Armour Institute of Technology - Cycle Yearbook (Chicago, IL)
- Class of 1933
Page 1 of 284
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
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Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 284 of the 1933 volume:
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THE CYCLE Cf 193 3 COMPILED AND EDITED BY CARROLL KELLER SIMONS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AND ELMER GUSTAVE LUNDIN BUSINESS MANAGER THE CYCLE 1933 PUDLHHBO  r TMÂŽ 1932 AND 1933 CLASSES ARMOUR INSTITUTE Of TECMNCLCGy CHICAGO, ILLINOIS VOLUME XXI That be took us under his arm, or that we took him into our family, does not matter, but that he is one of us, we are heartily proud. In gratitude for the renewed life and promise which he has (ottered in our tAlma Mater, we present this humble token, The Cycle of 193}, to fames T) alt on Cunningham I, The Cycle of1933, give you within these covers of mine, trag- edy, comedy, history, and song. On that Isle where dwells the Muse of prose and poetry, I was nurtured and cradled. And as I grew, I became filled with epics and lyrics which you, kind reader, are now to scan so eagerly. Chiefly, I weave the web of romance and reminiscence about the Class of 19)3. With- in myself I hold the whip hand over fickle memory which might sometime obscure tin events and impressions now so vivid and dear. Perhaps, kind reader, I am doomed to remain long unopened after your first inter- ested perusal. But I shall still count myself worthwhile if at a later time you and your classmates shall open my covers and find and know other classmates as well as pro- fessors. You may in fancy dream of some sleepy lecture rooms, of some busy and inter- esting hours in recitation room, laboratory, and drafting room. Amid the events and mishaps of your future, you may smile at the events and mishaps that have been. I am the answer to the hopes of many minds who have dreamed and labored to give me body and soul. Everyone wJx has had a part ht creating me has given a little of Ins life blood, has shared a tiny fragment of bis soul, has breathed into my being a little of his breath of life, to make me a living reality. by John Frederic Mangold CCNTENT i ADMINISTRATION II CLASSE III ACTIVITIE IV ATHLETIC V ORGANIZATION VI ADVERTISING Theme Science and Industryâthe force of the Century of Progress. At tbe entrance to the Administration Building stand two shining Herculean figures; one emblematic of Sci- ence, symbolized by the zodiac circle; tlx otlxr representing Industry, symbolized by gears. Science and Industryâthe force of Ar- mour Institute of Technology. On the cover of this book is impressed a reproduction of tlx demi-urge. Industry; in tlx corner of it is a quarter of tlx zodiac circle. By these powers have been created great things in the past century. By these same powers will be wrought still greater things in the next century. let the administrators be the pi ay rights; lei grant park be the stage; lei the architectural splendor of Chicago's skyline be the backdrop, let the story be;âof that ei entful century begun in I iff; of I foe energetic present in which nr are glad to be upon the earth; and of the glorious future into which tte are always peering. herein is tin century of progress exposition, this drama will be presented but once, and when the curtain is rung down only its memory will remain. AftMINISTIATMN the authors and directors of the play of armour institute hate a more lasting plot, already they hate more than forty times cast many characters into their respectis e parts in the gnat drama of life, in order that they might im- pros e this story and cast into it many new characters, they are preparing a larger and finer stage for its presentation to our audience, industry and the world. ' t in ibt trustees room of the administration building urre formulated tl e plans which were constantly advanced for the crystallization of our modern creative spirit. from the library of lire minds of our own directors comes tire store of knowledge and experience gained from the past, and the vision into the time to be. INSTITUTE ADMINISTRATION â THE CYCLE TRUSTEES James D. Cunningham, Chairman Alfred S. Alschulcr Lester Armour Philip D. Armour George W. Borg Paul H. Davis Lawrence A. Downs Charles J. Faulkner, Jr. Thomas S. Hammond Robert B. Harper Roy M. Henderson Ernest A. Henne Charles W. Hills, Jr. Willard E. Hotchkiss Vincent Bendix George B. Dryden Lester Falk J. J. Merrill Sixteen OF 1933 TRUSTEES Frank Knox John J. Mitchell William S. Monroe Sterling Morton Harold W. Munday C. Paul Parker Stuyvesant Peabody Howard M. Raymond George W. R osset ter John J. Schommer Bernard E. Sunny George G. Thorp Charles R. Tuttle Russell Wiles Leo F. Wormser Seitn cen IN the film Cavalcade,â Noel Coward has told a stirring tale of the first third of the Twenfieth Century. In doing it he has merged all the technics of show- manship with the art of portraying life. The period of upheaval he depicts is the one in which Armour Institute of Technology has been sending out men to merge their technical competence with the art of living; and now the next third of the century is upon us. This next third of a century will be your moment of time â you men of iArmour today. It requires no gift of prophesy to predict for you a time of stirring events. You will need every bit of competence which your native abil- ity, your eagerness to learn, and our eagerness to teach, can give you. You will confront problems as yet unsolved, of adjusting technical and human fac- tors in living. Armour Institute of Technology is trying to help as best it may to equip you for this task. We all bid you God Speed. F Doctor Willard Eugene Hotchkiss President ARMOUR INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY S'hitffcn CYCLE Doctor Howard Monroe Raymond President Emeritus ARMOUR INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Twenty Willard E. Hotchkiss George S. Allison John C. Penn Henry T. Heatd Robert V. Perry Ellen Steele Wilmot C. Palmer William E. Kelly OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Willard Eugene Hotchkiss Preside George Sinclair Allison Secretary amI Trcasurer John Cornelius Penn Dean of Engineering Henry Townlcy Heald Assistant to tlx Dean Robert Vallette Perry Dean of the Evening Classes Ellen Steele Librarian Wilmot Cecil Palmer Cashier William Ernest Kelly Recorder T h enly-one James D. Cunningham THE DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE James D. Cunningham Chairman Alfred S. Alschulcr Paul H. Davis Charles W. Hills, Jr. Dr. Willard E. Hotchkiss John J. Mitchell Sterling Morton Harold W. Monday Russell Wiles FINANCE COMMITTEE Sterling Morton Chairman Paul H. Davis John J. Mitchell â THE DEVELOPMENT PLAN The Development Committee of the Board of Trustees is bringing to a close the second active year of its pro- gram to broaden the usefulness of Armour Institute of Technology in the engineering and industrial world of the middle west. When school was opened last fall, the new Depart- ment of Science bore testimony to the fact that the Committeeâs recommendations for development were being carried forward. Organized and headed by Pro- fessor Charles E. Paul, the new department has increased in size and popularity during the school year in a man- ner which indicates that it is sure to become an impor- tant part of the curriculum. Throughout the summer and autumn months, the Committee worked strenuously in their search for a man who would be fully qualified to fill the executive posi- tion left vacant by the retirement last June of Dr. Howard Monroe Raymond. Many candidates were con- sidered, their records carefully reviewed and their quali- fications studied. The search was brought to a success- ful conclusion shortly after the first of the year, when Dr. Willard E. Hotchkiss was secured for the presidency. With a broad background of successful organization work both in industry and in education. Dr. Hotchkiss has had a richness of experience which assures the Com- mittee of his ability to handle the problems which he is facing here. He believes thoroughly in the policies which arc embodied in the Committeeâs recommenda- tions. His work during the few brief months he has been here has amply justified the Committeeâs confi- dence in his leadership. Along with its other activities, the Development Com- mittee has sought constantly to publicize the schoolâs activities, and particularly to command the attention of the more important industrial and commercial interests of Chicago. Results of this phase of the program have been gratifying. The first published announcement of the development program created widespread interest, and drew a large and enthusiastic response from many of the leaders of Chicagoâs business and industrial life. Starting in September of last year, the Committee has presented a scries of Sunday evening radio talks over Turnly-tuo Station WJJD, Chicago. The programs aim rather to create a wider general understanding of engineering work and its importance to society than to advertise the school specifically. Inquiries to WJJD indicate that these talks have stimulated considerable interest, par- ticularly among high school students throughout the middle western states, and that in these programs Ar- mour is making a substantial contribution toward a fuller appreciation of engineering. The faculty lecture bureau, which was organized last spring for a series of talks in Chicago and suburban high schools, has carried on a full program during the entire school year. This work, undoubtedly, was an important factor in making this yearâs enrollment the largest in Armour history, at a time when many institutions arc handicapped by small enrollments. In their efforts to gain financial support with which to carry on the broad program for future development, members of the Committee have worked tirelessly in the face of trying circumstances. Until quite recently, un- certainty has prevailed in the economic scene, and the release of any considerable funds from individuals or corporations has been impossible. The Committeeâs suc- cess in this direction, therefore, has been surprising. Loyal alumni contributed generously to the promotional fund with which the Development Committeeâs work was inaugurated. Many outside interests have indicated their desire to assist in carrying forward the Instituteâs program. The resumption of business activity seems to be defi- nitely here,â said Mr. James D. Cunningham, comment- ing on the position of the college, and we are sure to find that many advantages arise from the very tardiness of this recovery. Few executives will permit a re-occur- rence of the too-rapid expansion and the oversized schedules of production which prevailed a few years ago. Business activity generally is increasing, but on a sounder, more considered basis. We arc confident that as this activity grows. Ar- mour Institute of Technology will gain the support which is merited by its forty years of service to Chi- cagoâs industries, and by its present determination to broaden the scope of that service.â Philip D. Armour IN 1893âIN 1953 In the first public announcement issued by Armour Institute of Technology, in September of 1893, the ideals of Philip Danforth Ar- mour. founder of the college, were set forth as follows: The Founder has conditioned his benefactors in such a way as to emphasize both their value and the studentâs self- respect. The Institute is not a free school, but its charges for instruc- tion arc in harmony with the spirit which moves alike the Founder, the Trustees, and the Faculty; namely the desire to help those who help themselves.â It is this same desire which has motivated the Development Com- mittee in its work of the last two years. Realizing that the engineer- ing and industrial science has changed considerably, and that ex- pressions of service in that scene must change also, the Committee is endeavoring to keep following the course which was charted forty years ago by the Founder, and to keep correcting that course by consideration of shifting social winds. T trenty-thru tire administration building houses also the scenic studios u rcrein were created the stage properties for the play of progress. that great body of artisans and craftsmenâour fac- ultyâbuilds, each group, its own part in the minds and Uses of us. life students. FA C L LT y George F. Gebbanft Robert Vallette Perry M.E. B.S. and M.E. Armour Institute of Tech. Dean of Evening Classe and Professor of Machine Design Tau Beta Pi. Pi Tau Sigma, Theta Xi Daniel Roesch M.E. B.S. and M.E. Armour Institute of Tech. Professor of Automotive Engineering Tau Beta Pi. Pi Tau Sigma, Phi Pi Phi James Clinton Peebles M.M.E. B.S. and E.E. Armour Institute of Tech. M.M.E. Cornell University Professor of Experimental Engineering Sigma Xi. Gamma Alpha, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Sphinx, Sigma Kappa Delta Henry Leopold Nachman M.E. B.S. and M.E. Armour Institute of Tech. Professor of Thermodynamics Tau Beta Pi. Rho Delta Rho Edwin Stephen Libby M.E. B.S. and M.E. Armour Institute of Tech. Professor of Refrigeration Engineering Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Sigma Kappa Delta Philip Conrad Huntly B.C.E. B.C.E. University of Arkansas Professor of Experimental Engineering Black Knight. Tau Beta Pi. Pi Tau Sig- ma. Chi Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Triangle DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING George Frederick Gebhardt, A.B., M.E. A.B. and M.S. Knox College M.E. Cornell University Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Head of the Department Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Phi Delta Theta What changes have been made since last year in the curriculum of the Mechanical Engineering Department and what new equipment has been added? What changes and additions arc in view for the immediate future? These and similar questions have been asked from time to time. The answer is, None! No changes have been made in the curriculum because it is in conformity with that of the leading engineering schools of this country and because it has given the kind of training best suited to the needs of student and employer. No material change is contemplated at present, though it is quite probable that some adjustments may have to be made from time to time to meet with the demands of indus- try. It must not be inferred from this statement that there is no room for improvementâthere is, and plenty of itâbut more in increasing efficiency of instruction than in change of subjects. Armour is an engineering school, not a school of science, and as such its main ob- jective is to train the student for the engineering pro- fession. As for equipment, suffice to state that the pres- ent apparatus is wholly adequate for the purpose at hand. To be sure, modern up-to-the-minute devices are desirable for the purpose of showing the latest develop- ment of the art, but they arc not essential to a thorough grounding in fundamentals. In industry a piece of ma- chinery is not obsolete, whatever may be its age, until R. V. Perry T urnfy-iix D. Roesch J. C. Peebles H. L. Nachman E. S. Libby P. C. Huntly it fails to return a net profit equal to that of its more modern competitor. In education a piece of laboratory apparatus is never obsolete since it will always illustrate the application of certain fundamental principles. It may lack the efficiency or precision of a more modern device and it may be inadequate for practical purposes but from an educational standpoint it will never cease to be of value so long as it is physically intact. Take for example, the old piston engines io the steam laboratory. They are poor representatives of our latest designs but what more can the student learn in the way of funda- mentals from the latter which cannot be obtained from the former. The ice plant from a practical standpoint is as obsolete as the dodo, but what principle can be shown in the latest installation which is not included in this old patriarch. After all it is not the equipment, but the faculty, which makes the school. The faculty of the mechanical engineering department is a seasoned body of engineers, experienced in teaching, and the individuals arc recognized authorities in their chosen line, and whatever may be the status of the equipment, its limitations arc more than made up by the efficiency of instruction. It is quite probable that an attempt will be made to add a post graduate course for those who care to con- tinue academic work, but all depends upon the demand. It is also possible that the Research Institute and the Technical Institute as advocated by the Armour Plan may take tangible form in the near future, but this i- largely a matter of finance. Meanwhile the Mechanical Department will continue to function along those lines which have been eminently successful for 40 years. Charles Roscoc Swineford M.E. B.S. University of Michigan M.E. Armour Institute of Technology Associate Professor of Machine Design Stanton Edwin Winston M.E. Colorado School of Mines A. B. and A.M. University of Denver B. S. and M.E. Armour Institute of Technology Associate Professor of Kinematics Lynn Eugene Davies M.E. B.S. and M.S. Armour Institute of Tech- nology Associate Professor of Experimental En- gineering Richard Joseph Foster B.S. B.S. University of Nebraska Associate Professor of Descriptive Geom- etry Walter Henry Sccgrist M.E. B.S. Purdue University M.E. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Machine I esign Phi Kappa Sigma Arthur William Scar M.E. B.S. University of Minnesota M.E. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Elementary Ma- chine Drawing Pi Tau Sigma, Theta Xi A. W. Sear T utnty-icitn C. R. Swineford S. E. Winston I.. E. Davies R. J. Foster W . H. Sregrist Melville B. Wells John Cornelius Penn C.E. B.S. and C.E. Armour Institute of Tech- nology Dean of Engineering, and Professor of Civil Engineering Tau Beta Pi, Chi Epsilon, Theta Xi Roe Loomis Stevens B.S. B.S. Armour Institute of Technology Associate Professor of Bridge and Struc- tural Engineering Honorary Member of Chi Epsilon Henry Townley Heald M.S. B.S. Washington State College M.S. University of Illinois Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, and Assistant to the Dean Black Knight. Tau Beta Pi, Chi Epsilon. Sigma Tau. Phi Kappa Phi. Sigma Kappa Delta Herbert Ensz C.E. B.S. and C.E. University of Colorado Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Chi Epsilon DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING Melville Baker Wells, B.C.E., C.E. B.C.E. and C.E. Purdue University Professor of Civil Engineering and Head of the Department Tau Beta Pi, Honorary Member of Chi Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta A new development in the Department of Civil Engi- neering is the post-graduate course, for which six men are now registered. The subjects include advanced work in strength of materials, statically indeterminate struc- tures, water supply engineering, sanitary engineering, and foundations, with special consideration to soil me- chanics. The students who complete the required work satisfactorily will receive Mastersâ degrees. Members of the faculty who are teaching these sub- jects find in them opportunities for their own develop- ment greater than arc found in the under-graduate courses, and in thus serving themselves, they have the satisfaction of knowing that they are helping our graduates. The Department is now completing the construction of a water treatment and Alteration plant, with a ca- pacity of twenty-five gallons per minute, for educa- tional and research purposes. The advantages of treated water for commercial and industrial as well as domestic uses is now universally appreciated, and Armour In- stitute of Technology is, perhaps, the first educational institution offering the student of the water supply the advantages of an actual operating plant. The installa- J. C. Penn R. L. Sievent H. T. Hcjld H. En z T went y-tight tion is designed to allow great flexibility of operation and various types of treatment including softening, iron, color, odor, taste, and turbidity removal, and sterilization, so that the most practical method of treat- ing any type of raw water may be determined. The plant is located in the basement and the three floors above at the south end of Chapin Hall. The de- sired type of raw water will be artifically prepared in one of two raw water control tanks, of approximately two thousand gallons capacity each, located in the base- ment. From these tanks it will be pumped to the first point of treatment on the third floor and then flow by gravity through each of the successive stages of treat- ment to the two thousand gallon filtered water reservoir in the basement. The research program will include ex- periments on turbidity, softening, coagulants, activated carbon, rate of filtration, rate of wash water application, and others. All equipment is modern and includes a specially designed aerator and mixer, an orifice box, chemical feed, filter, rate of flow controller, and a wash water pumping system for cleaning the filter. Professor Harold A. Vagtborg has charge of the installation of the plant and the work done with it will be under his supervision. The Armour Branch of the Western Society of Engi- neers has been active through the year and a number of interesting and instructive lectures have been given by well-known engineers. Full advantage is being taken of the fact that the location of the Institute and its standing among engineers makes it possible to get such speakers. It is an important part of our educational program. Eldon Carlyle Grafton C.E. B.S. and C.E. Washington State College Assistant Professor of Structural Engi- neering Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, Scabbard and Blade, Phi Kappa Phi, Chi Epsilon Sholto Marion Spears B.S. B.S. University of Kentucky Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Tau Beta Pi Harold Alfred Vagtborg B.S. B.S. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Municipal and Sanitary Engineering Joel Martin Jacobson B.S. B.S. Armour Institute of Technology Instructor in Civil Engineering Kappa Delta Epsilon Ernest K. Eugene B.C.E. Ing. Dipl. University of Chent B.C.E. University of Michigan (No picture) J. M. Jacobson Turnl -nint E. C. Grafton S. M. Spears H. A. Vagtborg DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Harry McCormack Benjamin Ball Freud Ch.E. Sc.B. and Ph.D. University of Chicago Ch.E. Armour Institute of Technology Professor of Organic Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi Charles Austin Tibbals Ph.D. B.A., M.A. and Ph.I). University of Wisconsin Professor of Analytical Chemistry Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma Xi, Honor- ary Member of Alpha Chi Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta, Triangle Eugene Edward Gill Ph.D. Ph.B. and M.A. Dickinson College Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University Associate Professor of General Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa Arthur Howe Carpenter A.M. A.M. Ohio University Associate Professor of Metallurgy Delta Tau Delta Harry McCormack, B.S., M.S. B.S. Drake University M.S. University of Illinois Professor of Chemical Engineering and Head of the Department Tau Beta Pi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa The enrollment in the department of chemical engi- neering has been heavier during the past year than at any time during its history. The customary acceptance of freshmen in this department is forty, but at the time of last yearâs enrollment it was decided to accept fifty entering freshmen in chemical engineering. The laboratory facilities have, therefore, been crowded to their limit during the past school year. The most significant departure in the policy of the department for the past year has been the decision to accept students for one yearâs graduate work. And eight students have been taking this work during the school year. The department of chemical engineering has been able to offer this graduate work, due to the cordial co- operation of men in other departments who have con- sented to give courses for graduate students and to the consent of certain members of the department of chem- ical engineering to take on additional work. It is be- lieved that the yearâs graduate work has been successful and its continuance for at least another year is con- templated. There is, however, at the present time, no contemplation of prolonging the graduate work beyond one year. Courses which have been offered by instructors in Thirty B. B. Freud C A. TibbiW E. E. Gill A. H. Carpenter other departments and which have met with a very cordial reception by graduate students in chemical en- gineering, have been Dr. Schergcrâs course in Chemical German, Dr. Thompsonâs course in Electron Physics, and Professor Mangoldâs course in Plow of Fluids. The graduate courses added to the work in the de- partment of chemical engineering have been a course in Thermodynamics by Dr. Freud, a course in Cost Ac- counting and Engineering Economics by Assistant Prof. Bentley, and a course in Industrial Chemical Calcula- tions by Mr. Martin. Prof. McCormack gives some time to directing the research of the graduate students and to conferring with them in regard to this work. Commercial organizations in the Chicago area have been persuaded that it was to their advantage to defray school expenses of five of these graduate students dur- ing the past year. It is hoped the encouraging results, which have been received through the labor of these students, will convince these organizations as to the de- sirability of continuing this policy and it is also hoped that others may be found who will adopt a like attitude. As this has been a period of retrenchment in all lines of industry, educational as well as otherwise, there have been no material additions to the equipment of the department of chemical engineering. Certain small pieces of equipment which could be made in our own shops have been so made and have been used in adding to the previous list of experiments offered in the chemical engineering laboratories. It is contemplated to continue such additions until all of the unit operations of chemical engineering are represented by at least one laboratory experiment. John Joseph Schommcr Ch.E. B.S. University of Chicago Ch.E. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Industrial Chem- istry Black Knight, Alpha Chi Sigma, Phi Kappa Sigma Walter John Bentley Ch.E. B.S. and Ch.E. Armour Inst, of Tech. Assistant Professor of Chemical Engi- neering Phi Lambda Upsilon. Alpha Chi Sigma, Beta Psi Homer Zcttlcr Martin B.S. B.S. Armour Institute of Technology Instructor in Chemical Engineering Hans Tropsch Dr. Eng. Lecturer in Physical Chemistry J. J. Schommer W. J. Bentley H. Z. Martin H. Tropsch Thirly-ont Ernest H. Freeman ' f ' John Edwin Snow E.E. B.S., M.A., and M.$. Ohio University E.E. Armour Institute of Technology Professor of Electric Power Production Eta Kappa Xu David Henn Morcton B.S. and E.E. Armour Institute of Tech. Professor of Direct and Alternating Cur- rent Machinery Tan Beta Pi. Eta Kappa Xu. Sigma Kap- pa Delta Oliver Charles Clifford Ph.D. A. B. Oberlin College Ph.D. University of Chicago Professor of Electrical Engineering Sigma Xi Charles Anson Nash B.S. B. S. University of Illinois Associate Professor of Elec. Engineering Sigma Xi Donald Elmer Richardson M.S. B.S. and E.E. Armour Institute of Tech. M.S. University of Chicago Associate Professor of Electrical Meas- u remen ts Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Xu, Sigma Kappa Delta DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Ernes.t Harrison Freeman, B.S., E.E. B.S.. Kansas State College B.S. and E.E. Armour Institute of Technology Professor of Electrical Engineering and Head of the Department Tau Beta Pi. Eta Kappa Xu. Phi Kappa Phi. Phi Pi hi Whither electrical engineering? In these days of re- duced activity, we are naturally concerned about where we are bound and look to the future to sec, if possible, what the days to come may bring forth. The only means of predicting the future arc based upon studies of the past. Such studies lead us to believe that we shall emerge from this depression because we have gone through several others. And then, what will happen in electrical engineer- ing? Certain tendencies may be expected to continue as they have in the past. Activity, now halted, will be resumed. As examples of unfinished work, there re- mains one-third of our residences to be wired and sup- plied with energy for the many electrical household conveniences; thirteen million homes do not now have radio receiving sets; many millions of new telephones are yet to be installed. These are but samples indicating the tremendous consumersâ market lying in the future. That such a market will develop is further indicated by the fact that our national per-capita wealth has mul- tiplied more than ten-fold in the last hundred years, and the trend is toward a much higher value than we now have. Future purchasing power will, therefore, be much greater than the past; and a generous market for all kinds of electrical goods and services appears quite well assured. Except for a temporary set-back, electrical engineer- ing is still on the up-grade. J. E. Snow Thirty. no D. P. Morcton O. C. Clifford C. A. Xash D. E. Richardson DEPARTMENT OE FIRE PROTECTION ENGINEERING Joseph Bernard Finnegan, S.B. S.B. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor of Fire Protection Engineering and Mead of the Department Tau Beta Pi, Salamander, Sphinx Fire protection engineering practice during the past year has met unusual problems caused by the increase in the number of unoccupied buildings and the general tendency to economize by reducing expenditures for fire protection, both factors tending to increase fire losses. Fire insurance companies and bureaus like other business organizations, have been compelled to reduce operating expenses, and it is therefore especially pleasing that all 1932 graduates of this department were em- ployed immediately after the end of the school year, most of them through the operation of the scholarship plan. Carl H. Johnson, Assistant Professor, resigned in June to enter the engineering staff of the Iowa Insurance Service Bureau. Harold L. Norway of the staff of Underwriterâs Laboratories was appointed to succeed Professor Johnson. Mr. Norway is a graduate of the department of mechanical engineering at Case School of Applied Science. He has had ten years of experience in test and research work with the Commonwealth Edison Company and in two engineering departments at Un- derwriterâs Laboratories. Increasing demands on the time of Professor Holmes concerning committee activities and field tests have made it necessary to transfer his sophomore classes to Professor Finnegan. Our students continue to show a natural and proper interest in extra-curricular activities, and the morale of the department is excellent. Joseph B. Finnegan Otto I.ouis Robinson B.S. B.S. Purdue University Associate Professor of Fire Protection Engineering Salamander, Acacia Charles Page Holmes S.B. S.B. Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology Salamander, Alpha Chi Epsilon Harold Leighton Norway B.S. B.S. Case School of Applied Science Instructor in Fire Protection Engineering O. L. Robinson C. P. Holmes H. L. Norway Tbirly-ihrtt F.arl . Reed, Jr. Albert H. Krchbiel Protestor of Freehand Drawing and 'S'as- er Color Emil Robert Zettler Consulting Professor of Architectural Sculpture William Frank McCaughcy, Jr. M.S. A. B. Carnegie Institute of Technology M.S. University of Illinois B. A.I.D. Certificate Associate Professor of Architectural De- sign Honorary Member of Triangle, Delta Skull, Sigma Nu William Henry Lautz B.S. B.S. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Architecture Tau Beta Pi, Scarab, Sigma Kappa Delta August Christian Wilmanns Assistant Professor of Architectural Construction A. H. Krchbiel F. R. Zettler Thirty-four DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE Earl Howell Reed, Jr., S.B. S. B. -Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor of Architecture and Head of Department Delta Kappa Epsilon Few of the thousands of visitors to the Art Institute realize the existence above the galleries there of the Architectural Department of Armour Institute. In the skylighted drafting rooms, in the big lecture room fac- ing Michigan Avenue, in the many galleries of the art museum, and in the Burnham and Ryerson Libraries, the students have a very favorable environment for ac- quiring much of the experience and background with which they expect to start their architectural careers. Both students and faculty have been greatly inter- ested in the Armour Development Plan and have tried to do their bit in furthering this great program. One small expression of this interest was the decorative set- ting done by the alumni and students for the big re- union banquet at the Naval Armory. The members of the faculty have been giving careful study to the archi- tectural curriculum with a view to the broadening of training and eventually developing a five-year course. Slight changes have already been introduced, notably the co-ordination of design and construction problems in the Sophomore year and the extension of the study of design elements in the Freshman year. A particular desire to emphasize the inseparable bond between design on paper and the physical nature and fabrication processes of building has led to an increase in the number of visits by practicing architects and lec- tures by representatives of different building trades. There have also been a number of inspection trips of W. F. McOughey. Jr. V. H. Liutz A. C 'Kâilmanin great practical value, and additions have been made to the Departmentâs collection of building material sam- ples during the year. As usual, a number of exhibitions were held in the Department, among them a group of sketches and paintings done by the students during the summer, travel sketches by alumni, and a traveling exhibition of the Bcaux-Arts Institute of Design. The programs of the Bcaux-Arts Institute of Design of New York continue to be used in the Junior and Senior years. This system puts advanced design courses, as given throughout the country, on the same basis. Several special problems have been studied by Senior students of the Department in collaboration with paint- ers and sculptors from the School of the Art Institute and with landscape architects. As usual, the members of the Architectural faculty have been engaged in interesting work in addition to their teaching. Mr. Beersman, assisted by a number of graduates of the Department, has prepared a large ex- hibit of the Central Station Industries at the Century of Progress. Mr. Bentley has been working on a transla- tion from the French of portions of Gaudetâs Elements et Theorie d'Architcctureâ and Mr. Rathbun has been doing restoration work for the Field Museum in connec- tion with the recent excavations at Kish in Mescpotamia. Mr. McCaughey and others have continued general practice and Mr. Reed has supervised the restoration of the Old Market House in Galena, Illinois. Mr. Surer has been active in Plan Commission work and Mr. Krehbicl spent the summer at the Saugatuck School of Painting and has continued his winter landscape work in this region. Harry Howe Bentley S.B. S.B. Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology Assiltam Professor of Architectural De- sign Charles Gerhard Beersman University of Pennsylvania Assistant Professor of Architectural De- sign Acacia Theodorus Marinus Hofmecster, Jr. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Architectural Modeling Scarab Walter Lindsay Sutcr B.S. B.S. Armour Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Architectural De- sign Scarab Rowland Rathbun M.S. B.S. and M.S. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Architectural His- tory and I esign Scarab, Phi Delta Theta K. Rathbun Thirty-fit t H.H. Bentley C. G. Beersman T. M. Mofmeester. Jr. W. L. Suter Charles E. Paul Guy Maurice Wilcox A.M. A.B. Carlton College A. M. Univerxity of Wiicomin Professor of Phy , and Head of Dept. William Charles Krathwohl Ph.D. B. A. Harvard College M.A. Columbia University Ph.D. University of Chicago Professor of Math, and Head of Dept. National Council of Teachers of Mathe- matics Charles Wilber Leigh B.S. B.S. University of Illinois Professor of Analytic Mechanics Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Kappa Delta, Phi Gamma Delta Thomas Eaton Doubt Ph.D. B.S. Nebraska Wesleyan University M.A. University of Nebraska Ph.D. University of Chicago Professor of Experimental Physics Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi John Frederic Mangold C.E. B.S. Cornell College B.F. and C.E. University of Iowa Associate Professor of Mechanics Beta Psi William White Colvcrt A.M. A.B. and A.M. Cumberland University Associate Professor of Physics Sigma Xi DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE Charles E. Paul, S.B. S. B.'Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor of Mechanics, and Head of the Department of Science Tau Beta Pi, Sphinx, Theta Xi The Department of Science at Armour Institute of Technology is finishing the first year of its work. This new department was established in July, 1932, as the realization of a part of The Armour Plan.â Registra- tion of students in the new division of work offered was opened in September, 1932. At the beginning of the second semester in February, 1933, an enrollment of twelve freshmen and one graduate student was re- ported. The administrative organization of the Department centers in the grouping of the Departments of Physics, Mathematics, and Mechanics. The instruction in courses in chemistry shown in the curriculum of the Depart- ment of Science is given by members of the Department of Chemical Engineering. The aim of the course of study offered by the De- partment is to provide a thorough training in the basic sciences relating to engineering, and a more extensive knowledge of the humanities than is customary in the usual engineering curricula. A large proportion of the students who enter engi- neering schools each year have no definite purpose in following the course which they indicate on their en- trance papers. Many of them choose a branch of the profession without careful thought as to the kind of work covered by it, their degree of interest in such G. M. Wilcox Tbirty-iix W. C. Krathwohl C. W. Leigh T. E. Doubt J. F. Mangold W. W. Col vert work, or the possibility of success in it as a vocation. But few have had the counsel or contacts which enable them to make such a decision wisely. They all feel that they wish to become engineers, but the difference in training in the specialized lines and the divergence in practice after graduation is not recognized until they arc well advanced in their period of training. Others desire a general training in the sciences upon which en- gineering is based, together with a wider individual choice of engineering subjects than is allowed in any of the usual specialized courses. They also wish to devote more time to the study of physics, chemistry, mathe- matics, mechanics, English, modern languages, psychol- ogy, economics or history. These types of students find the course in Science well adapted to their needs and ideas, because of its close relation to the specialized engineering courses during the first two years, the larger number of hours devoted to scientific and humanistic subjects, and the wide choice in electives offered during the fourth, or senior year. In order to supply this kind of training, new courses are appearing in the Departments of Physics, Mathe- matics, and Mechanics, and many others are contem- plated. More time is allotted to work in the Depart- ments of English and Economics, and a broader scope in such subjects is covered. The present trend of thought in technical education is toward thoroughness in fundamentals. These include subjects which are basic to the building of men of char- acter, vision, and culture, as well as to the training of engineers and scientists to enter some branch of the industrial field. A well-balanced curriculum should pro- vide this type of instruction. INDUSTRIAL ⢠PROGRESS ' ENGINEER ING H scji-Ni; Ej |U. â'â I Van Bauman Teach M.Sc. B.A.. B.E.E., and M.Sc. Ohio State Uni- versity Associate Professor of Mathematics Tau Beta Pi. Sigma Xi, Eta Kappa Nu. Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Kappa Tau James Stratton Thompson Ph.D. B.S. and Ph.D. University of Chicago Associate Professor of Physics Sigma Xi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Samuel Fletcher Bibb S.M. S.B. and S.M. Unisersity of Chicago Assistant Professor of Mathematics Sigma Xi Harold Witter Haggard M.S. B.S. Dennison College M.S. University of Chicago Assistant Professor of Mathematics Delta Phi Walter Arthur Spencer B.Sc. B.Sc. University of Nebraska Instructor in Mathematics Watson M. Davis M.S. A.B. Cornell College M.S. University of Iowa Instructor in Mathematics Sigma Xi, Phi Tau Theta Van B. Teach J. S. Thompson S. F. Bibb H. W. Haggard W. A. Spencer V. M. Davis Thirty-it ten George Lawrence Scherger Ph.D. A.B. University of Indiana Ph.D. Cornell University Professor of History and Political Science and Head of the Department Phi Beta Gamma Clyde Barnes Cooper Ph.D. A. B. University of Nebraska M.A. University of Iowa Ph.D. University of Chicago Professor of English; Head of Dept. Wallace Bruce Amsbary Professorial Lecturer in Gen. Literature Walter Hendricks M.A. B. A. Amherst College M.A. University of Chicago Associate Professor of English Phi Beta Kappa, Sphinx, Phi Delta Theta Robert Henry Engle M.S. B.S. and M.S. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Economics Ernest E. Tupes LL.B. A. B. and B.S. University of Missouri LL.B. Chicago Kent College of Law Lecturer in Business Law Tau Beta Pi John Valentine Lizars J.D. B. S. Armour Institute of Technology J.D. DePaul University Instructor in Business Law Tau Beta Pi. Delta Tau Delta (No picture) THE HUMANITIES The Humanities include the courses in History of Civilization and Recent Times, Political Science, English and Literature, Economics and Law, and Great Leaders and Movements of Thought. This is a somewhat miscel- laneous variety of subjects and yet they have a common characteristic: they are neither engineering subjects nor can they be grouped as scientific. Their aim is rather to get at the man and the citizen than at the engineer. It has been a tradition at the Armour Institute of Technology to cultivate the humanities. We should be untrue to our past if we departed from this policy. We rather pride ourselves upon the fact that we either fore- stalled the trend of policy or else set the fashion which other engineering schools have followed. At least we know that increasing emphasis is being put upon the cultural work. We have been attempting with a very limited amount of time at our disposal to help make our engineering students better men, because we felt that only a big man can become a great engineer. We selected our courses primarily with this end in view. They should have as a background a knowledge of the progress of man-kind, of the great masterpieces of literature, of the great lead- ers and movements of scientific and philosophic devel- opment, of the nature of our economic organization and :hc great problem of economics, and also be able to use the English language effectively. This seems to be the minimum of cultural requirements. It is certainly a step in the right direction to strengthen the cultural work. We believe that the stu- dent body has come to recognize this quite as much as the faculty. G. L. Schcrg:r Tbirly-ei ht C. B. Cooper W. B. Armbiry V. Hendrick R. H. Engle E. E. Tupe SHOPS Is a thorough training in shopwork essential to the general education of the engineer? Not shop methods,ââ production,â shop cost accounting,â and glorified mechanic arts,â but the old-fashioned manual training in which the student acquires some technical skill and actual experience in the fabrication of machinery? Thirty years ago the answer was Yes.â Today, the answer is No.â Some educators favor the complete elimination of manual shopwork in every form, but the great majority believe that a limited and carefully chosen course is of great value, at least to those students inter- ested in mechanical and electrical engineering. Com- ing as it does, during the most formative years of the studentâs course, namely the freshman, sophomore, and junior years, shopwork has a three-fold value. The first and most important is psychological, the second is recre- ational, and the third, professional. The majority of en- gineering students like shopwork, they enjoy making things,â they glory in getting into overalls and soiling their hands, they feel that they arc practical men.â It is the only subject in the freshman and sophomore years which bears upon practice, all others being of an ab- stract nature. In other words, it sellsâ them to the en- gineering profession. But for shopwork the freshman and sophomore students at Armour would have no let up in their intensive course of theoretical training. As it is the few hours devoted each week to this work arc periods of mental relaxation and at the same time result in the acquirement of useful knowledge. Many an Ar- mour graduate attributes his position in industry to his training in shop practice. Ncls Peter Peterson Instructor in Wood Working Charles Henry Fornhof Instructor in Machine Tool Work Charles Lewis Larsen Instructor in Founding Ferdinand Theodore Foerster University of Illinois Instructor in Forging F.dward Roylancc Galley Runcorn Institute of Technology, En- gland Instructor in Machine Tool Work N. P. Peterson C. H. Fornhof C. L. I.artcn F. T. Foerster E. R. Gatlcy Thirty-nine CYCLE Faculty Club Reading Room F. U. Smith D. P. Morcton J. J. Schommer J. S. Thompson W. A. Spencer V. B. Teach FACULTY CLUB OFFICERS .......................Honorary President President .............. ...............First Vice-President Second Vice-President ........................................ Secretary .........................................Treasurer The history of the Armour Faculty Club, which it has been the pleasure of the present historian to record from time to time, must be written this year in rubrics. For 1932 has indeed seen red letter days; days in which the club quarters were transformed from an unventilated hole in the wall into clean, spa- cious, attractive club rooms, where the mem- bers may spend their moments of relaxation in ease and comfort. The Institute authorities having placed ad- ditional space at the disposal of the club, a program of expansion and improvement was proposed by the president. Professor Morcton. The plans involved an increase of approxi- mately 100% in the space occupied by the club, the installation of a large, well lighted and ventilated reading room, the providing of adequate cloakroom and washroom facili- ties, and a thorough revamping of the exist- ing quarters. The new reading room is well insulated, both thermally and acoustically, so that the click of the ivories (or shall we say, the crash of the bakclitcs) in the billiard room adjoining, or the verbal hot air from the card room, can not disturb R.V.P. read- ing the latest mystery story in Saturday Eve- ning Post, or R.J.F. working the cross-word puzzle in Judge. Practically all the work involved in the improvements was done by members of the club, with Morcton acting as superintendent of construction and Nash and Spencer as boss carpenters. Through the long summer vacation these men worked, assisted at fre- quent intervals by many other members. Members who did no work contributed cash for necessary supplies and materials, and for new furniture. The slogan was Ten Days or Ten Dollars,â an illuminating commentary on the value of the average professorâs serv- ices when he works with his hands. Forty The Christmas Party House Committee C. A. Nash, Chairman G. M. Wilcox J. E. Snow C. A. Tibbals J. C. Peebles A. W. Scar E. C. Grafton N. P. Peterson F. T. Foerster COMMITTEES Membership Com mil tee M. B. Wells, Chairman G. F. Gebhardc H. A. McCormack E. H. Freeman J. B. Finnegan Honorary Member F. U. Smith Loan Committee C. E. Paul, Chairman B. B. Freud H. T. Hcald W. A. Spencer N. P. Peterson Cigar Committee R. V. Perry, Chairman W. C. Krathwohl C. R. Swincford E. Kelly The old reading room has been redecorat- ed, supplied with the necessary tables and chairs, and converted into a card room. Every noon this room is filled with contract players, Larryâ Larson usually being among the first to arrive. Several players, including Huntly, Thompson, Sear, Swincford, and a few others, are making a careful study of the game, and swear by Culbertson. George Allison has no conventional yard stick to value his hand; he bids what he thinks he can makeâand us- ually makes it. And thus the club members derive relaxation and mental stimulus from this most popular of all card games. In recognition of the important services he rendered in the renaissance of the Armour Faculty Club, Professor Moreton has been elected to succeed himself as president. This is the first time in its history that the club has taken such action, and it is well deserved. In line with the physical improvements which have been effected during the past year, plans have been formed for increased social activi- ties during the coming year. In this way it is hoped that the club will become a more im- portant factor in the lives of Armour profes- sors, and an integrating and directing force in the life of the Institute. An enjoyable Christmas turkey dinner and party started the program. On April 18, the club gave a dinner followed by an initiation ceremony for Doctor Hotchkiss, Professor Engle, and Doctor McNamara. After the goat was re- stored to captivity, general entertainment fol- lowed. On April 19, the faculty ladies en- joyed the club rooms with cards and other games. Forty-one attached to firry auditorium is a storeroom for tire products of the brush and hammer, the field museum guards and displays tire storks, not of one century but of many. tire veteran actors, our alumni, hair not, however, remained under a roof, but have gone out into the world and related and practised tire lessons of our story. ALUMNI ARMOUR ALUMNI ASSOCIATION John J. Scbommer OFFICERS John J. Schommcr PreuJeut Frederick C. Heuchling Vrcc-PrtsiJcut David I . Morcton Secretjry-T rfusurer ADVISORY COUNCIL Earl J. Smith 0(5 Abraham A. Corman '17 Edwin O. Griffcnhagcn '06 Harold V. Mundav '23 Arthur Katzingcr '16 Melville S. Flinn '04 Charle H. Hammond â04 Vernon S. Watton â00 William T. Watt â17 Percy W. F.vant âia Aaron Patchkow 'ai J. Warren McCaffrey 'aa The Alumni Association of Armour Institute of Tech- nology has had a very successful year. Hundreds of names have been added to the list of alumni. Chapters of twenty or thirty alumni have been organized and installed respectively in New York, Cincinnati, Mil- waukee, and St. Louis. The active memberships now number about 3,400. Besides greatly increasing the membership by the addi- tion of lost sheep,â some other outstanding events took place. The twenty-fifth reunion of the class of 1907 was held last June. Fred Heuchlingâs leadership induced about thirty of the class to join in the happy meeting. There were three days crammed full of activities that recalled the happy carefree days of long ago. Old com- radeships were renewed, new toasts were drunk, and old tics of friendships were more securely cemented. The reunion culminatd in a picnic at the summer home of A. L. Eusticc. In October the Association held its largest Alumni Banquet, in fact, it was one of the largest college ban- quets ever held in the west. There were twenty-one hundred fifty persons present. This included the Trus- tees, Faculty, Undergraduates, and about thirteen hun- dred Alumni. The affair was held at the Illinois Naval Reserve Armory. The hall was beautifully decorated forty-four The twenty-fifth reunion of the class of 1907 â by the Architects, under the leadership of Alfred Mcll, ten days being spent on this task. At each plate there was placed a grab bag, containing many articles of use, kindly donated by prominent Chicago firms. The Alumni who so generously gave their time to make this banquet the great surprise and stupendous success were Charles W. Hill, Harold Munday, H. W. Martin, John Lizars, Professor D. P. Morcton, and Pro- fessor John J. Schommcr. These men with a committee of nearly five-hundred men were successful in bringing in delegations from all over the country. The annual business meeting was held on December 28th at the Mcdinah Athletic Club. President Emeritus Howard Raymond made a short talk as did Mr. Roy Henderson, Alumni Trustee. Many changes of the Con- stitution were effected and the annual election was held. The officers elected will serve for a term of two years. Mr. Morris W. Lee of the class of â99 was elected to replace Ralph H. Rice â97 on the Board of Managers as was Mr. Louis A. Sanford â02 to replace Henry L. Nachman â02. The Vice-Presidents who were elected are to act in the capacity of chairmen of the various committees. John J. Schommcr was elected President, Fred Heuchling Vice-President, and David P. Moreton Secretary-Treasurer. Entertainment in the form of mu- sicians and dancers was provided throughout the dinner. David P. M ore ton ALUMNI TRUSTEES Roy M. Henderson '02 Alfred S. Alschulcr '99 Robert B. Harper âoj John J. Schommcr â12 Charles V. Hill . Jr. âit Harold W. Munday âiy BOARD OF MANAGERS Morris V. I.cc '99 Louis A. Sanford â02 Clinton E. Stryker '17 Henry V. Rcgemburger â2$ Charles W. Burcky â27 Edward F. Pohlman âto James A. Whittington â14 ALUMNI ON THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Schommcr, Harper. Henderson. Hills, Munday. Alschulcr Forly-firt THE GRAND ARMOUR ALUMNI Trustees, faculty, alumni, and students of Armour congregated as one large and happy family on the evening of October 20, 1932, in the spacious United States Naval Reserve Armory in Grant Park. Here at the Grand Armour Alumni Reunion and Student Rally, they manifested their hearty interest in each other as professor met trustee, and alumnus chatted with student. About their tables in the large banquet hall gathered the students and graduates from every class even the first Academy group which entered the Institute forty years ago. As the faculty and trustees marched down the aisle, they were hailed in an enthusiastic ovation by the Armour men. The well-fed engineers did their best to disprove the strength of the roof above as they cheered for class, school, and leaders. To the accom- Forly-Six paniment of the twenty-eight piece Naval Reserve band, the Armour Fight song was sung, symbolizing the spirit of all present in the support of the development program under way. In his welcome address, John J. Schommcr, president of the association, drew an analogy of the Armour Plan as a football campaign. He compared the trustees to the coaches, the alumni to the linesmen, and the faculty to the team, all of whom were set on carrying the ball, the Institute, down the new campus to the goal posts which in reality are the towers of the engineering buildings to come. Following the welcome, a number of alumni awards were presented by Harold W. Munday. For his developments in astronomy, Francis G. Pease of the class of 1901 was given the Alumni Association Dis- REUNION AND STUDENT RALLY tinguishcd Service Award, a recognition which is to be given annually to an alumnus for outstanding achievement. The recipient of the first annual award to the outstanding student of his class was Harvey C. Rossing, the ranking student of the class of 1932. Charles W. Hills, Jr. was presented with a testimonial from his committee for his in- dustry in arranging the Reunion. A significant honor was bestowed upon the Associationâs president, John J. Schom- mer, by the presentation of the first Alumni Association Service Key, an award for cease- less and unselfish service to the Institute and the Association. That the visionary Armour Plan will be- come a reality was assured by James D. Cun- ningham, chairman of the board of trustees, in a short talk after which he introduced the new members of the board. The Armour Development Plan, in some of its detail, and a review of progress were pointed out by George W. Rossetter. Law- rence A. Downs reported on the personnel and placement program, Don M. Compton on the Armour radio program, and Alfred S. Alscnuler on the new architectural depart- ment. Morris W. Lee, '99, reported that the naming committee decided to retain the present name as the best possible. The alumni committee, headed by Charles W. Lee, Jr. â11, and Harold W. Munday â23, were justified in feeling proud of the results of their effort in having staged such a mo- mentous undertaking as the reunion. With over two thousand present at the event, it is said to have been the largest of its kind ever held by a college in the middle west. Fort) -seien loir, unfailing loyally, and regard for fellou- man, coupled with an unequalled leitic of jut lice, bate reared the greatest nation on the earth, iceond to patriotism to one's country, there it no bond stronger tern of self rule, in our company, naturally, there is tin star, tin supporting cast, the stage hand, and the extra, each classed according to bis service and merit, gradually the deserving are draun from the ranks and raised to a brilliant height. than that between tire mem- bers of a band of troupers, in lire government set, the federal building, stand three tall toners, symbolical of the triple-division of our sys- a itatt endowed with great natural resources or ad- vantageous position becomes the staras Joes the senior who has, in the course of his life, steadily accumulated that resource in much the same manner of piling upon pile, although in an incomparably ihort period of time. SENIORS SENIORS OFFICERS Another group of young men has been sent out into the world to help bring fame to Armour Institute of Technology. This group, the Class of 1933, has reached that rung in the ladder from which there is no returning.- As we gaze at the product of four strenuous years of labor, we recall with pleasure the friendships formed from constant association with men having the same ob- jective in life. As Freshmen, the first few months were spent in acquiring a knowledge of the strange atmosphere prevalent at an institution of this type. The newness and strangeness of college life was one of the most formidable opponents we had to overcome in our fight for our ambition. However, it soon became apparent that the strict discipline of the high school was absent, and the earnestness and brotherly interest of the faculty brought forth a sense of responsibility and belief in ourselves which had been lacking here- tofore. The Freshman Informal, our first social event, along with the vanquishing of the Sophomores in the Class Rush, did much to relieve the monotony of the first year. The Sophomore Year, while actually more difficult than the first, found us more inclined toward harder tasks because of an under- standing of the type of work required. No time was needlessly wasted as was done during the Freshman Year. By this time we had learned to apply ourselves as engineersâswiftly, surely, and economically. Outside activities began to occupy our attention, helping to enlarge the range of our interests. It was with a sigh of relief, however, that we left the dreaded second year behind to be only a memory. Junior Year, the most fascinating year in any manâs college life, began to utilize the fundamentals learned during the first two Willis G. Buehnc PrniJenl George J. Beemstcrboer Vicf-PrciiJcnt Vincent J. Galvani Strrt ary Social William W. Davies Chairman Harold J. Bannasch William G. Booth Roy W. Carlstrom Irving C. Johnson COMMITTEES Announcement Bradford Larson Chairman Irving C. Johnson August J. Krcuzkamp William T. Smethells George W. Tcrp. Jr. Jacket Joseph D. Fernbach Chairman Joseph J. Gura Bernhard II. E. Loeschc Ralph I.. Seafuri Elroy A. Snelling 1933 years. More and more time was devoted to outside activities along special lines. The various engineering societies, of which we be- came members, proved to be beneficial, both in giving us some place to relax, and by bringing us in contact with practicing engi- neers of high rank. Many of us were honored at this time by being bid to one or more of the Honorary Fraternities. This pleas- ant year was climaxed by Junior Week, and that event to which all Armour men look forward from the first day they enter the Institute, the Junior Formal. During the Senior Year we made rapid progress through the engineering applications already studied. Laboratories and reports required a good deal of our time, along with the newer subjects encountered. The various clubs, smokers, and dances made this the busiest year of our four at Armour. Finally, the Class of â33 was gathered together as a complete body for the last time, not in order to attend a class meeting, a lecture, or a social event, but for the purpose of receiving the enlightening lesson presented at the Baccalaureate Sermon. Com- mencement Day found us ready to receive our well-earned reward for four years of toil, the goal that each of us had looked to for four long years. Today, upon the completion of our schooling, we find our ideas more advanced and look upon our chosen profession in a new light. We arc no longer carefree and reckless, but we hope arc level headed, careful, and precise engineers, who lack only a practical training. Again we must start, as we enter our field of engineering, but this time from a higher level, and without a guiding hand. Armour has opened the path to our future field, shown us what we want and how to find it. Our progress from here depends upon our own ability. OFFICERS COMMITTFES Charles B. Sommer Photography Cap and Gown Jewelry T reaiurer Carroll K. Simon Chairman Earl G. Beard.Jr. Chairman Maurice J. Eritman Chairman Wilfred W. Davies Walter G. Anderson George R. Belton F.arl C. Bollinger William W. Lange John H. Miller Harold J. Bannasch Alan D. Burnet Lawrence Gabriel Bernhard H. E. Loesche Vernon C. Alexander Ors-ille T. Barnett Raymond J. Dufour William A. Janssen Raymond E. Nelson Social Clrairman Edwin C. Kenner Sargeant-al-Armi Fifty-one â THE CYCLE Alexander, Vernon C. Riverside, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Riverside-Brookfield High School. Riverside. 111. Triangle: Honor A Society; W'.S.R. 2, 3. 4; Interdas Basketball 2. 3. 4; Interclass Base- ball 2. 3. 4; Interclass Golf 1, 2. 3, 4; Jewelry Committee 4. Altschuler, Martin Chicago, 111. B.S. in Architecture Crane Technical High School, Chi- cago, III. A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Andersen, Walter G. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Lake View High School. Chicago, 111. Armour Players 4; Rifle. Club 3: A.A.S. 1. 2. 3, 4; Armour Engi- neer 4; Orchestra 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 3, 4; Photography Commit- tee 4. Anderson, I.eRoy S. Aurora, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Enginecr- Kast High School. Aurora, III. Beta Psi; K.P.E.S. 2. 3, 4. Bannasch, Harold J. Chicago, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- Lane 'technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Salamander: Social Com- mittee 4; Cap and Gown Commit- tee 4. Barnett, Orville T. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Hyde Park High School. Chicago. III. Sigma Alpha Mu. President; Black Knight; Sphinx; Pres Club 2: A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4; Intcrclass Track J, 2. 3: Armour Tech News L ?⢠L 4- New Editor 3. Editor-in- Chief 4; Board of Publications 3. 4: Jewelry Committee 4; Interfraternity Council 4; Assistant Junior Mar- shall 3. Baumann, Wilbur E. Springfield, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Springfield High School. Springfield. 111. Theta Xi. President: W.S.E. 4; Social Committee 3; Orchestra 1. Beard, Earl G. Park Ridge, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Maine Township High School. Park Ridge. III. Chi Epsilon; W.S.E. 3. 4; Honorary Marshall 2, 3. Becker, Henry F., Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Sphinx; Armour Radio Association 1. 2. 3; K.P.E.S. 2, 3. 4; Assistant Baseball Manager 3; Cycle 2. 3. Athletic Editor 3; Ar- mour Tech News 2. 3. 4. Sports Edi- tor 4. Beemsterbocr, George J. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Mt. Carmel High School. Chicago. 111. Chi Epsilon: Honor A Society: W.S.E. 3. 4; Basketball 2. 3. 4. Captain 4; Intcrclass Baseball 1, 2. 3. 4; Intcrclass Basketball !. 2; Class Vice-President 3, 4. Belton, George R. Thorndale, Ontario B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Beck Collegiate Institute. London. Ontario. Theta Xi: A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Photography Committee 4. Bcrglund, Gunner Chicago, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Calumet High School. Chicago. III. Triangle; Glee Club 2. 3. 4; F.P. E.S. L 2. 3. 4; Track 4; Cycle 2; Class Secretary 2. Fifty- it o Bcstlcr, Paul W. La Grange, 111. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Lyon Township High School, La Grange. III. Aljdia Chi Sigma; A.I. Ch.E. 2. S. . Bock hole, William C. Oak Park. III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Oak Park High School. Oak Park. 111. Bodinson, Harold W. Aurora, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing East High School. Aurora, III. Tri- angle: Press Club 1. 2; K.P.E.S. 1. 2. J, 4; Armour Tech New I. 2. 3. 4; Feature Editor 4; Class Social Chairman 3. Bollinger, Earl C. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Ride Club 2; A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Orchestra 2. 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 2. 3, 4; Photography Com- mittee 4. Booth, William Gâ Jr. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Calumet High School. Chicago. 111. University of Wisconsin. Madison. Vi . Sigma Chi; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4; Interclass Baseball 4; Social Com- mittee 4. Bottorff. Paul A. Do Plaines, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Maine Township High School. De Plaines. III. W.S.E. 3, 4. Bronwcll, Arthur B. Riverside, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Rivcrside-Brooklicld High School. Riverside, 111. A.I.E.E. 2, 3. 4. Buchnc, Willis G. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering I-akc View High School. Chicago. III. Tau Beta Pi: Honor A Society: Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E. I. 2. 3. 4; Baseball 1. 2. 3, 4; Interclass Base- tall I. 2. 3. 4; Honor Marshall 3; Class President 4. Burnet, Alan D. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Lake View High School, Chicago. 111. W.S.E. 2. 3. 4. Cameron, Howard J. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Greenbrier Military School. Lewis- burg, West Virginia. Phi Pi Phi; Chess Club. President 4; W.S.E. 3. 4; A T.A.A. 2. Campionc, Joseph L. Chicago. III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Tilden Teehnical High School. Chi- cago. III. A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Boxing 2, 3. Carlstonc, Paul A. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Senn High School, Chicago, III. Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 3. 4; Or- chestra 4. Fifty-three ] Carlstrom. Roy W. Chicago, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Carl Schur High School. Chicago. 111. Theta Xi: Black Knight; Honor A Society. Pre iilent; F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3, 4; Swimming 1. 2. 3. 4. Captain 4; Track 2; Intcrcla Relay 1; In- terda Track 4; Interda Baidal I 4; Claw President 1; Board o Ath- letic Control 1: Assistant Junior Marshall 3; Honor Marshall 2. 2: Sccial Committee 4; Inter-Honorary Fraternity Council 4; A.T.A.A. 2. 3. 4. President 4. Christensen, Carol C. Morgan Park, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Morgan Park High School. Morgan Park. 111. A.S.M.K. 2. 4; Stresses and Strains 3. Cislak, John F. Cicero, 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering St. Mel High School. Chicago. III. A.S.M.K. 2. 3, 4. Clanton, Carl N. Topeka, Kansas B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Topeka High School. Topeka, Kan. Triangle; Tau Beta Pi; Salamander, President: Pi Nu Epsilon, President; Black Knight; Armour Player . 3. 4; F.P.E.S. 1, 2, 3. 4; Student Direc- tor Orchestra ami Band 4. Collick, Milton A. Ironwood, Mich. B.S. in Electrical Engineering I..I,. Wright High School. Ironwood. Mich. Theta Xi; Pi Xu Epsilon; Sphinx; Glee Club 2. 3. 4; Press Club 2; A.I.E.K. 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech News 2, 3. 4. Advertising Man- ager 4. Cone, Spencer B. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Architecture Garden City High School. Garden City. Kan . Delta Tau Delta; Scarab; Sphinx; Honor A Society: A.A S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Tennis 2. 3. 4; Armour Engineer 2. 3. Art Editor 2. 3. Cordcs, Emmett L. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Morgan Park Military Academy. Chicago. III. Beta Psi; Honor A So- ciety; Rifle Club 3. 4; Track 1. 2. 3. 4. Curran, Edward L. Chicago. III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing De IjSalle Institute. Chicago. 111. Sphinx; Armour Players 3; Glee dub 2. 3: F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3, 4; Interclass Baseball 2. 3; Armour Engineer 3. 4. Technical Editor 4. Davies, Wilfred W. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Tau Beta Pi. President; Scarab; Black Knight; Armour Play- ers 3. 4; A.A.S. 1. 2._ 3. 4. Presi- dent 3; Armour Tech News 2; Class Treasurer 1. 3: Class Social Chair- man 4; Orchestra 4; Inter-Honorary Council. President; Honor Marshall 3. Demikis, Anton, Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering John Marshall High School. Chi- cago. 111. A.I.E.E. 3. 4. Di Orio, Pasqual A. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Campus Club; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4. Dombrowski, Roman J. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Crane Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. Truss Club; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4; Radio Club 2. 3. 4. fifty-four OF 1933 Donncllan, John P. Chicago III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Si. Rita High School. Chicago. III. W.S.K. 3. 4; Bascl all 1. Ending, Charles A. Chicago, III. in Architecture Ccniral Y.M.C.A. Evening High School. Chicago. 111. A.A.S. 1, 2. 3. 4; Wrestling 3. Dubskv, Frank A. Chicago. III. B.S. in Architecture Tilden Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Glee Clul 2. 3. 4; A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Dufour, Raymond J. Oak Park. 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Oak Park High School. Oak Park. III. Triangle. President: Tau Beta Pi: Pi Tau Sigma. President; A.S. M.E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech News 2. 3; Assistant Junior Marshall 3: Interfraternity Council 4. Dumscr, Wesley T. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Eta Ka|-i a Xu; Armour Radio Association 3. 4; Armour Players 3. 4; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4; Ar- mour Tech News I. 2. 3. 4. Dunham, Edwin A. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Evanston High School. Evanston. 111. Eta Kapjci Xu; A.I.E.E. 2. 3, 4. Eberth, Ellsworth E. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Bowen High School. Chicago. III. Phi Kappa Sigma; Eta Kappa Xu: Sphinx: A.I.E.E. 1. 2. 3. 4; Ar- mour Tech Xews, 2. 3, 4. Xews Edi- tor 4. Erisman, Maurice J. Oak Park. III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Oak Park High School. Oak Park. 111. Pi Tau Sigma: Sphinx; Armour Mayers 3; A.S.M.E. 3. 4; A.T.A.A. 3. 4; Track 1. 3. 4; Manager 4; Ar- mour Tech Xews 3. 4. Circulation Manager 4; Assistant Junior Mar- shall 3: Election Committee 4; Chair- man Jewelry Committee 4; Inter- class Track 1; Intcrclass Relay 2. Ecinbcrg, Albert E. Chicago, III. d.3. in r.icctrical l ngmecring Englewood High School. Chicago. III. Rho Delta Rho; Ride Club 1. 2; A. I.E.E. 2, 3, 4; Boxing 4. Fernbach, Joseph D. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Tilden Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Armour Radio Association 3: Rifle Club 2, 3: A.I.E.E. 2. J. 4; Class President 3; Jacket Commit- tee Chairman 4. Fishman, FIcnry Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Englewood High School. Chicago. III. Rho Delta Rho; Phi Lambda I'psi- Ion; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech Xews 1. 2. 3. 4. Fuhrer, Martin Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Carl Schurr High School. Chicago, III. A.S.M.E. 2, 3, 4; Armour Play- ers 3. 4. Fifty-fitt Galvani, Vincent J. Chicago. III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Phi Lamtxla tjn.il.wi; Hon- or A Society: A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4; Clave Secretary 4; Baseball t. 2. 3. 4; Interda Baseball 1. 2. 3. 4. Gets, Milton M. Dolton, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Thornton Township High School. Harvey. III. A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4. Gisskc, Edward Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lane Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. Phi Pi Phi. Goo, Karl M. Chicago. HI. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering McKinley High School. Honolulu. T. H. R fle Club 3. 4. Gura, Joseph J. Chicago, III. B.S. in Eire Protection Engineer- ing Lindblom High School. Chicago. III. Glee Club 1. 2; Armour Players 3. 4; K.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Armour En- gineer .5. 4. Engineering Progress Editor 4; Jacket Committee 4. Hacklcy, K. Lewis Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Technical High School.' Chi- cago. III. Phi ITunisia Lâpsilon; Rifle Club I. 2. ,t. 4; Rifle Team 1. 2. 3. 4; A.I.Ch.E. I. 2. 3, 4. Hallcn, George K. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago, III. Armour Player 4; Glee Club 1. 2; Chess Club 2. 3, 4; Box- ing 1. 2. 3, 4. Hanrahan, George E. Glen Ellyn, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Crane Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. W.S.E. 2. 3. 4. Hclmick, Allen H. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Lincoln High School, Webster City. Iowa. Alpha Chi Sigma; Rifle Club 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 1. 2. J; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4 President; Interda Track 1. 2. 3; Rifle Team 2. 3. 4, Cap- tain 4. Hess, R. Adair Madison, Wise. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Tildeti Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Campus Club 1. 2, 3. 4; Rifle Club 2. 3; A.S..M.E. 1. 2. 3. 4. Hoffman, William C. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lindbiom High School. Chicago. III. Pi Tau Sigma; Truss Club 2. 3, 4; Rifle Club 4; A.S..M.E. 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 4. Hollmann. Walter G. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Lane Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lamlida Cpsilon; Rifle Club 2, 3, 4; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4. Fifty-six Q o Hulswit, William H. Hubbard Woods, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering New Trier High School. Winnetka. III. A.I.E.E. 2. 3. i. Jackson, John R., Jr. Nashville, Tenn. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Hume Fork High School. Nashville. Tenn. Della Tau Delta; President: Sphinx; F.P.E.S. I. 2. 3. â˘; Armour Tech News 2, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council 4._ President: Class Treasur- er 2; Social Committee I: Chairman Program Committee 4; Press Club 2, 3. Jackson, William D. Winona, Minn. B.S. in Civil Engineering Winona Senior High School, Winona. Minn Theta Xi: W.S.E. 3. 4; Glee Club 1. James, Erwin H. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Lane Technical High School, Chi- cago. 111. A.A.S. t. 2. 3. 4. Janssen, William A. Oak Park, 111. B.S. in Architecture Oak Park High School. Oak Park. III. Glee Club 1; A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Honor Marshall 2; Jewelry Commit- tee 4. Jenson, Gust, Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Bowen High School, Chicago. 111. Cam| uÂŤ Club 4; A.I.Ch.E. 3. 4. Job, Bolcslaus W. Chicago. III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Carter Harrison Technical High School. Chicago. III. A.I.K.K. Johannison, Sven Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering l-akc View High Cchool, Chicago. III. Honor A Society: Campus Club. President 3; A.I.Ch.E. I. 2. 3. 4: Golf 1. 2. 3. 4: Captain 4; Alpha Chi Sigma. President 3. Johnson, Irving C. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Nicholas Semi High School. Chicago. III. A.S.M.E. 3; Interelass Baseball 1. 2. 3; Interelass Basketball I, 2. 3: Junior Marshall; Social Committee 4; Announcement Committee 4. Juvinall, James W. Chicago. III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Hyde Park High School. Chicago. III. Phi Kappa Sigma; Tau Beta Pi: Eta Kappa Nu. President; Sphinx; Black Knight. President; Armour Players 3; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech New 1. 2. 3. 4. As- sociate Editor 4. Managing Board 4; Armour Engineer 2; Honor Mar- shall 2, 3; Intcrhonorary Council 4; Board of Publications 4. Kaiser, Charles A. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering I.indblom High School. Chicago. 111. A.I.E.E. 2, 3. 4. Kampwirth, John L. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Civil Engineering St. Rita High School. Chicago. III. W.S.E. 3. 4; Armour Tech News 3. 4. Fifty-ttvtn :ycle Kenner, Edwin C. Macomb, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engincer- Macomh Ili(h School. Macomb. III. Triangle: Pie  Club 2; F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 4; Armour Tech Xcvi 2. 2. 4; Interdas Track 2, 3. 4. Knudson, Raymond I.. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Nicholas Senn High School. Chicago. 111. dec Club 2. 3; Campus Club 2. 3. 4; A.I.K.K. 3. 4. Krawitz, Ira Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Waller High School. Chicago. 111. Kho Delta Kho; W.S.K. 2. 3. 4. Kreuzkamp, August J. Highland Park. III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Deerfield High School. Highland Park, III. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Brookline. Mas . Phi Kappa; Honor A Society; Track 2, 3. 4. Kubicck, Earl C. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Parker High School, Chicago. III. A.A.S. 1. 2. 3, 4; Armour Tech New 2. 3. Kubicka, Joseph L. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Beta P i; Alpha Chi Sig- ma; A.I.Ch.K. Lange, William W. Chicago. III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering I.akc View High School. Chicago. 