Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)
- Class of 1914
Page 1 of 438
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 438 of the 1914 volume:
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PUBLIC UBRARY l ' iJ ix p. FORT WAYNE ALLEN CO , iNDj INDIANA COUUfc i w Gri 3 1833 01703 8529 iGc 977.2 Ir.2795s 1914 Indians University Arbutus ' ' INDIANA UNIVERSITY ARBUTUS NINETEEN HUNDRED FOURTEEN DWIGHT C PARK 3 LAWRENCE BOCK STAFFORD ENGRAVI NG.COM PANY PRINTED AND BOUND BY THE WILLIAM MITCHELL PRI NTINGlCOMPANY GREENFIELD. INDIANA HE nnBUTU5 BY THE I SENIOR CLH55 OF INDIHNHUNIVER5(ITY Allen County Public Library 00 Webster Street Fpo Box 2270 Fport Wayne, IN 46801-2270 1 ' II E A R 1! L ' 1 I ' S T HE trailing Arbutus is a modest, spring flower which blossoms on the clay-covered hillsides of Monroe county. The blossoms, seldom large, are of a pink to red color with beautiful green leaves. One hill in particular, near Bloomington, is known for the abundance of Arbutus blossoms found there and de- rives its name from such. The Senior publication takes its title from this flower which appears shortly before the usual date of publication. This year ' s publication contains four hundred and thirty-two pages, requiring S.SOO pounds o( paper, 1,000 pounds of boards for backs, 3,000 square feet of cow hide and SO pounds of ink. It gives in verse, prose and pictures, a tiue relation of such events and occurences of note as have happened at Indiana University during the year Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen. Lu C3 486876 iiantps Ultttromb ISilrii l]o siuiia nf a wraith b l in rnmmuti numrr- slii i— tbr laiiyh nf thr lirnok. tbr ftri of thr hnv. tbr smrll of tbr rnsr auii tlir unirrB nf rhtliirnt at play— a Pnrt lulin lias maiir us tint an inurli tn tliitik as tn rrmrntbrr: mljnar pnrtry Irabs Its bark to tbr smiburut (Sahs at pUni— wr irbtratr tbin book. TAMES WHITCOMR RILEY, it has been oiven •J oii to know deeply the life of a people. It ha.s been given von to see the central trnth that the language and manners and faiths of a people are of essential value and dignity. There has fallen upon you the gift of tongues, so that men from afar, the wise, and the simple hear and understand you. .Above all. our own people understand you. The old farmer at the close of his long battle with the wilderness sees the land glorified about him by your song. The little children hear you and confer upon you an honor higher than any academic dignity when they gather with joy about vour feet. Now. therefore, the Uni- versity of Indiana, which is also the child of the peo- ple, which represents their spirit and their hojie. in- vites you to academic fellowship in conferring upon you the degree of Doctor of Laws. These are the words which President Bryan spoke on the occasion of Mr. Riley ' s receiving the honorary degfee in IQ07. By Con liny ,ij Mnffel-Clii, 3iii5tni:njj lilts. February 21st, 19 14 To The Senior Class, State University. Dear friends; The new honor from my State University, that your letter invites ma to accept, inspires the memory of the many good things Indiana and its students have brought me, till, verily my cup runneth over with the tender gladness of it all. I thank the mambers of the Senior Class with fullest, most affectionate appreciation. Ever faithfully and loyally. , unu..s tr i!,L-o,n(; i .C.., A niLLKCK AXXUAL IS (JlITKLIKK A CIRtUS. I ' ACII V i. R IT IS 1. Ilk l,i )i:i l |;V tU tlie advance notices as ISigger and I ' .etter Than Ever Before; I-AcrN thir.o New ISiit the Xanie. I ' .iit the same trapeze act, the san:e slap-stick coniedv, the same hare-back riders, the same traineil seal exhibition is presented with onlv a change in red unifnrnis for the band. So witli tlie .-Irhiitiis.—we are still sivins the same old exhibition of the editorial hioh dive and the literary tight-wire act, with- out even a new coat of paint for the chariots. TT W ' e began the work on the borik with our own heads in the clouds ; we have tU finished by being tarred in jirinters ink ard feathered with criticism. W ' e have tried to be urigiiial, but about the only wav in which we have succeeded is in l)ublishing the book a month later than usual. TT 1 he nights have not been tilled w itb music, cares have infested the davs, priut- ers ' ghosts have haunted our sleep. At times we ha e almost despaired of publication, but we have sworn by the spirits of Don Herold and held abiding faith in the belief that printer ' s ink, like murder, z nll out. TT ' e have tried much, succeeded a little, failed a great deal. We present this TU book, — not as the biggest, not as the best, not as one whollv perfect, — but a book on which we have lalmred with sincerity and devotion, — a work that repre- sents our best efforts at making a IJook. That it please, is our earnest desire and hope; if it fails in this respect our labor shall have been in vain. P.ut, in either event, we shall join in looking forward toward the coming nf the liest Ever. SnDiana Oniiicrsitp 3tbutus BOARD OF ARBUTUS MANAGERS T( ) THI-: BOARD CIF BUSINESS MAXAGICRS FALL THE FIXAXCL L WORRIES. Printers must be paid, engravers demand recompense for services cheer- fully granted, photographers ask to be kindly remembered when the shekels are passed out, and even the artists draw on the treasury. The laborer is worthv of his hire, the hungry must be fed, liills must be paid, and many promises will TKit get a iliscount, for money talks. Going, — going, — gone ; beware of a deficit. Those who have dreamed of, watched over, cared for and wrestled with this years Book, include the following money-changers, fee-collectors and book-agents who would ncit undertake to manage a Patent ledicine Almanac, now. D. Lawrence Bock _ Business Manager Howard Telle President Clarence McNabb Treasurer Ernest Force _ Secretary Frank D. Martin _. Medical School Manager j inetccn I unDtcD ifourtcen 1 ' ffH H ' lJ ' H JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus BOARD OF ARBUTUS EDITORS ASIDE FROM KXPKRIMKXTIXG WITH A REBUILT, ULD-STVI.E, X( X- ISIRLE tvpewriter and shariiening- pencils, the Board of Editors spends its spare time in soliciting items, ramsacking mental vacuums for ideas and pass- in - bv typographical errors in attempts at reading proof which even an ink-eyed Printer ' s Devil could see. An_ unsuspecting young literary cub, who feels that he hr.s editorial genius which should be conserved and published in book form, gets a taste of Printer ' s Ink, consumes a volume of Mark Twain, is elected to the Arbutus Hoard, and sets out to issue a book which makes all previous annuals look like a garden-seed catalogue. Dwight C, Park Editor-in-Chief Carl Schultz Venice Kaiser Chester L, DeBrular Albert L, Rabb Mineteen !DunDrcD jTourtccn SnDiana ainitiersitp arbutus ARBUTUS STAFF Literary: Robert F. Harris, Mary Louise Espey, Fred Myers, Erenia ' ilk, Simnn Twining ' , George Shively, Arthur Leible. Dramatics: Charles F ' iper, Charles I. Baker. AIusic : Frederick Durham. Ralph Mitchell. Fk. turi;s : .Vrtie l!urk, ilbur ( Iruber, Ralph an X ' aler. Press: ] lark Hanier, Don .McUctt, Charles Crampton. Walter McCarty. Soci. l: Llovd Cla C( inb, .Mary Jackson, Crystal Fall. Or. T()RY : ' erlin Herrold, ( )rville Hubbard, Robert . rnistrong. Law .School: Cecil liall, Kenneth Call, F. C. (Irllion, Ennnett Choate. DEP. Rr-Mi-.- r. L Ci-Ui ' .s: Ruth Telfer, ard Recder, Farl R. .M?.rtir, Midge McMillan. .Athletics: John H. oods, Floyd Wright, Hays lUrskirk, Floyd hden-.ing. Fr- terxitii-:s : Herbert Horner, Rotiert Payton. SoRORiriKS: Helen liarbour, Cecile Hanna, Helen Hovey, Helen Paterson. ? 1edic. l School: Paul Harninn, altcr Jones. L man ( )vershiner, Murl E. Fulk. F.vcui.TV : Elizabeth Kachlew Christine Riedner. SicxiiiRs: X ' ictor Reamer, liarrctt Cockrum. ( imer Loop. Relkuo.x : Ruth Reeves, Susie Thro. Ruth Hemmersbaugh, Roy Riuidebush. Art: George .Sutton, Fluyd Carter. Pictures : Clarence Artman, h ' rances Trackwell. Graduate School: b ' orrest Tucker, Clitiord Woody, Paul Carlisle. lic.MORi.M.s : James Robinson, Walter Danner. Tokes : Helen P)artle -. Doroth - Ketcham. JI3meieen l unDteD jToutteen bJPbq JnDiana Oniticrsftp arbutus ASSOCIATE EDITORS npHIS ear a new ver.ture in the filiti irial wcrk (in the Avbutiis was intnuluced - - 1) the ' a])| nintnKnt nf three Associate pjlitcrs, ti) act in an intermediary capacit ' between the liuard of Editurs and the Staft. Frances Hankemeier, William O. Trapp, Christine Biller. RENDER UNTO CAESAR- I the making ot liooks there is no end to thu aid wliich may ho given to Iht autlior. Tlie editors of this hook are indelited to many friends who took a kindly interest in the work and contrihuted vakiahle favors. Especially do we desire to express our appreciation of the many helpful suggestions given concerning the typographical appearance, hy Doctor Samuel 1 ' .. Harding and Mr. -fosiipli W. Piorcy, and to acknowledge the Alumni Quarterly as a source of aid in gathering the news of the rear. jeincteen I unDreO jFoutteen For the purpose of intrud- ing the children. — Legend of Sleepy Hollow. PRESIDENT WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN JI3ineteEn l unDreD jFouttccn THE SONS OF MARY AND THE SONS OF MARTHA MR. KlI ' I.IXi; liAS LATICI.V WKITTICN A POEM EN- title.l, The Sons of Martha. The alhision is to the l ' )il)le story whicli tells how Martha, who was cumbered with iiuich serving, while Mary sat at Tesus feet, came to jesus and said, Lord dost thou not care that my sister hatli left nie to serve alone? I ' .id her therefore that she help me. Whereupon Jesus answered and said, Martha, Martha, thou art trou- bled about many things. I ' .ut one thing is needful, and Mary hath chosen that good part whicli sliall not be taken away from her. Mr. Kipling has taken the part of Martha, and her kind — of that great company who he savs, —must wait upon Mary ' s Sons— world without end, re- prieve, or rest. It is their care in all the ages to take the huffet and cushion the shock ; It is their care that tlie gear engages ; it is their care that the switches lock. They finger death at their glove ' s end when they piece and repiece the living wires. He rears against the gates they tend : tliev feed him hungry behind their fires. To these from birtli is Belief forliiddcn ; from these till death is relief afar, — They are concerned with matters hidden, — under the earth line their alters are. Lift ye the stone, or cleave the wood, to make a path more fair or fiat, — Lo I it is black already with blood some Sons of .Martha spilled for that. Meanwhile, he says, the Sons of Mary —sit at the Feet, and they hear The Word— they know how truly the promise runs. They have cast their burden upon the Lord, and— the Lord He lays it on Alartha ' s Sons. My friends, the matter of these lines deeplv concerns vou. For in truth most of you are the children of .Martha. You are to be cumbered with much .serving. Vou are to bear the burden and heat of the days. You are to be weary with the work which ou have chosen. ar:d intolerably weary with the drudgery which vou have not chosen, ' ou are to enter fine fields of enter- prise and to see yourselves grow quickly old with only a little accomplished. You are to begin in the freedom SnDiana 2Jnitiersitp arbutus 1)1 ciiuh anil (iu are lu end each in his own prison of habits. Y(jii are to face society bearing its ancient nereiHtary linrden of tasks, of iniquities, of sorrows, and to find presently tliat something of all this has been laid upon you. This, as Kipling sees, is the bitter por- tion of the Children of Martha. Xevertheless, vou can bear all this with patience, with courage, even with deepening happiness — on one ' condition. On one condition not found in Kipling ' s Pagan Psalm of Labor }0u can meet life at its hardest without inner defeat. This one condition of life for the Sons of Martha is some share in the vision of the Sons of Mary. It is, I think, a most certain fact of history that men have not lived bv bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of (_iod. The magic words of the Sons of lary in every generation have done as much ti keep i mr race from perishing as the bread which they have eaten. There is corn every year upon the ISanks of Deer- creek, but none so precious as the song that grew there one day. The Spartans had no poet. They borrowed one. And thev believed that they won battles partly with their spears and partlv with the songs of the crippled Tyrtaeus, ] Ioses led the Israelites forty years through the Wilderness. He fed them with Manna from day to day. But he gave them the law. And the plain fact of his- tory is that their faith in the law has made the Israel- ites a nation which fortv centuries have not been able to ilestroy. The ' oman of Samaria drew water from the city well for the day ' s need. But by that well Jesus spoke wiirds which go home to the deepest thirst of man, the thirst for a life in which he can believe with all his heart. And so I sav to you, oh Children of Martha, you must do the work ; you were made for that. You must meet danger ; it takes risks to make a man. But alas ! If vou must do these things with a silent and darken- ing heart ! It need not be so. You can meet life sing- ing, — as the best men and the great races have always done — songs of cheer, songs of courage, songs of in- destructible hope, the songs of the useless Sons of Marv, jf3inetecn lt)unDrcD JFourtcen SnDiana UniMcmt 3r6utus FACULTY Charlks ALFRiii) M(isi:.MiLi.EK. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. A.i;., Indiana L ' niversit} ' , 1890. Frank William Tildex. Associate Professor of Greek. . .r,.. Hamilton College, i8i;2: . .. l, Harvard L ' ni -ersity. 1897. y.v.AiEs Ali;ert ' ooi)r,L ' R- ' , 1 -ofessor of - merican History and Politics. A. 11., Indiana I ' niversity, 18 C1: . . .m., 1885; pii.d., Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, i8go: LL.D., Colgate University, 1909. Schuyler Coleax D.wissox, Professor of Mathematics. . .u., Indiana L ' niversity, 1890; - .m., 1892: sc.d.. I ' niversity of Tubingen, 1900. HoR. t ' E Addison Hoef.m.vn, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of ( ireek. . .i!., Indiana l ' ni -ersity, 1881 : . .ii.. Harvard University, 1884. Alfred M.vxsfield P.rooks, Professor of Fine Arts. . .r,., Harvard University, 1894; a.m.. 1899. Burton Dorr ] Ivers, P ' rofessor of Anatomy. Ph. P.. Puchtel College, i8g3; - ..m., Cornell University, 1900: m.d., Uni- -ersity of Leipsic. 1902. Ulvs.se.s Shicr.max IIa. x. , Associate Professor of Mathematics. - .i;., Indiana University, 1895; a..m., 1898; ph.d., University of Penn- sylvania. 1905. Fraxk Avdelotte, Associate Professor of English. . .i;., Indiana L ' niversity, 1900; . .m., Harvard Universitv, 1903: b.litt., CJxford University. 1908. Alice Gi ex Coss. Instructor in German. . .i:., Indiana I ' niversity, i(jo8. CoR-V I ' lAkiiAkA Hexxel. Instri ' ctcir in Mathematics. A.I!., Indiana I ' niversity. ujoj; a.m.. 1908: pii.d., 1912. RoisEKT Edw.vrd Lvt xs, Professor of Chemistry. . .r.., Indiana University, i88g: . .m., 1890; ph,d., Universitv of Heidel- berg, 1894. jfI3ineteen ! unDtcD JFourteen SnDiana Onitiersitp 3rbutu$ Alhkkt I ' kederick Kueksticixkk, I ' rnfessor of Romance Lang uages. A.i;., University of Cincinnati. 1888; pii.d.. Johns Hopkins University, 1904. Warner 1 ite, Professor of Pliilosophy. A.r.., Haverford College, 1889: ph.d.. University of Pennsylvania, 1894. RuLi A Riix Ramsey. Associate Professor of Physics. A.I ' .., Indiana University, 1895: a.m.. 1898: PH.D., Cornell University, 1901. DA in Andrew Rothrock, Professor of lathematics. . .ii.. Indiana I ' niversity, 1892; . .m., 1893; pii.d.. University of Leipsic, i8.j8. Da id jNIyers Mottier, Professor of Botany. A.I!.. Indiana University, 1891 ; a.m., 1892; ph.d., University of Bonn, 1897. Edg. r Roscoe Cumings, Professor of Geology and Secretary of the Faculty. . .n.. Union College, 1897; ph.d., Yale University, 1903 George D.wis Morris, Associate Professor of French. Paris, 1912. Joseph Wieli. m Piercv, Director of Work in Journalism. Ulysses Grant ' E. TIIERLY, Professor of Economics and Social Science. A.i!., Colgate L ' niversity, 1890: PH.D., Cornell University, 1894: litt.d., Colgate University, 1910. ■H.l.IA-M A. Rawees, Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal . rts, and Pro- fessor of Political Economy. - .i;., Indiana University. 1884; - . m.. 1895; PH.D., Columbia Universit} ' . 1903. Ce- kence F. RL AL Y, Associate Professor of Chemistry. . .i ' .., Indiana University 1904; a.m.. 1905 ; PH.D., Columbia L ' niversity, 1908. Carl Wilhelm Ferdin. nd Osth. us, Professor of German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Ilildesheim, 1880: A. ' s .. Iniliana Univer- sity, 1890. Ali ' .i:rt I.udw 1(1 Kohlmeier, Instructor in History. . .i!., Indiana L ' niversity, 1908; a.m.. Harvard University, 191 1. Ernest Hir. m Lindley. Professor of Philosophy and Pyschology. - .i ' .., Indiana L ' niversity, 1893; A.w.. 1894; PH.D., Clark L ' niversity, 1897. WiLL.VERED Howe. Assistant in Women ' s Gymnasium. William Osc. r Tr. pp, Teaching Fellow in English. 2(1 J13inetecn I unDtcD jFourteen 3nDiana 23niticrsitp 3rbutus Ruth Kkhfekx .Maxwki.i,. InstructDr in l- rench. A.I ' .., Indiana I ' niversity, lyoj. ' iLi;uR Adelmax Cik-,sh. ll. As.sociate Professor of Astronomy. B.S.. Albion College, 1895: a.m.. Indiana Universit} ' , 1902. Paul Johnsox C. ruisle, A.B., Teaching Assistant in Chemistry. luLiETTE Maxwell, Director of Physical Training for Women. A.I!., Indiana L ' niversitv, 1883; Graduate, Sargent ' s Normal School of Physical Training. 1890. George Hall Hyslop, Laboratory Assistant in Philosophy. Arthur Henry Berxdt, Director of Inter-Collegiate Athletics. . .i!., Indiana University, 191 1. Luther A. Peluegeu, A.B., Research I- ' ellow in CJerman. Ch. kles Peltox Hutchixs, Professor of Physical Training for Alen. M). , Long Island College Hospital, 1897. AxDKEU Texxaxt Wylh-;, Instructor in Er.glish. A.r.., Indiana L ' niversity, 1906; . .iL, 1907. James A. Kasi:, Instructor in Physical Training for ] Ien. Russell .-Ilgek Sh.xki ' , Instructor in English. A.i:., Indiana University, ujii. Ulysses Howi-: Smiiii, Instructor in Accounting. Ciraduate of Department of Conur.erce, Eureka College: a.b., Indiana Uni- versity, 1893. ' H.L Da id Howe, Professor of English. A.I!., Butler College, 1893; a. 11.. Harvard University, 1895; a.m., 1897; PH.D., 1899, AIel ix Eyerett H.vggerty, Associate Professor of Psychology, and Director of the Psychological Laboratory, A.r.., Indiana L ' niversit} ' , 1902; . .m., 1907; Pii.n., Harvard I ' niversitw 1910. C.VRL H. EiGEx.M.vxx, Dean of the Graduate School, Professor of Zoologv, and Director of the Biological Station. . .i:., Indiana I ' niversity, 1886: . .m., 1887; ph.d., 1889. Joiix L. Geigek, Assistant in Music. Will Scott, Assistant Professor of Zoologx ' . . .p,., Indiana University, 1908; . .ii., 1908; PH.D., 191 1. Arthur Lee I ' oley, Professor of Physics. A.i:., Indiana I ' niversity, 1890; . .m., rt ' .- ph.d., Cornell L ' niversity, 1897. GuiDO Herm.vxx S ' ITCMPEL, Associate Professor of Comparative Philology. A.I!., State I ' niversity of Iowa, 1899; a.m., L ' niversity of Wisconsin, 1894. JI3ineteen !£)unDtcD jFoutteen JInDiana Oniticrsitp Arbutus C][ A College Graduate adorns the com- mencement ]3latform far better than an Oleander but at work, he looks sorely out of place. The Valedictorian who charms with his eloquence and wis- dom may sometime develop into a fairly competent grocery clerk. A Degree to the Senior is sufficient but many diplo- mas will not fill a Position. A ' ' m, jQineteenJ unDteD jFoumen A portion of llir book rontatning jjtrturrs of tlir g rnioni. toyrtltin luitli rfrtaiu iiata of tlirir rolUunatr ranuTH atiii uarioua obatrnationB btr ottf Milltam g ' liakr- aprarr. who, prrliapa, kni ' ui as nturli of Inimau ttaturr aa (ID. I pitrg or (Sroror S itrl). —W. ®- S. SnDiana a3nft)ct0itp arfiutus ROBERT S. PAYTON Rockport History. Phi Gamma Delta, History Club, Pres- ident IBooster ' s Club ' 13, Press Club, Student Council, Student Marshals, Vice-President Jack- son Club ' i2- ' i3. Executive Committee ' i3- i4. Track Team, Sphinx Club, Assistant to Bursar T3-T4, Sigma Delta Chi, Arbutus Staff. He hath indeed a good outward happiness. —Much Ado About Nothing. EREAIA S:MITH WILK Riishrillc English. Kappa Alpha Theta, Arbutus Staff. Piv mv troth, a pleasant-spirited ladv. —Much Ado About Nothing. JACK HORNER Monon Economics. Kappa Sigma. He doth indeed show some sparks that are Hke wit. — Mucli Ado About Notliing. JOHX HAIT. ■OODS Priucctou History. Phi Kappa Psi, History Club, Press Club, Sigma Delta Chi, LTnion Revue Staff ' 12, Indiana Student ' ii- ' i2, ' i2- ' i3. Sporting Editor Jimior Book, Traveler ' s Club. He liath every month a new sworn brother. —Much Ado About Nothing. 4868 6 l ineteen unDteD jFourtccn GEORGE HUPP DEHORITY Ehi ' ood Economics. Beta Theta Pi, Sphinx Chib, Eco- nomics Club, Booster ' s Club ' i2- ' i3, Pan-Hellenic Council ' i3- ' i4, Traveler ' s Club, Jackson Club. How sweetly do vou inini.ster to love. —Much Ado AbonI Nothing. BESS FERX WILLIA IS Coiiucrsvillc Historv. Kappa Kappa Gamma, History Cluh, Woman ' s Council, Strut and Fret. An excellent head of hair. ' -T-a ' clfth Night. EPHRAOI VERN SAYERS Blooiiungton History. Band, Orchestra, History Club, Strut and Fret. Save thee friend, and tliv music ' -Tzvclfth Night. FRANK WHITE Indianapolis Economics. Economics Club, Cross Countr Team 1913, Track Team. The argument shall he thy running. ' - Hcnrv n SnDiana enitiersitp atfiutu0 HO ' ARD ' . HURXUXG Greeiisbury Political Science. President History, Club, Pres- ident Socialist Club, ' ice-President Franchise League. His words are a very fantastical banquet, just so many strange dislies. —Much Ado About Xothing. i-RAXCES HAXKE-AIEIER Indianapolis ( jcrnian. Delta Zeta, Phi Beta Kappa, Secretary Deutscher ' erein ii- ' i2. President 1913, Y. ' . C. A. Cabinet ' i2- ' i3. President Y. W. C. A. ' 13- ' 14, F ' resident Woman ' s Athletic Association 13- ' 14, Sophomore. Junior, Senior Basketball Teams, Junior. Senior Hockey Teams, Le Circle Francais, Arbutus Staff. ' You lack the season of all natures, sleep. ' -Macbctli. HORACE HOFF-AIAX Slicridaii I- ' conomics. Delta Tau Delta, Economics Club. The ladies call him sweet. ' — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. RALPH D. WELLOXS Biooinington Philosoph} ' . Indiana Club, Philosophy Club, Y. ' SI. C. A. Cabinet ' i2- ' i3- ' i4. There was never yet a philosopher that could endure tlie toothache patiently. — Much Ado About Nothing. JI3inetcen li)unDrcD jFoutteen BERRY } IcCT.l ' RE WHITAKER Aiiiicrsou I ' h siologv and Anatomy. Phi Cianima Delta. Sphinx Club, Freshman Scrap Captain, h ' reshman Football Team. ' arsity Football Team ' i i- ' i2- ' i3. Track Team ' i I- ' |2. ' I ' ll warrant him hcart-whulc. As You Like It. HELEX BARBOUR Blooiniiigtoii English. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Phi Beta Kappa, French Ckib, Arbutus Staff. The hand that hath made you fair hath made you good. — Measure for Measure. CLAUDE M. BOLSER A czi ' castle Philosophv. Kappa Sigma. ' You walk softly and look sweetly and say nothing. — Winter ' s Tale. MILO SOAIMERMLLE Soiitli Milford Chemistry. Independent Literary Society, Alpha Chi Sigma, Oh ! what a deal of scorn looks heautiful In the contempt and anger of his lip. —T ' ccelfth Night. UnDiana dniticrsitp arbutus ALBERT LI ' IXGSTOX RABB Indianapolis Economics. Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa, P)Oard Arbutus Editors, Economics Club, History Cluh. Writer ' s Club, Lincoln League, Junior Book- Staff 1913, Student Marshals. Your experience makes you sad. ' -As You Like It. RUTH ADAMS TELFER Blooniington Botany. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Botany Club, Philosoph} - Club. Woman ' s League Board i2- ' i3. ' So quiet and so sweet a style. — As You Like It. CHESTER HARRISON ED ' ARDS Modoc ' W ' liat a spendthrift is he of his tongue. — Tempest. R. LPH WALDEX ' AX ALER ' .roiiesboro conomics. Arbutus Staff, Glee Club ' r2- i3. ' 13- ' : 4, Economics Club, Traveler ' s Club. This fellow pecks up wit. as pigeons pease. — Lo ' c ' c ' s Labour ' s Lost. Nineteen ! unDteD jToutteen CHARLES M. PIPER Indiaiiafolis English. Beta Theta Pi. Senior Class Treasurer, Strut and Fret, Glee Club, Stage Manager Rob Roy, Babette, Union Revue, Mikado, Track Team ' i2- ' i3, English Club. Writer ' s Club, Arbutu? Staff. Does he not hold up his head, as it were, and strut in his gait? — Merry Wives of IVindsor. HELEN HOVEY Iiidiaiiat ' olis English. Delta Gamma, Theta Sigma Phi, Eng- lish Club, Orchestra, ' oman ' s Council 1912, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1912. An excellent musician, and her hair shall he of what color it please God. — Much Ado About Nothing. PAUL MONTGOMERY HARMAN Elwood Anatomy. Phi Rho Sigma, President Sophomore Class, Student Marshals, Skeleton Club, Assist- ant in Physiology. He can carve too. — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. ALBERT WILLIS YOUNGBLOOD Vankcctoivn His hair is of a good color. —As You Like If. SnDiana Oniticrsitp 3rt)utus JOHN BUNNEL You are so fat, sir John. -I Henry IV. MARY M. JACKSON .Vnc Palestine Enoiisli. Pi P.eta Phi. Who can Vilot that name with any just reproach? — Mnch Ado About Nothing. HARVEY E. STAHL Zionsz ' ille German. Phi Deka Kappa, Der Deutsche Yerein, Indepentlent Literary Society. ' A German one. ' -Cyinbeline. LOUIE R. HULL Fohoniville Physics. Delphian CUib, Physics Chib. Such a one is a natural philosopher. — As You Like It. iSinetecn l unDreD jFourteen NOBLE P. P.ARR Bnu-crillc Economics. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Economic- Club, Arbutus Staff, Pan Hellenic Council. ' He is so quiet. ' -}[cn-y IVivcs of JVindsor. EAIILY JESSE BOSTON .liidivsoii Latin. Pi P.eta Phi. You spake in Latin. ' -Merry H ' i ' cTS of IP ' iiidsoi. WEXDELT. ANTHONY BAKER Lyons History. History Club, Phi Delta Kappa His garments are rich, Init lie wears them not handsomely. — Winter ' s Talc. CARL H. SCHULTZ Blooiuiiigtoii Chemistry. Kappa Sigma, Alpha Chi Sigma, Booster ' s Club, IJoard Arbutus Editors, Varsit)- Baseball Team ' i2- i3- ' i4. He knows the game. -Hciirv VI. SnDiana Onitiersitp 9r6utu0 CHARLES IKE BAKER Troy Economics. Independent Literary Society, Gam- ma Eta Gamma, Strut and Fret, larquette Club, Economics Club. I do much wonder that one . . . will become the argument of his own scorn by falling in love. — Much Ado About Kothing. HELEN FAYE BARTLEY Oaktown Economics. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1913, Student Council 1 91 3, ' ice-President Senior Class, Eco- nomics Club, Arbutus Staff. In faith, lady, you have a merry heart. — Much Ado About Nothing. ROGER MILLS CRAIG Seymour Latin. ' He misses not much. — Tempest. A. ELLISTOX COLE Lafayette I ' hilnsophy. Glee Club, Philosophy Club, Jackson Club, Phi Gamma Delta. ' Strong imagination sees a crown Dropping upon thy head. — Tempest. jQinctecn I unDreD jFourtccn ORMLLE W. TIUnr.ARD Loogootec Economics. Delta Sigma Rho. Triangular De bating Team, Class Orator 1914. Very good orators, when they are out. they will spit. ' — As ] ' ou Like It. iAL UDE WATKINS Crav. ' fordsz ' ille English. Delphian, Woman ' s League, English Club. Know her hv her gait. — Tonpest. CHARLES CRAMPTON Blooiiuuglo)i Philosophy. hallow in Philosophy, Editor-in- Chief Indiana Student, Editor Red Book 1913, Editor-Business Manager Red Book 1914, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ' i3- ' i4, Booster ' s Club, Press Club, Sigma Delta Chi, Student Marshals, Graduate Club, English Club, Philosophy Club. Arbutus Staff ' 13- ' : 4, Skeleton Club. We are blest in thi man. as I may say, even blest. ' —Winter ' s Tale. ARTIE EDEN BURKE Blooiiiiiigtoii History. ' Instructed by the antiquary times. He must , lie is, he cannot Init be wise. ' -Troiliis and Cressida. SnDiana Oniucrsitp 3rbutu$ FLUYD DEWITT RIGHT Indianaj oUs Economics. President Association of the Unor- ganized, Booster ' s Club, Arbutus Staff, Student Marshals. Economics Club. Anotlier of liis fashion they have not : To lead their business. —Othello. DOROTHY KETCHAM Indianapolis Economics. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' oman s Council, Secretary-Treasurer Philosophy Club. Secretary-Treasurer Economics Club. Say. what ' s thy name? Thou hast a grim appearance. — Coriolanus. GEORGE WATERS FORD South Bend Economics. Sigma Nu, Economics Club, Union Revue Cast 191 3. Falstaff : Which of you know Ford of this town? Pistol : I ' . en the wight ; he is of substance good. — Merry Wiz-cs of Windsor. EUGEXE HIXRICHSEX JOHXSOX Blooniinyton English. Kappa Sigma. Boy, what sign is it, when a man of great spirit grows melancholy? — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. JBineteen 10unDteD Jfourtcen THURAIAX BRCJOKS RICE La Fontaine Botany. Graduate of Marion Normal College 1909, ' alparaiso L ' niversity 1912. Muncie Nor- mal 1 91 3. Now, Jove, in bis next commodity of hair, send thee a beard. —Twelfth Night. RUTH HEAIMERSBAUGH Bluoiiiiiujton English. Independent Literary Societv, Theta Sigma Phi. What an eje she bath ! rctliinks it sonnds a par- ley of provocation. —Othello. BRUCE ' ELKER McCULLOUGH Scottsbiirfj English. Delphian, President English Club, ' inner Riley Essay Contest, Philosophy Club. One of two contending in a prize. — Merehant of I ' eiiiee. CHESTER LEEL. ND DEBRULAR History. Board Arbutus Editors, History Club, Philosophy Club, Indiana Student Staff ' i2- ' i3, ' i3- ' i4, Sigma Delta Chi, Junior P.ook Staff. Class Historian. I know you by the waggling of your bead. — ] ' inter ' s Tale. JnDiana Uni ' oetsity arbutus ASA McKIXNEY Kciiipton Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. ' Hath any man seen him at the barber ' s? — Much Ado About Nothing. CHRISTINE RIEDNER Ez ' ansville Ensjhsh. Arbutus Staff. I saw her once Hop fort.v paces through the public street. — Antony and Cleopatra. FRED RIGGS Princeton Economics. Sigma Nu. ' He is of a very melancholy disposition. — Much Ado About Nothing. ALERED HENRY WETZEL Crothersville English. English Club. tartly that gentleman looks. — Much Ado About Nothing. JI3inEteen IDunDrcD JFourtecn DON C. WARREN Saratoga Zoology. Tlie very quietness of spirit. -Merchant of Venice JOSIE LILIAN LEE Frankfort Latin. ' Her hair, what colour? Brown, — Antony and Cleopatra. HUBERT GEORGE ANDERSON Tu ' ehe Mile Are you sick, Hubert? You look pale. -King John. MELVIN GRANT DAVLS Corydon History, History Club, ' A snapper up of unconsidered trifles. —Winter ' s Tale. 3InDiana Oniticrsitp arbutu0 HERBERT GLEXX HIEL South Bend ' You do look in a moved sort, As if vou were dismav ' d : be cheerful, sir. ' -Teiiil ' cst. MMAX ALICE ' OLKERS Tcrrc Haute Latin. ' As quiet as a lamb. -King John. HARRY C. MILHOLLAXD ] ' est port Mathematics. Of a cheerful, a pleasing eye. - Henrv IV BYROX S. LEGG ]VindfaU History. Phi Delta Kappa. ' A gentleman that loves to hear himself talk. — Romeo and Juliet. jQinetccn i utiDrcD jFourteen JOHN WESLEY CLINE Gary Chemistry. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Chi Sigma. A weighty and a serious brow. —Hciirv Fill. ERNA IRENE OEHLKUCH E-i ' aiis-i ' illc German. Independent Literary Society, Der Deutsche A ' ' erein, History Club, Le Cercle Fran- cais. Speak what terrible language you will. —All ' s Well That Ends Well. ELSIE SARAH STULTZ Clin ton German. Phi Beta Kappa, Der Deutsche Verein. Le Cercle Franc;ais. There ' s little of the melancholy element in her. — Much Ado About Nothing. RAY F. MYERS Dalcville Physics. Indiana Club, Phi Delta Kappa. Alay pass for a wise man. -Twelfth Night. 3InDiana Onitiersitp arbutus E. ROGERS SMITH luiglish. Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Rho Sisnia, Sphinx Club, Le Cercle Frangais. Union Revue ' i2- ' i . Free of speecli, sings, plays, and dances well. —Othello. AXXA ELLE ' A WADE Hoive t ierman. Delta Gamma, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1913, Deutsche ' erein. ' What call vou the town ' s name? -Hcnrv V. HARRIET : IITCHELL Edinburgh English. Kappa Alpha Theta, Philosophy Club. Of a noble modest nature. —Henry Till. VERLIX J. HARROLD 11 ' a r re n English. English Club. Inter-class Discussion i()i3. Cross Country Team 1913, Track Team, Inter-class Athletic Committee. He runs straight and even. — Heiirv IV. Nineteen It)unDreD jfoumcn OLA FLOYD NIXON Mathematics. Emanon. Delta Sigma Rho, Inter- class Discussion. Debating Teams ' ii- i2- ' i3, Jackson Club. Will speak more in a minute than he will stand tn in a month. — Koiiico and Juliet. LUCY MARGARET BOYD Rock-port Romance Languages. Le Cercle Frangais, Can with ease translate. — King Jolih. HELEN VIRGINIA IKERD Blooiiiiiintoii Mathematics. Pi Beta Phi, Euclidian Circle. She liath a brother. — Merry Jl ' iz ' cs of U ' iiidso: JOHN W. REYNOLDS Redkey Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. He ' s a bear, indeed, that lives like a lamb. — Corio ' .ir.HS. SnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus JOHN W. HOLDEAIAN Elkhart Chemistry. Came from the north. — Henrv IV. EDITH LOU GOAR Kirklin English. Graceful, and excellent. — Much Ado About Nothing. BLANCHE WELLONS Blooiiiiugton English. Indiana Club. English Club. Of spirit so still and qniet. —OtheUo. CARL WATSON Orleans ' Sirrah, thou knowest how Orleans is? — Henrv Vl. Jl3incteen I unDtcD jToumcn ROY R. ROL ' DEBUSH I ' ortrillc Mathematics. Indiana Club, Euclidian Circle. President Y. M. C. A. Spring- 191 2, Y. .M. C. , . Caliinet ' 13- ' 14. Arlnitus Staff. All liis iiiiiid is liciit to holiness. — Hcni-y VI. CHRISTINE BILLER JVasliingtoii, D. C. English. Delta Gamma, Secretary Senior Class, Associate Editor Arbutus, Literary Editor Junior Book, ' oman s Council, Strut and P ret, I ' resi- dent Writer ' s Club, Theta Sigma Phi, Le Cercle Frangais, English Club. .At war twi.xt will and will not. — Measure for Measure. MIDGE McAIILLIX Dayton English. Delphian, Secretary A ' omen ' s League, Arbutus Staff, English Club. No bigger tlian an agate stone. — Romeo and .Juliet. GEORGE ' AXDEL Graiidvieiv. History. Not a hair amiss yet, - Henry 11 ' JnDiana C nitjcrsitp arljutus OMER LOOP Grccntoii ' ii I listorv. Student Marshals, Circulation Manager lit Indiana Student, Football Team 1912, Press Club, History Club, Arbutus Staff. Examine every married lineament and see how one .. Other lends content. — Roiiicii and Juliet. SUSIE FRANCES THRO Jcffcrioiri-ille 1 atin. Indiana Club, President Women ' s League 12- ' 1 3, Member Women ' s League Board ' i3- ' i4. Women ' s Council. ' i2- ' i3. President ' omen ' s Council ' i3- i4. Arbutus Staff. liat well-appointed leader fronts ns here? II Henry I]-. FRAN ' CES TRACKWELL Marion .Mathematics. Delta Zeta, Euclidian Circle, Mar- quette Club, Arbutus Staff. ' Forsooth, a great arithmetician. -Othello. FRED IRWIX MYERS Decatur ■.nglish. Phi r)eta Kappa, Indiana Club. Strut and Fret. English Club. Thv voice is verv direfnl. JI3inctecn unDrcD JFouttcen ERNEST WHITFIELD FORCE Loogootee Economics. DePauw Debating Team ' i2- ' i3, Tri-State Debating Team i3- ' i4, Class Treas- urer ' i2- ' i3, Economics Club, Delta Sigma Rho, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Phi, Arbutus Board of Managers. W ' liat are thou, Greek? -Troilus and Crcssida. CAROLINE WIEGAND Bootiville Silent and attentive too. -Tzi ' elfth Night. GABRIELLE ARIMSTRONG Blooininyton English. Fair, sober, wise. ' JOHN MARK PO ' ELL Btooiiiiiujfoii Mathematics. Wrangler, Euclidian Circle. He goes up and down like a gentleman. —Much Ado About Xotliing. UnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus C. W. WILLIAMS Blooiiihigton English. Phi Kappa Psi, Earlham-DePauw De- batins: Team. Wherefore frowns he thus? -Henry Fill. GRACE LILLIAN POLING Blooiniiigton Botany. Delphian. Grace was wont to laugh. — As You Like It. MAUDE McCLASKEY Union City. A weight} ' and a serious brow. —Henry Fill. PAUL W ' EATIIERWAX U ' orthinfilon Botany. From his cradle He was a scholar, and a ripe, and a good one. —Hcnrv Fill. JI3ineteen i unDtcD jFourtecn CLIFFORD ZETTERBERG Chirksbiiiy Some sober brow. -Merchant of Venice GENEVIE ' E BLANCHARD CHAPMAN Benton Harbor. Mich. Romance Languages. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Le Cercle Franc;ais, GirFs Pan Hellenic Council Of excellent discourse: pretty and witty. — Comedy of Errors. CLAUDL SCOTT Logansport English. Never taxed for speecb. —AlVs Well That Ends irdL HARRY CHARLES INMAN Loiiisville. Ky. Economics, Sigma Nu. Ob my sweet Harry, says she. — I Henrv IV. JnDiana 23nttictsitp arbutus GRO ' ER LITTLE Ciiiiibcrland History. History Club, Y. AL C. A. Cabinet. Read by rote and could not spell. — Romeo and Juliet. MOXNA LEOTA WHLrLOCK Iiidiaiiaholis ? Iathematics. Delphian, Euclidian Circle. Thy smiles become thee well. —Tzcelfth Night. LLOYD H. ZIEGLER Bippiis Philt.isophy. Phi Delta Kappa. .Assistant in Psychology. He did inform the truth. — Coriolaniis. EARL R. MARTIN Borden History. Delphian. History Club. Arbutus Stall, Observe, observe, he ' s mood} . Hen IV J -in. Nineteen ! unDreD jTourteen BRUCE MCTOR AIOORE Kokomo Philosoph -. President l ' hilos(jpliy Club. He hears merry tales and smiles not. I fear lie will prove the weeping philosopher when he grows ohl. being so full of unmannerly sadness in his youth. —Merchant of I ' cnicc. HELEX PATLIXE PATTERSON SI. J,n- Botany. Delta Zeta. Botany Club, -Vrbutus Staff. Keep Helen still, For ' tis a cause that hath no mean dependence Upon our joint and se eral dignities. — Truiliis and Cressida. RALPH HORACE PHILLH S Coalcsrillc Mathematics. Delphian. Euclidian Circle. He hath had good ancestors. — Cyiiibcliiic. HOAIER GLEXX FISHER La Fontaine Zoologiy. Assistant in Embryolog■■. He ' s a worthy man. — Coriolanus. 3nDiana ejniticrsitp arfiutus HORACE XOBLE CORYELL Blooiniiigtoii Geology. Phi Beta Kappa, Indiana Club. Able to breathe life into a stone. —All ' s Well That Ends Well. KATH.VRIXE CULLEN ASHMAN Osgood Eno;lish. Her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low. CHARLES G, AL PLE Tiosa A most incomparable man, breathed, as it were. To an untirable and continuate goodness. — Tiiiion of Athens. CAREY EA ' ERETT AIUXSEY Keystone AFathematics. With bis . ninzonian chin he drove The bristled lips before him. — Coriolaiins. Nineteen l unDrcD jFourtecn ALFRED HOGSTON Now, afore me. a handsome fellow. — Pericles. NELLIE MARY CARITHERS Rilcysburg English. A sweet lady sad. — Troilns and Cressida. EL.AIER HENRY STUART Frankfort Chemistry. Physics Club, Assistant in Chemistry. What a mental power This eye shoots forth. — Tinion of Alliens. ROLAND ELSWORTH MERRITT Logansftort English. Pi. S. [Marion Normal College. A sober, ancient gentleman. — Taming of the Sinew. SnOiana CJnitictsitp arbutus ROY E. SHIERLIXG JViiichester Botanv. Rotanv Club, Orchestra. ' Item, one neck. ' -Tu ' elfth Night. MABEL AXXETTE SUTTON Blooniington And the inoon, were she earthly, no nobler, — Coriolanus. ELMER L. MITCHELL jrindfall Economics. Junior Class Discussion, Economics Club, Jackson Club. Before him he carries noise, and behind him he leaves tears. — Coriolanus. BUTLER LAUGHLIX Robison L ' tllenlatics. In troth, there ' s wondrous things spoke of him, — Coriolanus. j[3inetcen ' i unDteD jFouttecn FORREST GLEXX TUCKER Georgcloivii Physics. Phi Beta Kappa. President Physics Ckib, Assistant in Physics, Euclidian Circle, Booster ' s Club. Like liim well ; ' tis not amiss. Alfs ll ' t-ll That Ends Well. MARY LOUISE ESPEY Rising Sun Philosophy. Pi Beta Phi, Le Cercle Francais. Philosophy Club, Women ' s League Board, Y. ' W. C. A. Cabinet ' i2- ' ; , Student Council ■i3- ' i4. Inter-class Discussion, Winner of Girl ' s Discus- sion. She will outstrip all praise. And make it halt liehind her. — Tempest. RUBY FINCH EXGLE Blooiuingdale Latin. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Women ' s Council. ' What a serious contemplation are you in ? — Lear HER lAX ROSCOE HARTLEY Comb down his hair; look, look! it stands upright. ' — Henrv 11. KnDiana einiticrsitp atfiutus ROBERT O. HUTCHINSON Sparksville Physics. Physics Club. He knits his brow and shows an angry eye. — Henry VI. ANNA G. ABEL Seymour Romance Languages. Delta Gamma, Le Cercle Frangais, Der Deutsche Verein, English Club. Anne is a good girl. ' -Merry Wives of Windsor. GEORGE E. DAVIS Burket Phvsics. Physics Club. Cross Country Team 1912, Senior Wrestling. He never stood To ease his breast with panting. , — CoriolauKs. PAUL KUNSCHIK BJoontington German. Assistant in German, Der Deutsche ' erein. Le Cercle Francais, Phi Beta Kappa. Sir, I hear you are a scholar. — I will be brief with you. ' ' — Mcrrv Wizes of ll ' indsor. JI3inetcen IDunDreD Jfouttcen RODERI ' [■' . HARRIS CU-zrhiiid. Ohio I ' hiliisopln . I ' lii Kappa Psi, Eiliti)r-in-cliief Indiana Stnilent W ' inU-r Term 1913-14. I ' ress Clul), I ' re.siclent W irtcrs ' C ' lnli. Spring- Term 1913. He will print tliem, out of (loiil)t, fur he cares not what lie pnts into the press. —Merry Iftrcs of Windsor. EMILY CECILE HANNA Blooiiiiiigion English. Kappa Kaiijia Gamma. Le I ' ercle Erancaise, English Cliih. Der Deutsche erein. . rhiitus Staff. Bring me word, how tall is she. — .Iiiloiiy and Cleopatra. IXEZ BOWMAN McINTYRE Blooiiiiiujion Mathematics. Enclidian Circle. A bright particular star. —All ' s ll ' cll Thai Ends U ' cIL RALPH W. MITCHELL Bedford English. I ' hi Gamma Delta. I ' hi Rhci .Signiu. Zeta Delta Chi, Strnt and h ' ret. Cdee Clnb. Babette Cast, Skeleton Club. Arbutus Staff. Matrons Hung gloves. Ladies and maids their scarfs and handkerchiefs Upon him as he passed. — Coriolaiiiis. 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus FRANCIS GEOFFREY GRIFFITH Cohiinbiis Economics. Phi Kappa Psi, Sphinx Club, Economics Club, JMarquette Club, Glee Club, Rob Roy, Babette, Union Revue. You are the singer, I will say. — Roinco and Juliet. EDGAR C. DAMS Salciii . natomy. Sigma Xu, ' arsity Football, Cap- tain 1913, Track Team, Wrestling Team, Captain 191 2- 13, Conference Champion 1912-13-14. Skeleton Club. Cover thy head, cover thy head : nay, prithee, be covered. —As You Like It. HELEN PLU.M.MER Bloomingtoii This will do Helen ' s heart good now. — Troihis and Cressida. ]MURL E. FULK Deeatur Anatomy. Phi Chi, Student Marshals, A ' arsity Football 1912-13. ' A curled pate will grow bald. ' — Henry I ' . J13ineteen !l)unDte D jFourteen J. CARLTON DANIEL Corydoii Anatoniv. Sigma Xu, Sphinx Clul), I ' ai Hellenic Council i(;i3-i4, Track Team iyi2- 13-14, Captain ' 14, Skeleton Club, Zeta Delta Clii. He seemed in rniiiiiiii; tn dcMUir the wav. — He my ! ' . MARY OTJVE IILLDON PlyiiioKtl: Economics. Economics Club, History Club Winner of Peace Oratorial Contest, Winner of Second Prize State Peace Oratorical Contest, Wiimer of Lake Mohonk I ' eace Prize. Brought home noble prize. ' -Troilus and Cicssida. DOROTHY THORN IIURGH Iiidianal ' olis English. Kappa Alpha Theta, Le Cercle I ' ran- caise, Y. ' . C. .V. Cabinet. For she had a tongue with a tang. — Tetupest. JOHN THOMAS DE L( )NG Roanoke History. Phi Kappa Psi, Travelers ' Club, His- tor ' Club. A traveler, by my faitli, yon have great reason to be sad. ' A -As Von Like If. JinDiana Oniticrsitp 9rbutu0 CLARENCE RLSSEL AlcNABB Blooiniiigtoii I ' .CDiiomics Arbutus Hoard cif Managers, Economics Club. ' If lie be sad, he wants money. — Much Ado About Nothiny. xAL RY LOUISE MACZY RuslrAlk i- ' .ni;iisb. Kapija Alpba Theta. Strut and I ' ret, ' (inian ' s Council I(ji3-I4, Secretary ' 13, Englisb Clul), Philosophy Club, Junior L ' xiok Staff. Arbutus Staff ' . ' .Marked lie vour mnsic -Pericles. CICRTRCDE MARGARET SHIELDS. Iiidiaua olis ■.uglish. Delta Ciamnia. English Club. ■■. most excellent accomplished lady. —T cclflh Night. DWIGHT CLIEEORD PARK Grccii ' cvood ■Jiglish. Sigma Xu, Editor-in-chief .Vrljutus President Sigma Delta Chi, Nice President Delta Sigma Rho, Press Club, ' riters ' Club, Winner Hamilton Club (.Oratorical Con- test 1913. Winner L ' nion Revue Prize Skit Contest 1913, Junior Book Staff , Student Marshals, Student Staff, Union Nominating Board. There is one eoat for ()n. —rieury f. jQineteen iDunDreD jFourteen IlA s I ' .i ' SKikk Bli ' diiiiiii liiii Economics. Phi Kajipa I ' si, I ' .u incss .Man- ager Junior i ' .ddk, Stiulcnl Staff, L ' hairman Inter-Class Athletic C ' cniiniittcc 11J12-13. President Ecnnnmics ( hil) Winter ' rcrni 11J14. All places yield to him ere lie sits duwii. —Conolaiuis. CAR( Jl.ENl-: LlAlLf, Wf.i ' .MS ll ' oll lilllllllll Latin. I ' i Meta I ' hi. N ' . W. C. . . Cabirei Given to soft and gentle sjieeeh. — .liitoiiy and Cleopatra. NETJJI ' , (;i ' ,( mCTA .SUITE I ' crrvsvillc l ' ' niilisli. Le Cercle Prancais As tall as any. -Tzcclfth Niijht. ELIZABETH KALkLEY Bniccvillc English. Arbuttis Staff. What is her name? h ' lizaheth. -Hcur VIII. UnDiana aniticrsitp arbutus VENICE DUXCAN KEISER Indianapolis Anatomy. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Nu Sigma Xu. ' ice President Skeleton Club, Arbutus Board of Editors, Assistant in Depart- ment of Anatomy. The brain may devise laws for the blood. — ilercJwnt of Venice. MATILDA LEBLINE Seymour l ' ' r.glish, Der Deutsche erein. English Club. Ever precise in promise-keeping. — Measure for Measure. LOLA LANGSTON Wa bash JMiHish. Xot soon provoked, nor, lieing provoked, soon calmed. — Troilus and Crcssida. JOHN 1LLL M O ' HARROW Blooniington Economics. Phi Kapjia Psi, Economics Clul Sphinx Club, Jackson Club. He will smile and stroke his beard. —Much Ado About Nothing. H incteetti unDteD Jfoutteen GARF METCALF HOPKIXS I ' Insics. He hath a person and a smooth dispose To be suspected. -Othcllu RUTH REEVES Anderson English. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Deutsche W ' rein, Y. W. G. A. Galiinet 1911-12-13, ' ice President Y. ' , G. A. 1913-14, Secretary English C ' liil). ' TIow fearful And dizzy ' tis, to cast one ' s eve so low ! FLORA ANDERSON Craii ' fnrdsviHc Botany. . nd the huh sliall say her mind freelv, or the blank verse sliali halt for it. —Hamlet. HERMAN WBIMER Edncation. Phi Delta Kappa. With precepts that wonhl make invincible The heart that cr nneil tlicm. — Coriolaniis KnDiana Unitycmtv 3rbutu0 GEORGE G. GRAHA I Lebanon Alatheniatics. Di, ' lphirin, luicliilian Circle. Believe me, an alisolute gentleman. llani!ct. ' ICT()R EUGENE r.E. : IER Zionsz ' illc l -coii(iniics. FVesidciit Sciiicir Class. Desk Li- l)rarian. Student Marshals, Arbutus Staff, I ' .ci iiiumics Clul). 1 lemurrer Club. All tungues speak of him, and the hleared sights . re spectacled to see him. — Corwlanus. R. ELENORA OWEN J ' inccnncs Eiii lish. Toastmasters ' Club. Her tongue will not obey her heart, nor can Her heart obey her tongne. — Antony and CIcopalra. J. HAMALW BringJinrst German. Did but glance a far off look. -Hcnr ' VI. Nineteen !DunDteD jFourteen JESSE JACKSCiX WARRUAI (, ■,•.■, ' „ ,■, Chemistry. Delphian. )rchrstra. Hand. The business of this man Imiks (lut of him. —.Iiitiiiiy unci Clcufalra. ISlARY A. KLIPPLE BrookviUe She that could think and ne ' er disclose her mind. —OthcUo. IMOGEN VARNER Blooiiiiiigtoii English. Alpha Chi Omega, Woman ' s League Board 1912-13, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1913-14. So blessed a disposition. MAUDE ESTHER BRYAN Blooiiiiugton Latin. A maiden never so bold ; Of spirit so still and quiet. -Othello. JInDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus (f slS- ■j ; FLOYD F. FLEMING. Nnv Albany I Iinglish. Sigma Xu, Varsity Football Team, Captain 19 12, Freshman Football, ' ' arsity Baseball Team, Captain 19 14, Freshman Baseball, ' arsity Basketball Team, Freshman Basketball, Sphinx Club, Arbutus Staff. ' In his time plays many parts. -As You Like ll. WARD GLENN REEDER Windfall Histor -. History Club, Arbutus Staff. ' He ' s vengeance proud and loves not the common people. ' -Coriolanns. AGNES HART ] ' cva v ' With cheerful semblance and sweet majesty. —Henry ! ' JAMES J. R( )BINSON Princeton 1 Hstory. Phi Kappa Psi, History Club, Delta Sigma Rho, President Y. 1. C. A. 1913-14, Indiana-Notre Dame Debating Team 1911, Cross Countr - Team 1911-12, Captain 1913. Could tell . whispering tale in a fair lady ' s ear. Such as would please. — Ronico and Juliet. Nineteen ! unDteD jFoutteen CLYDE ROSCOE liAlR P or Ha lid Alatlicmatics. Euclidian Circle. I!. S. Marion Xurnial lycnj. O well divided disposition ! Xote hiin ! — .