Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA)

 - Class of 1924

Page 1 of 548

 

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 7, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 11, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 15, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 9, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 13, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collectionPage 17, 1924 Edition, Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 548 of the 1924 volume:

■; ?  ■-• A T Copyrighl 1923 lURON G. ALI.ICN ICnrroR-iN-CHiEr HAROLD Z. Tl!:ST JiusiNEss Manager 3n Jllemoriam Via Mtm Spencer aimbroSc J?cac() professor aifreb glUen |gennctt (General SamesJ i usf) Hintoln iMrg. lotta i.incoln Jtlrs. iWarp ?B. OTJcIcft rofesfgor Jfrcb Comab IDcibcntfjin Cljegter Bonalb J atfjatoap ' 26 Cfjamp (gilbert l arbp ' 26 iWiliircb i orton ' 26 J arolb (! . €;i)iei)emaiT ' 24 laapett f ofjn Vrnafales ' 24 Haura aHaaUcnfclbt ' 26 Mi : ' !Hi m f?mH ff iiiiiiitii itiii ti  iiitti H iiii  itii i ii ««tiiiiili liiiiiiiit lM  itiHii itiiM  imtimM« iiiM«nHMHiMmninnminmmiminn« iiiimiiii limill IUIII llMMII IIIIIHMIMIH HIIIIII IMHtlltlllimilHI IIIIIMIIIIMItll MIHI  IIIIIIIIIIIIHII tlH llll l IH MIH«H HIMI« IIIIIIHMHtMtyjr a-ar ' a-af-: ' j l«ll«lllll ll «lll«MllllllllltHIMlll lllltlllllllllllllllMM IMtrtnt IIMIMI«IWHMIIM MIHIIHOMHItllllHIIM«IHHmmMIHimitM MIIHIII THE VF lKRlNAin COliRT To lessen sufferitit in tliiinh creatures, to prevent diseases of animals roinmunicable to man. and to save iiiil ions of livestoei from disease tire tasks of sufficient importance to attract those iiho iiish to render a V(duahte service to humanity. (M ' M JlEJC IIIIIIMII«IMt)lll«lltMillllllllllilllMllltHltMMi(t l lini lt tllll)nllllll)ltllMHIIillMlltllll«IMIIIIIIIIIIIMIMHIMtllMlinHII IHMMItlHIII.?a  IIIIIHIIItll llt IMIIIIII ltl«MM l IIMIMtM«llllllllllllllllllllltU IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIItlHMIIIIIIII lltM«IIIIHmMHm lll«lll IIHHmi mni e e ' IIIMIIHIIIIIIiHIIMIIIIillllMMI IHMIIIIIIIIIIHM)IHI«IIIHHIIH)MM)IIUMIIUI«MIIHlHINIHMIII TllL KNOLL ' These shndes are still the nhndes of ( ladiuss : the thiek roof of yreen (ind stirriny hraiuhes is (dive mid iiiiisiecd with birds. Bryant -C MHIIIIIIIIIMMIIIMItilll«H«MIIIM HIIH«llllllttUIIMII)MIMIiHHIIIIIMIIHIIIIMIIIIMIHI l IIIHn •Ci|MIIIIHIIII)il ltlltNI(IIIIH«IMIIIIIIIII«ai IIHIHIIIIIIHIHIIII«UMIIIII(t M IMUII««IHIH lim HIIII(l IM«IHIMMII lll(tlll)IIIM llllllll)llll -, vr o — jy- Er r sr tf- -fliiiiii A CAMl ' LS I ' Alll ' (;Vi rj 7 ; iiiiiltr In open .v -v. ' ' 7 ' f Xii iirc ' s tcdcliiiii . Bryant • IIIIIIKIHIHIIMHIIIIIMIKIWIUHIIIIIMKIHMMIIIIIIMIHIIIIIMMtllXIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIMIIIUin l)IHMM HHHIHimilllH miMIIIIIHIIHIIIMHHMII tllMHHIimHIHHIimnMIIHIIII« Hltmmillimi «III«HIIH1II IIII1 inmi l MIMMII tHtlllllMIIIHIIIIim)IM)l MHIMIIIHHIMIH HHmUMtHIIHIIMIM)tltMIIIIIIIMIIIIMII)IIMtHIHIIII«M)M«l«IIIIMII«IMIHII)llilMIIIMHl! nuiiiimi««t iimiiii«  n  niiminn unmntmmMiini iini tMnnMHiinii iMi ni iiim i niiiMtniiiM nniiiM  H IIHIIIMIHIHII)IIMIIIIHIIHM«IIIH)l liMIHIIIUmMIHIMIIIIMIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIMMMIIt«IIMHIMIIIIIIIIIIIMI(IMMIIHtHIIIIIIMiMIMI«llll MIIIIIIMII 9 9 9- .vl M ■ A.T.v ■i ;«Si A PAGEANT OF WINTER li it iiiirtulc (if lit ir l trfinsfor niiiff h this iviltl li ' ori: of frost anil light. This yliinpse of glory injinitef C:.|HIIII Mllltll l t IIIMI  IIH  IIHI l MI«tM l l«llt  IIIIHIMItMIMt lltllltlllMIIMIMIIItMlltlllMtllltllMllllt IIHHmillHllltlllllllllllllil ll llll ' m ; ■ . ■t -A en(;inki:rinu hai,l m J he engineer of the nciv cfiorli. I lie rpocli ilIi ' uIi he is hrin iii( into rxiitinrc tliroiiyh tin iniiinif i liirr of poiver, iiiitsi he nil educated iiiiin. MORISON ilMIIIIIIUIIIIIIllMMI IMtlllMIMIIHM IIMII lt l IHtl  lltlH l  lltllllMIII « lll t ltlllllMIIIIIIIIIIM MIIIM l tt« ltl IIIMMIttt MMMIIHIIII-a« ' a-a- . '  - .-: '  ) •C IMIMIII(IIMII IMIHIIIIHllll«ll  ll tMltlll«IIMIIMIIIIIIMMIIIf Mtl IIIIIIIMIIHIMMIHMIItl«HIMtlM lltlllH4IIMIMI«tlMIM«l)tlllllMIMHilMMMtt Cg tM MIMHHIMM IHIMtMIIIM HMMIIMlltMMIIMltl MMIf HIIM M MMHItmM MM lilMtllll IIIIMIMIIIIIIMI IMIIIMMMIMIIitllllilMliiM ■ ■■■.■II..UIII14IIIHI llltll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIHIIII IIIIIIIIIIIMIIimillllllMIIIIH lt HltlHIIIMIttMIHm l  Hm HIMHI ' mHHIIimil ON THE CAMPUS One touch of nature makes the ivlio e ivorlil kin. Shakespeare ■ IIIIIIIIIM i lltl llllllll IHMIMHIItilUUnMII UlllimitllMIII IMI llllllllllilllMH)IIHIIIIII«9- m M ii JK k C:J|IIIIIIIMIIIItM l MHI IM l«MIII«ll«l IHII «t«IMIItlllllllllll IIM«l IIUMIIIItllllllltlltllllHIIIIMIIimillll IM llllimH«IHmmnllll«IIIIIH tllH IIIHIIIIIItl llIlitMt)hlMI«UIIM lllll lttlltlMIIIIMII)illHHIHIMHHmHMIHMMniMIHiM«IMH(l «MIHOIUIMHMIMilMIIIMHIMIIIIII --t3r=o--nr:ar:flC3fflIl linilllll  MH ll HIMII ll llltHIMIHilHlflll :iiiiimmii ' A E 3 OCR COLLEGE In devoting this section of the 1924 Ko.mb to a series of short articles concerning people anil facts which we feel will be of interest to our readers, the editors have opened up a new field for college annuals. There are in- numerable things of interest taking place in and about the college ever day and it has been the plan of the edi- tors to record a few of them in this section of the Bo rB. Many of our alumni and many of the professors connect- ed with the teaching staff of this institution are de oting much of their time to work that is to be of great service to society and we have felt that short accounts of such work would be one way of showing the appreciation which we all have of those who devote their lives to the service of humanit} ' . In addition to such articles Our College contains short editorial accounts of some of our newly established customs and traditions, and of the growth of some of the departments of the college. Ve ha e selected these articles at random from a large mmiber of contributions with the idea in mind of build- ing up a section which ill be of interest and value to all of our readers. The Editors. ' S ' si iirat =]si 28 7 a--a-tHMirmniTniTrnn7iiix; anHTiTiinnmTnTTriTnniniTlTnmmTTnilllllllli: §!■ THE WORK OF DR. SEAMAN A. KNAPP Taken from the Life and I etters of Walter H. Page B ■ B. J. Hendrick In 1906 the problem of Southern education assumed a new phase. Dr. Wallace Hutterick, the Secretary of the General Education Board, had now decided that the fundamental difficulty was economic. By that time the Southern people had revised their original conception that education was a private and not a public concern ; there was now a general acceptance of the doctrine that the mental and physical training of every child, white and black, was the responsibility of the state ; Aycock ' s campaign had worked such a popular revolution on this subject that no politician who aspired to public office would dare to take a contrary view. Yet the economic difficulty still i- ; remained. The South was poor; whatever might be the general desire, the taxable i g ' resources were not sufficient to support such a comprehensive system of popular instruc- j g tion as existed in the North and West. Any permanent improvement must therefore be based upon the strengthening of the South ' s economic position. Essentially the task was to build up Southern agriculture, which for generations had been wasteful, unin- telligent and consequenth ' unproductive. Such a far-reaching programme might well appall the most energetic reformer, but Dr. Butterick set to work. He saw little light until his attention was drawn to a quaint and philosophic gentleman — a kind of bucolic Ben Franklin — who was then obscurely working in the cotton lands of Loui- siana, making warfare on the boll weevil in a way of his own. At that time Dr. Sea- man A. Knapp had made no national reputation ; yet he had evolved a plan for re- deeming coiuitry life and making American farms more fruitful that has since worked marvellous results. There was nothing especially sensational about its details. Dr. Knapp had made the discovery in relation to farms that the utilitarians had long since made with reference to other human activities: that the only way to improve agricul- ture was not to talk about it, but to go and do it. During the preceding fifty years agricultural colleges had sprung up all over the United States — Dr. Knapp had been president of one himself; practically every Southern state had one or more; agricul- tural lecturers covered thousands of miles annually telling their yawning audiences how to farm ; these efforts had scattered broadcast much valuable information about the subject, but the difficulty lay in inducing the farmers to apply it. Dr. Knapp had a new method. He selected a particular farmer and persuaded him to work his fields for a period according to methods which he prescribed. He told his pupil how to plough, what seed to plant, how to space his rows, what fertilizers to use, and the like. If a selected .icreage ' ielded a profitable crop which the farmer could sell at an in- creased price. Dr. Knapp had sufficient faith in himian nature to believe that that par- ticular farmer would continue to operate his farm on the new method and that his neighbors, having this practical example of growing prosperity, would imitate him. Such was the famous Demonstration AVork of Dr. Seaman A. Knapp; this ac- tivity is now a regular brancli of the Department of Agriculture, employing thousands 29 ■ llllllltlllllllllll(tllllHIIIII«flllMIIIIM UIIIIHMHIIMIilHIMnNIHUHH HIUMIIHIIII(«IIIMIII- of agents and spending not far from :?;l 8,000,000 a ear. Its application to the South has made practicall ' a new and rich country, and it has h)ng since been extended to other regions. ' heii Dr. Butterick first met Kiia|i[i, ho e er, there were few indi- cations of this splendid future. He brought Dr. Kna|i|i north and exhibited him to Page. This was precisely the kind of man who a|ipealed to Page ' s sympathies. His mind was always keenh ' on the scent for the new man — the original thinker who had ome practical plan for uplifting humankind and making life more worth while. And Dr. Knapp ' s mission was one that had filled most of his thoughts for many years; its real purpose was the enrichment of coiuitri, life. Page therefore took to Dr. Knapp with a mighty zest. He sujiported him on all occasions; he plead his cause with great eloquence before the General Kducation Board, whose purse strings were liberally un- loosed in behalf of the Knapp work; in his writings, in speeches, in letters, in all forms of public advocacy, he insisted that Dr. Knapp had found the solution of the agricultural problem. The fact is that Page regarded Knapp as one of the greatest men of the time. His feeling came out with characteristic intensity on the occasion of the homely reformer ' s funeral. Ihe exercises, Page once told a friend, were held in a rather dismal little church on the outskirts of Washington. The day was bleak and chill, the attendants were few — chiefly officials of the Department of Agriculture. The clergyman read the service in the most perfunctory way. Then James Wilson, the Secretary of Agriculture, spoke formally of Dr. Knapp as a faithful servant of the Department who always did well vhat he was told to do, commending his life in an altogether commonplace fashion. By that time my heart was pretty hot. o one seemed to divine that in the coffin before them was the body of a really great man, who had hit upon a fruitful idea in American agriculture — an idea that was destined to co cr the nation and enrich rural life immeasurably. Page was so moved by this lack of appreciation, so full of sorrow at the loss of one of his dearest friends, that, when he rose to speak, his appraisement took on a certain indignation. Their dead associate, Page declared, woidd outrank the generals anil the politicians who recei ed the world ' s plaudits, for he had devoted his life to a realh ' great purpose; his inspira- tion had been the love of the common people, his faith, his sympathy had all been ex- pended in an effort to brighten the life of the too frequently neglected masses. Page ' s address on this occasion was entirely extemporaneous; no record of it was ever made, but those who heard it still carry the memory of an eloquent and fiery outburst that placed Knapp ' s work in its proper relation to American history and ga e an imfor- gettable picture of a patient, idealistic, achieving man whose name will loom large in the future. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiititiniimiiiitiiiinnnntiiiiitiiiniimiitiininnmmm iw«nimiMMMWiiii miiiiHiin- Jll FIGHT! AMES! FIGHT! {Ily Harold Willard Gleason ' — Harvard ' 17) Fourth down, three, and the tension grows — ■ Stands are hushed — then the eager crowd In the stadium, rows on rows. Voice their war cry in cadence loud ; Crouching linemen react like springs; Backs drive forward, the ball clutched tight Nerved anew as the chorus rings Over the chalk lines — Fight! Ames! Fight! Fog and mud and a cheerless dawn ; Whispers pass through the sullen rain — Two minutes more, boys! Pass it out! Then — a whistle thrills — ends the strain: Rattle of stones from the parapet As soldiers scrambled to left and right Moimting; eyes flashing brighter yet At the heart stirring slogan, Fight! Ames! Fight! Thus they answered when honor called, Giving all to their country ' s needs; Leaving their college stately walled — Blazing her name with splendid deeds. Heroes, late of the football field. Doing battle for God and Right, Shoulder to shoulder, never to yield. With their glorious war cry, Fight! Ames! Fight — ■.i :i:n!!ni!!iiii!!iiii!!::]r!;i!iiiMi:ri!!:iiTTiTT: 31 llltlllllM(MMIIfllMI4 lllillliaill«IIIIIIMIItllltinilltlmltfMIHH .fimingTKifafc- Ki THE HOME ECONOMICS DIVISION t m Ever since the home economics division started as only a small department, it has been noted particularly for its rapid growth. Other divisions have made rapid strides but in a school founded primarily for the instruction of agriculture and engi- neering, home economics work made a tremendous development. At the opening of Iowa State College many young women enrolled aiul the college authorities considered it advisable and practical to give them training in housekeeping. Mary B. Welch, wife of the first president, was asked to direct the work. At first the cour.ses were laboratory courses but later in 1871 they were supplemented by lec- tures. The department of cookery and household art was the first to be provided. The following year an experimental kitchen was established in the basement of Old Main building. So far as it is known, this kitchen was the first of its kind provided in an college. The .scope of the department was enlarged in 1877 by the addition of several new- courses, care of the house, plan of the week ' s work, care of the sick, sewing and cook- ing. The present course in institutional cooking ma ' b e traced back to this year when the cooking classes prepared and served meals for one table in the main dining room. In 1885, Mrs. Welch resigned, having succeeded in laying firm foundations at a time when domestic economy was regarded as a novelty in the college curricula of the country. She had studied at the Kensington School of Cookery, in New York, and had visited the schools of cookery in leading cities. She overcame popular prej- udices by the practical character of her work in college and by lectures to some of the most progressive women in the state. She conceived the idea of the practical uti- lity of extension work and established a precedent for it that has received a wide ap- plication throughout the country when she conducted a class of 60 women in Des Moines. In 1894 Margaret hall was biu ' lt and the school moved into one wing of it. I n that same year the two-year post-graduate course was begiui. Soon the course was divideil into the departments of domestic science and domestic art. The available space in Margaret hall and in the old Agricultural hall was inade- quate for the needs of the department and the present Home Economics building was formally ' opened in the fall of 1911. In 1912, the department became a dixision with Miss Catherine J. MacKnw who had been a profe.ssor in the department since 1910, as acting dean. The following year she was appointed dean of the division. In 1913, Omicron Nu, an honorary home economics organization, was established as a further incentive to high scholastic efforts. The growth of the division is re ealed by the fact that at the present time there are 54 instructors and 889 students as against 4 instructors and 136 students in 1911. At present there are seven departments, household art, household administration, ap- plied art, household science, home economics, vocational education, and physical edu- 32 cation. The Home Economics building is no longer aiicquatc and classes are being lield in Chemistry bm ' Iding, Science building, Old Agricultural hall, and three emergency buildings. In 1916, the Practice cottage was opened and here the Senior girls have actual experience in household administration. The home economics division maintains an extension department inider the leader- ship of Miss Neale S. Knowles. In the fall of 1916, the work became affiliated with the farm bureau extension work. The work has passed through the first stages in which is was necessary to present spectacular demonstrations. The people now appre- ciate the significance of the extension work and are seeking solid information instead of entertainment and excitement. THE - ' LITTLE INTERNATIONAL AT AMES 14 Iowa State College has its own international live stock show. It is called The Little International, to distinguish it from the more famous affair held yearly in Chi- cago. The institution was founded at Iowa State College in 1914, by the Saddle and Sirloin club, the departmental organization of the animal husbandry students. The pin ' pose of the show as outlined by the club at that time was to place emphasis on the fitting and showing of the stock rather than on the actual condition of the animal. The exhibition of 1922 was guided by the same principles. There were more than 200 animals exhibited. These were shown by students from 47 states and 23 countries. The students competed for the beautiful cups given t« the winners of each class. Some of the donors of the trophies are Weaver Garden, Wapello, Iowa, who awards a cup for the best fitted and shown beef animal ; Har- grove Arnold, Norwalk, Iowa, who awards one for the best fitted and shown dairy animal; Harper (S: Son, Ames, for swine; J. O. Singmaster iS: Son, Keota, Inwa, JJbI horses; and Collins Products Company of Clinton, Iowa, poultry. Ribbons are award- ed to first, second and third place winners. The same judges who inspected the stock originally make the final awards, scoring 73 per cent for im|irovement in appearance and 25 per cent for the actual showing in the ring. Floyd Johnston of Waterloo, won the cup for the best fitted and shown dairy ani- mal and also for the grand aw aid for the best fitted animal of any class in the entire show. J. C. Holbert of Ewing, Mo., took the championship for the best fitted and shown horse. 33 m niim mininmiiinimiii«iiiiininiiiniim«n mn im« mm n« ' ww« IHiii iM Oi !!AA,ka!ily! mi SkM-i ST. Henry C. Howard, son of J. R. Howard, president of the American Farm Bureau federation, was winner of a blue ribbon. He exhibited a Hereford heifer. Charles Singmaster, son of J. O. Singmaster of Keota, Iowa, won a blue ribbon with Jalap, a Percheron stallion that is considered one of the outstanding sires of the countr . (ieorgc E. Rosenfield, son of Carl Rosenfield, one of the leading breeders of Aber- deen Angus cattle in this country, was also a winner of a blue ribbon. ' Ihomas S. Serrano, Cabugo, Philippine Islands, on a blue ribbon with the best fitted and show n I ' olami China gilt. Roy L. Watkins, Keosauqua, Iowa, won the cup for tiie best fitted and shown sheep. J. E. Lisk, Marion, Iowa, won a championship for the best fitted and shown bird in poultry division. J. R. Pearson, Uecorah, Iowa, showed the championship hog. J. V. Wilson, Morning Sun. Iowa, won a championship for the best fitted and shown beef animal. An added feature in recent years has been the riding class contest for the combined classes of women and men. Miss Helen Curtiss, daughter of Dean C. F. Curtiss, of the agricultural di ision, was wiiuier of first place last ear. Ringing of the ' ictory bell which is situated west of Central building is at least one tradition that is familiar to all students and alumni of Iowa State College. To some of our alumni the peal was at one time far from being a joyfid sound, especially at 5 :30 a. m. The bell which weighs 700 pounds was purchased in 1890 at a cost of $325. It was intended at the time to install the bell in the tower of Old Main hall, now replaced by Central hall, but because of its excessive weight, it was set up where it now is located. The routine of Iowa State College students and fac- ulty during the years 1890 to 1901, was regulated by the bell ringer. The first call as at 5 :30 a. m. The stu- dents were required to make their beds and be ready for inspection by proctor at 6:15. At 6:30 breakfast call was sounded. The bell was rung on the hour from 7:00 a. m. until 4 :00 p. m., classes being started and dismiss- ed by it. It was also rung from 4:45 p. m. to 5:00 p. m. when at the last stroke the bell ringer ran to chapel and closed the doors. Roll was then taken by a proctor. Study hours were from 7:00 until 9:45 p. m. At 10:00 p. m. all lights were turned out. The bell has been used since 1901 to proclaim victories by Iowa State College teams. During the winter quar- ter of 1923 the bell was rung more times than any pre- vious quarter. ■,l)l«IM« l)lll l IMI«lllllllllttltlf«lllllllllll ll illl)lllllltlHII MltlMIIIINIMtM  Mllltlllll MHHIMnUUH(ll?a  «3-S ' -9-a«3 IVI ltHIIIIMII)«tl)IIMIMIIIII«IIIUIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIH«IMIIMiilMI tHt ' THE 1922 VEISHEA E i: n Prior to last spring it had always been the custom at Iowa State College to hold a series of divisional celebrations throughout the year. Early last year the Engineering council suggested that all of the divisions of the college combine their individual cele- brations into one huge all-college affair. The first annual Veishea, May 11 to May 14, was the result. The college was closed at noon on Thursday, May 1 1 and Veishea reigned supreme luitil Sunday, May 14. On Thursday afternoon, the May Fete was given on the West shore of Lake La ' erne. The audience, seated on the east side of the lake, was able to view the whole spectacle. The theme of the fete, ' The Return of Spring, by Harriet Schleiter, was the winner of a contest held by the Women ' s Guild. Helen Easter held the honor position of May Queen. Her assistants were Eleanor AIurra - and Marcella Dewell. Music was furnished by the college orchestra and band. Immediately following the May fete and on the same location, the annual knight- ing of senior engineers took place. At this time a hundred of the senior engineers who had done noteworthy work were initiated into the national society. Knights of the Or- der of the Guard of St. Patrick. The engineering council, official governing body of the engineering division, arrived on the scene first, and were followed by the hundred initiates. In a short but impressive service, Ann Stover, engineer ' s lady, knighted the men with the engineer ' s sword, the slide-rule. During the evening of the first day those who cared to dance, found a good floor and good music at State gymnasium. Others were well entertained by the four one act plays presented by the public speaking department in the assembly at Agriculture hall. The plays presented were, By Courier, Temperament, The ' cry Naked Boy, and Suppressed Desires. On the second day of the exposition, the mammoth ' eishea parade was the niorn- ing feature of entertainment for crowds of people. Two miles of floats, take-offs and decorated automobiles passed in review before thousands of spectators. The first part of the parade portrayed the history of Iowa. A float was made to represent each period of development in the history of the state. The float shown b the dairy department won the prize for being the most attractive. In the afternoon an all-college carnival displaying side shows, the renowned Ferris wheel, fortune tellers and endless numbers of roulette wheels replaced the Ag Carni- val on old State field. Late in the day, students in the military ilepartment ga e ex- hibitions of horse riding. W ' hilc the carnival was in progress, Ames and Nebraska were competing in the first of the two baseball games scheduled for the week end. All X ' eishea activities were concentrated on the Ames Scandals, on the night of April 12. This was the only attraction during the evening and full - 4000 people crowded into the Armory to witness what was probably the most attracti e entertain- ment that has ever been given here. For weeks the committee in charge had been col- lecting songs and suggestions for costumes and the general character of the production. From start to finish the Ames Scandals was a riot of fun, color, harmony and talent. t.-a-cusL «llllHIIHIII«IHII«MM«lllllimillllllHIIIIIIMIIHIIIII«limH IMHt MmH 36 lit (t t Saturday nioniing while the Nebraska baseball team was playing Ames on the State field diamond, all departments on the campus were holding open house. Kach depart- ment had attractive exhibits shoeing the work that had been accomplished during the previous year. Saturday afternoon 500 stutlents of the R. O. T. C. put on a sham battle in the vicinity of Lake La Verne. Artillery, infantry and engineering luiits were used in the engagements. The climax of Veishea was an all college dance held in the State g ninasium. Veishea was a new experiment at Iowa State College and the remarkable success of this first attempt at an all college exposition has laid a permanent foundation for its continuance. Every Iowa State College student should be proud of Veishea and should do all in his power to keep this splendid celebration going each year. Editor. loira State Student ; Dear Sir: This forenoon I had the pri ilege of seeing the AVestern Conference Cross Country meet held at Lafayette. The Ames men were the favorites before the race, and in a different way they are still the favorites. After a gruelling battle with a very strong field of starters, our men tied for third. In a way that was disappointing but with several of us strangers in a strange land this race filled us with a greater regard for our Alma Mater than any uneventful win could possibly have done. The whole team fought — one man unusually hard and another unbelievably so. One man was out of condition as he had been unable to practice for the last two weeks. A month ago he would have taken first place; but as it was, he fought — and his in- jured leg carried him to second place among a field of sixty-six starters. The big inspiration came from the little man on the team. After running a win- ning race for the first two miles, n muscle at last gave way. It seemed to paralyze one whole side of his body — but still he hobbled on. Runner after runner went around him it seemed that he could not take another step. The tears came, and his heart was nearh broken, tnr this was his last cross country jog for the old school — but the spirit of the school, that wonderful old ' Tight, Ames, Fight was in incible. That little man put up the biggest fight of an of the 66 starters. AVith stifled groans and heart-broken sobs that man from .-Xnies ran the other three miles and FIXI.SHED the race — not in last place, either. The stands had shown little interest in the finish, but the - found a cheer to give for this show of ner e and fight. The score keeper said that he did not win, but Ames DID win, and in a much larger sen.se than points can show. It was a i i(i lesson in school loyalty and the old Ames ideal. Cordially yours, Ai. AIwATT, C. E. ' 21. ii4 .- g gnTTTTTlTTTITT; 37 lltllMHIUIIIMIIMIIIHIIMItlUtt«UIHIUIt«IMMHIIIIIMtlHIII(MMIIIIIII«tMIIIIII«IIIHIII. THE CAMPANILE For nearly a ([uarter of a cfiuur . I(i %a State student ha e timed their dail ' routine by the Campanile chimes at fifteen minute intervals. Dr. E. W. Stanton, late junior dean and vice-president of the colletie, was the donor of the chimes, which cost $7,500. They were purchased fiom John lax lor and ( ' o?npany, hell foundry, of England, in 1899. The tower in which the chimes were placed was erected by college authori- ties at an expense of about $4,500, and the clock also furnished by the college, cost $2,300. A duty of $3,000 on the bells should have been paid according to tariff laws of thai date, before they could be admitted to this country. Senator William B. Allison of Dubuque, chairman of the ways and means committee, influenced Congress to remove this duty and thus eliminate part of the expense of the bells. When the idea for the erection of a Campanile was first considered, the southwest tower of Margaret hall was selected as a location but later investigation showed that the tower wasn ' t strong enough to hold the chimes. Some consideration was given to the placing of the bells over the Women ' s gymnasium in Margaret hall but this idea was discarded, because the authorities believed that it would destroy the architectural beauty of that building. Later the present site was chosen. When the Campanile strikes lower C, a niass of copper and tin four feet nine inches in diameter weighing over a ton and a half vibrates to make the noise. The baby bell, high E, represents only 415 pounds of metal and is two feet, two and a half inches in diameter. The ten bells, comprising the chimes, range between these two extremes. .A memorial tablet of terra cotta on the north side of the tower facing the campus bears an inscription which gives the Campanile much of its significance, These chimes are dedicated in hallowed memory of Margaret McDonald Stanton by her husband, Edgar W. Stanton. Inscriptions dedicating tlie bells to Dr Stanton ' s first wife were moulded into each hell when the were made and they can still he seen ver ' plainly. Starting with the highest pitched bell, the inscriptions are as follows: And soften down the rugged road of life — Kirk White; Ring merrily, ye chimes, evermore — Charles MacKay; Harmonizing this earth with what we feel above — Shelley; My language is understood all over the world — Hayden; K ery deed of goodness is like a chord set in the heart — Thomas Macklelan; Sweetly on the evening air, sounds the vesper chime of prayer and rings a thousand memories, at vesper and at prime — Coxe; Music is the child of prayer — the companion of religion — Chateaubriand; A woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised — Proverbs, XXXI :30; Then pealed the bells, more loud and deep; Ood is not dead; nor does he sleep; the wrong shall fail, the right prevail — with peace on earth, good will to men — Tennxson. The Campanile tower proper is Italian Renaissance in style and rests on a foundation ex- tending six feet below the surface of the ground. The tower is 110 feet in height and the chimes rest on a concrete arch 75 feet from the ground. The structure is 18 feet, eight inches square. A removable panel was placed on the south side of the tower for the purpose of admitting the bells, which were drawn up by block and tackle and horse power. Tradition has it that when the largest bell was lifted almost to the top, the team, after reaching the animal husbandry barns, was unable to hoist it further. Several men took hold of the rope and accomplished the final lift. The company which cast the bells is today considered the largest establishment of its kind in the world, having been organised in 1366 in Leicester, England. The Ames chimes were the first order received by that company from America. The chimes are played each morning and evening by an experienced bell ringer. The striking of the bells every 15 minutes is controlled automatically by the clock, working by a system of ropes and pulleys. iU3 ;: ; ..J ill AGRONOMY CLUB CORN AND SMALL GRAIN SHOW OFFICERS Prrsidnit H. K. ' ii.soN- Vice-Prcsident J. L. Fowler Secretary R. R. Jefferson ' Treasurer M. D. Textrum The Students ' Corn and Small Grain show, fostered by the Agronomy club, was first introduced at Iowa State College in the winter of 1914-15. From a very small and modest beginning this show has come to be one of the really big events of the col- lege year. More interest and enthusiasm were shown at the last show than ever before in the history of the club. The 1923 show was held in Agricultural hall, January 3, 4, and 5. A total of 200 entrants made up the largest show in the history of the institution. Interest among the agricultural students was general as the prize winners, included men enrolled in the animal husbandry, horticulture, agricultural economics, non-col- legiate, and farm crops and soils department. Exhibits consisted of single and ten ear samples of corn, ten ears popcorn, half peck samples of winter and spring wheat, oats, r e, barley, and soy beans, two quart sam- ples of red clover, timothy, and sweet clover seed, and one quart samples of corn silage. In order to stimulate greater interest in the show the faculty of the farm crops and foils department offers a beautiful loving cuji annuallv to the student entering the largest number and best qualit) of exhibits, the trojihy becoming tlie permanent pro- perty of the winner. ]M. B. Matteson, senior animal husbandry student of Burchinal, Iowa, was declared winner of the cup. 39 ■ ' iminiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiii in: Rothcl Walker, a freshman student from Mediapolis, Iowa, exhibited the grand champion 10 and single ear samples of corn, together with several other winning .■■aniples. AValker was runner-up for the cup and received an award of honor. P. H. (joodman, who won the cup last year, was also a ranking high man, giving Matteson and Walker live competition. As a special feature a seed identification contest, open to e ery student and faculty member of the college, with the exception of the farm crops and botany faculties, was held in connection with the show. Merle R. Bunker, of Mt. Pleasant, received the five dollar prize offered, when he correctly identified 137 of the 150 seeds in the con- lest. Albert Pettinger and Russell Perry, were the high ranking men. ;3 ll iie- si i rsio DR. L. H. PAMMEL AS THE PRESIDENT OF THE STATE BOARD OF CONSERVATION During the last 30 years Dr. L. H. Pammel, head of the botany department at Iowa State College, has been interested in and active for the movement to establish state parks for the preservation of places of historic, natural, and recreational interest. In his own words he is striving for the addition of the park- — city, state, and national — to round out the four fundamentals of our civilization — home, school, and church. In 1901, an organization called the Iowa Park and Forestry association was formed at Ames. Dr. Pammell was one of the leaders of this organization. Its purpose was to encourage the establishing of parks. Several years later it became the Iowa Con- servation association, and put on an extensive publicity campaign the result of which was the passing by the legislature of a bill providing for a State Board of Conser- vation. The board consisting of four members was instructed, to investigate the pro- posed park areas in Iowa from a standpoint of archaeology and to investigate a means tor the promotion of forestry and the protection and preservation of bird and animal life. The reports on such areas were to be submitted to the General Assembly thru the Executive Council. The board was appointed in December, 1918, and the legislature gave it an appro- priation of 100,000 dollars as financial support, and allowed it to receive donations of land and money. Kach of the members for the board was chosen from a standpoint of his fitness as an authority on one of the subjects for investigation. The personal duties of the members of the board are to make out reports on every area under con- sideration as a state park, and to file them u ith the Conservation Board which either rejects or adopts the recommendations. B reason of his prominence in the botanical 3 40 llllilitllltllHKIMHIIIMIIDIIIIIIilllllKIMtllllHIIII world. Dr. Pamniel was appointej to a membership of the board, and at its first meet- ing he was imanimoush ' elected president, which position he still holds. In 1918, omitting the state levees, docks, and city parks, there were not 10 acres of woods, lakes, or river margins where the public could go and not be trcsiiassing on private property. In 1919, the Executive Council had or nearly completed the pur- chase of 43,000 acres of park land, divided into nine parks ranging in size from fifteen to fourteen hundred acres. Only about one hundred acres of this had been donated and of the $117,000.00 paid out, $5,000.00 had been contributed by private parties. One publication has aptly commented on this result. This shows what can be done under the guidance of an enthusiastic leader, such as Dr. Pammel, president of the board. As the botanist of the board. Dr. Pammel ' s first duties were the investigation of the forestry and plant materials and the estimation of the scenic value of the districts under consideration. This work entailed much work both i n the field and in the making up of the reports. The first district to receive his attention was the Backbone area in Delaware county. His report shows his very careful personal investigation in that he has listed all the varieties of trees, shrubs, and plants found there. As the park contains 1400 acres one can appreciate the regard which Dr. Pammel has for the state park move- ment. In addition to the above district he has investigated four other proposed park areas: Buckingham Lake area in Mills county, Lower Des Moines area, Moorhead Caves in Jackson county, and Wild Cat Den in Muscatine county. Besides the botanical work. Dr. Pammel has had to attend to his duties as president and chairman of the board. This has required his attendance at every one of the board meetings which arc held at various places in the state. Frequentls ' he is called upon to lecture to various state clubs upon the subject of conservation ; this lecturing he does as a part of the publicity campaign for conservation which he has helped to carry on. In company with Mr. Harlan, secretary of the board, Dr. Pammel has interviewed many of the prominent people of the state who might be interested in mak- ing donations of land or money. These donations have amounted to $50,000.00 in money and several hundred acres of land. Two years ago, Dr. Pammel was appointed chairman of a special committee for the investigation of lakes. He has conducted these investigations along with his other work, and now the state has over 45,000 acres of lake land in connection with the park areas. The people of Iowa certainly owe a great deal to Dr. Pammel for his work which he has not done with the idea of personal gain. By his efforts the future generations of Iowa will be able to see the natural beauties of the state which at one time were threatened with destruction. =«(5gS i= 1 N what our college has prockiced and in what she is producing lies the true glory of her name. The fol- lowing pages give a glimpse through Who ' s Who in America— 1922- 1923, and in the words of that book tells of a few Ames alumni who ha e won their way to success and the right to have their names and works recorded in the pages of that volume. Though these few alumni do not include Iowa State ' s entire repre.sentation in AVho ' s VV ho or those who have through their achievements brought honor to their Alma Mater, it is thought that these few will be representative. Furthermore, it is hoped that by this means the alumni, faculty and students of Iowa State College may be brought to- gether in a greater understanding of her ideals. The Kditors. I milll lllf 11 II ■■ ! ■ nm u tifi II  n II III! II lilt II II II iiiHIlM pill itTtw-wu-if itirTfixyfTT VTrTfinrTTT Trint Triii if ii i ARMSTRONG. William C. civil engr. ; b. at Marietta, la.. 1859; s. John C. and Elizabeth (Alexander) A.: B. S. in C. E., la. State Coll., Ames, la., 1881; m. Mrs. Emma Moody, of St. Paul, Minn., 1889. Engaged in practice, 1881, and since 1899 with C. N, W. Ry., as resident engr., 1899-1902, Bridge engr., 1902-4, was ter- minal engr, in charge of new passenger terminal in Chicago, 1906-11. engr. of bridges, and now terminal engr, in charge of cctnstrnction of new union station St. Paul. Minn. Mem. Am. Soc, C. E., 1909, Western Soc. Engrs. (pres. 1912-13). Chicago Engineers ' Club. Home: 91 Hague Ave.. St. Paul. Oftice: L ' nion Sta,. St. Paul. L 7T T22r ' iAIJ . KIiiu ' i- Darwin. I ' litnniulouist : It. ai Allu ' iis. Vt., Sei)t. 21. 1870; s. Ltrov A. and Marv A, (Mans- field) H.: n. S.. la. Stall ' ( ' (.II.. IHi). ' ), M. Sc. 1898: Ph. I).. Ohio State l .. 1907: m. Mildred R. Nnrvell, of Ft. Ciillins. Cold.. June 14. 1H!I! . Asst. in zoology and iMJtoinohifiy. la. State (  Il., lrt!). ' -7: asso. prof, same. Coin. Agrl. Coll.. 1HU8-190-J: prof, zoology and entoniolimy, Ctah Agrl. Coll., li 01i-7: dir. Kxpt ' . Sta. and Sell, of A ;r.. Ctah A rrl. Coll.. 1907-1( : state )-iiioninloi;ist of Wis., 1 91 (M H ; prof, zoology and en- tniiinlMij ' , la. State Coll.. and state entonioiogist of Ta.. 1! I rt ' J 1, on leave iis asst. see. agr.. .Ullie 1-. 1020. Oct. 1. 1921: dir. scientifie work. l ' . S. Oept. Ayr., 1921-. Fellow A. A. A. S.. Entoniol. Soc. Anierira. l tali A end. Seicnee ( ])res.. 1910). la. Aend. Seleiu-e: inem. WashitiKton Acad. Science, liiol, and Kntoniol. soes. Washinpton. Am. Assn. Keon. KntonKtloKists (pres.. 191S). Paeifie Slope Assn. same (pres,. I91. ' )-19I(i ), Am. (lenetie . ssn.. Sigma Xi. Phi Kaj)i)a Phi. (iamma Sijrma Delta (pres.. 1921-22). Chilis: Cosmos. Washington Coun- try, Author of svNtematie and life history studies of Cereopidae, .lassidae and FnlKoridae, eeoiu)mic stud- ies of codling moth, grasshoppers and leaf hoppers, causing rvirh- leaf of sugar lieets and hopper linrn of potatoes, also studies poultry Iiri eding. Aildr. ' .s: Dcpt. of Agrieiilture. Washington. D. C. II Ltn It II II MW II II II   II  M II niLiiunji II II II iL II II mm ii ir f if im r pm II II 11 Till TiiLirTrii ii ii ir ii Tr firini iriTTririiii m ti -irtt iiiiw ■I r CARVER, Geovge WnshinEton. edueatnr: b. of slave parents, tin farm near Dianuirul (Trdve. Mo., about 1864; in infancy lost futber. and was stolen and carried into Ark. with mother. who was never heard of again : was boueht from raptors for a race horse valued at $300, and returned to former home in Mo. : worked way through high sch., Minneap()lis, Kan., and later through coll.: B. S. Agr.. Iowa State Coll. Agr. and Mechanic .Vrts, 189-4. M. S. Agr., 1896; unmarried. Klccted mem. faculty la. State Coll. Agr. and Mechanic Arts, and phiced in charge greenhouse, de- voting spl. attention tc) bacterial lab. work in systematic botany : teacher Tuskegee Inst since 1896, now dir. iJept. o( Research. Mem Royal Soc. of Arts, London. 1917. . ddress: Tuskegee, . la. BRYAX. William Alanson. toolopist. mnscnm dir. ; b. - ' nr. Xew Sliiiron. la.. Dee. 23. 1875; s. William A. and Cullicrine M. (Pearson) B. : B. S., la. State Coll.. 1896: m. Ruth M.. d. Howiird M. and Julia Go.ss, of Windoni, Minn., June 20. 190H; m. 2d, Klizabeth Jane, d. Augustus F. and Nellie W. Let- son, of Buffalo. N. v.. Mar. IH. 1909 (died l- ' eb. 5, 1919); m. 3d, Maud M. Kohinson, June 21. 1921. Asst. dept. zoolnpy in eharge la. State Coll. Mus., 1893: t)n expdn. to Big Stone Lak.-. 1H94: spl. lec- turer on mus. methods. I ' , of Minn,, Ind. l ' .. U. of ChicaKo. Purdue I ' ., la. Coll. and Drake C. 1895-7; ) asst. cnratiir in charge dept. ornithoIoKy, Field Co- I himliian Mus.. 1898-9: rep. V. S. Dej)!. ' Agr. to in- vestigate fauna of H. I.. 1899 : traveled in Kurope and .Vmerica. stvidving mus, admin.. 19IHI ; curator. Bushiip Mus. of Kthnology and Xat. History, Hono- hilu. 1900-7: organized, and was made pres. Pacific Sci. Instu,, 1907 : prof, zimlogy and geology, I J. of Hawaii, 1909 19; scientific expdn.. Latin Am.. 1919- 20: dir. L. A. Mus. Hist.. Sci. and Art, I921-. Pre- sented pvt. collection. 10.000 natural histury spec, to New Sharon (la.) High Sch.. 19o:i: hon. curator Pa- cific ornithology. Minn. Acad. Natural Sciences. 1904. Fellr v A. A. . S. : mem. Am. Ornithologists ' Union. Cooper Ornith. Club, Am. Fisheries Soc.. Am. Mus. Assn.. Hawaiian Hist. Sim-, (v.p. ) : mem. 4th Inter- nat. Ornith. Congress. AHtlior of hoitkH on Nat. Hist. and scientific papers. Home: 2401 W. Hth St. Ad- drpRK: L. A. Museum. Exp. Park. Lon Angeles. Wis.: d. Lucius luul Miiria (Clinton) Lane: ed. In. State Coll. of Li.. took spl. course in law: was prin. high sch. and gen. .supt. of schs.. Mason City. la.: ni. Leo Chapmaii, 1884 (died 1886): 2d. George William Call. 1890 (died 1905). State lecturer and organizer la. WoiMan Suffrage Assn.. 18S)U-2 : since then in service of Nat. . m. Wcnnan Suffrage Assn., of which was pres.. liMM)-; , and since 1916: pres. Internat. Woman SulTrage Alliance, 1904-. Has lectured in nearly every state; worked for suffrage in successful -a ' inpaigns in nearly all the woman suffrage states: lead- er in campaign to snliniit a woman suffrage amendment to the Federal Constitution, hill successfully passed in Ho. of Kep.. May, 1919, and Senate, .luiie. 1SII9. ratified Aug. .n ' . 1920. proclaimed . ug. 26. 192IJ. Mem. wom- an ' s com. Council Xat. Defense. Has lectured in almost every country of Europe. Home: 404 Riverside Drive, New York, X, Y. I HANSKX, Xiels Khln-si ' ii. hnrtii-ulturist : I., nr. Kibe. iM ' iiiiiiirk. .Jan. 4, IHlili; s. Atuin-w and a niill (Midl- ;:aanl) H. ; canu ' to l . S. with pan-nts. 1H7:!; i. S., la. Slatf Coll.. 1887. M. S.. ISUfj; (Sc. 1).. Tni. of S. ]).. 1917) ; m. Kmina Klise I ' ainmel, Nov. IC, 1898 ((iii ' d J)t ' c. Ifi. 1904); 2d. Dora Sophia Pain- iiiel, Aug. 27. 1907. In pr;ictiral liorticultui-c, com- iiicri ' ial Iowa mirsi ' i-ics, 188H-91 ; asst. prof. hort.. la. Stilt. ' Coll.. lH91-. : prof, hnrt., S. I). Agrl. Coll. and Expt. .Sta. sincH 189. ). Spent 4 mo.. 1894, in hort. study in 8 ronntrics of Knrnjn ' ; made lu mo. c.vplor. trip. 18978. for 1 . S. D.-pl. Af;r., rolh-rtiny; new ero- nmnic si-cds and plants in Kussia. Turk ' stan. West- ern China. Siberia. Ti-anscaiH-asia ; made (i mo. ex- phir.. 190 ;. for V. S. I ept. Apr., around world throuKli 1. apt and. Kinlan l, Kussia, Siberia. Matu-hu- ria and -lapan: made 9 imi. explor., 1908-9. for V. S. Siberia, Moafiiilia. Manchuria. Turkes- asia and N. Africa; orieinat ir of new I ' d the Turki ' stan and Siberian alf ni- ck alfalfa, developing from spoonful of seed in 19(i. ' to over UiOO bushels of sped in ]91l ; originated a method of Held liybridizu- tion of hardy alfjilfas by transplanlinK : made .  mo. explor. for alfalfa for S. 1 . in Siberia. I9i;t, also im- ported the Siberian fatruniped sheed. Author : Nu- merous hort. textbooks. bulb ' tins and paper.s. Awarded (J. K, White titdd nu-dal of honor for emi- nent service in hm-iicnlture. by Mass. Ut)rl. Soc, 1917. Sec. S. 1). Stiite Hort. Sue, wince 189j. Dept. ii tan, ' l ' rans ' auc fruits : intnuluc fas; also introduced Co HITCHCOCK, AliMiM- Krtwiircl. lawyer, b. North Keryeii. (ieiiesee Ct)., X. Y.. Oct. 29, 18,5, ' J ; .s, I..tiiising Milnndo and Harriet (Lumle.v) H.: B. S., la. State Coll. Agr. and Mechanic Art.s, 1876: I-L, B„ State I ' , of la., 1880; ni. Louise L. Lawton, of I,.vons, Clinton Co,, la.. June 20, 1882. Began practice at Mitchell, Dak. (now S. D.). 1880- : cil.v ntt.v.. Mitchell. 1886- 92: state ' s atty.. Davison Co., S. D.. 1891- :i: mayor of Mitchell, 190816. Trustee State Agrl. Coll.. 1891:!, Dakota Wesley- an r., 190. ' i-9: regent of edu., S. D., 1909 1... Mem. State Bar Assn. of S. D. Democrat. Conglist. Mason (K. T. ). Home: Mitchell. S. D. ;iiiiiiiiig miutm II II nil nni KIRKI ' ATKICK, Edwin Asbury. psjchologisi : h. Pe- ' oria. MHhiiska Co.. la., Sept. 29, 1862: s. Francisl Marion and Catliarine (Bradbury) K. ; B. S., la. j Slate Coll., 1887, M. Ph.. 18il9: srholar, 18«9SI(I, fellow. 1890-1. Clark U.i m. t ' lorenoe May Clifford, of Stanton, Minn., Aug. 29, 1895. Asst. in niathe- maties and English, la. Stale Coll.. 1887-9: inslr. . Winona (Minn.) State Xonnal Seh., 1892-7: dir. child study dejjt., Kilehburfi: (Mass.) State Normal Seh., sinee 1898. Lecturer on edu.. Smith Coll.. 1905, Columbia. 1906, U. of Chieago, 1907, I ' niv. of] Virginia. 1910, Cornell Univ., 1911, fniv. of W. Va.. 19i:!. and Cniv. of Vt.. 1914. Pellow A. A. A. S. ; mem. Am. Psychol, . ssn. : sec. Minn. Child Study .-Vssn.. I8flli-7: pres. child study dept. X. E. -•v., 1904. Received gold medal as collaborator child- study exhibit, St. I.ouis Expn., 1904: member Mass. Civic League. .-Xuthor: Inductive Psychology, 1895; Fundamentals of Child Studv. 190:): Genetic Ps chology, 1909: The Indiividunl in the Making, 1911; The I ' se of Money, 1915: Kiindamentnls of Soi ' iology. 1916: Studies in Psychology, 1918: Imagination and] Its Place in Edm-ation. 919. Exchange teacher at j Bellingham (Wash.) State Normal Seh.. 1910 17. Home: North l-eominster. Mass. . ddress: Fitchburg, ' Mass. Ill II II II ■ ■  u II II H lilt 1111 mi II u on II II Ti  mi u imi i i n i l M I T in rTrTrTiTmii iiit trT| hitti iiiiin ir ii im ii r n MT i ' J ' i it ilEAL). Ehvtuul. engineer ; b. Patriot, Ind., Jnn. 16, 1858; s. Oaniel and Lucinda M. : B. S.. Purdue U.. 1882. M. S.. 1884 (L . Engrine., 1904): C. E.. Iowa State College. 1883. Assistant engr.. U. S. Engi-s.. 1882-3; prof, in Colo. Agri. Coll.. 1883-4 and 1886-8; territorial and state engr. of Wyo.. 1888-99: chief irrigation and drainage investigation, U. S. Dept. Agr.. 1897-1907; prof, institu- tions and practice of irrigation, U. of Cal.. 1898-1907: ohmn. State Rivers and Water Supply Cominn.. Victoria. Australia. 1907-1.3; prof, rural instns.. U. of Cal., since 1915. and chmn. Land Settlement Bd. Consulting engr. for various irrigation and water works COS. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E.. British Inst. C. E. Has written articles, reports, etc.. on ir- rigation, engineering, and other subjects. Author: Irrigation Institutions. Home: 2736 Bancroft W ' nv. Berkelev. Calif. N )■: W !■; I . I .. Wiliiinr], ciilcnn.iliiKist : li. Hull, la., .M:ir. 4. 1H7. : s. Williiim .1. and Kliziilu-lli A. (.ViiHiTsiin ) X.: li. S.. In. Slalv Ci.ll.. IKilT. M. .S.. ISllit: D. Sc. from same I ' liUi ' s;! ' . lir. ' l: m. Hi ' li-n M. Main ' ! ' , (if (JaU ' stmrj;. Illinois. I-Vliruar.v 12. 1907. Assistant cntomoliisist. In. Ac- ricultunil Kxpt. Sta.. 1H97-9. Ohio Acil. Kxpt. Sta.. 18!)9190-. ' : asst. iMitomoloirist and aiilarist. Tex. . ffrl. Kxpt. Sta.. 1902; Stat tomologist of (ia.. 190:i-4: ellto- incilocist, La. .Vtri ' l. Kxpt. Sta. and see. and entomologist Slat ' Crop Pest f ' oniinn. of I. a.. 190. .9: entomoloKist. 19101. ' ): plant icnnmr. Fla. Stale I ' lant H(l.. 191. )-: ilean Coll. of Aki . and dir. Kxpt. Sta. and Aeil. Kxtension I)iv.. T. of Kla.. 1921 . Fellow A. A. A. S. : mem. .Vssn. Keoii. Knt nnoloKists (pres., 1920). Phi Kappa Phi. (iamma Sij;nia l ' !ta. Mason (Sliri- ner). Uotarian. A ldress: (iainesville, I ' la. RASMrSHKX, Kii ' derik. Sec. iigricuUure of Pa.: 1). Hals. Denuiiirk. Jul.v IS. 1876: s, Xeils and Kirstiiu (.li ' iisen) R.: cnme to V. S.. 1.S99, natinalizod citizen. 