111. Beta Psi. President; Tau Beta Pi; Kta Kappa Nu; Sphinx: Pi Xu Ep- silon; Black Knight; Armour Radio Association I, 2. 3; Musical Club 1. 2. 3. 4; A.I.K.K. 2. 3. 4; Band 1. 3, 4; Orchestra 2. 3. 4; Cycle 2. 3. 4; Photography Editor 3. 4; Armour Engineer 3. 4. Staff Pho- tographer 3. 4; Inlcrfraternity Coun- cil 4. President; Social Committee 3; Pres Club 2; Photography Com- mittee 4. Larson, Bradford Highland Park, III. B.S. in Eire Protection Engineer- ing Deerfield Shields High School, High- land Park, III. Sigma Kappa Delta, President; Tau Beta Pi; Salaman- der; F.P.E.S. I. 2. 3. 4; Baseball Manager 4; Armour Engineer 3, 4; Interfraternity Council 4; Election Committee 4; Announcement Com- mittee 4. Lcncki, Sigmund T. Chicago. HI. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Bowen High School. Chicago, III. Rifle Club; Orchestra 2, 3. Loose he, Bernhard E. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Civil Engineering Tilden Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. Tau Beta Pi: Chi Epsi- lon; W.S.K. 2. 3. 4; Orchestra 1. 2; Stresses and Strains 2; Election Committee 4; Cap and Gown Com- mittee 4; Jacket Committee 4. Lomasney, Edmond P. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Tilden Technical High School. Chi- cago, III. Sphinx; Campus Club 2. 3. 4; A.I.Ch.K 2, 3. 4; Armour En- gineer 2, 3, 4. Luckcrman, Philip Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Crane Technical High School, Chi- cago. 111. A.I.Ch.K 3. 4. Fifty-right 1. uckctt, Thomas D. Louisville, Kentucky B.S. in Architecture The Hill School. Pottstown. Penn. Delta Tau Delta; Scarab; A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 1. 2; Cycle 1. 2. 3; Art Editor 3; Class Vice-President 1. MacIntyre, Alexander M. Chicago. III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Pullman Free School of Manual Training, Chicago. 111. University of Chicago, Chicago, III. Marks, Christian W. Chicago. III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Carl Schurz High School. Chicago. 111. A.S.M.E.: Interda Baseball 4; Interda Basketball 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 4. Maucr, Jacob T. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Roosevelt High School. Chicago. III. Chi Epsilon; W.S.E. 3. 4; Rifle Club 2, 3; Interda Basketball 1. 2. 3, 4. McKenna, George W. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Hyde Park High School. Chicago. 111. McLane, John R. Honolulu, T. H. B.S. in Architecture Punahou Academy. Honolulu. T. II. Delta Tau Delta; A.A.S. I. 2. 3. 4; Swimming 1. Meehan, Robert F. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering St. Rita High School. Chicago. 111. Theta Xi; Pi Xu Epsilon: Musical Club . President 4; A.S.M.E. 3.4; Band 1, 2. 3; Orchestra 1. 2. 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 1, 2. 3. 4. Meyer, Albert L. Maywood, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Proviso High School. Mavwcod. 111. F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Meyer, Herman Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Rho Delta Rho. Presi- dent: Interfraternity Council 4; Iâi Xu Epsilon: Musical Clubs; W.S.E. 2. 3. 4; Orchestra 2. 3; Stresses and Strains 2, 3. 4, Director 4. Meyer, Robert N. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Tildcn Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Truss Club 4; Armour Players 4; A.I.E.E. 3, 4; Interdas Baseball 3. Miller, John H. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Phi Kappa Sigma. Presi- dent; Phi lambda Utwilon; Alpha Chi Sigma; Sphinx; Rifle Club 2; A.I.Ch.E 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech Xcvrt 1; Cycle 3. 4. Organization Editor 3: Assistant Editor 4; Interfraternity Council 4; Photography Committee 4. Mitchell, Charles R. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lindblom High School. Chicago. III. Phi Pi Phi; A.S.M.E. 1. 2. 3. 4; Boxing 2; Interfraternity Council 4. Fifty-mut Moline. Robert W. Chicago, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Bowen High School. Chicago. 111. Campus Club 2. 3, 4; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4. Monger, Harold J. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Carl Sehurx High School. Chicago. 111. Pi Tau Sigma: Armour Player 3. 4; Armour Tech New 2. 3. 4: A.S.M.E. 3. 4. Moravcc, Julius Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering l.imlliloni High School. Chicago. III. Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S. M E. 3. Morris, Sidney H. Chicago. III. B.S. in Architecture Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Sigma Alpha Mu: A.A.S. 2. 3. 4; Armour Players 4; Boxing 3; Armour Tech News 2. 3. Nelson, Clifford A. Chicago. III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Lindbtom High School. Chicago. HI. Theta Xi: K.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Or- ehc tra 2; Stresses and Strains 1. 2. Nelson, Hans P. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Architecture Carl Schurz High School. Chicago. 111. Glee Club 2. 3; A.A.S. 2. 3. 4. Nelson, Raymond E. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Nicholas Senn High School, Chicago. 111. Theta Xi; Pi Tau Sigma: Sphinx: Press Club 2: Glee Club 4; A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Board of Publica- tions 4; Armour Tech New 1. 2. 3. 4. Business Manager 4; Jewelry Committee 4. Paine, Franklin W. Park Ridge, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Maine Township High School. De Plaines, III. Phi Lambda Lâpsilon, Prcsiilcnt: Sphinx: Black Knight; Honor A Society: Hide Club 3, 4; A.I.Ch.E. 1. 2. 3. 4; Tennis 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech News 2. 3. 4, Copy- Editor 3. 4; Honor Marshall 2, 3. Pechman. Jack R. Denver, Colorado B.S. in Eire Protection Engineer- ing East H'v-h School. Denver. Colorado. Theta Xi; K.P.E.S. I. 2. 3. 4; Ten- nis Manager 4; Social Committee 2. 3. Penfold, Norman C. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Nicholas Serin High School. Chicago. III. Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; So- cial Committee 3. Peterson, Victor P. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Tildcn Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Truss Club; A.I.E.E. 2, 3, 4. Pihl, Stanley E. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Calumet High School. Chicago. 111. A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Intcrelass Baschall 2. 3; Interclass Basketball I. 2, 3. 4; Basketball 3. Sixty Plhak, Roy L. Cicero, 111. B.S. in Architecture Crane Technical High School, Chi- cago, HI- University of Illinois, Ur- bana. III. I clta Chi. Poedtke, Carl H. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago, III.; W.S.E. 3. -t; Intcrclass Basketball 1, 2. 3. 4. Priban, Milton L. Chicago, III. B.S. in Llectrical engineering Harrison Technical High School. Chicago. III. Eta Ka| ; a Nu: A.I. E.E. 2. 3, 4; Interda Basketball 2. 3. 4. Rasmussen, Harold Chicago, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Creighton High School. Omaha. Ne- braska. A.I.E.E. 1: F'.P.E.S. 4. Ream, Alt us M. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Chemical Engineering 1. akc View High School. Chicago. 111. Alpha Chi Sigma. President 3; Ar- mour Engineer 3. 4. Advertising Manager 4; Campus Club; A.I.Ch.E. 2, 3. 4. Reardon, Edward P. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Loyola Academy, Chicago. III. Rcber, Grotc Wheaton, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Wheaton Community High School, Wheaton. III. A.I.K.K. 2. 3. 4. Reynolds, Harold C. Cordova, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Chattey High School. Ontario. Cali- fornia. A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4; Radio Club I. Rohrer, John A. Hammond, Indiana B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Hammond High School. Hammond, Indiana. Phi Pi Phi: A.S.M.E; So- cial Committee 2; Band I. 2; Swim- ming 1. Roscnfcld, Phil Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. Kappa Delta Epsilon. President; Interfratentity Council 4; W.S.E. 3. 4; Wrestling 3. 4. Rychlik, Robert E. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Harrison Technical High School. Chicago. 111. Eta Kappa Nu: Sphinx: Armour Radio Association; Armour Players 3. 4; A.I.K.K. 2. 3. 4; Ar- mour Tech News 1, 2. 3. 4. Man- aging Editor 4. Managing Board 4. Sademan, Elmer E. Chicago, III. B.S. in Eire Protection Engineer- Lane technical High School, Chi- cago. 111. Honor A Society; F.P. E.S. 2. 3. 4; Track 1. 2. 3. 4. Cap- tain 4; Interclass Baselgill 4; Inter- class Basketball 3; Class President 2. Sixly-Onc Sanchez, Joe R. San Lui Potoii. Mexico B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lake View High School, Chicago. III. Campus Clu! ; Armour Engi- neer 3. Sjmistedl. Julius S. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Englewood High School. Chicago. III. A.B. Augustana College. Rock Island. III. A.A.S. I. 2. 3. 4; Has- krthall 1; Interclass BasketlKill 2, 3; Interclass Baseball 1. 2. 3. Scafuri, Ralph L. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Beta P i; Musical Clui ; A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; interdas Base- ball 2. 3; Jacket Committee 4. Schultz, Carlisle C. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Architecture Englewood High School. Chicago. III. Glee Club: Armour Player 3. 4; A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Schwcnncscn, Donald O. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lake View High School. Chicago. III. Rifle Club 2; A LE E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Tech News 4. Sicgal, Irving Chicago. 111. B.S. in Architecture Harrison Technical High School, Chicago. III. A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Simons, Carroll K. Chicago, III. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Carl Schurz High School. Chicago, 111. _ Phi Kappa Sigma. President 2. 4; Sphinx; Interfraternity Council 3, 4; Rifle Club 2; Press Club 2; A.A. S. 1, 2; A.S.M.E. 3. 4; Cycle 2. 3. 4; Associate Editor 3. Editor-in- Chief 4; Chairman Photography Com- mittee. 4. Skubic, Leroy F. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Architecture Harrison Technical High School. Chicago, 111. A.A.S. 2. 3, 4. Smcthclls, William T. South Haven. Mich. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing South Haven High School. South Haven. Mich. Theta Xi; K.P.E.S. 2. 3, 4; Announcement Committee 4. Snapp, Dean B. Oak Park, III. B.S. in Eire Protection Engineer- Oak Park High School. Oak Park. 111. Beta Psi; F.P.E.S. 2, 3. 4. Snelling, Elroy A. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Tildcn Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4. Sommer, Charles B. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Scarab; Honor A Society; A.A.S. 1. 2, 3. 4; Baseball 2, 3. 4; Boxing 2; Armour Tech News 4; Class Treasurer 4; Interdas Base- ball 2. 3. 4. Sixfy-tuo Sorensen, Jarl T. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Carl Schurz High School. Chicago. 111. Theta Xi; Tau Beta Pi; Sala- mander; Sphinx. President: Black Knight; Press Club . : F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. -t. President; Track 1. 2; Basket- ball 1; Manager. Swimming Team 4; Interclass Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Inter- class Basketball 2; Interclass Relay I. 3. 4; Cycle 2, 3. Social Editor 3: Armour Engineer 2. 3. 4. Assistant Editor 3. Editor-in-Chief 4; Board of Publications 3. 4; Class Treasurer 2: Inter-Honorary Fraternity Coun- cil 4. Spawn, Orville J. Chester, S. D. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Chester Consolidated High School. Chester. S. I). South Dakota State College, Brookings. S. I). Staib, Otto W. Aurora, III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- East High School, Aurora. III. Bela Psi; F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 1; Golf Manager 4; Cycle 2, 3. Busi- ncess Manager 3; Social Chairman 2; Election Committee 2. Stcinhaus, Arthur L. Sheboygan, Vt'iw. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Sheboygan High School. Sheboygan, Wise. Beta Psi; Pi No Epsilon: Ar- mour Musical Club; Glee Club. Pres- ident; F.P.E.S. 1. 2. 3. 4. Tcrp, George W., Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Bowen High School. Chicago, III. Scarab; Armour Player 3. 4; Glee Club; A.A.S. I, 2. 3. 4. Announce- ment Committee 4. Tufts, Robert R. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture University of Chicago High School, Chicago. III. Carleton College. Northficld, Minn. Delta Tau Delta. Kerrigan, Vincent M. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago, III. Tyler, William W. Monroe Center, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Monroe Center High School. Monroe Center. III. Theta Xi; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4. Wandrey, Erwin Chicago. 111. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lane Technical High School, Chi- cago. III. Rifle Club 1. 2. 3, 4; President 4; A.S.M.E. 3. 4. Weldon, Walter J. Chicago, 111. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Carl Schurz High School, Chicago, III. Honor A: F.P.E.S. 2. 3. : Golf 2. 3. 4; Baseball 3. 4; Inter- class Baseball 2, 3. 4; Interfraternity Athletics Manager 4. Wilson, Donald G. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Hyde Park High School. Chicago. III. Tau Beta Pi: Eta Kappa Nu; Rifle Club 1. 2. 3. 4. President 2; A. I K K. 2. 3. 4. Winogrond, Milton Chicago. III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Roosevelt High School. Chicago. 111. Sigma Alpha Mu. Wise, Morris J. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Crane Technical High School. Chi- cago. 111. Kappa Delta Epsilon; A. A.S. 2. 3. 4. Zvonecek, Joseph W. Chicago, HI. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Y.M.C.A. High School. Chicago. III. A.S.M.E. 3. 4. Six y-lbrrt SENIORS SANS PICTURES Babcock, Gifford S. Clifton, 111. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Kankakee High School, Kankakee. 111. Cole, Abraham Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. A.A.S. I. 2. 3. 4. Gabriel, Lawrence Chicago, 111. B.S. in Civil Engineering South Division High School. Mil- waukee. Win. Giovan, Nick C. Chicago. III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Varvakion Technical High School. Athene. Greece. Honor A Society 4; Campus Club 1, 2. 3. 4; W.S.E. 3. 4; Swimming 1. 2. 3, 4; Track 1. Larson, Walter H. Chicago, III. B.S. in Architecture Nicholas Senn High School. Chicago. 111. Delta Tau Delta: A.A.S. 1. 2. 3. 4; Cycle 2. 3; Fraternity Editor 3; Orchestra 1; Class Vice-President 2; Class Secretary 3. MacLcnnan, Jack Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Parker Senior High School. Chicago. 111. Phi Pi Phi: Chess Clul, 4; V. S.K. 2. 3. 4; Interclass Basketball 2. 3. 4. Mahonc, Albert L. Park Ridge. III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Nicholas Senn High School. Chicago. 111. Northwestern Military Academy. Lake Forest. 111. B.S. Lewis Insti- tue. Chicago. 111. McWilliams, Walter A., Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Civil Engineering Englewood High School. Chicago. 111. Triangle; W.S.E. 3. 4; Interclass Baseball 4; Interclass Basketball 3. 4. Rowe, Harry C., Jr. Chicago, III. B.S. in Electrical Engineering Lane Technical High School. Chi- cago. III. A.I.E.E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Radio Association 2. 3. Shaver, Earl G. Rowland, III. B.S. in Chemical Engineering Fengcr High School. Rose!and. 111. Campus Club; A.I.Ch.E. 2. 3. 4; Armour Engineer 3, 4. Vandcrpoorten, Steven A. Chicago. III. B.S. in Fire Protection Engineer- ing Gilman Community High School. Oil- man. 111. University of Illinois. Sig- ma Phi Sigma: Salamander: Tau Beta Pi; Orchestra 2. 3. 4; Band 2. 3. 4; Stresses and Strains 2. 3, 4. COMMENCEMENT MARSHALS The Institute Marshals Charles Anson Nash. Marshal William White Colvcrt, Assistant Marshal Arthur William Sear, Assistant Marshal The Student Honor Marshals Earl Gilman Beard Willis George Buchne Roy William Carlstrom Charles Arthur Cunningham Wilfred Wacchtcr Davies Earl William Gosswillcr Walter Edmund Gunderson Theodore Herman Irion James William Juvinall George Albert Nelson I-'ranklin William Paine Willard Thompson George William Wheaton Donald Erwin Young Sixty-four THIRTY-SIXTH ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT ADVANCED DEGREES CONFERRED For tlx Degree of Master of Science in Chemical Engineering James Jerome Dohcny For the Degree of Mechanical Engineer Warren Edwin Hill William Martin Kaufltmann George Vaclav Minibcrgcr Henry Elmer Karow Saul Samuels William Ernest Beach James G. Cooney For the Degree of Civil Engineer Eugene Clarke Hedges Edwin Albert Janssen Donald E. Willard AWARD OF HONORS Honor Man of All Departments Max James Schinke Honor Man of tlx- Department of Mechanical Engineering Harold Rex Davis Honor Man of the Department of Electrical Engineering Max James Schinke Honor Man of tin' Department of Civil Engineering Richard Ernest Meagher Honor Man of the Department of Chemical Engineering William Aaron Holland Honor Man of the Department of Fire Protection Engineering Walter Matthew Trautcn Honor Man of the Department of Architecture Raymond Arthur Peterson Sixty-fire di the secondary character supports the star, so Joes the broad wheat field of the northwest furnish sus- tenance to our great nation, and so does the junior augment Iris store of present knowledge for use when tire position of star or s eteran Iras been attained. JUNICES OFFICERS Frank W. Koko President Joseph A. Bacci Vice-President Donald N. Chadwick Secretary JUNIORS Allowed to reflect, the man who finds himself a Junior will readily appreciate the statement that the time spent in college em- bodies the most pleasant period of his life. Reminiscence of facts and incidents seem to be coherent with this fact. Even the distinc- tion of the Junior Year fails to influence the genuine regret we feel at the all-together too hasty departure of time. Between the moments of compulsory diggingâ and those of seemingly un- bounded delight we have found a happy medium that provides us with a feeling of assured satisfaction and confidence in our chosen work. Upon starting at the bottom of the scale as Freshmen, we re- solved to some day acquire that certain note of quiet and aloof dignity possessed by those who had just passed the half-way mark in college. True, our ranks have been sadly depleted for various reasons, but, those of us who remain feel that we have stood up against storm and strife. We have accepted our scars as service stripes and our hours of toil as time well spent. When that mark was left behind, we looked among ourselves to discover that time did not permit the expending of a conscious effort by which to acquire any form, whatsoever, of self-centered poise or dignified mannerisms. The presence of any development of impressive char- acter we may attribute to an intense application of mind and body in securing the purely basic fundamentals of engineering. The first year is recalled for its joyful, good-natured memories of those delights of every man entering school; the Freshman Smoker, our first social event; the fraternity rushing season, dur- ing which time we were the Kings of the Institute; the class rush, in which we were victorious over the lordly Sophomores; and a multitude of less distinct reactions to freedom from high school restraint. Very early in our college careers the class established a determined stand in athletics by winning interclass titles in both baseball and basketball. While conquering the academic forces besetting us during the Sophomore Year we continued to enrich our relative prominence in school affairs. Self-abnegation during the trying days of Physics, Calculus, and Mechanics allayed the least suspicion of our becom- ing self-existant or unduly conscious of our own powers. Outside activities engrossed our attention to a greater extent. Interested Sophomores were found in the Varsity athletic squads, the various publications, the social clubs and societies, and the musical organ- izations. We inaugurated a precedence which we hope will meet Sixty-eight 1934 with continued success. For the first time in the history of Ar- mour, a joint informal dance was given by the Sophomore and Freshman Classes. The great interest given such a collaboration is indicative of the degree of success it enjoyed. After losing the baseball championship to the Senior Class in a hard fought battle, we succeeded in avenging ourselves by winning the basketball title from them. Early in the second year the real- ization came upon us that a trained engineer knows not only the rudiments of engineering along with their applications, but that his visionary ability permits him to appreciate the cultural, purely non-engineering side of the worldâs business. The fascination of pure engineering work in our respective de- partments attracted us on entrance to the Junior Year. This re- newed interest was not only scholastic, but embraced these interests to which we found ourselves best fitted. Each of us was hurled into our own specific work with a desire to branch out and take those subjects which were uppermost in our hearts. Advantage was taken by individual members of the opportunities presented by the Ar- mour Tech News, the Engineer, and the Cycle. The noteworthy improvement in the standing of our musical organizations was further increased by the support of third year men. The loss of the third consecutive basketball championship was due to the fact that the Varsity was made up of Juniors, who were, as a conse- quence, ineligible for inter-class athletics. The desire for closer contact with practicing engineers in specialized and allied indus- trial fields was reflected by the support given to the engineering societies by class members. The color and glamour of the year so recently completed out- line to us distinctly the mental picture of a most successful season. Starting with entrance day there follows a definite sequence of steps comprising this picture. First, the class election, with its attendant rivalry and political maneuvering. Second, the appre- ciation of the fact that as Juniors we were entitled to privileges and a certain lack of faculty supervision we had always known before. This merely added to our zest in fabricating a more united, co-operative atmosphere in which to carry on our work. With a greater amount of time to ourselves, we widened and diversified our interests to include every branch of curricular and extra-cur- ricular activity. The Junior Informal held in January bolstered still higher the capacity of the class for purely social attainment. OFFICERS J. Arthur Larsen Trejiurer Raymond J. Pllum Sttfial Chairni.m James F. Manly Subeant-at-Armt Sixty-nine Mine', Polko. Dahlgren, Klima, Lukey, Traver, Schneebalg, Hcaden, Rupprecht, Kolvc, Johnion Hoycr, I.a Force, Ronowiki, Lewi , Brenner. Hillman, Kreisman, Hemel, Hu ter, V. Omiecimki Finlay, O'Hara, Pinkut, Anders, McDonough, Hanson, Nelson, McDonald, Stahl, Ferrara, Manly The extent to which the Junior Prom emitted collegiate atmosphere proved of ad- ditional value in climaxing the pleasure of that traditional period. Junior Week. The completion of the activities of Junior Week saw us in the enviable position of having add- ed still further to the prestige of the men of â34. Instead of following in the footsteps of those who had precceded us and electing one man to hold the office of Junior Marshall dur- ing Junior Week, we threw tradition to the winds and elected three very able men to be- come co-marshals. The election was one of the most heated ever held at the Institute with the supporters of the three men contin- ually throwing the vote into a dead-lock. An examination of the various component elements of our existence as a class readily reveals the underlying reasons for such a suc- 1 Hi 9 If n tt t t r X 1 i 9 r t i ,v t - 0 ⢠âTil A j % J 11 f Lodcski, Spangler, Storey, Pilum, Nelson, Malloy, Kuchn, Bacci, Smith D'Alba, Nomcl, Cramer, Renstrom. Machini , Cosme, Marcus, Korink, Mcacham Laestadiut, Pilip, Lippincott, Simpson, Schmidt, Gregerson, Feldman, Schreiner, Kostenko Quinncll, Kaplan, Rummel, Koko, Cattane , Davidson, Fleissner, Colburn, Callen Seventy Clarkson, 1âgloff, Alberti, Woodtmall, Morriiscy, Rimsha, Chadwick. Murtten. Wood, Gilmore Leo, Lamberg, Rcichcl, Krause, Murphy, Avery, Gonswillcr, Hour, Patlawski Mayer, Larson, Tamncy, Ratchke, Lehmann, Reed, Knudson, Thompson, Ader, Graham ccssful organization. It is seen that the amia- ble fellowship, not only departmental, but inter-departmental as well, distinguishes those men who may now be found in imposing numbers on any representative body of the school. The Varsity teams of practically all major and minor sports are composed of Juniors, while school and fraternity politics arc cleverly superintended by those of the Junior Class. The reputation for determined action es- tablished during our Freshman Year has led to a most formidable showing for efficiency in organization. The intensified co-opcrativc- ncss during these three years has firmly im- planted in our minds the belief that the Class as a group may hope for the ultimate of ma- terial success. And with this thought in mind we anticipate an unprecedented usefulness among those of our profession in the future. Williams, Gundersen, Swanson, Cohr . Bcwersdorf, Burson, McFarland, Mordli, Robinette Schrage. Brockmann, McBrady, Bachner, Omiccimki. Lilli . Noerenbcrg, Cunningham Duphorne, Pcavcy. Myers, Frciiag, Mills, Anderson, Shaw, Krol, I.uka , Petcr on Davison, Kane, Sachs, Jacobson. Dob on, Zukowski, Gibson. KutTcl Stnnty-orte ai the products of the oil fields of texat and Oklahoma were for centuries made ready for their utility and enjoyment in our preient day, to tlx stage hand first prepares and erects tlx properties upon the stage, and so the sophomore prepares himself uilh time things which usll aid htsn in tlx enactment of tlx play of life. SC P E CMC E ES OFFICERS Riclurd D. Armsbary President Russell J. Lang Vice-President Bernard B. Abrams Secretary U SOPHOMORES Once again we have gained the right to pause and rest on our ladder of determination, as wer climb to the goal of higher educa- tion and useful knowledge. As we relax before completing the second half of our strenuous, climb, we turn and look downward to view our successes and achievements. With the knowledge that we have passed the most hazardous portion, we arc looking for- ward to that part of college life that is considered the reward for countless nights of labor and days of recitation. We arc about to turn to the specialized work which comes with the latter half of an engineering educationâthe work for which each of us feels we arc especially fitted. How different it was to return to school last fall as Sophomores, in comparison to our entrance as Freshmen. A new feeling of se- curity and accomplishment offset the old feeling of inferiority, wonder and strangeness. Although the work of the second year was indeed much more difficult than that of the Freshman year, somehow, through habits of correct study, determination, and clear thinking, it was much more easily overcome. Working through the most dreaded year of college, the second, depleted our ranks to quite a degree, but those of us who remain arc soon to taste the reward for hours of toil. Now, although the path was hard, by fighting through the first two years, we are entitled to the more interesting portion of college life which comes with the final two years. We will soon branch out into the studies we most desire. Along with this branching will come a natural segregation which will divide the Class into sections according to courses. However, we know that the bonds formed during our first two years at Armour will hold no matter how strong the group rivalry becomes. The sudden change from high school to college seemed, upon our entrance to the Institute, to keep us bewildered for a few months. However, we soon became used to our new form of study and began to progress under full steam.â As Freshmen, our in- structors seemed an indifferent and unsympathetic group of in- tellects who appeared to gloat over our inability to grapple with their seemingly impossible assignments, but as Sophomores, we suddenly realized they were intensely human and understanding companions, who were anxious to simplify our problems regard- less of the nature. The result is that we now realize how much easier our Freshman year could have been had we accepted them in an unprejudiced manner. With the trying days of Physics, S i enty-four 1935 Mechanics, and Calculus behind us, we can look forward to an interesting and helpful two years of work. One of the finest assets of the Sophomore year was the solidify- ing, for years to come, of the friendships formed during the first year. During the Freshman year, with the deluge of unfamiliar and difficult work it was hard to find time for companionship and social activities; but with the second year we gradually discovered that two heads are better than one, and the result was the forming of bonds of friendship which we hold above everything we may have accomplished heretofore in life. We hope we will keep these friendships in business as well as in school. Although many members of our Class were individual stars as Freshmen, and more as Sophomores, on the Varsity squads, we really showed our prowess as a whole in the inter-class activities. As Freshmen, we proved true to form by easily winning the Class Rush, although unable to take any of the sporting championships. However, as Sophomores, we won the intcrclass basketball cham- pionship from the highly touted Junior team which had won for the two previous years. In inter-class baseball competition, we lost to the Freshmen, although they met and conquered a fighting Sophomore machine which never gave up until the last out was made. In our second year we were looked upon from the start as under-dogs, but we were scarcely beaten by the Freshmen in the Class Rush. It is generally known that an engineering curriculum docs not permit the social life and activities that other courses do, yet, in spite of this, it is essential, in order to obtain a well-rounded edu- cation, to take part in some extra-curricular activityâno matter how small the part. Following this plan, representatives may be found in all of the musical and literary organizations. We arc also well represented on all minor and major athletic squads and can boast of several men who won their letters when only Fresh- men. As Yearlings, our social activities started with the Freshman Handshake, and was followed shortly by a smoker at the new Victor Lawson Y. M. C. A. The gatherings were well attended by students and professors. The highlight of the year was that event to which all first year men look forward, the Freshman dance, at which we inaugurated a new idea which we hope will continue with the same degree of success with which we accom- plished it. The idea was to combine the Freshman and the Sopho- OFFICF.RS George W. Wheaton T reaturer John J. Ahern Social Chairman William Trudcllc Sjrgcanl-al-Armt Stlfnly-fiif Faro. Sobcl, Jonuska, Kvapil, Dushek, Beckman, Skjordalil, Baltcwick, Humiston, Armsbury, McKibben Chiappe. Allen, Samuels, Feinberg, Fsberocn. Shapiro, Palmer, Buchhauser, Smith, Willi , Hoffman Liebcrman, Grossman, Addi . Arenson, Pcchota, Rosen, Granger, Forsyth, Smerz, Kohn more dances and run one dance under the supervision of both Classes. This was the first time in the history of Armour that a dance of this sort had been held, and al- though both classes were traditional rivals, all were comrades on that night. Our Soph- omore dance was even more of a success than that held during our Freshman year, prov- ing that we are becoming more acquainted with the social side of lifeâan acquaintance which is essential to all men. Today, at the completion of our second year, having been tested and tried, we find our ranks depicted but hopeful. Those who were found wanting in the requirements of an engineer have left, while we who find ourselves inclined toward engineering look toward the future with a high degree of optimism. We feel that we are the picked few1âthe few who had the ability and degree Kdgren, Slocking, Heller, Trudcllc, Ahern, Bristol. Scarl, Hahn. O'Connor, Zibblc Behmer. Rigonc, Troemper, Kettle !ring , Abram . Ducrmein, Wittekindt, Jones, Lester, Freilinger Grakavac, Jonutka, Leonas, Thomsen, Cannon, Kcrlin, Hcdin, Landis, Morrison, Schnachcl Bradac, Skach, Bolton. Hough, Zimmerman, Talaber, Fenske, Vcndiey, Maurer, Patterson Seventy-six Zimmerman, Mayerowicz, Mc iingcr, Ahern, Glo . Baumcl. Weber, Maci, Wmzler, Uzunaris, White Englander, I e Boo. Bicglcr, Marow, McCarty, Wheaton, Van Dyke, Higgint, Phillip , Mczera, Felt Petraiti , Hanton, Petersen, Galbraith, Cullen, Bard. Stchno, Friede, Wolf, Nakayama, Bitbec, Hedlund of genius which is always necessary in any profession. We came back last fall with the warning of those who prcceeded us still ringing clear in our earsâthe warning that our second year at Armour would be the hardest year we shall have ever spent in educating our- selves for the place which is waiting for us in the world. However, we found that heed- ing the motto apply yourself properlyâ proved to be the difference between drudgery and pleasure. How like a football game is this problem of education. Each year is a down in that final drive for the winning score which will make a success of our life. For the members of the Class of â3 5, two downs are already gone, with two more to go toward the goalâ graduation. Kolber, Shirley, May, Birdsong. I.auclmkn. Wall, Potter. Robert Jone , Henning Aravotit, Miller, Schavilje. Bcrmtcin, Hazleton, Dalton, Adamcc, Youngkrantz. Ric z, Schmidt Szantay, Wciland, Goldberg, Work, Healy, Hoot. Thompson. Kobzina, Lyford Henoch, Babcock, Berger, I.ang, Willi , Adair, Smith, Levy, Levin, Stanovich Snrii y.iririi a territory may eternally remain such. or it may in time become independent, in the tame manner an extraâ may' never rite above bit insignificant position, but, if worthy, will inevitably come forth, a fresh- man, through diligent effort and application, has tlx opportunity of advancing through the rations stages to the bright limelight. fCESH HAN OFFICERS George W. Ormsby PretiJent Don C. Harris Vice-PreiiJe t Frederick L. Smith Secretary FRESHMEN Launched into a new world, a world of science and hard work, were two hundred and eighty Freshmen whose records had sur- vived the elimination processes applied by a scrutinizing faculty. Knowing that much was expected of us by parents and friends, we, rhe wearers of the green, having been duly registered and hav- ing obediently parted with the proper entrance fees, approached those knights of the square table who sat in the school library carefully outlining courses of study. We then began the usual investigation of the Armour campus with its numerous buildings containing class-rooms, shops, labora- tories and drafting rooms. These were features which many of us had never seen before our advent to the Institute. Here, in these class-rooms, we were to be introduced to the extensive knowledge which is an important requisite to the successful engi- neer. In its laboratories, we were to develop that mind which loves to solve the unknown, to find why and how certain physical and chemical results might be effected. Then, with this knowledge well in hand, we were to learn to apply it in a practical way in an effort to train ourselves for the needs of industry, for which we are to be the tools for further progress of humanity. Our first formal gathering was held at the Freshman assembly, at which meeting we became familiar with the rules and traditions of Armour. Those precedents established by Armour men for forty years before us were unfolded, and the fact was driven home that Armour men can, and do, develop a true college spirit and loyalty. Thus, we learned that we were to have another side to our well-rounded education, one which would consist of par- ticipation in some of the numerous extra-curricular activities of- fered by the Institute. Our next gathering as a body was at the Freshman Handshake, where we new men not only became better acquainted with our fellow classmates, but also with the upper classmen and many of the members of the faculty. It was here we learned that the higher students did not consider us as under-dogs, but, on the contrary, they showed us they considered every Armour student as being on the same level, all studying with but one purpose in mind, to become useful engineers. We also discovered that the Professors were not persons to whom we had to look in awe and wonder, but were human and understanding, and were here only to help us in any way we might desire. Eighty 1936 No sooner had we become acquainted with the upper classmen, than we found ourselves suddenly lifted from a position of ob- scurity to that of the most popular group on the campus. The annual Fraternal Rushing Season swept in with its numerous in- vitations to participate in those social affairs offered by the various organizations. For a short time, the studies were given a rear scat, sleep became a rarity, and the life of the Freshmen was both en- joyable and arduous as they were rushed at the different Houses. When the usual turn of events at the Institute had reached normal again, attention was immediately turned to politics. An arrangement for the election of the various officers was reached at the first meeting. Factions immediately sprang up among the different departments, each department nominating its own ticket. The closeness of the race, and the manner in which the election was run, has shown that quite a few worthy politicians will arise from the Class of â36. Inter-class athletics came to the fore early in the season when the baseball supremacy was decided. Contrary to predictions, the Freshmen came through with flying colors, easily defeating the Sophomores in our first encounter. The Seniors were able to hold us to a deadlock in the final tilt, but in the play-off game, the Freshmen staged a late rally to take the inter-class championship. In basketball we were not quite as successful. Although we put up a good fight, we were defeated by the Sophomore team which eventually won the championship. A few stellar players were dis- covered in this encounter who have since earned places on the regular Armour quintet. The results of the interclass track meet show the Freshmen at the wrong end of the table of standings. That these victories of the second year men are only whetting the appetites of the Freshmen for some satisfying revenge will prob- ably be proved by the overwhelming victory which we hope to attain on Ogden Field in that annual skirmish, the Class Rush. Early in the spring of the year, our thoughts were changed from those of an engineer to those more along the trend of the social lion. The time had come for the annual Freshman informal. Fol- lowing in the footsteps of the class just ahead, we decided to give a joint Freshman-Sophomore dance. All rivalry was forgotten for the moment, and the finest of co-operation was effected so that the dance might be one of the most enjoyable ever held by an OFFICERS George Browning. Jr. T rfjsnrcr I. Murrey Hughes Serial Chairman â Eigbly-on Styrsky, Clark, Smith, Gray, Knahc, Nyttrom, Siegel, Lane, Mchaffey Penn, Thurson, Johnson, Horn. Rie