Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1939

Page 1 of 464

 

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 464 of the 1939 volume:

■mmi 9 W r VIBRANT it INCIiMMB S i i, INn f ■IN SCENE jTLl AND AS C! Nfi MPULSIVE PIIBLISHEI) 900 V ebster Stieei PO Box 2270 2270 5 • Wl J i ■BIBHP? HBi ■, , W Bi  «WPIS«rswWf  4  -« 5 ' Ijn nii PUIiLISHEil 900 VJebster SHeei PO Box 2270 2275 S i ( tcrfli; Allen County Public Libra Ft. Wayne, Indiana c i i . ' i.f vV II btii- ITS EMOTIONS TO MUSIC. ..HOW IT TRAVELS AND WHERE IT FOREGATHERS. II H V E R S 1 T 1 A delineation of the adminis- tration and the schools which comprise Indiana University — their Seniors, their honoraries, and their activities. ACTIHTIES A cross-section of the extra- curricular life of the student — • honoraries, publications, and so- cial life. ATHLETICS A graphic and pictorial por- trayal of victories, losses, and good sportsmanship in athletic activity at I. U. :.W ' MH t t % - V Ml jf snijiiimtsasr- Vitality, rustic beauty, and the strength which issues from outdoor life are joys to students in their moments of leisure. li LINKING STUDENT AND ADMINIS R A glimpse from the clouds reveals the vast [lanorama that is Indiana University: compact, yet ever- expanding— a dynamic institu- tion. i,4U) . ' Si,:!:W7Br:.,v ' !:,. i;;«!iEiBS«|«st.; yn - J V. A •Ms k? - ' ■• . 1 . ■kilfc '  « . ;■ ! ' - ' ' L W IVk, ■ t ' W?? Casual conversation and companionship fill spare moments as students pause before carrying on the day ' s routine of classes. Youth, fire, ambition — all that is the lifehlood of a great University is set against a background hal- lowed in tradition. The old and the new merge into an intangible something that is Indiana. The quiet grandeur of old build- ings, the legends of bygone years, and the simple beauty of the campus — each of them leaves a lasting impression upon those who dwell in their midst. pi T ■ ■: ' ' . . rtsyyii :-- ' ' :i-f ;-i ' LEMUEL MOSS CYRUS NUTT ALFRED RYORS J. H. LATHROP WIIXIAM MITCHELL DAILY FORMER nU Over a period of years, eleven capable men have guided skillfully and shaped carefully the destiny of Indiana Univer- sity, giving as the product a glowing, progressive institution as we are aware of it today. The first of these men was Andrew Wylie, who steered it through the most hazardous period of its career. After the untimely death of Dr. Wylie in 1851, Dr. Alfred Ryors, formerly of Ohio University, then became head; and after managing the University through a hec- tic and gloomy year, he resigned in 18 53. Immediately after the resignation of Dr. Ryors, William M. Daily was selected to fill the vacancy. All went well until a fire swept the buildings, and soon they were a smouldering mass of ruins. This calamity, coupled with the lack of suf- ficient financial resources, was almost enough to discourage the hope of resusci- tation. Nevertheless, President Daily was undaunted and indefatigable in his ef- forts to rebuild and maintain the stand- ing of the University. ' i As fourth president, John H. Lathrop served during the year of 18 59-60, suc- ceeding in fostering good feeling among the faculty and student body. Cyrus Nutt, who filled the office from 1860 until 1875, began his term under favor- able conditions, for the enrollment had reached an all-time high of 182 students. Too, under his supervision, a number of important measures and changes were adopted, including the admitting of wo- men students to the University. A former president of Chicago Uni- versity, Lemuel Moss, became Indiana ' s sixth executive. During his presidency from 1875 until 1884, many new courses were added to the curriculum. Indiana University began its career as a definitely modern institution in 188 5, the year when David Starr Jordan became presi- dent. Under his efficient leadership, In- diana came to be recognized as one of the most progressive educational insti- tutions in the country. This was ac- complished by a reorganization in the curriculum to the form that it secured a broad, yet specific education for the student. John Merle Coulter became the eighth president of Indiana in 1891, remaining in the position until 1893. During his administration he continued the com- mendable work begun by President Jor- dan. As ninth president of the growing educational laboratory, Joseph Swain as- sumed leadership in 1893. He stressed building up the departments and fos- tered the general expansion of the Uni- versity until 1902, at which time Dr. William Lowe Bryan was elected to serve what became a thirty-five-year term of office, marked by the extensive growth of the University and an almost incredi- ble increase in enrollment. In 1937 he asked to be relieved of his administrative duties and was followed by Herman B Wells, whose inauguration was held on December 1 of the school year now clos- ing. JOSEPH SWAIN JOHN MERLE COULTER ANDREW WYLIE inieiiRATioi OF HERMAN I) WELLS ri I The academic procession leaving Alumni Hall for the Field- house. President Wells ' inauguration speech was broadcasted over two nation-wide hookups. Parents of Indiana ' s new President look on happily during the reception following the inauguration. Dr. Bryan and his sister, Mrs. Joseph K. Philips, are served tea at the reception after the inaugural ceremonies. Herman Wells addresses the vast audience in attendance. The University ' s new President receives the best wishes of the President Emeritus. Presi- dent Wells smilingly receives congratulations. do up is CHALLEN ' OS T ' CF President Wells: Th!irtlyTsi|i ginners. t wnl ' begiiiriin ' illlpl )metimes dangerous enterprise. lYbt lore difficult and more dangcj!rou| i ' ertce and very littileii ' l ei ' ef ,liW ' l|!i,aS ' i!| same date you had no experience and ncj hrough. I took my risk and somehow li ' ec ju are at 3 6, eleventh president :a£|„,)[ ,sJ,iaJJii!J| 1. When you took over this office in the successful experience. You had achieved lanking Code and then in its adniinistratipdj id known how to make its enlarging facult ' l ation toward the essential objectives of sue} istilled two convictions more essential tha ith money. The first is that the uriivei ' sit j sol ' ent. It must have always a safely! ' the noblest institution is on the quick wa} 1 I find in you is that in, the spending iqI aniversity is for. Napoleon spent mone]|l ar where it would do most to win his war, in smoke as well as for men. But whether to win a victory greater than Napoleon ' s— 4 In this moment we cannot forget that wc | at the worst we do not know. But at thd sponsibillty with valiant heart. If thj|| The time is out of That ever 1 was bornii Til ' • ill say: |l ll ' jll fill I ri ' ! ' . . . Ibethankedl atched ti| W illiam Lowd ' ' ccember •s ■I K RESIDENT Tnrs ago you and 1 were be- w;is thought to be a difficult and ere beginning what is known to be iprise. I began with very httle jfi have to hve through. At the bf what you would have to Hve rhrough it. You took your risk and here LJp.iversit and more than that, my son, a -ummer of ' 37, you were already a man of wide widely recognized success in the formulation of As dean of the School of Business Administration Kip of competent men working in spirited ol. Out of your manifold experiences you thers for the life of a university. Both have must not spend more than it has. It must be al- balanced budget. Without that stubborn con- L() wreck and ruin. The other article of faith jxcry dollar one must keep always in mind what lavishly for powder and for men, but every 50 ' 0U must spend money for coal which goes for coal or for men you know that every penny the victory of mankind at its best, tice a troubled world. What it will come to worst you will starid in your place of re- vorst comes, you will not say: O cursed spite it right. [this hour. PRESIDENT HERMAN B WELtS Come in any Tuesday afternoon and talk things over. This invitation, ad- dressed to his student body, may be said to be typical of the administration of Herman B Wells. Lively, friendly, interested in his students as people rather than as speci- mens in an erratic experiment. President Wells is moving toward his goal of making Indiana an ever-greater university. He has roamed the country seeking scholars of the first rank who will bring new minds, new ideas to his campus. Second only to his efforts to strengthen his faculty have been his efforts to improve the physical equipment of the University: new build- ings, new laboratories, new books for the library — these too are needs which President Wells is seeking to fill. Under his guidance, stimulated by his abundant energy, and enriched by his bi ' eadth of mind, Indiana University looks to the future with ever-increasing surety. Students, alumni, and friends of the University follow President Herman B Wells, confident that he will lead them to a great and useful career. 22 PRESIDENT EMERITUS WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN 4 William Lowe Bryan. — To know, even just to have talked with the man now bearing the title of President Emeritus of Indiana University is a challenge: — a challenge to strive for the best in life. Dr. Bryan has projected the strength of his character to all with whom he has had contact. As the administration ' s highest executive for thirty-five years, he exemplified vitally the inspiring ideals which he strove to instill in others. His philosophy has been ever liberal, with an alert eye to the future and a devoted hand to the present. As President Emeritus he continues to maintain the intellectual integrity for which he has been so deeply admired. He is enjoying at last an opportunity long wished for — the opportunity to write, unhindered by administrative exactions. Here is a MAN — a man who has lived one of the fullest of hves and who has a reassuring confidence in a fuller life ahead. 23 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Ward Gray Biddle, Comptroller and Secretary to the Board of Trus- tees; Trustees Paul Lambert Feltus and John Simpson Hastings; Her- man B Wells, President of Indiana University; Ora Leonard Wilder- muth, President of the Board; Trus- tees Albert Livingston Rabb, Val Francis Nolan, William Albert Kunkel, and Mrs. Sanford Fortner Teter. Not pictured is Trustee Dwight Peterson. The Indiana University Board of Trustees has had a busy year super- vising the development of a newer and greater Indiana University. The approving of plans and letting of contracts for eight new University buildings have necessitated frequent and lengthy meetings. In keeping with the expansion of the campus, the trustees have approved extensive changes in the faculty personnel which have been made throughout the year. The members of the Board have contributed whole- heartedly toward making Indiana the outstanding educational institu- tion of the Middle West. BUILDINGS Top row: Physical Science Build- ing; School of Business; Hall of Music. Bottom row: Calumet Extension Building; West Hall and North Hall, men ' s dormitories; Beech Hall and Sycamore Hall, women ' s dormitories. 24 kV WARD G. BIDDLE, COMPTROLLER A Worthy Guardian of the Trust Which Is His Comptroller since 1936, Ward G. Biddle, ' 16, typifies the loyalty, democratic service, and unceasing effort of the new administration in promoting the best interests of Indiana Uni- versity. Master financial mind of the University, friend of the stu- dents, counselor to the faculty, and universal friend of alumni, Mr. Biddle was cited in 1939 for outstanding service to his alma mater. Long hours of work and pains-taking attention to details have brought him the respect and confidence of all friends of the University. First as Manager of the University Bookstore from 1923 until 1932, then as Director of the Indiana Union until 1936, and now as Comptroller, his first thought ever has been of Indiana University. Its progress is his greatest satis- faction, its growth his chief pride, and its well-being his ever- present concern. 16 DEAN KATE HEVNER MUELLER Mrs. Kate Hevner Mueller, who was appointed this year as Dean of Women, has the duty of looking after the interests of more than 1,500 young women. Mrs. Mueller is capable of answering the questions that puzzle college women and prob- lems that confront the coeds at Indiana University, for her own college days at Wilson College and at Columbia University are still in the not-so-distant past. As a former instructor and assistant professor of psychology, her experience and training have served well to make her a competent person for the position. With the tact, the warm understanding, and the willing- ness to counsel and advise which her office requires. Dean Mueller has won alread) ' the confidence, respect, and friendship of the women students of Indiana University. MRS. LOTTIE KIRRY Mrs. Lottie Kirby, Associate Dean of Wom- en, during the short time she has served in this capacity, has endeared herself to coeds of the University by her understanding of their prob- lems. In the Dean ' s office she performs the function of smoothing over problems that arise in and among sororities; but more than that, she has served as a personal adviser because of her interest in young women as individuals. Her understanding of young people may be based on the fact that she has three children of her own, all graduates of Indiana Uni- versity. Mrs. Kirby has served in official positions in the University for a number of years, as chief clerk to the Registrar, as secretary to the President, and now as Associate Dean of Women of the school from which she was graduated. A D M I « I S T R J T I V E THOMAS A. COOKSON serves the University efficiently in the capacity of Registrar. DEAN C. E. EDMONDSON, as Dean of Men, is a sym- pathetic counselor to men of the University. Superintendent of Grounds H. E. PEARSON cares for the supervision of the physical part of the University. E. ROSS BARTLEY, promoter of a bigger and bet- ter Indiana University, acts as head of the News Bureau, assisted by Secretary Henrietta Thornton. CHAMNESS carries the title of Editor of University Publications, F F I C I U S GEORGE F. HEIGHWAY keeps the records of Indiana ' s alumni through his work as Alumni Secretary of the University. W. A. ALEXANDER renders faithful service as head of the University ' s Library. J. E. PATRICK, Director of Indiana ' s Union, is a familiar personality on the campus. DR. CHARLES J. SEMBOWER, Dean of Men, solves the problems and difficulties that arise in the lives of University men. DEAN FERNANDUS PAYNE fills the important position of Dean of the Graduate School. PROBLEM J. A. FRANKLIN executes faithfully his work as Purchasing Agent for the University. FRANK R. ELLIOTT, one of the first persons with whom the beginning student has contact, serves as Dean of Admissions. GEORGE GARDNER acts as assistant to Z. G. Clevenger in directing the athletic program of the University. WAYNE WISMAN is a familiar character seen daily carrying the campus mail through rain or shine. L. L. FISHER finds time to be Ticket Manager in addition to his duties as head Cashier. S L IE K S HAROLD W. JORDAN di- rects the activities of the University Bookstore and Ticket Office. DR. J. E. P. HOLLAND always is available as medical adviser to University men. ZORA G. CLEVENGER serves as Director of Athletics as well as head of the Depart- ment of Physical Education for Men. W. W. PETERSON supplies the element of law and order in his capacity as campus policeman. MRS. ALICE NELSON supervises the dormitories and and Commons in fulfilling her duties as Director of Halls and Commons. DR. EDITH BOYER SCHUMAN, as University Physi- cian for Women, offers friendly as well as medical ad- vice to coeds. a TTTCDOX, President RUTH SMITH, Vice-President ROSEMARY REDENS, Secretary TOM BUCK, Treasurer 32 Committee Chairmen: Neal Gilliatt, Invitations Committee; James Robert Anderson, Tree Planting Com- mittee; Jeanette Strayer, Breakfast Committee; Martha Martz, Memorial Committee; John Visher, Peace Pipe Com- mittee; Ted Fleming, Siwash Committee. SEMSE um SIWASH COMMITTEE Ted Fleming, Chairman William H. Mayse Robert Sturgeon Mona Jane Wilson Mary Aldred Martha Jean Caster TREE-PLANTING COMMITTEE James R. Anderson, Chairman Allan Linker James K. Adams Martha H. Mull Cynthia Demaree Doris M. Taylor INVITATIONS COMMITTEE . Neal Gilliatt, Chairman Andrew Olofson Richard Schannen Jane H. Dillin Edith English Edythe Thornton BREAKFAST COMMITTEE Jeanette Strayer, Chairman Peggy Sue Leininger Virginia Coverdale Hazel E. Parsons Betty Jane Conley Margaret Ann Bassett MEMORIAL COMMITTEE Martha Martz, Chairman Clair Richardson Paul Meacham A. Robert Lawrence Margaret Kerkling Margaret Thompson PEACE-PIPE COMMITTEE John Visher, Chariman James Huston J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick Betty Lou Fraling Virginia Lee Fellmy Helen Weatherwax Right: PROFESSOR JOHN E. STEMPEL Head of the Department Journahsm Below: PROFESSOR RALPH E. CLELAND Head of the Department of Physics Above: PROFESSOR ALLAN C. MITCHELL Head of the Department of Chemistry Left: PROFESSOR ROBERT T. ITTNER Head of the Department of German C TJ Center: DEAN S. E. STOUT . . . head of the Latin Depart- ment . . . his main interest is a very valuable personal collection of Latin books and manuscripts and Pliny ' s Letters . . . works seven days a week and rises punctually at five every morn- ing ... is a perfect example of courtesy and geniality. Illl[llllllllllllllllllll{l:llllllllllllllllllll{lllllllll Mona Jane: Wilsor|i |f JM |hj ' Mix ' Wilsons, believes in ' a ' ilitiVity las ' Veil as activities. She is not only presi- dent, ol .A.A. but also wears the Mortaill Bj SaWl; badge. ' .UL.I IlIjBAHA ' I i!|: €B ' !S. (Sbemistry i! ' ■ ' ' !! ' ' Le Cercle Franc a is; Town Hall; Clieniis- try Club. J ' -i , I CfiARKS!! ' ■ GAYLORIP !|iAli)LEK IndiurtapoliS A.B. Sfm-ch T li e t a A 1 p li a Phi; University Theater; Orchestra. MARION FRANCIS ARNOLD, JR. New P.alcstine U.S. Mi ' iljciiic Lambda Chi Alpha. BETTY ANN ADNEY Lebanon A.B. English Zeta Tau Alpha; Hng- lisli Civib; Education Club; International Relations Club; Y.W. C.A. ; Jackson Clubi ii[iii|]iiii!iiiiiiii|iiiii|iiiii1ii|iliiiil!!iliiii|n ALBERT q ' AIKEN ' AI ' RY FI I AIM-TEI i Ft. Wavnc UDRID CLARENCE L. ANDERSON Indianapolis A.B. Maihcnuilies Euclidean Circle; Y.M.C.A.; Chess Club; Junior Matlie- matics Club. FLAROLD ARONSON Brooldyn, N. Y. A.B. Chcmishy A.B.CiM ' Pihtry Alpha Chi SiKoia; Al- pha Phi Oniega. (ARY FiLI ' ANOR ANDERSON Linton A.B. Uoinc EauromU ' BETTY AULT South Bend A.B.iiuslhh 1 t X tynt Chi Onum Fill Bctt K ippi M4)i tir Bo ltd PlLsident, Tliett SlL,- mi Fin Indi m i U nh Studuit StafI, I ditor IiLshmni 1 1 and booh, St)phoniou I ditorial «lst nt ' rbutus PUndts W A A Boil d ' Mpha I nnbd t D(-lt 1, Sift ish C om- tnirtct HOMER ARNOLD, JR. Rock ' ille A.B. Chvfuhlry ROBERT LEE AUSTIN Aiulerson A.B. II ht on- Sigiata Alpha Epsilon PHILLIP BADELL Knox A.B. Govcrnmoif Delta Upsilonj Fresh- man Debating. WILLIAM THOMAS BAGBY, JR. Alt dcr soil A.B. joHrvalhni Kappa Alpha Psi; In- diana Daily Student Staff; Sociology Club. CARL R. BAILEY Fluntington A.B. History Phi Kappa Psi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band; Le Cercle Francais. GILBERT BAILEY Delphi A.B. Gort ' irrDiciit Phi Delta Theta; In- diana Daily Student Scarf; Phi Delta The- ta Exchange Student CO England; Stage Door . FIARRY CLYDE BAKER Indianapolis A.B. lihtoty Lambda Clii Alpha. :■ EL11K|! BARRY Greenwood A.B. Hhtory Le Cercle Francais. JOAN BARTHOLOMEW Valparaiso A.B. Vrench K.ippj Alpha Theti Alpha Lambda Dclti, Le Cercle Francais, Taps; ' T. U. Revue , Cabaret Show ; Pan JT e 1 1 e n i c Council After Dark , KATHLEEN BEFiRMANN Indianapolis A.B. Spauh j Pi Beta Phi; Y.W. C.A.; V.A.. .; Span- ish Club; Bored Walk Staff; Newm.an Club; Jackson Club. PAUL F. BENTE. JR. Ft. Wayne A.B. Chemistry Cross Country; Var- sity T rack; D e r Deutsche Vercin; Chemistry Club. JACOB LLOYD BENT2 Madison A.B. Chemistry Sigma Epsilon Theta. MARGARET BERRY Rtrshville A.B. Hhtory Kappa Alpha Theta; International Rela- tions Club. MARIANNE BESSIRE ; ' : Nashville :||l A.B. PiiKiArt f Ji ' Chi Omega ; ' |palibdis Club; V.W.p.,|i.! C o u n c i 1 ; ' F r ' e n i h ' Club; W.A.A.; Alpha Lambda FJelta. ROBERT DEAN I jlBICKETT iL ' || ' : Kirklin i ' • ' iA.B. History JpIisjiPry Club; Inter- lacional Relations Club; per Deutsche Vcrein; Y.M.CA. FRANCES III lilLLMAN I Sullivan .A.B. Sociology Delta Gamma; Y,W C.A.; Tap.s; Rcpubli can Club; I. U. Rt- V u c ; C a b ,1 r e t lSho ' ' MORRIS E. BINKLEY Bloom ington A.B. Mitt .iemalifs Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Euclid- ean Circle. KATHRYN BLACK Indianapolis A.B. Frcnrh Delta Gamma; L e Cercle Franqais. LOIS FRANCES BLAIR D.anville A.B. History Delta Gamma; Flis- t o r y Club; D e r Deut,sche Verein. IRWIN BLEIWEISS New York City A.B. Chemistry Der Deutsche Verein; Chemistry Club. CLAIRE BOWDEN Indianapolis A.B. Ell.nlish Phi Mu; Y.W.G.A.; Der F euc,{che Verein; E n g I ' i sfh , C I u b; W.A.A. ; ' • FLERMAN BOWT-RS Ak|-on A.B. Bsyrhology AUDRA ROSEIMARY ' BREEDLOVF Plainfield A:B. English Euclidean C i r c I Classical Club, i; ,5 CHARLOTTE [■|£i|NfBRTNKMA j 1 Detroit, Mich. I AfB. Goirrnuienf ' ' k if b a D e 1 t a P i ; ;:.W.Ij .A.; Y.W.C.A.; ,. Pan ' -FjyiijJIi.irifCouncil. ' ill li :,i 111, CATFIERINE I INGELS BROKAW Prtncecon B.S. Home Eronumirs Kappa Phi; W.A.A.J President, Home |!co- nomics Club. ' |1 JOHN HARRISON ;! !; BROWN ilj: ' Indianapolis A.B. German Phi Kappa Psi; Vice- President, Delta Phi Alpha; Vice-Presi- dent, Der Deutsche i ' lVcrein; Le Cercle I F{ ,i |j c ' ii i s ' ; Taps; ( fabllf ret Show ; Ger- tnm fexchange Stu- dent; Jordan River Revue , NELLIE VIRGINIA BROWN Louisville, Ky. A.B. Botany ]. THOMAS BUCK Star City ,! A.B. Jonrnalism Bdicor-in-chief, Indi- ana Daily Student ; ,|iditor-Jn-chief, State Faif St udenr; Board of ilAflOn,sJ; President, Si g in a Delta Chi; Blue Key; Dragon ' s Head; Sphinx Club; Phi Fta Sigma; Band; Bryan Scholarship Conaniitt.ee; Taps; Treasure r, S e n i o r Class. HARRY J. BUGFL Ansoni.r, ( otm. A.tt. Chemistry Alpha Chi Sigma. VICTOR L. BUNCFI Borden A.B. Ctietuisiry llllllllfell lllilijiil lllilllllllllljlllllillliililllllllllilllllillllillllilllllillllllllllllllllli iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiilii li![[li!HIJi!ll!llll]l||l1ll!l|j!IIIIIIIIHl|lllllllli;ill]lllll]llllllllllllllHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIII]lllltlll[|]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH nilll!tllllllllll|llll|!l r.UGHNi: ' HKNRY IIIIIMII|lllllllllllMI|l|lllltlllllll Who ' s president of ' Pleiades and runs around with Dick Haskctt? Go to the head of the class if you say that grin belongs to Peggy Sue Lei- nniger as slie sits in front of her na- tive Pi Phi haunt. JUANITA COOK New C iislle A.B. Psyclioloxy Lc Cercic Fraiicais. CHARLES COOPER ROBERT DONALD A.B. Goiiriiiiifii l!illi;ird I ' tjni; Chcss 1 o,im. COPPOCK Per u A.B. Ifhiorx BURRLLI. Soucli licnd .-I.e. Eiifjiib K. ARLETM CARVIN Ft. Wayne ,1.B. Maihrm.i ic I ' l ticta Phi; Alplia I. ii ni li d a L) c 1 1 a ; Pi Lambda T]itta; L ' li- clidean Circle; Sccre- r.iry, Y. W. C. A.; W.A.A. WALTER STEPHEN CISCO joiTer;ion ' ilie A.B. Gorrnj nun Bot:l Theta Pi; Eresll- m.an Golf Tcjm; (Cap- tain. Varsit} Gulf. EUGFNl ' sherwood corm;r Plains, luiit:, A.B. Clh-mhity Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; ( llciTii,str ' CilLiB; I Liclideaii Cir- cle; Radio Club. 1!ARBAR,- R BCTLER Eo ler A.li. Fn-inh Chi Omega; Y.W, C.; . Cabinet: Le Cer- e-lc I-r.incai.s; W.A.A.; Sopl-KMiiore B u .si n ess Assist.Kir, ArbriLus. FRLL)I:IVICK CASPAR Salem S.S, C vm.hlr ' , Alplla Chi Si,t;ina. MARY AN ABEL COFFIN Marion . ' .B. SiM-i ili , PHILIP COR KEEL Blounlip;.;Uin .A.li. Eonnmiis i ' hi Cj a ni m a Delta; F li c t ;l A I p ll ,1 Pin; I ti tl 1 o r S y 1 m m i n g . l,injt;cr; Ta] s; Band; F. e on ) ni i e s (.i 1 n b ; ■■After Dark ; Ho- tel Universe ; ' ■Ronie :i and Juliet ; Broken Dishes ; The Solid South ; iVIuch Ado About Nothing . FRANCIS A. .SALLY CAMP BYR.Nk: ■ ilkewnod, N, V, lii Wesi li ran.i;e, N. ,|, A.B. SIh-it j ' ' 1 A.B. P. yrl. olo. ' iy Al iha Onticron Pi; | GEORGE FI. CillASI Flkbart A.B. Gcrniun Delta Dpsilon; PIr, Eta Sigma; Skull and Creseem; Y.. 1.C.A.; President, Der Deut- sche X ' crcin; Delta Phi .Alpha; Fixchange Stu- dent t .) Germany. VIRGINIA COLL G.iry A.B. English Alplia Chi OmcKa; Delta Pit, Alpha.; Der D e u t s c ll c ' e r c i n ; Chorus; Y.W.C.A. CHARLES M. COSNER Bloomin.cttjn A.B. Hi fi,i ' v Y.M.C.A.; Le Ccrck Francais. Tlicta Alpha Plii; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle .Fr a n c a i s; Business Sla(f, LhiiverSity: ' Fh,e ; ' i atre; Tap.si Pleiades: ' ■ ' Fhe Solid St Luii ; The Old .Maid . FliO j. CHRIS ' FV • liasi ChieaHO B.S. Cf.u-mh ry Phi lamlxia Upsilon; Camera (..Hub; Cliem istry Club. BETTY lANE CONFEY Brazil A.B. S j.(«;.v i Kappa Kappa Gamma; Alpha Lambda Delta; S pa n i s h Ci I Ll h; F e Cerele Fr.in,c;iis; Sciph- omore iUisiness Assist- ant, .Arbutus; Senior Breakl ast Commit Lee; Student Orientatitm Adviser, MAXENF FX Ct)UNDIEF Gary , ' 1, L Si c l lngy ..Alpll.l O in i c r o n P Y. V.C:.A.; Sociolog Club; Spanish Cdub, VIRGINIA COVER DALE Ft. Wayne A.B. lin.iilii j Chi Ome.i;a; Theca Si.gma Phi; Indiana Daily Student Staif; FIti Beta Kappa; Le Cercle ' rancais; Petri Medal. MONA V. DEES Bic knell . .B. Sn.nilijxy Alpha Omicron Pi; Sociology Club; L,e Cercle Francais; Republican Club; Cliemistrv Club. lAMES EDWARD DILEIXGER West Baden A.B. i.ifjifynjiicnt LOGAN O. COWGILE Anderson A.B. Sliiliny I n t e r n a t i o n a 1 R e- lations Club; History Cilub; Camera CItib. JEROME DEICH Bird.seye B.S. Chctnhfry RICFIARD RITTER DODD Blooniington A.B Jijiinnih ' sm t PEGGY CROSBY Milwaukee, W ' iic, A.B. Hiitory Delta Gamma; Bored Walk Stafi; History Club; Y.W.C.A.; Vice-President, Re- publican Club; Eng- lish Club. ALICE LOUISE DEEP South Bend A.B. Eiiiiliih Phi Omega Pi; Alpha lambda Delta; W.A. A,; Y.W.C.A.; Eng- lish Club; Spaaaish Cilub; Coed Coun- MAL ' DI- A F.10DS0 Indian. ipk A.B. II.:.. ' . I ICE C!hi Omega C.A,; W.aIa. jBusiness Assist tjutus; Pleiade ' Walk Stall: Ueautv Que. I Hellenic Com ; Y.W. ; Junior ant, Ar- s; Bored Atdmtus : Pan- TEVIOTHY JOSEPEI DA.XhAHbR Indianai olis A.B. Sormloxv ::ena LOIS dean Indianapolis A.B. Ftaich cynthia anne de.maree Klooritington A.B. lii iii Kappa Alpha Theta; Alpha Lambda Delta; President, Fita Sigma Phi; Pi Lambda The- ta; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; Y.W. C.A.; President, ling- lish Club; Classical Cltlb; Lc Cercle Fran- ROSS DONALDSON Indian.tpolis A.B. Ej;.i; ;.( i BETTY i:)eSCH IPPER Carthage A.B. Hhiory Ki ' fijsa Alpha Theta; W. A, A.; Le Cercle F r a It, 15 ' a i ,s ; H i s t o r y Club; Oceanidcs; Seiphomore B u s i n e s .s As.sistant, Arbutus. ELIZABETH: B. DO X ' Paragon A.B. Chimis iy WILLIAM ROBER F LW,ANE Eogimsport A.B. Mii bi ' iiicilhi Phi Eta Sigma; Y.M. C.A.; Flame Club; Der Deutsche Verein; hi d i t :i r. Fresh m a n Guide; Euclidean (iir-. cle; Secretar ' , Sii;ma Epsilon Theta. DORIS DeVORF, S ' ay .ec A.B. Goirninwn Pi Sigma Alpha; Y.W. C.A.; Coed Band; Le Cercle Francais. MARY DRAKULICH Gary A.B. Sociuto. y Soc lol ogy Club; W.A. .A.; F r e s h m a n Debate. ' A EDWIN DECKARD Fyons ' .B. ( rn i ' rnnw!l JAKF HARRELL DILLIN ' Pel;r.rsburg A.B. Spnu-li Alpha Chi O m eg a; Phi Beta Kappa; Al- pha Lambda Delta, Mortar Board; Tliei.i Alpha Phi; Tau K .|j- j a Alpha; Pi Lamb.la Theta; Nie7er De- bate Awards; Y.W. C.A.; W.A.A.;, Le Cercle lYancai.s; Jack- son Club; A.W.S. Council; Associate Editor. Bored Walk; T a p s; ■ ' B u r v t h e Dead ; The New Fa list Ll s ■■; ■■S t a g e Door . RliFD DuBOiS Warsaw A.B. H s ori Kappa Sigma; I aw Club. .: ' :iliij||jiilliilliiillliljlilllj Mary Aldred, Chi Omega scribe and brain-truster. As a journalist, she is president of Theta Sigma Phi; as a student, a member of Phi Beta Kappa; and as an activities woman, a member of Mortar Board. ARTHUR WILLIAM DUN TNG Richmond A.B. Got cruinoil Pi Sigma Alpha. JEROME ETTINGER Indianapolis A.B. A)iatomy JOHN K|-.NNI ' TH DUNN LLikL ' W K3d. Ohic) A.R. Cl. c)uistry Sigma Chi. GERALD H, EWBANK Lawrenccburg l.?i. Cioifi ii inful. Pgrshin|4 l-viilu ' s. Law Club; Interiiacional Relacitjns Club, FREDLRK K MICHALL EBI-RLI ' Chicago. III. A.B. I ' syiboliiny Kappa Delta Rho: Bored Walk Staff; Phi Eta Sigma. liliii ' HENRY LEON FEFFER Brooklyn, N. Y. B.S. Cl. ' cmivlry ll)LIM n ' ll II.LI N ' :| LLLKVfT ;! Klo.Hiilnjituii A.n. I.,ilin Alpha Landxla Delta; I ' ,ta Sigma Piii; Pi Lambda Tlu ' ta; liiig- lish Club; Lc Ccrcie 1-rancais; Y.W.CA,; Classical Club. WTI.IJAM 15. rr.RGUSON 1 luhanaiKili ' : A.H. CjM ' iiihlry Delta Tau Delta; I-VoHlmum Baseball. HELEN iMAY FtCKEL Frankfort A.R. English Cosmopolitan Club; W esley Foundation Council; Kappa Phi. JANET M. FISHER North Jiidson A.B. Sociology Phi Omega Pi; Sociol- ogy Club. THEODORE B. FLEMING, JR. Princeton A.B. Gorarumi ' ift Kappa Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Pi Sigma Alpha; Blue Key; Chairman, Junior Prom; President, Un lc n Board; Chairman, Siwash Committee; Board of Aeons; Pres- ident, L ra.goia ' s Mead. BETTY LOU FRALING Kokomo A.B. Joftrfhrlisrn Alplia Chi Omega; Tlieta Sigma Phi; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Pleiades; Ediror-in- Cliief, Arbutus; Indi- ana Daily S t ud en t Staff; Bored Walk Staff; The Folio Stafl ' ; Le Cercle FranL:ais; I ' acc I ipe Commit- tee; Pan -Hellenic Cjjuncil. VIRGINIA ELLEN FREEMAN Bloomington A.B. Home Economics AMELIA GELL ' MAN Indianapolis A.B. Speech Freshmaia Debate; Women ' s Varsity De- bate; W.A.A.; Jewish Student Union; Hillcl Foundation; Hillel Council; Education Club. ARTHUR H. FRUECHTENICHT Ft. Wayne A.B. Goverinnenf Phi Gamma Delta; Law Club; Junior Football Manager; Secretary, Der D e ti t s c h e Verein; Taps; Jackson Club. VANCE B. GEYER, JR. Michigan City A.B. Chemistry LARRY FROMMER Indianapolis A.B. Jonrtuiiisnr Sigma Alpha Mu; Skull and Crescent; The Folio Staff; Indi- ana Daily Student Staff; .Script-Writer, University Radio Pro- gram; Hillel Founda- tion; Editor, Hillel Newspaper. CHARLES GALi: GOEBEL Indianapolis A.B. Chemiilry Euclidean Circle; Chemistry Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma. EVANGELINE JANE GAITHER Bloomington A.B. Home Economics Chi Omega; Chorus; Home Economics Club; Y.W.CA. SAM GORDON Indianapolis A.B. Jonynnlism liditor-in-chief, Indi- ana Daily Student; Phi Eta Sigma; Vice- President, Sigma Del- ta Chi. MARGARET E. GALE Bloomington A.B. Home liconmnics Delta Gamma; Horne Economics C Ki b ; Pleiades; Cbed Spon- sor, R.O.T.C. LOIS. GREENWOOD Irlarlan A.B., A.M. SocinloRy Sigma Kappa; Alpha Kappa Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Mt r- tar Board; Vice-Presi- dent, W.A.A.; Y.W. C.A. Cabinet; Pan- Hellenic Cotmcil; So- ciology Club; Le Cer- cle Francais; Ocean- idcs; Freshman Or- ientation Committee; Chorus; Flying Club; Hiking Club. HELEN LOUISE CARMAN Indianapolis A.B. History Kappa Alpha Theta; History Club. LESTER GRILE Geneva A.B. History President, History- Club. HERBERT V. GAWTHROP, JR. Leesburg B.S. Cliemislry Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rides; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Chi Sigma; Captain, Band; Y.M.C.A, DlTiORAH HALE Marion A.B. oc olo ' y Alpha Kappa Delta; President. Sociology Club; W.A.A.; C., ' . illllllNlllllllll ROBERT N. HALLSTEAD Ithaca, N. Y. A.B. Euslish Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa. MARY ELIZABETLI HANCOCK Sandborn J..S. Home E.conomics Alpha J-ambda Delta; Home Economics Club; Cosiuopolitan Club. FRANCIS HA NO FEE Indianaptjlis A.B. Clieinulry DORIS E. HARDY Lexington A.B. History Flistory Club. JUDITH A. HARRIS Bloomington A.B. Gi ' i ' nuin WILBUR S. FIARRISON Muncie A-B. Goi erij fneni Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Sigma Alpha; Flanie Club. JOHN T. HARSH Bluffton B.S. Chcwisir} Alpha Chi Sigma. CHARLES HARTMETZ Evansville A.B. English Plai Gamma Delta; Senior Track Man- ager. ALLEN R. HASS Gary A.B. Journalism Cosmopolitan Club; Indiana Daily Student Staff. lULIA M. FIATCHER Bloomington A.B. History History Club, JAMES AUBREY HATCHETT Morgantown A.B. History Phi LX ' lta Kappa; In- ternational Relations Club; History Club; Cjti ' ernmejit Club: Lc Cercle Francais, ALICE HEINE Wanamaker A.B. English Alpha Chi Omega; English Club; Spanish Club; Mortar Board Recognition; Y.W.C. A.; I-Veshman Orieat- a t ion C .t m ni i 1 1 ee; CJiorns; Indiana Daily Student StalT, MAYME HENDRIX French Lick B.S. Home Economics H ome Economics Club, HHBEi C. HERKLESS, JR. Knightstown .A.B. jonyuclisni Phi Delta Theta; Indiatia Dail ' Stutlent .Stall . 40f,i lll1lllll!l|[llpill{|Np|lllllllll|IIIIHII!ll|ll{llllll|[llllllllnlll!IIIIIIIIIIIIIII|l|{lllll|lllllllllll|||n Jane Dillin, Alpha Chi prexy, pauses for a rare rriomeht between a debate and a Utiiversity Theatre re- hearsal. This Phi Beta Kappa has a sense of humor but a string of honor- aries that can ' t be laughed off. MARTHA A. HKRTLING Coiydon ..S, Home Ei ' Diloiifics H o m c 1-. c o n o m i c s Club; G:in ima Delta. AlBKHT L. HIGDCN Scotcsburji l.fl. Chem ' iilry Delta Upsilon: Presi- dent. Senior Class; President, Board oi A c o n s ; S c c r e t a r y , Union !jo:!rd: Btisiness Manager, I ' J.l 9 Ai-bu- t u s ; . j b i n x CI ii b ; Riue Key; Ii)ra,i;c)n ' ,s He.ae!: junior Baseball Msaiaflcr; Plii Eta Si,i- ma; Y.M.C.A.; Le Cert:le Francilis, WORL VALCHESTT-R EIILE indiiiiTapolrs A.B. Cbemht ry Kappa Alpha Psi, MARY ALLISON H INKLE Louisville, Ky. A.B. hrcuch Kappa Alpha Tlu ' ta; Le Ccrcle- Eranjais; Taps; Jordan River JKevue ' JOHN THOMAS HISSION Shoals ROBl RE ILO EIOIMIS Lldi m ipolis fl S C ) „, t) 1 I eitt L ' psil 111 Vip Chi Sii,ma kLill n C usee at HELEN DOS WELL HOBBS (MR,S.. M. A.) Cleveland Ohio oente I ditoi r- tus Co d S[ onsor, ore Assoente The Folio; Ocr 1 R Id Spanish C luh D e u t s e It e eiein ; Ere hm in Oiient Hi in Conmittee .; lplit I amb h 1 elta, I ' l AlBERT L HOI T Peiii Pi ii,mi lpln Law Club THELMA FLOY HODGES Marrinsvillf A.B. Ufin Eta Sii ma Phi; Class- ieal Club, ROBERT HORTON Eliintingenn , .B. Chemistry Si.ijnia Alpha Epsilon; A 1 p b a C h i S i i; m a ; Varsity Golf; Le Cer- clc Erancaii. VIRGIN E lANIi HOFFMAN Brazil A.B. Eiif in , Ee Cercle Eraneals; English CUi b; Der Deutsche V e r e i n ; Chorus; Y.W.CA,; Jaek. ' on Club. FRED O. HOUGH MoQOn BS. Chemistry MAURINE HELEN HUFFMAN Walton A.B. English Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W.C.A. ELIZABETH HALL HUGHES Harrisburg. Pa. A.B. Freeh Alpha Chi Omeg.a; Le Cercle Francais. RACHEL EUGENIA A ' T,ARGAR[-T ■ HUNN HU.NTHK ; ' Elkhart Eudora, Kans. A.B. fo. ' ti ' fmlhm BS. Hofuc ilioiio ' iiic Indiana D,iilv Studeitt 1 H c) m L ' {-, c (.1 n o m c s Staif. ;j ,■■ ,:■■ I, • Club. jAME,a A. I[U,STON Eairmount A.B. History Acacia; Phi I ' ta Sig- naa; Alpha Plii Omv- ,i;a; Freshman Debate; internation.al Rela- tions Club; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Indiana Daily Student St.aff; Peace - Pipe Commit- tee. DOROTHY ROBERTA ISAACS Gillespie, HI. A.B. Mcifbeiiuities Sigma Kappa; Y. V,C. A; Euclidean Circle. BERNICE JAMES Pendleton A.B. Ei,i;l:-sh Alpha Lambda Delta; Eta Sigma Phi; W A. A. THOMAS JAMES Vincennes A.B. Chemistry HENRIETTA KAN Gary A.B. Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa; Pres- ident, lota Sigma Pi; Chemistry Club; Le Cercle Francais. JEAN KERNODEE Frankfort A.B. Psyrhohigy Kappa Kappa Gamma. NEESOiN JEAN Shelbyvitle A.B. Chem try Scabbard and Blade. DOROTHA WILLIAMS KARSELL (MRS. W. A.) Blooniington A.B. freiieh Pi Beta Phi; Taps; I. U. Revue ; Le Cercle Francais; ' Frills and Furbeloa ' s ; ,„YAV.C,| - , ' Jl ' ' ' ' j||i ' ' ' ' |f CEEDA EETEl KIGHTLINGERi „| Elwood ' ,i|ii ' ,||j! ' . ' - . Koeiolo, y ' Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Secrelary - Treasurer, .i:eioloe.y Club; Coed l ano ; Vice-President, Kappa Phi: Chorus. THOMAS A.: JFAr- ill ' Campbcllsbni g A.B. Chemistry Der Deutsche N ' ereln; Scabbard and Blade; Chess Club; Chorus. HAROLD LAWRENCE KASSENS East Chicago ' B.S.. Physies President, Radio Club; Alpha Ph i Omega; Plavsics Club. : n,. GERALD E. KING |. Angola if B..S. Chemistry Phi Delta Theta; Al- pha Chi Sigma; Scab- bard and Blade; In- terfraternity Council. IfAEBERT JOHNSON Winchester A.B. Goeernii er t Y.M.CA, JOHN R. KEEEER Hannaaond i! B.S. Chemistry Si gm a Pi; ' a r s i t y Wrestling; Lc Cercle Francais. PAUL MORTON KINNEY Spencer A.B. Philvseijihy Der Deutsche ' ' erein ANN JOEINSON Crosvn Point A.B. loitrntliisni C;hi Omega; Theta J-o ' gma Phi; Indiana Daily Student Stall; Stitiology Club; Eng- lish Club, IRA N. KEEEOfiG. .IR. Ft. Wayne A.B. Gorernmenl Cosmopolitan C I u b; International R e 1 a- tions Club; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet. (ERBERT KLINCK I (i.gansport ; A.B. S r.V)  ,l;y resident. Alpha Kap- a Delta; Y.M.C.A, MARY ELIZABETH JOEINSON Leipsic A.B. History Y.W.C.A.; History Club; Coed Counselor. WILLIAM MORRIS KELL1 ' Goshen A.B. C iemislry Phi Kappa Psi; LU. Radio vXniiouiicer. iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii ELMER L. KOCH Indianapolis A.B. Chcwi. ' hy Ac:icia; Tr ea sure r, Phi. Kfa Sr i ma; Tlietn Kappa Psi; Si.t nia P.p- silon Tlicta; .A I p h a Pin Omega; Secretary, Y. M. C. A.; Dlm- Dcutscli e ' orL ' in; Fi-csliman Orientation C oinniitcec. ijjlill Mil IJIilll WILLIS H, JONES Vierom A.B. Mathewelies Delta Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Y.M.C.A.; Ituclidtan Circle. MARGARET KERKLING Bloonaington A.B. joiirihit ' isrn Alpha Omicron Pi; Theta Sigma Phi; . ' V, W.S. Council; Pub- licity Direetiit Uni S ' Orsity The itie W C. A. C iL I na Sen ior Km Mil C om niirtee Histor luh Alpha 1 imb li Delti Taps; Mi.itii I Olid Recognit on ' V Pan - Hellenie I leeu ti e Council (. i lent ation Assistiiit hull ana L )nl Si ude n i Staff B u r the Dead ' 1 he Old Maid . |i WANDA i ' l KODCHfV Gii |l ' A.B fl i oii j Der fyCUtselie ere n |l Histor) ( lub I n lish Club ijl illlillJlillllJilllllillilMlilllllMIMIMIIlt It s one thing tor a studetit ' ' ttJ make Theta Sigma Phi; it ' s another for a student to niake Phi Beta Kappa; but Virginia Coverdale of the Chi Omega k)dge is faced with the difficult task of combining the two into a really successful teaching career. MILDRED KRAFT Indianapolis A.h. English Der Deutsche Verein. CHARLES lOHNSTON ■ MACKRES Ft. Wayne A.B. Governmciif Alpha Phi Omega; Pi Sigma Alpha; Presi- dent, Cosmopolitan Club; Liternational Relations Club; Y.M, C.A. Senior Cabinet; Le Cercle Francais. ROBERT E. MILLION Monticello A.B. joilriillUsin Indiana Daily Stu- dent Staff. MARTHA MULL Shelby ville A.B. Chemhtry Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Iota Sigma Pi; Mortar Board; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Co-Chair- man, Freshman Ori- entation Committee; International Re- lations Club; W.A. A. ; Mortar Hoard Recognition; Taps; T. U. Revue . ANDREW G. OLOFSON Cranford, N. J. A.B. History Sigma N u ; Sigma Delta Chi; Board of Aeons; Union Board; llliiMi Blue Key; President, III jj: Dragon ' s Head; Edi- I I ' l ' ! ' ' tor. The liuliana Atli- htic Revie ' ; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Red Book Staff; The Folio Staff; Bore ' d Walk Staff; Numerals, Cross Country and Track; Editor-in-Chief, Indi- ana Daily Student. 44 MARGARET MARLEY Gosport A.B. History Zeta Tau Alpha; Pi Lambda Theta; His- tory Club; Interna- tional Relations Club; Le Cercle Francais; Coed Rifle Team; W. A. A.; Locke Prize Winner. DARLING MARIE MITCHELL Bloomington A.B. Social StiiJia Alpha Omicron Pi; Y. W. C. A.; W.A. A.; Lc Cercle Francais; History Club; Gov- ernment Club; Chor- us; Eiducation Club. MARY FRANCES MUNK Kendallville A.B. French Delta Phi Alpha; Der Deutsche Verein; Le Cercle Francais. ALFRED W. OL,SON Stnughton, Wise. . ' .B. C wjuistry Delta Upsilon. MARTHA MARTZ Bloomin.i ton A.B. Ei:.iilish Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Beta Kappa; Mor- tar Board; Alpha Lambda Delta; Theta Alpha Phi; Pi Lamb- da Theca; Mortar Board Recognition; Y. W. C. A.; De r Deutsche Verein; W. A. A.; D r a m a t i c Award, 19.iS; Rom- eo and Juliet ; Flel- oi.se and Abelard ; Flote! Universe ; Stage Door , FLOYD B. MITMAN, .IR. Huntington A.B. Chemistry Sigma Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Phi Lamb- da Upsilon; Scabbard and Blade; Interna- tional Relations Club; Y.M.C.A. EVAFI I.,OIS NASFI Bloomingtt n A.B. EngUsh Pi Lambda Theta; English Club; Lc Cer- cle Francais; Alpha Lambda Delta. MARTIN I AMES O ' NEILL Indianapolis A.B. Gcnriiin BURR E. LAWRENCE Hanna A.B, Mathematics Euclidean Circle; Phi Ija Sigma; Freshman Baseball. MARY C. McCANN Danville, dll. A.B. SocioJogy Kappa Alpha Theta; Alpha Kappa Delta; W.A..A.; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francais; I nteruational Rela- tion.s Club; Sociology Club. MARY ,)ANE MAXWELL MedaryviUe A.B. Sociirl Stmlics Alpha Lambda Delta; Y. W. C. A.; Der Deutsche Verein; His- tory Club. MYRTLE MOBERG South Bend A.B. History History Club; Der Deutsche Verein. MALCOLM NEGLEY Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry Y.M.C.A. lOFIN PAUL OVERMAN Bloomington B.S. Chemistry Kappa Kappa Psj; Pershing Rifles; Band. MARGARET |EAN KRIEGBAU.M Richmond . B. foil yfuilis ni Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Kappa Delta; Sociolgy Club; Indi- ana Daily Student Staff. CLAUDIA SUE LEININGER Al( ron A.B. Speech Pi Beta Phi; Theta Alpha Phi; President, Pleiades; Pan-Hellenic Council; Secretary- Treasurer, Taps; As- sociate Business Man- ager, Arbutus; Y.W. C.A. Council; Fresh- man Orientation Committee; Coed Counselor; Costume Director, University Theatre Staff; Bored Walk Staff; Le Cercle Francais; L U. Re- v u e ; Cabaret Show . ANN L. McCOLLEY Lebanon A.B. Physiolofiy W.A.A. Board; Y.W. C.A.; Hiking Club; (.!;oed Counselor; Archerv C ltib. PAUL L. MEACHAM Acton A.B. Journalism Phi Beta Kappa; Sig- ma Delta Chi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Indiana Daily Student Stafl ; Intra- mural Debate Cham- pion; Niezer Debate Awards; Senior Me- morial Committee; State Fair Student Staff; I.S.A. KATFIERINE MOHLER Scottsburg A.B. English Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francais; English Clid); Pi Lambda Theta; Phi Beta Kap- pa; Mortar Board Recognition. BYRON WINFIEED NEHER Muncie A.B. Chemistry F.LISE ALBERTA PARKE Soutlt Bend B.S. Home Economics Delta Gamma; Home Economics Club; Oceanldes. MARY ANN KUNK.EL Bluft ' ton A.B. Psycholo. y Kappa Alpha Theta; Taps; Le Cercle Fran- cais; S o p h o m r e Snowball Oueen; Pan- Hellenic C o LI n c i 1 ; Jackson Club; Mortal- Board Recognlcjon; I U. Revue ; Cab- aret Show ; Accent on Youth ; St.ige Door , NATHAN LIPSHUTZ Whiting A.B. Jonrmilisni Ads ertlsing Club; Indiana Dally Student Staff; Spanish Club. VIRGINIA FAYE McDANIEL Bloontington A.B. Speech Delta Gamma; Theta Alpha Phi; Taps; Der Deutsche Verein; Stage Door ; After Dark ; Lady of Let- ters . DOROTHY L. M,.E,NKE Huntingburg A.B. Home Ecafiovhcs Delta Delta Delta; Home Economics Club; Glee Club; Taps; W.A.A.; Y.W. C. A.; Cabaret Show . FORREST LACI-:Y FoLincaiii City A.B. Gorvi-fimviil History and Govern- nieiit CUih; Interna- tional Relati.on.s tllnb. Law Club; Pi Sit nia Alpha. J, CHESTER LONG Bloomington A.B. Chemistry JOHN McLEOD Bedford A.B. Journalism City Editor, Indiana Daily Student Staff; Night Editor, Sum- mer Student. JACK BARNETT MILLER Winslow A.B. Zoology : ' ! Delta Upsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M. C.A.; Interfraternlty Council. GAIL MICHAEL MORRIS Paoli A.B. Gorernrnerii LOIS NOFFKE Indlanapcjlis A.B. S ieech Taps; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counselor. HAZEL PARSONS L ug.eer A.B. Journalism Alpha Onticron Pi; Secretary, Tlieta Sig- ma Phi; Woman ' s Editor, Indiana Dally Student; Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Lambda Delta; Der Deutsclie W ' rein; Advertising Club; S e n I o r B r e a k f a s t CAimmittee; Pan-EIel- lenic Council; State Fair Student Staff; Freshman Orientation mittee. iii! ' CHARLES F. MOSS, JR. Salem i.B. Chemistry Nu; Phi Eta Phi L.ambda Upsilon. DAVID DW ' TGEIT OAK La Crosse A.B. Chemistry Y.M.C.A. liERNARD pf:c::k Brooklyn, N. Y. A.B. Hislory iSiiiiiiisiiiiiniiiliHiiiiiBiiSiii ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin A. IS. Chfilihlr Si,L;m,i Nu. lllllll!lllllll|IIIIIIIIHIIII!llllllllllllllllllllllilll|llllllllllll{ll[lllll[|lllllllll|lllinill|pillllllHlllllipi [Illlllll|lll|| lllllllllllllillliiii Ill SA ' MUn- ' H; ■ ' ■ ' ■ ■ ' ■ ■ ' :|0?IN ' KKiOX ■ l Af R ' ffcfK ' Ti ' MW. ' ' ■■■ ' ■: ' J I ' URCl ' Li; Sullivan Ni, ' , titac isn ' t the eight ball bchind w!.:in.:li v,-e find Martha Mull. That rii;:nilii:;id of books attests to her pro- ficiency in chemistry. Besides being prexy of Iota Sigma Pi, coed chemis- try organization, Martha is a member of Mortar Board, Taps, Y.W.C.A, Council anci Cabinet, International Relations Club, Der Deutsche Vcrein, and the Senior Tree-Planting Com- mittee. She also is co-chairman of the Freshman or ' entation program. KOSMMARY ,|ANI-; RliDENS New Albany . . A.B. Speech , Delta Delta Delia; 1 hjta Alpha Plli; Sec- I ' etar)-, Alpha Lanab- da Delta; PI Lambda Tlieta; Taps; Seete- tary, ]( |■ta Ijoard; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; W. A. A.; Pleiades; S e c r e t a r y, Senior Class; Nic7e|- Awatil; Bored Walk StalK; Bij; Ten S tv i m ni i n i: Queen; Coed Sponsor, ll.O.T.C; Orchestra; Dlfeettir, Cabaret SHow ; Direelnr, Jordan Rivet Re- V 11 c ; H o o s i e r Sehoolm.;ster ; Ac- cent on Youth ; The Old Maid ; Around die Corner ' ; Idote! Utti verse ; F.than Fronie ; Scai;;esioor ; M,iich Ado Abou t Nothing . PO« ' HK Frankfort A.B. Hhfon I.,a ' C lub; Mistor Club. CLAUDI; D. REl-SF Ft. Wayne U.S. Clh ' iun ry Hand. IdAZI ' I. ANN ROACH IjloonifieUl A.B. L.iiin Fta .Si ' irna Phi; Cl ass- ical Club; liuclidean t ircle. HARRY I RANR ; K.OBlNS Owensboro, Ky. A.n. En liib Cros - C o u n t r y ; Var,sity:Trnck; Daub- ers Club. A.B. Hi.hiry Al|alta d au C inei;; Fe C::ercle I ' raneai ' Jackson Clidj; He lory Club; Tap FTeshinan Debate. MIFDKFD RUTH REEVES Bloomini ton i.S. lUnuf lii-ii!n Uii(- Plii Omega Pi; Y, V, C.A.; Coed Cotmse- lor; Flome Eiconennics Club. Jk.AN RORINSON Michigan City A.B. Bot ' iny Sif;ma Kappa; Alpha Lambda Delta; W.A. A.; Y. X ' .C.A. Coun- cil; Le Cercle Fran- ' KIAPP i ' Santa Ana, Calif. A.B. Brnich Kap|T:i Kappa iainn WAL ' FER THO.MAS R IN EH ART. JR. Elkhart A.B. P r Zoso j ii Dolphin Cdub; Camp Counselors Club; . ALC. A,; V a r s, t y S inunnii;- I ki:di-kk,:k carl ROFHM lndian.ipoa,s A.n. S „vr Delta LlnMlon; S ipho- naore Ftiotball Man- aKcr. EORF,ST ROGERS WashingKtn B.S. Gvih-idl Bituvis DOROTHY LOUISE SCFIIEDLKR Creensbur A.B. S Hi„U,Ky Rappa Kappa tumtma. P.ETTY JANE SCULLY Gary A.B. EiikI ' I ' PI I ' .tta Phi; Alpha 1 amhda Delta; Eta Sij;ma Phi; Pi Lamb- da Theta; Mortar Poard Recognition; T, ps; A.W.S. Coun- cil; Jordan l l ' er R e V u e ; F. n ,n I i s h Club; Classical Club; Coed Couiaselor; Y.W. C.A. GERAEDINE CLENN SMIFFI Ft. Wayne A.B. L,iti!i P, lieta Phi; ETa Sig- ma Phi; Pi lambda Theta; Classical Cdub; Y.W.V.k. EDNA ELtZAbFITEl Id.TA FRANCES CI JY F. RUSSFLl. ROKRE ROLL Indi in.ipoli NeViTolJen, Minn. [ndianapoU ' J A.n. Hhtvry A.B. I.ufhi B.S. llnme Bcoiiomir Phi Omega Pi; Flome Leon om i cs CI u b ; Daubers Club; Ocean- ides; Y. V.C,A. i 1 1 : BETTY SCFJRADER Kokonio JAY VAE .SCEFILEING Indianapolis A.B. Gfoluay EdU.E ROBERT SCHNFdDFR Logan sport A.B. Colony A.B. SlK ' Cch Kappn Alpha Theta; Pan-Hcllcnic Council; T h c a Alp h a P In i ; T.ip.s; PleiadLs; The Alpha Tau Omega; liconomics Club; In- Soli i .Souih ; Fili- Sophomore Football ictnalional Relations ) ni ; •■The Old Manager; Y.M.C. A. Club. M, i d ; Holel Uni- Cabinet. verse ; Ci ba ret Show . RUTIT SEIAKKS Indianapolis A.B. Eui[lr.h Der Deirtsche Verein; Y.W.C.A. .MARIAN H. SHARP Mil ford ,- .;}. ; . . M-r Chi Omega; Pleiades; Le C.ercle I ' ra ilea is; 11 i SI or y Club; Pan. Ihl ' enic Council ; Re- publican Club; Y.W, C .A, (.ERTRUDli M. SMITFl lUoomington . .B. So. loln y Ip.lii Kappa Delta; ROSIiMARY SM!TF[ T. rre Haute A.B. Soc o o.i v IPi Beta Phi; Interna- tional Relations Club; Y.W.C.A. JOSEPH R, SIMS Intii.anapolis l.7i. P.:yrholii. y RUTEI CFIAREOTTE SMITFl bloominglon A.B. Vvnich Kappa Aljaha Theta; President, A.W.S.; Vice-Presidem, Senior Cilass; Mortar lioattl; Junior Prom Com- mittee; Treasurer, Y.W.C.A.; Varsity Women ' s Debale; Tau Kappa Alpha; Pi Lambda Thet.i; Presi- dent, Alpha L.imbda Delta; President, Lc Cercle Francais; Co- Cdiairman Coetl Coun- seling. MARY E. RUSSELL Anderson A.B, lounii lh) ' ! Alpha Chi Omega; Advertising Cilub; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Lc Cercle Fran- cais; Y.W.CA. ARNOLD MILTON SCHREtDLR brtiokline, lass. A.B. Chcniiilry Fi)er IDeiitsche Verein; Chemistry Club. KENNETH M. SMARTZ Tndianapeilis A.B. History Phi Delta Kappa; ti: rory Club. Il ' !ll|llllipi|lill|ll|i|!|l llllli! VIRGIL HOWARD SMITH , Gorydon A.B. Goi ' i ' rfniu ' Nf l..m Club, ). A. SANDERS, IR. Auburn A.B. Malhemulifi Phi Kappa Psi; Presi- d e n 1, Intertratei ' nity Council; Euclidean Circle, FREDRICK PAUL. SCH WEEKS Independence, W.o. A.B. Groloxy BETTY ALICE SMITH Indian.-polis A.B. L.iliir Chi Omega; lYa Sig- ma Phi; Dauber, Club; Classical Club; W.A.A.; YAV,C., ' . FARE A. SNYDER ClrawfordsviUe A.B. Gfiri ' nnni. ' ii Alpha Tail Ciiuega. SA ' i ' IF ' fUnumglon A.B. Gh,-:iii, n ' beta Tliela I ' i, ELLIS ii. SCRIPTURli Cireensbiirg A.B. So io!,r;.r M.iogv Club; .M, EETTY MAE SiMITH Indianapolis A.B. Suivo oyr Pi i ' .ela Pill, o. ogy Club. WALTER 15, SPi (d R Albion A.B. Gmlo.Kr ;ma Cj.nrmia I Ion. ii2i! i::3tiii . ' fiiiiiiii llllillllllliiliiliiijiii:; JULIA SPECTOR Ease Chicago A.B. Hhtory History Club. Betty Schrader, who wears a kite and a five-armed star, suddenly switched her attention from drama- tics and school-teaching to cub re- porting and home management when she accepted a diamond from Indiana Daily Student Editor Andy Olofson. MARJORIE MARIE STOCKS ,: Ne burgli,::! ,, ' ' A.B. History HAROLD D. STUMP Auburn A.B. Hhtory History Club. LULA FRANCES SPEER Nortli Vernon B.S. Home Eronomics H o m e E c o n o m i c s Club; Newmnn Club; Coed Rifle Team; Y. C.A. ; Cosmopol- itan Club; W ' .A.A. ALEXANDER G. ST. PAUL Gary jI .B. Pyyclmlony Glee Club. ROBERT R. STURGEON Upland A.B. Economics Phi Beta Kappa; Board of Aeons; Union Board; Senior Siwash Committee J Editor, Red Book;; President, Y.M.CA.; Economics Cittb; Der Detitsche Verein; Band; Interna- tional Relation.s Club; Flame Club; Phi Eta Sigma. ;: MARIE L. STEGEMEIER Indianapolis A.B. Gcrmnn Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Phi A.lpha; Der Deutsche Verein; Bored Walk Staff. JOHN R. STROUSE Evimsville A.B. English Phi Gamma Delta: ' C a b a r e t Show ; Taps. DORIS MAE TAYLOR Pendleton A.B. la fill Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Lambda Theta; Eta Sigma Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Mor- tar Board Recogni- tion; W.A.A.; Presi- dent, Clas,sical Club; Euclidean Circle; Tree Planting Com- mittee; Coed Coun- selor. 1 ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON Lin ton A.B. Gorcniiiinii Delta Tau Delta; A ' ai sity Eootball. CLARENCE G. STUCKWISCH Seymour A.B. Chemistry Chemistry Club; Phi Lambda U p s i 1 o n ; Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa. MARY IDA TAYLOR Tcrre Haute A.B. English RUTH DOLORUS TETER (MRS. E. A.) Bloomington B.,S. Home Economics iHome Economics Club. ANNE TOSTI Bloomington ' A Ji. Home Economics RUTH WALDBIESER - Indianapolis A.B. Joiiriialiym Le Cercle Erancais; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Y.W.C.A. JOHN D. WIDAMAN Warsaw j{|||||j ' A.B. Government ii ' i,E.eta Theta Pi; Var- sity Eootball- 48 ' W- ' AND ALINE EUGENIA THOMAS HiUsboro A.B. History Kappa Phi; EEstory Club; Cosmopolitan Club; International Relations Club; Y.W. C.A. MARY ELIZABETEI TRAYLOR Evansville A.B. Eniitis j Kappa Kappa Gamma. JOHN R. WALTER Mt. Vernon A.B. Hisfory Alpha Tau Omega; Kappa Kappa Psi; Le Cercle Erancais; His- tory ' and Government Club; Cabaret Shosv . ROBERT POOLE WILKINS ' . |i, Hammond I ' , A.B. History History Club. ROY H. THOMP,SON, JR. Bloomington A.B. C iemistry Phi Lambda ' Upsilon: Rifle Team; Y.M.CA. CHARLOTTE UEBELHOER ,: Ft. Wayne A.B. Dietetics Delta Gamma; Treas- ttrcr, Pleiades; Taps; Cabaret Show ; Ar- butus Beauty Queen; Home Economics Club. ANNETTE TY WALTERS Jasonville A.B. Sociology Kappa Alpha Theta; Pleiades; Taps; Theta Alpha Phi; W.A.A.; Coed Sponsor, R.O.T. C; Dance Director, Jordan Rl ' er Re- ' ue ; L )ance Director, C a b a r e t Show ; Oceanides. WYNONA HUCHETTE WILKINS Elammond A.B. History tc) ' Club, EDYTHE GALE ' THORNTON Ft. Wayne A.B. l.ilin Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Taps; Dance Group; Sopho- more Editorial Assist- ant, Arbutus; W.A.A. Board; Y.W.C.A. Council; Oceanides; Secretary, Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club; iiFre ' shnian Orientation ' Committee; President, ivjortar Board; Senior Invitations Commit- tee, ELIZABETH ANNE ; ' iV NFLEIT ' JiGarrett A.B. History Pi Lam. b da Theta; History Club; Le Cer- cle Erancais; Y.W. ■C.A. ,: ' . ' ■ MAX ROBERT WASILEWSK Gary A.B. T.oolo. ' iy Newman Club; Y.M. C.A. ili ' ■ ROBERT E. WILLIAMSON ! Muncie A.B. Gocernmeiit .Sigma Nu; Indiana Daily Student StafI ' ; Sphinx Club; Sigma Delta Chi. WESLEY D, tImmins Lowell, Mass A.B. History ..MARK E ' . TOMES Gary A.B. Botany Band. A-IARY RA ' GLAND VICK Bloonaington A.B. Vrench Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Erancais; English Clul,i. ■ , HELEN WEATHERWAX I51o.:)mingtop A.B. loinimtism ij Kappa Alpha Theta; Theta Sigma Phi; Edi- tor-in-chief, Indiana Daily Student; Tlie Folio Staff; Y.W.C. A. Council; Peace- Pi p e Committee; Treasurer, 1-mglish Club; International Relation, s Club; A 1 tt m n i Magazine Staff; State Fair Stu- dent Staff. JULIAN P. WIENER New York City A.B. ' Zoology Phi Beta Delta. JOHN E. VISHER Bloomington A.B. Government President, Tau Kappa Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega; Pi Sigma Al- pha; Varsity Debate; Varsity Sv, ' imm!ng; Chairman, To w n Hall; International Relations Club; Un- ion Board; Blue Key; Peace - Pipe Commit- tee. |i ALFRED GRANT Mi ' HITE A ' lt. Vernon A.B. Jonnnilism Advertising- Club; Band. GEORGE N. WILSON Gary A.B. History HARRY [, TOMLINSON South Bend .A.B. Gorernmi ' nl Sigma Nu; Pi Sigma Alpha; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Freshman De- bate; Varsity Debate; -Meyer Award Win- ner; Band; Interna- tional Relations Club; Cosmopolitan Club. EDWARD LEWIS WADDLE Somerset, K ' - A.B. Political Science Alpha Tau Omega; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Jordan River Re- y u e ; Cabaret Show . REX K, 1} ' HITEMAN Logansport A.B. Chemistry Y.M.CA, .VI ON A TANE WILSON alparaiso A.B. Cticmisiry Phi Mii; Pi Lambda Theta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Iota Sigma Pi; Mortar Board; Intra- m u t a 1 Elead ; Presi- dent, W.A.A.; Mortar Board Recognition; Pan-I-Te)lenic Council; Der Deutsche ' Y ' rein; Chemistry Club; Co- ed Rifle Tc.iiU; Coed Band: Orchestra; Y. W.C.A- Cabinet; Co- ed C ounselor: Senior Siwasli Committee. m 111 ' ' ' i lLsriN ' j[i Bov. ' lii-,,, I,, ..M-, K Vic;;- I- ■; ;,i.Jt ' ;t. .y; rclc c.ih-.r, I tin C!i.il-i:, Y. ' ft ' .C. Coed Criiin;;c!or. l-RANCES M. WISEMAN Li ' !ooniin, Ccin A.B. S i.v, I,e CiTclc FfLiEic is; Taps; University T]ic- Bu St;lif. MARIORIE WRORK Slidburn A.B. Sociology Alpha Omicroii Pi; Y.W ' .C.A.; Sociolosy Club; Jackson Club. MARGARET MONROE ■Af,i;R Fort Branch A.B. Specli ' i ' nia Kappa; YAV ' .C. A. ' Council; A.W.S. C o :il. FRANK EMERSON YOOER Mil ford A.B. Goi ' tTiitncii Flying Club. JAY A. YOUNG 1-1 LUU.in,l UHI B.S. Cln ' uihlry Si,L;ma Pi; Alpha Clu -Sigma; Band; Y.M.C. A, ; Bored Walk StalT; Orchestra. CORA V. ZASI-R I iuli,in:ip :ilis A. IS. C jnins ry W. A ■ ' ■ ' ■ Club; R.O. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIII if fff nftfff Paul Scott, Joan Bartholomew, Andy Olofson, Frances BlUman, and George Schmidt demonstrate the approved Arts and Sciences manner of spending leisure time. iifffitfi imn mun liiuiiMTEs THOMAS M. BROWN Muncie A.B, ChcniiKtry BONNIE MAE BRYANT Bloomingron J,,S, lionic licoiioinu s phi 0.mcga Pi; M ,)mc ' Hconomics Club; Y, W.C.A. Council. JOHN ROBKRT CODY Loi;;insport A.B. Goi i ' viiiuciit BDTTH ENGLISH BloomingUin A.B. Home Iico::o)it ' ics Mortar BojrJ; Vice- President, O m i c r o n Nu; Vice - President, Alpha Lambda Delta; President, Y.W.C.A.; Mortar Board Recog- nition; W.A.A.; Coed RilleTcam; President, Home Economics Club; Co-Clinirnian, Coed Counselors; Co- Chair m a n ; A. W. S. Parties. LAWRENCE F. FISHER, JR. South Bend A.B. Chciiihtry Thcta Chi. HENRY _M. FRENCH Bioomingron A.B. Cht ' iui try. Ddtii Tau Delt;i. ROBERT L. GREENWOOD Washington A.B. H sfary P h i G a 111 m a D e i L a Frcs h m a n FuotbaM, Fresh m a n T r a c k , Hijitory Club. EDWARD GARFIELD HIGH Indianapolis A.B. C ' J.)fn i-s ry Kappa A ! ]i h a P s i ; ,i rcsh m a n T r a c k; l ' Chemistry Club. VIRGINIA [. HOFFMANN Indianapolis A.B. Home Ecorfouifrs Y. W.C.A.; H ome .Hconomics Club. MARY ELLEN MAY I.MoumingCon A.B. lltniic ErojJOfJfii ' : Chi Ome; a; Le Cer- cle I-raneai.s; Home Economics Club; Y. W.C.A. GLEN O ' LAVERTY Rockville A.B. Jouruiilisii! Delta Tau Delta; Red Book Staff; Indiana Daily Student Start ' ; Bored Walk .Staff; Advertising Club. ERNEST H. PRICE Waldron A.B. Chcmhtry Pershing Rifles; Y.M. C.A. ELIZABETH R,ICF Monticcllo A.B. Goi cDinwul Pi IJiXa Phi; Alpha Lantbda Delta; Le Cerclc Erancais; Coed Land; W A.A.; Y.W. C.A.; Pi Sigma AL pha; A.W.S. Coui-icil Mortar Board, SA.MUEL STEWART ROBINSON lnjLL;i,;polii A.B. liisfory Delta Upsih.)n; Persh- in,! Rilks. CHARLES D. SANDS Warren A.B. Gouvriinii-ul 50 PAUL F. SCOTT Tcrrc Haute A.B. }i !iniu! ii f Delia Chi; Sphinx C.lnh: ::.|.,n|) ;j„d Cros- eeii:.;, Ii Ji,.wi.i J )aily Student Si .id; Bored Walk SliI-T. (OHN [. SIMMONS CuU ' cr A:B. Clh-iij sfyy RUTH EUGENIA SMITLI Frankfort A.B. Home liconontics Omicron Nu; Home F conomics Club. JACK M. THARPE Plainfield A.B. Goiemnicnt Freshman Basketball F r ey h m a n Baseball Le Cercle Francai Law Club. ROBERT L. MARY JANE THOMPSON T RAVER Fremont Stiuth licn.d . A.B. Efixliih A.B. ilunic I ' .cunumit ' Y. W. C. A.; Home E c o 110 m I c .s Club; Chorum. IF THEY DON ' T MAKE GOOD, IT ' S ' TAPS First Row Homer Hire Sally Camp Joe Crouch Martha Martz Vera Mae Massev Second Row Ty Walters Gaylord Allen Mary Beth Hunt Dick Haskett Betty Schrader Third Row Neal Gilliatt Virginia Faye McDaniel Philip Correll Mary Brumblay George Blair Fourth Row Rosemary Redans Richard Shores Jane Dillin Paul Boxell Peggy Leininger 52 FOR THESE STAGE-STRICKEN SOULS George Blair President Gaylord Allen Vice-Presiderti Vera May Massey Secretary Philip Correll Treasurer nm Seeking to give recognition to students outstanding in any phase of dramatics work, ten Indiana University students founded the Indiana Alpha chapter of Theta Alpha Phi, national honorary dramatic organization, on St. Valentine ' s Day, 1922. Prof. Lee Norvelle, head of the Division of Speech, is national president of the organization. At least Sopho- more standing, C plus scholarship, and either talent in acting or outstanding work in campus theatrical activities are requirements for membership. Play writing, radio drama, technical assistance, publicity, and business man- agement compose the types of work other than acting which qualify one for membership. The University Theatre, organized by Theta Alpha Phi in 1932, presents from four to six plays a year, while the Experimental Theatre, founded two years ago, serves as a testing ground for embryo campus playwrights and actors. Every spring the organization selects the most outstanding actor and actress of that year in University Theatre productions, and their names are placed on a plaque in the lobby of the library. The awards went to Gaylord Allen and Vera Mae Massey in 1938. Since Theta Alpha Phi is primarily for upperclass- men, it founded Taps, junior dramatic organization, to recognize beginners. To become a member of Taps, one either must compete in acting eliminations or gain recog- nition through campus theatre work. A feature event of Theta Alpha Phi ' s year is the Cabaret Show, which alternates a floor show with danc- ing. The group also aids in sponsoring the State Drama Conference. Marjorie Weaver, ' 36, moving picture star, was initiated this year because of her dramatics work both in the University and in the cinema. Hoagy Car- michael, I. U. ' s famous composer of popular songs, was granted honorary membership also. 53 Dr. Lee Norvelle, head of the Speech Department and Director of the University Theatre Troc faces the man whom he had killed and thrown in the river Assistant Director Foster Harmon in the make-up room George Blair, assistant to the Director of the Theatre Garth and Esdras await the opening of the door during a tense moment in Winterset . raiVERSITY THEATRE 54 Dr. Lee Norvelle, director of the University Theatre, is one of the outstanding college men in the field of drama. He is national president of Theta Alpha Phi, dramatic honorary, and is president of the American Educational Theatre Association. He was elected to membership this year in the National Theatre Conference, a group consisting of the directors of the twenty-five leading university and civic theatres in the country. Dr. Norvelle served as judge of state drama contests at Hunting- ton, West Virginia, and at Columbus, Ohio, this spring. At the na- tional convention of Theta Alpha Phi at the University of Utah he lectured on modern drama. In addition to his professorial duties, he found time this year to adapt Many Mansions, last year ' s Broad- way success, for civic and university theatres. Prof ' s outstanding trait is his lively sense of humor. A dramatic scene unfolds in Winterset . . . the police- man stands puzzled as the orator shouts and waves the flag . . . Mio attacks Judge Gaunt for his famous court decision . . . V. A. Smith, director of scenery for the Theatre . . . Death is portrayed vividly by the cast of Winterset . Three faculty members aid the director in carrying out the many details that arise in the University Theatre. Foster Harmon is assistant director of the main group and acts as Di- rector of the Experimental Theatre. George Blair is assistant to the director. V. A. Smith designs scenes for the Theatre and has constructed several excellent sets for the cast. His work in Winterset this year was particularly outstanding. The University Theatre, under the direction of Dr. Lee Norvelle, presented a series of six well-balanced productions this season. Silas, the Chore Boy opened the series with a melodramatic flair. The villain and the heroine paced back and forth across the stage to the delight of an appreciative audience. Stage Door was the next of- fering of the Theatre staff, followed by Much Ado About Nothing . A superlative presentation of Maxwell Anderson ' s Winterset marked the highlight of the season ' s plays. The Jordan River Revue , a student-written musical, and A Murder Has Been Ar- ranged completed the season ' s work. 55 A domestic scene in the gay nineties fashion in Silas, the Chore Boy . . . Bonnell and McCart- ney wax melodramatic . . . Redens looks perturbed in Much Ado About Nothing . . . Two reput- able characters from the same production . . . Silas threatens to shoot the villain if he so much as moves. A technical staff of students carries out the many details incidental to the presentation of the University Theatre pro- ductions. Mary Beth Hunt and Lois Noffke were in charge of make-up for all productions, and Phyllis Landis and Peggy Leininger were responsible for the costumes of the cast. Ray Carter was in charge of lighting and assisted the faculty staff in preparing sets. 56 The many business problems that arise from the activities of the University Theatre are settled by a student staff. Neal Gilliatt acted as the Senior business manager of the staff during the past season. He was assisted by Ruth Ferris, Al Harrison, and Fred Brooks. The publicity for all the plays was handled by David B. Richardson and Margaret Kerkling. The business staff had complete charge of tickets, programs, and publicity. Redens and Stewart receive guests in Stage Door . . . The girls spend a quiet morning at home . . . Ma rtz and Massey in a serious mood . . . J. G. Nichols and Vera Mae Massey portray Dr. Randall and his daughter Terry . . . Mary Ann Kunkel, as Jean , displays her portrait to friends. K h. , Il I i|iiiH ABARE ' lSNlpjW ' DEL I u is the quartet with |,he ihislmI j ' jtijckln -? ... . Bctcy Jo HaJnTOi 4 ' - ' ' ' ' - ' Hedcflf-s riral for cigarette trilde ' • ■L■n K- - . Danny, the dibunutive, liwdlc, stands aghast — can it tei ' itiiicc . . . Screwballs Shenvdod and ! ' !■ contort theit way tht ' ottgh ' ' hit ' e o ' I I foo, — with gestures , . l W Koster taps lightly a d| Lhicl ' . . . Redens has her prep||[||||i)mciiis, too, gents. . . , .■ , ?- ' -?■■ rr M i. s -. «? iW - m JORDAN RI R REVUE, OR HOW TO ELECT A PROM QUEEN — The chorus demands quiet hours! ... Is there a corn plaster in the house? . . . Bruno Ranch in one of his hghter moods . . . Principals Steinmetz and Keller look love silly, while comedians Mas- sey and Sherwood act window sill-y . . . Rosemary Redens, able director of Cabaret Show and Jordan River Revue ... Ye Grand Einale . , . Dickie Reed tears hair J ' hile trying not to succumb to wiles M ticket sellers Redens - Kunkel. «f iiiipi  - , 1 ■r COA p YO OUc Urr ur .t - p.R r- ? ' f f mSi aj-:. Xi l-Cfffff Hon TO LQVC IN 8Y TCN ' ' for JORbfin OOOLC) Ut  fl lC n ffCy UC WOMEN ' S DEBATE TEAM; Front Row: Mary Beth Hunt, Sophia Nicholas, Jeanette Strayer Back Row: Geneva Senefeld, Ruth Adler MEN ' S DEBATE TEAM: Front Row: John Houghton, Edward Hutton, Montford Mead, Paul ' Meacham, Marvin Miller. Back Row: Melvin Eggers, Clyde Blocker, Rich- ard Haskett, William Gragg, Fred Capp. FRESHMAN DEBATE TEAM: Front Row: Robert Doxtator, Suzanne Moore, Robert DeMoney, Joan Bonsib, Robert Gates. Back Row: Zeke Shapiro, Margaret Fargo, Gerald Hutton, Mary Susan Stull, Rex Joseph. DIRECTOR OF DEBATE: Robert B. Huber. Intramural debate winners Lewis Smith and Jack Fairchild. Donald E. Bowen, Assistant Director of Debate. Intramural Debate runners-up Walter Rinehart and William Gragg. ■•■ ' sSt 1 % Indiana ' s men ' s Varsity debate team closed the season by winning over Purdue and Chicago at the Big Ten Conference Tournament in April. These victories gave them a tie for fourth place in the Con- ference standing. As a preliminary to the season, the team engaged in the Manchester College Invitational Tourney and there met William and Mary College, Western State Teachers College, Hobart College, and the University of Florida. At these meets the question debated was: Resolved, That the Federal government should cease use of public funds, including credit, to stimulate business. In the fall round of non-decision debates which were not recorded in conference standing, Indiana debated against Michigan, Ohio State, and Illinois on the question: Resolved, That the United States should form an alliance with Great Britain. As a re- sult of the forty-five debates participated in by the squad, men chosen as having outstanding qualities in thinking, personality, and leadership ability were Paul Meacham, Marvin Miller, Melvin Eggers, Ed- ward Hutton, and Montford Mead. The women ' s Varsity debate squad participated in an independent part of the Big Ten Conference. In its fall season the squad met Northwestern, Illi- nois, Purdue, and Ohio State in all types of debate, including radio, open forum, and the conventional Oxford style. A new type of debate was carried out when all the conference schools gathered at North- western in legislative assembly for the purpose of answering the question, What should be the status of the married woman in industry? Speeches and discussions in small groups in legislative assembly with a final radio discussion ( ro. included. Outstanding recognition for excellence was awarded to Geneva Senefeld, Ruth Adler, and Jea- nette Strayer. With eighty teams participating in intramural debate on the subject: Resolved, That athletic scholarships should be awarded to outstanding ath- letes, the Delta Upsilon team, composed of Jack Fairchild and Lewis Smith, emerged as winners. Wil- liam Gragg and Walter Rinehart of South Hall won the runner-up position. The men ' s and women ' s Freshman debate squad were created primarily to give collegiate experience in forensics in preparation for Varsity debate participa- tion. The Freshman squads participated in the Man- chester College Invitational Tourney in the B division, winning fourteen out of twenty debates. Teams from Notre Dame, Northwestern, Western State Teachers College, and Purdue were among those participating. Several members of the Freshman squad were active in a novice tournament at Franklin College. 61 First Row Jeanette Strayer Dick Haskett Bill Bloom Geneva Senefeld John Visher Second Row Paul Meacham Jane Dillin Ruth Smith Stanley Valinet -3a., Till KiPPI ALPHA John Visher Harry Tomhnson Geneva Senefeld _. President Vice-President -Secretary-Treasurer Tau Kappa Alpha was established in 1908 to meet the need for a forensic honorary in Indiana. It was con- ceived by a group of undergraduate students from De- Pauw, Wabash, Butler, Indiana, and Notre Dame who met in Indianapolis to carry out their plans. In 1914 it was extended to include individual college chapters, and the next year the Indiana chapter was founded. Tau Kappa Alpha honors only those students who have completed two years of college work and two years of active participation in forensics. The limitations of this field confine the membership of the organization to a select group. Each spring the fraternity honors outstand- ing debaters with a speech banquet. The Indiana Intra- mural Debate Tourney also is under its sponsorship. 62 TALK FAST-THERFS A PRETTY KEY TO RE HAD! Radio, Indiana ' s newest experiment, already is one of its most rapidly expanding fields. Last September Robert Allen was given charge of the department. This was the first time that a full-time instructor had been employed in this type of work at Indiana. Under Allen ' s guidance Indiana ' s rise to a top position in the radio field has been meteoric. The top was reached when Indi- ana was invited to join the select group of the University Broadcasting Council comprised of Chicago, Northwest- ern, and DePaul Universities. In joining the Council, Indiana became the fourth school in the country to have regularly scheduled programs over the networks. Four programs were presented weekly over station WIRE. The educational angle was considered in the Sunday Morning Hour, which featured faculty members editorializing the news. Raymond Beights and ensemble proved to be one of the most popular ensembles on the air. An unusual program was broadcasted from the Fire- side Bookshop every Thursday afternoon when Chauncey Sanders and Ralph Collins of the English department in- formally reviewed current books. The Student Variety Hour given by the Hoosier Radio Workshop furnished the fourth type of program. The program was broad- casted from the University Commons and featured a campus band and interviews with students. During the year several spot broadcasts were made. President Wells ' inauguration was broadcasted over two nation-wide hook-ups; the Band Benefit Ball and Junior Prom were broadcasted over WIRE. The aim for the future of radio work at Indiana lies not so much in starting new programs, says Robert Allen, but in perfecting the present programs so as to bring more prestige to Indiana University. The Beights Ensemble . . . Sun- day Morning Hour . . . Book re- views from the Fireside Bookshop . . . The Student Variety Hour. THESE GIRLS WILL DO WRITE RY YOU First Row Hazel Parsons Betty Lou Fralinj Helen Weather- wax Mary Aldred Second Row Ann Johnson Jeannette Dice Virginia Cover- dale Margaret Kerk- ling 64 -THEIR MAKEUP JUST FITS THE TYPE! Mary Aldred President Virginia Coverdale Vice-President Helen Weatherwax Treasurer Hazel Parsons Secretary THETit HMil PHI Oddly enough, the distinguishing characteristics of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalistic sorority, is the annual dinner of revelation, better known as the Razz Banquet. This sorority, founded at the University of Washington on April 8, 1909, brought the searing in- fluence of the Delta chapter to Indiana in 1913. The Razz Banquet, tagged with the For Women Only placard, is an occasion at which women are filled with dread for their own secrets and filled with amusement and mock horror as incidents from the private lives of their friends are related with much gusto. To unite women engaging in or planning to engage in journalism, and to confer honor upon women who dis- tinguish themselves in journalism or letters, are the pur- poses of this organization. Active service on The Indiana Daily Student, a high average in journalism, and a definite intention to engage in the journalistic profession are the qualifications these ladies of the press must possess. Striking a more serious note, Theta Sigma Phis spon- sor annually their Matrix Table. The 400 women of the campus and local community were invited to the ban- quet this year to hear Marjorie Hillis, author of Live Alone and Like It , speak on Solitary Refinement . A spelling bee with Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic honorary for men, is an important item in the list of the chapter ' s activities, as is also the day when The Indiana Daily Student is edited by the chapter ' s members. The coed staff members take over all jobs, with Theta Sigs acting as executives. In the spring at Commencement time there is a reunion of all Theta Sigma Phis. 65 SAPPY SCRIBES SCRIBBLE SCUMMY SATIRES, First Row Tom Buck Jack Hemstock Tom Elrod Bob Johnson Second Row Lowell Freeland Paul Boxell Andy Olofson Frank Widner Third Row Paul Meacham Nathan Kaplan Sam Gordon Dave Richardson 66 SATURATING OUR SENSES WITH SURLIME SADISM Tom Buck Presideni Sam Gordon Vice-Prcsideiil Nathan Kaplan Secretary Andrew G. Olofson Treasurer mm UETA CHI If you want to disprove the maxim that journahsm is a poor man ' s game, just take a look at Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalistic fraternity. Not only is the orgnization ' s den the most luxurious quarters of any honorary, but Sigma Delta Chi throws such annual af- fairs as the Blanket Hop in the fall and the Gridiron Ban- quet in the spring to help fill its coffers. Nationally, the fraternity began at DePauw in 1909 and has spread mostly through the Midwest, superseding the Press Club at Indiana. Frank Mason, now head of NBC, installed the local chapter in 1926. A past national president is Prof. John E. Stempel, the group ' s adviser and head of the Department of Journalism. Eligibility for entrance is definite intent to enter the journalistic profession and evidence of intellectual ability in the field, usually shown by holding executive positions on The Indiana Daily Student. Patterned after the razz affair given annually in Washington, D. C, by Capital scribes, the fraternity ' s Gridiron Banquet pans all and sundry with skits and cross-examination. Other projects are the Blanket Hop, the proceeds of which buy I blankets for graduating lettermen, the $200 scholarship going to two Sophomores showing the most promise as journalists, monthly book awards for best stories in The Indiana Daily Student, the annual State High School Newspaper Contest, and lec- tures for journalism students given by prominent news- men. Things journalistic are discussed at the chapter ' s Tuesday luncheon meetings. 