-liitoiiy and Clcofulni. BARRETT W. COCKRUM Blooiiiiiij ldii Chemistry. Independent Literary Society. Trav- elers Club. Arbutus Staff. Eello vshi|) in Chemistry. Consider what you first did swear unto, To fast, to study, and to see no woman. — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. VEVA LYDL DEAL LaGraiige Latin. So luixoni, blithe and full of face. —Pericles INEZ EULALIA HOWARD Lincoln Latin. ' onian ' s Leaoiie Roard 1913-14. A good heart ' s worth gold. — Scnrv IV KnDiana Qnivicrsitp 3t6utus ' ALTER II. J(1XES Kokoiiio Cheiiiistrw Enianon, . lpha Chi Signia. I resh- man liaseball and Basketball, A ' arsity Base- liall Team 1912, Track Team ' 12, Inter- Class Baseball, Basketball and Track. Broad of Directors Indiana Union iyi4-i5- ■' He proved the best man in the field. — Coriolanns. GENEVIEVE COUCHER Bennett ' s Switcli En-lish. Of n pleasing look, a cheerful eye. — Merchant of Venice. -MYRA T. LAUPUS Scyinonr F.n,i;lisli. Treasurer Woman ' s League 1913-14. Was of many accounted beautiful. —Tii ' clfth Xight. FREDERIC DURHA: I Mnncie • ' .cnnnniics. Beta Theta Pi, Strut and Fret. Sphinx Club, Glee Clulx Roll Roy Cast, Bab- ette, liikado. Union Revue Alusic, 1913, Economics Club, (Orchestra, Arbutus Staff. ' He was disposed to mirth. .-Intony and Cleopatra. JI3inetecn unDteD jFourtccn DONALD H. GARI ' .KR North Maiiclicstcr Chemistry. Alpha L ' lii Sigma. One that makes fritters of English. —Merry IVivcs of Winds LOLA BROOKS Xoblcsrillc Enghsh. Independent Literary Society, Y. V. C. A. Cahinet 1913-14. Woman ' s League Board 1911-12. English Club. Teach not tliy lip scorn : for it was made For kissing, ladv, not for such contempt. —Richard III. BESSIE PATRICK DUBBER Bedford Latin. Heavens keep old Bedford safe ! CATHARINE BOWMAN Btooiniiigtoii Botany. Delta Ciamma, ] ' )Otan Club. Marcpiette Club. What sorrow craves acquaintance at thy hand. — Roinco and Juliet. SnDiana anit)cr0itp arbutus HALLET B. FRISBIE ivcoiioniics. DeimirrcT Clrb, History Clul). Sec- retary-Treasurer. ' ice Tresident Economics dull. Secretary Association of the Un- oroanized. ' He stares and looks so vildl ' . CRYSTAL FALL finiianapolis She puts her toiiLiue a little in her heart And cliides with tliinking. - Richard II. JESSE G. FISHER Borden ( ieniian. W ' itli yood accent and good discretion. ' ARTHUR LEE TR()l ' T. Bniccville ' arsitv Football. . . snlistitute of niost allowed sufficiency -Hamlet. -Othello. JI3ineteen I unDreD JFourteen CHI WAGGONER Blooiniiigton English. English Club. Alarried Students ' Cluh. A proper man, as one shall see in a summer ' s cia . — A Midsuinincr Night ' s Dream. IVA MARIE WEYBRIGIIT Blooiniiigton English. English Clul). Toastmasters ' Cluh. She will siiiu the savai eness out of a bear. LULU BERGDOLL Blooiniiigton English. A. I!. Central Normal College i ;oi;, Y. W. C. A., President 09, English Cluli. One that excels the quirks of hlazonins pens. —Othello. r.ESSIE AIcMCKER Ul land (German. Der Deutsche X ' erein, She that eould thnik and never disclose her mind. See suitors following and never look l ehind. 3nDiana Onitjcrsitp 9r6utus mrntm. 1 g| r l K gg c B ■1 M [ ?il WILLIAM I ' RAXK URLSTOL Economics. An honest soul, i ' faith sir; by my troth he is, as c er broke liread. — Much Ado About Nothiug. ELMLR RITTER ll ' dlfOII ' He will be talking: as they say, ' when the age is the wit is out. ' —Muc i Ado About Nothing. : IIXER ' A A. EBERLY Balbec ■' .tii;iisli. Hear Alinerva speak. -Taiuiug of the Shrczv. LVCOB JORDAN B looiuingtou I ' lnsics. Gocl bath blessed you with a good name. — Much Ado About Nothing. Nineteen IjjunDreD JFoutteen ALLAN ' . GRISSOM Blooiiiiiic toii History. A good lilunt fellow. CARRIE ANNE GRANT Blooiiiiiigton Education. Indiana Club. She is of so free, so kind, so apt, so blessed a div position, that she holds it a vice in her goodness not to do more than she is requested. —Othello. MARGARET C. WRIGHT. Lapel English. Indiana Club. A maid that paragons description and wild fame. ' — Othello. ROSCOE nULEY J ' iiiiiiines Histor Who ' s yonder, That does appear as he were flayed r Coriolanus, SnDiana C nitiersitp arbutus ARTHUR L;. ' 0YLES. luii lish. Gamma Eta Gamma, Le Gercle Fran- caise, Board of Directors Indiana Union. 1914-15- blaster of his time Till seven at night. -Macbeth. lERTOX ALKER Blooniington ( ' hemii trw ' There ' s little of the melancholy element in him. ' — Much Ado About Nothing. L. H. WHITECRAFT ] ' abasJi .Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. ■■. kinil heart he hath ; a woman wonld run through lire and water for such a kind heart. — Merry Wives of Windsor. JOHN F. lOORE Yonder is a most reverend gentleman, who. belike ' cceiving wrong by some person, is at most odds with his own gravity and patience. — Merry Jl ' ives of U ' i)idsor. JI3ineteen unOteD jFourtcen ((( (JHlI () .« ICnglish. Deutsche ' erein. She ' s apt to learn, and thanktnl for good turns. — Taming nf The Shi-c-K HAZET. M. STROUT Anderson Botany. Botany Club, Philosophy Club. Your silence most offends, and to lie merry liest b comes you. —Much .Ida About Xofhnui. DELL- MARGUERITE EOLTZ Rcvuolds Latin. You look As if you held a brow of much distraction. ' -inntci- ' s Talc HENRY ASHER uiglish. He liath deserved worthily of his country. -Coi ' inlanUi. JnDiana fliniticrsitp arbutus The following Twen- ty-Three Seniors spent Four Years at Bloom- ington and have com- pleted the First Year of the Medical Work at Indianapolis, leading to the degree of Doctor of Medicine. Nineteen iDunDrcD Jfourtcen . l( )Rr( )i D. VVILCL ' TS Grcentown AlcdiciiK ' . I ' lii r.ela I ' i. Skelctciii Chili. Stinlent Council, Treasurer Lincoln I.eat ue. The ilevil knew in it what he did when lie ni;uK mail |ifihtic. — Tiiiion of Athens. ri)i;| ' :rt emmet conway Goodland : le;licire. Phi Beta Pi. Skeleton Club, Mar- quette Club. C. how full of briars is this working day world. —As You Like It. WILLIAM EMERSON BARNES Evan sv ill e Medicine. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club, Lincoln League. What doth gravity ont of his hed at niidiiight? — Henry If. EARL H. HARE Slieridan Aledicine. Phi Beta Pi. Skeletim Club, Uni- versit ' Band, Lincoln Leaj ue. When a gentleman is disposed to swear it is not for any standersby to curtail his oaths. —Cynibcline. 3nDiana Oniticr0itp arbutus WILLIAM WISE Hartford City .Medicine. .Skeleton Club. Yell Leader and Sergeant-at-Arms 1912, Junior Peace Pipe I )rator. Freshman Football igio. N ' arsity Football 11)12. He returns Splitting tlie air with noise. -Coriolanus THEODORE F. K0LL:MER Kokoiiio .Medicii ' .e. Phi lleta Pi. .Skeleton Club. Lincoln League. .Adieu valor! rust rapier! lie still drum I for your manager is in love. — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. ARTHCR J( )H. .MICHELI Clinton .Medicine. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club. Skull 11J12-13, larc|uette Club. Lincoln League. I had rather than forty shillings had my hook of -ongs and sonnets here. —Merry Ulx ' es of U ' indsor. PVROX JOHXSI )X PETERS Greentozcn Anatdun-. Phi Beta Pi. Skeleton Club. Lincoln League, Travelers ' Club. What ha e we here, a man or a fish? . fish! He smells like a hsh : a very ancient and hshlike smell ! — Tempest. Jl inctecn l unDrcD jFouttcen LESTER DALE HUFFMAN Fair la I id .Medicine. I ' hi Beta Pi. Skeleton Clnb. Jackson Club. He speaks as his understanding instructs him and as liis honesty puts it to utterance. —jriutcrs Talc. GEORGE R. KENT Mulberry Medicine. Phi lieta Pi, Skeleton Chili. Medic Veil Leader 191 3, Lincnln League. Thou cloest snore distinctly. Tliere ' s meaning in th - snores. -Tempest. ARCHIE F. SCHULTZ Blooiiiingtoii Medicine. Indiana Club, Phi Beta Pi, l ' reshniar. Baseball 1911, ' arsity 191 1, ' 13, Student Council, Skeleton Club, Jackson Cluli. What iileasurc, sir, find we in life: to li.ck it from action anrl adventure? —Cyiiiheline. ROYALL H. BAXDELIER Fort U ' ayiic Medicine. Phi Chi, Skeleton Clul), Vice Presi- dent Sophiiniore (, ' lass. Cross Countr - 1912, Track 1912-13. Speak Init one rhyme, and I am satisfied. Cry but, — ah nie, couple, Init, — love and dove. —Ron, en and Jnl:et •SnDiana Bni ' oemtv arbutus FLUYD IKWIX EICHliR Medicine. Indiana Club, Skeleton Club. He hath a heart as sound as a licll, and liis tongue is the clapper; for what his heart thinks, his tongui speaks. —Much Ado About Nothing. KDWIK XICH(JLS Kl.ME Blooinington . nal(ini . President Sophumore Medical Lias 11)13-14. Cliairman Class Seminar 1913-14, .Mar(|uette Club, Jackson Club. Tile people swarm Uke summer flies — r.ut whither tlv the gnats but to the sun? — llcnrx I ' I. BERNARD DAMD RA ' DIN Evansville .Medicine. Independent, I ' bi Cbi, Skeleton Club. Oh Jupiter, iiow weary are his spirits ' . —As You Like It. CLARENCE P. HINCH L N Indianapolis Medicine. Phi Chi, Wrangler, Skeleton Club, Lincoln League. When I said I would die a bachelor I did not know that I would live to tell I were married. — Much Ado About Nothing. J13inetecn ii)unDtcD jFourtecn HAYNES JORDAN FREELAND Iiidiaiiafolis Medicine. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Rho Sigma. ' arsity I ' asketball Team 1911-12, Captain 1913, .Sphinx Chil), .Skeleton Club. Sir, he hatli never ted uf tlie daiiitie.s tliat are lired 111 a liook; he hath not eat paper; he hath not drnnk ink. — Luvc ' s Labour ' s Lost. SC( )TT R. EDWARDS Greenfield .Medicine. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Rho Sigma. Skeleti m Clnb. .Sphinx Club, Varsity Pasketball Team 1 91 2. If he he not in love witli sonic woman, there is no heHeving okl signs. —Much .Ida About ' othiu;i. HERMAN W. SiMELSER Lahiioulh .Meclicine. Phi (, ' hi. Wrangler, Skeleton Club. She, sweet lady, dotes, Devontl} ' dotes, dotes in idolatry Upon this spotted and inconsistent man. — . Iidsuunner .Vh ht ' s Drcoiu. GEORGE D. TIIO.MPSON Sltarj svillc .Medicine. Phi Rho Si.gma, Track Team 191 1- 12-13, Gross Countr - Team 11J12-13, Wrestling Team 11)12-13-14. e thonght him small — hnt he ' s the very devil incarnate. — Ttlt ; XiijUl. 3nDiana Oniticrgitp arfiutus |()H. H. HARE Meilicinc. Phi Beta Pi, Skeleton Club. Uni- versity Band. And bid tlie cheek be ready with a lilusli Modest as the morning when she coldly eyes The yonthfnl Phoebus. — Troilus and Cicssida. TACOE! ADER Medicine. Phi CTamma Delta, Phi Rho Sigma, Jackson I ' lnb, Skeleton Club, Atlas 1912-13, Student Assistant to Doctor J. H. Oliver. Society is no comfort To one so sociable. -Cvinbclinc. JACK JOXES Fainiiount .Mfdicine. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Rho Sigma, ' arsit iMiiitball Team lyii. Junior Class President, Hoard of Directors Indiaria Unidu i ji2-i3. Sphinx Club, Skeleton Club. Behavior, what wcrt thou Till this man showed thee? ' -Loz ' c ' s Labour ' s Lost. JSinetecn J unDteD jFouttecn mi i mM [_ £V OENC£ ' ) CHIMIN XLUWJ SnDiana Oniticcsitp arfiutus (][ A man between two lawyers is like a mouse between two cats. Present day law IS a very mtricate cobweb which will catch flies but lets the wasps and hornets get through. A Law-student is an am- bitious young man who has designs on bringing the railways to time and usually devotes his legal talent after graduation in defending horse-thieves or chasing an ambu- lance. A few lawyers go to the Supreme Bench, others sit in deserted offices and watch clients go by, while some lawyers go to prison. Nineteen lt)unDrcD jFouttccn CLARENCE HYMAX WILLS ] ' oiiiig Anicricii Law. Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Phi. The forehead of a married man. —Much -Ido .Ibnut Nothiin, GEORGE W. HUGHES Xc ' lC Harcii. Coiiii. Law. He is a verv- vaUaiit trencherman ; he liath an excellent stomacli. —Much Ado About Nothing. LL( )VD 1)1-:XZIL CLAYCOMB Jasper Law. Independent Literary Society, Gamma Eta Gamma, Boosters ' Chih. He bears himself more proiidlier. -Coriolaiius. DUDLEY W. WINDES Phoenix. Ari.:ona Law. Delphian, Phi Delta Phi, Treasurer In- diana L ' nion, President Senior Law Class. He ' ll shape his old course in a country new. 3nDiana Uni ' attsitp 3rftutus CECIL W. BALL Siiiiiiiiitvillc Law. Sif ina Chi, I ' hi Delta Phi. He hath of late made maiiv tenders Of his affeetioii. -Hainlcr. WILRUR GLOVER Bedford Law. Sigma Al|)ha Epsilon. Ciamma Eta Gamma. Strut and Eret. Tile law hath iicit lieeii dead. thou.E;li it hath slept. — Measure for Measure. EDWARD CLEX ' EXGER GULLION Lebanon Law. I ' hi Delta Phi, President Senior Law Class, Boosters ' Club, Student Marshals. ' . good sensible felhnv. - Merry ITrres of IVnidsor. WALTER LEWIS Peiiin ' ille Law. Wrangler, ' arsitv Baseball, Captain 191 1. X ' arsitv F ootball. Ereshman Baseball Coach Phi Delta Phi. He lirushes his hat o ' niorninos : what should that .,io: —Much Ada About Xothing. Ji inctccn IDunDrcD JTourtecu UAXIKL LAURENCE ilOCK Law. Emanon, Gamma Eta (iamnia. llusiiiess Manager Arbutus, President Fresliman Class, Board of Directiirs Indiana I ' ninn igoy-io, Y. .M. C. A. Cabinet ujioii. Student Marslials, Student Conueil, l.incnhi 1-eague Cabinet HJ13. He liatli been most notorioiisl_ - abused. —Twelfth Xiijh,. HARRY RUST Holland Law. Frowns, words and threats. Shall be the war that Henry means to use. — Hcnrv n. W.M.TER S. DANNER Odoii Law. Independent Literary Society, Universitx Band, Winner Freshman Law Prize 1912, Board of Directors Indiana Union 191 3- 14, Great di.yiiity, that is his valour. — .-J ' .s- JVcll That Hiids Well RAY WALLACE CLARK M uncle Law. I ' lii Gamma Delta, Secretar -Treasurer Demurrer Club, Mce President Senior Law Class, Travelers ' Club, Tennis Association. One that knows the law. go to. —Much .Ido Al .nil Xolhiii.,. SnDiana Onitictsitp 3r6utu0 DONALD STOREY DIXON North J ' cnion [.aw. Sigma Chi, Student Alarshals, Boosters ' Club 1911-12. E.xecutive Board, Jackson Club igi2-i3. Student Council, Arbutus Staff, Sphinx Club. In love, i ' faitli to tlie very tip. — Troilus and Cressida. DON BOSK Argos Law. Delta Tau Delta, Track Team. Captain 1913, Cross Country Team. He had rather venture all his limbs for honor. Than one of his ears to hear it. — Coriolaiiiii. GEORGE GUVTNER RANCK Blooiiiiiii ton Law. Phi Delta I ' hi, Graduate Club. We nuist not make a scarecrow of the law. Setting it up for fear the birds of prey. — Measure for Measure. C. H. HARTKE Hunliiintoii Law. Itidependent Literarv Society, Gamma Eta Gamma, Treasurer Senior Law Class. He draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his argument. — Love ' s Labour ' s Lost. Jl3incteen !|)unDteD iFouttecn LEROY SELLERS Kiiiysbiiry Law. Wrangler. He speaks plain cannon, — tire and smoke and bounce. HOWARD TOLLE Blooiiiiiii ton Law. ( )rator Senior Law Class, Gamma Eta Gamma, Board of Managers Arbutus, Delta Sigma Rho. Hear his speecli, Init sav tliou nought. —iMacbclh. DEWITT CHAPPELL Blooiniiiytoii Law. They say the best men are moulded out of faults And, for the most, become more the lietter For being a little bad. — Measure for Measure. EAOIETT CHOATE Bloominejton Law. Seldom he smiles: and smiles in such a sort, . s if he mocked himself, and scorned his spirit. ' -Julius Caesar. UnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutusi GAMMA ETA GAMMA Gamma Eta Gamma was the second of the two national Honorary Legal Fraternities to be founded at Indiana. The chapter is but three years old. Onl_ - those who have shown themselves to be thorough students and who give promise of becoming worthy and successful lawyers are granted membership. LIST OF MEMBERS Walter Banner Laurence Bock SENIORS John G. Grane Wilbur ' . Cilover Christian H. Hartke Lloyd D. Glaycomb Howard Tolle Fred F. Smith JUXIORS ATorman G. Schlemmer Benjamin DrolHnger Arthur ' ovles SOPHOMORES Gharles I. Baker Nineteen lt)unDreD jfouttecn UnDiana 9Initier$itp Arbutus PHI DELTA PHI. The Foster Chapter of Phi Delta I ' hi was installed at Indiana fourteen years ago. The fraterriitx ' originated at the University of Michigan in 1869. A high standard of scholarship is demanded of those invited to menihership. Recom- mendations on the basis of scholarship are first made by the Law Faculty, after which the names so presented are voted on with regard to their general (|ualifi- cations and desirabilitw Ever - member of Law I ' aculty belongs to Phi Delta Phi. Ralph ' . Sollit and Curtis Shake are among the recent members meeting with success in actual cou.rt practice. LIST OF MEMBERS. Cecil p.aii Edgar J. Call Emmett Choate Preston Cox Edward C. Gullion ■alter O. Lewis George G. Ranck Ralph Himelick George W. Henley Clarence H. A ' ills Dudley W. ' ii:des Kenneth L. Call Nineteen unDreD jFouttecn JnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus A Law Student is known by the buckram books he carries, while a Medic may be distinguished by a car- boKc odor, a copious flow of Piper Heidsieck and a reckless disregard for conventionality. Science and invention have made wonderful strides in the gentle art of Bone-setting until today, diseases come as latest fashions. Not all Physicians are Quacks and a few doctors can cure a Toothache. J inetcen l unDreD jFoutteen Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis Department An Act passed by the State Legislature in 1909 authorized the Trustees of Indiana Univer- sity to conduct a Medical School in Marion County. The first year of the four year Medical Course is emphasized only at Bloomington. The last three years are given at Indianapolis. Indiana University gives the degree and issues the diploma to every graduate of this school. This year twenty-four seniors will receive the M. D. Degree. SnDiana nitiersitp Arbutus A VISION OF THE FUTURE As I lodk forward into the future I have a vision, and I see it so distinctly th; ' ,t I canrot but believe that it will come true. I see a great State with its many and aried medical institutions working independently and, therefore, inefficiently. The an,:;el of [)rog re ss raps sharply the edge of mv field of vision and I see these inci ir)rdinated institrtions, like iron filings, jrmp to the pattern of c(ir.centric cir- cles w itli the State Lniversitx- as the cer.ter. This l ' ni ersit with its departments of science, arts and philosophy as the nucleus, surrounded by its professional schools, and this zone surrounded bv its social service departments, brings each of these medical iiistitutions within its field of scientific influence. And I see that the attention of a group of trained men is focused on one problem — the physical and mental health of the citizens. And these many specialists study this one problem each from his own angle; they study the citizen as he is at home, at wiirk, at play, at school, in the insane asylums, the jails, the hospitals, the alms houses. And from the coniliined effort of so many studying one problem thoroughly, there results a contribution to knowledge and a benefit to the State of transcendent im- portance. . nd what State is better suited to such a study than is Indiana, a .State with so homogeneous and native population that we can study all citizens as one? What other State has institutions so organized that the)- could be as re- ceptive to university influence, and with a I ' niversity with ideals so high, with departments so active? ' hat L ' niversitv wiiuld be better able to focus its many departments like so many eyes on a single problem? Wdiat other University is surrounded by its problems for research, a population which it proposed to care for when sick, and will care for, whether it studies it or not? And wdiat goal is more worthy of attainment than the health of a wdiole State? And what State has in the past shiiwn more interest in such advanced problems than has the greit and progressive State of Indiana? (Closing paiai:;raph of flic Foundation Day address dcliz ' crcd by Doctor Charles P. Emerson at Bloonrington on January 20, 1914.) Nineteen unDreD jFoutteen JnDiana Qniticrsitp 9r6utus ILL C. MOORE .luderson A. I ' .. Sigma Chi. Phi Rho Sigma, Board oi luHtiirs Arbutrs, Strut and Fret, Sphinx Chih. Skeleton Chib. Interne Joseph East- man Hospital, Assistant to Doctor Joseph Rihis Eastman. l n much enforced, shows a hasty spark, Anil straight is cokl again. GEORGE E. BOESIXGER Lagranye I hi Delta Theta. Xn Sigma Xu. Assistant in Department of Patholog 1913-14. i am sure care ' s an enemy to life. MERRIL STAMPER DAMS A. P.. Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Rho Sigma. Sphinx Glul), Skeleton Club. Freshman Football 1908. ' arsitv igoq- 10- 1 1, Freshman Ba sketball ii)o8. X ' arsity 1909-10-11. Captain ' 11. ■•. n(l loosed his love shaft smartly from his liow, r.ciicdict. the married man. BYRE R. KIRKLIX Gaston Sigma Chi. Phi Rho Sigma, Sphinx Club. Skel- eti;n Club. Assistant in Department of Derma- tology. Student Assistant to Doctor H. A. Moore. Externe City Dispensary 191 3. Externe Deaconess Hospital 1914. Ciinceit in weakest hodies stront;est works. JSincteen !!)imdrcD jFourtecn FRANK D. INIARTIN J ' liiila. Ohio A. P. I ' hi r.eta Pi, Board of .Mana.a ers Arbutus, Skeleton Club. In his own grace lie doth exalt himself, More than in vonr atUlition. HARRY ALDRICH A. B. Nu Si nia Xu, Skeleton Club. The purest treasure mortal tomes atr ' ord is spotless reputation. CHARLES EDWARD SAX ' ERY Knox Kappa Sigma, Phi Chi The weight of this sad time we must ohey, Speak what we feel, not what we ought to sav CLARENCE KENNETH JONES Paoli ' . S. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Beta Pi, Earl ham College, Baseball and Football IQ08-09. Oklahoma LTniversit -, Manager TracK Team 1912. The time is out of joint. O cursed spite That ever I was horn to set it right. SnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus DUXALD A. BARTLEY Oaktoii ' ii A. 1 ' .. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Xu Sigma Xu, Skeleton Club, President Senior Class in Medicine. l- ' rom woman ' s e3 ' e this doctrine I derive. HEXRY FREDERIC XOLTIXG Frcclandsi ' illc Kappa Sigma, Phi Rho Sigma, Sphinx Club, Skeleton Club, Goethe Gesellschaft, Presi- dent 1910-11. At least two glasses. The time twi.xt six And now must by us both be spent Most preciously. CHARLES BROAD ' AY DAXRCTHER IVcst Baden . . r . Skeleton Club, Externe City Dispensary 1913, Class Treasurer, Freshman Baseball 1909, A ' arsity Baseball 1910-11. Then art always figuring diseases. EDWARD W. MARKWELL Gcorgctoivn ndependeiit. Phi Chi. Hapl}- my presence lay well a]iate the over merry spleen. jQineteen unDteD JFoutteen HAROLD D. NIMAL I ' hi Chi, Ta.xicology Assistant igio. Metropoli tan Encainpent No. 5, Canton I{ncam|.)- nient No. 42. Along with him — a mere anatomy, a living dead- man. EDWARD C. CEKUL Baltic Province, Russia B. S. Valparaiso University. Phi Chi. And for mj- lo e, I pray you wrong me not. ' JAMES WILLIAM VANSANDT Carbon A. B. DePauw L niversity, Phi Chi, Assistant in Chemistry 1910. There are more things than we dreamt of in youi philosophy. MICHAEL JOHN SHIEL Indiaiial olis Nu Sisma Xu, Charter Memlier Marquette Chil ISand, Orchestra, 1906-07-08. A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing: For there is not a more fearful wildfowd than Your Hon living. UnDiana Oniticrsitp 3r6utus CLIFFORD S. BARTLETT Indianapolis ' Life is as tedious as a twice told tale. EVELYN PEARL HYATT Washinyton A. 11. Nil Sigma Phi, Delphian. I never knew a woman love man so. RALPH L. LOCHRY Franklin A. P.. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Rho Sigma. Hut let none of your people stir nie. 1 liave an exposition of sleep. EARL KENDALL HOLT Indianapolis Phi Chi. ' ■( ) ciiinc. let us remove. The si;w;ht of lovers feedeth those in love. Nineteen !!)unDrcD JFourtccn JESSE LEE JACKS(3N U ' ti basil 11. S. Marion Xoriiial, Vice President Senior Class in Medicine. What a sigli is this the- heart is sorely cliaryed. MYRTLE J IINNA BRILL Shazi ' iiee, Oklalioiiia A. U. Nu Sigma I ' hi, Delphian. Though I look old _vet I am strong and lusty. CARR( )LL J. TUCKER Craiiiordsvillc A. 15. Wabash College, Phi Rho Sigma, West- ern Reserve University 1910-11, Assistant in Bacteriology 1910-11, Externe City Llis- pital ' 12, Externe Deaconess IIosi)i- tal ' 14. O, that this too, too solid flesh would melt. Thaw and resolve itself into a dew. ERNEST E. CAHAL Tcrrc Haute I ' hi Chi, ( iraduate State Xormal 1908, Cicero- nian Debating Society ' o4- ' o8. This disease is beyond my practice. Vet I have known those who have walked in their sleep. 3jnDiana Onitietsitp arbutus Nineteen unDreD jFourteen THE ROBERT W. LONG HOSPITAL, The Robert W. Long Hospital, located at Indianapolis, is a hospital of about one hundred beds capacity, presented, fully equipped, to the State as the Hospital of Indiana University by Doctor and Mrs. Robert W. Long, of Indianapolis. It is to be maintained by Indiana for the benefit of the sick-poor of the State, k will also serve as a teaching hospital for the L ' niversitv School of Medicine. The construction of the hospital was begun in Novenilicr, [i;i2, and it is now about ready for patients. The structure has a four-story main portion, with two wings of three stories each. It is of steel and a matt-faced, gray-brick con- struction, with Bedford stone trimmings and floors of reinforced concrete. The hospital is planned for the care of adult medical and surgical cases, the present intention being to devote the second floor to men and the third to women patients. Its normal capacity is one hundred and six beds, eighteen of which are in private rooms on the first floor, and eighty-eight in the public wards of the second and third floors. On the fourth floor of the main portion of the building- are the operating rooms, while over the ells are the roof gardens. In the base- ment are the kitchen, dining rooms for the doctors, nurses and help, the laun(lr - and the boiler rooms. The building is heated by steam. The arrangement for natural cnlilation is supplemented by forced ventilation, one large fan blowing washed and heated or cooled air into the rooms and three fans drawing out the impure air. one from the wards, one from the kitchens, and one from the service rooms. On the first floor are the rooms for the private patients and the offices of the executive staff of the hospital. A point of interest here is the central reception room, which, when the east and west doors are closed during the da -, does not allow visitors access to, or sight of the corridors to the private rooms. The sec- ond and third floors are similar to the first in arrangement, so that each floor is not only a perfect hospital, but also may be run as three isolated units. Each ward has its own laboratory, so that the doctor and his students will make more clinical examinations than if they must go to separate laboratory buildings. On each floor is a special hydro-therapeutic room, in which all the common and simple forms of baths may be given so that these baths may be prescribed more often. Each large ward has its own balcony for bed patients. The root gardens are intended primarily for the convalescent patients. Forty-four beds have been accepted as the floor unit of the hospital. In Germany, about half this number is used as a floor unit, but experience has shown that in America from fortv to fifty patients constitute a better ward unit. The nursing force is saved many miles of walking and a great deal of fatigue •JnDiana 23nitict$itp 3tbutus by t v(i means. Rxtra niilt ' s are saved by the arrangement of the forty-fuur pa- tients in a semi-circle around two administrative centers, and extra fatigue is avoided by covering- the sides of the concrete floor with wood, and the center b}- a wide strip of linoleum. The forty-four patients on each floor are grouped il two large wards of sixteen beds each and four .small rooms arranged in pairs. Each group of one large and two small rooms has, as its center, a service room and the diet kitchen is between the two groups. The walls of the small wards are made of hollow tile in two layers with a mat- tress of seaweed between, in order to deaden sound. Each floor has its own ad- missiem room, a large room directly across the corridor from the elevator, into which the new patient is first taken. Here he is given a complete bath and re- ceives his ward clothes. Here, also, any minor surgical operation mav lie per- formed and dressings dor.e. The elevator, the admission room and the laboratory are grouped at one end of the north corridor and are separated from the wards bv thick swinging doors which deaden soimd froni these, the chief centers of noise in most hospitals. The lighting of the wards is by chandeliers ith opaque reflectors which throw all the light to the ceiling. In one large wanl, floor lights have been used as an experiment, believing that the mirse can obtain an even light in the ward without awakening the patients, each of wlmm will be shaded from the light by his bed. Behind each bed is a signal light w hich gives a red signal when the patient presses the Ijuttou of his bed cord to call the nurse. In addition to these, are emergency buttons at convenient points on the walls, which, when pressed, give a green light at several points throughout the floor and ring an alarm in the diet kitchen. The surgical rooms are on the fourth floor. In order that the convalescent pa- tients nia - reach the roof gardens without going through the surgery, outside bal- conies are built comiecting the ell with these roof gardens. The surgery con- sists of two large operating rooms with northern light. Each operating room has its own anesthetizing room, and between them, equally distant from both, is the sterilization room, where the instruments and supplies are always ready. ( )n this floor also, is the dark room for examination requiring artificial illumination. The Hospital faces south and stands in the center of a lot of sixteen acres on ' est Michigan Street. It is hoped that some day there will be new hospital units added. With the erection of this hospital, Indiana University School of JNIedicine enters upon a new cha])ter in its career. The medical school must have control of its own hospital if it is to teach good medicine. This is for the interest of not onlv the medical students but also the patient, for there is no dottbting the general proposition that, where students are best taught how to treat their patients, here the patients receive the best treatment. This is proven by practical experience as well. There are no hospitals which are in such favor with the poor patients and so appreciated by them throughout this country, as the university hospitals. jQinetcen IDunDteD JFouttcen NEW CITY HOSPITAL Tkic rSobliis and City Free Dispensary, the largest in the city, is main- tained bv the School of Medicine of Indiana Uni ersit ' and the C_ it ' of Indian- apolis. It consists of three l ' ari;e waitint; namis, a well e(|ui|)pe(l (hw room, a clinical lal;i)rat(iry fur microscopical, chemical and bacterioliigical, diagnosis, an operating rdimi, and twelve clinic rodnis for section teaching. An eleven-rooni house adjoining the college building affords (|uarters for the dispensary internes, and office room for the dis|)ensary superinterdent and matron. Daily morning cli)iics in the arious departments are held tbrorgliout the year. JnDiana Oniticrsitp arftutus THE SOCIAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT In one of the few sunny corners of the School of Medicine are two small rooms known as the Social Service Department. There, nothing is visible to the eye but a jumble of desks and people, — all sorts of people, — while the ear is conscious only of telephone, typewriter and the murmur of continuous conversation. Conversation, telephone and typewriter are the tools with which this depart- ment supplements the physician ' s drugs or advice and the surgeon ' s knife. It is to this corner that Dispensary doctors send those patients who can not be cured by drugs, surgery or advice alone. Patients who can not buy glasses or braces; children who have bad environment or poor food ; babies who need nurses , and new babies with helpless or ignorant mothers, are referred there. Any patient who needs financial relief, regular (ir long continued treatment, persuasion, comfort, care or restraint, ; order to be cured or cared for. laelongs in that corner. And, as the department raises and handles no relief fund and is entirely dependent upon interested local organizations and individuals for all aid, — financial or personal; and todav is trying to follow over fifteen hundred patients, — typewriter, tele- phone and tongues must be ever busy in the effort to obtain and to record results. The Social Service Department of Indiana University was opened September 20, 191 1, It is a part of the Department of Economics and Social Science, but its dailv work is with the School of Medicine an(l the Indianapolis City Dispensary. The department began with one worker, a desk, a telephone and record cards. Today it has three general workers, a teaching nurse in the field, two clerical as- sistants, a junior medical student, who is a regular field worker, a Fellow from the Department of Social Science who is doing research work, fifty-four medical student volunteers, and ninety-seven other volunteers. All of these could be busy profitably every moment. The Social Ser ' ice Department has three objects: education, prevention and research. Its first aim, however, is to further the cure of those patients referred to it by physicians who recognize that their patients need more than medicine if they are to prtifit by Dispensary care. Medical treatment is worthless to a patient suffering from hernia or varicose veins, if he has no mone ' , unless truss and stockings can be furnished. It is useless even to furnish truss, stockings or glasses unless someone will sec that they are worn constantly and properly. It is not ' orth while to prescribe drugs onlv iov a woman who has tuberculosis and must do all of the work for a famih ' of nine, r.or for a man with a bad heart who is lifting automobile bodies. These need rest and change of employment more than drugs. It is foolish to give medicine to a man who uses alcohol to excess and has lead poisoning unless he can leave alcohol alone and stop painting. It is Jl ineteen i unDrcD Jfourtecn absurd, even criminal, to give merely directioriS about feeding a bal)y to a mother who is feeble-minded. The record of the daily work of this department will furnish valuable statistics which in time should be used as a basis of research along sociological lines. Such statistics ought to throw at least some light upon the causes of fault - conditions which this generation faces. There could be no better laboratory for sociological research than a medical dispensary. A man may go without clothing, fuel or food ; but when the babv is sick or his own illness throws him out of work he thinks oi but one thing, — how to get well. His free doctor has a chance, not (inly U help, but to prevent chronic illness or chronic dependency. Lastly, but of the greatest importance, the department is providing new oppoi tunities for the education of students of medicine and of sociology, and f .ir the enlightenment of all persons who are interested in wrong social conditions, — their causes and their cure. This department offers a good school of preventive medi- cine. No medical student who follows a case of improper feeding, tuberculosis or venereal disease, will ever be able to ignore the importance of home conditions, of pure milk, good housing and pure food laws ; or the doctor ' s opportunity and obligation to strike at the social evils and the alcohol which lie at the root of some, and the insanitv, feeble-mindedness and inefficiency which grow out of them. No medical student who has worked much with the department will be satis- fied until he can make an accurate social as well as a correct physical diagnosis. He will know that it is not always possible to alter a physical condition withoui first changing social surroundings. That community which receives this student later as a doctor, will have, and later will always demand, a physician of medical ability who at the same time iias a mind which can see a patient as a unit, a person with bodv, mind, soul and social background. In its doctor it will have also a man and a citizen who knows and will teach medical truth, the foolishness of lopping off branches rather than of striking at the roots, the worse foolishness of legislation enacted before investigation or education, of giving non-constructive relief and of the necessity of dealing b(ith with the individual and with abstract problems. Prevention, that doctor will know, is easier and cheaper than cure. Thus far. the department ' s work has been almost entirely with the patients of the Indianapolis City Dispensary. But, with the opening of the Robert W. Long Hospital, the work will soon be for the whole State and in time will lose entirely its purely local character. The department, then, must discover among the resources of each community means for the after-care of the patients sent to the hospital or to the State Dispensary. The department must know what resources there are and nnist enlist all people and organizations in preventive and reconstructive work among their own citizens. The department and all of the students who have ever worked with it nuist look through the individual patient to the society in which he lives and find there the causes which make and keep individuals sick. Indiaui- University feels an obligation to learn and to teach such medical and sociological truths as may result in better health, more knowledge and consequently less misery for the next generation of its State. 117 JnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutii$ OLD CITY HOSPITAL The Indianapolis Citv Hospital, the largest charity institution in the State, with two hundred and fifty beds, is used freely in clinical teaching. It is under municipal control and supported entirely by the city. It has numerous large and small wards and amphitheaters for demonstration and surgical work. The City Hospital has in its wards some three thousand patients a year. During the college year the clinical material is used to the fullest extent, so that students of the school mav reap the benefits of the enlarged provisions for clinical instruction. Nineteen it)unDreD jFourtcen NEW CITY HOSPITAL AiuiuT thirt -six positions as resident jihysicians in various hospitals and dis- pensaries in Indianapolis and in the State are open to graduates of the Indiana University School of ] ledicinc. These ajjpointinents are secured largely through competition. In many cases, they nia he filled only liy students of this school; but in other cases the ' are open to general competition. The length of service of these positions is one }ear. 3nDiana 9Initicrsitp 9t6utus JOSEPH I ILUS EASTMAN JI3inetecn unDreD jFourtecn JOSEPH RILUS EASTMAN, A. M., M. D. Clinical Professor of Surgery. Indiana University. Dr. Eastman was born in Indianapolis in 1872, where he attended school imtil he entered Wabash College, receiving his A. B. and his A. M. (Hon.). He was graduated from Berlin University with his M. D., Magna Cum Laude in 1897. Dr. Eastman is a member of the Sigma Chi and Sigma Xi fraternities. His recent researches concerning the origin and significance of pericolonic membranes and menilirar.iform ]3eritoneal veils as a causative factor in the pro- duction of intestinal stasis liave been widely quoted in American and fureign sur- gical journals. Some of his more important publications are : Zur Entstehung der Corpora Amylacea in der Prostata. Newer Conceptions of Operative Technic in Cleft Palate and Harelip. Impressions of Appendicitis and Sigmoidal Diverticulitis. Malleable and Dirigable Dilators for Cicatrical Esophageal Stricture. Surgical Treatment of Exophthalmic Goitre. Impressions of London Surgery. The Control of Bleeding in Brain C)perations. Gastrostomy As a Curative Measure Per Se in Xon-] lalignant Strictures of the Oesophagus. Bacillus Pvocvaneus Septicaemia Associated with Blastomycetic Growth in Primary Wound. Confessions of a Yeoman Prostatectomist. The Retention of Drainage-Catheters. Foetal Peritoneal Folds. The Foetal Peritoneal Folds of Jonnesco, Treves, and Reid, and Their Prob- able Relationship to Jackson ' s Membrane and Lane ' s Kink. Further Studies of Pericolonic Membrane. Pericolitis Sinistra. An Anatomic and Phvsiologic Method of Short-Circuiting the Colon. JlnDiana Oniticrsitp 3rbutus JSineteen IDunDccD jToutteen FRANK B. WYNN, A. M., M. D. Professor of Medicine, Indiana U nivcrsity. Doctor Wvnn received his A. B. and his A. . from DePauw L ' niversity in 1882 and ' 83 ; was grackiated from the Cincinnati Medical (. ollei e and served a e:ir as interne in the Cincinnati Hospital. Later he spent four years in pnst ,i ra l ate work, principally at the Carnegie Pathological Laboratory in this conntry and the Allgemeine Krankhans of N ' ienna. Doctor ' vnn has been active in . merican Medical Association affairs for vears. He organized the Scientific Lxhibit of the A. M. A. in 1898, and has been the chairman of that department since its organization. He established the Medical Library in Indianapolis; and is an active Ijooster for the big centennial celebration of Indiana statehood. Doctor W ' ynn is a meni her of the Sigma Chi fraternit -. SnDiana enitiersitp arbutusi PHI RHO SIGMA (Indianapolis and ISlooniington.) NoKTiiWKSTicRX L ' niversit}- was the l)irthplace of Phi Rho Sigma, the Honorary Medical Fraternity established in 1871. Pi Alpha chapter was in- stalled at Indianapolis thirty-two years later. Cardinal and old gold are the fraternit - colors. The American Beauty rose is the flower. The fraternity publishes an official periodical entitled the Journal of Phi Rho Sigma. .M!-:.MI ' .ERS IX THE FACULTY. John H. Oliver, A. M., Al. D. Louis Burckhardt, AI. D. Joseph Rilus Eastman, A. M.. M. D. Charles E. Ferguson, M. D. Thomas B. Eastm.an, A. 1 ' .., M. D. Lafayette Page,, A. : I., M. D. John W. Sluss, A. AI., .M. D. W. N. Wishard A. M., M. D. A. C. Kimberlin, A. P., M. D. F. B. Wynn. A. M., I I. D. J. X. Hurty, Phar. D., M. D ThLnd.ire Pntlcr. A. M.. Thomas P.. X..ble. A. 1!. James H. Ta l(ir. A. AI. D. 1914 .S. R. Edwards Jake Ader K. S. Jones H. J. iM-celand G. D. Thompson Roger Smith Ch ester Erni Harold Graesle Paul Harmon Lacey .Schuler Ral])h Mitchell A. AI. Cole, A. M., M. W. T. S. Dodds, M. D. Harvey Moore, I I. D. Al. D. Geothe Link, M. D. M. D. Oscar Torian, M. D. M. D. Francis Dorsey, A. B., M. D. Daniel Layman, AI. D. Paul Alartin, M. D. Bernavs Kennedy, AI. D. H. H. ' Wheeler, Al. D. John Carmack, M. D. C. H. McCaskey, AI. D. PI. K. Bonn, AI. D. Will Shimer, A. B., M. D. C. R. Strickland, A. B., iM. D. Arthur Hetherington, M. D. MEMBERS IX COLLEGE. 1916 F. H. Xolting AI. S. Davis B. R. Kirklin R. E. Lochry W. C. Moore B. F. Hatfield BLOOMIXGTON. Kent Leasure John Porter Neal Looniis Ernest Foley Harold Corya Ralph Malott JOinetecn unDreD jFoutteen JlnDiana Onitictsitp 3tbutu0 NU SIGMA NU ( iildoniington. ) Nu Sigma Xu originated in 1882, at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Reta Eta chap- ter was instituted at Indiana University six }ears ago. Wine and white are the fraternity colors. MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY. I!. D. .Myers, A. M., M. D. E. D. Wales, B. S., AI. D. A. G. Pohlman, M. D. E. O. Lindenmuth, M. E., .M. D. W. G. Moenkhaiis, I ' h. D. C. E. Edmundson, A. i I. L. S. Davis, Ph. D. E. W, Koc.i, A. M., M. D W. D. (iatch, A. B., M. D. J. D Miller, A. B., M. D. J. C. Sexton, A. M., M. D. L. H. Maxwell. R. E. Lyons, Ph. D. W. F. Hughes, M. D. II. R. Allen, . . I!., M, D. G. B. Jackson, M. D. L. P. Drayer, A. 1!., M. D, F. E. Jackson. 1 ' . F. Hrtchins, M. D. ■_ Charles Ricketts. AlE MBERS IN COLLEGE. 11J14 191 5 Harry Aldrich Clarence L. Bock Donald A. Hartley C. Herbert Bruner George E. Boesinger William F. Craft Michael J. Shiel Edward E. Johnston C. Gleason IMackey R. J. D. Peters. Clyde K. Startzman Arlie J. Ullrich 1917 ' enice D. Keiser Pledges : Harry L. Foreman, John Glendenning, Karl Koons, Dwight Murray. Charles Summerlin. J13ineteen I unDteD JFouttecn SnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus PHI BETA PI. ( Indianapolis. ) Phi Beta Pi came into existence at the Western Pennsylvania Medical Col- lege in 1891. Fourteen years later Omriccm chapter was established at Indian- apolis. Emerald green and white are the fraternity colors. The white chrysan- theum is the flower. MEMBERS IX THE FACULTY Samuel E. Earp, M. S.. M. D. Paul Coble H. II. Wheeler, M. D. I ' . C. Mann J. R. Thrasher. A. B.. M. D. A. C. Schipp, A. M.. M. D. T. F. Ban-.hill, I. U. W. H. Foreman. A. B.. M. D. C. S. Woods, M. D. T. W. DeHass. M. D. J. ' . Reed, B. S., M. D. C. L. Cabalzer. A. 1!.. M. D. W. S. Dow, M. D. D. W. Fosler, M. D. MEMBERS IX COLLEGE. 