z, Shevchuk. McGrath. Wichlacz, Waldmann Galandak, Boxer, Harris, Knittel, Greenman, Waichunas, Stenson, Caruso. Laskicwicz, McAllister Smetana, Hefner, Hughes, Ford, W. Fleig, Hansel, Peterson, Koch, Denny, Gustafson organization of the Institute. With a splendid orchestra and a spacious ballroom, the social committees of the two classes did their best that the lower classmen might break away from their daily tasks to participate in the more enjoyable side of life. In the extra-curricular activities at Ar- mour, many of the Class of â3 6 can be found who are on the road to success in their vari- ous endeavors. The publications are already receiving the services of those Freshmen who are aiming high, hoping to train themselves for the responsibilities of those editorial posi- tions which arc recognized as rewards for hard work and an opportunity for further development. With quite a number of the Class musically inclined, the various mus- ical organizations have found their ranks Hickey. Houtsma, Altermatt. Wadman, Johnson, May, Brown, Scott, Zalcwski, Cox, Gold Steven , Oluften, Davi , Andlcr, Kraut, Warner, Collin , Riley, Brch, Berquitt, Dougan Thiltgc , Dunn. Smith, Kraemer. Watylciv. Knaut, Haeger, Hamlin, Frank, Pantonc, Hella Du Sell, Cotterman, Larson, Ormtby, Mansfield, Nice, Kropf, Lcschintki, Mar !ck. Malinowski, Quayle, Stutz Doudera, Kuh, Zwissler, Rice. Ruppert, Alt. Coleman, Mieezkowski, Perrill, Neal, Maack, Tallafuts Eighty-two Bowie, Luce, Nelson, Hagenauer, Gilkiton, Nachman. Schrciber, Velck, Cooper Schairer, Rothschild, Wicting, Kuk, Macclev, Schrciber, Priestley, Kaplan, Swart . Cole, Gernstrons, Regnery, Ready, Auler. Ikcnn. Vice-Naess, Meyer bolstered by those who find pleasure in fol- lowing the school of Apollo. As shown by the attainments in the interclass competition, the class has many who have shown the met- tle necessary for berths on the baseball, bas- ketball, and track teams. Boxing, swimming, and tennis, are also being provided candidates from the group of first year men. In reviewing the accomplishments which the Freshmen have already made, there need be little fear that the Class of â36 will fail to contribute its share to the history of Armour. In the three years to come this prediction will probably be sustained, and the Class will graduate with as much glory and satisfaction of achievement as any that has gone before. Dworsky, Doede, Schmidt, Sho tak, Oollenmaier, Kaytcr, Sumner, Browning. Shunt. Parton . Papa , Ramirez, Bober g Strazz. Rootberg, Schlick, Lane. BottcUcn, Timbcrlakc. Litchcr, Krcft, Litciani. Valcwarc . Bothwell Bill, D. Flcig, Flaggc, Ramotow ki, Stone, Chapman, Rchling, Majcrcik, Concolino, Graham, Zme kal Simon , Land, Schmidt. Malovcc, Mozoleaki, Fogle, Savage, Phillip , Galler, Penzcl, Wolniak Eight)-thitt the uorlj hub of dramatic activity, holly u immI, hat built upon tlx fairâs lake front stage, a typical actors' colony where will be shown tlx evolution of its art. were it not for the activity of a presentation, it should be ineffective, activity need not necessarily demand fast music to which a ballet dances, but neither will it tolerate dullness, tlx spice of life is the variety of it. one environment and form of pleasure soon would become monotonous and uninteresting; one style of play would soon lose its attraction; but in living our lives, we take part in the social play, tlx wild west thriller, tlx battling hero tale, the historical drama, and unremembered numbers of amusing, humorous, and tragic roles. when or whertvtr wai civHixatkm without gaiety, dancing and laughter are companion  to a young heart. SOCIAL SENIOR INFORMAL COMMITTEE Eighly-tix SENIOR SOCIAL COMMITTEE Wilfred W. Davies Chairman Harold J. Bannasch William G. Booth Roy W. Carlstrom Irving C. Johnson Edwin C. Kenner The annual Senior Informal marked the beginning of Armour's 1932-33 social season. It was held in the Cameo Room of the Morrison Hotel, on the evening of Friday, December second. This was the last social function sponsored by the class of â33, who may feel sure that it was one of the finest dances of the year. Colorful indirect lighting gave the ballroom a soft glow which created the proper atmosphere for the pleasing rythm of the music which was furnished by Mauric Sherman and his justly popular orchestra. Everyone entered into the spirit of the affair and, missing none of the pleasures of the evening, helped make the dance a grand success. For those not wishing to dance, there was a lounge and balcony where they could sit and talk and listen to the music. Each couple received a beautiful program with which to commemorate the evening. The programs very effectively displayed the school colors of black, yellow and red, and consisted of a gold Aâ mono- gram on a red leather cover with a black leather inner cover. The crowd of approximately two hundred couples was cha- peroned by professors Grafton, Heald, Huntley, and Spears and their wives, who enjoyed a pleasant evening of dancing. Senior Informal at tinâ Morrison Hotel JUNIOR INFORMAL JUNIOR SOCIAL COMMITTEE Raymond J. Pflum Chairman Roy Ekroth George T. Korink No picture Arthur F. La Force Stephen M. Lillis Bcrthil H. Peterson George M. Reed The first important social function of the Junior Class, that busiest of classes, was the annual informal dance. This has always been one of the outstanding features of the school year, and this one was no exception. It was held Friday evening, January 20, in the main ballroom of the Illinois Womenâs Athletic Club. The room was tastefully illuminated with blue and yellow lighting effects which seemed to blend harmoniously with the enchanting music of Doug Peppard and his Northwestern Troubadours. Contrary to custom at Armour hops, the dancing started as soon as the orchestra began to play at the scheduled hour of 9:30, and continued until the final note about 1:30. The placing of tables about the dance floor eliminated the ever stiff line of chairs circling the room as is found at many school dances. The programs were of a distinctly modern type bringing the school tricolors into blazing prominence. The cover was of white leather bearing the school monogram in gold, while the inner pages were of red paper bearing the printed program in black. The chaperons for the evening were Professors Ensz, Heald, Grafton, Kuehn, and Weissmann with their wives, all entering into the spirit of the occasion and serving very admirably in their official capacity. Junior Informal at tlx Illinois Womenâs Athletic Club COMMITTEE Eighty-seven FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE INFORMAL 1931-1932 Sop xwiorc Social Committee John J. Ahern Earl R. Ecnske Chairman . George W. Wheaton William B. Ahern Roy H. Wittekindt On Friday evening, April 5, 1932, the Gold Room of the Con- gress Hotel became the scene of the first Freshman-Sophomore dance. Never before in the history of Armour had any two classes combined their resources in the presentation of a dance. The two social committees under the direction of Headen, the Sophomore chairman, and Wheaton the Freshman chairman, put forth every effort in an attempt to offer a dance finer in every respect than were its predecessors. Due to the central location and beauty of the ballroom, it was conceded to be as nearly ideal as could be acquired. The dance floor was perfect, but for those weary of dancing there were spacious lounges and a balcony for retreat. The music for the event, furnished by Jack Chapman and his peppy ten piece orchestra, was, as always, greatly enjoyed by the dancers. The covers of the programs were black, decorated with a gold Armour seal. The chaperones for the evening were Professor and Mrs. Man- gold, Professor and Mrs. Heald, and Professor and Mrs. Grafton. As the last strains of the music died out and all turned homeward, there were sighs of regret over leaving one of the most successful and undoubtedly the largest social event of the year. COMMITTEE Freshman-Sophomore Informalâ19)2 Eighty-right FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE INFORMAL 1932-1933 FRESHMAN SOCIAL COMMITTEE I. Murrey Hughes Charles R. Ford Chairman Herbert J. Niemann William H. Fogle Raymond C. Peterson The scene of the second Armour Freshman-Sophomore dance was the ballroom of the Medinah Athletic Club. The date was Friday, March 31. The accommodations offered by Medinah arc especially commodious, with a spacious lounge, augmented by a balcony encircling three-fourths of the hall, and a seemingly per- fect dance floor. These, coupled with the varied and colored light- ing effects created a most captivating setting for the sweet har- mony produced by Jack Chapman and his orchestra. The bids and programs for the dance were exceptionally attrac- tive; the bids being white mother of pearl with modernistic black lettering, and the programs being of black celluloid covers with a white inner facing. The whole was bound together with small rings and set off by a red silk cord and tassel. The sponsors for the evening were Dr. and Mrs. Hotchkiss, Dr. and Miss Tibbals, Professor and Mrs. Bibb, Professor and Mrs. Grafton, and Professor and Mrs. Hendricks, who all seemed to enjoy the festivities as much as the students. The Freshman-Sophomore Dance was truly a glorious ball. Be- cause of the success of the 1932 and 1933 double dances, this plan of these two classes seems destined to become the usual rather than the exceptional practice. Freshman.Sophomorc Informalâ19)) COMMITTEE FJgbty-nirtf INTER HONORARY BANQUET The annual Inter-Honor- ary Banquet was held Fri- day, December 16, at the Womenâs Club located on Eleventh Street between Mi- chigan and Wabash. Practi- cally all the actives and pledges of Tau Beta Pi, the departmental fraternities, Sphinx and Pi Nu Epsilon were present for a very en- joyable evening. The pledges of all the represented organ- izations were introduced to the assemblage. PUBLICATIONS SMOKER Thursday evening, No- vember seventeenth, t h e Theta Xi house was the scene of the first Board of Publica- tions Smoker. The staffs of the Cycle, Engineer, and News were well represented and five faculty members of the board were present. The purpose of the smoker was to better acquaint the student staffs with the faculty mem- bers and with each other. Be- cause each Publication has the Institute at heart, it is only fitting that they should gath- er in a social manner. JUNIOR PROM The climax to every yearâs social activity at Armour is the annual Junior Formal. This is the only formal event held during the regular school year, and as such was a smashing success, not only for those who enjoy dancing to a good orchestra, but also for those who arc never hap- pier than when attired in for- mal dress. The dance is looked forward to by every under- graduate at the Institute and is a fitting ending for a year's hard labor. Ninety I ntcr honor ary Banquet, 19)2 Publications Smoker Inter- honorary Dance April 29, 19)2 HONOR aâ DINNER The banquet of the Hon- or A Society was held Thursday evening, December eighth at the Blackhawk Res- taurant. This banquet is an annual affair for these select- ed athletes. John Schommcr was the principal speaker for the occasion and entertain- ment was furnished by Hal Kemp and his orchestra sup- ported by a fine floor show. INTERHONORARY DANCE, 1932 The members of the hon- orary fraternities spent a very pleasant evening Friday, April 29, 1932, at the annual dance sponsored by the Hon- orary Fraternity Council, which was held at the Allcr- ton Hotel. Music for the oc- casion was furnished by The South Shore Seven.â An addi- tional entertainment was fur- nished by the pledges of the various organizations who sang the Armour Fight Song. Active and pledge members of all Honorary Fraternities are invited to participate at this exclusive affair. A.T.A.A. DINNER On the evening of May 23, 1932, the Tropical Roomâ of the Medinah Athletic Club was the scene of the third an- nual Athletic Banquet at which the Armour Tech Athletic Association played host to some one hundred thirty Armour athletes. Din- ner was followed with several addresses delivered by Dean Penn, Prof. Schommer, and Stan Lind, President of the A.T.A.A. Ninety-one Honor Aâ Dinner A.T.A.A. Dinner, 19)2 an âenchanted isle h a cbiIJ'i dream world, our fun, t fougb it changes as our own life story unravels, is always an essential factor in our disposition and attitude. JUNICE WEEE JUNIOR WEEK OFFICIALS Junior Mars tal Irving C. Johnson Assistant Junior Marshals Orville T. Barnett Raymond J. Dufour Maurice J. Erisman Roy W. Carlstrom Honorary Starter Alonzo A. Stagg, Jr. Judges Professor William W. Colvert Professor Harry McCormack Professor Charles A. Nâash Sophomore Rush Leader Frank W. Koko Freshman Rush Leader Otto P. Frcilingcr The climax t every hard yearâs work at Armour is without doubt Junior Week.â The freshman, who has never lived one often regards it with some degree of in- difference, the sophornore anticipates it eagerly, the junior looks forward to it and plans diligently, while the senior holds it as a pleasant memory long to be cherished. The well-ordered routine of school work is torn asunder by such welcome diversions as the Pentathlon, Interclass Re- lays, and other athletic contests; The Home Concert; Cir- cus Day, the climax, with its sack rush, fraternity stunts; and finally the outstanding dance of the year, the Junior Formal. Such a period as this is remembered years after much of the subject matter of our texts is forgotten. While the official beginning of Junior Week was Mon- day, the ninth of May, it was not until Wednesday that any great amount of activity was apparent. On this morn- ing the annual pentathlon was held and George A. Nelson, a Sophomore, easily captured first place with a score of 4,222.59 points. Second place was taken by Henry Fox, â32, who acquired a score of 4,013.13 points. In the after- noon the Armour baseball team vanquished Lake Forest with a score of six to two to take second place in the league. That evening, in the Armour Mission, the first really important event of the week took place. This was the annual Home Concertâ sponsored by the musical clubs. Before the arrival of the audience the sophomores Dufour, Erisman, Johnson. Carlstrom Ninety-four 1932 released several gas filled red balloons, bearing large white 34s,â which floated to the ceiling of the hall. This caused much discomfort to the Freshmen who, during the per- formance tried to bring the balloons down with pins shot with rubber bands, but they had no success until an air- gun was produced and a sharpshooter proceeded to make a number of bullseycs. An enjoyable program was pre- sented, made up of selections by the Orchestra, Stresses and Strains, and the Glee Club; the Interfraternity Sing; and an innovation, a play, entitled The Silent Alarm, given by the Armour Players. All were accorded more than the usual amount of applause by the audience. Just before the final numbers by the orchestra, Dean Penn an- nounced the Honor Edition Awards of the Cycle and pre- sented them to the ten outstanding men. He also awarded the Interfraternity Sing Cup to the Delta Tau Delta Fra- ternity. This was the second consecutive year they had won this trophy. Thursday morning the class bound students were greeted by a display, produced in the dead of night by the over- enthusiastic freshmen. Every available surface of fence, street, and building in the vicinity of school was liberally smeared with large figures designed to infuriate the Sopho- mores by blaspheming them and extolling the virtures of the Freshmen. Prominent examples of these signs arc state- ments such as Down With the Sophomores,â Yea Frosh,â Official Program JUNIOR WEEK PROGRAM Wednesday, May 1 Pentathlon Baseball, Varsity vs. Lake Forest Annual Spring Concert Thursday, May 12 Intcrfratcrnitv Track Meet Baseball, Varsity vs. Michigan State Normal Friday, May 1) Interclass Relays Interfraternity Relay Class Rush Interfraternity Pageant Junior Prom at the Drake Hotel Saturday, May 14 Track, Varsity vs. Bradley Tech at Peoria Spring Concert Ninety-pet An attack on the freshman goal and a liberal quantity of â3Ss. The interfra- ternity track meet, held that morning, was easily won by Triangle Fraternity. In the afternoon Michigan State Normal defeated the Armour nine in a bitterly contested non- conference game. This defeat did not dampen the spirits of the student body who, mischief bent, formed into bands later in the evening and far into the night were to be seen parad- ing up and down Michigan Avenue, fre- quently taking time to build bonfires and conduct snake dances. The entire dayâs ac- tivities were filled with an enthusiasm seldom seen at Armour in recent years, and as a re- sult there were a great many scraps between the two factions. Friday morning an air of suspense pre- vailed, for this was the most important day of the week if one may judge by the amount of preparation. Early in the morning a large green coffin was found in the center of Ogden Field. It was, so an epitaph stated, the final resting place of the Frosh.â In spite of many difficulties the coffin was removed some time before the intcrclass relays which were the first scheduled event of the day. These relays were won by the Senior class, who as Juniors had won the event the year before. Stan Lind in tin⢠lead Whoâs race Just for fun Triangle Fraternity excelling, as before, at track events, won the interfraternity relays. The crowning event of the day was the annual Freshman-Sophomore sack rush at one oâclock for which the greater part of the student body, as well as a great number of visitors, turned out. When all was in readi- ness the participants assembled for the fray and after a hard fought battle, the freshmen under the leadership of Otto Freilinger emerged victorious over the sophomores who were led by Frank Koko. The score as finally settled by the Marshals was sixteen to five. At two oâclock the fraternities began their circus day stunts and while all were of a very interesting and entertaining nature that of Beta Psi was adjudged best from the stand- point of originality, versatility, and laugha- bility. It was a very clever parody on the Armour Development Plan. Immediately after the stunts Dean Penn presented the prizes won by fraternities, classes, and indiv- iduals throughout the week. To most of the student body the 1932 Junior Weekâ was complete, but there were many who were fortunate enough to attend the grand finale, The Junior Formalâ, which was held at the Drake Hotel. The whining stunt Oh yea! Ninel y-teien io and story were not absent eteit from the little log fortress at tire mouth of our famous river which now. through the ingenuity of the enginer flows a backward course. SUMMER CAMP The met rie ere tv of â52 SUMMER CAMP, 1932 Included in the curriculum of every stu- dent enrolled in the Civil Engineering depart- ment is an added tid-bit which is gulped down hook, line, and sinker by each of the fifteen odd aspirant bridge builders who are fortunate in obtaining the opportunity to ex- perience true life in the rough. And why not? Each knows that the benefits reaped from the mental and physical training ac- quired in the six short weeks at Camp Ar- mour in Wisconsin will prove of the utmost importance in his preparation for later life. With the desire to investigate the fragrancy of pines as soon as possible, a group composed of sophomores and several freshmen bustled into an outgoing train to Minoequa, the nearest railroad point to the camp, from whence a waiting bus conveyed the travelers seventeen miles to the State House. After a half mile tramp which seemed lengthened several times over Camp Armour was reached. On the following Monday, a civil engi- neerâs life was begun by each individual. Tri- angulation, taping, surveying, and the use of the transit and level were only several details included in the practical training. One Hundred W tere u e eat âand w tere we sleep Play âstudy âand work Thus, a great amount of knowledge was gar- nered at the hands of experience. After each workday, a refreshing plunge in the lake fol- lowed by a repast which was fit for a kingâ set the boys in fine fettle. Week-ends were spent in becoming acquainted with the lore of the forest or in snaring the plentiful trout. The annual baseball contests between the camp and the Red Arrow Camp teams re- newed the friendly rivalry of years gone by. To keep in touch with civilization several of the men went to the dances held occasion- ally in the town of Trout Lake. This town, incidentally, contains only a dance hall and general store. Here, at one of the dances, they were fortunate in seeing an Indian dance. A canoe trip having been suggested for July 4th, several canoes were obtained at Boulder Junction, approximately five miles north of the upper end of Trout Lake. Packed with supplies for two days a crew of six pad- died forty-five miles, returning in a round- about manner back to Trout Lake. Activity again surrounded the camp on July 26, when the time arrived to board the Fishermanâs Special which would conduct all to a less eventful life. Before t je dance Just a little doze One Hundred Ont wt are conscious of the greatness of seme list portrayeJ emotions of a great know tlx accomplishments of a college an eJison. ue actor, but ue chum. AWA E E â â â I THE HONOR Roy Carlstrom Elmer E. Sademan Wilfred W. Davies Charles B. Sommer, Jr. James W. Juvinall .........that the Board of Athletic Control, the ad- visory council of the Armour Tech Athletic Association, in meeting assembled, each year select ten men from the graduating class to be known as the Honor Edition Award men; that the basis of selection shall be on the leadership and interest in all school activities displayed by these men while in school in accordance with the basis of selection now drawn up; that these men shall receive recognition of this award by appropriate publication of the Honor Edi- tion Award in the Cycle; and that each man shall receive a numbered copy of the Cycle.â Ont HunJrrJ four EDITION AWARD Willis G. Buchnc Jarl T. Sorensen George J. Beemsterboer Franklin Paine William W. Lange In accordance with the above resolution presented to and adopted by the Armour Tech Athletic Association in 1928, the appropriate publication in the Cycleâ is hereby made. The resolution was this year amended to the effect that the Honor Award Cycles should not be numbered but that the most outstanding graduate who, under the original resolution would have received Award Number One, should be given special mention. Because, by his leader- ship and interest in all school activitiesâ, he most nearly fulfilled the conditions of the basis of selectionâ, Roy William Carlstrom deserved and received this honorary citation from the Board of Athletic Control. Ont llunJreJ Fil e a thrill, ulyetlyer our'i ou u r perietur, or a sensation stirred by uiturning an act of anot ter is usually rosy to rrmrmbrr, but rumory don not record as com- pletely and accurately as don a picture. FEATURES Three Tech News editors deciding an editorial pol- icy. Fuhrer must have been on time that morning. A rush period at the entrance to the card? rooms. So this is how hard the summer electricals work. A Sphinx may have a silent voice, but oh that soup. Other things as well as baseball must be going along in a happy manner. Brad looks as though he were about to give away a ring. The Architects re- ception for Doc- tor Hotchkiss. Ont HunJrtJ Eight OF 1933 â After plowing through a bliz- zard, a boiler test is a comfortable job. Between classes, with Rasâ tak- ing the center. If the picture were a talkie, wc d probably hear the post - grads speak German. Having switched the power once, how many can now do it again? Jim and Joe oblige. A good shot in the Junior - Soph game. Warren Brown tells the journal- ists of peaceful, easy life of a newspaper man. Donât be misled, Haroldâs only a stage-sweeper. Oar Hundred Nine Some of the rea- sons thefront steps donât blow away. Smile for the cam- era, Ray. This is a good view of Michi- gan avenue and Bodinson. Someone gets a shot at Callen taking a shot. Armourâs grand- stand and back yard. Bccmâ at bat for the Se- niors. Vic, between in- ningsâI meanâ classes. At least it's an original excuse, Earl. If you doubt the Freshman ability to play basketball, read on to the athletic section. Onr llunjifj Ttn Why so serious, Carl â did some- one swipe the pipe? It isn't a handout, but what else draws such a crowd? This couldnât be a classroom â there arc too many stu- dents. Who else do we often sec in that same pose, Ray? All good things donât go at once. Sadeâ leaves the pacers, butâ John- icâ stays. This picture was taken before the game, or perhaps somebody cracked a joke. A big Yea Ar- mour.â Turn aboutâs fair play, a shot for a shot. One Hundred Eleven A birdie shot of part of Armour's golf team. Quick, who has a machine gun? Our boxers in- vade a foreign stronghold. Throw it, Suman. It might hit someone. Erisman was reaching for change to pay for this picture. Interfraternity baseball gets into full swing. Not a worry in the world. One broad smile all down the line. A bolt out of the blue. Cone steps into a fast one. Our HunJrtJ Tuv iy Proof of the good sportsmanship of the rush. This might be either an assistant Junior Marshall or a Freshman. A preli minary skirmish of the Frosh-Soph rush. No. This isnât a Spanish bull- fight- Just before the cannon shot that was heard around the world. Junior Marshal Johnson,not Mar- shall Johnson, Ju- nior. A group of at- tractive Armour coeds. O, Yoo Hoo. Livingston, but not the famous explorer. The interfrater- nity track meet attains new heights. Oat Hundred Tbirfrtn had tht lites of our countrymen been a reenactment of the rote of the rich and idle Xreek or roman uit before the collapse of their respective great empires, such an enduring and fitting monument as soldierâs field should neter base been erected in memory of those who were nail- ing to lay before history all that was within and of them seisesâ strength, body, life, and soul âso that their country might enjoy a future according to its own shaping. such sacrifices to the spirit of patriotism would not ras e been possible without the presious athletic training which teaches the hatred of a quitter, a boaster, an alibier, or a hypocrite,â and which instills the fortitude to face the odds with determination, courage, and mental alertness.â by day (hr shiny snit furnishes (hr light in which wr view tlx world in ilsâ glory; by night electricity illuminata its parts; similarly, athletic leaders are the operators who focus the beams of fair play and good sportsmanship upon the game. ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION SCHOMMERâ: At a recent meeting of prominent lawyers, graduated at least fifteen years ago from The University of Chicago, Dean Bigelow asked a question which everyone had to answer. This was the question: If you had your college days to live over again, what courses or college activities would you stress? With the single exception of one who claimed he would stress international law, everyone expressed the desire to put his efforts in additional athletics and physical culture. In other words, their desire was a healthy body. They had been so engrossed with the majesty of the law they forgot to inculcate the desire to develop their health by exercise and play. What is true of these lawyers holds true with other professions and with our engineers. Athletic games, especially the competitive kind, not only develop your body, but your character as well. Habits of co-operation necessary in all MESSAGE team games arc learned by practicing them. Loy- alty is learned by helping to achieve the cause to which you are loyal. Self-control is learned by being put in a situation where personal contact games plus the instinctive fighting spirit con- stantly require the exercise of self-control. In- tercollegiate sports aid greatly in developing many traits of character that are of constant use throughout life. Donât neglect your exercise. Use our facilities to the utmost. Build your bodies. A sound body is almost essential for a sound mind. The com- bination is tough to beat. Learn athletic play. It is the safety valve of your existence. It means the development of your health. It will build up a reserve force of strength and energy essential as a condition necessary for success and happiness in life. âJohn J. Schommcr. Out Hundred Sixteen C. V. I.cigh A. A. Stags, Jr. W. V. Col vert V. C. Kratft B. Vtitman E. W. McGillivray O. Kuchn THE ARMOUR COACHING STAFF Track.......................Alonzo A. Stagg, Jr. Baseball..................... William C. krafft Basketball........ Otto Kuchn Swimming.............. E. Wallace McGillivray Another successful year has been complet- ed by the Armour coaching staff. Because of the illness of Coach Krafft, Otto Kuchn, a former Tech star, was appointed basketball coach. All the major sports came through with flying colors. The baseball team under the direction of W. C. Krafft tied for first place in its initial year as a member of the North- ern Intercollegiate Conference. With one veteran and additional new material. Coach Kuchn developed one of the best fives to take Golf....................... Charles W. Leigh Tennis William W. Colvcrc Boxing Bernard Weissman Wrestling ..................Bernard Weissman the basketball floor in the last nine years. Coach A. A. Staggâs track team finished an excellent season, although continually handi- capped by injuries. Swimming received ma- jor status in Armour athletics this year. The team, guided by li. W. McGillivray, success- fully completed the toughest schedule ever faced by any Tech team. The minor sports experienced a lean year, inasmuch as most of the teams were com- posed of inexperienced players, who, however, show good promise. One Hundred Si-i tntttn Bicglcr Luchobcr Framchi Lillis Allison Carlstrom Schommcr Krslft ARMOUR TECH ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Roy W. Carlstrom Stephen M. Lillis Louis W. Bieglcr Lawrence Frateschi OFFICERS President Joseph Laschobcr Freshman Representative First Vice President GeorgeS. Allison Treasurer Second Vice President John J. Schommcr Director of Athletics Secretary John F. McNamara, M.D. Medical Advisor William C. Krafft Instructor in Physical Training The Armour Tech Athletic Association was founded in the spring of 1922, by a group of students led by Harold W. Munday. Every student is a member of the organi- zation, and each class elects a representative. The officers of the Association arc these stu- dents excepting the freshman member, and together with the administrative officers of the school and three faculty members, con- stitute the Board of Athletic Control. The object of the A.T.A.A. is to develop a unified Armour spirit by furnishing efficient regulation for all student athletics and inter- class relations. It serves as a medium between students and the faculty. It directs all varsity athletics. Asâ arc awarded by the Board of Athletic Control through the coachesâ recommenda- tion. These awards arc given for earnest ef- fort, proficiency, ability, and strict adherence to training rules. Graduating major Aâ men receive Aâ blankets which are black football robes with a large yellow Aâ attached. The Association promotes interfraternity and intcrclass athletics and manages all ath- letic mass meetings. The Association also has jurisdiction over the Cycle, the Rifle Club, and the Musical clubs. For the past six years the A.T.A.A. has awarded 10 Honor Cycles to the ten out- standing men of the senior class. The factors which enter into the selection of these men arc: personality, athletic ability, various ac- tivities, and scholarship. âR. W. Carlstrom. One Hundred Eighteen Bicglcr, I.ncKobcr, Fratctehi. Carlitrom, Lilli Allium, Kralft, Penn, Hotchkiu, Huntley, Schommcr, Heald BOARD OF ATHLETIC CONTROL OFFICERS President Secretary Treasurer Philip C. Huntley William C. Kraflft George S. Allison FACULTY REPRESENTATIVES Willard E. Hotchkiss John J. Schommcr Henry T. Heald John C. Penn Charles W. Leigh STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES Roy W. Carlstrom Stephen M. Lillis Lawrence Fratcschi ................................... Louis W. Bicglcr ...... Joseph Laschober Senior Junior . . . Junior Sophomore Freshman MANAGERS Robert F. Meehan Intcrclass Athletics Walter J. Weldon Inter fraternity Athletics One Hundred Nineteen McDonough. Kolve, La Force. Weldon, Kummel. Bcertmerboer, Fratctchi, Sireb. Lilli Galvani. McDonald. Luka , CarUtrom. Giovan. Nelson, Oberbeck, Sademan HONOR Aâ SOCIETY OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer Roy W. Carlstrom Elmer E. Sademan Leonard G. Rummcl George J. Beemsterbocr Willis G. Buchnc Roy W. Carlstrom Spencer B. Cone Lawrence Frateschi Victor J. Galvani Nicholas E. Giovan Allen H. Helmick Sven Johannisson ROLL Irving A. Kolve August Kruezkamp Arthur F. LaForcc Stephen M. Lillis Michael A. Lukas George MacDonald Leonard E. Marcus Edward W. McDonough George E. Nelson Arthur W. Oberbeck Tad Omiecinski Victor Omiecinski George M. Reed Leonard G. Rummcl Elmer E. Sademan Charles B. Sommer Louis H. Strcb Walter J. Weldon The Honor Aâ Society was created early in the year of 1914 and is one of the oldest organizations at Armour. Although it was originally organized for the purpose of gov- erning all athletics on the campus, it has been replaced in that capacity by the Armour Tech Athletic Association. At the present time it is maintained strictly as a Society for Tech lettermen and devotes its interests toward the promotion of athletics. The mem- bers, who arc chosen only from the Junior and Senior classes, wear a small gold Aâ charm as a mark of distinction. During the past year, the Society decreed that Thursday should be official letter day, requesting that all men who have earned the coveted Aâ should wear them on that day. It also stated that men having letter-sweaters from other schools may wear the sweaters on removal of the letter. The seventh annual athletic re-union ban- quet was held at the Blackhawk Restaurant on Thursday evening, December 8, 1932, im- mediately after the alumni-varsity basketball game was made history in the proper manner. The banquet was noteworthy because of the conspicuous absence of the after-dinner speakers. In addition to the dinner, the or- chestra and splendid floor show furnished everything in the way of amusement for the pick of Armourâs athletes and the Instituteâs coaches. Out UnnJrtJ Tueitly OF 1933 McDonough, Strcb, La Force. Bernmerboer, l.illit, Nelson, Armsbury Behmer, McDonald. Kulpik. Lukat. Kolvc, Viâcldon. Omiccimki, Galvani Caristrotn, Kummel, Giovan, Bicslcr, Fratcschi, Omiecinski. Obcrbeck. Sademan WEARERS OF THE Aâ MAJOR Aâ AWARDS Baseball Basketball T rack Swimming W. G. Buchne G. Bccmstcrbocr E. L. Cordcs S. M. Lind R. W. Carlstrom A. J. Evans H. Dollcnmaier C. H. Fox G. A. Nelson N. C. Giovan V. J. Galvani J. Us L. Frateschi A. W. Obcrbeck I. A. Kolvc S. M. Lillis J. Laschober K. S. Hirsh J. L. Roberts M. A. Lukas A. I.auchiskis C. J. Jens E. E. Sademan G. J. Mayer M. L. Lukas A. J. Kruezkamp H. C. Set ter berg T. Omiecinski R. E. Pflum V. Omiecinski L. G. Rummel C. B. Sommer R. F. Young R. O. Warner MINOR Aâ AWARDS Baseball Track Swimming Tennis L. W. Bicglcr O. T. Barnett A. Kulpak J. J. Ahern R. D. Armsbury G. M. Reed J. B. Finnegan H. P. Richter S. Bernstein S. B. Cone D. E. Freer A. J. Rosen R. Knause E. F. McDonough M. J. Heller J. T. Sorensen A. F. LaForcc, Jr. F. W. Paine H. S. Hendricks A. J. Jungles A. Tiensuu G. H. Reed L. H. Streb Golf Boxing W resiling L. Davidson S. Johannison D. W. Pearson W. J. Weldon Harry P. Richter A. Edward Colcord Irving C. Johnson Jarl T. Sorensen J. Bacci W. C. Behmer W. C. Brch J. L. Campionc L. J. McDonald L. G. Marcus J. P. Schavilje G. H. Bergquist W. H. Larson I. C. Perrill R. W. Schmidt H. Sumner F. L. Talaber MANAGER AWARDS Baseball Glen W. Schoddc Tennis Track Walter M. Trauten, Jr. Golf Basketball Frank W. Koko Boxing Swimming Frank W. Koko Wrestling Owe IlunJrfJ Turnty-one energy is tlx basis of all things, but u vn all taiJ things are divided into groups or clan ft, each of these Iras ill own dominant figure, in enjoyment and entertainment, baseball, our great national game, holds paramount position. BASEBALL BASEBALL, 1932 Under the able direction of Coach Kraflft the Armour baseball team completed another successful season finishing in a triple tie for first place in the Northern Illinois Conference. In the play- off Tech lost a hard-fought tljirteen-inning dual to Wheaton Col- lege by a score of 6 to 5, to tie for second in the league standings. Although a total of sixty-five candidates reported for practice Coach Krafft found only three lettermen back around which to build a championship team. On April 7, the first practice game of the season went to Armour, Chicago Normal falling by the wayside to the tune of 7 to 4. A six-run rally in the fourth inning eliminated all doubt as to the final outcome. Crane, on April 12, played the Tech team to a 6 to 6 tie in a game replete with errors due, largely, to the inclement weather. Lukas starred at bat for the home team, collecting three of the six hits the Armour aggregation was able to muster. Techâs stock in the league standings fell decidedly below par when, in the opener at Naperville, the following Saturday, North Central scored a 4 to 0 shutout. Of the five hits collected by Armour, Biegler, playing second, and Evans, in left field, both freshmen, banged out two hits apiece to lead the Tech attack. Buchne and Mayer turned in good pitching, but lack of support accounted for two of the four runs scored by Naperville. In the second consecutive league game away from home, on April 19, the Krafftsmen slugged out a 10 to 8 victory over Elm- hurst. Tech opened up with a barrage of hits in the first inning, William C. Kraut Ouch Kratft again show- ed hit coaching ability by developing a near champion- ship team with a nucleus of only four veteran . He kept hit men fired to a high pitch and the rctultt were grati- fying. Harry P. Riciiti.r Harry Richter discharged very well the duties of the responsible position of man- ager. His readiness to assist at all times earned for him the esteem of the players and coach. Owe HuuJrrJ Tutnty-four Kratft, V. Omiecinski, Levy, Lillis, Baunsel, O'Omnor, Stchno Cosme. Machinis. Sommer. Galvani. Buehnc. Lukas Biegler. Young, T. Omiecinski, Reed, Evans, Morrclli, Mayer William C. Kraflft ......................................... Coach Harry P. Richter .... Manager (No captain was elected) notable among which was a home run by Mickeyâ Lukas that cleared the bases to put the game in the bag. However, the slug- ging continued throughout the game with Armour displaying a better attack with runners on bases. The Armour nine continued their heavy hitting to win their first league game at home, April 22, Wheaton being turned back by a score of 6 to 2. Buchnc, Tech pitching ace, allowed only two hits. Wheaton scored a tally in the second inning on two errors and two walks. In the first half of the fifth inning Wheaton was stopped by a double play, Galvani to Vic Omiecinski to Tad Omiecinski. The Tech half opened with Buchnc reaching first on an error. Evans singled, and both runners scored on another single by Vic. Armour scored two more in the sixth, holding Wheaton hitless. Lillis singled, Sommer got to first on an error, and Buehne sacri- ficed. Evans then banged the ball over the short right field fence for a double, to clear the bases. In the first of the