Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)
- Class of 1940
Page 1 of 472
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 472 of the 1940 volume:
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,;,5y.i,«, vf:. -rimamt Jipr ..• r = J i MMiy TTP 3 -- - ' 3« ,v ; y ' ' AJ.:jfvAsy .m.. -:-k  % _.L o I N d I k na university M- iA.£- 04 u The 1940 Arbutus, published by the students of Indiana University at Bloomington, Indiana, has attempted in these pages to portray life on Indiana ' s campus. Another volume is added to the colorful history of Indiana University in its year of greatest growth. Here is recorded not merely a record of the year ' s events, but a composite picture of people and places that make up the ever-growing, dynamic institution that is Indiana University. Copyright AUDREY SMITH, Editor. ROBERT W. TWYMAN, Business Manager. Indiana foresaw in its first corP stitution in 1816 its need for a statc school of higher learning; and tlius Indiana University had its beginning. It was not until four years later that this clause in the constitution became a reality; in that year an act of the General Assembly authorized the establishment of a State Seminary. A building to house the Seminary was constructed southwest of the present square by 1824, and in May of that year school was opened. Foundation Dav is recognized even now as the first Wed- nesday in May. Ten boys answered the roll on the opening day and the first professor, Rev. Baynard Hall, teaching Greek and Latin, conducted the classes. The name was changed to Indiana College in 1828 by the General Assembly, who also granted permission to award additional degrees. The first college building was completed eight years later, but was destroyed by fire in 1854. Indiana College became Indiana University on Feb. 15, 183 8. Four years after the founding of the School of Law in 1842, the Assembly acted to recognize the Uni- versity as the Univers ' ty of the State . y ndrcw Wylic, first President of Indiana University. 1829-1850 . . . The Present observatory is an outgrowth of this original structure . . . The thirteen coeds enrolled at I. U. during the first year that the doors were open to women, 186 8 . . . Sarah P. Morrison, first women graduate who was partailly responsible for the admitt.ince of coeds to I. U. . . . Seminary Building, erected in 1824, one of the first seven structures of the Uni- versity ... 1. U. Footb.il] Tcnni. |-:ill 1SS9 . . . First Universitv huildini;, erected in ] S5 ). iiidvaua UnvvevsUi Foo ' .ua.v i dm, FaVV u ijH 3.C.C«;i«iv i3T.t «MM «,e. MV«iXGklW W. ut Vv. tt.- ' - ' m t IS l ' i -I I X _XV- L _jr Juv _!L5 . -AJL Miss Sarah Parke Morrison was the first woman to be gradu- ated from Indiana University, entering in 1867 when the school was made co-educational, and receiving her degree two years later. Because of the lack of space for expansion the University was ordered moved in 1883. The new location, known as Dunn ' s Woods , is the site of the present campus, and during the next twelve years Wylie, Owen, Maxwell, and Kirkwood Halls were completed. The Hoosiers played their first football game in 1888 against Butler University with Evans Woolen as coach. Baseball had been a popular sport among the students almost since the founding of the University. Construction continued to keep pace with the growth of the University, and by 1905 the Men ' s Gymnasium, later renamed As- sembly Hall, the old Powerhouse, now the home of the Indiana Daily Student, Kirkwood Observatory, Science Hall, the new Powerhouse, the Student Building and a wing on Maxwell Hall had been added to the University. During this decade summer school and the Medical School in Indianapolis, had been instigated. The Indiana athletic teams became affiliated and started their career in the Western conference, later named the Big Ten. First college building, erected In 18 36 . . . Indiana University Band of 1896 . . . The orig- inal Maxwell Hall, when used as the Chapel . . . Old Assembly Hall, one of the last of the frame buildings to b: demolished (1939) . . . 1. U. Baseball Team of 1893-94 . . . Staff who edited the first Arbutus, 1894. ]? i| q.B ;_ I H l! MM m  Mi 1820 JTIVJOL A By 1910 the School of Education had been authorized, Biology Hall constructed and the University Water Works completed. The fol- lowing year Robert E. Long Hospital in Indianapolis was con- structed in connection with the Medical School. In the same year the first basketball team was organized. The new Men ' s Gymnasium was ready for use in 1917, and a new building for the School of Medicine in Indianapolis was finished. During the next two years the School of Commerce and Finance, later called the School of Business, and the School of Music were authorized. In 1925 Memorial Hall, Memorial Stadium, the Business Admin- istration Building, and South Hall had been completed, and the Uni- versity continued to grow at a greater rate than construction could be completed. By 1930, the Fieldhouse and a wing to the Library had been added. During the next two years the Chemistry Building and the Me- morial Union Building were dedicated. Construction again boomed as the Administration Building, the Music Building, and Forest Hall were completed in 1936. And by 193 8 the School of Medicine Build- ing in Bloomington, the Stores and Service Building, and a wing to the Union Building were finished. Assembly Hall, after yearly threats Women .is well .is men were becoming interested in golf at Indiana University in 1918 . . . The Freshman-Sophomore class scrap of 1918 . . . The young ladies and gentlemen of 1912 strolled along the board walks of the campus . . . Even in 1918, the Bloomington square was a busy place on Saturday afternoons . . . The Bloomington battery, organized under Captain Kenneth Williams in April 1917, drills on the campus. :OV- xw-USi ojc _ tLJC jl: j jct: of burning by students at Purdue game pep sessions, was officially razed by the University. It was apparent that the campus was expanding eastward, for during 1939 the new Business Building and the Auditorium were be- gun. The University School also was completed. Construction was begun on the Physical Science Building, North Hall, and West Hall, dormitories for men, and Sycamore and Beech Halls, women ' s dormi- tories. An addition to the Union Building was made that year and a building for the Calumet Extension Division was finished. Eleven presidents have served the University since its organiza- tion as a college in 1828: Andrew Wylie, 1829- ' 51; Alfred Ryors, 1852- ' 53; William Mitchell Daily, 185}- ' 59; John H. Lathrop, 1859- ' 60; Cyrus Nutt, 1860- ' 75; Lemuel Moss, 1875- ' 84; David Starr Jordan, 1885- ' 91; John M. Coulter, I891- ' 93; Joseph Swain, 1893- ' 02; William Lowe Bryan, 1902- ' 37; and Herman B Wells, acting president from July 1, 1937 to March 22, 1938 and president from March 22, 1938. Indiana University, one hundred and twenty years young, con- tinues to expand, to grow, to build, and to become a greater Indiana. Strut and Fret, Indiana ' s dramatic club in 190S, presented the play entitled, A Scrap of Paper or The Adventure of a Love Letter . . . Wylie HaJl looked like this in 1907 . . . Indiana Uni- versity ' s first I man was Malcolm A. McDon- ald in ' 66 and ' 67 . . . Indiana celebrated the 100th year of its founding in 1920 ... In 1896, Indiana University girls played Indiana kick ball in the ladies ' gymnasium. 1940 to Herman B Wells, President of Indiana University, whose goal it is to make the university an ever-greater institution, one which will serve every community throughout the state. Under his careful guidance Indiana University has grown rapidly. The faculty has been strengthened following a nationwide search to bring new scholars to the campus, the physical equipment has been enlarged, and the Presi- dent this year made an extensive alumni-contact tour throughout the entire United States, uniting alumni in the progressive spirit of Indiana University. A friend of the students, always eager to have them in his office. Presi- dent Wells is establishing the University as the educational center of the Middle West. J. V ' miWjik: - ' ■THE STUDENT BUILDING MEMORIAL HALL 11 r : . cii ' ■-. !, .. J m Jt -. ■u 11 i i i 1 II •l VS :; 1 J . ,1 « MEN ' S GYMNASIUM AND FIELDHOIISE INDIANA UNION BUILDING 13 - U- '  • . Ij g ' -??• ■' •Ei ; ' 1 J ' t - K ' ■A % 1 i L -.a ' t K ■•Tni|ftii{iiiu„.„u r Sfe i irii KIRHWOni) HAIl SCHOOL OF BUSINESS BUILDING 15 The University . . . the sum of all its parts . . . the entity . . . here we find the hierarchy of education . . . here are the governors, the go-betweens, and the governed . . . here are the rulers, the rules, and the ruled . . . here are the officials, the boards, the commit- tees, the divisions, and the departments, the agencies and the instrumentalities . . . here are the machinery and the machine . . . here, in short, is the institution. A J 16 17 _OJiSVJVJlA Jl.«JL3VXVJUlJ 18 BOAhU OF TRUSTEES The Indiana University Board of Trustees, the administrative body of the University, is com- posed of eight citizens of the State of Indiana. Five of these are appointed by the State Board of Education, while the other three are elected by the alumni of the University. The term of office is three years, with the tenure arranged so that one is elected every year. This year the Board has been unusually busy at its monthly meetings as the University is in the midst of its biggest building program. Also the board has started a program of expanding the University staff, and has now carried it through its second year of development. Through the cooperation of the Board and Pres- ident Wells, the University has made great strides in its expansion program. . THESE MEN CHART AND STEER THE COURSE 20 The loyalty, service, and unceasing devotion to Indiana University is typified by Comptrol- ler Ward G. Bid dle, ' 16. Since he became the financial head of the University in 1936, Mr. Biddle has watched with pride the expansion of the University. He has carefully supervised the extensive construction program which is rapidly nearing completion. His efforts have aided in furthering the progress of Indiana University. A friend of students, a counselor to faculty members, and held in the highest esteem by alumni — Mr. Biddle is happiest serving this Uni- versity in which he thoroughly believes. WARD G. BIDDLE Comptroller of the University OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY In 1923 Mr. Biddle returned to his alma ma- ter as Manager of the University Bookstore, in which capacity he served until 1932. He was Director of the Union until 1936 when he be- came Comptroller. His entire service to Indiana University has been characterized by his keen business acumen, his long hours of work, and his particular attention to details which has re- warded him by his host of admirers and friends. In 1939 he was cited for the outstanding serv- ice award given annually by Sigma Delta Chi to the person who has given the most meritorious service to the University. 21 DEANS OF MEN clarence E. Edmondson has been the friendly counselor of the men students at Indiana University since the office of the Dean of Men was formally established in 1919. By individual conferences with students and with their par- ents he has established a helpful and cooperative relation- ship between the faculty, students, and parents. Dean Edmondson, who is a professor of hygiene, was graduated from Indiana University with an A.B. degree in 1906. He received his A.M. degree in 1912, and two years later, in 1914, was awarded his Ph.D. degree from the University. He acts as chairman for many selection committees for awarding student scholarships and campus positions. DEAN C. E. EDMONDSON DEAN C. J. SEMBOWER Charles J. Sembower is the friend and advisor of every student on the campus and at the same time one of the most highly respected professors on the faculty. A popular speaker at student meetings, he has tact and un- derstanding which serve to establish an ideal relationship between faculty and student. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, and in 1934 was made an honorary member of Phi Delta Gamma, hon- orary journalistic, debating, and forensic fraternity. Dean Sembower was graduated from Indiana in 1892 with an A.B. degree and received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1909. A noted author, he now holds the position of professor of English at the University. 22 DEANS OF WOMEN Since her graduation from Indiana University, Mrs. Lottie Kirby, Associate Dean of Women, has served her Alma Mater in many ways. She has acted as chief clerk to the Registrar and secretary to President Emeritus Bryan. In her present position, Mrs. Kirby has given her utmost in understanding and aid to the coeds on the I. U. campus. She has acted as intermediary between the sor- orities and the Dean ' s office, easing the headaches of the Pan-Hellenic council and individual social organizations. Mrs. Kirby is known for her sympathetic nature and has proven herself to be a faithful advisor in many a per- sonal problem. MRS. LOTTIE KIRBY MRS. KATE H. MUELLER Mrs. Kate Hevner Mueller, in her two years as Dean of Women at Indiana University, has endeared herself to the hearts of all of the 2,000 young women students to whom she offers friendly and wise counseling. Mrs. Mueller attended Wilson College and Columbia University and was formerly an instructor and assistant professor in psychology. Her experience along this line has enabled her to understand and cope with the myriad of problems which come to her office daily. 23 Mr. J. A. Franklin Assistant Comptroller Mr. Charles E. HarrcU Assistant Registrar Mr. Claude J. Black Purchasing Agent Miss Alice Nelson Director of Halls of Residence Mr. W. S. Bittner Associate Director of the Ex- tension Division Mr. Henry E. Pearson Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds Mr. Harold W. Jordan Manager of the University Bookstore 24 Miss Beatrice Chitwood Stenographer, Office of Di- rector of Admission Miss Ella L. Yakey Secretary to Director of Ad- mission Mr. Frank R. Elliott Director of Admission Mr. George F. Heighway Alumni Secretary Dean Fernandas Payne Dean of Graduate School Mr. Zora S. Clevenger Director of Intercollegiate Athletics 1 Mr. L. L. Fisher Cashier and Ticket Manager Dr. Edith Schuman University Physician Women Miss Ivy Chamncss Editor of University Publica- tions Mr. John W. Hicks Chief Accountant, Comptrol- ler ' s Office Mr. W. A. Alexander Librarian for Mr. E. Ross Hartley Director of the University News Bureau Mr. Thomas A. Cookson Registrar Dr. R. C. Speas University Physician Dr. Charles Holland University Physician Mr. J. E. Patrick Director of the Indiana Uni- versity Memorial Union Mr. J. W. Spriggs Business Manager of the In- diana University Press Mr. A. H. Berndt Director of the Department 25 of Safety X EDWIN H. SUTHERLAND, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology EDGAR ROSCOE CUMINGS, VELORUS MARTZ, Ph.D., ph.D.j Professor of Elementary Education Professor of Geology ERNEST HOFFZIMMER, Professor of Piano GEORGE E. SCHLAFER, A.M., EDNA F. MUNRO, A.M., D. LYLE DIETERLE, C.P.A., Assistant Professor of Physical Associate Professor and Director Assistant Professor of Business Education for Men of Physical Education for Women Administration JOHN FREDERICK LANDIS B.S., Lieutenant Colonel, Infantry, U. Army; Professor of Military Science and Tactics JAMhS h. AlOi-FAT, Pli.U., Professor of Economics EDMUND S. CONKLIN, Ph.D., D.Sc, Professor of Psychology KLNNLTH P. WILIJAMS, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics JACOB A. BADERTSCHER. Ph.D., Professor of Anatomy 26 ENDELL WILLIAM WRIGHT, CORA BARBARA HENN EL, PAUL WEATHER WAX, Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Professor of Botany Professor of Education Professor of Mathematics CLARE WRIGHT BARKER, M.B.A., Professor of Marketing and Merchandising LEE BENNS, Ph.D., Litt.D., Professor of History FRANK CURRY MATHERS, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry AGNES E. WELLS, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics WILL T. HALE, Ph.D., Professor of English RL G. F. FRANZEN, Ph.D., LENNART VON ZWEYGBERG, GEORGE W. STARR, M.S., MILO JESSE BOWMAN, LL.D., )fcssor of Secondary Education Professor of Cello Director of the Bureau of Business Professor of Law Research 27 JOHN HENRY MUELLER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Sociology ALLAN C. G. MITCHELL, Ph.D., Professor of Physics and Director of Research in the Department of Physics DOUGLAS D. NYE Assistant Professor of Music JESSE JAMES GALLOWAY Ph.D., Professor of Geology and Paleontology SAMUEL T. BURNS, A.M., Professor of Public School Music AUBKLY UlLLKK, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Creek ALFRED EVENS, LL.B., Professor of Law HERMAN T. BRISCOE, Ph.E Professor of Chemistry and Spe( Administrative Assistant to th President FORD P. HALL, B.C.L., LL.M., Professor of Government HARRY C. SAUVAIN, M.B.A., D.C.S., Director of the Investment Re- search Bureau and Professor of Finance RUSSELL L. JONES, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Anatomy ROLAND C. DAVIS, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology 28 [ENRY HOLLAND CAR- TER, Ph.D., Professor of English -S4.. LILLIAN GAY BERRY, A.M., Professor of Latin HUGH EVANDER WILLIS, LL.D., Professor of Law ROLLA ROY RAMSEY, Ph.D., Professor of Physics BERT EDWARD YOUNG, Ph.D., ' rofessor of French and Italian ALFRED CHARLES KINSEY, S.D., Professor of Zoology RALPH ERSKINE CLELAND, Ph.D., Professor of Botany WILLIAM J. MOENKHAUS, Ph.D., Professor of Physiology jOlliN KuliLRT MOORE, Ph.D., Professor of English WILLIAM H. JELLEMA, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy FRANK E. HORACK, JR., S.J.D., Professor of Law LYDIA D. WOODBRIDGE, A.M., Assistant Professor of French 29 I. OWEN FOSTER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Education CLARA FEDLER, A.M., Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women WILLIAM ORLANDO LYNCH, JOHN McMURRY HILL, Ph.D A.M., Professor of Spanish Professor of History MELVIN S. LEWIS, A.M., Ed.D., Professor of Education WILLIAM E. ROSS, M.M., Assistant Professor of Voice PAUL MONTGOMERY HAR- LEE ROY NORVELLL, i MON, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English am Professor of Physiology Radio Director OLIVER W. Professor BROWN, A.M., of Chemistry ROBERT ELISHA BURKE, A.M., Professor of Fine Arts JACOB ROBERT KANTOR, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology CLARENCE EARL MAY, Ph.D, Professor of Chemistry 30 J. WYMOND FRENCH, A.M., CARROLL L. CHRISTENSON, WILBUR A. COGSHALL, A.M., ssociate Professor of Journalism Ph.D., Professor of Astronomy Professor of Economics WILLIAM THOMAS MORGAN, Ph.D., Professor of History STITH irtu.Mi suN, Ph.D., Professor of English JOHN E. STEMPEL, M.S., Professor of Journalism EDWARD D. SEEBER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French WINTHROP N. KELLOGG, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology FRANK M. ANDREWS, Ph.D., Professor of Botany ALBERT L. KOHLMEIER, Ph.D., Professor of History JESSE E. SWITZER, Ph.D., Professor of Geography JOSEPH A. WRIGHT, A.B., Professor of Journalism 31 r ' = c Each year twenty-three Senior women and seven- teen Senior men receive positions as Senior class officers and committee members. They are ranked according to the merit system which includes extra-curricular points and scholastic achievement. This year Buck Mauck, number one Senior man, was chosen as Senior Class President. Geneva Senefeld and Rosemary Treanor, ranking as number one and number two respectively, were chosen as vice-president and secretary. The office of treasurer was filled by Nathan Kaplan. Conversing about not-so-weighty matters are Sen- ior class officers: Nathan Kaplan, Geneva Senefeld, Rosemary Treanor, and Buck Mauck. 34 Senior committee members seated are Barbara Beall, Mary M. Holsinger, and Robert W. Twyman; stand- ing are Robert H. Weir, Evan Stiers, and Edward L. Hutton. Senior committee members chosen were: Edward L. Hutton, chairman of the Siwash committee; Robert H. Weir, chairman of the Invitations committee; Robert W. Twyman, chairman of the Tree-planting com- mittee; Evan Stiers, chairman of the Peace-pipe com- mittee; Mary M. Holsinger, chairman of the Memorial committee; Barbara Beall, chairman of the Breakfast committee; David B. Richardson, Willard Findling, Mary Jane Tharp, Mary Beth Hunt and Jeannette Dice, members of the Siwash committee; Paul Boxell, Rem- brandt C. Hiller, Margaret Postma, Anne Hopman and Caroline L. Imel, members of the Invitations commit- tee; Myron Glassner, Richard M. Beavans, Robert M. Boughman, Eliza Bess Lucas and Audrey Smith, mem- bers of the Memorial committee; Walter F. Smith, Allen Harrison, Margaret Anne Johnston, Mary Frances Her- camp, and Carma Parkhurst, members of the Tree- planting committee; Montford A. Mead, John A. Myers, Mary E. Mellinger, Eunice Runner and Betty Suther- land, members of the Peace-pipe committee; Virginia Heller, Laura Wilkins, Ruth H. Ferris, Sarah Gray and Dorothy Redden, members of the Breakfast committee. 3J THE GENERAL COURSE FROM WHICH MANY Specie: Indianensis Studenta- tis. Several Bottles + a first year chemist ==? Even members of the Daily Student staff read a newspaper. PATHS ARE TAKEN. y :- Owen Hall, home of rainmakers. Dean S. E. Stout of the College of Arts and Sciences. chemist Elliott is no doubt looking for the ninety-third element. Shirley Hannapel seems to have found some- thing in the collection plate — a dance pro- gram? Business Manager Fred Brooks is giving a lit- tle support to the University Theatre adver- tisements. ELIZABETH ANN ABBETT Ft. Wayne A.B. French Pi Beta Phi; Vice-Pres- ident, International Relations Club; W.A.A.; Coed Coun- seling; Y. W. C. A.; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Taps. F. LAURENCE ANDERSON, JR. Gary A.B. Government President, Kappa Al- pha Psi; Law Club. JOE G. BADGER Bloomington B.S. Physics Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Cos- mopolitan Club; Chief Engineer, University Radio Program. JONAS BERKEY Salem A.B. Psychology Y.M.C.A. ft WILLIAM MEYER BLOOM Columbia City A.B. Government President, Sigma Al- pha Epsilon; Skull and Crescent; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Pi Sigma Alpha; Tau Kappa Alpha; Varsity Baseball; Var- sity Debating; Frcsh- m a n Orientation Committee; Le Cercle Francais; Law Club; Blue Key Recognition. MAURICE ADELMAN Canton, Ohio A.B. Economics Sigma Alpha Mu; Sophomore Swimming Manager; Telegraph Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Economics Club; Advertising Club. JOAN ADELE ANDERSON Indianapolis A.B. English Pi Beta Phi; Y.W. C.A.; English Club; International Re- lations Club. LAURA BACHMAN Syracuse B.S. Home Economics Omicron Nu; Home Economics Club. MARSHALL A. ALEXANDER Terre Haute A.B. Chemistry Phi Kappa Psi; Fresh- man Football; Y.M. C.A. MILFORD E. ANNESS Metamora A.B. Government CATHERINE LOIS BALDRIDGE Bloomington A.B. History History Club; Span- ish Club; English Club. LEWIS BER.MAN South Bend A.B. Journalism University Committee on Religion; Student Religious Cabinet; President, Hillel Stu- dent Council; Indiana Daily Student Staff. MERLE DeVON BLUE Marion A.B. History Phi Delta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; President, Sigma Epsilon Theta; President, Flame Club; President, History Club; President, Prot- estant Student Council; University Committee on Religion; Vice-President Y.M.C.A.; I.S.A. Council; Wesley Foundation; Der Deutsche Verein; International Relations Club; Student Religious Cabinet. F. WAYNE BERRY Bloomington A.B. Journalism Asiociate Night Edi- tor, Indiana Daily Student Staff; Der Deutsche Verein. VICTOR BOERGER Ft. Wayne A.B. Chemistry CRYSTAL ALLEGRE Lawrence B.S. Home Economics Home Economics Club; Classical Club. GRACE GRAYBILL ASHBY Ladoga A.B. History Pi Beta Phi; Secre- tary, Pi Lambda The- ta; Secretary, Interna- tional Relations Club; History Club; Le Cer- cle Francais; Locke History Award; Coed Counseling. BARBARA BEALL Rushville A.B. English Mortar Board; Theta Sigma Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Board of Standards; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Freshman Handbook; GLORIA GAYLE ALLEN Bloomington A.B. History Kappa Kappa Gamma; History Club; English Club; Y.W.C.A. JUNE ATKINSON Bloomington A.B. Home Economics Y.W.C.A.; Home Eco- nomics Club. KUTSI MEHMET BEGDES Ankara, Turkey M.A. Economics Coed Counseling; Cosmopolitan Club; English Club; Le Cercle Francais; Y.W.C.A.; Chairman, Senior Breakfast Committee; I.S.A. Executive Board. LOUIS J. BIANCO Gary A.B. Chemistry Sigma Pi; Newman Club; Y.M.C.A.; American Chemical Society. CECELIA G. BOLSON Ft. Wayne A.B. Journalism Indiana Daily Student Staff. A. VAUGHN BIERLY Pekin B.A. Latin Classical Club. RITA JOAN BOLSON Ft. Wayne A.B. History JEAN L. ALLEN Greenwood A.B. History Sigma Kappa; Orches- tra; Coed Band; Pan- Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; History Club; Mc- Nutt for President Club. CARL H. AULT Butler A.B. Chemistry BETTY ANN BENDER Bloomington A.B. Home Economics Alpha Delta Pi; Pres- ident, Omicron Nu; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Mortar Board Recognition; Cosmo- politan Club; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A. Council; Der Deutsche Verein. VIRGINIA ELLEN BIERY Frankfort A.B. History Alpha Chi Omega. GLADYS O. BOOHER Evansville A.B. English THEODORE E. ANAGNOST Cortland, N. Y. A.B. Spanish WILMER BAATZ Ft. Wayne A.B. English English Club. KENNETH H. BENNETT Dillsboro A.B. Chemistry Kappa Delta Rho; Band. CLEO MAY BISHOP Vincennes A.B. Sociology Delta Delta Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta; Y.W.C.A. JESSIE BOSWELL Anderson A.B. Spanish Alpha Chi Omega. 39 ' im.:- Drama in the commons enacted by Glen Rust and tea cup. Tri Delt Jeannette D ice has to stay on the ball to keep up with the presidency of Mortar Board and Theta Sig. Prof . Jellema dictates, and Jean McGrew can take it m FRANK PAUL BOXELL ALICE CLARENCE BOYD BERNICE MIRIAM RUTH MARCELLA BOURGHOLTZER Indianapolis CHARLOl It Indianapolis ROBERTA BOYER BRADY BRANDYBERRY New York City A.B. Speech BOYD A.B. Zoology Tipton Gary Decatur A,B, Govurnment Delta Upsilon; Blue Kokomo A.B. English A.B. Speech A.B. Anatomy Sigma Delta Chi; In- Key; President, Theta A.B. Merchandising Y.W.C.A.; English W.A.A.; Taps; Presi- diana Daily Student Alpha Phi; Vice-Presi- Kappa Kappa Gamma; Club; Education dent, Gamma Delta; Staff. dent, Sigma Delta Chi; Vice - President, Board of Aeons; Au- thor, Jordan River Revue ; Director, Cabaret ; Bury the Home Economics Club; Le Cercle Fran- cais; W.A.A.; Taps; Y.W.C.A. Club; W.A.A. History Club. Dead ; Old Maid ; Our Town ; Senior In- .. vitations Committee. FRED REYNOLDS BROOKS, JR. Loogootee ELIZABETH JACK C. BROWN CHARLES BRANN ROY BRILL WILLIAM J. MARTHA A.B. Government ANNE BROWN Indianapolis Greencastle B.S. History Louisville, Ky. A.B. Journalism BRINK, JR. Indianapolis BRINSON Anderson Phi Gamma Delta; Theta Alpha Phi; Indianapolis A.B. Fine Arts A.B. Goiernment Phi Delta Theta; Sigma Alpha Mu; Le A.B. Journalism A.B. Journalism Taps; Men ' s Glee Kappa Alpha Theta; Pershing Rifles; Inter- Cercle Francais; Ad- Sigma Delta Chi; Der Club; Le Cercle Fran- Alpha Lambda Delta; national Relations vertising Club; Skull Deutsche Verein; cais; International Re- Mortar Board Recog- Club; Y.M.C.A.; Le and Crescent; Fresh- Managing Editor, In- lations Club; Pershing nition; W.A.A.; Y.W Cercle Francais. , , man Swimming. diana Daily Student. Rifles; Business Man- ager, University The- atre. C.A.; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Secretary, Dau- bers Club. LLOYD H. BROWN GUS C. BROWNE ROBERT F. J. GEORGE BURNS DOROTHY MAE BETTY CALPHA MILDRED Evansville Marion BUCHANAN Flora BUSBY Laurel CAMPBELL A.B. Chemistry A.B. Chemistry Darlington A.B. Government Anderson A.B. Sociology Lebanon Sigma Chi. B.S. Chemistry Men ' s Glee Club; A.B. Latin Alpha Omicron Pi; B.S. Home Economics Gentlemen from In- Delta Zeta; Classical Alpha Kappa Delta; Home Economics diana ; Jordan River Club; Junior Math Socio logy Club; Club; Y.W.C.A. Revue . Club; Education Club; Y.W.C.A. W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; English Club; Hiking Club; Coed Counsel- ing. PAULINE E. WINIFRED BERNARD JESSIE CHAILLE DOROTHY WILMA JEAN GEORGE DOUGLAS ' CARTER CARTWRIGHT CEDERHOLM, JR. Bloomington CHAMBERLAIN CHAMBERS CHARLTON Hope Charleston Indianapolis B.S. Home Economics South Bend Bloomington Indianapolis A.B. Home Economics B.S. Home Economics A.B. Chemistry A.B. History B.S. Home Economics A.B. Geology Home Economics Omicron Nu; Home Y.W.C.A.; Coed Chi Omega; Y.W. Club; Der Deutsche Economics Club; Band; Women ' s Glee C.A.; Home Econom- Verein. Y.W.C.A. Club; Le Cercle Fran- cais; History and Gov- ernment Club; Pi- rates of Penzance . ics Club; Education Club; W.A.A. ELBERT D. FLOYD B. BARBARA JANE EDMUND H. CARMEN COOK EARL LONG GENEVIEVE CHARPIE, JR. COLEMAN CONGLETON CONKLIN Birdseye COOPER COUGIAS Indianapolis Martinsville Frankfort Bloomington A.B. Sociology Indianapolis Gary A.B. Mathematics A.B. Chemistry A.B. History A.B. Psychology Alpha Omicron Pi; A.B. Government A.B. French Euclidean Circle; Pi Lambda Theta; Phi Gamma Delta; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Beta Theta Pi; Y.M. Le Cercle Francais; Band; Men ' s Glee History Club; English President, Mathemat- Sociology Club; C.A.; Freshman Rifle Education Club; Eng- Club; Rifle Club; Club; Le Cercle Fran- ics Club. Women ' s Glee Club; Team. lish Club; Girls ' Fife, Camera Club. cais; Education Club; Y.W.C.A. Coed Band; Treasurer, Jackson Club. Drum, and Bugle Corps. - 41 Bob Weir and Henry Wehr worry with Chemistry breakage fees at stake. Rosemary Treanor occupies the bench in the best Treanor and Town Hall tradition. Dean Mueller and A.W.S. Prexy Geneva Senefeld reflect on weighty matters. MARIANNE A. COWAN Bloomington A.B. Speech LOUISE ELEANOR CRABB Indianapolis A.B. Home Economics Y. W.C. A.; Home Economics Club; Taps. CHARLES K. CRANE Loogootee A.B. Journalism ANNA K. CRAWFORD Indianapolis A.B. History JOHN ESTY CURTIN Ft. Wayne A.B. Government Phi Kappa; Newman Club; Freshman Swimming; Student Religious Cabinet; Chairman, Religious Education Committee. HAROLD KENNETH DAY Washington A.B. Sociology Sigma Epsilon Theta; Sociology Club; Var- sity Golf. VELIT MEHMET DAG Istanbul, Turkey M.A. Economics Cosmopolitan Club. ADELE G. DeFOREST South Bend A.B. English JEANNETTE DICE Converse A.B. Journalism Delta Delta Delta; President, Mortar Board; President, Theta Sigma Phi; Pleiades; Taps; Ad- vertising Club; Wom- en ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; Women ' s Varsity Debate; Cabaret ; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Senior Siwash Committee. FLORENCE JOAN DICKMAN Evansville A.B. Sociology Pi Beta Phi; Sociology Club; Spanish Club; Y.W.C.A. ESTHER G. DILLEY Solsbury A.B. History JOSEPH FRANCIS DONNELLY Indianapolis A.B. English ' English Club. HARRIET CATHERINE DORAN Indianapolis A.B. Psychology Kappa Phi; Y.W. C.A.; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Education Club. ANNE DOUGLAS Shelbyville A.B. Journalism Sigma Kappa; Theta Sigma Phi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Euclidean Circle; Y.W.C.A.; Interna- tional Relations Club. ELAINE M. DOVEY Anderson A.B. History Pi Beta Phi; Interna- tional Relations Club; Y.W.C.A.; History Club. RICHARD M. DOWNEY Wabash B.S. Chemistry VIRGINIA K. DRUM Indianapolis A.B. History Y.W.C.A.; History Club; English Club. JANET DWYER Oak Park, 111. A.B. Fine Arts Phi Mu; Y.W.C.A. Council; W.A.A.; Le Cercle Francais; Ten- nis Club; Alpha Lambda Delta; Mor- tar Board Recogni- tion; Vice-President, Daubers Club. ESTHER MONROE DYE Detroit, Mich. A.B. Fine Arts Delta Gamma; Dau- bers Club; Le Cercle Francais; Women ' s Glee Club. JACK TRAFFORD EASON Chicago, 111. A.B. Journalism President, Phi Delta Theta; Skull and Cres- cent; Indiana Daily Student Staff. LOIS W. EDWARDS Newark, Ark. A.B. Zoology MELVIN A. EGGERS Ft. Wayne A.B. Economics Varsity Debate; Tau Kappa Alpha. NICHOLAS EGNATZ Hammond A.B. Chemistry Newman Club; Der Deutsche Verein. WILLIAM C. EHRENMAN Plymouth A.B. History LAURA J. ELLIS French Lick B.S. Home Economics Home Economics Club; Daubers Club. VIRGINIA L. ESHLEMAN Gary A.B. English English Club; Lambda Theta. Pi AUDREY E. EVANS Moores Hill B.S. Home Economics FRANCINE EVANS Gary A.B. Sociology Alpha Kappa Delta; Sociology Club. FRANK GERALD EVANS Rushville A.B. Chemistry Kappa Alpha Psi. MAHLON FECHTER Patchogue, N. Y. A.B. Government Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Baseball. FREDA ROCHELLE FEINMAN Garfield, N. J. A.B. Journalism Indiana Daily Student Staff; Editor, Hilltl Banner. BETTY JEAN FIRTH Indianapolis A.B. Journalism Delta Delta Delta; Theta Sigma Phi; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Le Cercle Francais; McNutt for President Club; Associate Wom- en ' s Editor, Indiana Daily Student. ROBERT FIRTH North Arlington, N. J. A.B. Economics Delta Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Track; Le Cercle Francais; Economics Club; Senior Track Manager. WILLIAM CECIL FITZPATRICK Elwood A.B. Chemistry EDMUND J. FLYNN Elmhurst, N. Y. A.B. Government Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Sigma Alpha; Fresh- man Track; Junior Track Manager; New- man Club. 43 Theta Chi ' s D. Bacon Richardson, burning his s-candals at both ends, rambles on, this time on the Daily Student. Phi Bete-D. G. Peg Johnston puts thumbs up on Der Deutsche Verein. Nate Kaplan, of El Rancho Grante, and the Daily Student, with the inevitable pipe — of the smoking variety. OTIS W. FORTNER Rockville B.S. Chemistry Band. BERNARD P. GILL Bloomington A.B. Chemistry Lambda Chi Alpha; Men ' s Glee Club. GENE GOSCH Indianapolis A.B. Journalism Associate Church Ed- itor, Indiana Daily Student; Sociology Club. SHIRLEY HANNAPEL Chicago, 111. A.B. History Delta Gamma; His- tory Club; Cabaret ; Jordan River Re- vue ; Y.W.C.A. HORACE H. HAY Lebanon B.S. Chemistry Theta Chi. STEPHEN A. FREE Spencer A.B. Chemistry Phi Delta Theta. WILLIAM GILLICK, JR. Gary A.B. English Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M. C.A.; English Club; Le Cercle Francais. SARAH MARGARET GRAY Bloomington A.B. Journalism President, Kappa Kap- pa Gamma; Secretary, Pleiades; Vice-Presi- dent, Theta Sigma Phi; Campus Editor, Indiana Daily Stu- dent; Coed Sponsor, R.O.T.C; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus; Y.W.C.A.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Bored Walk Staff; Senior Breakfast Committee. ELIZABETH FREEMAN Bloomington A.B. Chemistry JEAN GLENN Pampton Plains, N. J. A.B. French Alpha Lambda Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Treasurer, Mortar Board; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Associate Editor, The Folio; President, Le Cercle Francais; Co - Chair- man, Town Hall. ANNE SHIRLEY GRAY G.iry A.B. English Der Deutsche Verein; English Club; Educa- tion Club. ALICE MERCIA FRICK Gary A.B. Sociology Sociology Club; Der Deutsche Verein. MARVIN E. GLIDEWELL Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry Vice-President, Alpha Chi Sigma; Chemistry Club. Ph HERBERT S. GUTOWSKY Hammond A.B. Chemistry i Beta Kappa. ROBERT LEWIS HARMEIER Cambridge City A.B. Government Sigma Epsilon Theta; Associate Editor, Freshman Guide; Men ' s Glee Club; Pi- rates of Penzance ; Law Club; Y.M.C.A. VIRGINIA HELLER Ft. Wayne B.S. Home Economics Vice-President, Delta Gamma; Omicron Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta; Associate Edi- tor, Arbutus; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A.; Pleiades; Pan-Hellenic Council; Senior Breakfast Com- mittee. RAYMOND OTIS HARMON Louisville, Ky. A.B. Government President, Delta Chi; Interfraternity Coun- cil; Skull and Cres- cent; Kappa Kappa Psi; Vice-President, Pi Sigma Alpha; Blue Key Recognition; Phi Eta Sigma; Le Cercle Francais; Band. MARY JEAN HARTMAN Wirt A.B. Botany Der Deutsche Verein: Euclidean Circle. NORMABELLE HELMAN South Bend A.B. Psychology Art Editor, The Folio; Art Editor, Bored Walk; Cabaret ; Y.W.C.A. ELIZABETH B. HENSLER Kent B.S. Home Economics ANN FUHRER Mt. Vernon A.B. Sociology Kappa Kappa Gamma. RUTH R. GOEBEL Ft. Wayne A.B. Botany Delta Gamma. MARY A. HABICH Indianapolis A.B. English Kappa Alpha Theta. FRANCES C. HASEMAN Linton A.B. Journalism MARY FRANCES HERCAMP Seymour A.B. English Alpha Lambda Delta Pi Lambda Theta Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A. Mortar Board Recog- nition; The Folio Staff; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Coed Counseling; Freshman Orientation Committee; I.S.A. Council; A. W. S. Council. JOE GARRISON Boonville M.A. Chemistry Sigma Nu. JOHN C. GOGLEY Gary B.S. Chemistry E. RICHARD HALEY Evansvllle A.B. Sociology Alpha Kappa Delta; Y.M.C.A.; President, Wesley Foundation. RICHARD C. HASKETT Bloomington A.B. History Phi Gamma Delta; Theta Alpha Phi. DICK HERD Peru A.B. Chemistry President, Phi Delta Theta; Alpha Phi Omega; President, In- ternational Relations Club; Secretary, Y.M. C.A. Cabinet; Busi- ness Manager, Red Book; Bryan Oratori- cal Contest; Secretary, Young Republican Club; Student Affili- ate of the American Chemical Society. ROBERT RAYMOND GERNER Garrett B.S. General Business Delta Chi. JANET J. GORRELL Winamac A.B. Journalism Kappa Alpha Theta; Secretary, Theta Sig- ma Phi; Women ' s Ed- itor, Indiana Daily Student. BETTY HAMILTON Richmond A.B. Zoology Delta Gamma; Der Deutsche Verein; Cabaret ; Y.W.C.A. MARSHALL GRIFFITH HASSENMILLER Lafayette A.B. Sociology Dolphin Club; Scab- bard and Blade; Presi- dent, Flying Club; Sociology Club; Var- sity Rifle Club; Freshman Swimming. DON W. HERROLD Grass Creek B.S. Chemistry 45 r mr fw s w Luci 11a Hall, Mary Jane Tharp, and Mary ■Mellinger lend material aid to the Y.W.C.A. Barb ara Gale and Mary Beth Hunt set a rec- ord in the Delta Gamma house. Mildred Campbell, home ec major, demon- strates the latest practice house technique in what to do when the hatchet is lost. JANE HERSHMAN LAURA HESTER JUNE HIATT GENE F. SHERWOOD HELEN L. HINES JOHNNIE L. Tipton Charlestown Bluffton HINCHMAN HINDS, JR. Lafayette HODGIN A.B. Home Economics A.B. Journalism A.B. English Geneva Columbia City A.B. English Noblesville Theta Sigma Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; A.B. Chemistry A.B. Journalism Sigma Kappa; Band; A.B. Social Studies Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Upsilon; Alpha Associate Campus Ed- Y.W.C.A.; McNutt History Club; Y.W. Francais; Women ' s Treasurer, W. A. A.; Phi Omega; Camera itor, Indiana Daily for President Club. C.A. Glee Club; Chorus; Oceanides; Der Deut- Club; Der Deutsche Student; Cosmopoli- Telegraph Editor, In- sche Vcrein. Verein. tan Club. diana Daily Student; CHARLES E. H.M.S. Pinafore ; MARY HOLSINGER ANN HOOVER JEAN HOPEWELL LOUIE M. HORNE HELEN KRAMER HOLLINGSWORTH Pirates of P e n- LaGrange Wabash Seymour Anderson HOUGLAND Kokomo zance ; W.A.A. A.B. Journalism A.B. English A.B. English A.B. Government Rockport A.B. Chemistry ROSALIE HOLMAN Indianapolis Theta Sigma Phi; Pi Beta Phi. English Club; Y.W. Kappa Alpha Theta; A.B. English A.W.S. Council; C.A.; Coed Counsel- International Re- Sigma Kappa; Le Cer- Y. W. C. A. Council; ing; Education Club; lations Club; Y.W. cle Francais; Y.W. A.B. History Hiking Club; Editori- al Assistant, Arbutus; Associate Editor, In- Indiana Daily Student Staff. C.A. C.A. diana Daily Student; Editor, Fieshman Hand- CAROLINE LOUISE HURST book; Le Cercle Francais; Chairman, Senior LOUISE IMEL MARY BETH Connersville Memorial Committee. South Bend HUNT A .B. Journalism A.B. Zoology Evansville A.B. Speech Phi Mu; Theta Sigma Phi; Alpha Lambda MARY ANN HYDE Saratoga Springs, N.Y. JAMES HYNDMAN Bloom ington Pi Beta Phi; Mortar Board; Y. W. C. A. JEAN MABEL INSKEEP Lafayette ELIZABETH IRWIN Delta Gamma; Alpha Delta; Y. W. C. A.; A.B. Psychology A.B. Economics Cabinet; W. A. A. Elnora Lambda Delta; Theta Women ' s Editor, In- Alpha Kappa Delta; President, Economics Board; Der Deutsche A.B. Dietetics A.B. English Alpha Phi; Tau Kap- diana Daily Student. Sociology Club; New- man Club. Club; Le Cercle Fran- Verein; Coed Counsel- Phi Mu; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Zeta Tau Alpha; Le pa Alpha; Pleiades; cais. ing; Orientation Com- Cercle Francais; In- Taps; Business Assistant, Arbutus; Y.W.C.A. mittee; Coed Band; Club; Der Deutsche ternational Relations Council; Mortar Boarc ; A.W.S. Council; Jun- Vice-President, In- Verein. Club; Y.W.C.A. ior Prom Committee; President, Pan-Hellenic ternational Relations Council; Springtime for Henry ; Le Cercle Club; Senior Invita- Francais; Senior Siwash Committee. tions Committee. MARIAN LUCILLE JOHNSON EMILY A. IVAN CARL JACOBSON ALBIN A. MARY MARGARET BETSY VIRGINIA CHARLES Bedford Gary Hammond JANKOWITZ JOHNK JOHNSON JOHNSON A.B. Chemistry .B. Spanish A.B. Economics Gary Covington Logansport Brazil Delta Zeta; Der Deut- Sigma Alpha Epsilon; B.S. Medicine B.S. Home Economics A.B. Speech A.B. Journalism sche Verein; Home Varsity Swimming; Home Economics Kappa Alpha Theta; Economics Club; Dolphin Club; Eco- Club. Jordan River Re- Y.W.C.A.; Pan - Hel- nomics Club. vue ; Women ' s Glee Club; Student Direc- tor, Our Town . lenic Council; Chor- us; Student Affiliate of American Chemis- try Society. NATHAN KAPLAN MERCEDES E. ROBERTA MAXINE ALAN JOHNSTON MARGARET ANTRIM BERNICE KAPLAN Whiting JOHNSON JOHNSON Indianapolis JOHNSTON HERBERT JONES Indianapolis A.B. Journalism Tampa, Fla. Bringhurst A.B. Chemistry Wilmette, 111. Indianapolis A.B. Sociology Editor-in-Chief, Indi- A.B. Zoology A.B. Sociology President, Student Af- A.B. German A.B. Chemistry Le Cercle Francais; ana Daily Student; Kappa Alpha Theta; filiate of the Ameri- Treasurer, Delta Alpha Phi Omega; Alpha Kappa Delta; President, Sigma Del- Taps; Le Cercle Fran- can Chemistry Socie- Gamma; Alpha Lamb- Y.M.C.A.; Men ' s Glee Sociology Club; Sec- ta Chi; Board of cais; Cabaret ; Mc- ty; Alpha Chi Sigma. da Delta; Phi Beta Club; Jordan River retary Hillel Founda- Aeons; Blue Key; Nutt for President Kappa; Delta Phi Al- Revue . tion. Dragon ' s Head; Bored Club. pha; Vice - President, Walk Staff; The Folio Jackson Club; Vice- Staff; State Fair Stu- President, Der Deutsch ; Verein; Le Cercle Fran- dent; Junior Prom cais; Mortar Board Recognition; Y.W.C.A.; Committee; Senior Coed Counseling; Senior Tree Planting Com- Class Treasurer. mittee. - 47 ' 1 • Joe Badger, radio technician, keeps things un- der control. Life in the Theta house is viewed by Kath- erine Landis and Betsy Johnson. Home ec major Virginia Heller practices pan handling. SHEO-MING KEH Shanghai, China A.B. Economics Economics Club; Cos- mopolitan Club. ROBERT W. KERNS Conklin, N. Y. A.B. Economics HAROLD K. KLUTHE Latham, Kan. A.B. ]ournaUsm ANDREW F. LIVOVICH Hessville A.B. Chemistry Newman Club; Var- sity Wrestling; D e r Deutche Vercin. SHIRLEY J. LYBROOK Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry JULIUS DAVID MANN, JR. Nashville, 111. A.B. Goiernmcnt Theta Chi; Jordan River Revue . KATHARINE LANDIS Logansport A.B. History Kappa Alpha Theta; History Club; Span- ish Club; Pan - Hel- lenic Council; Cab- aret . ROSS LOCKRIDGE Bloomington M.A. English DON McCAMMON Greensburg A.B. Journalism Theta Chi; Sigma Delta Chi; Sports Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Bored Walk Staff. ALICE CAROLINE MARTIN Portland A.B. English Phi Omega Pi; W.A A.; Y.W.C.A.; Dance Committee, A. W. S.; Der Deutsche Verein. GEORGE L. KERRIGAN Connersville A.B. Government President, Sigma Lambda; I.S.A. Coun- cil; Vice-President, South Hall; Law Club; Spanish Club. PHYLLIS G. LANDIS Indianapolis A.B. Speech Pi Beta Phi; Theta Alpha Phi; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Taps; Cos- tume Director, Uni- versity Theatre; Pan- Hellenic Council; Old Maid ; Lady of Letters ; Tonight entation Committee; C.A.; Le Cercle Franca ALFRED LOHSE, JR. Michigan City A.B. Speech Acacia; Alpha Phi Omega; Band; Or- chestra; Taps; Jor- dan River Revue . DORIS JUNE McCAMMON Letts A.B. Latin Vice-President, Eu- clidean Circle; Edu- cation Club; Classical Club; W.A.A.; Y.W. C.A. MARY LOUISE MARTIN South Bend A.B. French Treasurer, Eta Sigma Phi; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Phi Beta Kappa. ALICE C. KETTNER Indianapolis A.B. German Phi Mu; Secretary- Treasurer, Delta Phi Alpha; Alpha Lambda Delta; President, Der Deutsche Verein; Women ' s Glee Club Pirates of Penzance ; Classical Club. MARSHALL E. LENTZ Bloomington B.S. Chemistry Advisory Committee, Student Affiliate of the American Chemi- cal Society. at 8:30 ; Freshmen Ori- Coed Counseling; Y.W. LOUISE ELIZABETH LOVE Indianapolis A.B. French Le Cercle Francais; Spanish Club; Or- chestra; Pirates of Penzance . RAYMOND EARL McCASLIN Indianapolis A.B. History Sigma Pi; Skull and Crescent; Advertising Manager, Bored Walk: History Club. RALPH L. MARTIN Gosport A.B. Physics Der Deutsche Verein; Camera Club. J. RAYMOND KING Winamac A.B. Chemistry President, Phi Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; Sigma Delta Psi; Varsity Track. Jordan River Revue ; LOIS LAUTER Indianapolis B.S. Home Economics D el t a Gamma; Oceanides; W.A. A.; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club; Treasurer, Omicron Nu; Cabaret . PAULINE LOWTHER Gary A.B. Government Phi Omega Pi; Taps; Y.W.C.A. ROBERT A. McCORMICK Danville B.S. Physics Junior Math Club. ROBERT WADE MARTIN Pendleton A.B. English Phi Eta Sigma; The Folio Staff; President, English Club. LAMAR LYN KIRVEN Mexia, Tex. M.A. History Omega Psi Phi; Grad- uate History Club; Negro Student Club. ELIZABETH J. LEONARD Bloomington A.B. Home Economics WALTER J. KLEINSCHMIDT Evansville B.S. Chemistry ROBERT LEE LUTZ Wabash A.B. Government Phi Gamma Delta; The Folio Staff; Le Cercle Francais; Law Club; Cabaret . JOHN B. McFARLAN Connersville A.B. Government Phi Kappa Psi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Band. RAY H. MATTINGLEY Rockport A.B. English President, Cosmopoli- tan Club; Associate City Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Y.M C.A.; Camera Club; Student League; Ref- ugee Student Commit- tee; Le Cercle Fran- BETTY LICHTENBERG Michigan City B.A. Sociology Der Deutsche Verein; Orchestra; Treasurer, Sociology Club; Al- pha Kappa Delta; W. A. A.; Secretary, In- diana Student League. JOANN GORDON LYBROOK Gary A.B. French Kappa Alpha Theta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francais; W.A. A.; Y.W.C.A. ' ; International Rela- tions Club; English Club. JEAN McGREW Newcastle A.B. Philosophy Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi Sigma Alpha; Y. W.C.A. Council; I.S. A. Council. VIRGINIA MAY MEAD Salem A.B. Journalism Theta Sigma Phi; Telegraph Editor, In- diana Daily Student; Coed Rifle Team; Y. W.C.A.; W.A.,A.; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Kappa Phi. 49 Jord an River Revue author Paul Boxell takes a professorial stand. Betty Calpha, A.O.Pi., does not look too con- fident of Lochinvar, the trusty steed of the sociology department. Mortar Board Elizabeth Rice calling from the Pi Phi phone booth pick s a cab to match her costume. MARY EMILY MARIAN ELLEN L. MILLER FLORENCE V. TOM J. MILLER WILLIAM J. MARION MILLS MELLINGER MIDDLETON Bloomington MILLER Aurora MILLIKAN Lake Mills, Wis. Indianapolis Lexington B.S. Home Economics Gibson City, 111. A.B. Journalism Indianapolis M.A. Journalism A.B. Latin A.B. History Y.W.C.A.; Chorus; A.B. Home Economics Sigma Delta Chi; Al- B.S. Medicine Vice-President, Eta Education Club; Zeta Tau Alpha; pha Phi Omega; Blue Sisma Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W. Home Economics Home Economics Key; Spanish Club; Club. Club; Y.W.C.A. Indiana Daily Student C.A. Cabinet; Vice- Staff; Bored Walk Staff; Athletic Re- President, Classical CI ub; Coed Counseling; KATHERINE JOHN W. MURRAY JOHN CREVISTON ROBERT NEFF Mortar Board Recognition; Senior Peace Pipe LENORE MORGAN Dunkirk view Staff; State Fair Student Staff. NAGLE Iowa City, la. Committee. Bloomington A.B. Chemistry Washington A.B. Journalism A.B. French A.B. History NELLIE D. MINNICK CHARLES WILLIAM Kappa Alpha Theta; Y.W.C.A. Council; MARTHA E. MYERS Noblesville Delta Chi; Beta Phi Gamma; Inter-Fra- Indianapolis MOHLER Coed Counseling; ternity Council. A.B. English East Chicago A.B. Zoology Freshman Tennis. Women ' s Glee Club; Chorus; Le Cercle Francais; Mt. Holy- oke College; La Sar- bonne. A.B. English Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francais; Associate Editor, The Folio. EUGENIA LOUISE CHESTER PEGGY NEWTON RICHARD F. HARRY JAMES PETE NICHOLAS CAROLINE NEU NEUMEISTER Columbus NEWTON NICHOLAS NICHOLAS Bloomington Bloom ington South Bend B.S. Chemistry Ligonier Bloomington Bloomington A.B. Government AB. Mnsic B.S. Home Economics Delta Gamma; Ocean- A.B. Government A.B. Government A.B. Government Kappa Alpha Theta; Women ' s Glee Club; sides; Euclidean Cir- Phi Eta Sigma; Pi International Re- Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Chorus; Home Eco- cle; W.A.A. Sigma Alpha; Phi Beta lations Club; McNutt Mortar Board Recog- nomics Club; Educa- Kappa; Le Cercle for President Club. nition; Orientation tion Club; Omicron Francais. Committee; Le Cercle Nu. Francais; Coed Coun- seling; W.A.A. CARMA LEE PARKHURST JOSEPH M. MARY KATHRYN Syracuse MARY A. PARR MYLES F. PARRISH WILLIAM ERNEST ROBERT C. PEASE O ' NEAL PACKWOOD A.B. English Bloomington Decatur PAYNE Ft. Wayne Loogootee Salem Le Cercle Francais; A.B. History A.B. History Blue Point, N. Y. A.B. Chemistry A.B. Chemistry B.S. Home Economics Y.W.C.A.; Cosmopol- AB. Chemistry Theta Chi. Newman Club. Home Economics Club; Daubers Club; Cosmopolitan Club. itan Club; Campus Religious Council; Alpha Lambda Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Sen- ior Tree Planting Committee. MARGARET RICHARD PELL LAURA HELEN MARY PHEGLEY WENDELL C. RALPH WILBUR POSTMA JEANNETTE Shelbyville PERCEY Fairbanks PHILLIPPI PHILLIPS Indianapolis PRINZ A.B. History Anderson B.S. Home Economics Zionsville Salem A.B. Economics Louisville, Ky. President, Kappa Sig- A.B. Psychology Home Economics A.B. Economics A.B. Chemistry President, W.A.A.; AB. Art ma; Skull and Cres- Club; Y.W.C.A. Sigma Nu; Sigma Del- Sigma Nu; Treasurer, Mortar Board; Secre- Alpha Chi Omega; cent; Interfraternity ta Chi; Blue Key; Ed- Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi tary, Economics Club; Pleiad es; Daubers Council; Business itor-in-Chief, Indiana Eta Sigma; Le Cercle Der Deutsche Verein; Club; Junior Prom Staff, University Daily Student; Eco- Francais; Chemistry Y.W.C.A. Council; Queen; Coed Sponsor, Theater; Bored Walk nomics Club; Interna- Club; Y.M.C.A. Coed Counseling; R. O. T.C.; Pan-Hel- Staff; Editorial Assist- tional Relations Club. Orientation Commit- lenic Council. ant, Arbutus. tee; Senior Invitations Committee. - 51 Arbutus business head and D. U. President Bob Twyman and Betty Jane Williams — the throne pours the power a drink. Caroline Imel derives pleasure from the small things in life. Barbara Beall and Mary Habich reminisce after Hale ' s hilarious class. i JOHN BIERY QUICK Frankfort A.B. Economics Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma; Y.M.C.A.; International Rela- tions Club; Econom- ics Club; Chemistry Club. DAVID B. RICHARDSON Mapiewood, N. J. A.B. Journalism Theta Chi; Editor-in- Chief, Daily Student; ' ' Union Board; Treasurer, Sigma Delta Chi; Blue Key; Sphinx Club; Editor, Athletic Review; Publicity Director, University Theatre; Taps; Cabaret ; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus; Niezer Theatre Award; I.S.A. Executive Board; Sen- ior Siwash Committee. GLADYS GENEVIEVE RATTS Bloomington A.B. Economics Economics Club; Y. W.C.A.; Coed Band; Coed Counseling; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francais. JANE RINEHART Louisville, Ky. B.S. Home Economics Delta Gamma. RICHARD ROTH New Castle A.B. Government Sigma Alpha Mu. GEORGE TOURNER SCHILLING Hinsdale, 111. A.B. Government President, Delta Tau Delta; Skull and Cres- cent; Der Deutsche Verein; Y.M.C.A. ELIZABETH CLAIRE SIGLER Hammond A.B. Chemistry Delta Delta Delta; President, Alpha Lambda Delta; Vice- President, Iota Sigma Pi; Y.W.C.A.; Fresh- man Orientation Committee; W.A.A.; Le Cercle Francais; International Rela- tions Club; Coed Counseling. MAXINE ROWE Kentland A.B. Chemistry Beta Sigma Omicron; Alpha Lambda Delta; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Iota Sigma Pi; Der Deutsche Verein; Y.W.C.A. ROSAMOND L. SCHLAEGEL Indianapolis A.B. Psychology Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Lambda Delta; Cabaret ; Coed Counseling; Y.W.C. A.; W.A.A.; Mortar Board Recognition; Le Cercle Francais; Club; NORMAND W. REDDEN Norwich, N. Y. A.B. Government Pi Sigma Alpha; Jun- ior Track Manager; Y.M.C.A. VIOLET LOUISE RIPLEY New Augusta B.S. Home Economics Home Economics Club; Kappa Phi; XX ' .A.A. ISABELLA RUSS Bloomington A.B. Chemistry Iota Sigma Pi; Der Deutsche Verein. ELLEN VIRGINIA SCHOCKE Salem A.B. trench Alpha Chi Omega; Le Cercle Francais; Der Deutsche Verein. International Relations Pan-Hellenic Council; Chorus. BARBARA SIMMERMON Lapel A.B. Sociology Kappa Kappa Gamma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta; Pan-Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A.; Sociology Club. KENT SIMPSON Salem A.B. Geology JOHN THOMAS REED Terre Haute A.B. Chemistry ROBERT B. REED Linton A.B. Chemistry WILLIAM C. ROBERTSON Indianapolis B.S. Chemistry Sigma Chi. HUGH B. RUSSELL Salem A.B. Government Law Club. WILLIAM G. ROESSLER Evansville B.S. Chemistry EMIL GLENN RUST Holland A.B. Psychology Delta Tau Delta. IMOGENE GENEVA SHARPNACK SENEFELD Columbus Indianapolis {[}, History A.B. Psychology Alpha Chi Omega. Vice-President, Senior ' Class; President, A.W.S. Council; Junior Prom Committee; Mortar Board; Alpha Lambda Del- ta; Tau Kappa Alpha; Women ' s Varsity Debate; Niezer Debate Award; W.A.A. Board; Presi- dent, Tennis Club; Secretary, I.S.A. Executive Board; Y.W.C.A.; Chairman, Coed Counselors. MARJORIE SLABAUGH Syracuse B.S. Home Economics Chi Omega. EDWARD M. SLAYBAUGH Akron A.B. Geography Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y.M.C.A. STEPHEN R. REIBLY Valparaiso B.S. Chemistry Vice-President, Phi Kappa; Alpha Chi Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Newman Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Student Affili- ate of the American Chemistry Society. MARVIN C. ROGERS Bloomington A.B. Botany DONALD W. RUTH Solsberry A.B. Philosophy ALICE RICH Bloomington A.B. English - JOSEPH L. SHERIDAN Kokomo A.B. Chemistry Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club. CH - RLOTTE CAROLINE SLOAN Bloomington A.B. Spanish Vice-President, Span- ish Club; Le Cercle Francais. IRA ROSENTHAL New York City B.S. Psychology Sigma Alpha Mu; In- ternational Relations Club ; Men ' s Glee Club; Spanish Club. MARION VIRGINIA SANDERS Roswell, N. M. A.B. Speech Kappa Kappa Gamma; Theta Alpha Phi; Stage Door ; Win- terset ; A Murder Has Been Arranged ; Our Town ; Taps. GILBERT MALCOLM SHULL Auburn B.S. Chemistry Phi Gamma Delta; Sphinx Club; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Blue Key; Phi Eta Sigma; Pershing Rifles. MILDRED SMIGIEL Gary A.B. Fine Arts Le Cercle Francais; Daubers Club; Educa- tion Club. 53 Carmen Cook, A.O.Pi, checks up on check from home. J. D. Mann and Adelaide Jones converse over but not about the Jordan. Found in the Alpha Chi house — one coke machine that works — by Prom Queen Jeannette Prinz. ANNA MAULDIN SMITH (Mrs. William) Gary A.B. English AUDREY JEANNE SMITH Crown Point A.B. Journalism Alpha Omicron Pi; Treasurer, Theta Sig- ma Phi; Pleiades; Edi- tor-in-Chief, Arbu- tus; Indiana Daily Student Staff; State Fair Student Staff; Advertising Club; Bored Walk Staff; Seni Junior Math Club. MARION AVIS SMITH East Chicago B.S. Home Economics Delta Delta Delta; Pleiades; Pan-Hellenic Council; W.A.A.; President, Home Eco- nomics Club; Y.W. C.A. or Memorial Committee; WALTER FRANCIS WILLIAM M. SMITH SMITH Versailles Troy, Ohio A.B. Sociology A.B. Chemistry Sigma Pi; Sphinx Club; President, Al- pha Phi Omega; Pershing Rifles; Skull and Cres- cent; President, McNutt for President Club; Business Manager, Bored Walk; President, Y.M. C.A.; Business Manager, Red Book; Inter-Fra- ternity Council; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus; Union Board; Assistant Business Manager, Uni- versity Theater; Senior Tree-Planting Commit- tee. NANCY E. SNYDER Bloomington A.B. Journalism ALVERTA ALICE SOHL Hammond B.S. Chemistry Hiking Head, W.A. A.; President, Iota Sigma Pi. VERNON J. SOMMER Geneva B.S. Chemistry DANIEL DAVID SOKOL Revere, Mass. A.B. Chemistry Der Deutsche Verein; Chess Club. JEAN W. SPEAR Yoder A.B. Chemistry BETTY JANE SPILMAN Milroy A.B. History Kappa Kappa Gamma; Freshman Orienta- tion Committee; His- tory Club; Coed Rifle Team. HELEN M. STAECK Earl Park A.B. French Phi Mu. ALBINA SPYCHALSKI Gary A.B. Sociology Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Board of Standards; Coed Counselor; Mortar Board Recognition; Le Cercle Francais; I.S.A. Executive Board. RICHARD STAFFORD Indianapolis A.B. French KAYE STEINBERG Connersville A.B. Fine Arts Secretary, Sigma Phi Upsilon; Le Cercle Francais; Coed Band; Coed Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps. MARGIE V. TAYLOR Bloomington A.B. Home Economics Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Home Economics Club; Le Cercle Fran- cais; President, Edu- cation Club; Coed Counseling. THELMA LUCILE STEWART Anderson A.B. History Orchestra; History Club; International Relations Club; Y.W. C.A. MARY JANE THARP Bloomington A.B. French Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Phi Alpha; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Der Deutsche Verein; Le Cercle Francais; President, Y.W.C.A.; Mortar Board; Busi- ness Manager, Fresh- man Handbook; Co- Chairman, Coed Counselor; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus. PAUL W. STOKESBERRY Mooresville A.B. Chemistry Alpha Chi Sigma; Student Affiliate of the American Chemi- cal Society. RICHARD A. STRAIN Bloomington A.B. Journalism ROSEMARY TREANOR Bloomington A.B. Government Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Vice-President, A. W. S.; Secretary of Sen- ior Class; Chairman, Board of Standards; Pi Sigma Alpha; Vice- President, Mortar Board; Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francais; Englis h Club; Town Hall; Y.W.C.A. Council. DONC. TILLOTSON, JR. Brookston A.B. Mathematics Secretary, Y.M.C.A.; Euclidean Circle; Classical Club; Rifle Team. ALICE STREY Wabash A.B. French Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francais; Y.W.C.A. ROBERT WICKLIFF TWYMAN East Chicago A.B. Sociology President, Delta Up- silon; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Delta; Blue Key; Treasurer, Dragon ' s Head; Busi- ness Manager, Arbu- tus; Sociology Club; FLORENCE G. SW ANSON Ft. Wayne A.B. Psychology Delta Gamma; Vice- President, Republican Club; Newman Club; Bored Walk Staff; Oceanides. DORIS M. VADER Whiting A.B. Speech Chi Omega; Theta Al- pha Phi; Le Cercle Francais; Bury the Dead ; Stage Door ; Student Director, Our Town , Fumed Oaks ; Pan-Hellenic Council. DOROTHY JUNE TAYLOR Detroit, Mich. A.B. Journalism Alpha Delta Pi; In- diana Daily Student Staff; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francais; Eng- lish Club; Chorus; Pan-Hellenic Council. HARRY ELIAS VICK, JR. Louisville, Ky. A.B. Chemistry Phi Gamma Delta; Pershing Rifles; Der Deutsch Verein; Stu- dent Affiliate of the American Chemical Society; Cabaret ; Chess Club. Sophomore Baseball Manager; Y.M.C.A.; Phi Beta Kappa; Chairman, Senior Tree-Planting Committee. STEPHEN VISNYAI Whiting A.B. English CHARLES W. WALKER Charlottesville A.B. French Sports Editor, Indiana Daily Student. ROBERT J. WALKER Anderson A.B. Government Sigma Chi. EVELYN C. WALLER Indianapolis B.S. Home Economics ROBERT D. WALTER Goshen A.B. Chemistry ROBIA L. WATSON Indianapolis B.S. Home Economics HomeEconomicsClub. HENRY W. WEHR, JR. Evansville B.S. Chemistry J5 Kappa Bette E ggemeyer brushes up on the smile of beauty . What won ' t people write next? asks Mary Holsinger reading her own column. Ann Fuhrer is surprised by a new drink- coke. Practice House scene, starring Marion Smith, Winifred Cartwright, and mix-master. Margaret Postma, W.A.A. prexy, takes her books for a walk. Wendell Phillippi is caught smoothing up for his typewriter. TING SU Liang-Chen, China Ph.D. Educaiional Adnihiistratiofi Cosmopolitan Club. EDITH K. WILLIAMS Chesterton A.B. English JAVID WEINER ROBERT H. WEIR New York City Scottsburg A.B. Chemistry B.S. Chemistry li Beta Kappa; Bil- Phi Delta Theta; Sec- •d Team; Hillel retary, Union Board; lundation. Board of Aeons; Vice- President, Blue Key; JACOB W. WITTMER Cannelton A.B. Journalism President, Phi Kappa; City Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Secre- tary, Cosmopolitan Club; Newman Club. ROLAND E. WEITZEL Francisco A.B. Chemistry HARVEY O. WELLNITZ Michigan City B.S. Chemistry Theta Chi. Sphinx Club; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Junior Baseball Manager; Der Deutsche Verein; Chairman, Senior Invitations Commit- tee; Y.M.C.A. ROBERT L. WILLMAN North Vernon A.B. Speech LUCILLE WINN Greenfield A.B. History Pi Lambda Theta; RALPH EDWIN WOODALL Hammond A.B. History leta Alpha Phi; Y. Alpha Lambda Delta; .C.A.; Student Re- Le Cercle Francais; ious Cabinet. History Club; Y.W. C.A.; Chorus. JOSEPHINE WYKOFF New Carlisle A.B. Music Le Cercle Francais; Orchestra; Y.W.C.A.; President, Student Council; Kappa Phi. HAROLD J. WESSELMAN Evansville A.B. Chemistry Sigma Nu; President, Alpha Chi Sigma; President, Camera Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Interfrater- nity Council; Chem- istry Club. HARRY L. ZEITELS New York City A.B. Chemistry FRANCES ALMIRA WHALEY Bloomington A.B. Home Economics Omicron Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta; Presi- dent, Home Econom- ics Club; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counseling; Education Club; Le Cercle Francais. ROSELDA ZIMMERMAN Indianapolis A.B. English BURDETTE J. WHEELER Hammond A.B. History CORINNE ELIZABETH WHITE Indianapolis A.B. History Chi Omega; Le Cer- cle Francais; History Club; Education Club; W.A.A.; Y.W. C.A.; English Club. S. G. (CHRIS) SAVAGE Worcester, Mass. A.B. Journalism Sigma Delta Chi; Al- pha Phi Omega; Jun- ior Prom Committee; Managing Editor, Sum- mer Student Staff; Associate Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Bored Walk; Y.M.C.A.; New- man Club; Track. EMERSON K. ELKINS Peru A.B. Goiernment First Row Second Row Third Row Margaret Lou May Marion Sanders Charlotte Fields Paul Boxell Richard Reed Mary Beth Hunt Doris Vater Richard Haskett Robert Willman Betty Jo Hanson Vera Mae Massey James Phillippe Jack Leas Ray Southworth Robert E. Johnson Lois Noffke Mary Susan Stull Fred Brooks Peggy Smith JS Paul Boxell President Vera Mae Massey Vice-President Robert E. Johnson Secretary Mary Susan StuU Treasurer The promotion of, appreciation for, and participation in university dramatics is the purpose of Theta Alpha Phi, national honorary organization. Toward the fulfillment of its purpose, this group sponsors many campus projects and activities. Theta Alpha Phi organized the University Theatre in 1932 and the Experimental Theatre in 1937. Both organizations provide a golden opportunity for students to display ability in acting, play writing, technical assistance, costuming, make-up and other phases of theatre work. An added encouragement for earnest young dramatists is Theta Alpha Phi ' s annual selec- tion of the outstanding actor and actress during the past season of University Theatre productions. Their names are engraved on a plaque in the library. Vera Mae Massey and Dan Sherwood received the awards in 1939. The Paul Hochgeiger Award, given for distinguished service to the theatre, was established in 1939 in memory of Mr. Hoch- geiger, an outstanding former member of Theta Alpha Phi. The recognition was given to Ray Carter, head electrician. The Niezer Scholarship Award to outstanding Freshman actors went to Joe Hayes and Richard Reed. Indiana Alpha chapter of Theta Alpha Phi was founded on St. Valentine ' s Day, 1922. To be eligible for membership, one must accumulate fifty points, which are obtained for any kind of stage work. New members are selected by a vote of the entire membership of the organization. Other major activities sponsored by Theta Alpha Phi are the annual Cabaret Show and the State Drama Conference. The organization also founded and sponsors Taps, a junior dramatic group, membership into which is gained through demonstra- tion of ability or recognition in theatre work. Professor Lee Norvelle, head of the Speech Department, is sponsor of Theta Alpha Phi and has been national president for the past three years. 59 Jeannette Dice President Sarah Gray Vice-President Jan Gorrell Secretary Audrey Smith Treasurer One of the outstanding functions of Theta Sigma Phi, national journahstic sorority, is the annual Matrix Table. Each year, the organization brings to the campus for the affair, some prominent woman who has distinguished herself in the field of journalism. Mary Ellen Chase was this year ' s very distinguished speaker. An equally prominent project, to satisfy the feminine journ- alists ' lust for gossip, is the Razz Banquet, which illustrates their professional individuality by being for women only . Many a coed shakes in her boots as the Razz Banquet approaches each year, for several uncomplimentary awards are given. The serious intent of the affair is shown in the presentation of a Senior ring to their choice of the most outstanding Senior woman in the University. To unite women engaged in the profession of journalism and to recognize women who have distinguished themselves in this field are the main purposes of Theta Sigma Phi. To be eligible for membership in the Indiana chapter, a woman must maintain a high scholastic average, she must work faithfully and diligently on the Indiana Daily Student, and she is required to show definite intent of remaining in the field of journalism. Pledging takes place in the fall at the Theta Sigma Phi — Sigma Delta Chi party and in the spring. Mrs. John E. Stempel is adviser to the group. Nationally Theta Sigma Phi was founded at the University of Washington on April 8, 1909. The Delta chapter on the Indiana campus was installed in 1913. That the sorority has been a success is proved by the annual reunion of all Theta Sigs at Commencement. Additional projects of the organization include putting out one edition of the Indiana Daily Student, with Theta Sigs as executives assisted by other women journalists, the awarding of a scholarship to a woman student outstanding in journalism, and the sending of a delegate to the Annual National Conven- tion. This year marks the beginning of bi-monthly dinners for all journalism students and faculty members. At each meeting a prominent journalist gives a talk on the application of jour- nalism to his particular vocation. 60 First Row Audrey Smith Jeannette Dice Betty Firth Mary Holsinger Janet Gorrell Second Row Louise Hurst Virginia Mead Anne Douglas Laura Hester Sarah Gray Barbara Beall 61 First Row- Second Row Third Row David B. Richardson Robert Meyer Richard M. Beavans William Fitzgibbon Don McCammon Wendell C. Phillippi Forrest Garderwine Lowell Freeland Chris Savage Samuel Wells William Brink Harold Kluthe Frank Bourgholtzer Leo Melzer Robert E. Johnson Bernard Rose Nathan Kaplan Paul Boxell Tom Miller 62 Nathan Kaplan President Paul Boxell Vice -President Robert E. Johnson Secretary D. Bacon Richardson Treasurer Sigma Delta Chi this year sponsored the fortieth Blanket Hop, the oldest continuous traditional dance on the campus. The proceeds of the dance are used to buy I blankets for graduating lettermen. This is but one of the organization ' s many activities. It also maintains a luxurious den in the Union Building in the memory of Don Mellett, former Indiana SDX member, who was killed in 1926 while using his newspaper to expose racketeers at Canton, Ohio. For men only is the mark of the fraternity ' s annual Gridiron Banquet which razzes the administration, faculty, or- ganizations, and campus rods ; serious awards also are given, including a brown derby to the most popular faculty member, a leather medal to the faculty member who has done the most for the University, and an award to the outstanding Senior man. The purpose of this national journalistic fraternity is the promotion of knowledge and interest among undergraduates and professional men in the field of journalism and the further- ing of the highest ideals of journalism. Eligibility for membership is based on journalistic ability and the intention of pursuing newspaper work as a profession. Sigma Delta Chi was nationally established at DePauw Uni- versity in 1909. Its growth was rapid and the I. U. chapter was founded by Frank Mason in 1914. Professor John E. Stempel, head of the Department of Journalism, is a past national presi- dent and adviser to the local chapter. Other projects include the awarding of a $200 scholarship annually to two outstanding Sophomore journalists, the present- ing of a book to the Daily Student reporter who writes the best story each month, and the sponsoring of a High School News- paper Contest each spring. 63 Leslie Cutler President Doris McCammon Vice-President Doris Allison Secretary Students of advanced mathematics are accepted as members in the Euclidean Circle, whose activities include both social and educational features. Under the leadership of Professor Ken- neth P. Williams, round table discussions, student papers, and various games and problems which require mathematical calcu- lations are presented at the regular monthly meetings. The so- cial program consists of two annual gatherings, a Christmas party at th e home of Dr. Agnes E. Wells and a spring picnic, which aid in promoting friendship between students and faculty. EUCLIDEAN CIRCLE AND JUNIOR MATH CLUB First Row: Mr. Williams, Mr. Artin, Doris Allison, Doris McCammon, Leslie Cutler, Bob Mellen, Keith Cox, Miss Agnes E. Wells, Miss Cora B. Hennel. Second Row: Mary Jean Hartman, Robert Ewing, Myrtle Livesay, Jane Menefee, Peggy Newton, Helen Voiglit, Anna Case, Norma McClintock, Geraldinc Schmidt, Helen Davis, Margaret Stump, Bill Smith. Third Row: Wendell McKissick, Ruth Edwards, Betty Hall, Jeanette Straub, Betty Jane Aungst, Ruth Bailey, Mary Rees, Jean Burns, Elbert Charpic, Richard Neuman. Fourth Row: Bob Collette, Glen Vannatta, George Schumm, Don Tillotson, Gerald Rainford, Owen Blum, Joseph Szabo. Robert Mellen President Keith Cox Vice-President Eleanor Winslow Secretary The Junior Math Club, with Dr. Agnes E. Wells as faculty sponsor, was organized for students who are interested in mathe- matics but who have not yet had enough work in the subject to qualify for membership in the Euclidean Circle. The group stresses mathematical discussion, puzzles, and games at its meet- ings. This year the club also examined various computing ma- chines and learned how they worked. The organization carries over the social traditions of the advanced group by sponsoring a spring picnic and a Christmas party, to which faculty members and their wives are invited. 64 An honorary organization for university de- baters, Tau Kappa Alpha this year participated in several activities which excited not only local but also sectional interest. In October the group organized and sponsored a mock Congressional Session at which were present debaters from such middle western schools as Purdue, Wabash, Western State of Kalamazoo, Butler, and Man- chester. Tau Kappa Alpha also sponsored the intra- mural debate tournament, in which nearly a hundred expounders were entered. Two inde- pendent girls were victorious, Anne Thomas and Betty Foss. The fraternity set forth plans in its program this year to inaugurate a Speakers ' Bureau on the campus to provide and make available to out- side organizations student speakers who might thereby have an opportunity for practice in public speaking. Tau Kappa Alpha has as its sponsor Mr. Rob- ert Huber, of the Department of Speech. 11 1 ' HP First Row Sophia Nicholas Mary Beth Hunt Mary Susan StuU Robert Prichard Second Row Geneva Senefeld Melvin Eggers Montford Mead Ruth Adler Third Row Charles Barnhill Marshall Hanley Richard Haskett Marvin Miller Edward L. Hutton Montford Mead President Marvin Miller — Y ice -V resident Mary Beth Hunt Secretary Melvin Eggers Treasurer 65 I 1 A 1. 1 . A f -• -. 