1914 1916 C. K. Jor.es W. E. Barnes F. D. lartin ' R. E. Conway R. H. Fisher ' ' E. H. Hare R. J. Anderson J. H. Hare W. E. Arbuckle W. C. Heilman E. H. Clauser L. D. Huffman A. B. Coyner G. B. Kent W. P. Jolly T. F, Knllmer Z. M. Scifres A. J. Alicheli C. A. Stayton B. J. Pete rs W. M. Stout A. F. Schultz R. B. Storms M. D. Wilicutts 128 J13inetcen it)unDreD jFourteen JtiDiana 23nit)crsitp 3rbutus PHI BETA PI (Bloomington) Alpha Zeta. the Blooniington Chapter of Phi Beta Pi, was established in 1908. The fraternity house is on Kirkwood Avenue and the boys own a player- piano. MEMBERS. JUNIORS Arley R. Barnes Chester N. Frazier Losey L. Harding Earl H. Mitchell Martin T. Patton Ernest Rupel R. A. Soloman Roy Lee Smith Bertram C. Smith Lester W. each Guthrie W. W ' isener SOPHOMORES Everette E. Burgman Russel H. House Allen Tunis P. R. Locke Rov ' . Mvers C. D. Reitenour Claude E. Smith FRESHMEN Henry F. Crossen Albert E. Douglass Tames W. Griffith Everett L. Hayes W. Ward Norris Samuel J- Purveiance Herbert A. Smith I-Toward E. Steele Pledges : Charles E. Wilson, Charles D. ' arner. Ji5inctEen unDrcD iFoutteen .Li ' - ' i. JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus PHI CHI Phi Chi was fiaiiulecl in i8y4 at the L ' ni crsit - of Lcniisville. ' 1 lie installation of J In chapter at hulianapolis followed in 1903; Alpha Mu came to Bloomington at the same tin-.c. The lily-of-the-valle ' is the fraternity tlower : olive green and white, the colors. The Phi Chi Quarterly is the national publication. Frederic R. Charlton Charles E. Cottingham George W. Combs William P. ( iarshwiler Xorman E. Jobcs T. C. Hood Edgar F. Kiser George J. Cook Edmund D. Clark James H. Ford Marion PLidley Henry Jameson George D. Kahle Harry K. Langdon M. J. ' P.arry L. A. luisniinger 1914 C. L. Partlett E. E. Cabal Edward Cekul Edward Marl cll H. W. Nimal Charles Savcr I. ' . ' an San.lt 1915 John Da FACULTY MEMBERS John E. Morris John L. Masters Ross C. Uttinger John Pfaff Custav Petersdorf Albert E. Sterne ' Frederick A. Tucker G. R. (_;reene Frank A. Morrison Charles F. Xeu Orange G. Pfaff Hugo Pantzer David Ross C. Rich. Scliaeffer A. P. Graham Rol;ert Long ACTIVE MEMBERS 1 9 1 6 Royall Bandelier Kenneth Craft ' illiam Doeppers Clarence Hinchnian Edwin 1 liatt Raymond Johnson Chester Marsh Bernard Ravdin Hern-an Smelser George Shewalter Homer G. Hamer C. Dolph Humes G. W. H. Kemper Homer R. McKinstrv John Stewart Albert Seaton H. S. Tliurston Lewis F. Cline Charles B. Gutelius Alfred Henry Sidney Hatfield Walter F. Kelley John R. Xewcomb Frank L. Truitt J. P. Simonds j. W ' right Bloomington A. AI. Aspey Harold Caylor Alurl Fulk ' G. A. Fischer Harold Gray A. Dale Huffman C. M. McFall AL L. Marquette Lyman Overshiner S. C. Sommers - . G. Thomas Tames Thaver Mnttetn I unDreD jFourtcen 3nDiana Onitiersitp 3r6utuiai A SENIOR DILEMMA A LA Frank Tixxey — ello, Crum. — ello, I ' .ill. liiiw are you today? ( )h, I ' m all ri,i:;ht, I am. How are you? ' Then I sav, ' I- ' ine enough to take some pictures, come go with me. ' Crum says, ' All right. I ' ll go. You see that is where the drama begins and a regular paid photographer does the dirtv work. When I said. ' — ello. Crum. ' at the beginning. I could have said, ■— ello. Cecil ' or ' — ello. Jake ' or anything, ' cause L make up those greetings just JI3inetecn J unDreD JFoucteen like iithcr storv writers. Now T have let ymi in on the story, so I shall i;ci ahead. and I will show you a few little thint s that a Senior does of a morning; ' . First, is the Eye Clinic. ( )ver twenty patients are treated here every morning. How do you like it, Crum? Oh. all right, luit why do you come here first? (You see I just asked that question so that I can get even with Alartin). Why. Martin is in this clinic and he wants his picture to be taken while in ac- tion. He is the business manager. That ' s why I humor him. In the first picture they are not reallv treating anyone; the - are just acting. Martin is im the left. Drs. ] torrison and Hughes are in the picture, too. If (ni will put on the soft- sole stuff we will slip over to the surger -. If the Juni(_irs find out we are going to take a picture, we will be unalile to find room for the camera man. The second picture is the surgery. There ' s a regular nurse, gowns, patients, surgeon and everything here. I think Dr. Hadley will admit the surgeon part of it. The nurse in the picture got awfully tired holding out that strip of adhesive till the light exploded. The Junior — Oh, he didn ' t mind. He would stand in one JnDiana Onitiewitp atbutuis position for a wx-ck in order to .s;et in a picture. They tij up liroken heads, liroken legs, broken — , — . well, everythini - Ijroken except Ijroken vows and Miss Henry does that jiart with the aid nf her clever assistants. Xciw, I ' ll show you where she keep them. Watch your linglish, Crum, cause this is big league stuti. Come on. don ' t slow the story. This third picture is good. It doesn ' t slmw Crum and n ' .e chasing the parties up and down the hall. Well, anvwav, we didn ' t know thev had to fix their hair. This is where JMiss Henr - mends broken lives. Miss Henry is the lady standing. e had her in the chair at the right in the picture for a second but she had to fit a lit- tle orphan bi y with a pair of parents so this is almost a m(i ing picture. j While we are tiding this big time stuff we might as well take a ])icture of the of- fice and Bob Neff. (This picture, Xo. 4. was taken just to make it embarrassing for Bob to ask us for our back fees), ' ou can tell by the picture that he gets along with himself pretty well, Init when that is said it is all said. jQineteen unDteD jTourteen Eh, liill. ain ' t mhi got any clinics with Seniors in ' cm? Sure vc have, conic im. ( I ha -c Lruni ask nic that (|ucstii n so that I can use this next picture and pull a good one on Savery ). This is the Ear, Xose and Throat Clinic. We ' ll find sonic Seniors and Squirnn Saver} ' here. This fifth ])icturc is made uii, too. W ' c ha l to ])lan it to g ' et Saver ' s hack to the camera. Dr. AlcCaskev is standing next to him, in fact, ever - one is next tcT him. It took a lot of nerve to pull that one. Hut it is all right if I can get away with it. In pointing out these emhryo doctors 1 use Jestures — with hoth hands — see, anihidc.xtrous. .Most ever - medical student gets that from his familiarity with the Ihhics. .Mike Shiel is in this ]iiclure. lie asked me to mention his name, lie is trying to see what his patient is thinking aliout. an- Saiidt couldn ' t find anyone to look into so he has dropped himself over the tahle. We will go up the hall to a Tub ' crcular Clinic. This is another one of our big clinics. The regular doctors have gone, so in order to give ou a picture of the nurse and the clinic room we had to call in somebod} ' to act like a diictor. The gen- tleman whom we called in asked that we label this picture, Roy .Storms aiiil his lahoratorw The nurse suggested that he could hear the breath sounds better if he would remove the girl ' s coat — hence the beautiful color on the doctor ' s face. Kirk- lin, Nolting and Locherv are posing just at the edge of the picture but we are go- 137 UnDiana 23nitiersitp arbutus ing to fool them and leave them out. Kirk ' s gold tooth is certainly working well today. The next picture is Dr. Emerson ' s Limousine Clinic. Of course they don ' t all own Limousines, nor is it one of the prerequisites of the Clinic. Dr. Brayton is res- ponsible for the name. All of the patients who survive the foregoing clinics end at the drug-room where r. Lynn is bus} ' , putting the corks in and the bottles back. This picture, Xo. 8, shows Mr. Lynn through the window and also Dr. Rrayton of the famous Bravton Clinic. If Mr. Lynn ' s medicine doesn ' t cure them we will probably- find them at the hospital on another day. ' ell, this is another day and this is the Hospital. This is a regular picture, noth- ing phonev about it except Danruther has shaved for this occasion. Nothing less than a picture could stimulate Danney ' s shaving center. (Jur worthy presitlent has his back to us but he is none the less impressive. There is a lot of brains in this picture. ( Boesinger is in the center). You will notice that Cahall is not flirting with the nurses. Aldrich, being married, must trod the straight and narrow. Oh, the clinician is Dr. Torias. Jl ineteen IpunDceD Jfourteen This picture finislies our little drama. It is almost the end for the |)atient and for our trip. Dr. Thorner is operating, assisted bv Dr. Fortner. Dr. Steve Eggert is giving the anasthetic and I might say he has a world of class. That squares us for the points he taught us- in anaesthesia. Xot bad looking nurses, eh, Crnm. In the roost from left to right are the following seniors, Tucker, Unit, Ihatt. Hrill, Jesse Lee Jackson ( ' ice Pres. class). Dr. Swartz. Dovis, Danrulhcr ( Danruther is following the photographer) and Bartlett. ' ' Well, Crum, some work nut. eh? One is pretty near ready to go over to Mr, and Mrs. Busy-Bee ' s and grab his daily bean. How dd you like the talk with the pictures? Oh, all right, but it nuist ci ist m it tor cocaine. HISTORY OF THE CLASS Our class first of all has the uni(|ue distinction of being the first class to grad- uate from Indiana University in the six-year medical course. Back in 1908, when we were Freshmen, our trials with Physics and Chemistry wore so severe, we thought nothing worse could cume to any man, but lo, when Anatomy and Xeur- ology were encountered, we freely gave out the warning, . bandnn all hope ye who enter here. JnDiana Onitjcrsitp arbutus Doctor I ' ohlman led us gloriously through muscles, nerves, liver and bone while Doctor Mvers brought in the brains and told Bennett ti 1)ring in the class. Dnctnr May said, ■• ' (lu ' ll flunk just sure if nu don ' t watch out. And sometimes, unfor- tunateh ' , a few failed to do the watching or, at least, the re(|uired work. Doctor Rloenkhans, in his quiet German way, warned us occasionally of a State T.oard question. On January I, H)i2, we were bundled u]i 1 - our Alma Mater and shipped off to Indianapolis to be henceforth under the protecting wing of Doctor Emerson, who was then a ni tli and a mystery to us. We must add here, that he still re- mains a mystery, hut not a myth by any means. When we were settled in Indi- anapolis away from college, we began to lay aside our Rah rah ways and tried to assume the dignity of real doctors. We were given our A. B. degrees in 1912, JI3ineteen IJ)unDtcD jFoutteen ' hen we entered in tlie fall nf ii;ij, twn cif (nir wcirtliy classmates, i lenry ■ill)ur - and I ' -. X. Ilennelt had witlidrawn. Durir.i ciur summer acati in cnu duties had evidentU ' increased as well as our respdnsihilities, for now we must write preseriptiiins fur our patients during clinic hours and listen to lectures or re- cite the rest of the da}, six days a week, with the exception of Saturday afternodu. These long hdurs were lirightened along the wa - hv an occasional social function. The annual .Medic dance is one enjo ed h - all. fhe annu.al .Seninr dance was given at the Melropulitan School of Alusic, April lo. The l ' acult - en- tertained the Seniors, ITTruar) 27, at which time Doctor I ' juersnn ga -e a short talk on the doctor as a stu lent and the advancemer.t of the .Medical School standard. Doctor Hutchins talked on the iihildSdjihy of life for the doctor. ( )ur six years, we feel, have been well spent an l with a large numlier taking the seventh ■ear in hospital work or a post-graduate course, we go out this June well equipped, we hope, for our ' s, the noblest of all professions, — Medicine. 141 JnDiana Oniticrsitg atbutu0 NARCOTICS Davis to Aldrich ( Mrs. Aldrich present) : Harry, will you have a cigar Aldrich : ' Xo, I don ' t smoke. Dr. Gatch : Aloore, what is the prognosis in retropharyngeal abcess? ' ' Moore: Good, Doctor. Dr. Gatch: They practically all die. Dr. Allen: Vhy are people pigeon-toed? Saverv : Wliv, they have bad eyes? Kellv : Cekul, why are you always late to class? ' ' Cckul : I ' m a Russian — Dan: ' an Sandt, wh_ - are you so sleepy? ' ' an : Because I had to rock the bab - all night. ' ' I13meteen undreD JFourteen DR. LONG ADDS TO GIFT Ax additional gift of ten thousand dollars has been made by Doctor and Mrs. Robert W. Long, of Indianapolis, to the Trustees of Indiana University to be used in the improvements of the Robert V. Long Memorial Hospital, which is now Hearing completion on West Michigan street, near White River. The latest gift from Doctor and Mrs. Long brings the total amount of their donations to the hospital to two hundred and sixty thousand dollars. A sub-committee of the Board of Trustees held a meeting at the Denison Hotel, April 2-j, to discuss matters in connection with the Lniiversity School of Aledicine. ' hilc the members were in session. Doctor Long appeared and pre- sented a check for the latest gift. None of the committeemen knew 1)eforehand that the gift was to be made. .■little more than a year ago Doctor Long gave the Board of Trustees a pack- age of bonds amounting to twent - thousand dollars. InDiana UniMzvsitv 3rbutus THE PLACE OF MEDICINE IN SCIENCE Sinii ' n at lar.ux- must be responsible tVir the free medical care of the sick poor bv a sufficieiith well-trained profession. This, of course, means free dispensari-;s which are affiliated with m.edical schools, in order that the n-.edical student may i::e a mao-net attractin.t - there the well-trainetl professor whose services otherwise the mone - appr( ])riated would not tempt. Indiana proposes through her I ' niversity to fm-nish the jjoor a certain an:cunt of this free medical aid. This w-ill allow us also the opportunit - to study the problems which lead to disease of the poor ir. a wav not before attempted. ' e hope to focus the attention of many departments on the same problems, suggested by the conditions of our patients. This is contrary to the custom of other medical schools, each departnier.t of which is allowed full freedom in its choice of research problems with the result that these researches arc quite mn-elatcd. Team pla - has proven its great value not only in business but also in professional work, as is witnessed by the most famous private surgical clinic in the worlil, whose success is due in large measure to the fact that many experts cooperate in the care of one patient. — Dean Charles P. Hiiierson. iQineteen unDteO Jfoutteen Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis Department When it was decided tliree years ago to emphasize the work of the first year at Bloom- ington only, Owen Hall was remodeled. The improvement was made in order to accommodate the Department of Anatomy and Physiology. The well-equipped laboratories are now in use. The third floor of Wylie Hall has been fitted up to accommodate the increasing number of students in physiological chemistry. The work of the Sophomore year has been transferred entirely to Indianapolis. JnDiana niticrsitp 3t6utus THE SKELETON CLUB Ax old legend of the campus has it that once upon a time, long ago, no one knows exactly when, the Law students of the University had a certain distaste for their gruesome Medic associates. The members of the Medical School, however, were always somewhat undecided as to what their attitude toward the Laws should be — should the Laws be considered along with other curiosities in osteology as a species that invariably shows a remarkable crook in the spinal cokmin — or, should the Laws be looked upon from the standpoint of what they produced, and, accordingly, be placed in the newer additions of the pharmacopoeia as a re- liable source for salve of either the healing or the irritating variety as the case might demand. But continuing the legend, it is clear that these two clashing attitudes that existed long ago could hardly result in very great harmony between the two schools. In fact, quite naturally relations were somewhat strained, and feeling ran verv high between the Laws and Medics. This situation is one entirely of the past, but, so the legend goes, this very situation was the one that resulted in the birth of the Skeleton Club. Having as a common interest a common attitude to- ward the Laws, the Medics and Pre-medics organized themselves into a perma- nent organization known as the Skeleton Club. This Law-Medic sittiation now being merely a bit of interesting history, the Skeleton Club has resolved itself into the social organization of the medical school at Bloomington. The club has, however, had a real function in our medical careers by acting as an agency to promote a definite intimacy between students and the medical faculty. At various meetings Dean Emerson, Drs. Myers. Rein- hardt, Payne, and ] Ir, Wilson have given short talks to the club, which were at once instructive in their nature and vet lacking in that formality that necessarily attends a lecture in the class room. These were indeed rare opportunities to the Skeletons. The Skeletons, however, gave attention to the social side of their natures at the club dance in the Winter term. The dance was carried out in true Medic style. The auditorium of the Student Building resembled a true Chamber of Horrors littered with skulls and bones and partially disarticulated skeletons. A full skeleton grinned good-naturedly as he posed calmly in front of the orchestra in the full blare of the green spotlight. Some of the guests were slightly shocked during the grand march — but when the Skeleton Rag struck up for the first dance — it wasn ' t so bad after all. JBineteen l unDreD jFouttecn Perhaps the most enjoyable event of the Skeleton Cluh this year was the annual ban(|uet held at the Hotel Turner, May 7. This was the last regular meeting of the Skeleton Club for the ear. The entire Medical faculty at lllooni- ington, along with a few of the Indianapolis faculty, were the guests of the club. President llryan, Dean Emerson antl Dr. A! vers gave talks, and ever thing ended quite appropriately the year of iyi4 for the Skeleton Club. OFFICERS. EVMAN OVERSHINER Sldlll y. D. KiiiSER Itlas Miss Sti-: e. son I iiiiicnis Robert H. us St cm 11 in DR. BARDERTSCHER Doctor J. D. Uardertscher is one of the new members of the department of anatomy. Dr. Bardertscher came to lUoomington, last fall from Cornell, where he took his I ' ll. D. degree and served as instructor for the past three and a half years. He received Ixith de- grees of A. n. and A. M. from ( ihio I ' niver- sitv at Athens, Ohio. SnDiana Oniuersitg arbutus JI5inetecn iDunDreD jFourteen 3nDiana Onftocrsitp arbutus Ddcthk May ' s Ricseakch Laburatukv. Doctor Barhkrtschkr ' s Histology Laboratory A Simple Apparatus. k ' s Workshop. JI3ineteen ! unDreD jFourtecn •Pat Reiny Jawbones-Sawbones Receptiox Committee For Purdue wrWi ' ml Where Figures Are Studied Yell- Leader JnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus Earl Spiino Br Coiii nv „J Shaw Cr Comn Jl3ineteen unDreD jFouttecn .■' -Dulnt utrrnru (Tliur (Elmiiir -llrsar Tijmiuirii JJhili i Urmirr n- ■■•;,: ' ivj -: ' - C;4.v ky JnDiana OniUersitp arbutus JOHN SWEENEY For two years John Sweeney was a member of the Class of Nineteen Fourteen. For three years he was a member of the History Club. Those of us who were fortunate enough to have him for a classmate or an associate knew especialU ' well why he was an acknowledged leader in the class ro(im and on the campus. His superior ability, his restless energy, and his depth of character commanded the recognition and homage of all. He won leadership and popularity not by seeking for them, but by forgetting them. How vividly do we recall the ring in his voice an d the fire in his eye as he would speak in class meetings, in Union meetings, and in other student assem- blies. Fearlessly he would denounce what he thought was wrong and champion that which his sound judgment and high principle told him was right. Perhaps we thought him overbold at times ; but we always knew that John Sweene - was sincere, and we always honored his devotion to principle. His struggle for an education was sustained by high ambition and invincible pluck. Who knows how great were the dreams which made him smile at all hard- ships and difficulties? In fact he seemed to welcome every trial as a test of his independence and self-reliance. For above all, John Sweeney was a free man, in thought and in action. The only distinction which he would recognize among his fellow-students were those based on undivided merit. Tre one organization to which he acknowledged first alle giance was that greatest and best fraternity which binds us all together as her own sons and daughters — Indiana University. For such a man, defeat and dishonor are impossible; even death cannot harm him ; and even death honored John Sweeney because to him it came as the death of a hero. Hut some may ask, was not his everyday college life after all, a long, bitter, lonesome struggle. Xo. He had friends and honors in abundance. His friends were true friends, attracted to him by his rugged, forceful personalitv. His col- lege honors were real honors — the greatest which his Alma Mater could give him. They were sincere, inalienable tributes which hewon not bv humbling himself, but by asserting himself in work well done. As long as an Indiana student like John Sweeney is so honored and so rewarded, by teachers and by students alike, we can rest assured that our University is standing true to the principles which are her life. It is fitting for us to perpetuate the tradition of his college career. Although we can no longer talk to him or walk with him across the Campus, we can see to it that his influence still lingers. May each incoming Freshman resolve to be the kind of a college man John Sweeney was. And may every out-going Senior study this alert, manly face, and, thanking God for life and opportunity, deter- mine to serve his fellowman as Tohn Sweenev would have done. JI3meteen unDteD jFoutteen Sloliit uirrttPij Indiana Oniticrsitp atbutus CLINE CLQUSE Physically sti-diij;, kindly in dispositinn. and a stndent of ability, Cline Clouse will be renienil)ered as a fine type of youni;- nianlnuid. Ueing clean in his daily habits and trained l)v hartl labor on the farm, he possessed an excellent physique and made a wcirthv and tVirniidable contender on the football field or basketball floor. He had many friends. wIid admired him fur what he was, and liked his snnny disposition. lie was (piiet, contented and satisfied to labor, to earn a portion of his education by his own efforts, — without seeking the empty ojory of college honors. He was not an exceptional student; least of all, was he a grind. But he possessed the intellect and capacity for work and his record as a student remains as one worthy and highlv credible. ThoroughK- sincere were his convictions. lie disdained stooping to low ideals or to pett - motives. iM-ar.kness characterized his speech and an absolute fairness directed his actions. His death came as the result of a railroad accident near his home at Hope, Indiana, during the latter part of the summer acation. The fatal accident to Clouse and John Sweeney lioth took place within the space of a few days. Nineteen !0unDreD jfourtecn (Eluir iEsUc (Ulmtivr SnDiana Onitiersitp at6utu$ JESSE HOWARD The death of Jesse Howard took place January 17, 1913, following a brief illness. Howard received his A. B. degree three years ago and at the time of his death, was engaged in graduate work in sociology at Indianapolis, preparatory to making social service his life work. ' hile at Bloomington, Howard was the varsity baseball pitcher and during his last ear with the team, made an e.xcellent record. On the athletic field, he was a clean, fair sportsman, — who plaved the game for its worth but always respected his opponents. In class rooms, Howard was an earnest, sincere, conscientious student, who seemed guided by a firmly fixed aim and ambition. In active student life, he was energetic, and thoroughly honest; above all, he was a Christian. During his undergraduate days, the Y. ] I. C. A. activities received a great part of his attention and eiiforts. After taking his degree, Howard began devoting himself to service for others, — toward helping those, who bv poverty and social conditions, were no longer able to help themselves. Few men could have been better fitted for social service than Jesse Howard, — kind in heart, sympathetic, sincere in purpose, devoted to principle, and clean in mind and body, certainh the good that his life would have meant must have been crreat. Ji3ineteen I unDtcD jFoutteen dirssr iByfrs l ouiarii JinDiana Onitiersitp at6utu0 JOHN PHILIP BRUNER ToiiN Phili|:) I ' .runer will be remembered by bis ready smile, his good hv.n ' .or. and his cheerful disposition. In a year ' s time bis personality won for him many friends, wIki were drawn to him b - his clean and hiobly mural character. — friends, who knew him to l;e a gentleman of truth and honor, whose word remained un- questioned and , hose principles stood unchallenged. I ' .runer came to the School of Medicine fmm Earlham. where he received the degrees of A. B. and A. .AI. While in high school at Greenfield and in college, he had made a name for himself as an athlete, both in foutball and baseball. He was a meml)er nf the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and during his work in leuical School became affiliated with tlie Xn Sigma Xu medical fraternit -A.S a member of bnth organizations, he was a loyal brother but never suffered himself to allow his circle of friends to be confined to the narrow limits of anv organization. Jl3metecn l unDteD jFoutteen 3lnliu Jthilii-i Ikmirr 161 UnDiana eniDcrsitp arfiutus ON THE UNIVERSITY IDEAL ( (( uiiiz ' crsity, us in a man, the ideal actually held IS all-iiiiportaiit because it appears ei ' cry day in the decisions which determine what the man or uniz ' crsity comes to he. The ideal university, as I think, is a group of first- rate men whose zcork is to find the whole truth so as to bring to society complete enlightenment. The men are of zwious types. There arc scholars who devote themscl:-es to pure learning without trying to do any- thing else: though in fact their discoveries often prove to have the utmost practical Z ' aluc. There are schol- ars who dez ' Ote themselz ' cs to the immediately practi- cal problems of applied science: though in fact {since science is one) their discoz ' cries often haze the utmost -value in the field of pure science.. There are scholars who are also gifted as teachers. There are scholars z ' ho are also practical mechanical or clectricat or social engineers. There are scholars z ho are pri- marilx artists or interpreters of art. The z ' ork of these men touches ez ' cry human interest — farm kitchen, factory, bank, public road, school, poor-house, art gallery, library, theater — all things useful, many things of no use at all e.vcept in terms of the spirit. It is the office of the uniz ' crsity scholars to knoz ' , — eacli in at least one of these fields. — zcliat is quite first-rate and to help nuike the first-rate displace z ' hat is second-rate or zi. ' orse. This Is the one thing z ' liich I zcould liazr an alum- nus of the Uniz ' crsity fully understand. I z ould haze him realise the firstrateness of at least one University scliolar. I z ' oiild haz ' c him see the incalcuablc zxdue of that man ' s firstrateness to the farthest corners of the State, because it is the initial condition for bring- ing that sort of firtrafeiie. ' ;s there. I z ' ould haze him reali::e that he is himself bound to help make that kind of firstrateness a liz ' iug fact in his ozen community. The alumnus z ' lio does this is not simply a man zeho once took a degree. He is a lizing member of the Uniz ' crsity. sharer in its essential z ' ork of complete social enlightenment. William Lowe Brvax, President. Alumni Quarterly. 162 Nineteen I unDrcD Jfouttecn flTflLCTICS anDiana Onitietsitp att)utu0 College without athletics would be like greens without bacon. Everyone makes room for an athlete and a mon- ogram is more to be prized than much Greek and fine learning. Being able to demolish the ribs of a gridiron oppo- nent, to appropriate hotel and pullman towels, and to throw the bull make col- lege worth while. A University is known by the athletes it keeps. 164 I13ineteen i|)unDreD jfourteen PLAYING THE GAME A WISE man observed not long ago that the cure for defective athletics is more ath- letics. He meant that the way to abate the over-intensity of inter-collegiate competition is to diffuse it over more space. We, who believe in the value of athletics among gen- eral university activities, hope for three things: a game for everyone to play; everyone in the game of his choice ; and everywhere and always, animating the whole, the spirit of the sportsman. Let us play our games for the fun of playing them; and we shall soon real- ize that there is little fun in doing what we like to do unless we do it as well as we can. With a great many men playing games for the pleasure of playing them well, inter-col- legiate teams will take care of themselves. They will be a natural outgrowth of the desire that every good player acknowledges, — the desire for the zest and the fun of competition with someone worthy of his skill. CHARLES JACOB SEMBOWER. JnDiana CJniDcrsitp arfiutus COACH CHILDS AND THE NEW ERA FcLi.dWiNG the resignation of Jimmy Sheldon as the Indiana football coach, the Athletic Committee adopted the Year-Amund System of coaching. — a system in which an Athletic Director assumes control over all forms of athletics through- out the ear. With the revolutionary change in the athletic system at Indiana, Clarence C. Childs was chosen as the new Director. His duties will begin at the opening of the football season next fall. Childs is a Yale man and is said to have been one of the best line men ever tiirneil out at ( )ld b ' li. His first experience in athletic company came at Kenyon, where he pla ed on the footliall. basketball and second baseball teams. He pre- pared himself for Yale at Croton School, Syracuse, X. Y., and was a member of all the athletic teams. In his first ear at Yale he was rnable tn maVe the Bull- dog eleven, contenting himself with playing sub-guard. He outclassed all con- tenders in the following year and gained a position on the first eleven. During the next season, injuries after the West Point game prevented his ]ilaying again until the latter part of the season. His football training came from such notable football men as Walter Camp, Shelvin, Jones. Sanford and Coy. Child ' s activities did not end when the football season was over. The spring found him at work on the track and on the river. He was a member of the crew- and rowed a strong oar. As a track man, he was one of Yale ' s stars. His first season with the hammer showed him to lie handy with the weights and he e ' |ualled the work in one year of Flannigan in six. . t the end of that season, he was throwing the hammer (ine hundred feet and two inches. He was a member of the ( )l nipic team and established a new record at Berlin and at Paris, defeating Ralph Rose with a throw of one hundred sixty-four feet, ten inches. He was chosen captain of the Yale track team and for a tin:e, led the men in pole aluting. ' restling received his attention, also, and he repre- sented his schoiil in the heavyweight class. When Childs came to Bloomington during the Winter term to confer with the Athl etic Committee and to make his plans for the coming year, a formal welcome was extended ti him on behalf of the Facult ' . . lumni and student bodv in the form of a large baniiuet in which Indiana spirit ran high and enthusiasm prom- ised better da_ s for local athletics. Childs made a verv favorable impression at that time and it is believed with his coming, with the introduction of Eastern s s- tenis of coaching and with otiier new ideas, Indiana will fight its wav toward the head of the Conference. So universal is the belief in the arrival of Indiana ' s supremacy that hopes and faiths have been symbolized b}- the Burning of the Jinx and the declaration of a New Era in Indiana Athletics. 166 lE oav Davis FooTiiAi.L Captain. JnDiana Qnitjersitp 3r6utus FOOTBALL As pointed out in the January issue of the Aluiiini Quarterly the football team of last season earned the distinction of being both the best and worst since 1910. By beating Ohio State, 7 to 6, in the most thrilling game of the season, and de- feating Northwestern, 21 to 20, Indiana won two Conference games and thereby I ' ustitied the first part of the paradox. These were the first Conference football victories within the ]5ast three years. Purdue having contributed the last victory at Lafavette in 1910. On the other hand. Indiana suffered two humiliating defeats. At Iowa City, the team encountered a surprise and met defeat by the overwhelming score of 60 to o. The second loss came in the closing game of the season, at the hands of the ancient rival, Purdue : the slaughter in this instance resulted in the score of 42 to 7. It was a glorious season for the skeptics and critics. Even the most loyal supporters were forced to admit that something was wrong somewhere, and naturallv, the wise ones were the first to foresee the difficulty. As many different theories regarding the cause of the failures were advancd as there were persons attempting to find the trouble ; remedies were much less numerous. The largest squad of candidates in vears reported on Jordan Field at the opening practice in late September. Prospects were flattering. In the opetung game, DePauw paid its humble sacrifice to the extent of 48 to 3. Hopes for a victorv over the eleven of Coach Stagg collapsed early in the game on the fol- lowing Saturday and Indiana lost in a 7 to 21 score, while Captain Davis re- ceived injuries that deprived the team of his services for the rest of the season. The best game of the season followed three weeks later with Illinois at Wash- ington Park, Indianapolis. Although the Hoosiers lost, 10 to o, it was a contest in which, as expressed In- the Indianapolis papers, there was as much of glory in defeat for Indiana as in victor - for Illinois. Six times, the Indiana line success- fully defended its goal against the fierce attacks of the heavy Illinois backs: — each time within a distance of a few yards of the goal. Indiana registered a victory over the Ohio State, met bitter defeat at Iowa, won from Xorthwestern by a single point margin and closed the season by loosing to Purdue. During the year the Cream and Crimson scored 90 points against 162 made by the opponents. Following the absence of Captain Davis from the team, Fleming, last year ' s leader, served as the field captain, ' ith the closing game Jimmy Sheldon. — who has brought home manv victories to the Hoosier school, — ended his period of coaching at Indiana. jSineteen unDtcD jFourteen GOOD.MAX SHELDON tr; )U SHOXKW ' ILER Walter Eckersall, writin.i - in the Chicago Tribune, has the fullowing aihlitional comment on the Chicago-Indiana game, Saturday : The gan-.es played in the West last Saturday, resulted as expected, but in some instances the elevens did not show the anticipated strength. Although Chicago won from Indiana. 21 to 7, the Maroons failed to show versatility of attack and strength on the defense. I)ut the players said the Hoosiers were a stronger team than expected. —INDIANA STUDEX ' l. BERXDT TOHXSOX FLE.MIXG r ' ECKIXI ' AU(;H 169 3nDiana Onitietsitp arbutus; LOETZ REDAIOXD WILLIAMS WORSE Y The coaching force for the 1913 football team was further increased yester- da - bv the arrival of Xoel Dvnbar from his home in South Lend. Mr. Dunbar arrived esterday morning, got into a suit yesterday afternoon and helped tn direct the regular workout. He will have charge of the line candidates. Dunbar played football at both Chicago and Yale. In 1908, he played center for Yale and won a place on the All-American team. He coached the line at Notre Dam.e last sea-- son. —IXDL4XJ STUD EXT. CONRAD ZARING SCOTT JI3mctccn It)unDrcD jFourtecn EREHART KRAUSS WHITAKER WAl.Kl ' .K Iowa showed no compassion for the Crimson cripples at Iowa City Saturday. After sendino- several Hoosier mainstays to the side lir.es early in the game, they proceeded to tear things up during the remainder of the contest and when the whistle brovght relief the Hawke_ es had hung u]j a stupendous sccirc. —INDI.INA STUDIiXT. WINTERS DECKER D.WIS DICE JI3mcteen unDteD Jfourteen I .- ' ft.. BARN 1 1 ART MIXTUN WMm MATTHFAVS The chief topic of conversation on the campus this morning; was the liKhana- Ilhnois football game at Indianapolis, scheduleil for next Satunla . Such tritles as the water-famine, the Kappa open house. Strut and JM-et trynuts and what not were rushed into the background and everybody talked of the big game. That this contest promises to be the greatest reunion of facult -, alumni and undergradu- ates in the histur} ' of Indiana L niversit - seems assured from the amount of enthusiasm shown. —IND .IX.I SrUDJlXT. DUNBAR voss BEAN JInDiana UniMctsitv 9r6utus JIMMY SHELDON VuK the past eight years James H. Shel(li)ii has been coaching Indiana ' s foot- ball teams. Sheldon was reluctant to come back to Bloomington after finishing the 1 012 season but finally consented to take up the leadership again. His resig- nation at the end of last year came, hdwever, somewhat as a surprise. Although Indiana had not been successful thrtiughnut the season, the students were still loval in their support of the little coach, who had taught the men all the rudiments of the game and brought Indiana from the bottom in Conference standing well toward the top. The title of Foxy Jimmy came to be applied to Sheldon while he was still in school at the L ' niversitv of Chicago. Those were the days when he was play- ing either at half-back or quarter for Alonzo Stagg. The name originated from the ability of Sheldon to keep his opponents guessing and from his size as a factor in deceiving their backs. Three years after his graduation from the Midway school in 1902. Sheldon came to Indiana and began his creer as a football coach. In the season of 1910. Jimmy produced the greatest and most successful team that ever represented the University. Although it failed to land the Conference championship, the men had the honor of being strong contenders in the race. It was during this memorable year in the history of Indiana ' s athletics that Sheldon achieved his greatest ambition. — that nf gaining a triumph over his old teacher Stagg. The first ear that Sheldon came to lllooniington, he succeeded in drillir.g the team to such a point that Indiana battled the Boilermakers to 11 to 11 tie. In 1908 he braced the Cream and Crimson and developed the men into a machine that defeated I ' urdue by a score of ten to four, despite the tremendous odds against them. In 1909. Indiana defeated the old rivals by the very decisive score of 36 to 3. Sheldon had the ability and the tact to teach football. Xo coach could have instilled the fight into the players that Jimmy did. To him the game was a battle, fit only for those with courage and determination ; above all. he detested any lack of staving cjualities. So long as a man showed a willingness to learn, the courage and resolution to fight until the end of the game, regardless of all odds. Coach Sheldon was his friend, whether the candidate knew the finer points of the game or not. It is with regret that the students of the University look upon Sheldon ' s de- parture. To him. Indiana ' s athletics owe a great debt. He gave the school team of which it could be proud. — not ajways winning teams to be sure, — but never a team that could be called cowardly or lacking in determination. It was by his teaching that the names of such stars as Gill. Hare, Berndt. Dutter. Hill and Davis have become fixed in the history of football at Indiana. iFloijti iFlpmtng Baseball Captain ' [X r 7 J Sere JI3inEteen unDrcD jFoutteen BASEBALL Indiana played real baseball last spring. The team, under the skillfnl coach- ing of Arthur H. Herndt, gained eleven victories out of a possible fifteen, won six games and lost three in the Conference struggle, and tied with lllinnis for seennd place, after Chicago made a runaway race for the leadership. The season proved to be the best that the Cream and Crimson has had in manv vears. The good record has probably never lieen excelled since the good old davs when the present chairman of the Athletic Committee played shortstop for Indiana The success of the 11)13 team was due largeh ' to the fine leadership of Cot- ton, who handled a group of young but willing fellows with excellent judgment. SCHULTZ MARTIXDALE JOHNSON SnDiana Onitiersitp arftutus He developed men for nearly every important position on the diamond, and then succeeded in getting the men to work together. With Captain JMartindale, Schultz, Fleming and Ramsey as a nucleus for a new team, the coach worked hard to bring out promising qualities in Englehart, Schlemmer, Anderson, Alinton and John- son. As a result of his exertions the close of the season saw a remarkable ni- crease in team-pla and basc-rur.ning, a good increase in fielding ability, and a fair increase in batting. The men worked together as a unit, and made up in their daring for their lack of polish, liehind all the personality of Berndt accomplished much. . fter an eas - victor - over llert W ' estover ' s Indianapolis Independents un April 14, which ended in a 2-0 score, the Crimson team moved on to Champaign and two da s later lost to the I ' niversity of Illinois, 9-5. That defeat was due largely to poor battery work, Schultz and Johnson working together in that game for the first time. The southpaw mi. ed si.x bases on balls with two strikeouts in the second inning, and the Illini scored seven runs as a result. That disastrous game gave the unfaithful a chance to shout, ' T told you so and tliere were many expressions of sympathy for poor Schultz. Both the sym- pathizing and the shouting were wasted. Exactly two days later Carl beat Iowa, 4-2, on Jordan I ' ield, and held the 1 lawkeyes to two hits, a single and a double MINTON ANDERS ' . )X V ' 1!R( )( )1 Nineteen unDrcD jFourteen by righl fielder Louden. Indiana drove Gordon iiU of llie liox in tlic lliird inning by scoring three runs on three hits, one of them a duulile l)y Schultz. The latter struck out eleven men. The game gave Indiana a percentage of .500 in the Con- ference race, a percentage which they never tell helnw in the course of the season. Even better news came a week later. Indiana surprised the Wisconsin men by defeating the over-praised Badgers in a remarkably easy game. 10-4. The strong team of Beloit College fell the ne.xt day, 2-1. Lybrook pitched a splendid game and his partner, Foellinger, distinguished himself with two hits. I ' ull of confi- dence, therefore, the team entered Chicago for the third game of the trip. Ikit the Maroons were prepared. The sterling I ' .aiimgartner went on the slab and helft Indiana to one hit — a single by bleming. Chicago, needless to saw won. and the score was 5-1. That game did more to damage Indiana ' s pennant hopes than the Crimson players or fans suspected at the time. One week later Indiana entertained Wisconsin on Jordan b ' ield. The score was 5-4 in favor of the entertainers. P ' leming hit a home run, a doul)le and a single, and Fred Trueblood described the game for the Indiana Student. ( )ther- wise the game was featureless. Rose Poly played the mid-week game in the week following, and lost, 5-2, al- though Nehf pitched a clever game for them. The real excitement of the week ' s placing on Jordan Field, however, proved to be a thrilling overtime game with EREH. RT ENGLEH. RT SnDiana Oniticrsitp 9t6utus Ohio State. Fur eleven innings the contest went on and furnished hair-raising plays every minute. Indiana won, 6-5, on two clean hits and a sacrifice. That last inning deserves a re-telling. Minton, who had hit a home run early in the game, singled to right field. Fleming sacrificed from the box to the bag. Schlemmer tried hard but raised a fly to left field. With two out and ] Iinton on second base. Englehart came to bat and hit to deep center field for what, under other circum- stances, v. ould have 1 cen a h( ir.e run. Minton scored, of corrse. and a great gan:e came tu an entl. The last long trip uf the ear began with the defeat of Wabash at Crawfords- ville on .Ma 2 J, the score being 4-2. The game was slow and tiresome, Indiana piling up all its runs in the first two innings on two hits and four errors. DePauw furnished an unpleasant surprise on the following day by beating Indiana, 5-4. Lybrook allowed only five scattered hits, but one of them, combined with two bases on balls and erratic work by the infield, netted four runs in the fourth inning and ga e the Methodists the game. Sensational outfielding by both sides did much to prevent further scoring, Minton and B. Thomas starring with several brilliant catches. For the third game of the barnstormers, Ohio State contributed some credit- able opposition, but the Buckeyes lost by the fan:iliar score. 6-5, Indiana, as usual, got an early lead by scoring three runs in the opening inning and the chief interest FOELLINGER McNUTT RAMSEY Nineteen -! unDreD jfourtccn thereafter lay in the possibihty of the Ohioans tieing the score. They did so in the third inning after Indiana had made one more in that inning, Ohio State gathering four runs on two hits, a base on balls and two errors. The eighth inning looked dangerous for Indiana, but Schultz prevented the tieing run by striking out the batter with a runner on second base. This game gave Indiana an average of five games won and two lost in the Conference race. The next game would probably decide Indiana ' s chances for the title. If Indiana won, the Crimson had a chance to tie for first place, regardless of what Chicago might do. If Indiana lost, the best that could be hoped for was second place. . s a matter of history Indiana lost — to Purdue un the following Wednesday, y2. It was a bitterly-fought game, played before a crowd of four thousand Elks who were holding their State convention at Lafayette. The crowd and the players divided amusement honors. Schlemmer scored Imth of Indiana ' s runs on singles by himself and a double by Englehart in the fourth inning and a doulilc b - . n k ' r- son in the seventh inning. Oliphant, prince of Crimson hoodoos, tallied the win- ning run in the eighth inning by beating out a bunt, a passed ball and a squeeze play with Weaver at bat. The ne.xt and last three games of the season were played on Jordan Field and Indiana won them all. The first two games were revenge games against De- Pauw and Purdue. The Methodists were beaten, 2-1, although Indiana secured FERGUSON BERNDT HUNT SnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus but line hit oft Patterson — a single by Anderson, which brought in the winning run. I ' urdue was easily defeated on June 3, three days later, in a game devoid of feature. The score was 4-1. The closing game of the season on June 7 saw the second defeat of Wabash. lo-o, the Scarlet being convinced by thirteen clean hits. Anderson made four hits and Fleming met the ball safely on three occasions. An- derson, plaving right field, made a double play unassisted by running to second base after catching a fly. Of the team which made such a brilliant record only three men are lost : : Iartindale, Ramsey and Lybrook. The regular battery, with Schultz and John- son doing dutv, remains intact. Each of the base positions is covered by a veteran, Fleming on first. Englehart on second, and Schlemmer at third. In the outfield Anderson and Clinton remain of the regulars and Erehart of the substitutes. And best of all. Coach llerndt remains at Indiana. ff. 0. T. 1914 FRESHMAN SQUAD |05 5 . -H .g ' 3 ' ■« -3 E ■o — -■St t: § M j; SnDiana Onitietsitp 3t6utus SIGMA DELTA PSI Sigma Delta Psi, an athletic honorary society, was founded at Indiana Uni- versity in the spring of 1912. In purpose, it is intended to be a counterpart on the side of physical training to the academic societies, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sigma Xi. The idea of an honorary fraternity for athletes of exceptional all-around ability originated with Doctor C. P. Hutchins arid received the endorsement of the University Faculty. The name of the fraternity is derived from the initials of its Greek motto which means the body, the servant of the mind. The purpose of the society is to encourage the comprehensive, all-around phys- ical development of college men, to give an impetus to the acquirement of skill in accomplishment, to require of a man that his muscles be trained to respond to his will. — in short, to make of him physically what the college curriculum is mak- ing of him mentally. Membership is limited to students of Junior and Senior standing and placea on a competitive basis. Thirteen events constitute a test for fitness and thev are so arranged as to cover the various forms of muscular fitness. The events include the hundred yard dash, hundred and twent - ard high hurdles, running high jump, running broad jump, putting the shot, iiole vault, throwing the baseliall, punting the football, hundred yard swim, three mile run. ten mile walk and tum- bling. Certain marks are prescribed in each event which the candidates must equal or better before he is eligible for membership. In selecting the events, to quote Doctor Hutchins, The elements of ettort, speed, endurance, and co-ordination had to be in proper proportion in any balance test of physical fitness. In order that the membership might represent the same qualit - of motor efficienc) ' in the small college as in the large university, it was necessarv that the events selected should be self-standardizing. Xine colleges have so far applied for national charters, — Minnesota, Maine. But- ler, Hanover, W ' aliash, Whitman, Utah, DePauw and Yale. At Indiana, seventy- eight different stuilents have enlisted in participation of the membership contests : of these sixt -four are Sophomores and Freshmen. These men have made two hur.dred and thirty-one attempts in the twelve events. Fifty-nine per cent, gained Senior rating, twentv-six per cent, won junior rating, and fifteen per cent, failed to qualify. Doctor William (7. Anderson, of Yale, in commenting on the new movement, wrote as follows : The more I think of the scheme, the better are my impressions. I shall favor the society, and vote for its adoption at Yale. Professor Long, of Leland Stanford wrote : The formation of this society will have marked influ- ence in changing the present attitude toward specialization. 