67 EDCIIDEABI CIRCLE clarence L. Anderson President Burr Laurence Vice-Presideni Leslie Cutler Secretary The Euclidean Circle is a club composed of faculty members and students who have had courses in advanced mathematics. Es- tablished in 1907, it replaced the old Physics-Mathematics Club, one of the first organizations on the campus. The purpose of the Euclidean Circle is to promote greater understanding between students and faculty members and to further stu- dent interest and experience in the field of mathematics. Under the faculty leader- ship of Prof. Williams, meetings are held the first Tuesday of each month. Front Row: Richard Dietricli, Prof. Arvin, Leslie Cutler, Clarence Anderson, Burr Lawrence, Prof. Wolfe, Prof. Williams. Second Row: Mr. Moore, Arleth Carvin, Eunice Hodges, Margaret Heller, Margaret Stump, Doris Allison. Third Row: Morris Binkley, Edwin Godfrey, Eugene Corner, Charles Goebel, Winifred Meyer. Fourth Row: William Deane, Lyman Kinnett, Gerald Rainford, Donald Tillotson. WE CANT FIGURE OUT THESE PROBLEM CHILDREN Front Row: Dr. Agnes E. Wells, Betty Jane Aungst, E. Holbrook Conklin, Betty Griffith, Clarenc Anderson, Dr. Cora B. Hennel, Richard Dietrich. Second Row: Perrin Scott, Jeanette Straub, Anna Case, Leonard Knight, Ernest Thompson. Third Row: Auburn Herron, Don Huckelberry, Carol Koerber, Bettye Ann Howard. JUNIOR MATH CLUB Holbrook Conklin President Betty Jane Aungst Y ice-President Betty Griffith Secretary-Treasurer Early last fall a group of students inter- ested in mathematics, but who had not had enough work to qualify for Euclidean Cir- cle, organized the Junior Math Club. For programs at their meetings they have talks, presented by professors and students, on mathematics and its practical uses. The organization is under the faculty super- vision of Dr. Agnes E. Wells. PHI BETA UM Professor Alfred C. Kinsey President Professor William T. Morgan Vice-President Mrs. Cecilia H. Hendricks Secretary-Treasurer Professor Grace P. Youns 1 _ ,. _ -r, , „, i.t T ■ t txecntive (committee Professor Chauncey M. Louttit J Phi Beta Kappa not only is the highest of Greek letter fraternities but also is the oldest, having been founded in 1776. In 1875 women were re- ceived as members for the first time, and since then they have constituted a large percentage of the membership of the organization. The organization upholds fraternity, morality, and literature as three principles subordinate only to the fundamental requirement of scholarship. Annually it has two banquets, one in the fall and one in the spring, at which newly-elected members are initiated. Phi Beta Kappa is represented only in schools that award an A.B. degree, and it is accepted everywhere as the highest attainable honor. Phi Beta Kappa always distinguishes the superior from the good, and at Indiana it considers only candidates for the A.B. degree who rank in the highest ten per cent of their class and who meet specific requirements of residence and course. MEMBERS Mary Elizabeth Aldred Ruth L. Alexander John C. Andressohn Frank M. Andrews Warren Edward Baker Joseph A. Batchelor F. Lee Benns Lillian Gay Berry Donald M. Binkley Morris E. Binkley Ray Borland Samuel E. Braden Herman T. Briscoe Robert C. Brown William Lowe Bryan Samuel T. Burns Fienry H. Carter Ralph E. Cleland Ralph L. Collins Jotilda Conklin David M. Cook Eugene Sherwood Corner Virginia Coverdale Harold H. Crabill Edgar R. Cumings S. Frank Davidson Schuyler C. Davisson Cynthia Anne Demaree Jane Harrell Dillin Loretta K. Doerflein Wallace W. Douglas Clarence E. Edmondson Edna Hatfield Edmondson Frank K. Edmondson Frank R. Elliott Frances Hankemeier Ellis Logan Esarey Ralph Esarey Arthur L. Foley Carl G. F. Franzen Jesse J. Galloway Bernard C. Gavit Charles Gale Goebel Croan Greenough Montana Grinstead Hester J. Gruber Clausin D. Hadley Ford P. Hall Robert Nathaniel Hallstead Ulysses S. Hanna Mabel M. Harlan Paul M. Harmon Edgar Allen Hawk Cecilia Hennel Hendricks Coral B. Hennel John B. Hill Richard B. Hudson Mason E. Hufford Robert T. Ittner William E. Jenkins Charlotte Jones Alexander C. Judson Henrietta Kan Winthrop N. Kellogg Alfred C. Kinsey Albert L. Kohlmeier Agnes Duncan Kuersteiner O. Wilma Langdon Arthur B. Leible Hedwig Gruen Leser Ernest J. Leveque Melvin S. Lewis Alfred R. Lindesmith Ernest M. Linton Ross F. Lockridge Ross F. Lockridge, Jr. William N. Logan Marion L. Lohman Chauncey M. Louttit Clyde A. Malott Grace N. Martin Martha Martz Velorus Martz Mary Jane Maxwell Paul Lincoln Meacham Frederick J. Menger Bernard W. Miller Taulman A. Miller Mark C. Mills William J. Moenkhaus James E. Moffat Anna Lovina Mohler Mable Katherine Mohler William T. Morgan George D. Morris David M. Mottier John H. Mueller Lewis N. Mullin Burton D. Myers Dorothy Nordman John B. Patton Fernandus Payne Josephine K. Piercy Rolla R. Ramsey Arthur T. L. Robertson James J. Robinson David A. Rothrock Kate Rutherford Chauncey E. Sanders Mary E. Schell Theodore Frank Schlaegel, Jr. Verne L. Schuman Edward D. Seeber Charles J. Sembower Daniel G. Sherwood Donald A. Smalley Henry L. Smith Ulysses H. Smith Grover T. Somers Guido H. Stempel Myrtle Emmert Stempel Henry T. Stephenson Selatie E. Stout Martha Thompson Strong Clarence George Stuckwisch Robert Ray Sturgeon Doris Mae Taylor Stith Thompson William D. Thornbury Edythe Cale Thornton Kenneth B. Thurston Prescott W. Townsend Rosann R. Van Valer Henry B. Veatch Stephen S. Visher Paul Weatherwax Agnes E. Wells Kenneth P. Williams Hugh E. Willis Lester Lewis Wilson Harold E. Wolfe Elmer O. Wooley Edgar L. Yeager Bert E. Young Grace Philputt Young 69 m: rw . M 1 ' • 1 ' ? - -_ y ' ftSf ■m ' l SSS- ' I :29onalO:3 0night . . . Keep your shirt on, old chap . . . Propaganda from the Y ... Assembly Hall, B. T. (before ter- mites) . . . Dean Edmondson waits for a crack to get across to rhinies . . , Dean Muel- ler gives wornan ' s viewpoint . . . Make checks payable to . . . You can ' t get along without a (take one) Bored Walk, Arbutus, Music Series ticket. Daily Student . . . Guessing when you were last vaccinated for smallpox . . . Here a fine . . . To your right the Ihll Bookstore, home of the bait sys- .,.,-••«« ' ' T . s % « r- ■ g8 - ' i A f tem . . . Waiting for Comp- troller ' s office to open. V , %i - f f li B n II if r  i 1.1  JIIHI fr  E ijjtll- ' 1% ■ Ai J •• i: Right: PROFESSORS N. L. SILVERSTEIN H. C. SAUVAIN Below: ASSISTANT DEAN CHARLES A. MURRAY Above: PROFESSOR EDWARD E. EDWARDS Left: PROFESSORS JAMES E. MOFFAT WILLIAM C. CLEVELAND Center: DEAN CLARE W. BARKER . . . co-author of two books . . . one on marketing and one on retailing . . . snatches a week in the summer to fish in Michigan . . . habitually spends Christmas in Florida ... his hobby is put- tering in his garden . . . likes young people and listens to their problems at odd times both day and night. tntt House,; presiderits give nil thcir liCciclaches and heartaChdis to ' Mat ' tha Jean Caster, but she seems to be find- ing it all very amusing. Despite her vice-presidency of A.W.S. and mem- bership in Mortar Board, she found Tie to take charge of all meetings the Women ' s Career Conference. PIliRCI ' AB141-;rT I iHtinnapoli U.S. (Iciicnil liii.uihss Lambda Clii Alpha Jackson Club. lOHN ABBOT ' T II khan at !« ■ v IS.H. ( I.YMAK I-, .AlilSOTT 5 Mal-liilSvlllc H.S. (.h ' iit ' i-(il Binh i-s Fr L ' sli m a n Fo 3tl all; ' arvivv Haskcihall. U.S. (U ' iieral liusit!,■s Sigma Chi; Plii Eta Sii ma; Senior Foor- blill MallaKCr; Skull and CifL ' Suc),)! . Fcrsli iug KiHoH; ' T ' tlc Fiant ini C,a. mnutCLL. DARWIN i:. ALLEN .|AMi;s 11. ALLEN Wcscficld.Mass. ,|AiMi;S R. ANDERSON lAMES H ARMSTRONG Ft. Wayne U.S. Cu ' iH-rtd l n if!v s Milroy Springvillc ..S- Gcncfiil ihi h c - ' ' Alpha Kappa Fsi; Sij;. ma L)clta Fsi; Varsity Track. U.S. (,i ' )ii ' r,il lh:sliiri. . S i.i; rn a C.li i ; Union Hoard; Senior llascball M a n a . e r ; Jimior F r m C o m m i : t e c ; Q h a i r m .a n, Tree B.S. i ' m-} ii Biiut! Acacia, 1 ,|,| J ' lanting (ia: m:mitj,teef 11 1 u e K c y ; S p h i n x Cltib; Taps. !!! iU ARpNSON South ' Bend Freshman Wrestling. U ' .O V. ARVIN l.oogooccc BS. Oi-fieral B tsJucss Newman C]ub; PltsH- in ' ' Rililii!s;.Alphii Knp- pa Psu JACK C. .ATKIN Evansvillc B.S. Crcni-rt l Bu hii-ss t I. DELBERT VLRN ATKINSON Upland B.S. iH-irerul Ihishh ' si A I p 1 1 a Kappa l ' ' r, h.ducalion Ciilub; Si|;- la Fp.silon Theta; Y. I.e. A. LEWIS BAGALOFF Hammond U.S. Ait-iriiiiling Accounting C lub. |ACK MAURICE BALDWIN Itvansville U.S. Gciivtiil Ihisiiicis Kappa Sigma. WILMA BARTFI C .orsicana, Tex. i..S. Gcin-nil Ihisiiim Vicc-Frosiclent, Omi cron Delta. RICHARD BARTINDALE Oxford U.S. Gt ' iiri-ifl thisnu ' s ROBERT I!, bf:ckett Moare-sHill B.S. Gi ' in-ral Hn htcss Acacia; Alpha Kappa P;:i; So]Thomore Swim- ming Manager; Soph- omore Business Assist- ant, Arbutus; Fresli- ni;ui Debate Team, MARGARIsT loulsf; benbow C}ast j,n. B.S. Gilinal lil uiirt AIph;i C bi Omega; Omicron Delta. MILDRED ' ! BI ' RNFIART Bvansville n.S. Gfiicriil H (.( ;;eM S i g ]n a Kappa; Pi Lambda TIneta; Pata- Hellenic Council; Omicron Delta; Sec- retary, Aecouiuiiig Club; W.A.A.; Y.W, C.A. Cotincil. MARIAN RUTH DLACKLEY Indianapolis „.S. Gcin-nii BmJiicss Kappa Alpba Theta; Omicron Delta; Re- publican Club; Ad- vertising Club. FRED R. BLANFORI) Terre 1 lautc B.S. Gi ' iu-ial JJ ci.v RALFLI L. BUM FAS Logansport B.S. Gvni-r.,1 IhLvim-y. Lambda Chi Alpba; Pry.sitleitt, Inter frater- nity Cotincil; Indiaria D.aily Student Stall; Y.M.CA. JANE BOSARJ lutlianapolis B.S. Gi-nn-al Bmhusi Pi Beta Phi; Beta Gamma Sigma; T reas- urer, .Mortar Board; Omicron Delta; V,W. C.A. Council; Uni- ver.sity Theater ISusi- neis Staff; Arbutu.s Beauty Queen; Coed Sponsor, R.O.T.C; Coeii Claptain, Persh- ing Hi lies. KATHRYN It, BOWMAN Marion U.S. General B isiiim Omicron Delta; Y.W. C,A.; le Cerele Iran- M PR EDITH |. ■iliRATTON Lcbanttn B.S. Genera! Bnshie Sigma jNu; India Daily Sttident Sta Sojshoniore Editor Av. ' istant, Arbulu Alpha K.appa Psi; A cottnting Club; A vertising Club; C( 111 o p i 1 i t a n C;) LI Pored Walk St b; JOAN i:)lNKia,AKHR ItRENNAN CMRS. BARRY) Carmel B.S. Geih ' ra! J f,v j;rss (tniieron Delta; In- tcrn;ttitnial ReLit ' tins Club; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Y.W ' , C,A,; Dames ' CKih. BFT ' TY BROWN PKs ' otnl B.S. ( enera! Bnum Y.W.C. A.; Omiertin Delta, I, Hb.RBFR ' r P. BUE.S(J-fER Edwardsport B.S. Aeeonnting Sigma lijssilon 1 beta; 11 A,pcou n t i n g CJub; llCfiess tJub; Y.M.C. A. ROBERT E. CA-SSAD ! ' ' IiddlebLlry B.S. Generai Business Delta Chi; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles. MARTHA jl-lAN CASTItR CYa vf : rdsville B.S. Generiil Business Mortar Board; Alpha Panahda Delta; Vice- President, A.W.S, Council; Y. W. C. A. C a b i la e t; Mortar Board Rcctignition; Junior Proru (!om- m i I tec; Lc Cere le ! r.nieais; Internation- .d Relations Cltib; V, A, A.; Fre.shmaia pr- ienl,iti(Mi FLxeOUtll ' vc (onimittee; Chj t i .1 m ni a; (.) m i e r o n Delta; Collegiate C ll a m b e r o f Com- merce; i, oed Cotm- ■Sekir. RUTH E, BURLINGAMF Gary L,S. General Business Alpha Omicron Pi; Omicron Delta; W.A. A, Board; Chorus; Glee Club. I ISTf R M, CHANDLER Lvansville B.S iWerrb.niJisinf K a p p a K a p pa Psi: Band. DOLORES 1. CAMPBELL Lebanoia B.S. General Bnsiuess Ch i G a nt m a; C)mi. croi) Delta. DONALD W. CHAPMAN Unicm City B.S. General Ihisines (iFRALD M. CARRIER Indianapolis B.S. General Business Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega; Y. M.C.A.; Taps; Band; F r e s h m a ii Track; Freshman Swimnaing. WILLIAM T, CFIESTI R Vincennes B.S. General Basines DONALD CASf.Y Wesiiicld B.S. General Bnsiiwss ' ice - President, Ae- c Hinting C ltlb; Alph.t Kappa Psi; Pershing Rifles, FRED V. CHEW, ,1R. Bloomington B.S. General Business IIJLLIE: FRANC I S If ClASH N ' incennes B.S. Generai Busi ' ti Kajipii K,ip|sa Gim-|ll ma; Cilti Ganama, Y . W.C. A,; Pleiades, Bo.ird t f Directctrs, Collegiate Cbanaber of Ciommerce; Fan-Hel- lenic Cotnicii. LOIS lENNINGS CHEW (MRS. F, ' ,) Bloomington i..S. General Business ' Y ' ' ,W.C.. A.; Omietkin Delta, 74 If Clair Richardson looks worried in the picture opposite, it ' s probably because he is wondering how to at- tend meetings of Union Board, Inter - fraternity Council, Scabbard and Blade, and Alpha Kappa Psi — and still crack the whip on his A.T.O. brothers. . ' I ' l;; .EUZABETH MARION CfiOWNING IndUnapolis BS. Gcncrnl Busini ' ss Chi Gamma. RUSSHL M. ANTHO CHURCH I,., CIM Dumonl:, N. J. CkMrtu-ld, BS. Cfi ' ucr il Bmiiiv s ByS. Gfuwiil Frcihman Sv, ' immiiig X ' arsliy I ' rjcl; ' 1 Team; Dolphin Club; Pcriilung RiitUK; Scab- bard and Blades Sopli- omore .Businc,s.s Assisirant, ArbucuJi; Union Board; Co-Capcaiti, Varsiiiv .Riflt; Tejiii; 6 cam. Alpha KLippa 1 ' Commerce. CoUcjiiatc Chamber oi ROBERT E. COATHS Indianapolis B.S. Buiincss Unv Treasurer, Camera Club; Law Club. HULBERT A. COX Princeton BS. Gciii ' rktl Bnsiiu ' ss Kappa Sigma; Sphinx Club. ALYIN L. COHEN Indianapolis B.S. Gcuvi ' iil hnuiict s Sigma Alpha Mu; Al- pha Phi Omega; Vice- President, Jewish Stu- dents Union; Incerfra- c L r n i t y Council ; Fre ' jhman Orientation Committee. MARY ELIZABETH CRAWFORD Madison B.S . Gnwrai Binhic- Pi Beta .Phi; Chi Gam- mi ' ; (Dmitrort Deltii; Taps; W.A.A.; YAV. C. A.; Ocea.nides; Bored Walk Staff; Account- ing Club; Jo r d a n River Revue ; Frilh and Furbelows ; Sil- as, the Chore Boy . MAX E. COLLIER Wdkinson B.S. Gi ' nvval Bii ' hivs Sigma CJii; T ' rC ' liman [■ootball ; F res h m a n BaskeiUall ; Sopliomore l ' ;a-iki iball Manager. lOSFPFI E, CROUCH Blo(]mi:igtun B.S. Gvticrul Bhui!C Kappa Sigma. El.,SON LUCL N ,.|i|j|| CLAY ' TCVN ' ' ' ' li! ' ! ■ B.S. Orfft ' ffif Bau)n;a. Phi Fia Sigma; Y.M. C.A. ; Jieta G a m m a Sigm.n; Phi Delta K,ip- .i .|j|i|||| pa. BRUCE CORWLN F ' oLuitaintown [ ambJa Chi Alplia; Alpiia Kappa P.si; Ac-.,y| counting ' CUib Scab- ' bard and Blade. RAYMOND FOSTFR CULLEY Lidiiinapoli IS. Ii srjrci fi ' i ' Y.M.C.A.; Freshman Crtj i. ' V ' C.iountTv; Fresh- ' man Tennis; Varsit ' Track. 1. ROBERT ROBERT WILLIAM DELIGTER DcREAMER ; New Rochelle, N. Y. Griffith B.S. GcaiTul BiL iirc ' sa B,S- Gencrci! Btisinffis B.S. Pirrciflcc ami Y.Al.C.A. Alpha Phi Omega; As- BiDiking sociate Business Man- Alpha Kappa Psi; Fly- ager, Arbutus; Senior ing Club. Cabinet, Y.M. C.A. AUDREY R. DICKSON Bainbridge B.S. Ociicliil Bitsiui ' Si Y.M. C.A,; Collegiate Chamber o£ Com- merce. B.S. WILBUR A. DINSMORE Blooniington Gcncrdl Bmi Scabbard and Blade. ALBERT I IRKS Indiariapolis fl..S. Cn ' ueral Bilsiin- Y..M.C., ' . EDWARD DODD • South Bend B.S. .Afi ' oifufjijy. President, Alpha Pbl Omega: Flame Club ' ; ' . ' Taps; A c CO u n t in g Club, VINCENT A. DOUGLAS Chicago, III. B.S. Gciiciirl Bniii:ni CITARLOTTE L. ERICKSON South Beitd B.S. GfiH-rai Biiiincsi Cosmopolitan Club; W. A. A.; Omicron Delta; Collegiate C It amber of Com- merce. 1. LLOYD FITZPATRICK Washington B.S. Accounting Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi F.ta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Alpha Phi Omega; Flame Club; Vice-President, Y.M. C.Ai; Treasurer, In- tcrtiational Relations Club,; Accounting Club; Chess Club; Pershing Rifles, Scab- vbard and Blade; Red ' Book Staff; ' Poate Pipe Committee. ElUGFI BELL DUNLOP Elizabeth, N. J. B.S. Gt ' iicriil BjLiJin ' s Sigma Pi; President, A d ' e r t is i n g Club; Y.M. C.A. CLIFFORD A. ESINHART, JR. Indianapolis B.S. Gt ' iiriirl Biisiiics Delta Sigma Pi. VIRGINIA FOREMAN Culver B.S. General Business Chi Omega; Chorus; Y.W.C.A. ; Chi Gam- ma; Omicron I elta, JOHN DU VAEL Frankfort B.S. Cmncrai Brishicfis Sigma Nu; Sophomore FMitorial Assistant, Arbutus; Freshman Orientation Commit- tee; Jordan River Revue , Y.M.C.A. ROBERT B. ESTLICK Columbia City B.S. hi iirancc JOFIN H. FRAZIER Fiartford City B.S. Gciicrai Business Acacia. HOWARD R. ECKELS Huntington B.S. Gciicrtfl Bushiest Alpha Kappa Psi; Var- sity Debate; Orches- tra; Glee Club; Biind. MILDRED FALL ' Roachdale B.S. Genera! Biif.hfi ss Alpha Omicron Pi; Omicron Delta; Y.W. C. A. ; Accounting Club. ARTFIUR FRLSBIF ShelbyviUe B.S- Geiicrid B?tshics BETTY ANNF FCKLER ■ E ' ansville B.S. Si-actiiriul Omicron Delta: Span- ish Club, ROBERT WATT ' ■ FERGUSON Indian-ipolis B.S. GcrrvrnI Bii- jm- sS Sigma Chi; Alpha Phi O m eg a ; Pershing R,itles; Busines,s Staff, The Folio; Sophomore Business Assistant, 7 r b u t u s ; .B 1,1 s i n e s s Staff, U.niversity The- atre; Taps; Cabaret Show ; After Dafk ; Bury the Dead . WALTER FRED FURTEK Chicopee, Mass. B.S. Gna-ntf B is jjcs HARRY FINSTANDIG Indianapolis B.S. Gi ' iiin ' iti B !..siucss Phi Beta Delta; Jewish Student ' s Union; Jun- ior W ' rcisthijg Man- ager ; In ter f rater ni t y Coujicil, IRVING A. FINE F Ian imond B.S. Accoutit ' iu: .Accounting Club. ]OHN MILAN ■ FUSEK Ea.st Chicago B.S. Gcucnii B rsiucs. Delta IJpsilon; Scab- bard and Blade; Per h- ing Riik ' s; Freshman Fool: ball. THOMAS ELROD Ladianapolis B.S. Gt ' ucrj! Bit 1 Beta Thetii Pi; SiL,mi Delta Chi; Sphinx Club; Senior Intra muiMl iVLu;iag«;r; Y 1 C. A.; Advertising Cltib; Indiana I adv Student Staff. RUSSELL H FiSHFR Rockvllle j J.,S, GciJviud Bii in Tfji J A 1 ).-) 1 1 a Kappa Psi, ' Kappa Kappa P s 1.1 I .Freshman Dtba t:i:il||l Band. NANCE ■CATHE.IUN1 GABBER ! Princeton B.S. Gcrnnul ' Bit JlU i] Omicron Delta 76 Illlli!!! ' m Dick Schannen seems to be musing over the Boar of .a e ns ' iatest find- ings; but, sssh — they must be kept secret. It ' s no secret, however, that Dick is Senior basketball manager, Blue Key secretary, and a Beta Gam ma Sigma scholar. HRMAL ' GETSS Wadesvillc ' BS. Arroiiiif ng Phi I ' l-i Sigm:i; Scab- bard and Blade: Ac- counting Club. JOHN C, ' GEYflR Logansport BS. GcfrtTii! Bfi iir - Lambda Clli Alpha; Alph.i Kappa l i; Y, M.C.A.; International Relations CHlub; S :ipli omore Football Man- I-DWARD D. JOHN BE ' NJ ' AMIN GLOVER GOOD Oow ' n Point ' arren BS. Gi ' iinul Biishu as. Gnnral Biiuiify Sigma I u; President. Sigma IMli. AlphirKiippa Psi; Senior ' W r e s t 1 i n g Managef; Y.M.CA. WENDELL L GREEN Ft. yayne B.S. General Biishnsi Phi Delt.a Theta; Al- pha Phi Omega; Cam- era Club; Li l1 i a n a D.ailv SttiJent Stafl; y.m ' .ca. C ' R CI c FREDERICK PORTER GRIFFIN Corydon S. Gemral Bhwwcss i Et.i; Siiijin j Y.iVL •A.; Dcr ' Deutsche ■rein; Pershing lies ; A c c o LL n 1 1 n g ub; Fiducation lib. ■1 C. r,l ' . ■for K illc IIS. Giiirn l B!i hu- VAV.C.A,; On.icr BARBARA GRAY B.S. Gi-iii-vat Bfis Jicss Zcta T.-iu Alp]T,i; BcM Cj.iminii Si.i im.i; Omi- CfQii 1 clr.i; Scci ' i ' tary, Interniitional Rcl a- rions C-lub. ADDISON C, GRISFLL Cr:nvtords ' illc ' ' BS. Ai-cOunHn.ii Ni i t 11 1 iM r 111 1 In !,!( i S ifi Ht I i! hit in S L,iii vI]tIi 1 I p lit n Bin K. n m s I li ul Bll I tiTin II 1 Sii,nn Phi I ti S K m I 1 lun Iplii Plu V .iiJ ?t l n I ' uiM ntss M-ini5 Li Uhi ' T.I. i I Ik u L Sill 1 H S in niniL, Mm i (.r I ' K ' .ldcnt liit .ini I ric.n il K. .luinns C lub Doljilnn C liib I i li ini;; KiHls C h iirin iiu S n 1 )i I 1 % 1 1 1 1 1 o n s C 1.11 iniiiiLt tR NCiS GILBtRt GRAY HimmonJ i S (i fit I il hii 111 S m 1 Ml 1 E p 1 1 lOM V (.,ROSCOL| ini_c me B G 111) t Uii m| Deh Lps.l PATRICIA J. GRUBAUGH W ' oleotlvitle B.S. Gfinral Bn iiicss Phi M u ; O ni i c r o n Delta; Y.W.C. A.; Education Club. ESTHER ELIZABETH HALE Wiilslow BS. Gt ' iu-nrl Bii irn ' ss Pi Beta Phi; Oniicron Delta; Coed Rifle Team; Y.W.C.A. MADIA El A L STEAD Gary B.S. Gciifml Bn.iiili ' !S Pi Lambda Theta; Oniicron Delta; Coed Rifle Team; Exluea- tlon Club. LAWRENCE EL HARPOLD Brazil B.S. GftH ' rul Bns iu ' s K a ji p a Kappa P ■. Band. DONALD C?-IARLi;S HARRIS Connersville B.S. Gt ' iifnd Busr)u-s. Phi Kappa Psi; Phi lit a Sigma; Sopho- more Basketball Man- .iger: Tajas. PHILIP A. HATFIELD , Bedfqrd ;„ B.S. Grm-rnJ Bl! hivs ' Beta Theta Pi; Skull and Cirescent; Jor- dan River Re ue , t ILMOkl S 1 ' ' ' ' lull I V iris ilk III BS GiH I tl Bll 111 M Phi G nil 111 Delti 1 r s I t V I i n n 1 s I resl man 1 ootbill I Men t I Lib Sph ii t lub lie I son ( lub JAMES B. EIEATON Corydon B.S. Cn ' iivial Buihicis GEORGE EDWARD H EATON Winona Lake B.S. Gi ' iirr.il Bnuiin.s WILLIAM A. HEBERT Indianapolis B.S. Gciwrid Bn iiu ' ss Delta Tau Delta; Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus; Jortian Riv- er Revue . WILLIAM D, HFLDT Princeton B.S. Geiin-iil Bmiiics s Kappa Sigma; Sphinx Club. W. EJOWARD EIIGHSMITH Owensville B.S. Gi-iH ' yal Bniiut Senior I ' rack Manag- er; LS.A. harrii:et EElZABErU HUT)EBRAND Wasliington. D. C, B.S. Cciin;,l Bii. ' .hn i Alpha Delta Pi; Onii- cron Elelta; Y.W.C. A.; Kappa Phi; Edu- cation Cliib, K)S1 I ' l I 1 nil C 1 M.l KG huh m ip lis « S (,11,1 I hi I lpl 1 1 1 dm 1 LL CHARLES S. ' HUSTON ji !in- . Sellersburg B.S. Viimnci ' mid , Bairkiii.ii Alpha Kappa Psi; Y. M.C.A, HOMER E. EI IRE Ft. ' a ' ne B.S. Mi-rchaiiilhina Sigma Alpha Epsilon; T b c t a Alpha Phi; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Presi- dent, Taps; Univer- sity Jheatre Business Staff; Chairman, Band Benefit Ball; Chairman, Military Ball. EIERBERT EilZER Moran B.S. liminiiHt ' Y.M.CA. ROBERT A. HOPE Indianap :)Us B.S. Gi ' lwral Biisincsi ROBLIRT IRVIN E10KI-: Salem B.S. GcuiVitl Bn-iiiir Phi r!ta Signta; Scab- bard and Blade; Al- pha Kappa Esi; Vai ' - sity Track, CH RI I S HOO I R 1iddlehur l| B S I It 11 Dell 1 Ups lo 1 K ippa iiiiiii K ippi Pm ctount li 1 ., Glib RA MOND A. hossInger Kendallville B S l Cijtinfiii e e o u n t i II g Club II sit Kitle Team Seibblid ;tnd Blade Pel hin, RUlcsi GLEN W. HOY Elope B.S. Biisinc- Law a. KENNI.TH HUDSON Cambridge City B.S. Gcnri dl Bmiiii ROBERT R. HULL i: Eyansville B.S. Aicoiuttiiii Accounting Club. ROY W, HUMBAUGH PliiinVille B.S. Gcn ' ral Bii ' tiif DAN INT-HOUT Park Ridpc, III. B.S, Gawral B i.(ij;e.s Phi Delta Theta; TrcnsLi rer, S.c a b b a r d and Blade; IiUerfra- ternu - C.AHineil ROBERT N. JUDAY Peru B.S. General BmhieJ Phi I-ta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi, Tom Elrod probably is thinking of of the fun he ' s going to have wield- ing a paddle at the next Sphinx Club initiation; or else this Beta president and Senior intramural manager may be recalling more scandal to use in the Sigma Delta Chi Gridiron Ban- quet. lOHN ROBERT KEILHOLZ Indianapolis B.S. General Bushier. ' ' Concert Band; Or- chestra; Economics Club. V7 I,,TER FRANCIS KERRIGAN Hammond B.S. General Biniiiess Newman Club; Y.M. C.A.; Varsity Weight Lifting. ELIZABETH ANNE KRIEKHAUS Evansville B.S. Gcncni! Business Sigma Kappa; Pi Lambda Tlieta; .Ac- counting Club; Onii- cron Delta; Y.W ' .C.A. Council; W.A.A. REX V. KELLER HilLsboro B.S. linshicis Law COLE J. KEYES Peru B.S. General Birslnesa Kappa Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Intcr- fraternity Council. ABRAM R. KUSHLEVITZ Mineola, N. Y. B.S. Geriertil Busines. ESTEL W. KELLEY Sllarpsville B.S. . ' i-coHnliii ' ii Sigma Chi; President, Collegiate Chamlicr of Commerce; Presi- dent, Ace o LI n t i n g Club; T ' reasurer, Al- p li a P h i O m e g a ; Chairman, Universicv Sing; Y.M.C.A. Sen- ior Cabinet; Kappa K a p p a Psi; AJpha K a p p a Psi; Band; Freshman Orientation Committee. VICTOR KINGDON Indianapolis B.S. General Business Phi ■ Delta Theta; Captain, ar.sity Ten- nis; Freshman Tennis. WILLIAiM T. LACEY Muncie B.S. General Bnshies. (.MARI 1 S P. 1 KIT-SfY I B.S. in-nenil B n Hcni j lpha I ' au Omega- O FT RICK .S, . KNIGHT Ft, Wayne B.S. General Biisincis : ' i Sigma j lpha F.pslloni; :!jl|| Glee Club; Y;M. ' e,4ji|| ROBERT -ill! LAMBERTUS Indianapolis B.S. Genera! Business Phi Delta Theia. ' iU ROBERT H. LANGE North Vernon B.S. Aihvrtising Beta Theta Pi; Ad- vertising Club; Fresh- man Baseball. THOAIAS L. LIEVAN Gary B.S. General Business Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi; In- terfraternity Council; Advertising Club; Bored Walk Staff; In- ternational Relations Club; Freshman Counselor. FRIEDA LATIMER Bloomington B.S. General Business Alpha Lambda Delta. CHARLES P. McAULIFFE St. Paul B.S. Ge«fr i( Business Sigma Chi; Interfra- ternity Council; Freshman Golf; Jack- son Club. ROBERT G. MILLER Vincennes B.S. Ghreral Business ALLAN JEROME LINKER Louisville, Ky. B.S. General Business Sigma Alpha Mu; Al- pha Phi Omega; Skull and Crescent; Phi Eta Sigma; Blue Key; Blue Key Fresh mail Recognition: Bored Walk Staff; Orienta- tion Committee; Jew- ish Students Union; Tree Planting Com- mittee; English Club; Intcrfraternity Coun- cil. BRUCE FIUBERT McCRACKEN Argos B.S. Aeco ' linfing Y.M.C.A.; Aeicount- ing Club. DOROTHY MAE MOFFAT Springfield, III. B.S. General Bnsirress ice-P esident, Omi- cron Delta; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Kappa Phi; Education Club; Chi Gamma. A. ROBERT LAWRENCE Indianapolis B.S. General Bjisiness Theta Chi; ice-Pres- ident, Union Board; President, Sphinx Club; Treasurer, Y. M.C.A.; Senior Me- morial Committee; Business Manager, The Red Book; Skull and Crescent; Freshman Orientation Commit- tee; Dragon ' s Head. ALFRED LAURENCE LITTMAN Evansville B.S. Merchanilisinn ROBERT GIVEN McLAIN Anderson B.S. Merchandising Phi Gamma Delta; Advertising Club; University Theatre Staff. LEONARD V. .MONZKA F ast Chicago B.S. General Business BETTY LEE Bedford B.S. General Business Zeta Tau Alpha; Ad- s ' ertising Club; Ac- counting Club. BEATRICE LOMATCH Osgood B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; Edu- cation Club; English Club. PHYLLIS MAUCK Owensville B.S. General Business Kappa Kappa Gamma. MARIE PATRICIA MOONEY Roann B.S. General Business Omicron Delta. JOHN DAVID LEFFLER Bloomington B,S. General Business Beta Theta Pi; Treas- urer, Kappa Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; Band; Sophomore Editorial Assistant, Arbutus. CLARENCE V. LONG Hartford City B.S. Accounting Delta Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Account- ing Club; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce; Pershing Rifles; Senior Football Manager. WILLIAM H. MAYSE Goshen B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Gam- nta Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Blue Key; Board of Aeons; Sen- ior Track Manager; Freshman Orientation Committee; Y. M. C. A , ; Senior S i ' a s h Committee. ROBERT CHARLES MOORE Paoli B.S. General Bu-tincss Accounting Club. GEORGE L. LEINENWEBER Greensburg B,S. Arcouufin.i; Accounting Club. HELEN MIRIAM LYBROOK. Galveston B.S. General Business Kappa Delta; Omi- cron Delta; Y.W.C. A.; Pan -Hellenic Council; Classical Club. HAROLD G. MIENER Linton B.S. General Bnsittess Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi; Scabbard and Blade: Pershing Rifles. ROBERT H. NEWSOM f;li .jbethtQwn B.S. Aeroutiliii.v, Orchestra, JAMES RUSSEL LEWIS Pekin B,S. Finance an, I Banking Alpha Kappa Psi. MARY LOU LYTLE ,C ;i;svftird.,sville ' I B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; A. A.; Sociology Club ' fi; The Folio Busincs.s Staff; Y.W ' .C.A. WILLIAM THOMAS MIHOLTCH South Bend B.S. Merchandising Newman Cltlb; Var« j sitv Football, FRED M. NYGREN Kokomo B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi, 80 9W § Bill IViayse, Beta big gun, might be leaving the Union Building £0 do any number of things. Perhapsi the track team, of which he is a Senior manager, is taking another trip. Quite possibly he could be heading for the Library, to keep up his Beta Gamma Sigma academic prowess. A ' laybe Blue Key has sent him on an errand to do service to the University. Then again he might be scouting down additional information for the Board of Aeons, or going to advanced mili- tary. lillll j|RNARD F. ' O ' NI-AL Loogootee B.S. Bmhicss Sfu islin Scabbard and Elad(;; Newman Club; Var- s i t y Rifle Team: Fresliman Track; Freshman Fpotbatl. WILLIAM JOHN PAWELEC Hammond Bi ' S. Accounting Sigma Epsilort Theta; Beta Gamma ' Sigma; Account in ' ' g Club; ,, Y. M. C, A.; ' Radio Club; Canaera Club. |llllllliMI1llll|lllll R.AL.,I H. O ' RILEY, JR. Rensselaer B.S- Geiicrul Bus iu ' i: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. MARGARET ELIZABETH ■ PETERSON Bloomiiigton varn.i-:r h.paigj: Terrc .Ma Lite BS. General Bushress Plii Kappa Psi ; T;ips; Jo I ' d ;m River Kc- . Yue - Bored Walk Staff. ALPMONSH F-IERBERT PEAU Jasper B.S. Aceoituliii Ne ; ' man Ciuh; (ntra mur:il A ' lariaj cr. !l ' n!lil!n!l1 ' !!!!!l!ll ' fli!1!!illli1l rAUl.lNli I ' AT ' I ' ON ' BhiomiuigtOM U.S. Gcik ' fal fl d J ns Accounting Club. HELEN PHILLIPS North Manchester U.S. Gi ' iicr, ! Biiiiiiea Chi Ome,i;a; Omicron Delta; Y.W.CA. ALICE fFRlANCES PIRRSOL ' : DeKalb, 111. 3S. Couinu-ycHil Teacher Trd ' m ' ni Chi Gamnaaj, Omicron Delta. 1 ' .jl ,, ' L. LOUIS ,1 FLETCHER ,:;■ Ft. Wayne B.S. Geucriil Biisiuc s Phi Delta Theta; Freshman Football; Taps; Hotel Untp Yerse . ROBERT GARTHON PRATT Indianapolis li.S. General Bn rne. GEORUl 1 1A RD PRIf I lowlcr II B.S. Gintuil Bn nn Si,eTna Alpha I psilon. Alpha Phi Omtm, Y. M. C iV bond Walk Start CE i.s. CTL THOMAS PRIDDY Bedford General Bnsincs THOMAS S. ROMINGE ' R Lawrence B S Aecount ' ni; IJAlphi Kappa Psi; Ac- |l ' tuuntmg Club; Y.M. I C A , E r e s h .m a n ||Trae.k; F r e s h rn a n Crois-Countrv. JOHN MITCHELL RABER Colfax B.S. Accounting Alpka Kappa Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Ac- co.tinting Club; Col- icgiare Chamber of. Commerce. ALBERT ROSENBERG Vinccnncs B.S. Ba.unvss Law Phi Beta Delta; Glee Club; S (J p Ii o nn o r e Track Manager; Soph- omore Basketball ■Manager; Pert;h ing Rifles. ' CLAIR LEONARD RICEIARDSON ! ' Mcrion, I?enn. , ' : B.S. General Bu uneyf, Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Al- p h a Phi Omega; Scabbard and Blade; Union Board; Varsity Track; Freshman Or- iejitation Committee; Interfraternicy Cotin- cil; Y.ALC.A.; Senior Memorial Committee. SHELDON V. ROY Georgetown B.S. Accountht Accounting Club. PAUL RICKARD Kokomo B.S. ..Gcncrai Biishess Glee Club; Y.M.C.A. LLOYD O. SCHAEER i ' ;Francisco B;;S, -iGencriil Bushiess B.S JAMES BURKE J, RITTER Anderson Gcucval B nJness Phi Kappa Pii. ROBERT E. SCEIALLIOL Mishawaka .B.S. General Bii ines. ; ' :Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Eta -Sigma; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Presi- dent Delta Sigma Pi; Coilegiatc Chamber of Commerce; Y.M,C,A. I ■ llC EORGE B. ' i |9i W-SON . ]Sf 7ffi i||YCii City B.S. Gcneni} Bmhiess Phi Gamma Delta; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M.C.A,; Freshman Kitle Teani; Kepubli- can Club; Le Cercle Francais. RICHARD EI, SCHANNEN F ' t. Wayne B.S General Busrnes. Phi Gamma .Delta; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Cjamma SigTna; ' ar- sity Debate; Senior Basketball Managei ' ; Blue Key; Board of Aeons; Collegiate Chamber of C im- mcroe. JAMES T. ROMEY Richmond B.S. Genrru! Business Phi .K-appa Psi; Skull and Croccnt; Sphinx Club ; -As-ioc i a te E d itiIi. tor. Arbutus: Cilec ' Club; Tans. KATl-iRYN SCHNEIDER Vinccnnes B.S. General lirnines. Omicron Delta: Y.W. C.A. CHARLES P. SCHNUTE Evansville J S Geneva! Bji. incs!, bclta Up-silon; Vat- pjty Tennis; Pershing EUGENE AV; SCEIOTT ;. fit. ■ ' ayne; ' ' B.S. Geiiertil Business , Torch and Skull. ARNOLD iCi ' l i SCHUMACHE|l I ' Hartford (pity ' , ' B.S. Genera! Business Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Band; Y.M. C.A. :■ FRANK SHADEL La Porte B.S. General Business Lam.bda Cbi Alpha; Band; Skull and Cres- cent. TACK A, SHAFFNER Gary B.S, Accounting Phi Beta Delta. ED RD SHAPIRO Gary B.S. MerchanilrsfU Phi Beta Delta; .A.d- veriising Club; Red Book Staff: The Folio Staff; Skull and Cres- cent. CAROL JEAN SELRUM Salem B,S. Genera! Business P h i M u ; O m i c r o n Delta; K a p p a I- h i ; Y. X ' .C.A. Pan Hei- Icnic (.x)u.ncil, lii ROBERT L. SJEBENTHAL Bloomington II ' iJ S General Bw-ines [Phi Kappa Psi; Skull and Crescent; Sopho- Tlrnorc .F jiptbflU Man- RUSSELL SLOSS Duqucsne, Penn. B.S. General Bnsi ies:f Si. ma Nu; Varsity Football. GENE ALBERT SMITH Indianapolis B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi- GILBERT K. SMITH Indianapolis B.S. General Business LESTER SNELL Troy, Ohio B.S. Merchantlisi rg Acacia. EKED TEIOMAS SPEICHLRT FlamiTiond B.S. General Business Y.M.C.A,; Varsity S1 ■ ' in■lmIng; Dolpliin Club, RICHARD SPIECE Roann B.S. Genera! B ' usrness ■■! iiiiiiiiijliiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iijiiiiiiijiiiiiijiiiiiijiiiiiijiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji Four Business School Seniors prac- tice salesmanship and sales-resistance between classes. James Romey, the seller, tries his art on Phyllis Mauck, Allan Linker, and Jim Adams. Rumor is that the Brooklyn bridge is on the block for the — nth time. THOMAS M. STROUSE Indianapolis BS. Gene fi} Business Accounting Club; In- tramural Manager. B.S. DARWIN C. STEVENS Freedom Gcncfiil Bushi KENNETH R. STRAUSS Wadesville B.S. General Business Kappa Kappa Psi; Band. PAUL TAFF Madison B.S. General Emit ROBERT F. STIMSON Bloomington B.S. General Bust. Kappa Sigma. JAY V. STRONG Charlestown B.S. Gpneral Business Y.M.C.A. ROBERT W. TAM Warren B.S. Merchandising DAVlDiSTRAUS, nif;|| Newark, N. J. B.S. General Business Sigma AlphaMu; Dol- phin Club; Taps; Ad- vertising Club; Indi- ana Daily Student Staff; Varsity Swim- ming; Jordan River Revue ; Wlntersct ; Cabaret Show , WILL1AA1 ROBERT STROUP Tipton B.S. Accounting Accounting Club. MARIEOU THOMAS Logansport B.S. General Business Delta Delta Delta; Pleiades; Tap. i; Pan- Hellenic Council; A.M( .S. Council; ■ ' Cabaret S K o w ; Jordan River Re- vue ; Lc Cercle Fran- cais. BERNARD C. THOMPSON Frankfort B.S. General Business Acacia; Alpha Kappa Psi. JOHN B. TUTHILL Michigan City B.S. General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Blue Key; Vice-President, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Union Board; Varsity Track; Varsity Tennis; Soph- omore Editorial As- sistant, Arbutus; Y. M.C.A. Cabinet. JOHN PHILLIP THOMPSON Blufl- ' ron B.S. Genera! Business Beta Theta Pi; Jack- son Club; Law Club. LLOYD M. VANSCOY Delphi B.S. General Business Y.M.C.A. MARGARET THOMPSON Kingman B.S. General Business Pi Lambda Theta; Omicron Delta; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Chi Gamma; Secre- tary, Treasurer, W. A. A. Board; Treas- urer. A.W.S. Council; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Coed Counse- lor; Y.W.C.A.; Hik- ing Club; Rifle Team; International Rel a- tions Club; Freshman Orientation Commit- tee. ROBERT COIL VIETS Vincennes B.S. General Business WILLIAM CYRUS THOMPSON Vincennes B.S. General Business HELEN JANE WALKER Seymour B.S. General Business Alpha Lambda Delta; Omicron Delta. WILLIAM H. THOMPSON Heltonvllle B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Band; Y.M.C.A.; Jackson Club. CHESTER M. WARM AN Kokomo B.S. Accounting Delta Upsllon; counting Club; sity Track. Ac- Var- S; ' LMA TROUTMAN Shoals B.S. General Busifiess Zeta Tau Alpha. ROBERT A. WATERS Indianapolis B.S. General Businea. Vice-President, Phi Eta Sigma; President, Delta Sigma Pi; Ac- counting Club; Colle- giate Chamber of Commerce; Beta Gam- ma Sigma. MEL TRUTT Bloomington B.S. General Bnsiucsfi Varsity Track; Cap- tain, Cross Country Team; Dragon ' s Head; Balfour Award, Track. LLOYD J. WATSON jlj Indianapolis j B.S. Gencr0l Business THOMAS RUSSELL WATTS Aurora ' B.S. General Business PAUL WEARLY Montpelicr B.S. General Business Sigma Chi. FORREST E. WELPOTT Bloomington B.S. General Business EDWARD C. WERNER Shelbyville B.S. General B?isinesj Band; Camera Club. SAMUEL EARL WESTFALL Bloomington B.S. General Busines s Accounting Club. HARRY E. WHITE Greensburg B.S. Insurance and finance Sigma Nu; Advertis- ing Club; Jackson Club. EDWARD C. WIELAND Evansvilic B.S. General Business ■ Delta Chi; Skull and Crescent; Intcrfrater- , nity Council, ij ' i JOHN L. WILLIAMS Indianapolis B.S. Business Laic Phi Delta Theta; Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sig- ma Pi ; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce; Law Club. WILMA WILLIAMS Bloomington B.S. General Business JOHN FREMONT WILSON Pendleton B.S. Genera! Business Sigma Nu; Alpha Phi Omega; Camera Club; Advertising Club; Y.M.C.A. VELMA V. WOLFE Lafayette B.S. General Business Chi Omega; Le Cercle Francais; Y.W.C.A.; Advertising Club; In- diana Daily Student Staff; Republican Club. GLENN L. WOODS Bloomington B.S. Merchandising RAYMOND H. ZIRKLE Hartford City B.S. General Businesi ERNEST lOSEPH-l! ZWERNER ' Terre Haute B.S. General Business ' ' Alpha Tau Omega; Sophomore Basketball Manager. 84 The ' MMBESg ' Banking Conferetieeimet m tending, ' ramana bankers gathered in Business AuaitorranT ' Br ' tneir meetings. In April 200 business men of Indiana attended Hl pia Real Estate Education! Conference on the campus. Leaders of the Indiana Mortgage Lending Conference met to plan the program for the 260 business men who ;ui ended the meeting in December. bite- BlISIIESS COIFEREiCES Indiana University and its School of Business have been fortunate this year in being able to have on the campus various conferences of Indi- ana business men. The Indiana Banking Con- ference, attended by 240 bankers of the State, met on the campus October 24, 25, and 26 for a three-day conference. On December 6 the University was host to 260 members of the In- diana Mortgage Lending Conference. The In- diana Real Estate Education Conference, with 200 business men in attendance, met on April 4. We at the University feel fortunate in hav- ing practical business men here on this campus, said President Herman B Wells in welcoming the first of these groups. Business education, although it has made much progress in the last quarter-century, is still a relatively new pro- fessional field. Our School of Business, in com- mon with others throughout the country, needs the guidance of business leaders. The greatest contribution business can make to the University is by offering thoughtful as- sistance in the development of proper training for young men who intend to enter the business field. President Wells, at each of the conferences, stressed the importance of business men work- ing with the University in the deve lopment of courses and study materials, proper educational objectives, and techniques of guidance for young men and women to be trained for busi- ness careers. The business professions, he sug- gested, should assume this responsibility for guiding schools of economics and business along the most effective educational paths in the same manner that the medical and law professions guide their schools. In several spheres of activity the University makes important contributions to business, he asserted. It furnishes personnel from the aca- demic ranks. Through intensive research ac- tivity, which excels all else in opportunities for far-reaching benefit, the University can be of aid. In a period of rapidly changing social, po- litical, and economic conditions, the survival of any institution depends upon its ability to adapt itself to the shifting environment. Adap- tation can be made only if adequate facts are available. President Wells sa id, in describing the plans of the conferences, that they were arranged so as to bring to business executives the best in contemporary practice and procedure, designed to enable them to meet successfully the kaleido- scopic changes in situations ever present in the business world. 87 BETil MMM l SIliMil Prof. A. L. Prickett President: Prof. Edward E. Edwards Vice-Presideni Prof. G. L. Carmichael Secretary Prof. Stanley Pressler Treasurer Beta Gamma Sigma is one of the most powerful scholarship groups in American colleges and is the top-ranking honorary for schools of business ad- ministration. This fraternity concerns itself with progressive scholarship, per- sonnel and placement, and the general advancement of business education. The Alpha chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma was established at Indiana Uni- versity in 1913, largely through the efforts of Prof. A. L. Prickett and Dean William A. Rawles. The fraternity recognizes pre-business achievement by placing the name of the outstanding Sophomore each year on a large scholar- ship plaque hung in the general office of the School of Business. A William Rawles key will be awarded to the highest ranking Junior in the School of Business this year in honor of the former dean and member of Beta Gamma Sigma. A nationally known speaker is brought to the campus to address members at the spring initiation. I. W. Aim C. W. Barker J. A. Batchelor W. G. Biddle W. T. Buckley G. L. Carmichael E. E. Edwards MEMBERS Faculty H. G. Fraine Bernita Gwaltney J. E. Moffat O. S. Parrish S. A. Pressler A. L. Prickett H. C. Sauvain W. H. Stackhouse G. W. Starr G. A. Steiner R. E. Strahlem R. D. Swick R. E. Walden H. B Wells Victor R. Beard Irving D. Berger Fred R. Blanford Jane A. Bosart W. Daniel Bretz Elson Clayton Seymour Cohen Albert E. Dickens C. Ben Dutton J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick Students Beverly C. Furr Neal Gilliatt Barbara Gray Alfred Green Edward L. Hutton Jane Judy Estel W. Kelley Earl G. Mauck William H. Mayse George W. Newlin William J. Pawelac John M. Raber Richard H. Schannen Robert E. Schalliol A. C. Schumacher Gene A. Smith Margaret Thompson Robert A. Waters Wilma C. Williams 88 First Row Charlotte Erickson Bob Waters Ruth Ferris Estel Kelley Clarence Long Second Row Bill Fisher Gene Troy Martha Jean Caster Bob Botighman Dick Schannen Third Row Bette Thrasher Russel Church John Raber Billie Cash COLLEGIATE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Estel Kelley President Robert Boughman Vice-President Billie Cash Secretary Russel Church, Ruth Ferris Treasurer The Collegiate Chamber of Commerce is unique in that it probably is the only one of its kind in the United States. At the suggestion of President Herman B Wells, then Dean of the School of Business, officers of the various organizations con- nected with the school met to draw up articles for just such a council. On June 2, 1937, the constitution was voted upon and adopted by business students. Every person enrolled in the School of Business automat- ically becomes a member of the C. C. of C. The governing body is the Board of Directors, elected in May of every year. To be eligible for the Board one must, besides being a business student, have at least a 1.2 average and must have been in the University two semesters. The post-graduates elect one repre- sentative, and the other four classes choose two members, one boy and one girl. Likewise, each organization that is officially recognized by the School of Business has the privilege of se- lecting a representative to the Chamber of Commerce. These organizations are Beta Gamma Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, Delta Sigma Pi, Omicron Delta, Chi Gamma, Advertising Club, and Accounting Club. The Junior Chamber of Commerce of Bloomington also has one representative; in return, the college council sends one of its members to the city group. During the fall registration, the C. C. of C. aids with the Freshman orientation program. In addition, it sponsors a stu- dent counselling service in which upperclassmen help the Fresh- men who are not doing so well as they should in their curricular work. To foster acquaintance between students and faculty, the C. C. of C. sponsors smokers several times during the year and conducts a squeak-box for any recommendations which anyone might wish to make for the betterment of the School of Business. It also sponsors forums which are addressed by outstanding businessmen. A NOBLE EXPERIMENT, OR FOIL 89 NICE LUNCHES, I41IT IJU WE LIVE TO EAT? DELTA SlfiMA PI Robert Schalliol Presideni Robert Bottin Treasurer Bill Carmichael Secretary Delta Sigma Pi, founded in 1907 at New York Uni- versity, is a professional fraternity in the field of com- merce and business administration. The purpose of the fraternity is to foster the study of business; to promote closer affiliation between the commercial world and stu- dents of commerce, and to further a higher standard of commercial ethics and welfare in the community. The Alumni Placing Service, one of the organization ' s out- standing achievements, is a cooperative undertak ing now being operated by the alumni whereby members are as- sisted in securing employment in keeping with their training. Alpha Pi, the Indiana chapter, was established in 192 5 and is one of the sixty active chapters in the United States. Prominent faculty members include Dr. James E. Moffatt, Acting Dean C. W. Barker, Prof. Ivan V. Snyder, and Edward E. Edwards, the sponsor. First Row Howard Kesslcr Harold Curtis Bob Conner Robert Eifler Second Row B- - ;;s Tom Lindail Charles Hedge Bill Carn-iicb.acl Marvin Miller Bob Bottin Third Row Bob Waters Evan Stiers Rcr.ibrandt Hili ' . Torrance .hallioi a Sliphcr Edward Glover President Morris Ritchie Vice-Presideui Thomas Rominger Secretary Bruce Corwin Treasurer Alpha Kappa Psi was founded at New York Uni- versity in 1904. It was created to further the interests of business among college men, listing as its objectives the promotion of scientific research in the field of business, the education of the public to an appreciation of modern business, and an attempt to promote higher ideals among business men. The local chapter, chartered in 1927, plays an active part in the affairs of the School of Business. Each fall, it sponsors a trip to Chicago for Juniors and Seniors in order that they may visit large stores and factories and study actual problems of business. This year ' s tour included visits to Swift and Company, The Chicago Board of Trade, Marshall Field ' s, and many other large business concerns. A study of the Chicago underground transportation sys- tem also was included on this trip. The highest ranking Senior from the School of Business is awarded each year a scholarship medallion by Alpha Kappa Psi. The chapter holds meetings once a month, at which times members are addressed by promi- nent faculty members and business men. FoLii-th Pvov.-.- . Jiimcs Allen, Do;-:ald Arxin, Ed Glover, Robt-rc cr, William Heifrich. rifih Rov, ' .- Fra:-,k Sigo, Estcl Kcllcy, Bud Phli:ip;, John Xistlcr, John Geyer, Davics jircw:-;-, Hsrold iVIieiicr, Bob Button. ALPHA KAPPA PSI WHAT, DID WALT SMITH ACTUALL ONE? 91 VIVE LA BUSINESS! Eloise Barnett Wilma Barth Barbara Gray Betty Ann Eckler Dorothy Moffat ... -President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer ONICRO DELTA Although it was founded only last year, Omicron Delta already has become an active and growing honorary for Junior and Senior women in the School of Business. The purpose of this group — to promote social and profes- sional association among business women — has been ad- vanced under the sponsorship of Mrs. Esther D. Bray and Miss Lula M. Westenhaver, of the School of Business faculty, and Miss Sarah Kirby, assistant to the Dean of the School of Business. This year ' s activities of Omicron Delta included en- tertaining the School of Business faculty, giving a party for members of Chi Gamma, meeting once a month to hear various campus speakers, and serving as pages for the State Business and Professional Women ' s Convention at French Lick. Also, the honorary aided in re-establishing Chi Gamma on the Indiana campus and interviewed several Indianapolis business men concerning openings for women in the business field. .; „.-.. . Burlingame, Dorothy -I ' .arlotte Erickson, Dorothy Cop- ; -n Krrting, Alice Piersol, Rose Berndt, : i .-.trick, Marjorie Mc- Kinley. Second ■ : ' e Bosart, Edna Levi, frsnc;; ia Peckin- paugh, Anna Louise ary Lytle, Marjorie Crow. Third Row: Betty Ann Hck.;. Stephan, Betty Lee, Mildred Mildred Fall, Mary Ann Kriegb;- cia Grubaugh, Blanche Childress. Row: Mary Crawfc. Harriet Hildebrand, ■. ' ;e B.irnett, Bet: im, Marian Bake?. Barth, Bcr.tr r, Dolores C:- e Mooncy, - -■.y, Martha Jet -r, Ruth Ferris, •man, Lois Chtw ■ Higbee. Front Row: Virginij Muore, Doris Allison, Bert us Joimson. i tare ha Jane Erunto ' . • jmrnings, Florence Cherry, Anne Clifford, Helen Woytovich, Betty Chapman. Second Row: Wilma Moore, Charleen Romines, Vivian Johnson, EUogene Griflith, Jacqueline Alobley, Eernice Schneider, Mildred Magel, Betty Keyser, Helen Hauselmire. Third Row: Virgene Moore, Nancy Eenefiel, Lois Armstrong, Marian Swan, Ellen Pcttit, Betty Yoke, Sarah Gusman, Mavaline Ferrier, Betty Bowman, Dorothy Forrest, Mary Kosanke, Naomi Bates, Earicanc Eastburn. Fourth Row: Dottle Fink, Martha Kno x, Alca Thompson. Naomi Crum, Maxine Dukes, Martha Shertzer, Wanda Pulliam, Eulalia TerwiiUger, Betty Hancock, Louise Samuelson, Dorothy Nussnieier. Fifth Row: Ruth McCrocklin. Harriet Powers, Marjorie Katccrhenry, Frances Yearick, Claire Strickler, Muriel Collins, Betty Sutherland, Lee Tyler, Doris Nicholson, Beverly Carraway, Louise Hemmer. m umk Bernice Schneider -President Ellogene Griffith Vice-Presideiif Betty Bowman Secretary Mildred Magel Treasurer A professional organization to which all women majoring or minoring in business are eligible for mem- bership was organized on the Indiana campus in 1930. After a lapse of several years, the Indiana chapter of Chi Gamma, national service organization, again became active. Its objectives are to promote higher education for women in business; to encourage scholarship; to maintain close contact with business and to develop that solidarity which comes from working together, and to stimulate the development of professional attitudes and high standards of business efficiency, business ethics, and culture. The theme for the year has been the development of leadership. Business women spoke before the group at monthly meetings, explaining their duties and telling of their experiences in the business world. The climax of the year was a formal reception held in April for honorary and ex-officio members, outstanding people interested in business who are on the campus. THESE CAME ON th: OF TF 93 wunm? Y(31I FUTURE UEFIIAUDEHS! Estel W. Kelley President Donald E. Casey Yice-Vresident John P. Chrisney Treasurer Mildred Bernhardt Secretary The Indiana Accounting Club was established on this campus in 193 8 to further the interests of accounting students at Indiana University by supplementing their accounting theory with business contacts, by bringing to Bloomington speakers who are employed in the different branches of accounting work, by endeavoring to interest accounting employers in the students, and by serving these students. From the time this club was organized last spring it has brought to the campus several speakers. These talks have made it possible not only for the mem- bers to understand accounting systems in operation, but also have aided in placing graduates majoring in account- ing. Membership in the club has risen from thirty-five, at the time it was organized, to seventy-five members. Alva L. Prickett, Stanle) A. Pressler, Geoffrey L. Car- michael, Ingvald W. Aim, and Robert E. Walden of the School of Business are honorary members of the organiza- tion. ACCOlliTIE CLUB ■■ T .ow: Mary Beth Qvaw. Westfall, Charles Houvcr, . Kriekhaus, Edward Dodd, . ■ .: V. Kelley, John . ' hard Aikman, .lius Klaus, Bct- ry L;;t. L-- :- -uii ts.oy, John Raber. Joseph .i .. ' .j-;. Third Ro%v: Smith, Rober. crsly, Lewis 1: Irving Fine. Fourth Ro Cliester Varn:.i:i, li.:z:.bct}i Thomsoii. --- -■ .-t Uno cher, LL, .: , : Donald F. ...unger, Jeanne -Bernhardt, Rob. . Sconer, Ermal C ow: Tom Stro: ! U,bcrt Stroj_« - Green, JoVn - .veber, Harr, 94 Nice going, Stinky . . . No thanks, I don ' t V ' n le . . . Havin ' a hot time at the Delt fire dance . . . Part of |the crowd at the D. U. dance - - - the punch bowl is downstairs . . . faunt struts his stujff . . . Say, Howdy Wilcox, Let ' s roll ' em . . . Three ' s a fowd . . . There ' s something about a soldier . . . Nice work if you can get it! Below: PROFESSOR NILA SMITH C. O. DA Left: PROFESSORS  «..??; CARL G. F. FRANZEN VELORUS MARTZ DEAN HENRY L. SMITH . . . member of the Board of Directors of the World Federa- tion of Education Association . . . holds ' innumerable offices in similar important organiza- tions . . . finds time to compile collections of Educational Sur- veys and Achievement Tests . . . work is his hobby and long walks in the country his relaxa- I isfai- ■ i-t;;.uiit .-, ,.. a URIAH ABERSON New York City B.S. Physiatl Education The Folio Staff. Joeing and studying in the Gables during convocation period is this trio of future teachers. James Bu- chanan is the male, while the would- be school-marms from the School of Education are Martha Sears and Har- riet Scott. JANE E. ATKINSON Edwardsport B.S. Education Chi Gamma: Y.W. C.A.; W.A.A.; Eng- lish Club: Glee Club. NANCY MAY BENEFIEL Indianapolis B.S. Education Phi Mu; Eta Sigma Phi; yf .K.A.- Y.W. C.A.; Archery Club; C a b a r e t Show ; Classical Club; Eng- lish Club; Education Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Dance Group. WILLIAM P. ANDERSON Marion ' B.S. Education Sigma Chi; Sphinx Club; Varsity Foot- ball; Assistant Coach, Football, Basketball, Ear,cball. ROSEALICE BALDWIN Hamniond jB.S. Eiliicntion Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A.; W ' .A.A.: Le Cercle Francais; Education Club. JEAN ESTYL BIELBY Lawrenccburg B.S. Educatio Pi Beta Phi; Pleiades: Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Bored Walk Staff; In- ternational Relations Club; Coed Counse- lor; Pan - Flel 1 enic Council; Frills and Fur belows . ERNEST ANDRES JR. IctVersonvilie .B.S. Physical Education Plii Cjamma Delta; Captain, Varsity Bas- ketball; Co-Captain, Varsity Baseball; Sphinx Cliib; Drag- on ' s Head; Balfour Award, Basketball; I Men ' s Association. BETTY BEASLEY Indianapolis B.S. Education Kappa Kappa Gamma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Freshman Debate: Mortar Board Recog- nition; W.A.A. MARIAN VIRGINIA BILTZ .Mishawaka B.S. Education ELLEN AREHART Kondallville B.S. Education Chortis; Orchestra; W.A.A.; President, Education Club; Pres- ident, Gamma Delta Pi Lambda Theia; Al pha Lambda Delt.i. MARY LOU BECK Mishawaka B.S. P ryiical Education Pi Lambda Theia Alpha Lambda Delti W.A.A. Board; Arch cry Club; Y.W.C.A , Coed Counselor; The Folio Staff. DELOSS D, BLANCHARD Winchester B.S. Education Alpha Phi Omega, lufucation Club. WILLIAM ROBERT BOKELMAN Grcensburg B.S. Education DALE E. BROCK Mt. Comfort B.S. Education History Club. JAMES L. BUCHANAN Rising Sun B.S. Education Pro-Music Club; Ed- ucation Club; Caba- ret Show ; Music Master . liti ' . DARRELL H. BURNETT Paragon B.S. Education Pershing Rifles; Scab- bard and Blade; Al- pha Phi Omega; Freshman Rifle Team; Y.M.C.A.; Chemistry Club; Education Club. TONY CAMPAGNOLI Clinton B.S. Education Varsity Football. A. ALWYN CARDER Red Key B.S. Education History Club; English Club; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Education Club. HILDA J. CARMICHAEL (MRS.) Indianapolis B.S. Education 1;:,J!|| RAY ANDREW CARTER Orleans B.S. Education MARTHA ROSE CIESAR Whiting B.S. Education Zeta Tau Alpha. EDWIN W. CLASEN Kansas City, Kans. B.S. Education Sigma Chi; Varsity Football. BARBARA RUTH CUDDLEBACK Syracuse, N. Y. B.S. P jyiical Education ICA DELORES CURRY Columbus B.S. Education Education Club. TFIOMAS MARSHALL DECKARD Bloomington B.S. Physical Education Beta Theta Pi; 1 9 36 Olympic Team; Varsity Track; Cap- tain, Varsity Cross- country. LOWELL WALLACE DOHERTY Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Flistory Club. DOROTHY DARLINE DRENNAN Taylorville, 111. B.S. Education VIRGINIA LEE FELLMY Crandall B.S. Education Alpha Omicron Pi; Vice-President, Y.W. C.A.; Y.W.C.A. Cab- inet; Editor, Fresh- man Handbook; W.A.A. Board; Mor- tar Board Recogni- tion; Bored Walk Staff; Freshman Or- ientation Committee; Coed Counselor. PHILIP J. DUCKWORTH Paragon B.S. Education DOTTIE FINK Elizabeth B.S. Education Classical Club; Edu- cation Club; Y.W. C.A. ERLEANE EASTBURN Indianapolis B.S. Education Chi Gamma; Y.W. C.A.; English Club. ROBERT KEITH FLANINGAM Thorntown B.S. Physical Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JAMES HALBERT ELDER Dillsboro B.S. Education Varsity Rifle Team. ETHEL V. FRISK Hammond B.S. Education Zeta Tau Alpha. FREDERIC DOUGLAS ELIOTT Kokomo B.S. Education Kappa Alpha Psi; Var- sity Track. WILLIAM: L. GRAGG Lucerne B.S. Education Delta Chi; Pershing Rifles; Varsity De- bate. CARMEN PASCAL FABIAN l ast Chicago B.S. Education Cosmopolitan Club; Euclidean Circle; In- tramural Manager. DELORES GRICE Ft. Wayne B.S. Education HARRY H. FELDMAN Indianapolis : ' ' i|]||jj B.S. Education ' ' ' ' ll ! Vice-President, Phi Epsilon Kappa; Edu- cation Club; Interna-, tional Relations Clubj,| Cosmopolitan Club; Camp Counselor ' s Club. JACK GUARD Monticello B.S. Physical Education Theta Chi; Freshman:, | Basketball; Varsityl ' Basebal I ; F r e s h m a n Baseball. 98 iiiiiili I Comparing notes on relative strengths of Big Ten teams are three Crimson athletic stalwarts. To the left is Tony Campagnoli of Bo ' s pore li ' l boys . Next is basketeer Bill Johnson; then, leaning against the Gables ' front door, is Swede Clasen, backfield mainstay. ROBERT A. HAAK COLBURN S. JOHN HARRTS KATHRYN L. Hammond HARDIN Bloomington hi-:rli; J3.S. Physical Kewanna B.S. Bdifcation Orleans Education B.S. Education B.S. Physical Sigma Pi; Sphinx Y.M.C.A. Ediiiulion Club; Varsity Foot- Alplia Chi Omcpa ball; Varsity Wrest- W ' .A.A. Board; Y. ' ling. C,A.; Girls ' . GU Club; Pro-Musi Club; Cliorus; I. L Rcvuc ; D.inc Group. HELEN HOLMES Indianapolis B.S. Education Delta Delta Delta; W.A.A. Board; Presi- dent, Occanides; Pan- Hellenic Council. MILDRED BERNICE JACKSON Kokomo B.S. Education Sigma Kappa; Y.W. C.A.; Education Club. VIRGINIA HOLT Burns City B.S. Education Daubers Club; Coed Band; Education Club. EVELYN GRACE JOHNSON Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education W.A.A. GRETCHEN KATHRYN HOPMAN Hammond B.S. Physical Education Pi Beta Phi; Secretary, Treasurer, W.A.A.; Dance Group; Presi- dent, Oceanides. WILLIAM SHERRILL JOHNSON Jcffersnnville B.S. Physical Education Alpha Tau Omega; Sphinx Club; Skull and Crescent; Varsity Basketball. RAYMOND S. HYDE Rushville, Ohio B.S. Education Varsity Y ' rcstling. HELEN KALKANOFF Gary B.S. Physical Education W. A. A. ; Oceanides Dance Group; Hiking Club. JOSEPH R. KANYA East Chicago B.S. Education Sigma Phi Epsilon; History Club; Y.M. C.A. CATHERINE KEITH Shelbyville B.S. Education Sigma Kappa; Kappa Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Edu- cation Club. KARL K. KLEIN Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education ELIZABETH LANZA Newark, N. J. B..S. Education Newman Club; Eng- lish Club: Le Cercle Francais. LOLA LENNOX Indianapoli.s B.S. Education Pi Lambda Thcta. Phi CHESTER E. LESNIAK Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical t.ducation Epsilon Kappa. HENRY AUGUST LOHSE, JR. Indianapolis B.S. }:d ucation Men ' s Glee Club; Phi Ljisilon Kapjia. [I JOHN F. McCORMICK Bloomington B.S. Education MALCOLM LEE PORTER Cayuga B.S. Education HELEN LUCILLE McDANIEL Bloomington B.S. Education HERBERT ELIAS RICKS Summitville B.S. Education Euclidean Circle. CHESTER THOMAS McNERNEY Indianapolis B.S. Education JOHN M. ROBERTS Munster B.S. Education Bored ' Walk Staff; Freshman Wrestling; Education Club; Eng- lish Club; Phi Delta Kappa. ELISABETH MANN Indianapolis B.,S. Education Y. V. C. A.: Alpha L a in b d a Delta; Pi Lambda Tlieta. KENNETH M. SCHREIBER Indianapolis B.S. Physical Education MARY CATHERINE MORITZ Ft. ■Wayne B.S. Ed ncation 7.i: VA Tau Alplia; W.A.A. Board; Hik- ing Club; F ducation Club; Vice-President, Newman Club; Inter; national Relations Club. DOROTHY SCOLES Warsaw B.S. Education Sigma Kappa; Vice- President, Junior Home I ' c o n o m i c s Club; W.A.A. ; Y.W. C.A.; Le Cercle Fran- cais. VINCENT lAMES OLIVER Whiting B.S. Education Varsity Football. HARRIET RAE SCOTT GriiSth B.S. Education Alpha Omicron Pi; Le Cercle Francais; Coed Sponsor, R.O.T.C; Snowball Queen At- tendant; Bored Walk Staff,; PlcLides, FRANCIS lOSEPH PET RICK Youngstown, Ohi i||j|[| B.S. lid ucation II Varsity Football. MARIAN L. SCOTT J! Gji-y ' ; B.S. Education A RUTH MADELINE JEAN MILDRED SCOTT La Grange B.S. Education SEAGER Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical E.diication W.A.A. MARTHA ELLA SEARS Elkhart B.S. Education Pi Beta Phi; Pi Lamb- da Theta; Y.W.C.A.; International Rela- tions Club. LOLA K. SLOAN New Albany B.S. Education Delta Delta Delta. FRANK .SMITH, JR. Rochester B.S. Education WILLIAM TAYLOR S. 1 ITFI North Manchester B.S. Education ELIZABETH SNOOK !]:, Ft. Wayne §, B.S. Education J Phi M u: W. A. M Pan- Hellenic Council lif y.W.C.A, Gouncil.1 ' 100 WANDA HELENA SPONDER Gary B.S. Eilncaiion Education Club; Taps; Lady of Let- ters . COLLEEN GAYLE STANLEY Plainfield B.S. Eihica ioii Seward Wilshere, Education Senior and Varsity baseball player, strolls down one of the campus paths with Martha Sears. MARIAN TANE STEVENS Hammond B.S. Etincation Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi Lambda Theta; Y.W. C.A.; Chorus. HAZEL E. STOCKRAHM Bloomington B.S. EiJncafioii Education Club; Eng- lish Club. S. JEANETTE STRAYER Claypool B.S. Education Chi Omega; Tau Kappa Alpha; Fresh- man Orientation Committee; A. W. S. Council; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; W.A.A.; Chairman, University Sing; Freshman De- bate Team: Women ' s Varsity Debate Team; Niczer Award; Girls ' Glee Club; Chorus; Republican Club; Pan-Hellenic Council. MARJORIE RUTH SWIHART Ft. Wayne B.S. Ethirafioii Alpha Omicron Pi; Y. W. C. A.; D c r Deutsche Verein. CAROLINE ELIZABETH THIEL Gary B.S. Education CHRISTOPHER TRAICOFF Gary B.S. Education Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Delta Kappa; Varsity Wrestling. MAGDALEN MARGARET VARGA Soutli Bend B.S. Education JOE A. VEGH South Bend B.S. Education Varsity Football; Sen- ior Intramural Man- ager. MARY ELIZABETH VEHSLAGE Seymour B.S. Physical Education Tennis Club; Archcrv Club; W.A.A. Board. SUZANNE VINCENT Clay Center, Kans. B.S. Education PHYLLIS INEZ VINT StirTesviJIe B.S. lidiicalioii MARIAN HI ' TTY WAIKl ' R Lucerne B.S. tdiicution Delta Zcta; Y.W ' .C, A.; Elducation Club. MILDA JANE WEDEKIND Louisville, Ky. B.S. Physical Education Delta Psi Kappa; W. A.A. 102 tersea marie xt;isheit Baltimore, Md. B.S. Physical Education Delta Psi Kappa. GEORGE R. WESTFALL Bloomington B.S. Education SEWARD E. WILSHERE Skaneatelcs, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education Theta Chi; Phi Delta Kappa; Glee Club; Freshman Baseball. MARY LUCILE WILSON Ft. Wayne B.S. Education ADOLPH FREDERICK WINTER .Milwaukee, W ' i.s. B.S. Physical Ed ucaliun Phi Epsilon Ka p p a; Glee Club, LOUISE HAZI I W ' YIJI P.Uuiniin.LiU ' n B.S. Ed iicai ioir ' Signi.i K.ippa; Y.W.C, A.; l.-.ducation Club. ..jmim Drink ' er Down, Drink ' er Down ... ... Cub Reporter Birdeye William- son tries to conceal his thrill at being photographed . . . Flash!! Cash customer fights way out of Bookstore; escapes bait system . . . Edythe Thornton grins obligingly . . . Ten more days to file your blue card . . . Victorious but tired after a two hour battle with the books ... A studious trio takes a moment between classes: Correll, Conley and Sturgeon. Hitch-hiking business picks up . . . The power conies out from behind the press for a walk . . . Schnute sleep- walking his way to a class ... It costs a dollar if you ' re late, Edith . . . Betas f Widaman, Thompson, and Elrod talk it over in Commons . . . Lawrence spares M cameraman a quick grin . . . No class today . . . A. T. O. scholarship up three points. PI UMBM THETA Mrs. Carolyn Bookwalter Mrs. Helen Painter Elizabeth Kriekhaus Mrs. Bessie Harrell President -Vice-President Secretary Treasurer _ ' ;.:: _.; .damentally is an educational honorary, but its aim :::ing — to develop high professional ideals and to encourage ad- SLudy m education among women . addition to many student members, the group has added membership v nswomen and graduates. This honorary has many activities: it holds meetings the year round, at which time educational programs are SDonsors teas three times during the year in honor of outstanding ,e teaching profession; it finances a high school girl in food, clothing, and school expenses, and it gives an annual award to a woman gradu- ate who has been outstanding in the field of education. Another accomplishment of Pi Lambda Theta has been the founding of the Education Club. This was formed several years ago as a joint product of the efforts of this honorary and Phi Delta Kappa. studied; stude:- -: Ruth Alexander Ellen M. Arehart Mrs. Freda Arnett Mildred Bernhardt Dr. Lillian Berry Mrs. Mary Black Alta Bohenbaugh Mrs. Carolyn Bookwalter Loleta Branson Flossie Burks Jessie Burks Mrs. Lucy Carmichael Mrs. LavTra Childs Olevia Davis Phena Deane Alma Engelbrecht Agnes Elpers Adda Fraley Oletha Griffith Montana Grinstead Virginia Hall Madia Halstead Mrs. Bessie Harrell Dr. Cora B. Hennel Hilda Henwood Mary E. Hodges Mrs. Lottie Kirby Elizabeth Kriekhaus Sarah Elizabeth Mann Margaret Marley M. Katherine Mohler Elizabeth Moore Thelma Overbeck Mrs. Helen Painter Amelia Peters Eva Pring Cora Purdy Mrs. Helen Mooney Rogers Geraldine Smith Mrs. H. L. Smith Ruth Smith Doris Taylor Margaret Thompson Hester Thorpe Mrs. Ruth Trotten Betty Anne Van Fleit Rosann Van Valer Dr. Agnes E. Wells Blanche Wellons Pauline Wildman Mrs . Madge Wilson Ethel E. Wooden Mabel Wylie Beulah Young EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Mrs. Carolyn Weems Bookwalter Vice-President Mrs. Helen Welch Painter Treasurer Mrs. Bessie Harrell Recording Secretary Elizabeth Kriekhaus Corresponding Secretary Margaret Marley Keeper of Records Flossie Burks Active Member Adda Fraley 106 PHI DELTA KAPPA Phi Delta Kappa, a professional association committed to the scientific study of education, is the result of a merger of Phi Delta Kappa, Pi Kappa Mu, and Nu Rho Beta. The three organizations had similar purposes, namely, to further research, service, and leadership in the profession of education. The Alpha chapter of the fraternity is on the Indiana campus. Membership in this organization is limited to men of high scholarship who are planning to devote their lives to the field of education. Usually only graduate members are elected, but men who have Junior standing and who have completed at least eight semester hours in edu- cation are eiligible for membership. Burie .3!en D. 2. . Harold E. M ■■iSfoW imcifiK n Ellen Arehart President Hazel Stockrahm Vicc-Presideiif- James Buchanan Secretary-Treasurer This offspring of Pi Lamba Theta and Phi Delta Kappa, honorary education organizations, appeared on the campus in the spring of 193 5. As originally intended, the club exists for one purpose, that of furnishing underclassmen in the School of Education with more opportuni- ties for getting together and becoming ac- quainted. Eligibility for membership requires that the student in education has a C average and an interest in the problems of teaching. The pledges are voted in by members of the cabinet. The group meets once each month and pre- sents program.s planned and presented by the students themselves. With the help of talks by faculty members and occasionally an outside speaker, members study the progress of educa- tion. Once a year the club meets jointly with its foster organizations, Pi Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kappa, for dinner. In the future, co- operation with the school faculty will be carried on through a greater number of joint meetings yearly. The High School Teachers ' representa- tive for the group is Madia Halstead, and the Elementary Teachers ' representatives are Laura Wilkins and Edna Rosenbaum. 107 ' — «rft? ' -  ii!W«!!y --iiii . M S ? -E Last September 8, Principal C. O. Dahle opened the doors of the Uni- versity School to pupils for the first time. The six hundred students filed through the doorway to spend their first day in the ultra modern educational plant ranged in grades from kindergarten through high school. One hundred and forty-three students of the University practice teaching in this laboratory school. DIVERSITY iMmm m, The school has a three-fold pur- pose. The first is to educate the pu- pils; the second, to serve as a train- ing school for prospective teachers; and third, to serve as a model for educators of the State to study. The building is furnished with the finest and most modern equipment, and the newest methods in teaching are employed. The school is com- plete with everything from a spacious auditorium to an up-to-date book- store. The conventional study halls are conspicuous by their absence, for all free hours are spent in the library. A great deal of emphasis is laid on the good health of the students, for a nurse is kept on hand at all times; and a local doctor gives physical exami- nations for one hour each morning. 109 C f5 Below: PROFESSOR S. T. BURNS Left: PROFESSOR R. S. TANGEMAN DEAN ;anders . . . whc„,: ,j, ;s him dig- nity . , . w. ideas give hii - ■. ; ' ;s that he is iaz ;3 second hand copic: cl niysii.y books by cer- ziiin authors . . inevitably his inirerests rev . nd music - . sreat , r,d great ■ -.1 the Caught joeing in the Jordan is this all-star School of Music quartet. Surrounding the vocalist, Dot Silverthorn, are Jack Walts, band maestro, (standing), and Ray Beights (rig ht), and Dick Shores, ace piano team. AHRGARI 1 K l B.PS.M. Mmu Sigma Alpha !ot,a; Cosmopolitan Club; ' :j Bnglisli CUib; Secrc-:| tary. Pro Music Club; || CKoru.s; Sccrc ' cary ' l Treasurer, Glee Club)! ' :! Orchestra; y.W.C.A..f ; j Coed C o u n s e I o r ; I ' j Freshman Orientation , Committee; The J ' 1i-j kado . ;! ' RAYMOND BF.IGHTS i Kcndallville ■; n.M. Pi.nio ] University SympiionV Orchestra; Chorus; Chairman, School ol Music Student Coun- cil; Gamma Delta; Musical Director, Cabaret Show ' LOLETA BRANSON Rockville B.P.S.M. Music ,|j Pi Lambda Theta; Al-I pha Lambda Delta; Pro Music Club; Edu- cation Club; Chorus; Glee Club, I OHM «TLLARD BROOM Ft. Wayne n.P.S.M. Miiiir Kappa Kappa P s i ; Band; Taps; Y.M.C. A.; Chorus: Orches- tra; Phi Delta Kappa; Pirates of Penzance . VIRGINIA HALL Bloomington B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi Lambda Theta; Chorus; Orchestra; Pro Music Club. PAULINE JUDAH Bloomington B.P.S.M. Music Pi Lambda Theta; Sigma Alpha Iota; Pro Music Club; Chorus; Glee Club; Orchestra; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counselor; The Mikado ; The Only Girl . JEANNE E. McHENRY Matthews B.S. Eilrica iori Orchestra; Chorus; Education Club; Kap- pa Phi. MARY MARGARET MURPHY Griffith B.P.S.M. Music Pro Music Club; Chorus; Glee Club. WILLIAM F. PIRTLE Linton B.P.S.M. Music Kappa Kappa Psi; Band; Orchestra; Pershing Rifles; Y.M. C.A. MARY L. BRUM BL AY Bloomington B.M. Music Theta Alpha Phi; President, Sigma Al- pha Iota; President, Pro Music Club; Glee Club; Chorus; Cos- mopolitan Club. OLIVE LYNNE SANDERS Bloomington B.P.S.M. Micuc A I p h a Omicron Pi; Glee Club; Y.W.C. A,; Treas u rer. Pro Music Club; Chorus; E d u c a t i o n Club; Band; H.M.S. Pina- fore ; The Mikado . MARION ERWIN Albion B.P.S.M. Music Band; Orchestra; Pro Music Club; Men ' s Glee Club; H.M.S. Pinafore ; The Mi- kado , RICHARD W. SHORES Rockville B.M. Music Delta Tau Del Kappa Kappa Psi Eta Sigma; Theta pha Phi; Taps; Music Club; Mu ' Phi le-il Director, Jor d tnl| River Revue ; Bindtl Cabaret Show ; MuJJ sical Director, Slll ,Jj| The Chore Eov MAVIS SMITH Bloomfield B.P,S.M. MH,«f Alpha Omicron Pi: Glee Club; Chorus: Y.W.C.A. lliiiktii ' CHARLES ARTHUR SUKMANN Bloomington B.P.S.M. Music Kappa Kappa Psi; Pro Music Club; Band; Orchestra; Chorus; Y.M.C.A. JOY HELEN WAGNER Silderville B.P.S.M. MiLwc Chorus; Glee Club; Band; Daubers Club. JACK CLAYTON WALTS Georgetown B.P.S.M. Music Acacia; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band; Sophomore Basketball Manager. CHARLES THELMA WHITLOCK iLouisville, Ry. B.P.S.M. Music Y.W.C.A. STEPHEN WILLIAM YANKTOVICH Chesterton B.P.S.M. Mtisn- Pro Music Club; Or- chestra; Chorus; Camera Club; Dau- bers Club; I.U. Radio Iin:iemhle; School of iMusic Student Coun- cil, ALICI M ZWILLInG ViTTceiines fi. P,S,M. hnii Pi Beta PI . . Walk; Freshmaili Princess; Tips PanH Hellenic Councd j W.C.A,; Chor is ( lu. |j Club; Good News East I,ynnc BorcJ h n, , J JOHN CHARLES THOMAS FABIEN SEVITZKY GUIOMAR NOVAES NATHAN MILSTEIN EMANUEL FEUERMANN mm SERIES Increased patronage has made it possible for In- diana University to obtain outstanding musicians to aid in the cultural development of the students. The first musical artist to appear on the Music Series this year was Emanuel Feuermann, celebrated Aus- trian cellist, one of the greatest of all times. He was followed by John Charles Thomas, who is at the top of the list of American baritones. For four sea- sons he has been a member of the Metropolitan Opera Company. The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, consist- ing of eighty musicians directed and conducted by Fabien Savitzky, appeared twice. Guiomar Novaes, who holds the undisputed claim to the title of the greatest woman pianist, was enthusiastically received, and Nathan Milstein, brilliant Russian violinist, cli- maxed the Music Series with his excellent perform- ance. WELL, WHO SAin ANYTHINB PRO-MDSIC CLUB Mary Brumblay ____ Richard Shores Margaret Ardashier Olive Sanders President -Vice-President Secretary The Pro-Music Club was founded by faculty mem- bers and students for the general purpose of furthering the cause of music. More specifically, the group embraces the following aims: to bring students and faculty mem- bers in the School of Music more closely together; to pre- sent a light opera each year; to sponsor recitals and con- certs, and to promote music appreciation on the campus and throughout the state. The club petitioned this fall for national membership in two groups — Sigma Alpha Iota for women, and Sin- fonia for men. In addition to creating good will for music, the Club aids in the sale of season books for the campus Music Series. Members are supposed to acquire the social graces of music from association in the Club and to become more proficient listeners and performers. First Row MargLiret Alice Thompson Fred Fiess Loleta Bra nson Pauline Judah Robert Coates Margaret Ardashier Second Row Mar) ' Margaret Murph) ' Marion Erwin Dorothy Silverchorn James Buchanan Vivian Isaacs Kathrvn Klineelhoifer Third Row John Marti]! Mary Brumblay Dick Shores Olive Sanders Charles Sukmann DEAN ROBERT SANDERS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA INDIANA UNIVERSITY CHORUS -fHii a, - I - The University Symphony Orchestra, contrary to pc whose membership is not Hmited to students of the Schcc brilliant performances, one on the Sunday Afternoon Serie; Music, the other at the Foundation Day services. The pu. _ chestral training for those students who are interested in r time in a worthwhile manner. In the future the requireme;: difficult. The School of Music also plans to give the stude: rection of experts. DEAN ROBERT L. SANDERS One of Indiana ' s most valued acquisitions of the year is the services of Robert L. Sanders as Dean of the School of Music. A graduate of Bush Conservatory, Chicago, Dean Sanders also studied composition on a fellovirship at the American Academy in Rome. In 1912 he returned to Chicago as instructor in music at Meadville Theological Seminary; later he was appointed assistant conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orches- tra. He came to Indiana University in the fall of 193 8, after four years as a member of the faculty of the music department at the University of Chicago. Dean Sanders, an artist as well as a dean, has made many friends and has done a great deal of constructive work since his arrival on the campus. He was instrumental in changing entrance requirements for the School of Music, making it possible to admit without condition all graduates of accredited high schools. He has planned a new and expanded curriculum in all branches of study in the school to take effect next year. Dean Sanders also was largely responsible for a new, greatly increased basic theoretical program, which has been developed and placed in full charge of Professor Nye. The Dean received a coveted honor this year when he was invited to direct the New York Symphony Orchestra, February 26, 1939, in the playing of his prize-winning composition, Little Symphony in G ; the world premier was broadcasted on a nation-wide hook-up. The composition, which is being examined now by other conductors, was written during the season of 1936-37 in Chicago. In September, 1937, it was sent to the annual contest conducted by the New York Philharmonic Society for American Composers in the division of short works. In February, 1938, the award of $500 was announced as being shared by Dean Sanders and Charles Haubiel of New York. In the brief time Mr. Sanders has held the position of Dean, he has proved himself invaluable in the developing of Indiana ' s rapidly growing School of Music. An impressive presentation of the Messiah and a brief con e , : Hour were the public appearances of the University Chorus this yeir. 1 r.:.