1912; B. S. in Ari-.. la. Stale Coll.. 1905: m. Faith Winifred Klliotl. of Hillsdale. Mich.. Oct. 2. I ' ll!). Asst. in daiiving. Purdue r.. 19(l.5-(i: asst. l i ' of. dairying. Ta. State Coll.. 19n(i-7: prof, dair.ving. N. H. State ( dl.. 19117-16: prof, dair.v husbandry. Pa. Stale Coll.. 1911). 19: sec. of agr. of Pa.. term 1919.2.S. Mem. ( ' . S. Pood Admin- istration. World War. Trustee Pa. State Coll. Xlem. Phi Kapiia Phi. Alpha Zeta. Repuhlican. Lutheran. ilason. Trav- eled exteusivelj- in northern and middle Europe stndyiug agrl. einiditions. .■Vlitllor of various bulletins and articles relatinji to agr. and dairving. Home: Harrisburg. Pa. WALLACE. Henry Cnntwell. Sec. of Agriculture: h. Rock Island. III.. Mav 11. 1866; s. Henry and Nan- nie (rantwell) W. ; B. S. A.. la. Slate Coll. A r. iind Mechanic Arts, 1892; m. Carrie May Brodhesid. of Muscatine. In., Nov. 24. 1887. Farmer and Iireeder pure bred live stork. Adair Co., la.. 1887-91: lirof. dairying. In. State Coll.. 1893-. ' ): editor Creaiit- f ' tfi (imi-ttr. and Farm (niil Pair! . l89;J-5: mgr. and asso. editor Wallan- ' s Fanner. 189. -1916, editor same since Keb.. 1916: pres. and treas. Wallace l uh. Co.. Capital City Printing Plate Co.: dir. Central State Hank. Secretary of Agriculture in Cabinet of Presi- dent Harding. Mar. 4. 192 1-. Mem. V. S. Live Stock Industry Com. (exec, com.); sec. Corn Belt Meat Producers ' Assn. 1-1 yrs. ; permanent clim. Nat. Ship- ]iers Conf. : mem. Nat. War Work Council Y. M. C. A.; chmn. la. War Work Council Y. M. C. A.: chmn. state exec. com. la. Y. M. C. A.; mem. Internal. Com. Y. M. C. A.: mem. e.vec. com. Roosevelt Memo- rial Assn. Mem. I elta Tan Delta. Phi Kappa Phi. Republican. I ' nited Presbyn. Mason. Clubs: Prai- rie. Des Moines, (Jrant. Golf and Country (I es Moines): Chevy Chase, Cosmos. University (Wash- ingt( n). Home: Des Moines, la. Address: I ept. of AKricuItuie. Wash i nut on. I). C. U 1I1 1 I I I I  ii Mini  ■ noLtmjuijui I I I! II n nil m i rriTim im j III II II III! II II m i II II II II iniiiiiiiniLii i ni ii mi u ii ii n ii ii i ii i ii ii i ii I WATTLES. Gurdon Wallace, banker: h. at Richford. X. y.. May 12. 1855: .s. -lames and Betsy Ann (Whiting) W, : la. State Coll.. Ames, leaving coll. Jr. hr. on account of illness; (hon. M. Ph.. same, IHOfi): ra. Jennie Leete. of Clarksville. la.. Oct. 20. 1881: m. 2d. Julia Vance. June. 1918. Admitted to Iowa bar. 1880: commenced banking as cashier. Farmers Bank. Carroll. la.. 1882: Pres. First Xat. Bank. Carroll. 1886-92: v.-|i.. 1892-19U1, pres.. 19i)l- 6, Union Nat. Bank. Omaha ; became vire-president r. S. Natin the board. _ . . . _ H.) Loan Banking Co.. 1886- : pres. Omaha Council Bluffs St. Ry. Co.. 1906- ; dir. Chicago Great Western Rv. Co. Republican. Kpiscopalian. Co. supt. schs., ' Carroll Co.. la.. 1879-81: pres. Omaha E. pn.. 1898: pres. Xeb. State Comm. to St. Louis Expn. (by appmt. of gov. of Xeb.). 1904: del. Rep. Nat. Conv.. 1904 : pres. Omaha Grain Exchange, 1904-9: pres. Ak-Sar-Ben. Omaha. 1905-li-7: trustee Bellevue Coll.. 1909- : mem. Delta Tau Delta. Clubs: Omaha. University. Coiuuiercial. etc. Wrote, A Crime . gainst Labor. 1909. a brief history of the Omaha street car strike. ? ederal food administrator for Xeb.. 1917. Home: Holl wood. Calif. Nat. Bank. Ouiaha : l e -ame vice-president tinnal Bank, Omaha, 1906, and chairman of ,. 1916: western manager of Rochester (X. u_ i ._t.:„_ _ , JO,? . r 1... e. -e--C C:-IIIIMIIIMI)MinilHIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIH IIIIIIMIIII(IMIII«IIIIMIMI IIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII«IIHII)tlllllilMIIIIIIIII|i 3n iMemoriam (general Raines i uslj ILincoln tcfJifan ; pfiKcr Ambrose 5?eatf) i iii MiiiiiiiiiiH iHi iiiiiniiiiiiniiinmiiii Miiiiiim i iim(HnnniimiHMniiniimtiiiinimiiiiiniiiiiiii M TUB 8TU1  .. ' ' ' , IOWA Si. AMES. IO v . (ImI Kamr firil) Six DoIUti, Ind«cot l Fm for Quirler '  :«il by Board of EilucMion (or t r -msrli-r U  (. i!i ' trt ' uli ■liiJ ' .-Oli ' ■ '  l, ,1 cUm. ' « ■ ' ■I ' l (Tu. ' . ' iaj) It ( ■• ■ , ' ua, Kw .ul..cnlkB.nl.. ,t-.J...U (b, fr will lliv r irolftr ilun-itu- ! ' l l- ■AMPED IIV TlillAPfRrlt j VA STATE COLLEGE LTUBE AND MECHANIC ARTP TUITION FOR QUARTER. WM n ' ' .Ai , y ' ■- : - :; T O Z 3 5 z 3 31 IOWA STATE COl.I.liGH AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTS 1 1 | ll| H 1 ■1 ! r 1 Fp PHKj H Hk Vf i IE H 1 H y ■■ ' 1 1 1 1 - JUIU 1 ait ;- J t I ' l --■■. i ) |P p With Ilu- ripinhui of C.oilcye in the Fall (ami- the iistiat Rril Taf r, thr t rreliiK oj Old Friends, and- The introduction of frrshmrn to Pr,p Caps and the Sunshine Club- Later on Piips and Sol liomorcs On Slcih liiLl m ■,ar «-|Mi ' «i--iM- '  ir« A A M Before a Large Crov-d .7 Monstfr Pep Meeting and Elaborate Decorations Featured the Homecoming of 1922 w On HomnomuKj Day atumni ijrretcd old friends and everybody iiafc ird The .1 mis-Missouri joothatl ijame. A large crowd folloiufJ the Band and tin- Sirens to 1 P ' yl DfS Moinis for tin- Drake name ' Dcac ' s senstUional loui uioivn at Gnnnrtl and The Drake-.lmes i iiiin- at Dcs Moiiiis Drai: a targe folloiiiiKj of toyal .Imes rooters. In iJir Fall llir F ' lii imrif chose their Ourrri and held their annuat Camp Fire in North Woods. (• all enjoy our fun at times and the many dances held on the campus during the year ivere a constant source of deliaht. During the cold ijjinter months the Public Speak- ing Department did good work in keeping us all •well entertained. Just before tlie Holidays the big Cliristmas tree •was iiijJited and u.e all yathtiid beneath it to siny Cliristmas carols. ! [ilij ' ! ' ! . There lias been much ' liHIIimHIMIIIl ■ Construction on the campus lfTr ' ' '  J During the past year. HI ■■■ Hi J [ 1 1 . -S— „. , -iy  f i4 ' .2 4 A ' ' t— •••l ■SsTlMuf ' i ' : ■ 1 SluJivd late and got up early ll ' e ' -ve had our serious moments ii:hen qi ' f In our endless pursuit of knoviledge In our laboratories tve hair obtained muili ijood practical experieni And it 14-aj a lucky man ii-lto could cat liis luncheon in the Hec Tea Room Thi- I lulu ' a parade txillt Its many floats v;as of ( rial intirist To the large craved that gatliered to iiilness it- The May Fete and the Kiiii lilintj of tin ' Lnuuu-crs Jl ' ere of unusual interrst to the spectators and Helped to make ilie first annual I ' eisliea a success. HErlTi Wg S 1 . jd s s P fnl B ■vu v l ■ vl l ' Vktl « L 1 . l H 1 ■ B ' 1 1 MH HL . HBKii W I K H ' i ' ' dm JkS UKSK U Il ' irn sprinij rrlurncd and o inid up the u;oodi to our eager joolsicps Otiff more, ive ivrre ivoril to desert the elass moms for the deliijhls of all out-doors. hid 111 the sirinij n youny man ' s jtiniy- •IMItll«)IIIIMMIHIIIMIK(HIMOHIIIIIIIItll«UII)llltllll lllllllltllHHIIMIIIIIIIMIIIil« IHtllltlHtll lltHIHI)m 3-9 ' 3 d-a-9- Adams, ek o (;. Wirnicliafio, Minn. Inimal lltisliandry Tlieta Chi ; oiin Stall ' Sliuifiil Staff ■20, ■21. AiTA, Fariav CiMiiuil Hluffs i.li ' iliiiat Eni hii ' iiinii Bachelors 20; C. S. A. ■20, ' 21. Ai.i.RN, B. W ' lr.MOT Laurens .hjiiiulliual luoiwmiis Phi Delta Delta ; T. L. B. ; Presi- dent Intramural Athletic . sMici- ation : Track ' 22. Alle , Bvrov G. Des Mciines Farm Maiiat i ' mint Phi Delta Theta ; T. L. B. ; Inter-Fraternity Council ; V. M. C. A. ; Home Oratorical Contest ' 22, ' 23; Missouri Valley Ora- torical Contest ' 23 ; loixa Stale Slud,-nt ' 20, ' 21; Editor 1924 Bomb. Ames, Isabelle Traer InJusliial Sriniif Omega Pi; Glee Cluh; Grinnell College. AxDERSOV, T. A. Belton, Missouri I ' oialioiial Educalion Lambda Chi . lpha; Freshman Inter-Fraternitv Council ' 22; Dixie Club; Block and Bridle. Anderson . ' incent M. Stanton .Inimal Husbandry Angus, George L. Chicago Heights, III. Dairy llii.shandry Block and Bridle: Band ' 21, ' 22. .• renson. Rov D. Fort Dodge Ci ' vil Engiiiiirinij Tau Ciamma Nu ; Inter-Local Fraternity Council; .A. S. C. E. ; oii« Enijinrfr Staff. Armstrong, Clarence C. Grinnell .Inimal Husbandry Sigma Pi; .Ag Club; Block and Bridle; Inter-Fraternity Council; Class ' restling. ja!-a-a- -a-n-H- :imM« M H(l(imi«llilllillMlt MIIIIHIII«IIIIIIIIIIIMIIItlfllll llltMllll|llllltl|)lllllitllltt|llilulMU|M|Utl||i.a 76 • )IIIHIIIIMItlHIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMt «ltl)ltllt4 llllllllilll IIIIMIII)IMIIIIHIIIIIMin«ll4fll l«Hmi«lll)ll(lllllll)MI-3-9- Asiinv. R. WiLLSOK W ' ellman Annnal Husbandry Ilau Ki. Baird, Frank E. Clintnn Electrical Enijuiccriiu Ball, W. Kendrick Stuart Architectural Fui iuerririi Tau Kappa Epsilon ; Treasurer Junior Class; Crocket Society; Publication Board lo ' u.a Stale Slu- Jent; Band ' 21, ' 22. Barker, Will E. Sanhorn Electrical Enc ineerini Bartlett, Stella Des Moines Home Economics Gamma Phi Beta ; Home Ec- onomics Club; Y. W. C. A. Barton, Ruth Des Moines Home Economics Pi Beta Phi. Bartruc, C. M. I.e Grand Agricultural EAucalion President Vocational Education Club; Agricultural Council. Bates, Harvey S., Mitchell, South Dakota Electrical Enyineerinij Tau Gamma Nu; Phi Mu Alpha; Concert Band ' 21, ' 22, ' 23 ; Men ' s C;lee Club; A. I. E. E. ; Iowa Engineer Staff; Pirates of Pen- zance Cast. Beck, George L. Spencer Chemical Engineerini Chemical Engineering Societ ' ; A. A. E. ; loiL-a Eni ineer Staff. Beckman, RiciLXRD V. Ames Cii ' il E ngineering Theta Delta Chi; Sigma Delta Chi ; loijca State Student Staff Engineering Council; A. C. E. ; A. S. C. E.; Grinnell College. I ■-ir:i;Ti[i!ii!ii ' iii!iiiiiiiii!iiiiT:!iiiii;i!rt!!! uin!imiimi: :i:! mi ' .!im -i a-TV -ti-iny-; rtH 77 Tiiiunimn 15 Uekse, CiEORCE Oes Moiiics Mcihaniiat linijinrrrin) Helta Tan Helta; MaiiaKcr Jun- iiir ( ' la s Play; ManaKfr Rol- lo ' s Wild Oat ; Manager The H( k nl jnh ; A. S. M. K. Hein, Ml hi I. k M. BtMinan llfiinr F.i oHonnt s Jack O ' l.anterii; Women ' s Cjuild; Home Economics Club; V. W. r. A.; W. A. A.; IlikiiiK ' 20; Basketball ' 2!, ' 22; Kaseball ' 22. Hri.niNc. Aki.rne Waiicoma Ilomr F.tonom ' us Home F.conomics Club; State t ' Tiiversity of Iowa; Oklahoma College for Women. Herioi.i, N ' iRciMA B. Chicago, Illinois ] nJtislnal Si iiritr Sigma Kappa; ' . W. C. A. Science Club. Best, Lindi.ev M. illisca I:lri ill III I-.tujiiifniitt -Alpha Sigma Phi. Bei ER, Jeanette .Ames hiifiisliiiil Siiritif . lpha Helta Pi; Theta Sigma Phi; Secretary Mortar Board; Women ' s CJuild ; Presideiit (Jc- nc ' a Club; N ' ice President . W. C. A. ; Sophomore Council ; Orchestra ; louva Ilomimahir Staff; Women ' s Athletic Council; W. . . A. Swimming; Women ' s I.ile Saving Corps. HlcKEII , 1 1 Kcii.i) R. I ' raer ( ( Iriiiil I:iii itiiiiiiii Chi Phi; o i4v I ' .niiiiirir Staff. BlERIlALM, Kl.MER O. CriswoUl .liiimat lliislninJry tiau Ki; AA Fraternity; Block and Bridle; ' arsity Track ' 21; Cross Country ' 22; Cross CouTitry Captain Elect. BisiM.iNciinn . I. El. ah M., Bismarck, Mo. Iiiiluslriat Si inn r K.ippa Phi; Cosmopolitan Club; Rural Economics Club; Girls ' Cilee Club; Chapel Choir; Stu- dent ' oluiiteers ; W. A. A. Bl.AiSDEi.i., Everett W. Manila, I ' liinnnl I liisbamiry .• g Club; I. S. C. Life Saving Corps; liachelors; Swimming Club ' 20, ' 22; Porpoise Club. I. 78 Blakk, John R. S ' it-nna, ' irginia .li i ' i ' ultinal I.I iinonui s Hlinks, Albion A. Marion Landstafti- Ji iliitiilnn- Alpha Tail OmeKa ; [iinior Class Plav. Blohm, George A. Dexter I ' ctirhiary Miduine ' eterinar ' Medical Society. Blus ' Dei.l, I.vi.e L. Ottumwa Landscapi- .In ' lili ' ilurc Junior Class Play. BoEVERS, M. L. Mason City I ' clrrincirx MiAiiinr BOHREN. . ' D0I.P11 F. North Plainflelil, New Jersey Dairy Phi Gamma Delta; Dairy Club; lonua Stair Studrttl Staff ; Treas- urer Cadet Officers Club; Lieu- tenant R. O. T. C; 1924 Bomb Staff. Bollinger. P. ll R. Delta .Inimal lluslianJi y Block and Bridle. BONXSTETTER, FRANK A. . lgona I ' ltcrinary Mcdiiiin ' eterinar Medical Societ . BoOTHE, Eli;ene F. Indianola I-.h ' i trital I ' .iii inrt ' i inij Eta Kappa Nu. Bolrland, Jessie L. Ames llomt- l.i onomii s Kappa I ' hi; Quill Literary Soci- ety ; V. A. A. ; Home F.conomics Club; V. W. C. A. 79 IIIIIIMI lllll ll«IIIIIHIIIillllllllllllMMItllllllil)lllliltlMII)ltlllltMIIIH«llll HIIHIMtllHI)IHMtllM ltMII Howts, Rai I ' ll R. IIucImiii FJnIiiial l:n iiiirnin i BdWiR. Ai.iCK M. Des Moines llomi- luotinmti s (fnmnia Phi Heta ; Wnrneii ' s Ciuild; Home Kroiiomirs V ' aiide- ' ille; ' eishea ' aii(Ie ' ine Danc- ing Team ; Irnva Slalr Sliuirril Staff ' 23. Bovt), RnBERT C. F.ldnra (-I ' m I fill ' EiujiHt-t ' nnii Sigma Xu; EiiKineering Council; Student Branch American Cer- amic S(iciet . Hkolk, (;EnKt;E ' . Prairie City C.ii ' il I ' .Ufjhifmjuj BKOdKiiARi , C. E. Washington I liirtit ulturr Sigma C hi. Bro v , Horace D. (irundy Center .hiimal Husbandry Block and Bridle. 15rox , Henrv F. Des Moines M i( lian ' ual I ' lii iiinrinff Iheta Delta Chi; •■. ' . Fra- ternity; Varsity Track ' 21 ' 22 ' 23. Browv, Irel B. Cedar Rapids Mil itiiiitiil i.niiimiriiKj Sigma Sigma ; . ' . S. M. E. ; Con- cert Band. ] R() . S KA Aw Dayton lliimr I ' .iiiiiomiis Alpha Delta Pi; V. V. C. A. Cahinet ' 21, ' 22; Home F conomics Club; Frances Shimer Junior Col- lege. Brows, Pali. Salix l-lrilrii III riifiiiiiiiiiiff •iiitiiiiiiniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiHitiH iiiiii« HiiHiiininH n )Mi Bruecheri, Horace Dubuiiue Cr III in it I ' .ni iiuiiinii Blblitz, Lavra E. St. Aiisgar Home Eionomics and .Ir ritullurr Alpha rhi Beta; Women ' s A Fraternit ; Home Economics Cluh; Y. V. C. A.; Geneva Club; Agronomics Club; Vice- President Crescent Literary So- ciety; Varsity Captain Baseball ' 22; Women ' s Athletic Council; oicfl Uomimiikir Staff; 1924 Bomb Staff. Buchanan , Waiter R. exvton J iii ial 1 1 itsharuiiy Adelante. Blettcll, Marc A. Ovibuque yirrhanical F.ntiinccrini and F.lictrical Eniiuiiiiinij .Adelante; Sigma Delta Chi; Engineering Council ; Editfir lo m-a Eniiinerr. Bllki.ev. Ruth F. llornr I ' -cotioinics Perrv Bl ' xdv, Bernadine Cedar Rapids Ilonit ' I ' .t ' onomiis Delta Delta Delta; Home Eco- nomics Club; Coe College. Buncer, J. .Arthur Sibley C.i-cil Eni iiii rrhui A. S. C. E. Bunting, Alma Irene Home Eeonomus Lacev Kappa Phi; Home Economics Club; May Fete ' 22. Burger, August F. Winterset I ' elcrinaiy Mrdii iiti- Veterinary Medical Societv. Butcher, Ethel Ames lloinr Economics Pi Beta Phi ; V. W. C. A. ; Home Economics Club; W. A. A. Hock- ey; Women ' s Life Saving Corps; Xorlhwestern I ' niversit . Hi iciiF.K. II. C. Ames . Iffruulluial .Inuruu ' iism Sinina Phi Epsilnii ; Si ;ma Oelta (hi ; AA I ' raternity ; T. L. B. ; Order of (loslings; Press Club; Inter-Fraternity Council ; Fresh- man Hasketball ; Baseball; ' ar- sity Basketball ; Gniri Handir Staff; oii ' d .lijru ullurisi : Iokii Slair Sluihril Staff; 1924 Bomb Staff. Bl TLFR, Marguerite Sicuix City Home liconomiis Morningside College. 151.XT0N. H. S. ' intnii .hiimal Husbandry Block and Bridle; Cadet Offi- cers Association: R. O. T. C. H ' lKWi. ll i(()i,D M. W ' averly .hjruullurat Education Phi Mu Alpha; Ag Club; Voca- tional Education Club; Band ' 19, ' 20, ' 22; Orchestra ' 20, ' 22. Cai.iious. Lois Induslrial Siirntf Auburn C Mi ' , Lef. V. Little Meado Penns K ' ania Vocational I ' .duiation Philomathian. ( ' NMHRRI.I,. BOWEN Des Moines Mechanical I ' .ni iuccrinij ( ' KI1FKRV. FmMETT Industrial Scicnc C. S. . .; Science Club. ( ' KI,, noK()IH .Ames Tree Home I ' .conomus . lpha t:amma Delta; V. . . A. Cnri.fv. Mercie Los .Angeles, California Home F.conomiis .■ lpha Chi Beta; Home Econo- mics Club; V. A. A.; V. W. C. . ; The N ' aiads. ciimEc:cE::j= £EatJEnHj Carlson, Ralph E. Stcnn Lake Electrical lintjiniiriny Sigma Delta Chi; Wrestling; A. A. E. ; A. C. E. Carspecken ' , Charles I. Oaklaiul I ' Irclrical F-nrjiiwcruui Alpha Sigma Phi. Carter, C. Warren Fullcrtcm, Nebraska .lichili ' clural Entjinccrini Crocket Society; A. A. C. E. ; Hastings College, Nebraska. Carter, Sam T. Animal llusbatidry Alpha Tau Omega; Football Cass. Dorothy Home Economics CSamma Phi Beta; National Col- legiate Players; President Fresh- man Commission ; Sophomore Council ; Junior Advisory Hoard ; Sophomore Class Secretary; Secre- tary Masqued Players; Clar- ence Cast; Hyacinth Halvey Cast; Junior Class Play; May Fete; Geneva Club; W. A. A.; V. W. C. A. ; Home Economics Club. Cass, Moxt. gue A. Le Mars Animal Uushandry Theta Delta Chi; Junior Class Play; Business Manager loiua Acjricultiirist. Cation., Donald Horticulture Tail Gamma Nu ; Alpha Zeta ; Phi Mu Alpha; Cardinal Guild; Ag Council; Ag Club; Horti- culture Club; loiua Agriculturist Staff; Manager Men ' s Glee Club; A-M-E-S Quartet; Junior Class President ' 23. Catlin, Earle C. Elgin, Illinois Animal Industry Chi Phi; Ag Club. Cecil, Rodney Calhoun, Missouri Animal Husbandry Alpha Kappa Delta; Dixie Club; Ag Club; Block and Bridle; Iowa State Rifle Club; Wash- ington Cniversity. Chase. Kresse C. Cliicaijo, Illinois Home Economics Sigma Kappa; V. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; Finger- bowls and Araminta Cast; He- loit College. C ' iaRLM, B. 1.. I.ittir K.iik, Arkansas .hiimal llushiinJry riitta Pelta Chi; Alpha Zfta ; Hlink aiul Bridle. Church, Li.ovd . Oak Cnnc, Misscuiri Home luonom ' us Sigma Kappa; Glee Cluh; Home Econnmics Chili; ■. W. C. A. Clifton ' , Johx M. Alhia F.leclrical Enii ' iniirinij CoDV, C. S. Siniix City Meclian ' unI I-.n jinirrinij Phi Gamma Delta; AA Fra- ternity; Junior Representative to Public Speaking Council ; Foot- ball ' 22, ' 23; A. S. M. E. CoN , Ethei. M. Marengo Home Economiis Omega Pi; Secretary Quill Liter- ary Society; Y. V. C. A.; Home Economics Club; ' ocatlonal Edu- cation Club. h iY Or. -XA Cn FR. M. rcui;rite Ames Home F.conomics .Mpha Chi Beta; Omicron Nu ; lack O ' Lantcrn ; Home Econo- mics Club; W. A. A.; V. V. C. A. Conrad. Emery J. Eldon Mccliaiiifal Enr iniiriiKj Phi Helta Theta ; .AA Frater- nitv; Engineering Council; Chairman A. S. M. E. ; Wrest- ling. Con ROW. . . B. If rinilliirtil .Inurnalism .Acacia. . nics CciREV. Fi.oLRNOv Pis Moines M, I until III I- Ill in I ' liitio A CoRwiN, Robert C Kock ' alUv .hiimal lliisliatiitry Theta Delta Chi ; Block and Bridle; loKa .hjiidillitrisl Staff; Wrestling. ■IMIMIMItMtltltllttlflffllllllHlllllltlllll«llltllllMMIIIIillll|MIIMia lltMMItltlll fflllMtllflltMllfllMltlHMimMII ' ' STFa T£:i Craig, Vei.ma J. Clariiula Home Economiis W. A. A.; Occidental rollcgf- Cram, Mary Oavcnptirt Ilorni ' i.tunonius Freshman CommissioTi ' 20; lack OXantern; V. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club. Culver, Ralph Laceyville, Pennsylvania Atiricultural Etonomirs Acacia. Cunningham, Thomas F. Cii ' il Fuf rrirtrrrif Jesup Deal, Leonard C. Ames Poultry lliisliitiuiry Dairy Club: 1923 Bomr Staff: Green Gander Staff: Order of Goslings; Poultry Judfiinj Team DeBruin, Edwakd a. Hospers Mechanical Eiii inn rini Hau Ki; Band ' 22, ' 23; (ilee Club. Decker, George C. Peck, Michigan Pomolo iy Amician ; Catholic Student As- sociation ; Horticulture Club. Derrv, Rnii I.amoni Home Ktouomu s L« V Denner, S. (;. Xew Hampton Animal Ilushniulry Tau Gamma Nu; As; Club; Bachelor; President of Block and Bridle. Devvell, Marcella R. Missouri ' alley Home Economics Pi Beta Phi: Theta Sigma Phi; Freshman Commission ; Sopho- more Council; Junior Advisory Board; Ioilo Homemakcr Staff; Iowa A irieullurisI Staff; lri iva State Student Staff; 1924 Bomb Staff; May Fete ' 22; Home Eco- nomics ' audeville ' 21, ' 22; Wo- men ' s Pan-Hellenic Council; The Locksmith cast ; The Bracelet cast; Fingerbowls and Araminta cast; Military Spon- sor. ' .IIIIMIH HIIIHnHlltllllllHI IH IIMIIIIIUH«lli llll««HI lnnHHHHIIIIIIIHMIIII«l MHMMIHI MMNHttlll 85 rf5E 2 r : ' 4 HEUK-i, Iki: h Ames ll ' ini ' F ' Conomits Alpha (111 Beta; President Jack () ' lantern; Home Economics Chili; V. V. C. A.; W. A. A.; Freshman Commission; Hockey ' 21; C ' .ym Team ' 22; Swimming 7 DiRiiL, John F. Ames Civil I ' lnijincerinij Crescent Literarv Societv ; A. A. E. ; A. C. E. ; Lincoln Way Club. DOLAN, Sarah Colo Ihiinr r.t oiinrnii s DoTV, Glew H. Neuell CitH Eniiinrninii Oow. II. Ci. Fort Madison I ' ltirinaiy Mi iiiini- Sigma Phi Epsilon. nucGF.K. Edith What Cheer Home Economiis Alpha Helta Pi. iS Duke. Mariw Monmouth, Illinois Ilorrii ' r.iniinmii s Pi Beta Phi. ' 0 PiMUK, RnRERT J. Osceola .Irchilcilural I-.m imiiing Crocket Societv; Inter-Class Box- in,s ' ' 21. ' 22. ' 23. Du.vN. Leonard L. Le Mars I ' llrrinary Mrdidne ' eterinarv Medical Societv. Ill Piis. Oscar G. Fort Madison M,i luuii( (it i.iiiiiuiirina mml IHmHIHHIIWIHIIHIimllllH tin mil HII lll««llllHIIIHmilMII Tl DuvALL, I ' liii.ii ' KiKK I.ofiaii Cii ' il Enijineerinij Alpha Tau Omega ; T. L. R. ; Freshmen Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil; Sophomore Class Treasurer. Edwards, F. A. Scranton Ehflriial Lniiincrrimj Lamh(ia Oelta Chi ; RiHe Feani ' 20, ' 21. Ehlers. Carl F. Ogden (ai ' U Kuiiiiift ' rtiK Chi Phi: Phi Mu . ' Ipha; .A. .A. E. ; Band ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Orchestra Elder, Edidi DeW ' it: Home Eionomhs Ciamma Phi Beta ; Home Econo- mics Club; Treasurer Y. V. C. A.; Geneva Club; ' ocational Ed- ucation Club; Macalaster Col- lege. Ellis, Gladwyn E. Xe vell Animal Uuslnindry Ektorf, Carl Cleveland, Montana .hiimal llusbanjry Theta Peltn Chi; Block and Bridle. Epperlev, Donald A. Letts Animal Husbandry Hau Ki ; Varsitv Wrestliuf; ' 22, ' 23; Block and Bridle. Ericksov, TllERON ' H. Reinbrck Farm Manaacim iil Assistant Scout Master. Esmav, Ralph M. Sabula Elrtlrical Kn juii ' iriuf Everett, Cil rles H. Colfax Atjriiultural Ent inrrriiit . ' delantc; Delta Si ma Rho; .Al- pha Zeta ; Engineering Council; Cardinal Cruild ; Kansas Debate ' 22; Michigan-Purdue Debate ' 22; Public Speaking Council. ■MniinmiiiiiiiHMitMiiMtmimMinMwiM«iMWiMiini«iiii miMinnm MminiiiMimitnuMMmmuiiniiiii •■|H««H«HIIHMMU llllll IIIIIIIIIIIIH tl(IMIIM«MIIIII ttllllllllll«MIIIIIIIIIIII IMIMIIMI MlltllMMIIMII)tlill ESESSEEEE 1 Everett, F.i.i areiji 1. Lacey InJustnal Stit ' itct ' Fahm.e. Chester E. Norway Ch-il liiKiiitirrhiii Farmer, Robert E. Weldon Ci ' vit Enyiniirinij Alpha Kappa Delta; President Ames Chapter A. S. C. E. ; Civil Engineering Society ; loiia Enai- mrr Staff ' 21, ' 22, ' ' 23. Farrar. MlLTON D. Abilene, Kansas Industrial Science Thcta Chi; Class Track ' 20, ' 21. Farris, Earl ' alley Junction Eteclrical Enyincninij Fighter, Corbv Randolph Animal Ihifhariilry R. O. T. C. FiCKE, J. H. Wheatland Eli ' drical J ' lifliiifiiiiit Fisher, H. H. Fairmont, West Virginia I ' arm Crops and Soils Phi Ci.Tinina Delta. Foley. C. Ada Paris, Illinois llomr Etonnmii ' s Purdue I ' ni ersit FoRSVTH, M. Isabel Ilorni ' Efottomics Home Economics Club. Dana ■iiiiiimiiiiiiiMti««Hii niimiiiiiimin«iminmHiiiii«iiiiii iiiimiiiiniMtHmniMnniimnniii ' ini '  ' m ' ' 0iiiiiitnMi«ii i i MHii HMMiiiMiiiiiti«iiMMi iiHiiii«iiiiiiiiiiiii  iMniiniiinmmtiiiti4iimiiiimMnnim a  ' a- -a-a-a;; FoTiiEROiLL; Robert E. Eagle Grove Clicmical Engineerinij El Paso; Phi Lambda I ' psilon; Chemical EiiKiiieers Societv. Fovvi.ER, Pall M. Des Moines Mri lanical Engineerinij Secretary, Treasurer, Vice-Presi- dent Bachelor; Lieutenant R. O. T. C. ; Y. M. C. A. ; A. S. M. E. Eraser, James W. Charleston, South Carolina Electrical Enijineering Alpha Phi Alpha; Boxing. French, Lyla F. Home Economics V. W. C. A. Ames French, Ila Ames Home Economics Y. W. C. A.; May Fete ' 21; ' eishea ' 22. Gangstead. Clara Goldfield Home Economics Quill Literarv Societv ; Vocational Education Club; W. ' A. A.; Hik- ing ' 20; Baseball ' 21, ' 22; May Fete ' 22. Gardiner, Henry C. Sheldon Electrical Eni ineering Amician. Garret, Charles I. Cedar Rapids Electrical Engineering George, Willum D. Oubuiiue Civil Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha; T. L. B. ; AA Fraternity ; Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil ; Freshman Baseball; ' arsitv Baseball. GiRBEXs. J. Donald North English .Inimal Husbandry Block and Bridle. lEOEEi (iiiiiFR], CIrovf.r n. Kainrar Mrihanical I iii inii liiii Sit;iiia SiKma; Phi Mii Alpha; C ' diict-Tt Band; ' 21, ' 22. ' 23; 0)1- Icgc Orchestra; A. S. M. K. Clil.BERr, I.RSI.IK F. Kamrar : ■( Irutil l:iuiiiuiTitui Concert Band ; A. I. E. E. Cli.i.is, R i) i.t. Osage F.trilrual l-.m inrcrinii Chi Phi. c;()i i Ri). li.iiKFNCE A. Davenport Ihimr luoriotriics Kappa Helta; V. V. C. A. Cab- inet; ' ice-President J unior Class; Woman ' s Cniild ; State Cniversity ot Iowa. OdKiMMscER, Katherike L. Boone llomr luonomiis Pi Beta Phi; Theta Sigma Phi; Jack O ' l.antern ; Editorial Staff Imiii llomimakcr ' 21, ' 22, ' 23 ; Editorial Staff oito Slair Stu- diiil ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; lo ' uja Agri- ■ullurist; Green Gander; 1924 Bomb Staff; Freshman Commis- sion; Sophomore Conncil ; Junior . dvisor Board; Big Sister Cap- tain: Home Economics Cluh; Y. V. C. A. Publicity Manager; Home Economics ' audeville ' 23. OonDMW, . rihir G. Cedar Rapids ( ' ivil Eniiineerhui . delante; Associate Editor o ifl fnr ineer; Inter-Local Fraternity Council. Oordos, llirii E. Lenox .Inimal llusluinJry .Mpha Kappa Delta; Block and Bridle Cluh; Ag Club; Poultrv Induing Tram ' 22; Captain R. O. T. C. Cinss. J. Fletcher New Rockford, North Dakota .If rieiillural F.ntjineer ' ina Crescent Literary Society; A. S. A. E. ; Public Speaking Council; Class Wrestling ' 22. ( R. r)i ' RFV, Medora B. Owatonna, Minnesota lliirne I ' .connmirs Y. W. C. . Cabinet; Geneva Scholarship ' 22; Glee Club; Home Economics Club; Junior .• d lsor Board; Cosmopolitan Club; lack O ' Lantern ; Geneva Club, G ' rmki:, . l.BERr W. Strawberr Point I ' .leilrieal linijinerrinfi 90 Gray, Helen E. Ho Mnines Home Einitomiif Drnke I ' ni ersit . C RAi, Naomi M. Ames llnnii !.( onomiis Omcfia Hi; i . V. ( ' . A.; May Fete ' 22. CjREE , Ferv Winteiset lloini ' I-.tonom ' us Chi Omega; Home Economics Cluh; V. V. C. A.; Women ' s Paiihellenic Council ; lo ua Stall ' SluJint Staff; hmii lloinnnakfr Staff. Greex, George E. Harlan Animal llushauJry Thcta Xi. Green, Helen M. Conrad Itorrir Eiufiomus Kappa Phi; ' . W. C. . . Home Economics Cluh; Iowa State Teachers College. Greenlee. Charles O. Jr. Fort Dodge Animal Husbandry Ausonia ; lo=ii-a A i rit ultm ist. Grewell, c;lenn v. Gilman I ' clninary MiJiiinr Ciamma Sigma Alpha; X ' ctcrin- ar Medical Socielv. c;rim. Clal ' de G. Cedar Rapids Mininr F.ni imirini Chi Phi; A. I. M. E.; A. C. E. ; Band ' 20, ' 21. Grimes. Run h Montrose llomt ' Etnnomus .Mpha Chi Beta; Quill Literary Societ ; Home Economics CUib ; Y. C. A. Groth, Harold V. Ottumwa C.h ' il I ' .ntjini iiinij A. S. C. E. ; A. A. C. E. 1 Hlllim IHIIH IHI«HIIMHIHII«ll««HIIIIIIHHMIItl ll HtlHI Hl«l l '  iiiinnmn: iimiRFgaa Harpri.v, Anne Cresco llomi- F.eonomiis nJ .lijiii ullure Agronomics Club; Secretary Sophomore Class ' 20. 11 nF:Ri.v. I.vcii.i.E Cresco Ilomi- Econoinus itiiJ .1 t ri( iilturi- Agronomics Club; Secretary Agronomics Club. I Iamm ARSinnM, Marv .■ . Clinton Ilonii- Eionomiis Home Economics Club ; W. A. . ; State l ' ni ' ersit ' of Towa. llANTMEK. Hakdi.d A. Altooua .liiimat Hiisharniry Block and Bridle Club; Ag Club. IlAMMERi.v, Carroll A. Newton .Inimal Husbandry Theta Delta Chi; AA Fra- ternity; Athletic Council; Inter- Fraternitv Council; ' arsitv Track ' 22, ' 23; Class Track ' 21. ' Hanson. Rav F. Casper, Wyoming Miu lianuni Enaint ' t ' nno A. S. M. E. 11 rmison. H. -A. Marcus Dairy Tau C amma N ' u; Debate Sijuad ' 23. IIarmox, Glenn R. New Hartford Eli ' drical Enginerring Ausonia. II Kri:K, CipORGE . . Ames hiJustrliil Sciiiiit- Science Club; Scabbard and Blade; Cadet Officers Associa- tion. liARi ' ER. . mle M. Ames llnrnr Etonomits iliaiMlMll4lllHIMtm HIIIIIIHMimWIHimiHHIIIIM««HtllM«HHMMItWHHHMIHWWHM 92 •CfHIMIMIMIIH IIIHIIMIIIHIIIItlllllHI)IIH«l|IHI||||l|| |||l |||||H|tt|lH||M|l««|IMIIMHIIIIIMI HarveVj Ralph M. Ames Ariliiteclural Eni inirritni Harvey. Walter ( Dairy l.nhr llle Hastings, Mary E. Hamilton, Illiiinis Home Efonotnus Alpha Ciamma Delta; Cilee Cluh; Chapel Choir; Y. V. C. A. Hatilwvay, Carl Cedai- Rapids C ' fvit 1: tit ill I III III Hathaway, R. H. Aines Mecha iiial I: in iiirniii Hatlestad, S. Lucille Radcliffe Arcliitcctural Enijinrn iiu Havir, Ray W. St. Ansgar Ci ' vil I ' .n iiiiirini A. S. C. E. ; Band. Heald, Mary Des Moines Industrial Siinin- Chi Omega; Women ' s ( mild; Big Sister Chief; Junior Advi- sory Board; Geneva Cluh; Chairman Citizenship Council; Undergraduate Representative Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Extempor- aneous Speaking Contest ' 22; Home Oratorical Contest ' 23 ; Faculty Women ' s Club; Gene- va Scholarship ' 21; National Student Council; Y. W. C. A.; Delegate to National Y. W. C. A. Convention ; Delegate to Canadian Student Conference; Drake Universitv. Heeren, Ralph H. Creston Industrial Stiriir, ' Philomathean Literary Society; Science Club. Heid.man. Nett ie Cirangcr Ilomr f.t niiiimics . W. C. A. ; Home Economics Cluh; Des Moines University. iiiii iiMiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii«itiH imwnnnniMiiiMmmi iimiimM  MiiMiMH tnwninm  Hiir.  a  -a!- -   r i IIendercos, Fl.ORFACE Madriil llomr F.ionomus Kappa Phi; V. V. C. A.; Del- phian I.iterarv Society ; May Fete ' 19. llE DERsn . F. Ml ' rrav Arnolds Park EIrdiiral I- ntiiturriinj Hat ' helors. Hendersov, Herbert EInlriiiil luuiiniirinij SiKina ' u ; I . I.. B. t ' NeH Scraiitcin Henderson, Iva liomr r. onomics OmeKa Pi ; Home Economics Hub; V. V. C. A.; W. A. A.; ' ccat!onal Education C lub; Mav Fete ' 20. Henderson. Rav M. Scranton Iniinal Husbandry .Alpha Sigma Phi; Phi Mu .Alpha; Hand. Hendrv. Mvrne llnirn ' F.corimrin s V. A. . . ; Hiking ' 20. Prirngha Hensinc, Emmett H. .Alton ( ' ii ' il I ' .n iiiuirinij .Ainician; Cix il Engineering So- Herr. Helev C ' alniar llomr liconomics Chi Dmega; Omicron Nu; Wo- men ' s A Fraternity; Home Economics Counril ; Junior Class Secretary; ' men ' s Life Saving Corps; Women ' s Athletic Coun- cil; Naiad; Sophomore Class Play; Junior Class Play; Tryst- ing Place ; Love the Lock- smith ; Home Economics ' aude- ville ' 23; Clee Cluh; Mav Fete ' 2!. liicHi.v. F. Mkrkei. ripton C.ii ' il hjujtttiwnu j Piha I ' au Delta; Tail Beta Pi. IIil;i.::i, I.enoke Salt Lake City, Itah llninr luonnmics lack () ' Lantern; Red Ooss Life Saving Cluh; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Swimming ' 2L ' 22; May Fete ' 22; .Aesthetic Dancing Cup ' 21 ; Secretary and Treasurer Naiad; Secretary and Treasurer of Jack O ' Lantern ; .Aesthetic Dancing Team ' 22. Hill. N. Alkred William Inimal llusbandry Welch Literarv Society ; Ag Cluh; Block and Biidle. llLVNAii, H. H. Kenta .Inimal lluslutndry Cadet Orticers Avsnciatioii ; Lieutenant R. O. 1 . ( ' . Hitchcock, Frances, E. Little Sinu Home F.conomiis HoiFMAX, JOH.v E. W ' ilmette, 111. Agricultural Eui iiniiiin A. S. A. E. HoisiNCTON , Cecil Harlan .Inhitictural Enyiuiirimj Crocket Society. HoLBERT, Mildred E. Plainview, Neli. llomf Etonomiis Delta Delta Delta ; V. V. C. A. ; Home Economics Cluh; Griiinell College. Holi.owell, Elgene a. Farmer City, HI. Industrial Stii-ncr Tau Ciamma Nu ; Freshman Track ' 21 ; Varsity Cross Country 21, ' 22; Varsity Track ' 22; Vice- President Intramural Association ' 23. Holmes, Clavtov E. Northwood Cfvil Fnijinfirinii . . S. C. E.: t ' ncle Jimmv Cast; Junior Class Pla . HoLROYD, Howard B. Plymouth Mechanical l:ni incerin A. S. M. E. ; Philomathian So- ciety. HoLsiNGER, Lawrf.nce Ames Aijricultural Eni ineerini A. S. A. E. ; Scahhard and Blade; Cadet OHicers Associa- tion; Captain Pistol Team ' 22. 95 e C:-HI)MlltHII l  l«lltllllHIIIMUItl(llllllll(llllllllllllltlllllllllHllfHIIIIIM«IIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIMI IMIUIMIIiniMti9 y IlooPES; Leslir W. MiiM:itiiu- Antinul Uushandry El Paso; Ak Club; Block niul Bridle. Hopkins, Anne Ocs Moines llnmr Ef nuomn ' s Delta Helta Delta; Oitiicron Nu; Freshman Commission ; Sophii- more Council; Junior Advisory Board; Women ' s (Juild; Hoine Economics Club; W. C. A.; Vice-President Bij; Sisters; Wo- men ' s Pan-Hellenic Council ; Associate Editor 1924 Bomb Board; Veishea Plavs; Junior Class Plav. IIoRNEV, M. Jav Weldon lUcdr ' ual F.ntiinfcr ' ing A. I. E. E.; A. A. E. ; A. C. E. Howard. Clarke M. LeRo . III. Jiiimat Husbandry Alpha Kappa Delta; oiid .lyii- culturist Staff; Ag Club. Howell, Joseph Kansas City, Kansas Fonstry Concert Band ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Or- chestra ' 22, ' 23; I. A. F. C. Howell, Walter, W. Muscatine F.lic trical F.nginetring EI Paso; . . I. E. E. Hsif, H. D. Changsha, China Animal Uushanjry Cosmopolitan Club. lUnsoN. Charles E. Montezmna .Inimat Husbandry Theta Xi. IKi.iiH.s, Andrew B. Ames Dairy Manufacturing Iheta Chi; Phi Mu Alpha; Dairy Club; Band. lliDiiFS, .Amos O. .Ames F.lrilrical F.nginrrrinii Iheta Chi; A. A. C. E.; A. I. E. E. IIMtllH«ll Ht HIUIIIHIII IHItl ) llll««IIHIIllllllltMHIMNIi(HIMItll ll ' 9 i UHUHMUHUIItKKI tlimillltlW ll IMIIHMItMm« lltllHMIIHI«IM IIHmt tMI«  MH HIMMIHMM  lll Hlches, Hugh Charles City Dairy lliishiindry At; C ' luh; Block niul Kriclle. Hlches, L. W. Harmony, Minn. Ci-i ' il l-.nfjiniirini Hl ' LL, B. Fr.wki.in Matiuokcta .1 nimcil lliisliandi y Block and Bridle; Ak Club; Lniversitv of Iowa. Hlxl, Raymond R. Keokuk Chemical EnyinccriiKj C. E. Society ; Ions:a Entjiniir Staff; loua State Student Staff; Cadet Officers Association; Life Sa ings Corps. Hlnt, Gale - Ames Chemical Kntjineerintj Chemical Engineering Society; American Chemical Society; Vet- erans of Foreign Wars. Hlntoon, Homek Pes Moines .Irchiteclural I.iii iiieerinii Theta Delta Chi; Pi Mu Alpha; Glee Club ' 21, ' 22; Glee Club •A . ]les, Clarice Dayton Home Economics Home Economics Club; Jack O ' Lantern; Glee Club ' 22; W. A. A.; Basketball ' 21, ' 22; Hockey ' 21. IxciiAM. Rem M. Va ne, Neb. Home Economiis Omega Pi. ISE.VIIXCER, C. RLETON ' R. Sioux City Electrical Eniiineerinii A. C. E.; A. I. E. E. ISAACSOV, Mariov R. Essex Farm ( ' rn ' s and Soils Alpha Sigma Phi; Welch Lit- erary Society; Wrestling. g. lulill«ltlll MMIMUimMtlllUIMIHWMilllMIIMMMtlllllM IMIIIHIIII. tllllllllltlllllllHtHIMl! )iiii i iii iiiiii  HHii ttMiiiii mniii itmiiiiiinii( iiiiiniHinHHHMmmiimMtnmMMM«nmni niiiii 3-a.-a.3. Jacksov. Alice IJaRley Iloirif flioiiomio Sigma Kappa; SpmiMir K. (). T. C. .IxGKR. M RiK Eddyville Horn, ' l-.iOiiomiis Jacorsov. Damd 1. ( ileiiwoiid City. Wis. Dairy Husbandly W ' flch Literarv Society; Ag Cluli; Block and Bridle. Jav, Makiokie M. Blakesbiirg Ilotnr lu nno rius Alpha Delta Pi; Home Econ- omics Club; V. V. C. A.; Ilome- maki ' r Staff; t ' liivcrsity of Colo- rado. .Tar is, Porter ClarksluirK, V. ' a. .Inirial llushandry Helta Tail Delta; Inter-Frater- nity Council; Dixie Cluh. Jewiscs. noROiHV Tipton llnmr Kiouomus Kappa Phi Cabinet; ' ocational Education Club; Home Economics Club; V. W. C. A. Jehf.rsdn, Richard R. Dunkerton Farm Crnj s aitd Soils AuronoMix Club; Ag Club. Jniivs, Saniord J. Le Mars l.a idsia i .In nltiliirr Ag Club. John. W ' ii.blr K. State Center .liiimal llushandry Sigma Pi. JoiiNsos. Beth Storm Lake llnmr l.innomics Omega Pi. i|llllll««IWM nniHI)lllllllllllll illlllltll «IIIIIIHIlll )lll lll HMI llllll«llll l l«ilHII Hn ll iMHHtim Johnson ' , Glenn E. Red Oak Elfttrnal i ' .ut ttu ' i ' tuu Johnson, Ione A. Boone Home Economics Alpha Delta Pi; Freshman Com- mission ; Jack O ' l.antein ; Pub- lication Board of Inicti Slalr Slit- detit; Women ' s PaTihellenic Coun- cil ; Military Sponsor. Johnson, Jewell V. W:iterl :o Meclianical Eniiiiiicriiu Adelante; Sigma Delta Chi; Delta Sigma Rho; Michigan- Purdue Debate ' 22; Eiiginceiing Council ; Public Speaking Coun- cil ; Philomathean ; Kennedy Cup Debate; Cioslings; loiia Slalf Council; Military Sponsor. Johnson, Lee E. Ilnmiltnii Clinnwnl Eiu inrii tnt Chi Phi: Chemical Engineering Society; Varsity Football ' 21, ' 22. Johnson, Osee O. Ilomr Econnmus Drake T ' ni ersitv, Noma Johnston, Neh, E. .Ames Aijricultural EJut ation Ag Club; Vocational Education Club; Monmouth College. Jones, Cio.viEK D. W ' illianisbur), Mnhanual Eiiamrn ina A. S. M. E. Jones, Harold V. Tabor Animal llufhatuiry Adelante. Jones, KENNETjr F. Ame Lanilsrttpr Jri hilt-ffurr Beta Theta Pi; ' istonian Club. Jones Philip C. Marshalltowi CJivmical l.tK inririna Ioii:a E ' li iriiri Staff. m iMmMiimn«iinnitm ntni( iiimiiimniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiii  iiniimnnmiiM« MMW«wtm Jov, Katiirvv B. Ncwtoii lloinr luoufiinn s K.ippa Helta. Kaiile, Lorex F. Oklahoma City, Okla. Mrclianical Lnijiniu ' ritnj Heta Theta Pi ; President of Mascjued Players; National Col- legiate Players; ' arsity Debate ' 23; Clarence Cast; Tailor Made Man Cast; Public Speak- ing Council ' Zi ; Cadet Officers Association. Kaldenbekc, Wii.i.AKD Ci. Monroe Elrr ' .rual lini innrnn Kalse.m, Ai.ma Huxley llomr Econumics Chi Omega ; Home Economics Club; V. W. C. A.; Glee Club ' 22, ' 23; Hiking ' 21; Hockev ' 21, ' 22; Baseball ' 22; Basket Ball ' 23; V. A. A.; A Sweater. Karsten. Mvra Home Ecotiomits Sumner Karlnaker, p. O. Calcutta, India Farm Grot ' s and Soils Cosmopolitan Club; Agronomv Club. Kaifkmav. llnROTllv Pes Moines llomr l.iOnomii s Kappa Pclla. Kav, E. W. Xora Springs Chil Eni inrrrinij KeM-OGC, Lester ' ., Douglas, Wyoming C.i-vil EiKjinrerimj Kendai).. I.. er e Des Moines C.ii ' il F.nginrrrinij A. C. E.; A. S. C. E. IIIMIIIItlllll IIIHMI«M «l il IIH «milMIIIIIIII)IMHIHHMIIMItlillllin l imn«HIII l! 100 ,c KiRKHAM, BeRNICE P. Home Econnmus Delta Delta Delta; Mas(|ued Plavers; National CollcKiatc Plavers; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A.; Junior Class Play; Home Economics Vaude ' ille. w . ! ' ,- ! KiRKHAM, Marguerite Ames Home Economics KiSER, Lei.a Wilton Horn, ' r.ionomics K K;ins, Ruth H. Creen Mountain llniiii ' l.iiinom ' us utiJ .1 ricullurc Jack O ' Lantcin ; W. A. A.; Crescent Literary Society; Ag- roiioMiics Club; V. V. C. A. K oop. Werner C. Waterloo Ci-vii Entjiju ' frinq Atlelante; ' arsitv Footliall ' 21, Knolk. Ralph J. De Moines TAictricul F.nyinming Drake I ' nl ersitv. Rnowi.fs. XiTA Tesup llrtntr V.fonamu s I )elta Delta Delta; Jack O ' Lan- tern ; Soplinmore Class Secretary; ' ice President Masqued Players; National CnlleKiate Players; ' et- erinary Military Sponsor; Vei- shea Follies of 1923 ; Veishea Play; The Fatal Necklace Cast; Junior Class Play; Clar- ence Cast; Rollo ' s Wild Oat Cast. K n. . J. Rlssell Ft. Morgan, Colorado Ci ' v ' tl Enffiiit-rnru . . S. C. F. I i isii , NhKii.E M. Sioux City llomr r.i ' onomiis Chi t)niejia ; Hoine Economics Cluh; Junior Class President; Cardinal Chiild; Mav Fete ' 22; . W. C. A.; Girls ' Cllee Club; I ' niversity of Iowa. KoEMiZER, Lester U. Des Moines Civil Eniiineerinij A. S. C. E.; A. C. F..; Cadet Officers Association. Kosier. Lot is W. Waterloo I ' ll I Iriiiil Fn iiniiiinii Kiiw aike. FncAK W. Sheldon ( ' III )niial l.niiiiti ' i ' liiui lambda Chi .Alpha; Inter-Fra- ternity Council; EriKineering Council ; Freshman Tnler-Fraler- nity Council ' 20. ' 21. IIIIHIItllllllillMiWlllimiHHHI l«l lllllimHHHIIIHI IIUIIIIHH l IHIIM«HIHH IIIIIIIMH mHltHimiimi( •MI(HIMIIilHIHMMIIIMMni«lllltlMllli M «(MIIIIUIIItMIIIHMilll MIHIIMIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIHI«il«lll inilMHI«,r3.f9 9iX ¥1 ' Krebs. Mii.DRiD S. Cedar Rapids Home luonomus Home Economics Cluh; V. W. C. A. Kroecer, Gerald O. Audubon Animal lliuhiiiiJi y Kruwei.l. Ci.enn F. Marathon I iiJuslritil Si it HI r Han Ki; Phi Mn Alpha; A-M- E-S Qnartettc; Clec Cluh; ' 22, ' 23; Band ' 21; Symphom Orches- tra ' 21 ; Inter-I.ocal Council. KuEfil.. Auired C. Davenport Landscape .Ircliitnlurr Delta Upsilon ; Vistonian Cluh; Ag Council ' 22 ; ' ice-President As Council ' 23 ; ' icc-President ' 23; Junior Class Play. Landis, Rvssem, B. Dairy Pairv Cluh; Band ' 22, ' 25. Cdleshurg Lane. Wai.ier L. Muscatine Civil Enfiinccrinii Chi Phi; AA Fraternity; Bas- kethall ; Treasurer Engineering Council; Stewards Club. Laktz, Reirex S. Boone A re lite fliiral Engineerimj Crocket Society ; University of Minnesota. Larsen, Ella E. Home luonomits V. A. A. Newell Larson, Conrad E. Cedar Rapids Aijyieiiltural Joitniahsm Alpha Ciamma Rho; Sigma Delta Chi; Alpha Mu ; Ioij;a At rieul- turist Staff ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Presi- dent Press Club; loiia Slate Stu- dent Staff. L. RSON. Florence C. Menan, Idaho llnrrie Kionomii s V. V. C. . . Vice-President Red Cross; Naiad; V. . . A.; May Fete ' 22; Swimming ' 21, ' 22; D.nicing ' I ' eani ' 22. .IIIHIIIHHIIHHIMIHHIIDHIIIIKHHMHItlNIHtHHHKIMUIHMKIIItMII ■iriiifvrv- I.ARSov, H ARR Callender Civil F.iKjini ' irintj Crescent Literary Society; Scab- bard and Blade. I.ARSOV. RnscOE E. St. Olaf Dairy Ilusbnruli y I.aRue, Perry Jacksonville, Illinois Civil Fnr inrrrini A. A. E. ; Illinois College. Laugiilix, . ' Vleta Rhodes Home Economics Home Economics Club; Y. V. C. . . ; Lainbda Delta Sigma. I.Aunm.i.v. Louis V. Osage F-li ' ctrical F.nf incirin j .Alpba Sigma Phi; AA Fra- ternitv; Freshman Football ' 19; Varsitv Football ' 20, ' 21, ' 22; . C. E. I.EE, Kari. Spirit Lake Chemical Engiticcrinij Tau Kappa Epsilon ; Chc?nical Engineering Society. Lennox, Arthur G. Council Bluffs .Inimal Husbandry Beta Theta Pi; Block and Bridle; oicvi li riculturist Staff; Adver- tising Manager Green Gander ; Business Manager Men ' s ' aude- vilie ' 23 ; Advertising Manager Book of Job and Tailor Made Lan. l.EPi.EV. K.ATIIRVN H. Conrad Home Economics W. . . A.; Dancing Team ' 22; Crescent Literary Society; Home Economics Club. l.Kwis. Joy Ames Home Economics . W. C. . ' Home Economics Club. Lexz.mkier. Mavme a. Ames Home Economiis . W. C. . . ; Home Economics Club. I.I. Chun ' Jung Canton, Chi .Inimal IluslmnAi y aiui I ' elrrimiry Mt ' Jtiinr Chinese Students ' Alliance; .Agri- culture Society of China; Chi- nese Students ' Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Veterinary Medical So- ciety ; Tsing Hua Scholarship. LiCHTENBERG, RUDOLPH E. O. Whit Mechanical Enginrcrinij LicHTV, George C. Water Civil r.nginecrinii Theta Xi ; Eiigineering Council ; Inter-Fraternitv Council. LiKi.NS.. Arthlr E. Ori Animal Husbandry Phi Mu Alpha; c;iee Club; Ag Club; Block and Bridle; Catholic Students Association. LiNKj John T. A Civil Engineering Civil Engineering Society; Del- phian Literary Society ; cratrt En- gineer Staff ' 22, ' 23. ' Linn, H. rry D. She Animal Iluslnuiilry Theta Xi ; Block and Bridle; Boxing; Class Football; Track. LiNNAN, Joseph C. Mau .Igriculliiral Econoinii s Amician. Long, Ed ith G. Wagner. South Dakota Home Economics rnlversitv of South Dakota. Little, John F. Springy Civil Engine criuii Delta Tpsilon; Junior Class Plav. Long, Sadie S. Wagner, South Dakota Home Economics University of South Dakota. Ioscui.khi. Wallace II. Aine Indiislrial Scicncr H;ichfl ii ; ' ice-President Science Chili; jiininr ( lass Pla . LoRENS, Leonard C. Ogdeii liuiustrial Sdi ' itd- Chi Phi; Phi Mu Alpha; Science Club; Band ' 21. ' 22. ' 23; Orches- tra ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Drake Cni- versitv. LoLCEEj Pall H. Plymnuth, New Hampshire yift luiniml Kntiinfi-nnfi LoLCH, VlLLL .M K. Esther ille h(ii istry I. . . F. C. ; Fnrcstrv Cluh. I,in R . Harrv K. Sevinnr C ' t ' vil Ent infirituj Thcta Chi; A. S. C. E. ; Class Football ' 21. I.OVD, Frank R. Gretna, Kansas Jiiiiiial Husbandry l.L ' CAS, Homer C reene .hiuiuil 11 usbandry Bachelors; An Cluh; ' ocatinnal Education Club. 1.L0 . Pearl Strawberry Point llomi ' r.totiomii s Kappa Phi; Quill Literary So- cietv. McAllisier, Arnold F. Hurlin iun .Inimal HushaiiJry Philomathean ; Block and Bridle; Ak Club. .McBRinE, Harold R. Pes Moines .Inimal lluslmnchy Phi Helta Theta Pledge; Foot- ball ' 23 ; Gn-ni CanArr Staff. 106 ,!:n TT!TI!:;iIirir;Mlllllrrtl!IIlllllllllltril ' .i:[l!I!r!lT;!!lTTTTTTnTTnilITITIll111Hlllllllllll!linir McC RTV, Margaret Tama Home I-.ionnmus Alpha Delta Pi; Secrctarv Home Economics Club; junior Athisorv Board. McClarnon ' , llfiWAKO n. Kradclyville .Ininiilt lllishilnji y McCoi.Lv, Howard F. Ames Atjru ulturtil i. iitjint I ' nnij A. S. C. E. ; C ' ollejiiate Engineers. McDowell, Walter R. Claiinda Mechanical Enijinccriiui Lambda Chi Alpha; A. C. E.; loixu l-.tiijinccr Staff; A. S. M. E. McElvea, C. S. Ames Electrical En iineerinij V. M. C. A. Cabinet. McGuiRE, Thomas M. Des Moines Electrical Eiiyinerrinij McKiBBEN, Hazel B. Ames Home Ecouomiis Kappa Phi; Delphian; V. V. C. A. Public Speaking Council ; Home Economics Club. McPnEETERS, DuNCAK S. Harlan Electrical Etujineerinii Electrical Engineering Society. 107 M. riiK. r ' l.oM) I,. Ciilliert ( ' i-vil Eutjinft-nnif SiKina Pi; t ' ivil EiiKineering Sn- MacFaki.anr, Jean M. Sioux City llomr Economirs cirul I ' liysinit F.iiiualion tJama Phi Beta; President Fresh- man Commission ; Snphoniore Council; Junior Advisory Board; V. VV. C. A.; Women ' s (aiild; W. A. A. Council ; Home Econo- mics Club; Manager of the IJirls ' (ilee Cluli; Hockey Team; Cap- tain Hiking Team; Pinafore Cast; Ciirls ' Quartette; l )elegate to National V. VV. C. A. Conven- tion; Home Economics Vaudeville. Macv. RoFiERT W. Moorcroft, Wyoming .hnifiiil 1 1 ushtiriJry Sigma Sigma; Phi Mu Alpha; Block and Bridle; Band ■21, ' 22; Orchestra ' 21. M cKK ' i. (iixDvs N. Boone Home Economics .■ lpha Chi Beta; Home Econ- omics CUili; Women ' s Guild; Hiking ' 20; W. A. A. ' 20; Y. W. C. A.; Chapel Choir ' 21. Maiiwke, 1I fl Waterloo lldnir l:ionom ' t(S Delta Helta Oelta ; Hoine Econo- mics ( Uib. Maiiwke, Makiilkrite ' alerloo Home Etoiiomits Helta Helta Oelta; Home Econo- mics Cliih. M i i:, Raiimi W. Hes .Moines Mi ' clianical I:iii iiii ,ri u Sigma Nu ; Varsitv Track ' 22 ; Class Track ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; ice Chairman A. S. M. E. ' 23. .Makei ' I ACE. Otis Osage Mrdianirnt E niiinirrinci Bachelor; A. C. E. Mai.coi.vi. RiTH Pocahontas Home Eronomiis Helta Helta Delta; Occidental College. M i() i-. Cari. C. Helta .hiimtil 1 1 ushdiiJry H.ichelors; Block and Bridle. niMiiMHMiniMiii nintiiniMn«iiiniii immiiinM «mmiiim«mini iimn  iitminiimi i MHnnMMiin Mai.tas. Kfnnkhi j. nclriiar .hiimal I luslninJry Alpha Ciamina Rho ; Alpha Zeta ; Scahbard aiui Blade; Ag Cnmicil ; Secretary Ag Club; Block and Bridle; Hiitchniwii Medal; lu- nioi (■las Flay; •■Rcillc ' s Wild Oat ( ast ; Jiarhelors. M.WHART, Sarah Kridxsille Ilnwi- Ktntwjnu s Gamma Phi Beta; Theta Sigma Phi ; Woman ' s Editor loiva Slalf StUitnil : llnmcmakfr Staff; ' o- men ' s Guild Home Economics Club; V. W. C. A.; W. A. A.; Hiking Medal; College Orches- tra ; Home Economics Orchestra ; May Fete; Home Economics Vaudeville; Junior Class Play. Marsh, D. Yoino Webster City h ' Iri Iriiiil Eitii ' inrfrinii Eta Kappa Nu. Merihart, Eari. nuburpie ■ (•( hind r.nijiniiiin ' j Hau Ki. Marshman. W. a. Hubbard Aniiiud llnsliandiy Ag Club; Block and Bridle. Marsh. Johv L. F.h ' ili ' u al Eiuiinrniii ' i Ames Martin, Chester W. Orange, Mass. Fnn ' stry Delta T ' psilnn; . ' Kg Council; Inter-Fraternity Council ; Vice- President Forestry Club; Tuninr Class Plav ; .Associate Editor .lines Forislir; Cilee Club. Maktiv, Ardath lielle Plaine Ilninr luonnmiis Treasiner Women ' s Guild ' 22; Grinnell College. Mai ' Rice, Catharine Jefferson Ilomr r.innomirs Y. W. C. A. ; Home Economics Club; W. . . . .; Sophomore Council; Junior . dvisiiry Board. Mai_n, Vere p. Laurel, Nebraska Ci-Z ' il V.nijini ' rrhu . . A.. E. ; Ex-Service Men ' s Rifle Club. |k2B3. 109 IIIM inilttl«lllllflll)IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHni|ll|(||ll|IIIM MMIINMHIIMI«ll unai Maxweli,, Dami) C. W ' liai Cheer harm ( ' .vol ' s aiiA Soils Agroiininy C ' liili. Meadows, Elmer J. iKnlhin( .lllimill llllshiirhlry El Paxj; Block niul Hrlille. Mei.i.inoek. II. F. SpririKfieUi, Oliin .lyriiullural Eronomits Phi Kappa Psi ; Iiiter-Frateniitv Council; ! ' ;24 Bomb Staff; Wit- tenberjx C tllejxe. Mellincer. M. J. Houston, Texas .Animal Husbandry Dixie Cluh; Hand. Me eolcii, E. M. Cnimes . If rinil :irii Joiinuilism Alpha tiamnia Rhn ; AA Fra- ternity; Freshman Baseball; ' ar- sity Baseball; Football; ' rest- ling; Inter-Fraternitv Council; loraa Sitilr Stiictrnl Staff; BOMB Staff; Press Club. Men ' tzer, Phoebe E. Marion Home F.ronomirs Kappa Delta; Theta Sifji ' na Phi. MinDi.EiON, Cecil B. What Cheer .Jiiimal Ilusbtituiry Block and Bridle; . ' k Club. Miller. .Ai.nERt R. Readinp;, Penn. I ' l lirhiary Midirine Phi Kappa Sigma; Freshman Track; ' arsity Track ' 22, ' 23; Secretary Wtcrinary Medical So- ciety. Miller, Allan- Des Moines Fonslry El Paso; Forcstrv Club; . . I. S. C. ; .Imis Fon ' shr Staff ' 23. Miller, Mi.Ki i a .Ames r.lt ' i trim! 1. lu irirrrin A. S. C. E. liHMXnittHHIfHIIIHHIIHMMtMIIIIIIHill 110 x-irati Hj Mii.i.ER, Marion ' Mediapoli hidiislrial Si inn i ' Alpha CjaiiiiiKi Delta; Math Club; Geneva Club; V. V. C. A.; Women ' s Guild; Parsons College. Miller, R. J. Waterloo .Irchiti ' i ' tural Knginrcrinij Phi Delta Theta ; AA Frater- nity; A ' arsity Basketball. MiLN ' ES, James K. Downers Grove, 111. Animal Ilushandiy Philomathean; Kennedv Cup De- bates ' 22, ' 23; Ag Club. MOFFIT, Alex.wder Mcchanicsville Animal IlusluuiAyy Theta Chi. Molisov, Wilbur C. Malcolm Animal II ushauJry Theta Delta Chi: Block and Bridle; oiivi .Iprinillurist Staff ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Class Track ' 21, ' 22. Monroe, Marit.x Knoxville IJomr Economics I ' niversity of Colorado. Moore, H. Richard Moulton F.lcctriial I-.m mcninij MoRisSEV, ' eronica Ames Home Ecotiomiis Chi Omega; C. S. A.; Sopho- more Council ; Junior Advisory Board; Military Sponsor ' 22, ' 23. MoSER, Reuren K. Osterdock Animal lliishanji y Alpha Ciamma Rho ; Freshman Baseball ; Varsitv Basketball ' 22, ' 23. Mlndt, .Anne W. Whittier, California Home Eco nomics CJamina Phi Beta; flomcmakcr Staff; Home Economics Club; May Fete ' 21 ; Veishca ' 22; Home Economics ' aude ille ' 21, ' 22; I ' niversitv of Southern California. Ill Ml RPHV, Am RED V. Westficlil, N. Dairy Maiiulactiirint Sigma Alpha F.psilnii ; T. L. H. : 192+ lioMB Staff; Intcrfraternity Cmiiuil. Mi ' RPiiEV. Lawrence A. Ames C ' f(7 F.nijinnrinii Beta Thcta Pi; Civil Engineer- ing Society. I ERS, Kewetii Newtiiii .Ir rii ulliinil f.ronnm ' u ' S MvERS, Roland B. Pes Moines Elri Iriral Kiuiimii in MvcATT, R. F. SlicnandcKih .hnrtuil I ushiinJt y Alpha Ciamma Rho ; Scnhliard and Blade. Xaik. Warrex F. ' inteiset T ico-Y ftir .1 t ru ulturr As CUib: Ciirtiss Club; Class Football, ' 21. N ' WAKKO. ' INCENT C. Muntinlupa, Phillipine Island .htiiniil lliishaniiry . mcs Filipino Students Associ- ation. Nelson, Volnev C. .Ames F.leilrical Eiujiiiririnii NEwmN, Helen J. I ' onca, Nelnaska llonti ' Ei ' OtiotnifS Home Economics Club; Morning- siile College. Nichols, Richard T. Osa c .Ircliitcclural Kniiiniiriiu Sigma Pi; Vice-President Engi- neering Council ; Crockets. • IIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIItlMltllMlllllltHIIIIIIMIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIItltllMltllMMIIIIIIIlim- rar-H -:ar- r=ailTniU: iHinimmMHHntit tiMiminiinitiiinin«iiiiitiiiiMMtMmitiln«nwMtMHiMHi Niciini.snv. lUi:ii 1 ' . Ossian Ml inn (I l.ttf imiyiuij NoRKis, W. J. nenisim .hiinuil lliisl iiihlry Delta Tau Delta; Inter-rrater- nity Council ' 20; ' livi .li ruut- lurisl Staff ' 20. North. Clarence P. Rock Rapids Mfclianical httyijiffrmtj Acacia. Norton-, Robert A. Rowley .Iciruulluriit I.iuiiiui luu Welch Literar Societ ' ; A. S. A. E. Oldham, Elizabeth F.ddyville Ilnmr Economics Omega Pi; Penn College. Olsan. Dorotiii ' M. Ruck RapicK Home Eiofioinus Gamma Phi Beta; Basketball Team ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; llockev Team; Tennis Team; W. . . A. Coun- cil. Osborne, D vk;hi H. Walker farm Mautit nncnl Rural Economics Club; Ag Cluh; Scabbard and Blade; Captain R. O. T. C. OsTEKHUS, Lenora Rllth ell Home Economics Glee Club; St. Olaf College. Pace, James F. Marmwhone, Kentucky Inimal llushandiy Tau Kappa Epsilon; Dixie Club; Ag Club. Page, CIlenn I. Des Moines Mrc uinn ni l- nz inrccinr A. S. M. E.; A. A. E.; Presi- dent Laison ' 22. Paiii.. I ' m I. Cl ' mtiin Inimal llushanjiy Delta rp iIon; Junior Class Plav; Ag Club; Hloi-k and Bridle; ' eishea Pla . PAiriE, Cl.Avinv W. Fort Dodge Civil i.iiiiincrrinii Delta Tau Delta ; rrcshniau Bas- ketball ' 21; ' arsity Tennis ' 22; College Championship ' 21. ' 22, Paine, Edwin H. Eagle Grove .htimal II iisliaitdry l elta T ' psilon. Palm, C. TIenrv Circleville, Ohio .hiirruil II itshantiry Theta Delta Chi; Alpha Zeta ; AA Fraternity; Blork and Bridle; Football ' ' 22; 1924 Bomb Staff. P.VONE, Anthony Des Moines r.lrttrical Eiujiniiiinij loKa F.iif iniir Staff ' 22. ' 23. Park, Walter A. Belle Plaine .Irichilcctural Rntiiniiririfi Sigma Sigma; Crockets; Inter- Local Fraternitv Council. Parker, Cieorge E. Webb . hiricultural Fnginiiring College Rifle Team ' 21, ' 23. Parkins. G. Gerald Derby .Inimal Hushaiuliy Tau Gamma Nu ; Block and Bridle; Chapel Choir. Pall, Francis J. Grinnell .Inimal IliisliunJry Block and Bridle; Dinsinore Me- dal ' 22. Paxton, Ralph E. Boone r.lcilrii lit I: III ill I- 1- rill 1 Kappa Sigma ; 1 . L. B. ; .AA Fraternity; Freshman Basketball ' 23; X ' arsity Basketball ' 21. ' 22; Inter- Fraternitv Council. ■ TTT:TnrTTITTIMlllllllll!!l!ilJ!: iir:. 