3. Carlton 2)amcl Track Captain. SnDiana Initictsitp Arbutus TRACK Track athletics at Indiana have been rather unsuccessful for a number of years but with the arrival uf Uoctor C. P. Hutchir.s. it has shown a marked im- provement within the last two seasons. ? or a time, the L ' niversity had no coach to direct the work of the track men, and the only training the squad recei ' ed came from their own interest. As a result, the University was [iractically without any team to represent the school on the field and cinder path. In lyio, efforts were made to regain the former track standing of the days of Sampse, lohnson and BarcIa ■. The efforts were successful only in the measure that thev stimulated interest in this branch of athletics once more and caused a numl;er of men to begin work which would not show results for two or three ears. The I ' .ext season witnessed even more visible results. Last season a credi- ble team represented the school on the cinder path and while it lost its meets with large schools bv rather one-sided scores, the showing made was one l:)y im means to be ashamed of. Bose, Thompson and Daniel letl the team in point scoring and were successful against the opponents from the stronger schools. This vear, the season has been even better. DePauw fell an easy victim, but credible showings were made against Northwestern and Purdue. Captain Daniel represented the team in the dashes and broad jump, ' icks in the pole vault. ' allace in the middle distances, and Davis in the weights. Nineteen l unDteD jFoumcn fianh Mbital er Basketball Captain. t ■= m S JnDiana aniDcr0itp arfeutus BASKETBALL Ix response to Coach I ' .err.dt ' s call for candidates for the 1914 basketball team, a squad of Sophomores of n ore or less known ability appeared. Dne to the fail- ure of Captain-elect JMcCullough to return to school and P.arnhart ' s injuries sus- tained in football, not a veteran remained around whom to build a team; thus it was conceded bv everyone that Indiana ' s chances to land well up in the Confer- ence percentage colunm were slight. The season 0]5ened at Champaign on January fi, with the Illinois quintet, which proved its superiority over the Crimson team by the overwhelming score of 33 to 6. The game gave evidence (if lack of experience and team work, which could iinlv be imjjroved as the season ])rogressed and as the men became accus- tomed to each other ' s style of play. ( )n January 12 ' isconsin, who later took the Conference title, handed Herndt ' s men a 59 to 15 defeat, and on January 24 the lowlv Earlham five sprang the season ' s surprise, nosing out Indiana by the score of 19 to 11. However, the team got revenge the next week by defeating the Quakers at Richmond b}- a three-point margin of 28 to 2-,. The crisis of the season came on March 3, when Indiana buried the jinx by de- feating Purdue in Hutchins Hall in an overtime game b} ' the score of 30 to 28, the first basketball victory over the old rival for a number of years. The game was replete with thrills fmni start to finish. The Crimson five took the lead and Mw t .0 M FREXZEL Mi )RRIS LINGEAIAA ' jSinetccn l unDreD jTourteen (lisplaxed teamwork and Jiasket shootin,t; ability such as was thoui ht iiii])ussil)le. There was no iiiilivi(hial star of the ga ' ic ; ever}- man earned his share of the glorious victory. The season closed on March 7, when the Crimson showed a complete reversal of form shown in the Purdue game, losing to Minnesota by the score of 28 to 8. Thus ended an unsuccessful season so far as victories were concerned, Init credit is certainlv due to Coach Berndt for the manner in which he kept the team going, in spite of the discouraging situation at the beginning and the string of inevitalile defeats which naturalh ' tended to dishearten both team and coach. January 6 January 12 January 17 Januar - 4 January 30 Januar - , i Februarv 7 February- 9 Februarv 1,1 Februar - -2,1 Februar - 4 Februarv 2f : larch ,1 : larch 7 RESULTS : Indiana 6 Indiana 15 Indiana 33 Indiana 11 ln liana 28 Indiana ij Indiana 15 Indiana 13 Indiana 15 Indiana 2 Indiana 24 Indiana 19 Indiana 30 Indiana 8 Illinois 35 ' isconsin 59 Xorthwestern 48 Earlham 19 Earlhani 25 C)hio State 43 Illinois 31 Purdue 35 Northwestern 40 Minnesota 26 Wisconsin 46 Ohio State 28 Purdue 28 Alinnesota 28 it t fi - PRATHER UnDiana Onitersitp arbutus M J f FERGUSON ex .m .«  -. _ll l L ' ? 1 f IB J , I .9:17 V9.1. a.i7 , T . ■w ' 1 liTTf _ j S -i Sj i f ll •• % J ife i! ' i ; : — fc— a y FRESHMAN BASKET BALL TEAiM £ 9ar Davis Wrkstijng Captain. JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus WRESTLING F(iR the first time in many years, if not in the history of the University ' s activity in inter-collegiate athletics, an Indiana team finished its season with a clear claim to the championship of the West. This distinction came in the branch of athletics which has been most recently introduced at Indiana — wrestling. By winning three firsts and tying for third place in the remaining three weights, In- diana won the annual Conference Wrestling Championship Meet, held at Chicago last April. The team finished first with a total of 15 2-3 points. Wisconsin, the Crimson ' s closest rival for the honors, came second with 13 2-3 points. Miile members of the team which was successful in bringing victory home with them are to be congratulated, no small amount of credit is due Coach lones DROLLIXGER AIYERS Z ART NO Nineteen unDtcD jFourteen for the team ' s splendid showing. From the time he first began to arouse inter- est in the mat game at Bloomington he has worked constantly to popularize the sport and give Indiana a championship team. Beginning in the winter of 1909, at the suggestion of Ross Netherton, the old football player who had heard of Jones ' s wrestling honors while a student at Columbia University, the latter organ- ized the first class in wrestling ever conducted here. A few men responded, but no attempt at organizing a team was undertaken. Doctor Jones began work two years later with the purpose in mind of develop- ing a wrestling team. Three men entered the Conference events and Bodenhafer, in his first year at the game, won the middle weight championship. Teeter, rep- resenting Indiana in the 125 class, won second. Three men entered the big meet in 191 1 and Doctor Jones gave Indiana a champion in Davis, who won the heavy weight title. Last year four men, which at that time constituted a full team, entered the meet at Illinois, and again Davis won the heavy weight championship. A greater interest than ever before resulted last Fall when the Coach issued a call for candidates, no less than thirty-five men appearing for places on the several teams. With Captain Davis, twice winner of the heavv weight title, and other experienced men on hand, the outlook for a championship team appeared bright, and with this end in view. Coach Jones began to develop a team capable of making a strong showing in all of the six events recognized in the Conference WILLIAMS LA DURON WALL JnDiana 23niticr$itp 3rbutus Demmon, Droellinger, Thompson and Zaring profited by previous experience in Conference meets last year, while Myers, Meinzer, Williams, Wall and Peck- ingpaugh went into the game with the advantage of a year ' s experience gained in the regularly conducted class in wrestling. Illinois came to liloomington as Indiana ' s first opponent, the Crimson team defeating them with ease. Davis, Demmon, Droellinger and Meinzer won their Bouts. M ers received a draw, while Zaring lost the 175 pound match on a fall. Purdue proved no match for the more experienced Indiana team in a contest one week later. This being the first } ' ear for the Boilermakers in wrestling, their reception into Conference circles came none too pleasantlv from Captain Davis and his men, who won six of the seven bouts by the fall route. Zaring n ' .et a match in his opponent and could only secure a draw. Wall represented Indiana in a special 115 pound class event. Indiana made its first trip of the year a few days later, and met the ISoiler- makers on their own floor. Again the Lafayette grapplers were no match for Coach Jones ' s men, and Indiana administered defeat, by a less humiliating score this time, however, than before. Purdue secured a fall in the 175 pound weight, winning the bout, which was the onl - time luring the entire season that a Pur- due wrestler succeeded in landing a fall and making his letter. Wall and his opponent wrestled to a draw in the special event. ( .«. D.WTS DEMMON MEINZER Nineteen l unDreD Jfoutteen P ' ollowiiit;- the decisive victories over lUinuis am! I ' lirdiie L ' oacii Jcmes leil his men on an invasion of the East. Contests were held with C . rnell and the I ' ennsvl- vania State College. I ' reshnien were eligible to enter the Mastern meets and La Duron succeeded in defeating Zaring in the tr ()Uts for the 175 poimd class, while Thompson won from Wall in the 115 pound class, ' illiams, who had Ijeen working all year in the 135 pound class, trained down to the 125 pound class, and defeated .Meinzer for the place on the team to represent Indiana in the East. Myers entered as Indiana ' s contender in the 135 pound class. Indiana lost the Cornellian meet by the close score of iS to 12. Davis and Droellinger both gained the decision in their matches. Thorn] )son and La Duron receiving draws in their respective bouts. The remaining three men lost on deci- sions or liy falls. After the hard fight with Cornell Indiana met the strong Penn State team on the following night. Imliana suffered the worst defeat of the _ ear, failing to land a single bout. Davis and Williams were the best performers for the Crimson, each receiving a draw : Indiana four points to twent -seven for the Easterners. , fter its return from the Eastern invasion, two weeks remained in which to shape tlie team for the Conference meet. Althciugh several of the men came back from the E,astern meets in poor physical condition Coach Jones had his team read - for the filial fight for glory when the day arrived. Six men were taken to Chicago and all six returned with a part of the glorv that was to he gained. PECKINPAUGH 3nDiana QJnitiersitp arbutus Captain Davis, as was expected, successfully defended the heavy weight title he had won for himself when only a Sophomore in the University, and thereby earned the unprecedented record of winning the title in three successive years. He won on a decision. Demmon, in the 158 pound class, also won the title in his event, winning the t oss after his bout had gone the full time to a draw. Williams was the other Indiana man to win a Conference title, giving Indiana three champions for the ear. and for the first time in the history of wrestling at Indiana more than one man wearing the crimson colors returned with a claim over all other wrestlers in Western colleges to the title in his respective class. At the close of the season Demmon was chosen to lead next vear ' s team. Nineteen unDteD JFourteen 3amc9 IRobinson Cross Country Captain. 3nDiana Onitiersitp arbutus CROSS COUNTRY The Illinois team won the cross country rrn at Bloomigton. Saturday, Xo- vember 8, h the score of 21 to 34. The day was cold and damp, snow beginning to fall shortly before the run. The race started at the corner of Indiana and Kirk- wood, covering four miles, with the finish on Jordan Field. Mason of the Illinois team completed the course in twenty minutes and forty-seven seconds. White of the local team finished second, following Mason some seventy-five yards. Telle of the local team finished fifth, with Captain Robinson, Harrold and Gray running in eighth, ninth and tenth places respectively. The time made was much faster than had been expected, and Indiana ' s showing was much stronger than Coach Gill had anticipated. In the Conference run over a five-mile course held at Columbus, Ohio on No- vember 22, Indiana made a satisfactory showing and brought to a close the best cross-countrv season that Indiana has had. THE NEW FREEDOM IT is a notable sign of the tin-.es that the joint Rules Committee has decided to bar coaches from the side lines during the football games. The voung men of our universities and colleges are to do their own plaving. Thus liberty triumphs on still another field. We hope that, eventually, it may become possible for these collegians to do some of their own thinking. Getting a degree is not always the same as getting edu- cated. —Collier ' s Jl ' c-cklx. 3nDiana ClnitJersitp Stftutug professor (I. 3. Sembower Conference Representatu ' e. MEN PERMANENTLY ORGANIZED. Prior to the Indiana-Illinois football game last fall, a number of former Uni- versity athletes met at the Clavpool Hotel in Indianapolis and formed a permanent organization of the I men. Every athlete who had ever received a Universit}- monogram was made a member. The purpose of the organization is to bind more closely together the men who have battled for the cream and crimson and to render service in various ways to present-dav athletics in Bloomington. The organization has been, even in this short short time, a wonderful success ; the interest shown by the men who wore the cream and crimson for the last time, has been remarkable. The organization has a broad field of usefulness before it, which it is speedily setting about to fulfill Carl Endicott is President of the I men. Doctor C. J. Sembower, Vice President and George I I. Cook, Secretary. JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Two thousand visitors invaded Bloomington last March for the fourth annual -State high school basketball tournament, when seventy-five teams from various parts of the state competed for the championship. It was the biggest and most successful contest that the University has given. Four floors were used for the games, and graduall}- by the elimination process, the contests were narrowed down to the final contest on Saturday night. The ' i gate lads, twice state champions, defeated their opponents with ease and demonstrated their superiority in every part of the game. Wingate led the favorites from the start and the final victory came not as a surprise but demon- strated the un(|uestinnable superiority of the team in high school basketball. The members were clean, consistent players, and the effects of their careful training were clearly shown in the ease with which they withstood the strain of a long and hard contest. THOSE WHO AI.WAGEU THE ToURXAMEXT. jSmeieen 10unDtcD iFourteen ' iUbo Sai Baseball? ' 3nDiana 23niticr0itp 3rfiutu0 WOMEN ' S ATHLETICS EXECUTR ' E BOARD ()F (JMEX ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. Fraxces Hankemeier President. Alieda Van ' esse.m J ' ice President. Ophelia Xetherlaxd Secretary Juliette Maxwell Treasurer. Miss Rhoddy Secretary of Honors. CLASS REPRESENTATR ' ES. Adelaide IMoore Freshman. Paulixe Siebexthai Sophomore. ' iiii,ET I ' lXAiRE Junior. Matilda Leblixe Senior. The purpose of the Women ' s Athletic Association is to promote a greater interest in i;irls ' atliletics. Tlie Association has proved to be both a popular and healthful organization. As a result of the numerals that are given for excellence in the various lines of athletics, many girls engage in hockey, swimming, basket- ball, and tennis, who in former years gave no thought to physical training. To be the owner of a monogram which signifies excellence in three forms (jf athletics is worth striving for, at the least. But a single girl has succeeded in winning one of the coveted momigrams, — A ' iolet Pinaire, a Junior. jQinetcen I unDceD JFoutteen HOCKEY In the fall, hockc ' claimed the attention of all the .n ' ii ' ls, — and often of the men on the sidelines. There were a number of practice games, but only one real contest, played on the Friday previous to Thanksgiving. For this final game, the Seniors and Freshmen, with Frances Hankemeier as Captain, opposed the Juniors and Sophomores, with Aline Polk as leader. The teams were evenly matched and the game ended with the score of 2 to 2. Five minutes overtime were played, during which time the Senior-Freshmen team added another point and captured the game with a final score of 3 to 2. The following monograms in hockey were awarded : Seniors; Alary Loveless, Frances Hankemeier; Juniors: l ' ' a Aiken, ' iolet Pinaire, Aline Polk, Hattie White ; Sophomores ; Isabella McElroy, Ruth Morri- son, Sue Reed, Glenora Swadener ; Freshmen ; lietty Carothers, Clara Piper and Hazel Wellman. BASKETBALL Basketball is perhaps the most eagerly awaited of all forms of girls ' athletics. By right of priority, the Seniors felt this year that the contest would be theirs. Thev met sad disappointment in the strength of the .Sophomores. The latter succeeded in defeating the Freshman 13 to 11. the Juniors 17 to ij, and the Seniors were forced to forfeit. The Freshmen defeated the Juniors 38 to 17 and the Seniors 17 to 3. The Yale-Harvard teams are made up from all four classes and the game between the two teams closes the basketball season. For the third successive season, Harvard won the victory this vear. 3nDtana Onitiersitp arfiutus SOPHOAIORE TEA: I. Anna Clark Center. Glenota Swadener Second Center. Pauline Siebenthal Right Forward. May Clayton Left Forward. Sue Reed Right Guard. Isabella McElroy Left Guard. I Iary Rieman, Irma McElro}- Substitutes. SWIMMING Owing to the shortage of water durir.g the l- all term girls were disappointed in not being able to use the swimming pool. When water became more plentiful in the early part of the Winter term, however, the privilege of using the pool was granted. P ' ive girls have equalled the qualifications necessarv to obtain a numeral in swimming, — Violet Pinaire, Doris Hofifman, Bernice Hickman, Madeline Con- nor, and Manier Ragsdale. The final contest of the vear will be held in June. TENNIS Tennis becomes the popular sport among girls during the Spring term. From five in the morning until it becomes so dark that the ball can be seen no longer, the courts on the east side of the campus are filled. The tournament each spring calls forth a large number of contestants. Last spring, which was the first tourna- ment that has been held, the contests were marked by closely fought preliminaries. Grace Jackson, Edna Winch, Gladys Babcock and ' Slay Bradberry won the cham- pionship in the Senior, Junior, Sophomore and F reshmen classes respectively. Through her splendid endurance combined with skill. Edna W inch won the Uni- versitv championship. This year, Katherine Brown, the winner of the open state dnd close state contests vear before last will coach the girls. iQineteenJ unDteD JFoucteen anDiana Onitietsitp 3r6utus Poets are born poets but short story writers are paid. With popular maga- zines offering small fortunes for dairy- lunch fiction every man hears the call, aspires to be his own Stevenson or Jack London and buys the latest model of a six cylinder Smith Premier. Old plots in up-to-date slang make capital stories while problem fiction covers a multitude of sins. j inetecn l unDreD JFoutteen THE POETRY OF RILEY (During the Winter Term the puhhshers of the new Biographical Edition of Riley ' s Works, offered a complete set of the poems as a prize for the best apprecia- tion of Riley written by a student of Indiana University. Bruce AlcCullough, ' 14, of Scottsburg. won first place.) Throughout Rile}- ' s poetry there are two or three (|ualities that stand out as the dominant characteristics of his poetic genius. Sympathy, humor and sim- plicity of style and characters are perhaps the most distinguishing marks of his pen. These qualities combine in the presentation of the poet ' s view of life, of which the central theme is sane optimism and cheerful resignation, a message spoken so directly to the human heart that its appeal has become universal. Riley is always the poet of common life. He speaks the language of the com- mon people, and interprets the common heart. His strange interpenetrating sym- pathy has endeared him in the hearts of the people. Filled with a profound love of nature, beauty and truth, he is deeply impressed with the most commonplace things about him. He can write sympathetically about such lowl) creatures as the cricket or the tree-toad. . 11 life is filled with meaning and common incidents are seized upon and clothed in verse : The bumble bee is pelted down The wet stems of the hollyhock; And sullenly, in spattered brown. The cricket leaps the garden walk. But his interest in nature lies chiefly in its relation to mankind. Essentially a humanist, he never fails to catch the beautiful or the pathetic element in the simple routine of the lives of humble people. This is the great quality of his genius, as it is the mark of any great artist ; the ability to see life as it is, and then to render it livingly for less discerning eyes to see. IVhcn the Frost is on the Pumpkin is a good illustration of this quality. It imparts the very feeling of a crisp, frosty morning with its stimulating effect. And who can read Out to Old Aunt Mary ' s without recalling the thrill of youthful joys, and being softened by the unaffected sorrow of the grown man? Such is the C|uality of his sympathy, that it even overleaps the bounds of expe- rience : else, how could he have written An Old Sz ' ecthcarf or JJ ' hcn She Conies SnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus Home? And although he had never experienced parental joy or grief, we have from his pen such a tender and gentle consolation in Bcreazcd. In the combination of this subtile insight and generous sympathy, with origin- ality of style, Riley marks an epoch in American poetry. Whitman had originality, but he lacked sympathy. He was remote and appealed only to the few. Lowell was the first American poet to attempt a new form of verse. And the Biglow Papers have enjoyed a unicjue success. But they lack the charm and beauty of Riley ' s dialect. Xo one can doubt the quality of Lowell ' s humor and satire. But the things that are most charming in him are to be found in his loftier poems. Rile - however, is a master of his form. He combines the homely phrase with Ivric feeling. And, although his excellence, when writing in literary English, can- not be questioned, his greatest works of art are written in dialect. There, he seems more at home; more original and effective. Vritten with infinite grace and melody, and perfected by the feeling for the inevitable word, manv of his little poems of homely life become in effect, little dramas. Thev are essentially dramatic in character. Such poems as the Old Man and Jim and Xothin ' to Say afford illustration of this dramatic quality. Setting and atmosphere are not lacking, and the characters are so endowed with life that one feels that he has been in the presence of living men and women. Filled with gentle and deep emotion, color and dialogue and climax are such as to leave one rapt and wondering. But perhaps the qualities of Riley ' s genius are best displayed in his child poems. He shows remarkable power in delineating child character. With perfect under- standing and sympathy, he enters into the Child World and pens series of pictures drawn from his own experience and childhood. In such poems as Maxiiiic ' s Story of Red Riding Hood, Bud ' s Fairy Talc, and in particular, Alex ' s Bear Story. which he ist niaked up his own se ' f, he has caught the spirit of childhood in a wonderful wa ' and wrought a veritable child world. And children evervwhere never tire of : Listenin ' to the witch-tales ' at Annie tells about. Or of taking delight in the wonderful things done by the R aggedy Man. This sympathy that Riley has for childhood is complete. He is, himself, an eternal child. lie has a vivid appreciation of the world of small life, real and imagined, ar.d revives fairy-land, so much neglected since Shakespeare ' s time: An wite by the pump in the pasture-lot. He showed me the hoi ' at the Wunks is got. ' At lives way deep in the ground an ' can Turn into me er ' Lizabeth Ann. ' ' Added to this warm sympathy and understanding of life, the quality most at- tractive in Riley is his genuine sense of humor. Throughout his writing, humor is blended with pathos. In few poets will the two qualities be found so well inter- mingled. And it is a splendid kind of humor. It is neither wit nor satire. Even JI3meteen I unDtcD JFoucteen such a character as Milo Jones ' Wife calls forth a jest rather than Ijilleniess. Tliere is never anv sting to his humor. It is a finer kind that seeks truth and seeks kindness. It is the humor that helps one thr ]Ui;h unpleasant [places. As has often heen remarked, in the literature of lowly life, there is a heart-ache heneath its gaiety. and tears follow close upon its laughter. Such humor is a kind of wisdom of human nature that enables one to meet the unexpectetl and disagreeable always with feathers unruffled. Having grown up close to nature and among lowl} ' people, where it often seems that more happens to thwart than to fill men ' s aims, Riley teaches the lesson of resignation ; not blind acceptance of everything that life may offer, but an un- complaining resignation to the inevitable laws of nature ; submission to the eternal forces and an abiding faith in the final outcome of good. Thoughts fer the DL- couraged Fanner is highly expressive of this undying cheer and undaunted faitli : Oh ! let us fill our hearts up with the glory of the day. And banish ev ' ry doubt and care and sorrow fer away : Whatever be our station, with Providence fer guide, Sich fine circumstances ort to make us satisfied ; Fer the world is full of roses, and the roses full of dew. And the dew is full of heavenly love that drips fer me and you. It is not easy to find a more simple and beautiful expression of faith than is breathed forth in these lines. It is a relief to find, among present day poets, one who is free from dejection and cynicism. Endowed with a sense of humor that amounts to wisdom, the peculiar quality of his poetry is its sanit -. He is nut a reformer nor is he a philosopher. At the same time, he is not a maudlin sentimen- talist. And though his poetry reflects nothing of modern tlKjught. that does not prevent it from having a wide appeal among normal human beings. It is alive with robust gaiety and fascinating )-outh. Leaping from humor to pathos, it some times becomes strangely serious and results in such intense thought as in the poem entitled. Home. The faulty criticism has been made that it is confined to narrow range. Such a notion is the reverse of true. There are poems from his pen that lie far apart in thought and method of development. Contrast, for example, the simple child- like version of The Fishin ' with the mystical and romantic poem of Illileo. The Flying Islands of the Night affords further proof of his versatilitv. Here he dis- plays his constructive skill. From a world of visions and dreams he forms this original composition. It is a fantasy ; a thing of imagination and whimsicality. Real living characters, endowed with human passions and ideals inhabit the flying islands. It is a work of art with many strains of fine poetrv, which show Riley ' s lyrical faculty at its height. But the Hoosier ' s claim to distinction will continue to lie in his work that is more thoroughly original and American ; upon his short poems in dialect. They show the remarkable power of his genius in trans- muting plain clods into gold as no one has done since Burns. SnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus Like Burns, his love is fur the simple and elemental. His poetry breathes the spirit of brotherhood. An idealist of unquavering faith and optimism ; a humorist of genuine merit ; a poet of consummate art and sweetness of song ; a most human- hearted man. surelv tried but never soured by adversity: magnanimous and char- itable in all his relations with men — one of the most lovable figures in American literature, — such a man is James Whitcomb Riley. THE SURRENDER OF QUEEN NAN The Hucklel)err - ] [arsh stretched flat in the iiKjonlight, drear and leprous — white in miasmic desolation. Here and there tree-skeletons lifted their fantastic malformations in silhouette against the livid sky. A gray mist hung like a cur- tain above the surface of the shallow lake, and wandered in gradually, vanishing tentacles among the tops of the bushes which bordered the water. Like a death- pall was the silence over all, deepened only bv the mournful cr ' of a loon or the rustle of a water-snake among the slimy reeds. The silence floated up and filtered through the square window of the little hut by the lake and choked the heart and soul of Nan as she watched — she who was so accustomed to silences. For the damp stillness of this white midnight was new to her in its enmity, in its clammy, boding fatefulness. She leaned far out over the window ledge, straining her wide, dark eyes against the moonlight, ques- tioning the glimmering solitude. Nan had been fighting for countless days and nights against a growing some- thing whose existence she would even now deny. She could not understand that the love of man might ever conquer her. The wildness of cave-man ancestors ebbed and flowed in her. Yet. untamed by an - mandate of convention. Nan was nevertheless possessed of the honor-code of the Open, a code uncouth, but sweeter and truer and gentler than any man-made custom. Gifted with more intelligence than her neighbors, she had become the Huckle- berry Queen, and ruled the fierce, half-clouded souls of the Marshland with a tact and an absoluteness that were broader than justice. Many a man among the godless clan had desired Nan for his own, and a few had had the boldness to express their desires, and had been laughed to scorn by the Queen for their avowals. Nan wanted no man s love ; she wanted only homage and fear. . nd these she had had from all until Jean-noir came to the settlement. A half-1ireed Frenchman he was, swarthy, and lithe, with the gentleness of a woman 214 Nineteen l unDreD jFoutteen in his eyes and the strength of four men in his broad back. One day, before the sullen eves of all her subjects, Queen Xan had given her word of command to Jean-noir. And Jean-noir had laughed and snapped his fingers and turned his back upon her, for only an instant. But in that instant. Nan leaped and stabbed, and Jean-noir still laughed merrily as he drew the knife from the flesh of his shoulder. As Xan cursed him. her eyes ablaze, he handed the knife back to her. Ma petite, he said in his soft, whimsical patois, Nanne ees no bon nom. You shall be to me — Rien. You shall be notheeing. Speechless, quivering. Queen Xan had watched him out of sight, and had heard to the last the merry lilt of his song. Since that time Jean-noir had come and gone and done as he pleased, ever gay, ever laughing, ever breaking mto song. He showed no sign of even having noticed the stab-wound in his shoulder. Nan no longer tried to command him, but the two were no better friends. She watched him out of steady, defiant eyes as he swaggered his easy way among her subjects. These slow-witted, vicious men and women whom Nan ruled were becoming rebellious. They hafl seen their Queen defied. Thev grew impudent. Nan saw that her power was shaken and her bitterness against Jean-noir grew apace. She said nothing, but watched him stealthily. And Jean-noir drank and swaggered and sang with the others, went out of his way neither to encounter nor avoid the haughty queen, but always, when he did meet her, greeted her with flashing smile and careless word. Her coldness he heeded not at all. Trulw she was to him Rien — nothing. So Xan thought as she leaned out of the little window, watching the white mist wrapping the stark tree-trunks as with a burial shroud. Rien to him ! Fiercely Nan pressed upon her breast to stifle the pang that the thought aroused. Never until tonight had she felt such vehement longing for the strange something out there in the moonlight. She felt her helplessness in the face of this subtle lure. .She thought frantically of her loss of dominion in the Marshland, the loss of the capricious rule which hitherto had been life itself to her. And finallv she thought of Jean-noir — Jean-noir, the cause of her coming deposal. Strange to say, min- gled with the hatred in heart for him there was a kind of fierce, compelling tender- ness that brought the hot tears to her eyes. Nan yielded to the leaping of her heart and let the lure of the moonlit Marsh- land draw her on. She crept silently from the hut on the ridge and down the wet path to the border of the lake. Sure-footed as the wild creature she was, un- reasoning and blind of purpose, she went on and on and on. She did not think of her action — as a surrender. It was inexplicable; merely the obeying of an instinct. ' hen she finally saw the trunk of a great tree uplifted above the surrounding bushes, she thought chaotically of Jean-noir — him to whom she was nothing. And there from the shadow of the tree she saw him, very near the water ' s edge. Con- torted almost out of luunan shape, he crouched low on the marshy ground, one foot entirely buried in the nuid. And as Nan stole slowly, triumphanth- toward him, she saw that he was grinding the stout branch of a willow in his power- 21-1 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus ful teeth, spitting the fragments into the water. One hand held the willow which his teeth were tearing, the other hand was clasped among the reed-roots of the shore. Nan heard from time to time come from his lips the snarls of a wild heast. But creeping nearer she made out the words, Pah! — Rien she ees ! Rien she must be or — Then Nan leaped like a panther into the moonlit space behind Jean-noir and tilting back her head till her white throat gleamed, she laughed and laughed till her black hair fell like a sable curtain about her face, v eiling her dusky eyes. When she looked again, Jean-noir stood tall and straight before her, gay ana whimsical as of old, his rover ' s eyes agleam with mirth, the corners of his mouth curling as bv the eternal lilt of song. Maddened by his careless, smiling eyes. Queen Xan struck straight and sure, felt the sharp impact as her hand smote his cheek. It was Nan ' s last struggle, and she knew a deep content as Jean-noir ' s merry laugh rang out, as his strong arms lifted her, and his voice crooned gently, joyously into her ear. A MAN AND HIS WIFE Mr. Henrv James Smith was ann() ed: as a result he was unusually nervous and fussy. He had arisen late — his wife had forgotten to call him. Ucsides he had discovered on getting half wa} ' down stairs that he had forgotten to put on his collar and tie. With a martyr ' s patience and fatigue he propelled his two hun- dred odd pounds up stairs again and donned the collar and tie. To add to his nervousness just as he started to descend the staircase again, lie saw his wife frisk behind the corner at the bottom. There, hang it all, she was going to scare him again ! He steeled himself against the shock ; he would not allow himself to be frightened. He would show Jane, and have the laugh him- self once. But why did she want to scare him ? It did make him so terriblv nervous. Erect as a giant oak, or rather a giant oak stump, he marched towards the bottom. But alas for composure ! four steps from the bottom, while he was holding himself pompously in hand, his foot slipped. He forgot all about Jane around the corner in regaining his lost equilibrium, and was promptly frightened almost off his feet, when she rushed at him, shrieking: Oh — Henry — a laugh rippled out at his terror stricken face. Oh, Henrv— I was twenty-four six weeks ago. ' Henry jerked himself together. His fat brain became verv angrv. JI3inetecn l unDrcD JFourtcen Look here, Jane Smith — Jane grinned at him and cuffed his fat face. Henry with great strength steeletl himself doubly. Look here, Jane Smith. This is the fourth time vou ' ve jumped at me in the last week. It ' s gotta stop. It all un- strings me ! The next time — Henry shook himself free with some effort as his wife soberlv took his face in her hands and wiggled his head from side to side. Even tho ' he thought that, after all, she was a jolly good sort, he was going to let her see that he was angry with cause. At breakfast, however, having taken himself in hand, he started off again. He made no mention of his wife ' s birthday — ignored it intentionally — ranted on and on with the breakfast table and the morning paper safely between himself and his wife. The end of the wlmle iliscussion was that when he left for the (jffice, his wife ignored him, did not help him on with his coat, did not kiss hini, did not pat him good-bye ; oh — in short didn ' t do anything she used to do — and he had left with his nerves all trembling and his fuss - old heart thumping : he was half minded to go back and apologize. He re-steeled himself, bv recalling his tremendously strong will and great resolution of spirit. Jane was having the time of her life. Her husband was a great fund of en- joyment to her. She could coddle him, scare him, love him, and anger him. In fine he responded just exactly right to everything she did to him. She watched him all the way down the walk and laughed, and whenever she thought of it all day she laughed again. And then she had a splendid idea ! What great sport ! she ' d scare him foolish when he came home in the evening. He surelv was a jollv husband ! Meanwhile all the steel, the strong will and the resolution had slowlv leaked our of Henry J. Smith ' s soul and had left him as fussy, as nervous and uxorious as ever. A dozen times he had almost called Jane up and apologized — and then he would become ashamed of himself and pluck together once more his ragged ana scattered resolution and drive back that impulse. About noon he, too, had a splendid idea! He would get his wife a new hat by way of atonement. He rumi- nated long on what she would want. . h ! He knew how to do it! He wou ld lake her photograph to the milliner and let her rig out a liat that she thought would suit. Henry rubbed his hands together and all the trembling and fluttering left his heart and his former wrinkles all came back around his mouth and eyes, — and he was supremely happy. He took the photo over to the milliner — described his wife, how tall, how large, how old, and all the other things the milliner asked him. He was to get the sublime creation as he went home in the evening. He got the hat ; so far as he could tell it must be a beautv — one of the twenty- five dollar variety. It certainly was a terrible responsibilitv ! He caught the street car on the trot, but it was so crowded that he couldn ' t find a seat or even get inside, and so had to stand on the tail end platform. The jam was alarming. Every clerk, every shop girl, and every workingman in the town was going home to supper! Even the policemen seemed to be riding! One climbed on as fast as another got off! Henry ' s nervousness increased; he was almost sweating blood. 217 3nDiana 2Init)crsitp arbutus He had to stand up all the long way home, with his stomach against the wall and the hat hanging securely out behind the car, where the railing was just the height of his chest, and cramped his arm and put his hand to sleep. The strain was terrific ! At one of the street corners a gust of wind almost blew his own hat awa - — he nearly lost the box in the scuffle. Once he almost sat down on the floor of the platform at the sudden shrieking of an automobile horn right under him, and once again only saved the hat with extreme exertion and the exhaustion of self-control and will power. He was the most relieved man that ever existed when he finally got to the corner two blocks from home. The danger was past ! Hut his troubles were not over. . s he was rolling along with a beatific smile on his face and a steadfast hold on the box he suddenly stepped on a slick wet brick, and without deliberation or warning, came down with a terrific jar. High in the air he held the hat. He chuckled triumphanth- and ejaculated: Saved it, by gee — saved it. The pain in his back from the jar worked out in a smile of sublime satisfaction at his extreme good luck and good sense in a time of such a crisis and emergency. As he drew near the house, he advanced more slowly and tucked the hat safely behind his broad back, holding it securely out of sight. In the growing dusk it would be extra easy to conceal it. Oh, but wouldn ' t he surprise her ! Jane was watching for him and saw him coming up the walk in the dusk. She slipped into the library and hid behind the door. Henry came quietly and puffinglv in — looked in the parlor; she wasn ' t there: in the drawing room — she wasn ' t there. Then he marched into the library — all the time safely holding the hat behind him. Where was Jane, anyway? Horrors — murder — fire and out bounced something great and wild from be- hind the door. Straightway and promptly Henry lost his feet. With a terrible sinking heart he felt the sublime creation going down flat as a paper under him. There it went. lane. There it went, ' ' and he climbed to his knees and sur- veyed the wreck. Then jane saw it and she cried with her husband. The hat was certainly demolished : the great plume was all smashed and mangled : the hat was ruined. Jane and Henry almost had hysteria : first she would grasp the ruined hat and then the weeping Henry. He on his part kept repeating time and again : Xever mind, dearie, never mind. I ' ll get you another one tomorrow! THE CHILDREN OF LOTUS-VALE HE.XTHERn.xLK was a good place to live, for Heatherdale was serene. From earliest dawn, when first the cool, amber sunshine slanted athwart the grass- plots, till late dusk, when the distant Clue Ridge was glorified by a transient halo 218 Jl ineteen I unDteD jFoutteen of mistv color. Heatherdale slept on and justified its other name — Lotus-Xale the Blessed. A queer old hermit of the mountain had given the place his name. His day was long past, but the richness of his fancy had communicated itself through the years until the inhabitants of the little village had come to believe their valley blessed, and oftener than not they spoke of it as Lotus-Vale. ( )ld men whose dim eves were already seeing into the Beyond, still believed simply in Li itus- ' ale ; mothers crooned their little ones to sleep with the low, sweet tales of the alley ' s sacredness ; even reckless youth seemed a little more reverent here than in the world beyond the misty, purple ridge. In the calmness of Lotus-Vale were growing up three children, nearly of an age. Thev were fit little comrades for one another, and their life was a song of jo -. Each little child seemed to bring just what was needed to make sweet and perfect the trio ' s simple happiness. Dan was a sturdy urchin, rud(l and active, reckless of spirit, careless of thought; Paul was more delicate, whiter of face, more pensive of mood, yet still a good fellow ; Fae was a wispy. Iimwu-eyed sprite from some fairv world, bringing in her tiny flower-face the loves and hopes of fairies. Both little lads, with the beautiful idolatry of childhood, worshipped the tiny maid who was their stanch companion even as she was the just mediator of their disputes. With grave attention they listened to her piping dictates, and with un- questioning acquiesence bowed to her sovereign will. And if she did tyrranize a little, it was a sweet, sweet tyrranv, more welcome far than the purest liberty. Strong as their common love for their small fairy-(|ueen grew up the affectiiin of Dan and Paul for each other. Dan, with his rugged strength and self-assertive- ness, seemed the natural protector of the more timid Paul; on the other hand, Paul ' s pensiveness had a wholesome effect upon Dan, though the latter did not know it, of course, and would not have admitted it if he had. Xor was it tor a long time granted Dan to know the utter loyalty of his one boy comrade. Queer indeed are the quirks of Destiny. With slow time passing gently over Lotus- ale, the children were growing up. still inseparable. They were developing, according to the manner of children the world over, each unfolding farther to heaven ' s light the leaves of soul. Not un- like the outer world ' s children were two of Lotus-A ' ale ' s nurslings. Dan and Fae. Always happy and care-free as the lark, they lived as yet unconscious of the ears ' significance. But with Paul matters were different. It was given him to see things sooner than the others saw them ; to feel the subtleness of existence even while his childish voice mingled with the shouts of his two comrades. .And even under the influence of the Valley ' s blessedness, a shadow began to creep over Paul ' s glad- ness, a shadow faint and vague, yet menacing. Still the three, the two little boys and the one little girl, were the best of companions. The shadow falling over the life of one of them was all unseen by the other two. Rut Paul had one other comrade, one whose eyes could not be blind to what was surelv coming. This other comrade was Paul ' s mother, his closest confidant SnDiana Onitietgitp 9r6utu$ She knew his moods as only a mother can know, yet even she was startled at his words and looks one summer night as he lay tucked in bed. Alother, he said slowl}-, grave eyes on her face, Mother, 1 know that some time I must give myself for Dan. And far into that still, star-lit night, his mother, this wonderful, gentle-eyed mother stood almost breathless by the bedside, bending above the sleeping boy. The three good comrades were about to meet again, but far, far from the Lotus- Vale of old. The multitudinous noises of the great city bruited below as Paul sat, white-lipped and smiling, slender hands gripped fiercely over the arms of his chair. Now that the time had come he was finding his will none too strong to summon back to his tired eyes the look that he knew must be there when the playmates of the past touched his hands. But once before his spirit has risen to the call. As the great vessel had left the dock, neither the stalwart man at the rail nor the dainty miss by his side had seen aught in the eyes of the one left behind that would make bitter to them the remembrance of Lotus- Vale. Now, after four years, Paul again saw his duty. He would do it — but how bitter, bitter that duty was! Give himself for Dan! Four }ears ago he had done that. . y, and was doing it anew, each long, dragging day. When the greeting was over and Fae — now Dan ' s own fairy — had flitted out, the two men seated themselves gravely, face square to face. And now it was m the eyes of Dan the strong, Dan the aggressive, Dan the god ' s own, that the phan- tom of fear was flickering. Dan ' s voice, hoarse and strange, broke the silence, and Paul leaned forward in amazement and unbelief. Yes, Paul old man, concluded Dan. with a queer wan smile, and a choke in his voice, yes, old man, I did it. I ' m done for — that ' s all. Business is business, and law is law. and — justice — is — I did it — 1 akjne and — well — Fll pay — (juh- — only — she — Dan ' s face was hidden in his quivering hands. Dan, came the slow answer, while Paul ' s eyes seemed far awav in reverie, Dan, you know — I ' m c_)ur business partner. The words died out int i a silence that throbbed, until with a crv Dan leaped to his feet, only to be puslicd Ijack ])y slender, masterful hands, onlv to hear the other ' s quiet words : You and I will flo this thing, Dan. for — you know. Don ' t vou see that mv life is only my love for you and her? And when the long fight was over, and Paul lay back to rest from victory, jov was born anew in him. This buoyant gladness sang in his heart even after the prison-doors had clanged behind him. And again he had given himself. Prison pallor in the abode of dust is not entirely incongruous. . s Paul touched the furniture with the tips of his fingers he felt the kinship of the fine, pow(lere l deca} . The five dead years behind him had been years for other things jfQineteen ! unDreD JFoutteen as well, animate and inanimate. His eyes strayed slowly about his old room. Al! was just as he had left it — Five prison years ! — Only an epoch in the tragic ages of a man ' s life ! Slowly Paul raised his eyes till they stared liiill(iwl - l);ick at him from the dim mirror. Dark, deep eyes, no longer lio}isli : li])s faintly compressed, but with no cynical curl; Ijrow unlined, as in days of old. Still I ' aul sat and gazed while the reddening sun went down in falling glory; the faint chill of evening crept through the air as the winds of day were stilled. Painfully his brain was making adjustments, long since foresworn and un- needed ; dim pictures flitted past, all too unworthy to note. A strange apathx- was upon him ; with a kind of idle curiosity, Paul was watching the jiallid wisp of a man staring back at iiim from the glass. A martyrdom of soul — that was what the five years had l een. At first, think- ing had been terrible; night hours, times of cruelest torture. Not because of con- finement — that was nothing — but on account of other things. But even mental pain finally can jjecome familiar; can become mere monotonv, shading toward oblivion. . t last Paul arose, moving with the slowness of a man who is wear - unto death. Idly lie raised the blind higher and stood in the full red glare of the setting sun. For some time he stood, vacantly watching the people passing far below. ' ere they mere puppets — or was he? What had he in common with them? liurnl out — done for — why need he watch the life of the street that knew him not. nor ever had? Hey-ho ! Only to fade out and see dust and all no more — that woula be his happy, final lot. How welcome! (lod or Kismet Inrks ever in the shadow of men ' s slightest deeds. The last red gleam of the setting sun glinted over Paul ' s tliin, white hand, as his fingers rested on an open book whose pages were thick with dust. Idly he glanced down, moving his hand in the warm glow. And up to him through the dust came a message that held him motionless until even that last sun-gleam died out and the room was curtained and shrouded in darkness. To this tired old man, who was vet so young, came an echo of the words, like a benison through the gloom : — If I should be drowned in the deepest sea, Mother o ' mine! Mother o mine! I know whose tears would come down to me, Mother o ' mine ! Mother o ' mine ! If I should be hanged on the highest hill, Alother o ' mine! Mother o ' mine! I know whose prayers would go u]) for me still, lother o ' mine! Mother o ' mine! JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus So in far, sweet Lotus- ' ale, Paul found his tranquil rest. It came to him through love — a love which gives all, grieving onl_y that it has not more to give; a love that follows over the loftiest heights of Paradise, and through the lowest depths of Hell ; a love than which, save