eighth Buehne retired by way of strike out route all three men who faced him. Tech concluded her scoring in the last half by crossing the home plate twice. Sommer singled and Buehne doubled for his second hit to put two men on base. The next two struck out but Vic Omiecinski doubled over the right field fence to score his teammates. Plenty of time, Cltarlic Roy F. Younc Roy Young 1' the only senior on the Tech ÂŤquad. Latt teason he wÂŤ shifted from hit former position be- hind the bat to the outfield. Me was a comitiant hitter, and the team lent a valuable player by hit graduation. Archie J. Evans Archie Evans, a fresh- man. led the team in hitting with a mark of . }$. Thus he was the only man on the team to receive a gold bate- ball for this accomplish- ment. His outfielding wat at brilliant as hit hitting. One IlunJrtJ Turnty-five A sensational double play from Bicgler to Vic Omiecinski stopped a potential Wheaton rally in the ninth. The following Monday, April 25, the Armour nine defeated the Alumni by a score of 10 to 9. Chiefâ Stchno, â31, former Tech ace, allowed the varsity ten hits while striking out ten men. Sommer starred for the varsity, getting three hits, including a home run, out of four times at bat. Pepe, â31, did likewise for the Alumni. Friday of the same week, North Central invaded Ogden Field, and again took the Tech scalp, this time by a score of 7 to 0. The whole game was played in a drizzling rain which may have accounted for the ragged pitching and fielding on the part of the Armour team. The Naperville nine scored six runs in the fifth inning on three base hits, two bases on balls, and two errors. George Mayer pitched good ball but to no avail as the Tech siege guns were all clogged up with mud and water. The team went to Ypsilanti over the week-end. Tech, after a long, hard struggle came out on the short end of a 1 to 0 score. Buchne again turned in a stellar game, allowing only three singles in the nine innings. Charlie Sommers opened the game with a three-base swat, but his mates were unable to bring him home. This was the only chance either team had to score until the seventh, when a single, a walk, and a line single, scored the winning run for Michigan State Normal. Armour tied for second place in the league standings, when on Chaklks B. Sommi k Charley Sommer was one of (he moil capable lead- oif men and centerficldcrt Armour has ever had. Be- cause of hit natural leader- ship and likeable personality he was elected captain of the 19)) team. Willis G. Buliine Bill Buchne was the only veteran pitcher to re- turn. He continued to live up to his established reputa- tion by pitchiii); brilliant ball. In all of his four years with the team he has proved a valuable man. Not quite fait enough One Hundred T wen Iy-six May 4, the Tech nine journeyed to Mt. Morris and defeated them by a score of 4 to 1. Mayer pitched an excellent game allow- ing only six hits, well scattered. In the third inning Armour scored the first tally on hits by Mayer, Evans, and Lukas. Tad Omiccinski scored another run in the sixth when he singled, stole second, and came home on Lillisâ second hit of the game. Both teams registered one run apiece in the seventh inning to conclude the scoring. In the first half Sommer singled, stole sec- ond, and scored on Evansâ second single. Mt. Morris scored on a triple by Cassioppe and a single by Daugenbaugh. During Junior Week the Armour nine played two home games, the first with the traditional rivals, Lake Forest, which they won to the tune of 6 to 2, and the second with Michigan State Normal, which they lost 9 to 7. The Tech nine displayed excellent ability with the bat in the Lake Forest encounter on Wednesday, May 11. Evans starred at bat with three hits, one a home run. Buchnc again pitched an excellent game. In the encounter with Michigan State Normal the following day, Ypsilanti scored one run in the second, two in the third, and three in the fourth to take an impressive lead. Although the Tech nine rallied in the late innings the lead was too large to overcome. On May 17, Mt. Morris upset the dope when they defeated the Tech team by a score of 9 to 2. Armour collected only six hits while Mt. Morris swatted out fourteen, also taking advantage of seven Tech errors. Victor Omiixinski Vie Omiccinski again played a bang-up game at short. Although his batting average was lower than that of the previous year, he still was the best hitter on the team in a pinch. Stephen Lillis Steveâ I.illis was the guardian of the hot cor- ner, third base. His good hitting and fine throwing arm helped Tech in the fight for the league champion- ship. One Hundred Tuenty-ieten Armour continued in her losing ways, when on the following Friday, Elmhurst easily won over the Krafftsmcn by a score of 8 to 1. Fifteen strikeouts were all that the Tech team could show for the afternoon. The run that they did score came in the sev- enth inning when Young reached first on a pass, stole second, took third on an error, and then scored on a fly to right field. The next afternoon they went to Wheaton to engage the league leaders on their home ground. Armour showing a complete re- versal of form over the last two games, came home with a 5 to 3 victory, which again gave them a fighting chance to tie in the league standings. Buehne returning to form pitched a stellar game allowing only four hits while striking out eleven of the league leaders. Earlier in the season he had allowed the same team only two hits. Tech scored two runs in the fourth, two in the fifth, and con- cluded the scoring in the sixth with one tally. Wheaton scored an unearned run in the third, and wound up the scoring in the ninth in a two-run rally. By defeating Lake Forest on May 2 5, in a play-off of a post- poned game, Tech finished the 1932 season in a triple tic for first place in the Northern Intercollegiate Conference. The final score of the Lake Forest game played at Lake Forest was a 2 to 1 victory. As has already been stated, the play off on Memorial Day gave Wheaton the right to meet Mt. Morris. Although the Armour nine had already defeated Wheaton twice, the crucial game was lost in a terrific thirteen-inning duel, 6 to 5. Tad Omiixikski Tad Omiccinski, big first baseman, was another new- comer to the Tech squad. He was a dangerous slugger at all time , and could al- ways be counted upon to play a good game at his po- sition. George Mayer Leftyâ Mayer pitched brilliantly during hit first year in an Armour uniform. With added experience, he it sure to take a place among the great left hand- ert who have made Armour history. A Double Play for Ann our One Hundred Tu enty-eigbt 1932 BASEBALL SCHEDULE April 7âArmour 7, Chicago Normal College 4, at Armour. April 12âArmour 6, Crane College 6. at Armour. April 16âNorth Central College 4, Armour 0. at Naperville, III. April 19âArmour 10, Elmhurst 8, at Elmhurst, III. April 22âWheaton 6, Armour 2, at Armour. April 25âArmour 10, Alumni 8. at Armour. April 29âNorth Central 7, Armour 0, at Armour. April 30âMichigan State Normal 1, Armour 0, at Ypsilanti, Mich. May 6âArmour 4, Mt. Morris 1, at Mt. Morris, III. May 11âArmour 6, Lake Forest 2, at Armour. May 12âMichigan State Normal 9, Armour 7, at Armour. May 17âMt. Morris 9, Armour 2, at Armour. May 20âElmhurst 8, Armour 1, at Armour. May 21âArmour 5, Wheaton 3, at Armour. May 25âArmour 2, Lake Forest 1, at Lake Forest. May 30âPlay off for League Championship. Wheaton 6, Armour 5 (13 innings) SUMMARY Won 7 Lost 8 Tied 1 Reed Stehno Bieglcr Michael A. Lukas Mickey Lukas was the man behind the mask in practically all of the Tech games. He was an excellent long distance hitter as at- tested by the number of extra base hits chalked to his credit. Vincent Galvani Galâ Galvani played sec- ond base for the Krafftsmen throughout the greater part of the season. As the second batter in the lineup he de- veloped an uncanny skill of sacrificing the runners on base. One Hundred Tu-en y-nine despite the real ad lances nude in tlx methodi and fixed of travel during the many centuriet of biltory, man still retains the strength and usefulness of bit legs, slfould all othermcansfail, lx can take to tlx path. TE AC r INDOOR TRACK, 1932 The indoor track season of 1932 proved to be one of the most successful in recent years as the Armour aggregation won four indoor meets while losing only one. They also made an excellent showing in the Armour Tech Relays, the largest indoor track event held during the season in the Middle West, and the C.A.A.U. meet. A successful season was indicated from the day Coach A. A. Stagg, Jr., made his first call for candidates. The turnout was the largest in the teamâs history. Most of the veterans of the 1951 season returned, including Capt. C. Jens, Nelson, Sadcman, Fox, Hirsch, Richter, Cordcs, and Sctterberg. The first meet of the year was held on February 13, La Grange furnishing the opposition. Armour won by a one point margin, 46 to 45. Nelson, with 26 4 points, starred for Tech. Armour won her second meet of the season when, on February 20, she met and defeated both La Grange and the University of Chicago B team in a triangular meet. Nelson again was the out- standing star while Sadcman, Lind, and Capt. Jens also turned in excellent performances. The following week Scars Y.M.C.A. fell victim to the Tech squad to the tunc of 42 to 23. Coach Staggâs men met their first defeat when they engaged the strong North Central team on March 5. The Naperville boys ran away from the visiting engineers, 62 to 41 J . The busiest week of the entire season was the final week of in- door competition. In the short space of five days the tracksters Alonzo A. Stacg, Jr. Coach Lonnie Stagg de- veloped another excellent track team for the 19}a sea- son despite the handicap of injuriet to several of hit start. He did much toward making the Armour Tech Relays the greatest indoor track event in the middle west. A. Edward Colcord Manager Colcord very ably handled the affairs of the track team. He scheduled five indoor and four outdoor meets. He was assisted by Maurice J. Erisnsan who was appointed manager for 19)). Kuchn. Schriener, ('alien. Malloy, Kulpak, Hansen, Concolino, Fleistner, Flcig, Hoyer, Stagg Eritman, G. Nelson, Roberts, Sadcman, Oberbcck, Krcu kamp One UnnJrrJ Thirty-1 uv Alonzo A. Stagg, Jr......................................... Coach Charles J. Jens, Jr... Captain A. Edward Colcord Manager competed in three meets. The first of the three was a dual meet with Crane Junior College, on March 29. The Tech team emerged victorious by a score of 54 to 50. On the following evening Armour entered the 34th Annual Central A. A. U. indoor track and field championships. Although competing against some of the speediest talent Techâs medley relay team, composed of Roberts, Hirsch, Lind, and Sadcman, won sec- ond place in the 1%-mile event, while Capt. Jens took third in the shot put. Over twenty-six universities and colleges throughout the Middle West were represented in the Armour Invitational Relays held at the new University of Chicago fieldhouse on April 2. Over 3,000 track enthusiasts saw more than 200 athletes in record-breaking performances, the only Invitational record to weather the on- slaught being the shot put mark, established by Capt. Don Paul of Armour in 1930. Armour Tech scored two third places in the relays, and Capt. Jens and Frateschi placed third and fourth in the shot put, respec- tively. The 880-yard relay team was composed of Hirsch, Krcuz- kamp, Jens, and Sademan, while Lind, Hirsch, Roberts, and Sadc- man ran the college two-mile event. Indiana University, Big Ten Conference champions, easily took first place in the university events by piling up a total of five firsts out of a possible thirteen for a total of 38 points. The Relays marked the end of the 1932 indoor season. Armour Ini national Relays Charles J. Li ns Captain Charley Jen led the Armour track team through the 19)2 season. His excellent work in the relay events and hit long distance tosses of the shot pul will b: sorely misted in future cam- paigns. Gi oxct A. Nelson Nelson is unquestionably one of the greatest track stars ever to represent Tech. In four of the indoor meets he piled up 76 Vi points al- most one-third of the total sccrcd. He has set eight in- door and two outdoor school records in his two years of competition. a Out HmiJrtJ Tbirty-thrtt OUTDOOR TRACK, 1932 Armourâs outdoor track season opened auspiciously, when on April 26, Tech defeated a strong Y.M.C.A. College team by a point score of 80 to 51 at Ogden Field. Armour men won ten out of a possible fifteen first- places. Injuries which handicapped the team throughout the season first became felt in this meet, when George Nelson, â34, who was the individual high scorer of the whole squad the previous year was unable to compete. During the meet, Captain Jens, â32, tore the ligaments in his knee and was lost to the team for the remainder of the season. Tech defeated Lake Forest, but lost to Milwaukee State in a double dual meet held the following Saturday, April 30, at Ogden Field. Armour took eight out of a possible fourteen first places to triumph over Lake Forest by a score of 69 to 57, but Milwaukee State, under the leadership of their great star, Gerboth, won 96 to 29. Sademan and Roberts were the individual stars for Armour. The annual triangular meet between Armour, Milwaukee State, and Y.M.C.A. college was held at Stagg Field, May 7. The Mil- waukee team amassed a grand total of 971 2 points to win the meet. Armour finished second with a total of 5 1 points and Yâ College scored but 14'L. points to finish last. Nelson, back in his old form again, placed first in the high hurdles and the broad jump and took second place in the low hurdles and in the high jump. Elmer Sademan won the 440 yard dash as usual. Other track- sters who added to the Tech total were Johnnyâ Roberts, who Elmer E. Sademan Sade's excellent per- formance in the too, aao, and 440 dashes, and in the longer distances earned for him second place in the scor- ing honors and the captaincy of the 19)} team. He also holds three Tech indoor records. John I.. Roberts Johnny scored a total of points to place third in the scoring honors on the Tech team. His exceptionally fine work during the out- door season made many of the Armour victories pos- sible. Push âem up Charlie One Hundred Thirty-four placed second in the 110 yd. high hurdles and tied for third in the pole vault, and Stanley Lind who won his specialty, the half mile run. A dual track meet with Bradley Tech at Peoria, May 14, con- cluded the outdoor season for Armour. The one-sided score, 36 to 90, piled up by the Bradley tracksters, was partly due to the absence because of injuries of five of the Armour track stars and partly due to the Bradley one-man team. Redd, who scored a total of 29 points. Two Armour Tech seniors, competing in their last meet, estab- lished new school records in their respective specialties. Stanley Lind won the 880-yard run in a record time of 2:00.9; and Emmet Cordes, established a new school record for the javelin throw when he hurled the spear 157 feet, 10 inches. Immediately after the Bradley meet, Elmer Sademan, 33, was elected captain of the Armour track team for the 1933 season. Sademan was high point man for the outdoor season just closed, having compiled a total of 41 points. Co-starring with Sademan for the outdoor season honors were John Roberts, â3 5, with a point total of 40VI , Stanley Lind, â32, with 26 4, and George Nelson, â34, with 22 points. Members of the 1932 track team, under the able direction of Alonzo A. Stagg, Jr., deserve credit for the way they carried out their work against the odds that constantly faced them. Petersen, Kcrchcr, Babcock. Erisman Jungels, Jones, Hendrick , Freer. Finnegan. Korrcll, Kreurkamp, Hclmick, Richter, Heller, Kulpak, Rosen.Stagg Mueller, Frateschi, Scctcrberg. Robert , Hirsch, Jen , G. Nelson, Tien uu, Sademan, Lind, Fox Stanley M. Lino Stan, competing under Tech colors for the la t time, in the meet against Bradley, established a new Armour record in the SSo-yard run, to complete in a fitting manner his numerous ath- letic activities for Armour. Harold L. Fox The 19} 1 season was also the last for Fox. This able dash man consistently garn- ered points for Armour in the 100 and the aao yard dashes. His work will be greatly missed in the ijjj track season. Owe Hundred Thirty-five INDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE, 1932 February 13âArmour 46, La Grange 45, at Bartlett Gymnasium February 20âArmour 57 Vi, La Grange 43 Vi, University of Chicago B 22, at Bartlett Gymnasium February 27âArmour 42 3 5, Sears Y.M.C.A. 25 2 5, at Scars Roebuck Y.M.C.A. March 5âNorth Central 62, Armour 41 Vi, at Naperville. March 29âArmour 54, Crane Junior College 50, at University of Chicago fieldhouse. March 30âCentral Athletic Association Union track and field cham- pionships at 124th Field Artillery Armory. April 2âFourth Annual Armour Indoor Invitational RelaysâIndi- ana University 38, Chicago 23, Illinois State 19, Michigan State 12, Butler 11, Northwestern 11, Pur- due 9 Vi, Notre Dame 8, Armour 7, Monmouth 7, Loyola 7, Lake Forest 5, F.lmhurst 5, Bradley 2, Dc Paul 1 Vi, Wisconsin 1. OUTDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE, 1932 April 26âArmour 80, Y.M.C.A. College 51, at Ogden Field. April 30âArmour 69, Lake Forest 57, at Ogden Field, Milwaukee State 96, Armour 29, at Ogden Field. May 7âMilwaukee State 97 2, Armour 51, Lake Forest 14 Vi, at Stagg Field. May 14âBradley Tech 90. Armour 36, at Peoria. August J. Kkiu kami1 Gut is an exceptionally capable dash man and in this capacity he became outstand- ing. He is one of those men who arc generally counted upon without question. Lawrence Frati sent Frateschi earned his major letter for track mainly be- cause of his excellent work in putting the shot. He will be with the team for an- other two seasons and is likely to seriously threaten the school shot put record. Not a Jot on tiff ground Out Hundred Thirty-fix 1932 TRACK STANDINGS Total Total Grand Indoor Outdoor Total Nelson 76 2 22 98% Sademan 24 41 65 Roberts 10% 40' a 50% Lind........................ 17% 26% 43% Jens ........................ 32 5 37 I;ox.......................... 8 4 5 20 28 4 5 Kruezkamp...................... 6% 17% 24% Frateschi..................... 8 14 22 Tiensuu...................... 14 8 22 Hirsch ...................... 14% 7 21% Richter....................... 7 6 13 Cordcs....................................... 13 13 Setterberg 2 3 10 10 12 3 10 Rosen 1 9 10 Winogrond................ 9 9 Kulpak........................................ 9 9 Jungcls....................................... 8 8 Jones ........................................ 7 7 Hclmick.................. 6% 6% Hendricks........ 6 6 Freer 5 1 6 Heller.............. 5 1 6 Finnegan..................... 1 2 3 Peterson ..................................... 3 3 Van Dyke 1% 1 2% Mueller....................................... 1 1 Barnett...................... 1 1 Kcrcher ..................... 1 1 Totals...............258 3 5 272% 5311 10 Kenneth S. Hirsch Hirsch was another senior competing under Tech colors for his last season. His first- rate work in the no and 440 yard runs, and in the relay were of great importance to their outcome. Harry P. Richter Richter scored his points for Armour in the long dis- tance runs â the mile and two mile. His graduation also left a gap difficult of refilling. Everyone on bis toes One Hundred Thirty-men in this age, more than ever before, transportation mutt be speedy, entertainment must be lively, and sport must Irate greater concentrated activity, for strenuous compact competition there is no more typi- cal game than basketball. BASKETDALL BASKETBALL, 1933 Tech, facing a tough basketball schedule with only two letter- men back, completely upset the dope by winning nine out of the fifteen games scheduled and in so doing piled up a total of 530 points, a record that has not been equaled in the last nine years. Because of the illness of Coach Krafft the Armour five this year was under the able direction of Otto Kuehn, a former Tech bas- ketball star. About forty prospective basketball men answered the first call for practice early in November. Of the forty, only three men had been on the squad the previous season, Captain G. Becmstcr- boer, L. G. Rummel, and M. A. Lukas. After two weeks of con- ditioning the squad was cut in half, and serious work was begun in preparation for the rapidly approaching games. Coach Kuehn was forced to experiment with various combinations well into the season in order to find the maximum available scoring power made even more necessary by the new ten-second ruleâ. Armour opened her 1932-1933 basketball season, when Tech defeated the University of Chicago in a practice tilt December 7th by a score of 27 to 23. After a nervous start the Armour five ran the Maroon regulars off their feet to score the first triumph. The following Saturday Tech engaged the strong North Central team at Naperville. After taking a 17-8 lead at the end of the first half Armour permitted the Naperville five to rally and take a four point lead with only four minutes to go. North Central won Otto Kuihn Coach Kuehn deserve the major credit for one of the most successful seasons Tech ha experienced in the la t nine year . Hi feat i all the more noteworthy in that out of eight letter awarded  ix were to first season men. Irving C. Johnson Manager Johnson's effi- cient handling of hi duties wa of great help to the coach and to the team in general. He scheduled tome of the toughest team in the Chicago area a well a such team a Michigan State Normal and Detroit Uni- venity. Levy, Dollenmaier. Pflum, Warner. Peter on. Rummel Johnson, Latchobcr. Lauchitkit, Bcemsterbocr, Hagcnaucr, Lukas, Kuehn One HunJreJ Forty William C. Kraflft Coach George J. Beemsterboer Captain Irving C. Johnson Manager Harold W. A. Davidson Asst. Manager after a hectic struggle by a score of 28 to 26. Pflum at guard and Warner at forward collected 17 of the 28 points scored by Tech. Coach Kuchnâs basketccrs ran wild over a supposedly strong Yâ College quintet when they defeated them by a score of $$-32, Tuesday, December 13. Yâs defense could not cope with the Tech sharpshooters as witnessed by the 23 points scored by Capt. Beem- sterboer and the 17 by Ray Pflum. While the Tech aggregation was still thinking about that vic- tory, the Crane Tiger tore in with a 38 to 30 victory, and North Central accomplished what no other team could do, by scoring a second victory over the engineers, this time to the tune of 29- 23. Armour completed a disastrous home stay by defeating Alumni to the tune of 47 to 27. Al Lauchiskis led the varsity by sinking six baskets and four free throws. Al now began to justify Coach Kuchnâs faith in him by rapidly becoming the individual high scorer of the team so that, at the end of the season, he had a total of 140 points to his credit. On Thursday, January 19th, Armour invaded Wheaton, but after holding their own in the first half, succumbed before a Wheaton onslought in the second half 46 to 36. Techâs forward wall composed of Dollenmaicr, Beemsterboer, and Lauchiskis were the leaders in scoring with Pflum performing a superb job at guard, assisted by Warner and Lukas. Anotlx-r point for Pflum GI OHO I Bl I MSI I KBOI K Beemsterboer, a veteran of three seasons, successfully captained the 19)2-19)) basketball team. âBcem supplied the steadying power to an inexperienced team. While out jumping most of the opposition at center, he also scored a total of 1:4 points for the season. Raymond Pilum Pilum starred both in the guard and forward positions. He supplied the fight and spirit that carried the team on to five brilliant victories. Because of his excellent qualities as a player and leader, Ray was unanimously elected captain for the next season. One Hundred Forty-one Saturday of the same week Armour returned to the win column by again trouncing Y College on their home floor, this time by a score of 38 to 35. Although the score was tied at the half 22 all, Tech took the lead immediately upon the resumption of the game in the second half and was never headed. Michigan was invaded between semesters, the Tech cagcrs visit- ing Michigan State Normal and Detroit University. Michigan State with victories over the University of Michigan, Loyola U. of Chicago, and other strong teams from the Middle West were in no receptive mood and administered a sound 40 to 24 lesson. The lesson was well learned as shown by later developments. The following evening, February 4th, Tech took on Detroit U. and after a terrific struggle came out on the short end of a 38 to 33 score. Wheaton College reached snowbound Chicago in time for the scheduled return engagement on February 7. Tech thoroughly outclassed the Wheaton five in every department of the game, to score an impressive 43 to 19 victory. Captain Becmsterboer led the Tech scoring with six baskets and two free throws, and Lau- chiskis connected for five baskets, and Dollenmaicr tied him with three buckets and four gratis tosses. The Armour five accomplished the most brilliant victory ever seen on any basketball floor at any time when they defeated, by a one point margin, the strong, overconfident Michigan State Nor- mal quintet 31 to 30 on February 17. Those last two minutes will long be remembered by those who witnessed the game. Armour led by a two point margin 29 to 27. Ashley, Michigan forward sank a difficult shot from the corner of the floor to knot the score ALBERT LaUCHIIKIS Lauchiskis, playing his first year with the vanity, amassed a total of 140 point to lead the Armour live in scoring. Al. a for- ward. i counted upon to supply the scoring power to the Tech team in coming campaign . H  r Dollesmaier Dollenmaicr, another fre hman, played an excel- lent game both in the for- ward and guard petition . Dolly'' i an cxceptionally fine defensive player and can always be relied upon to score more than his share of points. A fast scrimmage with Detroit One Hundred For y luo at 29 all. He was fouled and converted a free throw to give his team a one point advantage. Both teams fought furiously for possession of the ball in the few remaining seconds left to play. In desperation Captain Bcemsterboer took a general aim at the basket and in the ensuing melee under the basket Al Lauchiskis recovered the ball, whirled free, and hooked in the winning points with less than four seconds to play. This was but the second defeat for Normal. A summary of the game shows that Al Lauchiskis was the in- dividual high scorer of both teams with five baskets and one free throw. Pflum played a sterling game at guard and was the runner up in scoring with three baskets and a free throw. Jagnaw, guard for Michigan Normal, was high point man for the visitors, con- necting for three baskets. A tired, but game quintet, met the Northern Illinois College of Optometry basketball team the following evening. Pflum, Bcem- sterboer, and Lauchiskis kept the team in front so that at the end of forty minutes of comparatively listless play Tech won out 35 to 33. In the final home game of the season Tech sent the teachers at Chicago Normal home with a 44 to 37 lacing. Lauchiskis added 17 more points to his already impressive total. Pelc kept Chicago Normal in the running by collecting a total of twelve points. The Crane Tiger was easily tamed when the engineers returned the visit in the last game of the season, on February 27. Armour rung up her fifth straight victory to the tune of 38 to 23. Tech, matching Craneâs fast breaking offensive, with a similar style of their own in the first half, held a seven point lead in mid-game. Raymond Warner Warner teamed up with Pflum throughout most of the season. Pop'' was a lit- tle erratic in this, his first year on the squad, but with more experience should be- come an outstanding player on the team. Michael A. Lukas Lukas, a fine reliable player, alternated at guard with Pflum and Warner. Mickey was always ready to take over the guard posi- tion and to play it well. He will Ih: a valuable asset to the Tech team next year. Did he make it? One Hundred Forty-three But all was not well in the Tech camp. Three of the Armour mainstays were in precarious position with three fouls called on each of them. Between halves Coach Kuehn laid the plans which were to completely take the Tiger by surprise. With the opening of the second half Tech took the tip-off and for the next seven minutes controlled the ball in the front court. When the Crane defense came forward Lauchiskis made an easy step-in shot. This delayed offense was repeated time and time again, and until the last few minutes when the second string went in Crane did not score a point. Al again starred for Armour, sink- ing eight baskets and three free throws for a total of nineteen points. Pflum, despite a severe injury to his foot played practically the whole game and was the highlight of the Tech defense as he had been throughout the entire season. Captain George Bccmstcrboer played his last game for Armour. His fine personality and leadership will be greatly missed by the team in coming campaigns. His control of the tip off throughout most of the games, and his excellent marksmanship, being second highest scorer, contributed in a great measure to the success of the team this season. Prospects for a championship season next year are excellent. Captain Becmsterbocr will be the only man out of a squad of twelve to be lost by graduation. After the Crane victory Raymond E. Pflum, a junior in the Civil Engineering Department, was unan- imously elected to captain the 1933-1934 basketball team. His keen basketball sense and quick thinking together with his fine personality and sure leadership should make him a great captain. Leonard Ki'mmii. Rummol, one of the two lettermen on the squid, played a fine defensive game at guard. Len will be back next year and should bolster up the de- fense considerably in what promises to be one of the best seasons Tech has ever had. Joseph Lasciiobir Laschobcr, a freshman, al- though handicapped by in- juries in mid-season, proved to be a valuable man to the team. He should develop into a very good forward with a little more experience. Tight defense checks Wheaton Or.f Hundred Forty-foul BASKETBALL SCHEDULE 1932-1933 December 7âArmour 27, University of Chicago 23, at U. of C. December 10âNorth Central 2S, Armour 26. at Naperville. December 13âArmour 5 5, Y. M. C. A. College 32, at Armour. December 15âCrane College 38. Armour 30, at Armour. January 6âNorth Central 29, Armour 24, at Armour. January 9âArmour 47, Alumni 27, at Armour. January 19âWheaton 46, Armour 36, at Wheaton. January 21âArmour 38, Yâ College 3 5, at Y College. February 3âMichigan State Normal 40, Armour 24, at Ypsilanti. February 4âDetroit University 36, Armour 33, at Detroit. February 7âArmour 43, Wheaton 19, at Armour. February 17âArmour 31, Michigan State Normal 30, at Armour. February 18âArmour 35, N. III. College of Opt. 33. at N. I. C. February 21âArmour 44. Chicago Normal 37, at Armour. February 27âArmour 38, Crane College 23, at Crane. SUMMARY Won 9 Lost.............................. 6 George Hagenauer Of Hagenauer, a first year man. it can be  afely said that he wa one of the mo t improved player on the team. With the graduation of Captain Bccm terboer, Hagc  hould have an ex- cellent chance to take over hi dutiei at center. William Petersen Petersen was another new- comer to the Tech squad. Pete'' was a hard working candidate, but because of his lack of experience he failed to land a regular berth on the team this sea- son. Beemâ on (jumps an opponent One Hundred Forty-five greater accomplishment multi from a determined dive into tire problems of life, and from thenceforth a sure, steady stroke toward the goal of success. SWIMMING SWIMMING The Tech natators, competing in twelve meets against the strongest teams in the Middle .West, smashing eight out of the existing eleven records, and piling up a total of 420 points to their opponents 428, completed the toughest schedule any Armour swimming team has ever had by winning four and losing eight. In this case the summary does in no way indicate the true worth of the team. Because of the major competition that Coach McGil- livrayâs swimmers have met, and because of the rapid progress Tech has made in this sport, the Armour Tech Athletic Associa- tion awarded the swimming team a major status in athletics at Armour, a rating which it so well deserves. A preliminary meet with Crane Junior College on January 12, opened the season for Armour. Although Crane won, 44 to 31, the Tech neophytes, Knaus, Burson, Tallafus, and Reed, were so effective as to give the veterans, Carlstrom, Kolvc, Ahern, Giovan, LaForcc, and Bernstein, a close race for scoring honors. Victory number one was chalked up to the Tech swimmers when on February 3, the champions of the 'âLittle Nineteenâ of the previous season were outsplashed to the tune of 57 to 17 at Bartlett pool. Captain Carlstrom took first in the 40 and 100-yard free style events, and played an important part in the winning of the 160- yard relay event, to lead in scoring with twelve points. Knaus, Burson, Bernstein, and Kolvc won in their specialties. An impressive upset was scored the following week-end when E. Wallace McGillivray Coach E. Wallace Mc- Gillivray hat developed chc Tech swimming teams lo such prominence ÂŤhat swirn- ming ha now become a ma- jor ÂŤport at Armour. The team under hi direction broke eight out of the eleven school records. Jarl T. Sorensen Manager Sorcn en drew up the toughest schedule ever to be arranged for a Tech swimming team. Twelve meets against some of the strongest schools in the Mid- dle West were entered. La Force. Knausc, Davidson, Goldberg Tallafus, Luce. Sorensen. Bernstein. Burson Giovan, Kolve, Carlstrom, Ahern, Reed One HundrtJ Forty-eight E. Wallace McGillivray Coach Roy W. Carlstrom.............. ....... Captain Jarl T. Sorensen Manager the Armour swimmers journeyed to Evanston and defeated the Northwestern Wildcats to the tune of 41 to 34. After losing the 160-yard relay in the opener, Tech quickly took the lead back when Kolvc left his diving board to win the 100-yard breaststroke and Knaus placed second for a total of eight points. Captain Carlstrom took first in the 40-yard and Burson did likewise in the 220-yard free style events to increase the Tech lead. Bernstein added five points in the 100-yard backstroke and Carlstrom three in the 100-yard free style. Tech evened the relay events by win- ning the 120-yard medley race, to conclude the meet. The following afternoon Tech engaged the Michigan State Col- lege aggregation at Bartlett pool. Armour could not repeat the victory of the preceding evening, losing 45 to 30. Armour journeyed to Wisconsin the following Saturday to meet the Milwaukee State Teachers in an aquatic duel. Tech fought the Teachers to a standstill throughout the first six events but when State took six of the nine points in the diving and 300-yard medley relay, Armour gave way, 34 to 41. Loyola University defeated the Tech swimmers in one of the hardest fought meets of the season when they clashed at the Loyola pool February 22. Armourâs weakness in the relay events was the main cause of the stinging 3 5 to 40 defeat. Captain Carl- strom broke the school record when he negotiated the 50-yard free style event in 2 5 seconds. Carlstrom hi Action Roy V. Carlstrom Captain Carlstrom is un- doubtedly the greatest swim- mer in the history of the Tech sport. Three individual school records were broken by him as he piled up a total of 107 points. Irving C. Kolve Kolve, star diver on the Tech squad, piled up a to- tal of 6f points to take sec- ond place in the scoring honors. He was elected to lead the Armour swimmers through the 1954 season. Out HunJrtJ Forly-nint Armour continued in her losing ways when the angry Wildcats of Northwestern mauled the home team to the tunc of 46 to 29 in a return engagement at Bartlett pool, two days later. March 1, Tech gave the Crane Tiger a terrific battle at Bartlett pool. The meet was won in the final event when Crane took the 120-yard medley race, to win by one point, 38 to 37. March 3rd Tech returned to the win column by avenging an early season defeat by the Milwaukee State Teachers, 48 to 27, at Armour. Coach McGillivrayâs men failed to take first place in only two of the eight events. Bernstein of Armour set an Armour record in the 100-yard backstroke, being clocked in that event at 1:17.2. University of Wisconsin proved too strong for the Engineers whom they engaged in a duel meet at Madison on March 11, the final score being 5 5 to 29. Although the Tech tanksters smashed four school records it was not enough to defeat the strong Loyola team in the final meet of the season. Knaus won the 100-yard breaststroke in 1:48.8 to put Armour in lead after a poor start in the 160-yard relay. Ertz of Loyola then succeeded in doing what only one man before him had been able to do this season, when he defeated Captain Carl- strom in the 40-yard free style event. In so doing both exceeded the school record. Kolve and Reed added eight points in the diving event, to make the score 31 to 3 5 in favor of Loyola as the final relay race was to begin. Bernstein, Knaus, and Carlstrom met Elwell, Scrtich, and Nick C. Giovan Giovan it another veteran who will be lott to the ssjuad in the ÂŤ9)4 campaign. Hit steady point winning in the 40 yard free style and hit work on the 160 yard relay team will be greatly misted the coming season. R. Knausk Kisaute concluded a great season for Armour in his first year as a member of the team. This freshman broke the school record in the too yard breast stroke and was alto a memb.r of the 1 ao-yard medley relay team. Kolve Executes a Rack Flip Out llunjrtj Fifty Trick of Loyola in one of the most exciting races ever staged by the Tech swimmers. It was a nip and tuck affair throughout, and at the end of the race both schools were again clocked under the school record. Loyola had won the necessary points to win the meet 41 to 34. SCHEDULE January 12âArmour 31, Crane College 44. at Crane. February 3âArmour 57, Illinois Wesleyan University 17. at Armour. February 10âArmour 41, Northwestern University Bâ 34, at Evan- ston, 111. February 11âArmour 30, Michigan State College 45, at Armour. February ISâArmour 34, Milwaukee State TeachersâCollege 41, at Mil- waukee, Wis. February 22âArmour 3S, Loyola University 40, at Loyola. February 24âArmour 29, Northwestern University B 46, at Armour. March 1âArmour 37, Crane College 38, at Armour. March 3âArmour 48, Milwaukee State Teachersâ College 27, at Armour. March 4âArmour defeated Illinois Wesleyan University by forfeit. March 8âCentral A. A. U. Senior Swimming Championships, Me- dinah A. C., Chicago, 111. March 11âArmour 29. University of Wisconsin 55, at Madison. Wis. March 21âArmour 34, Loyola University 41. at Armour. SUMMARY Won â 4 1933 Swimming Team Points Lost â S Carlstrom (Capt.) 107 Reed 19 Kolvc (Capt. Elect) 65 Tallafus 13 Knaus 53 Davison 7 Bernstein 50 Luce 7 Burson 30 Goldberg 3 Ahern 27 â Giovan 20 Total 420 La Force 19 Total Opponents 428 Start of a race at Bartlett Stanley Bernstein Stan Bernstein starred in the ioo yard backstroke for the Tech natators. He hold the Armour record in this event and was also a member of the record breaking I lo- yarJ medley relay team. John J. Ahern Johnnyâ Ahern proved invaluable to the Tech swim- ming team in the too-yard free style and the 160-yard relay events. He will be one of the mainstays of the team next season. One