1  •— %► First Row: Dr. Beatrice J. Geiger, Laura Bachman, Betty Bender, Louise Neumeister, Dr. Una Robinson. Second Row: Miss Leah Weidman, Virginia Heller, Frances Whaley, Marjorie McKinley, Lois Lauter, Winifred Cartwright. Betty Bender President Virginia Heller Vice-President Laura Bachman Secretary Lois Lauter „ Treasurer The Sigma chapter of Omicron Nu, profes- sional honorary organization, was established on the Indiana University campus in 1922 for stu- dents of home economics. Membership In Omicron Nu Is based on scholarship and promise of future achievement. Only a small percentage of the Junior and Sen- ior classes are eligible for selection. A $10 award Is given annually to the out- standing Junior of the year. A recognition tea for students of the Home Economics Depart- ment who have maintained an average of B + or better Is sponsored by Omicron Nu. Alverta Sohl President Betty SIgler Vice-President Betty Harris Treasurer Eunice Runner Recording Secretary Ten years ago, In 1930, the local chapter of Iota Sigma PI was Installed for women interested In chemistry. This national honorary organization requires for membership a B average with at least twenty hours of chemistry work. Meetings are held once a month In the form of a luncheon program. The organization attempts to further the interest of women In chemistry, by presenting programs dealing with prac- tical application, and giving opportunity for contact with prom- inent men and women In the field. Iota Sigma Pi sponsors a tea for Freshmen women who are Interested In chemistry courses, and holds a banquet honoring the faculty of the Department of Chemistry. Miss Una Robinson of the Department of Home Economics is faculty adviser for the group. Honorary members are Miss Llla Curtis of the Department of Physics, and Miss Agnes E. Wells of the Department of Mathematics. Members are Betty Joy DIckerson, Betty Harris, Henrietta Kan, Margaret Kellar, Maxine Rowe, Eunice Runner, Isabella Russ, Betty SIgler, Alverta Sohl, and Thelma Ward. 66 f ! f Arthur Freeland President Virginia Austin Vice-President Joseph Pedicini Secretary Mrs. Ruth Imes Treasurer Students who have received above a B average in one year of French are invited to join Le Cercle Francais. In order to promote the understanding of spoken French, the meetings are conducted entirely in that language. In addition to skits, plays, and lectures presented by faculty members and students, the presentation of French classical and popular music is included in the club ' s program. Each year one outside speaker is asked to present a talk on some phase of French life of interest to the members of Le Cercle Francais. Major Vivier, formerly of the French army but now in the diplomatic service, was this year ' s featured speaker. Social activities are also sponsored by the club, giving French students an opportunity to become better acquainted with each other as well as with the faculty members of the French department. Alice Kettner President Margaret Anne Johnston „__ Vice-President Bernard Davidson Secretary Prof F. J. Menger Treasurer At its regular meetings to which the most actively interested students are in- vited, Der Deutsche Verein presents Ger- man plays, music, and illustrated lectures. In its twenty-nine years of existence the club has done much toward attaining its goal of fostering an interest in German apart from the usual classroom work. Social activities to further closer rela- tionship and acquaintance between the faculty of the German department and students of German are also a part of the club ' s program. ALICE KETTNER BERNARD DAVIDSON MARGARET ANNE JOHNSTON 67 FUTURE FINANCIERS FACE FACTS AND Business students attending to business. Collegiate Chamber of Commerce election brings out a large crowd around the ballot box. Typists in Alpha Hall learn rhythm, posture, and fingering. Entrance to Business. Dean Arthur M. Weimer of the School of Business. « • -4 Eddie Hutton is trying to condense his ac- tivities for one honor blank. Franny Watkins is getting some of the edu- cation that comes in books. Beatrice Murphy, leader of the left wing, (when facing Memorial Hall) scribbles suc- culent secrets. ROBERT STANLEY ALLEN Jeffersonville B.S. Accounlitig Phi Eta Sigma; Ac- countirg Club; Y.M. C.A. BERNARD W. BOGARD Lyons B.S. General Business President, Alpha Tau Omega; Vice-Presi- dent, Interfraternity Council; Varsity Track. FRANCIS R. ALWARD South Bend B.S. General Business Phi Eta Sigma. CHARLES D. BAILLIE South Bend B.S. General Business President, Phi Gamma Delta; Beta Gamma Sigma; President, Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sig- ma Pi; Sigma Delta DALE W. ANDERSON Geneva B.S. General Business MARIAN ELIZABETH BAKER New Albany B.S. Commercial Teaching Omicron Delta. Psi; President, Blue Key; Varsity Track; Skull and Crescent; Interfraternity Council; Pershing Rifles; Law Club. ROBERT H. BOLLUM South Bend B.S. Insurance Sigma Nu; Junior Wrestling Manager. RICHARD M. BEAVANS Warren B.S. General Business Sigma Delta Chi; Edi- tor, Indiana Daily Student; President, I.S.A.; Secretary, Board of Aeons; Chairman, Student Refugee Committee; Adver- tising Manager, Indiana Athletic Review; Bored Walk Staff; Dragon ' s Head; Band; Senior Me- morial Committee. RUTH AILEEN BREIMYER Portland B.S. Secretarial Training Treasurer, Omicron Delta; Women ' s Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps ; Le Cercle Francais; Der Deutsche Verein; Co- ed Sponsor, R.O.T.C. k ROBERT RALPH BATTON, JR. Marion B.S. Finance and Banking •elta Tau Delta; Al- pha Kappa Psi; Persh- ing Rifles; Sophomore Baseball Manager; McNutt for President Club. WYLE DE BRYANT Morocco B.S. Merchandising Delta Tau Delta. ROSE-ELLEN BERNDT Indianapolis B.S. General Business Zeta Tau Alpha; Treasurer, Omicron Delta; W.A.A.; Edu- cation Club; Camera Club; English Club; Y.W.C.A. ANNA LOUISE BURKHART Westficld B.S. Secretarial Training Alpha Chi Omega; Omicron Delta; Coed Counseling; Y.W.C. A.; Cabaret Show ; Chorus. H. BEVERLY BOYLE, JR. Jacksonville B.S. General Business Scabbard and Blade; Varsity Track. ROBERT G. BOUGHMAN Kokomo B.S. General Business Phi Kappa Psi; Social Chairman, Union Board; President, Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce; Taps; Sphinx Club; Blue Key; Assistant Business Manager, University Theater; Alpha Kappa Psi; Flying Club; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Senior Memo- rial Committee. RICHARD D. ARNOLD Cedar Springs, Mich. B.S. Advertising President, Acacia; Board of Aeons; Union Board; President, In- terfraternity Council; Vice-President, I.U. Republican Club; In- diana Da ily Student Staff. EARL F. BANNISTER Avon, N. Y. B.S. Finance Kappa Delta Rho; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Skull and Crescent; Pershing Rifles; Sophomore Baseball Manager. WALLACE BILLMAN Argos B.S. General Business Delta Sigma Pi; Ac- counting Club; Y.M. C.A. RAY H. BURNAM, JR. Sandborn B.S. General Business Y.M.C.A.; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. BILL CARMICHAEL Albion B.S. Insurance and Finance Sigma Chi; Delta Sig- ma Pi; Kappa Kappa Psi. ROBERT JAMES ATKIN Evansville B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A. HUGH V. BANTA RockviUe B. S. General Business HOWARD H. BLANKERTZ Elkhart B.S. Marketing Delta Sigma Pi; Var- sity Tennis; Freshman Basketball. A. MALCOLM BUCK Anderson B.S. General Business Phi Kappa Psi. ELLEN CAPLIN Indianapolis B.S. Business Administration Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Omicron Delta; Hillel Foundation ; Coed Counseling. SAMUEL M. AZEN Newcastle B.S. General Business Sigma Alpha Mu; Sophomore Football Manager. CHARLES JOSEPH BARNHILL Bloomington B.S. Business Law Phi Delta Theta; Tau Kappa Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi; Blue Key; Associate Business Manager, Arbutus; Varsity Debate. OWEN W. BLUM Princeton B.S. Commerce JAMES VINTON BOOHER Albany B.S. General Business President, Kappa Del- ta Rho; Skull and Crescent. ROBERT W. CARRIGER Ft. Wayne B.S. Accounting Alpha Kappa Psi; Ac- counting Club; Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce. COSTA BAGALOFF Hammond B.S. General Business Varsity Golf. D. ELOISE BARNETT Sulphur Springs B.S. General Business Chi Omega; President, Omicron Delta; Board of Directors, Collegi- ate Chamber of Com- merce; International Relations Club; Freshman Orientation Committee; Education Club. R. C. BURCH Bloomington B.S. Advertising ROBERT E. BOTTIN Indianapolis B.S. Accounting DAVID W. CHARTERS Bloomington B.S. General Business 71 g - Oddity in the news — a business student that feels Hke smiHng after a day of being business- hke. Betas Cravens and Mueller, campus common - taries, play anchor at the end table. Diamond Jim Fausch offers bait to another prospect. HAROLD C. CHASTAIN Bedford B.S. Accounting LESLIE IRA COMBS, JR. Gary B.S. Real Estate Beta Theta Pi; Sopho- more Football Manag- er. MARJORIE R. CROW Markle B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; W. A.A.; Le Cercle Fran- cais; Y.W.C.A. JACK DEWBERRY Kokomo B.S. General Business Alpha Tau Omega. JAMES J. FARLOW Paoli B.S. Law Law Club. HARRY W. CHENOWETH Richmond B.S. General Business HAL B. COOK Union Mills B.S. Merchandising Kappa Delta Rho; Pershing Rifles. DAVID L. CURRAN Elkhart B.S. Merchandising HERBERT DICKEY Elwood B.S. Merchandising Y.M.C.A.; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. JAMES CHESTER FAUSCH Michigan City B.S. General Business Delta Tau Delta; Sphinx Club; Varsity Basketball; Skull and Crescent; ' Jordan River Revue ; Cab- aret Show, BLANCHE CHILDRESS Spencer B.S. Commercial Teaching Omicron Delta. JOHN L. COVEY Mission, S. D. B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles. CHARLES G. CURRY Bloomington B.S. General Business JOHN P. CHRISNEY Chrisney B.S. Accounting Phi Eta Sigma; Flame Club; Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A. Cab- inet. C. ROL EUGENE COX Muncie B.S. Insurance Varsity Baseball; Freshman Basketball. LESLIE CUTLER, JR. Gary B.S. General Business President, Euclidean Circle. EUGENE E. CLAYTON Paxton B.S. General Business JAMES FRANCIS COX Tipton B.S. General Business Sigma Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Y.M.C.A.; Newman Club; Cam- pus Religious Council. MAY VASILIKI DaLEURE Salem B.S. Business Alpha Lambda Delta; Omicron Delta; The Folio Staff; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce; Education Club; Y.W.C.A.; Cos- mopolitan Club. JOYCE COLE Wolcottville B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; W.A. A.; Y.W.C.A.; Junior Prom Queen; Coed Counseling; I.S.A. Council. THOMAS C. CRAVENS Martinsville B.S. Business Administration President, Beta Theta Pi; Blue Key; Y.M. C.A.; Senior Intramu- ral Manager; Sopho- more Baseball Manag- er; President, Jackson Club. JOHN DANCY Gary B.S. General Business Cosmopolitan Club; Newman Club. ALVAH MILTON JOHN J. DOYLE LOUIS J. RICHARD DIETERICH Loogootee DREVENAK ARTHUR Hammond B.S. Accounting Gary DRICKEY B.S. General Business B.S. General Business Hagerstown Kappa Kappa Psi; Delta Tau Delta; B.S. Business Statistics Band. Freshman Swimming; Dolphin Club; Jor- dan River Revue ; Newman Club; Ca b- aret Show. Alpha Kappa Psi; Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce. DALE M. COLEMAN Palmyra B.S. General Business WILLIAM G. CRAVENS Linton B.S. General Business Sigma Nu. JOE M. DEAL Kendallville B.S. Accounting Scabbard and Blade; Accounting Club; I.S. A. Executive Board. FLOYD W. EVANS New Castle B.S. Accounting Men ' s Glee Club; Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce. BERT R. FENN Tell City B.S. General Business Sigma Chi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Drum Ma- jor, Band. RUTH H. FERRIS Hammond B.S. Merchandising Vice-President, Chi Omega; Omicron Delta; Treasurer, Pleiades; Chi Gamma; Treasurer, Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce; Publicity Director, University Theater; Y.W.C.A.; Business Manager, Freshman Hand- book; Business Assistant, Arbutus; Freshman Orientation Committee; Senior Breakfast Com- mittee. CHARLES FERGUSON Springville B.S. General Business WILLARD H. FINDLING Hobart B.S. Finance Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Board of Aeons; President, Blue Key; Interfrater- nity Council; Senior Football Manager; Junior Prom Commit- tee; Editorial Assist- ant, Arbutus; Business Staff, University The- ' atre; Taps; Accounting Club; Dragon ' s Head; Senior Siwash Committee. WILLIAM C. FITZGIBBON Staten Island, N. Y. B.S. Business All minis f ration Sigma Pi; Sigma Delta Chi; Scabbard and Blade; Daily Student Staff; Bored Walk Staff; Athletic Review- Staff; Alumni Maga- zine Staff. 73 Jane Judy finds a shortcut in enrolling fill in your own card. George Newlin, Joe Deal, and Bea Spychalski gather evidence to prove that it ' s I. S. A. all the way . Kappa Sig Gene Troy finds the market crowd- ed for that seventh hand advanced marketing book. HERNDON FLETCHER Indianapolis B.S. General Business President, Theta Chi; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Inter- fraternity Council; Sophomore Swimming Manager. RICHARD K. FOWLER Indianapolis B.S. General Business Phi Delta Theta. FREDERICK H. FREUND Indianapolis B.S. Merchandising BEVERLY C. FURR CLYDE E. FULTON Cloverdale BS. General Business Omicron Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Beta Gamma Sigma; Y.W. C.A.;W.A.A.; Chorus. Hartford City B.S. Accounting LEROY IRA GENSBURG Gary B.S. Merchandising Phi Beta Delta; Skull and Crescent; Execu- tive Council, Hillel Foundation. BURMOND J. GAUNT Dunkirk BS. General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band. DALE GENTIL Mt. Vernon B.S. General Business Co - Captain, Varsity Baseball; Varsity Bas- ketball. ROBERT FRANK GERMER Olney, 111. A.B. History CHARLES T. GIBSON Batesville B.S. General Business MYRON STANLEY GLASSNER Columbus B.S. Accounting President, Sigma Al- pha Mu; Board of Aeons; Senior Track Manager; Student Refugee Committee; Senior Memorial Committee; Account- ing Club. ELSBY B. GOFFINET Mt. Vernon B.S. General Business Varsity Baseball; Newman Club; Fresh- man Football. EDWARD H. GOODMAN Indianapolis B.S. Merchandising Treasurer, Sigma Al- pha Mu; Sophomore Swimming Manager; Advertising Club. KENNETH A. GOODWELL Indianapolis B.S. General Business ELBERT D. GRAVES Solsberry B.S. General Business Treasurer, Scabbard and Blade; Treasurer, Pershing Rifles; Soph- omore Baseball Man- ager, ALFRED GREEN Indianapolis B.S. Accounting Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Wil- liam A. Rawles Award; Accounting Club. MARY GREEN Muncie B.S. Secretarial Training MAURICE ROBERT GREESON Indianapolis B.S. Advertising ARTHUR J. GRIMM La Fontaine B.S. General Business ROBERT D. HAN Monticello B.S. Merchandising DAVID W. HANCOCK Morocco B.S. Merchandising Delta Tau Delta; Dol- phin Club. ELLSWORTH HANDY Indianapolis B.S. Adierlising I WILLIAM E. HAUSCHILD LaPorte B.S. General Business President, Kappa Sig- ma; Sphinx Club; Delta Sigma Pi; Jor- dan River Revue . JEWELL G. HARBAUGH Indianapolis B.S. General Business Y.M.C.A.; Account- ing Club. BARBARA H. HEALY Aurora, 111. B.S. General Business Kappa Kappa Gamma. ALLEN HARRISON Ladoga B.S. Banking and Finance Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Blue Key; Associate Editor, Arbutus; Junior Football Manager; Junior Business Staff, University The- ater; Senior Tree-Planting Committee. CHARLES F. HARRISON Shelbyville B.S. Accoitniing Delta Sigma Pi; Ac- counting Club; Y.M. C.A. CHARLES LAVON HEDGE Lebanon B.S. General Business Treasurer, Sigma Nu; Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Sophomore Track Manager; McNutt for President Club. EDWARD H. HELFRICH Evansville B.S. General Business Kappa Sigma. ARTHUR LELAND HART Evansville B.S. Merchandising WALDO J. HERRMANN Brownstown B.S. Insurance Varsity Baseball; Freshman Basketball. JULIA ANN HARTING Tipton B.S. General Business Alpha Chi Omega; Pleiades; Jordan Riv- er Revue . GEORGE HERSHBERGER Nappanee B.S. Accounting Accounting Club. ROBERTA CONNELL HASKELL Indianapolis B.S. Commercial Teaching Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Delta; Business Assist- ant, Arbutus; W.A.A,; Y.W.C.A.; Interna- tional Relations Club; Pleiades; Oceanides; Bored Walk Staff. ROBERT LANE HEWES Culver B.S. Accounting 7S Prom Queen Joyce Cole checks over the stu- dent directory — but this time surely not look- ing for the Junior men. Acacia Prexy Dick Arnold, keys and all, keeps the wolf away from the door. Walt Smith and Merle Blue audit the books in the Y.M. office, as the mad monks of the Y monastery. BETTY HIGBEE Indianapolis B.S. Secretarial Training Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Oml- cron Delta; Interna- tional Relations Club; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil; Freshman Orien- tation Committee; Y.W.C.A. GLENN W. HOY Hope B.S. General Business ROBERT JACK Ft. Wayne B.S. Business Statistics Collegiate Chamber of Commerce: Euclidean Circle; Varsity Golf. JANE JUDY West Lebanon B.S. General Business Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Omicron Delta; Y.W. C.A.; Coed Counsel- ing. MARY PHYLLIS KIRKPATRICK South Bend B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; W. A. A.; Chorus, EDWARD HENRY HILDEBRAND Brookville B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Pershing Rifles; Y.M.C.A.; Ac- counting Club. JAMES BYRON HUFF Martinsville B.S. Business Statistics Beta Theta Pi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; Band; Sophomore Swimming Manager. THOMAS J. JAENICKE Ft. Wayne B.S. Public Ac ministration Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Y.M.C.A.; Sophomore Track Manager; Cam- era Club. LEO M. KANE Schererville B.S. Accounting Sigma Pi; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Ac- counting Club; New- man Club. CHARLES J. KOLLMAN Ft. Wayne B.S. Merchandising Alpha Tau Omega; Sophomore Track Manager; Y.M.C.A.; Freshman Baseball. REMBRANDT C. ROBERT L. HILLER, JR. HOGAN Indianapolis Hartford City B.S. General Business B.S. Personnel Secretary, Beta Theta Management Pi; Treasurer, Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Blue Key; Union Board; Senior Swimming Manager; Associate Business Manager, Arbutus; Treasurer, Y.M.C.A.; Dolphin Club; Der Deut- sche Verein; Senior Invitations Committee. ROBERT DALE HOOD Columbia City B.S. General Business MARVIN HUFFMAN Newcastle B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi; Cap- tain, Varsity Basket- bail; Sphinx Club; Dragon ' s Head. EDWARD A. JAKUSH East Chicago B.S. Public Administration Pershing Rifles; Dol- phin Club; Varsity Swimming. JAMES KATTERHENRY Huntingburg A.B. Merchandising Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JOSEPH A. KOVACIK Whiting B.S. General Business WILLIAM JAMES HYDE East Chicago B.S. Merchandising Delta Sigma Pi; New- man Club; Collegiate Chamber of Com- EDWARD LUKE HUTTON Bedford B.S. General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Tau Kappa Alpha; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Union Board; Blue Key; President, Board of Aeons; Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Var- sity Debate; Vice-President, National Intercol- legiate Chamber of Commerce; Sphinx Club; Niezer Debate Award; Chairman, Senior Siwash Committee. ROBERT HENRY JARNECKE Hammond B.S. Management Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Y.M. C.A. M. DORIS KATTERJOHN Huntingburg B.S. General Business Phi Omega Pi; Kappa Phi; Y.W.C.A. WILLIAM KOZMA Ft. Wayne B.S. General Business Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega; Cosmopolitan Club. WILLIAM PARNELL JENNINGS Evansville B.S. General Business Treasurer, Kappa Sig- ma; Delta Sigma Pi; Theta Nu Epsilon; Skull and Crescent; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball. NORMA KATZ Michigan City B.S. Commercial Education Vice-President, Sigma Phi Upsilon; Omicron Delta; Treasurer, Hillel Foundation; Student Council: Education Club, WILLIAM KRAFT Gary B.S. General Business Theta Chi. MARCELLE J. HORN Fairfield, Conn. B.S. Secretarial Training Omicron Delta; Y.W. C.A.; W.A.A. RAYMON INGLEMAN Bicknell B.S. General Business DENVER C. JORDON Indianapolis B.S. General Business Lambda Chi Alpha; Men ' s Glee Club. PAUL C. KEISLER Columbia City B.S. General Business Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Y.M. C.A.; Varsity Rifle Team. MARY ANN KREIGBAUM Huntington B.S. Secretarial Training President, Delta Gam- ma; Omicron Delta; Pan-Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A. WILLIAM H. HOUGHTON Huntington B.S. General Business Phi Gamma Delta. VIRGIL INGRAM, JR. Greenville B.S. General Business Sigma Epsilon Theta; Freshman Baseball. JOSEPH P. JOYCE Madison B.S. General Business Band; Men ' s Glee Club; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. HOWARD E. KESSLER Morocco B.S. Finance and Banking Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Delta Sigma Pi; Blooming- ton Junior Chamber of Commerce. WILLIAM L. KUNKLE Hartford City B.S. General Business 77 Basketball manager Evan Stiers and George Gardner produce a little high powered publicity. De Bryant, J. G. Nichols, Dick Lenox, and Morris Ritchie emerge from the Lenox taxi as it reaches dead end at the Delt house. Ruth Ferris and Jack Parr talk it over outside of B.A. 29. DAVID M. LAMAR Indianapolis ' B.S. General Busittess Phi Eta Sigma; Y.M. C.A.; Flame Club; Accounting Club. LOTTA F. LUNG Indianapolis B.S. Accounting GLORIA NADINE MANSER Rising Sun B.S. Commercial Teaching O micron Delta; Chorus; Education Club; Y.W.C.A.; Co- ed Band. HAROLD MEDOW South Bend B.S. General Business President, Alpha Phi Omega; Taps; Hillel Foundation; Varsity Debate; Business Stafif, University Theater; Jordan River Re- vue ; Y.M.C.A.; After Dark ; Exper- imental Theater. FRANK CHARLES NAPIER Seminary, Miss. B.S. Merchandising THOMAS A. LANAHAN Indianapolis B.S. General Business Delta Upsilon; Sopho- more Football Man- ager. JOSEPH ROLAND LYBROOK Galveston B.S. General Business Treasurer, Sigma Chi; President, Intramural Athletic Association; Sophomore Baseball Manager. ROBERT E. MARSH South Bend B.S. Real Estate Theta Chi; Varsity Award, Swimming; Vice - President, Dol- phin Club. LEO MELZER Gary B.S. Business Journalism Sigma Delta Chi; As- sociate Night Editor, Indiana Daily Stu- dent. WILLIAM ALLEN NEAL Covington, B.S. Finance and Banking Kappa Delta Rho. HOWARD ALLEN LARKIN South Bend B.S. Merchandising Acacia ; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Y.M.C.A. JOHN H. LYNCH Ft. Wayne B.S. General Business Phi Kappa; Univer- sity Committee on Religion; Freshman Orientation Commit- tee; Interfrater- nity Council; Presi- dent, Newman Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Sphinx Club. GEORGE E. MARTINDALE Lakewood, Ohio B.S. General Business Chess Club; Le Cercle Francais; Economics Club. PHILIP T. METSKER Chicago B.S. General Busines i Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Varsity Swimming; Dolphin Club; Y.M. C.A. JAMES B. NEIGHBOURS Wabash B.S. General Business Kappa Delta Rho; In- terfraternity Council; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Blooming- ton Junior Chamber of Commerce. RICHARD MOORE LENOX Lebanon B.S. Merchandising Vice - President, Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi. charles d. McCartney Fairmount B.S. Merchandising President, South Hall; Sophomore Basketball Manager; I.S.A. Ex- ecutive Board; Y.M. CA. ROBERT MARTZ Bloomington B.S. General Business Phi Gamma Delta; Captain, Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Taps. C. STEPHEN LEONARD Hartford City B.S. Business Law Phi Kappa Psi. MARCIA JANE McCOLLY Rensselaer B.S. Secretarial Training Chi Omega; Chi Gamma; Omicron Delta; Home Eco- nomics Club; Y.W. CA. EARL G. MAUCK Princeton B.S. Accounting Delta Tau Delta; President, Senior Class; Beta Gamma Sigma; President, Un- ion Board; Chairman, Junior Prom Committee; Board of Aeons; Vice- President, Sphinx Club; Blue Key; Associate Editor, Arbutus; President, Dragon ' s Head; Vice-President, Phi Eta Sigma. ALDEN J. MOORE Romney B.S. General Business Beta Gamma Sigma. MARTHA ELIZABETH NESBITT New Richmond B.S. Secretarial Training Chi Gamma; Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Co- ed Band. RICHARD MUELLER Indianapolis B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi; Y.M. C.A.; Sophomore In- tramural Manager; Treasurer, Skull and Crescent. GEORGE WILLIAM NEWLIN Attica B.S. Accounting Beta Gamma Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Account- ing Club; I.S.A. Ex- ecutive Board. EDNA LEVI Indianapolis B.S. Secretarial Training President, Sigma Phi Upsilon; Omicron Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta; English Club; Student Council, Hil- lel Foundation. ROBERTS BLAINE McCOY Greensburg B.S. Merchandising Phi Eta Sigma. TOM B. LINDAHL Indianapolis B.S. Merchandising Secretary, Delta Sig- ma Pi; Alpha Phi Omega; Board of Di- rectors, Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. MARJORIE McKINLEY Vincennes B.S. Institutional Management Beta Gamma Sigma; Omicron Nu; Omi- cron Delta; Home Economics Club. MONTFORD A. MEAD Mishawaka B.S. General Business President, Tau Kappa Alpha; Blue Key; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Phi Omega; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Varsity De- bate; Niezer Debate Award; Flame Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Y.M Peace-pipe Committee. ROBERT H. MEADE Washington B.S. General Business Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M.CA.; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce; Freshman Bas- ketball. BEATRICE MURPHY Connersville B.S. General Business Omicron Delta; Y.W. C.A.; I.S.A. Council. C.A.; Chorus; Senior JOHN ASHBY MYERS Mayfield, Ky. B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Blue Key; Intcrfraternity Coun- cil; Sphinx Club; Commerce; Accounting II Manager; Skull and Senior Peace-Pipe Com- FRED WILLIAM NYE, JR, Ft. Wayne B.S. General Business Collegiate Chamber of Club; Junior Basketba Crescent; Camera Club mittee. JOHN G. NICHOLS Clinton B.S. Business Journalism Delta Tau Delta; Treasurer, Interfra- ternity Council; Pres- ident. Taps; Assistant Director, Cabaret Show ; Hotel Universe ; Ethan Frome ; Stage Door ; Experimental Theater; Indiana Daily Student Staff. 79 Sigma Nu Johnny Myers in a double feature amid luxurious surroundings. Pi Phi Betty Higbee takes spring inventory of the sisters ' coats. Business Seniors Dick Beavans, Betty Suther- land, and Allen Harrison check with Miss Kirby before going into the home stretch. L. ARIEL OSGATHARP Otwcll D.S. General Business Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus. LOWELL T. OTTINGER Madison 5.S. General Business Y.M.C.A. JULIA ELIZABETH PECKINPAUGH Mt. Summit BS. General Business Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi Lambda Theta; Omicron Delta; Board of Directors, Colleg- iate Chamber of Commerce; Y.W.C.A. Coun- cil; Mortar Board Recognition; W.A.A.; Taps; Education Club. ROBERT H. PENN Kokomo B.S. General Business Delta Upsilon; Presi- dent, Kappa Kappa Psi; Band. TOM PETERS Flora BS. Merchandisinf Beta Theta Pi; Sphinx Club; Sophomore Bas- ketball Manager; Var- sity Baseball; Y.M. C.A. JAMES R. PICKERING New Castle B.S. Merchandising ROWLAND L. POELLEIN Bloom ville B.S. Merchandising ROGER W. POORMAN Ft. Wayne B.S. General Business MARGARET T. RABER (Mrs. J. R.) Valparaiso B.S. Merchandising JOHN W. POTTS Union City B.S. General Business Alpha Tau Omega; Scabbard and Blade; Freshman Track; Freshman Basketball. DAVID H. RARIDEN Bedford B.S. Merchandising Sigma Nu; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band; Pro Music Club. CLIFFORD E. PRICE Union Mills B.S. Finance and Banking Acacia. DOROTHY REDDEN Morocco B.S. Commerce Secretary, Omicron Delta; President, For- est Hall; Kappa Phi; Y.W.C.A. Council; Alpha Lambda Delta; Freshman Orientation Chamber of Commerce; mittee. ROBERT PRICHARD Waukegan, 111. B.S. General Business Phi Delta Theta; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Kappa Alpha; Varsity De- bate; Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. CHARLES F. RENSCHLER M adison B.S. Business Administration Pershing Rifles. Committee; Collegiate Senior Breakfast Com- GUS PSALTIS Bedford B.S. Merchandising Varsity Football; Var- sity Wrestling; Scab- bard and Blade. CHARLES GREGORY RICKE Shelbyville B.S. General Business President, Sigma Chi; Varsity Basketball. MARGARET PYLE Rochester B.S. General Business Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; W.A.A.; Caba- ret Show ; Y.W.C.A. MORRIS RITCHIE, JR. Lebanon B.S. General Business Delta Tau Delta; Sen- ior Football Manager; Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. JAMES R. RABER Valparaiso B.S. Merchandising Sigma Pi. EUGENE ROBISON Nabb B.S. Finance JOHN J. ROCHFORD Indianapolis B.S. General Business Alpha Kappa Psi ; Vice - President, Ac- counting Club; New- man Club. LOWELL LAWRENCE SANDERS Mitchell B.S. Finance and Banking Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pershing Rifles; Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus; Y.M.C.A.; Alpha Phi O m eg-a; Phi Eta Sigma. BERNARD ROSE Indianapolis B.S. Merchandising Phi Beta Delta; Inter- fraternity Council; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Sigma Delta Chi. MARY E. SAUSE Cincinnati, Ohio B.S. Business Administration Pi Lambda Theta; Omicron Delta; Soph- omore Business Assist- ant, Arbutus; New- man Club; W.A.A.; Freshman Orientation Committee. MANUEL ROTHBERG Ft. Wayne B.S. General Business President, Sigma Al- pha Mu; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Board of Aeons; Blue Key; Associate Business Manager, Ar- butus; Junior Basket- ball Manager; Orien- tation Committee; In- terfraternity Council. HERMAN RICHARD SCHELL Logansport B.S. Statistics Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Scabbard and Blade. ROBERT ELLSWORTH ROULT Jamestown B.S. General Business Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y. M. C. A.; Yell Leader. RICHARD H. SCHMALZ Bloomington B.S. Merchandising Kappa Sigma ; Senior Baseball Manager; Sphinx Club; Bored Walk Staflf. HARRY E. RUMRILL Indianapolis B.S. Business Management JEANNE SCHRADER Jones boro B.S. General Business Sigma Kappa; Vice- President, Omicron Delta; Accounting Club; W.A.A.; Y.W. C.A. FRANK SAGE Brownstown B.S. General Business Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; President, Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y. M. C. A.; Flame Club. ARTHUR V. SCHWEIDLER Lafayette B.S. General Business CHRISTINE E. SALWAECHTER Evansville B.S. Secretarial Training JOHN D. SHARP Ft. Wayne B.S, General Business Phi Delta Theta; Sphinx Club. 81 Betas Hiller and Huffman discuss things less serious with Buck Mauck before tackling more high finance. How to run the School o f Business is dis- cussed by Bob Boughman of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce and Dean Weimer. Mathematically-minded Montford Mead me- thodically manipulates machine. ROBERT LEE SIMMONS Brownstown B.S. Accounting Delta Sigma Pi; Ac- counting Club. DAVID SMALL, JR. Fowler B.S, Insurance Y.M.C.A.; Varsity Golf. ARTHUR E. SMITH South Bend B.S. Merchandising Band. WILLIAM B. SQUIER Richmond B.S. General Business Kappa Sigma; Y.M. C.A.; Varsity Basket- ball; Freshman Base- ball. SARA E. SUGGS Bloomington B.S. General Business R. EARL TEVIS Madison B.S. Accounting JERRY W. TORRANCE, JR. Marion B.S. Business Law Phi Gamma Delta; Al- pha Phi Omega; Del- ta Sigma Pi; Business Staff, The Folio; Soph- omore Track Man- ager. JOHN EDWIN STEIN New Albany B.S. General Busines. Kappa Delta Rho. RICHEY BENSON SUMNER Owensville B.S. General Business Sigma Epsilon Theta; Scabbard and Blade; Captain, Pershing Rifles; Men ' s Glee Club; Freshman Track. EDWARD G. THARP Danville B.S. General Business Alpha Kappa Psi. GENE TROY Indianapolis B.S. General Business President, Kappa Sig- ma; Theta Nu Epsi- lon; Vice-President, Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; After Dark ; Jordan River Revue ; Bored Walk; Bloomington Chamber of Commerce. FREDERICK LEE STEINMEIER Indianapolis B.S. Accounting Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A. BETTY ANNE SUTHERLAND Bloomington B.S. Secretarial Training Kappa Kappa Gamma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Lambda Delta; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Senior Peace- Pipe Committee. JACK BRUCE THOMAS Versailles, Ohio B.S. General Business Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. BENJIMAN LEON UNDERWOOD Ft. Wayne B.S. Merchandising President, Alpha Kap- pa Psi. MARY AGNES SMITH Cumberland B.S. Textile Merchandising A lpha Delta Pi; Omi- cron Delta; Y.W. C.A.; Home Econom- ics Club. DOROTHY STEPHAN South Bend B.S. General Business President, Omicron Delta; W.A.A.; Y.W. C. A. ; Education Club; Newman Club; English Club. MAZADA JONES TALMADGE Bloomington B.S. Comviercial Teaching Omicron Delta. MIFFLIN K. THOMAS Honolulu, Hawaii B.S. General Business Phi Gamma Delta; Vice-President, Union Board; Board of Aeons; Captain, Var- sity Swimming; Blue Key; Dragon ' s Head; Dolphin Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Pershing Rifles; Cosmopolitan Club. SAM VAN ARSDELL Chicago, III. B.S. General Business Treasurer, Sigma Pi; Pershing Rifles; In- ternational Relations Club; Men ' s Glee Club. RICHARD M. SMITH Chesterton B.S. General Busines JACK K. STEVENSON Indianapolis B.S. General Business Beta Theta Pi; Busi- ness Assistant, Arbu- tus; Skull and Cres- cent; President, Sphinx Club; Persh- ing Rifles; Varsity Basketball. ROBERT GOODWIN TAYLOR Sullivan B.S. Law Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Kappa Kappa Psi; Alpha Phi Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Band; Freshman Orientation Commit- tee; Men ' s Glee Club; Gentlemen from In- diana ; Cabaret Show ; Jordan Riv- er Revue ; Law Club. JOSEPH WILLIAM THOMPSON Bloomington B.S. Accounting ROSS H. WAGGAMAN Kokomo B.S. General Business Phi Delta Theta; Sophomore Baseball Manager. HAROLD H. SPANGLE Westphalia B.S. General Business EVAN STIERS Rushville B.S. Finance and Banking Sigma Chi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Presi- dent, Delta Sigma Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Presi- dent Collegiate Cham- ber of Commerce; Senior Basketball Manager; Secretary- Treasurer, Blue Key; Pershing Rifles; Skull and Crescent; Varsity Debate; Chairman, Peace-Pipe Committee. ALFRED PERRY TEEGARDEN Veedersburg B .S. Merchandising Delta Sigma Pi; Cap- tain, Pershing Rifles; McNutt for President Club. ELIZABETH WANDA THOMSON Plymouth B.S. General Business Pi Beta Phi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Omi- cron Delta; W.A.A.; Secretary, Accounting Club; International Relations Club; Fresh- m a n Orientation Committee; Mortar Board Recognition. WILLIAM A. WARDER Vincennes B.S. General Business FREIDA FERNE SPARKS Bloomfield B.S. Commercial Teaching Omicron Delta; Treas- urer, Forest Hall; Ed- ucation Club; English Club; Y.W.C.A. CLEMENT F. STIGDON Kansas City, Mo. B.S. General Business Sigma Nu; Pershing Rifles; Alpha Phi Omega; Advertising Club; Junior Swim- ming Manager; A Murder Has Been Ar- ranged ; Many Man- sions ; Our Town ; Tonight at 8:30 ; George and Mar- garet . NEWTON TERZIAN Redbank, N. J. B.S. Business Statistics Y.M.C.A.; Euclidean Circle. MORRIS M. TOBIAN LaPorte B.S. General Business HAROLD V. WARNER Sanborn B.S. General Business Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M.C.A. 83 Barbara Healy, K.K.G., adds her name to ' signs of the times . Downspout, and Myron Glassner, S.A.M. prexy, view the job horizon. Dorothy Redden takes knowledge in one hand and 100 calories in the other. CARL A. WATLER Brazil B.S. Accounting Accounting Club. FRANCES GALE WATKINS Indianapolis B.S. Secretarial Training Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Delta; Pleiades; Coed Sponsor, R. O. T. C; Editorial Assistant, Arbutus; Y.W.C.A.; W.A. A.; Bored Walk Staff; International Relations Club; Flying Club. SEYMOUR WEISS South Bend B.S. Accounting Varsity Wrestling; Hillel Foundation; Freshman Swimming; Freshman Football. FRANK O. WELLNITZ Michigan City B.S. Business Journalism Theta Chi. FRANK S. WHITE Portland B.S. Insurance President, South Hall; Band; Y. M. C. A.; I.S.A. Council. DALE WILLMAN Indianapolis B.S. General Business ROBERT N. WILSON Evansville B.S. General Business RAY WINGERT Bloomington B.S. General Business HERMAN C. WINTER, JR. Louisville, Ky. B.S. Merchandising Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y.M.C.A.; President, Economics Club; I.S.A. Council. ROBERT A. WOEHR Ft. Wayne B.S. Real Estate Varsity Baseball. JANE WORSHAM Indianapolis B.S. General Business Zeta Tau Alpha; Omicron Delta; Pan- Hellenic Council. JOHN LINDERMAN WREGE New Albany B.S. General Business WARREN WRIGHT Sheridan B.S. Accounting Sigma Epsilon Theta; Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A. RICHARD WALTER WYCZAWSKI LaPorte B.S. General Business Scabbard and Blade; Varsity Football. ETHEL ZMUDZINSKI Gary B.S. Comniercial Teaching Willard Findling, S.A.E. President, tells the Placement Bureau, I ' ll take this one, and wrap it up . Sig Gregg Ricke inspects a tome that may be a bound volume of Esquire . 85 BETA GAMMA SIGMA Prof. G. L. Carmichael President Prof. W. H. Stackhouse Vice-President Prof. R. E. Walden Secretary Prof. I. W. Aim Treasurer Prof. W. T. Buckley Sergeant-at-arms Prof. H. C. Sauvain Historian The purpose of Beta Gamma Sigma is to recognize scholarship among the students in the School of Business. This fraternity was founded nationally in 1913 by the University of Southern California, the University of Illinois, and the University of Wisconsin. The Alpha chapter was officially installed at Indiana University in 1923. There are now chapters in practically every school which holds membershi p in the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. Membership is restricted to the upper ten per cent of the class. Not more than two per cent of the Juniors nor more than ten per cent of the Seniors are eligible to become members. The organization stresses good business ability and moral character as well as scholarship. As a rule, the organization has not engaged in outside activities, but this year they are attempting to raise funds to furnish the William A. Rawles room in the School of Business. The name of the most outstanding Sophomore business student each year is placed on the Beta Gamma Sigma scholarship plaque. The award is deter- mined by an examination and the grade standing of the student at the end of the Sophomore year. This year the award was given to Miss Rachel R. Norman. She is the first girl ever to receive the honor. John Jay placed second in the competition for the award. Another award is the William A. Rawles key which is given to the business student who has the highest average at the end of his first two and a half years in the Indiana University School of Business. Both of these honors are evi- denced by having the person ' s name inscribed on a name plate and mounted on a board which hangs in the dean ' s office. The student who receives the plaque award receives also a gold key, and the student in second place receives a silver key. acuity Students I. W. Aim S. A. Pressler Charles D. Baillie Lotta Lung Clifford Price C. W. Barker A. L. Prickett Paul A. Bucha Edward L. Hutton Arnold C. Schumaker J. A. Batchelor H. C. Sauvain Ellen Caplin John Jay Lot Seacat W. G. Biddlc W. H. Stackhouse Eugene E. Clayton Jane Judy Robert W. Sill W. T. Buckley G. W. Starr John R. Danch Marjorie McKinley Evan Stiers G. L. Carmichael G. A. Steiner Donald S. Farquharson Earl G. Mauck Richard B. Stoner E. E. Ed wards R. E. Strahlem Herndon Fletcher Alden J. Moore Betty Sutherland H. G. Fraine R. D. Swick Beverly C. Furr Frank C. Napier Elizabeth W. Thomson Bernita Gwaltney R. E. Walden Myron Glassner George W. Newlin C. Lawrence Toney J. E. Moffat A. M. Weimer Alfred Green Rachel Norman O. S. Parrish H. B Wells S6 COLLEGIATE CHAMBER COMMERCE First Row Janet Hamersly Herman M. Dieter Earl Bannister Rachel Norman Edward L. Hutton Second Row Nat U. Hill Ruth Ferris Evan Stiers Richard Murray Eloise Barnett Morris Ritchie Third Row Walter Voss Rosemary Hendricks Suzanne Moore Gene Troy Julia Peckinpaugh John Myers Evan Stiers President Gene Troy Vice-President Janet Hamersly Secretary Ruth Ferris Treasurer The Collegiate Chamber of Commerce acts as a connecting body between the faculty of the School of Business and the students. Organized on this cam- pus in 1937, it is a charter member of the National Intercollegiate Chamber of Commerce, founded in 1938. The Board of Directors of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, which represents the students in the School of Business, is made up of a boy and a girl elected from each class, and one representative each from Delta Sigma Pi, Alpha Kappa Xi, Chi Gamma, Omicron Delta, Beta Gamma Sigma, and the Account- ing Club — all of which are organizations for business students. These, with the three members held over from the previous year, constitute the membership of the Board; all business school students are members of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. 87 DELTA SIGMA PI « ' i i ' i ' First Row Lew Deeter Alfred Teegarden William Hyde Howard Blankertz Jack Kistner Robert Bottin Howard Kessler Second Row Stephen Slipher Wallace Billman Jack Eason Howard Curtis Rembrandt Hiller Edward Bartley Marvin Miller Third Row Charles Hedge George Newlin Bob Simmons John Jay Robert Conner Jack Fairchild Keith Cox Fourth Row Charles Baillie Tom Lindahl Robert Eifler Jerry Torrance William Jennings William Keck Charles Legeman Fifth Row Philip Cooper Evan Stiers Robert Powers Bill Carmichae! George McNabb William Hauschild Charles Harrison Evan Stiers President Rembrandt Hiller Vice-President Tom Lindahl Secretary Stephen Slipher Treasurer Delta Sigma Pi, one of the largest fraternities in the professional field, was founded at New York University in 1907 with the objective of attaining pre-eminence in the field of commerce and business admin- istration. The Alpha Pi Chapter was established in 1925. Among Delta Sig ' s many activities are the maintaining of a large and effective alumni organization, the administration of a personnel placing service on a national basis, the publication of a quarterly maga- zine, and the presentation of a scholarship key each year to the gradu- ating student who has the highest four year scholastic average in the School of Business. The activities of the local chapter include semi-monthly professional meetings, cooperation with the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, and the sponsoring of industrial tours. Noon lunches, open to all students, are sponsored monthly with faculty members, professional, and personnel men speaking on subjects of current interest. w ALPHA KAPPA PSI First Row Donald Farquharson Ray Partlow Charles Lees Merrill Beck Richard Drickey Robert Batton Robert Atkins Robert Taylor Second Row David Robbins John Kistler Cecil Cunningham Gene Kern John Clerkin Richard France Frank Sage Louis Culmann Morris Ritchie Third Row Robert Boughman Byron Aukerman Robert Thompson Ben Underwood Richard Aikman Richard Lenox John Myers Gilbert Cooper John Rochford Fourth Row Bernard Cinkoske Delmer Hylton Edward Tharp Eugene Brown Ray Bolinger John Leininger Robert Carriger Leighton Mock Arnold Wilken Ben Underwood President Robert Burton Vice-President John Myers Secretary Harold Hersch .Treasurer Alpha Kappa Psi, an international business fraternity, is an active organi- zation on the I. U. campus. Each year it sponsors an industrial tour to Chicago, where the members visit a few of the various industries and business firms of interest there. In addition to this tour the fraternity carries on research prob- lems, and each month a professional dinner meeting is held. The purpose of this organization is the furthering of the interest of busi- ness among college men, the promotion of scientific research in the field of business, the education of the public in an appreciation of modern business methods, and the promotion of higher ideals among business men. Alpha Kappa Psi was founded in 1904 at New York University. Today there are sixty-one chapters in the leading business schools in the United States and Canada. Beta Gamma, the Indiana chapter, was founded in 1927; its Deputy Councilor is Stanley Pressler, and Divisional Councilor, Joe Batchelor. Each year Beta Gamma chapter awards the highest ranking Senior in the Business School a scholarship medallion and engraves his name on a plaque. 89 First Row Marjorie Heidenreich Janet Hamersly Ruth Ferris May DaLeure Eloise Barnett Marjorie McKinley Rachel Jones Martha Shcrtzer Agnes Smith Second Row Betty Bowman Roberta Beck Marian Levin Barbara Collier Joyce Cole Dorothy Stephan Blanche Childress Wanda Pulliam Norma Katz Third Row Dorothy Redden Edna Levi Mary Graves Mary Sause Marcia McCoUy Jane Judy Marian Baker Dorothy Graf Florence Meloy ff;Wf Fourth Row Mavaline Ferricr Jeanne Schrader Mary Sailors Ruth Breimycr Harriet Powers Jane Worsham Mazada Talmadge Martha Nesbitt Mary Griffin Fifth Row Louise Samuelson Beatrice Murphy Ellogene Griffith Helen Hauselmire Marjorie Crow Charlcen Romines Helen Jean Schroeder Dorathea Lehman Lois Kiesling Sixth Row Gloria Manser Mary Ann Kriegbaum Marcelle Horn Louise Hemmer Elizabeth Thomson Rose-Ellen Berndt Freida Sparks Christine Salwaechter OMICRON DELTA „ h , . Dorothy Stephan Fresiaenr Jeanne Schrader Y ice-president Rose-Ellen Berndt Treasurer Dorothy Redden Recording Secretary Omicron Delta, the honorary for Junior and Senior women in the School of Business, has as its aim the promotion of friendly understanding and professional interest among business women. In the pursuance of this purpose, the members of the organiza- tion arrange a varied program which includes both social and instructional activities. This year at the regular monthly meetings speakers, either from this campus or from a business concern, discussed the op- portunities for women in the professional field. In addition, the group gave a tea in honor of the School of Business faculty and a party for the members of Chi Gamma. Omicron Delta is a relatively new organization, founded only two years ago; but with the help of Miss Lula Westenhaver and Mrs. Esther D. Bray of the School of Business and Miss Sarah Kirby, assistant to the Dean of the School of Business, it has already been recognized as an active and progressive honor- ary. The organization is represented in the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce by Eloise Barnett. 90 .If $! IS % 9 $• 1 1 1 1 f f f f f 1 1 f First Row Gcorgeanna Giovanini John P. Chrisney Joseph W. Thompson Mary Hendricks Eugene Brown Second Row Frederick L. Steinmeler Jeanne Schrader Charles R. Lees Warren Wright Dan Chiddister Laura K. Briley Harold C. Chastain Robert Schilling Elizabeth Thomson Third Row Scott Daniels Janet Hamersly Richard Stoner Bryon J. Aukerman William T.Wright Charles Legeman Bernard C. Cinkoske Robert Conner Fourth Row Bruce Decker Donald S. Farquharson Percy R. Ganstine Glen Smith Clyde E. Fulton Daniel Schoger Charles Ferguson Robert Allen Fifth Row John Myers Edward Hildebrand Louis Culmann Robert Gill Carl Walter Alfred Green George Newlin Sixth Row Robert Simmons Joe Deal Leo Kane Richard Aikman Raymond Austin Harriet Kriegbaum Mary Graves Robert Thompson John Rochford Charles Harrison George Hershbcrger Robert Carriger ACCOUNTING CLUB Donald S. Farquharson President John Rochford Vice-President Elizabeth W. Thomson Secretary Richard E. Aikman Treasurer The Indiana University Accounting Club has successfully completed its third year on the campus. Following its con- stitution, it has furthered the interests of accounting students by bringing speakers to Bloomington who are employed in the different branches of accounting work, by endeavoring to interest accounting employers in the accounting students at Indiana University, and by promoting better student-professor relationships and friendships . Prominent speakers for the Club have included such men as William Werntz, Chief Accountant of the Securities and Ex- change Commission; Roy B. Kester, Head of the Department of Accounting, Columbia; O. A. Kirkman, Vice-President and General Manager, High Point, Thomasville and Denton Rail- road; Edward B. Wilcox, partner of Edward Gore Co., Cer- tified Public Accountants; and J. O. Waymire, Accountant, Eli Lilly Co. Also Mr. A. H. Scheidt, Assistant to Administrator, Indiana University Medical Center; Mr. Otto Jensen, Deputy Examiner, Department of Inspection and Supervision of Public Offices; and Mr. Keith Canan, Assistant Cashier, Ford Motor Company have appeared as guest speakers. Meetings are held once a month. Faculty members include Alva L. Prickett, D. Lyle Dieterle, Geoffrey L. Carmichael, Ing- wald W. Aim, Stanley A. Pressler, and Robert E. Walden. Mr. Dieterle is also adviser for the group. 51 CHI GAMMA First Row: Elizabeth KoUman, Marjorie Kensler, Virgene Moore, Catherine Cherry, Joanna Archibald, Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, Betty Chatten. Second Row: Norma Lagenaur, Mary Jane Thompson, Rebecca Morris, Betty Regal, Zanna Davisson, Mary Louise Millis. Third Row: Rosemary Hendricks, Alice Schafer, Doris Koning, Patricia Pool. Virgene Moore President Frances Yearick ..Vice-President Dorothy Forrest Secretary Catherine Cherry Treasurer Chi Gamma was founded on the Indiana campus in 1930 with the aims of promoting higher standards for girls in the business world. The organization lapsed for several years but was reorganized last year and now meets the first Tuesday in every month. This year the meetings are planned to survey all fields of business and discuss the duties and requirements of the various office positions. The general theme is the preparation of mem- bers to fill successfully posts in the actual business world. This organization is open to any Freshman or Sophomore girl in the School of Business who is interested in the program of the group. The objectives include the promotion of higher education for women in business, the development of solidarity which comes from working together, and the stimulation of the development of professional attitudes and high standards of business efficiency, business ethics, and culture. 92 CONFERENCES Delegates to the Mortage Conference register in the Union Building. Law Journal Conference members meet in the Union Board room. Dean Weimer of the School of Business welcomes three of the members of the Bankers ' Convention. The N. Y. A. Conference holds a banquet meeting in Room E of the Union Building. This year Indiana University has been host to many im- portant conferences on the campus, representing a wider va- riety of fields of interest than ever before. Eight hundred high school students and teachers attended the Tri-County Music Festival held April 4, for the largest con- ference of the year. The Indiana Bankers ' Conference, with 300 bankers in attendance, met February 12, 13, and 14. The Law Institute, April 5 and 6, brought 200 lawyers to its meetings. Such conferences are designed to acquaint men in various occupations with new ideas for their particular field of interest. Conferences and contests provide competition among groups interested in music, mathematics, debating and other subjects. 93 flf I ' 11 ' wi ft a , THEY LEARN TO TEACH AND THEY Not one clock watcher in sight. Even model schools have libraries. Student teacher teaches students. TEACH TO LEARN. Entrance to the University school. Dean Henry L, Smith of the School of Edu- cation. A.O.Pis Susanne Fogg and Laura Wilkins catch a laugh for relaxation between classes. Eliza Bess Lucas educates while being edu- cated at the University School. Doris Allison reads up on the newest educa- tional method of teaching the kiddies to enun- ciate c-a-t. MARY ELIZABETH ADAMS Vincennes B.S. Physical Education Delta Delta Delta; W.A.A.; Taps; Alpha Lambda Delta. MARY MYRTHEL ADAMS Sandborn B.S. Education W.A.A.; Choral Un- ion, Women ' s Glee Club. RUTH ADLER WALTER ADLER Ft. Wayne Bloomington B.S. Education B.S. Education Treasurer, Kappa Kap- pa Gamma; Tau Kap- pa Alpha; W.A.A.; Mortar Board Recog- nition; Vice-President, Freshman A.W.S.; Edu- cation Club; Freshman Debate Team; Women ' s Varsity Debate; Coed Counseling; Orientation Committee; Niezer Debate Award; Bored Walk Staff. DORIS ANN ALLISON Tipton B.S. Education Delta Gamma; Chi Gamma; Alpha Lamb- da Delta; W.A.A.; Euclidean Circle; Ed- ucation Club; Bored Walk Staff; Y.W. C.A.; Mortar Board Recognition. MARION EASTWOOD ANDERSON Vincennes B.S. Education MARY ELIZABETH ARM AG AST Troy, Ala. B.S. Education PAULINE A. ARNOLD Petersburg B.S. Education FRANCES BAYLOR Speed B.S. Education Alpha Omicron Pi; Oceanides; Y.W.C.A. NOVA LORENE BAYS Solsberry B.S. Education MARY LOUISE BENNINGHOFF Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Chi Omega; Y.W. C.A.; Education Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Ar- butus Beauty Queen. ERNESTINE BENTON Eberfeld B.S. Education English Club; Educa- tion Club; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counseling. GEORGE BEREOLOS Hammond B.S. Physical Education Y.M.C.A.; Varsity Baseball; Freshman Football. JEAN F. BEUGNOT Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Sigma Phi Epsi lon. FRANCES BLAIR Gary B.S. Physical Education W.A.A. MARJORIE KATHLEEN BOOKER Muskegon Heights, Mich. B.S. Education S e c r et a ry-Treasurer, Delta Zeta; Y. V . C. A.; History Club; Ed- ucation Club. JOHN GEORGE BROZSKI Patchogue, N. Y. B.S. Education Varsity Football; Var- sity Wrestling. NELLIE KIRBY BRUCE Dale B.S. Education MARGARET BURKE East Chicago B.S. Education Pi Lambda Theta; Ed- ucation Club; English Club; Y.W.C.A.; Chorus. BETTY BURRIS Vincennes B.S. Education Pi Beta Phi. JAMES P. BUTLER Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education ROXIE CHLOE BUTLER Lafayette B.S. Education ROY GEE CARTER Mishawaka B.S. Education Alpha Phi Omega. DONALD CHESTNEY Altoona, Penn. B.S. Physical Education Phi Epsilon Kappa. JAMES BERNARD CLARK South Bend B.S. Education Kappa Alpha Psi; Sig- ma Delta Psi; Varsity Football; Varsity Track; Cabaret . ESTEL VOORHEES COOK Cloverdale B.S. Physical Education MARY LEE COULTES Tell City B.S. Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Y.W.C.A. THERESA MARIE CYGAN LaPorte B.S. Education EDYTHE ELISABETH DALE Indianapolis B.S. Education MARTHA MARIE DANIELS East Chicago B.S. Education DOROTHY DEE DAWSON Louisville, Ky. B.S. Education Kappa Delta; Interna- tional Relations Club; Education Club; Chorus; Y.W.C.A. PAUL A. DECKARD Bloomington B.S. Education Phi Delta Kappa; Ed- ucation Club. MARGARET DICKERSON El wood B.S. Education OLIVIA MARY DICKHAUT Mt. Vernon B.S. Education ELLEN JEAN DILGER Evansville B.S. Physical Education Oceanides; W.A.A. Board; President, Archery Club. 97 Peering into the bookstore door is convo- fugitive Victor Heine. Theta Betty McCuIIough has a pleasant sur- prise — the typewriter works. Pi Phi roddess Anne Hopman opens the door to Education . Ruth Adler debates over a station by re- mote control. L. IVAN DILLON Atwell B.S. Education Men ' s Glee Club; Y.M.C.A.; Chorus; Jordan River Re- vue . DOROTHY D. DIXON East Chicago B.S. Education MARY M. DUNN Frankfort B.S. Nursing Education R. N. Club. ALBERT CARL EBEL New Marion B.S. Education SADIE ALTIN FIELDS East Chicago B.S. Nursing Education . N. Club. JOHN T. FLANINGAM Thorntown B.S. Physical Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Varsity Baseball. SUSANNE FOGG Grcensburg B.S. Education Alpha Omicron Pi; Education Club; Spanish Club; Coed Sponsor, R.O.T.C. BETTY K. GASSER Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education Phi Delta Pi; W.A.A. MARY ELLEN GOSS Paoli B.S. Education OPHELIA KATHERINE GRAEFF Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Y.W.C.A.; Education Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Chorus. GEORGE EDWARD GRAF Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education PETER McLANE GRANT, JR. Indianapolis B.S. Physical Education Varsity Basketball; Varsity Golf. EARL E. GRAVES Solsberry B.S. Education Y.M.C.A.; Education Club. SARAH GUSMAN Markle B.S. Education Alpha Delta Pi; Kap- pa Phi; Chi Gamma Education Club Women ' s Glee Club Chorus; Y.W.C.A. MARY MARGARET HASTINGS Bloomington B.S. Education PATRICIA HILLIARD South Bend B.S. Education FLETCHER WINTERLY HINDS Crawfordsville B.S. Education MALCOLM M. HODGES Oaktown B.S. Education Y.M.C.A. VICTOR P. HOEHNE Burnettsville B.S. Physical Education Freshman Basketball. HELEN ELIZABETH HOGUE Hammond B.S. Education MARY ELIZABETH HOOVER Middlebury B.S. Education Chi Omega; Le Cer- cle Francais; Y.W. C.A. ANNE B. HOPMAN Hammond B.S. Education Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Lambda Delta; Vice- President, W.A.A. ; Y. W. C. A.; Oceanides; Secretary, Mortar Board; A.W.S. Council; Senior Invitations Committee. MADONNA MILDRED HUGHES Tipton B.S. Nursing Education R. N. Club. JOHN DICK JANZARUK LaPorte B.S. Education Delta Upsilon; Var- sity Football. LILLIAN JOHNSON Indianapolis B.S. Nursing Education N. Club. SHELTON KAISER Orleans B.S. Education CHESTER ROBERT KLOESZ Buffalo, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education Phi Epsilon Kappa. ALMA LILLIAN KOZA Michigan City B.S. Education Kappa Delta Phi; Del- ta Kappa Gamma; Ed- ucation Club; New- man Club. DOROTHY FRANCES KOZA Michigan City B.S. Education Education Club; W.A.A.; Newman Club. JACK L. LEAS Petersburg B.S. Education Theta Alpha Phi; Ed- ucation Club; Y.M. C.A.; Jordan River Revue ; Much Ado About Nothing ; Winterset ; Stage Door ; You Can ' t Take It With You ; Tonight At 8:30 ; Merry Wives Of Windsor . ELIZA BESS LUCAS Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Mortar Board; Y.W. C.A. BETTY McCULLOUGH Columbus B.S. Education Kappa Alpha Theta. DOROTHY ELIZABETH McDANIEL Lebanon B.S. Education Pi Lambda Theta; Ed- ucation Club; Y.W. C.A.; Le Cercle Fran- ARVEL CONWAY McKINLEY Borden B.S. Education ELEANOR JANE MENEFEE Vincennes B.S. Education Chi Gamma. 99 Tri Delt Mary Elizabeth Adams is keeping up home town contacts. Mary-conscious George WiUiamson is joeing with camera-conscious Mary Benninghoff. NINA JANE MILLER Paris, 111. B.S. Education Chi Gamma; English Club; Education Club. ROBERTA MOORE Frankfort B.S, Education LEAH KATHERINE MORRISON Morgantown B.S. Education VERYLE AUDREY MOUNTS Salem B.S. Education ETHEL SALINE MOXLEY Gary B.S. Physical Education MILDRED B. MUENCH Syracuse, N. Y. B.S. Physical Education Delta Psi Kappa; W.A.A. MURIEL MASON MULLINS Indianapolis B.S. Education GENE S. NORRIS Thorntown B.S. Physical Education Phi Delta Kappa. HAROLD D. NORRIS Rushville B.S. Physical Education GRACE TRUMBULL OBERLIN Ft. Wayne B.S. Education GERALD EDMUND RAINFORD Morocco B.S. Education Euclidean Circle; Phi Delta Kappa. BETTY JANE RAYL Ft. Wayne B.S. Education Women ' s Glee Club; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A. Council. SARA ELLEN REEVES New Market B.S. Education Secretary, Alpha Omi- cron Pi; Pan-Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A.; Chorus; Education Club; Coed Counsel- ing. EERNICE SYLVIA SAPERSTEIN LaPorte B.S. Education Secretary, Sigma Phi Upsilon; Taps; Educa- tion Club; Bury the Dead ; Our Town ; Vice-President, Hillei Foundation. VIRGINIA RUTH SCHAEFER Whiting B.S. Education Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Education Club; Eng- lish Club. GERALDINE SCHMIDT Ft. Wayne B.S. Education RALPH TOBIAS SIGEL Detroit, Mich. B.S. Physical Education Phi Epsilon Kappa. SAMUEL SINN Bloomington B.S. Education Education Club. ANABEL SPROAT Hammond B.S. Education WALTER EDWARD STEBING Auburn B.S. Physical Education Delta Chi; Varsity Track; Freshman Football. ORVILLE A. STOVER Kokomo B.S. Physical Education Freshman Cross Coun- try. JOSEPH SZABO Farrell, Penn. B.S. Education Phi Delta Kappa; Varsity Football; Scabbard and Blade; Education Club; Jun- ior Math Club. LOUISE EVELYN VITTITOW Owensboro, Ky. B.S. Education Alpha Omicron Pi; LEATRICE DIANE WEINER Gary B.S. Education History Club; Eng- Assistant Publicity lish Club; Education Director, University Club; Y.W.C.A. Theatre; Y.W.C.A.; Chorus; Education Club. PAULINE EDWINNA WHANNEL Laurens, la. B.S. Educatio-i Education Club. LAURA WILKINS Gary B.S. Education President, Alpha Omi- cron Pi; W. A. A. Board; Vice-President, Education Club; Pres- ident, Pleiades; Coed Counseling; Chorus; Pan-Hellenic Council; MARTHA ANN WILSON Roachdale B.S. Education Kappa Phi; Education Club; Y.W.C.A. Y.W.C.A.; Senior Break- fast Committee; President, Archery Club. WILLIAM O. WILSON Oaktown B.S. Etlucation Delta Chi; Interna- tional Relations Club; Pershing Rifles; Y.M. C.A.; History Club; Education Club. JOHN ROBERT ZELLER Osceola B.S. Education Phi Delta Kappa; Y.M.C.A.; Education Club. 101 n LAMIIDA THETA Mrs. Carolyn Weems Bookwalter President Mrs. Helen Welch Painter Vice-President Jessie Burks Treasurer Grace Ashby ....Recording Secretary Composed of townswomen and graduates as well as student members, Pi Lambda Theta functions as an honorary organization whose purpose is to encourage a spirit of fellowship among women in the profession of teaching . In addition to the study of the theme Worthy Use of Leisure Time sev- eral additional activities were included in this year ' s extensive program. A joint dinner with the members of Phi Delta Kappa and the Education Club was given in December; three teas were held throughout the year in honor of outstanding students in education; a Freshman girl was given financial aid; the annual award of a fifty dollar scholarship was granted to a graduate student for superior research work; and a news letter was sent to each one of the 660 members who have been initiated into the chapter in the last twenty years. During the past year the local chapter of Pi Lambda Theta has tried to follow the purposes outlined by the national organization. A detailed report was given at the first fall meeting of the Biennial Council held in Palo Alto, California. Several Indiana University graduate students in education are now seeking the $250 scholarship offered for excellence in research work. Abbett, Elizabeth A. Baughman, Bonna Benninghoff, Mary Louise Burke, Margaret Caplin, Ellen Dudley, Mary Gertrude Eschleman, Virginia Lee Fogg, Susannc Gassor, Bei;ty Kathrine Hunt, Mary Beth Kettner, Alice Languell, Mrs. Alma Levin, Marian L. Martin, Mary Louise Mellingei ' , Mary Muench, Mildred Redden, Dorothy P. Wiesman, Martha Ellen Wirick, Jane E. Williams, Inez Irene Linder, Ruth Dale, Edythe Grant, Helen E. Stoops, Betty Vorgang, Georgia L. Whannel, Pauline E. Grace Ashby Mrs. Lora L. Batchelor Mrs. Carolyn W. Bookwalter Flossie Burks Jessie Burks Mrs. Geoffrey Carmichael Alma EngleBrecht Mrs. Bessie Harrell Mary Frances Hercamp Mrs. Lottie Kirby Dorothy McDaniel Elizabeth Moore Mrs. Helen W. Painter Cora Purdy Mrs. Helen M. Rogers Mary Sause Dr. Johnnie R. Smith Elizabeth Van Fleit Blanche Wellons Pauline Wildman Ethel Wooden Beulah Young Montana Grinstead Ag nas Elpers Rosealice Baldwin Doris Boettjer Roberta Brogan Barbara Congleton Lola Lennox Julia Peckinpaugh Dorothy Scoles Lucille Winn Mrs. Frieda Arnett Alta Bolenbaugh Mrs. Laura Childs Phena Deane Adda Fraley Amelia Peters Eva Pring FIELD MEMBERS Mrs. Mary Black Lola Smith Gladys Stanford ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Mrs. Lillian Jay Berry Dr. Cora B. Hennel Dr. Agnes E. Wells 102 PHI DELTA liAITA Harold CrabiU _._ ...President Luther Howard Vice-President Roger Shaw Secretary C. A. Murray Treasurer C. O. Dahle — Faculty Adviser Members of Phi Delta Kappa are selected from the Senior class and graduate students after rigid examination of their scholarship and per- sonal qualifications. The ideals of the organi- zation are scholarship, service, and leadership. Phi Delta Kappa is an active as well as an honorary fraternity. Programs relating to re- cent developments in educational research are given throughout the year. The fraternity sponsors the annual Bookmen ' s Picnic and the All-Men ' s Round-Up, which are outstanding events of the summer session. Since the organization now has over one thousand members, and it includes in its mem- bership the outstanding educators of the state, it has a powerful influence in determining state school policies. A State Council has re- cently been formed which includes in addition to Alpha chapter, the field chapters at Terre Haute, Ft. Wayne, Muncie, Hammond, Lafay- ette, South Bend, Indianapolis, and Evansville. Margie Taylor President Laura Wilkins Vice-President Robert Cartwright Secretary-Treasurer Aspiring teachers formed the Education Club on the Indiana campus in the spring of 193 5. Actually, the club was established as an off- spring of Pi Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kappa, honorary education organizations. The club meets once a month, and through these meetings promotes its purpose, that of fur- nishing underclassmen in the School of Educa- tion more opportunities for getting together and becoming acquainted. Dr. Henry L. Smith, Dean of the School of Education, guest speaker at one of the meetings, talked on the World Education Conference held in South America last summer. Another speaker was Mr. Harold Moore, Supervisor of the Bureau of Teacher Recommendations. The traditional banquet with Pi Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kappa was held in December. At a picnic this spring the new officers were introduced. To be eligible for membership in the Educa- tion Club, the student in education must have a C average and a sincere interest in the prob- lems of teaching. Pledges must be voted in by the members of the cabinet. EIJLICATIUN GLIIU 105 THE MUSICALLY-MINDED ARE MOLDED BY THE Professor Hoflfzimmer in- structing a pupil at the piano. It is practice that makes one per- fect. A mixed chorus learning a new song. MUSIC OF THE MASTERS. V. ' ««,, .: ' Within are the classrooms for future mu- sicians. Dean Robert L. Sanders of the School of Music. %. Dottie Silverthorn pauses between Music school classes to coke with Art Smith. Doodie Klingelhoffer finds what the score is. Proving that the slide is not limited to base- ball, Dick Bowles tears off a few on the trom- bone. Practicing her personality smile for her next solo with the Women ' s Glee Club is Tri Delt Margaret Hall. Maryel Patrick takes time off from winning beauty contests to compare notes with Art Singleton. JOHN BROOM Ft. Wayne M.A. Music RICHARD BOWLES Crown Point B.M. Piano KATHLEEN CLAPP Wichita, Kan. B.P.S.M. Music ROLAND CLYDE MALOTT Bloomington B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Phi Omega; Band. ALICE CHOUNING COFFIN Madison B.P.S.M. Music Women ' s Glee Club; Chora! Union; Pi- rates of Penzance . WARD WENDELL MARTINDALE Linton B.P.S.M. Music Sigma Pi; Band; H. M. S. Pinafore ; Pi- rates of Penzance ; Pro-Music Club. CHARLOTTE MARY BEER Osgood B.P.S.M. Music Choral Union; Wom- en ' s Glee Club; Sigma Alpha Iota; Y.W. C.A.; Orchestra; Pro- Music Club. MELBA E. COLEMAN Palmyra B.P.S.M. Music Kappa Phi; Choral Union; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Band. MARYEL PATRICK West Lafayette B.P.S.M. Music Chi Omega; Sigma Alpha Iota; Pro-Music Club; Y. W. C. A.; Choral Union; Wom- en ' s Glee Club; Arbu- tus Beauty Queen; Vice - President, Mc- Nutt for President Club. DARLENE BUSKIRK Ft. Wayne B.P.S.M. Music President, Kappa Del- ta; Pro-Music Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Orchestra; Chorus; Women ' s Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps; In- ternational Relations Club. DORIS JEAN FAIRCHILD Monon B.P.S.M. Music Pro -Music Club: Women ' s Glee Club; Choral Union. WILLIAM F. PIRTLE Linton B.P.S.M. Music Kappa Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; Orchestra; Ensemble; Pro-Music Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Orchestra; Pirates of Penzance . ELEANOR E. BUZAN Cicero B.P.S.M. Music Y.W.C.A.; Ensemble; Women ' s Glee Club; A Cappella Choir. GEORGE KEITH GNAGY Hamilton B.P.S.M. Music Kappa Kappa Psi; Pro - Music Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Band; Choral Union. MARGUERITE CATON Clay City B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Lambda Delta; Chorus; Women ' s Glee Club; Mortar Board Recognition; Coed Counseling; Secretary, Pro-Music Club. KATHRYN KLINGELHOFFER Aurora B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Chi Omega; President, Sigma Al- pha Iota; Pro-Music Club; Taps; Choral Un- ion; Women ' s Glee Club; Coed Band; Cabaret Show ; Jordan River Revue ; H.M.S. Pina- fore ; The Mikado ; The Pirates of Pen- zance . LORETTA CARLSON Gary B.P.S.M. Music W.A.A.; Women ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Orchestra. MARGARET HALL Williamsport B.M. Music, Voice Delta Delta Delta. DOROTHY SILVERTHORN Rossville B.P.S.M. Music Sigma Alpha Iota; Women ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Presi- dent, Pro-Music Club; Y.W.C.A.; Education Club; Pirates of Penzance fore ; Jordan River Revue . ARTHUR J. SINGLETON Albion B.P.S.M. Music Phi Eta Sigma; Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus; Orchestra. H.M.S. Pina- KATHLEEN STANTZ Switz City B.P.S.M. Music Choral Union; Wom- en ' s Glee Club; Coed Band; Women ' s Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps. MARGARET ALICE THOMPSON Salem B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Omicron Pi Sigma Alpha Iota Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A. Mikado ; Women ' s Glee Club. JANE M. WIRICK Star City B.P.S.M. Music MARTHA ELLEN WIESMAN Kokomo B.P.S.M. Music Alpha Omicron Pi; Sigma Alpha Iota; Pro-Music Club; Y.W.C.A. Council; Women ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Taps; Jordan River Revue ; Pirates of Pen- zance ; Silas the Chore Boy ; A Cappella Choir. That superlative piano duo of Shores and Beights stores away vitamins before sitting down to a short two-hour rehearsal. You don ' t have to be contrary to be a con- tralto, grins Marty Wiesman, A.O.Pi vocalist. Mute evidence that one way to get a ride is to blow your own horn is afforded by Bill Pirtle, Dock Thrasher trumpet man. 107 SHiMA ALl ' HA IOTA First Row Harriet Yenne Helen Burton Elmira Schickedanz Dorothy Silverthorn Vivian Isaacs Maryel Patrick Second Row Katheryn Klingelhoffer Mildred McBride Charlotte Beer Martha Ellen Wiesman Margaret Alice Thompson Katheryn Klingelhoffer President Elmira Schickedanz Vice-President Helen Burton Secretary Vivian Isaacs Treasurer Interest in Sigma Alpha Iota, a national professional mu- sic fraternity, was started on this campus last year by girls who are members of the Pro-Music Club. These girls petitioned the national office for a chapter at Indiana University which was granted on October 31, 1938. Iota Epsilon chapter officially was installed on the campus on December 17, 1939. The purpose of Sigma Alpha Iota is to promote and dig- nify the musical profession for women; to further the devel- opment of music in America; and to give moral and material aid to its members. Persons eligible for membership in Sigma Alpha Iota in- clude professional musicians and students in a school of music who are working toward a degree in music. Each chapter sets its own scholastic standards for membership. At Indiana Uni- versity the music student must have a B average, faculty recom- mendation, and have shown excellence in scholarship and musical ability. 108 P1 0 MUSIC CLUB First Row William Kleyla Doris Fairchild Charles Coats Richard Bowles Martha Wiesman Second Row Harriet Yenne Ned Gardner Dorothy Silverthorn Marguerite Caton Maryel Patrick Third Row Kathryn Klingelhoffer Charlotte Beer Jane Wirick Alice Coffin Darlenc Buskirk Fourth Row Margaret Alice Thompson Elmira Schickedanz Mildred McBride William Pirtle Vivian Isaacs Dorothy Silverthorn Fresident Mildred McBride Y ice-President Marguerite Caton Secretary Doris Fairchild Treasurer Pro-Music members are chiefly interested in establishing friendly relations between the faculty and the students of the Music School and in making Indiana University music-con- scious, both on campus and throughout the state. Their activi- ties start each fall with a tea, when new students, faculty mem- bers, and returning music students become acquainted. They assist at concerts and recitals both by performing and acting as ushers. Each year Pro-Music sponsors a light opera, the only such production given on the campus. Gilbert and Sullivan operas have been popular choices for the past few years, and their Gondoliers was given as the 1940 production. Members of this organization must have a B average, must be of Sophomore standing, and must have some fair degree of musical ability. 109 AMONG THE TOMES OF MAXWELL THE EMBUY The Laws still hopefully wait for a return smile. The Law Library alive with legal literature and lawyers. Alert law class. ONIC BARDS DEVELOP. Even the steps of old Maxwell Hall are strangely deserted. Dean Bernard C. Gavit of the School of Law. WILSON G. ANDERSON Anderson LL.B. Gamma Eta Gamma; Phi Eta Sigma; Law School Student Coun- ciL LEWIS N. ANGERMEIER Evansville LL.B. WARREN E. BAKER Ft. Wayne LL.B. Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Sigma Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Student Board of Editors, Indiana Law Journal. IRVING DAVID BERGER Logansport LL.B. Phi Beta Delta; Beta Gamma Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Student Board of Editors, In- diana Law Journal: Freshman Orientation Football Manager. EDWARD O. CRAFT Kingsbury LL.B. Phi Delta Phi; Chair- man, Student Board of Editors, Indiana Law Journal. Committee; Sophomore WILLIAM BURNS DOUGLASS Ft. Wayne LL.B. C. BEN DUTTON Hammond LL.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; President, Beta Gam- ma Sigma; President, Blue Key; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Vice - President, Law Club; Varsity Wrest- ling. JEANETTE LILLIAN FICHMAN Ft. Wayne LL.B. President, Sigma Epsilon. Phi JACK FINNEY Frankfort LL.B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta Phi; Law School Student Council. WADE H. FREE, JR. Anderson LL.B. Phi Kappa Psi; Taps; No, No, Nanette ; Men ' s Glee Club; Pershing Rifles; Scab- bard and Blade. MARK W. GRAY Indianapolis LL.B. Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta; Student Judge, Moot Court; Justice- Supreme Court of Maxwell; McNutt for President Club. WALLACE H. GROSBACH Sellersburg LL.B. Phi Delta Phi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band; Mc- Nutt for President Club. MELVAN M. JACOBS Kansas City, Mo. LL.B. JACK STOVER KALE South Bend LL.B. ROBERT ADRIAN MARKS Ladoga LL.B. Acacia; Phi Delta Phi. PAUL T. MARTIN Evansville LL.B. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Indi- ana Law Journal. FRANK CHARLES MIDDLETON Marion LL.B. Phi Delta Phi; In- ternational Relations Club; History Club. SAMUEL L. MITCHELL Salem LL.B. Phi Kappa Psi; Blue Key; Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Kappa Psi; Al- pha Phi Omega; Sen- ior Basketball Man- ager; Jackson Club; Senior Memorial Com- mittee. CHARLES L. MURRAY Selma LL.B. BERNARD M. NIEZER Ft. Wayne LL.B. Theta Pi; Beta Delta Phi. Ph: F. JAY NIMTZ South Bend LL.B. Phi Delta Phi; Presi- dent, Alpha Phi Omega; Blue Key; Phi Eta Sigma; Secretary, Sigma Epsilon Theta; President, Y.M.C.A.; Editor, Red Book; Editor, Freshman Guide; Student Board of Editors, Indiana Law Jour- nal; President, Flame Club. The laws give three cheers for the duck be- fore he goes on the block in traditional pre- Homecoming day manner. The most typical law student with a bunch of his buddies between classes. Just hanging around until the Law dance, was the comment of this legal loafer. A sextet of Pi Phis arrives by taxi to face the lecherous laws in their annual Alumni hall fi- asco. Numbers 135 and 136 of the Supreme Sev- enty check in with Mad Monk before the dance. 