One, there is no greater. And in the stillness of Lotus- ' ale the Blessed long into the star-lit night, a gentle-eyed, thankful mother bent breathlessly over her sleeping bov. THE TALE OF A RUN-AWAY JOKE ( My dear fellow, i ' liat docs it matter If one fool is not talking, another zcill be. ) The study-table was littered with holly-ribbon, stickers, and wrapping paper. Deke was doing up Christmas packages, while Maggy Byrne and Lize Herr, perched on opposite ends of the davenport, were holding a ring-blowing contest, filling the room with smoke. ' hcre di ' you buy the p-r-e-t-t-y baby-ribbon, Deke? piped Lize. between puffs. There was mischief in the remark. Deke, in tow of his mother, a maid and a chauffeur, had entered college in the fall, and for a full week had been coddled un- der the very eyes of eleven hundred boys, who, — cut off from that civilizing in- fluence which must be credited to good women, — had come to regard even blacked shoes and white collars as marks of good taste only on occasions of formality. The maid, it was whispered on the campus, was decorating the freshman ? room — pardon me boudoir — probably in pink, and precocious preps ventured to salute him as Willie. A friendly ducking in the lake had gifted him with under- standing of the Spirit of the School, the starched look had disappeared after his discovery that wearing jerseys instead of shirts and collars meant extra sleep after the ringing of the rising bell, and a few harmless physical encounters with would-be christeners had alifected the preservation of his old high-school nick- name. Still, the memory of those first, eventful weeks was yet fresh, and Deke reddened under the veiled allusion. Pretending to be suffocated by the cigarette smoke, he opened a window to get his breath. As a counter-attack, he sprinkled toilet-water — Maggv ' s — to relieve the odor, which, though Lize indignantly produced a ;; box. he libeloush- pro- fessed to recognize as of Bull Durham. A good-natured rough-house ensued, and Deke was ejected, — to go upstairs and clog-dance over their heads until a bell called him to leave for Physics Lab. You going to study? quizzed Lize. jQincteen l unDteD iFoutteen What ' s the use? Maggy responded. Exams don ' t come for four weeks yet, and I ' d forget it all by that time. Let ' s go down lo the Orpheum. There ' s a little brunette down there with a singing and dancing act they say ' s good. Lize was fingering the gift-shop assortment on Deke ' s table. Hello, he said, how long has this been going on ' holding up a letter addressed by Evans to Miss Elinor Carroll. Bvrne laughed. Oh, Deke ' s been dedicating books to that girl for a long time. Went to high school with her, I guess. He lives in a little town near Shafers- ville, her home. Let ' s see, that ' s where you spent Thanksgiving, wasn ' t it? he asked. Do vou know the Carrolls? Lize nodded, and sat whistling dreamily while Maggy dressed for town. In the middle of a note he stopped suddenly, and chuckled. Then, taking up Deke ' s letter, he placed on the package a sticker bearing the inscription, Do not open till Christmas, and held it up for inspection. Maggy laughed and swore secrecy, Thev had the letter registered, and upon their return from the postoffice, Lize hypocritically accepted a cigar from Deke, as a reward for thoughtfulness in tak- ing the mail. To be sure, Deke remarked that Lize was evidently disposed to look after his own interests, and seemed to invite questioning; but Lize hastened away, to enjoy with Maggy the imaginative weaving of possible developments. The letter reached its destination more than a week before Christmas, and inas- much as Elinor was to give a house-party over Christmas to which Deke had been invited, Mrs. Carroll was somewhat mystified. Nevertheless, she insured Elinor ' s observance of the order on the sticker bv withholding the letter from her. Even at a boarding-school, it often happens that two particular people d(3 not see one another for many days at a time. Lize hadn ' t enjoyed thinking aliout his practical joke so much as he had expected, and had avoided reminders of it — especially Deke. At the station, however, as they were leaving for the holiday vacation, Deke had come up to him with a See you in Shafersville next Wednes- day, I suppose, Lize? You ' re going up to the house-party? I? — why whose house-party? tammered Lize. Why Elinor ' s, of course. I didn ' t get an invitation, Lize confessed. Deke ' s curiosity grew, and his first question of Elinor when he reached Shafersville was, How does it come you didn ' t ask Lize? which was answered by the still more surprising question, Why didn ' t you answer the letter I wrote you asking about him? Why, gasped Deke, I did, and Lize maile d it himself ! And now, said Mrs. Carroll that evening, I suppose that since you ' re here, and it ' s Christmas eve, I may as well give Elinor the gift you sent her last week, and satisfy my own curiosity as to what it is. Mv-mv gift? Whv-Why — . Deke was non-pluseil, and could only stammer JInDiana CInitictsitp atfiutus unintelliti il)Iy as Mrs. Carrull handed to her surprised and now expectant daugh- ter a biilkv resjistered letter, bearing the warning: Do not open till Christmas. The joke was on nie, though. said l.ize. talking over the affair with Maggy after their return to school. She had written Deke to ask if I wouldn ' t be a good sixth man tn invite to the house-party, and he ' d given me an enthusiastic send-off. Huh, I (li:)n ' t know whether it was or not, ' synicized Maggy. Deke had to get lier a r. ) ' ;-Ti r Christmas present after her expectations had been so aroused, — and the a rreed on a diamond rin r. A FABLE FOR CRITICS Three gentlemen met in the open road. The first was on his way Some- where to negotiate a loan. The second was going Anywhere, as the day was beautiful and he loved the green fields and running brooks. The third traveled Xowhere in particular, for he held all matter to be infinite in space. It was early autumn. The sweet smell of ripening apples filled the air while the golden persimmons glistened in the sun like so many pomegranates. The pokeberrv bushes were laden with their tiny, grape-like clusters. Crimson shumac shrubs drowsilv nodded their bloodv crowns, and fnun the tepees of corn, rustled streamers of unburnished gold. The heavily cnated S(|uirrels raced across the dead limbs and exchanged their signals of success in the early harvest. A sharp gust of wind brought down a host of many colored leaves from neigh- boring maples. Winter is coming, observed the first man. with a slight shiver, as he glanced up at the trees, now half-naked and ragged. That brings pleasant evenings by the fireside, cheerfully remarked the second. And poverty and suffering to the masses, added the third, as he wrinkled his brow. At the turn in the road, the three companions entered a lane which led them into a pasture-land. The springs on the hillside flowed down into the valley and here, in the lowland, was the watering-place of cattle, .V muddy ciuagmire ; a cesspool of bacteria, complained the first man, as his polished boot sank into the vellow water and mire. Like the dreamless ooze of vulgar minds, commented the third. But you can see the reflection of the sky in it, affirmed the second, as he paused, looking into the muddy depths of the water. Silently, they crossed the pasture, climbing the fence of decaying rails and entering a field, where a farmer was busily cutting the corn. Mere druggery. muttered the first of the travelers, a life of slavish toil. Adds nothing to the Nineteen l unDceD JFourteen greatest good of the greatest nuniljcr, mused the third. But he whistles while he works, noted the second. liy this time they came before an humble farm house that stood by the side of the road. It was small, rough, and unpainted. The moss-covered roof sagged and sadly needed repair. A miserable shanty, the first man said, as he shook his head. Nothing but a shelter for a bare existence, drawled the third. It is a home, said the second of the men. Having reached the cross-roads, they halted, fur they must now part com- pany. My friends, said the first, you do not see things as they really are. No, said the second, every man sees for himself. Alas gentlemen, growled the third, ' Alas, you are both fools. They separated and each man went his own way, except the third, who had none. FRESHMAN WORK! THY WEEK END O ' ER Freshm.vn, work! thy week-end o ' er. Face the toil now swift advancing ; Dream of picture shows no more. Days of idling, nights of dancing. Dost thou dally at the call ' i Hands unseen thy themes are rating Marks of red ink thickly fall. Errors multiply berating ! Freshmen, work I thy week-cntl o ' er. Dream of picture shows no more. Face the labor swift advancing. Think not now of dates and dancinaf 3nDiana UniMtt tv arbutus THE BOARD WALK rr HE Appian Wax, Fifth Avenue, the Road to Jericho, Broadway and the High- J. road to success are fabled ahke in Song and Story, but none can be so sacred in memory and so firmly fixed in tradition to University travelers as the Board Walk. Few Collegiate Tourists learn the short-cuts to an education, but even the dullest Freshman knows the Board Walk. Romance and sentin ent have given it a place far above the power of Road Guides to add or detract. Scarcelv wide enough is this Promenade to permit Hays Buskirk and John Geiger to walk side by side, only a few hundred kilometers or so is it in length, — never quite long er.ough for Sam Boyd to linish a funny story, — and so uneven are its planks that ruined shines, muffled profanity and broken promises con.stantly result. Shrubs and bushes line the borders, while the overhanging branches of the Campus trees shield the wayfarer from summer ' s heat or winter ' s snow, and permit the tender rays of moonlight to filter through with a peculiar romantic and artistic effect. Song birds warble in the trees, even in the dead of winter, while vio- lets blossom along the way, — to those whose thoughts are lightly turned to dreams of love. Here, — along this walk, — youthful couples stroll in the moonlight, scarcelv at a snail ' s pace, murmuring promises soon forgotten ; the freshl - powdered co-ed hur- ries to an eight o ' clock, giving final touches to her hair and repeating French con- jugations ; the tired Freshman, his morning classes o ' er, winds his weary way home- ward : midnight serenaders startle the owls with their popular harmonies and spirited revellers wander unsteadily after a bacchanal celebration. Dver the Aps lies Italy and at the end of the planky way is Sorority Row. ' e shall travel this wa - but once, but to repeat the sentimental journey via the Board alk is one of the privileges of a college education. jfastcv tbe (Bill, Slower tbc iUall Conrtcsv ofShmu C Cim JnDiana Onitjcrsitp arbutusi Ky PPA ALPHA THETA KAi ' i ' A Alpha Theta began its sorority existence at DePauw in 1870. A cliapter was installed at Indiana during the same year. Theta colors are l)lack and gokl. The black and gold pansy is the sorority flower. The Theta pin resembles a kite and the sisters occupy front seats in class rooms. SEXIORS Mary Louise Craig Alary Louise Mauzy Harriet Mitchell Dorothy Thorriburg Erema W ' ilk JUXK )RS Elida Allen Hazel Certsch Imo Enid r)rendel Lillian Luc IXivisson Ruth Alay Herdrich Grace I-iidd Mildred Showers MEMBERS SOPHOMORES Dorothy P ransen Xancv Disncv Conwell Alary Elizabeth Eullenlove Maude Marie ITarvey Henrietta Hepburn Hilda Kidder Alarjorie Lewis Esther AlcXaull Alary Jane Rienian Hilda Sjiringer Pdorence W ' andcll FRESHMEX Alildred Camp Edna Corr Blanche Eoreman Agnes Foreman Josephine Hall Janet Hepburn Esther Alayer Ruth AliUer I,ois Xicholson Lucille Robertson Katherine Rawles Luella Smith Lillian Seaney Alartha ' ogelsong Alary ' oodburn Martha W ' oodburn Jl3inetcen i unDteD JFourteen Si i SnDiana Onitoetsitp arbutus KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA KAi ' PA Kappa Gamma bought its Forest Place residence five years ago and became the first sorority to own its own home. The sorority was founded at Monmouth College, Illinois, in 1870, and Delta, the local chapter, started two years later. Kappa colors are blue, — light and dark. The fleur-de-lis is the flower. The golden key forms the Kappa badge. MEMBERS Genevieve Chapman Helen Barbour SENIORS Cecile Hanna Ruth Reeves Ruth Telfer Bess Williams Marie Bowles Edith Fitzpatrick JUXIORS Elizabeth Griflith Marion Janes Mildred Kuhn Ruth Lockhart Alieda ' an A ' essem Alice Adams Alta Burns Hilda Cleveland Dorriss Carpenter Anna Marv Dve SOPHOMORES Marion Grimes Margaret Harlan Doris Hofl man Ellen Hobbs Anne Koch Eunice McCullough Ruth Morrison Edith Regester Nellie Van Antwerp May Woolery Ruth ' eatherlv ]Marv Blair Lael Davis LucA ' Franklin FRESHIMEN Nell Johnson Elsa lannfeld Lorena ] Ioore Ruth ] IcCracken Fave Harris jSinetccn I unDreD jFourteen W ibt jgBt : m SnDiana QJnitiersitp Srbutus PI BETA PHI PI Beta Phi, established as the I. C. Sorosis in 1867 at Monmouth College, Illinois, became a Greek letter organization in 1888. The local chapter, Indiana Beta, was established in 1893. The colors are dregs-of- vine and silver blue. The red carnation is the national flower. Pi Phi moved ir.to its new liome at the beginning of the year. The armw is the sorority pin. Post Graduate : Ola Yates. MEMBERS Emily Boston Louise Espey SENIORS Frances Hill Helen Ikerd Alary Jackson Caroline ' een S Clara Creath Bernice Good JUXIORS Rer.a Dearmin Maude Elfers Winnette Emory Olive Montgomery Ludisa Braun Lela Crook Darle Er.nis Katherine Anderson Marguerite Davis Grace Grthrie Marv Hall SOPHOMORES Ruth (iivan EditJT Haines FRESHMEX Emma Hill Gladys Jackson Ida Myers Luciie Phillips Mary Martin Margaret Alock Freda Schlotzhauer Clara Alay Robbins Martha W ' interrowd Aiarie West Hazel Woods Nineteen unDreD JFouttcen anDiana Onitiersitp arbutii0 DELTA GAMMA Di:i,TA ( ,amina was founded at the University of Mississippi in 1872, and entered Indiana as Theta chapter sixteen years ago. Pink and Ijlue are the colors. Cream rose is the Delta Gamma firiwer. George Ilanta, the father of two members of the active chapter at the present time, is a member of Delta Gamma, — the onh male affiliate of any young women ' s fraternity. The present home of the sorority is situated in Forest Place between the houses of Theta and Kappa. Delta Gamma is renowned in college circles for its clever and original minstrel performances at the annual Countv Fair. MEMBERS Pest graduates : Frances Latzke. Elizabeth Banta. Anna .Vbel Christine Biller Margaret Banta Zoe Beaslev SEXK )RS Catharine Howman JUNIORS Una Graham Gail larshall Grace Monttromerv Helen Hovey Anna ' ade Katherine Tinsley Elizabeth NIoloiiv Juanita Bailey Alberta Cordier Xorene Carmichael Mildred Cooke SOPHOAIORES Louise Frank Annabel Highman Emilv Hanshoe Lucile Herold Xaomi Harris Maebeth ] IcCullough Ruth Tourner Bonnie Bennett [Mary Dedman ] Iarv Lee Galbraith FRESHMEN Adelaide Moore Marv Alack Jessie AlcCracken Mary Newsome Mildred Otto 236 Jl3ineteen I unDteD Jfoutteen I SnDiana Onitictsitp arbutus DELTA ZETA DELTA Zeta is 1iut a recent addition to the sorority circle at Indiana University, having reccivetl its charter luit five years ago. The national organization preceded the installation of the local chapter seven years. The colors are old rose arid Nile green. The pink rose is the Delta Zeta flower. The chapter horse is located at the corner vi Third Street and Indiana Avenne. The sororit ' pin re- senihles Aladdin ' s Lamp. . lth(jugh yonng in existence, the chapter includes in its membership many prominent girls in L ' niversity activities. MEMBERS SENIORS Frances Hankemeier Helen Patterson Erances Trackwell JUXKJRS E. Claire Jolly Edna Malott Flora Ruth ' iolet Pinaire SOPHOMORES Helen Pjrandt Eranchon Campbell Irene Gwartney Harriet Browne Jeanette Calvin Bernice Hickman Stella Clark Carrie Freeman Sue Reed Fern Fields FRESHMEN Marie Ballinger Katherine ( J ' Connor Mary Remsburg Elizabeth Carothers Belle Mowrv Anne Sweeney J13ineteen unDreD jToumen SnDiana tlniticrsitp arbutus; THE FIRST SORORITY DATE A Freshman ' s first date at a sorority house is an epoch in his college life. It either makes or breaks him, — makes him a victim or breaks him of change — some- times both, depending on the girl and what she drinks. Love at first sight some- times results at the initial meeting but usually somebody is disappointed. Attired in a checker-board suit, approved b)- the Board of Fraternal Censor- ship, his home-town collar replaced by one of a more recent and less comfortable model, his pledge pin radiating distinction like the badge of a village police force, the P reshman, — sometimes under the protecting surveilance of a disgusted upper- classman, — begins his Cjuest for the Sorority Queen. He listens in holy reverence to the instructions of the Social Giant who leads him as a dumb goat to the slaughter, — or if alone, — repeats from memory the parting advice of his influential fratres m vobiscum. ' ith his lieart in his lar nx, his hand on the proceeds of father ' s first check ar.d a strange longing for the vine-covered cottage of the deserted girl in the far-off village, he approaches the Alfalfa AIo House, feeling al out as comfortalilc ;is a Bloomington bootlegger answering a summons l;efore the I ' ederal grand jury. Ushered in among a score of other misguided searchers for the liberal part of a college education, he swallows his Spearmir.t, and from that time on is hardly responsible for anything that he ma - say or do. To make his arrival all the more conspicuous and auspicious he places a stout, rural foot on a filmy, silk train and accidentb and none too gracefully, overturns a neighboring A ' ictrola. F ut his injured ]jride soon heals under a liberal application of Omega Salve and he soon feels quite as much at home as an Irish section boss in Congress. When the ten- thirty alarm is given and he is told good-night, he is firmlv convinced that the fraternity was exceedingly fortunate to get him. He has turned his first social handspring, and will soon be walking on his head. It takes a lot of iicrrc to face a first nii lit date, but ereii ' i ' ith Greek Sf ecials selliiii:; at thirty f er. ' jiiii , it ' s wortli it. j inetecn i|)unDreD jFourtcen RNITIES JnDiana 83nitiersitp 3rbutus BETA THETA PI BETA Theta Pi bears the distinction of being the first national fraternity to enter Indiana University. Thomas B. Graham estabHshed Pi chapter in 1845. six years after the founding of the fraternity at Aliami University. ( )xford. Ohio. The American Beautv Rose is the fraternity fli.nver. Uight shades of pink and bhie are the colors. The annual House Party during the Thanksgiving vacation and the past achievements of Paul AlcXutt arc linked inseparably with Beta. LIST OF MEMBERS FACULTY William A. Rawles Charles M. Hepiiurn Charles D. Campbell Doctor Allan Maxwell SEXIORS TUXI()RS SOPHOMORES George H. DeHority Frederic E. Durham Charles M. Piper Albert L. Rabb George ' . Hughes Clai ' de ] L E ing ' lLLIAM A. Kl ' NKEL Paul L. Iaddock pERR E. C) ' Xeal FRESH.MEX Russell B. Kh kpatrick Otto ' . Lieber ' alter X. Matthews Allan B. AIaxwell William X. C )ciiiltree Enoch R. Gr. y Wayne W. Schmidt I. .MES H. ' arner Harry L. Baughman George A. Bigley Joseph L. Dailey ' i;sLEY M. H( ppknrath Harry [M. Shackelford Robert T. Humi:s W nn S. Owen ' iR(.;iL M. Simmons Kenneth M. Kunkel Wendell ]. Washburn Mintttm puntttn jFourtcen iBiia JnDiana Onitiersitp arfiutus PHI DELTA THETA Pill Uelta Tlieta is the oldest contintmus fraternity at Indiana, liaving l een active since its installation in 1849. lianii University, likewise, is the home of Phi Delta Theta : the birth of the organization preceding the installation at Bloom- ing b ' one ear. The white carnation is the fraternity flower. Argent and azure are the colors. Local Phi Delts enjov the privileges of suburban life on the former Axtel Farm, wear high boots and get their mail by rural delivery. LIST OF MEMBERS FACL ' LTY Doctor Robert E. Lyons TUXIORS SOPHOMORES FRESH IEX Lester Corya H.-VROLD Gr.XESLE Sherm. n Mixton Norman Schleiimer Verne W. gst. ff Paul Bailey Louis Cordes L ouis Foster Harding Hox ' ey Albert Hare Harry Jones Walter McCurdy Eden Patrick Walter Voss ' ernox Burns Louis Carrol Carl Cooper H.vrold Ccrva Bert Horn M.Kx Lechner George Laupus Clayton O ' B.vnion Austin Seward Joe Swope Floyd Thom.vs Dudley ' agst. ff Nineteen It)unDreD jTouttecn UnDiana Oniticrsitp artjutus SIGMA CHI SIGMA Chi, another one nf the dreck letter ottsprings of the proHfic Aliami I ' niversitw came tn Indiana in 1855. The chapter occupies the imposing stone structure at the northwest corner of the campus, overlooking the Jordan. The fraternitv flower is the white rose. Blue and gold are Sigma Chi colors. IMickey Erehart, next gear ' s football Captain, and Mark Hamer, Business Manager of the Student, are Sigma Chis. Fred Bates Johnson is a prominent alumnus. LIST OF :members FACCLTY HoR.vcE A. Hoffman Charlks J. Sembower Earnest H. Lindley Carl H. EiGENiiANX SENIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEX Cecil Ball Donald Dixon JUNIORS Humphrey Barbour Mark G. Erehart T. D. Fleming Alfred Foellinger J. F. Frisinger Glenn B. Ralston A. D. Erehart Mark Hamer Oral Hutto Clair Kimber Robert Masters Casper Rhetts Clair H. Scott Cl. rk Springer William Storey From man Foster Sydnor Gildre.vth George Lee Penn Nash Harold Peterson Robert Peterson Edward Ridley Richard Scribner R. ' . Terry Noble Palmer Nineteen unDtcD jFourteen UnDiana Onitietsitp arbutus PHI KAPPA PSI PHI Kappa I ' si recenth ' erected its home, a handsunie four-story Jjrick struc- ture at a cost of thirt - thousand doUars. The local chapter was installed fortv-fiA-e ears ago and has distinguished itself in the representation of its mem- bers in all forms of college activity. The sweet pea is the Phi Kappa Psi flower. Pink and lavender are the fraterr,it ' colors. Cotton Berndt brought renown to the chapter while a member of the athletic teams ; Hays Buskirk and 1- rank Wliitaker are the more prominent active members. LIST OF MEMBERS FACULTY W. E. Jenkins Charle.s E. Mosemiller SENIORS JUXKJRS SOPHOMORES Hays Buskirk John T. DeLong Geoffrey Griffith John W. O ' H.vrrow RoIJKRT I I.XKUIS James J. Rop.inson E. Rogers Smith JoHx H. Woods C. ' . ii-i,i. MS Allan Buskirk John Diggs Fr. nk Paris Paul T. Hackett Arthur Krause Chester Loughry Donald Thronburgh Matthe ' Winters R.vlph ' elom FRESHMEN R. y Casey Thomas Eley James Frenzel William Gabe Earl Geiger ' lLLI. M Gessler W ' lIMS HiCK.VM, John Redmon George Shixely Louis ' ASEM Frank W ' hitaker Jr. Francis Bowser Severin Buschman Emmett Chancellor Robert Free Hugh Harris Hknry Humerichoi ' sfk John Shively ' Neal Loomis William JMcCool H.xRTwiG Mottier Jl3incteen I unDreD Jfouttecn SnDiana 2Init)crsitp arbutus PHI GAMMA DELTA Piu Gamma Delta now occupies a new stone Imuse, erected on the site of the home which was destroyed l)y fire four _ ears ago. The fraternity first came into existence at Washington and Jefferson, in 1848, and twentv-three ears later, Zeta chapter was installed at Indiana. The fraternity flower is the heliotrope. Royal Purple is the Phi Gamma color. An annual Pig Dinner is a chapter tradi- tion which forms one of the chief social events of the college vear. Rohert Pav- ton and Berry W ' hitaker are prominent active members. LIST OF MEAILiERS FACULTY Doctor J. A. ' ()(inr,URX, Doctor ' . J. AIoi-:nkh. us. V. H. S.mith, Joiix ' . Cravens, E. A. Hog.vte, J. J. Al. LaFollette SENIORS SOPHOMORES FRESH.MEX Ray ' . Clark . . Elliston Cole Ralph W. Mitchell RoniiRT S. Pavton Berry M. Whitaker Il ' XTORS George L. Hardi.xg F. Clay Raymond Lacey L. Schuler John A. Benz Sa.m B. Boyd Walter X. Bercaw Ralph G. Hastincs Louis H. Legler, Jr. John K. Le. sure Wayne W. Mitchell E. H. Menart ' al F. Xolan Xeil v. Robertson Ralph F. Thompson Richard Porter AA ' iLLiAM C. Reed JuLi.vN Ralston Tim A ' . Ransom J. Harold Schuler Okl. Sicks Howard K. Turner C. C. Prather n orman scholz Ivan D. Carson Kemper F. Cowing Fred B. Cohee Willlam G. Glackman Paul A. Hainbaugh Howard B. Houghton Paul E. Leffler L. Pence M.vuck Robert L. McClure PLEDGE Marion D. De Tar jfSineteen I unDteD jFoutteen SnOiana Onitiersitp arbutus DELTA TAU DELTA DELTA Tail Delta rivals I ' hi Delta in its rural location, the chapter living at the ast extreme of Third Street. The national organization remained a Southern fraternity exclusi ' elv until 1869, when the northern invasion began, followed by the installation of l!eta Alpha chapter at Indiana five years later. The pansy is the fraternit ' flower. I ' urple, white and guld are the Delta Tau colors. Dean Barnhart is a prciiuinent alumnus and his lirnther. Hugh, is now one of the popular active members. LIST OF MEMBERS FACULTY Doctor Will D. Howe SENIORS F. T. Stocktox TUXIORS C. E. Edmuxdson SOPHOMORES Donald L. Bose Earnest W. Force HoR. CE Hoffman Chester X. Fr. zii:r Martin T. Patton George A. Schilling March F. ' ELLs Hugh A. Darniiart Harvey B. Decker ( )tto T. Englehart Harry C. Muth Edward J. Bole.man FRESHMEX Floyd E. Dix John W. Jordan Dan ' . Goodman Harold Pulfer Paul R. Baugh Fred Beckdolt Charles Cushman Ira Englehart Harold Fickle Edward S. Johnston Gilbert Luzzader Charles Priest R. LPH J. Paxtzer Donald Rogers Xeal B. Welch IRREGULAR George Donnelly Leroy Buckley Paul Edmondson JI3inctecn l unDteD JFourtccn 3nDiana Ctnitocrsitp arbutus SIGMA NU SicMA Xu was the first fraternity to occupy a chapter house at IncHana Uni- versity, moving into its first home within two years after installation. The first chapter of Sigma Xu was founded at ' irginia Military Institute in 1869. The white rose is the fraternity flower. I ' .lack white and gold are the Sigma Xu colors. The chapter has heen widely represented in athletics, the name of Andy Gill, perhaps, being most familiar. LIST L)F : IEMBERS F. CULTY Fr. xk Avdelotte H. rry Thew Stephenson POST-GRADUATE Simon E. Twining SEXIORS TUXIORS SOPHOMORES Edgar D.wis J. Carlton D.vniel Floyd Fleming George V. Ford Harry C. Inman Dwight C. Park Fred Riggs Roy Anderson George X. S. Gi ' an S.vmuei HErnuRN e.vrl j. ckson Praxis Williams James Woodburn C E. ZiNN Paul Dunton Frank Le ' inson Francis ' ILS0N FRESHMEX Ren Dale Harry A. Eisenbise Carr Hemmersb. U(;ii Karl ' . Hoff Francis B. Leist Paul C. Means ' . lter McFarland JcsEPH McDonald ClIRISTL N MeSSNER Gordon Pierson Albert Ouigley ' ILLIAM R. Stuart Fred ' ilson Karl Zoller PLEDGE Glenn Oliphant Nineteen unDreD jFourtcen QBgB 00 HrS JnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus KAPPA SIGMA KAi ' i ' A Signia was originally organiztd at Indiana in 1887. but became inactive after a brief period, renewing its charter in 1900. The chapter owns its own hon-.e on East Third Street and distinguished itself last year by its representation in Phi Beta Kappa. The lily-of-the-valle - is the fraternity flower. Scarlet, white and en-.erald are the Kappa Sigma colors. Carl Schultz, star varsitv baseball pitcher, is a Kappa Sigma. Jack Horner and Holloway Crennen are prominer.t members of the chapter. LIST OF lEAir.ERS POST-GRADU. TES CriARLEs H. Crexxkx Georgk H. Hvslop SENIORS JUXinRS SOPHO iORES Cl.xude ' SI. BoLSER Floyd R. C. rter Adri. x J. Foxc.xxxox Herbert II. Horxer Gi-xrge R. Fischer Braxdcx Griffis EuGEXE JnHxsTox Fr. xk D. Mcrris Augustu.s S. Hocker Carl H. Sciu ' ltz AIelxtx H. Rhcrer Courtl. xd M. Isexhowee Clarexce H. ■ILLs C[-Arexcil Stew.vrd Chester W. Joxes Walter W. ullnms Harry P. Schi ' ltz fresh:mex Lek M. Bowers Eugexe Caroou Bex B. [oore H.nrmox p. Bross ' ixfield W. Durbin Emil McCoy Lesier Choate Ray G. Ikexs Hermax M. Robbixs CuLLEx B. Meckel pledges Farxc.m Axdersox Carl J. Allexb. ugh Harold Phipps T. MES S. ' RIGHT jfl3inetecn !DunDrcD jFourteen UnDiana Onitoersitp 9r6utus SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Sigma Alpha Epsilon received its charter in the spring of 1907 and conse- quently remains the voungest of the nine fraternities. The national organization is fifty-eight years old and located extensively in the Southern universities. The fraternity flower is the violet. Royal purple and gold are the colors. Mickey McCarty, college newspaper man, Manager of the Glee Club, and a popular, genial, good fellow, is one of the chapter ' s foremost representatives. L IST OF MEMBERS. SENIORS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES Noble P. Barr John W. Cline Venice D. Keiser John F. Casey N. R. Lawhead C. W. McCarty DwiGHT Murray Raymond Rueush Fred B. Smith S. K. White Lawrence Baker Doster Buckner Ben Drollinger Ward Gilbert George Helwig Grester Lamar FRESHMEN Norman R. Byers Fred C. Fischer Charles Gaunt Albert Hockensmith Max Shircliff ' ALTER Morton Ray ; Iilburn Nineteen unDteD jFoutteen UnDiana UniMtmtp arbutus PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL The Pan Hellenic Council is composed of one representative from each of eight fraternities. The purpose of the organization is to establish, maintain, ad- vance and direct the best interests and relations between the national fraternities located at Indiana. The Council meets at irregular times to act as an advisory bodv in all matters pertaining to inter-fraternitv life. The organization is unique in the respect that no officers are elected ; the representative of the chapter house vhere the particular meeting is being held serves as the presiding officer. . t present the council is planning a re-organization, with important changes and becoming affiliated with the National Inter-Fraternity Conference. Under the proposed changes, the Council will exert a wider and more constructive influ- ence, legislating measures for the betterment of the chapters and acting in a judi- cial capacitv at times of misconduct. Among the more important regulations pro- posed for adoption are included a shorter rush season, fifteen hours of credit be- fore initiation and anti-high school pledging. REPRESEXTATI ' ES Noble P. B. rr, Sigma Alpha Epsilon H. RtiLD Graesle, Phi Delta Theta J. Carlton Daniel, Sigma Nu L. cey L. Schuler, Phi Gamma Delta George DeHority, Beta Theta Pi Dox Tiiorxdurgh, Phi Kappa Psi Otto Englehaet, Delta Tan Delta ' ALTER Willlmis, Kappa Sigma Jl3ineteen l unDtcD jFourteen JInDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus GEORGE FITCH ON COLLEGE FRATERNITIES The Greek Letter Society was invented over one hundred years agii in an American college, and there are now so many of them that the Greek alphabet is becoming sadlv overworked and must soon be enlarged to take care of the rush of business. Contrary to popular supposition, the members of these societies do not spend their time writing letters in Greek. No doubt they could if they chose, but the kind of letter that father understands and answers most kindly must be written in English, and the Greek letter member is usually a most faithful correspondent as far as his father is concerned. A Greek letter society is commonly supposed to be a gang of desperate young men who have sworn over a bloody skull to stand firmly by each other and never to reveal the name of the lirother who blew up the court house. It is supposed to be so powerful that when twenty ov thirt ' ■llung men with pomjiadour hats get together in a black cellar under a red light and whisper in case hardened voices they can defeat the noble young candidate for congress who is supported only by a few shivering magnets or a plucky little railroad. Greek letter societies are also supposed to lead lives of crime and to encourage their devotees to engulf large vats of virulent stimulants. ] Iany a bright young man who has gone to college with a pocket full of picture cards for perfect at- tendance at Sunday school is supposed to have emerged from the first meeting of his secret society with a fierce yearning for hasheesh and the blood of tender young children. All of these suspicions arise from the fact that the Greek letter society is se- cret and its members are supposed to never, no never, to reveal what has hap- pened behind the black curtain with the crossbones on it. Greek letter societies are harmless, however, and even do good. Many a collegian has, through them, learned the Greek alphabet so thoroughly that he has remembered it long after French and trigonometry have cantered from his memory. Jl3inetcen l unDreD jFourtceu YJc focaf € f u ' bs UnDiana OniUcrsitp arfiutus EMANON Emanon was fuuiided in 1901, as a purely social organization and in its brief existence has had many members prominent in University activities and success- ful after graduation. Emanon reversed is Xo Name. The Alarechal rose is the Emanon flower. Purple and gold are the colors. Earle Reeves, John Alellett and Elmer Raschig are former members now gaining success in the newspaper field. LIST OF MEMBERS. Post Graduate : Daniel L. Bock. SENIORS. Walter B. Jones Donald R. Mellett JUNIORS Clifford O. Dice Earl H. Eletchall Robert B. Hauss Paul D. Kassebaum Karl ' SI. Koons Ralph J. Malott Clifford L. [Miller William N. Strack George S. Sutton Rolla K. Thomas SOPHOMORES Ralph W. Evans Earl Frazier P ' rank N. Gastineau Audrey W. Haines Charles J. Kirschman Charles R. ]Metzger Chester L. Schlabach FRESHMEN ' allace H. : Iartin PLEDGES Augustus Koch Marion Kiess Llovd Mellett jQineteenl unDteD jFourtecn SnDiana UniUt itv 9r6utus WRANGLERS liiK Wraiio-ler Club origir.ated with thirteen men twelve years ago and for a time existed merely as a literary and debating society. For two years the membership was restricted to thirteen in number, but the idea was abandoned at the end of that time. John Whittcnberger, founder and first president of the Indiana Union, was a Wrangler. The house now occupied on East Kirkwood . ve- nue has been the organization ' s home for eight years. LIST OF MEAIBERS. SENIORS Chestei A. Davis Walter O. Lewis John ] I. Powell Lerov E. Sellers JUNIORS . mbrose M. Aspy E. Earl Lines SOPHOMORES E. Ross Bartley Dale Beeler Joseph H. Conrad Harold D. Caylor H. jMonford Cox Harold Gray Ward Ingels J. Horton McCoy Olin L. McReynolds Edgar M. Starr Fred Tavener Russel S. Wallace FRESHMEN Cecil G. Barnard Harold Bowser Mrgil Barnhart Don Essex Harry P. Gray Glen A. Gordy Noel C. Ruddell W. Paul Wallarp j incieen l unDrcD JFoumen KnDiana anitier0itp arfiutus INDEPENDENT LITERARY SOCIETY Till-: Independent Literary Society, composed of both men and women, was organized in 1883, with Robert J. Aley as one of the charter members. The purpose of the organization is literary, dramatic and social. The society colors are apple green and white. Independents are well represented in the faculty, in- cluding Samuel B. Harding, Schuyler C. Davisson, Mrs. Alice Goss, Arthur L. Foley, R. R. Ramsey, G. D. Morris. JNIelvin E. Haggerty and R. F. Lockridge. LIST OF MEMBERS. Post Graduates; Clifford Woody, Barrett Cockrum. Christian Hartke, alter S. Danner, Irs. A. C. Ouinn Charles I. Baker Lola Brooks Llovd D. Cla comb Otto R. Babcock Lillian Hillis Genevieve Herricks SENIORS Edgar Call Ruth Hemmersbaugh Mary Loveless Charles Maple SOPHOMORES Karl Kornblum Joe McCord John Newman Erna Oehlkuck Milo Sommerville Harvev Stahl Jane Stevenson Marion Stevenson Russel Lomax Nell Bulliet Paul Dillv JUNIORS Ormal J. Ferguson Mvron W. Tatlock Wilbur R. Tweed} Merl Wall FRESHMEN ? lartha Denny Hilda Eschelman James E. IMontgomery John C. Reed Willis Stahl JKinctcen I unDteD jFourteen 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus DELPHIANS The Delphian Literary Society is a non-secret organization for men and women. Literary and social meetiniis are held and good fellowship fostered. When the society was first formed in n 05, the meetings were held in Kirkwood Hall. Gold and silver gray are Delphian colors. Ivan Zaring. wrestler, football man and member of the Union Board for the coming year, is a Delphian. LIST OF MEMBERS. SENIORS George G. Graham Louie R. Hull Earl R. Martin Bruce W. McCullough lidge McAIillan Lyman Overshiner Grace Poling Maude Watkins Mona L. W ' hitlock Dudle - W ' indes JUXIORS Harold W. Adams Carl F. Brand lames D. Darnall Herman A. Jones Leslie R. Lingeman Lillian C. Niemann Lola W. Ward Ivan A. Zaring Nellie Hoshaw SOPHOMORES Maurice V. Kahler Byron N. Lingeman Lennie R. Martin Nellie Richardson FRESHMEN Cletice P. Baker Mabel Chamberlain Rubv Cornelius Bessie A. Guthrie Nettie Hannawalt Elsie Morris Bessie E. Newlon Ray Newlon Lillian Alice Ridgeway Herbert A. Smith avo Bintteen I unDreD jfourteen UnDiana Onit]ct0itp 3rbutus INDIANA CLUB The Indiana Llulj ma)- almost be considered as an auxiliary organization to Phi Beta Kappa. TIk ' L 1u1i leads all other societies and fraternities in scholarship and has contributed mure members to Phi Beta Kappa than any other organiza- tion. The purpose of the Club is threefold, — social, literary and dramatic. One or two plays are given annually by the organization for their friends. Albert Stump, next year ' s president of the Union, is a well known Indiana Club member Post Graduates : Albert Stump, Howard Smith and Harold Baldwin. LIST OF : IEMBERS. SENIORS Xobel Coryell Willafred Howe Fred I. I Iyers Roy Roudebush Susie Thro Blanche Wcllons Ralph ' ellons FRESHMEN Olen Eicher Lila lies Joe Kutch Raymond Pence Ross Snapp C. J. Steigmeyer Ina Shordon Irma Shordon Ruth Zimmerman SOPHOMORES .-Vnna Clark Anna Khite John Lewis ; Iarv Moorhouse Paul Myers Fred Shonkwiler Marjorie Suter Daisy Smith JUNIORS Florence Rees Charles Showalter Wylie Pollock Jl inetccn li unDrcD JFourtccn ;273 JnDiana Oniucrgitp arbutus What is Politics without a Plum Tree and College without Departmental Clubs? Deprived of various organiza- tions, College Honors would be scarce as Boarding House strawberries and a Pedigree would not be worth striving for. After all, for what do students come to College but to get in Organiza- tions and OUT of Work? Usually a great amount of energy is spent in gain- ing the coveted Club membership, fol- lowed by increased energy in keeping away from meetings. Inter-frats furnish a vest full of badges and Departmental Clubs make the Honor list seem longer. jQinetecnJ unDteD jFoumen ainifi CLUBS INTER FMTS 3nDiana Onitietsitp arfiutug HISTORY CLUB The disciples of Channing, Bancroft, rarknian and Lecky have colonizea into an organization known as the History Chib. To be exact, the organization was established in iy02. Instructors in the department, History majors, together with certain other readers of the dusty Clironicles, who may be elected to mem- bership, meet fortnightly and discuss topics of historical interest. During these sessions Napoleon is resurrected and asked to excuse his mili- tary blunder at Waterloo, Pienedict Arnold appears before the members to defend his own reputation, Julius Caesar answers the charges preferred against his ambitions and Christopher Columbus is made to repeat what he said to the Indians, who constituted his reception committee. Battles are fought, wars avoided, dead diplomats soundh- criticised, forgotten heroes raised to new pedestals, and the Monroe Doctrine made to resemble a keynote speech at Arma- geddon. The students of Arms and of Alen believe s(jundly in the assum])tion that history repeats itself and feel safe in regarding the past as a correct index to the future. Following an evening ' s session of the Club, the Mexican Indletins take on a different color and it is a perfectly easy matter for a memlier to determine the correct policy in bringing Huerta to time. The meetings ne ' er fail to arouse a diversity of opinion. Heated discussions arise concerning the exact words used by King George when he learned the decision of the colonists to boycott his stamps. At other times heated debates ensue over Nero ' s preference for Chopin or Wagner when rendering his famous violin obligate. liv way of diversion, the members engage in a search for his- torical liars and dates are served as refreshments. Seriously speaking, the History Club meets to consider questions of teaching, writing and interpreting history. The Club is especially active concerning the Indiana Historical Survey being carried on at present and with regard to the approaching Centennial Celeb ration. During the past year a highly successful banquet was given, at which an interesting toast list featured. At the last meeting of the winter term Professor Sweet, head of the History Department at De Pauw, read a paper on Bishop Matthew Simpson and the Funeral of Abraham Lincoln. Howard Hornung acted as the Club President during the winter term. r sM KtKtlk SS — ' i tiiAiSi 1 19 i i lH, ■J n 1 ' m 11 O a H X X M ' 5 c75  5 2 3nDiana Cniticrsitp arbutus DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN HoCH der Kaiser und lang leben der Deutsche ' erein ! Ja, dasz ist ein goodlichen Sprichwort fur die Gesellschaft. Xaturlich ! Alzo, die Verein ist ein kleinen Parten von den Deutschen Department vat Deutsche studieren, lesen und sprechen. VVenn diese People zuzammen gekommen hatten sie singen und spielen und essen. If Mann kann nich Deutsch versprocken he besser nicht gejoinen hatte yet alrett}-, aber he essen kann und so weiter. Trinken ? Ach nein ! Diese Verein meets in dem Studenten Gebaude und dasz nicht ein Rathskeller oder ein W ' einstnbe geworden sein ist. The Deutsche A ' erein, which translated literally means the German Society, is composed of Facult - instruct(_)rs in German, majors in the department and students in other departments who have shown a good knowledge of German. The object of the society is to familiarize the members with German life, German songs, customs, games, literature and especially to promote free conversation in the native tongue. The Society stages one or two short plays yearly. Regular programs arc held at meetings, when German poems are recited, folk stories told, readings from literary masterpieces given and songs sung in German. The social hour is always an enjoyable feature of the evening, at which time native games and amusements are arranged. Holiday seasons are often celebrated after the German fashion. The anniversaries of various German heroes are sometimes commemorated by fitting exercises while special programs are often devoted to the life and works of some great writer. Erna Irene Oehlkuch i? the Societv President. 3nDiana Onitiersitp arbutus FRENCH CLUB Le Cercle Frangais is the French departmental ckib. CL)nsisting- of not more than fifty active members chosen from the student l3od - and a number of honor- ary members representing- the Faculty. The purpose of the organization is to promote interest in the French language and to increase the ability of its members to use the language in conversation. Regular meetings are held on the first and third Thursday nights of each month. The meetings are usually devoted to French games, readings, songs, and conver- sation, followed by a business session of the active members. The Club has enjoyed a successful year, during which the more important and enjoyable events were the presentation of two plays, and a social given at the home of IVofessor A. I ' . Kuersteiner. OFFICERS Alied. A ' an ' essem President Cecil W. Bvers Secretary Fr.xnces L. tzke Treasurer D.xxiel ; Iebane Librarian ACTI ' E : lFMr.ERS Dorothy Tiiorxi!urg Genevie -e Chapman Alieda ' an A ' essem Lucy Boyd Lucy Dax ' idson Grace Montgomery Cecil W. Byers Allan M.vxwell Elizabeth Molony Charles Piper ALargaret Kroft Xellie Siiute p. ul kunschik Lucii.e Treadway ( lAYLE DOOLITTLE John Burns Daniel Mebane Christine Biller . da Doolittle . nna Abel . dalene Coffman Frances Hankemeier (3phelia Netherland PUTH WeATHERLY AIarth.v Kixcaid Erna Oehlkuck Helen Barbour Cecile Hanna Anna Koch Mildred Kuhn Henriette Hepburn Samuel Hepbltrn Alice H. Adams Alt A Burns George Shively I L RY Stevens 280 S inttem l unDrcD JFoutteen ENGLISH CLUB To promote the study and appreciation of English and kindred subjects and to give those interested in these subjects a common ground upon which to meet, so reads the charter of the English Club and incidentally forms an excuse for the organization. Meetings are occasionally held on the centennial birthday of some great writer, when readings are given from O. Henry, the novels of Robert W. Chambers reviewed, and poetry mixed with pimento sandwiches. OFFICERS. Bruce JMcCullough President James Cox J ' icc-Prcsidcnt Ruth Reeves Secretary MEMBERS. Anna Abel Hilton Baldwin Christine Biller Lola Brooks James Cox Cecile Hanna Matilda Lebline Louise Mauzy Bruce McCullough Roland Merrit Fred Myers RoscoE O ' Byrne Ruth Reeves y .LiEDA Van Vessem Alfred Wetzel ' erlin Harrold Blanche Wellons Allan Grisso.m Albert Stujip Ruth Hem.mersbaugh Charles Piper Ola Yates Helen Hovey IvA Weybright Inez Blank Clyde Sweitzer Nellie Carrothers Midge McMillan Maude Watkins George McCarty Lulu Bergdoll Ruth Lockh.vrt Edith Fitzpatrick Charles Crampton JnDiana nivictsitp atfiutuis PHYSICS CLUB The Physics Club has been in existence for twenty-seven years Jjut. unhke n.iost departmental clubs, has always remained active. Publicity is not sought b the members and they are quite content to carrv on research work quietlw Nr) one has ever heard of a f hysics Club Dance, but energy, force and wnrk are cm - rent topics at the regular meetings. Eats and smokes are not offered as iniluce- ments for attendance. 