11+ gjgjg -g- amuik annnnmnmnrr. s Pearson, Thelma H. Ottunnva Home Economics W. A. A.; V. W. C. A.; Quill Literary Society; Chapel Chnir; Home Economics Cluh. Pedersen, Eveleth Davenport Home Economics Alpha Chi Beta; Jack O ' Lan- tern ; Kappa Phi ; Sophomore Council; Junior Advisory Board; Home Economics Club; V. V. C. A. ; Dancing Team ' 22. Penquite, Gladys Colfax Home Economics Kappa Phi ; Home Economics Cluh; Y. V. C. A. Peppers, Martha E. Ottuniwa Home Economics Kappa Delta; Y. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; Sopho- more Council ; Junior Advisory Board. Pereboom, Frank S. Springfield, Illinois Agricultural Economics Phi Kappa Psi ; Inter-Fraternity Council ; oita State StuclenI ' 22, ' 23. Petersen, Carl W. Primghar Mechanical Eni ineeriniy A. S. M. E. Petersen, Lucy E- Hancock Home Economics Kappa Phi; Home Economics Club; Concert Band, ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Symphony Orchestra ' 22, ' 23 ; Home Economics; Orchestra ' 21, ' 22, ' 23; Y. V. C. A. Peterson, Charles D. Ames Mechanical Eni ineerini Alpha Mu; A. S. M. E. Peterson, Ina Home Economics Randall Peterson, J. Merrlwi Council Bluffs Chemistry Technoloijy Scabbard aiul l?Iade. • 115 ■IIIMIHMMHUIIIHHIIIIII IHIIIIIHHUHimiMIIMMmilHIHIIHIIHIIIIIIHHMIHHimtMHMHIII IIHII m Pktkrsov, Lawrrxce J. Ciriswnld Kliflricat Knijineniny R. O. T. C. PlEPER, F.LSIE Vc t Liberty lloini- liionnmus . V. C. A.; Penn CnllcKe. HEniN(;ER. Albert N. Crrston Farm Crn s itrij Stiils Porsii. Hii.nRED Indusliial Scuiur Lamniii Pnill.M.W, (iRACE IiiAuslriat Scienci- . V. C. A.; Science Cliih. Ames Prestox, Doris Strawliern Point I i iuslriiil SiiriK r I ' OWEI.l., Rav Pine Cirove, ' e t ' irj;inia lot ational luiutttliun Priem, Harold W. Nora Springs Rural Soiiolnijy Chi Phi; Glee Club ' 18, ' 19, ' 22; A-M-E-S Quartet ' l ' ); Mika- dii Cast; Ag Club. I ' rkt, I.l ra Winterset Ilonu- l-conomits Chi Oiiiega ; Business Staff loiua llomitnukrr: Band; Svmphony Orchestra; Leader Hume F.con- nniics Orchestra ; SaNaphiine Quartet; Manaj er Home Kcon- oinics Vaudeville ' 22; ' . V. C. A.; W. A. A.; Home Econ- omics Club; Military Sponsor; ' onien ' s Pan-Ilellcnic CoiMicil. I ' ROESCiinLDT, Walter H. Manilla Electrical I ' lir iii: rrim Cadet Officers Association; Or- chestra. • IIIIIIIMIIIHIMIIIIItllllHIIHIIIIMIMIIIIHIMMIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllltlllHillllllllilltHI«HIIIII lt IIMtMIIIIMIII-3- V Provt, Clarence ' ii ;iiua. Miiincscita Fnrrslry A. I. F. C. ; Associate Eilitor Amis I ' orcstir ; Class Track. Raxnei.s, Jessir M. Ilnnw i ' .i Dnoinii s Dviiilap Kappa I ' lii; V. A. A.; V. V. C. A.; Ilome Economics Cluh; Cres- cent Literarv Society. Ratcliffe. HiKiiiA Oeciirah Untnr !:( finnmii s Alpha Delta Pi; V. V. C. A.; Home Economics Cluli. Rai ' er, Joh J. Ottuniwa Jitimal llusliandry Amician ; Ag Club. Ravness, EriiEi, Ames Ilomr V.iojifnnits V. V. C. A. ; Home Economics Club. Ravnoi.ds, Rk ' HAKI) B- Easton, Penn. Fann Manaijinunt Phi Gamma Delta; T. I.. H. ; ■•.• . Fraternily; Assistant Edi- tor 1924 BnMP, ,■ Grcin Gnndrr Staff; Intcr-Miiral Council; In- ter-Fraternity Council; ' arsit Track ' 22, ' 23; Junior Class Play. Read, Franklin Y... tuand Rapids, Illino ' s Jiiiiritil 1 1 iishii !ilry Theta Chi. Reck, Frank i ' nwx. Indiana .liir ' nultund Journalism Delta Tail Delta; Sigma Delta Chi; Cardinal Guild; Editor Iniva Jt rinilliirisl ; Bally Rot ; Publicity Manager ' eishea. Reed, Rlssell Cedar Elerlridil l:ni i)tirrinij Reidv, Helen G. Rockwell City Ilnmt ' i.iontimit s Alpha CJamina Delta; Cornell College. SHIM« IMH«l«H IMIfllllll ltlll HIIIIUIHUIIMH IIM «llll HIII U llllllll«IMHI ll«IHtHlinntlMHIIIMHI m •e$C «IWUIM4 HMIII««l IUI MIIIHM ll IIHHIIIINIIUIIUHitllHII HIII«IIH)MI -niiiiiiii iii Renz, C ' ari. F. Welistcr City CitH Eiiffiiii ' irini Reynolds, Viola G. Elizabeth, Illinois Iloiiii ' Economic! Chi Omeya ; Ioilui llomcmakcr Staff; V. V. C. A.; V. A. A. RicHEV, Alfred N. Ames Vi ' lrrinary Medicine ' cteiinarv Medical Societv. Ring, I. N. Ames Forestry Juniiir Class Play. Rin ;l nd, Joe Waxiie, Nebraska Farm Crofs and Soils Sigma Alpha Epsiloii ; T. L. B. ; Freshman Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil; President Sophomore Class; Cardinal tJuild; Inter-Fraternit Council; Sales Manager 192+ Bomb; Feature Editor 1924 Bomb; Cireen Goslings; Junior Class Play ; Men ' s od-vil ' 23 ; Agron- omy dull. Rink. Leslie G. Ft. Morgan, Colorado . •( liileclural Enc ineering Crockets; Phi Mu Alpha; Orch- estra. RonniNS, O avid J., Lessueur Center, Minn. .Inimal Husbandry llau Ki; Block and Bridle. RoiiEKis, DwiGiiT F., Fullcrton, California Civil Encjineering Theta Chi; A. S. C. E.; B.nsket- ball Siiuad ' 22, ' 23. Robertson. Pamd O. l.odi, Wisconsin Jniir.dl lliishiindry and Veterinary ■ M ediiine lluta Helta Chi; Block and Bridle; ' eterinary Medical So- cietv; loKa .Ir ritulltirist Staff ' 21, ' 22. Robertson, Ruth Columbus Junction Home F.ioiwmies . W. C. .v.; Home Economics Club; ' (icational Education Club. nuimimimiiu ' ' lis ROBISO.V, LULA KelliiHS Home Econom ' us Alpha Gamma Delta; Junior Acl- visorv Board; V. V. C. A. SCHOEXTAC, Julius Strawberry Pnini Agricultural Education RocHO, Helen- L. Boone Industrial Science Glee Club; Simpson College. Robertson, Rlth Columbus Junction Home Economics V. W. C. A. ; Home Kconomics Club; ' ocational Education Club. Sarazine, Genevieve Spirit Lake Home Economics Home Economics Club; . . . A.; Hiking ' 20; Dancing Team ' 22; May Fete ' 22; Catholic Stu- dents Association. Sanders, Addie M. Iowa Falls Home Economics Kappa Phi; Home Economics Club; y. W. C. A. S. ' lUNDERS, Charles Dubuiine Meclianical Enainecrinci Amician; Catholic Students Asso- ciation. ScHLOssER, Verne B. Electrical Enijinccrinij Theta Chi; A. C. E. Ames SCHOENLEIN. HeNRV V C,r Industrial Scicmc Science Club; Junior Class Play; Cadet Officers Association. Schmidt, Charlotte Home Economics Universitv of Missouri. Monona .e g;g.-.g C IIIIIIIIHIHHMMHIimHMI KlimillllllllllllllllltHtKIIIMIItlllMiimHtUHItllKIHIIHl m 119 vCte « ' iC ' t:r«, ' e. ' IIIH«ll HIIII lltl IMil llltlllMI illlMMI«IHIIIIIIIIIIItlillH)IIIIIIIIIHIII«lllllllt«lll IIMI(IMI HtllliMI)  l l ScHOMBERO, Harold J. Muscatine Electrical Knii ' tncerinti El Paso. ScHOON ' , Hrxry F. Manson Civil Ent inccring Theta Xi; A. S. C. E. ScuvvEirzER, Albert C. Cedar Rapids .hchilcctural Enyinccrinii El Paso; Crocket Sociel ; Base- ball ' 24. Scott, Johx R. Vctcnnnry Mctlicinc ' cterinarv Medical Societv. Ames SCOMLLE C. WlBER Ft. Morsan. Colorado .Irc iili ' ctural Enginccrinci Crockets; Cadet Officers ' .Asso- ciation; Scabbard and Blade. SiLWV, Ruth Des Moines lihhislrial Siicncc Kappa Kappa CJamma; t ' ncle Jimmy Cast; A Fan and Two Candlesticks Cast; Junior Class Play; Home Economics ' aude- ville; Crescent Literary Society; Orake Tniversitv. SllELLAnARHER, Clark A. Letts .Inimal Ifiishiiiiifi y F.l Paso; Poultr Judging Team ' 22; Rifie Team ' 22; Band ' 22, ' 23; Block and Bridle; Ag Club. Sherwood, H. H. Kingsley Mcc iaiiical Eii iiii,rini A. S. M. E. ; Collegiate Boxing. Siiii.iz. F.ARL N. Des Moines Inimal llushaiuli y Block and Bridle; Philomatbean Literary Society; Ag Club. Slmons. Mary Indianola llfi fic E orin fiti s . lplia Cianima Helta; . W. C. A. ' , Crescent Literarv Societ ; Home Economics Cluli; Cliapel Choir; V. A. A. !lllllMIMII)IM  IM)Mlt lllti) l IIIIIMHIi M(HIIHI llltllllHIIII«IIHIIIIII)ll«llltllHiaUlimi llllll«imimill- 121 IIMMIIIIHHIIKHIIIIIIIllllMIIIMIIHIIIIIIMMtlllHIIIIHNIIIIU Snyder, J. Edward Boone (Uu ' mnai Tit hnoloijy Kappa Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Lambda I ' psilon A A Fraternity ; American Chem- ical Society; ' arsity Football; Pistol Team. Ames Sowers. Frwk F,. huiustrial Science Beta I ' heta Pi ; Iowa Stale SluJ- eiit Staff ' 21, ' 22, ' 23 ; Cardinal Guild ' 22, ' 23. Spexcer, E. Merritt Humeston .li ricullural liJiicalion Ag; Club; ' ocational Education Club. St. hl, Benton ' M. Chicago, Illinois .-Igricullural F.iKjineering D. V. M. ; George Washington ST.wrnRD, Clvdena Fairfield Home Economics Chi Dmega; Masqued Players; National Collegiate Players; Cast Overtones ; Cast Rollo ' s Wild Oat ; Cast The Clod ; Iniin Ilomemaker Staff ' 23: May Fete ' 21 ; Los Angele s Junior College. Stanke, Lora a. Chicago, Illinois Domestic Science A. D. F.; 1922 Lewis Institute, Chicago. Sins. Meyer Dubuque Civil lini incerinc loiia Slate SluJenl Staff ' 22, ' 23. 1 122 nmiiiiitii mm iiutnutintiinimiii iinnmmiiiiMtiiniiim nn Miiin«tmiHHHH STEVEXS; W ' lLI.ARD W. Pecatonica, Illinni Eliclrhal Kiujinirrinti Cadet Officers Assnciatioii. Stewart. Alice M. Ilomr luonnmiis Haihiii Alpha Vh Beta; Y. V. C. A. Ih me Kfonotnics C ' luli. Stewari. R. T. Waterl .1 (7 haniial V.ni iiii i rinij Kappa Sigma. Aplitit;ton Stockdale. C,v a. Po m olot y Crescent Literary Society; Ag Cluh; Treasurer Horticulture Cluh ' 22, ' 23; Fruit JuclKing Team ' 22; Y. M. C. A. Promdtion Force. Stoli.ey. Lenore Tone Moorhead llomr luonnmics Home F.conomics Club; Y. V. C. A.; V. A. A. Alcona Stoitenbero. Lii.i.iax a. Ilonif Economics Alpha Chi Beta; W. A. A.; Home Economics Club; Hiking ' 19; Y. W. C. A.; Chapel Choir; May Fete ' 19; Junior Advisory Board; Cast Uncle Jimmy ; Cast Fingerbowls and . ra- niinta. Stirk. Earl E. Mount . ' r . I (iricullural Eni incrruiii American Society of Agricultural Engineers. SiLLiVAx. M rie C. Chicago, Illinois IriiUislrial Scinicc Sigma Kappa ; Sophomore Coun- cil ; Junior . d isory Board: In- tlustrial Science Club; ' . W. C. iiitM«iiiii«MniiiiinMiMiiiiiitMiiiiiiiiiiitifH«iniii« iiiitHn«iiMiHH«iitiiinmiiitti TgTB-l Iaclr, W. H. Osage .1 iirhultural F.nr inrcrinij Talsma, Margaret Springfield, S. D. Ilnme Economics . V. ( ' . A.; Home Economics Cluli; State Teachers ' College. lAVioit, IXw II) L. Knapp, ' i clMl in Dairy Uusliaiuiry Welch Literary Societs ; Block aiul Bridle; Little Coiintrv Thea- tre; Junior ( lass Play. Lest, Harold Z. Panllina .It rii utiiiral I-.cniiomics Sigma Chi; 1 . L. B. ; Scabhard and Blade; Bnsiness Manager 1924 Bomb.- President Freshman Class; Cardinal Guild; Fresh- man Inter-Fratcrnitv Cnnncil ; Lieutenant, R. O. T. ' C. ; V. M. C. A. Te.vtrum, Myrox n. Ames Farm Cro is aiiA Soils Scabhard and Blade; Ag Coun- cil; Officer Agronomy Club; Ca- det Captain; Officers Club; Ag Club. Thompson. Noel M., Huron, South Pakota Farm Crops and Soils Sigma Phi F.psilon. I ' lmMPsov, Noel M. Huron, South Dakota Chemical Fnt inccrini Lambda Chi Alpha ; loiia F.ncji- nrrr Staff. Thompson ' , Tholmer J. Marshalitown Chemical F.nc inccrini TiiORNE, CiRATA Frederickslni rg Home Economics Sigma Kappa; Jack O ' LaiUern ; loiua Stale Student Staff; Jiniior Advisory Board; Sophomore Council; Freshman Commission; Home Economics Publicity Cnm- inittee; Y. V. C A. Publicity Committee; lovia llomemaker Staff. I ' llOKI ' E. RlTll Home Economits (i rimes 3c: a3E3S33ni3 • c: llllllll lllllll)IIIH MM lilllMIIHIIIMM«IIMIIHMII)lllMtllllllMlllltll IKtIIIIIMdHIIIII TiiORSOS . WiLRUR R. Radcliffe F.lii ' Irical 1- lit ill III ill! A. I. E. E.; A. S. C. E. ; Ells- worth College ' 20. TiLLOTSOK, BeRTOX F. Miintpellcr, N ' erincmt .li riculiural l-.duiittioii Adelante; President ' ocational liducational Cluh; Ag riniiicil. TiNOi.EFF. Howard C. Cliiiton Industrial Siinur Ilau Ki. ' 1 ' racev, Albert H. t ' larion Electrical Eiuiinccrini Aiisonia. Turner, John H. Jr. OeWItt Animal Husbandry Ag Club; Block and Bridle; Bachelor Literar : Society; Track; 1924 Bomb Staff; Advanced R. O. T. C. Tlitle, Florence M. Norway Home Economics Uehli.vc, Theodore Oakland, Nebraska Agricultural Ei onoinics .• cacia; Alpha Zeta ; Inter-Fra- ternity Council ; Ag Council ; lo ' u.a Agriculturist Staff ; Presi- dent Rural Economics Club. Wilsey F. E. Dubuque Electrical Engineer in Trmv, Ralpji B. Pittsburgh, Penn. Animal Husbandry Beta Thcta Pi; Masqued Play- ers; National Collegiate Plavers; N. C. P.; Scabbard and Blade; Clee Club; Ag Club; X ' eishea Commitee ' 23; Cast Clarence ; Cast A Tailor Made Man ; Cast RoUo ' s Wild Oat ; Cast The Mandarin ; Men ' s Vodvil ' 23 ; Cast The Fatal Necklace . N ' anderveldEj Villl m F.inrnetsburg Architectural Engineering Crocket Society; Swimming Team 125 .ul .llMMmMMMMHImnlllHIHIIIIIIIIIIHHIItmilH  « IHI mHHHIHHHH«M l « mWtltlHHII HIMIHI«IH Van Nice. Jamfs A. Ames .litiiniil lliislniritfry Ag CUih; Utticcr Club; RiHe Team R. (). T. C. ' 21, ' 22. an Si.vKR. Frances L. Manilla InAuslrial Stirnce ' errai,. A ' ictor Britt Fl i lira! F.nyineerinij Victor, Ij.mrr M. Villisca I III mill niisliandry ' lNso , Helen ' Algona llinnr lionomics Alpha c;amina Delia; Jack O ' Lantern; Woman ' s (5uild; Pres- ident W. A. A.; Pan-Helleiiic Council. ' oggenihalek, Albert L. Dubuiiuc Mrclianical Enyiiiiiring Delta Tpsilon; A. S. M. E. ; Cir- culation Manager Iowa Stair Stu- Jiii! ' 22; President Porpoise Club. ' i,L CF, Harriett A. Mondamin Uoifif Etotioniiis ' nsn , IJFIEN Fort DodKe 1 1 nine I ' .ionom ' us Sigma Kappa; Pan-Hellenic Council; Home Economics Club; ' omen ' s Citi ' enship Council ; V. W. C. A. Walsh, William I.., Scottsboro, .Mabama liiimiil llufhaiiilry Wallis, EmVARD E. Fort Madison . fi( utniial Enijinii ' ritnj A. S. M. E. Walter, ' ivian Alice Keamaii Home Eionomiis Waterman, M. O. Newell FJectrical Etitjinrfriuc Weiss, Theodore W. neiiisoii Animal IlusbanJry Sigma Chi; Blocli and Bridle. Watkins, Rov L. Keosauqua Animal IlushanAi y Welch Literary Society ; Block and Bridle; Poultry Judging Team ' 22; Charles Grev Medal ' 21. WiiiRRETT, Kenneth M. Pulaski Animal Iliishiuiilry Ag Cluh ; Philomathean Literary Societw Wentch. Barbara Ames Industrial Stii ' ni c Alpha Gamma Delta; Jack O ' Lantern ; Woman ' s .Athletic Coun- cil ; Secretary W. . . A.; Heavy Apparatus Cup ' 22. White, Warren L. Oaklaiul Animal Ilushandiy .Ausnnia ; loii-a Atjriiullurist Staff ' 20, ' 21, ' 22. ' HirE, Ei.MVRA Adelaide Sutherland, Nebraska Home Economics Gamma Phi Beta; Home Econo- mics Club; Y. W. C. A. WiwT, n. Emerson Huntington Mills, Pennsylvania AiiricuUural En( inrrrinii A. S. A. E. WiiiTFiELn. W. A. Laurens hiihistrial Scirnn ' Kappa Sigma; Sigma Delta Chi; Green Goslings; News Editor loua Slalr Stiuu-nl: 1924 Bomb Staff; Debating ' 23; Bachelors Litcrarv Society. •IIIIIIIIMI«lll«tlllllHlllltMIIIMIIHIIMIi MMIII«M l HIHIHI!i!IMII k W ' li.i ' .tR. Ufr llawkeye linmr I ' .i onomici Alpha l ' )elta I ' l. W ' liKiNsov. Roger I. Mason City lUiitrical F.nijinirrinii Chi Phi; Mathematics Chih; Mason Cit Junior Cnllej e. ' ii.Ki so , Fi.oKENCF. Mason City Ilomr t-conomics Ciamina Phi Beta. Williams, Pali. G. Villisca .hiimal Husbandry Block and Bridle; Ar Club; Phi- lomathean I.iterarv Society. Williams, Marshall T., Aberdeen, S. D. Dairy Husbandry Co ote Club. Wilson-, Amelia J. Des Moines Ilomr Economics Kappa Delta; Y. W. C. A. Cab- inet; Home Economics CInb. Wii.sEV, F. EucEXE Sheldon l: ii Iriial I-.nt inccriutj Wilson, Marian West Liberty Ilomr F.(onomics Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A.; Home Economics Club. Wilson, Rl hi F.i.aine Breda hiduslrial Science Chi ()me{;a ; Freshman Commis- sion ; Sophomore Council ; Y. W. C A. Cabinet; Junior Advisory Board; Woman ' s Guild; Author of Scenario and Lyrics Magic Melodv : X ' eishea ' 23; Sponsor R. (). r. c. WiiHFRN, X ' ei.da L. Pes Moines Ilomr Economiis Delta Delta Delta; Drake Cni- versity ; I ' ni ersity of Illinois. Wind, Opai. M. Omaha, Nebraska Home Economus Alpha Gamma Delta. W ' lMFK. WlI.I.IAM I ' . Dairy Dairv Club. Ames WiNTERSTEEN ' , Grace . kr(in Itomr Kionumiis Glee Club; University of Inwa. Wocexs, Carroll A. Cliutmi Animal Ilushaiulry Delta Upsilon ; Sigma Delta Chi ; loua State Student Staff ; Men ' s Vaudeville; Junior Class Play; Class Track ' 22. Wolfe, Helex Louise Keokuk Home Eeonomus Glee Club; Chapel Choir; Uni- versitv of Iowa. Wolfe, Roberv H. l )avcnport Meelianieal Eni inenind A. S. M. E.; Baseball. Wooddell, Lora L. Prairie City Home Eeonomus Chi Omega. Woods, Florence H. Ames Industrial Siieure Kappa Phi; Delphian Literary Societ ' ; Glee Club. Woods, NLwford 1L Ames Industrial SeieU( e . Ipha Tau Omega; Industrial Science Club. Worlev, L. E. Shellsburg Electrical Enyineennij Sigma Nu; Freshman Inter-Fra- ternity Council ' 20; Engineering Council ; . Xss ' t Business Manager 1924 Bomb. iiinminnmiii«iM MtniininniiminniiMiiminiim Miim ininnmt nininitinn««Mim innmitimitn 129 ■ e.g.g.g«IIIIIIIIIIHlll IIIMIMtMttll l  M«IIH«nm IIHIIIIHHlllllHIIIHtmtHtmHIHH IIH« WIMW«WHmHIIMIIHIH;a- -a Wrichi, FiDRtNCE Ames Ilninr liirjiiom ' us Omega Pi ; Jack O ' Lantern ; V. A. A.; Ilikinn; Swimming; Hock- ex ; Kappa Phi; Junior Class I ' la ; Home Erononiics Cluh. W ' riciii, Mw Forrslry Alpha Kappa Delta. Maquoketa YouNC, Ika Jefferson C.i-vil Untjinirrnuj Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; A. A. Fra- ternity; I ' rcasurer Sophomore Class; Freshman Football; Fresh- man Basketball ; A ' arsit Foot- ball, ' 21 ' 22; Football Captain- elect, ' 23 ; ' arsity Basketball, ' 21, ' 22 ' 23; Varsity ' Fcnnis ' 22; Car- dinal (iiiiUl; Iiiter-Fraternity Coimcil. WvMAN , J. Wallace Des Moines Commmial Dairy iiuj Phi (lamma Helta; Dairy Club. Vou.vGCLAs. Claire Webster City Ilomr lironomifs Home F ' coiiomics Club; Sigma Kappa ; Point Supervisor of ' o- man ' s Ciuild; V. W. C. A. Cabi- net; . W. C. A. Membership Chairman; lotj:a llomimaktr Staff : ' eishea C jmmittee ' 23 ; Heo. N ' auileville. You ST, Marion- E. Independence I ' lii alttiittil Kdutatiiin Zerbe. Mason S. Omaha, Nebraska liiiiniil IlitshanJry Delta lau Delta; T. L. B. Zeman, F ' ihvaro M. Humboldt .li iii uitiiral l-.iiucalinn Ajj Club; ocationaI Education Club; Cosmopolitan Cluh; Y. M. C. . . Conference Lake Geneva; Leader Student ' olun- teer Band; Ckispel Feam ' 21. ZiNK, Franklin J. CJreen Mountain . Iffriiiiltiiial Kntiiitiiiinij Adelante; .Ag Council; . . S. A. E. Ml • e ' «C M tfHlMt IIM IIIMHlMMlHltHlllllflMHII«4llllMllini|MIIIIIMfHIIIIIMIIIIfllllM ' ' Ai.i.RALnii; Mrs. F- (i- llomr Kionnmiis Ames Andersen, Andrew C P. Iowa City .Itjriculture AiNsunRTii. Sterling Fort Dodge Afii ' nulture Baird. Lee R. Webster City .Itjricullurr Curtiss Club. . rp, .Al.viN D. Eldridge Agricullure Upsilori Sigma .Mpha; . g Club; Curliss Club. Be. ' VN, Mrs. Leslie H. Ames Home luoiiorniis Baker. O. V. ' inton .h rirullurc Bean, Leslie H. Reasnor Eli ' ilrir F.nii ' tnnrin ! Trades and Industries; Ex-Ser- vice Men; Rifle Club; . I. E. E. Belles, Cecil G. Blakesburg EUclr ' ual I ' .niiincerinij Brown, C. N ' . Oeep River .1 ffrti tillurt- ■IMHIIIHMIII«ll HIIH)IIIIHII IIH)IIIIMIHUIH IMtl)initlHHttltllll)IIIIIIMIMIIIII IIMIIIIimiHIHmilltllll-9 a«a- -3 132 l tll«HMIIHH«IIIIIMItlHIIIMilllMtlllMHtltlli H«WMItMIIIIIIHIItllllllllllllllMt llll IIMIIIIIIIIMIM)IHIII i ar-nr irg a:-am:iii mlHIHllllllllllll(MI|MlHHI M MIIIIIIMIII ' ll Kisso , Relben C. Ottumwa Agriculture Curti s Club; Ag Club. Ki.ivE. Leslie E. Conrad .lijruulturc I ' psilon Sigma Alpha; Curtiss Club; Ag Club. Langmaii). ern Newton .li riiulturf ClIrli . Club; Class Football ' 21, Mann. Alvin W. Malcom .Iijruiilture Ipsilon Sigma . Mpha; Ag Club; Curtiss Club. MAniRE, -Albert S. .Itjricullure Curtiss Club; Ag Club. Stanhope Mali ' In. Harris Q. Columbia. Mo. Structural F.ngiticeninj Trades and Industries Society; Ex-Ser ice Men ' s Rifle Club. PEtERi. James T. ' ' ork, Nebraska Structural J:iii iticcri?ii (iamriia Sigma .-Mpha; President Trades and Industries Societ ; Tre;isurer Non-C (tllegiate Class. Mki.sha, C ' iForce O. Cedar Rapids Mc luutical Hiitjniccritii] I ' psilon Sigma .Alpha; Class Basketball ; Class Baseball. Pose. Walter . Marshalltown .If riciilture Ipsilon Sigma .Alpha; Class Bas- ketball; Curtiss Club, . g Club; Ag Council ' 22. Peierson. Lawrence Council Bluffs RnuJmaknKj Trades anil Industries Societv ; A. C E. e.g.g.g.iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimitmiiMiittiiiiHUimimiimntiiiWitiiliiiiiiminHintHHiiHimHIHUimnnniiHii ' itH •g.g-.e c.iHiiiiiMHiiiii iiiiMtiiiiiHHiimMmmHHMmnini«iiiiniiiini mmiinmiiiMHHMtiiw«it«iimn«iiiiiiii ig- h-a-J-grsri Robertson, E. J. Omimwa . yriculture Shaffar, Glenn I.. Imnj eiie Electrical EiKjinccnuii I ' psiloii Sigma Alpha; EiikI- neer ' s Council; Cardinal Guild; Class President ' 23; Secretary Trades and Industries Society ; Class Football; Class Raskethall ; Class Baseball. Spencer, Bernice WcuHiwiinl Home Economus Singer, Ett.a Sheldon flowe Economics Stubblefield, Malcolm J. Sioux Citv Ac riculture Curtiss Club. Steuart, J. H. Sidne RoaAmaking Swires, Charles H. St. Louis, Missuui Roadmakmcf Gamma Sigma Alpha. Sunderman, Arnold Clarinda Ai ricullure Curtiss Club; Band; Chapel Choir. ToKLE, OLE B. Grinnell Agriculture tpsilon Sigma .Alpha; Curtiss Club; Ag Club; Class Football. Ta.vim, Clarence Schleswig .Igricullure I ' psilon Sigma .Alpha; Ag Club; Curtiss Club; Secretary .Ag Council. !IIIM«mHIIHH«IHMNIIIinil«MHIIM lllllimHH«IHn mi HIHIIHHin«lll MMIMII MUIIlnHM HMMtlHHI! .iiiiinniiiiiiimiiinimiiiHiiitiiiiimiitni«iHHiimmtwiiii mtmmnimi n Mmwmn '  wt Walter, John Ames .Ujr ' uullure West, George Humboldt .h iii uiluii- Vice-President Nnii-Ciillegiate Class; Secretary Curtiss Club. Wood, Georce R. Slater, Missouri Mil lianii al riuiiniiiing Gamma Sigma Alpha Pledge; Trades and Industries Society. Lanas. Marcus B. Penarrubia, Abra, P. T ' uuo Year A gricullurf Filipino Students ' Federation of America; Catholic Students Asso- ciation ; Corda Fraters of Cosmo- politan Clubs. Xaik. Warren ' interset, Iowa Tii-o Year .lijriiullun- Curtiss Club, President ' 22 ; Ag Club; Class Football ' 22. Baldwix, James Kasox Indianola, Iowa litectrical Engineering Alpha Tau Omega; A. S. M. E. ; Freshman Football and Basketball ' 20; Varsity Football ' 22; Inter- Fraternitv Council ' 22. Wight, Kenneth E. ' Irinidad. Colorado Animal lliishanjry Kappa Sigma; Block and Bridle, Secretar Leader ' 21, Pebul ; Cheer 136 UNIOR CLASS PRESIDENTS SENIOR JUNIOR MVRILE Knutsex (Fall) SOPHOMORE Fred E. Shepard FRESHMAN Don Catiox ' (Spring) NON-COLLEGIATE H.VRRv I. Schmidt (Fall) Fred J. Crawford (Fall) Glenn L. Shaffar (Fall) Giv 1 ' . Roberts (Spring) RoiitRT T. SOUTHGATE (Spring) Herman J. Doscher (Spring) FHE VALl ' E OF INTER-COLLEGIATE ATHLETICS By Sec Taylor (Sports Editor of The Des Moines Register ) Ever - year brings ast and niar elnus changes in the li es, surroundings and affairs of man and just as the last decade has brought equal rights for women, prohibition, the radio and thousands of medical and scientific discoveries of value to civilization, so has it seen colleges and college life change its habits, customs and attitude. Ten years ago toda bo s and girls who hurdy-gurdied through the intricacies of the modern dance steps would have been banished from school. Young ladies who ap- peared on the campus and in class rooms in the garb of bareback circus riders would have been sent home for more clothing. The professor who took a keen interest in athletics and admitted that physical training was an important part of education would have been ostracized as an undesirable by most of the faculty. Yet these things, among hundreds of others, unthought and unheard of a iew years ago, are taken for granted these days in the up-to-date and progressive colleges and universities of America. Athletics and ph sical training in the modern university have come to take an equal place with class-room work, for educators now realize that a highly de eloped brain without a well de eloped and healthy body cannot function at its best anv more than the fine bod ' can do real work without that trained head. College games heretofore considered a diversion that must be restrained, if not curbed, have now become recognized as a highly necessary part of education, and being so, the need of specialized instructors to teach the games also has been seen bv progres- sive college presidents and officials. College athletics, properly conducted, bring out all the good qualities in man and mstill the others in him. 1 hey teach the collegian loyalty, sacrifice, and gameness in the face of reverses, and magnanimity in the glory of success. These things of course combine in the end not only to make better college men, but later on, better citizens and better husbands. The loyalty and sacrifice for a college develop into public spirit- edness. Statistics show that as a rule the members of successful college teams are among the best students. Of course there are exceptions, but figures show that the best athletes are the most apt students. There was a time when faculty members went out of their way to make it difficult for athletes to surmoiuit the scholastic barriers, placed with the apparent intent of restraining all but the luuisual student from participating on his school team. Rut that time is past, at least in these uiu ' versities which are now regarded as the best. Instead the tendency is the other way. There is no inclination to overlook the necessary requirements, for every student should be compelled to make a good grade before being eligible for intercollegiate athletics. He should be, and is encouraged in I ' .is work when he is ha ing difficulty in na igating the class room shoals and in most .schools where he show s a willingness to work, professors are giving him extra attention and are helping him back into the channel that he may pilot his way out safeh ' , avoid- ing the rocks of educational disaster and the breakers of wrecked hopes. MlllinH MIMJ l ) ' MI ltllH )l«IMII l)«lll llnillllllltMIIIIIIIHMIIIIHIIinMI III tin An athletic ti-ani wliicli goes on tin- field and iila s well, giving all that each of the indi iduals has, whether it loses or wins, advertises success. If it wins, the advertise- ment is a much better one, of course, for the circulation is greater and the copy has the appearance of having been written by an expert. There is no denying that advertising pays, and there is no denying that the wcU-w ritten and cleverh t ped advertisement pays best. That is one of the reasons the president, trustees, facultx members, students, alumni and friends of the best universit ies glory in winning athletic teams. They advertise to tlie world the greatness of their beloved school. PERSONNEL OF THE ORIGINAL CYCLONES Manager, T. L. Rice Captain, E. A. Mellixger Van Campen, Center Blaxche, Left Guard Hammer, Right Guard S. O. Rice, Left Tackle WooDBURX, Right Tackle Lewis, Left End B. WiLSox, Right End Shaum, Left Half Back Meyers, Right Half Back Mellixger, Quarter Back J. VlLsox, Fullback Frexch and L-s ford. Subs Warxer, Coach JUE C ' VC ' l.ONE FOOIH.XLI, TEAM OF 1895 m L£ ,uunuinmii!j;iii:jjii:i:imiiuiitJct_CF35- B E:E3(E 142 rn-JT arm:- .: 11 E r .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.iiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii!: - - 1 III 3 E B 7 irac 1 rmg 1922 1 1 i! I 1 s e m - i-t!-a-n-H-alIlIlt!!!!l!lt!!: 3 3 3 ' ■I - ' lMMllll!IIllllllllIIim!IllIll!!!im!llllll!llllimm)!ll!TIini!I!V;i!l!ri!ty-. . 143 A. X. S.MITH, TRACK COACH ••••tllH tllMIIIIIII ao9 S- r9 3 3 vl Coach Art Smith Art Smith, head track and cross country coach for the last two years, came to Ames with a record of 12 suc- cessful years as an athletic director or coach. For six years, Smith acted as football trainer and track coach at the University of Maine and dining this time built up 13 championship track teams at that institution. Smith has served as director of ath- letics at Colby College, Tufts College, Williston Academy, and at the city high schools of Riiffalo, New York; as as- sistant coach at the University of Penn- sylvania and as track coach at the Mich- igan Agricultural College. In 1912 he attended the Olympic games in Sweden as assistant to Mike Murphy, the American Olympic team coach. Last year Art led the Iowa State track team through a highly successful season. Cap I. Oiis O. Hicgins 440, SSO, 2 Mile Relay Rel,iv TRACK SQCAI) 1V32 • C lllllmilMIIIIIMIH)IIIIMIMIIIItllllMMI IHIIIIIIIIIIIllllMIIHHIHIIIII«IIIIHMIIMIIHItlttlHMItlllll IIIMIIIIIII- LETTER AWARDS Otis Hiccins, Hig (Captain) A. E. WoLTERS, Deac L. E. Rathbun, Doc M. A. Boyd, Shorty V. E. Frevert, Mot J. B. Tracy, Jim F. B. LiXCENFELTER, Red H. A. HoLMCREX, Holly G. G. PoHLMAX, (Captain-elect) H. A. RiEDESEL, Hank F. W. Reich, Spike H. F. Brown, Fletch R. H. Greene, Pinky C. A. Hammerly, Ham R. B. Rayxolds, Dick M. P. Birthright, Parky H. F. Gaylord, Gav TRACK SCORES ILLINOIS ATHLETIC ( LIB Indoor Meet, Chicago— Ames first (A special two mile relav with I ' niversity of Chicago) MILLROSE ATHLETIC CLUB Indoor Meet, New York— Ames second (A special two mile relay with Penn State) NEBRASKA-AMES INDOOR DIAL MEET, AMES Ames 49; Nebraska 44 KANSAS CITY ATHLETIC CLUB INDOOR MEET, KANSAS CITY Ames first in special 660-yard race. ILLINOIS ATHLETIC CARNIVAL INDOOR MEET, CHAMPAIGN Ames first in medley and second in the two mile relay. AMES-DRAKE-GRINNEL TRIANGCLAR INDOOR MEET, AMES Ames 81; Grinnell ISyi; Drake 6 ' MISSOURI VALLEY INDOOR MEET, KANSAS CITY Ames first in the two mile. DRAKE RELAYS, DES MOINES Ames first in the two mile relay; Ames second in the one mile relay. MINNESOTA-AMES DUAL MEET AT AMES Ames 621 4; Minnesota 72 STATE MEET, DES MOINES Ames second. MISSOURI V. LLEY CONFERENCE MEET, LAWRENCE Ames third. WESTERN CONFERENCE MEET, IOWA CITY Ames fourth. NATIONAL INTER-COLLEGI. TE MEET, CHICAGO Ames first in the two mile. THE 1923 INDOOR TRACK SEASON WIN JC SF.PH HITT TROPHY Ames again put a two mile relay team into the hig time competition tliat came home with the usual Ames two mile relay laurels. On January 29, in a special race for the Joseph Hitt trophy at Chicago held under the auspices of the Illinois Athletic Associ- ation, Notre Dame and Chicago University were defeated in 8 :22. The men that ran were Allan Miller. George S. Mclntire, C. A. Hammerly and A. E. Wolters. This :-IHJ£R:: i f;-..- ..-, rTTTri-f-TTTT- ' fr ' TTin ■ was tlif tliird tinu ' tliat Ames had won this event, thus gaining permanent possession of the Hitt tioph . L. L. Bleakly won first and A. E. Wolters third in the special handi- cap 600 yard race the same evening. Deac was the only runner compelled to start trom scratch and he experienced considerable difficulty in passing the groups of runners on the indoor track. Time, 1 :18. WIN AT K. C. A. C. The annual invitation meet held by the Kansas City Athletic Ckib at Kansas City on February 17 resulted in Iowa State ' s relay team winning premier honors again from a fast field of principally Missouri ' allcy contenders. Time, 8:11. Volters was con alescing from an attack of influenza and could not run. Ralph F. Shawhan was the fourth member in place of Volters. In this same meet Hammerly finished second in a special 600 yard race and Pohlman, captain of arsit ' track for 1923, won the quarter mile. Time, :55. WESTERN CHAMPIONS Iowa State won the Western Conference two mile relay championship at the Illinois Relay Carnival held at Urbana, Illinois, March 3 ; Wolters was again with his team- mates. This victor ' gave Ames first claim to the middle west relav title. = s GRINNELL AND DRAKE DEFEATED The annual Ames-Drake-Grinnell indoor meet held at Ames, March 10, resulted in victory for Ames. The results follow: TRIANGULAR MEET AT AMES, Ames 62 Grinnell 41 MARCH 10. 1923 Drake 4 F.ienI Shot Put Bro.Td .Tvnnp Pole Vault . ' in-yH. Dash Miip Run 440-.v(l. Dash 50-v(l. I.nw Hurdles SO-v(l. Ilis;h Hurdles 880-yd. Dash High Jump 2 Mile Run One Jlile Relay ri« ft.. 4 % in. 21 ft., 3 ' A in. 11 ft. ■.On 3-5 4:37 :52 4-5 :06 1-.5 :n6 4,5 2:08 2-.5 .5 ft., 7 in. 10:33 4-5 3:41 Fimt Bogge (G) Tavlor (G) Dodd.v, Meyers, Main (A) Mclntire (A) Wolters (A) Green (G) Green (G) Mcllrath (G) Sficond TliiriJ Miller (D) Greer (A) Allen (A) Orelinugh (D) and Young (A) tied for tirst Green (G) Keating (A) Bierbaura (A) Howard (G) Pohlman (A) Kritrhett (G) Keating (A) Allen (A) Tavlor (G) Allen (A) Hammerly (A) Jliller (A) Ravnolds (A) McFarland and Taylor tied for second Seaton (A) Bollinger (A) BoUiner (A) . mes (Holconib, Miller, Hammerly. Wolters), First; Grinnell, Second Total Points G 5 5 3 1 1 5 •H 5 !ii MISSOURI VALLEY INDOOR At the Mi.s.souri alle ' Conference Indoor Meet held on March 24 at Kansas City, Ames won first in the quarter on Wolters with a time of :51-j seconds which was over a second under the pre ious record ; second in a record breaking mile on Rierbaum in 4:29; and fourth on Shawhan in a fast half mile. It was A. E. Volters ' last race lor Ames — the collegiate finis of a series of brilliant triumphs that has given him the title of America ' s greatest quarter miler. The men that made the trip were: A. E. Wolters, Elmer O. Hierbaum, Ralph F. Shawhan, G. L. Seaton, and Ralph W . Maine. 146 Gordon- Pohi.man A. E. Wolters L. M. Rathbun Captaut-.lcct 440, 8S0, 2 Mile Relay T vo Mile 440 M. A. BovD High Jump 1922 TRACK SEASON Io va State opened an extensive track season for 1922 by entering seven indoor meets. Coach Art Smith, in his first year of track direction at Ames, was at the head of the Cyclones ' track squad. Three of the former members of the famous two mile relay team that established a world ' s record at the Drake Relays in 1921 were back in search of further laurels. Stanley (Graham, the fourth member of the record breaking quartette, returned to his Alma Mater to act as assistant track coach. Otis Higgins captained the team for the 1922 season. RELAY TEAM DEFEATED CHICAGO UNIVERSITY Ames ' first event on the heavy schedule arranged by Coach Smith was a special two mile relay with the University of Chicago team at the Illinois Athletic Club ' s games at Chicago, January 27. The Maroons were defeated handily by the patched up world ' s intercollegiate champions. Continuing on their eastward jaunt, the Cyclones again participated in another headliner, this time under the auspices of the Millrose Athletic Club of New York City. The race, especially arranged, was to be against the crack Penn State team which was considered the best in the East. Truly this was an East vs. West classic. As the teams came on to the track, the Cyclones were cheered by 14,000 spectators. PENN STATE WON CLOSE RACE Wolters started for Iowa State, and gained a three yard lead on his opponent. Frevert ran second and held the lead. Webb had trouble Iti receiving the baton and lost the lead given him by Frevert to Helfrick, who was winner of the half mile in the National Intercollegiate meet at Pasadena, California, in 1920. Higgins fought to regain the lost three yards and was for a good share of the race elbow to elbow with Penn State ' s fleet half miler, Larry Shields. The finish was so close that the difference in time between Higgins and Shields could not be clocked. Penn State had the lead by six inches. Higgins, Frevert, Wolters, Webb, and Bier- baum made the trip. IOWA STATE WON THE FIRS I ' HOME MEET The first dual indoor meet of the season was staged Saturday, February 18, with Nebraska in the State gyin. The meet was a victory for Ames, 49-44. The Cornhuskers were strong in the field events and sprints while the Cyclones presented a fairly well balanced team with an advantage in the middle and long distances and in the pole vault. Coach Smith ' s proteges scored heavily in the quarter, half, mile, and two mile runs and in the pole vault by winning all the scoring places. Bert Webb was individual winner with first places in both the half and the mile races. Deac Wolters was second high scorer, having won the |uarter and taking second In the half. A new local track record was established by Rathbun when he ran the two mile jaunt in 9:55 1 ' 5. Tracy, Godby and Boyd tied for first place in the pole vault. 147 UMMIIUmillHlllimilllHHIIIIlllHHIIIIHIIIHI« tlllUimil llllllt  HHI l« ll ' tll HIHH IIIIIIIIMHHIII PASSING THE BATON— DRAKE RELAYS WOLTERS CAPTFRED THE SHANNON n(nca.AS CX ' P On February 25, one week after defeating Nebraska, Ames nas represented at the Kansas City Athletic club meet at Kan- sas City by Captain Higgins, Wolters and Harnmerly. Deac Wolters, running in a special 660 yard race, cap- tured the coveted Shannon Douglas cup from Kansas who had held the trophy for the two preceding years. Hig ran in true war horse style and defeated his nearest rival. Meeker of Missouri, with a time of 2;03 4 5. H.Tmmerly, a sophomore, finished fr.urth against a fast field. AMES SHOWED SPEED AT ILLINOIS Iowa State had always been a dangerous opponent to the Kig Ten track aspirants and she again di-pla ed her power iiois. when her the two mile relay — both record breaking events. In their winning event, the Cyclones set a new record which w, .s six seconds faster than any former time recorded. The ti me was 8:18 1 ' 5. Mot Frevert started off for the Cyclones and ran a good half. Harnmerly and Wolters followed second and third respectively, each running a quarter. Rathbun fin- ivlu ' d with a fast mile. The Perm Slate two mile relay team, pitted against the lown Staters again, ran hard from the start and won the event u a new record time of three seconds lower than the pre ' ious mark, of Frevert, Greenlee, Wolters, and Captain Higgins finished second. and she at the Illinois . ' thletic Carnival, Champaign, II runners took first in the mcdiev and second 1 W INMXc; IHE TWO MILE RELAY— DRAKE RELAYS The Ames team, composed DRAKE AND c;RINNELL TOOK A DECISIVE DEFEAT On March 18, the Cyclones played hosts to Drake and Grinnell in a triangular meet at Ames. Iowa State proved to be rather an ungracious host by annexing the majority of honor s. The final score stood: Ames, 81; Cirinnell, 15 ' j; Drake fy ' -. Ten of the thirteen possible firsts were captured by Iowa State and all three places were taken in the half mile and pole vault. Rathbun was high man in the meet with firsts in the mile and two mile to his credit. Wolters had little difliculty in winning the quarter and Green- lee, Higgins and McAdams won first, second, and third, respectively in the half mile run. Keaiing and M int .Mien took first and second in the low hurdles. Gaylord won the broad jump while Ravnolds and McFarland tied for fir ' -t place Iei the high jump. Tracy and Gndby also tied for fir t in the pole vault. Shol and Hank Riedesel placed first and second in the shot put. KAI IIHIN BROKE RECORD Al ' KANSAS CITY The annual Iniloor Missouri ' alle meet was held March 22 at Kansas City. Rathbun was ihc onl . Xmes man enl, but he abl reprc-ented his college by lireaking the i no mile record i iiniuiiiiiiiMM«ntiin«iiiiiiiniimiiiiimiiiim  mniimm«iimniiiiiiiini 148 OEAC FINISHING MILE RELAY STATE MEET FREVERT WINNING THE MILE RLN STATE MEET which -was set by himself the year before. His new time was 9:43, or 17 seconds faster than his time at Nebrasl a a month previous. DRAKE RELAYS A WONDER DAY The 1922 Drake Relays was truly the Classic of the West. Recortis fell in almost every event. The Cyclones, although not successful in establishing a new world ' s record as they had done in 1921, again captured the two mile relay. Their mark was 7:53 3 5. Hammerly ran first, Frevert second, Iliggins third and Wolters last. Minnesota finished a close second. In this race the Cyclone captain, Higgins, earned the title War Horse because of the wonder- ful fight he made to regain the lost yardage which handicapped him when he received the baton. His run was one of the bright spots in a spectacular day of events. Illinois, running the mile relay in fast time, barely edged Ames into second place. The breaking of two world ' s records and other inter-collegiate records probably made the Drake Relays one of the luminous competitions of the 1922 season. The four mile quartette from Illinois broke the former world ' s record by 18 2 5 seconds. Angier, another Illinois man hurled the javelin 202 feet 9!. 2 inches for a new record. RATHBUN FIFTH AT THE PENN RELAYS Financed by Double A tag sale, Rathhun travelled to Philadelphia to run in the Penn Relays ' international two mile race while his teammates were participating at the Drake Relays. Rathbun failed to hit his stride, however, and finished fifth. A long trip with but little rest before the race probably caused the Cyclone ' s defeat. MINNESOTA WON A DIAL MEET FROM AMES Minnesota invaded Iowa State ' s track field May 6, and, after some thrilling competition, succeeded in winning the meet b the score of 7214 to 62 2. . mes was compelled to fight for THE START OF THE HALF .MILE— STATE MEET 1+9 nrnmimTmmTTimnTninmmL H. A. RiEDEISEL Shot Put F. B. I.INCENTELTER Discus V. E. Frevert One Mile, 2 Mile Two Mile Relay C. A. Hammerlv 440, 880, 2 Mile Relay every point and in only one race, the two mile, did the Cyclones have things their own way. In this race Rathbun, Krnwn and Seaton placed in the order named. The Cyclones clipped off three firsts in the field events by winning the discus throw, the broad jump and the shot put. In the latter, Hank Riedesel, conqueror of the Gophers in the shot put in the previous year, pushed the 16 pound weight 37 feet for five points. Anderson, as in the Ames-Minnesota dual of 1921, was the star. He won the high and low hurdles and took second in the century dash. Deac Wolters easily outran the field in th« 440 and was second in the half to Higgins, who won that event in 2:06. Sweitzer of the Min- nesota squad took the mile in 4:34- . mes ' one mile relay team, consisting of Pohhnan, Ham- merly, Wolters and Higgins won their event in 3:33 4 5. CORNHl ' SKERS DEFEATED CYCLONES Nebraska ' s Cornhuskers pr(n-ed harder for the Cyclones than did the Gophers. The Nebras- kans took the fast dual meet held at Lincoln on May 13 by a score of 78 to 53. Ames presented an unbalanced team — a team with the heavy scorers on the track side. The result was that while four of the Cornhusker records were lowered, Ames finished on the little end of the score. Deac Wolters broke two of these records and tied Ed. Smith, the Nebraska speedy dash man, for individual honors in the meet. Deac won the half mile in the record time of 1:57 and later set a new mark in the quarter of 50 seconds Hat. Pohlman, Hammerly, Higgins, and Wolters won the mile after battling all the way with the crack Nebraska quartette. Gish, the noted Nebraska hurdler, was forced into second place by Brown of Ames. Rathbun proved his consistency by wiiming his favorite race — the two mile. Jim Trac ' won the pole -ault. AMES SECOND IN THE STATE MEET Iowa ' s Thirteenth State Meet held at Drake stadium, Des Moines, ended with Iowa in first place with 79; ' S points and .Ames second with 64. The Cyclones carried off five firsts. Dope was sent reeling when Morrow of Iowa out ran Higgins in the half mile therein- lowering Higgins ' last ear ' s record )f 1 :57 b one secoiul. Ristine, another Hawke e, aston- ished the Ames track followers b defeating Rathbun in the two mile run and lowering the latter ' s previous record by five and three-fifths seconds. Holmgren struck the keynote for the Cyclones when he threw the javelin 159 feet six and one-half inches for a new State meet record. Mot Frevert hit his best stride in the mile and surprised the crowd by taking the event in 4:31 3 5. Deac Wolters became one of the high point wiiniers of the meet by taking the 440 and placing second in the half. Pohlman, Ham- merly, Higgins and Wolters won the mile relay for .Ames in 3:26 1 5. Pinky (Jreene gave the Hawkeves a scare when h e led lirookins. Io va s crack hurdler, aroimd the cur ' e through the first half of the race over the low hurdles. Brown gave Schope of Iowa a close race over the high barriers and finished second. r ' !!:! ' r!!! i i iinTi i ti J ( 150 jiiiiniim: i AMES AMESJ |p.MC H. A. Holmgren ' Javelin H. F. Brown 120 Hish Hurdles F. V. Reich 220 Low Hurdles H. F. Cavi.ord Broad Jump The Iowa half-mile relay team e(|ualed the track record for this event when they forced the Cyclone team to take econd place. The Ames team was composed of Keating, Green, Pohlman and Birthright. IOWA STATE THIRD IN VALLEY MEET Led by Nebraska with a score of 49 and bv Kansas with 34, the C_ clone runners placed third in the Thirteenth Annual Missouri ' alley Meet with 30 points vhich included four firsts. The Jayhawkers had a close battle with Ames for second honors and won out only by virtue of the remarkable work of their individual star, Bradley, who placed first in the 120 yard high hurdles, the broad jump, the shot put and the discus. Deac Wolters won the 440 yard dash in the time of 48 4 5 seconds. Wolters also led the field in the half mile until the final sprint when Captain Higgins took the lead and won the race in 1:56 4 5. Rathbun lowered the old conference record when he stepped the two mile in 9:42 l lO. Tracy surprised the Ames followers when he excelled all his previous high marks in tieing Dobson of the Kansas Aggies and Rodgers of Kansas U for first place in the pole vault with a height of twelve feet. a y AMESi li Wi WOLTERS TAKINc; THE 440— MISSOIRI ALLEV MEET i3i3X3£5B :- - .-if-fir 4 J. B. Tracy Pole ' aLilt R. H. Greene 220 Low Hurdles M. P. Birthright 220 R. B. Raynolds High Jump ,elv.. r. , ■ u • ' r ' ' ' °J P° ' ' l ' = ' ' Hammerly, HiRgins and Wolters proved them- s Ues the bes in the conference when they outran the field and won their event in 3 H 3 lO Ihis same relay team won the mile relay in the State meet, and the Minnesota and Nebraska Q U3 i inccis. CYCLONES MADE BIG TEN RECORDS Breaking one Western conference record and winning more firsts than anv team in the Big Ten excepting Illinois, the five Cyclones entered in the meet held at Iowa Citv on Tune 3 set up a record that is seldom equaled. Press comment on the meet praised the Ames quintetl Kathbun ran his best race among the Big Ten two mllers and broke the Western con- ference record by two and three-fifths seconds. Deac Wolters reached the peak of his career when he captured the 440 in 48 seconds and later won the half mile in 1:55. Both races were entered by the best athletes in the middle west. IHE SIARL OF THE TWO MILE— BIG TEN MEET RATIIBIN FIRST IN TWO MILE- BIG TEN MEET . iiiiiiiiii iiiiinii i nniiMinm nimmiMiimiiiiiiiuiiiiitiniiniiinnntMi«inniiinmt i  mn miinii i RULXDlNt, Hit CURVE IN THE HALF MILE— BIG TEN MEET Ames ' winning mile relay members met with misfortune due to a foul by Sweet of Illinois %vho smeared up the relay at the beginning of the third leg. Higgins fell over a Notre Dame runner who had stopped to pick up the baton which Sweet had knocked from his hand. Higgins regained his feet quickly and ran a good race, but Woltcrs, running in the anchor position, could only regain enough of the lost ground to bring Ames into fourth place. Illinois was disqualified by Sweet ' s foul and Ames was given three poitits for third place. A second place in this race would have placed the Cyclones above Iowa I ' niversity in the total scoring. RATHBUN WON AT STAGG FIELD Doc Rathbun set a new Inter-Collegiate two mile record against the country ' s best at Chicago in the second annual Inter-Collegiate Meet on June 17. He outran Doolittle of Butler College and won by a narrow margin in the record time of 9:32 l lO. This was Rathbun ' s last race for Iowa State as a two miler. i: r r : -- THE -WO IN :48 FLAT— BIC7 TEN MEET UU.t. INS UTALIFV- ING FOR THE 880 BIG TEN MEET ■ iiiiiiii t iiiiiiiti«iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iitiMintmimiiH im«ni mniiiiiini nntMH MiinnnMM MmMWMWWHi?a. a  aTa ' ' j-   «iM i|i|: THE INDOOR TWO MILE TEAM, 1923 Miller, McIktvre, Coach Smith, HammerlYj Wolters RECORDS RECORDS ESTABLISHED BY IOWA STATE ' S 1922 TRACK TEAM Rathbun broke the two mile record at the Big Ten meet at Iowa City on June 3, 1922, with the time of 9:27. The old mark was 9:29 3 5. This new record stood as the national record for the two mile run in 1922. Wolters ran the half in 1:55 and the 440 in 4S flat at the Big Ten meet at Iowa City, June 3, 1922. Both marks were national records for the year. Rathbun broke his own record in the Missouri ' alley Conference meet at Lawrence, Kansas, in the two mile with a time of 9:42 l lO. Holmgren broke the State record with a javelin throw of 159 feet and f 2 inches. Rathbun set the Missouri Valley indoor track record for the two mile at Kansas City on March 22, 1922. Time: 9:43. The Iowa State medley runners, composed of Frcvert in the 880, Hammerly and Wolters in the 440 and Rathbun in the mile, established a new medley record of 8:18 15 at the Illinois Athletic Carnival on March 5, 1922. In the dual meet with Nebraska at Lincoln, May 13, 1922, Wolters broke two of the Corn- husker track marks by winning the half in 1:57 2 5 and the quarter in 50 flat. At Stagg field, Tniversity of Chicago, during the second National Intercollegiate meet held June 17, 1922, Rathbun broke their two mile record with a time of 9:32 l lO. Wolters equaled the Western Conference record in the 440 at Iowa City in the Big Ten meet on June 3, 1922, by running the single lap in 48 flat. TWO MILE RELAY •lll«l HHHII«HIIIIIIIMM MinimiHWMHHIINI«lltlUI ltMI HI(MIUimillUIIM 154 rTnnjT!Tjjj ' M. A. KENT, BASEBALL COACH Coach M. A. Kent ] Iaur Ki-nt, head coach of the 1922 baseball squad, furnished the team with the expert guidance that conies only from years of experience at the game. Coach Kent started his baseball career as a pitcher on the Univer- sity of Iowa nine while he was in college at that institution. From Iowa Maury went to the Brooklyn Nationals and after several seasons with them was secured as coach for the Haskell Indians and later for Carleton Col- lege. L pon leaving Carleton College, Kent returned to the L niversity of Iowa where he coached for five very successful seasons. He then went to the Lniversity of AVisconsin where he coached both baseball and basketball until he was secured to coach our teams here at Iowa State College. While here Kent coached basketball and tinned out one of our best cage teams. Later he took over football and baseball. Coach Kent is now on the coaching staff of Northwestern L niversitv. CAPr.-F.I.ECT ROI.I.IN WUITAKER First Base, Rij lit Field Captaiv G. W. MAiinSRV t ' atcluT ] ■MMHHMMIMHUItllHIIHMmWIimmiH ttHWWMIIMWWHt 1S6 iiitiiiininnnitmiM  iniinmtnniii« mniiiiniiii iiiiiiiiiin« mnMitnmn «nimtMHii SCORES Ames 4 Missouri 1 Ames 7 Coe 4 Ames 2 ] Iissouri 1 Ames 4 Cornell 1 Ames 4 Minnesota 1 Ames 1 Washington 2 Ames 6 Minnesota 1 Ames Ames Ames 20 4 Washington Coe Cornell 12 9 1 MISSOURI VALLEY CONFER- ENCE BASEBALL STANDING Ames 2 Kansas U. 4 Won Lost Pet. Ames 1 Kansas U. 7 Kansas 12 4 .750 Ames 3 Washington 8 Washington . 9 - .750 Ames 9 Vashington Nebraska 10 4 .715 Ames 5 Nebraska 7 Missouri . . 4 8 3ii Ames 3 Nebraska 7 Oklahoma 4 10 .286 Ames 5 Nebraska 7 Iowa State . 