-,::; public his intention of abolishing required work for all public school r s oi P will be a choral union composed of selected voices from interested f ' ' ispeople, plus the entire membership of the combined Glee Clubs. This new : -icn-credit standing and will be considered as extra-curricular. 117 ? t A ' ,t I,- xJ pK M y ' ' 8 ' ;r:;;:Kv!-:: ' Ws .a ■« MtfSS 5 . ■■■■■■■, An opportunity for coeds to gain experience and practice in choral train- ing is offered by the Girls ' Glee Club. Selections for membership are made in the fall — the final number in the group totaling approximately one hundred. A very successful year was enjoyed under the direction of Professor William I. Ross. The group ' s first appearance was in December, at which time the group presented The Child Jesus by Joseph Gluck. In January the club aided the Cabaret Show by singing in the chorus; a convocation program also was pre- sented by the group, and about forty members appeared in the chorus of the Pirates of Penzance . During the season Vivian Isaacs acted as the accom- panist and Seldon Marsh as assistant director. On May 12 the busy season was concluded with the annual Mother ' s Day program. The highlight of the year for the Men ' s Glee Club, under the direction of Professor Douglas Nye, was the annual concert tour through the state of Indiana. Cities visited included Indianapolis, Noblesville, Peru, Monon, North Judson, Plymouth, South Bend, and Culver Military Academy. On the trip Charles Reitz was the accompanist, and Herman DeMoss was clarinet soloist. A special feature was furnished by The Gentlemen from Indiana quartet, com- posed of George Burns, first tenor; Wayne Carmichael, second tenor; Robert Taylor, first bass, and Robert Stanley, second bass. The nature of the music on the program was serious, light opera, and folk. They finished their year with the annual campus concert on April 2. MEr.S lilEE (ILIIB CXIW . . ' % 4 !I|1 yii m ... Proving that School of Music students really do study . . . Vivien Green and pupil ape the spirit of ' 76 . . . Required rendering of German songs under Prof. Berrett. Ach, nicht sehr gut! . . . Winifred Merrill and protege can ' t tie those bows . . . Von Zweygberg asks, Who hit that sour note? ... A future N. Eddy. l ' - Below: PROFESSOR M. J. BOWMAN ' AbL, ' - : PROFESSOR J. J. ROBINSON Center: DEAN BERNARD C. GAVIT . . . whose off-campus activi- ties include being secretary to the Indiana Judicial Council and member of the State Board of Law Examiners ... is a notable joe who manages to visit the Commons alm.ost every after- noon . . . easily recognized by his quiet, pleasant manner and the twinkle in his eye. Left: PROFESSORS R. C. BROWN H. E. WILLIS ALFRED EVENS Curator Sam Dar- gan, official law tome duster - offer . . . No, dearie, that winged creature isn ' t a law student . . . Curlie seems to be making his study quite a feet , . . That surely can ' t be a shyster . . , Maxwell Monastery, bane of extra-curricular ac- tivity. Not having the Meds to insult, the bards of Maxwell have retired to the Commons in a body, where they are participating in a little extra-curricular activity. Here they are en- gaged in the all-American sport of poker. The faculty is rumored to be considering Jacks , or better, to stay in school. Seated from left to right in this unholy alliance are — Back-to-the- Camera Pontz, Will Call-me-Caruso Os- burn, John Left-be-Heiny Christensen, Dave Hands-on-the-Table Cook, Jim Ready-to- Spring Pease, Ray Power-Behind the Throne Fox, and Horace The Mighty Kean. Phi DAVID N. ' I1|I1I|1 BREWER ' ' j Frjnkforc LL.B. Law ,i Gamma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Alpha i : ' l Kappa Psi; Kappa;:||[ Kappa Psi; law Club; :j Band; Freshman Ori-i entation Committee; j Jordan River R e- :j vue ; Band. ' JAMES O. BRINKERHOFF Garrett LL.B. Law Phi Delta Phi. JOHN CHRISTENSEN Hammond LL.B. Linii Delta Tau Delta; Phi ,i Delta Phi; Phi BetaJ Kappa; Blue Key; Phi ill Sigma Alpha, ■ ' DAVID M. COOK ; Logansport LL.B. Laiv t ' Phi Beta Kappa;if ' iji]jii Eta Sigma; cWli Club; Flame Club if Chairman, Indiana ' ' Law Journal; Board of Managers, Law Club; History Club. HORACE M. KEAN Jasper LL.B. Lau Sigma Chi; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Mu Alpha; Student Board of Edi- tors, Indiana Law Journal. WILLIAM E. OSBURN Ma rion LL.B. Law Delta Upsilon; Golf Team; Associate Edi- tor, Arbutus; Bored Walk Staff; Blue Key; Band; President, Phi Delta Phi; Indiana Law Journal Staff; Orchestra; Skull and Crescent; History and Government Club. ISADORE KRIEGER Gary LL.B. Law Student Board of Edi- tors, Indiana Law Journal; Law Club; Secretary, Jackson Club; Varsity Debate; Y.M.C.A. JAMES PEASE Franklin .D. Law Phi Delta Theta; Blue Key; Phi Delta Phi; Theta Alpha Phi; Jordan River R e- V u e ; Cabaret Show ; National Ora- torical Champion, ' 3 4; Law Student Council; Winner, Bryan Oratorical Contest, ' 5 8. GALE IVAN McGREW Kokomo LL.B. Law STEPHEN M. PIERSON Ft. Wayne LL.B. Law Phi Delta Phi; Alpha Phi Omega; Law Club. ROBERT EUGENE MASTERS Ft. Wayne LL.B. LaiL ' Union Board; Scab- bard and Blade; Lc Cercle Francais; Flame Club. WILL LAM M. PONTZ South Bend LL.B. Law Sigma Pi; Law Club; Skull and Crescent; Bored Walk Staff; Phi Delta Phi. JOSEPH G FORGE ETTL South Bend LL.B. Law Delta Upsilon. THOMAS NESBIT MATHERS Bloomington LL.B. Laiv Swimming Team; President, Dolphin Club; Law Club. JOE ROE Columbia City LL.B. Law ' Phi G a m ma Delta; Law Club; Varsity Football. RAYMOND M. FOX A4ichigan City LL.B. Law Delta Tau Delta; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Delta Phi; Skull and Cres- cent; Sphinx Club; Blue Key; Dragon ' s Head; President, Un- ion Board; President, Board of Aeons; Pres- ident, Senior Class, ' 37; Varsity Football; Chairman, Junior Prom, ' 3 6; President, Phi Delta Phi. HAROLD H. MELOY Shelbyville LL.B. Law STANLEY S. VALINET Indianapolis LL.B. Law ■ Sigma Alpha Mu; Var- sity Debate; Vice- President, Tau Kappa Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega; Skull and Crescent; Nie er Award; Law Club; Phi Delta Gamma; Blue Key Recognition. Freshman Golf. JOHN HARVEY HIMELICK Conners ' ille LL.B. Law Phi Delta Theta; Phi|| ' j| Delta Phi. fi JOHN M. MrLLERi ! Indianapolis ■ J IX.B. Law I Phi Delta Theta; PhJ. ' l! Delta Phi. ' , FRED A. WEAVER I Bloomington ' pi LL.B. Lmv li Kappa Sigma; Phi ' I Delta Phi. ' | 122 The white-robed cadaver crew retrieve their horns from the hock shop and parade before the big game . . . Medic Bob Craig cuts a hunk out of the baseball ' s epidermis in the Softball game . . . Shyster Demosthenes inspires the team to battle with oratory, while Mary Ann Kunkel and friend look on . . . Just kids, tch, tch, — mustn ' t fight . . . Victorious Vivisection- ists drink heartily froin the loving cup. STER-HyCK COMBAT The Law-Medic game was held during the morning of Homecoming Day, attended by its usual pomp and circumstance. Both contestants were represented by marching bands, the crowd cheered wildly, and the tra- ditional mug was on hand to inspire the players. Baseball was played instead of football this year in an attempt to cut down the high mortality list that always came from football. The white-garbed Medics beat the shysters by an 11-6 count. 124 LAW TAXI Um .:i= ktJ, The Power of the Indiana Law was all massed into one big case during the winter social season to make the annual Taxi Dance one of the more select occasions of the year. As this was only the second year that the barristers had tried their hands at the art of entertaining, they did their best to improve the affair. Instead of the first plan, to send out sub- poenas to only seventy of the school ' s fairest coeds, practically twice that number of bids were mailed out. In this way they figured that there would be fewer broken hearts, and furthermore, to their own advantage, there would be a female stag-line. Each of the lawyers had a chance to see that his dream girl was properly invited, as all that he had to do was sl ' p her name on the sheet of paper hanging in the hall of old Maxwell when none of the broth- ers were looking. From then on, all he had to do was hope and pray that she could afford the taxi fare. The dance featured the music of Gene Kellams and his orchestra, aided by several spontaneous per- formances by members of the faculty, who dis- missed from mind for one evening their ban on extra-curricular carousals. DR. JAMES O. RITCHEY DEDICATION Having received his own professional training in the Indiana University School of Medicine, Dr. Ritchey has, since his graduation, remained a loyal friend of his alma mater and has been a member of the teaching staff for many years. Today, as head of the Department of Medicine, although engrossd in the pressing demands of his practice, he continues to give freely of his time to the teaching of clinical medicine and to the promotion of the general pro- gram of a growing medical center. Devoted to the proposition that the competent doctor is one well trained in careful observation and accurate diagnosis, drawing copiously, to the benefit of his students, upon a vast knowledge of disease, and constantly exemplary of the requisite in the relation between physician and patient, he has earned and is accorded the respect of those who study under him as well as those associated with him in the profession. In appreciation of these qualities so thoroughly manifested in his teaching and in his practice of the healing art, the Senior class dedicates to him this medical section of the 1939 Arbutus. 126 DR. CHARLES P. EMEUSON INM To the memory of Dr. Charles P. Emerson, skilled physician, revered teacher, eminent citizen. Christian gentleman, and former Dean of the Indiana University School of Medicine, this page respectfully is dedicated. Dr. Emerson brought to the deanship the fruits of an extensive educational background, having received the bachelor ' s degree from Amherst College, the M.D. degree from Johns Hopkins, and having spent many years in postgraduate study, again at Johns Hopkins, and in several European universities. Serving as Dean from 1911 until 1932, his guidance brought the Medical Center through its formative years to its present established place in the front rank of American institutions for the study of medicine. A gifted author, he wrote textbooks which have been used widely throughout the country, redounding not only to his personal credit, but to that of the University as well. Incessantly active in the pursuit of his profession, he yet found time to be a real factor in the affairs of his community and his church. Though his loss is felt deeply, the depth of his character and the extent of his achievements long will be reflected in the work of many who were his students and his associates. 127 •J, .;., Left: DOCTOR GEORGE S. BOND Below: DOCTOR CECIL L. RUDESILL Above: DOCTOR - ■ROLLA N. HARGER f Center: DEAN WILLIS D. GATCH ... a graduate of Johns Hop- kins . . . skilled surgeon of wide r outation . . . possessed of un- ' ig energy ... a genial gen- : whose dry wit is at once light and despair of his :: ... a prominent figure medical circles . . . : '  of strength and ' s Medical Cen- MARK P. HELM Mark P. Helm, an I man of the Class of ' 94 and the Medical School ' s genial Registrar, has been associated with the Medical Center since 1924. He became Registrar in 193 6, and his white hair and black briar pipe have become a familiar sight on the Indianapolis campus. A thousand and one de- tails relative to curriculum and to such matters as clinic attendance, over-cuts, and semester grades comprise his daily job, which he performs with quiet good humor. To Mr. Martin falls the heavy responsibility of the administration of the Medical Center ' s business affairs. Exclusive of the medical and nursing staff, the entire personnel of the hospitals and Medical School is under his direction. His office, located in the new Clinical Building, also handles the Center ' s finances, the purchase of supplies, and the many de- tails concerned with the upkeep of the buildings and grounds. CLINICAL BUILDING Pictured below is the new Clinical Building, the University ' s latest addition to its Indianapolis division. Erected at a cost of five hundred thousand dollars, the building was completed and occupied in 193 8. Its six stories satisfy a long-standing need for more space, and it has greatly increased the facilities available to staff and patients. Several departments formerly housed in smaller quarters in other campus buildings now occupy more room here. The first floor contains the admitting room and X-ray department. Out-patient clinics and the central clinical laboratory take up the second floor. On the third floor are the business offices. Other floors house the central record room, a central sterilizing room, several wards, surgical amphitheaters, and spacious living quarters for the internes and resident physicians. iililillllin I mi nil pii I i nil nil nil I I. . MEDICAL CEITER The Indiana University Medical Center stands today as one of the finest institutions of its kind in the nation. Its growth has been steady and rapid, the entire present estabhshraent having been planned and set up within the last twenty- five years. The Robert W. Long Hospital, the first unit, was completed in 1914. The corner- stone of the Medical School Building bears the date 1919. The James Whitcomb Riley Hos- pital for Children was erected in 1924. In 1927 the William H. Coleman Hospital for Women was added. The beautiful Ball Nurses ' Resi- dence was built in 1928. In 1930 the Kiwanis Unit was added to the Riley Hospital. The Rotarian Convalsecent Home was completed in 1931. The Clinical Building was finished and put into service in 193 8. Now under construc- tion on the campus is a new structure which will house the offices and laboratories of the Indiana State Board of Health. The teaching personnel has, from the first, included physicians and surgeons outstanding in their various fields of endeavor. At present the faculty, headed by Dean Gatch, is made up primarily of men actively engaged in the prac- tice of medicine, and their years of experience stand behind their instruction in classroom and clinic. For this reason the students in the In- diana University School of Medicine are as- sured that the training which they receive is calculated to familiarize them with the most useable aspects of present-day medical science. In addition to the teaching of medicine and the care of patients, the Medical Center constantly maintains several lines of research work, emble- matic, of the spirit which always has motivated the profession — a desire to alleviate human suf- fering by discovering more of its causes. The State of Indiana has just reason to be proud of a great University. It has reason to be doubly proud of the University ' s Medical Center, which has been, and continues to be, of inestimable service to its citizens. ALPIII OMEGA ALPHA Alpha Omega Alpha, a national medical scholastic fraternity, corresponds to Phi Beta Kappa of the College of Arts and Sciences. The fraternity was founded in 1902 at the University of Illinois. The Indiana University chapter was chartered in 1916. Each spring those students who have led their class throughout the four years of the medical course receive membership in the society. Although a few of those elected each year are Juniors, the majority of the new members are chosen in the second semester of the Senior year. FACULTY MEMBERS Willis Dew Gatch Burton Dorr Myers Sidney S. Aronson John F. Barnhill Gordon W. Batman Cyrus J. Clark Clyde G. Culbertson A. Murray DeArmond Dwight L. DeWees Frank Forry Harry L. Foreman Paul J. Fouts Arthur G. Funkhouser Euclid T. Gaddy John L. Glendening Robert Glass John H. Greist Frank F. Hutchins Rolla N. Harger Edwin N. Kime Isadore J. Kwitney Kenneth G. Kohlstaedt J. Jerome Littell Wendell D. Little Ralph U. Leser John M. Masters Walter P. Moenning Amos C. Michael Hugh Martin Cleon A. Nafe John E. Owen Thurman B. Rice James O. Ritchey Ben R. Ross Cecil L. Rudesill Frank B. Ramsey Bernard D. Rosenak Lacy L. Shuler David L. Smith Reuben A. Solomon Alan L. Sparks Brandt F. Steele Harold M. Trusler B. Bernard Turner William V. Woods Matthew Winters Donald J. White Don. J. Wolfram STUDENT MEMBERS Mary Frances Travis Ward B. Warren Louis W. Nie Milton L. McCall Charles E. Walters Gordon T. Herrman Robert M. Salassa Mary S. Kitchel Marietta Houston A. David Price James G. Shanklin Irving H. Itkin Maynard C. Shiffer Paul L. Rieth Carroll B. Warren Cleo C. Shullenberger Lyman D. Eaton John F. Spahr Jack C. Shrader Robert H. Maschmeyer Robert W. Phares James M. Hundley Elbert H. Laws Paul V. Evans Francis J. Kubik 131 SENIOH cuss :_ZSPIE ANNA L. MILLESON Secretary A. DAVID McKINLEY Treasurer JAMES D. PEIRCF President JOHN F. SPAHR Vice-President ADRON A. SUI.LF.NGER Secretar) ' RAY H. BURNIKEL Treasurer The graduating Senior looks back with a great deal of relief upon the completion of a long and exacting course of training. He looks ahead with some apprehension, which stems from the knowledge that today ' s irresponsible student must needs become tomorrow ' s re- sponsible intern, and that today ' s didactic pictures of disease leave him somewhat inade- quately prepared to meet tomorrow ' s actual problems in diagnosis and treatment. His Senior year having been devoted largely to clinical work, entailing bedside study of patients, he realizes now that much he has gleaned from textbook and lecture is of a fleet- ing nature, while the human experiences as- sociated with his medical training are truly unforgettable. In short, he has learned that knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers. The course of study in the Senior year in- cludes advanced work in the fundamental departments of medicine and surgery and an introduction to such specialized fields as otolaryngology, roentgenology, and orthopedics. Mornings are given to clinics at the University hospitals and the Indianapolis City Hospital, and afternoons to lectures and quizzes. In the course of the second semester, members of the class visited the Lilly Laboratories in Indian- apolis and the Parke, Davis Laboratories in Detroit, and were royally entertained on both occasions. mm cuss The lot of the Junior medical student is a hard one. Contrary to the accepted belief, the Junior year is perhaps the most arduous of all. Entering his third year with some serenity of mind at having completed the fundamental courses, the Junior is introduced abruptly to the clinical side of his medical work, which sounds fascinating until he finds himself con- fronted with seven quizzes a week and sixteen exams at the semester ' s end. This means that the study lamp burns late every night, and our advanced medico finds himself reminiscing about his Freshman year in Bloomington when a man could have a coke date or attend the cinema without feeling that he was placing his professional future too much in jeopardy. Junior students devote their mornings to work in the dispensary clinics at the Indian- apolis City Hospital, where, under supervision of the staff, they diagnose and prescribe for the ills of the city ' s indigent patients. It is here that the student first comprehends the complexity of disease and here that his first great mistake in diagnosis becomes his first great enlightenment. Yes, the Junior ' s lot is a hard one — perhaps that ' s why his supplica- tions always are loudest when there is a chance of getting the afternoon off to view a ball game. 132 SOPHOMORE mU The time comes at last when the medical student must bid farewell to the undergraduate atmosphere with which he has been so familiar for the past four or five years. A great transition is made when Bloomington ' s frivolous Freshman becomes Indian- apolis ' sober Sophomore. The Bloomington campus has much with which to lure a man from his books, the Indianapolis campus holds forth no such diver- sions; here the second year man gains the impression that he is expected to work at his career, and plenty of provision is made for him to do just that. The Sophomore year completes the study of the fundamental courses in medicine, with biochemistry, bacteriology, and pathology as the most formidable obstacles to continued success. None but the brave have conquered these. As if the burden were yet too light, an introductory course in medicine and a clinical course in psychopathology have recently been added to the second year curriculum. In his second semester course in physical diagnosis, the Sophomore gets a tantalizing taste of clinical work on the Indianapolis City Hospital wards. Here you will see him vigorously thumping chests and intently listening to hearts with a brand new stethoscope. But didn ' t every great clinician begin just that way? FRESHMM CySS The Freshman year in medical school is a rare ex- perience and one never to be forgotten. The white gowns that wouldn ' t stay clean, with little black case of instruments projecting from the pocket at just the right angle; the smell of the anatomy lab which wouldn ' t wash from your hands; those in- terminable descriptions in Gray ' s Anatomy; sleep- less nights before exams; the friendly enmity with the Laws; those terrific celebrations after finals — these are the things the student remembers best when it ' s all over and he ' s one fourth of the way to being a doctor. The first year is designed to familiarize the medical student with the normal structure and function of the human body, the knowledge of which is the foundation of any physician ' s skill in the diagnosis and treatment of disease. This accounts for the stress on the study of anatomy and physiology and for those tired eyes which squinted through the microscope at histological sections for hours on end. With its new building and complete new equipment, the School of Medicine at Bloomington has been able to place this first year of training on a higher plane than ever before, and to offer a course which is second to none in the country. SOPHOMORE OFFICERS LAWSON F. SMITH President WILLIAM W. KRIEBLE Vice-President I]- - . HOSTETTER Secre,;ary OTTIS N. OLVEY Treasurer FRESHMAN OFFICER JOE JEWETT President NORMAN COOK Vice-President J. P. WORLEY Secretary WILLIAM KARSELL Treasurer A knotty question in obstetrics. The fellow in the corner either is trying to dream the answer, or he has it written on his cuff. ROBERT PAUL ACHER Terre Haute M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. LESLIE M. BAKER Aurora M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. MARY LYMAN BARTHOLOMEW ' Goshen M.D. J. STANLEY BATTERSBY East Chicago M.D. TERALDINE c. BAUMGARTNER Ft. Wayne M.D. Phi Mu; Nu Sigma Phi; y.A.A.; A.W.S.; Alpha Lambda Delta; Dcr Deutsche Verein. SHIRLEY benham, jr. Leavenworth M.D. Phi Beta Pi. LEE BOEING Ladoga M.D. Phi Delta Theta. THOMAS A. BRADY I. WILLIAM BRILL HARRY MERRILL Gary M.D. Nu Sigma Nu; Var- sity Baseball; Treas- urer, Junior Medical Class. Indianapolis M.D. Phi Delta Epsilon. BROWN Westfield M.D. Phi Rho Sigma; Kap- pa Kappa Psi. IRVIN CAPLIN Indianapolis M.D. FRANCIS E. CARREL Lebanon M.D. Phi Beta Pi. HARRIET MAY CLARK Washington M.D. Nu Sigma Phi; Iota Sigma Pi; Y.W.C.A. HUBERT L. COLLINS Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi. CHARLES W. COMER Mooresville M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. JAiMES W. GRAIN Brooklyn M.D. Phi Beta Pi. EARL P. CRIPE North Manchester M.D. Phi Beta Pi. MARVIN ROBBINS DAVIS Greensburg M.D. Theta Kappa Nu. HENRY TROY EARHART Mulberry M.D. Phi Chi. LYMAN D. EATON Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi. BRICE FITZGERALD Hammond M.D. LAUREL RAE FOXWORTHY Indianapolis M.D. Nu Sigma Phi. A. ELIZABETH GARBER Dunkirk M.D. Alpha Omicron Pi; Nu Sigma Phi; Secre- tary, Junior Medical Class; Vice-President, W.A.A.; Oceanides. LOUIS JAY GILBERT Mishawaka M.D. Phi Delta Epsilon. CHARLES F. GILLESPIE Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi; Vice-Presi- detit, Senior Aledical Class. MEREDITH B. , i GOSSARD 1 Kempton ! B.S. MedhJne, M.D. Der Deutsche Verein;: i Phi Eta Sigma; Theti Kappa Psi; Freshman Baseball. TED L. GRISELL Ft. Wayne M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. GEORGE K. HAMMERSLEY Frankfort M.D. Phi Chi; Sigma Nu. STANLEY M. HAMMOND Indianapolis B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Chi. ROBERT M. HANSELL Rising Sun B.S. Medicine, M.D. Sigma Pi; Phi Beta Pi. MARTIN LUTHER HARSHMAN Mulberry M.D. Phi Beta Pi. BENNETT B. HARVEY Bloomington M.D. LLOYD M. HEADLEY Dugger M.D. Phi Beta Pi. GORDON THOBURN HERRMANN Upland M.D. Alpha Omega Alpha. KENNETH G. HILL Washington M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Vice- President, Alpha Phi Oinega. WARREN V. HINSHAW Winchester B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Y.M.C.A. PHILLIP T. HODGIN Richmond M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Der Deutsche Verein; Freshman Tennis. RUSSELL K. HORSMAN Kokomo B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Beta Pi. MARIETTA HOUSTON Indianapolis M.D. Nu Sigma Phi, JACK D. HULL Fowler M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Band.: 1.M 11 ' why so glum? Could it be that measly seven- teen cent pot? Iliiilj IRVING H. ITKIN New York City M.D. Phi Delta Epsilon. JOHNSTON Wabash M.D. Phi Chi, PAUL A. JONES Dugger M.D. Sigma Pi; Phi Beta Pi; Band; Der Deut- sche Verein. HOWARD L. KAHN Indianapolis M.D. Phi Delta Epsilon. FOREST M. KENDALL Marion M.D. Nu Sigma Nu; Sigma Pi; Skull and Cres- cent; Interfraternity Council. ROBERT W. LEO KIRCH MRS. MARY ROBERT C. B. LADINE HILBERT KEPLER Indianapolis SPURGEON WOODROW KUHN Prophetstown, 111. LEININGER LaPorte M.D. KITCHEL Wilkinson M.D. Ft. Wayne M.D. Phi Chi. Terre Haute M.D. M.D. Kappa Sigma; Phi M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Kappa Phi Beta Pi. Chi. Alpha Omicron Pi; Iota Sigma Pi; Nu Sigma Phi. Kappa Psi; Band. G. N. LOVE Worthington B.S. Medicine, M.D. MILTON L. McCALL Hammond M.D. President, Senior Med- ical Class; Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Omega Al- pha. ROY RALSTON McCOY B.S. Medicine, M.D. Kappa Delta Rho. VORIS F. McFALL Anderson M.D. Phi Beta Pi. A. DAVID McKINLEY Muncie M.D. Phi Rho Sigma. WALTER McMANNIS Lebanon M.D. Phi Beta Pi. Phi ROBERT W. McTURNAN Indianapolis M.D. Chi; Sigma Chi. MILLARD R. MARSHALL Clinton B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Beta Pi; President, Junior Medical Class. LOREN H. MARTIN Greensburg M.D. Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu. LAWRENCE E. MAURER Goshen B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Beta Pi. MAURICE H. MENTF.NDIEK Richmond M.D. Phi Beta Pi. THEODORE OBED MEYER Bluffton M.D. Delta Chi; Phi Beta Pi. LA VERNE B. MILLER Evansville B.S. Medicine, M.D. RAY D. MILLER Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi; Lambda Chi Alpha; Blue Key; Freshman Football. ANNA LUISE j MILLESON ii; Shelbyville :■ B.S. Medicine, M.D. . Nu Sigma Phi; Secre- ,, tary, Senior Medical ,il Class. MARION H. MORRIS Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi. LOUIS W. NIE Huntington M.D. Kappa Sigma; Phi Chi; Alpha Omega Alpha. D. DAVIS PARKE Muncie M.D. Phi Rho Sigma. DELBERT J. PARSONS Greentown M.D. Phi Chi; Der Deut- sche Verein. A. DAVID PRICE Marion M.D. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Chi; Alpha Ome- ga Alpha. SAMUEL RICHTER Gary M.D. Sigma Alpha Mu. PAUL L. RIETH ; Goshen B.S. Medicine, M.D.jil Phi Chi; Blue Key. ' l Phi GLYNN A. RIVERS Muncie M.D. Gamma Delta; Phi Rho Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Fresh- man Basketball. 136 FRANKLIN GEORGE RUDOLPH Lowell M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. ROBERT M. SALAS.SA Logansport B.S. Medicine, M.D. Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Omega Alpiia; Fresh- man Football; Varsity Football. ROBERT O. SCOTT Knlg htstown M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. lAMES G. SHANKLIN Hammond M.D. Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Business Manager, Medical Sec- tion, Arbutus; Vice- President, Sophomore Medical Class. MAYNARD D. SHIPPER Ft. Wayne M.D. Phi Beta Pi. liH ■iiiiill CLEOC. SHULLENBERGEI J| Indianapolis ' !i ji f-D- I Sigma Chi; Phi Rlifj):] Sigma; Presiden tjlbl Sophomore Medicalii Class; Editor, Medicallli Section, Arbutus. m liiiiiiiiijiifiijjiiiiiii [il|iiil|!ii![iiiiiiiiili|iii[||{iiniii||il||iiipiiii|iiiiiiiiiiii|{iiiiiin!U Iliii[|i|i Nu . H. SMITH Lebanon M.D. Sisma Nu. Go easy, Doc. If the patient hasn ' t heart trouble now, he will have when he sees that worried look. WILLARD C. SMULLEN Bentonville M.D. Lambda Chi Alpha; Phi Beta Pi; Sphinx Club; Varsity Track; Cross-Country; Presi- dent, Freshman Medi cal Class. llill WILLIAiM C. ' ' ' ' ' STAFFORD Plainfield M.D. Sigma Chi; Phi Chi. ' DAVID F. STONE RAYMOND AMES R. WILLIAM R. Indianapolis MERCER STOVER TEMPLETON TIPTON M.D. Kokomo South Bend Brazil ' hi Chi. B.S. Mctliciiie, iA.D. M.D. M.D. Phi Beta Pi. Phi Beta Pi. Phi Beta Pi; Band M. E. TOMAK North Judson B.S. Medicine, M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. JULIUS C. TRAVIS Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi. MARY FRANCES TRAVIS ,i| Indianapolis ' i M.D. ' ; ' ,; Nu Sigma Phi; Alpha? Omega Alpha; Kappa |! Alpha Theta. RICHARD J. TROCKMAN Evansville M.D. Sigma Alpha Mu. JAMES S. WALKER Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi; Rifle Team; Der Deutsche Verein. CHARLES E. WALTERS Mishawaka B.S. Medicine, M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Alpha Omega Alpha. WESLEY C. WARD Indianapolis M.D. JAMES ROGER WARE Huntington B.S. MetUcine, M.D. CARROLL B. WARREN Marshall B.S. Medicine, M.D. Kappa Sigma; Phi Chi. JOHN C. WARREN-J Winchester :!| ' ij| B.S. Medicine, M.ofk Phi Chi. ■■|!llllllllilii WARD B. WARREN Marshall B.S. Medicine, M.D. Kappa Sigma; Phi Chi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Treasurer, Sophomore Medical Class. 138 JOHN D. WEAVER Elnora M.D. Phi Chi. FIELDING P. WILLIAMS Dale M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. RALPH CLEMENTS FRED M. WILSON WILMORE Winchester M.D. Phi Chi. Indianapolis M.D. Phi Kappa Psi; Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Beta Kappa; President, Phi Eta Sigma. EDWIN E. WUNDERLICH Logansport M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. WILLIAM D. ■■ GAMBILL ■ Terre Haute M.D. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Chi. lilillliiill . ' : Front Row: Hadley, McClelland, Badertscher, Kline, Hoetzer, Fant, Hall, Beaver, Dintaman, Holovachka, Connoy, Clouse, Garland, Johnson, Dulin, Lucas, Nutter, Taylor. Second Row: Jackson, Rang, Sullenger, Dukes, Fischer, Schornick, Thompson, Hickman, Ballou, Kintner, Engle, Aldrich, Cohan, Stuckey, Tourney, Eaton. Third Row: Peirce, Hare, McVaugh, Bennett, Morris, Spahr, Morgrette, Sage, Mullin, Klee, Davis, Bander, Ball, York. Fourth Row: Mclntyre, Hamilton, Grillo, Winter, Eidson, Simmons, Shrader, Evans, Roland, Miller, Kaler, Robert Miller, Graf, Flanigan, Martz, Webb, Austin, Bailey. Fifth Row: Hoffman, Offutt, Kennedy, Dyer, Laws, VanNess, Stepleton, Jewell, Jay, Fosbrink, Long, Brown, Chattin, Cohn, Kern, Barnett, Pelczar, Mings, Freeman, Garfinkle, Reed, Kissinger, Flick, Swihart, Worth, McMahan, Williams. Front Row: L. Smith, W. Yocum, Snyder, Kendrick, Cantow, Albright, Hummel, C. Jones, Henderson, Schmidt, Deppe, R. Yocum, Kresler, Allen, C. Miller, Heubi, Bretz, Axtell, Thompson, Brayton. Second Row: Parrish, Hedrick, Goodrich, Klamer, Young, W. Jones, Redding, Ferrara, Weiss, Pearce, Hostetter, Morical, Whallon, Lewis, Davis, Ferrell, Firestine, Shugart, Deputy. Third Row: Ajiderson, Kintner, Boughman, Krieble, Mueller, Sputh, Santan Schell, Beal, Rose, VanVactor, Storey, Hamilton. Fourth Row: Hummins, Fenneman, Miklozek, Hardin, Gardner, Slabaugh, Krajac, Wehr, Dick, Hare, Darling, Vivian, Hollingsworth. Fifth Row: Warringer, Steften, Dobrin, Olvey, Schappel, Scherschel, Nestman, Sandoch, Donelley. Sixth Row: Schuchman, Ling, Beaver, Overmyer, Wissman, Rothrock, Brown, Johnson. Seventh Row: Browning, Steele, Hall, Eastman, Hazewinkle, Hunter, Hibner, Price, Hanna, S. Smith, Nonte, Maurer, Reppert, R. Miller, Muentzer. gelo, Humphreys, Wilson, Joseph, Ziperman, Dilts, 140 Franklin Rudolph President Meredith Gossard Vice-President Robert Scott Secretary Fielding Williams Treasurer The oldest of medical fraternities, Theta Kappa Psi, was founded in 1879 at the Medical College of Virginia. Its primary aim is to pro- mote friendship, character, and scholarship among medical students. Its membership there- fore is limited to students and graduates of recognized medical schools who fulfill definite scholastic and social requirements. The Gamma Upsilon Chapter was established at Indiana Uni- versity in 1924. The national organization now boasts a total of fifty-three chapters. The fra- ternity ' s colors are gold and green, and its flower is the red rose. Chapter business meetings take place bi- monthly, and one social event is held each month. Topping the social calendar is the an- nual initiation, followed by a banquet and dance. Each year the chapter honors its graduating Seniors with an informal farewell party. To the Senior who is deemed the most valuable to the fraternity the chapter awards an honorary key in recognition of his services. First Row Meredith Gossard ' 3 9, Kenipton W ' iiliani Kleifgen ' 42, Indianapolis Charles Johnson ' 42, Brazil Edward Kattany ' 42, Indianapolis Byron Harrison ' 42, Chandler Ray Getz, Jr. ' 42, Ft. Wayne Elmer Koch ' 42, Indianapolis Third Row Howard Rowe ' 42, Rochester Tom Sheller ' 42, Bremen Joe Santangelo ' 41, Newark, I ' s Robert Scott ' 3 9, Indian. ' .poUs Joe Smicii 41, Washington Robcri; Switzcr ' 42, Crorr.- .c.! Franklin Rudolph ' 39, Lowe . Second ' Xovf 141 First Row: ■ Robert Acher, ' 39, - Ted Grisell ' 39, Ft. Wi- Ted Schhiegel ' 42, Indi.i...., Arciuir Schappell ' 41, Indi.i; Loweli Henderson ' 41, Kokomo Jamjs Shanklin ' 39, Hammond hr ' 40, Huntington Second Row: Robert Salassa ' 39, Logansport Joseph Boughman ' 41, Kokomo Warren Polhemus ' 42, Anderson Joseph P. Worley ' 42, Indianapohs C. Karl Kuehne ' 42, South Bend Forest Kendall ' 39, Marion Thomas Brady ' 39, Gary Third Row: John H. Smith ' 39, New Albany Roland E. Miller ' 40, Plymouth Ottis N. Olvey ' 41, NoblesviUe Fred Wilson ' 39, Bloomington Loren Martin ' 39, Greensburg John Rieder ' 42, South Bend Leslie Baker ' 39, Aurora ; ' i Row: Z i ar A. Hawk ' 42, New Palestine ■yaliace Bash ' 42, Warsaw ' ' innah ' 41, Rising Sun ' . Taylor ' 42, Jasonville jstfall ' 42, Indianapolis ■IcCall ' 39, Hammond Charles Comer ' 39, Mooresville 142 THEIR GUIDING PIIINCIPLE: WHEN IN DOUBT, II SIGMA W Leslie Baker President Robert Acher Vice-President John H. Smith Secretary Sam Davis Treasurer One of the most widely known among medical fraternities is Nu Sigma Nu. It also is one of the oldest of these groups, its inception dating back to 18 82, when the first chapter was founded at the University of Michigan. The fraternity ' s pri- mary objectives always have been to promote the general ad- vancement of the medical profession and to inspire fellowship among its members. Established at the Indiana University School of Medicine in 1908 and now in its thirty-first year of exist- ence. Beta Eta chapter continues to maintain these aims. Mem- bership is limited to those holding or seeking the M.D. degree who are proficient in their work and who are of good moral character. Many of Indianapolis ' outstanding physicians are alumni of this group, and the active chapter holds regular meetings during the year, at which these men speak on various practical phases of medicine. A pledge chapter of representative Fresh- man students is maintained on the Bloomington campus, and several joint meetings of the two groups are held during the school year. The top social event on the Nu Sig calendar is the annual spring initiation, followed by a formal banquet and dance. The chapter also sponsors one open dance each year, to which all medical fraternity members are invited. GIYE BICARBONATE OF SODA. 143 First Row: Frank C. Whitlock ' 42, Fairbanks Shirley Benham ' 39, Leaven-worth 3arl Gripe ' 39, North Mar.cheiter ?,obert Fenneman ' 41, Evansville Robert Dilts ' 41, Fort Wayne - -- Elliott ' 42, Middlebiiry Second Row: ' Paul Jones ' 39, Dugger Charles Walters ' 39, Mishawaka Quentin Kintner ' 40, North Manchester Maynard Shiffer ' 39, Ft. Wayne William Tipton ' 39, Brazil Ben L. Leming ' 42, Topeka Third Row: Willard SmuUen ' 39, Bentonville Millard Marshall ' 39, Clinton Ames Templeton ' 39, South Bend Hilbert Leininger ' 39, Ft. Wayne Maurice Mentendiek ' 39, Richmond Francis Henderson ' 42, Elwood Trrrel ' 39, Lebanon i Ieyer ' 39, Bluffton ' ' •- Fowler :; ' 39, Lebanon ' : urer ' 39, Goshen : , Crown Point -;i ' 39, Wilkinson ail ' 39, Dunkirk = nsell ' 39, F,.ising Sun ' 39, Brooklyn -.1 ' 42, Middlebury over ' 39, Kokomo Sixth Row: Russell Horsman ' 39, Kokomo Philip Hodgin ' 39, Lynn Martin Harshman ' 39, Frankfort Kenneth Hill ' 39, Washington Lloyd Headley ' 39, Rosedale Warren Hinshaw ' 39, Winchester 144 T [ARGE, CUT AND CHARGE- PHI BETil PI Lawrence Maurer President Robert Hansell Y ice-President Daniel Hare _ Secretary Maynard Shiffer Treasurer Phi Beta Pi, one of the leaders among national medical fra- ternities, was founded in 1891 at the West Pennsylvania Medi- cal College. Fourteen years later, in 1905, the Omicron Alpha Zeta chapter was established on the Indiana University campus. The encouragement of good conduct and scholarship and the pro- motion of the advancement of medical science are the basic aims of the organization. Thirty-nine chapters in leading medical schools throughout the country go to make up the national fraternity. The fraternity flower is the white chrysanthemum; the fraternity colors are green and white. Membership in Phi Beta Pi is limited to medical students who come up to certain scholastic and social requirements. Omicron Alpha Zeta chapter maintains a large and active en- rollment and boasts a large number of active and interested alumni. The active chapter in Indianapolis and the pledge chapter in Bloomington combine to keep up high scholastic standards and to promote a program which is both social and educational in scope. Outstanding social events are the formal Christmas dinner-dance and the spring initiation dance. Stag parties and smokers are held regularly. Of more educational nature are lectures and movies of medical interest, enjoyed by both chapters. The year ' s program is a well-rounded one, de- signed to enable the chapter members to profit thoroughly from their years in the medical school. THAT IS ALL YE KNOW AND NEED T ' 145 First Row: Henr) ' Earhart ' 39, Mulbeny Melvin Denny ' 42, Madison Merle Bundy ' 42, Salem Harold Burdette ' 42, Roachdale Hubert Collins ' 39, Indianapolis James P. Powell ' 42, Upland ■ ' : ' - - B ' -i ' rnn ' 42, Beech Grove 9, Winchester Rcb ' rsailles Salem -.Udison .mapolis .ndianapolis ■■r;c! . ) n d Mil:- -,. Albany Dc! U.u Second Row: Lyman Eaton ' 39, Indianapolis Gene Davis ' 42, Salem William GambiU ' 39, Tcrre Haute William John ston ' 39, Wabash James Walker ' 39, Indianapolis Martin Krajac ' 41, Bloomington Charles Gillespie ' 39, Indianapolis jlcbcrt McTtirnan ' 39, Indianapolis T, Smith ' 42, Indianapolis ' -C j ' J-, iViaiiua ' ord ' 59, Plainfieid ' 39, Indianapolis : ' cr ' 40, Boonville ■ ■- , Winchester ' 41, Bedford Indianapolis Green town Third Row: Alan Houser ' 42, Liberty Stanley Hammond ' 39, Indianapolis George Hammersley ' 39, Frankfort James Hundley ' 40, Summitvillc Ray Miller ' 39, Indianapolis Robert Jordan ' 42, Indianapolis Robert Kepler ' 39, LaPorte Paul Eidson ' 40, Indianapolis Tom Dittmcr ' 42, Kouts Sixth Row: Ward Warren ' 39, Marshall Harold Reiidel ' 42, Mexico Charles Wilhams ' 42, Hartford City Carroll Warren ' 3 9, Marshall Woodson Young ' 41, Richmond John Schechter ' 42, Indianapolis John Ling ' 41, Hebron Julius Travis ' 39, Indianapolis 146 PHI CHl-WOlil D ' MOST MODERN QUACK CLUB- Pill ill i ' r - ' tiSA James Hundley President Herbert Chattin Vice-President Robert McTurnan Secretary Edwin Eaton -Treasurer The Phi Chi medical fraternity had its inception at the University of Vermont, where the original chapter was es- tablished on March 31, 18 89. Five years later, on October 26, 1894, there appeared on the campus of the Louisville Medical College another group of medical students which took unto itself the same Greek letters. In this wise, the original northern and southern divisions of Phi Chi came into being. The Mu Chap- ter was chartered at the old Indiana Medical College in 1903 and was one of fifteen chapters belonging to the southern division. A consolidation of the two divisions was brought about in 1905, with certain compromises being made, chief among which was that which established the grand chapter of the southern group as the governing body. The local chapter of Phi Chi is the oldest medical fratern- ity in the State, and it numbers among its alumni many of Indi- ana ' s eminent physicians, surgeons, and teachers. Qualifications for membership include good moral character, a good scholastic record, and the completion of one semester of satisfactory work in the University ' s School of Medicine. The members of Mu chapter have made their group a leader in scholarship and so- cial affairs on the Indianapolis campus. Chapter business meet- ings are held twice each month. Annual social functions con- sist of a formal initiation banquet and dance, one open dance, and a founder ' s day banquet. DONT SEW-ZIP EM UP! 147 First Row; Leo Dobrin ' 41, New York City Nathan Bander ' 40, Central Islip, N. Y. Louis Gilbert ' 3 9, Mishawaka Irving Itkin ' 3 9, New York City I. William Brill ' 3 9, Indianapolis Second Row: Lawrence Cantow ' 41, Passaic, N. J. Jerome Korn ' 42, Gary Alexander Kahn ' 42, Indianapolis Howard Kahn ' 39, Indianapolis Martin Garfinkle ' 40, Atlantic City, N. J. Irving Itkin President I. William Brill Vice-Presideni Howard Kahn Secretary Nathan Bander Treasurer Phi Delta Epsilon is a national non-sectarian medical organization composed of seventy-one active chapters and clubs. It was established in 1904 at Cornell University, its purposes being to promote good fellowship, equality, and unity among its members, to encourage the highest standards of achievement in the science and art of medicine, and to maintain a high plane of ethics in the practice of medicine. The national president this year is Dr. Morris Fishbein. The Alpha Tau chapter was founded at Indi- ana University in 1924. Although usually it has found itself to be one of the smaller units of the national fraternity, it has not allowed this fact to interfere with its activity. At present eleven undergraduate members, six pledges, and twelve Indianapolis alumni comprise an active group which meets regularly on every other Wednesday evening. 148 Jeraldine Baumgartner President Marietta Roberts Vice-President Mary Frances Travis Secretary Elizabeth Garber Treasurer Nu Sigma Phi, a medical fraternity for women, was founded in 1898 at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at the University of Illinois. The Gamma chapter first made its appearance on the Indiana University campus in 1909. The objective of the organization is to further scientific investigation, intellectual improvement, and social development among medical women. The national chapter roll now numbers ten. The fraternity flower is the rose, and the fraternity colors are green and white. Each year the chapter holds formal pledge and initiation services and a banquet. Business meetings are held each month with Indianapolis alumnae, and a social meeting is scheduled once a month. Despite the fact that women represent a definite minority among medical students, it is to the credit of Gamma chapter that three of its members were elected to Alpha Omega Alpha this year. First Row; Marietta Houston ' 5 9, Salem Anna MiUeson ' 59, Shelby ville Harriet Clark ' 3 9, Indianapolis Mary S. Kitchel ' i9, Indianapoli; Second Row: Laurel Foxworthy ' 59, Indianapolis Mary Frances Travis ' }9, Indianapolis Jeraldine Baumgartner ' }9f Ft. Wayne A. Elizabeth Garber ' 39, Dunkirk 149 UM ZETA Front Row: Mesdames Joseph E. Ball, Ben A. Speheger, J. Lawrence Sims, C. Willard Worth, Tom S. Shields, Julien C. Kennedy. Second Row: Mesdames Ross W. Rissler, Loren M artin, W. Duane Jones, Jack E. Shields, James Shanklin, John H. Smith. Third Row: Mesdames Edgar G. Bridwell, R. McCauley Vandivier, Harry D. Aldrich Elsworth K Stucky, Ray D. Miller. Mrs. Willard Worth President Mrs. Jack Eisaman Vice-Presideiii Mrs. Tom Shields Secretary Mrs. Larry Sims Treasurer Formerly known as the Dames Club, the members of this group organ- ized, in 1930, the Alpha chapter of Gamma Phi Zeta. The membership is composed of the wives of medical students, the organization being designed to bring these women more closely together on a social basis. The sweetheart rose is the chapter flower; the sorority colors are light green, pink, and rose. Meetings are held twice each month, either in the homes or at a downtown hotel. In true wifely manner, the members fete their husbands at an annual dinner, the highlight of the social calendar. That this group has been successful in bringing together women of mutual interests is made manifest by the steady increase in membership since its beginning. 150 I son likes the loafing part anyway. Dr. Ensminger surveys an x-ray plate with a practiced eye. See the poor Junior — caught between the book and the microscope. A conference of surgeons. Somebody ' s gonna lose an organ. Dr. McElroy has something interesting this time. At least, the Juniors are awake. Obstetrics consultation holds the feminine interest, while the male element just looks on. Mr. Martin shows wrong-way Corrigan the right way around the Medical Center. Above: DOCTOR WILLIAM J. MOENKHAUS Right: DOCTOR PAUL M. HARMON Left: DOCTORS ROBERT T. HILL V. BROWN SCOTT EBER A. TETER R. L. JONES Below : DOCTOR J. A. BADERTSCHER Centei : DEAN BURTON D. MYERS . . . whose name is starred in American Men of Science, sig- nifying that he is one of the thousand outstanding students of science in the United States . . . has httle time for his favorite hobby, golf . . . usually finds a week during the summer to do some fishing in Wisconsin. I Although the Freshman year of the Indiana University School of Medicine is located at Bloomington and the last three years of the medical course are located at Indianapolis, it must be understood that together they make up completely the medical educational unit of four years. Beginning with the premedical course, the subject matter studied by the premedical stu- dent is such as the correlated experience of the medical schools of the United States demon- strates as giving the soundest preparation for medical study. Correlations of premedical work and Freshman medical school accomplishment are made annually for the 6,000 students of the eighty medical schools of the United States in order to determine what premedical pre- paration gives the soundest foundation for medical study. Within the medical school proper there is a carefully arranged sequence of subject mat- ter. Anatomy deals with structure. Structure understood, we have Physiology dealing with function. We have Pathology following, which deals with abnormalities of structure or function. We have Bacteriology because micro-organisms constitute one of the great menaces to the healthy normal function of the body. We have Biochemistry which deals with chemical changes taking place in the blood and other body fluids. Through Biochemistry we determine the degree of deficiency in metabolism, the degree to which various organs of the body are functioning below normal. We have Pharmacodynamics, which deals with the ac- tion of various medicinal substances u pon the body, and Therapeutics in which we learn the curative value of medicinal substances in disease. And we have the two years of clinical medicine in which individual cases are studied in the light of all the preclinical background. And, ultimately, we have graduation followed by an internship, and in many instances the internship is followed by a residency of two, three, or more years in preparation of the doctor for the practice of medicine. In many schools all four years are on one campus. In certain schools like California, Stanford, and our own school, the Freshman year is given on the University campus, and the second medical year and both clinical years are given in some great medical center nearby. Whether on one campus or divided, as in the case of our School and other schools, the whole four years of the medical course constitutes a unit of medical education. Burton D. Myers Dean at Bloomington Out for a brief respite from the stench of cadavers are these three medics — Ben Leming, Bob Peacock, and Don Hampshire. If they aren ' t discussing ways and means of beating the shysters in softball (which, dear- ies, has supplanted that brutal foot- len they ' re admiring the epiglotis on that cute little II ne of them had out last JOHN H. ALWARD South Bend A.B. Airiitomy Phi Kta Sigma; Plu Eei3 I ' i: Y.M.C.A.; Band; Dei- Deutsche Vcrein; Skeleton Club. .ARNOLD [. BACH MANN Cambridge City BS. Mt ' Jicine Tlieta Chi; Skelclon Club, ROBERT lACfCSON I ' , ALL ARC) Ix ' banon A.H. Cbt ' mUtry Phi l ui Simma; Phi Lanibihi Upsiloii; Phi BetLi Pi; Der Deutsche Verein. WALLACEiilHI B.S. Mediftne Sigma Chi ; Nu Si„ Nu; Skeleton Club MARGARET ANN J. B. BENNETT GEORGE R. BASSETT Warren BL,001V1 Thorntown «.S. Wi ' ilil-hu! Mitldlehury A.B, Xiwio y Pill Chi. B.S, Mcdk-hii ' D Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi i Beta Pi; Skeleton Pi Skeletoit Club; Senior c ub; Alpha Phi V Breakfast Committee, o iiega. OTIS BOWEN Crown Point A.B. Anatomy ■ ■ :]ca Chi; Phi Beta ; Der Deutsche irein; Skeleton Club- tiiiti m WE.LBON D, BRITTON Beech Grovo BS. Mi ' tiicivf Phi C ]] i ; :D e r 1) e Li c s c h c V e .r e 1 n ; ' LRANKLIN A. BRYAN Ft. Wayne ,B.S, Mt ' ilh-r,H- Phi Be fit Pi; Skeleton Gob, JOSEPH A. BUCH.VIEIER Indianapolis A.B. Chfmjs ry Phi Rho Sigma. MERLE BUNDY Salem .A.li. Auuiotfiy Plu Chi; Skeleton Club. Ro.ichdale A.B. Chemistry Phi Chi. ' CANNON Hamoiond B.S. Mi ' ilicine Glee Club. GEORGE COMPTON Tiptoo B.S. Medicine Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu; Skeleton Ciub. ALEXANXIER FRANCES CRAIG Gary A.B, Chemhhy Delta Tau Delta. MARY ALICE CRAIG Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Beta Phi. GENE PHILIP DAVIS Salem B.S. MeJiriiie JOSEPH B. DAVIS Marion A.B. C .iemi. ' . ry Phi Kappa Psi; ' ar- sity Tennis; Freshman Tennis; Y. M.C.A. Senior Clabinet; Skele- ton Club. FORREST L. DENNY .Madison B.S. Mnlii ' ire Phi Chi; Persbing Rides; .Der Deutsche Verein; Cheniistry Club; Skeleton Club. MELVIN FE DENNY jMadison B.S. Medifirre Ph i Chi; Persbing Ri les; Skeleton Club; Cihemistry Club. THOMAS L. DITTMER Kouts A.B, Chemistry Kappa Sigma; Phi C hi; Phi Eta Sigma. Ph PAUL D. EIDSON Indianapolis B.S. Mediciiw Chi. J. COLIN ELLIOtT Middleburg A.B. Aiiiitomy mrd Phyaiofogy Kappa Kappa P.sl; Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club: Band. EVERETT W. GAUNT Anderson A.B. Chemistry Beta Tlieta PI; Nu Sigma Nu; Skeleton ciub. RAYMOND J. GETZ, JR. Ft. Wayne A.B. Chemistry Phi Delta Theta; The- ta Kappa Psi; Presi- de n t . , I p h a Phi Omega; Skeleton Club. JAMES EDWARD GOODPASTURE Salem A.B. Anatomy Phi Chi; Skeleton .■.CU:b. MYRON HARRISON GREEN Indianapolis B.S. Mi ' Jirine Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Skeleton Club. EDGAR A. HAWK New Palestine A.B. Chemistry Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deut- sche Verein. ROBERT E. HAYES Muncie B.S. Chemistry Skeleton Club, FRANCIS G. HENDERSON I: ' . 1 wood .4.B. Chemistry Acacia; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Band. lAMES R. S. HIMEBAUGH Cireen |Dod A.B. Chemistry Phi Chi; Skeleton Club. ALAN D. HOUSER North Liberty A.B. Afnttomy President, Phi Chi; Secretary Phi Fita Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Skeleton Club. [AMES C. HUMPHREY Hammond A.B. Cln ' mf.lrv I Chi; Skelet Club. 154 ROBERT OWEN HUMPHREY Ft. Branch A.B. PsychoSoxy ■jOE HAINES JEWETT Carmel A.B. Chemistry Kappa Delta Rho; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Chi; Men ' s Glee Club; President, Skeleton Club; Der Deutsche Verein; Tnterfrater- .nity Ckiuncil. CHARLES E, lOHNSON Brazil B.S. ' Medicine ]. MERRILL jOtlNSON Milltown B.S. Chemistry Phi Rim Sigma. ROBERT S. JORDAN Indianapolis B.S. IVIrvi ' c Hi- C.h i ; Skeleton Club. ALEXANDER JEROME KAEIN Indianapolis j B.S. Medicine ' Ph.i Eta Sigma; Ph l Delta Epsikm; Skele- ton Club. I ll, ifhliifti the tact that one ot them )n, these are medical stu- eading in the Inevitable ' riink Tinsley, Robert Bal- fewett, Warren Pblhemus, Huchmeier. All of them thoroughly premedicated jLiacks out of you. WltlJAM A, KA.RSE,Ll Blootmingtoii Phi Mu Thttii; ' Nil Sigma ,Nii; Y.M.C.A. CLF.M KARL KUEHNE South Bend US. Meiliait.- Sigma Alplja Bpsiioi); Nu Sigma Nu; :Do)- phin Club; Varsity iSwimming; Skeleton Club; I Men ' s Asso- ciatl :)n. I!!IIIIIIIII1III[IIIIIII]IIIII]IIIIIIIIIIIII|!|||||;|||M|||| ' . BEN I.. I EMlNG Topeka A.B. 7.ooli gy Delta Chi; Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club; Skull a,nd Crescent. JAMES C. KA ' n ' HRjOHN jNcw Albttnv A.,H.,[ Chumistry P ' hi C:!li,(; I ' lii GiiHlriiil Delta. KOR rOllREST R. LaFOLLETTE New Salisbury A..B. Chanhfry Phi Eta Sigma; Theta Kappa Psi; Der Deut- scjte ' ereln ; Skeleton Club; Flame Club; Y.M.C.A. Senior Cab- inet; Ciirculation Mau- agej-, The Red Book. FRANK A. LIEBERT Del ph i B.S. MeJicine Skeleton Club; Phys- ics Club. JliROMi: M Gary B.S. MeJicittii ■ I ' ln Beta Dcltat Ti .ttriiV, :P1i.[ l:Vl(!a lj { hw; Skeleton Club.i CFIAREES WILLIAM LATSHAW Carlisle A.B, Chemhiryi Tlieca Kappa Jhh GRIFFITH MARR,i| Colurnbws ' ' ||!| A.B. AiMloiiiy mui ' M P y. io!of y . IN Phi Kappa Psi; Pm Eta Sigma; Uni().y| .Board. Plainville B.S. Medicine Theta Kappa Psi. w rtivUEiN C POLHEMUS Anderson A.B. Chemhh ' y Nu Sigma Nu. CHARLES F. MARTIN, JR. Logansporc A.B. Chemistry Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Pi; Der Deutsche Verein; Skeleton Club. POWELL Upland B.S. MeJieiiie Phi Chi. BROOKER I,. MASTER Plymouth ' A.B. Cheiiiiifty Phi Chi; Skeleton Club. nu RICHARD C. PRVOR Washington B.S. Meilidne Phi Delta Theta; Phi Rlio Sigma; Skeleton Club. Ph SFIERMAN MINTON New Albany A.B. Zoology Delta Theta; The l- ' olio Stafl , JTf f HARC - Mexico A.B. Chemistry Sigma Pi; Phi Chi; InlerfraternitS ' CoLui- cil; y.M.C.A. ' ; Chem- istry Club; Intenaa- tional Relations Club; Cinema Club; Cosmo- politan Club; Cliesa Club; Camp Counse- lors Club. LULLUS M. jMULLER Fowler B.S. MeJirine Thee J Kappa Psi; Skeleton Cilub. .FRT RITS: L ' . ' anssille B.S. .MeJidiw Torch and Skull. JOHNNY NILE : Ft. Wayne i| B.S. Medicine ! ' Theta Kappa Psi; Skeleton Club; Var- , ' sity Ba.sebalf. EDMUND C. ' Rdtfll FrankAjrt , ,.■ B.S. Meclrciiic ; Pin Beta Pi; Skeleton I Club, lOEIN S. SCHECHTER Indianapolis A.B. Ctiemii ry Phi Chi. Bremen A.B. C iemis ry Theta Kappa Psi. m u rorest n.u. Chfrnh ry Skeleton Club. 1S6 hff Uttiii ...J..... ...I,, Indianapolis A.B. Chemi.-try Theta Kappa Psi ; Gamma Delta; Skcle- ton Club; Freshman Basketball. LOIS SHOFF Flora A.B. Chemhtry Skeleton Club. (OHN B. W ' liS ' El wU-L Indianapolis A.B. Antitomy and Physiology Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Fits Sigma; Nu Sigma , Nil. WILLIAM M. SITOLT ' i ' Lafayette B.S. Meitiriiie Skeleton Club; 1 Men ' s Association; Phi Beta Pi; Varsity Football; Varsity Wrestling-, PRA.NK C. ' HI ' I ' LOCX Fairbanks B.S. MedieiiH- Delta Chi; Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club. DA ' ID JOE SMITFI Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry l hi Chi; Skelett n Club; Vice-President, Flame Club; Glee Club. CHARLES D. WIEEIAMS Hartford City B.S. Medicine Phi Clu; Skeleton Club. MAURICE E. SNYDER Liberty A.B. Afuilowy ii uf Phyiivlogy Theta Clii; Skeleton Club; Plii Rho Sigma. (ULIUS B. NVOilLF ' ELD Jntlianapolis A.B. Chemisfiy S i g m a A. I p h a M u ; Skeleton Club. H. NORMAN TAYLOR jasonville . lil B.S. Medicine fjt L elta Upsilon; Ni J Sigma Nu; Skeletoi Club; Y.M.C.A. Sen- ' J i M ' Cabinet, nl N JOSEPH P, WOREiiV Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Beta Theta Pi; NAl, ' Signrn Nu; Frcshtfld Football; .Fresh tn| ' | Wrestling; Secretilj Skeleton Club. V o, r Front Row: Martin, Nickels, Rutkin, Burns, Bennett, Bo wen, Alward, Powell, Schlaegel, Denny, Bloom, Green, Tyner, Pryor. Second Row: Sholty, Kahn, Katterjohn, Heritier, Bash, Worley, Jewett, Dr. Scott, Dr. Hill, Dr. Strong, Dr. Badertscher, Dr. Jones, Dr. Myers, Dr. Moenkhaus, Mr. Teter, Cook. Third Row: Westfall, Hurt, Whitcomb, Streib, Bill, Nill, McDonald, Gaunt, Dittmer, Wohlfeld, Gaulke, Karsell, Johnson, Tinsley, Craig, Halfast, Whitlock. Fourth Row: McBane, Muller, Polhemus, Getz, Roth, Snyder, Davis, Bryan, Applegate, Kuhn, Minton, Kuehne, Korn, Marks. Fifth Row: Tribby, Havens, Bachman, Elliott, Green, Singeman, Buchmeier, Vollrath, Norton, Cannon, Smith, Hitch, Britton, Rendel, Latshaw, Williams, Mader, Bundy, Burdette, Goodpasture, Roll, Davis, Thomas, Brink. Sixth Row: Rieder, Hampshire, Botkin, Switzer, Marr, Taylor, Ritz, LaFollette, Turley, Himebaugh, Hawk, Hayes, Ro- vain, Kinzie, Godersky, Jordan, Henderson, Salm, Kalb. Seventh Row: Humphrey, Master, Schecter, Houser, Kurtz, Ross, Craig, Mainland, Liebert, Sisson, Detraz, Bassett, Denny, Moss, Schoff, Peacock, Weldy, Craig, Ingwell, Woolery. SKELETOI CLUB Joe Jewett President Norman Cook Vice-President J. P. Worley Secretary William Karsell Treasurer Skeleton Club, an organization with which Freshmen in the School of Medicine are affiliated automatically, functions as the voice of student opinion in questions of policy that are left for students to de- cide. It serves to give organization to the Freshman medical class, whose picture ap- pears above. EMBRYO QUACKS, ONE AND ALL. WANNA BE CUT IN? 158 Herewith front and profile views of that vile place the Laws term Cadaver Castle . . . What medics do when they ' re not whistling as passersby their Third Street entrance . . . Oh, teacher, come look at my strep- tococcus . . . One must not dis- sect too much from these ca- davers, you know . . . There ' s Bill Sholty rattling the bones again . . . Engaging in the hope- less task of removing med school boquet . MISS CORDELIA HOEFLIN Director of the School of Nursing Miss HoefHn long has been associated with nurses ' training at the Medical Center and has held a responsible position in that work since 1928, when she was appointed Assistant Superintendent of Nurses at the Riley Hospital. She began her service as Director of the University ' s School of Nursing in 1933. She heads a large and efficient staff, which is widely known for the high standards it maintains in the teaching of the science and art of nursing. MISS LUTE TROUTT Head of the Department of Dietetics Miss Troutt, as Head of the Department of Dietetics, handles the tre- mendous task of feeding the staff, the patients, and the employees of the Medi- cal Center. In addition, she is director of an excellent post-graduate course in hospital and institutional dietetics, which attracts students from all parts of the country. The student dietitians have quarters in the Rotarian Con- valescent Home, one of the most beautiful buildings on the Indianapolis cam- pus. 160 TRAIIIH SCHOOL FOR NURSES Leading to a G.N. degree, the training of a nurse is an exacting three-year job. Embryo nurses spend their first six months as probation- ers, or, as the upperclassmen refer to them, probies . During this period they are exposed first to the theory and practice of nursing, then the decision to continue two and one-half years more rests partly with the probies and partly with the school. The next half year is given to a preparatory course. Then follows a one-year Junior Term and a one-year Senior Term. Throughout the course long hours of duty, more hours of study, and very short va- cations are the routine. Upon graduation, the nurses go out into hospitals, doctors ' offices, and welfare agencies to be cheerful, efficient workers, wearing spotless white uniforms em- blematic of the constant application and hard labor attendant in such a profession. The Indiana University Training School for Nurses is a part of the School of Medicine. It thus has the distinction of being one of the few nursing schools in existence which is an Integral part of a university. Through this close asso- ciation with the other departments of the Uni- versity, its students are given the opportunity to apply their training school work directly toward the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science. The Training School Is housed in the Ball Residence, which also affords living quarters for part of the nursing staff and space for the several dances sponsored by the nurses during the year. The didactic courses In nursing are given by Miss Hoeflin and her aids and by mem- bers of the faculties of the School of Medicine and of the College of Arts and Sciences. Prac- tical training is obtained on the wards of the University hospitals, under the supervision of the graduate staff. 161 Three white-clad nurses relax morning of cIlisscs. after COLLE A LEX an: Petersburg G. N. SOFIE C. lih Indianapdll DELORIS BOIFNGER F nilLlnd G. N. ROBERTA BUTLFR Moores ' ine G. ,.V. Sigma Tlieta Tau; Secretary, Senior Class. MAJl ' THA BOONE Ft. Wayne G. N. Choral Club. ALMA ,M. BROWN Oyeii, Alberta, Canad j G. ,1V. Choral Club. ARLINE CLOSE Ft. Wayne G. N. Clioral Club. LOIS 1. COFFING Covingtoii G.A ' . flFTTlE BROSSi ' N Indianapolis G. N. PRINCESS E. COG AN Peru G. iV. SARA El E. COTTON Madison G. N. Sigma Tlieta Tau. BETTY LOU DAVID Logansport G. N. ESTHER EERNE DICKISON Lakcton G. N. Le Ccrclc Francais; Socio! o g y C 1 u b ; Chorus: t lioral Club. EILEEN DIETZ Logansport G. jY. IREINF DOWi ' NLLAAl Logansport G. N. M,Il,i:)REE) R, DUKE, Ni ' w Albany G. ,V. LAV AUG FIN EIREN,BFRRY ,Den ' er G. N. E. MARIE £l,ROD Salem G. N. Clioral Club. DORTEIA FOLLICK Richmond G. JV. WILMA FRENCE{ Blooniington G. N. MIARTHA GA ' EES Brookville G. AL THORA GENTRY Nortli Libctty G. N. Choral Club. MARY GILL Iiidianapoli,s G. jV. BETTY GI„ORE Green ca,stk G.N. I I I |i BARBARA ' THRYN GOEE ,-lrawfords ' ille G. AT. -«l Club. Dt DO ROTE! E A El AN SON Blooniington G.N. r Deutscke Verein; Delta Phi Alpha. FRANCES FAUEINE HENDERSON Atwood G. N. ESEA S. HERRMANN Upland G. N. Sigma Thcta Choral Club. Tau; GWENDOLYN! ' : 11 1 EELS Terre Haute G. AL ,A 1 ]i h a C h i Omega; Sigma T h 4 1 a Tau; Ee Cercle Ffancais; Choral Club. MARY ' TOLA KFLT ' S Ctawfordsville G. N. Choral Club; Fresi- dent, Freshman Class, IDA. S. ROSTER ,Franccsvillc G, N. ■vRANCFS I LANTZ Greenfield G. A ' . DOROTHY LEIGEI J ortland G. N. Delia Gamma. JEAN MIELICENT EINKE Na,shvillc :meeva lohrig ,M; dl5on G.N. Delta Delta Delta; Choral Club. S HI RELY LUCAS Franlifort G. N. GENEVA Mc ADAMS S:)nssvell (17. ,V. Sigma F heta Tau; P r e s 1 d e n t, Senior Class. MARGARIiT ,M£KTZi:,R Memone G. )V. Phi Ontega Pi; Y, C. A.; W ' . A. A. IlilWillllll iliJii| ' i|:,i:ANORF, l||l ' |! ' y!l|l;C)T ' l--|EKS[Ll, I ' ,l,]idi,ln:il} jji G. N. Dukii Delti Delta. ||ll|[|llll|||illlll| Mj RTHA e. O ' NEAL Mivtinsvillc BERNirCC I ' Rict: Frankfort G, jV. P 1 ' e s i d n (: „ J ti n CIms. IIIIHIHII ' ' HARR ' ffitT K, RHIiVrs Ellcttsvillc G.,V. President, Clioral, Club. BARBARA ' 11 i,;; ' I SCHWARfK|||l: ' ' .j|!, | G.N. ■ ' :i ' ' ,i: ' ' ,if Delta Delta Delta; Der Dcutaciic Vet ' etn; Y.W.C.A.; V. .A.; CKtjral Chib- MARY SHERRY Co ' nner s ' ille Sh G-N. MlAlll R (iind ilKdle I A I ' mijA ' MAE SINN. ' m G.N. ,ji ' ;■ kL th m. ■ S:WAN,SON ' |l ' 1 li ' li.ilPortc lillill ' .BeufaelK Vcrcin; fcliornl Clul:,, f ■■.: ■ ■ G.N. RUTH A. TFBBC Indianapolis G.N. FRANCF:.,S THOKIAS CfianerfiviUe G.N. VIRGINIA WILLIAMS G recti e-ustle G.N. Cdo.ral Club. EILEEN WILLIS KabmilxtiiC iVIich, G.N. Cli :iral Clttb, SA1S,A E. W ' RIGEI ' I ' Letts G. N. , ' Oipral Club. SENIORS Front row: Mothersill, Mentzer, David, O ' Neal, Blase, Lohrig, Sherry, Hillis, Lucas, French, Elrod, Koster. Second row: Swanson, Dietz, Gill, Duke, Baer, Close, Cogan, Tebbe, Hanson, S. Wright, Sinn, Reeves. Third row: Butler, Anderson, Boone, Downham, Glore, Eikenberry, Coffing, Thomas, Bolinger, Linke, A. Brown, Flerrmann. Fourth row: Kitts, Alexander, Goff, Willis, Fol- lick, Leigh, McAdams, Henderson, Schwartz, Cot- ton, V. Williams, Lantz. JUNIORS Front row: Christie, Gentry, Mitchell, Archbold, Glabman, Gaudin, Jefferis, B. Wright, McCullough, Fallis, Haehl, Seneff. Second row: Dickison, Scoelting, Steinkamp, Rem- ley, Daniel, Riddle, Ruddeli, Turpen, J. Williams, Heiniger, Johnston, McDonel. Third row: Risley, Fulk, Heascon, Gardner, Faris, Brameier, Cummings, Boigegrain, Burgess, D. Smith, Steele. Fourth row: Langdon, Bragg, Bittner, Blaze, Mel- vin, Nichols, Peters. i M g ! : n • „v.4 ' .jf. . -f. ' . ' ' ' ' ■ ' f T ;A ' V V r ' ! .V . t ' - fC 111 I i I [i i FRESHMEN Front row: Fenimore, Maas, Huhnke, McClain, Rudy, Baringer, May, Myers, Emly, Boles, V. Sims, McCowen. Second row: Russell, Dodd, Michael, Celenica, Kern, Gottschall, Etter, Steffy, Haynes, G. Sims, Behlmer, Alexander, Callender, Manlove, Pritt. Third row: Stancomb, Shufflebarger, Burkhart, Meseke, Bryant, Kohr, Lehman, C. Richardson, Hiatt, Boyd, J. Smith, Wagerman, Hungate, Os- borne, Breiner. Fourth row: Freeman, Perkins, Short, O ' Connell, Rush, Reed, J. Richardson, Harper, Eddy. Fifth row: Duncan, D. Brown, Rector, Lamber- son. Street, D. Williams, Cantwell Kronewltter, Thompson, Asher, Chadwick, Coolman. I ' MJ liki DIETITIANS Front row: Ford, Moser, Crooks, Miss Lute Troutt, Miller, Lorenz, Thomas, Swaynie. Second row: Meyer, Bixler, Jones, Thompson, Flanigan, Menke, George. Third row: Wolf. Wehking, Pittman, Babb, Bass, Humke. 165 ; Aj-o First Row Gwendolyn Hillis Esta Hermann Geneva McAdams Second Row Roberta Butler Sarah Cotton Marie Culbertson Evelyn DeWees __ Anah Corbin President Vice-President Recording Secretary Kathleen Potts Corresponding Secretary Mildred James Treasurer Sigma Theta Tau is a national scholastic fraternity for nurses of university training schools, based entirely upon merit, moral qualifications being approved. The fraternity was founded in this State October 4, 1922, in the Indiana Uni- versity Training School for Nurses in Indianapolis. It is the only national honorary society of nursing in the United States, and its major purpose is stimulation of scholarship in the field of nursing. RESIDENT STAFF MEMBERS 193 8-1939 Barkley, Jose phine, Mrs. Brinker, Angela Bowen, Annette Bowman, Eileen Brumley, Grace, Mrs. Byrne, Virginia, Mrs. Cand) ' , Elizabeth Carson, Helen Chapman, Ninette Corbin, Anah Cox, Mary Coy, Fern Culbertson, Marie DeWees, Evelyn Dunfee, Mary Jane Fell, Lilla Gill, Margaret Garrison, Edith Haugk, Edna Halstead, Crystal Heckard, Mary E. Henderson, Caroline Hubler, Ruth Hubble, Juanita Johnson, Helen, Mrs. Johnson, Mary Johnson, Grace Alice James, Mildred Lollar, Alice Mooth, Adelma McGaughey, Erma Oglesby, Elizabeth Parkes, Catherine STUDENT MEMBERS 1939 Patterson, Mary Porter, Virginia Potts, Kathleen Rainey, Lucille, Mrs. Roberts, Marian Scraper, Thelma Smith, Rose Marie Strader, Mary Jo Talbert, Treceleah Thomas, Mildred West, Helen Jane Wright, Helen Walsh, Louise Van Sandt, Betty Van Sickle, Ruth Zike, Ruth Butler, Roberta Cotton, Sarah Hermann, Esta Hillis, Gwendolyn McAdams, Geneva 166 The clinic patients can wait while these ladies pose. It ' s bottle time at the Riley. Please go ' way and let me sleep. It ' s an easy life — the nurse does everything for you. Stain bottles and pipettes — the technician ' s arma- mentarium. A novel arrangement to keep the head above water. The easy way to take your warm water treatment. These lads get the best hospital care in the coun- try. Occupational therapy in- terests these Riley patients. 167 DR. JOHN LACEY WILSON DEDICATIOK The Dental Section of the 1939 Arbutus is dedicated to Dr. John Lacey Wilson in respectful appreciation of his quarter-century of service to the Uni- versity. Dr. Wilson became a member of the Dental School faculty the year after he was graduated, at which time he was appointed to act as clinical demonstrator. In 1923 Dr. Wilson was appointed superintendent of the clinic and retained this position when the clinic became affiliated with the University in 1925. He withdrew then from the extensive private practice which he had built up in Indianapolis. Dr. Wilson ' s career has found him an exacting teacher, and for a very good reason — his one driving ambition has been to make the Dental School the best of its kind, and the prevailing standards of the school are concrete evidence of the attainment of his wishes. All who have studied under Dr. Wilson re- member him as a friend and a leader. He has been a source of inspiration to the hundreds of dental students who have studied under his guidance. 168 DR. FREDRICK R. HENSHAW n lUEMORltll We note with deepest regret the passing of Fredrick R. Henshaw, late Dean of the Dental School. His absence is felt keenly by all who knew him, and especially by his colleagues and students in the School. His winning personality and generous nature made thousands of friends during his twenty- five years with the School. Dr. Henshaw ' s interests in dentistry were many and varied. He was an outstanding member of the Indiana Dental Association and served as presi- dent of the American Association of Dental Schools for two years. In addi- tion, he was a Fellow of the American College of Dentists and of the New York Academy of Dentistry. The new Dental Building, dedicated in May, 1933, was built largely through the efforts of Dr. Henshaw. The School is indebted further to Dr. Henshaw for the new children ' s clinic which was established in Indianapolis as a center for research in children ' s dentistry by the United States Public Health Service. The school and the children ' s clinic stand as living memorials to the man whose untiring efforts made them possible. 