1)ut the Club, however, has prospered and grown on a scientific diet. OFFICERS. Forest G. Tucker President Ray F. Myers ] ice-President Robert O. Hutchixsox Secretary-Treasurer George E. Davis Reporter MEMBERS. Doctor Arthur L. Foley Doctor Rolla R. Ramsey Doctor F. A. Molby Professor J- B. Dutcher M. E. HuFFoRi) G. AI. Hopkins William Shevvm.vn E. H. Stuart F. E. Germanx Jacob Jordan George E. Davis Louie R. Hull Forrest G. Tucker C. W. Byers R. y F. Myers J. D. Darnall R. C). Hutchinson Myron Tatlock C. G. Watson George A. Nye R. E. Whitehead J13mctcen ipunDteD JFoutteen PHILOSOPHY CLUB The Philosopliy Club aims to be the most liberal of the departmental clubs. It is composed of students interested in questions concerning philosophy and psy- chology, ten hours of work in the department being the only requirement for membership. At its re-organization earh- in the Winter Term, Bruce Moore was elected President ; Louise Espey, Vice-President ; and Dorothy Ketcham, Secre- tary. Fortnightly meetings are held, at which an opportunity is offered for free discussion of the present day problems and tendencies of science and philosophy. MEMBERS. Frank C. Senour George H. Hyslop Charles Crampton Lloyd H. Ziegler Katherine Easley Gertrude McCain William O. Trapp John H. Thomas Hazel Hansford Hazel Bertsch Ruth Telfer Katherine Ashman Doctor Earne.st H. Lindley Doctor Warner Fite Doctor M. E. Haggerty Doctor C. J. Sembower Bruce Moore Louise Espey Dorothy Ketcham Charleine Burgess Eleanor Martin Harriet Mitchell A. Elliston Cole Timothy DeBruler J. Stanley Wright Samuel B. Hepbi-rn Ralph D. Wellons Thomas E. Nicholson Mary Louise Mauzy Ruth M. Herdrich John J. Fisher Bruce McCollough Charles C. Stech Claude M. Bolser Elmer Ritter Frieda K. Williams L. B. Sawyer Lester A. Corya ( Irack Poling Hazel Strout Alieda Van Vessem 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arfiutus ECONOMICS CLUB Collective bargaining, the entrepreneur, communism and marginal returns are stock phrases with the Economics Chib members. The High Cost of. Living is the problem in which most discussion naturally centers, and the task of making one dollar go as far as two involves the greater amount of time outside the organization as well as in. The newh ' initiated member usually feels a deep disappointment when the initiaturv ceremonies fail to reveal any secret means of reducing the tremendous cost of a college education. Miile papers of great length are prepared and read showing a score of ways in which the cost of production of wire nails and wash- ing machines ma - he reduced fifty per cent., no one. as }et. has found a means of getting two hamburgers for a nickel or a haircut for a dime. The wav to immortal fame lies open to some enterprising Economics major who can discover a means whereby two people can live as cheaply as one and prove the practicalit - of his theorv by actual demonstration. A wide field along this perplexing question awaits the efforts of the Club and, without question, the coming vear will find a few of the members assuming that responsibility. [Membership in the Economics Club is open to all m ajors in the department. At the various meetings, papers are read on assigned topics, talks given on various subjects and periodicals reviewed. Jack Horner and Hays Buskirk served as President in the Eall and ' inter terms respectivel}-. Jl3ineteen i unDteD jFoumcn EUCLIDIAN CIRCLE 1 eeling that h organization, mathematical efficiency may be raised to the wth power, those who search dihgently for the unknown quahty and the Fourth Dimension, meet together as the EucHdian Circle. Students who have survived a year of eight o ' clock Math classes and are still devoted followers of Euclid may be eligible for membership. Fortunately, no mathematical tests are given the candidates and Quadratic Equations do not bar the way. Contrarv to popular supposition, meetings are not devoted to a memorization of statistical tables, contests in lightning calculation, or to conversing in symbols and ratios. Logarithmic questions and Binomial answers are sometimes indulged in for a pastime. A passing knowledge of the multiplication table is almost essential toward good standing in the Club and the ability to add and subtract, without cotmting the fingers, is a valuable accomplishment in time of Ijlackboard exercises. ■' Two and two make four is the motto of the Euclidian Circle and the members are not at all particular about the verb form. The organization luoks with extreme disfavor on the Adding Machine and places an iron-clad boycott on its use by the members. Tables of compound interest are likewise on the black- list, while the sin of resorting to long division at any time is unpardonable. The creation of a greater interest in the more general problems of mathe- matics and a knowledge of current literature on the subject are the objects which the Euclidian Circle seeks to attain. anDiana ejnitiersitp arftutug ALPHA CHI SIGMA Alpha Chi Sigma is a national fraternity of chemists, estabUshed at Madison, Wisconsin, in 1904. Those who intend entering chemistry as a profession and who have made credible grades in their college work are eligible for membership. ' Ihe local chapter, Epsilon, was organized in 1907. Prussian blue and chrome yellow are the colors. Weekly meetings are held at the chapter house on East Thiru Street. FACULTY MEMBERS. Doctor R. E. Lyons Doctor L. S. Davis Doctor C. E. May Doctor F. C. Mathers jMEMBERS. SENIORS John W. Cline Chester Edwards Donald Garber Walter Jones Asa McKinney Carl Schultz Mile Sommerville Hubert Anderson Merton Walker JUNIORS Aaron Rogers George Hale Wilbur Tweedy Walter Landeman Clifford Miller JI5inetecn i unDreD Jfouttecn UnDiana Onitietsitp arfiutus BOTANY CLUB Ai.i. the- vear around with Flora , is the object of the Botany Chib, ahas Botanical Club. Incidentally, the Club acts in a similar capacity with the S. P. C. A. by protecting everv leaf, twig and branch on the campus from the ruthless hands of passersby. The organization offers exceptional inducements in the way of training its members to discriminate between a hickory tree and one of maple ; of avoiding the embarrassing mistake of calling a verbena a mignonette. The club was established in 191 1 and as with other department clubs, consists of instructors and majors in the department. Research subjects and current devel- opments in the science are the principal topics for discussion at the regular meet- ings. At the first meeting of the ear the following officers were elected : Edith Hennel President. Mrs. F. : I. Andrews ■ice President. Glenn B. Ramsey Secretary-Treasurer. SOCL L COMMITTEE. Flora Andersr.n Hazel Stront Rov Shierling iSinetecn unDteD jFouttccn PHI DELTA KAPPA Piii Delta Kappa is a national honorar - educational fraternity, established as a national organization in lyio. Its puriiose is to further the stud - of education and to encourage educational research among the members. The Indiana chapter has been especially active during the past year and a number of interesting pro- grams have been given l)y the members. Clifford Woodv. the Xational ' ice- President, represented the local organization at the national convention held at Richmond. ' irginia. OFFICERS Masox E. Hufford President Clifford Woody J ' icc-Prcsidcut L. R. HonvER Secretary Lloyd H. Ziegler Treasurer W. D. Shewman Corresponding Secretary MEMBERS Professor ' . W. Black Professor E. E. Jones Professor H. G. Childs Profes.sor J. C. Mattoon Bryon S. Legg Charles T. Fewell Harvey E. Stahl J. H. Thomas Lloy ' d H. Zi egler Clifford Woody H. P. Walker Charles C. Stech Ray F. Myers Mason E. Hufford L. R. Hoover W. D. Shewman E. E. Ramsey F. L. Pickett UnDiana Onitietsiitp arbutus SIGMA XI Sigma Xi is an Honorary Scientific Fraternity open, under certain restric- tions, to members of the Faculty, to graduate students, and to Seniors. It was founded at Cornell University in 1886 with the object of encouraging original investigation and science pure and applied, to meet for the discussion of scientific subjects, for the publication of such scientific matter as may be deemed desirable, to establish fraternal relations among investigators in scientific centers, and to grant the privilege of membership to such students as have during their college course given special promise of future achievement. At various times noted scientists visit the chapter and deliver lectures. .Meet- ings are devoted to discussions and reports of the latest achievements along tlie various lines of scientific work. The chapter was founded October i, 1904. Arthur Lee Foley, Edgar Roscoe Cumings, Joshua W. Beede, Rolla Ramsey, Burton D. Myers, William Lowe Bryan, Carl H. Eigenmann, John A. Miller, Ern- est H. Lindley, David lottier, Robert Lyons, William J. ] Ioenkhaus, and John Bergstrom were the petitioning members. Nineteen I unDreD Jfourtecn THE YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Tin-: V. AI. C. A. has continued, on a larger scale, the social service work which it lainiched out upon in the fall of 1912 with the coming of i lr. A. L. Miller as General Secretar -. It is now the recognized leader of social service in Bloom- ington. A ver - important work is the instruction of foreigners in the English language. It is interesting work for students and highly ai)preciated by the foreigners. Perha])s the greatest thing done was the organization of Boy ' s Clubs in and about the citv. There are five clubs of town boys. These are led l)y students, and given good amusements and games, thus in a sense directing the boys ' atten- tion to other things than loafing on the streets. In addition to the above clubs there is a Working Boy ' s Club for the basket factory employes. Some of the bovs put on probation by the Juvenile Court were taken by the Association and helped to reform. The Association co-operated with the city night school by furnishing several teachers. Co-operation with, and work in the cnuntry churches were highly appre- ciated 1)y the rural people. Speakers and (|uartcttes were also furnished these churches. One of the most important weeks of the Association year was the second week of the Winter term when a series of special addresses b_ ' some i:)f the noted speakers in the college man ' s realm were heard bv a majoritv of the Universit ' men. The series opened with an All Men ' s Bancjuet, the first ever held in the University. The principal speaker of the evening was Mr. L. P. Moore, a prominent business man of Chicago. Other speakers of the series included Dad Elliot, Ted Mer- cer, J. M. .Artman, and II. J- Heinzman. The themes of all the speeches were of particular interest to college men and emphasized the need of Christian citizen- ship. The series was very successful, and many men were lead to take a newer view of their spiritual relations. ' esper services were held from time to time. Bible classes were organized in the churches with competent leaders and such books as The Manhood of the Master and Christ in Everydav Life were studied. Mission Study Classes were also organized. The Bean Suppers were an innovation of the year. Every Thursdav eve- ning a group of the Association men met at the Baptist church at a bean supper for the purposes of good fellowship and of checking up the work which thev were doing for the Association. The growth of the Association activities during the last two -ears pavs a com- pliment to the efficiency of Mr. Miller as a General Secretarv. SnDiana aniticrsitp arbutus OFFICERS OF THE Y. FOR 1913-14 C. A. Al aii L. Miller General Secretary James J. Robixson President E. Ross Hartley J lee-President Rav.moxd V. Pence Secretary U. H. Smith Treasurer CABINET Roy R. Roudebcsh R. D. Wellons E. R. Bartley H. ] [. Barbour R. A. Raxck Albert Stump C. R. Metzger G. R. Little D. V. Goodmax C. r. Crampton jSineteen l unDreD jFourteen 3nDiana Onitietsitp arfiutus HE KNEW WHAT WAS IN MAN IF ever a man was justified in turnin; - with tragic hopelessness away from the human race, it was Jesus of Xazareth. ' hy ilicl He not give us up? Tlie answer is, because He knew what was in man. Ijecause underneath the man of lust and murder and treachery. He saw another man who cannot be given up. He knew the passion of the Prodigal, the passion which led him from his father ' s house into every iniciuity; but He also knew that in the Prodigal there was a deeper passion which, if awakened, would lead him from among the swine back to the life where he belonged. He knew the cowardice of Peter. But He knew that Iselow the cowardice and disloyalty there was a Peter who would stand like a rock in a storm. He looked out from His Cross upon a jeering multitude, symbol of the vaster multitude who forever jeer and crucify the good, and there He performed His supreme miracle. He believed in them. He saw what was in them. He saw through the darkness and through the whirlwind of evil passion the real multitude, whose deepest law, whose deep- est necessity, is that they shall be loyal to each other and to their Father in Heaven. My children, believe this man. Life is tragic as He saw. Life is terrible as you will know. You may fight as the tigers do until }our turn comes to perish. You ma}- curse with Timon. You may despair with Hamlet. Or, with Jesus of Xazareth, you may find a place within, where there are neither curses nor despair nor war, but where there lives an unconquerable courage for everv circumstance and for every task which can come ho me to vou before the going down of the sun. President Villi. m Lowe Buvax. jQinetcen l unDtcD jFourteen THE YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION We purpose to make a better Christian of every student who bears the name, to make Christian life comprehensible and compellingly attractive to those stu- dents who are not avowedly Christians ; and to make the community life of the college stand for Christian Ideals. This is the purpose of the Cabinet of the Young Women ' s Christian Association. With this in mind and under the able leadership of JMiss Virginia Hinkins, the general secretary, the Association has this vear made its influence felt among the girls of the University. The Membership Committee tried to make the act of joining the Association a real spiritual step in the life of the college girl. The committee started its work in the fall with this new membership basis, which has a three-fold purpose, The development of communitv service and the training of women for community service when they have finished college, the development of a definite spiritual life for women in harmony with their intellectual, social and physical life, and the development of interest and co-operation in every worthy college activity that shall express the highest loyalty to the University. The committee succeeded in relat- ing almost all of its members to some branch of the . ssociation work. The ' espers Coniniittee had a two-fold aim, first, to secure good speakers for the esper services and to make these meetings worth while in every way, and second, to get as many girls as possible to come to Vespers and to create among them a spirit of friendship and of good-fellowship. The average attendance num bered eighty-five or ninety and at five meetings over a hundred girls were present. The Finance Committee had charge of the sale of Christmas calendars and cards, of Hershey ' s chocolate in the different organization houses and sandwiches on the campus. It also managed the Foundation Day luncheon, the Student Pastor Con- vention luncheon. County Fair and the collection of membership dues. The Social Committee organized and took in charge three girls ' clubs. Uni- versity Chapel, jNIcDoel Chapel and one at the Fairview school. It furnished magazines and books for the local hospital and sent two girls as instructors in a private charitable serving school of the city. Gymnastic dancing was taught to the working girls clubs and these girls received coaching in dramatics. Over twenty girls engaged in the social service work. In connection with the meetings of the committee, an educational work was carried on. Lectures were given by social service leaders on Hull House, Probation Work in Gary, Social Ser- vice ' ork in Indianapolis. and the Local Situation in Bloomington. anDiana anitiersitp arbutus During the Fall Term there were two Mission Study classes, one on Immi- gration, ' and one on China. In the Winter Term, the Mission Study Com- mittee had charge of the large Shanghai campaign. Three hundred girls attended the Shanghai dinner, and two hundred and seventy dollars were pledged by them for work among the women in Shanghai, China. Miss Hi Ding Ling, a Chinese student from Chicago, talked on The Conditions of Women in Shanghai. The Freshman Frolic, earlv in the Fall Term, marked the first undertaking of the Social Committee. All the girls of the University were invited and nearly four hundred attended. A Freshman playlet, When Green Meets Dean, full of local color, added greatlv to the enjoyment. At the beginning of the Winter Term the two Christian Associations gave a joint reception for the students and the faculty, at which seven hundred were in attendance. The Social Committee has charge of the ' espers social each month and of informal chafing-dish parties to wihch each member of the committee invited one girl. The Publicity Committee had charge of the Association Scrap-book, the Association periodicals, and the Geneva campaign. A card catalogue system of housing was installed and an eniplo ment bureau for students wishing to make their own way. OFFICERS Fr. nces Hankemeier President Ruth ' . Reeves Jlcc-Prcsidciit Hazel Bertsch Secretary Ruth Clark Treasurer ViRGiNi-V HiNKiNS Stiidciit Secretary CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES. Ruby Engle Membership ' iolet Pixaire Bible Study Dorothy Ketcham Vespers M. rion Janes Mission Study Lola Brooks Finance C.xroline Wee.ms Social Aline Polk Social Serz ' ice Doris Hoffm.vn Publicity Jl3inetecn ! unDrcD jFourtecn o r1 45 2 Ji ) ?3 ' Cri ' C ' J o c -5 Op .. Z 5? i, ' - p 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus MARQUETTE CLUB The ] Iarquette Club is composed of students of the Catholic faith and the purpose of the organization is to bring the members into closer religious and social relationship. The Club was organized at Indiana in 1907. Meetings are held, at which time papers are read concerning Catholic poets and literary men, recent literature dealing with the religion reviewed, and problems of the Church discussed. OFFICERS AuEL.viDE Moore President. Mary MooRHorsE Seeretary. Clem J. Steigmever Treasurer. : [EMBERS Charles I. Baker George C. Beach Margie M. Benckart E. J. Boleman Max V. Bolser Catharine Bowman J. Everette Burgman J. A ' ernon Burns Mary Casserly Stella Clark Alfred C. Clouse Carl F. Coerper Adalene M. Coffman Henry Crossen Kenneth Culbertson Tom Elev Agnes T. Evans Gladys Farrell John J. Fernholz Frank Gastinau ' illiam F. Gessler Genevieve Gill Thomas ' . Greene Elizabeth Griffith F ' rancis G. Griffith Adrienne Guckien Lee Mazzlewood Anna G. Herricks Karl W. Hoff Harold Jenkins Gerald F. Kempft Mary H. Kenworth lary H. Kerr Earl ' J. Kolb Joseph J. Kutch John W. Lyhan Marv C. Martin ? Iar - McCloskey J. Lee McDonald ' illiam McDonald Mark S. McGary Fl ' zalx ' tb Molonv .Adelaide Moore Mary F. Moorhouse ' al F. Xolan Katherine O ' Connor G. I. Foince Raymond Rieglag Harry Schultz Alax ' shircHff Clem J. Steigmever Ralph Thompson Dora L. Thrine Frances Trackwell Simon E. Twining Lucy I. A all George E. Walsh ' endell J. ashburn Muriel L. Webb Xeal B. Welch Mrs. Katherine ' ells M. F. Wells Marv K. ' ells j!3meteen l unDccD jFouttecn O .5 in anDiana Oniticrsitp 9r6utus WOMEN ' S LEAGUE Active membership in the ' omen ' s League is open to all women students connected with Indiana University, to resident alumnae, and to wives of all men students. All Faculty women are eligible to associate membership. The League was first organized in the winter of 1896. L ' niversity girls then numbered scarcely one hundred, but the new organization received the support of almost the entire number. At that time there were but three sororities and one literary society and a small Executive Board resulted. The Executive Committee at the present time includes one representative from each of the five sororities, the three social clubs, and ten girls selected from the unorganized. The work of the Committee and four Officers is supplemented by an Advisory Board. During the past year the Little Theater Players of Chicago were brought to Bloomington by the League, for two performances on Foundation Dav. The League has a suite of rooms including the two west parlors of the Student Build- ing. ' ( )AIEX-S LEAGUE BOARD Gr.vce Montgomery President. Adalene Coffm. x J ' ice President. Midge Mcj Iill. n Secrctarv. Myra Laupus Treasurer. EXECUTR ' E CO: IMITTEE Henrietta Hepburn, Kappa Alpha Theta. Sue Reed, Delta Zeta. Grace Alontgomery, Delta Gamma. Midge McMillan, Delphian. Lucile Phillips, Pi Beta Phi. Ruth Hemmersbaugh, Independent Ruth Lockhart, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mary Moorhouse, Indiana Club. UNORGANIZED Ruth Miller Marion Janes Esther Kinsley Ruth Kroft Adalene Coft ' man . nna Clark Myra Laupus Susie Thro Inez Howard Pauline Siebenthal Inez Blank Eleanor Martin J13meteen ! unDred JFourteen JnDiana OniDcrsitp atfiutus GIRL ' S STUDENT COUNCIL The idea of student self-government originated a year ago when the Student- Affairs Committee authorized the formation or a Student Council. The Girls ' Council had no executive or legislative powers, its object being merely to aid in creating sentiment in favor of reform and progressive ideas relative to student life. The Council has since been reorganized on a slightly different basis. Its efforts have been more aggressive and the attempt made to place the ideals of the Council into actual practice. The introduction of the Honor System in class room examinations came as the result of the organization ' s plans. In order that the movement might be brought fairly before the students and that everyone might clearly understand the real purpose, the Council ordered the pledge printed in blue books which might be used optionally by the individual. The plan met with much success and the members of the Council believe and hope that the Honor System will soon become a practice firmly established in student life. OFFICERS Susie Th ro President Marion Janes J ' ice-President Louise Mauzv Secretary MEMBERS Ophelia Netherland Esther Kinsley Louise Espey Christine Biller ] Iary Rieman Susie Thro Flora Ruth Ern. (.)eiilkuch ; Iarv ; 1oorhoi ' se Iaud Watkins Bess Williams Marion Janes Ola Yates Eleanor Martin Marion Stevens Rup.Y Engle Adalene Coffman Ruth Miller Louise jNIauzy Alieda Van Vesseii Dorothy Ketcham JSineteen J unDrcD jFourteen 303 3nDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus SPHINX CLUB Ordinarily a man is not to be jndged b - his clothes, but a Sphinx Chib mem- ber can be told as far as the e e can see, by his hat. Conceived in silence and dedicated to the proposition that organizations should be created in secrecy, the Sphinx Club quietly originated four years ago. Those were the palmy days of Jerry Ulen. Phoeb Messick. Bull Williamson, Mose Roberts. Cotton Berndt, Andy Gill. Bervl Kirklin. Stamper Davis. Bob Hamilton, Dutch Goss, Scotty Edwards, Big Kent. Cy Davis, liully Birch. El Elston and Dean Barnhart. and with these men the organization began. At the present time the membership is limited to two score and ten fraternity men selected from the upper classes. The chief purpose is. quite naturally, that of good-fellowship. A banquet and a dance are given each term. During the past year Geofifrey Griffith has acted as president and Robert Payton as secretary- treasurer. Doctor Wooler HONORARY MEMBERS Doctor Sembower Doctor Campbell ACTR-E MEMBERS Geofifrey Griffith John O Harrow Matthew Winters Edwin R. Smith Hays Buskirk Hubert Hanna Frederic Durham Perry O ' Neal George DeHority Thomas Fleming William Kunkel Walter McCarthy Wilbur Glover Fleming Haymond Robert Payton Berry Whitaker Lester Corya Jack Horner Melvin Rhorer Holloway Crennen Floyd Fleming J. Carlton Daniel Alfred Foellinger Mark Erehart Donald Dixon Donald Bose Otto Englehart Hugh Barnhart Arthur Berndt JI3incteen lt)unDreD Jfourteen BgggQ anDiana Onit)et$itp 9r6utug BOOSTERS ' CLUB Boost ! Boost ! Though it be but the pitifullest, infinitesimal fraction of a movement, if the cause be worthy, boost it ; boost it in the interest of the Univer- sity. Every school enterprise that has for its object a Greater Indiana, finds its most loval support in the Boosters ' Club. The scope of the Club ' s activities extends from starting a movement for a new gymnasium to selling pop at a baseball game. The biggest achievement of the year resulted in the State High School Basket- ball Tournament, in which seventy-five teams participated. All arrangements and finances were cared for by the club. Jack Horner and Lester Corya deserve special mention for their energies in making the work of the Boosters ' Club a success. HONORARY MEMBERS C. J. Sembower C. P. Hutchins U. H. Smith George M. Cook .Arthur Berndt MEMBERS Lester Corya Herbert Horner Robert Pa ton Harry Muth R. B. Kirkpatrick Donald Thornburg George Givan George Sutton George Helwig Clem J. Steigmeyer Harold Caylor Lloyd Claycomb Bvron Lingeman Paul Harmon Forrest Tucker Paul Gruber George Hale Charles Crampton Wilbur Gruber Omer Loop Carl Schultz Floyd ' right Albert Stump Ermel Lindsey Kenneth Call Chester Edwards Edward Gullion Bimtttn I unDreD jfoutteen iil B SnDiana ClnitJcrsitp arbutus THE ASSOCIATION OF THE UNORGANIZED The Association of the Unorg-anized was fonred in the winter of 1913-14 by a g;ronp of infhiential stndents not men .bers of any fraternal body. The purpose of the orqanizatiijn was to promote good fellowship among the non-fraternity students; to see that ever - unorganized man had the privilege of meeting other unorganized men and to establish that communit of interests which makes college life worth while. It had been a well recognized fact that the unorganized man was missing some of the finer points of college life. He was not so good a mixer as the fraternit - man. and in the end. he found that unorganized life had serious disadvantages. The Association has endeavored to remedy the defect, and it is believed that it has been successful. Smokers are held, get-together meetings arranged and at every opportunit ' some member of the faculty is called upon to address the uror- ganized nxn. The n:eetirgs Irive indicated, in a fair way, the success of the movement. The Association has always remained outside the arena of college politics, although several n embers have been elected to various offices. It is not the purpose of the Association to discourage the ambition of gaining college honors among its members, but rather to encourage it. The purpose of the organization in politics is a political square deal. Since the founding of the Association college honors have apparently been more equally distributed between the fraternity and the non-fraternit - strdents. For this ear Movd D. Wright is President; Mallet B. Frisbie, Secretary, and Charles Crampton, Treasurer. 308 Nineteen I unDtcD jFouttecn STUDENT MARSHALS Becoming a Student Marshal is an early step toward a realization of the youthful ambition to be a Policeman. The blue coat, brass buttons and increased authority come later. An officer of the law rides the street car without cost and a Student Marshal uses his official badge as a passport to all athletic contests. Simultaneous with the reorganization and redecoration of Bloomington Police force, the Student Council and the Student Marshals amalgamated and twenty- eight brave and daring young men assumed the responsibility of preserving the peace and dignity of the University. With his left hand on a copy of the new dance rules, each member swore by the shades of Dogberr and Sherlock Holmes to hear r.o evil, see no evil, and tell no evil. WitJi the new authoritv, therein vested, the Student Marshals ceased to have dates on no date nights, refrained from excessive use of Coca Cola and stopped smoking cigarettes in the President ' s office. The wave of crime which had previoush- enveloped the cani])us, sul)sided im- mediately and a reform era ensued at oi-.cc. The Book Nook came to time in clos- ing hours and refused to sell grape juice to I ' reshn .en ; Lit students were barred from the sacred |)recints of Maxwell Hall, and promoters of the Union Entertain- ment Series were arrested for obtaining money under false pretenses. As a result of the new regime of law and order, a Maxim Silencer was ordered for the I ' nion room piano, students barred from Music classes without a Snap-Hunter ' s License and a few well known characters indicted for bootlegging English ' ir themes. The lid was on and even a Medic dared not defy the eternal vigilence of the Student Marshals. It is the purpose of the organization to develop among the students a sense of individual responsibility, to serve as an organized medium of communication be- tween the student body and the Faculty; to investigate student conduct and to report its findings to the President of the University, with recommendations. The membership comes by appointment at the hands of President Brvan ; each of the nine fraternities and five social organizations having a representative and the re- maining members selected from the unorganized men. Willmr Gruber is the Chief and it is by his energies that a movement for local self-government has been started. MEMBERS Wilbur T. Gruber — Chief. Kenneth Call Charles Crampton Paul Harmon Walter Lewis George Henley Edward C. Gullion Robert Payton Albert Stump Walter McCarty Floyd Wright Lee McDonald Sherman Minton Clifford Woody Omer Loop George Schilling Murl Fulk Howard Tolle Donald Dixon Albert Rabb Dwight C. Park Laurence Bock Victor Beamer Ivan Zaring Holloway Crennen 309 JinDiana Clnitiersitp arbutus MARRIED STUDENTS ' CLUB Thi-; larried Students C uh is one of the most exclusive organizations in school and its eligibility rule is one which baffles even the shrewdest of candidates for club honors. A marriage certificate, alone, can serve as credentials, while a divorce decree furnishes sufficient grounds for expulsion. The Art of Making Last Year ' s Hat Look Like Xew, — Every Husband His Own I ' .arbcr, — A Means of I ' tilizing Bread Scraps, — What Should Be Done With Cigar I Ioney? — When To Set Young Onions, — and Can a Baseball Player Become Proficient in Carpet Beating, are topics often discussed in meeting. At other times experience sessions are held, Ijut fear and pride serve to suppress much of the news. The Matrimonial Union has definite rules concerning Compulsory Arbitra- tion of Marital Disputes, Dishwashers ' Compensation, House Cleaning Appren- ticeship, A Dyspeptics ' Liability Law, Henpecked Husbands ' Insurance and a Uniform Allowance Scale. Strikes freciuently occur during furnace firing season, boycotts are declared at Easter time and picture shows placed on the Black List. Once a Married i Lnn always a Married Man, is the motto of those who have taken Her for better or for worse, while Live and Let Live, is the policy of the members who have promised to love, cherish, honor and obey. The latest achievement of the Club has resulted in the publication of a monograph on Hozu to Reduce the Cost of Broken Clothes Pins. Club dues are very nominal but the cost of maintaining the eligibility require- men keeps members awake at night. Eact spring the members enjoy a day s outing but they are far from believing that Married Life is one grand picnic. E. C. Gullion is President. jfSineteen l unDreD jFourteen TOASTMASTER ' S CLUB ■' Ladies and gentlemen, — we have with us tonight, a new clulx )rganized during the Fall term by a mere handful of enthusiasts who believed after-dinner speaking a lost art, as with letter-writing and duelling and who believed that the cultivation of this art was just as essential and important as the abilitv to juggle peas on a fork or to nibble a well grown stalk of celery without offending your neighbor ' s sense of hearing, the Toastmaster ' s Club has talked its way into favor, and commendation, — and, we may even say, — into success. The membership in this growing Club is open to Faculty members, towns- people and students, but restricted to a hundred in number. Meetings are held at 6 o ' clock on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month ; the banquet being followed by six or more five-minute speeches, depending to a great extent on the patience and endurance of the members. We now take great pleasure in introducing the Toastmaster ' s Club and its officers. FALL AND WINTER TERIM SiMOX Twining President Grace Guthrie J ' icc-Prcsidcnt George McC.arty Secretary-Treasurer SPRING TERM Cora Hennel President Mrs. Alice Goss Vice-President Leonard Fleenor Secretar -Treasurer JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus SOCIALIST CLUB Thi-: Socialist Club exists for the purpose of determining the proper apportion- ment of the Nation ' s weaUh. It is, however, in no way connected with the I. W. . W. or the Indiana Union. Eugene V. Debs is the Ckib s patron saint and the Ca|)italist, its sworn enemy. The organization advocates the University owner- shi]) of picture shows, boarding clubs and taxi-cabs : favors the public control of the Jordan and the Well House and demands an equal division of dance proceeds among those who attend. As vet, no attempt has been made to demolish fraternity houses or to mob sororitv sisters for having a monopoly on Library seats. I or the most part, the members are verv peaceful, acquiese to the sovereignty of the Desk Assistants, respect the social rules and pa - rent on dress suits. Dynamite and all forms of violence fir.d stout ojipositinn from the Club and for this reason, DeBrular ' s policy of Jarrin ' ' em loost recei ' es small fa ' or. The Club entered into politics last winter, by placing an Independent ticket in the Union election but while the candidates polled a large vote, they failed of Mil- waukee success. The Clul) employed the usual Socialistic scare-head, placard ad- vertising methods in the campaign and presented the usual number of questions which could not be answered. As a matter of fact, the Club is a thoroughly worthy and sincere organization. Discussions of economic, political and industrial problems are held at meetings, current literature on the subject of .S(_icialism reviewed, the growth of the move- ment throughout the country studied and, from time to time, various leaders secured for addresses. Howard Hornung is President. jSincteen ! unDteD JFourtecn THE WRITER ' S CLUB Cuncei ' i-:d in dissatisfaction with present-day fiction, founded upon the prin- ciple of the divine sovereignty of hterary genius and dedicated to the proposition that Everyman should be his own Tolstoy, the Writer ' s Club originated a vear ago. The Development and Cultivation of ' ritinii- as one of the h ' ine Arts served as the special ])retense, while to Ix ' come anil)idexterous and prolific in the transmission of inspired messages through the media of short stories served as the ideal. At irregular meetings, depending on the literar vivacit - and spontaneitv of the members, original euphemistic compositions of clever verbcisit ' and nenterism are unburdened, fcjllowed by a clinical session of rheturical dissection. . bilit ' to pasquinade the linguistic contortions of a fellow parvenu; to surreptitousK ' de- nounce his literary adroitness as being colloquially clumsy and hopelessly verbose, and to apply a vesicatory, vitriolic, critical application is regarded as the chief accomplishment. I ' lagiarism is punishable by expulsion ar.d to accept pay for a chcf-d ' ociivrc means exclusion from the programs. Membership is inflicted b invitation; per- sons addicted to spring poetry are excluded without right of trial. No artistic taste is required; patience and fifty cents being the only essential requirements, (hough a reading knowledge of the Cosmopolitan and an appetite for H and K sandwiches are splendid recommendations. Fra Hubbard is r.ot an honorary member and meetings are held in the Zoology laboratory. MEMBERS Christine Biller Robert H. rris Grace Montgomery Frances Latske ELIZ. r,ETIl MOLONY DwiGHT Park Mrs. C. E. Edmundson George Siiively D. ' NiEL Mebane Charles R. Metzger Fred Myers Simon E. Twining Ola Yates ' JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus TRAVELERS ' CLUB Contrary to natural inference, the Travelers ' Club is not an organization of tourists or Globe Trotters. Many o f the members have never journeyed outside of the state and their travels have been restricted to a Monon car-ride. Instead, the Travelers ' are those who have been conducted, blindfolded, through the dimly lighted, mysterv-shrouded. secret-passages of Masonry. The wearers of the Square and Compass organized, into the Travelers ' Club early in the year. Several years ago a similar organization existed in Indiana bui more recentlv became inactive. The survivors of the ritualistic, traditional ordeal, — when the candidate is made to walk barefooted over sharp tacks, or red-hot irons and to ride an ill-natured, cross-eyed goat, — meet together to discuss the mysterious rites of Masonry and to enjoy the advantages of student brotherhood. Banquets are arranged occasionally, to which men high in the Masonic circles are invited for talks. Various forms of entertainments are provided at such times. The Club works in conjunction with the local lodge at Bloomington and a closer intimacv between the older members of the order and the student Alasons is obtained. jQmeieen l unDteD jFourteen JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutuis Music hath charms to soothe the savage beast and the opening number of a Glee Club concert will soon clear the aisles of a crowded house. A mus- ical voice is a Divine gift but a lyric tenor with sand in his voice box be- comes a pubHc nuisance. For harmony of voices, the Glee Club puts the Seven Keys to Baldpate under cover. Ji inetcen li3unDrcD jfourtccn MUSIC DEPARTMENT The courses in Music are ii it intended tn de -elop a loni;-haired virtuso or grand opera terors anv more than a course in poetry is guaranteed to fill a man ' s brain with sonnets and to confine his speech to rhyming couplets. The cultivation of a better understanding and a|)preciati()n (if music is the object, rather than that of gaining technical proficiency. At the end of a term ' s work in Modern Composers, the student may still be unable to whistle Boola P.oola or to distinguish a dotted half-note from a certified check, but he at least, has learned that Mozart did not compose Af plc Blossom Time in Xoniiaiidy and can even recognize the Sirring Soii ' when pla ed on a street accordian. The main object of the department is that of teaching the students to know good music when thev liear it and to applaud it, whether they like it or not. After a few courses in music, the concert programs look less foreign and the freshly inspired student of the old masters can converse very fluently on the circumstances sur- rounding the composition of the Moonlight Sonata. One of the most difficult feats of the course is that of getting the rude-tongued beginner to say Vahgncr and Taahnliazi ' scr, and pronounce them as if they came naturally. The Department has been onl - recenth established, but it has enjo ed a rapid growth in popularity. The courses for beginners and for ad -anced students in- clude. Harmony, Richard Wagner and his Music Dramas, Nineteenth Century Opera, Modern Composers and the Symphony and Symphonic Composers. The work is of a historical and theoretical nature, consisting of lectures and recitations, supplemented by illustrations on the piano, and by collateral reading and reports. The Department has a four-cylinder, ten-horse-power Pianola, a library of music rolls, and a leather-lunged ' ictrola. With these modern appliances the lecturer may illustrate to his dumb and stupid class exactly what he is trying so vaguely to say, by having Caruso sing it or Alexander ' s Rag Time Band play it. A second use of the musical accoutrement is to be found when the enrolled students show a rude indifference to the lectures and express their appreciation of the instructor ' s efforts by genth ' falling asleep. In order to secure thorough satisfac- tion for all. the obliging lecturer thereupon marks the resting place in his lecture notes with a dog-ear and turns loose a deluge of Chopin or Beethoven, bringing the hour to a peaceful close. JnDiana Onitiersitp atbutus THE UNIVERSITY BAND The University Band fulfills the function required of all bands, merely that of furnishing noise. This it does consistently, and perhaps it may be said, conscien- tiously. Aside from a few changes in the personnel of its members and a few- variations in the compositions it renders, or sometimes massacres, the Band re- mains the same as it has been for the past five years. Playing a funeral march at a basketball game or waking sleepy sorority sisters with early Saturday m.orning rehearsals are the more serious offenses of which the Hand is guilty. MEMBERS Carl F. Brand, Director. CL. RINETS R. E. Whitehead R. K. Thomas Hugh Norman Edward Boleman Preston Cox Charles Danglade DwiGHT Fritz H. Wisener TROMBONES Ross Snapp Leon Roby Glenn Ramsey Harold Bowser ALTOS I -Ax Carson Lafe ] Iauck Joseph McCord PICCOLOS E. V. Sayers Cecil Barnard CORNETS George ' axdel Lee Bowers R. S. Kemp Charles IMaple Cecil Ross Paul C. rter Lester ] Ieeks DRUMS George Sutton Byrox Legg Kemper Cowing TUBAS L. L. Steimley ; L URicE Kahler OBOE H. H. Hagl.vxd BARITONE Thomas Teeters SANOPHONE ] Iartix P. tton 318 Nineteen I unDreD iFouttcen JinDiana Onit)er0itp Arbutus UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA Trying to kee p thirtv-five different instruments of fourteen dift ' erent kinds all plaving the same selection, in the same tempo, maintaining harmony, securing expression, preserving modulation and, finally, to produce a result that sounds something like a tune, is a task (|uite comparable to driving twenty fiery steads hitched to a band wagon. The advantage of playing classical numbers lies in the fact that nobod - in the audier.ce knows the air and if the slide trombone player loses a page from his rack and executes from the Frciscluictc: score, while the rest of the orchestra renders from Dzvrak. the audience applauds and next day ' s issue of the Stiiilciit praises the sturdy beaut - and tone stridencv of that particu- lar number. MEMBERS Doctor C. D. Campbell, Director. FIRST ' 1( )1.TXS Harold Wolfe Helen Ho ey Roy Shierling Ray Rieglag Aaron Rogers Kemper Cowing Ruth ' ' eatherIy SECOND VIOLINS Clifford Miller James Woodburn Rufus Mikesell Mary Wells VIOLA C. E. W illiams DOCBLE BASS L. L. Steimley FLUTES Frohman Foster E. . Sayers OBOES H. H. Hagland Edward Bolcman CLARINETS Jesse Warrum Carl F. Brand BASSOON Dr. C. E. May SAXOPHONE R. E. Whitehead FRENCH HORNS M. A . Kavlor Ivan Carson Lafe Mauck CORNETS George Wandel R. S. Kemp TROMBONES Ross Snapp Leon Roby TYMPANI George Sutton PIANO Frederic Durham Louise Wolfe j inetecn l unDteD Jfourtccn a; H X O o Z D JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB The Uiiiversitv Glee Club is a small edition of the Howling Host. The ] Iusi- cal Department is chiefly responsible for its existence. Jack Geiger instils the inspiration. Mickv McCartv pays the bills and takes the blame. The Club is larger in number this year than in previous years and considerably more violent. The Glee Club is the largest number of untrained voices ever in captivity at one time. Xo one ever openly accused the members of singing. MEMBERS John L. Geiger. Director. Walter McCarty, Manager. Frederic Durham, Pianist. Walter ' oss Louis Harshman Ralph Mitchell Merle Colvin Charles Kirshman Charles ]M. Piper William jMcCooI Fred Fischer Geoffrey Griffith Elliston Cole Ralph an N ' aler George Sutton Charles IMetzer TENORS William Ochiltree Ross Snapp SECCIXD TENORS Robert McCIure G. W. Youngblood Everett Burton FIRST BASS- Ray Milburn Floyd Thomas William Strack SECOND BASS Herman Kimher Paul I lainibaugh Harmon Bross SPECIALTY AIEX Albert Ouigley Clair Kimber Ralph Hastings Harry Baughman Harold Schnler Arthur Bisjlev George Helwig M. FI. Baldwin Will Storv G. H. LaMar Dale Owens Sidney Gilbreath lI3meteen unDteD JFourtcen S . c :. X Q . r £ s ' - a; -5 c ;§ — .■' i E? 2:; == -:: - _r f. ' . k , — rt SnDiana Onitictsitg arbutus GLEE CLUB TRIP Dl ' king the latter part of March and the early part of April of last year, the UniversitN- Glee Club made a journey to the Pacific Coast. The trip came under the auspices of the Santa Fe railroad and extended west to Los Ang-eles. Three weeks were spent on the tour, including five days at Los Angeles, during which time, the Club gave concerts at the various division points along the road where the Santa Ve maintained club houses for the em ployees. The Club traveled the entire route in a private car. making all the stops, with one exception, on the outgoing trip. The singers gave their first concert at Marceline, Alissouri, going on to Chanute, Kansas, Arkansas Citv and and Wellington. Kansas. Waynoka, C)klahoma. was the first town to inii)ress the Hoosiers as being really western, — western in the sense implied h the moving picture shows. Here, an abundance of sand and wind con- stituted the principal reception. The Club invaded the Panhandle division, of Texas, giving concerts at Canadian and Amarillo. The latter city, the largest in the Panhandle Territorv, afforded all the advantages of an eastern city and greeted the visitors in the up-to-date theater, with an audience of fourteen hundrc l. Pelen. New .Mexico. Albuquerque and Gallup came next on the itinerary. At Alliu(juer(|ue. a muulier of Indiana people wintering in the South, greeted the Hoosiers and provided excellent entertainment for them. . t (..lallu]). many of the bovs collected a number of Xavajo blankets and silver trinkets from the Indian trading ])osts. At illiams. .Arizona, the Indiana Club met the Pennsylvania ( dee Club on its return home, and both exchanged greetings. The last regular concert was at Needles, California. This is said to be the hottest city in the United States. The weather was considered cold when the Glee Club visited the city early in April, but the temperature hovered around the ninety mark on the r.ight of the concert. Los Angeles terminated the journev westward. Nineteen unDteQ jFoutteen STATE TRIP The first and only trip taken l)y tlic (ilee Club this year came durino- the Spring- vacation and extended over the ccvilral and northeastern part of the state. Nine towns made up the itinerary, including- X(.)hlesville. Knightstown, ( Ireentield, Greenwo od. Noblesville, Elvvood, Swazee, ( ias City, Kokoino. Tipt(_)n and Indian- apolis. The comments on the concerts in the various places as related in the local newspapers were highly complimentar -. The Indianapolis engagement proved the most successful and despite the short time given for publicity and advertising, si.x hundred people attended the concert at the English Opera House. The small deficit that had resulted from the large expenses of the trip was easily covered by the proceeds fron-i the concert in the Capital City and the interest and response on the part of the audience eclipsed anv received during the tour. The program this year was higher in (|uality than the one of last ear ; the chorus work being comprised of more difficult nnisic and the specialties of better talent. Frederic Durham accompanist and musical monologist, received his usual share of three encores at every performance. Ho -ar l Ualdwin, soloist, Charles ?iletzger, magician, (ieorge Sutton, chalk talker, and an instrumental trio composed of Clair Kimber, Sidney Gilbreath and Albert Ouigley, furnished the specialty numbers. The Club made a week-end trip to Bedford during the Spring term and gave a final recital ii-i the (ixnmasinni at lUooniington in ' Slay. UnDiana 2Initi£r$itp arbutus UNDER THE DIRECTION OF DR. CHAS. D. CAMPBELL OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY -PRESENTS— A Comic Oper;i in Two Acts by Gilbert Sullivan. CHARACTERS MIKADO of Japan John L. Geiger NANKI-POO, his son, in love with Yum-Yuni Arthur Bigley KO-KO, Lord High Executioner of Titi[)u Frederick Durham POOH-BAH, Lord High Everything Else Herbert Hopkins PISH-TUSH,a noble lord Eloyd Thomas YUM-YUM Three Sisters. Anna Maxwell Schram PETTI-SING wards of Marion Grimes PEEP-BO Ko-Ko Tmo Brendel KATSHA, elderly ladv in love with Xanki-Poo Frances Hill SCHOOL GIRLS : — The Misses Cleveland, Sweene - Zimmerman. Colvin, West, Remsburg, Carrothers, Woodburn. Cogswell, Luck. Horner, Grantham, Grace, Herold. Beasley, Bollenbacher, Bennett, Graham, Otto, Wavbright, Hanshoe and Highman. GUARDS: — The Messrs ' uss. Harshmaii, llaugham, Hastings, Colvin, liurton, Schuler. McCool, Strack, Helwig, Baldwin, Storey. FYisbie, Griffith, I!ross, La Mar, Owens, Rose, Metzger. ORCHESTRA: — Harold Wolfe, Helen Hovey, Roy Shierling, Kemper Cowing. Aaron Rogers, James Woodburn, Leslie Gates, John Elwell, Merrill Mikesell, Raymond Rieglag, Clifford Miller, C. W. Williams, Leonard Steimley, Carl Brandt, Frohman Foster, R. S. Kemp, E. V. Sayers, Harry Haglind, Edward Boleman, Dr. C. E. May, R. E. Whitehead, M. V. Kahler. Ivan Carson, George Wendel, Ross Snapp, Leon Roby and George Sutton. Musical Director Dr. Chas. D. Campbell Manager Walter McCarty Stage Manager Chas. M. Piper Accompanist Miss Louise Wolf 326 Jl3ineteen I unDtcD jFourtcen A plague o liotli your houses! M omeo an d Jul i ei . trVtdtov Untiiana Clnitictsitp arbutus Melodrama makes the whole world kin and everybody feels sorry for an amateur on his first night. College theatricals are uncalled for but they usually arouse their share of noise from the galleries. Dramatic criticism has developed into a question of clearness in the films and Thespian art consists in the ambidexterity of the operator. Strut and Fret ' s contribution to the uplift of the drama is a boost in prices. Nineteen I unDteD jToutteen tnti nxih xtt PRESENTS trtf A DRAMA BY JOHN GALSWORTHY MENS ' GYMNASIUM SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 18, 1914. jOinctecn l unDrcD JFourtccn CAST OF STRIFE Enid Elizabeth Fullenlove. Anthony J. H. Diggs. Roberts W. H. Maurer. Scantleburv R. D. Armstrong. Wankhn Charles Metzger. Wilder George Schilling. Edgar E. ' . Savers. Underwood C. M. Evving. Harness William Ochiltree Tench Fred Durham. Mrs. Roberts Ola Yates. Madge Mary Wells. Mrs. Bulger Esther McXaull. Mrs. Rous Carrie Freeman. Mrs. Yeo Pauline .Siebenthal. Rous Lee McDonald. Thomas B. Drollinger. Bulger C. I. Baker. Green Will Kunkel. Jago J. F. Dailey. Blacksmith Ralph Thompson. Rous, Tr Kemieth Kunkel. Lewis L. Schuler. Evans J. S. Benz. Davis Flo}-d Dix. Red Haired Youth G. W. Helwig. Brown H. M. Shackelford. Frost G. Biglev. SnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus CHARLES M. PIPER. President WILLIAM KUNKEL. BUSINESS Manager WILLIAM MAURER, STAGE Manager PRESENTS BY RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN UNDER THE DIRECTION OF KATHARINE S. BROWN. THE CAST. Sir Peter Teazle Harold Schular Sir ( lliver Surface Jnhn Benz Sir I!en jamin Backbite Charles Akin Sir Harry Bumper Charles Piper Joseph Surface Allan laxwell Charles Surface IToyd Thomas Crabtree Kemper Cowing Rowley Walter Lieber Careless Ralph Thompson Moses Wayne Mitchell Trip ? [albv Clevenger Snake Floyd Dix Lady Teazle Louise ] Iauzy Lady Sneerwell JMay Frank Mrs. Candour Lael Davis laria Christine Biller Act I — Lady Sneerwell ' s House. Act 1 1 — Sir Peter Teazle ' s House. Act HI — Charles Surface ' s House. Act I ' — Joseph Surface ' s House. Act ' — Same as .Vet II. Scenery by Fred .Nelson ' aiice. Costumes by Fritz Schoultz, Chicago. 