyer, ' 29, Aurora Katherine Dice, ' 29, Covington Marguerite Market, ' 30, Elkhart Third Col,, m„ La Vonne Huttun, ' 28, Peru Eleanor Nichols, ' 30, Mooresville Lois Smith, ' 30, New Haven Julia Howard. ' 31, Bloomington Evelyn Williams, ' 31, Denver, Colo Met; Putna Ackels. ' 30, Pendleton Sixlh Column Mary Katherine Strain, ' 30, Blooming Mary Frances Stubbs, ' 28, Shelbyvllle Ruth Custer, ' 28, Columbus Carrie Alford, ' 28, Dublin, Va. Vivian Mcintosh, ' 29, East Chicago Mary Alice Carpenter, ' 30, Perrysville Mary Franks, ' 30, Owensboro, Ky. Laura Ward, ' 28, Coalmont o4 Plbuiiis ' :r fii y Chi Omega Founded at University of Arkansas Local Chapter: Theta Beta Established: 1922 National Chapters: 81 Flower: White Carnation Colors: Cardinal and Straw Local Address: Quadrangle First Column Harriet Gragg, ' 30 , Lowell Virginia Meek, ' 28, Indianapolis Alice Miles, ' 29, Corydon Lucille Taylor, ' 30, St. Augustine, Fla. Dorothy Gentry, ' 30, Jamestown Sarah Margaret Murray, ' 30, Dunlcirk Florence Phelps, ' 31, Fort Wayne Lucille Graf, ' 30, Whiting Second Column Helen Collett, ' 31, Ridgeville Josephine Rundell, ' 30, Spencer Florence Hopkins, ' 29, Ridgeville Elna Paxton, ' 29, Hobart Lucille Waltz, ' 28, Edinburg Helen Gragg, ' 29, Lowell Delpha Sullivan, ' 28, Oakland City Tluri Column Mercedes Tinder, ' 28, Lapeer, Mich. Lillian O ' Bannon, ' 28, Corydon Ruth Ebert, ' 31, Hammond Catherine Thiele, ' 30, Whiting Mary Ellen Harrison, ' 30, Danville Burnace D ' Armond, ' 31, Wabash Sarah Ruse, ' 28, Lowell Fourth Cohnnn Mildred Woodworth, ' 28, Elkhart Mary Cauble, ' 31, Hardinsburg Mary Catherine Younger, ' 29, Bedford Sarah Adams, ' 31, Corydon Deborah Wallace, ' 28, Knlghtstown Dorothy Simler, ' 31, Corydon Margaret Wagner, ' 31, Knightstown Fifth Column Isabel Walters, ' 30, Fort Wayne Virginia Haymond, ' 28, Muncle Marcclla Shallcy, ' 31, Muncie Lois Porter, ' 29, Wabash Treva Gaunt, ' 28, Dunkirk Dorothy Rrubnker, ' 29, Warsaw Elizabeth Foster, ' 31, Columbus Sixth Column Martha Roberts, ' 30, Madison Elizabeth King, ' 31, Wabash Lucille Coolman, ' 28, CrawfordsviUe Geraldine Lower, ' 29, Fort Wayne Mildred NeflF, ' 29, La Fontaine Anne Marie Peterson, ' 29, Whiting Jocelyn Denbo, ' 30, Orleans Ruth Greenwood, ' 29, Washington, D. C. ' r4 PL .- .- W .% ' f S f . A-. ' l Phi Omega Pi Founded at University of Nebraska as Achoth Society, 1910 Name changed to Phi Omega Pi, 1922 Local Chapter: Xi Established: 1922 National Chapters: 19 Flower: Lily-of-the-Valley Colors: Sapphire and White I.oc.l Address: 1012 East Third Street First Column Adrienne Schmedel, ' 29, Indianapc Mary Ann Ferguson, ' 29, Farmers Kathryn Simpson, ' 30, Center Jane Whelan, ' 31, Bloomington Jean Cowley, ' 30, Chicago, Illinoi Mary Hauck, ' 30, Grcencastle Second Column Mary Jane Bonham, ' 28, Evansvil Mildred Eckerty, ' 28, Princeton Agnes Smith, ' 28, Elkhart Margaret Sage, ' 29, Brownstown Eloise Adams, ' 29, Princeton Evelyn Wylie, ' 31, Bloomington Eileen Beckett, ' 28, Attica Third Column Edith Dome, ' 31, Evansville Mary Goff, ' 31, La Porte Florence Kirkpatrick, ' 28, Plainfie Wilma Hinton, ' 29, Greencastle Audrey Carter, ' 31, Bloomington Norma Riley, ' 30, Chrlsney Fourth Column Katherine Welch, ' 30, Bloomington Maxine Dille, ' 28, Greensburg Geraldine Grover, ' 30, Fort Wayne Bernice Thompson, ' 31, Kokomo Mary Katherine Wcldele, ' 30, Terre Louise Hepley, ' 29, Bloomington Mabel Luella Riggs, ' 31, Kentland F.flh Column Dorothy Halvorsen, ' 31, Evansville Lela Greenwood, ' 28, Oxford Helen Jones, ' 29, Redkey Martha Pearson, ' 30, Flora Rosalind Mentzer, ' 30, Mentone Elizabeth Hauss, ' 29, Aurora Sixth Column Florence Pcarsc, ' 28, North Liberty Aline Welsheimer, ' 30, Columbia Cil Maurine Davis, ' 31, Greencastle Celia Kelso, ' 28, Carthage Vanda Miller, ' 31, Bloomington Gwendolyn Hemphill, ' 30, Monon Sara Lou Dille, ' 28, Greensburg ..j  - : fl na Vy iM -iM S ' 7 ' 5 ■: Zeta Tau Alpha Established at Virginia State Normal School, 1888 Local Chapter: Alpha Xi Established: 1922 National Chapters: 54 Flower: White Violet Colors: Turquoise and Silver Local Address: Quadrangle M. hst Column Mary Lou Wilkinson, ' 30, Bloo Opal Crockett, ' 30, Walton Florence Tomllnson, ' 30, Plym Naomi Campbell, ' 31, Attica Mildred Woodin, ' 30, Wabash Estlier Gant, ' 28, Attica Mary Hester Smitli, ' 30, Daytoi Fla our , Column Evelyn Wilkinson, ' 2S, Bloomington Irene Wilhelmus, ' 29, Newburg Marjorle Cox, ' 29, Bloomington Hildreth Seifert, ' 30, Indianapolis Coriene Wilhelmus, ' 30, Newburg Marjorie McKensen, ' 29, Shelbyville Virginia Thompson, ' 30, Indianapoli ' i Second Column Nora Smith, ' 29, Anderson Sarah Elizabeth Jones, ' 31, Knox Elizabeth Siefert, ' 30, Indianapolis Ileen Young, ' 30, Sheridan Mabel A. Boyd, ' 29, Geneva, N. Y. Louise Pearson, ' 29, Shelbyville Ora Stelr, ' 31, Washington, Pa. Tiird Column Lucille Flurher, ' 29, EvansviUe Aldine Lantis, ' 31, Eluffton Martha Jones, ' 31, Clinton Ruth Wilbur, ' 29, Hamilton Marion Rhorer, ' 28, Oakland, Cal. Wilma Nagel, ' 29, Chalmers Irene Ross, ' 28, Shelbyville Fifth Column Helen Crawford, ' 29, Fort Wayne Frances Caden, ' 28, EvansviUe Mary Hale, ' 31, Fort Wayne Grace Caufman, ' 28, Gallipolis, Ohio Opal Weeks, ' 31, Ligonier Elizabeth Cammerer, ' 30, Kokomo Charlotte Deeds, ' 31, Anderson SixtA Column Nehersta Pierce, ' 31, Alexandria Mary Brower, ' 29, Ketchell Lois Zimmerman, ' 29, Bridgeville Bernice Ooley, ' 30, Bloomington Marjorie Hawkins, ' 31, KendalhiUe Ruth Price, ' 28, Fort Wayne Fay Overton, ' 31, Kokomo xLy, . . J . u Bttiyt f ' r [171] cAr bvliiS j f4 Kappa Delta Founded at Virginia State Normal School, Local Chapter: Sigma Upsilon Established: 1923 National Chapters: 61 Flower: White Rose Colors: Olive Green and Pearl White Local Address: 825 East Eighth Street First Column Orah Cole, ' 29, Bluffton Ruth Anderson, ' 28, Fort Wayne Mary Lohrmann, ' 28, Indianapolis Alice Moomaw, ' 30, South Bend Elizabeth Voight, ' 29, JeffersonviUe Clarice Barker, ' 29, Plainfield Second Column Meridith Pleasant, P. G., Indianapolis Katherine Hurlbert, ' 29, Indianapolis Juanlta Moscr, ' 29, Nashville Irene Smith, ' 29, Tiosa Phyllis M. Finlcy, ' 31, Albion Third Column Beatrix Bumpas, ' 28, Logansport Mary Jane White, ' 29, Columbia City Dorothy Belle Finley, ' 29, Indianapoli Edythe Wilson, ' 30, JeffersonviUe Elizabeth Kendall, ' 28, JeffersonviUe Fourth Column Margaret Williams, ' 31, Bloomington Beula Sare, ' 28, Bloomington Mary Grant, ' 28, Fort Wayne Maxine Williams, ' 30, Connersville Evelyn Arkcnburg, ' 29, Batesville Fifth Column Hazel Jackson, ' 29, Hagerstown Florence Phillips, ' 31, Valparaiso Margaret MaisoU, ' 29, Indianapolis Cloris Jones, ' 30, Owensburg Madeline McFarland, ' 31, Madison, i Sixth Column Helen Spaugh, ' 29, ZionsviUe Hazel Arkenburg, ' 31, Batesville Helen Barker, ' 31, Plymouth Helen SiniiT, ' 30, South Bend Mary Shigley Wcstfall, ' 29, Wolcott Orthella Stephens, ' 30, Oxford ' ' ■.. . j -5 [173] ' .% 10, ' M:i ' iM, Alpha Delta Pt Founded at Wesleyan College, 1851 Local Chapter: Beta Alpha Established: 1926 National Chapters: 52 Flower: Violet Colors: Light Blue and White Local Address: Ballantine and Third Fir t Colunn, Marjorle MulHn, ' 31, Rockfi Lenore Lamb, ' 29, Newcastle Kathryne Myers, ' 29, Chili Mary Cook, ' 28, EvansviUe Eula Stringer, ' 29, Ellettsvill Huldah Dell, ' 28, Logansporl Third Column Katherine Hougland, ' 30, Rockport Eunice Timmerman, ' 31, Richmond Lolita Hostettler, ' 31, La Grange Florence Roth, ' 28, Boonville Lois Downs, ' 30, Danville, 111. Jane Hart, ' 28, Garrett m Second Column Evelyn Hastings, ' 29, Paragon Betty Fermier, ' 29, Leesourg Mablc Trotter, ' 30, Hope Mary Staley, ' 29, Lafayette Ruth Homey, ' 30, CrawfordsviUe Fourlh Column Katherine Sweet, ' 28, Indianapolis Doris Wise, ' 30, Lafayette Emilie Thuman, ' 28, EvansviUe Mary Louise Mueller, ' 28, Evansv Kathrvn Metz, ' 28, New Point hU Filth Column Charlotte Pelz, ' 31, EvansviUe Blanche Hargis, ' 29, Derby Irene Pelz, ' 28, EvansviUe Mary Latham, ' 29, Indianapolis Catherine Gwinn, ' 28, Frankfort Jean StlUwell, ' 31, EvansviUe [175] Cy -,pbiiiiis Beta Sigma Omicron Founded University of Columhia, Columbi, Local Chapter: Alpha Beta Established: 1926 National Chapters: 3 5 Flower: Richmond and Killarncy Rose Colors: Ruby and Pink Local Address: 420 South Fess Street Harriet Allee, P. G., Bloomington Juanita Mae Combs, ' 30, Bloomfield Rachal Griffith, ' 28, Bloomington Madge Woods, ' 30, Dugger Pauline Ashley, ccouJ Column Margaret Whyt Edith Titus, ' 2i Mary Dill, ' 31, Pendleton Esther Eeclcr, ' 29, Liberty Catherine Blosser, ' 30, Goshe Pe.irl Shaffer, ' 28, liienicn Nellie Clark, ' 28, BIu iinington Lora McKinzie, ' 28, Pine Villag. Lelia E. Enley, ' 29, Wheatland Ruth Stewart, ' 28, Salem Hildred Grueber, ' 28, Fuit Wayi Fourth Column Ruth Yerkes, ' 30, Covington Agnes Spencer, ' 30, Indianapolis Winona Welch, P. G., Goodland Thelma Abell, ' 29, Nappanee Florence Moellcr, ' 29, Seymour Josephine Brown, ' 28, Gosport V; iH F,fth Column Alice Schade, ' 29, Wabash Verna Schaefer, ' 29, Cannelton Virginia Wharton, ' 30, Indianapc Hazel Keffaler, ' 28, Wabash Ruth Buchanan, ' 29, Bloomington Mabel Boyer, ' 30, Bloomington J- ..JMiMSl MiMS ' I [177] u Women ' s Residence Men ' s Residence Indiana Club Firsl Columu Roy Huitema, ' 28, New Paris Gladys Franklin, ' 29, Freedom James Pfeifer, ' 30, Areola, 111. Nina Sturbois, ' 29, Alexandria Henr) ' M. Flowers, ' 28, Churubusco Cr stal Carruthers, ' 31, Bloomington Lee A. Dare, ' 30, Columbia City Second Column Marie Daniel, ' 30, Indianapolis Tom L. Sovine, ' 30, Bunker Hill Olive Carruthers, ' 29, Bloomington Marshall Huntsingcr, ' 31, Pendleton Olive Wingard, ' 28, La Fontaine Orrin O. Boren, ' 29, Cynthiana James Loren Hughes, ' 31, Indianapolis Third Column Paul Pepper, ' 29, Fort Wayne Ada Meyer, ' 30, Osgood Gerald Fisher, ' 29, Wolcottville Helen Carroll, ' 30, South Bend Clifford M. Blowers, ' 31, Portland Ida Wilson, ' 28, New Richmond Fourth Column Mary Helen Burt, ' 29, Columbia City Raymond Speer, ' 28, Orleans Margaret Henderson, ' 31, South Bend Courtney C. Boone, ' 31, Bromer Vita Ann Petro, ' 28, Losantville John Pittenger, ' 29, Coesse Fifth Column Frederick Eley, ' 28, Portland Martha Shaw, ' 29, Columbia City Leslie Groves, ' 30, Indianapolis Violettc Sayers, ' 30, South Bend Robert Shelley, P. G., Bluffton Ralph Hile, P. G., Indianapolis Sixth Column Ada Marie Barnes, ' 29, Shelbyville Dana Schwanholt, ' 29, Dillsborough Irene Knight, ' 29, Warren Wendall Adamson, ' 28, Bloomington Garnet Pumphrey, ' 30, Tipton Helen Wolfgang, ' 29, Columbia City John Grimes, ' 29, Elwood fventh Column Frederick AUman, ' 30, Bloomington Mary Morton, ' 31, Alexandria John Reed, ' 30, Bloomington Mary Carroll, ' 31, South Bend Eldon Baker, ' 30, Columbia City Howard Evans, ' 28, RussellviUe Joseph Waymire, ' 29, Bloomington :- 4| .wr- 1 [178] w [ire] .o .- .. . m mf-: m Sorority Lift B, RADsiREET aiid a questionnaire serve as the means of the modern sorority ' s pledging s stem. Detective bureaus may be installed later. With the construction of many new sorority houses in these parts a tabulation as to the financial progress made by every prospective pledge ' s father is a household necessity. Sister Jones was late with her house bill a few months ago because her Old Man out at Storm Center had a new front put on his general merchandise store. Knowing that she couldn ' t get that house bill paid in time, Sister Jones just took her fur coat, a la mail order house, and left. A few weeks later Mr. Jones became reckless and speculated. The result was that Sister Jones bought another fur coat, laid in a new stock of chewing gum, and went back to her diet at the $$$ house. Storm Center ' s daughter and the rest of the sororities have enjoyed their greatest year of sorortorial love, according to the department of competitive statistics. Jesse James, the most prominent man on the back campus, recently left the $$$ ' s in the lurch. He had had his pin on Sister Dynamique, but he transferred his aifections to Gladys Gladys, of another establishment. Sister Jones ' s sorority and Sister Gladys ' s outfit, along with their private detective bu- reaus, found that their rival ' s side porch lights had been broken, and that the respective sisters were becoming promiscuous. Chewing gum was abandoned, for each sorority had something on its rival. At a meeting of the $$$ ' s it was decided that no sister should speak to a member of the rival organization ; furthermore, if a member of Gladys Gladys ' s sorority gets in the Griffy Creek Resume, each loyal sister will high hat her. So the high hatting process started. Sister Gladys was walking to class the next day with several of her sistern-in-the- belief, and, strange to say. Sister Dynamique and a few of her cohorts were coming down the sidewalk. Vanity cases flew recklessly and furiously until all the sisterhood of both factions had their faces well covered. Then came the meeting. Both parties stopped. All of both sororities admired the other ' s garb, complexion, make of tooth brush, and divers usages of slang. The conversation ended. After several steps were taken in opposite directions, mem- bers of both groups looked slyly over their shoulders, got out their notebooks, and read the ritual of hate for the other sorority. . A X ■jjd a: [ 181 ] ' - M mr Interjraternity Council f Sherzcooi Bliif, Piesiilen Organized men finally reached the decision that they had accomplished nothing in the year in which they had existed as separate and unrelated organizations, and accordingly, in the fa ll of 1927 a new combination was formed and named the Interfraternity council. In this new council the house president of each fraternity was the sole representative. Its activities have not been aggressive, but they have been calculated and well organized. All indications point to a new era in inter- fraternity relations which will be based on mutual understanding and co- operation. m First Column Robert Dreisbach, Sigma Nu Richard Ray, Beta Theta Pi Richard Griffith, Alpha Tau Omega Max Votaw, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Second Column Frank Stimson, Delta Tan Delta William Ramsey, Phi Gamma Delt: Oswald Fox, Kappa Delta Rho Robert Talbot, Kappa Sigma Theodore Dann, Sigma Alpha Mu Third Column Gilbert Alsop, Phi Delta Theta Richard Trueblood, Phi Kappa Psi Vane Howard, Lambda Chi Alpha J. Cromer AUdredge, Acacia The Chi Sig o„rt , Column Halford Dawsi Robert Boyard, Sigma Chi Eugene Hazel, Delta Chi Malcolm Mallette, Delta Upsilo: [1S3] film ifirnf ' S 0i Beta Theta Pi Founded at Miami University, 18 Local Chapter: Pi Established: 1845 National Chapters: 86 Flower: American Beauty Rose Colors: Pink and Blue Local Address: East Tenth Street irst Column Richard Ray, ' 28, Sanford Martin Mutz, ' 31, Edinburg Fred Swihart, ' 31, Goshen Dillon Geiger, ' 29, Bloomingtoi Richard King, ' 31, Bloomingtoi Fred Tangeman, ' 29, Bluffton Edwin Cl.ipham, ' 30, Fort Wayr Four h Column Henry George, ' 30, Kokomo Paul Miller, ' 30, Bloomington Joseph Kivett, ' 30, Martinsville Maurice O ' Rourk, ' 31, Kokomo Giles Pierre, ' 31, Fort Wayne Thomas Dyer, ' 30, Indianapolis Ward Dildinc, ' 29, Fort Wayne econd Column Charles Hepburn, ' 29, Bloomington Gerald Rice, ' 31, Logansport Myron Paige, ' 29, Terra Haute Ncal Baxter, ' 31, Bluffton George Davis, ' 31, Kokomo Alva Kline, ' 28, Indianapolis Rawls Cook, ' 29, Bloomfield F!fi , Column Robert Miles, ' 29, Fort Wayne Vincent Ryde, ' 30, Indianapolis William Bond, ' 30, Terrc Haute William Nixon, ' 30, Indianapolis Walter Brown, ' 31, Bloomfield Robert Winston, ' 29, Washington lames Gill, ' 30, Washington I TAIrd Column George Hutto, ' 30, Kokomo William Miller, ' 28, Bloomington Don Vordermark, ' 29, Fort Wayne Edmund Keeney, ' 30, ShelbyviUe William Huston, ' 31, Kokomo Howard Alltop, ' 29, Clarksburg, W. Va. Alfred Laiiter, ' 29, Indianapolis Sixth Column Clifford Weldy, ' 31, Elkhart Fletcher King, ' 29, Anderson Hugh Shanahan, ' 31, Goshen Robert David, ' 30, Logansport Robert Hclfrick, ' 31, Elkhart Creed Fisher, ' 28, Indianapolis Carl Winnings, ' 31, Elwood I f f:: f  t mam [185] :)uiius ' 2. 4 Phi Delia Theta d Ch. nl University, Indiana Alpha Fstsbllshed: 18+9 National Chapters: 96 Flower: White Carnation Colors: Argent and Azure Local Address: East Tenth Str First Column George P. M.icKnight, ' 30, Fowler Robert Elliott, ' 29, Logansport J. W. Ungei-, ' !1, West Point, Mis Artluir Funkhousei Earl li. Hill, ' 29, Warsaw- Ross AUee, ' 31, Cloverdale Alfred P. Mower, ' 31, Greentown Henry L. Drake, ' 28, Indianapolis Second Column W. R. Stephenson, ' 28, Macon, Miss George W. Bates, ' 29, Fowler Warren Vsery, ' 30, Attica O. K. McKittrick, ' 29, Indianapolis William A. Sheplar, ' 29, Indianapoli Don Wilson, ' 30, Indianapolis James Van Hook, ' 28, Bloomingtun T urd Column Richard Beroth, ' 28, Warsaw Thomas Robinson, ' 30, Indianapolis John Hoover, ' 31, BoonviUe Kern Knox, ' 31, Indianapolis Edward N. Steel, ' 29, Robinson, 111. Robert Kinnett, ' 30, Milroy i T. Ruby, ' 28, Walla Walla, Fourth Column Gilbert M. Alsop, ' 28, Vincennes Ralph Alsop, ' 30, Vincennes Harold Loge, ' 31, Boonville James Regester, ' 28, Bloomington _ Robert Hunter, ' 31, Newcastle Charles H. Mount, ' 28, ConnersviUe Elson Helwig, ' 29, Warsaw Fiflli Column Dale Wells, ' 29, LaPorte Clarence Owens, ' 29, Horse C.ive, K; Hanson S. Giflord, ' 30, Tipton Robert Nelson, ' 31, Chicago, 111. Chester Wh.iley, ' M, Dogger Donald Phelps, ' 31, North Webster Dwight McCi ' 30, Pho Sixlh Column Franklin K. MuUin, ' 30, Rushvlllt Donald Dean, ' 29, Rushvillc John Shemaitis, ' 31, Chicago Martin Clift, ' 31, Newcastle James Cavr, ' 31, RushviUe James Moss, ' 31, Horse Cave, Ky, Charles M. Morris, ' 31, Newcastle David Pugh, ' 30, RushviUe t % -J j [187] ' MWD M ' l-cJiif btiitJS ] a M St HIM Chi Founded at Miami Uni ersity, 185 5 Local Chapter: Lambda Established: 18 58 National Chapters: 82 Flower: White Rose Colors: Blue and Gold Local Address: 601 Eas t Seventh Street First Col,„„„ Vourlh Column Karl V.-lt-i, •; ■rii.il III Claire Randolph, ' 29, Elkhart John Mri ' . i ' || ' ii.,i,ih Ralph Shafer, ' 30, Upland Merlin 1!: Earl Shafer, ' 31, Upland Robert P1h;:.| William AnstcJ . , William Hamilton, ' 30, Greensbur ' 30, Conncrsville Alan Lewis, ' 28, Indianapolis Robert Crasher, ' 31, Marion Roger Devlin, 31, Tulsa, Okla. Yadcn Spencer, ' 31, Bloomington Second Colu mn Fiill, Column Russell Kelso, 28, New Albany Cluni Bucher, ' 28, Huntington Lorin Watson, 29, Indianapolis Sterling Ward, ' 31, Garret Cornelius Haye , ' 30, Elkhart Richard Lockton, ' 30, Elkhart Richard Lawson, ' 31, Brazil James Lesh, ' 30, Indianapolis De Weere Dyer ' 31, New Albany Eugene Wilson, ' 29, Conncrsville Charles Wylie, ' 29, Bloomington Charles Lesh, ' 30, Muncie ThhJ Coluun, Sixth Column R..bci-t McMllI n, ' 30, Muncie Robert Bolyard, ' 28, Indianapolis Cb.irk- H. ill. in 1, ' 30, BI„„mington Arthur Sullivan, ' 31, Indianapolis Joe Lesh, ' 511, lunlliml.in Harold Bettman, ' 30, New Albany John Collins, • S, MlJil .n, Citv John Bolvard, ' 30, Indianapolis Wilson DcCam , •;! ' , i liK. 1, 11. 111. Harold Schaefer, ' 29, Indianapolis Irvan Fleischer ' 3 , r« .Mli.ilU Kenneth Baker, ' 30, New Albany Seveulh Colu in, William G raham, Jr , ' 28, Bloomington Ernest Killlan, ' 29, Washington Jack Felto n, ' 30, To ronto, Canada James Bea ty, ' 30, I idlanapolis Edward H ughes, ' 31 Gary James McMillan, ' 3 , Muncie m 1 .,! [188] Phi Kappa Psi Founded .it Washington . nd Jefferson College, 1852 Local Chapte r: Beta Established: 1869 National Cha pters: 5 Flower: Jacq ueminot Rose Colors: Red and Green Local Addres : 1022 E.1 .t Third Street Fin Colunn, Fourth Column Jean A, Graffis, ' 30, Ricl.mond William Dice, ' 30, Covington Jack Gronlnjcr, ' 31, Indianapolis Phil Pike, ' 30, Bloonilngton William Luther, ' 29, Brazil James Shattuck, ' 31, Brazil William Laurien, ' 28, Warsaw John Bundy, ' 30, Vincennes Noland Wright, ' 30, Anderson Robert Wasmuth, ' 29, Huntingto Horace Boyd, ' 31, Evanston, 111. James Johnson, ' 28, Fairmount Harold Ratllff, ' 31, Fairmount Second Column Douglas Scheid, ' 29, Vincennes Neg Shirts, ' 29, Indianapolis Edwin Harold, ' 28, Indianapolis Hal Blount, ' 30, Memphis, Tenn. Richard Baker, ' 31, NoblesviUe John Dow, ' 31, Indianapolis Neal Hines, ' 30, Terre Haute Fifth Column Robert Blount, ' 30, Anderson Robert Smith, ' 31, Lebanon Byron Brenton, ' 30, Petersburg Tom Jones, ' 30, Gary Paul Jones, ' 31, Newcastle Andrew Powell, ' 31, Marion Tom Hubbard, ' 30, Indianapolis Third Column Sixth Column Dixon Trueblood, ' 28, IVIarion James Tucker, ' 30, Salem Maurice Starr, ' 29, Anderson Carl Rinne, ' 30, Indianapolis Dow Richardson, ' 28, Marion John Volderauer, ' 29, EvansviUe Earl Swain, ' 31, Muncie William Teetor, ' 31, Bloomingto, Frank Conley, ' 31, Frankfort Charles R.acey, ' 30, Vincennes George Richardson, ' 31, Marion John Rawley, ' 31, Terre Haute Scott Chambers, ' 30, Newcastle Louis Mitchell, ' 30, Anderson l4 Delta Tan Delta m Founded at Bcthain College, 1859 Local Chapter: Beta Alpha Established: 1871 National Chapters: 75 Flower: Pansv Colors: Purple, Wh te and G old Local Address: 408 North h diana Avenue Firs Column E. Fr:ink Stimson, ' 28, Gary John Hrld, ' 31, WiUlamsport J. V. Stimson, ' 30, Oxvensboro, Kv Winston li.iir, ' 30, J,,sonville Rlch.ird WciJig, ' 30, Indianapolis Howard Hammer, ' 30, Indianapoli Geary Smith, ' 30, Gary Clarence Wynn, ' 31, Rochester Second Column William Riddle, PG, Lawrcnccburj Curtis Siegelln, ' 30, Brazil Robert Davis, ' 29, Gary Paul Mcndenhall, ' 29, Indianapolis John Shafer, ' 31, Rochester Edward Krusc, ' 31, Indianapolis Robert Handy, ' 31, Morristown Third Column John Woolery, ' 28, Bedford Paul Spicer, ' 31, Paris, 111. Leland Burford, ' 29, Indianapolis William Jenner, ' 30, Marengo Fred Hill, ' 31, Indianapolis Burl Brannon, ' 31, Monticello Louis Ikei-d, ' 30, Bloomfield ourll, Column Bales Miller, ' 31, Brazil Eddie King, ' 28, Terre Har Andrew Van Sickle, ' 31, Ca Edward Bettcher, ' 31, India Eugene Yockey, ' 30, Angola Thomas Aitken, ' 31, Indiana Wil Ada Fifth Column Fred Mustard, ' 28, Rensselaer John Luzadder, ' 29, Bloomington Willi. im Kcrlin, ' 31, Delphi Emanuel Miller, ' 28, Brazil William Lea itt, ' 31, Brazil Joseph Carpenter, ' 28, Angola William Moss, ' 29, Jasonville Sixth Column Robert Huncilman, ' 29, Bloomin, Carl Brecht, ' 30, Indianapolis Kenneth Warren, ' 31, Marshall Dale Rafferty, ' 29, Greenfield Owen Llndley, ' 31, French Lick Herman Brecht, ' 31, Indianapolis James Miller, PG, Peru f p i v vt L maim M mmmM [193] US m. m % ' Phi Gamma Delta Founded at Va hington nd Jefferson College, 1848 Local Chapter: Zct , Established: 18 71 National Chapt ers: 69 Flower: Purple Clemat s Color: Royal Purpl e Local Addrc??: 631 F.nn Third Street Fint Column Fonrlh Cvh.mn William D. Ramsey, ' 29, Terrc Haute J.,hn Leonard, ' 29, Rochester Joseph Greenwood, ' 31, Washington Wallace McConnell, ' 29, Carlisle Joe Hatfield, ' 30, Evansville John McGinnis, ' 31, Columbus A. Warren Phillips, ' 30, Columbus Halleck Hoag, ' 28, Newton, Kan. Edward Benzel, ' 29, Bedford John Hunt, ' 29, Rensselaer Laurence Wylie, ' 31, Vincennes George Blif:h, ' ?(!, R .cluster Chester Weed, ' 29, Kempton Eugene Sprln.c,-, ' 2S, Sullivan Fred Trcadu.iy, ' .M, L.iPnrte Sc-co„d Column Arthur Stevenson, ' 30, Indianapolis Fill , Column A. Joseph Hirons, ' 29, Portland Parker Dunham, ' 28, Kempton J. Robert Shideler, ' 29, Indianapolis Robert StonehiU, ' 30, Indianapolis Jack McCoy, ' 30, Indianapolis Buford O ' Blenis, ' 30, Mishawaka John Scott, ' 30, Indianapolis Ralph Martzolf, ' 29, Kokomo James Strickland, ' 30, Owensville Shockley Lockridge, ' 28, Bloomingt Donald Templer, ' 28, Muncle John Rosebaum, ' 31, Indianapolis Hobart Hobbs, ' 31, Kempton Harper Miller, ' 29, Muncie Francis Wylie, ' 28, Vincennes Third Column Lee Streaker, ' 28, Salem Sixlh Column Robert Caine, ' 30, Marion Robert Zaiser, ' 28, Indianapolis James Sinclair, ' 31, Sullivan Earl Conrad, ' 30, Bicknell Wallace Ruck, ' 30, Bicknell Truman Warren, ' 29, Muncie Harry Miller, ' 29, Elwood City, Pa. Howard DeMyer, ' 29, LaPorte Ralph Palmer, ' 28, Washington Otis McQuiston, ' 30, Paxton, 111. William Shields, ' 30, Muncie Eugene Alexander, ' 31, Evansville Duane Hicks, ' 30, Indianapolis Maurice .Avery, ' 31, Gary r. ' ai c j Kappa Sigma Founded at Universitv of -lrginla, 1869 Local Chapter: Beta Theta Established: 1887 National Chapters: 101 Flower: Lilv-of-the-Vallev Colors: Scarlet, Green and White Local Address: East Third Street I J Firs Clumn Robert M. Talbot, ' 28, Blooming Fred P. Nehrbas, Jr., ' 29, Evansv , Lyall D. Morrill, ' 30, Fort Wayn Chas. G. Dant, ' 31, Indianapolis Frank R. Gove, ' 31, Muncie Byron D. Arrick, ' 28, Converse Dcryl Foster, ' 28, Columbus Karl Pielemeier, ' 31, Vincennes Second Coh,m„ Philip S. Talbot, ' 30, Bloominpto Fred Sanders, ' 28, Newcastle Clayson Patrick, ' 29, Muncie Herbert H. Evans, ' 31, Newcastle Amos Otstot, ' 31, Muncie Robert Frazer, ' 31, Marion Robert S. Studv, ' 30, Muncie Paul J. Messic ' k, ' 30, ShelbyxiUe Third Cohiwn Julius Moser, ' 30, Bloomlngton Robert L. Todd, ' 30, Bedford Joseph E. Hamaker, ' 29, Indianap Lester M. Bolitho, ' 29, Chicago William W. Crow, ' 29, Cromwell Albert Davison, ' 29, New Londor James B. Schutt, ' 30, Ligonier Charles Brubaker, ' 30, Fort VVayni Robert Correll, ' 29, Bloo lingto n ■arl Q ueisser, ' 29, I ndian apolis Robert M. Brown, ' - y, ■has. . Weirich, ' 3i , For t Wa ne Jeorge E. McReyno ds, ' 31, CI ntoii amuc B. Ryan, ' 29 , Princeton .ee A. Showaltcr, ' ' . 1, W abash illia , O. Hepley, ' 31, Bloom ngton Villia 1 I. Caldwell ■29, Silver Lake Fifth Col,n,:„ William B. Matthew, ' 29, Gary Robert C. Doles, PG, Greensburg Robert C. Cook, ' 31, Columbus Robert M. Scheuman, ' 31, Fort Wayne Noble O. Sprunger, ' 30, Fort Wayne Richard S. Jones, ' 30, ShelbvviUe Aubert Clarke, ' 31, Anderson Chester L. Decker, PG, Lawrenceburg Sixlli Coliiw:, Robert B. Matthew, ' 29, Gary J. NeiU Garber, ' 30, Dunkirk Frank Ballman, ' 31, Indianapolis Joseph A. Smith, ' 30, Vincennes Donald W. Llbey, ' 30, Kendallville Norman H. Miles, ' 29, Berlin, N. II Charles Rich, ' 30, Converse Robert D. Ewing, ' 31, Shelbyville i ,4 %. Scvcn h Chiwn Karl S. Thornburg, ' 28, Muncie E. Branch McCracken, ' 30, MonroN Audrey E. Hollenbeck, ' 30, Andersc James Leffel, ' 31, Warsaw Gerald Albright, ' 31, Anderson Robert ' Masters, ' 30, Aurora, 111. Henry C. Smith, ' 30, Maunie, 111. William R. Flaitz, ' 31, Shelbyville Ck, 1 ' f [197] m p ' l i T y L ' ' ' 53 f r ' ' ■Q km Mg: £!3 ; ;« ; Vm Founded at Virginia Military Institute, Local Chapter: Beta Eta Established: 1892 National Chapters: 93 Flower: White Rose Colors: Black, White and Gold Local Address: 322 E. Kirkwood Ave. il H First Column Fourth Cohn,,„ Alfred V. Ringer, ' 28, ViIlla.risport Dean Todd, ' 30, Bloomington VVay.u. Cars..,,, ' 29, InJianapnlis Wilbert Catterton, ' 30, Kenosha Alfred R.iys, ' !l , Plyniuuth Rollo Schumacher, ' 29, Kewanna Harold Carnelly, ' :S, Elkhart Phillip Clark, ' 28, Fort Wayne Ramon Kessler, ' :9, Evan5 ille Craydon Hubbard, ' 29, Brookville John Cooper, ' 29, North ' ernon Frank Keppen, ' 30, Michigan City . James Kattman, ' 31, Brazil Frank Welcher, ' 29, Coal City ' : ' Phillip Platter, ' 30, North Vernon Robert Pentecost, ' 30, Indianapoli -■- Second Cohimn Fifth Colu„n, Kern Miles, ' 28, Pendleton Herman Byers, ' 28, Evansville Paul Whitehouse, ' 31, Columbus Antrim Catterton, ' 28, Kenosha William Hart, ' 31, New Castle Fred Swain, ' 31, Pendleton Lewis Biggs, ' 31, Hr.M.kviUe John Crisp, ' 30, Evansville Robert Batey, ' 3(1, North ' ernon Donald Cooper, ' 30, North Verno Roy Lynn, ' 29, Evansville George Sage, ' 29, JeffersonviUe Allen Hanna, ' 31, Bloomington Russell Hanna, ' 29, Terre Haute i Ralph Weaver, ' 29, Terre Haute Maynard Lemon, ' 31, Bicknell i ■Third Coltmni Sixth Column Joseph Todd, ' 2S, Rloomington Brandt Steele, ' 29, Indianapolis -i Edward Farmer, ' 28, Bloomington Richard Llnebach, ' 28, Greenfield 1 Lucien Ashby, ' 31, Evansville Carl Porter, ' 29, Linton Herschell Johnson, ' 30, Indianapolis Henry Lynn, ' 29, Evansville f Fred Anglin, ' 28, Leesburg John Humpston, ' 30, Goodland Robert Kirby, ' 29, Bloomington Irwin Cummings, ' 29, Brownstowr Chauncy Allen, ' 30, Linton Malcolm Shafer, ' 30, Brazil Robert Dreisbach, ' 28, Fort Wayne Donald Bowen, ' 28, Lebanon H ..o ' 1 mi tkm _-4 . [199] ' IT-m t I; Sigma Alpha Epstlon Founded at University of Ala Local Chapter: Gamma Established: 1907 National Chapters: 100 Flower: Violet Colors: Purple and Gold Local Address: Quadrangle Fir.t Column Joseph Kldd, PG, Philadelphia, Pa. Robert Etherton, ' 30, New Albany Frank Wilson, ' 30, Indianapolis James M. Turney, ' 28, Franklin Wallace Evans, ' 30, Remington Braxton E. letlrics, ' 31, Indianapolis Burke E. Whitaker, ' 31, Indianapolis Second Column Maxwell Votaw, ' 28, Wabash Louis Carow, ' 29, Michigan City Matthew Hutmaker, ' 31, Philadelphia, Pa Kenneth Eberts, ' 29, Jefiersonville Ritter Lavcngood, ' 3f, Wabash Arthur Palmer, ' 30, Huntington George Ross, ' 31, Shelbyville Third Column Daniel James, PG, Indianapolis Denzel Pittman, ' 29, Sullivan Paul Emert, ' 28, Indianapolis William James, ' 29, Indianapolis Harry Stitle, ' 29, Indianapolis Thomas Quinn, ' 30, Indianapolis Paul Richardson, ' 31, Martinsville Fourlh Column Joseph Stipp, ' 29, Michigan City Harvey Shipp, ' 28, Little Rock, Ark. Steven Boneff, ' 31, Detroit, Mich. George Murphy, ' 31, Wabash Walter Risch, ' 29, Vincennes Edgar C John St( ' 31, Bio igton Fifth Column Ravmond Tavlor, ' 30, Spencer Robert Reed, ' 31, Sulliv.in Jack D. Kusy, ' 31, Omaha, Neb. Frank Hnjnacki, ' 31, Detroit, Mich. Walter Waraksa, ' 30, Detroit, Mich. Sylvan Tackitt, ' 31, Martinsville Mayburn Landgraf, ' 30, Indianapoli; Sixth Column Lawrence Marks, ' 31, Sullivan Eaton Dudley, ' 30, Sullivan Gaither Eads, ' 29, Bloomington Emerson Nafe, ' 29, Rochester Marshall W. Reavis, ' 31, Anderson Kenneth Coyle, ' 29, Warsaw George Wilson, PG, Indianapolis il fventh Column Frank M. Nichols, ' 31, La Granj Preston Smith, ' 28, Kokomo SherriU Deputy, ' 28, Dugger Herbert Deickman, ' 29, Evansvil Paul Winters, ' 31, Linton Frank Hodges, ' 29, Indianapolis Leo House, ' 29, Cambridge City W -J - - oAiMbvtus - 2 Alpha Tail Omega Founded at ' irginia Military Institute Local Chapter: Delta Alpha Established: 1915 National Chapters: 89 Flower: White Tea Rose Colors: Gold, Blue and White Local Address: 720 East Third Street nl Col,„„„ Fourth Column Jaseph A. De Lo, ' 2 ' ), Kokomo Arnold Habbe, Mil, Kv.msville John Thomas, ' 30, La Fontaine Stanley Stohr, •2S, Terre Haute Walter Eakiiis, ' 2S, Rusluille Edward Kruse, ' 31, Indianapolis Lavvreno ' i n! ■. . i, ' ' ' , l:l ..mington Max Gordon, ' 311, Indianapolis Clifford M ■■■y nr City Robert Pebworth, ' 31, Indianapolis Ben M.inl,. : 1 mapolis Robert Lcedy, ' 31, Logansport E. Weir C, M : ' .