169 is ' Ci Right: DOCTOR HERBERT P. WERKMAN Below: DOCTOR ROBERT J. MEYERS - % Above: DOCTOR WARREN V. HANSON Left: DOCTOR SUMNER X. PALLARDY Center: DOCTOR GERALD D. TIMMONS . . . acting dean . . . doesn ' t get to play enough golf . . . gradu- ate of Valparaiso Pharmacy School and Indiana University School of Dentistry . . . Fellow of American College of Dent- ists . . . Secretary of American Association of Dental Schools . . . Trustee of American Dental Association . . . American Legion. r A difficult operation . , . Consul- tation hours . . . The baseball team . . . That ' s a beautiful bridge . . . Research . . . What large feet you have! . . . Foxy . . . This won ' t hurt a bit . . . The long and short of it . . . Smile and show your teeth . . . Indiana University ' s School of Dentistry, located in the I. U. Medical Center in In- RETROSPECTION A student, as he is about to be gradu- ated from the School of Dentistry, looks back on his academic experiences and realizes the personal touch that is felt in dental school that could not be felt on a larger campus. Four years of as- sociation with colleagues and faculty members in one building make the school appear as a family affair. He looks back with appreciation on the assistance, kindness, guidance, and patience which each member of the faculty has accorded him and his fellow students. With awareness of the per- sonal sacrifices each faculty member has made in fulfilling his duties, he is grate- ful for having the opportunity to learn from them the fundamentals and details of this important phase of the healing arts. SENIOR OFFICERS Jack D. Carr President Wilson E. Prentice Vice-President Samuel Groher Secretary-Treasurer I 172 SCHOOL OF DEKTISTRY Ideally located in the Indianapolis Medical Center, Indiana University School of Dentistry ranks high amongst the dental educational insti- tutions of the country. The present school had its beginning in the Indiana Dental College, organized in 1879, and was the ninth dental school to be founded in the United States. This school continued to grow and function until June, 1925, when, by an act of the Indiana Legislature, the school became known as the Indiana University School of Dentistry. In 1933 the school took its rightful place in the Indianapolis Medical Center, when it moved into its beautiful modern structure of lime- stone. The establishment of the new children ' s clinic in 1936 through the efforts of the late Dean F. R. Henshaw, by the United States Pub- lic Health Service added even more to the ef- ficiency of the school in dental education and public service. On June 1, 193 8, Dr. Gerald D. Timmons was appointed Acting Dean to succeed the late Dean F. R. Henshaw. Dr. Timmons has served the school continuously since his graduation from this institution in 1925, having started as instructor in pharmacology and materia mcdica and also as clinical instructor. He later served as assistant professor of operative dentistry, as associate professor of operative dentistry, and finally as professor of materia medica and therapeutics. In 1932 he was made secretary to the faculty and served in this position until he became Acting Dean. Dental students at work in a clinic. Dr. Timmons received the degree of Phar. G. from Valparaiso University in 1917. In 1925 he received the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery from Indiana University. He also holds the degree of a Fellow in the American College of Dentistry. Dr. Timmons ' untiring efforts in behalf of the school as well as of the dental profession as a whole have made him a nationally known figure in dental circles, and to him goes much of the credit for the school ' s present high rat- ing. He is a past president of the Indian- apolis Dental Society and now is Dental Techni- cal Adviser to the Indiana State Board of Health. In addition to his duties at Indiana Univers- ity, he is active also in national dental circles and is now serving his seventh consecutive year as secretary-treasurer of the American Associa- tion of Dental Schools. Also he is a Trustee of the American Dental Association. He served one year as first vice-chairman of the Ameri- can Council of Education, and is a former mem- ber of the National Board of Dental Examiners. 173 I C k P C Al R Indim ipoh DOS Sii,m I ( hi Pm Onu- ua FiLsidcnt SLrmor Dtjntal Class; SpJuns Club. r ROBERT DA ' 1S D.DS. Delta Sifiiua Dclti; Plii Delta ' Theta. WILSON C, DYER VCotthins lon D.D.S. .Pershing Rifles; B.iiid, HOKE.N Prjiicctoj] D.D.S. E)elta Tail Delta, Del (a S ,i:iru Dolta. RALPH CARL EASTMAN U ' ashiiagton D.D.S, Delt.i Sigma Delta. D t UjiC:! :, Jlatesville D.D.S. PHHJP j. MCEJKLAN Ft, Wayne D,D.,S. i3iN,Ki,(-:y .New .SaiiNbiii ' D.D.S. li Omesa il n.bfi ' Vl ! ' ' : CAMIMIELL ; ;| . !M ' atkin D.D.S. Delta U|isili-m; ,l„ elti.i Sigma. Deltai ' i. Ail|jl:(ii;! •Pill Cnaei;a; PL:t:Kliij!i,|;t; ' Ri,fles; Ta|M; liditoi:, Dental Section, Arbti- I t..is, ' iii BoiWli Vs kl StalE M R CK 1) VII 1 K)KM Illllllililllilllllliill III I 1 tlpir tiMj M irion D D s ! !niii|ii III llillli ' ' ' ' 1 lcli.1 Sit;iin OcU ! J 1 ■11 ' - ' ' - Sn-TLlli] IlLl ' lULr ililUlll[[]lll|l II lllll(-h 1 1. Sigma Ptlta i. e I 1 c s ti m .1 n 1) t n t 1 1 President ftiniCNt Den ( ' lass; [ -0 L u L 1 V e la! Class. ( o m m 1 1 1 L L, [iiiiioi ' A.D.A. W ' 1I,I,.]A.M V. (..lAlNEY Tnttianapoli.? O.D.S. FRANCIS W. GAMBLE Muncie ,D.D..S. Delta Sigma Delta JOItlN GTilSLL Gary .D.D.,S, .Xi Psi Plii, RICHARD C, GLASSLETi: Ft. M( ' aync D.D..S. Xi P.si Phi; Newman, Club;. S Kv ' i jnin i p g Team. LMANL ' EE ,|. GRELN Detroit, Mich. D,D.,S. A.lpha Omega, PACIL I ' . GREEN Eia mnaond D.D.S. Phi Delta Tlicta, CILARLES R, GREGG Indianapolis D.D.S. Delta Sigma ■ Dslca ' S,;; .Pershing RiPes. JS.AMU:i:iL G ' ROHER DALE V. LiARVEY New t.ainaan, Cnrm. D.D.S. T,re:j,ti rer Alpha Omega J .Se ci et at y- Treasurer, Senior Detital Clasi. Urbana, 111. D.D.S. Thcta Chi.; Delta Sii ma Delta. SAUL HERMAN New York City D.O..S. .Alpha Omeg;j. LUIS OSCAR , IRIZARRY Lares, Puerto Rici D.D.S. JOI-IN PAUL JARABAK I.ia. ' it Chicago D.D.S. Delta Sigma Delta DICK H. JORDAN Ilidianapi li.s D.D.S. Phi Gamma Delta; Skull and C ' h ' escent. ■j-nii ' lWRj j- ' G LIE.8ERMAN ,li ' ansville D,D.,S. Alplia Omega; ScfUtti Editm , Dental Sectinu L9 Arhuttis. 4 W ' lL.SO.N A. LOUIS ERED EVANGELINE WELD ON |. lOHN c::.AR,L TON LL ROL,D .StDN ] ' , « ' JAMES A. LIWINGSTON LONSBURY LUETKEMLILR LYNCH MILLER MINTZ McPHLLTLRS Pt. Wayne Indianapolis N ' ii cennes Anderson Argi.is Indiana LLirbor Lt, Mitehell. Ky- D.D.S. D.O.,S. D.D,.S, D.D.S. D.;).,s, D.D.S. D..D.S, Sigma .Nu; Btisines.s Psi Omega; Lantbdla Signra Nu; Psi Omega, Xi Psi, Phi. . ' ljsha Omega. Ph Delta Thcta; De Manager, Dental Sec- Ch Alpha, ta Sigma Delta. tion, 9 Arbutus. ROBERT L. PAVY Cjreensburg D.D.S. Ride Team. JOHN R. PELL Hrazil D.D.,S. Phi Kappa Psi; Presi- dent, Junior Den tal CLtss. WILSON !•:. PREN ' EICi; jelTersonvillc D.D.S. Phi CLimma Delta; President, Xi Psi Phi; Business Manager, Denfal ,SeccioA, ,: ' « Arbutus; Vice-Presi- dent, Senior Dental Class. PERRY A. RATCLli F Indiatnipolis D.D.S. Psi Omega; ' Lati Kap- pa . ' Mpha; Secretary- Treasurer, junior Ddntal Class; St:udcnt Ci ttncil, G. BYRON RUTLEDGP beech Grove D.D,.S. Delta Sigma .Delta; President , Freshman L ental Class. JULIUS .SEGAL Norwich, C onn. D.D.S. SCOTT so-siiTais; . Morgan town, W. Vn, D,D..S. Plii Delta Theta; Del- ta Signna Delta; Presi- dent, Sophomore .Den- tal Class. LLLIS FIAROLD MEREDITH D. WALTER Tl. GERALD N, J. IIARR ' ALBLHT C. 7-:d ' ' ard young TADF. ■PAIT-OCK VLNDES W ' ac;nlr WEILT,STONL ' , YODE.R, JR. 1. aPorte Bicknell Wheeler Bicknell OsgtKxi .1 ' ,% ' aiisville tiioshen D.D,,S. D.D.S. D.D.S, D.D.S. .D,D..S. ,;,iiili D.D.S. D.D..S. Rappa SigiTia; Delt.i Lambda CJii Alfiha; Psi Omega. XiPsi Phi; Vice-Presi- Delia Sigma Delta. Delta Sigma Delia; Sigma Delta; Yell Skull . and Cre,scent; dent ' So(!iluH.rio.re J ' en- L)elta Lipsilini; Viee- Leader, ' .3 . - ' 34. Trea,surer, Sophomore tal Cla.ss. liiiiiii!! ' ILresiden t. T ' reshnun Class; Student Coun- Dental Class; Varsity cil; j t rd an K i i, ' er ,ll ..III ,1 ' .,11 ,l,.,lll Lemiis; I Men ' s Club, .Reyue , M2, 174 SENIOR CLASS Front Row: Wagner, Jarabak, Tatlock, Jordan, Grolier, Irizarry, Young, Lutkemeier, Mmtz, Glassley, Campbell, Miller, Lieberman. Second Row: Beck, Fichman, Lonsbury, Francis, Gainey, Boren, Forney, Segal, Carr, Lynch, Livingston, Harvey. Third Row: Gamble, Gregg, Fierman, Prentice, Yoder, Whetstone, Binkley, Rutledge, Pell, Sowers, Davis, Pavy, McPheeters, Tade, Dyer. JUNIOR CLASS Doyle E. Pierce, President R ichard H. Howard, Vice-President Julius C. Sexson, Secretary-Treasurer Front Row: Richardson, Bryan, Fraser, Patterson, Stock- ing, Morris, Hanley, Albright, Fly, Davidson, Troutwine, Fodora. Second Row: Niles, Hess, Shaw, Bales, Porter, Thomas, Barco, Robinson, Baker, Lively, Nelson, Berman, Hanes, Koss. ! I Third Row; Hanning, Nadler, Iden, McCUntick, Pierce, Sexson, Etter, Stookey, Howard, Ferling, Koenig, Metaxas, J. Green, Brown, Sharon. SOPHOMORE CLASS William J. Healy, President Lester H. Mausehund, Vice-President William D. King, Secretary-Treasurer Front Row: Rosenstein, Stiefler, Shanteau, Smith, Dr. Morrow, Price, Charkins, Kowal, King. Second Row: Healy, Lyddan, Feldman, Mausehund, Frank, Zimmerman, Irvin, Damm, Ford, Rosenbarger. FRESHMAN CLASS Robert W. Wurtz, President George J. Stragand, Vice-President Leo H. White, Secretary-Treasurer Front Row: Gromer, Lowery, Hall, Stout, White, Strag- and, Feldman, Larimore. Second Row: Wurtz, Henning, Gilchrist, Michener, Welp, Feintuch. Third Row: Goldman, Ward, Pruect, Stock, Poorman, Baldwin, Bush, Gassin, Burks. 176 mm CLASS Graduation finds the thoughts of members of the Senior class look- ing eagerly towards the future that is in store for them. After four years of hard work and study in the lecture room, laboratory, and clinic, they are well qualified for the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery which will be conferred upon them. The many acquaintances so quickly formed during the first few months of the Freshman year now have matured into close friendships, and it is with much regret that the members of the Senior class say good- bye to their fellow dental students and the very able faculty which has been so kind and helpful during their stay. The Senior class proudly boasts the presence of the first woman dental graduate at Indiana University in eleven years, and all her class- mates doff their hats to a willing worker, a good sport, and fine dentist. jeioR cuss The end of the year finds the Junior class well established in the routine of the clinical practice of dentistry. It has been a very busy year for them, for in addition to putting to practical application in the clinic the fundamentals studied dviring the first two years of their dental curriculum, they were busy also in the lecture room and laboratory in searching for more knowledge and skill. Already they are looking forward to the busy year lying ahead of them and are anxious to embark upon the final lap of their dental train- ing. By now they realize the vast amount of knowledge necessary for the successful practice of dentistry, and are inspired to study more and to delve deeper into the subject in search of this knowledge. The second woman dental student to enter the school since 192 8 very ably holds her place as a member of the class of 1940. SOPHOMORE CLASS Although this class is the smallest in the history of the school, members more than make up for this by the high scholastic standards which they already have set for themselves by their eagerness and will- ingness in the study of dentistry. The members of this class, by virtue of having spent the last two years in a thorough training in the basis of dentistry, both in the lecture room and laboratory, now are ready to embark upon their clinical ex- perience in the beginning of the Junior year. To them has come an understanding of the necessity for a full knowledge of the intricacies of their chosen profession, and next Sep- tember will find them back in school inspired with the idea of putting into practice what they have been learning, as well as intent upon their purpose to gain more knowledge and experience in the field of dentistry. FRESHMAN CLASS As the year draws to a close, twenty-four members of the Fresh- man class are remembering their first day in a school of dentistry. That day found them assembled, eager to learn the art and science of dentistry, and filled with ambitions to practice this interesting branch of the heal- ing arts. They proved to be industrious and willing students, and their labors have rewarded them with a good introduction into their chosen profession. The knowledge which they already have gained has served to whet their thirst for knowledge even more, and they now are striving to advance further in the study of dentistry. The class of ' 42 upheld tradition by staging a very successful Fresh- man dance, in conjunction with the Junior American Dental Association, on March 1 1 at the Spink-Arms Hotel. 177 OMicROfl y§i m im Omicron Kappa Upsilon, national dental honorary fraternity, was organ- ized in 1914 by the faculty of Northwestern University Dental School to en- courage and develop a spirit of emulation among students in dentistry and to recognize in an appropriate manner those who distinguish themselves by a high grade of scholarship. Upon the completion of a school year, the Dean nominates a list of Senior students to be considered for election to the fraternity. This list usually in- cludes only those in the upper third of the class arranged according to the scholastic standing for the four years in the dental school. From this list, twelve and one-half per cent of the total class are elected by chapter vote. Clarence W. Abraham L. K. Anderson Samuel R. Antle Kingdon Avery T. L. Babcock Harry Bailie E. C. Baker F. C. Baker M. G. Baum N. M. Beery F. G. Behmlander Raleigh F. Benham E. C. Bennhoff Hugh T. Berkey R. I. Blakeman R. P. Boesinger R. G. Boggs Elmer Bosselman D. A. Boyd W. S. Bray J. E. Buck John E. Buhler H. A. Buses Milo Bushong Kiefer R. Calkins Rodolfo A. Campani Newton M. Cainpbell Guthrie P. Carr J. B. Carr E. D. Cofield Harold M. Crockett Delmar D. Curry Harold T. Dailey Floyd E. Davisson Watson E. Deakyne Donald C. Dicks E. M. Dill Harold C. Dimmich C. E. Donnell Myron J. Druley William M. Duncan Omer A. Dynes N. T. Enmeier H. M. Enyart L. A. Fonner L. S. Fountain F. B. Fouts Carl A. Freeh Perry Garman R. E. Gieringer Earl S. Gilchrist R. R. GiUis Lawrence Ginther C. H. Glascock Charles S. Glaser Oscar F. Goyert Gladwyn E. Graham G. T. Gregory John M. Hale J. W. Hammer W. V. Hanson G. F. Harrold Harold P. Haskins Wm. H. Hastings Edgar T. Haynes Harry J. Healey Maurice J. Healey F. G. Heimlich Harve Hemphill G. F. Henricks Frank Hensley F. A. Hohlt J. W. Huckleberry Oscar S. Hufnagel F. C. Hughes A. O. Humphreys Harold Her H. L. Imboden H. M. Ingle C. R. Jackson D. A. Johnson John F. Johnston John Paul Jones Frank W. Jordan L. A. Kaler K. H. Kayser W. A. Kemper Ross R. Kennedy Von L. Kennedy W. E. Kennedy W. N. Kiesling D. W. Kiliinger W. J. Krider S. E. Kroczek Gordon D. Lamb F. W. La Rue Fred W. Leavell H. D. Leer Ralph O. Leonard Richard C. Leonard Theo. E. Lilly J. Y. Linn R. W. Little H. J. Longcamp Virgil H. Longcamp Paul K. Losch Frank L. Loskot R. Clifford Lowe Floyd E. Lytle P. T. McClarnon B. A. Martin R. J. Meyers A. H. Mitchell E. L. Mitchell C. F. Morganthaler Hugh D. Morris Lawrence E. Morris H. B. Morrow C. D. Morton D. H. Mottier Donald D. Myers R. E. Naftzger Gale R. Oldham P. R. Oldham Sumner X. Pallardy F. K. Paul Herbert B. Paul G. J. Pell Harold C. Percival R. L. Reynard Frank A. Richison J. Conley Robinson L. G. Robinson E. J. Rogers Martin Roschelle Dale M. Roth Chester A. Ry croft Sylvester A. Schmid Roy A. Scircle Reed M. Shroyer Louis C. Siegel T. C. Smiley Roscoe R. Smith J. Eldon Spahr L. B. Spear Jay C. Spink Arthur W. Spivey WiUard C. Stamper H. V. Steinmetz E. W. Stoelting O. C. Stoelting Franz W. Stumpf Richard N. Taylor H. H. Taylor G. D. Timmons M. E. Tom Frank L. Traster Mary C. Turgi R. W. Turner J. O. VanAntwerp D. J. VanGilder Dean VanOsdol E. E. Voyles J. Thayer Waldo John M. Watt Harold W. Watts K. P. Watts William K. Welker James C. Weatherholt H. P. Workman John C. Werner E. R. Wesner B. K. Westfall Douglas H. White James E. Williams J. L. Wilson Ralph G. Wilson A. F. Witte G. B. Wolfe C. L. Wundram John H. Yates 178 THEY HEARD THAT THERE ' S SAFETY IN NUMRERS The Indiana University branch of the Junior American Dental Associa- tion was founded at the Indiana University School of Dentistry on December 12, 1934. The purpose of this organization is to give the student a stable beginning in organized dentistry, thus equipping him better for a full and useful career in his chosen profession. The association strives to cultivate the education of its members by lectures and clinics given by men of high repute, and the excellent cooperation of the members has resulted in their gaining a great deal of valuable information in the field of dentistry and allied subjects. Membership in this society is limited to members of the Sophomore, Junior, and Senior classes who are in good standing. Although the Indiana University School of Dentistry is not so large as some dental schools, the local association is one of the largest and most active in the United States. JIIIIOR illlERICill DENTAL ASSOfI ATIOI WILSON E. PRENTICE President JULIUS C. SEXSON Vice-President MICHAEL KOWAL Secretary -Treasurer LYNN H. RODENBARGER Prcsident-Elcct Front Row: Lieberman, Young, Tatlock, E. Green, Davidson, Campbell, Groher, Glassley, Binkley, Fed or a, Livingston. Second Row: Jarabak, Bak- er, Hanning, Beck, Feldman, Fly, Ford, Fraser, Nelson, Patterson, Koss, Robinson, Kowal, Boren, Price, Dyer, Mintz, Carr, Harvey, Miller, Albright, Jordan, Brown, Thomas. Third Row: Berman, Ping, Shanteau, Morris, Smith, Por- ter, Stiefler, King. Mause- hund, Lively. Fourth Row: Tade, Barco, Nadler, Shaw, Stookey, Frank, Sexson, Bryan, Lyddan, Pell, Pavy, Koenig, P. Green, Ros- enstein. Prentice, Davis, Rut- ledge. First Row: Ellis Har- old Tade, Perry R. Rat- cliff, George G. Rich- ardson, Reginald Earl Stookey. Second Row: David King, Stanley Ping, Alfred Stock, William Ronald Darrell Richard Shenk Michener. Something new and needed for a long time has been the institution in the School of Dentistry of a student council. As in all schools, it was felt that there should be some medium through which the student body, faculty, and administration of the School could meet and form a closer association with each other. It was with this particular idea in mind that Dr. Timmons organized the Student Council this year, and its first year has proved to be a very successful and worthwhile one. However, not only does the Student Council act its part in making a close association with the faculty, but it is here that any constructive legislation by the student body or faculty is diccussed and passed upon. Thus, should any student have any ideas which would be for the betterment of the school, he merely passes them on to a member of the Student Council, who in turn brings them up for discussion at a subsequent meeting of the group. The Student Council is composed of two members of each class, elected each year by the members of their respective classes. It meets on alternate Fridays with Dr. Timmons, who serves as its faculty adviser and also as the faculty representa- tive. 180 THEY PULL TOGETHER TO FILL THE GOVERNMENTAL CAVITY. ATTENTION? DHFLLING SQUAD! THE YANKS ARE COMING, Perry A. Ratcliff President Eugene E. Bales Vice-Presidcut Ernest H. Porter Treasurer Ronald S. Ping Secretary In 1892 at Baltimore Dental College a few students, imbued with a sense of professional obligation and a desire for fraternal fellowship, organized the first chapter of Psi Omega fraternity. From this has grown an organiza- tion that is today the largest dental fraternity in the world, having a chapter in every dental school in the United States plus several European chapters. Omega chapter was founded at Indiana Dental Col- lege in 1903 and is doing its part in carrying on the tra- ditions of Psi Omega, hoping to make every man a better man, a better student, and a better dentist. To cultivate the social qualities of its members; to surround each member with friends to whom he can turn for advice and assistance; to secure by cooperation bene- fits and advantages out of individual reach; by means of a journal to keep its members in touch with other mem- bers in all parts of the world; to assist its members in all their laudable undertakings; to exert its influence untiring- ly for the advancement of the dental profession in methods of teaching, practice, and jurisprudence: to all this do Psi Omega members dedicate themselves. |SI 011 . First Row Jonathan E. Thomas 40, Connersville Weldon, Lynch ' 39, Anderson Lester H. Mausehund ' 41, St. Lodi, Calif. Meredith D. Tatlock ' 39, Wheeler Jack D. Carr ' 39, Indianapolis Second Row Richard H. Howard ' 40, Boston E. Hanson Albright ' 40, Connersvi Perry A. Ratcliff ' 39, Indianapolis John D. Ford ' 41, Indianapolis Albert A. Fodora ' 40, Indianapolis Third Row Louis F. Lonsbury ' 39, Indianapolis Ernest H. Porter ' 40, Oden Frank S. Mitchell ' 40, Marshall, 111. Harold H. Koenig ' 40, Edwardsport Howard K. Binktey ' 39, New Salisbury Ronald S. Ping ' 41, Terre Haute ISI THY TO CHEW YOUR WAY THROUGH THIS, BY CUSPID! DELTi A DELTA John L. Campbell ' President James Robert Davis Yice-Fresident Edward Young Secretary Wilber C. Boren Treasurer First Row: Paul H. Pruett ' 42, Ft. Wayne Andrew G. Larimore ' 42, Madison J. Harry Whetstone ' 39, Evansville G. Byron Rutledge ' 39, Beech Grove Alden H. Poorman ' 42, Huntington Robert E. Lively ' 40, Cicero Second Row: Pat H. Lyddan ' 41, Webster, Ky. Ernest E. Rosenbarger ' 41, Corydon Dennis A. Welp ' 42, Jasper John L. Campbell ' 39, Marion Roscoe L. Gromer ' 42, West Baden Spring John M. Goldman ' 42, Rockport Third Row: Albert C. Yoder ' 39, Goshen J. Robert Davis ' 39, Lexington David L. Francis ' 39, Marion, Va. Ally N. Burks ' 42, Indianapolis William D. King ' 41, Indianapolis William J. Healy ' 41, Naugaluck Fourth Row: James A. McPheeters ' 39, Covington, Ky. William F. Henning ' 42, Boonville Vernon J. Forney ' 39, Valparaiso Leo H. White ' 42, Valparaiso Willard H. Damm ' 41, Evansville Charles R. Gregg ' 39, Indianapolis Fifth Row: William A. Robinson ' 40, Brazil Wilber C. Boren ' 39, Princeton Scott Sowers ' 39, Morgantown, W. Va. John E. Davidson ' 40, Bloomington Dale W. Harvey ' 39, Urbana, 111. Edward Young ' 39, LaPorte Francis W. Gamble ' 39, Muncie Richard S. Michener ' 42, Kokomo Delta Sigma Delta was founded in 1883 at the University of Michigan and has the distinction of being the first fraternity to be established strictly for members and students of the den- tal profession. The fraternity has grown to become an inter- national organization represented by forty-one supreme and auxiliary chapters with thirty-two subordinate chapters. Delta Sigma Delta embraces the entire world in her scope, and nearly every country is represented in her membership. Xi Chapter of Delta Sigma Delta was organized at the Indiana Dental College in January, 1900. Since that time there has been a great group of professional men at Indiana Univer- sity keeping Delta Sigma Delta ideals on the upper plane. Delta Sigma Delta is a member of the professional Inter- Fraternity Council of which Dr. D. G. Putterbaugh of Delta Sigma Delta at this time is president. Xi chapter at Indiana has a very fine deputy in charge, Dr. F. Wade La Rue, a Past Supreme Grand Master of Delta Sigma Delta, who resides at the fraternity house which is lo- cated at 1424 Central Avenue. The late Dean F. R. Henshaw also was a Past Supreme Grand Master of this fraternity. 182 THESE GENTLEMEN KNOW HOW TO BRIDGE THE GAP Emanuel J. Green __ — President Saul Herman Vice-President Francis Feldman Secretary Samuel Groher Treasurer Alpha Omega was founded in 1909 by the union of the Roniach fraternity, founded at the Pennsylvania Col- lege of Dental Surgeons in 1906, with the Alpha Omega fraternity, founded at the University of Maryland in 1907. The sires of this organization were a group of Jewish dental students with a purpose to form a close social and fraternal union of Jewish students in various universities and to reap the benefits therefrom. Alpha Gamma chapter was founded at Indiana University in 192 8. Alpha Gamma, however, is only a part of the 32 collegiate chapters and 143 alumni chap- ters in the United States and Canada. Alpha Omega prides itself in having more than 10,- 000 active and alumni members who carry forth the fra- ternity ' s ideals of scholarship, fellowship, Judaeism, and, above all, the general advancement of an ethical dental profession. Alpha Omega is pleased with her graduates, many of whom have given a great deal to the progress of dentistry, and others who are teaching in some of the lead- ing dental colleges in America. Her members serve best by striving to make themselves a source of strength and pride to their school. First Row Morris M. Stoner ' 42, New London, Conn. Ralph Berman ' 40, South Bend Emanuel J. Green ' 39, Detroit, Mich. Samuel Patterson ' 40, Indianapolis Jack S. Feintuch ' 42, New York City Second Row Francis Feldman ' 41, New York City Saul Herman ' 39, Brooklyn, N. Y. Martin Feldman ' 42, New London, Conn. Elliot Frank ' 41, New York City Morris N. Brown ' 40, Syracuse, N. Y. Third Row Seymour W. Nadler ' 40, Boston, Mass. Maurice E. Rosenstein ' 41, Frankfort, Ky. Harold S. Mintz ' 39, East Chicago Heiman G. Lieberman ' 39, Evansville Samuel Groher ' 39, New Canaan, Conn. 183 HERE ' S AN ORGANIZATION WITH PLENTY OF PULL Wilson Prentice Tresident John Geisel Vice-President Gerald J. Morris Treasurer Charles A. Fly Secretary Xi Psi Phi was founded at the University of Mich- igan on February 8, 1889, and now is celebrating its golden anniversary. It was the second dental fraternity to be organized; however it was the first one to establish a chapter in Indiana. 1893 marked the beginning of Theta chapter at Indiana Dental College, which institu- tion later became the Indiana University School of Dentistry. From its beginning Xi Psi Phi grew rapidly and dur- ing its existence established forty-six active college chap- ters. Approximately half of these have gone out of ex- istence because of mergers of dental schools or the dis- continuance of other schools of dental learning. Today there are twenty-five chapters located in the leading dental institutions. In the years 1900-1902 a magazine was founded and published intermittently until 1906, since which year the official publication, the Xi Psi Phi Quarterly, has en- joyed an uninterrupted existence. With the exception of very few, the active chapters are housed in chapter houses. Theta in the past year moved to a new location, facing beautiful Fall Creek, at 115 E. Fall Creek Boulevard. Xi Psi Phi is the only dental fraternity in which every initiate receives life membership in the alumni chapter upon his graduation. Included with this member- ship is a lifetime subscription to the Xi Psi Phi Quarterly. First Row Richard L. Niles ' 40, Ft. Wayne Gerald J. Morris ' 40, Cambridge City Marion A. Shaw ' 40, Zionsville Edgar R. Gassin ' 42, Bellair, N. J. E. Wallace Bryan ' 40, Ft. Wayne Second Row Walter H. Vendes ' 39, Bicknell Richard F. Ferling ' 40, Richmond Richard C. Glassley ' 39, Ft. Wayne Doyle E. Pierce ' 40, Chicago, 111. John Geisel ' 39, Gary Julius C. Sexson ' 40, Worthington Third Row Frank K. Etter ' 40, Seymour Wilson Prentice ' 39, Jefferson ville Aulden K. Bush ' 42, RossviUe, 111. Michael Kowal ' 41, Detroit, Mich. Charles A. Fly ' 40, Lima, Ohio John C. Miller ' 39, Argos 184  . t j- ' 14 i D[A! A t MvLR.: n V SCHOOL OF DFNTIVT ■II ' Junior Lab . . . Dr. W I ! n and his goo-goo eyes . . Ic I cai?t be done ... Hi, Bud ... W (.loset did that come from? . . . What ' s V ' ii II l| ' i| li the diagnosis . . . Main entrance . . . Happy to be going to work or glad ||| i! it ' s over . . . Most beautiful coed in the Senior class . . . Nice shooting, iioys . - . Open wide, please . . I, ' I. I Getting store teeth . . . Tv. i I ndi .ii:r.iLi: ' i. ' iiyiiuiii.liii T ' ' fe ' m t ' . . 1 % R. E. Cavanaugh, Director 1. 11. EXTENSION DIViSIOI Tucked away in the cellar of Wylie Hall is the Extension Division, one of the most vital parts of the University in that it reaches out to serve more than 700,000 citizens of the State each year. With R. E. Cavanaugh as director and W. S. Bittner as associate director, the Division makes its activities three-fold: class teaching, correspondence study, and general welfare service. The latter service embraces promotion of public conferences and institutes, speech clinic work, home reading courses, assistance in art and music education, child welfare and parent-teacher serv- ice, and a public information service. The Bureau of Public Dis- cussion Service, directed by Mrs. Adela Bittner, includes package libraries, parent-teacher aids, club study guidance, municipal in- formation and community service, play loan service, symphony broadcast service, and promotion of contests in public discussion, Latin, music, and mathematics, with finals held at the University each year. The Visual Instruction Bureau lends lantern slides and movies, chart and picture exhibitions, and visual aids for classes. It also conducts the University exhibit at the State Fair. Three principal extension centers of the University are at Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne, and in the Calumet area. These centers allow persons finding it impossible to take work at Bloomington to continue their education. A new building is being constructed at the Calumet Center to handle an increasingly large enrollment. Staff workers prepare lessons for cor- respondence study students. Package library workers prepare parcels for the mail. 186 snund nr MHpaSiPPpm . ■ • Bill Warder shown el with the rest of tli idred owned by the Extension Division Hoff does some copy work lur one of the University professors . . . Iov ' 1 I ' v MIS photogriph ' . riinpii . ui i itii- ' . . . . One of the Division ' s daily ship- mcMi M ' ntv fihi lo leave Wylie . . . One of the 3 ) c,ln1lHl ' ' ioyed by an education ' Extension centers are located in Ft. Wayne, Indianapolis, and the Calumet region to supply academic study for persons who find it impossible to take work in Bloomington and for the pro- motion of general adult education. A large training staff serves several hun- dred students each year. leff. Director of the Ft. Wa . Clare Albrecht and Irwin perforn tl lit i.llii.e staff Extension unJcnts take time nimittee meeting The Tndiann Daily Student Staff in Indianapolis turns out copy for ington iiuhlir irif in A el -, :---,,if-ri r Centei I B , ,1„ Ir H fca v n a u and Mary Orvis, £xecuti c | K; ihc IrididiiapuliN r, help two students plan their 1 H (. ' T ' 1 ii,-ii- o If t hi ' 1 ision Center The CaUimet | 1 ( Corner , directed by Dr. Bc | Sundel Norman, e Secretary of the Calumet l H B ,!...,,... ,■ C -r-Un tr Ain iTpA Uv Rohl ' ; H H J. w I Mason in action at the Phi Gam Pig Dinner . . . Whatcha ' mean it ' s a first cli ' n? . . . Dear Pappy, hena nioi money . . . Ya ' gotta eat, even in soring . . . Bob Allen ' s cir; wiiere ' s her So I sez to him, See here , , , Kow do vou want to go lo Purdue? How to drape a grand piano ... In sprmg, a oung man ' s ihougius turn . use that refreshes, fur a nickel . , , Russ f Bad taste, Sybil? . . . Typing by the nk Meyers hands Beta brother Arm- of coffee . . . Tri Dclts give typical sorority quiet hours. mirjtt OlRfCrORV BARBER SHOP CAFETERIA ' r ' CULTY CLUB MEN-S GRILL I BOOK STORE I DIRECTOR MENS LOUNGE SECOND FLOOR THIRD FLOOR ME£T(N6 ROOM MEETING ROOM I BO RD OF AEONS ALUMNI OFFICE ALUMNI SEC ' Y ' •0. FDUNDAriDN ' ' mNBERBER PH DELTA PHI N HALL f DELTA CHI jNG fiODM CA OFFICE US XTA KAPPA G ROOM f. Ad room f AN ROOM ' ifePleri] ' NOIANA UNION S T, mmm f RECORD HOUR m ' ' MENS SMOKFR ' BRYAN ROOM J . BEMiTIES ELEB t p ' ' ai tZ iitJ HELEN EMLY DELTA DELTA DELTA 196 i MARYEL PATRICK CHI OMEGA il ' n li.- ' ' f ' WTi ' tL ' - ' ' ' JPl ' - ' Kc vlKI ' ij-l ' jn m ' ' ' 197 pw- ' ' ■M ' 3 i I m fiV., ifl 1 ' %i MARY BETH STEINMET2 DELTA GAMMA 198 ANNE LOUISE COLE KAPPA ALPHA THETA i -ST!mmwm sm m iimiiKSimm : ' ' ' y:l ' ' ,: ' - 199 Wi ' 0: ' ' i! MARY BENNINGHOFF CHI OMEGA 200 ass s issfsssa 1. i- 111 I Ss 4i ' ,W ' ' ai es :332i!aill itMi2HMi(g8«W{ i£He? ' i s f .. ' ,i ' M W f r Jffil6S« K i}te« V6Yi:! ' ' T «,i « liliiliaitti HiiilllBSBiaaBiSlIB: HIGHLIGHtS OF 193 9 AR- BUTUS BEAUTY GONTEST— ■ ■ ' ' ' ' i® Hoagy : Garmichael poses with Queens Patrick, Benninghoff, Emly, Steinmetz, a:n.4 CcAd ii:hi:inediately alter the contest . , Eotmal shoe of the hve queens . . . ' ' ' inne ran4 Judges . ' .celebrate victory . . Rod IveyAolds, Ftank, North,, and .Mary Paxtor )W.c|:g S:. of, the fi,tst contest . . . Beau i; Queijiis : ' ' in , civilian ;at ' tire . .,. Judge :Ji:4mi|? ,|jamess, left, a,nd Mar, [ ' .iNSon, right, Watch beauty, wliiic ! rank THE 19H JIHOR PROM Louis Armstrong, gravel-voiced hot trumpeter more familiarly known as Old Satchelmouth , brought his swing band to play the 1939 Junior Prom. Ar- rangements for this year ' s Prom were in the hands of a quintet of outstand- ing Juniors: Willard Findling, Nathan Kaplan, Chairman Buck Mauck, Ge- neva Senefeld, and Mary Beth Hunt. Features of their presentation of the an- nual social event were novel programs bearing pictures of Prom Queen Joyce Cole and the Union Building, balloons raining from the ceiling, and decorative boughs of foliage. 3 ■ ' 4- JOYOe COLE A ' ' . P i . • m. J .. i . ..,. . .: ,_J:, 1939 JUNIOR PROM QUEEN Joyce Cole, as 1939 Junior Prom Queen, glided onto the Alumni Hall stage Friday evening. May 5, in a white canoe to receive her crown of pink rosebuds. She was the second unorganized girl in the nineteen-year history of the University ' s premier social event to be voted this honor. Reigning over 300 couples at the dance, she led the grand march with Buck Mauck, Prom chairman, and was interviewed over WIRE during the evening. 207 •:?9 ' . ; BORED WALK PROCESS Margery Stewart, Kappa Kap- pa Gamma. Bored Walk Fresh- man PrLncess of 193 8-39. R.O.T.C. SPOISORS R.O.T.C. coed sponsors, elected this spring for 1939, are Colonel Juanita Clawson, Lieutenant Colonel Pauline Taylor, Majors Bonnie Baker, Mary Car- son, and Madeline Scully, and Captain Jane Bosart. ' Each Year Indiana Universit)- has been iortvmtc in ' : _ having a xiumber of nmrie bancis appear on the campus. Among ■% those who have appeared this yt ' -Ar are; Artie Shaw, shown phi) ' jjig his ' clarinet at the Band l eiietit Bali . . . Joe Sanders, at the piano . . Fletcher Henderson, center, and his band; upper right, who played tor the Blanket Hop . . ,- i -rankie Masters, brought here by L ' uion-A.W.S. . . . Anson Weeks who played at the Military Ball . . , Rica Rio, co-starring maestro at Blanket Hop. .inn iJnn, rsitj ha. played host lo a number of famous pefsonaiides durJnv- the ;- ' ' :f ' ' -™- hesc are JNorman Thomas, who .poke before an Open Forum, Rubinolf Jic: Wo.uiu;t, who appeared m a popular concert sponsored by the Indiana Umon; cn-cnescra xead«f Jimmie janies, one of the judges of the Arbun;,s kanty contest; ' Karold j. Laski, presented as lecturer by the Patten Fcmndation; Fray and Bra t- ' ftf, psano duo, who were presented wrth llubmofF; and Wendell WiUae, pnneipal speaker at the Foundatior- Day exercises last spring. Composer Hoagj. Car- micnael received a cetcificate of honorary membership in Tfeeta Alpha Phi irom Prof. Lee Norvehe. Movie actress Matjorie maver, pictured nth ; some oi Iier sororn]- sisters, spent a weekend on tfie campas; Mar nrie Hdhs appeared as Marnx Table speaker, and John D. TornHnson, ' m tafy Qi tli£ American Cotumittee at the Genew Con- ' :, _ fereiice, was the initial speaker of the Open Forum series. FR ATERNITIES FRATERNITY LIFE SORORITIES SORORITY LIFE 211 mm Richard Arnold -President William Day Vice-President Carson King Secretary Robert Beckett Treasurer Acacia fraternit) ' was originated at the Uni- versity of Michigan in 1904 by a group of Masons who desired a closer Masonic fellowship on the campus. For twenty-six years the membership was limited to members of the Masonic Lodge. How- ever, the requirements have been changed to allow those to join who are recommended by Masons. Chapters of the fraternity are founded only at class A universities. The Indiana chapter of Acacia was founded in 1920 by three members of the Indiana Masons ' Club, which had been established on the campus in 1916. It was the twenty-fifth chapter of the fraternity to be founded. This fall the Acacias opened their long-awaited new house. Built in Georgian colonial style, it has been adjudged one of the most beautiful houses on the campus. Members of the fraternity who are active in campus affairs are Jim Huston, church editor of The Daily Student, president of the Protestant Student Council, and a member of Phi Eta Sigma; Dick Arnold, secretary of the Interfraternity Council and Union Board member, and Elmer Koch, associate editor of the Red Book. Acacias are active also in Alpha Kappa Psi, Kappa Kappa Psi, Band, Alpha Phi Omega, Accounting Club, Pro-Music Club, basketball and golf teams. Alumni of the chapter on the campus are Dr. Logan Esarey, Geoffrey Carmichael, Prof. Harold Lusk, Prof. William Thornbury, Robert Royer, and Prof. Lyle Dieterle. Members of the fraternity prominent in the field of politics are William Howard Taft and Posey Kime. e 212 GOOD AFTERNOON, ACACIA FRATERNITY. First Row James H. Bell ' 40, Elwood Richard D. Arnold 40, Cedar Springs, Mich. Harry W. Foster ' 41, Frances ville Carson King ' 40, Shelbyville Robert Beckett ' 39, Cincinnati, Ohio Robert Arbuckle ' 41, Shelbyville Joe Russell ' 42, Winamac Second Row Charles Coates ' 41, Lynn Lester Snell ' 39, Troy, Ohio Miles Marshall ' 40, Mt. Summitt Gene Rodenberger ' 42, Frankfort James Fluston ' 39, Fairmount FFoward Larkin ' 40, South Bend Elmer Koch ' 39, Indianapolis Third Row Robert Sill ' 41, Gary James Timmerman ' 41, Pleasantville Clifford Price ' 40, Union Mills Adrian Marks PG, Ladoga Bernard Thompson ' 39, Frankfort Robert Mohr ' 42, Frankfort Jack King ' 42, Gary Fourth Row Louis Culmann ' 41, Indianapolis Bryant Millikan ' 40, Indianapolis Russell Whitmore ' 42, Indianapolis John Torphy ' 42, Bedford James Hughes ' 42, Hammond James Armstrong ' 39, Springville Francis Henderson ' 39, Elwood Fifth Row John Jackson ' 42, Ft. Wayne William Torphy ' 42, Bedford Ellsworth Strang ' 42, Gary Barrel Becker ' 42, Corydon Robert Murray ' 42, Frankfort Alfred Lohse ' 40, Michigan City Eugene Yoder ' 40, Elwood Sixth Row John Purner ' 41, Terre Haute Eugene Brown ' 42, Indianapolis Richard Russell ' 41, Winamac John Frazier ' 39, Hartford City Donald McMurtry ' 42, Frankfort Merrill Beck ' 41, Bloomington Robert Straesser ' 41, Frankfort Jack Walts ' 39, Georgetown WILL YOU COME SEE OUR NEW MORTGAGE? 213 EPHil m OMEGA Bernard Bogard President John Purcell _ Yice-Vresident Joe Hilgenberg Treasurer Alpha Tau Omega was founded in 1865 at the Virginia MiHtary Institute by three men whose pur- pose was a reconcihation of the feehngs of Northern and Southern boys after the Civil War. It was the first Greek-letter fraternity to became incorporated, and after firmly establishing itself in universities throughout the South, Alpha Tau Omega chartered its local chapter of Delta Alpha on the Indiana Uni- versity campus in 1915. The national organization of ATO annually presents the Thomas A. Clark Award (usually a jeweled fraternity pin, a recogni- tion pin, and a medal) to an active member who has been judged to have been outstanding during the school year in scholarship, campus activities, and character. Every year each chapter of Alpha Tau Omega puts up one of its members to compete for this coveted award. Clair Richardson of the local chapter was selected this year. Among its prominent faculty members, ATO boasts Dr. Merrill Eaton of the School of Education, Dr. Richard Sherman of the Department of Spanish, Dr. Lee Norvelle of the Division of Speech, and Dr. Wilbur Cogshall of the Department of Astronomy. The chapter is represented in Phi Eta Sigma by Robert Taylor, Herschel Kopp, Allen Harrison, and Robert Chattin. Clair Richardson is a member of the Union Board, Robert Dro and William John- son are varsity basketball players, and Johnson ys also a member of Sphinx Club. William Mitchell and Robert Taylor are active in Glee Club, and John R. Walter and Robert Taylor are members of Kappa Kappa Psi. Taylor and Clair Richardson are mem- bers of Alpha Kappa Psi. TIS THE LOVE OF AN ALPHA TAU, 214 First Row Craig Booher ' 42, Sullivan Wayne Kamm ' 42, Clinton George Henry ' 40, Indianapolis Oliver Hitch PG, Princeton Jay Schilling ' 39, Indianapolis Ray Bolinger ' 41, Terre Haute Jack Jester ' 41, Indianapolis Joe Zwerner ' 39, Terre Haute Gilbert Stover ' 41, Southport Second Row Thomas Walsh ' 40, Brazil William Van Horn ' 42, Terre Haute Richard Neuman ' 42, Richmond Clair Richardson ' 39, Merion, Pa. Keith Reese ' 42, Indianapolis Roscoe Cutsinger ' 41, Edinburg Freeman Land ' 41, Terre Haute Bernard Bogard ' 40, Lyons Robert Taylor ' 40, Sullivan Third Row Fred Henry ' 42, Indianapolis Paul Gutzwiller ' 41, Indianapolis Merrill Eaton ' 41, Bloomington Jack J. Dewberry ' 40, Kokomo Howard Wilcox ' 42, Indianapolis Wendell Prough ' 40, Bluffton William Hunter ' 41, Greensburg William Barker ' 39, Kokomo John R. Walter ' 39, Mt. Vernon Fourth Row Allen Harrison ' 40, Ladoga William Mitchell ' 41, Kokomo Robert Robb ' 42, Indianapolis Ralph Walker ' 42, Kokomo John K. Purcell ' 39, Sullivan Robert Kalb ' 42, Greensburg Emerson Craig ' 41, Indianapolis William Anderson ' 42, Indianapolis Edward Waddle ' 39, Somerset, Ky. Fifth Row Herman Schaefer ' 41, Ft. Wayne Herschel Kopp ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Dro ' 41, Berne Robert Chattin ' 42, Union City Earl Snyder ' 39, Crawfordsville Charles Steele ' 41, Jason ville Jerome Peters ' 42, Marysville Joe Hilgenberg ' 39, Indianapolis Robert Hall ' 4 1 , Indianapolis Sixth Row Ernest Davis ' 42, Sellersburg Robert Nickels PG, Terre Haute Harvey Weimer ' 42, Union City Albert B. Hemmer ' 40, Ft. Branch Wilham Johnson ' 39, Jeffersonville William Roessler ' 40, Evansville Charles Kelsey ' 39, Oakland City William Miller ' 41, Anderson Louis Grieger PG, Wanatah LITTLE GIRL-HOW ABOUT THAT LOYE? 21S BETA THETA PI Thomas Elrod President Harrison Green Vice-President Philip Scott Secretary Harold Lantz ...., Treasurer Founded at Miami University in 1839, Beta Theta Pi, the oldest college social fraternity, cele- brates its centennial this year. One of the sentimental traditions of the fra- ternity on this campus is that of members putting out their pins in the Wellhouse. After each serenade, too, the members meet in the Wellhouse and go through the fraternity ritual. Annual social func- tions of the chapter at Indiana University include the barn dance, held each fall, and the Miami Triad, made up of and completed by Sigma Chi and Phi Delta Theta, in commemoration of the founding of the three fraternities on the Miami campus. Prominent Betas in activities on the campus in- clude William Mayse, who is a Senior track manager and a member of the Board of Aeons, Blue Key, Beta Gamma Sigma, and Phi Eta Sigma; Jack Mueller, a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Blue Key, and the golf team; Stanley Terhune, a member of Blue Key; Marvin Huffman, a member of Sphinx Club and captain of the basketball team; Gene Smith, Beta Gamma Sigma and Phi Eta Sigma. Other members of Phi Eta Sigma are Rembrandt Hiller, Richard Reed, William Fisher, and James Henley. Sphinx Club includes, besides Huffman, Thomas Elrod and Jack Stevenson. Outstanding in athletics are Curly Arm- strong and Jack Stevenson in basketball, John Wida- man in football, and Walter Cisco, captain of the golf team. Illustrious alumni from the Indiana chapter are Paul V. McNutt, High Commissioner to the Philip- pines; Bill Kunkel and Albert Rabb, two of the Uni- versity ' s Trustees; and Wendell Wilkie, president of the Southern Commonwealth Utilities Company. Coach Bo McMillin and George Heighway are prominent alumni on the campus. Five of the University buildings are named after Betas, — Kirkwood, Wylie, Maxwell, Owen, and Mitchell. 216 BETA THETA PI-GOD BLESS OUB ALUMNI- First Row Marvin Huffman ' 40, New Castle Harold Lantz ' 40, Greenfield Thomas Chad ' 39, Indianapolis James Henley ' 42, Carthage Bill Fisher ' 41, Indianapolis C. P. Van Meter ' 40, Shoals Charles Tinsley ' 42, Indianapolis John Widaman ' 39, Warsaw Clifford Weithoff ' 42, Seymour Fovirth Row Frank Mellinger ' 41, Gary Jack Thompson ' 39, Bluff ton Robert Mauzy ' 42, Rushville Gene Smith ' 39, Indianapolis John Zankl ' 39, Indianapolis Mark Shackelford ' 40, New Conn. Richard Mueller ' 40, Indianapolis Roger Curry ' 40, Bloomington John WaUace ' 40, Indianapolis James Dilts ' 41, Winamac Second Row Harrison Green ' 39, Indianapolis John DeFries ' 40, Milford Jack Matthews ' 42, Madison Kurt Kreyling ' 42, Evans ville Robert Lange ' 39, North Vernon Leslie Combs ' 40, Gary Edward Kruse ' 40, Ft. Wayne Hugh McAdams ' 42, Boswell Phil Hatfield ' 39, Bedford Robert Templin ' 41, Bluff ton Fifth Row Con Sterling ' 42, Ft. Wayne Tom Peters ' 40, Flora Jack Mueller ' 39, Ft. Wayne Tom Robinson ' 41, Frankfort Jack Leffler ' 39, Bloomington Canaan, Tom Cravens ' 40, Martinsville Charles Sembower ' 42, Bloomington Jack Spencer ' 42, Evansville Charles Legeman ' 42, Muncie Third Row John Quick ' 40, Frankfort Page Benson ' 41, El Dorado, Kans. William Stonex ' 42, Indianapolis Fred Nygren ' 39, Kokomo Rembrandt Hiller ' 40, Indianapolis George Hughes ' 39, New York City Richard Reed ' 42, Bloomington James Huff ' 41, Martinsville William Mayse ' 39, Goshen Sixth Row J. P. Worley ' 39, Indianapolis Phil Scott ' 41, Shelby ville Earl Cooper ' 40, Indianapolis Walter Cisco ' 39, Jeffersonville Mark Meyers ' 40, Martinsville John Katterhenry ' 41, Evansville Cecil Cunningham ' 42, New Castle Tom Cathcart ' 41, Michigan City Dick Rehm ' 41, Indianapolis THEY ' RE SO NICE TO HAVE AROUND! 217 DELTA CHI Edward C. Wieland Presideni Clarence Long Vice-President Donald Painter Secretary Robert Cassady Treasurer Delta Chi was founded by a group of students at Cornell in 1890. The principal aims of the founders included the advancement of justice, better education for the members, and the founding of an organization of distinctive homogeneity. In 1923 the organization was transformed from a law fra- ternity into a regular college social fraternity. Delta Chi has on its national roll more than 13,000 mem- bers and alumni throughout the United States. All thirty-seven active chapters and the alumni chap- ters observe October 13 as founders ' day and May 1 as memorial day for deceased members. Immediately following the establishing of the Indiana chapter in 1925, Delta Chi became promi- nent on the campus. Local alumni include Prof. E. L. Yeager, L. L. Fisher, H. W. Jordan, and Glen Bretz, Bloomington High School basketball coach. The organization is well represented in campus ac- tivities with Paul Scott, Jack Ury, and George Mil- ler as members of Sphinx Club; Walter Stebing and Wayne Tolliver as varsity track men, and Clarence Long, Senior football manager and member of Alpha Kappa Psi. The membership of Phi Chi in- cludes Frank Whitlock and Otis Bowen; Walter Mc- Elvain is a member of Sigma Delta Chi; Dick Loughery and Tom Gilliam represent Delta Chi in Skull and Crescent, and Raymond Harmon is a mem- ber of Kappa Kappa Psi and Phi Eta Sigma. Other Delta Chis have been active in advanced military, Pershing Rifles, Scabbard and Blade, University Theatre, and numerous departmental organizations. 218 FOOTBALL IS A NOBLE GAME -AND ITS First Row Frank Whitlock ' 39, Fairbanks William Davis ' 41, Terre Haute Richard Earl ' 42, Ft. Wayne Norman Griff is ' 42, Ft. Wayne Parker Pengilly PG, Culver Donald S. Painter ' 41, Garrett Second Row Robert Trenner ' 40, Ft. Wayne Tom Gilliam ' 41, Warsaw Maurice Hill ' 42, Ft. Wayne Victor Hitz ' 42, North Madison Edward C. Wieland ' 42, EvansviL Milton Archer ' 41, Terre Haute Otis Bowen ' 41, Crown Point Third Row Richard Loughery ' 41, Edinburg Jack Oliver ' 41, Columbia City Robert Cassady ' 39, Middlebury Paul Scott ' 39, Terre Haute Paul Garrison ' 42, Terre Haute Clarence Long ' 39, Hartford City Fourth Row J. P. Martin ' 40, Lowell Reed Franklin ' 42, Bloomington Robert L. Scherer ' 42, Martinsville Charles L. Finney ' 40, Martinsville Ray Harmon ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Benjamin Leming ' 39, Topeka Austin Aable ' 41, Evansville Fifth Row James Trimble ' 42, McKeesport Samuel Hostetter ' 41, Bainbridge Wilber Coon ' 42, Rochester James Gard ' 42, Jonesboro Harold Marihal ' 41, Clinton John Daily ' 41, Loogootee PLAYERS SHOULD BE WELL SUPPORTED 219 DELTA TAD DELTA Alvin Fernandes Tresident George Schilling . Vice-President John Vanatta Secretary William Hebert Treasurer In 1858 eight men in Bethany College founded the first chapter of Delta Tau Delta. In 1886 the fraternity merged with The Rainbow, a Southern fraternal organization, and since that time it has grown until now there are more than seventy chap- ters spread over the United States and Canada. The local Beta Alpha chapter was established in 1871 by six charter members. The Delts are well represented by their brothers on the University instructional staff. Among these representatives are C. E. Edmondson, Dean of Men; E. C. Hayes, track coach; Dr. Stith Thompson, Dr. George Steiner, Prof. J. A. Wright, and Marion Lohman. The chapter is represented in extra-curricular activities by a large number of its members. Buck Mauck is a member of Blue Key, Board of Aeons, and Union Board. He is associate editor of the Arbutus and chairman of the 1939 Junior Prom Committee. Brothers Stevenson, Maycox, and Wer- dine all are members of the varsity football squad. Other Delts participating in varsity sports are Frank Penning in golf, and David Hancock and Jack Hatfield in swimming. J. G. Nichols is presi- dent of Taps, and Morris Ritchie is vice-president of Alpha Kappa Psi and Senior manager of the football squad. Numerous members of the chapter are in Pershing Rifles and Alpha Phi Omega. DELTA TAU DELTA CASINO-WHO SAID 220 First Row James Fausch ' 40, Michigan City Gail Eldridge ' 40, Indianapolis Harry Huff ' 42, Kenosha, Wise. Henry Bockstege ' 42, Evansville Robert Curl ' 42, South Bend Donald Batton, ' 42, Marion Hiram Sexson ' 40, Indianapohs Robert Stunkard ' 42, Brazil Second Row Buck Mauck ' 40, Princeton Miles Daubenheyer ' 42, Hoi ton Robert Stevenson PG, Linton Gordon McLaughlin ' 41, Terre Haute Robert Batton ' 40, Marion Glenn Rust ' 40, Holknd Irvin Grimes ' 41, Chicago, 111. Third Row Glen O ' Laverty ' 39, Rockville Theodore Schlaegel ' 39, Indianapolis Russell Gilmore ' 40, Michigan City Fernando Mendez ' 42, South Bend Cecil Ferguson ' 42, Indianapolis William Leib ' 41, Indianapolis John G. Nichols ' 40, Clinton Ray Stultz PG, Clinton Fourth Row George Schilling ' 40, Hinsdale, 111. William Hebert ' 39, Indianapolis John Vanatta ' 41, Brookston George Ranch ' 41, Marion William Ferguson ' 39, Indianapolis Benjamin Hatfield ' 40, Indianapolis Richard Lenox ' 40, Lebanon Fifth Row Donald Werdine ' 41, Michigan City Richard Hutchison ' 41, Indianapolis Louis Hutton ' 42, Hammond Richard Shores ' 39, Rockville Morris Ritchie ' 40, Lebanon William Dale ' 42, Lebanon Alvin Fernandes ' 39, Indianapolis Jack J. Hatfield ' 40, Indianapolis Sixth Row Thomas Miller ' 42, Princeton Alexander Craig ' 39, Gary John R. Hatfield ' 42, Indianapolis Gilbert Wilhelmus ' 42, Newburgh David Hancock ' 40, Morocco Robert Arnold ' 42, Michigan City David Yeoman ' 41, Mitchell FRENCH LICK WAS BIG TIME? WANNA PLAY? 221 DELTA UPSILOI Al Higdon President John Janzaruk VJce-Presideni Tom Lanahan Secretary Chet Warman Treasurer Student life in the early nineteenth century had become relatively static, and groups of students had formed organizations with the avowed purpose of keeping to themselves the sole possession of extra- curricular activities and honors. To break up this monopoly a group of thirty students organized The Social Fraternity at Williams College in 1834. This movement spread, and the Anti-Secret Confedera- tion was formed as a national organization. Later it ceased active challenge to secret organizations and became, in 1864, the non-secret Delta Upsilon. The Indiana chapter was granted its charter in 1915, being formed from an original society. The Wrang- ler ' s Club. Keys jangle loudly in D. U. halls, with Al Hig- don as Senior Class president, president of the Board of Aeons, member of Sphinx Club, Union Board, Blue Key, and Dragon ' s Head, besides being business manager of the 1939 Arbutus. Also representing the brotherhood on the Arbutus staff are Bob Twyman and Jack Holmes, associate business manager and Sophomore business assistant respectively; Herb Mc- Laughlin, staff photographer, and Sophomore edi- torial assistant Jack Fairchild, who also is president of Phi Eta Sigma, one of the Sophomore track managers, and who was intramural debate co-winner with Lewis Smith. The gentlemen of the press from the house are Sam Wells, campus editor of The Daily Student; Bob Johnson, Sigma Delta Chi member and associate campus editor of The Daily Student, and Paul Boxell, who wrote the script for the Jordan River Revue and who is a member of Blue Key, Theta Alpha Phi, and Sigma Delta Chi. Sports also have their share of D Us. On the gridiron are John Janzaruk, also a Sphinx Clubber; Tim Bringle and Bill Tipmore, who figure both in football and on the hardwood. Dan Chiddister is a varsity tennis man, and Bob Firth is a Junior track manager. 222 ALLAH, HIGDON! BOW DOWN, CHILLIN; First Row Albert Higdon ' 39, Scottsburg Paul Zerkel ' 42, Anderson Charles W. Hoover ' 39, Middlebury Frank J. Hill ' i9, Bruceville Herbert Cormican ' 40, Elkhart David Kennedy ' 41, Bloomington Jack Holmes ' 41, Indianapolis Samuel Wells ' 41, Scottsburg Robert Weaver ' 42, Goshen Second Row Joseph Ettl PG, South Bend Tom Grose up ' 39, Vincennes Paul Splittorff ' 42, Evansville Phillip Badell ' 39, Knox Robert Penn ' 40, Kokomo Robert Holmes ' 39, Indianapolis Herbert McLaughlin ' 41, Hammond Louis McAnly ' 42, Indianapolis Frederick Roehm ' 39, Indianapolis Jack Fairchild ' 41, Elkhart Third Row Charles Schnute ' 39, Evansville John Byers ' 42, Hammond Gene Hinchman ' 40, Geneva Donald Farquharson ' 41, Gary Daniel Chiddister ' 41, Goshen Ray Bringie ' 41, Elkhart Dwight Handley ' 42, LaPorte Jack Miller ' 39, Winslow Charles Eaves ' 42, Indianapolis Fourth Row John Curtis ' 41, Monon Jack Gibson ' 42, Elkhart John Whitfield ' 42, Indianapolis Lewis Smith ' 41, Decatur Robert Firth ' 40, North Arlington, N. Maclin Milner ' 41, Indianapolis Norm Taylor PG, Jasonville John Fusek ' 39, East Chicago Eugene Atz ' 42, Goshen James Krick ' 42, Decatur Fifth Row George Chase ' 39, Elkhart Chester Warman ' 3 9, Kokomo William Morris ' 42, Anderson Robert Schmidt ' 42, Evansville J. William Swinford ' 42, Indianapolis John Janzaruk ' 39, LaPorte Robert Twyman ' 40, East Chicago Willis Jones ' 39, Merom Bill Osburn PG, Marion Sixth Row Porter Murphy ' 41, Morgantown Paul Boxell ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Johnson ' 41, Decatur Floyd Tipmore ' 41, Elkhart Dale Boggy ' 41, Indianapolis Ivan Escott ' 41, Passaic, N. J. Alfred Olson ' 3 8, Stoughton, Wise. Jack Ford ' 42, Syracuse Samuel Robinson ' 39, Indianapolis William Greiling ' 41, LaPorte WHILE THE KING STRAIGHTENS HIS CROWN 223 KAPPA DELTA RHO Frederick M. Eberle President James Neighbours Vice-President James Jewett ..- Secretary Joe Jewett - Treasurer The accompanying picture shall be the sign by which all shall recognize Kappa Delta Rho in its future years on the Indiana University campus. Built in imitation of the Grecian revival style, the new building will be prepared next year to house thirty-six boys and will be located on the present site. Kappa Delta Rho was founded in 1905 at Mid- dlcbury College by six young men who wished to surpass the efforts of other local organizations. For the first few years the activities of the fraternity remained local. The growth of the organization, however, began in 1913 when a charter was granted at Cornell University. Since 1913, nineteen chap- ters have been instituted. Kappa Delta Rho made its debut on the Indiana campus in 1926 when a charter was granted to a local organization, Sigma Eta Chi. An annual venison dinner commemorates the anniversary of the founding of the fraternity. Tra- dition also dictates an annual Mothers ' Day ban- quet and an annual Thanksgiving dinner for alumni who are members of the faculty. For the last two years the organization has won the Homecoming Day Decorations cup and retains permanent posses- sion of two scholarship cups. The organization is represented in campus honor - aries by Joseph Waltz and Robert Marlett who are members, respectively, of Phi Lamba Upsilon and Alpha Phi Omega. Louis Conn is a member of Phi Eta Sigma. Stanley Stoker is a member of Alpha Chi Sigma, while Richard Guth and Reed Giese are members of Skull and Crescent. Alumni of KDR who are members of the faculty and University staff include Dr. Robert Hartman, Eugene Channing, Bernard Miller, and Claude Rich. ..5 ISP If tS « i t 9- M, .■ .A 224 KEEP OFF THE GRASS, BOYS, TRI BELTS ' First Row J. Vinton Booker ' 40, Albany Edward J. Swets ' 42, Hammond John S. Wilson PG, Bargersville J. Leland Teaney ' 42 Aurora Sheldon C. Sanderson ' 40, Union Mills William A. Neal ' 40, Covington Third Row Charles V. O ' Brien ' 42, Danville Murl M. Nichols ' 42, Herron Earl F. Bannister ' 40, Perry, N. Y. Joseph E. Waltz PG, New Palestine Dean Foster ' 42, Belle Flower, 111. Jam.es Lincoln ' 42, Gar) ' Second Row James S. Jewett ' 40, Carmel Robert D. Glimpse ' 40, Bedford James B. Neighbours ' 40, Wabash D. Stanley Stoker PG, Mauckport H. Louis Conn ' 42, Danville Charles G. Glimpse ' 42, Bedford Fourth Row Robert Marlette ' 41, Pine Village Richard L. Guth ' 41, Gary Reed A. Giese ' 41, Gary Robert E. McDonald ' 41, Gary Joe H. Jewett ' 39, Carmel Kenneth H. Bennett ' 39, Dillsboro Frederick M. Eberle ' 39, Chicago, 111. LAWN COMES BEFORE INTRAMUMLS 22J RAPPl SIGMA Theodore B. Fleming President William Squier Y ice-President Clayton Fraker Secretary Gene Troy Treasurer In 1869 at the University of Virginia, five young men founded Kappa Sigma. Fired by the spirit of society which all Kappa Sigs say can be traced to student groups at the University of Bologna in Italy in 1400, the fraternity has grown to include 109 chapters. This growth establishes the organiza- tion as one of the oldest and largest of the college fraternities. Traditions descendent through many of the noble families of the European continent were incorporated in one ritual as it was written by Stephen A. Jackson, University of Virginia, ' 73. Among the first charters to be granted in the North was the one which was given to the Beta Theta chap- ter at Indiana University in 1887. Extra-curricular men of Kappa Sigma represent their group very well in campus activities. Ted Fleming is president of the Union Board and Drag- on ' s Head, chairman of the 193 8 Junior Prom and 1939 Siwash Committees, and member of Blue Key and Board of Aeons. The socially-minded Sphinx Clubbers are Hulbert Cox and Bill Heldt. Members of Skull and Crescent are Richard Pell, past presi- dent of the organization. Cole Keyes, Bill Jennings, Ted Fleming, Marvin Miller, and James Fish. Keyes is a member of the Interfraternity Council also. Phi Eta Sigmas of the East End Third Streeters are Ted Fleming, Marvin Miller, Jim Fish, and Adrian Freed. Bill Heldt again is one of the varsity nine. Marvin Miller is active in varsity debate, and both he and James Fish won Blue Key Freshman recognition. Prominent alumni of the Kappa Sigma are Hoagy Carmichael of Stardust fame. Coach Branch McCracken, Prof. William Kellogg, Dr. Ralph L. Collins, and Dr. Frank G. Bates. 226 irS PARTY NIGHT, TONIGHT, BOYS- First Row Frank M. Talbot ' 40, Bloomington James C. Fish ' 41, South Bend Byron L. Brown ' 41, Terre Haute William Heldt ' 39, Princeton Jack Baldwin ' 39, Evansville Marvin L. Miller ' 41, Bedford Cole J. Keyes ' 39, Peru Second Row William Jennings ' 40, Evansville Hulbert Cox ' 39, Princeton John Harlan ' 40, Cambridge Cit) ' Allyn Freed ' 42, Attica Gene Troy ' 40, Indianapolis Charles Savery ' 41, South Bend Robert Hullet ' 42, Hammond Thomas Dittmer ' 39, Kouts Third Row Reed DuBois PG, Warsaw Adrian Freed ' 40, Attica William Alexander ' 41, Martinsville William Heet ' 40, Richmond Thomas Mutz ' 42, Indianapolis Murray Huse ' 41, Indianapolis Munro McManus ' 42, Indianapolis William Squier ' 40, Richmond Fourth Row Theodore Fleming ' 39, Princeton Richard Lewis ' 41, Bloomington Robert Rosa ' 41, Richmond Stewart Cohn ' 42, Martinsville Reginald Phillips ' 41, Evansville Thomas Radigan PG, Gary William Hard wick ' 42, Martinsville Rufus Rodgers ' 42, Jeffersonville Fifth Row Edward Carlson ' 40, Peru Fred Weaver PG, Bloomington William Tirey ' 40, Terre Haute Harry Mason ' 40, Monon Edward Helfrich ' 40, Evansville John Murname ' 42, Indianapolis Ralph Bruner ' 42, Jeffersonville Robert Massie ' 40, Boston Sixth Row John Beckraan PG, Hammond Robert Stimson ' 40, Bloomington Joseph Angermeier ' 40, Evansville William Hauschild ' 40, LaPorte Robert Rankin ' 42, Logansport Thomas Hasbrook ' 42, Oak Park, 111. Glevn Wallenbrock ' 42, Terre Haute $5 FINE FOR ATTENDING 8 O ' CLOCKS TOMORROW 227 lilMBDl CHI ALPHA Ralph Bumpas President Harold Miener Y ice-President William Clunie Secretary John C. Geyer Treasurer In 1909 when the potential court-house-stooges of Boston University decided to transplant their ideals from the Cosmopolitan Law Club to a national fraternity, the Alpha chapter of Lamba Chi Alpha was formed. In thirty years the fraternity has es- tablished thirty chapters. In 1917 Lambda Chi be- stowed its brotherhood on the members of the Inde- pendent Literary Society, and the Alpha Omicron chapter of Indiana University was founded. After seventeen years one of the traditions of the Third Street domicile has passed. The faithful service of Old Joe, the house dog, is being carried on by New Joe. Lambda Chis who are members of the faculty are Herman T. Briscoe, George W. Starr, Joseph A. Batchelor, Ingvald W. Aim, Christian Knecht, and Theodore W. Torrey. Ralph Huff has his track letter, is a member of Sphinx Club, and is on the varsity football team. Other pigskin toters are Emil Uremovitch and Eddie Herbert. Lambda Chi has its share of brains as well as brawn in the form of Harold Meiner, Thomas LieVan, and Bruce Corwin, all members of Alpha Kappa Psi, Business School honorary. The Daily Student has been invaded by Howard Sterett, tele- graph editor. Gerald Carrier, Clyde Blocher, and Hughes Smith are members of Alpha Phi Omega, Boy Scout service group. TO LAMBDA CHI WE RESPECTFULLY ASSIGN 228 First Row Ralph L. Bumpas ' 39, Logansport Milford Anness ' 40, Metamora Gerald M. Carrier ' 39, Indianapolis Frank Shadel ' 39, LaPorte Don Hawkins ' 42, Gary Hughes Long Smith ' 39, Indianapolis Second Row Harry Baker ' 39, Indianapolis Bruce Corwin ' 39, Fountaintown John C. Geyer ' 39, Logansport Ralph Huff ' 39, Muncie Bob Phillips ' 42, Gary Floyd Tremor ' 42, Morristown Harold Miener ' 39, Linton Third Row Emil Uremovitch ' 41, Hobart Clyde Blocker ' 42, Huntington E. Leighton Mock ' 41, Huntington Pierce Abbett ' 39, Indianapolis Marion F. Arnold ' 39, New Palestine Thomas Lie Van ' 39, Gary Fourth Row James T. Devol ' 42, Lafayette William A. Clunie ' 40, Corydon Richard W. Held ' 42, LaPorte Jay Hillis ' 41, Kokomo Patrick Paine ' 42, Brookville William Helfrich ' 41, Gary Joe Petty ' 42, Frankfort ALL MIGRATORY PLEDGE CLASSES 229 PHI BETA DELTA Ed Shapiro President Harry Einstandig Vice-President Bernard Kaufman Secretary Marvin Katz Treasurer Wishing to develop the highest ideals of con- duct and to promote a close fraternal bond through means of carefully selected associates, eight students founded this national Jewish fraternity at Columbia University in 1912. Alpha Theta chapter was es- tablished at Indiana University in 1928. It was the outgrowth of Gamma Tau, prominent Jewish men ' s local organization on the campus. To those alumni who have distinguished them- selves in their service to the fraternity since gradu- ation, the national organization gives an honorary award. Last year, Sidney Seligman, Indiana ' 32, received the signal honor. In the house, the Farb- Levi cup is awarded each year to the best pledge, on the basis of scholarship, outside activities, character, and general interest. Other activities sponsored locally are the annual open house for all Jewish women entered in the University and a smoker for Jewish men. On the campus, Irving Berger belongs to Beta Gamma Sigma and the Law Journal Board. Hal Lieber is a member of Blue Key. Bernard Kaufman is in Phi Eta Sigma and is an Arbutus Sophomore business assistant. Vice-president of Hillel Founda- tion, Ed Shapiro is likewise vice-president of the Ad- vertising Club. Harry Einstandig is treasurer of the Jewish Students ' Union. Beginning this year, Phi Beta Delta will set aside an annual donation of $1,000 so that a refugee author will be able to continue with his work. 230 MY GOSH, BOYS, WHO WILL SING US TO SLEEP First Row Leroy Gensburg ' 40, Gary Harold Lieber PG, Michigan City Abe Leff ' 41, Indianapolis Gersten P. Rappaport ' 42, New York City Albert Rosenberg ' 39, Vincennes Harry Einstandig ' 3 9, Indianapolis Second Row Jerome Korn ' 39, Michigan City Albert Kosnoff ' 42, Goshen Bernard Rose ' 40, Indianapolis Bernard Diamond ' 40, Hammond Herbert Weiner ' 42, Whiting Alfred Nathan ' 42, Attica Fourth Row Ed Shapiro ' 39, Gary Lemar Gelman ' 41, Indianapolis Felix A. Bogart ' 42, New York City Stanley Schwartz ' 42, New York City Jack Shaffner ' 40, Gary Third Row Eugene I. Schlack ' 42, Whiting Bernard Kaufman ' 41, Whiting Milton J. Olshewitz ' 42, Indianapolis Harry Schwartz ' 42, Washington Harold Finkelstein ' 41, Hammond Julian P. Wilner ' 59, New York City WHEN WE DON ' T HAVE LIEBER? 23i PHI DELTA THETA Dan Int-Hout President: Ross Waggaman Secretary Robert Lambertus Treasurer Phi Delta Theta was founded in 1848 at the University of Miami at Oxford, Ohio, thus becom- ing a member of the Miami Triad, a combination of three fraternities founded at that school. One year later the Indiana Alpha chapter became established on the Indiana campus. The fraternity, besides boasting second place among early-founded organiza- tions in this country, also has had the longest con- tinuous existence of all chapters in Phi Delta Theta. Outstanding events for the lords of Phi Delt Hill are the Miami Triad dance and founders ' day, which is observed on March 1 5 by all chapters. The Phi Delts still hold the campus record, which is 844 as to the number of men initiated into Indiana Alpha. Representing the fraternity in campus organiza- tions are Robert Weir, a member of Sphinx Club and Blue Key, Junior manager of the baseball team, and secretary of Y.M.C.A.; Dan Int-Hout, treasurer of Scabbard and Blade, of which Gerald King also is a member; Charles Barnhill, a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, and Victor Kingdon, captain and treasurer of the varsity tennis team. Working on The Daily Student are Jack Eason and Heber Herkless, and representatives in dramatics are Ray Southworth and George Greer. Among the Phi Delta Theta alumni the follow- ing prominent faculty members may be found: Dean Henry L. Smith, Dean Bernard C. Gavit, and Dr. Robert E. Lyons. I 232 AW, GIRLS, WE ' RE NOT SO RAD-WE JUST First Row Robert L. Zimmerman ' 42, Richmond Jerry King ' 39, Angola Ben Barr ' 40, St. Louis, Mo. Jack C. Brown ' 40, Indianapolis Ray Southworth ' 40, Monon Paul Catt ' 42, Washington John R. Frazier ' 41, Milroy Fourth Row Richard Ellwanger ' 41, Jeffersonville Guy Hoover ' 40, Boonville George Meihaus ' 40, Indianapolis Claude Spilman ' 42, Rushville Robert Lambertus ' 39, Indianapolis Ray Getz ' 39, Ft. Wayne Dan Int-Hout ' 39, Park Ridge, 111. Second Row Richard New ' 41, Greenfield Stephen Free ' 40, Spencer Richard Herd 40, Peru J. D. Sharp ' 40, Ft. Wayne Thomas Taubensee ' 42, Kokomo Lawson Ware ' 42, Chicago, 111. Terry Lane ' 42, Winchester, England Fifth Row Gilbert Bailey ' 39, Delphi Wendell Green ' 39, Ft. Wayne Jack Eason ' 40, Chicago, 111. Heber Herkless ' 39, Knightstown Robert Weir ' 40, Scottsburg Paschall Allen ' 41, Hammond Richard Waggoner ' 42, Rushville Third Row George Compton ' 39, Indianapolis Hal Bridge ' 41, Tipton Claude Pierce ' 40, French Lick Richard Young ' 40, Kokomo Milton P ' Simer ' 41, Anderson Robert Johnson ' 42, Tipton Richard Fowler ' 40, Indianapolis Sixth Row Tom Metcalf ' 39, Connersville Dean Call ' 42, Gaston Huber Waggaman ' 40, Kokomo Robert Johnson ' 42, Tipton Sherman Minton ' 39, New Albany Jack Seele ' 41, Connersville Victor Kingdon ' 39, Indianapolis Charles Barnhill ' 40, Bloomington HAVE A HOUSEMOTHER TO SEW OUR SOCKS 233 PHI liAMlUA DELTA Fred R. Brooks President Mifflin K. Thomas Treasurer Richard Schannen Secretary The Phi Gams were the first fraternity mem- bers to own their own house at Indiana University, after their purchase of the home of Indiana ' s Presi- dent Swain in 1903. The house still is the only one on the campus proper. Zeta chapter was established here in 1871, while Phi Gamma Delta was founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, on May 1, 1848. Held with Phi Kappa Psi, the Jeff Hop is an annual affair to commemorate the found- ing of both the fraternities on the campus of Jeffer- son College. Val Nolan and John Hastings, members of the Board of Trustees, are prominent campus alumni, as are Dr. W. A. Woodburn, Professor-Emeritus of history, and U. H. Smith, Treasurer-Emeritus. Faculty members include Profs. F. L. Benns, E. S. Conklin, W. T. Hale, and W. J. Moenkhaus; Ross Lockridge, Jr., instructor; W. A. Alexander, librar- ian, and Z. G. Clevenger, Director of Athletics. Undergraduate lettermen are Junie Andres, basketball captain and baseball co-captain; Joe Nicholson, football; Charles Baillie, track; Gilmore Haynie and Ted Scott, tennis; Miff Thomas, swim- ming; Bernard Swanson, Senior yell leader; Richard Schannen, Senior football manager, and Charles Hartmetz, Senior track manager. Andres and Hay- nie also belong to Sphinx Club. Baillie and Schannen are members of Blue Key, and Thomas is on the Union Board. In addition, Schannen is a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, Board of Aeons, and Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Baillie also belongs to Sigma Delta Psi, athletic fraternity. Gilbert Shull is Junior football manager. Junior cheer leaders were Ken Peterson and Bill Keck, while Bill Lugar earned tennis numerals last year. The Phi Eta Sigma man is Val Nolan, Jr. Both Phil Correll and Dick Haskett are members of Theta Alpha Phi. i .rA. 234 FLASH! I. U. BUYS PHI GAM HOUSE-BROOKS First Row Robert McLain ' 39, Anderson John Foster ' 41, Portland Miff Thomas ' 40, Honolulu, Hawaii Robert Lutz ' 40, Wabash Robert VanRiessen ' 41, South Bend Robert Downey ' 41, Monticello Ernest Andres ' 39, Jeffersonville Fourth Row John Boehne ' 42, Evansville Charles Nicholson ' 42, Evansville Ralph Jones ' 42, Ft. Wayne Orville Nichols ' 41, Knox Jerry Torrance ' 40, Marion Kenneth Haynie ' 42, Evansville Chariest Hartmetz ' 39, Evansville Second Row William Lugar ' 41, Marion Richard Haskett ' 39, Bloomington Roger Eisinger ' 42, Washington, D. C. John Strouse ' 39, Evansville Jack Feighner ' 42, Marion Robert Offut ' 42, Vincennes Robert Greenwood ' 39, Washington Fifth Row Val Nolan ' 41, Indianapolis John Houghton ' 42, Huntington Charles Baillie ' 40, South Bend Robert Martz ' 40, Bloomington Jack Reinhard ' 42, Washington, D. C. Edward Griffith, ' 42, Cleveland, Ohio Robert Walton ' 42, Mt. Vernon Third Row Robert Kendall ' 41, Crawfordsville William Houghton ' 40, Huntington R. E. Purcell ' 41, Bloomington Robert Mellon ' 42, Bedford Gilmore Haynie ' 39, Evansville Jack Nolan ' 42, Evansville Richard Schannen ' 39, Ft. Wayne Sixth Row Frederick Brooks ' 40, Loogootee Phillip Correll ' 39, Bloomington Arthur Fruechtenicht ' 39, Ft. Wayne Kenneth Peterson ' 41. South Bend David Brewer PG, Frankfort William Keck ' 41, Mt. Vernon George Robinson ' 39, New York City FORCED TO JOIN BROTHERS AT STARDUST 235 PHI KAPPA PSI f John Westfall President Don Stephens Vice-President Robert Jacobs Secretary Robert Boughman Treasurer To serve others and care for the sick were the motives for founding Phi Kappa Psi at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, on February 19, 1852. This ideal developed during an epidemic of typhoid fever during which the boys had to nurse their fellow students. While keeping one of the night vigils, they were inspired to found a fraternity with a national purpose. On the seventieth anniversary of its founding on this campus (1869), the Indiana chapter lists in its roll call a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, and the social chairman of the Union Board, all in the person of Bob Bough- man. Phi Eta Sigma lists Phi Psis Jim Romey, John Westfall, Sam Mitchell, and Griff Marr. Those who prefer athletics are Phil Green, yell leader; Bob Denny and Ray King, Varsity track men; Joe Davis, a Varsity tennis man and intramural manager, and John Fox, Sophomore track manager. A variety of activities are represented by John McFarlan of the University Band and president of Kappa Kappa Psi; Jack Sanders, president of the Interfraternity Council; Morrie Kelly, radio an- nouncer, and John Fox, circulation manager of the Bored Walk, a member of the circulation staff of the Red Book, and a member of the Folio staff. Phi Psis on the faculty are William E. Jenkins and Dr. Robert L. Kroc. Other prominent alumni are Croan Greenough, administrative secretary, and Thomas A. Cookson, Registrar. m IS IT TRUE THAT THE LEFTISTS BOUGHT 236 First Row John Brown ' 39, Indianapolis Rex Wisehart ' 42, Anderson Robert Siebenthal ' 39, Bloomington John Fox ' 41, South Bend Robert Denny ' 41, Kokomo Wilham Morrice Kelly ' 39, Goshen James Noland ' 42, Bloomington Dick Prentice ' 41, Jeffersonville Second Row Kemp Westfall ' 41, Indianapolis Harry Humrichouser ' 42, South Bend James Romey ' 39, Richmond Walter Simonton ' 40, Denver, Colo. Harry Chenoweth ' 40, Richmond Donald Harris ' 39, Connersville Jack Sanders ' 39, Auburn Bailey Guard ' 42, Spencer Robert Cash ' 41, Vincennes Third Row Dick Price ' 42, Indianapolis John Springer ' 42, Kokomo Phillip Green ' 41, Ft. Wayne John McFarlan ' 40, Connersville Marshall Alexander ' 40, Terre Haute Robert Boughman ' 40, Kokomo Nat Hill ' 42, Bloomington Glenn Marshall ' 42, Indianapolis Truman Rose ' 42, Terre Haute Fourth Row Ben Wilson ' 42, Bloomington Major Slough PG, Indianapolis Chester Stay ton ' 41, Indianapohs Kim Greenough ' 42, Indianapolis Sam Mitchell ' 39, Salem John Westfall ' 39, Indianapolis Elliott Hickam ' 42, Spencer Charles Feeger ' 42, Richmond John Kelly ' 41, Winamac Fifth Row Bob Whitehead ' 41, Kokomo Stephen Leonard ' 41, Hartford City Griffith Marr ' 39, Columbus Warner Paige ' 39, Terre Haute Stephen Rose ' 42, Terre Haute Robert Strawbridge ' 42, Ft. Wayne Guy Boyd ' 42, Indianapolis Carl Bailey ' 39, Huntington Austin Rinne ' 42, Indianapolis Sixth Row James Ritter ' 39, Anderson Dick Renn ' 42, Lafayette Joseph Davis ' 39, Marion George Kempf ' 42, Ft. Wayne Donald Bell ' 42, Indianapolis John H. Zeller ' 42, Brazil Richard Davis ' 42, Marion Donald Stephens ' 40, Marion A NEW MACHINE GUN LAST WEEK? 237 mu ALPHA m im Dan Bretz President Don Davies Vice-President Phil Cooper Secretary Neal Gilliatt Treasurer The University of Alabama served as the birth- place of Sigma Alpha Epsilon in 1856. The Southern founders of this fraternity soon were compelled to hasten to the Civil War as members of the Confed- erate Army, leaving behind them, in the hands of Miss Lucy Pattie, the papers which made up the vital core of the fraternity. Appreciation was shown to Miss Pattie after the War by giving her honorary membership in Sigma Alpha Epsilon. From the Dwyki Club, organized locally in 1902, sprang the Indiana Gamma chapter in 1907. Each spring the Sigma Alpha Epsilons give their customary gypsy dance, and each Christmas they sponsor a party for the unfortunate children of Bloomington. Prominent faculty members who are alumni of SAE are Dean C. W. Barker, Prof. Fowler V. Harper, Samuel E. Braden, Prof. Wayne Stackhouse, Robert E. Walden, and Dr. Chauncey Sanders. Adding links to the chain of Sigma Alpha Ep- silon in campus prominence are the following active members: Dan Bretz, who is a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, Alpha Phi Omega, Phi Eta Sigma, and who was editor of the Bored Walk, associate editor of the Arbutus, and a member of the Board of Aeons, Blue Key, Sphinx Club, and Skull and Cres- cent. Equalling him is his fraternity brother, Neal Gilliatt, who claims affiliation with Dragon ' s Head, Board of Aeons, Theta Alpha Phi, and Beta Gamma Sigma, and who is business manager of the Univer- sity Theatre, president of Blue Key and of the Inter- national Relations Club, Senior swimming manager, and winner of a Niezer award. Not to be outdone is Homer Hire, ex-president of Taps, and a member of Theta Alpha Phi and Scabbard and Blade. Mak- ing a brilliant showing is Willard Findling, who is Senior football manager, 1939 Prom Committee member and in Blue Key and Phi Eta Sigma. Jim Logan is captain of the 1939-40 football squad. 