113 Bus Waddle and Claude Warren dispense with hymn books and carol at the Law Taxi Dance. Prof. Brown and Bob Wrege laugh on as Harriet Yenne is proclaimed queen of the Mad Monk ' s dance by Dan Bretz. Bretz cavorts with the queenly crown. Carmen Cook catches up on her back read- ing on ways to win friends and influence people and lawyers. Bob Wrege doing Little Nell in the Wrege manner. JOSEPH AUSTIN THOMAS PATRICK THOMAS J. ISADORE DAVID JACOB G. RUDY MARTIN JOHN ROBERT L. NOEL Indianapolis RADIGAN ROSENFELD Floyd Knobs SCHIESSLER STEVENSON Kokomo LL. B. Gary South Bend LL.B. Grosse Pointe Park, Linton LL.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; LL.B. LL.B. Phi Delta Phi. Mich. LL.B. Skull and Crescent; Phi Delta Phi. Kappa Sigma; Phi Hillel Foundation; LL.B. Delta Tau Delta; Var- Freshman Debate Delta Phi; Student Debate Team. Phi Delta Phi. sity Football; Phi Del- Team. Judge, Moot Court; Board of Managers, Law Club. ta Phi. DALE H. TANNER C. RICHARD HENRY BABCOCK MELVILLE E. JOHN L. BROOKS WYNNE Plymouth TEMPLETON WILLIAM A. VOSS WALKER, JR. WATSON WILLIAMS Bedford LL.B. Terre Haute Hammond Evansville Greenfield Indianapolis LL.B. Sigma Chi; Gamma LL.B. LL.B. LL.B. LL.B. LL.B. Beta Theta Pi; Phi Eta Gamma; Sphinx Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Tau Delta; Sec- Phi Delta Phi. Phi Delta Phi; Presi- Beta Kappa; Phi Del- Club; Football; Inter- Delta Phi. retary, Board of Man- dent. Law Club. ta Phi; Student Board fraternity Council; agers, Law Club; of Editors, Indiana Freshman Blue Key President, Phi Delta Law Journal. Recognition. Phi. in William Voss Magisfer Mark W. Gray Exchequer Miles W. Patrick Clerk F. J. Nimtz Historian Alfred Evens Faculty Adviser The University of Michigan was the site of the original founding of Phi Delta Phi in 1869. The different chapters are called Inns after the old English Inns of Court. Foster Inn on this campus was established in 1900. Phi Delta Phi was founded for the advancement of high scholarship and culture; the opposition to corrupt practices; and rigid adherence to a code of professional ethics and culture in the profession of lawyers. Members are selected from the group with at least a C+ average. This year there are thirty-two active members and fourteen pledges. During the meetings controversial points that are not studied in class are discussed for a closer contact with actual practice. Among the prominent alumni of Foster Inn of Phi Delta Phi are Paul V. McNutt, Honorary Member Judge George L. Tremain of the Indiana Supreme Court and Judge Curtis G. Shake, also of the Indiana Supreme Court, and Dean Bernard C. Gavit of the Indiana Law School. First Row: Paul Martin, Jack Thompson, F. Jay Nimtz, Miles Patrick, William A. Voss, Mark W. Gray, Claude Warren, Jacob Rudy, William Lienberger, Thomas Radigan. Second Row: Edward Craft, Brooks Wynne, Frank Middleton, Silas Kivett, Howard Hawkins, Martin J. Schiessler, Gerald Ewbank, Wallace Grosbach, Gale Graber, Earl Johnson, Henry Walker. Third Row: Bernard Niezer, Richard Templeton, Ben Button, Dave Peters, Jack Finney, Edward Waddle, John Beckman, Ronald Beard, Forrest Lacey, Jr. a I fWTI k mmmm m That pause at the end of a routine school day — Beverly Carraway entertains Catherine Cherry and Elizabeth Brown. Kappas enjoy a musicale session as Marge Little renders Twelfth Street Rag . An intimate chat just among the girls at Memorial Hall. Jean Dickson shows the sisterly spirit at the Pi Phi House, as she assists Pearle Cartwright with the finishing touches. Life among the polka-dot pajamas, at the Sigma Nu House, starring Stigdon and Williamson. Cagey cameraman catches Kappa Cuties cutting capers con- cealed by curtains. Bill Tipmore prepar es to trump his partner ' s ace in D. U. card game ' ' ■' ! ' ■' ?$■• ! — (cont ' d, in next week ' s installment). The old one-two administered aptly, as Rocky Ford hot- foots Bill Swinford. 117 ' THE NATURE OF THE BODY IS THE BEfilNNINO Entrance to the new State T Board of Health. Medical students slide through a tough course. Dr. Badertscher ' s Histology laboratory. OF MEDICAL SCIENCE. ' Entrance for all who aspire to medicine. Activity and orderliness characterize the Medical office. E. Harold Laws President C. Cham McVaugh Vice-President R. E. Miller Secretary Andrew Offutt Treasurer Morris Snyder President E. R. Rose Vice-President Robert Maurer Secretary John Ling Treasurer Charles Green President J. C. Brink Vice-President Robert Peacock Treasurer Roger Isenhour Vice-President Juanita Simpson Secretary J. W. Patterson Treasurer 120 The Senior year is the year to which all medics look forward with such eager expectancy and enter with so little practical knowledge that its course of clinics and lectures is surprisingly enlightening. Each Senior has at some time caught himself wondering when he really would feel capable of entering a world of people with both real and imaginary illnesses and how he would distinguish one from the other, thus plan his course of treatment. His last year imparts to him the necessary degree of confidence, yet clearly points out to him his limitations, and shows him the necessity of continued study. Morning clinics at the University and City Hos- pitals are more carefully organized than ever before, and show correspondingly greater attendance. The afternoon lectures in Surgery, Therapeutics and the specialties are more instructive than ever; very few Seniors cut classes without feeling that they have missed something. This, the last year of the medical student ' s formal training, is one which gives him more practical experience in the medical profession. After his first year of exacting work at Indian- apolis, the medical student enters the Junior year with different and more difficult courses on his schedule. The Junior student must take an advanced anatomy course, which necessitates a clear understanding of previously assembled anatomical material. A course in surgery is also a part of the Junior ' s curriculum. This year, for the first time, a new course in psychiatry was offered to members of the Junior class. Dr. Boyd, the newest member of the faculty, had charge of this class. After completing his first year in medical school at Indiana University, the prospective doctor enters the Indianapolis school as a Sophomore. This year, with its courses in biochemistry, bacteriology, pathol- ogy, and pharmacology, is as important as it is diffi- cult. The second semester provides courses in medicine, physical diagnosis, and clinical neurology. One of the most interesting and unforgettable classes is phar- macology dog laboratory. With the three years of pre-medical work out of the way, the Freshman med student settles down to some real book learning, to say nothing of the many laboratory courses that go with the books. No more does he find himself having week night dates, and going to shows before an exam, but instead he amuses himself at home with a microscope and a box of slides. No longer do exams frighten him, as now they are a weekly occurrence. At last the student has settled down for four years of a strenuous work in order to obtain a position as interne, and perhaps later as a resident physician, where he may then work all the more. On the Bloomlngton campus, however, he is given the very best opportunity to prepare himself for his profession. The building where he works, and the equipment with which he works are the very best that are obtainable for training him. After a year of study in the new medical building, he goes to the Indianapolis Medical Center, where he obtains the other three-fourths of his formal training for the medical profession. 121 First Row: J. Hannah, F. Gardner, W. Yocum, W. Young, V. Albright, C. Jones, E. Rose, P. Hedrick, R. Yocum, R. Axtell, W. Browning. Second Row: R. Parrish, J. Miklozek, L. Kresler, J. Baughman, L. Schmidt, C. Deppe, M. Beall, N. Hibner, L. Henderson, B. Kintner, W. Krieble, J. Davis. Third Row: L. Dobrin, J. Humphreys, J. Santangelo, W. Kendrick, R. Pearce, R. Donnelly, L. Nonte, C. Klamer, M. Ferrell, M. Snyder, R. Deputy. Fourth Row: L. Steele, J. Whallon, M. Krajac, H. Joseph, M. Harden, M. Hillings- worth, C. Sputh. Fifth Row: J. Warriner, J. Hummons, P. Rothrock, R. Hummel, W. Wissman, J. Eastman, R. Schell, L. Brayton. Sixth Row: H. Ziperman, S. J. Smith, F. Allen, D. Vivian, J. P. Scherschel. Seventh Row: A. Goodrich, J. Overmyer, G. Schuchman, A. Schappell. First Row: H. Streib, J. Powell, J. Al- ward, C. Sussman, R. Pryor, F. Sheeley, M. Moss, M. Bassett, M. Crandall, L. Schoff, M. Craig, W. Karsell, V. VoUrath, T. Schlaegel, A. Applegate, A. Ritz. Second Row: P. Burns, H. Tyner, R. Jordan, E. Thompson, J. Westfall, F. Bryan, R. Kinzie, C. Elliott, W. Bash, J. Davis, J. Worley, E. Ravdin, J. Brink, S. Marks, R. Whitcomb. Third Row: A. Kahn, J. Buchmeier, L. Muller, J. Humphrey, J. Roth, C. Kuehne, R. Holfast, O. Hitch, M. Snyder, W. Brit- ton, C. Green, G. Marr, R. Craig, R. Wool- ery, J. Schechter, J. Bjorkland, J. McBane, A. Bachman. Fourth Row: G. Godersky, B. Masters, C. Martin, C. Latshaw, F. Whitlock, H. Burdette, D. Gaulke, J. Wohlfeld, J. Ben- nett, F. Lafollette, R. Getz, J. Nill, C. Williams, J. Riedcr, R. Peacock, D. McCart- ney. Fifth Row: E. Roll, R. Cannon, P. Detraz, R. Buckingham, F. Denny, R. Dilts, M. Denny, F. Kuhn. Sixth Row: D. Smith, M. Green, F. Mc- Donald, W. Polhemus, J. Korn, H. Norton, B. Laming, R. Bill, W. Kalb. Seventh Row: R. Switzer, D. Hampshire, A. Hauscr, J. Jewett, W. Kurtz, S. Minton, O. Bowen, T. Ditmer, G. Bloom, W. Sholty. 122 INniANAFOLIS MEDICAL CENTER DR. WILLIS D. GATCH ¥ The Indiana University Medical Center exists as an example of the ideal functional medical unit. The Medical School, The Nurses ' Training School, The Dietitians ' Training School, and the four hospitals are now so closely integrated that an almost unbelievable degree of efficiency has been attained. Already widely known as a teaching center, this campus continues to grow in importance in national medical circles. Now made up of eight imposing buildings — the Medical School, Long Hospital, the Clinical Building, Coleman Hospi- tal, Riley Hospital, Rotary Convalescent Home, Ball Residence for Nurses, and the recently occupied State Board of Health Building, The Medical Center gives one the impression of a quiet, beautiful village within a busy city. The teaching staff, headed by Dr. Gatch, and the adminis- trative force under the supervision of Mr. Martin, work to- gether in maintaining the highest standards of instruction to students and service to the patients. With the cooperation of the Indianapolis City Hospital, the Center provides clinical teaching facilities second to none. The eyes of the people of Indiana are now intently focused on this institution, which is daily fulfilling the expectations of a progressive commonwealth. 123 Ballou and Flick take a lesson in physical therapy. Ballou seems to like massage. Dr. Gatch gets off a good one. P HARRY ALDRICH Angola M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. EUGENE W. AUSTIN Anderson M.D. Alpha Tau Omega; Nu Sigma Nu; Inter- fraternity Council. ROBERT C. BADERTSCHER Bloomington M.D. Sigma Chi; Phi Chi; Glee Club; Sopho- more Swimming Man- ager. JOSEPH E. BALL Indianapolis M.D. Phi Rho Sigma; Delta Alpha Pi; Club Brinker. NATHAN BANDER New York City M.D. President, Phi Delta Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma. EDWIN B. BAILEY Linton M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. ERNEST R. BARNETT Terre Haute M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. ERNEST R. BEAVER, JR. Rensselaer JENE R. BENNETT Plymouth RAY H. BURNIKEL Evansville GEORGE E. BROWN Greenwood BASIL KEMP BYRNE Georgetown PERRY A. CAMPBELL Liberty HERBERT O. CHAITIN Vincennes M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Golf Team. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Nu Sigma Nu; Vice- President, Freshmen Medical Class. Phi Chi; Alpha Omega; Presid( Freshman Med Class; Treasurer, , ior Medical Class. Phi ;nt, ical Jun- Phi Kappa Psi. Th eta Kappa PsI. Theta Kappa Psi. Phi Chi; Varsity Track and Cross Country; President, Skeleton Club. PAUL ALEXANDER CLOUSE Evansville M.D. Phi Beta Pi. WILLIAM COHEN South Bend M.D. WENDELL E. COVALT Muncie M.D. Phi Chi. LEO F. CONNOY Indianapolis M.D. Phi Rho Sigma. WILLIAM HARRIS DAVIS, JR. Asheville, N. C. M.D. Club Brinker. SAM J. DAVIS Brazil M.D. Phi Kappa PsI; Presi- dent, Nu Sigma Nu; President, Sopiiomorc Medical Class; Club Brinker. PAUL G. DINTAMAN Richmond M.D. Phi Beta Pi. BASIL DULIN Bedford M.D. RICHARD E. DUKES Dugger M.D. Sigma Pi; Phi Beta Pi. WALLACE K. DYER Evansville M.D. Kappa Sigma; Phi Rho Sigma. EDWIN RAY EATON Indianapolis M.D. Treasurer, Phi Chi; Captain, Golf Team. PAUL D. EIDSON Indianapolis M.D. PhiChi;ClubBrinlier. JOHN M. ENGLE Winchester M.D. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Chi. PAUL V. EVANS Indianapolis M.D. Theta Kappa Psi ; Alpha Omega Alpha. JAMES RUPERT WARREN FISCHER JOHN J. FLICK EPHRAIM L. MEREDITH BYE JOSEPH E. EDGAR ALLEN FANT Gary Indianapolis FOSBRINK FLANIGAN FREEMAN GARLAND Indianapolis M.D. M.D. Vallonia Milltown Syracuse Indianapolis M.D. Nu Sigma Nu; Editor, Phi Chi. M.D. MD. M.D. M.D. Delta Upsilon; Phi Medical Section, Ar- President, Theta Kappa Delta Chi; Phi Beta Phi i Delta Th eta; Beta Pi. butus. Psi. Pi; Pershing Rifles; Glee Club; Chorus. Th Del Clu eta Kappa Ita Omicron b Brinker. Psi; Chi; 125 •Mfc? « m Foreigners, no less. Dr. Gustafson has Mitch Taylor in a spot. This man, Spahr, pours ether with his own technique. MARTIN GARFINKLE Indianapolis M.D. Secretary, Phi Delta Epsilon. JEROME A. GRAF Bloomfield M.D. Theta Kappa Psi. S. PHILLIP GRILLO Gary M.D. Phi Beta Pi. BERNARD R HALL Walton M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Brinker. Club DANIEL M. HARE Evansville M.D. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Pi. DAVID HADLEY Indianapolis M.D. Phi Rho Sigma; Treas- urer, Freshman Medi- cal Class; Club Br inker. EMORY D. HAMILTON Kendallvillc M.D. Treasurer, Phi Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma. E. M. HOETZER Ft. Wayne M.D. Phi Beta Pi. A. LEE HICKMAN, JR. Hammond M.D. Delta Chi; Kappa Psi. STERLING P. HOFFMANN Ft. Wayne M.D. Theta Phi Beta Pi. ANNE HOLOVACHKA Gary M.D. President, Nu Sigma Phi. JAMES M. HUNDLEY Summitville M.D. Phi Chi; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Omega Alpha; Landon Re- search Fellow; Band. ARTHUR N. JAY Indianapolis M.D. Nu Sigma Nu. DEAN B. JACKSON Angola M.D. Delta Tau Delta; Phi Rho Sigma; Glee Club; Yell Leader. GEORGE MONROE LINDEN F. ROBERT KABEL JULIEN C. JOHN KITCHEL KNIGHT L. CARROLL E. KERN JEWELL JOHNSON Winchester KENNEDY Indianapolis KISSINGER Lakewood, Ohio Indianapolis Newtown M.D. Indianapolis M.D. Hamilton M.D. M.D. M.D. Phi Chi. M.D. M.D. Phi Beta Pi. Phi Rho Sigma; Rifle Nu Sigma Nu. Lambda Chi Alpha; ' ■Nu Sigma Nu. Team. Phi Chi; Phi Phi Phi; Treasurer, Sophomore Medical Class; Glee Clu lb. KURT B. KLEE Indianapolis M.D. Delta Up silon; Nu Sigma Nu; Pershing Rifles; Cabaret Sho w ; Interfrater- nity Council. JACOB M. KLINE MAX R. LONG Ligonier, Penn. Marion M.D. M.D. Vice-President, Ph i Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Epsilon. Chi; Delta Omicron Chi; Business Man- ager, Medical Sec- tion, Arbutus; Club Brinker. E. HAROLD LAWS Milan M.D. Phi Chi; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Alpha Omega Alpha; President, Sen- ior Medical Class. CLARENCE ALFRED LUCAS Indianapolis M.D. I. U. Symphony Or- chestra. CARL D. MARTZ Anderson M.D. Alpha Tau Omega; Nu Sigma Nu; Delta Omicron Chi. ROBERT H. MASCHMEYER Indianapolis M.D. Alpha Omega Alpha LEONARD J. MORGRETTE Pcnnville M.D. DWAIN E. MINGS Kokomo M.D. Phi Chi. ROLAND E. MILLER Plymouth M.D. Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Secretary, Senior Medical Class. ROBERT B. MILLER Nappanee M.D. Delta Upsilon; Rho Sigma. Phi CHARLES W. MORRIS Rockville M.D. Phi Beta Pi. HARRY N, McCLELLAND Indianapolis M.D. Sigma Chi; Phi Chi; Secretary, Junior Med- ical Class. VIRGIL CARROL McMAHAN Bedford M.D. 127 ■• ' . Dr. Kime: What goes thru this foramen, Bander? Anne wants an explanation from Dr. De Ar- mond. One of J. C. ' s angle shots of the medical center ' s newest building. I CHARLES CHAMP McVAUGH Pendleton M.D. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Rho Sigma; Vice- President, Senior Med- ical Class. JOSEPH E. MULLIN Rockfield M.D. Delta Chi; Phi Beta Pi; Skull and Cres- cent. WYNDHAM H. NUTTER Morristown M.D. ANDREW CARROLL OFFUTT Spiceiand M.D. Phi Delta Theta; Treasurer, Senior Medical Class. ABRAHAM OWEN Bloomington M.D. JAMES D. PEIRCE Indianapolis M.D. Phi Delta Theta; Pres- ident, Phi Rho Sigma; President, Junior Medical Class; Club Brinker. WALTER EDWARD PELCZAR Hobart M.D. Phi Beta Pi. ROBERT W. PHARES Greentown M.D. Phi Chi; Alpha Ome- ga Alpha. JOSEPH CEDRIC REED Rochester M.D. Phi Chi. H. LESTER REED Vincennes M.D. Theta Kappa Psi; Band. ROBERT RANG Washington M.D. Phi Beta Pi. ROBERT ABRAHAM SAIDE Michigan City M.D. Vice-President, Theta Kappa Psi. CHARLES VICTOR SAGE, JR. Brownstown M.D. Phi Chi. JAMES C. SCHORNICK Wabash M.D. Phi Beta Pi. JACK C. SHRADER Indianapolis M.D. Phi Rho Sigma; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa ; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sec- retary, Freshman Med- ical Class; Interna- tional Relations Club; Glee Club. Phi FREDERICK HARRISON SIMMONS Goshen M.D. Beta Pi. JOHN FRANKLIN SPAHR, JR. Huntington M.D. Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sig- ma Xi; Kappa Phi Sigma; Vice-President, Junior Medical Class. E. B. STEELE Sullivan M.D. Phi Chi; Phi Eta Sigma. ELSWORTH KEENE STUCKY Indianapolis M.D. Phi Chi. JOHN STEPLETON Vevay M.D. ■Phi Beta Pi. GLENN L. SWIHART Elkhart M.D. Phi Beta Pi. MITCHELL TAYLOR Indianapolis M.D. Kappa Delta Rho; Phi Rho Sigma. PAUL V. THOMPSON Indianapolis M.D. Phi Beta Pi. FRED L. TOUMEY Ridgeville M.D. Phi Chi. Ph WALTER C. TWINEHAM Indianapolis M.D. Rho Sigma. WILLIAM C. VAN NESS Summitville M.D. Phi Beta Pi; Phi Sigma. Eta WILLIAM M. WEBB Indianapolis M.D. Delta Tau Delta; Phi Rho Sigma; Club Brinker. DONALD K. WINTER Logansport M.D. President, Phi Beta Pi; Club Brinker. C. WILLARD WORTH Indianapolis M.D. Phi Delta Theta; Sphinx Club; Vice- President, Phi Rho Sigma; Vice-President, Sophomore Medical Class; Club Brinker. DALE E. YORK Bloomington M.D. Phi Chi. 129 Alpha Omega Alpha, national medical scholastic fraternity, was founded in 1902 at the University of Illinois. The Indiana chapter was chartered in 1916. Election to membership in this society is one of the most coveted medical honors. Each spring those who have lead their class in scholarship throughout the four year medical course are granted membership. The new members are usually second semester seniors, but a few juniors are awarded this special honor. 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 RoUa N. Harger Edwin N. Kime Isadora J. Kwitney Kenneth G. Kohlstaedt J. Jerome Littell Wendell D. Little 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 Paul L. Rieth Carroll B. Warren Cleo C. Shullenberger Lyman D. Eaton John F. Spahr Jack C. Shrader Robert H. Maschmeycr Robert W. Phares James M. Hundley Elbert H. Laws Paul V. Evans Francis J. Kubik Maynard C. Shiffer 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 130 First Row Joe Freeman 40, Syracuse Perry Campbell ' 40, Liberty Robert Saide ' 40, Michigan City John Nil) ' 42, Ft. Wayne Raymond J. Getz, Jr. ' 42, Ft. Wayne Basil Byrne ' 40, Georgetown Second Row John Murray ' 43, Dunkirk Basil Dulin ' 40, Bedford Tom Sheller ' 42, Bremen H. Lester Reed ' 40, Vincennes Jerome A. Graf ' 40, Bloomfield LuUus Muller ' 42, Fowler Third Row A. Lee Hickman ' 40, Hammond G. E. Brown 40, Greenwood Earl Applegate ' 42, Frankfort Horace Norton ' 42, Plainville Paul Eidson ' 40, Indianapolis Howard Rowe ' 43, Rochester Fourth Row Forrest LaFoUette 42, New Salisbury Joseph A. Santangelo ' 41, Newark, N. J. Charles Latshaw ' 42, Carlisle William Schafer ' 43, Decatur Ephraim Fosbrink 40, Vallonia Leo R. Nonte ' 41, Loogootee Fifth Row Victor Vollrath ' 42, Indianapolis George Stauffer ' 43, Elkhart Nevin Aiken ' 43, Ft. Wayne Edward Kattany ' 43, Indianapolis Robert La Follette ' 43, New Salisbury Robert Switzer ' 42, Bloomington Hugh Williams ' 43, Martinsville f 9 :f S $! I Ephraim L. Fosbrink Pryton Robert A. Saide Vice-Pryton Joseph W. Freeman Recorder Jerome A. Graf Bursar Basil B. Dulin Historian Theta Kappa Psi, the first medical fraternity in existence, was founded in 1877 at New Haven, Connecticut. The Gamma Upsilon Chapter was established at Indiana in 1924. There are fifty-seven collegiate chapters, and graduate chap- ters have been formed in twenty-six cities. The primary function of the group is to promote friend- ship, character, and scholarship. Interesting and instructive speakers, medical motion pic- tures, literature reviews, and informal discussions are featured. Socially, the chapter participates in interfraternlty dances, in- formal outings, Bloomington pledge banquets, and the special Senior Farewell party. The formal season is closed with the annual initiation banquet and dance when the senior consid- ered to have been the most valuable man to Gamma Upsilon Chapter is awarded the coveted honorary key. 131 W M First Row S. Phillip Grillo ' 40, Gary John Alward ' 42, South Bend Franklin Bryan ' 42, Ft. Wayne Paul Dintaman ' 40, Richmond J. Colin Elliott ' 42, Middlebury Carroll Kern ' 40, Lakewood Otis Bowen ' 42, Crown Point Second Row Meredith Flanigan ' 40, Milltown James Fant ' 40, Indianapolis Walter Pelczar ' 40, Gary Jay Overmyer ' 41, Winchester Ernest Beaver, Jr. ' 40, Terre Haute George Bloom ' 42, Middlebury Bernard Hall ' 40, Walton Third Row Lowell Steele ' 41, Lafayette Charles Martin ' 42, Logansport Charles Morris ' 40, Rockville Charles Miller ' 41, N. Carlisle Edward Muentzer ' 41, Vincennes Robert Dilts ' 42, Ft. Wayne Donald Winter ' 40, Logansport Fourth Row James Schornick ' 40, Wabash Paul Clouse ' 40, Evansville Robert Fenneman ' 41, Evansville John Heubi ' 41, Jeffersonville Edmund Roll ' 42, Frankfort Sterling Hoffmann ' 40, Ft. Wayne Daniel Hare ' 40, Evansville Fifth Row Frederick Simmons ' 40, Goshen Joe Humphreys ' 41, Cloverdale Emory Hamilton ' 40, Kendallville M. Quentin Kintner ' 40, North Manchester Glenn Swihart ' 40, Elkhart Paul Thompson ' 40, Indianapolis Joseph Mullin ' 40, Rockfield Sixth Row William Sholty ' 42, Lafayette William VanNess ' 40, Summitville James Davis ' 41, Anderson Russell Morrical ' 41, Logansport John Stepleton ' 40, Vevay Robert Rang ' 40, Washington Richard Dukes ' 40, Dugger 132 Donald K. Winter Archon Sterling P. Hoffmann Yke-Archon James M. Davis Secretary Emory D. Hamilton Treasurer The Omicron Alpha Zeta chapter of Phi Beta Pi was estab- lished at Bloomington in 1905, fourteen years after the found- ing of the fraternity at the West Pennsylvania Medical College in 1891. Forty chapters in prominent medical schools all over the country make it a strong national organization. The flower is the white chrysanthemum, and the colors are green and white. The local chapter maintains one of the largest enrollments of active members among medical fraternities and boasts of a very active alumni association; the national association now ap- proaches 19,000 in membership. The active chapter at Indianapolis and the pledge chapter at Bloomington combine to keep up high scholastic standards and promote fellowship among medical students. Social activi- ties include the Christmas formal dinner dance, the spring initia- tion dance, stag parties, and smokers and luncheons shared by both chapters. To these are added movies and lectures of a more educational nature. The year ' s activities make up a well rounded program of social and educational character. 133 First Row Roland Miller ' 40, Plymouth Edgar Hawk ' 42, New Palestine Theodore Schlaegel, Jr. ' 42, Indian- apolis Philip Rothrock ' 41, Bloomington Eugene Austin ' 40, Anderson John Westfall ' 42, Indianapolis Second Row Edwin Bailey ' 40, Linton Jene Bennett ' 40, Plymouth Carl Martz ' 40, Indianapolis Sam J. Davis ' 40, Brazil Charles Kime ' 43, Indianapolis Linden Johnson ' 40, Wingate Third Row Wallace Bash ' 42, Warsaw Griffith Marr ' 42, Columbus Ottis Olvey ' 41, Noblesville Irwin Hostetter ' 41, Roachdale C. Karl Kuehne, Jr. ' 42, South Ber Arthur Jay ' 40, Indianapolis Fourth Row Warren Polhemus ' 42, Anderson Robert Horton ' 43, Huntington C. P. Van Meter ' 43, Shoals Arthur Schappell ' 41, Indianapolis Joseph Worley ' 42, Indianapolis Myron Green ' 42, Indianapolis Fifth Row Knight Kissinger ' 40, Hamilton Warren Fischer ' 40, Gary Morris Snyder ' 41, Amboy Jack Hannah ' 41, Rising Sun Lowell Henderson ' 41, Kokomo Joe Boughman ' 41, Kokomo Sixth Row William Kendrick ' 41, Indianapolis Kurt Klee ' 40, Indianapolis William Karsell ' 42, Indianapolis Harry Aldrich ' 40, Angola John Spahr, Jr. ' 40, Huntington Ernest Barnett ' 40, Terre Haute 134 Sam J. Davis President Arthur Jay Vice-President Roland E. Miller Secretary Ottis Olvey Treasurer Nu Sigma Nu was founded March 2, 1882, by six students of the University of Michigan School of Medicine. The na- tional organization after fifty-eight years of steady growth, is now composed of thirty-eight chapters in the United States and Canada, its membership totaling some 10,000 men. It claims among its ranks such names at Mayo, Gushing, Osier and others who have contributed brilliantly both to the theory and the practice of medicine. With the aid of a national convention held on alternate years since its origination, as well as a permanent but progressive national leadership, each chapter of Nu Sigma Nu finds itself an integral member of a closely knit nation-wide organization which is quick to accept any steady trend toward the advance- ment of scientific medicine. The local charter was granted in 1908 and the chapter be- gan at Bloomington with eighteen students of the Indiana Uni- versity School of Medicine and eleven men already in the practice of their profession. In 1912 the chapter was moved to Indianap- olis where it has been located since that year. Its fifty-two student members hold monthly meetings to which outstanding men are invited to lecture. Business meetings are held at the Medical Center. Each spring the fraternity holds an initiation dance and banquet which is attended by active and alumni members from all over the state. A state alumni organization of several hundred physicians, keeping in close contact with the chapter in Indianapolis, affords guidance and fraternity fellowship. 135 The present Phi Chi medical fraternity is the result of the consoHdation of two fraternities, both having the same name. The so-called Northern division of Phi Chi was founded at the University of Vermont, March 31, 1898. The Southern division was established at the Louisville Medical School on October 26, 1894. The local chapter was chartered at the old Indiana Medical College, forerunner of our present school, in 1903, as one of fif- teen chapters of the original Southern Phi Chi. In 1905 the two fraternities were fused, resulting in the establishment of the grand chapter of the Southern group as the governing body for the combined organization. The local chapter of Phi Chi is the oldest medical fraternity in the State, and numbers among its alumni many of the State ' s foremost clinicians and instructors. The fraternity imposes certain prerequisites of character and scholastic achievement on its members in the interest of maintaining ever-rising standards within its own group and within the medical profession in general. Ii6 PTZS l9iHi] First Row- Robert Kabel ' 40, Wingate Robert W. Phares ' 40, Greentown Harry McClelland ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Maurer ' 41, Brazil Ray Burnikel ' 40, Evansville John Flick ' 40, Indianapolis E. Harold Laws ' 40, Milan Fourth Row Jim Jewett ' 43, Carmel Albin Jankowitz ' 43, Gary William Donham ' 43, Bicknell Wendell Covalt ' 40, Muncie J. Guy Hoover ' 43, Boonville John Ling ' 41, Hebron Paul Eidson ' 40, Indianapolis Second Row Joseph Reed ' 40, Rochester Elsworth Stucky ' 40, Indianapolis Dale York ' 40, Bloomington Woodson Young ' 41, Arlington Richard Dunham ' 43, Worthington Richard K. Parrish ' 41, Decatur Fifth Row Herschell Kopp ' 43, Indianapolis William Clunie ' 43, Corydon James A sher ' 43, New Augusta Roger Isenhour ' 43, IndianapoHs Herbert Cormican ' 43, Elkhart Max R. Long ' 40, Marion Wendell Prough ' 43, Bluff ton William Franklin ' 43, Indianapolis Third Row Lester L. Hardy ' 40, Lexington William Millikan ' 43, Indianapolis Joe Jewett ' 42, Carmel John Marlowe ' 43, East Chicago John M. Engle ' 40, Winchester John A. Crawford ' 43, Indianapolis Herbert Chattin ' 40, Vincennes Sixth Row Jack Blackstone ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Badertscher ' 40, Bloomington Robert Weber ' 43, Muncie Charles Sage ' 40, Brownstown William Dannacher ' 43, Wabash Fred Tourney ' 40, Ridgeville James Hundley ' 40, Summitville Edwin R. Eaton ' 40, Indianapolis 137 First Row: Dorothy Darling ' 41, Gary; Martha Crandall ' 40, Princeton; Margaret Bassett ' 42, Thorntown; Anne Holovachka ' 40, Gary. Second Row: Helen Sisson ' 42, Pendleton; Lois Shoff ' 42, Flora; Mary Beall ' 41, Rushville. Gamma Chapter of the Nu Sigma Phi was organized in February, 1909, by several alumnae of the Alpha chapter practic- ing in Indianapolis. Initially there were fourteen graduate mem- bers from other medical schools, four students and ten graduate physcians. At present there are several graduate members, eleven students, and approximately sixty graduate physicians. The fraternity functions in the interest of women in medi- cine and the maintenance of high ideals in the profession. High- lights in the chapter have been the conventions in 1927 and 1939 when the chapter was host to the national organization. Dr. Olga Bonke-Booher was elected Noble Grand and Dr. Mary Alice Norris, Editor of the Nu Sigma Phi News. 138 First Row: Mrs. John Flick, Mrs. August Hasewinkle, Mrs. Jack Shields, Mrs. Burgess Boone, Mrs. Ellsworth Stucky, Mrs. Joseph E. Ball, Mrs. Harry Aldrich, Mrs. Julien Kennedy, Mrs. Jack D. Hull, Mrs. Ray H. Burnikel, Mrs. Lester Reed, Mrs. Forest Kendall. Second Row: Mrs. Norman R. Cook, Mrs. Ralph Wilmore, Mrs. Edgar A. Gar- land, Mrs. Tom Shields, Mrs. Tom G. Sheller, Mrs. Lawrence J. Sims, Mrs. Mitchell Taylor, Mrs. Basil Byrne, Mrs. Ray D. Miller, Mrs. Carl D. Martz, Mrs. William B. Rossman, Mrs. Charles Gillespie. Third Row: Mrs. Richard Pryor, Mrs. Walter Twineham, Mrs. Robert M. Han- sell, Mrs. George A. Vail, Mrs. WiUiam C. Stafford, Mrs. Lowell Redding, Mrs. John Smith. Mrs. Joseph E. Ball President Mrs. Harry Aldrich Vice-President Mrs. Julien Kennedy Secretary Mrs. Ellsworth Stucky Treasurer Prior to 1930 Gamma Phi Zeta sorority was known as the I.U. Medic Dames Club which was formed in 1928. In 1929 the advantages of a Greek letter sorority were recognized and on May 7, 1930, the Alpha chapter was founded. Gamma Phi Zeta is a social organization and its existing pur- pose is to facilitate acquaintances among the wives of medical students, internes, residents, and practicing physicians now in Indianapolis and those who will arrive from Bloomington in the future. Meetings are held twice a month at the home of a member or in a downtown hotel. These meetings are devoted mainly to some form of social recreation. The sorority colors are light green, pink, and rose and the sorority flower is the Sweetheart rose. Founders Day is commemorated in May by a dinner which the members give for their husbands. Their relationship furnishes a common bond among the members of Gamma Phi Zeta that forms a basis for the success of the organization which is manifested in its steadily increasing membership. Besides those pictured above, the membership includes Mrs. John Warren, Mrs. Roger E. Lingeman, Mrs. Robert M. Fergu- son, Mrs. Meredith Flanigan, Mrs. Robert Badertscher, Mrs. Harold Laws, Mrs. John M. Young, Mrs. John C. Brink, Mrs. Floyd Boyer, Mrs. R. McCauley Vandivier, Mrs. William A. Karsell, Mrs. Noel Bailey, Mrs. Emmett B. Lamb, Mrs. Dwain Mings, Mrs. Donald R. Hampshire, Mrs. Willard Worth, Mrs. Joseph Worley, Mrs. Carl Kuehn, and Mrs. Loren Martin. 139 DEDICATION Dr. Robert M. Moore has been an ac- tive member of the clinical teaching staff at the Indiana University Medical Center since his graduation in 1913. He received his pre-medical training at In- diana University; his A.B. degree was taken in 1911. In preparing himself further, Dr. Moore spent parts of three years at Harvard Post-graduate School (1920, ' 21, ' 22). Dr. Moore is a member of the follow- ing organizations: Delta Tau Delta, Nu Sigma Nu, and the honorary Society of Sigma Xi. In his capacity as Clinical Professor of Cardiology Dr. Moore has given very generously of his time and wide knowl- edge of both theory and practice of Medicine, so that each recent medical graduate remembers with a great deal of pleasure the time spent in Dr. Moore ' s clinics. Much of Dr. Moore ' s excellence as a teacher lies in his inculcating the su- preme value of clinical observations. He teaches that no amount of laboratory work can replace clinical study and rea- soning based thereon. With passing years. Dr. Moore has be- come increasingly prominent in local as well as national medical circles, particu- larly in the fields of Cardiology and In- ternal Medicine. At present, he is the Indiana Governor of the American Col- lege of Physicians. 140 BLOOMINGTON MEDICAL CENTER The freshman class of the Indiana Universit y School of Medicine for the year 1939-40, like the freshman class for the year 193 8-39, was selected from more than 1,000 applicants. The enrollment for 1939-40 was 132. This is close to our maxi- mum, and since we rank among the first half-dozen schools in the United States in point of view of freshman enrollment, it will be recognized that our freshman class was too large rather than too small. Of the 5,800 students who were enrolled in the Medical Schools of the United States last year, 63 % had either a B.S. or an A.B. degree prior to beginning the study of Medicine, and this per cent is greater each year. A study has recently been published by the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association giving the median cost of teaching the various major subjects of the medical course, such as Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, etc. It develops that the cost in the Indiana University School of Medi- cine is a few dollars per student above the median for the United States, which leads us to feel that it is about right — neither too much nor too little. With the purpose of increasing the effectiveness of our freshman medical work, it is planned to give part of the labora- tory work in Physiology during the fall semester. During the past year there has been active investigative work carried on by the staff of the freshman medical year. Badertscher, Hill, Jones, and Strong presented papers or demon- strations at the American Anatomical Association, and Harmon, Robinson and Scott have been very active in research and have subject matter shaping up for publication. — Dean Burton D. Myers 141 Football Captain Jim Logan indulges in skull practice. Dean Myers reporting to Jack Hatfield — or vice versa. Meds Bill Twyman and Carlton Keck adding a little nourishment to their anatomy. NEVIN E. AIKEN Ft. Wayne BS. Medicine Theta Kappa Psi; Al- pha Phi Omega; Y. M.C.A. MARION F. ARNOLD, JR. New Palestine BS. Medicine JAMES W. ASHER WARREN P. BALL ROBERT FRANK New Augusta A.B. Chemistry Alpha Sigma Phi; Phi Chi. Muncie A.B. Chemistry BARTON Ligonier B.S. Medicine Phi Beta Pi. EVAR T M. BECK Anderson B.S. Medicine JOHN H. BUSHONG Crawfordsville B.S. Medicine KATHRYN ELIZABETH CAMPBELL Boonville A.B. Chemistry Y.W.C.A.; Chorus; Der Deutsche Verein. WILLIAM CLUNIE Corydon A.B. Chemistry Lambda Chi Alpha; Phi Chi; Chemistry Club. HERBERT CORMICON Elkhart B.S. Medicine WILLIAM D. DANNACHER Wabash A.B. Anatomy Sigma Pi; Phi Chi; Wrestling. BERNARD DAVIDSON Elkhart A.B. Chemistry Phi Eta Sigma; Secre- tary, Der Deutsche Verein; Chemistry Club. JOHN J. DeFRIES Milford B.S. Anatomy Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu. HILBERT H. DeLAWTER Indianapolis B.S. Medicine WILLIAM L. DONHAM Bicknell B.S. Medicine RICHARD B. DUNHAM Worthington B.S. Medicine GAIL E. ELDRIDGE Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Delta Tau Delta. JAMES C. FARR Paragon A.B. Chemistry Phi Rho Sigma; Y.M. C.A.; Der Deutsche Verein. CARL A. FREED Attica A.B. Chemistry Kappa Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Chi; Der Deutsche Verein. WILLIAM J. GERDING Ft. Wayne B.S. Medicine BYRON N. HARRISON Chandler B.S. Medicine WILLIAM F. HARTING Linton A.B. Anatomy and Physiology JACK J. HATFIELD Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry Delta Tau Delta; Dol- phin Club; Swim- ming; Band. JOHN A. HETHERINGTON Indianapolis A.B. Anatomy Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Rho Sigma. GILBERT JOSEPH HIMEBAUGH Speed B.S. Medicine Phi Chi. J. GUY HOOVER Boonville A.B. Chemistry Phi Delta Theta; Phi Chi; Skull and Cres- cent; Cosmopolitan Club; Flying Club; Debate Team; Wres- tling; International Relations Club. ROGER CLAIR ISENHOUR Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry President, Phi Chi; Vice-President, Skele- ton Club. JIM S. JEWETT Carmel A.B. Chemistry GRANT C. JOHNSON Noblesvillc A.B. Physiology EDWARD C. KATTANY Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry Theta Kappa Psi. CHARLES EDWIN KIME Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Delta Tau Delta; Nu Sigma Nu. HERSCHEL S. KOPP Indianapolis A.B. Chemistry Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Chi; Der Deutsche Verein; Band. WARD LARAMORE Knox A.B. Chemistry JACK M. LOCKHART Indianapolis A.B. Anatomy and Physiology Sigma Chi; Nu Sigma Nu. JAMES ZIMMERMAN LOGAN Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Nu Sigma Nu; Cap- tain, Football Team. 143 Malcolm Scamahorn washes his hands of the whole affair, but finds that you can take it with you . Eunice Runner and friend (reading from left to right). Dannacher leads choir practice as Alex Craig, Guy Hoover, Bill Ferguson, John Crawford, Morrie Kelly, and Skip Eldridge follow. Jack Miller, Bill Horan, Jack Lockhart, John DeFries in Skeleton Club lounge. Herbie Sims, Theta Chi, makes diagnosis. RICHARD McDonald Muncie BS. Medicine fletcher w. McDowell Muncie A.B. Anatomy JOHN J. MARLOWE East Chicago B.S. Medicine CHARLES RICHARD MILLER Argus B.S. Medicine Theta Kappa Psi. JACK WALTER PATTERSON Peru A.B. Anatomy Lambda Chi Alpha; Kappa Kappa Psi; Phi Rho Sigma; Treasurer, Skeleton Club; Band. WILLIAM K. PATTERSON Indianapolis B.S. Medicine WENDELL PROUGH Bluffton A.B. Chemistry HOWARD HEETER ROWE Rochester B.S. Medicine Theta Kappa Psi. UNICE RUNNER Oxford A.B. Chemistry i Omega Pi; Iota MALCOLM O. WILLIAM C. SCAMAHORN SCHAFER Pittsboro Decatur B.S. Medicine B.S. Medicine gma Pi; Alpha Sigma Nu; Kappa Theta Kappa Psi. mbda Delta; Der Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; eutsche Verein; McNutt for President W.C.A. Cabinet; Club. jrtar Board Recog- :ion; W.A.A.; Or- estra; Girls ' Coed nd; Pow-WowCom- ttee; Senior Peace- e Committee. HIRAM SEXSON Indianapolis B.S. Medicine Delta Tau Delta; Nu Sigma Nu; Y.M.C.A.; Inter - Fraternity Council. MARY J. SHERFEY Brazil A.B. Chemistry GEORGE W. SMITH Dunkirk A.B. Medicine GLOSTER J. SMITH Kokomo A.B. Medicine GEORGE EDWARD STAUFFER Elkhart A.B. Chemistry Theta Kappa Psi; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Der Deutsche Verein. DONALD EMMONS STEPHENS Marion A.B. Chemistry Phi Kappa Psi; Nu Sigma Nu. ROBERT E. SWITZER Cromwell A.B. Chemistry Theta Kappa Psi; Band. ALEXANDER SHEVCHIK Gary B.S. Medicine JUANITA SIMPSON Sharpsville A.B. Medicine CYRIL POWELL VAN METER Bloomington B.S. Medicine Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Der Deut- sche Verein; Y.M. C.A. ROBERT W. VERMILYA Brownstown B.S. Medicine HERBERT A. SIMS Gary M.D. President, Theta Chi; Phi Chi; University Theater Staff; Bored Walk Staff; Inter- Fraternity Council. ROBERT C. WEBER Muncie B.S. Medicine Phi Chi. 145 lllli T ' T .r:r V,:-.]]. CnmcH. Van Meter. Beck, Tarreu, SpLirlock. AicDoiwld. Sher -. McDo sni,- TCllv. Ashcr, Donnacher, H;ufic ;l. rioo. Harrison, laconei • whz, Freed, J. H. C. Weber, Davidsovi- ,1, ixiLoii, ivoiicn, Scluimakcr, Horau, jmiwu, BIp ' ' T f: ; ' - i. Switzcr, Kat Schafer. ron, Sciimidl, S okolai, Hill, Prough, Hiestand. Young, Kii ' ■wcvt, Briglu, Grodrian, Shcvchik, Marlowe, i.sea ' iour, iur, rding. Miller, Mii :ovsky, Sclitiiiweeker. Laramore, Scxswi, Favicett, Simtns, Craig, Stoops, Sn ' Tony Nolke __..President Roger Isenhour Vice President Juanita Simpson Secretary- Jack Patterson Treasurer Recognized by their hats with a white skull and cr ossbones on them, members of the Skeleton Club include all Freshmen medical students. The purpose of the organization is to provide social recreation for its members, to broaden their medical edu- cation and to inaugurate bonds of personal and professional friendship among them. Of annual interest are the classic basketball and Softball games and the tug of war with the Law students. The club endeavors to present each year some known medi- cal authorities. Dr. Byrl R. Kirklan an X-ray specialist from the Mayo Clinic, was one of the outstanding speakers this year. 146 I TRAINING SCHOOL FOR NURSES i;partmcnL ut The Indiana University Training School for Nurses, under the direction of Miss Cordelia Hoeflin, is part of the School of Medicine in Indianapolis. The School was opened in 1914. The March class of this year will be the 53rd to enter this school. At the present time, girls from Indiana, North Dakota, Illinois, Ohio, Nevada, New York, and Iowa are enrolled as members of the student body. In order to be eligible for admission into the School, a stu- dent must have satisfactorily completed thirty hours of desig- nated college work, and have shown herself adaptable in pro- fessional activities during an orientation period of one week. These orientation periods are held in February and in June. It is the purpose of the School to maintain a high standard of nursing, to give the best type of nursing care to the sick, and to give the young women who choose nursing as a pro- fession every opportunity of becoming competent and broad- minded members of the community. Classes and practical ex- perience are so planned as to give the student nurses an intel- ligent understanding of the basic problems encountered in the remedial care of the sick, and the promotion of community welfare. The student extra-curricular activities program is almost entirely planned by the student body. The Choral Club of the School, under the direction of Mrs. Martin is well recog- nized in the city of Indianapolis. The basketball team plays home and return games with other Nursing Schools and com- munity centers in Indianapol ' s. Tennis, dancing, dinner par- ties, and teas are part of the program. Miss Lute Troutt is head of the Department of Dietetics of the Indianapolis Medical Center. She is the director of an ex- cellent post-graduate course in hospital and institutional die- tetics and also has charge of feeding the patients, staff, and employees of the Medical Center. It is the desire and intention of the members of the faculty of the Medical and Nursing Schools to continue the progress which has been to the mutual advantage of the student body, the patients in their care, and the people of the State of Indiana. 147 ' V McAdams and Parks take a short-cut. Miss Heininger in a pensive mood. Obviously in no hurry. ALICE ARCHBOLD Decatur G.N. President, Freshman Class. ROBERTA R. ALEXANDER Frankfort G.N. Vice-President, Choral Club. CASSIE BAMMER Princeton G.N. LEOTA BITTNER Decatur G.N. LUCILLE BLAZE Madison G.N. ALICE BRAMEIER Florence G.N. Iota Sigma Pi; Chem- istry Club. LOUISE BRAGG Madison G.N. CAROLINE CHRISTIE Indianapolis C.N. MARY JANE CUMMINGS Crawfordsville G.N. AUDREY DANIEL Thorntown G.N. Choral Club. MARY DUMENRIC Gary G.N. DOLORES EMLY Letts G.N. Vice-President, Delta Delta Delta; Mortar Board; Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A.; Secretary, English Club; Girls ' Orchestra; President, Nurses ' Choral Club; Sigma Theta Tau; Vice-President, March Senior Class. HELEN FARIS Bloomington G.N., A.B. Sociology Sigma Theta Tau ; Choral Club; W.A.A. THA FALLIS OPAL FLORENCE FULK Franklin FOXWORTHY Worthington G.N. Brazil G.N., A.B. Physiology G.N. Choral Club; W.A.A. JUANITA GAUDIN Vevay G.N. Vice-President, Alpha Delta Pi; President, Junior Class. HELEN LOUISE GARDNER Camden G.N. ANNE-LOUISE GLADMAN Los Angeles, Cal. G.N. WINIFRED HALL Indianapolis G.N. Delta Sigma Epsilon. DOROTHY HAEHL Shelbyville G.N. Choral Club. MARIETSA HEASTON Ft. Wayne G.N. HELEN HEINIGER Ft. Wayne G.N. 149 Miss Bittner obliges the camera-man. A good view of a truly attractive campus. I VALEDA JEFFERIS Newcastle G.N. Choral Club. ELIZABETH JOHNSON HALI, Princeton G.N. RHODA JOHNSTON Ft. Wayne G.N. RUTH LANGDON Wheatfield G.N., A.B. Sociology Phi Omega Pi; Girls Band. DOROTHY MELVIN GASTON G.N. HELEN MITCHELL Bedford G.N. Sigma Theta Tau. RETTALOU McCULLOUGH Oakland City G.N. Sigma Theta Tau. MARGUERITE McDONEL Elwood G.N. Choral Club. VIRGINIA NICHOLS Kentland G.N. Delta Delta Delta; Vice-President, Senior Class. PHYLLIS NOLAND Ladoga G.N. Choral Club. FRIEDA PETERS Huntingburg G.N. Choral Club. KATHLEEN REMLEY Crawfordsville G.N. Sigma Theta Tau. JEANNE RIDDLE WINIFRED RISLEY MARY ELIZABETH MILDRED SCIFRES Indianapolis GN. Choral Club; Presi- dent, Senior Class. Acton G.N. Sigma Theta Tau; Secretary, Senior Class. RUDDELL Sullivan G.N. Seymour G.N. MARCILE SENEFF Odon G.N. DORIS E. SMITH Indianapolis G.N., A.B. Chemhiry Alpha Lambda Delta; Women ' s Rifle Team; Y. W. C. A.; Der Deutsche Verein. RUTH STEINKAMP Huntingburg G.N. MARY LOUISE STOELTING Syracuse G.N. THELMA TURPEN Sullivan G.N. BONNIE B. WRIGHT Tunnelton G.N. JEAN WILLIAMS Hope G.N. in JUNIORS FRESHMEN veeci, B. Beaslc DIETITIANS 1J2 First Row Kathleen Remley Helen Paris Winifred Risley Rettalou McCullough Second Row Betty Johnson Dolores Emly Helen Mitchell Mrs. Helen Johnson President Monette Springer Vice-President Mary Jane Dunfee Secretary- Sarah Cotton Treasurer The active members Dorothy Buschmann Mrs. Jack Pilcher Ella Boeger Nora Mae Hutto Margaret Bruce Grace Brumley Mary Cox Helen Carson Helen Austin Edna Teegarden Mrs. A. R. Stacey Juanita Hubble Edna Haugk Fern Coy Kathryn McFadden of Alpha Chapter are: Mrs. J. H. Hawk Grace Alice Fitzgerald Trecaleah Talbert Elsie Loher Crystal Halstead Ruth Hoaglin Ruth Buehler Mary Johnson Mary Heckard Elizabeth Candy Mrs. L. G. Carey Ruth Hubler Caroline Henderson Marie Culbertson Lucille Rainey The Alpha Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau, a National Scholastic Society for Nurses of University Nursing Schools, was founded at Indiana University Training School in Indian- apolis October 4, 1922. Membership is based entirely on scholastic and practical achievement, and moral qualifications. The fraternity is the only national honorary nursing organization in the United States. There are chapters located at Indiana University, Wash- ington University at St. Louis, University of Iowa, Ohio State University, University of Kansas, and the University of Minne- sota. Monette Springer Charlotte Bray Mildred Ellis Helen Johnson Margaret Gossard LiUa Fell Margaret Barricklow Thelma J. Scraper Angela Brinker Mary Jane Dunfee Adelma North Helen Jane West Dorothy Gutterman Anette Bowen Alene Bowman Sarah Cotton Virginia Spencer Viola Kitts Virginia Porter Mary C. Peacock Catherine Parkes Pauline Duffy Mary Webber Johnson Mary K. Norton Lois Young Ninetta Chapman Mary Elnor Grimes Mildred Thomas Anah L. Corbin Edith Harvey Virginia Burns Evelyn DeWees Mildred James Erma McGaughey Roberta Butler Gwendolyne Hillis Martha O ' Neal Marie Elrod Kathleen McMahan New Members — 1940 Rettalou McCullough Helen Faris Dolores Emly Betty Johnson Helen Mitchell Kathleen Remley Winifred Risley 153 THE DENTAL STUDENT EXTRACTS HIS KNOW Dental students drill for an exam. The professor is brushing up on what he preaches. Future dentists in the lab. I Mass production extraction in the clinic. Dr. William H. Crawford, Dean of the School of Dentistry. DR. GERALD D. TIMMONS 156 The preparation of the dedicatory message for the Dental Section of this year ' s Arbutus is paradoxical — it is the easiest, and yet the hardest. It is easiest in that by their vote the students voiced their unanimous opinion to honor a man who although not now associated with the University, still holds a place in the hearts of every student. It is hard because with his leaving the students feel the loss of a true friend, a wise counselor, an able administrator and an eminent educator. Doctor Timmons was as an older brother to so many that his leaving has caused an indefinable hurt. We are all proud of Doctor Timmons ' national prominence. For seven years he has served as Secretary-Treasurer of the American Association of Dental Schools, and, until this Spring, as Business Manager of the Journal of Dental Education. He just recently resigned as trustee from Indiana and Ohio to the American Dental Association. As first Vice-President of the American Council of Education and as a member of the Na- tional Board of Dental Examiners, recognition was given to his outstanding ability. Many other honors, too numerous to men- tion, have been conferred upon him. Doctor Timmons resigned his position as Acting Dean, effective in February, and shortly afterwards accepted the office of Executive-Secretary of the American Dental Association. The students are sincerely sorry to see Doctor Timmons leave Indi- ana, but equally glad that he has been thus advanced in the profession. DR. WILLIAM H. CRAWFORD WELCOME The students, faculty, and assisting staff join in giving Doctor William Hopkins Crawford, our new dean, a sincere and hearty welcome. In acquiring such an outstanding per- sonage to fill the office of the late Dean Frederick R. Henshaw, we have every reason to believe that such a wise selection will result in a continued and accelerated progress of the school and the dental profession. Doctor Crawford, at the first of the year, left his position at Columbia University to assume the deanship of our school. At Columbia University he developed and equipped one of the finest laboratories for the investigation of materials used in den- tistry. His reputation and past accomplishments in this im- portant phase of dental teaching, as well as in other branches of dentistry, may allow us to assume that Indiana, under his leadership, will forge ahead into new fields of achievement in the science and art of our profession. In the short space of time that Doctor Crawford has been with us, we all sense a feeling of pride and confidence in our new leader. The spirit of friendliness, understanding and in- terest in his attitude towards the student body will result in mutual cooperation and enthusiasm toward making our insti- tution ever greater. So we say welcome to a gentleman, scientist, scholar, teach- er, and friend. 157 Organized in 1879, the Indiana Dental College was the ninth dental school to be founded in the United States. On June 1, 1925, by act of the Indiana legislature, the College was pur- chased by Indiana University and became known as the Indiana University School of Dentistry. Sixty-one successful years have found its graduates practicing dentistry throughout the civilized world. In 1933 the school board moved to its present location in the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis. In 1936 the United States Public Health Service established at the school a special clinic to provide for the care of child patients. Access to the facilities of the James Witcomb Riley Hospital for Chil- dren and the Robert Long Hospital have been made possible for dental students. Thus, in this ideal location and with a beautiful new building, complete facilities are provided for thorough train- ing in the theory and practice of the science and art of dentistry. The school is a member of the American Association of Dental Schools and conforms to all of the requirements of the Association for a top rating school. Because of its constant progress, efficiency, and completeness, it is regarded highly among the nation ' s dental educational institutions. 158 SENIOIA OLASS First Row: Fly, Nelson, Nadler, Metaxes, Brown, Da- vidson, Fodora, Troutwine, Stoelting, Wilson. Second Row: Hanley, Fraser, Richardson, Albright, Patterson, Morris, Hanes, Kasmar, Pierce, Manning, Thomas, Shaw, Lively, Robinson. Third Row: Iden, Bales, Hess, Bryan, Etter, Ferling, Koss. Fourth Row: McClintock, Howard, Sexson, Barman, Baker, Porter, Barco, Greene, Rodenbarger, Niles. Fifth Row: Stookey, Koenig, Rosenthal, Sharon. lllNIOn CLASS First Row: Ford, Mitchell, Price, Charkins, Kowal, Stiefler, Rosenbarger. Second Row: Ping, Healy, King, Damm, Shanteau, Feldman. Third Row: Lyddan, Frank, Rosenstein, Mausehund. SOI ' HOMOUE CLASS First Row: Larimore, Gromer, Feldman, Stoner, Low- ery. Stout, Baldwin, Wurtz. Second Row: Hall, Stragand, Michener, Gilchrist, Welp. Third Row: Burks, Pruett, Henning, White, Stock, Fientuch, Gassin, Bush. FRESHMAN CLASS First Row: Wilson, Good, Pickard, Klatz, Weather- ford, Lytle, Groher, Borman, DeFrank Furst. Second Row: Shumaker, James, Clark, Kane, Bron- stein, Nichols. Third Row: Lowe, Shaeffer, Babcock, Neiderhofer, Gwinn, Shaw, Young, Davis, Epstein, Starcher. SENIORS Richard Howard, President Marion Shaw, Vice-President John Davidson, Secretary-Treasurer JUNIORS Leo Charkins, President Ronald Ping, Secretary-Treasurer SOPHOMORES Ally Burks, President Martin Feldman, Vice-President Eldred Stout, Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMEN John Shaw, President Samuel Kane, Vice-President Merle Niederhofer, Secretary-TrTisui 160 SENIOR CLASS JUNIOR CLASS After four years of professional training in lec- ture, laboratory and clinic, the Senior student is qualified to assume the duties and responsibilities which accompany his Doctor of Dental Surgery de- gree. Association with his fellow students during this time has resulted in many close friendships. With eagerness, yet with sadness at the breaking of old ties, the Senior student looks to his future. Realiz- ing that he has had the best possible training, he is imbued with a spirit of optimism and confidence upon entering his chosen profession. He has had the privilege of having studied un- der instructors who have treated him with respect and consideration. In appreciation alone can he re- pay the faculty for their never-failing kindness and able guidance. Many of the Senior class will enter private prac- tice upon being graduated; others will serve as in- ternes. In any event, wherever they go, they will do their utmost to bring credit and honor to their Alma Mater. The Junior class of this year is one of the small- est in the history of the school. However, this class has shown itself to be higher than average scho- lastically. The Junior year in dental school is generally regarded as being the most arduous of all. In addi- tion to the full course of laboratory and lecture work, the Juniors have the new experience of applying their fundamental knowledge to clinical practice. Nevertheless, their introduction into the clinical side of dentistry is regarded by all as being a pleasing climax to their two previous years of academic studies. Although this year involved a bit more exer- tion for all, they realize that the knowledge and ex- perience gained is of vital importance in their pro- fessional training. With this thought in mind they are now prepared to enter their final year, harbor- ing the ambition to accumulate and retain all of the skill and knowledge possible which will benefit their professional future. SOPHOMORE CLASS FRESHMAN GLASS The Sophomore Class has decreased to twenty- one members this year. Nevertheless, they still main- tain the high scholastic average they established last year as Freshmen. In the second year of the dental curriculum many important procedures are presented to the stu- dents in lectures and in laboratories. Having be- come familiar with these procedures, the members of the class are anxious to make a practical applica- tion of their knowledge and skill in the school clin- ics in their Junior year. Although they have ac- quired considerable knowledge through their basic training, they begin to realize that their experience in the vast fields of dentistry needs supplementing through clinical operations. The class regrets the loss from the faculty of two very competent instructors. Doctor Louis D. Belden and Doctor Gerald D. Timmons. Doctor Belden discontinued his lectures early in the first semester due to illness. Doctor Timmons resigned at the end of the first semester to assume a still higher position in the dental profession. At the beginning of the year, thirty students became orientated into a new era of their life upon their entrance into dental school. Many prepara- tory years of academic application have well fitted these men for the demands which will be made upon them in their dental course. With the passing of this first period they begin to comprehend the scope of their chosen profession and the many responsibili- ties devolving upon its members. Every unit in their course of study has been carefully planned and arranged so as to lay a solid foundation for their future schooling and professional living. The Freshmen, realizing the necessity of this fundamental training and being confronted with the high expectations from them, have proved them- selves industrious, scholastic, and intent on further advancement. The Class of ' 43 gave a banquet in the fall for the members of the class and their professors. Such gatherings aid in facilitating a more friendly and co- operative attitude between students and professors. 161 The pause that refreshes. Open wide — it won ' t hurt — much. The dental editor and prosthetic ponderings. R.A.H. and Rah-Rah. Tri-dent. Double exposure. EDWARD HANSON ALBRIGHT Connersville D.D.S. Psi Omega. EUGENE BALES JAMES EUGENE MARTIN THOMAS RALPH BERMAN MORRIS NORMAN WALLACE BRYAN Lebanon BAKER BARCO South Bend BROWN Ft. Wayne D.D.S. Odon Lawrence D.D.S. Syracuse, N. Y. D.D.S. Vice-President, Psi D.D.S. D.D.S. Vice-President, Alpha D.D.S. Xi Psi Phi. Omega; Vice-Presi- President, Psi Omega; Omega. Secretar y-Treasurer, dent, Freshman Den- S e c r e t a r y-Treasurer, Alpha Omega. tal Class. Sophomore Dental Class. FRANK KARL RICHARD FRANK JOHN E. ERASER ALBERT ANDREW CHARLES A. FLY, MYRON E. GREENE ETTER FERLING Hobart FODORA JR. Indianapolis Seymour Richmond D.D.S. Whiting Lima, Ohio D.D.S. D.D.S. D.D.S. D.D.S. D.D.S. Kappa Sigma; Skull Xi Psi Phi. Xi Psi Phi. Secretary, Psi Omega; Secretary, Xi Psi Phi; and Crescent; Men ' s President, Sophomore Secretary, Freshman Glee Club. Dental Class. Dental Class; Business Manager, Dental Sec- tion, Arbutus. JOHN EDWARD DAVIDSON Bloomington D.D.S. President, Delta Sigma Delta; Secretary- Treasurer, Junior American Dental As- sociation; Secretary- Treasurer, Senior Class; Assistant, Den- tal Section, Arbutus. WILLIAM F. HANNING Indianapolis D.D.S. Editor, Dental Sec- tion, Arbutus. RALPH E. HANLEY Indianapolis D.D.S. EUGENE HOWARD HESS Indianapolis D.D.S. Tau Delta Phi. RICHARD H. HOWARD Boston D.D.S. Treasurer, Psi Omega; Vice-President, Junior Dental Class; Presi- dent, Senior Dental Class. ROLENZO ARLIS HANES Gainesville, Fla. D.D.S. JOAN E. KASMAR Chicago, III. D.D.S. HAROLD H. KOENIG Edwardsport D.D.S. Psi Omega. WILLIAM F. KOSS Indianapolis D.D.S. Psi Omega. 163 Senior lecture in ceramics. In spring a dentist ' s thoughts turn to other things than microscopes. One dentist, at least, is all wrapped up in his work. The dentist takes a trimming. Bare facts of dental school. ROBERT LIVELY Cicero D.D.S. Secretary, Delta Sigma Delta. OLIVER E. McCLINTICK Lapel D.D.S. Delta Sigma Delta. GUS GEORGE METAXAS Gary D.D.S. GERALD J. MORRIS Cambridge City D.D.S. Treasurer, Xi Psi Phi. SEYMOUR WILLIAM NADLER Dorchester, Mass, D.D.S. Treasurer, Alpha Omega. A. BURLESON NELSON Shipshewana D.D.S. RICHARD LEON NILES Ft. Wayne D.D.S. Xsi Psi Phi. SAMUEL PATTERSON Indianapolis D.D.S. Alpha Omega; Sigma Alpha Mu. DOYLE E. PIERCE Chicago, 111. D.D.S. President, Xi Psi Phi; President, Junior Class; Vice-President, Soph- omore Dental Class. I. M. SHARON Cincinnati, Ohio D.D.S. Alpha Omega ERNEST H. PORTER Odon D.D.S. Vice-President, Omega. Psi MARION A. SHAW Zionsville D.D.S. Xi Psi Phi; Vice-Presi- dent, Senior Dental Class; Student Coun- cil; Assistant Business Manager, Dental Sec- tion, Arbutus. GEORGE G. RICHARDSON Marion D.D.S. Phi Kappa Psi; Stu- dent Council. KARL W. STOELTING Syracuse D.D.S. Xi Psi Phi. WILLIAM A ROBINSON Brazil D.D.S. Vice-President. Sigma Delta. Delta REGINALD E. STOOKEY Portland D.D.S. President, Freshman Dental Class; Student Council. LYNN HURSH RODENBARGER Rossville D.D.S. Delta Sigma Delta; President, Junior American Dental As- sociation. JONATHAN E. THOMAS Connersville D.D.S. Psi Omega. LEONARD ALLAN ROSENTHAL New York City D.D.S. GALE HOWARD TROUTWINE Michigan City D.D.S. JULIUS C. SEXSON Worthington D.D.S. Vice-President, Xi Psi Phi; Vice-President, Junior American Den- tal Association; Stu- dent Council; Secre- tary-Treasurer, Junior Dental Class. CLYDE E. WILSON Cleveland, Ohio D.D.S. Lambda Chi Alpha; Student Council. 165 niVllCIUIN liAITA UrSILON f . B- The national honorary dental fraternity, Omicron Kappa Upsilon, was founded in 1914 by the faculty of Northwestern University Dental School. It is represented in the Indiana University School of Dentistry by Theta Theta Chapter. Organized for the purpose of encouraging scholarship and promot- ing advancement in the dental arts and sciences, membership in the fraternity is recognition of those who have made a distinguished record during their pro- fessional schooling. Election to membership is voted annually by the faculty from a list of Senior students who generally rank in the upper one-third of the class. Based on individual merit, selection of twelve per cent of the total class is made from this list, and the individuals are presented with the fraternity key representing their membership. Clarence W. Abraham L. K. Anderson Samuel R. Antle Kingdon Avery T. L. Babcock Harry Bailie E. C. Baker V. C. Baker M. G. Baum N. M. Beery F. G. Behm lander Raleigh F. Benham E. C. Bennhoff Hugh T. Berkey R. I. Blakeman R. P. Boesinger R. G. Boggs Elmer Bosseiman 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. Campbell Guthrie P. Carr J. B. Carr Jack C. 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. Gillis 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 Dale W. Harvey 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. Killinger 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 Heiman G. Lieberman 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 Robert L. Pavy G. J. Pell John R. Pell Harold C. Percival Wilson E. Prentice R. L. Reynard Frank A. Richison J. Conley Robinson L. G. Robinson E. J. Rogers Martin Roschelle Dale M. Roth Chester A. Rycroft 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 Willard C. Stamper H. V. Steinmetz E. W. Stoelting O. C. Stoelting Franz W. Stumpf Ellis Harold Tade 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 166 First Row: Metaxas, Fly, Stout, Albright, Price, Hanes, Fodora, Brown, Troutwine. Second Row: Hess, Han- ley, Fraser, Patterson, Rich- ardson, Charkins, Kasmar, )avidson, Morris, Shaw, Han- ling, Stoner, Pierce. Third Row: Nels on, Nad- Icr, Fientuch, Larimore, Feld- man, Gromer, White, Lowry, Stocking, Henning, Welp, Gilchrist, Thomas. Fourth Row: Hall, Shan- teau. King, Bryan, Ferling, Lively. Fifth Row: Sexson, How- ard, Koss, Rosenbarger, Lyd- dan, Baldwin, Porter, Mich- ner, Rodenbarger, Niles, Barco. Sixth Row: Berman, Iden, Burks, Stookey, Sharon, Ros- enthal, McClintock, Baker, Koenig, Mausehund, Robin- son, Etter, Bush, M. Greene, Ping, Strogand. JUNUm AMEniCAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION Lynn Rodenbarger President Ronald Ping Vice-President Pat Lyddan Secretary The Indiana University Society of Junior Members of the American Dental Association is an organization conducted un- der the auspices of the American Dental Association and the Dental School. Having been reorganized in November, 1939, the local society is now one of the largest and most active in any school. Membership is limited to Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors, and the society now boasts an enrollment of ap- proximately eighty per cent of those eligible. The purpose of the association is to contribute to the ele- vation of dental education in the student body and to give an insight of the value of organized dentistry. Lectures and clinics conducted at the society ' s monthly meetings by men distinguished in their field or specialty are highly beneficial to the student members. Problems which are likely to confront the dental graduate are discussed for the purpose of guidance along principles advocated by the association for a successful and worthy career in dentistry. Upon graduation, all junior members automatically become senior members of the Ameri- can Dental Association. 167 STUDENT COUNCIL First Row Clyde Wilson Louis Shanteau Edgar Gassin William King Second Row Ronald Ping William Lytle Morris M. Stoner Julius Sexson Marsh Shumaker The Student Council was instituted last year and in its short existence has proven to be a worthy and successful organ- ization. Its purpose is to bring together through a definite me- dium the student body, faculty, and administration, so that a closer association may be had for furthering the educational pro- gram of the school. At its bimonthly meetings Dean Crawford, the Student Affairs Committee, made up of the heads of the different de- partments, and the members of the Student Council discuss and act upon suggestions of the students and faculty members per- taining to student affairs and problems. The members of the council represent the student body in these meetings, and they present before the body any plausible ideas of the students which may aid in the progress of the school or alleviate discord or griev- ances. Respect for and arbitration of student problems is thus recognized as being of vital concern in the betterment of the student body and the school. Five members from each of the four classes compose the Student Council. Two members are elected by class vote and serve together with the class officers to make up the representa- tive body from each class. 168 XI PSI PHI First Row Richard Niles ' 40, Ft. Wayne Gerald Morris ' 40, Cambridge City George Stragand ' 42, Dunkirk Edgar Gassin ' 42, Belmar, N. J. Michael Kowal ' 41, Hamtramik, Mich. Wallace Bryan ' 40, Ft. Wayne Second Row Richard Ferling ' 40, Richmond Aulden Bush ' 42, Rossville, 111. Julius Sexson ' 40, Worthington Frank Etter ' 40, Seymour Clayton Lowery ' 42, Balkan, Ky. Marion Shaw ' 40, Zionsville Third Row Doyle Pierce ' 40, Chicago, 111. Harold D. Furst ' 43, Ludington, Mich. Robert Langohr ' 43, Columbia City Charles Fly ' 40, Lima, Ohio Sheldon Hall ' 42, Indianapolis George W. James ' 43, Indianapolis Karl Stoelting ' 40, Syracuse Xi Psi Phi fraternity began its existence as the first dental fraternity at the Indiana Dental College with the installation of the Theta chapter in 1893. It was the second dental fra- ternity to be organized, having its origin at the University of Michigan, on February 8, 1889. Xi Psi Phi, growing rapidly since its inception, established forty-six active chapters. At present, due to mergers and dis- continuance of dental schools, there are twenty-five active chap- ters. In the years 1900-1902 a fraternity magazine was published intermittently. In 1906, the official publication, the Xi Psi Phi Quarterly, was founded. It has since enjoyed a continuous ex- istence and has proved to be a worthy publication. Xi Psi Phi is the only dental fraternity in which every initi- ate receives life membership in the alumni chapter upon his grad- uation. Included with this membership is a lifetime subscription to the Xi Psi Phi Quarterly. With very few exceptions, the active chapters reside in chapter houses. Theta chapter is now located at 115 East Fall Creek Boulevard, in Indianapolis. 169 I ' SI OMEHA First Row Johnathan E. Thomas ' 40, Connersville Martin T. Barco ' 40, Lawrence Harold Koenig ' 40, Edwardsport Ernest Porter ' 40, Odon Second Row Ronald Ping ' 41, Terre Haute Eugene Bales ' 40, Indianapolis Albert A. Fodera ' 40, Indianapolis Third Row Edward H. Albright ' 40, Connersville Richard Howard ' 40, Boston Frank S. Mitchell ' 41, Marshall, 111. William Koss ' 40, Indianapolis Psi Omega fraternity was founded at the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery in 1892 by an energetic group of students who felt the need of an organization to promote fraternal fellowship and to aid in advancing the dental profession. To this group many graduate dentists and students of the profession are deeply obligated. Psi Omega has grown to be the largest dental fraternity in the world, having a chapter in every dental school in the United States and several in European schools. All of the active and alumni chapters are kept posted on developments and activities of the fraternity by their journal, The Prater , which is pub- lished quarterly. Omega chapter, at the Indiana University School of Dentis- try, was founded in 1903, and since has been striving to do its part in carrying on the traditions of Psi Omega. To secure this, each member dedicates himself to cultivate the social qualities of his fellow members, to surround each with real friends to whom he can turn for assistance and advice, and to promote the advancement of the dental profession in methods of teaching, practice, and jurisprudence. 170 H UELTA SKiMA DELTA First Row J. William Lytle ' 43, Union City Byron Price 42, Terre Haute Robert Lively ' 42, Cicero William King ' 42, Indianapolis Lloyd Weatherford ' 43, Franklin William Robinson ' 42, Brazil Second Row Ernest Rosenbarger ' 41, Corydon Lynn Rodenbarger ' 40, Rossville S. Max Starcher ' 43, Weston, W. Va. A. Graham Larimore ' 42, Madison Richard Young ' 43, Kokomo George Gwinn ' 43, Noblesville Third Row Robert Lowe ' 43, Fairview, W. Va. Victor DeFrank ' 43, Sullivan Roscoe Gromer ' 42, West Baden Leo H. White ' 42, Valparaiso William Henning ' 42, Boonville W. J. Healy ' 41, Naugatuck, Conn. Fourth Row Robert Clark ' 43, Walkerton Robert Babcock ' 43, Rochester Ally Burks ' 43, Indianapolis John E. Davidson ' 40, Bloomington John Shaw ' 43, Valparaiso Marsh Schumaker ' 43. Pomeroy, Ohio Merle Niederhofer ' 43, Cincinnati, Ohio Fifth Row Robert Pickard ' 43, Vincennes Dennis Welp ' 42, Jasper Willard H. Damm ' 41, Evansville David Louis Groher ' 43, Noblesville Pat Lyddan ' 41, Webster. Ky. Oliver McClintick ' 40, Lapel Richard Michener ' 42, Kokomo Founded in 1883 at the University of Michigan, Deha Sigma Delta fraternity claims the distinction of being the first dental fraternity organized for members and students of the pro- fession. Since this time the fraternity has developed into an international organization composed of forty-two auxiliary chapters with thirty-three subordinate chapters. The local chapter, known as the Xi chapter, was established in January, 1900, and since has been a very active organization at the dental school. The late Dean F. R. Henshaw was a Past Supreme Grand Master of Delta Sigma Delta. Doctor F. Wade LaRue, also a Past Supreme Grand Master of the fraternity, is deputy in charge at the fraternity house, where he resides. The Delta Sigma Delta fraternity house is located at 1424 Central Avenue, in Indianapolis, and the members of the fra- ternity are proud of the fact that the house is the property of the fraternity. The organization also owns a bus which affords transportation to and from school for the members. This has proven very advantageous and the members are contemplating a new bus for the next year. 171 First Row Maurice E. Rosenstein ' 41, Frankfort, Ky. Seymour William Nadler ' 40, Dorchester, Mass. Samuel Patterson ' 40, Indianapolis Morris N. Brown ' 40, Syracuse, N. Y. Second Row Martin Feldman ' 42, New London, Conn. Francis Feldman ' 41, New York, N. Y. Jack Feintuch ' 42, Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Kane ' 43, Revere, Mass. Third Row Ralph Berman ' 40, South Bend Morris M. Stoner ' 42, New London, Conn. Stanley Epstein ' 43, Spotswood, N. J. Irving Sharon ' 40, Cincinnati, O. ALPHA OMEGA In 1909, the Romach Fraternity, established in 1906 at the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery, and Alpha Omega, den- tal fraternity established in 1907 at the University of Maryland, combined to form the Alpha Omega fraternity. Thus, two small organizations found themselves together forming the nucleus of the Alpha Omega fraternity, the oldest and foremost Jewish dental fraternity in existence. Over fifty subordinate Chapters, covering many states, from coast to coast and from Canada to the Gulf, are now included within its rolls. Alpha Gamma chapter at the Indiana University School of Dentistry was founded in 1928. Twelve years later, in 1940, the Indianapolis Alumni Chapter was organized. The charter mem- bers are all alumni members of Alpha Gamma chapter. To instil in its members the virtues of truth and wisdom; to cultivate the social qualities of its members; to surround each member with true life long friends; to the general advancement of the dental profession; and to carry forth the fraternity ' s ideals of scholarship, fellowship and Judaeism: to all this the members of Alpha Omega, dedicate themselves. 