3 9 .250 Ames 5 Nebraska 7 Kansas State 2 8 .200 G. W. Mahoxey E. W. RUNKLE Edw.ard Thayer E. L. BlERBAUM J. M. CURRIE H. L. Smith WINNERS OF THE A E. jVL Meneough RoLLiN Whitaker (Captain-elect) Joe Greer L. M. Clauson William George c. r. durlan ' d THE BASEBALL SEASON The 1922 baseball season can not be called a successful one if the figures on the percentage column are to serve as a criterion. However, Iowa State met the strongest teams in a conference where baseball was raised to a higher standard than ever before. In every game the Ames players gave a good account of themselves, but they were often forced to carry home the smaller share of the spoils. The Cyclones lacked but one point of scoring the same number of tallies as did their iiHmtmHm iiiini mn  «iiiiit««ttniinHiitntiMM nnnmnin iiiii«iininwii mn 157 IIIUIttUIMHMIHUIHHIIIUIHIMHIIMiliiMUIItillMHltMlllllitHIIHMimil Edward Th.wer Short Slop L. M. C ' l-AUSON Pitcher 1. E. Greer Right Field more highly ranked oiiponeiits. Walter F ' ekersall, sports writer for the Ch ' uayo Tribune, saw the Ames nine in action and wrote the following: The Iowa State squad is made up of men of real ability but being composed principally of sophomores it shows some lack of experience. Another year should see a championship team at Ames. One or two bad innings were responsible for the defeats handed to Ames in practically every instance. As only two men were lost by graduation, next year we should hear the Victory Bell ring more often. Out of a squad of 25 men, survivors of the original cut from o er 30 aspirants, made by Coach Kent early in the sea.son, among whom were old letter men, previous season ' s substitutes, and the strong freshman team of the year before, every department was supplied with several capable men. Hitting ability as the main factor in deter- mining the personnel of the team throughout the season. CYCLONES WIN PRACTICE GAMES Previous to the opening of the conference season, practice games were scheduled with Coe College and Cornell College on April 7 and 8. These teams were treated to seven to fom ' and foui ' to one drubbings respectively. Rill George and Rib Moser performed on the mound for the Cyclones in the first contest and Slim Smith went the five innings of the affair with Cornell. All three were sophomores and showed up r fe ■■ ■ mm 7i Efc.O-JJr-. ' Jj I T. E. DURLAND Pitcher E. L. BlERBAUM Third Base H. L. Smith Pitcher well in their first taste of varsity competition. Captain Mahoney held down the cor- ner sack; Thaver, playing his second season for Ames, worked at second, and Rankle, from the 1921 prep squad, and Link Bierbaum, another new man, comprised the remainder of the infield. In the outfield, Coach Maurice Kent placed Currie, veteran of two seasons, in the left garden and filled the other two positions with Larson and Greer, both new men ; hile Whitaker did the receiving. In these games the entire team looked and played like veterans both in the field and at the bat and the prospects for a winning season seemed good. LOSE FIRST CONFERENCE GAMES The first conference games pla ed with Washington at St. Louis on April 13, re- sulted in a pair of defeats for the Cyclones. The first game with Smith on the mound for Ames was lost by a two to one score. Infield errors and too conservative base running proved fatal for Ames. The Washington aggregation got to Bill George and Greer in the second encounter and chalked up an even dozen counters while the Ames batters were held scoreless. COE AND CORNELL DEFEATED Iowa State engaged in a slugfest with Coe on the following Friday and gave evi- dence that its collective batting e e had improved considerably during the week of ■•iJChZtB- 159 •lllllimi«IIIMIMIIIIMIMfMIH«IHIIIIIIIItlM IIMIIIIt liailllMII l(iMIIMI l MU IHMMnntllHtMI HII(IMUtl-9 9- ' 9-9-9 9- ;k! E. M. MEvrOLGH Center Field . M. Clrrie Left Field V. ' . I ). Ceorce Firs: Base F.. W. Rlskle Second Base extensive practice following the defeat at St. Louis. The score which assumed football proportions was to 20 to 9 with the ' ictory Bell ringing for Ames. Smith and Moser worked on the moimd for the Cyclones, and Meneough, a sophomore, took Larson ' s place in the outer gardens. The next day at Cornell the Ames nine was again the victor by a score of 4 to 1 . JAYHAWKS TAKE TWO In the second pair of conference games Iowa State was again forced to suffer defeat, this time at the hands r id bats of the L ' niversity of Kansas at Lawrence. A niudd field and the Jayhawkers ' slabsmen contributed towards shunting the Cyclones to the bottom of the percentage column. In the first game Smith held the Kansans to a low- score but was beaten in the end 2 — l. Buck, Ames sophomore left bander, was unable to locate the plate in the second encounter and the Kansans coimted six times in the first inning. Durland, who relie ed Buck, pitched masterly hall but the final calcula- tions showed Kansas 7, Ames 1. AMES WINS GAME FROM WASHIN(m:)N One week later, May 5 and 6, AVashington journeyed to Ames and in the first ' alley encoimter on State Field defeated the Cyclones 8 to 3. The Southerners coimt- ed eight times on five hits secured off of Smith and Clauson. Three costly infield errors by Ames and some timeh hits by AV ' ashington accounted for the final score. The second battle between the teams was an exact reversal of the previous game and a 9-3 victory residted, the first alley win of the season for Ames. Slim Durland pitched this game. NEBRASKA TAKES FOUR STRAICHr The four meetings whh the Nebraska Coriduiskers were disastrous for Ames. Three of the encounters ended in 7-5 victories for the Cornhuskers and the other, the .second game on State Field, was lost to the isitors on fi e hits and seven errors, all of the latter credited to the Ames infield. The Ames team which had been leading, blew badly in the eighth inning and, as in e ery other encoimter with the Cornhusk?rs, lost the game on this account. The score for this traged of errors was 7-3. Poor umpiring helped Ames to defeat in the first return game phned the next week at Lincoln, but in the fin.nl encoimter both sides played ver - good bas. ' ball. The hitting Liiiini. ' iiiiiiumi:: : ii!iiiiiiirTr 160 ami fielding was accurate on both teams. However, the Nebraskans bunched their blows and the 7-5 score w as fairl - representative of the two teams on that day. CYCLONES COME BACK AT MISSOURI Iowa State showed the brand of ball the ' were capable of playing when the met the Missouri diamond artists on State field in the final pair of conference games for both teams. The Tigers out-hit the Cyclones in both games but the brilliant fielding of the Iowa State nine cut off run after run. The first game, an errorless affair, with Clauson on the mound for Ames, resulted in a 4-1 victory for the Cyclones. In the second encounter, which returned another victory for the Ames team by a 2-1 count, the Alissouri aggregation had a man on base in every inning. Mickey Meneough came through in this game with a pair of difficult catches in center field, at one time catching a man at the plate and at another holding the tieing run on third with a beautiful throw home from deep center. Bill George, who worked on the moiuid in the earlier part of the season, held down the initial sack in these games and kept the infield together in good shape. Captain Oaks Mahoney was shifted to right field for these contests and showed his versatility by making several timely putouts. AMES CONTINUES WINNING STREAK The same squad which humbled the Tigers journeyed to St. Paul and defeated the representative Big Ten team from the University of Minnesota by a 4-1 score. Clauson pitched his usual good game and Oaks Mahoney in right field cut short the Gophers ' only rally by pulling down a long drive for a third out. Oaks also looked well at the bat, being the first Cyclone to solve the crack Minnesota hurler ' s delivery. Meneough brought in the first run when he hit safely over second while the bases were loaded. Successive singles by Thayer and Runkle accounted for sufficient runs to cinch the game. Ames met the same team in the final game of the season on State field and defeated them 6 to 1 . Riuikle was the offensive star of the day, getting to the Gopher hurler for two home-nui clouts. Smith, Ames ' elongated hurler, had the game well in hand at all times and the outcome was never in doubt. FINISH SEASON IN TOP FORM The showing made by the Ames nine in the latter part of the season gave its follow- ers an opportunity to look for great things in another ear when the large number of first year men have received more seasoning. Ed Thayer and Jack Currie were the only men lost by graduation and the large reserve squad of this season should furnish capable men for a winning team in 1923. The 12 members of the squad awarded the baseball letter were: Mahonev, captain, right field; AVhitaker, captain-elect, catcher; Durland, pitcher; Smith, pitcher; Clauson, pitcher; George, first base; Runkle, second base; Bierbaum, third base; Tha er, short stop; Greer, right field; Meneough, center field; and Currie, left field. This letter mailc the ninth which Currie had received in three years of competition at Iowa State and was the third awarded him in baseball. Rollin Whitaker, varsity catcher and two letter man, was elected captain for the 92 season. • iiiiiiiiiiiii)fiiiinitiiuiHni«ititi(iMit ii it«iiiiMiiiiraiiiiiiiii ti iiiiii 161 ■Miiiiiniiniimn i «n«ntM  t«it t minnnnininiiii iiiniiiininmii«iiimmi i Hi THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE ( .iiirlr. ' i ,;. A . Ihnlin.i .pi (JRt ' EMOR ClASS BANQUET, Fl ErtEO AND ALL THAT. WeVE ALL HEARD . Ubout your CKEAT KKOM] IN HIOH SCHOOL AND HAVe , 5JIED TOU UP AS OWE OF THE COMIMG MEN INCOLLECi TH6: PRESIDENT HAS KECOM- MENDED IT AS A JUST RE.COC-- NITIOM OF rut HONOR TfOO DO THE COLLtt-e. BT tOMtNl HERE AND THE v JH 0L£ SEWIO ' CLASS WILL BE DISAPPOINTED If YOU DON ' T COmE_ ONLY S DOLLARS iC m - - ' vvi;: y - ' .lloir.n. miiiiljul iij ill, ' (•anninl (il l ' )niatwn iij Ih, liiijli liuuur. pays ii Sof-lmmore $2.00 for an allii i i In hi lo llir hanijinl of I he Senior ilass. -.IIH IIMIIN««l IIIMIHIIHHini l)IIIUItHIIIIMU M ilHH)MlltllMHIIIM H)HOmHIIMtlHMim M :- T.-— V-J I 162 163 tll  nlllM l«ll )IIH«IHM((«IM«IIIMIIIIIIItlllllHMMIIIMiMIIIIIII««ll)liltlMIHHf CoACfr Sam S. W ' ii.i.aman Assistant Coach Frank Willaman S. S. WILLAMAN, FOOTBALL COACH Sam Willaman, hcail football coach this year, came to Ames from the Clexelaiid Last Technical High School where he hail been in charge of all athletic teams for four years. Coach Willaman is a graduate of Ohio State where he plaved football for three years. After his graduation he spent three years luider Vilce at his alma mater. Willaman ' s record as a coach suggests that he also has marked abilit in dealing with oung men. He is a man who can win the implicit confidence and loyalt of all thos? under his charge. During the past season Coach Willaman demonstrated his ability to develop a fighting team out of practicalh new material and Iowa State fans ilo not doubt but that he will prove to be of great value in developing a hard hitting, fighting ' ootball team next fall. Ames is confident that Villaman is able to instill in his teams the true Cyclone spirit. (APT. A. v.. W ' OI.TF.RS Half Hack FRANK WILLAMAN Frank AVillaman, engaged as tlu ' assistant football coach, is also a graduate of Ohio State and like his brother he played three ears of varsit ' football at that institution, lie was also a member of the im- ilefeateil (nTat Lakes Na :il Training Station team. He ha-- h.ul coaching experience under ilce and with his brother for two v;ars. C ' APT.-Ki.FCT Ira ov Quartcrbaek ' imii!rniiiiii iin!i!!iiiiiiii!imT 16+ IIMUIi MMHI(i« iHIHt(MMIiniHltllUIIIHIHt««ti«llltllll)IIMIIIM HlHlll I I m I WINNERS OF THE A A. E. AVoLTERS, Captain I. S. RiGGS L. W. Laughlin C. S. Cody J. E. Sn-vder R. L. Ekins H. J. Sch: iidt J. K. Baldwin ' E. A. AXDERSOV R. W. LOXGSTREET J. E. Brorbv R. Hextges J. F. Smith E. V. Sage E. J. AXDERSOX L. POWEIK F. M. BoxDOR K. S. BoxD G. T. Roberts Ira ' ouxg, Captain-elect R. H. Greene L. A. Sauxders C. M. WlXGERT W. C. Berger H. K. Bexxett H. P. Sixdt C. H. Palm ' AMES WINNERS C. D. Brodersox J. E. Greer T. G. Nevexesch RESERVES Ames Coe 24 Ames J) Alissouri 6 Ames 7 Grinnell Ames 13 A ' ashingtoii Ames 7 Drake 14 Ames 2 Kansas State 14 Ames 13 Oklahoma Central 14 Ames 6 Nebraska 54 UMlllllltlMIIIIIIIIIIMtlltlKIIKUIIIMIIIIIIIIIimill W. C. Kxoop S. T. Carter Irvixg Jexsex H. R. McBride i;. M. Mexeolgh 165 MHHHIMW HHIHU« HilllMlliniltlHIIII«ltfl(M«IIIIIMIUI IHI -S S 9 THIRD ROW: Assi t;int Cn;uh Kr:iiik WillaMKin, B.iiul. Bnidersim, Sage, I ' cwi ' ik, McHinifv, Xeveiu-sch. Boiulor. C ' .iafh S. S. Willaiiiiiii. SKCOXI) ROW: Orecr. Bcrticr. Kiionp. Vuiint:. Wintrcrt. Piilni, Roberts. Grepiie, Bennett, Brorby, Ilt ' ntffHS. t ' lRST ROW: Risgs. Sinill, Baldwin. Smith. Wnlt.Ts. Lcingstreet, Anderson, SL-limidt, Ekins, ' Laughlin, Cody. Sannders. THE 1922 FOOTBALL SEASON Unadorned statistics covering the 1922 football season do not present encouraKing totals to the Iowa State fan. Winning only two games out of eight, and scoring only 51 points against 128 by her opponents, the Ames team plumbed to a new depth of gridiron disaster. Ames lost to Coe, Missouri, Drake, Kansas Aggies, Central and Nebraska- Of her two victories, that against Grimiell as made possible by a fumble, and the one against ashington was o ' er a notably weak team — one that did not win a game during the entire season. A close study of the season, however, throws a more cheerful light upon the football ear than the preceding statement would seem to reveal, and indicates greater possibilities in year-- to come. To understand the past season, one must appreciate the fact that a new coach, S. S. AMKs ori.Ns nil ' . si;. si) wiiii toi-: llnilMIMIIMMMMMIIIHIMIMMIHIUHIIUMftiHtltlllMltllMlttlMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIt- 166 •MllltlllHlilMll«l«ltlMIIIIIIIMHMIIIIHItll««IHIIMUtll Mlllin«HHtlllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIH IIIMIMI«)llilllMtllimil I. S. RicGS End R. L. Ekins Tackle R. H. Creene Half Back Willamaii, came here with an entirely new style of play to hnilci a team around no more than four A men. Only three of these men, Voung, Wolters and Riggs, were available dur- ing the season. The fourth, tSaylord, was on the sidelines all year with a bad knee. Nearly half of the points scored against Ames were made by the powerful Nebraska eleven. In the other seven games, Iowa State made 45 points to 72 by her opponents. Outside of Nebraska, no team was able to do any promiscuous scoring against Willaman ' s defense. This defensive strength showed itself in the Missouri game when the confident Tigers found them- selves at the end of the game dazedly holding on to a narrow three point margin, . ' gain in the Drake game the Bulldogs had extreme difficulty in keeping one touchdown ahead of the threatening Cyclones. In these two games the Ames squad showed a brand of aggressive, never-die football that promises well for the team when it has gained a little more experience and gridiron knowledge. PRACTICE c;ame pro es disastrous The season opened at State field with the Coe game on October 7. In view of the fact that Ames had defeated Coe the previous year by a score of 28-3, the fans were in an optimistic mood, looking upon the first scrap of the season as a practice tussle more than anvthing else. The smaller school, however, had a team composed of men who had played together for four r MISSOIRl PI.AVS A ' V AMES FOR IIOMECOMINC 167 Tn:iiiimmniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;rmTTmrmiiiiiMwiiinnniTmnn!mT:iiniinir,ininiiiT:!:iiiiUi-H-i -: ' C. S. Cody End M. C. WiNCERT Half Back J. E. Snvder End years, and it showed the Missouri ' allcy squad a finished, siiapp , mid-season type of play and came out on the long end of a 24-0 score. Of the three touchdowns scored against Ames, Collins, Coe ' s speedy halfback, was responsible for two. The other score was made by the drop kick route. In this game, Coach Willaman gave nearly every man on the squad an oppor- tunity to show his mettle. MISSOURI WINS A RE.AL BATTLE, 6-3 The Missouri Tigers caine on to State field October 14 for the Ames home-coming, confi- dent that they would administer an exemplary drubbing to her green opponents, at the same time giving their second string men a little early season practice. The Southerners were heralded as one of the strongest teams in the Valley, while the Cyclones had apparently proved them- selves one of the weakest. Much to Missouri ' s surprise, (and, even to Ames itself) the mule- skinners bumped up against an impregnable defense. The Ames team displayed the true fight- ing Cyclone spirit and her opponents were forced to resort to a kicking game. Lincoln of Missouri booted the ball between the bars from the 20-yard line for the first score of the game. Zcke Roberts tied the score by making a placekick from the 33-yard line. Ames fans, as much surprised as Missouri at the tightness of the game, went into hysterics. Missouri, how- ever, despairing of gaining any ground against the Cyclone line, called for another place- THE CYCLONES WIN HKldKl i ,K1 NMll.S 1 1() 1 1 l i IM 1 i . TKdW H ■llllllllllllll)ll )UlltllllMMHIIItl l«Mltll« IMIIIIMUII«IIIIHillllll ll IIIMIII MIIIMI« IIIIIMI «lll«IIHtllM)ll 16. mv V. C. Berger Guard R. V. Ldngstreet Center H. J. Schmidt Tackle kick when the opportunity presented itself, and Lincoln again made good with a 40-yard kick, the longest that had been made on State field in two years. In the final quarter, Ames made a terrific onslaught, time and again working the ball up into position for a kick. Roberts tried one placekick from the 35-yard mark that missed the goal only b inches. Another attempt went wide, and the game ended with Missouri thankfully hanging on to the safe end of a 6-3 score. GRINNELL FURNISHES FIRST VICTORY On October 21, Ames went to Grinnell for her first victory of the year. The Pioneers outplayed the Cyclones throughout the first half, but lacked the punch necessary to put over a score. Many times Ames held the threatening Grinnell team for downs under the shadow of her own goal. On these occasions, Roberts ' remarkable punting was an important factor in discoura ging the Pioneers, his kicks often making over 60 yards and one of them rolling and bouncing more than 75 yards. In the last quarter Wolters scooped up a fumble on his own 20-yard line and dashed the length of the field for the only score of the game. The defensive work of Brick Sanders at half, the kicking of Roberts and the sensational run of Deac Wolters were the high lights of the game. Score: Ames 7, CJrinnell 0. )% yC ' THE AMES ' BACKS CROSS WASH ING ION S LINK i WICE TO WIN K-fH-iXz i iiiiiii iMiiiiiiMM iiiii MHiiiiMmiiinmiinmiiiinniiininitimniiMmnm tiii iiiiim Hiiiiiiu iiiiinii-a-a- 169 !,. V. Lauciilix End H. P. SiXDT Center E. A. Anderson Ciuarcl AMES BEATS WASHINcnON AND ORAKE SCOUTS Before a bleacher full of home fans and a number of Drake scouts and rooters who were here to size up the Ames team, the local s(|uad showed a clean, powerful brand of straight foot- ball against the Pikers. For the first time this fall, the Cyclones exhibited force and driving power. The first touchdown was made by an unbroken series of line plunges and off-tackle plays that started at the five yard line and ended across the Washington goal. A plunge by Roberts capped the march down the field. In the second (|uarter Palm dove across the chalk mark for another counter. The last half was a slow affair with Ames on the offensive and in the enemy ' s territory, but unable to carry the pigskin the last 10 yards to a touchdown. Rather than open his bag of tricks for the benefit of the Drake scouts who were in the stands, Willaman contented him- self with a 13 point lead. In this game Longstreet played a defensive game at center that reminded one of •■Pnll Wallace at his best. Score: Ames 13, Washington 0. DRAKE WINS ONE The hundreds of Io va State fans who journeyed to Des Moines November 4 for the annual classic between the Cyclones and the Bidldogs were treated to a type of battle royal that is more often read about in fiction than witnessed on the gridiron. Things started to happen on the first kick-off when Snvder, Iowa State end, was carried off the field with twci broken ribs. DRAKE AND AMES BATTLE AT THE STADITM 170 -giFir! ' LvMAN Sanders Half Back H. K. Bennett Full Back G. V. Roberts Quarterback P ' orgetting that they were supposed to be outclassed, the Ames players dug in their toes and held the Drake team scoreless for the first quarter. In the second quarter, Boelter ' s speedy legs, not to be denied, scampered across the line in two successive runs for the first score of the game. Towards the end of the third quarter, Laughlin, Ames end, threw the Cyclone stands into a frenzy by carrying a forward pass through Drake ' s secondary defense for a touchdown. Roberts kicked goal and the score stood 7-7. Drake ' s real ofl ensive power showed itself at the beginning of the last quarter when Boelter and Orebaugh carried the ball to within 10 yards of the Ames goal in four successive runs. On their 10 yard line the Cyclones held, but a poor kick gave Drake the ball again in Cyclone territory. A forward pass and an end run by Orebaugh resulted in another touchdown. In the last five minutes, Iowa State opened up with a series of forward passes, one of which was almost carried across the line for a touchdown by Greene. The game ended with the ball near Drake ' s goal and the Bull dogs hanging on to their slim lead with prayers in their hearts. Score: Ames 7, Drake 14. KANSAS AGGIES WIN MUDDY GAME Ames players will always be under the impression that Manhattan, Kansas is made of mud. It rained all of the night of November 10, the eve of the Aggie game. A sea of Kansas loam, sloppy and tenacious, greeted the players when they took the field. After a few minutes of play, the ball took queer contours never intended for it by the inventors of the game, while the players accumu- THE CYCLONES AND WILD CATS TANGLE IN AQUATIC FOOTBALL 171 J. K. Baldwin Tackle C. H. Palm Full Back lated an epidermis of good, tillable soil. Backfleld men, receiving the ball stood rooted to the spot, vainly attempting to divorce their shoes from the mud with insufficient frequency to insure pro- gress into the territory of their statuesque opponents. In all this wallow, the Aggies, aided by forward passes managed to fall often enough in the right direction to make two touchdowns. The only score made by the Cyclones was a safety. Score: Ames 2, Kansas State 14. CENTRAL WINS ON PASSES All tragedies are not confined to Shakespeare ' s plays. When Central left State field November 18 with a one point margin to her credit, she put the delicate finishing touches to the black mask of gloom worn by the Ames contingent. It is only after seeing a game like that against Central that a rooter can understand how much of uncertainty and hick the development of the forward pass has put into the grand old sport. Ames gained a six point advantage in the first quarter when Wolters ran 25 yards for a touchdown and Roberts missed kicking goal. Unable to stop the Cyclones or to gain on straight football, Central resorted to the aerial attack. It seemed to have the Iowa State defense baffled and before long the Oklahomans took the lead 7-6, by kicking the goal when a pass went across the last marker into the eligible hands. Wolters quickly put Ames back into the lead with an 88 yard run, making the score 13-7. All through the game the local team had no difficulty in going through the Teachers ' lines for big gains. Ames made 354 yards in scrimmage, while Central made only 78. By the forward - r: - -r.- THE GREAT DISASTER • CI .«MHI IH l«M«M«)«IMMMII l«l4Hlit IHmnHIWXMMWWHIIHHMmiHHMWIUHHIIIWItMMWWMIIHIH 172 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiminiiiimtiiiii niiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimnntiininiiMHHHM MitiiiiiiinimHHi pass route, however, Central adx aiiced the liall !45 yards while Ames made only 13. It was hv this method, in the last minute of play, that the I ' eachers took the ball over for the winning touchdown. Outclassed in every department of the game e.xcept the forward pass, the notably weaker team left the field a victor. Score: Ames 13, Central 14. NEBRASKA BATTERS LINE FOR VICTORY Ames went to Lincoln, Nebraska for the last game of the season. The players learned a great deal of football in their hopeless efforts to stem the Husker advance. In spite of the odds against them, the Cyclones did one thing to Nebraska that no other Valley team had been able to do on the Husker ' s home grounds that season ; they crossed Nebraska ' s goal for a touchdown. To Wolters, who received a pass and got away with it, goes the honor of placing this blot against Nebraska ' s otherwise white record. Details of the game tell a story of the constant weakening of the Cyclone defense under the expert and merciless pounding of the Husker backs. FOI ' R REGULARS CiRADUATE The game with Nebraska on November 25 was the last game that A. E. Wolters, I. S. Riggs, R. L. Ekins and R. H. Greene will play for the Cardinal and Gold on the gridiron. Wolters, who has had two years of varsity football, captained the team. Almost too light for college football he made up in speed what he lacked in weight, and his smoking ankles accounted for four of the seven touchdowns that Ames made during the season. Laughlin, Roberts and Palm each accounted for one of the other three touchdowns. R ' ggs played a game at end that makes one of the bright spots in a black season. In breaking up, interference, getting down under the punts, following the ball, and tackling he excelled. Fans will not soon forget the playing of Riggs. Ekins at the tackle position was a power in the inexperienced Cyclone line. It is unfortunate that Bob was not found for the line before. His place will be hard to fill. Pinky Greene was out of commission during the first half of the season, due to a dislocated shoulder, but he tame back strong in the Drake game and showed consistent playing qualities from that time on. It was his first and last year of varsity football. Cyclone fans would like to have seen him in football togs earlier in his college career. Our new coaches, Sam and Frank Willaman, have the whole hearted support of the Ames ians. They appreciate the underlying causes of poor seasons. With practically nothing but green men to build on, the two coaches from Ohio have had to start at the bottom and build up. But with almost the same squad back next year and with addition of the best freshman material that has graced Ames for years, the rooters hope to see a real old time foot-ball team turned ■out next fall. AMES MEETS THE NEBRASKA AVALANCHE 173 1 THE EDUCATION OF ALOiNZO APPLEGATE t ' ourteay J. .V. Dnvluij iD One of l ie reijuircminls oj llic colleye (oursi tliiU Joes not appiar in the catalogue. 174 iTiTiTrTiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiilllliriiMitiinrnTrnTTiTTmnTnTTrniirnTiiTTnnTrrTTTT; Cross Country Fall of 1922 «:c-iiiwmMM«i««iwm«mmnwiimnnMniiin iMniiii« n« iiimM nnni niinnniiniiuiiinnnMtM« — -JTT Capt. L. M. Rathbun ' CROSS COUNTRY SEASON Captain L. M. Rathbiin, with E. O. Bierbaum, E. A. Hollowell, and SI. H. Brown of the 1921 cross country squad, gave Coach Smith a good nucleus about which to build a w inning squad in the fall of 1922. The other members on the 1922 squad were G. S. Mclntire, G. L. Seaton, and D. S. Holcomb. The first meet of the season was a dual with Nebraska, which was held on No- vember 3. In this encounter the Io«a State cross country team defeated the Corn- husker harriers decisively. All of the Cyclone runners crossed the line ahead of the first Nebraska man, giving Ames a 15-40 victory. Bierbaum was the first man to finish. He completed the five mile course in 27:74 , leading Mclntire and Seaton, who finished second and third respectively, by 75 ards. The other men, Hollowell, Brown, and Holcomb, finished in the order named. At the end of the first mile, the contestants were still well bunched, but soon after that Bierbaum and Mclntire set the pace, the others running a short distance behind. At the h;df-wa ' mark, Bierbaum had acquired a safe lead, while the remaining runners were strung out for more than a quarter of a mile. Injuries forcei! Cajitain Ratlibun of Iowa State and Captain Bowman of Nebraska to remain out of the race. AVIN VALLE MEET EIFTH TIME W ' licn the Cyclone hill and dale men journeyeil to AV ashington University at St. Louis on No ember 1 I for the Missouri N ' alley conference meet, strong competition was expected. Hut the .Ames runners proved superioi- and won first for the fifth ear  iiiiHiHii iiiiimiiiMimimiHnii«Min«HMHiniiiiiimiiiiiliiiim iiiinitmiimiiimi«niiniiiiiiminiiiiiii. ft lfi ncsi E. A. HOLLOWELL D. S. Hol.COMB Capt.-Elect E. O. Bierbaum in succession. Captain Henne of Kansas Aggies was first w ith a time of 28 :3, Seaton of Iowa State was second, and Bierbaum of Iowa State was third. Kansas and Mis- souri each placed a man after the first three, then IMcIntire and Brown of Ames took sixth and seventh respectively. Holcomb finished ele enth and was the last Ames man to count in the scoring. WIN THIRD IN BIG TEN RUN Ames was, in a way, doped to win the Big Ten cross country title providing Rathbun ' s injury allowed him to run in his best form. But the dope proved dopey and Io a State was necessarily content ith third place. Captain Rathbun ' s injury was really an important factor that kept Ames from winning. It was in this race that G. L. Seaton, well toward the front at the half-wa mark, severely strained a leg tendon but gamely finished the race, even though last. Michigan placed first with 41 points, Wisconsin second with 51, and Iowa State % . .MISSOURI ALLEV MEET— WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, SI. LOUIS IIIMmMHIIHHtmm mt IHm MHItlM«HKIIH MmiWMtW tm MH MI M IMHHmH MM G. S. McIntire G. L. Seatom M. H. Brown third with 62. The cold wind that swept the course did not materially interfere with the speed of the runners. Doc Rathbun wearing the Cyclone colors for the last time in cross country was second. He ran a fine race but was handicapped by poor condi- tion. Bierbaum, finishing fifth, was the only other Iowa State man to place in the first ten. McIntire placed thirteenth, Hollowell placed nineteenth, and Brown twenty- third. Judging from comparative scores, this year ' s team was stronger than the 1921 team which won second place with a score of 66 points, while the 1922 squad finished third with a score of 62 points. Elmer O. Bierbaum was elected bv his teammates to the captaincy of 1923 cross country squad. Bierbaum won his second letter in cross country in the 1922 compe- tition. The members of this year ' s squad who received the A awards were Rathbun, Seaton, Brown, Bierbaum, and McIntire. Doc Rathbun, although unable to run in the first two meets of the season, proved himself to be the ace of five milers this fall, placing second in the Big Ten meet with a time of 26:39 . THE ST. RT . T BIG TEN MEET— I ' lKDl K I . I l.K.Sl 1 , L.M.Wtirt, 1N1)1. X. 178 179 BACK: Coach Chandler. STANDING: MfKinley, Moser, Fe lv. .lacohson. Butcher, Lane. Sherk. SEATED: Boiler, Roberts, Greene. Young, Ralf. Coach W. S. Cmaxdi.er Bill Chandler, head coach of the 1922- ' 23 basketball squad, is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin. While at the university, Bill played center on the var- sity team for three years and was selected as All-Western center each year. In his last year at Wisconsin, Chandler was elected captain of the Badger team and was also awarded the captaincy of the All-Western team. During the world war. Chandler took the double role of player and coach on the Great Lakes Naval Training Station team and was doubtless instrumental in helping that team to make such an excellent record for itself. Bill came to Iowa State College from the River Falls Normal School where he had served as director of ath- letics and as basketball coach. He has proven his ability to Ames fans in the past two seasons as a basketball coach, leading his men through the season this year with the best record e er made h an Iowa State basketball team. WINNERS OF THE A Captain R. H. Greexe Ira oi. ng L. T. Raff W. L. Lane Tanner Jacobsox C. R. Sherk G. F. Roberts (Captain-ilect) H. C. Bitcher •)inilllllltlllllltllil«l(IIIIIMIIM lllllltHli «i Mltllllllia)IIIIIIHII  lllllill«IIIIMIIIHMIIHII«MllniUMIUIIIII 3-a .9-9-9- 180 iiimii iiiiiimiiimiiiiimmiiiniitiin tiiii««iiiiiiiiininiinmnn n«MMMHIil« nnininiiiiHii Captain R. H. Greene Captain-Elect G. F. Roberts Forward Guard 1922-23 SCORES opponent Played at Ames Oppone. Drake Ames 19 32 Cornell Ames 24 31 Grinnell Grinnell 26 17 Simpson Ames 40 15 Kansas Aggies Ames 2 Oklahoma Norman 29 18 , , ,,. . ,. ,, , TTT Kansas Universitv Lawrence 12 22 «al Missouri alley (.ames 347 365 Kansas University Ames 17 37 To l All Games 411 411 Grinnell Ames 26 12 Won Lost Missouri Ames 25 41 Kansas 16 1.000 Nebraska Ames 15 21 Missouri 14 2 .875 Drake Des Moines 29 27 Drake 10 6 .625 Nebraska Lincoln 21 17 Ames 9 7 .563 Kansas Aggies Manhattan 22 14 Washington 8 8 .500 Missouri Columbia 22 35 Nebraska 5 11 .313 Washington St. Louis 18 24 Oklahoma 5 11 -313 Oklahoma Ames 24 19 Cirinnell . 3 13 .188 Washington Ames 28 17 Kansas Aggies 2 14 .125 THE 1922-23 BASKETBALL SEASON Iowa State ' s basketball team started its 1922-23 season when Coach Wm. S. Chandler called the first practice on October 9. The heart of the team throughout the year was in Pinky Greene, captain and veteran of two seasons. With him Coach Chandler had a nucleus of three other letter men from the previous year — Red Lane, forward; Ira Young, guard; and Ralph Paxton, forward. The latter, however, was compelled to withdraw from athletic competition for the year by doctor ' s orders. With these men as a foundation, Coach Chandler combined the best material from the last year ' s freshman team and varsity squad into a basketball aggregation that finished with more games to its credit than any Ames basketball team in the history of the cage sport at Iowa State College. The final standing in the Missouri Valley Conference showed Kansas University at the top with sixteen straight wins and no conference defeats. Missouri ranked second with only two defeats — and these from Kansas. Drake finished third having won ten and lost six. Ames was fourth with nine won and seven lost, giving a final percentage of .563. Considerable credit is due Coach Bill Chandler for his feat of turning out a team of such caliber with the material available. The use of the short pass, while quite thoroughly executed and understood by the 1921-22 veterans, was difficult for the new players to master in the duration of one season. Considering the amount of sophomore material used on the regular five — men in their first year of collegiate competition — the record of the team was exceptional. GREENE ON ALL- ' ALLEY TEAM Pinky Greene concluded his captaincy of the team with an official . ' Ml-Valley first team rating — an honor earned by Pink ' s superb all-around basketball ability and by his courtesy and sportsmanship at all times. It is extremely doubtful if there was a player in the conference that ei|ualled (Jreene ' s combination of scoring abilitv and floor work. He rated third in total ' TIMIItHH ' - C. R. SlltRK Forward, (iuard L. T. Rakf Forward Tanner Jacobson Center scorings of all plavers in the ' alle — Browning of Missouri and Miniier of W ' asliington being ahead of him. Along with Piiil; (Jreene go Red Lane and Sherk, two valuable forwards who con- tributed to the final standing of the team. Five letter men remain to form the basis of the 1923-24 aggregation. They are: Pep Young, Riff Raff, Butch Butcher, Tanner Jacob- son, and Zeke Roberts. Zeke was selected by the letter men of the squad to captain the team next year. lie is a fast and sure guard and has the distinction of wearing a captain ' s star while a sophomore. Roberts was given honorable mention in an All-Valley selection and will no doubt cli?nb the ladder higher during his remaining two years of basketball eligibility. PI.AV CORNELL AND SIMPSON FOR PRACTICE The first practice game resulted in a 24-31 defeat by the veteran Cornell College five on Dec- ember 15. The game was ragged from start to finish, especially as regards the Cyclone passing. Greene led in scoring but lack of training and insufficient scrimmage practice handicapped the makeshift Ames lineup against the Cornell five who had pla ed together the previous year. Coach Chandler started the following men: Greene and Lane, forwards; Tanner Jacobson, center; Butcher and Young, guards. The defeat showed Coach Chandler his team ' s weaknesses and these were overcome wonderfully in the second practice game with Simpson College, Jan- uary 2, also on the home floor. Simpson had decisively defeated Texas University at Indianola and since they had previously played a close game with Cornell, there was some opinion broad- cast that Simpson would wallop Ames. But the Cyclones had benefitted materially from the Cornell lesson, and, with the help of scrimmage against Buena Vista during the Christmas vaca- tion, completely swamped Simpson 40-15. Coach Chandler used Captain Cireene, Tanner Jacob- son, Roberts, Young, Raff, McKinley, Butcher and Diwoky in the fray. Greene came back to his last season ' s form in floorwork and basket tossing. Zeke Roberts, sophomore, playing his first college basketball, considerably alleviated Chandler ' s worry over a sturdy yet fast man for the running guard position. Ira Young, junior, at back guard, displayed the result of his year ' s experience in breaking up Simpson ' s advance and in regaining the ball from the bankboard. T. Jacobson and Raff, both sophomores, gave the Cyclone basketball followers an insight on what is in store for Iowa State when her present crop of yearlings mature in experience. OKLAHOMA AND KANSAS V. ARE OPENERS Eight men: Captain Cjreene, Lane, Young, Roberts, Raff, Jaaibson, Diwoky and Butcher, com- prised the squad selected to make the trip to Oklahoma University at Norman where the Missouri Valle season was opened for both teams with a 29-18 victory for the Cyclones on January 6. Raff displayed his ability as a forward with six field baskets. Greene was the main cog in the floorwork and offense, however, while Young and Roberts worked nicely at the guard positions. Jacobson, with his height, was valuable in securing the tip-off from the Oklahoma center. 182 IIMMM  M« IHHIIIII «IIHmiHM«MltllHIMMt ll«MMM nTiTniimiLirTTnT1TITmTTTi:: mnTTTTTmnT yp-fvTV2 W. L. L.WE Forward Ira Vouxc Guard H. C. Botcher Center til Returning from Oklahoma, the team stopped off at Lawrence, Kansas, where the Jayhawkers held forth with a strong team. Kansas won after a hard battle, 22-12. Both teams presented a formidable defense, but the Jayhawkers, largely through their tall center, Wulf, penetrated often enough to gain a 10 point margin at the finish. Ames fought Kansas gamely all the way — but more especially in the first half for the score at half time stood 13-9. The 22-12 result was one of the lowest scores that the Kansas scoring machine was held to all season- FOUR HOME GAMES NEXT After the return from the Oklahoma-Kansas trip, the team prepared for four successive home games, the first of which was with Kansas on January 12. The Jayhawks fo llowed on the Cyclone ' s heels to Ames after their Monday clash at Lawrence and trapped the Cyclones in their lair for a 37-17 victory. The embryo champions were masters of all departments of the game. However, the Jayhawkers did not win without a creditable account from the Cyclones as fans stated that the game was one of the hardest fought battles seen on the local court in years. The next home game was played January 17 with Grinnell. Newspaper dopesters gave the advantage to the Pioneers before the game as they had four veterans from last year, all of which were good men. But in the game, Ames led practically all the way and emerged victor- iously, 26-12. All the . mes players played well, but their best game was on the defensive end of the court. Missouri next visited Iowa State and, after an exciting game and a spectacular comeback in the second half by the Cxcloncs, won the game 41-25. Greene scored 13 points for his team and Sherk, playing in place of Raff who had a crippled shoulder, tallied three field goals. Roberts held Browning of Missouri effectively while Young at standing guard blocked many Mizzou offenses. January 26 the Cornhuskers came to Ames from Des Moines where they had been defeated by Drake. Even though Ames expected a hard game, the dope favored the Cyclones somewhat but the Nebraska basketeers displayed one of their chronic eccentricities by out-scoring the Iowa State five, 21-15. .■ mes led until the last five minutes when Russell scored a long shot for Nebraska that started a rally resulting in a victory for the invaders. The Cyclones were clearly off form on basket shooting as they tried 62 field shots against Nebraska ' s 39. AMES DEFEATS DRAKE Ames supporters and Drake followers of the cage sport waited anxiously for January 30 when the Cyclones and Bulldogs moved on the Coliseum floor at Des Moines. Ames won 29-27 by hard fighting and clever floorwork. Usually the Cyclones had been playing a short pass and short shot game but in this instance a long shot attack was launched at the beginning of the game thus drawing the Drake defenders nut from their deadly defensive positions. Then a swift change to the short pass carried the ball through for counters. Jacobson played one of his best games of the season scoring two baskets and working in on defense consistently. Pinky Greene seemed to be everywhere and at the right time. He 183 tl|IH4ll«l IIHMMIII IMHIItMMI«IHIII llll lllllllllllll )llllttlt«IIIIIHIIMI  IH l dribbled and pivoted by the Drake guards for six goals and scored eight times at the free throw line. Roberts and Voting guarded effectively while Raff, though still nursing a crippled left shoulder, added zest to the game by his scrappiness. Several Drake and Ames players were ejected from the game because of four personals. Fouls were called exceptionally close by Referee Quigley of St. Marys and I ' mpire Britton of West Point. SPLIT EVEN ON FOIR GAME TRIP. The squad left February 1 on a 10-day journey which resulted in two victories and two defeats. Nebraska fell before the Cyclone offense February 3 to the score of 21-17. Ames hit the hoop more effectively than in the former Nebraska game at . mcs, but even then the contest was ragged at times. The regular five performed adequately, however, to avenge the former defeat. The Kansas Aggies were next on the journey and they were hauled into camp 22-14 on February 5. Although the Wildcats were at the bottom of the list in percentage, they had by no means lost their fight. Oreene continued his scoring rampage by adding 16 points to his credit. After the Kansas Aggie game, the team rested two days at Kansas City before playing the Missouri Tigers at Columbia, February 9. The score at half time stood 13-11 in Missouri ' s favor but they gradually pulled away in the second half due principally to Browning ' s accurate basket shooting. At St. Louis the next night the Washington Iniversity five defeated the Cyclones 24-18 in a brilliantly played contest. The Pikers were fortunate in hooping several long shots during the last few minutes of play coming from behind for their win. Captain Greene scored consis- tently again and so spectacular was his floor work that a St. Louis paper in commenting later on All-Valley first-team selections, stated that he put up a wonderful exhibition of pivoting and dribbling heretofore unseen on a St. Louis court. Travel and the hard game with Missouri the night before had taken the edge off the Cyclones basket eye. THE TEAM AT HOME AGAIN Washington could not hit the basket from long range as accurately at Ames as they had on their own floor and the Cyclones playing consistently, won by a 28-17 score. Jacobson rang up four field goals while Greene maintained his high scoring average with 16 points. Drake invaded Ames February 21 with 300 rooters that cheered their team to victory with a 32-19 score. The Bulldogs hit the hoop from all angles and did not fail to add points whenever possible from the free-throw line. By smothering ' Pinky Greene with two and sometimes three guards, the main force in the Ames offensive was stopped but other members of the team failed to hit the basket at close range or quite possibly the score would have been different. DEFE. ' VT GRINNELL ON THEIR FLOOR A jaunt down to Grinnell resulted in another scalp hanging from the Cyclones belt although at the end of the first half the Pioneers led by several points. A snappy comeback in the first five minutes of the second half, however, placed Ames in the lead at the finish, 26-17. WIN LAST GAME FROM KANSAS AGGIES The last game of the season for Ames was on the home floor March 1 with Kansas Aggies. They had lost several close games and had given Kansas V a scare a week before. But Ames overcame their lead in the last few minutes of the game winning 14-12. OFFICIAL ALL-MISSOTRI VALLEY CONFERENCE TEAM At the close of the season, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch conducted a telegraphic vote of the Missouri Valley Conference basektball coaches to determine the official All- ' alley selections. The result follows: Scfond Team Right Fonuard Minxer (Washington) Left For ix;ard Ackerm.xm (Kansas) Right Guard W. RRE (Nebraska) Center Boelter (Drake) Left Guard Bl.ack (Kansas) First Team Browmxo (Missouri) Greexe (Ames) Wvi.F (Kansas) ExDACOTT, Captain (Kansas) BuxKER (Missouri) 185 :ii!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[iiiii]iniiii ii n !i Muii i iiH TTmr, 1 E WRESTLING g HBk IQI Athletic Director C. W. Mayser came to Ames in 1915 as head H L football coach and has been successful in turning out some of HJIl Pr the best football teams Iowa State fans have ever cheered on our H gridiron within the last 10 years. While Coach Mayser was in A H Mf ' charge of football, Ames beat Iowa Iniversity and Nebraska, won ' the Missouri Valley championship, and at no time during his career did Ames lose more than two games during one season. .After a career at Yale, Mayser assisted as football coach for his -Alma Mater and also at Princeton. One year at Williston Preparatory Academy, East Hampton, Mass., gave Mayser a start in gridiron circles as a coach. His team that year lost only one game. Mayser left there for Newark Academy, Newark N. J., also a prtp school, where he lost only three games in eight years and won the Eastern Prep championship for three years. Next at Tome Prep School he lost only two games in three years. Mayser came to -Ames from Franklin and Marshall College Lancaster, Pennsylvania. His F. M. team was famous because it beat the Iniversity of Pennsylvania eleven to a 10-0 score. In 1919 Ames won the Missouri Valley championship beating Nebraska, the principal con- tender for the honor, by a 3-0 score. Being without a baseball coach in 1919 and nobody desiring to be the ' ' goat , Mayser took over the burden and won the Missouri Valley champion- ship and landed in second place the next year. However, Charley Mayser has an even more enviable record than any of these mentioned — and that is in wrestling. Ames, due to Mayser ' s coaching, stands supreme in the collegiate mat world. And not only does Ames stand supreme in the collegiate wrestling world but through Mayser ' s uncanny ability Iowa State College stands as a national power in the mat sport. Out of 58 meets in the past six years Ames has lost but two and has won the Western Conference title twice. Mayser ' s record as coach in football, baseball and wrestling is the best in the historv of Iowa State athletics. Athletic Director C. W. Mayser i!!r!iTiriiii. ' iii!ini!ti!:!t!i!ii tii!iiiin!iii;!!irrrTTnT 186 THE 1923 WRESTLING SEASON h ' Although Ames entered the 1923 mat season with two new men on the team, and unfortunate injuries necessitated the use of suiistitutes in some of the hardest matches, Io va State again won the Western Intercollegiate Wrestling championship, defeated Penn State, n ho as recognized as being one of the strongest of the Eastern mat teams, and brought home four individual championships from the ' estern Intercollegiate wrestling tournament. Ames was tied with Ohio State in the scoring column of the number of meets won, due to the fact that the Cyclones outranked the Buckeyes in the number of points scored during the season, and that they won the Western Intercollegiate Wrestling tournainent, Iowa State was awarded the Western Cham- pionship. Hale Dickerson, the scrappy, shiftv Cyclone midget had his arm seriously hurt in an auto- mobile accident earl ' in the fall, and although he wrestled most of the season in top form, injuries received in the Kentucky match, and again in the Western Intercollegiate tournament, kept him out of two of the most important meets. Sickness, and an infected finger, kept Captain Loucks out of the West ' irginia and Michigan Aggie meets. The interest shown in wrestling candidates early in the fall made it comparatively easy for Coach Mayser and Assistant Coach Firkins to round the squad into shape before the first meet with Northwestern. Fred C. Shepard, Iowa State ' s tricky 145 pounder, won the national intercollegiate title in his class when he defeated Dye of Purdue, for the western championship and Captain Evans of Penn Stale who had previously von the eastern title. 