HufiJrfJ Fifly-out many small furls make up out big, ufrole. our char- ac trs art built by early training, environment, as- sociations, anJ observations, no two sets of factors art quite alikeâno two characters are the same. HINâŹC SPCRTI Coach V. U Colvut Profeuor Colvcrt finithcd hi third year a coach of the Tech tennit team with the completion of the ÂŤ952 teason. Hi influence in hiv- ing the lenni court refin- i hed ha proved of great benefit. Lovi H. Sthjb Playing number one por- tion throughout the seavois. Strefe won  even tingle matchc while loting only- two. He will captain the team in lyy:. Glen V. Schoooe A manager of the 1952 tennu team. Glen Schoddc was largely retpontible for the tuccctt the team ob- tained. Hi encouraging word helped the player out of tough spot time and â˘gain. â TENNIS, 1932 Not since the days of George Jennings has a Tech Tennis team enjoyed the success that the team of 1932 has. The team played a total of nine games, winning five and losing four. Of the four that were lost three of them went by only one match. The squad, under the popular leadership of Coach W. W. Colvert, was com- posed of the following men, listed according to the number they played, L. Streb. R. D. Armsbury, F. W. Paine, E. McDonough, and S. B. Cone. Tc G. V. Schodde, manager of the team, much of the success of the raqueteers is due. Tech, in the season opener on April 29, lost to a strong Loyola squad by a score of 4 to 3. Armsbury and Cone won their sin- gles matches and Paine and McDonough were victorious in the doubles to account for the Tech points. In the return engagement on May 2, Armour returned the compliment by defeating Loyola by the same score. Streb, Arms- bury, and Cone won in the singles, while Paine and McDonough won the deciding doubles match. May 14, the Ramblers of Notre Dame administered the only severe defeat of the season to the Tech netmen, when they defeated them by a score of 6 to 1. Wheaton also took advantage of Techâs relapse by scoring a 4 to 3 triumph the same week. Tech netmen soon returned to form, winning their next three meets, defeating Lake Forest twice by scores of 5 to 2, and 7 to 0, and then journeying to Wisconsin to defeat Ripon by a score of 7 to 0. Armsbury, Paine, Cone, Streb, Beal Out HuuJrtJ Fifty-four W. W. Colvcrt G. W. Schoddc Coach Manager (No captain was elected) The team lost its second match to Wheaton by the same score, 4 to 3. Wheaton College was the only team to defeat Armour twice during the season. The season closed with a 7 to 0 duplicate administered to Ripon College. Prospects for the 1933 season are excellent as every member on the squad returned. A tournament held in the fall brought out new men of excellent ability who threaten to push the veterans for team positions. TENNIS SCHEDULE, 1932 April 29âArmour 5, Loyola 4, at Loyola May 2âArmour 4, Loyola 3, at Armour May 14âArmour 1, Notre Dame 6, at Armour May 16âArmour 3, Wheaton 4, at Armour May 19âArmour 5, Lake Forest 2, at Lake Forest May 24âArmour 7, I.akc Forest 0, at Armour May 28âArmour 7, Ripon 0, at Ripon May 31âArmour 3, Wheaton 4, at Armour June 1âArmour 7, Ripon 0, at Armour SUMMARY Matches Wonâ5 Matches Lostâ5 Action on tljc courts Franklin X Paine Although handicapped by a bad ankle most of the sea- son, Paine won four singles victories to four defeats. He saved Tech from a shut- out when he turned in Ar- mour's lone victory against Notre Dame. Spencer B. Cone Spenceâ Cone supplied many of the victories that made a Tech win possible. His line tennis and his ex- cellent personality combined to make him one of the most popular men on the team. Richard D. Armshury Although a first year man Dick rapidly rose to number two position. His season's record was six wins to three losses. One Hundred Fifty-five GOLF, 1932 Charles W. Leich Professor Leigh coached the golf team to one of the most successful seasons in recent years. The team went through a tough schedule, winning five out of the scheduled eight meets. David W. Pearson Captain Pearson led the golf team through an excel- lent season. His fine con- sistent play was an import- ant factor in all Techâs vic- tories. Walter M. Trauten Manager Trauten schedul- ed strong opposition for the men of Leigh. The excellent cooperation offered to the coach and team earned for him the high esteem of his teammates. Old Man Depression - and his accompanying gloom forgot to call on the Tech golfers in 1932 as the men of Leigh were vic- torious in five out of eight matches. The squad was composed of Captain Pearson, Johannisson, Weldon, Richards, and Davidson. After the customary school tournament on April 9, the squad opened its season on April 16 by trimming the Alumni, 131 - to 4 2, at Evergreen Park. Defeat to the tune of 16 2 to 1 Y was the present received on April 22 at Valparaiso. Getting her scige guns in battlefront array for the first time Tech fairly annihilated the Crane Tiger, 15 to 3, when the sup- posedly ferocious animal visited Evergreen Park on April 27. On May 5 Loyola trounced Tech, 10J4 to 7 4, at Evergreen Park, but the Engineers got back into winning stride again on May 13 by giving the visiting Toledo aggregation the works, 11 to 7. Vengeance was wreaked on Valparaiso at Evergreen on May 18 by trouncing the Hoosiers 10 to 8. Tech completed her season by drubbing Crane, 9 to 3, at Wheaton on May 20 and losing to Toledo on May 28, 16i to 1 2, in the Ohio metropolis. The star of the team turned out to be Davidson although he was pushed closely for top honors by Captain-elect Sven Johan- nisson. Captain Pearson was the high point man for the squad in performing in the same cool and leisurely style that is char- acteristic of his game. Weldon also proved to be a valuable mem- Trauten, Division, Pcirmn. Leigh. Johannmon. Weldon One HunJrrJ Fifty- fix Charles W. Leigh Coach David W. Pearson Captain Walter M. Trauten, Jr. Manager ber of the team as did the rotund Richards. Trauten, as manager, rendered valuable services, and Staib, his successor, expects to carry on in the same efficient manner. GOLF SCHEDULE. 1932 April 9âSchool Tournament April 16âArmour 13! .-. Alumni 4j a, at Evergreen Park April 22âArmour 2, Valparaiso 6 z, at Valparaiso April 27âArmour 15, Crane 3, at Evergreen Park May 5âArmour 7 2, Loyola I0l i, at Evergreen Park May 13âArmour 11, Toledo 7, at Evergreen Park May 18âArmour 10, Valparaiso 8, at Evergreen Park May 20âArmour 9, Crane 3, at Wheaton May 28âArmour I 2, Toledo 16J4, at Toledo SUMMARY Matches won 5 Matches lost 3 Davidson sinks one Sven Joiiannisson Sven, a veteran of two seasons, wa one of the high scorers of the Tech golfers. For his excellent showing on the course he was elected to lead the Tech golfers in ÂŤ?) ⢠Walter J. Weldon Weldon, a veteran player on the Armour team, shot an excellent game of golf during the season. The dou- ble combination of Weldon and Johannis on was almost unbeatable. Lawrence W. Davidson Davidson was easily the outstanding star of the Tech aggregation. Thi brilliant newcomer shot consistently in the seventies throughout the season. One Hundred Fifty-seven BOXING The boxing team opened the season on February 17 when they engaged the West Side Y.M.C.A. in a terrific dual of fistcuffs at the opponentsâ gym. Eight matches were carded. Hella, Bacci, Breh, and Marcus came through with victories to give Tech a tie with four wins apiece. Captain McDonald and Schaviljc lost their bouts by a very small margin. Culver Military Academy, Armourâs ancient and most feared rival, was the next opponent for Coach Wcissmanâs leather pushers. Tech fought the Culver aggregation to a three to three tie which may be considered a moral victory because two of the Armour stars, Captain McDonald and Behmer, were not matched by the opponents. The cadets opened with a rush, taking the first two bouts in quick order. The third bout found Joe Bacci matched against Rumbaugh of Culver. The bout was by far the fastest of the eve- ning. Joe fought the best fight of his career and after a terrific three round dual he had piled up enough points to win the deci- sion. Schaviljc, Tech 140 pounder, then fought his way to the second Armour victory when he defeated Hough to throw the meet in a tic at two all. Marcus put the standings at three to two when he won the deci- sion after landing some of his terrific punches that had his oppo- nent groggy at times. The final bout of the evening went to Culver when Keyler de- Birnard Weissman Coach Wcissmin hti de- veloped boxing into one of the moet popular minor sports at Armour. Hie team hti fared exceptionally well against urong opponente. Leo McDonaed Captain McDonald, a emooth boxer and a tough fighter, eet up for himeclf a record of eeven victorice and no defcate. Frank Koko Manager Koko ably con- tributed hie part toward the eucceee of the season by echeduling a number of real scrappy bouts. Castanee, Bacci, Schaviljc. Phillip , Suman. Hella Weinman, Marcus, Dangcbich, Hough, Koko Babcock, Bchmcr, McDonough, Breh, Strass One Hundred fifty.eight Bernard Weissman Coach Leo J. McDonald Captain Frank W. Koko Manager feated Phillips in the heavyweight division to give Culver a tie at three all. In every engagement a noticeable improvement was evident, but by the middle of April the team had not fought a sufficient num- ber of bouts to really predict the approximate summary. More meets had been scheduled, but due to postponements and other causes their ultimate dates were later than press dead line. BOXING SCHEDULE 1933 February 17âArmour 4, West Side Y.M.C.A. 4, at Y.M.C.A. March 25âArmour 3, Culver Military Academy 3, at Culver. McDonough and Sc ha til jc in a friendly scrap JOSf.PI! SCHAVILJI. In the junior welter- weights. Armour was repre- sented by Schavilje, whose left is a real feeler. His wins balanced his defeatsâ record .500. Leonard Marcus Len Marcus has an un- blemished record for the current season. He is a hard hitter and a smart boxer, and seemed not too troubled by opposition. William Beiimer Bill Behmcr. Armour's flashy little featherweight, although kept from the West Side Y meet by flu, made an impressive showing at Culver. Ow Hundred Fifty-nine WRESTLING Btrnard Vidjuan Coach Sonny Weinman ably guided ihc newly formed wrntling team in its firat season's endeavors. An- other year under his direc- tion will give Tech a prom- inent team. Frank Talabir Captain Talabcr was eas- ily the outstanding star of the team. The Central A. A. U. Champion won every bout he entered. It was larg- ly through his enthusiasm that the team was organized. Frank Koko Manager Koko drew up an excellent schedule for the grapplers in spite of the fact that few schools supported wrestling teams this year. Wrestling, Techâs newest contribution to the Armour sports followers, made its debut this season. The team was coached by Bernard Sonnyâ Weissman, and managed by Frank Koko. It was composed almost entirely of freshmen, captained by Frank Tala- ber, a sophomore. A strong Wheaton team defeated the Armour grapplers in their initial engagement on February 8 in the Tech gymnasium. Pcrrill and Bcrgquist were the only Tech wrestlers to win for Armour so that the final score was 6 to 2 in favor of the visitors. In the return engagement three weeks later Tech again lost by the same score. Captain Frank Talabcr, C.A.A.U. middle weight champion, and Robert Schmidt won their bouts by time advan- tage. A noticeable improvement of the squad was evident despite indications to the contrary by the score, 6 to 2. Belmont Y.M.C.A. blocked Techâs third attempt at a victory, the final outcome being 7 to 2. The squad was minus the services of Captain Talabcr, Larson, and Vcndley, because of injuries. Bcrgquist and Fleig scored the Armour victories. Coach Weissmanâs men won their first meet of the season when they met Morton Junior College March 17, at Morton. Talabcr and Bergquist again won their matches as usual. Schmidt, Sum- ner, and Patterson also entered the win column to make the score 5 to 3 in favor of Armour. The Crane Tiger proved too strong for the Engineers when they Ow Hundred Sixty Quandee, PiiKrton, Fleig. Baltcwick, Bcrquitt. Marslck. Weinman, Holla, Bard. Papa , Roscnfcld, Koko Sumner, Vcndley, Talabcr, l.anon. Pcrrill Bernard Weissman Coach Frank Talabcr .... Captain Frank Koko............................................... Manager came to grips in the Crane gym on March 29th. Talabcr, won the only match for Armour out of the six scheduled. Tech scored an impressive 6 to 1 triumph over Morton in the final meet of the season. In the opener Roscnfeld of Armour pinned Hcgna of Morton. Schmidt, Talabcr, Bergquist, and Sum- ner all won easily over their opponents. Bard of Armour and Roll- berg of Morton wrestled for fourteen minutes to a draw, to con- clude the meet. The team this year lacked the necessary experience which is o very important in producing victories. Next season should find the Tech grapplers definitely established as a winning team, for barring unexpected events, all the members will be backâthis time as veterans. February February March March March April SCHEDULEâ1933 8âArmour 2, Wheaton 6, at Armour 29âArmour 2, Wheaton 6, at Wheaton 11âArmour 2, Belmont Y.M.C.A. 7, at Yâ 17âArmour 5, Morton Junior College 3, at Morton 29âArmcur 1, Crane Junior College 5, at Crane 5âArmour 6, Morton Junior College 1, at Armour Talabcr has Vendley up in t! c air Berquist Bcrquitt came through the season by winning four of hi six bout . ''Swedeâ' i a continent hard worker and hh careful training showed results. John Larson Larson, the regular 145 pounder, was out a large part of the season because of injuries. Despite this, he was able to balance his losses with the same number of wins. Edward Vlndlev Ed is a quick and brainy wrestler. He showed up well in the matches in which he worked, and won his letter as a member of the team. One HitnJreJ Six!)-one Freshman baseball team Inter- el ass Champs INTERCLASS ATHLETICS Most interesting intcrclass baseball activity permeated the campus as the schedule of the various games was revealed to the respective classes. The initial strife between the incom- ing freshmen and the somewhat better or- ganized sophomores gave promise of a heated battle. Rumors to the effect that the fresh- men possessed unknown strength disturbed the sophomore aggregation. The truth of this became evident after the latter had received a 4-1 defeat. In the contest between the up- per classmen, the seniorsâ 4-0 triumph over the juniors disclosed a well balanced unit of diamond men. That the teams were evenly matched was shown in the championship game. The first tilt ended in a 3-3 score necessitating a replay. With a last inning rally the frosh overcame the seniorsâ early lead and carried away the diamond honors. With the coming of basketball, the class rivalry was again aroused. The sophs re- venged their baseball loss by defeating the frosh 21-19 in a hard fought game. Finish- ing strongly, the second year men registered a 27-12 victory over the very confident juniors who had triumphed over the seniors. Another upset in interclass competition oc- curred at the University of Chicago field- house where the sophomores garnered 2 z points to win the track meet. Sophomore intcrclass basketball champions Oaf Hundred Sixty-tux? Inter- f rater nil y cbam [ s INTERFRATERNITY ATHLETICS Love for fair play and clean sportsmanship has raised intra-mural sports at Armour to a high level. For the glory of his fraternity a man will do his utmost. Fach individual receives an added thrill upon perceiving hon- ors bestowed upon his brotherhood. Such competition is displayed annually in the various sports promoted by all fraterni- ties. Perhaps the most interesting of these is the interfraternity basketball round. Phi Pi Phi showed considerable headwork in their victory over Delta Tau Delta in obtaining the third leg of their fifth consecutive trophy. For the second time in succession Triangle has won the intra-mural track meet by col- lecting S9l i points to its credit. Taking eight first places out of a possible thirteen, their vast superiority could be readily seen. Sigma Kappa Delta, who came in third in the last yearâs competition was second with 23 points while Rho Delta Rho and Beta Psi tied for third honors with 18 points. Added interest in tennis and golf gave rise to much competition. Delta Tau Delta seems to hold the edge in having fine players in these sports. One IlnnJrcJ Sixty-tbrff if, by some great catastrophe. the book containing all engineering be destroyed, but our pretent ttate of civilization and our fundamental knowledge of tcience be left to us, we should soon be able to replace our lost, but, should all our scientific learning be tnalched away, our engineer- ing would decay, our cisilrzation would retreat, and we would be set back again into the age of the illiterate, savage barbarian, science, in its widest significance, is lire generalization and organization of lire dit isions of knowledge, for many centuries, science of a sort stas perceived by but few men, and, in fad, was reserved for, or restricted to tlrem. MCAII ATItl but during lire years from then to now, hat been built up, through publication, society, and dub, a com prehensile and uni- versal system for tire dispersing of all knowledge, scientific or liberal. a good book, br it a story, a history, a treatise, or a text tbould be a prized pen ten ion to any and all of uie ai was that famous life of george Washington which was soiled by the rain that seeped through the logs of the cabin wall, and which was paid for by days of toil in a neighborâs field. PUDLIC4TICN C. K. Simons E. G. LunJin THE CYCLE, 1933 In compiling and editing this book, the Cycle of 1933, it has been our endeavor to present accurately an account of the events which have taken place and to carefully re- cord the achievements which have been ac- complished during this period. We have at- tempted to capture in picture and printed word the typical or particular Armour life as well as the usual college activity and to confine them both within these pages for our present pleasure and perhaps as a means of recalling to mind certain joyous occasions at a time when these might have faded from our memory. The gathering together and organizing of material for the Cycle of 1933 was a re- sponsibility, or rather an opportunity, which we all accepted with the determination to do our best in trying to produce a book that would be received favorably. We hope that the result of our effort has not fallen short of our desires. To the members of the staff who have put forth so much effort and who sacrificed so many of their crowded hours toward the successful completion of their specific assign- ments and our combined result, we arc most sincerely grateful. President Hotchkiss, Dean Penn, Dean Hcald, and Mr. Allison were ever ready to lend an car and a hand to the solution of our problems. The Faculty Committee, Pro- fessor Mangold, Professor Perry, and Profes- sor Spencer, under whose supervision we were privileged to work, proved an inexhaustible source of assistance and advice. Without the aid of Mr. Enoch V. Linden and Mr. James A. Motherway, the difficulties encountered in the actual building of the book might not have been so easily removed. We are especially grateful to Mr. H. H. Brinker for his courtesy in granting permis- sion to use pictures from the Century of Progress. The end of our task brings also an end to the pleasant associations created by it. This we regret, but, as has been the worldâs way for all time, one relinquishes the hold, another takes it up, and so continues the natural progress. One UnnJrtJ Sixty-six Pcavcy, Jacobion, Sach , l.angc Irion, Davidson, Brenner, Lukas THE CYCLE STAFF Carroll K. Simons Editor-in-Chief Elmer G. I.undin Business Manager Thomas C. Peavey Associate Editor C. Donald L. Jacobson Organization Editor Carl H. Sachs. Jr. Fraternity Editor William W. Lange Photography Editor Theodore H. Irion Art Editor Harold W. A. Davidson Athletic Editor John L. Brenner Social Editor Michael A. Lukas ASSISTANTS Feature Editor John H. Miller Ellis H. Doanc Howard J. Zibblc Jacob M. Bard George W. Wheaton Charles E. Vcndlcy Willard C. McCarty CONTRIBUTORS Louis W. Bicglcr Walter Hendricks Bernard B. Abranv; John F. Mangold Richard D. Armsbarv John J. Schommer Roy W. Carlstrom George F. Gebhardt Donald N. Chadwick George L. Schcrgcr Allen A. Hclmick Harry McCormack Vincent J. Galvani Ernest H. Freeman Bernard H. Locschc Charles E. Paul Harold Monger Joseph B. Finnegan Donald O. Schwcnncscn Earl H. Reed, Jr. Fred Smith Melville B. Wells Jarl T. Sorensen James C. Peebles Erwin Wandrey Edward O. Meacham One Hundred Six y-teten Jarl T. Sorensen Edmund P. Lomasney THE ARMOUR ENGINEER The first Engineer was distributed twen- ty-four years ago, it then being a small tech- nical journal with articles written solely by alumni and faculty members. There were no under-graduate contributions and no in- teresting departments to present valuable technical sidelights. Capable student staffs carried the maga- zine on, always developing it in some man- ner, with new sections added, or in the more subtle way, with advanced styles of type and format. The Armour Engineer became a member of Engineering College Magazines Associated in 1924. Succeeding staffs rapidly absorbed all there was to be gained from this affiliation and very soon rose to a peak posi- tion among its member publications. In the 193 1-32 academic year a full analysis of E.C.M.A. and its value found the Engineer easily in the fore of the member magazines, with little to gain in experience and content from its affiliation. Decisions to modernize the format and realizing the situation as stated above the Engineerâs withdrawal from membership was rendered desirable. The new Armour Engineer was first Out HunJreJ Sixly-ti bt presented to its readers in this 1932-33 sea- son. It has set a new high standard in college publication content and format. Each issue has carried five or six feature articles, author- ship being equally divided betwen faculty members, outstanding alumni, graduate en- gineers and technical men, these not of neces- sity being connected with Armour in any manner, and undergraduate students. Of this latter class, certain outstanding student arti- cles, prize-winners of the society and honor- ary fraternity contests, were presented. The numerous departments, some radically new, some merely newly titled, all cover their respective fields thoroughly and interestingly. These are The Technical Bookshelf, Technical Abstracts, Engineering Progress, The Guest Editorial, The College Chronicle, and Con- tributorsâ Page. The Armour Engineer is an imroved magazine; its contents involve much thought and work on the part of each staff member, and should be of a very real value to all the readers. Its present fore position among tech- nical college publications is secure and will be elevated even more in the future. Currjn. Peavcy, Guri, Monger, l.ukit Linge, Kreisman, Krol, Rcim, Noerenbcrg THE ARMOUR ENGINEER STAFF Jarl T. Sorensen Herbert Kreisman Edward L. Curran Thomas C. Peavey. Joseph J. Gura Harold J. Monger Michael A. Lukas William W. Lange Edmund P. Lomasney Fred C. Nocrenberg Altus M. Ream Barry M. Kostenko Harvey A. Williams Rolland McFarland Walter F. Krol .........Editor -in- Chief . Associate Editor Technical Editor Technical Abstracts Engineering Progress Reviews Editor College Editor Staff Photographer ...... Comptroller Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Assistant Comptroller Assistant Circulation Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Accountant ENGINEER BOARD OF CONTROL Jarl T. Sorensen Herbert Kreisman Edmund I . Lomasney Professor Joseph B. Finnegan Professor Charles E. Paul Professor James C. Peebles Walter G. Andersen Leroy J. Beckman Stanley Bernstein George L. Brabcncc John L. Brenner Donald N. Chadwick Harold Cordes Harold W. Davidson ASSISTANTS Ellis H. Doane Wilbur J. Flcig Raymond A. Flcissncr Earl W. Gosswiller Richard E. Harwood William A. Hoycr Charles E. Kahlke Alfred Kapecki Raymond L. KHudson Bradford Larson Edward O. Meacham Ervin F. Mezera Robert O. Patterson Peter P. Polko Victor Rimsha Ear! G. Shaver One Hundred Sixty-nine Orville T. Barnett Raymond E. Nelson THE ARMOUR TECH NEWS The Armour Tech News is the official newspaper of Armour Institute and is pub- lished weekly throughout the school year. The task of publishing a weekly paper is a sizable one, and the entire staff is to be com- mended for the very fine work they did this past year. The original purpose of the organizers of the Armour Tech News was to present to its readers an unbiased account of all the hap- penings pertaining to the school, and this still remains as the aim of the paper today. The variety of problems which have arisen in the attempt to achieve this ambition have each been accorded due thought, with the result that they have all been successfully solved. Today the paper may truly be said to have accomplished its purpose. By virtue of its position, the Armour Tech News is the nucleus about which all campus life is centered. It is the very important or- gan which connects the student body with student activities. It is the source of daily campus information, the distribution of which is vital if school interest is to be maintained. The members of the staff and their as- sistants have been required to donate time and talent that this instrument may properly function. Their reward has been two-fold. They have gained experience and knowledge they could not possibly procure in any other manner, and they receive the inherent bene- fits which arc always attained with self- sacrifice. The Armour Tech News is a member of the National Scholastic Press Association and, although making journalistic perfection sec- ondary to the desires and needs of the stu- dent body, received a first honor rating from the Associationâs critical service. Two mem- bers of the staff attended the national con- vention in Cincinnati this year, but the com- ing year brings the convention to Chicago and gives every member the opportunity to meet representatives of other papers. Five years ago the News was born amid a general feeling that it could not be done.â The News has proved that a newspaper has a definite place in Armour and has become an accepted feature of student life. One Hundred Seventy Juvinall, Rychlik. Eberth. Colburn. Paine, Bodimon Kenner, Morris, Fllis, Fishman, Becker, Frisman Orville T. Barnett James W. Juvinall Robert F. Rychlik Raymond E. Nelson Ellsworth E. Eberth Norman E. Colburn Edwin N. Scarl Franklin W. Paine Wesley T. Dumscr Edward G. Avery Harold W. Bodinson Sidney H. Morris Earl C. Kubicek Robert B. Tague Harold J. Monger Edwin C. Kenner Raymond L. Ellis Henry Fishman......... Henry F. Becker Raymond A. Flcissncr Richard D. Armsbury Milton A. Collick John L. Kampwirth Maurice J. Erisman THE NEWS STAFF ......................................... Editor-in-Chief .........................................Associate Editor .......................................Managing Editor .......................................Business Manager ............................................. News Editor ..................................Associate News Editor .......................................... Make-up Editor ..............................................Copy Editor ..................................Assistant Copy Editor ................................. Assistant Copy Editor .......................................... Feature Editor ..............................Architectural News Editor ................................. Architectural Assistant ...........................................Reviews Editor ...............................Associate Reviews Editor ............................................. Columnist ........................................Fraternity Editor ......................................... Exchange Editor ........................................... Sports Editor ..................................Associate Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor ................................... Advertising Manager ......................... Assistant Advertising Manager ....................................Circulation Manager MANAGING BOARD CONTRIBUTORS Orville T. Barnett James W. Juvinall Robert F. Rychlik Raymond E. Nelson Professor Walter Hendricks Professor William W. Colvert Professor Eldon C. Grafton Leroy J. Beckman Clarence Clarkson Harold W. Davidson Otto P. Freilingcr Karl M. Hanson Thomas F. Jones Alexander Kulpak Henry Levin Michael A. Lukas Leonard Marcus Ervin F. Mezera Fred C. Noerenberg John Paslawski John E. Schreiner Emil A. Svoboda Paul J. Thompson One Hundred Sei enty-orte THE FACULTY COMMITTEE Professor John F. Mangold Chairman Professor Robert V. Perry Professor Walter A. Spencer The Cycle is very largely a product of the efforts of the student editors. However, there is a faculty committee which advises and co- operates with the editors in regard to the character, scope and makeup of the material presented. The duties of this committee are not very arduous, and still from time to time there is important work to be done. The members have read all the copy and have made any necessary corrections. The members of the committee feel that the editors have used good judgment in their selection of material, and have succeeded in retaining a well ordered balance. We like to see our pictures, and knowing this human frailty, our editors have obliged us. Anyone who has ever had a part in pro- ducing a college year book must know the immense amount of thought and energy that is demanded in sensing the ebb and flow of student life. Our editors have caught the lights and shades as well as the colors with- out which any portrayal is very inadequate and also misleading. The Cycle presents a colorful panorama of the four classes of stu- dent life with its intimate background of study halls and dusty tomes. We of the committee trust that all who had a part in producing this volume derived as much pleasure as we did in seeing the growth and completion of the work. By the Committee. Ont Hundred Sevfnty-tu-o Col vert, Grafton, Finnegan, Paul, Hendricks, Peebles, Lomashev Sorensen, Juvinall, Nelson, Krcisman THE BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS Professor Charles E. Paul Professor James C. Peebles Professor Joseph B. Finnegan Professor Walter Hendricks Professor William W. Colvert Professor Eldon C. Grafton Raymond Jarl T. Sorensen Herbert Krcisman Edmund P. Lomasney Orville T. Barnett James W. Juvinall Robert F. Rychlik E. Nelson The Board of Publications was organized in the spring of 1932, for the purpose of guid- ing and governing the editorial and publish- ing policies of the student publications. This board, composed of six students and six pro- fessors, with the co-operation of the head of the Publicity Department of the Institute, is divided, for the sake of efficiency, into two groups of three students and three professors each, one group directing the affairs of the Armour Engineer, and the other the Armour Tech News. These committees arc responsible for the management of their own affairs, but answerable, at the same time, to the Board, which, at its monthly meetings, decides upon the resolutions and recommendations of the separate groups. For the year 1932-33 the student members of the Engineer committee have been Jarl T. Sorensen, H. Kreisman, and E. P. Lomasney; the faculty members. Professors C. E. Paul, J. B. Finnegan, and J. C. Peebles. The student members of the News com- mittee have been Orville T. Barnett, James W. Juvinall, and Raymond E. Nelson; the faculty members, Professors Walter Hen- dricks, W. W. Colvert, and E. C. Grafton. The Board of Publications has been in ex- istence for only a year, but from the results already accomplished, one can easily appre- ciate the wisdom of having confided the af- fairs of so important a department of the Institute as its publications to the control of this autonomous group. One Hundred Sei cnly-tbref through the mates tic unter gates of the electrical group will enter many mi ton to Ut exhibiti, and through the portali held open by our tier Mpfut engineering locieties will many of us pan to lucceit in our chosen professioni. ENGINEERI Ne SGCIETIE AMERICAN SOCIETY Raymond J. Du four Raymond J. Dufour President Paul A. Carlstone Vice President Harold J. Monger Secretary Norman C. Penfold T reasurer The Armour Branch of the American Society of Me- chanical Engineers caught the spirit that has prevaded the atmosphere of our Institute during the past year. It started the yearâs activities with a new plan, or, more correctly, an old plan that has been more or less ignored in the past. At the first meeting of the Society a motion was passed to the effect that student talks on engineering topics should be encouraged in every possible way. To make this more than a mere resolution, a committee was immediately appointed and given certain specific duties to perform. They were to ask members to speak when there were no volunteers, to arrange the date of presen- tation of the speech, and to check the preparedness of the students before they addressed the meetings. This new plan shows a shift in the educational policy, in-so-far as the student body itself determines it. It is part of a marked tendency toward the desire for liber- alizing studies. Members of the Society advanced the theory that the benefits of addressing an audience on an engineering topic was worth the time and effort of everyone concerned and that its meetings offered the only possibilities for so doing. Simon . Suimn. Johnson, Kolvc, Lukey, Hanes, Traver, Eglolf, Nelson, .Mayer, Vi'andrey C.itlak, Hoffman, Phil. Campionc, Erisman, Belton. Zvonecek, Goo, R. E. Nelson, Hcmcl Fuhrer, Monger, Peeble , Huntley, Gcbhardt, Roesch, Dufour, Pcnfold, Carlstone Out Hundred Seventy-six OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS V. L. Abbot, chief engineer for the Commonwealth Edison Co., was the first outside speaker to address the group. He spoke on The Value of Contacts for the Engineer at an organization meeting. Mr. Abbot has often addressed the Society in past years and can be considered one of the staunch friends of Armour Insti- tute of Technology. At the same meeting, Ernest Hart- ford, district secretary of the American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, gave a short explanation of the membership plan on which the student branches operate. A general discussion meeting was called in which the topic was The Status and the Desirability of Shop Work as Now Given in the Mechanical Engineering Course.â Each member offered his own opinion and suggestions. A motion was passed favoring a modifica- tion of the shop classes and the using of the time thus gained in studies of a non-technical nature. The social functions of the year consisted of bi- annual smokers at which both students and faculty members were present. These affairs always arouse an enthusiastic response, since, in the ordinary course of the school year, opportunities for professors and their pupils to meet in a social manner arc rare. Harold J. Monger American Society of Mechanical Engineers Organizedâ18 $0 Incorporatedâ1881 Armour Branch Senior Mechanical Club Organizedâ1905 A.S.M.E. Charterâ1909 Three inspections in one day Annual A.S.M.E. smoker One Hundred Seien y-seten AMERICAN INSTITUTE Robert F. RycUik Robert F. Rychlik Chairman Elroy A. Smelling Vice-chairman Donald O. Schwennesen Secretary Wesley T. Dumser T reasurer Ernest H. Freeman Faculty Advisor At the beginning of this school year, the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Armour Branch, took another step in the furthering of the participation of students in the activities of student organizations. In the past, it has been the custom of the society to hold meetings every two weeks and to have some person prominent in the engineering field speak, or to have an illustrated lecture by means of moving pictures. This year, in addition to the talks by outside parties, the organization voted to have students prepare speeches on engineering topics, and deliver them before the as- sembled members. The training and ability of the mem- bers proved that engineers really can speak intelligently and profusely. At the first regular meeting of the branch, on Octo- ber 7, 1932, Mr. M. J. Maicrs of the Central Station Institute, gave an interesting talk on the subject of air conditioning. He discussed the detrimental effect on health caused by the presence of dust and smoke in the air, and described an interesting experiment made on a group of people subject to hay fever. When the pa- tients lived in a room in which the air was conditioned, the hay fever disappeared. Knudton, Kaiser, Kerrigan. MacIntyre, Peterton, Hallen. Meyer. Hulnrit, Dombrowaki, Hume, Demiki , Reber Reardon, Fernbach, Dum cr, Krause, Dunham, Tyler, Coilick, Morrissey, Ges , Job, Reynold . Rowe Schwennesen, Snclling, Priban, Juvinall, F.bcrch, Freeman. Rychlik, Di Orio, Lange, Wilton, Bronwell Ont HunJreJ Srttnly-rigbt OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS November 18 brought Mr. Aubuchon, a division transmission engineer attached to the long lines division of the plant department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. He delivered an interesting talk on the use of carrier currents in telephone work, and traced through the various types of circuits em- ploying carrier currents that have been used since the idea was first introduced. A talk was given by Mr. Levy, assisted by Mr. Probst, on the dial type of telephone manufactured by his com- pany, and illustrated by a demonstration with equip- ment. These men are engineers with the Automatic Electric Company. Mr. Levy traced the diagram of con- nections, and discussed the various types of relays used in the instrument. In connection with this topic, he had a group of relays mounted on a board. These could be energized to show their principle of operation. The social activities have always consisted of two so- cial meetings, one in the fall and the other in the spring. This year, a smoker was held just after the Christmas holidays, and an outing to the Indiana Dunes was planned for the enjoyment of members and friends dur- ing the spring. Donald O. Scbwennessen American Institute of Electrical Engineers Organizedâ1884 Incorporatedâ1896 Armour Branch Organizedâ190) A.I.E.E. tramp January smoker One Hundred Seventy-nine Earl G. Beard, Jr. Earl G. Beard, Jr. President Bernhard H. Loesche Secretary Walter A. McWilliams Corresponding Secretary Nick C. Giovan T reasurer Alan D. Burnet Student Representative WESTERN SOCIETY The Armour Branch of the Western Society of Engi- neers was founded in October, 1919, for the purpose of advancing the science of engineering in the best interests of the profession. The means employed to reach this end are the bringing before the young men of the So- ciety such men as have credited the profession by their work, and the fostering of direct contact with latest developments through inspection trips. The first meeting of the current year was held on October 7, at which time we had the pleasure of hear- ing Mr. T. L. Condron of Post and Condron, Consulting Engineers. Mr. Condronâs talk was of especial interest, describing, among other experiences, those secured in designing the steel structure to support the bells of the mighty carillon installed within the tower of the Uni- versity of Chicago Chapel. On November 18, Mr. Brumley, president of the Western Society of Engineers, visited us and presented an interesting discourse on his experiences from his days in college to his present status. During December, Mr. R. Owens of the Calumet Steel Co. brought us an illustrated lecture on the manu- facture of rail steel and reinforcing bars. This moving Simpson, Koko, Gabriel, Beemsterboer, Pllum, Colburn. Davidson, Mcicham, Bacci. Castane Donnell an, Maucr, Pocdtke, Smith. Kampwirth. Streb, Stasiulis, .Machinis, Prahin, Cosme, BoitorfT Rosenfdd. Hanrahan, Loesche. Alexander, ( alien, Schreiner, Storey, Kuchn, Ruben, Kostenko Burnet, Giovan, Jacobson, Spears, Ens , Wells, Stevens, Hcald, Beard, Krawitz, Meyer, P eiler Ont HunJuJ Eighty OF ENGINEERS picture was an inspection trip in itself, giving many un- usual photographs of operations performed in the man- ufacture. Two inspection trips were held which afforded the utmost in benefit and pleasure to all the men who at- tended. The one brought us an extended tour of Chi- cagoâs water supply system, including a trip through the new 16 ft. tunnel at Chicago Ave., a boat trip to the cribs, and a visit to the North Side pumping stations. In addition, all the bridges on the river from the lake to the West Side incinerator plant were inspected, as well as the plant itself. The second covered an inspec- tion of the West and North Side sewage disposal plants of the Sanitary District. Both of these trips were bene- ficial in that they offered a means of seeing the actual application of some of the theories which we discuss daily in the classroom. The semi-annual smoker was held on December 14 at the Triangle Fraternity House. All the requisites of an enjoyable evening were on hand, wherein we might en- joy an acquaintance with our fellow classmates in a spirit unattainable in the class-room. The Chi Epsilon pledges furnished the entertainment with an hilarious satire befitting the occasion and enjoyed by all. Bernhard II. Eoesclx Western Society of Engineers OrganizedâIS69 Incorporatedâ1 SSO Armour Branch Armour Civil Engineering Societyâ1 906 W.S.E. Carterâ1919 December 14 smoker And more smoke One HnuJtcJ Eighty-one Allen H. Hclmick Allen H. Helmick President Robert H. Schorling Vice President Ale-red Kapecki Secretary Vincent J. Galvani T reasurcr AMERICAN INSTITUTE During one of the most successful years of its exist- ence, Beta Chapter of the American Institute of Chemi- cal Engineers has been very fortunate in being able to present some of the outstanding men in the field of Chemical Engineering to the students of the organiza- tion. The bi-weekly meetings of the Society have all received the whole-hearted support of the upper classes. The organization meeting was held on October 7, for the purpose of formulating a plan for the yearâs diversi- fied activities. A speakerâs committee was immediately formed, consisting of the most prominent men in the group, to interview potential speakers. The men were chosen with careful and critical judgment; chosen so they might enlarge the knowledge of the active student body along varying lines. On December 2, the Chapter had the privilege of hearing Dr. Clarence G. Muchlberger, county toxicolo- gist and consulting chemist for the Scientific Crime Detection Laboratories at Northwestern University, speak on the subject Industrial Poisons.