- V l.luood Paul Mason, ' 28, Rockport co,,d Column Fift , Column Donaia WuoJw.irJ, ' 28, Danville Paul Graves, ' 29, Salem r:,!,: ; n::n:rh, •2Q, Evansville George Gr..vc=, ' 30, S.ilcm W |. ■•!, Rrazil William P„llni,l, ,1, St, Louis, Mo. V. V ■, ' - ' 1, St. Louis, Mo. lohn M.icn il ' -i , ' ' 0, Clinton X. 1 V ,:,., ■' }, Indianapolis Rcrt Vns, ' 3(1, Rloomington Carl Southard, ' 29, Nohlesville Charles Howard, ' 30, Evansville Harry Miller, ' 30, Kokomo hhJCol,n,:„ Sixth Column Paul Hanx II, ' .- ' I, In Ji in.ipolis Robert Boggs, ' 31, Salem Vance S.iriin li.-M, •;!, Trrre Haute Jack Countryman, ' 30, Terre Haute Hn«a.d 11, ] !, ' ' i ' Irrrr Haute Frank Carter, ' 2S, Arcadia I., I- n ' , , ■■' , Delphi Walter Jaros, ' 31, Hamtramck, Mich. M- , ■;(!, Flat Rock Stanley Cooper, ' 31, Brazil R ' s :. .V, ' 31, RushviUe Denby Cadick, ' 29, Crandview David Laycock, ' 31, Indianapolis Seventh Colu,, „ Paul Stout, ' 31, Bloomington Kerv al Goo dvvir , ' 30, Sevmour Chris Pesax ento ' 31, Clinton Will nil St ain. ' 29, Bloomington Man on Sh inks ' 31, Salem Fran is MI Is, ' 29, Wabash Thur man S mith ' 31, Salem 14 kM jm : c biji s ' If Dt :; Upsilon Foun dcd at Wi! iams College, 183 + Locil Ch ipter: Indiana Established: 1915 National Chapters: 52 Colo s: Old Gc Id and S. pphir e Blue Loca Address: 1200 Ea t Third Street 14 SvcondCuhu,:; Russell M. :r , Hii Edgar R... ' I r-,,p Lewis l.ili .: i, ■- , : ,..],, Wilbur Rc,nii.,n, i , f.illt-j: Harold Peicrs, ' _!1, Inuiana, Harry Elllntt, VM, Brazil Third Column Charles Bennett, ' 29, Lintor Leo Keim, ' 31, Marlon Nelson Jones, ' 28, Orleans Tohn Palm, ' 31, Brazil bugan Keith, ' 30, North V, Victor Selby, ' 31, Fairmoun Howard Coons, ' 31, Sevmou Fourth Column Emery Parks, ' 31, Blooming William Lucas, ' 29, Winche Charles Starr, ' 29, Boston Thomas Kcdar, ' 31, Whitin, George Oswalt, ' 31, Brazil Maurice Miller, ' 30, Lowell Richard Mclvin, ' 30, Whitii FiitI, Cohn S,,n, Me WI lilndgttl Kdu.ird liienne)!, ' 31, Indi.uiapolii Rnbert ■rurni.iu, ' 30, Bloomington Charlton White, ' 29, Linton Stanley WolVe, ' 2S, Walkerton Wayne Bradfield, ' 31, Terre Haute ■a ; Column George Pepplc, ' 29, X.ippanee Russell M.,- IV, ■; ' , l.:;.t.,n R,iy Wti W R.iherl k : : lines . rthur Sin , V N, [] -Mitown Carlos McNeill, ' 30, N.ishville, Tenn. ago, III. f Vl Maivcr Moss, ' 31, Terre Haut( w ra m f f 1 inbvt ' n% ' Lambda Chi Alpha Founded at Boston University, 1909 Local Chapter: Alpha Omicron Zeta Established; 1917 National Chapters: 76 Flower: Violet Colors: Purple, Green and Gold Local Address: East Third Street irsi Cilunn, Carl G. Winter, ' 28, Indianapolis Wayne Houser, ' 28, Hammond Ward N. Baker, ' 29, Mishawaka Tohn A. Creasv, ' 30, Auburn Joseph H. Conner, ' 30, New Alba brrin F. Hiler, ' 29, Mishawaka Russell R. Richardson, ' 31, Hamn Phil Smith White, ' 30, Larwill R. Ho 28, Ren ngton John E. Fell, ' 28, Gn Ralph C. Lett, ' 29, Tipton Milton A. Johnson, ' 29, Mishawaka Ross W. Deckard, ' 30, Bloomington George S. Sloan, ' 31, New Albany Stephen J. Vrocan, ' 31, Detroit, Mich. Lloyd Moser, ' 31, Bloomington Robert W. Miller, ' 28, Indi, William E. FuUam, ' 29, For John T. Fergu Flovd A. Ha 29, Ha Carl Bernhardt, ' 29, Indianapolis Harold F. Fields, ' 29, Indianapolis Hugh S. Ramsey, ' 29, Bloomington Arthur Torrengo, ' 31, Lafayette ..;■Col,n„„ Richard Wall, ' 29, Lebanon Wallace D. Buchanan, ' 29, Burnetts ' Clinton C,H,k, Tr., ' 31, Monun Lloyd W. LitteH, ' 28, Smithvillc Frederick J. Galllon, ' 31, Greentowi Robert F. Emmons, ' 31, Mishawaka Morris D. Ward, ' 31, Laporte Samuel S. Davis, ' 31, Forest Tlurd Colum,, Burnell Plank, ' 28, Galveston Robert Hartzog, ' 31, Mishawaka Samuel J. Ferraro, ' 29, Gary James B. Dodd, Ir., ' 31, Monon Thomas Van Hook, ' 30, Corydon Clarence Leet, ' 30, Indianapolis Marioa M. North, ' 28, Brookston S. Ma Whil ' 31, La ixll, C«lui::n John A. Parker, ' 29, Ter Ha Matthew Cornacchione, ' 29, Inc Charles A. Reid, ' 30, Indianapo Lee Slinkard, ' 28, Indianapolis John Showalter, ' 30, Waterloo Charles F. Foster, ' 28, Monticel Noi-man Kohlman, ' 31, Lawren George W. Ditzler, ' 29, Peru evenlh Column Herbert Sullivan, ' 28, Lafayette James S. Spohn, ' 30, Elkhart George A. Shealy, ' 31, Churubusco J. Walter Wilson, ' 29, Los Angeles, Cal. Rufus Wcinland, ' 31, Bloomington James H. Hickey, ' 29, Morgantown William D. Davidson, ' 31, Evansville Herbert C. Fledderjohn, ' 31, Indianapolis r- [206] 1 iplht d ! I xl BiSB ft I ? ■? f f fi ' % fe i f J ' i ..r;. UWi ,J i. rs to A cacia Founded ;it University of Michig.m, 19(1 + Local Chapter: Indiana Established: 1920 National Chapters: 33 Flower: Acacia Colors: Black and Gold Local Address: 702 East Third Street ■:r,l Col,,,::,, V.,p Slu-p.ird, ' 3U, Scd ili;i Frnuls Whitacre, PG, Salamonl Lllbuin Kemp, ' 29, Kcmpton Og il Crews, ' 31, W.isliinfrton Fred Clark, ' 29, Terre Haute Edmund Bruncr, ' 29, P.ilestinc, Russell P.uiyli, ' 29, Acton Loin.ii-d Klncde, ' 28, Tcrrc H:. j, Crnmci- AlKli-edjie, ' 28, Andc P.iul Spurge.. n, ' 28, Kokomo Austin Funk, ' 29, Greensburp Neil Spurgeon, ' 28, Kokomo John Kirkpatrick, ' 31, New Rlchn John H.inna, PG, Bloomington Troy Hull.., ' 28, Tipton P:.ul B.ur, ' 28, Tipton Me •311, Ga Wolcott ' ersaiUes Loganspo Walter Gillespie, ' 29, Boswe Carl Burris, ' 29, Cicero Theodore Brouwer, ' 29, Mon Farrol Dragoo, ' 30, Parker Robert Rover, ' 28, Akron James Wright, ' 31, P;,ris, III Six , Cohii,,,, Adrian LaFollette, ' 29, Thorntov Harry Champ, ' 28, Indianapolis Hubert Sears, ' 30, Bloomington Max Kidd, ' 28, Bloomfield irirry Wheat, ' 28, Lizton l fF rArhUi-. - ' $ I oSt buiius v- f.-a - m Theta Chi Founded .It Norwich Univcrsit; Local Chapter: Alpha Iota Established: 1921 National Chapters: 45 Flower: Red Carnation Colors: Red and White Local Addres s: 4-20 South Fes First Column Gerald R. Redding, PG, Michigan City George Von Baker, ' 31, Bloomington Gerald S. Young, ' 29, Huntington Charles F. Sonneborn, ' 28, Laporte William S. Robertson, ' 28, Salem Fred C. Rawley, ' 29, Hammond Gail Justin Myers, ' 31, Plymouth Fo„rlh Cclnwn Harold C. BuU.ird, ' 28, Maywood, 111. Vernon H.irlow Duke, ' 28, Gary Kenneth Marshall Blades ' 29, Hope Bagdas.ir Der.inian, ' M, In Lii.in.ipolls Vincent R. Foxvler, ' 31, Indi.inapolis Richard N. Pierce, ' 31, Liberty Robert L. .Stauffer, ' 28, Michigan City Second Column Sherwood F. Blue, ' 28, Indianapolis John Powell Teare, ' 31, Vlncennes George Robert Klsner, ' 29, Terre Haute Harold C. Martz, ' 29, Garrett Charles N. Beard, ' 29, Oaktovvn Ralph Warren Dorsett, ' 28, Cloverdale James N. Williams, ' 31, Connersville Fiflk Column James P. Elder, ' 31, Dana W. Arthur Butler, ' 29, Valparaiso Ralph McBride, ' 31, Auburn Donald A. Russell, ' 30, Elkhart Stuart A. Ludlow, ' 29, Laporte Paul W. Marrs, ' 31, Fort W,ayne Elwood L. Heine, ' 28, Fort Wayne Third Calurn,, Louis A. Briner, ' 29, Garrett Rixlh Coluwn Loren H. Brewer, ' 30, Salem Lee Thomas Hollnpeter, ' 31, Garrett Howard T. Batman, ' 29, Marengo Tohn A. Metts, ' 28, Fort Wayne David L. Cooper, ' 31, Carmel Carl W. Medskcr, ' 31, Sullivan Emmett Wallace Arnett, PG, Bloomlngton Robert M. Thompson, ' 29, Indianapolis Harold William Dauer, ' 30, Gary Harold E. Wright, ' 31, Indianapolis Richard F. Simons, ' 29, Kentland William Roswell Drake, ' 31, Greenwood u i v-y. M £: .. si m ' . [210] f¥ cAf ' bu mi [211] i,iS:.i r: 1 Wm ' - Sigma Alpha Mu Founded at College of New York City, 1909 Local Chapter: Sigma Zeta Established: 1921 National Chapters: 33 Flower: Purple Aster Colors: Purple and White Local Address: 421 North Fess Avenue First Coin,,,,, ThirJ C.ului,,,, Theodore R. D.inn, ' 28, New Custlc Maurice Rnthherg, ' 29, Fort Wayne Mclvin Kerstcin, ' 31, Indiana Harbor Samuel Keplan, ' 29, Indiana Harbor . Lloyd J. Herskovitz, ' 30, Indiana Harbor Nathan Kre ltz, ' 31, Gary Oscar Borkon, ' 30, ShepardsviUe Samuel Kroot, ' 29, Columbus lien Kroot, ' 31, Columbus Nathan Sambursky, ' 30, Indiana Harbc Marcus S. Cohen, ' 28, Indianapolis ScconJ C„l,n„„ FourlhCnl,,.,:,, Lloyd J. Cohen, ' 29, Indiana Harbor Harry Glass, ' 31, Indiana Harbor Sol William Schwartz, ' 30, Fort Wayne David Fuchs, ' 31, Gary Janu ' s Ahn.nison, ' 29, Portland Naf Gladstone, ' 31, Fort Wayne Peter FrieJLiiul, ■2S, Indiana Harbor Mnse Hurxvltz. ' 29, Fort Wayne William Deutsch, Jr., ' 31, Muncie Harry Gladstein, ' 31, ScUershurg Fijtii Cohonn -Albert Abromso 1, ' 29, Portland Jesse D. Fine, 28, EvansviUe Samuel Bobele, 31, Gary William Jacobsr n, ' 31, Hammond Morris Watkins •30, Muncie 4 ix i r,rr - };-1S U= f liP s ' . m ■11 ' y, 2L jhi ■rr ' ' ■1 lli X t M i.. Sigma Pi Grew out of local organizations of University of Vincennes, Ohio State Uni -ersity, Uni- versity of Illinois, Temple University and University of Pennsylvania. Permanent or- ganization effected in 1897 Local Chapter: Beta Established: 1905. Re-establijhed: 1924 National Chapters: 27 Flower: Purple Orchid Colors: Lavender and White Local Address: 71+ East Third Street i First Column Delbcrt CriJer, 31, Greenfield Roy Perkins, ' 3: , Raub Russell Rush, ' 3 , Mays William McAfee , ' 30, Hobart Ardra Wise, ' 31, NoblesviUe Ernest Wooldridge, ' 31, Lowell Carroll McDole, ' 31, Bloomington Second Column James Burke, ' 3 , Chicago, 111. Paris Poindextci ' 31, Odon George Deanier, ' 31, Rochester William McLin, ' 29, Bicknell Byron Duff, ' 29, Peru . Gerald Miller, ' 31, Montpelier William Bacon, 31, Washington T ,lrd Column Victor Salmi, ' 28 , Gary William Payne, 29, Bloomington WiUard Knapp, 29, Centerville John Davis, ' 30 NoblesviUe Fourth Column William Bratta n, ' 28, NoblesviUe Ralph Boggs, ' 3(1, Brownsville Vernon Warne , ' 28, Richmond William E. Mi ler, ' 31, Wilkinson Avery Plessing -r, PG, Anderson Keith King, ' 3 1, Richmond Rudolph Hubci , ' 28, Shelbyville F Column John Brattain, ' 29, NoblesviUe Maurice Garwc od, ' 30, Fort Wayne Joe Risley, ' 30 Indianapolis Omer Conn, ' 3 1, Lorce Charles Ranks, ' 30, Culver George Whartc n, ' 31, Montpelier Roger Justice, 31, Wilkinson Sixth Column CaroU Butts, ' 2 9, Watertown, N. Y. William Hugu , ' 29, Gary Halford Dawsc n, ' 29, Indianapolis Ralph Marlow , ' 29, Sandusky Charles Iscnburg, ' 31, Gary Betram Kellcrr icver ' 31 Indiampol Meeks Cockere 1 28 Bilker W. cJ iPlbu. . . J kj r . : r m Ax I M MMm 1 11 %M im. Delta Chi P Founded at Co rnell U, ivcrsity, 1890 Local Ch aptcr: Indiana F,?tablifh jd: 1923 National Chapters: 35 Flower: White Carnation Colors: Buff ai d Red Local Address: Quadra igle Fin, Column Fourll, Col:„„„ Kenneth Meyer, ' 28, lirldgcport Allen Marks, ' 31, Fort Wayne Ernest Downing, ' 29, Brazil Max Brand, ' 31, Hobart Garland Crowe, ' 30, IVIarkle Ross Terhune, ' 29, Columbus Harold Pyle, ' 31, Geneva Amos Hunt, ' 31, Hammond Robert Studer, ' 31, Huntingburg Donald Lee, ' 31, Hobart Oliver Wheatley, ' 31, Kempton George Brother, ' 30, Rockport Kenneth Beckner, ' 29, Flora Paul Grlffis, ' 31, Fort Wayne James White, ' 30, New Albany Second Column Fifl i Column Watson McC.irmlck, ' 31, Delphi Gene Ha el, ' 2S, Logansport Paul Tanner, ' 311, Clunibus Paul Ja.per, ' 31, Fort Wayne George Steinnictz, ' 30, Indianapo lis ■rliurl.iu Morr.iw, ' 28, Portland Frank Brown, ' 31, Hobart Al,- , -nJri fnnrbell, ' 29, Fort W Lloyd Griffin, ' 31, Bloomington OiMllr Huris ' 31, Huntington Guy Nichols, ' 29, Heltonville Howard Dirks, ' 29, Greencastle Maynard Lake, ' 31, Connersville Robert Miller, ' 30, New Albany Robert Ramsey, ' 31, Fort Wayne Sixth Column rinrd Column George Hazel, ' 29, Logansport William Nichol, ' 28, Oakland Ci y Robert Benson, ' 30, Connersville Earl B. Pulse, ' 30, Columbus Glen Ross, ' 30, Logansport Harry Baum, ' 31, Frankfort Virgil Miller, ' 31, Rochester John Martin, ' 29, F,.rt Wayne Arthur Thomas, ' 30, Plymouth Virgil Parks, ' 30, Flora Keating Toohy, ' 29, Martinsville Roy Busick, ' 30, Orleans Donald Eusey, ' 29, Noblesvllle Roger Armstrong, ' 30, Portland Max Trent, ' 28, Noblesville i Lj Mo:. ... m m: L :M ' ' y - - 2 ' f!fi: :r . m [217]  Founded at Middlebury College, 190 5 Local Chapter: Nu Established: 1926 National Chapters: 16 Flower: Red Rose Colors: Orange and Bl le Local Address: 814 Ea St Th rd Street Firsi Colunn, Fo„r, : Colu,:,„ Kingston Raycraft, ' 31, Hammond Everett Scales, ' 28, IdavlUe Orville Melching, ' 31, Ossian Aden Long, ' 30, Lapurte George Faith, ' 31, Rloomington Claude Rich, ' 29, RussiaviUe Fred Jenkins, ' 28, liloomlngton Donn Woods, ' 29, Trafalgar Donald Frvback, ' 28, Ossian John Buchanan, ' 29, Bloomington Marlon Aker, ' 28, ReelsviUe Wendell Pleak, ' 31, Waldron Dale Trinkle, ' 30, Claypool Second Coh„„„ Jasper V. Garland, PG, Huntington George Simon, ' 30, Fort Wavne Gilbert Glendennins, ' 31, Geneva Joe Treon, ' 30, Aui-Qra Oswald Fox, ' 29, Columbia Gene Kannlng, ' 29, Fort Wayne Fifth Colu,::i: Loring McFail, PG, Richmond Robert Hartman, PG, Fort Wayne Newell Long, PG, Laporte Robert Vandiver, ' 30, Franklin Robert Wvbourn, ' 31, Ossian William Stevenson, ' 29, Blooming Tli)rJ Colli,::,, Sixlh Colu„:„ Arthur Clark, ' 29, Franklin Russell Chrisler, ' 30, Clinton Robert Rupright, ' 31, Ossian William Tucker, ' 29, Orland Dale Owens, ' 28, Poseyville Wallace Studenski, ' 31, Gary Clarence Fowerbaugh, PG, Andrev Harold Latier, ' 28, Waterloo George Urey, ' 28, Ashley Edwin Steele, ' 31, Laporte Francis Fargher, ' 29, Laporte Bernard Miller, ' 31, Waldron Sevcith CoI,:,„n Harold Chrlsler, ' 29, CI Bryce Weldv, ' 30, Fort Lester Van Domelon, ' 2 Leonard Miller, ' 31, W Harold Sweancy, ' 29, In Merle Hunter, ' 29, Ossi Wayne ), Gra Idron dianap id Rapids, Mich. B i K ..cJf plbuiius Wi n Gamma Tau Founded at Indiana university, 192 ' Colors: Blue and White Address: Sixth and Indiana First Column Samuel Avins, ' 30, Evansville Alexander Klein, ' 30, New York City Raymond Ruff, ' 30, Gary Louis Feinburg, ' 29, Hammond Paul Bornstein, ' 30, Paterson, N. J. Second Column Theodore Singer, ' 30, Hammond Abe Farb, ' 30, Indianapolis Louis Cohen, ' 30, Indianapolis Sidney Zier, ' 31, Indianapolis Leon Levi, ' 30, Indianapolis 7 iird Column Alvin Zcplowitz, ' 28, Hammond Sidney Seligman, ' 30, Indianapol Arthur Given, ' 31, East Chicago Jacob Polish, ' 31, Peabody, Mass. Herschel Winsberg, ' 31, Whiting Four A Column Tevle Jacobs, ' 29, Indianapolis Isadore Rubin, ' 31, Peabody, Ma Phenny Smidt, ' 31, Peabody, Ma Irving Levin, ' 31, Hammond Harry Levin, ' 31, Indianapolis Samuel Kaufman, ' 30, Indianapo li 3T [ 220 ] [221] Fraternity Life Oeveral years ago the word Greek was applied to fraternity men, but from appearances the name will undergo a change shortly. Just what the new name will be depends on the several nations that are represented in the organizations. At present Poland, Lithuania, Italy, and kindred nations seem to he in the majority. The new fraternal system here, however, may stimulate the study of lan- guage in the University, so all the brothers may be able to converse with one another freely. Rough week and 50 members to each fraternity house have been the fea- tures of the year. Politics, social activities, and athletics, of course, have come in for their share of attention, but the rush captains, treasurers, and stewards have insisted that the chapter roll be kept around the 50 or 60 mark. New houses mean large bills, so the bills are getting most of the attention. Some of the few organized men, who can see a few feet farther than their brothers, realize that fraternities at Indiana university are not the equal of those of yesteryear; however, the general enlisting of members goes merrily on, and the international problem becomes more intricate. Merit sheets for the brothers who have dates with the better sorority girls are an innovation at the University this year. Now, if Brother Lingletingle has a date with one of the Mu Mu Mu ' s he gets five merits, but if he goes to one of the homes of the lesser lights, he gets none. If friend Lingletingle would enter some worthwhile campus activity he would be fortunate if he didn ' t flunk the fraternity course. Activities are just activities nowadays; one ' s social prestige is always at stake though, so the thing to do is to keep an eye on the Tri Mu ' s, make good enough grades to stay around the institution for another year, and get a good collegiate vocabulary to spring on a likely employer. Civil war has ended among the fraternities, and a new organization of organ- izations has been perfected. Insurgents are near nervous breakdowns in an attempt to execute a few more coups before the year is over, but as the deadline for pub- lication nears, the forces have allied against Poland, Lithuania, and Italy. -? 4! ' Ti v. ' r ' S ' ■■- im « Aeons Basil Clark, p-esideiU Donald Woodward, secretary The Aeon board is the student council of the University. The purpose of this board is to promote closer co-operation between the student body and the administration. It is concerned with matters pertaining to student affairs and University policies as related to the students. Their activities are made more effective by giving them no publicity. The organization is composed of not more than 12 nor less than 8 junior and senior men who have shown unusual capacity for leadership on the campus. Members are appointed by the President of the University, on the recommendation of the Aeons and the Student Affairs committee. 14 First Column Alfred V. Ringer Clarence W. Deitsch Dow Richardson Donald B. Woodward Second Column President William Lowe Bryan Dean Charles J. Sembower Dean C. E. Edmondson Robert Talbot Third Column Basil B. Clark Half red Dawson James Miller Frank Stimson Mortar Board Gladys Martin, president Cora Jane Whitehead, vice-fres de)it Louise Schetter, secretary Vivian Ellis, treasurer 11 Mortar Board is Indiana ' s single honorary organization which recog- nizes the exceptional in the work of its women students. This chapter of Mortar Board was organized in 1920 and is affiliated with the national organization, which was formed in 1918. New members appointed to Mortar Board in the late spring of each year are chosen on their merits in scholarship, as well as individual promi- nence in campus activities. The members, assisted by Dean Agnes E. Wells, judge the worth of candidates who must be of senior standing in the Uni- versitv. The chapter roll is limited to 12 members. Dorothy Lutton Mildred Legge Vivian Ellis Seioiid Ro-.c Gladys Martin Mercedes Tinder Cora fane Whitehead Louise Schetter 11 til s ' - f ■• ' Alpha Chi Sigma William H. Stevenson, president Neg Shirts, vice-president Eugene Kanning, reporter Richard Holdeman, secretary Darwin Badertscher, treasurer a X Alpha Chi Sigma, national chemical fraternity, was founded at the University of Wisconsin in 1902. It was established on this campus in 1908. All students majoring in chemistry are eligible for membership and the fraternity picks the outstanding students in this department each year. Meetings are held every two weeks, at which time lectures are given by members of the faculty. Their annual event, a smoker, is advertised in some appropriate scientific fashion. This year it was the figure of a man smoking a cigar from which periodic clouds of smoke issued. The fraternity is planning to have men from outside the University who have gained special recognition in the field of chemistry for speakers in the future. Firs Column Joseph Treon Byron Arrick Neg Shirts Eugene Kanning Darwin Apple Second Column Marim Aker Bert Vos Francis Whitacre Roy Huitema Flovd Peyton Third Column Darwin Badertsche Elbert Short Max Votaw Robert Blue Fourth Column Thomas Westfall William Stevenson Frank Welcher William Bright Richard Holdeman Fifth Column John Sicks Robert Shelley Robert Hartman Robert Etnier Loring McFail i ' LJ jCk.i =-,- . [228] 14 ' i [229] ■cAf biiims ' II Alpha Kappa P si Sherrill Deputy, fres ' uleiit James Van Hook, vice-president Wallace Coles, treasurer Lee Slinkard, master of ritual Ernest Killion, isarde i Frank Carter, chaplain The large number of students interested in business has encouraged the installation of honorary societies for students who are outstanding in the School of Commerce and Finance. With the object in mind to further the individual welfare of its mem- bers; to foster scientific research in the fields of commerce and finance; to educate the public to appreciate and demand higher ideals therein; and to promote and ad ' ance courses leading to degrees in business administration, 26 active members of the School of Commerce petitioned and obtained the local charter of Alpha Kappa Psi, national honorary commerce fraternity, in April, 1927. This fraternity is composed of sophomores, juniors, and seniors who are working toward majors in commerce and economics. Current problems of the business world are discussed orally at regular meetings. These problems illustrate facts studied in the classroom and familiarizes students with common business problems which will face them in their future practices. Alpha Kappa Psi hopes to create a greater spirit of professionalism in the School of Commerce, and to increase interest in commerce and finance. Ofiicers for the first semester were Fred Anglin, president; Kenneth Beckner, vice-president; Richard Beroth, secretary; William Hugus, treas- urer; George Kisner, master of ritual; James Van Hook, warden, and Lee Slinkard, chaplain. r First Cohiirin Cip Shep.Trd Kenneth Eberts Joe Hamaker Paul Messick Richard Beroth Lee Slinkard Second Column Edmund Bruner Ainsley Burks Henry Coffey Deryl Foster Charles Sonncborn Burnell Plank Third Coliann Paul Emert George Kisner Theodore Brouwer Henry Drake Tames Van Hook Fred Anglin Fourth Column Frank Carter George Sage Richard Jones Kenneth Beckner Wallace Coles William Ramsev Fifth Column Eugene Hazel Jack Biel George Ditzler Ernest Killion Hubert Sears Wayne Stackhouse Sixth Column Sherrill Deputy Lawrence Dill William Shepler William Hugus Ira D. Anderson Leonard Hotopp Vernon Duke hy ■XIMS mmm ' • wfw r T ' .. .J m lik Association of Women Students Irene Coate, president Gladys Martin, vice-president Janet Johnston, secretary Helen Benton, treasurer To create a democratic spirit among all women students; to co-operate in maintaining the most favorable conditions for study, and to develop the finest in personal ideals, is the purpose of the Association of Women Students. This organization, familiarly known on the campus as A. W. S., is primarily an outgrowth of the old Women ' s League founded on the campus in 1895. In 1920, the league became the Women ' s Self-Government Association, which, in 1927, was changed to the present Association of Women Students. A. W. S. sponsors several worthy projects. Its new plan, which has been in effect for only one semester, is the dividing of the out in town girls into districts, in order to create a more friendly spirit among the girls, and to give them an opportunity to meet and know their faculty members. The districts, 20 in number, each have a chairman with several faculty advisors who plan to entertain the girls at least once during a semester. The publication of the I. U. Songbook, and the co-operative work with other campus organizations in editing the freshman handbook, are other activities fostered by A. W. S. The organization provides and maintains a room at the city hospital also. A. W. S. council consists of representatives from each class. The pur- pose of the council is to assist the officers in the administration duties of the Association of Women Students. First Column Mercedes Tinder Starley Hunter Janet Johnston Helen Benton Second Colunu! Gertrude Schuelke G].-idys Martin Eunice Timmerman Margaret Dow Third Column Miriam King Marv Roth rock Cora Jane Whitehead Ruth Hannon Fourth Column Irene Coate Hazel Leslie Frances Long Miriam Combs Arlvs Roberts Ly. ' ..€ i [ 232 ] u A .cJf.t buiiis ' Chi Gamma Tan JJ)unald S. Fryback, president Allen C. Minor, vice-fresideiit Lauril Gladville, secretary-treasurer The elite of horn-blowers, picked players of Indiana university ' s famous marching band, which has traveled more than 3,000 miles in the last year to give exhibitions, receive distinction by election to Chi Gamma Tau, local honorary band fraternity. In 1925 Mark G. Hindsley, director of the band, and Capt. G. C. Cleaver, in charge of the organization, realized that if there were an in- centive to do advanced band work, the individual band would also improve. Their policy was to bring about close harmony of friendship as well as close harmony of notes. This being the purpose, 1 7 charter members met and founded the fraternity. Membership is limited to 25 selected men who must have had a year with the band. Pledges are announced at the final home football game of the season each year and at regimental inspec- tion in the spring. The chapter looks into the future with plans to make a national organ- ization and establish chapters at all Big Ten and larger universities and schools. Already progress has been made in establishing the national char- acter of the organization. Chi Gamma Tau sponsored a banquet for members of the Purdue Uni- versity band, here for the Indiana-Purdue football game, and gave a smoker for members of the Indiana band at the close of the football season. First Column Orrin Boren Merlin B-iiley Thomas Van Hook Quitman Klngcn Second Column Wallace Evans George Diveley Lester Bolitho Aden Long Ainslcv Burks Third. Column Donald Fryback Phillip Platter David Corn Leslie Groves Louis Ikerd Fourth Colu Joseph Carpenter Stuart Ludlow Allen Minor John Hunt Robert Turman Fifth Column George Urey J. Neill Garber Newell Long Lauril Gladville [234] ( t- __ Delta Sigma Pi James Johnson, head )iiaster Paul Graves, seiiior warden Robert Study, junior warden Neil Spurgeon, senior guide Emerson Biggs, scribe Clarence Forkner, treasurer Alpha Pi chapter of Delta Sigma Pi, honorary commerce fraternity, was established at Indiana university in 1925. The purpose of this organ- ization is to foster the study of business in universities; to promote scholar- ship and business research; to promote closer affiliation between the com- mercial world and students of commerce, and to further a higher standard of commercial and business ethics. The fraternity is international and has 45 chapters in the United States and Canada. It was founded at the New Yoric Cominerce School in 1907. Each chapter endeavors to carry out the high ideals and aims of Delta Sigma Pi in a practical manner by awarding annually a scholarship key to the senior who has ranked the highest in scholarship. This year the fraternity gave a dance in conjunction with Alpha Kappa Psi, and a series of Sunday evening dinners. Officers for the first semester were Robert Bolyard , head master ; Harold Bullard, senior warden; Emerson Biggs, junior warden; Charles Mount, senior guide; Russel Smallwood, scribe, and Clarence Forkner, treasurer. First Rozi- Theodore Larimore Harold Bullard Thurlow Morrow R. A. Bolyard Charles Mount Second Rozc Clarence Forkner Robert Study Don Usey Neil Spurgeon lames Johnson Third RozL- Merlin Bailey Lester Bolitho Russel Smallwood Preston Smith Paul Stewart Fourth Row William James Ed Edwards Carl Queisser Russel Murr.iy Kenneth Blades Fifth Rozv Emerson Biggs Nelson Jones Don Vodermark Truman Warren Carl Rlnne Sixth Rozc Richard Ray Andrew Hirons Ed Benzel James Miller Paul Graves Hal Dawson --T fT i i ' cJI-pbvtus EUi Sigma Pli William Lesh, national president Agnes Smith, fresident Margaret Brumbaugh, vice-fresident Adelyn Armitage, secretary-treasurer Four years ago Eta Sigma Phi was founded at the University of Chicago to create a livelier interest in the classics. Two years later eligible seniors in the Greek and Latin departments formed the group of charter members of the local organization. At present there are 27 national chapters. The chief aim of this fraternity is not only to foster a more vivid interest in literature and art on the campus but also to aid in establishing classical clubs in high schools throughout the state. One way which this is done is by the annual custom of bringing at least one well-known speaker on the classics to each school. To prove the activity of the local organization, William Le sh was elected national president. Last year there were fewer than ten student members, but because of the success of the work accomplished by these, more than 20 pledges were announced last fall. Topics that are of interest to students of classics which cannot be stressed in the classroom are discussed in the meetings. Benefits are derived which could never be gained otherwise. Seniors who have an average of B and are majors in Greek or Latin are eligible for membership. first Column Lucile Thon-.