172 Somehow this doesn ' t taste Hke the custard pie mother used to make! . . . Upperclassmen swell attendance at Freshman FroHc . . . The inspiration for Registration Blues . . . Re- member, boys, how we used to sleep on Saturday morning? . . . The Graham, rushees, and it ' s a fight to the finish . . . At induction ceremonies. President Herman B Wells, Dr. William Lowe Bryan, President Emeritus, and Mary Susan StuU address Freshmen . . . Sucker sells sucker on way up Field House steps. 173 COLLEGE WITHOUT A CAMPUS ANU CURmCU A corner of the popular li- brary in the Extension Center in Indianapolis. Checking and assembling films in the Bureau of Visual Instruc- tion. Editing and cutting films prior to their distribution throughout the state. LUM WITHOUT COKES. The new Indiana University building at the Calumet Extension Center. Robert E. Cavanaugh, Director of the Ex- tension Division. EXTENSION DIVISION Extension students sell tickets in the front hall of the Ft. Wayne Center . . . Relaxa- tion in the lounge of the Indianapolis Cen- ter .. . Iota Chi, made up of students out- standing in scholarship and activities at the Ft. Wayne Extension Center, By means of the University Extension the general public is given the privileges of a university. The four extension cen- ters of Indiana are the Indianapolis Center, the Calumet Center, the South Bend-Mishawaka Center and the Fort Wayne Center. Classes are open to any adult who can carry out the work with profit. University credit is not given unless the persons com- ply with the University entrance conditions. Each Division is glad to certify any work which has been successfully com- pleted. Under the guidance of the Extension Teaching Service the Extension Divisions offer annually several hundred differ- ent courses which are mostly undergraduate courses in the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences. Extension classes are also offered in courses in the School of Education, the School of Medicine, the School of Business, and the School of Music. The Public Welfare Service is another phase of university extension. The Public Welfare Service aids the various agencies endeavoring to meet certain community needs such as good health, child welfare, sound public opinion, and civic progress. The Public Discussion Bureau and the Visual Instruction Bureau are also organizations within the university extension. The Bureau of Public Discussion assists in the education of public opinion, stimulates intelligent discussion of current political, economic, and social questions, based on reliable recent factual data. 176 k 0H The four Extension Centers in Ft. Wayne, In- dianapolis, South Bend-Mishawaka, and in the Calu- met region offer university facilities for student study, activities, and recreation. Here many students take work before entering the University in Bloom- ington. Others supplement their high school train- ing with extension studies. The students at the cen- ters have many extra-curricular activities including plays, clubs, and interest groups. The journalism classes at the Indianapolis Center write an Extension news column which appears in the Indiana Daily Student every week. Thus the students at the Ex- tension Centers are given an opportunity not only to take college courses, but also to participate in campus life and extra-curricular activities. il: Play production class at Ft. Wayne prac- tices a scene from Liliom . . . Library at the Indianapolis Center . . . The student lounge in the Ft. Wayne Center . . . Eng- lish Composition class at Ft. Wayne . . . The Chemistry lab in South Bend . . . Lounge of the new Calumet Center . . . Entrance to the Calumet Center. i i kv «f 177 IINDEKULASSIVIEN Along with the Freshman year, with its publicized rhinie pod, board, phone answering, and blind dates, go many other things not so much publicized. Among these are the sneak dates from study table, and the hours spent in the library annex, which may vary from the Varsity Drug Store to the benches behind the observatory — weather per- mitting. Then too, the Freshmen get a wide variety of education from the various lectures at which they fill in for upperclassmen. Perhaps the Freshman acquires more advice during his nine months ' stay, than the Business School acquires in four years from the Squeak Box. It might be said, too, that the percentage of advice taken by both is low. Late in the year, the Fresh- men become brave and cut a few classes, but in general they sleep through few of them, either in them or at home. Among the Freshmen who have not only been very successful in progress- ing the above lines, but also have in- dulged in extra-rhinie activities have been Ruth Tavlor. Arbutus Beauty; Hank Rickey, President of Skull and Crescent ; and Bob Niebauer, President of Phi Eta Sigma. Nancy Hull, AOPi songstress, croons into the mike with Paul Devinc ' s campus band . . . Acacias make a rake-off . . . Waipy Waterfall ' s vocalist, Marge Warren, Alpha Chi warbler, adds that plaintive look . . . Sigma Nu punch must be giggle water. King of the Dames Ball Charles Barnhill in a wreath of smiles is crowned with the laurels by Mortar Board prexy Jeannette Dice . . . On one of the days when the Music School lounge was not closed to the pubhc, three musical scholars, Khngelhoffer, Abrams, and Wiesman, got together and lounged. The Sophomore year finds a more indepen- dent group haunting the campus. They may be found literally all over the campus, all the way from the Memorial Hall Rock Garden, to the middle of the Jordan, and from sleeping through eight o ' clocks, to cutting classes for a game of bridge in the commons. Indeed, the most honored achievement that a member of the Sophomore class can attain is to get through the whole year without buying a book, and without borrowing one from a roommate. The Sophomore is usually the villain who lures the unsuspecting Freshman into taking a blind date with a queen . He is usually the one who thinks up the clever schemes of getting through school by selling the one born every minute boys tickets to Convocation, or an athletic book for intramural games. When on good behavior, the Sophomores may be found working diligently on plans for Hell Week , or dodging the Freshmen after Hell Week . In general, the only ones who notice the Sopho- mores are those organizations who have some manual labor to be done, and no fund for hiring it, and so they exchange a small key for several hours of work. Those branching out into other than the general run of activities this year have been Howdy Wilcox, ex-President of Skull and Crescent; SAE Ed Ferrey of the Arbutus and Daily Students Staffs; Don Batton, Delt Presi- dent, and member of Union Board; and Mary Jane Armstrong, A.W.S. Council, and Presi- dent of Pan-Hell. 179 Pi Phis do too study — and due to study bring up the scholastic rating . . . Sigma Chi — Pi Phi — ahght — from White . . . Robert Sabin makes an impression with Mary Benninghoff — Thumb fun. With two years of college behind them, the Juniors have all requirements out of the way, or at least some of them, and at once begin the search for pipe courses. Here many fail. Few of them find a full fifteen hours of pipe, and many are led astray by the fatherly advice of a Senior who wants to get even for the tough course which he got stung on the year before. When not in search of such courses, the Juniors are usually on the path of some person to take or give them a pin. A few are trying to find ways and means of severing pinning connections of previous years. When not pursuing one of these pasttimes, the Juniors content themselves with boressing with Freshmen about Hell Week , piling up activities points, and rem- iniscing in general about the years they have left behind, Grey Beards, so to speak. Among the noted who have lasted through the third year in clinging to the activities ladder are Richard Stoner, Prom Chairman, Union Board President, etc.; Mary Susan Stull of University Theatre fame, not to mention the Presidency of A.W.S. and work on the Junior Prom; Bar- bara Van Fleit, ' 40 Prom Queen; and John Jay, of the I.S.A. and Union Board. The Supreme Two Hundred and Fifty , lawyers, and others gaze avidly at the en- tertainment furnished by the Mad Monks at the taxi-less Taxi Dance . . . Suzy StuU weighs the matter at hand at the Pleiades- Skull and Crescent Barnyard Frolic . . . Prof. Smokeup takes a beating and Howdy Wilcox engineers it . . . The upper and lower crust in the social pie at the Barris- ter ' s Brawl. Once upon a time, there was a man who decided that it would be fitting to have a lasting and tangible record of his college days. So he invented something called a yearbook. This man should be doomed to an eternal hereafter in the deepest depths of hell. He found about fifteen of the world ' s worst suckers and called them his staff. They were all pleased with their titles, and proceeded to work for a lost cause which they never should have attempted to find. The man, who had not yet learned to leave well enough alone, thought up a filthy little thing that creeps up on one called a deadline, and created a well worn and oft repeated phrase, The deadline must be met , and theoretically started out to meet it, optimist that he was. He wrote reams of dull copy in which no one was interested and fewer reams of wit and humor which no one understood anyway. He took angle shots of beauties and formal shots of professors and sweated over short, to-the- point captions about them. He planned pages and counted words and corrected spellings on the names till he reached a crisis when he sent the book to the printers and left for two weeks in the mountains. Our hero, or villain, depending upon whether one has ever worked on a yearbook staff, has not been heard of since. A man was found in the bottom of the East River with his hands and feet tied behind his back and a cement bag around his neck. He fitted the description of our late benefactor but he did not appear to have been the suicidal type. Some claim that he may be found under Revolutionary War Claims in his own office where no one would ever think of looking for him. Others say he was lost in a forest of eight balls. Activities . . . uncatalogued . . . non-credit . . . but on a par with scholastics in student interest . . . clubs and committees, professionals and hon- oraries, groups and gatherings . . . here the student acquires poise, personality, and merit points . . . the competitive angle of the campus community, where its citizens rise or fall in the estimation of their fellows ... or according to the estimation of their fellows . . . the debatable measure of campus renown. 182 -1!L_V V £ 183 r v lM V w v:§L 184 w I ifc THE 1940 ARBUTUS Publication of any issue of the Arbutus has always entailed extreme coop- eration and coordination between the various students engaged in the financial and editorial units of the book. This year found a business and editorial staff of ample capabilities coupled with the experienced leadership of Editor-in-Chief, Audrey Smith, and Business Manager, Robert Twyman. Working directly under the editor were the Junior associate editors, Bette Anne Tillman, John C. Vanatta, John Kistler, and Richard Stoner. These four, in turn, supervised the various departments of copy writing, editing photography, and style, assisted by the twelve Sophomore assistants, Madelyn Pugh, Jean Dick- son, Joan Veit, Martha Mcintosh, Don Batton, Maurice Hill, Claude Spilman, Virginia Flory, Ed Ferrey, Carolyn Davis, Mary Carson, and Joanna Archibald. Chief photographer. Bob McConnell with his ever-present assistant. Bill Morris, was seen throughout the year chasing his subjects around the campus. With its high budget and expense the Arbutus required superior financial management. Directed by Robert Twyman, the business staff busied itself sell- ing subscriptions, advertising space and the all important function of keeping the book on the black side of the ledger book. The Junior business associates were Marvin Miller, Virginia Austin, Herman Dieter, and Bill Fisher. The roster of subscription -sellers and ad-pawners included Charles Legeman, Nancy Ellis, Mary Eisner, Margaret Welsh, Jeanne Gifford, Joan Barr, Bob Witham, Bob Frank, Gene Brown, Joe Troy, John Painter, and Garza Baldwin. AUDREY SMITH, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ROBERT W. TWYMAN, BUSINESS MANAGER Sophomore Ed. Ferrey and Editor-in-Chief Audrey Smith, Associate Editor John Kistler and sophomore Vir- ginia Flory turn editorial wheels. Business Manager Bob Twy- man, seated, with sophomore Mary Eisner and Associate Business Manager Bill Fisher. Associate business mana- gers Herman Dieter and Vir- ginia Austin, seated, give pointers to sophomores Charles Legeman, Joan Barr, and Garza Baldwin. Associate Editor Dick Sto- ner with sophomores Carolyn Davis, Claude Spilman, Gene Brown, and Madelyn Pugh. Editorial sophomores Mar- tha Mcintosh, Don Batton, and Joan Veit with Associate Editor John Vanatta and sophomore Morry Hill pour over copy. Editorial sophomores Jean Dickson, Mary Carson, and Joanna Archibald. Business staff sophomores Jean Welsh, Joe Troy, Bob Witham, Jean Gifford, and Nancy Ellis count sales. !:!!■The university watchman on his nightly rounds has no doubt many times passed in front of the Union Building, looked up at the third floor east wing and seen a light burning. If the window was open he probably heard the hum of voices mingled with the clacking of typewriters, and saw wisps of cigarette smoke rising in the early dawn air. He didn ' t run to the nearest corner to turn in an alarm, however, for he knew by this time that it was merely the Arbutus staff sweating their journalistic brows in the hope of being able to answer affirmatively the question, Will the Arbutus be out on time this year? 187 ROBERT McCONNELL Staff Photographer WALT LERNER Assistant Photographer BILL MORRIS Associate Photographer BOB WEATHERWAX Darkroom Manager MAX R. LONG Business Manager, Medical Section WILLIAM MANNING Editor, Dental Section CHARLES FLY Business Manager, Dental Section In the compilation of any year- book the help and cooperation of a great many people are necessary. The work of the photographer and his staff, as well as that of the editors and business managers of sections of the book, contribute greatly to the success or failure of a book. For the second consecutive year the Arbutus has had a separate photography division in connection with its regular staff. The main work of this group has been the making of all of the informal shots and many formal ones which appear through- out the book. This year the staff photographer was Bob McConnell, and his associate was Bill Morris. The dark room assistants were Walt Lerner and Bob Weatherwax. Past practical newspaper and high school annual experience has given McConnell a very good background for his work. Also, he has used most of his own equipment for this year ' s work. Much of the quality of the Arbutus is due to those of the photographic division for their fine cooperative spirit, splendid photographs, and efficient service. This year the editors and business managers of the Medical and Dental sections of the Arbutus have, through their efficiency and cooperation, assisted greatly in the publication of the year- book. With their aid, the Arbutus has attempted to present a clear picture of student work and activity on the Indianapolis campuses. 189 THE INDIANA DAILY STUDENT Modestly self-styled the World ' s Greatest College Daily, the Indiana Daily Student publishes for the campus the latest cam- pus, city, state, nation, and world news. During the school year, four sets of editors serve on the paper. The first semester Nathan Kaplan was editor; Dave Richardson, managing editor; the second half of the semester Dave Richardson was editor and Bill Brink, managing editor. The second semester Richard Bea- vans headed the staff and Wendell Phillippi assisted him; the second half of the semester Wendell Phillippi occupied the ed- itor ' s chair, with Carl Lewis assisting as managing editor. Dick Beavans and Wendell Phillippi, editors during the second semester, re- fer to the morgue. First semester editors read the day ' s news: Bill Brink, managing editor, and Nathan Kaplan and Dave Richardson, Editors-in-Chief. The Daily Student goes Daily Stooge linotyr ' typing. Famous are the Student ' s numerous campaigns, which are conducted with an earnest desire to improve the University. The Daily Student is to be congratulated upon its Send the Band to Fordham campaign, which it initiated during the football season, and which cry it kept up until the band was safely on its way to New York. During the bas- ketball season the need of raising the school spirit was shown by the Student, with a sug- gestion that girls be added to the cheer leaders squad. By the time of the home Purdue game, three girl leaders were ready to perform. The Student does much to keep the campus safety conscious by its frequent articles and editorials on this subject. Another campaign which the editors have taken up is that for an improvement in the student government set up, and a change in the merit system. Other campaigns which the Student has carried on have ranged from backing University debating, to advocating peace in keeping with the present world situation. Blackie Wellnitz, campus editor takes life easy with his three associates, James, Gosch, and Austin. Marianos, Fleming, Sports Editor Walker, and Kennedy grind out the sports page. The editorial board sits in session in the Sigma Delta Chi den with Editor-in-Chief Dick Beav- ans at the helm. 191 Campus Staffite Suzy Redman and Gerard Himmelsbach, city staff member, look over the city news with City Editor Charles Johnson. Dick Runyan confers with Night Editor Bob Meyer. Bob Meyer in the slot with Daily Studentites Carl Lewis, Dick Run- yan, Meredith Bratton, Dorothy Taylor, Dick Griffith, and Tom Gilliam around the rim. Theta Sigma Phi issue Editor Jeannette Dice and Managing Edi- tor Mary Holsinger put out the women s issue. THE SUMMER STUDENT Editors John McLeod and Chris Savage scan the latest edition. Harry Dennis and Dick Arnold pound the typewriters while Herb McLaughlin and Bill Bagby concentrate. Dick Strain, Sherwood Hines, Bob Thompson, and Nancy Snyder — in action around the campus desk. The Indiana Daily Student is not idle during the summer. An edition is pub- lished twice a week by summer school students, who struggle through the hot summer, tracking down stories, and editing the news. During the State Fair at Indianapolis in September, a staff composed of In- diana University students, puts out a daily edition of the Student, the only newspaper in the world to be published on a fairgrounds. Dave Richardson was this year ' s Editor-in-Chief, and the rest of the staff was made up of Wen- dell Phillipi, Richard Beavans, Tom Miller, Mary Holsinger, Helen Wallin, Tom Gilliam and Carl Lewis. 193 THE FOLIO In the year ' 39- ' 40, the FoHo published its fifth volume, the third in succession under the capable direction of Editor- in-Chief Dr. Josephine K. Piercy. Under Dr. Piercy ' s editorial policy, each issue of the Folio is edited by different faculty co-editors working with a permanent staff of faculty and stu- dents. The co-editors this year were Dr. Collins and Mr. Lockridge, Jr., for the fall issue; Mr. Roudebush and Mr. Palmer for the winter issue; Mr. Jansen for the midwinter is- sue; and Dr. Campbell and Mr. Yellen for the spring issue. All are of the Department of English. The year was marked by the introduction of two new features: Among the Magazines , a series of reviews meant to introduce the student to some of the better magazines which he otherwis e might not meet, and News Review , a commen- tary by Nathan Kaplan, ' 40, in which news was not only re- viewed but interpreted. Books and Off the Record , the latter a news-letter by Robert W. Martin, ' 40, on the record- ing of classical music, were features continued from previous years. The art work of the magazine for the year was high- lighted by the excellent photography of John W. Sloan, ' 39, and Lloyd Evans of the Bureau of Visual Instruction as well as the amusing and witty illustrations of Normabelle Helmen, ' 40. The policy of the Folio has remained unchanged. Pri- marily it is meant to serve as a textbook for English Composi- tion — to provide stimulation to composition students by show- ing them what their fellow students have done. Besides being an organ of the English Department, the Folio is meant to encourage aspirant writers on the campus by giving them an outlet of publication. Thus the Folio struggles with the two-fold problem of producing a literary magazine and a text book. BORED WALK The Bored Walk, humor magazine of the campus, is pub- lished once a month during the nine months of the school year. The magazine is considered by the boards and associations of college magazine editors one of the best college humor maga- zines in the Middle West. Bob Meyer, Editor-in-Chief of the magazine, is assisted by Bob Dobbins as Business Manager, Earl McCaslin, Advertis- ing Manager, and Jack Modisett, Circulation Manager. In keeping with the editorial policy outlined in the Sep- tember issue this year, the Bored Walk has presented each month a variety of features which appeal to every reader ' s taste — gossip, slang, features, love charts, cartoons, essays, satire on campus institutions, humorous poetry, gags, and plenty of names. The most popular feature in the book is the Borings col- umn, a monthly revelation of private love-life, dormitory, sorority, and fraternity gossip. This year the publication has been highlighted by having two cover designs drawn by an Esquire artist. Also capturing attention have been the pin charts, local photographs and the Life magazine issue , which has gained favorable opinion from other campuses. Bored Walk has the distinction of having its humor excerpted for use in the Reader ' s Digest . 194 Upper left: The Folio Staff, Bob Martin, Barbara Humphreys, Miss Josephine Piercy, Mr. William Jansen, Mr. Ralph Potter, Mrs. Cecilia Hendricks, Mr. Charles Green, Miss Mary E. Campbell. Lower left: Bob Meyer, Editor of the Bored Walk. Upper right: Lucy Sutton, Hugh Clayton, Max Scherer, Tom Miller, Virginia Austin of the Bored Waif staff. Lower right: Bored Waif staff members, Jim Wood, Nathan Kaplan, Normabelle Hcl- men, Richard Beavens, Relda Hoelocker. In 1936 The Folio had its beginnings as a private enter- prise at Indiana University. However, in 1937 the magazine was taken over by the English Department, enlarged, and is now used as a means of expression for creative writing, with the students in English Composition as its contributors. The Bored Walk, Indiana University ' s humor magazine, was first published in January, 1931. Bernard Nordberg ' 33, served as Editor-in-Chief of the publication during its first year of life. Ever since its beginning The Bored Walk has been a privately owned publication. During its eight years of existence, it has built a reputa- tion for itself which makes its publication date a red letter day on the campus calendar. 195 Besides the conventional paper, yearbook, hu- mor magazine, and literary magazine there are many subsidiary pubHcations on the Indiana campus. Freshman men and women receive the Freshman Handbook and the Chimes of In- diana , respectively, to aid them in becoming orientated to college life. The Indiana Alumni Magazine is of special interest to those wishing to keep in contact with their alma mater; the Athletic Review sold at football games appeals to sport enthusiasts; and the Red Book fur- nishes all those connected with the university with a complete directory of students, faculty, and offices. Miff Thomas Mary Dave B. Andy Olofson J. Lloyd Editor, Holsinger Richardson, Editor, Fitzpatrick Freshman Editor, Editor, Alumni Editor, Handbook Chimes of Indiana Athletic Review Magazine Red Book 196 In order to maintain alumni interest in I.U., the Indiana Alumni Magazine is issued each month from October through June to graduates and former students who are members of the Alumni Association. It includes University news, feature stories about outstanding alumni, sports write-ups, and pictures. Published each fall by the Y.M.C.A., the Red Book is Indi- ana University ' s complete directory of all students, administra- tive officials, and faculty members. With the additional in- formation concerning campus organizations and regulations, it is an indispensable book. The Athletic Review is presented in combination with the official program at all home football games. It features lineups of the games, information about opposing teams, and pictures of the outstanding athletes of I.U. This year the Freshman Handbook was compiled entirely under the supervision of an A.W.S. committee instead of in co- operation with Y.W.C.A. members. Presented in booklet form, it is a combination of tips to Freshman women on campus life and on social etiquette. A committee composed of members of the Indiana Union annually prepares the Freshman Guide for new men students in the University. Its purpose is to give the student a general con- ception of the type of academic work and social and extra-cur- ricular activities presented at Indiana University. 197 % 198 First Row Richard Arnold Paul Boxell Edward Hutton Second Row Buck Mauck Robert Weir Nathan Kaplan Third Row Willard Findling Richard Beavans Mifflin Thomas Pres. Herman B Wells Dean C. J. Sembower Dean C. E. Edmondson 200 Edward Hutton President Paul Boxell Vice-President Richard Beavans Secretary In the center of the discussion and debate on student self- government this year was the Board of Aeons, highest student tribunal and governing body. Much publicity was given to the movement for self-government on the campus, and the Board itself spent considerable time studying various systems and plans pointing toward a probable change in the mode of administra- tion. Established in 1921 by President-Emeritus William Lowe Bryan, the Board of Aeons was originally designed to serve as a coordinating link between the student body and the faculty- administration. Meeting each Monday night throughout the school year, it discusses various problems relevant to campus life, and makes recommendations to the University Board of Trus- tees. Its meetings are secret, a fact which is necessitated by vir- tue of the type of situations it must handle. In achieving a position on the Board of Aeons, a student may say that he has truly climbed to the highest rung of the campus political ladder. Membership is appointive, and the student must have displayed excellence either in scholarship or in some type of campus leadership. The Board compiles a list twice each year of the Junior and Senior men whom it feels most capable of executing its business, then submits these lists to Presi- dent Wells for final selection. Men who represent all walks of campus life and who are well acquainted with student needs and problems comprise the membership of the group. s ' : 201 1. liJ Jeannette Dice President Rosemary Treanor Y ice-President Anne Hopman Secretary Jean Glenn Treasurer A university woman who has been elected to Mortar Board has achieved one of the highest honors possible in extra-cur- ricular activities. Mortar Board has as its aim the promotion of the best interests of university women. This Senior organi- zation recognizes four years of scholarship, leadership, and activ- ity. New members are capped in their Junior year at the Junior-Senior Luncheon on University Foundation Day. In the evening after the capping , the chapter serenades the new pledges and the faculty advisers. The Indiana chapter of Mortar Board was organized in 1921 by Dr. Agnes E. Wells, former Dean of Women. Miss Wells also helped frame the national constitution of Mortar Board, at its foundation in 1918. Mortar Board traditionally sponsors several worth-while projects. In October, the organization compiles a list of avail- able tutors, who have been recommended by heads of depart- ments in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, the group recognizes outstanding Sophomore women, who are en- tertained at a tea. Other projects include the collection of old clothes and textbooks, the awarding of three tuition scholar- ships, and the sale of Phillips Brooks calendars. Mortar Board sponsors the unique Dame ' s Ball, which is the one campus af- fair of the year at which the girl pays all the bills for the eve- ning. The dames call for their dates, send them corsages and show every attention and courtesy that they would expect from a masculine escort. This year Mortar Board members held a dinner for their dates before the dance and attended in a body. From their treasury, the organization periodically replen- ishes the Student Loan Fund and also has recently redecorated the chapter room. It is an annual custom for Mortar Board to return the razz on the members of Theta Sigma Phi, wom- en ' s journalistic honorary, who sponsor the Razz Banquet. On Baccalaureate Day the active chapter entertains the Mortar Board alumni who have returned for Commencement. Several new projects are being inaugurated this year. Mortar Board is keeping the Student Building kitchen supplied with staples, is conducting research on cooperative houses to see if they would be practical for this campus, and will publish a pamphlet on Hygiene and Etiquette for University Women. The present faculty advisers of the group are Miss Agnes E. Wells, Miss Cora B. Hennel, and Miss Clara Fedler. 202 First Row Second Row Third Row Rosemary Treanor Mary Jane Tharp Barbara Beall Margaret Postma Geneva Senefeld Caroline Imel Jeannette Dice Eliza Bess Lucas Mary Beth Hunt Anne Hopman 20} First Row Second Row Third Row J. E. Patrick Robert Boughman Paul Feltus Richard Stoner W. A. Cogshall William Tipmore E. G. Mauck G. F. Heighway John Jay J. J. Robinson Edward Hutton David Richardson Richard Arnold Mifflin Thomas Robert Weir J. Hugh Funk Rembrandt Hiller 204 ! f Buck Mauck President Mifflin Thomas Vice-President Robert Weir Secretary J. E. Patrick Director Conceded to be the most imposing edifice on the Bloom- ington Campus is the Indiana Memorial Union Building, which, since its erection in 1932, has served an indispensable purpose in providing the student body with a nucleus for the conduct of its activities. Founded in 1909 by John Whittenberger and a group of students, the Indiana Union has grown to be a dominant factor in extra-curricular life. All male white students are members of the Union. Set up in the beginning to guide its activities was the Union Board, which has continued to function as govern- ing body and superviser of the usage of the building ' s facilities. Its membership consists of fifteen men, twelve students, two faculty members, and the director, J. E. Patrick. Of the stu- dent members, nine are selected on the basis of scholarship, in- terest in the Union as demonstrated in committee merit system work, and leadership qualities. The remaining three members of the board are elected at large by the male students in a spring election. The various activities and interest groups sponsored by the Union Board are numerous. Each Friday night in conjunction with A.W.S. the Board holds an informal dance or mixer to provide low cost entertainment for the students. It makes possi- ble the two discussion groups. Town Hall and the Open Forum, at which students voice their opinions in debate on pertinent questions of local and national concern. The football and bas- ketball pep sessions are under the supervision of the Board, and also the Grid-Graph, a play-by-play presentation of the out-of- town football games. Throughout the year visitors to the campus are conducted on tours of inspection by Union Board guide service workers. The Freshman banquet, football and basketball banquets, and other fetes of that type are directed by the Board. Another wide- ly publicized project of the Union is the weekly Record Hour, at which classical recordings are played. This service enjoyed a tremendous boost this year as a result of a grant of records and custom-built recording machine donated by the Carnegie Found- ation. Under this expansion students may now have access to the records at times other than the Friday night session. The Union Board plays guardian angel to a group of lesser interest clubs and organizations, such as the Chess Club, the Camera Club, the I. U. Flying Club, the university billiard teams, and several others. 205 Geneva Senefeld - .President Rosemary Treanor Vice-President Betty Harris Secretary Catherine Cherry Treasurer Bette Ann Tillman Social Chairman The seventeen hundred women students at Indiana Uni- versity comprise the membership of the Association of Women Students. The promotion and the maintenance of the highest standards of college life, and the bringing about of greater unity and mutual helpfulness among the women of the university has been the purpose of this organization since it was established here in 1920. A. W. S. is a member of the National Inter-Collegiate Association of Women Students. The organization is governed by a council of thirteen women students who are elected by all the women students. Organized and unorganized students have equal representatioii on the council. At least once a year there is a mass meeting of all the women. In order that more women may take an active part in the organization, five committees were formed. They are the publicity, clerical, coed counseling, social, and finance commit- tees. The publicity committee is in charge of the A.W.S. pub- lication. The Coed Reporter, which contacts every woman student. A.W.S. created the Board of Standards this year which enforces the A. W. S. rulings and offers help and advice to any woman student so desiring it. The organization also made possible a recreation room in the Student Building to provide recreation and entertainment for both men and women. Students may enjoy dancing, ping- pong, badminton, and shuffleboard. A.W.S. in cooperation with Union Board sponsors weekly Friday night dances, the Powwow, and a Christmas party for underprivileged children. Also at Christmas time the girls dress dolls to be given to unfortunate children. In addition to these functions, A.W.S. has several informal Sat- urday night parties, a dinner for Freshman women, a tea for transfer students, and a Hallowe ' en party for all Freshman women. This year the organization is giving a dinner in honor of the Senior women. Through coed counseling and the print- ing of the Freshman Handbook, the organization helps orien- tate the Freshman women. ..- % ' B 20 First Row Catherine Cherry Mary Jane Armstrong Mary Beth Hunt Hester Graham Second Row Geneva Senefeld Rosemary Treanor Betty Dickerson Mary Susan StuU Third Row Bette Ann Tillman Betty Harris Mary Frances Hercamp Mary Holsinger Anne Hopman 207 First Row Buck Mauck Willard Findling Richard Beavans Edward Hutton Second Row Robert Twyman Marvin Huffman Mifflin Thomas Nathan Kaplan 208 1 lJ XXJUiXt 1st Semester E. G. Mauck President Nathan Kaplan Vice-President Mifflin Thomas Secretary Robert Twyman Treasurer 2nd Semester Edward Hutton President Willard Findling Y ice -President Marvin Huffman - Secretary Richard Beavans - Treasurer Dragon ' s Head represents a singular organization on In- diana ' s campus. It is purely honorary, meeting only twice a vear at induction banquets, one taking place in the fall and another in the spring. Its beginning dates back to 1933. The group boasts only the biggest and better of the campus big-wigs. To be eligible, one must be a Senior and must have attain none but the highest ranking in prominent extra- curricular activities. As such, a member is captain of a major athletic team, editor or executive officer of a major publication, or president of one of several organizations. Glancing over its officers it is easy to see what rods are members of Dragon ' s Head. Buck Mauck is President of Senior Class and President of the Union Board. Nathan Kaplan was Editor of the Indiana Student the first half of the first semester. Miff Thomas is Captain of the Varsity Swimming team. Robert Twyman is Business Manager of the Arbutus and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Edward Hutton is President of the Board of Aeons. Willard Findling is Senior Football Manager and Presi- dent of Blue Key. Marvin Huffman is Captain of the varsity basketball squad. Richard Beavans is President of the Inde- pendent Students Association and was Editor of the Daily Stu- dent for the first half of the second semester. Four men are initiated in the first semester and four more the second, thus limiting the membership to eight. Twice a vear four officers are chosen from the ranks of the new members. There are no dances, monthly meetings, or services per- formed by Dragon ' s Head. It sponsors no milk funds, gives no benefits for relief funds and gives no excuse for its existence. It is in this fact that lies its chief claim to campus fame. The reason for this is, undoubtedly, that the B.M.O.C. ' s it boasts of would have no time to participate in them. For if they did have time, Dragon ' s Head would not claim them. 209 The Board of Standards is the youngest self-government group on the campus. It began its work in the fall of 1939 with Rosemary Treanor as chairman of the group, and has been functioning strongly ever since. It was started by AWS Council to perform the functions of a judiciary board, and to act as an advisory council to the Dean of Women in her work with students. The council takes action in disciplinary cases, and plans remedial and constructive projects for women students of Ind ' ana. Before the final examination period the Board of Standards undertook a campaign to reduce cheating. The campaign consisted of recommendations sent out to faculty members and group meetings for all women students. A sur- vey was made by the board to discover the cause of cheating and find means of remedying it. Through contact with pro- fessors, a collection of past examinations is to be made, and the examinations are to be kept on file in the Library for the use of students. The minutes of the weekly meetings are available for read- ing in the Dean of Women ' s office and the AWS Council room, so that any Interested student may be fully informed of all the work of the Board. Plans are now being made to enlarge the group so that the student body will be assured of a greater rep- resentation. The Board Is composed of seven members, three seniors, two juniors and two sophomores. The present mem- bers are Barbara Beall, Albina Spychalski, Rosemary Treanor, Betty Harsh, Mary Jane Straub, Margaret Fargo, and Mary Rees. 210 First Row Rosemary Treanor Betty Harsh Margaret Fargo Mary Rees Second Row Mary Jane Straub Albina Spychalski Barbara Beall 211 First Row Willard Findling Robert Boughman Phil Cooper Charles Baillie Robert Weir David B. Richardson Second Row Allen Harrison Robert Denny Robert E. Johnson Tom Miller John Jay Sam Mitchell Nathan Kaplan Third Row E. G. Mauck Harry Tomlinson Evan Stiers F. Jay Nimtz Gilbert Shull Val Nolan, Jr. John Myers Thomas Cravens Fourth Row Charles Barnhill Robert Twyman Paul Boxell Wendell Phillippi Montford Mead Rembrandt Hiller William Keck Edward L. Hutton 212 Willard Findling President Robert Weir Vice-President Evan Stiers Secretary-Treasurer The burial of Jawn Purdue at the pep session preceding the Indiana-Purdue football game is one of the best-known activities of Blue Key, honorary organization for outstanding men of the campus. They also compile a recognition list of the outstanding Freshmen and give a Blue Key dance each year. The group meets every other Thursday for lunch to discuss various campus problems. Blue Key was founded at the University of Florida in 1924. The fraternity was originally organized for the purpose of wel- coming members of the state legislature to their campus. One year later the organization became national in scope. In 1929 a chapter was founded at Indiana University to recognize stu- dent activities, character, and scholarship. Before a student can be considered for membership in Blue Key, he must have accumulated at least 100 points in extra- curricular activities, his scholastic average must be at least 1.3, he must be a Junior or Senior, and he must have the endorse- ment of President Herman B Wells. The faculty members of the fraternity are Dean C. J. Sembower, Dr. L. E. Norvelle, Dr. E. L. Yeager, Dr. J. J. Rob- inson, and A. N. (Bo) McMillin. Glen R. Hillis, prominent Kokomo attorney, was made an honorary member in 1939. 213 Laura Wilkins President Julia Ann Harting Vice-President Sarah Gray Secretary Ruth Ferris Treasurer The blue and gold cap, which is worn on Wednesdays and rainy days by members of Pleiades, is their traditional in- signia. The cap marks a girl who is prominent socially and in extra-curricular activities. To strengthen the spirit of cooperation and friendliness among social organizations is the main purpose of Pleiades, which was founded on the Indiana campus in 1925 by six girls — hence the six stars in a circle on the front of the hat. The number of pledges is governed by those graduating, as the membership is limited to twenty-five. New members are announced at the Powwow in the fall and on the morning of the Junior Prom in the spring. New pledges announced Prom morning were Naomi Bates, Helen Miller, Betty NichoUs, Mary Snapp, Nancy Ellis, Louise Samuelson, Joan Barr, Kathryn Alexander, Madelyn Pugh, Vara Judd, and Anne Hooge. Pleiades sponsors an annual Christmas party for needy children and awards two scholarships annually to the unor- ganized women most outstanding on the campus. As a uni- versity organization it is most helpful because of its many projects which keep it in contact with students and student affairs. Regular bi-weekly luncheons are held in the Pleiades Room of the Student Building, and dinner meetings are also held fre- quently at sorority houses of the various members in order to acquaint each with the other ' s sorority membership. On November 1 1 the group co-operated with Skull and Crescent in sponsoring the Jordan Ramble dance. Sponsors of the organization are Miss Agnes E. Wells, former Dean of Women, and Mrs. Lee Norvelle. I First Row Mary Scales Jeanette Prinz Adele Lov. ' ell Georgia Vorgang Mary Susan StuU Second Row Mary Catherine Kirk Virginia Heller Jeannette Dice Frances Watkins Mary Beth Hunt Third Row Marjorie Heidenreich Marion Smith Ruth Ferris Roberta Haskell Peggy Smith Fourth Row Audrey Smith Marie Turgi Mary Ruth Steinmetz Betty Jo Hanson Laura Wilkins Sarah Gray 21J First Row Second Row Third Row Fourth Row Robert Boughman Robert Weir James Fausch William Keck Bill Tipmore Robert Denny Jack Lynch William Armstrong Richard Schmalz Gilbert ShuU John Myers J. D. Sharp John Janzaruk Page Benson William Hauschild William Menke Edward L. Hutton Jack Stevenson E. G. Mauck Marvin Huffman Dale Tanner David B. Richardson Walt Smith 216 Jack Stevenson President Earl G. Mauck Vice-Presideni Walt Smith Secretary-Treasurer Sitting stolidly and allowing the shifting sands of the desert to bury him is not, as the name might seem to indicate, the occu- pation of a member of Sphinx Club. The very honorable hon- orary for upperclassmen maintains a reputation which is nation- ally recognized, for the group is wide-spread and has chapters on many campuses throughout the college world. Originally conceived at this University in 1910 by several enterprising men as a means of promoting good fellowship among students on the campus, this organization has upheld that purpose with commendable zeal. Pledging to the group takes place in the fall and spring, the new men being required to have at least Junior standing. The members of Sphinx Club are chosen on the basis of their being active on the campus in some form of extra-curricular ac- tivity, and being good fellows as well. The organization sponsors several functions, some public and others confined to the group. The campus activities are numerous, including the Dad ' s Day function, an annual paternal get-together on the day of the Purdue classic. Sphinx holds the Table Waiter ' s Ball each year in Alumni Hall. In conjunction with Pleiades, the group ushers at the Powwow Banquet. In the journalistic field. Sphinx helps sponsor the Athletic Review. Within its own sphere of activity it holds several dinners and private parties during the school year. Faculty adviser of the group is Robert Allen. Mary Jane Tharp President Eliza Bess Lucas Vice-President Lois Armstrong Secretary Charlotte Jeanes Treasurer The Young Women ' s Christian Association is character- ized by a faith in the ability of each individual to create and contribute to the social whole. Here different personalities may meet on the common ground of belief in the realness of deeper values and form valuable friendships through common in- terests. Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. grew into two separate organiza- tions from the Joint Christian Association, which was estab- lished in 1887. The Y.W.C.A. welcomes into membership ail women students who agree to practice the principles of the asso- ciation. Its theme for this year has been, Youth Faces Life . All the programs planned by the Y.W.C.A. are beneficial to the students of the University. It starts the year with Fresh- man Week, giving a picnic, breakfast, luncheon, and the Fresh- man Frolic to help new Freshman girls get acquainted and feel at home. During the course of the year its members hold informal discussion groups, in which philosophy, music, inter- national relations, and social and economic problems are dis- cussed. Together with the Y.M.C.A., they sponsor monthly teas and parties and sponsor the University Sing in May on the steps of the Student Building. Hobby groups meet for mem- bers interested in hiking, riding, reading, poetry, music, dra- matics, and handicrafts. Council and Cabinet members of the association may par- ticipate in a retreat held in Brown County every spring and fall. Here campus problems and Y.W. ' s proceedings for the year are discussed. Y.W.C.A. also sponsors groups for campus and commun- ity service in which any interested members may participate. These groups strive to aid the poor, blind, and under-privileged children, and give special help in personal adjustments. They also lead Girl Scout troops and the Girl Reserves in Blooming- ton schools. 218 First Row Second Row Third Row Eugenia Neu Charlotte Jeanes Margie Taylor Edwina Myers Jean Sinclair Caroline Imel Margie Lou May Carmen Cook Betty Firth Eliza Bess Lucas Eunice Runner Mary Jane Straub Mary Jane Tharp Betty Harsh Mary Mellinger Lois Armstrong Mary Susan Stull 219 First Row- Roger Eisinger Donald Batton Rufus Rogers John Erdnian George Ahlering Patrick Larkin Second Row John Springer George Kirsch Robert Scott James Wood Gene Rodenberger Robert Gates Robert Arnold Third Row Dick Davis Al Kosnoff Jim Teaney Clifford Wiethoff Glen Smith Jim Swets Jack Feighner Fourth Row Jim Duval Bob Chattin Maurice Hill Jim Mendenhall Howdy Wilcox John Horton James Young 220 Howard Wilcox President John R. Feighner Vice-President James Gard Secretary Don Batton Treasurer The orange and green hat signifies membership in Skull and Crescent, replies the bored upperclassman to the inquir- ing Freshman, and may or may not continue to inform the lowly one that the organization in question boasts of eight chapters in the schools of the Big Ten athletic conference. Each spring the group pins pledge ribbons on two neo- phytes from each of the several social fraternities on the cam- pus, the men selected being the outstanding members of their respective classes. The members remain active only through the Sophomore year, then bow to the incoming class. Thus the group maintains an active roll of about forty men. Each year Skull and Crescent presents a fifty dollar schol- arship to an outstanding student who is a member of the Sophomore class. This year the award was given to Scott Dan- iels. Other activities engaged in are: maintenance of the Sen- ior Walk ; the assumed authority over the Freshman class as to the wearin ' o ' the green ; and several dinners and lunch- eons throughout the year. On November 11, the group collaborated with Pleiades in sponsoring the informal Jordan Ramble dance, injecting a novel circus theme into the affair. The Indiana chapter of Skull and Crescent received its charter in 1922. The chapter adviser left the campus the fol- lowing year, and no one has been appointed as yet to fill the vacancy. 221 Margaret Postma - Vresident Anne Hopman Y ice-President Nelda Johnson Secretary June Hiatt Treasurer The Women ' s Athletic Association has as its purpose the promotion of interest in physical education. Membership in the organization is open to anyone who makes one team or passes two required tests in the Department of Physical Education for Women. The group, which has a membership of approximately 150 girls, is governed by the W.A.A. Board, made up of the offi- cers and the following: Georgia Vorgang, intramural head; Helen Wallin, publicity; Beryl Ann Brownell, who represents archery on the Board; Mary LaVon Stevenson, tennis; Roberta Haskell, swimming; Caroline Imel, dance; Lois Thompson, bas- ketball; Elizabeth Dawson, baseball; Elnora Curtis, hockey and speedball; Ruth Rogers, recreational sports; Mary Stuart Hayes, golf; Marcile Irle, volleyball; and Alverta Sohl, hiking. Also on the Board are representatives from the archery, hiking, dance, tennis, and swimming clubs. They meet twice a month, with the entire group meeting every third Tuesday. W.A.A. sponsors the intramural activities for women, and gives a Senior banquet for all graduating women in May. They also publish an official bulletin every week. « Play days and sports days are held with other universities. This year W.A.A. conven ed with Depauw University, Frank- lin College, and Illinois University. 222 First Row Caroline Imel Roberta Haskell Margaret Postma Nelda Johnson Elizabeth Dawson Second Row Helen Wallin Elnora Curtis Marcile Irle Anne Hopman Alverta Sohl Third Row Ruth Rogers Lois Thompson Georgia Vorgang Marie O ' Dowd Beryl Ann Brownell Mary Stevenson 223 First Row Chester Stayton Rembrandt Hiller Val Nolan, Jr. Harold Wesselman Richard Pell Bernard Rose Second Row Samuel Wells Bernard Bogard William Horton J. G. Nichols Dan Drain Leighton Mock Third Row Willard Findling Richard Arnold Jack Modisett John Nagle Herman Dieter John Lynch Dick Arnold Vresident Bernard Bogard Y ice-President Rembrandt Hiller Secretary J. G. Nichols Treasurer 1909 saw the founding of an organization, the Intrafra- ternity Council which was to build up cooperation and friend- ship among the Greek letter fraternity men on this campus. Once every two weeks the members meet to discuss fraternity house problems, exchange dinners, intramural games, rush week activities, and various other fraternity problems which arise. The organization includes a representative from each fraternity; the group, however, has no legislative control over the organizations, for it may only formulate and offer suggestions. The Council sponsors two annual events — the Interfrater- nity Ball and the Greek Night Banquet at which awards are made to both the fraternity and to individual members having the highest scholarship. The fraternity winning this award for three successive years will be able to take permanent possession of it. Through these activities the Council has been able to be of greater service to the fraternities in solving their problems, encouraging high scholastic averages, and in eliminating inter- fraternity conflict. 224 , .i First Row Mary Carson Laura Wilkins Ellen Schocke Jeannette Fichman Sarah Gray Margaret Cierzniak Second Row- Louise Samuelson Virginia Austin Mary Beth Hunt Dorothy Taylor Margaret Gary Phyllis Landis Third Row Mary Ann Kriegbaum Doris Vater Harriet Kriegbaum Marie Jeannette Turgi Eunice Runner Elizabeth Dawson Fourth Row Mary Scales Joyce Smith Adele Lowell Mary Jane Armstrong Leota Bruner Marian Johnson Fifth Row Mark Catherine Kirk Betty Higbee Jean Inskeep Darlene Buskirk Marietta Wood Elizabeth Dawson . resident Mary Jane Armstrong Vice-President Marie Turgi Recording Secretary Joyce Smith Corresponding Secretary Pan-Hellenic Association is a group of representatives from each sorority whose purpose is to maintain fraternity hfe and inter fraternity relationship; to cooperate with college authori- ties; to be a forum for discussion of questions of interest to the college and fraternity world . A national organization, Pan-Hell is active in promoting a cooperative spirit among the sixteen sororities on the cam- pus. The organization also strives to encourage a more friendly attitude between organized and unorganized students. A Thanksgiving tea dance was given by the association in coop- eration with the Interfraternity Council and the I.S.A. in an effort to stimulate this attitude. As an incentive for high scholarship, Pan-Hellenic Asso- ciation awards a scholarship cup to the Greek-letter sorority having the highest average each semester. The house which is able to retain the cup for three successive years is entitled to permanent possession of it. 225 First Row- Betty Roach Alwyn Miller Betty Jane Campbell Eleanorc Barnhart Ruth Dixon Mary Fountain Second Row •. Doris Sheeler ' Mary Weinland Mary Snapp Mary Hendricks Mary Jane Armstrong Mary Rees Patricia McConnaha Third Row Mary Elizabeth Hendricks Betty Jeanne Dickerson Margaret Fargo Hester Graham Betty Jane Corwin Jo Anne Pierpont Laura Jane McWhinney Fourth Row Helen Burton Suzanne Moore Elizabeth Eraser Mary Mann Emma Lucy Phillipp Phyllis Gill Lois Armstrong Mary Mann President: Doris Sheeler Vice-President Hester Graham Secretary Patricia McConnaha Treasurer Alpha Lambda Delta girls might be called the intelligent- sia of the Freshman class. Prerequisites for becoming a member are a B+ average and fifteen or more hours of college work. The purpose of the group — to provide a stimulus for study and high scholarship and a reward for real interest in things intellectual — is incentive enough for Freshmen women to strive to attain the honor of selection to membership in this group. This honorary organization was formed at the University of Illinois in 1924. It became a national organization two years later when other colleges in the Association of American Uni- versities became members. Now scholarly Freshmen women in colleges and universities all over the country are seen wearing the small, gold pin of Alpha Lambda Delta. All study and no play is far from the aim of the organi- zation. Social activities, although less important than study- ing, are never neglected. The major social event of the year is the formal dinner with Phi Eta Sigma in the spring after the initiation of new members. This year members of Alpha Lambda Delta attended social meetings which were held once a month. A Christmas party was given for all members now in school. I 226 First Row Merle Blue James Henley John Springer Walter Robbins Glenn Irwin Pierre Talbert Harold Houser Robert Thompson Second Row Robert Sill John Erdmann Paul Boxell Jack Fairchild Theodore Bockstahler Robert Gates Keith Cox Russel Ratclifif Third Row John Visher Jerome Finkelstein James Noland William Clevinger Maurice Kirkwood Robert Chattin Paul Sollman Norman Hasler Scott Daniels Fourth Row Bruce Decker Lloyd Toney Robert Brown Willard Findling Philip Seitz Donald Foxworthy Maurice Hill Jack Reinhard Joseph Pedicini James Noland President Lloyd Toney Vice-Presideni Keith Cox Secretary Hanley Hammell Treasurer To promote a higher standard of learning and to en- courage high scholastic attainment among Freshman men is the sole and worthy purpose of Phi Eta Sigma. This honorary fraternity was founded at the University of Illinois in 1923 and in 1930 a chapter was established on the Indiana campus. There are now twenty-nine active chapters throughout the country. Eligibility for Phi Eta Sigma includes Freshmen standing in the University and a maintenance of at least a 2.5 average for the first semester or for the year. Robert Royer, swim- ming coach and assistant Dean of Men, is the faculty sponsor. The fraternity ' s chief function consists in assisting Fresh- man men who have encountered difficulty in their studies. A Counsellors Corps, made up of members who volunteer their services, helps freshman students plan study hours and methods of study. This year the organization distributed a booklet, Hints on How to Study , to all Freshman men. Social activities consist of a smoker in the fall for Fresh- men who attained an A average in high school, and a banquet in the spring held in conjunction with Alpha Lambda Delta, honoring new members of both organizations. Last year in the spring of 1939, the Indiana chapter played host to the na- tional convention of Phi Eta Sigma. 227 First Row Ben Barr Richard Herd Martin Ankenbruck Robert Naugle Walter Smith Second Row Warren Zweig Oliver Zeiher Roland Malott John Jay Robert Johnson Joseph Herd Third Row Robert McConnell William Kozma Robert Plank Chris Savage Keith Cox Tom Miller Fourth Row Montford Mead Harold Medow Porter Murphy Tom Lindahl Al Lohse Percy Ganstine Harold Medow ....President: Porter Murphy Vice-President Robert Sabin Secretary Robert Plank Treasurer Alpha Phi Omega, which is primarily a service organiza- tion, sponsored this year for the first time on the I. U. campus the Quarterback Hour, in which a series of movies of the foot- ball games played away from home were shown with explan- ations by members of the football coaching sta ff. Another new project which met with success was the free fingerprinting ser- vice in which members of Alpha Phi Omega took fingerprints of over a thousand students for the civilian fingerprint files of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Alpha Phi Omega was established at Lafayette College in 1929, to extend the services of Boy Scouts throughout the col- lege. The principle requisite for membership Is that a prospec- tive member must have been a registered scout. A traditional project of Alpha Phi Omega is the annual Scout Day, held at the beginning of the football season. This year they also held the Third Annual Eagle Scout Conference, and in connection with it awarded two scholarship loans. 228 mmM First Row Ben Barr Byron Aukerman James Batchelor Harold Medow Donald Tillotson Second Row Frank Sage Charles Lees Glen E. Smith John Vanatta Robert Naugle Third Row J. Merritt Carroll Richard Herd David Gray Hal Bridge Walter Smith Fourth Row Joyce Herrmann Merle Blue John Fox Robert Plank F. Jay Nimtz Rembrandt Hiller Walt Smith President Merle Blue Vice-President Rembrandt Hiller Treasurer Don Tillotson Secretary Exemplifying the true spirit of brotherhood the Young Men ' s Christian Association, founded in 1891, has been bring- ing together the individual students of this campus for 42 years. Its functions are numerous. The Y helps to create a well balanced life for the student. It gives him religious train- ing, social training, political and economic experience, and of- fers to him training in leadership. The Y.M.C.A. assisted by the Y.W.C.A. sponsors many important social events of the year. These include the Fresh- man Mixer, the All-University Parties, and the University Sing in which all social organizations compete for the trophy offered by the Y . One of the important services of the Y is the publica- tion of the Red Book. This book, giving complete information about the faculty, all social organizations, and students of the campus, from its publication date becomes the complete encyclo- pedia for the students. 229 First Row James B. Huff Alvah M. Dieterich Robert H. Penn John W. Broom Richard Waggoner Second Row David Rariden Robert G. Taylor Jack W. Patterson William Schimpff Third Row William D. Kleyla Ray Kern William Pirtle Bert Fenn Ray Moutoux Bob Penn President Ray Kern Vice-President David Rariden Treasurer Kappa Kappa Psi holds two annual picnics to increase friendship and unity among the bandsmen on the campus. In addition, the organization, by sponsoring the annual fall smoker, gives Freshman band members an opportunity to become ac- quainted with men who have gained some success in their band work. Members of the fraternity are selected from the March- ing Hundred on the basis of attitude, appearance, and playing and marching ability. Much of the attention of the group is centered on promoting the interests of the Marching Hun- dred on the campus. Kappa Kappa Psi members entertain visiting bands, spon- sor concerts, and aid various organizations in presenting musi- cal programs. 230 Melvin Ritter and Andrew Best prepare the I.S.A. weekly bulletin. Joe Deal campaigns for the I.S.A. at a C.C. of C. election. Office workers shape up the I.S.A. cam- paign talk. The I.S.A. executive board made up of Albina Spychalski, George Newlin, Joe Deal, Melvin Ritter, Betty Bowman, John Jay, and Dick Beavans, make wheels turn smoothly. The I-M Softball team decides who will go to bat first. Members enjoy the informal I.S.A. mix- ers in the Union Building. John Canvin distributes news through the I.S.A. Bulletin. Richard Beavans President John Jay Yice-Fresident Sophia Nicholas Secretary Bob Overmyer Treasurer The Independent Student Association has three major activities: informing independent students of campus activities through weekly bulletins, sponsoring social functions and mixers to promote better acquaintance among the students, and the sup- port of independent students in campus elections. The executive board, which meets once a week, is composed of the officers and the following students: George Newlin, elec- tion chairman; Joe Deal, personnel chairman; Melvin Ritter, dis- trict chairman; Albina Spychalski, social chairman; Fred Case, publicity chairman Betty Bowman, membership chairman. The I.S.A. general council, which meets once a month, has six students from the working committee, nine students elected from those living out in town, one representative from each dormitory, and five members from the previous year. I 231 First Row Bill Fitzgibbon John Potts Millard Eck Elbert Graves Julius Klaus Col. J. F. Landis, Inf. Second Row John Covey Major L. P. Hodnette, Inf. Joseph Szabo Howard Kessler Herman Schell Joe Deal Third Row William Day Beverly Boyle Gus Psaltis Ray Southworth Richard Wyczawski Robert Jarnecke Fourth Row Paul Kiesler David Kirkpatrick Major R. L. Shoemaker, Inf. Stanley Dec Richey Sumner James Cox Robert Martz 232 Scabbard and Blade was founded in 1905 at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin by five senior officers in the cadet corps. Now it is a national organization composed of seventy-eight companies at the different universities and colleges having de- partments of military sciences and tactics. It has a total mem- bership of 30,000. The Indiana chapter presented its petition at the first na- tional convention of Scabbard and Blade held after the World War. The petition was accepted in 1921, and Company F, 2nd regiment at Indiana University, was the first company to be admitted to the national organization after the close of the World War. The installation of this chapter is very pe- culiar in the fact that its ceremonies were held at Purdue in- stead of at Indiana University. Membership is based upon character, academic record, pro- ficiency in military science, and general fitness. The local chapter conducts an election each year to elect the five coed sponsors for the R.O.T.C. unit. Scabbard and Blade ' s chief purpose is to promote interest in military training. It seeks to develop the essential qualities of good and efficient officers. It also spreads intelligent in- formation concerning the military requirements and organiza- tions of the country. Scabbard and Blade shares the responsibility of the Band Benefit Ball and gives the Military Ball at which the Coed Sponsors are announced. For the past few years on Scabbard and Blade Day the fraternity has had the honor of being the reviewing stand for a regimental parade. 233 Alfred P. Teegarden Captain Howard Kessler First Lieutenant John Covey Second Lieutenant James D. Atkinson - Second Lieutenant Edward Hildebrand Second Lieutenant Elbert Graves _. .— Second Lieutenant J. Hugh Funk First Sergeant Pershing Rifles attracts those men who find their interest in military to be greater than merely the required course. Its purpose is to maximize the dril l efficiency of its members; its goal is to teach perfect precision in all military movements and drill. In a word it is the crack drill team of the military department. The group first came into being when John J. Pershing organized an army unit as a competitive drill team in 1894 at the University of Nebraska. It has grown until now there are seven regiments in the United States. National headquar- ters are maintained at the University of Nebraska. Organized in 1930, the unit on this campus belongs to the Third Regiment which also consists of companies from Michi- gan State University, University of Illinois, and Western Ken- tucky State Teachers College. I.U. ' s members of Pershing Rifles entered into this year ' s regimental meet which featured competition in individual and team drills. Marching as a separate unit. Company F, in the weekly military reviews, the Pershing Riflemen can be recognized easily by the blue braid worn on their left shoulders. Because of the extra training offered by the organization, most of the men holding responsible positions in drill regulations are found to be wearing this distingu ' shing blue braid. Members of Pershing Rifles aid the advanced military course men in sponsoring the Military Ball. The unit this year elected, as their Coed Sponsor, Virginia Austin who served as reigning queen for the ball. 234 irst Row Second Row Third Row Fourth Row Fifth Row Robert Smart John Covey Paul Keisler William Stogdill Robert Wilson Norman Vernon Walter Hayes James Piper Paul Gilliatt Ed Hildebrand Richard Lewis Thomas Rupert John Frazier Richards Merley Alfred Teegarden Donald Dooley Elbert Graves George Buckner Max Coan John Eason Robert Molenda J. Hugh Funk Harry Littell Robert Stutsman De Wayne Royalty Elmer Stonecipher William Sohl Robert Smith Robert Lutes John Lycas Bernard Cinkoske Warren Zweig Charles Rhetts Charles Feeger Howard Kcssler William Couch Robert Martz Robert Jarnecke Claude Holmes Keith Cox William Bungert 2J5 Marshall Hassenmiller President Richard Robinson Vice-President Dean Pearch Secretary William Robinson Treasurer The Indiana University Flying Club was organized in 1937, at the same time becoming a member of the National Intercol- legiate Flying Club. In 193 8 they put out a questionnaire on campus for the purpose of compiling statistics for the C.A.A. The club was formed to promote interest on the cam- pus in aviation, to obtain flying instructions at reduced rates, and to aid students in gaining flying experience and knowledge of Civil Air Rules. The organization was quite influential in obtaining a Civilian Pilot Training Program at Indiana University, which was granted a quota of twenty students in November, 1939. Thus the University became one of the many hundreds of col- leges and universities participating in the new program of the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Soon after this first quota, I. U. got an additional grant which increased the quota to thirty students enrolled in the course. The course includes ground instruction amounting to seventy-two hours, during which time the students study Navi- gation, Meterology, Theory of Flight, Airplane Engines, His- tory of Aviation, Aeronautical Instruments, Parachutes, and Radio Procedure. In addition to this they are given at least thirty-five hours of flying, of which eighteen are solo. After this is completed, they are given the C.A.A. examination for a Private Pilot ' s License. The ground instruction was begun just after Christmas vacation, but the flight instruction was held up for some time before the city could get a P.W.A. grant for the construction of a new airport. Finally, on February 22, flight instruction was begun. Although this program is not connected in any way with the U. S. War Department, and students enrolled in it do not assume military obligations, the course is under the supervision of Col. John F. Landis on this campus. Lieutenant Daudt of the National Guard is the instructor of the ground school, and he is assisted by William Kaiser, and Blaine (Junie) Bradfute in the flight instruction of the thirty students. 236 First Row: Dorothy Lucas, May V. DaLeure, Frances Panos, Al Birch, Angel P. Garcia, Antonio Orpi, Mary O ' Donnell, Mary Micu. Second Row: Bart Liana, Maris Orpi, Lotte Lederer, Ting Su, Eric Simmons, Ray Mattingley, Betty Bender, Paulina Heine, Henry Wen, Verna Godsey. Third Row: Sheo Ming Key, Bob Moffat, Jose Gonzalez, Eugenio Salazar, Ann Ray, Eileen Collier, Velit Mehmet Dag, Anna Kurilovitch. Fourth Row: Roger Donoghue, Muriel Mullins, Elvina Wolfe, John Dancy, Izzettin Turanli, Burt Wheeler, Carl Moenkhaus. Ray Mattingley President Antonio Orpi Vice-President Albert Birch Secretary Bart Liana Treasurer Membership in the Cosmopolitan Club is limited to foreign- born students and any faculty member. However, a restricted number of American-born students are allowed membership by vote of the club. The organization is principally a social and educational group, its purpose being to acquaint foreign-born students with each other and to widen their relationships with the remainder of the students on the campus. The Indiana University Cosmopolitan Club was accepted as a chapter of the International Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs in 1918. Their bi-monthly meetings include a varied en- tertainment program, consisting mainly of faculty speakers and musicales. Prof. C. L. Lundin of the History Department, was chosen faculty adviser for the group this year, succeeding Miss Cora B. Hennel. Projects being carried on by the club include the organiza- tion of a speaker ' s bureau of foreign-born students available for school and club talks, and the maintenance of an emergency loan fund for students whose homes are in foreign countries. Plans are also being made for a revival of the International Revue which was discontinued by the group in 1925. 237 First Row Catherine Lory Charlotte Bray Sadie Fields Josephine Brown Ruth Carter (Mrs. R. C.) Inez Williams Second Row Mary Day Mary Jane Bumingham Mary Dunn Elvina Wolf Marcella Brandyberry Grace Fuzy Mary Margaret Hastings Third Row Ruth Hinton Olivia Dickhaut Madonna Hughes Muriel Mullins Monica Underwood (Mrs.) Patricia Hilliard Lillian Belle Johnson Mary Margaret Hastings President Inez Williams Vice-President Mary Day Secretary Charlotte Bray Treasurer One of the newest club groups on the campus is the or- ganization composed of Registered Nurses who are taking work in the university. The idea of organizing these students into a social group was first conceived two years ago when the School of Education offered a B.S. degree in Nursing. They have grown in this short time from the six original members to thirty-eight members this year. The two main purposes of the R.N. Club are social and educational advancement. The meetings are held once a month usually in the Student Building. At these meetings, various faculty members and other outstanding persons have spoken. In addition to the regular educational meetings, luncheons and teas are held. The ultimate aim of this young organization is to build a chapter house and obtain permission to charter a national Greek letter organization. Mrs. Bessie F. Swan of the School of Education is the sponsor of the club. 238 Triple P Pulchritude Parlor, alias Grand Finale Theta Sigma Phi Razz Banquet . . . AOPi pledges get board for being bored with study table . . . I. U. Rowing Crew, four coxswains and one oarsman, beat parked auto by a nose in Biology bird bath . . . Self explanatory . . . Left to right, Warpy Waterfall, The Waiter with the Water, The Waiter with the Water, The Waiter with the Water, and The Waiter with the Water . . . Sigma Nu ' s campaign for five extra cigarettes in place of five extra smokes. 239 240  UNIVERSITY THEATRE Five regular dramatic productions, a student- written musical, and several experimental shows constituted the schedule of the University The- atre season. You Can ' t Take It With You , Pulitzer Prize winner, opened the series. Its farcial comedy was excellently done by a large cast in which Vera Mae Massey, Joe Hayes, and Charlotte Fields were outstanding. Following was another award play, Our Town , with Joe Hayes, Marianne Cowan, and Frank Greg- ory in the leading roles. Noel Coward ' s so- ard Reed, and Maurice Hill as the leading fun- makers. The Jordan River Revue , written by Paul Boxell, ' 40, and Shakespeare ' s Merry Wives of Windsor completed the season ' s work. The experimental Theatre presented for their first showing original plays written by Robert Johnson, ' 41, Robert Maloy, ' 39, and Maurice Hill, ' 42. Student technicians were Tom Rowe, lights; Mary Jane Straub and Lucilla Hall, make- up; Margaret Lou May and James Glover, costumes and properties. Fred Brooks was Manager of the Business Staff with Betty Jo Hanson and Adele Lowell as Junior Assistants and Joan Barr, Charles Legeman, Mary Snapp, and Don Batton as Sophomore assistants. In charge of publicity were Ruth Ferris, Robert Johnson, and Miriam James. ' x honors. George and Margaret , a delightful English comedy, saw Vera Mae Massey, Rich- ' On the opposite page: At the top, a hilarious moment from You Can ' t Take It With You . Cumu lult) Juiixij, I ' oom jnuim ti ' i sn ■Take Is Townf In the circle Lucilla Hail and Frank Gregory, stars of You Can ' t Take It With You . Center right, two more pictures of Our Town starring Frank Gregory and Marianne Cowan. Bottom, drama from Our Town with Marianne Cowan. 