238 EVERYBODY KNOWS IT STINKS, BUT First Row John Windsor ' 40, South Bend Robert DeMoney ' 41, Greenfield Phihp S. Cooper ' 41, Columbia City George Bloom ' 4 1 , Columbia City Herbert Detrick ' 42, Hammond Frank Gregory ' 41, Princeton John Flaningam ' 40, Thornton Edward Hutton ' 40, Bedford Second Row Homer Hire ' 39, Ft. Wayne Ford Tracey ' 42, Pendleton James Wood ' 42, Terre Haute Ralph O ' Riley ' 39, Rensselaer James Katterhenry ' 40, Huntingburg Edgar Ferrey ' 42, Columbia City Detrick Knight ' 39, Ft. Wayne William Showers ' 40, Shelbyville Third Row Neal Gilliatt ' 39, Washington Burmond Gaunt ' 40, Dunkirk Robert Wilson ' 42, Omaha, Nebr. George Price ' 39, Fowler Thomas Jeanicke ' 40, Ft. Wayne James Ehinger ' 42, Ft. Wayne Oscar Lange ' 42, Chicago, 111. Francis Gray ' 39, Hammond Fourth Row Robert Austin ' 39, Anderson Arvin Henderson ' 41, Ridgeville Norman Wernet ' 41, Muncie Harold Warner ' 40, Sandborn Lowell Sanders ' 40, Mitchell Robert Gates ' 42, Columbia City Karl Kuehne ' 39, South Bend George Stevens ' 41, Hammond Fifth Row Willard Findhng ' 40, Hobart William Kimmell ' 40, West Lafayette Daniel Bretz ' 39, Huntingburg Keith Flaningam ' 39, Thornton John Freed ' 4 1 , Terre Haute Berry W. Cooper ' 42, Anderson Charles Batsch ' 41, Dunkirk Francis Smith ' 41, Bloomington Sixth Row Robert Horton ' 39, Huntington Victor Aldridge ' 41, Terre Haute Robert Meyer ' 41, Hammond William Bloom ' 40, Columbia City Malcolm King ' 41, Indianapolis Frank Hoover ' 42, Rensselaer John Tuthill ' 39, Michigan City William Lindley ' 42, Sullivan Hugh Clayton ' 41, Hammond IT ' S PUBLICITY... HEIL SIGMA NAZI EPSILON 239 SIGMA ALPHA Mil Allan Linker President Myron Glassner Treasurer David Straus Secretary At • the College of the City of New York in 1909, eight students felt the need for and proceeded to found Sigma Alpha Mu. The purpose back of this movement was to form a closer union and a fraternal bond among Jewish students of the various universities of the country. This ideal spread, and the organization grew until now it embodies forty active chapters. Sigma Zeta, the local chapter, was founded in 1922. By coincidence both the national and the local chapters were founded in the month of April and each by eight students. The Sigma Alpha Mus moved into their present location in 1926. Two leading traditions of the local chapter are Pledge Night, the night when the pledges and the actives reverse positions, and the exchange of a facsimile of the Old Oaken Bucket . This prize goes to the chapter winning the annual football game between the Purdue and Indiana chapters. The Sigma Alpha Mus are represented on the campus by Manuel Rothberg, Board of Aeons and Blue Key member, and associate business manager of the Arbutus; Al Linker, also in Blue Key, and on the Senior Memorial Committee; Dave Straus, associate sports editor of The Daily Student, and active in the University Theatre and Taps; and Maurice Adelman, associate news editor of The Daily Student. Sigma Alpha Mus in sports are Louis Finkle of the Varsity track team and Irving Glazer on the Varsity swim- ming team. Irvin Wasserman and Myron Glassner are Junior managers of football and track respective- ly. Leo Miller was president of the Hillel Founda- tion. A DEFINITE I-M THREAT-THEY ' RE 240 First Row Second Row Melvin M. Jacobs PG, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Roth ' 39, New Castle Samuel Azen ' 40, New Castle Irvin L. Wasserman ' 41, Louisville, Ky. I. Wilson Gittleman ' 42, Louisville, Ky. David Straus III ' 39, Newark, N. J. Philip Trockman ' 42, Evansville Manuel Roth ' 42, New Castle Richard Black ' 42, New York City Fourth Row Stanley Valinet PG, Indianapolis Kenneth J. Lewin ' 39, East Chicago Irving Glazer ' 41, Anderson Marvin Sablosky ' 42, Indianapolis Robert Goldstein ' 42, Mishawaka Melvin Smith ' 41, South Bend Leo Miller ' 39, East Chicago Roy N. Brill ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Alvin L. Cohen ' 39, Indianapolis Samuel Eder ' 42, South Bend Stanley Grad ' 42, Brook ville Robert Berman ' 40, Evansville Lawrence J. Frommer ' 39, Indianapolis Fifth Row George Novick ' 41, Muncie Louis Finkle ' 39, Newark, N. J. Julius Wohlfeld ' 39, Indianapolis Samuel Smuly an ' 41, Indianapolis Ira Rosenthal ' 40, New York City Edgar Siegel ' 42, Converse Marvin H. Smith ' 41, South Bend Third Row Doovid Barskin ' 42, Martinsville Myron Glassner ' 40, Columbus Whitney Greenberg ' 42, Indianapolis Allan J. Linker ' 39, Louisville, Ky. Manuel F. Rothberg ' 40, Ft. Wayne Maurice J. Adelman ' 40, Canton, Ohio Milton C. Blieden ' 41, Indianapolis Sixth Row Franklyn Kahan ' 42, Gary Morton Turbow ' 42, East Chicago Herman M. Dieter ' 41, Louisville, Ky. Albert Wisch ' 41, Whiting Joseph Tuchman ' 42, Indianapolis William Borman ' 41, Indianapolis Richard Simons ' 42, Marion Donald Dann ' 42, New Castle RIGHT IN THERE PITCHING-HGRSESHOES 241 mm CHI Edwin Clasen President Charles McAuliffe Vice-President: Evan Stiers Secretary Robert Combs Treasurer A group of dissenters from the Delta Epsilon Kappa fraternity founded Sigma Chi at Miami Uni- versity in 1855. Lambda chapter was established at Indiana in 1858 and is the oldest chapter of the fra- ternity in continuous existence. In 1905 the Sigma Chis dug down in their pockets and built their house — the first group to build a fraternity house in the State. Among prominent men who have been mem- bers of the local chapter are Edwin C. Hill, Fountaine Fox, Dwight Peterson, and L. G. Balfour. On the faculty the chapter is represented by Dean C. J. Sembower and Prof. W. T. Buckley. B.M.O.Cs. are plentiful at the Sigma Chi house. Jim Bob Anderson is a member of Union Board, Sphinx Club, and Blue Key and is Senior baseball manager. Jim Adams is Senior football manager and a member of Phi Eta Sigma. Evan Stiers belongs to Blue Key, while Estel Kelley is president of the Ac- counting Club and the Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. Several Sigma Chis are on Varsity athletic teams. Swede Clasen and Dan Bassett are football men; Bill and Bob Menke are centers on the basket- ball team, and Red Corriden and Don Danielson play on the baseball nine. Other Sigma Chis are in Taps, Bored Walk, Alpha Kappa Psi, Marching Hun- dred, Pershing Rifles, and rifle team. The oldest tradition of the Seventh Street boys is the Miami Triad, annual dance held with Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta. All three fraterni- ties were founded at Miami University. HEY, FELLOWS-DIDNT YOU FORGET 242 First Row Gilbert Cooper ' 41, South Bend Ray Wingert ' 40, Bloomington Gus Browne ' 40, Marion William Horton ' 41, Muncie Paul Wearly ' 39, Muncie William Robertson ' 40, Chicago, 111. James Adams ' 39, Elkhart Charles McAuliffe ' 39, St. Paul Robert Ferguson ' 39, Indianapolis Fourth Row William Lyon ' 42, Madison Dan Bassett ' 42, Elkhart James Mendenhall ' 42, Greensburg Evan Stiers ' 40, Rushville Robert Menke ' 41, Huntingburg Robert Patterson ' 42, Akron, Ohio George Miller ' 41, Evansville Delbert Lieninger ' 40, Ft. Wayne William Menke ' 41, Huntingburg Charles Rhetts ' 41, Marion Second Row Bert Fenn ' 40, Tell City Robert Walker ' 40, Anderson William Keller ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Hall ' 42, Indianapolis Estel Kelley ' 39, Sharpsville John Dunn ' 39, Lakewood, Ohio Robert Combs ' 39, Evansville Don Camp ' 42, Marion Ralph Singer ' 42, Indianapolis Richard Feiertag ' 41, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row Robert Powers ' 42, Columbus, Ohio James R. Anderson ' 39, Milroy John B. Mitchell ' 39, Salem John Painter ' 42, Alexandria William Carmichael ' 40, Albion Steven Slipher ' 41, Columbus, Ohio Charles Hull ' 41, Connersville Fred J. Capp ' 41, Rushville Don Danielson ' 41, Pierre, So. Dak. Third Row Roger Chester ' 42, Elkhart Dan Holthouse ' 42, Decatur Edward Wagnon ' 41, Indianapolis Joe Keller ' 42, Indianapolis Perin Scott ' 42, Madison Jack Corriden ' 41, Indianapolis Joe Lybrook ' 40, Galveston Jack Lockhart ' 40, Indianapolis Don Woolery PG, Bloomington Sixth Row Max Collier ' 39, Wilkinson Edwin Clasen ' 39, Kansas City, Kans. Robert Acker ' 42, South Bend Don McCracken ' 42, Paoli George Richwine ' 42, Nobles ville Robert Hoffman ' 41, Ft. Wayne James Thompson ' 42, Chicago, 111. Gregory Ricke ' 40, Shelbyville Robert Hugus ' 42, Gary William Kelley ' 42, Sharpsville CAESAR ' S POSSIBILITIES FOR AN I M DOG SHOW? 243 mu m Andrew G. Olofson fresident John A. Myers Vice-Presideiti Harry White Secretary Charles Hedge Treasurer Founded at the Virginia Military Institute at Lexington in 1869, Sigma Nu first was known as the Legion of Honor. The three founders were desirous of establishing an organization of congenial college men with ideals of intellectual achievement, charac- ter, and social development with the purpose of be- coming better men and better citizens. Sigma Nu ' s expansion at first was confined to the South, and it was not until 1884 that the organization estab- lished a chapter in the North at Lehigh University. From this time it became in every sense a national fraternity. Today it has ninety-nine active chapters and more than 37,000 alumni. Beta Eta, the Indiana chapter, which was in- stalled in 1892, had one of the first fraternity houses on the campus. Each year the Sunday preceding Armistice Day is observed nationally as a tribute to the founders. Among the prominent local alumni of Sigma Nu are President Herman B Wells, Dr. James Mof- fatt. Ward G. Biddle, J. W. French, Alfred Evens, and W. H. Jansen. Sigma Nu is well represented also in campus activities, with Russell Sloss and Ray Dumke on the Varsity football team, Tom Gwin as co-captain of the baseball team, and Ed Glover as Senior wrestling manager and president of Alpha Kappa Psi. Bill Armstrong and Bevins Clark are promising Sophomores in baseball and track. An- drew G. Olofson is a member of the Board of Aeons, Union Board, Sigma Delta Chi, Blue Key, and Dra- gon ' s Head, and is editor-in-chief of The Daily Stu- dent. Rob Williamson is in Sphinx Club and Sigma Delta Chi, and he, too, is on The Daily Student staff. - ¥ f ' ' ' - 244 CHIC SALE BUILT A PURTY ONE-BUT NEVER First Row Ronald Oskins ' 41, Camden Robert McConnell ' 42, Indianapolis John Covey ' 41, Mission, So. Dak. Edward Glover ' 39, Crown Point Ray Dumke ' 41, St. Joseph, Mich. John Horton ' 42, Nashville Clay Ulen ' 41, Lebanon William Armstrong ' 41, Owensboro, Richard Stoner ' 41, Tipton Second Row Herbert Askren ' 40, Greensburg Edward Hildebrand ' 40, Brookville Ralph Phillips ' 40, Salem Malcolm Wiechman ' 42, Richmond William Pitkin ' 41, Martinsville Bevins Clark ' 41, Seymour Clatide Holmes ' 42, Ft. Knox, Ky. Ky. William Armbruster ' 42, Seymour Russell Sloss ' 39, Duquesne, Pa. Third Row Charles Bob Myers ' 41, Bloomington John Clerkin ' 41, North Vernon Andrew Olofson ' 39, Cranford, N. J David Rariden ' 40, Bedford John Myers ' 40, Mayfield, Ky. Roy Bruns ' 41, Brookville Robert Frank ' 42, Anderson John Hamer ' 42, Indianapolis Robert Atkin ' 39, Evansville Fourth Row Richard Runyan ' 41, Sturgis, Mich. Harry White ' 39, Greensburg Harry Tomlinson ' 39, South Bend Charles Hedge ' 40, Lebanon John Nicks ' 40, Indianapolis John Olmstead ' 39, Homestead, Pa. Russell Owen ' 42, North Salem Harold Wesselman ' 40, Evansville Robert McFarland ' 42, Vincennes Fifth Row Robert Hanna ' 42, Bloomington Rob Williamson ' 39, Muncie Ben Good ' 39, Warren Thomas Gwin ' 39, Shoals James Beldon ' 41, Seymour John Visher ' 42, Evansville James Young ' 42, Glen Ellyn, 111. Albert Baumgartner ' 42, Alexandria Robert Bollum ' 40, South Bend Sixth Row Richard Moran ' 42, South Bend William Thompson ' 39, Heltonville John Wilson ' 39, Pendleton John DuVall ' 39, Frankfort Meredith Bratton ' 40, Lebanon Carlos Brewer ' 39, Bloomington Clement Stigdon ' 40, Kansas City, Mo. Rex Chadwick ' 42, New Castle BEFORE WAS THERE ONE LIKE THEIRS 24J SIGMA PI Floyd Mitman Walt Smith _. Jay Young Earl McCaslin Presideni J ice-Presidenf Secretary Treasurer Sigma Pi was founded in the old home State at Vincennes University in 1898 under the name of Tau Phi Delta, which was changed to Sigma Pi ten years later. The first charter was granted here in 1904 to a group of students from Vincennes who came to the University to study law. The chapter later became inactive during the World War, and the second charter was granted in 1924. Sigma Pi, with the exception of the members of the Miami Triad, is the oldest fraternity originating west of the Alleghenies. On the annual social calendar is the banquet given for the Seniors by the undergraduates. Wear- ers of the cross and emerald give an orchid dance an- nually, with each girl invited donning an orchid for the evening. The social scroll includes also the founders ' day banquet, the Christmas date dinner, and the annual joint meeting with the Purdue chap- ter. Included in a long list of prominent alumni are Curtis Shake, Supreme Court Judge of Indiana, President Davis of Vincennes University, and Prof. William O. Lynch of the Indiana faculty. This year ' s crop of extra-curriculees spread out in almost all fields. Bob Haak chalks up an im- pressive record as co-captain of the Varsity football team, winner of the Balfour award for football for ' 3 8 - ' 3 9, Tribune award for outstanding player in the Big Ten, and member of Sphinx Club. Walt Smith claims membership in Sphinx Club and Union Board, and is business manager of the Redbook, president of Alpha Phi Omega, president of the Jackson Club, and acting chairman of the ' 39 Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. sing. Floyd Mitman is active in Scabbard and Blade, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Alpha Chi Sigma, and Skull and Crescent. In other fields are Ralph Broils, Sigma Xi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, and Alpha Chi Sigma, and Loy Baxter, editor of the Bored Walk. 246 INDIANA HAD PAU L Y. McNUTT, BUT H L, First Row Ralph Deetz PG, Bloomington, 111. Carl Winnebald ' 42, Evansville Duane Collinge ' 42, Wabash Lex Jordan ' 42, Lynn Edward Rucinski ' 41, East Chicago Robert Naugle ' 41, Wabash Clarence Dickerman ' 40, Gary Second Row John King ' 41, Seelyville Robert Haak ' 39, Hammond Henry Timbrook ' 40, Columbus Glen Smith ' 42, Versailles William Fitzgibbon ' 40, Indianapolis Louis Bianco ' 40, Gary Floyd Mitman, Jr. ' 39, Huntington Third Row Arthur Van Arsdel ' 42, Valparaiso James Cox ' 40, Tipton Jack Stawicki ' 41, Gary John Keeler ' 39, Hammond Harold Rendel ' 39, Mexico James Fischer ' 42, Indianapolis Sam Van Arsdell ' 40, Chicago, 111. Fourth Row Hugh Dunlop ' 39, Elizabeth, N. George Kirsch ' 42, Indianapolis Jay Young ' 39, Huntington Earl McCaslin ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Paulsen, ' 40, Auburn Joseph Dukes ' 41, Dugger Fifth Row Robert Morton ' 42, Ft. Wayne Allie Wilt ' 42, Gary Jack Modisett ' 41, Terre Haute James Phillippe ' 41, Dugger Walter Smith ' 40, Versailles Leon Little ' 42, Linden HE WASN ' T PREXY OF ALPHA PHI OMEGA! 247 THETA CHI Herbert Sims President Bob Lawrence Mice-fresideiit Herndon Fletcher Secretary Dave Wilson Treasurer Theta Chi sometimes is known as the fratern- ity of deans, for nineteen members have become deans in leading universities throughout the country. Pre- dominately an Eastern fraternity, Theta Chi was founded in 1856 at Northfield, Vermont. Sixty- five years later the Indiana chapter had its begin- ning. This fraternity was the first to institute Mothers ' Day as an official fraternity calendar event. Too, it is the only Greek letter organization that has set a limit to its chapter roll. Annual social functions at the Theta Chi house include a barn dance and a Roast Pig Dinner. Several Theta Chis are outstanding in extra- curricular activities. Bob Lawrence is vice-president of the Union Board, president of Sphinx Club, treas- urer of Y.M.C.A., and member of Dragon ' s Head. Skull and Crescent members are Charles Sonnenberg and Maynard Morris. In Phi Eta Sigma, Theta Chi is represented by Herndon Fletcher and Bernard Fry. Vernon Wilshere is in Blue Key, and Seward Wilshere is in Phi Delta Kappa. Pershing Rifles lists Charles Sonnenberg, Kemp Martin, Robert Toellinger, Ray Dunn, and Harry Zimmerman. Kappa Kappa Psi, national band fraternity, has James Lampl and J. D. Mann on its roll call. The associate sports editor of The Daily Student and member of Sigma Delta Chi is Jack Hemstock. Dave Wilson and Arnold Bach- mann are members of Alpha Phi Omega; George Schmidt is an Alpha Chi Sigma, and Herbert Sims is a representative on the Interfraternity Council. Wearers of the Theta Chi badge on the faculty are Dr. W. W. Wright, Prof. Russell Noyes, and Donald Barrett. 248 AND THE ANNUAL HELL WEEK PERFORMANCE First Row Raymond Guard ' 3 9, Monticello Paul DeVine ' 40, Gary Charles Ogden ' 42, Indianapolis Franklin Rosenbaum ' 40, Kouts Gene Moore ' 41, WKiting George Schmidt ' 3 9, Hammond Jack Stone ' 42, Evansville Melvin Schaefer PG, Whiting Charles Sonnenberg ' 41, Columbus Second Row- Julius D. Mann ' 40, Nashville, 111. Donald McCammon ' 40, Letts Kenneth Moeller ' 42, Ft. Wayne A. Robert Lawrence ' 39, Indianapolis Robert Foellinger ' 41, Ft. Wayne Harvey Wellnitz ' 40, Michigan City John Hilliard ' 42, Rensselaer John D. Falls ' 40, Hammond Bruce Harrold ' 41, Bellefontaine, Ohio John Hazel ' 41, Bloomington Third Row David Wilson ' 39, Cambridge City Maynard Morris ' 41, Indianapolis W. Harrison Nicholas ' 41, Indianapolis Kemp Martin ' 41, Indianapolis Ralph White ' 40, Gary John Boyd ' 42, Columbus Fred Nye ' 40, Ft. Wayne Horace Hay ' 40, Lebanon Ben Falber ' 41, Terre Haute Fourth Row Arnold Bachmann ' 39, Cambridge City Herbert Sims ' 3 9, Gary Morgan Neu ' 42, South Bend Jack Hemstock ' 40, Hammond Seward Wilshere ' 3 9, Skaneateles, N. Y Frank Wellnitz ' 40, Michigan City Jack Crone ' 40, Gary Harry Zimmerman ' 41, Gary James Ellenwood ' 40, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row James Antrim ' 42, Chicago, 111. Robert Marsh ' 39, South Bend Joseph Troy ' 42, Michigan City Robert Pease ' 39, Ft. Wayne Maurice Snyder ' 3 9, Liberty Addison Riepe ' 42, Evansville William Kraft ' 39, Gary Ray Dunn ' 42, Gary Merlin Summers ' 42, North Liberty Sixth Row Herndon Fletcher ' 40, Indianapolis James Bowers ' 42, South Bend Bernard Fry PG, Bloomfield James Lampl ' 40, Kouts Louis Kunkel ' 42, Michigan City Robert James ' 41, Valparaiso Dan Drain ' 41, Ligonier Ben Woodhull ' 42, Ft. Wayne Duane Helms ' 42, Lewisville Lawrence Fisher ' 39, South Bend AT THE JORDAN ISN ' T PllBLICITY-YERY 249 nm AID SKULL John Lynch President Stephen Reibly Vece-Presideni Jacob Wittmer Secretary Richard Koester Treasurer Torch and Skull was founded at Indiana in the fall of 1937 by seven students who saw a place on the campus for a stronger Catholic fellowship. The charter members were John Lynch, Richard Koester, Al Ritz, Stephen Reibly, Bernard Cinkoske, Eugene Schott, and Jacob Wittmer. With the opening of the chapter house in the fall of 193 8, ambitious plans for expansion were formulated. The group immediately got into the activities race and now has several extra-curricular representatives. Torch and Skull members who hold offices in campus organizations are Bernard Cinkos- ke, vice-president of Phi Eta Sigma, Jacob Wittmer, secretary of the Cosmopolitan Club, and Al Ritz, treasurer of Alpha Rho Sigma. Frank Widner is a member of Sigma Delta Chi, and he and Jacob Witt- mer are members of The Daily Student staff. Stephen Reibly has membership in Alpha Chi Sigma. Jack Lynch is a member of the Campus Com- mittee on Religion. Other activities of the members include Flying Club, football, Newman Club, Ex- perimental Theatre, Bored Walk, and Alpha Phi Omega. Annual events of the fraternity include several smokers each year for the Catholic men on the campus and banquets held to celebrate Mothers ' , Fathers ' and Founders ' Days. INDIANA ' S NEWEST BLESSED (?) EVENT IN 250 First Row John Lynch ' 40, Ft. Wayne John Murphy ' 42, Tell City Jack Curtin ' 40, Ft. Wayne Richard O ' Connor ' 42, Ft. Wayne Al Ritz ' 39, Evansville Second Row Eugene Schott ' 39, Ft. Wayne John McGreevey ' 42, Logansport Stephen Reibly ' 40, Valparaiso James Bullock ' 42, Washington Patrick Larkin ' 42, Loogootee Third Row Bernard Cinkoske ' 41, Valparaiso Dick Koester ' 42, Ft. Wayne Jacob Wittmer ' 40, Cannelton George Ahlering ' 42, Indianapolis Frank Widner ' 39, Indianapolis THE WAY OF FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS 251 SOITH HilL Walter Rinehart President Eugene Burrell Vice-President Bill Schimpff Secretary Bill Gragg Treastirer At last the reason for the naming of South Hall with the name it now bears, even though it is situ- ated on the northern part of the campus, has become evident. South Hall, the first section of a proposed quadrangle of men ' s dormitories, was opened in 1924. Now, after a lapse of fifteen years, the other sec- tions of the quadrangle are being placed under con- struction. The administration of the dormitory is in charge of the house mother, Mrs. Frances Broadie, and the proctor, Ray Fox. Responsibility for the government of the Hall rests with the officers, who are elected semi-annually, a social chairman, an athletic director, and a cabinet, which is composed of men chosen by the president. Annual events of the dorm include a Freshman exchange dinner with Memorial Hall and a Brown County picnic. The Hall publishes its own dormi- tory weekly, The South Hall Corridor. High scholars at the Hall include Richard New- ton, Ermal Geiss, Bruce Benward, and Bruce Decker, all members of Phi Eta Sigma. Publications take the eyes of Charlie Walker, Tom Miller, and Arthur Van Arsdel, members of The Daily Student staff, and John Kistler, Arbutus Sophomore editorial as- sistant. Bill Gragg is a Varsity debater, and Tom Strauss is secretary of Kappa Kappa Psi. The athletic end is held up by Walt Rinehart, Varsity swimmer; Bob Boaz, Freshman backstroke record holder; Philip Ronzone, football, and Bob Stanley, Varsity track and cross country. Ben Pass is Junior track manager, and John Kistler is a Sopho- more manager. Bruce Decker is a Sophomore base- ball manager. GOLD DIGGERS ON ONE SIDE, MUD DIGGERS 252 First Row Mose Gross ' 42, Petersburg Sid Long ' 42, Lawrenceburg Bruce Decker ' 41, Bluff ton Vincent Lambo ' 41, Elkhart Ray Montoux ' 41, Evansville Donald Cart ' 42, Lawrenceburg Bruce Benward ' 42, Churubusco Mike Ottean ' 42, Terra Haute Fourth Row Richard Newton ' 40, Ligonier Ralph Brown ' 40, Indianapolis William Garner ' 42, Hanna Tom Miller ' 40, Aurora Robert Brown ' 41, Velpen Richard Derby ' 42, Elkhart Joseph Vorgang ' 42, Jeffersonville Donald Asbury ' 41, Oak Park, III. Ernest Kern ' 42, Oakville Second Row Frank Kotoro ' 42, Gary Frank White ' 40, Portland Delmer Hilton ' 42, Indianapolis George Moore ' 42, Indianapolis David Gray ' 42, Gosport Charles Walker ' 40, Charlottesville Robert Blackburn ' 42, Lawrenceburg Walter Kerrigan ' 39, Hammond James Aslier ' 40, New Augusta Fifth Row George Engleman ' 41, Hammond Benjamin Pass ' 40, Gary Charles McCartney ' 40, Fairmount Francis Knowles ' 40, Wadesville William Gragg ' 39, Lucerne Melvin Maxwell ' 42, Medaryville Milan Dudas ' 42, Whiting Ermal Geiss ' 39, Wadesville Harold Stump ' 39, Auburn Third Row Arthur Van Arsdel ' 42, Valparaiso James Kessler ' 42, Wabash Phillip Ronzone ' 41, Elkhart William Schmipff ' 41, Jeffersonville George Kerrigan ' 40, Connersville Robert Koonz ' 42, Evanston, 111. Paul Bockmeyer ' 42, Richmond Robert Hull ' 39, Evansville Gene Kern ' 42, Oakville Sixth Row Eugene Burrell ' 39, South Bend James Gale ' 40, Anderson Robert Avery ' 41, Gary Ralph Schnabel ' 41, Indianapolis Walter Rinehart ' 39, Elkhart Robert Sabin ' 42, Dana Charles Halpin ' 42, Muncie Robert Stanley ' 41, Liberty Thomas Watts ' 39, Aurora ON THE OTHER - YOU CANT WIN 253 1940 ' « Tf V V ? - , ' . ? ■i|l ■ 5 k I ' l Hi .■«5.; ■S- V i Dick Russell admires his roommate ' s serial number . . . Union barbers take It on the chin . . . Four Delts start on road to becoming deans of men . . . Phi Delt pledge gives out, by request . . . Boughma n shows the admiring brothers how it ' s done back home . . . SAE Henderson assumes the eleventh hour pose . . . Caesar, where were you on the night of June the Foo? She ' ll be coming ' round the mountain . . . What you mean it ' s your hand? pha Chi ' s hold o contest . . . Jane Holt relaxes after Kappa Dett study table . . . Delta Zetas approve record com- mittee ' s selections ... Chi Os Jane Kleinert and Adele Lowell await front le position in kibitzer ranks . . . Coming through (with) the Rye ... Pi Phi ;ik helps a sister complete her dating chart . . . Z.T.A.s dry hair on one of mington ' s non-rainy days . . . Oh-Oh (on throne) rules over Theta boress. COME ON, GIRLS, KAPPA SIGS ARE O.K., Although Alpha Chi Omega was founded by seven girls who were in Music School at DePauw University, it never has been, as some people be- lieve, a professional musical organization. When these girls founded it on October 15, 1885, they in- tended it to be a social organization. However, be- cause of their sincere interest in music they selected the shape of the lyre for their pin. During the early part of the fraternity ' s history, it was required that the girls whom they pledged be taking at least one course in music. The Alpha Mu chapter was established on this campus on April 23, 1922, with its chapter house located on Forest Place. In 1927 it was moved to its present location on the Quadrangle. Its president this year, Jane Dillin, is vice-president of Mortar Board, a member of Theta Alpha Phi, Tau Kappa Alpha, and Phi Beta Kappa. Betty Lou Fraling is editor-in-chief of the Ar- butus, a member of Theta Sigma Phi, and one of Alpha Chi ' s three members of Pleiades, the other two being Jeannette Prinz and Julia Ann Harting. Sophomore Bette Anne Tillman is on A.W.S. Coun - oil, a member of Alpha Lambda Delta, and a Sopho- more Arbutus editorial assistant. Virginia Cowan also holds this position on the Arbutus. Other mem- bers of Alpha Lambda Delta include Julia Peckin- paugh, Betty Lou Fraling, Rosamond Schlaegel, and Jane Dillin. Jane Gaff is Freshman president of Y.W.C.A. Pauline Taylor was selected as one of the R.O.T.C. coed sponsors. Other members of Alpha Chi Omega are in Taps, the Pro-Music Club, and Omicron Delta. ALPHA CHI OMEGA Jane Dillin President Julia Ann Harting Vice-Presideni Virginia Biery Secretary Anna Louise Burkhart Treasurer 256 BUT THERE IS AN ANTI MONOPOLY LAW! First Row Madalyne Spencer ' 42, Peru Jean Kriegbaum ' 39, Richmond Imogene Sharpnack ' 40, Columbus Helen Nelson ' 41, Marion Ann Casey ' 41, Gary Jean Parent ' 41, Union City Barbara Drummond ' 42, Indianapolis Alice Heine ' 39, Indianapolis Helen Miller ' 41, Elkhart Fourth Row Louise Benbow ' 39, Gaston Pauline Taylor ' 42, Columbus Ellen Schocke ' 40, Salem Frances Shropshire ' 42, Peru Virginia Cole ' 39, Gary Frances Bevier ' 41, South Bend Jessie Boswell ' 40, Anderson Edna Suverkrup ' 41, Columbus Pat O ' Donnell ' 41, Indianapolis Second Row Marilyn Fleming ' 42, South Bend Juha Ann Harting ' 40, Tipton Sadona Washburn ' 41, Peru Lois Fraze ' 41, Winchester Jane Dillin ' 39, Petersburg Betty Nicholls ' 42, Bound Brook, Rosemary Miner ' 42, Pendleton Elaine Stevens ' 40, South Bend Fifth Row Jeanette Prinz ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Jane Gaff ' 42, South Bend Virginia Lee Cowan ' 4 1 , Ft. Wayne Mary Paddock ' 41, Chicago, 111. Kathryn Herle ' 39, Orleans Rosalie Holman ' 40, Indianapolis Mary Russell ' 39, Anderson Betty Hughes ' 39, Harrisburg, Pa. Third Row Betty Ditzler ' 41, Handrjgton Mary Lou Ferguson ' 42, S-.-.y.niour Rosamond Schlasgcl ' 40, Indianapolis Sally Bollenbacher ' 42, WasHngton Virginia Kuhn ' 41, South Ee;-.:1 N. J. Kathryn Klingelhoffer ' 40, A -rora Virginia Biery ' 40, Frankfort . Anna Louise Burkhart ' 40, Wsstfisld Betty Peckinpaugh ' 40, Mt. Summit Sixth Row Marybelle Gallmeyer ' 40, Ft. Wayne Phyllis Morris ' 42, Jeffersonville Virginia Stevens ' 42, South Bend Elva Baughn ' 42, Greenville, Ohio Bette Anne Tillman ' 41, Bloomington Marguerite Cox ' 41, Peru Marietta Wood ' 41, Indianapolis Marilyn McElwee ' 41, Indianapolis Betty Lou Fraling ' 39, Kokomo 257 $5 FINE FOR NOT ENTERING REALITY In 1851 on the Wesley an Female College campus the first secret society for women was founded. The Adelphean Society was the first name given to this social group. It had been the policy of the group to write the Greek letters Alpha Delta Phi after the name. In 1913 they amended the charter, chang- ing the name to Alpha Delta Pi, so that it would not be confused with Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. Seventy-five years later, in 1926, the local chapter was organized. Beta Alpha was selected as the name to be given to the Indiana chapter. One of the highlights of the year is the annual Colonial dinner given during rush week. Other customs of the local chapter include a Senior razz banquet for the graduating Seniors, a founders ' day dinner, and Christmas and Thanksgiving banquets. Alpha Delta Pi has several recruits in the ever- growing army of extra-curricular activities. Ruth Lindner and Lenora Wilkinson are on the roll of Alpha Lambda Delta. In Omicron Delta, business group, are Mary Smith and Harriet Hildebrand. Mary Lou Koster is a member of the University Girls ' Glee Club. Faculty members ' wives who wear the pin of Alpha Delta Pi are Mrs. Robert E. Burke, Mrs. Henry L. Smith, Mrs. Harold Wolfe, Mrs. Brown Scott, and Mrs. Oscar Winther. Two fellowships to be used in the field of nurs- ery school management and research are granted an- nually by Alpha Delta Pi. The Abigail Davis Stu- dent Loan Fund, named in honor of a Southern member, is supported by the sorority. ALPHA DELTA PI Charlotte Brinkman President Jean McFeely Y ice-President Dorothy Taylor Secretary Sarah Gusman Treasurer 258 CONTESTS-COME ONE, COME ALL. First Row Thelma Davis ' 41, Hebron Sarah Gusman ' 40, Markle Jean McFeely ' 40, Oak Park, 111. Patricia Patton ' 42, Bloomington Charlotte Brinkman ' 39, Detroit, Mich. Second Row Jane Schmick ' 42, Gary Ellen Taylor ' 42, Pearl City, Hawaii Harriet Hildebrand ' 39, Washington, D. C. Betty Bender ' 40, Bloomington Mary Smith ' 39, Cvimberland Third Row Mary Lou Koster ' 41, Indianapolis Dorothy Taylor ' 40, Detroit, Mich. Helen Greene ' 41, Bloomingdale Betty Martin ' 41, South Whitley Ruth Lindner ' 41, Valparaiso Fourth Row Mary Jo Tennell ' 42, Bloomington Marilyn Rader ' 42, Chesterton Mary Elizabeth Schilling ' 41, Indianapolis Lenora Wilkinson ' 41, Gary Mary Jo Wright ' 41, Odon Edith Seitz ' 41, Indianapolis 259 WHO DROPPED FAUSCH IN OUR PRETTY RIRD RATH? At Barnard College of Columbia University in 1897 there came into existence one more addition to the thriving family of Greek-letter sororities. Alpha Omicron Pi was the name chosen by the four found- ers for this new social organization. On December 8, 1916, Beta Phi made its appearance on the Indi- ana University campus via the tower room of the present chapter-house on Seventh Street. Alpha Omicron Pi boasts the only patio on the campus, with an honest-to-goodness fountain and pool in which every girl who accepts a fraternity pin is ducked. This custom has grown to be a tradition at the AOPi castle . Alumnae on the campus who are the wives of faculty members are Mrs. Robert Royer, Mrs. Don- ald Bowen, Mrs. George Steiner, Mrs. Marion Loh- man, and Mrs. Ray Borland. Wearers of the pearls and rubies who are active on campus include three members of Theta Sigma Phi — Audrey Smith, Hazel Parsons, and Margaret Kerkling. Miss Kerkling is an honorary Pan-Hellenic Council member also. Sally Camp, Harriet Scott, and Laura Wilkins are members of Pleiades; Ello- gene Griffith is vice-president of Chi Gamma; Audrey Smith holds the position of associate editor of the Arbutus, and Mary Ruth Steinmetz is a Sophomore Arbutus editorial assistant. Alpha Omi- cron Pi is represented in Pro-Music Club by Olive Sanders and Martha Ellen Wiesman; the latter also belongs to Taps. Virginia Lee Fellmy is vice-presi- dent of Y.W.C.A. Betty Calpha is an Alpha Kappa Delta member; Margaret Kerkling, Hazel Parsons, and Audrey Smith are members of The Daily Stu- dent staff; Sally Camp and Margaret Kerkling are representatives in Theta Alpha Phi, and Mary Jane Armstrong, Hazel Parsons, and Margaret Kerkling are members of Alpha Lambda Delta. Margaret Kerkling is co-director of University Theatre pub- licity. ■• ■.. ilLPHA OMICRON PI Rosealice Baldwin President Ruth Burlingame Vice-President Mavis Smith Secretary Laura Wilkins Treasurer 260 (CONFIDENTIALLY, IT STINKS!) First Row Sally Camp ' 39, Lakewood, N. Y. Martha Ellen Wiesman ' 40, Kokomo Winifred Bir ' 41, Reynolds Winifred Black ' 41, Hobart Wanda Pulliam ' 41, Indianapolis Mona Dees ' 39, Bicknell Norma McClintock ' 42, Indianapolis Louise Vittitow ' 40, Owensboro, Ky. Maxine Morse ' 41, Elkhart Second Row Mavis Smith ' 39, Bloomfield Ruth Burlingame ' 39, Gary Marjorie Wrork ' 39, Shelburn Maxine Coundiff ' 39, Gary Harriet Scott ' 39, Griffith Susanne Fogg ' 40, Greensburg Betty McTerney ' 40, Schenectady, N. Margaret Kerlvling ' 39, Bloomington Olive Sanders ' 39, Bloomington Audi ey Smith ' 40, Crown Point Third Row Naomi Bates ' 41, Gary Ellogene Griffith ' 41, Scottjburg Jane Pursley ' 41, Nev biirg Marie Mitchell ' 39, Blootringtcn Mary Jane Taylor ' 41, Lotur rie, Ky. Mary Ruth Steinmetz. ' 41, Soutlnort Y. Betty Greene ' 41, Gary Rosemary Ruffing ' 41, Delphi Doris Rose ' 41, Crown Point Fourth Row Eleanor Way ' 41, Albany Jeanice Bartling ' 42, Ft. Wayne Martha Mcintosh ' 42, Worthington Mary Jane Armstrong ' 42, Bloomin Eulalia Terwilliger ' 41, Gary Margaret Thompson ' 39, Salem Donna Shurr ' 42, Hobart Louise Roudebush ' 42, Winimac June Kennedy ' 42, Dunkirk Fifth Row Laura Wilkins ' 40, Gary Virginia Lee Fellmy ' 39, Crandall Marjorie Swihart ' 39, Ft. Wayne gton Mildred Fall ' 39, Roachdale Betty Caipha ' 40, Laurel Florence Rozelle ' 39, LaGrange Rosealice Baldwin ' 39, Hammond Evelyn Gilbert ' 40, LaGrange Carmen Cook ' 40, Birdseye Barbara Spencer ' 41, Indianapolis Sixth Row Betty Kreutzinger ' 41, Indianapolis Reba Pendry ' 42, Bloomington Mary Elizabeth Mcllveen ' 41, Bi ton Margaret Thomas ' 42, Corydon Hazel Parsons ' 39, Dagger Jessie Mitchell ' 40, Bloomington Sara Ellen Reeves ' 40, New Market Martha Jane Tiernan ' 42, Richmond Delores Small ' 42, Hobart oommg- 261 THE FRONT ROOM AT MIDNIGHT- Theta Beta of Chi Omega made its bow to the Indiana campus in 1922, estabHshing itself firmly in a distinctive Spanish-style house on the Quad and gracing a coveted spot on the banks of the Jordan. Four coeds at the University of Arkansas are re- sponsible for this sorority, which has grown from its origin on April 5, 1895, to a national organization of ninety-two chapters. The campus activities in which the Chi Os have distinguished themselves are many and varied. The portals of Phi Beta Kappa have swung wide to re- ceive Mary Aldred and Virginia Coverdale; Eloise Barnett is president of Omicron Delta; Mary Aldred is a member of Mortar Board, and Jeanette Strayer, member of Tau Kappa Alpha, is a Senior A.W.S. representative also. Chi Omega is represented in Alpha Lambda Delta by Betty Harris, Evelyn Jontz, and Marian Combs — these three girls, plus Adele Lowell and Jane Kleinert, also received Mortar Board Freshman recognition. Members of Taps include Jane Kleinert, Doris Vader, and Nance Walker; Ruth Ferris is a Junior representative in the Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce and assistant business manager of the University Theatre. Mary Aldred, Ann Johnson, and Virginia Coverdale are members of Theta Sigma Phi, of which Mary Aldred is presi- dent. Mary was editor of the Freshman Handbook, and Ann Johnson was telegraph editor on The Daily Student. Chi Omega is represented in Pleiades by Marian Sharp, Mary Aldred, Ruth Ferris, and Maude Alice Dodson. Alumnae of Chi Omega are represented on the campus by Miss Estella Whitted of the Department of English, and by Mrs. R. C. Buley, Mrs. R. S. Sherman, and Mrs. T. F. Wessels, wives of faculty members. CHI OIHEy Mary Aldred President Jeanette Strayer Yice-Vresident Doris Vader Secretary Barbara Butler Treasurer 262 LIGHTING NIL-SOUND EFFECTS GOOD First Row Mary Spradling ' 40, Morocco Betty Thomas ' 41, Elkhart Helen Jane Miles ' 41, Terre Haute Doris Vater ' 40, Whiting Marjorie Slabaugh ' 40, Syracuse Elizabeth Neff ' 42, Ft. Wayne Mary Benninghoff ' 40, Ft. Wayne Maude Alice Dodson ' 39, Indianapolis Fourth Row Jane Kleinert ' 41, Elkhart Corinne White ' 41, Indianapolis Maryel Patrick ' 40, West Lafayette Marian Combs ' 41, Terre Haute Evelyn Jontz ' 41, Silver Lake Amelia Royer ' 41, Spencer Evangeline Gaither ' 39, Bloomington Virginia Foreman ' 39, Culver Velma Wolfe ' 39, Lafayette Second Row Helen Phillips ' 39, North Manchester Florence Barbillion ' 41, Garrett Wilma Jean Chambers ' 40, Bloomington Ann Johnson ' 39, Crown Point Betty Harris ' 41, Madison Martha Gast ' 40, Warsaw Betty Alice Smith ' 39, Indianapolis Virginia Coverdale ' 39, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row Catherine Marnan ' 42, Whiting Mary Ellen May ' 39, Bloomington Mary Snapp ' 42, Whiting Jean Loucks ' 41, North Manchester Dorothy Forrest ' 41, Elkhart Martha Jane Hightchew ' 42, Monticello Betty Jean Rowe ' 42, Milwaukee, Wise. Marianne Bessire ' 39, Nashville Lois Zehring ' 41, Miamisburg, Ohio Third Row Nance Wa; . CW.cago Frances Granani ' 41, Moncn Ruth Ferris ' 40, Hammond Clara Bente ' 41, Ft. Wayne Dolores Miller ' 42, Terre Haute Barbara Butler ' 39, Fowler Olivia Days ' 41, Elkhart Mary Aldred ' 39, Ft. Wayne Sixth Row Marjorie Cole ' 42, West Lafayette Jeanette Strayer 39, Claypool Mary Elizabeth Hoover ' 40, . Jean Closser ' 41, Hanna Marcia McCoUy ' 40, Rensselaer Adele Lowell ' 41, Elkhart Eloise Barnett ' 39, Sulphur Springs Dolores Cleaver ' 41, Ft. Wayne Marian Sharp ' 39, Milford ;-ury 263 THEY GET AROUND WITH AN AUSTIN. THROW THE DICE, One night during fall rush confusion at Boston University in 1888, Sarah Ida Shaw and Eleanor Pond decided to found a society which would be based on the principle of equal ity and on the development of character. As a result Tri Delta was established on Thanksgiving eve as the seventh national Greek so- ciety and the first in New England. It has eighty- eight chapters at the present time. As the two founders looked to the sky to pledge themselves to Delta Delta Delta, they saw a crescent moon and three stars; hence the origin of the pin. Indiana University chapter. Delta Omicron, cele- brates its chapter day on March 3, since that was the day of its founding in 1917. The three-star girls moved to their present house on Third Street in 1930. The Delta Delta Delta house has as president Rosemary Redens, who is a member of Mortar Board, Theta Alpha Phi, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, and Pleiades, and was winner of the 193 8 Theta Alpha Phi best actress award. Other Pleiades members are Marilou Thomas and Marion Smith. Virginia Austin is an R.O.T.C. coed sponsor, and Jeanne Van Dien is a member of W.A.A. Board. Arbutus beauty queens of 193 8 were Helen Emly and Margaret Hall. Delta Delta Delta won the loving cup for intramural debate and also won its second victory in the all -University Sing last spring. It boasts of the Tri Delt trio, composed of Marion Smith, Marilou Thomas, and Jeannette Dice. Jean- nette also is president of Girls ' Glee Club and a mem- ber of Theta Sigma Phi. One of the customs of Delta Delta Delta is the singing of Christmas carols on the eve of Christmas vacation to all campus fraternities. DELTA DELTA DELTA Rosemary Redens President Mary Elizabeth Adams Vice-President Dorothy Menke Secretary Helen Holmes Treasurer 264 AND THEIR FACE NEVER REDDENS First Row Marjorie Mellen ' 42, Springfield, Ohio Betty Kenderdine ' 40, Chicago, 111. Marion Smith ' 40, East Chicago Lola K. Sloan ' 39, New Albany Jane Palmer ' 41, Jeffersonville Beatrice Fudge ' 42, Ft. Wayne Nancy Ellis ' 42, Elkhart Marilou Thomas ' }9, Logansport Jean Redman ' 42, Garrett Second Row Jacqueline Mobley ' 41, St. Paul Fern Hart ' 42, Chicago, 111. Betty Sigler ' 40, Hammond Naomi Kixmiller ' 42, Vincennes Betty Firth ' 40, Indianapolis Relda Hoelocker ' 41, LaPorte Dorothy Menke ' 39, Huntingburg Matele Davidson ' 41, Lafayette Third Row Suzanne Moore ' 42, F-s:: ' -fort Barbara Baugh ' 41, Eva.: UIs Cleo Bishop ' 40, Vinccnv:;; Virginia Austin ' 41, 2:o. rv:i;-j Patricia Sigler ' 42, Hami-:or.d Elizabeth Whisman ' 42, Shelby ville Millie Cox ' 42, Sheridan Jeanne Gifford ' 42, Chicago, III. Jeannette Dice ' 40, Converse Fourth Row Mary Ehzabeth Adams ' 40, Vincennes Helen Emly ' 41, Letts Jean Vittitow ' 42, Rockport Margaret Hall ' 40, Williamsport ■Jane Livengood ' 42, South Bend Helen Holmes ' 39, Indianapolis Miriam Matchette ' 41, Green town Mary Lou Sanders ' 42, Lafayette Fifth Row Margaret Grundy ' 42, South Bend Betty Jo Thomas ' 41, Portland Rosemary Redens ' 39, New Albany Mary Carson ' 42, Lafayette Joan Umbenhower ' 42, Garrett Anne Snook ' 41 Evanston, 111. Mary Elizabeth Miller ' 42, Manilla Ellen Elise Burns ' 42, Bloomington Jeanne Van Dien ' 41, South Bend 265 KEEPING FRESHMEN IN ON WEEK ENDS IS Founded in 1874, Delta Gamma is one of the oldest fraternities for women. It is international in scope, with four Canadian chapters, and is repre- sented on forty-five other college campuses. Alumnae of Delta Gamma are outstanding in many professions, with Ruth Bryan Owen Rhodes, one of the first women to be given as high a diplo- matic position as foreign minister to Denmark, lead- the way. Wearers of the golden anchor are prominent in many phases of campus life, and many of them are active in the extra-curricular field. Mary Beth Hunt is president of Pan-Hellenic, social chairman of A.W.S., member of the Junior Prom Committee, and member of the debate team. Other activities which claim the interest of Delta Gammas include Alpha Lambda Delta, with Peg Johnston, Virginia Heller, Doris Allison, Mary Beth Hunt, Harriet Yenne, Jean Weber, Mary Jane Straub, and Betty Fraser as members; Theta Alpha Phi, to which belong Vir- ginia McDaniel, Mary Beth Hunt, and Charlotte Fields; Arbutus staff, two members of which are Virginia Heller and Mary Jane Straub; Sigma Alpha Iota, listing Harriet Yenne; Y.W.C.A. secretary, Mary Jane Straub; Pi Lambda Theta, enrolling Doris Allison; Pleiades, whose roll includes Toddy Uebel- hoer, Mary Beth Hunt, and Betty Gale; and Uni- versity Theatre staff, of which Mary Beth Hunt and Mary Jane Straub are members. In the beauty line Delta Gamma has its winners, too: Juanita Clawson is the R.O.T.C. Honorary Cadet Colonel, and Mar- jorie Heidenreich is the Lieutenant Colonel of the R.O.T.C. The Sphinx Club cup for the best sorority Homecoming decorations was awarded to Delta Gamma this year. DELTA GAMMA Mary Beth Hunt President Virginia Heller Vice-President Frances Billman Secretary Peg Johnston Treasurer 266 ONE WAY FOR THE ACTIVES TO GET DATES First Row Margie Piatt ' 41, Mexico City, Mo. Bertus Johnson ' 41, Bethlehem Ruth Colle ' 42, Anderson Alyce Wright ' 42, Metuchen, N. J. Mary Susan Schmalz ' 42, Bloomington Charlotte Uebelhoer ' 3 9, Ft. Wayne Frances Billman ' 3 9, Sullivan Shirley Hannapel ' 40, Chicago, lU. Margaret Roethke ' 42, Milwaukee, Wise. Second Row Maurene Fiegenschuh ' 41, Hammond Jerry Gates ' 42, Indianapolis Betty Hamilton ' 40, Huntington Betty Fraser ' 42, Bloomington Ann Henderson ' 42. Indianapolis Marjorie Heidenreich ' 41, Bicknell Janet Graham ' 42, Indianapolis Jean Weber ' 41, Huntington Third Row Gene Calvert ' 41, Warsaw Virginia Heller ' 40, Ft. Wayne Mary Ann Kriegbaum ' 40, Hun rington Barbara Gale ' 40, Washington, D. C. Dorothy Burchfield ' 42, Evansville Margaret Johnston ' 40, Wilmette, 111. Patt Nichols ' 42, Spencer Margaret Shaul ' 41, Terre Haute Jane Rinehart ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Fourth P-OT, Francir.i; ■ 57r.ncon ' 40, Chicago, I i. Juns: L ;•,-;. 1 ' 40, Indianapolis Lois Bk;. ' ■ :?, Danville (M.-s.) Kt ■:.■■ Coswell Hobbs ' 39, Clcve and, Ohio Charlotte Pidvv; -41, Bioomington Virginia F c ;r . ' 4. ' ndianapolis Mary Js.-ie h • :v z- ■ ' vl, Evansville Carolyn K r..j :; ' 42, Evansville Fifth Row Marie Davis ' 41, Bloomington Elise Parke ' 3 9, South Bend Margaret Newton ' 40, Columbus Mary Beth Steinmetz ' 42, Indianapolis Harriet Yenne ' 41, Cleveland, Ohio Betty Gale ' 3 9, Bloomington Doris Allison ' 40, Tipton Katherine Durham ' 42, Indianapolis Irene Krantz ' 41, Logansport Sixth Row Barbara Williams ' 41, Beaumont, Tex. Anita Niven ' 41, Ihdianapolis Mary Beth Hunt ' 40, Evansville Louise Samuelson ' 41. Springfield, Ohio Virginia McDaniel ' 39, Bloomington Mary Jane Lincoln ' 42, Columbus Annette Ford ' 42, South Bend Juanita Clawson ' 41, Muncie Seventh Row Barbara Ziegler ' 42, Michigan City Kathryn Black ' 3 9, Indianapolis Ruth Goebel ' 40, Ft. Wayne Lois Lauter ' 40, Indianapolis Peggy Crosby ' 3 9, Milwaukee, Wise. Jean Humphreys ' 42, Linton Betty Sutphin ' 39, Bloomington Helen Graf ' 40, Bloomington Margaret Morrison ' 42, Kokomo 267 THERE ' S A RUMOR THAT THE LAMP ON Miami University was the scene of the found- ing of Delta Zeta sorority on October 24, 1902. From a meager beginning with six members, Delta Zeta has grown rapidly until now it embraces sixty chapters. Among the many prominent alumni are Gail Patrick, movie actress; Mary Dranga Camp- bell, founder of the Seeing Eye Foundation, and Bess Goody Koontz, Commissioner of the U. S. Bureau of Education. The Lamp of Delta Zeta made its appearance on the Indiana campus when Epsilon chapter was founded on May 22, 1909. This chapter has the dis- tinction of being the fifth oldest of the sororities on the campus. Last year Delta Zeta won the Pan- Hellenic cup awarded each year to the sorority which has the highest scholarship in the University. The chapter was honored further last year in that one of its alumnae, Mrs. Grace Mason Lundy, was elected second vice-president of the national organization. In order to maintain its high scholarship, Epsi- lon chapter engraves upon a silver loving cup the name of the member who makes the best grades each semester. To the Freshman with the highest average grades for the year goes a scholarship ring. Delta Zeta ' s actives in campus affairs are Eliza- best Dawson, vice-president of the Pan-Hellenic Council; Irene May and Jean McGrew, members of Alpha Lambda Delta, and Ruth McCrocklin and Vivian Johnson, Chi Gammas. Betty Walker is in the Education Club and Irene May in the Interna- tional Relations Club. Alumnae on the campus are Mrs. Francis Ellis of the Department of German and Miss Beulah Young of the Registrar ' s office. DELTA ZETA Marian L. Johnson President Vivian Johnson Vice-President Dorothy Busby Secretary Elizabeth Dawson Treasurer 26% THEIR PIN DOESN ' T HELP MUCH AT 12:50 First Row Vivian Johnson ' 41, Gary Jane Hudson ' 42, Detroit, Mich. Ruth McCrocklin ' 42, SulHvan Jean McGrew ' 40, New Castle Second Row Betty Walker ' 39, Logansport Dorothy Busby ' 40, Anderson Elizabeth Dawson ' 41, Gary Josephine DeFrank ' 41, Sullivan Third Row Alice Crosman ' 42, Chicago, III. Jane Piper PG, LaGrange, III. Irene May ' 41, Corydon Marjorie Booker ' 40, Muskegon Heights, Mich. Marian Johnson ' 40, Bedford 269 ONE MEETS THE BETTER PEOPLE IN ♦ Kappa Alpha Theta grew out of a realization of the need for a social organization for women similar to fraternal organizations for men. It was founded in 1870 at DePauw University and was the first sorority ever established on an American campus. In the same year the chapter had been established at DePauw, Indiana ' s Beta chapter was brought into ex- istence. The most traditional function of the sorority is Kite Day, established in 1889. On this day, the Sunday preceding Commencement, scrapbook air- ings , written by underclass sisters, are read by the Senior girls of the organization. Thetas are prominent in extra-curricular activi- ties. Ruth Smith is president of A.W.S. and vice- president of the Senior class, besides being a member of Mortar Board. Pleiades members are Betty Schrader, Mary Ann Kunkel, and Evelyn Anderson. Betty Schrader belongs also to Theta Alpha Phi. Cynthia Demaree is a member of Mortar Board, while Rosemary Treanor is on the A.W.S. Council. Helen Weatherwax attained the rare distinction — for a coed — of editorship of The Daily Student. Harriet Cracraft was chosen as one of the R.O.T.C. coed sponsors. Two members, Anne Louise Cole and Marjorie Nie, belong to Alpha Lambda Delta. % Um ALPHA THETA .. ' President Betty Schrader Katharine Landis Vice-President Betty Ruth McCullough Secretary Marjorie Roach Treasurer 270 THE STRANGEST PLACES, DOESN ' T ONE? First Row Josephine Griflfis Ml, Richmond Ty Walters ' 39, Jasonville Joan Bartholomew ' 3 9, Valparaiso Betty Brown ' 40, Billings, Mont. Joanne Barr ' 42, Rochester Barbara Hinshaw ' 41, Kokomo Chloe Hook ' 42, Noblesville JayneMilteer ' 42, Gary Betty Schrader ' 3 9, Kokomo Second Row Louis Home ' 40, Anderson Adaline Chambers ' 41, New Castle Janet Lee Fleehart ' 42, Roswell, N. Mex. Louise Miller ' 42, Crawfordsville Barbara Tompkins ' 42, Bluffton Bonnie Baker ' 42, Bluffton Jane Gillespie ' 42, Indianapolis Betty Bohannon ' 42, Terre Haute Shirley Dunten ' 42, LaGrange Third Row Jeanne Wills ' 42, Indianapolis Betsy Johnson ' 40, Logansporc Mariangeneen Helvie ' 42, Valparaiso Ruth Smith ' 3 9, Bloomington Rosemary Treanor ' 40, Chicago, 111. Mary Susan Stuil ' 41, Bloomington Joann Lybrook ' 40, Gary Phoebe Revington ' 41, Monticello Betty Biddle ' 40, Bloomington Four: ' ' -l aric - ' S ' 42, Indianapolis Mary H=n, ' ,:. -.y, Louisville, Ky. Marjoris Nio i, Huntington Evelyn Anc - -.vi 40, Marion Marie Js3;in,t::o Turgi ' 41, New Castle Katherine A} ' :-.: , d ' ..r ' 41, Bloomington Roberta Johnson ' 40, Delphi Betty De Schipper ' 59, Csrrhage Jane Clifford ' 42, Valparaiso Fifth Row Patricia De Prez ' 40, Shelbyville Mary Anne Kunkel ' 3 9, Bluffton Leia Jane Ross ' 42, Bloomington Clare iMarie Snyder ' 41, Geneva, N. Y. Marjorie Hill ' 41, Bruceville Jane Winters ' 42, Indianapolis Harriet Cracraft ' 40, Indianapolis Mary McCann ' 40, Danville, III. Janet Gorrell ' 40, Winamac Sixth Row Betty McCullough ' 40, Columbus Dorothea Rose Elliot ' 41, Sheridan Nancy Biddle ' 42, Bloomington Virginia Burkholder ' 42, Indianapolis Jeanne McMahon ' 42, Memphis, Tenn. Laura Jean Long ' 41, Columbus Helen Weatherwax ' 3 9, Bloomington Katharine Landis ' 40, Logansport Elizabeth Rowe ' 41, Glen Ellyn, III. Seventh Row Nancy Snyder ' 40, Bloomington Anne Louise Cole ' 41, Bloomington Eugenia Neu ' 40, Bloomington Dorothea Neuhauser ' 41, Bluffton Olive Starr ' 41, Gary Margaret Berry ' 3 9, Rushville Cynthia Demaree ' 3 9, Bloomington Eleanor Dauer ' 41, Wilwaukee, Wise. Mary Rees ' 42, LePorte 271 v.- WHAT IS THIS BROWN COUNTY ' ART ' ' Kappa Delta can be proud of such alumnae as Pearl Buck, the Nobel Prize-winning author of The Good Earth and other novels; Hildegarde Fillmore, beauty editor of a leading women ' s magazine; Helen Claire, appearing in the Broadway hit, Kiss the Boys Goodbye , and Sylvia Myer, the only woman member of the National Symphony Orchestra. The local chapter, Sigma Upsilon, was founded in 1923. It contributes to the support of a ward at the Children ' s Hospital at Richmond, Virginia, in which state the first of the present sixty-eight active chapters of Kappa Delta was founded in 1902. Kappa Deltas at Indiana University are proud to have Mrs. T. C. Steele, the widow of the well- known Brown County artist, as a patroness, and several times each year the girls are entertained at her estate. The group also gives a tea at her home for those University persons who are interested in Brown County art. Kappa Deltas participating in activities are Dar- lene Buskirk, a student director of the Coed Band for two years, Helen Lybrook, member of Omicron Delta, and various members of the Rifle Club, Der Deutsche Verein, and International Relations, Cos- mopolitan, and Education Clubs. Dr. Edith Schuman, the University women ' s physician, and Mrs. Herman Briscoe, wife of Dr. Briscoe of the Department of Chemistry, are alumnae of Kappa Delta. KAPPl DELTA Darlene Buskirk ' President Jane Holt Vice-President Helen Lybrook Secretary Annette Sappenfield Treasurer 171 THAT LURES THE GIRLS INTO THE W! First Row Evajean Craig ' 41, Ft. Wayne Darlene Buskirk ' 40, Ft. Wayne Helen Lybrook ' 39, Galveston Jeanette Straub ' 42, Ft. Wayne Second Row Ruth Dippell ' 42, Huntington Dorothy Dawson ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Alice Richards ' 42, Lehighton, Pa. Bette Fredrich ' 41, Cincinnati, Ohio Third Row Margaret Cierzniak ' 42, South Bend Anna Case ' 42, Camden Jane Holt ' 41, Cincinnati, Ohio Carol Koerber ' 42, Ft. Wayne Annette Sappenfield ' 41, Lyons 273 GET BUSY, GIRLS-ONE MORE PIN AND In 1870 a group of energetic young women at Monmouth College decided it was time for women to enjoy some of the privileges of organizations that seemed to belong to men. This inspired the found- ing of Kappa Kappa Gamma, whose Delta chapter was established at Indiana University in 1873. Every year Kappa Kappa Gamma offers for continued post-graduate work three fellowships which are available to any outstanding girl attend- ing a college where there is an active chapter. The publishing of sorority magazines originated with the Kappas, who printed the first publication of this type. Among their girls who aire active extra-curricu- larly. Kappas list Martha Martz, a member of Mortar Board, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, and Theta Alpha Phi, and a veteran actress who played the lead in the pro- duction, Winterset . This year Mary Jane Tharp was co-chairman of Coed Counseling and a member of Y.W.C.A. Cabinet. Socially-minded Sarah Gray nd Billie Cash are members of Pleiades, but the intel- ligentsia are in the majority, with Alpha Lambda Delta listing Mary Jane Tharp, Martha Martz, Bar- bara Simmerman, Betty Conley, Betty Beasley, Betty Sutherland, and Shirley Maloney. Kappa is represented on the Board of Trustees by Mrs. Sanford F. Teter and on the faculty by Mrs. Ellen Williams. Mrs. J. E. P. Holland and Mrs. A. L. McNeeley are prominent town alumnae, while Mrs. W. J. Moenkhaus, Mrs. E. S. Conklin, and Mrs. F. V. Harper, all Kappa alumnae, are wives of faculty members. KAPPA KAPPA CAMMA Billie Cash President Margaret Pyle Vice-President Ruth Adler Treasurer 274 WE ' LL BE AHEAD OF THE DELTA GAMMAS First Row Joan Bonsib ' 42, Ft. Wayne Ann Fuhrer ' 40, Mt. Vernon Daphne Palmer ' 42, Bloomington Barbara Healy ' 41, Aurora, 111. Phyllis Mauck ' 39, Owensville Sarah Gray ' 40, Bloomington Ann Lung ' 41, Kokomo Connie Hurst ' 42, Peru Shirley Maloney ' 41, Peru Fourth Row Betty Spillman ' 40, Rushville Betty Sutherland ' 40, Bloomington Jean Scholz ' 41, Evansville Molly Rhuel ' 41, Caldwell, N. J. Jean Skinner ' 40, Stockwell Helen Konold ' 42, South Bend Marion DeLanoy ' 41, Anderson Martha Martz ' 39, Bloomington Midge Edwards ' 42, Rye, N. Y. Second Row Rebecca Walley ' 40, Ft. Wayne Dorthea Urbahns ' 41, Cambridge City Jean Kernodle ' 39, Frankort Madeline Pugh ' 42, Indianapolis Helen Thieme ' 42, Ft. Wayne Liberta Stephenson ' 41, Marion Patricia Rapp ' 39, Santa Ana, Calif. Betty Conley ' 39, Brazil Ann Wilson ' 41, Rushville Mary Jane Tharp ' 40, Bloomington Fifth Row Betty Hanson ' 41, Bloomington Alice Boyd ' 40, Kokomo Martha Allman ' 41, Muncie Sybil Burleigh ' 42, Springfield, Ohio Mary Traylor ' 39, Evansville Mary Stuart Hayes ' 41, Bloomington Carolyn Cole ' 41, Peru Dorothy Scheidler ' 39, Greensburg Billie Cash ' 39, Vincennes Betty Beasley ' 39, Indianapolis Third Row HarHet Rutledge ' 42, lv; :Usriapolis Hekne Kuehn ' 41, So-;- ' - -jd Bette Eggemeyer ' 40 J Marie Stegemeier ' },?. .oJis Ruth Adler ' 40, Ft. Wayne Rebecca Morris ' 42, Nobiesv;!!;. Mary Jane Thompson ' 42, Indisnapolis Margery Stewart ' 42, Wabash Norma Ballard ' 41, French Lick Sixth Row Marjorie Scholz ' 41, Evansville Mary Sailors ' 42, South Bend Margaret Pyle ' 40, Rochester Mary Helen Schulz ' 41, Chicago, 111. Emily Gardner ' 40, Ft. Wayne Gloria Allen ' 40, Bloomington Peggy Burrell ' 42, Indianapolis Barbara Simmerman ' 40, Lapel Catherine Karges ' 42, Evansville 275 WE DEMAND AN INVESTIGATION OF POLITICS On March 4, 1852, the Philomathean Society came into being from the creative minds of three Wesleyan students, thus justifying their boast of being the second oldest sorority in the United States. Attaching the Greek name of Phi Mu, the society budded forth as a national sorority in 1904, just fifty years later. The Alpha Epsilon chapter of Phi Mu was in- troduced on the Indiana University campus in 1920, bringing Vi ith it the warmth and congeniality that has characterized the sorority since its beginning. Custom demands an annual Dixie Day dinner, heightened in color by the Southern Ball which fol- lows — two events which typify Phi Mu ' s traditional and deeply embedded hospitality. Phi Mu sponsors a health clinic in Georgia, bringing medical aid to unfortunate members of that state who cannot provide their own funds. An alumna of Phi Mu who now is a member of the instructional staff of Indiana University is Miss Clara Fedler of the Department of Physical Education for Women. Prominent in campus affairs are the following members: Mona Jane Wilson, member of Mortar Board, Pi Lambda Theta, and president of W.A.A.; Virgene Moore, member of Alpha Lambda Delta; Edna Shideler, member of W.A.A. board, and Louise Hurst, member of The Daily Student staff. PHI Ml] Mona Jane Wilson President Elizabeth Snook Vice-President Carol Shrum Secretary Patricia Grubaugh Treasurer 276 IN W. A. A. AND THE HIKING CLUB First Row Doris Lutz ' 41, Valparaiso Edna Shideler ' 41, Valparaiso Alice Kettner ' 40, Indianapolis Janet Dwyer ' 40, Oak Park, 111. Mary Woods ' 40, Poseyville Louise Hurst ' 40, Connersville Second Row Robia Watson ' 39, Indianapolis Virgene Moore ' 41, Indianapolis Beryl Ann Brownell ' 42, Valparaiso Betty Kay Mills ' 41, Noblesville Marcile Irle ' 42, Columbus Vesta Kettery ' 42, Indianapolis Fourth Row Joyce Smith ' 42, Valparaiso Jean Mahaffey ' 41, Goldsmith Mona Jane Wilson ' 39, Valparaiso Dorothy Nussmeier ' 42, Columbus Betty Lou Schneider ' 41, Elkhart Elizabeth Snook ' 39, Ft. Wayne Third Row Carol Shrum ' 39, Salem Betty M. Chatten ' 42, Milford Marian Harmon ' 41, South Bend Ruth Schroer ' 41, Dale Nancy May Benefiel ' 39, Indianapolis Jean Inskeep ' 40, Lafayette Fifth Row Dotty Loretta Lackey ' 39, Indianapolis Claire Bowden ' 41, Indianapolis Vera Jean Bash ' 42, Indianapolis Marjorie Ann Price ' 41, Columbus Jane Davis ' 42, Union City Patricia Grubaugh ' 39, Wolcottville 277 ONLY 196 SHOPPING DAYS TO FIND DATES Fifteen members of the Masonic Order founded Phi Omega Pi in 1910 at the University of Nebraska. The fraternity originally was called Achoth, a Hebrew word meaning sister . However, in 1922, the organization adopted the Greek name of Phi Omega Pi. The chapter on campus was started by the Eastern Star, but the Masonic requirements were dropped when the sorority became national. Traditionally, the wearers of the pentagon pin observe the annual Rose Dinner, the Brown County breakfast, and the Pentagon Prom. The fraternity has a national scholarship fund which is lent to a member worthy of financial aid. Another custom is the wearing of blue and white ribbons under the POP badge on founders ' day. Well-known alumnae include Mrs. Joanna Olm- sted, Y.W.C.A. Secretary; Mrs. Lloyd Setzer, past national officer of Psi Iota Xi; Mrs. Fannie Weather- wax, secretary to the Dean of Women, and Wilma Langdon, instructor in the Department of Govern- ment. The POP house claims two Alpha Lambda Delta members, Eunice Runner and Eleanor Taylor. In other fields are Eleanor Taylor, Bonnie Mae Bryant, and Eunice Runner on Y.W.C.A. Council. Active in coed counseling are Jane Bottorff and Miss Run- ner. PHI OMEUA PI Eunice Runner President Georgeanna Giozanini Vice-President Jane Bottorff Secretary Eleanor Taylor Treasiwer 278 FOR DAMES ' BALL... WE ' RE OUT FOR THAT CUP! First Row Ruth Dallie ' 42, Michigan City Dorothy Knoop ' 42, Gary Laura Ellen Johnson ' 42, Boswell Guinevere Hinshaw ' 41, Shirley Mildred Reeves ' 59, Bloomington Second Row Dorothy Bottorff ' 42, Indianapolis Ruth Johnson ' 40, Hobart Caroline Martin ' 41, Portland Eunice Runner ' 40, Oxford Doris Katterjohn ' 40, Huntingburg Fourth Row Alice Delp ' 39, South Bend Bonnie Mae Bryant ' 39, Bloomington Anna Jane Hacker ' 42, Bloomington Elta Frances Roll ' 39, Indianapolis Janet Fisher ' 39, North Judson Norma Jane Heninger ' 41, Galveston Third Row Pauline Lowther ' 40, G-;.ry Jane Bottorff ' 41, Indir.:)r.poIis Ellendell Gentry 42, No! lI: Liberty Georgeanna Giovanini ' 41, Ki ' Jsboro Dema Jane Fowler ' 41, Riyrolds 279 I MAY WE PRESENT PI PHI, STEEPED IN TRADITION, The Indiana chapter of Pi Beta Phi was in- stalled on the campus in 1893, twenty-six years after the founding of the sorority at Mon- mouth college. The distinction of being the first wearer of the arrow at Indiana belongs to Louise S. Gregg, who was sent by the national office to found the local chapter. Among prominent alumnae of the national sorority are Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, Mrs. Henry Wallace, Carrie Chapman Catt, and Susan B. Anthony, who was the first honorary member. Alumnae prominent on the campus include Mrs. C. E. Edmondson, Miss Helen Grant, and Mrs. Thomas Cookson. The history of the Pi Phi pin may be used as a record of the change in tastes and styles in the past fifty years; for the pin was worn first in the hair, later at the collar, then at the waist, and finally, as at present, over the heart. Each position of the pin has reflected the mode of the period in which it was worn. During this period the size of the pin has been changed five times, but the style has remained the same. Pi Phis holding offices on the campus are Edythe Thornton, president of Mortar Board; Peggy Sue Leininger, president of Pleiades; Martha Mull, president of Iota Sigma Pi, and Gretchen Hopman, treasurer of W.A.A. The Pi Phi manor shelters members of Alpha Lambda Delta, Pleiades, A.W.S. Council, Pi Lambda Theta, Eta Sigma Phi, and Mortar Board. Pub- lications also hold the interest of the wearers of the arrow, for they have members on the Ar- butus, Bored Walk, The Daily Student, and Folio staffs. — X-fti? PI BETA PHI Edythe Thornton President Jean Bielby Vice-President Carolyn Imel Secretary Frances Watkins Treasurer 280 PAINTED BRICKS, AND LEGACIES First Row Maryellen Rentschler ' 41, Center Point Margaret Louise Smith ' 41, Washington, D. C. Ruth Rogers ' 41, Bloomington Lois Frank ' 42, Ft. Wayne Marjorie Milligan ' 41, Attica Margaret Ann Torphy ' 42, Bloomingloti Vara Judd ' 42, Sturgis, Mich. Mary Jane Bachelder ' 42, Indianapolis Fourth Row Audrey Gibson ' 41, Bloomington Caroline Thurston ' 40, Slielbyville Chadwena Swayne ' 40, Indianapolis Jean Johnson ' 41, Hammond Betty Mae Smith ' 39, Indianapolis Phyllis Landis ' 40, Indianapolis Caroline Imel ' 40, South Bend Alice Zwilling ' 3 9, Vlncennes Mary Ellen Bibbee PG, Athens, Ohio Second Row Ruth Prickett ' 41, Bloomington Anna Kay Wells ' 41, Indianapolis Mary Eisner ' 42, Seymour Martha Jackson ' 42, Spencer Martha Mull ' 39, Shelbyville Mary Alice Craig ' 39, Indianapolis Madeline Scully ' 42, Gary Gretchen Hopman ' 39, Bloomington Ann Fuelber ' 41, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row Geraldine Getz ' 41, Indianapolis Elizabeth Thompson ' 40, Plymouth Esther Hale ' 40, Winslow Mary Elizabeth Crawford ' 3 9, Madison Arleth Carvin ' 39, South Bend Jean Bielby ' 39, Lawrenceburg Elizabeth Rice ' 39, Monticello Joan Anderson ' 40, Indianapolis Betty Scully ' 39, Gary Seventh Row Geraldine Smith ' 40, Ft. Wayne Edythe Cale Thornton ' 3 9, Ft. Wayne Jane Stevens ' 3 9, Hammond Ann Abb ett ' 40, Ft. Wayne Third Row Betcy iicCormick ' 41, Vi. c r.Tis Janet _HcmersIy ' 41, Wash; .-x:-. Jean c:ien ' 41, B ' oomir.gtor. Marian Ireland ' 41, Brownsto—.n Betty Jane Williams ' 41, East Chicago Bettye Stilwell ' 41, Evansville Frances Watkins ' 40, Indianapolis Betty Higbee ' 40, Indianapolis Willoughby Allen ' 42, Washinston Sixth Row Kathleen Behrmann ' 39, Indianapolis Roberta Haskell ' 40, Indianapolis Margaret Lou May ' 41, Bloomington Juliann Hoover ' 40, Wabash Florence Dickman ' 40, Evansville Elaine Dovey ' 40, Anderson Grace Ashby ' 40, Ladoga Royleen Clark ' 41, East Chicago Claudia Sue Leininger ' 39, Akron, Ohio Ann Hopman ' 40, Bloomington Rosemary Smith ' 3 9, Terre Haute Martha Sears ' 39, Elkhart Betty Burris ' 40, Vincennes Doris Henry ' 40, Anderson 281 ALL WE KNOW IS WHAT WE HEAR Sigma Kappa has an interesting history in that it was the first sorority to be founded in New Eng- land. Old records show that in the year 1874 Colby College had its first taste of coeducation. At this time five girls banded together to found Sigma Kappa. The sorority is international in scope, with chap- ters in Canada. The group aids in the maintenance of the Maine Seacoast Mission as a tribute to its five founders. On this campus, Tau chapter was founded in 1918 when the Independent Literary Society out- grew itself; the girls became Sigma Kappas, and the boys Lambda Chis. Today there are several Sigma Kappa members whose parents once were members of this Independent Literary Society. Sigma Kappas prominent in activities are Lois Greenwood, who is a member of Mortar Board, Alpha Kappa Delta, and Oceanides, and vice-presi- dent of W.A.A.; Mildred Bernhardt and Elizabeth Kriekhaus are in Pi Lambda Theta; Jeanne Schrader, Mildred Bernhardt, and Elizabeth Kriekhaus are in Omicron Delta; Mildred Bernhardt is corresponding secretary of the Pan-Hellenic Council; Harriet Krieg- baum, Doris Nicholson, Gretchen Hoppes, and Anne Clifford are in Chi Gamma; Elizabeth Kriekhaus is on the Y.W.C.A. Council, as is Jean Robinson; Charlotte Jeanes is contributing editor of the Folio, and Harriet Kriegbaum, Charlotte Jeanes, Jean Rob- inson, and Lois Greenwood are members of Alpha Lambda Delta. SIGW KAPPA Mildred Bernhardt President Jean Allen Vice-President Jeanne Schrader Secretary Elizabeth Kriekhaus Treasurer 282 -AND WE HAVEN ' T HEARD A THING First Row Treva Sayler ' 42, Indianapolis Margaret Ruth Kriekhaus ' 41, Evansville Mary Betty Moldthan ' 41, Indianapolis Gretchen Hoppes ' 42, Middletown Louise Foster ' 42, Bloomington Eleanor Pace ' 41, Indianapolis Jean Allen ' 40, Bloomington Second Row Roberta Poland ' 42, Indianapolis Margaret Sturgis ' 42, Indianapolis Lois Greenwood PG, Harlan Mildred Bernhardt ' 39, Evansville Edith Trautman ' 42, Michigan City Louise Wylie ' 39, Bloomington Marian Dingle ' 42, Chicago, 111. Fourth Row Helen Hines ' 40, Lafayette Betty Niederhaus ' 42, Haubstadt Betty Lou Piez ' 42, Indianapolis Jeanne Schrader ' 40, Jonesboro Doris Nicholson ' 42, Evansville Mildred Jackson ' 39, Kokomo Jean Robinson ' 39, Michigan City Third Row- Martha Jane Young =41, Marion Dorothy Scolss ' 39, Wzxcvc r Elizabeth Kriekhaus ' 5$, ■T.vansville Anne Douglas ' 40, Shelhyvllio Helen Somerville ' 41, Boiand Brook, Alice Applegate ' 42, Winarr.ac Harriet Kriegbaum ' 41, Warrsn Virginia Trickey ' 41, Indianapolis N.J. Fifth Row Charlotte Jeanes ' 41, Indianapolis Helen Hougland ' 40, Rockport Dorothy Isaacs ' 39, Gillespie, 111. Vivian Woods ' 42, Ft. Wayne Anne Clifford ' 42, Ft. Wayne Ellen Jane Martin ' 41, Rushville Margaretmonroe Yager ' 39, Owensville 283 I IS IT THE BREEZE THAT FILLS THE TREES One of the youngest of the social groups on the campus, Sigma Phi Upsilon, was organized in 1934. It was formed by a group of ten Jew- ish women who were aided to a great extent in this founding by Dr. Agnes E. Wells. The Sigma Phi Upsilon constitution closely parallels the Pan-Hellenic constitution and is written so as to permit affiliation with a national organiza- tion in what is hoped to be the near future. The group made a large step toward expansion by acquiring a chapter house last year. One of the interesting customs Sigma Phi Upsilon has acquired during its short existence is the open house and tea held in the fall of each year for all Jewish coeds on the campus. Sigma Phi Upsilon has two members of Alpha Lambda Delta, Betty Savesky and Betty Hol- land. The sorority is represented in Taps by Bernice Saperstein and Jeanne Sacks, and in Oceanides by Jeanette Pass, who also is a Daily Student reporter. SIGMA PHI UPSILOni Edna Levi President Norma Katz Vice-President Bernice Saperstein Secretary Betty Holland Treasurer 284 WITH VOICES FROM THE SAMMIE HOUSE First Row Irene Levy ' 41, East Chicago Rosalie Levenson ' 42, Indianapolis Betty Holland ' 41, Anderson Rosalin Zinn ' 42, Ft. Wayne Estelle Sider ' 41, Logansport Second Row Jeanette L. Fichman PG, Ft. Wayne Edith Chasman ' 41, Indianapolis Shirley Fine ' 42, New Albany Alberta Shalansky ' 42, Indianapolis Kaye Steinberg ' 40, Connersville Mildred Horowitz ' 42, New York City Fourth Row Norma Katz ' 40, Michigan City Evelyn Pollak ' 42, Gary Bernadine Dee ' 42, Indianapolis Jeanette Pass ' 41, Gary Ruth Feibleman ' 42, Terre Haute Shirley Barnett ' 41, Indianapolis Third Row Jeanne Sacks ' 42, IndianaooHs Florence Fliegael ' 42, LouisviJiT., Ky, Betty Savesky ' 42, Marion Bernice Saperstein ' 40, LaPcrt ' ; Leona Rabinowitz, ' 42, Indii-r.Epoiis Edna Levi ' 40, Indianapolis Lorraine Lewis ' 42, Gary 28J THEY ' RE THE GIRLS WHO WEAR THE Historically this sorority seems to have been of questionable origin, but only in the sense that its derivation was from an organization known as The Three Question Marks . The group was founded by nine coeds at Virginia State Teachers College on Oc- tober 15, 1898. At some time during the evolution of the soror- ity, the Greek name of Zeta Tau Alpha was adopted. Zeta Tau Alpha was one of the first sororities to de- velop in the South and for a number of years con- fined its expansion to this region. In an effort to be of greater service to the people of the state in which it was founded, the organization has provided a health center in Currin Valley, Virginia, for the re- habilitation of the mountain people. At its inception, in 1922, the Indiana University chapter was given the name of Alpha Xi. Annually on October 15 the group commemorates its national an- niversary with a formal Founder ' s Day Dinner at which some honored province official is in attend- ance. Each year at a formal dinner the undergradu- ates present the graduating Seniors with Zeta rings. Since appearing on this campus, Zeta Tau Alpha has become increasingly interested in campus ac- tivities. Extra-curricular rolls list Wilma Troutman, Elfreda Grande, and Betty Curts as members of Pleiades. Mary Catherine Moritz and Margaret Marley are active in Pi Lambda Theta. On the roster of Alpha Lambda Delta are Florence Gevers and Georgia Vorgang, and Barbara Gray is a member bf Beta Gamma Sigma. Among the prominent alumnae from this chap- ter are Mrs. Bernard Gavit, Mrs. Ford P. Hall, and Miss Elizabeth Lynch. ZETA Till ALPHA Wilma Troutman President Mary Catherine Moritz Vice-President Margaret Marley Secretary Nelda Johnson ___ Treasurer 286 FIYE-ARMED ST VRS OF DEAR OLD SIGMA NU First Row Florence Hruskovick ' 41, Whiting Betty Adney ' 39, Lebanon Jane Fear ' 41, Elwood Nelda Johnson ' 41, Indianapohs Mildred Fuhlberg ' 41, Gary Rachel Jones ' 41, Anderson Mary Kathryn Chappell ' 41, Petersbur Nelda Cohn ' 41, Martinsville Peggy Myers ' 41, Hongkong, China Second Row Martha Ciesar ' 39, Whiting Mary Emahiser ' 42, Akron Betty Lee ' 39, Bedford Mary Lee Coultas ' 40, Tell City Vera Bretz ' 41, Huntingburg Barbara Collier ' 40, Martinsville 5 Betty Lou Phillips ' 42, Indianapolis Margaret Manley ' 42, Brookville Thl: .! Row P: :cia Gevers ' 42, LaPorte Betty Lou Anderson ' 41, C ' olitic Barbara Gray ' 39, Lebsrcn Elizabeth Irwin ' 40, Elnora Catherine RicUiart ' 40, Lidianapolis Georgia Vorgang ' 41, Jeffersonville Violet Sexon ' 42, IndiEraooH- Marjorie McGaw ' 42, Indisnnpolis Fourth Row Mary Catherine Kirk ' 41, Martinsville Carolyn Buechele ' 41, Winslow Elfreda Grande ' 39, Indianapolis Margaret Miller ' 41, Elwood Mary Scales ' 40, Petersburg Mary Catherine Moritz ' 39, Ft. Wayne Wilma Troutman ' 39, Shoals Dorothy Graf ' 41, Richmond Fifth Row Aline Cutler ' 42, Hammond Anne Hooge ' 41, Mobile, Ala. Margaret Marley ' 39, Gosport Ethel Frisk ' 39, Hammond Florence Miller ' 40, Gibson City Rita Fernet ' 42, Ft. Wayne Betty Curts ' 39, Bloomington Mary Katherine Welmer ' 41, Columbus 287 GIRLS, AS I SEE IT, WE ' VE GOT TO DO IT THIS WAY ' 193 8-39 marks the third year in the existence of Forest Hall, women ' s dormitory. It was built in 1936 and occupied during that school year, but was not completed until last year. The women students housed in Forest live under a cooperative plan. The social calendar includes an annual Senior dinner, faculty tea, spring picnic, and a tea given each fall for the Freshmen. Winter and spring formals are included also in the year ' s activities. It is a custom of the residents to warm up football fans with open house and coffee after home games. A large number of dorm coeds shine in campus activities. Members of the intelligentsia include Jane Maxwell and Doris Taylor, Phi Betes. It seems that these girls go in for the teaching profession, for members of Pi Lambda Theta, women ' s educational honorary, include Madia Halstead, Mary Lou Beck, Margaret Thompson, Mary Frances Hercamp, Barbara - Congleton, Loleta Branson, Doris Taylor, and Lucille Winn. Representatives in Beta Gamma Sigma are Jane Judy and Margaret Thompson. Theta Alpha Phi claims Lois Noffke, and Eliza Bess Lucas is vice-president of Y.W.C.A. Forest Hall has three of those campus rari- ties — women medical students, namely Mary Alice Craig, Margaret Ann Bassett, and Lois Schoff. Mary Holsinger, Geneva Sene- feld, and Margaret Thompson repre- sent the dorm on the A.W.S. Coun- cil. Miss Senefeld has been promin- ent also this year in Varsity debate, besides being a member of W.A.A. and secretary of the I.S.A. FOREST UilLL Mary I. Taylor President Mary Jane Sherfey Vice-President Barbara Congleton Vice-President Margaret Postma Secretary Eloise Barnett Treasurer Dorothy Stevens Social Chairman 288 -SENEFELD HAS SPOKEN! First Row Jane Bosart ' 39, Indianapolis Catherine Keith ' 40, Shelbyville Loleta Branson ' 39, Rockville Kathryn Bowman ' 39, Marion Ernestine Benton ' 40, Elberfeld Barbara Congleton ' 40, Frankfort Marian Swan ' 42, Wabash Margaret Postma ' 40, IndianapoHs Fourth Row Eliza Bess Lucas ' 40, Ft. Wayne Helen J. Walker ' 39, Seymour Virginia Drum ' 40, Indianapolis Mary Jane Maxwell ' 39, Medaryville Mary Adams ' 40, Sandborn Rose Berndt ' 40, Indianapolis Anabel Coffin ' 39, Marion Dorothy Silverthorn ' 40, Rossville Second Row Martha Daniels ' 39, East Chicago May Gilkey ' 39, Crawfordsville Catherine Hancher ' 42, Elwood Virginia Hoffman ' 39, Brazil Jean Hopewell ' 40, Seymour Ann Jessup ' 40, Carmel Alice Strey ' 40, Wabash Lucille Winn ' 40, Greenfield Fifth Row Elizabeth Lanza ' 39, Newark, N. J. Beatrice Lomatch ' 39, Osgood Marian Biltz ' 39, Mishawaka Betty Stich ' 39, Indianapolis Joanna Phillippe ' 42, Indianapolis Frances Proud ' 39, South Bend Louise Crabb ' 40, Indianapolis Lucille Hall ' 39, Rensselaer in;:u Row E.