3.32 jQincteen I unDreD jFourtecn FRENCH CLUB PLAYS I ' ERSI )XXAGES. Hortense, a y( mni;- widow Lael Davis Hector de Courvalin, a deputy prosecrtor Arthur liiqley Peters Fougasson. an American Jules LaDuron Franine, a maid Caroline W ' iei and The Scene is at I ' aris. Present time. ' f itntnt fniitlhx PERSONXAGES. Patelin, a lawyer Allan Maxwell Guillaun;e, a merchant L. A. Pflueoer Bartholin, a judge J,,h„ .,-r.e I ' .urns . snelet. a shepherd Cecil W. ISyers ' alere, Guillaume ' s son Daniel Alebane Peasant Herbert Richards Archers J. F. LaDuron William F. McCool William Patelin daler.e Coffman Colette Frances Hankenieier Henriette ( ;,-ace M. .ntgomerv JnDiana tlniticrsitp arbutus GERMAN CLUB PLAYLETS With all the setting of a Berlin opera, to quote the enthusiasm of the Indiana Student on March u, Dcr Deutsche J ' crcin presented two charming German playlets in the Men ' s Gymnasium, last evening. VcrsaLcti and Eiiier Mils.-: Hciratcn were one-act farces of the merriest t_ pe. Members of the Club composed the cast aiul the presentation showed excellent training on the part of the ccaches. Following the inlays, the X ' erein adjourned to the Commons where the n embers took part in a social session, with refreshments. VERSALZEN 1iy Roderick llcnedix. Cierichstrot W ' ittkow — Charles Stech. Ul.ike, his wife — Carolire Wiegand. Herta, his niece — Miss Ragsdale. .Arudld, Herta ' s husband — Ernest Stewart. Arnokl ' s friend — Simon Twining. ] Iaid — Lennie .Alartin. EINER MUSS HIERATEN by .Me.xander W ' ilhclniini. Jakob Zrirn — Luther Pflueger. Wilhelm Zorn — Isador Ravdin. Gertrude, their aunt — klora Ruth. Louise, Gertrude ' s niece — Anna bel. LITTLE THEATER PLAYERS The Greek drama, hypochondria, dual standards of morality, and the poor house formed the four themes of as many plays given by the Little Theater Play- ers of Chicago, Foundation Dav. Fiu ipides ' Trojan Women was the afternoon program, while three short pla s. TIic Fifth Coiiinniiidiiieiit Ijv Houghton Wonicukind by Gibson and Joint Oz ' iters in Spain by llrown. furnished a varied entertainment in the evening. Four aspects of womenkind were presented and to mak-e it all the more appropriate, the performances were given under the auspices of the Women ' s League. Nineteen unDreD jFourteen INDIANA CLUB PLAYS The Indiana Cluli, wliicli cstaljlished a name for its nieiiibers in I ' niversity dramatics b_ - a stcrlini;- pcrforinance of Tlic Servant in the House, three years ago, presented two ])la s 1) W. 11. Veats before an audience of five hundred invited guests at the Men ' s ( i mnasium, April 24. Professor Frank Aydelotte, writing for the Indiana Student, described the performance as being one of the most delightful dramatic events of the year. The pla s, full of the poetry which characterizes the Xew Irish drama, were presented by the cast with intelligence and enthusiasm. A POT OF BROTH A Beggerman Jtsse (ialloway John Coneelv Paul Myers Sibbv Coneelv Marjorie Suter THE HOUR GLASS Wise Man Fred Myers Teigue, The Fool Wiley Pollock Angel nais - Smith Wife of the ' ise Man Willafred Mowe Students — Clem Steigmeyer. Raymond Pence, Charles Showalter, Ralph Wellons Children of the ' ise ] Ian Elizabeth and ' ' illiam Johnston Under the Direction of Miss Hennel. UnDiana niiozxsity arbutus INDEPENDENT SOCIETY DRAMATICS The Independent Literary S(jciety revived its old custom of producing short plays and presented two Irish dramas before an invitational audience with worthv success. In Sprcadiiii the Xcws. — describetl by the dramatic critic of the Indiana Student as the m ire pretentious of the two plays, — Aliss Ruth Henimersbaugh, headed the cast in the role of Mrs. Hartley l- ' allon. Ike liaker ' s presentation of Bartley l- ' allon was clever and highly credible. Miss lirna ( )ehlkuch carried the part of the gossiping peasant woman with success and added to the humor of the amusing situation which comes as the denouement of the plav. The U ' lirkhduse Ward, the other play chosen by the society, was presented here last ear by the Hull House Players. The three characters in the brief farce were well taken and the simple Irish wit involved in the dialogue met the favor of the audience. UNION REVUE The second annual L ' nion Revue. — the L ' niversity I ' ollies of 1913, — given at the Harris Grand on the eve of Decoration Day, surpassed the performance of the year previous and was a thorough success. In the two years that the Revue has been given, it has proved the most popular of all dramatic events and is already regarded as a ]3leasing college tradition to be observed annually. At tliis time. Puck holds the mirmr up to the school life of the past year and all the distortions which perplexed, enthused, displeased and excited the University mind in the days gone b ' are reflected in the light of comedy and burlesque. George Henlev directed the chorus and deserves the lion ' s share of the praise for the success of the Revue. Fred Trueblood wrote the lines and lyrics, and Frederic Durham collaborated on the music score. Dwight C. Park wrote the allegorical ir.terlude, F. ' c ' erystudent. presented between the two acts of the Revue. JI3mcteen I unDceD jFoutteen JjnDiana ejnitiersitp atfiutus Too many reporters spoil a scoop and getting facts from a Daily Student story is like unscrambling eggs. A cub reporter is a newspaper Freshman with a cast-iron head and a mental alloy of ninety per cent brass. Editorial policy depends on the columns to be filled and the stock of the editor ' s tobacco. Se- curing a New Gymnasium is a trite example of the Power of the Press. Jl3metecn unDceD JFouttcen DEPARTMENT OF JOURNALISM A School of Journalism with all the equipment for the teaching of such, has been at last provided for at Indiana University. A real plant, with presses, type antl ink, — all of which are very essential to printing-, — are the things promised J. W. Picrcv, head of the department, for next fall, h ' or the first time in the history of Tournalisni at this University, or for that matter, in the middle west, Indiana students will be enabled to learn real newspaper work in actual practice. The Trustees of the Universit} ' met March 24 and voted an appropriation of $7,500 to be applied on the improvement and enlargement of the Journalism depart- ment. ' ith this liberal appropriation, tlic training of newspaper men will l)e started next fall on an extensive basis and an up-td-i.late newspaper plant will l)e established at the Universitv equal to that of the larger universities in the country. Equipment for the plant has alreadv been determined and beginning with the open- ing of the ne.xt school vear, the Indiana Sfiidi ' iif will lie pui lished 1) - the Univer- sity press. The old power house near the gxnmasium will be used for the new iilant. This building will be entirely overhauled and modern machinery installed, including a liehle Xo. 3 Press and a linotype machine. The location of the plant will be better suited for the purposes of the department, being on the campus and near the center of imiversitv activities. The inconvenience of having the office of the Student downtown will be done awa)- with, and students taking journalistic courses will find the arrangement more satisfactory in connection with their other work. Several new courses will be oiifered with the coming of the new plant. The mechanical side of getting out a newspajier will be taught In- a competent foreman. Another feature to he introduced will be that of teaching the executive phases of newspaper work, including advertising, management and accounting. 3nDiana niticrsitp arbutus Fall Term Walter C. McCarty . . - - Editor-in-Chief Winter Term Robert Harris . . - . . Editor-in-Chief Spring Term Don Melett Editor-in-Chief Mark Hamer Omer Loop Business Manager Circulation Manager I13incteen I unDteD JFourtcen THE INDIANA STUDENT Pul.lithed fVi-rv mnrniiig c. ct-pt Suiuinv bv the Journalism department of Indiana Uni- versity, at World-Courier office. Entered as Second class matter in the Post Office at Bloomington. Indiana. OFFICE PHONE Main 122:; M.VKK E. HAMER Business Manager Phone 1353 OMER LOOP Circulation Manager ROLL. K. THOMAS Cily Editor Phone 5 8 Reporters Clyde Sweitzer Dale Beeler Naomi Harris Ralph Hastings Charles Metzger Floyd Dix Wallace Martin Archie M. Tracv Willie Cline Noel Ruddell Chas. T. Akin. Jr. Mildred Kuhn Lester Corva Adelaide Jloore Paul V. livers Editorial Writers Duight Park Sin ,nn Tnining Desk Editors Clem J. Steigmeyer Robt. D. Armstrong Ray Casey Loyd Mellett .Exchanges Feature Writers Tim De Brular Wall Charles Crampton ter Mccarty Sports Department George Givan Editor Hugh A. Barnhart Neal Welch Floyd Fleming Mmtem unDrcD jFouttccn UnDiana Qlnitietsitp 3rbutus INDIANA STUDENT The Indiana Student in ' olunie XXIX sliows an ajjprecialjle improvement in keeping- with the newspaper spirit iif the times and stamps the daily publication ol Indiana L ' niversitv as a leader in the tield of college journalism. Six months of increased dignity in its news columns and a growing strength of editorial expression advanced the Student immeasurably in its service to the college community and strengthened its claim to the front rank among all college dailies. The improvement t()uche l all features of the work, ir.cluding more real news written in a better newspaper style, a more pleasing typographical arrangment, a higher tone and balance in the make-up, increased strength and value of editorials, and added features to lighten straight news matter. A ' irile American college life was embodied ii: the n ' .aking of the 1913-14 Student and a desire for originality, a journalistic enthusiasm made every issue a live one. The efforts of the editors, if not always right, at least were always actuated by an honest and very earnest ambition for service to University interests. All of the energies of the staff combined to make the Student a digniiied and forceful factor in the aft ' airs of the college community. Aside from the paper ' s value to the readers, as a medium of news publication, and to those interested in journalism, as a practical lab.oratory, it has been of im mense ser -ice in giving publicity to all I ' niversity enterprises. All uKivemer.ts foi the advancement and betterment of student life have met with the support of the Student both editorialK- and through its r.ews columns. INDIANA U NIVE RSITY ALUMNI QUARTERLY I ' ublisliL ' il four times a year in the n.( ntlis nf jamiar . April, |uly, and October, by the Indiana University Alrnmi Association, from the University office Bloomington, Indiana. Application has been made for entry as second class matter at the postofifice at Piloomington, Indiana. ' ()L[ ' .MK I. |. . U. RV. h .XlMlU-.R I. DR. SAMUEL I!. HARDING, Editor. The reception given the first :;nie of the Quarterly was very grati- fying in many ways. The magazine is a neat edition, pleasing typo- graphically, full of I ' niversity news of interest both to Alumni and present students. The arrangement shows a practical kr.owledge of printing and book work. UnDiana Oniuer$it? acbutuis lUI IIM PRESS CLUB SCOOPED SIGMA DELTI CHI TAKES OVER OLD ORGANIZAITON Former Assumes All Traditions, Functions, Debts and Rooms of Latter Members Dun AJellett Dwight Park ' illiam Trapp Hugh r.arnhart Charles Crampton John ' oo ls ■alter McCarty Robert Harris Omer Loop Robert Payton John Dig-gs Mark Hamer Clem Steign:eyer Rolla Thomas Ra ' Casey Dtto Englehart Ross Bartley Robert Armstrong Samuel Boyd Dan Goodman Ralph Hastings Cieorge Givan ' 30 jQineteen !|)unDteD Jfourteen SIGMA DELTI CHI ESTABLISHED HERE Fifteen Men Initiated Into the Honorary Journalistic Fra- ternity La Night PRESS CLUB TO BE ABSORBED {Special to the Arbutus.) Bloomington. Ind.. Apr. 4. — The Press Club of Indiana University became the Rho Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the r.ational jom-nahstic organization last night at the Hotel Bowles. A banquet followed the ceremonies. Those initiated last night were as fol- lows : William ( Trapp. Dwight C. Park, Mark Hamer, Chester L. DeBru- lar, Robert D. Armstrong, Samuel Boyd, Otto Englehart. John H. Woods, Robert S. Payton, Rav Casey, George Givan, Ross Bartley. Rolla K. Thomas. Don Alellett and Charles Crampton. Immediately following the initiation the chapter was organized with these officers : Dwight C. Park, president ; Mark Hamer, vice-president: John Diggs. secretary and ' illiam O. Trapp, treas- urer. John Diggs is a member from the De Pauw Chapter and Joseph W. Piercy is an honorary member of Sigma Delta Chi from the Washington Chapter. Rho Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi is the fifteenth chapter to be established since the founding of the fraternity at DePanw in 1900. jeinetcen ! unDteD jFoucteen KnDiana ejniticrsitg arbutus (Elasa jpr aiii utB Victor Beamer George Schilling E. Ross Bartley Benjamin Saunders Senior Junior Sophomore Freshman jeineteen I unDreD jFouctcen JInDiana OniDersitp 3rtJutu8 Players may strut and players may fret but orators rave on forever. Room- ing with a debater is about as pleasant as living with a cornet player. College orators are in great demand in the business sphere but the world offers little time for rebuttal. Telling a large and appreciative audience how to secure Compulsory Arbitration of Labor Dis- putes is quite different from explaining an unpaid bill to an impatient grocer. J13inctcen It)unDreD jFourtccn INTER-CLASS DISCUSSION Frank H. Gnnter, of In liar.apolis, 17, won the Inter-class discussion in a contest, pronounced bv members of the Facult -, as being ' the liest in years. The New State Constitution formed the subject for discussion. According to the usual custom, the final discussion was preceded by prelimi- nary contests in each of the four classes ; the two winners in the separate discussions represented the classes. Mr. Gunter and six of the Dther speakers spoke for a constitutional convention to be held in 191 3, while one contestant opposed the plan. Ilie contest last year as well as this was won b - a first year student. 353 anDiana CJniticrsitp 9r6utus TRl-STATE DEBATE Indiana met defeat both to Illinois and to Ohio State in the annual Tri-State debating contest. Resolved : That a policy of fixing a minimum wage scale by state boards is desirable, constituted the question. The affirmative team, composed of Simon E. Twining, Robert D. Armstrong and Ernest W. Eorce, lost to the Uni- versity of Illinois, at Bloomington by a vote of two to one in favor of the negative. Indiana ' s negative team, William Maurer, Charles ] Ietzger and Frank Gunter, lost to ( )hio ' s affirmative team at Columbus, on the following night. Albert Stump, Ross Lockridge and James Cox coached the Indiana representatives. TRIANGULAR DEBATE A NEW system was inaugurated this year in the triangular debate between Indiana, DePauw and Earlham. Each team debated awa ■from home and the judges were chosen from the faculty of the institution at which the debate took place. DePauw triumphed in the contest defeating Indiana ' s negative team, while Earlham lost to Indiana ' s affirmative team. The subject was, Resolved : That Indiana should have a law providing for the settlement of all labor disputes by Compulsory Arbitration — Constitutionality granted. Lee McDonald, Ralph Thompson and C. W. Williams formed the affirmative team ; John Benz, Clem Steigmeyer, and William E. Sullivan were members of the negative team. Ji inctccn IDunDrcD JFourteen anDiana Onitietsitp 3r6utUjS DELTA SIGMA RHO Dklta Sigma Rlio, the national hoi:orary oratorical fraternity, invites to membership those who have shown more than ordinary ability in the various forms of public speaking and have represented the University in some inter-col- legiate contest. The Gavel is the national publication devoted to news of the organization. OFFICERS Albert Stc.mp President. DwiGHT C. P. RK f ' ice President. Oe -illk HrniiARii Secretary. H(iWARi) ToLLi-; , Treasurer. jMEMBERS E. ' ' . Force James Robinson Charles R. j letzger Frank (nmter Sherman Minton (Jrville Hubbard George Givan C. J. Steigmever ' illiam ] laurer S. F. Twining Dwight C. Park Harry L. Jones Robert Armstrong O. F. Xixon Lee McDonald Paul Fdmondson Howard Tolle Albert Stump JI3inetcen ipunDteD jFourteen 357 3nDiana dniDcrsitp arfiutus BRYAN PRIZE CONTEST Sherman Minton, nf Xew Alljany, won the annual liryan I ' rize Contest held April 7, in the Auditorium of the Student Building. Miiiton spoke on The Rela- tion of the Executive to the Legislative Department of the United States. The Br an Prize Contest is under the direction of the department of History and Political Science and usually takes place on Foundation Day. Init this year, various circumstances forced it to he postponed until April. The subject is limited to some principle underlying our form of government. The interest on two hundred and fiftv dollars contributed by William Jennings Bryan constitutes the prize. jeineteen l unDteD JFouttcen GIRLS ' DISCUSSION Miss Louise Espey, a Senior, won the tirst prize of ten dollars offered by the Collegiate Alumnae Association for the best, discussion on a Much Needed Im- provement in Student Life at Indiana Llniversity. The contest was open to all women students. Miss Espey took as her subject, The Sorority Question and declared the greatest influence today against a more complete democrac - in college to be the attitude of our sororities and fraternities. She maintained that the social caste system makes the outsider feel that there is one phase in the University which is completely shut out from him, and our social life should, therefore, be based more upon individual choice and not so much upon allotment for wholly artificial reasons. UnDiana OniUersitp atbutus PEACE ORATORICAL CONTEST Miss Olive Beldon, a Senior, represented Indiana University in the State Inter- collegiate Peace Oratorical Contest held at Indianapolis during the Spring term. She was awarded second place and received first place hy one of the three judges. Delivery, composition and thought constituted the three points in judging the contest. Miss Pieldon was the only woman entered in the State contest. She chose for her subject, The True Patriotism. in which she pointed out that real patriotism should lead a man to live for his country and not to die for it. She scorned the old idea of patriotism, which taught that men should fight for the flag in time of work, but failed to cause them to serve the country ' s laws, to vote intelli- gently, and to exercise freedom of thought in times of peace. jSmctecn lOunDtcD JToumcn ( (2 JnDiana Oniticrsitp 9t6utus INDIANA UNION OFFICERS Sherman Minton President. M. G. Erehart First Vice President. Paul Carlisle Second Vice President. Dudley ' indes Treasurer. Lee McDonald Secretary. Board of Directors. George Henley Mlliam Strack Holloway Crennen Walter Danner ' iniam O. Trapp Dan Goodman ' alter McCarty Albert Stump W. A. CoGGSHAL] Faculty Member. ■Theodore F. Rose Uumni Mendnv. The Union has enjoyed a quiet but prosperous }ear. An excellent Union Entertainment Series was promoted including among its enjoyable and highly sat- isfactory numbers, ( )rville Herrold and Lydia Locke in a joint concert. The Chi- cago Symphony Orchestra. The Polar Pictures, Helen Keller and Bliss Perry. Football and baseball returns were arranged for by the L ' nion, the usual dances given, big meetings with special entertainments held and a loan fund started. The continued agitation for the Petition Plan of electing officers failed. The officers for next year include Albert Stump, president: Walter McCarty, first vice president ; Otto Englehart, second vice president ; E. Ross P)artley, secre- tary : George Shively, treasurer; Sherman ?iIinton, Mark Hamer, George Givan, Allen Maxwell, Ivan Zaring, Arthur ' oyles, Walter Jones, and k ' rank Gunter n:embers of the Board of Directors. J13ineteen unDreD jFouttecn 3nDiana Onitier itp arbutus; LAKE MOHONK PEACE PRIZE One of the biggest honors won b_ - any student at Indiana University this }-car was tlie Lake Mohonk Peace Prize won bv Howard Hornung, a member of the year ' s graduating class. The contest is held annually, open to all university and college students in the country. Original essays on some phase of the International Peace question are submitted to a board of judges who grade the several hundred manuscripts on thought and construction. It is one of the largest contests open to college men. Two hundred dollars con- stitutes the prize, including transportation and expenses to Lake Mohonk at the time of the Peace Conference. Hornung received first mark on his essay from each of the judges. Nineteen l unDteD jFoutteen Jfiej astyear SnDiana Onitietsitp arbutus Events in college happen with a start- ling, kaleidescope rapidity that makes the world outside seem like the Comt House Clock. We root for a new Gymnasium one day and howl over the water situation on the next; mackinaws are in fashion for awhile and boarding- house hash comes but once a week. Something extreme in a loud bow-tie gets ancient before time to change a collar and some men never date the same girl twice. iI3ineteen IDunDtcD jFourteen INDIANA DOWNS PURDUE IN OVER- TIME GAME-THE JINX IS DEAD Crimson Wins First Conference Game in Two Years, First Defeat of Purdue on Local Floor in History— Game Fast and Rough . SHELDON ' S MACHINE OPENS PERM ANENT ORGANIZATION SEASON BY DEFEATING DEPAUW FORMED BY CONFERENCE WOMFH PLEDGED TO REPORT CHEATING IS Dean Rawles Elected President of Per- manent Organization-Executive Com- A MOVING SCENE mittee to Draft Constitution ENTRY OF SEVENTY-FIVE SCHOOLS , „ , , „ REGULAR TICKET CARRIES TO A lyiAN MEANS BIGGEST TOURNEY OF HISTORY I state Wide Interest In Interscholastic Meet 1,500 Visitors Estimated Town and University Unite In Entertainment Accommodations Scarce VERSATILITY THEIR DEDICATE ARBUTUS CROWNING VIRTUE TO HOOSIER POET Albert Stump Elected President, McCarty, Ist Vic( President; Englehart, 2nd Vice-President; Bartley, Secretary and Shively, Treasurer DirectfH-s INSURGENTS ARE CHIEF ENTERTAINERS FOR GLEE CLUB Varleiiated Progtatn Offered By Little Theatre Players Yesterday ONE-ACT PLAYS PLEASF, COLLtGE ALDIENCE Seniors Lnanimoiisly Name .lames Whitcomb Riley for Year Book SECOND HONOR FROM INDLWA INIVERSITY TWO HUNDRED TWENTY SIGNERS OF HONOR PLEDGE Wilbur T. Griiber By Rapid Fire Change, Evades: the Issue • ' Rl ' MP ELECTION DEAD- SWEET HARMONY REICNS Manager McCariy Announces Several Week-End Trips and Two Week ' s Tour. GEIGER CALLS FOR MORE TENOR VOICES Indiana University Begins Her Ninety Fifth Year Today CHILDS OF YALE IS INDIANA FOOTBALL COACH STUDENTS UNITE WITH FACULTY ' scoh«« FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY MEN TICKET APPEARS CRIMSON PLAYERS LOSE FIRST GAME ORGANIZATIONS LIIVIITED TO ONE DANCE A TERM TWO THOUSAND VISITORS MAKE THIS REAL CENTER OF POPULATION ELLIOTT CLOSES SERIES OF TALKS INDIANA BEATS PURPLE. 2 TOO IK I WSfiO SIDPSmMllON ' ' C ' ' i ' INDIANA UNION HOLDS BIG DANCE SEVENTY-FIVE DELEGATES ATTEND OPENING SESSION OF CONFERENCE ' FROM DAY UNTO DAY 367 JnDiana einitiersitp 3r6utus HOME ECONOMICS AND INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION , Mo (i tlie new departures nf the current year in the University are the cstal)li hiny of departments (it home ecounniic and inchistrial echication. ' J he former was opened this fall with an enmlhr.ent of over one hundred students. It is already offering work in sanitation and house management, dietetics and food chemistry, as well as in garment-making, textiles, and cooking. It is intended to offer at once enough work to make it possihle for students to major in the department. This with the necessary allied work in such subjects as physics, chemistry, physit)logy. bacteriology, in economics, economic history, and Sociology: in education, in art, and in architecture will give ample training for those wishing prepar;itiou ftir teaching this subject. ] ' ut it is b - no means intended that the department shall have so narrow an aim as this. ]t is hoped that ever - girl in the University will l e al)le to take some of the work off ' ered. It is hoped also that the department can be of direct ser ice through its exten- ion work not only in the immediate commuuit , fiut throughout the State. It is planned to senil lecturers when lesired to women ' s clul)s, mothers ' clubs, to tciwnship and county institutes, antl to other teachers ' meetings, lixpert help in plamiing rooms, in choosing ecpiipment, and in organization must be given to schools which are preparing to put in this work or to those reorganizing their e(|nipment. The department is in charge of Aliss Mabel T. W ' ellman. who came to the University from Lewis Institute, Chicago, where she has Ijeen in charge of the domestic science for the past seven ears. l or foiu ' years before .going to Lewis she had charge of the department at Rockfortl College. Miss W ' ellman is an alumnus of Wellesle -. and has done work at Alassachusetts Institute of Technology, and at the L ' uiversitx- of Chicago. She is assisted in the work in clothing and textiles by Miss Elizabeth Sage, who taught this suliject for eight years at Teachers ' College, Columbia Universit . In Jauuar - they will be joined by a third meml)er of the department, who will assist in the extension work and who will teach courses in cooking. The sewing room, with ten machines, is already in use. The cooking laborator -, which is now being installed, will accommodate twenty students at a time. A complete c ooking equipment will be furnished each individual student. As the work develops there will be provision made for further needs. The Department of Industrial Education also was established in the I ' niversity in September, ii)i,v It offers regular courses in wood-working, mechanical draw- ing, and elementary industrial education. This department is in charge of Pro- fessor T- C. Mattoon, formerly head of the department of manual arts in the State Xormal School at Earmville, irginia. The courses off ' ered are inteudeil. primarily. jlSineteen unDreD JFouctecn to train teachers and supervisors of industrial education for the pubHc schools of the State. The courses will be enlarged and added to, from time to time, as the needs of the school ma} ' indicate. The department will endeavor also to co-operate with the various schools of the State in the practical work of organization for the advancement of industrial education. This will l)c done by correspondence, by visiting schools, and b - assistance in everv way consistent with the purpose in view. THE INDIANA HISTORICAL SURVEY In close connection with the Iiidiami Magazine of History is an enterprise under the direction of the Universit - department of history, called the Indiana Historical Survey. This was launched a year and a half ago. Its purpose is threefold : (i) the collection, cataloguing, and preservation of manuscript and printed materials relating to the history of the State of Indiana; (2) the editing and publishing, so far as practicable, of the most important source materials ; (3) the preparation and publication of a series of monographic studies on the history of the State with a view to a worthy celebration in 1916 of the first centennial of its political existence. The history of Indiana has been a notable one, and it is believed that the State feeling of our citizens is as strong as elsewhere ; yet so far little has been done in the way of collecting and preserving the materials for its history. The manuscript materials for the territorial period were carted off and sold as waste paper during the building of the present State House. A full set of the published State laws, which are now so rare as to have a market value of $1,500, was burned not long ago as old junk. Many good collections of old papers and letters are known to have been recently destroyed. Files of Indiana newspapers, and similar materials, have been sent out of the State to institutions elsewhere. Old Indiana newspapers, and books, pamphlets, and other publications of all sorts by Indiana authors or about Indiana are among the materials desired by the Survey. Its directors especially want to secure letters or records of the work of early preachers, farmers, merchants, teachers, doctors, lawyers, and politicians. The Survey proposes to collect material for a brief, accurate biography of every man or woman who has achieved a State reputation, or who has served the State in an official capacity. It is preparing an historical newspaper directory which pro- poses to give a brief account of the career of every newspaper ever published in the State ; and any information concerning papers or editors will be welcomed. An annotated bibliography will be issued, if plans do not miscarry, of all literary works published by Indian authors. It is hoped also that arrangements can be made for beginning the publication of a series of volumes compiled from the State archives, which will contain the chief impublished documentary materials relating to the JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus State. Any person possessing papers or materials of any sort which will assist in this work is invited to correspond with Dr. James A. Woodburn, 76, director of the Survey, or with Dr. Logan Esarey, ' 05, its secretary. Materials which the owner may regard as having no value may be highly important for the purposes of the historian. The Survey will welcome especially gifts of materials which will aid it in its work, and persons making such will be doing a patriotic service to the State. Loans of materials, where gift is not practicable, will also be welcomed. The University has a fire-proof library where such materials will be safely stored : and persons having valuable collections, with which they are unwilling permanently to part, can have the assurance that they will be kept safely here, under lock and key, and subject to recall at any time. Where owners are unwilling to deposit materials for indefinite custody, arrangements will be made to have them copied and the originals returned to the owner. If neither of these arrangements is suitable, the Survey would like the privilege of copying the documents, at its own expense, at the home of the owner. Owing to present lack vi funds, jjurchase in most cases is not practicable. RELIGIOUS CONFERENCE A PRACTICAL exemplification of the new extension work of the L ' niversity is alTorded by a series of conferences held in Blooniington in the winter and spring terms. The first of these was a conference of religious workers at State L ' niversities, held on February 4 and 5. More than seventy-five men, representing the religious work carried on at twelve State universities in the Middle West, attended this meeting. Among the speakers at the conference were Dr. Shailer Mathews, dean of the Divinity School of the University of Chicago ; Dr. Frank Gibson Ward, professor in the Chicago Theological Seminary ; Albert R. V ' ail, Unitarian pastor at the University of Illinois ; President Charles M. Stuart, of the Garret Biblical Insti - tute, Evanston, 111. ; President Charles T. Paul, of the College of Missions, Indian- apolis ; Secretary Frank D. Paddleford, of the Baptist Board of Education, Boston; Rev. Matthew G. Allison, Presbyterian university pastor at the University of Wis- consin, formerly pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Bloomington ; James A. Holmes, of the University of Illinois ; and Rev. Charles Gilkey, of the Univer- sity of Chicago. The reports on the work in the different State U niversities showed that the student pastor work in these institutions has passed the beginning stage. The reports revealed an increase in the past year both in the number of student pastors, and in material equipment in the form of Bible chairs, Bible colleges, dor- 370 jeineteen I unDteti jFouttccn mitories, and university churches. At Indiana L ' nivcrsity Rev. j. C. T(h1 1 is student pastor for the Christian Church, and Rev. T. R. White for the Presbyterian. luich has pushed forward toward completion projects for denominational quarters on the borders of the University campus — the Presbyterian on the northwestern corner of Kirkwood and Indiana Avenues, and the Christian on the southwestern. TAX CONFERENCE For the Conference on Taxation in Indiana, held on Feliruary 5 and 6, the Extension Division of the University was directl}- responsible. In the foreword to the program the object of this conference was stated as follows: The subject of taxation is important to every citizen of the State, Progress toward the ideals of social justice and industrial efficiency is impeded by an imperfect system of taxa- tion. No apologies seem necessary for the calling of a conference to consider in a dispassionate wav the present situation in Indiana with a view to ascertaining just what are the imperfections in our system, and how they may be remedied. Some seventy persons were registered in attendance at this conference, exclusive of members of the University. Governor Ralston, who was expected to preside at the opening session, was unfortunately unable to be present. Among speakers from outside the State were the following well-known authorities : Hon. Lawson Purdy, president of the department of taxes and assessments. New York City ; Joseph French Johnson, dean of the School of Commerce, New York University ; David I ' Tiday, professor of political economy. University of Michigan ; Raymond V. Phelan, lecturer in the University of Minnesota ; and Thomas S. Adams, member of the Wisconsin tax commission. From within the State the following had places on the program : President William L. Bryan, of Indiana University ; Hon, Dan M. Link and Hon. Eben H. Wolcott, of the Indiana tax commission ; Hon. Fred A. Sims, former member of the tax commission ; Hon, Jacob P, Dunn, city concroller i)f Indianapiilis: Dr. ( Iscar L. Pond, ' 99, of Indianapolis, author of Municipal Con- trol of Public Utilities: Hon. John B, Stoll, the veteran editor of South Bend; Hon. Charles F. Remy, former clerk of the Supreme Court : John A. Lapp, director of the bureau of legislative and administrative information, Indianapolis: Professor J. L. Leonard, of Wabash College; Professors William A. Rawles, Charles M, Hep- burn, and Frank T. Stockton, of Infliana University. In the discussion of Indiana ' s local tax laws, the attention of the conference was directed chiefiv to two things, the taxation of intangible property and the control of local assessments. Generally speaking, it was the view of the conference that the present taxing clause of the State Constitution, providing for the general property tax, fails to meet with success, or to provide equality when applied to the taxation JnDiana Onitiersitp arbutus of mone , credits, and other forms of intangible property. Under the present system such property largely escapes, or if assessed it bears more than its proper burden. Instead of the general property tax, a classification system was urged, allowing for the imposition of different rates of taxes on different classes of prop- erty, or even the total exemption of certain kinds of property. In order to adopt such a system a change in the State ' s Cqnstitution would be necessary. Accordingly there was strong sentiment in favor of a constitutional convention, preceded by the appointment of a special tax commission to make an exhaustive study of Indiana ' s needs. The second question which caused livelv discussion was the defects of our present methods of assessments. The members of the State Board of Tax Com- missioners asserted that the local assessments were perforce most unequal ana unjust, because the board had neither control over the selection of the local asses- sors nor the power to order a reassessment where careless, inefficient, or discrimin- ating work had been done. The placing of assessors on a civil service basis was urged, so as to take them out of local politics. On t e other hand, sharp criticism was directed at the State Board itself by the Hon. J. P. Dunn, who asserted that that bodv was even more deficient in the assessment of railroad property, which is intrusted to it, than were the local assessors in their work. The chief outcome of this meeting was the formation of a permanent Indiana State Tax . ssociation to carry on the work of the conference. To link this organi- zation to the University, and in recognition of his work in starting the movement. Prof. W. A. Rawles was chosen president of the association. Other officers selected were : John B. Stoll, John A. Lapp, Dan M. Link, Fred A. Sims, and L. S. Bow- man, vice-presidents ; Fred B. Johnson, secretary, and W. K. Stewart, treasurer. EDUCATIONAL CONFERENCE . third conference, on Educational Measurements, has been arranged to be held at the University on April 17 and 18. Professor E. L. Thorndike, of Teachers ' College, Columbia University, will have the chief place on its program. The purpose of the conference is to discuss the application of various scientific standards of measurement to the results of elementary and secondary education. Projects for other conferences of an analogous character are under discussion. In no way, per- haps, can the University more directly and tangibly justify its existence to the people of the State than by holding such expert discussions of the people ' s problems, and b}- priiUing the proceedings in easily accessible pulilications. JSincteen unDteD jFouttcen FOUNDATION DAY EXERCISES FuLi.DW ING the practice begun last year. Foundation Dav was again made the occasion for a notable celebration both in Bloomington and throughnut tlie State, wherever the alumni could be gathered together. In Bloomington the exercises were held on Tuesday, Januar_ - 20. The chief address was given by Dean Charles P. Emerson, of the School of Aledicine at Indianapolis. It more than confirmed the conviction that in Doctor Emerson, Indiana University has one of the great medical educators of the country. In introducing the speaker. Dr. Bryan reviewed the great growth of the Univer- sity in its almost a century of existence, from an academv. which for the first seven years of its life had a faculty consisting of but nne menil)er, to a great University with a teaching force of approximately one hundred. ■' ' hile the face of the world has changed a great deal in this time. said Dr. Bryan, it has not changed so nuich as the ideals. The changes in science have been great but there has been no such remarkable change in the ideals of science as of that in medicine. Dean Emerson was then presented as one of the foremost leaders in the great forward movement in the profession. The theme of Dr. Emerson ' s address was, that medicine is not a science Init an art or a technique; and the man who really makes the better doctor is the medical student studying science rather than the scientific man studying medicine. The scientific searcher is the searcher for the truth. he said, and the only way for a man to make a success in the profession of medicine is to seek the truth. This was not true of doctors in the old era, and it is for this reason that the young doctors leaving the University today are able to make their expenses their first year in the practice and to have a good income by their third year in the field. The doctor of yesterday was in the profession for the financial return that he could get out of it, regardless of hmv he got it, but today stress is being laid on the doctor being self-sacrificing and willing to use his talent for the comfort and help of mankind rather than to its detriment. Every student entering the course is expected to enter as a medical missionary, and if a student, although he has a keen mind and is well up in his class work does not show a sympathetic heart and a strong moral character he has failed in his work and told not to remain in the study. A man so constructed will be a failure in the modern field of medicine and, should be kept from entering it in every case possible. Dean Emerson advocated the lengthening of the course in medicine to eight vears from the present six-year course. Germany, he pointed out, has a twelve- vear course and their results in medicine. JnDiana UniMtrntv arbutus The exercises were well attended huth by students, townsmen, and out-of-town guests ; and for the latter an informal luncheon was given by the faculty in the commons of the Stucler.t Building. In the afternoon and evening the Women ' s League of the Lniversity stuod sponsor for a series of well presented playlets given bv the plavers of the Little Theater of Chicago, under the direction of Maurice Lrovvn. The alumni celebratiims outside of ISloomington were in general held on the afternoon or evening of I ' riday. January I ' l. I or various reasons, however, a number of these were held either before or after that date. In all, fifty-three meetings were held at different places in Indiana this year, and thirU ' -seven members of the faculty attended one or more of these meetings as represntatives of the I ' niversitv. A well attended meeting was also reported from Los Angeles, California. The enthusiasm manifested in these meetings was as evident this vears at last. It is universall} ' the opinion that no one thing in recent years has done so much to bind the alumni together ar.d to vitalize the whole University bod - as these meetings in which alumni and former students meet together to dis- cuss with members of the faculty the [irogress and problems of the L ' niversity. The reaction on the members of the faculty who participate in this work is equally valuable. The spirit animating these celebrations is well expressed in the follow- ing letter from President Bryan, which was sent out to be read on the occasion ; Til the Ahtiuni: — It is inspiring to think of the thousands of onr alumni and former students gathering at a table which spreads all over the State of Indiana, organizing, planning, working together for the good of the University. I am far from wishing, however, that our students and alumni should organize themselves as an exclusive clan within the State. I think an organization in that spirit worse than none. We are supported by the whole State. We belong to the whole State. We should organize for effective co-operation with all other college men and women and with all other persons, to the end that the best things the University stands for may be made more and more fully the actual possession of all the people of the States, W ' li.i.i . i Lowe Brv.w. r loomingt(in, Ind. BOOKS BY FACULTY MEMBERS Hardiiii ' s Arri ' Medic: al ami Modern History (American Book Company; $1.50) is an admirable work by Prof. Samuel Bannister Harding of Indiana LTni- versity, based on his Essentials in Medieval and Modern History, but rewritten and enlarged to an extent that makes it practically a new book. The book is particularly to be recommended, among its many other excellent points, for the plan by which the information contained is correlated and made to stick. Tables of royal relationships, brief summaries of chapters and illuminating footnotes help greatly in the understandableness of the text. These pedagogical devices, the Bincteen IpunDteD jFoutteen author acknowledges, are partly the result of the co-operation of many teachers of histor - who have helped him by suggestion and criticism in the production of the book. Unusual attention is also given to social, industrial and cultural topics in connection with each period of history. Especially important matters are treated topically and the nnitual relationship of contemporary developments in various countries is ke|:)t clearly before the reader. The book is well up-to-date — ■to be precise, up to July, UJ13 — and includes, therefore, the Portuguese and Chi- nese revolutions, the Italian-Turkish war and the war in the Balkans. The book contains 60 maps, many of them in colors, and 198 illuminating illustrations. Selections from IViUiam HazUtt. Kdited with introduction and notes bv Will D.wiD Howe. Professor of English in Indiana L ' niversitw lioston : Ginn and Compan -. 1913. Pp. xix. 398.) The essays chosen, some twenty-three in number, with each complete in itself, represent the whole range of Ilazlitt ' s activity. The different sections of the Introduction give the significant facts of Hazlitt ' s life, point out the material, methods, and results of his criticism of the drama, of painting, of books, and of men, and analyze the qualities of his personal essays, of his style, and of the man himself. The notes give the occasion of the several essays and show the wealth of Hazlitt ' s reading. The selections and the editorial apparatus combine to give the reader the right enjoyment of Hazlitt and the right appreciation of his signifi- cance in the development of English culture. The book is put out with the mechanical excellence to be expected nf the . thenaeuni Press. It is to be com- mended to the alumni as another excellent example of the good vork done by the members of the facultv of Indiana Universit} ' . Architecture and the Allied Arts. B - Pkofessdr . lfki-:i) W. Brooks, head of the Fine Arts Department in Indiar.a Universit}-. The book, which is to be found in the University library, is attractive because of the interesting and simple manner in which the subject matter is presented, the freedom from technique and the abundance of excellent illustrations. The purpose of the text, as given in the first chapter, is to point out some of the most marked characteristics of the plastic and graphic arts ; of the architecture, sculpture, and painting of western Europe during the middle ages, and in narrow compass to track back to their sources the chief influences which were brought to bear on the plastic and graphic arts of Mediaeval Europe, showing how, when and where these influences mingled, and what the results were. College English : A Manual for the Study of English Literature and Composition, By Fk. xk Avuei.iitte. ' go. Associate Professor of English in Indiana Univer- sity. (New York: Oxford University Press. 1913. Pp. 150.) Professor Aydelotte ' s work is a text-book to be used in a freshman course in English litefature and composition. It differs widely from other books planned 37S JnDiana Onit)er0itp arbutus for similar use, because it presupposes and outlines a course in many respects different from those given in most American colleges and universities. The essentials of International Public Laic. A.mos S. Hersuey, Ph. D., Professor of Political Science and International Law in Indiana L ' niversity. ( Xew York: The .Macmillan Company. 1912. Pp. xviii. 558.) Theory of Relativity. By Robert D. C.xrmichael, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics in Indiana Universit ' . [Matlie }iatieal Monoi raph, Xo. 12.] (Xew York: John Wiley and Sons. 1913. I ' p. 74.) The Life of Thaddeus Stephens. W James .Vli ' .ickt W ' oodburn ( ' 76), Professor of American History and Politics in Indiana University. (Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Alerrill Company. 1913. Pp. x. 620.) Elicahethan Roi:;ues and I ' agabonds and their Representation in Contemporary Literature. By Frank Aydelotte, ' 00, B.Litt. Oxford. Associate Professor of English in Indiana University. ( (Jxford. Carendon Press. 1913. Pp. 187.) ■Pope Poppenspaler von Theodor Storm. Edited with introduction, notes, and vocabulary b - Euge.xe Leser, Ph.D., Assistant Prtifessor of German in Indiana L ' niversity. ( Xew York : Henry Holt and Company. 