â This was a very timely subject for the Seniors who were encoun- tering various poisons in their work. Dr. Muchlberger graduated from the Armour Institute of Technology in Schmidt, Miller, Schavilge. Renttrom, Lauchiskis, McFarland, Williams, T. Omiccimki, Berger, Thompson, Rie z, Lyford, Babcock Lang, Hollmann, Levin, Booth, Marty, Johanniuon, Adamec, Luckcrman, Ream, Highman Levy, Galvani, Miller, Nocrenberg, Mullanc, Gundertcn, Helmick, Winogrond, Lomasney, Paine One HunJreJ Eighty-two OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS 1920, and obtained his Doctorâs degree at the University of Wisconsin. On December 9, a joint meeting with Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical fraternity, was held for the purpose of co-ordinating the work of the two groups. Dr. V. W. Meloche, Assistant Professor of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin and officer of the Grand Chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma, addressed the group. He gave an illustrated lecture on the scientific study of lake water and its effects on fish life. Dr. Meloche also described the details of micro-analysis used in the testing of lake water. The yearly smoker was held on December 29, at the Phi Kappa Sigma House. Here the difficulties of the struggling embryo-chemist were forgotten as the eve- ning passed on wings of laughter and good cheer amidst the smoke rings and cards. The struggle for the Schmicr Chemikcr trophy has been very intense this year. This, the official trophy of the organization, is a replica of a broken flask, engraved suitably, and attached to a safety pin. It has changed hands very rapidly, the better members of the Senior Class outdoing themselves in their earnestness. Alfred Kapecki American Institute of Chemical Engineers Organizedâ1908 Armour ChapterâBeta Ar nonr Chemical Engineering Societyâ190} A.I.Ch.E Charterâ192) Chemists in the Field Museum Spring smoker, 19)2 Out HunJrfJ Ei hty-thrte Jar l T. Sorensen Jam. T. Sorensen President Otto W. Staib Vice President Carl N. Clanton Secretary Bradford Larson T reasurer Prof. J. B. Finnegan Faculty Advisor FIRE PROTECTION The Fire Protection Engineering Society is an organ- ization which strives-to maintain interest in the field of fire protection engineering, and to give the members a definite contact with men in the field. An attempt is made to secure a prominent and successful insurance man or fire protection engineer to speak before the So- ciety bi-weekly, the speakers to be selected from every conceivable branch of the work. The Society is not maintained solely for the gathering of technical infor- mation, however, but succeeds in carrying on an abbre- viated social program in the form of a smoker held in the early spring of the year. The first speaker of the past year was Mr. F. J. Prindc- ville of the Chicago Fire Prevention Bureau. On Octo- ber 21, he gave a very interesting talk on the work of the Bureau and its developments. Shortly after, on October 28, the Society had as its guest speaker, Chief McDonald of the Fire Prevention Committee of A Century of Progress.â He gave some very valuable in- formation concerning the fire fighting facilities of Chi- cagoâs second Worldâs Fair. On November 14, Mr. F. C. Snapp of the Farm De- Peavey, Marow, Hedin. Kcrlin, Frcitag, Sorensen, Lukas, Neal, Rasmussen, Larson, Zibblc, Shaw Bannasch. Stcinhaus, Bcrglund, Gura, Carlstrom, Ahern, Davison, Pechman, Vanderpoorten, Dobson Mills, Curran, Weldon. Becker, Peterson, Anderson, Sadcman, Snapp, McCarty, Wheaton, Kurfel Bicgler, L. S. Anderson, Bodinson, Kenner. Swanson, Sachs, Staib, Cunningham, Schragc, Duphornc. Clanton One HunJreJ F.igbty-fout ENGINEERING SOCIETY partmcnt of the Aetna Insurance Company, gave a talk on a phase of the business that is very little understood in many insurance circles. He explained the problems and experiences in the farm departments of the stock fire insurance companies. The annual smoker was held at the Theta Xi House in March, and from all outward appearances the depres- sion has not affected the general ability of the students to have a good time . The early part of the evening was given over to entertainment in the form of card playing and the handling of what our dear friend and associate, Professor Finnegan, would term friendlyâ firesâ cigars and pipes. Mr. J. V. Parker congratulated the boys on their fine records in school and in the Bureaus at their summer work. He also gave some interesting information on the present status and future outlook of the Fire Protection Engineering Department. At this time Carl Clanton, president of Salamander, presented Mr. George V. Wheaton with a copy of the Crosby-Fisk-Forster Handbook of Fire Protectionâ for having obtained the highest average in the Freshman class of the department. Carl N. Clanton Fire Protection Engineering Society Organizedâ191) Incorporatedâ 91) March smokerâ19)2 Right in their clement One Hundred RightY-fiie sounds in imitation of nature are believed to bare been llse first music, its simplest expression is in son :; H deepest the symphony, musical appreciation is unircrsal among nations and men for a man with- out music is without soul. MUSICAL ORGANIZATIONS C. Viâ. Leigh A. L. Sicinhiut C. N. Clinton R. F. Meehan O. G. Erickson ARMOUR TECH MUSICAL CLUBS OFFICERS Professor Charles W. Leigh Robert F. Meehan Carl N. Clanton Norman E. Colburn Edward G. Avery.......... Clarence W. Clarkson Faculty Advisor President Vice President Treasurer Secretary Manager The organization known as The Armour Tech Musical Clubs was formed in 1922, the existing musical organizations at the time forming the nucleus of the new society. Since its founding, it has been the aim and desire of the club to foster the appreciation of music not only among its members, but among those who lacked the talent to join one of the musical groups. The Musical Clubs combined to present to the faculty and to the student body a re- markable concert just before the Christmas holidays, the theme of which was in keeping with the spirit of the occasion. Again, at the Home Concert, given annually in May, a delightful program consisting of orchestral, choral, and novelty numbers, judiciously in- termingled, marked the final performance of the year. The clubs have been especially successful this year in accomplishing their ambitions, for the admiration of the entire student body has been focused on their achievements. This has resulted particularly from the fact that they have not been content with appearing only before the student body and the fac- ulty, as in the past, but have also had several important radio engagements on musical con- cert programs, as well as rendering public concerts in various of the cityâs prominent One Hundred Eighty-eight OF 1933 â The 19)2 spring smoker hotels. This has not only been a means of furthering musical appreciation on a larger scale, but has also been an instrument where- by Armour Institute has received additional and desirable publicity. The enterprising program has been viewed with surprise by many of the students, who did not realize to what extent the musical talent of the school has been developed. The outside engagements have done much to stim- ulate interest among the various members of the clubs, who previously have had only two opportunities to really show what they could do in the way of musical accomplishments, namely, at the Christmas and the Home Con- certs. The added incentive to good work has led to a great improvement in the quality of music offered. Another important development during the past year has been the reorganization of a band, the lack of which has been a serious problem to many of the students, who could not visualize proper school spirit without that necessary something that puts the punch be- hind the teams and men. Under proper lead- ership the organization of a band was again attempted, and its continued existence is definitely assured. A band is an important cog in the musical wheel at Armour, and we feel that it has come to stay. Certainly the progress it has made in the short time it has been organized has been enough to cause us to hope for a great future for this organiza- tion. As in the past, all of the cares of the mo- ment were set aside for a while on the occa- sion of the annual Musical Club Smoker. Here, amid an atmosphere of good-fellowship and amiability, these men who have worked so hard and gained such little recognition spent a very pleasant evening, when all but the joys at hand were forgotten. Much of the success of the clubs in the past year has been due to the fine work done by Professor Charles Leigh, who continues to be Faculty advisor, and Mr. Gordon Erickson whose unlagging zeal and interest has marked his initial year as musical director. The Musical Clubs consider themselves fortunate indeed to have the co-operation of these men. Out Hundred Eighty-nine Kricmcr, Viitckindt, Lang, Coleman, Knabe, Dalton, Johnson, Smith, Berger Potath, Ader, Wieting, Litchcr. Greenman, Lewi . Huucr, Graham, Brch, Zibblc Steven , Smetana, Xvttrom, Brenner, Avery, Hillman, Christen ten, Hemel, Krcft, Grakavac Schmidt. Graham. Reardon, Collick, Clarkson. Ormsby, Dobson, Paslawski. Arenson, Koriath Mr. O. Gordon Erickson Arthur L. Stcinhaus Clarence W. Clarkson Howard J. Zibble GLEE CLUB Director President Secretary-Treasurer Business Manager The purpose of the Glee Club is to provide its members with an outlet for pent-up emo- tions, which otherwise would be stifled in a sea of academic onslaughts. In furthering their objective, there is created a by-product in the wealth of entertainment and pleasure afforded to those who may listen. Until this year, the audiences were un- fortunately very limited in number, but a new policy has made possible the destruction of all barriers limiting the number afforded the opportunity to hear their concerts. This has been accomplished through radio appear- ance and engagements for public concerts in prominent hotels. On February 26, the medium of the radio was adopted for the first time as an outlet for the Armour Glee Club activities. This was on the occasion of their appearance at the Edgcwatcr Beach Hotelâs Twilight Musi- calc, a program given every Sunday after- noon and broadcast over one of Chicagoâs premier stations. Its successful performance at that time was duplicated on the day fol- lowing when a special choral program featur- ing only the Glee Club was presented over another radio broadcasting station. The program of the Glee Club was also expanded through their appearances in pub- lic concerts given in leading hotels in and near Chicago. Besides appearing as guest art- ists at the Edgcwatcr Beach Hotel Twilight Musicale, concerts were given, together with the Armour Orchestra, a{ the Belmont Hotel and at the North Shore Hotel in Evanston. Mr. Gordon Erickson and Professor Charles Leigh arc the faculty representatives with the Glee Club, and both have made themselves invaluable to the organization since assuming their duties. One Hundred Ninety ORCHESTRA Mr. O. Gordon Erickson Carl N. Clanton......... Harold W. Davidson Alexander Kulpak Wilfred W. Davies OFFICERS ............ Director ................... President-Student Director ............................ Vice-President .....................................Secretary .................................. Treasurer The Armour Orchestra is highly regarded among the musical units at the Institute. It is an integral part of our school life, and provides inspiration and entertainment to re- lieve the monotony which daily routine makes inevitable. The benefits accruing from association with an organization of this sort are incalculable. It forms a background of musical appreciation and culture, a lack of which has supposedly been an important part of every engineerâs makeup. Much of the progress made by the Orches- tra during the past year, in raising the stand- ard of music, its interpretation and execution, has been made possible by the untiring ef- forts of Mr. Gordon Erickson, director, and Mr. Carl Clanton, student director. The realization that Armour possessed a well-bal- anced, well-directed, orchestra was impressed upon the faculty and the student body on their first important appearance of the year, the occasion of the Christmas Concert. At that time they performed with all the finesse and tonal quality of professional mu- sicians. Increasing perfection made possible ap- pearances in public concerts. The first of these, at the North Shore Hotel in Evanston, was given in conjunction with the Glee Club, and the approval of the audience supplied the only lacking element necessary, confidence. A second concert, sponsored by the Alumni Association of the Chicago Teachers College at the Belmont Hotel, was another oppor- tunity which the Orchestra grasped at for further advancement. The final appearance of the year, at the Annual Home Concert, provided a fitting close to a year of achieve- ment. Ont UunJrtJ Xindy-ont a (OrJut manner in steeling ih guests it a mark of distinction of a good dub. realizing this fact, our icvereign stale of Ulinois erected near the entrance to the fair, the attractive though not pretentious illinoit host building. CLUES Williams, Edgrcn, Tamncy, Wall, Cramcr. Bradac, Guyot, Krol Leoni , Shaver, Englander, Patterson, Adrain, .Mecklenburg, Bolton, Nelson Szantay, May, Omiccinski, Noerenberg. Beckman, Vicl, Kostenko, Merer a, Kane CAMPUS CLUB OFFICERS Arthur L. Vicl ................................................ President Frederick C. Noerenberg Vice President Barry M. Kostenko Corresponding Secretary James Woodburn Recording Secretary The Armour Tech Campus Club, an or- ganization open to all the students at Ar- mour Institute, has completed its sixth suc- cessful year since its creation in 1927. The Club is primarily an organization of social concern, and offers the students a place to gather for discussion, for study, and for re- laxation. The spirit of friendship and good- feeling prevailing among the members has been one of the main factors in placing the organization among the foremost at the In- stitute. At the beginning of the last school year, the Campus Club quarters were enlarged. It now occupies the entire second floor of the third entrance to Chapin Hall. Social activities at Armour Institute were One Hundred Smety-fonr initiated with the holding of the annual Freshman Handshake with the co-operation of the social fraternities. This provided an excellent opportunity for the upper-classmen and the new students to get acquainted in an informal manner. Several smokers were held during the year, at which bridge, chess, and other games were played to the enjoy- ment of all. Visitors arc always welcome, and someone can always be found ready to discuss politics, current events, or studies. The Club spon- sored the formation of a chess club at Ar- mour, which is now in its second year. The formation of a Campus Club orchestra has been started and future smokers will be made more pleasant by music. De Boo, Zimmerman, Marty, Mullanc, Docdc. HottcUcn. Tcmbcrlakc. HolTmann Jonet, Henning, Hanct, Colburn, M a infield, Harwood, Winogrond, Lomasney Smetana, Wilson, Hollmann, Wandrey, Helmick, Renstrom, Hacklev, Paine RIFLE CLUB OFFICERS Erwin Wandrev Donald G. Wilson G. Lewis Hackley Franklin Paine............. Edward Balscwick President Vice President Secretary-T rcasurcr ......... Manager Range Officer The Armour Tech Rifle Club, although one of the youngest organizations about the Institute, is rapidly taking a prominent posi- tion in the extra-curricular activities at Ar- mour. The avowed purpose of the founders was to encourage competitive matches with similar organizations throughout the coun- try, in addition to promoting the safe use of fire-arms. How well the aims of the founders has been followed is evidenced in the yearly program of the Club. The past yearâs activities, consisting of shoulder to shoulder matches, was highly successful. The outstanding events were the Illinois State Rifle Association Championship series, and the Humboldt Park Gun Club vs. Armour Tech Rifle Club trophy cup series. In addition, matches with teams representing the New York Stock Exchange, the Appleton Rifle Club, Crane College, Ohio State Univer- sity, the University of Michigan, Austin Rifle Club, Iowa State College, and Western Elec- tric afforded the team the keenest of competi- tion. The team has been champions for the fifty foot division of the State League twice in suc- cession and is very hopeful of repeating. The Clubâs equipment was materially in- creased by the purchase of a new Winchester target rifle. With this addition, use of the range, which is located in the basement of Chapin Hall, can be extended to a maximum. One Hundred Ninety-If McDonald, Lippincott. Pctcrwxn, Stuiulii, Lc 'ii, Nuct cl Stahl, Dombrow ki, Hoffman, Swineford, Kuchn, Callcn TRUSS CLUB William C. Hoffman President Charles F. Lewis Vice President Leo J. McDonald ... Secretary Curtis W. Thomas Professor Charles R. Swineford Nine years ago a group of Senior students in the Department of Civil Engineering or- ganized the Truss Club on the Armour Campus. The basic purpose of the organi- zation was to bring into closer contact, men of the same interests and of good personal character. This year marks the completion of two years in the new quarters, and the members have remodeled all of the rooms to suit their own particular fancies. It has been the policy of the Club to hold several smokers and radio dances during the collegiate year to help alleviate the heavy burden placed on engineering students. The social activities of the year were initiated with One Hundred Ninety-six I Treasurer Faculty Member a smoker held early in October, when the members, meeting across the bridge tables, exchanged talcs of their experiences during the summer. Several radio dances followed the smoker and the annual Harvest dance was held in the latter part of November in the Club rooms. A new form of entertain- ment among the Club members was intro- duced this year. A series of inspection trips to local places of interest, including a visit to the Century of Progress Exposition grounds, was conducted at regular intervals. The spirit of friendship and comradeship prevalent among men of the same walks of life, and with the same object in life, has resulted in a very pleasant year. Divio, Monger, May, W. G. Andersen R. Andcrion, Clarkeon, Hendrick , BauÂŤrmci tcr THE ARMOUR PLAYERS Developments during the second year of its existence have shown that the Armour Dramatic Club is destined to take its place among the leading extra-curricular activities at the Institute. The interests of the members are divided into three main groupsâthe production staff; stage managers, property manager, lighting manager, and their assistants; Architects, who work on the scenery; and finally, those who have active parts in the plays. ARMOUR TECH PHILATELIC SOCIETY During the latter part of 1931 a few Ar- mour students gathered in the Institute library to talk of something not pertaining to any- thing technical. The conversation suddenly shifted to collecting, and the group discov- ered that they were all mutually interested in the gathering of rare valuable stamps. In December of that year, this same group met again and formed the Armour Tech Philatelic Society. Today, the Society has expanded and developed beyond the fondest dreams of its originators. After the first successful year, the mem- bers did not cease work because of the sum- mer vacation. They organized, rehearsed and produced a program consisting of three one-act plays, and presented them before au- diences on two occasions. Lessons in voice technique, pantomime and even Shakespeare were studied, resulting in giving to the per- formers the skill and confidence which are necessary for good acting. CHESS CLUB With the discovery that many of the erst- while Armour engineers were enthusiastic chess or checker players, a special meeting of the Armour Chess Club took place in the Campus Club rooms on November 10. The purpose of this meeting, to lay plans for a school-wide chess tournament, was greeted with enthusiasm by the members who were anxious to show their ability and differing technique in open competition. Immediately after the championship was decided a handi- cap list was prepared for use in future Ar- mour chess competition. One Hundred Ninety-seven here presented are lire sculptured gods of fire, night, light, anj ttorm. fire rules our unstable tempers,' the god of night gently consoles us in times of darkness or Jouht, light is conscience, storm is tire mighty force that stirs our determination. HONORARY AND PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES Beard, CarLtrom, C lanton Davie , Dufour, Juvinall Paine, Sorenven Honorary Fraternity Council Wilfred W. Davies President REPRESENTATIVES Tau Beta Pi Wilfred W. Davies Sphinx Jarl T. Sorenson Eta Kappa Nu James W. Juvinall Phi Lambda Upsilon Franklin W. Paine Chi Epsilon Earl G. Beard, Jr. Salamander Carl N. Clanton Pi Tau Sigma Raymond J. Dufour Pi Nu Epsilon Carl N. Clanton Black Knight James W. Juvinall Honor A Roy W. Carlstrom Tuo HunJtfJ Black Knight HONORARY MEMBERS Henry T. Heald Philip C. Huntly John C. Schommer ACTIVE MEMBERS Orville T. Barnett Roy W. Carlstrom Carl N. Clanton Wilfred W. Davies James W. Juvinall William W. Lange Franklin W. Paine Jarl T. Sorensen Tu o HunJreJ One TAU BETA PI HONORARY ENGINEERING hounded at Lehigh University in. 188} Sixty-one Ac file Chapters BETA CHAPTER - EstabiisM 1906 President Emeritus of Armour Institute of Technology Professor of Mechanical Engineering Professor of Chemical Engineering Professor of Mechanics Professor of Fire Protection Engineering Howard M. Raymond George F. Gebhardt Harry McCormack Charles E. Paul Joseph B. Finnegan Ernest H. Freeman Eldon C. Grafton Henry T. Heald Phillip C. Huntlv William H. Lautz Charles W. Leigh HONORARY MEMBERS FACULTY MEMBERS Edwin S. Libby David P. Moreton Henry L. Nachman James C. Peebles John C. Penn Robert V. Perry Donald E. Richardson Daniel Roesch Sholto M. Spears Van Baumcn Teach Ernest E. Tupes Melville B. Wells Tau Beta Pi, an engineering honorary society, was founded at Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in June, 1885. Its primary purpose is to confer honor upon those engineering students who have maintained a high standard of scholarship, and have also displayed a high degree of initiative, a spirit of leadership, and a strong char- acter during their years at college. It has been the aim of Tau Beta Pi to stress the cultural side of a studentâs life, an aspect that is too often forgotten by an engineering student. Tkv HunJrtJ Tho Buelinc, Carlstone, Clanton, Colburn, Davies, Dufour, Juvinall Cunningham, Lange, Larson, Locschc, Moravec, Sorensen, VanJcrpoortcn, Wilson ACTIVE MEMBERS Willis G. Buchnc Paul A. Carlstonc Carl N. Clanton Norman E. Colburn Wilfred W. Davies Raymond J. Dufour James W. Juvinall John L. Kampwirth William W. Lange Bradford Larson Bernhard H. Locschc Julius Moravec, Jr. Jarl T. Sorensen Stanley A. Vanderpoorten Donald G. Wilson CHARTER MEMBERS William C. Brubaker Henry W. B. Clausen Einar Enandcr Tenney S. Ford Edwin F. Gillette Edwin O. Griefenhagen Grover Keeth Charles Ktapper Samuel Klein Howard L. Krum George W. Kuhn Ernst I.icbcrmann David P. Morcton Robert V. Perry Myron B. Reynolds Ralph H. Rice Oscar A. Rochlitz Henry J. Sawtell Ray E. Swearingen Andrew F. Wanner Beta Chapter of Illinois was chartered May 22, 1906. It was the fourteenth chapter of a roll that now includes sixty-one chapters spread all over the United States in the engineering colleges. There arc nine Alumni Chapters. The roll numbers approxi- mately 18,000. Student; arc elected to Tau Beta Pi from the upper one-eighth of the Junior class in the spring; and in the fall, seniors in the upper quarter are eligible, together with three juniors from the upper one-eighth of their class. Honorary memberships have been conferred on prominent engineers and graduates. Tux Hundred Thrtt SPHINX HONORARY LITERARY Founded at Armour Institute of Technology in 1907 Pledge Ribbon Yellow and Black HONORARY MEMBERS Walter Hendricks Charles E. Paul James C. Peebles Joseph B. Finnegan Associate Professor of English Professor of Mechanics Professor of Experimental Engineering Professor of Fire Protection Engineering CHARTER MEMBERS H. Ralph Badger Austin Crabbs Donald D. Dick Harold S. Ellington Walter Eyers James S. Harvey, Jr. John A. Jones Arthur A. Kellkcnney Elmer V. McKarahan Joseph E. Monahan Edwin H. Stillman Sphinx, honorary literary society, was founded at Armour, March 4, 1907. It was the second honorary to make its appearance on the campus. The executive members of the Fulcrum and the Integral formed a society which soon afterward became known as Sphinx. The society was formed with the purpose in mind of fostering and promoting the publication work at Armour and to serve as an honor society for services rendered to the Institute through the publications. Tuo HunJuJ Four OF 1933 Barnett. Bcckcr. Cone. Collick. Curran. Eberth. Erisman, Juvinall Cunningham, Lange, I.arson, Loesche, Moravec, Sorensen, Vandcrpoorten, C'ilson ACTIVE MEMBERS Orville T. Barnett Henry F. Bcckcr, Jr. Milton A. Collick Spencer B. Cone Edward L. Curran Ellsworth E. Eberth Maurice J. Erisman James W. Juvinall Jarl T. Sorensen Herbert Kreisman William W. Lange Edmond P. Lomasney John H. Miller Raymond E. Nelson Franklin W. Paine Robert F. Rychlik Carroll K. Simons It has followed out this purpose by serving as an advisory board to the student publi- cations. Through this close association the history of Sphinx and of the Armour student publications have become synonymous. Membership has been granted to 226 men at Armour Institute. Senior and junior students who hold executive positions on the staff of any recognized publication at Armour and who have done work of high character and have shown exceptional ability during their first two years are considered for membership. Two HuhJuJ Five ETA KAPPA NU HONORARY ELECTRICAL Founded at University of Illinois in 1904 Twenty-two Active Chapters Ten Alumni Chapters DELTA CHAPTER Established 1909 HONORARY MEMBERS Erncsc H. Freeman Professor of Electrical Engineering John E. Snow Professor of Electric Power Production FACULTY MEMBERS David P. Moreton Professor of Direct and Alternating Current Machinery Van Bauman Teach Associate Professor of Mathematics CHARTER MEMBERS Clarence C. Bailey Alfred B. Chapman Samuel W. McCune, Jr. William J. Ncrillc Olin L. Richards Edward B. Sherwin It was on October 28, 1904, that Eta Kappa Nu was organized by ten progressive students in the department of electrical engineering at the University of Illinois. Realizing the benefit to be derived from such an organization and the necessity for binding together the outstanding members of each class, these students made the necessary steps for its organization. The society now includes twenty-two active chapters and nine alumni chapters. Tux HuuJrrJ Six OF 1933 â I)umÂŤf, Dunham, Ebcrth, Juvifull, Lange Priban. Rychlik, Thompion, Wilion ACTIVE MEMBERS Wesley T. Dumscr Edward A. Dunham Ellsworth E. Eberth James W. Juvinall William W. Lange Milton L. Priban Robert F. Rychlik Paul J. Thompson Donald G. Wilson In 1909 a few students of Electrical Engineering at Armour Institute petitioned Eta Kappa Nu. On May 24, 1909, Delta chapter was chartered. The major requirement for candidacy to Eta Kappa Nu is scholarship. The standard of scholarship is defined in its broadest sense. It is taken to mean ability to lead and ability to use knowledge with common sense. SCARAB PROFESSIONAL ARCHITECTURAL Founded at University of Illinois in 1909 Eleven Active Chapters EDFOU TEMPLE Established 1913 Pledge Ribbon Black, Blue and White FACULTY MEMBERS Earl H. Rccd, Jr. William H. Lautz William F. McCaughey, Jr. Walter L. Sutcr........ Rowland Rathbun Emil R. Zettler Theodoras H. Hofmecstcr Professor of Architecture Assistant Professor of Architecture Associate Professor of Architectural Design Assistant Professor of Architectural Design Assistant Professor of Architectural Design Consulting Professor of Architectural Sculpture Assistant Professor of Architectural Modeling CHARTER MEMBERS Edwin M. Sincere Raphael N. Friedman Charles D. Faulkner Murray D. Hcthcrington Gorden S. Barber Fred D. Farrar In 1909 the leaders of architecture at the University of Illinois organized a group called the Scarab fraternity. It had no intention of becoming a national organization when founded. An architectural fraternity was organized at Armour in 1900. It was known as Alpha Delta Tau. This organization continued until 1915, when it was admitted, after petitioning, as Edfou Temple of Scarab Fraternity. There are now thirteen temples in the nation-wide organization. 7'uÂŤ lUinJrrJ Eight 19 33 Buckhaufcr. Cone, Davidson. Davies. F.kroth Irion. Terp, Skubic. Sommer, Luckctt ACTIVE MEMBERS Burton R. Buckhauscr Spencer B. Cone Lawrence W. Davidson Wilfred W. Davies Roy Ekroth George W. Terp, Jr. Theodore H. Irion Thomas D. I.uckctt Leroy E. Skubic Charles B. Sommer, Jr. Robert W. Taguc Scarab secures through association the advantages of a refined culture; it stimulates interest in architecture and the allied arts and promotes friendly competition among the students and schools of architecture, and creates a lasting spirit of fellowship and cooperation within the fraternity. Election to membership is based on ability, scholarship and character. It has always kept its membership comparatively small. Tuo HunJrtJ Sine PHI LAMBDA UPSILON HONORARY CHEMICAL Founded at University of Illinois in 1899 Tu cnty-eight Active Members OMICRON CHAPTER Established 1920 Pledge Ribbon Red and Blue FACULTY MEMBERS Harr)' McCormack Professor of Chemical Engineering Charles A. Tibbals Professor of Analytical Chemistry Waller J. Bentley Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering CHARTER MEMBERS Walter J. Anderson Walter J. Bentley Joseph M. Bernstein William S. Eagle Lyman D. Judson William T. McCauley Harry McCormack Clarence M. Muchlberger William J. Savoyc Emil F. Winter Founded at the University of Illinois in 1899 for the purpose of promoting high scholarship and original investigation in all branches of pure and applied chemistry. Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical engineering, now numbers twenty-eight active chapters and one alumni chapter. The total membership is about four thousand. Through the efforts of two members of the faculty. Professor C. A. Tibbals and Mr. C. F. Smith, Omicron chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon was chartered in 1920. Tux HuhJkJ Ten Fithman. Galvani. Hacklcy, ({oilman Miller. Paine. Gunderson ACTIVE MEMBERS Henry Fishman Vincent J. Galvani K. Louis Hacklcy Walter G. Hollmann John H. Miller Franklin W. Paine PLEDGE Walter E. Gunderson Election to membership takes place in the beginning of each semester. Members of the junior and senior classes and the highest sophomore student in chemical engineering arc eligible. The basis of election is scholarship. This is determined by averaging all grades, giving chemical grades twice the value of the others. The vote on scholarship must be unanimous. The personality of the student is considered only so far as it pertains to habits, neatness and honesty. Tuo Hundred Eleven CHI EPSILON HONORARY CIVIL Founded at University of Illinois'in 1922 Eleven Active Chapters ARMOUR CHARTER Establish'd 1923 Pledge Ribbon Purple and White HONORARY MEMBERS Herbert Ensz Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Eldon C. Grafton Assistant Professor of Structural Engineering FACULTY MEMBERS Melville B. Wells John C. Penn Roc L. Stevens Philip C. Huntley Henry T. Heald Professor of Civil Engineering Professor of Civil Engineering Associate Professor of Bridge and Structural Engineering Associate Professor of Experimental Engineering Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Founded at the University of Illinois in 1922, Chi Epsilon, honorary civil engineering fraternity, granted a charter to the Armour chapter, March 9. 