-::y Bowman ' 3?, T ' lanon ? ' ;?ia Halstead ' 5 J,. Gary J ' ' ::j Morrow °42, I-- - ' -?napolis DjAJs McCammon ' 40, T..=i:ts Cs-c: Keesling ' 42, M i ' lriUe Edith Evans ' 42, Gary Marjorie Crow ' 40, Markls Doris Taylor ' 39, NoblsjTi ' le Sixth Row Martha Lewis ' 42, New Ca:- ' :!- Dorothy Stephan ' 40, South EcbcI Margaret Thompson ' 39, Kingn-.sn Charlotte Beer ' 40, Osgood Marjorie Stocks ' 39, Newburgh Mary Phegley ' 40, Fairbanks Betty Brown ' 39, Elwood Marjorie Rush ' 42, Indianapolis Seventh Row Dorothy Billings ' 42, Greensburg Martha Myers ' 40, Noblesville Mildred Kraft ' 39, Indianapolis Ruth Roberts ' 42, Ft. Branch Mary Kirkpatrick Esther Myers ' 42, Eugenia Smith ' 3 Muriel Collins ' 42 ' 40, South Bend Noblesville 9, Frankfort Lafayette 289 LOVERS OF BEAUTY AND NATURE AND STUFF. In Memorial Hall the business of studying, hav- ing teas and parties, and enforcing regulations has to be carried on through the cooperation of 200 girls. Much of the work is simplified by the two wings of the dormitory working separately. Thus each wing has its own pajama parties and radio parties; and West Memorial has an annual Easter breakfast, while East Memorial has a May Queen each year. The Hall as a whole gives faculty suppers each spring and date dinners each semester. The girls may visit informally with their parents and guests each Sunday afternoon while coffee is served and a short program is given in the living room. The social directors, Miss Helen Stewart and Miss Marguerite Keller, see that the regulations are ob- served and supervise the various social functions. These supervisors are aided by councils which are elected by each wing. Memorial Hall furnishes complete living facili- ties, and each wing is provided with a dining room. Many of the girls serve in the dining room to help toward their school expenses. The dormitory, which was built in 1925, is not large enough to accommo- date all applying women students now. The quad- rangle, which includes Forest Hall as well as Me- morial Hall, will be completed when the new dormi- tory is finished next fall. MEMORIAL HALL East Wing Nancy Gabbert President Bettie Rayle Vice-President Margaret Burns Secretary Kathryn Schneider Treasurer West Wing Winifred Wilson President Mary E. Sause Vice-President Mary L. Masters Secretary Charlotte L. Erickson --Treasurer 290 LOOK AT THEIR SUNKEN GARDEN First Row Mary Barr ' 42, Union City Mary Vehslage ' 3 9, Seymour Mary O ' Donnell ' 41, Indianapolis Mary Louise Pow ' 42, Bicknell Theresa Fisher ' 42, Evansville Mary L. Masters ' 41, IndianapoUs Virginia Conrad ' 41, LaPorte Winifred Cartwright ' 40, Charlestown Kathryn Schneider ' 41, Vincennes Fourth Row Betty Ault 3 9, South Bend Laura Rarick ' 42, Upland Betty Cull ' 41, North Vernon Joan Veit ' 42, Union City Rita Lemm ' 42, Lawrenceburg Marianne Hackney ' 41, Indianapolis Anna Mae Willis ' 42, Greenfield Mavaline Ferrier ' 41, Freemont June Rowland ' 42, South Bend Seventh Row Edna Rosenbaum ' 41, Wanatah Eileen Miller ' 41, New Castle Virginia Eshleman ' 40, Gary Louise Love ' 40, Indianapolis Marjorie Miller ' 42, Yorktown Helen Burton ' 42, Sandborn Jean Blocher ' 42, Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Marsena Garretson ' 41, Hammond Florence Lustgarten ' 42, Indianapolis Second Row Marian Kuhn ' 41, Gary Martha Dukes ' 42, Frankfort Wandaline Thomas ' 39, Veedersburg Joanna Archibald ' 42, New Castle Barbara J. Cotton ' 42, Indianapolis Harriet Powers ' 41, Greenfield Betty House ' 42, Atlanta Hilda Sobrino ' 42, Arecibo, Puerto Rico Ruth Waldbieser ' 3 9, Terre Haute Fifth Row Catherine Cherry ' 41, Shelbyville Frances Yearick ' 41, Argos Mario Sobrino ' 42, Arecibo, Puerto Rico Maxine Morrison ' 42, Ft. Wayne Anne Kuzmitz ' 42, Gary Eleanor Sands ' 41, Three Rivers, Mich. Marjorie Ludlow ' 40, Elmira, N. Y. Sylvia Kupersmith ' 42, New Rochelle, N. Marjorie McKinley ' 40, Vincennes Eighth Row Beverly Carraway ' 42, Noblesville Sarah Wills ' 42, Indianapolis Helen Woytovich ' 42, Gary Charlotte Erickson ' 39, South Bend Charlotte Perrine ' 40, Indianapolis Viola Bredeweg ' 42, Linton Betty Keyset ' 41, Plymouth Kathryn Campbell ' 40, Boonville Marjorie Katterhenry ' 42, Indianapolis Third Row Mary Isabelle Brandt M2, IJicknell Virginia Paxton ' 42, Craw. ' ordsville Ver?. Crook ' 42, South Bs:...i Cec ' .ia Bolson ' 40, Ft, Wayne Joan Huffman ' 41, Walton Betty Foster ' 42, Foster, Ky, Mar:.ha J. Brunton ' 42, Scottsi ' .:!-; Elsa Parrish ' 41, Morocco Caroline Thiel ' 39, Gary Sixth Row Charlotte Haseman ' 40, Linton Maurine Clayton ' 42, Linton Cletius Lampe ' 42, Rushville Leona Nowviskie ' 42, Crown Point Louise Hemmer ' 41, Ft. Branch Dorothea Lucas ' 40, Indianapolis Margaret Burns ' 41, Keystone Mildred Magel ' 41, South Bend Mary Sause ' 40, Aurora Ninth Row Betty Harsh ' 41, Bluffton Normabelle Helmen ' 40, South Bend Marcella Horn ' 40, Fairfield, Conn. Winifred Wilson ' 39, Bowling Green, Ky. Julia Spector ' 39, Indiana Harbor Betty Brammer ' 42, Indianapolis Gayle Gardner ' 42. Indianapolis Dorothy Egger ' 42, Indianapolis DeVore McQueen ' 42, Flat Rock INDIANA UNIVERSITY ' S MEMOKIA NION . . . University Post Office receives some business . . . Students catching up on world affairs in Men ' s Lounge . . . Bookstore takes some special orders . . . Time out for relaxation in the Co mens . . , Informal Union-A.W.S. dance in Alumni Hall ... To go to I the Commons, that is the question . . . Chatting on the steps which lead to the Fireside Bookshop . . 292 PUBLICATIONS HONORARIES 293 1939 ARBUTM BETTY LOU FRALING EDITOR-IN-CHIEF OFFICE HOURS With a greatly increased budget at its disposal, the staff of the 1939 Arbutus was able to make substantial improvements in its working organization. A photog- raphy staff and a dark room were placed at the dis- posal of the editorial staff in order to facilitate the handling of pictures. Assisting Betty Lou Fraling, editor-in-chief, were associate editors Audrey Smith, Al Harrison, Buck Mauck, and Virginia Heller. Sopho- mores who served on the editorial staff are John Kistler, John Vanatta, Bette Anne Tillman, Virginia Cowan, Mary Ruth Steinmetz, Relda Hoelocker, Royal E. Pur- cell, Mary Jane Straub, Jack Fairchild, Dick Stoner, Lucille Sutton, and Bob Overmeyer. Business Manager Al Higdon ' s efforts accounted for the great increases in the advertising and the cir- culation. This added income placed enough money at the disposal of the editor to allow the extensive use of color throughout the book, a padded cover, and other refinements heretofore beyond the reach of budget. Assisting Higdon on the business staff were Rembrandt Hiller, Bob Twyman, and Manuel Rothberg. Sopho- more members of the business staff included Herman Dieter, Royleen Clark, John Clerkin, Virginia Austin, Charleen Romines, Marvin Miller, Phil Green, Bill Fisher, Shirley Maloney, Bernard Kaufman, Bill Keck, and Jack Holmes. BUSINESS MANAGER 294 r ' a aB Editorial Staff at work — Mauck, Sutton, Steinmetz, Fraling, Fairchild, Smith, Hoelocker. t. r Keck, Clark, Austin, Business aides — Mil- Higdon, all of the Busi- ler, Twyman, Green, ness Staff. More editorial lights — Heller, Tillman, Pur- Business staff members, Harrison, Cowan, Kistler, cell, Vanatta, Straub, Dieter, Maloney, Hiller, Overmeyer, Stoner. editorial staffites. Clerkin, Romines. IIBliMPOLIS IRBLTLS STAFF ,Ull|iHI!!Jill|W jllilili CooperafMg v, illingly wifli the editor-in-chief and business manager of this publication, clic editorsiliilil business managers on the Indianapohs campus have de ' oted sinccie ef fortil ilward producing improved Medical and Dental divisions of the Arbutus. 1|l|eir thorough tactics proved to be of valuable assistance in the production of this school annual. CLEO C. SHULLENBERGERi Medical Editor JAlvIES G. SHANKLIN Medical Business Manager ■■ ' liuilllliil HEIMAN LIEBERMAN Dental Editor WILSON A. LIVINGSTON Dental Business Manager H -fcLAUGHLIN lotographer LOUIS HUTTON Ass!s ar.: BILL MORRIS Assistant As an experiment this year the Executive Board of the Arbutus established a photography division in con- nection with the regular staff. It was felt by the Board that such an addition would aid the staff in procuring pictures of a uniform quality and would reduce the cost of photography. Herb McLaughlin was appointed to act as official staff photographer, and he was permitted to select two assistants. Louis Hutton was placed in charge of de- veloping and printing, and Bill Morris was chosen to take care of the chemical supplies. A wide variety of practical newspaper photog- raphy gives McLaughlin an ample background of ex- perience. He contributed the use of his Speed-Graphic camera and his dark room equipment without charge. Membership in the News Photographers Association is evidence of McLaughlin ' s standing in the profession of photography. The Arbutus staff is indebted to the new photo- graphic division for the cooperation, good photographs, and efficient service it supplied during the production of the book. 297 One of working newspapermen ' s chief arguments against employing college-trained journalists is that they often are trained by men who never have entered a city room. So the appointment this fall of Prof. John E. Stempel as head of the Deartment of Journalism was welcomed in that he is a veteran of more than -i decade of newspaper work. Prof. Stempel, succeeding Prof. J. W. Piercy, who resigned the position after twenty-seven years of serv- ice to the University, came to the University from the Easton (Pa.) Express, where he had been news executive. Prof. Stempel was born in Bloomington, the son of Prof, and Mrs. Guido Stempel, instructors in comparative philology. He was graduated from the University in 1923. Then followed a period of work on Bloomington papers and as instructor in journalism and English and publicity director at Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. In 1927, he attended Columbia University, there to obtain the M.S. degree and act as news editor of the Columbia University Alumni News. After seven years as a copy editor on the New York Sun, he moved to the Easton Express and thence to the Uni- versity. This year he was faculty adviser of both The Indiana Daily Student and Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fra- ternity, of which he is a past national president. THE IIDIMA DAILY STOEilT PROFESSOR JOHN E. STEMPEL The Summer Student, published semi-weekly during the summer session, had Robert Franks as editor-in-chief. His assistants were Helen Weatherwax and John McLeod, night editors; Margaret Kerkling, day editor; Walter McElvain, sports editor, and Dan Lutes, campus editor. A skeleton reportorial staff made up of summer session students chosen by Prof. J. A. Wright, faculty adviser, was augmented in its work by Associated Press dispatches received over the teletype machine. Summer Student staff members brave the heat to put out one of their semi-weekly issues . . . Prof. J. A. Wright, faculty adviser of both the Summer and State Fair issues, pauses in his work . . . Looking at you in double-breasted suit is ToiTi Buck, editor-in-chief of the State Fair Student ... In the middle is Bob Franks, Sum- mer Student editor . . . This study in shirt- sleeves is the State Fair Student staff. The State Fair Student, only paper in the world to be published on a fairgrounds, was written and edited for five issues during the State Fair at Indianapolis, the copy being sent to Bloomington nightly to be printed. The staff consisted of Tom Buck, editor-in-chief, Mary Aid- red, Hazel Parsons, Paul Meacham, Andrew G. Olofson, Rob Williamson, Nathan Kaplan, and Frank Widner. Prof. J. A. Wright was faculty adviser. Every piece of news in the paper con- cerned the fair itself. In his editorial sanc- tum sits Sam Gordon, editor-in-chief the first half of the second sem- ester . . . Columnist, first semester editor-in- chief is Helen Weather- wax . . . Hard at work is Tom Buck, first chief the first semes- ter . . . Cigarette dang- ling, Prof. Stempel per- forms his faculty ad- viser duties. Giving journalism students practical experience in newspaper methods. The Indiana Daily Student this year maintained its position as one of the country ' s top campus dailies. More than eighty students made up the staff, ranging from lowly reporter to harried editor-in- chief. Editors-in-chief the first semester were Tom Buck and Helen Weatherwax, each taking the helm for half the semester. They were assisted by Andrew Olofson, Sam Gordon, and Rob Williamson, night editors; Paul Meac ' ham, Forrest Garderwine, Howard Sterrett, and Ann Johnson, day editors; David. B. Richardson, campus edi- tor; Bernard Rose, city dditor, and Frank Widner, sports editor. Heading the staff the second semester were Sam Gordon and Andrew Olofson. Other positions were held by Richardson, Nathan Kaplan, and Lowell Freeland, night editors; Sam Wells, campus edi- tor; Leo Melzer, city editor, and Bob Meyer, sports editor. Editorially the paper campaigned successfully for no smoking in the Fieldhouse during basketball games, printing of exact votes in elections, a student refugee movement, and freedom of expression regarding a demonstration against Communists prior to an election. Coverage of the banking conference held on the campus drew special praise, while the April Fool ' s day issue, with the streamer head- line Final Exams Are Abolished , was notable. Innovations this year were student and faculty guest columns, biographical sketches of prominent alumni, daily analyses of campus organizations, and press conferences with President Wells to aid the editorial board. Four integral parts of Daily Student opera- tion are the copy desk, with Nathan Kaplan supervising the night shift; the editorial page, with second semester editor-in-chief Andy Olofson at the copy desk and in the midst of his editorial board in the Sigma Delta Chi den; the press — grind- ing out copies at 2 a. m., and the back- shops, showing linotyp- er and proof reader. Dan Bretz, managing editor of the Bored Walk, has succeeded in obtaining variety in the various issues of Indiana ' s monthly humor pubhcation in spite of the handicap of lack of an official staff and office. The Folio staff at work in its office. Seated are Mrs. Cecilia Hendricks, Chauncey Sanders, Ralph Collins, Wil- liam Jansen, and Miss Josephine Piercy. Standing are Miss Mary E. Campbell, Jean Glenn, and Robert Martin. THE BO. J WM The Bored Walk, Indiana University ' s student humor publication, appears each month as the product o£ an all- student staff. Now in its eighth year, the magazine has grown rapidly and has become one of the leading college magazines. It boasts a larger circulation than any other campus publica- tion. The annual Freshman Princess contest is sponsored by the magazine to select the most beautiful Freshman coed. Five contestants are chosen by applausometer showings, and the final winner is selected by a committee of prominent judges. Features of the Bored Walk are photos, candid camera shots of campus personalities, gossip and humor, and exchanges with other well-known college periodicals. The Borings sec- tion is a source of campus gossip, fanmiliar to all students. The Bored Walk recently was named winner in an adver- tising contest, qualifying as the best magazine of its type as a medium for national advertising. An important place is filled by the magazine as the humor medium of Indiana ' s publication world. THE FOLIO In 193 5 the Folio was established as a private enterprise. However, in 1937, the need was felt for a larger magazine in which writers could express themselves creatively, and the English Department took over publication, making an enlarge- ment and several improvements. The source of material for the Folio is entirely from stu- dents of the University. Articles are received from the re- quired and the advanced English composition courses, from general submission, and from articles, written by I. U. students, which have been published elsewhere. The Illustrations in the magazine come from the Daubers ' Club and the Camera Club. The staff Is made up from two general divisions. The permanent staff Is composed of selected members. In this division falls the editorship, which is rotated, having two dif- ferent co-editors for each issue. Besides this selected group, there are a number of contributing editors who are chosen after turning in three acceptable articles. The purposes of the Folio are to provide a means of ex- pression for writers at Indiana and to supplement the regular texts for classes in English composition. 301 T IHE - JANUARY ■ 193 INDIANA ALUM HI . MAGAZIN iMDlAMA ATKJ-ETIO BEVfEW orficiAJ. psoca STAT li vs IOWi% vs IMIIIABiil ESHt Roger Hurst Editor of the Alumni Magazine Mary Aldred William Deane Robert Sturgeon Andrew Olofson Editor of the Freshman Handbook Editor of the Freshman Guide Editor of the Red Book Editor of the Athletic Review 302 RED BOOK A complete directory of Indiana University, the Red Book supplies in- formation concerning all students enrolled in the University, as well as faculty members and administrative officials. Under the sponsorship of the Y.M.C.A., the material is compiled and printed for the convenience of students. ATHLETIC REVIEW The Indiana Athletic Review makes its appearance at home football games in combination with the official program. With pictures of outstanding Indiana athletes, lineups of the games, and information on Indiana and opposing players and teams, it gives a composite picture of football at Indiana University. FRESHMAN HANDBOOK The Freshman Handbook, a guide of information for the coed members of the incoming Freshman class, is prepared alternately by the A.W.S. Council and the Y.W.C.A. Through the handbook Freshman coeds are given a preview of University life. FRESHMAN GUIDE The Freshman Guide is a manual of information for men students enter- ing the University for the first time. The University Y.M.C.A., in coopera- tion with the Indiana Union, compiles this guide to acquaint students with the academic work and the social and extra-curricular activities at the Uni- versity. ALUMNI MAGAZINE A magazine of Indiana University graduates and former students. The Indiana Alumni Magazine appears monthly to keep Indiana ' s alumni informed of the progress of their alma mater and the happenings in the lives of their former classmates and friends. 303 IF OUR FOREFATHERS COULD MAKE CONSTITUTIONS, First Row Tom Buck Al Higdon President Wells Dick Schannen Bob Sturgeon Second Row Dean Sembower Buck Mauck Andy Olofson Neal Gilliatt Dean Edmondson 304 WHY CAN ' T WE REVISE THEM? Albert L. Higdon President J. Thomas Buck Yice-Vresident Richard H. Schannen Secretary ummmm Highest student tribunal is the signal honor belonging to the Board of Aeons. The Board serves as the link between the student body and the Uni- versity administration. Membership on the Board is perhaps the highest honor a man student can gain. To be eligible, one must have demonstrated unusual leadership or high scholarship. The Board lists, twice a year, those Juniors and Seniors whom it deems best able to carry out its work. After the list has been approved by the Dean of Men, the President of the University then makes the final selections. Those chosen represent almost every phase of campus ac- tivities. The Board of Aeons is unique in that it is con- fined to Indiana University. It was founded in 1921 with the help of President-Emeritus William Lowe Bryan. It aids University officials by making recommendations to the Board of Trustees. If the trustees approve the recommendat.ons, the changes are put into effect. Because of the large number of questions which are brought up continually, the Board meets every Monday night. Unusual is the Board among campus organizations in that the proceedings of its meet- ings necessarily are secretive in nature. Every con- stitution on the campus is checked by the Board, and about the only time the student body ever knows there is a Board of Aeons — other than when its mem- bers are selected — is when it revises the Junior Prom constitution, a yearly event. 305 DOUGH HEAVY? AND HOW! First Row Mona Jane Wilson Jane Dillin Lois Greenwood Martha Jean Caster Martha Martz Second Row Rosemary Redans Jane Bosart Cynthia Demaree Edith English Edythe Thornton Third Row Ruth Smith Elizabeth Rice Mary Aldred Martha Mull 306 THEY HANDLE THE DAMES ' BALL RACKET Edythe Thornton President: Jane Dillin Vice-President: Rosemary Redens Recording Secretary Cynthia Demaree Corresponding Secretary Jane Bosart Treasurer Election into Mortar Board is considered one of the highest honors among extra-curricular activities for women. Dr. Agnes E. Wells, former Dean of Women, organized the local chapter in 1921. Miss Wells was one of those who framed the national constitution of Mortar Board when it was founded in 1918. Candidates for membership are chosen by the pre- vious year ' s organization and are capped at the Junior- Senior Luncheon on Foundation Day. It is the purpose of Mortar Board to develop a finer type of college woman; to promote a spirit of fellowship, service, and loyalty; to recognize and encourage a high degree of scholarship and leadership, and to provide for the cooperation between Senior honorary societies for women. Previous to this year Mortar Board has had a Fresh- man recognition list. Fiowever, this year the plan was changed to recognize outstanding Sophomores. The Dames ' Ball, the night when the women pay, is the out- standing social event sponsored by the organization. Other projects include the awarding of three tuition scholarships, the sale of Phillips Brooks calendars, and the tutoring list. Each year Mortar Board has an old clothes drive for needy women. During orientation week in the fall, mem- bers serve as student counselors. 307 HEREAFTER, UNION MASS MEETINGS WILL RE First Row W. A. Cogshall J. J. Robinson Ted Fleming Walt Smith J. E. Patrick Second Row Paul Feltus Clair Richardson Buck Mauck Jim Bob Ander- son Bob Sturgeon Bob Boughman Third Row Andy Olofson Mifflin Thomas Al Higdon Bob Lawrence John Visher G. F. Heighway HELD IN THE BOOKSTORE PHONE BOOTH Ted Fleming -President Bob Lawrence Vice-President Al Higdon Secretary J. E. Patrick Director BfliRD The Indiana Union was founded in 1909 by a group of students headed by John Whittenberger. Its avowed purpose was To promote the interests of the University and its students . Since the erection of the Union Building in 1932, the Union has been able to fulfill its purpose to a higher degree than ever before. Membership in the Union is automatic to every white male student on the campus. The governing unit of the Union is the Union Board. Fifteen members comprise the board, twelve of whom are students; two, faculty members; and one, the Director of the Union. Membership on the board is gained either through appointment by a selection committee or through an election held each spring. The Union serves the students in many ways, with the board members planning and supervising its many activities. Among the most valuable of these are the dances, guide service. Grid Graph, Open Forum, pep session, banquets, and billiard teams. In conjunction with A.W.S., the Union brings noted dance bands to the campus. 309 NOW, HERE ' S A WORTHY ORGANIZATION First Row Marth Jean Caster Jeanette Strayer Geneva Senefeld Betty Scully Second Row Mary Holsinger Bette Anne Till- man Anne Hopman Elizabeth Rice Third Row Ruth Smith Margaret Thomp- son Rosemary Treanor Mary Beth Hunt Frances Proud 310 .TEAS ARE SUCH FUN! Ruth Smith President Martha Jean Caster Vice-Presideni Rosemary Treanor Secretary Geneva Senefeld Treasurer Mary Beth Hunt Social Chairman OF yimi mmm One of the first things a Freshman woman hears about upon entering Indiana University is Coed Counsel- ing. To the bewildered novice of campus rules, regula- tions, and traditions comes the aid of a coed counselor, sponsored by the A.W.S., who helps her over the first rough paths of adjustment to college life. In 1920 A.W.S., the child of two similar organiza- tions, the Women ' s League and the Women ' s Self -Govern- ment Association, was established on the Indiana campus. Every woman student upon entrance in the University automatically becomes a member of the Association. Cor- responding to this organization is the Indiana Union for men. A.W.S. is a member of the National Inter-Colleg- iate Association of Women Students. A.W.S strives toward bringing about unity and mutual helpfulness among women and in promoting and maintaining the highest standards of University life. Organized and unorganized women who satisfy the quali- fications in scholarship and activity iTierit points are repre- sented equally on the Council. The entire Association has a required meeting once a year; the Council meets weekly. The Association combined efforts with the Indiana Union this year in sponsoring Friday night dances, Sat- urday afternoon mixers, and dance classes. Independently it operates the East Wing of the Student Building, throws a dinner for Freshman women, a Halloween party for all University women, a tea for upperclasswomen, a Christ- mas party for underprivileged children, and two scholar- ships for outstanding Junior coeds. A.W.S. also publishes a University Song Book, assists in the publication of the Freshman Handbook, and maintains a loan fund of $1,000. 311 CONGRATULATIONS! YOU DON ' T EVEN First Row Neal Gilliatt Tom Buck Bob Lawrence Mel Trutt J. E. Patrick Second Row Al Higdon Ted Fleming Andy Olofson Ernie Andres 312 PRETEND TO DO ANYTHING WORTHWHIL ORAlin HEAD OFFICERS First Semester Ted Fleming President Thomas Buck Vice-President Ernest Andres i Secretary Al Higdon Treasurer Second Semester Andrew Olofson President Robert Lawrence Vice -President Neal Gilliatt Secretary Mel Trutt Treasurer Conceived in the idea that every man should start a fraternity, Dragon ' s Head remains a unique organizati on among the ever-increasing files of the honoraries. This purely honorary honorary began its existence on the Indi- ana campus in 1933. Dedicated to the purpose of providing the incumbent B.M.O.C.s with two square meals a year, the organization skims only the cream of the extra-curricular crop for its initiates. The eligibles are Senior men only. As such, they must have attained the highest rankings of major Uni- versity activities. A man must be either captain of a major athletic team, editor or other executive officer of a major publication, or president of one of several organizations. Four men are initiated each spring at the induction banquet and four more at the banquet held in the fall of the year. Thus the group limits its membership to eight men, and twice a year the four officers are chosen from the ranks of new members. 313 HERE ' S ANOTHER SERVICE ORGANIZATION First Row Ted Fleming Evan Stiers Allan Linker Jack Mueller John Tuthill Dick Schannen Second Row Neal Gilliatt Tom Buck Jim Bob Ander- son Andy Olofson John Visher Bill Mayse Third Row Al Higdon Charles Baillie Willard Findling Paul Boxell Jim Pease Bob Weir Fourth Row Buck Mauck Dan Bretz Sam Mitchell Manuel Rothberg Bill Osburn 314 -JUST LIKE THE SERVICE IN THE COMMONS Neal Gilliatt Jim Bob Anderson Dick Schannen President -Vice-President Secretary BLIIE KEY T Through the efforts of Major Bert C. Riley, Blue Key, national honor fraternity, was founded at the Uni- versity of Florida in 1924. The fraternity was organized by a local group of students of the university for the pur- pose of welcoming members of the state legislature to their campus. At that time, a charter was drawn up and, in 1925, the organization became national in scope. A chapter was founded on the Indiana campus in 1929 to recognize student activities, character, and scholarship. As prerequisites for membership, to be eligible for consideration, a student must have accumulated at least 100 points by participation in extra-curricular activities, his scholarship must be not less the 1.3, and he must have the endorsement of the President of the University. Selections are made from Junior and Senior men. Blue Key honors the outstanding Freshmen each year by compiling a recognition list. The Blue Key Victory Ball is the highlight of the fraternity ' s social activities. Luncheons are held every other Thursday, at which time various campus problems are discussed. An annual affair of the organization is the burial of Old Jawn Purdue at the pep session preceding the Indiana-Purdue football game. 315 NO, YOU STUPID RHINIE-rM NOT First Row Laura Wilkins Ruth Ferris Marion Smith Elfreda Grande Wilma Troutman Peggy Sue Leininger Betty Lou Fraling Second Row Harriet Scott Mary Ann Kunkel Juha Ann Harting Rosemary Redens Sarah Gray Billie Cash Maude AHce Dodson Third Row Sally Camp Jean Bielby Mary Aldred Betty Gale Marilou Thomas Marian Sharp Betty Schrader Fourth Row Jeanette Prinz Mary Beth Hunt Frances Watkins Betty Curts Toddy Uebelhoer Evelyn Anderson 316 A PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS STEWARDESS! Peggy Sue Leininger Betty Schrader -Presideni -Vice-President Jeanette Printz Secretary Charlotte Uebelhoer Treasurer The blue and gold hat which signifies Pleiades is worn by those young women who have proved themselves out- standing in campus activities. Pleiades comes under the classification of a social honorary organization and is the feminine version of Sphinx Club. Membership is limited to twenty-five girls. Pledges are announced at the Pow- wow and Junior Prom. Besides being socially active, the Pleiades candidate must be an organized upperclasswoman with good scho- lastic standing. Pleiades meet twice monthly for luncheon or dinner business meetings. The former are held in the Pleiades room in the Student Building and the latter at the different sorority houses. As a group, Pleiades is as active as its members are individually. For the past two years it has sponsored the annual Bored Walk Beauty Contest and has arranged the program for the evening of the judging. Each fall Pleiades joins with Sphinx Club to usher at the Powwow. This year Pleiades assisted with the ticket sales for the University Horse Show. Pleiades sponsors a yearly dance in the Union Building. The group gives two scholarships each year to unorganized women students whom it considers most ac- tive on the campus. Its diversified projects keep Pleiades in close contact with student affairs and make it a worth- while and helpful campus organization. THEY FOLLOW THE RECIPE FOR GOOD FELLOWS- First Row Al Higdon Bill Johnson Jack Ury Gilmore Haynie Paul Scott Second Row Tom Buck Hub Cox Bob Lawrence Bill Heldt Walt Smith Third Row Tom Elrod Bill Anderson Marvin Huffman Rob Williamson John Janzaruk Fourth Row Jim Bob Ander- son Bob Haak Jim Romey Ernie Andres Bob Weir Ralph Huff 318 BEAT WELL BEFORE USING!! Robert Lawrence Bill Heldt President -Secretary -Treasurer SPHimCLIlB The Sphinx Club member can be identified easily by his Tattle-Tale Gray hat and by his suave manner. Oh, he ' s a jolly good fellow describes well one requirement for membership in the club. The other is having at least a Junior standing in school. Pledges to the organization are announced at the first Conference football and base- ball games. Each fall and spring a formal banquet is given honoring initiates. Also a closed informal dance is given in the spring. Although primarily an honorary fraternity, Sphinx Club justifies its existence by making itself useful about the campus and by fostering good will and fellowship among men students. Each year the club donates trophies to the fraternity and sorority sporting the best Homecom- ing decorations. A famed tradition of the organization is the Table Waiters ' Ball, sponsored to gain funds for scholarships given to the two most deserving Sophomore men. Also The Athletic Keviciv is sponsored in part by the club. This year Sphinx Club added to its prestige by in- augurating Dad ' s Day. The success of this event leads to a hope that Dad ' s Day will become an annual observ- ance. Coach Branch McCracken was honored before the Ball State basketball game by a banquet given by Sphinx Club members. MAMA, PIN A ROSE ON ME! HOLLY WILL DO First Row Margie Lou May Ruth Smith Cleda Beth Kighthnger Virginia Lee Fell my Mary Jane Tharp Second Row Edith English Martha Jean Caster Rosemary Redens Mary Mellinger Martha Martz Third Row Mona Jane Wilson Martha Mull Margaret Kerk- ling Barbara Butler Mary Jane Straub Fourth Row Eliza Bess Lucas Jean Glenn Cynthia Demaree Vera Mae Massey Jean Robinson 320 -ANYTHING TO MAKE US SOME MONEY OFFICERS Edith English -President Virginia Lee Fellmy Vice-President Mary Jane Straub Secretary Eliza Bess Lucas Treasurer The Young Women ' s Christian Association is an or- ganization in which girls of all classes may come together under the common bond of friendship, believing that re- ligion is not separate from life, but part of it. Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. grew into two separate organizations from the original Joint Christian Associa- tion, which was established in 1887. Perhaps Y. W. ' s out- standing attribute is that its membership is open to all women students who agree to practice the principles of the association. The Y.W.C.A. ' s purpose is to stimulate thought and to increase the realization of a full, rich, creative life through friendship and belief in the religious side of life. One of this organization ' s most beneficial efforts is helping new Freshman girls on the campus to become acquainted and to feel at home. During the first week of school, a table is reserved in the Commons where mem.bers may find companionship while they eat. Because of the wide variety of interests of its mem- bers, the Association is divided into many service and in- terest groups. Here each girl may find a place to serve her school through committees, or to enjoy herself in such groups as the Riding Group, the Music Group, and other similar subdivisions. Always standing ready to help are the advisers and cabinet members. Activities include get-acquainted parties for Fresh- men, Rose and Holly Days, and, in co-operation with the Y.M.C.A., the University Sing held in May. oK. 321 A MARK OF SOPHOMORE DISTINCTION- First Row Bill Lugar John Fox Ray Bolinger James Phillippe Hugh Clayton Marvin Miller Second Row Dick Loughery Dick Russell Irvin Wasserman John Vanatta George Rauch Floyd Tipmore Bob Denny Third Row Mickey Cooper Jim Fish Richard Guth Tom Gilliam Herman M. Dieter Dick Stoner Fourth Row Val Nolan Bernard Kaufman Bill Fisher Bob Menke Bob Straesser Dan Chiddister Charles Sonnenberg 322 IF SOPHOMORES CAN BE DE STINKED ESCEIT Robert Denny President Hugh Clayton Yice-l? resident Dan Chiddister Secretary William Lugar Treasurer Each spring Skull and Crescent, honorary Sophomore social fraternity, holds its pledging services for new mem- bers in the Wellhouse. This membership is composed of two outstanding Freshmen from each of the social fraterni- ties on the campus. After a tw o weeks ' period of pledge- ship, these Freshmen are initiated and become active mem- bers of the organization for the coming year. Following initiation each year, it has been a custom that the old members welcome the new ones at a date dinner. The Indiana chapter of Skull and Crescent received its charter in 1922. Since that time its members have been the propagators of the tradition that all Freshman men wear Rhinie pods . Last year they instigated the Senior Walk , which, since that time, is used more than ever by members of the Freshman class. This year the organiza- tion sponsored a Six-Bit Sweater Dance in Alumni Hall. 323 THE MOST APTLY NICK NAMED GROUP ON THE CAMPUS Mary Beth Hunt President Julia Ann Harting Secretary-Treasurer To maintain fraternity life and inter-fraternity re- lationship; to co-operate with college authorities; to be a forum for discussion of questions of interest to the col- lege and the fraternity world. Such is the formal purpose of Pan-Hellenic Council, coed equivalent of the Interfraternity Council, which makes itself useful each fall by setting up rush rules — des- pite the fact that they ' re invariably broken. Pan-Hell , as the group usually is referred to, seeks to sponsor and promote friendship among social organizations and their individual members. A dance helps in achieving this end. The organization awards a scholarship cup to the Greek-letter sorority which makes the highest scholastic average each semester. If any house is fortunate enough to retain the cup for three successive semesters, it takes per- manent possession of the trophy. The Council is made up of two active members of each sorority. First Row: Carol Shrum, Mona Jane Wilson, Phyllis Landis, Betty Curts, Wilma Troutman, Barbara Simmerman. Second Row: Marybelle Gall- meyer, Marjorie Nie, Mary Beth Hunt, Sara Ellen Reeves, Jean Rob- inson, Marian Johnson, Helen Ly- brook. Third Row: Pauline Lowther, Mildred Bernhardt, Mary Ann Kun- kel, Ruth Johnson, Edna Levi, Jane Piper, Billie Cash. Fourth Row: Edythe Thornton, Marion Smith, Peggy Sue Leininger, Marilou Thomas, Marian Sharp, Kaye Steinberg, Jean McFeely. Fifth Row: Julia Ann Harting, Virginia Heller, Marie Jeanette Turgi, Elizabeth Dawson, Jane Holt, Charlotte Brinkman. ACUTE INSOLVENCY, OR-WHO ' S HOLDING THE BAG e:; Jack Sanders ..President Gerald King Vice-President Dick Arnold Secretary Charles McAuliffe Treasurer In 1909 the fraternities decided that a policy of co- operation would be more beneficial than a policy of inter- fraternity conflict. Thus, the Interfraternity Council was born. It is composed of the presidents of the various houses or their chosen representatives, who meet in the Union Building on alternate Tuesday nights. The pur- pose of the Council is to further co-operation, but it does not include legislative control of fraternities. Matters discussed are rush week activities, intramural games, house problems, and exchange dinners. The Council ' s biggest social event this year was the First Annual Interfraternity Ball, played by Frankie Trumbauer. Another activity was the annual all-Greek banquet, which the Council sponsored. The largest change brought about by the Council this year was the licensing of salesmen. Each salesman wishing to display goods in any fraternity house first must pay a certain fee and receive an identification card from the Council. This, as well as many other rules passed by the Council, has been very helpful in aiding fraternity members to solve some of their problems. ™iJiTY mm i ■ o , First Row Herbert Sims Charles Baillie John Myers Jerry King Harry Einstandi Cole Keyes Second Row Willard Findling Clair Richardson Joe Jewett Herman Dieter Jack Sanders Tom Lie Van Third Row Dick Arnold Rem Hiller Jack Modisett Charles McAuliffe Carl Wieland 325 ANYWAY, SHE READS GOOD BOOKS-LOTS OF THEM! Mary Remus President Betty Jane Dickerson Vice-President Martha L. Bassett Treasurer A B-plus average and fifteen hours or more of college work are prerequisite to becoming a member of Alpha Lambda Delta. This organization is the scholastic honorary for Freshman women and was formed on this campus in 1931 after several of the faculty had voiced an opinion that an honorary corresponding to Phi Eta Sigma should be installed for the benefit of women students. The group emerged at the University of Illinois in 1924 and became a national organization in 1926 after several other col- leges in the Association of American Universities became mem- bers. The stated purpose of the group is to provide a stimulus for study and high scholarship and a reward for real interest in things intellectual. A Freshman may become a member of Alpha Lambda Delta if she has fulfilled the requirements at the end of her first semes- ter or if she brings her average up to a B-plus at the end of the year. Diverging from pure intellect, the members of Alpha Lambda Delta sponsor several dinners and picnics for members and partici- pate in a joint banquet with Phi Eta Sigma each spring after the two groups have initiated new members. First Row: Virgene Moore, Betty Holland, Irene May, Myrtle Live- say, Mary Jane Straub, Ruth Lind- Second Row: Marian Combs, Leota Bruner, Carol Reeves, Ruby Allen, Leonila Badger, Mary Remus, Harriett Kriegbaum. Third Row: Jacqueline Mobley, Elnora Curtis, Mary Kosanke, Frances Proud, Betty Jane Dicker- son, Mary Susan Stull. Fourth Row: Evelyn Jontz, Georgia Ricks, Margaret May, Betty Stich, Harriet Yenne, Effie Mitchell, Vivian Issacs. Fifth Row: Marjorie Nie, Janet Hamersly, Charlotte Jeanes, Cath- erine Cherry, Sophia Nicholas, Jean Weber. 326 A STORY OF SUCCESS, OR-HE MADE THE GRADE Jack Fairchild President Bernard Cinkoske V ce-President Don Farquharson Secretary John Jay Treasurer Phi Eta Sigma was founded at the University of IlH- nois in 1923 to promote a higher standard of learning and to encourage high scholastic attainment among Freshman men. The fraternity now embraces twenty-nine active chapters. The Indiana chapter was founded on the campus in 1930 and has risen steadily in prestige since then. The only requirement for membership in Phi Eta Sigma be- sides having Freshman standing is the maintenance of at least a 2.5 average for the first semester or for the year. A worthy project of the fraternity is the Counsellor ' s Corps, a group that aids Freshmen who have started off on the wrong foot scholastically. The Corps is a helping hand and not a tutoring organization. It aids the student by helping him to plan his study hours and methods. Phi Eta Sigma men prominent in this group are Charles Baillie, Rembrandt Hiller, Eddie Hutton, and Robert Taylor. Other activities include a smoker for Freshmen who have maintained an A average in high school. Each spring a banquet is held in conjunction with Alpha Lambda Delta, honoring the new members of both organizations. First Row. Bernard L. Cinkoske, John W. Kaellner, Manon Felts, Bill Fisher, Dick Stoner, Marvin Miller. Second Row: Donald Farquhar- son, George Mayrose, Evan Stiers, Montford Mead, Byron Aukerman, Dick Shores, Steve Slipher. Third Row: Richard Aikman, John Jay, Irvin Wasserman, Bernard Kaufman, Clay Ulen, Robert La- Follette. Fourth Row: Val Nolan, Philip Cooper, Jim Fish, Rem Hiller, Joe Ornelas, Robert Taylor, Jack Fair- child. Fifth Row: Dale Fink, Merrill Eaton, Paul Boxell, Bob Eifler, Bob Connor, Hugh Williams. 327 NEXT YEAR THEY ' LL TAKE IN THE GIRL RESERVES ALPHA John Jay President Richard Herd Vice-President Emerson Craig Secretary Lloyd Fitzpatrick Treasurer Restricted in membership to those who in some way have been affiHated with scouting, Alpha Phi Omega was instituted in 1929. Frank Horton and several other stu- dents at Lafayette College conceived the need of an organi- zation for continuing the Boy Scout movement through college days. Alpha Phi Omega is purely a service fraternity and in this sense is distinguished from other campus organiza- tions. The purpose of Alpha Phi Omega is To assemble college men in the fellowship of the Scout oath and law, to develop friendship, and to promote service to hu- manity. Each year Alpha Phi Omega serves as host to all the Scouts of the local council and to several other councils at a football game on Homecoming Day. Another event of the local chapter is the Eagle Scout Conference to which the chapter invites the Eagle Scouts of surrounding com- munities. Alpha Phi Omega awards a University scholar- ship to an outstanding and needy Boy Scout. From a selected group of candidates recommended by the award committee, the choice is made by chapter vote. The com- mittee consists of the chapter president, the senior faculty advisor, the Scout executive, and one other chapter of- ficer. The organization meets every Tuesday to discuss vocational subjects, campus problems, and civic questions. 328 First Row: William Shaker, Dick Renn, Al Lohse, Emerson Craig, Dick Simons, Roland Malott, DeLoss Blanchard, Lioyd Fitzpatrick. Second Row: Gerald Carrier, Robert Marlette, Thomas Lindahl, Harold Wesselman, John { ilson, Walt Smith, James D. Thompson, Ernest Paullus Third Row: Russell Whitmore, John Jay, Montford Mead, Robert McConnell, Estel Kelley, Robert Meade, Robert Sabin, Keith Cox. Fourth Row; Kemp Martin, Har- old Medow, Dick Herd, Ben Barr, James Huston, James Atkinson, Tom Miller, Maurice Grueter. Fifth Row: Charles Mackres, Robert Hetrick, Porter Murphy, John Visher, Robert Taylor, Dale Burnett, Bob Ferguson, Robert John- son. 1 YOUTH TAKES A HOLIDAY-AT A SUNDAY SCHOOL PIGNIG Robert Sturgeon J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick Richard Herd Vresident Vice-President Secretary A. Robert Lawrence Treasurer Organized in 1891, the Young Men ' s Christian Association aggressively has promoted Christian ideals on the campus for forty- nine years. To develop and perpetuate a wholesome university com- munity and the welfare of individual students, the Association unites men of Christian character in service. Open to any man on the campus, this organization furthers student leadership and plays a vital part in constructive activities. Inspiring and informing students on religious, social, economic, and political topics, the Association promotes the development of a well-rounded personality. Discussions during the current year were led by many authorities outstanding in their respective vocational fields. The social calendar sponsored by conjunction of the Y.W.C.A. with the Y.M.C.A. scheduled popular social events such as the Fresh- man Mixer, all-University parties, and the University Sing, in which social organizations vied for the best presentation of song. These activities were intended to provide closer fellowship of students out- side the classroom. Among other services, the Y.M.C.A. publishes the Red Book and the Freshman Guide. An employment service and room in- formation bureau are stationed in the Y headquarters in the Union Building. The Association co-operates in recreational and intramural athletics. In union with city churches, it provides special religious services for students. Delegates represent the local organization at important student conferences. Policies of the Association are directed by the Senior Cabinet, Sophomore Council, and Freshman Cabinet. In this way the organi- zation carries out its objective of discovering individual needs and interests, and of building programs to reach the maximum number of students. W-- ic W First Row Harold Medow Robert Wilson Estel Kelley W.ilt Smith Bill Mayse Second Row- Frank Sage Bob Lawrence John Broom Donald Tillotson John Chrisney Third Row Dick Fierd Rem Fiiller Bill Deane Malcolm Negley Lloyd Fitzpatrick Bob Sturgeon 329 WHAT ' S IN NAMES? WE CANT SAY THEM EITHER!! Indiana ' s East has been meeting its West on an equal basis ever since 1918, when the CosmopoHtan Club was organized and made a chapter of the National Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs. Bi-monthly the Cosmopolitan Club meets to further kindred spirit, tastes, and interests between American-born stu- dents and foreign-born students. The club stresses the individual — not the nationality to which he belongs. The central purpose of the club is to make foreign-born students feel welcome and to become gradually familiar with American social customs just as, in turn, the American-born stu- dents are made acquainted with the foreign trends. All this is made possible by guest lectures, open discussions of international affairs, talks given by individual club members, and varied forms of lighter entertainment. The club sponsors a fund of about $500 to be used by foreign-born students. Loans, as high as fifty dol- lars, can be procured each semester. All foreign-born students and foreign-born faculty mem- bers are welcomed to club membership without election, and other students and faculty members who sincerely are intersted can be elected to membership. The number of American-born students is limited to one-half the entire membership. With a clearer percep- tion of the foreign folkways, a better understanding and a warm human interest results. CLUB Front Row: Cora B. Hennel, Winifred Wilson, Antonio Orpi, Charles Mackres, Barbara Beall, Jacob Witmer, Mrs. Kath- erine Skorich, E. M. Linton. Second Row: Ray Mattingly, Antonio Trujillo, Jui Hoong-Zung, Pete Nicholas, Toong Oen Paung, Moises Rael, Angel P. Gracia, Dau Tshing Sien, Chao Jih- Chang. Third Row: Ellis Godsey, Newall Kel- logg, John Dancy, Charles Mints Chow, Cleda Beth Kightlinger, Use Horn, Mary K. Packwood, Lula Speer, Madge Varga. Fourth Row: Frank Banta, Stephen Reibly, John Lynch, Lymon Kinnett, Charles Stiles, Bernard Cinkoske. ' % 330 Front Row: Carl Moenkhaus, Jose Gonzaley, Er Selcuk Muzaffer, Ting Su, Mary Elizabeth Hancock, Carmen Fa- bian. Second Row: Raif Erishkin, Izzettin Turanli, Eric Simmons, John Marlowe. mmm t % Left to Right: Frank Yoder, ' William Pfingst, David Macklin, Lawson Ware, Harry Rumrill, Bar- bara Gale, Noble Shepherd, Frances Billman, John Harmon, Francis Bevier, William Hardwick, Lois Greenwood, Dean Pearch, Joe Crouch, Marshall Hassenmiller, Bernard Cinkoske, Richard Robinson, Wil- liam Robinson. IIDIiMIA MIVEirSlTY Lim Marshall Hassenmiller President Richard Robinson Vice-President Dean Pearch Secretary William Robinson Trcnsiircr In September of 1937 several students and fac- ulty members of the University met with Jack Har- rington, manager of the Bloomington Airport, to discuss the possibilities of organizing a University flying club. Plans were made for drawing up the constitution and by-laws of the organization, and these were adopted at the following meeting. Later in the year the group received a charter from the National Intercollegiate Flying Club. The club has succeeded in securing reduced rates for flying instructions at the Bloomington Air- port. Many of its members have taken advantage of this opportunity, and several others have taken lessons elsewhere. The organization has been active in attempting to get an R. O. T. C. flying unit es- tablished at the University. This year students of the University were offered an opportunity to take the Army physical examination for air pilots. OH, HOW I WISH I HAD THE WINGS OF AN ANGEL 331 L WHAT PRICE GLORY? NO, GLORY First Row Ermal Geiss Bill Mayse Ray Wingert Darrell Burnett Jerry King Second Row John Fusek Edward Hess Jack Dewberry Nelson Jean Raymond Hos- singer Third Row Harold Miener Herbert Gaw- throp Bruce Corwin Clair Richardson James Raber Fourth Row Gene Smith Charles Littell Dan Int-Hout Homer Hire Robert Hoke Lloyd Fitzpatrick 332 IS NOT ONE OF THE COED SPONSORS Homer Hire Captain John Fusek First Lieutenant Dan Int-Hout Second Lieutenant Charles Littell First Sergeant S0AB6A BLADE Cooperation with the War Department in the im- provement of the R.O.T.C. is the aim of Scabbard and Blade, national honorary military fraternity, which was founded at the University of Wisconsin in 1904 by senior officers in the cadet corps. Company F, of Indi- ana, second regiment of the fraternity, had a unique in- auguration in that it was installed at the first national convention of Scabbard and Blade after the World War. Membership in the group is based upon merit, pro- ficiency in military science, academic record, character, and general fitness. The local chapter conducts an elec- tion annually to choose five coed sponsors for the year. Although this election is devoid of the usual high-pres- suring, the boys have quite a time every spring picking the right quintet of beauties. The organization seeks to develop in its members the qualities of efficient officers, to unite more closely the military departments of various universities, and to spread information concerning the military service of the United States. Among the activities of Scabbard and Blade are co-sponsorship of the Band Benefit Ball and sponsorship of the Military Ball, at which the coed sponsors are an- nounced. Company F is honored on Scabbard and Blade Day with a regimental review. A yearly Corps Smoker honors Juniors and Seniors enrolled in military. 333 THE CLOSEST RIVAL OF THE KING ' S GUARD First Row Alfred P. Teegarden Bernard Cinkoske Howard Wilcox Leo Arvin Bailey Guard Julius Klaus Dale Burnett Bob Overmeyer Clarence Long Second Row Frank Monroe Dean Call Carl Winnebald Ralph Jones William Koves Harry Zimmerman John Reinhard James Dye Jack Fairchild Third Row Kemp Martin Ford P. Tracey Howard Kessler Joseph Maxwell Robert Eifler David Young Raymond Hossinger Cecil Ferguson Bob Curl Fourth Row Joe Keller Eugene Brown Robert Wilson Robert Dobbins Ben Phipps Elbert Graves Robert Straesser Claude Spilman John R, Frazier James D. Atkinson Fifth Row Charles Myers David Hyndman Richard Lewis Edward Hildebrand John Hatfield Gordon Stinson J. D. Swickard Robert Weaver Joseph Herd Sixth Row Robert Buck De Wayne Royalty Hugh Funk Donald Barker Paul C. Keislcr Herbert Gawthrop Raymond Dunn Charles Rhetts Keith Cox Charles Littell Seventh Row Roger Eisinger Harry Littell Robert Foellinger John Lycas Charles Legeman Homer Hire William Keck Harry Vick Bud Mendez Eighth Row George McCain Thomas Gilliam Ben Barr Harry Voyles Robert Rosa Bud Acker Clifford Hannum William Helf rich Allan Freed J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick 334 -AND IT ISN ' T COMPULSORY Charles Littell Captain Clifford Hannum First Lieutenant Herbert Gawthrop Second Lieutenant Leo Arvin Second Lieutenant Alfred Teegarden First Sergeant In 1894 Lieut. John J. Pershing organized an army unit as a competitive drill team at the Uni- versity of Nebraska. Upon Pershing ' s promotion in the Army the members voted to name the unit Persh- ing Rifles in honor of its founder. Since that time the organization has grown until now there are seven regiments in the United States, with their na- tional headquarters located at the University of Ne- braska. About eight year ago a Pershing Rifle unit was organized on the Indiana University campus and since then has grown to a body of ninety-five members. Each year the unit competes in a drill meet with the other companies of its regiment. This year the Indiana organization was host to this meet on April 28-29. For the first time in its history, Pershing Rifles marched as a separate company of the regi- ment in the weekly military reviews. Also for the first time in its history, it added a coed sponsor, Jane Bosart. V-. 335 CAMniS BMDS «(4 Maestro Robblns and band — night attraction at local establishment — fea- tures sax swing — good trumpet work — Arlene Owens supplies the vocals. Hal Lieber — plays daily in the Com- mons — features the arrangements by Warpy Waterfall — Maestro does the male vocals — Marjorie Warren adds the feminine interest — Warpy ' s hot solo work appears in nearly every number. Paul Devine ' s band — nightly attrac- tion at the Jordan — Represents combi- nation of two bands, Devine and Walts • — Recently lost feature vocalist Redding to Red Nichols — Plays request numbers. 336 Sigma Pi ' s try out a new ' song . Phi Psi house — Hanson ofticiiti . . Contributors to the prosper i i! and Konold — how odd! to wear on one ' s head Late .ir .... Just a K ; • . . . A.O.Pi ' s vav. local soft drill!. I Fausch, a shiniii; avals to the Arbutu ' : Mueller mimics D. ?).ic()n Richardson puts some y. ' lJBBgtRt.Tii.i-; -..-; ma . R:rtrc h ! BaiCXUiAit ' fl UB Indiana University has been called one of the most successful institutions in athletics of any in the Big Ten, and its teams this year have done anything but dispel this belief. Although the year was disastrous as far as football victories go, the cross-country team won its tenth Big Ten title besides taking the State and National Collegiate championships. The wrestling team won the Conference crown for the sixth time in eight years. The 193 8 baseball team tied for Big Ten honors. The track squad continued to collect trophies and medals and hang up victories and records. The swimming team won six of its seven dual meets. Golf and tennis remained the only real weak spots in the sports setup. A little-known but immensely vital factor in the smooth running of Crim- son athletics is the Athletic Board of Control. Chairman of the Board is Prof. William J. Moenkhaus of the De- partment of Physiology. This group carries out the original desire of the Big Ten in taking control of college sports out of the inexperienced hands of stu- dents and alumni and placing them in charge of interested, sager faculty mem- bers with enough alumni on the body to gain an outside viewpoint. The Board has a hand in such matters as setting the athletic yearbook price, drawing up coaches ' contracts, and scheduling teams for the various sports. Responsible in no small measure for the University ' s sports prowess is the efficient athletic department, under Z. G. Clevenger, Director of Athletics. Lodged on the second floor of the Men ' s Gymnasium this department contains offices of coaches and records of all teams. As assistant to Mr. Clevenger, George Gardner handles sports publicity besides his manifold other duties of ordering equipment and arranging trips. 340 Coaching Staff: Billy Thorn, Ralph Graham, Alvin Bo McMillin, Swede Anderson. Bo McMillin The Crimson coaching staff, headed by ail- American Bo McMillin, is one of the most capable in the sport today. Each phase of football is repre- sented on this staff by its own particular expert. Ralph Graham and Swede Anderson assist with the team during the whole year, and Billy Thom and Coach Hayes aid during the season. Outstanding Seniors of preceding years help the regular staff with the routine work of practice. 342 FOOTBALL MAKitGERS Allen Harrison, Junior; Willard Findling, Junior; Clarence Long, Senior; James K. Adams, Senior; Gilbert ShuU, Junior; Morris Ritchie, Junior. 343 ' - ' ■ ? Va-Ji ' ' , ■ OHIO STATE— 6 INDIANA— Indiana dominated the first three periods of the game so completely that the Buck- eye fans laughed at their own team. Dur- ing the first half, Ohio State made only nine yards through the Indiana line, while the Indiana backs ripped through for first downs almost at will. The third period saw the host team hold the ball for only four plays — and Indiana made six first downs in this time. The Bucks came to life in the last quarter and made a sus- tained march down the field for a touch- down. Indiana lost because of inability to play consistently. A series of brilliant passes and runs always ended in fumbles or penalties as soon as the team neared the Buck goal line. Captain Paul Graham Captain-elect Jim Logan Indiana defense breaks up an enemy pass Fourth down, seventeen to go. Bob Haak Joe Nicholson ILLINOIS— 12 INDIANA— 2 A strong Ilhnois hne forced the Hoosiers to take to the air in order to gain ground. Hursh and Nicholson threw fourteen passes out of thirty-seven attempts, for a gain of 188 ya rds. Illinois passed successfully twice for a gain of 19 yards. The Indiana passing attack crossed the Illini goal line once, only to have an official call the pla) back. Illinois made a well-earned touchdown by march- ing straight through the Hoosier line from mid-field. An intercepted pass accounted for the second Illini score in the closing seconds of the game. Neither conversion at- tempt was successful. The hosts made nine first downs, the Hoosiers fourteen. 347 Front Row: Bill Smith, John Maycox, Page Benson, Clee Maddox, Lawrence Usher, Cobb Lewis, Edward Herbert, Don Wer- dine, Eddie Rucinski, Bob Williams, Harold Zimmer. :5econd Row: Mike Bucchiianeri, Emil Uremovich, John Janzaruk, Bill Stevens, Swede Clasen, Bob Haak, Paul Graham, Frank Petrick, Russell Sloss, John Wida- man, Ray Dumke, Bill Bringle, Joe Tofil. Third Row: Charles Steele, Russell Hig- ginbotham, Harold Hursh, Mike Naddeo, Jim Ellenwood, Jim Logan, Bob Stevenson, Ralph Huff, Vincent Oliver, Tony Campag- noli, Graham Martin, Frank Smith, Archie Harris. Fourth Row: Dwight Gahm, Andrew Liscinsky, Dick Rehm, Steve Nagy, Joe Nicholson, Walter Jurkiewicz, Tim Bringle, Ai Sabol, Floyd Tipmore, Joe Walters, Rob- ert Zinsmeister, Frank Mikan. INDIANA— NEBRASKA— EDDIE RUCINSKI CLEE MADDOX Indiana and Nebraska tried for their first victories at Lincoln, and both of them failed — for the game ended in a scoreless tie after sixty minutes of nothing in particular. The game was dull from start to finish and was marked with penalties and fumbles. There were only two passes completed all afternoon and only nine first downs. Each team connected for a single pass and Nebraska gained a 5-4 margin in downs. Bo summarized the game neatly by calling it A typical Sophomore ball game. 348 KANSAS STATE— 13 INDIANA— 6 Eighteen thousand Indiana fans gath- ered for Homecoming, hoping to see In- diana break into the win column at the expense of Kansas State. Three members of the athletic staff particularly wanted to win this game, for each had been af- filiated with Kansas State in past years. Bo McMillin coached there; Clevenger was on the athletic board; Ralph Graham was an all-American back from there. Indiana finally scored the first touch- down of the season in this game, but it wasn ' t enough to beat the strong Kansas State running attack. The first touch- down for the enemy came on an end zone pass to an unguarded player. Again, in the third quarter, the Kansans crossed the Indiana goal line. This time they scored after grabbing a punt, which went straight up and rolled back to the Indiana five- yard line. Blanke took the ball around right end for a touchdown on the next play. The long-awaited Crimson touchdown came on a pass in the last period, Nichol- son to Graham, over the center from the fourteen-yard line. v pi S gg A ' liks Bucch ' aneri Bill Smith St;ve Niis ' v Ralph Huff AH LOVES FOOTBALL WISCONSIN 6 INDIANA On October 29 at Madison a tough, grimly determined Indiana football team held the powerful Wisconsin Badgers to a 6-0 victory before 30,000 homecoming spectators. McMillin ' s pore little boys flashed an amazing passing attack in the closing seconds of the fourth quarter, but they were unable to break the jinx of bad luck which followed them through the earlier part of the schedule. The eleventh hour assault, featured by Tim Bringle ' s passing to Floyd Tipmore and Vincent Oliver, reached the nine-yard line before the timer ' s gun halted the Fightin ' Hoosiers . Full Back Howard Weiss of the Badgers dominated their twelve play, seventy-two yard, touchdown march in the second quarter. With fourth down and goal to go Vince Gavre, Wisconsin quarterback, swept around right end to score the only points of the game. Frank Smith Emil Uremovich Robert L. Stevenson 350 Eddie Herbert John Widaman Tim Bringle Vincent Oliver BOSTON COLLEGE— 14 INDIANA— Boston College played host to In- diana for the next game. After i quiet first quarter, the Eagles, led by Charlie O ' Rourke, pushed over touchdowns in the second and last periods. The conversion attempts were successful each time. This vic- tory for the Eagles left them one of the undefeated major teams in the country. Indiana, as usual, kept the enemy backed up to its goal line most of the time, but was unable to make the last few yards. The Crimson attack advanced within the Boston five-yard line five different times, but each time some- thing failed to click, and the oppor- tunity was wasted. Indiana made twelve first downs to Boston ' s eight. Russell Higginbotham Harold Hursh INDIANA— 7 IOWA— 3 The Chicago Tribune headed its game summary At Last , for it revealed that Indiana finally had beaten the football jinx by defeating Iowa. In the first quar- ter, Indiana dominated the game com- pletely but ineffectively. Two driving at- tacks folded up on the Iowa one-yard line, and the Dad ' s Day crowd settled back to watch what it thought was to be another moral victory. In the last period Floyd Dean kicked a field goal for Iowa from the Indiana twenty-eight-yard line. After the Iowa score, Indiana launched a desperate scoring drive, with Hursh passing and Maddox running. Herbert took the ball from cen- ter, flipped it over to Hursh, and ran around left end. A return pass connected on the eight-yard line and Herbert fought his way over the goal for a touchdown. Herbert kicked the extra point, with Hursh holding. Indiana outplayed the heavier Iowa team all the way, making sixteen first downs against five for Iowa. Ray Dumke Frank Petrick Al Sabol Floyd Tipmore -...dl ' ■• ' . ' E :S3!i§ - -- f . ' Around right end for five yards PURDUE— 13 INDIANA— 6 54 he Indian.x-Purdue game opened with all its tradi- tional color. The Crimson team kicked off to its host, sending the ball down to the two-yard line. Brown of Purdue caught the ball, juggled it for a moment, and started running. He fought his way to the middle of the field and then coasted on over the goal line, just seventeen seconds after play had started. Brown rounded out the first minute of play by kicking the extra point. Purdue scored again in the third quarter, this time on an end-run by Brock. The Indiana attack started clicking in the last period, culminating its drive with an end sweep by Dumke. Tofil ' s kick went wide, leaving the count 13-6 Purdue. The last play of the game netted Indiana 57 yards on a pass from Bringle to Clasen, but a lone Purdue man stopped the threat just as the gun ended the game. Jim Ellenwood Russell SIoss John Janzaruk N Nebraslio 11 5! . f WW it I Perfect Par- son Pease delivers the benediction at Jawn Purdue ' s grave . . . Light, buddy? . . .The chimes, as seen before the naughty Boilermakers filched ' em . . . The omnipresent yell leaders look happy about the whole thing . . To the scream of a siren, the pep session swings down Third street on its way to Union Building . . . Big Chiefs grunt their approval at Powwow . . . 2,500 Hoos- ier rooters clutter up Union entrance to hear more about po ' lil ' boys. it . . ' ;l il II II li II II s not cold about is Delta Gamma e-winning Homecom- g decoration . . . Queen Heller on ice . . . Cold hands. Warm heart, eli? . . . The Kappa Delta Rlio zoo won first place in fraternity decoration l ; . . A. O. Pi ' s Bo White and his po ' lip dwarfs . . Grasshop- ilers destroy Chi Omega rhu- iljiarb crop . . . Deegee Peg Cros- llli receives Homecoming dec- ii tfation troph)- at Band fit Ball . . . Satur- night in fro, Sigma Nu 1 3 5HliCK$ toff TM ARHT ms m m BACK mm] ■ ' ,;  f : :£ «i ' ' k BASKETBALL MANAGERS Front Row: John Clerkin, Sophomore; Lawrence Lazzelle, Sophomore; Evan Stiers, Junior; John Myers, Junior. Second Row: (Standing) Sid Hiestand, Sophomore; John Freed, Sophomore; Rich- ard Schannen, Senior; Orville Nichols, Sophomore. r csrrrri! COACH BRANCH McCRACKEN Hoosier basketball has been ac- cepted as just about the best in the country, so no more ideal man could be picked to coach the State ' s No. 1 sport than Branch McCrack- en, who seems to have been born with a basketball in one hand and a hoop in the other, a Hoosier through and through. Graduating from Monrovia High School in 1925, he entered Indiana Univer- sity, where his hardwood feats have become legend. For three years he led the team in scoring and was chosen All-American in 1930. He hung up a new Conference scoring record of 147 points. Upon grad- uation McCracken went to coach basketball at Ball State. During his seven years there, his teams an- nually were among the most feared of the State ' s secondary colleges. A year ago this last season his Ball State quintet upset a highly-touted Indiana team. So when Coach Everett Dean packed up his bags and left to coach at Stanford, there was little doubt as to his successor. And McCracken in his first year here proved his penchant for turning out crack quintets. VARSITY SQUAD First Row: Ed Mansfield, Ralph Dorsey, Bob Dro, Ernie Andres, Paul Armstrong, Bill Johnson, Herman Schafer, Joseph Let- telleir, Richard McGaughey. Second Row: Dick Schannen, Marvin Huffman, Tom Mottcr, Clarence Ooley, Bill Menke, Jack Stevenson, James Gridley, Coach McCracken, James Clifton, Chet Francis, Dale Gentil, Robert Hansen, Bob Menke, Bill Tipmore, Trainer Jesse Fergu- FRESHMAN SQUAD Front Row: Bill Frey, Perry Shoemaker, John Torphy, Don Huckleberry, Lloyd Whipple, Kenneth Smith, Harry Odell. Second Row: Coach Ralph Graham, Bob Brough, Charles Kasper, Dick Dutton, An- drew Zimmer, Everett Hoffman, Bill Tor- phy, Dick Pettyjohn, Pete Broadbent, Coaches Anderson and Hobson. Third Row: Edward Schmidt, Herschel Sartor, Con Sterling, Ralph Bruner, John Boyd, Clifford Weithhoff, Norman Hasler. HARDWOOD SEASON Several hours after a testimonial dinner for their coach the high-geared Hoosiers opened the season with a smashing victory over Ball State, 54-28, with Bill Menke, Capt. Andres, and Curly Armstrong lead- ing the scoring. Miami, Wabash, and Connecticut State fell before Indiana in short order to close the pre-holiday season. In defeating Connecticut State, 71-38, the Crimson hit 44 per cent of their basket at- tempts. Finishing out the pre-Conference play, the Hoosiers defeated Butler, Western Reserve, and Michigan State in hard fought battles. Only by furious last-half rallies was Indiana able to keep its victory string intact. Indiana ' s quest for the Conference Champion- ship had a slow beginning, for Ohio State ' s veteran five piled up a 30-15 margin at half time and re- pulsed the Hoosier ' s last-half rally to break the Crim- son ' s victory string. The Hoosiers returned to the victory column the following Monday by a nerve- wracking 29-2 8 win over the Illini at Urbana. The 43-19 victory over Wisconsin proved to be a warm- up tilt for the Purdue game. Piggy Lambert brought a smooth bunch of ball handlers down from Purdue who were very much in the ball game until Captain Anderson went out on fouls with seven minutes to go. Andres led Indiana with fifteen points. After finals, the Buckeyes fell, 46-34, before the fast break of the revenge-seeking Hoosiers; Iowa was forced aside by a Crimson rally in the last four minutes, and Chicago and Northwestern were taken in stride. With Andres and Dro in the hospital, Indi- ana ' s strong reserves downed Iowa in the return game at Bloomington. The following Saturday the Crim- son, paced by Bill Menke ' s 28 points, obliterated Min- nesota ' s title hopes, 49-37. With only one victory in the last two games needed to tie for the championship, Indiana dropped both battles to two inspired in and out teams. Pur- due caught Indiana on an off night and administered a 45-34 shellacking, and Michigan, hotter than Tim- buktu, won the last to burst Indiana ' s Conference championship bubble. Starting with only three veterans. Coach Mc- Cracken relied on Sophomores and welded together a team that -won seventeen games and lost three — a team acclaimed by many to be the nation ' s best. In- diana averaged 45 points per game to their oppon- ents ' 34 for the season. i I f Ralph Dorsey Bill Johnson Bill Tipmore sfs. vSlik kei- at NX Uliam Jenn - ' P Banquet the Sp ain ClubBasketbaW Tom Motter Chet Francis Richard McGaughey Herman Schaefer Curley Armstrong Russ Clifton Joe Lettellier Ed Mansfield Clarence Ooley Jim Gridley Dale Gentil Jack Stevenson 359 kSMtjSVl ' ' fas _ V 17 iWV •V. m i   3 n ■ -. ' - 10 ' ' P :-m ■i I ' I ' M i ' ■ - . ' .1. .,1 ' ' ' |P ,l|l ' illi|ll ' ||i,. , , ., III, , ......,,. ■ I ' Johnson a-Kl . rrn«-n-(iiiL; iv cover under Io . ,;■ -.il li i ,,:,,,,, ter, Andres, ami l ill Meid .ilur iiiii ' re bound . . . Dro illustrates best form in modern dancing — but he ' s trying to break up a Purdue pass . , , Bill Menke takes off for an under- the- basket shot against Minnesota . . . Jack Sr- rnson runs into complications in 1 1 Iowa game . . . Menke goes up for a ' th western shot as Huffman., Arm- i -png, and Andres look on , . . Indi- ii ma tees oft against Ohio State to avenge an opening-game defeat. Hey, You big bum mm o k se BIOGRAPHICAL BRIEFS ANDRES . . . All-American . . . kept Indiana ' s ball rolling against Purdue . . . All-Conference . . . inspir- ing general . . . Balfour Award Win- ner. ARMSTRONG . . . Spirited Sopho- more . . . teamed with Dro to form top defensive duo . . . scored 8 points in two minutes against Connecticut State . . . ball hawk. HUFFMAN . . . Captain-elect . . . old rough and ready . . . Second Team All-Conference . . . rebounder par excellent . . . paced team against Chi- MENKE ... 