-5 Bessie Pinnick Barbara Dodson Clyde Wooden Louise Emerson Second Column Byron Duff Mabel Pitman Marjorie Morris Lela Finkbinder Agnes Smith Third Column William Lesh Dorothy Rader Nettie Hess Ruth Veatch Louise Falk Fourth Column Frank Burlingame Bernice Coffin Arlys Roberts Florence Swazy Mary Marshall fijth Column Adelyn Armitage Margaret Home Marv Thomas Theima Abell Margaret Brumbaugh [239] buiiis % ! Gamma Eta Gamma Basil Clark, president James Sutton, secretury Douglas Whitlock, tveiuiiyer Gamma Eta Gamma, professional law fraternity, was founded at the University of Maine in 1901 and has grown to include 26 chapters in the leading law schools of the country. It was established on this campus in 1911. Only schools with a class A rating among law schools are eligible for charters. Following the procedure of other chapters on the campus, the fraternity moved into a house in 1925 and is now entering its third year in chapter house. This year, in further observance of the program of expansion, the members purchased a new home at 924 East Third street, and are living there at present. The fraternit - plans to build itself into a lawyers ' club where all mem- bers will have a common interest with the result that all will benefit from the association. Other future projects include the building of a law library toward which the ' ha ' e made some progress. First Column Orval Hunter John Fell James Sutton Alfred Morgan Second Column John Kneipple Ralph Palmer Charles McCartney Russell Stewart Glen Morrill T hhd Column Thomas Dav Jack Garlin ' Maurice Fisher John Hicks Edgar Hnrbit Fourth Cohann Anton G. Kominarek, Jr. Douglas Whitlock Paul L. Cox Walter Crisman Wendell Rvnerson - ?S8it ' . Basil Clark Metherell Pearce Paul Whitlock John Grimes Garrick Club Russell McDermott, president Alice Thorn, vice-preside iit Robert Masters, secretary Bagdasar Deranian, treasurer Garrick club, which commemorates the name and art of David Garrick, the great English actor, is the goal to which all students interested in dra- matics aspire. The high ranking of the club in the list of extra-curricular activities was more than evident this fall, when more than 200 aspirants competed in a series of tryouts. From the two hundred candidates, 1 8 were finally elected to membership. Two productions were successfully staged by the club during the year. In accordance with preceding club calendars, a light play was presented early in the fall. This year, The Patsy, a three-act comedy of tempes- tuous married life, was most favorably received. The second annual per- formance of Campus Affairs was presented by the club shortly after the Christmas holidays. The show, a marked success, played two nights before capacity houses. Garrick club was founded on the campus in 1916 by Prof. H. T. Steph- enson. The present organization is an outgrowth of the old Strut and Fret Dramatic club. Garrick club ' s two faculty sponsors. Miss Edna Johnson and Prof. Stephenson, are interested and active members, having been voted to membership in the club last year. Officers for the first semester were: L. Ivan Boxell, president; Muriel Mattox, vice-president; Nancy Hurd, secretary, and Harold Bullard, treasurer. First Column Russell McDermott Katherine Becker William Ramsey Crystal English James Regester Agnes McNutt Fredrick Smith Second Column Muriel Mattox Denzel Pittman Helen Thomas Harold Bullard Janet Cuthill Ramon Kessler T h ' lrd Column Sherwood Blue Helen Toay Underwt William Jenner Jennylou Whitehead Bagdasar Deranian Joseph Greenwood Fourth Column Geraldine Lower Howard DeMeyei Nancy Hurd John Palm Alice Thorn Robert Masters F-ijth Column Ivan Boxell Frances Matthews Jack Countryman Margaret Steele George Graves Robert Winston Sixth Column La Donna Reemsnyder W. Otis McQuiston Helen Spaugh Gerald Albright Audrey Smith Marjorie Lutz m. £23 ' _:C [243] : o4i buiius ' ' V Indiana Union Board Alfred Ringer, fres ' ulenl Philip Clark, vice-president Clarence Deitsch, secretary H. R. Champ, treasurer The Indiana Union is the all-men ' s campus organization. By action of the board of trustees of the University last summer a 50 cent compulsory fee was assessed each man entering the University. As a result every man is a member of the Union. The Union was founded at Indiana in 1909, and incorporated under the laws of the State of Indiana in 1910. Its functions were at first rather limited, but they have expanded with the growth and needs of the men of the University until at the present time its activities are numerous and varied. It has, in the last year, assumed the activities of the Boosters club and at present maintains a pool room, gives sixteen open dances, conducts a reading room in conjunction with the Y. M. C. A., sponsors pep sessions, charters special trains, helps entertain the guests of the University, and gives aid in any matter of university interest where it can be of assistance. A part of the memorial plan is the construction of a Union building. When this building is completed, the Union will be the center of the activi- ties and social program of the University. The governing body of the Union is composed of thirteen men students and two faculty members, with the Aluinni secretary and a member of the board of trustees ex officio members. ij r-, . F ' lnt Cohinin .Alfred V. Ringer William Ramsey Gerald Redding Clarence W. Deitsch Second Coluiiiii Prof. W. A. Cogshall Richard Ray Paul Spurgeon Third Column Prof. W. E. Treanor Dow Richardson Clarence Forkner Fourth Column Clum C. Bucher Philip Clark H. R. Ch.amp Richard Wall f cJfir lbuiiis p.. [24S] H. R. Champ, }iiagutey James R. Regester, clerk Gerald Redding, reporter Dan James, historian Phi Delta Phi, the oldest legal fraternity, is international in scope. The chapters, of which there are 55 in the United States, are called Inns in imitation of the old English inns of court. In the fraternity ' s first years, it assisted in the teaching of law, just as the English originals. With the more recent improvements in the teaching of law, the organization has assisted by maintaining standards of high scholarship in the law schools and by upholding the highest legal ethics through its barristers ' Inns among practicing lawyers. Undergraduate members are chosen from the best stu- dents of the school on recommendation of the faculty and a unanimous vote of the active members. The national organization was formed in 1 869, and the local chapter, Foster Inn, was chartered in 1900. First Column Dan James Roy Lynn Clarence W. Deitsch James R. Regester Second Column Sherwood Blue Alfred V. Ringer Gerald Redding Robert W. Miller ThirJ Column H. R. Ch.amp Dcwcy Myers Henry Lynn John C. Alldredge [246] [247] ■.. .. ijuiius Pleiades ' era Reynolds, president Alildred Legge, vke-pres ' uleiit Ruth Custer, secretary Lillian O ' Bannon, treasurer Having enough foresight to know that student life might become mo- notonous in later years for the coed posterity of the University, two mem- bers of Delta Gamma, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Kappa Alpha Theta founded Pleiades here in 1921. Those bold and noble souls have had a following of bronze, blue, and black hat wearers, supposedly the select among organized women, for these many years. Without any claims of bettering the athletic situation, and not attempt- ing to make any awards, the organization operates on purely a social basis. Pledging to this select group. Sphinx club ' s running mate, is done at the Blanket Hop and the Junior Prom. To obtain membership one must have a sorority sister in the club, and go through a rather humiliating ordeal. First ColiiiJiii M.ir- - Beeson Billy Herdrick Elizabeth Neeh Ellen Stott Martha McEwe SeiOHd Colunu, Elizabeth Fergu Pat Slayback Jo King Sara Rafferty Roberta North Dorothy Bales T h ' ird Column lone Nixon Martha Coomb? Nancy Hurd Mary Melton Mary Jane Walters Jean Green Fourth Column Vera Reynolds Owceta Thompson Ruth Custer Helen Crawford Martha McCreary Miriam King age Fifth Column Adelyn Arm Jane Ensle Lillian O ' Bannon Mildred Neff Cora Tanc Whitehead w Scabbard and Blade Karl Thornburg, captain Guy Nichols, first lieute iai t Fred O. Tangeman, second lieiiteiiaiit Harold N. Fields, first sergeant Scabbard and Blade is a national military society organized to raise the standard of militar - training in American colleges and universities, to unite in closer relationship their military departments, to encourage and foster the essential qualities of good and efficient officers, and to promote intimacy and good fellowship among the cadet officers. The society stands for a virile, progressive Americanism, and through its alumni endeavors to stimulate interest in a sane degree of military preparedness for this country. The national organization was founded at the University of Wisconsin in 1 904. Early in 1920, Company F of the Second Regiment, the local chapter, was chartered. Every year the local group gives a Military Ball in the fall. Scabbard and Blade also presents gold footballs, basket balls, and baseballs to senior I men in these sports. This year coed sponsors for each regiment were chosen under the direction of the society. This was an innovation on this campus, and received little recognition j but it is the intention of the organi- zation to support these sponsors in coming years. Members are chosen from the officers of the corps each year, usually at the Armistice Day parade, for qualities of character and manhood as well as military efficiency. Officers for the first semester were Charles Mount, captain; Robert Dreisbach, first lieutenant; Karl Thornburg, second lieu- tenant, and Alfred A. Lauter, first sergeant. First Rozv Nelson Jones Edgar A. Roehm Charles Mount Robert Dreisbach Dale Sare Second Rozv Guv Nichols Harold N. Fields Harry Stitle Trov N. Hutto Fourth Rozv Alfred A. Lauter William B. Matthev Laddie Kornafel WiHi.im H. Lesh T iird Rozc Karl Thornburg Henry L. Kibler George Wilson Howard Dirks Fifth Rozv William C. Blackledge Fred O. Tangeman Wilson DeCamp Lilbern Kemp ' ' TW - ' V Sigma Delta Chi L. Ivan Boxell, president George P. MacKiiight, vice-pres ' uleut Tevie Jac obs, secretary Charles F. Foster, treasurer Sigma Delta Chi is an international professional journalistic fraternity. Students of journalism who have shown exceptional ability in this field are pledged to this organization at the Blanket Hop and at the first home con- ference baseball game of each year. The local chapter, which was estab- lished in 1912, strives to promote better journalism at Indiana university, and to make a closer co-operation between journalism students and men actually working on newspapers. The Blanket Hop and Gridiron Banquet, which have become traditional in the year ' s activities, were originated by Sigma Delta Chi. The returns from the Blanket Hop are used to buy blankets for the senior I men. The Gridiron Banquet, in addition to what its name signifies, is a great razz session for men. Many awards are presented — the most important being the leather medal which is given to the man w ho has been most prominent in promoting the welfare of Indiana university during the year. The fraternity offers three prizes of ten dollars each to the person doing the best work on the Daily Student, to the best reporter, and to the best editorial writer. A large loving cup is owned by Sigma Delta Chi, and the name of the best newspaper man for the year is engraved on it. Ofiicers for the first semester were: Donald B. Woodward, president; H. Dixon Trueblood, vice-president; Dow L. Richardson, secretary, and Donald Young, treasurer. First Column George P. MacKnight Donald Young Dow Richardson Jean Graffis Second Column Joe DeLo Donald Woodward Henrv Flowers Third Column Franklin Mul Fred Foster Robert Barton Fourth Column Tevie Jacobs L. Ivan Boxell Leo House Dick Trueblood [252] [233] Skull and Crescent I % Donald Cooper, president Joseph Smith, vice-president Robert Blount, secretary-treasurer Paul Balay, sergeant Rhinies! Stand by! The royal order of Skull and Moon has the plat- form. At the football games last fall, one could see in the distance a splotch of blue and gold; through the campus this winter the blue and gold bobbed up and down with a sea of collegiate humanity; and at the baseball games this spring, those who yelled the strongest were the wearers of the yellow and blue. This distinctive colored skull hat, significant of freshman supervision, is the campus tag of Skull and Crescent, honorary social organization on the campus for organized sophomores. Seventeen fraternities have been represented on this august body during the past year by two men from each fraternity. In between streaks of Robert ' s rules of order, the sophomores had time to discuss freshman laxity in green cap wearing on the campus and arrange for two campus dances during the year. The fraternity came to this campus in 1 922. Besides two dances, one given December 3 and the other this spring, Skull and Crescent confined its activities to a generous display of its loyal colors, and a few epistles of Rhinie denouncement that appeared in the columns of the Daily Student. The first proclamation that appeared was a subtle order to Frosh to wear the traditional green cap, and the few mandates that followed, collaborated on this order with threats of second- year violence. r ' l Thomas Robinson William Jenner Wavne Houser Donald Collins Farrol Dragoo Paul Balay Arthur Stevenson John Creasv James Strickland Robert Etherton Ralph Boggs .Arthur Thomas Robert David Charles Weirich Clifton Wright ThirJ Colunni Fred Rowley Loren Brewer Heilman Allen Martin Nading Joe Treon Edmund Keenev Fifth Colutnii Byron Brenton Hanson Gifford Robert Blount Donald Cooper Toe Smith zJI-pbvtii% m sphinx Club Alfred V. Ringer, president Richard Ray, secretary Clum C. Bucher, treasurer Sphinx club, in its attempt to get hack in the good graces of the Uni- versity this year, has been more active than usual. The necessary requisites for adinission, however, which include social prestige and general distinc- tion, remain intact, according to its guiding lights. Rumors would tend to offset this assertion, but rumors are rumors. Many years ago — 191(1 to be exact — the idea of a more or less painful ordeal for several of the University ' s chosen came to light on the campus, and the organization was founded. It has been in existence since that time, and its members have their hour ' s recreation on Jordan field twice each year. Two dances and the awarding of a watch to the best freshman football player made up the organization ' s activities this year. Officers for the first semester were: Chester Decker, president; Alfred Ringer, vice-president; Richard Ray, secretary, and Clum Bucher, treasurer. First Colu!?in Charles Bennett James Burke John Woolery Edward Steele O. K. McKlttrlck Lee Streaker Second Column Paul Harrell Alfred Ringer CLiyson Patrick William Stephenson John Leonard Earl Hi Thh-d Column Richard Rav Russell Kelso Frederick Sande Ralph Weaver William Riddle Herman B ei Bailey Lewis Karl Thornhi William Blur William Mill Fifth Column Clum Bucher Eu8;ene Springer Harold Schaefer Dale Wells Chester Decker Robert Miles Sixth Column Robert Matthews Richard Garrison Antrim Catterton Gilbert Alsop Hal ford Dawson Harold Derr y S. i-fS W , [237] juiius £: Mi Tan Kappa Alpha Henry Lee Drake, president Deborah Waters Norvelle, vice-president Howard Batman, secretary-treasurer Tail Kappa Alpha, national honorary debating fraternity, is composed of the men and women of the University who are outstanding in the art of argumentation. Admittance to the organization is gained only after a stu- dent has participated in an intercollegiate debate. It is the hope of Tau Kappa Alpha ' s adherents to stimulate debating and to obtain a larger mem- bership. The Speaker is the publication of the organization. Intramural debating was given its start at the beginning of the year by the fraternit}-, and a loving cup is held in reserve for the best debater ' s name to be engraved on its surface. First Column Howard Batman Ollie Gardner jasper Garland Henrv Drake Strong Column Dorothy Bell Finl James Tucker Dorothv Benner Tames Miller T h ' ud Column Howard De Myer Mildred Woodworth George Wilson Donald Bowen mm i ,--m .b ■iJltlU- . -i JWi b iS; i ' H n [259] I r Theta Sigma Phi FJpha Slayback, president Ellen Helton, lice-pyesideiit Birdie Hess, secretary Rosamond Risser, treasurer The highest honor that can come to a woman journalist on the Indiana university campus is her election to Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journal- istic and advertising sorority, wearers of the matrix, the emblem of en- deavor where linotypes hum steadily. Theta Sigma Phi, founded at the University of Washington in 1909, was brought to Indiana in 1913, when Delta chapter was established. Since that time the sorority has grown in prominence until it is recognized as one of the leading honorary organizations on the campus. Membership is based not only on journalistic work, but on the actual scholastic record. Each year every member is required to sell an article to some publication. The organization acts as an agent for anyone who wants to find a market for written material, and co-operates with Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalistic fraternity, in campus endeavor. Genevieve Forbes Herrick, herself a member of the sorority, now the most famous woman writer of the Chicago Tribune, and Margaretta Tuttle, scenario writer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, motion picture corporation, and author of Feet of Clay, were guests of honor at the annual Matrix Table banquet, g iven by the sorority, December 15, for about 200 coeds. In addition, the Theta Sigs gave the first dance of the year, the Billboard Ball, published the annual scandal sheet the morning of the Junior Prom, and gave a Razz banquet during the semester, besides giving teas and musi- cales for important women visitors to the campus during the year. Rosamond Risser EIph.i Slayhack Ellz.ibeth Lovel.md Second Column Ellen Helton Birdie Hess Helen Cr.iwford Marg.iret Frazier Third Column Mary Pattie Jane Ensle Dorothy Scht [261] Women ' s Athletic Association :fp I Doroth} ' I.utton, prcsiJei t Louise Schetter, -vice-presideiil Exie Welsch, secoiul vice-president Margaret Whyte, recording secretary Ernestine Metzner, corresponding secretary Mary Rothrock, treasurer To create better sportsmanship in coed athletics and to increase the inter- est in all sports is the policy of W. A. A., Indiana ' s athletic association for women. Membership in the organization is open to all undergraduates who have earned their 100 points by winning a position on one of the various teams. Numerals are awarded to those coeds who have earned 800 points, while the monogram, the highest goal of the W. A. A. member, is awarded with the acquisition of 1,000 points. W. A. A. sponsors several worthy athletic projects. The Intra-mural Association, which schedules all the intra-mural tournaments, is working under the auspices of W. A. A. The May Festival and the selection of a .May Queen are other events fostered by the organization, and the Max- well Medal is presented by W. A. A. This medal, awarded each year at the Senior banquet, when the installation of the W. A. A. officers takes place, is a tribute to the girl who, having earned her monogram, has also proved exceptional in her scholarship and leadership merits. The W. A. A. board is composed of the officers of the organization, as well as the heads of various sports. Officers are elected once a year. First Rozv Exie Welsch Margaret Whyte Kathryn Biedinger Dorothy Lutton Second Row .Audrey Benner Dorothy Coppock Mary Pattie Nell ' ie Clark Third Row Muriel Place Mary Rothrock Louise Schetter Alma Fischer Fourth Rozv Ernestine Metzi Helen Jackson Vivian Ellis [263] p- Ic buins ' m Young Men ' s Christian Association Myron Paige, president Charles Rich, vice-president James Tucker, secretary Wayne Stackhouse, treasurer Twilight services. Double Y parties, the candy counter in the Student building and the Red Book occupy the time of the Y. M. C. A., which, under the direction of Joseph Kidd, general secretary, has enjoyed a suc- cessful year. An office for the organization is maintained in the Student building. Location of jobs and rooms for men is an invaluable function performed by Mr. Kidd and his assistants. Twilight services are held on Sundays. Leading faculty members are engaged to speak at the services, along with entertainment by several of the University ' s musicians. Each fall, a few days before the college year opens, the Y. M. C. A. holds a freshman camp at Bedford. New students are familiarized with customs and traditions of the University at the camp, where faculty mem- bers and students co-operate in serving as the executive officials. First Row Third Row Joseph R. Kidd George Klsner W.-.]ter Eakbs Paul Spurgcon Edmund Keenev Charles Rich W. Otis McQuiston James Tucker Second Row Fourth Row John Fell Edwin Clapham Dale Owens Robert M. Paige Paul Emert John Buchanan Harvey Shipp Wayne Stackhouse Dale Sare m 11; .-o -. ' ; ■- ;• jggbSg! ' :S : 1 , ' a % [265] t -3tts Young Women ' ' s Christian Association Virginia Meek, president Kathryn Hoadley, vice-president Louise Ritterskamp, secretary ' ista HudeJson, general secretary Birdie Hess, treasurer The Y. W. C. A. apparently is not content to wait until the men are removed to the Union building, so it may increase its activities. This year the Y. W. C. A. has tried to increase the social life of the girls on the campus by teas and similar functions. To fill a need, an appreciation hour is held every Tuesday afternoon from 4-4:30. Continuing the intro- duction of the sub-cabinet system of last year, this group of upperclassmen has had charge of publishing the Y. W. C. A. News Sheet and of the Ex- tension program. The editor of the News Sheet is Georgia Bopp, ' 29. The freshmen girls are grouped under the leadership of Kathryn Hoadley. They have been given an opportunity to engage actively in the work. Such work as afternoon teas, the candy counter, and the bulletin board occupy their time. The Y. W. C. A. co-operates with the Y. M. C. A. in holding Twilight services during the winter months of the year. The attractive Y. W. C. A. rooms in the west wing of the Student build- ing were decorated this year. Current magazines are provided, and the freshmen Y. W. C. A. is attempting to collect a library. A First Rozv Audrey Benner Vista Hudelson Kathryn Hoadley Serond Rozv Zoa Gross Louise Ritterskamp Georgia Bopp Third Rozv Virginia Meek Katherine Bockhop Trcva Gaunt Fourth Rozv Winbourne Smith Catherine Brown Virginia Raymond Sarah Lou Dille I ' .Ozf, .....Ls;! iPb i c4P bii. .--i Wi Alpha Omega Alpha Most of the medical students are content to complete their years of training with an M. D. A few, however, work for and obtain the honor of wearing an Alpha Omega Alpha key. The Indiana chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha is one of the oldest honorary organizations on the campus. The membership is made up of the one-sixth of the medical students who stand highest in scholarship at the end of their four years. The fraternity has no definite organization. Elections each year are announced by the faculty of the School of Medicine. Although Alpha Omega Alpha holds no meetings as a fraternity, it has done much to foster an interest in the further extension of medical science by research. Perry Wilson Bailey Charles Berns Carl McL.iughlin Clark Albert Murray DeArmond Walter Scott Fisher Clifton George Follis Edgar John Hunt James Frank Maurer Howard Allison Miller Leonard Locke Nesbit Lester Hale Quinn Frank Banta Ramsey Bertha Rose Thomas Joseph Walsh Louis Berkowitz Floyd Lei and Grandstaff Samuel Hurwitz Isadore Jacob Kwitny Arthur Charles Rettig Lester Bogue Rhamy Bruce Kenneth Wiseman Reuben Orlando Zierer H i -:i ' U [268] ■— }— jg- m L Beta Gamma Sigma m Beta Gamma Sigma is a national honorary commerce fraternity. The purposes of this organization are to encourage and reward scholarship anci accomplishment along the lines of business activity among the students and graduates of colleges or courses in commerce j to promote the ad -ancement of education in the science of business; to foster principles of honesty and integrity in business practice and to encourage a more friendly attitude of the business public toward graduates of commercial courses. Qualifications for membership include high scholarship, good moral character, and prom- ise of marked business ability. The local chapter, Alpha of Indiana, was established March 3, 1923. Fred Victor Chew Clarence W. Deitsch James Ernest Moffat Edward Everett Edwards Alva LeRoy Prickett Edwin Paul Emert William A. Rawles James Noah Johnson George Washington Starr Nelson Morris |one? Fred Wanamaker Anglin Kern Joseph Miles Emerson ance Biggs Gerald Raymond Redding Phi Beta Kappa With the increase in honorary organizations on the campus, there has come a feeling that to belong to them is no longer an honor. Many have suffered in this way, but not Phi Beta Kappa. This, the oldest Greek letter fraternity, stands for honor and achievement throughout the world. As the University grows larger. Phi Beta Kappa also will increase, for each year it may elect more students to share its honors. Phi Beta Kappa was established at William and Mary College, Vir- ginia, December 5, 1776. The local chapter, Gamma of Indiana, was in- stalled on Foundation day, 1911. Members of the faculty belonging to Phi Beta Kappa serve as active members of the organization. At the fall elec- tion the first half of the ten per cent, of the senior class standing highest scholastically are elected, and the other half are elected to membership at the spring election. A. R. Addington A. C. Kinsev D. A. Ruth rock Mrs. H. L. Smith F. M. Andrews Albert L. Kohlmeier Will Scott Mrs. Guido H. Stempel F. L. Benns M rs. Hedwig Leser C. I. Sembower Mrs. Stith Thompson Lillian G. Berry W. I. Kirkharn F. C. Senour Mrs. W. E. Treanor H. T. Briscoe C. A. Lamev H. L. Smith Mrs. W. Austin Seward William L. Bryan E. J. Levcque Guido H. Stempcl Mrs. R. R. Stull H. H. Carter E. M. Linton H. T. Stephenson Mrs. Grace Young Miss J. ConkUn W. N. Logan S. E. Stout .Mrs. Kenneth Cline JohnW. Cravans C. A. Malott F. W. Tilden Mrs. Mason Hoadley Mervyn Crobaugh Paul V. McNutt Walter E. Treanor W. E. Jenkins E. R. Cumings Vclorus Martz T. C. Van Hook Alfred V. Ringer Harold T. Davis F. J. Merger Stephen S. Visher Irene Polkcmus S. C. Davisson M. C. Mills Miss Cornelia Vos Esther Overmeyer J. B. Dutcher W. J. Mocnkhans B. J. Vos M,.rv I ' .r.idtield C. E. Edmondson jam ' es E. Mofiat U. G. Weatherwax Theodore R. Dann Frank R.Elliott G. D. Morris K. P. Williams K.itherine Eckert Logan Esarey C. S. Mosemiller Hugh E.Willis OIlie Irene Gardner Ralph Esarey D. M. Mottier Harold E.Wolfe Gladys H. Martin A. L. Folev R. D. Myers E. O. Woolev Ralph Mills Carl G. F. Franzen Carl Osthaus Miss Agnes E, Wells Conrad D.O« ens U. S. Hanna Fernandus Pavne B. E. Young Vita Ann Petro Miss Cara B. Hennel Miss Josephine Piercy Miss Vista M. Hudelson Mable F. Pittman C. M. Hepburn lames H. Pitman Miss Winifred Knapp Beula Sare Amos S. Hershey R. R. Ramsey Mrs. William L. Brvan H. Dixon Trueblood M. E. Hufford W. A. Rawlcs Mrs. C. E. Edmondson Edgar Charles Ulrick Bolf Johannesen I.nnes J. Robinson Mrs. Alfred Kinsey Mildred L. Woodwort ' ., A. C. Tudson Miss Vivian Ross Mrs. J. E. Moffat Rubv Randolph 14- W [270] rw..y Pi Lambda Theta Pi Lambda Theta, national educational fraternity for women, was in- troduced here in 1919. IMembership to the fraternity is limited to women who have taught, or who have had experience in practice teaching. This, however, does not constitute the only requirements for membership, as pro- spective members must have a scholarship of at least 90 per cent., and must show personality in dress, manners, and conduct. The purpose of the organization is to foster a better spirit among the teaching personnel and to promote a greater interest in instructional work. The fraternity, unlike many honoraries, is active and holds regular meetings twice a month. Election of officers is held each spring. M Lillian G. Berry Hannah