1923. It was founded to provide an incentive for greater achievement in the civil engineering profession, and to distinguish the undergraduates who have shown a high scholastic ability. Two IIniiJreJ Turin Rcctmtcrbocr, Beard, Loc che, Schreiner ACTIVE MEMBERS Earl G. Beard, Jr. George J. Bccmstcrbocr Lawrence Gabriel Bernhard H. E. Locsche Jacob T. Maucr John E. Schreiner CHARTER MEMBERS Richard B. Barry Mack Burkcy C. Wendell Carlson Eugene F. DcBra Fred G. Frederick Charles S. Frink George Goedhart Frederick Hess Robert S. Mayo Harold W. Munday F. Raymond Nolle Alfred E. Phillips Edward W. Prentiss Lloyd R. Quayle Orcmas G. Smith John H. Sweeney Election to membership is based on the four requisites of a successful engineer; scholarship, character, practicability, and sociability. A candidate must have an average grade in scholarship in the upper one-third and must be a student in regular standing in the Civil Engineering Department in the junior or senior class. Tu 9 Hundred Thirteen SALAMANDER HONORARY FIRE PROTECTION Founded at Armour in 192} Jackson V. Parker Wellington R. Townlcy Joseph B. Finnegan Otto L. Robinson Charles P. Holmes Fitzhugh Taylor HONORARY MEMBERS Chairman, Scholarship Committee Member of Scholarship Committee Professor of Fire Protection Engineering Associate Professor of Fire Protection Engineering Assistant Professor of Fire Insurance Fire Protection Engineer, Underwriters Laboratories CHARTER MEMBERS Royal M. Beckwith George G. Blair Ora L. Cox Joseph B. Finnegan Chester W. Flauth Raymond O. Matson John C. Worley In 1923, with the help of Professor J. B. Finnegan and other members of the faculty, the initial steps for founding an honorary fire-protection engineering fraternity were taken. The initial chapter was composed of seven men. Its purpose was to foster high scholarship and incite original investigation in all phases of its branch of engineering. Tuo HunJreJ Four let Bjmrutch, Clanton, Cunningham, I.arton, Sorenson ACTIVE MEMBERS Harold J. Bannash Carl N. Clanton Jarl T. Sorensen Charles A. Cunningham Bradford Larson The primary requisite for membership is high scholarship. However, to qualify for membership the candidate must show evidence of superior abilities through his activities and must possess a strong character. A news letter, the Deflector,â is published annually by the organization. In it is contained news of its alumni and of the active chapter. Regular meetings arc held throughout the year. Two initiation smokers arc held, one in the fall and the other in the spring of the year. Tuv IhinJreJ Fifteen PI TAU SIGMA HONORARY MECHANICAL founded jointly at University of Wisconsin and University of Illinois in 1915 Nine Active Chapters DELTA CHAPTER Established 1924 George F. Gebhardt Ernest Hartford Philip C. Huntly Edwin S. Libby James C. Peebles Robert V. Perry Daniel Roesch HONORARY MEMBERS Professor of Mechanical Engineering Assistant Secretary, A.S.M.E. Associate Professor of Experimental Engineering Professor of Refrigeration Engineering Professor of Experimental Engineering Professor of Machine Design Professor of Automotive Engineering FACULTY MEMBERS Arthur W. Sear Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, was established March 16, 1915, at the University of Illinois. It was founded by students in the department of mechanical engineering who. having felt the need of closer association to foster the spirit of liberal culture in engineering students, and having maintained a high scholarship, took the necessary steps for the organization of such a society. Its purposes are to emphasize the high ideals of its profession, to stimulate student interest in student activities and to promote the welfare of its members. T WO HunJreJ Six I ten OF 1933 Buchnc. Carluonc, Dufour. Erismin, Gouwillcr Hoffman, Monger, Moravee, Nclaon, Pcnfold, Suman Willis G. Buchnc Paul A. Carlstonc Raymond J. Dufour Maurice J. Erisman Earl W. Gosswiller ACTIVE MEMBERS Robert W. Suman William C. Hoffman Harold J. Monger Julius Moravec, Jr. Raymond E. Nelson Norman C. Pcnfold CHARTER MEMBERS Samuel Allen Baird Earl Gustav Benson James Pendleton Dunlap George Seth Maffit, Jr. George Cristy Kramer Eugene William Odenwaldt Henry Walter Regenberger Charles Morgan Rowley John Maxwell Shoemaker Delta, the fifth member of a roll call that now numbers nine, was installed at Armour, December 22, 1924. Students are elected each year from the upper half of the senior class and the upper third of the junior class. The upper third of the junior class is eligible in the spring. Though high scholarship is essential, other characteristics of the candidate such as personality, character, leadership, and college activity are taken into account. THO HunJrtJ Sritn ftn PI NU EPSILON HONORARY MUSICAL Founded at Armour in 1927 Pledge Ribbon Scarlet and Grey FACULTY MEMBERS Charles W. Leigh Professor of Analytic Mechanics Howard M. Raymond President of Armour Institute CHARTER MEMBERS Thornton J. Clark David G. Greenfield W. MacDowcll Horn Charles Wilber Leigh Willard Wilson Nicholas MarkolT Kent H. Parker George Rezac William E. Vevurka In 1927, Pi Nu Epsilon was organized as a musical honorary fraternity. It followed many months of consideration of the problems of the musical clubs and the need for such an organization. The charter members were a sincere group of men who realized the need of a stimulus for the musical organizations at Armour. The aims of the fraternity have been to honor the men who have devoted their time and energies for four years to the musical clubs at Armour, to stimulate interest in the musical clubs and a broader interest in music and musical affairs at Armour. Tuv Hundred Eighteen Linge, Clanton, Collide, Clarkson, Brenner Meehan. Reardon, Stcinhaus ACTIVE MEMBERS John L. Brenner Carl N. Clanton Clarence Clarkson Milton A. Collick William W. I.angc Robert F. Meehan Edward P. Reardon Arthur L. Stcinhaus Twice each year the members scan the roll of the musical clubs and select therefrom those seniors and juniors who have been prominent in furthering the musical cause. Before initiation each pledge must prepare a paper, requiring research in the musical world. As the organization is a musical fraternity there is no scholarship requirement which a man must attain before he may be pledged to Pi Nu Epsilon. However, he must pass a rigid examination of his musical knowledge before he may be pledged. T wo IluitJrfJ Nine trot ALPHA CHI SIGMA Founded in 1906 E C YCL Forty-sci en Active Chapters Seventeen Professional Chapters ALPHA PSI CHAPTER Established 19}0 Charles A. Tibbals Arthur H. Carpenter Walter J. Bentley John J. Schommcr FACULTY MEMBERS Professor of Analytical Chemistry Associate Professor of Metallurgy Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Assistant Professor of Industrial Chemistry CHARTER MEMBERS Edward A. Armit Frederick B. Attwood Walter J. Bentley Russell H. Blom Albert F. Bigelow Lawrence C. Brunstrum Arthur H. Carpenter John O. Cavanagh James J. Doheny, Jr. Oliver J. Fiola Maurity P. Johnson Harold J. I.athomn Isaac B. Lehman Orville G. Linnell Maurice E. Lovcjoy Leonard V. Melcarek Charles E. Morris Ulrich G. Nolf George L. Parkhurst Peter M. Rayerick Clarence H. Seeley Albin J. Stabovitz Charles J. Stambcrg Oscar R. Stcincrt, Jr. Gcrvasc J. Stockmann John E. Tarman Charles A. Tibbals Walter R. Trognitz On December 13, 1930, the members of the local fraternity known as Flask and Beaker were initiated into Alpha Chi Sigma as the forty-seventh collegiate chapter. The fraternity conflicts in no way with Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical. The purpose of Alpha Chi Sigma is to bring chemical students and professional chemists into closer contact and to strive for the advancement of chemistry both as a science and as a profession. Tuv Hundred Tur ty OF 1933 Bottler, Booth. Ream, Hclmick, Miller, Johanniuon, Hollman Schorling, Martv, Kopecki, McFarland, Lange. Mullane, Gundenon ACTIVE MEMBERS Paul Bcstlcr William G. Booth Kenneth Ebcrly Allen H. Helmick Walter G. Hollman Walter E. Gunderson Sven Johannisson Alfred Kapccki J. Russell Lang Roiland McFarland Raymond W. Marty John H. Miller Daniel J. Mullane Altus M. Ream Robert H. Schorling In addition to the forty-seven collegiate chapters there arc seventeen professional chapters situated in the principal cities of the country. A feature of the fraternity is a placement bureau maintained by these professional chapters to aid graduates in securing work. Candidates are elected twice a year from the senior, junior and sophomore classes in Chemical Engineering. Election is based on scholarship, ability and personality. in youth thrrc is more gaiety and leu Jeep tlsought, but with the adding of yean tlx scale gradually bal- ances and then slowly tips to tlx other side, in so doing, tlx companionships and pleasantries of tlx fast are the thoughts which often occupy that serious mind. SOCIAL EEATERNITIE PHI KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University of Pennsylvania in 1850 CYC ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER Established in 1898 3236 S. Michigan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS John J. Schommer Walter H. Seegrist Gordon C. Erickson ACTIVE MEMBERS Louis W. Bicglcr Edward O. Dasc William H. Fogle Ronald P. Dobson Ellsworth E. Eberth George H. Gray Donald L. Jacobson James W. Juvinal! Willard C. McCarty T. Arthur Marow John H. Miller Earl A. Phillips Carl H. Sachs, Jr. William H. Savage Carroll K. Simons J. Robert Van Dyke John S. Walker George W. Wheaton Miller, Simor , F.berth, Juvinall, Sachs Jacobson. Gray, Date. Dobson Tun Hundred Turn y-four OF 1933 Colors Old Cold and Black Flower None SOCIAL CALENDAR Rushec Dance ...... October 1 Founderâs Day Banquet October 19 House Dance . . ....................... . . November 4 Alumni Smoker November 21 Pledge Dance . . December 3 Parentsâ Reception . December 18 New Yearâs Dinner Dance December 31 Tri-Chapter Initiation February 24 Tri-Chapter Formal................................. March 4 Spring Dance .March 18 Alumni Smoker ..................................... April 7 Chapter Picnic May 14 Senior Farewell Formal May 27 Bicgler. Marow, McCarty. Van Dyke. Walker Wheaton, Fogle. Phillips, Savage Tux, Hundred Twenty-five CHAPTER ROLL AI.PHA ....................................................... University of Pennsylvania DELTA................................................... Washington and Jetferson College EPSILON Dickinson College ZETA.................................................... Franklin and Marshall College ETA .......................................................... University of Virginia IOTA............................................................... Columbia University KAPPA..................................... â˘............................Dartmouth College LAMBDA. University of North Carolina MU.................................................................... .Tutane University OMICRON. . . . . University of Oklahoma RHO................................................................. University of Illinois TAU...........................................................Randolph-Macon College UPSILON.......................................................Northwestern University PHI University of Richmond PSI ........................................................ Pennsylvania State College ALPHA ALPHA. Washington and Lee University ALPHA BF.TA . University of Toronto ALPHA GAMMA................................................. West Virginia University ALPHA DELTA . University of Maine ALPHA EPSILON..........................................Armour Institute of Technology ALPHA ZETA University of Maryland ALPHA ETA University of South Carolina ALPHA THETA ..............................University of Wisconsin ALPHA IOTA ................................................. Vanderbilt University ALPHA KAPPA University of Alabama ALPHA LAMBDA ................... University of California ALPHA MU Massachusetts Institute of Technology ALPHA NU Georgia School of Technology ALPHA XI Purdue University ALPHA OMICRON ..... University of Michigan ALPHA PI .................................................... University of Chicago ALPHA RHO . .... Cornell University AI.PHA SIGMA..................................................University of Minnesota ALPHA TAU ....................................... Leland Stanford Junior University ALPHA UPSILON................................................. University of Washington ALPHA PHI.....................................................State University of Iowa ALPHA CHI..................................................... Ohio State University ALPHA PSI......................................University of California at Los Angeles Tu o Hundred T u fiily-iix ! | Tivo Hundred Tuenly-tev n 1 E CYC DELTA TAU DELTA Founded at Bethany College in 1859 GAMMA BETA CHAPTER Established 1901 3155 South Michigan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS Arthur H. Carpenter John V. Lizars ACTIVE MEMBERS Hugh A. Bisbee Spencer B. Cone Lawrence W. Davidson Ellis H. Doanc, Jr. Francis M. Gibian John R. Jackson, Jr. Charles E. Vcndlcy PLEDGES John B. Davis Earl R. Fenske Frank X. Gallagher Harry G. Gragg Arthur F. Kayser Frederick A. Smith Walter H. Larson Thomas D. Luckctt John R. McLanc Thomas C. Pcavcy Robert H. Schorling Louis H. Streb Harry L. Mayfield Charles W. Nelson Edward Olson Paul Orsingcr Walter M. Ready McLanc, Jackton, Lanon, Luckctt. Cone Pcavcy, Schorling, Streb, Bi b c, Davidion, Gibian Tu o Hundred Tuvnty-eight 9 3 3 OF Colors Purple, White and Cold Flower Pansy SOCIAL CALENDAR Rush Dance October 1 Rush Dance October 5 Radio Dance.................................. . . November 4 Pledge Dance........................................ November 28 New Yearâs Dinner Dance December 31 Inter Semester Dance ............................. February 3 Initiation Banquet March 19 Presidentâs Dinner March 30 24th Annual Dclt Prom April 7 Spring Formal...........................................April 23 Foundersâ Day Banquet May 10 Farewell Dance ..........................................May 2S Dome, Vendley, Fen ke, Grams. Smith, OWon Net ton, Davi , Kaytcr, Or ingcr, Gallagher, Mayfield Two Hundred Twenty-nine CHAPTER ROLL Pi PHI BETA DELTA BETA EPSILON- BETA THETA BETA IOTA BETA XI GAMMA F.TA GAMMA IOTA GAMMA PSI GAMMA OMEGA DELTA ALPHA DELTA DELTA DELTA EPSILON- DELTA ZF.TA DELTA ETA DELTA KAPPA OMICRON BETA GAMMA BETA ETA BETA KAPPA BETA PI BETA RHO BETA TAU BETA UPSILON BETA OMEGA GAMMA ALPHA GAMMA BETA GAMMA THETA GAMMA KAPPA GAMMA MU GAMMA PI GAMMA RHO GAMMA TAU GAMMA CHI DELTA GAMMA DELTA IOTA . University of Mississippi Washington and Lee University .............University of Georgia ........................Emory University . University of the South University of Virginia ......................Tulanc University George Washington University University of Texas Georgia School of Technology . University of North Carolina . University of Oklahoma University of Tennessee Unis-ersity of Kentucky University of Florida University of Alabama Duke University University of Iowa University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota Unis-ersity of Colorado Northwestern University Lcland Stanford Junior University University of Nebraska Unis-ersity of Illinois Unis-ersity of California University of Chicago Armour Institute of Technology .......................Baker University University of Missouri .......University of Washington Iowa State College .................University of Oregon University of Kansas Kansas State College University of South Dakota University of California at Los Angeles DELTA LAMBDA Oregon State College DELTA MU ...............................University of Idaho BETA Ohio University DELTA University of Michigan ZETA ...................Western Reverse University EPSILON Albion College KAPPA .................................. Hillsdale College MU . Ohio Wesleyan University (HI Kenyon College BETA ALPHA ............ Indiana University BETA BETA DePauw University BETA ZETA Butler College BETA PHI ...... Ohio State University BETA PSI Wabash College GAMMA LAMBDA Purdue University GAMMA XI . . University of Cincinnati GAMMA UPSILON Miami University ALPHA ............... ...................Allegheny College GAMMA Washington and Jefferson College NU Lafayette College RHO Stevens Institute of Technology TAU Pennsylvania State College UPSILON Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute OMEGA University of Pennsylvania BETA LAMBDA ..............................Lehigh University BETA MU Tufts College BETA NU . Massachusetts Institute of Technology BETA OMICRON Cornell University BETA CHI ............ .................Brown University GAMMA GAMMA .............................Dartmouth College GAMMA DELTA West Virginia University GAMMA ZETA Wesleyan University GAMMA NU ...............................University of Maine GAMMA OMICRON.......................................Syracuse University GAMMA SIGMA University of Pittsburgh GAMMA PHI Amherst College DELTA BETA Carnegie Institute of Technology DELTA THETA ...........................University of Toronto Tmo Hundred Thirty Tuo Hundred Thirty-one THETA XI Founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in IS64 E CYCLE ALPHA GAMMA CHAPTER Establish'd 1922 3305 South Michigan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS Charles E. Paul Robert V. Perry John C. Penn Arthur W. Sear ACTIVE MEMBERS Wilbur E. Baumann George R. Belton John L. Brenner Roy W. Carlstrom Norman E. Colburn, Jr. Milton A. Collide Ray L. Ellis Karl M. Hanson William D. Jackson Carlton H. Landis J. Arthur Larson Frank LcGradv.Jr. Elmer G. Lundin C. Lodge McKibben Robert F. Meehan Clifford A. Nelson Raymond E. Nelson PLEDGES Jack R. Pcchman Leonard G. Rummel William Scharringhauscn Carl T. Seabcrg William T. Smcthclls P. Vincent Smith Jarl T. Sorensen W. Walch Tyler Lee C. Willis Clyde Adair Ernest C. Bcwersdorf Carlo M. Christenson Curtis H. Parsons Hugh Kent Robert P. Nelson Eugene Norris Baumann, Belton. Carlstrom, Collick, Ellis. Jackson, Meehan C. A. Nelson, R. E. Nelson, Pechnsan, Sorensen, SmethdU, Tyler. Brenner. Colburn Tiro flunJrtJ Thirty-two Colon Blue and White Flower None SOCIAL CALENDAR Radio Dance Rush Dance Radio Dance Halloweâen Party Alumni Smoker Formal Dinner Dance Radio Dance Radio Dance Hard Times Party Spring Formal Foundersâ Day Banquet Picnic .............. . Senior Farewell September 24 October 1 . October 15 . . November 5 November 19 December 16 January 14 February 25 March 25 April 7 April 29 May 21 ...... June 6 Larson, Lundin, Rummcl, Scharringhausen, Adair, Hanson, Landis. McKibbcn Smith, Willis, R. P. Nelson, Parson, Bewersdorf, Christensen, Kent. Norris Tuo Hundred Thirty-three c CHAPTER ROLL ALPHA BF.TA GAMMA DELTA EPSILON....... ZETA ETA........... THETA IOTA.......... KAPPA LAMBDA...... MU NU............ XI OMICRON. PI .... RHO SIGMA TAU UPSILON PHI.......... CHI ......... PSI OMEGA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA BETA ALPHA GAMMA ALPHA DELTA ALPHA EPSILON ALPHA ZETA ALPHA ETA ALPHA THETA ALPHA IOTA ALPHA KAPPA . ALPHA LAMBDA ALPHA MU...... .......Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University ...........Stevens Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology .........................Columbia University ..........Cornell University ......................... Lehigh University . Purdue University Washington University Rose Polytechnic Institute Pennsylvania State College .........................Iowa State College ........... University of California ...................State Unis-ersity of Iowa University of Pennsylvania Carnegie Institute of Technology ..............University of Texas University of Michigan Leland Standford Jr. University University of Washington ...................University of Wisconsin Ohio State University University of Minnesota Washington State College Louisiana State University ..............University of Illinois Armour Institute of Technology Oregon State College University of Nebraska University of California at Los Angeles University of Colorado Lafayette College Kansas State College .................... Northwestern University University of Alabama ...........................Amherst College Tuo Hundred Tbirly-foui Tu o Hundred Thirty-fin SIGMA KAPPA DELTA Founded at Armour in 1922 BETA CHAPTER 3344 South Michigan Boulevard A S FACULTY MEMBERS Henry T. Heald William H. Lautz Charles W. Leigh Edwin S. Libby David P. Morcton James C. Peebles ACTIVE MEMBERS Emmett H. Babcock Victor H. Camsky Luke G. Cosme George H. Glos Bcrtil Hanson Edwin Koriath William Krause Gervase J. Stockman Earl Kreft Alexander Kulpak Bradford Larson Orville G. Linncll George M. Reed Joseph Stchno Robert G. Stevens Edward Baumel Nick C. Giovan PLEDGES Henry Koeber Arthur J. Skorjdal Caimky, Lar on, Linncll, Stockman Hanton, Reed, Stchno Tun Hundred Thirty-six Flower White Rose SOCIAL CALENDAR Rushcc Dance ........................................October 1 Halloweâen Party....................................November 5 Alumni Smoker..................................... November 18 Christmas Dance December 17 Pledge Dance February 4 Initiation Banquet................................ F'ebruary 11 Hard Times Party April 8 Alumni Banquet May 13 Beach Party May 28 Baumcl. Glo . Koeber, Krainc Kreft, Stevent, Skorjdal Two Hundred Thirty-men PHI PI PHI Founded at Northwestern University in 1915 GAMMA CHAPTER Establish'd 192) 3 i 31 South Michgan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS Ernest H. Freemen Carl Johnson ACTIVE Howard J. Cameron James C. Castanes Chris Chaiin John M. Curran Richard L. Fricde Donald R. Grcgerson Otto Kuehn Daniel Roesch MEMBERS John MacLennan Charles R. Mitchell Vladimer Novak John A. Rohrer Robert P. Samuels Robert Simpson PLEDGES Edward Gisskc George A. Hanes Al Lauchiskis Nick Maucr Raymond Pflum Donald Storey Frank Talabcr Roland Warner Edwin Wendt John W. Zimmerman Cameron. MacLcnnan, Mitchell, Rohrer, Gisskc Castanet, Curran, Grciccrton ' Ta Hundred Tbirly-eighl Colors Turquoise Blue and Black Flower Bluebell SOCIAL CALENDAR Rushcc Dance Alumni Smoker Pledge Dance . . Alumni Dance New Yearâs Party Tri-Chapter Formal Spring Informal Alumni Smoker House Dance Farewell Party National Convention October 8 October 11 October 29 November 26 December J 1 January 21 March 19 .... March 30 ........April 22 June 10 September 7, 8, 9 Simpson, Pilum, Storey, Samuel , llane Zimmerman. Maurer, SX'endt Two Hundred Thirty-nine RHO DELTA RHO Founded at Armour in 1919 ALPHA CHAPTER 3116 S. Michigan Boulevard HONORARY MEMBER Professor Henry L. Nachman Archie Anders Theodore Cohan Louis DâAlba Albert Feinberg Harold Feldman Henry Fishman ACTIVE MEMBERS Charles Goldberg Charles Handler Milton Heller Ira Krawitz Herman Meyer Alfred Rosen Jack Wciland Norman Cooper Leonard Dworsky Ray Feinberg Frank Kaplan Leonard Kaplan PLEDGES Milton Kohn Henryâ Levin Samuel Potash Louis Siegel Robert Simons Harry Stern Feinberg. Handler, Fithman, Feldman, Hdlcr Krawii7, Meyer, RoÂŤn, Cohan, Ander , D'Alba Tuo Hnn,lrrJ Forty Colon Orange and Black flower Acacia SOCIAL CALENDAR Rush Smoker Pledge Dance Alumni Bridge Radio Dance New Yearâs Party Alumni Smoker Initiation Smoker Dinner Dance October 7 October 29 November 18 November 25 . January' 1 February 24 April 7 .....May 13 Grouman, Cooper. F. Kaplan. Kohn. Goldberg. Wetland L. Kaplan, Levin, Potath, Siegel, Simons, Stern TÂŤa Hundred Forty-one LOCAL FRATERNITY In the latter months of 1918, several students at Armour Institute of Technology, led by the true spirit of college fraternalism, laid plans for the organization of a fra- ternity. After a short while the group took definite steps toward becoming a recog- nized fraternity on the Armour campus. On August 27, 1919, the Rho Delta Rho Fraternity was chartered. Soon afterward a formal petition was drawn up and presented to the Institute. The petition was accepted, and n February, 1920, Rho Delta Rho was established on the Armour Campus as a local fraternity. The initial membership of this group was only ten in number, but because of the ideals set by these ten charter members and the sincerity of the men following in their footsteps the fraternity has thrived and increased in both size and importance on the campus. An important and integral part of the fraternity is the large and extremely active alumni chapter. Two IlNuJrtJ Forty-tuo Two Hundred forty-three mmm.w - ' 7 A c SIGMA ALPHA MU Founded at College of Tlx City of New York 1909 e SIGMA EPSILON CHAPTER Established 1922 ACTIVE MEMBERS Irving M. Addis Stanley Bernstein Lewis Arcnson Herbert Kreisman Orville T. Barnett Sidney H. Morris Milton J. Winogrond PLEDGES Julius Frank Zorro Rubin Barnett. Morri . Tinogrond, Krcitman Ttto UunJrtJ Forly-foui Colors Purple arui White Flower Purple Aster SOCIAL CALENDAR Smoker....................... Annual Pledge Party National Convention House Party Founderâs Day Dinner Dance............. House Party ..................... Smoker ................................ Chicago Alumni Banquet House Party and Installation of Officers Farewell Banquet ..................... ......October 5 October 50 . December 25, 27 December 31 ......February 5 February 25 ........ March 1 April 3 April 15 ...........June 3 Addis, Bernstein, Aronson, Frank Two IlNnJreJ Forty-five TRIANGLE Founded at University of Illinois in 1907 ARMOUR CHAPTER Established 192) 5222 South Michigan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS Phillip C. Huntly Sholto M. Spears William F. McCaughcy Charles A. Tibbals HONORARY MEMBERS Harold R. Phalcn Walter A. Rcinert Vernon Alexander John J. Bachncr Gunner E. Berglund Harold W. Bodinson Carl Clanton Arthur J. Cohrs Raymond J. Dufour ACTIVE MEMBERS Roy Ekroth Edwin C. Kenner Stephen M. Lillis Robert Lyford William A. Malloy George B. MeBrady Edward McDonough Walter A. McWilliams Arthur Oberbcck Edwin A. Runge Frank Schmidt John E. Schrenier John Scott Eric H. Smith William Brown Edson Denny Harry Dollcnmaicr PLEDGES Charles Dugan Joseph Laschobcr Joseph McGrath George Quandcc Alexander, Berglund, Bodimon, Clanton. Dufour. Kenner McWilliams, Oberbeck, Bachner, Cohrs, Ekroth, Lillis Two Hundred Forty-six Colors Old Rose and Grey Flower None Be SOCIAL CALENDAR Rush Dance October 1 Alumni Banquet November 12 Initiation Banquet November 20 Snow Ball Dance December 17 Mid-Semester Dinner Dance February 1 Initiation Banquet March 19 Alumni Smoker March 25 Fathersâ and Mothersâ Day April 2 Initiatesâ Dance ...................................... . April 8 Founders' Day Banquet April 15 National Convention....................................April 27-28 Chapter Anniversary Banquet May 26 Senior Farewell Dance June 3 Malloy, MeBrady, McDonough, Runge, Schreiner, Smith Lyford, Brown, Denny, McGrath. Quandcc, Scott Tho Hundred Forly-sft ftt BETA PSI Founded Jointly at Armour and University of Illinois in 1924 BETA CHAPTER Established 1924 3337 South Michigan Boulevard FACULTY MEMBERS John F. Mangold Walter J. Bentley Eldon C. Grafton LcRoy S. Anderson Walter C. Breh Curtis R. Bristol Karl Brusa Emmett L. Cordes Armand J. Hahn John F. Hu mis ton Joseph L. Kubicka William W. Lange John A. Breh William W. Burson Kenneth E. Dunn John A. Hazelton Willis F. Kraemcr ACTIVE MEMBERS PLEDGES James A. McBride Ralph L. S. Scafuri Edwin N. Scarl Newton W. Snashall Dean B. Snapp Otto W. Staib Arthur L. Stcinhaus Roy H. Wittekindt Howard J. Zibblc Julius R. Kuh Charles Schnackel Myron B. Stevens David Timberlake Donald E. Young Anderton, W. C. Breh, Corde , Linge. Scafuri. Kubicka Stcinhau , Staib, Snapp, BruÂŤa, McBride, Scarl, Hahn Tur Hundred Forty-right Colors Black and Gold Blower None SOCIAL CALENDAR Rush Smoker Sept. 29 Theatre Party Sept. 30 Rush Dance ...............................................Oct. 1 Pledge Dance Oct. 29 Thanksgiving Dance Nov. 19 Christmas Dance Dec. 17 Valentine Party . Feb. 18 Initiation Banquet March 5 Annual Alumni Smoker April 9 Radio Party April 15 Parentsâ Tea .... May 7 Senior Farewell . May 20 Humitton, Searl, Snathall, Vfittckindt. Zibblc. J. A. Brch, Dunn Hazel ton, Kraemcr, Kuh, Schnackcl. Steven , Tinnberlakc, Young 7âuo HuaJrtJ forty-nine KAPPA DELTA EPSILON Organized as Umen in 1922 Reorganized as Kappa Delta Tan in 1924 Charter as Kappa Delta lipsilon in 19)1 ALPHA CHAPTER EACULTY MEMBER Joel M. Jacobson ACTIVE MEMBERS Jacob M. Bard Milton Hoffman William A. Holland Norman Krause Leonard Marcus Phil Roscnfeld George Rosenthal Morris Wise PLEDGE Oscat Boxer Roicnthal, Motfman, Holland, Bard Tuv Hundred Fifty SOCIAL CALENDAR Rushing Smoker Pledging Smoker New Yearâs Party Theatre Party Initiation at Dunes Initiation Smoker Dance Farewell Dinner October 1 November 12 December 31 February 3 March 16-18 April 7 . May 5 June 2 LOCAL FRATERNITY Kappa Delta Epsilon had its inception on March 19, 1922. This organization was given the name Umcn,ââtaken from the ancient Hebrew. Its true meaning is Builder,â and thus portrays the ideals of the group gathered under its banner. The Umcn was officially recognized by the Institute in April, 1922. I.ater it was reor- ganized as a fraternity and chartered in 1924. In 1926, in compliance with a suggestion from the Institute, the name was changed from Umcn to the Greek Letter term. Kappa Delta Tau. Under the new name, sym- bolical of the fraternityâs ideals, they have rapidly advanced and they now hold a meritorious position among the social organizations on the campus. In 1931 the fraternity was incorporated under the laws of the state of Illinois and in order to avoid duplication of the name it was changed to Kappa Delta Epsilon. T(to Hundred fifty-one Miller. Pcivcy, Lange. Bauman. Larson Mitchell, Barnett, Meyer, Dufour, Andcrion INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL William W. Lange, Beta Psi Phi Kappa Sigma Delta Tau Delta Theta Xi Sigma Kappa Delta Phi Pi Phi Sigma Alpha Mu Rho Delta Rho Triangle........................ Beta Psi Kappa Delta Epsilon The Interfraternity Council was organized in 1927 for the purpose of controlling the relationships between the ten social fraterni- ties at Armour Institute. The Interfraternity Council is the successor to the old Interfra- ternity Rushing Committee. The purpose of the Interfraternity Council has been to bring about a closer relationship between the fraternities and also between these organizations and the Institute. This group handles all matters of common interest such as interfraternity sports, sing, scholar- ship, rushing, pledging and initiation rules. The council proper is made up of the presi- ...................President John H. Miller Thcnus C. Pcavcy Wilbur E. Bauman ...................Bradford Larson Charles R. Mitchell Orville T. Barnett Herman Meyer Raymond J. DuEour LcRoy S. Anderson Philip Roscnfcld dents of each social fraternity on the campus, thereby giving each fraternity an opportu- nity to voice its opinion on matters of com- mon interest. In an effort to better establish the rushing regulations this year it was decided to publish a Handbook, the purpose of which was to acquaint the freshmen with the histories of the various fraternities on the campus, as well as to inform them of the rushing rules. This proved of great value, both to the men desir- ous of joining a fraternity, and to the frater- nities themselves. Two Hundred Fifty-two STRAY GREEKS William G. Booth . Wisconsin Sigma Chi Robert G. Chcatam . . North Carolina Chi Psi Harold E. Cox . Beloit College Beta Theta Pi Theodore G. Dclang . . Illinois Chi Phi August J. Kreuzkamp Massachusetts Institute of Technology Phi Kappa George D. Kreuzkamp Massachusetts Institue of Technology Phi Kappa Charles P. Kufifcl Chicago Lambda Chi Alpha W. R. Gilmore Illinois Sigma Chi Stephen A. Vanderpoortcn Illinois Sigma Phi Sigma Tuv Hundred Fifty-thru story tiling it an age-old art. tbrnt lain which the court jnttr of medieval Jays tolJ to his lord gained for him Iris bread, when coni incingiy presented, list stories of the materials, life manufac iire, and tire use of bis products are tire means by which tin modern salesman earns his living. the general exhibits building is a vast library, conceived and erected for just tire purpose of telling in word and object the stories of the usefulness and desirability of the many varied products llrere laid before the fair visitors. AiTIITISliC our storin shall be our deeds, may llrey be sound and true. ARMOUR INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY CHICAGO Offers four-year courses ami graduate work in Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering Fire Protection Engineering Architecture General Science Programs of instruction arc carefully planned to provide a background for advance in the professional fields; to develop a capacity for logical thinking; and to stimulate an active interest in current scientific, business, and social problems. Summer Session June 19 to July 28 First semester begins September IS, 19)) THE INSTITUTE BULLETIN WILL BE SENT ON APPLICATION Two IlunJrtJ Fifty-fire Sold Only at Better Places CONGRESS SPECIAL SUPREME AMONG ICECREAMS Not in the Trustâ A. M. Jens, â04 Wm. M. Murray JENS, MURRAY CO. Insurance 175 ÂĽ. Jackson Blvd. Room 748 Phone Wab. 3420 Victory 0890 Tillic Cywon, Prop. For Homelike Wholesome Food EAT AT GEISLERâS RESTAURANT 1036 East 31st Street Compliments of SMITH DRUG CO. L. M. Smith, R.Ph. Cut Rate Druggists N. E. Cor. Indiana Avc. and 31st Street Phone Calumet 6224 Victory 0809 M. Geller. Prop. CLOVER FARM STORES GROCERY, MEATS, FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Wlxilesale and Retail We Deliver 113 East 31st Street Tuv Hundred Fifty-six B) Id DOM Photographers CHICAGO Official Photographers for the C yc e 0 t 1933 190 N. State Street Central 5 807 7'uv HuuJrcd fifly-uvtn Tuo Hundred Fifty-tight LIINDIEN PRINTING CQ j 7 jmnrmt jhtierjon jtrbet CttttllCAâŹ0,ll lULIINOlU oProducers of oJufierfine 99buntals fa CCNLILIEGIE AND ItitllGttit CtTtlOOt IPUBUICAiniOW IPIRJINYIEPT Ttt-o HunJrtJ fitly-nine Telephone Blvâd 7670 It s Wise SUNKIST PIES To Buy George M. Harris, President WÂŤ Call Phone â ((ri)L MICHIGAN Deliver 1516 rruxkk 6 . dpnt nigfdt! HOLLIDAY'S DELUXE SHOE REPAIR CO.ri 77 E. 3Stm.ST. AT MICHIGAN AVÂŁ. i SENIOR INDEX Alexander, V. C. SI, 52, 180, 246 Altschuler, M. 52 Andersen. W. C. 51, 52, 169, 197 Anderson, 1.. S. 52, 184, 248, 252 Babcock, G. S. 64 Bannasch, H. J. 50, 5 1, 52, 86, 184, 215 Barnett, O. T. 51, 52, 94, 121, 170, 171, 173, 201, 205, 244, 252 Baumann, W. E. 52, 232, 252 Beard, E. G............................................. 51, 52, 64, 180, 200, 213 Becker. H. F. 5 2. 171, 184, 205 Bcemsterbo;r. G. J., 50. 52. 105, 1 10, 120, 121, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144. 145, 180, 213 Belton, G. R. 51, 52. i76, 232 Berglund, G. E. 52, 184, 246 Bestler, P. 53, 221 Bockholt, W. C. 53 Bodinson. H. W. 53, 110, 171, 184, 246 Bollinger, E. C. 51, 53, 110 Booth, W. G. 50, 53, 86, 182, 221, 253 Bottorf. P. A. 5 3, 180 Bronwcll, A. B. 5 3, 178 Buehne, W. G. 50, 53, 64. 105, 120, 121, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 203, 217 Burnet. A. D. 51. 53, 180 Cameron, H. J. 5 3, 138 Campionc, J. L. 5 3, 121, 176 Carlstonc, P. A. 53, 176, 203, 217 Carlstrom, R. W. 50, 54. 64, 86, 94, 104, 105, 1 18, 1 19, 120, 121, 148, 149, 150, 167, 184, 200, 201, 232 Christensen, C. C............ . 54 Cislak, J. F. ..........54, 176 Clanton, C. N. 54. Ill, 184. 185, 188, 191, 200, 201, 203, 215, 219, 246 Cole. A...... 64 Collick, M. A. 54, 171, 178, 190, 205, 219, 232 Cone, S. B. 54. Ill, 120, 121, 154, 205, 209, 228 Cordes, E. L. 54, 121, 132, 135, 248 Curran. E. L. 54. 169, 184, 205 Davies, W. W. 50, 51, 54. 64. 86, 104, 191, 197, 200, 201, 203, 209 Demikis, A. 54, 178 Di Orio. P. ......................... 54, 178 Dombrowski, R. J. 54, 178 Donnellan, J. F............................................................5 5, 180 Dubsky, F. A. ................................................................. 5 5 Dufour, R. J. 5 1, 55, 94, 1 10, 176, 200, 203, 217, 246, 252 TtiO HunJrcJ Si l) SENIOR INDEX (Continued) Dumscr, W. T. 5 5, 171, 178, 207 Dunham, E. A. 5 5, 178, 207 Eberth, E. E. 55, 171, 178, 205, 207, 224 Emling, C. A. . 55 Erisman, M. J. 51. 55. 94. 11 1, 132, 171, 176, 205, 217 Fcinbcrg, A. 5 5, 240 Ecrnbach, J. D......................................................... 50, 5 5, 178 Fishman, H. 5 5, 171, 211, 240 Fuhrcr, M............................................................ 5 5, 108, 176 Gabriel, L. 51. 64, 180, 213 Galvani. V. J. 50, 56, 120, 121, 124, 125, 129, 167, 182, 211 Gcss, M. N.................................................................... 56, 178 Giovan, N. C. . . . 64. 120, 121, 148, 150, 180, 236 Gisskc, E..................................................................... 56, 238 Goo, K. M. . 56, 176 Gura, J. J............. . 50, 56, 169, 184 Hacklcy, K. L. 56, 195, 21 1 Hallen, G. K. ......... . . 56 Hanrahan, G...............................................................56, ISO Hclmick, A. H. 56, 120, 135, 167, 182, 221 Hess, R. A. .......... 56 Hoffman, W. C. 56. 176, 196, 217 Hollmann, W. G. 56, 182, 21 1, 221 Hulswit, W. H. 57, 178 Jackson, J. R. 57. 223 Jackson, W. D. 57, 232 James, E. H...... . . 57 Janssen, W. A. 51,57 Jenson, G., Jr. ................ 57 Job, B. W. 57, 178 Johannisson. S. 57, 120, 121, 156, 157, 182, 221 Johnson. I. C. 50. 57, 86, 94, 111, 121, 140, 145 Juvinall, J. W. 57, 64, 104, 171, 173, 178, 200, 201, 203, 205, 207, 224 Kaiser, C. A......................................................................... 57 Kampwirch, J. L. 57, 171, 180, 203 Kenner, E. C. 51. 58. 86, 171, 184, 246 Kerrigan, V. M. 63, 178 Knudson, R. I................................................................ .58, 169 Krawitz, L . 58, 180, 240 Krcuzkamp, A. J. 50, 58, 120, 121, 133, 135, 136, 253 Kubicck, E. C. ............................................................... 58, 171 Kubicka, J. L. 58, 248 Lange, W. W. 51, 58. 105, 167, 169, 178, 201, 203, 205, 207, 219, 248, 252 Larson, B. 50, 58, 108, 184, 203, 215, 236, 252 Larson, W. H. 64, 169, 228 Lcnki, S. T. 58 Loesche, B. H. 50, 51, 58, 167, 180, 181, 203, 213 Lomasney, E. P. 58, 168, 169, 173, 182. 205 Luckcrman, P. . . 5S, 182 Luckett, T. D. 59. 209, 228 MacIntyre, A. M. ..........................................59, 178 MacLcnnan, J. I. 64, 238 Mahone, A. L. ............. . 64 Marks, C. W. . . 59 Mauer, J. T. 59, 180, 213 McKenna, G. W. 59 McLane, J. R. 59, 228 McWilliams, W. A. 64,180,246 Ttto Hundred Sixty SENIOR INDEX (Continued) Meehan, R. F. 59, 1 19, 188, 219, 232 Meyer, A. L. . 59 Meyer, H............................................................. 59, 180, 240, 252 Meyer, R. N. 59 Miller, J. H. 51. 59, 167, 182, 205, 21 1, 221, 224, 252 Mitchell, C. R. 59, 238, 252 Moline, R. W. 60 Monger, H. J............................. 60. 109, 167, 169, 171, 176, 177, 197, 217 Morevae, J. 60, 203, 217 Morris, S. H. 60, 171, 244 Nelson, C. A..................................................................60, 232 Nelson, H. P. 60 Nelson. R. E. 51, 60, 1 1 1, 170, 171, 173, 176, 205, 217, 232 Paine, F. W. 60, 64. 105, 121, 154, 155, 171, 182, 195, 200, 201, 205, 21 1 Pcchman, J. R. 60, 184, 232 Penfold, N. C. 60, 176, 217 Peterson, V. P....... ...........................................60, 178 Pihl, S. E. . . ............................60, 176 Plhak, R. L. 61 Pocdtke, C. H. 61 Priban, M. I.. 61, 178, 207 Rasmussen, H. 61 Ream, A. M...................................................... ..61, 169, 182, 221 Reardon. E. P. 61, 178, 190, 219 Reber, G. .............................................................61, 178 Reynolds, H. C. 61, 178 Rohrer, J. A. .....................61, 238 Rosenfcld, P. . .... .61, 180, 250, 252 Rowe, H. C. 64, 178 Rvchlik, R. F. 61. 171, 173, 178, 205, 207 Sademan, E. E. 61. 104, 11 1, 120, 121, 132, 133, 134, 135, 184 Sanchez, J. R. 62 Sandstedt, J. S. 62 Scafuri, R. L. 50, 62,248 Schultz, C. C. 62 Schwenncsen, D. G. 62, 167, 178, 179 Shaver, E. G. 64, 169, 194 Siegal, I. 62 Simons. C. K. . 2, 51, 62, 166, 167, 176, 205, 224 Skubic, L. F. .................................................62, 209 Smcthclls, W. T. .......................................................... 50, 62, 232 Snapp, D. B. 62, 184, 248 Snelling, E. A. 50, 62, 178 Sommer, C. B. 51, 62, 104, 120, 121, 124, 125, 126, 149, 209 Sorensen, J. T. 63, 105, 121, 148, 167, 168, 169, 173, 184, 200, 201, 203, 205, 215, 232 Spawn, O. J. 63 Staib, O. W. 63, 184, 248 Steinhaus, A. L. 63, 184, 188, 190, 219, 248 Terp, G. W. 50, 63, 209 Tufts, R. R. 63, 228 Tyler, W. W. 63, 128, 232 Vanderpoorten. S. 64, 184, 203, 253 Wandrcy, E. 63, 167, 176, 195 Weldon, W. J. 63, 1 19, 120, 121, 156, 157, 184 Wilson. D. G. 63, 178, 195, 207 Winogrond, M. 63, 182, 244 Wise, Morris ....................................63, 250 Zvonecek, J. W. . . 63, 176 Tuo HriuJrrJ Sixty. ito TABLE OF CONTENTS Administration . 15 Golf 156 Alpha Chi Sigma 220 Honor Aâ Dinner 120 American Inst, of Chemical Engineers 182 Honor Aâ Society 91 American Inst, of Civil Engineers 178 Honorary Fraternity Council 200 American Society of Mech. Engineers 176 .... 103 Armour Alumni Association 43 Humanities 38 Armour Alumni Reunion 46 Intcrclass Athletics 162 Armour Engineer 168 Interfraternity Athletics 163 Armour Institute, Main Buildings 9 Interfratcrnity Council 252 Armour Players 197 Interhonorary Banquet 90 Armour Tech News 170 Interhonorary Dance 91 Armour Tech. Athletic Association 118 Junior Class 67 Armour Tech. Musical Clubs 188 Junior Prom 90 Armour Tech. Philatelic Society 197 Junior Informal 87 Athletic Administration 115 Junior Week 93 Athletic Dinner 91 Kappa Delta Epsilon 250 Baseball 123 Officers of Administration 2.1 Basketball 139 Orchestra 191 Beta Psi 248 Phi Kappa Sigma 224 Black Knight 201 Phi Lambda Upsilon 210 Board of Athletic Control 119 Phi Pi Phi 258 173 Pi Nu Epsilon 218 Boxing Campus Club Chess Club 158 194 197 Pi Tau Sigma President, The President Emeritus 216 18 20 90 Chi Epsilon 212 240 Coaching Staff 117 Rifle Club 195 Commencement 65 Salamander 214 Cunningham, James D. 4, 22 Scarab 208 Cycle 166 Schommcrâs Message 116 Dedication 4 Senior Class 49 Delta Tau Delta 228 Senior Informal 86 Dept, of Architecture 34 Shops 39 Dept, of Chemical Engineering 30 Sigma Alpha Mu 244 Dept, of Civil Engineering 28 Sigma Kappa Delta 236 Dept, of Electrical Engineering 32 Sophomore Class 73 Dept, of Fire Protection Engineering 33 Sphinx 204 Dept, of Mechanical Engineering 26 Stray Greeks 253 Dept, of Science 36 Summer Camp 99 Development Plan 22 Swimming 147 Director of Athletics 116 Tau Beta Pi 202 Eta Kappa Nu. 206 Tennis 154 Faculty, The 25 Theta Xi 232 Faculty Club, The 40 Title Page 5 Faculty Committee 172 Track 131 Feature Section 107 Triangle 246 Fire Protection Engineering Society 184 Truss Club 196 Freshman Class 79 Trustees . . 16 Freshman-Sophomore Informal 1951-1932 88 Wearers of the A 121 Freshman-Sophomore Informal 1932-1933 89 Western Society of Engineers ISO Glee Club 190 Wrestling . . 160 LIST OF ADVERTISERS Armour Institute of Technology 255 Goodman Ice Cream Co. 256 Bloom Photographers 257 Jens, Murray and Co. 256 Clover Farm Stores 256 I.indcn Printing Co 259 Holidayâs Deluxe Shoe Repair Co. 260 Pontiac Engraving Co. 258 Gcislcrâs Restaurant 256 7'kw Hundred Sixty-three lev bale i isioned theadministrators as the pi ay right , grant park as the stage, Chicago's skyline as the back- drop, and the time as from the unknown to eternity, let now the curtain ring down on the close of the first century of Chicagoâs history and tire end of the century of progress, but let this year mark only tire close of the first really eventful chapter in our hope- ful litet. - i i.V. 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