28 points against Minnesota . . . Second Team All-Con- ference . . . led team in scoring . . . valuable under the basket. JOHNSON ... Old Reliable . . . fast break forward deluxe . . . led I. U. in Ohio State game . . . teamed with Andres to form Jeff Red Devil duo. DRO . . . features right hand hook shot . . . Heckles opponent . . . high scorer against Xavier giant. defe 361 09 Batting practice before an intra-squad game . . . Waiting in line for a turn at bat . . . Dr. William Lowe Bryan joins youthful spectators at baseball practice . . . S-t-r-e-t-c-h . . . Coach Harrell sizes up the team in practice. VARSITY BASEBALL SQUAD Front Row: Woehr, Aldridge, Hundley, Clendening, Francis, Kosman, Escott, Doolittle. Second Row: Goffinet, Bereolos, Herman, Cromer, Andres, Gwin, Gentil, Wilshere, W. Bloom, Stoshitch, Peters. Third Row: Coach Harrell, Whaley, G. Bloom, Babcock, Han- sen, Dro, Danielson, Asbury, Middleton, Armstrong, Clifton, Senior Manager Anderson. Pooch Harrell, a former Big Ten baseball and football star, is commencing his first year as Varsity baseball coach at his alma mater. When he was gradu- ated, he chose coaching as a career in preference to professional baseball. Poo ch demonstrated his knowledge of the sport and his ability to handle the players successfully while he was Fresh- man football and baseball coach previous to his selection as head coach. MANAGERS Front Row: Jim Bob Anderson, Richard Schmalz, Frank Mell- inger. Second Row: Bob Weir, James Thompson, Bill Keck, Jack Holmes, Phil Scott. 362 Coach Pooch Harrell ' s baseballers, seeking de- fense of their Conference championship, em- barked on a difficult schedule under their new coach with Sophomores making up half the squad. Nevertheless, the nine dropped only three of its first twelve games and kept within reach of the coveted crown as the season drev to a close. Slugging out hits galore, the Crimson beat DePauw, 22-2 and 14-2, and Indiana State, 14-5, to open its season. Wabash fell, 5-2, be- fore a siege of Bloomington rain forced can- cellation of two games with Illinois and one each with Butler and Indiana State. Delayed a week by the downpour, Indiana ' s Conference opener came April 22 when Wis- consin was downed, 7-2 and 11-4, in a double- header. In both games the Hoosiers were trail- ing until the last three innings, when their bat- ters boomed out a barrage of hits to sew up victories. Jack Corriden, tiny lead-off man, starred with a homer and three singles as Indiana eked out a 6-5 triumph over Wabash. Chicago handed the Harrellmen their first Big Ten set- back by stealing home in the seventh inning to win, 4-3. The next day Indiana avenged the defeat. Notre Dame outslugged the Hoosiers, 12-7, at South Bend. In an 1 1 -inning, errorless pitch- er ' s dual, Purdue nosed out Indiana, 1-0, to stay atop the Big Ten standings. The next day the Crimson administered Purdue ' s first Con- ference defeat, 7 -( . Other games on the sched- ule included Michigan State, Michigan (two), Butler, Ohio State (two), and DePauw. Hal Cromer and Bozidar Stoshitch Ernie Andres and Tom Gwin (co-captains) Co-captains waiting for action. 363 ' 38 BISEBAIL BOB DRO BOZIDAR STOSHITCH ERNIE ANDRES DALE GENTIL DON HUNDLEY HAL CROMER BOB WOEHR DON DANIELSON Smashing through to tie Iowa for the Big Ten championship, Indiana ' s 193 8 baseball team proved one of the most successful in Crimson sports annals. Played in bitter cold weather, the first tilt, with DePauw, ended in a sixth inning, 1-1, tie called because of cold. A Southern spring va- cation trip netted two triumphs over Eastern Kentucky State Teachers and a loss and a vic- tory in two frays with Maryville Teachers. Re- turning to its home state, the nine trounced Indiana State, 16-1, and Wabash, 7-2. Mark Kilmer, Ohio State pitching ace, fanned 14 Indiana batters in the Deanmen ' s Confer- ence debut to allow the Buckeyes to edge out the Crimson, 5-4. The next afternoon the Hoosiers chalked up their first Conference victory over the same Ohio State crew, 7-5. Wabash was defeated again, 11-1, before the Crimson returned to Jordan field for the first home Big Ten game of the season. In this tilt Northwestern was smothered with runs, 12-0, and the next day Indiana prevailed, 6-2. The Crimson twirlers journeyed to Michigan State college, only to suffer a 7-4 setback at the hands of the Spartans. Michigan was downed, 4-1, to keep Indiana among the lead- ers in the title chase. Inman Blackaby, Butler ' s No. 1 pitcher, limited the Crimson to two hits, but it wasn ' t until the last inning that a wild heave over second base gave the Bulldogs a 2-1 victory. The Hoosiers engaged in a twelve-inning marathon with arch-rival Purdue, finally emerging victor to the tune of 3-2. The Dean- men went to Wisconsin and split a two-game series there, winning 2-0 in the first one but falling, 3-2, in the second fray with the Bad- gers. After beating Purdue, 6-2, Indiana lost, 4-0, to end its season. Starring for Coach Dean was Ernie Andres, second baseman, who led in batting with a .3 85 average for the season. Tom Gwin was second in batting. Wild Bill Smith won six Conference victories and was the outstanding pitcher. JIM CLENDENNING MIKE KOSMAN LEFTY COX SWEDE HANSEN JACK CORRIDEN CHET FRANCIS TOM GWIN SEWARD WILSHERE 36S Coach Hayes Track Managers: Howard Highsmith, William Mayse, Robe rt Firth, Charles Hartmetz, Benjamin Pass, Norniand Redden. TRACK Indiana ' s indoor spiked shoe forces opened the season January 30 at South Bend by edging out Notre Dame 44 1 2-41 l 2 to avenge last year ' s defeat. Mel Trutt, peerless Crimson middle distancer, outstepped Greg Rice of the Irish in the mile run, feature event of the day, with a 4 minutes 19.2 seconds performance. Purdue played perfect host to the Hoosiers in its new West Lafayette Fieldhouse by being submerged, 45-10. Traveling to Columbus, Ohio, Coach Billy Hayes ' Sophomore-studded track men found the veteran Buckeyes too strong, and lost. Winding up the season, Indiana beat Illinois, 55 2 3-30 1 3, setting three Fieldhouse records in doing so. Roy Cochran, Soph- omore sensation, blasted to a 49.4 second 440-yard dash. Archie Harris, big Negro weightman, tossed the shot 47 feet 1 inch. And finally. Bob Dieten- thaler, elongated lUini high jumper, leaped 6 feet 6 3 4 inches. At the Illinois Relays, Indiana ' s two-mile quartet of Fred Elliott, Edgar Hedges, Bob Hoke, and Mel Trutt set a new meet record of 7 minutes 45.6 seconds. The Crimson placed second to Michigan in the Butler Relays point standing as the two-mile team won again and the distance medley team triumphed. Archie Harris set a University record by putting the shot 49 feet 3 3 4 inches. The Hoosiers placed third in the Big Ten indoor champion- ships behind Michigan and Ohio State. t 366 Opening the outdoor season April 22, Indiana evened the score for its indoor defeat by Ohio State by beating the Buckeyes 76-55, in Memorial Sta- dium. Cochran and Harris combined accounts for four first places and two thirds as Indiana won only eight of the fifteen events but capitalized on run- ner-up points to triumph. The Indiana-Kentucky A.A.U. meet, despite the rain-flooded track and adverse conditions, proved a walkaway for the Hoosiers as they took the team championship with ease at the Butler oval in Indianapolis. Two seconds and two thirds were garnered by Crimson athletes in the Penn Relays at Philadelphia. The distance medley and two-mile relay teams each took a second place, the latter missing victory by a foot. Archie Harris took thirds in the discus throw and shot put. Pittsburgh and Michigan loomed on the dual meet card in May while the Big Ten and National meets promised topflight competition to wind up the year for the spiked-shoe athletes. VARSITY SQUAD Front Row: Hedges, Per- singer, Barter, Clark, Boyle, Cochran, Humphrey, Gard- ner, Bente. Second Row : Burnett, Broertjes, Mikulas, Tolliver, Denny, Jenkins, Hoke. Third Row: Uremovich, Huff, Harris. FRESHMAN SQUAD Front Row: Daniels, Mc- Adams, Jackson, Hill, Kane, Adler, Riley, Baumgartner, Napier. Second Row: Cole, Kitch- en, Baldwin, Fleming, Blake- more, Beggs, Howard, Mc- Kibben. 367 OUTDOOR TRitCK Coach E. C. (Billy) Hayes faced a major problem in building his outdoor track team this spring. Most of the in- dividual stars who brought the Crimson fame on the cinder- paths in recent years were graduated — Don Lash, Tommy Deckard, Jimmy Smith, Bob Collier, and the rest. Only Mel Trutt of the old guard remained. To make up for his losses, one of the best groups of Sophomores in Indiana track history answered Coach Hayes ' first call. Two of these first year men especially are outstanding. Archie Harris, big Negro weight- man, holds the unofficial world ' s record in the discus throw and has put the shot 49 feet 3 3 4 inches this year. Roy Coch- ran, blond Mississippi speedster, set a new Fieldhouse 440-yard record of 49.4 seconds in the Illinois meet and doubles in the low hurdles and broad jump. Bob Denny taking the high hurdles Roger Poorman, javelin throwing Among the veterans predict- ed to garner points this season are Bob Hoke, a 1:56 half-miler, and Beverly Boyle and Jim Al- len, both of whom shade 9.8 sec- onds in the 100-yard dash and run fast 220-yard dashes. Ed- gar Hedges in the mile and half- mile; Vernon Broertjes, distance runner; Wayne Tolliver, two- miler; Marcelleous Jenkins and Fred Elliott, quarter-milers, and Eddie Mikulas, high jumper, all are expected to break into the scoring prominently. i ' Ed Mansfield clears the bar in the pole vault — Archie Harris follows through in best form after an attempt with the shot — Jim Allen soars through the air in a high jump — Roy Cochran hits his stride in the quarter mile — Allen and Boyle get off to a quick start in the dashes — Fred Elliott hands the baton to Bob Hoke in the relays. Sid Robinson, Indiana cross-country coach, returned to the University last fall to take up his harrier-coaching duties after a two-year leave of absence while doing gradu- ate work at Harvard University. His hill and dale teams at Indiana haven ' t relinquished the Conference title in eight years, and they have won two national titles during his regime. Only once since 1934 have they tasted de- feat in dual competition. Two reasons present themselves as explaining Robin- son ' s coaching prowess. He is a former runner himself, having run the 1,500 meters in the 1928 Olympic and having won the Southern Conference mile and half mile titles three consecutive years while running for Mississippi A. and M. Also he is an expert on the physiology of ath- letics, having carried on extensive research in that line to aid in producing superior foot-racers. COACH SID ROBINSON CROSS-COMTRY HARRY ROBINS BOB BARTER EDGAR HEDGES 370 One of the strongest cross-country teams in Indiana history under the tutelage of Sid Robinson donned spiked shoes last fall. Although dropping its first dual meet since 1934, the team went on to win all three other dual meets and the State, Big Ten, and National Collegiate titles. Mel Trutt, barrel-chested Senior ace, led the team to all its victories, tasting defeat only once, and that time taking second in the National Collegiate meet. A group of promising Sophomores aided the team in maintaining its traditional top place among the nation ' s harrier out- fits. They were Edgar Hedges, Bob Barter, Paul Bente, Vernon Broertjes and Wayne Tolliver. Harry Robins and Roger Poorman were veteran distancers on the squad. Purdue was crushed, 19-3 8, in the opener. Butler fell 19-36. Then a veteran Michigan State aggregation, always the Crimson ' s most feared rival in the fall sport, nosed out Coach Robinson ' s men, 27-28, at East Lansing, Mich., although Trutt set a new course record of 23 minutes 1.4 seconds for the rugged four and one-half mile grind. Ohio State was swamped, 19-39, and another Crimson victory followed in the State championship. Finishing 19 points ahead of its nearest rival, Indiana turned the Big Ten championship meet into a walkaway. Not since 1931 have the Hoosiers been displaced as Conference champs. Going to East Lansing, scene of their loss to the Spartans earlier in the season, the crimson-shirted distancers this time were more successful, taking the National Champion- ship, with Notre Dame, closest rival, ten points in the ruck. ROGER POORMAN MEL TRUTT PAUL BENTE VERNON BROERTJES ♦fl-Jsar -J ?) Perhaps the most dependable Crimson team year in, year out, with the possible exception of the cross-country aggrega- tion, is Coach Billy Thorn ' s wrestling outfit. It won both the Midwest A.A.U. and Big Ten championships this year. In dual meets it won three and lost two. Nuclei of the team were three veterans: Capt. Chris Traicoff, Sammy Hyde, and Joe Roman. Traicoff was undefeated during the season; Hyde, forced to wrestle out of his regular weight because of lack of heavyweight, pinch-hitted at the task well, and Roman was second best in his weight in the country. Traveling to Chicago, the Hoosier matmen won their sec- ond consecutive Midwest A.A.U. championship as Roman, Chauncey McDaniel, and Traicoff won firsts — the latter tying Nichols of Michigan. Michigan, meeting an Indiana team with- out the services of Traicoff and Homer Faucett because of injuries, beat the Crimson, 17-11. Iowa State was swamped, 2 5-5, as Seymour Weiss dropped the only match for the Hoosiers by wrenching his knee when he was leading his op- ponent. Managers Ed Glover, Robert Bol- Dan Gill and lum, and Bernard Diamond Homer Faucett Joe Roman and Bob Antonacci Angelo Lazzara Andy Livovich and Bill Dannacher Sam Hyde 572 Injury-ridden, Indiana entrained for Stillwater, Okla., lair of the perpetual national championship Oklahoma A. and M. team. Coach Thom ' s grapplers were defeated, 18-6, in a meet that helped dedicate the Aggies ' new fieldhouse. The matches were closer than the score indicates, scant points separating most competitors as McDaniel and Traicoff continued their winning ways. Illinois and Ohio State both fell before the Hoosiers, 20-6, to end the dual season. Although Michigan, vanquisher of the Crimson earlier in the year, was odds-on favorite to win the Big Ten championship, Indiana breezed through the tough com- petition powerfully to regain the crown it used to hold annually. Angelo Lazzara, McDaniel, and Traicoff each won individual titles as Andy Livovich, Robert Antonacci, and Roman took second places. After sending more men into the semi-final rounds than any other team, Indiana ' s hopes were shattered in the National Collegiate meet as Antonacci and McDaniel with- drew because of injuries. The Crimson team took sixth place, with Traicoff winning the 165-pound title and Roman cop- ping second in the 13 5-pound class. Varsity picture: Front Row: Sam Hyde, Chris Traicoff, Angelo Lazzara, Coach Thorn, Bob Antonacci, Andy Livo- vich, Seymour Weiss. Second Row: Joe Roman, Bill Dannacher, Homer F a u c e t t, Chauncey McDaniel, Ed Glover (manager), Bill Richmond, Gar- nett Inman, Bruno Rolak, Dan Gill. Freshman picture: Front Row: Ben Wilson, Ernest Pauilus, Dick Klaer, RoUa Patton, Don Burns. Second Row: Nat Hill, Chet Terrell, Harry Traster, Mort Tur- bow, Tom Tone. Third Row: Eddie Anderson, Jim Trimble, Coach Eli Aronson, Willard Hansen, Gene White. Left Corner: Sam Hyde, Chris Traicoff. Upper Right: Coach Billy Thom cleans up after a workout. Right Corner: Chauncey Mc- Daniel, Garnett Inman. Coach Bob Royer Varsity Squad. Front Row: David Hancock, Jack Munsee, Edward Jakush, Capt. Ted Feigel, Walt Rine- hart, John Visher. Second Row: Irving Glazer, Bart Benedetti, Karl Kuehne, Coach Bob Royer, Mifflin Thomas, Frank Klafs. Freshman Squad: Front Row: Robert LIpton, Robert Boaz, William Lienberger, Ted Thomas. Second Row: Robert Scrogin, Winston Smil- lie, Walter Carpenter, George Kempf. Managers. John Houghton, Cle- ment Stigdon, James Huff, Philip Cooper, Rembrandt Hiller. SWIMMIWIi Under the tutelage of Coach Bob Royer, Indiana ' s swimming team turned in one of the best season records in its history this winter. ' The Crimson tank- men won six of their seven dual meets and lost in a triangular affair. Toppled by lopsided scores in the first three meets were Butler, DePaul, and Butler again. Highly-touted Purdue came to Bloomington in what was pre- dicted to be Indiana ' s first real test. But Indiana won handily, 51-33, despite the fact that Capt. Ted Feigel, ace Crimson springboard artist, suffered his first defeat of the season. Highlight of the Boilermaker meet was the sparkling performance of the Hoosier 400-yard relay team of Jakush, Kuehne, Borst, and Benedetti. It turned in the fast time of 3 minutes 58.2 seconds. Bart Benedetti, sensational Sophomore, set a new pool backstroke record of 1:44.6 as his Crimson teammates edged out a stubborn Huntington Y.M.C.A. crew, 44-40. Lone dual meet defeat was that administered by Chicago, 50-34. Rebounding to finish their season on a high note, the Crimson swamped Michi- gan State, 57-18. 374 Most experienced and polished Crimson swim- mer was Capt. Ted Feigel, low springboard dive styl- ist. He was defeated but once in dual competition and avenged this setback by vanquishing his con- queror twice during the remainder of the season. Be- sides Feigel, three Sophomores made brilliant show- ings in their first year of Varsity competition. They were Bart Benedetti, Hank Borst, and Frank Klafs. Benedetti led the team in scoring and hung up two new University pool records. Borst proved almost invincible in the 50- and 100-yard dashes, and Klafs, at breast stroke, was a consistently high scorer. Cap- tain-elect Mifflin Thomas was second highest scorer on the team, while other veterans were John Visher, backstroke, and Karl Kuehne, dashes. Capt. Ted Feigel executes a sharp jack-knife . . . Frank Klafs displays good form with a butterfly breast stroke . . . Bart Benedetti, record-shattering sophomore, glides through a fast 150-yard backstroke race . . . Four Varsity natators churn up the water in a 100-yard free style race. Coach Hugh Willis sorts through his golf clubs before deserting Max- well in favor of the links. Freshman Tony Vurich hoists one out of the grass with an iron shot. Varsity Squad: Front Row: Peter Grant, Jack Mueller, Walt Cisco, Frank Penning. Second Row: Dave Small, Bob Horton, Bud Talbot, Bob Jack, Fir- man Thompson, Costa Bagaloff, Bob VanRiessen, Bob Sill. Coach Willis and Captain Walt Cisco pause after a few holes of golf. Leaving a sand trap by blasting the ball out. Jack Mueller lines a putt straight for the pin. itSSJPS- jrj . Frank Penning poises to drive one down the fairway Walt Cisco lifts one out of the sand Peter Grant follows through after a long drive. Freshman Golf Team: First Row: Julius Brownstein, Steve Rose, Tom Taubensee, Tony Vurich. Second Row: Frank Hoover, John A. Mannan, Dick Dutton, Louis Hutton, Walter McFarland. Ninth in the Big Ten with five losses and two victories in 1937-38, Indi- ana ' s golf team presaged a better season this spring by taking team honors in the Midwest Amateur Tourney to open its schedule March 3 1 to April 2. After downing Alma Coll ege of Michigan in its dual meet start, the team lost to Purdue and Illinois. Other meets on the 1938-39 schedule included De- troit, Ohio State, Michigan, Iowa-Purdue triangular, and the Conference championship windup. Three lettermen returned to bolster Coach Hugh Willis ' links forces this spring. They are Capt. Walter Cisco, Pete Grant, and Jack Mueller. Three others are expected to give these veterans material aid through the tough schedule. They are Bob Sill, Frank Penning, and Bob Horton. 377 TEMIS Winning two of its first four matches this spring, the Crimson tennis squad seemed well on its way to bettering its record of 1937-3 8, when it won but three of twelve matches. That poor record was attributable to inexperience and one of the most arduous schedules in the team ' s history. This spring two lettermen returned, and two Sophomores broke into the lineup. Captain Vic Kingdon, Gilmore Haynie, and Gail Eldridge are vet- erans on the 193 8-39 squad, while Dan Chiddister and Howie Blankertz were the numeral winners to win posts. Butler was trounced, 6-1, in the season ' s opener. Notre Dame ' s powerful netters beat the Crimson, 7-2, but the Hoosiers bounced back into the win column with a clean sweep over Wabash, 7-0. Ken- tucky then trounced the Indiana team, 6-3. Other meets on the Crimson schedule include those with Western State, Michigan State, Wayne, a quad- rangular affair with Ohio State, Purdue, and Illinois, and the State championships. Although construction of new buildings on the campus necessitated doing away with the men ' s courts and limited practice to certain hours daily on the women ' s courts, the addition of Ray Stultz, for- mer Culver summer school coach, as coach was ex- pected to boost Indiana ' s prowess in the net sport. All meets were forced to be played away, since new courts could not be completed in time to be used this season. Lower Left: Coach Ray Stultz inspects Front Tlow: Bill Lugar, Thomas Good- Back row: Gilmore Haynie, Charles one of his rackets. man, Gail Eldridge. Schnute, Howard Blankertz, Vic Kingdon, Dan Chiddister. RIFLE TEAMS The girls ' rifle team, coached by Major T. F. Wessels, won about half its postal matches during the past season. The first part of the year was devoted to training and practice. The Indiana University Rifle Club awarded sweaters to the five girls who showed the highest total scores for the twenty-five postal matches on the team ' s schedule. The high scorer for the year had an average of 7 for the matches. The whole team turned in a good season, especially in light of the fact that it could practice only once a week. The Indiana University rifle team turned in one of its poorest showings in years. Handicapped by the loss of eight veteran marksmen. Major T. F. Wessels had to build his team from the ground up. Although the team won only fifteen of fifty-one matches, the new men on the squad had the highest average of any group of yearlings in the school ' s history. Next year ' s team should again carry Indiana ' s colors to their accustomed place high in collegiate ranks. 379 I. U. BAID Perhaps outshining anything the Marching Hundred has done for several years was its trip to Boston last fall to play at the Boston College-Indiana football game. Thousands lined Common- wealth Avenue and the Common to marvel at the automatous pre- cision displayed by the band members. Boston newspapers ran big picture spreads on the crack marching outfit and went into ecstasies of delight over the grey-clad Hoosiers. Despite its Marching Hundred label, the University band actually is made up of approximately 150 members. Hours of practice both in marching and playing comparable only to those of an athletic team explain the prowess of the organization, which has a morale topped perhaps by no other group on the campus. So well received was its Kentucky Derby appearance last year that the band again played for the event this spring, marching to boisterous applause from the sophisticated race-goers. Besides its regular appearances at home football and basketball games, the band appeared for such special occasions as pep sessions and Founda- tion Day. The concert band, drawn from the cream of the crop among members of the marching outfit, made its annual spring tour in April, playing concerts from one end of the State to the other. Such dances as the Military Ball and Band Benefit Ball help to raise funds annually to send the band on trips and to equip it with uniforms and new numbers. Drum Major Bert Fenn decked out in full regalia . . . The March- ing Hundred parades across the Boston Common before the Boston Col- ge-Indiana football game, as New Englanders gape at the clocklike precision .... Colorful fanfare at a Thursday afternoon military re- . . . The fifth band ever to march down Boston ' s famous old First Row Ray Kern Bob McFarland John Leffler Charles Sukmann Wilham Kleyla Ken Strauss Second Row Robert Marietta Bert Fenn David Rariden Robert Taylor Russell Fisher Bob Penn Third Row Carson King Estel Kelley Richard Shores Dave Brewer Carl Bailey Bill Schimpff Fourth Row John Overman Charles Hoover James Lampl Bill Carmichael John Walter Bert Fenn President: Kenneth Strauss Secretary John McFarland Treasurer Kappa Kappa Psi, founded in 1921, promotes the interests of the Marching Hundred and of music gen- erally. Every fall and spring several men who rank in the upper third of the band and vi ho have served for at least one semester are pledged by this group. Ability in marching and playing, appearance, and attitude are con- sidered in selecting Kappa Kappa Psi members. All Freshman band members are entertained at a fall smoker given by this band fraternity in order that they may become better acquainted with the rest of the band. Each fall and spring Kappa Kappa Psi holds a picnic. One of the picnics is a stag affair, while the other is for mem- bers and dates. Aside from social activity, the members of Kappa Kappa Psi sponsor concerts, aid in putting on programs, and welcome visiting b ands to the campus. IF YOU TOOT A TUBA OR BLOW A BASSOON, YOU ' BE IN! 381 mu Under the able direction of Prof. George E. Schlafer, the intramural department provides an athletic program for the average student who has neither the skill nor the desire for Varsity sports participation. A wide range of sports is offered, all the way from touch football and wrestling to ping pong and aerial dart. Hundreds of stu- dents are drawn into games by interest in team com- petition and the incentive of recreation. A new high for competition in intramural team events was achieved this year when sixty-three organizations and groups entered some phase of the competition. By grabbing championships in cross-country and touch football, Sigma Chi stepped into an early lead in this year ' s point race. However, in the multiplicity of championships decided since fall, the scoring has been fairly well distributed among teams. Feature of the year ' s program was the intramural open house, at which championships in indoor events were decided. Aerial dart singles and doubles titles were taken by the Phi Delts and Sigma Chis, respectively. Marvin Smith of the SAM house paddled his way to the ping pong singles crown, while Alpha Tau Omega grabbed doubles laurels. Unorganized groups won handball, wrestling, and indoor track titles. Special attraction of the open house was weight-lifting competition, Chet Tee- garden ' s Indiana team competing with Kokomo WPA Recreation Center and Hofmeister ' s Studio teams. To complete the intramural season were final contests in swimming, Softball, spring golf, outdoor track, horse- shoes, and code-ball. 383 «S- v The field staff of the local R. O. T. C. units lines up with the coed sponsors of last fall. And someone once asked why anyone would take advanced military!! From left to right: Ermal Geiss, Virginia Austin, Charles Lit- tell, Jane Bosart, Gene Smith, Bill Mayse, Joe Zwerner, Jeanette Prinz, Marjorie Heiden- reich, Lloyd Fitzpatrick, Harriet Cracraft, Clair Richardson. Although Indiana University is not a land grant college, military training is required of all physically fit male stu- dents by the Board of Trustees. The purpose of this instruction is to cover the fundamentals of military training and to create respect for authority and habits of punctuality . Approximate- ly 1400 students are in the basic course, and more than 100 continue with the advanced course. These advanced course men conduct drills under the supervi- sion of the tactical officers. Upon graduation each becomes a commission- ed second lieutenant in the United States Organized Reserve Corps. The year is climaxed by the Presi- dent ' s Review and the National Inspec- tion, at which time the unit is examined to determine its rating. The Gold Star, presented to universities showing su- perior work in military training, re- mained with Indiana for the third con- secutive year at the last inspection. The Freshman and Sophomore cadets do a snappy eyes right under the gaze of ap- proving friends as they pass the reviewing stand. Lieutenant Colonel John F. Landis and coed sponsor Prinz stand stiffly erect as the soldiers file by. Indiana ' s own doughboys do a present arms before starting on the long march around the golf course. Drum Major Bert Fenn leads the March- ing Hundred out to play for a Thursday afternoon review. R. 0. T. C. Last spring Lieutenant Colonel John F. Landis replaced Colonel William R. Standiford, who retired from active military service. The personnel of the department in- cludes Major T. F. Wessels, K. M. Still, R. N. Hagerty, H. G. Esden, and S. L. Dunlop. There are also five sergeants connected with the local office. The newly-elected coed sponsors for the next year are Juanita Clawson, Honorary Cadet Colonel; Pauline Taylor, Lieutenant Colonel; Madeline Scully, Bonnie Baker, and Mary Carson, Honorary Cadet Majors. The coed sponsors who served last fall were Jeanette Prinz, Marjorie Heidenreich, Virginia Austin, Harriet Cracraft, and Jane Bosart. Upper right: The color guard leads the Thursday afternoon pa- rade past the reviewing stand. •IIS j — ' Center: The reserve officers stand with the newly-elected coed sponsors and Lieutenant Colonel Landis in the first review of the 1939 season. Gene Smith, Homer Hire, Paul- ine Taylor, Bill Mayse, Juanita Clawson, and Lieutenant Colonel Landis are in the reviewing stand. Bottom: Bill Mayse and Jea- nette Prinz parade under the cross- ed sabers as they lead the grand march at the Military Ball. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL The Student Building is the nucleus of the Department of Physical Educa- tion for Women, and Dunn Meadow is the amphitheatre for outdoor sports. Under the leadership of Miss Edna Munro the department has cooperated with the students, and many changes are the results of student suggestions. This year more than ever the department has been able to offer a wide variety of activities and an opportunity for individual achievement. The girls no longer have to hold swimming classes in the Men ' s Pool, for now they have their own pool in the north wing of the Student Building. The girls are magnanimous with their new possession to the extent of offering a daily plunge period for all the women in the University. EDUCATION FOR WOMEN Any stray lassies in riding togs, either lurking • around the steps of the Student Building or straggling down Third Street, probably are waiting for the bus that takes the riding classes to Kerr ' s tables. The coeds have become equestrian-minded, and riding is offered on inside tracks for the winter seasons and on outside tracks for the fall and spring seasons. Also, students may take golf inside during the winter, while the advanced classes may play at the country club during the outdoor seasons. While each member of the faculty teaches some of the theory work and maintains an interest in a variety of activities, it is only natural that she should specialize in one phase of her work. Miss Edna Munro, as Head of the Department, directs all the administrative work and still finds time to teach tap dancing. Miss Fedler teaches many team games, and Miss Yeakel has charge of the corrective work. The new pool is the favorite haunt of Miss Grant, who teaches most of the swimming classes. Miss Fox instructs in modern dance and archery, while Miss Bookwalter teaches a variety of activities. Miss Bell instructs in camp counseling and tennis. WATCH OUT, FELLOWS, THESE AMAZONS First Row Laura Wilkins Mona Jane Wil- son Edna Shideler Anne Hopman Jeanne VanDien Second Row Lois Greenwood Edythe Thornton Nelda Johnson Gretchen Hop- man Margaret Postma Third Row Mary Vehslage Ruth Burlingame Georgia Vorgang Geneva Senefeld Mary Lou Beck Fourth Row Mary C. Moritz Elnora Curtis Margaret Thomp- son Kathryn Herle Doris Taylor ARE TOUGH CHARACTERS TO DEAL WITH Mona Jane Wilson President Lois Greenwood Vice-President Margaret Postma Secretary Gretchen Hopman Treasurer To promote an interest in physical activities is the purpose of the Women ' s Athletic Association, and having such an interest is the means of attaining member- ship in this organization. The interest in activities must be expressed in some definite manner, such as passing two tests or belonging to one team. Activity clubs are the backbone of the organization. In these specialized groups, girls have a chance to indulge in their favorite exercise or hobby along with a comparatively small number of other girls who have similar interests. The Dance Group, sponsored by Miss Jane Fox, has been particularly successful this year. The group repre- sented W.A.A. in many personal performances and also appeared on a Sunday Twilight Musical program in con- nection with the School of Music. Oceani des, coed swim- ming club under the guidance of Miss Helen Grant, par- ticipated in intercollegiate swims, which were conducted on a friendly rather than competitive basis. Very competi- tive, however, are the telegraphic swimming meets. In these the different swimming times are sent in from all the colleges, and the points awarded accordingly. Indiana coeds placed third in the Midwest region and tied with Illinois for first place in the Big Ten. One of the main functions of the Women ' s Athletic Association is the promotion of intramural activities. At all times there is an intramural competition in one of the many sports. The organization always has participated in exchange visits with other universities. This year it cooperated with Purdue in a basketball Play Day. The W.A.A. National Convention was held at San Francisco this year, and the Indiana representative was Margaret Postma, president-elect for next year. In the fall W.A.A. gives a banquet for incoming Freshmen, and in the spring the Seniors are honored at a traditional farewell banquet. At this time the James Darwin Maxwell medal is awarded to an outstanding Senior woman. Numerals and monograms are other awards to which a great number of girls aspire. 389 ( y stJOO llli mil Sweepstakes fe 7 RIDING HIGH BLOWING UP on 1 PITCHING WOO THROWING R PARTY .J . . DOUGH I i f% SWlNG b G SOME V0T£5 LUCKY 5TRIKE INI THE Dough A Or ow W Lfly NG i. , KICKING 5 GETTING AROUND ' Rhis ng HELL .f° IN THE GROOve- OR IN H RUT THE Bucket TELEGRAPH m | 5 . K ittTTfi WRONG- TRfir TdMB ' SHOOTING 2 BUCKS INTHE JUG BflRK NG U? THE WRONG TREE TURNING THE TIDE DEFEATED 390 I ISITORS u NOT KNOWING WHAT THE 5C0RE IS CUTTING CLASS THROWING THE BULL PADDLING ONt ' s OWN CRNOE ,.itA ' ' ' •y= TRUCKIN ' THE WflG£5 OF 5iN THE MISS NG LINK FLYING 0FFTH5 HANDLE MOWIN £M DOWN R FEATHER IN HIS CAP Bfl MflNfl-SPLiT LETTING THE CRT OUT OF THE BftG CE BETS jptpc ' ll you dBT f! THE NflRCH OF TIME REACHING BURNING THE CRNDLB BT QOTH foRjHErAOON ENDS 0 p 9 G KILLER J)ILLER RRPIP FIRE CONVERSRTION 391 ACKNOWLED(iNE TS In assembling copy for this publication, the 1939 Arbutus staff has been assisted in many ways by companies working on mechanical production of the book and by persons who were not members of the official staff. Sometimes this assistance was in the form of advice; sometimes it was criticism; at times it was rush service; a few people contributed photographs to supplement our files for certain events; many times the aid consisted of cheerful cooperation in the writing of copy; and perhaps most helpful of all were the occasional words of encouragement and assurance of confidence in the results of our efforts. We wish to express our sincere appreciation and gratitude to all who aided us — including those who may have contributed only a friendly smile when we were worried. We deem the following persons and organizations worthy of particular mention on this page: Indianapolis Engraving Company The Benton Review Shop The David J. Molloy Plant Dexheimer-Carlon Studios Ward G. Biddle, Comptroller E. Ross Hartley, Director of News Bureau John E. Stempel, Head of the Department of Journalism J. Wymond French, Faculty Adviser Indiana Alumni Office Charles Gilbert Shaw, Photographer Bureau of Visual Instruction, I.U. Extension Division 113th Photo Section, 3 8th Division, Aviation — Hobart Simpson, Photographer; Howard Maxwell, Pilot Robert McConnell, Photographer. Normabelle Helmen, Cartoonist W. A. Alexander, Librarian 392 G. J. CARLON Realizing fully how much good photographs contribute to the success of a yearbook, the 1939 Arbutus wishes to take this opportunity to express particu- lar gratitude to G. J. (Jerry) Carlon, of the Dexheimer-Carlon Studios, for the high quality of the photographic portraits appearing in this publication. 353 SLIPS THAT PASS Perhaps the Law School was right, after all — not all amusement is to be derived from extra-curricular activities. One day someone went to class. A few minutes later he was awakened by laughter — something funny had been said — in class! He decided at once to re-visit that professor soon, for it might happen again — and next time he would try not to sleep through it. Time passed, as tempus is prone to figit, and by the end of the year the following gleanings were picked up from oral discussions and quiz papers: • • I think that all but a few will agree with me in my theory that the basic, underlying principle is the etymology of the situation is with little doubt the incapability of man with his instruments of measure to determine a stu- dent ' s intelligence even in relation to the other members of the class. (Translated by instructor: Intelligence is hard to measure.) The Indians used to scalp the pale-faces with instruments called scalpels. Infancy has played a large part in chemistry because of its results Truely actual experimental work could not take place until one had a infancy. Confucius was a Greek architect. Paderewski never goes a day without practice on the piano, neither does a world champion swimmer. Neal Gilliatt, business manager of the University Theatre, at the annual Speech Banquet, made a startlingly frank admission, to wit: I am not a speech major, nor am I a Liberal Arts School student — I am in Business School, but never have I found any work more profitable than my work with the University Theatre! 394 IK THE CLASS I was born in Jeffersonville, Indiana, on August 20, 1920, in a moment of despair. The dean readmitted me on prohibation. Never in all my life had I met so many strange people as during rush week, nor shaken hands with so many new faces. This answer was given on a final examination to a specific question on the term papers read in class: The one that I thought best, I forget what it was about, and I forget by whom it was written. However, there was one which I thought was very good, because it was very concise and to the point. It was about the work of some author. First the person stated just the most important things about the author, himself, his life, in a compact form, and such things that might have influenced his writings. Then she gave his most important works, — giving a short sketch of what they were about, the date written, what caused them to be written, and their significance in literature. Then she merely listed his less important works, and ended it with a good conclusion about the importance of the author today, and why it is important. There were boxes ranging in size from a box of aspirin tablets to canned beans. I know my life will be ideal if the girl to whom I am engaged and my plans are carried out. A rich baritone voice rose in a melancholy Russian ballet. Booker T. Washington was born at a very early age. My father is a mortician, and a large family is beneficial to him from a business standpoint. 395 BUY SHOES AT A SHOE STORE IT PAYS IN MANY WAYS THINK IT OVER MAROTT ' S 18-20 East Washington St. INDIANAPOLIS 396 THE 1939 ARBtTUS BEAUTY QUEENS • ' Helen Emly Maryel Patrick Mary Beth Stein metz Anne Louise Cole Mary Benninghoff • Choose M ARO I ' l S SHOES Marott has the shoe for every occasion 397 THE R. L. COSLER CO. Book Binders and Manufacturers of STATIONERY FRATERNITY FAVORS GIFTS AND PROGRAMS BLOOMINGTON, IND. PEERLESS ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. ELECTRICAL DISTRIBUTORS Commercial and Residential Lighting Fixtures Universal electric ranges, refrigerators and socket appliances Emerson radio - Clark electric water heaters Silex Hamilton Beach appliances Complete line of electric wiring supplies 122 S. Meridian Street Indianapolis Geo. Hitz Co. WHOLESALE Fruits and Vegetables Canned Goods Frosted Foods INDIANAPOLIS Index to Advertisers Airport Skating Rink Allen Funeral Home . Alumni 398 420 431 432 Bevington-William Inc. 42 1 Benton Review Shop 433 Bloomington Limestone Corp. 432 Book Nook 408 Bouquet Shop 400 Brown Collegiate Mfg. Co. 400 Burnett ' s Book Store 409 Burns and James 429 Burns, Roy 40 1 Business Furniture Co. 401 City Securities Corp 409 Central Beauty College 424 Central Supply Co. 420 Claypool Hotel 422 Coca-Cola, Bloomington Co. 407 Columbia Dentoform Corp. -—399 Cosier, R. L. Co. 398 Crutcher Dental Depot, T. M. 404 Curry, B. E. Building Corp. 408 Dexheimer-Carlon 430 Ellis Floral Co. 421 Feltus Printing Co. 429 First National Bank 409 Gables 425 Graham Hotel 42 8 Hitz, Geo. Co. 398 Home Laundry 399 Hotel Washington 40 5 Hook Drug Co. 428 Hughes Bros. Co. 415 LU. Bookstore 415 LU. Press 42 3 Ideal Laundry 42 1 Indiana Business College 408 Indiana Fur Co. 432 Indianapolis Bond and Share Corp. 43 1 Indianapolis Engraving Co. 434 Johnson Creamery 422 Kahn Clothing Co. 414 Lang, Maxwell Co. 409 Lilly- Ames Co. 408 McGuire Shook 424 Marott Shoe Store 396, 397 Mead Johnson Co. 406 Molloy, David J. Plant .421 Monroe County State Bank 405 Mutual China Co. .407 National Library Binding Co. 424 Peerless Electric Co. 398 Pierson-Lewis Hardware Co. 415 Pitman-Moore Co. 416 Princess and Harris Grand Theatres 414 Ransom-Randolph Co. 420 Red Book 4 1 7 Ritz Roller Rink 424 Safety Carton Container Co. 423 Sanborn Electric Co. 405 Shook, Charles H. 404 Seville Tavern 42 5 Sexton, John Co. 409 Smithers Roofing Co. 424 Spink Arms Hotel 417 Sprigg ' s Dairy 4 1 4 Stone ' s Cafe 406 Strauss, A. M. 413 Sullivan ' s 420 Union Barber Shop 401 University Chevrolet Co. 406 Vonnegut Hardware Co. 425 Wahl Curry 425 NS eber Dental Mfg. Co. 400 White Dental Mfg. Co. : 412 Wildermuth, Joe 399 Wiles Drug Co. 399 Woodward Coal Co. 416 Home L ME LAUNDRY Sanitone Cleaning Rng Cleaning Moth Pioofinj 309 S. Lincoln Phone 6344 We are proud to announce our 40th year in the ARBUTUS WILES DRUG CO. The Kodak Store JOE H. WILDERMUTH CO. ARCHITECTS GARY, INDIANA USEFUL! Columbia Rubber Model Formers ' T ' HE easy u ' ay to make neat study models. Just ponr plaster into model former and mount anatomical cast. The soft, pliable rubber premits easy removal of model, which comes out per- fectly smooth and finished, with indent- ed panel for patient ' s name and other data. Upper and loiver models made in these formers occlude automatically. PRICE per set — 1 upper and 1 lower rubber model former — $2.75 Columbia Dentoform Corp. The House of a Thousand Models 131 East 23rd St. New York, N. Y. 399 Z 9 Imagine him makin ' me read poetry so we ' ll have sumpin ' to talk about! Flowers by the BOUQUET SHOP Always Lovely Washington at Kirkwood Bloomington, Indiana STINCTIVE DANCE PROGRAMS • INVITATIONS • PLACE CARDS • DOOR CARDS • STATIONERY • FAVORS BROWN COLLEGIATE MFC. CO. I EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE GOODS INDIANAPOLIS WEBER Equipment is recognized to- day as being one of the finest and most fairly priced offered to the dental pro- fession. Be sure, before purchasing, to investigate the many individual and outstanding principles that are built into this modern dental equipment line which embodies the latest in electrical and mechanical inventions and covers a range of design and price to meet every professional demand. Weber goods are sold on very liberal terms by reputable dealers everywhere. The Weber Dental Manufacturing Co. CRYSTAL PARK CANTON, OHIO Makers of Fine Dental Equipment and Cabinets 400 WailoujtAA Cancel that missing man call — they found him at Convo. i QUALITY! Office Furniture School Equipment Printing Folding Bleachers Gymnasium Equipment MARYLAND ST. INDIANAPOUS INDIAKA- The Favorite of Men Students UNION BARBER SHOP Basement of Union Building LEN HANNA. Mgr. Groceries - Meats - Vegetables WHOLESALE 303 West Third St. Phones : 6506 and 6660 FREE DELIVERY RETAIL 200 N. Walnut St. No. One Store Phones; 6341 and 6342 ROY BURNS STORES 401 TYPICAL mmiTES OF A STPEIT ORGASIZATIOI The president called the Gables to order, then opened the meeting. The secretary was asked to call the roll. This had to be postponed until the secretary could find the member- ship list, which had been used to wrap up a beer bottle. Under new business, one member suggested that the sec- retary exercise more care hereafter and not wrap up beer bottles in such fragile paper as the roll call sheet. Another member got up to make a rebuttal in favor of the secretary, but was hit in the eye with a projectile closely resembling a paper wad. The motion was tabled, or rather shelved, because the Bored Walk had borrowed the table for a subscription campaign. The faculty adviser yawned and his uppers fell out. Somebody dropped a penny, and the meeting enjoyed a tempo- rary recess. A treasurer ' s report was requested. It was dis- covered, however, that he had been on an extensive European tour for several months. Somebody, in an unconscious moment, made a motion that the organization sponsor some worthy campus project like dust- ing the gargoyles atop Maxwell — before it ' s too late. The mo- tion was passed over for lack of things. The president accidentally dropped his shoe, which he had been using for a gavel, and the meeting broke up. ■: ttii fcJi iatoi:;l ' -.H-. ,,t .- v i.S '  .v?l 403 We are proud to have been the GENERAL CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTORS for the New Men ' s Dormitories and New Women ' s Dormitories CHAS. H. SHOOK DAYTON, OHIO Hey, Bo, lemme change to ping pong. A clean bill of health Consult Your Dentist at Least Twice a Year Only the wise profit by advice T. M. CRUTCHER DENTAL DEPOT HUME MANSUR BLDG. INDIANAPOLIS DENTAL SUPPLIES — DENTAL EQUIPMENT Colle2:e Branch I. U. School of Dentistry Bldg. 404 t ' UUuA Now ivhat was his name? COMPLIMENTS Monroe County State Bank The Friendly Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THE SANBORN ELECTRIC COMPANY CONTRACTING ENGINEERS Electrical Supplies Lighting Fixtures 309-311 No. Illinois Street Indianapolis, Ind. HOTEL WASHINGTON 350 Rooms — All Outside Exposures Fine New Coffee Shop - Cafe Beautiful New Bronze Bar and Cocktail Room Entertainment Nightly Three New Party Rooms: The Gold Room Chinese Room Bamboo Room also New Ballroom. E. W. BENSON, Pres. and Mgr. 405 You Are Among Friends AT University Cfievrolet Co., Inc. Service for All Makes of Cars PHONE 6346 324 So. Walnut Bloomington ohnso IN MEMORIAM And it came to pass that many things came to pass. And they passed. May we say in passing that sorely grieved are the students at the passing of many things now past. It is with tender affec- tion that we wish to commemorate the following things in the following space: Perfect Parson Pease Who ' s Cheating Whom? Assembly Hall Pipe Courses The Drive Behind Kirkwood First Table in the Commons Keep Smiling Interfraternity Ball Phi-Gam-Theta I-Hate-School Club Bette ' 41 T N E ' s Treasury Eleanor for President Club Page 89 — ' 3 8 Arbutus Meet your friends at - STONE ' S CAFE The Students Choice Since 1924 PHONE 4024 ill V ' oodla vn Ave. Bloomington, Ind. 406 The right slant on refreshment — 318 S. Washing-ton Tel. 3541 Check your preferences. FOR THE IDEAL COLLEGE PROFESSOR: □ Fiarpo Marx D F. D. R. Jones n Sneezy FOR HOUSE MOTHER: n Sophie Tucker n Walter Winchell n Dorothy Dix FOR THE PERFECT MATE: n Lew Lehr □ Tizzie Lish n Robert Benchley Mutual China Co 128-132 South Meridian Street INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA t? i7 c5 Importers and Distributors of Fine China from England — France — Germany — Czechoslovakia Glassware from Heisey — Fostoria — Rock Sharpe — Bryce S 6 SPECIAL HOTELWARE, SILVERWARE AND GLASSWARE FOR FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES AND INSTITUTIONS 407 COMPLIMENTS OF B. E. Curry Building Corp. Bloomington, Indiana Contractors for Union Building Addition New Biology Greenhouse A School of Specialization Here, students concentrate upon specific courses; drive toward definite objectives; prepare thoroughly for desirable, promising positions of their choice. This is the Indiana Business College of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Mun- cie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes — Ora E. Butz, President. For Bulletin, telephone or wi ' ite the I. B. C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Prin- cipal Central Business College Architects Builders BIdg. Penna. and Vermont Sts. Indianapolis For over 25 years - - - The Book Nook Most outstanding student ' s place on campus. 1939 ARBUTUS BUDGET $ $ $ Postage Stamp $ .03 One Bottle Cough Medicine (Ed. ' s con- sumption) .20 One Bottle Whiskey (Bus. Mgr. ' s con- sumption) 2.25 One Bottle Ether (Biddle ' s convul- sions) 4.44 Trips to Commons 124.22 Alpha Chi State Dance (estim.) 50.00 D. U. State Dance (estim.) 50.00 Taxis to Bookstore 2.45 Psychology Lab Fee 20.00 Junior Prom 13.78 Printing 2.59 Engraving (subject to change) 7.95 Nevir Spring Ensemble 35.00 Bottle Coke (broke bottle over Fral- ing ' s head) — .10 Marriage License (unused) 2.00 One Garbage Can (for obvious pur- poses) .87 English Lit. Exam (1st semester) 42.33 Hush Money 354.56 Photographer ' s Stuff 2.43 Editor ' s Expense Account 2,243.99 Bus. Manager ' s Expensive Account 2,243.99 Paper Clip .07 Rubber Band .06 Paste 2.76 Miscellaneous 1 0,986.98 Total $ 16,193.05 $ $ 408 LILLEY-AMES UNIFORMS For College Cadet Corps and Bands CAPS - BELTS LEGGINGS SABERS Catalog on Request The Lilley-Ames Company Columbus, Ohio College Uniform Contractors Visual lectures are some fun — huh? Burnett ' s Rook Store Shopping Center for Student Supplies - Stationery- Greeting Cards - Gifts - Etc. 104 South Indiana Ave. Between the Book Nook and the Gables We have the following Indiana Uni- versity Alumni in Our Organization : J. Dwight Peterson ' 19 C. W. Weathers ' 17 Richard C. Lockton ' 30 K. W. Barrett ' 26 Noble L. Bidding-ei- ' 33 Mayburn Landgraf ' 30 Margaret Todd Strahl ' 30 Eleanor Meek ' 30 CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INVESTAIEXT SECURITIES 417 Circle Tower Indianapolis JIM FAUSCH Reliable Campus Agent for a Reliable Fraternity Jeweler MAXWELL C. LANG 708 TEST BUILDING, INDIANAPOLIS if BIG FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BLOOMINGTON Member of Federal Reserve System Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Bloomineton ' s Bank since 1871 MYSTERY here! No extravagant claims — no special blend for you alone. But coffee priced right that is going to please your pa- trons and increase your business. Backed by 55 years experience in supplying hotels and restaurants. John Sexton Co.-Chioap:o-Rri oklvn 409 410 APPlICilTIOI BLilM Name (Please include alias, cognomen, nickname, and social security number.) Address: Local (If house number ends in 7, add 3 points to your score. If it ends in 1, 2, or 12, tear up this application. Home (Don ' t put down the Graham Hotel. The lid ' s on!) AFFILIATION: (Underline) 1. (A) A.F. of L., (B) C.LO., (C) Self Survey Committee 2. (A) Phi Beta Kappa, (B) Kappa Beta Phi, (C) Beta. 3. (A) Town Hall, (B) City Hall, (C) Pool Hall. 4. (A) D.U., (B) Delta Upsilon, (C) A Y. Experience with other publications: (Please go into detail) 1. Mein Kampf 2. Das Kapital 3. Bored Walk 4. Y.M.C.A. Bulletin 5. Black Legion Monthly Activities: (Include all big positions, i.e., Wesley Foundation, I.S.A., Skull and Crescent, Young Republican Club, etc. Extra for Walt Members of the Selection Committee: 1. I have been afraid to approach 2. I have offered ten dollars 3. I have offered more than ten dollars 4. I have offered my undying friendship 5. I have given more than three beers If appointed, I will be: (See coding at bottom.) L Honest (AK72) 2. Fairly Honest (J3107Z) 3. Crooked (872K) 4. Flunked out of school (AlOK) 5. Crazy (Y1E2S) Code: AK72 — sucker; J3107Z — average; 872K — in Alcatraz; AlOK- You ' re damn ' right; Y1E2S — true. I am applying: (Check five.) 1. Before it ' s too late. 2. For foo. 3. To get the money. 4. For the honor and glory! 5. For the hell of it. 411 T tPLICfrj, I h « Ask your dealer aboin the S. S. While Easy Payment Plan and Free Oflice Planning Service, or write direct. THE S. S. HITK DHNTVL WG. CO. 2 ri S. 12th Slrwt, Pbiladftpbia. Pa. 412 A. M. STRAUSS ARCHITECT For 1 Medical Building Stores and Service Building School of Business Building Physical Science Building Auditorium 415 Cal - Wayne Building Fort Wajme, Indiana 413 b A KAHN CLOTHING COMPANY (.(. The Store for Men BLOOMINGTON ' ) ' Spriggs Pasteurized Dairy Products PHONE 3366 321 West Third Street y i It was this or law school and I prefer extra-curricular activities! Where the Crowds Go! T TT F PRINCESS THEATRE Bloomington ' s Most Popular Playhouse A Where the Best can Always be Seen for Less ! THE HARRIS GRAND Always Two Big Hits A ALWAYS WITH THEM 414 KjtCv VVXA ' Co Prof. Quack, my roommate says she would rather have that date the nite before the mid- term. HUGHES BROS. CO. The Best of Everything in Building Material Since 1882 COALS OF QUALITY PHONE 6115 Pierson-Lewis Hardware Co. Distributors for the Following Nationally Known Products: Yale Locks and Builder ' s Hardware Elgin Metal Kitchen Cabinets Miami Medicine Cabinets Kerner Incinerators Venetian Blinds Weather Strip and Metal Frame Screens Architects and Builders Bldg. 117 E. Vermont St. Indianapolis THE WORLD ' S MOST BEAUTIFUL COLLEGE BOOKSTORE INDIANA UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 4n check your preferences in each of the follow- ing: FOR DEAN OF WOMEN: D Ben Blue n Mae West n Edward Everett Horton FOR PROM QUEEN: n Bobbsey Twins D Snow White n Martha Raye FOR SENIOR CLASS SONG: n Hold Tight n Rock of Ages D It Ain ' t What You Do It is no small thing to know that on what we maJ e, may depend whether life shall be preserved or shall perish. The Pitman-Moore Laboratory Worker ' s Creed. PiTMAN-MOORE COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS 416 EVERY STUDENT SHOULD OWN A COPY OF THE Red Book A complete directory of Indiana University One of the many services of the University Y.M.C.A. Out about October 10th Price 40c ENIGMA OF THE ELEMENTS OR TERMITES IN THE TORRENTS The noise of whirlpools and waves that lash Against the bridge, the weary splash Of washing water downstream-bent Across the meadows broad were sent. But the mighty waters rage no more; No waves now lap upon the shore. No torrents rage; I wonder why — But now I see, in passing by, The reason — And I heave a sigh; For summer ' s here and the Jordan ' s dry. Spink Arms Hotel 410 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis Convenient and desirable location facing new War Memorial Plaza and three blocks from center of city Reasonable rates :- Single $2.50 Double $4.00 and $4.50 also apartments for permanent guests All modern conveniences Coffee Shop - Dining Rooms - Beauty Parlor - Valet and Barber Telephone - Lincoln 2361 417 ;l THE ILLITERATE DIGEST POLL Every publication, however great or insignificant, has its straw vote. The Arbutus is no exception to this practice. Herein find the results of one of the most inclusive concentrated polls ever to grace or disgrace, the pages of an American book. These results have been coming in over the campus wires and grape vines for the past several months. It was only after extreme effort on the part of the committee in charge of the coHnting that they were even tabulated. The questions were of a general n ure with which most of the students were familiar. The Arbutus gives you the 1939 Straw Vote on Stuff — hey, hey! 1. If you had it to do over again would you do it? 3,876 students answered, Yes. 222 students answered, No. 32 said, Who, me? 1 said, Huh? 2. Where were you on the night of Octembruary 3rd? 5,436 students — How ' d you know? 43 5 students — I ' ll sue. 1 student — Honest, judge, I ' m going straight. 2 students swooned. 3. What do you consider the outstanding publication on the Indiana campus? 4,999 Students— The 1939 Arbutus. 1 mule — The Folio. 4. What do you consider the most active organization on the campus? 543% students — The Euclidean Circle 189 students — The Medical Student ' s Choir 189 students — The Law Students ' Choir 2 students — Kappa Beta Phi 2 students — Theta Nu Epsilon 5. What is the best school of the University? 1234 students — The College of Arts and Science 1234 students — The Business School 1234 students — The Medical School 1234 students — The Law School 1234 students — The Graduate School 1234 students — The Music School (Editor ' s Note: This was a tie.) 6. What would you rather be — a Med or a Law? 5,875— Law 5,874— Med (Editor ' s Note: Infraction of election rules is suspected on this question) 7. What is your favorite character in literature? 436 — Mother Goose 683— Dick Tracy 29 — The Rover Boys 28 — The Other Rover Boy 3 — Never touch it. 418 419 VvaJIu juua And then I found out he wasn ' t a Junior at all—! yluLUVANT 117 E. Kirkwood ' Authentic Fashions for University Men Airport Roller Skate Rink 21 2 Miles West Just Off Road 48 Take the Free Bus to the Well-Ventilated Roller Rink Special Rates for Fraternity or Sorority Parties and Free Transportation Orchestra Fri. and Sun. Nights Telephone 9143 YOUR CONVENIENCE For your convenience in selecting your outfit, we have five complete model oft ices. With this display, you have the opportunity of mak- ing comparisons of the different models of all the leading equip- ment manufacturers. THE RANSOM RANDOLPH CO. Indianapolis, Indiana 420 Modern, up-to-the-minute plumbing fixtures are be- ing used today by all builders. ASK FOR (.1. Standard Fixtures CENTRAL SUPPLY CO. 210 S. Capitol Ave. INDIANAPOLIS Ellis Floral Co. The Flower Shop 304 E. Kirkwood Bloominsfton, Ind. IDEAL LAUNDRY PHONE 2117 Home of Sterilized Washing 12th St. and Park Ave. WE ARE PROUD of the part we have played in making INDIANA A GREATER UNIVERSITY BEVINGTON-WILLIAMS, Inc. Indiana Pythian Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind. Electrical and Mechanical Engineers Women ' s Swimming Pool School of Education Stores and Service Building- Medical Building Physical Science Building Business Administration Hall of Music Building And then I found out — I had passed the exam anyway! WitBuMi Molloy-Made c overs — produced in a plant devoted exclusi ' el3r to em- bossed and decorated products Ijy an organization of cover specialists — represent the highest standard in yearbook work. Specify MOL- LOY — it ' s your assurance of the best. THE DAVID J. MOLLOY PLANT 2857 North Western Avenue CHICAGO . ILLINOIS 421 DIET is the basis of GOOD HEALTH MILK is the basis of DIET Be Sure It ' s Pure— Drink, Johnson s PROPERLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS VvJUaajUa Sure you can be our prom queen candidate, Lulu. TJ LA! =J i-i ' — 1— a - INDIANAPOLIS Catering to all who appreciate comfortable, pleasant surroundings at moderate rates. 422 Of course, you understand you ' re to help with my lessons now — W «i  SAFETY CARTON CONTAINER COMPANY lanufacturers of CONTINENTAL SAFETY EGG CARTONS The Safety First Carton Since 1910 1406 I Street Bedford, Indiana THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRINTING PLANT PRINTERS OF THE INDIANA DAILY STUDENT 423 NATIONAL LIBRARY BINDERY COMPANY of INDIANA, Inc. Specialists in LIBRARY BINDINGS University, College. Public and Private PLASTIC BINDING Yearbooks, Annuals, Etc. Henry C. Smitlier Roofing Company Reputable Roofing Sheet Metal Contractors since 1868 430 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis Skate for Health Ritz Skating Rink Bloomington ' s top-notch spot of fun and entertainment SPECIAL RATES FOR RENTALS Skating- every night and afternoon JUST OFF THIRD ON WASHINGTON 424 SENIOR LAMENT Being a Senior, I ' d like to give vent To some long-hidden thoughts - - - a Senior ' s lament; Because four long years in a state institution Have left me quite haggard, vi ith frail constitution. Rush week built iip a gay country club Then came hell week, the paddle, the tub. Next year I pinned, caroused and cavorted; Then with a thud, love ' s young dream was thwarted. As a Junior, to politics my life was devoted; I helped in elections, with tongue sugar-coated. Then came the last step in my college career: I loafed like all Seniors — till finals drew near. Then I crammed and wrote papers far Into the night; That ' s all I could do — except pray and hold tight. The prayers were answered, for I heard with elation That I barely had qualified for graduation. Now all is forgotten — I ' m a free man at last; Books, classes, quizzes — all that is past. — And if I had my choice now, what would I be? Why I ' d return to I.U. and become a PG! Best In The Midwest! EXCLUSIVE GIRLS ' SCHOOL featuring HAIR STYLING and Complete Beauty Culture Curriculum CENTRAL BEAUTY EST. 22 YRS. COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg., Indianapolis COMPLIMENTS WM. C. McGUIRE and WILBUR B. SHOOK ARCHITECTS for Laboratory School Building Women ' s Swimming Pool Of course I love you, now will you get the answer to the eighth problem? CAFETERIA And HARDWARE Supplies • for Sororities • Fraternities • and Hotels VCNNEGUT Hardware Company Indianapolis 120 E. Washino-tc COMPLIMENTS OF WAHL CURRY QUALITY BAKERS 202 E. 3rd St. Phone 6861 The Gables L ' l©in iGi..««£xe«S SEVILLE TAVERN Indianapolis ' Smartest Restaurant Popular Priced Luncheons, Dinners University Tradition For The Finest In Foods 425 426 THE AAAAil DRIVIE TEST (Sponsored by the Amalgamated Association of Asinine American Automobilists) Indicate your choice of answers to the questions below. If your score is in the upper bracket, you will receive one aluminum-plated loving mug and will hereafter be referred to as The Man With the Iron Mask. Also you will have the opportunity to ride beside Lon Dash in one of the State ' s cars for a future test to determine I. U. ' s most reckless driver. 1. What would you do if your car stalled out in the middle of nowhere? ta. Relax with a Raleigh. b. Say, I know it ' s an old trick, but it ' s a good one. c. Release the clutch and apply the brake. 2. If you are driving on a slippery pavement and your car skids to the right, what would you do? a. Put the car in reverse. b. Utter a quiet dammit. c. Say it with flowers. 3. If a pedestrian gets caught out in the middle of the street and the lights are green, what happens next? ' - a. He is mowed down. b. Johnstown wins the derby. c. Close the street behind the pedestrian before it ' s too late. 4. If the gear shift knob flies off and hits you in the head — what then? a. Apply icebags. i b. Break into Stardust. c. Don ' t commit yourself. Anything you say may be held against you. 5. If there is a yellow line down the middle of the road what does it mean? a. Beware of skunks. b. Keep your distance, buddy. i-cT Don ' t make any passes. 6. If you are going south on an east-west street, you want to turn up and a car is attacking from the rear, who has the right of way? ■ a. The dog that just ran under the car. b. The officer on the next corner. c. The person driving from the back seat. 7. If two red light are blinking, the gates are down, and a train is chugging across the tracks, what does that mean? a. The British are coming, i- b. Lulu ' s back in town. c. Buy a ticket. You can ' t crash the gate this time. 8. If you got a ticket for parking, what would you do? . Ask for another for your friend so both of you could go. b. Reach for a Lucky instead. c. Ticket or leave it. For a key to determine your score, see page 431. 427 tt;76:}c Dependable Drug Store at 105 North College Ave. For the BEST in DRUGS and TOILETRIES Also Hurry to Hook ' s for this Delicious JUMBO SODA at 10 After this, they ' ll sign a guarantee they can dance! Hotel 200 ROOMS Graham 120 BATHS BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA p. C. Gilliatt, Proprietor You are issued a cordial welcome at Southern Indiana ' s Finest Hotel Serving select foods and extending the comforts of modern rooms at reasonable rates. — 428 Wt VMOlAA Just a precaution during finals, Prof. Quibbleback! ! . . . as traditional as the Old Board Walk . . . Printing from F E LTU S PRINTING COMPANY For moi-e than 50 years Bloomington Printers to Organizations of Indiana University V THE PUBLISHERS BLOOMINGTON STAR Bloornington ' s Home Newspaper THE FOUR NEW DORMITORY BUILDINGS that are now being built in the residence quadrangles for men and for women, will, we believe, be equal to the best to be found on any campus. We appreciate the honor conferred upon us by the Officers of Indiana University in selecting us as archi- ' tects for projects of such importance. BURNS and JAIVIES INDIANAPOLIS 429 DEXHEIMER-CARLDN +._.+ FINEST QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHY BY THE OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS OP THE 1939 ARBUTUS +— + 912 ODD FELLOW BUILDING, INDIANAPOLIS 430 r ve veY e A3.U ALLEN EXCLUSIVE SERVICE REVERENCE W. W. Allen SATISFACTION 211 East 6th St. KEY TO AAAAA DRIl ' lK TEST (See Page 427) Your grade is determined by your choice of answers. Five A ' s and three B ' s — Moron Three A ' s and five B ' s — Imbecile Four A ' s and four C ' s — Idiot Four C ' s and four A ' s — Phi Bete Three lemons and one orange — Five nickels All lemons — Jackpot Failure to answer any questions — One aluminum-plated loving mug. (Your class won the Bible.) As underwriters and dealers in securities, We have distributed $1,000,000 of Indiana University Bonds Indianapolis Bond and Share Corp. 129 East Market Street - Indianapolis Dealers in GOVERNMENT, MUNICIPAL and CORPORATION SECURITIES 431 WE ARE GRATEFUL TO THE ALUMNI S HO HAVE ASSISTED IN THE PUBLICATION of the 1939 ARBUTUS Paul Jasper, LL.B., ' 32 William G. Sparks, A.B., ' 26 Robert S. Stempfel, A.B., ' 19 Sol Rothberg, LL.B., ' 33 Clarence McNabb, LL.B., ' 19 James Ballou, LL.B., ' 3 5 Otto Grant, Jr., LL.B., ' 37 Anonymous, ' 24 Anonymous, ' 29 Anonymous, ' 31 Anonymous, ' 3 8 INDIANA ' S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE FURRIERS All furs ' fully guaranteed ! USE CHARGE ACCOUNT OR LAYAWAY Furriers for 55 years ffncUcuiaJmC , Opposite the Post Office 29-31 EAST OHIO STREET INDIANAPOLIS Quarriers and Fabricators of Indiana Oolitic Limestone The Bloomington Limestone Corp. Bloomington, Indiana 432 PRINTING . . . Sound managerial policies and long successful experience have provided us with sufficient equipment ade- quate personnel, and ample resources to render dependable service as art- ists and makers of fine printing. That you will be secure from chance is our first promise. THE BENTON REVIEW SHOP School and College Printers FOWLER, INDIANA Home of 20th Century Workbooks 433 Not the greatest ... not the largest ... but an oi anlzatlon devoted to a principle of excellence. For more than three decades hundreds of yearbook editors and business managers have placed their faith In our ability to belp them design, publish, and finance unusual yearbooks ... Just old-fashioned In principle, but ivlth a very definite flare for the best in modem publication trends t INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING COMPANY, Ixc. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 434 INDEX BLOOMINGTON CAMPUS A Aable, Austin 219 Abbett, Elizabeth A. 75, 281 Abbett, Pierce M. 229 Abbott, John C. 75 Abbott, Lyman E. 75 Aberson, Uriah 99 Abraham, Saul J. 37 Acacia 212, 213 Accounting Club 94 Acker, Robert F. 243, 3 34 Adams, James K.-.33, 75, 85, 243 343 Adams, Mary E. 265 Adams, Mary M. 289 Adelman, Maurice J 241 Adler, Ruth M. 60, 275 Adney, Betty A. 37, 2 87 Ahlering, George H. 2 5 Aiken, Albert C. --__. 37 Aikman, Richard E. 91, 94, 327 Aldred, Mary E. 33, 37, 41, 64, 263, 302, 306, 316 Aldridge, Victor E. 239, 362 Alexander, Kathryn J. 271 Alexander, Marshall 237 Alexander, W. A. 29 Alexander, William M. 227 Allen, Charles G. 37, 52 Allen, Darwin E. 75 Allen, Gloria 275 Allen, James H. 75, 91 Allen, Jean L. 283 Allen, Paschall 23 3 Allen, Ruby M. 326 Allen, Willoughby 281 AlHson, Doris A. 68, 93, 267 Allman, Martha E. 275 Alpha Chi Omega 2 56, 2 57 Alpha Delta Pi 258, 259 Alpha Kappa Psi 91 Alpha Omicron Pi 260, 261 Alpha Tau Omega 183 Alward, John H. 155, 158 Anderson, Betty L. 287 Anderson, Clarence J. 37 Anderson, Clarence L. 68 Anderson, Eddie 373 Anderson, Evelyn Y. 271, 316 Anderson, James R. 32, 33, 75, 243, 308, 314, 318, 362 Anderson, Joan A. 281 Anderson, Mary E. 37 Anderson, William P. 99, 215, 318, 342, 356 Andres, Ernest H. 99, 23 5, 312, 318.356, 358, 362, 364 Angermeier, Joe J. 227 Anness, Milford E. 229 Antonacci, Robert 372, 373 Antrim, James G. 249 Applegate, Albert E. 158 Applegate, Alice V 283 Arbuckle, Robert B. --2 13 Archer, Milton C. 219 Archibald, Joanna 291 Ardashier, Margaret K. 113, 115 Arehart, Ellen M. 99, 107 Armbruster, William H. 245 Armstrong, James E. 75, 213 Armstrong, Lois E. 93 Armstrong, Mary J. 261 Armstrong, Paul 3 56, 3 59, 362 Armstrong, William S. 245 Arnold, Homer, Jr. 37 Arnold, Marion F., Jr. 37, 229 Arnold, Richard D. 213, 325 Arnold, Robert W. 221 Aronsen, Harold 37 Aronson, Eli 75, 373 Arvin, Leo W. 75, 91, 334 Asbury, Donald E. 25 3, 362 Ashby, Grace G. 281 Asher, James W. 253 Askren, Herbert 245 Atkin, Jack C. 75 Atkin, Robert J. 245 Atkinson, Delbert V 75, 91 Atkinson, James D. — 32 8, 3 34 Atkinson, Jane E. 99 Atz, Eugene F. 223 Aukerman, James B. 327 Ault, Betty 291 Aungst, Betty J. 37, 68 Austin, Robert L. 37, 239 Austin, Virginia B. 265, 295, 384, 385 Avery, Robert 253 A. W. S. Council 310, 311 Azen, Samuel M. 241 B Babcock, Robert 362 Bachelder, Mary J. 281 Bachmann, Arnold J...._15 5, 15 8, 249 Badell, Philhp J. 37, 22 3 Badger, Leonila G. 326 Badertscher, Jacob A. 152, 158 Bagaloff, Costa 376 Bagaloff, Lewis 75, 94 Bagby, William T. 37 Bailey, Carl R. 37, 2 37, 381 Bailey, Gilbert P. 37, 233 Baillie, Charles D. 23 5, 314, 325 Baker, Bonnie M. 208, 271, 385 Baker, Harry C. 37, 229 Baker, Marian E. 92 Baldwin, Jack. M. 75, 227 Baldwin, R. 99, 261 Ballard, Norma J. 275 Ballard, Robert J. 15 5, 157 Band 3 80 Bannister, Earl F. 225 Banta, Frank 330 Barbillion, Florence J. 263 Barker, Clare W. 72 Barker, Donald C. 334 Barker, William L. 215 Barkes, Glenn D. 107 Barnett, Dorotha E. 92, 263 Barnett, Shirley E. .___ 285 Barnhill, Charles J. 233 Barr, Ben O. 233, 328, 334 Barr, Joan E. 267 Barr, Mary E. 291 Barry, Ellen 37 Barskin, Doovid B. 241 Barter, Robert 367, 370 Barth, Wilma A. 75, 192 Bartholomew, Joan 37, 51, 271 Bartindale, Richard M. 75 Bartley, E. Ross 28 Bartling, Jeanice M. 261 Bash, Vera J. 277 Bash, Wallace E. 142, 155, 158 Bassett, Dan 243 Bassett, Margaret A. 33, 155, 158 Bates, Naomi R. 93, 261 Batsch, Charles 239 Batton, Donald E. 221 Batton, Robert R. 221 Baugh, Barbara 265 Baughn, Elva A. 257 Baumgartner, Albert H. 245 Beals, Barbara , 330 Beasley, Julia B. 99, 175 Bechtold, Burley V. 107 Beck, Mary L. 99, 3 88 Beck, Merrill E. 213 Becker, Darrel D. 213 Beckett, Robert B. 75, 213 Beckman, John F., Jr. 227 Beer, Charlotte 289 Behrmann, Kathleen 37, 281 Beights, Raymond S. 113 Beldon, James F., Jr. 245 Bell, Donald W. 237 Bell, James H. 213 Bcnbow, Margaret L._-75, 92, 202, 257 Bender, Betty A. 259 Benedetti, Bart 374 Benefiel, Nancy M. 93, 99, 177 Bennett, J. B. 15 5, 158 Bennett, Kenneth H. 225 Bcnninghoff, Mary L. 200, 263 Benson! Page W. 217, 348 Bente, Clara J. 263 Bente, Paul F., Jr. 37, 371 Benton, Ernestine 289 Bentz, Jacob L. 37 Benward, Bruce C. 253 Bereoleos, George 362 Berman, Robert N. 241 Berndt, Rose E. 92, 289 Bernhardt, Mildred L. 75, 92, 94, 283, 324 Berry, Margaret 37, 271 Bessire, Marianne R. 37, 263 Beta Gamma Sigma 88 Beta Theta Pi 216, 217 Bevier, Frances E. 2 57, 331 Bianco, Louis J. 247 Bibbee, Mary E. 281 Bickett, Robert D. 37 Biddle, Betty R. 271 Biddle, Nancy W 271 Biddle, Ward G 24, 26 Bielby, Jean E. 99, 281, 316 Bill, Robert O. 158 Billings, Dorothy J. 289 Billman, Frances E 37, 51, 267, 331 Biltz, Marian V. 99, 289 Binkley, Morris E. 37, 68 Bir, Mary W. 261 Bishop, Cleo M. 265 Black, Richard H. 241 Black, Sara K. 37, 267 Black, Winifred L. 261 Blackburn, Robert G. 253 435 INDEX Blackley, Marian 75 Blair, George F 52, 54 Blair, Lois F 37, 267 Blanchard, DeLoss D. 99, 328 Blanford, Fred R. 75 Blankertz, Howard H. 378 Bleiweiss, Irwin 37 Blieden, Milton C. 241 Blocher, Jean 291 Blocker, Clyde E. 60, 229 Bloom, George R. 144, 155, 158, 239, 362 Bloom, William M 62, 239, 362 Blue Key 314, 315 Board of Aeons 304, 305 Board of Trustees 24, 25 Boaz, Robert 374 Bockmeyer, Paul 2 5 3 Boehne, John W., Ill 23 5 Bogard, Bernard W. 215 Bogart, Felix A. 231 Boggy, Dale H. 22 3 Bohannon, Betty C. 271 Bokelman, William R. 99 Bolinger, Raymond K. „-.91, 215, 322 Bollenbacher, Sally M. 257 Bollum, Robert H. 245, 372 Bolson, Cecelia G. 291 Bonsib, Joan 60, 275 Booher, Craig E. 215 Booher, James V. 22 5 Booker, Marjorie K. 269 Bockstege, Henry F. 221 Borman, William J. 241 Bosart, Dorothy J. 75, 92, 204, 208, 289, 306, 384, 385 Boswell, Jessie 2 57 Botkin, Clyde G. 158 Bottin, Robert E. 89 Bottorff, Dorothy E. 279 Boughman, Robert G. 89, 91, 237, 308 Bowden, Claire L. 37, 277 Bowen, Donald E. 60 Bowen, Otis R. „.144, 155, 158, 219 Bowers, Herman 37 Bowers, James 249 Bowles, James D. 249 Bowman, Betty V. 92, 93, 289 Bowman, Kathryn E. 75, 289 Bowman, M. J. 120 Boyd, John 3 56 Brownstein, Julius 377 Boxell, Jean P. „.52, 66, 223, 314, 327 Boyd, Alice C. 275 Boyd, Guy F., Jr. 237 Boyd, John E. 249 Brammer, Betty S. 291 Brandt, Mary I. 291 Branson, Loleta 113, 115, 289 Bratton, Meredith J. 73, 91, 245 Bredeweg, Viola M. 291 Breedlove, Audra R. 37 Brennan, Mrs. Joan D 75 Bretz, Vera L. 287 Bretz, Waverly D., Jr. __239, 300, 314 Brewer, Carlos B. 245 Brewer, David H. -.91, 123, 235, 381 Bridge, Hal L. 23 3 Brill, Roy N. 241 Bringle, Ray D. ...223, 348, 349, 351 Bringle, Wilham V. 348 Brink, John C. 158 Brinkerhoff, James D. 123 Brinkman, Charlotte J. ..37, 259, 324 Britton, Welbon D. .