Book Cora B. Hennel Amelia Peters Agnes E. Wells Ruth Alexander Mrs. Mallie Blair Aha Bolenbaugh Mrs. W. W. Black Maude Bryan Mrs. H. G. Childs Mrs. Ann- Crowe Phena Deane Letha Falls L ' dia Ferger Adda Fralev Rose A. Jack Isabel Miller Marjorie Morris Bessie Pinnick Irene Polhemus Eva Pring Dorothy Riker Mildred Scrogin Mrs. H. L. Smith Lola Smith Arda Weir Blanche Wellons Mabel Wylie Mary Helen McCov [271] e Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma Gamma Epsilon is a professional fraternity of geology, mining, and metallurgy, organized to advance interest in these fields of work. It was founded at Indiana in 1926. Members are chosen on the merit of their scholarship and work accomplished relating to geology. Graduate students, seniors in the geology department, and members of the faculty are eligible for membership. Meetings of the fraternity are held at regular intervals. Various phases of geology are brought up for discussion, and papers are frequently pre- pared by members of the organization or other persons interested. Although the department is not large, standards for election to the fra- ternity are very high. As a result, membership in the organization is small, and composed only of those who are sincerely interested in geology and are capable of accomplishing successful work in that field. N .Arch R. Addington Stephen S. Visher Clyde A. M.ilott Ralph E. Esarey Edgar R. Cumings William W. Logan 1. Elmer Switzer George 1. Whitlatch Lewis Childs Robert R. Shrock Robert J. Hartman Paul F. Simpson Hor.ace E. Rankin Lester H. Wise [272] r r hm F Sigma X Sigma Xi is a national scientific society open under certain restrictions to members of the faculty, students in the graduate school, and undergraduates in the senior class. The organization has as its aim the encouragement of original scientific research. This purpose is carried out by discussion of scientific subjects, by publication of scientific material, and by electing to membership those who show promise along scientific lines. This fall the custom of an address to the society by the retiring president was instituted. It is the intention of the society that this address become a regular practice. The national society, founded at Cornell university in 1886, has a mem- bership of about 15,000. The local chapter was founded at Indiana in 1904. A. R. Addington Flora Anderson F. M. Andrews J. A. Badertscher W. F. Book H. T. Briscoe O. W. Brown W. L. Brj-an W. A. Co ' gshall S. L. Crawley Lila Curtiss H. T. Davis S. C. Davisson J. B. Butcher C. E. Edmondson Ralph Esarev A. L. Folev ' U. S. Hanna Cora B. Hennel M. E. Hufford J. R. Kantor Florence King A. C. Kinsev J. W. H. Aired Sister Amata (McGlynn) Mrs. F. M. Andrews J. J. Brady Eung T}-nn Cho Troy Cook Daniels Hazel M. Fletcherm Gastao Etzel G. W. D. Hamlett y. B. Her-chman Ralph Hile Herschel Hunt ' oris Latshaw Henry G. Nester Irene Price Robert L. Shelley Robert E. Shrock Herman T. Spieth Ralph ' oris Winona Welch H. P. Wright J. T. Brundage Amos Butler y. O. Ritchie John A. Shafer j. F. Barnhill C. p. Emerson W. D. Gatch B. B. Tourner W. N. Logan R. E. Lvons C. A. Malott F. C. Mathers W. y. Moenkhans D. M. Mottler B. D. Myers Fernandus Payne R. R. Ramsey ' William E. Riecken D. A. Rothrock Will Scott George S. Snoddy J. E. Switzer J. M. Van Hook S. S. ' ' isher Paul Weatherwax Agnes E. Wells K. P. Williams E. L. Ye.iger H. H. Young E. R. Cumings H. E. Wolfe Paul Harmon T. B. Rice Charles Hire Ifl 1:S . EIE . ; ' -- :. Order of the Coif Just as election to Phi Beta Kappa is the highest honor attainable in the College of Arts and Sciences, election to the Order of the Coif is the highest honor in the Law school. The number which can be elected each year is limited by the fraternity to the ten per cent, of the graduating class who have attained the highest rank in their law work. This means that there are only three elected to the Indiana chapter of Coif each year. The or- ganization may also elect to honorary membership not more than one per- son who has attained distinction in the profession. Order of the Coif is an outgrowth of an earlier fraternity known as Theta Kappa Nu. In 1912 this organization and the Order of the Coif, which had been founded at Northwestern, united to form the national or- ganization. The Indiana charter was granted in 1925. The fraternity has no meetings or officers. The faculty of the Law school serves as a board of electors for the society. Results of the election are announced each year at the Commencement exercises. Those men who are members of the Indiana chapter of the Coif are: R. C. Brown Ch.irlcs McGriffev Hepburn F.uil . McNutt J.imes laques Robinson P.iul L. Say re Walter E. Treanor Hugh F.vander Willis Park Hunter Campbell yZJ. -A K Ii Russell Judd Ross Myers Charles Reed Donald Rogers Warren Jennings Ronimes Rov Emanuel Sappenfield Donald Shinn Pearl Lee ' ernon ' ■SJ [ 274 ] ..c4 Pbuiius ' ' i C ' ■Phi Delta Kappa In 1906 a local educational fraternity known as Pi Kappa Mu was estab- lished at Indiana. This organization in 1907 had chapters at Stanford and Iowa. Seven educational societies sent representatives to Indianapolis to a conference in 1910. At that time the national educational fraternity, Phi Delta Kappa, was founded, and the Indiana chapter became Alpha, the mother chapter. There are now 37 organizations at various colleges and universities with schools of education. The members are chosen from the students of the School of Education who have high scholastic records. The badge of the organization is a mono - cram of the three Greek letters. William Lowe Bryan E. W. Arnett C. G. F. Franzen Hugh Norman C. Rov Williams C. A. Murray F,. O. Wooley W. E. Treanor A. R. Addington William F. Book H. L. Smith H. H. Young W. W. Wright G. T. Somers D. E. Scates G. E. Schlafer W. W. Patty V ' elorus Martz M. S. Lewis I. O. Foster Harold F. Clark H. G. Childs George S. Snoddy H. E. Binford R. N. Tirey A. R. ' an Cleave VV. W. Winn F. A. Moore D. E. Gorseline Drulev Parker B. D. Arrick A. B. Scales L. M. Chamberlin A. T. Hamilton L. E. Dver H. G. Badger Earl Johnson Charles Green William Sumrall William E. Riechen Lawrence W. Hess Clyde C. Hillis Archie T. Keene P. Edward Leavenworth James H. Russell :S m Classical Club The Classical club is an organization made up of the major and minor students in the departments of Greek and Latin who have completed a year of work in either of the departments. Meetings of the club are held the first Thursday of each month. The program is made up of a lecture on a classical subject by either a member of the university faculty, or of some other college or university, and a social hour with refreshments. Each year the Classical club sponsors during the state Latin conference, the state high school Latin contest. While the contestants are on the campus each spring, the club entertains them with a banquet after the examination. The officers are chosen each year. This year Dorothy Rader was presi- dent; Martha Jewett, ' ice-president, and Louise Emerson, secretary- treasurer. M w. S4 Fanilty Memhers Dr. S. E. Stout Dr. R. H. Coon Prof. Lmi.in G. Berry Prof. F. W. Tilden .Meriwether Stuart Virgil Hiatt M.irguerite L. Burbanck Mirl.im Burbanck Geneva Burwell Mildred Clinton Madge Crane Dorothy David Sara Lou DiUe Barbara Louise Erne Thelma Em Letha Falls rgaret Home Vonne Hutton rtha Jewett zel Keffaber a Kuersteiner arles Lesh lliam Lesh rothy Long iry M.irshall ii M. Morford Arlys Roberts Verna Schaefer Catherine Smallwo Agnes Smith Ruth Stewart Marietta Taylor Mary Thomas Jean Trusler Clyde Wooden Ruth Veatch Louis Zickgraf Margaret Holden Agnes Hass Robert Hass c r II -ikJU ■I ' i i } ..-. jikjij ' -f f - ]Z- - f Theta Alpha Phi Actors who have gained fame on the Indiana campus find their fame symbolized in a pin of the comic-tragic mask of gold, crowned with four rubies and weird looking letters on the eyes and nose. This badge is worn by members of Theta Alpha Phi, honorary dramatic organization, restricted to upperclassmen. To become a member of the organization a person must have had two leads in some campus production, two major parts and one lead, or three major parts and four minor parts. The national organization was founded at Chicago in 1919 at the na- tional association of teachers of speech. Since that time 62 active chapters ha ' e been granted charters. The Indiana chapter was organized in 1922. The purpose of the society is to foster an interest in wholesome dra- matics and to provide means for uniting socially, students, alumni, and in- structors who have histrionic talents. Neophytes to the organization are pledged usually only once a year, the pledging coming immediately follow- ing the production of the Jordan River Revue, all-campus show. Sherwood Blue was president the first semester, and Ramon Kessler, the second. ' Wi Sherwood Blue Mildred Legge Ramon Kessler Harold Bullard Jeraldine Loxver L s Deutsche Verein Deutsche Verein was organized on the campus of Indiana university in November, 1911, to further the study of the German language and its literature, and to enable students to con erse more easily in the language. It was re-organized in March, 1927. Elections to this organization are held once each semester by the instruc- tors of the department. In order to be eligible for membership it is neces- sary for a student to obtain credit for at least ten hours of German, and to have a high scholastic standing. Meetings are held the second Wednesday of each month, and with the exception of the essential business details, all conversation is carried on in German. The forms of entertainment are varied and interesting. Mem- bers of the club have devoted much time to the study of German music, and in addition to having musical numbers on their programs, they have taken up the study of German songs. Plays are frequently presented, and occa- sionally a speaker is obtained. Typical German games are played occa- sionally. This year a Christmas party was given. All the German customs were carried out in detail. Officers for the first semester were: Howard Dirks, president; Gertrude Schuelke, vice-president; Mary Elizabeth Weber, secretary. Officers for the second semester were: Gertrude Schuelke, president; Bert Vos, vice- president; Helen Carroll, secretary. Faculty Members Mar.ha Baker Frank Dolian Elsa Kuersteiner Brooks Smith B. J. Vos Waller Beanblossom Dorothv Emrich Ruth Kuersteiner Lois Smith Carl Osthaus Katharine Eockhop AbeFarb MarvLohrman George Steinmetz E. H. Biermann Galen Eager Erich Freudenberger Margaret Maisoll Elmer Sylvester Hedwig Lcser Georgia Bopp Palmer Eicher Meredith Pleasant Edgar Ulrick Frederick J. Menger Jessie Borror James Groves Adolph Pozednoweck Robert Vandivier Elmer O. Wooley Margaret Bossmeier Edgar Harbit James Rellly Lewis Von Skeel E. P. Appelt George Brother Lawrence Hess Louise Ritterskamp Bert Vos, Jr. Frances S. Ellis Helen Carroll Pauline Hindsley Mary Rothrock Mary Elizabeth Weber Student Members lohn Davis Paul Hinkle Gertrude Schuelke Maryellen Whelan Maude Arthur iviarcia DiUinger Kathrvn Hoadley Sidney Seligman Philip Yunker Joy Edward Beanblossoir Howard Dirks Stephen Johnson Leila Shelley } [278] mzm i Phi Lambda Upsilon Phi Lambda Upsilon, national honorary chemistry fraternity, was estab- lished at Indiana uni ersity in the spring of 1925. The national organiza- tion was founded at Illinois university in 1888. Promotion of scholarship and research are the primary purposes of the fraternity. Membership to Phi Lambda Upsilon is based on scholastic attainment and personality, each member being required to have an average of at least 90 per cent. Two- thirds vote of the active chapter is necessary in addition to good quali- fications. No regular meetings are held, since members have too much research in and studying of chemistry to make the fraternity an active one. Officers for this year were Herschel Hunt, president; Frank C. Welcher, vice-president, and Wilmer T. Rinehart, secretary. f Dr Clarence E Mlv Herschel Hunt Wilmer T Rinehart FnnkC Welcher Eugene Kmning JnhnT Brundage Tro C, Daniels Cist D Etzel G M Bridburv Will am J Sp,rks Ches erM Alter lohn H Sicks Char esE Short Will imL Bright C L Gregg [279] .;gp Euclidean Circle . J- The FAiclidcan Circle at Indiana has grown into an acti ' e, entertaining, and educational society from the small charter group 2 1 years ago. These first members were so interested in mathematics as to take the proper steps toward establishing an organization for the purpose of discussing topics that would never be acquired otherwise. Bi-weekly meetings are held for this purpose. The programs consist of lectures and general discussions on sub- jects which are of interest to students in the mathematics department. In preceding years both social and business meetings were held as one, but in order to create a keener interest for mathematics in the future, two social meetings are held during the year and business meetings every other week. Membership is open to faculty members as well as students. All stu- dents who have had at least ten hours work in the mathematics department are eligible. The purpose is both educational and social. An annual picnic in the spring is the predominant social event of the year. The Circle was organized on this campus in 1907. Officers for this year were Hattie Mae Clevenger, president; Lloyd Green, vice-president and treasurer, and Virginia Hayward, secretary. Faa ty Members Harold T. Davis Schuyler C. Davisson Cara B. Hennel Margaret G. Cook William H. Crawford Catherine Daniels Edith De Lawter Mary Marshall Roy Meredith Hazel Moore Ruth Newcomb L. A. Kellam David A. Rothrock K. P. Williams Harold E. Wolfe Student Members Gladys Franklin Elverda GofSnet Lloyd Green Horace H. Harrell Virginia Hayward Bessie Helmback Muriel Oaley Dale Owens John Pittenger Margaret Poor Irene Price Frances Ream Thclma Abell Ruth Hinkle Arlys Elizabeth Robe Margaret Anderson Margaret Home Gertrude Schuelke Mary Bradfield Olive Carruthers Dorothy Johnson William J. Kirkham George Wrcy Blanche White Hattie Mae Clevenger Voris Latchaw Rae E.White liinHHpii n ' fe S i 1 1 mml sm M Jkl f ' Jp L Ij h W WffK T d Qjl-pbvliu% and Political Science Club The History and Political Science club was founded on the campus in the fall of 1902 to fulfill a need of co-operation between students of these departments and members of the faculty. The primary purpose of the club, however, is to promote research and better methods of study and teaching, together with the idea of gaining a broad understanding of American and European political problems by dis- cussion groups. Membership to the organization is limited to graduate students, members of the faculty, 25 seniors and 10 juniors. Student members are chosen on the basis of scholarship along with the interest they evince in their work in these departments. Meetings are held every two weeks, when papers prepared by the stu- dents are given. Plans were made recently to divide the discussions into periods of history with exhaustive study of each of the eras under discussion. Officers for the first semester were: Theodore Dann, president; Edgar Ulrick, vice-president, and Beula Sare, secretary-treasurer. Second semes- ter officers were: Stanley Gray, president; Roy Meredith, vice-president, anci Katherine Eckert, secretary-treasurer. Farul y Members S uJent Members Rachel Griffith James Parr F. G. Bates William Bolce Katherine tLiehl Celia Kelso Dorothy Rike Richard Stein F. Lee Benns John Coffin Altha Mercer Mary Thomas F. E, Brengle Mable Decker! Rov Meredith Martha Muell C. Buley Judson Deer Emma Moss Roberta NortI R. C. Daily Burge Emmcrt Keith Cash Irene Pelz Logan Esary Russell Fitzgibbon Violet Gatewood Martha Rott R. J. Ferguson Stanley Gray Helen Gragg Beula Sare A. S. Hershev Martha Loniax John Grimes Paul Schuler R. Johannessen Samuel Clashman Charles Marshall Tom Solvine A. L. Kohlmeler Theodore Dann Isabel Miller Eloysc Stage W. O. Lynch Katherine Eckert Orpha Morgan Horace D. Trv W. T. Morgan LoisEldridge George Osborn Edgar Ulrick Home Re ()}i amies Club The Home I ' .eonomics club is both a soci:il luid an iiistructioiuil organiza- tion, which has a membership open to all junio rs and seniors who are majors in the home economics depiartment. This year the club roll included 39 coeds, as well as 6 members of the home economics faculty. ' f ; The club meets once a month at the University Practice House on East Third street. Since the meetings are combined business and social occasions, the members may enjoy a social program as well as an instructional lecture. The club often entertains a speaker who is interested in home economics work. Topics of general interest on this phase of economics are also dis- cussed by the members. To promote a closer fellowship among students and faculty members who are mutually interested in this type of work is the immediate purpose of the club. It is also the aim of its members to create a greater interest in the activities of the home economics department of Indiana university. Officers for this year were: Starley Hunter, president; R uby Portteus, vice-president; Florence Pearse, secretary, and Olive Wingard, treasurer. f pbultius ' ' 2, Le Cercle Francais Le Cercle Francais was originally organized at Indiana university for the purpose of promoting methods of French study and teaching. Since then, however, it has felt the need of encouraging the spieaking of French yy . anci now devotes a large part of its time to this work. : The club joined with the university French department in an attempt to establish a Maison Francaise (French House) such as exists on other university campuses. For the first time, this was carried out last fall by the purchase of a house on East Seventh street where each member of the club may live. At present eight students and two faculty women are living there. The Maison Francaise is an experiment, but it seems probable that it will become a permanent institution. Membership to Le Cercle Francais is limited to the faculty, 50 students, including 20 seniors and 20 juniors, and 10 special students. Officers for this year were: Virginia Lindstrom, president; Mildred Woodworth, vice- president; Beulah Young, secretary, and Ruth Kuersteiner, treasurer. Faculty Members M.ibel Ferguson Elizabeth Neelv Antoinette Billant Katherine Franke Mary Pattie Lucie BilLint Hilda Hathorne Ann Marie Pete Margaret Hayes Emma Phillips Stude?,t Members Elsa Kuersteiner Sarah Rafferty Dorothy B.iss Ruth Kuersteiner La Donna Reem Louise Rhudy Carolvn Sackett Georgia Bopp Virginia Lindstrom M.iude Bryan Gladys Linton Louise Schetter Juanita Carnelly Helen Lynch Frances Schmede Catherine Carpenter Ethel Masterson Elizabeth Voigt Lenore Dowden Mildred May Mary Wampler Lois Eldridge Alice Miles Mildred Wood« Leonora Enlow Juanita Moser Beulah Young cJ r buias 1 , .-t,,«s.,aE Phi CIu Thcta Phi Chi Theta is a professional business sorority with a purpose to foster high ideals for women interested in business careers, and to encourage fra- ternity co-operation. In 1924 the organization was founded by the combination of two com- peting professional business sororities, Phi Theta Kappa and Phi Kappa Epsilon, and was granted its national chapter in 1 925. Chapters are granted to the colleges and universities having business schools of recognized stand- ings. The local sorority is Nu of the 1 7 active chapters in the national organization. To encourage efficiency among the commerce students, Phi Chi Theta each year awards a key to the senior coed in the commerce school with the highest scholarship and the best record in activities. Last year the key was awarded Margaret Peters. Since 1924 the sorority has doubled its chapter roll, publishes a monthly magazine, and has become a chapter member of the professional Panhellenic association. The local chapter has 14 members. Florence Roth is president. Hon- orary members of the organization are: Dean Rawles, Miss Sarah Kirby, and Miss Lulu M. Westenhaver. % m [384] Outing Club Each member of Outing club is working toward the goal of physical effi- ciency, and is endeavoring to promote in other university women an interest in outdoor activities, and a democratic spirit in all sports. This club was formed in 1920 when a need was felt for an athletic organization which would sponsor less vigorous sports than those sponsored by W. A. A. To reach active membership each girl must earn 25 points in 3 different sports. These sports are arranged in the following groups: Tennis, swim- ming, rifle shooting, bicycling, and miscellaneous, and are under the direc- tion of club members. The initiation is held the first Tuesday in December. The traditional event of Outing club is the annual hike to Nashville in Brown county. Other activities include a tennis tournament, breakfast hikes, and short weekly hikes. Rifle shooting is growing in popularity and is expected to become one of the most important sports of the club. This fall more than 50 girls signed up for practice. The officers for this year are: Nellie Clark, president; Blanche Hargis, vice-president; Rachel Griffith, secretary; Mary Rothrock, filing secretary; Esther Compton, treasurer, and Thelma Abell, publicity head. [285] The Physics club is an organization of the faculty and advanced students in Physics. Topics pertaining to the mysterious laws, hidden secrets, development and recent discoveries of this science are dlscust cd and explained in the meetings. Many current events concerning physics and other subini nt intircst to physics students cannot be talked about in class, but will only be Icanud tliiinii;h (.nic social organization with this as its foundation. From this principle the PhyMv club rcw. Every meeting closes with a social hour, which affords an opportunit}- for the members to mingle and have discussions. The last meeting of the year is devoted to a picnic. .A com- mendable spirit of alertness and loyalty is shown in the Physics club, arising and centered around that of a progressive and congenial faculty. This element has attributed much toward the life of and the interest shown in the years the club has been established on the campus. Each of the i3 students .md f.iculty members attends meetings regularly. Five new students were taken in the second cmc icr. D.ilc Owens was president the first half of the rear; George Urey, vice-president; Thclni.i Abcll, secretary, and William Strain, treasurer. At the meeting held early in the second semester, Mr. Owens and Mr. Urey were re-elected and Robert E. Miller and Robert Quinn were chosen as secretary and treasurer, respectively. Faculty Members A. L. Foley Tohn B. Dutcher M. E. Hufford Rolla R. Ramsey Lila B. Curtis .A. W. Dicus William Ferger Hazel Fletcher Mrs. Hattie Gehr J. B. Hershman Ruth Hinkle Anna Coleman Charles Jeffrey Student Members Glenn Lef ler Perry Martin Thclma Abell Robert L.Miller J. J. Brady B. D. Morris Josephine Bro«n .1.0. Carson, Jr. Dale Owens A. V. Pershing E. T. Cho Robert Quinn Everett Scales Wilfred Stewar William Strain George Urey Blanche White L. J. BuIIiet Edith De Lawtc Paul Bradt Jeanette WiUiai Gladys Franklii Olive Carruthcr Walden Kunz Edna Spanneth Claude Cox . c fe;? - . ' - - n z-gm m . Psychology Club The Psychology club, which was org.ini cd on the t.impii- ■L L-r.il ycirs ago, is a through which students and faculty members who arc iiitcrc ' lcJ in pMJiology may their work in some extra curricular activities. The club nicct once ,i month to hea speakers and to discuss current psychological problems. Membership is open to al and minors in the department, as well as faculty members. Activities of the club extend beyond the monthly meetings. Each year it sends a to the American Psychological association convention to gain new information and id( club also adds occasionally to the equipment in the laboratories of the department. The officers for this year were Ralph Mills, president; Mrs. Elsie Lockridge, v dent; Miss Mary Shiglcy Wcstfall, secretary-treasurer. medium continue delegate as. The Faculty Members Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Book Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Young Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Snoddy Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Nicholso Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Crawley Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Major Mr. andMrs. C. A. Whknier Miss Hannah Book Studejit Members Clarence Fowerbaugh linrbara E. Dodson . ' imelia Howell Ralph Shaffer .•Xrthur Joseph Sulli ' Lela Louise Johnsor Reulah McCoy Dorothy Foster Edith Knoblock Beaulah Price John C. Reed H.irrv C. Baum •org( Steii Rubv Thelma Tate Ruth E. Horney Mrs. Elsie Lockridge Ruth .. xtell Wilhflmina Heidr E. Ellison Joseph H. Conner Claude Hutson Wendell Adamson Ralph Mills [287 1 v| !v.o r hu il ' iis Skeleton Club ' I ' lic vSkcUloii ikib was luuudcd shortly after the medical school was added to the Uni- versity. The club functions as a departmental organization as well as a class organization. To foster good feeling and brotherhood among the students of the medical school is the pur- pose of the organization. Members of the freshman class of the medical school comprise the membership of this club. It is the largest organization on the cimpus, having a membership o Black felt hats are worn by the members of the organization. The colors are black and white. Officers for this year were: Arthur Richter, president; Harold Hilty, vice-president, and Frances Brown, secretary-treasurer. li:im Edwia liarnc-tt ■g.nrct F.iirb.ink Rcnj.mili ;n Frederick Benz ert John Bickel nor Hssson Rhickledge Members of the Skeleton Club M.iut V:iitcr F. Galbrcith Dillon Don.iId Geigcr Jacob Earl Gillespie Myron Lester Habegger OrviUe Arvane Hall Anton Paul Hattendorf Marvin E. Hawes Floyd A. Hawk Ricli Ha Claybo :oiiii Matthew Cornacchion Harry McnloCovell Edward Weir CuUiph. William Donald Davl Donald Irvin Dean Roger Scif res Denny Charles Henry Denzh August Joseph Dean Her bert Stephen Died Donald Clay Emenhis Samuel James Ferrarc John Kieffer Foick , Frank Furstenberg Ladene Hodges Olga A. Hoffman Lawrence Merrill Hughe Gayle Jones Hunt Wilbur James Irish Howard Wilfred Johnsoi George L. Jones Leo Espert Jordan Clarence Gerald Kern Nicholas Earl Keseric Jack Albert King Florence Kirkpatrick (Honorary Member) Bennett Kraft Leslie A. Land Emmett R. Lamb Robert Maurice La Salle Jean Russell La Vanchy Clifford James Lewis Hamlin Berry Lindsay Glenn Clovis Lord John Edmund Luzadder Tyrell D. McConnell E. Craig McDonald Calvin Porter McLaughlin William Meston McLin l..,.n.,rdKirkMcMurty l.in.K-l Hamilton Maloney C.imiel Michael Malstaff lohn Paul Marsh William Burleigh Matthew Ardis Francis Melloh William Weaver Nichol Vincent Joseph Noone John William Ollphant Carl Byno Parker John Francis Parker Edwin Diment Perrln Maynard Franklin Poland Carl Morgan Porter Edward Stanfield Post Alden Jasper Ra ric k Donald Reed Arthur B. Richter William S. Robertson Carl Joseph Rudolph Martin Luther Ruth George Lawrence Sandy • Schutt 1 Schwar Her: Ralph Daniel Shaner Reuben Isaac Shapiro Byron John Smith Carl Benjamin Southard William J. Stangle Arthur J. Steffen Lee Henrv Streaker Everett Charles Taylor Jerry Loyal Town Menlo Clayton Turner Karl William Vetter Paul C. F. Vietzke John Charles Volderauer Gerald Treslar Watterson Robert Kenton Webster J. Walter Wilson, Jr. Marion Evans Wilson Donald Owen Wissinger Gerald Strauss Young % i -Tp- ' ' w mp i Botany Club Any one interested in botany is eligible to membership in the Botany club. Other than aiming to present to its members the practical side of botany and the recent discoveries in the field through talks and papers by the faculty and advanced students, the club fosters a closer acquaintanceship between students and faculty. It is the hope of the officers to increase steadily both the membership and the usefulness of the club. Three of the best reasons for membership are the two picnics and the Christmas party which are given every year. Meet- ings of the club are held every other Monday night in Biology hall. To insure attendance, refreshments are served after each meeting. The officers of the organization this year are: Margaret Cummins, president; Fern Railsback, vice-president, and Pearl Schafer, secretary- treasurer. Faculty Members David M. Rothrock Frank M. Andrews Paul Weatherwax Flora Anderson James M. Van Hook Student Members Cyril Wilson Terzo Amidei Betty Long Opan Putnam Lillian Lockridge Emma Snider Mary Brower Maude Harrell Fern Railsback Edward Sabernl, Naomi Nash Ruth Hale Pearl Schafer Gladys Price Helen Siniff Mar - Travis Florence Roger! Winona Welch CorieneWilhelr Dorothv Johnso Vera Spencer Edith Titus Hugh Ramsey Marjo rie MuUin Audre • Trueblood Willia m Riechen Irene Pelz Kathr m Metz Margn ret Cummin Esther Bernice Gel Bonni McClure Louise Wemple Herm n Spieth Vivian Jeffries Alice Momaw Clara Vlary Newso lone Nixon lone Hamilton [289] ms c Sigma Delta Psi The local chapter of Sigma Delta Psi, national honorary athletic fra- ternity, was founded in 1912 by Dr. C. P. Hutchins. The aim of the fraternity is to foster versatility among men of athletic ability. To become eligible for meinbership it is necessary to pass several diffi- cult qualifications. These qualifications include: Swim, 100 yards; 100- yard dash in 11 seconds; high jump, 5 feet; pole vault, 8 feet, 6 inches; broad jump, 17 feet, 6 inches; low hurdles, 31 seconds; shot put, 30 feet; 2-mile run, 12 minutes, 15 seconds; baseball throw, 250 feet; 10-mile walk, 2 hours, 30 minutes; front dive, 4 feet; football punt, 40 yards; handstand, 10 seconds; handspring. Any University man may become a member of the fraternity provided he can complete these tests, but because of the difficulty of these require- ments, membership has always been limited. Jcwett Hull, the only active member this year, was in school the fir ' t semester. i ' .