7 he new mat rulings, allowing 12 minutes for a match vith two extra periods of three minutes each in case of a draw were used this year. NORTHWESTERN BENDS TO IOW. STATE Showing the results of weeks of careful training and coaching, the Cyclone team completely shut out the Northwestern aggregation in the first match of the season January 18. Dickerson, although outclassing his man from the start, did not succeed in throwing him. Captain Hines of the Purple squad, was clever enough to reach the edge of the mat every time a fall was im- minent. Captain Bowen started the series of falls when he pinned Roster in less than five minutes. Rolling tactics on the part of Fisher kept Shepard from securing a fall until the last few minutes of the bout. A newcomer to the Ames mat fans, W. W. Carithers, won a decision from Hathaway, having over eight minutes advantage. M. W. Smith, a late season find from last year, and Joe Greer, the heavyweight that took Zink ' s place on the squad, both won falls, pinning their men in less than four minutes. Score: Ames 29, Northwestern 0. NEBRASKA PRESENTS REAL COMPETITION Nebraska, rated as the most aggressive of the vestern mat teams, gave Iowa State one of its hardest battles of the year, Jaimary 26. By winning three decisions and a fall in the first four bouts the Cyclone grapplers were able to offset the fall and the two decisions that the Cornhuskers took in the heavier classes by a three point margin. Loucks, showing even better form than he displayed in the Northwestern meet, threw Kellogg with a body scissors after the Cornhusker had taken a lot of punishment. Dickerson, Bowen and Shepard, meeting men rated high in the Western Conference won decisions in the 115, 135 and 145 pound classes. Carithers, still new and inexperienced, lost his bout b a decision after he had gi en Captain Reed a long, hard battle. In spite of a strained shoulder. Smith ga e Troutman of Nebraska a harti tussle before being thrown. The heavyweight bout was perhaps the feature of the meet, (ircer lacked but 15 seconds of securing the decision at the end of the 12 minute bout and the match had to go to extra periods before Renner succeeded in winning a decision. Score: Ames 14, Nebraska 11. WEST IRc;iNIA MEET CLOSE Again the . mes grapplers had a tough battle when they met West ' irginia in the first intersec- tional meet of the season on Februarv 9. Crippled by the ra ages of an influenza epidemic, the Cyclone mat men succeeded in downing the Mountaineers with but a single point margin, the final score standing 14-13. Shep easily downed Brown of the West N ' irginia team when he secured a fall in less than five minutes. Otdy rolling off the mat saved the Mountaineer from earlier defeat. Richard pla ed a defensi e game throughout the match, Dickerson keeping him flattened on the mat for a time advantage oi 6:15. Two extra periods vere necessary in the 158 pound class before Turk Carithers was able to win the decision. Weakened by attacks of the flu . Captain ' Short was unable to throw his man, but took the decision with a time advantage of 2:28. Hester, substituting for Loucks who vas out vith the flu. plaxed a heady defensi ' e game, and won the meet for . Xmes by keeping Hough, the much-touted irginian, from securing a fall. Captain Pitsenberger easily threw Smith of . ' Xmes, going behind in less than a minute and pin- ' III p ilill r.lH«MnMWnHMHHIIHIII« lll«IIHIIHIIHH«IHIMH«W«HIIHiHIIMI UNII HHMItllH«l 187 lllliltllllllltlllllMIIIIMtll)l«lllltllllllltl(llltllUIM ltl«l(lllll«IIMIIIUflllHIHII)lllltllllllM)lll- SECOND ROW; R. S. Hosier — 125 lb., A. L. Luiuks — 125 lb.. E. J. Conrad — 115 lb., H. II. liowt-n— 135 11).. Hale Diokerson — 115 lb. FIRST ROW: F. C. Shepard— 145 lb., Joe Greer — Heavjweight. M. W. Smith— 175 lb., W. W. Carithers 158 lb. niiiK him to the mat in four iiiimite with a body lock and a further anti hold. Lack of condition cost Greer his match, for he «as not able to last out the two extra periods. After coming to his feet in a little over a minute in the first period, ( .reer with a 17 second time advantage to his credit, lost to Setron of West X ' irginia in a reverse body lock. Score: Ames 14, West ' irginia 13. SHUT OUT MICHK .AN AGt IES Iowa State won an easy victory when thev shut out the Michigan Aggies without allowing them to score a point, (ireer made a startling comeback and partially made up for the defeats he had suffered at the hands of the Nebraska and West A ' irginia heavyweights when he threw Murray in five minutes. Oickerson continued his winning streak and won his first fall of the season when he pinned Bristol, of the Aggie squad, to the mat after three minutes of fast but one sided work. Hester, after his exhibition of defensive ability in t he West Virginia meet, took the offensive early in the match and easily took the decision from Willaman. The effects of the flu epidemic were still apparent in the work of Captain Bowen, who, although vinning a decision, was slowed up considerably by the lack of condition. In spite of his handicap, Bowen made the match one of the most exciting during the meet. Shepard tossed Ingstrom with a body scissors and wrist lock in 5:45. Both Carithers and Smith won decisions in the 15.S and 175 pound classes. Score: Ames 27, Michigan Aggies 0. MINNESOTA IS SMOTHERED By taking five falls and two decisions, the Iowa Slate mat team won its most decisive victory February 24 when it defeated the Iniversity of Minnesota, U-O. Squeak Loucks was back again in the tussle and won a decision from Leaky, of Minnesota. Although handicapped by an injured finger, Loucks finished with a time advantage of over 10 minutes. Carithers won 18S MMIIIIIIIII)il«nMtH IIIIIH«lll lll ll«llllllllllllllll IIIUI lllll 9lltllll llllillllltl«IIHHIHWIIHWHIUIIII THE LINE UP Tlirce days In ' for,- llir sair of tiikrls for the Penn State Matcli, lines of students, representing lieket pools start tlie rush for the rim side seats. his first fall of the season vhen he ihiwiied Percerzek, of the Minnesota squad, in the last few minutes of the bout, nisplaying his old time aggressiveness, Captain Bowen downed Halver- son of the visiting aggregation in less than four minutes. Although the 145-pound bout went to extra periods, Shepard easily won the decision. By downing Catarearo of the Minnesota squad in 2:40 Smith annexed his second fall of the season. CJreer also won a fall, the second consecutive one, when he tossed Clap in 2:20 of one sided vrestling. KENTUCKY SHOWS DEFENSE Iowa State annexed its second intersectional victory when it downed the Kentucky mat team vith a 20-3 margin. The Blue grass team displayed perhaps the best defensive game seen on the local floor this season. In the heavyweight class only, they took the aggressive, contenting themselves with avoiding falls. Shepard secured the only fall, downing Wolf of Kentucky in 6:40, after the Kentuckian had saved himself several tiines by rolling off the mat at critical moments. Enlow, the Bluegrass heavyweight, and Cireer, of Ames, went to extra periods, Enlow winning with only a 5 seconds margin. The meet was run under Eastern conference rules, otherwise under western ruling, the bout would have been declared a draw. Captain Bowen, of Iowa State, and ( aptain Smith of Kentucky, furnished the most spectacular match of the evening. Bowen took many uiinecessary risks in order to toss the Kentuckian, but had to content himself with a decision, having a time advantage of over three 7iiinutes. The 158 pound bout also went to extra periods, Carithers of Ames defeating Brewer. Oickerson, Loucks, and Smith also won decisions in the 115, 125, and 175 pound bouts. Score: Ames 20. Ken- tucky 3. WISCONSIN FALLS TO AMES By decisively defeating the I ' niversity of NA ' isconsin mat team, the Iowa State wrestlers took the Western Collegiate championship. Winning one fall and five decisions, the Cyclones piled up a 20-5 score on the Badger s(iuad. Shep again won the only fall for the Ames team when he downed Schaekel, after the Wisconsin man had managed to keep away from the Cyclone middleweight for six minutes. Conrad, the 115 pound maTi who took Oickerson ' s place on the Ames team, tussled with Sucke, a Filipino, for the 12 minutes. In the extra periods, Conrad showed some clever work and took the decision. After Benlow, the Badger 125 pound grappler, apparently had the advantage, Loucks came out from undernea th and annexed the decision «.C: ' llll MHmHMIIMHM««IHIimi HWIIHHt M imiHimmMIIIHmHmHIHHmiW HHHIHHWItHMWWMIWWIB. H-S-.U 189 with 9 minutes to his credit. Captain Bowen was forced to extra periods before he could secure the referee ' s decision. Another match went to a draw in the 158 pound hout, Carithers winning the decision only after the extra six mimitcs. Cireer added another victory to his winning streak when he outclassed Beirhcrstein of Wisconsin. Score: Ames 20, ' isconsiii 5. KOTR MEN V:N CH.-MVIPIONSIIIPS Four out of the six Ames wrestlers that went to the Western Intercollegiate wrestling tourna- ment at Ohio State brought back with them the championships in their respective classes. Dicker- son, the game Cyclone midget, had his shoulder and arm seriously strained after he had a time advantage of over two minutes, and conseciuently lost the bout. Loucks, 125 pounder, met vith no competition at the tournament, winning the finals through a forfeit. Bowen, by defeating Holmes of Wisconsin and Christopher of Ohio, secured the western title in the 135 pound class. Ames did not have an entry in the 175 pound class. The dope bucket was completely upset when Cjreer of Ames defeated Renner of Nebraska who had previously thrown the Cyclone heavyweight in a dual match, in the preliminaries and won again from McMillen of Illinois in the final match. Turk Carithers, 158 pound, lost to Player of Illinois in the preliminaries. AMES DEFEATS PENN STATE The score is no indication of the closeness of the Pcnn Statc-.-Xmes battle. The Nittany Lions, rated as being one of the strongest of the eastern teams, holding the much famed Navy squad to but a five point lead, gave the Cyclones the toughest battle of the season. The fact that none of the matches resulted in falls is some indication of the closeness of the contest. Conrad, substituting for Dickerson who had been injured in the ' estern Intercollegiate wrestling tournament the previous week, again proved his mettle when he easily outclassed Lehman of the Peini s(|uad. The 145 pnuiid hout was the most exciting match of the evening. Shepard, Avho had recently won the Western title in his class, and Captain Evans, eastern 1+5 pound champion went to extra periods after a fast e ' enly matched bout, before Shepard managed to secure the time ad ' antage. Loucks beat Richards, of the ' isiting aggregation, although the Pennsylvanian put up a game battle during the entire bout. Naito, the Jap wrestler from Penn State, showing a wonderful lot of speed and power, won the decision from Captain Bowen, with a time advantage of 1 :30. Smith in the 175 pound match, had a hard time annexing the decision. Joe Greer, the Cyclone heavyweight who had copped the Western title, showed his stuff when he easily won the decision from Burdon. Carithers lost a close bout to Parthemore, the Nittany grappler having a time advantage of but 40 seconds in his favor, after the match had gone to extra periods. C arithers attempt to clamp on the body scissors lost the decision for him. Score; Ames 15, Perm State 6. SIX OF TE. M C;RADrATE Shepard, Bowen, Loucks, Dickerson, Smith and Carithers wrestled on the Cyclone sijuad for the last time when they met the Perm State team. Cireer, who made such a name for himself in the heavyweight division, was elected captain for 1924. Besides winning his letter in wrest- ling, Joe has a letter from baseball and is a promising candidate on the varsity football squad. Cireer, although getting away to a slow start during the past mat season finished up in a burst of glory, wiruiing the Western Intercollegiate title, and defeatirrg the Penn State heavyweight who had won considerable recognitiorr throrrghout the East. Conrad, the featherweight, who so easily defeated the Nittarr 115 p  urrder and who won his bt)ul in the Wisconsin clash, vill also be back next year, ' ith the exception of these t vo men, the 1924 s(jirad will be made up of irrexperienced men. With the wealth of material at hand, and with the interest that is displayed by the men who work out every night durirrg the wirrter, 1 am corrvinccd that loiva State will have another world beating wrestling team in 1924, Coach C. W. Mayser, the father of wrestling at Iowa State declared. Nil .iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMMiti««iiii    iiimt nt HMHiiiiii «in iiimii ni iinnini«niwnmnmniiiiiiini imiii- -a-aiiiiiiiG- ti S B 3 I: -I i ii Freshman Athletics spring 1922 Fall 1922 Winter 1923 a c c ' 3 191 MIHIHIHItiHHIttllMIMtllKIIIMtlKlllt IIIIIIHHMtl)ltll« l Coach E. E. Myli L. E., Hooks, M lin has bci ' ii at Iowa State as frcsh- niaii coach for three ears. During this time he has devel- oped many freshman athletes who arc now making names for themselves on the varsit ' teams. This year ' s freshman football and basketball teams are of high caliber and arc excellent examples of Mylin ' s ability as a coach. He de- serves credit for the efficient way in w hich he has devel- oped intramural sports at Iowa State. Through his efforts intramural activities have become a big thing to the organ- izations of our college. He believes in getting every col- lege student out for something and has doubled his efforts this year in the intramural sports. Six footers and heavy- weights do not always make the best football players. Look at Mylin and then at his record as an All-American football player. He was a star quarterback at Franklin Marshall College. We hope that he develops for Iowa. State a quarterback as good as he once was. THE FRESHMAN SPIRIT The results of freshman athletic training shows w hen the players become eligible for varsity competition. Discipline practiced on freshman squads bears fruit during the long training seasons that follow. The spirit of fight can be instilled in prep teams and it will carry through to future victories for the Alma Mater. Ames ' yearlings have been well trained by Hooks Mylin. Their fight, especially in scrimmages against the ' arsity, were sights worth seeing. NUMERAL AAVARDS FOOTBALL— F.ALL 1922— t L.ASS OF ' 26 NORTOV Behm JoiiNw Behm Frederick Crawford Charles Hill H. L. Owes Ralph Shawhax Arthur Mellix C. G. Hardy (deceased) C. Malcolm AiviN- Thorxburo Jack Trice JA.V1ES Sampel Joiix Blchaxax JoHx Travis E. W. Wixget W. L. Nave James Tlrxbull Edgar Lehmax George . lexaxuer W ' Al.rER Scholz Tax ' xer Jacobson C. R. Towxe C. R. Wright C. L. BiRCE BASEBALL— SPRING 1922— CLASS OF ' 25 G. W. Churchill L. T. Raff A. B. Hughes M. W. Peacock R. W. ASHBV R. C. Meeker A. R. Miller L. C. ( ord niiTin 192 ' - ' C«« ' C g ' ?g «? .g ' «««MMI«MMIIMMHI IM lll«MMII HIIIMWtlWHHtMMMWIItHMIIMMIIIIIIIt«IMIimimi Hm l MWMH)ll«lll.   «ar3 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL SQUAD, FALL 1923 . - ' • ' •. .oH B Bv Cn ' WFil JL . 139 PV? ' fc S. 1 . f ' ' WSIB i )|IWi «9 %• ji .. -wi,  . iatJh« --Ji - .g iirfj-r  fii tBS -= v.. tfaf3B«« Mfc- .« v -y; t -.j . SECOND ROW: Hill, Lehman. Bui ' lian:in. Tri.-f, Mellin, Owen. Alexander. Scholtz, Sample. FIRST ROW: Crawford, Malcolm, Winget. .]. Behm, Travis, Tnrnljull, Hardy, Shawhan, Nave, N. Behm. D. S. HOLCOMB C. D. S.ADLER track:— SPRING 1922— CLASS OF ' 25 J. M. Embree C. W. G.4MBLE G. H. RlEM. N BASKETBALL— WINTER 1923— CLASS OF ' 26 JoHMXY Behm Norton Behm Frederick Cr.awford R. J. Fisher F. J. Arnold L. L. Arnold Herman Fennem.4 D. D. Crom H. D. Keller Burn ELL Wright M. J. MiCH.AELSON j.1mes turnbull Cl. ude McBroom CL-iDE McBroom R. C. W. LLI G How. RD Rho. des R. E. Meyer FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SQUAD, WINTER 1922-23 THIRD ROW: Coach E. E. Mvlin. Wright. Crum. Rhoades. SECOND ROW: Walling. Meyers. Fisher. Arnold. N. Behm. FIR.ST ROW: Claude McBroom, Clyde McBroom. Arnold. Michaelson, Crawford, Keller. C-.«.-C C ' lllltllllltllllllltl HIIHHUHH l  l«MHIII  ll«HIHIIIIt«IIIHIIHIMtmMIIMIHIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIimmnimil 193 THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE f niirlem J. ' . liiirliiiu r1 Dear Ma ami Pa: Is cvervboilv all ri;;l)t at home? Pltase telegraph at once. If I were home now I would be altoRet ' her a iliffereiit kind of boy from what I used to be. 1 am not very well. I am afraid it is pneumonia or typhoid fever. I feel worse in my throat. If it don ' t get better prettv soon I think I had better come home. Pont you think so? Write tioon. ' I ' our affectionate son, Alonzo. 19+ Minor Sports 1922-23 :iiiiiiiiiiiii: :illlI!:;n1:IllR-g -B- -  - j 19S minmmminnTTniiiiimmTTrTTnmTi TTTTmiTnnnnTTirnTTTrrnTTTniniiTiTTrT7TmT- jnrmTnitg-pJTB - --tt-To--ia-- ll C. V. WEE PAIGE, CHAMPION OF IOWA, 1922 THE 1922 TENNIS SEASON Prospects for a successful intercollegiate tennis year were exceptionally good at the opening of the 1922 season. Alton Loucks and C. R. Kinney of the 1921 tennis squad were on hand and C. W. Paige, runner-up in the 1921 Northwest Iowa tourney, was also eligible for varsity competition. Drawings were made for the tennis tryouts on April 8, at which time there were 51 entries in the all-college event, 21 in the intramural singles and 30 in the doubles. Those who survived the final eliminations were A. L. Loucks, C. W. Paige, Ira ' oung, and Don Thompson. C. R. Kinney, a member of last year ' s team, was eliminated before the finals. Loucks was elected captain of the 1922 tennis team. OKLAHOMA TAKES FIRST CONTEST The clash with Oklahoma on Ma - 1 1 gave the C cl()nes their first chance to display their ability. As the team had not been able to practice, due to poor weather condi- tions, they were not in condition at the time of this match. They lost to a team which had just completed a series of victories, humbling Chicago, Purdue, Michigan Aggies, and Michigan. C. K. Park, captain of the Sooners , defeated Wee Paige of Iowa State, 6-0, 6-2; Harrington of Oklahoma defeated Thompson of Iowa State, 6-3, •(IM ( HIIMIItlllllHIIIIIIMMMMtlllllMlllllllltllllltllllltintlllllflllHMmMIIMftMlflllllfMIIIIIIMIMIIimMIH. ' 196 iii!iiiMirrTiii[ iiiriiiiiit[)riiii iiiiiiiiiiiii!iii iiirr!iitTiMiiiriiiiiiiii[iiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiii!i ' !. ' iiniiiiinri!:Hit T-Tvn-p-g-r Paige Thompson ' LOUCKS Young 6—4; O ' Coniiell of Oklahoma defeated ' ouiig of Iowa State, 6—1, 6-0; Harrington and O ' Connell of Oklahoma defeated Captain Loucks and Paige of Iowa State in the doubles, 6-0, 6-3. COE FALLS TO AMES RACQUET MEN On May 19, the Iowa State tennis team defeated the Coe squad rather easily. The results of the singles were: Paige of Iowa State defeated Beeson of Coe, 6-3, 7-5; oung of Iowa State defeated Jones of Coe, 6—3, 5—7, 6—3 ; Thompson of Iowa State defeated Monteith of Coe, 6-3, 6-2. In the doubles, Paige and Loucks of Iowa State defeated Monteith and Jones of Coe, 6-3, 6-1 ; Chan and Beeson of Coe defeated ' oung and Thompson of Iowa State, 1-6, 6-2, 7-5. The Iowa State racquet team also defeated the Coe men a second time at Cedar Rapids later in the season. DRAKE TAKES DEFEAT On May 20, the Iowa State team decisively defeated Drake. The results for the singles were: Paige of Iowa State won from Barkley of Drake, 6-3, 6-4; Young of Iowa State defeated Beall of Drake, 6-1, 6-2; Thompson of Iowa State won from Nichols of Drake, 6-4, 6-1 ; Loucks won from Freidman of Drake, 6-3, 6-0. In the doubles, Paige and Loucks of Iowa State won from Freidman and Barkley of Drake, 6—1, 6-1 ; Thompson and ' oung of Ames won from Nichols and Beall of Drake, 6-0, 6-1. PAIGE WINS STATE CHAMPIONSHIP Wee Paige and Don Thompson entered the State tennis meet which was held at Des Moines during the second week of July, 1922. Paige fought his wa to the state singles championship. If Wee competes in 1923, along with Loucks and Young, we will have at Ames one of the strongest tennis teams in the ' alley. 1 he possibility of awarding letters to the members of coming tennis teams tends to place the court sport at Iowa State on a higher and more deserving plane. •HllllllllltlMltlMHnill«Htllllllllll HI IH«l«IHIIIII)l«lllllllll ll IIIIMIIIIIIII lll HMHmM«ll«IIIIUIIIMI ' 3-9- ' 3 ' 9 ' 197 lllllllltlllMMIIHHIIIMWMHIHiiHIIHHIIIMilMiniHHMIIMHIHM! n-ivp-K - m Hugo Otopalik, a foniifr University of Nebraska star in football anil wrestling, and for two consecutive seasons the light-hca y weight ciianipion of the Missouri X ' alley, is completing his third year as physical training instructor at Ames. During this time he has also served as assistant football coach and as assistant wrestling coach. Much credit is due Otto for his efforts in building the phjs- Vx ical training department and his excellent work in the correction of physical deficiencies through a rigid system ' ' ' of training. Each year contests are staged under the per- sonal supervision of Otopalik and the winners are gi en due credit for their records. He has done much in a silent way by making all of us better men physicalh ' . This past year Otopalik developed a shifty group of boxers. He promoted the first boxing meet ever held in the Missouri alley or Middle West — and won it. Hugo Otopalik PHYSICAL TRAINING AT AMES Efforts to popularize physical training at Iowa State College b - offering competition in various lines of athletics have met with favor. Largely due to the inspiration and activity of Hugo Otopalik, Iowa State has per- haps the most advanced set of efficienc ' tests of any college in the middle west. Recognition of this fact has been accorded to this institution and to Otopalik by the Athletic Journal, trade paper for everything athletic. There are scores of freshman students that enter Ames who can not coordinate their muscles in such a way as to jump one foot off the floor. Others can not reach the floor with their hands from an upright position. Still others are weak in their ankles or in other respects. All the.se can be corrected and bettered by consistent, earnest physical training. Such is the nature of that gospel of muscle building and coordination train- ing that is preached and executed by Hugo Otopalik. Competition for the three medals awarded for the most physically efficient students tnroUed in physical training is keen. Many spend weeks practicing for the several events even before the preliminaries. Such practices undoubtedly interest students who would otherwise be inclined to slight the physical side of their education. Varsity coaches often find the heretofore imheralded athletes that come before the fans ' eyes as dark horses by watching the results of the several ph sical efficiency tests. - mmililmMHlnilllHllllilimmllllllllfa-a-a-a-J« 198 a-g-g-ir: raFf. PHYSICAL EFFICIENCY TESTS Fall, 1922 18-foot Rope Climb— E. J. Murphy; time, :08 . 1-12 Mile Fast Walk— AI. T. Williams; time, :284i High Jump — A. Christy, 5 ft., 1 in. Standing Broad Jump — F. G. Allagar, 9 ft., 6 in. Pull Up — J. Algavaga, 23 times. Hop-Step-Jump — F. G. Allagar, 25 ft., 5 in. Fence Vault — G. Wimmer, 6 ft., 9 in. 50-yard Dash — E. L. Rhoades; time, :05j4. 12-pound Shot Put — R. Fisher, 36 ft., 10 in. Running Broad Jump — R. Fisher, 18 ft. HIGH POINT WINNERS First — R. Fisher, 139 points. Second — E. L. Rhoades, 125 points. Third — E. J. Murphy, 124 points. THE STUDENT BODY CELEBRATES VICTORIES 199 !i THK ames- vashinc;ton meet BOXING 1923 marks the begijining of a new chapter in the annals of Iowa State athletics with the introduction of boxing as an intercollegiate sfiort. Not onl - was the one boxing meet with Vashington University new to Iowa State College, but it was also the first intercollegiate boxing meet in the Missouri ' alley Conference or Western Collegiate Conference. Although boxing merely recei ed a start in the winter of 1922-1923, it bids fair to become a poptilar form of intercollegiate competition. Previous to 1923 the art of self-defense had been confined to intramural meets and all-college affairs. Coach Hugo Otopalik selected the best men from these contests as the members of the first boxing team at Ames. The primitive desire to aid the combatants ith lusty vocal support has not died out, even within college students, and consequently it was necessary to abolish all elling during actual encounters so that boxing might conform to the code of collegiate-slugger ethics. Consequently all elling was abolished during the actual encounters. The one meet scheduled with Washington University of St. Louis on February 17, 1923, displayed considerable skill and endurance with the mitts. Ames won by the clo.se score of 4—3. The results follow: 115-pound class — D. Cilley (A) outpointed Satura { V). 125-pound class — Capt. Rouser (A) gained a technical K. (). o er Alfend (AV). 135-pound class — Vatson (W) outpointed A. Cilley (A) in extra periods. 145-pound class — Randall (W) outpointed Jacobs (A). 158-pound class — Sherwood (A) won a technical K. O. over Ludwig ( V). 175-pound class — Morse (W) won from Clanipitt (A) on n foul. Heavyweight class — McAvinchcy (A) won by forfeit.  C C «-e-e.r« C- llllllll IIIIMIIHMIMMIMtHIIIMIItllHMill IIIIIIIHllltlll)IHIIM IMtlllllHIII IMIIIIIII IMIHIMUimllHHI Wt 200 ■ IHMHMNIMHHMHIIMIMtHIOMnMIMIIHIHdHMMIIIItllDllltlltllMMIIIMIIHtMIMMMItMHHHinil Captain W. E. Rouser 125 Pound O. L. Jacobs 145 Pound H. H. Sherwood 160 Pound lACK McAviKCHEY Heavyweight At the close of the boxing season, all the Ames participants in the Washington en- counter were awarded I. S. C. monogrammed sweaters. These men were: Ricardo Cilley (115-pound class), Buenos Aires, Argentina; Captain Wm. E. Eddie Rouser {125-pound class), Davenport, Iowa; Alberto Cilley (135-pound class), Buenos Aires, Argentina; O. L. Jacobs (145-pound class), V ' est Bend, Iowa; H. H. Sherwood ( 158-pound class), Kingsley, Iowa; Wesley D. Clanipitt (175-pound class), Greenfield, Iowa; and Jack McAvinchey (heavyweight), Oelwein, Iowa. Alberto Cilley 135 Pound Ricardo Cili.ev 115 Pound V. n. Cl.AMPlTT 175 Pound iiiimiinimtim iniiiMtiiitimniiimmiiiimiinniiiiiiinm ' i ' i i ' m «i i «mmii«ninMH imiii 201 ?1 SWIMMINC; IXSTRLCrOR C. E. DAURERT Three years at Iowa State College have rendered to C. E. Daubert the distinction of enrolling more life savers than any other swimming instructor working under the Red Cross Life Saving Corps. Besides being coach and swimming instructor, Daubert has been conducting special classes for men and women. He also conducts a casting club. Daubert believes that every college graduate should know how to swim well enough to save a person ' s life. Coach C. E. Daubert 3 a 3 3 THE IOWA STATE COLLEGE LIFE SAVING CORPS Early in October, 1920, students interested in swimming held a meeting in the trophy room in State gymnasium at the request of C. E. Daubert, the swimming direc- tor, the object of which was to present an outline of work for the year, in which stress was placed on ater safety and first aid. The slogan, Every man a swimmer and hi every swimmer a life saver , was adopted. To bring the student body to that point of ' Ie! proficiency where they could pass the life saving tests, a progressive course of instruc- tion was arranged and the regular college swimming requirements raised so that they would compare with those of all colleges and universities. On October 25, 1920, Charles Wheeler of Fort Dodge, Iowa, passed the first life saving examination given at Ames under the direction of C. E. Daubert, the swim- ming instructor. His enthusiasm and interest assisted materially in getting others to r II 202 ■imnamu;; nmiitFXFg-t ' .T 9 S ' M THE RED CROSS LIFE SAVINC; CORPS report for instruction. Daily the interest grew until 40 men attended the classes. From this class, 28 passed their examinations. Application for a charter was made to the American Red Cross and was granted March 1, 1921. Interest grew until it be- came the ambition of every swimmer to become a Life Saver. Many failed in their examinations, but kept coming for the special instruction, which was given by the new officers. When the next examinations were given, 108 reported and 71 passed. Each year, during every quarter these examinations are held and men given an opportunity to qualify. Today this corps has the honor of being the largest in any college or imi- versity in the United States, with a membership of 230 men coming from 21 states and 6 countries. From the members of this organization the present Iowa State College Porpoise Club was formed. Its object is to hold swimming demonstrations to entertain the public, and to provide inspiration for competitive material. I i ' 203 limlllllHill WimiHH  ltlHllllHIIIIHIIII llllltlllHIIHtHIHItimMHIM «miMWmi)MmH)IBIIU SIRENS To have successful athletic teams, a school must have an interested and loyal student body. The citizens of the college community must be bound together in a unity of spirit and desire for a place in the sun of athletic fame. In order to secure such a place they can not be satisfied when their team makes a poor showing, but must stand strong in their support with unflinching loyalty. It was for such purposes that the Sirens and its preceding organizations have been formed. The ' have done their bit toward bolstering up Ames courage. C. T. Cow ME Cheer Leader N. K. Ci.EMMENSEN Cheer Leader i g.cg e.«:«cg-.nmMiwtMinMMMi« im Hiii nnnHmnmMwmm M tMi MHiii mi«mmniim immfHimMtnHiii. '   a a- 204 IIIIIMIHMIIIIIIHIMtllllMlllltKIIDIMIHilMtUflUi HILi-rj -. INTRAMURAL SPORTS Athletics For All is a sloiraii of the athletic ck-jiart- iiient and it has proved to be quite idealh ' true. Under the able directorship of E. K. Mylin, freshman coach, the 44 men ' s organizations on the Iowa State College campus ha e been able to compete against each other in ail the several phases of athletic activitx ' . The fulfillment of the slogan could well be illustrated b one glimpse into State gymnasium almost any evening from six to eight during the basketball season. There one would see a half dozen or more quintets on the basket- ball courts and several individuals boxing or wrestling. In the spring one would see a field of forty acres covered with baseball players and fans. At other times one could see the hair raising track meets where dark horses quite often loomed into prominence much to the track coach ' s delight. Intramural sports are an invaluable asset to the Iowa State College curriculum. It affords the necessary spice and recreation which is so essential to vary the general hum- drum of routine class work. Statistics from January 1, 1920, to spring quarter, 1923, exclusive of the 1023 .sec- tional track meet, show the following data on the intramural competition. A college championship coimts 5 points; second, 3 points; and third. 1 point. INTRAMURAL ATHLETIC RATING B. W. .- i,i,E President Intramural Athlet .Association ' ■■f Organizal ' wn Points Phi Delta Theta 30 K Alpha Gamma Rho 21 Phi Gamma Delta 15H Sigma Phi Epsilon 14 , Tau Gamma Nu 14 Adelante 13 Beta Theta Pi 13 Delta L ' psilon 13 Hau Ki 8 El Paso 6 Sigma Pi 6 Alpha Tau ( mega 5 ' Hieta Xi 4 Sigma .Alpha Epsilon 3 ' , Ausonia 3 Phi Kapp. ' i Psi 3 Sigma Chi I ' j Alpha Kappa Delta 1 Kappa Sigma 1 JVinnings Five firsts, one second, one tie for second, one third. Four firsts, one third. Ewo firsts, one second, one tie for second, two thirds. Four seconds, two thirds, one tie for third. Four seconds, one tie for second. Two firsts, one second. Two firsts, one second. Two firsts, one second. One first, one second. One first, one third. One first, one third. One first. ( ne .second, one thiril. One second. One second, ( ne second. One third, one tie for third. One third. One third. ' ! |L il -f t -G ::rni[iii!iiir 206 INTRAMURAL BASEBALL, SPRING 1922 A iitional Lilly lie FIRST SECTION ' Delta Up.siloii Theta Delta Chi Alpha Sigma Phi Alpha Tail Omega Phi Gamma Delta Pi Kappa Alpha . Beta Theta Pi . Acacia .... THIRD SECTION Sigma Phi Epsilon . Phi Sigma Kappa Lambda Chi Alpha . Phi Delta Theta . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Kappa Sigma . Sigma Nu .... SECOND SECTION W 7 5 4 3 3 2 1 W 5 5 3 3 J 9 L 2 4 4 4 5 6 Alpha Gamma Rho Theta Xi . . . Chi Phi . . . . Delta Tau Delta Tail Kappa Epsilon Sigma Chi . . . Pi Kappa Alpha . 6 4 Club League v State 5 Two ear Ags 5 West Gate 4 North Hall 3 Stanton 3 elch 1 West End 1 Local League FIRST SECTION Lambda Sigma Phi Mohawk Sigma Sigma . Tail Gamma Nu . Lambda Delta Chi Ausonia .... Gamma Sigma Alpha THIRD SECTION. NATIONAL Sigma Phi Epsilon . Phi Sigma Kappa . SECOND SECTION L 1 3 3 4 5 5 LEAGL E TIE . . . 12 . . . W 6 5 3 2 1 Hau Ki Adelante El Paso Ames Alpha Kappa Delta . Amician Ionian CLLB LEAGUE TIE State Club Two ear Ags .... W 5 4 4 3 2 9 L 2 3 3 4 6 L 1 1 2 3 3 5 5 L 1 2 2 3 4 4 5 5 6 Sigma Phi Epsilon .... Alpha Gamma Rho .... Lambda Sigma Phi (Sigma Pi) Lambda Si Phi (Sigma Pi) SEMI-FINALS 5 Sigma Phi Epsilon 16 . Delta Upsilon 11 7 Hau Ki 6 FINALS 7 Sigma Phi Epsilon •.llll lllinilllfl4HllinnllimMUUHIIUIIMHIHinllli ltlllll MMIIHnillMIII«)tH)IHIIIHIHHIM«UI HUimil! Pi 207 • IIIIUIIHIIIIIIHHIHMIMDMIIIHHHMMHMHIIMIIII tll lllnmillHIII«lllll«l«« M«HmMHI immilH llll INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL 1922-23 FIRST SECTION ' Sigma Phi Epsilon Delta L psilon . Phi Kappa Psi Lambda Chi Alpha Alpha Tau Omega Kappa Sigma . Pi Kappa Alpha . SECOND SECTION Alpha Gamma Rho . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Phi Sigma Kappa Alpha Sigma Phi . Phi Gamma Delta Theta Xi . . . Tau Kappa Epsilon FIRST SECTION ' National League THIRD SECTION L W Delta Tau Delta 7 1 Phi Delta Theta 6 2 Chi Phi 5 4 Sigma Chi 4 5 Theta Delta Chi 3 5 Acacia 1 5 Sigma Nu L Local League 1 W 1 Tau Gamma Nu 2 Hau Ki . . . . 4 Mohawk (Theta Chi) 4 Sigma Sigma . 4 Ausonia 5 Alpha Kappa Delta Amician .... Club League SECOND SECTION Ionian 6 State 6 North Hall 6 Upsilon Sigma Alpha ... 3 Ames 2 Lambda Delta Chi .... Yankees 6 Stewart 5 Lincoln AVay 4 Mortensen 2 Non-Collegiate 2 Squires 2 Vest Gate Summary: Ties — Alpha Gamma Rho, 10; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 8; Ionian, 20; State, 14. Section Champions National League: Sigma Phi Epsilon, first section; Alpha Gamma Rho, second sec- tion ; Delta Tau Delta, third section. Local League: Tau Gamma Nu. Club League: lonians, first section; Yankees, second section. National League Champions Alpha Gamma Rho. Cluh League Champions Yankees. MIIIUIHIIIIItim«lllllillllll IIMIIIiliai«l«(tlll(IIIIIMI IIIIIHMtlllf INTRAMURAL BOXING, WINTER 1922-23 Points Points 1. Delta Upsilon 17 3. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma 2. Phi Kappa Psi 10 Chi and State Club tied . 5 INTRAMURAL WRESTLING, WINTER 1922-23 Points Points 1. Adelante 14 3. Phi Delta Theta .... 8 2. Hau Ki 11 INTRAMURAL SWIMMING MEET, MAY 25, 1922 Points Points 1. Beta Theta Pi 50 3. Alpha Kappa Delta ... 16 2. Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 18 4. Phi Gamma Delta .... 5 INTRAMURAL TRACK MEET, JUNE 1-2, 1923 Points Points 1. Phi Gamma Delta ... 25 3. Kappa Sigma 19 2. Ausonia 21 J 2 4. Sigma Phi Epsilon . . . 17 yi INTRAMURAL TENNIS TOURNAMENT, SPRING 1922 Singles won by Clayton V. Paige, Delta Tau Delta; Ralph R. Morris, Phi Delta Theta, second. Doubles won by Clayton W. Paige and Donald Thompson, Delta Tau Delta; Ira Young and A. W. Murphy, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, second. SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT The following articles have been run in the 1924 Bomb as an expression of a trend of sentiment and thinking that has come over the student body of Iowa State College during the last few years. Three elements of the institution are represented in the articles for one was written by a non-athlete student, one by a AA fraternity man, and one by a member of the facult) ' . .May they add to the desire of the student body, alumni, faculty, and friends of the college, to think over Iowa State ' s standing in the athletic world. The Editors. Although we feel that collegiate athletics play an important role in creating a wide- spread fame for an institution, we do not lose sight of the fact that primarily our col- leges and uni ersities ha e as their purpose the education and development of men and Avomen who desire to train themselves for lives of service and who will be a credit to the institution through their later achievements. It is very much to the interest of the students at Iowa State College that this institution maintain the high scholastic stand- ing which it has so well maintained in the past. But we have before us in the records of countless other institutions of a similar nature the living examples of colleges and universities which have discovered a means whereby both ends ma ' be maintained. It is essential to the good management of an branch of an institution that the men  .IIIIHHMtlllMII limimmHimMIIIIHIIHM HtMM W«miltWMHMM MMMmiHltUIIMH«ll WHW 209 il iiiiiim iiii im nmnniiMmimti«««nniiniMt«iiitiiniimnii Mi who supervise that management be persons who are at least to some extent interested in the work they have to do. Under our present system the athletic council is composed almost entirely of men whose primary interest lies along purely scholastic lines. 1 his situation cannot help but color the actions of the council in a way that has already proven detrimental to our entire athletic system at Ames. Is it not more desirable and more to the interests of progress that these two elements of college endeavor be brought into the management of our athletics ? Such a system would undoubtedly lead to a slight conflicting of opinions between the two bodies; but would not such confliction be desirable in that it would at least bring to light both sides of the question and call forth discussions hich are apparently much needed. We want to see Iowa State College maintain its excellent standing; but we also want to see Iowa State College maintain its athletic prowess among the colleges and univer- sities of the middle west. It is essential to the building up and keeping alive of the student morale, of the good old Fight, Ames, Fight! spirit which has always filled the hearts of students, alumni and faculty of Iowa State College with such a great feeling of pride. (By a AA man.) In a recent college catalogue, there appears the picture of our last Iowa- Ames toot- ball game. The picture shows what was at the time a record-breaking crowd at an athletic contest in this state. Under this historic picture is the quotation, For college honor stri e the athletes there, and by that spirit urged, care not for blows. — Macurda. To read that statement and to see that picture must fill every loyal Ames fan with pride and yet regret, especially those who were so privileged to see that game. At that game a Cyclone team won glory and one man, Polly Wallace, proved himself to be worthy of the title All-American Center. A team of inferior record played one of the greatest teams of the west and did it so well that the sporting world wondered at the 14 to 10 margin for the victor. Since that game many changes have taken place. The victors of the last Iowa-Ames clash have formed the nucleus for two championship teams. The members of its team have appeared as stars on the sporting pages of America ' s greatest newspapers. In fact the Hawkeye eleven has brought so much fame on its members, their school and their state that the governor of Iowa spoke of them in one of his messages to the legislature. He honored them because the. - had brought honor to their school and the educational system of the state whose name they bear. The students of Ames, on the other hand, have watched their Cyclones who repre- sented them so well at the great game in 1920, sink lower and lower into athletic oblivion. Instead of their team traveling to the greatest college athletic field in the world and winning glory for their school they have seen an unheard-of team from the south brought to State Field, because of a short-sighted athletic policy, and have seen that same unheard-of team administer defeat to a team whom we dare to call Cyclones. The student bod. ' has often been told bv speakers at its arious gatherings that they are satisfied with defeats and ha e schooled themselves to tolerate inferior athletics. At the same time this same student body has gotten up a world of spirit over a clique fight in a class election and have marched with blaring trumpets to celebrate finishing fourth in conference basketball. This same student bod -, mainh through its campus organizations, has aided a large number of worths oung men to stay in school by giving these men work within these organizations and making it possible for them to represent Iowa State College in ath- letics. An effort on the part of an alumnus to do such .service is branded as profes- sionalizing college athletics . 210 The student body is represented nn the athletic council but they are usually asked to attend meeting only when unimportant work is to be done. The major work of the council is conducted b ' special committees manned, quite frequently, by men who can- not recognize the coaches when they meet them or who have never attended an athletic contest since that memorable game in 1920. Now and then an Ames stvident picks up the newspaper and reads, Jack Funk High Scorer for Big 1 en . He pauses and remembers that Funk was the president of the Freshman Class in 1919 here at Ames. Maybe he will read of Critchett of Grin- nell, Schnaus of Vashington or Barnes of the Navy, and he will recall that these men also attended Iowa State College at one time. Baseball fans in the spring of 1923 will watch the Nebraska game and be pleased to see an old familiar face behind the bat. They will recognize in this Cornhusker back stop one of the best catchers in the Missouri ' alley Conference, Jeff Petty, a former Ames player and A man. It will also be pleasant for one of these students next fall to visit the homecoming of our sister school and upon going to his fraternity house meet as many Ames Alumni as attended the last homecoming at his own school and chapter. The ultimate result no one can venture to say, but it would certainly be a silver lining if someone, student, faculty, alu mni or friend of the college would venture a guess at the cause or causes and recommend a panacea. (By a student who never took part in athletics.) President Riggs of the Alumni Association certainly hit the nail squarely on the head at a convocation in November when, in discussing the football situation at Ames, he said, We have oiu backs to the wall, and we ' ve got to fight. No one is in a better position to reflect the sentiment of the alumni than is President Riggs, who has met so many of them in his extensive boosting trips in the interests of the Memorial Union, and does not everyone agree that athletically, since football is the major sport, Ames is about as low as she dare be. For too many years we have been forced to give alibis for our team ' s standing and vain predictions about next year. President Riggs said we would have to go out and tell ' em where to get off, but he didn ' t suggest what to tell ' em . Suppose that instead of trying to tell anyone anything, we begin by asking ourselves a few things. First, are athletics worth while? The U ' dllacc ' s Farmer and others not quite able to see the student ' s viewpoint say no. Evidently they do not believe in the old maxim of All work and no play, etc., nor do they realize the effect of good clean athletics on the general tone and spirit of a school. Some argue that athletics for all and not merely for the school ' s teams should be our aim. Have we any argument with them? Is a winning intercollegiate team going to discourage intramural athletics? Notre Dame and Ohio State are frequenth ' cited as schools where intramural athletics are successful in that a high percentage of students get into some type of athletics. Has it hurt their intercollegiate standing? How much would the general public know of them if it were not for their athletics? Many are indifferent to athletics because the are not the prime purpose of the insti- tution. Again we can agree, but are athletics going to injure the institution and can anyone name a more effective advertisement than a winning football team? A few ot the students will remember that previous to the war period, Iowa State and the L m- versity of Iowa were running a fairly even race for enrollment. In those years we would occasionally beat Iowa (in 1915) and usually played her a close game. Now compare our enrollment, rather let ' s don ' t, it is too embarrassing. Iowa ' s en- rollment has increased almost on a ratio with her football success; so has ours. Of fi iUiiiiiimtniniMMiiimitiHHHMmiiiiHMiHiHiiiiiiiniMiiiiiitMUHimim ' 211 li «gilHMilMlWMMJMI«l4 IIIHmMlltMI«l«l HtHHim IMIIIIHH IIIH HlltlMIWm««imMW mi mtM IIHI .a i course there are other reasons, but who w ill attempt to prove that Iowa ' s football suc- cess was not a large factor? ' hether it is desirable to increase our enrollment or not, we at least would all like to feel that the college spirit here and the pride of our alumni in the school were surpassed by that of no other institution on earth. Isn ' t it pretty difficult to maintain that spirit and pride when so much of our publicity is of Ames defeats. AVe don ' t expect permanent championships but we would like our share. Now let ' s ask ourselves why we haven ' t a better football record. It is a rare in- stance where the responsibility of a losing team isn ' t loaded directly on the coach, but we have heard no criticism of the present coach. Who wouldn ' t be convinced of his ability after watching the excellent football form and know ledge of the men who were coached by him in high school or by the remarkable improvement shown by the indi- viduals on our team last fall ? A football team consists of eleven pla ers each of whom must know the fundamentals of the game in order to be able to make his efforts effec- tive during every second of play. Such a knowledge of the game cannot be taught to green men in one short football season. Our 1922 team just commenced to show their real merit at the close of the season. Do you suppose that if the game had been six weeks earlier, Deac Wolters would have been able to make 50 yards in three plays and the only touchdown against Ne- braska made by a Missouri ' alley team last season? However, any coach must have good material in order to win and the more experi- enced that material is the more dependable they should be. Can we students and fac- ulty who were here last year entirely excuse ourselves of the responsibility for our inexperienced line, when from the 1921 A men at least six linemen, still having a year of eligibility, failed to return to school last fall and especially since three of that number were not graduated last June? If everyone here was as concerned as they should be about the reputation of Iowa State, would men want to quit before the ' had done everything that they could do for the school? Shouldn ' t they be more anxious to play their full three years? Last fall we reaped what we sowed the previous year — indifference and lack of uni- fied purpose. Now things are started in a different direction for next year. A hat we need is more talented and better trained men for our coaches to work with. The 175 men out for practice this spring will give Coach AVillanian a large squad for next fall, but we can ' t leave it all to the coach. Everyone can do his bit by assisting in at least the three following ways: First, make certain that every experienced man who hasn ' t played three years will be here and will be eligible next fall. Second, help to get every man who has football possibilities out for all practice and instruction offered. Third, make a conscientious effort to interest all talented high school men in Ames. Never miss an opportuiu ' ty to sell the idea of coming here to an one at all interested in the courses offered. Rut especially concentrate on football men until by our winning teams, we can without special effort attract the t pe of men with enough talent ami energy to be good athletes. Remember how before the w ar many stars on teams representing big schools outside of Iowa were Iowa bo s? ProbabK there are still a few; but turn to the list of I ' s given to the men on the Universit ' of Iowa ' s two champion teams. With one or two exceptions they are all Iowa bo s. Then look where Ames ' stars of recent years are from. lust Ames, the school most typical of the best state in the Union, depend on other states for many of her football men? Ve aren ' t getting our share of Iowa boys. Let ' s go after them. ( Ry a member of the faculty.) ii 1-JBtV Women ' s Athletics 1922-23 HIMMW HI«MllHIHHIt«IHtMHIMIHMimillHMIHmH«M nHHIIMHmMlim l tHHmtHMMMMIHtmMHIIIJ 213 i CIIIMHII  NMHM«IMM(lltMIIM«lll))IIIIIHIiUHMMMt PHYSICAL EDUCATION FACULTY Miss Vinified R. Tilden, B. A., is professor of physical education and director of women ' s athletics at Iowa State college. She studied at Dana Hall School, Wellesley, and at New ' ork. Later she graduated from Mt. Holyoke College, receiving a B. S. degree. In 1904 and 1911 she attended Harvard and in 1913 studied in the Chalif School of Dancing, New York. She is a member of Phi Kappa Phi, a member of the Middle West Society of College Directors of Physical Education for Women, presi- dent of AVomen ' s Athletic Council, and honorary member of the Women ' s A fra- ternity. Miss Agnes Murphy, assistant professor of physical education, received her B. A. degree from the University of Illinois, later attending Chicago University. Previous to her coming to Ames, she was an instructor in swimming at Northwestern Univer- sity. She has charge of all advanced swimming and playground classes. She is chair- man of the Naiad Club and official examiner for the Red Cross Corps in this district, and an honorary member of the xomen ' s A fraternity. Miss Mae Kelley received her R. A. degree at Oberlin College, Ohio, and later Studied at Harvard Medical College, Boston. She is an instructor in indi idual gymnastics. Miss Marie Habermann received her B. A. degree from Hope College, Holland, Mich., and a B. P. E. degree from the American College of Physical Education at Chicago. She has also studied at Berkeley, Calif. She has charge of all the heavy apparatus, and aesthetic, nat- ural, and folk dancing. .Miss Ruth P. Springer graduated from Columbia Nor- mal Sclinnl of Ph sical Education at Chicago, and later studied at the Coloratio State Teachers ' College. She has charge of all freshman gymnastics and general sports. Miss Jessie AL Shannon received her B. A. degree from Simpson College, and later attended Battle Creek Nor- mal School of Physical Education at Battle Creek, Mich. Miss Shannon has been added to the instructing staf? this last ear, and assists in heavy apparatus, aesthetic dancing, and freshman g innastic work. She lias been the .able coach of basketball this winter. v-y S ra 214 !|i!IIIIHHIIHIMM«MHH«IIMIIIIUH«UUMMMIWHIIIIM)IIIIMIIMIII H(IIIIMItUn IHIIIIII 215 r II i3 T -rr - i ' • !_ .5r f r FIELD HOCKEY Pield hockey attracted the attention of many uomen during the fall quarter at Iowa State College. During the first quarter of 1922, 42 women received credit which was used in their obtaining women ' s athletic honors. The honors are awarded according to points received for the work done. A arsity player receives 100 points towards honors. Twenty-five women received this number last fall. These points were awarded to them because of their attendance at all practice games; their good sportsmanship in all games; their scholarship; and their work in the physical education department. Hockey deserves its present popularitx , for it is a splendid, .scientific and healthful game. In addition, because of the work required on different parts of the field, it is adapted to all t pes of players, increasing in them all mental alertness, vigor and endurance, those necessary factors in a successful life. VARSn V PLAYERS Mary ' ASSER W ' IMKRFD BrOWX Bf.sse Chmelik F.I.rrilE NiSEWANCER Helen Keeler Ethel Butcher Margaret Brook hart . ' LnERTA COLEMAK Irene Shaben Regina Tarr March ERrrA Tarr Ethel Easter l.ois Calhoun Florence Wright Cleo Meredith I.UELLA Wright Alma Kalsem Dorothy Olson Jean McFarland Frances Westcott Dorothy Carl ' elma Craig Ona Tlricii Lucile Heidenrich Blanche Belknap 216 ' MlllMIMMlll|Mtlllll llltlllMfllMlflllMMtM«lllllllllllllltMIIIIIMIIHtlHIIMIIf«ltllllHlffllHHflltlMimillMMIIt W. A. A. BASKETBALL First among the winter sports for women at Iowa State College was basketball. Early in the quarter practice was started, and after a period of seven weeks the class games were played. Out of 48 women, who were active in this sport, only 16 received the coveted 100 points. The first game was played between the senior college team and the sophomore aggregation, which resulted in a victory for the sophomores. The seniors also suffered defeat at the hands of the freshmen. The championship game was pla ed between the sophomores and freshmen, which resulted in a victory for the freshmen. Basketball is gaining more and more popularity among women and the next few seasons will see more attention paid to it as an inter-class sport. VARSITV PLAYERS Helen Herr LuELLA Wright Helen ' Smith Anx Hesdershot Frances Wescott Clarice Iles Margaret Brook hart Georgia Easter Helen Keeler Verena Meyer Alma Kalsem Lois Calhoun Katherin ' e Rutherford Velma Craig Dorothy Olson- Catherine ROLIRAUCH Miiiimiitii .