1913. ) THE CLOISTER AND THE MART {E.rtracts from the Phi Beta Kappa Address Delii ' ered by Doetor A. F. Kucr- steiner. ) The cloister and the mart, the antithesis that existed in Mediaeval times, exists todav. The teacher in college and university has become the heir of the monk in his convent. The convent was usually in a lonely spot. The college or university is generally, with some notable exceptions, in a small town. The student of old spent his life in convent walls ; today his quarters are less confined, but still he is more or less cut ofif from the world. As long as the colleges were small and poor in the world ' s goods, the cloistral system flourished, but when the number of students greatly increased, when wealth came flowing from the coffers of the rich or from the coffers of the state, a cr}- was raised against the cloister. The education it had been giving was too aristocratic, it did not prepare for life. Then, too, the cloister was a Mediaeval affair, let the higher institutions of learning become modern, brush off the mould of the past, and study live subjects. This cry has become more and more insistent and it behooves us, as university men and women, to heed the cry and to consider to what degree it is justified. jQineteen ipunDtcD jFoutteen The argument that seclusion from the world is Alediaeval need not frighten us. To condemn a thing because it is ] Iediaeval is easy, it is not so easy to prove that it is, therefore, blameworthy. Men were young in the Middle Ages, and being oung they were turbulent and intolerant and persecuted men for difference of belief. But being young they had faith and they had beautiful dreams, and wrought magnificent cathedrals, painted fine pictures, and wrote the Divine Comedy. Who is there that does not groan at the mistakes of his youth, and yet who is there that would condemn young men because they are not old ? Do we not sometimes long for the faith of our golden days, for the time when we wasted our strength on impossible dreams ? Did we not accomplish things that we should not even undertake today? Even so the Aliddle Ages. They did great things which we can no longer do, because enthusiasm is gone. Great were the Middle Ages and only the ignorant scoff at theiu. Their greatness was different from ours, even as one star differeth from another in glory. Conduct depends largely upon experience. The man who has the opportunity to meet all sorts and conditions of men, has an immense advantage over the man who has not had the experience. But the latter need not despair. To begin with, he is in very numerous company, to which, nearly all of us belong. He has, how- ever, an excellent substitute at his disposal — the world ' s literature, and again I quote Matthew Arnold, is a criticism of life. It is the expression of the best that men have thought and felt in the world. ' ■' ■' As it is impossible for one man to have .all the experiences of men, it is only through literature that he can gain an insight into these experiences. It is important that he should do this. To read and to understand some of the best literature is to gain an insight into the deeper side of life. He that has not this insight, or that does not at least know that there is mystery, which he has not fathomed, is like a reed bending before every wind that blows. What we call frivolitv is just that lack of poise and that shallowness which comes from willful ignorance of the race ' s profoundest feelings. Human society in order to endure, must have men and women who take life seriously, who will not lightly throw aside the most sacred traditions of the race. To be acquainted with some of these traditions, to know that the - exist, that human society has reached its present imperfect conditi in through the tre- mendous struggle of the race ' s noblest and best individuals, that much remains to be done, this we may be told, but only the reading of literature and historv can give us that realizing sense of the truth which gives men and women a rock on which to stand. The society or the state that would receive the best returns for monev spent on higher education, the truly enlightened state, will encourage the men of the cloister to the utmost, put at their disposal all documents, possible, all apparatus, all material of any sort, and leave them free to teach and work out results. Absolute- ly free. It is this freedom that must be insisted upon, in season and out of season. =;= =;= It must not be forgotten, moreover, that to the extent that the cloister is invaded by practical consideration, to just that extent this freedom will be JnDiana SJnitiersitp atbutuis curtailed. The state or corporation that demands practical results from the cloister is restricting- the freedom of the men by making them anxious to produce such results. The most practical way to obtain practical results is to encourage to the utmost the impractical. Hence the state that will endow the cloister generously enough to enable it to procure good men, and will leave those men free to follow the bent of their mir.ds. that state will surely reap a rich reward and its people will march in the van guard of civilization. RILEY DAY J.X-MEs Miitc imb Riley came to Bloomington. October 8. as the special guest of Indiana University. A procession of Faculty and studer.ts, a convocation, a Faculty luncheon, and a parade of school children from the Bloomington public schools were the special events. Mr. Riley was accompanied by Meredith Nichol- son and FT H. Rowland, literary editor oi the Bobbs-Merrill Company ; George Ade, who had been invited as a guest for the occasion was unable to attend. The convocation held at eleven o ' clock in the gymnasium, was preceded by a procession of the Facult - and of students marching by classes. The Faculty wore ' caps and gowns, and as a mark of the honorary degree given him, Mr. Riley wore the robe of Doctor of Laws. Presidert l ' r an i)resided at the convocation and repeated the remarks made bv him at the time Afr. Rilev received his degree. ] Ieredith Nicholson paid a tribute to the poet, and on behalf of the poet ' s intimate friends, expressed their gratitude for the mark of esteem and appreciation shown by the State University on this and former occasions. Mr. Rile ' expressed his gratitude for the honors shown him and related amusing incidents in connection with visits to Bloomington in the earlv davs of his career. Cowing to physical weakness, it was impossible for Mr. Rile}- to speak but briefly. A reception and luncheon were given by the Faculty and their wives in the Student Building, following the convocation. At three o ' clock in the afternoon he viewed a procession of school children. J13ineteen unDteD JFourteen DISTINGUISHED VISITORS OF THE YEAR Alfred Xoyes, herakled as the greatest livinr;- i)()et and the next poet laureate of England appeared as the fourth number of the Cnion Entertainment Series. Seven representative poems recited from memory comprised the program and the poet spill e tlieni with a rich, full voice, free from the affectations usuallv associated with literary Englishmen. The longest poem of the evening, The Wine I ' ress, which tciok a full half hour in recitation was a polemic against war, hut contained an ahsorhing storv as well. The visit of Mr. Xoyes will long be remembered as one of the best of an excellent series of entertainments. The second English literar}- leader to come to the University during the year was Charles Rann Kennedy, author of The Servant in The House. and The Terrible Meek. Air. Keimedy was accompanied by his wife who assisted the presentation of parts from the playwright ' s work. The visitors gave The Terrible ; leek, under the auspices of the English Cluli, at the Men ' s Gynuiasium and gave readings at cor. -ocation on the following morning. fSliss Perrv. professor of English literature at Harvard, lectured in the g nina- sium as an extra number of the Union Entertainment series. Professor Perrv is one of . merica ' s foremost literary men, having been editor of the .Atlantic Alonthly and the author of a number of books dealing with fiction, literary essays and criticisms. Mr. Perrv delivered a highlv interesting lectiu ' e on Thomas Carlyle. 370 •JnDiana Onitiecsitp arbutus Nineteen unDteD jFoutteen You can make a man listen to your joke but you can ' t make him laugh. Trying to be humorous when it is expected of you is like coming to the bat with the bases full in the ninth. Many a good joke has been spoiled by the untimely appearance of a bill-collector. Some men have a sense of humor like em- balming fluid. 3nDiana Onitiersitp 3rt)utus AS WE WERE SAYING THERE IS XUTHIXG NEW UNDER THE SUN AND A JOKE IS BY NO MEANS AN EXCEP- tioii to the rule. Looking for an entirely new and absolutely original laugh- producer is like searching for a boarding-house without prunes : — vou may get them stewed or choped into salad, disguised with whipped cream, ctjncealed liehind an ambush of custard, or secreted inside a jelly-roll, but it all comes back to prunes, — so with () ( jokes. With all our marvelous progress in science and invention we can ' t produce a joke that will stand the test. A woman can trim a last year ' s hat to fool the mem- bers of her own Sewing Circle, but even U ' cbcr and Fields can ' t always get by with a rebuilt, overhauled joke. lieware of the funny stories told b}- Professors, — unfortunately the Barrett I aw doesn ' t operate on their jokes, — they can ' t be outlawed. . college professor doesn ' t take time to localize a joke or to give it a new coat of varnish, he simply hurls it at you bo lily with the weight of a tombstone, — moss and all, — but, at that, it is policy to laugh. Play tin- fool and the spirits of the z ' ise sit on liigh and mock ns. Nineteen unDteD jFoumen COLLEGIATE BACHILLI I HAVE found after years of careful investigation, ears of scientific and experi- mental study that there can be no doubt concerning the existence of a series of germs which enter into the system of a Freshman ver - shorth ' after his exposure to collegiate environment. These deadl}- germs are of a varied nature both as to physical structure and to effect. Prolonged microscopical stud • of several thou- sand cases enable me to state that these germs frequently come in pairs ; usually appearing in a sequence of rapid development, and sometimes entering the system of the victim singly. I have found conclusive proof of a varying difference in the intensity of the invasion of the germs and especially a diversity of effect among individuals. The germs are usually more profuse in numbers and more fatal in their invasion during the spring of the year, when the victinr ' s vitalit ' is lnwest and consequently more susceptible to disease. The only remedy with which we mav combat the invasion of Collegiate Bachilli is to inoculate the system of the victim with a carefully prepared serum of fire and brimstone, sometimes, in chronic cases, an operation on the social privileges of the patient becomes necessarv and, quite often, a complete change of environment is recommended as a last resort. Doctor W. J. Raidcs. Head Collegiate Surgeon. 383 3nDiana Oniljcrsitp arbutus THE TERRIBLE THREE Fnim the bush-leag-ues of liigh school a freshman came. Ill lasting- and vain and proud. I can ' t show the goods but I ' ll bluft my way thru. He told his village crowd. The deans and the others ' ll eat from my hand ; They ' ll beg me to grace their old halls. So he came and he saw and the umps called him out, Cravens to Hoffman to Rawles. So freshmen, dear freshmen, don ' t come here prepared To run things like Cobb or McGraw ; Don ' t play to the stands from the very first day — (The winds of September are raw.) Don ' t think we ' ll go right by your telling us Gee. Or you ' re due for some heartbreaking falls : There are three reasons why. and here are the three ; Cravens, and Hoffman, and Rawles. J13metecn I unDtcD jFouttcen For Cravens is shortstop, and plays np to catch Your entrance requirements, too. If your credits arc lacking he stops you oiT short. Only he and his name let vou thru. And Hoffman on second and Rawlcs guarding first Are death to all manner nf stalls. You may bluff, but the ball is there first and you ' re out, Cravens to Floff ' man to Rawles. Ah, there ' s many a man who ' s the star of the o;ame, A high school diamond peach, Who thinks the big league is the place for him. His eye, and his wing, and his reach. But the manager says : Get out in a suit, Run bases, and bat out some balls. And sooner or later the bush-leaguer ' s out, Cravens to Hoffman to Rawdes. JnDiana Onitietsitp arbutus YE GODS IX Tin-: Lnx-G HISTORY OF STUDENT LIFE AT InDIAXA, WITH ITS MAXV TRADITIOXS, its mvstic fables, its classic stories tolcl and retold of winter evening ' s around the radiators of fraternity houses, to open-mouthed l- ' reshnien, there are certain Heroes, — now gone to work ; whose names will live so long as Pittinger runs the Co-op. These names have become linked inseparably with deeds of valor, warranted to stir men ' s souls, and the stories of their escapades are handed down, always with increasing volume, from Senior to Freshmen. In the Greek mythology at Indiana, certain leaders, whose names graced the Student headlines in days gone by. have been canonized and become the Gods to whom admiring Freshmen pay homage. Phoebus, — the God of Heidsieck, reverenced by those who masticate the weed. Hekrold Adonis. — the God of F un. envied by the lovers of cleverness in writ- ing and keenness of observation. ' enus M. cNutt, — the God of Politics, adored by the ambitious and those who hunger and thirst after college honors. Andro Gill, — the God of Athletics, honored by gridiron aspirants and devotees of the manly art of booting the pigskin. hit lo! the name of Heze Clark led all the rest! jeincteen unDteD jFourteen V OdL ip Vt Si-udeid Sa.H,S lVt iwT ttV, SnDiana UniMemtv arbutus WHY GIRLS COME TO INDIANA THE WAIST. An imag ' nary line is the waist, Which seldom stays long where it ' s placed. But ambles and skips ' Twixt the slioiilders and hips — According to popular taste. Mitchell says since he has grown a mus- tache he has had to pass up the spaghetti. ow that tliey have reformed dancing, why not eliminate the dip from the jelly ri7; 7 is so rare as a steak H ' ell-done? Mellett: I think that man is tlie best lecturer in school. Why, 1 sit m his classes with m mouth open. Trapp : So do I. but I snore. Professor Brooks, to a class in Dante : Those of you who had Hell last term will remember — The Red Book is the first sure sign of St riuij. [USICAL TASTE A traffic officer holds up the ( ilce Cluh for an Organ-grinder. jBinetecn unDteD jFoutteen THE UNIVERSITY DAMS JnDiana Onit)er$itp 3tbutus THE TALE OF A FISH The fish in the college Cdininuiiity is not necessarily a shark in his studies, or a whale of a man. neither must he he an eel that squirms and glides through to graduation. More often he is the toy fish that contents itself hy swimming around in a glass bowl, gawping greedily at the crumbs of comfort thrown to him by a woman. Hut even for a fish he possesses peculiarities: for a fish once snagged bv a hook is sly and will swim away in great excitement at the approach of danger. He will circle aroimd and around in a vain effort to beat the game; knowing from the beginning that it is unbeatable and still hoping that some day he may be returned the winner in a single combat with her. He leads her fcirth that his fellowman may see him and congratulate him and admires his prowess — the wurlil and the philcsoplier sneer, lie i oints at her wonderful hair, i)ileil coil ui)on coil on her prett head ; watches the light play in and out of the strands making it look like molten gold. The philosopher wonders whether it c(.uild not be the re flection of his own wasted opportunities. He tells of her eyes and of their sparkle; and exults that she is his; and it seems that those eyes licild the lepth of the sea. . nd et the might be green, muses the philosopher. The fish, not content, cries. I ' .ehnld how slender she is. like a reed. The philosopher laughs at her worthlessness. The fish gawps at her wisdom and drinks in her wurds as thuugh the - were filled with the nectar that fiows from the fountain of wisdom; the philosopher is bored b - her drivel. She speaks of her little group, her tri ' ial ([uarrels. her pettv hatreds; she enthuses over the honor sxsteni as though it were a part of the life she claimed. The men of the school, and she holds up her prettv pink hands in horror, have political machines. They are bad. The philosopher smiles and the fish fairly writhes at her practicalitw She boasts of the conquests her group have made : she tells of dates, and dates, and dates ; and then the eleventh hour finish in order to stay in the grade limits. She tells (jf sleepless nights at the end ; hours of coke ; ])hysical dissipation that would make mere man shudder. She tells of conquests ; and her narrative is one of disappointments, to her. to the philosopher, ' snii Nineteen l unDteD jFoutteen and even the fish oets uneasy. She speaks to the fish, he bows his he:i(l ; slie ciinimands, he obeys; she threatens, and he pleads: and the philosopher jeers at him he once called friend. When the philosopher is alone, and the yellow haired girl, that is, oh, so l)eau- tiful, and the fish that is, oh, sn foolisli. have gone, he muses on them, on him- self, and finds the - are wiser than he. If the fish is successful in his suit be will he happy; if he loses her he will be successful. If she marries him she will gain de otion but she will ruin him; if she doesn ' t marry him she will be just as happ - with another and perhaps more so, in either case they gain ; while he, tlte philosopher is the only one that loses ; for he has nothing to gain. To think that a ellow haired girl, with blue eyes that sparkle and seem to hold the depth of the sea ; with a form that is slender and sways like a reed ; with hands that are, and he stops for the hands are perfect; and a complexion, that fitted the rest ; could so master the man that he called friend, to make of him a fish, a spender and a waster. What was there in such things when molded in the form of a girl that made them so attractive? And then he remembered a time when she was sorry, a time when she struck a little deeper than first intended and then with tears in her eves she asked the fish for forgiveness. And the philosopher smiled for once again the world was set right. Fresiim.vx; Gruber, where am I? Gruber : That ' s all right. — -ou ' re in the .4rbiitus. ' JnDiana Onitietsitp arbutus THE NEW SHEPHERD . I ' reshnian lav upon his bed, And tried in vain to sleep. And he thought of the pies he might have eat, And he fell to counting sheep. Five hundred passed his weary eyes. Ten hundred jumped his bed ; But the nine hundred and seventeenth sheep Paused by his side and said: The pastures of my native land . re not more green than thou ; If thou hast anything to say. Prepare to say it now. ' ' Sheep are not wont thus to converse. But dreani-(ines talk quite differently ; And so the l- ' reshman said: Fd like To know what school will do for me. What is this college life one hears About ? Come, is it good or bad ? Fve seen it all, the sheep replied, I was the lamb that Mary had. Four ears of sadness mixed with strife ; Four years of labor you begin. And the reward? the I ' Veshman cried; And the reward — ]My Skin! What is the prise? the l- ' reshman asked. Slowl} ' the sheep replied : Your peace of mind, vour happiness. Your health, our wealth, your pride. Your natural self, your modesty — .And it gave a sheepish grin. What do they want who give all this? And the sheep replied: My Skin. But you ' re only a sheep. the Freshman said, . nd follow where ' Ou ' re led. J!3ineteen i unDreD jFourteen ■' And you ' i ' L ' iinly the gnat, the sheep replied, And the butt of the world, instead. ' Tis all a skin-game, after all. And it takes four years to play it, And my skin ' s not worth a day of it. Although I blush to say it. Farewell, perhaps we meet again. And vanished the dismal ewe, And a night-mare came antl stayed awhile, With all her grisly crew. And she galliipe l arnund on the Freshman ' s chest. While an owl flew through the gloom And perched upon the h ' reshman ' t liea I, And muttered through the room ; To be the ,goat for fdur king years. And get a sheep-skin for vour knowledge ! Consistency, thou art a fool ; You ought to go to college. And the night-mare laughed, (for they can laugh) And the freshman rubbed his eyes ; Which goes to prove that sheep are sheep, And dreams are sometimes — PIES. AT THE PRINCESS ' XXlktXX I ' txxijjs ' IN TWO PARTS SnDiana Onitietsitp 9rf)utu0 Nineteen I unDceD jFourtecn WOMEN mm FOR CONFERENCE rURE BEAUTY MAY APPEAR PAINFUL AMAZING LACK OF KNOWLEDGE SHOWN -JIMSTUONC REFUSES TO HEAD THE REBELLION GIRLS BACK DOWN NO MORK TOWELS To Rent Hamture. SHOT TO PEES ASKS DAMAGES. STUDENTREPORTERUNEARTH ' SGAUSE LOStS SllTCASE AN D CLOTHES THIMBLE CLUB MEETS FRESH AIR WILL RESTORE HIM. I OCAL MAN GETS TEMPTING OFFER WET OR DRY? LIQUOR WITH CREDIT. NOYES DELIGHTS BIG AUDIENCE DR.HOWETALK.S TSIIT UNIQUE MENU FOR SHANGHAI DINNER DEBATERS PICKED ON VOIR (il ' ARD UO S. UOI ' t K ' K THI MEDICS STRUT AND FRET CHANCES METHOD SCANTY CLOTHES ALLOWED GET A GOWN WHATNEXT?ARTISALL HYGIENE TONIGHT PARTY A SUCCESS FALL OFF PORCH WEIGHING THE MOON EDMONUSON ON CRUTCHES BONESETTERS MEET. CHAS. PIPER MILL START BIG SISTER MOVEMENT COLORED WIGS GO GtS, GET BUSY! NO MORE DOLLS ANNUAL SPRING CONCERT TO START DANCERS HERE FOR BIG PARTY WARM NUMBER IN FINAL SHAPE READY FOR PRESS WILL PUBLISH RESULTS ILLUSTRATED WITH SLIDES SIGMA CHI MEETS CQiS EVERY EVENI CARDS ALL IN WILL PLAY ON CAMPUS. WHO DID IT? IROBBERY OCCURRED AT ALPHA HALLI FORMER L U. PROFESSOR RECOGNIZED. GYMNASTIC TEAM LEAVES ALSO PROF. JENKINS RETURNS MANY STIU ON THE FENCE KNIGHTS Of IHE STRAP ' low THEY LOVE EACH OTHER ATHLETES BUMPfJ] SYSTEM OPERATING ELSEWHERE THE WAY MADE PLAIN DATES TONIGHT FOR TERRIBLE MEEK ! THE TALES THE HEADLINES TOLD UnDiana Oniiiecsitp arbutus Indiana Arbutus 1914 [ rKl V ART I. IlKAI.)- RrnXii. C_ ' lil)])e(l unccrini(inii)usly from the ' (i;7v Student. HERROLD SINGS NOYES PLEASES DR. HOWE TALKS DR. JONES LEAVES JOHN HESS WRITES PRES. BRYAN SPEAKS MRS. BACON LECTURES PROFESSOR BATES ILL BAND SUITS DAMAGED. Tlic l)aii(l dill not appear in uniform at the DePauw football game because the suits were damaged by moths dur- ing the summer. HARRIS GRAND . fool is l.ioru every minute and some one wants the - rbutus job every Spring Tlic difference between a dry and a zvet lozv ' ii is aboni fifty cents a quart. jQinetecn I unDccO jFouttcen Indiana Arbutus 1914 A short course is soon carried. THE ETERNAL ROUND. The government astronomer on the Cali- fornia coast says he has discovered that gravity is a manifestation of electricity. Very good. And what is electricity? A manifestation of force. And what is force? A manifestation of gravity. Where the ill the a lawver. THE BROWXIXG CLUB. What did the Professor mean liy ' ]io - tic license? I ' m not quite sure, Init surely it can ' t be be any worse than some of this recent prose. r)ne swallow doesn ' t make a meal. AT THE ETA BITA PI HOUSE. Beanier : — See here, Xewt, here ' s a piece of wood in my sausage. Newt: — Yes, but I ' m sure — er — Beamer: — Sure nothing! I don ' t mind eating the dog, liut I ' ll be han,ged if I ' m going to eat the kennel to . Man proposf, . v.-oman thinks tif the ali- mony. A CHEERFUL GIVER. Jeff Griffith:— Good-liye, Doctor, I shall never forget you. I am indebted to you for all I know . Doctor Weatherly : — Oh, ou ' re ery vi-elcome, Mr. Griffith, don ' t mention such a trifle. Tlie High Cost of meat has caused a great deal of liver coniflaint at lunirdiiui clubs. r . I -a 1 Ml afc ' ■It- 397 UnDiana 2Initicrsitp arbutus AGITATION NOW ALL- INDIANA MOVEMENT 450 Students Sign Petition for New Gymnasium — Women Loyally Support Movement STATE WIDE PUBLICITY THRU STATE PAPERS AND ALU MINI ASSOCIATIONS FORTY-SIX MEMBERS OF INDIANA UNION MEET UNEXPECTEDLY -ElECT NOMINATING BOARD -TWO RESIGN HONOR SYSTEM IS TO BE ESTABLISHED Albert Rabb, E. C. Gullion and Wilbur T. Gruber Lead Rump Convention DeBrular and Call Not Recognized STATEMENTS OF DOCTOR BRYAN AND LEADERS FOLLIES OFllKl Jl3meteen l unDteD jToumen THE GRIND I was a griiicl. the student said, .And named his school and year. Too l ad, St. I ' eter gentl - said, ' J ' hou can ' st not enter here. 1 was a grind, the student cried, I knew my lessons well. But Satan sniileil and said : W ' e have . o use fiir yon in hell. So hack to his school the spirit went. And haunted his books again. For he who was a grind on earth Haunts r.ot his felli iw-nien. And so, when a book is missing. Or a leaf has torn awav. Or one hears a ste|j where the hooks are kept, When the night is enfolding the dav, It is liut the shade of a former grind . t work (in his tasks of vore. And the rustling sound is all one hears As he turns the leaves once more. No place is for him in heaven or hell ; ,. ! ' . Nor rest nor peace of mind. And the saddest words a soul can say Are these : I was a grind. THE ARHUTUS IS OUT JnDiana Onitictsitp 9t6utu0 iiifl K ic xICaa PA c-oLuCt iA)4tA J W Ji( V L lZeU tft oJLunu y jLuL tA:, a AjUkMuf. U AXst OA otUU CtW. - KlSx feA i ONE REASON WHY ENGLISH INSTRUCTORS GO CRAZY Jl3inctecn i unDrcD jFourtccn m ' ' UnDiana OniDersitp atbutu$ THE STEAM ROLLER. tlK Politics lias travelt-il tuc. fast Steam Roller. The vehicle which once rode through all elections to victory has lieen relegated to the scrap heap and will figure no more in political races. A fort. ' horse-power six-c dinder racer has re- placed the Juggernaut of iron. Loukiuf; forward to a oud team is look- ing hack to da s of Bunny Hare or Heze Clark. — All of the F00Tii, LL pl.wf.rs wn.L iii; SE.- TED . T T. ELES, WHICH WILL F,E PL. CEli IN THE CENTER WE. RING THEIR I SWE.ATERS. I should like to have something in an extreme how tie, please. — Sister Grulier. A Senior in filling out his honor blank for the Arbutus included. — Member of the Methodist Church. Great men hirrc enemies ajid I have made many of them. — Robert Harris in his closing editorial. Paying earpenter suit. bills is Theta ' s long SUFFOCATION. This party has for its primary ob- ject the acclimatization of the new- girls, to give them an opportunity to become more thoroughly acquainted with the upperclassmen. CONSISTENCY THOU ART Originality will 1)e the theme of the 1914 Arbutus. The Editors have lieen busy going over some thirty annuals of other scliuuls looking for new ideas. Some men are born zvith a silver sf omi in their nioitlhs, others are pledged Flu I ' si be- fore leaving high sehool. - ' f ' ' • iii er THE TAXGO lUST GO. jfI3incteen I unDccD jFourtcen l ' fp -j v A - ' A COLLEGE NOTEBOOK IS AN INTELLECTUAL GRAVEYARD. -.Mrs. l-:isiu Parso us 111 Suci JnDiana Oniucrsitp 3r6utU8 aync Sclmiidt returned to Blooming- College yesterday, where he will again PURSUE his studies, after a n ' eek ' s visit w i t h h o m e- folks. — MARTIXSMLLE PAXXER. .A rolling stone gathers no moss liut a pair of loaded dice will carry some men through college. The early hird catches the lilame. S- l-E. We desire to call special attention to the above illustration as an excellent ex- ample of good photography and had base- ball. This remarkable picture was snapped in the heat of a game. Springer is taking the throw at second to nab An- derson. Xote Springer ' s relaxed facial expressiciii and nindcl form of the hands. Pride goeth liefore a stall. I.oz ' c iiw Utile, hue iiic i]iiii-k. A HIGH BALL Jl ineteen unDtcD JFourtecn We are traveling at a furious, break- neck pace, said William Oscar Trapp, of Hoboken, last nigbt, in addressing a large and restless audience of English VII stu- dents, which left at the conclusion of the first hour of his discourse. Professor Trapp took as the subject of bis verbosity, Crimes Near the Chimes, and drew ex- tensively upon his wide experience as a campus philosopher and from a small flask in his hip pocket. The speaker paused from time to time to take a fling at col- lege customs and his address, according to the janitor, who remained to close the door, was a bitter denunciation of Fatima cigarettes and higher education. We are clipping off a pace that kills, cripples and makes speed maniacs of us all, charged the Sage from Hoboken. We don ' t know where we are going, but we ' re hit- ting the pace and that is what satisfies us. To-day the modern college ROi TEO pro- poses while speeding at the rate of fifty miles an hour and JULIET accepts him, arnica, accident insurance and all, in the hospital ten minutes later. We are racing our social system on high gear and it takes nerve to throw in the clutch. This is an age of electricity : an age in which copper wires are fashioned into tongues that speak and hands that make, hands that far surpass human hands or a royal flush, hands that can crush a ton of rock or spin a thread of silk. Nothing is impossible • but few things are improbabk What a flashlight into the future, what a future in the flashlight. But we must keep our hand upon the throttle and our e e upon the rail : open switches must Ix avoided. I repeat once more, exclaimed the per- spiring speaker, striking the table with his fist and overturning a bottle of ink, I re- peat that this is, indeed, an electric age. ft is an age of electric lights, electric cars, and electric chairs. It is a day of electric signs, electric fans and electric belts. It is a tune of electric irons, electric thrills and electric bitters. Electricity is everywdiere, men are shocked daily by women ' s fashions. What a variety ! What originality ! What next? Discussing the whirl of college life, Mr. Trapp pointed out the varialnUty of stu- dent attention. The limelight of college interest is ever shifting, it alters quicker than some students change their major sub- ject. At one time, all the University grieves over a 60 to o football defeat, at another, a frenzied mob, drunken with a basketball victory over Purdue, raids the Greeks. To- night we tango where _yesterdav the Reli- gious Conference met. Wounds soon heal, victories soon fade, honors soon crumble, engagements made over a Coca Cola are as quickly broken, social leaders come and go in the course of an evening. Events hap- pen too rapidly to remember. We are trav- eling fast : we are Iving at a terrible pace, but, take it from me, ' n ' c arc H ' l ' iuii. AM ' -v; INTO THE lORUAN 3nDiana UniMtmtv arbutus mmttm unDreD jfourteen LAMENT OF A DEPAUW AFFILIATE Oh warden, von t vou shoot him down? For m - sake let him die. Whv place this curse, this awful shame. On poor Phi Kappa Psi? What motive could have brought him here? He looks not like a ' winner. Oh Arthur, take him to the woods And give the squirrels a dinner. The truth is plain, his hair is read. His face is simply ' messed, And how the sun shines down Upon the shield pinned to his breast. Oh can ' t ou run? You cannot jump. For our sake loose your pin. The bar is only three feet six, ( )h please don ' t try again. The girls are in the bleachers, They hear the brothers swearing, They see your silly looking face And they know the pin you ' re wearing. Now vou can go home, brother. And the boys won ' t treat you raw. But ril catch hell all this term, I came here from DePauw. BURNING THE MIDNIGHT OIL 40 JnDiana CJniticrsitp arbutus jQinetecn ! unDreD JFourteen AND It Came To Pass That After Many W ' f.kks, The ARBUTUS Appeaued Axd fell among many hands. And at the same time a black cloud gathered from the east and fell over the campus like a shroud of gauze, not concealing the fo rms beneath but veil- ing them with uncanny darkness. The moon came slowly from liehind a cloud and cast a pale, white light over the buildings. A wind rose from the hollows of the campus and sighed and moaned mournfully in the tree tops like the groans of dying soldiers. The campus was dark, void and without form ; unseen spirits were abroad in the deep. Slowly, the chimes sounded the hour of midnight, with a deep, muflfled stroke that shook the stone foundatiim and chilled the heart like the Dull, Deep Drums of Doom. When the last sad echo had died away into silence, a fl ash of lightnin.s; broke o er the scene, followed by a mighty peal of tbumli-r, :i dreadful r(iar like that nf many waters, a fearful grinding and tearing of timbers, a ikatcmng outliurst as from a terrible explosion : voices came out of the darkness, like those of an angry mob — a jargon of tongues, hoarse cries, as the cry of wild beasts, groans of pain, wails of despair, oaths of rage and snarls of hatred. An owl shrieked from the tree top. Again the lightning flashed and revealed the fallen ruins of the Student Building Tower. The pale moon passed liehind a cloud, the Well House was split in twain and the lightning cast a yellow light over the scene of de as- tation. (Slowly the moon came out from behind the cloud but it was red as blood and cast a scarlet glow over the ruins. A turbulent, angry stream flooded the Jordan like a raging river of hiniian blood. Millions of poppies sprang from the banks and nodded their bloody blossoms. A gigantic bull-frog hopped from the depths of the stream, with his eyes like two red coals or fire, as he grinned and croaked in a hoarse, fiendish glee. Crimson colored serpents writhed and coiled and hissed among the poppies and glided among the weeping willows as streaks of dull fire. Water-lilies, yellow as saffron, sprang from the uuze and from the blossoms leaped imps and devils. The owl perched itself on the edge of the stream and night-hawks now with fiery plumage flitted over the waters. And save for the rush of the waters, no sounds broke the deathly silence. Another Arbutus had come and gone. . nd from the depths of the Jordan, the voice of the Kditor answered— XEVER.Ml )R !•:. ctie: e:j7i 3nDiana Oniuersitp arbutus Nineteen unDtcD jFourteen Here takdh the makers of this booke their leve now prcvc w« to bcm alk that bcrknc this litel trctvs or rede, that if thcr be any thyng in it that likcth and pkaseth them, that tbmoT we are glayd. JUnd if there be any thyng that displese hem, we preye him aHo that they arrette it to the defaute of our unkonnyng, and nat to our wyl, that wolde ful fayn haoe seyd bettre, if we hadde had konnynge. Wherefore, we biseke you mekely for mercy on our enditynges of kollege vanitees of which we have written. fiecre endetb the Book of the Senior class, compiled by ye editors, on whose reputations may you have mercy. DON ' T ALL HOWL AT ONCE SnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus Minter Sba ows Cnidh-sy of Slut c c- Cisi jQinetccn i unDrcD jFoutteen 3nDiana S nitietsitp arfiutus Indiana University William L. Brvax, Ph. D.. President I The College of Liberal Arts. ' ii.LiA.M L. I ' .K . x. I ' ll. L)., President. II The Extension Division. ' ILLIAM A. Rawles, Ph. D., Director III The School of Education. ' iLLiAM W. P)L- CK, A. y[.. Dean IV The Graduate School. C. H. Eir,i:. MAxx_, Ph. D., Dean V The School of Law. Exocii G. HoG.xTE. A. B., PL. D., Dean VI The School of Medicine. Charles P. Emerson, j L D., Dean, Indianapolis Burton D. IMyers, ' M. D., Secretary, Bloomington (Catalogues or Bnlletins sent free on application.) JlSinetecn I unDreD Jfoutteen WE MAKE ALL WOOL SUITS or OVERCOATS Individual Measure for $ 15 Up NATIONAL WOOLEN CO. M ILL-TO-MAN-TAI LORS TOM HUFF Pocket Billiards na EAST KIRKWOOD AVENUE BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Fine Line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco Phone 527. • Checks Good For 5c in Trade at Henry Kerr ' s. ' 3nDiana Onitictsitp Srbutus CJ.TOURNER TheSpnggs Studio Tail or High Class Tailoring Work done here at home I 1 1 East Kirkwood Ave. West Side Square Photographs At Popular Prices Why Don ' t You Rent A Remington Typewriter? Oiir Special Rental Rate to University Students is one which ought to interest you. We v ' ill rent you a rebuilt latest visible Remington. 2 months for $5 Then at the end of the two months, if want to buy that machine or a new one, zue credit the $5 en the purchase price. Every student needs a typewriter for his own work, if for nothing else. And if you wish to do work for others, remember that a Remington Typewriter is the best source of income a student can have. Our special students ' rental offer gii ' es you a s plendid chance. Send us the $5 and we will send the rental machine. Remington Typewriter Company I Incorporated ) 6 West Market Street Indianapolis, Ind. Nineteen l unDreD jFourteen Indiana ' s Leading Photographer BRETZM AN Indianapolis, Indiana 22 1-2 North Pennsylvania Location After Oct. 1, Fletcher Savings Trust Bld| The Illinois Central Railroad Co. Direct and Convenient Line between Indianapolis and Bloomington Connections with through Limited trains to Memphis, New Orleans, Houston and San Antonio. If ant cipating a trip anywhere communicate with the undersigned for full information, J. M. MORISEY Dist. Passenger Agent INDIANAPOLIS, IND. c R. PLEASANTS Ticket Agent BLOOMINGTON. IND JnDiana Onitiersitp arliutus NEURONHURST INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 1140 EAST MARKET ST. DR. W. B. FLETCHER ' S SANATORIUM Though Neuronhurft is primarily a Sanatorium for the treat- ment of all forms of mental disturbance and of such diseases as arise from organic or functional derangements of the brain and spinal cord, the various forms of constitutional disorders are treated, es- pecially those which yield to the scientific application of electro- therapy, hydro-therapy massage and special diet. Cases of paralysis, inebriety, and the drug addictions, receive special attention as well as those cases who have undergone nervous strain and who need rest and temporary relief from business or do- mestic cares. Dr. MARY SPINK, Superintendent. Long Distance Telephone, Prospedl: 38 1 . Bintttm it)unDteD jFourtecn WE have the Finest Hne of Box Candies in Bloomington. Exclusive agents for Apollo, Bryn Mawr, and Princess Chocolates OUR CIGAR LINE Does Not Need Advertising The Best in Ready-to-Wear For Men, Women and Children First National Bank Building BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Billiards and Bowling The Coolest Place in Town Stradley ' s IN THE YELLOW BUILDING Phone 758 L. H. SMOCK, Mgr. J. W. O ' Harrow Phone 35 THE HOME OF Pure Dru s And Athletic Supplies SnDiana Slniticrsitp Arbutus m? - LINE OF PHYSICIANS ' EQUIPMENTS ' iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiwi ' Makes Your Office Look the Part Chair N. We guarantee the Material, Work- manship, Finish and Safe Delivery of our Goods. Send for List No. 20 You can ' t afford to buy office furniture without investigating our line of Chairs and Tables, Medicine and ( - g Instrument - Accessories of all Kinds Our New Catalog sent on request Table Slyle 36. Special Bargain W. D. ALLISON CO., Mfgrs. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 925 N.Ala. Si. Steinmetz Peebles S, E. Corner of Square. AH Work Designed and Made In the City BLOOMINGTON INDIANA isYouTAnswenmi 1 Webster s I I New International I I -TheMerriahWebster | s Even as you read this publication you = = likely question the meaning of some = = nemword. A friend asks: What makes = = mortar harden? You seek the location = S of Loch Katrine or the pronunciation of = = j ' ljutsu. ' Whatis irhitc coat: ' This NEW = = CREATION answers all kinds of ques- = = tions in Language, History, Biography, = = Fiction, Foreign Words, Trades, Arts = g and Sciences, with final authority. = = 400,000 W ords and Phrases Defined = = 6000 111 t ons s = Cost $400 000 § 2700 Pages = Theonlyd ctionarywith = the new d d d pa charac e zed as 1 = Stroke of Gen us = Write i G. C i MERRIAM I CO. § Springfield = Mass fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaimuuiiii itiii laiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii For Fine Clothing And- Furnishin s Go to the GLOBE Northeast Corner Square BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA Phone 1011 Nineteen unDreD jFoumcn NORWAYS SANATORIUM, Inc. FOR NERVOUS DISEASES INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA (1820 E. Tenth Si. Opp. Woodruff Park) itorium for the care and treatment ot the si phi pe search of amusement, equipped in every partii Every method of treat Pat buildings, and is thoroughly r. The grounds are extensive and beautiful. The cuisine is excellent, t of known value is employed by skilled attendants and specially ffering from all forms of nervous disease, both medical and surgical, kidney troubles, the various drug habits are accepted. Paralytic children and I of the rest cure are especially treated. Separate buildings for mild mental Terms, range fron Regular si All charges are payable weekly, one week in advance, without exception. $35 to $90 per week, depending upon necessities of treatment and location of i natorium rates include board, room, nursing, treatment and physician ' s fees. ' a charges, unless a special nur.5e ($ 0 to $25 per week) is demanded. Average The nple for operat examination is $10 to $25, depend upon specia vhether patit stitu tions and are not include(4 above. Outdoor patients will be charged according to the treatment employed. X. B. No person should be brought to the institution who is too weak to be safely ini home. For further information apply to the Norways Sanatorium. ALBERT E. STERNE, M. D. CHARLES D. HUMES, M. D. Visiting Hours to Patient, 3 to 5 p. m. Telephones: Old, Woodruff 1999; New, 3 Consulting Hours, by appointment only, 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m. Worth Knowing The Book Nook is an in- stitution of great strength, rare beauty and has been a model of perfection for half a decade. It is habit- uated by true sons of ele- gance and culture. The trusted clerks are there when wanted and they serve in silence. Beautiful women eat here between meals and classes. On certain nights they bring their dates. JnDiana Oniticrsitp arbutus SKIRVIN Dry Cleaning and Pressing Repairing a Specialty Now Located on Sixth Street. Two Doors East of Walnut. Phone 751 W Y L I E S The Gift Shop of Bloomington T ictures . ' Pottery . gaskets Artistic Framing W Y L I E S It May Interest You to know that we are showing the newest things in high-class Footwear For Men and Women Model Shoe Store Phone 1081 West Side Square Routt ' s Cafe Bell McKinley Cleaners We are equipped to put out the best and Dyers line of eatables in the city. Give us a call. 415 EAST KIRKWOOD Phone 893 Bloomington, Ind. We will expect you. Special attention given ladies ' East Kirkwood Ave. gloves, furs, slippers, lace waists, etc. Nineteen l unDreD Jfourtcen SHAW COSNER Official Photographers For the 1914 ARBUTUS Take home a set of our Artistic Campus Views: v? The Chimes Moonlight on the Board Walk Winter Shadows Early Spring at Indiana At the Well House The Student Building TEN- THIRTY JinDtana BniMtmt rbutuie! British Woolen Co. TAILORS Exclusive Patterns, Best Fabrics and Skilled Workmanship 133 North Illinois Street INDIANAPOLIS, IND. L )ric Theatre Block If you don ' t care about your appear- ance we can ' t interest you. We are cranks on good fitting Clothes. We fit your purse and personality. JACK SUNDERLAND, Manager BERT DEFIBAUGH, Designer Kirkwood Dru; Company Drugs, Sundries, Cigars and Tobacco. Indiana University Bookstore Maintained by the University In the Interest of Students Basement of Library. N. O. PITTENGER, Manager JI3inetecn I unDteD jFouttecn ENGRA VING for COLLEGE and SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS mi -,■■-,. ' pHE above is the title of our Book of Instruc- tions which IS loaned to the staff of each publi- cation for which we do the engraving. This book contains 1 64 pages, over 300 illustrations, and covers every phase of the engraving question as it would interest the staff of a college or school publication. Full description and information as to how to ob- tain a copy sent to any one interested. We make a Specialty of Halftones, Color Plates, Zinc Etchings, ' Designing, Etc. For College and High School Annuals and Periodicals. Also fine copper plate and steel die embossed Stationery such as Commencement Invitations, Visiting Cards, Fraternity Stationery, Etc. Acid Blast Halftones H ; -•■l- lf o-s are etched by the Lev - , ,„„ , „„„„„, Sii Acid blast process, which insures deeper and more evenly etched plates than it is possible to £jet by the old tub process, thus insurint;- best possible results from the printer. The engravings for this Annual were made by us. Mail orders a specialty. Samples sent free if vou state what nu are especially interested in. STAFFORD ENGRAVING CO. ARTISTS ENGRAVERS ELECTROTYPERS Engravings for College and School Publications a Specialty CENTURY BUILDING INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA JlnDiana CJniucrsitp Srbutus npHIS store is the Home of Hart, Schaffner Marx - ' - Clothes the be.,t clothes in America. We are t ole agents for Heid Caps — Superior Un- derwear — fine imported Neckwear — Imperial and Stet- son Hats — and lastly — Agents for the Kahn Tailoring Co. of Indianapolis — the kind of clothes gentlemen wear. KAHN CLOTHING COMPANY BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA WILES i Coombs Sell -t- EJ. V. Price Co. Fine Tailoring rt Specialties Spalding Kodaks Track Suits and Shoes RUGS Indiana and Other University Pennants. Best qualities for less than can be bought elsewhere. Satisfaction guaranteed. Come in and let us show you. I13ineteen unDrcD JFourteen HOTEL BOWLES Bloomington ' s Leading Commercial Hotel GREEK ' S Candy Store For — The best be , sanitary plumbing, steam heat, telephone ction in all rooms. Cuisine and service elletl. Rates, l)i-3..50; with bath, $3.00. CENTRAL INDIANA LIGHTING COMPANY J. N. MONCRIEFF, Managet Gas, Electric Heat and Power, Elec- tric Irons, Vibrators, Motors, Toast- ers, Percolators, Hot Plates. Phone 271 p ine Candles, T ee Cream, Etc. Metropolitan for Sunday Dinners GEO. C. POOLITSON. E. R. MOORE, President A. A. PATTERSON, Sec ' y and Treas. RENTING OF CAPS AND GOWNS TO GRADUATING CLASSES A SPECIALTY E. R. Moore Company MAKERS OF Collegiate Caps, Gowns and Hoods ORIGINATORS OF Moore ' s Offical High School Cap and Gown 4014-16 Broadway -:- CHICAGO 427 SnDiana Onitjer0itp 9tbutu0 TURNER ' S 5 and 10c Store EVERYTHING IN BRIC-A-BRAC First Floor Second Floor 5 and 10c 5. 10, 25c and up Hospital Electrical D. J. CO. Means Service Unexcelled. We are doing the cleanest most Ethical supply business in the United States. We tell you the Truth. We invite comparison. Dugan Johnson Co. 206 N. Meridian St. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Surgical Laboratory THE MODERN 6 Barbers 5 Shine Boys BA THS CGAR STAND STRADLEYS OLD PLACE East Side Q FRED GATES Hotel Kii ' kwood Headquarters for Students BLOOMINGTON, IND The only $1.25 per Day House in the City. Meal Tickets $3.50 Two Squares East o( Seven Squares South Monon Station 1. C. Station CAMPBELL COMPANY Dr y Goods, Shoes, Carpets and Millinery. Ready-to-wear, and in fact Everything in Clothing For Women and Girls Give US a trial Red Star Shoe Shop EDWARD J. PORTER Nineteen I unDteD jToutteen Exclusive Styles in Men ' s and Women ' s Cigars ox Candies FOOTWEAR Skirvin Bros. PR Y O R SHOE sxORE No. 117West Side Square BLOOMINGTON. IND. Indiana Lunch The Last Word in Eats Catering to the hungry with the choice line of foodstuffs in the city. C|Our Soda Fountain is un- excelled. 11 OS. Dunn ' St. Tobaccos Phone 947 Cigarettes An Investment That PAYS Take advantage of our Special Rental Rate to University Students and rent from us a rebuilt latest visible model Remington Typewriter 2 months for $5 Think of all the different uses After you have used that a college student can make of a Remington for two months, you typewriter. It is worth r nsir-- ' ' ° ' ° while as a time and labor f ,-. o ' S with- saver, just on your own j J out it. work. And if you wish ] kj y S yr- Then if you wish to to do work for others, A SIaf rented machine its the best source of in- §, jf ° ' ' ° ' ' ' ' ' come that any college jaF credit the $5 on tne piir- student can have. chase price. Better take advantage of this offer NOW. Send us the $5 and we will send the machine. Remington Typewriter Company (Incorporated) . ,- t j I 6 West Market Street Inaianapolis, Ind. SnDiana nitictsitp 9r6utus H. E. Williams DRUGS Phones: i iffi.-,.. mi:.. Hrim.-. 1137 A. M. SNYDER DENTIST ( )ffice : Henry and J err Xew Building. East Kirkwood Avenue Toilet Articles Cigars and F. B. Van Valzah Tobacco Hardware and Cutlery South Sirlj. of Square BLOOAIIXGTON liast Side Square Phone 112 IXDIAXA Telephone 425. Phones. Rfsiclenee. 3S; Office. 559 Bloomington ...The... Coal Co. Quality Shop Miners ' Agents and General Dealers Sole Agents for the Celebrated Red Jockey Coal, the most satisfactory Domestic Coal in use. U ' liite .Ish o Clinkers. Sanitary Plumbing .VXD Heating Engineer Expert repairing, I guarantee ¥ree estimates and specificatiiins. See us before placint;- your order. (Jet my prices. There ' s a reason Offiec and Yards of posite I . C. Freii lif Depot r,L()()MIXC,T( )X. IXDTAX.V. FRED W. FENNEMAN Batman Block. Sei ' enth and Walnut Streets. Jl3inctccn l!)iinDrcD jTourtccn cM orris ' he Florist Greenhouse located comer 2ncl a nd H ighland Ave. Flowers for all Occasions PHONE 294 Visitors Always Welcome Stranger: Where is the Fool ' s Paradise? Saint Peter: The Fool ' s Paradise? Stranq-er : Yes, — I was an Avbutiis Editor. 3nDiana UniMttsitv arbutus niie Old Sv immin ' Hole Press Operated b tKe Wm. MitcKell Printing Co. Book Manufacturers Greenfield - Indiana Special Department fo; College Publications and Books TKe 1Q14 Arbutus Was Made Here
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