- .Ak:..-, mp gr [291] cAt buiius ' ! Cain pus A ffa ' n L ; hj At B N ' H b l Anions anil Cleofatra n [292] l cAr lbu litis ' : Ruisell McDermott Co-dir,-clor Rdinait Kc ' siUr Cain pus Affairs The second edition of C.nnpus Affairs, presented January 11 and 12 at Assembly hall, received an almost unaniniou- aciianiation of approval. The show was undoubtedly the best student creation staged in sc er.il years. The production, which was divided into two acts, with sixteen and nine scenes, respec- tively, included a cast of 94. The Book-Nook after Pi Phi Dance, with its bowery dancers and chorus, and A Night in Joseph, or A Bedate, were probably the two outstanding skits. Individual honors, however, went to Boxell and Carow, who provided some of the show ' s best comedy. Eleven dancing choruses, under the direction of the Misses Bird, Slay- back and Allbright, added to the scenic beauty of the performance. This year the coeds did their kicking to double piano tunes instead of the usual orchestra. Fred Tangeman, musical director, and Amos Otstot, assistant director, were at the pianos. Campus Affairs, which is a Garrick club presentation, was first conceived and directed by William Halstead, ' 27. The funds from the last performance will be used to purchase equipment for a new auditorium. Ramon Kessler and Russell McDermott were co-directors of this year ' s show. lj::JI-plbvtiiS ' : w wmr Sherzvood Blue ' ' The Patsy A three-act comedy, The Patsy, given December 1+ and 15 at Assembly hall, was Garrick club ' s first presentation this year. The plot was centered around Pat Harrington, one of those ever} ' day sort of girls who has been blessed with a much better looking older sister. Pat, Alice Thorn, suffered all the indignities of the downtrodden member of the family, as well as encountering other diffi- culties by virtue of her desire to do the sportsmanlike thing. Pop, Harold Bullard, was Pat ' s pal, but that didn ' t help much since Mom, Muriel Mattox, was distinctly head of the family. Mom and Grace, Jennylou Whitehead, were social climbers whose chief ambition was to marry Grace to Billy Caldwell, Denzell Pittman, scion of a wealthy family whose social standing was impeccable. Pat was in love with Tony Anderson, James Snodgrass, an ordinary } ' oung man, according to Grace, who jilted him for Billy. Everything ended happily, however. Pat came out ahead and won Tony, Grace married Billy, and Pop read the riot act to Mom, thereby revesting the household with peace and tranquillity. The comedy was a success, since the characters were well portrayed by members of the cast, and the play itself was particularly adaptable to a university cast and audience. Sher- wood Blue was the director. i Jordan River Revue Err- uig Dress Chorus Miles and Bo.xell I A- cJI-iPbvlu% . Jordan Rive By defying the set coiu ' eiitions of musical comedy and stage ethics, novel effects were obtained which made the Jordan River Revue of 1928 the most original production ever staged bv the students of Indiana. H Hr ' M ' P ° ' entirely collegiate, centering around the se- ■||r ' H lection of a college man for the movies. The first act had its a ' H setting in a sorority house on the campus, and the second and HEf H third acts took place in a motion picture studio in Hollywood. Hv H This was the first three-act revue attempted for several years, but it was successful. Settings for all scenes were elaborate, L. Ivan Eo.xell ut the finale, Castle of Love set, surpassed them all with its wide promenade, sparkling columns, blue sky, and moun- tainous background. The cast and chorus were in formal attire for this scene. The 16-piece college band and the feature tunes, Could You Learn to Love Me, Dear.? and I ' ve Held You in My Arms, were enthusiastically received. After three successful performances in Bloomington, March 12, 13, 14, the cast and chorus of 75, together with the orchestra, proceeded to Lafayette, Muncie, Fort Wayne, and Indianapolis, where the Revue was presented. The show traveled in special cars, which were well labeled and decorated by the publicity directors. Accommodations for the coinpany to use the banquet halls for meals in hotels were made. L. Ivan Boxell directed the 1928 Revue. His staif included Russell McDermott, assistant director; Fred Tangeman, musical director; Mary Valetta Allbright and Pat Slayback, dancing directors; William Ramsey, business manager; George Pepple, assist- ant business manager; Robert Huncilman, publicity director; Birdie Hess, assistant pub- licity director, and Mrs. Esther Austin and Helen Johnson, costume directors. Lyrics were written by Ed Savage. Francis Wylie and Mr. Boxell were co-authors of the book. ■, cJf Pbuiius- : Jiisper Giirland Asshr ,:! Coach Coed Debating There was a slight increase in the number of coeds who took up debating this year. Not only were there more coeds, but also the material was better. Coeds who debated during the year were Joy Belle Goyer, Dorothy Finley, Mil- dred Woodworth, Joyce Armstrong, Ollie Gardner, and Beth Blue. A triangle debate held with the University of Illinois and the University of Mich- igan was the feature of the year in coed debating. The direct primary question was debated. At the University of Illinois, the negative team lost, but at Indiana the affirma- tive team won from the University of Michigan. One other minor debate was held with Indiana Central College at Indianapolis. Pro- fessor Norvelle coached the coed team throughout the year. TT : i ' T l r4r bulus% s Domdd Bo ' ucu International Debaters 1. m Men ' ' s Debating Lender the coaching of Lee R. Norvelle and Jasper Garland, men ' s debating at Indi- ana this } ' ear had a pretentious program. Two international debates and one triangle debate were held. In the first international debate held last fall, a team picked from the University of London, the University of Edinburg, and the L niversity of Reading met the Indi- ana team on the question. Resolved: That Co-education Has Failed. The judges gave the victory to the Indiana team, consisting of Donald Bowen, Howard De Meyer, and Henry Drake. The Indiana team debated the negative side of the question. The triangle debate held with Purdue and DePauw universities was coached by Jas- per Garland, assistant debating coach. Freshman debaters on the teams were Bernard Frick, Bagdasar Deranian, George Davis, James Elder, Harold Wright, Giles Pierre, Sjlvan Tackitt, and Harry Dean. Indiana lost her fourth international debate held this spring with the Philippines on the question of immediate independence for the Philippines. The team was composed of Haroki Wright, Bernard Frick, and Joyce Armstrong, and debated the negative side of the question. Plans are being laid this spring for the installation of a chapter of Phi Delta Gamma, a national professional forensic fraternit} ' . ! ..c4 taias ' mM .. . M _ .n. The ig28 ylrbiitiis ifiS, -LLach spring the eagerness and expectancy with which the student body awaits the pub- lication of the Arbutus is increased by the successful fulfillment of the expectations of the previous year. These standards, established by former staffs, have increased the obliga- tions of those to whom this year ' s work has been entrusted, but they also ser ' e as a stimulus to untiring efforts. The staff of the 1928 Arbutus has endeavored to attain in its publication the high- est possible degree of perfection by having the idea of perfection as an aim. To accom- plish this purpose, the fact has been kept in mind that this book must be an accurate and complete record of the University year, preserving within its covers all the old senti- ments and traditions. In this, and in the mechanical make-up of the book, the staff has been guided by the work of foregoing staffs, for during the past few years, in competi- tion with the publications of other leading universities, the Arbutus has maintained a posi- tion among the best. However, if the staff limited itself to accomplish only that which has been accom- plished in former years in the best manner possible, there would be little need to seek ■— ■.y y i T Edmund Bruner favor for this publication, because it would represent only a repetition of what custom has originated. . . . r ,, , This year the staff has strived to point out in the most convincing form, to all those interested, the progressiveness of the University and its organizations. For this reason it adopted a futuristic ideal in all divisions of the book. With what degree of success this end has been accomplished will be for others to judge, but the staff has desired to give to the readers of the 1928 Arbutus a book composed with perfection as its aim, which will recall to them the joy of their college days, the memory of old and dear friends, and the sweetness of old traditions; but at the same time to renew with each reading the feel- ing that Indiana universit - is still ali •e, still as progressi -e as it was in their own college If the staff has accomplished its purpose, and fulfilled the expectations of others, it must acknowledge a great obligation to those who have given invaluable service: Members of the faculty and Universit ' administration who have co-operated with the staff in e -ery wa . The S. K. Smith companv for its covers and original ideas. The Bookwalter-Ball-Greathouse Printing company for its services and co-operation. The Stafford Engraving company for its interest and excellent work. The Sinclair Studio for its co-operation, interest, and splendid work in procuring pic- George P. MacKnight [303] ; g _ : : iJ; ijtes-w 2 ,., ,..,Jn . ' - ii Don Xodermark Emily Pond ClnirUi Sonneborn Pat Slayhack George Pepple Philip Clark Aais. Sport Editor Puhliiity Campaign Assis. Campaign Assis. Organization Editor Campaign Managi Sophomore Assistants First Column Lawrence Fulwider, business staff Christine Miller, editorial staff Martha McLaughlin, editorial stai T liird Column Max Sappenfield, editorial staff Robert Turman, business staff Joe Smith, business staff Franklin Mullin, editorial staff Second Column Rex Sappenfield, editorial staff Max Gordon, editorial staff Louis Ikerd, editorial staff Gladvs Denison, editorial staff Fourth Column Carl Brccht, business staff Winifred Smith, editorial staff George Graves, editorial staff }as. R. Woods, Ji. Mm on Dtule Max Gli,k Frank W. Ralclijf Otis McQuiston Bu!. Mgr. ,f Med ' .s Editor of D.ntah Bus Mgr ofDcnlals Editor of Medtcs Snapshot Editor LJ £: s ..j sm U. [305] MM c bvi s ' Ml_,, . -l J. A. ]l,-ig , upen ' hor, the D.uly Slud,-,,! Josefh W. Piercy Head of Jouriiitlism Dfp.trtment The Indiana Daily Student A, FACSIMILE of the Chicago Tribune, WGN, otherwise known as the World ' s Greatest Newspaper, is WGCN, the world ' s greatest college newspaper, the Indiana Daily Stu- dent, published every school day by students of the University department of jour- nalism. The Student was one of the first college newspapers to assume daily publication, and since that time has gained prominence. With special services, including the Associated Press and the Central Press Photograph, it is equipped to supply not only the campus, but Bloomington readers with all up-to-the-minute information. Although a paper of eight columns and from four to eight pages. The Student edi- torial department, which is taken care of by students, is organized along the lines of a metropolitan daily. The paper is under the control of an editor, appointed each semes- ter, who organizes his staff from managing editors and associate editors to the reporter, much the same as the big city staff is arranged. The Student is supplied with special feature writers, editorial writers, a dozen mem- bers of the copy desk, headline writers, columnists, sport writers, and approximately a score of reporters, who comb both campus and city for news. The paper has always made a policy of publishing the most important events of city interest, in order to make it a typical newspaper. Prof. J. A. Wright, member of the journalism faculty, is in direct supervision of The Student, and his office is in the editorial rooms of the Journalism building. During the first semester, Donald B. Woodward was editor, and H. Dixon True- blood, Dow Richardson, and Donald A. Young were associate editors. The associate edi- tors were editorial writers, and had direct control of the copy cHesk. The first half of the second semester saw Mr. Trueblood in the editor ' s chair, while Mr. Young assumed this position during the last half of the second semester. W. L. Reeves is business manager of The Student, and Joseph R. Todd is assistant advertising manager. The paper is published in the Journalism building where the offices of the Univer- sity Press are located. The building contains a modern printing plant, which is used by the University Press and The Daily Student, both being co-operative in the publishing of the paper. University credit of three hours is given those who work on the paper, and working hours are arranged. Most of the work is done on a competitive basis, with the paper and Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalistic fraternity, offering prizes in various phases of competition. i 1t- 1 Don Young Scott Ckamben Joe DeLo Editor Cily Editor Assoc. Editor Birdie Hess Tevie Jacobs Robert Barton Dixon True- Assoc. Editor Assoc. Editor Sports Editor blood Editor Lewis Edwards Editor G. Dallas Newton Faadly Advisor The Summer Student A, .LTHOUGH the staff of The Student during the summer session of the University was entirely reorganized and very much depleted, its own activity, and the special features contributed by correspondents, produced a publication of more than ordinary interest. The President ' s column, which President William Lowe Bryan writes for The Daily Student, was continued during the summer months. Several members of the second semes- ter staff acted as correspondents and sent in their observations from various places of interest. Reports were received also from the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. confer- ences at Lake Geneva, and from the Indiana university biological station at Winona Lake. In addition, members of the faculty contributed articles. In accordance with the usual policy, the paper was issued twice each week, on Tuesday and Friday mornings, until the middle of July, when publication was suspended until the opening of the state fair, when the summer staff was replaced by a staff especially selected to publish the state fair editions. Lewis B. Edwards was editor last summer. His staff included Donald A. Young, George P. MacKnight, Ruth McKorkle, Jerry Sheridan, Anne Bray, and a number of reporters. George P. MacKnight City Editor . m 1 Mm w CrU- Don Young Sport s Editor jmu. .cJI-pbv © I % •ii n.d-Auliin OlayfcacA Toilf. C iaTnbei ' j frueilood Jacoks Vv oodkvard 1 c4r buiiis ' ' -isism ' ' ondzi-ard The State Fair Student ) . newspaper in the wtirld published un the gruunds of a fair is the state fair edition of the Indiana Daily Student; or rather, the only exposition in the world that can boast of a newspaper published on its premises is the Indiana State fair, held annually at Indianapolis. The easiest way for a student to get experience in journal- ism would be to give newspapers all over the state information and special news articles for five days, which was done by seven members of the staff of The Daily Student during the jubilee celebration of the exposition in September, 1927. For the sixth consecutive year the journalism department gave its unique demonstration at the grounds along with the other university exhibitions. Under the editorship of Donald B. Woodward, six students, H. Dixon Trueblood, managing editor; Donald Young, sports editor; Birdie Hess, Dow Richardson, Joseph DeLo, and Franklin Mullin, scur- ried in and out of the big fair buildings for five days, resigned to the task of informing the state as to what was transpiring at the seventy-fifth annual state fair. Every morning the paper of six pages was circulated over the grounds. During the day the staff worked at typewriters in its tent on the midway, getting out copy to be sent by special busses to Bloomington, where the mech anical work of the publishing was done. Special interviews of prominent men who visited the grounds were obtained by the stu- dents. The publicity department of the state fair, which maintained an ofiice in the Admin- istration building, received carbon copies of all material written by the reporters for The Student, and in this way every news happening of the exposition was recorded by local and state papers as well as the official organ, The Daily Student. I % - T G ' TKm- ' m m The Red Book o PUBLICATION Oil the campus offers so great a source of pleasure to students as the Red Book published annually by the Y. M. C. A. In fact, it has been well named the student bible, because it is the final authority in deciding problems concerning them. For a number of years there has been a joke on the campus concerning the publication date of the book. Editors usually begin setting deadlines for publication when school opens in September, and keep extending them until far into the semes- ter. This year, however, the book was issued close to the date set by the editor and was placed on sale November 1 . The Red Book contains the names and addresses of every student enrolled in the University the first semester, the names and addresses of all faculty members and officials, a list of social organizations with the members of each, the names of honorary organizations with the significance of each, and several other sections on the University which are especially informational to the new student. To compile such an edition, which is more or less a bird ' s-eye view of the University, is a tedious undertaking, and requires the co-operation of every unit of the campus and the University in addition to a gift for organizing material on the part of the editor. The Red Book for this year has been one of the most complete and accurate edi- tions which have been published. For the first time in several years the book was a financial success. The 1928 staff members were: Donald A. Young, editor; Adrian La Follette, associate editor; John Ellis, business manager; Geary Smith, advertising manager, and George Pepple, sales manager. II ' . i 4 ■•...- :jf ' i -. ' SiPbuiius George Heighiva Editor, the Alumnus Paul Sayre Editor, Indiana Law Journal Minor Publications The Indiana Law Journal is the official publication of the Indiana State Bar asso- ciation. It is compiled by Prof. Paul Sayre, under whom a group of student editors work. It is strictly a legal publication, containing articles written by leading legal figures, and briefs on important cases. The Alumnus is a four-page paper issued once every two weeks for the benefit of former students and alumni. It gleans news from the Indiana Daily Student which will be of interest to its readers, and thus keeps them in touch with the life of the University. George Heighway, secretary of the Alumni association, was the editor during the past year. The Athletic Review is published for each of the home football games during the football season. It contains information about the players of each team, the coaches, and about the game itself. L. Ivan Boxell was editor of the publication this year. The Indiana University Alumni Quarterly was first published in January, 1914, and has been issued four times a year since that date. The Quarterly is the mouthpiece of the alumni, and it is intended to bring about a closer co-operation between the grad- uates. Personal notes on students included in the magazine are grouped categorically according to the date of graduation. Articles by faculty members and officials and other interesting features are included in the publication. Ivy L. Chamness is the editor. Vi .7. L. Ivan Boxell Editor, the Athletic Rn fV L. Chamness Editor, ' the Alumni Quarterly iSL- ) ' t ' : ' ?k. ' Mi fj ¥4 itt . [313] :« . r! K [314] 1 §■C ' : Helen Klehi Fyesh}nan ' ' J W ' fflB I  i WtW r ' M.cJiMDuias c - y 1 opal Crockett Sophomore M ' C . rAir.! r II- I- _,, , MJfrit ijS fct t The ' ' ir Section To .0 ERADICATE any belief that this section of IT ' S has been placed in the Arbutus for a razz, a complete explanation of the means of selection will be given. The names of four candidates, one from each of the classes, were sent to the Arbutus office from every sorority and fraternity house, and from each of the three student dormitories. These names were kept secret, and the selection committee, consisting of Mr. D. D. Sinclair, the Arbutus photographer, and the four members of the Arbutus staff — Jane Ensle, editor; Edmund Bruner, business man- ager; Robert Huncilman, secretary-treasurer, and Joe DeLo, man- aging editor — used these candidates as possible selections, but did not bind itself to them exclusively. Every suggested person was carefully considered after a period of investigation into his or her merits. The selection was based upon qualities of physical attractiveness and pleasing personality. Per- haps the most essential consideration was how well each candidate represented his or her class. The freshmen were to be young, unso- phisticated, and still the novice; the sophomores were to be col- legiate; the juniors were to be the carefree, somewhat athletically inclined persons, and the seniors were to be calm, serene, and approaching sophistication. With these necessary characteristics in mind, the committee selected the eight men and women whose pic- tures appear in the section. The Arbutus staflF wishes to express its appreciation to Mr. Sin- clair for his help in making the selections of the men and women. Moreover, the artistry with which he photographed the individuals has been unsurpassed in any section of this kind. His ability, dis- cernment, and patience have been largely responsible for the success of this section, as for all other sections of the Arbutus. [ 323 ] jz4ipbuiius ' [ ' : l f :r:! :L:J 4 ' : R. 0. T. a Th HE National Defense act, passed hy the United States Congress following the world war, in order that the country would maintain a position that would enahle it to he prepared for war at any time, makes possihle the local department of a Reserve OfHcers ' Training Corps. One of the provisions of the Defense act was the establishment of departments for the military training of young men in colleges and all secon- dary schools. Indiana university requires that every man, who intends to be graduated, take two years of basic military, and the military depart- ment gives opportunity to students who desire to take advanced work to become cadets in the reserve corps. The local department is in the fifth field corps. Maj. Harry B. Crea, for the fifth consecutive year, was head of the depart- ment this year. He had under him a general staff of five captains of the regu- lar army and two sergeants. Charles H. Mount was cadet colonel of the R. O. T. C. regiment during the year. Nine hundred and ninety students were enrolled in the basic course the first semester, and 675 were enrolled during the second semester. Approximately 75 me n were enrolled in the advanced course. The regiment was composed of three battalions, of eleven companies. Non- [324] „ «f commissioned cadet officers had charge of the drill work of the companies. The first of May the War department in Washington sent corps inspection boards to all R. O. T. C. divisions in the fifth corps for the annual inspection of the units. Selec- tion of any unit to honorable position is based on appearance of cadets, instruction capacities, and general conditions. The entire regiment was called into drill on the day of general inspection, and one war-strength company was selected to stage a sham battle before the inspecting officers. In the fall and spring, drill for cadets is given twice a week, and on one afternoon each week the regiment is assembled on the golf course for regi- mental review before the cadet colonel and his staff. The department has under its supervision the military band of 100 pieces, which attends each ceremony in full dress. In winter season, when outside drill is prohibited by the weather, indoor instruction is given in military tactics and science, military hygiene, and advanced warfare tactics. Under Maj. Crea were Capt. Grover C. Cleaver, adjutant, Capt. John C. Blizzard, Capt. J. J. Pirtle, Capt. A. K. Rupert, Capt. John W. McCormick, Serg. S. B. Gibson, Serg. Fisher, and Serg. Harris. Lit US ' Prominent Men at Na Day Each year, when November 1 1 rolls around, the military department plans a special ceremony, drill, and review in commemoration of Armistice day. Last fall Commander E. E. Spafford, national commander of the American Legion, elected at the Paris convention of the Legion, spoke to the regiment from the reviewing stand on the golf course during a special visit to Blooming- ton. The regiment assembled on several other occasions for regimental exer- cises before visiting dignitaries. Maj. Crea has been notified by the War department that he is to be given a new command following the present school year. Since coming to Indiana uni- versity as head of the military department, he has done much to pave the way for a harmonious period of service for his successor. a 1 ' ::sg r o ' T .. A— 1. :.: z ' ' m Ccipt. A. K. Rufert Men ' s Rip Team More interest was shown in the men ' s rifle team this year than ever before, and from indications the sport has come to stay as a part of the University ' s numerous activities. Sweaters were awarded to ten men by Capt. A. K. Rupert, the coach. Those who received letters are: H. E. Coffey, captain; H. M. Covell, Rex Bradt, Orval Hunter, Glen Lefler, L. E. Scherer, John Carson, James Forsyth, Bliss Phillips, and James Lesh. Several other men were in some of the Big Ten matches, and were com- mended by Capt. Rupert. Coffey won first place in seven of the twelve meets in which the team was entered. Lefler got two firsts, as did Covell. Hunter received one first. Coffey was the champion high score rifleman in the Conference also. J ! ■■- - Uu t ft. ' — ■( — _ _ J 4 ' ! fc w-m i m pWS [327] -ibuiius L AST October the bright crimson capes of the army, thrown back over the shoulders of 100 In- diana university bandsmen, heralded the name of the Hoosier state university before the eyes of thousands of rooters crowded in the Harvard uni- versity stadium at Cambridge, Mass. The band received the attention of a football nation for several weeks. Every time the football game between Indiana and Harvard broke into newspaper columns, the band came in for its share of the glory. The Sunday edition of the New York Times carried a full picture of the band in its rotogravure section. The Indiana marching band was made. Dri,„: AL, or In four years Capt. Grover C. Cleaver, of the R. O. T. C, under whose supervision the band performs, has been building up an organization which can maintain a standard with other collegiate bands. Over night he found that the band that he, with Mark Hindsley, musical conductor, and John Ellis, drum major, had been working and training with untiring efforts, had caught and even superseded the college bands he was using as his mark. The band arrived in Bloomington the Sunday following the game on the special Harvard train bearing team and rooters, and received an appropriate welcome. Besides the Harvard trip, the band followed the football team to Northwest- q (ZJI-ir iuaiu ern and Chicago for games there, and was ac- corded the same recognition. In practice season the hand mcmhcrs drill from four to five o ' clock daily, weaving from their files appropriate figures and. letters for the visit- ing and visited schools. It has become known as the world ' s greatest collegiate marching band. Speaking of the organization, the Boston Herald is quoted: No other college band in the country starts to compare with this Hoosier organization. The precision of the musicians ' march would do credit to a West Point outfit. A program at the Indiana state fair in Indian- apolis opened the season after a practice starting the third week in August. The popularity of the thrilling, unique drills and beautiful, harmonious melodies merited for the band a spring tour through the state and a request to play in Fort Wayne and several other Indiana cities. The big event in the spring was the trip to the Indianapolis automobile race on Memorial Day, when the musicians, clad in olive drab officers ' uniforms, crimson capes and white O. D. belts, paraded before a vast audience assembled from all corners of the world. There are requests from all parts of the state and from all colleges where I ndiana is to play football that the band be present for concerts. The ordinary admirer watches the marching of the organization, and in his musical delirium Wi ® mA l .j-1 b yhai ww Mm STAGG Formation of Band fails to realize the even more wonderful band orchestration technique that has been established by Conductor Hindsley. Showing the appreciation of the student body for Capt. Cleaver ' s accom- plishment of bringing Indiana ' s band to a point where it now ranks with the best in America, Sigma Delta Chi, international professional journalistic fra- ternity, presented him with the leather medal of 1928 at the Gridiron banquet held in the Student building May 2. This award is given each year to the faculty member who, in the eyes of the fraternity, has done the most for the University during the past year. Following the presentation of the medal, students and members of the fac- ulty, as well as townspeople, congratulated the fraternity on its choice, show- ing the general appreciation for Capt. Cleaver ' s work. Im - J LcAi buiiis ' l j s University Orchestra JJecause of the growing demand for orchestra work, two orchestras were established this year instead of one. The orchestra has been a musical organization on the campus since the formation of the School of Music. The first orchestra, composed of the more advanced and more experienced students, meets each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and is under the direction of Dean B. Winfred Merrill. Martha McEwen is concert- meister, and Jack Biel is second concertmeister. The second orchestra meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays under the direction of Miss Winifred Merrill. The orchestra did not appear before an audience of the student body during the first semester; however, a selected number was played for the University chorus ' s presenta- tion of the Messiah. During the second semester the orchestra played at convocation, and for one of Indiana university ' s programs over radio station WFBM, of Indianapolis. Each year, a short time before Commencement, the orchestra presents its annual concert of sacred music. The organization also provides the music for the Commencement and Baccalaureate services. m .cAf ' biJius- m i-ii String Quartet Xx KEEPING with the advancement of the School of Music was the installation last year of a string quartet directed by Miss Winifred -lerrill. Not since the early years of the school has there been such a quartet, and the strides which this one has made this year have been great. The string quartet is composed of girls who, with the exception of Martha Harmon, pla ed together all last year, which partly accounts for its success. One recital was given at con ocation this spring. This was the first appearance of any chamber music ensemble by the students of the School of Music, and the quartet proved the excellence of its director as well as its inherent ability. The musicians of the quartet are Martha McEwen, first violin; Martha Harmon, second violin; Jessie Porter, viola, and .llice Carr, cello. mw... r.rr-.