-EUEZE.- ._ _ jjL 1 ■ 1 W. A. A. BASEBALL Baseball was the most popular sport at Iowa State in the spring quarter of 1922. Every dormitory and sorority house organized in a tournament. The game was con- ducted under Spalding ' s boys ' rules, except that the diamond is 60 instead of 90 feet. Margaret Hall was the champion, so received a silver loving cup, which they must hold for two consecutive years before it becomes their permanent possession. erena I Ie ' er pitched and Lucile Hatlestad caught for the winning te am. The high or best 22 plajers picked from all teams were called the varsitx pla ers and received the 100 points toward the athletic honor. AVhen a total of 00 points have been won in the arious sports, the person is permitted to wear the women ' s official A , while 600 permit membership to the women ' s A fraternity. V.- RSITV PL. ' WERS Verena Meyer I.ALRA Bl BLITZ CLEORA DlETRlCK CJrace Sowerwixe Besse Ciimelik Maroaret Brookhart Pearl Robbixs Alma Kalsem JULIErrE WVLIE Florence F.ckle ' elm. Craig Georglx F.asthr Ethel Easter Lucile Hatlestad Oxa I ' lrick Clara Caxcsted Ctrace Fitch Alma Bovce Myrtle Beix (iRACE ShERIDAX ' iviAX Walter Emma Fife 218 NAIAD CLUB Vonle swininiers ha e organized an honorary swimming ckib at Iowa State, the Naiad Club, whose purpose it is to interest and to promote excellency in swimming j.mong the women students of Ames. Before becoming a member a candidate must be unanimously elected ; slie must be able to do four standard strokes, and four standard dives; hold a Red Cross certificate; pass a theory examination ; be working for an A sweater ; and ha e passed 1 5 hours of work at Iowa State College. The uniform is a black suit with a white belt, and the emblem. Ihis vear there were eight charter and one honorary member in the organization. ] Iercie Carley was president. CHARTER MEMBERS Mercie Carlev Presidint Le ore Higley Secretary-Treasurer Jeanette Beyer Florence Larsox LuciLE Butcher Helex Herr Miss Agxes Murphy. Ilonortiry Member Dorothv Cooke 219 220 • MIIIIIIIIIIIIIII llltMI(l IIIIMIMIilillll«ll(«lllllllllllll lllilllllll «ll mlllllllll IIIIIIIHIMII ll«IIIIIIIIIIUI- Fraternities illlWIIMHIIIHWtwmUMWWIHIWIMWMWMMIMMMKWtmiHimMmimHUimillllllllllHIIMIllllMMtHMlMlw 221 K • IIIIIMtlWIII«lltlHltlllllMHI«IIMtll«MIHmHI MUMUiltlMlltlllHIII THE EDUCATION OF ALOXZO APPLEGATE CniirlfKii .1. . Dinlii w m f Tl-it- SOPHOftlORG. lEKPfcDlTlO-W To SHEA.R v .UOr ZO ' 3 I-OCK.S. .Homo .livaktuimj i HISTORY OF FRAIERXn Y SYSTEM The ancient Greeks, particLilarly after they had gained supremacy as the most cul- tured and civilized people of the then known world, separated into cliques of the vary- ing philosophies. These cliques were known as brotherhoods, or in the language of that nation, fraternities. As these groups became more closely organized, the rival- ry between them increased, until it was necessary, to hold many of their meetings in secret. When colleges and universities came into being, young men were thrown into close contact with each other, and were joined by common interests. It was then that the banding instinct, that was inherited from prehistoric forefathers, made itself felt in the formation of many societies, both social and literary. Later, some of these societies, possibly copying from the long extant Masonic order, and from the customs of the ancient Grecian cliques, adopted secret initiation rituals. In America, the first secret society was organized at William and Mary College, at Williamsburg, Va.. in the year 1750. This group was called the Flat Hat Society. The first Greek letter fraternity came into being some 26 years later, when Phi Beta Kappa was founded at the same university. It was organized as both a literary and social society. In the latter part of 1779, it authorized the establishment of branches in both Harvard and Yale. It existed in the latter university as an honorary society, limiting its numb ers to the upper two classes. Phi Beta Kappa is now an honorary fraternity whose membership is selected from those who have reached a high degree of scholastic attainment. Authorities claim that Phi Beta Kappa so completely worked out the essential fea- tures of the Greek letter fraternity system that subsequent fraternities have been strongly influenced by the laws and traditions of the initial organization. Alpha Delta Phi, founded at Hamilton College in 1832, introduced the fraternity system into the West u hen it established a chapter at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in 1835. Previous to that date, but six fraternities had been founded in the United p. States. One of these organizations was, and still is, non-sceret, due to the anti- Masonic movement in national politics, that had extended to all secret organizations. Nine fraternities, national in scope, were organized between 1835 and 1850. Beta Theta Pi, one of the famous Miami Triad, established the first secret society in the South when it granted a chapter to Transylvania College in 1842. The national sorority system, inaugurated in 1870 with the foundation of Kappa Alpha Theta, has had a growth much similar to that of the national fraternity system. Prior to the year 1900, thirty-two national social fraternities had been established in America. Since that time the fraternity system has shown an extremely rapid growth, a fact which max be attributed to the repealing of the anti-fraternity laws in many states. Some fi e ears after the close of the Civil Var, a society was formed at the L ni- versity of Michigan, which limited its membership to those students who were enrolled ' |n|I nnnn:; lllllllHIIIII«IIHII   IIHII limtll«H«MtllHli ill in the law college. That society inavigiirated the national professional fraternity sys- tem. Today there are many social fraternities in practically every school which has well-established professional or scientific departments and are composed only of stu- dents who are taking work in some particular line of study. Statistics compiled within the past decade show that this type of society is rapidly growing in popularity. Another type of fraternity has been firmly established in the United States, espe- cially since the beginning of the Twentieth Century. In this system, membership is granted because of excellence in some particular line of work. They are known as honorary fraternities, and they have been founded to include almost every profession and science taught in the American colleges and universities. At the meeting of the National Religious Education Association, a series of resolu- tions was introduced suggesting that steps be taken to bring about a Pan-Hellenic union of the different national fraternities. Following the adoption of the resolutions, twenty-six fraternities met at the University Club, in New York City, November 17, 1909. It is the purpose of the Conference, as stated in the constitution of that organ- ization, to further the common interests of the national fraternity system. An attempt has been made, and has been carried forward with success, to bring about a more com- plete understanding between the various fraternities. The National Interfraternity Conference has made a rapid growth during the past decade, for at the 1918 meeting, thirty-seven fraternities were represented. The national sororities have completed a much more effective inter-sorority system than have the fraternities. Today, college fraternities, both national and local in character, play a big, and often underestimated part in campus life of the colleges and universities. In the past, legis- lative and often individual school bans have been placed upon the organization or the installation of secret societies. In some states, these restrictions are still enforced, but throughout the country as a whole, the feeling against the fraternity system is being lessened rather than increased. 224 FOURTH ROW: Schaefer, Siillivnn. Jorvis, Zerbe. Ailcn, Kosing. Smith. Murphy, George. Dilworth. Chase. THIRD ROW: Wilson, Lichty, Dunn, Bailey, Reynolds, Earhart, Benson, Wolters. Mellinger, Birthright, Baker. SECOND ROW: Meneough, ShuU, Bodholdt, R. H. Greene. Brookhart, J. C. Greene, Martin, Armstrong, Bowen. Goodwin. Reed. FIRST ROW: Sindt, Hammerly, Uehling, Raynolds. Butcher. Pereboom, Mueller, Paxton, Young, Bryant. OFFICERS A. E. Wolters President R. H. Green ' E ■ Vice-President P. M. DuNN ' Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS J. G. E.ARH.ART Acacia Theodore Uehling L. L. DiLLWORTH Alpha Gamma R io E. M. Meseough H. L. Chase Alpha Sigma Phi R. A. Sullivan H. J. Reynolds Alpha Tau Omega H. S. Smith Mortimer Goodwin Beta Theta Pi M. P. Birthright F. E. Shepard Chi Phi E. C Catlin. Jr. Porter Jarvis Delta Tau Delta M. S. Zerbe K. R. Marvin Delta i ' psilon C. W. Martin J. M. Bailey Kappa Sigma R. E. Paxton P. M. Dunn Lambda Chi Alpha E. V. Kowalke R. H. Greene Phi Delta Theta B. G. Allen L. M. Haugen Phi Gamma Delta R. B. Raynolds H. F. Mellinger Phi Kappa Psi F. S. Pereboom C. B. Schaefer Phi Sigma Kappa J. A. Bryant A. E. Wolters Pi Kappa Alpha W. D. George A. W. Murphy Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ira Vounc E. R. Reed Sigma Chi C. E. Brookhart J. L. Benson Sigma A ' u R. S. Bodholdt J. C. Greene Sigma Phi Epsilon H. C. Butcher H. H. Bowen Sigma Pi C. C. Armstrong W. E. Shull Tau Kappa Epsilon H. B. Sindt M. G. Mueller Theta Chi W. S. Rosing D. D. Baker Delta Delta Chi C. A. Hammerly C. H. Wilson Thela Xi G. C Lichty ltllllMII«IMtlHHIII ilil)l«lilHllllll IIUllllllIllltHIIIII-3-9-a-9-9- 225 • IH ml«llllll  HMIHI(IMfHIIMtll«IMaitltl llinillllll llll«lllinll IHIIIII IXTER-LOCAL FRATERNITY COIXCTL THIRD ROW: Bi)vle, Hoopes. I ' ai-k, Howard. Seaton. SEC ' OXU RdW: Kritts. Schaml.iTj;. .lai-ohs. Teniiani. FIRST ROW: Spaulding. Arenson. (iibson, Hanson, Xyline. OFFICERS Rov D. Arex son- Charles O. Greenlee John D. Spauldixg . Clarke M. Howard President ice-President Secretary- Treasurer MEMBERS A. G. GooDALAX, ' erx Uker . . . Adelaiite C. O. Greexlee, C. J. Cahill . . . Ausonia H. J. Schomberg, C. C. Llchterh and . EI Paso A. W. Nylin E, I. V. Ash by . . . Hau Ki W. A. Park, L. E. McMahox . . Sigma Sigma R. D. Arexsox, C. ' . Stephens . Tau Gamma u C. M. Howard, L. P. Carlson Alpha Kappa Delta |. n. Spal i.DiXG, L. S. FiT i ' ATRicK . . Amiciaii •IIINII«HIIHItHIIIUItlMtlMIIIII IMI lllllt llllli«tM«UIM)llllll 226 TinmiTLrnTniiimiiimTnTiiinTnTrTTrTTmi: FRESHMAN INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL THIRD Row : (Jslturii. CifUsirkf, Hjiriinian. Mever. Chope. Singiiia.ster. 8K{ ()XI RO V: AIItMi, Anderson, Christensen. Koester, Gamble, Sinclair, Thompson. FIRST RllW: Crabb, Baker, Moss, Walling, Southgate, Maybauer, OFFICERS L. F. Allen ....,,.. PresiJ,nt T. A. Anderson I ' ice-President E. H. OSBURN . ■ Secn-lary J. W. Tavlor Triasunr MEMBERS L. A. Harriman. .Icaria A. M. W. J. Mavbaler, .llp ia Gamma Rlio R. J. E. L. Crabr, Alpha Sie ma Phi A. N. D. M. Sinclair. Atfha Tail Om,;_ia D. D. R, T. SoLTHGATE, Bila Thria Pi A. R. R. E. Mever, Chi Phi J. W. R. C, Walling, Dr la Cpsilon E. H. Dickson Reck, Diila Tan D,lla E. L. L. F. Allen, Kappa Sigma H. N T. A. Anderson, lambda Chi Alpha C. O. J. B. Moss, Phi D.lla Thrta R, A. J. n. Johnson, Phi Gamma Drlla L. T. . Baker Phi Kappa Psi Flsher, Phi Sigma Kappa Harding, Pi Kappa Alpha Benson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Koester, Sigma Chi Taylor, Sigma Nu OsBURN, Sigma Phi Epsilon Gensicke, Sigma Pi . Chope, Tau Kappa Epsilon Sincmaster, Thtia Delia Chi Arduser, Thcia Xi Johnson, Thita Chi UVi f-g-H-g-g-JlLgji;. «ll«lllll«llllllllll ll«lltllllUltllMI llllllll S. V. Beyer W. F. COOVER J. E. Brindley Ansox Marston r. a. rudmck R. E. Buchanan JoHx Hug F. S. VVlLKlXS R. E. Cramer C. C. SCHIDE E. M. Capellan A. B. Conrow J. H. Rust ' . V. Grooan N. K. Clemmensen W. H. Dunham R. E. Hird 11. S. Lames ACACIA MEMBERS IN FACULTY C. S. Nichols T. R. Ago H. W. JOHXSON W. C. Calvert R. L. Cochran C. V. Mayser V. E. Drips GRADUATE STUDENTS SENIORS K. C. Satterfield R. L. Culver JUNIORS B. M. Stahl G. C. Terry Tiieadore Uehlixg SOPHOMORES C. J. Jack PLEDGES C. P. North E. A. Oppenheimer R. A. Sawyer G. W. Smith C. H. Stange H. A. BiTTENBENDER V. L. Hein H. H. Kildee A. L. Anderson H. R. Searles W. M. Alsin T. H. Bexton C. S. Linton J. G. Earhart A. B. Hird M. W. Locke E. F. Koerner L. a. Harriman F. I.. Strong R. E. Thompson C. S. Fox Neil Weldon ' iiiiiii it(iiinmnnimHminmiiimmwmtnmiMH «mnnmiitiiiiimiiimimmiimtiiuinimniiiiiiiiii 22S nuii ' iitrnmiiiiiiiiiirrjiiiiiimTTiTTTT ; ACACIA -n- aiiiiiiiiiiTiiiin!!!nnTTrr FOURTH ROW: Grogan. Hnrriman. Hird. Stahl, Culver, Dunham. THIRD ROW: Sntterfield, Clemmensen, Schide, Thompson, Bittenbender, Rust, Earhart. SECOXD ROW: Smith, Cramer, Fox, Linton, North, Strong, Oppenheimer. BOTTOM ROW: Capellan, Lames, Locke, Conrow. Uehling, Koerner, Sawyer. Acacia fraternity, vhich was founded at Ann Arhor, Michigan in 1904, was the outgrowth of a Masonic chih, whose members conceived of the idea of establishing a national Masonic fraternity for college men. Clubs of a similar nature in other institutions saw the advantages of such an organization and applied for charters. At present, there are 31 active chapters with a total mem- bership of 5,308. Eight alumni associations have been formed. Fifteen of the active chapters own their houses. The government of the fraternity is vested in the CJrand Conclave, which is composed of delegates from the several chapters. The supreme executive body is the Grand Council which is composed of the five national officers. The offi- cial publication of the fraternit , the Triad of cicada, formerly issued as the Acacia Journal, is published (juarterly by the Cirand Editor. The badge is a right-angled triangle with a jeweled border, within which are three smaller triangles. The chapters are named from the institutions at which they are located, and are to be found only in the larger colleges and universities. The chapter at Iowa State College was founded in 1909, when the Craftsman club, a local Masonic Organization, was granted a charter of Acacia. The Crafts- inan club was effected in 1908 by a group of faculty men who had in mind the establishment of a chapter of Acacia. The first meeting of the Craftsman club was held in room 222 Central Building, where the constitution and by-laws of the organization were adopted. 229  lH«ll«HllllHIIIHimUIMIIMmMIIIIMMHMMimHHlMWIIHHIMHIIII mmHHIHIIIH.  ADELANTE Rex Beresford E. T. Erickson M. H. Brown W. S. Collier W. C. Fernow V. R. Blchanan- C. H. Everett H. y. Tones A. R. Bowman A. P. Blciianan H. R. Freeman ' MEMBERS IN FACULTY B. J. Firkins J. H. Hilton E. R. McK.ee SENIORS E. A. Fritts S. I. Graham S. A. McCosh JUNIORS M. A. Buettell V. C. Knoop A. C;. (lOODMAN SOPHOMORES n. V. Mever PLEDGES W. Graham Theadore Hansen 230 iiiiimnniniiiiimimi iiiinin niminmiintiiiiiiniimiiniinmi tiiii miiinm «miiniiiniiini mnnTgTeg-.s  --s-x ADELAXTE FOl ' RTH ROW; Zink, Buelttll, Everett, V. IJi-iihiim. S. Gr;iham. Johnson, Ml-Co.sIi. Staddart. THIKI) ROW: Hilton, P. Buchanan, MeKee, Kritts, Goodman, Collier, Tillotson, Meyer. SE . ' OXI ROW: Brown, Strteter, Firkin.s. Bowman, Murph.v, Freeman, Masters, Hansen. FRONT ROW: W. Buchanan, Pohlman, Uker, Knoop, .lones, Erickson. Fernow. Founded at loua State College in 1907 ■f!i!!iiiiT:niii ;:iiimiii!iiiiii!ii!ii!iiniiiiiir- 231 r-rr?i[ ' :wiinnnTnTTTnTTTni nTTTTrnn TirnrmttfTnmmii iini: iniininiii ALPHA GAxMMA RHO M. D. Hei.ser E. N. Bressman- D. H. Eldridce R. S. Stephenson L. L. nn.vvDRiii Ralph Mvoatt Kenneth Maltas R. E. MosER IIenrv Howard MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. W. Warner C. B. FiNLEV FoRDYCE Ely F. B. Paddock GRADUATE STUDENT D. Q. Cannon SENIORS Frank Rutter Frank Race Eugene Waikins JUNIORS E. M. Menolch Earl Margerlm SOPHOMORES C. W. McDonald S. H. Thompson S. N. Smith ' J. L. Robinson ' aldo McIlnwELL C. E. Larson Floyd Johnson I ' )Avn) SjLLIN Allen Boller R. E. Larson R. T. Nelson Lester Ryon N. T. Baird Mark Kramer PLEDGES R. C. Ferglson Wn.LARD Ma raler Dale Morris Joe Myrick H. L. Rietveld Ralph Richardson Paul Parker George Williamson Harold Utley r?C23 • iiiiiiiii iii«iiiMiM it«  twti iitii tiiiMMMiiMiniiiiii iinilntiimii mn mitii«m iimtimtiiimintiMin(; 232 E ' !C e C :e lllll MHItlll«M IHIIII ll«(M «lliHllltllllHlill( )IMIIt«ltlMIM)lllllllilll«llll(IIIIMlilllii lllHMI HHIIM 1 ALPHA GAMMA RHO I ( «■ I S !«! f¥ I FOURTH ROW: Baird. Haw. Eldridge. Howard. Race. M rick. Richardson, Buchanan, Dilworth. THIRD ROW: C. E. Larson. Morris. R. H, Larson. Williamson, -Johnson, Maltas, Cramer, Nelson, Mygatt. SECOND ROW: Ferguson. Menough. Watkins. Rutter, Sjulin. Warner, Rickey, Rickard, Parker. FIRST ROW: Smith, Rietveld, Paddock. Helser. Lawson. Maybauer, Moser, Stephenson, Ryou. This fraternity «as or|;anizcd by the union of two prior societies, Alpha Gamma Rho founded in 1904 at Ohio State Tniversity, and Delta Rho Sig ma founded in 1906 at the University of Illinois. In the spring of 1908 a union was effected, the Illinois chapter being called the Alpha, and the Ohio, the Beta Chapter. Previous to 1917 several chapters of Alpha Gamma Rho conducted them- selves as professional agricultural fraternities, electing members from social fraternities. In February 1917, legislation was passed barring membership in social fraternities and prohibiting the initiation of members of social organi- zations. Today there is no difference between this and the general college fra- ternity, except that membership is still limited to agricultural students. The local chapter, Eta, was granted on April 4, 1914. The charter was se- cured by the A. G. R. club, which had been organized for the purpose of be- coming affiliated with the luitional fraternity. Twenty chapters compose the chapter roll with a membership of 2,500. A periodical called the Sifklf and Slwaf is published qua rterly. The badge is a gold crescent with a sickle and a sheaf of wheat placed inside of the points of the crescent. Alpha Gamma Rho was organized to make better men and through them a broader and better agriculture by surrounding its members with influences tending to encourage individual endeavor and aggressive efforts along agricultural lines. Its aim is to broaden the outlook of agricultural men through fellowship in a national organization. !B ' ■ g c.iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiitiMiiMti iiitiniiiniinmmimiiminniiiHiiHMHin imHiimiiiMiinmmi«iiiiiii«niiiitin 233 i i ALPHA KAPPA DELTA K. L. Bird MEMBERS IN FACULTV J. V. XlEI.SEX C. p. Lewellex L. R. Beath Rodney Cecil S. R. DOUGHIV SENIORS H. L. GiBsox R. E. LiLJEDAHL J. E. NORMAV F. V. SCHULTZ L. G. SORDEN R. E. Farmer JUNIORS 11. E. Gordon C M. Howard M. O. Waiekman P. R. Benson L. P. Carlson SOPHOMORES E. Cutler V. H. Dennieon P. H. Goodman- K. W. Johnson Arthur OeXaul J. V. Eichinger P. I.. Johnstone G. H. LiLJEDAHL PLEDtSES I.Al RENCE LiLJEDAHL C. A. Nichols II. H. Osland II. S. Phlard H. E. Pulver R. I. Reidesel J. M. Sloan Kenneth Wriomt niiimitiiiiiiiimiiiiiiM nniiiMm««nm««im  n 234 • ' iiimrMTir ::iimiimi:: niiiiiirt-EF ALPHA KAPPA DELTA THIRD ROW: Eichinger, Lewellen, Dnught.v, Nielson. G. H. Liljedahl. Osland, Cecil, Sordeii, Beath. SECOND ROW: Sehultz, Nichols, Gorden. Johnson, Howard, Pulver, Goodman, Johnstone. FIRST ROW: Farmer, Reidesel, Denisun, Benson, Gibson, Carlson, Waterman, R. E. Liljedahl, L. Liljedahl. Founded at lou ' a State College 1920 illllllllF ' g 235 •HiHmiii«itiii)iiitiM«(i ii«ii i iiiuiiMiMiiii iiiiiii )ii itiiiiiititiiiiiiiiin!i mi ALPHA SIGMA PHI T. J. Maney S. M. DiETZ R. H. Porter MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. B. RowE G. M. Fuller C. W. Hammans J. S. QuiST W. H. Stacy H. L. Chace T. E. DeHart SENIORS J. R. Redditt F. V. Keatikg D. R. Porter C. I. Carspeckek R. M. Henderson JUNIORS M. R. Isaacson L. M. Best L. V. Lauchlin M. E. Leetuk R. A. Sullivan J. R. Boyd L. M. CORREI.L J. N. Embree SOPHOMORES C. H. Jefferson J. V. Lyle R. B. McKennan S. E. ViCKERS G. W. Westcott E. I,. Arnold F. J. Arnold E. L. Crabb Dwigiit DeHart M. O. Enfield PLEDGES O. M. Galiher L. M. Heck man J. C. Hendriscksen C. J. Hudson W. H. Jones J. B. Lupton H. C. Reel B. J. Roberts H. H. Smith •.Hi«iiiMtMii«iiMHiiM««iMitMinmi«nnmii HMiiMn««tmmm iiiiiiiniiiiMniinnn imnMiiiMi Mwtiiii.-a . a j-a- 236 iiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiinminniiiiiiiimnini«iiii iitiniiiim nninniimmi n  M «w« ' ' « ' ALPHA SIGMA PHI FOURTH ROW: Galiher, Boyd, McKennan, Carspecken. Vickers, Roberts. THIRD ROW: Leetun. Laughlin, DeHart, Chace. Keating, Smith. Fuller. SECOND ROW: Correll. Redditt. Isaacson, Enfield, Lyie, Hendricksen, Jefferson. FIRST ROW: Best. Emtiree, Reel, Wescott, Sullivan, Lupton, Crabb. . ' Ipha Sigma Phi fraternity was founded as a sophmore society at Yale in December 1845. While a sophomore society, Alpha Sigma Phi chartered branches at Harvard in 1850; Amherst College in 1856; Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity in 1865; and Marietta College in 1860, the latter being open to all classes. The Harvard chapter became dormant in 1857, Amherst College in 1862, and Ohio Wesleyan in 1865. It is significant that the general chapter was the only chapter that survived the shocks of disintegration which overtook the rest. It may be that the class character of the others contributed much to their demise. The Marietta chapter remained as the only active society from 1865 until 1907, when the Yale chapter was revived, not as a sophomore fraternity, but as a university fraternity. .Ml chapters established since then have admitted students from all departments and classes. Alpha Sigma Phi, has, since this time, followed the policy of conservative expansion. At the present time there are 24 active chapters located at the leading universities throughout the East and West. The same rituals are in use that were instituted at Yale in 1845. The same badge is worn, but the size has been reduced. The history and traditions of the fraternity in its earlier character have survived, and have been perpetuated in its present life. The fraternity magazine bears the name of the old annual, the Tomahaiuk. The fraternitv does not enroll honorary members, but has a number of faculty mem- bers who have been regularly initiated as active members. The local organization, to which Alpha Sigma Phi granted a charter on May 8, 1920, was formerly known as the Palisades, which was organized April 12, 1911. K-a- s- £ - 237 ALPHA TAU OMEGA H. E. Bemis I. E. Melhus R. M. VlFQUAIN MEMBERS IN FACULTY H V. Wright H. L. Maxwell E. M. Roller C. E. Adams H. O. Smith Carol Fulkerson SENIORS R. A. Trexel A. A. Blin ' ks S. T. Carter W. S. Cupps JUNIORS P. K. Duvall H. E. Field H. y. Reynolds H. J. Smith H. S. Smith M. II. Woods C. E. BORG J. A ' . Cotton SOPHOMORES C. A. Fectlv Hubert (Jarrecht E. C. Rasmissex C. H. Greef Raymond (Ialbraith H. E. Jensen H. D. Keller PLEDGES Rae MacDonalds H. E. Price L. S. Smith M. Smith P. M. Terry R. B. Thompson D. M. Sinclair 238 -a-omiLir ALPHA TAU OMEGA FOURTH ROW: Cotton, Greef, Keller, Duvall, H. S. Smith. Cnvtev, Rasmussen. THIRD ROW: Field, H. J. Smith, L. Smith, Firmiin, Reynolds, M. Smith, Blinks. SECOND ROW; Price, Borg, Fulkerson, Sinclair, Newcomer, Trexel, Thompson, Garrecht. FIRST ROW: Galbraith, Perkins, Woods, Cupps, Jensen, Fegtl.v, Terry. In December 1904, a congenial group of students at Iowa State College orga- nized a club for social purposes and called themselves the Black Hawk club, having as a badge an Indian arrow head with the words, Black Hawk, upon it. Under the guidance of members of the national fraternity, Iowa Gamma I ' psilon of Alpha Tau Omega wns installed on March 17,1908. Alpha Tau Omega was founded at Richmond, Virginia on September 11, 1865. It was the first fraternity to be established after the Civil War. While the country was still raw and bleeding from the havoc that only war can bring. Alpha Tau Omega was formed. The organization was based on a brotherly love that would include the entire nation, and once more bind the North and the South. As this was the first fraternity of Southern origin which was successful in maintaining chapters in the North, it is interesting to note that this was ac- complished through members of other fraternities. Dr. Edgar F. Smith, Phi Kappa Psi, and William Raimond Baird, Beta Theta Pi, were instrumental in placing chapters at the Tniversity of Pennsylvania and at St. Lawrence Uni- versity respectively. With sectional prejudice thus overcome, the fraternity ex- perienced a sudden expansion and now embraces all of the United States. !li;i ' .IH-ja:J!:fcl!- -Ji.. 239 IHHUIHIHIHHWIIHIHHIIIHHHMHMMI IH«HIII«IHW IIIHMHMHIII IHM tMI M«ltlMmill IIHII«MMlmil.a ' « « -a.a.g .m.lxl AMICIAN H. T. BovLE Murray Joslin J. A. O ' Leary E. H. Hes ' sinc H. C. Gardnier C. J. Saunders C. J. Denmer C. V. Buss Joseph (Irier e. j. luttrel SENIORS J. C. LiNNAX G. C. El.LIOIT JUNIORS L. V. KOSTER J. J. Rater SOPHOMORES E. 1.. SpAliR PLEDGES J. P. Nagle P. F . Struble I.. J. ' ecxer H. C. Smith E. L. Broderick L. E. Martin- J. D. Spaui.dixc G. C Decker K. R. Oberle I,. Fitzpatrick D. J. Farrell C. A. Bi rd B. J. Langdo m •A-C ?C-e C. C c:«IIMIIIIMIIMIIIIIIMIIt«MIIMIIIIIIIIIII)l«tll«llllflllMlllfilllllllHIIII«IMII liaMI IIH llllllimillllHI llim illlllllllltlllllllM llllll llllllHHIIIlim«lmHI lllllll«HllltlllllimH  MII IHHH m«HI m« HlimMHMH l ts -p-Tigiy e fl AMICIAN FOL ' KTH KUW: Broderick. Slrubi-l. Boyle. Wegner. Uenner, O ' Donnell, Martin. THIRD ROW: Saunders, Linnan, Koster. Rater, Burd, Buss, O ' Leary, SECOND ROW: Smith, Gardiner, Fitzpatriek, Elliot, Grier. Xagle, Oberle. FIRST ROW: Farrell, Hensing, Spahr, Joslin, Luttrell, Decker, Spaulding. Founded at I on a State CoUet c in 1920 241 il — ■ iimiiiiimiiiin): ' AUSONIA V. F. LaCjRAxce MEMBERS IN FACULTY W. E. Beanblossom E. F. Goss RoBLEV Winfrey H. K. Bennett H. B. B0VI.E SENIORS C. V. Hanson- C. M. Simon- H. F. Stevenson- C. O. Greenlee JUNIORS A. H. Tracy W. L. ' hite A. C. Frisk Henry ' a Roekei. SOPHOMORES J. S. MUNRO G. M. MoRCAX C. J. Cahill Virgil Ri tier V. J. (Srimm G. R. Harmon ' H. P. KUEHL PLEDGES D. J. LuicK J. L. MoAD H. n. Peters C. V. SCIIIERBALM D. E. Waceck W. L. Wallace G. W. Yeacer W. H. SlELOFF 242 tJ-g-Ml!: -Pi AUSONIA THIRD ROW: Hanson, Bennett, Grimm, Harmon, White, Frisk, Kuehl. SECOND ROW: Cahill, Wageck, Winfrey, Yeager, Tracy, Luick, Morgen, Simon. FIRST ROW: Van Roekel. Greenlee, Boyle. Stevenson, Peters, Moad, Munro. Founded at loica Sl(i t ' College in 101] •lllllll llll IIIIMUiMIIMMIIUI«HI«lltlt(lll«IIIMIMIIIII«IIIIIIIHI A ' riiiiiriiia-n-ien -a-iB-B--i 2+3 llll l lll HII HlllltlllMMIIII llltlllMI iMIHII«l)llltltll IIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIMIII HIMIIM IIIMItl ll«tlMIII) lll S S 9 ara BETA THETA PI O. H. Cessna MEMBERS IN FACULTY E. V. LiNDSTROM J. M. Thlrber F. S. Al.UMUTH M. A. Smith GRAOrATE STUnENTS W. P. Shller D. B. Lucas D. C. POSHUSTA ' . p. COWDEN B. M. Sherlock R. B. Urmy A. G. Levn ' ox R. L. Bi.ESSixc SENIORS L. M. Rathbun JINIORS M. P. BlRIHRlGHT SOPHOMORES n. S. Vir;HTMAN E. W. Jones J. R. Roche Mortimer Coodwin I,. M. Murphy L. F. Kahle F. S. Radci.ihe K. S. McCORKINDALE J. n. McKahiv J. D. Graham PLEDGES I.. G. Sherlock M. R. PovE V. H. Athertov E. B. Streater H. A. McCracken- M. J. McMillan- R. T. Southcate C.-e-C MIHIinitllUII  ltllllMIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIHIiH llllllll IIM«IIIMIIIIIHIIIIIiltl) IIIIHMiltllHI MIII«ll|!HH!ll 24+ -tlllllllMIIIIIM llltlMIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIt « llllltlllltlllllllMHIItMlf)llll IIIIMI)l«lllltllHfl«llll«l«IIIIIMim- BETA THETA PI THIRD ROW: McCorkindnle. McKahin, Blessing, Cowden. Wightman, Poshusta, Urmy, B. M. Sherlock, Lennox. SECOND ROW: Graham, L. G. Sherlock, Jones. Radclift ' e, Rathhun, Dove. Birthright, Goodwin. FIRST ROW: Roche, Murphy. Atherton, Kahle, Streater, McCracken, McMillan, Southgate, Lucas. Beta Theta Pi, the first fraternity organized west of the Alleghanies, was founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, August 8, 1839. The founders were John Reily Knox, Samuel Taylor Mai-shall, David Linton, James George Smith, Charles Henry Hardin, John Holt Duncan, Michael Clarkson Ryan, and Thomas Boston Gordon. Twice during the lifetime nf the fraternity other fraternities have effected unions with it. In 1879 Alpha Sigma Chi was received into full membership and in 1889 they were followed b the Mystical Seven. The active chapters of the fraternities united with Beta Theta Pi where they existed in the same in- stitution. On August 27, 1900, a literary society called the Triserps was organized at Iowa State College with approximately a dozen members. In a short time this organization became a social fraternity and petitioned Beta Theta Pi. A charter was granted the group, July 14, 1905, and the installation ceremonies took place November 25, 1905. The publication of the fraternity is the Bfla Theta Pi Magazine. 245 :iriiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiimiii!ii:imrninir- CHI PHI A. L. Bakke W. G. Baker MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. A. Bradley H. H. Cornell J. G. Jessup E. E. Mylin r! POST GRADUATE J. C. SCHILLETTER G. A. Pe Havev SENIORS F. E. Shepard H. R. BiCKET E. C. Catlix C. F. Ehlers JUNIORS Randall Gillis H. B. Heft I.. E. Johnson W. L. Lane L. C. LORENS H. V. Priem R. I. WiLKINSOM II. A. Arthur J. C. Cherry C. G. Grim M. T. Hamilton C. V. KlNdSBURY SOPHOMORES C. G. FicK PLEDGES E. R. LORENS R. E. Meyer C. T. Norton R. D. Mayser E. G. Morton J. D. Pearson J. N. Placoe E. F. Zehrinc 246 CHI PHI THIRD ROW: Kellog. Grim. -Icihiisoii, Pearson, Plaggp. Meyer. Gillis, Zehring. SECOND ROW; Arthur. E. Lorens, Wilkinson. Shepard, L. Lorens. Cherrv, Morton. FIRST ROW: DeHnven, Mnyser, Fick, Lane, Catlin, Ehlers, Bickett, Norton. M The Chi Phi fraternity is a union of three independent organizations, existing in different sections of the United States, and all bearing the name Chi Phi. I ' he oldest of these was founded at Princeton on December 24, 1824. At that time, the undergraduate enrollinent consisted of 125. The college was closely allied with the theological seminary and represented the non-conformist element of the South — the Presbyterians as against thi Episcopalians. During this period, the nation was in a condition of unrest. The old govern- ment by representatives of the upper classes was at an end. Democracy was beginning to develop. These conditions led to the organization of a society at Princeton, to promote the circulation of correct opinion upon Religion, Morals, Education, and so forth, excluding Sectarian Theology and Party Politics. This society was the Princeton Chi Phi and was composed of members of the faculties of the seminary and college, as well as undergraduates- Anti-Fraternity laws drove all secret societies out of Princeton, but a chapter of Chi Phi had been established at Franklin and Marshall College, which has since maintained a continuous existence. The other two orders, the Southern and the Hobart, were founded in 1858 and 1860 respectively. The first originated at the University of North Carolina, and was of a literary character. The Hobart order was founded at Hobart College and was called the Secret Order of Chi Phi. These three orders existed inde- pendently until 1873, when they united into one organization under the name of the Chi Phi fraternity. Chi Phi became a part of Iowa State College on February 18, 1922, when Lambda Tau Alpha became Pi chapter of the Chi Phi fraternity. Hinilllllll!nil IHinit HIIMIIilllMMMllllllUIHI «lllll ltllllll 247 MMMimnmiiiiinmiiinniiinii niiiinm«iiiimn «iinintni nnnimntii«i iiniMtnnMi DELTA TAU DELTA RoLLAND Fletcher H. E. Pride W. P. FiSHEL MEMBERS IN FACULTY c. f. curtiss Phillip Spakg W. T. Elder H. K. Davis M. G . Spancler A. F. Faul E. L. Bartley SENIORS H. L. McBiRNEV S. W. McBlRNEY C. V. Hillman C. W. Paioe M. n. JoHXsnv R. M. Smith Donald Thompson- JUNIORS Donald Hucke j. w. norris M. S. Zerbe CIeo. Beese P. M. Jarvis F. M. Highly H. C. Phillips F. M. Reck G. T. Roberts E. W. McKee W. B. Michaels Dickson Reck V. J. Janda A. F. Shei.ler SOPHOMORES S. H. Reck C. M. Wincert K. M. Bennett G. V. Churchill PLEDGES R. A. Pride George Alexander L. E. Drake G. R. Paine R. I. Pride J. K. Knox Clarence Hiedeman ' B. A. Gamble Harold Weis DELTA TAU DELTA A mr t ' tft ' FOURTH ROW: R. A. Pride, Highly. Hiedemiiii. Piiigf, Jarvis, D. Reck, Paine, S. Reck. THIRD ROW: Beese, Smith, F. Reck, Roberts. Hartley, Knox, Norris, Faul. SECOND ROW: Bennett. Michaels, Churchill. R. I. Pride. Gamble. Phillips, Drake, Thompson. FIRST ROW: Zerbe. Wingert, S. McBirnev, Hilluian. Hansen. Johnson. H. L. McBirnev. Delta Tail Delta was founded at Bethany College, Virginia, in 1859. Of the eight original members of the fraternity, only one, John C. Johnson of Clarks- burg, Virginia, is still living. Mr. Johnson is over 90 years old. The fraternity speedily became national, through the establishment of a num- ber of chapters in the South. The expansion in this field was checked during the years of the Civil War but gained impetus during the reconstruction period following the conflict. In 1886, the Rainbow fraternity, a southern organization at the University of Mississippi, and at Vanderbilt University, united with this fraternity. Two years previous to this consolidation. Delta Tau Delta had taken an important step in establishing a national administrative body. It was one of the earliest Greek letter societies to create an arch chapter, which was composed wholly of graduates to govern the organization. The fraternity publication is a (juarterlv called, Rainhoit;. It has its head- quarters in New York. There are 65 active chapters in 27 states and the Dis- trict of Columbia. The present head of the fraternity is A. Bruce Bielaski of New York, chief of the I ' nited States secret service during the World War. The local chapter, Camma Pi of Delta Tau Delta, was founded on July 17, 1875, being the first Oreek letter society on the Iowa State College campus. With the advent of Dr. Beardshear as president of the college in 1890, the career of the fraternitv was interrupted, but it was recommenced in 1911 v.hen the ban was lifted on fraterniti es. l ' ' g g g ' ' g ' «t««i .g ' .MItMIIIIIMI lll IM tM«ltlllltllllllllltlllllllllHIIMIMtltt llllltll IIHIII tllltlllltll ll tMmiWMilM MMIHIII. a J ai-at .  a«lvl 249 titiiiiiiitmitiHiin iniiimiiiniiiiiinniHiinimmimwmwwtwiumtiiiHiiif DELTA UPSILON M S R. E. Buchanan John Buchanan H. H. KiLDEE P. E. Brown Karl Brown K. R. Marvin J. F. Little C. A. WOGENS A. C. KUEHL H. H. Plueger L. J. Evans I.. I. Beldisc E. R. IIOPPE O. J. Thompson M. VV. Manning MEMBERS IN FACULTY F. D. Paine W. S. Chandler L T. Bode V. E. Jones SENIORS V. L. ESTLE A. L. LoucKS JUNIORS Paul Paul G. T. Smith C. W. Martin SOPHOMORES A. n. Berckhan R. F. Shawhan PLEDGES !I. J. Wilson H. J. Lewis L. T. Raff P. K. Heimbaugh W. A. Perry F. G. Churchill Paul Critz A. H. Fuller Charles Burge O ' Neal Mason L. E. Clapp P. J. Beard A. L. VOGGENTHALER E. H. Paine A. V. Gadd I. P. AZELSEN R. C. Walling W. W. Putney L. M. Clauson R. E. Shawhan 250 DELTA UPSILON it: IE a FOURTH ROW: Hoppe, Belding. Pahl. Kuehl. Voggenthaler, Thompson, Evans, Manning. THIRD ROW: Foley, Wilson, Clapp, Axelson, Berckham, Churchill, Lewis. SECOND ROW: Paine. Gadd, Smith, Mason, Raff, Estle, Martin. Loufks. FIRST ROW: Heimbaugh, Wogens, Marvin, Little, Perr.v, Shawhan, Walling. Delta Upsilnn was founded in 1834 at Williams College, Williamstown, Mas- sachusetts, by a body of men whose aim was to combat secret fraternities, which were more or less exclusive and tyranical at that early stage of their develop- ment, and to retain the advantage of fraternal sentiment. As the purposes of the secret and anti-secret societies began to coincide, however, the attitude of the anti-secret organization toward the secret fraternities changed from enmity to amicable rivalry and in 1881 the word, anti-secret, was struck from the constitution of Delta Upsilon and non-secret substituted. Originally Delta I ' psilon was called the Social Fraternity, which was later changed upon the addition of several chapters to the Anti-secret Con- federation and in 1864 was again changed to the present name. The design of the present badge and the motto, which, when interpreted, means, Justice, Our Foundation, were adopted in 1858. Here is a quotation froin their constitution, The objects of this fraternity are the promotion of friendship, the development of character, the diffusion of liberal culture, and the advancement of justice in college affairs. At the present time there are 48 active chapters, which are located, for the most part, in the East and Middle West. Iowa State College chapter of Delta I ' psilon was formed from an organi- zation called the Colonnades. The Colonnades was organized in 1904 at the house on the corner of Boone and Ash streets. In 1909, the CoUjnnades peti- tioned Delta Cpsilon for the first time, and again at each succeeding conven- tion, until the convention of 1913, when they were granted their charter. The installation took place on December 6, 1913. m 251 252 •IMIMIlMIIIIMIIIIIflHIIlMffllllMttlfHItMIIIIMMIIIMIIiailllllMIMIItlf EL PASO THIRD ROW: Westenberger. Barnard. Meadows. Hasek, Mullinnix, Mi-Vey, MoUison, Schweitzer. SECOND ROW; Miller, Shellebarger. Hoopes, Si ' hmiil)erg. Patterson. McGraw. Spencer. FIRST ROW: Reicliman. Sclimidl. Lmhtcrliiuul. Htnvell, Fothergill, Hallowell, WoodlluU, Pearson. FoiinileJ at loiva S iite College in 1911 .lb ;iiJXJL-tt.- t-nL-«.;fliii:iuiiimuiLi;!;i:;:iunjULa IWtltMMMHtmHH   MltlHM mMII IHIWIIIIimmilHHI H tH MMim«M. 253 KtlllllMlltllllltlMIIIIMIIIIMIIUIMOIIttHMillMU GAMMA SIGMA ALPHA Ni ' J. T. Peters J. R. McM.Miw n. ( ' . Anderson (). P. Clark J. V. Hack lev Ira KiTNER AVLllEN Kruger SENIORS H. N. WOLCOTT JIKIOR G. ' . Bkock SOPHOMORES F. Paladin- pledges G. R. Woods C. H. Swires E. L. Miller H. C. Laub F. V. Smith J. E. Terry E. L. Trott W. I.. XA ' llEELER !m Hm«IH IIM«tMtlll«illMltlltll IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMtllllltl«ll|||||l||(|M|MI 25+ nnmnrE GAMMA SIGMA ALPHA THIRD KOW: Terry. Anderson, McMahan. Laub, Paladin. SECdXI) KOW: Grewell. Wood. Kruger. Brock. Dunklee. FIR.yT ROW: Kitner, Wolcott, Hacklev, Peters, Trott. Local Fititiinily for Federal Board Students Founded at loiva State College in 1919 ill 255 lll)MMMtll«MMI«MtlHlllllllllltllllllMI  lltMHinilHIIHHI HAU KI J. E. Hii.AXD MEMBERS IN FACULTY R. J. De LaHunt F. M. Sheldon GRADUATE STUDENTS J. F. Beveri.e E. L. BlERBAUM O. L. Jacobs E. O. BlERBAUM E. A. DeBruin D. A. Epperly R. O. DONELS A. C. Berostrom W. W. Amspoker L. H. Rogers SENIORS L. V. Miller JUNIORS G. F. Kruwell H. C. TiNGLEFF SOPHOMORES J. E. Greer A. V. NVLIKE PLEDGES L. L. Kruwell G. E. WiMMER V. F. Brunner M. W. Smith H. A. Stabe D. J. ROBBIKS R. M. AsHBV M. S. Redexbaugh G. M. Stolt E. E. Marihart E. V. BUEllLER J. M. Greer .■-m-wiii;i!;:!iiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!;mK 256 ::!]!ili:ill!i: Ji£Z i innmnimi nTinrriTnri: tvts HAU KI f fJJ ft THIRD ROW: Donels, Ashb.v, Xyline. Miller, Robbins, Stolt, Amspoker, SECOND ROW: Jacobs, Epperly, Redenbaugh, Bergstrom, Kruwell, DeBruin. XIarihart. FIRST ROW: Stabe, Tingleff, Greer. Brunner, E. L. Bierbaum, Smith, E. 0. Bierbaum. Founded at Ion a State College in 1914 1 331? ' Illlllllirili: ' iriiiiiiiiTr 257 KAPPA SIGMA THIRD ROW: Augustine. Howard, Weber. Hall. Crooks. Bower, Bockel. Rice. SErOND ROW: Wight, See, Allen, Brunn, Mi-Creadv. Henning.son, Whitaeld, Goodman, Stewart. FIRST ROW: Chehak, Meyers, Snyder, Rygli, Paxton. Held, Richart, Bailev. Five men assembled at 46 East Lawn, at the I ' niversitv of ' irginia and founded the Kappa Sigma fraternity, December 10, 1869. From this beginning. Kappa Sigma has spread to 92 American colleges and universities and is represented in the larger cities by alumni chapters. In the early days of the fraternity, the governing power was in the hands of the mother chapter at the University of ir- ginia, but an act of the Grand Conclave of 1876 instituted a Supreme executive council composed of five men «ho were invested with the legislative, judicial and executive powers of the order. For purposes of government, the chapters are divided into 18 districts with officers at the head of each. District conventions are held annually while the Grand Conclaves arc held biennially. Kappa Sigma is alone among the American fraternities in a traditional and legendarv European origin. About 1400, the Greek scholar, Manuel Chrysoloras, founded an order known as Kohaths at the University of Bologna in Italy. The lodge spread to the other four great universities of Europe — Florence, Paris, Orleans, and Montpelier. In modern times the European order has become practically extinct, but the secrets and sym- bols have been preserved and form the basis for the Kappa Sigma fraternity. The Gamma Lambda chapter of Kappa Sigma at Iowa State College incorporated Gamma Alpha, the first fraternity estab- lished on the campus after the ban of the college authorities on fraternities had been raised. It was installed December 9, 1909. nil SniHIIIHIIHIIIItin «IIIIIIHIHI MIIHIIflHIII 259 lhl4niHMII|t«IMfffllM«lllltl«IMIIMMIM4IIIIIIMIllUfl|IIHI|IIIMHIHIO LAMBDA CHI ALPHA . aB MEMBERS IN FACULTY E. W. Kurtz C. H. Meyers C. A. MoORE D. R. Johnson Dr. F. J. Walsh R. E. BORGENSON E. W. Schilling SENIORS A. B. Deal E. J. KOWALKE P. M. Dunn E. S. Larson C. H. HOPER JUNIORS J. W. HUSSEY E. W. KoWALKE W. R. McDowell N. M. Thompson SOPHOMORES M .R. Smith W. H. Mlndt W. M. Hogue R. B. Pendry PLEDGES Jake Ellerbroek T. A. Anderson Ralph Green Lee Rodda V. J. Brandt V. L. Groesbeck c;. B. Sauer M. G. Chitty J. C. Kennedy S. F. Sergeant Howard Crist Geo. Nelson D. W. Shaw E. S. Fee D. W. OSBORN S. L. WiNSLOW IIIIMMIIIIIIIIIHIIII IIIMIHMIIIMtllMltllllliillltMIIMIHIIIHtHniMmillMIIII 260 ' .ca HtWHHMHMMIHMMHimilllMimimimHIIIHIMMMWUMtmUmilMimilllllllMMMIIHmMIWIHIIIHIHIM LAMBDA CHI ALPHA FOURTH ROWr Kurtz, Ellerbroek. E. W. Kowalke, Fee, Moore, Mundt, Sauer. THIRD ROW: Nelson, Groesbeck, Osborn, Corrough, Rodda, Hussey. E. J. Kowalke. SECOND ROW: Thompson, Larson, Anderson, Smith, Crist, Green, McDowell, Dunn. FIRST ROW: Brandt, Hoper, Hogue, Johnson, Kennedy, Pendry, Sergeant. Of the larger national men ' s fraternities. Lambda Chi Alpha is perhaps the youngest. It was founded at the Boston Institute of Technology in 1909. It was founded upon the ideals of superior scholarship and was meant to advance the higher aims of college men, which in substance are the ideals of all fra- ternities. Lambda Chi Alpha was founded at a time when most of the older, national fraternities were upholding a policy of slow expansion. Local fra- ternities from all over the country were seeking admission into the various na- tionals with very little success. This condition made rapid expansion a thing easy to accomplish, and in the few years of its existence, Lambda Chi Alpha has grown to 60 active chapters. These chapters, with one exception, are all located in schools of 1,000 or more enrollment. It would seem that such extremely rapid growth would result in some unde- sirable features, such as a loose organization, and a doubtful financial status. All national fraternities have gone through a period of loose organization, and it is only during the last ten years that central offices have become the rule, rather than the exception. Lambda Chi Alpha profited by the experience of its predecessors, and almost from the beginning has maintained a central of- fice, with an administrative secretary in charge. By means of the central office the fraternit ' operates an employment bureau, and it has a national sinking fund for chapters that are particularly in need of aid, because of fire or other misfortune. In June 1917, the Alamo club at Iowa State College was installed as the Alpha Tau Zeta chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha. As a young chapter of a young fraternity is forged ahead as best as it could. In the fall of 1919 it pur- chased and moved into its home at 604 Grand avenue. By the fall of 1923 the chapter hopes to be installed in a new home nearer the campus. 261 HtHHMHUIIIIIHMItmilHI IUllU IHIIIIMHMtllMHMIIHIH r LAMBDA DELTA CHI J. H. Moore SENIORS JOHX RiNCL.WD A. C. Heckenlaible JUNIORS W. H. RiPPEL H. T. Petersen- E. H. Bergquist Vm. Berkev L. S. Campbell F. A. Edwards H. II. Fennell J. V. Fox M. H. Fox R. W. Merreman SOPHOMORES V. E. Williams PLEDGES y. I.. WOMELDORFF C. K. Hill Theo. Kolba W. E. Plcsley M. K. Sawyer M. M. Smith J. G. Treloar H. P. Warrington M. B. Zeiser 262 ■ •lllllllllllll MliHltlllll lltlllllllll«l IM«t  ll«lt)llllllltl- LAMBDA DELTA CHI THIRD ROW: Hill, M, B. Fox, Sawyt-i-, Ruiijiel, Williams, Treloar, Smith. SECOXD ROW: Moore. Zeiner, Fenndl, Berkev. Pugslev, Edwards. FIRST ROW: Womeldorff, Koulia, Hfckciilaible, Ringland, J. W. Fo- -, Campbel: Bergquist. m Foundt ' d at Iowa State College in 1919 TninnTnmnnnimnitniTTTriTnrrTinn 263 Y-«iii:i!i!!;!iii!i! niiiiiiii iirniiniiii:- : ;i!llllllllllll ' .!ll!!!lllllllll ' !!!!l PHI DELTA THETA A. B. Caine MEMBERS IN FACULTY Capt. G. p. Winton, U .S. A. F. A. Fish R. S. BOTTORFF R. H. Greeve R. J. Miller E. J. Conrad B. G. Allen R .E. Lawson P. M. Ainsworth T. B. Rlssell SENIORS JUNIORS B. W. Allen Ted Rlssell H. R. McBride J. B. Ives SOPHOMORES C. D. Sadler D. C. Johnson- Kenneth Mackenzie R. B. Morris J. E. Jackson R. D. Riley E. G. Reid C. n. Waller C. I.. GORD ' . A. Cotter J. B. Moss W. M. Anderson J. V. HooN Dale Talbert R. H. Braunlich R. L. Llck FRESHMEN F. L. Olmsted O. N. Smith Richard Shore C. B. Ives H. K. Woodland T. n. Curtis D. C;. Ainsworth F. F. Mayer C. T. COWNIE C . R. Scott B. K. WiCKERSHAM 2a mMM Mii«nM«n nimiiimiiiiimiinmmMiim nmiiiinnninniniii m imm « HMiwniMmwwiii PHI DELTA THETA FOURTH ROW: Johnson, Riley, Moss, Cotter, Anderson, Hoon, Tolbert. Reid, Sadler. THIRD ROW: Jackson, Braunlich, Miller, Bnttorf, Elliot, B. W. Allen. Luck. Olmstead. Smith, C. B. Ives. SECOND ROW: Conrad, Woodland, Caine, Morris, Greene, T. Russell, Curtis, MaeKenzie, D. Ainsworth, P. M. Ainsworth. FIRST ROW: T. B. Russell, Waller, J. B. Ives, B. G. Allen, McBride. Gord. Ma.ver. Lawson, Cownie. Ill a small dormitory room at Miami University, Oxford. Ohio, on the evening of December 26, 1848, six undergraduates planned for the organization of a college brotherhood. Two days later, Phi Delta Theta was established, and the Bond of Phi Delta Theta, which is the fundamental law of the fraternitv, was adopted. The ideals, upon which the founders based the fraternity, are: first, the cultivation of friendship among its members; second, the acquirement, individ- ually, of a high degree of mental culture; and third, the attainment, person- ally, of high standard of morality. With these ideals ever in view, the founders built up the original chapter. Those six men also had a vision of a national organization, for the - intended that branches should be established in collegiate institutions of high and well established reputations. Within a year, a second chapter of Phi Delta Theta had been established at Indiana University. Shortly following the installation of the Indiana Univer- sity chapter, a third chapter was placed in Centre College, Kentucky. Fif- teen years after the founding of the fraternity, organizations in 15 colleges and universitie s had been granted chapters of Phi Delta Theta. At the present time there are 90 chapters scattered throughout the entire United States, and Canada, with a total membership of over 27,000 men. The local fraternitv, Caduceus, was installed as the Iowa Gamma chapter of Phi Delta Theta, .April 12, 1913. The present chapter house, located at 325 Welch avenue, was completed in the summer of 1914. IIIHIIIIMItlHIII inil)IIIIHIMIUIt IUHMtHIIMi(liniHN lil) iMWMMI IIIIM MUIIIItl tlH PHI GAMMA DELTA J. A. Burrows MEMBERS IN FACULTY S. L. Galpin E. A. Pattencill L. N. Haucen Hale Dickersov SENIORS R. W. Brandt N. N. Hake T. A. Shipi.ev B. I.. Wilcox C. S. Cody A. F. BOHREM JUNIORS II. H. Fisher V. B. Petersov R. K. Ravnoi.rs J. V. Wvman F. W. Carey D. S. HOLCOMB H. L. Jacobs SOPHOMORES Taxxer Jacobsex I. F. Jensex L. C. KxiEREM R. W. LONGSTREET C. F. OUREX H. J. Schmidt R. M. UXDERHII.L Olexe Jacobson W. L. Wright H. O. BOYVEY PLEDGES W. B. Bishop J. I). JoHXSON James Myerly R. E. Copeland E. D. Klixe 266 PHI GAMMA DELTA THIRD ROW: Hiuigen, Hnke, Cudv, Jensen, Schmidt. Holconib. SECOXD ROW: Shipley. Fisher, Knierem, Wilrnx. Underhill. Jacobs. FIRST ROW: lintndl. Oiiren, T. .liicdbson. R;i. n(ilds. Wyman. Longstreet. The fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta was founded in 18+8 at Jefferson Col- lege, Canonshurg, Pennsylvania, by a group of six men who sought in this ivay to perpetuate certain ideals which had been held by them throughout their lives. Aiming to instill in its members all of t he finer ciualities of manhood, this fraternity developed rapidly in the adjoining states but showed a tendency toward a greater developTiient in the Southern states at the expense of those in the North. When the Civil War came, Phi (Jamma Delta had but six active chapters in the North, hut these chapters served to keep the fraternity alive while the South- ern ones became extinct. Since the war, Phi CJamma Delta has developed rapidly and at the present time has 64 active chapters located at representative cnl- Iges and universities in all parts of the I ' nited States. The fraternity aims to promote high scholarship, clean, upright manhood, and good fellowship. It encourages all to their best efforts towards a clean life, lived in accordance with the highest Ideals devoted to the welfare of others. The publication of the fraternity is the Phi Camiiui Diila, a magazine which is issued monthly. The Alpha Iota chapter of Phi Ciamrna Delta was granted a charter in 1907. It grew out of a local organization which was known as the Noit Avrats which had been established at Iowa State College in 1898. % lillllltiMlullMHMtltMMIIIIIIIIMinlHIMMMnillHMIIIt PHI KAPPA PS I FOURTH ROW: Ruseiifelt, Coonej. Wlight. Wiiiget. Bailev, Hodges, Xichuls. THIRD ROW: Finnev, Sage, Reams, Baker, Coad. Allard, F. Mason. Van Cleve. SECOND ROW: Brown, Chambers, C. V. McBroom, C. V. McBroom, Crawford. Behm. Lvtie, Paxton. FIRST ROW: Sample, Bushnell, Mellinger, C. Mason, Hibnev, Serrell, Uroth, Pereboom. Phi Kappa Psi fraternity was founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, Fehruary 19, 1852, by Charles P. T. Moore and William H. Letterman. The founding of the fraternity was the culmination of the friend- ship formed by these men during an epidemic of typhoid fever at Jefferson College. In 1853, Judge Moore entered the law school at the I ' niversity of Virginia, where he established the first branch of the fraternity. Expansion has been gradual throughout the life of the fraternity and the chapter roll numbers 48 at the present time. A chapter was established at the I ' niversity of Iowa in 1867, which date marks Phi Kappa Psi as one of the pioneers in the fraternity field west of the Mississippi River. At the present time the fraternity is pursuing a policy of conservative expansion, having granted five charters in state colleges and universities in the past 10 years. The offi- cial magazine of the fraternity is called the S iii-UI. and is published bimonthly. The Iowa State College chapter is known as biwa Beta, and is thought to have been first established about 1868. However, little is known of the history of this chapter. The present chapter was formed from the local fraternity, Ozarks, which as founded Iti 1907. The charter in Phi Kappa Psi was granted in 1913. 