243 DIRECTORS Each year the University Theatre presents a number of well-produced plays under the supervision of an efficient staff of directors headed by Dr. Lee Norvelle. One of the most outstanding college men in the field of drama, Dr. Norvelle is recognized not only on this campus but also in national dramatic circles; he holds the position of national president of Theta Alpha Phi, hon- orary dramatic organization. He is also chairman of the Committee of the Na- tional Association of Teachers of Speech of the National Educational Association. Each of the three assistants holds a particular position on the directing staff. Foster Harmon is the assistant director of the main group and also make-up director. V. A. Smith is the technical director in charge of costumes and scenery which he himself designs. Assistant to Dr. Norvelle is George Blair. The Experimental Theatre, with Mr. Harmon as director, is one of the proj- ects of the dramatic department. Its purpose is to give more students an oppor- tunity to appear in plays and also to find new talent for future University Theatre productions. Dr. Lee Norvelle, Director of the Uni- versity Theatre. Assistants Blair, Har- mon, and Smith discuss the success of the University Theatre season. 244 A Ball Room Scene from We Were Dancing , one of the three of Noel Cowards one act plays produced by the University Theatre . . . George Strother as Karl; Elizabeth Rowe, Clara; and Clement Stigdon, Herbert, all of We Were Dancing . . . The Garth-Banders of George and Margaret , as portrayed by Vera May Massey and Richard Reed, indulge in a secret . . . The cast join the audience in laughing at the new maid of George and Margaret . . . Elizabeth Lanier and Louis Lind, as Stella and Tony Cartwright in Ways and Means enjoy breakfast in bed . . . Clement Stigdon and Betty Jane Mowry, cast as Roger and Frankie, do the musical part of George and Margaret . 245 The Men ' s Ballet Chorus point their toes daintily at the agile Elaine Ax . . . The Nor- vellettes smile in a chorus . . . Music Director Dick Shores makes a veritable Toscanini . . . The Norvellettes reverse their position to pose . . . Dancer Peggy Smith sways while part- ner Bill Scrobel strains . . . Mann, Farrington and Plummer arc blissfully unaware of Osborne ' s plotting thoughts . . . Sherwood, Massey, Leas, and Farrington in a jovial mood . . . Lohse and his tuba hsten to Broom ' s magic flute . . . The Grand Finale lakes a curtain call. The waiter without the wa- ter in true Commons glass- carrying style . . . Versatile Elaine Ax taps on her toes and her xylophone at the same time . . . Musclemen Brogan and Goldenberg in an unwavering hand-stand . . . Sherwood, Osborne, and Kel- ler have that far-away look . . . Groucho Boxell and Harpo Johnson make their Marx on a bicycle . . . Carl Lewis and Doc Kleifgen carry on at odd moments through- out the show . . . Mountain- eers Sherwood and Massey think city-slicker Bill Keller is purty durn comical. DEBATE The development of bstter-than-average skill in speaking and the practice of habits of good delivery are two purposes of the debating program at Indiana University. The different squads, composed of 29 members, carried on more than one hun- dred intercollegiate debates this year. The men ' s squad debated two questions: govern- ment ownership of railroads and the isolation pchcy of the United States. Indiana defeated Iowa, Illinois, Purdue and Ohio State, but lost to Wisconsin. In the Manchester Tournament, they won 10 out of 12 debates, and participated in the University of Wisconsin tournament and the Big Ten Tournament. Women Varsity Debaters; Seated: Sophia Nicholas, Ruth Adler, Geneva Sene- feld, Mary Susan Stull. Standing: Suzanne Moore, Margaret Fargo. Right: Geneva Senefeld speaks at convocation. Women Junior Varsity: Pat McConnaha, Jo Anne Picrpont, Ann Thomas, Betty Foss. Mary Susan Stull, varsity debater. Freshman Squad: Len Bunger, Hal Dane, Bill Tillett, Roger Stull. V . • The women ' s varsity discussed the question Shoul d anti-democratic organizations be suppressed? at a discussion conference held at Ohio State University. Out of ten possible opportunities for recognition from the entire Big Ten group, Indiana received three. Those named were Mary Susan Stull, Geneva Senefeld, and Ruth Adlcr. In the spring the women ' s team discussed Renewment of the Federal Housing Administration program. A Round Robin tournament was held in February, in which Indiana met the Purdue and lUinois teams twice each, winning ever Purdue twice and defeating and tying Illinois. The Women ' s Junior Varsity and the Freshmen men took part in the first invitational novice tournament and the Manchester College Tournament in which they won 17 out of 20 debates. Approximately fifty teams entered the intramural debate contest which was won by the I.S.A. team made up of Betty Foss and Ann Thomas. Right: Dick Hasketc strikes the pose. Varsity Debaters: First Row; Paul Bard, Dick Haskett, Marvin Miller, Bill Spray. Seco nd Row: George Engleman, Bert Servaas, Marshall Hanley, Jack Falrchild, Robert Doxtator. Intramural runnersup Legcman and Esclibach, and winners Thomas and Foss. Assistant Coach Bob Lee and Coach Robert Huber. Marvin Miller, Varsity Debater. RADIO Familiar to this year ' s students are the. University broadcasts from WHAS and WIRE. It was only two years ago — February 13, 193 8 that I. U. went on the air. At that time the University received and accepted an invita- tion from WIRE in Indianapolis to broadcast weekly programs by remote control. President Wells then appointed a committee of seventy- five to organize and direct this radio work, and later chose from these an executive committee of twelve. Professor Lee Norvelle of the Speech department was made director of radio. Courses in production and script writing for radio were then initiated and Indiana ' s newest experiment was well under way with four weekly programs being given. At the end of this first year, a full time program director, Robert E. Allen, was appointed. In 1939 courses in radio education and a radio seminar were added to the curriculum. In the same year WHAS in Louisville extended an in- vitation to the campus for broadcasts and the committee accepted. On November 12, 1939, Indiana inaugurated a series of broadcasts over WHAS, Everyman ' s Campus of the Air, from 11:30 to 12 on Sunday mornings; this program consisted of music, drama, and brief interviews of current topics. There are two weekly pro- grams broadcasted from WIRE: Beight ' s En- semble, Thursday evenings at 5:30; and the Editorial of the Air, Sunday at 9:30 a. m. In the new speech department adequate facilities have been provided for radio, both for actual broadcasts and for learning radio technique. During the past two years the broadcasts orig- inated from the Music School, with Joe Badger as technician. Performance from the stage of the Music Auditorium . . . Joe Badger at the controls . . . Bob Lee acts as Master of Ceremonies . . . George Strother and Marianne Cowan take their cues in one of the regular Sunday morning broad- casts. 2J0 MUSIC SERIES Deviating somewhat from the usual assembly of an all musical array of talent, this year ' s University Music Series in- cluded two lectures on its schedule. The distinction of being the first lecturer went to William Lyon Phelps, the grand old man of Yale University. The other speaker. Grant Wood gave his talk on contemporary art later in the year. This year ' s series again featured two concerts by the In- dianapolis Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Fabien Sevitsky in addition to the varied programs presented by out- standing musical artists. The season was opened with a pro- gram by Emma Otero, celebrated Cuban soprano; and the next musical performance was given by the Salsburg Trapp Choir, an instrumental group. The artistic performances of both Allan Jones, radio and screen tenor, and Moriz Rosenthal, the last of the great pupils of Franz Liszt, also contributed to the success of the series. Top left, Dr. William Lyon Phelps. Middle, Allan Jones gives a quick smile to his wife, Irene Hervey. Mid- dle right. Grant Wood. Right, Emma Otero. Bottom left, Moriz Rosenthal at his piano. Right, the Salsburg Trapp Choir. . , ' ii i 1  (K I MEN ' S GLEE CLUB The Men ' s Glee Club is composed of sixty selected voices. With the Women ' s Club it comprises the Choral Union for the presentation of outstanding choral literature, and prepares its members for participation in such campus activities as have a call for soloists or choristers. The Glee Club has been invited to sing for the next meeting of the Indiana Society in Chicago in the fall of 194G. CHORAL UNION One of the outstanding programs presented for the first time by the Men and Women ' s Glee Clubs as the Indiana Uni- versity Choral Union, was a Christmas concert which included the Christmas music of The Messiah and a fantasy of Christ- mas carols. A spring concert was presented with music from the Peaceable Kingdom by Randall Thompson and excerpts from The Messiah . Student soloists were the outstanding features of both concerts. The Choral Union and the Univer- sity Symphony were both under the direction of Dean Robert L. Sanders. The Choral Union is composed of the Men and Women ' s Glee Clubs and additional faculty and towns people on invita- tion. Student members participated in the Jordan River Re- vue and the Music School Operetta. WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Membership in the Women ' s Glee Club, directed by Pro- fessor William Ross, is open to all women students in the Uni- versity. Eligibility for membership is based on try-outs for quality of voice and a certain amount of music reading ability. Approximately ninety girls compose the Glee Club proper, but for performances of the Choral Union, additional voices are added making a total group of one hundred fifty voices. The Women ' s Glee Club has sung this year for University programs which were broadcast. The group also sang at the Bankers ' Convention held here in February and concluded their activities with the annual Mother ' s Day Concert. 253 i30 2J4 I ! By choice and not by compulsion, Indiana University offers R.O.T.C. as a part of its curriculum. Approximately 1,500 men learn right oblique , stack arms , and at ease during their Freshman and Sophomore years; and spend the next two years trying to forget and learning to hoot at the Freshmen. R. 0. T. C. About 100 of the students continue their studies of military under the supervision of the tactical officers. These advanced students make up the student officers of the corps. Alfred Teegarden was selected to serve as Cadet Colonel for this year. Two new majors came to Indiana this year. They are Major Hodnette, and Major Shoe- maker. Cadets present arms before Thursday afternoon review. Honorary Cadet Colonel Susanne Fogg and Cadet Colonel Alfred Teegarden lead Grand March of Military Ball under sa- bers and stars. Eyes front! Little Jack Little packs them in at the Military Ball. Last spring marked the innovation of the Girls ' Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps at Indiana University. The group was first organized by- Major Roy N. Hagerty of the Military Depart- ment. The fifty girls, dressed in red and white military uniforms and red and white saddle shoes, rapidly became proficient with Mrs. Frederick E. Green as musical director and Charles Littell as drill master. As a result of many hours of practice, the Corps has presented several well-received per- formances since the beginning of its existence. In the spring of 1939, they marched at both the President ' s Review and the Federal Inspection of the R.O.T.C. During the past winter, the Drum Corps performed at the Homecoming football game and at the Indiana-Purdue game. At the latter, they formed an I.U. monogram formation in conjunction with the Marching Hundred. Coed officers of the organization are: Muriel Collins, drum major and second lieutenant; El- myra Holmdohl, first sergeant; Rachel Norman, technical sergeant; and Kaye Steinburg, staff sergeant. Cadet Colonel Teegarden palms the Pershing Rifle Co- ed Sponsorship off on Ginger Austin. Drums, saddle shoes, and the Girls ' Fife, Drum and Bugle Corps. Indiana Infantry shows its version of Right Shoulder Arms. THE MAHCHING HUNDRED Indiana ' s Marching Hundred, recognized as one of the most outstanding marching bands in the country, oddly enough, has a membership of 143. Each year the band takes at least one trip with the football team to perform at the game at a major university. The trip, made to Fordham this year, was probably one of the most outstanding ever undertaken by the Marching Hundred. It was also an expensive project, and dur- ing the week preceding the game, an extensive, cam- pus-wide campaign was conducted voluntarily by the Indiana Daily Student in order to raise the remainder of the necessary funds. The band drilled long and hard on an intricate formation for the Fordham game at the Polo Grounds in New York City. Their remarkable skill and march- ing precision was well-recognized by the 20,000 spec- tators, as well as newspapers throughout the east. After the performance, Major Roy N. Hagerty, director of the Marching Hundred, received a program upon which were written words of praise from Kay Kyser and Eddy Duchin. In addition to appearing at home football and bas- ketball games, pep sessions, and military reviews, the outfit played last spring at the Kentucky Derby and at the 500-mile race in Indianapolis. At the latter, 100 of the 143 members of the band played a concert in front of the main grandstand at the Speedway; they were the only college band ever to have had that privilege. Much ability and enthusiasm is embodied in the group of boys, who this year mastered many new marching techniques and formations. Progressive ideas are constantly added to their methods; the latest is the adoption of the British parade step for entrance, which is slow and stately in contrast to the rapid, high step which follows. The colors advance across the field . . . Indiana ' s Marching Hundred forms an I be- fore the crowds at the Purdue game. 258 HOMECOMING In traditional style the annual Homecoming cele- bration was observed this year with gaily decorated fraternity houses and a light-hearted carnival spirit over the campus. The Fightin ' Hoosiers played the Nebraska Cornhuskers to a 7-7 tie before a near ca- pacity crowd in Memorial Stadium. Returning old grads and enthusiastic I. U. sup- porters thronged Bloomington for the occasion, and fell into the general spirit of good will and gaiety. Delta Delta Delta, social sorority, won first prize for women in the decorations contest with a scene of Indiana taking Nebraska, Reverend Bo perform- ing the ceremony. Phi Delta Theta, social fraternity, captured the men ' s award with their ferris wheel on which they hoped to take Nebraska for a ride . HOMECOMING Homecoming . . . old grads . . . coming back to the Alma Mater . . . Powwow . . . dinners . . . dances . . . speeches . . . decorations. Speaker for the twenty-seventh annual Powwow was Jim Tucker, ' 30, Indiana ' s youthful Secretary of State. President Herman B Wells ' remarks were di- rected toward the upward trend in Indiana football. Homecoming festivities were ended with the an- nual Band Benefit ball with music by Don Bestor ' s twelve-piece orchestra. Proceeds of the dance financed the I. U. Band ' s trip to the Fordham game. NAME BANDS Indiana University was host to an un- usually large number of outstanding dance bands this year. Don Bestor and his twelve piece orchestra opened the season at the Band Benefit Ball. Duke Ellington and his sophisticated swing played for a Union-A.W.S. dance and the Republican Club entertained with Herbie Kay and his band furnishing the music. Next on the social roster was the Blanket Hop, following the Indiana-Purdue foot- ball game, with Johnny Scat Davis and his swing orchestra officiating. The open- ing of the formal season was celebrated December 1 with a dance at which Ray Herbeck played. I.ittle Jack Little was the featured attraction at the Military Ball in February. Highlight of the social school year was the coming of Hal Kemp and his univers- ally popular band for one of the most successful Junior Proms in years on March 8. Johnny Scat Davis at the microphone Duke Ellington at the keyboard Ray Herbeck and his sax Among Indiana University ' s honored guests of 1939-40 were many of the state ' s and the country ' s most prominent citizens. Artist, statesman, poli- tician, sportsman — all added to the University ' s pro- gram of cultural and educational advancement. Besides those pictured above many others, Mary Ellen Chase, novelist. Father Flanigan of Boys ' Town, James Tucker, Secretary of State, and Law- rence M. Judd, former Governor of Hawaii, have been guests at Indiana. GUESTS William Lyon Phelps of Yale with President Emeritus Bryan . . . Federal Securities Administrator Paul V. McNutt . . . Governor M. Clifford Townsend . . . Paul Doug- las, University of Chicago profes- sor . . . Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins . . . Arch Ward, Chicago Tribune sports writer. 263 l _i_«t 264 lV ' X ' ; .V. S V , . ■•• 1 ANNE LOUISE COLE KAPPA ALPHA THETA MARYEL PATRICK CHI OMEGA HELEN KONOLD KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA RUTH TAYLOR DELTA DELTA DELTA ELIZABETH LANIER DELTA GAMMA HIOHLIDHTS OF THE BEAUTY CONTEST Coeds fight the Jitters backstage . . . Marge Warren swings a number . . . Sherwood simpers into the mike a la Dorothy Parker . . . The judges judge — Robert Young, fashion photog- rapher; Randolph Coats, artist; Prof. William Poland, Dean of Fine Arts School at Hanover College; Joe Gerber, talent scout for MGM . . . Jack Brogan draws feminine ahs . . . Magician brings out surprise bouquet . . . Dan Bretz and stooge Bob Wrege and a little by-play . . . The winnahs! . . . Avid interest and other emotions . . . Warpy does his bit. SHIRLEY MALONEY Kappa Kappa Gamma LORRAINE SMITH Memorial Hall MARJORIE HEIDENREICH Delta Gamma NONA FRYAR Sycamore Hall DEDE LUNG Kappa Kappa Gam ma DORIS HUFFSTETTER Delta Delta Delta BARBARA HEALY Kappa Kappa Gamma ALICE BOYD Kappa Kappa Gamma JULIA ANN ARTHUR Kappa Alpha Theta MARY BENNINGHOFF Chi Omega MARY LOU KOSTER Alpha Delta Pi JEANNE WILLS Kappa Alpha Theta BETTY McCORMICK Pi Beta Phi JANE CALNON Pi Beta Phi SYLVIA LEGG Chi Omega 273 i ' - j.sTiF- ' pa« ' t ' • .a ' 3-,XJ ;:l ' Vn„ CTlrll l ' )4() I ' l ' .OM (lllhKN THE 1940 JUNIOR PROM On March 8, four hundred couples danced to the music of Hal Kemp and his orchestra at the 1940 Jun- ior Prom. The Prom, with Gone with the Wind as the theme, was one of the most successful in recent years. The theme was carried out in the decorations by a replica of a Southern mansion, which formed the background for the band. The walls of Alumni Hall were artistically draped with Spanish moss, and the en- trance to the hall was decorated in keeping with the Southern theme. The Prom Queen, Barbara Van Fleit, wore the dress which was worn by Vivian Leigh in her role as Scarlet O ' Hara in Gone with the Wind . At eleven- thirty, Miss Van Fleit led the Grand March with Rich- ard Stoner, chairman of the 1940 Prom Committee. During the evening Miss Van Fleit was interviewed over station WHAS during a half hour broadcast from Alumni Hall. Miss Van Fleit reigned as the second consecutive unorganized girl to be awarded the honor of queenship in the twenty-year history of Indiana ' s top social event. Five capable Juniors handled the arrangements for this year ' s Prom. They were, as shown below, J. Hugh Funk, Mary Susan Stull, Prom Chairman Richard Sto- ner, Rachel Norman, and Phil Cooper. Behind the scenes of a successful prom, there are many details which are forgotten soon afterwards, such as the three by fives of the prom candidates, the social schedules of the Junior men who are being politicked for votes, and the apple polishing of all of the Prom Chairman ' s friends and fraternity brothers in hopes of getting a free ticket to the affair. Not to be forgotten, too, are the social chairmen ' s headaches in arranging for the prom dinners and breakfasts, to say nothing of minor details of keeping the tie straight throughout the evening. The 1940 prom was not without these details, all of which must be attended to in order to make the prom a never-to-be- forgotten event. Among the highlights was the dropping of the balloons from the top of the Union Building, with one of the red ones carrying a free prom ticket. Along with this went the slopping in the mud, as the Juniors tried to find and catch the particular red balloon. Then too, pre-prom days were filled with political teas, parties, and dances, at which were found the cus- tomary glad hand , but poor punch. Then, after the weeks of activities and the prom itself, come the usual dance post- mortems in fraternities, sororities, dormitories, and residences for countless days. James Phillippe captures questionable honor of casting first ballot in Junior Prom Queen election . . . Prom Queen Barbara Van Fleit, Don Painter, and Vir- ginia Austin have prom breakfast in Colonial Tea Room . . . Sigma Nu prom dinner . . . Entree . . . Prom Chairman Richard Stoner and Prom Queen Barbara Van Fleit head promenade . . . Bob Alien, Prom Queen Van Fleit, and Hal Kemp hold big boress . . . The Prom, in person . . . Pillared entrances to Alumni Hall are used for exit . . . Prom Queen Candi- dates Virginia Austin and Barbara Van Fleit polish off their campaign efforts as Junior men enter to cast ballots. 276 The coed sponsors for the year 1939-1940 were: Virginia Austin, MadeUne Scully, Mary Carson, Bonnie Baker, Pauhne Taylor, and Susanne Fogg. R. 0. T. C. SPONSORS Honorary coed sponsors add a bit of color and grace to the Thursday afternoon R.O.T.C. reviews. In their red and white uniforms the girls march be- side the cadet officers, respectively in the positions of Honorary Cadet Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, and Majors of the three battalions. In addition to these five customary positions, a sixth girl was chosen this year to serve as sponsor for the Marching Hundred. Formerly the selections have been made by a vote of the Junior and Senior military men; however, the sponsors were chosen this year by a selection com- mittee composed of five persons appointed by the De- partment of Military Science and Tactics. The selec- tions were made on a basis of appearance, posture, and smartness of bearing, application being open to any girl in the University. The sponsors chosen are announced and intro- duced at the annual Military Ball in February, and serve during the following spring and fall drills, terminating their period of service by participation in the grand march, in uniform, at the Military Ball the next year. The coed Pershing Rifles ' sponsor is presented with the other sponsors at the Ball. The new coed sponsors for the year 1940-1941 are: Ruth Breimyer, Genevieve Cougias, Jane Calnon, Barbara Johnson, Jane Smith, and Virginia Austin, honorary officer of Pershing Rifles. I ' ' ' w FROM ALPHA TO OMEGA - THE GREEKS Pi Phi ' s time study table. Sigma Nu study table. The D.G. ' s play a nine-handed game of bridge. HAVE A WORD FOR IT. The D.U. ' s, their dates, and others amid the greenery at the annual closed Rose Dance. Chi O ' s take a fraternity exam strictly on the honor system. i_5 280 ud f 3 f % 1 ? f y f V , 1 f Y,; 282 ACACIA When the Acacia fraternity was founded at the University of Michigan in 1904, it was a fraternity for the sons and brothers of Masons. At the present, however, a member must be recommended by two Masons before gaining admittance to the fraternity. The Acacia chap- ter at Indiana University was estabhshed in 1920 by three members of the Indiana Masons Club which had been estabHshed on the cam- pus four years before. In 1939 the group be- gan occupancy of their new house. To all Acacia ' s, the mention of the Colo- nade, the fraternity ' s formal winter dance, brings enthusiastic comments. This dance and the Founder ' s Day Banquet on May 22, are Aca- cia ' s most important social events. Dick Arnold is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Union Board, and Board of Aeons and is Presi- dent of the Interfraternity Council. Acacias in Phi Eta Sigma are Robert Sill, Robert Eifler, Elmer Koch, and James Huston. John and Bill Torphy represent Acacia in varsity basket- ball while Robert Sill is on the varsity golf team. Eugene Brown is Business Assistant on the Arbutus Staff. For prominence in politics Acacia honors William Howard Taft and Posey Kime. Alumni on the campus are Geoffrey L. Car- michael, Lyle Dieterle, Dr. Logan Esarey, Dr. Ralph Esarey, Harold F. Lusk, Robert A. Royer, and Professor William D. Thornbury. First Row John Collins ' 43, Frankfort Gene Brown ' 42, Indianapolis Hal Driver ' 43, Aurora Calvin Klingelhoffer ' 43, Aurora Jack Fox ' 43, Vevay Ralph King ' 42, Gary William Munger ' 43, Detroit, Mich. Alfred Lohse ' 40, Batesville Charles Gibson ' 40, Frankfort Robert Murray ' 42, Frankfort Fourth Row Keith Atteberry ' 42, Anderson Clifford Price ' 40, Union Mills Glen Smith ' 42, Indianapolis Kenneth Ritter ' 43, Aurora Robert Rhoda ' 43, Valparaiso Quenten Schockley ' 41, New Ross Bill Huff ' 43, New Albany Larry Welch ' 43, Vevay Swift Wunker ' 43, Lawrenceburg Louis Culmann ' 41, Indianapolis Second Row Howard Larkin ' 40, South Bend Charles Coats ' 41, Lynn William Day ' 40, New Albany Adrian Marks PG, Ladoga Floyd House ' 41, Bloomington Robert Arbuckle ' 41, Shelby ville Carl Goebel ' 43, Ft. Wayne Donald McMurtry ' 42, Frankfort James Avery ' 43, Bedford Maurice Robison ' 43, Frankfort Third Row Phil Jackson ' 43, Bloomington Bob Sill ' 41, Gary Richard Arnold ' 40, Cedar Springs, Mich. Harry W. Foster ' 41, Francesville Robert Miller ' 43, Indianapolis Gene Rodenberger ' 42, Frankfort Guy Wcllman ' 43, Valparaiso Merrill Beck ' 41, Bloomington Donald Endicott ' 43, Rushville Keith Wilson ' 43, Indianapolis Fifth Row Richard Russell ' 41, Winamac Bob Bulmer ' 43, Gary Harry Potts ' 43, Logansport Robert Kluth ' 42, West Lafayette Robert Straesser ' 41, Frankfort Robert Eifler ' 41, Evansville Darrel Becker ' 42, Cory don Max Coan ' 43, Bloomington Booth SchoU ' 41, Speedway City 283 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Alpha Tau Omega celebrated in 1939 the diamond jubilee of its founding at Richmond, Virginia, which each year the Indiana chapter celebrates by giving a dinner dance, the Rich- mond Hop. The fraternity was established to bring about a better feeling between the youth of the North and the South. In 1915 Alpha Tau Omega chartered its local chapter of Delta Alpha on the Indiana University campus. A.T.O. Al Harrison is a member of Blue Key, and Howdy Wilcox is President of Skull and Crescent. Bob Witham, Merrill Eaton and Bob Chattin are members of Phi Eta Sigma. In the field of sports, A.T.O. has Bob Dro and Herman Schaeffer, members of the varsity basketball team, and Bob Boaz and Fred Smith on the swimming team. Emer- son Craig and Bob Witham are on the golf team, while Bob Chattin participates in track. Bob Witham is also a member of the Arbutus staff. I Faculty members of Alpha Tau Omega are: Dr. Wilbur A. Cogshall of the Department of Astronomy, Dr. Merrill T. Eaton of the School of Education, Dr. Lee R. Norvelle of the Divi- sion of Speech, and Dr. Richard S. Sherman of the Department of Spanish. First Row William Mitchell ' 41, Kokomo Robert Dro ' 41, Berne Edward Bromm ' 43, Evansville Charles Kollman ' 40, Ft. Wayne Harry Hilgenberg ' 43, Indianapolis Parker Graves ' 43, Robinson, 111. Robert Boaz ' 42, Indianapolis Joseph Dewberry ' 43, Kokomo Robert Hall ' 42, Indianapolis Fourth Row Craig Booher ' 42, Sullivan Harold Heimroth ' 43, Terre Haute Ralph McDonald ' 42, Indianapolis Joseph Hil?enberg ' 43, Indianapolis William Oberlin ' 42, Culver Fred Schmidt ' 42, Indianapolis Charles Steele ' 42, Sullivan Bernard Bogard ' 40, Lyons Albert Hemmer ' 40, Ft. Branch Second Row Herman Schaefer ' 42, Ft. Wayne Richard Neuman ' 42, Richmond Dwight Posson ' 41, Indianapolis Jerome Peters ' 42, Marysville Richard Veach ' 42, Bainbridge Emerson Craig ' 41, Indianapolis Jack Dewberry ' 40, Kokomo Fred Wolf ' 43, Indianapolis Clyde Mays ' 43, Kokomo Fifth Row Herschel Kopp ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Robb ' 42, Indianapolis William Wooley ' 40, Richmond Keith Reese ' 42, Indianapolis Warren Foreman ' 43, Culver Jack Bostick ' 43, Ft. Wayne Glenn Irwin ' 42, Roachdale Joseph Davis ' 42, Indianapolis John Walters PG, Mount Vernon Third Row Allen Harrison ' 40, Ladoga Merrill Eaton ' 42, Bloomington Howard Wilcox ' 42, Indianapolis Roscoe Cutsinger ' 41, Edinburg Robert McCalip ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Taylor ' 40, Sullivan Freeman Land ' 41, Terre Haute John Potts ' 40, Union City Bill Roessler ' 40, Evansville Sixth Row Robert Chattin ' 42, Union City Robert Gaston ' 43, Indianapolis Frank Goll ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Witham ' 42, Indianapolis Harry Billings ' 43, Indianapolis John Scott ' 43, Richmond Clemmer Bartley ' 43, Terre Haute Raymond Bolinger ' 41, Terre Haute Wendell Prough ' 40, Bluffton Carl Cheadle ' 43, Gary Seventh Row William Van Horn ' 42, Terre Haute Wayne Kamm ' 42, Clinton John Blake ' 43, Gary Russell Harrel ' 43, Indianapolis Richard Shaffer ' 42, Indianapolis William Hunter ' 41, Greensburg Robert Kalb ' 42, Greensburg Edward Waddle ' 40, Newport, Ky. Jack Jester ' 41, Indianapolis Frank Crossland ' 43 Indianapolis 284 15 !• ll? f t f 1 f f ■■5 n M , 5f f % % 285 2U BETA THETA PI r The highlights in the social life of the Betas are the traditional Fall Barn Dance and the Miami Triad Dance, given with two other fraternities founded at Miami University, Phi Delta Theta, and Sigma Chi. One of the many traditions belonging to the Indiana Betas is the custom of putting out their pins in the Well House. That edifice, built by a member of this chapter, is the insignia of a Beta pin. Following all serenades the chapter meets at the Well House to perform their sa- cred and secret rites. Beta Theta Pi was founded at Miami Univer- sity, Oxford, Ohio, in 1839, and the local chap- ter received its charter in 1845. The many prom- inent alumni from the Indiana chapter include: Paul V. McNutt, Federal Security Adminis- trator; Wendell Willkie, former President of Commonwealth and Southern Utilities; and William Kunkel, member of the University Board of Trustees. Faculty members are Dr. Allan Mitchell and Coach A. N. Bo Mc- Millin. Beta Rembrandt Hiller is a member of Blue Key, Union Board, Phi Eta Sigma, and is Sen- ior Swimming manager; Marvin Huffman is captain of the varsity basketball team and a member of Sphinx Club. Tom Cravens is a member of Blue Key and is the Senior Intra- mural manager. Jack Stevenson is President of Sphinx Club, in which memberships are held by Betas Tom Peters, Tom Elrod, and Page Benson. Other Phi Eta Sigma men in the chapter are William Fisher, James Henley, and Richard Reed. In addition to Huffman, Curly Arm- strong, Cliff Wiethof f, and Jack Stevenson play varsity basketball. Charles Legeman is a Sopho- more Assistant on the Arbutus Staff and Wil- liam Fisher an Associate Business Manager. First Row Con Sterling, ' 42, Ft. Wayne Tom Peters, ' 40, Flora Charles Legeman, ' 42, Muncie William Stonex, ' 42, Indianapolis Leslie Combs, ' 40, Gary James Huff, 41, Martinsville Hubert Scheidler, ' 43, Muncie Jack Katterhenry, ' 41, Evansville Fourth Row Jack Stevenson, ' 43, Indianapolis Harold Lantz, ' 41, Greenfield Page Benson, ' 41, Eldorado, Kan. Max Rose, ' 43, Bluff ton Jesse Eschbach, ' 40, Warsaw Paul Armstrong, ' 41, Ft. Wayne Robert Turgi, ' 43, Newcastle Wayne Schmidt, ' 43, Terre Haute Second Row Mark Shackelford, ' 41, New Canaan, Conn. Frank Mellinger, ' 41, Gary Roger Curry, ' 40, Bloomington John Quick, ' 40, Frankfort Charles Sembower, ' 42, Bloomington Tom Robison, ' 41, Frankfort Cecil Cunningham, ' 42, Newcastle Charles Tinsley, ' 42, Indianapolis Fifth Row James Piper, ' 43, Montclair Jack Matthews, ' 43, Madison Kurt Kreyling, ' 43, Evansville Anson McAdams, ' 43, Boswell Cyril P. VanMeter, ' 40, Bloomington Clark Fleehart, ' 41, Rushville William Cook, ' 43, Bloomington Carleton Smith, ' 43, Toledo, Ohio Seventh Row Richard Mueller, ' 40, Indianapolis Rembrandt Hiller, ' 40, Indianapolis Richard Rehm, ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Mauzy, ' 42, Rushville Hugh McAdams, ' 42, Boswell James Dilts, ' 41, Winamac Allen Brown, ' 43, Toledo, Ohio Tom Cravens, ' 40, Martinsville Third Row Marvin Huffman, ' 40, Newcastle John Dc Fries, ' 40, Milford Tom Cathcart, ' 41, Michigan City Tom El well, ' 43, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. William Scherffius, ' 43, Evansville Phil Scott, ' 41, Shelby ville Clifford Wiethof f, ' 42, Seymour Preston Gregory, ' 43, Bloomington Sixth Row James Henley, ' 42, Carthage Raymond VonSpreckclsen, ' 43, apolis William Fisher, ' 41, Indianapolis Richard Reed, ' 42, Bloomington Earl Cooper, ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Raber, ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Templin, ' 41, Bluff ton Paul Davis, ' 43, Lowell Indi; 287 DELTA CHI Originally intended as a law fraternity, Delta Chi was founded at Cornell in 1890. The an- nual traditions of the fraternity are the observ- ance of Founders ' Day on October 13, Memorial Day, and Mothers ' Day. Delta Chi Ray Harmon is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Kappa Psi, and Pi Sigma Alpha. Maurice Hill is Editorial Assistant on the Ar- butus and a member of Phi Eta Sigma, the University Theatre, Skull and Crescent. Walter Stebing and Wayne Tolliver are varsity track men while Jim Trimble is varsity end on the football squad. Richard Earle is active in the University Theatre. Angelo Lazzara is Big Ten Conference wrestling champion. Alpha Kappa Psi and Alpha Phi Omega include Sam Hostetter and John Baldwin. Tom Gilliam, Gerard Himmelsbach, and John Cali hold posi- tions on the Indiana Daily Student staff. Jack Ury is a member of Sphinx Club and James Gard of Skull and Crescent. Other Delta Chis belong to Pershing Rifles, language clubs, the Marching Hundred, University Glee Club, and the symphony orchestra. Local alumni include Prof. E. L. Yeager, Prof. Fernandus Payne, L. L. Fisher, Glen Bretz, Don Lash, W. H. Thom, H. W. Jordon, and Dean Emeritus B. W. Merrill of the School of Music. First Row- Dick Miller, ' 42, Bloomington James Trimble, ' 42, McKeesport, Pa. George Long, ' 43, Greencastle Maurice Hill, ' 42, Ft. Wayne Richards Merley, ' 43, South Bend Carl Rohleder, ' 41, Mishawaka Thomas Gilliam, ' 41, Warsaw Joseph Baringer, ' 40, New Paris Second Row Robert Gerner, ' 40, Garrett John J. Baldwin, ' 42, Crown Point James Gard, ' 42, Jonesboro John Nagle, ' 40, Washington Richard Loughery, ' 41, Edinburg Raymond Harmon, ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Fred Hess, ' 41, Indianapolis Darell Zink, ' 42, Bloomington Third Row John Wheeler, ' 42, Crown Point Richard Earl, ' 42, Ft. Wayne John Cali, ' 41, New Par is Donald Painter, ' 41, Garrett John Farris, ' 42, Washington Angelo Lazzara, ' 41, Hammond Harold Marshall, ' 41, Clinton Walter Stebing, ' 40, Auburn Fourth Row Jack Oliver, ' 41, Columbia City Samuel Hostetter, ' 41, Bainbridge Otho Sappenfield, ' 43, Bedford George Reitze, ' 43, Louisville, Ky. Warren Woolridge, ' 43, Kokomo Carlyle Snider, ' 41, Nappanee Wilfred Lusher, ' 43, Columbus Milton Archer, ' 41, Terre Haute Gerard Himmelsbach, ' 41, New York City 288 289 JHMd If t%l 290 DELTA TAU DELTA One of the oldest fraternities in the United States, Delta Tau Delta was founded by eight men at Bethany College, Virginia, in 1858, and was later merged with a southern group known as the Rainbow. The fraternity has steadily grown, until it now boasts of over seventy-five chapters. The local chapter, Beta Alpha, was granted its charter in 1870. Earl G. Buck Mauck, in addition to being Senior Class President, is President of the Union Board, member of the Board of Aeons, Sphinx Club, Beta Gamma Sigma, Dragon ' s Head, and several other honorary service organizations. The Delts are active in football managerships — Morris Ritchie being Senior manager, Dick Hutchison Junior manager, and Bob Arnold Sophomore manager. Ritchie is also a member of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. John Vanatta is Associate Editor of the Arbutus, and Don Batton is on the Sophomore Editorial Staff of that publication. Members of Alpha Kappa Psi are Robert Batton, Morris Ritchie, and Rich- ard Lenox. Jim Fausch is another member of Sphinx Club. Delts of prominence on the faculty include: Dean C. E. Edmondson; E. C. Billy Hayes; Prof. J. A. Wright; Dr. Stith Thompson; Dr. George Steiner; and Marion Lohman. First Row John P. Moon, ' 43, Crawforcfsville Wilbur Fernandes, ' 41, Indianapolis David W. Hancock, ' 40, Morocco James C. Fausch, ' 40, Michigan City Wyle De Bryant, ' 40, Morocco Robert Kemp, ' 43, Winslow David Yeoman, ' 41, Mitchell Fernando L. Mendez, Jr., ' 42, South Bend Second Row Frank Ashby, ' 43, Rushville Earl G. Mauck, ' 40, Princeton Wells McGurk, ' 43, Indianapolis Otto Englehart, ' 41, Brazil Ben Shera, ' 43, Lebanon Sidney Long, ' 42, Lawrenceburg William Cummins, ' 43, Evansville Joe Begley, ' 43, Evansville Third Row Herschel Sartor, ' 42, Indianapolis Leo McShane, ' 43, Winnetka, 111. Cecil Ferguson, ' 42, Indianapolis Gordon Englehart, ' 43, Brazil Frank Holt, ' 41, South Bend Franklin Grimsely, ' 43, Evansville Robert Phillips, ' 42, Gary Joseph McCaffery, ' 43, South Bend Fourth Row Samuel Miller, ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Batton, ' 40, Marion Louis Drevenak, ' 40, Gary Joseph Glover, ' 42, Huntington, W. Va. J. G. Nichols, ' 40, Clinton Gordon C. McLaughlin, ' 41, Terre Haute Jack J. Hatfield, ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Lucas, ' 43, Gary Fifth Row Gail Eldridge, ' 40, Indianapolis Richard Lenox, ' 40, Lebanon Glenn Rust, ' 40, Holland Edward Johnston, ' 43, Wilmette, Louis Hutton, ' 42, Hammond John Vanatta, ' 41, Brookston Benjamin Hatfield, ' 40, Indianapolis Morris Ritchie, Jr., ' 40, Lebanon Robert Curl, ' 42, South Bend Sixth Row George Schilling, ' 40, Hinsdale, 111. Richard Hutchison, ' 41, Indianapolis Henry Snyder, ' 43, Gary 111. Harry Huff, ' 42, Grand Rapids, Mich. Russell Gilmore, Jr., ' 40, Michigan City George Davis, ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Arnold, ' 42, Michigan City George Rauch, ' 41, Marion Ernest James, ' 43, Crawfordsville Seventh Row Donald Batton, ' 42, Marion Paul Alley, ' 42, Indianapolis Gilbert Wilhelmus, ' 42, Newburg Hiram Sexson, ' 40, Indianapolis John R. Hatfield, ' 41, Indianapolis Thomas Riddick, ' 41, Indianapolis Henry Bockstege, ' 42, Evansville Robert Stunkard, ' 42, Brazil James Jennings, ' 41, Springfield, O. 291 DELTA UPSILON Delta Upsilon was founded in 1834 at Will- iams College. The Indiana University chapter of the fraternity was formed in 1915 from the old Wranglers Club. Bob Twyman, house president, is Business Manager of the Arbutus, the fifth member of the chapter to hold this position in the last seven years. Twyman is also a member of Blue Key, Dragon ' s Head, Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Kappa Delta, and Phi Beta Kappa. Paul Boxell, who has written script for the Jordan River Revue for two years, is a member of Blue Key, Theta Alpha Phi, Phi Eta Sigma, the Daily Student Staff, Sigma Delta Chi, and the Board of Aeons. Sam Wells, Dave Kennedy, and Bob Johnson, a Blue Key man, all work on the Daily Student Staff. The house boasts three varsity football men — Floyd Tipmore, Ray Bringle, and John Jan- zaruk. Tipmore has also played varsity basket- ball, and in addition he is a member of Blue Key, Union Board, and Skull and Crescent. Dan Chiddister is a varsity tennis player and a mem- ber of Skull and Crescent and the personnel committee of the Union Board. Ivan Escott is a varsity baseball man. Senior track manager is Bob Firth; Junior manager is Jack Fairchild, who is also a member of Phi Eta Sigma and the varsity debate team. Sophomore • track man- agers are Louis McAnly and James Krick. Rob- ert Penn is President of Kappa Kappa Psi and a member of the Marching Hundred. Other bandsmen are Eugene Atz, Bob Atz, Bill Hen- derson, and Bob Schmidt. D. U. alumni on campus are Professor Rob- ert C. Brown, Professor Edward Birge, Pro- fessor Arthur B. Leible, Wilmer T. Rinehart, and J. E. Patrick. First Row John Janzaruk, ' 40, LaPorte Robert Atz, ' 43, Kendal villa Samuel Wells, ' 41, Scottsburg Robert Swayze, ' 41, Vincennes Paul Splittorff, ' 42, Evansville Jack Henderson, ' 43, Gary Richard Aikman, ' 41, Washington Jack Fairchild, ' 41, Elkhart Arthur Farquharson, ' 43, Gary Floyd Tipmore, ' 41, Elkhart Fourth Row Bert Servass, ' 41, Indianapolis John Byers, ' 42, Hammond William Wright, ' 42, Elkhart Robert Firth, ' 40, North Arlington, N. J. Jack Ford, ' 42, Syracuse Eugene Atz, ' 42, Goshen Robert Johnson, ' 41, Decatur Jack Miller, ' 40, Winslow Ned Wohlford, ' 43, Goshen David Kennedy, ' 41, Bloomington Second Row Robert Twyman, ' 40, East Chicago Gene Hinchman, ' 40, Decatur James Krick, ' 42, Decatur Jack Holmes, ' 41, Indianapolis Leroy Pope, ' 43, Lafayette Robert Ellison, ' 43, Warsaw Porter Murphy, ' 41, Morgantown Robert Haugh, ' 43, East Chicago Robert Penn, ' 40, Kokomo Walter Krumwiede, ' 42, Elkhart Fifth Row Robert Cusack, ' 43, Indianapolis George Szabo, ' 42, East Chicago Edward Ettl, ' 41, South Bend William Henderson, ' 43, Gary William Grciling, ' 41, LaPorte Walter Lerner, ' 43, Elkhart Paul Boxell, ' 41, Indianapolis Irvin Swanson, ' 43, LaPorte William Swinford, ' 42, Indianapolis Thomas Lanahan, ' 40, Indianapolis Third Row James Glover, ' 41, Vincennes Donald Farquharson, ' 40, Gary Howard Elliott, ' 43, Elkhart John Johnson, ' 43, Vincennes Dwight Handley, ' 42, LaPorte Ivan Escott, ' 41, Passaic, N. J. Herbert Cormican, ' 40, Elkhart Robert Schmidt, ' 42, Evansville John Erdman, ' 42, Elkhart John Somes, ' 43, Vincennes Sixth Row William Morris, ' 42, Anderson Paul Zerkel, ' 42, Anderson Maclin Milner, ' 42, Indianapolis John Whitfield, ' 42, Indianapolis William Bierhaus, ' 42, Vincennes Thomas Duncan, ' 43, Indianapolis Louis McAnly, ' 42, Indianapolis Daniel Chiddister, ' 41, Goshen George Price, ' 43, Nappanee James McConnell, ' 43, Evansville 292 293 w - • , :i ;. % A. f ' ..la- if ■__   « ' -•■4r 294 KAPPA DELTA RHO Each anniversary of the founding of Kappa Delta Rho in 1905 at Middlebury College, is celebrated by a venison dinner. Also an an- nual Thanksgiving dinner is given for the alumni who are on the campus, and Mother ' s Day is observed with a banquet. The Indiana chapter, which was chartered in 1926, is now living in a relatively new house designed in the Grecian revival style architec- ture. The outstanding trophies coveted by the organization are the two scholarship cups which they retain permanently. K.D.R. is represented on campus by Joseph Waltz, who is a member of Phi Lambda Upsi- lon; Louis Conn, a member of Phi Eta Sigma and Der Deutsch Verein; Stanley Stoker, a member of Alpha Chi Sigma and Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Earl Bannister, a director of the local Collegiate Chamber of Commerce and Finan- cial Chairman of the national organization; James Neighbours, member of the Blooming- ton Junior Chamber of Commerce; Ed Swets and Leland Teaney, members of Skull and Crescent; and Joe Jewett, who is a Phi Beta Kappa and President of the Skeleton Club. On the faculty of Indiana, Kappa Delta Rho is represented by Dr. Robert Hartman, Dr. Eugene Kanning, Bernard Miller, and Claude Rich. First Row Jim S. Jewett ' 40, Carmel Earl F. Bannister ' 40, Avon, N. Y. William Allen ' 43, Hillsboro Dean Foster ' 42, Bellf lower, 111. Joseph E. Waltz PG, New Palestine John A. Ambler ' 42, Indianapolis Second Row William A. Neal ' 40, Covington Ted Miller ' 43, Green town Stanley Stoker PG, Mauckport John E. Stein ' 40, New Albany Fred G. Pfrommer ' 42, Hammond Tom A. Jewett ' 43, Carmel Third Row Richard L. Guth ' 41, Gary William Hohe ' 43, Huntington Reed Giese ' 41, Gary Kenneth H. Bennett ' 40, Dillsboro Hal B. Cook ' 40, Union Mills William Walton ' 43, Gary Fourth Row John H. Strong ' 42, Gary Robert K. Chowning ' 42, Indianapolis Leland Teaney ' 42, Aurora Robert L. Johnson ' 42, Sandborn H. Louis Conn ' 42, Danville Robert Ford ' 43, Alexandria Edward Swets ' 42, Hammond Fifth Row Charles V. O ' Brien ' 42, Danville Edward Fowble ' 43, Hobart J. Vinton Booher ' 40, Albany Robert E. McDonald ' 41, Gary Roland Lisius ' 40, Crown Point Dan Bannister ' 43, Avon, N. Y. James B. Neighbours ' 40, Wabash 29J KAPPA SIGMA Kappa Sigma has grown to include 109 chapters since its founding in 1869 at the Uni- versity of Virginia. Stephen A. Jackson, Uni- versity of Virginia, ' 73, incorporated into one ritual all the traditions which have descended through many of the noble families of the European continent. In 1887 the Beta Theta chapter at Indiana University was given one of the first charters to be granted in the North. Kappa Sig members of Skull and Crescent are Richard Pell, Bill Jennings, Marvin Miller, Jim Fish, Tom Hasbrook, and Rufus Rodgers. Phi Eta Sigmas include Marvin Miller, Jim Fish, and Adrian Freed. William Hauschild is a member of Blue Key, Delta Sigma Pi, and Sphinx Club. Bill Jennings and Marvin Mil- ler also hold membership in Delta Sigma Pi. Richard Schmalz is in Sphinx Club and a Sen- ior baseball manager, and Tom Mutz is a Sopho- more football manager. Marvin Miller is Asso- ciate Business Manager of the Arbutus and a member of the varsity debate team and Phi Kappa Alpha. Gene Troy belongs to the Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce, Charles Keyes is on the Redbook staff, and Dick Lewis is a Pershing Rifler. Kappa Sigs on the faculty are Coach Branch McCracken, Prof. William Kellogg, Dr. Ralph L. Collins, and Dr. Frank G. Bates. Other prominent alumni of Kappa Sigma are Hoagy Carmichael and Lowell Thomas. Outstanding in the nation ' s history are Benjamin Harrison, William Jennings Bryan, Claude A. Swanson, and Robert Todd Lincoln. First Row James Fish, ' 41, South Bend Thomas Hindman, ' 43, Indianapolis Thomas Hasbrook, ' 42, Indianapolis Kenneth Knapp, ' 41, Flora Kay Hilkert, ' 43, Logansport Dick Pell, ' 40, Shelbyville Joe Jenkins, ' 42, Richmond Dan Jenkins, ' 43, Gary Robert Oldenberg, ' 41, Evansville Second Row Garza Baldwin, ' 42, Vincennes Adrain Freed, ' 40, Attica Carlos Rozelle, ' 42, LaGrange William Hauschild, ' 40, LaPorte Richard Lewis, ' 42, Bloomington John Boswell, ' 41, Anderson Robert Hulett, ' 42, Hammond Rufus Rodgers, ' 42, Jeffcrsonville Marvin Miller, ' 41, Bedford Fourth Row Ralph Bruner, ' 42, Jeffersonville Willard Pierce, ' 42, Indianapolis Howard Stein, ' 41, Bloomfield Murray Huse, ' 41, Indianapolis Skip Haas, ' 43, Jeffersonville Charles Keyes, ' 42, Peru Thomas Radigan, PG, Gary James Schmalz, ' 43, Bloomington Gene Troy, ' 40, Indianapolis Fifth Row Third Row John Beckman, PG, Hammond Edward Helfrick, ' 40, Evansville William Stogdill, ' 43, Bluff ton William Tillett, ' 43, Peru Thomas Mutz, ' 42, Indianapolis Webb Beggs, ' 42, Honolulu, Hawaii Clayton Fraker, ' 41, Logansport Raymond Meisel, ' 42, Hammond Jack Graves, ' 43, Lafayette William Jennings, ' 40, Evansville Stewart Cohn, ' 42, Martinsville Logan Coombs, ' 42, Bloomington Richard Schmalz, ' 40, Bloomington John Byers, ' 43, Williamsport Harold Corbin, ' 43, Indianapolis William Squier, ' 40, Richmond William Alexander, ' 41, Martinsville Harry Ullery, ' 43, South Bend Keith Fenters, ' 43, Covington 296 297 298 ii LAMBDA CHI ALPHA r The Alpha Omicron chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha was created from the Independent Liter- ary Society of Indiana University in 1917. The growth of Lambda Chi since its foundation at the University of Boston in 1909, reached a climax in 1939, with the special convention and negotiations which resulted in the union of Theta Kappa Nu and Lambda Chi Alpha. One of the established traditions of the local chapter is a St. Bernard mascot. Old Joe faithfully fulfilled this duty for thirteen years, and upon his death was replaced by Josephine. Last year Josephine disappeared, and this year a new dog, Pard, reigns. On campus, Lambda Chi is represented by Eddie Herbert and Emil Uremovich, varsity football players, with Herbert also a member of Sphinx Club; Hugh Williams, Phi Eta Sigma; Richard Held and Leigh ton Mock, Al- pha Kappa Psi; Robert Scott and James DeVol, Skull and Crescent. Clyde Blocker is a mem- ber of the varsity debating team and William Oliver is on the Freshman team; Milford An- ness is Telegraph Editor of the Daily Student; Leighton Mock, Clyde Blocker, Charles Clunie, and Richard Yarling are members of the Marching Hundred. On the faculty Lambda Chi is represented by Herman Briscoe, George Starr, Joseph Batchelor, Ingwald Aim, Christian Knecht, Theodore Torrey, and Karl Bookwalter. First Row Emil Uremovich ' 41, Hobart Robert Bradley ' 42, Rochester Robert Scott ' 42, Kewanna Leo Vesemmeier ' 43, Martinsville Jim Wilhelms ' 42, Hartford City George Standley ' 42, Greensburg Hugh Williams ' 41, Martinsville Second Row Clyde E. Blocker ' 41, Huntington Richard Held ' 42, LaPorte Robert Spradling ' 42, Kokomo Milford Anness ' 40, Milford Jack Van Winkle ' 43, Hartford City Marion F. Arnold ' 41, New Palestine Jay H. Hillis ' 41, Kokomo Third Row James T. DeVol ' 42, Lafayette Eddie Herbert ' 41, Gary Robert Records ' 43, Anderson Charles Clunie ' 40, Corydon Bernard Gill ' 41, Bloomington Jack Patterson ' 40, Peru Leighton Mock ' 41, Huntington Fourth Row William Oliver ' 43, South Bend Richard Yarling ' 43, ShelbyviUe Floyd Tremor ' 42, Morristown George F. Parker ' 41, Terre Haute John Holdcraft ' 43, Muncie William Ryan ' 43, Frankfort 299 PHI BETA DELTA Each year the Farb-Levi cup is awarded to the best Phi Beta Delta pledge on the basis of scholarship, outside activities, character, and general interest. In addition, tradition claims an annual open house for all Jewish women entered in the University and a smoker for all Jewish men on campus. This is the second year that Phi Beta Delta has donated $1,000 to a refugee author to enable him to continue his work. The Indiana Alpha Theta chapter founded in 1928, is the outgrowth of Gamma Tau, promi- nent Jewish men ' s local organization on this campus. Phi Beta Delta was founded at Colum- bia University in 1912 by a group of eight Jewish students. In extra-curricular activities, men on cam- pus include Irving Berger, member of Beta Gamma Sigma; Bernard Diamond, Senior wres- tling manager; Bernard Rose, Night Editor of the Daily Student; and Bernard Kaufman, member of Phi Eta Sigma and manager of the wrestling team. Louis B. Mayer of M. G. M. studios is an important Phi Beta Delta alumni as is Sena- tor Jacob Weiss, president pro-tem of the Indi- ana Senate. Each year, to those alumni who have distinguished themselves in their service to the fraternity since graduation, the national or- ganization gives an honorary award. This award was given to an Indiana graduate in 1938. First Row Robert Ganser ' 43, Michigan City LeRoy Gensburg ' 40, Gary Bernard Kaufman ' 41, Whiting Rudolph Grunfcld ' 41, New York City Albert Kosnoff ' 42, Goshen Gersten Rappaport ' 42, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bernard Rose ' 40, Indianapolis Second Row Ray Beller ' 42, Willimantic, Conn. Irving D. Berger PG, Logansport A. Martin Katz PG, Michigan City Abe Leff ' 41, Indianapolis Herbert Weiner ' 42, Whiting Irving Kessler ' 43, Michigan City Stanley Schwartz ' 42, Brooklyn, N. Third Row Sid Gerstenhaber ' 43, Richmond Hill, N. Zeke Shapiro ' 42, Mishawaka Eugene Glick ' 43, Indianapolis Felix Bogart ' 42, Brooklyn, N. Y. Lemar Gelman ' 41, Indianapolis Stanley Levy ' 40, South Bend Fourth Row Charles Fisch ' 43, Indianapolis Milton Goldberg ' 43, Linton Nate Miller ' 42, Patterson, N. J. Maurice Bluestein ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Hirschberg ' 43, Gary Albert Rosenberg PG, Vincennes 300 301 i i li«« i ' 1 i Sal 302 PHI DELTA THETA The Indiana Alpha chapter of Phi Delta Theta enjoys the privilege of being the oldest chapter of any social fraternity in continuous existence. It was established one year after the founding of the national organization in 1848 at Miami University by six men who were not satisfied with their old fraternity, Delta Epsi- lon Kappa. The Miami Triad dance, given with the Betas and the Sigma Chis, and the annual Housemother ' s Banquet are included in the so- cial activities of this chapter. Representing the Phi Delts on the campus are Robert Weir, a member of the Board of Aeons, Blue Key, Sphinx Club, Union Board, and Phi Eta Sigma; Richard Herd, President of Alpha Phi Omega and International Rela- tions Club, and Business Manager of the Red Book. In athletics are Campbell Kane, varsity trackman; Harry Tuffy Brooks, member of the varsity football squad; and Bill Frey, a mem- ber of the basketball team. The Phi Delts are well represented by their brothers on the faculty, for Dean Bernard V. Gavit of Law School, Dean H. L. Smith of the School of Education, Professor John Mee, and Professor Julius Bryan are alumni of the fraternity. First Row Jack Finney, ' 40, Frankfort Richard Herd, ' 40, Peru James Briggs, ' 42, Geneva John Kennedy, ' 43, Columbus Nelson Hall, ' 43, Peru Paul Ilg, ' 42, Oak Park, Illinois Ray Southworth, ' 40, Detroit, Mich. Richard Fowler, ' 40, Indianapolis Fourth Row Walter Voss, ' 43, Seymour Charles Barnhill, ' 40, Bloomington John Frazier, ' 41, Milroy William Murchie, ' 43, Bloomington Robert Yost, ' 43, Chesterton Robert Baker, ' 43, Vincennes Hal Bridge, ' 41, Tipton Richard Waggoner, ' 42, Rushville Earl Rich, ' 43, Scottsburg Second Row Clyde Christiansen, ' 43, Miami, Fla. Huber Waggaman, ' 40, Kokomo William Frey, ' 42, Kokomo Robert Moorhead, ' 43, Indianapolis Stephen Free, ' 40, Spencer Claude Spilman, ' 42, Rushville John Adams, Jr., ' 41, Vincennes William Kerrigan, ' 43, Connersville Ted Lewis, ' 42, Indianapolis Fifth Row Dean Call, ' 42, Gaston Joe Marquette, ' 43, Indianapolis Jack Brown, ' 40, Indianapolis Robert Taylor, ' 43, Hagcrstown Campbell Kane, ' 42, Valparaiso Robert Bosart, ' 43, Indianapolis Richard Silver, ' 43, Knightstown James Perry, ' 43, Columbus John Anderson, ' 42, Shelbyville Third Row J. D. Sharp, ' 40, Ft. Wayne Gilbert Bailey, PG, Delphi Warren Ardapple, ' 43, Lafayette John Overshiner, ' 43, Columbus Robert Erdmann, ' 43, Columbia City Jack Templin, ' 42, Indianapolis Harry Brooks, ' 42, Dayton, Ohio Guy Hoover, ' 40, Boonville John Seele, ' 41, Connersville Sixth Row Ben Barr, ' 40, St. Louis, Missouri William Miles, ' 43, Bloomfield Paul Catt, ' 42, Washington William Sohl, ' 43, Hammond Jack Eason, ' 40, Chicago, Illinois George Graessle, ' 43, Seymour Robert Kirk, ' 43, Bloomington Robert Weir, ' 40, Scottsburg Richard Ellwanger, ' 41, Jeffersonville 303 PHI GAMMA DELTA Almost as old as Indiana itself is the Zeta chapter of Phi Gamma Delta. The national fraternity was founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania in 1848 and was es- tablished at Indiana in 1871, where it became the first campus fraternity to own its own house, and remains the only house on the cam- pus proper. The Phi Gams annually celebrate their spring initiation with a Pig Dinner and a Din- ner-Dance, to which all members are invited. Phi Gam is represented on the campus by Mifflin Thomas, swimming captain and a mem- ber of the Board of Aeons, Union Board, Drag- on ' s Head, and Blue Key; Charles Baillie, hav- ing double track letters, being a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, Sigma Delta Psi, Phi Eta Sigma, and President of Blue Key; Gilbert Shull, member of Phi Eta Sigma, Sphinx Club, and Blue Key. Also represented in Blue Key are Wil- liam Keck and Val Nolan. Other members of Phi Eta Sigma are Val Nolan, Richard Ma- son, and John Reinhard. Representatives in the athletic field are: Orville Nichols as Jun- ior basketball manager; in Junior basketball, William Keck; in Junior track, R. E. Purcell; in Junior swimming, John Houghton; in Jun- ior football, Val Nolan; and in Sophomore swimming, Roger Eisinger. William Keck is Junior yell leader, while Ted Scott has his let- ter in tennis. Active in Theta Alpha Phi are Dick Haskett and Fred Brooks, who is also Business Manager of the University Theater. Phi Gamma Delta also claims such alumni as Dr. W. A. Woodburn, and U. H. Smith, Treasurer-Emeritus; Profs. F. L. Benns, E. S. Conklin, W. T. Hale, and W. J. Moenkhaus; Ross Lockridge, Jr., instructor; W. A. Alexan- der, librarian, and Z. G. Clevenger, Director of Athletics. First Row Second Row Third Row John Foster, ' 41, Portland William Lugar, ' 41, Marion Harry Vick, ' 40, Louisville, Kentucky Jerry Torrance, ' 40, Marion Mifflin Thomas, ' 40, Honolulu, Hawaii Edward Bartley, ' 42, Bloomington James Fletcher, ' 43, Belleview, Ohio John Hetherington, ' 40, Indianapolis Thomas Krise, ' 42, Auburn Robert Shoemaker, ' 43, Bloomington Douglas Weber, ' 43, Huntington Ralph Jones, ' 42, Ft. Wayne Howard McCelland, ' 43, Huntington John Nolan, ' 42, Evansville Val Nolan, ' 41, Indianapolis Charles Baillie, ' 40, South Bend Jack Feighner, ' 42, Marion Charles Nicholson, ' 41, Evansville Orville Nichols, ' 41, Knox Fred Brooks, ' 40, Loogootee Everett Hoffman, ' 42, Evansville Richard Mason, ' 40, Marion Fourth Row Fifth Row Sixth Row Robert Martz, ' 40, Bloomington Max Mitchell, ' 43, Ft. Wayne Richard Spencer, ' 43, Greenfield Richard Hunter, ' 43, Marion Robert Nelson, ' 43, Marion Robert Van Riessen, ' 41, South Bend John Houghton, ' 41, Huntington Frank Gans, ' 43, Weston, West Virginia Robert Kendall, ' 41, Crothersville Robert Bernhardt, ' 43, Evansville Wilbur Shull, ' 40, Auburn Richard Haskett, ' 40, Bloomington Berry Bercaw, ' 43, Whiting Edmond Conklin, ' 40, Bloomington Robert Lutz, ' 40, Marion Richard Neff, ' 42, Iowa City, Iowa Robert Downey, ' 41, Monticello John DeShipper, ' 43, Carthage Ned Longsworth, ' 43, Ft. Wayne William Keck, ' 41, Mt. Vernon John Boehnc, ' 42, Evansville John Reinhard, ' 42, Washington, D. C. 304 305 306 PHI KAPPA Phi Kappa, founded in 1889 at Brown Uni- versity to further CathoHc fellowship, installed on the Indiana campus last October the Alpha Alpha chapter. The local fraternity. Torch and Skull, was founded on the campus in 1937 and was granted a national charter from Phi Kappa on August 24, 1939. During the summer, a new chapter house was purchased and ambitious plans for the first year with a national charter were formulated. Prepa- rations for intensive participation in extra-curri- cular activities and the preservation of a high scholastic record were not neglected. Young in tradition, the Phi Kaps have initiated the annual Mothers ' Day Banquet, smokers for Catholic students, a Founders ' Day Banquet, and the exchange of a trophy each year with the Purdue chapter on the result of the football classic between the two schools. Phi Kappa is already well represented in cam- pus activities. Jacob Wittmer is a member of the Cosmopolitan Club and the Daily Student Staff. Jack Lynch holds membership in Sphinx Club and the Campus Committee on Religion. Stephen Reibly represents the Phi Kaps in Alpha Chi Sigma. Salvator lozzo is on the Freshman football team. Other activities include Flying Club, Newman Club, Experimental Theater, Bored Walk, and Alpha Phi Omega. First Row Bernard F. Cinkoske ' 41, Valparaiso Richard J. Houk ' 41, Logansport J. Francis Plummer ' 41, Gary J. William Wittmer ' 40, Cannelton Donald F. Dallie ' 43, Michigan City Second Row James F. Coffee PG, Ft. Wayne Herman O. Ankenbruck ' 43, Ft. Wayne Stephen R. Reibly ' 40, Valparaiso Kenneth D. Sanborn ' 42, Ft. Wayne Salvator lozzo ' 43, Indianapolis Fourth Row Richard J. Koester ' 41, Ft. Wayne James B. Bennington ' 43, Ft. Wayne Joseph E. Kerwin ' 40, Shawnee, Okla. Martin P. Ankenbruck ' 42, Ft. Wayne George H. Ahlering ' 42, Indianapolis John Esty Custin ' 40, Ft. Wayne Third Row Alfred H. Diem ' 43, Ft. Wayne John H. Lynch ' 40, Ft. Wayne Richard P. O ' Conner ' 41, Ft. Wayne Maurice A. Weikart ' 40, Ft. Wayne John W. McGreevey ' 42, Logansport 307 PHI KAPPA PSI This year marks the seventy-first anniver- sary of the founding of the Indiana chapter of Phi Kappa Psi. This active chapter is part of the national organization of Phi Kappa Psi formed at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, on February 19, 1852. While keeping night vigil and caring for their ty- phoid-stricken fellow students during an epi- demic, a group of boys conceived the idea of founding an organization with service as the basic motive. Heading the list of activities men is Robert Boughman, who is Social Chairman of Union Board, a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Collegi- ate Chamber of Commerce, and Sphinx Club. John McFarlan is President of Kappa Kappa Psi and a member of the University Band. Among those claiming membership in Phi Eta Sigma are Sam Mitchell, John Springer, Tru- man Rose, and James Noland. Representatives in the various fields of ath- letics include: Phil Green, head yell leader; Charles Feeger, intramural manager; Ray King and Bob Denny, varsity track; Al Sabol and Rex Wisehart, varsity football; Ben Wilson and Nat Hill, wrestling; Dick Davis, tennis. Faculty representation includes Dr. Robert L. Kroc and Professor John Stempel. Alumni serving prominently in other capacities are Croan Greenough, administrative secretary, and Thomas A. Cookson, Registrar. First Row- Nat Hill, ' 42, Bloomington Darl Miller, ' 43, Marion Richard Davis, ' 42, Marion Robert Anderson, ' 43, Marion Charles Feeger, ' 42, Richmond Robert Whitehead, ' 41, Kokomo William Fox, ' 43, South Bend William Bannon, ' 43, Kokomo Fourth Row Elliott Hickam, ' 42, Spencer William Simmermon, ' 43, Lapel Max Miller, ' 41, Kokomo Guy Boyd, ' 42, Indianapolis Robert Denny, ' 41, Kokomo John Fox, ' 41, South Bend Robert McClure, ' 42, Kokomo Austin Rinne, ' 42, Indianapolis Herbert Cramer, ' 43, South Bend Second Row Ray King, ' 40, Winamac George Kempf, ' 42, Ft. Wayne Richard Land, ' 43, Richmond Richard Ellis, ' 41, Kokomo James Noland ' 42 Bloomington Rex Wisehart ' 42 Anderson Richard Mehl, ' 43, Goshen Robert Stephens, ' 43, Anderson Fifth Row Marshall Alexander, ' 40, Terre Haute Paul Miller, ' 40, Kokomo John Springer, ' 42, Kokomo David Gray, ' 43, Gosport Stephen Leonard, ' 40, Hartford City William Price, ' 42, Marion Richard Price, ' 42, Indianapolis George Smith, ' 40, Dunkirk Samuel Mitchell, PG, Salem Third Row Truman Rose, ' 42, Terre Haute Wade Free, PG, Anderson Chester Stayton, ' 41, Indianapolis Malcolm Buck, ' 40, Anderson Robert Duke, ' 41, Kokomo Harry Chenoweth, ' 40, Richmond John Zeller, ' 42, Brazil Glenn Marshall, ' 42, Bloomington Sixth Row Ray Marr, ' 43, Columbus Kemp Westfall, ' 41, Indianapolis Donald Stephens, ' 40, Marion Stephen Rose, ' 42, Terre Haute Bob Boughman, ' 40, Kokomo Harry Humrichouser, ' 42, South Bend Robert Cash, ' 41, Vincennes Albert Sabol, ' 41, Duquesne, Pa. John McFarlan, ' 40 Connersville Donald Pell, ' 42, Brazil 308 30 - 310 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Since its founding at the University of Ala- bama in 1856, Sigma Alpha Epsilon has grown until today it is the largest national college so- cial fraternity, comprising a total of one hun- dred and fourteen chapters. Although it was the original intention of the founders to keep S.A.E. strictly a southern fraternity, a number of chapters had already been established north of the Mason Dixon Line before the turn of the twentieth century. Indiana Gamma chapter was granted a charter at Indiana University in 1907. S.A.E. is well represented on the campus by faculty alumni, among whom are Dr. Robert E. Walden, Dr. Chauncey Sanders, Dr. Donald Smalley, Prof. C. W. Barker, Prof. Wayne Stackhouse, Samuel E. Braden, Dr. Nelson Grills, and Paul Feltus, a member of the Board of T rustees. Eddie Hutton is president of Board of Aeons, and a member of Blue Key, Dragon ' s Head, Sphinx Club, Union Board, Collegiate Cham- ber of Commerce, Tau Kappa Alpha, Phi Eta Sigma, Beta Gamma Sigma, varsity debate team, and winner of the Niezer Award. Willard Findling is President of Blue Key, Senior foot- ball manager, and a member of the Board of Aeons, Sphinx Club, Phi Eta Sigma, and the 1939 Prom Committee. Other members of Phi Eta Sigma are Bill Bloom, George Bloom, Phil Cooper, Phil Hennessee, John Danch, Jack Barnett, and Bob Gates. Phil Cooper is also a member of Blue Key, and Ed Ferrey is an Editorial Assistant on the Arbutus Staff. Jim Logan captained the 1939-40 football team. Other S.A.E. ' s who are outstanding in athletics include Gene White, football; Tom Motter, basketball; Jim Wood and George Ste- vens, tennis; Bill Bloom, George Bloom, and Vic Aldridge, baseball; Carl Jacobson, swim- ming. Athletic managers, in addition to Find- ling, are Phil Cooper, Junior swimming; Joe Black, Junior baseball; Hugh Clayton, Junior wrestling; Ed Ferrey, Sophomore baseball; and Bob Gates, Sophomore swimming. First Row Edgar Ferrey, ' 42, Columbia City John Freed, ' 41, Terra Haute Eugene Schmidt, ' 43, Ft. Wayne Thomas Motter ' 41, Ft. Wayne Philip Cooper, ' 41, Anderson John H. Wernet, ' 41, Muncie Robert Letsinger, ' 43, Bloomington Robert Elmore, ' 43, Washington Byron Nesbitt, ' 43, Rensselaer Edward Hutton, ' 40, Bedford Fourth Row Robert Austin, PG, Anderson Kenneth Gardner, ' 43, South Bend Phil Hennessee, ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Morris, ' 41, Rochester Joe Black, ' 41, Seymour Victor Aldridge, ' 41, Terre Haute Phil McKay, ' 43, Ft. Wayne Thomas Jaenicke, ' 40, Ft. Wayne Grant Moore, ' 43, Bedford Francis Smith, ' 41, Bloomington Second Row Robert Wilson, ' 42, Omaha, Neb. Burmond J. Gaunt, ' 40, Dunkirk John Swayze, ' 43, Kokomo Wiliard H. Findling, ' 40, Hobart John Logan, ' 43, Richmond Hugh Clayton, ' 41, Calumet City, 111. William Malone, ' 43, Ft. Wayne George Bloom, ' 41, Columbia City Harold Schaf stall, ' 41, Columbus Max Hockema, ' 43, West Lafayette Fifth Row Robert Meyer, ' 41, Hammond Robert Horton, PG, Huntington Glenn Bordner, ' 43, Ft. Wayne Phil Metsker, ' 40, Chicago, 111. Robert Gates, ' 42, Columbia City Lowell Sanders, ' 40, Mitchell Richard Letsinger, ' 43, Bloomington Jules Hendricks, ' 43, Bloomington Reuben Craig, ' 43, Kokomo Ralph Sperry, ' 41, Nashville George Stevens, ' 41, Hammond Third Row Harold Warner, ' 40, Sandborn Phil Gaebe, ' 43, Gary Paul Roberts, ' 43, Lowell Jack Barnett, ' 41, Winamac James Katterhenry, ' 40, Huntingburg William Bloom, ' 40, Columbia City Carl Jacobson, ' 40, Hammond Robert Shimel, ' 43, Ft. Wayne George Buckner, ' 43, Ft. Wayne Frank Hoover, ' 42, Rensselaer Sixth Row Richard Hodson, ' 43, South Bend William Niven, ' 43, Indianapolis Ray Sadler, PG, Athens, Ala. Arvin Henderson, ' 41, Ridgeville James Wood, ' 42, Terre Haute John Flaningam, ' 40, Thorntown Richard Button, ' 41, Hammond Roger StuU, ' 43, Bloomington Eugene White, ' 42, South Bend Len Bunger, ' 43, Bloomington Frank Gregory, ' 42, Princeton 311 SIGMA ALPHA MU After the annual I. U. -Purdue battle, a re- plica of the old oaken bucket travels the road to or from the Bloomington and Lafayette chapters of Sigma Alpha Mu as a result of the local chapter ' s foremost tradition. This tradi- tion grew up shortly after the chapter, Sigma Zeta, came to the campus in 1922. The na- tional organization was founded in 1909 at the College of the City of New York by eight Jew- ish students to foster and maintain a close so- cial and fraternal union among Jewish students at the various universities and colleges of the country. Active S.A.M. ' s are Myron Glassner and Manuel Roth berg on the Board of Aeons; Maurice Adelman is Telegraph Editor on the Indiana Daily Student; Herman Dieter is a member of the Board of Directors of the Col- legiate Chamber of Commerce, and is Junior Business Manager of the Arbutus; Manuel Rothberg, Irvin Wasserman, Robert Goldstein, Edgar Siegel, and Philip Trockman are mem- bers of Phi Eta Sigma. Manuel Rothberg is a member of Blue Key. Irving Glazer is on the varsity swimming team and Morton Turbow is on the wrestling squad. Myron Glassner is Senior manager of the track team and Irvin Wasserman is Junior manager of the football team. First Row Melvin Jacobs PG, Kansas City, Mo. Marvin Sablosky ' 42, Indianapolis Sherman Weinstein ' 43, Ft. Wayne Samuel Torno ' 43, Toronto, Canada Roy Brill ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Samuel Smulyan ' 41, Indianapolis Sol Blickman ' 43, Indianapolis Arnold Marks ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Goldstein ' 42, Indianapolis Justin Frommer ' 42, Indianapolis Second Row Richard Roth ' 40, New Castle Samuel Azen ' 40, New Castle Ben Richter ' 43, Gary Louis Fehr ' 43, Marion Robert Nerenberg ' 43, Kokomo Richard Simons ' 42, Marion Irving Glazer ' 41, Anderson Edward Goodman ' 40, Indianapolis Donald Dann ' 42, New Castle Milton Blieden ' 41, Indianapolis 312 Fourth Row Doovid Barskin ' 42, Martinsville Murray Seidenburg ' 42, New Brunswick, N. J. Sheldon Wagner ' 43, Ft. Wayne Benjamin May ' 43, St. Louis, Mo. Samuel New ' 43, South Bend Allen Williams ' 43, Chicago, 111. Samuel Levy ' 43, Indiana Harbor Manuel Rothberg ' 40, Ft. Wayne Melvin Smith ' 41, South Bend Leon Rosenberg ' 43, Elizabeth, N. J. Fifth Row Third Row Whitney Grunberg ' 42, Indianapolis Irving Wasserman ' 41, Louisville Ky. Howard Levin ' 42, Warsaw Louis Finkle PG, Orange, N. J. Albert Wisch ' 41, Whiting Bernard Glogas ' 42, Gas City Isaac Gittleman ' 42, Louisville, Ky. Joseph Barrett ' 43, Indianapolis Maurice Adelman ' 40, Canton, Ohio Marvin Smith ' 41, South Bend Myron Glassner ' 40, Columbus Philip Trockman ' 42, Evansville Marvin Snyder ' 43, Winslow Edgar Siegel ' 42, Converse Morton Turbow ' 42, Indiana Harbor Herman Dieter ' 41, Louisville, Ky. Joseph Tuchman ' 42, Indianapolis Richard Black ' 42, New York, N. Y. Ira Rosenthal ' 40, New York, N. Y. Robert Berman ' 41, Evansville 313 iS 1 tS S 9 5 S Wm WI EBM 5 .? f . 3 t l.Er f . .•? f l 314 SIGMA CHI Sigma Chi joins with Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta annually to hold the Miami Triad, a dance whose significance lies in the fact that all three fraternities were founded at Miami. University. This fraternity was founded in 1855. It was but three years later that Lambda chapter, which is the oldest Sigma Chi chapter in continuous existence, was founded at Indiana University. Added to this distinction is the fact that the I. U. chapter is housed in the old- est fraternity house in the state, built by them in 1905. Included in the list of prominent alumni from Lambda chapter are: Edwin C. Hill, radio news commentator; Fontaine Fox, cartoonist; L. G. Balfour, President of Balfour Jewelry Co.; R. D. Weyerbacker, Commander of U. S. Naval Bureau of Aeronautics; and W. C. De- Pauw, benefactor of DePauw University. Alumni who are members of the faculty are Professor W. J. Buckley and Dean C. J. Sem- bower. B.M.O.C. ' s of the chapter are Evan Stiers, who is President of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, Secretary-Treasurer of Blue Key, President of Delta Sigma Pi, senior basketball manager, and a member of Beta Gamma Sigma; Bill Menke, member of Sphinx Club, and his brother. Bob, have won honors in varsity bas- ketball. Don Danielson and Red Corriden have received letters for varsity baseball, while Bill Horton has won his letter in golf. First Row Joseph H. Keller ' 42, Indianapolis Max B. Woolery ' 43, Bloomington Robert D. Bash ' 40, Indianapolis John R. Painter ' 42, Alexandria Evan Stiers ' 40, Rushville William C. Robertson ' 40, Indianapolis Charles C. Rhetts ' 41, Marion Bill M. Carmichael ' 40, Albion Gilbert F. Cooper ' 41, South Bend Fourth Row William A. Lyon ' 42, Madison Thomas Brady ' 43, Evansville William Gregory ' 43, North Vernon Fred Wiecking ' 43, Indianapolis Ernest Ebbinghouse ' 43, Wabash George McNabb ' 43, Carthage Robert Hibbard ' 43, Frankfort Gregory Ricke ' 40, Shelbyville James Thompson ' 42, Chicago, 111. Second Row Robert H. Johnson ' 43, Lafayette Robert N. Hall ' 42, Indianapolis Robert J. Walker ' 40, Anderson William R. Cain ' 43, Indianapolis John M. Corriden ' 41, Indianapolis Robert G. Powers ' 4 1 , Columbus, Ohio Gus C. Browne ' 40, Marion John E. Wilson ' 43, Arcadia, Cal. Ray D. Wingert ' 40, Bloomington Fifth Row- Richard Nelson ' 43, Marion Jack M. Lockhart ' 40, Indianapolis Daniel C. Holthouse ' 42, Decatur Stephen G. Slipher ' 41, Columbus, Ohio Robert Hoffman ' 42, Ft. Wayne Bert R. Fenn ' 40, Tell City James Sublette ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Elliott ' 43, Indianapolis Richard B. Feiertag ' 41, Ft. Wayne Seventh Row Robert LeFavour ' 43, South Bend James Matthews ' 43, Bloomington John C. Lybrook, Jr. ' 43, Gary Fred J. Capp ' 41, Rushville George F. Miller, Dale Swihart ' 43, Joseph E. Keyser Paul J. Coolman Third Row James Mendenhall ' 42, Greensbury Joseph R. Lybrook ' 40, Galveston Harold A. Borneman ' 41, Elkhart Robert H. Menke ' 41, Huntingburg John Loch ' 43, Chicago, 111. William C. Menke ' 41, Huntingburg Dale H. Tanner PG, Plymouth Donald T. McCracken ' 42, Paoli Oral J. Ricke ' 43, Shelbyville Sixth Row Jack D. Sturgis ' 43, Bluffton William P. Keller ' 41, Indianapolis Roger H. Chester ' 42, Elkhart Dan Bassett ' 42, Elkhart William E. Horton ' 41, Muncie Ralph C. Singer ' 42, Indianapolis Donald C. Danielson ' 42, Pierre, S. Dak. Jean Harwood ' 43, Marion Jr. ' 41, Evansville Elkhart ' 43, Mt. Carmel, 111. ' 43, Huntington 315 SIGMA NU . ■fv ' - .