-- . a m m Men ' K- , .FTER MAKING oiilv oiie uppciiraiice before the stu- Kr j .j j. [ Q y af convocation in December, the men ' s H pt f Cilee club opened its annual spring concert tour at the HlJll ' ■H Bloomington high school, March 26. Following their 1 ! a. | appearance at Bloomington, 28 men left on a tour of H H L fl l state, which included Columbus, Indianapolis, An- Bfc. i l derson, Muncie, Marion, Kokomo, Fort Wayne, War- rS hMj H and Goshen. l jL H At the convocation in December, the club presented B HK I about half of the program given on its tour. The con- k ' H cert program was made up of a group of classical num- bers, sea chants, humorous numbers, songs from Sul- D: D. A ' vf livan ' s The Pirates of Penzance, violin solos by Ken- DJre.ior „i .u, ,; , c7, v ciuh ncth Coyk, and piano solos by Lowell S. Love, the accompanist for the club. The solo parts in the selec- tions from the Pirates of Penzance were sung by Alfred Morgan as Frederick; Ramon Kessler as the major-general; J. Clifford Milnor as the police sergeant; John Buchanan as the pirate king, and Carl Rinne as Samuel. For the first time costumes were used by the club in presenting their songs. The Glee club is composed of a group of men interested in singing the songs espe- cially suitable for men ' s voices. The number chosen to make the annual tour is determined by elimination through a series of tests, two of which are good voices, and regularity m attendance to the weekly rehearsals. It has been the aim of the director, D. D. Nye, to build up as permanent an organization as the changing student body will allow. Dur- ing the four years of his directorship, Mr. Nve has made great progress with the club. J Howard Altop was the business manager of the Glee club this year. M l C lPbL ligg sS Lzife Women ' s Glee Cltih V OR YEARS the men ' s Glee club has been going around the state singing its own and Indiana university ' s va - into the hearts of the people of Indiana. This year the women ' s Glee club started doing its bit by touring the state. The girls ' trip, however, was not continuous, but consisted of trips to nearby towns and cities on Tues- day nights during the months of March and April. Programs for the concerts were made up of three-part songs sung by the entire club, a violin solo by Martha McEwen, a trumpet solo by Fern Midkiff, and a cello solo by Sara Alice Carr. Mildred Cornell was pianist. Although the club is composed of about 60 girls, only 30 went on each trip. The members making the trip were chosen before each concert by a committee composed of Mildred Cornell, Gretchen Haig, and Helen Greenman, meeting with Prof. John L. Geiger, was the business manager for the club on these trips. The organization did not sing for the student body March 7, a concert was given at convocation. The officers of the club for 1927-1928 were: Prof. E. W. Arnett, president, and Daisy Hinkle, business .. 1 John L. Geiger Director of Women ' ! Glee Club the club ' s director. Daisy Hinkle ■during the first semester, but on John L. Geiger, director j Mrs. manager. c •fi iU ' ' . -r ' ,:: ii ' rf!f| itjiir ii ' tf ' i!- f iif I tilt t I t ♦ f ,? t  t I f f 111 H f- II cnten ' s Glee Club 4 ¥i W SPbuiiis ' Artists on Music Scries t V Florence Austral M Flonzaley Quart el Nikolai Sokolojf [337] cAmbuiiis Memorial Hall The following girls lived in Memorial hall during the sec- .1 semester: Florence Bond Chapcro n Luclle Abel Wilma Ale Clover Anderson Margaret Anderson Pauline Ashlev Matilda Auman Blanche Bachtenkirch Emily Baker Violet Ballard Mavree Ballantine Elsie Barker Iris Beadle Audrey Benner Bernadine Bennett Antoinette Black Beth Blue Lorene Bond Doris Bopp Edythe Broshears Margaret Bossmier Vera Bowles Mary Bradfield Evelyn Burkett Mary Carpenter Lucile Carr Margaret Cauble Howarda Clark Alice Clifton Irene Coate Esther Compton Elizabeth Conner Josephine Conner Ruby Cook Florence Cotherman Lucile Countryman Ruby Lee Creager Catherine Daniels Lillian Decker Ruth Dickinson Amelia Dildine Mary Dill Martha Dippel Mildred Dovvdcn Lois Downing Helen Eldridge Agnes Elpers Dorothy Emrich Lelia Enley Lenore Enlow Alma Fischer Helen Louise Fisher Zelma Fletcher Helen Ford Mary Louise Ford Jean Fox Evelyn Full Helen Fulling Virginia Gentry Ida Gilmorc Marguerite Gohdcs Joy Goyer Lucile Graf Margaret Gray Zoa Gross Adele Gwinn Ruth Hammersly Edith Hammond Cornelia Hankee Margaret Hays Georgia Heal Bessie Helmbock Christine Heritage Birdie Hess Margaret Hill Geraldine Hindman Mertie Hoffman Jane Hoy Helen Huling Starley Hunter June Jackson Mary Edythe Johns Mildred Johnston Annabel Jones Hazel Karst Elizabeth Kendall Mildred Kirschbaum Katherine Klepinger Lora Lackey Mary Louise Lacy Mary Wilma Lane Beatrice Latting Frances Lawrence CA P bL IL. ' i.- . N- ' .i ill s p Mary Louise Lewis Gertrude Lewis Virginia Lindstrom Verna Kathryn Lowe Dorothy Lutton Elizabeth Macicey Dorothy McAfee Mary J. McGinnis Ruth McGinnis Virginia Main Louise Manley Dorothy Martin Gladys Martin Virginia Masterson Thora Melson Ruby Gladys Mitchell Alice Moomaw Isabelle Morgan Marian Morgan Lois Aileen Morrow Mary Murphy Esther Myers ' Elizabeth Naber ta Neese Kathrvne O ' Connor Helen Overleese Marv Jean Packard Catherine Paige Margaret Pate Charlotte Pelz Vita Ann Petro Clarissa Phegley Irene Pielemeier Martha Pittenger Priscilla Pittenger Natalie Pokorski Margaret Poor Grace Porter Elizabeth Price Evelvn Pritchard Pearl Putt Fern Railsback Clara Ramsey Evelyn Reed Elizabeth Rees Minnie Remley Ramona Rhodes Voyle Rhode Louise Ritterskamp Arlys Roberts Ailene Rommes Tiberia Ruchti Josephine Rundell Marie Rupp ' erna Schaefer Gertrude Schuelke May Schlosser Dorothy Schulmeyer Mrs. AJberta Shul ' tz Lucia Scofield Katherine Sellers Blanche Shortridge Helen Siniff Mary Slinkard Katherine Smallwood Barbara Smith Agnes Spencer Lenore Springer Helen Steinbach Helen Stewart Margaret Stormont Anna Stuprich Mina Sweeten Helen Thomas Lucile Thomas Jean Trusler Sonia Turbow Marie Underwood Christine ' anHorne Elizabeth VanWinkle Margaret Br ' tdgeman Chaperon Alice ' awter Marguerite X ' ogeding Margaret Wagner Gavle Walker Lvdia Walker Kyra Ward Elizabeth Warner Catherine Wasson Camilla Waterheld Catherine Waters Julia Welch Exie Welsch Marie West Margaret Whyte Emily Wigton Maxine Wildermuth Mary Dell Williams Helen Louise Wilson Marjorie Wilson Miriam Winship Helen Wise Eva Zink % T Tv r  im The following 2nen li ' ed in South hall during the second semester: Mrs. Kale Roberts Cln,peron Robert Barton Louis Bateman William Baugh Calvin Beamon Don Beci Jack Biel Robert Biel Emerson Biggs Stephe n Bodney David Bornstein Paul Bornstein B. E. Brennen Noyelles Burkhart Worth Brummitt Leonard Callaha William Cha Jarton Cartmel Wendell Clipp Paul Conj J. Richard Davis Lawrence Dial George Diveley Byron Duff James Elder Palmer Eicker Albert Ewbanks Eugene Fletchall Clarence Forkner Bernard Erich Anson Frohman David Fuchs Theodore Garvey Robert Gresley Charles Hahn Leon Harris J. Earl Held George Herrold Harold Hilty Leon Himler Frederick Hizer John Holdeman Richard Holdeman Charles Holtz Clair Hostetler Russell Huffman Claude G. Hutson Tcvie Jacobs Wade Johnson Charles Jordan George Kassens William Keenan Paul Key Foster King James Kiper M3. L n r ' ■' t ,,,f m ' ' ' ' : mi ' !mn Claude Kimball Julius Kleeman Robert Kough Weldon N. Lambert Ervin Lyons Francis McCarty Robert McPeak Perry Martin Charles Meredith Robert E. Miller Thomas Mooney Mavor Moss Isadore Nedelman Bruce Needham Howard Nelson Morse Nichols Vernon Pancost Mctherell Pearce Silas Penrod Robert Pittman Jacob Potish James Prybyl John Randall Gerald Rubin Walling Ryman Paul Shaffer Elbert Short Russell Smallwood Phenney Smidt Floyd Smith Otto Sporer Kenneth Stalcup Richard Steinmetz John Stephenson Robert Studer E. Richard Taylor M. B. Thompson Charles Todd Eugene Wagoner John Whitelock ■4 1 1 I [341] ollowing girls lived in Residence hall during the second semester: Sarah Adams Octavia Griffith Marian McDonald Jane Allen Wilma Gw inn Agnes Mclntire Evelyn Ayer Mildred Hammerman Carmelita Moore Helen Ayer Agnes Hass Elizabeth Moore Florence Beck Martha Helt Cecelia Moran Esther Beeler Beulah Hodge Lucille Musson Kathryn Biedinger Ruth C. Hodges Alice Niederhaus Enid Berg Dorothy Hopkins Edith Paddack Irol Berg Lillian Hunnicutt Dimmerous PuUiar Thora Bodey Harriett Husted Florence Richman Virginia Bond Dorothy Ingram Irene Richman Alice Brettschneider Janetta Johns Martha Riggs Edythe Brown Elnora Johnson Helen Rogers Elizabeth Brown Lela Johnson Violet Rosenthall Marguerite Burbanck Violet Johnson Mary Royce Miriam Burbanck Martha Jones Bertha Shanklln Mary Carter Sarah Jones Pauline Shock Florence Case Evelyn Kennedy Harriette Sims Esther Coggeshall Marianne Kruke Rosclla Smith Jean Comstock Mildred Larick Elizabeth Staiford Mildred Cox LaVerne Laughlin Esther Sullivan Isabelle Crostreet Grace Lesley Eunice Timmerma Adalene Eaton Hazel Lesley Faye Vest Euel Edwards Inez Litten Aileen Wate Thelma Emminger Alice Lollar Kathryn Wellbaun- Marie Enyeart Betty Long Aline Welsheimer Letha Falls Marv Long Martha Wilson Margaret Ferguson Josephine Lucas Esther Wolfgang Dorothy Foster Dorothy McBride Mary Woodard Dorothy Green Beulah McCoy JulialynYandell [342] The May Festival of 1927 was held on Dunn meadow, Saturday, May 21, after changing the date four times in order to accommodate Bloomington rains. A sunset was an additional asset to the beauty of the affair, as it took place a few minutes before five o ' clock. The interest was sustained over the period of time when the date was changed so often, for the identity of the May Queen was not revealed until she took her seat on the throne. Natural dancing was used to carry out the spirit of the six-piece orchestra which played for the Every Day drama. The dancers were dressed in bright costumes which blended with one another as well as with the natural background. The rainbow colors were touched with a few drops of rain occasionally, adding to the naturalness of the scene. Flower girls led the procession to the throne and sprinkled flowers along the path in front of the queen. Katherine Wasmuth, president of A. W. S., crowned the queen, who on this occasion was Hazel Totten, ' 28, who had been chosen by secret ballots. The choice proved to be an excel- lent one, so the observers said. ! ' A ms 3 inr -i diiM Group of Commencement Sfeakers Commencement With the horseshoe of Memorial stadium forming a magnificent background, the light of the setting sun glinting on the many-hued hoods of the faculty, and the bright tassels of the candidates almost 800 men and women received degrees from the University on the sixth of last June. Preceding the Commencement exercises, members of the faculty and those who were to receive degrees met in Academic dress with the alumni on Dunn meadow, where the graduating seniors were inducted into the alumni organization. From there a line of march was formed to the scene of the graduation ceremony. While the class assembled around the speaker ' s platform, the band played Hymn to Indiana. The Rev. Charles W. Harris, student pastor, gave the invocation, followed by an overture, Euryanthe, played by the University orchestra. The Commencement address, The Call for Service, was made by Everett Sanders, ' 07, secretary to the President of the United States. Diplomas were presented by President William Lowe Bryan. Governor Ed Jackson presided at the ceremony. Commencement week activities began Saturday, June 5, with the traditional breakfast for senior women. The rest of the morning was reserved for alumni registration and business meetings of the Alumni association. At noon many class luncheons and reunions were held, as well as student-alumni luncheons at organization houses. IjzJfiPbuiiis ' H : A ■I Pres ' tdettt Br ' ;ati During the afternoon and evening various forms of entertainment were provided for the visiting gradu- ates, including an alumni baseball game with Chicago and a conference game with Minnesota. President and Mrs. Bryan held a reception at their home in the afternoon. Citizens of Bloomington took an active part in the program in the evening hy providing a barbecue in the Stadium, which was followed by an all-Univcrsity sing and presentation of 1 blankets. By request, the Studio Players presented Craig ' s Wife, which they had given with success earlier in the season, in .Assembly hall. Indiana ' s undergraduates made their contribu- tion to the festivities in the form of a rose dance in the Gymnasium. Observance of senior traditions began at 9:30 o ' clock, Monday morning, with the raising of the fl.ig on the Library flag pole. This was attended by a ceremony in which both alumni and seniors took part. Fol- lowing the flag raising came the custom of smoking the peace-pipe. The ivy and the tree which commemorate the class of 1927 were planted on the south side of Kirkwood hall. The alumni luncheon was held at noon, followed by a baseball game with the Waseda team of Japan in the afternoon. The Commencement committee endeavored to extend a welcome to the visiting graduates which would indicate the appreciation of the University for co-operation the alumni have shown. To this end extensive arrangements were made for their convenience and entertainment. Dean Paul V. McNutt was chairman of the faculty committee. James L. Miller and Christianna Lohr- mann were in charge of student activities. tx [345] cAt buiiis Bookstore -iVs YOU WALK, across the campus any time of the day you will notice a number of students hurrying with packages, letters, or with laundry bags toward a little one-story, wooden structure located midway between Owen and Maxwell halls above which is the Indiana University Bookstore sign. Probably the busiest little spot on the campus, this store began its service to students in 1910. The present temporary quarters were completed in 1925, when the bookstore moved from its quarters in the basement of the library. Although the principal purpose of the store is to supply students with textbooks and supplies at reduced costs, the store maintains a branch postoffice. The store is managed by a board of trustees who operate inde- pendently of the University. They appoint a manager who has com- plete charge of the store. Ward G. Biddle, ' 16, has been manager for the last few years. 14 1 . PM ' km ■: ' | i ' i; gj |- M ' P - 1 1 College Hall C. ' OLi.EGE HALi. is a dormitory for girls operated on a co-opera- tive basis, located in the old President Bryan homestead at 812 North College avenue. Formerly situated on East Kirkwood ave- nue, where the organization was known as Co-operative hall, the group moved into President Bryan ' s former home in the fall ot 1924, where they have been located since. Social functions of the organization include a Christmas party given each year for the poor children of the city, and a Hallowe ' en party. Complete executive authority is exercised by the members of the group which is composed entirely of freshmen. Officers for the last semester of this year were: Hilda Herbst, president, and Marie Able, secretary-treasurer. ii ,i ' . College Nezvs and Notes By Abe Martin Don ' t git fooled on raccoon coats. Ther ' s two kinds o ' raccoon are used fer th ' firsts, while backs an ' bellies are used fer seconds. -firsts an ' seconds. Onlv th ' back Mr. Roy Howard, around 40, o ' th ' Scripps-Howard string o ' newspapers, an ' reported t ' be worth around $14,000,000, h.-is relatives in Rushsulv.ania, Ohio, an ' th ' nearest he ever come t ' attendin ' college wuz playin ' th ' guitar. Charley Schwab, steel magnate, wore a hat when he wuz around 19, an ' never asked his dad fer a cent Ray Long, managin ' editor o ' all th ' Hearst magazines, didn ' t even have a pony when he went t ' school, much less a car. irn around } ' our fraternity house, it ' s a generally accepted fact that th ' earth is Th ' boy who comes out o ' a college a purty fair saxophone player hasn ' t done so bad after all. It ' s what a college boy learns after he ' s been canned by four or five different employers that counts. Your dad don ' t know nothin ' or mebbe you wouldn ' be in college Wesley Mopps, Indianny, 1923, has finally got a job as a alto player with th ' John Robinson c It hain ' t so hard t ' thumb your way home from college occasionally, but wait till you tr - t ' thumb our wav t ' success. Andrew Mellon, secretary o ' th ' treasury, has given lots o ' money t ' colleges, but he went into a d Ier at a early age an ' later made millions o ' ciollars. No matter what you hear around a fraternity house, this is a wonderful world, an ' thcr ' ni.irc oppoi tunities t ' day t ' git t ' th ' frruit than ever before. ' Th ' earth is flat, an ' ther ' s probably a hereafter, an ' th ' rul o ' th ' survival o ' th ' fittest i -till in force. All you need is th ' goods, an ' if you ' ve picked up a 1 cation, it won ' t hold vou back, but mav be used on th ' side when out in society. ll J Mr. Abner Lark, who painted .md paper :d th ' Skunk Ridge bank while workin ' his way thro ' I. U , now owns th ' bank. ' S [348] ' M l ( _ t)iiiius ' B Poems by Campus Authors (Of divers tones — from the ridiculous to the sublime) His head was bald, His chin was galled With dithyrambs of Glancy. He never beamed, His brow was steamed With idiots of fancy. TO A PORTRAIT Old man smiling from the Broad forehead, bleared eyes of blue. Mouth agape, grizzled beard and hair, Yet with a smile banishing all, What have the ages taught to you? His motley crew Of things to do Were patently Pandorlc. No day he passed In mental fast; His trend was clearly Doric. So hard he tried! His brothers sighed. To guide his wobblv course. Methinks you smile of far-off things. Perchance of times that are no more; Or may it be of angel ' s wings. And voices stilled in days of yore? Whatever the grief that you may bear. You envelop it in the smile you wear. —Paul E. Bar THOUGHTS OF MY MOTHER I saw him then. Within the PEN; He s.aw me, too, perforce! — Estle Digestle. Pale blue on white; A constant red. And then some pink From sweet peas laid abed. m LETTER FROM THE DEAN Mr. Andrew McHugh, Since my last to you. Your son has been missing his classes. I have come to the conclusion That much of the confusion Has been caused by affairs with the lasses. He ' s all bluff and guessin ' , He never has his lesson, He misses two classes a d.ay. If you ' ll answer this letter, We ' ll make him do better. Or send the poor devil away. — Williarn Moeukhai A cool dewdrop; A torrent ' s leap; Slow breaking dawn Above an ocean ' s deep. Little chips of day, and Flecks of night. Two birds, two clouds; The happiness of light Warm crumbled earth Around a stem— Thy love, my Mother, To crown thv diade J ,; Atle Gn, f ' l r L The Prince of Asininia CANTO I What base ignominy from great greed springs, What pettiness misguided judgment brings To self-important beings, Muse! my song Hear now — how one has consecrated wrong. Say what strange motives. Goddess! could persuade A suave young man to lose his handsome head O ' er flames kept burning by that greedy god Whose name extreme Ambition fain does pod. Four years ago from Danville town, There came a future politician down To Indiana. Serious, yet gay, Untainted still, he to himself would say, With what industry my ship I ' ll rig, ycr Right — I ' ll be the greatest figure This place ever had. I ' ll aim to get Some state-wide recognition; I ' ll bet The paper back at home will rush to print My photograph. And so the lad by dint Of serious, constant zeal in classroom and Activities, he early made the band. CANTO II No mortal, Muse, divined the mighty worth Of him w ' hose self-made destiny the earth Would tremble at — none knew this second year, ' Though he reduced reporting art to mere And easy play, and also lodged his name Upon the staff of fair Arbutus; Fame Did on his brow bestow her lovely smile. This is a chapter brief. Muse; bide awhile. Rest, ' Goddess, for Ambition ' s song begins In following lines, sweet Muse! Hear of his sins CANTO II Now Don Quixote did this year aspire To be an editor-in-chief or higher If higher mortal man could win his WMy By politicians ' foresight and survey. So with the Flordian he threw his angling hook And whet Ambition — for to make the book He was selected, then the way made neat To have his name emblazoned on the sheet Of daily hue, as one of those who earned Important recognition. Then he burned To be the Red Book ' s fashioner like Vulcan great. And was again selected. But now fate Did curtsie, enter his ambitious brain. And him to be all worldly things did deign. Remember, Muse, the words of Bacon, sage, — Plotters to be all-high decay the age. In quick succession other marks acquired Were journalist outstanding (don ' t get tired). And president of Sigma Delta Chi, And high board known for purposes most high. And at the head of state collegiate press, Receptive to full fifty more, I guess, And then in Union with a glor ' ous plan He strove to make his ace take o ' er a hand. There first he knew how Ney, dejected, said My Emperor, they ' ve struck us in the head. Inflamed, he did resort to piercing pen. The vote was Nav — he fell, but rose again. Soon came another golden chair prized dear. He ' d run the daily journal the next year. He was Mohammed now in glitt ' ring power. Allah he ' d become e ' er summer flower W:. A M 1 Didst fade ; now down to Hano ' c To win another oflice, nor did fa And asiced his subjects new to visi And hear his fame resound and r -next year. Now came warm summer with its flowers sweet, The Prince received a message from Wall Street In old New York — a plea that he make haste And rush and save the journal from the waste. He went and made (O, Muse, how great the fates) The paper edited best in all the States; In maiden ' s hands he left the task Of sending notes unto the News; don ' t ask What pay she got — methinks ' twas but a pound Of chocolates. Now by sweet robins ' sound The summer days waned, there was in the air The call to show the great crowds at the fair How powerful an editor they had At their state institution. Now, Muse, add Unto your list these other jobs (this rhymes). The Christian Science Monitor, New York Times Did seek news from his pen; and stout A. P. Is al! he missed, why, none alive can see. Dear summer closed, and now, he, pompous, came Back to school to elevate his fame. CANTO IV Like great Elizabeth who love forsook To wield the power of England, and to hook The chin of Philip, now the Prince did yearn To charm fair women; three of them did learn The suave and gentle purrings of this lord. Who soon was made secr ' tary of the board. His search for honors to attain in swarm Led to a plan the council to reform — (I speak of Greeks, Muse), but alas, alack. He ' d head the group, but he didst hold the sack. (By rotation system, he ' d not be ruler for ' most se ' enteen years.) And then took out his wrath and lowly spite On many a poor and slaving, wretched wight (As Chaucer says) ; now did the Prince aspire To honor as a Garrick member — Spire Of Drama! He no stage performance did, But thought that paper fame should bring the bid. Now came the college press from o ' er the State To heap new crowns upon his greedy pate. That done, he looked with longing, wat ' ring eye To represent Sigma Delta Chi In Kansas land, but when his lodge few votes Him gave, and others favored, nasty notes He wrote upon the bulletin, and swore His own great treasury would use to soar To Kansas fields, for even there was chance To win an office. Prince took up his lance .And went, and failed, but did return full proud, .And more invectives heaped upon the crowd That toiled with pencil all the dreary day, And soon did heed but little what he ' d say. Now cast the Prince for further titles strong. Alumnus, Interests head, both came along. But he with foresight which was not unseen. Desired to print a campus magazine. So that when he reluctantly resigned His title as editor, would find A chair from which he could continue well His wretched editorials to sell. No tombstone marks this Prince ' s resting place, No smile doth linger on his pallid face, He left no glory to his wretched race. He died as e ' er he lived — full well disgraced. frV „ Nr i. JWW iu KV m Vs. ' ■-: f %  Ch-M m ' k [353] f : . cAr butiis . Indianapolis T YPICAL of the University ' s expansion in the last few years are the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry and the Nurses Training school at Indianapolis. These divisions are a vital part of Indiana university. Primarily a school of liberal arts, the institution has gone far in the development of its more specialized divisions. For many years the University has been renowned for its graduates who have become important figures in education, literature, and science. Members of the medical and dental professions have not been slow to recognize the ability of their colleagues who have been graduated from the Indianapolis division of the University, proving its suc- cess in this type of education. Since becoming a part of the state University, the Indianapolis branches have shown their appreciation by co-operation in keeping the prestige of the schools at the state capital. ¥ im— ' ' .- cJfp biiiius ,d i l cJ ' taiius ' i Robert E. Neff School of Medicine A series of consolidations brought about the present School of Medicine at Indian- apolis. The original Indiana University School was founded at Bloomington in 1903. Subsequently it joined with the State College of Physicians and Surgeons of Indianap- olis and the Indiana Medical College, itself a combination of colleges. Thus, the Medi- cal School maintains a campus of its own in Indianapolis. The dean of the Medical School, Dr. Charles P. Emerson, is deserving of credit for the standing which the school has attained. Under his leadership the school has become one of the leading and standard medical colleges of America, being now classified by the American Medical Association as a class A school. Dr. Emerson is an enthusiastic leader in the field of internal medicine, and is striving at all times to equip the medical graduate to care for the problems met in the practice of medicine. He is the author of several textbooks on medicine and a lecturer of national reputation. Robert E. Netf is the administrator of the Indiana University Hospitals, and regis- trar of the School of Medicine. Mr. NeflF ' s duties include the business management of these institutions such as planning new units, the purchase of supplies, management of help and the admission of patients. 