269 PHI SIGMA KAPPA V. J. DlEDERlCHS MEMBERS 1 FACULTY B. V. Hammer L. E. Dean- A. L. Stanley V. H. Kaliin ' M. B. Peacock 1). C. MivARn C. S. McMlCHAEI. E. S. MORLIXC F. G. RVBEY SENIORS M. B Mattesok T. E. Stantom JtNlORS Paul Wilson SOPHOMORES J. A. Bryant I. C. Starry M C . Range pleih;es R. J. Fisher L. E. Smith M B . Ferguson n. C . Crom C. B. Schaeker R. J. Miller C. O. Holmes D. V. VlLLL MS B. O. Rogers F. A. Beemer 1.. A. Hepola R. ' . 0L1E 270 PHI SIGMA KAPPA THIRD ROW: Stantnii. Rubv. Fisher, Dieterichs, Stanley, Mattesoii, Minaril, Starry, SECOND ROW: Smith, McMichael, Kaliin, Bryant, Ferguson, Range, Miller. FIRST ROW: Dean, Wilson, Holmes, Williams, Croni, Rodgers. Schaefer. a g In the fall of 1907 eight mei , believiiiK that there was room for another per- manent organization on the campus of Io va State College, organized what was then known as the Antlers club. This was the beginning of Gamma Deuteron of Phi Sigma Kappa. The following fall, that of 1908, found the group re- organized as a local fraternity called Zeta Sigma Zeta. The installation of Zeta Sigma Zeta as Ciamnia Deuteron of Phi Sigma Kappa took place April 13, 1911, at which time there was a total membership in the chapter of 20 men. At the present time this chapter has a membership of 125. Phi Sigma Kappa was founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College, located at Amherst, Massachusetts, on March 15, 1873, Tntil 1909, all of the chapters of Phi Sigma Kappa were located in schools in the East. , t that time, West- ward expansion began, and at the present time, there are 36 chapters located in state institutions throughout the countr . I! )tir ! nn: 271 MIMIimtHMIIMIIIIII)l(tllllllllltllllllllllM ll illllH« IIIMI HHNMMI W. H. Stevensox R. V. Newcome MEMBERS l. FACl ' LTY G. E. Weaver H. H. SU-VDERLIN B. E. Heitzman POST GRADIATE O. E. OVERSETH V. O. Flllertox E. J. Drewelow SENIORS L. Johnson C. B. SiLLETTO G. E. Wricht J. E. Brorbv A. E. WOLTERS J. F. llANEV ' . R. Wright Jl ' NIORS W. D. George R. A. WlI.HEl.M Fred Powers C. F. Bartels W. T. Lawrence SOPHOMORES F. U ' . Stoddard E. J. Lace E. G. Werxextix M. E. Harding I. S. Lemley PLEDGES C. R. Fvllerton A. X. CllRISTENSEV C. C. lltlMING 272 PI KAPPA ALPHA FOrRTII ROW: Bartels. Potter. Haiiey, Xewoomb, Harding. Wagner. I.emley. THIRD ROW; Stoddard. Mullins, W. 6. Fullerton. Lawrence. Drewelow. Sunderlin. Heitzinan, Wereinine. SEt ' OXI ROW: L;ige. Christensen, Stevenson. Weaver. Wright. Helming, .lohnson. FIRST ROW: Silletto. Wilhelm, Peterson, C. R. Fullerton, Overseth. Pc vevs, Moravets, George. At the University of Virginia, Richinond, Virginia, four undergraduates found- ed Pi Kappa Alpha on March 1, 186S. Due to the disorganized conditions in the Southern colleges immediately following the Civil War, the early develop- ment of the fraternity was slow. Pi Kappa Alpha was organized as a national society, but at the convention in 1889 a constitutional amendment made it strictly sectional, and it remained ex- clusively Southern until 1909 when the sectional amendment was repealed and expansion in the West was encouraged. Previous to 1911 there had been 40 chapters established in the South and East, but during the past decade 19 ad- ditional chapters have been installed, principally in the Middle and Far West. The general council of the fraternity edits regularly the Sliirld and Diamond the official publication of the society. The badge of the fraternity is made up of a white shield which is surmounted by a black diamond. Upon the dia- mond are the three capital letters II K . and in the four corners of the shield are the small Greek letters ' I ' ' f ' K A. In February, 1913, Pi Kappa . lpha granted a charter tn the local fraternity known as (iainina Theta. I ' hc chapter hnu e is located at 2112 Lincoln Way. li 273 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILOX H !i iPli k ■ MEMBERS IN FACTLTV ■ ;! g V. F. COOVER C. D. Rice H. B. Cook I Ij 1 Adolph Shane c;. V. Burke Dr. G. G. McKhann- 1 C. A. IVERSON R. M. Pickens = ■ ■ GRADl TE STUDENTS pj ' Ernest Stanley SENIORS Joseph Qlig ,, ; ' i ' E. V. Petersen F. P. Krebs W. I). rERMOHLEN-  , ,, 1 Ij ■ J II. L. Laube A. B. Slater P. R. Wvi.iE A. V. Mlrphy ]{: ' ■: 1 JUNIORS -- ' ; Ira ' ouxc Joe Ringlano I SOPHOMORES :p-S : J. A. McKiNi.EV C. H. CnopER F. A. BiLLocK «■:■ : J. L. Trecker A. E. Line ' ij p 1 -: 1 •; P ' .KIlOrS i - - ' 1 f- Norton Brum John Silxrp K. B. Watson ' a 1 n. D. Benson C. R. Strlxk E. H. Whitney 1 ( ' . C. Hardy Louis Thompson F. A. Brown , l :: ' . I,. Nave Alvin Thornblrc W. N. Handy • I V. t: J. F. Travis 27+ r-mfTTTTinii- SIGMA ALPHA EPSILOX FOURTH ROW: Hardy. J.iiul c. Wliittiiigton, Thompson, ,J. Sharp. Dr. Buck. Uuiiiphrux , Coopur. THIRD ROW: W.vlie. Quig. Toens, A. Sharp, Pickens. McKinle.v. Krebs, Cook. SECOND ROW: Trecker, Watson, liuschar. Nave, Travis. Birdi. Petersen. Behm, Line. FIRST ROW: Young. Ringhind. Murph.v, Slater, Terinohlen, Whitne.v, Benson, Struck. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity Avas founded March 9, 1856, by a group of eight men attending the I ' liiversity of Alabama to perpetuate the friendship which had gro vn to mean so much to them in the course of their college life. Their ideas of fraternalism and unselfish service to others are embodied in the ritual of the present day. Three months after the founding of the fraternity, the faculty of the Uni- versity of Alabama started proceedings to abolish fraternities from the univer- sity. This was a serious blow to the hopes and aspirations of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, hut by untiring effort they were successful in establishing chapters at si. of the leading universities of the South before it was necessary to disband the mother chapter in January, 1858. The fraternity continued to grow until the Civil War period, during which time the members enlisted almost to a man. The chapter in Washington, D. C, was the only one which was not retjuired to disband for lack of members, and around this the fraternity was rebuilt during the period of reconstruction. The first convention in 1858 brought up the riuestion of Northern extension, but it was not until 1885 that the policy of the fraternity was definitely settled on this point. In succeeding years the growth of Sigma Alpha Epsilon in both the North and the South has progressed rapidly. At the present time the frater- nity is building a memorial to the 165 members who gave their lives in the World War. The memorial is to be in the form of an office building, locat ed at E anston, Illinois, and will contain the executi ' e offices of the fraternity, a fraternity library, and a fraternity museum. The Dragon club of Iowa State College was granted a charter, and on June 3, 1905, the Iowa Gamma Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon was installed. P. ' ' iiiir -•rwjl ■ •lliaH «l«IIIIIIIIUIIMIIIf 9 2 - -a![ 9-9.-lMi 275 llltlHIII MMIIIIHIHMItilHItlHIIIIIIMIIIIIIMHIHMIMHMHIUHIIIItMIIHIIHIII. SIG.MA CHI M. P. Baker MEMBERS IN FACULTY Q. E. Wallace H. J. Petersem H. T. SiNDT SENIORS E. R. Reed H. C. BOEKE G. D. Broderson ' C. E. Brook HART JUNIORS H. Z. Test T. W. Weiss L. M. Bergkr W. C. Berger SOPHOMORES H. M. Parkhlrst M. C. Levsex R. P. Reid W. P. TVRRELL L. F. Steffen H. F. Hutchinson P. A. Pltnam PLEDGES J. R. Lee A. R. KOESTER E. A. Anderson ' A. L. Barngrover H. R. Sinnard M. A. Sinnard Q. C. Wilson I IIIIMIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIItlllllltMHIIIHIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIMI 276 SIGMA CHI THIRD KOW : Slerten, Tvrrell, L. M. Berger, Petersen, Hutchinson, Boeke, Keid, I ' litniim. SECOND ROW: Wei.ss, Pavkhurst, W. C. Berger, Baker, Brookhart, Lee, Koester, Sindt, Reed. FIRST ROW: Anderson, Barngrover, Test, Levsen, Broderson, Bodwell, H. R, Sinnard, M. A. Sinn:ird. Sigma Chi, the nineteenth college fraternity to enter the field, vas founded June 28, 1855 at Miami I ' niversity, Oxford, Ohio. It was the last of the three national fraternities, which were known as the Miami Triad, to be organized. It was originally called Sigma Phi, but in January 1856 a new constitution and ritual were adopted, at which time the fraternity was given the present name, Sigma Chi. Expansion started at once. In 1870, 22 chapters had been estab- lished in both the North and the South. The policy of the fraternity has ever since been one of conservative expansion, and it has been carried out by installing chapters in schools of first rank. The chapter at the I ' niversity of Iowa was the first to be installed west of the Mis- sissippi River. Chapters have been established in all sections of this country. In 1922, a chapter was installed at Toronto University, Toronto Canada. Sigma Chi now has a total of 78 chapters, 58 of which own their own houses. There are 50 alumni chapters in as many different cities. The official magazine, the Siffiria Chi Ouarlirly. began publication in 1880. The fraternity colors are blue and gold; the flower the white rose. The local organization, to which Sigma Chi granted the Beta Omicron chapter, va5 formerly known as Rhn Sigma Gamma, which was organized in 1909. 277 :i3lliEniIi; : ' :iniinni!r - SIGMA NU R. A. Mover MEMBERS I FACULTY Chas. Fisher J. I.. Benson- P. I. Henderson M. ' . Henderson ' SENIORS I. S. RicGS R. S. BODHOLT O. H. Weatherill John A. R. Hansen E. V. RUNKEL R. C. Boyd jrXlORS L. E. Worlev R. V. Maine F. R. NuTT F. C. Fraver SOPHOMORES H AKoiD Hii.i.earv Ernest Nolkeviper I. H. Watkins R. G. COOMES I. W. Favi.or PLEDGES Rom. ' FiiDMAs J. P. PllBYNS Jack Gi.aha R. V. Heckt 278 E t .iimiiiiiiiiiiiinii: - iiii;iiiK-Y SIGMA NU THIRD ROW: Watkins, Runkle, Weatherill. Doliyns, Johnson, Worley, Traver. Maine. SECOND ROW : Xolkemper. Xutt. Polf, BodhoUlt. Thomas, Hei ' kt. Taylor. FIRST ROW: II. II. Henderson. P. I. HeiKlrrson. Hansen. Risirs. Kloppenberg. Hilleary, Boyil. M. Henderson. V. Sigma Nu fraternity, by nature of the location of its birthplace and its early growth, was essentially a Southern fraternity. Having been founded at the Vir- ginia Military Institute, January 1, 1869, during the reconstruction period follow- ing the Civil War, its growth was steady throughout the Eastern and Southern colleges and universities. In 1884 its Northern and Western expansion was started. The fraternity at the present time numbers 88 chapters. Gamma Sigma chapter was installed at Iowa State College, April fi, 1904, immediately after the ban on fraternities was removed. It was the first national to appear on the campus at this time. The chapter house was situated at ninth street and Douglas until 1911, when the property on Lincoln Way was purchased. The objects of Sigma Nu are to support and advance the principles of edu- cation, to bind together the members of the organization b ties of true and last- ing friendship, and to have plans for guidance and unity in action. H ■■iiniiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiii(iiiiiiiiiiiiMiui «iiiiiiiiiiitiiiii 27V SIGMA I ' FH P:PSIL0N I. L. Ressler MEMBERS IN ' FACULTY C. C. CUI.BERTSOX James Waddem. E. C. Stillwell A. H. White GRAOrATE STUDENTS c. j. dodsworth Ernest Abbott Bertrlm Sweeting B. C. Ressler A. M. BiNKLEV V. L. Brown R. L. Ekixs M. Z. Kidder SENIORS J. C. Greene J. P. (7r dv J. E. McFarland E. A. SWANSON ROLLIN WhITAKER }i. C. BlTCIIER JUNIORS G. S. MclNTIRE J. B. Thompson E. A. Brown SOPHOMORES A. A ' . HoLTZ R. L. Fawcett E. H. OSBURN J. R. Clark J. A. Fedor K. A. Bercdaih. PLEDGES T. L. WiNSLOw C. J. Schvvarzer P. F. Peterson Gordon Brown II. G. Dow Fred Stanzel J. Q. Tiedje T. R. Kelso C. A. Salmons Merrill Ressler SIGiMA PHI EPSILON FOURTH ROW: Peterson, Sweeting. Ij, Brown, Clark. Oshurn. Dow, Stanzel, Bergdahl, Thompson. THIRD ROW; Borrusch, Swansoii, W. Brown, E. A. Brown, Waddell. Kier. Dunn, Holt, M. Kessler. SECOND ROW: Hentges, Fedor, Kelso, Greene, Kidder, Salmons, Stillwell, Winslow, B. Ressler. FIRST ROW: Fawcett, Mclnt.vre, McFarland, Britson, Ekins. Tiedje, White, E. F. Brown, Butcher. The Saturday Night Club. fnuuded at Richmond College, Richmond, Va., in November, 1901, was the original chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon- Although originally intended to be a local fraternity, the organization soon became national, through the installation of chapters in Eastern colleges. Due to the fact that four of the first nine chapters were placed in medical schools, it was then believed that Sigma Phi Epsilon was a professional fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon was one of the first social fraternities to include minis- terial students in its membership. This fact together with the heart shaped pin earned the fraternity the nickname of The Sacred Hearts, The government of the fraternity is vested in an executive committee, com- posed of five members, named by the conclave. The granting of charters is in the hands of this committee. There are now forty-eight active chapters in all parts of the United States. The Iowa State chapter was installed April Ki, 1916. The chapter house is located on the corner of Welch and Knapp streets. IIIIHIII «H«HH«MHII llim««IINMIHH«IHIIHIIIM«HI«inMIIIMtl HinMIIMIHinilHiMllUH HH MM!lli EXEXEtfcS ZEJ 281 SIGMA PI 282 Tir:mrn!snB--Tts iy s--B--j SIGMA PI ? OrRTH ROW: ,lnhnf.on. Nichols. .lacksoii, Xystrom. Walter, Gamble, Meeker, Loose. THIRD ROW: Hanna, .Sehoppc. Houghland, Mabie. Kenslia%v. Sprague, Olson, Price. SECOXD ROW: Anderson, Simmons, Honle, Wallace, Eaton, Bowen, Peterson, Sanilirs. FIR.ST ROW: De.voe, Hoover, .Inlin, Wesco, Turner, Towne, Peilersen. Sigma chapter of Sigma Pi fraternity was established at Iowa State College on April 15, 1922, when the local fraternity, Lambda Sigma Phi was installed as Sigma chapter of Sigma Pi. Lambda Sigma Phi was founded at Iowa State College on February 15, 1915 by five students of the college, three of whom are members of the present faculty of this institution. Sigma Pi fraternity was founded February 27, 1897 at inceiuies Tniversity, Vincennes, Indiana. There are 19 active and three inactive chapters scattered from Cornell Cniversity at Ithica, New York, to the University of California at Berkley, California. The publication of the fraternity is the Emnntd. which is published (|uarter] . The flo ve is the lavender orchid, with the lilac and the white rose together ns an alternate, and the goldenrod as an auxiliary. The colors are lavender and white with gold as an auxiliary. The ideals of the fraternity are scholar-hip, fraternalism, and moral ju-tice. In addition to these the fraternity endeavors to develop a high sense of loyallv, a social education, a sound, healthy body, and with them an appreciation of the finer things of art, literature and mu ' -ii-. 28+ IM«WIWWIIHM im«MII mnniimnHIIIH|Hnmn IIMIIIimilH HHMIWM IWIIIjaf 285 .mHimHlllll IIIIIIIIHIHIIII HI milllHIHI«llim IHMIIMMIIMMII MHIM Wim IIMtMI H HMIIIIIIU    a-  '   J ' l l TAU GAM -MA NU ■xaziuiur. :anE223EEX 287 i e: ■i iniiitniiiMi HMiiiniittiini  titimiiiiiiiimnniimiiinin  ttimwi«ntimi««mMMtH«  H mMiinmiiiH TAT KAI ' l ' A ETSILON D. S. jEtTERS D. R. TlIEOPIlILUS MEMBERS IN I ACTI.IV W. . Adams C. J. Myers J. C. Nichols O. M. Anwyl SENIORS F. v. CtRE V. E. Shlll H. F. Gavlord W K. Bail 11. P. Sl DT JUNIORS H. W . Asuw K. L. Lee H. A. Christopheksov J. D. Kaser V. R. Obcami ' SOPHOMORES Ed. Hartsock L. M. Cl ' rtiss M. C. Lowes BERG L. L. HlLLL RD L. L. Carver J. F. Olrbiv H. M. Chope P. II. Chamberlaiv J. H. Pfautz PLEDGES Ci.AiDE Sears C. Sears J. B. Bates R. S. Parker H. E. (iREEWVOOD B. S. Cmttins r. L. Shartle Frank Kllow R. R. Straver P. J. Van der Merwe J. F. Pace V. W. Cakmhers TAT KAPPA EPSILON f H ' M FOURTH ROW: Seiirs. C ' iirvcr, Pliiiit , l ' ,K-e, CllDlje, Bull. Ka.ver. I.fi-. THIRD ROW: Shull. I.owenbers. Greenwood, Bates, Anway. Hartsock, Cure. SECOND ROW: Durljin. Straver, Theophilus. Flatt. Kulow. Chamlierlin. Gittins, Parker. FIRST ROW: Van der .Mcrwf. Hilliiiril. . inv.vl, Shartle, Curtiss, Sindt, Ga.vlord. Tail Kappa Epsiloii, natinnal social fraternity, was fnuiided at Illinois Wesleyan Tniversity, Bloomington, Illinois on January 10, 1S99. The founders, Joseph L. Little, Clarence A. Mayer, Owen I. Truitt, James C. McNutt, and C. Roy A tkinson, were men with high ideals who wished to see carried on into the fu- ture their ideals of brotherh ' love, friendship, and high scholastic standing among the students in higher schools of learning in this country. The policy of the national organization has always been one of internal im- provement rather than external expansion. Tan Kappa Epsilon has desired to improve the standards and conditions of each local chapter to the utmost before increasing its numbers. There are at present 17 active chapters connected with the fraternity. These chapters are located at the principal colleges and univer- sities of the Middle and Far West. There are eight alumni chapters, which are located in the following cities: Bloomington, Chicago, Decatur, and Springfield, Illinois; New York, New York; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Cleveland, Ohio. Epsilon chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon was installed at Iowa State College on Mav 28, 1915. Previous to this time the chapter existed as a local fraternity known as Seminoles, a social fraternity, founded on the campus in 1911. At present there are 74 alumni and 15 active memliers affiliated with the local chapter. THETA CHI X i f -f i. i lillKl) ROW: Muffitt, Uodbv. A. O. Hiighps. Rvan, Howanl. Mi-Ki-nzie, Slevciisun, Hester. SKrOXU ROW; Adiaiis, Chaidn. Reed, MeRiie. P. G. .Ii.Uiisdm. I.iiwry. [• ulnier. Heekert. FIRST ROW: Ilii .iUd. Steinbreclier. Kair:ir. Mueller. Brown. Riisilig. Riilierts. .Sehlosser. J. E. Foster TOLBERT McRae E. I. FULMER O. N. Massexgai.e J. F. Brown- E. W. Chapiv MEMBERS I FACULTY L. C. Heckert C. H. ' erkmax GRADUATE STUDENTS SENIORS R. W. (iODBV P. (.;. Johnson- W. W. DUECKER R. L. Howard F. C. Stevenson D. M. SwARTIIOt ' T P. v. Rvan M. G. Mueller v. C. Adams M. D. Farrar D. F. Roberts C. R. Hazard JUNIORS W. S. RosiMC A. (). HlCHES J. K. Kent II. K. I.OWRV D. A. MOFFIT F. E. Reed V. B. SCHLOSSER H. F. Steinbrecher H. R. Olson W. V. Griese R. G. Hester SOPHOMORES C S. Greer W. W. McKenzie M. A. Woodcock G. R. Armneciit J. A. Buchanan A. B. Hughes C. A. Johnson M. E. KOENIG A. E. LiKiNS PLEDGES G. D. Lower M. J. MiCHAELSON Leon Orr ( ' . J. Owens r. R. Relsser O. H. Rhodes E. B. Servo.ss J. E. Tripp O. C. Walters Blrnell Wright A. J. Carvell a-a-g- ra ■.t)IHWMHHIMHM IMIIIIM)llllll MllllltMIIII IIIIIIHII«HIIMIII«l lini)IIMIIIIII H lllll)M nl tlllH««MHIItja( • C ' CiiiiiiMiiMiitiiinttMiiiiitiiniimtimniiiiHOHiiiiiiniiiiiiiniDiiiiinniimnimnHtmtHtWHHuiwmmmHa THETA CHI THIRD ROW: II. Hughes. Buchanan, Reu.sber. Orr. Koenig. Michaelson. SECOND ROW: Tripp. Lower. Woodcock. Wright. Griese. Walters. Rhodes. FIRST ROW: C. Johnson. Kent, Servoss. Likins, Owens, A. B. Hughes. Theta Chi fraternity was installed at Iowa State College, December 22, 1922, with sixteen charter members. The local organization first came into being in 1912, and was then known as the Mohawk club. Theta Chi was founded at Norwich University in 1856 by .■ rthur Chase and Frederick Norton Freeman, and was incor- porated in 1888. The second chapter was established at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology in 1902. There are now 35 chapters at the bigger universities throughout the country, though the house at Ames is the only one in the Missouri Valley. There are at present about 6,000 members of Theta Chi. Though the society has been organized for 80 years, there never has been an inactive chapter, and many of the alumni chapters have an unbroken record of meeting regularly once a month over a long period of years. It has always stood for the highest things in college life, both social and scholastic, and its motto is one of which any college organization might well feel proud, . lnia Mater first; and Theta Chi for Alma Mater . HIHtllMimMlim «mHIIHmillHlltHimMIIIIHMm IHHIlHMHItlHIIIIIIIIII IUHHMIMUlMlMtmM 291 THETA DELTA CHI V. A. AlTKE.V Perkins Coville D. n. Baker H. F. Hrown R. W. Beckman- R. G. CORWIN- C. A. Hammerly K. S. Bond Bert Graham C. O. SiXGMASTER 1). D. Hammeri.v V. F,. Nelson P. S. Shearer P. C. Taff G. A. Metzcer G. A. Nei.sox MEMBERS IN FACTI.TV J. S. DOODS F. C. Fenton SENIORS M. A. Cass Jr, R. A. Olsen- C. II. Larsov JUNIORS n. B. HUSTOON ' V. C. Moi-isoN ' SOPHOMORES W. D. Reck PLEDGES U. L. Owen- Richard WlI.SOM C. B. Proctor THETA DELTA CHI FOIRTH KUW: G. Xelsuii, V. Bond, Jasper, Dreniian. Mi-tzger, Singmasler. Reck, Bukei-. THIRD ROW: C ' nss. Entorf, Slemmons. Hiintiion, Churi-li, Corwin, Oraliam. SECOND ROW: Palm, Sace, Miiiernian. Olsen. Pnictor, W. Nelson, Robertson, Da,v, FIRST ROW: Brown, Beeknian, Owen. Watt, Mnlison, Hammerl.v, K. Bond. Theta Delta Chi was founded at Union College, Schenectady, New York on October 31st, 1847, and it has enjoyed a continuous existence from that date- At the present time, Theta Delta Chi has 2S active charges with a inemhership of 8,189. The fraternity journal is called the Sliictd. Beta Deuteron charge, established at Iowa State College in 1919, became the twenty-ninth of the 30 active charges in the United States and Canada. The Colonials, known on this campus for 11 years, was the local organization added to the national charge roll. The central governing power is vested in the CIrand Lodge, which consists of active as well as graduate inembers. The graduate associations of the fraternity are limited in numbers so that the power of the fraternity will rest in the hands of the undergraduate members. The national club in New York, New mV. serves as a general head(|uarters for the fraternity. •nniiiiiiiiiim   nnnmnn«mnnii mmtniiii«niitiiiiiiiiniiniininiiniin«nim4ni«im««iniiiiiimiiiii; 294 iiiiiiimiiii iMiiiniiiiiiiiiiitniniiiitMiimiiiiiii«iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii niiiimiitiinntmin i WMM«nwi iim THETA XI THIRD ROW: H. B. Nowlin. Spfer. McCurdy, Wii-ene. Gordon. T. H. Nowlin, Callahan, J-ichtv SECOND ROW: Hudson, Heverly, Walz, Green. Orrick, Johnson, Davis, Corey, Beem, FIRST ROW: Berray. Schooii. I.inn. Behreiis. McXeil. Webb, Scholz, Arduser. Theta Xi was founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1864. It was the first professional fraternity founded, confining its membership to students of en- gineering and science. It aims to bind together men interested in engineering and its allied professions. At the present time there are 27 chapters, all of vhich are acti ' e, and are located at the principle scientific institutions of the country. In addition, there are recognized honorary clubs in 16 of the largest cities of the country. The fraternity is governed by a Grand Lodge, the members of which are elected at the annual convention. The official publication is the Theta Xi Quarterly. Mu chapter of Theta Xi was installed at Iowa State College, February 20, 1909. The chapter was granted to a local organization which was known as Epsilon Sigma which was established at Inwa State College in 1907 with the purpose of petitioning Theta Xi. lllilllHIIIIIItMIIHtllHHIIIIHtllU •lUHMIIHIHnillllltlMIHMilHHIIHHHHMUnHHmjr 296 gtg«e« «g.iiiiii MtiiiiiiiMii iii inminiiiiiit«nnmiiHMimmii MiiMniiiii m nimiinim iniHHwiniiiiiiwnniii UPSILON SIGMA ALPHA THIRD ROW: Tcikle, Wertz, Shaftiir. Uosi-her, Green. Mann. SECOND ROW: Robertson, Kline, Meyers. Brown. Pose. FIRST ROW: Arp, Spenser, Tamm, Fans, Steddom, Hainline. Local Frdttrnity for . on-Collegiate Students Founded at loiia State (Wjlleae in 1914 THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE (.tiurti ' fiti J. ,V. llndituj irhnnii ■■Slu i( rr (alius .IIori:i,l . . ,y ,i , i,uihs a ,■«;■ loncessions lo lli, Julalis of col- lege fashions. Meets the eaf ttii i of the foothiiU l,,tm ,i i,l is iniiled to fut on a suit and come out and try for the team. iimii nm«tniiiiimnnitiniiin tiiiiinmiii«iiiniiiiiiiiiininn itniinm«ww mHi twni«im tiiiitM « ALPHA CHI BETA In the spring of 1914 a group of girls organized a cliih under the name of Michabo having for their ideals high moral standards and scholarship. Mem- bers of the club were chosen for their personality and for democratic all-round- ness. Four years later in the fall of 1918. they organized into a local sorority under the name of Alpha Chi Beta. ■IIIMIIHH lll IIMIHIIIIIIItlllllllllllHIIII«l)tl IH)M)lll«IIM HIII(MMIItMIII lt IMIIIHIII WIIMIIHmil))llfa ' 9  -9 9-a IVI 300 • C-IIIIDlDlllllllilMHMIIMItflMtllllttKMHIIHMIttlHIIIIIIIIItlltHIMIMIMItUIMIIIMMIIIII i!iiiiiirimiiirii iiiiiti-n-B B- T i-iP-B-j ALPHA CHI BETA I ' lFTH KOW: Lillian StoutiMiburg 24. Irene Dewev ' 24. Kuth Urimes ' 24, Tlielma Tollefsiin ' 2:!. Mereie Carle.v ' 24. rolKTH ROW: Sarah Katharine Perley ' 23. Ghidys Maekey ' 24. Elithe Xisewaiiger ' 2:i. .lessie Hill ' 25. Aunt ' s Crain 25. TUIKD ROW: Doris Wherry ' 23. Aliee Stewart ' 24. Marie Hartman ' 23. .• KCOXD ROW: Marguerite Connor ' 24. I.eorra Porter ' 25, Opal McClearv ' 23, Laura liulilitz ' 24. Besse C ' hnielik ' 23. h ' lRST ROW: Dorothy Gibson ' 23, .lennie Haggard ' 23, Eveleth Pedersen ' 23, Grace Gray Dewey ' 24, Klsie (dinger ' 2.5. Uiti-fi-s-tr-iT- trrsn 301 ALPHA DELTA PI Alpha Helta Pi vas iii talled at Iowa State College June 3, 1911. In the year of 1904 a friendship club was formed known as the Inomene Feiiae and in 1910 the members decided to reorjj:anize as a sor( ril and became national one year later. It was the third national sorority to be established on this campus. Alpha Dela Pi sorority was founded at Weslyan College. Macon, (ieorgia, in 1851 and is the oldest secret organization. It remained local at Wesleyan and did not expand until 1904 when it received its National Charter. . Ipha Helta Pi or Adelphian Society, as it was called in 1851, changed its name in 1905 to .Alpha Helta Phi and in 1913 to Alpha Helta Pi. Alpha Helta Pi belongs to the National Pan-Hellenic Congress, has chapters and a total membership of 5,000. It is a policy of Alpha D go into uni ' ersities and collegia ' s of high standing. s 35 active Helta Pi to 302 ALPHA DELTA PI 1 I ' IFTII KOW: Ihiiila Ileiner ' 2::, Alici- K l«:ii ls :;. ). Ethel lluclnier 2::. Xita Cnmstook ' 23 FolKTH KOW: Kdith DuKSev ' •. .■.. Mnrie l.i okinKliill ' 25. Piiuliiu ' Mav ' 2.j. THIKl) ROW: Bt-rthu Uati ' liftV ' 24. .Icanetti ' Heyel- ' 24. Esther Pmul ■2:i. SKfOXI) ROW: Margaret McCartv ' 24, loiie .lolliison ' 24. Marjorie .lav ' 24, I ' IRST ROW: .Sara Ann Brown ' 23, Harriett .Sli.ss ' ■ :-,. Helen I ' iper ■2.- . Slargaret Sloss ' 23. 303 • e llllltll IHII)IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMII)IIIIIIMIII«lllilil IIIIIMt«IIIIIIHi )ll)MIIMIHIMIMIH«(IIIMMIIHMIIIIIIMMIIIIII ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Alpha Camma Delta was fmiiided at Syracuse rnivcrsity, Syracuse, New ' ork. May 30, 1904 with the aid of Dr. Wellesley P. CoddiiiKtoii and at present has 30 active chapters. Rhn of Alpha C5amma Delta was installed at Iowa State College September 8, 1917 from a local organization known as Lakota. This organization supports a sumer camp tor children at Jackson, Michigan. The fraternity has for her ideals to develop health, cultivate actjuaintances, cherish friendships, welcome opportunities for service, honor home, religious faith and country, to hold faith inviolable, sincerity essential, kindness iiivaliKible ; to possess high idtals and to attain somewhat unto them. The fraternit publishes a iiiarterly magazine, the .ll iii Gumma Drlla (Juarlciiy. The colors are red, huff and green, and the flowers are red and buff roses. OllltMM(IMMIlMIIIMItlll IIIMItllM«IIIHI|IIIIMIIlHlllltlllMIMIIMtllllllllfllHlllllfl|ll||IIM«MIIIMIIIIMIMMI( idllDIHMIttMIIIIMIIIIIIItHMIMHIIIIMItlllllllMI tlllllillHtl IIIHI«l l««M«IIIM IIIHtM! «ilMMIMIII)llll- ALPHA GAMMA DELTA FIFTH ROW: Oiml Wind JJ. Eleannr Muny •. ' :!, Isiimoii- UiMiiielt ' 28, Kuth Donaldscni ' L ' . ), Kuth Kennish ' 24. FOl ' RTH ROW: Margi-et Van Riper ' 23. Irene Havnes ' 2:1. Francis Linn ' 24, Gladys Johnson ' 25, Dorothy Carl ' 24. THIRD ROW: Helen Vinson ' 24. Kdna Willard ' 24, Miriam MrLain ' 2.5, Xorina Harvey ' 2.5, Irma Sindt ' 25. SECOND ROW: Iva Robison ' 24. Jlarv .Simons ' 24, Helen Reidv ' 24. Irma Brillhart ' 24. Lulu Robison ' 24. FIRST ROW: JIarian Miller ' 24. Marv Reed ' 2.5, (iertrnde Slurrav ' 2.5. Karlmra Wcntc-h ' 24. Marie Willard -23. ■.IMII (ll IHII MIMIIM IIIHH)IIMIIIIIIIIMIIItlitMI IHH«IMIIHIIIIUHIUHIIII H  IIMIIin« HltlMM«IMIIt.? 305 CHI OMEGA 3 ' I ' lie Chi C)ine ;a fraternity was founded at the Triiversits ' of Arkansas, Fay- ettville, Arkansas, April 5, 1895. The five founders included in their numfier Dr- Charles Richardson, a mernher of the Kappa Sigma fraternity who is the only honorary member of Chi Omega. The local snrorit Delta Mu, was installed as the Eta Beta chapter if Chi Omega at Iowa State College October 20, 1922. Jean Kelly Warrens, a member of the chapter from Corvallis, Oregon, was a founder of the local group. Helta Mu was organized November 20, 1920. The publication of Chi Omega is the l.liiisis. The fraternity also published the first secret magazine. The Mysfar oi iir. The colors of the fraternity are car- dinal and straw, the flower the white carnation. The policies of the fraternity as a whole are expressed in the statement Chi Omega — a frateriiitv for our- selves, the college, and the world. The open motto of Chi Oniega is Hellenic Culture anil Christian Ideals. ! m -imuimui : 306 CHI OMEGA i [. ' 3 3 KIF ' I ' ll KllW: rlv(lrii;i .Stiiiiford •.•4. Fern (Jivi-n ' -Jl. Knlli Wils.i.i IM. .Mvrllc KiiuIsmii ' 24. KOIU ' I ' II RUW: Affiles Mi(_ ' :n-thv ' 5. I.cira Wdiiiliicll LU. Vinia Rpvnolds LM. TlllKll HOW: Gliidvs Watson ' 23, Marv ri. ' ald ■i;4. Hi-l.-n Hon- ' 24. SKCIIN ' II KinV: Alam Kalsem ' 24. Mmia ■rii.iinpsi.ii ■2.-.. ViTnnii ' a Miirrisscv ' 24. I.ncilr lirii-knev ' 23 h ' lKST KdW; I.l.Ma Prir-,. ' 24. Hfrtha SaiHlvMl l -2:!. Alice Davis ' 24, l.iniise Slepht-iisen ' 23. lllllllllliLli 307 On Thanksgiving eve, 1888, Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston I ' niversity by Sarah Ida Shaw, Eleanor Dorcas Pond, Florence Stewart and Isabel Morjjaii Breed. In 1889 the second or Delta chapter was established at Iowa State Col- lege by Etta May Budd. In a short time all sororities were taken out nt the school and the members of the chapter formed a local called Omega Delta. This local flourished until 1912 when Delta Delta Delta again came into Iowa State and was reestablished as Omega Delta chapter. At the present time it has an active member- hership of 24. The publication of the sorority is the Trident. The badge is three stars and a crescent. Delta Delta Delta has an active chapter roll of 64 with 60 alliance organizations in the largest cities of the country. There are three other active chapters in Iowa, Delta at Simpson, Delta Eta at Cne, and Phi at the University of Iowa. The national organization sponsors a scholarship fund. DELTA DELTA DELTA ' t Marinii Swjinson Anne Hopkins ' 24, Xancy FIFTH ROW: YcUla Will.iii ■J4, Kiilive Ekslr.mi Klliotl ■•-•.- . ForRTH Kt V: Mildred nullieit ' 24. Eathel Lee ' 23, Ruth Miilcolm ' 24. liladvs Hamey ' 25, Bernii-e Kivkiialli ' 24. THIRD ROW: lone MeCord ' 23. Beulall Robert. ' ! ' 25, Marie Whelpley ' 25. SEC ' OXl) ROW: Hazel Mahanke ' 25. Marjorie Drewry 23. Gertrude Haslam ' 25, Alice Rorney ' 23, Xita Knowles ' lM. FIR.ST ROW: .MarKuerile Mahanke ' 25, Bernadine Bundv ' 24, .Iose)ihine Lord ■2: . Doris Anderson ' 2. i. Ruljy Fiiul ' 25. M GAMMA PHI BETA ill I Omega of (iamma Phi Beta uas installed at Iowa State College December 21, 1918. Zeta Iota, the name of the organization previous to this date, was estab- lished as a local sorority in 1913. Gamma Phi Beta was founded at Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, November 11, 187+, and since that time has growl) to include 29 active chapters, 18 alumni chapters and 19 alumni asso- ciations. The purpose and ideals of the sorority arc to promote high scholarship, siK ' ial culture and cooperation with all cainpus activities, and its open motto is Faith and C ood will. The national organization sponsors: 1. A scholarship of 500 for social service training. 2. One building on the Baltimore Fresh .Air Farm, known as Gamma Phi Beta hall. 3. During the late war, Ciamma Phi Beta organized the Milk Bottle Cam- paign that gave over $7,000 to the Belgian Relief. 4. .An annual Christmas party for the poor children of .Ames, and help in supporting an Ames girl now in a tuburcular sanitarium. -gTflllllllC 310 ' iiiiMiiiii: :3 JH SIXTH R(1W ; Florrncr Hjthn _ ' I . .IU I;!)];!!- ' Jo. Vnila .himnuT -. ' , llnntthv t_ ' :iss ' 24. Alice Btnvie -4. KIFTll ROW: Siiiiih Miiuliiirt ' i;4. I.nis I.iiwler ' 25. Gnice Bowie 2:). Rose Storm ' 23. Agnes Noble ' 25, Mildred lliiwkins -J.-.. FOIRTII RIlW: Helen Hiiniilton ' 25. lieitiude MeArthiir ' 25. MiirRiiret Aikens ' 25. Margaret Kinney 2.7, I ..v.itln OImii ' 2J. THIRD Rchv : Kiuh Knutsen ' 25. Elmjra White 25. I.urille MeKinne.v ' 25, .lean McFarlane 24, Nelle Fishel ' 24. SECOND ROW: Marie Lawler ' 23. Beiilah .Swihart ' 25. Adel Hurbst ' 25, Anne Mnndt ' 2: . Lneille Hnlrlur ' 25. FIRST ROW: :iurEia vpt ' 25. Kdilh Elder ' 24. Kdna Carlsim ' 25. Dorolh.v (;r iwell ' 23. Stella Bartlell ' 24. IIIM14M4«MIMMMlHIIIIHIIIimiHlllltHIIIIIIIIIHIIHH«tHllimilHHI)IIMimill limiMIII«IIHtl IIIHH IHM r KAPPA DELTA Kappa Delta was established by Mary Somerville Sparks, Julia G. Tyler, Sarah Turner, and Lenore Ashmore at ' irginia State Normal School, on October 23, 1897. It «as a local for five years and was then granted a petition for incorporation April 2, 1902, under fhe laws of the state of ' irginia. Sigma Sigma chapter was installed April 11, 1908. The local sorority from which it was formed was formed was known as Sigma Sigma. Kappa Delta now has 39 active chapters, 10 inactive chapters and 23 alumni associations. From Sigma Sigma chapter there are 192 initiates, and the active alumni chapter in Ames is composed of 25 members. The official publication of the sorority is 7 ;c .1 iii ilns. a magazine published (|uarterly. Kappa Delta maintains for its members a Student Loan Fund to assist girls through college and a House Loan Fund to help chapters to own their homes. It has endowed and supports a section of the Richmond Hospital for Crippled Chil- dren, as a memorial to Virginia the state of its birth, and as a philanthropic con- tributi(tn. 313 inMHtin ifit iiti«iiitiiiiiiiiiii«aiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ii iii iiiitiii iifn««IIMiHMHiii ' i y OMEGA PI Onie);:! Pi, composed of Kastern Star nifinbcis, vns orj anized al Iowa State College, larujarv 2( . j22. •.iimuummwiuimiui ■ 3M OMEGA PI FIFTH ROW: Lois Miller Hird ' 23, Esther C.-irlsnn ' 2. , Kuth Ingham ' 25, Beth .Tulinson ' 25. FOURTH ROW: Mildred Mnrshall ' 2:!, Iva Henderson 24. Helen Bovd ' 24. THIRD ROW: Xaomi Gra.v ' 24. Elizabeth Oldham ' 2.i. SECOND ROW: Lorine Wright ' 2.5. Isahelle Ames ' 24. JIarie .Tohnson ' 2:1. Florence Wright FIRST ROW; Amy Stowell ■2.-), Ethel Conn ' 24. Marjorie Miller ' 23. Oladys Sliiigerlaiid ' 2:!. 315 •e.c-c-e e c: iiilHiinilittiii « Miii«ii ii«MiiMUiMi«i«ilUMiiii ittiiiiiliiiitiKiitMMiiiiiiiiii u I nrTnmrnmmmTiiiinng-B,-«rfv-i :-s--t --, - l PI BETA PHI Pi Beta Phi «as founded April 28, 1867, at Monmouth, Illinois. The Iowa Ciamma chapter was established at Iowa State College in 1877. A noted alumni of Iowa {Jamma chapter is Carrie Chapman Catt. Pi Beta Phi has an active chapter roll of 65 established at various colleges and I ' niversities. The pulilication is T e Arroix: and the badge a golden arrow. In 1910, the national organization established a settlement school in the moun- tains near Ciatlinburg, Tennessee. This school, which started with one crude building, has enlarged to five buildings and a large acreage. The national organization also sponsors a scholarship fund and a undergraduate loan fund. 316 •e-g-e ' g-g-c:rl mi llllllllll (ltlM  WHmHimn •IMIIMIIItlllllillM llillillllllM ll«IIIMII«ll«IMIIMIM PI BETA PHI SIXTH ROW: Ruth Haitnn LM. Marc-ilh, Diwi-ll 4. Dunitiii MiCaiinll ' J:). MuiriiM ' I ' ndiMi •23. Marvel Secor ' 25. FIFTH ROW: Helen Hass ' 25. Dnrotli.v Han ' imaii ' 2:1. Clara .lordan ' 2:!. Heatriee Olsen ' 2:i, F.lizalieth l etersen ' 23. FOIRTH ROW: Lufille Wormhoudt ' 25. Lydia Arm.sti ' iinK ' 25. Barbara Stamoii ' 25. Florence Todd ' 23. ■IHIRI) ROW: Ada Havner ' 25. Charline Wood.s ' 25. Marian Duke ' 2:i. Beulah Ta.vlor ' iS. Louise Herman .SKCOXn ROW: Katherine Goeppinger ' 24. Marjorie Beam ' 25. Doroth.v Kenworthy ' 24. l aula Braunlicll ' 25, Marfiaret Graham ' 25. FIRST ROW: F.thel Butcher ' 24. Elizabeth Daubenberger ' 23. Margarethe Wilson ' 23. Theresa .Tudae ' 24, Uutb Meyeroff ' 24. R • C: IHIItHUMIII« tll l«ll«MIHIIIIIIIIIIMI)IIIIIHItll«)ltl(IIIIIIH)lllll SIGMA KAPPA f B im Sigma Kappa snrcrity was Imiiulccl N ' nveniher 1S74, at ( olliv College, Wat- erville, Maine by a group of five girls, Mary C. Lowe, Louise H. Coburn, Eliza- beth .!. Hoag, Frances E. Maiui, and Ida M. Fuller. It was the first to register in this college. The purpose of this sororitv is to unite its members in a close liorul of sis- terhood for the development of character and the promotion of social and intel- lectual culture. The organization now has 30 active and 15 alumni chapters. The official publication of the sorority is the Trlaru lr. The local organization Delta Phi, was founded at Iowa State College in 1913 and installed as Alpha F.psilon chapter of Sigma Kappa, May 7, 1921. The local organisation issues a chapter paper quarterly. •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii  iiMiiHm nin immiiiiniiii iiiiiiiiiiiinii iiimiiiiniiininiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiii-a. -a-3-B-p 318 iiiriiiTirmT innnnnn: SIGMA KAPPA KIFTH ROW: Firn Thornton ' 2.i, Gratii Thome ■i;4. Chiire Youngrhis ' 24. Alk ' e Jackson ' 2i. rOl ' UTH ROW: Pearl Brown ' 23. Llovd Church ' 24. Helen Heels ' 2:!. Helen Wadson ' 24. THIRD ROW: Muriel Orr ' 23, Marie Sullivan ' 24. Kilna Miller ' 2.1. Jean Kertoli ' 24. Leone Hampton SECOND ROW: Bertha Wheeler ' 23. Bernice Gish ' 2.5. Doris McKee ' 24. Josephine McMullen ' ; ' 5. FIRST ROW: Marie Plath ' 25, Edna Engleman ' ' 25. (iladys Zismer ' 25, Kresse Chase ' 24. |L Erorr TVIVT!.:: 319 WOMEN ' S PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL THIRD KOW: KHzalieth IVIerson. Rulije Ekstiom. Doris Wlieriv. Helen VinMin, Helen Hen-. SECOND ROW: Anne Hopkins, Helen Wadson, Muriel Orr. Gladys Slingerland, Ilyra Price, Martha Pepiiers. Grace Bowie. FIRST ROW: p;ieanor Mvirrav, lone Johnson, Marfiaret Sloss, Gertrude Reis. Dorothy Olsen, Mar.ella Iltw. II. OFFICERS Gertrude Reis . ■ Prrsidrnt Margaret Sloss . Sccrrtary-Trcasurrr PERSONNEL Pi Beta Phi Miss Maria Roberts Marcei.i.a OrWFLL F.i.izABEiH Peterson- Kat ta Di ' ltti Mrs. J- F. Kirkman Mariha Peppers (Jertrvde Reis Al ' ia l),ila Pi Miss Fav J. Mack Io.se Johnson Margaret Sloss Delia Delia Delia Mrs. C. H. Stange Anne Hopkins Rlbye Ekstrom Alpha Gamma Delia Miss I.illes Ksappesblrger Helen Vinsox F,i.e. sor Mlrr. v Gamma Phi Beta .Miss N, Beth Bailev Florence Hahn Grace Bowie llpha Chi Beta Doris Wherry Si ma Kapf ' a Miss Alma Riemensciineider Helen Wadson MiRiEL Orr Chi () met a Llyra Price Louise Stephenson Omei n Pi Gladys Slingerland 320 322 mnniM wi« t niinininimiiiMiii«tiiiniii imiininmitiiiiiiiimnHMimiiMiiiiiiiiiiinij.a ' a.a. OAK. I.ODCiE PARLOR DINING HALL AT THE LODGES IIIWIH Hmi«l« IIIIH«HHMH «l«IHmHHIHIIHHIim t tMI«lllltHMHIIHIIIHnm UHIII 323 EAST HALL SIXTH ROW : CVlestine Maschek. Xorine Xesmith. Laura Bublitz. FIFTH ROW: Kathryn Lepley, Beulah Bradgate. Mable .lohnson. Miss Margaret G. DoUiver. Hazel Molsherrv. FOVRTH ROW: Frances Mett. Ruth Hook, Mary McLarnan. Myrne Hendry. Lyla Hulbert. THIRD ROW: Alice Helms, Eflie Hendrickson, Ruth Knights. Dorothy Jennings, Irene Hickey. SECOXD ROW: Dorothv McCaulev. Edythe Morgan, Mildred Peterson, Henrietta .lohnston, Mildred Krebs, Kdith Wright. FIRST ROW: Kdna Moeller. Ruth Hess. Ciitherine Miiurire. Maroia Hazlett, Ardith Martin. Osee Johnson. FOrRTH ROW: Adeline Wurdeman. .M,iri..r, V.ls .ii ' i - i i -i, i, Mii.irnt Whistler. THIRD ROW; Frances Shuster, Lenore Shcnnaii. Ht-lt-iiL I ' titiiuii. lUrlha St-ydil. Gladys Tliumasuii. Mary Sweeny. SE( ' OXI ROW: Florence Selman, Helen Siebels, Aileen Witmer. (ienevieve Sarazine. FIRST ROW: Frances Mett, Nurine Nesmith, Ellen Hirum, Margherita Tarr, Louise Sailer, Reginu Tnrr, Bernice Shi Ids. •lll«l)IHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII H ltll«llllllll IIIIIIH IIIHMIIItlllllllMIIIIIHMI l«fHMMIIIIIHHHmnilHlllr9 a 3 ' : 324 -:i3r«irnTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[iiiiiJi[iiilllllllilliilliliiiiirii!iiiMi!HiniHi iirTiiirni iiiiiiitinii:iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiniii Y EAST HALL m FOURTH ROW: Arlene Belding. Daisy Davis, Louise Beuhk-r. Margaret Collins, Ella Boland. THIRD ROW: Helen Gray, Helen Barnard, Irma Davidson, Hilda Faris, Ethel Greenway, Margaret Brookhart. SECOND ROW: Ruth Fostch, Mildred Beuhler, Gertrude Grahl, Edna Giese, Alice Groth. FIRST ROW: Mildred Bailey, Barbara Dewell, Kalhryu Beatty, Marjorie Cannon, Mildnd Boyt, Winifred Brown. (- ' FOURTH ROW: .lissi. Kjmi.lK. l.auva Pratt. Mililnd K..;;. r-. opul r.uin, (:iihrTi.i,- Philips, Pearl Robbins. THIRD ROW: Helen Putnam. Ruth Robertson, Lucy Peterson. Doris Pre, iton. Laura Reeves. SECOND ROW: Lois Richards. Helen Richards, Sylvia Sewell, Helen Nugent, Mary Marie Peterson. FIRST Rt W: Frances Mett. Norine Xesmith, Helene Peterson, Pauline Peacock, Mildred Xelson. llll)IIH)lll IIUUMIIMIt IIIIMIIIII lt l ilHni lll i«l ll(( llll(tlllltlltllllllMltltllltllllU«IIIIIIUIIHIIM- miH nM(IHMIIIHI IIHIMMIIIMIIIIH HltMt«lillllHllltllltlllMllliHHIIIIIHI tlll M IIIIIIIIIIHHI-B ELM LODGE— DELTA ' rillHD KOW: Edna Williard, Elizubeth Peterson. Dorothy Khiuiinan, Nellie Scott, Elizabeth Liiyden, I ' aiiliiie Sarset. Miriam Von Kroog. SECOND ROW: Helen Smith. Katherine Gowens, Clara Wilson, Bernice Piper, Juliet Macintosh. Margaret Kati-nnt-r. Ali ' e Vick. ■ ' IRST KOW: Lena MeGinnis. Dorothy McKeller. Catherine Srhnonover, Huth Riilkley, .Josephine MeMaillon, M;i nif Unlsworth, Evelyn Ely. C3r 326 • e e.Cr-e C:-IIIIHItllllltlMIIIIIIIIII IIIMIIM llllllllllll lllllllllllltMllllllllltlllllHltlllllllll)MlllimiHIHII|M MIIIMIIMf ELM LODGE— GAMMA Km a THIRI) ROW: Flort-nce Larsun. Anii:i Wfsiroin. Ethel Sinitli. Lfiinre Higlil.-v. Aliiui Smilh. Evelyn Sanders, lone Sleigle, Elsie VandenburK, Heulali Siindell. Katherine Levtze. Edith Kiedaisch. SECOND ROW: Florenee Houston, Onii-a Prall, Ruth Perkins ' , Mildred Wharton, Mar.v Cosjjer, Neva Johnston, Pauline Low, Mary (i, Foley. Hazel Cochrane, Marv Dillon. FIRST ROW; Burnita Boyd, Berniee Xewston. Gladys Good, Beulah Honsh, .Tessiea MaePheeters, Ruth Cronin. Ruth Eckstrand, Zathoe Dillon, Mary Elizabeth Stevenson. ELM LODGE— OMEGA THIRIJ ROW: Arlene Mvhre. Uladys Stewnrt. Anna Pavluvsky. Miriam Vrm Kn.i:. Kvclyii Smith. Alicr McKinney. Dorothy I ove. Marie Plalh, Ruth Keiinisch. SKCOND ROW: .leannelte Porter. Franris Diinlap. Bernice Bertram. Ada Foley, Marian Kkler. Helen Knieper. Ona May Wilkin, Charlulte De Laiio. FIRST ROW: Kathryn HnUIen. Chariotte KdsMn. Ceeille Miller. Benlah Roberts. Elsie Peiper. .lean Bran- liall. Winifred Lefelnire. I illian Johnson. S U sX LiHMIimiMIIMtWHIHKIKHIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMItHHtHUUnMllinilttMmlllllMH MARGARET HALL THIRIJ R(( V: {irare Heidlnvdi-i-. Kuili L:iiiilers. Ali . (.aritii Jlcfurn.ll. Gladys Pelersoii. Daisy Mfllrath, Kditli l iirgpscm, SECOND ROW: Gai! Redfield. lima (lariior. Anna Paul. Helen Parzyhoiiski. Grace Borland, Edith Hauser, Louise Smith. FIR8T ROW: Liu-ile Lentz. Violet Miller. D(.rMthy Osl.oni. Elizalieth Boyd. Gladys Wilkie. Ruth McCall, Gladys Pidgeun. Ona ririi-h. AL RGARET HALL SECOND ROW: Elizabeth Appel. Blam-li.- Duini. Hazel Uiltoii. Gladys Irvine. Mildred Jones. Bessie Anderson. Dnrothv Davis. Marie Wyall. I ' lRsT ROW: Kdna Wjillon. Louise Truelilood. Margaret MuUer. Orvetta Bergren. Helen Issacsoii. Verna N.-U.ni. •llllllllllllllllltUMMIIHIHIIIIHIIII«IUHMI«niltlltlllltIIIIIIIIM IIHIIII(HIIIIMIHIIIIIIIMIHI l IHIIIIIIIIIIIII 328 • ' lllltt(IMIHI« IMIItlllHiMllllltlllMllltllllllllltlllMIIIIMIII«IIIIIIIIIU  llllllll«IIIIIIIUItlllMIMIIH Nllllllli MARGARET HALL I FUl ' RTH ROW; Helen Beresford. Ktliol JIurgaret Easter. Theliiut Pearson. Helen Prortor. AIiMii Snvder, Lncile Hatlestud. THIRD ROW: Edith Long. Evah Johnson. Sadie Long. Mabelle Keables. SECOXO ROW: Georgia Rae Easter. Virginia Bigelow, Verna Hughes, A!eta Laughlin. Gladys Penquite, Wilnia Kenion. FIRST ROW: Lena Hefner, Gladys Peterson. Cynthia Hughes. Kathryn Clausen. Muriel Body, Lucy Larrouy. MARGARET HALL EOIRTH ROW: Wilnia Hach. Lelah Bisplinghoff. Florence McKahin. Ruth Ilitzhusen. THIRD ROW: P dna Lindgren. Verena Meyer. Cloe .Tenisou. Olive Hewitt, Mildred Azeltine. SE( ' OX] ROW: Rose Johnson. Margaret Davies. Miss Ida M. Yates, Evelyn Spragg. AHierta Coleman. FIRST ROW: Kathrine McWhinney. Ph llis Warford, Esther Curtis. Lura Faber. Laura Proescholdt. Flnreme Ec-kel. Laura Laggart. •lt Himillllllt HinillH MIHMIII«HlflllHIIIIIMIIIIIII«llllliMII nill lltlllllllllMI(ll lillMMIIIIII IHII lllll 9 a. ' ' i3-9-3-3-9- X a-Qr-jY 7mf:TinT:TrnTT!TTT ' Tr lllll«MI «lilllMIIIIMUIM«UMtM IIIMMtlllltllHMMIHHIH INMIIMUIMf ll IMHIIMtHlil OAK LODGE— IOTA i T1IIKI iiliW : M.iii KliH.-irii. Mi.r.idnc K.-IktIs. .Mary (_ ' onc:iniiun, .liili:! Srhow. Helen Hicks, K.-na Hicks. Revii Piirce, Ruth Roln-rts. Marie Bhirkniaii. Lnella Wright, Fonda Dirkscni. SECOND ROW; Catherine I.avelle. Jnlia Christcnson. Gladys Zisnier. Helen Keeler. Helen Putnian. Viola Meints. Vir rinia Parish. Kdna Kraft. Blanche Windus, Marv Marshall. Helen Dunnel. FIRJ T ROW: Mildred Lnellen. Rnth Liggett, Carolyn Carey, .leaiiette Stork. Helm W.-Uy. Klla M.-Cii. ' . Lucille Fothergill, .Jenn McDirmid. OAK LODGE— KAPPA ' itilcl r-ht r m.hL ( it-raid iiie lira in a rd. Zuda Fislie Myrile Wesleillmrg. FOIRTU ROW: Helen Beel i Rernice Rasnlli (n. THIRD ROW: Ada Maln.L ' . Josephine Chambers. Margaret Talsma. (Jra.e llnrnstra, Ruth Talhoy, Mar- i;i:i rite Prth r. SKCOXD ROW : Main 1 (i rimes. Louise Brown. Lorn Way. Pauline lliuwii. Kleanor Tregoning. Alice Houglilnii, Mary Klizalieih Innes. FIRST ROW : Rntli Donaldson. Irene Larson, Doris Williams. Kleaiior Peregoy. Helen Newton. Ada Mae Whiteside. Rachael Kettering. g -:g.g.g.e  g.g«MH  iiiiiim MMM  Mm«tiimnnw n««iMiiiniiii«iinnmiM iniinnn«nmHm iimHHiiittn iiMiiii( ' 330 IM : « C-Cfe e :CI-IHIIIMHIMII l IMMi IIKIIKHIIII IIHMI«iM li«HII«HMIHIHIMIMII lltllMMni HIHmniHIIH«miir.9 3EEr SOUTH HALL SEVENTH ROW: M.ii-;ir.i Kinney, Mnrion Miller. SIXTH ROW: ElizalMili I iitoii, Kuth Moore. Helen Pustooske. Mrs. M. Coolidge. FIFTH ROW: Fern SpelbrinK. M:ir.v Hiizel Stewurt. Alice .Tohnson. Helen I.nmb. FOURTH ROW: Florence Light. Kdnii Oorlon. Vera Hartle.v. Mildred McKnight. THIRD ROW: Lucille Haberl.v. Hildred Pousch. Ann Haljerl.v. Bett.v Oilderslive. SKCONl) ROW: Elaine Stnessel. Ina Peterson. Margaret Spelbring. Ruth Derry. FIRST ROW: Viola Turner, Ona Demming. Frances Van Sljke, Lottie Shore. •IIIIIIIIMtllll|IHIIIIIII(llltllMIMtll)IMItlllllllMIIII ll lllllllll«lll«illMIIIIIII«lltl«l«iMilHIMIfllllll«IIIIIMim!9 ' 9 SOUTH HALL FIFTH ROW: Helen Wolfe. Rulh Wood, Isamor, i;.nii,ii, i li:iii..ii Sehmitt. FOURTH ROW: Esther Kirk. Lillian Sidel. Irma nrillharl. -Myrna Blake. THIRD ROW: Leanore Stollev. Loise Calhonn. Nettie Trei. Eleanor Falcon. SECOND HOW: . ddie Sanders. Helen Green, Ellen Dahl. Helen Rocho. FIRST ROW: Helen Kinney, Mary Hastings, Rnth Shaw, Velma Ornig, • -OLjii;i:iiii!:iiuuimmimm-Jiiimmmn fii!m!;!:im!r, ' i;::iiiii!iiiii 7i!i!ii!!;:iii]!mp-«-r -BrR-gTP - 333 MII)IMIIIIIIIimiHIIM«IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII)llllllttllllllllllllOlinillHIMtMIM(ll«HMIMIttlllHM«ll)lllll«lltllllllU-3 S ' 3- WEST HALL FOURTH ROW: Jean Lischer, Lila Kiser, Gertrude Seibert, Mary Eram, Lilas Larson. THIRD ROW: Florence Keeling, Jucille Heidenreich, Helen Lyman, Edith Roebuck, Doris Coleman, Joy Brindle. SECOND ROW: Marjorie Brunais, Willetta Mordock, Doris Patten, Grace Glass, Frances Nelson, Mary Wallenschmidt. FIRST ROW: Dorothy Peas, Wanda Swarner, Margaret Morris, Irene Berry, Mildred Barry, Florence Peas, Myrtle Schmidt. WEST HALL TlIIHIi IJnW: iia.,. 1 liiiirulli. Kvc-l n l,i|M ' . ll ' l.-ii Trnii:iin. Irene Herrv, KNie Ma s(.iii. SECOND KOW: Elizulieth Wriglil, Esllier Swuiison. Hor(;hild .lohnson. Ruby Miiilisun, FIR8T ROW: Marvel Smith, lieniice Gish, Eleanor Shearer, Phnebe Mentzer, Doris Donahoe. ■.iimmwmmiiMimHHWiMtMmmimiMmiUM tiMn iMmiiHin«MtiMtni m iimwnwinmiHH iniii.- 334 MMIMtltllHllM IIIIHHIIIIIIIMI IIIIIMI«MIIIIIMIIIIIIIAII IIIIIHIMHII« IIHIIini«IHH«Hfml«IIIMHIIMlMHim« WEST HALL Luna Ijuv iieyer, Mjinuii Doiiglaf , Stella FOURTH ROW; Kmu Hungate. Lucille Liiulslrum, Edith L.vle Hackett. Georgiana Steele, Ilene Hackett. THIRD ROW: Mildred Toop. Leila Troyer. Anne Sorenson, Ella Larson, Fern Bovenmeyer. SECOND ROW: Harriet Wallace. Susie Lyle, Hazel Johnson, Mellie Mericle, Gladys Foster. Eveleth Pederson. FIRST ROW: Lenora Osterhus, Hope Field, Joyce Archer, Adele Herbst, Ruth Sonneyson, Helen Dickinson, Florence Pond. WEST HALL FIFTH ROW: Zoe Bain, Bernice Gregory, Fern Hostetter. Hazel Westerlund. Myrtle Larson, Helen Gilmore. FOURTH ROW: Helen Brayton, Alma Wigdahl, Mable Westcot, Alma Boyce, Aletha Jamison, Emma Gertrude Groves. THIRD ROW: Ruth Carlson, Lillian Benna, Gladys Olson, Dorothy Pe.vton, Helen Nichols, Isabel Lundvall, Clela Garrett. SECOND ROW: Vivian Walters, Edna Smith, Muriel Gowans, Esther Sweetser, Myra Karsten, Francis Hitchcock. FIRST ROW: Florence Glenn. Esllier Rayhurn. Glenys True. Dorothy Bates. Katherinc Rutherford. Ann Hendershott, Ruth Hockaday. WEST HALL PARLOR ELM L0DC;E PARLe)R C• •HI IIIIM••l■llt••llllllll•llllll•M  ••tl••l•M l•ll MllllHlffll•lllllll•l•||ll•«|••la«•■l•«■|f•«|tHlHU■l|■(l■l|■l■|||Hl•s-9 336 lllltlllllH •■IUIIIIIIIil!IIIIIHIIMMIIIII«ll|tMlllllltllll(MMMIIill HIIIIII«)ll«HI l«HIIIHII )MIM Musical Organizations 337 iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiitiM iiniMiiti iinMiniiHniiiiiinninniiniiiini mmmiiiMi«iHH«t  m i ' mwmiiMim IOWA STATE COLLEGE BAND ■p .. ' X • ,Vi Oscar Hatch Havvley Conductor A. B. Hughes Assistant Conductor V. O. French Manaijcr L. G. SoRDEN Drum Major BuRDETTE Bai-colm Assistant Drum Major CORNETS— A. B. Hughes, H. M. Brvan, B. BASSES— H. L. Bates, G. D. Gilhert, C. M. H. Piatt, L. B. Ehlers, G. U. Godard, Ire! Eppard, L. B. Eckles, C- E. Noble, M. K. Kjer- Brcwn, M. A. Woodcock, C. J. Maass, R. land. C. Benson, M. V. Sprole, R. R. Strayer, H. DRUMS— G. H. Mathews, R. H. Kratzer, H. E. Jensen, H R. Bare, A. E. Mahany, B. R. V. Barlow, Miss Fern Spelbring, Miss Helen Mevers. Oldham, G. L. Angus, Carl Harris, F. L. TROMBONES— W. M. Hogue, Orville Brvan, Strong, E. R. Lorens. Clyde Kudrle, L. L. Lncher, Orville Collins, TVMPANI— B. E. Hvnds. E. A. De Bruin, M. K. Sawyer, F. V. Schultz, CLARINETS— H. A. Arthur, G. P. McGraw, C. A. Shellaberger, E. I. Rosenberger, K. L. C. M. Morse, L. M. Corrcll, lulius Schoentag, Andrews. A. C. Heckenliahlc, F. H. Mendell, J. B. BARITONES— N. K. Clemmensen, W. H. Williams, F. M. Knupp, F. K. Dubbert, J. H. Ruppel, F. W. Stoddard, O. N. Allen, W. ODay, H. C. Robinson, J. D. Kaser, A. J. E. Berkev, Arnold Sunderman. Duden, R. A. Pride, Miss Agnes Crain, John OBOE— Joseph Howell. lakonbck, T. F. Burgess, Miss Helen Holland. E CLARINET— F. R. Mason, A. W. Gratke. SAXAPHONES— R. M. Henderson, G. B. FLUTES— Miss Lucy Petersen, H. L. New- Drake, H. S. Tracy, V. O. French, Miss Llyra comer, R. I. White. Price, Miss Florence Schlinfcer, Kenneth PICCOLOS— C. C. Shutt, M. J. Mellinger. Wright, Theodore Kouba, B. A. Anderson, |. ALTOS— Prof. A. R. Lamb, L. C. Lorens, W. Fichinger, H. H. Smith, C. O. Vohs, E. Earl Marihart, R. W. Havig, Eugene Frit- R. Brown, K. G. Westenberger, R. E. Speer, schel, W. T. Lawrence, L. F. Gilbert, R. B. ' . O. Ladwig, W. R. Macy, E. F. Koerner, Landis. R. A. Sawyer. Jg-C ««g ' .llimilWm MII«l« «HMtHmMIHIHMHIWl«l HMIIIIMt«Mm mmH  IMt IHHMl WIIIM MIIIIMHItl ll  HHIIMIIHIIIIIHmHIH lMmnmMtlMIII«HH milMIIIIIHIimHHIII HMIIMMI.a.a.a.a.a.a. .lxl MEN ' S GLEE CLUB THIRD ROW: Heckeiilailile. .Stahl, .Sordeli. I ' lasgp. Uir. Kuehl. Ruessev. SECOND ROW: Martin. H. D. Cation, Prof. Muc Rae. Hazard. Kruwell. Murphy, DeBruin. FIRST ROW: Bate:s, Huntoon, Harriman, Likins, Carlson, Byram, Olsen. Prof. Tolbert M. cR. e Director R. A. Olsen President Donald C. tio. - Business Manager D. R. Porter Issistant Business Manager Edw.ard Lorens iccompa ' nist FIRST TENORS— D. R. Porter, C. R. Hazard, BARITONES— H. D. Cation, R. A. Olsen, K. M. Smith, H. V. Priem, E. V. Servass, Donald Cation, Dan Culbertson, O. B. Bv- T. R. Reusser. ram, C. W. Martin, R. L. Black. SECOND TENORS— L. G. Sorden, E. L. BASSES— G. F. Kruwell, V. J. Veneables • Broderick, A. E. Likins, R. B. Urmy, H. S. A. C. Heckenlaible, L. J. Murphv, B. M. Stahl, Bates, L. A. Harriman, H. P. Kuehl, Leon E. A. DeBruin, L. P. Carlson. Orr. ♦Deceased. •l(lllll)IIIMIMIIHH)HltlllMH«IIIHIIII«tllli IIMIIIIillll ll)IIIIIHIIIHIMMH lll«litlH(llll ltHIII IHIIimillllll • IIIMIII««IIIMII«milllll IIIIIHIItlllllilMII tlllMIII «IIMIIIIIIIIIIMHIMIMHIHMH HHM«n MHIItl)HIIHMr WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB OFFICERS ToLBERT MacRae Dirfclor Jean MacFarlane Prcsidnit Margaret Brookhart Business Manat er Mary Reed hcompanist 1ST SOPR.ANO— Uabelle Ames, Lclah Bis- plinghoff, Ruth Ekstraiul, Ethel Cirecnway, Meiliira Graiidprey, Mary Hastings, Edna Miller, Agnes Noble. :.) 