- ' ' Sigma Nu fraternity was founded at Vir- ginia Military Institute at Lexington, Virginia, in 1869. Although the development of the fra- ternity during the first few years was almost entirely in the South, the organization soon spread to the Middle West and came to the Indiana University campus in 1892. Richard Stoner is an Associate Editor of the Arbutus, Chairman of the Junior Prom Com- mittee, a member of the Union Board and Phi Eta Sigma. John Myers is a Junior basketball manager, and a member of Sphinx Club, Alpha Kappa Psi, and the Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce. Wendell Phillippi is Managing Editor of the Daily Student, as well as a member of Sigma Delta Chi and the Camera Club. Bob McConnell is the Arbutus photographer, the president of the Camera Club, and is a mem- ber of Alpha Phi Omega. Clay Ulen is a Jun- ior football manager and a member of Phi Eta Sigma. Outstanding Sigma Nu social activities in- clude the Bar Room Brawl, the Dutch Lunch, and the Daughter-Sister-Sweetheart Banquet. In addition, the chapter holds an annual Fra- ternity Memorial Sunday and a traditional Founders ' Day Dinner. Sigma Nu alumni on the University faculty are President Herman B Wells, Ward G. Bid- die, James E. Moffat, William H. Jansen, Al- fred Evens, Dwight Cragun, and J. Wymond French. First Row- Robert McConnell ' 42, Indianapolis Mike Dumke ' 42, St. Joseph, Mich. David Rariden ' 40, Bedford George Williamson ' 43, Ft. Wayne Fred Morris ' 43, Indianapolis William Armbruster ' 42, Seymour Jack Rosser ' 43, Pendleton Clay Ulen ' 41, Lebanon Harry Hendrickson ' 43, Indianapolis John Myers ' 40, Mayfield, Ky. Second Row Richard Runyan ' 41, Sturgis, Mich. Bill Armstrong ' 41, Owensboro, Ky. Harry Tomlinson PG, South Bend Virgil Samms ' 41, Indianapolis Maurice Lehman ' 43, Ft. Wayne James Sefton ' 41, East Chicago Roy Bruns ' 41, Brookville John Clerkin ' 41, North Vernon Claude Holmes ' 42, Ft. Knox, Ky. Robert Black ' 43, Gary Fourth Row Richard Moran ' 42, South Bend Harold Wesselman ' 40, Evansville Ray Dumke ' 41, St. Joseph, Mich. Robert Swaim ' 43, Indianapolis Charles Hedge ' 40, Lebanon William Pitkin ' 41, Martinsville Wendell Phillippi ' 40, Zionsville Harry Wesselman ' 42, Evansville Rex Chadwick ' 42, Newcastle Robert McFarland ' 42, Vincennes Fifth Row Third Row John Covey ' 40, Mission, So. Dakota William Hale ' 43, Alexandria Thomas Byrd ' 43, Ladoga John Visher ' 42, Evansville Ralph Phillips ' 40, Salem Walter York ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Frank ' 42, Anderson John Horton ' 42, Nashville Russell Owen ' 42, North Salem James Young ' 42, Glen EUyn, 111. Edward Hildebrand ' 40, Brookville Frank Ratchford ' 42, Bloomington Clement Stigdon ' 40, Kansas City, Mo. Henry Schricker ' 43, Knox Malcolm Weichman ' 42, Richmond James McGuire ' 42, Kalamazoo, Mich. Rex Purkey ' 43, South Whitley Richard B. Stoner ' 41, Tipton Robert Bollum ' 40, South Bend Malcolm Scamahorn ' 40, Pittsboro Robert Atkin ' 40, Evansville 316 f 317 318 SIGMA PI Traditions of Sigma Pi are an annual banquet given by the undergraduates in honor of the Seniors, a Founders ' Day Banquet held in Febru- ary of each year, and a Christmas Dinner given for a number of under-privileged boys. Another big social event of the year is the Orchid Dance for which each girl receives an orchid. Walt Smith is a member of Sphinx Club, Alpha Phi Omega, and President of the McNutt Club. William Fitzgibbon is active in Sigma Delta Chi, Scabbard and Blade, and the Indiana Daily Student. Earl McCaslin and Jack Modi- sett are on the Bored Walk staff; and James Gridley and Frank Smith are active in basket- ball and football respectively. Founded in 1898 at Vincennes University, Sigma Pi is recognized as one of the oldest fra- ternities originating west of the Alleghenies. Although it was organized as Tau Phi Delta, in 1907 the name was changed to Sigma Pi. A chapter of Tau Phi Delta was started at In- diana University in 1905 by five law students from Vincennes, but it became inactive during the World War. However, Sigma Pi again be- came one of the organizations on this campus in 1924 when local Kappa Chi became a mem- ber of the national fraternity. Prominent alumni are President Davis of Vin- cennes University and Prof. W. C. Lynch and Dr. R. L. Jones of the Indiana faculty. ■First Row Robert Haak ' 40, Hammond Ben O. Stands ' 43, Lafontaine Robert Parrish PG, Ft. Wayne Henry Jackowski ' 42, E. Chicago Raymond Earl McCaslin ' 40, Indianapolis Jackson Modisett ' 41, Terre Haute Henry Timbrook ' 41, Columbus Joe Dukes ' 41, Dugger William Dannacher ' 40, Wabash Second Row Carl Winnebald ' 42, Evansville James Raber ' 40, Valparaiso Glen E. Smith ' 42, Versailles Myers Thompson ' 43, Terre Haute Ralph Broyles PG, El wood Thomas Fowler ' 43, Evansville William Fitzgibbon ' 40, Indianapolis Lee Kane ' 40, Schererville Ralph Fisher ' 43, South Bend Third Row John King ' 42, Shelby ville William Cherry ' 43, Indianapolis Ernest Paullus ' 42, Wabash William Thompson ' 42, Wabash Carl Leevy ' 43, Bloomington Sam Van Arsdell ' 40, Chicago, 111. Edward Rucinski ' 41, E. Chicago Robert Naugle ' 41, Wabash John Brown PG, Ft. Wayne Fourth Row Harold Roth ' 43, Evansville Pierre Chaillaux ' 43, Indianapolis Paul Hertenstein ' 43, Napoleon Damon Arthur ' 41, Dugger Gene Sanders ' 43, Bloomington Walter Smith ' 40, Versailles James O. Gridle y ' 41, Vevay Louis Bianco ' 40, Gary John Tichenor ' 40, Pimento Fifth Row James Cox ' 40, Tipton Donald King ' 43, Columbus Maurice Eagan ' 42, Benton Harbor, Mich. Harold Cromer ' 40, Schererville Ward Martindale ' 40, Linton James Phillippe ' 41, Dugger James Fischer ' 42, Indianapolis Leroy Vondersaar ' 43, Indianapolis Frank Smith ' 41, Benton Harbor, Mich. 319 THETA CHI Theta Chi sometimes is known as the frater- nity of deans, for nineteen deans in leading universities throughout the county are mem- bers. The organization was founded at Nor- wich University, Northfield, Vermont, in 1856, and sixty-five years later the Alpha Iota chap- ter was established on the Bloomington campus. Annual social functions of this chapter include a Barn Dance and a Pig Dinner. Theta Chi Dave Richardson is Editor-in- chief of The Daily Student, Editor of the Ath- letic Review, Treasurer of Sigma Delta Chi, and a member of the Union Board, Sphinx Club, and Blue Key. Joe Troy is a member of the Ar- butus Staff, and Robert Foellinger is a mem- ber of Pershing Rifles. Paul Devine has one of the leading campus bands, and Frank Wellnitz is Campus Editor of The Daily Student. Hern- don Fletcher is listed among the members of Phi Eta Sigma. A Sports Editor of The Dailv Student is Don McCammon who is also a mem- ber of Sigma Delta Chi. Theta Chi is repre- sented in football bv Jim Ellenwood, Kenny Moeller, and Kenny Smith, and in baseball by Dan Drain. Jim Ellenwood is a member of Sphinx Club, and Skull and Crescent lists Kenny Moeller as one of its active members. Wearers of the Theta Chi badge on the fac- ulty are Dr. W. Wright, Prof. Russell Noyes, and Donald Berrett. First Row Robert C. Pease ' 40, Ft. Wayne Paul Devine ' 41, Gary Howard Gill ' 43, Chicago Charles E. Moore ' 42, Hammond Frank O. Wellnitz ' 40, Michigan City Ned Reglein PG, Michigan City Charles Dunkinson ' 43, Peru Floyd Wuenn ' 43, Michigan City Harvey Wellnitz ' 40. Michigan City Ben Falber ' 41, Terre Haute Second Row George Engelman ' 41, Hammond Emery Konrady ' 42, Gary Wayne Shook ' 42, Spencerville William Siples ' 43, Ft. Wayne Dan Drain ' 41, Ligonier Lloyd Hiott ' 43, Indianapolis George Lyday ' 42, Indianapolis Louis Kunkel ' 42, Michigan City Eugene Stoner ' 41, Tipton James Ellenwood ' 40, Ft. Wayne Third Row Herbert Sims ' 40, Gary Julius D. Mann ' 40, Nashville, III. Joseph Troy ' 42, Michigan City Robert Bingham ' 42, Gary Ralph Faucett PG, Cambridge City Richard Jones ' 43, Indianapolis Bud Hay ' 40, Lebanon James Orr ' 41, Munster David B. Richardson ' 40, Maplewood, N. J. John Hazel ' 40, Bloomington 320 Fourth Row Kenneth Moeller ' 42, Ft. Wayne Harrison Nicholas ' 41, Indianapolis Morgan Ncu ' 42, South Bend Robert J. Foellinger ' 41, Ft. Wayne Herndon Fletcher ' 40, Indianapolis William Spencer ' 43, Peru Robert Roudebush ' 42, Huntington William Kraft ' 40, Gary Merlin Summers ' 42, North Liberty Fred Nye ' 40, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row Maynard Morris ' 41, Indianapolis James Antrim ' 42, Chicago Kemp Martin ' 41, Indianapolis Robert Marsh PG, Gary Kenneth Smith ' 42, Piqua, Ohio Ray Dunn ' 42, Gary Donald McCammon ' 40, Greensburg Morris Best ' 42, New Albany Robert Romine ' 43, Bloomington •i f 3 f 321 322 SOUTH HALL Opened in 1926, this men ' s dormitory was the first unit in the proposed dormitory sys- tem for Indiana University to be completed and occupied. The second semester of this year saw the long awaited North and West Halls, finished and opened. The Hall is governed by the officers, social chairman, an athletic director, and a cabinet chosen by the president and officers. These officers are elected semi-annually. Traditional events in the Hall include a Freshman exchange dinner with Memorial Hall and a Brown Coun- ty picnic. Activities of the South Hall residents are: Beta Gamma Sigma, Lot Seacat; Phi Eta Sigma, Richard Newton, Bruce Decker, Bruce Ben- ward, Chris Blassaras, Paul Solman; Phi Beta Kappa, Richard Newton; I.S.A. Council, Gene Kern, Charles McCartney; Alpha Phi Omega, Robert Sabin, treasurer, Paul Tack; President of Alpha Chi Sigma, Paul Tack; Swimming manager, Bruce Benward; John Fleming, Asso- ciate City Editor of Daily Student; Alpha Kappa Psi, Gene Kern, Delmar Hilton; Kappa Kappa Psi, Bruce Decker, Ralph Schnabel. John Kistler is Associate Editor of the Arbutus, mem- ber of Daily Student staff. Junior track man- ager, and a member of Alpha Kappa Psi. First Row Delmer Hylton ' 42, Indianapolis Vincent Lambo ' 41, Elkhart William Schimpff ' 41, Jeffersonville Charles McCartney ' 40, Fairmount John Kistler ' 41, Elkhart Richard Derby ' 41, Elkhart Arthur Van Arsdel ' 42, Valparaiso Bruce Decker ' 41, Bluff ton Second Row James Jordan ' 43, Lynn Milan Dudas ' 42, Whiting Richard Newton ' 40, Ligonier Ernest Kern ' 42, Oakville William Kunkle ' 40, Hartford City Frank White 40, Portland Leslie Werry ' 42, Hartford City Robert Prichard ' 40, Waukegan, 111. Third Row Gene Kern ' 42, OakviUe Ralph Schnabel ' 41, Indianapolis James Asher ' 40, New Augusta Ralph Sigel ' 40, Detroit, Mich. Daniel Harsh ' 43, Bluff ton Wendell Decker ' 43, Bluff ton George Kerrigan ' 40, Connersville Robert Collette ' 43, Ravenna, Ohio Fourth Row Paul Sollman ' 42, Fort Branch Patrick Ronzone ' 43, Elkhart Cyril Teutemacher ' 43, Dyer John Horvath ' 43, South Bend Donald Hertz ' 43, Indianapolis Robert Hunt ' 43, Dyer William Piatt ' 43, Aurora 323 _£ 324 F Ellen Schocke - - — President Virginia Biery Vice-President Mary Paddock .._ Treasurer Imogene Sharpnack Secretary 326 i ALPHA CHI OMEGA i Alpha Chi Omega ' s outstanding philanthropic interest is the Star Studio maintained by the sorority at the Mac Dowell Colony, Peterboro, New Hampshire. The purpose of this colony is to provide a place of refuge and quiet for those who wish to study and do creativ e work. The outstanding traditional functions of Alpha Chi Omega are Hera Day and Founders ' Day. These occasions are observed with a service de- voted to the well-being of others. The pearl encircled lyre, the pin of Alpha Chi Omega, signifies not a music sorority but a social organization having an interest in mu- sic. The national organization which has grown to include fifty-eight chapters, was founded at DePauw University in 1885 by seven girls who realized the need of a group whose purpose would be to develop social activi- ties and to promote musical art. The Alpha Mu chapter was installed on this campus April 23, 1913. Alpha Chis Jeanette Prinz, Marybelle Gall- meyer, and Julia Ann Harting are members of Pleiades. Jeanette Prinz and Suzanne Weaver are members of the Daubers Club. Bette Ann Tillman is Associate Editor of the Arbutus and Social Chairman of the A.W.S. Council. Jane Gaff and Joan Veit are members of Y.W.C.A. Council, and Joan is also Sophomore Assistant on the Editorial Staff of the Arbutus. The Collegiate Chamber of Commerce lists Julia Peckinpaugh and Julia Ann Harting who, with Anna Louise Burkhart, are both members of Omicron Delta. Alma Freyn, Emily Zankyl, and Betty Nicholls are members of Oceanides, while musically-minded Katheryn Klingelhoffer is President of Sigma Alpha Iota and a mem- ber of the Pro-Music Club. Alpha Lambda Delta claims Julia Peckinpaugh, Rosamond Schlaegel, and Bette Ann Tillman. Pauline Taylor was chosen as an R.O.T.C. Coed Sponsor. First Row Marjorie Warren ' 42, Wheatfield Jane Gaff ' 42, South Bend Eloise Kriegbaum ' 43, Richmond Louise Bicknell ' 41, Bloomington Mary Elizabeth Graves ' 41, Evansville Rosemary Miner ' 42, Pendleton Emily Sperry ' 43, Nashville Julia E. Peckinpaugh ' 40, Mt. Summit Second Row Emily Zankl ' 43, Indianapolis Jeanette Prinz ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Patricia O ' Donnell ' 41, Indianapolis Mary Lou Ferguson ' 42, Seymour Imogene Sharpnack ' 40, Columbus Betty Nicholls ' 41, Bound Brook, N. J. Virginia England ' 43, Plainville Virginia Hitch ' 43, Park Hills, Ky. Third Row Suzanne Weaver ' 43, Noblesville Doris Bicknell ' 43, Bloomington Mary Lampton ' 43, Ft. Wayne Alma Freyij ' 43, Indianapolis Rosalie Holman ' 40, Indianapolis Virginia Biery ' 40, Frankort Joan Veit ' 42, Union City Mary Ellen Stimpson ' 43, Bloomington Fourth Row Helen C. Miller ' 41, Elkhart Bette Ann Tillman ' 41, Bloomington Betty Jane Ditzler ' 42, Huntington Ruth Richardson ' 43, Jeffersonville Anna Louise Burkhart ' 40, Westfield Ann Casey ' 41, Gary Jesse Boswell ' 40, Anderson Mary Lou Dennie ' 42, Ft. Wayne Fifth Row Sally Bollenbocker ' 42, Washington Wanda Craddock ' 43, Indianapolis Betty Jane Prinz ' 43, Louisville, Ky. Virginia Lee Kuhn ' 4 1 , South Bend Martha Sandeman ' 42, Elwood Marybelle Gallmeyer ' 40, Ft. Wayne Marietta Wood ' 40, Indianapolis Rosemary Fry ' 42, Jason ville Sixth Row Mary Margaret Myers ' 43, Wilkinson Katheryn Klingelhoffer ' 40, Aurora Pauline Taylor ' 42, Columbus Mary Paddock ' 41, Chicago, 111. Rosamond Schlaegel ' 40, Indianapolis June Enoch ' 43, Ft. Wayne Rosemary McCarthy ' 43, Indianapolis Helen Gery ' 41, Darlington Seventh Row Virginia Stevens ' 42, South Bend Kathryn Simon ' 42, Ft. Wayne Julia Ann Harting ' 40, Tipton June Elkins ' 43, Evansville Virginia Lee Cowan ' 41, Ft. Wayne Barbara McPike ' 43, Bloomington Martha Jean Bunger ' 41, New Albany Ellen Schocke ' 40, Salem Jean Parent ' 41, Union City 327 ALPHA DELTA PI || Founded in 1851 on the campus of the Wes- leyan Female College, the Adelphian Society adopted the custom of writing the Greek let- ters Alpha Delta Phi after their name. In 1913 they amended the charter and changed the name to Alpha Delta Pi, in order to avoid confusion with the fraternity, Alpha Delta Phi. Honorable mention was given the chapter for their Homecoming decorations featuring the Wizard of Ah ' s . Members of the local chapter are prominent in several campus activi- ties. Lenora Wilkinson and Ruth Lindner are on the roll of Alpha Lambda Delta. Mary Smith was a charter member of Omicron Delta while Lenora Wilkinson and Doris Troedon uTth Lindner is a member ot lassical L Jut English Club, and is Vice-President of Eta Sigma Phi. Members of the Glee Club are Peggy Taylor, Thelma Davis, Ruth Lefforge, Alta Marie Morgan, and Marjorie Martinson. Bettye Jo Ullom is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota. The Indiana chapter holds a Colonial Din- ner, usually during rush week, as one of its annual customs, besides such traditions as a Founders ' Day Banquet and a Senior Razz Ban- quet. Wearers of the diamond among the fac- ulty include Mrs. H. L. Smith, Mrs. O. O. Winther, Mrs. D. Lyle Dieterle, Mrs. Stanley Pressler, Mrs. V. Brown Scott, and Mrs. Har- old Wolfe. First Row Mary Helen Dix ' 43, Chicago, 111. Lenora Wilkinson ' 41, Gary Marceille Jones ' 43, LaPorte Peggy Taylor ' 43, Chicago, 111. Alice Grandstaff ' 42, North Manchester Ruth Lindner ' 41, Valparaiso Second Row Ruth Lefforge ' 42, Wabash Sarah Gusman ' 40, Markle Margaret Gary ' 41, Rising Sun Marilyn Rader ' 42, Valparaiso Doris Trogdon ' 43, Honolulu, Hawaii Bettye J. Ullom ' 41, Urbana Third Row Mary Lou Roster ' 41, Indianapolis Dorothy Taylor ' 40, Detroit, Mich. Marjorie Martinson ' 43, Hines, 111. La Vonne Roth ' 43, Boonville Nancy Waterworth ' 42, Gary Mary Agnes Smith ' 40, Cumberland Fourth Row Mary Jo Tennell ' 42, Bloomington Ellen Taylor ' 42, Pearl City, Hawaii Betty Bender ' 40, Bloomington Mary Jo Wright ' 41, Odon Alta Marie Morgan ' 43, Bloomington Fifth Row Thelma Davis ' 41, Hebron Jean McFeely ' 40, Oak Park, 111. Patty Patton ' 42, Bloomington Janice Robey ' 42, Indianapolis Mary E. Schilling ' 41, Indianapolis 328 Jean McFeely __.. ..President Dorothy Taylor Vice-President Sarah Gusman ...Secretary-Treasurer Laura Wilkins __ President Carmen Cook .-Vice-President Sara Ellen Reeves Secretary Ellogene Griffith __ Treasurer JK il gjgj k. Jtai i 330 ' X ALPHA OMICRON PI J In the Alpha Omicron Pi house is the only real patio and pool on the campus, and every girl who accepts a fraternity pin must conform to the tradition of being ducked in the pool. Beta Phi chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi was founded at Indiana University in the tower room of the present chapter house on June 3, 1916. An organization of forty-eight chap- ters in the United States and Canada grew from the foundation of this sorority in 1897 at Bar- nard College of Columbia University. Audrey Smith is Editor-in-Chief of the Ar- butus, treasurer of Theta Sigma Phi, and a mem- ber of Pleiades. Laura Wilkins is president of Pipia L. v;, St At: VA, of the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, while Winifred Black and Martha Ellen Wiesman are repre- sentatives on the Y.W.C.A. Council. Susanne Fogg is the R.O.T.C. Honorary Cadet Colonel. Alpha Lambda Delta members are Helen Bur- ton, Vivian Isaacs, Frances Proud, and Mary Jane Armstrong. The vice-president of the Pan- Hellenic Council and a place on the A.W.S. Council are also among Mary Jane Armstrong ' s activities. Frances Baylor is a member of Oceanides; Sigma Alpha Iota memberships are held by Helen Burton, Margaret Alice Thomp- son, Martha Ellen Wiesman, and Vivian Isaacs. Martha Mcintosh is a Sophomore Assistant on the Arbutus Staff. Pi Lambda Theta mem- bers are Susanne Fogg and Martha E. Wies- man. First Row Margaret Alice Thompson ' 40, Salem Reba Pendry ' 42, Bloomington Mary Ruth Steinmetz ' 41, Indianapolis Rosemary Ruffing ' 41, Delphi Sara Ellen Reeves ' 40, New Market June Kennedy ' 42, Dunkirk Ellen Jane Balfour ' 42, Anderson Martha Ellen Wiesman ' 40, Kokomo Wanda PuUiam ' 41, Indianapolis Ann Baylor ' 43, Speed Second Row Adelaide Jones ' 41, Kokomo Martha Mcintosh ' 42, Worthington Ann Rodefeld ' 43, Richmond Eleanor Way ' 41, Albany Helen Burton ' 42, Sandborn Frances Proud ' 41, South Bend Jane Palmer ' 42, Owensboro, Ky. Winifred Black ' 41, Hobart Lois Kiesling ' 41, Logansport Pat Criley ' 41, Owensboro, Ky. Third Row Phyllis Knapp ' 41, Michigan City Pat Rozelle ' 43, LaGrange Marcella Booher ' 43, Albany Audrey Smith ' 40, Crown Point Louise Vittitow ' 40, Owensboro, Ky. Phyllis Oyler ' 43, Galveston Laura Wilkins ' 40, Gary Betty Calpha ' 40, Laurel June Kohl ' 43, Angola Nancy Hull ' 42, Hungtington Fourth Row Elsie Chalfant ' 43, Griffith Venitia Harpster ' 42, Gary Mary Elizabeth McUveen ' 41, Bloomington Jeanice Bartling ' 42, Ft. Wayne Susanne Fogg ' 40, Greensburg Carmen Cook ' 40, Birdseye Doris Rose ' 41, Crown Point Vivian Isaacs ' 41, Kokomo Betty Bates ' 43, Joliet, 111. Fifth Row Martha Tiernan ' 42, Richmond Helen Hughes ' 43, Washington, D. C. Ellogene Griffith ' 41, Scottsburg Marjorie Finke ' 43, Evansville Betty Pruitt ' 42, Greensburg Frances Baylor ' 40, Speed Dorothy Jean Billings ' 42, Greensburg Norma McClintock ' 42, Indianapolis Mary Jane Armstrong ' 42, Bedford 331 CHI OMEGA A unique traditional function of Chi Omega is its Bowery Dinner in the spring each year. Indiana Theta Beta chapter was estabhshed on this campus in 1922. Founded in 1895 by four coeds at the University of Arkansas, the organization has grown to a national social sor- ority of ninety-three chapters. Chi Omega alumnae on the campus are Miss Estella Whit- ted of the Department of English and Mrs. R. C. Buley and Mrs. R. S. Sherman, wives of fac- ulty members. President of the Chi Omega house, Doris Vater, is a member of Taps and Theta Alpha Phi. Members of Pleiades include Jane Klein- ert, Adele Lowell, and Ruth Ferris, who is also Treasurer of the Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce as well as Publicity Director of the Uni- versity Theatre. Other members of the theatre staff are Mary Snapp, assistant publicity direc- tor and Adele Lowell, assistant business mana- ger. Eloise Barnett is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. Betty Harris is Secretary of the A.W.S. Council and a member of Iota Sigma Pi. Arbutus Beauty Queens are Mary Benning- hoff and Maryel Patrick, who is also a mem- ber of Sigma Alpha Iota and the Pro-Music Club. First Row Catherine Marnan ' 42, Whiting Vella Lee Page ' 42, Rensselaer Mary Elizabeth Hoover ' 40, Middlebury Jerrie Werber ' 41, Gary Marcia McColly ' 40, Rensselaer Margaret Ale ' 41, Vernon Olivia Days ' 41, Elkhart Martha Gast ' 40, Warsaw Marjorie Walker ' 42, Whiting Jean Thompson ' 43, Rensselaer Second Row Betty Ncighborgall ' 43, Garrett Jean Closser ' 41, Hanna Adele Lowell ' 41, Elkhart Helen Hauselmi re ' 41, Newburgh Lucille Sutton ' 41, Jeffersonville Jean Loucks ' 41, North Manchester Phyllis Paris ' 42, Bloomington Marjorie Slaybaugh ' 40, Syracuse Betty Jean Rowe ' 42, Milwaukee, Wis. Jean Sullivan ' 42, Petersburg Third Row Marian Combs ' 41, Terre Haute Jane Kleinert ' 41, Elkhart Dorothy Forrest ' 41, Elkhart Peg O ' Riley ' 43, Rensselaer Elizabeth Ann Neff ' 42, Ft. Wayne Mary Snapp ' 42, Whiting Sylvia Legg ' 43, Terre Haute Jean Teaney ' 43, Aurora Marguerite Barnes ' 42, Terre Haute Mary Benninghoff ' 40, Ft. Wayne 332 Fourth Row Betty Jane Boyer ' 42, Tarpon Springs, Fla. Betty Harris ' 41, Madison Jeanne Baker ' 43, Miamisburg, Ohio Helen Jane Miles ' 41, Terre Haute Rosemary Keane ' 43, Mitchell Charlene Romines ' 41, Lawrenceburg Margaret Ann Blakeslee ' 43, Indianapolis Doris Vater ' 40, Whiting Eloise Barnett ' 40, Sulphur Springs Helen Meekins ' 42, Hollywood, Fla. Fifth Row Martha Alice Day ' 43, Bloomington Ruth Ferris ' 40, Hammond Corinne White ' 40, Indianapolis Dolores Miller ' 41, Terre Haute Suzanne Rummel ' 43, Goshen Carolyn Johnson ' 41, Crown Point Martha Keelty ' 43, Madison Wilma Jean Chambers ' 40, Bloomington Eileen Doyle ' 43, Norwalk, Ohio Edrea Jane Yeager ' 43, Indianapolis Maryel Patrick ' 40, Lafayette la m f f B • P«?iK .V3l.« . Doris Vater President Ruth Ferris Vice-President Jean Loucks - Secretary Dorothy Forrest Treasurer 333 1 t f ' 5 Virginia Austin - President Cleo Bishop — Vice-President Betty Firth ...Secretary Betty Sigler Treasurer 334 DELTA DELTA DELTA The crescent moon and three stars of the pin worn by members of Delta Delta Delta origi- nated when, during the first pledging, founders looked at the sky and saw there a moon and three stars. The sorority was established on Thanksgiving Eve at Boston University in 1888 by Sarah Ida Shaw, Eleanor Dorcas Pond, and two classmates. From this small beginning the organization, which is based on friendship and development of character, has grown to include eighty-nine chapters. This year Indiana ' s Delta Omicron celebrated its twenty-third birthday and its eleventh year at its present location on Third Street. This year the Tri Delt house was awarded the cup for Homecoming decorations, and the Freshman class won the A.W.S. stunt contest in competition with the other Freshman groups. The house president, Virginia Austin, is Co- Chairman of Coed-Counseling, Assistant Busi- ness Manager of the Arbutus, a member of the Daily Student and Bored Walk Staffs, a Persh- ing Rifles Sponsor, and a member of Pleiades. Jeannette Dice is President of Mortar Board and Theta Sigma Phi, and a member of Pleiades. Suzanne Moore is a member of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, the Debate Team, and the University Theatre Business Staff. Mary Carson is an R.O.T.C. Sponsor and an Editorial Assistant on the Arbutus Staff. Betty Firth is on the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet and Marion Smith is a member of Pleiades. Five members are Alpha Lambda Delta members. First Row Marion Smith ' 40, East Chicago Betty Sigler ' 40, Hammond Jeannette Dice ' 40, Converse Betty Ann Small ' 42, Vincennes Pat Sigler ' 42, Hammond Cleo Bishop ' 40, Vincennes Jean Sheiffele ' 41, Hammond Glenna Deane Hunter ' 42, Williamsport Mildred Marshall ' 43, Bloomington Dorothea Lehman ' 41, Cannelton Fourth Row Second Row Feme Hart ' 43, Chicago, 111. Ruth Elizabeth Taylor ' 43, Boswell Mary Carson ' 42, Lafayette LaVaun Reehling ' 43, Indianapolis Margaret Hall ' 40, Williamsport Margaret Grundy ' 42, South Bend Barbara Burk ' 43, Decatur Suzanne Moore ' 42, Frankfort Patricia French ' 43, Princeton Jeanne Pierson ' 43, Morocco Third Row Marjorie Mellen ' 42, Springfield, Ohio Marjorie Homan ' 43, South Bend Gladys Huber ' 43, Evansville Betty Harsh ' 41, Bluff ton Doris Huffstetter ' 43, Aurora Emily Jo Schwartz ' 43, Kokomo Beatrice Fudge ' 42, Ft. Wayne Betty Firth ' 40, Indianapolis Millie Cox ' 42, Sheridan Patricia McConnaha ' 42, Lebanon Fifth Row Virginia McFatridge ' 43, Princeton Dorothy Shafer ' 43, Indianapolis Phyllis Cloetingh ' 43, South Bend Betty Tuck ' 42, Louisville, Ky. Sara Sweet ' 43, San Francisco, Calif. Marilyn Bir ' 42, New Albany Betty Jane Campbell ' 42, Owensboro, Ky. Alwyn Miller ' 42, East Chicago Martha Jane Brunton ' 42, Scottsburg Relda Hoelocker ' 41, LaPorte Jeanne Gifford ' 42, Chicago, 111. Nancy Ellis ' 42, Elkhart Mary Elizabeth Adams ' 40, Vincennes Marjorie Bicknell ' 42, Sullivan Betty Lou Duncan ' 43, Lafayette Jane Palmer ' 41, Jeffersonville Betty Miller ' 42, Manilla Vivian Woods 42, Ft. Wayne Virginia Austin ' 41, Zionsville Cathryn Cooper 43, Anderson Jean Redman ' 42, Garrett 335 DELTA GAMMA The Delta Gammas are well represented in campus life and extra-curricular activities. Mary Beth Hunt is a member of Mortar Board, Tau Kappa Alpha, Senior representative on A.W.S. and Co-Chairman of the Powwow. Eight Delta Gammas are members of Alpha Lambda Delta. Pleiades representatives are Mary Beth Hunt, Virginia Heller, and Marjorie Heidenreich. Other activities in which Delta Gammas are participating are Theta Alpha Phi to which Mary Beth Hunt and Charlotte Fields belong; Omicron Nu, enrolling, Virginia Heller and Lois Lauter; Y.W.C.A. Council of which Katherine Durham is a member; University Theatre Staff, Mary Jane Straub; and Sigma Alpha Iota lists iXi t Yonnr ' nc -i mpmbpr , Mf rnKpr i of O ides are Peggy Newton, K| [ancy Kegley. Indiana ' s Theta Chapter, founded in 1898, was established on the Quad when Jordan Ave- nue was still a mud path. Today it boasts of green terraces, sloping to the shores of the Jordan River and green hair-bows on its Fresh- men. The national organization was founded in 1874 at Lewis College, Oxford, Missouri. To- day there are girls on fifty college campuses, four of which are in Canada, wearing the golden anchor of Delta Gamma. First Row Dorothy McLain ' 43, Anderson Mary Ann Samms ' 43, Indianapolis Mary Jane Straub ' 41, Evansville Nancy Mayfield ' 43, Sullivan Ruth Goebel ' 40, Ft. Wayne Barbara Fraser ' 43, Bloomington Jean McDonald ' 43, Bloomington Annette Ford ' 42, South Bend Katherine Durham ' 42, Indianapolis Fourth Row Marjorie Heidenreich ' 41, Bicknell Charlotte Rupper ' 41, Evansville Helen Betty McLucas ' 41, Wheaton, 111. Margaret Rinehart ' 43, Louisville, Ky. Helen Bassler ' 43, South Bend Helen Humphreys ' 43, Bicknell Nancy Kegley ' 42, Indianapolis Margaret Johnston ' 40, Wilmette, 111. Suzanne Ewing ' 42, Indianapolis Second Row Juanita Clawson ' 41, Muncie Jean Weber ' 41, Huntington Maurene Fiegenschuh ' 41, Calumet City, III. Peggy Newton ' 40, Columbus Elizabeth Lanier ' 41, Ft. Wayne Ruth Colle ' 42, Anderson Carol McNierney ' 43, Toledo, Ohio Betty Sutphin ' 40, Bloomington Betty Hamilton ' 40, Richmond Fifth Row Esther Dye ' 40, Detroit, Mich. Eloise Stump ' 42, Richmond Margaret Shaul ' 41, Terre Haute Alyce Wright ' 42, Metuchen, N. J. Mary Beth Hunt ' 40, Evansville Shirley Hannapel ' 40, Chicago, 111. Marjorie Stucky ' 43, Ft. Wayne Jane Lincoln ' 42, Columbus Third Row Jeanne Dailey ' 43, Franklin Mary Susan Schmalz ' 42, Bloomington Patt Nichols ' 42, Spencer Barbara Gale ' 40, Cleveland, Ohio Marie Hixon Davis ' 41, Bloomington Betty Fraser ' 42, Bloomington Peggy Morrison ' 42, Kokomo Kathleen O ' Banion ' 43, Tipton Jane Rinehart ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Sixth Row Louise Samuelson ' 41, Springfield, Ohio Harriet Yenne ' 41, Cleveland, Ohio Vesta McClellan ' 43, Chicago, 111. Mary Ann Kriegbaum ' 40, Huntington Doris Allison ' 40, Tipton Phyllis Ann Toy ' 43, Huntington Florence Swanson ' 40, Ft. Wayne Virginia Flory ' 42, Indianapolis 336 Seventh Row Geraldine Gates ' 42, Indianapolis Virginia Heller ' 40, Ft. Wayne Dorothe McComb ' 43, Terre Haute Lois Lauter ' 40, Indianapolis Jane Smith ' 43, Rochester Dorothy Lowey ' 43, Huntington Charlotte Fields ' 41, Bloomington Margaret Lorenz ' 41, Indianapolis Mary Ann Kriegbaum President Betty Hamilton Vice-President Barbara Gale Secretary Peg Johnston Treasurer aaiPPiBi •f. I f I ' l m % rf wm 337 Vivian Johnson President Elizabeth Dawson Vice-President Dorothy Busby - Secretary Marjorie Booker Treasurer g DRTA ZETA ♦ Hoping to stimulate true interest in scholastic achievement, the Indiana University chapter of Delta Zeta offers two honorary awards to its members. A silver loving cup is awarded each semester to the active member with the highest scholastic average. To the Freshman girl with the similar honor in her class a scholarship ring is presented. Elizabeth Dawson, who is President of Pan- Hellenic Council and a member of W.A.A. Board and the Drum and Bugle Corps, and Jane Delta Zetas may well be proud that they be- long to the fifth oldest sorority on the campus, their chapter having been chartered in 1909, ju st seven years after the national founding at Miami University. They may also be proud that such persons as Gail Patrick, movie actress; Mary Drange Cambell, founder of the Seeing Eye Foundation; and Bess Goody Koontz, Commis- sioner of the United States Bureau of Education, are included in their group of outstanding alum- nae. First Row Julia Butt ' 42, Miamisburg, Ohio Marian Johnson ' 40, Bedford Elizabeth Salisbury ' 43, Detroit, Mich. Helen Click ' 43, Midland, Mich. Vivian Johnson ' 41, Gary Second Row Dolores Lang ' 43, Buffalo, N. Y. Barbara Taylor ' 41, Indianapolis Phyllis Hanson ' 43, Gary Lorraine Dorton ' 42, Bloomington Betty McDaniel ' 43, Gary Third Row Dorothy Busby ' 40, Anderson Marjorie Booker ' 40, Muskegon Heights, Mich. Margaret Hill ' 41, Marion Martha Meyer ' 41, Vincennes Elizabeth Dawson ' 41, Gary Jane Hudson ' 42, Detroit, Mich. 339 KAPPA ALPHA THETA Kite Day, now a tradition of Kappa Alpha Theta, was established in 1889. This is held on the Sunday before Commencement in honor of the graduating Seniors. The important so- cial functions are a banquet which is given after the installat ' on of new officers in January, and formal dinners given before Thanksgiving and Christmas. The Christmas dinner is of espe- cial importance because at this dinner needy youngsters are completely clothed. The national organization, founded at De- Pauw University in 1870, was created to give cooperative advantages to women similar to those of men. Beta chapter was founded at Indiana in the same year. Those in the sorority who are active in cam- pus affairs are Rosemary Treanor, who is a member of Mortar Board and is Vice-President of the A.W.S. Council; Mary Susan StuU, who is a member of Theta Alpha Phi, Tau Kappa Alpha, A.W.S. Council, the 1940 Junior Prom Committee, and Pleiades; and Marie Turgi is also a member of Pleiades and Secretary of the Pan-Hellenic Council. Janet Gorrell belongs to Theta S ' gma Phi and is Women ' s Editor of the Indiana Daily Student. Members of Alpha Lambda Delta are Marjorie Nie, Anne Louise Cole, Rosemary Treanor, Kathryn Alexander, Betty Brown, Mary Susan Stull, and Mary Rees. Mary Rees is also a member of the Board of Standards. First Row- Betty Baker ' 43, Bluff ton Charlotte Fleming 42, Indianapolis Phyllis Foster ' 40, Tipton Mariangeneen Helvie ' 42, Valparaiso Nancy Snyder ' 40, Bloomington Letitia Williamson ' 43, Bluffton Betsy Johnson ' 40, Logansport Janet Gorrell ' 40, Winamac Second Row- Louie Home ' 40, Anderson Eugenia Neu ' 40, Bloomington Betty Schmidt ' 41, Dayton, Ohio Olive Starr ' 41, Dune Acres Lenore Morgan ' 40, Bloomington Phoebe Revington ' 41, Monticello Mary Rees ' 42, LaPorte Marjorie Carr ' 41, Pittsburgh, Pa. Third Row Josephine Griffis ' 40, Richmond Jayne Milteer ' 41, Gary Clare Marie Snyder ' 41, Geneva, N. Y. 340 Jane Gillespie ' 42, Indianapolis Betty Brown ' 40, Billings, Mont. Doris Jones ' 42, Indianapolis Louise Miller ' 42, Crawfordsville Helen Kay Raper ' 43, Monticello Fourth Row Chloe Hooke ' 42, Noblesville Katherine Landis ' 40, Logansport Marjorie Nie ' 41, Huntington Joan Spray ' 42, Frankfort Dorothea Neuhauser ' 41, Bluffton Norma Overbay ' 42, Indianapolis Shirley Dunten ' 42, LaGrange Helen McCullough ' 43, Columbus Fifth Row Patricia De Prez ' 40, Shelbyville Joann Lybrook ' 40, Gary Janet Lee Fleehart ' 42, Roswell, N. Mex. Bonnie Baker ' 41, Bluffton • Louise McNutt ' 43, Indianapolis Roberta Johnson ' 40, Delphi Jane Winters ' 42, Indianapolis Marjorie Roach ' 41, Delphi Sixth Row Joan Barr ' 42, Rochester Betty Ruth McCullough ' 40, Columbus Anne Louise Cole ' 41, Bloomington Virginia Burkholder ' 42, Indianapolis Marie Jeanette Turgi ' 41, New Castle Jane Clifford ' 42, Valparaiso Elaine Ax ' 43, Jasonville Ann Jackson ' 43, Indianapolis Seventh Row Nancy Biddle ' 42, Bloomington Lela Jane Ross ' 42, Bloomington Julia Ann Arthur ' 43, Anderson Rosemary Treanor ' 40, Bloomington Elizabeth Anne Field ' 41, New Castle Mary Susan Stull ' 41, Bloomington Kathryn Jane Alexander ' 41, Blooming- ton Jeanne Goss ' 43, Anderson Josephine Griffis Presideni Marjorie Nie Vice-President Joann Ly brook Secretary Marjorie Roach Treasurer 341 Darlene Buskirk _ President Carolyn Davis — Vice-President Dorothy Dawson _.. Secretary Anna Case Treasurer 342 KAPPA DELTA Alumnae of Kappa Delta are prominent in many professions, Pearl Buck, the Nobel Prize- winning author of The Good Earth and other novels; Sylvia Myer, the only woman member of the National Symphony Orchestra; and Geor- gia O ' Keefe, one of America ' s most famous women artists. Alumnae on the campus are Dr. Edith Schuman, women ' s physician of the University; Mrs. Herman Briscoe, wife of the head of the Department of Chemistry; and Miss Hawthorne, dietician in the food department of the Union Building. Kappa Delta was founded by four young women at Virginia State Normal, Farmville, Virginia, in 1897. It has now grown until it is respresented by chapters in sixty-nine col- leges and universities. Sigma Upsilon chapter of Kappa Delta was established on the Indiana campus in 1923. Their outstanding philan- thropic work is the support of a ward at the Children ' s Hospital at Richmond, Virginia. Darlene Buskirk is a member of the Girl ' s Drum and Bugle Corps and the Pro-Music Club. Thelma Farrington has had various leads in operas an d operettas in the School of Music. Various members belong to Der Deutsche Verein, Le Cercle Francais, International Rela- tions Club, Euclidean Circle, Y.W.C.A., and the Education Club. First Row Anna Case ' 42, Camden Darlene Buskirk ' 40, Ft. Wayne Helen Voigt ' 41, Jeffersonville Margaret Cierzniak ' 42, South Bend Second Row Thelma Farrington ' 42, Indianapolis Alice Richards ' 42, Lehighton, Pa. Carolyn Davis ' 42, Evansville Dorothy Dawson ' 40, Louisville, Ky. Third Row Bettye Vogel ' 42, Evansville Jeanette Straub ' 42, Ft. Wayne Eva Jean Craig ' 41, Ft. Wayne 343 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA T Kappa Kappa Gamma ' s The Key was the first sorority magazine pubHshed and is at pres- ent received by every active and alumna within the organization. Kappa was founded to fill the growing need for organizations for women similar to those enjoyed by men. Three years after the found- ing of the sorority at Monmouth College on October 13, 1870, Delta chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma came to this campus. Members of the sorority ranked as B.W.O. C. ' s by their sisters because of their participa- tion in campus activities are Mary Jane Tharp, who is President of Y.W.C.A., member of Mor- tar Board, and Co-Chairman of Coed Counsel- ders is a member of Theta Alpha Phi; Doro- thea Urbahns holds membership in Pleiades and the executive committee of the Republican Club. Tau Kappa Alpha and the varsity de- bate team are activities of Ruth Adler; and Betty Sutherland, member of Beta Gamma Sigma. Those belonging to Alpha Lambda Delta are Mary Jane Tharp, Barbara Simmer- mon, Betty Sutherland, Shirley Maloney, Joan Bonsib, Ruth Adler, and Mary Elizabeth Hen- dricks. First Row Janice Pope ' 42, French Lick Sybil Burleigh ' 42, Springfield, Ohio Barbara Smiley ' 43, Washington Bernice Brown ' 43, Bloomington Joan Curdes ' 43, Terra Haute Jean Willet ' 43, Swampscott, Mass. Harriet Rutiedgc ' 42, Indianapolis Barbara Simmermon ' 40, Lapel Emily Gardner ' 41, Ft. Wayne Second Row Phyllis Burge ' 43, Kokomo Rebecca Walley ' 41, Ft. Wayne Kate Cole ' 43, Peru Janet Ross ' 43, Belleville, Illinois Madelyn Pugh ' 42, Indianapolis Mary Jane Thompson ' 42, Indianapolis Daphne Palmer ' 42, Bloomington Margaret Anne Driscoll ' 43, Indianapolis Jean Fawcett ' 41, New Albany Betty Sutherland ' 40, Bloomingron Third Row Marion Sanders ' 40, RoswcU, New Mex. Rebecca Endres ' 43, Rushville Alice Boyd ' 40, Kokomo Joan Bonsib ' 42, Ft. Wayne Constance Hurst ' 42, Peru Jean Moffat ' 43, Bloomington Shirley Maloney ' 41, Peru Jane Tourncr ' 43, Bloomington Norma Ballard ' 41, French Lick Sara Gray ' 40, Bloomington Fourth Row Betty Cull ' 41, North Vernon Mary Sailors ' 42, South Bend Dorothea Urbahns ' 41, Cambridge City Shirley Landers ' 43, Glen Ridge, N. J. Betty Jo Hanson ' 41, Bloomington Betty Spilman ' 40, Rushville Rebecca Morris ' 42, Noblcsvillc Catherine Karges ' 42, Evansville Maribeth Harrison ' 43, Indianapolis Jean Voss ' 41, Seymour 344 Fifth Row Helene Kuehn ' 41, South Bend Margaret Pyle ' 40, Rochester Mary Jane Tharp ' 40, Bloomington Suzanne Harrold ' 43, Marion Barbara Healy ' 40, Aurora, III. Martha Cauble ' 43, Bloomington Diana Stout ' 42, Memphis, Tenn. Ann Fuhrer ' 40, Mt. Vernon Charlotte Cooper ' 43, Greenfield Gloria Allen ' 40, Bloomington Sixth Row Dede Lung ' 42, Kokomo Virginia Thomas ' 43, Honolulu, Hawaii Rosemary Hendricks ' 43, Martinsville Helen Thieme ' 42, Ft. Wayne Marjorie Little ' 43, Indianapolis Miriam Wedeking ' 41, Dale Mary Lib Hendricks ' 42, Martinsville Ruth Adler ' 40, Ft. Wayne Mary Ellen Fries ' 43, Peru Jeanne Thompson ' 43, Terre Taute I Sarah Gray President Rebecca Walley — Secretary Ruth Adler Treasurer Jean Inskeep President Louise Hurst Vice-President Beryl Ann Brownell Secretary Virgene Moore Treasurer PHI MU tt Many needy inhabitants of the state of Geor- gia benefit from the traveling health clinic provided by the national organization of Phi Mu. Annually contacting every isolated dis- trict in the state, the truck hospital is fully equipped with modern supplies and a staff cap- able of rendering excellent medical service to all in need. Known as the Philomatheon Society from 1852 until 1904, the year in which the Greek name was adopted. Phi Mu has accumulated in its many years of existence a background im- bued with southern tradition. In observance of some of the old customs, the local chapter ' ' ' ' ' u„ ,-.. „ .,!,  £_tk. - ■Since its organization in 1920, the Delta Al- pha chapter of Phi Mu has contributed many prominent women to this campus. Among them is Miss Clara Fedler of the Department of Physical Education. Active members who are now outstanding in campus affairs are Louise Hurst, Women ' s Editor of the Daily Stu- dent, and a member of Theta Sigma Phi; Vir- gene Moore, President of Chi Gamma; Janet Dwyer, a member of Alpha Lambda Delta; and Alice Kettner, who belongs to the latter organi- zation as well as being President of the German Club. First Row Joyce Smith ' 42, Valparaiso Janet Dwyer ' 40, Oak Park, 111. Betty Chatten ' 42, Elkhart Beryl Ann Brownell ' 42, Valparaiso Helen Staeck ' 40, Earl Park Second Row Louise Hurst ' 40, Milton Virgene Moore ' 41, Indianapolis Alice Kettner ' 40, Indianapolis Ruth Schroer ' 41, Dale Patricia Pool ' 43, Valparaiso Third Row Dottie Lackey PG, Indianapolis Doris Turtle ' 43, Indianapolis Edna Shideler ' 41, Valparaiso Dorothy Hatcher ' 43, Mt. Summit Barbara Wickard ' 43, El wood Fourth Row Jean Inskeep ' 40, Lafayette Nova Bays ' 41, Salisbury Ann Welch ' 43, Bloomington Marcile Irle ' 42, Columbus Dorothy Luccock ' 43, Joliet, 111. Aurelia Vraciu ' 43, East Chicago 347 PHI OMEGA PI 9 Wearers of the pentagon annually sponsor numerous social functions which include the Rose Dinner, an outing in Brown County, and the Pentagon Prom. Nationally, the sorority is prominent in social work, particularly in Lexington, Kentucky, where it maintains a ward for the blind in conjunction with the city hospital. Phi Omega Pi boasts of several women in varied activities, among whom are three mem- bers of Alpha Lambda Delta, Leota Bruner, Eunice Runner, and Eleanor Taylor. Eunice Runner is also on the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, and Eleanor Taylor is a member of the Y.W.C.A. Council. Branching out of the Masonic Order of the Eastern Star, the first chapter of Achoth, as it was originally called, was founded by fifteen women on the campus of the University of Ne- braska in 1910. The local chapter was founded by members of the Eastern Star in 1922, shortly before the national organization changed the name to Phi Omega Pi and dropped the Ma- sonic requirements. First Row Rose Laurenzana ' 43, Indianapolis Jerry Zix ' 43, Indianapolis Rosemary Bailey ' 43, Gary Mary Katherine Harris ' 43, Bloomington Doris Katterjohn ' 40, Huntingburg Jeanette Shultz ' 43, Walkerton Second Row Carolyn Davis ' 43, Crawfordsville Georgeanna Giovanini ' 41,Hillsboro Miriam Stembel ' 43, Wheatfield Maida Fowler ' 43, Reynolds Louise Byers ' 43, Kokomo Eunice Runner ' 40, Oxford Third Row Jamie Gentry ' 42, North Liberty Dorothy Bottorff ' 42, Indianapolis Mary McKee ' 42, Howe Caroline Martin ' 40, Portland Nell Jane Higginbotham ' 43, Gary Eleanor Taylor ' 41, Madison Fourth Row Dorothy Knoop ' 42, Gary Lorene Reynolds ' 43, Indianapolis Leota Bruner ' 41, Bloomington Jane Bottorff ' 41, Indianapolis Pauline Lowther ' 40, Gary Winnie Werts ' 43, Ladoga 348 Eunice Runner President Georgeanna Giovanini Yice-Presidetit Dorothy Bottorff Secretary Caroline Martin Treasurer 349 ft ' 9 f S z PMuyMypyy BMf l SPPp ? t -f ? Phyllis Landis — President Caroline L. Imel Vice-President Elaine Dovey Secretary Janet Hamersly Treasurer 350 PI BETA PHI Jpr The national organization of Pi Beta Phi has one outstanding philanthropic interest, a Set- tlement School located at Gatlinburg, Tennessee. This school has caused much interest among tourist trade in its education program for the people living in the mountain areas surround- ing the school. Prominent alumnae of Pi Beta Phi are Mrs. C. E. Edmondson, Mrs. Thomas Cookson, Mrs. Stith Thompson, and Miss Helen Grant. Beta chapter boasts of Mortar Board members. An ° Hopman and Caroline Imel. Anne is also Senior representative on A.W.S. Council. Peggy Smith and Margaret Lou May are members of Theta Alpha Phi; Peggy is, in addition, a member of Pleiades and W.A.A. dance group head, while Margaret Lou is a member of the Y.W.C.A. Council. Roberta Haskell is W.A.A. swimming head and a member of Pleiades; Frances Wat- kins i s also in Pleiades. Elizabeth Thompson has been honored by Beta Gamma Sigma, while Madeline Scully is a Coed Sponsor of R.O.T.C. The national organization came into being in 1867 at Monmouth College under the name of LC. Sororis. Beta chapter on the Indiana cam- pus was formed in 1893 by Louise S. Gregg. Since the founding the arrow has been worn in many ways in accordance with the ever-chang- ing fashions. Second Row Third Row Jane Meyer 42, tt. Wayne Frances Renfro ' 41, Spartensburg, S. C. Betty Norman ' 43, East Chicago Grace Ashby ' 40, Ladoga Julia Miller ' 43, Russiaville Virginia Davis ' 41, Indianapolis Lois Frank ' 42, Ft. Wayne Barbara Gibson ' 43, Bloomington Fourth Row Mary Osborne PG, Hymera Jean Johnson ' 41, Hammond Betty Mayes ' 41, Vincennes Doris Henry ' 41, Anderson Marian Myers ' 42, Mayfield, Ky. Betty Jane Williams ' 41, East Chicago Sarah Jean Hays ' 42, Mt. Carmel, III. Roberta Haskell ' 40, Indianapolis Dorothy King ' 43, Birmingham, Mich. Joanne Watson 43, tlkhart Ruth Cookson ' 43, Bloomington Margaret Lou May ' 41, Bloomington Ruth Prickett ' 41, Bloomington Bettye Stilwell ' 40, Evansville Helen Lee Fletcher ' 41, Ft. Wayne Betty Burris ' 40, Vincennes Ann Hoover ' 40, Wabash Fifth Row Barbara Smith ' 43, Indianapolis Ann Abbett ' 40, Ft. Wayne Elizabeth Thompson ' 40, Plymouth Barbara Bayless ' 43, Shaker Heights, O. Barbara Johnson ' 43, Knightstown Vara Judd ' 41, Sturgis, Mich. Phyllis Landis ' 40, Indianapolis Margaret Welsh ' 42, Vincennes Willoughby Allen ' 42, Washington Seventh Row Jean Dickson ' 42, Hammond Muriel Anderson ' 42, Indianapolis Jean Esden ' 41, Bloomington Audrey Gibson ' 41, Bloomington mel ' 40, South Bend Mary Eisner ' 42, Seymour Dorothy Thompson ' 43, Bloomington Joan Anderson ' 40, Indianapolis Eleanor Winslow ' 41, Indianapolis Madeline Scully ' 42, Gary Helen Mcintosh PG, Des Moines, Iowa Margaret Smith ' 41, Philadelphia, Pa. Sixth Row Betty Higbee ' 40, Indianapolis Ruth Rogers ' 41, Bloomington Janet Hamersly ' 41, Washington Maryellen Rensberger ' 43, Goshen Suzanne Conrad 41, LaG range, 111. Anne Hopman ' 40, Bloomington Pearle Cartwright ' 43, Osceola, Ark. Elaine Dovey ' 40, Anderson Ann Fuelber ' 41, Ft. Wayne Jane Calnon ' 43, Hammond Frances Watkins ' 40, Indianapolis Margaret Torphy ' 42, Bloomington Betty Thompson ' 43, Winamac 351 SIGMA DELTA TAII Upsilon chapter of Sigma Delta Tau, formerly Sigma Phi Upsilon, was installed on the Indiana campus in April. Sigma Phi Upsilon was the last local sorority on the campus to become a part of a national organization. Sigma Delta Tau, one of the highest ranking Jewish sororities, was founded in 1917 by seven women at Cornell. The Indiana chapter was made a pledge chapter February 17, 1940. Sigma Delta Tau ' s national president is listed in Who ' s and Patricia Jackson are members of Alpha Lambda Delta. Mortar Board recognized Mil- dred Horowitz and Betty Savesky, who is also on the Daily Student Staff. Jeanette Fichman is a member of the Indiana University Law Club. Members of Taps include Bernice Saperstein, Gerri Levine, Jeanne Sacks, all of whom had roles in University Theatre productions. The lead in Silas, the Chore Boy was played by Jeanne Sacks. Betty Holland is a member of the Honorary Chemical Society for Women. Patronesses of the sorority are Mrs. Lewis Becovitz, Mrs. Hedwig Leser, and Mrs. Rose Fell. First Row Bernadine Dee ' 42, Indianapolis Mildred Horowitz ' 42, Brooklyn, N. Y. Jeanette Fichman PG, Ft. Wayne Sylvia Epstein ' 43, Indianapolis Rose Steiber ' 43, Ft. Wayne Second Row Betty Holland ' 41, Anderson Betty Savesky ' 42, Marion Betty Belle Helman ' 43, Indianapolis Alberta Shalansky ' 42, Indianapolis Geraldine Levine ' 43, Aurora Third Row Jean Roskin ' 43, Marion Evelyn Slung ' 42, Seymour Jeanne Sacks ' 42, Indianapolis Patricia Jackson ' 43, Indianapolis Norma Katz ' 40, Michigan City Fourth Row Edna Levi ' 40, Indianapolis Ruth Weil ' 43, Indianapolis Shirley Fine ' 42, New Albany Bernice Saperstein ' 40, LaPorte Kaye Steinberg ' 40, Connersville 3J2 Jeanette Fichman President Betty Holland .— Vice-President Kaye Steinberg Secretary Shirley Fine Treasurer ■• flflll f t fBi ' ' m 1 A 353 Jean L. Allen President Harriet Kriegbaum Vice-President Helen Somerville Secretary Helen Hines Treasurer A SIGMA KAPPA Out on Jordan Avenue is situated an invit- ing looking structure — Tau chapter house of Sigma Kappa. The sorority ' s origin is interest- ing in that Sigma Kappa was the first sorority to be estabhshed in the New England states. In 1874 five girls established this organization at Colby College, little realizing that some day it would become not only national but interna- tional in scope. Tau is quite active with both Charlotte Jeanes and Harriet Kriegbaum, members of Alpha Lambda Delta, and Virginia Trickey and Anne Douglas, reporter and Assistant Campus Editor, respectively, on the Daily Student Staff. Two girls in the house, Jeanne Schrader and Harriet Xri ' pgh iim nrp mcrnhprg nf Pmi ginia Campbell, and Doris Nicholson are active in Chi Gamma. Virginia Trickey and Char- lotte Jeanes are editors on the Folio Staff, and Charlotte is also Treasurer of the Y.W.C.A. Anne Douglas is a member of Daubers Club. A Sigma Kappa representative in the Drum and Bugle Corps is Margaret Anne Hamilton. Traditions of the sorority are the Maroon and Lavender Dinner which is held in September, the Mother-Daughter Thanksgiving Dinner, the Razz Banquet during the Christmas season, and the annual Star Dust Dinner in February. Sigma Kappa is well represented in the Uni- versity by Mrs. John Stempel, Mrs. Ward G. Biddle, Mrs. Theodore Torrey, Mrs. J. Wymond French, and Mrs. Harold M. Haas of the Alumnae chapter. First Row Jeanne Schrader ' 40, Jonesboro Jean Ragon ' 43, Hammond Alice Schafer ' 43, Evansville Virginia Campbell ' 43, Evansville Gretchen Hoppes ' 42, Middletown Jean Allen ' 40, Greenwood Second Row Doris Nicholson ' 42, Evansville Margaret Anne Hamilton ' 43, Franklin Betty Niederhaus ' 42, Evansville Charlotte Anne Jeanes ' 41, Indianapolis Norma Lagenaur ' 43, Indianapo ' is Marion Welborn ' 42, Terre Haute Third Row Lois Greenwood PG, Harlan Helen Somervillc ' 41, Bound Brook, N. J. Martha Jane Young ' 41, Marion Anne Douglas ' 40, Shelbyville Anne Clifford ' 42, Lapel Harriet Kriegbaum ' 41, Warren Fourth Row Helen Hines ' 40, Lafayette Helen Houghland ' 40, Rockport Doris Koning ' 42, Indianapolis Edith Trautman ' 42, Baltimore, Md. Betty Ann Regel ' 43, Evansville Mary Betty Modlthan ' 41, Indianapolis Fifth Row Zanna Davisson ' 43, Rochester Margaret R. Kriekhaus ' 41, Evansville Dorothy Hathaway ' 43, Lowell Virginia Trickey ' 41, Indianapolis Jane Martin ' 41, Rushvillc 3JJ s ZETA TAll ALPHA f Southern- born Zeta Tau Alpha for a num- ber of years confined its growth and influence to that region, and maintains a health center for the rehabilitation of mountain people in Currin Valley, Virginia, as a symbol of service to its mother state. The local chapter ' s annual af- fairs include the observation of Founders ' Day with a banquet at which some province officer is in attendance and a formal dinner for the Seniors. Founded nationally on October 15, 1898, as The Three Question Marks by nine coeds at Virginia State College, the organization later adopted the Greek letter title. Alpha Xi chap- ter was introduced on the Bloomington campus in 1922. Campus alumnae include Mrs. Bernard Gavit, Mrs. Ford P. Hall, Mrs. Dale Tomey, and Mrs. Joanna Olmstead. Zeta Tau Alphas holding prominent campus positions are Mary Catherine Kirk, Treasurer of Pan-FIellenic Council; Anne Hooge, President of the Riding Club; Nelda Johnson and Geor- gia Vorgang, members of the W.A.A. Board. Omicron Delta includes Rose Ellen Berndt, Jane Worsham, Rachel Jones, Katherine Collier, and Dorothy Graf in its membership; Pleiades mem- bers are Georgia Vorgang, Mary Scales, and Mary Catherine Kirk; Georgia Vorgang and Eleanor Nicholas are members of Alpha Lambda Delta. First Row Mary Scales ' 41, Petersburg Florence Miller ' 40, Gibson City, 111. Eleanor Nicholas ' 41, Indianapolis Rose Ellen Berndt ' 40, Indianapolis Patricia Olmstead ' 42, Beaver, Pa. Betty Griffith ' 42, Indianapolis Dorothy Graf ' 41, Richmond Second Row Martha Ashby ' 43, Petersburg Jane Worsham ' 40, Indianapolis Willa Jo Britan ' 43, Indianapolis Marjorie McGaw ' 42, Indianapolis Vera Bretz ' 41, Huntingburg Rachel Jones ' 41, Anderson Jean Conrad ' 43, Frankfort Third Row Armada Ward ' 41, Danville Jean Wampler ' 41, Indianapolis Ruth Lee ' 41, Tell City Mary Lee Coultas ' 40, Tell City Bsatrice Hruskovick ' 43, Whiting Faith Fisbeck ' 43, Terre Haute Marjorie Kensler ' 43, Indianapolis Fourth Row Carolyn Buechele ' 41, Winslow Luana Hill ' 43, Indianapolis Mary Kirk ' 41, Martinsville Peggy Myers ' 41, Hongkong, China Barbara Collier ' 41, Martinsville Betty Irwin ' 40, Elnora Mary Emahiser ' 42, Akron Fifth Row Jane Toplin ' 43, Millburn, N. J. Anne Hooge ' 41, Mobile, Ala. Peggy Gates ' 43, Indianapolis Georgia Vorgang ' 41, Jeffersonville Mary K. Green ' 43, Indianapolis Betty Phillips ' 42, Indianapolis Nelda Johnson ' 41, Indianapolis 356 Mary Scales President Georgia Vorgang Vice-President Mary Lee Coultas Secretary Nelda Johnson Treasurer 357 FOREST HALL In 1936 the new dormitory for women was opened. During the first year mud and board walks provided its landscaping. In its second year came the addition of suitable drives and walks, and its dedication by Acting-President Wells who bestowed upon it the name, Forest Hall. The girls of Forest Hall made the first attempt to install a system of self-government on this campus during the third year. This year, its fourth, will mark the graduation of its char- ter members who number fifteen. A unique tradition of the dormitory is the compilation of the Forest Folio which contains snapshots and characteristics and foibles of each year ' s residents. At the annual Senior Ban- quet the editors present the book. The campus activities in which the Forest Hall girls have distinguished themselves are many and varied. Those holding offices on the campus are: Geneva Senefeld, President of A.W.S.; Margaret Postma, President of W.A.A.; Eliza Bess Lucas, Vice-President of Y.W.C.A.; Lois Armstrong, Secretary of Y.W.C.A.; and Doris Sheeler, President of Alpha Lambda Delta. Barbara Van Fleit is this year ' s Prom Queen. First Row Betty Bowman ' 41, Marion Mary Kirkpatrick ' 40, South Bend Margaret Burke ' 40, East Chicago Barbara Kem ' 41, Marion Charlotte Beer ' 40, Osgood Doris Sheeler ' 42, South Bend Mary Holsinger ' 40, La Grange Barbara Congleton ' 40, Frankfort Betty Jane Patty ' 42, Bloomington Jane Judy ' 40, West Lebanon Mary Myrthel Adams ' 40, Sandborn Fourth Row Martha Lewis ' 42, Newcastle Betty Vake ' 41, Anderson May DaLeure ' 40, Salem Harriet Powers ' 41, Greenfield Juanita Simpson ' 40, Sharpsville Louise Crabbe ' 40, Indianapolis Carrie Huffman ' 43, Indianapolis Alma Koza ' 40, Michigan City Patricia Hilliard ' 40, South Bend Dorothy Stephen ' 40, South Bend Martha Nesbitt ' 40, New Richmond Second Row Lucilla Hall ' 41, Rensselaer Marjorie Cram ' 40, Markle Marjory Ann Smith ' 41, Frankfort Lucy Berkey ' 42, Salem Miriam Brady ' 40, Gary Mary Green ' 40, Muncie Ernestine Benton ' 40, Elberfeld Fay VanArendond ' 42, Indianapolis Dorothy McDaniel ' 40, Lebanon Dorothy Boyd ' 41, Thorntown Marjorie Rush ' 42, Indianapolis Fifth Row Mary Louise Martin ' 40, South Bend Virginia Drum ' 40, Indianapolis Catherine Hancher ' 42, Elwood Mary Francis Hercamp ' 40, Seymour Lucille Winn ' 40, Greenfield Mary Jane Sherfey ' 40, Brazil Virginia Mead ' 40, Salem Dorothy Koza ' 40, Michigan City Martha Myers ' 40, Noblesville Doris McCammon ' 40, Letts Kathryn Campbell ' 40, Boonville Seventh Row Maxine Rowe ' 40, Kentland Nina Jane Miller ' 40, Paris, 111. Arlene Flora ' 41, Peru Hilda Lease ' 43, Noblesville Marion Levin ' 41, Michigan City Marian Swan ' 42, Wabash Josephine Wykoff ' 40, New Carlisle Ethel Zmudzinski ' 40, Gary Muriel Collins ' 42, Lafayette Wanda Williamson ' 41, Columbus Martha Ann Wilson ' 40, Roachdale Dama Wilson ' 42, Roachdale Third Row Ruth Roberts ' 42, Fort Branch Mildred McBride ' 41, Jeffersonville Helen Wallin ' 41, Hobart Leatrice Weiner ' 40, Gary Laura Hester ' 40, Charlestown Margaret Winklepleck ' 42, Freetown Joanna Phillippi ' 42, Indianapolis Freida Sparks ' 40, Bloomfield Catherine Doran ' 40, Indianapolis Dorothy Redden ' 40, Morocco Dorothy Chamberlain ' 40, South Bend Sixth Row Betty Stich ' 41, Indianapolis Ruth Breimeyer ' 40, Portland Mildred Magel ' 41, South Bend Dorothy Silve rthorn ' 40, Rossville Crystal Allegre ' 40, Mitchell Louise Neumeister ' 40, South Bend Margaret Postma ' 40, Indianapolis Jean Hopewell ' 40, Seymour Elizabeth Kollman ' 42, Ft. Wayne Roberta Eckert ' 42, Indianapolis Bernice Schneider ' 41, Valparaiso Florence Meloy ' 41, Shelby ville 3J8 Martha E. Myers President Margaret Burke Vice-President Muriel Collins Secretary Frieda Sparks .Treasurer f f m k 359 WEST MEMORIAL Mary Elizabeth Sause ..- President Vera Cook .—Vice-President Marjorie Katterhenry Secretary Beatrice Murphy Treasurer EAST MEMORIAL Betty Rayle President Rosemary Auburn — Vice-President Beverly Carraway - Secretary Frances Blair - Treasurer 360 MEMORIAL HALL Memorial Hall is the realization of a dream — a dream of Dr. Agnes E. Wells who worked and planned for this building unceasingly. She visualized a women ' s dormitory that would com- bine beauty, practicality, and comfort. The re- sult is this building in Collegiate Gothic, with its familiar four towers which symbolize Edu- cation, Service, Religion, and Recreation. The earnest yet exhuberant spirit of Miss Wells has permeated the traditions of the dormitory. Self-government under the A.W.S. consti- tution is practiced by the residents of the Hall. Each wing has its officers and committees which under the supervision of the social directors govern the women. Each wing publishes a year book. East, the Towers and West, the Castle Chronicles . These books review academic and social achievements of the year. The social activities besides teas, dances and pajama parties, include May Day Breakfast and Hard Times Dinner for East, an Easter Break- fast and Bowery Dinner for West. Jointly the two wings have a Senior Ring Dinner and a Faculty Supper. Two traditional customs which have been much enjoyed by students and visitors are the informal Sunday night suppers and Sunday after-dinner programs. With the opening of Sycamore Hall second semester, the spirit embodied in Memorial Hall extends into another unit of the dormitory sys- tem which is being completed for Indiana Uni- versity women. Miss Katherine Waller is Busi- ness Manager and Dietician for the Hall. Miss Helen Stewart was Social Director of East the first semester and is now at Sycamore. Miss Marguerite Keller is Director of Residence Halls. First Row Mary O ' Donnell ' 41, Indianapolis Maxine Dukes ' 42, Frankfort Ada Schueike ' 41, Ft. Wayne Loretta Diness ' 42, Gary Virginia Elierbush ' 43, Indianapolis Margaret Fargo ' 42, Indianapolis Mary Grayson ' 42, Crown Point Mildred Smigiel ' 40, Gary Betty Griesel ' 42, Crown Point Shirley Gray ' 40, Gary Fourth Row Doris Fairchild ' 40, Monon Ma valine Ferrier ' 41, Fremont Josephine Brown ' 41, Indianapolis Eleanor DeVol ' 43, Columbia City Olivia Dickhaut ' 40, Mt. Vernon Dorothy Egger ' 42, Indianapolis Virginia Eshleman ' 40, Gary Marianne Hackney ' 41, Indianapolis Betty Wood ' 42, Farmersburg Inez Williams ' 42, Martinsville Second Row Beatrice Murphy ' 40, Connersville Dorothy Lucas ' 41, Indianapolis Vivian Bever ' 43, Kingman Marilyn Fournier ' 43, Frankfort Louise Hemmer ' 42, Ft. Branch Mary Mann ' 42, Indianapolis Edwina Myers ' 42, Muncie Roberta Poland ' 42, Indianapolis Betty House ' 42, Atlanta Helen Newmark ' 43, Attica Fifth Row Joanna Archibald ' 42, New Castle Catherine Cherry ' 41, Shelbyville Anne Bloom ' 43, Mt. Vernon Charlotte Perrine ' 41, Indianapolis Maxine Morrison ' 42, Ft. Wayne Mary Masters ' 41, Indianapolis Joyce King ' 43, Thomasville, N. C. Theresa Fisher ' 42, Evansville Marjorie Katterhenry ' 42, Indianapolis Vera Crook ' 41, South Bend Third Row Marcelle Horn ' 40, Fairfield, Conn. Frances Blair ' 40, Gary Betty Rayl ' 40, Ft. Wayne Helen Smith ' 43, Ligonier Betty Tharp ' 43, Fountain City Mary Van Drew ' 42, Ft. Wayne Jane Tyner ' 42, Goldsmith Mary Blanche Poer ' 43, Gwynneville Edna Schultz ' 41, Terre Haute Pauline Williams ' 43, Gary Sixth Row Beverly Carraway ' 42, Noblesville Barbara Cotton ' 42, Indianapolis Barbara Jackson ' 42, Orleans Charlotte Bray ' 40, Monrovia Albina Spychalski ' 40, Gary Mary Sause ' 40, Aurora Eleanor Sands ' 42, Three Rivers, Mich. Mildred Klopfenstein ' 42, Ft. Wayne Mary Van Natta ' 43, Chillicothe, Mo. Kathryn Burket ' 42, Winchester Pauline King ' 41, Thomasville, N. C. Athletics . . . colorful . . . hectic . . where character is built in the thud of body against body, the swish of the ball through the nets, the flash of spikes on the baselines . . . that part of the various curricula at which scattered student interest comes to a focus . . . football and the massed stands in the Stadium or basketball and the massed stands in the Fieldhouse . . . athletics . . . that is the ingredient that puts the college into college. 362 £ VI 5 _S 363 O jL-3l3-J3 jLjL 364 ., «9 Coaching Staff: Harrell, Hayes, McCracken, McMillin, Graham, Ander- son, Thorn, Freeman. Bo McMillin, the almost mythical quarter- back of the Praying Colonels of Centre Col- lege, came to Indiana as head-coach in 1935 and has lifted the Hoosiers from the doldrums of mediocrity in football. Since Bo ' s advent to In- diana football the Crimson have played the best teams in the country and have performed cred- itably well. Bo ' s teams have been fighting teams — a credit to their coach, a credit to their school. Managers, Seated: Findling, Ritchie. Standing: Hutchison, Wasser- man, Ulen, Cooper. ISI ' , Ai-i. I.J -. Chalk talk . . The Varsity . . Bo inspires students at pep session. Captain Jim Logan, most valuable player award winner. Eddie Herbert practices those all important ex- tra points. • .. ' ' ?■iW-,7  •-•, 4 First Row: Herron, Steele, Smith, W., D u m k e, R., D u m k e, M., B r i n g 1 e, R., Brooks, Z i m- mer, Bucchian- eri, Uremovich, Sabol, Williams, Smith, K. Second Row: Harris, Bedwel Hansen, Niblick, Usher, Bragalone, Gahm, Tofil, Tipmore, Moeller, Jurkiewicz, Wiseheart, Harding. Third Row: Bradley, Martin, Benson, Herbert, Naddeo, Broski, Janzaruk, Logan, Ellenwood, Higginbotham, Rucinski, Smith, F., Rehm, Lewis, Eggers. Fourth Row: Marshall, White, Bassett, Trimble, Liscinsky, Lange, Bringle, W., Alford. 367 Although losing half of their games during the 1939 season, the Crimson gridmen nevertheless gained many hon- ors. Gaining 636 yards in conference play and averaging 126 yards per game for all games, the Hoosier passing attack was above that of any other Big Ten team and third best in the nation, behind Texas Christian n d Princeton. Jim McGuire, hitting 10 out of 16 pass at- tempts, had the best completion record in the Conference. Harold Hursh was one of the most highly publicized players in the country. Mike Bucchianeri was named left guard on a southern sports editor ' s annual All American team of unpronounceables. It seemed to the casu.u oUwi v i u-u one of the weaknesses of the 1939 edi- tion of the Fightin Hoosiers was the lack of versatile back. Indiana had good line plungers, good passers, and good men on end runs and reverses. However, almost to a man, they were proficient in only their specialty. The opposition soon learned that when Hursh took the ball, a pass was in the making; or when Tofil carried the mail, it was a plunge. They set their defense accordingly. A triple threat back would have spelled the dif- jflV fercnce between defeat and victory in - several games. Two fine freshman backs, Dale Swihart and Bob Rhoda, may be the answer to McMillin ' s troubles. After a disappointing season in 1938, the Hoosier football warriors returned for the 1939 gridiron campaign with 21 lettermen on the roster. With exper- ienced men for almost every position on the team and plenty of reserve strength on hand, Bo and his Fightin ' Hoosiers had good reason to face the 1939 season with an optimistic outlook. But bad luck struck the Hoosier camp hard and often, dispelling the high hopes that had been held. Halfback Cobb Lewis, who had been expected to start as a regular, was kept out of action for the entire season because of injuries. Maddox, Tofil, Higginbotham, and others were dogged by injuries that kept them on the side lines for part of the season. As a result of the bad luck jinx, Indiana ended the year with a record showing two victories, two tie games, and four losses. I ' he Big Ten conference standings showed I. U. in seventh place. The Hoosiers started with a tie game against the highl y-rated Nebraska eleven. One week later Nile Kinnick and his teammates from Iowa edged out the McMillinmen, 32-29. Undaunted by this defeat, Indiana came back to topple Wisconsin and Illinois on successive Saturdays. Ohio State, the conference champions, had too much power for the Hoosiers, as did Fordham. Indiana out- fumbled Michigan State but gained a tie decision and then ended the season by osing to Purdue, 7-( , Harold Hursh, passer deluxe Freshman f o o t- ballers await a chance to get in- to their Pow- wow game . . . Joe Tofil draws first blood in the Nebraska game. !,( ■) Dumke, R.; Bringle, R.; Brooks; Herbert. INDIANA 7 NEBRASKA 7 The Hoosier eleven opened their 1939 grid- iron campaign with a 7-7 tie against the Ne- braska University football warriors in Memorial Stadium before a colorful Homecoming crowd of 18,000 spectators. After a scoreless first half in which neither team threatened seriously, the Hoosiers came back in the third period with a successful aerial attack that carried them the length of the field into scoring position. Tofil climaxed the drive by smashing across the goal line for a touchdown and Herbert placed-kicked the extra point to put Indiana in the lead, 7-0. In the closing minutes of the final quarter Nebraska re- sorted to the air as Rohrig passed the Cornhuskers into scoring position. Luther on a reverse skirted his left end for a touch- down and Rohrig converted the extra point to tie the score, 7-7, So far as the statistics of the game were concerned, it was an I. U. victory. The first downs favored McMillin ' s eleven, 12 to 6, and the Crimsonites gained 220 yards from scrimmage as against only 7 1 yards for Nebraska. Indiana Nebraska Total First downs 12 6 Passes Attempted _ 21 13 Passes Completed — 10 8 Average Yardage Punts — 43 42 Total Yardage Scrimmage ___ _... 220 71 Yards Gained Forward Passes 149 37 Total Yards Gained 369 108 370 IOWA 32 INDIANA 29 In one of the wildest and highest scoring battles seen in the Big Ten for more than a decade, the University of Iowa cele- brated its Homecoming by pushing over two touchdowns in the final quarter to nose out Indiana, 32-29. It was a heart-breaking loss for the Hoosiers, who held a nine point lead going into the final quarter. With the hot sun beating mercilessly down upon the Iowa City gridiron, Hursh of Indiana and Kinnick of Iowa staged a spectacular passing duel. It was in this game that Hursh es- tablished himself as one of the greatest passers in college football by completing 18 of 26 passes attempted. The Hoosiers jumped into an early 10-7 first quarter lead, but the Hawkeye offense rolled up a 20-17 advantage as the first half ended. In the third period Hursh completed two touchdown passes to move Indiana into a 29-20 lead that ap- peared safe. In the final stanza, however, Iowa scored twice to gain their 32-29 margin of victory. Brooks, Zimmer, Tipmore, and Rucinski tal- lied touchdowns, Herbert booted a field goal, and Tofil and Herbert each converted an extra point to account for the Hoosiers points. Indiana Iowa Total First Downs 16 11 Passes Attempted 29 13 Passes Completed 16 4 Average Yardage Punts 31 44 Total Yardage by Scrimmage 363 3 12 Total Yards Gained by Passes 2 58 101 Total Yards Gained 621 413 Higginbotham; Rucinski; Harris; Janzaruk. Gahm K. Smith .mM STt ' iVmtigm INDIANA 14 WISCONSIN Maddox McGuire An alert and vastly improved Crimson eleven scored in the opening minutes of the first quarter and the closing minutes of the final quarter to give Indiana a 14-0 victory over Wis- consin. The Hoosiers unleashed a powerful running attack and provided a stubborn defense that kept the Badgers from scoring. Before many of the 22,000 spectators had an opportunity to settle back in their seats, Indiana had scored. On the second play of the game Archie Harris recovered a Wisconsin fumble on the Badger 18 yard line. Hursh then faded back and passed to Herbert in the end zone for a touchdown. Herbert place- kicked the extra point to shove the Fightin ' Hoosiers into a 7-0 lead. It was late in the fourth period when Maddox, speedy In- diana half-back, supplied the thrill of the day. Indiana received the ball on her own 20 yard line after an exchange of punts. On the next play Maddox went outside his right tackle, cut back sharply, and sped down the sideline for the Hoosier ' s second touchdown. Herbert converted, making the score: Indiana 14, Wisconsin 0. Indiana Wisconsin Total First Downs - 5 10 Passes Attempted 9 18 Passes Completed - 4 6 Average Yardage Punts 3 5 33 Total Yardage by Scrimmage 170 224 Total Yardage Gained by Passes — - 45 77 Total Yards Gained - 215 301 Jurkiewicz Tipmorc INDIANA 7 ILLINOIS 6 The right toe of Gene White, Sophomore guard, gave In- diana a 7-( victory over Bob Zuppke ' s lUinois eleven. In a game that was featured by the goal hne stands of the Fightin ' Hoos- iers and the accurate passing of Harold Hursh, Indiana chalked up its second Big Ten victory of the season. The win marked the first time in 40 years that a Hoosier eleven has defeated the Blue and Orange on the Illinois gridiron. The Crimson ' s only touchdown of the day was scored with but 22 seconds of play remaining in the first half. After Indiana had moved the ball to the Suckers ' nine yard line, Hursh faded back and passed to Eddie Rucinski, who made a spectacular catch on the goal line and fell into the end zone for the touchdown. White then place-kicked the extra point that proved to be the Hoosiers ' margin of victory. Illinois scored their lone touchdown late in the third quar- ter. After recovering an Indiana fumble on the Crimson 1 5 yard line, the Illini took advantage of the opportunity by driving to a touchdown In four plays. Indiana Illinois Total First Downs _. 