4 ' [356] The Nezv Coleman Hospital The medical unit consists of the Medical School, the James Whltcomb Riley Hos- pital for children, the Robert W. Long Hospital, and the William H. Coleman Hos- pital for women. The newest addition to the unit is the William H. Coleman Hospital for women. This was made possible through the gifts of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman, made in memory of their daughter, Mrs. Suemma Coleman Atkins. Through this gift an impor- tant step is taken in advancement of training in the care of maternity cases and women ' s diseases, since this institution is used as a teaching hospital. An opportunity for invaluable practical work, such as a hospital like this offers, is an advantage which but few medical schools possess. It will advance the interests of the medical profession as well as the students by providing needed instruction in that neg- lected major branch of medicine — obstetrics. Unlike ordinary hospitals attended only by the regular staff, a case treated well in an institution of this kind influences every future patient of the stucient assisting in the treatment. Indiana University School of Medicine feels greatly indebted to Mr. and Mrs. Cole- man for their wonderful gift which means more than mere words can express toward the advancement of medicine in Indiana. [357] Six years have elapsed since the present senior class was launched upon the sea of Medicine. Perhaps each student was unsuspecting, but after sailing the stormy depths for their allotted time they are emerging tried seamen. The first two years of work are preparatory to the four years which follow. The first year of medicine is given at Bloom- ington at Owen Hall. Here the student receives instruction in anatomy, histology, and physiology, and at his odd moments joins in hurling harangue at the laws. The last three years of instruction are received at Indianapolis. Here the student receives not only aca- demic work, but comes in contact with patients in the Long, City, Riley, and Coleman hospitals. The hospital training is equal to, and in many cases superior to, that of other medical schools in the country. Competent physicians and surgeons make up the medical staff that conducts clinics and gives lectures to students of the institution. l:cJfip buiiis ' wp The student body is made up of men and women from all parts of the United States. Many students from foreign lands are enrolled also in the school. Each class is made up of about 100 students, which is as large a number as can be given instruction due to the shortage of class rooms. This year marks the construction of a new auditorium which has been added to the Medical School building. In this auditorium are held the monthly seminars and all class clinics. This is an improvement long hoped for and eagerly received. The addition also contains new quarters for the executive offices of the school. With the new addition there is an increase in the size of the library. A large appro- pi iition his been mide toi new books and a larger readmg room has been ai ranged Sunounded b these lecent improvements, the hospitals of the unit, the excellent stiff and the wealth of clinical mateinl, the student has a wonderful opportunity to enhmce his knowledge in the medic il sciences [359] m- y . ' S ■sis (iyyr II ikj u n = Harold Charles Adkins Indianapolis B.$.,I.U., ' 26 Howard Aldrich Hamilton B. 5., . U., ' 26 M. D. Indiana club Lewis Gordon Allbritton Warrior, Ala. B. S; Birmingham Southe college, ' 25 M. D. Theta Kappa Psi Alfredo Ojerio Alonzo Camalaniugan, Cagayan, P. : B. S., I. v., ' 25 M. D. Cosmopolitan club James F. Balch Clinton B.S.,I.U., ' 26 M. D. Sigm.i Alpha Epsilonj Phi Rho Sigma William Elim Ballenger Economy B. i ' ., . U., ' 26 M. D. Sigma Pi; Phi Rho Sigma ' lNCENT LeLAND BaRKER M. D. Alpha Tau Omega Theodore W. Benson Logansport A. B.J. v., ' 25 M. D. Phi Chi Louis Berkowitz New York City A. B., Hiram college, ' 23 Phi Delta Epsilon Alpha Omega Alpha I ' RiDERicK William I ' lrKCHNER South Bend R. S., Notre Dame, ' 23 ■.DWARD Gregory Billin ' gs B. S., I. v., ' 26 .M. D. Theta Chi; Phi Chi ; E. Broadie amsport , . v., ' 25 m III [362] ' MLc j hiu-iiis : Roy Theodore Hyni Indianapolis B. S., I. v., ' 21 M.D. Phi Chi Albert Tenlv Jones Linden B. s., ;. v., ' 2S M. D. Phi Chi ■■cJf ipbu iiis ¥if: [•(§r: li I Carey Ryker Mac- DONNELL Phi Delta The Nu Sigma Nu, Charlotte Eleanor Mason Sullivan William B. Martin Warrior, Ala. B. S., Birminghao: Sou he college, ' 25 M. D. Theta Kappa PsI Robert D. Meiser Columbia City B. S., I. U., ' 26 M.D. Kappa Sigma; Elisha a. Metzger Covington B. S., I. v., ' 26 M.D. Theta Chii Phi Rho Fritz Martin Meyj Bridgeport, Conn. Ph. C, VMparalso u, H v, -J; B. .S ., . U., M. D. Phi Chi .Addison Gerald Moore Lambda Chi Alpha Mathias Samuel Mount Noblesville B. S., I. v., ' 26 M. D. Varsity Wrestling, ' 23- ' 24i Phi Chi. Eliga Bassett Nisbet Madisonville, Ky. B. S., I. U., 26 M.D. revalyn W. Omstead .• ngola B. S., Trl-Slare College of E, gineerhlg, ' 21; B. S. in Medicine, I. U., ' 26 Guy Argyle Owsley Delta Tau Delta; William Pearson B. S., I. U., ' 26 ihi y 21 v.c ipbuins Herbert Charles WURSTER Indianapolis P;,. G., huUauapoli! „i Pharmacy; B. S ' 26 M. D. College , I. v., Phi BLtl I ' i Ralph Hvbert Young Huntington B. S., I. v., ' 26 M. D. Ihcta Kappa Ps! c-f AbiihiS ' fi hi ' h ■HEN Orlando Ziericr Batesville A.B.J.V., ' 2i M. D. Alpha Omega Alplia i:N Zimmerman Vermillion, S. D. B. S., UniversUv of South Dakota, ' 26 M.D. John Michael Zivich East Chicago B.S.,l.V., ' Z6 M. D. Varsity Football, ' 23- ' 24i Varsity Baseball, ' 24. John Evan Alexander EvansviUe Cecil L. Andrews Greenfield Daniel C. Barrett Indianapolis i A a i- M l , , j :Jl- ir?hviu :; ' , ■1 I hERS B DlLMS Huntington B. S. Phi Delta Theta; Sphini club; Skull and Crescent; Nu Sigma Nu. E. A. DeMi B. S. Delta Gamma Delt; G. L. Derhammer Lafayette E. S. Lester L. Eberhart |i Robert H. Flinn Marion B. S. Sigma Nu; Nu Sigma Nu bTANLEY B. GoRDIN h MES E. Graham Bopnville R. S. Otto Hannebaum B. S. Phi Chi William Ward Harvey B. S. Sigma Chi; Nu Sigma Nu A. Hanly Held Warren R. Hickman Siema Nu; Phi Beta Pi ' erlin Park Huffman South Whitlev ? i ; h ' rT . ' ' MMr t)uiiis2 [372] m ' | Nu Sigma Phi Founded at College of Physicians and Surgeons (University of Illinois), 1898 Local Chapter: Gamma Established: 1909 National Chapters: 10 Flower: Rose Colors: Green and White First Row Maredith Heaton Wjttenbach, ' 29, Ind M. Jeannette Lieber, ' 29, Indianapolis Julia Swain, ' 30, Wabash Charlotte E. Mason, ' 28, Sullivan Greta Maxine Gibson, ' 29, Ossian :.onJ Roil Marjorie Louise Ikemire, ' 29, Palestine, 111. Margaret Hatfield, ' 28, Indianapolis Anna Lucinda Goss, ' 29, Henryville Gladys Dykes Frith, ' 29, Indianapolis 13 T zt j Kappa Psi Founded at Medical College of Virginia, 1879 Local Chapter: Gamma Upsilon Established: 1924 National Chapters: 53 Flower: Red Rose Colors: Gold and Cream Local Address: Lidianapolis ;■■;■« Columu Fourth Colum,, Fred Clark, ' 29, Terre Haute John Parker, ' I ' l, Irm lliutc Floyd Boyer, ' 30, Bloomlngton C. Howard Mr,r l,tll, SH, |,uU,,„ Lewis G. AUbritton, ' 28, Warrior, Ala. Hall T. L.um-y, ' H, Anderson John C. Miller, ' 30, Indianapolis Dean K.. Stinson, ' 29, Athens lien B, Raney, ' 30, Linton Harold G. Petitjean, ' 30, Haubst i Harold C. Riningcr, ' 3ft, Rockport William E. Schoolfield, ' 30, Gran Sccoud Coluw,, Fifth Column Marvin Hawes, ' 29, Columbus Clarence K.ern, ' 29, Lebanon Herman Schwartz, ' 29, Terre Haute August Dian, ' 28, Gary Layman R. Harrison, ' 28, Indianapolis Lowell W. Painter, ' 30, Garrett Floyd Hawk, ' 29, Hammond William B. Martin, ' 28, Warrior, Floyd Riggs, ' 28, Clay City Russell C. Rccs, ' 28, Knightstown Ralph Sappenfield, ' 30, Bloomington Everett W. Williams, ' 28, Richmo Thini Column Sixth Column Herbert Kaufman, Jr., ' 31, South Bend Urban F. D. Stork, ' 30, Evansvll Burnls Augustus Stoltz, ' 30, None Mark H. Williams, ' 28, Quincy Chester S. Laubscher, ' 30, Evansvllle Ralph H. Young, ' 28, Huntlngtoi E. Brayton Snioot, ' 28, Washington Glen G. Musselman, ' 30, Akron Edward T. Stahl, ' 28, Kokomn Frank W. RatdiH ' , ' 28, Kingman J..scph S. Skobba, ' ?U, Nanticoke, P,i. Charles W. McMillin, ' 2S, Dayto M ' m i ' ' iLJ ' U J. ' l-l O - rl A Pin Chi Founded at Universitv of crmoiit, 1889 Local Chapter: Mu Established: 1903 National Chapters: 5 3 Flower: Lilv-of-the-Willev Colors: Olive Green and White Local Address: Indianapolis irs! Column Carl B. Parker, ' 29, Kokomo William Robertson, ' 29, Salem Lowell T. Coggeshall, ' 28, Saratoga Gerald Young, ' 29, Huntington Harry C. Harkcom, ' 28, Valparaiso Max E. Blue, ' 30, Claypool John L. Carpenter, ' 28, Peru e(0„d Column Carl Southard, ' 29, Noblesville Edward Billings, ' 31, Richmond Gerald F. Kempf, ' 28, Jasper Albert T. Jones, ' 28, Linden Otto Hannebaum, ' 30, Indianapolis Russell E. Miller, ' 30, Rochester liird Column J. Walter Wilso n, ' 29, Los Angeles C Roy E. Shanks, ' 28, Lawrc nceburg Russell E. Clym r, ' 28, Ind anapolis A. Hanley Held ' 30, Lam William D. Ma kay, ' 28, Valparaiso Kenneth C Smithburn, ' 28, Noblesv He ourlh Column William E. Barnett, ' 29, Logansport Edwin B. Boots, ' 30, West Terre Haute Carroll Burroughs, ' 30, Shelby Lester L. Eberhart, ' 30, Huntington Christian E. Laatsch, ' 28, Indianapolis Mathias S. Mount, ' 28, Noblesville ' ! ti j Fif A olumn Rob rt Bickel, ' 29, ■orl W.ivnc The adore W. Bensoi 8, Logar sport Tho mas E. Broadie, ' 28 Willian- sport Pau K. Cullen, ' 28 In dianapol s Roy T. Hynes, ' 28, Ind anapolis V. Earle Wiseman, 28, Ingalls, N. C Frit M. Meyer, ' 28 , B idgeport Con oS buiius i Phi Beta Pi ;r ; Fuundcd :U WcJt Pcunsvh-..ni lege, 1891 Local Chapter: Omicron Established: 1905 National Chapters: 39 Flower: White Chrysanthemu Colors: Green and White Local Address: Indianapolis irsi Colun:,, Russell Sage, ' 28, Wilford Nusbaum, ' 30, Dugge John Emhardt, ' 28, Indianapu H.u.-li A.ikr,-, ' :s. lnJl,,n.,poi;s Clifton Merritt, ' 30, Orland Duiiaia Firijij, ' :S, dry Ernest IVIock, ' 30, Huntington Charles Denzler, ' 29, Jeffersonville Second Column Fifl , Column Wayne House, ' 30, Hammond Lester Rhamy, ' 28, Wabash John Kerr, ' 30, Indianapolis Edgar DeMiUer, ' 30, Indianapolis Maurice Gross, ' 28, CoatesviUe Herbert Wurster, ' 28, Indianapolis Richard Good, ' 28, New Point John Show.ilter, ' 29, Waterloo B. K. Wiseman, ' 28, Indianapolis Byron Smith, ' 29, Yeddo William Xichol, ' 29, Oakland City Gayle Hunt, ' 29, Richmond T ,ird Column Six , Column Maurice Fox, ' 30, Frcelandville Clayton Hathaway, ' 28, Auburn Ardis Melloh, ' 29, Indianapolis John Martin, ' 30, Fort Wayne Warren Hickman, ' 30, Logansport Matthew Cornacchione, ' 29, Indianap Joseph Flora, ' 28, Chili Walter Gillespie, ' 29, Boswell Samuel Ferrara, ' 29, Gary Leroy Burney, ' 30, Indianapolis John Oliphant, ' 29, Fort Branch ' 1 - (m Wf o4if buiius ' i Nil St gma Nu I Founded at Universlt - of Michigan, 1882 Local Chapter: Beta Eta Established: 1908 National Chapters: 3 5 Colors: Wine and White Local Address: Indianapolis First Cohmn Third Colum,, William Ward Harvey, ' 30, Marion Robert Frederick Harris, ' 28, NoblesviUe Vincent Leland Barker, ' 28, Indianapolis N. Cort Davidson, ' 28, Indianapolis Ray B Robertson, ' 28, Ewing Myers Bowman Deems, ' 30, Hun Robert H. Flinn, ' 30, Marion Guy E. Stahr, ' 28, Marion James Maurice McBride, ' 30, Za Lee Streaker, ' 31, Salem Second Column FoKrtli Column Clifford Willi.im Hoffman, ' 28, Laurel Robert Edward Lyons, Jr., ' 28, B Floyd Leland Crandstnff, ' 28, Preble Francis W. Pruitt, ' 28, Westfield Wcmpic Dodds, ' 28, Logansport Emery A. Rovenstine, ' 28, Atwoo Oren Leslie Kirklin, ' 28, Muncie Robert D. Melser, ' 28, Columbia Philip B. Reed, ' 30, Indianapolis John C. Troxcl, ' 30, Elkhart c f bviius ' ° m n v inrr - (% a c :. f a ' UiA ' O i l ' M ' C -: l:[ Phi Rho Sigma Founded at Xorthwcj tern Medical School, 1890 Local Chapter; Pi Established: 1903 National Chapters: 30 Colors: Scarlet and Gc id Local Address: Indian poll First Ron TAini Ro-.v Russell M. Decker, V?n, Brazil Elisha A. Mctzger, ' 28, Covington Willi mi L, Sharp, ' 30, Greenwood William E. Ballcnger, ' 28, Economy ; Fredrick W Buechner, ' 28, South Bend Guy A. Ousley, ' 28, Thorntoxvn ; Second Row Four , Ro ' .v Jean LaVar chy, ' 31, Indianapolis Clement L. Poston, ' 28, Mays Maurice Kl ngler, ' 2S, Garrett Hubert Gros, ' 28, Delphi John Egan, ' 28, Wabash Arthur C. Rettig, ' 28, Evansville John C. Carney, ' 28, Delphi [382] Phi Delta Epsilon F..iindcd at Cornell University MeJicl Ct lege, 1904 Established: 1924 National Chapters: 29 Colors: Roval Purple and Cream of White Local AddrJss: Indianapolis !4 First Rozf Tsvetco An:ist.isuff, ' 29, Valparaiso Louis Berkovvitz, ' 28, Warren, Ohio Louis Fichman, ' 29, Fort Wayne Samuel Hurvvitz, ' 28, Cleveland, Ohio cco,„i R„ ' .l . J. Kwltney, ' 28, Indianapolis Abraham Wainston, ' 29, Cleveland, Ohio Harry J. Riemer, ' 30, Cleveland, Ohio Bernard Hyman, ' 28, Indianapolis ' 1 V S XB [384] Ball Brothers Nurses ' ' Home Pebruarv, 1926, the Ball brothers, of Muncie, made a gift of $501), 000 to provide a residence for the nurses in training at the Indiana University hospitals. The building was begun in 1927 and will be ready for use by September, 1928. It is of red brick, trimmed in stone and is of Colonial architecture. It will house 165. The ground floor will be used for class rooms, laboratories, and instructors ' offices. On the first floor is the main office, lobby, living room, parlors, and reading room. Members of the faculty will have living quarters on this floor. On the second, third, and fourth floors are the sleeping rooms. With few exceptions these are single rooms. On the fourth floor there is a gymnasium. In the wing on each floor there is a sitting room, a kitchenette, and a laundry. A buzzer system is being installed, which will connect the main office with each room. Telephone booths are conveniently placed on each floor. On the exterior a large terrace is found at the entrance, and brick terraces are seen on the east and west sides. The roof above the living room is finished with a tile floor and is surrounded by a brick parapet. The building is connected with the others of the hospital unit by a tunnel, making for convenience in rainy and cold weather. The gift is significant in that it will bring the nurses in training into closer contact socially, since they have been scattered, heretofore, among the several buildings of the unit. It aff ords better living quarters and a gymnasium which is an asset. Ball brothers are to be long remembered for their magnificent gift making this home possible, and for their generous gifts to the Indiana University hospitals. 4 ' [385] The Training School for Nnr ses Andiana university has in connection with its medical unit in Indianapolis a Nurses ' Training School. This school offers a thorough three-year course for a limited number of qualified girls, the work leading to the R. N. degree. Training is under the direction of Mrs. Ethel Palmer Clark, who is assisted by Miss Nellie Gates Brown. The three years of study are made up of academic work and practice nursing. Nurses in training take care of the patients in the Robert W. Long hospital, James Whitcomb Riley hospital for children, and the William H. Coleman hos- W B ' -cAi ' hvlMs ' mr ' i.ir ' - mn . ' 4 A ' pital for women. In addition to this training they do social service work and receive a comprehensive training in dietetics. The school edits a publication known as the Bulletin. This journal is worked up by the students and is published quarterly. It is made up of news from the campus and activities of the school which are of interest to the nurse in training and to the alumnus. Indiana University Training School for Nurses has an enviable record of growth and achievement. It is a highly accredited school and is an integral part of the medical unit. With the addition of the new Ball Brothers Nurses ' home, Indiana can boast one of the finest training schools in the Middle West. Pauline Merle JoHiisoN Rvishville R. N. Georgia Eileen Lord Sullivan R. N. Sigma Theta Tau Laura Leedle Indian ipolis R. N. V Rose An L.wm.i West Lafayette R. N. Marv Mac fm DoROTHA Morris West Lafayette R. N. Mary Ruth Mc ff Jeanetta Belle Nlnamaker Indianapolis - B., I. U., ' 25, . Zeta Tau Alpha; Sigma Theta Tau ( -1 . m jz f baiasj - ' m m: ' ,j ■m ' :: msm Florence Janette Wells Dorothy Zi m f 4i Sigma Theta Tau i Founded at I. U. Training School for Nurses, Indianapolis, 1922 Local Chapter: Alpha Established: 1922 Flower: Orchid Colors: Orchid and Fuschia Local Address: Indianapolis Recently made National by the installation of a Beta chapter at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Margaret E. Waller, Washington Ruth Leffler Anthony (Mrs.), Mu Eula Ruddell, Sullivan Third Column Georgia Eileen Lord, SuUi Dora M. Hicks, Maywood Mildred E. Painter, Garret Edna Teegarden, Winchestt ecorld Column Laura A. Davidson, Wabash Mary Frances Byrum, ShelbyviUe Hertha Reidlsperger, Indianapolis Jeanette Belle Nunamaker, Indiar Four h Co! ise Cm, Bloomingdale Lawler, West Lafayette iry Remley, Waynetown ' ' j -. dk t,t!St y '  I 7 [393] ti Social Si-tz ' ' ue Departineiit Social Service Department This department functions as part of the department of sociology and as part of the staff of the Uni- versity hospitals and City Dispensary. In the former capacity It offers training for the professional social ser- vice workers. In the latter capacity it co-operates with ph MciaiTi in obtaining social data having a direct bearing on diagnosis and treatment of disease and in the supLr i ion of the follow-up care of the patient. The department gives special training in the fields of family welfare, child welfare, community organi- zation and medical social service. Dietary Department Indiana university offers, through the department of dietetics of its hospitals, to students with proper collegiate preparation, opportunities for further study in institutional and hospital dietetics. The dietary department has grown to be an important unit of the hospitals and gives active trainin g to nurses and student dietitians. A home economics student who likes the hospital atmosphere with its systems and order will find a splendid opportunity as hospital dietitian not only to translate into practical terms the theory she has learned, but also to give a greater service to humanity. [394] iirsj De.u, F. R. H Nihj ' .f The Dental School A HE Indiana University School of Dentistry, located at In- dianapolis, is the youngest school of the University. Although it was the tenth dental school organized in America, it did not become a part of Indiana university until 1925. For many years it has been under the guiding hand of Dr. ¥. R. Hen- shaw. The institution is designed for the earnest student desirous of obtaining a theoretical and practical training in the science and art of dental surgery. It has more than 2,000 graduates who are practicing dentistry in practically every country in the world. Women students are welcomed and are accepted on the same terms as men. Indianapolis has proved an excellent location for the dental school. Here it enjoys a very close relationship to the University School of Medicine. This is fortunate now that medicine and dentistry ha ' e been generally accepted as going hand in hand. Another advantage of its location is its relation to many hospitals. The facilities of the University hospitals, the Robert W. Long and James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children are available for student instruction. It is the privilege of the students to attend the major dental operations which often require hospital treatment. All cases of minor surgery are taken care of in the oral surgery of the school. The student may, if he wishes, watch thes e operations, and is often called to assist. With these advantages the student is brought in closer contact and relationship with the dental specialists in Indian- apolis. More than 10,000 people a year are patients at the school. Every kind of dental case is treated. The variety of cases that present themselves is unlimited. Every student has f¥ii Dr. J. L. Wilso,, Sup-l of h,fir„Mry Dr. K. H. Kayser General Sup ' l i opportunities to perfect himself in gold work, amalgam, gutta percha, zinc oxide, and silicate cement fillings, porcelain and gold inlays, crown and bridge work, partial and full dentures on rubber and metal bases, root canal treatment, X-ray work and ' arious patho- logical conditions that present themselves during the conduct of dental practice. The school is a member of the American Association of Dental Schools, and con- forms to all requirements of the Dental Educational Council of America. It is located on North Pennsylvania street in Indianapolis, where it has been for a number of years. Hopes at the present time are for a new building within the next few years, to be constructed at the medical school grounds on West Michigan street in Indianapolis. L. V, Commiskey Secretary-T; Seniors To achieve the honor and knowledge of being called senior is a goal to which all students look forward. With their scholastic careers at an end, having spent the required number of years at the School of Dentistry, they are now preparing to leave and to take their places in the activities of the world. The class of ' 28 has been characterized through its four years of school life by its integrity and a spirit of general good fellowship. Their loyalty to their class and school has been brought forward in the eyes of their fellow students and faculty by a co- operation which has truly stood the acid test. Four years — it seems only four days since the first enrollment. The years pass rap- idly, and it seems an impossibility that they have so soon attained their final step in the beginning of a worldly life. The time has come for the separation and scattering to the four winds of a class which has stood together and shared their hardships as one through the past four years. This class is among the largest that has ever been graduated from the dental school. The original class somewhat exceeded the present number, but in the process of elimina- tion and addition, such as every class must go through, it now stands at 88. ' ? : 1 f Senior Dentals . c Moui u s - ■;| S Ralph Antle Frankfort, Ky. D. D. S. Hunt Society SORMAN G. BaLLAN Charleston, V. Va. Z). Z). .S-. Delta Sigma Delta Hunt Society William Ross Bane Clinton Z). D. S. Maurice G. Baum Rockport D. D. S. RoLLiE A. Bennett Markleville D. D. S. Psi Omega; Hunt Society Leon W. Berger McKeesport, Pa. D. D. S. VV ' arder Hugh Castle Indianapolis D. D. S. , 1 ' cj . v James F. Smith Indianapolis D. D. S. Xi PsI Phi; Hunt Society f: c r buiiis% .■idsiiK ' - - - iss- a-i- ' -.- ife fi.c4 bijiiis u RocKR L. Trueblood Salcm D. D. S. Hunt Societv Emery C. Thorn e Vinccnncs D. D. S. Psi Omegn; Hunt Society Dean O. Taggart Whiting D. D. S. Hunt Society Nicholas Vlassis Corfu Island, Gr D. D. S. Hunt Society; Ralph L. V ' an Vorhees Benton Harbor, Mich. D. D. S. Xi Psi Phi; Hunt Societ: President, ' 28; Sojoi William A. H ANARSDALL Fnnkljn D D S P 1 Omtei Hunt Society 1 -PER C. Williams Wadesville D. D. S. Class President, ' 27- ' 28i Psi Omega; Hunt Society .INTON H. Wl Ohlong, III. D. D. S. Hunt Society Ray.viond W. Whitman Hinton, W. Va. D. D. S. Hunt Society; Sojourners club John C. Werner Elkhart D. D. S. Delta Sigma Delta Hunt Society Clinton I. Wasson Muncie D. D. S. Delta Sigma Delta; Hunt Society Richard H. Wade Hammond D. D. S. Psi Omega; Hunt Society . DRE V LeRoY WeSSAR D. D. S. Xi Psi Phi y j- ' ■' i Harold Gamfher, ' 2 Harold Alviii Gampher, ' 24, was bom in Elkhart, January 22, 1904. He graduated from the Elkhart High School in the January class of 1922, where he was prominent in high school activities. He was a member of the Delta Sigma Upsilon fraternity and the Atherton club. He died suddenly March 30, 1928, in Indianapolis, where he was a senior in the Indiana University School of Dentistry. Here he was a member of the Xi Psi Phi, national dental fraternity. Mr. Gampher had endeared himself to all who knew him by his upright Christian life and sterling qualities of character. His genial presence and good fellowship will be sadly missed by his classmates and all who knew him. l cJf-r buius ' ' - yy s B roii F. Barnard President Orvilie E Ct i-de ' j « Juniors The class of ' 29, a bubbling over of enthusiasm, has been termed as one with a fight- ing spirit and an eagerness for obtaining knowledge. Amassed together from all walks of life, to weld them into master craftsmen of the art and science of dentistry has been a severe task and strain for the staflF of the school. However, they have not struggled in vain, for the junior class is now one to be proud of, for they stand on the threshold of their final year in the arduous task of gaining a dental education. This year ' s annual Prom was the peak of the successes of the affairs given by the class. It was held at the Columbia Club, April 20, and was typical of the rest of the doings of the class. With the junior year over, we can look back at the eagerly sought chances to start our clinical experience, and with pride say, We have truly accomplished much. Junior Dentals 04r tLJillS C. E. Phillips Vice-Preiide,n J. P. Schenker Secretary-Treasurer Sophomore} The sophomore class is the smallest class to have entered the school in many years; nevertheless, they have shown their strength and ability by intelligence and willingness to learn the fundamentals of their chosen profession. Because of their small number they are given more individual attention by their instructors. Much is expected from this class since they are the first entrants requiring pre-dental college education here. All have had at least one year of college work, and several have A. B. degrees. Class election is their one big affair. It is hotly contested and to the larger classes looks more like a family argument than an election of officers. The boys co-operate well with one another in their work, and their lack in number is no great detriment to their accomplishments as a class. cAiPbuius Floyd H. Blackuell President Harold G. Swill, Vice-President Willard Stoelti. Secrel,„y-Treasur Freshmen The embryo dentists that entered the dental school in September of the 1927-1928 school year brought with them ideas direct from the campus. Indeed, many of them took their pre-dental work on the Bloomington campus. Even though they had campus training and thoughts, they were bewildered when brought face to face with the freshman subjects of anatomy, including dissection, or- ganic chemistry, and histology. In these subjects the future masters of the art and science of dentistry found ample outlet for their muscular as well as mental energy. Members of the class increased and diminished with the balmy October days. The class was soon overcome to the epidemic of politics now prevalent in Indian- apolis and elected officers as follows: Floyd Blackwell, president; Harold Smith, vice- president, and Willard Stoelting, secretary-treasurer. Being socially inclined the boys decided on a Freshman Brawl which was held late in March at the Columbia Club. }:: ' - I o4r buiiis t!j . ■Ky.4 Bi w K m y George T. Knaff If. If. Smith Sojourners Club The Sojourners club is a club organized and maintained by the Masons of the school. It was organized a number of years ago. All Masons in good standing are eligible for membership. Members of the faculty are made honorary members. The aim of the club is to promote activities among fellow students and indirectly make better and more active Masons. The Sojourners generally have one big get-to- gether meeting a year, commonly called a smoker, where they enjoy interesting talks from some of the prominent Masons of the city, and from members of the faculty. These meetings generally bring the Masons together and promote much interest in the club. The club elected for its officers this year: G. T. Knapp, president; F. A. Jones, vice-president, and W. W. Smith, secretary-treasurer. [410] M Since 1 896 every student who has attended the dental school knows the purposes and accomplishments of the P. G. C. and G. E. Hunt society. This society was founded by the class of 1 899 in its freshman year in honor of Dr. P. G. C. Hunt, who was the first dean of the school and the moving spirit in the organ- ization. He was a man of great vision, mighty purpose, and gave of his best to the pro- fession. After the death of Dr. P. G. C. Hunt in 1896, he was succeeded as dean by his son, Dr. George Edwin Hunt. Following his death in 1914, the name of the society was changed to the P. G. C. and G. E. Hunt society, thus honoring the memories of both men. Dr. George Edwin Hunt, during the many years of his incumbency as dean, was the greatest factor in the promotion of dentistry in Indiana. Kindly, courteous, and gen- erous, he was a guide and helper to all students who came under his influence, and all who had contact with him received benefit. This society was organized with the purpose of providing a means of social and liter- ary contact among the students of the various classes. Through all the years of its exist- ence its management has been entirely in the hands of the student body with such assist- ance as was deemed necessary by the faculty. The society elected for its officers this year: R. L. Van Voorhees, president; A. E. Turkey, vice-president; G. W. Pifer, secretary, and J. W. Harrold, treasurer. Delta Sigma Delta Founded at University of Mici Local Chapter: Xi Established: 1900 National Chapters: 29 Colors: Turquoise Blue and (j Addre apui ' Harold Stahlhiit, ' 28, Ft. Wayne Marvin Rigsbee, ' 29, Marlon Thaddeus Gregorv, ' 28, Union City Arthur Evans, ' 29, Cromwell Raymond Downev, ' 29, Francisco Robert Collins, ' 31, Tipton Second Column William Stafford, ' 29, Hope Howard McCurdy. ' 29, Ft. Wavne William Grant, ' 28, Rensselaer Warren Elliott, ' 30, South Bend Edwin Connley, ' 29, Covington, Ky. Bruce Carney, ' 29, Logansport Third Column Clinton Wasson, ' 28, Muncle Jack Krlder, ' 29, Brazil John Farmer, ' 29, Oakland Citv Myron Druley, ' 29, Anderson Gordon Bradford, ' 30, Covington, Ky Fay Baltzell, ' 29, Sumner, 111. Fourt , Column John Werner, ' 28, Elkhart Harold Pcrclfield, ' 29, Columbus Robert McGeorge, ' 28, Covington Ned Kerr, ' 29, Tene Haute Jack Grant, ' 29, Rensselaer Charles Everett, ' 30, Terre Haute Harold Armstrong, ' 29, South Bend Fit , Column Emme t Wells, ' 29, Hanover Dale Miller, ' 28, Kokomo Donald Musselman, ' 28, Denver Oscar Hufnagel, ' 28, Camp Point, 11 Lawrence Ginther, ' 31, Michigan Cin Lewis Davis, ' 28, Richmond Six , Column Kenneth Wingard, ' 31, Montpelier, ( Seth Shields, ' 28, Brownstown Maurice Longeneckcr, ' 29, Cromwell Lewis Compton, ' 28, Rushvlllc Howard Frohman, ' 31, Columbus Delmar Currv, ' 28, Indianapolis even , Column Robert Barkley, , ' M, Indianapolis •28, Charleston, W. V. ' 28, Logansport .c fir tuiiis ; Pst me ;?