-146, 15 5, 158 Broadbent, Pete 3 56 Brock, Dale E. 99 Broertjes, Vernon 371 Brokaw, Catherine I. 37 Brooks, Fred R., Jr. 23 5 Broom, John J., Jr. 113, 329 Brough, Robert 3 56 Brown, Betty 271 Brown, Betty 92, 2 89 Brown, Betty C. 75 Brown, Byron L. 227 Brown, Eugene W. 213, 334 Brown, Jack C. 23 3 Brown, John H. 37, 277 Brown, Nellie V. 37 Brown, Robert J. 120 Brown, Ralph 2 5 3 Brown, Robert V. 25 3 Brown, Thomas M. 51 Browne, Gus C. 243 Brownell, Beryl A. 277 Brumblay, Mary L. 52, 113, 115 Bruner, Leota G. 326 Bruner, Ralph W., Jr 227, 3 56 Bruns, Roy H. 245 Brunton, Martha J. 93, 291 Bryan, Franklin A. 15 5, 158 Bryan, William L. 21, 23 Bryant, Bonnie M. 51, 279 Bucchianeri, Mike R. 348, 349 Buchanan, James L. 107, 115 Buchanan, Robert F. 99 Buchmeier, Joseph A. ..-155, 157, 158 Buck, John T. 32, 37, 66, 298, 299, 304, 312, 314, 318 Buck, Robert R. 334 Buechele, Carolyn 287 Buescher, Herbert 94, 75 Bugel, Harry J. 37 Bullock, James A. 251 Bumpas, Ralph L. 75, 229 Bunch, Victor L. 37 Bundy, Merle 146, 15 5, 158 Burchfield, Dorothy M. 267 Burdette, Harold F. .-..146, 15 5, 158 Burkhart, Anna L. 92 Burkholder, Virginia 271 Burleigh, Sybil L. 275 Burhngame, Ruth E. 75, 92, 261, 388 Burnett, Darrell H. 99, 328, 332, 334 Burnikel, Roy H. 130 Burns, Don 373 Burns, Ellen 265 Burns, Margaret J. 291 Burns, Paul F. 158 Burns, S. T 110 Burrell, Eugene H. 39, 25 3 Burrell, Peggy 201, 275 Burris, Betty R. 281 Burton, Helen M. 291 Busby, Dorothy M. 269 Buskirk, Darlene E. 273 Butler, Barbara R. 39, 263, 320 Byers, John G. 223 Byrne, Francis A. 39 Cabaret Show 5 8 Call, Dean J. ... 233, 3 34 Calpha, Flora E. 261 Calvert, Doris G. 267 Camp, Don 243 Camp, Priscilla T. ....■39, 52, 261, 316 Campagnoli, Tony 99, 348 Campbell, Dolores I. 75, 92 Campbell, Kathryn E. 291 Campbell, Mary E. 300 Cannon, Robert L. 15 5, 158 Capp, Fred J. 60, 243 Carder, A. 99 Carges, Catherine 275 Carloh, S. J. 393 Carlson, Edward H. 227 Carmichael, Hilda 99 Carmichael, William 89, 90, 243, 381 Carpenter, Walter 374 Carraway, Beverly A. 93, 291 Carrier, Gerald M. 75, 229, 328 Carson, Mary 208, 265, 3 85 Cart, Donald W. 253 Carter, Ray A. 99 Cartwright, Winifred J. 291 Carvin, Kathryn A. 39, 68, 281 Case, Anna A. 68, 273 Casey, Ann B. 2 57 Casey, Donald 91 Cash, Billie F. ....75, 89, 275, 316, 324 Cash, Robert S. 237 Casper, Frederick W. 39 Cassady, Robert E. 75, 219 Caster, Martha J. . 33, 75, 89, 92, 306, 310, 320 Cathcart, Thomas M. 217 Catt, Paul E. . 233 Cavanaugh, R. E. 186 Chadwick, Rex H. 245 Chambers, Adaline 271 Chambers, Wilma J. . 263 Chamness, Joy 28 Chandler, Lester M. 75 Chapman, B. 93 Chapman, Donald W. 75 Chappell, Mary K. 287 Chase, George H. 39, 223 Chasman, Edith 28 5 Chatten, Betty M. 277 Chattin, Robert N. 215 Chenoweth, Harry W. 237 Cherry, Catherine E. 291, 326 Cherry, Florence 93 Chester, Roger H. 243 Chester, William T. 75 Chew, Fred V., Jr. 75 Chew, Lois J. (Mrs.) 75, 92 Chiddister, Daniel L. ....223, 322, 378 Chi Gamma 93 Chi Omega 262, 263 Childress, Blanche 92 Chorus 116 Chowing, Elizabeth M. 77 Chrisney, John P. 94, 329 Christensen, John W. 123 Christy, Leo J. 39 Church, Russell M. 77, 89, 91 Cierzniak, Margaret T. 273 Ciesar, Martha R 99, 2 87 436 INDEX Cimo, Anthony L. 77 Cinkoske, Bernard F. 91, 251, 327, 330, 331, 334 Cisco, Walter S. 39, 217, 376 Clark, Royleen 281, 295 Clark, Bevins - 245 Clasen, Edwin W. .39, 24}, 348, 349 Clawson, Juanita A. 203, 208, 287, 385 Clayton, Elson L 77 Clayton, Hugh 239, 322 Clayton, Mary M. 291 Cleaver, Dolores M. 263 Cleland, Ralph E. 34 Clendenning, Jimmie 362, 364 Clerkin, John G. 245, 295, 356 Cleveland, William C. 72 Clevenger, Zora G. 31 Clifford, Anne 93, 283 CHfford, Mary J. 271 Chfton, J. Russell 3 56, 3 59, 362 Closser, Jean D. 263 Clunie, William A. 229 Coates, Robert E. 77, 1 1 5 Coats, Charles E. 213 Cody, John R. 51 Coffin, Mary A. 39, 289 Cohen, Alvin L. 77, 241 Cohn, Nelda R. 287 Cohn, Stewart H. 277 Cole, Anna L. 199, 271 Cole, Carolyn 275 Cole, Joyce 207 Cole, Marjorie E. 2 57, 263 Cole, Virginia 39 Colle, Ruth L. 267 Collegiate Chamber of Commerce 89 Collier, Barbara K. 287 Collier, Max E. 77, 243 Collinge, Frederick D. 247 Collins, Muriel E. 93, 289 Collins, Ralph 300 Collins, Robert 94 Combs, Leslie I. 217 Combs, Marian L. 263, 326 Combs, Robert E. 243 Compton, George L. 155, 233 Congleton, Barbara J. 289 Conklin, Edmund H. 68 Conley, Betty J. 3 3, 39, 275 Conn, Hadley L. 22 5 Conner, Robert M. 90, 94, 327 Conrad, Virginia A. • 291 Cook, Carmen C. 261 Cook, David M. 123 Cook, (Laura) J. 39 Cook, Norman R. 133, 158 Cookson, Thomas A. 28 Coon, Wilbur 219 Cooper, Berry W., Jr. 239 Cooper, Charles W. 39 Cooper, Earl L. 217 Cooper, Gilbert F. 91, 243, 322 Cooper, Philip S. 239, 327, 374 Coopage, Dorothy J. 92 Coppock, Robert, D. 39 Cormican, Herbert L. 223 Corner, Eugene S. 39, 68 Correll, Philip R. 39, 52, 23 5 Corriden, John M. 243, 364 Corwin, Bruce H. 77, 91, 94, 229, 332 Cosmopolitan Club 3 30 Cosner, Charles M. 39 Cotton, Barbara J. 291 Coultas, Mary L. 287 Coulter, John M. 19 Coundiff, Maxine D. 39, 261 Coverdale, Virginia 33, 39, 45, 64, 263 Covey, John L. „ 245 Cowan, Virginia L. 257, 295 Cowgill, Logan O. 39 Cox, Hulbert A. 77, 227, 318 Cox, James F. 247 Cox, Keith W. 32 8, 3 34 Cox, Marguerite L. 2 57 Cox, Millie M. 265 Crabb, Louise E. _. 289 Crabill, Harold 107 Cracraft, Harriet 271, 384, 385 Craig, Alexander F. -15 5, 15 8, 221 Craig, Emerson C. 215, 328 Craig, Eva J. 273 Craig, Mary A. 155, 158, 281 Craig, Robert A. 158 Cravens, Thomas C, Jr. --217 Crawford, Mary E. —-77, 92, 94, 281 Cromer, Hal 362, 364 Crone, John N. 249 Crook, Vera C. 291 Crosby, Peggy J. 39, 267 Crosman, Ahce E. 269 Crouch, Joseph E. 52, 77, 331 Crow, Marjorie R. 92, 2 89 Crum, Martha N. 93 Cuddeback, Barbara R. 99 Cull, Betty, M. 291 Culley, Ray F. 77 Culmann, Louis C. 91, 213 Cummings, Vera R. 93 Cunningham, Cecil R. 217 Curl, Robert F. 221, 334 Curry, lea 99 Curry, Roger 217 Curtin, John E. 251 Curtis, Elnora D. 326, 3 88 Curtis, Harold L. 90 Curtis, John B. 223 Curts, Betty ...287, 316, 324 Cutler, Aline M. 287 Cutler, Leslie, Jr. 68 Cutsinger, Roscoe C. 215 D Dahle, C. O. 96 Daily, John P. 219 Daily, William 18 Dale, William R. 221 Dallie, Ruth E. 279 Danaher, Timothy J. 39 Dancy, John 330 Daniels, Marthe M. 289 Danielson, Donald C. ....243, 362, 364 Dann, Donald H. 241 Dannacher, Bill 372, 373 Daubenheyer, Miles 221 Dauer, Eleanor A. 271 Davidson, Matele 265 Davis, Ernest 2 1 5 Davis, Gene 146, 15 5, 158 Davis, Jane L. 277 Davis, Joseph B. 15 5, 15 8, 2 37 Davis, Marie H. 267 Davis, Richard M. 237 Davis, Thelma R. 2 59 Davis, William E. 219 Davison, Norman E. 77 Dawson, Dorothy D. 273 Dawson, Elizabeth A. 269, 324 Days, Olivia E. 263 Deane, William R. ...39, 68, 302, 329 Deckard, Fay E. 39 Deckard, Thomas M. 99 Decker, Bruce E. 253 Dee, Bernadine R. 285 Dees, Mona V. 39, 261 Deetz, Ralph A. 247 DeFrank, Josephine L. 269 DeFries, John 2 17 Deich, Jerome 39 Delanoy, Marion V. 275 DeLigter, Robert 77 Delp, Alice L. 39, 279 Delta Delta Delta 264, 265 Delta Chi 218, 219 Delta Gamma 266, 267 Delta Sigma Pi 90 Delta Tau Delta 220, 221 Delta Upsilon 222, 22 3 Delta Zeta 268, 269 Demaree, Cynthia A. 33, 39, 271, 306, 320 DeMoney, Robert J 60, 239 Denny, Forrest L. 146, 15 5, 158 Denny, Melvin H. 146, 155, 158 Denny, Robert O. 2 37, 322 DePrez, Patricia 271 Derby, Richard E. 253 DeReamer, Robert W. 77, 91 DeSchipper, Betty J. 39, 271 Detraz, Pauline M. 158 Detrick, Herbert W. 239 DeVine, Paul J. 249, 336 Devol, James T. 229 DeVore, Doris B. 39 Dewberry, Jack J. 215, 332 Diamond, Bernard 231, 372 Dice, M. Jeannette 64, 265 Dickerman, Clarence C. 247 Dickerson, Betty J. 326 Dickman, Florence J. 281 Dickson, Audrey R. 77 Dieter, Herman M. 241, 295, 322, 325 Dietrich, Richard E. 68 DiUin, Jane H. 33, 39, 43, 52, 62, 257, 306 Dillinger, James E. 39 Dilts, James A., Jr. 217 Dingle, Marian E. 283 Dinsmore, Wilbur A. 77 Dippell, Ruth V. 273 Dirks, Albert G. 77 Dittmer, Thomas L. 146, 155, 158, 227 Ditzler, Betty 2 57 Dobbins, Robert A. 334 Dodd, Edward 77, 94 Dodson, Maude A. 39, 263, 316 Donaldson, Ross K. 39 Doolittle, Douglas 362 Doherty, Lowell W. .99 437 INDEX Dorsey, Ralph J 56, 3J8 Douglas, Anne E. 283 Douglas, Vincent A. 77 Dovey, Elaine M. 281 Dow, Elizabeth B. 39 Downey, Robert F. 23 5 Doxtator, Robert 60 Dragons Head 312, 313 Drain, Dan T. 249 Drakulich, Mary B. 39 Drennan, Dorothy ' ) Dro, Robert C. 215, 356, 358, 362, 364 Drum, Virginia K. 289 Drummond, Barbara 2 57 DuBois, Clifford R. 39, 227 Duckworth, Philip J. Dudas, Milan A. . 253 Dukes, Joseph E. 247 Dukes, Martha M. 291 Dumke, Ray M. 245, 348, 3 52 Dunham, June C. 267 Duning, Arthur W. 41 Dunlop, Hugh B. 77, 247 Dunn, John 41, 243 Dunn, Ray E. 249, 334 Dunten, Shirley E. 271 Durham, Katherine F. 267 Duttor, Richard 3 56, 377 DuVall, John R. 77, 245 Dwyer, Janet 277 Dye, Lawrence J. 334 E Earl, Richard J. 219 Eason, Jack T. 233 Eastburn, Erleane 93, 99 Eaton, Merrill V. 215, 327 Eaves, Charles K. 223 Eberle, Frederick M. 41, 22 5 Eckels, Howard R. 77 Eckler, Betty A. 77, 92 Eder, Samuel 241 Edmondson, Clarence E. ..... 28 Education Club 107 Edwards, Edward E. 72 Edwards, Midge 275 Eggemeyer, Bette 275 Egger, Dorothy J. 291 Eggers, Melvin 60 Eidson, Paul 155 Eifler, Robert K. 90, 327, 334 Einstandig, Harry 77, 231, 325 Eisinger, Roger W., Jr. 23 5, 334 Elder, James H. 99 Eldridge, Gail E. 221, 378 Ellen wood, James A. ___.249, 343, 3 53 Elliott, Dorothea R. 271 Elliott, Frank O. 30 Elliott, Frederic D. 9 Elliott, Hildreth E. 41 Elliott, J. Colin 144, 15 5, 158 Ellis, Nancy O. 265 Ellwanger, Richard N. 233 Elrod, Thomas J. 66, 77, 81, 318 Eisner, Mary A. 281 Emahieser, Mary R. 287 Emerson, Charles R. 127 Emly, Helen M. 196, 265 Engelman, George T. 253 Enghsh, Edith 33, 51, 306, 320 Eninger, James 239 Erickson, Charlotte L. 77, 89, 92, 291 Erishkin, Raif 3 3 Erwin, Marion 113, 115 Escort, Ivan, Jr. 223, 362 Esden, Jean 281 Eshleman, Virginia L. 291 Esinhart, Clifford A. .__.. 77 Estlick, Robert B. 77 Ettinger, Jerome 41 Ettl, Joseph 123, 223 Eubank, Gerald 41 Euclidean Circle 68 Evans, David S. 91 Evans, Edith P. 289 Evans, Glenn A. 94 Evens, Alfred 120 F Fabian, Carmen P. 99, 330 Fairchild, Jack C. 60, 223, 295, 327, 334 Falber, Ben 249 Fall, Mildred _-_26, 77, 92, 94 Falls, John D. ....__ 249 Fargo, Margaret 60 Paris, PhyHis R. 92 Farquharson, Donald S. 94, 22 3 Faucett, Homer 372, 373 Fausch, James C. 221 Fear, Jane 287 Feeger, Charles A. 237 Feffer, Henry L. 41 Feibleman, Ruth 285 Feicrtag, Richard B. 243 Feigel, Ted 374 Feighner, John R. :23 5 Feldman, Harry H. 99 Fellmy, Virginia L. .33, 99, 261, 320 Felts, Manon W. 327 Feltus, Paul Lambert 24 Fenn, Bert R. 243, 3 80, 3 81 Ferguson, Cecil B. 221, 3 34 Ferguson, Jesse 3 56 Ferguson, Mary L. 257 Ferguson, Robert W. __.77, 243, 328 Ferguson, William B. 41, 221 Fernandes, Alvin C, Jr. 221 Ferrey, Edgar E. 239 Ferrier, G. Mavaline 93, 291 Ferris, Ruth H. 263, 316 Fichman, Jeanette L. 28 5 Fickel, Helen M. 41 Fiegenschuh, Maurene 267 Fields, Charlotte J. 267 Findling, Willard H. 206, 239, 314, 325, 343 Fine, Shirley W. 28 5 Fine, Irving 77 94 Fink, Dale F. 327 Fink, Dottie P. 93, 99 Finkelstein, Harold 231 Finkle, Louis 241 Finney, Charles F. 219 Firth, Betty J. 265 Firth, Robert 223, 366 Fischer, James W. 247 Fish, James C. 227, 322, 327 Fisher, Janet 41, 279 Fisher, Lawrence F. 51, 249 Fisher, L. L. 30 Fisher, Russell H. ..77, 91, 3 81 Fisher, Theresa H. 291 Fisher, William L. 89, 217, 295, 322, 327 Fitzgibbon, William C. 247 Fitzpa trick, Joseph L. 33, 77, 91, 94, 328, 329, 332, 334, 384 Flaningam, John T. 239 Flaningam, Robert K. 99, 239 Fleehart, Janet L. 271 Fleming, Charlotte L. 271 Fleming, Marilynn C. 2 57 Fleming, Theodore B. 32, 33, 41, 227, 308, 312, 314 Fletcher, Newton H. 249 Fliegall, Florence 285 Flory, Virginia Mary 267 Foellinger, Robert J. 249, 334 Fogg, Susanne 261 Ford, Annette 267 Ford, Jack P. 223 Foreman, Virginia J. 77, 263 Forest Hall 288, 289 Forrest, Dorothy B. 93, 263 Foster, Betty L. 291 Foster, Dean 22 5 Foster, Louise 283 Foster, Harry W. 213 Foster, John E. 23 5 Fowler, Dema J. 279 Fowler, Richard K. 233 Fox, John W. 237 Fox, Raymond M. 123, 322 Fraling, Betty L. 33, 41, 64, 257, 294, 295, 316 Francis, Chet 356, 359, 362, 364 Frank, Lois J. 281 Frank, Robert E. 245 Franks, Robert 298 Franklin, J. A. -...30 Franklin, Robert R. 219 Franzen, Carl G. 96 Eraser, Elizabeth W. 267 Fraze, Lois R. 257 Frazier, John H. 77, 213 Frazier, John R. ..23 3, 3 34 Fredrich, Bette 273 Free, Stephen A. 233 Freed, Carl A. 227 Freed, James A. 227, 3 34 Freed, John E., Jr 239, 3 56 Freeland, Lowell P. 66 Freeman, Joe 141 Freeman, Virginia E. 41 French, Henry M. 51 Frey, William 3 56 Frisbee, Arthur 77 Frisk, Ethel 99, 287 Frommer, Lawrence J. 41, 241 Freutenicht, Arthur H. 41, 23 5 Fry, Bernard M. 249 Fudge, Beatrice Ann 265 Furtek, Walter 77 Fuelber, Ann 281 Fuhlberg, Mildred M. 287 Fuhrer, Ann 275 Funk, Joseph H. 344 Fusek, John M. 77, 223, 332 Flying Club 331 43 8 INDEX Gabbert, Nancy C. 77 Gaff, Jane 257 Gahm, Dwight : 348 Gaither, Evangeline J. 41, 263 Gale, Barbara L. 267, 331 Gale, Betty E 267 Gale, James F. 2 5 3 Gale, Margaret E. 41, 316 Gallmeyer, Marybelle 257, 324 Garcia, Angel 3 3 Gard, James E. 219 Gardner, Gayle ' .-- -291 Gardner, George 30 Gardner, Grace E. 275 Garfinkle, Martin 148 Garman, Helen L. 41 Garner, William P. 25 3 Garretson, Marsena M. 291 Garrison, Paul J. 219 Gast, Martha J. 263 Gates, Jerry A. 267 Gates, Robert E. 60, 239 Gaulke, David W. 158 Gaunt, Burmond J. 239 Gaunt, Everett W. 15 5, 158 Gavit, Bernard C. 120 Gawthrop, Herbert V., Jr. 41, 332, 334 Geiss, Ermal P. 79, 94, 253, 332, 384 Gellman, Amelia M. 41 Gelman, Lemar 231 Gensburg, Leroy I. 231 Gentil, Dale 3 56, 3 59, 362, 364 Gentry, Jamie E. 279 Getz, Geraldine 281 Getz, Raymond J., Jr. 141, 155, 158, 233 Gevers, Florence P. 2 87 Gayer, John C. 73, 91, 229 Geyer, Vance B., Jr. 41 Gibson, Audrey F. 281 Gibson, Jack G. 223 Giese, Reed A. 22 5 Gifford, Donna J. 265 Gilbert, Evelyn L. 261 Gilkey, May 7 ), 289 Gill, Dan 372, 373 Gillespie, Charles F. 130 Gillespie, Jane 271 Gilliam, Tommy R. ____219, 322, 334 GiUiatt, Neal 32, 33, 52, 73, 239, 304, 312, 314 Gilmore, Russell A., Jr. 221 Giovanini, Georgeanna 279 Gittleman, I. Wilson 241 Glassner, Myron S. , --- -241 Glazer, Irving M. 241, 374 Glee Clubs 118 Glenn, Jean 300, 320 Glimpse, Charles i 22 5 Glimpse, Robert D. 225 Glover, Edward D. 73, 245, 372, 373 Godersky, George 158 Godfreyo, Edwin L. 68 Godsey, Ellis 330 Goebel, Charles G. 41, 68 Goebel, Ruth R. 267 Goldstein, Robert R. 241 Good, John B. 73, 245 Goodman, Thomas P. 378 Goodpasture, James E. -146, 15 5, 158 Gonzaley, Jose 330 Gordon, Samuel 41, ( ( , 299 Gorrell, Janet J. 271 Grad, Stanley 241 Graf, Dorothy M. 287 Graf, Helen 267 Gragg, William L. 60, 99, 2 53 Graham, Frances P. 263 Graham, Jeanette ___ 267 Graham, Paul W. 346, 348 Graham, Ralph 342, 3 56 Grande, Elfrieda 287, 316 Grand, Peter 376 Graves, Elbert D. 3 34 Gray, Barbara E. 73, 92, 2 87 Gray, David C. 2 53 Gray, Francis G. 73, 239 Gray, Sarah M. 203, 275, 316 Green, Alfred 94 Green, Myron H. 15 5, 15 8, 217 Green, Philip E., Jr. 237, 295 Green, Richard H. 73 Green, Wendell H. 23 3 Greenberg, Whitney J. 241 Greene, Betty 261 Greene, Helen 239 Greenough, Charles K. 237 Greenwood, Lois M. 41, 283, 306, 331, 388 Greenwood, Robert L. 51, 23 5 Gregory, Frank 239 Greiling, William R. 223 Grice, Delores 99 Gridley, Jim 3 56, 3 59 Grieger, Louis A., Jr. 215 Griffin, Frederick P. 73 Griff is, Norman R. 219 Griffith, Edward M., Jr. 23 3 Griffith, Frances E. .....93, 261 Griffith, Fred R. 68, 94 Griffith, Josephine 271 Grile, Lester L. 41 Grimes, Irvin L., Jr. 221 Grisell, Addison C. 73 Groscop, Tom A. 73, 223 Gross, Mose 253 Grubaugh, Patricia J. 73, 92, 277 Grueter, Maurice R. 328 Grundy, Margaret E. 265 Guard, Bailey 237, 3 34 Guard, Raymond J. 99, 249 Gusman, Sarah M. 93, 2 59 Guth, Richard L. 22 5, 322 Gutzwiller, Paul 215 Gwin, Thomas T 245, 362, 364 H Haak, Robert A. 101, 247, 318, 347, 348 Hacker, Anna J. 279 Hackney, Marianne R. 291 Hale, Deborah D. 41 Hale, Esther E. 73, 281 Halfast, Richard W. 158 Hall, Charles 243 Hall, Lucille J. 289 Hall, Margaret E. 265 Hall, Robert N. 243 Hall, Robert S. 215 Hall, Virginia J. 113 Hallstead, Robert N. 41 Halpin, Charles T. 253 Halstead, Madia P. 73, 92, 289 Hamer, John K. 245 Hamersly, Jane L 94, 281, 326 Hamilton, Betty 267 Hampshire, Donald R. 15 5, 158 Hancher, Catherine J. 289 Hancock, Betty J. 93 Hancock, David W. 221, 374 Hancock, Mary E. 41, 330 Handley, Dwight S. 223 Hanna, George R. 245 Hannapel, Shirley M. 267 Hannum, Clifford P. 3 34 Hanofee, Francis A. 41 Hansen, Robert M. 3 5 8, 3 56, 364 Hansen, Willard A. 373 Hanson, Betty J. 275 Hardin, Colburn S. 101 Hardwick, William H 227, 331 Hardy, Doris E. 41 Harlan, John M. 227 Harmon, Foster 54 Harmon, John 331 Harmon, Marian A. 277 Harmon, Paul M. 152 Harmon, Raymond O. 219 Harper, Fowler V. 120 Harpold, Lawrence H. 73 Harrell, Pooch 362 Harris, Archie H., Jr. 348, 349 Harris, Betty J. -263 Harris, Donald C. 73, 217 Harris, John B. 101 Harris, Judith A. 41 Harrison, Allen 215, 295, 343 Harrison, Byron N. 141 Harrison, Wilbur S. 41 Harrold, Bruce D. 249 Harsh, Betty C. 291 Harsh, John T. 41 Hart, Fern 265 Harting, Julia A. 92, 203, 257, 316, 324 Hartmetz, Charles E. -..41, 23 5, 366 Hasbrook, Thomas C. 227 Haseman, France C. 291 Haskell, Roberta C. 281 Haskett, Richard C. -52, 60, 62, 23 5 Hasler, Norman 3 56 Hass, Allan R. 41 Hassenmiller, Marshall G. 331 Hastings, John S. 24 Hatcher, Julia M. 41 Hatchett, James A. : 41 Hatfield, Benjamin F. 221 Hatfield, Jack J. 221 Hatfield, John R. .221, 3 34 Hatfield, Philip A. 73, 217 Hauschild, William E. 90, 227 Hauselmire, Helen 93 Havens, Oscar D. 158 Hawk, Edgar A. 142, 15 5, 158 Hawkins, Donald H. 229 Hay, Horace H. 249 Hayes, Mary S. 275 439 INDEX Hayes, Robert E. 15 5, 158 Haynie, Gilmore S. 73, 23 5, 318 Haynie, Kenneth G. 235, 378 Hazel, John G. 249 Healy, Barbara H. 275 Heaton, James B. 73 Heaton, George 79 Hebert, William A. 79, 221 Hedge, Charles L. 89, 245 Hedges, Edgar L. 367, 370 Heet, William 227 Heidenreich, Marjorie L. 201, 267, 384, 385 Heighway, George F. 29 Heine, Alice E. 41, 2 57 Held, Richard W. 229 Heldt, William D. --.-73, 91, 227, 318 Helfrich, Edward H. 227 Helfrich, William F. 229, 3 34 Heller, Virginia E. _-_-.267, 295, 324 Helmen, Normabelle 291 Helms, Duane 249 Helvie, Mariageneen 271 Hemmer, Albert B. 215 Hemmer, Louise A. 93, 291 Hemstock, John ( (•, 249 Henderson, Anne 267 Henderson, Arvin T. 239 Henderson, Francis G. 144, 155, 158, 213 Hendricks, Mrs. CeciUa 300 Hendrix, Mayme 41 Heninger, Norma J. 279 Henley, James W. 217 Hennel, Cora B. 68, 330 Henry, Doris 281 Henry, Fred J. 215 Henry, George 215 Herbert, Edward C. -.348, 349, 351 Herd, Joseph G. 334 Herd, Richard M. 233, 329 Heritier, Claude J. 158 Herkless, Heber C, Jr. 41, 233 Herle, Kathryn L. 101, 257, 3 88 Herman, David T. 362 Herron, Auburn W. 68 Hersch, Harold M. 349 Hertling, Martha A. —-43 Hess, Edward W. 332 Hess, Fred F. 115 Hetrick, Robert 328 Hickam, Elliott 237 Hiestand, Sidney 3 56 Higbee, Betty 92, 281 Higdon, Albert L. 32, 43, 223, 294, 295, 304, 308, 312, 314, 318 Higginbotham, Russell B. 348, 349, 351 High, Edward G. 51 Highsmith, William H. 73, 366 Hightchew, Martha J. 263 Hildebrand, Edward H. 245, 334 Hildebrand, Harriet E. -.73, 92, 2 59 Hilgenberg, Joseph C. 73, 215 Hill, Frank J. 73, 221 Hill, John H. 147 Hill, Robert T. 158 Hill, Marjorie A. 271 Hill, Maurice J. 219 Hill, Nathaniel U 237, 373 Hill, Robert T. 152 Hill, Worl V. 43 Hiller, Margaret 68 Hiller, Rembrandt, C, Jr. 90, 217, 295, 325, 327, 329, 374 HiUiard, John A. 249 Hillis, Jay H. 229 Hilton, Palmer 253 Himebaugh, James R. S. —15 5, 158 Himelick, John H. 123 Hinchman, Gene F. 223 Hines, Helen L. 283 Hinkle, Mary A. 43, 271 Hinshaw, Barbara A. 271 Hinshaw, Guinevere 279 Hinton, Charles S. 73 Hire, Homer E. 52, 73, 239, 332, 334, 385 Hission, John 43 Hitch, Oliver M. 15 8, 215 Hitz, Victor 219 Hizer, Herbert 73 Hobbs, Mrs. Helen D. 43, 267 Hobson, John 3 56 Hodges, Mary E. 68 Hodges, Thelma F. 43 Hoelocker, Relda 265, 295 Hoff, Robert A. 73 Hoffmann, Everett 3 56 Hoffman, Robert M. 243 Hoffman, Virginia J. 43 Hoffman, Virginia M. 51, 289 Hoffzimmer, Ernest 110 Hoke, Robert I. 73, 91, 332 Holland, Betty I. 326 Holland, J. E. P. 31 Holman, Rosalie L. 257 Holmes, Claude D., Jr. 245 Holmes, Helen V. 101, 265 Holmes, Jack F. 223, 295, 362 Holmes, Robert L. 43, 223 Holsinger, Mary M. 310 Holt, Jane 273, 324 Holt, Virginia A. 101 Holthouse, Daniel C. 243 Holtz, Albert B. 43 Hooge, Anne L. 287 Hooke, Chlo e 271 Hoong-Zung, Jui 330 Hoover, Ann 281 Hoover, Charles W. 73, 94, 223, 381 Hoover, Frank L. 239, 377 Hoover, J. Guy 233 Hoover, Mary E. 263 Hopewell, Jean 289 Hopman, Anne B. 281, 310, 388 Hopman, Gretchen K. __101, 281, 388 Hoppes, Gretchen R. 283 Horack, Frank 120 Horn, Use 330 Horn, Marcella J. 291 Home, Louie M. 271 Horowitz, Mildred V. 28 5 Horton, Jack H. 245 Horton, Robert 43, 239, 376 Horton, William E. 243 Hossinger, Raymond A. 73, 94, 332, 334 Hostetter, David S. 219 Hough, Fred 43 Houghton, John W 60, 23 5, 374 Houghton, William H. 235 Hougland, Helen K. 283 House, Betty V. 291 Houser, Alan D 146, 155, 158 Howard, Bettye A. 68 Hoy, Glen W. 73 Hruskovick, Florence E. 287 Huber, Robert B. 60 Huckleberry, Don G. 68, 3 56 Hudson, E. Kenneth 73 Hudson, (Ruth) Jane 269 Huff, Harry E. 221 Huff, James B. 217, 374 Huff, Ralph 229, 318, 348, 349 Huffman, Joan 291 Huffman, Marvin 217, 318, 356, 358 Huffman, Maurine H. 43 Hughes, Elizabeth H. 43, 2 57 Hughes, George S. 217 Hughes, James M. 213 Hugus, Robert A. 243 Hulett, Robert L. 227 Hull, Robert R. 73, 2 53 Humbaugh, Roy W. 79 Humphrey, James C. -146, 15 5, 158 Humphrey, Robert O. 155 Humphreys, Harriet J. 267 Humrichouser, Harry M. 237 Hundley, Donald F. 362, 364 Hunn, Rachel 43 Hunt, Mary Beth 52, 60, 206, 267, 310, 316, 324 Hunter, Margaret E. 43 Hunter, William H. 215 Hursh, Harold J. 348, 351 Hurst, Clara L. 277 Hurst, Roger 302 Hurst, Constance, L 275 Hurt, Paul T., Jr., 158 Huse, William M. 227 Huston, James A. 33, 43, 213 Hutchinson, Richard A. 221 Hutton, Edward L. 60, 239 Hutton, Gerald L. 60 Hutton, Joseph L. 221, 297, 377 Hyde, Raymond S 101, 372, 373 Hyndman, David E. 334 Imel, Caroline L. 281 Ingwell, Guy B. 158 Inman, Garnett 373 Inskeep, Jean M. 277 Int-Hout, Dan 73, 233, 332 Ireland, Marian R. 281 Irle, Marcile A. 277 Irwin, Elizabeth 287 Isaacs, Dorothy R. 43, 283 Isaacs, L. Vivian 115, 326 Ittner, Robert T. 34 Jack, Robert 376 Jackson, John F. 213 Jackson, Martha F. 281 Jackson, Mildred B. 101, 283 Jacobs, Melvin M. 241 Jakush, Edward A. 374 440 INDEX James, Bernice 43 James, Robert L. 249 James, Thomas 43 Jansen, William 300 Janzaruk, John D. 223, 318, 348, 353 Jay, John 327 Jean, James N. 43, 3 32 Jean, Thomas A. 43 Jeanes, Charlotte Ann 283, 326 Jeanicke, Thomas 237 Jennings, William P. 90, 227 Jessup, Ann 289 Jester, Jack D. 215 Jewett, Jim S. 22 5 Jewett, Joe H. 13 3, 146, 155, 158, 223, 325 Jih-Chang, Chao 3 30 Johnson, Albert 43 Johnson, Ann E. 263 Johnson, Bertus I. 93, 267 Johnson, Betsy V. 271 Johnson, Charles E. ...141, 15 5, 158 Johnson, Dorothy A. 43, 64 Johnson, Evelyn G. 101 Johnson, J. Merrill 15 5 Johnson, Jean M. 281 Johnson, Laura E. 279 Johnson, Marian L. 269, 324 Johnson, Mary E. 43 Johnson, Nelda M. 287, 3 88 Johnson, Robert A. 233 Johnson, Robert Edwards 66 Johnson, Robert Eugene 223 Johnson, Robert L. 328 Johnson, Roberta M. 271 Johnson, Ruth M. 279, 324 Johnson, Vivian D. 93, 269 Johnson, William S. 101, 215, 318, 356, 358 Johnston, Margaret A. 267 Jones, Harold W. 158 Jones, Rachel E. 287 Jones, Ralph H. 23 5, 334 Jones, R. L. 152 Jones, Willis H. 43, 223 Jontz, Evelyn A. 263, 326 Jordan, Harold 3 1 Jordan, Lex H. 247 Jordan, River Revue 59 Jordan, Robert S. 146, 155, 158 Jordon, David S. .. 18 Joseph, Rex M. 60 Judah, Pauline 113, 115 Judd, Vera 281 Judy, Robert N. 79 Junior Mathematics Club 68 Jurkiewicz, Walter S. 348 K Kaellner, John W. 327 Kahan, Franklyn B. 241 Kahn, Alexander J. -...148, 15 5, 158 Kalb, Robert D. 15 8, 215 Kalkanoff, Helen 101 Kamm, Maxwell W. 215 Kan, Henrietta 43 Kanya, Joseph R. 101 Kaplan, Nathan 66, 206, 299 Kappa Alpha Theta 270, 271 Kappa Delta 272, 273 Kappa Delta Rho 224, 22 5 Kappa Kappa Gamma 274, 275 Kappa Sigma 226, 227 Karsell, (Mrs.) Dorotha W. 43 Karsell, William A. ...13 3, 157, 158 Kasper, Charles .3 56 Kassens, Harold L. 43 Kattany, Edward C. 141 Katterhenry, James L. 239 Katterhenry, John 217 Katterhenry, Marjorie J. 93, 291 Katterjohn, James C. ....146, 157, 158 Katterjohn, M. Doris 279 Katz, Norma 92, 28 5 Kauffman, Eileen 201 Kaufman, Bernard 231, 295, 322 Kean, Horace M. 123 Keck, William H. 235, 295, 334, 362 Keeler, John R. 43, 247 Keesling, D. Carol 289 Keilholz, John R. 81 Keisler, Paul C. 3 34 Keith, Catherine P. 101, 289 Keller, Joseph H. 243, 3 34 Keller, Rex V. 81 Keller, William P. 243 Kelley, Estel 81, 89, 91, 94, 243, 328, 329, 381 Kelley, William 243 Kellogg, Ira N., Jr. 43, 330 Kelly, John W. 237 Kelly, WilHam M. 43, 237 Kelsey, Charles P. 81, 215 Kempf, George L 237, 374 Kendall, Robert 23 5 Kenderdine, Betty L. 265 Kennedy, David J. 223 Kennedy, Ellen J. 261 Kerkling, Margaret M. 3 3, 43, 64, 261, 320 Kern, Ernest L. 25 3 Kern, Gene B. 253 Kern, Raymond A. 381 Kernodle, D. Jean 43, 275 Kerrigan, George L. 25 3 Kerrigan, Walter F. 81, 2 53 Kessler, Howard E. 90, 334 Kessler, James R. 253 Kettery, Vesta 277 Kettner, Alice C. 277 Keyes, Cole J. 81, 227, 325 Keyser, Betty B. 93, 291 Kightlinger, Cleda Beth 43, 320, 330 Kimmall, Carolyn 267 Kimmell, William S. 239 King, Carson H. 213, 381 King, Gerald E. -....43, 233, 325, 332 King, John E. 247 King, Malcolm S. 239 Kingdon, Victor R. 63, 233, 378 Kinnett, George L. 68, 330 Kinney, Paul M. 43 Kinzie, Ralph V. 158 Kirby, (Mrs.) Lottie 27 Kirk, Mary C. 287 Kirkpatrick, Mary P. 92, 289 Kirsch, George A. 247 Kistler, John L. 91 Kixmiller, Naomi K. 265 Klaer, Dick W. 373 Klafs, Frank A. 374 Klaus, JuHus 91, 94, 334 Kleifgen, William A. 141 Klein, Karl K. 101 Kleinert, Jane E. 204, 263 Kleyla, William D. 3 81 Klinck, Herbert G. 43 Klingelhoffer, Kathryn M. ....115, 2 57 Knight, Detrich S. 81, 239 Knight, Leonard L. 68 Knoop, Dorothy F. 279 Knowles, Francis E. 223 Knox, Martha M. 93 Kobes, William 334 Koch, Elmer L. 43, 141, 213 Koerber, Carol M. 68, 273 Koester, Richard J. 251 Konold, Helen 275 Koonz, Robert E. 253 Kopp, Herschel S. 215 Korn, Jerome M. ...148, 157, 158, 231 Kosanke, Mary 93, 326 Kosman, Michael 362, 364 Kosnoff, Albert 231 Koster, Mary L. 2 59 Kotoro, Frank 2 53 Kotschek, Wanda M. 43 Kraft, Mildred R. 45, 289 Kraft, Wilham 249 Krantz, Irene 267 Kreutzinger, Betty J. 204, 261 Kreyling, Kurt W. _ .___ 217 Krick, Frank J., Jr. 223 Kriegbaum, Margaret Jean ....45, 257 Kriegbaum, Mary A. 92, 267 Kriegbaum, Ruth H. 94, 283, 327 Krieger, Isadore 123 Kriekhaun, Elizabeth A. 81, 92, 94, 283 Kriekhaus, Margaret R. 283 Kruse, Edward H. 217 Kuehn, Helene E. 202, 275 Kuehne, Clem K., Jr. 142 157, 158, 239, 374 Kuhn, Frederick L. 158 Kuhn, Marian F. 291 Kuhn, Virginia L. 2 57 Kunkel, Louis E. 249 Kunkel, Mary A 45, 271, 316, 324 Kunkel, William A. 25 Kupersmith, Sylvia S. 291 Kushlevitz, Abram R. 81 Kuzmitz, Anne 291 Lacey, Forrest, Jr. 45 Lacey, William T. 81 Lackey, Dotty L. 277 LaFoUette, Forrest R. -.141, 157, 158 LaFoUette, Robert E. 327 Lambda Chi Alpha 228, 229 Lambertus, Robert 81, 233 Lambo, Vincent A. 2 53 Lampe, Cletius A. 291 Lampl, James 249, 381 Land, Freeman M. 215 Landis, Colonel 3 85 Landis, Frances K. 271 Landis, Phyllis G. 281, 324 Lane, Terence M. 233 441 INDEX Lange, Oscar W. 239 Lange, Robert H. 81, 217 Lantz, Harold L. 217 Lanza, Elizabeth 101, 289 Larkin, Howard A. 213 Larkin, Patrick B. 251 Lathrop, J. H. 18 Latimer, Frieda M. 81 Latshaw, Charles W. ....141, 157, 158 Lauter, Lois V. 267 Lawrence, Alvin R. 33, 81, 249, 308, 312, 318, 328 Lawrence, Burr E. 45, 68 Lazzara, Angelo 372, 373 Lazzelle, Lawrence 3 56 Lee, Betty 81, 92, 94, 287 Leff, Abe H. 231 Leffler, John D. 81, 217, 381 Legeman, Charles F. 217, 3 34 Leib, William F. 221 Leinenweber, George L. 81, 94 Leininger, Claudia S. 33, 39, 45, 52, 281, 316, 324 Leininger, Delbert E. 243 Leming, Ben L. ..144, 155, 157, 219 Lemm, Rita M. 291 Lennox, Lola 101 Lenox, Richard M. 221 Leonard, Charles S. 237 Lesniak, Chester E. 101 Lettelleir, Joseph T. 3 56, 3 59 Levenson, Rosalie 285 Levi, Edna 92, 285, 324 Levy, Irene 285 Lewin, Kenneth J. 241 Lewis, Adrian A. 347, 348 Lewis, James R. 81, 91 Lewis, Lorraine 28 5 Lewis, Martha L. 289 Lewis, Richard 227, 3 34 Lieber, Harold M. 231, 3 36 Liebert, Frank A. 157, 158 Lienberger, William M. 374 Lievan, Thomas T. ...81, 91, 229, 325 Lincoln, James J. 225 Lincoln, Mary J. ....267 Lindahl, Thomas B. 90, 328 Lindley, William H. 239 Lindner, Ruth L. 2 59, 326 Lingeman, Robert E. 15 8 Linker, Allen J. ..33, 81, 85, 241, 314 Linton, Ernest M. 3 30 Lipshutz, Nathan 45 Lipton, Robert D. 374 Liscinsky, Andrew G. 348 Littell, Charles L 332, 334, 384 Littell, Harry B. 3 34 Little, Leon H., Jr 247 Littman, Alfred L. 81 Livengood, Jane A. 265 Livesay, Myrtle D. ...326 Livovich, Andrew F. 372, 373 Lockhart, Jack M. 243 Logan, Jim , 346, 348 Lohse, Alfred C. 213, 32 8 Lohse, Henry A., Jr. 101 Lomatch, Beatrice 81, 92, 289 Long, Clarence ..81, 89, 219, 334, 343 Long, J. Chester 45 Long, Laura J. 271 Long, Sid E. .253 Loucks, Jean F. 263 Loughery, Richard M. 219, 322 Love, Louise E. 291 Lowell, Adele R. 263 Lowther, Mabel P. 324 Lucas, Dorothea E 291 Lucas, Ehza B. 289, 320 Ludlow, Marjorie E. 291 Lugar, Wilham R. -....23 5, 322, 378 Lung, Mary A. 275 Lustgarten, Florence 291 Lutz, Doris A. 277 Lutz, Robert L. ;.233 Lybrook, Helen M. 81, 273, 324 L) ' brook, Joann G. 271 Lybrook, Joseph R. 243 Lycas, John 334 Lynch, John H. 251, 330 Lj on, Wilham A. 243 Lytle, Mary L. 81, 92 M McAdams, Hugh B. 217 McAnly, Louis C, Jr. 223 McAuliffe, Charles P. .-81, 243, 325 McBane, John K. 158 McCain, George W. 3 34 McCall, Milton 130 McCammon, Donald F. 249 McCammon, Doris J. 289 McCann, Mary C. 45, 271 McCartney, Charles D. 2 53 McCaslin, Raymond E. 247 McClintock, Norma L 261 McColley, Ann L 45 McColly, Marcia J. 263 McConnell, Robert B. 245, 328 McCormick, Betty A. 204, 281 McCormick, John F. 101 McCracken, E. Branch 94, 3 56 McCracken, Bruce H. 81 McCracken, Donald T. 243 McCrocklin, Ruth E. 93, 269 McCuUough, Betty R. 271 McDaniel, Chauncey W. 373 McDaniel, Helen L. 101 McDaniel, Virginia F. ....45, 52, 267 McDonald, Frank C. 158 McDonald, Robert E. 225 McDowell, Fletcher W. 141 McElwee, Marilyn 257 McFarlan, John B. 237 McFarland, Walter 245, 377, 381 McFeely, Jean 2 59, 324 McGaughey, Richard V. ....3 56, 3 59 McGaw, Marjorie A. 287 McGreevey, John W. 257 McGrew, Gale L 123 McGrew, Jean E. 269 McHenry, Jeanne E. 113 Mcllveen, Mary E. 261 Mclntoch, Martha L. 261 McKinley, Marjorie M. 92, 291 McLain, Robert G. 81, 235 McLaughlin, Gordon C, Jr. 221 McLaughhn, Herbert 223, 297 McLeod, John F. 45 McKinley, A. David 130 McMahan, Jeanne 271 McManus, Munro 227 McMillin, Bo 42, 3 50 McMurty, Donald W. 213 McNerney, Chester T. 101 McQueen, Betty D. 291 McTerney, Elizabeth A. 261 Macklin, David A. 331 Mackres, Charles J. 45, 328, 330 Maddox, Clee S. 348 Mader, John H. 158 Magel, Mildred V. 93, 291 Mahaffey, Jean 277 Mainland, Dorothy V. 158 Maloney, Shirley 275, 295 Malott, Roland C. 328 Manley, Margaret L. 287 Mann, Julius David, Jr. 249 Mann, Sara E. 101 Mahnan, John A. 377 Mansfield, Edgar O. 3 56, 3 59 Marihal, Harold 219 Marks, Robert A. 213 Marks, Salvo P. 158 Marlette, Robert H. ...22 5, 328, 3 81 Marley, Margaret 45, 287 Marlowe, John J. 330 Marnan, Catherine J. 263 Marr, Griffith 157, 15 8, 237 Marshall, Glenn L. 237 Marshall, Harold C. 219 Marshall, Miles H. 213 Martin, Alice C. 279 Martin, Betty G. 2 59 Martin, Charles F., Jr. 157, 158 Martin, E. Jane 283 Martin, Graham E. 348 Martin, J. P. 219 Martin, John H. 115 Martin, Kemp F. 249, 328, 334 Martin, Robert 300 Martz, Martha 32, 33, 45, 52, 275, 306, 320 Martz, Robert 23 5 Martz, Velorus 96 Mason, Harry 227 Massey, Vera M. 52, 320 Massie, Robert 227 Master, Brooker L. 157, 158 Masters, Mary L. 291 Masters, Robert E. 123 Matchette, Miriam M. ...: 265 Mathers, Thomas N 123 Matthews, Jack T. 217 Mattingley, Ray H. 330 Mauck, E. G. 206 221, 295, 304, 308, 314 Mauck, Phylhs 81, 85, 273 Mauzy, Robert J. 217 Maxwell, Joe T. 334 Maxwell, Mary J. 45, 289 Maxwell, Melvin 25 3 May, J. Irene 269, 326 May, Margaret L. 281, 320, 326 May, Mary E. 51, 263 Maycox, John G., Jr. 348 Mayrose, George F. 327 Mayse, Wilham H. -.33, 81, 83, 217, 314, 329, 332, 366, 384, 385 Meacham, Paul L. 33, 45, 60, 66 Mead, Montford A. 60, 327, 328 442 INDEX Meade, Robert H. 328 Medow, Harold 32 8, 329 Meihaus, George 233 Mellen, Marjorie L. 26 J Mellen, Robert L., Jr. 23 5 Mellinger, Frank J. 217, 362 Mellinger, Mary E. 320 Melony, Harold 123 Memorial Hall 290, 291 Mendenhall, William J. 243 Mendez, Fernando L., Jr. ....221, 3 34 Menke, Dorothy 45, 265 Menke, Robert H.--243, 322, 3 56, 358 Menke, William 0.-243,3 56,358,3 59 Metcalf, Henry T. 23 3 Meyer, Robert L. 239 Meyer, Winfred A. 68 Meyers, Mark 217 Miener, Harold G. .81, 91, 229, 332 Miholich, William T. 81 Mikan, Frank 348 Miles, Helen J. 263 Miller, Dolores L. 201, 263 Miller, Eileen E. 291 Miller, Ellen L. 271 Miller, Florence V. 287 Miller, George F. 243 Miller, Helen C. 257. Miller, Jack B. 45, 223 Miller, John M. 123 Miller, Leo A. 241 Miller, Margaret E. 287 Miller, Marjorie A. 291 Miller, Marvin L. 60, 90, 227, 295, 322, 327 Miller, Mary E. 203, 265 Miller, Robert G. 81 Miller, Tom 25 3, 328 Miller, Thomas 221 Miller, William 215 Milleson, Anna L. 130 Milligan, Marjorie 281 Millikan, Bryant K. 213 Million, Robert E. 45 Mills, Betty K. 277 Milner, Maclin R. 223 Milteer, Jayne H. 271 Miner, Rosemary 257 Minton, Sherman, Jr. ....157, 15 8, 233 Mitchell, Allen C. 34 Mitchell, Darlings M. 45, 261 Mitchell, Effie M. 326 Mitchell, John 243 Mitchell, Jessie I. 261 Mitchell, Samuel L. 237, 314 Mitchell, William D. 215 Mitman, Floyd B., Jr. 45, 247 Moberg, Myrtle A. 45 Mobley, Jacqueline 93, 265, 326 Mock, E. Leighton 229 Midisett, Jackson W. 247, 32 5 Moeller, Kenneth W. 249 Moenkhaus, Carl X. 330 Moenkhaus, William J. 152, 158 Moffat, Dorothy M 81, 92 Moffat, James E. 72 Mohler, Mable K. 45 Moldthan, Mary B. 283 Moler, Robert 2 1 3 Monro, Edna 3 87 Monroe, Frank R. 3 34 Montoux, Ray 2 53 Monzka, Leonard V. 81 Mooney, Marie P. 81, 92 Moore, Charles E. 249 Moore, George E. 25 3 Moore, Harold E. 107 Moore, Marvin G. 68 Moore, Robert C. 81, 94 Moore, Suzanne 60, 265 Moore, Virgene 93, 277 Moore, Virginia M. 93, 326 Moore, Wilma G. 93 Moran, R. Richard 245 Morgan, Nen 249 Morgan, Robert 249 Moritz, Mary C. 101, 287, 3 88 Morris, Gail M. 45 Morris, Maynard F. 249 Morris, Phyllis R. 257 Morris, Rebecca A. 275 Morris, WlUiam M. 223, 297 Morrison, Kathryn M. 291 Morrison, Margaret A. 267 Morrow, Mary M. 289 Morse, Maxine L. 261 Mortar Board 306, 307 Morton, Robert E. 247 Moss, Charles F., Jr. 45 Moss, Mary A. 158 Moss, Lemuel 18 Motter, Thomas A. 3 56, 3 59 Mueller, Jack L. 217, 314, 376 Mueller, (Mrs.) Kate H. 27 Mueller, Richard M. 217 Mull, Martha H. 3 3, 45, 47, 281, 306, 320 Muller, LuUus P 141, 157, 158 Munk, Mary F. 45 Munro, Edna 3 87 Munsee, Jack R. 374 Murnane, John G., Jr. 227 Murphy, John G. 251 Murphy, Mary M. 113, 115 Murphy, Maurice P 223, 328 Murray, Charles A. 72 Murray, Robert E. 213 Music Series 114 Mutz, Thomas R. 227 Muzaffer, Er Selcuk M. 3 30 Myers, B. D. 152, 158 Myers, Charles B. 245, 334 Myers, Emma J. 287 Myers, Esther M. 289 Myers, John A. 91, 94, 245, 325, 356 Myers, Martha E. 289 N Naddeo, Mike 347, 348 Nash, Evah L. 45 Nathan, Alfred 231 Naugle, Robert R. 247 Neal, William A. 225 Neff, Elizabeth A. 263 Neff, Floyd R. 188 Negley, Howard M. 45, 329 Neher, Byron W. 45 Neighbours, James B. 22 5 Nelson, (Mrs.) Alice 31 Nelson, Helen W. 257 Neu, Eugenia C. 271 Neuhauser, Dorothea M. 271 Neuman, Richard E. 215 New, Richard W. 233 Newson, Robert H. 81 Newton, Peggy 267 Newton, Richard F. 253 Nicholas, Pete 330 Nicholas, Sophia 60, 326 Nicholas, Wilbur H. ' ...249 Nicholls, Elizabeth 201, 247 Nichols, John G. 221 Nichols, Mary L. 267 Nichols, Murl M. 22 5 Nichols, Orville W., Jr. 23 5, 3 56 Nicholson, Charles A. 23 5 Nicholson, Doris E. 93 283 Nicholson, Joe C. 347, 348 Nickels, Robert P. 15 8, 215 Nicks, John 245 Nie, Marjorie E. 271, 324, 326 Niederhaus, Betty 283 Nill, John H 157, 158 Niven, Anita J. 267 Noffke, Lois W. 45 Nolan, Jack P. 23 5 Nolan, Val F. 25 Nolan, Val, Fr 23 5, 322, 327 Noland, James E. 237 Norman, Hugh W. 189 Norton, Horace 141, 157, 158 Norvelle, Lee R. 54 Novick, George 241 Nowviskie, Leona E. 291 Nussmeier, Dorothy A. 93, 277 Nutt, Cyrus 18 Nye, Fred W. 249 Nygren, Fred M. 81, 217 O Oak, David D. 45 O ' Brien, Charles V. 223 O ' Connor, Richard P. 251 Odell, Harry 3 56 O ' Donnell, Mary M. 291 O ' Donnell, Patricia ..... 2 57 Offutt, Robert H. 23 5 Ogden, Charles 249 O ' Laverty, Glen R. 51, 221 Oliver, Jack W. 219 Oliver, Vincent J. .101, 348, 349, 351 Olmstead, John H. 245 Olofson, Andrew G. . .33, 45, 51, 66, 245, 299, 302, 304, 308, 312, 314 Olshewitz, Milton J. 231 Olson, Alfred 45, 23 3 Omicron Delta ...92 O ' Neal, Bernard F. 83 O ' Neill, Martin J. 45 Ooley, Clarence E. 3 56, 3 59 O ' Riley, Ralph D. 83, 2 39 Ornelas, Joseph P. 327 Orpi, Antonio . 330 Orris, Mary 189 Osburn, Wilham E. ......12 3, 223, 314 Oskins, Ronald G. 245 Otteau, Mike 2 53 Overman, John P. 45, 381 Overmier, Robert C. 295, 334 Owen, Russell T. 245 443 INDEX _233 Pace, Eleanor L. 283 Packwood, Mary K. 330 Paddock, Mary E. 2 57 Paige, Warner H. 83, 237 Paine, Patrick 229 Painter, Donald S. 219 Painter, John R. 243 Palmer, Daphne E. 275 Palmer, Mary J. 265 Pan-Hellenic Council 324 Parent, Jean 2 57 Parke, Elsie A. 45, 267 Parrish, Elsa M. 291 Parsons, Hazel E. _.._-3 3, 45, 64, 261 Pass, Benjamin 253, 366 Pass, Jeanette F. 28 5 Patrick, J. A. 29 Patrick, Maryel K. 197, 263 Patterson, Robert 243 Patton, Agnes P. 83 Patton, Orie P. __.. 2 59 Patton, Rolla L. 373 Patty, W. W. 96 Paullus, Ernest R. 328, 373 Pawelec, William J. 83, 94 Paxton, Virginia L. 291 Payne, Fernandus 29 Peacock, Robert C. 15 5, 158 Pearch, Lowell D. 331 Pearson, H. E. 28 Pease, James A. 123, 314 Pease, Robert C. 249 Peck, Bernard 45 Peckinpaugh, Julia E. 92, 2 57 Pendry, Reba J. 261 Pengilly, Parker 219 Penn, Robert H. 223, 3 81 Penning, Frank G. 376 Perrine, Charlotte 291 Peters, Jerome H. — 215 Peters, Tom L. 217, 362 Peterson, Kenneth 23 5 Peterson, Margaret E. 83, 92 Peterson, W. W. 31 Petrick, Francis J. 101, 348, 352 Pettit, Ellen R. 93 Pettyjohn, Dick 3 56 Pfau, Alphonse H. 83 Pfingst, William 33 Phegley, Mary L. 289 Phi Beta Delta 230, 231 Phi Beta Kappa 69 Phi Delta Kappa 107 Phi Delta Theta 232, 233 Phi Gamma Delta 234, 23 5 Phi Kappa Psi 236, 237 Phi Mu 276, 277 Phi Omega Pi 278, 279 Phillippe, James R. 247, 322 Phillippe, Joanna M. 289 Phillips, Elizabeth L. 283 Phillips, Helen M. 83, 263 Phillips, Ralph W. 47, 245 Phillips, Reginald H. 91, 227 Phillips, Robert G. 229 Phipps, Ben A. 334 Pi Beta Phi 280, 281 Pi Lambda Theta 106 Piatt, Margie L. 267 Pierce, Claude D. Pierce, James D. 130 Piercy, Josephine 300 Piersol, Alice F. 83, 92 Pierson, Stephen M. 123 Piez, Betty H. 283 Piper, Jane 269, 324 Pirtle, William F. 113 Pitkin, William V. 245 Pleiades 316, 317 Pletcher, Ll oyd L. 83 Poland, Roberta A. 283 Polhemus, Warren C. ....142, 157, 158 Pollak, Evelyn Z. 285 Pontz, William M. 77, 123 Poorman, Roger W. 371 Porter, Malcolm L. 101 Postma, Margaret 289, 3 88 Pow, Mary L. 291 Powell, James P. 146, 157, 158 Power, Samuel H. 47 Powers, Harriet E. 93, 291 Powers, Robert G. 243 Pratt, Robert G. ....83 Prentice, Dixon W. ......237 Price, Clifford E. 213 Price, Ernest H. 51 Price, George E. 83, 239 Price, Marjorie A. 277 Price, Richard J. 237 Prickett, Ruth J. 281 Priddy, Cecil T. 83 Prinz, Jeanette A. 2 57, 316, 3 84, 38 5 Pro-Music Club 115 Proud, Frances E. 289, 310, 326 Prough, Wendell A. 215 Pryor, Richard C. 157, 158 P ' Simmer, Milton 23 3 Pugh, Madelyn L. 275 Pulliam, Nellie W 93, 261 Purcell, John 47, 215 Purcell, Royal E. 23 5 Purner, David J. 213 Pursley, Jane S. 261 Pyle, Margaret L. 275 Quick, John B. 217 R Rabb, Albert L. 25 Raber, James R. 89, 332 Raber, John M. 83, 94 Rabinowitz, Leona 28 5 Rader, Marilyn E. 259 Radigan, Thomas J. 227 Radio 63 Rael, Moises 330 Rainford, Gerald E. 68 Rankin, Robert F. 227 Rapp, Patricia L. 47, 275 Rappaport, Gersten 231 Rarick, Laura K. 291 Rariden, David H. 245, 381 Ranch, George W. 221, 322 Redden, Normand 366 Redens, Rosemary J. 32, 47, 52, 59, 265, 306, 316, 320 Redman, Jean E. 265 Reed, Richard 217 Rees, Mary F. 271 Reese, Claude D. 47 Reese, Keith C. 215 Reeves, Carol 326 Reeves, Mildred R. 47, 279 Reeves, Sara E. 261, 324 Rehm, Richard T 217, 348 Reibly, Stephen R. 2 51, 330 Reinhard, John J., Jr. 23 5, 3 34 Remus, Mary O. 326 Rena, Lois D. 39 Rendel, Harold E. 146, 157, 15 8, 247 Renn, Richard W. 237, 328 Rentschler, Maryellen 281 Revington, Phoebe J. 271 Rhetts, Charles C. 243, 334 Rhuel, Molly 275 Rice, Elizabeth A. ..51, 281, 306, 310 Richards, Alice 273 Richardson, Clair L. 33, 77, 83, 215, 308, 325, 332, 384 Richardson, David B. 66 Richhart, Catherine E. 287 Richmond, William J. 373 Richwine, George F. 243 Rickard, Paul H. 83 Ricke, Charles G 243 Ricks, Georgia M 326 Ricks, Herbert E 101 Rieder, John J. 142, 158 Riepe, Addison E. 249 Rifle, Teams 379 Rinehart, Jane 267 Rinehart, Walter T., Jr. 47, 60, 253, 374 Rinne, Austin D. 237 Ritchie, Morris 91, 221, 343 Ritter, James B. 126, 237 Ritz, Albert S. 157, 158, 251 Roach, Hazel A. 47 Robb, Robert G. 215 Robbins, Cocky 336 Roberts, John M. 101 Roberts, Ruth M. 289 Robertson, William C. 243 Robins, Harry F. 47, 370 Robinson, George B. . 83, 23 5 Robinson, J. J. 120, 308 Robinson, jean E. -47, 283, 320, 324 Robinson, Richard B. 217, 331 Robinson, Samuel S. 51, 223 Robinson, Sid 370 Robinson, William D. 331 Rodenberger, Arthur E. 213 Rodgers, Rufus G. 227 Roe, Joe 123 Roehm, Frederick C. 47, 223 Roessler, William G. 215 Roethke, Margaret 267 Rogers, Forest V. 47 Rogers, Ruth J. 281 Rokke, Edna E. 47 Rolak, Bruno J. 373 Roll, Edmund C. 157, 158 Roll, Elta F. 47, 279 Roman, Joseph M. .158, 372, 373 Romey, James T. ...83, 8 5, 237, 318 Romines, Cleo C. 93, 295 Rominger, Thomas S. 83, 91, 94 Ronzone, Philip M. 253 Rosa, Robert 227, 334 444 INDEX Rose, Bernard 231 Rose, Doris M. 261 Rose, Stephen G. 237, 377 Rose, Truman E. 2 37 Rosenbaum, Edna L. 291 Rosenbaum, Franklin 249 Rosenberg, Albert 83, 231 Rosenthal, Ira M. 241 Ross, Evelyn G. H8 Ross, Lela J. 271 Ross, W. E. 110 Roth, James R. 158 Roth, Manuel L. 241 Roth, Richard ___ 241 Rotheberg, Manuel F. ..241, 29J, 314 Roudebush, Marion L. 261 Rowe, Elizabeth G. 202, 271 Rowe, Elizabeth J. 263 Rowe, Howard H. 141 Rowland, June M. 291 Roy, Sheldon V. 83, 94 Royalty, Lester D. 334 Royer, Amelia E. 263 Royer, Robert A. 374 Roz elle, Florence E. 261 Rucinski, Edward A. 247, 348 Ruffing, Rosemary E. 261 Rumrill, Harry E. 331 Runner, Eunice E. 279 Runyan, Richard F. 245 Rush, Marjorie B. 289 Russell, Elvin J. 213 Russell, Guy E. 47 Russell, Mary E 47, 2 57 Russell, Richard H. --_-141, 213, 322 Rust, E. Glenn 221 Rutkin, Irving R. 158 Rutledge, Harriet J. 275 Ryors, Alfred 18 S Sabin, Robert J. 2 5 3, 32 8 Sablosky, Marvin E. 241 Sabol, Albert R. 348, 3 52 Sacks, Jeanne 285 Sage, W. Frank 91, 329 Sailors, Mary E. 275 Salin, Andrew 158 Samuelson, Louise M. 93, 269 Sanders, Chauncey 300 Sanders, Jack 237 Sanders, Jesse A., Jr. 47, 32 5 Sanders, Lowell L. 239 Sanders, Mary L. 265 Sanders, Olive L. 113, 115, 261 Sanders, Robert L 110, 116, 117 Sanderson, Sheldon C. 225 Sands, Charles D. 51 Sands, Eleanor M. 291 Saperstein, Bernice S. 285 Sappenfield, Susan 273 Sartor, Herschel 3 56 Sause, Mary E. 291 Sauvain, H. C. 72 Savery, Charles 227 Savesky, Betty J 28 5 Sayle, Robert P. 47 Sayler, Treva 283 Scales, Mary Z 287 Schaefer, Herman 215, 3 56 Schaefer, Melvin 249 Schafer, Lloyd O. 83 Schalliol, Robert D. 83, 90 Schannen, Richard H. 3 3, 79, 83, 89, 235, 304, 314, 356 Schechter, John 146, 157, 158 Scheidler, Dorothy 47, 275 Scherer, Robert 219 Schilling, George T. 221 Schilling, Jay V. 47, 215 SchilUng, Mary E. 2 59 Schimpff, Wilham V., Jr. ....3 8, 253 Schlack, Eugene I. 231 Schlaegel, Rosamond 257 Schlaegel, Theodore, Jr. 142, 15 8, 221 Schmalz, Mary S. 267 Schmalz, Richard 362 Schmick, Jane 259 Schmidt, Edward 3 56 Schmidt, George, 51, 249 Schmidt, Robert 223 Schnabel, Ralph D. 253 Schneider, Bernice M. 93 Schneider, Betty L. 277 Schneider, Erie R. 47 Schneider, Kathryn M. -83, 92, 291 Schnute, Charles P. 83, 223, 378 Schocke, Ellen V. 2 57 Schoff, Lois 15 8 Scholz, Jean 275 Scholz, Marjorie L. 275 Schott, Eugene, W. 83, 251 Schrader, Betty 47, 49, 52, 271, 316 Schrader, Martha J. 92, 94, 283 Schreiber, Kenneth M. 101 Schreider, Arnold M. 47 Schroer, Ruth M. 277 Schulz, Mary H 275 Schumacher, Arnold C. 83 Schuman, Edith B. 31 Schwartz, Harry 231 Schwartz, Stanley 231 Schweers, Frederick P. 47 Scoles, Dorothy R. 101, 283 Scott, Ellsworth P. 68, 243 Scott, Harriet R. ...99, 101, 261, 316 Scott, Marian E. 101 Scott, Paul F. 51, 219, 318 Scott, Philip M. 217, 362 Scott, Ruth M. 101 Scott, V. Brown 152, 158 Scripture, Ellis B. 47 Scrogin, Robert H. 374 Scully, Betty J. 47, 281,310 Scully, Mary M. 208, 281 Seager, Jean M. 101 Sears, Martha E. 99, 103, 287 Seele, John, Jr. 233 Seitz, Edith C. 259 Sembower, Charles J. 29 Sembower, Charles W. 217 Senefeld, Geneva R. 60, 62, 206, 310, 388 Sexson, Hiram T. 221 Sexson, Violet, M. 287 Shackelford, H. Mark 217 Shadel, Frank B. 83, 229 Shafer, Herman 3 59 Shaffner, Jack A. 83, 231 Shaker, Wilham J. ..328 Shalansky, Alberta 28 5 Shanks, Ruth H. 47 Shapiro, Edward 83, 231 Shapiro, Zeke X. 60 Sharp, John D. 233 Sharp, Marian H 47, 263, 316, 324 Sharpnack, Imogene 2 57 Shaul, Margaret A. 267 Sheller, Tom G. 141, 157 Shepherd, Noble N. 331 Shertzer, Cecil G. 93 Shidler, Edna M. 277, 3 88 Shoemaker, Perry 3 56 Shoff, Lois G. 157 Sholty, William M. 157, 158 Shores, Richard W. 52, 113, 115, 221, 327, 381 Showers, William T. 239 Shropshire, Frances M. 257 Shrum, Carol J. 83, 92, 277, 324 ShuU, Gilbert M. 343 Shurr, Donna D. 201 Sider, Estelle G. 28 5 Siebenthal, Robert L. 83, 237 Siegel, Edgar 241 Sien, Tsching-Dau 3 30 Sigler, Elizabeth C. 263 Sigler, Patricia J. 263 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 23 8, 239 Sigma Alpha Mu 240, 241 Sigma Chi 242, 243 Sigma Delta Chi 66, 67 Sigma Kappa 282, 283 Sigma Nu 244, 245 Sigma Phi Upsilon 2 84, 28 5 Sigma Pi 246, 247 Sill, Robert W. 213, 376 Silverstein, N. L. 72 Silverthorn, Dorothy P. 113, 115, 289 Simmermon, Barbara H. 275, 324 Simmons, Eric L. 3 30 Simmons, John J. 51 Simons, Richard S. 241, 328 Simonton, Walter L. 237 Sims, Herbert A. 249, 325 Sims, Joseph R. 47 Singer, Ralph C. 243 Sisson, Helen M. 158 Skeleton Club 158 Skinner, Jean E. 275 Skorich, Milan 330 Skull and Crescent 322, 323 Slabaugh, Marjorie E. 263 Slipher, Stephen G. 90, 243, 327 Sloan, Lola 101, 265 Sloss, Russell M. ....83, 245, 348, 3 53 Slough, Major-Carol P. 237 Small, David G. 371 Small, Dolores J. 261 Smartz, Kenneth M. 47 Smillie, Winston B. 374 Smith, Audrey J. 261, 295 Smith, Betty A. 47, 263 Smith, Betty M. 47, 281 Smith, David J. 146, 157, 158 Smith, Eugenia 289 Smith, Eugene L. 332 Smith, Francis F. 239 Smith, Frank, Jr. 101, 348, 3 50 Smith, Gene 83, 94, 217 445 INDEX Smith, Geraldine G. 47, 281 Smith, Gertrude M. 47 Smith, Gilbert K. 83 Smith, Glen Estal 247 Smith, Henry L. 96 Smith, Hughes L. 229 Smith, Jean 384, 38 J Smith, Joyce 277 Smith, Kenneth 3J6 Smith, Lewis L. 60, 223 Smith, Margaret L. 281 Smith, Marion A. 259, 265, 316, 324 Smith, Marvin H. 241 Smith, Mavis A. 113, 261 Smith, Melvin 241 Smith, Nila 96 Smith, Rosemary 47, 281 Smith, Ruth C. 32, 47, 62, 271, 306, 310, 320 Smith, Ruth E. 51 Smith, Vergel A. 5 5 Smith, Virgil H. 47 Smith, Walter F. -247, 308, 318, 329 Smith, William S. 348, 349 Smith, William T. 101 Smulyan, Sam W. 241 Snapp, Mary E. 263 Snell, Lester L. 83, 213 Snook, Anne M. 265 Snook, Elizabeth 101, 277 Snyder, Clare 271 Snyder, Earl 47, 215 Snyder, Maurice E 15 7, 15 8, 249 Snyder, Nancy E. 271 Sobrino, Hilda 291 Sobrino, Maria 291 Somerville, Helen L 283 Sonneburg, Charles 249, 322 South Hall 2 52, 253 Southworth, Ray 23 3 Spahr, John F. 130 Spangler, Walter B. 47 Spector, Julia S. 49, 291 Speer, Lula F. 49, 330 Speichert, Fred T. 83 Spencer, Barbara 261 Spencer, Jack W. 217 Spencer, Madalyne B. 257 Sphinx Club 318, 319 Speice, Richard L 83 Spilman, Betty Jane 275 Spilman, Claude M., Jr. 233, 334 Splittorff, Paul W. 22 3 Sponder, Wanda H. 103 Spradling, Mary K. 263 Springer, John E. 237 Spychalski, Albina 204 Squier, William B. 227 Stanley, Colleen G. 103 Stanley, Robert B. 253 Starr, Olive __271 Stawicki, Jack 247 Stayton, Chester A. 237 Steele, Charles -215, 348 Stegemeier, Marie L. 49, 275 Steinberg, Gertrude K. 28 5, 324 Steinmetz, Mary B. 198, 267 Steinmetz, Mary R. .„___202, 261, 295 Stempel, John E 34, 298, 299 Stephan, Dorothy A. 92, 289 Stephens, Donald E. 237 Stephenson, Liberta E. 275 Sterling, Cornelius F. 217, 3 56 Stevens, Darwin C. 8 5 Stevens, Elaine E. 92, 2 57 Stevens, George P. . 239 Stevens, Marian J. 103, 281 Stevens, Virginia M. 2 57 Stevens, William F. 348, 349 Stevenson, Francine C. 267 Stevenson, Jack K. 3 56, 3 59 Stevenson, Robert L. 49, 221, 348, 350 Stewart, Margery 208, 275 Stich, Betty A. 289, 326 Stiers, John E. 90, 243, 314, 327, 3 56 Stigdon, Clement F., Jr. .„_. 245, 374 Stiles, Charles K. 330 Stilwell, Bettye 281 Stimson, Robert F. 85, 227 Stimson, Gordon „ 334 Stockrahm, Hazel E. 103, 107 Stocks, Marjorie M. 49, 289 Stoker, David S. 22 5 Stone, Jack A. 249 Stoner, Gilbert ..._... 215 Stoner, Richard B. 94, 245, 295, 322, 327 Stonex, WiUiam 217 Stoshitch, Bozidar 362, 364 Stout, Selatie E. 34 St. Paul, Alexander C. 49 Straesser, Robert B 213, 322, 334 Strang, Ellsworth H., Jr. 213 Straub, Jeanette D. 68, 273 Straub, Mary J. --267, 295, 320, 326 Strauss, David III 85, 241 Strauss, Kenneth R. 85, 381 Strawbridge, Robert 237 Strayer, S. Jeanette 32, 33, 60, 62, 103, 263, 310 Streib, H. Frederick 158 Strey, M. Alice 289 Strickler, Claire C. 93 Strong, Mrs. Martha T. 158 Strong, Jay V. 8 5 Stroup, William R. 8 5, 94 Strouse, John R. 49, 23 5 Strouse, Thomas M. 85, 94 Stuckwisch, Clarence G. 49 Stull, Mary S. 60, 271, 326 Stultz, Raman W 221, 371 Stump, Harold D. 49, 253 Stump, Margaret E. 68 Stunkard, Robert M. 221 Sturgeon, Robert R. 3 3, 49, 302, 304, 308, 329 Sturgis, Margaret A. 283 Su, Ting 330 Sukmann, Charles A. „..113, 115, 381 Sullwyn, Adron A. 130 Summers, Merlin W. 249 Sutherland, Betty A. 93, 275 Sutphin, Ina E. 267 Sutton, Elsie L. 295 Suverkrup, Edna 257 Swain, Joseph 19 Swan, Marian 93, 289 Swayne, Chadwena 281 Swets, Edward J. 225 Swickard, Jack D. 334 Swihart, Marjorie R. 103, 261 Swinford, William E. 223 Switzer, Robert A. 158 Switzer, Robert E. 141 Symphony Orchestra 116 Taff, James P. --85 Talbot, Frank M., Ill 227, 371 Tam, Robert W. 85 Tangeman, R. S. 110 Tau Kappa Alpha 62 Taubensee, Tom E. 233, 377 Taylor, Doris M. —33, 49, 289, 388 Taylor, Dorothy J. 202, 2 59 Taylor, Ellen L. 2 59 Taylor, Harold N 142, 157, 223 Taylor, Mary I. 49 Taylor, Mary J. 261 Taylor, Pauline 208, 2 57, 385 Taylor, Robert G. 91, 215, 327, 328, 381 Teaney, Leland J. 225 Teagarden, Alfred P. 334 Templin, Robert E. 217 Tennell, Mary J. 259 Ternet, Rita M 287 Terwilliger, Ella E. ._. 93, 261 Teter, Eber A. 152, 158 Teter, Mrs. Ruth D. 49 Teter, Mrs. Sanford F. 25 Tharp, Mary J. 273, 320 Tharpe, Jack M. 51 Theta Alpha Phi 52, 53 Theta Chi 248, 249 Theta Sigma Phi 64, 65 Thiel, Caroline E. 103, 291 Thieme, Helen C. 275 Thom, William A. 373 Thomas, Betty 263 Thomas, Betty Jo 265 Thomas, Jack E. 158 Thomas, Margaret J. 261 Thomas, Marilou __,8 5, 265, 316, 324 Thomas, Mifflin K. ....23 5, 300, 374 Thomas, Ted R. 374 Thomas, Wandaline E. 49, 291 Thompson, Alta R. 93 Thompson, Bernard C, Jr. 85, 91, 213 Thompson, Elizabeth ._ ___.281 Thompson, Ernest R. 68 Thompson, Firman C. 371 Thompson, James D. ... 243, 328, 362 Thompson, John P. 85, 217 Thompson, Margaret 8 5, 2 89, 310, 3 88 Thompson, Margaret A. ..33, 115, 261 Thompson, Mary J. 275 Thompson, Robert L. 51 Thompson, Roy H., Jr. 49 Thompson, William C. 85 Thompson, William H. 85, 245 Thomson, Elizabeth W. 94 Thorn, Billy 342 Thornton, Edythe C. 33, 49, 281, 306, 324, 388 Thrasher, Betty J. 89 Thurston, Carolyn 281 Tiernan, Martha J. 261 Tillman, Bette A. 257, 295, 310 Tillotson, Don C, Jr. 68, 329 446 INDEX Timbrook, Henry 247 Timmerman, James 213 Timmins, Wesley D. 49 Tinsley, Charles M. 215 Tinsley, Frank W. 157, 158 Tipmore, Floyd L. 223, 322, 348, 352, 356, 358 Tirey, William R. 227 Tofil, Joe J 348, 349 Tomes, Mark L. 49 Tomlinson, Harry J. 49, 245 Tompkins, Barbara 271 Tone, Thomas B. 373 Torch and Skull 250, 251 Torphy, John P. 213 Torphy, Margaret A. 281 Torphy, William L. 213, 3 56 Torrance, Jeremiah W., Jr. .__-90, 23 5 Tosti, Anne 49 Tracey, Ford P. 239, 334 Traicoff, Christopher 103, 373 Traster, Harry B. 373 Trautman, Edith A. 283 Traver, Mary J. 51 Traylor, Mary E. 49, 275 Treanor, Rosemary 271, 310 Tremor, Floyd H. 229 Trennor, Robert 219 Tribby, James F. 15 8 Trickey, Virginia R. 283 Trimble, James W 219, 373 Trockman, Philip 241 Troutman, Wilma J. -,.8 5, 316, 324 Troy, Francis E. 89, 227 Troy, Joseph H. 249 Trujillo, Antonio 330 Trutt, Melverne I. 8 5, 312, 371 Tuchman, Joe 241 Turanli, Izzettin 3 30 Turbow, Morton B. 241, 373 Turgi, Marie J. 271, 324 Turley, Robert M. 157, 158 Turrell, Eugene S. 373 Tuthill, John B. 84, 239, 314 Twyman, Robert W. 223, 295 Tyler, Anna L. 93 Tyner, Harlan H. 15 8 U Uebelhoer, Charlotte J. 49, 267, 316 Ulen, E. Clay, Jr. 245, 327 Umbenhower, Joan 265 Union Board 308, 309 University Theatre 54, 5 5, 56, 57 Urbahns, Dorothea F. 275 Uremovich, Emil 229, 348, 3 50 Ury, Jack J 318 Usher, Lawrence E. 348 V Valinet, Stanley 63, 123, 241 VanArsdel, Arthur E. 247, 2 53 VanArsdell, Sam G., Jr. 247 Vanatta, John C, III _-221, 295, 322 Van Dien, Jeanne 26 5, 388 VanFleit, Ehzabeth A. 49 VanHorn, William A. 215 VanMeter, Cyril P. 215 Van Riessen, Robert H. 2 3 5, 371 VanScoy, Lloyd M. 85 Varga, Madge 103, 330 Vater, Doris M. 263 Vegh, Joe A. 103 Vehslage, Mary E. 103, 291, 3 88 Veit, Joan 291 Veito, Robert C. 84 Vick, Harry E., Jr. 3 34 Vick, Mary R. 49 Vincent, Suzanne 103 Vint, Phyllis L 103 Visher, John E. 49 Visher, John S. 32, 3 3, 62, 245, 300, 314, 328, 374 Vittitow, Louise 261 Vittitow, M. Jean 265 Voke, Betty L 93 Vollrath, Victor J. .____.141, 157, 158 Vorgang, Georgia L. 287, 3 88 Vorgang, Joseph M., Jr. 2 53 Voyles, Harry R. 3 34 Vurich, Anthony R. 376, 377 W Waddle, Edward L. 49, 215 Waggaman, Ross H. 23 3 Waggoner, William R. 233 Wagner, Joy H. 113 Wagnon, Edward 24,3 Waldbieser, Ruth J. 49, 291 Walker, Betty 269 Walker, Charles W. 253 Walker, Helen J. 85, 92, 289 Walker, M. Betty 103 Walker, Nance L. 263 Walker, Ralph J. 215 Walker, Robert J., Jr. 243 Wallace, John 217 Wallenbrock, Gleyn F. 227 Walley, Rebecca A. 275 Walsh, Thomas A. 25 Walter, John R. 49, 215, 381 Walters, A. Ty 49, 52, 271 Walters, Joe 348 Walton, Robert W. 23 5 Walts, Jack C. 113, 213 Waltz, Joseph E. 22 5 Ware, Lawson 23 3, 331 Warman, Chester M. 8 5, 94, 223 Warner, Harold V. 239 Washburn, Sadona 257 Wasilewski, Max R. 49 Wasserman, Irvin L. --24 1, 322, 329 Waters, Robert A. 84, 89, 90, 94 Watkins, Frances G. -...„92, 281, 316 Watson, Joseph 94 Watson, Lloyd T. 84 Watson, Robia L. 277 Watts, Thomas R. 85, 253 Way, Eleanor L 261 Wearly, Paul E. 85, 243 Weatherwax, Helen P. 33, 49, 64, 271, 299 Weaver, Fred A. 123, 227 Weaver, Robert E. 22 3, 3 34 Weber, Ethel J. 267, 32 6 Weber, John R. 141 Wedekind, Milda J. 103 Weimer, Harvey E. 2 1 5 Weiner, Herbert W. 231 Weir, Robert H. 23 3, 314, 318, 362 Weisheit, Tersea M. 103 Weiss, Seymour 373 Weithoff, Clifford 217, 3 56 Wellnitz, Frank O. 249 Wellnitz, Harvey O. 249 Wells, Agnes E. 68 Wells, Anna K. 281 Wells, Herman B 20, 21, 22, 24 Wells, Samuel M. 223 Weimer, Mary K. 2 87 Welpott, Forrest E. 8 5 Werdine, Donald G. 221, 348 Werner, Edward C. 85 Wernet, Norman L. 239 Wesselman, Harold J. 245, 328 Westfall, Beverly K. 237 Westfall, George R. 103 Westfall, John B. 142, 157, 158, 237 Westfall, Samuel E. 8 5, 94 Whaley, Robert E. 362 Whipple, Lloyd 3 56 Whisman, Elizabeth F. 265 Whitcomb, Roger F. 158 White, Alfred G. 49 White, Corinne 263 White, Eugene G. 373 White, Frank S. 2 53 White, Harry E. 85, 245 White, Ralph 249 Whitehead, Bob 237 Whitelock, Harold V. 158 Whitman, Rex K. 149 Whitfield, John S. 22 3 Whitlock, (C.) Thelma 113 Whitlock, Frank C. 144, 157, 219 Whitmore, Russell 213, 32 8 Widamen, John D. 49, 215, 348, 349, 351 Widner, Frank N. (,( , 251 Wiechman, Malc olm E. 245 Wieland, Edward C. 85, 219, 325 Wieman, Martha E. 261 Wilcox, Howard S. 215, 334 Wildermuth, Ora L. 25 Wilhelmus, Gilbert M. 221 Wilkins, Laura M. 261, 316, 3 88 Wilkins, Robert P. 49 Wilkins, Mrs. W. H. 49 Wilkinson, Elizabeth L. 2 59 Williams, Barbara 267 Williams, Betty J. 281 WilHams, Charles D. ...146, 157, 158 Williams, Hugh L. 327 Williams, John L. 8 5 Wilhams, Kenneth P. 68 Williams, Robert E. 348 Williams, Wilma C. 85 Williamson, Robert E. ....49, 245, 318 Willis, Anna M. 291 Willis, Hugh E. 120, 376 Wills, Jeanne 271 Wills, Sarah E. 291 Wilner, Julian P. 49, 231 Wilshere, Seward E. 103, 24 9, 362, 364 Wilson, Ben J. 237, 373 Wilson, George N. 49 Wilson, John F. 8 5, 245, 32 8 Wilson, John S. 225 Wilson, Marjorie A. 275 Wilson, Mary L. 103 447 INDEX Wilson, Mona J. 33, 37, 49, 277, 306, 320, 324, 388 Wilson, Robert J. 239, 329, 3 34 Wilson, Winifred 29, 51, 3 30 Wilt, Allie 247 Windsor, John R. 239 Wingert, Ray 243, 3 32 Winn, Olive L. 289 Winnebald, Carl H. 247, 334 Winter, A. Frederick ____103 Winters, Jane E. 271 Wisch, Albert 241 Wiseheart, Rex. Jr. 237 Wiseman, Frances M. — H Wisman, Wayne 30 Wittmer, Jacob W. 251, 330 Woehr, Robert A. 362, 364 Wohlfeld, Julius B. ..-__.157, 15 8, 241 Wolfe, Harold E. 68 Wolfe, Velma V. 85, 263 Wood, James B. 239 Wood, Marietta C. 257 Woodhull, Benjamin I. 249 Woods, Glenn L. 85 Woods, Mary M. 277 Woods, Vivian E. 283 Woolery, Donald G. 243 Woolery, Richard H. 158 Worley, Joseph P. 133, 142, 157, 158, 217 Woytovich, Helen 93, 191 Wright, Alyce M. 203, 267 Wright, Joseph A. 298 Wright, Mary Jo 259 Wright, Wendell W. 96 Wrork, Marjorie L. 51, 261 Wyhe, Andrew 19 Wylie, Louise H. 103, 283 _329 Y.M.C.A. Y.W.C.A. 320, 321 Yager, Margaretmonroe 51, 283 Yanetovich, Stephen W. 113 Yearick, Frances E. 93, 291 Yenne, Harriet A. 267, 326 Yeoman, David C. 221 Yoder, Eugene F. 213 Yoder, Frank E. 51, 331 Young, David G. 334 Young, Jay A. 51, 247 Young, Martha J. 283 Young, Richard E. 23 3 z Zankl, John M 217 Zaser, Cora V. 51 Zehring, Lois M. 263 Zeller, John H. 237 Zerkel, Paul L. 223 Zeta Tau Alpha 286, 287 Ziegler, Barbara J. 267 Zimmer, Andrew 3 56 Zimmer, Harold L. 348 Zimmerman, Harry L. 249, 3 34 Zimmerman, Robert A. 233 Zinn, Rosalen 285 Zinsmeister, Robert 348 Zirkle, Raymond H. 8 5 Zwerner, Ernest J. 85, 215, 3 84 Z willing, Alice M. 113, 281 DENTAL STUDENTS A Albright, Edward H. ___.176, 179, 181 Alpha Omega 183 B Baker, James E. 176, 179 Baldwin, Fred 176 Bales, Eugene E. 176 Barco, Martin T. 176, 179 Beck, Tilford G. 175, 176, 179 Berman, Ralph 176, 179, 183 Binkley, Howard K. 175, 176, 179, 181 Boren, Wilber C. 175, 176, 179, 182 Brown, Morris N. 176, 179, 183 Bryan, Emory W. 176, 179, 184 Burks, Ally N. 176, 182 Bush, Aulden K. 176, 184 C Campbell, John L. 175, 176, 179, 182 Carr, Jack D. 172, 175, 176, 179, 181 Charkins, Leo J. 176 D Damm, WiUard H. 176, 182 Davidson, John E. 176, 179, 182 Davis, James R. ....175, 176, 179, 182 Delta Sigma Delta 182 Dyer, Wilson C. 175, 176, 179 E Eastman, Ralph C. il75 Etter, Frank K. 176, 184 F Feintuch, Jack S. 176, 183 Feldman, Francis 176, 179, 183 Feldman, Martin 176, 183 Ferling, Richard F. 176, 184 Fichman, Philip J. 175, 176 Fly, Charles A. 176, 179, 184 Fodora, Albert A. 176, 179, 181 Ford, John D. 176, 179, 181 Forney, Vernon J. 175, 176, 182 Francis, David L. 175, 176, 18 ' 2 Frank, Elliot H. 176, 179, 183 Eraser, John E. 176, 179 G Gainey, William W. 175, 176 Gamble, Francis W. ....175, 176, 182 Gassin, Edgar R. 176, 184 Geisel, John E. 175, 184 Gilchrist, John W. 176 Glassley, Richard C. 175, 176, 179, 184 Goldman, John M. .— . 176, 182 Green, Emanuel J. 175, 179, 183 Green, John A. 176 Green, Paul F. 175, 179 Gregg, Charles R. 175, 176, 182 Groher, Samuel 172, 175, 176, 179, 183 Gromer, Roscoe L. 176, 182 H Hall, Sheldon L. .176 Hanes, Rolenzo A. .176 Hanley, Ralph E. 176 Hanning, William F. 176 Hanson, Warren V. 170 Harvey, Dale W. 175, 176, 179, 182 Healy, William J. 176, 182 Henning, WiUiam F. .....„...„ 176, 182 Henshaw, Fredrick R. 169 Herman, Saul 175, 176, 183 Hess, Eugene H. 176 Howard, Richard H. 176, 181 I Iden, Eugene D. 176 Irizarry, Luis O. 175, 176 Irvin, Charles N. 176 J Jarabak, John P. 175, 176, 179 Jordan, Dick H. 175, 179 Junior American Dental Associa- tion 1 79 K King, Wil liam D. .176, 179, 180, 182 Koenig, Harold H. 176, 179, 181 Koss, William F 176, 179 Kowal, Michael 176, 179, 184 L Larimore, Andrew G. 176, 182 Lieberman, Heiman G. 175, 176, 179, 183, 296 Lively, Robert E. 176, 179, 182 Livingston, Wilson A. -175, 176, 179, 296 Lonsbury, Louis F. 175, 176, 181 Lowery, Charles C. 176 Lutkemeier, Ruth E. 175, 176 Lyddan, Pat H. 176, 179, 182 Lynch, Weldon J. 175, 176, 181 M- McClintick, Ohver E. v 176 McPheeters, James A. ....175, 176, 182 Mausehund, Lester H. ..176, 179, 181 Metaxas, Gus G. 176 Meyers, Robert J. . 170 Michener, Richard S. ....176, 180, 182 Miller, John C. ..-175, 176, 179, 184 Mintz, Harold S. ..175, 176, 179, 183 Mitchell, Frank S. 181 Morris, Gerald J. 176, 179, 184 Morrow, H. B. 176 N Nadler, Seymour W. ....176, 179, 183 Nelson, Albert B. 176, 179 Niles, Richard L. 176, 184 O Omicron Kappa Upsilon 178 P Pallardy, Sumner X. 170 Patterson, Samuel 176, 179, 183 Pavy, Robert L 175, 176, 179 448 INDEX Pell, John R. 175, 176, 179 Pierce, Doyle E. 176, 184 Ping, Ronald S. 179, 180, 181 Poorman, Alden H. 176, 182 Porter, Ernest H. 176, 179, 181 Prentice, Wilson E. 172, 175, 176, 179, 184 Price, Byron E. 176, 179 Psi Omega 181 Pruett, Paul H. 176, 182 R Ratcliff, Perry A. 175, 180, 181 Richardson, George G. 176, 180 Robinson, William A. -A76, 79, 182 Rodenbarger, Lynn H. 179 Rosenbarger, Ernest E. 176, 182 Rosenstein, Maurice E. ..176, 179, 183 Rutledge, Guy B. 175, 176, 179, 182 Segal, Ju lius 175, 176 Sexson, Julius C. 176, 179, 184 Shanteau, Owen L. 176, 179 Sharon, Irving M. 176 Shaw, Marion A. 176, 179, 184 Smith, George M. 176, 179 Sowers, Scott 175, 176, 182 Stiefler, David N. 176, 179 Stock, Darrell A. 176, 180 Stoelting, Karl W. , 176 Stoner, Morris M. 183 Stookey, Reginald E. .-176, 179, 180 Stout, Eldred W. 176 Stragand, George J. 176 Student Council 180 Tade, Ellis H. .... 175, 176, 179, 180 Tatlock, Meredith D 175, 176, 179, 181 Thomas, Jonathan E. ...176, 179, 181 Timmons, Gerald D. 170 Troutwine, Gale H. 176 V Vendes, Walter H. 175, 184 W Wagner, Gerald N. .- 175, 176, 182 Ward, Granville H. 176 Welp, Dennis A. 176, 182 Werkman, Herbert P. 170 Whetstone, John H. 175, 176 White, Leo H. 176, 182 Wilson, John L. 168 Wurtz, Robert W. 176 Xi Psi Phi 184 Yoder, Albert C. 175, 176, 182 Young, Edward ....175, 176, 179, 182 Zimmerman, Jack 176 MEDICAL STUDENTS Acher, Robert P. 13 5, 142 Albright, Victor F. 140, 146 Aldrich, Mrs. Harry D. 150 Allen, Frederick K. 140 Alpha Omega Alpha 131 Anderson, Harry B. 140 Axtell, Robert J. 140 B Badertscher, Robert C. 140 Bailey, Edwin B. 140 Baker, Leslie M. 13 5, 142 Ball, Joseph E. 140 Ballou, William W. 140 Bander, Nathan 140 Barnett, Ernest R. 140 Bartholomew, Mary L. 13 5 Battersby, James S. 13 5 Baumgartner, Jeraldine C. ....13 5, 149 BealhMary H. 140 Beaver, Howard W. 140 Benham, Shirley Jr. .13 5, 144 Bennett, Jene R. 140 Boling, Roderic L. 13 5 Bond, George S. 128 Boughman, Joe D. 140, 142 Brady, Thomas A. 135, 142 Brayton, Lee 140 Bretz, John M. 140 Bridwell, Mrs. Edgar 150 Brill, L William 13 5, 148 Brown, Dewitt W. 140 Brown, George E. 140 Brown, Harry M. 13 5 Browning, William M. 140 C Cantow, Lawrence A. 140, 148 Caplin, Irvin 135 Carrel, Francis E. ... 135, 144 Chattin, Herbert O. 140 Clark, Cyrus 128 Clark, Harriet M. 13 5, 149 Clouse, Paul A. 140 Cohn, Alvin F. 140 Colins, Hubert L. 13 5, 146 Comer, Charles W. 13 5, 142 Connoy, Leo F. 140 Grain, James W. 13 5, 144 Gripe, Earl P. 13 5, 144 D Darling, Dorothy 140 Davis, Marvin R. 13 5 Davis, Sam J. 140 Deppe, Charles F. 140 Deputy, Rolland 140 Dick, Jack 140 Dilts, Robert L. 140, 144 Dintaman, Paul G. 140 Dobrin, Leo 140, 148 Donnelly, Robert W. 140 Dukes, Richard E. ..._.. 140 Dulin, Basil B. 140 Dyer, Wallace K 140 E Earhart, Henry T 135, 146 Eastman, Joseph R., Jr. 140 Eaton, Lyman D. 135, 146 Eidson, Paul D. 140 Evans, Paul V. 140 F Fant, James R. 140 Fenneman, Robert J. 140, 144 Ferrara, Joseph F. 140 Ferrell, Mars B. 140 Firestein, Ray 140 Fischer, Warren E. 140 Fitzgerald, Brice E. 13 5 Flanigan, Meredith B. 140 Fosbrink, Ephriam L. 140 Foxworthy, Laurel R. 13 5, 149 G Gambill, William D. I39, 146 Gamma Phi Zeta 150 Garber, A. Elizabeth 135, 149 Gardner, Frederic D. I40 Gatch, Willis D. 128 Gilbert, Louis J. 13 5, 148 Gillespie, Charles F. 135, 146 Goodrich, Albert 140 Gossard, Meredith B. 135, 141 Graf, Jerome A. 140 Grillo, Salvatore P. 140 Grisell, Ted L. 13 5, 142 H Hadley, David 140 Hall, Bernard 140 Hamilton, Antha A. 140 Hammersley, George K. 13 5, 146 Hammond, Stanley M. 135, 146 Hannah, Jack W. 140, 142 Hansell, Robert M. 135, 144 Harden, Murray E. 140 Here, Laura 140 Harger, Rolla N. 128 Harshman, Martin L. 13 5, 144 Harvey, Bennett B. 13 5- Hasewinkle, Carroll W. 140 Headley, Lloyd M. 13 5, 144 Hedrick, Philip W. 140 Helm, Mark P. 129 Henderson, Lowell L. 140, 142 Herrmann, Gordon T. 13 5 Heudi, John E. 140 Hickman, Archibald L. 140 Hibner, Nolan A. 140 Hill, Kenneth G 13 5, 144 Hinshaw, Warren V. 13 5, 144 Hodgin, Phillip T. 13 5, 144 Hoetzer, Eldore M. 140 Hoffman, Sterling P. 140 Hollingsworth, Maurice C. 140 Holovachka, Anne 140 Horsman, Russell K 13 5, 144 Hostetter, Irwin S. 133, 140 Houston, Marietta V. 13 5, 149 Hull, Jack D. 13 5, 144 Hummel, Russel M. 140 Hummons, Francis D. 140 Humphreys, Joe 140 449 INDEX Hundley, James M. 146 Hunter, John G. 140, 146 I Itkin, Irving H. 137, 148 J Jackson, Dean D. 140 Jay, Arthur N. 140 Jewell, George M. 140 Johnson, Linden O. 140 Johnston, William H. 137, 146 Jones, Charles A. 140 Jones, Paul A. 137, 144 Jones, Walter D. 140 Jones, A ' Irs. W. Duane 150 Joseph, Herbert L. 140 K Kahn, Howard L. 137, 148 Kaler, James, Jr. 140 Kendall, Forest M. 137, 142 Kendrick, William M. 140 Kennedy, Julien C. 140 Kennedy, Mrs. Julie n C. 150 Kepler, Robert W. 137, 146 Kern, Carroll E. 140 Kintner, M. Quentin 140, 144 Kirch, Leo N. 137, 146 Kissinger, Knight L. 140 Kitchel, Mary Spurgeon 137, 149 Klamer, Charles H. 140 Klee, Kurt C. 140 Kline, Jacob M. 140 Krajac, Martin 140, 146 Kresler, Leon E. 140 Krieble, William W. 13 3, 140 Kuhn, Robert W. 137, 144 L Ladine, Clarence B. 137 Laws, Elbert H. 140 Leininger, Hilbert A 137, 144 Lewis, Marcel J. 140 Ling, John F. 140, 146 Long, Max R. 140 Love, George N. 137 Lucas, Clarence A. 140 M McCall, Milton L. 137, 142 McClelland, Harry N., Jr. 140 McCoy, Roy R. 137 McFall, Voris F. 137, 144 Mclntyre, James M. 140 McKinley, A. David 137 McMahan, Virgil C. 140 McMannis, Walter 137, 144 McTurnan, Robert W. 137, 146 McVaugh, Charles C. 140 Marshall, Millard R. 137, 144 Martin J. B. H. 129 Martin, Loren H. 137, 142 Martin, Mrs. Loren 150 Martz, Carl D. 140 Maurer, Lawrence E. 137, 144 Maurer, Robert M. 140 Mentendiek, Maurice H. _.„--137, 144 Meyer, Theodore O. 137, 144 Miklozek, John E. .. 140 Miller, Charles J. 140 Miller, Laverne B. 137 Miller, R. 140 Miller, Ray D. 137, 146 Miller, Mrs. R. D. 150 Miller, Roland E. 140 MiUeson, Anna L. 137, 149 Mings, Dwain E. 140 Morgrette, Leonard J. 140 Morrical, Russell J. 140 Morris, Charles W. 140 Morris, Marion H. 137, 146 Mueller, Arthur P. 140 Muentzer, Edward 140 Mullin, Joseph E. 140 N Nie, Louis W. 137, 146 Nonte, Leo R. 140, 141 Nu Sigma Nu 142, 143 Nu Sigma Phi --149 Nutter, Wyndham H. 140 O Olvey, Ottis N 133, 140, 142- Overmyer, Jay W. 140 P Parke, Delmar D. 137 Parrish, Richard K. 140 Parsons, Delbert J. 137, 146 Pearce, Roy V. 140 Pelczar, Walter E. 140 Phi Beta Pi 144, 145 Phi Chi 146, 147 Phi Delta Upsilon 148 Price, A. David 137, 146 Price, James O. 140 R Rang, Robert H. 140 Redding, Lowell G. 140 Reed, Harrel L. 140 Richter, Samuel 137 Rieth, Paul L. 137, 146 Rissler, Mrs. Ross W. 150 Rivers, Glynn A. 137 Rose, Embree R. .-140 Rothrock, Philip W. 140 Rudesill, Cecil L. 128 Rudolph, FrankHn G. 137, 141 S Sage, Charles V. 140 Salassa, Robert M. 137, 142 Sandock, Louis F. 140 Santangelo, Joseph A. 140 Schappell, Arthur W. 140, 142 Scherschel, John P. 140 Schmidt, Loren F. 140 Schornick, James C. 140 Schuchman, Gabriel 140 Scott, Robert O. 137, 141 Shanklin, James G. -_„.-137, 142, 296 Shanklin, Mrs. James . 150 Shields, Mrs. Jack E. 150 Shields, Mrs. Tom 150 Shiffer, Maynard C. 137, 144 Shrader, Jack C. 140 Shugart, Joseph A. 140 ShuUenberger, Cleo C. 137, 296 Simmons, Frederick H. i__140 Slabaugh, Carlyle B. 140 Slims, Mrs. J. Lawrence 150 Smith, John H. 139, 142 Smith, Mrs. John H. 150 Smith, Lawson F. 133, 140, 146 Smith, Samuel J. 140, 141 Smullen, Willard C. 139, 144 Snyder, Morris C. 140 Spahr, John F., Jr. 140, 142 Speheger, Mrs. Ben A. 150 Sputh, Carl D., Jr. 140 Stafford, William C. 139, 146 Steele, Everett B. 140 Steele, Lowell R. ____140 Steffen, Julius T. 140 Stepleton, John D — 140 Stone, David A. 139, 146 Storey, Destiny E. 140 Stover, Raymond M. 139, 144 Stucky, Elsworth K. 140 Stucky, Mrs. Elsworth K. 150 Sullenger, Adron A. 140, 146 Swihart, Glenn L. 140 Taylor, W. Mitchell 140 Templeton, Ames R. 139, 144 Theta Kappa Psi 141 Thompson, Paul V. 140 Thompson, William R. 140 Tipton, William R. 139, 144 Tomak, Milton E. 139, 141 Tourney, Fred L. 140 Travis, Julius C 139, 146 Travis, Mary Diggs 139, 149 Trockman, Richard J. 139 V Vanness, William C. 140 Van Vac tor, Helen D. 140 Vandlvier, Mrs. R. McCauley 150 Vivian, Donald E. 140 W Walker, James S. 139, 146 Walters, Charles E. 139, 144 Ward, Wesley C. 139 Ware, James R. 139 Warren, Carroll B. 139, 146 Warren, John C. 139, 146 Warren, Ward B. 139 Warriner, James B 140 Weaver, John D. 139 Webb, William M. 140 Wehr, Carl E. . 140 Weiss, Jason 140 Whallon, J. T. 140 Williams, Charles E 140, 141 Williams, Fielding P. 139 Wilmore, Ralph C. 139, 146 Wilson, Fred M. 139, 142 Wilson, Max M. 140 Winter, Donald K. 140 Wissman, William L. 140 Worth, Clarence W. 140 Worth, Mrs. Clarence W. 150 Wunderlich, Edwin E. 139, 141 450 INDEX Y Yocum, Richard S 140 Yocum, William S. 140 Young, Woodson C. 140, 146 z Ziperman, Hyman H. 140 NURSES and DIETITIANS A Alexander, Christine 1 5 Alexander, Colleen G. 1 5 Anderson, Virginia M. 1 5 Archbold, Alice 16 Asher, Marilyn 1 ' B Babb, Nora 165 Baer, Phyllis W. .._- 165 Baringer, Irene 165 Bass, Mildred 165 Behlmer, Marjorie 165 Bittner, Leota -165 Bixler, Emma 165 Blase, Sofie 165 Blaze, Lucille 165 Boles, Mary 165 Bolinger, Deloris I. 165 Boone, Martha A. 165 Boyd, Velena 16 5 Bragg, Louise 165 Brameier 1 ° 5 Breiner, Virginia 165 Brown, Alma M 165 Brown, Doris 165 Bryant, Genevieve 165 Burkhart, Rosemary 165 Butler, Wilma R 165, 166 C Callender, Frances 165 Cantwell, Helen 165 Chad wick, Jane 165 Christie, Caroline 165 Close, Arline M. 165 Coffing, Lois I. .-: 165 Cogan, Princess P. 165 Coolman, Betty 165 Cotton, Sarah E. 16 5, 166 Crooks, Jean .16 5 Cummin KS, Mary J. 165 D Daniel, Audrey 165 David Betty L. 165 Dietz, Eileen I. 165 Dodd, Betty 165 Downham, Irene B. 165 Duke, Mildred R. 165 Duncan, Margaret 165 E Eddy, Frances 165 Eikenberry, Helen L. 165 Elrod, Elsie M. 165 Emly, Dolores 165 F Fallis, Martha 165 Paris, Helen 165 Fenimore, Ferrell 165 Flanigan, Marie 165 FoUick, Dorotha W. 165 Ford, Pauline 165 French, Wilma A. 16 5 Fulk, Florence 165 G Gardner, Helen 165 Gaudin, Juanita 165 George, Mary J. 165 Gill, Mary A. 165 Glabman, Anne-Louise 165 Glore, Betty A. 165 Goff, Barbara K. 165 Gottschall, Veva Mae — 165 H Haehl, Dorothy 165 Hanson, Dorothea F. 165 Harper, Mary Ann 165 Haynes, Lucia i 165 Heaston, Marietsa 165 Heiniger, Helen 165 Henderson, Frances P. 165 Herrmann, Esta G. 165, 166 Hiatt, Erma 165 Hillis, Gwendolyne E. 165, 166 Hoeflin, Cordeha .- 160 Huhnke, Eva 165 Humke, Mary E. 165 Hungate, Dorothy 165 J Jefferis, Valeda 165 Johnston, Rhoda 165 Jones, Ethel 165 K Kerns, Betty Jane 165 Kitts, Mary V. 165 Kohr, La Verne 16) Koster, Ida S. 16 5 Kronewitter, Jeannette 165 L Lamberson, Ruth 165 Langdon, Ruth 165 Lantz, Frances E. 165 Leigh, Dorothy H. 165 Lehman, Betty 165 Linke, Jean M. 165 Lohrig, Melva H. 165 Lorenz, Anna L. 165 Lucas, Shirley 165 M McAdams, Geneva M. 165, 166 McClain, Martha 165 McCowen, Frances 165 McCullough, Rettalou 165 McDonel, Marguerite 165 Ma as, Caroline 165 Manlove, Mary L. 165 May, Virginia 165 Melvin, Dorothy 165 Menke, Dorothy 165 Mentzer, Margaret M. 165 Meseke, Kathryn 165 Michael, Jean 165 Miller, Helen 165 Mitchell, Helen 165 Moser, Rachel 165 Mothersill, Eleanore M. 165 Meyers, Frieda 165 Myers, Emmadell 165 N Nichols, Virginia 16 5 o O ' Conneli, Betty 165 O ' Neal, Martha E. 165 Osborne, Dorothy 165 Perkins, Mildred 165 Peters, Frieda 165 Pittman, Florence 165 R Rector, Rose T. 165 Reed, Doris M. 165 Reeves, Harriet E. 165 Remley, Kathleen 16 5 Richardson, Charlotte 165 Richardson, J. 165 Riddle, Jeanne 165 Risley, Winifred 165 Ruddell, Mary 165 Rush, Wilda 165 Russell, Mary J. 165 Schwartz, Barbara L. 165 Seneff, Marclle 165 Sherry, Mary F. 165 Short, Anna 165 Shufflebarger, Martha 165 Sigma Theta Tau 166 Sims, Geneva 165 Simms, Virginia 165 Sinn, Viola M. 165 Smith, Doris 165 Smith, Joyce 165 Stancomb, Frieda 165 Steffy, Ellen 165 Steinkamp, Ruth 165 Stoelting, Mary L. 165 Street, Caroline 165 Swanson, Ruth M. 165 Swaynie, Iva 165 T Tebbe, Ruth A. 165 Thomas, Frances E. 165 Thomas, Beulah 165 Thompson, Mae 165 Thompson, Ruth 165 Troutt, Lute 160, 165 Turpen, Thelma 165 451 INDEX W Williams, Daisy 165 Wolf, Elizabeth 165 Williams, Jean 165 Wright, Bonnie 165 Wagerman, Joan 165 Williams, Virginia 165 Wright, Sara, E. 165 Wehking, Margaret 165 Willis, Mary E. .-. 165 452 r I ip |W H«W)  «W f!J « f ' vmm- Ikl3 .€l 4f !■.


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