10 7 Passes Attempted 17 13 Passes Completed 8 5 ■Average Yardage Punts 23 30 Total Yards by Scrimmage 196 157 Total Yards Gained by Passes 122 73 Total Yards Gained 318 230 Wim 1 Zimmer TofU White Bragalone OHIO STATE 24 INDIANA After winning two consecutive conference games, the Hoosiers buckled before a powerful Ohio State eleven for their second conference defeat of the season. The conference cham- pions rode roughshod over Indiana in hanging up a 24-0 victory. The Hoosiers, who failed to score for the first time of the year, were kept deep in their own territory during most of the game by an alert Buckeye defense. Consequently, the I. U. gridmen were unable to unleash their vaunted aerial attack. On the first play of the second quarter Langhurst, Buck- eye fullback, plunged over the I. U. goal line for the first score of the game. A few minutes later Maag kicked a 25 yard field goal and the score was: Ohio State 10, Indiana 0. With only a few seconds of play remaining in the first half, Quarterback Scott broke loose for a 10 yard touchdown run, giving Ohio State a 17-0 lead. The Buckeyes scored their final touchdown in the fourth quarter when Langhurst plunged over from the Indiana one yard stripe. Indiana Ohio State Total First Downs - 4 13 Passes Attempted _ 11 17 Passes Completed 1 8 Average Yardage Punts 34 38 Total Yardage Scrimmage 69 143 Total Yards Gained by Passes 75 Total Yards Gained - 69 218 t ■W. Smith Bucchianeri 374 7, ' ' • : . Uremovich Trimble INDIANA 7 MICHIGAN STATE 7 Taking advantage of numerous breaks, Michigan State held the Hoosiers to a 7-7 tie in a game that was marked by frequent I. U. fumbles. The Crimson showed a definite superi- ority in the statistics, outgaining the Spartans, two to one. After Michigan State had jumped into an early 7-0 lead, Indiana, led by Hursh and Brooks, tied the score in the third quarter. Tofil plunged for the Hoosier touchdown and Her- bert place-kicked the extra point. Indiana Mich. State Total First Downs 11 7 Passes Attempted 14 12 Passes Completed 8 4 Average Yardage Punts 35 38 Total Yardage Scrimmage 257 99 Total Yards Gained by Passes 150 41 Total Yards Gained 407 140 FORDHAM 13 INDIANA Displaying a crushing running attack, the Fordham Rams scored a 13-0 victory over a stubborn Hoosier eleven, in its first New York appearance. The Rams, scoring in the second and third quarters, were held at a stand still, however, during the remaining periods. Indiana was able to make only one serious threat. On an intercepted pass by Herbert and two tosses from Hursh to Herbert, the Crimson brought the ball to the Fordham seven. The ball was then lost on downs. Two plays later Eshmont scored Fordhams last touchdown on an 80-yard run. Indiana Fordham Total First Downs 8 14 Passes Attempted 17 10 Passes Completed 7 4 Average Yardage Punts 51 41 Total Yardage Scrimmage 43 287 Total Yards Gained by Passes 95 58 Total Yards Gained 138 345 F. Smith Sabol 375 PURDUE 7 INDIANA 6 Conversion of the extra point after their touch- down gave Purdue a 7-6 victory over Indiana in one of the hardest fought games ever played between the two schools. By virtue of their one point margin of victory, the Boilermakers, for the third consecutive year, were able to forge another link on the highly ornamental chain attached to the Old Oaken Bucket. After a scoreless first half, the upstate eleven started a 63 yard victory march at the outset of the third period. With Brock carrying the ball on nearly every play, Purdue marched to the Indiana one yard line. Brock, after the Hoosiers held for two downs, circled his left end for a touchdown and Montague kicked what proved to be the winning point. Early in the fourth quarter Indiana traveled 74 yards on three pass plays to score their touchdown. After Hursh had returned a punt to his own 26 yard line, he completed a pass to Brooks for a 15 yard gain. The next toss to Rucinski was good for 14 more yards and a first down on the Purdue 45 yard stripe. On the next play Hursh faded deep and threw a long pass to Brooks, who made a beautiful catch on the Boilermaker 15 yard line and then raced the remain- ing distance for a touchdown. Herbert ' s attempt for the extra point was wide. The Hoosiers made a desperate effort to score again in the closing minutes of the game, but Hursh ' s attempt to drop-kick a field goal from the Purdue 3 3 yard line fell short of the goal posts. A capacity crowd of 25,000 watched the Crim- son eleven dominate the play throughout the game. Indiana gained 217 yards from scrimmage as com- pared to 41 gained by the Boilermakers. In addi- tion, the Hoosiers amassed a total of 15 first downs, while Purdue was able to make only 10. Indiana Purdue Total First Downs 15 10 Passes Attempted 27 4 Passes Completed — - 13 2 Average Yardage Punts 33 39 Total yards Scrimmage 98 174 Total Yards Gained by Passes 217 41 Total Yards Gained 315 215 Hursh poises to throw one far down the field . . . Dewitte stopped for third down on the Crimson two-yard line . . . Tuffy Brooks skirts Purdue ' s right end for a first down. A. ._ A CTf- - r I ' i ' r V CONFERENCE STANDING S W L T TP OP Ohio State 5 1 156 41 Iowa -- 4 11 82 85 Purdue 2 12 3 30 Michigan 3 2 147 57 Northwestern 3 2 1 47 37 iHinois 3 3 75 43 Indiana 2 3 56 69 Minnesota 2 3 1 92 76 Wisconsin 5 1 33 83 Chicago — 3 192 Archie Harris catches a pass as sweltering fans look on at Iowa game. Bob Boughman gives the home fans a treat as he runs the grid-graph . . . A big I. — «:? f . .f r 1 . M. Hursh gets off a pass over Rankin ' s outstretched fingers in the Purdue- Indiana game. Many people are prone to forget the gridiron greats of Indiana as soon as they receive their diplomas and take leave of their alma mater. Yet the fame of a great many Cream and Crimson football men spreads throughout the country in a few years, as ex-I. U. stars continue their feats on the gridiron for professional teams. Corby Davis, one of the greatest full- backs ever to wear the colors of Indiana University, has been plunging through the National Professional Football League for the Cleveland Rams since his graduation in 1938. In 1937 Vernon Huffman graduated from I. U., carrying with him nation-wide fame as the result of his choice for sports writers ' All-American elevens. For the past three seasons Huffman has been playing with the Detroit Lions. Playing with Davis on the 1938 team was a versatile backfield man by the name of Frank Filchock, who today, as a member of the Washington Redskins, is recognized as one of the greatest passers in professional football. Two years ago Bob Haak was selected as the most valuable man on the Hoosier team. At the present time he is one of the most valuable members of the Brook- lyn Dodgers ' aggregation. On the Dodgers ' roster is another name familiar to Indiana sports enthusiasts — Joe Zeller, one of the Fightin ' Hoosiers in the early thirties. Claire Randolph, who brought fame to I. U. more than a decade ago, turned to pro- fessional football and was described as one of the greatest players in the game. Other well-known Indiana University football men have graduated to the professional leagues; but to name all of them is a task best suited for the football historian. As long as the Hoosiers continue to play football, there will be additional wearers of the Cream and Crimson who will gain fame in the profes- sional field. A singular honor to which I. U. can lay claim is the distinction of having more foot- ball players win the most valuable player award in the Big Ten than any other school. Chuck Bennett, Vernon Huffman, and Corby Davis are the athletes who have re- ceived this coveted award. No other school in the Conference has had three men win this honor. 379 DL_Si 380 ■J? ' 3 •Wr Coach Branch McCracken has compiled an enviable record in the two years that he has coached the Indiana basketball teams. The McCracken coached Crimson teams have won 37 of 43 games played, and have been the victors in 19 straight non-conference battles. Both teams coached by Big Mac have placed second in the Conference and his 1940 edition won the N.C.A.A. tourney. McCracken has turned out an All American, Ernie Andres, and several all Conference men. 1939 saw Andres picked unanimously to the many All Conference teams. This year Curly Armstrong was named to the A. P. All Big Ten five. McCracken came to Indiana eight years after he graduated from the Bloomington institution with highest honors in athletics. While at Indiana, McCracken was an All American basketball player and an end on the football team. After graduating. Branch took over the coaching duties at Ball State where his basketball teams captured over eighty per cent of their contests. Varsity squad. First Row: Stevenson, Dorsey, Francis, Motter, Coach McCracken, Huffman, Dro, Gridley, McCreary. Second Row: Manager Stiers, W. Menke, R. Menke, Schaefer, Armstrong, Ooley, Hoffman, Zimmer. Third Row: J. Torphy, Frey, Newby, W. Torphy, Huckleberry, Wietoff, Trainer Ferguson. First Row: Coach Black, Crabtree, Shanklin, Douglas, Pavis, Watkins, Coach Graham. Second Row: Myers, Wunker, Pawelski, Swanson, Forsyth, Scheidler, Coach Reed. Third Row: Rosser, Driver, Van Valer, Gustin, Denton, Fourth Row: Anderson, Taylor, Logan, Miller, Heine. The 1940-41 Indiana University basketball schedule will include a five- game trip during the Christmas holidays that will pit the national hardwood champions against some of the best quintets in the country. The trip will be climaxed by an intersectional battle against the University of Kentucky ' s Southern Intercollegiate title-holders in the famous New Orleans Sugar Bowl. The Hoosiers will go to the west coast and then to the Gulf of Mexico before they return home — a distance of nearly 4,000 miles. The Indiana team will open their Western jaunt by playing California at Berkeley and Stanford at San Francisco on successive evenings. The Crimson basketballers will then play both U.C.L.A. and Southern California in Los An- geles before leaving for New Orleans, where the Hoosiers will meet the power- ful Kentucky team on December 30. The trip from California to Louisiana will be made by airplane. 383 First Row Bob Dro Chet Francis Curly Armstrong Second Row Bob Menke Jack Stevenson Marvin Huffman Third Row Andy Zimmer Tom Motter Everett Hoffman N. C. A. A. BASKETBALL In the words of President Her- man B Wells, It is fitting that the state of Indiana should be the home of the national basketball champ- ions. Coach Branch McCracken and eleven Crimson hardwood men proved this statement to the entire nation March 30, 1940, when they returned from Kansas City, Mo., with the gold trophy symbolic of their basketball supremacy — they were national champions. After being selected as the team to represent the Mid-West in the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Association tournament, the Hoosier cagers won the Eastern division championship by trouncing Springfield College, 48-24, and Duquesne University 39- 30. First Row James Clifton Ralph Dorscy Norman Haslcr Cliff Wiethoff John Torphy Second Row Jim Gridley Herm Schaefcr Clarence Ooley Bill Frey Jay McCreary Third Row Bill Torphy Don Huckle- berry Bob Newby Bill Menke Red Zimmer Kansas University, who had won the NS estern division crown by conquering Rice and Southern California, was de- feated by Indiana in the championship tilt, 60-42. The Hoosiers were led in the final game by Huffman and McCreary. The members of the Crimson team were presented gold watches and key-chain basketballs. Captain Marvin Huffman was awarded a medal for being the most valuable man to his team in the N.C.A.A. tourney. When the newly-crowned basketball champions returned to Bloomington, they were met at the city limits by more than two hundred cars filled with University students, who paraded them to the Fieldhouse. There more than 2,000 spirited students joined In the most enthusiastic victory celebration seen on the campus In recent years. I 385 9 ' - ' 4H| The 1940 Big Ten Conference season pro- duced one of the most unusual races in recent years, as Indiana ' s fire-brand five placed second to a team which they defeated twice by decisive margins. Although Purdue placed first in the final Conference standings, I.U. ' s students and supporters claimed a moral championship by vir- tue of the Hoosiers ' twin victories over the Boil- ermakers. The Crimson quintet opened their Conference season with a narrow 36-34 verdict over Illinois, who was without the services of Captain Bill Hapac. The Indiana netmen chalked up their second Big Ten win at the expense of Iowa, who fell before the fast-breaking Hoosiers, 45-30. After this auspicious start Indiana partisans be- gan dreaming of a Conference Championship; but an inspired Minnesota team darkened I.U. hopes when they handed the Crimson a 46-44 defeat. However, the McCracken-men soon found the victory trail again as they outpointed Wisconsin ' s Badgers, 40-34, two nights later. And then came the first Purdue game. As the capacity crowd filed out of the I.U. Fieldhouse, the score- board showed: Indiana 46, Purdue 39. The Wol- verines from Michigan were outclassed, 57-30, before the Hoosiers again tasted defeat — this time by a 40-36 count at Northwestern. The Crimson five then vanquished Iowa, 46- 42, and stalled to a 3 8-34 victory over a stub- born Chicago team, before bowing to the Buck- eyes at Ohio State by a 44-26 margin. And then came the second Purdue game. Newspaper headlines recorded the following figures: Indi- ana 51, Purdue 45. Indiana won their ninth and final Conference contest by smashing Ohio State, 52-31. mwnv M ■■p ' -MM 1 |3 ' H n H Curly Armstrong receives a pass un- der the Hoosier basket. Bill Menke steals a rebound from Fischer in the Purdue Game. Armstrong attempts to block a Pitts- burgh set-up. 386 The season ' s non -conference record: Indiana 3 7 Indiana 58 Indiana 49 Indiana 51 Indiana 40 Indiana 5 1 Indiana 4 5 Indiana 5 1 Wabash 24 Xavier 24 Nebraska 39 Pittsburgh 35 Butler 3} Duquesne 49 Villanova 3 3 DePaul 30 For the second consecutive year the Indiana basketball team went through its non-conference hardwood season undefeated. Playing some of the best quintets in the country, the Crimson netmen breezed through an eight-game schedule that included three intersectional tilts. Two of the Hoosiers ' most impressive victories were the 51-30 conquest over the highly-rated DePaul cagers and the 51-49 win over the powerful Duquesne five. Bill Menke scores on re- bound in the Purdue game. Jay McCreary harrasses Yeager. Menke doubts. That famous hustlin ' Hoosier offense in action. Dro, Armstrong and Schaefer. 387 JOL 388 iif M ! . V ,-■' i SiA% J 1940 BASEBALL Assistant Coach Becker and Coach Harrell. Managers Schmalz, Black, and Keck. Hundley is out as Kosman and Danielson complete the first leg of a double play. The team goes out on the field for daily practice. Coach Paul Pooch Harrell, Indiana diamond mentor, faced a difficult task in building his 1940 nine. Although the Hoosier baseball strategist had an experienced mound corps and a crop of promising Sophomores, the Cream and Crimson dia- mondmen were hard hit by graduation. Missing from the 1939 team, which finished second in the Big Ten, were many letter- men, including Ernie Andres, Tom Gwin, Hal Cromer, Lefty Cox, and Bob Woehr. As the Harrellmen prepared for the Conference opener against Ohio State, the infield was still Pooch ' s biggest worry. Don Danielson, hard-hitting second baseman, was the only re- turning regular in the infield. Mike Kosman, Junior letterman, took over the third base spot, and at first base and shortstop Har- rell found two Sophomores who ably filled the gaps. Everett Hoffman covered the initial sack and Lloyd Whipple won the shortstop berth. VARSITY SQUAD First Row: Bereolos, Shumaker, Ferguson, Brunner, Escott, Whipple, Hacker. Second Row: Armstrong, Danielson, Cor- riden, Kosman, Gentil, Stoshitch, Hundley, Herrmann. Third Row: Coach Harrell, Hursh, Dro, Clifton, Carroll, Hoffman, Bloom, Lewis, Assistant Coach Becker, Manager Schmalz. Fourth Row: Doolittle, Anness, Gordon, Schultz, Malchow, Drain, Francis, Aldridge. In the outfield the Hoosiers had a trio of veterans — Jock Corriden, Bob Dro, and Harold Hursh. Chet Francis, another letter-winner, and Charles Shumaker, a Sophomore, also saw action in the outer gardens for Indiana. Bozidar Stoshitch again handled the catching this year. Dro and Hursh worked behind the plate for the Hoosiers when Stoshitch needed relief. Capt. Dale Gentil and Don Hundley were Pooch ' s pitching mainstays. However, the Indiana tutor also had three other reliable hurlers — Don Dunker and Clarence Brunner, both Sophomores, and Vic Aldridge, Junior left-hander. Indiana broke even in their first six non-conference games of the season. The scores of Indiana ' s first six games: Ft. Benning, Ga. Indiana 7 Indiana Indiana Indiana 8 Indiana 4 Indiana 11 -0 Ft. Benning, Ga 1 Ft. Benning, Ga 1 Columbus, Ga 5 Ashville, N. C 6 Indiana State 2 391 1959 BASEBALL The Indiana University batsmen finished out a top notch 1939 Conference season in second place having lost the Cham- pionship by the slender margin of one-half game to Iowa with whom they tied for first in 1938. Had they not been rained out of the opening two games with the lower bracket Illinois nine, the home diamond lads easily might have emerged with the title. In the Conference race, the Crimson won seven and lost three, and for the total season won sixteen out of twenty encounters. The Harrellmen opened the season with impressive 22-2 and 14-2 victories over DePauw. Indiana State and Wabash proved to be the next victims by scores of 14-5 and 5-2, respectively. The Conference season was launched by a double-header with Wisconsin. Superb pitching Gentil and Cox coupled with late winning splurges put I.U. on top, 7-2 and 11-4. The Crimson winning streak stretched to eight games by victories over Wabash and Michigan State before it was broken by Chi- cago when they stole home with the winning run in the last inning. The next day the Hoosiers gained revenge with a 13-5 victory. Aid ridge Hansen Armstrong Corriden Stoshitch Dro Francis Brunner Defeat trailed the Hoosiers ' heels in the next two games, losing to Notre Dame, 12-7, and Purdue, 1-0, in an 11 -inning game. The Crimson retalliated with a victory the next day. Next in line of the Crimson ' s vanquished were Michigan State, 7-0, with Wilshere allowing only four hits. Michigan bal- anced the trip to the Wolverine state by defeating Indiana, 11-1. The last four games were won handily as Butler fell, 4-3, Ohio State, 11-2, and 4-2, and DePauw, 14-1. Outstanding in the delivery department of the game last season were Dale Gentil and Sophomore Don Hundley. Out- standing batters were Gwin, Danielson, Andres, Corriden, and Dro. The Hoosiers crossed the plate 172 times as against 81 for their opponents, indicating a better than 2-1 scoring average for the season ' s play. Hundley Shumaker Gentil Bereolos Middleton Danielson Hoffman Hacker 392 i _e 394 .fej sr m Poorman Hedges Kane Hoke Tolli ' Denny Coach E. C. Billy Hayes who has developed some of the country ' s greatest track stars appears to have brought two more from under cover. They are Roy Cochran and Campbell Kane. Cochran, the brother of Race Horse Cochran, the great sprinter of the 1924 Olympics, who was also one of Hayes ' prodigies, was National and International champion for 1939 in his specialty, the 440-yard low hurdles. This spring Cochran broke the world indoor record in the 440 twice with times of 48.2 and 48.3. Campbell Kane, a sophomore, has been called the most promising middle distance man to come up in recent years. The rangey Hoosier won the Sugar Bowl half mile in 1:54.2 and the Big Ten indoor mile in 4:13.2. Kane and Cochran teamed with Hoke and Hedges to run the fastest time ever recorded for the distance medley. This quartet, unbeaten this year in the distance medley and the two mile relays, stepped the two and one-half miles in 10:10 at the Butler relays. 396 VAI SITY SQUAD First Row: Mc Adams, Hill Coch- ran, Riley, Boyle, Persinger, Jen- kins. Second Row: Stebing, Hoke, Kane, Mikulas, Tolliver, Jones, Burnett. Third Row: Gardner, Hedges, Uremovich, Harris, King, Adler. FRESHMAN SQUAD First Row: Laudeman, Levy, Wilt, Williams, Kraja. Second Row: Walker, Eggman, Bartley, Dorton, Wilson, Bristow. The Indiana thinlies easily won all three of their dual meets this year. Led by Camp- bell Kane, brilliant sophomore runner, and Roy Cochran, lightning dash man, the team was not closely pressed in any meet all year. The team opened its season with a 53J to 4lK victory over Ohio State at Colum- bus. Cochran won both the 70 yard high and low hurdles and placed second in the 60 yard dash to score 13 points. Archie Harris, ace shotput heaver, won his event. Kane won the mile and 880 yard run to score 10 points. Against the last Nicholson-coached Notre Dame team, Indiana won another victory, 52-34. This was a record breaking meet. Roy Cochran set a new world ' s in- door record in the 440 yard dash of 48.3 seconds. Ten minutes prior to this Cochran equaled the fieldhouse record when he won the 60 yard dash in 6.2 seconds. Archie Harris broke the field house record by shoving the 16 pound shot-put out 49 feet and 4 inches. Campbell Kane again won the 880 and one mile run while Ed Hedges finished first in the two mile run. Against Purdue in the last dual meet In- diana again triumphed 49-39. Kane and Cochran, the unbeaten Crimson pair, led the attack against the Boilermakers. Kane won the mile run and Cochran won the 60 yard dash. Archie Harris defeated Weber of Purdue in the shot-put event. Mikulas and Burnett won first and second in the high jump. Indiana won both the two mile and the one mile relay races. 397 The 1940 Conference Indoor meet caused many an eyebrow to raise in surprise as Michigan, the odds on favorite, was forced to win the mile relay in order to nose out Indiana, 3 8-31, for the championship. It was the Wolverines ' team strength that pulled them through, as they counted many second, third, and fourth places. Most of the Hoosiers ' points came from the efforts of several star performers. Roy Cochran brought down the house as he twice broke the world indoor record in the 440 yard dash. His times of 48.2 and 48.4 were both well below the accepted mark of 48.9. Other Crimson firsts were won by the sparkling 4:13.2 mile turned in by Campbell Kane and by the 49 foot 2 inch throw by Archie Harris in the shot put. Second place ribbons were won by Kane, who was nosed out by inches in the 880, and by Ed Hedges in the two mile run. Jenkins and Tolliver placed fourth in the 440 and the mile run, and Eddie Mikulas leaped to fifth place in the high jump. The mile relay saw Indiana ' s team finish in third place behind Michigan and Illinois. The Crimson trackmen had marked success in the relay carnivals and special meets in which they were entered. In the Butler relays they came within a point and three-fourths of stealing the championship from under the nose of their arch rivals and the highly touted favorite, Michigan. The Crimson did not come home empty handed, for they won two relays and set two new world records. Cochran estab- lished a new mark of 6.9 in the 60 yard low hurdles over five barriers. He then teamed with Kane, Hoke, and Hedges to post a new world record of 10:10.3 in the distance medley. Hoke, Hedges, and Kane then joined with Tolliver to bring home the two mile trophy. At the Illinois relay, the two mile and distance medley quartet easily won both of their races. A month later the mile relay foursome placed second at the Chicago relays. Cochran beat Belcher at 600 yards and Kane finished second to Borican in a special 1000 yard run at Windy City games. January 1 Kane won the 880 at the Sugar Bowl carnival in 1:54.2 and Cochran ran second in the 440. Kraja, McAnly, and Sartor await the results as Coach Hayes gleams over his watch. Managers Cossman, Kistler, Firth, Glassner, and Purcell hide behind a hurdle as they worry over the season ' s prospects. nnmn Big Arch Harris poises in the ring after a long throw . . . Roy Cochran breaks the tape in 48.3 to set a new world record in the 440- yard dash . . . Hedges and Barter lead the field in the two mile run of the Notre Dame meet . . . Ray King floats across the pole vault bar . . . Steve Reidy, Notre Dame hurdler, leads the pack over the first barrier . . . Vern Broertjes demonstrates the track man ' s hard life ... Mikulas practices the low sticks . . . Cochran, Hoke, Hedges, and Kane, undefeated in the two mile and distance medley relays. S9$ 3lJ3 400 After having held the Conference Championship for eight consecutive years, Indiana ' s hill and dalers relinquished the title this year to Wisconsin. The Hoosiers ' record was by no means shameful as they won four out of five dual meets and placed second in the Big Ten and Third in the National. Campbell Kane Wayne Tolliver Tolliver Kane Hedges Daniels Barter Broertjes McKibben Pcrsin ger 402 Ed Hedges Coach Rinchart Coach Wilmer Rinehart back at the helm after an absence of one year led his team to an im- pressive record in dual meet competition. The season was opened by a 22-23 loss to Wis- consin, the ultimate Big Ten champions. Walter Mehl led the Badgers; Tolliver, the Crim- son. In their next meet the Hoo- siers brought joy to the hearts of their followers as they ad- ministered a 20-39 runaway to the Purdue Riveters. Ed Hol- derman salvaged a little glory for the Lafayette lads as he placed first. However, the next five runners to cross the line wore crimson jerseys as Kane, Daniels, Hedges, Tolliver, and Broertjes finished in that order. In the third dual meet Michigan State fell, 23-32. Hedges beat out Fehr by five yards to place first. Other Indiana scoring was done by Kane, Daniels, and Tol- liver who finished third, fourth and fifth behind Fehr. Broertjes ran tenth to round out the Hoo- siers ' total. The meet, run over a muddy course, saw the Crim- son reach their best form of the Vernon Broertjes Gerry Daniels A week later Indiana Central came, saw, and was conquered, 18-43. Hedges easily won the meet, but the feature of the day was the dual between Fred Wilt of the Indianapolis school and Kane. They raced neck and neck until the last 100 yards when Kane ' s famous kick gave him a ten yard margin at the finish. The last dual meet saw the Hoosiers defeat the Ohio State Buckeyes, 19-36. Hedges won his third consecutive race as he led the runners to the tape in the fast time of twenty-one min- utes. Eisenhart of the Bucks was a close second with Tolliver, Broertjes, Daniels, and McKibben close behind. In the Conference meet which was won by Wisconsin, Indiana placed second. The Hoo- siers scoring was done by Hedges, sixth; Tolli- ver, seventh; McKibben, eighth; Broertjes, tenth; and Persinger, seventeenth. Hedges placed tenth in the National. Particularly encouraging was the work of two sophomores, Campbell Kane and Gerry Daniels. Ed Hedges continued his reliable work, and Tolliver and Broertjes could be depended upon to place high in the scoring. Coach Rine- hart will have his entire team back next year, and with the help of two promising freshmen, Wilson and Wilt, the Crimson should again be the favorite for the National championship. 403 VARSITY SQUAD First Row: Sefton, Livovich, Dannacher. Second Row: Weiss, Wilson, Roman, An- tonacci, Rolak, Tone. Third Row: Hyde, White, Brozski, Mc- Daniels, Inman, Gill, Thorn. Coach Billy Thorn ' s grapplers completed the tournament section of their season with an al- most irreproachable record. They won the cham- pionship in their first two meets and took second in last tourney of the season. The Crimson mat- men compiled a total of eight first places, five seconds and four thirds. Livovich will rather be some other place when Dannacher starts putting the pressure on that figure 4 scissors. Wilson McDaniels Inman White Managers Kaufman Diamond, and Clayton, Freshman coach Hyde and coach Thorn talk over Oklahoma ' Aggies ' invasion. WRESTLING By scoring 28 points to Purdue ' s 7, the Thom men had no trouble in capturing the Midwest Championships at Chicago for the third succes- sive year. Antonacci, Lazzera, Wilson, and In- man won first place and Livovich and Fawcett were second place victors. Billy Thom ' s reputation as the most depend- able coach with the most dependable team, was verified as Indiana retained its Big Ten wrestling crown at Purdue, by nosing out Michigan 24-23. In the first place contingent were Sefton, Wil- son, and McDaniels. Seconds were won by An- tonacci and Inman, while Roman and Weiss received third place. The matmen then journeyed to the National Intercollegiate Meet at Champaign, 111. in an effort to unseat Oklahoma A. and M. from their title. Suffering the loss of McDaniels through injuries midway in the meet, Indiana received second place, bowing to Oklahoma, 24-14. An- tonacci was the only individual victor, with In- man a second and Roman and McDaniels third spot winners. Winning four out of six dual meets, Indiana ' s wresthng team collected 102 4 points to its op- ponents 5 1 Yi points to set up an excellent record for the season. The Thom men opened the mat season by defeating Cornell College, 21 to 3. Sammy Hyde demon- strates how not to win a wrestling match. FRESHMAN SQUAD First Row: Sparks, Norman, Crosby, Arch- er, Obradovich. Second Row : Lee, Wray, Patty, Davidson, Richey. Livovich, Sefton, Rolak, Roman, McDaniels, In- man, and White were victorious in their matches. At Iowa State, the wrestlers were defeated, 10j4- 13 . Oklahoma was Indiana ' s next conqueror, winning 18-6. The matmen again hit their stride at Ohio State, winning 22 to 8, with Sefton, Antonacci, Wilson, Weiss, McDaniels and Inman the vic- tors. Illinois was the next victim, suffering de- feat by a score of 20-6, on wins by Sefton, An- tonacci, Wilson, Roman, McDaniels and Inman. The wrestlers then routed Michigan with a 23 to 3 count. Inman headed the wrestlers by winning six out of six matches. McDaniels defeated five op- ponents and tied one. Sefton won four out of five and Antonacci won three out of four en- counters. 405 .--.i ' ' ,-■■■: . ' SWIMMING Managers Houghton, Hiller, and Cooper check over past records. Benedetti and Boaz backstroke down the pool. Capt. Thomas and Coach Royer discuss a coming match with Pur- due. Klafs comes up for air while executing his favorite breast stroke. Freshman Squad: First Row: Longs worth, Moore, Hodson, Ullery, Hunter. Second Row: Van Duren, Blick- man, Franklin, Pfrommer, Bun- gert. Varsity Squad: First Row: Boaz, Pakucko, Gan- ger. Second Row: Klafs, Thomas, Ja- kush, Benedetti, Kempf. Third Row: Royer, Munsee, Hall, I eggs, Jacobson, Marsh, Feigel. Sprinters Jacobson, Marsh, Pa- kucko and Beggs await the start- ing gun. Robert Royer, I. U. ' s swimming coach, started out on his career as an undertaker after graduating from high school. He then came to Indiana and after four years here again ventured forth in the world, this time as an English teacher and assistant principal in Akron, Indiana. Three years later he returned to I. U. to become swimming coach and to lead Indiana to the top of collegiate swimming. Besides these duties, he now serves as assistant Dean of Men and sponsor of Phi Eta Sigma. The Indiana University swimming team won four out of seven matches during the past season, losing two and tieing one. In the State Meet, the paddlers placed second, losing to Purdue by one point. Although this record is not too impressive, the Royermen were compensated by gaining victories in three out of four Big Ten Conference matches. The season was opened with a smashing 56-11 defeat over the Ft. Wayne Y.M.C.A. in the men ' s pool. Traveling to Chi- cago, they were conquered by a fast Chicago team, 52-32. Mike Pakucko and Bart Benedetti led the I.U. swimmers in gaining their 32 points. Pakucko again starred when Illinois came to Bloomington to suffer a 47-37 loss. Purdue was I.U. ' s next vic- tim, falling 50-34 at Lafayette. This match saw Pakucko in his first defeat of the season. Huntington came here to provide an interesting 42-42 tie. Klafs was impressive in the breast stroke WhllS B Mdfetti sVim 5 U yards in ' 24.1) ' sec6nds — the fastest tlmd Purdue, Rose Poly, and DePauw participating. Purdue eked out a 51-50 win to win the title that I.U. held the year previous. The Royermen then came through to close the season with a 59-25 victory over Wisconsin. Ganger and Boaz were outstand- ing. The three big natatorial names of the season were Mike Pakucko, Frank Klafs, who broke his own breast stroke record twice in one day; and Bart Benedetti, who holds the National Junior A.A.U. record in the 150 yard medley. Jack Ganger and Bob Hall, two sophomores, provided the diving strength and look very promising for the future. 407 Bob Van Reisen and Bill Lyon look down the fairway before teeing off. GOLF As the 1940 golf season started, Indiana had prospects for one of the best teams in the history of the school. Reporting to Coach Hugh E. Willis for this year ' s team were a group of veterans and a very promising crop of Sophomores. Four lettermen — Cap- tain Pete Grant, Frank Penning, Bob Sill, and Bill Horton were among those who answered the Indiana men- tor ' s call this spring. The Hoosiers got off to a success- ful start by winning the Mid-West Amateur Tournament for the second successive year. The Willismen then won their first collegiate match of the season by trouncing Butler and De- troit in a triangular meet. Although the Indiana golfers lost their first Conference start to Ohio State, pros- pects were still bright for the most successful season in years and a possi- ble Big Ten championship. Although the Indiana University golf team won only two of its six dual matches in 1939, the varsity linksmen showed steady improvement during the year and ended their season by placing fifth in the Big Ten tournament. The Hoosiers were only one point out of fourth place and two out of third position when the final results of the Conference meet were tabulated. The Indiana golfers finished higher in the tournament than three of the Big Ten teams that had beaten them earlier in the year. Among the laurels captured by the Cream and Crimson team during the 1939 season was the Mid- West Amateur championship at French Lick. The Hoosiers ' victories in dual matches were scored against Alma College and the University of Detroit. The links team was defeated by Purdue, Illinois, Ohio State, and Michigan. 408 Harry Timbrook The varsity foursome: Grant, Timbrook, Penning, VanHorn. Coach Willis Pete Grant Varsity squad, standing: Dutton, VanReisen, Coach Willis, Horton, Brownstein. Sitting: Sill, Lyon, Taubensee. Frank Penning k was not until he was 55 that Prof. Hugh E. Willis, golf coach and professor of law at Indiana University, ever played a game of golf. Mrs. Willis secretly arranged for some lessons and he had to take them. About six years ago, when Prof. Willis was asked by the University to coach the golf team, the boys had no coach. Taking over he showed the team the science of golf. Now and then Coach Willis shoots above par, but as a whole, his score is never above the seventies. Prof. Willis has been at Indiana Univer- sity since 1922. He received the A.B. (1897) and A.M. (1899) degrees from Yankton, South Dakota, College, and the LL.B. and LL.M. degrees from the University of Minne- sota in 1901 and 1902. 409 TENNIS Winning only two out of eight matches, Indiana ' s 1939 tennis team made their poorest showing in many years. The loss of six lettermen of 193 8 that should have been back was an im- portant deciding factor. The two victories were at the expense of Butler, 6-1, and Wabash, 7-0. The six defeats were caused by the racquets of Notre Dame, 7-2; Ke ntucky, 6-3; Western State, 8-1; Michigan State, 8-1; Wayne University, 8-1; and DePauw, 6-3. Two other matches with Ball State and DePauw were rained out. Indiana also failed to place in the State Intercollegiate Meet held at Earlham. However, Vic Kingdon reached the semi-finals in singles, while in the doubles Kingdon and Gil Haynie were defeated in the finals. Kingdon made the best showing of the season, winning practically all of his regularly scheduled games. The 1940 team promises better results. There are four regulars back plus a crew of promising sophomores, and present indica- tions show a stronger, better-balanced team for the coming sea- Gilmore Haynie, Stevens, Davis, Ratch- ford, Blankertz, Ken- neth Haynie, Wood, Feighner, Chiddister, Lugar. Blankertz Wood Chiddister RIFLE TEAM Winning the most important match in its history, the R.O.T.C. division of the University Rifle Team received the William Randolph Hearst trophy this year for first place in the Fifth Corps area which includes 22 teams in Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Indiana. The second team won third place by placing above the first teams of all schools except Ohio State. This victory climaxed a successful season in which the rifle team won over 80 per cent of its matches and was rated as one of the best teams in the country. The rifle team is composed of 30 men and is divided into three squads; the varsity, R.O.T.C, and Freshmen. Major L. P. Hodnette is in charge of the team while Sergeant Brooks serves as coach. Leonard Knight is captain of the varsity, Richard Feiertag of the R.O.T.C, and Robert Kendall of the Freshmen. Feiertag and Harold Marshall hold the highest individual scores of the year. Matches were held with Big Ten, R.O.T.C, and other col- lege teams. Although most matches are played via telegraph, trips were taken this year to the Universities of Kentucky, Tennessee and Chicago. Sweaters were awarded to the seven highest rank- ing varsity men. Don Bell Varsity Squad, First Row: Slieedy, Knight, Marshall, Pinter. Second Row: Feier- tag, Johnson, Hindman, Buckley. Freshman Squad: Ru- pert, Buckner, Sergeant Howe, Brown. Sitting: Walker. Sergeant Brooks, Ma- jor Hodnette. Feiertag 410 n S« o John Flaningam doesn ' t trust his eyes — or his — oppon- ents either for that matter. Senior manager Tom Cra- vens gives his subordinates a first hand demonstration on how to juggle intramural drawings. Track trophies watch in- tramuralist connect on a hard forehand drive. Intramural director George E. Schlafer is surprised by the camerman. 412 RAMllH The 1939-40 intramural season produced one of the clos- est races since the inauguration of this department of athletics. Although the Sigma Chis, winner of the 1939 championship, jumped into an early lead again this year, the S.A.E.s over- took the defending champs in March and had gained a iV2 point lead by April 1, with several spring events still to be completed. The Sigma Chis won the first I-M contest of the 1939-40 season when Bill Menke paced his fraternity to a first place in the cross-country run. The S.A.E. golfers copped top honors in the fall links tournament, with Sigma Pi second, and Phi Delta Theta third. The Sig Alphs amassed more points by winning the minor league volleyball crown and by placing second to the Ramblers in fall codeball. The Ramblers cap- tured the major league volleyball championship; second place in this sport was won by Kappa Delta Rho. The Sigma Chis added another trophy to their collection by defeating the Betas for the touch football title. The Ramblers were winners of the major league basket- ball cup, with the Footballers runner-ups. The Betas won the minor league hardwood championship by defeating the Ramb- lers. Winner in the wrestling tourney was Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon; the Delts placed second in this sport. The Den Ten cin- dermen captured the indoor track trophy, while the S.A.E.s carried off second place honors. 413 Miss Helen Yeakel Miss Eloise Chumley Miss Edna Munro, head of the department. Miss Clara Fedler Miss Alice Garwood Women ' s athletics at Indiana University embrace a variety of activities. Offered throughout the year are swimming, arch- ery, volleyball, horseback riding, baseball, tennis, volleyball, basketball, speedball, hockey, deck tennis, golf, and modern, tap, and folk dancing. Badminton was given for the first time this year. Also new is the Orientation class, required for Freshman women, which explains the need for physical education and explains the system of courses used in the University. A number of improvements have been made in the Student Building, headquart- ers for the gymnastic activities, including a new recreation room, and a number of new showers. Last year, a swimming pool to be used exclusively by women students was installed. Instructors in the Department of Physi- cal Education are Prof. Edna Munro, head of the department. Prof. Clara Fedler, Prof. Helen Yeakel, Miss Helen Grant, Miss Eloise Chumley, and Miss Alice Garwood. 414 I WOMEN ' S ATHLETICS U . A perfect back dive. The golf class tee. up. Ballet scene from the Oceanides water carni- val. Coeds trip the light fantastic for one half hours credit. The A.W.S. ' s new game room gets a heavy work out. William Tell — mod- ern version. 41J ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The production of any issue of a yearbook involves the help and cooperation of a great many people. Besides the various staffs of the book, who have done more than their bit, many other persons have contributed to the finished product. The 1940 Arbutus is indebted to these organizations and people who have helped in times of great need — with additional photographs, with rush produc- tion, with writeups and copy, with encouragement, advice, and criticism, and with confidence they have expressed in the final outcome. To these people and to numerous others the 1940 Arbutus wishes to express its gratitude and sincere appreciation. Especially worthy of mention are the following people and organizations: The Indianapolis Engraving Company The Benton Review Shop The S. K. Smith Company Indiana University Extension Division Dexheimer-Carlon Studios John E. Stempel, Head of the Department of Journalism Ward G. Biddle, Comptroller E. Ross Bartley, Director of the News Bureau J. Wymond French, Faculty Adviser of the Arbutus W. A. Alexander, Librarian Louie Hutton, for photographs Lloyd Keisler, Assistant Cashier, and Rembrandt Hiller, for business help. Nathan Kaplan, Don McCammon, Allen Harrison, Betty Bates, and Rich- ard Beavans for editorial help. 416 The 1940 ARBUTUS in some of the ads in the following pages has attempted to do something new and original in the way of advertising. Read over the following pages carefully. The pictures are of your friends. Look for them! 417 fiaUumijSL ih m Geo. Hitz Co. WHOLESALE Fruits and Vegetables Canned Goods INDIANAPOLIS Molloy-Made covers — produced in a plant devoted exclusively to em- bossed and decorated products by an organization of cover specialists — represent the highest standard in yearbook work. Specify MOLLOY — it ' s your assurance of the best. THE DAVID J. MOLLOY PLANT 2857 North Western Avenue CHICAGO ILLINOIS cudvsudiMJUL, 418 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Page Alumni Magazine -439 Benton Review Shop, Inc. 445 Bevington-WiUiams, Inc. 432 Bloomington Limestone Corp. 437 Book Nook 433 Bouquet Shop 42 3 Brown Collegiate Mfg. Co. 442 Burns and James 426 Burns, Roy 43 1 Central Beauty College 420 Central Supply Co. 438 Claypool Hotel 42 8 City Securities Corp. 438 Coca-Cola Bottling Co. 423 Columbia Dentoform Corporation 428 Cosier, R. L. Co. 435 Crutcher Dental Depot, T. M. 434 Dexheimer-Carlon 444 Ellis Floral Co. 435 Feltus Printing Co 431 First National Bank 420 Gables 429 Hitz, Geo. Co. 418 Home Elevator Co. 426 Home Laundry 427 Hughes Bros. 419 Ideal Laundry 42 1 Indiana Business College 436 Indianapolis Engraving Co 446 I. U. Bookstore 433 I. U. Printing Plant 435 Johnson ' s Creamery 427 Kahn Clothing Co. 42 1 Kingan Co. 43 Kothe- Wells-Bauer Co. 426 Lang, Maxwell Co. 438 Lilly-Ames Co. 442 Marott ' s 422 Monroe County State Bank 437 Mutual China Co. 424 National Library Bindery Co. 440 Peerless Electric Supplies 430 Perry, J. C - 424 Pitman-Moore Co. 440 Jhu hdjptsbdL ptuhli Jv jpWL ijsWLhboolL . . . Princess and Harris Grand Theatres 425 Ransom and Randolf Co. 432 Recker, Carlos 43 6 Red Book 437 Robbins 4 3 9 Seville Tavern 420 Sexton Co. 424 Shook, Charles H. . 438 Smith, S. K. Co 418 Smither Roofing Co. 440 Spink Arms 442 Sprigg ' s Dairy _._42 1 Stone ' s Cafe 419 Strauss, A. M. 420 Sullivan ' s 439 Union Barber Shop 437 University Chevrolet Co. Inc. 429 Weber Dental Mfg. Co. 430 White Dental Mfg. Co. . 441 Wildermuth, Joe 424 Wiles Drug Co. 425 Woodward Coal Co. 429 IN THE END... OUR PRODUCTS ARE THE BEST HUGHES BROS. CO. Everything in Building Material Since 1882 Fourth and Monon Railway - Telephone 6115 THE STUDENT ' S CHOICE! For the Tops in Fine Foods and College Congeniality it is STONE ' S CAFE The Student ' s Choice Since 1924 PHONE 4024 327 Woodlawn Ave. Bloomington, Indiana 419 JhadJL advaJdi Jih iu cUul ipuh. piisuiddu . . . MEET ME AT SEVILLE . . . Where good people enjoy good company and Good Food ! ! Delicious LUNCHEONS from 300 Towne DINNER Complete 500 Reslaurant 7 NORTH MERIDIAN mmim,,am m Best In The Midwest B m B k EXCLUSIVE GIRLS ' SCHOOL featuring HAIR STYLING and Complete Beauty Culture Curriculum iBBSmMl wli B CENTRAL psif ' l ' supp ,. BEAUTY 25 ?Ss. COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg., Indianapolis Even I. U. has it ' s Dead Spots . . . - The First National Bank OF BLOOMINGTON Bloomington ' s Bank Since 1871 A. M. Sl ' RAUSS ARCHITECT 415 Cal-Wayne Building Meml er of Federal System FORT WAYNE, INDIANA Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Architect for the Medical Building Stores and Service Building School of Business Building Swain Hall and DON ' T FORGET! Associate Archit ect on the Auditorium Building Subscribe to the 1941 Arbutus EARLY Indiana University 420 1 Jhmj ahsL loipaL Aupp tiMA. o Q. U.. . . . The boy on the left doesn ' t drink Sprigg ' s Milk SPRIGGS Phone 3366 321 West Third Street You Get DOUBLE Your Value AT KAHN ' S The Store for Men ,(, • •) IDEAL ' SAY ALL MEN IDEAL LAUNDRY Home of Sterilized Laundry Phone 2117 12th St. and Park Ave. Two bored prom queen workers entertain two bored juniors . . . ' We like McConnell, don ' t we?— Heh-Heh 421 THE CREEK REVIEW The last remnant of the abihty to take and dea halls of brotherhood. To those hallowed institutions fortune and to them dedicate this section. ACACIA If A were not the first letter of the al- phabet this house might not be first. At one time the Acacias claimed a relationship to the Masons. This has since been discontinued. Last year a boy was pledged who knew a Mason. After the novelty wore off he was ejected. They pledge the boys in front of that inlaid wood crest. After that Arnold shows the young ' uns how it ' s done on the campus in the wicked world of politics. out the razzberries remains but in the much criticized described below we send a wish for their future good BETA THETA PI For a while the Betas had the best knitting team in the conference but Charles Legeman sprained his thumb. The organization is said to indulge in other college sports besides danc- ing. Bud Mueller keeps them in condition with good, healthy victuals. The bigger guns are PG Silas Kivett, Marvin Huffman, and Ramb- ling Rem Hiller. Roger Curry is a member; but they can ' t help it. ALPHA TAU OMEGA In case anyone is interested, this house can be found between some Jewish fraternity and some sorority and between some street which runs in front of it and an alley in back. Howdy Wilcox manages to kegp the campus well stirred up while Bogard attempts to steer the ATO ship on a straight course. The boys probably have the screwiest assortment of names on the campus — among which are Kopp and Robb; Hunter and Wolf; Weaver and Taylor; Jester and Horn; Foreman and Steele; Land and Graves; and Pot (t)s and Dewberries. Some fun. Enough words to write a book, or some- thing. DELTA CHI When last heard of (Junior Prom Queen Election) , the Delta Chi ' s had merged with the I. S. A. But that is only a rumor. They have succeeded in acquiring a good sized monopoly on the wrestling team. Their proudest achieve- ment was some very clever Homecoming decor- ations. When the boys aren ' t waging war with the S. A. E. boys over prospective pledges, they ' re watching the antics of their neighbors, the Alpha Chi ' s. THE LEADER IN THE PARADE! MAROTT ' S U(. INDIANAPOLIS BUY SHOES AT A SHOE STORE ' i 422 Jhnif dsiMhviL ipWL fbodhonaqsL . . . BOTH LOVELY! Beautiful Girls from I. U. Beautiful Flowers to match by the BOUQUET SHOP Over frosty bottles of ice cold COCA-COLA friends gather together at the study table. So the custom of a sociable pause for ice cold Gifford shows her pretty teeth Sorority Legacy . Chapter meeting at the Sig Nu House . . . 423 Sutf puom. ChJbjuik advahJtLuihA. . . . THE MUTUAL CHINA COMPANY CHINA - GLASS - SILVER - NOVELTIES for Institutions, Fraternities and Sororities and the Home WHOLESALE - - 128 S. Meridian St. - - RETAIL Indianapolis This sprightly aid to finer meals Bespeaks the friendliness she feels She travels far both east and west Always bringing just the best So look for the Maid from Sextontown And serve your guests foods of renown John Sexton Co. -Chicago-Brooklyn SEXTON sr 424 DELTA TAU DELTA The Delts might have one of the best look- ing panel of pictures in the book if it weren ' t for their prominent black sheep that appears in the lower right-hand corner. The boys amuse themselves by playing little games which in- clude running around yelling Suits at each other. Otherwise they live in the glory of the multitudinous triumphs of E. G. everybody knows him Mauck. DELTA UPSILON The dew boys have a non-secret fraternity. It can ' t be secret and live next to the A. D. Pi ' s. At one time during the year a rumor was afloat that the frat would actually give a closed dance. Nothing developed. The boys are quite chesty about their corner on the activities market. A few of their better investments in- clude Tipmore, Twyman, Chiddister, and those cut-ups, Johnson and Boxell. Their favorite amusements are making life miserable for the Lambda Chi ' s and the A. D. Pi ' s. Compliments OF JOE H. WILDERMUTH ARCHITECT J. C. PERRY COMPANY WHOLESALE GROCERS Indianapolis, Indiana Jhsu hidftsuL jficuf. oi, ifouA, jpa ibook. . . . BUY Your Photography Supplies where the 1940 Arbutus does . . . FROM WILES DRUG CO. For 41 years an advertiser in campus publications How To Enjoy An Evening The Girl is Recommended The Show is Essential Princess Theatre THE HOME OF HITS HARRIS- GRAND ALWAYS TWO FEATURES 425 JhsiASL ajdvohiiAsUtbu hsdpsd COMPLIMENTS OF KOWiEBA COFFEE Kothe-Wells Bauer Co. by BILL EIX THE HOME ELEVATOR CO., Inc. MANUFACTURERS Passenger and Freight Elevators 1142-50 Southeastern Ave. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA fLUbUApL iPuL (hbutlJLbu KAPPA ALPHA PSI K. A. Psi is undoubtedly the best negro fraternity on the campus and dates in only the best negro sorority, the Alpha Kappa Alpha. The boys elected the dusky beauty of A. K. A., Mercedese Johnson, as queen of their frat for 1940. The cornerstone of K. A. Psi is Charlie Guess who has been around now for some six years and is due for a return engagement in ' 40- ' 41. The most outstanding suntanned social swimmers are Morris, Anderson, and Bur- nett. KAPPA DELTA RHO The K. D. R. ' s live in an old white house with an uplifted face and are quite the boys now. Ginger Austin, president of the neigh- boring Tri Delts, says their worst habits are failing ever to pull down their shades to conceal their brawny bodies and playing foulsome music from their would-be orchestra at all times of the night. Hal Cook, who bears a striking re- semblance to Ned Sparks, keeps activity drum- med up around the mansion. Bannister, Jewett, and Booher are among the better boys hanging around. They say Bob McDonald is the Don Juan of the outfit. THE FOUR NEW DORMITORY BUILDINGS for Men and Women are, we believe equal to the best to be found on any campus BURNS and JAMES ARCHITECTS INDIANAPOLIS KAPPA SIGMA The Kappa Sig ' s live in the last house be- fore Brown County and pretend to like it. A drive out to view their house is one of the favor- ite Sunday afternoon amusements of the Uni- versity. The main talking point to rushees is the healthy exercise they all get walking to and from civilization. Marvin Miller is being primed to take over the activity reins from PG Ted Fleming. The fellows like to sing and are pretty good at it. The University Sing and Gus ' s compete for their attentions. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA By rights that other Lambda Chi should be traced down and stood alongside his frat brother before a fair judgement can be made on the boys. Their environment between the D. U. house and the Jordan (no apparent difference) is not of the best, but their intentions are good. The greater part of the men in the gang are enrolled in the University. They live in a pretty house on a hill and have Uremovich. Otherwise it isn ' t their fault. 426 PaJbumi ihem,: ifuuf. cUul jpivc piLmdiL. . . . I. U. ' S Best Dressed Man A PRIMARY REQUIREMENT OF ANY BEST DRESSER IS TO HAVE HIS CLOTHES EXPERT- LY CLEANED OR LAUNDERED AT THE HOME LAUNDRY PRICES TO FIT A COLLEGE PURSE We Don ' t Like To Brag .... BUT THEY DO DRINK OUR MILK Dependable Milk Products Since 1912 The Tii-Delts have Hell Week — and how! . Come on, Ginger, look like you ' re working 427 fiat umijSL ihsiASL advsJdi siJiA. whsufL poA iblsL . . . Rich In Tradition Modern In Convenience CLAYP OOL Jlw JJAxnwtM ta Jtooia -Mai iitalUu INDIA NAPOIJS ' THE HOUSE OF A THOUSAND MODELS Invites You to Visit Its Showroom When in New Yorli for The World ' s Fair See the Great Variety of COLUMBIA DENTOFORMS in IVORINE - ALUMINAL - RUBBER STONE - PLASTER If it ' s a model, Columbia has It — or can make it for you! Have you a copy of our 1940 illustrated price list? If not, write for yours today. COLUMBIA DENTOFORM CORPORATION 131 East 23rd St reet New York, N. Y. As her boy friends will never see her . . . But, is she perty? . . . Gosh, I ' d like to go to that show . . . 428 ■mwmmmm -: mm Confessions of a Coed! . . . . and best by far, He has a Chevrolet! University Chevrolet Co., Inc. BLOOMINGTON, IND. Phone 6346 University Tradition For The Finest In Foods CTKe Qables PHONE 5021 WOODWARD COAL KEEPS THE FRAT FIRES BURNING PHI BETA DELTA These followers of Israel live in the gay 20 ' s version of the Pi Phi house. Their pet amusement is to light big smoky fires with lots of old rubber shoes thrown in just when the ATO ' s next door are having their annual garden party. Their proudest achievement of the year was heading the Sammy ' s in scholarship by .05 of a point. Their greatest desire is to get Zeke Shapiro through and out of school. 429 Supfuftbuuiu o 9ndi xncu lArnvsiAdJii . . . For the Best In Meats Ask for Kingan ' s KINGAN CO. PORK and BEEF PACKERS Since 1845 Indianapolis Indiana 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 The A. 0. Pi ' s sigh as the Sig Chi ' s walk by Wonder what ' s in those jugs? . , . THE WEBER DENTAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY For 41 years, makers of dental equipment and X-Rays, making the most com- plete line of any one dental manufacturer, comprising: The Weber Zenith Motor Chair The Weber Model F Chair with Com- pensating Arms The Weber Model G Chair with Lateral Motion Arms Three Models of Units — • The Empire The Majestic Model F for the left side of chair The Majestic Model G for the right side of chair Don ' t fail to see these products and have them demonstrated to you before entering practice as they represent individuality in design, high utility value and great economic value. All products fully guaranteed and sold by first line dealers everywhere. Our X-Rays, including tha tube, are guaranteed for one year. An X-Ray Counselling Brochure given with each X-Ray, gratis. Architectural, Survey, Office Planning services performed without cost or obligation. We wish you every success and all services we have to ofifer are at your command to help make your professional life triumphant. THE WEBER DENTAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY CRYSTAL PARK CANTON, OHIO Weber No. 5 Raydex, Shockproof X-Ray, with kilovolt range control and stabil- izer, Stationary or Mobile Weber No. 6 X-Ray, Shockproof, with mil- liammeter and voltmeter, Stationary or Mobile Operating Lights Stools Cuspidors Six Models of Cabinets Engines — Unit, Wall, Laboratory and Mo- bile Models 430 ShDulcL bib ftcdbionijiuL h j Q. lA.. idudsmtA. . . . Alpha Chi ' s and Sigma Kappa ' s enjoy Bloomington ' s sunny day . . . . . . as traditional as the Old Board Walk ... Printing from FELTUS PRINTING COMPANY For more than 50 years Bloomington Printers to Organizations of Indiana University PUBLISHERS THE BLOOMINGTON STAR Bloomington ' s Home Newspaper BEST FOOD AT THE BIGGEST SAVINGS GROCERIES MEATS VEGETABLES WHOLESALE 303 W. Third St. Phones 6506 - 6660 RETAIL 200 N. Walnut St. No. One Store Phones 6341 - 6342 ROY BURNS STORES 431 JkiL (hibjuiuA. Zl fmJblidJyid. IT HAS BEEN OUR PLEASURE to have had a role in the progress of INDIANA UNIVERSITY BEVINGTON WILLIAMS, Inc. ELECTRICAL and MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Women ' s Swimming Pool School of Education Stores and Service Building Medical Binlding Physical Science Building Business Administration Hall of Music Building INDIANA PYTHIAN BLDG. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA Jbij cuivQhihjMkl MtppiM . . A. T. O. ' s look nonchalant . . . Now don ' t look, boys I . . . Let ' s just ignore the photographer . . . Pfooey, says Marian . . . YOU WILL BE INTERESTED upon graduation, not only in a location, but also in the proper selection of an outfit. We have on display at all times in convenient model offices five complete outfits of different man- ufacturers and designs. THE RANSOM RANDOLPH CO. INDIANAPOLIS 432 (Busj pwjfL JthimL io aIww jpWc optpMojcdJorL . . CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1940 [ UNIVEBSIT 1 BOOKSTOPE INDIANA UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE For over 25 years I HE ll)€€r MOST OUTSTANDING STUDENT ' S PLACE ON CAMPUS ccr ' - !■, -•-«- Lotta fun this Military, huh, fellas ? . . . That best ventil- ated building on the campus that the Rhines were hunt- ing for during Hell Week . . . 433 (Bujn pwjnt, ilmdJL advohiiMJibu . . ' 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 College Branch I. U. School of Dentistry Bldg. PHI DELTA THETA The Phi Delts can be found living in the middle of a huge pasture that they call a lawn. Their best stock in trade to attract rushees are free views of the f ootball games from their red roof. Included in the annual dues is a member- ship to the Y. M. C. A. Dick Herd is a famous member. Bob Weir is more sane. The Phi Delts pledged quite a few freshmen. Bill Sohl keeps up the prestige of the pledge class by dat- ing in the Pi Phi house. PHI GAMMA DELTA The romantic guys and gals have been try- ing to move this outfit off the campus proper for years. Their playfulness is more effective than the Dean of Women in holding down the necking back of their house. Some of their more prominent members are Keck, Baillie, and Thomas who remind the campus that the Phi Gams are still around. Brooks and Val Nolan manage to guide the boys through their trials and tribulations. The Phi Gams make good grades. Half the faculty are Phi Gams. PHI KAPPA God ' s favored children are all segregated down in a little house on Sluss Street. These ex-Torch and Skullers are pretty new yet and having separated themselves from the general vicinity of the other castles of brotherhood, have managed thus far to keep their shirts pretty clean. Their dorm is probably the only one on campus which isn ' t full between 10 and 12 o ' clock on Sunday mornings. 434 PHI KAPPA PSI Technically the Phi Psi ' s pass the D. U. ' s. They pass them every day twice: once in the morning when they go down to the Jordan for a Kentucky breakfast and again when they grope back at night. They enjoy the flattery of having the Kappas and Pi Phi ' s fight over them. Some people say the Phi Psi ' s own a radio. The Memorial Hall girls are convinced of it. Morrie Kelly and Sam Mitchell have been around for an awful long time now. Jhsuf Aupp iL jpu fL Junwji LdJjti . . . Ricke shows off the cups . . . Hoffman prepares for finals . . . The Z. T. A. ' s act collegiate . . . This little Sigma Kappa is cold, fellas! THE R. L. COSLER CO. Book Binders and Manufacturers of STATIONERY FRATERNITY FAVORS GIFTS AND PROGRAMS Bloomington, Indiana ELLIS FLORAL CO. THE FLOWER SHOP 304 E. Kirkwood - Bloomington, Ind. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE 1940 ARBUTUS The Indiana University Printing Plant 435 CbdviUdiMhA. ohiL AJUftfi dM (L D dnduvuL UuV£AMljf . . 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, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Colum- bus, Richmond and Vincennes — Ora E. Butz, Presi- dent. For Bulletin, telephone or write the I. B. C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Principal Central Business College Architects Builders Bldg. Penna. and Vermont Sts. Indianapolis Compliments OF CARLOS RECKER INTERIOR DECORATOR for THE NEW MEN ' S DORMITORIES Indianapolis, Indiana SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON When it comes to rush the S. A. E. gang is not as shrinking as its chosen flower — the vio- let. Each fall the survivors send out for an- other gross of pledge pins and start out to do what they can to the human race. It was at one time maintained that the S. A. E. ' s stressed quality. However, the belief that they will pledge anyone is probably a bit overdrawn. The boys keep themselves amused by listen- ing to Dan Bretz ' s nonsense and Ray Sadler ' s Alabaman accent. In activities they have quite a few of the big ones including Findling, Hut- ton, Logan, and Bloom. SIGMA CHI The Sigs are most proud of their ability to date in the Theta house, and to run fast. Being a member of the Mrs. Baker groan circuit they exist on tough wieners, sauer-kraut, and navy bean soup. Some of their B. M. O. C. ' s are Stiers, Cooper, and the Menke boys; Gus Browne is a good boy . They hide Bassett when they ' re out to pledge someone. 436 The Thetas biggest show of the year . SIGMA ALPHA MU Adelman, Glassner, Rothberg, and Dieter wave the banner for these stalwarts. There is a rumor that Rothberg comes back to Bloom- ington to visit the boys and attend a class once in a while. The most strenuous activity they engage in all year is a knock-down and drag-out football game with the Phi B. D. ' s for a keg of beer. Everybody gets excited except Finkle. He ' s tired. SIGMA NU The Bloomington fire department is a reg- ular guest at the house. The fellows just love to toss lighted matches into waste paper bas- kets. The rumor that Freddy Morris was seen walking with a girl is just an out and out mean lie! The belief around campus is that the tune Make all checks payable to Ward G originated here. The Sig Nu ' s total assets are some old- fashioned dining room tables, a condemned house and Bob McConnell. Imagine — writing a whole paragraph without mentioning that second floor we pledge ' em here shower room. Jhmj dsidJUwsL jpWL ulL fuDdtJwnaqsL . . . The Alpha Chi ' s make pretty packages, No ? . . . Now here is the way it is done . . . COMPLIMENTS Monroe County State Bank THE FRIENDLY BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation The Favorite of Men Students UNION BARBER SHOP Basement of Union Building 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 CONGRATULATIONS to the Officials of Indiana University on the success of their Splendid Building Program The Bloomington Limestone Corporation Bloomington, Indiana 437 Jo Ahow jipWL xpphJidjcdwrL . . . CENTRAL SUPPLY CO. 210 South Capitol Ave. Plumbing Fixtures STANDARD ENAMEL and VITREOUS WARE See Your Plumber at Once for Estimate JIM FAUSCH Reliable Campus Agent for a Reliable Fraternity Jeweler MAXWELL C. LANG 708 TEST BUILDING, INDIANAPOLIS We have the following Indiana Uni- versity Alumni in our organization: J. Dwight Peterson ' 19 C. W. Weathers ' 17 Richard C. Lockton ' 30 E. W. Barrett ' 26 Noble L. Biddinger ' 33 Mayburn Landgraf ' 30 Frank J. Parmater ex ' 40 CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION INVESTMENT SECURITIES 417 Circle Tower Indianapolis My Compliments and Best Wishes For an Ever Growing Indiana University CHAS. H. SHOOK GENERAL CONTRACTOR FOR THE NEW DORMITORIES Worry, worry, worry . . . Gosh, ain ' t Pauline pretty? . Cole and Little act happy about the whole thing . . . 438 £mj pwm. ihiML s idvaJdLbJihA. . . . SIGMA PI The Sig Pi ' s nearly killed each other in the rush last fall when they found a boy who wanted to pledge and didn ' t need a job. The brothers make no bones about their desire for athletes and have some pretty good ones in Cromer, Rucinski, and others. They say the ash trays at the house have a very striking re- semblance to those formerly used at the Book Nook. Uncle Walt is the guiding star of the frat par excellence. Young Smith is fast acquiring his brother ' s acumen for politics and appears to be the best future activities prospect. Hav- ing covered the Smith boys we ' ve pretty well covered everything. THETA CHI The Theta Chi ' s spend most of their time putting out and taking back their pins, and keeping D. Bacon quiet. Their favorite sport consists of tossing each other in the Jordan River for the amusement of the surrounding feminine audience. The boys, too, like to dis- play their athletic prowess to the Alpha Chi ' s by playing ping-pong on the front porch. They have Ellenwood, Fletcher, Devine and some more good fellows, but they still have Richard- son. Keeping in Touch . . . . . . With Your University Keeping in touch with your University is no easy task after you have graduated anl left the campus to plunge into the hustle and bustle of the outside world. The easiest way for you to keep contact with old I. U., is to pay your annual dues in the Indiana University Alumni Association that amount to $3.00 A YEAR For this sum you will be a full-fledged member of the Alumni Association and will have full use of all the aids and facilities offered by the Alumni Office, AND you will get a full year ' s subscription to the Alumni Magazine, which once a month brings you the news of the University and the highlights of the alumni activities together with the news of your classmates and what they are doing. Don ' t let yourself drift away. Take this opportu- nity now to rebind your ties to the University that gave you your education and to the campus where you spent many happy hours. THE Low Down ON High Style AT ROBBINS Fashion Highlights in the World of Shoes yj VLLIVAN r FASHIONS FOR MEN THE • JANUARY • 1940 INDIANA ALUMNI • MAGAZINE lfMNUM¥40 21 M2f Published Monthly, October through June, Inclusively. Indiana Alumni Magazine For Graduates and Former Students of I. U. 439 NATIONAL LIBRARY RINDERY COMPANY of INDIANA, Inc. Specialists in LIBRARY BINDINGS University, College, Public and Private PLASTIC BINDING Yearbooks, Annuals, Etc. 546 S. Meridian, Indianapolis, Indiana Henry C. Smither Roofing Company Reputable Roofing and Sheet Metal Contractors since 1868 430 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis r I if Si t ■Afl Why men run for Union board . . Sig Nu ' s at the food trough . . . It ,, IS no sma II thing to know that on what we make, may depend whether lije shall be preserved or shall perish. The x itman 2nLoore Laboratory Tyorher ' s Creed PiTMAN-MoORE COMPANY INDIANAPOLI-S 440 Jhuf hsdfL ftuhliAk. 1J.OWL (hhutuA. . -£ c ' ea. WHAT WILL YOURS SAY ABOUT YOU? Now, while you are planning your office, is the pertinent time to bear in mind that most of the patients who will come to you have, upon one or more occasions, visited some other dental office, and that the initial appointment with you is their opportunity to compare you and your office with other dentists and dental offices they have known. That you should strive to make these mental comparisons favor you is obvious, and it lies within your power to so moid them. How? 1 CORRECT PERSONAL APPEARANCE 2 AFFABLE MANNER o AN INVITING, TASTEFULLY FURNISHED, EFFICIENTLY ARRANGED OFFICE M OPERATING EQUIPMENT SO MODERN THAT IT COMMANDS ATTENTION AND INSPIRES CONFIDENCE We can help you create an office that will assure your patients that you are prepared, and we extend a cordial invitation to use the services of our office planning division. This service is free and incurs no obligation of any nature. Ask any distributor of S. S. White Dental equipment or write direct. THE S.S.WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. MASTER UNIT, DIAMOND CHAIR, AND MODERN DENTISTRY ARE COMPATIBLES. 441 fiaihonijSL ChtbudbuL L advsJdiMJibu DISTINCTIVE DANCE PROGRAMS • INVITATIONS •PLACE CARDS • DOOR CARDS • STATIONERY •FAVORS BROWN COLLEGIATE MFC. CO. I EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE GOODS INDIANAPOLIS The Lilley-Ames Co. COLUMBUS, OHIO Manufacturers of Military and College UNIFORMS and Equipment Sabers and Swords Catalog on Request ' • • • Examples of the evils of smoking 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 442 PHOTOQRAPHIJ CONTEST t The first annual Arbutus photography contest was won by Louis Lind. His picture of the entrance to the Union Building, taken under the blaze of floodlights that play on it, was judged the best of the sixty entries by a committee of faculty and students. The committee was composed of John E. Stempel, head of the Department of Journalism; Lloyd Evans of the Extension Division; Prof. Harry Engel, Depart- ment of Fine Arts; Ralph Bruner, President of the Camera Club; Robert McConnell, Arbutus Staff Photographer; and Audrey Smith, Editor of the 1940 Arbutus. Second place was awarded to Ross Fowler ' s shot of the carvings over the entrance to the Medical Building, while third prize was awarded to Charles Smith for his picture of the Music Building. 443 (MjoshiiMKiL, MippchL Qndiana. lAnivsULsJJttf. . . . n u r- FINEST QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHY BY THE OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS OF THE 1940 ARBUTUS 912 Odd Fellow Building - Indianapolis 444 Jhsuf. hsdpL pubUAk, thsL ChbuiuA. . 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 445 l¥ I WERE an editor I ' d make sure of two things — first, p nK tliat my editorial experience would not malte me lead a dog ' s life, and seeond, I ' d not be consistently in tlie dog liouse witli every one including my instructors because of my ycarbooli activity. My way would be to choose an outfit that does more than put their feet on my desit and pat me on the bacli. I ' d call for Indeco service because it is complete and the best help an editor can get In producing an unusual annual within his budget. Ask the staff on this book If I ' m not right. INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING COMPANY, INC. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA cUMilcjMlhL jyiMj l 6mM uVi X of Qj.6(AnJlmDh. cm(( Sc yyoi HMLoSll 446 INDEX Abbett, Elizabeth Ann 3 50, 3 81 Acacia 282, 283 Accounting Club 91 Adams, John 302 Adams, Mary E. 96, 100, 33 5 Adams, Mary M. 96, 359 Adelman, Maurice 38, 313 Adler, Ruth ...6S, 96, 98, 248, 345 Adler, Walter 96, 396 Aeons, Board of 200, 201 Ahlering, George 220, 306 Aiken, Nevin 142 Aikman, Richard 91, 293 Aldridge, Victor 310, 391, 392 Ale, Margaret 332 Alexander, Kathryn Jane 341 Alexander, Marshall 38, 309 Alexander, W. A. 25 Alexander, WiUiam 297 Alford, Leonard 367 Allegre, Crystal 38, 359 Allen, Gloria 38, 345 Allen, Jean 3 8 Allen, Jean L. 3 54 Allen, Robert 91 Allen, Robert S. 70 Allen, William 294 Allen, Willoughby -350 Alley, Paul 290 Allison, Doris 64, 96, 336 Alpha Kappa Psi 89 Alpha Lambda Delta 226 Alpha Phi Omega 22 S Alpha Chi Omega 326, 327 Alpha Delta Pi 328, 329 Alpha Kappa Psi —89 Alpha Lambda Delta -226 Alpha Phi Omega 228 Alpha Omicron Pi 330, 331 Alpha Tau Omega 284, 28 5 Alward, Francis 70 Ambler, John 294 Anagnost, Theodore E. 38 Anderson, Dale 70 Anderson, Frances 3 50 Anderson, Joan 38, 350 Anderson, John S. 302 Anderson, La Verence, Jr. 3 8 Anderson, Mrs. Marion —96 Anderson, Robert 309 Anderson, Swede 366 Anderson, Wilson 112 Andrews, Frank 31 Angermeier, Lewis 112 Ankenbruck, Herman 306 Ankenbruck, Martin 228, 306 Anness, Milford 38, 298, 391 Antonacci, Robert 404 Antrim, James 321 Arbuckle, Robert 282 Archer, John 404 Archer, Milton C. 289 Archibald, Joanna 92, 187, 360 Ardapple, Warren 302 Armagast, Margaret E. 96 Armbruster, WiUiam 317, 391 Armstrong, Lois 219, 226 Armstrong, Louise 216 Armstrong, Mary Jane 207, 225, 226, 331 Armstrong, Paul C. 286, 382, 387, 391, 392 Armstrong, William 317 Armstrong, Susan 317 Arnold, Marion 142, 298 Arnold, Pauline 96 Arnold, Richard -.70, 76, 193, 200, 204, 224, 282 Arnold, Robert 220, 290 Artin, Mr. 64 Arthur, Damon E. 318 Arthur, Julia Ann 273, 341 Ashby, Frank 290 Ashby, Grace G. 3 8, 3 50 Ashby, Martha 3 57 Asher, James 142, 322 Association of Women Students... 206, 207 Atkin, Robert 70, 89, 317 Atkinson, June M. 3 8 Atteberry, Delbert 282 Atz, Robert 293 Aukerman, James 89, 91, 229 Ault, Carl 38 Aungst, Betty 64 Austin, Raymond 91 Austin, Robert 310 Austin, Virginia B 187, 191, 225, 257, 276, 277, 335 Avery, James E. 282 Ax, Elaine 246, 247, 341 Azen, Samuel M. 70, 313 B Baatz, Wilmer H. 3 8 Bachman, Laura C 3 8, 66 Badell, Phillip Joab Badertscher, Jacob A. 26 Badger, Joe 38, 48, 250 Bagaloff, Costa 70 Bagby, Paul 193 Bailey, Gilbert P. 302 Bailey, Rosemary 349 Bailey, Ruth 64 Baillie, Charles 70, 88, 212, 305 Baker, Betty J. 341 Baker, Bonnie 277, 341 Baker, Jeanne 3 32 Baker, Marian 70, 90 Baker, Robert W 302 Baker, Warren E. 112 Baldridge, Catherine L. 38 Baldwin, Garza 187, 297 Baldwin, John 289 Balfour, Ellen Jane 331 Ball, Warren 142 Ballard, Norma J. 345 Band, 2 5 8 Bannister, Dan 294 Bannister, Earl F 70, 87, 294 Bannon, William 309 Banta Hugh 70 Bard, Paul F 248 Baringer, Joe W. 289 Barker, Clare W. 27 Barnes, Mary 332 Barnett, Dorotha Eloise.. 70, 87, 90, 332 Barnett, John C. 310 Barnhart, Eleanore L. 226 Barnhill, Charles ... 65, 70, 212, 302 Barr, Ben 228, 229, 302 Barr, Joan E. 187, 341 Barrett, Joseph 313 Barskin, Doovid B 313 Barter, Robert 399, 402 Bartley, Clemmer 2 8 5 Bartley, Edward .....25, 88, 305, 396 Bartling, Jeanice 3 3 1 Barton, Robert F. 142 Bash, Robert 314 Bassett, Dan 314, 367 Bassler, Helen E. 336 Batchelor, James 229 Bates, Betty A. 331 Batton, Donald 187, 220, 290 Batton, Robert 70, 89, 290 Bayless, Barbara 3 50 Baylor, Ann 331 Baylor, Frances 96, 331 Bays, Nova 96, 346 Beall, Barbara J. 35, 38, 52, 61, 203, 211 Beard, Victor R. 116 Beavans, Richard M. 62, 70, 80, 190, 191, 200, 208, 231 Beck, Billy 142 Beck, Merrill 89, 282 Beck, Roberta 90 Becker, Darrel 282 Becker, Henry 371 Beckman, John, Jr. 116, 293 Bedwell, Robert 367 Beer, Charlotte ....106, 108, 109, 357 Begdes, Mehmot 3 8 Beggs, Webb 239, 406 Begley, Joe 290 Bell, Donald .411 Beller, Raymond 301 Bender, Betty Ann -.38, 66, 237, 328 Benedetti, Bart 406 Bennett, Kenneth 38, 294 Benningfield, Mary 332 Bennington, J. B. 306 Benninghoff, Mary 96, 100, 273 Bens, F. Lee 27 Benson, Page 216, 286, 367 Benton, Ernestine 9, 3 5, 96 Bercaw, Berry W 305 Bereolos, George 96, 391, 392 Berger, Irving 112, 301 Berkey, Jonas M. 38 Berkey, Lucy 3 59 Berman, Lewis 3 8 Berman, Robert N. 313 Bcrndt, A. H. 25 Berndt, Rose-Ellen 70, 90, 3 57 Bernhardt, Robert 305 Berry, Francis 3 8 Best, Andrew 231 Best, Morris 321 Beta Gamma Sigma 86 Beta Theta Pi 286, 287 Beugnot, Jean F. 96 Bever, Vivian 360 Bianco, Louis 3 8, 318 447 INDEX Bicknell, Louise F. — 326 Bicknell, Marjorie 335 Biddle, Nancy W 341 Biddle, Ward C 19, 21 Bierhaus, William 293 Bierly, Ada 38 Biery, Virginia E. 3 8, 326 Billings, Dorothy Jean 331 Billings, Harry D 28 5 Billman, Wallace 70, 88 Bingham, Robert 321 Bir, Marilyn 335 Birch, Albert 237 Bishop, Cleo 38, 33 5 Bittner, W. S. 24 Black, C. J 24 Black, Joseph 310, 391 Black, Richard 313 Black, Robert S 317 Black, Winifred 331 Blair, Frances 96, 360 Blair, George 244 Blake, John H 28 5 Blakeslee, Margaret 332 Blankertz, Howard 70, 88, 411 Blickman, Sol 313, 406 Blieden, Milton 3 1 3 Blocker, Clyde E. 298 Bloom, Anne 360 Bloom, George 310, 391 Bloom, William 3 8, 310 Blue Key 212, 213 Blue, Merle 38, 76, 227, 229 Bluestein, Morris 301 Blum, Owen 64, 70 Board of Aeons 200, 201 Board of Standards -.„-210, 211, 285 Boaz, Robert 406 Bockstahler, Theodore E 227 Bockstege, Henry F. 290 Boehne, John W — 305 Boerger, Victor 38 Bogard, Bernard 70, 224, 285 Bogart, Felix 301 Bolinger, Raymond 89, 285 Bollum, Robert 70, 317 Bolson, Cecelia G. 38 Bolston, Rita 38 Bonsib, Joan .—345 Booher, Marcella 331 Booher, Craig E. 285 Booher, Gladys 38 Booher, Vinton 70, 294 Booker, Marjorie 96, 338 Bordner, Glenn W 310 Borneman, Harold A 314 Bosart, Robert _..._302 Bostick, John 285 Bosw ell, Jessie 38, 326 Boswell, John 293 Berry, Lillian G. .- - 29 Bottin, Robert 70, 88 Bottorff, Dorothy --349 Bottorff, Mary J 349 Boughman, Robert .70, 83, 89, 204, 212, 216, 309 Bourgholtzer, Francis C. 40, 62 Bowles, Richard .