« Founded at the Baltimore College Local Chapter: Omega Established: 1892 National Chapters: 53 Colors: Blue and White Local Address: Indianapolis kt Jrs Column George Goodman, ' 31, ] Paul Sheets, ' 29, Columl Ross Bane, ' 28, Clinton Max Glick, ' 29, Kcntlar Robert Mills, ' 29, Wine Conley Robinson, ' 31, T Emerv Tho 38, Vin Second Column William Merritt, ' 29, liris WiUard Stoelting, ' 31, Fn Orville Crawlr-y, ' 29, Dan William K. Damron, ' 28, John McGregor, ' 29, Wii Victor Schultz, ' 28, Indiai W. A. Harold Vanarsdall, ourlh Column Floyd Blackwell, ' 31, Tcrrc Haute John Yates, ' 31, Indianapolis Howard EglofF, ' 28, Brazil Chester Huff, ' 28, Hartford City George Massey, ' 29, Lafayette C. C. Schilling, ' 29, DlUsboro, Ind. Fifth Column Vesper Willi Guy Swisher Lawrence FI Robert Horn Charles Jette Wadesville ron, Ohio Indi,- apol: i, Clcvclanc Portland ' 28, Fowlei Third Column George Hibbs, ' 29, Hebron Charles Abbott, ' 29, Martii Maurice Baum, ' 28, Rockport Sharps Crislip, ' 28, Berlin, W. John Martin, ' 29, Geneva Rufus Schideler, ' 28, Loganspo J. A. Ellis, ' 29, Indianapolis Sixth Column Haven Wade, ' 28, Hammond Harry Meyer, ' 30, Indianapolis Rollic Bennett, ' 28, Markleville Joe Hunger, ' 28 Frank Jordan, ' 28, Corydon Harry Smith, ' 28, Winchester Thomas I. Thomas, ' 29, Lafayette Walter Voile, ' 29, Vincennes M .cAMoaia- ' - ' - -f- ' - ' - ' ' y ' Founded ,it University of Miehiean, !8S9 -I Lo.,il Chapter: Theta j E tabli-hcJ: 1S93 National Chapters: 32 Flower: Rose Colors: Lavender and Cream Local Addre- s: Ladian pol First Col„„:n Foinlh Cohn,:,, Rnlph Van Voorhees, ' 28, Benton Harbo Hubert Thompson, ' 29, Salem Tames Si.ilth, ' 2S, InJianapolis Dillon Routt, ' 28, Sullivan r;...i:-- !■: 1, - ' K i:- Jiv, Ohio Ernest Purkey, ' 29, Morocco Rav Nauss, ' 29, Greenville, Ohio J. Wiler Harrold, ' 29, Lebanon, Ohio Roger Jiurch, ' 31, Elwood liyron Barnard, ' 29, Liberty i ' . ' i-OH, Co «W« Fifth Column Ward Smith, ' S, Ottrihem Kermit Sipple, ' 29, Cl.iv Citv Paul Silver, ' I ' l, l-r,,nhl ..rt Albert Russell, ' 28, Greensburj 1 Walter 0 Mn,,,iu, ' 29, IMosant City, Ol io Craig Philips, ' 311, H.nmilton, Oiiio ; Alfred Keller, ' 29, Huntington George Knapp, ' 2S, Oib nn City, 111. Harry Healy, ' 31, Indianapolis Frederick Fug,i i, ' ' 1, r.i.-.klvn, N. Y. ' - Honnis Meadows, ' 29, Posevville Stanton Wilkes, ' M, ];, i,l,,|.,„t. 111. Maurice Bickcl, ' 29, Ft. Wayne George Bogardns ' JS, ' IVne H.mte Tl,nd Colunn, Sixth Cohn,:,} William Smith, ■2S, In Ji.inapolis Clairmont Siekerman, ' 31, Spokane, Wash. Earl Sutlu-.I.M , ' Vv R, ;:-elaer Frederick Rush, ' 28, Otterbcin Gale Ohili :■:,, ■, !• , ill- ' Robert Nelson, ' 29, Lebanon John OlJIi: :, V X ' ,n Robert Kinstle, ' 29, Findlav, Oiiio Ambrose JJ, ,:,, ' I ' K I),, tnn, Ohio Luther Doty, ' 29, Ft. Wavne Lester Wolterm.in, ' 30, Newport, Kv. John Baldwin, ' 29, New M.mrefield, Ohio Stanley Abrams, ' 29, Hubbard, Ohio LeRoy Wessar, ' 28, Emmetsburg, Iowa Seventh Coluirin Sylvester Schmid, ' 30, Cincinnati, Ohio Victor Skinner, ' 28 , H jntington Robert Meyers, ' 28 , Decatur 1 Paul Hulse, ' 28, India lapolis T. Leo Cooley, ' 28 , Kentland | Daniel liieker, ' 28, Ha mmond 4 Ji. 1 , i r; a r! . o a ,e: c. v [417] Arbutus Business Manage Myron Drule Arhulus ' Editor for Dc Sterilization Department The sterilization department has recently been enlarged and is under the supervision of the department of surgery. All the bandages, mouth packs, and instruments used in the college clinic are required to go through the sterilization department before being issued to the student for use. The department is equipped with new auto-clave, sterilizers and other devices neces- sary for asepsis. Each student is required to spend a specified number of hours in the department before completing his junior and senior years of school. 4?f o iplbii :j Dr. H. P. Werknuu, Sup ' t ExtractioT, Departnunt Dr. J. T. Wa Jo Dr. H. D. Le Ass islam Sup ' , Department of Exodontia and Anesthesia The department of exodontia and anesthesia at the School of Dentistry has, during the past four years, been enlarged by the addition of new equipment, more space, and a modern sterilization department. This department offers to the students complete and t I thorough instruction in the extraction of teeth by bot h local and general anesthesia. This department is supervised by a group of well trained, competent instructors who supervise each operation and lend help if necessary. Group clinics are held weekly when members of the statf perform operations in the presence of a group of students demon- strating the various methods employed in the extraction of teeth. Students are required to spend a certain number of days in this department where they are taught the technic of proper sterilization as followed out in hospital routine for sterilization. ' 0 [419] Dr. E. D. CofielJ Dr. G. J. Pell Dr. J. F. Nevilt Department of Oral Surgery The department of oral surgery holds weekly clinics in the surgery at the college. Operations for the remo ' al of incysted and impacted teeth, removal of oral tumors, the exsection of necro sed bone, and the opening and treatment of the antrum are per- formed before the class. The use of general anesthesia, ligation of arteries, surgical con- trol of hemorrhage, and the suturing, dressing and bandaging of wounds are all prac- tically ciemonstrated. The relation of the oral cavity with the nose and throat and the dis- eases incident to all three, reduction of dislocations and many other operations falling in the scope of dentistry are elaborated. These operations are all carried out according to the general rules of hospital pro- cedure, and the student is impressed with the fundamentals and importance of steriliza- tion and asepsis. Oral surgery clinics are also held by the professors and members of the staff at the two university hospitals. Students are taken in groups to witness these demonstrations. 4 [420] o4 ' Pbu. Dr. Ert J. Rogers Prof, of Croun and Bridge Dr. A. O. Humphreys Asiiilant Crown mid Bridge Department The crown and bridge department is important and interesting not only to the school, but to the student as well. It is governed and supervised by skillful and efficient instruc- tors who are capable of giving students a thorough knowledge in the essentials of crown and bridge work. This branch of dentistry requires mechanical skill, art and good judgment; and for assistance we find connected with it a complete and modern equipped laboratory. Cases of crowns and bridges are not always of the same kind. The many indications and contra-indications for these require a separate diagnosis, also a staff personnel which will skillfully teach the student how and when to use the various and numerous types which may be indicated for their particular case. W cJfmtuiius ' ' , If Indiana University William L. Bryan, Ph. D., LL. D. Pres ' ulevt I THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES S. E. Stout, Ph. D., Dean. D. A. RoTHRocK, Ph. D., Dean. II THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION H. L. Smith, Ph. D., Dean. III THE GRADUATE SCHOOL Fernandus Payne, Ph. D., Dean. IV THE SCHOOL OF LAW Paul V. McNutt, A. B., LL. B., Dean. V THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE S. E. Smith, M. S., M. D., Provost, Indianapolis. Charles P. Emerson, A. B., M. D., Dean, Indianapolis. Burton D. Myers, A. M., M. D., Dean., Bloomington. VI THE SCHOOL OF COMMERCE AND FINANCE William A. Rawles, Ph. D., Dean. VII THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC B. W. Merrill, Dean. VIII THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY Frederic R. Henshaw, D. D. S., F. A. C. D., Dean, Indianapolis. IX THE EXTENSION DIVISION R. E. Cavanaugh, a. B., A. M., Director. For Catalogue and Bulletins A ddress THE REGISTRAR Bloomington, Indiana X : z: ' 0 .C S . -, , The Fulwider Lumber Company ' A BOARD OR A BUKGALOW CALL THREE OH Bloomington, Indiana Davis Clothes Shop extends sincere good wishes to Each Senior The A CAMPUS msriruTioH K here Real Student Democracy Is Expressed FOUTiTAm — - LUKCHEOJi --x CADDIES ■a-o mi %iiM [423] 1 More Good People Needed A Mcssa j c to the Ycning Men of the Chiss of 1928 SOME of you are scrutinizing vari- ous trades and protessions in the light of your own future. This is a sug- gestion not to look too far afield. Right in Bloomington, or at most not thirty miles away, is a rare opportunity. The stone industry is a great busi- ness. It needs more good people. The op- portunities it offers are many and varied. Some have to do with machinery and tools and will interest the mechanically minded. Some lead into the field of the engineer or technically -trained execu- tive assistant. Others require the imag- ination of the architect, and will ap- peal to the chap who likes to use the draughtsman ' s T square and rule. The successful quarrying and market- ing of Indiana Limestone requires or- ganization. Real executive capacity is always in demand. The stone has to be sold. The industry needs good salesmen. A field representative of the Indiana Limestone Company must have a fund of technical knowledge. This can be acquired only through an apprentice- ship with various departments of the industry. In our organization today are young men who have learned stenog- raphy. They are acting as secretaries to our officials and sales representatives to fit themselves for positions on the fir- ing line for Indiana Limestone Company. Ours is an interesting and fast-mov- ing business. We are helping to create a new architecture in this country. America is m the midst of a vast build- ing program. In the early days only buildings of monumental characterwere bujlt of stone. Today all sorts of struc- tures, from modest residences up, have walls faced with Indiana Limestone. Modern production methods applied to the stone industry have made it pos- sible for Indiana Limestone to compete in the field of medium -priced building. The successful and efficient develop- ment of new production methods re quired brains. Some one had to thinl things out. There are still many prob- lems to be solved. Things for young men of vision and initiative to do. Think It over. Study this business and Its opportunities. See if you feel yourself fitted for it. See if you have any- thing to contribute to it. But don ' t de- cide to go into the stone business merely to get your name on a payroll. For only if you have something to bring to the stone industry, has the stone industry something worth-while to offer you. INDIANA LIMESTONE COMPANY General Offices : Bedford, Indiana Executive Offices : Tribune Tower, Chicago f ' ' x tu i HA J , .-i ' . - -rih - r: - ' - m i Henrg CXijtton 8 Sons Broadway anJ Fifth— Gur Marion and Lake— Oa i Park Orrington and Church— Et anston State and Jackson— Chicago The New, 6 Times Enlarged LYTTON COLLEGE SHOP The Style Center for College Men THE POPULARITY of this famous Shop has increased almost as decisively as it has expanded. For here are presented first in complete assortment the authentic style ideas in everything to wear for undergrads and younger alumni. And equally important are the economies made pos- sible by our tremendous buying power. SUITS . OVERCOATS HATS SHOES SHIRTS HOSE . NECKWEAR LEATHER COATS m [425] 4Pbvlius% •SAY IT WITH FLOWKUS VixW the FLOWER SHOP On Hf.r Birthday, Sknh Muthei Flowers ELLIS FLORAL SHOP Floirei-s sott bij telegrapli FELTU8 PRINTING COMPANY BLOOMINCTON, INDIANA WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW Before Investing in Dental Equipment The many new and desirable features possessed by the first Harvard chair, con- structed more than forty years ago, set a standard that other manufacturers had to conform to. Since that time The Harvard Company has been a leader in the dental equipment field. Not only has The Har- vard Company set a standard for design, but it has set a standard for quality that other manufacturers have never been able to meet at the price of Harvard equip- ment. The dentist who is given the un- restricted privilege to carefully compare the design, efficiency, quality, beauty and price of Harvard Equipment with that of any other make will quickly understand why it i.s the choice of so many leading members of the profession and why it is sold by iiiritiiii careful ro  or(N()H ' rather than by hijjh-piessure sales efforts. The HARVARD Co. Canton, Ohio 5g i- A ppreciatiou T 0 THE students of Indiana University who, because 1 of their patronage, have made possible the bringing to Blooming-ton such a high standard of pictures, we extend our thanks. Should you be fortunate enough to return to college next year, we assure you that you will find our policy the same as now — the best pictures obtainable at the lowest prices possible. INDIANA THEATRE -,T9 Qradviation Qifts For Everyone If OUTHERN INDIAN I Sporting Goods Company Y ERN W. RUBLE HOME The building in front of the Garage where the radio is kept BEST WISHES William E. Sullivan Clothier for Ead mid Dad WEST SIDE SQUARE HOME LAUNDRY COMPANY When better Laundry and Drycleaning is done, we will do It Specui One Da Sen ' ice Phones 25 and 26 309 South Lincohi St. (Cor. Third and Lincoln i OmpUments . JIM ' S CONFECTIONERY DRINKS, CANDIES AND LUNCH We feattrre punch, )nint. ' . (nid almonds for dances and parties If this the store Engagement the quality and Wedding Rings will give happiness. come from ED WILLIAMS liaiiiMrcw. .I,, .■Irv. Miisi.al lustruineQ s 114 N w., r.IoOMIN ;t()N. 1NI . - f i n- f f LOGAN COOMBS SON Braeburn College Clothes The Home of Qiadit) ' EaFt Side Square Phone 444 Through the Arbutus we wish to express our appreciation for the business given us by the faculty, .students and organizations of Indi- ana University. C F. Tourner Coal Co. Nearly Everybody Burns Our Coal Phone 2400 Seventh at Monon R. R. YOUR destination depends on the road you travel. While it may never be too late to turn back, it is a distinct advantage to have started right. Our organization can be useful to you at the start and all along the way. The United Dental Laboratories Usefulness to the Dental Profession INDIANAPOLIS !4 [428] ' .cJfiPbuiiis K 1 JliE store where the student and the graduate get together. ' 14} THE VARSITY PHARMACY On the Campus BLOOMIKQ ' OK, INDIANA :m. n ' Tw v 4 buiii- •i sib.. -f, -} When a dentist with a CDX wants to see a probable hidden pathology, or wishes to check up his work — 2 He simply reaches over to the wall where the CDX is mounted on its extension bracket — 3 Positions it to the film in the patient ' s mouth — 4 Presses the button on the automatic hand timing switch, and the exposure is completed. In approximately six min ' utes his office assistant will have the film developed and ready for interpretation. Wntt or descriptive hooh et 07i tfit; CDX and names of authorized dealer distributors ni -your vicinity. CDX Is 100% Electrically Safe DENTAL DIVISION OF VICTOR X-RAY CORPORATION Manufacturers of the Coolidge Tube and complete line of X-Ray Apparatus 2012 Jackson Boulevard ft i-j jij cardiographs, and other Specialties Chicago, Illinois, U. S. A. iife  ' ' ' ? :iifc- L ' SE Pure Dairy Products Johnson ' s Ice Cream ' Shad) Brook Butter, Pasteurized Milk, Distilled Water Ice JOHNSON CREAMERY COMPANY Seventh and Monon Railway Bloomingrton, Indiana Phones: 195 and 196 Kahn Clothing Company Fashioji ' Park ( ia? ' ter House a id Hart Shajfner f Marx Clothes JOHN B. STETSON HATS COLUMBIA SHIRTS Bloomington Hardware Co. PAINTS AND HARDWARE SOUTH SIDE SQUARE PHONE 649 Wmnor and Good Jo es The Monroe County State Bdn Bloommgton Coal Co. COAL AND ICE Special prices to large consumos on high grade coals 310 W. Seventh St. Phone 42 LET HTTE ELP VOU ACHEEVE SUCCESS IF youIetRitterEqiiipniciil piementyourpeisoiiiil skill yo will render professional service of the highest order to your chosen community. Through this service you will receive not only commen- surate financial reward but that great personal satisfaction which comes only from doing a thing well, licgin your practice right witii Ritter equipment and you are w ell on the road to success. ManufnctiirersoJ fine denial equi I ' - ment for ncarhi half a cent urn ' Lj ' j:M:- t v i ' ' Lo s JTu ( Appreciation : f rW}h management wishes, through the Ar- butus, t(j thank the student body for their appreciation of giving them the very best in amusement that can possibly be secured. The service at the Princess Theatre has no comparison in any other city in the state of Indiana. The world ' s greatest pictures are shown at the Princess just as fast as they are released. PRINCESS and HARRIS GRAND THEATRES e Ji s:ep HIS boo printed on Oxford Ivory Dull Finish Enamel, manw factured b ' Oxford Paper Co., Rumford, Maine. Distributed by Century Paper Co., Indianapolis. y mj ... X i II ..CjfMjUa. ., L jii ROY BURNS GROCERY and MKAT MARKET Phone 241 or 24:2 Sixth and Walnut Quality Shoes for Men and Women at Moderate Pi •ices Featuring F lor s helm ' s fo?- Men Fashion Plate for Ladies RHORER ' S SHOE STORE i.Asi sii.i: si.pi . vv. Harris Printing Company ' hone 2676 315 S. Walnut St. RYORS 385 puoM. 385 Cleaning Pressing Ai-tering We Call For and Deliver Xew, Up-to-Date Valet Service KENNEY COAL AND ICE CO Best Grades Virginia. Eastern Kentucky and Indiana Coal Distilled Water Ice Phone 1900 THE VOGUE fs Women ' s and Misses Apparel of the Better Kind at Popular Prices c fplbuiiis ' ' ■Qc ■Indiana University Press Maintained by the University and operated by the Department of Printing of Indiana University. Printers to the University and affiliated organizations. Publishers of the Indiana Daily Student. ON THE CAMPUS R. W. Van Valer, Mgr. Cimnu, T.iu Fire Every day , - they we - 9|| HH pause that School days or vacation days, a drink of Coca-Cola provides one little minute that ' s always long enough for a big rest. Every bottle steriliied. Over 7 million a day IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS Chas. A. Pike Lumber Building Material Company ' Everything for Building 1210 414 N. Morton St. Wm. ■Kr-ii V Indiana University Bookstore Since iJ Maintained by the University in the interest of the Students, Faculty, and Alumni Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention Indiana University Bookstore WARD G. BIDDLE, Ma rager M ' M ■w« « ir i. i ' j Sg fri : m. Indiana University ' s Bank For Fiftii-Seven Years THE OLD RELIABLE FIRST NATIONAL HANK nE . -:J1: .x9 n The ( ' iti ens Loan Trust Co. The MoihiH lUnih- Capital - - $150,000.00 Surplus - - $150,000.00 V Safety First — Service Always J. n. Showers, Tn-x. Roy 0. Pike. Ca liu-r The Bloom ington National Bank Safe, Sou?ui, Conservative Ba?iki?ig M U p OUR CONGRATULATIONS! On the day of receiving the coveted sheepskins, after four long years of preparation, the corner-stone of the edifice of your life is laid. And with a finely equipped, modern, up-to-date dental ofiice as the sturdy foundation, a cheerful personality and a determination to get ahead, nothing will mar the building of a beautiful and successful lif e of service — a noble ambition, worthy of accomplishment. We have been dealing with the dental profession for over fifty years, striving at all times to work in harmony with the aspirations of our customers and friends. Our success depends upon the good will of our friends. You are cordially invited to visit our show rooms, and to discuss the problems of a proper location and the planning of your office, by experts in our field of endeavor. THE RANSOM 500 Bankers Trust Building RANDOLPH COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS il m ' ' there is true economy in the ownership of WthtV Equipment Despite the efforts of certain selling groups to popularize the belief that only the highest priced dental equipment can be the ultimate equip- ment for your office, there is nothing in the experience of many thousands of dentists using WEBER Equipment to indicate anything but the highest and warmest praise for its most attractive and professional appearance and entirely satisfactory service given over a period of many years. Our DENTAL UNIT, DENTAL X-RAY. ENGINE, CUSPIDOR. CHAIR, LATHE and OPERATING STOOL are more moderately priced and include greater value for your equipment dollar than that given by any other manufacturer in the industry. Ho a Weber Dealer or Weber Salesmtih yon (( intelligent denionstrafio: THE WEBER DENTAL MANUFACTURING CO. CANTON, OHIO vO: - f Diji II S ■iT 1 m u Koda s Athletic Goods Art Goods Prescriptions Our Specialty WOOD WILES Drug Store East Side Square - ' - ' rw m . -- 1 •bvi All the News E ery Day Keep Hep Wnh The Indiana Daily Student MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND CENTRAL PRESS - y ' ' yi - .o y s ' fe.,.,. . T m We Speciali2;e in Good Hardware THRASHER BROTHERS HARDWARE South Side Square ARTHUR DAY FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Any Minute During the Twenty-four Hours Unlimited Service at Limited Expense Arthur Day Funeral Home Fifteen Rooms BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA 302 Walnut St. ■Phone 582 J. PHOTOGRAPHERS 1435 N. Meridian St. LI ncoln 1155 In Our Now Home We Have Natural Settings for Our Pliotograplis of Character In a Beautiful Lounge Room, Conservatory, Landscape Garden, or in Our Specially Equipped Room for Studio Portraits JENKINS 104 EAST KIRKWOOD 15 Billiard Tables Restaura nt Cigars Soda Fountain Vibs? Catering to the better trade T sAiPbLJiiu ,,ih : QuM{isj£Wlc£r$ m An Organization skilled in the business of Serving the Dental Profession in an Intelligent and Efficient manner. T. M. CRUTCHER DENTAL DEPOT, Inc. Top Floor Hume Mansur Buildii INDIANAPOLIS ' Our Service Extends to E-very ' ■Detail oj Your Office ' Equipment that Pleases Both Dentist and Client American Dental Cabinets have char- acter built into them. This means much more than the mere outside appearance; it means sturdy construction, efficient designs that leave nothing to be desired, and features that are ahead of the times. Over seventy-five per cent of all dental cabinets now in use are American Dental Cabinets, which is a real recommen- dation. Our goods can be purchased from the dealer in combination with chair, engine, unit, and in fact a complete outfit, on one cciiitract on easy monthly payments. Wf will demonstrate our line in your city lii_-fnre you graduate and hope to see every member of the senior class. The American Cabinet Co. TWO RIVERS, WIS. M Compliments of Bookwalter-Ball-Greathouse Printing Company Indianapolis mm. The Co er of the Arbutus is SMITHCRAFTED 7 Q_ HE n most unusual covers on annuals this year were furnished by the S. K. SMITH COMPANY. The cover of the Beaver of Oregon, the Tyee of Wash- ington, the Chinook of Washington, the Illio of Illi- nois, the Sooner of Oklahoma, the Bomb of Iowa, the Wolverine of Michigan, the Owl of Pittsburgh, the Cornhusker of Nebraska, the Daedalian of Texas, the Gopher of Minnesota, the Jayhawker of Kansas, the Makio of Ohio, and there are hundreds of others too numerous to mention that are examples of the workmanship of this organization. Every S. K. SMITH COVER is specially designed for the book it is to appear on. Every S. K. SMITH Cover is deeply embossed as the cover on this annual. Every S. K. SMITH Cover is made of a high grade of material. Send us -our co -er problems and we shall be glad to suggest a solution to them with no obligation on your part. U THE S. K. SMITH COMPANY 44S XORTH WELLS STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS CREATORS AND SM ITH CR AFTERS OF GOOD ANNUAL COVERS m-M [445 1 L cAt bulius 2 {f3 Products that grew with the Profession JT was in 1844, just five years after the foundations were laid for the first dental school, the first dental society and the first dental journal, that Samuel S. White, visioning the needs of the profession and the expansion that was to come, founded a manu- factory and a policy to make the best goods, and to sell them at a not unreasonable profit. From this modest beginning there grew the present complete plant for the making of dental instruments, materials and appliances, wherein every article is studied from the view- point of its uses and a premium is placed on intelligence and skill. Rigid, systematic tests and inspection unite to guarantee S. S. White Dental Products as perfect as human skill can make them, while a competent organization together with the co-operation of reputable dental dealers in all parts of the wodd make possible an efficient service to the profession. Illustrated Catalogs and Pamphlets available on retiuest he S.S.White Dental Mfd. Co Since 1644 the Standard ' - Philadelphia NON-fREEZING GAS 6 APPARATUS TRUEDENTALLOY GOLD MATERIALS DENTAL COSMOS 2E e Trade Mark is a guarantee of quality |Ki4i .-.vJr ' Wii ' i ' Wic 7 WCI OST of the photographs which appear in this book were made by our studio. It is our desire to produce each year, something different, something new — to estabHsh in these pages an mterestmg record of people and events to which you may refer with pleasure in the years to come. We wish to remind all students, particularly the Seniors, that all Arbutus negatives are on ffle here, subject to their order at any time. May we take this opportunity to bid our Senior friends adieu, wishing you the greatest happiness and the best of success in your future fields of endeavor? SINCLAIR STUDIO Arbutus Pliotographe? ' m M I jrii lbuiius •w W A TC H E S Always something!: DIA M ON I)S to ' how you ill artistically designed jewe ' Can be applied while you wait. LYNCH HOLDEN JEWELRY STORE — , E W E L R Y A complete line of crests. Outline of the Book OPENING SECTION - - - - Copyright ------- Frontispiece ------ Main Title ------ Foreword ------- Dedication ------ Contents ------- Campus Scenes ----- ADMINISTRATION - - - - Mcmoriam to Mr. Sanford Tetcr Board of Trustees - - - - President William Lowe Bryan - Deans of Men ----- Deans of Women - - - - - Bursar and Registrar - - - - .Alumni .Association - - - - Publicity and Publications - - Library and E.xtension Di ision School of Arts and Sciences - - School of Medicine - - - - School of Dentistry - - - - School of Law ----- School of Educati.in - - - - School of Commerce and Finance School of Music ----- Graduate School ----- The Future Indiana - - - - ]5 III. CLASSES ------ - - . 8- 83 -, Seniors ------ - - 39- 79 Juniors - - 80- 81 4 5 Freshmen ----- - - - - 83 6 I ' . .ATHLETICS - - - - - - 84-139 ' Introduction - - - - - - 85- 88 Football ----- - - 89-104 l3 Basketball ----- - - 105-112 Baseball ----- - - 113-118 37 Track ------ - - 119-12f. 17 Minor Sports - - - - - - 127-134 18 Coed Athletics - - - - - 13 5-139 19 20 ' . CAMPUS LIFE- - - - - - 140-3 54 Sororities ----- - - 141-180 - Fraternities - - - - - - 181-222 Honoraries - - - - - - 223-290 Stage and Debate - - - - - 291-300 24 Publications - - - - - - 301-312 25 IT ------ - - 313-322 26 Militarx- ----- - - 323-330 27 Music n 1-3 ?6 28 Miscellaneous - - - - - - 3 37-347 29 Features ----- - - 348-353 .3 T, 1 VI. INDIANAPOLIS - - - - - 3 54-421 School of Medicine - - - - 3 5 5-394 School of Dentistry - - - - 395-421 VII. ADVERTISING ii % ■r im h y?-v
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