— 106, 109 Bowman, Betty 90, 231, 3 59 Bowman, Milo 27 Boxell, Paul .—40, 50, 5 8, 62, 200, 212, 227, 247, 293 Boyd, AHce C. 40, 273, 345 Boyd, Clarence E. 40 Boyd, Dorothy L. ......359 Boyd, Guy, Jr. 309 Boyer, Berniece 40 Boyer, Betty 3 32 Boyle, Beverly, Jr. 70, 232, 396 Bradley, David M. 367 Bradley, H. Robert 298 Brady, Miriam 40, 3 59 Brady, Thomas R., Jr 314 Bragalone, Alfred 367, 374 Brandyberry, Marcella 40, 23 8 Brann, Charles . 40 Bratton, Meredith 192 Bray, Charlotte 23 8, 360 Breimyer, Ruth A 70, 90, 359 Bretz, Vera 3 57 Bretz, W. Daniel 114, 271 Bridge, Hal L 229, 302 Briggs, James 302 Briley, Laura K 91 Brill, Roy 40, 313 Bringle, Ray D. 367, 370 Bringle, WiUiam 367 Brink, William J., Jr. ......40, 62, 190 Brinson, Martha 40 Briscoe, Herman 28 Bristow, Joseph 396 Britan, Willa Jo 3 57 Broertjes, Vernon H.... 399, 402, 403 Brogan, Jack 247, 371 Bromm, Edward 285 Brookbank, Wilma Jane 3 50 Brooks, Fred, Jr. ....3 8, 40, 5 8, 305 Brooks, Harry 302, 367, 370 Brooks, Sergeant 411 Broom, John J., Jr 106, 230 Broski 367 Brown, Agnes 367 Brown, Allen 286 Brown, Bernice 345 Brown, Elizabeth 40, 117, 341 Brown, Eugene W... 89, 81, 187, 282 Brown, Jack 40, 302 Brown, John 318 Brown, Josephine 23 8, 360 Brown, Lloyd 40 Brown, Oliver W. 30 Brown, Robert 227 Browne, Gus C 40, 314 Brownwell, Beryl . 220, 346 Brownstein, Julius 409 Broyles, Ralph 318 Brozski, John G 96, 404 Bruce, Nellie K. 95 Bruner, Leota 225, 349 Bruner, Ralph W. ... 293 Brunner, Clarance E. 391, 392 Bruns, Roy 317 Brunton, Martha Jane 33 5 Bryant, Wyle D. 70, 79, 290 Bucchianeri, Mike 374 Buck, A. Malcolm 70, 309 Buckley, Earl Ed. .....411 Buckner, George D. ....235, 310, 411 Buechele, Carolyn 57 Bulmer, Robert 282 Bumingham, Mary J. 238 Bunger, Len 248, 310 Bunger, Martha J. 326 Bungert, William C 23 5, 406 Burch, Robert 70 Burge, Phyllis L. 345 Burk, Barbara J. 33 5 Burke, Margaret 96, 3 59 Burket, Kathryn 360 Burkhart, Anna Louise 70, 326 Burkholder, Virginia 341 Burke, Robert E. 28 Burleigh, Sybil L. 345 Burnam, Raymond, Jr. 70 Burnett, Darrell H. 396 Burns, Jean 64 Burns, John G. 40 Burns, Samuel Lt. 28 Burris, Betty 96, 3 50 Burton, Helen 108, 226, 331 Busby, Dorothy 40, 3 36 Bushong, John H. 142 Buskirk, Darlene E 106, 109, 225, 342 Butler, James P. 96 Butler, Roxie C. 96 Butt, Julia 338 Buzan, Eleanor E. 106 Byers, John 297 Byers, John G. 293 Byers, Stella 349 Byrd, Thomas 317 Cain, WiUiam R. 314 Call, John 289 Call, Dean J 302 Calnon, Jane 273, 277, 350 Calpha, Elizabeth 40, 50, 331 Campbell, Betty Jane 226, 335 Campbell, Kathryn E. 142 Campbell, Mildred J. 40, 46 Campbell, Virginia ...354, 359 Canvin, John 231 Caplin, Ellen 70 Capp, Fred 314 Carlson, Loretta 106 Carmichael, Billy 70, 88, 314 Carr, Marjorie L. 341 Carraway, Beverly 116, 360 Carriger, Robert 70, 89, 91 Carroll, J. Merritt 229 Carson, Mary ..-187, 22 5, 277, 33 5 Carter, Henry H. 29 Carter, Pauline E. -40 Carter, Roy 96 Carter, Ruth 238 Cartwright, Pearle 117, 350 Cartwright, Winifred 40, 56, 66 Case, Anna 64, 342 Casey, Ann 326 Cash, Robert 309 Cathcart, Thomas 286 Caton, Marguerite .106, 109 Catt, Paul 302 Cauble, Martha 345 Cavanaugh, R. E. 175 Cederholm, Bernard, Jr. 40 Chadwick, Rex 317 448 INDEX Chaillaux, Pierre 318 Chaille, Jessie 40 Chalfant, Elsie 331 Chamberlain, Dorothy 40, 3 59 Chambers, Wilma 40, 332 Chamness, Ivy 2 5 Charlotte, Anne 3 54 Charlton, George D. 40 Charpie, Elbert D. 40, 64 Charters, David W. 70 Chastain, Harold C 72, 91 Chatten, Betty 92, 246 Chattin, Robert N ....220, 227, 285 Cheadle, Carl 28 5 Cherry, Catherine E...-92, 117, 207, 360 Chenoweth, Harry 72, 309 Cherry, William 318 Chester, Roger H. 314 Chestney, Don R. 96 Chi Gamma 92 Chi Omega 3 32, 333 Chickering, Roberts Chiddister, Daniel 91, 293, 411 Childress, Blanche 72, 90 Chitwood, Beatrice 24 Chowning, Robert 294 Chrisney, John .72, 91 Christensen, Carol - 31 Christiansen, Clyde 302 Chumley, Eloise 414 Cierzniak, Margaret T. 22 5, 342 Cinkoske, Bernard F 89, 91, 219, 306 Clapp, Mary Kathleen 106 Clark, James B 96 Clawson, Juanita 336 Clayton, Eugene 72 Clayton, Hugh 310, 404 Clerkin, John 89, 317 Clevenger, Zora S. 24 Clevinger, William G 227 Clifford, Anne 3 54 Clifford, Jane ......341 Clifton, Russell 385, 391 Cloetingh, Phyllis J. 33 5 Closser, Jean D. 332 Clunie, Charles 298 Clunie, William 142 Coan, Max B. 23 5, 282 Coats, Charles 109, 282 Coats, Randolph 271 Cochran, Roy 396, 399 Coffee, James 306 Coffin, Alice 106, 109 Cogshall, W. A. 31, 204 Cohn, Stewart Harrison 297 Cole, Anne Louise 266, 341 Cole, Joyce Eva 72, 76, 90 Cole, Kate 345 Coleman, Dale Martin 72 Coleman, Floyd Butler 40 Coleman, Melba E. 106 Colle, Ruth Leona 336 Collette, William R. 64, 322 Collegiate Chamber of Commerce ...87 Collier, Barbara Kathleen ... 90, 3 57 Collier, Eileen Constance 237 Collins, John W. 282 Collins, Muriel Eileen -._ ....359 Combs, Leslie L, Jr 72, 286 Combs, Marian L. : 332 Congleton, Barbara Jane 40, 3 59 Conklin, Edmund H. 40 Conklin, Edward S. 26, 305 Conn Louis 294 Conner, Robert M 88, 91 Conrad, Jean Maxine 3 57 Conrad, Suzanna Louise 3 50 Cook, Carmen Camille ...40, 54, 114, 219, 331 Cook, Estel Vorhees 96 Cook, Hal B 72, 294 Cook, William 286 Cookson, Ruth E. 3 50 Cookson, Thomas A. 2 5 Coolman, Paul J. 314 Coombs, Logan L. 293 Cooper, Cathryn Lee 33 5 Cooper, Charlotte Ruth 345 Cooper, Earl L. 40, 286 Cooper, Gilbert F. 89, 314, 366 Cooper, PhinpS.-...8 8, 212, 275, 310, 406 Corbin, Harold V. 297 Cormican, Herbert L. 142, 293 Corriden, John M 314, 391, 392 Corwin, Betty J. 226 Cosmopolitan Club 237 Cossman, Max 398 Cotton, Barbara Jean 360 Couch, William H. 23 5 Cougias, Genevieve 40, 277 Coultas, Mary Lee 96, 3 57 Covey, John L. .... 72, 232, 235, 317 Cowan, Marianne Adelle -42, 242, 250 Cox, Carol E. 72 Cox, James F. 72, 232, 318 Cox, Keith W 64, 88, 227, 228, 235 Cox, Millie Margaret 33 5 Crabb, Louise Eleanor 42, 3 59 Craddock, Wanda Gwen 326 Craft, Edward O 112, 116 Craig, Alexander F. 144 Crag, Emerson C. 28 5 Craig, Eva Jean 342 Craig, Reuben A. 310 Crame, Martha 359 Cramer, Herbert L. 309 Crane, Charles K. 42 Cravens, Thomas C, Jr 72, 212, 286, 412 Cravens, William G. 72 Crawford, Anna Katherine 42 Crawford, John Alexander 144 Criley, Patricia 331 Cromer, Harold 318 Crook, Vera Christine 360 Crosby, Hobart E. 404 Crossland, Frank E., Jr. 28 5 Crow, Marjorie Roush 72, 90 Cull, Betty Margaret 345 Culmann, Louis C. 89, 91, 282 Cumings, Edgar R. 26 Cummins, William S. 290 Cunningham, Cecil R. 89, 286 Curdes, Joan Jane 345 Curl, Robert F. 290 Curran, David L. 72 Curry, Charles Garret 72 Curry, Roger 286 Curtin, John Esty 42, 88 Curtis, Elnora Darwood 223 Cusack, Robert H. 293 Custin, John E. 306 Cutler, Leslie, Jr. 64, 72 Cutsinger, Roscoe C 28 5 Cygan, Theresa M. -. 96 D Dag, Velit Mehmet 42, 237 Dailey, Martha Jeanne 336 Dale, Edythe Elisabeth .96 DaLeure, May Vasiliki 72, 90, 237, 359 Dallie, Donald F 306 Dancy, John 72, 237 Dane, Hal 248 Daniels, Charles G. 403 Daniels, David Scott 91, 227 Daniels, Martha Marie 96 Danielson, Donald C. .314, 391, 392 Dann, Donald H. 313 Dannacher, William D 142, 318, 404 Davidson, Bernard 67, 142, 404 Davis, Carolyn 187, 342 Davis, Carolyn Jeanette 349 Davis, George P., Jr 290 Davis, Hellen Dagmar 64 Davis, Joseph P 285 Davis, Marie Hixon 3 36 Davis, Paul Jay 286 Davis, Richard M 220, 309, 411 Davis, Roland C. 28 Davis, Thelma R. 328 Davis, Virginia Anne 3 50 Davisson, Zanna 92, 3 54 Dawson, Dorothy Dee 96, 342 Dawson, Elizabeth Anne 223, 225, 338 Day, Harold K. 42 Day, Martha Alice 332 Day, Mary E 23 8 Day, William F. 232, 282 Days, Olivia Elizabeth 3 32 Deal, George E. 75 Deal, Joe M. 72, 91, 231, 232 Dec, Stanley 232 Deckard, Paul A 96 Decker, Bruce E 91, 227, 322 Decker, Wendell D 322 Dee, Bernadine Rose 3 53 Detter, Lew .... 88 DeForest, Adele Gustava 42 DeFries, John, Jr 142, 144, 286 DeLawter, Hilbert H. 142 Delta Delta Delta 334, 33 5 Delta Gamma 3 36, 3 37 Delta Tau Delta 290, 291 Delta Epsilon 292, 293 Delta Zeta 3 3 8, 3 39 Delta Sigma Pi 88 Delta Chi 288, 289 Dennie, Mary Lou 326 Dennis, Harry M. 193 449 INDEX Denny, Robert O 212, 216, 309, 396 DePrez, Patricia Wray 341 Derby, Richard E. 322 Der Deutsche Verein 67 DeSchipper, John M. 305 DeVine, Paul J 321 DeVol, Eleanor F. 360 Devol, James T 298 Dewberry, Jack J. 72, 285 Dewberry, Joe F. 285 Diamond, Bernard 404 Dice, Jeanette 40, 42, 61, 192, 203, 212, 335 Dickerson, Betty Jeanne 207, 226, 350 Dickerson, Margaret 96 Dickey, Herbert M. 72 Dickhaut, Olivia Mary_---96, 238, 360 Dickman, Florence Joan 42, 3 50 Dickson, Jean CoUings 117, 187 Dieter, Herman M 87, 187, 224, 313 Diem, Alfred H., Jr 306 Dieterich, Alvah M 72, 230 Dieterle, D. Lyle 26 Dilger, Ellen Jean 96 Diller, Aubrey 28 Dilley, Esther Gayle 42 Dillon, Lowell I 98 Dilts, James A., Jr. 286 Diness, Loretta Beverly 360 Ditzler, Betty J. 326 Dix, Mary Helen 328 Dixon, Dorothy D. 98 Dixon, Ruth Aldridge 226 Donham, WUliam L 142 Donnelly, Joseph F. 42 Donoghue, Roger L 237 Dooley, Donald W 23 5 Doolittle, Douglas E. 391 Doran, Harriet Catherine 42, 3 59 Dorsey, Ralph Crowe 28 5, 3 82 Dorton, Lorraine Arlene 338 Dorton, Robert O 396 Douglas, Anne Elizabeth 42, 61, 3 54 Douglass, WilUam B. 112 Dovey, Elaine McKenzie 42, 3 50 Downey, Richard M 42 Downey, Robert F. 305 Doxtator, Robert J. — 249 Doyle, Eileen Mary 332 Doyle, John J 72 Dragons Head 208, 209 Drain Dan T. 224, 321, 391 Drevenak, Louis J. 72, 290 Drickey, Richard A. 72, 89 DriscoU, Margaret Ann 345 Driver, Hal Victor 282 Dro, Robert C. - 295, 382, 387, 391, 392 Drum, Virginia Kathleen 42, 359 Dudas, Milan A 322 Duke, Robert L. 309 Dukes, Joseph E 318 Dukes, Maxine 360 Dumke, Ray Michael. _ 317, 367, 370 Dumke, Ray Michael 17, 367, 370 Duncan, Betty Lou —.335 Duncan, Thomas 293 Dunham, Richard B. 142 Dunkinson, Charles E. 321 Dunn, Mary Maxine 98, 238 Dunn, Ray Elmer 321 Dunten, Shirley Ellyn 341 Durham, Katherine Frost 336 Dutton, Clarence B., Jr 112, 116 Dutton, Richard K. 310, 409 Duval, James 220 Dwyer, Janet 42, 346 Dye, Esther Monroe 42, 336 E Earl, Richard J. 289 Eason, Jack Trafford 42, 88, 302 Eason, John C. 235 Eaton, Merrill V 285 Ebbinghouse, Ernest R. 314 Ebel, Albert Carl 98 Eck, Millard E. 232 Eckert, Roberta Cathryn 359 Edmondson, C. E. 200 Education Club 103 Edmondson, C. E. 22 Edwards, Lois W. 42 Edwards, Ruthe Alma 64 Egan, Maurice Michael 318 Eggemeyer, Bette 56 Egger, Dorothy Jane 360 Eggers, Melvin A. 42, 65 Eggers, Norman E. 367 Eggman, Roy J. 396 Egnatz, Nicholas, Jr. 42 Ehrenmann, William Corley 42 Eifler, Robert, K. 88, 282 Eisinger Roger W. 220 Eldrldge, Gail E 142, 144, 290 Elkins, Emerson K. 56 Elkins, June L. 326 Ellenwood, James A. 321, 367 Ellerbrush, Ruth Virginia 360 Elliott, Frank R. 24 Elliott, Howard R. 293 Elliott, Robert T. 314 Ellis, Richard 309 Ellis, Laura Jane 42 Ellis, Nancy Olive 187, 335 Ellison, Robert Dale 293 Ellwanger, Richard Norris 302 Elmore, Robert L. 310 Eisner, Mary Anette 187, 350 Elwell, Thomas S. 286 Emahiser, Mary R. 357 Endicott, Don R. 282 Endres, Rebecca 345 Engelman, George T. 248, 321 England, Virginia June 326 Englehart, Gordon Kerfoot 290 Elglehart, Otto T., Jr. 290 Enoch, June Eileen 326 Epstein, Sylvia Ann 3 53 Erdmann, John A 220, 227, 293 Erdmann, Robert E 302 Eschbach, Jesse E., II 286, 248 Escott, Ivan, Jr. 293, 391 Esden, Jean 3 50 Eshleman, Virginia Lee ..42, 360 Ettl, Edward J. 293 Euclidean Circle 64 Evans, Audrey E. 42 Evans, Floyd W. 72 Evans, Francine 42 Evans, Frank G. 42 Evans, Alfred 28 Ewbank, Gerald H. 116 Ewing, Mary Suzanne 336 Ewing, Robert E. 64 Fairchild, Doris Jean 106, 109, 360 Fairchild, Jack C. 88, 227, 249, 293 Falber, Ben 321 Fargo, Margaret Therese 211, 226, 248, 366 Faris, Phyllis Ruth 332 Farlow, James J. 72 Farquharson, Arthur H. 293 Farquharson, Donald S. ...88, 91, 293 Farr, James C. 142 Farrington, Thelma Irene 246, 342 Farris, John J. 289 Faucett, Ralph E. 321 Fausch, James C 72, 216, 290 Fawcett, Jean Eloise 345 Fechter, Mahlon 42 Fedler, Clara 414 Feeger, Charles A. .23 5, 309 Fehr, Louis A. „ 313 Feiertag, Richard B. 314, 411 Feigel, Theran DeWitt 406 Feighner, John Richard 220, 305, 411 Feinman, Freda Rochelle 42 Feltus, Paul 204 Fenn, Bert R. 72, 230, 314 Fenters, Keith C 297 Ferguson, Cecil B. 290, 391 Ferguson, Charles F. 72, 91 Ferguson, Mary Lou 326 Ferguson, William B. 144 Fernandes, Wilbur E. 290 Ferrey, Edgar E 187, 310 Ferrier, G. Mavaline 90, 360 Ferris, Ruth Heyl 72, 79, 87, 90 Fichman, Jeanette Lillian -112, 22 5, 323 Fiegenschuh, Maurene _— 336 Field, Elizabeth Anne 341 Fields, Charlotte Jane._..58, 238, 336 Fields, Sadie Akin 98 FindHng, WiUard H. —..72, 84, 200, 208, 212, 224, 227, 310, 366 Fine, Shirley Winifred 3 53 Finke, Marjorie Marie 331 Finkelstein, Jerome 227 Finkle, Louis 313 Finney, Jack 112, 116, 302 Firth, Betty Jean 42, 61, 219 Firth, Robert 42, 293, 398 Fisback, Faith Mary 357 Fisch, Charles 301 Fischre, James W. 318 Fish, James C. 297 Fisher, L. L 25 Fisher, Ralph Edwin 318 450 INDEX Fisher, Theresa H 360 Fisher, William L. ._„ .._.187, 286 FitzGibbon, William C, Jr. ...62, 72, 232, 318 Fitzpatrick, Joseph L. 196 Fitzpatrick, William C. 42 Flaningam, John T. .....98, 310, 412 Fleehart, A. Clark 286 Fleming, Charlotte Louise 341 Fleming, John L. 191 Fletcher, James C, Jr 305 Fletcher, Herndon 74, 321 Flory, Virginia Mary 187, 336 Flying Club 236 Flynn, Edmund J. 42 Foellinger, Robert J. 321 Fogg, Susanne ( , 98, 256, 277, 331 Ford, Annette 336 Ford, Robert 294 Ford, Jack P. 117, 293 Foreman, Warren E. 285 Forest Hall 117 Forrest, Dorothy Berenice 332 Fortner, Otis W. 44 Foss, Betty Marie 248, 249 Foster, Dean 294 Foster, Harry W. ......282 Foster, John E. 305 Foster, L. Owen 30 Foster, Phylhs 341 Fountain, Mary Louise 226 Fournier, Marilyn 360 Fowble, Edward L. 294 Fowler, Maida Belle 349 Fowler, Richard K. 74, 302 Fowler, Thomas C. 318 Fox, Jack W 282 Fox, John W. 229, 309 Fox, William 309 Foxworthy, Donald T. 227 Fraker, Clayton L. 297 France, Richard B. 89 Francis, Chester E 382, 391, 392 Frank, Lois J. 3 50 Frank, Robert E. 186, 317 Franklin, J. A. 24 Franzen, Carl G. F. 27 Eraser, Barbara Catherine 336 Eraser, Elizabeth Wiltse 226, 336 Frazier, John R. 23 5, 302 Free, Stephen A. 44, 302 Free, Wade H., Jr. 112, 309 Freed, Carl A. 142, 297 Freed, John E., Jr. 310 Freeland, Lowell P. 62, 366 Freeman, Elizabeth May 44 French, H. Wymond 3 1 French, Patria Marchand 335 Freund, Frederick H. 74 Frey, William N. 302, 382, 385 Freyn, Alma Louise 326 Frick, Alice Mercia 44 Fries, Mary Ellen 34j Frommer, Justin 3I3 Fry, Rosmary 326 Fryar, Nona 272 Fudge, Beatrice Ann 33 j Fuelber, Ann 35O Fuhrer, Ann 44, 56, 345 Fulton, Clyde E. 74, 91 Funk, J. Hugh 204, 23 5, 275 Furr, Beverly CorneHa 74 Fuzy, Grace Theresa 23 8 Gaebe, Philip A. 3 1 Gaff, Jane 36 Gahm, Walter D. 367, 372 Gale, Barbara LiUian 46, 336 Gallmeyer, Marybelle 326 Galloway, Jesse J. 28 Ganger, Jack El 406 Gans, Frank A. 305 Ganser, Robert W. 301 Ganstine, Percy R 91, 228 Garcia, Angel Pedro 237 Gard, James E. 289 Garderwine, Forrest K. 62 Gardner, Dean K. 310 Gardner, George 7 Gardner Grace Emily 345 Gardner, Joe D. 396 Gardner, Ned E. 109 Garrison, Joe W. 44 Garwood, Alice 414 Gary, Margaret Lucille 225, 328 Gasser, Betty Katherine 98 Gast, Martha Jane 332 Gaston, Robert A. 285 Gates, Jerry A. 336 Gates, Margaret Marian 3 57 Gates, Robert E. 220, 227, 310 Gaunt, Burmond J. 74, 310 Gavitt, B. C. 111 Gelman, Lemar 30 1 Geiger, Beatrice (,(, Gensburg, Leroy I 74, 301 Gontil, Dale A. 74, 391, 392 Gentry, Jamie E. 349 Gerber, Joe 271 Gerding, WiUiam J 142 Germer, Robert F. 74 Gerner, Robert R. 44, 289 Gerstenhaber, Sidney D. 301 Gery, Helen F 326 Gibson, Audrey Felice 350 Gibson, Barbara Langworth 3 50 Gibson, Charles T. 74, 282 Giese, Reed A. 294 Gifford, Jeanne 187, 335 Gill, Bernard P. 44 298 Gill, Daniel F. 404 Gill, Howard R. 321 Gill, Phyllis Lorraine 226 Gill, Robert 91 Gillespie, Jane 341 Gilliam, Tommy R. 192 289 Gilliatt, Paul T. ' 235 Gillick, William, Jr. ZZ. AA Gilmore, Russell A., Jr 290 Giovanini, Georgeanna 91, 349 Glassner, Myron S.... 74, 84, 313, 398 Glezar, Irving M. 313 Glenn, Jean 44 Click, Eugene Biccard 301 Glick, Helen Marjorie 33 8 Glidewell, Marvin E. 44 Glogas, Bernard H. 313 Glover, James J. 293 Glover, Joseph E. 290 Gnagy, George K. 106 Godsey, Verna Jane 237 Goebel, Ruth Rosemary -.44, 282, 336 Goffinet, Elsby B. 74 Gogley, John C. 44 Gddenberg, Joseph 247 Goldberg, Hilton S. 301 Goldstein, Robert Ruben 313 Goll, Frank Thomas 285 Gonzalez, Jose A. 237 Goodman, Edward H. 74, 313 Goodwell, Kenneth A 74 Gordon, Frederick E. 391 Gorrell, Janet J. 44, 61, 341 Gosch, Charles Gene 44, 191 Goss, Barbara Jeanne 341 Goss, Mary Ellen 98 Graber, Gersham Gale 116 Graeff, Ophelia Catherine 98 Graessle, George Granville 302 Graf, Dorothy Mae 90, 357 Graf, George E. 98 Graham, Hester Louise 207, 226 Grandstaff, Alice Jeanette 328 Grant, Helen Eileen 414 Grant, Peter McLane, Jr 98, 409 Graves, Earl Edwin 98 Graves, Elbert D. 74, 232, 23 5 Graves, Jack F. 297 Graves, Mary E. 90, 91, 326 Graves, Parker 285 Gray, Shirley 44, 360 Gray, David Campbell 229, 309 Gray, Mark Wm. 112, 116 Gray, Sarah Margaret 44, 61, 212, 225, 345 Grayson, Mary Ellen 360 Green, Alfred 74, 91 Green, Mary 74, 3J9 Green, Mary Katherine 74, 3 57 Greenwood, Lois Marie 354 Greeson, Maurice R. 74 Gregory, Frank L. 242, 310 Gregory, Preston 286 Gregory, William C. 314 Greiling, WiHiam R., Jr 293 Gridley, James O. 318, 385, 382 Griesel, Betty Jane 360 Griffin, Mary EUzabeth 90 Griff is, Josephine 341 Griffith, Alice Betty 357 Griffith, Frances Ellogene 90, 331 Griffith, Fred R. 192 Grimm, Arthur J. 74 Grimsley, Franklin S., Jr 290 Grosbach, Wallace H 112, 116 Grunberg, Whitney 3 1 3 Grundy, Margaret E. 335 Grunfeld, Rudolph 30 1 Gusman, Sarah Mildred 98, 328 Guth, Richard L. 294 Gutowsky, Herbert S. 44 H Haak, Robert 313 Haas, George H., Jr 297 451 INDEX Habich, Mary Alice 44, 52 Hacker, Charles 391, 392 Hackney, Marianne Rose 360 Hale, Will T. 27 Hale, William Clock 317 Haley, Emmett R. 44 Hall, Betty Ellen 64 Hall, Ford P. 28 Hall, Lucilla Jane 46, 242, 3 59 Hall, Margaret Esther 106, 335 Hall, Nelson 302 Hall, Robert N. 314 Hall, Robert S. 285 Hamersly, Janet Isabelle . _ 87, 90, 91, 350 Hamilton, Betty 44, 336 Hamilton, Margaret Anne 3 54 Han, Robert D. 74 Hancock, David W 74, 290 Handley, Stanley D. -.._._ 293 Handy, Ellsworth W. 74 Hanley, Marshall E. 65, 248 Hannapel, Shirley Martha 3 8, 44, 336 Hansen, Robert M 367, 391 Hanson, Betty J 5 8, 215, 345 Hanson, Phyllis A. 338 Harbaugh, Jewell Gray 74 Harding, Myron R. 367 Harmeier, Robert Lewis 44 Harmon, Foster 244 Harmon, Raymond O 44, 289 Harmon, Paul M. 30 Harold, Poock 366 Harpster, Venitia Ellen 331 Harrell, Charles E. 24 Harrell, Paul 391 Harrell, Russell E. 285 Harris, Archie H., Jr 367, 371, 396, 399 Harris, Betty Jean 207, 331 Harris, Mary Kathryn 349 Harrison, Allen _._.-74, 80, 212, 285 Harrison, Byron N. 142 Harrison, Charles F -74, 88, 91 Harrison, Maribeth — 345 Harrold, Suzanne 345 Harsh, Betty Clare 211, 219, 335 Harsh, Daniel S. 322 Hart, Arthur L. 74 Hart, Marjorie F. 335 Harting, Julia Ann 74, 326 Harting, William F 142 Hartman, Mary Jean 44, 64 Harwood, Jean A. 314 Hasbrook, Thomas C. 297 Haseman, Frances Charlotte 44 Haskell, Roberta Connell 74, 215, 223, 350 Haskett, Richard C 44, 58, 65, 248, 305 Hasler, Norman B. 227, 285 Hassenmiller, Marshall G 44 Hastings, Mary Margaret 98, 238 Hatcher, Dorothy Curtis 346 Hatfield, Benjamin Franklin 290 Hatfield, Jack J. _.. 142, 290 Hatfield, John R. 290 Hathaway, Dorothy G 3 54 Haugh, Robert Cyril 293 Hauschild, William E.„_ 74, 88, 216, 297 Hauselmire, Helen 90, 331 Hawkins, Howard Robert 116 Hay, Horace H 44, 321 Hayes, E. C. 366, 398 Haynie, Gilmore S. 411 Haynie, Kenneth G. 411 Hays, Sara Jean 350 Hays, Walter Patrick, Jr 23 5 Hazel, John G. 321 Healy, Barbara Helen ...74, 84, 272, 345 Hedge, Charles L 74, 88, 317 Hedges, Edgar L 396, 397, 402, 403 Heidenreich, Ma rjorie Lucille 90, 215, 272, 336 Heighway, G. F. 24, 204 Heimroth, Harold E. 285 Heine, Victor 98 Heine, Pauline T. 237 Held, Richard W 298 Helfrich, Edward H. 74, 297 Heller, Virginia Evelyn-...4 8, ( ( , 215, 336 Helman, Betty Belle . 3 53 Helmen, Normabelle 44 Helvie, Mariangeneen 341 Hemmer, Albert B. 285 Hemmer, Louise A. 90, 360 Henderson, Arvin T. 310 Henderson, John M. 293 Henderson, William H. 293 Hendricks, Jules Ord 310 Hendricks, Mary E...91, 92, 226, 345 Hendricks, Rosemary 87, 92, 345 Hendrickson, Harry H. 317 Henley, James W. 227, 286 Hennel, Cora B. 27, 64 Hennessee, Philip C. 310 Henry, Doris 350 Hensler, Elizabeth B. 44 Herbert, Edward C. .. .298, 367, 370 Hercamp, Mary Frances 44, 207 Herd, Joseph Gates 228 Herd, Richard M 44, 228, 229, 302 Herrmann, Joyce R. 229 Herrmann, Walao J 74, 391 Herrold, Don W. 44 Herron, Auburn Walker 367 Hershberger, George 74, 91 Hershman, Jane 46 Hertenstein, Paul L. -318 Hertz, Donald E. 322 Hess, Frederick F. 289 Hester, Laura B 46, 61, 3 59 Hetherington, John A. 142, 305 Hewes, Robert L — 74 Hiatt, June Lucile 46 Hibbard, Robert C 314 Hickam, Elliott .309 Hicks, John W 25 Hiestand, Sid. 382 Higbee, Betty -.77, 80, 225, 350 Higginbotham, Nell Jane 349 Higginbotham, Russell B. .367, 371 Hildebrand, Edward H... 76, 91, 235, 317 Hilgenberg, Harry J. __. 284 Hilgenberg, Joseph C 285 Hilkert, C. Kay 297 Hill, John David 396 Hill, John McMurry - -..30 Hill, Luana Irene 357 Hill, Margaret Frances 33 8 Hill, Maurice Joseph __.187, 220, 227, 289 Hill, Nat U. 87, 309 Hiller, Rembrandt C, Jr 7(,, 83, 88, 204, 212, 224, 229, 286, 406 Hilliard, Patricia 98, 23 8 Hillis, Jay H. 298 Himebaugh, Gilbert J. 142 Himmelsbach, Gerard R 192, 289 Hinchman, Gene F. 46 Hindman, Thomas M. 297, 411 Hinds, Fletcher W. 98 Hinds, Sherwood, Jr 46, 193 Hines, Helen Lucille 46, 3 54 Hinton, Ruth Elizabeth 238 Hiott, Lloyd Ambrose 321 Hirschberg, Robert L. 301 Hitch, Virginia Elizabeth 326 Hockema, Max Wseley 310 Hodges, Malcolm M. 98 Hodgin, Johnnie Lucile 46 Hodnette, L. P. 232, 411 Hod:on, Richard M. 310, 406 Hoehne, Victor Paul 98 Hockema, Max Wesley 310 Hoelocker, Relda A. 33 5 Hoffman, Everett G 305, 382, 391, 392 Hoffman, Robert M. 314 Hoffzimmer, Ernest 26 Hogan, Robert L. 76 Hogue, Helen Elizabeth 98 Hohe, John William 294 Hoke, Robert L 396, 399 Holdcraft, John Andrew 298 Holland, Betty Irene 3 53 Holland Charles 25 Hollingsworth, Charles E 46 Holman, Rosalie L. 46, 326 Holmes, Claude D., Jr. 23, 317 Holmes, Jack F. 293 Helsinger, Mary Marie.-..3 5, 46, 56, 61, 192, 196, 207 Holt, Frank A. 290 Holthouse, Daniel C. 314 Homan, Marjorie F 335 Homecoming 259, 260 Hood, Robert Dale 7(, Hooge, Anne Loretta 357 Hooke, Chloe 341 Hoover, Ann 46, 3 50 Hoover, Frank L 310 Hoover, J. Guy 142, 144, 302 Hoover, Mary Elizabeth 98, 332 Hopewell, Jean 46, 359 Hopman, Anne Boyer ...98, 203, 207, 223, 350 Horack, Frank E., Jr 29 452 INDEX Horan, William E. 144 Horn, Marcelle Juanita.. -76, 90, 360 Home, Louie May 46, 341 Horowitz, Mildred Vivian 353 Herton, John Ryder 220, 317 Horton, Robert 310, 409 Horton, William E. 224, 314 Horvath, John G. 322 Hostetter, Samuel 289 Houghton, John W. 305, 406 Houghton, William Hileary Id Hougland, Helen Kramer 46, 3 54 House, Betty Von 360 House, Floyd H., Jr 282 Houser, Harold B. 227 Howe, Sergeant 411 Hoy, Glen W. 7(, Hruskovick, Beatrice M. 357 Huber, Gladys R. 335 Huber, Robert 249 Huckleberry, Don G. 382, 3 85 Hudson, Ruth Jane 3 3 8 Huff, Harry E 290 Huff, James B. 7( , 230, 286 Huff, William P. 282 Huffman, Carrie J. 3 59 Huffman, Marvin ___76, 83, 208, 382 Huffman, Maurine H. 216, 286 Huffstetter, Doris L 33 5, 272 Hughes, Helen M. 331 Hughes, Madonna M 98, 23 8 Hulett, Robert L. 297 Hull, Nancy Margaret 331 Humphreys, Helen L. 336 Humrichouser, Harry M. 309 Hundley, Donald Frank 391, 392 Hunt, Mary B 46, 58, 65, 203, 207, 215, 225 Hunt, Robert W. 322 Hunter, Glenna D. 33 5 Hunter, Richard N. 305, 406 Hunter, William H. 28 5 Hursh, Harold J 391 Hurst, Clara Louise 46, 61, 346 Hurst, Constance Imogene 345 Hurst, Harold L 369 Huse, William M. 297 Hutchison, Richard A. 290, 366 Hutton, Edward L.-_.-35, 65, 70, 76, 87, 200, 204, 208, 212, 216, 310 Hutton, Louis 290 Hyde, Mary Ann 46 Hyde, Sam 404 Hyde, William J. 76, 88 Hylton, Delmer P 89, 322 Hyndman, James H. 46 Ilg, Paul F. 302 Imel, Caroline Louise 46, 52, 203, 219, 223, 350 Independent Student Association . .231 Ingleman, Raymond Dwight 7( Ingram, Virgil, Junior 7() Inman, Garnett 404 Inskeep, Jean Mabel 46, 22 5, 346 Intrafraternity Council 224 Iota Sigma Pi 66 lozzo Salvator F. 306 Irle, Marcile Ann 223, 346 Irwin Elizabeth 46, 3 57 Irwin, Glenn W., Jr. 28 5 Isaacs, Vivian 100, 109, 331 Isenhour, Roger Clair 142 Ivan, Emily Ann 46 Jack Robert P. 7(, Jackson, Ann 341 Jackson, Barbara 360 Jacobs, Melvan M. 112,313 Jacobson, Carl A 46, 310, 406 Jaenicke, Thomas J. 76, 310 Jakush, Edward A. 76, 406 James, Ernest K. 290 James, Miriam R. 191 Jankowitz, Albin A. 46 Janzaruk, John D 98, 216, 293, 367, 371 Jarnecke, Robert H 76, 11,1, 235 Jay, John 88, 204, 212, 228, 231 Jeanes, Charlotte A. 219 Jellema, W. Harry 29, 40 Jenkins, Daniel Lewis 297 Jenkins, Joseph K. 297 Jenkins, Marcelleous 396 Jennings, James Earl 290 Jennings, William P 76, 88, 297 Jester, Jack D. 285 Jewett, Jim S 142, 294 Jewett, Tom A. 294 Johnk, Mary Margaret 46 Johnson, Barbara Louise 277, 3 50 Johnson, Betsy Virginia -46, 48, 341 Johnson, Carolyn Charlotte 332 Johnson, Charles E. 46, 192 Johnson, Earl W. 116 Johnson, Grant C. 142 Johnson John 293 Johnson, Jean Margaret 3 50 Johnson, Lewis Cameron 98 Johnson, Lillian Belle 23 8 Johnson, Marian Lucille 46, 225, 338 Johnson, Mercedes Ella 46 Johnson, Nelda Maude 223, 357 Johnson, Robert E 58, 62, 212, 247, 293 Johnson, Robert H. 314 Johnson, Robert L. 228, 294 Johnson, Roberta M. 46, 341 Johnson, Vivian Dolores 3 38 Johnston, Alan 46 Johnston, Edward V. 290 Johnston, Margaret Anne 44, 46, 67, 336 Jones, Adelaide Pauline 54, 331 Jones, Antrim H. 46 Jones, Marceille 328 Jones, Rachel Ellen 90, 3 57 Jones, Ralph H. 305 Jones, Richard S. 321 Jones, Russell L. 28 Jordan, Denver C. R. 76 Jordan, Harold W. 24 Jordan James H. 322 Joyce, Joseph P. 76 Judd, Vara 3 50 Judy, Jane 75, 76, 90, 3 59 Jurkiewicz, Walter Stephen... 367, 373 Kaiser, Shelton 98 Kalb, Robert D. 28 Kale, Jack Stover 112 Kamm, Wayne 285 Kane, Campbell G 302, 396, 399, 402 Kane, Leo Martin 76, 91, 318 Kantor, Jacob R. 30 Kaplan, Bernice 46 Kaplan, Nathan 34, 44, 46, 62, 190, 200, 208, 212 Kappa Delta Theta 340, 341 Kappa Delta 342, 343 Kappa Delta Rho 294, 298 Kappa Kappa Gamma 344, 345 Kappa Sigma 296, 297 Kappa Kappa Psi 230 Karges, Catherine Warner 345 Kattany, Edward C. 142 Katterhenry, James L. 76, 310 Katterhenry, John W. 286 Katterhenry, Marjorie June 360 Katterjohn, M. Doris 76, 349 Katz, Arthur M. 301 Katz, Norma 76, 90, 353 Kaufman, Bernard 301, 404 Keane, Rosemary E. 332 Keck, Carleton A. 142 Keck, William H 212, 216, 305, 391 Keelty, Martha Ellen 332 Kegley, Nancy Jane 336 Keh, Sheo Ming 48 Keisler, Paul Clifford 76 Keller, Joseph H. 247, 314 Keller, William P. 314 Kellogg, Winthrop 3 1 Kelly, William M. 144 Kem, Barbara Ann 3 59 Kemp, Robert E. 290 Kempf, George L. 309, 406 Kendall, Robert McDonald 305 Kennedy, David J 191, 293 Kennedy, Ellen June 331 Kennedy, John I. 302 Kensler, Marjorie 92, 3 57 Kern, Ernest L. 322 Kern, Gene B. 89, 322 Kern, Raymond A. 230 Kerns, Robert W. 48 Kerrigan, George L. 48, 322 Kerrigan, William F. 302 Kerwin, Joseph E. 306 Kessler, Howard E. 76, 88, 232, 235 Kessler, Irving .301 Kettner, Alice Camilla. .....48, 67, 346 Key, Sheo Ming 237 Keyes, Charles L. 297 Keyser, Joseph E. 314 Kiesler, Paul 232 Kiesling, Lois 90, 331 453 INDEX Kime, Charles E 142 King, Donald Perry 318 King, Dorothy Stewart 3 50 King, J. Raymond 48, 309, 396, 399 King, John E. 318 King, Joyce P. 360 King, Pauline Wright 360 King, Ralph E., Jr 282 Kinsey, Alfred C. 29 Kirby, L. M. 23, 80 Kirk, Mary Catherine- -215, 225, 357 Kirk, Robert E. 302 Kirkpatrick, David V. S 232 Kirkpatrick, Mary Phyllis 7( , 3 59 Kirkwood, Maurice R. 227 Kirsch, George A. 220 Kirven, Lamar L. 48 Kistler, John LeRoy . - 89, 186, 187, 322, 398 Kistner, Jack Meredith 88 Kivett, Silas C, Jr. 116 Klafs, Frank A 406 Klaus, Julius 232 Kleifgen, William A. 247 Kleinert, Jane Elizabeth 332 Kleinschmidt, Walter J 48 Kleyla, William D 109, 230 Klingelhoffer, Calvin H. 282 Klingelhoffer, Kathryn Marie. -106, 108, 109, 326 Kloesz, Chester R. 98 Klopfenstein, Mildred Irene 360 Kluth, Robert G. 48, 282 Kluthe, Harold S 62 Knapp, Kenneth D. 297 Knapp, Phyllis Hazel 331 Knoop, Dorothy Florinne 349 Koester, Richard J. 306 Kohl, June Katherine 331 Kohlmeier, A. 31 KoUman, C. Elizabeth 92, 359 KoUman, Charles, Junior 76, 285 Koning, Doris Jane 92, 3 54 Konold, Helen 268 Konrady, Emery Lincoln 321 Kopp, Herschel S. 142, 285 Kosman, Michael 391 Kosnoff, Albert 220, 301 Koster, Mary Lou 273, 328 Kovacik, Joseph A. —-.Id Koza, Alma Lillian 98 Koza, Dorothy Frances 98, 359 Kozma, William 76, 228 Kraft, William 176 Kraja,Mylio Sylvest 396, 398 Kreyling, Kurt W. 286 Krick, Frank J., Jr 293 Kriegbaum, Eloise — 326 Kriegbaum, Mary A 7( , 90, 336 Kriegbaum, Ruth Harriet 91, 225, 354 Kriekhaus, Margaret Ruth 354 Krise, Thomas H 305 Krumwiede, Walter G., Jr 293 Kuehn, Helene Elizabeth 345 Kuhn, Virginia Lee.-— -326 Kunkel, Louis E. — 321 Kunkle, William L...- -....7(., Ill Kurilovitch, Anna 237 Lacey, Forest 116 Lackey, Dotty Loretta 346 Lagenaur, Norma Jane 90, 3 54 Lamar, David M. 78 Lambda Chi Alpha 298, 299 Lambo, Vincent A. 322 Lampton, Mary K. 326 Lanahan, Thomas A 78, 293 Land, Freeman M. 285 Land, Richard N 309 Landers, Shirley Mary 345 Landis, Frances Katherine 48, 341 Landis, John F. 26, 232 Landis, Phyllis Grace— .48, 225, 350 Lange, O scar W. 367 Lanier, Elizabeth 245, 270, 336 Lantz, Harold L. 286 Laramore, Ward 142 Larkin, Patrick B. 220 Larkin, Howard A. 78, 282 Laudeman, Sam R. 396 Laurenzana, Rose 349 Lauter, Lois Virginia 48, 66, 336 Lazzara, Angelo 289 Le Cercle Francais ( 7 Leas, Jack 5 8, 98, 246 Lease, Hilda 3 59 Lederer, Lone 237 Lee, Harold J. 404 Lee, Lelia Ruth 3 57 Lee, Robert H 249, 250 Lees, Charles R 89, 91, 229 Leevy, Hale C. 318 LeFavour, Robert J 3 14 Leff, Abe 301 Lef forge, Ruth M. — 328 Legeman, Charles F 88, 91, 187, 248, 286 Legg, Sylvia Margaret 273, 332 Lehman, Dorothea Wilhelmina 90, 335 Lehman, Maurice F 317 Leininger, John 89 Lenox, Richard M.--.75, 78, 89, 290 Lentz, Marshall E 48 Leonard, Stephen 78, 309 Leonard, Elizabeth Jane 48 Lerner, Walter Edward 188, 293 Letsinger, Richard P. 310 Letsinger, Robert L. 310 Levi, Edna 78, 90, 3 53 Levin, Howard 313 Levin, Marian Louise 90, 3 59 Levine, Geraldine 353 Levy, Samuel -313, 396 Levy, Stanley M 301 Lewis, Adolph A — 67 Lewis, Carl, Jr 192, 247 Lewis, Martha Lucille 359 Lewis, Melvin S. 30 Lewis, Richard S 23 5, 297 Lewis, Ted B. 302, 391 Lichtenberg, Betty Jane - 48 Lienberger, William M. 116 Lincoln, Mary Jane 336 Lind, Louis G. 245 Lindahl, Thomas B. 78, 88, 228 Linder, Ruth 328 Liscinsky, Andrew G. 367 Lisius, Roland Reeder 294 Littell, Harry B. 23 5 Little, Marjorie Jane 117, 345 Livesay, Myrtle Davis 64 Livovich, Andrew F. 48, 404 Liana, Bartolome G 237 Loch, John W. 314 Lockhart, Jack M 142, 144, 314 Lockridge, Ross F., Jr 48 Logan, James Z. 142, 367 Logan, John A., Jr. 310 Lohse, Alfred C, Jr. -..48, 228, 246, 282 Long, George F., Jr. 289 Long, Sidney Edward 290 Longsworth, Ned Vernon 305, 406 Lorenz, Margaret H. 336 Lory, Mrs. Catherine 238 Loucks, Jean Frances 331 Loughery, Richard M. 289 Love, Louise Elizabeth 48 Lowell, Adele Ruth —215, 225, 331 Lowey, Dorothy Hewit 336 Lowther, Mabel 48, 349 Lucas, Dorothea 237, 360 Lucas, Eliza Bess S(,, 98, 203, 219 Lucas, Robert 290 Luccock, Dorothy 346 Lugar, William 305, 411 Lung, Lotta 78 Lung, Virginia A 272, 345 Lusher, Wilfred 289 Lutz, Robert L 48, 235, 305 Lybrook, Joann 48, 341 Lybrook, John 314 Lybrook, Joseph 78, 3 14 Lybrook, Shirley 48 Lycas, John 235 Lyday, George — 321 Lynch, John H. .78, 216, 224, 306 Lynch, William O. 30 M Mc Adams, Anson 286 McAdams, Hugh 286, 396 McAnly, Louis C, Jr 398 McBride, Mildred 354 McCaffery, Joseph, Jr. 292 McGammon, Donald F..-.48, 62, 321 McCammon, Doris 48, 64, 3 59 McCarthy, Rose Mary C 326 McCartney, Charles 78, 322 McCaslin, Raymond 48, 318 McClellan, Vesta - 336 McClelland, Howard 305 McClintock, Norma Lee 64 McClure, Robert 309 McColly, Marcie 78, 90, 332 McComb, Dorothe 336 McConnaha, Patricia 248, 335 McConnell, James .._ 293 McConnell, Robert 188, 317 McCormick, Betty Anne 273 McCormick, Robert 48 McCoy, Roberts-- 78 454 INDEX McCracken, Branch 366, 3 82 McCracken, Donald 314 McCreary, Lawrence — 3 82, 385, 387 McCullough, Betty 98, 341 McCullough, Helen 341 McDaniel, Dorothy 98, 3 59 McDaniel, Mary E. 338 McDaniels, Chauncey 404 McDonald, Jean 336 McDonald, Ralph 285 McDonald, Richard 144 McDonald, Robert E 294 McDowell, Fletcher 144 McFarlan, John B 48, 309 McFarland, Walter 317 McFatridge, Virginia -—33 5 McGreevey, John W 306 McGrew, Jean 40, 48 McGuire, James 317, 372 McGurk, Sidney 292 Mcllveen, Mary Elizabeth -331 Mcintosh, Helen 3 50 Mcintosh, Martha 187, 331 McKay, Philip 310 McKee, Mary E. 349 McKeely, Jean 328 McKibben, Veryl 402 McKinley, Arvel 98 McKinley, Marjorie 66, 78, 90 McKissick, Wendell 64 McLain, Dorothy 336 McLaughlin, Gordon 292 McLeod, John 193 McLucas, Helen 336 McMillin, A. M. 366 McMurtry, Donald W. 282 McNabb, George 88, 314 McNierney, Carol 336 McNutt, Louise 341 McPike, Barbara 326 McWhinney, Laura 226 Maddox, Glee S. 372 Magel, Mildred, V 359 Malchow, Howard 391 Malone, Earl W. 310 Maloney, Shirley 345, 272 Malott, Roland 106, 228 Mann, Mary 360, 226 Mann, J. D., Jr., 48, 54, 246, 321 Manser Gloria 78, 90 Marching Hundred 25 8 Marianos, Thomas L. 191 Marks, Arnold 313 Marks, Adrian 112, 282 Marlowe, John 144 Marnan, Catherine 3 32 Marquette, Joseph S. 302 Marr, Ray 309 Marsh, Robert 78, 321, 406 Marshall, Glenn, Jr. 309 Marshall, Harold C 287, 367, 406 Marshall, Mildred 33 5 Martin, Alice Caroline 48, 349 Martin, Graham 367 Martin, Kemp F. 321 Martin, Mary Louise 48 Martin, Paul 112, 116 Martin, Ralph Lowell 48 Martin, Robert Wade 48 Martindale, George 78 Martindale, Ward 106, 318 Martinson, Marjorie 328 Martz, Robert ....78, 232, 23 5, 305 Martz, Velorus 26 Mason, Richard 305 Massey, Vera May 5 8, 245, 247 Masters, Mary Louise 360 Mathers, Frank Curry 27 Matthews, Jack 286 Matthews, James 314 Mattingley, Ray Herrell 48, 237 Mauck, Earl Grigsby 34, 78, 83, 200, 204, 208, 212, 216, 292 Mauzy, Robert Jameison 286 May, Benjamin F., Jr. 313 May, Clarence E. 30 May, Margaret Lou 58, 219 Mayes, Betty 3 50 Mayfield, Nancy 336 Mead, Montford A 65, 78, 83, 212, 228 Mead, Virginia 48, 61 Meade, Robert 78 Medow, Harold 78, 228, 229 Meekins, Helen C. 332 Mehl, Richard W 309 Meisel, Ray R 297 Mellen, Marjorie 33 5 Mellen, Robert, Jr. 64 Mellinger, Frank 287 Mellinger, Mary 46, 50, 219 Meloy, Florence 90, 3 59 Melzer, Leo B. 62, 78 Memorial Hall 360, 361 Mendenhall, William 220, 314 Mendez, Fernando L., Jr. 292 Menefee, Eleanor 64, 98 Menke, Robert H. 314, 382 Menke, William 216, 314, 382, 385, 387 Merley, Richards H. 23 5, 287 Metsker, Philip T 78, 310 Meyer, Eleanor 3 50 Meyer, Martha 338 Meyer, Robert 62, 192, 310 Micu, Mary 237 Middleton, Frank C 112, 116 Middleton, James J. 391, 392 Middleton, Marian Evelyn 50 Mikulas, Edward 396 Miles, Helen J. 332 Miles, William Cravens 302 Miller, Alwyn E 33 5 Miller, Charles 144 Miller, Darl C. Jr., 309 Miller, Dolores 332 Miller, Ellen L. 50 Miller, Florence V. 50, 3 57 Miller, George F., Jr. 314 Miller, Harriet 341 Miller, Helen C. 326 Miller, Jack 144, 293 Miller, Julia J 3 50 Miller, Marvin 65, 88, 249, 297 Miller, Mary 3 3 5 Miller, Max L. 309 Miller, Nathan 301 Miller, Nina 100, 3 59 Miller, Paul C 309 Miller, Richard 287 Miller, Robert 282 Miller, Samuel 292 Miller, Ted 294 Miller, Tom 50, 62, 212, 228 Millikan, William 50 Millis, Mary L 90 Mills, Marion 50 Milner, Maclin 293 Milteer, Jayne 341 Miner, Rosemary 326 Minnick, Nellie D. ..50 Mitchell, Allan C. G 28 Mitchell, Max 305 Mitchell, Samuel L. ....112, 212, 309 Mitchell, William 285 Mock, Ernest L. 89, 224, 289 Modisett, Jackson 224, 318 Moeller, Kenneth 321 Moenkhaus, Wm. 29, 237 Moffat, James E 26 Moffat, Jean 345 Moffat, Robert 237 Mohler, Charles 50 Molenda, Robert V 23 5 Moon, John 290 Moore, Alden J. 78 Moore, Charles 321 Moore, John R. 29 Moore, J. Grant 310, 406 Moore, Roberta R. 100 Moore, Suzanne -87, 226, 248, 33 5 Moore, Virgene 92, 346 Moorhead, Robert 302 Moran, Raymond, Jr. 317 Morgan, Alta Marie 328 Morgan, Katherine Lenore 50 Morgan, Lenore 341 Morgan, William Thomas 3 1 Morris, Fred F. 317 Morris, Maynard F. 321 Morris, Rebecca 90, 345 Morris, Robert A. 310 Morris, William 188 Morrison, Kathryn 360 Morrison, Leah 100 Morrison, Margaret 336 Mortar Board 202, 203 Motter, Thomas Allen 310, 382 Mounts, Veryle Audrey 100 Moutoux, Raymond W. 230 Mowry, Betty 245 Moxley, Ethel 100 Mueller, John H 28 Mueller, Richard 72, 78, 286 Mueller, Kate (Mrs.) 23 Muench, Mildred 100 Mullins, Muriel 100, 237, 238 Munger, William 282 Munro, Edna F. 26, 414 Munsee, Jack 406 Murchie, William D 302 Murphy, Beatrice . ....70, 78, 90, 360 Murphy, Maurice 228, 293 Murray, Charles 112 Murray, John William 50 Murray, Richard 87 Murray, Robert Eugene 282 Music Series 2 5 1 Mutz, Thomas Rost 277 455 INDEX Myers, Burton D. 142 Myers, Edwina Katherine 219, 360 Myers, Emma Jane 3 57 Myers, Jean Clare -___.„219 Myers, John A...78, 80, 87, 91, 212, 216, 317 Myers, Marion 3 50 Myers, Martha Evalyn — : -50, 3 59 Myers, Mary Margaret 326 N Naddeo, Michael 367 Nagle, John C. 50, 224, 287 Napier, Frank C 78 Naugle, Robert R 228, 229, 318 Neal, William A. 78, 294 Neff, Elizabeth Ann 3 32 Neff, Richard B 305 Neff, Robert J 50 Neighborgall, Betty Jayne 332 Neighbours, James B. 78, 294 Nelson, Alice J. (Mrs.) 24 Nelson, John R 305 Nelson, Richard V. 314 Nerenberg, Robert W. 301 Nesbitt, Byron D 310 Nesbitt, Martha E 78, 90 Neu, Eugenia C. 50, 219, 341 Neu, Morgan D. 321 Neuhauser, Dorothea Marie 341 Neuman, Richard E 64, 285 Neumeister, Louise C 50, 66, 3 59 New, Samuel 313 Newby, Robert R. 385 Newlin, George W.,„75, 78, 88, 91, 231 Newmark, Helen Ruth 360 Newton, Peggy 50, 64, 336 Newton, Richard F. 50, 322 Niblick, Charles W. 367 Nicholas, Eleanor Mae 3 57 Nicholas, Harry 50 Nicholas, James 50 Nicholas, Pete 50 Nicholas, Sophia 65, 248 NichoUs, Ehzabeth 326 Nichols, John G. _„.75, 78, 224, 292 Nichols, Orville W., Jr 305, 382 Nicholson, Charles A. 305 Nicholson, Doris Elizabeth 3 54 Niederhaus, Betty 3 54 Niezer, Bernard M. 112, 116 Nimtz, F. Jay ....112, 116, 212, 229 Niven, William E 310 Noel, Joseph A 5 8, 114 Nolan, Jack P 305 Nolan, Val, Jr. 212, 224, 305 Noland, James E. 309 Norman, Betty Marie 275, 3 50 Norman, Dennis R. 404 Norman, Rachel R. 87 Norris, Gene S. 100 Norris, Harold D 100 Norvelle, Lee R 30, 244 Nye, Douglas D. 28 Nye, Fred W., Jr 78, 321 O O ' Banion, Kathleen Joan 336 Oberlin, Mrs. Grace Trumbull 100 Oberlin, William, W. 100, 285 Obradovich, Nick 404 O ' Brien, Charles Van 294 O ' Conor, Richard P. 306 O ' Donnell, Mary M. 237, 360 O ' Donnell, Patricia 326 O ' Dowd, Marie Phyllis 223 Oldenburg, Robert F. 297 Oliver, Jack W. 287 Oliver, William W 298 Olmstead, Patricia J. 3 57 Olofson Andy 196 Oiley, Clarence 382 Omicron Delta 90 Omicron Nu . 66 O ' Neal, Joseph M 50 Ooley, Clarence E. 3 82, 3 85 Orpi, Antonio 237 Orpi, Maria Magdalena 237 Orr, James G. 321 Osborne, Mary Eileen 246, 350 Osgatharp, Leonidas A. 80 Ottinger, Lowell T. 80 Overbay, Norma Lucile 341 Overshiner, John L. 302 Owens, Russell T. ..317 Oyler, Phyllis Jean 331 Packwood, Mary Kathryn 50 Paddock, Mary Ehzabeth 326 Page, Vella Lee 332 Painter, Donald S. 276, 287 Painter, John Robinson 314 Pakucko, Mike Mesloe 406 Palmer, Daphne Elizabeth 345 Palmer, Jane Griffin 331, 33 5 Pan-Hellenic Council 225 Panos, Frances 237 Parent, Jean 326 Parker, George F. 298 Parkhurst, Carma Lee , 50 Parr, Jack R - — 7 Parr, Mary Alice 50 Parrish, Myles F. 50 Parrish, Robert J. 318 Partlow, Orval R 89 Patrick, J. E. 25, 204 Patrick, Maryel Kathaleen ...106, 108, 109, 267, 332 Patrick, Thor.ias M 114, 116 Patterson, Jack W. --..144, 230, 298 Patterson, William K. 144 Patton, Orie Patricia 328 Patton, Rolla Lee 404 Payne, Fernandus 24 Payne, Joseph A., Jr. .50 Pearson, Henry E. . 24 Pease, Robert C. 50, 321 Peckinpaugh, Julia E 78, 80, 326 Pedicini, Joseph L. 227 Pell, Donald M. 309 Pell, Richard 50, 224, 297 Pendry, Reba Jean 331 Penn, Robert H. 80, 230, 293 Penning, Frank G. 409 Percy, Laura Helen 50 Perrine, Charlotte 360 Perry, James G. 302 Pershing Rifles 234, 23 5 Persinger, Delmar M. 396, 402 Peters, Carl D. 116 Peters, Jerome H. 285 Peters, Thomas L 80, 287 Pfrommer, Fred G 294, 406 Phegley, Mary Lucille 50 Phi Beta Delta 88 Phi Delta Kappa 103 Phi Eta Sigma 227 Phi Delta Phi 116, 226 Phillippe, James Roy .-..-5 8, 276, 318 Phillippe, Joanna Mae 3 59 Phillippi, Wendell C 50, 56, 62, 190, 317 Phillips, Betty Jane 3 57 Phegley, M. L. 50 Phi Beta Delta 88, 300, 301 Phi Delta Kappa 103 Phi Delta Phi 116, 226 Phi Delta Theta 89, 302, 303 Phi Gamma Delta, 90, 304, 305 Phi Kappa 91, 306, 307 Phi Kappa Psi 92, 308, 309 Phi Mu 111, 346, 347 Phi Omega Pi 112, 348, 349 Phillips, Ralph W 50, 317 Pi Lambda Theta 102 Pi Beta Phi 113 Pickering, James R. 80 Pierce, Willard F. 297 Pierpont, Jo Anne 226, 248 Pierson, Jeanne 33 5 Pinter, Joseph R. 406 Piper, James G. 23 5, 286 Pirtle, William F. 106, 109, 230 Pitkin, William VanArsdel 317 Plank, Charles R. 228 Piatt, Robert M. 322 Pleiades 2 14, 215 Pletcher, Helen Lee 3 50 Plummer, Francis 246, 306 Poellein, Rowland L. ...80 Poer, Mary Blanche 360 Poland, Roberta Arndt 360 Poland, William 371 Pool, Patricia Ann 346 Poorman, Roger W. 80, 396 Pope, Janice Louise 345 Pope, Leroy, Jr. 293 Posson, Dwight E. 28 5 Postma, Margaret ....50, 56, 202, 223, 359 Potts, Harry C. ...282 Potts, John W. 80, 232, 285 Power, Samuel H. 88 Powers, Harriet Elma 90, 359 Powers, Robert G. 314 Price, Clifford E. 80, 282 Price, George F. 293 Price, James W. 309 Price, Richard J 309 Prichard, Robert E- ..65, 80, 322 Prickett, Ruth Jessie 3 50 Prinz, Betty Jane 326 Prinz, Jeanette Aline 50, 54, 215, 326 Pro-Music Club .109 Proud, Frances Eudale 331 456 INDEX Prough, Wendell A. ___...144, 28 J Pruitt, Betty Jean 331 Psaltis, Gus Marcos 80, 232 Pugh, Madelyn Laverne 187, 191, 345 Pulliam, Nellie Wandalee 90, 331 Purcell, Royal E. 398 Purkey, Rexford D 317 Pyle, Margaret Louise 80, 34J Q Quick, John B 52, 287 R Raber, James R. 80, 287, 318 Raber, Mrs. Margaret Tofte 80 Rader, Marilyn Elizabeth 328 Radigan, Thomas J 114, 116, 293 Ragon, Jean Marcelle 3 54 Rainford, Gerald E 64, 100 Ramsey, R. R. 29 Raper, Helen Kay 341 Rappaport, Gersten 301 Rariden, David H 80, 230, 317 Ratchford, Frank T. 317, 406 Ratcliff, Russell Elias 227 Ratts, Gladys G. 52 Rauch, George W. 292 Ray, Beatrice Ann 237 Rayl, Betty Jane 100, 360 Records, Robert G 298 Redden, Dorothy P..._.80, 84, 90, 359 Redden, Normand W. 52 Redman, Geneva Mae 192 Redman, Jean Ellen 33 5 Reed, John Thomas 52 Reed, Richard 58, 245, 286 Reed, Robert B. 52 Reehling, LaVaun L. 33 5 Rees, Mary Frances 64, 211, 226, 341 Reese, Keith C. 285 Reeves, Sara Ellen 100, 331 Regel, Betty Anne 90, 3 54 Registered Nurses ' Club 238 Reglein, Ned L. 321 Rehm, Richard T. 286, 367 Reibly, Stephen R. 52, 306 Reinhard, John J., Jr. 227, 305 Reitz, George 287 Renfro, Frances Lonon 350 Rensberger, Maryellen 350 Renschler, Charles F. 80 Revington, Phoebe Jane 341 Reynolds, Lorene Claire 349 Rhetts, Charles C. 314 Rhoda, Robert L 282 Rice, Elizabeth Amanda 50 Rich, Alice Pearl 52 Rich, Earl A. 302 Richards, Alice 342 Richardson, David B 44, 52, 62, 190, 196, 204, 212, 216, 321 Richardson, Ruth 326 Richter, Ben 313 Ricke, Charles G 80, 84, 314 Ricke, Oral J. 314 Riddick, Thomas L 292 Riley, Paul H. 396 Rinehart, Jane 52, 336 Rinehart, Margaret Beard 336 Rinehart, Wilmer T. 403 Ripley, Violet Louise 52 Ritchie, Morris, Jr. __ 7 , 80, 87, 89, 292, 366 Ritter, Kenneth W -282 Ritter, Melvin A. 231 R. N. Club -238 Roach, Betty Jane 226 Roach, Marjorie Louise 341 Robb, Robert G 285 Robbins, David W., Jr 89, 227 Roberts, Paul W 310 Roberts, Ruth Maryann 3 59 Robertson, William C 52, 314 Robey, Evelyn J. 328 Robinson, J. J 204 Robinson, Una 66 Robison, Eugene Field 80 Robison, James T. -287 Robison, Maurice Alvin 282 Rochford, John J 80, 89, 91 Rodefeld, Margaret Ann ...331 Rodenberger, Arthur E. 220, 282 Roessler, William G 52, 28 5 Rogers, Marvin C. 52 Rogers, Rufus 297 Rogers, Ruth Janette 223, 350 Rolak, Bruno J. 404 Roman, Joseph 404 Romine, Robert D. 321 Romines, Cleo Charleen 90, 332 Ronzone, Patrick N. 322 Rose, Bernard 62, 80, 224, 301 Rose, Doris Marjorie 331 Rose, Max 286 Rose, Stephen Gibson 309 Rose, Truman E. 309 Rosenberg, Albert 301 Rosenberg, Leon Abe 313 Rosenfeld, Isadore D 114 Rosenthal, Ira M. 52, 313 Roskin, Jeanne L 353 Ross, Janet K. 345 Ross, Lela Jane 341 Ross, William E 30 Rosser, Jack 317 R. O. T. C 256 Roth, Harold W 318 Roth, Richard 52, 313 Roth, Virginia LaVonne 328 Rothberg, Manuel F 80, 313 Roudebush, Robert LaRue 321 Roult, Robert E. 80 Rowe, Elizabeth J. 245, 332 Rowe, Howard H 144 Fowe, Maxine 52, 3 59 Royalty, Lester DeWayne 23 5 Royer, Robert ....297 Rozelle, Patricia Ruth 331 Rucinski, Edward A... 318, 367, 371 Rudy, Jacob G. 114, 116 Ruffing, Rosemary Emaline 331 Rummel, Suzanne 332 RumriU, Harry E. 80 Runner, Eunice Evelyn 144, 219, 225, 349 Runyan, Richard F. 192, 317 Rupert, Thomas Maclndoe 235, 406 Rupper, Charlotte Mae -. 336 Rush, Marjorie Belle 191, 3 59 Russ, Alice Isabelle 52 Russell, Hugh Bernard — 52 Russell, Richard H. 282 Rust, EmilG 40, 52, 292 Ruth, Donald W. .....52 Rutledge, Harriet Jean 345 Ryan, William T 298 s Sablosky, Marvin E 313 Sabol, Albert R 309, 367, 375 Sacks, Jeanne — 3 53 Sadler, Ray F. 310 Sage, Frank 80, 229 Sailors, Mary Eleanor 90, 345 Salazar, Eugenio C. 237 Salisbury, Elizabeth Allen 33 8 Salwaechter, Christine E 80, 90 Samms, Mary Ann 336 Samms, Virgil W., Jr 317 Samuelson, Louise M. .. 90, 225, 336 Sanborn, Kenneth D. 306 Sandeman, Martha 326 Sanders, Lowell L. 80, 310 Sanders, Marion Virginia ..52, 58, 345 Sanders, Robert L. 105 Sanders, Eugene 318 Sands, Eleanor Marie 360 Saperstein, Bernice Sylvia 100, 353 Sappenfield, Otho Clarence 287 Sartor, Herschel Lee 292, 398 Sause, Mary Elizabeth 80, 90, 360 Sauvian, Harry C 28 Savage, Stephen G.- 5 6, 58, 193, 228 Savesky, Betty Jane 353 Scabbard and Blade 232, 233 Scales, Mary Zoe 215, 225, 3 57 Scamahorn, Malcolm O. 144, 317 Schaefer, Herman H 285, 382, 385, 387 Schaefer, Virginia Ruth 100 Schafer, Alice Kathryn 90, 3 54 Schafer, William C 144 Schaf stall, Harold G. 310 Scheidler, Hubert A. 286 Schell, Herman R. 80, 232 Scherffius, William 286 Schickedanz, Elmira C 108, 109 Schiessler, Martin J. 114 Schilling, George T. 52, 292 Schilling, Mary Elizabeth 328 Schimpff, Wilham V., Jr.....230, 322 Schlaegel, Rosamond Louise 52 Schlafer, George E. 26, 412 Schmalz, James L. 291 Schmalz, Richard H. ....80, 216, 297, 391 Schmidt, Eugene E. 310 Schmidt, Fred A., Jr. 28 5 Schmidt, Geraldine Emma 64, 100 Schmidt, Mildred Elizabeth 341 Schmidt, Wayne W. 286 Schnabel, Ralph D. 322 Schmalz, Mary Susan 336 Schneider, Bernice Mae 3 59 Schocke, Ellen Virginia .52, 22 5, 326 457 INDEX Schockley, Quenten 282 Schoger, Daniel R. 91 Scholl, Booth J. 282 Schrader, Jeanne 80, 90, 91, 354 Schricker, Henry F., Jr. 317 Schroer, Ruth Mary 346 Schuelke, Ada Ludmilla _ 360 Schultz, Edna 360 Schultz, Vergil E 391 Schuman, Edith 24 Schumm, George 64 Schwartz, Emily J. 33 J Schwartz, Stanley 301 Schweidler, Arthur V. 80 Scott, John Spahr 285 Scott, PhiUp M 286 Scott, Robert M 220, 294 Scrobel, William D 246 Scully, Madeline 277, 350 Seeber, E. D. 31 Seele, John, Jr. 302 Sefton, James 317, 404 Seidenberg, Murray 3 1 3 Seitz, Philip 227 Sembower, C. J. 22, 200 Senefeld, Geneva 34, 42, 52, 65, 202, 207, 241, 248 Servaas, Burt R 249, 293 Sexson, Hiram 144, 292 Shackelford, Harry 286 Shafer, Dorothy 335 Shaffer, Richard P 285 Shalansky, Alberta 353 Shapiro, Isadora 301 Sharp, John 80, 216, 302 Sharpnack, Imogene 52, 326 Shaul, Margaret 336 Sheedy, William I 406 Sheeler, Doris E 226, 3 59 Sheiffele, F. Jean 33 5 Shera, Ben M. 292 Sherfey, Mary Jane 144 Sheridan, Joseph 52 Shertzer, Martha 90 Sherwood, Dan 246, 271 Shevchik, Alexander 144 Shideler, Edna 346 Shimel, Robert 310 Shoemaker, R. L. 232, 305 Shonk, Harold 321 Shores, Richard 246 ShuU, Gilbert 52, 212, 216 ShuU, Wilbur 305 Shultz, Jeanette ..— 349 Shumaker, Charles 391, 392 Siegel, Edgar 313 Sigel, Ralph T 100, 322 Sigler, Ehzabeth C. 52, 33 5 Sigler, Patricia 335 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ...-93, 310, 311 Sigma Alpha Iota 108 Sigma Alpha Mu ......94, 312, 313 Sigma Chi 95, 314, 315 Sigma Delta Chi 62, 63 Sigma Delta Tau — 115 Sigma Kappa 114, 354, 35 5 Sigma Nu 96, 316, 317 Sigma Pi 97, 318, 319 Sill, Robert 227, 282, 408 Silver, Richard 302 Silverthorn, Dorothy P 106, 108, 109, 359 Simmermon, Barbara 52, 345 Simmermon, William 309 Simmons, Eric 237 Simmons, Robert 82, 88, 91 Simon, Kathryn E. 326 Siinons, Richard S. 313 Simpson, Juanita 144, 3 59 Simpson, Kent 52 Sims, Herbert 144, 321 Sinclair, Irma 219 Singer, Ralph 314 Singleton, Arthur 106 Sinn, Samuel 100 Siples, William 318 Skeleton Club _. 146 Skull and Crescent 220, 221 Slabaugh, Marjorie E 52, 332 Slaybaugh, Edward M. 52 Slipher, Stephen G 88, 314 Sloan, Charlotte 52 Slung, Evelyn 353 Small, Betty 33 5 Small, David G. 82 Smart, Robert L 235 Smigiel, Mildred 52, 360 Smiley, Barbara 345 Smith, Anna C. (Mrs.) 54 Smith, Arthur 82, 106 Smith, Audrey Jeanne . .54, 61, 186, 187, 215, 331 Smith, Barbara 3 50 Smith, Carleton Scott 286 Smith, Francis 310 Smith, Franklin H. ......318, 367, 375 Smith, George 144, 309 Smith, Glen E 220, 229, 331 Smith, Glen G 91, 282 Smith, Gloster 144 Smith, Helen L 360 Smith, Henry L. 95 Smith, Jane Brooks 277, 3 36 Smith, Kenneth L 321, 367, 372 Smith, Lorraine 272 Smith, Margaret Louise 5 8, 215, 246, 350 Smith, Marion Avis .54, 56, 215, 335 Smith, Marjory Ann 3 59 Smith, Martha Joyce 22 5, 346 Smith, Marvin H. 313 Smith, Mary Agnes 82, 90, 328 Smith, Melvin 313 Smith, Richard M. 82 Smith, Robert T 235 Smith V. A. 244 Smith, Walter F. 54, 80, 216, 228, 229, 318 Smith, William M 54, 64 Smith, William S. .. ..367, 374 Smulyan, Samuel W. 313 Snapp, Mary E. 226, 332 Snider, Carlyle J. 287 Snyder, Clare Marie 341 Snyder, Henry B. 292 Snyder, Marvin 313 Snyder, Nancy Ellen ......54, 193, 341 Sohl, Alverta Alice 54, 223 Sohl, William Ibach 23 5, 302 Sokol, Daniel D. 54 Sollman, Paul B. 227, 322 Somerville, Helen Irene 3 54 Somes, John S. 293 Sommer, Vernon J. 54 South Hall 99, 322, 323 Southworth, Ray M., 11.5 8, 232, 302 Spangle, Harold H 82 Sparks, Frieda Feme 82, 90, 3 59 Sparks, Joe C. 404 Spear, Jean W. 54 Speas, R. C. 25 Spencer, Richard B. 305 Spencer, William A. 321 Sperry, Emily E. 326 Sperry, Ralph A 310 Sphinx Club 216, 217 Spilman, Betty Jane 54, 345 Spilman, Claude M., Jr 187, 302 SpUttorff, Paul W. 293 Spradling, Charles R. 298 Spragues, J. H. 2 5 Spray, Joan 341 Spray, William N 249 Springer, John E ......220, 227, 309 Sproat, Anabel Ruth 100 Spychalski, Albina 54, 75, 211, 231, 360 Squier, William B. 82, 297 Staeck, Helen Margaret 54, 346 Stafford, Richard L. 54 Standley, George L. 298 Stands, Ben Osborn 318 Stantz, Kathleen 106 Starr, George W 27 Starr, Olive 341 Stauffer, George Edward 144 Stayton, Chester A. 224, 309 Stebing, Walter E. ......100, 287, 396 Steele, Charles A. 285 Steele, Paul W. 367 Steiber, Rose Ida 353 Stein, Howard E 297 Stein, John E 82, 294 Steinberg, Gertrude Kaye 54, 3 53 Steinmeier, Frederick L. 82, 91 Steinmetz, Mary Ruth 215, 331 Stembel, Miriam Hope 349 Stempel, J. C. 31 Stephan, Dorothy Alfred 82, 90 Stephens, Donald E 144, 309 Stephens, Robert K. 309 Sterling, Cornelius F. 286 Stevens, George Putnam ....310 Stevens, Virginia Mae 326 Stevenson, Jack K...82, 216, 286, 382 Stevenson, Mary Lavon 223 Stevenson, Robert L. 114 Stewart, Thelma Lucille 54 Stich, Betty Alberta 359 Stiers, John E. .3 5, 75, 82, 87, 88, 212, 314, 382 Stigdon Clement F., Jr. .82, 245, 317 Stilwell, Bettye Lee 350 Stimson, Mary Ellen 326 Stogdill, William J 235, 297 Stoker, David S. 294 Stokesberry, Paul W. 54 Stonecipher, Elmer T. 235 Stoner, Norris E. 32 458 INDEX Stoner, Richard B. 91, 187, 194, 204, 275, 317 Stonex, William R. 286 Stoshitch, Bazidar 391, 392 Stout, Diana Rogers 345 Stout, S. E. 37 Stover, Orville A. 100 Straesser, Robert B. 282 Strain, Richard A. 54, 193 Straub, Jeanette Decoto 64, 342 Straub, Mary Jane 211, 219, 336 Strey, Martha Alice 54 Strong, John H 294 Strother, George B 245, 250 Stucky, Marjorie Ruth -—336 Stull, Mary Susan -5 8, 65, 207, 215, 219, 248, 275, 341 Stull, Roger L. 248, 310 Stump, Eloise 336 Stump, Margaret Ellen 64 Stunkard, Robert M 292 Sturgis, Jack D. 314 Stutsman, Robert E. 23 5 Su, Ting 237 Sublette, James F. 314 Suggs, Sara Elizabeth 82 Sullivan, Jean Elizabeth 332 Sumner, Richey 232 Sumner, Richey B. 82 Sutherland, Betty Anne — 80, 82, 345 Sutherland, Edwin H. 26 Sutphin, Ina Elizabeth 336 Sutton, Elsie Lucille 332 Swaim, Robert F. 317 Swan, Marian 359 Swanson, Florence Gertrude.. 54, 336 Swanson, Irvin Emil 293 Swayze, John A. 310 Swayze, Robert W. 293 Sweet, Sara Cahill 335 Swets, Edward J 220, 294 Swihart, Edgar D. .314 Swinford, Wilham E 117, 293 Switzer, Jesse 3 1 Switzer, Robert E. 144 Szabo, George Anton 64, 293 Szabo, Joseph 100, 232 T Talbert, Pierre C. 227 Talmadge, Mrs. Mazada Lorene..82, 90 Tanner, Dale H. 114, 216, 314 Taubensee, Thomas 409 Tau Kappa Alpha 65 Taylor, Barbara Jean 338 Taylor, Dorothy June. .54, 92, 22 5, 328 Taylor, Ellen Louise 328 Taylor, Margie V 54, 219 Taylor, Mary Eleanor 349 Taylor, Pauline 277, 326 Taylor, Peggy LaRue 328 Taylor, Robert 89, 285, 302 Taylor, Robert Goodwin 82, 230 Taylor, Ruth Elizabeth 269, 335 Teaney, Jeanne Agnes 220, 332 Teaney, Leland J. 294 Teegarden, Alfred P. ......82, 88, 235, 256, 257 Templeton, Charles R. 114, 116 Templin, Robert E. 286 Tennell, Mary Josephine .. 328 Terzian, Newton 82 Teutemacher, Cyril W 322 Tevis, Robert E. 82 Tharp, Betty 360 Tharp, Edward G. 82, 89 Tharp, Mary J. ...46, 54, 202, 219, 345 Theta Alpha Phi 58, 59 Theta Sigma Phi 60, 61 Theta Chi 98, 320, 321 Thieme, Helen C. 34 Thorn, Billy 366, 404 Thomas, Anna E. 248, 249 Thomas, Jack B. 82 Thomas, Mifflin K.. 82, 194, 196, 200, 204, 208, 305, 406 Thomas, Virginia Ellen 345 Thompson, Alice Elizabeth 3 50 Thompson, Dorothy Cosette 3 50 Thompson, Edna Jean 332 Thompson, James D. 314 Thompson, Jeanne Marie 345 Thompson, John P. 116 Thompson, Joseph W 82, 91 Thompson, Lois, Ruth 223 Thompson, Margaret Alice. ...106, 108, 109, 331 Thompson, M. Myers 318 Thompson, Mary Jane 90, 345 Thompson, Robert L 89, 91, 193, 227 Thompson, Stith ..31 Thompson, Wilham C. 318 Thompson, EHzabeth Wanda ...82, 90, 91, 350 Tichenor, John 318 Tiernan, Martha Jane 331 Tillett, William J. 248, 297 Tillman, Bette Anne 186, 207 Tillotson, Don C, Jr 54, 64, 229 Timbrook, Henry, Jr 3 1 8, 409 Tinsley, Charles M. 286 Tipmore Floyd LaMar..ll7, 204, 216, 293, 367, 373 Tobian, Morris, M. 82 Tofil, Joe J. 367, 369, 373 Tolliver, Wayne E 396, 402 Tomlinson, Harry 212, 317 Tone, Thomas B. 404 Toney, Lloyd W. 227 Tophn, Jane 357 Torno, Samuel 313 Torphy, John Patrick 382, 385 Torphy, Margaret Anne 350 Torphy, Wilham Lewis 382, 385 Torrance, Jeremiah W., Jr. 82, 88, 305 Tourner, Jane Frances 345 Trautman, Edith Agnes 354 Treanor, Rosemary. .34, 42, 54, 202, 207, 211, 341 Tremor, Floyd Henry 298 Trickey Virginia Ruth 354 Trimble, James W 287, 367, 375 Trockman, Philip L 313 Trogdon, Doris Hope 328 Troutt, Lute 109 Troy, Francis E.... 75, 82, 87, 297 Troy, Joseph H. .....187, 321 Tuchman, Joseph 313 Tuck, Betty 335 Turanli, Izzettin 237 Turbow, Morton B. 313 Turgi, Marie Jeanette 215, 225, 341 Turgi, Robert W. 286 Turtle, Doris Elinor 346 Twyman, Allen H. 142 Twyman, Robert W. 35, 52, 54, 186, 187, 208, 212, 293 Tyner, Nellie Jane 360 U Ulen, Earl C, Jr. 317, 366 Ullery, Harry D. 297, 406 Ullom, Bettye Jo 328 Underwood, Benjamin L. 82, 89 Underwood, Mrs. Monica Maxine....238 Union Board 204, 205 University Theatre 242, 243 Uremovich, Emil 298, 367, ' 375, 396 Usher, Lawrence E 367 Vake, Betty 359 VanArendonk, Fay 359 VanArsdel, Arthur E. 322 VanArsdell, Sam G., Jr 82, 318 Vanatta, John C, in....l87, 229, 292 VanDrew, Mary Emma 360 VanDuren, Allan 406 VanFleit, Barbara 274, 276 VanHorn, William A 28 5, 409 VanMeter, Cyril P. 144, 286 Vannatta, Glen D. 64 VanNatta, Mary Lynn 360 vanRiessen, Robert H 305, 409 VanWinkle, Jack T 298 Vater, Doris M. 54, 58, 332 Veach, Richard L. 285 Veit, Joan 187, 326 Vermilya, Robert W. I44 Vesenmeir, Leo, Jr. 298 Vick, Harry Elias, Jr 54, 305 Visher, John Sargent 227, 317 Visnyai, Stephen 54 Vittitow, Louise Evelyn 100, 331 Vogel, Bettye Amanda 342 Voigt, Helen Louise _...64, 342 Vondersaar, Leroy A. 318 VonSpreckelsen, Raymond, Jr 286 Vorgang, Georgia L. ...215, 223, 3 57 Voss, Barbara Jean 345 Voss, Frank W 87, 302 Voss, William A 114, 116 Vraciu, Aurelia M 346 W Waddle, Edward L 114, 116, 285 Waggaman, Ross Huber 182, 302 Waggoner, William R. 230, 302 Wagner, Sheldon R 313 Walker, Charles E. 191 Walker, Charles W. 54 Walker, Henry B., Jr _.__114, 116 459 INDEX Walker, Marjorie Jane 332 Walker, Robert J., Jr 54, 314 Walker, Robert L 396 Waller, Evelyn C. 54 Walley, Rebecca Ann 345 Wallin, Helen 223, 359 Walter, Carl 91 Walter, Robert D. 54 Walters, John 285 Walton, William Joseph 294 Waltz, Joseph E 294 Wampler, Jane 3 57 Ward, Armada Josephine 3 57 Warder, William A. 82 Warner, Harold V. 82, 310 Warren, Claude M. 114, 116 Warren, Marjorie E. 271, 326 Wasserman, Irvin L. 313, 366 Waterfall, Franklin E. „ 271 Waterworth, Nancy L. 328 Watkins, Frances Gale ..70, 84, 215, 350 Watler, Carl A., Jr. 7( Watson, Mary Joanne 3 50 Watson, Melville E. 114 Watson, Robia Lucile 54 Way, Eleanor Ivalou 331 Weatherwax, Paul 27 Weatherwax, Robert Stanton 188 Weaver, Suzanne Seymour 326 Weber, Douglas M. 305 Weber, Ethel 336 Weber, Robert C. 144 Wedeking, Miriam 345 Wehr, Henry W., Jr 42, 54 Weichman, Malcom 317 Weideman, Leah 66 Weikart, Maurice A. 306 Weil, Ruth 353 Weimer, A. M. ( , 75 Weiner, David 56 Weiner, Herbert W. 301 Weiner, Leatrice D. 100, 3 59 Weinland, Mary Christine 226 Weinstein, Sherman 313 Weir, Robert H.- ... 35, 42, 56, 200, 204, 212, 216, 302 Weiss, Seymour 84, 404 Weitzel, Roland E. 56 Welch, Anna Margaret 346 Welch, William L. 282 Wellborn, Marlon 354 Wellman, Guy L 282 Wellnitz, Frank O 84, 191, 321 Wellnitz, Harvey O. 56, 321 Wells, Agnes E. 27, 64 Wells, Herman B 8, 200 Wells, Samuel M 62, 224, 293 Welsh, Margaret Louise 187, 3 50 Wen, Henry L. 237 Werber, Elizabeth Jerrie 332 Wernet, John Henry 310 Werry, Leslie E., Jr. -322 Werts, Winnie B. 349 Wesselman, Harold J. —56, 224, 317 Wesselman, Harry H. 317 Westfall, Beverly K., Jr --309 Whaley, Frances Almira 56, 66 Whannel, Pauline Edwinna 100 Wheeler, Burdette J -56, 237 Wheeler, John P. 288 Whipple, Lloyd 391 White, Elizabeth Corinne 56, 332 White, Eugene G. - 310, 367, 374, 404 White, Frank Shuey 84, 322 Whitehead, Robert S. 309 Whitfield, John S. 293 Wickard, Barbara Jeanne 346 Wiecking, Frederick A 314 Wiesman, Martha Ellen 106, 108, 109, 331 Wiethoff, Clifford A 220, 286, 382, 385 Wilcox, Howard S 220, 28 5 Wilhems, James P. 298 Wilken, Arnold M. 89 Wilkins, Laura Margaret 96, 100, 225, 331 Wilkinson, Lenora 328 William, Dale 84 Willett, Jean 345 Williams, Allen C. 313 Williams, Betty Jane 52, 350 Williams, Edith Katherine 56 Williams, Hugh L. 298 Williams, Inez Irene 238, 360 Williams, John L. 114 Williams, Kenneth P 26, 64 Williams, Mary Pauline 360 Williams, Perry 396 Williams, Robert E. 367 Wilhamson, George E 100, 317 Williamson, Letitia Maria 341 Williamson, Wanda Lynn 3 59 Willis, H. E 29, 409 WiUman, Robert L 56, 5 8 Wills, Jeanne 273 Wilson, Ben, Jr. 404 Wilson, Dama Ellen 3 59 Wilson, Keith . 282 Wilson, John E. 314 Wilson, Martha Ann 100, 3 59 Wilson, Robert J. — 310 Wilson, Robert N. 84 Wilson, William O. 100 Wingert, Ray 84, 314 Winklepleck, Margaret Ellen 3 59 Winn, Olive Lucille 56 Winnebald, Carl H. 318 Winslow, Eleanor Frances 3 50 Winter, Herman C. 84 Winters, Jane Elizabeth 341 Wirick, Jane Marie 106, 109 Wisch, Albert 313 Wiseheart, Rex, Jr 309, 367 Witham, Robert L 187, 285 Wittmer, Jacob W. 56, 306 Woehr, Robert A. 84 Wohlford, Ned Ellsworth 293 Wolf, Fred R 285 Wolfe, Elvina Rose 237 Women ' s Athletic Association 222, 223 Wood, Betty Ruth 360 Wood, James Baxter —220, 310, 406 Wood, Marietta Carolyn 225, 326 Woodall, Ralph E 56 Woodbridge, L. D. 29 Woods, Vivian Elaine 335 Woolery, Max B. 314 Woolley, William St. John 285 Woolridge, Warren 288 Worsham, Ida Jane 84, 90, 3 57 Wray, Bob J 404 Wrege, John Lindeman 84 Wrege, Robert Buckner 114, 271 Wright, Alyce Mabel 336 Wright, Joseph . 31 Wright, Mary Jo ' . 328 Wright, Warren 84, 91 Wright, Wendell W. 27 Wright, William T. 91, 293 Wuenn, Floyd L 321 Wunker, Swift E 282 Wyczawski, Richard W. 84, 232 Wykoff, Josephine A. 56, 3 59 Y Y. M. C. A 114, 116, 229 Y. W. C. A. 218, 219 Yaeger, Edrea Jane 332 Yakey, Ella L. 24 Yarling, Richard W 298 Yeakel, Helen 414 Yenne, Harriet Ann ___108, 109, 114, 336 York, Walter Kern 317 Yost, Robert C 302 Young, B. E. 29 Young, James P. 220 Young, James W. 317 Young, Martha Jane 3 54 Young, Robert , 271 Z Zankl, Emily Hudson 326 Zeiher, Oliver Mayhugh 228 Zeiteds, Harry L. 56 Zeller, John H. 309 Zeller, John R. 100 Zerkel, Paul L. 293 Zeta Tau Alpha 3 56, 3 57 Zimmer, Andrew M. 3 82 Zimmer, Harold L. —367, 373, 385 Zimmerman, Roselda 56 Zink, Darell Eugene 288 Zix, Geraldine Martha 349 Zmudzinski, Ethel 84, 3 59 Zweig, Warren E. 228, 23 5 Zweygberg, Lennart Von 27 DENTAL STUDENTS Albright, Edward H. _ .159, 167, 170 B Babcock, Robert A. 159, 171 Baker, James E. 159, 167 Baldwin, Fred 159, 167 Bales, Eugene E. — 159 Barco, Martin T. 159, 167, 170 Berman, Ralph 159, 167, 172 Borman, William J 159 460 INDEX Bronstein, Edward 159 Brown, Morris N. 159, 167, 172 Bryan, Emory W. 159, 167, 169 Burks, Ally N. 159, 167, 171 Bush, Aulden K. 159, 167, 169 C Charkins, Leo J. 159, 167 Clark, Robert R 159, 171 D Damm, Willard H. 159, 171 Davidson, John E. 159, 167, 171 DeFrank, Victor ...159, 171 E Epstein, Stanley E. 159, 172 Etter, Frank K. 159, 167, 169 F Feintuch, Jack S. 159, 167, 172 Feldman, Francis 159, 167, 172 Feldman, Martin 159, 172 Ferling, Richard F. 159, 167, 169 Fly, Charles A. ...159, 167, 169, 188 Fodora, Albert A. 159, 167, 170 Ford, John D. 159 Frank, Elliot H. 159 Eraser, John E. 159, 167 Furst, Harold David 159, 169 G Gassin, Edgar R. 159, 168, 169 Gilchrist, John W. 159, 167 Good, Wesley C. 159 Greene, Myron E. 159, 167 Groher, David L. 159, 171 Gromer, Roscoe L. 159, 167, 171 Gwinn, George A 159, 171 H Hall, Sheldon L. 159, 167, 169 Hanes, Rolenzo A. 159, 167 Hanley, Ralph E. 159, 167 Hanning, William F. ....159, 167, 188 Healy, Wilham J. 159, 171 Henning, William F. ....159, 167, 171 Hess, Eugene H. 159, 167 Howard, Richard H. ....159, 167, 170 I Iden, Eugene D. 159, 167 J James, George W. 159, 169 K Kane, Samuel 159, 171 Kasmar, Joan E. 159, 167 King, William D. .159, 167, 168, 171 Klotz, Melvin M. 159 Koenig, Harold H. .....1 59, 167, 170 Koss, William F. 159, 167, 170 Kowal, Michael 159, 167 L Langohr, Robert W. 169 Larimore, Andrew G. .159, 167, 171 Lively, Robert E. 159, 167, 171 Lowe, Robert B. 159, 171 Lowery, Charles C. -159, 167, 169 Lydden, Pat H. 159, 167, 171 Ly tie, Joshua W. 159, 168, 171 M McClintick, Ohver E. ...1 59, 167, 171 Mausehund, Lester H. 159, 167 Metaxas, Gus G. 15 9, 167 Michener, Richard S. ...159, 167, 171 Mitchell, Frank S. 159, 170 Morris, Gerald Jones .159, 167, 169 N Nadler, Seymour W. ..__159, 167, 172 Nelson, Albert B. 159, 167 Nickels, Robert P. 159 Niederhofer, Merle A. 159, 171 Niles, Richard L. 159, 167, 169 P Patterson, Samuel 159, 167, 172 Pickard, Robert G. 159, 171 Pierce, Doyle E. 159, 167, 169 Ping, Ronald S. ...159, 167, 168, 170 Porter, Ernest H. 159, 167, 170 Price, Byron E. 159, 167, 171 Pruett, Paul H. 159 R Richardson, George G. 159, 167 Robinson, William A. 159, 167 Rodenbarger, Lynn H. .159, 167, 171 Rosenbarger, Ernest E. ..159, 167, 171 Rosenstein, Maurice E. 159, 172 Rosenthal, Leonard A. 159, 167 S Schaffer, Frederick M. 159 Sexson, Julius C .159, 167, 168, 169 Shanteau, Owen L. 159, 168 Sharon, Irving M. 159, 167, 172 Shaw, John B. 159, 171 Shaw, Marion A. 159, 167, 169 Shumaker, Marsh E. ...159, 168, 171 Starcher, Sammy M 159, 171 Stiefler, David N. 159 Stock, Darrell A. . 159 Stocking, Karl W. 159, 167, 169 Stoner, Morris M. -159, 167, 168, 172 Stookey, Reginald 159, 167 Stout, Eldred W. 159, 167 Stragand, George J. -159, 167, 169 T Thomas, Jonathan E. .. -159, 167, 170 Troutwine, Gale H. 159, 167 w Weatherford, Floyd W. 159, 171 Welp, Dennis A. 159, 167, 171 White, Leo H. 159, 171 Wilson, Clyde E. 159, 168 Wilson, Frederick D. 159 Wurtz, Robert W. ......159 Y Young, Richard E. ...159, 171 MEDICAL STUDENTS A Albright, Victor F. 122 Aldrich, Harry D. 124, 134 Aldrich, Mrs. Harry D. 139 Allen, Frederick K. 122 Alward, John H. 122, 132 Applegate, Albert E. 122 Axtell, Robert 122 B Bachmann, Arnold J. 122 Badertscher, Robert 124, 137 Bailey, Edwin B. 134 Ball, Joseph E. 124 Ball, Mrs. Joseph E. 139 Bander, Nathan 124 Barnett, Ernest R. 124, 134 Bash, Wallace E. 122, 134 Bassett, Margaret A. 122, 138 Beall, Mary H. 122, 138 Beaver, Ernest R., Jr. 124, 132 Bennett, J. B. 122 Bennett, Jene R. 124, 134 Bill, Robert O. 122 Bjorklund, John H. 122 Blackstone, Jack 137 Bloom, George R. 122, 132 Boughman, Joe D. 122, 134 Bowen, Otis R. 122, 132 Bray ton, Lee 122 Brink, John C. 120, 122 Britton, Welbon D. 122 Bryan, Franklin A. 122, 132 Buchmeier, Joseph A. 122 Buckingham, Richard E. 122 Burdette, Harold F. 122 Burnikel, Ray H. 124, 137 Burns, Paul E. 122 Byrne, Basil K. 124 Byrne, Mrs. Basil 139 c Campbell, Perry A. 124 Cannon, Robert L. 122 Chattin, Herbert O. 124, 137 Clouse, Paul A. 124, 132 Cohen, William 124 Connoy, Leo F. 124 Cook, Mrs. Norman 139 Cormican, Herbert 137 Covalt, Wendell E. 124, 137 Craig, Mary A. 122 Craig, Robert A. 122 D Dannacher, William 137 Darhng, Dorothy R. 13 8 461 INDEX Davis, James M. 122, 132 Davis, Joseph B — 122 Davis, Sam J. ...124, 134 Davis, William H., Jr. 124 Denny, Forrest L. 122 Denny, Melvin H. 122 Deppe, Charles F. 122 Deputy, Rolland 122 Detraz, Pauline M. 122 Dilts, Robert L. 122, 132 Dintaman, Paul G. 124, 132 Dobrin, Leo 122 Donham, William 137 Donnelly, Robert W. 122 Dukes, Richard E. 124, 132 Dulin, Basil B. 124 Dunham, Richard 137 Dyer, Wallace K. 124 E Eastman, Joseph R., Jr. 122 Eaton, Edwin R. 124, 137 Eidson, Paul D. 124, 137 Elliott, J. Colin 122, 132 Engle, John M. 124, 137 Evans, Paul V. 124 F Fant, James R. 124, 132 Fenneman, Robert J 132 Ferrell, Mars B. 122 Fischer, Warren E...124, 134, 137, 188 Flanigan, Meredith B. 124, 132 Flick, John J. 124, 137 Flick, Mrs. John J. 139 Fosbrink, Ephraim L. 124 Franklin, William 137 Freeman, Joseph W. 124 Gardner, Frederick B. 122 Garf inkle, Martin D. 126 Garland, Edgar A. 124 Garland, Mrs. Edgar 139 Gatch, Dr. Willis D 123 Gaulke, David W. 122 Getz, Raymond J., Jr 122 Godersky, George E. 122 Goodrich, Albert 122 Graf, Jerome A. 126 Green, Charles E. 120, 122 Green, Myron H. 122, 134 Grillo, S. Phillip 126, 132 H Hadley, David 126 Halfast, Richard W. 122 Hamilton, Emory D. 126, 132 Hampshire, Donald R. 122 Hannah, Jack W. 122, 134 Harden, Murray E 122 Hare, Daniel M. -126, 132 Harsell, Mrs. Robert M 139 Hasewinkel, Mrs. August 139 Hauser - 2 2 Hawk, Edgar A. 134 Hedrick, Philip W ......122 Henderson, Lowell L. 122, 134 Heubi, John E. 132 Hibner, Nolan A. 122 Hickman, A. Lee, Jr. 126 Hitch, Oliver M. 122 Hoetzer, Eldore M. 126 Hoffman, Sterling P. 126, 132 HoUingsworth, Maurice C. 122 Holovachka, Anne 126, 138 Hoover, J. Guy 137 Hordy, Lester 137 Hostetter, Irwin S. 134 Hull, Mrs. Jack B. 139 Hummel, Russel M. 122 Hummons, Francis D. 122 Humphrey, James C. 122 Humphreys, Joe 122, 132 Hundley, James M. 126, 137 I Isenhour, Roger 137 J Jackson, Dean B. 126 Jankowitz, Alvin 137 Jay, Arthur N. 126, 134 Jewell, George M. 126 Jewett, James 137 Jewett, Joe H. 122, 137 Johnson, Linden E. 126, 134 Jones, Charles A. 122 Jordan, Robert S. 122 Joseph, Herbert L. 122 K Kabel, Robert N. 137 Kahn, Alexander J. 122 Kalb, Everett L. 122 Karsell, William A. 122, 134 Kendall, Mrs. Forrest 139 Kendrick, William M. 122, 134 Kennedy, Julien C. 126 Kern, Carroll, E. 126, 132 Kintner, Burton E. 122 Kintner, M. Quentin 132 Kissinger, Knight L. 126. 134 Kitchel, John H. 126 Kinzie, Ralph V. 122 Klamer, Charles H. 122 Klee, Kurt B. 126, 134 Kline, Jacob M. 126 Kopp, Herschel 137 Korn, Jerome M 122 Krajac, Martin 122 Kresler, Leon E. . 122 Krieble, William W 122 Kuehne, Clem K., Jr 122, 134 Kuhn, Fredrick L. 122 Kurtz, William A. 122 L LaFollette, Forrest R. 122 Latshaw, Charles W. 122 Laws, Elbert H 120, 126 Laws, Harold E 137 Leming, Ben L 122 Ling, John F ....120, 137 Long, Max R. 126, 137, 188 Lucas, Clarence A. 126 M McBane, John K. 122 McCartney, Donald H. 122 McClelland, Harry N. 126, 137 McDonald, Frank C. 122 McMahan, Virgil C. 126 McVaugh, C. Champ 120, 128 Marks, Salvo P. 122 Marlowe, John 137 Marr, Griffith 122, 134 Martin, Charles F. 122, 132 Maschmeyer, Robert H. 126 Masters, Brooker L. 122 Miklozek, John C. 122 Miller, Charles J 132 Miller, Mrs. Ray D. 139 Miller, Robert B. 126 Miller, Roland E. 120, 126, 134 Millikan, William 139 Mings, Dwain E. 126 Minton, Sherman, Jr. 122 Morgrette, Leonard J. 126 Morrical, Russell J. 132 Morris, Charles W. 126, 132 Moss, Mary A. 122 Muentzer, Edward 132 MuUer, Lullus P. 122 MuUin, Joseph E. 128, 132 Myers, Burton D. 141 N Nill, John H. 122 Nonte, Leo R. -122 Norton, Horace 122 Nutter, Wyndham H. 128 O Offutt, Andrew C. 120, 128 Olvey, Ottis N. 134 Overmyer, Jay W. 122, 132 Owen, Abraham M. 128 P Parrish, Richard K 122, 137 Peacock, Robert C. 120, 122 Pearce, Roy V. 122 Peirce, James D., Jr. 128 Pelczar, Walter E. 128, 132 Phares, Robert W. 128, 137 Polhemus, Warren C 122, 134 Powell, James P 122 Pryor, Richard C. 122 Pryor, Mrs. Richard C. -139 R Rang, Robert H. 132 Ravdin, Emile H. 122 Reed, Harrel L 128 Reed, Mrs. Harrel L -139 Reed, Joseph C. 128, 137 Rieder, John J 122 Ritz, Albert S. 122 Roll, Edmund C 122, 132 Rose, Embree R. 120, 122 Rossman, Mrs. WiUiam 139 Roth, James R. 122 Rothrock, Philip W. 122, 134 462 INDEX s Sage, Charles V. 128, 137 Sage, Mrs. Charles 139 Saide, Robert A. 128 Santangelo, Joseph A. 122 Schappell, Arthur W. 122, 134 Schecter, John S. 122 Schell, Harry D. 122 Scherschel, John P. 122 Schlaegel, T. F., Jr. 122, 134 Schmidt, Loren F. 122 Schornick, James C. 128, 132 Schuchman, Gabriel 122 Sheeley, Faye G. 122 Shields, Mrs. Jack 139 Sheller, Mrs. Tom 139 Shoff, Lois G. 122, 138 Shrader, Jack C. 128 Sholty, William M. 122, 132 Simmons, Frederick H. 128, 132 Sims, Lawrence J. 139 Sisson, Helen M. 138 Smith, David J. 122 Smith, Mrs. John _...139 Smith, Samuel J. 122 Snyder, Maurice E. 122 Snyder, Morris C. 120, 122, 134 Spahr, John F. 128, 134 Sputh, Carl B. 122 Stafford, WiOiam 139 Steele, Everett B. 128 Steele, Lowell R. 122, 132 Stepleton, John D. 128, 132 Streib, Homer F. 122 Stucky, Elsworth K. 128, 137 Sussman, Clyde 122 Swihart, Glenn L. 128, 132 Switzer, Robert A. 122 T Taylor, W. Mitchel 128 Thompson, Edgar A. 122 Thompson, Paul V 128, 132 Toumey, Fred L. 128, 137 Tyner, Harlan H. 122 Twineham, Walter C. 128 V Vail, Mrs. George A. . 139 VanNess, William C -....128, 132 Vivian, Donald E. 122 Vollrath, Victor J. 122 W Warriner, James B. 122 Webb, William M. 128 Weber, Robert 137 Westfall, John B. 122, 134 Whallon, J. T. 122 Whitcomb, Robert F 122 Whitlock, Francis C. 122 Williams, Charles D. 122 Winter, Donald K. 128, 132 Wissman, WiUiam L. 122 Wohlfeld, Julius B. 122 Woolery, Richard H. 122 Worley, Joseph P. 122, 134 Y Yocum, Richard S. -. 122 Yocum, William S. 122 York, Dab E. 128, 137 Young, Woodson C. 122, 137 z Ziperman, Hyman H. 122 DIETITIANS AND NURSES A Acker, Virginiabelle 152 Alexander, Christine 152 Arbogast, Lou Alice 152 Arms, Opal 152 Asher, Marilyn 152 B Beasley, Blessing 152 Behrens, Edith 152 Berrier, Georgia 152 Biddle, Betty 152 Bittner, Leota 148 Blaze, Lucille 148 Boles, Mary 148 Boyd, Velena 152 Bragg, Louise 148 Brameier, Alice 150 Brammer, Betty 152 Branigin, Betty Jane 152 Breiner, Virginia 152 Brown, Betty Lou 152 Erown, Doris 152 Brown, Evelyn 152 Brickett, Mary Louise 152 Bryant, Genevieve 152 Bundry, Barbara 152 Burkhart, Rosemary 152 C Callender, Frances 152 Cant well, Helen 152 Chadwick, Jane 152 Conner, Margaret Sue 152 Coolman, Betty 152 Cummings, Mary Jane 140 D Davis, Jane 152 Davis, Marjorie 152 Dehne, Elma 152 Dennis, Helen 152 Doak, Vivian 152 Dodd, Betty 152 Douglas, Ruth 152 Duncan, Margaret 152 E Eddy, Frances 152 Emly, Dolores 148, 153 Etter, Opal 152 F Fallis, Martha 148 Paris, H. 153 Foust, Shirley 152 Fenimore, Ferrel 148 Frasch, Gladys 148 G Gardner, Helen 148 H Haehl, Dorothy 148 Hall, Winifred 148 Harper, Mary Ann 152 Harris, Judith 152 Haynes, Lucia 148 Heaston, Marietsa 148 Hessert, Louise 152 Heiniger, Helen 148 Hoeflin, Cordelia 147 Hornbaker, Dawn 152 Huhnke, Eva 148 Hungate, Dorothy 152 J Jessup, Ruthanna 152 Johnson, Betty 150, 153 Johnson, Laura Ellen 152 Johnston, Rhoda 150 K Keller, Jo Ann 152 Kerns, Betty Jane 152 Kiewitt, Faye 152 Kincaid, Maryen 152 Kronewitter, Jeannette 152 L Lamberson, Ruth 152 Lathrop, Dorothy 152 Lehman, Betty 152 Lewis, Beatrice 152 Loper, Bernice 152 Lung, Mary Ann 152 M McClain, Martha 150 McCowcn, Frances 150 McCullough, R. 153 McTerney, Betty 152 Maas, Caroline 150 Madsen, Ruth 152 Melvin, Dorothy 150 Meseke, Kathryn 152 Miller, Marjorie 152 Miller, Mary Catherine 152 Mitchell, Jessie 152 Mitchell, H. 153 Morrow, Mary 152 Murphy, Wanda 152 Myers, Emmadell 150 N Nichols, Virginia 150 Nickell, Georgia 152 Nims, Jayne 152 Noland, PhyUis 150 Norman, Dorothy 152 463 INDEX O ' Connell, Betty 152 Osborne, Dorothy 152 P Parris, Nellie 152 Perkins, Mildred 152 Poorman, Ann 152 R Rector, Rose Theresa 152 Reed, Doris, Mae 152 Reed, Virginia June 152 Remley, K. 153 Risley, Winifred 150, 153 Rork, Eloise 152 Rush, Wilda 152 Russell, Mary Jane 152 S Scea, Dorothy 152 Scott, Helen Marie 152 Seckinger, Gertrude 152 Seneff, Marcile 150 Shetterly, Elizabeth 152 Shufflebarger, Martha 152 Short, Anna 152 Sims, Geneva 150 Sims, Virginia . 150 Smith, Edith 152 Smith, Joyce 152 Southern, Jean 152 Stancomb, Frieda 152 Swango, Lois 152 T Trarer, Mary Jane 152 Trouth, Lute 147 W Wagerman, Jean 152 Wampler, Ruth 152 Willcutts, Jean 152 WiUiams, Daisy 152 464 l -v ' rf lfe 3B- ■■' :.- ' ' ' ' ' : ' vX ' ■■- ■■' ■•. 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