2Nn SOPRANO— Margaret Brookhart, Ethel Easter, Helen Herr, . ' lma Kalsem, Dorothy MacKellar, Helen Rocho, Margaret Spelbring, Mona Mae Thompson, Helen Wolfe. ALTO — Lloyd Church, Georgia Easter, Laura Flymi, Catherine Leytze, Gladys Johnson, Myrtle Knutson, A ' erena Meyer, Jean Mac- Farlane, Marie Rayness, Amy Stonell, Estelle Sill, Lillian Sevdcl, Miriam Von Krog, Ruby Wolfe. Ml FlFlil KUW: (ir.-fiH-, Hrorhv, Slipparil, (iciirge, raxtoii. FOURTH ROW: L. C. Bierbaum, Bennett, Mclntire. F. H. Brown, Sindt, Cody. THIRD ROW: Smith, Ga.vlord, E. O. Bierbaum, Ekins. Bowen, Runkle, PaUn. SECOND ROW: Laughlin, Pohlman, M. F. Brown, McBiernev, Anderson. FIRST ROW: Sanders, Diekerson, Welters, Wingert, Ravnold ' s. Carroll A. H. mmerly President Wf. WKi- SiN ' DT Vice-President Joe Greer Secretary-Treasurer A. E. WOLTERS I. S. RiGGS F. E. Shepiiard G. G. POHLMAN ' H. L. McBirney C. A Hammeri.v W . L La k ?. E. L. Bierbaum C. R. DURLAND C. . Wingert R. E. Ekins L. A. Sanders M H Brown Lewis Laughlin A. L. LOUCKS E. 0. BlERIlAUM M. ' . Smith E. V. Runkle E. M. Meneough Joe Greer J. E. Snyder C. S. Cody Herbert Sindt II. K. Bennett 1 1 All! Oickerson R. H. Greene II. K. Gavi.ord Iack McAvinchy R. B. Raynolds Leland Seaton N. P. Birthright L. M. Clauson W. C. Berger H. J. Schmidt F.. A. Anderson L. M. Rathbun H. H. Bowen ROLLIN WHITAKER Ira Young II. F. Brown G. S. McIntire W. n. George R. E. Paxton G. T. Roberts r. longstreet C. H. Palm II. I.. I.AUBE lllllHlllllllftftlMIIIIMIIIIIIItlHIIIIHIIIIfflMIIIIIIIIIIIHIl! jWMS « ' S ' Cre V e ' HIMIIIMtHIMI)tlHIIIIHI(HII)lllllllll)lltMltlMltlHIM«IIIMMIIII« llltl)IIIIIMIII«IIIIIIIHItlMHIIIIIIIIMtMHIII.9 ' «9 9 ' ar9- a a WOMEN ' S A FRATERNITY ■lAl 1 ■y| Mj||j m3 THIRD ROW: Margaret Sloss, Helen Vinson. Helen Beels, Helen Herr. SECOND ROW: Verena Meyer. EIner Martin. Elizabeth Smylie. FIRST ROW: Laura Bublitz, Miss Murphy, Miss Tilden, Lois Baker, Elithe Nisewanger. Women ' s A fraternity is an organization composed of those girls who have been awarded 600 points for the athletic work. Their purpose is to centralize and to pro- mote interest in women ' s athletics. MEMBERS Margaret Sloss Miss Winifred Tilden Helen Beels Helen Vinson Verena Meyer Helen Herr Elizabeth Smylie Elner Martin Miss Agnes Murphy Laura Bublitz Lois Baker Elithe Nisewanger Marie Hartman Thelma Tollefson PLEDGES Marie Habermam Dorothy Cooke Ruth Springer Dorothy Olson Besse Chmelik • ' .C C:-UIIMIIIIIII tll lllltll« IIIIIIMIIIIIMIIHIMMHHIMIIIUIIIIMIIIMIItMlllllt lllil«IHUltttMIMH« llliaillllllllll 343 IUMMHINHiM IHHIMIIItllllllllMllilllllltllHllltlHtllHtlllHII)IIIIIIIIMIIMIItlllCHII)HIMIMIIIIIIIHHIIMIMWS 9 9 ' 9-a-9 l ' ALPHA ZETA THIRD ROW: Miiltas. Godbj. LuiiKnecker, Ohiing, Deyoe, HaU-. SECOND ROW: Streeter, Olsen, Brown, Dulibcrt. Earhart, Palm, Fritts. FIRST ROW: Porter, McBirney, Dunn, Graham, Boyle. Trout, Brown. Honorary Agricultural Fraternity Founded at Ohio State University in 1896 Wilson Chapter Established at Ames in 1906 Active Chapters, 31 Purpose: Alpha Zeta was organized to promote scholarship, to encourage the study of agriculture, to improve agriculture in all its pha,ses, and to stimulate interest in student activities. CJianccUor Censor . . Scribe . . Trrasurrr . Historian . M. H. Brown L. E. Cl. pp P. M. Dunn J. G. Earhart E. A. Fritts R. W. GODBV S. I. Graham Fall C. P. Streeter F. P. Krebs J. C. Karhart n. R. Porter G. M. Trolt MEMBERS S. V. McBirney n. R. Porter r. P. Streeter G. M. Trout D. P. Cation H. B. BovLE J. F. Brown C. II. Everett Spring P. M. Dunn C. H. Palm C. H. Everett Tueodere Uehlinc K. I. Mai.tas J. V. Loncnecker K. J. Maltas R. A. Olsen C. H. Palm Theodore Uehling G. A. Haer E. E. Dubbert 1 .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii«M timimiini Miii«n««iiMiimiiu iiiHiiiiintMi Mniiniiminim mii«iimniii niii - imiiiMllitimmnHi imnniii nni«i«ii iiiniiniiii«iiiiniiimnin iiiiiiiitii«iimmniMiii miiiiiiiii DELTA SIGMA RHO Erickson, Underwood. Everett, Dubbert. Johnson National Honorary Forensic Fraternity Founded at Northwestern University in 1906 Iowa State College Chapter Established in 1909 Active Chapters, 61 Publication, The Gavel MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. B. Hawthorne MuRL McDonald L. J. Murphy D. D. Offringa R. H. Porter S. N. Smith P. C. Taff Senior J. Raymond Underwood Juniors Charles H. Everett MHHIIIIMMM IIIIIMtMlirill«IIIIIIIMIMIUIIIIIMItlfl(ftlllUMIMIII llf IIMIIIfll« H|ltllttllHf flMHtfllMlfHMI : -9- ' 9 9 3 9- rr| ETA KAPPA NU THIRD ROW: Myers. Marsh, Methfessel, Sheldorf, Joslin. Sunde. SECOND ROW: Paone. Brown. Lopher. Eckles, Verrall, Sealon. FIRST ROW: Delahooke. Fowler, Hoper. Booth, Talsma, Gaheli. Honorary Electrical Engineering Fraternity Founded at University of Illinois, 1904 Nil Chapter Established at Iowa State College, 1916 Active Chapters, 14 Publication, The Bridge MEMBERS IN FACULTY F. A. Fish D. C. F.aber F. D. P.aine OFFICERS L. L. LocHER President C. H. Hoper Vice-President Clarence T.4Lsnia Recording Secretary R. R. GoBELi Corresponding Secretary W. M. JOSLiN ' Treasurer E- B. Fowi.ER Sergeanl-at-Arms M E M B E R S Seniors H. H. Brovvv C. H. Hoper C. L. Seaton T. E. Dei.ahuoke V. M. Joslin M. V. Sheldork E. B. Fowler L. B. Eckles H. E. Sunde R. R. GoBELi L. L. Locher Clarence Talsma C. V. Methfessel Juniors E. F. BooTHE R. B. Meyers Anthony Paone D. Y. Marsh Victor Verral • llllimillHltll llltMllllltl«tllMIIIMtltll«IIIIIHItlllll IIIIIIIIMHItlll llllt lflllMHN IIIH HH JACK O ' LANTERN M THlKli R(.) V: Mcdora Griiiidpre.v. Florence Wright, Nil;i Knowles, lone Jolinsun, Ruth Knights. SECOXJ) ROW; CJreta Thome. Marguerite Conner. Mary Cram, Clarice lies, Lenore Higley. FIR,ST ROW; Barbara Wentch, Katherine Goeppinger, Helen Vinson, Irene Dewey, Eveleth Pederson, Myrtle Eein. Jack O ' Lantern is a local honorary sorority, whose purpose is to promote higher scholarship, create interest in college activities, and to develop a democratic spirit on the campus. It was founded at Iowa State College in 1908. OFFICERS Irene Dewey President Lenore Higlev Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS IN FACULTY WlMl RED TlLDEN lD. Anders IvA Brandt Francis Newell Gertrlde Herr RiTU O ' Brien Marie Stephens Lydia Jacobsen Ruth Meyer Alma Riemenschxeider MEMBERS Myrtle Bein Margaret Connor Mary Cram Irene Dewey k. ther1ne croeppinger Medora (Jrandprey Lenore Hicley Clarice Iles lONE Johnson Ruth Knights NiTA Knowles Eveleth Pederson CiRATA Thorne Helen Vinson Barbara Wentch Florence Wright Mortar Board was founded November 1, 1914, at Iowa State College. Its purpose is to further democracy and good fellowship among women of the college and to en- deavor to accomplish some permanent good for the college each year. Membership, which is chosen in the spring from the junior class, and in the fall from the senior class, is based on activities, scholarship, leadership, and character. OFFICERS Neta Comstock President Maida Heiner rice-Presideni Gladys Watson Treasurer Jeakett Beyer Secretary Hei.ev Reels . . • Marshal Rose Storm Historian MEMBERS IN F.ACri.TV Miss N. Beth Bailey Mrs. Helev Stevens Miss Johanna Hanson Mrs. D. Arville Miss Florence Busse Miss Irma Camp Miss Fredrica Shattlck Miss Ci. arrisa Clark Mrs. P. S. Shearer MEMBERS Muriel Orr Thelma Tolleison F thel Huebner Clara Jordan Juanita Beard Gladys Watson Marie Muiriiead Esther Pond Rose Storm Marie Hartman Verna Hunter Margaret Sloss Marie Van Ci.e e Jeaneite Beyer Mflen Beels Verena Meyer Maida Heiner iiiMiii«w««iMH iii«Mti mMi «iimin iiiimm«tnmm«ininMiiimiiiniinn ntM  niiiMi Mnnii M Hiii n.«  a    f ta 348 NATIONAL COLLEGIATE PLAYERS THIRD ROW: Sunde, Helene E. Wilson. Raines, Mildred I. Thorne, Garrecht, Clydena Stanford. SECOND ROW: Thelma M. Smith, Rena Shutt, Bernice Kirkham, Nancv Elliott, Helen Beels, Margaret Sloss. FIRST ROW: Trexel, Dorothy M. Cass, Knwalke, Fredrica T. Shattuck, Kahle, Nita Knowles, Urmy. Honorary Dramatic Fraternity Iowa State Chapter Founded by a union of Associated University Players (1914) and Pi Epsilon Delta (1918). The local chapter is the first taken in since the union. Active Chapters, 9 Publication, Players ' Magazine OFFICERS L. F. K. HLE President Nita Knowles I ' ice-President Dorothy Cass Secretary E. J. KowALKE Treasurer Fredrica ' . Sh.xttlck Faculty lii-visnr F. ' VCrLTY MEMBERS Fredrica V. Sh. ttuck Lester Raines Mildred I. Throne Helene E. Wiison MEMBERS S e 7t i r s Helen Beels R. P. Moscrip Thelma M. Smith H. S. Kern Ri-na Shutt H. E. Sunde E. J. Kowalke Trajan A. Shipley Jr. R. . Trexel Margaret W. Sloss Juniors Dorothy M. Cass Bernice Kirkham Nita Knowles LoREN F. Kahle Ralph B. Urmy, Jr. S p i m ores Nancy E. Elliot Hubert Garrecht Clydena Stanford OMICRON NU FOl ' RTH ROW; Bertha Wheeler. Mur vierile Conner. Vera MintU-. UiirrJell Tilden. ilargaret .Sarazine. THIRD ROW: Mary Glassfoid, Frances Xewell, Eunice Longworth, Leora Fairbanks, Helen Herr, Harriet Wallace. SECOND ROW: Anne Hopkin,s. Florence Wright, Doris Wherry, Marion Wilson, Gertrude Ecis, ,Iuliette Mcintosh. FIRST ROW: Pauline DroUinger, Ruth Spencer, Helen Beresford, Ruth Megchelsen, Eveleth Pedersen, Anna Gertrude Riegs. Irene Haynes. Purpose: The object of this society is to recognize and iironiote scholarship, leader- ship, and research in the field of home economics. Alpha chapter was founded at Michigan Agricultural College, East Lansing, Mich., in 1912. Gamma chapter was installed at Iowa State College in 1913. OFFICERS Ruth Megchelsem Prrsidrnt Irene H.wnes I ' ur-President Helen Beresford Sicretary Eunice Loncworth Treasurer MEMBERS IN F. CULTV Dean Richardsox Blanche Incersoll Edna E. Walls Ida V. . ' hrens IvA L. Brandt Cora B. Miller Anna Henderson Anna CJertrlde Ricgs Ruth Spencer Pauline Drollinger Grace Dewey MEMBERS Helen Herr Marion Wilson Marguerite Connor Bertha Wheeler Eveleth Pedersen Anne Hopkins Harriet Tilden Margaret Sarazine Helen Beels Vera Mintle Leora Fairbanks Mary Glassford Florence Wright Julieite McIntosh ■llllllllllllltllll«lt IIIIMini)«lllll IHII«l MIIIIIIIIIUIIIII  IIMIIIH MII)«nl l«MUHIHUIIII)l«lllllllllll- • miiimmiHHHMiHHHIMiiiiniimMHiiniiniiiinii iiiiinimn  niiiii tnHHummiiiiiinniiimuii PHI KAPPA PHI He r Graduate Fraternitv OFFICERS W. F. COOVER PresiJir.t H. H. KiLDEE J ' icr-Prcsidnil B. J. Firkins Secretary Edna E. Walls Treasurer A. L. Anderson W. A. AlTKEK Marv Battell J. A. Burrows S. W. Bever J. E. Brindlev R. E. Buchanan L. C. Burnett H. E. Bemis H. n. Bergman F. V. Beckman A. L. Bakke R. K. Bliss P. E. Brown J. H. Buchanan F. M. Baldwin J. L. Boatman Callie Mav Bliss Paul F. Barnard IvA Brandt C. W. Beese I. T. Bode O. H. Cessna VV. F. Coo er C. F. Curtiss A. V. Cltoe Grace Campbell A. B. Caine T. W. Clokey C. H. C0 AULT R. E. Crum Chas. Dorchester J. B. Davidson L. W. DURRELL H. H. Dukes S. M. DiETZ M. E. Daniels K. M. Dewey MEMBERS W. F. Douglas A. T. Erwin J. C. Eldredce Paul Emerson a. h. eschbach F. A. Fish L. W. Forman B. J. Firkins D. C. Faber J. E. Guthrie W. F. Guard E. F. Goss K. D. Hughes B. W. Hammer Ada Hayden H. B. Hawthorne M. D. Helser Anson Hayes H. M. Hamlin L. C. Heckert V. E. Jones H. W. Johnson Ward Jones Neale Knowles Herman Knapp H. H. Kildee A. H. Kimball W. H. Lancelot Eda Loyd Murphv Anson Marston G. B. MacDonald M. Mortenson H. S. Murphy- Chas. Murray ' C. C. Major I. E. Melhus J. N. Martin W. H. Meeker S. H. McNuTT G. W. McNutt L. J. Murphy D. V. Moses C. H. Meyers J. C. Nichols E. G. Nourse C. S. Nichols L. H. Pammel Mary Montgomery Pride H. E. Pride R. H. Porter Wallace Park Maria M. Roberts G. W. Renshaw L. B. Schmidt L. B. Spinnev C. H. Stance W. H. Stevenson J. A. Starrak John M. Shaw S. N. Smith Fredrica Shattuck w. j. schlick p. S. Shearer Helen F. Smith Winifred Tilden T. F. Vance F. S. Wilkins J. C. Weldin Edna Walls Q. a ' allace Earl Weaver J. A. Wilkinson Jas. Waddell H. V. Wright A. L. Young • MIIIIIIIIII«IIOtltllHillllfllllMIIIIM)ll«lllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllMIIMnllll«lll«l«ilM«l« H l   IIHIMj PHI LAMBDA UPSILON Honorary Chemical Society OFFICERS Dr. Pali. Emerson- President D. V. Moses Vice-President V. G. Heller Treasurer J. J. CiiNFiELD Secretary Dr. F. E Brown- Councillor Kirk Dewey Alumni Secretary MEMBERS L. T. Akderegg J. T. AUTEN T. H. Benton S. W. Beyer R. V. Borgeson F. E. Brown P. E. Brown J. H. Buchanan R. E. Buchanan G. W. Burke T. A. Burrows J. J. Canfield O. W. Ch. pman L. M. Christensen Norman Clark w. f. coover W. h. Cordes Kirk Dewey- E. J. Drewelow W. W. DUECKER H. H. Dukes Paul Emerson W. C. Fernow B. J. Firkins V. G. Heller Wilbur Hoff J. W. Hussey H. V. Johnston George Judisch e. j. kowalke A. R. Lamb Ma. ' Levine C. M. McCav H. M. McLaughlin R. L. McVey H. L. Maxwell C. H. Meyers F. J. Mleynek M. MORTENSON D. V. Moses Glen Naudain V. E. Nelson M. E. NORDBERG H. H. Parker Russell Pickens G. N. Quam a. w. rudnick Charles Saunders Robert Fothergill MiKKEL FRA NKERT E. K. Fulmer W. G. Gaessler S. L. Galpin Carl Geister Henry Gilman L. C. Hand R. L. Hanson Joe Hawkes Anson Hayes L. C. Heckert J. A. Schulz F. F. Sherwood H. O. Smith O. M. Smith J. E. Snyder W. H. Stephenson o. r. sw ' eenev Benjamin Toubes Ralph Waite Everett Wallace J. C. Weldin J. A. Wilkinson H. W. Wright • MmillUiHIMIIHIHIIItll«Htll)llllllltlllHH MIIHI M(IIIHIIHHIHIinilllHIIIHMIMIIHitHI«HMIHUM HI)l PHI MU ALPHA THIRD ROW: Sorden. Gilbert. Heekenlaible, Henderson. Lorens, Bates, Smith, Morse. SECOND ROW: French. Cation. Hughes, Hawley, Byram, Olsen, Schultz. FIRST ROW: Porter, Dihvorth, Huntoon, Likins, Maey, Ehlers, Rink, Piatt. Honorary Musical Fraternity Alpha Delta Chapter Founded at New England Conservatory of Music in 1898 Established at Iowa State College in 1922 TOLBERT MacRaE O. H. H.AWLEY FACULTY MEMBERS R. E. Cramer M. A. Smith L. F. Woods OFFICERS D. R. Porter President A. B. Hughes Vice-President L. C. Lorens Secretary R. A. Olsen Treasurer MEMBERS H. S. Bates E, L. Broderick H. M. Byram H. D. Cation L. L. DiLWORTH C. F. Ehlers V. O. French G. D. Gilbert C. R. Haz. rd A. C. Heckenlaible R. M. Henderson H. B. Huntoon A. B. Hughes Glenn Kruwell A. E. LiKiNS L. C. Lorens R. W. Macy C. N. Morse G. P. McGraw R. A. Olsen B. H. Pl.att D. R. Porter L. G. Rink F. V. Schultz K. M. Smith L. G. Sorden ■I .g.C;-IIIIIIIMHIIIIII tl « MIIII llll«t «ll« l tt« H tlM imill llllHIIIWMHI WMHHimmiMI« IMt  l««llm IHIIIHW? 353 nuiimm  iiiiniiitmHiniiimiiniminmim«iiiiiiiiiM mimi  i« i SIGMA DELTA CHI THIRD ROW: Larsen. Terry, Clupp, Uihvi.rtli. Culvi-r. Ri-i-k. Earhart. Hcrric-k. SECOND ROW: Goodwin, Caswell, Converse. liryson. Curtiss, Eichinger. Schide. FIRST ROW: Metzger, Johnson, Buttell, Dodds, Marvin, Beekman, WUitfleld. Streeler. Iowa State Chapter Founded at DePauw University in 1909 Established at Iowa State College, 1914 Active Chapters, 38 Publication, The F. W. Brckman Blair Converse W. H. Lancelot F. B. Flick H. M. Hamlin H. C. Butcher M II. Buttell I,. K. Clapp R. I.. Culver M. A. Cass I,. I.. DlLWORTH Paul Dunn OFFICERS Mortimer CJoodwin Prcsidrnt John Earhart Vice-President Kenneth Marvin Secretary C. C. SCHIDE Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS J. M. Evvard H. G. Bryson W. D. Griffon ROBl.EV WiM REV ACTIVE MEMBERS J. M. Earhart Mortimer Goodwin ]. W. Johnson C. E. Larsen K. R. Marvin G. A. Metzcer Harold Parker IIIIIIIIMItlllllltllllllHIIIIII«HHIItillHIHHIIIIIIHIMI lllimHmiHH IHH IW«« Hltimm«HI ' IIIHIIHIMIIII i s i ! SIGMA XT : Honorary SL ' ientific Fraternity Founded November, 18S6, Cornell University : Established at Iowa State College I Active Chapters, 38 Publication, Sit ii i Xi Quarterly ' : OFFICERS S. V. Beyer Presidi-nl L. H. Pammel I ' ic ' -Pri ' sUcnl P. E. Brown ' Snrelary I Charles Ml ' rrav Tfrasurrr ; MEMBERS Robert E. Buchavan Victor G. Heller ; Frances M. Baldwin ' Charles H. Meyers : Chester H. Werkman Adolph Shane : : Bruce M. Harrison John H. Griffith : I Joseph E. Guthrie Louis H. Pammel : I Jay B. Davidson Joseph C. Gilman E 1 Percy E. Browk L. W. Durrell E z Harlan W. Johnson I. E. Melhus : : John M. Evvard J. N. Martin E = Harry V. Richey Julia T. Colpitts : E Elizabeth V. Miller Cornelius Gouwens E 1 Charles H. Stance Edwin R. Smith : 1 Charles Murray J. V. McKelvey : : Samuel W. Beyer G. W. Snedecor E 1 Henry Gilman B. W. Hammer E 1 Ellis I. Fulmer A. Helen Tappan E 5 Victor E. Nelson Martha MacDonald McKelvey E ; Winfred F. Coover Harold Stiles 2 Frank E. Brown D. C. Faber : ; Henry M. McLaughlin Thomas F. ance S Ruth O ' Brien Iva Ernsberger E J Anson Haves Arthur L. Bakke E : William G. Gaessler Frederick A. Fenton : : Sidney L. Galpin Walter H. Wellhouse : i John A. Wilkinson R. A. Pearson : : George E. Thompson C. R. Sweeney E : Anson Marston C. J. Drake : = Almon H. Fuller Marie Farnsworth : = Jay W. Woodrow John Beeber : ; Fred A. Fish E. W. Lindstrom : i Charles C. Major Harold E. Bemis : E Thomas R. Ago Max Levine 1 Paul Emerson Douglas V. Moses i George E. Davis James Waddell : i i i i i ; ; William J. Schlick r i ! ( t ; 1 m-s.-s-a. C«« .C: JIM4HI«IIHIHH«IIHI tl«flllH4l«ltlHIH4IIHIIIIIIHHIHtt«Hftl«HIII«iHIMIIIMIHffHIHHlllMIMHMIHIIIM«tlll4M ?9. a«9 9V9 a m 355 flllllinnill)IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII lltlMI llt«lllllllllllltlllllMIIMIIHfllltll(ll(IM llt«IHIII«HH)IMIIinimililt 3-9 TAU BETA FI U J. ..M- Wi I ■• . •• THIRD ROW: Penney, Snakenberg. Norland, Highley, Reynolds. Longnecker, Christensen. SKCOXD ROW: Melynek, Brown. Han.son, Swanson, Seaton, Yohe. Stocking. FIR.ST ROW: Talsuia, Fernow, Morse. Krewson, Fowler. Hoper. Plait, (ioebli. Honorary Professional Engineering Fraternity Iowa Alpha Chapter Founded at Lehigh University, 1885 Establi.shed at Iowa State College, 1907 Active Chapters, 37 Publication, The Bent OFFICERS C. H. Yohe President F. M. Highley lice-President G. L. Seaton Secretary S. W. McBiRNEY Treasurer MEMBERS IN FACULTY J. B. D.wiDsoN R. A. NoRM. N F. A. Fish Frank Kerekes C. S. Nichols L. J. Murphy R. O. Mayer T. R. Acg J. G. Hummel A. H. Fuller An ' sov Marston V. E. Duckerinc M. P. Cleghorn J. S. DODDS S. V. Byers F. D. Paine W. H. Meeker n. V. Moses J. R. Sage L. B. Spinney L. J. Dunlap A. L. Young A. H. Kimball A. E. Eschbach Edwiv Kurtz H. E. Pride ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors C. L. Day Gayi.ord Pewey L. M. Christensen E. B. Fowler O. F. Reynolds W. C. Fernow R. R. Gabeli G. L. Seaton Harry Krewsan R. L. Hanson J. D. Snakenberg J. Van S. Longnecker C. H. Hoper E. J. Stocking R. F. Morse E. W. Kowalke E. a. Swanson Maurice Norland S. W. McBirney Clarence Talsma B. H. Platt F. J. Melynek C. D. Yohe C. B. Silletto H. H. Brown Junior F. M. Hicley •IMIMIIIIIIIItll IMIIHIIItlMIIM«i)IIIIIIIHIIII IIIHHIII iniilHIIHHIIHI«IIIHI  MIIIIM)ll llll IHMII l lll ' 35« iJLr g--ar-tr:a aS illlilHIIMIIIHIHIItlMIHIIIHttlMMIIttKIMHtllllltlMtllllllllDMIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIKIIIIIIHHIIIIIIMIIIIIHIIlia Q--D- -TFT5rT?y: f THETA SIGMA PHI SECOND ROW: Opal Milligan, Eleanor Murray, Juanita Beard, Marcella Dewell, Harriett Schlieter, Rose Sturm. FIRST ROW: Sarah Manhart, Jeannette Beyer, Kathrine Goeppinger, Phoebe Mentzer, Clara Jordan. Founded April 8, 1909, at Washington University, Seattle, Wash., for the purpose of encouraging the professional side of journalism among women. Omicron chapter of Theta Sigma Phi was established at Iowa State College in 1917. The publication is the Matrix, and the badge a gold printers ' matrix. OFFICERS Clara Jordan ' President Harriet Schlieter Viee-President Eleanor Murray Secretary Marcella Dewell Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS N. Beth Bailey Eda Lord Murphy Blanche Ingersol Ruth Spekcer Esther Cooper PERSONNEL Rose Storm Harriett Schleiter Clara Jordan Marcella Dewell Sarah Manhardt Katherine Goeppinger Jeanette Bey ' er Juanita Beard Opal Milligan Eleanor Murray Phoebe Mentzer ;UimiiM HiiM«UiHHiiiimininMimtniM iMi iiii«m  nimiiimninMlii«M imiiiMtMtni« miin it niii.a GAMMA SIGMA DELTA Honorary (iraduate Fraternity OFFICERS A. B. C.MNE PrrsiJi-nl B. W. Hammer I ' ite-PifsiJinl C. A. IvERSOK Secretary A. Foster Treasurer Anderson, A. L. Bakke, a. L. Beckmak, F. V. Beresford, Rex BiTTENBENDER, H. A. Bottorf, R. S. Boatman, ]. L. Bode, I. T. Brown, P. E. Buchanan, R. E. Caine, a. B. Castetter, E. F. Clarke, N. A. Collins, E. V. Coover, W. F. Cramer, V. F. culbertson. c. c. curtiss, c. f. Davidson, J. B. DiETZ, S. M. durrell, l. v. Ely, Fordvce Emerson, Paul Erickson, E. T. Erwin, a. T. Beach, Victor Campbell, Fi.ovd ' . Conn, Rex Devoe, Marion Douglass, Wilbur F. Eocers, Fred C. Ferguson, Fred F . Hendren, M. Zell Anderson, V. A. Crampton, E. W. duecker, w. w. Funk, L. C. Haber, E. S. Henson, E. R. llARTWin. H. B. Jones, Walter N. FACCLl V MEMBERS ( 1922-1923) Firkins, B- J- Form an, L. W. Foster, W. A. Fui.mer, E. I. CilLMAN, J. C. Gray, D. S. CiUTHRIE, J. E. Hammer, B. W. Hammond, Wrav Hawthorne, H. B. Holmes, C L. Haves, Anson Hughes, H. D. Helser, M. D. iverson, c. a. Jeffers, D. S. Johnson, D. R. Kildee, H. H. Lancelot, W. H. I.ANTZ, H. L. MacDonald, Ci. B. Manev, T. J. Martin, J. N. Mei.hus, I. E. MORBECK, G. C. UNDERGRADUATES (Imitated Spring 1922) McAfee, Norval B. McGuiRE. Harrv M. MoRAVETS, Fi.ovd L. Mericle, Lester Merriman, ' ai.ter N. Nelson, John A. Peterson. George Paige, ' m. R. GRADUATE NH ' .MBFRS (Initiated Spring 1922) King. George A- Lancashire, E. R. LVLE, S. P. Lyle, F. M. Ling, William Marombo, F. D. Mayer, L. B. Mortensen, M. Nelson, . E. Nichols, H. E. Nordaker, p. E. nourse, e. c;. Pammel. L. H. Park, Wallace Pearson, R- A. Porter, R. H. Richev, H. W. Robinson, J. L. Rudnick, a. W. Schmidt, L. B. Shearer, P. S. Sherwood. F. F. Stephenson, R- S- Stevenson, W. H. SWANSON, H. B. VoLZ, E. C. Von Tunglex, O. H. Wallace, Q. W. Warwick, G. H. Wentz, J. B. Weaver. Earl Wilkinson, J. A. Reineke. Ward B. Renshaw, V,v W. Shaw. John McKee SiARRAK. James A. SCHROEDER, HeNRY E. Smith. Stuart N. Underwood, Elton E. Wilson. Carl A. Plagge. H. FL Snyder. Roy W. Sandhouse. H- a. Toole, W. Ade Toens. Peter Vandecaveye. S. C. Working, E. J. Waddell, James 359 fdr== Perhaps the oldest form of college organization in the United States were the literar societies. They formed the center of social life of the institutions in • -hich they were located and conducted a useful and educational program. Their exercises consisted of debates, the reading and discussion of papers or liter- ary subjects, and the like. They were encouraged by college facidties and students joined them as a matter of course because of the opportunities of- fered in them for social life and the forming of friendships. Particularly in the West it is found that as the college communities grew larger and more complex other organizations came in, either to take the place of, or to form a part of the social system already formed by the literary societies. These newer organ- izations were the college fraternities, class societies, departmental clubs, and honorary organizations. Today the literary societies of Iowa State College and manv other schools hold a place of unique im- portance and interest in the college communit ' . ■lllllllltlllllll tltMHIIMtltll«tllll IIMI))tl IIMIII«UM lllilMHMIIHIIM )lil«lillllt l Hllltllll ll llimilllMI- . ' llll lliUIII ll IIIHIIIItlHII l(«IIIMIIItlllllltlll llt( IIIIIUil(IIIIHiiMIIIM tHIIMttlMIIIIIIII IMHIIMI t MI) ' BACHELORS ' DEBATING SOCIETY tS. JAA THIRD ROW: Sluitt. White. Xt-wlund. Paulson, Obenhaus. Loiigwiirth. SECOND ROW: Pickus, Kipi ing. Hill, Lucas, Winslow, Edwards, Malone. FIRST ROW: Fowler, Brunken, .Stewart, Daasch, Madill, Schneider. President rice-President Secretary-Treasurer CJiaplain Scrgeanl-al-Arms OFFICERS Fall Louie Pickus G. C. Kipping Ch. rles C. Shutt John ' Gilsox P. tL Fowler Spring Louie Pickus Paul Fowler H. W. Newlund Philip E. Field w. h. loncworth REPRESENTATIVE TO PUBLIC SPEAKING COUNCIL Cl.vrence S. Hill R. C, Benson- Everett W. Blaisdai O. H. Brukken- Harry L. Daasch Harvey E. Daniels S. G. Denver Paul M. Fowler Stuart Gastren ' JOHX GiLSOX Edward D. Gordev Leo a. Hepola Clarexce S. Hill F. M. Hexdersox MEMBERS B. G. Kemper G. C. KippiNc Russell I. Klopp Lerov R. Kxapp w. h. loxcworth Homer Luc. s Carl C. Mai.oxe Staxley M. Madill De.xter Obexhaus H. V. Newlaxd Frank O. Paulsox Louie Pickus burch schxeider Charles C. Shutt Robert Spearixg Ralph T. Stewart Fred B. Trenk John H. Turner John L. White Richard Wolff Harold B. Womacks W. A. Whitfield Ted L. Winslow Philip E. Field Ford Edwards Horace Brueckert Ewald B. Peterson • ll)« tllllll«IUIIimM«llll«l)H«(IIIIIIHIIHIMItllll IHI«l(MI«il HIIHtililMMI ltlMHIIIIIIIIHMMMIHIH) HIII. CRESCENT LITERARY SOCIETY t«J. .V5nf THIRD ROW: S. H. Reck. Simons, P. M. Rerk, Cliimiiitt. Stephens, Dubbert, Goss, Mnzenec. SECOND ROW: MeKee. Peterson, Bernitii Seott. Sadie Perley, Lillian Stoutenburg, Leoi-ra Porter. Parkin, Sprole. FIRST ROW: Jlighell, Reints, Womeldorff. Rntli Knifilils. . nzulovie. .Tessie Rannells. Vernon. Eckles. Founded in 1870 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Chaplain Critic OFFICERS Fall E. E. Dubbert L. B. Eckles K. THRVN Lepley J. F. Goss WlLLL-VM MAZEN ' EC R. V. Peterson F. M. Reck Spring L. B. Eckles Laura Bublitz Jessie Rannels W. S. C1.AMPITT R. L. MiniiELL E. H. Vernon R. Peterson REPRESENTATIVES TO PiBI.IC SPEAKING COUNCIL F. M. Reck J. F. Goss MEMBERS Vencesi.ar Akzui.ovic Frank M. Reck R. L. Michell W. S. Clampitt Samuel H. Reck Sadie Perlev J. F. DiEin. William J. Reints Leorxa Porter E. E. Dubbert Roma Sater R. V. Peterson L. B. Eckles Bernita Scott Louise Stephenson J. F. Goss Ruth Shaw G. S. Stockdale Ruth Knights C. L. Simmons Lillian Stoutenburc Harry Larson H. C. Simons Helen Termain Kathryn Lepley M. W. Sprole E. H. Vernon C. B. McGRATir C. Y. Stephens J. R. Wilson Everett McKee William Mazanec ' . L. Womeldorff 362 DELPHIAN LITERARY SOCIETY THIRD ROW: Lucas, Halstead, Link. Featherlv, Harroun, Hussong. Moore. SECOND ROW: Bertha Wolf, Ella Wax, Beulah McClurg, Pauline Trindle, Mrs. H. I. Featherl.v, Heleane Deaiie. FIRST ROW: Glen Durrell. Florence Woods. Bartlett, Sarah Link, Thompson, Florence Henderson, D. D. Durrell. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Attorney Chaplain Critic OFFICERS Fall Donald D. Durrell Florence Woods Florence Henderson John T. Link Robert Lucas Lewis Williams Sara Link Spring Helene Dean Donald D. Durrell Florence Henderson John T. Link Sara Link George Thompson Henry I. Featherly REPRESENTATIVE TO PUBLIC SPEAKING COUNCIL Robert Lucas Sara Link Robert Luc. s F. T. Moor Lewis Williams Florence Henderson Florence Woods J. T. Link Frances Harroun Helene Dean MEMBERS Henry I. Fe.vtherly Mrs. H. I. Fe. therly Ro.MAVNE Halstead Laura Goodale IJeorce Thompson Donald D. Durrell Glenn Durrell Ralph A. Bartlett Marion Curless Louise Henn Ruby Wolk M. A. Norton Oliver Douglas Pauline Trindle Beulah McClurc Doris Prine Ralph IIussonc • IIHtlll  tl IMt ll IH tlWM«IMI  IMItl l WI llllllll lllllltllHII l HIHIIIHtHMH mi4HHlHinirimt 363 c.cr-g-g ' iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii iiiiMt MiiHn in nm imiiiiiiniiinininiiiiiiimi iiiinnin«imt nnimminiini«iiiiiin a« PHILOAIATHEAN LITERARY SOCIETY THIRD ROW: Rosenberger. Millies. Camp, Whirrett. Holroytl SECOND ROW: Brown, Yohe. Stevens, Heeren, Northev. FIRST ROW: Delahooke. Duncan, Culbertson, Williams, H. E. Small. OFFICERS Dan Culbertson ' President H. H. Brown . rice-President Paul Williams Secretary-Treasurer G. W. Small . Corresponding Secretary Tracey E. Delahooke Society Attorney J. K. Milnes Chaplain Charles Vohe Critic H. B. Holrovd Historian M. A. Wettach Chorister G. R. Northey Usher N. D. Allison Sergeanl-at-Artns Earl Schultz . . . Representative to Public Speaking Council H. K. Brown Lee Camp Dan Culbertson T. E. Delahooke Darrell Hill N. D. Allison H. B. Holroyd J. W. Johnson MEMBERS A. F. McAllister J. K. MiLXES Sholan Sabbath J. A. Trumbower GcY Stevens Bernard Scholten H. E. Small G. W. Small Earl Schultz M. A. Wettach Paul Williams K. M. Whirrett Charles Vohe G. R. Northey E. I. Rosenberger «-e ' ' g C«  C ' .l IMIIHI tMMII IIHIMtllllMIIII IIIIMIIHmimHmHHHHIMIIMIIHHIIHIIIimilllllltlmiHIHimillllllll 364 i)IIIMIIIIIMIIIilll)llltllMIHIM)lltltllMIIIII«llllllltllll IIIIIIIIIMI lliHlltlllHlilllll(« IIHIMI«)MMIIIIIIMIII QUILL LITERARY SOCIETY THIRD ROW: Clara Gangstead, Jennie Haggard. Thelma Pearson, Cloe Jenison, Ruth Hitzhusen. SECOND ROW: Yerena Mevers, Pearl Robbins, Emma Thornwall, Ruth Grimes, Daisy Mcllrath, Florence Paul. FIRST ROW: Margaret Thompson, Florence Eckels, Elsie Ginger, Jessie Bourland, Agnes Crain, Florence Scott, Glad.vs Pidgeon. OFFICERS Jessie BouRL. b President Elsie Ginger rice-President Ethel Conk Secretary Florence Paul Treasurer Ellan Dahl Chaplain LuLA SOPPELAND Critic Acnes Craix . . • Representative to Public Speaking Council Blanche Bektlev Jessie Bourland Ethel M. Conn Ellen Dahl Florence Eckles L. URA Flynn L.AURA F.XBER Clara Cangstead Elsie Ginger Ruth Grimes PERSONNEL Marie H.artman Jennie H.acgard Ruth Hitzhusen Cleo Jennison Marie Johnson Pearl Ludy ' erena Meyer ' era Mintle Thelma Pearson Gladys Pidgeon Opal Pettit Florence Paul Helen Raymond Pearl Robbins Florence Scott Florence Schwark Laura Taggart Emma Thornwall Charlotte Turner Margaret Thompson Daisy McIlrath MIIII|IIHHIHIIIIlMIMII lfff«tMIIIS|tl( WELCH LITERARY SOCIETY THIRD ROW: Tavlor, Fonda. Morling. SECOND ROW: Murphv, Hill. Watkins. Isaacson. FIRST ROW: Westcott, Jacobson. Slaninger. ■J. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Fall A. E. Murphy Fr.ank Beyschloc J. F. Sl. xincer Wm. H. Fonda Spiiiiij George V. Westcott r. l. w.atkins A. E. MlRPHY Wm. H. Fond.a MEMBERS m. K. W. Dennison L. E. Dills Wm. H. Fond.a N. A. Hill M. R. Is. . csoN D. J. Jacobson A. E. Murphy R. A. Norton G. W. Westcott E. S. Morling F. W. SCHULTZ J. F. Slaninger D. L. Taylor c;. M. Trout J- R. rXDERWOOD W. I.. U ' ALSH R. L. W.XTKIXS 366 iiiirritniiniirmiTTnTmrmTTfi All- College, Divisional and Departmental Organizations B a 3 367 •-|llllltlMIHI IMIII HII)ll(IIIIHIIM(llllllltMMIIIIIIIIIIII«lllllllllllilMlill)IIHtllHHI tlHIMIMniMIIIIHMIIIIII CARDINAL GUILD THIRD ROW: Merriman, Pohlmaii, Rolicrls. French, Murvin, Streeter. Page Frills. SECOND ROW: Goodwin, Schide, Underwood, Whilaker, Cation, Myrlle Knutson, Olsen, Shepard, Greene. F1R.ST ROW: Hillman, Everett, Sowers, Dean J. F. Foster, Gaylord, Bierbaum, Soutligate. President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer STUDENT LEGISLATIVE KOPV OFFICERS Fall Fred Shepard Kenneth Marvin F. M. Reck Spring C. P. Streeter H. F. Gavlord Mortimer Goodwin REPRESENTATIVES Fred Shepard Senior Class Myrtle Knutson, Florence ( oddard ..... Junior ( lass H. J. Schmidt, Nell Taylor • . Sop wmon- Class Frederick Crawtord, R. T. Soi imcaie . . . Fns unan Class Dean J. F. Foster Dran of Men G. L. Shaffer i on-Cnllrt iali- K. R. Marvin Diiision of .le riiulturr H. F. Gaylord Division of Entjinrrrinij F. E. Sowers Division of In,iustrial Scirnce R. W. Merriman Division of l ' il,rinary Mrdieinc S. G. P. CE Military F. M. Reck hma .l jrimlliirisl C. C. Schide loiia Eni innr J. W. Johnson lo wa Slalr Sludi-nr V. O. French Manm rr lozia Slalr Concert Band R. A. Olsen Men ' s Glee Club E. A. Fritts Piihlie Speakintj Council C. M. Everett Public Spenkin Council J. R. Underwood Public Speatint Council C. VV. McElyea Y. M. C. A. Ira Vocng Football Captain C. G. PoHi.MAN Track Captain E. O. Bierral m Cross Country Captain R. 11. Greene liaskelball Captain II. H. BowEN U ' resllinii Captain Roi.MN W ' lilTAKER Iluscball Captain iiiiiiiimiii iiiiiiiiHiiiiiintinHHiiimmimniHiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmMiiimMMmiMiiHiMmmmnimiiiM! WOMEN ' S GUILD THIRD ROW: Marie Hartman, Ghidx. ' , W ilsc.ii. ilvrtle Beiii. Jeannetfe Beyer, Helen Vinson, Marion Miller. SECOND ROW: Muriel Orr, Lucy Taggart, Anne Hopkins. Ruth Ingham, Mary Heald, Helen Oldham, Claire Youngclass, Ardath Martin. FIRST ROW: Mable .lohnson, Sara Manhardt. Clara .lordan, Mary Montillon. Yerna Hunter, Helen Keeler, Juliette Mcintosh, Frances Holmes. OFFICERS Versa Hunter . • . Prisident Neta Comstock Vice-President Helen- Oldha.m Secretary Ardeth Martin Treasurer REPRESENTATIVES Claire Youngclass Point Supervisor Helen Beels Home Economics C.luh CjLadys Watson ■ . ■ . Y. It ' . C- A. Marie Hartman . Alpha Chi Beta Jean ' nette Beyer -llfha Gamma Delta Mary Heald Chi Omei a Anne Hopkins Delta Delta Delta Sara Manhardt Gamma Phi Beta Mary Montillon Kappa Delta Ruth Ingham Omeija Pi Clara Jordan Pi Beta Phi Muriel Orr Sic ma Kappa Verena Meyer Margaret Hall Mable Johnson East Hall Myrtle Bein ■ . . . West Hall Marion Miller ..-...- South Ilall Helen Keeler ■ Oak Lodge Juliette McIntosh Elm Lodge iiiiiiiiiiimiiinn- AG COUNCIL THIRD ROW: Kuehl. Reck, Scholten. Trout. Dilworth, Zink. Tillotson. SECOND ROW: (iiuidwiii. Cation. Baitrug. Lillian Black. Helen Bovd. Martin Gilson FIR.ST ROW: Culver, reliliug. Brown. I.ois Pammell. Textrum. Race. Maltas. i|m (3 OFFICERS R. L. Culver President A. C. Kuehl rice-Presidenl K. J. M. LTAS Seiretary E. W. W.MKIKS Treasurer MEMBERS F. J. Zink. John Cilson ..... .h rieullural Engineerimj James Brown, K. J. Maltas Bloeh and Bridle Malcolm Trout, R. A. Sullivan Dairy Club C. W. Martin, E. V. Watkins Forestry Cluh M. D. Textrum, Frank Race l-arm Crops Helen Bovd, Lillian Black . Home heonomies and .hjrieullure Bernard Scholten, Theodore Iehling . . . Rural l-.ionomies Llovd Dilworth, Frank M. Reck Press Cluh A. C. KuEMLE, Lois Pammei I ' islonian Cluh B. F. Tillotson. C. M. BARiKin . . I ' oeational Kducation Cluh Mortimer CJoodwin loiia .h rieullurisl 370 : ar«iif:nT ;mTfTfrnTnnTTTrTn!mmrTmnniiiilH!i!!rTTr -TB-D-I ' ■B ENGINEERING COUNCIL ' 5 g t t THIRD ROW: Wilson, Curvough, Ga.vlord. Lane, Wright. SECOND ROW: Weatherill, Schide, Worley, Powers, Conrad. FIRST ROW: Capellen. King, Drewelow, Everett. Boyd. Purpose: The Engineering Council is the recognized governing body of the Associ- ation of Collegiate Engineers. Its purpose is to promote national unity and brother- hood among engineering students through the exchange of ideas and customs. t OFFICERS O. H. We. therili President Herbert King rice-President E. J. Drewelow Secretary W. L. Lane Treasurer H. F. C VLORD Cardinal Guild Representative F. D. Paine Faculty Re presentati ' C Richard Beckman Publicity Manager Marc Buetell Editor Iowa Engineer C. C. Schide Business Manager loiva Engineer MEMBERS J. H. O ' Dav, Senior; L. E. WoRLEV, Junior .... Electrical C. H. Wilson, Senior; G. C. Lichtv, Junior Civil H. M. CORROUGH, Senior; E. W. Kowalke, Junior . . Cliemital E. M. CapelleNj Senior; R. T. Nichols, Junior . . Irchilectural M. H. Hansen, Senior; E. J. Conrad, Junior . . . Mechanical B. F. W. CNER, Senior; R. C. BOVD, Junior Ceramic S. W. McBiRNEV, Senior; C. H. Everett, Junior . Agricultural R. L. Wright, Senior; J. H. Rlst, Junior Mining G. L. Shaffar Trades and Industries tMlllli  ltlttllMIMMMIHHtHllllllllttlllllllMttimiHI MllHHHIIimnmaHinilltlM lllnM .IHHillMiHIHHtlllllMMMIIIIIHIMMHIIIMHIIIMIMIIIMIKIIIIMIIIIItHIIMIIIIHMHIHIIIMMIIMtlltllMMIIIItMII-S PUBLIC SPEAKING COUNCIL SECOND ROW: Pickus, Fritts. Agnes Grain. Goss, Peterson. FIRST ROW: Underwood, Everett, Streeter, .Johnson, Cody. The object of the Pubh ' c Speaking Council shall be to promote and manage all dramatics, forensics, and other public speaking events at Iowa State College. OFFICERS J. R. Underwood President C. S. Hill . Vice-President AcKES Grain Secretary Louie Pickus Treasurer C. H. Everett Ref ' rescnlative to Cardinal Guild MEMBERS Fletcher Goss • . . Creseeni Literary Society C. S- Hill . Bachelor Literary Society W. R. Lucas • Delphian Literary Society C. H. Everett Debate Louie Pickus Debate W. O. Duncan Philoinathean Literary Society E. A. FRirrs Senior Class S. C. Cody Junior Class R. V. Peterson . . Sophomore Class L. F. Kahle alioiial Collegiate Players Agnes Grain Quill Literary Society J. R. Uxberiiill ll ' elih Literary Society •C-IIMIIIItlUlllllltlMllllllllililtll ll«IIMHIIMIIMIIMIIIII«IIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIItllltMlltlllll|lllt«lllllllltlllllllllll-3-9 ' .3- -: 372 •MIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIMIIM«lll IIIIHIIIIIIIIIII l«llllllllll l)IIIIIMMII MIMIIIMniMIIII«ll «lltHtllllllllllllllllim-9 9y3-9-9 9-9-W VEISHEA K. R. Marviv, General Manager C. C. ScHiDEj Treasurer OFFICERS K. R. Marvin General Manai er C. C. ScHiDE Treasurer H. E. Pride Secretary F. M. Reck Publicity Manager O. H. Weatherill Manager Open House E. A- Fritts Manager Moi-ing Up Day James Browx Manager Parade H. L. Chase A ' ig it S iow G. P. Devoe . . Carnival C W. Hillman- . Military R. ' . Merrimax • Tetcrinary Rcprcscniative •.lll«IIHItlMWHtimiltMmMIHHIIIIHIIIItHtlltmiHI   WHmillHMHIH IHI«H lllim  Hlim IHIIItiMltl«W nirniiimmiTrnTTiTimr . 1 f ' h ' i d ' : fi AGRONOMICS CLUB ? 1 :J ■iS 3 a 3 p 3 ' 3 j lL -; ■ ; i 3 t w W % 1 1 ' S3 a 1 1 f J Jr S 9 i %ir 4 T rwAt S 1 1 H B --- K F ' l li H a lP ' H :5 i; 3 r B x BjIAr DHp l t ll r ' l L. 1 t: 1 9 a 1 F KjErM iy 3 p . mfflgii ... 3 E J a :! THIRD ROW: Viola Meints. Mildred Rogers. Opal Pellit, Mildred Luelk-n, I ' uuliiu- Bro w n . 3 .;-! SECOND ROW: Ruth Knights, Alma Bovre, Viola Bell. Blauehe Bentley. a Boyd. 3 1 ; t FIRST ROW: Ann Haberly, Laura Buhlitz, Prof. F. B. Paddock, Lucile Haberly, Hele 3 j I 3 3 3 = z ! E Purpose: To foster the interests in home economics and agricultural wo rk, and to -i 1 ■ further its development. It was founded at Iowa State College in 1917. 3; ' p 3 ' 5i ' a i ' a OFFICERS 3 ' E 3] a Fall Spring 3( E President Edna Walker Laura Bubmtz 3I. g Vice-President Evelyn Black ' ioi.. Meints 1 1 p Secretary and Treasurer Laura Bublitz Pauline Browi 1 : 1 REPRESENTATIVES TO . ' G COrNCIL H ' . i Edna Walker Helen Boyd Alma Bovce % Lillian Black Laura Bublitz Pauline Browi 3 g 3 1 5 : ' 1 t: t ' ' n 1 1 r HklllllllUI lllll UIH«liMtMIHHIIIIIIIIUIItllfllMIIIIIIM«IIIIHIIMII ltMiailUlallHIII«l lll)l(MII lllull 374 :irrii!irnii; ■!iiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiii;!!;:- AGRONOMY CLUB is Purpose: To promote good fellowship among the students enrolled in farm crops and soils ; to bring the students and faculty of the department into closer touch with one another; to develop helpful cooperation with other departments in the agricultural division ; to secure broader technical knowledge of agriculture and helpful training for service to society. OFFICERS H. K. Wiisov Pres ' uiint J. L. Fowler Vice-President R. R. Jefferson Secretary Verne Adamsov Treasurer Frank Race Senior Representative to Ag Council M. D. Textrum .... Junior Re iresentative to Ag Council m lllMll!!! lllltllllll l«lllllll«llllllimiH(UIHItlllllllll-9 a .9-9-9 3- t l • ' IUMMfMHi HHHIIIIIIM()IHIMIHMIIMIIIIIIHIIMI(l ll MMIMHIItlMMMIIIHI MttllllllMIIIII HIIIMIHIIimil HOME ECONOMICS CLUB Purpose: To bring home economics students together in unity of purpose; to discuss subjects of common inter- est ; and to keep in touch with the new developments in home economics and to gain a more extensive knowledge of home economics problems. Personnel : All two-year and all four-year home eco- nomics students may become active members. All home economics faculty members are honorary members. OFFICERS Helen- Beels President Esther Pond lice-President Margaret McCarthy Secretary Mary Reed Treasurer Blanche Ikcersoll Faailiy .-Idvisor •IIIIHIIIIIt IIIIIIUIMIIMItlll«l)IIIIIIH lllll«llll llll«ll lll IUtlltlllllll lllll«MMIIII«IIM ll MI «IMIIIinilf WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC COUNCIL SECOND ROW: Yeiena Meyers. Helen Vinson. Besse Chmelik. Dorothy Olsen. FIRST ROW: BarbaiM Weiitch. Miugaret Sloss, Helen Herr, Laura Bublitz. Purpose: The purpose of the organization shall he to promote athletics for women and encourage cooperation between women ' s athletics and the physical education de- partment. Organized, 1906. PERSONNEL Winifred R. Tildex President Ruth Springer Hazel M. Harwood Margaret Sloss President tV. A. A. Elner Martin Vice-President W . A. A. Barbara Wentch Secretary II ' - A. A- Helen Vinson .... Representati ' ve ll ' oman ' s A Fraternity Verena Meyer Baseball Dorothy Olsen Basketball Besse Chmelik Track Dorothy Cooke S-wimming Alma Burkhart Dancing Barbara Wentch Gymnasium Helen Herr Tennis Laura Bublitz Hockey ■.IIIHIIH ItllMIIIIIMIKIMIItKHIIIIIIIMIIIMIHIIIIHIfHIIMHMIIMHIIMIIIIMMHMIIIIIIIUNmnillHHIHHHI; a 3 P I ,1 THE EDUCATION OF .ALONZO APPLEGATE Courtesy J, .V. Darlimj M ' Dear Ma and Pa: Ihis is a reat school, though some of the protessors are a little veak in their subjects. I have had to take up football, as I found tud ing so inuch was hurting my eyes, and to avoid the expense of glasses, our physical director and coach. Dr. Rafferty, advised me to go out and try for the team. Football is a great game and not a bit rough. Of course, I don ' t play hard; just enough to keep myself in good condition for studying. I am sending you my expense account up to date. I think I must have lost some money out of my pockets, as I cannot account for all you sent me. Vou will notice also that I bought a sweater. I did this to save on my laundry hill. You see, a sweater never has to be washed, and I don ' t have to wear any shirts or collars with it- I don ' t believe I will be able to get home for Thanksgiving. Must close and get to studying now. Your affectionate son, Alonzo. p. S. Please send me some monev. i WONDER HOW IT COMES THAT ALOt O -HAS | SPEMT SysopoR POSTAGE STAMPS ALREADY WMEAi ' HEsl SO eusy s-ioDYiNc, He cant v jrite home but onceJI IN TWO w teKS-AriD HE ' SCOTDOWN f __ x ' ' l SUNDAY SCHOOL CONTW6UTI0N AND j HE ' i ONLY DEE-NAWAT J S NDMb r— -4 |li| ' |p! t Alonzo, Sliver Dix, and Monk McMaslers collaborating, make out their expense accounts. 378 . imrmrmTiinni liiimnniTin . STUDENT BRANCH OF AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY MEMBERS IN FACULTY D. A. MouLTO - p. E. Cox OFFICERS B. F. Wagner President R. C. Boyd Secretary B. V. Wii.sox Treasurer K. M. Smith Cliairman Program Committee MEMBERS R. C. Boyd P. K. Miller Horace Brueehert J. B. Ives Lowell Carver K. M. Smith J. D. Pearso-v G. a. Speer Frank Prevratil B. F. Wagner A. G. Johnson B. W. Wilson R. C. Meeker E. H. Whitney 379 AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS The student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers as estab- lished at Iowa State College in 1920. MEMBERS IN FACULTY F. A. Fish Adolph Shane E. B. Kurtz L. B. Spinney I.. F. Wood OFFICERS AsTHOsv Paosf. PresiJtnt R. E. Nichols rin-Prrsi drnt R. E. Paxton Si-oelary Stuart Pace Trrasmer iii«HiN«H i« iimim H MM««iM timM mt iim mHwnMHmnniMM  miiMM 380 STUDENT BRANCH AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS MEMBER IN FACILTY A. K. Friedrich OFFICERS R. L. Wricht Presidenl J. H. Rust rice-Prfsident H. P. Nicholson Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS C. G. Grim V. L. Nave Charles Hill H. P. Nicholson R. I. HoBouGH Ezra Rice W. A. Jennings J- H. Rust E. F. KoERNER H. E. Robinson X. M. Larson C D. Waller M. C. LOWENBERC R. L. U ' HITE R. L. Wright AMERICAN SOCIETY AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS •I OFFICERS Fall Spring President J. ' . LONGENECKER John G. Gilsov Vice-President Stanley V. McBirney Harold T. Boyle Secretary-Treasurer J. Fletcher Goss COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES Robert A. Nortom Enrjinriring Agricultural Stanley W. McBirxey Senior John- G. Gilsom Chari.es H. Everett Junior Franklin- J. Zink .iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiii iiiiiiiiii iiH«iitHiiiiit«iMHiii«iM iiii«iiiiiiiiii« t iiiiiimii4iiimMninitMi«iiimimmmn- IOWA STATE STUDENT CHAPTER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS The Civil Engineering Society was organized in 1909. In 1920 this society affiliated with the American Society of Civil Engineers as a student chapter. HONORARY MEMBERS T. R. Agg Frank Kerekes R. A- Cauchey J. W. Herves J. S. DODDS C. S. Nichols A. H. Fuller R. A. Mover J. H. Griffith L. T. Murphy O. H. Fisher R. V. Newcomb J. N. Cook W. R. Stecenga H. S. Carter L. V. Mahone O. T. Upp OFFICERS C. R. Durland President W. N. Handy lice-President C. L. Day Secretary : H. R. Olson Treasurer illL ■ :i!inii!iimi:t!;;!i!i;ii![. ' :ii!ii!; 383 4iiiiiiii iMiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiinminimmimiiuiiiiiii«niiiiiiiiminimiimMH  MM MtHiMnmniiiiiiiniin AMES STl ' DENT BRANCH AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS M. P. Clechorn J. G. Hummel MEMBERS IN FACILTV R. A. NoRM.w OFFICERS D. J. Conrad Prrsidcnt H. E. Field I ' io-PrisiJnil BowEx Campbell Sitrrlary G. D. Moore Tnasurrr 38+ |V CfC-C ' iC-e«« ' e«Ui« ll«IHIIIIHillll Mtl« MIMH «IIIN IIMI IIUH IHH ll«H«IHIIHIIMIIIIIIIIHIIMHt Mlt«lll li IHm MMIHUr 9 9 9 a! 9  9 ir||l I : J ! ! i ; : AMES HERDSMEN ' S CLUB i i i i i ; : I : H| l v VV jHiV I B i n M I K lo ' ' ■ 1 r l V PSn E STAlk . 1 1 1 1 iuSHiP s : OFFICERS III ; W. p. Lesle President ' - L. W. Anderson fice-President 1 5 William Hoppe Secretary : Glenn Foggy Treasurer DIRECTORS 1 1 ' . F. LaGraxce R. S. Bottorff C. L. Richardson : 1 The Ames Herdsmen ' s club was organized in 1917 by men enrolled in six months i : course for herdsmen. z MEMBERS : Laurence Anderson ' C. J. Happel N. W. Phillips : S Paul Baersch William Hobbs J. B. Pierson : 1 G. E. Baumcarten William Hoppe R. V. Perkins : Alex Begg A. K. Jones Carl Peterson : 1 A. P. Breitback L. D. Jones O. J. Rantzow : 1 J. N. Brown Hans Larson C. L. Richardson : a George Carr O. D. Lenty G. H. Ritter : : W. E. Catlin L. L. Leonard O. W. Rothlisbercer : £ L. L. Cookman Leo Link C. F. Ruth : : Walter Croskey (!. V. Loonan Geoffrey Scarth : : T. R. Cutter W. P. Lesle Frank Stacy : = Floyd G. Davis E. E. Lloyd J. W. Schmidt : 1 C. M. Deem Martin Luinstra P. R. Schmidt : : Harry Dyar R. K. Mather R. E. Schuerman : : H. C. Dix R. G. Mathew Donald Steiert : = S. M. Edson Arnold Meisgeier Thalmer Stoneberc : I L. G. Emerson E. L. Meyer J. G. Toelke : S H. C. Fausch J. J. Mork E. M. Victor  Glenn Foggy F. G. McCarty J. S. Walter E 1 S. L. Gill J. H. McCornack E. C. Watkins L. G. Grattan O. C Neville H. C. Wilcox r Paul Grzenia Otto Nielsen L. H. Willhoite : 3 Herald Grovert R. L. Payne Laurence Wolff : U U T. E. Hotchkiss Clayton Young ; i ; ! i ■ 7l-jC-C-C-C-«. C C IIMI)IIHIIIIIIIIII ltl(IIMI«l«lltltllllll(HIIIIIHIIIH(lll fllllllllHil lll IIIIHI )lltltllllltllllllHIIIIIIMtni«l)IH 3 S-A-9-9-3- .-t%lj| 385 BLOCK AND BRIDLE CLUB Founded in 1919 by Stock Judging Teams of Iowa State College, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, at Chicago, Illinois Established at Iowa State College in 1919 Active Chapters, 8 Purpose: To promote higher scholarship among students of animal husbandry, to promote more interest in intercollegiate judging contests, and to bring about a closer relationship among me n pursuing different phases of animal husbandry. MEMBERS IN FACILTV H. H. KiLDEE M. D. Helser p. S. Shearer OFFICERS S. G. Denner Pri-sidtiil P. R. BoLiNCER I ' ice-President K. E. Wright Secretary C. H. Palm Treasurer J. H. Ti ' RXER Marshal HnnMMMIII«IIIIIIIHIHIIIHIIHI IIIHI ll«ltMIII)ll  IIIIIIHIItllll. 386 CATHOLIC STUDENTS ASSOCIATION •IIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMI)llltllM(IHIIItlllMlltlilllllltllllllllllll llllllllllltllMII H« HUII«nil «IIHIIMIMI hi AMES CHINESE STUDENTS CLUB THIRD ROW: Pan. Ho, Tsui. Chang. Liu. SECOND ROW: Yu. Hsiu. Chen. Mong. F1R.ST ROW: I.i. Cheng. Lin, Lo. Chao. Organized at Iowa State College in 1919 Purpose : To promote the common intere.st of Chinese students at Iowa State College; to cultivate an international friendship; and to cooperate with the Chinese Students Alliance of the United States. HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. L. H. P.mumel Rev. R. L. Blrrocchs Mrs- L. H. P. mmel Mrs. R. L. Burrolchs OFFICERS C. C. Ch.wc Pnsiiinir H. D. HsRi I ' ice-Prfsident WlLLi.Mn T. 11. Ho Secretary S. C. Cheng Treasurer L. F. CH. ' io liusiness Manaijer C. J. Li Puhlieily Manai er H. Liu Social Manager MEMBERS C. C. Chavc WlI-LIAM T. H. Ho S. C. Cheng H. D. Hsiu C. J. Li H. Liu C. C. Chen K. S. Lo K. C. MONG C. V. Pan P. H. Uy Frank Liu L. F. Chad T. C. Tsui •)llllltt «IIIIHII IIHimilHIIHHMIIII«HI tHIHIIIIIHHmiHIIHtimtlllimillllllllllllllltllllmimHllillHmil 3-:SCC- 388 CORDA FRATERS ASSOCIATION OF COSMOPOLITAN CLUBS FOURTH ROW: Li, Chang, Allen. Phew, Schneider, Eikens, Chen, Tsui. F. Liu, Bonzo. THIRD ROW: Hsui, Grimes, Mable Russell, Florence Catlin, Lelah Bisplinghoff, Chang, Ho, Schapiro, C. C. Chen. SECOND ROW: Mong, Pan, Medora Grandprcv, Laura Taggart, Verena Mvers, tiladvs Wilkie, Ruth McCall, Zeman. FIRST ROW: Dr. DeVries, Serrano, Rev. Ames, Gowda. Mrs. W. F. Cramer, Liu, Eda Lord Murph.v, W. F. Cramer. Edith John. Founded at Iowa State College in 1908 Purpose: To promote a feeling of international friendship among the students en- rolled at Iowa State College. OFFICERS Ho Liu President Mable Russell Vice-President T. S. Serrano Secretary Dr. E. S. Allex Treasurer Pr. Louis DeVries Advisor to Foreign Students BOARD OF DIRECTORS Ed. Lord Murpiiv Chairman Verexa Myers D. J. Retief R. N. ' ic.AR Gowda Michael Grimes IMIim«MIIHMIIMIIIMIIIH«IIIU l aMI|HI|lllllltlllHII«IIIIIIIMMIMHIIMIIMIMI lll llllf ' . -im-c THE CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY MEMBERS IN FACl ' LTV Dr. O. R. Sweeney G. W. Blrke H. V. Wright L. C Heckert D- V. Moses C. H. Geister Edwin Kurtz OFFICERS E. J. Orewelow PrrsiJi-nt L. E. Johnson I ' icc-Pri ' sidfnt K. L. Lee Sicrrlary G. L. Beck Treasurer tlllHlltlllltltlllHlllllinilllllMIIII-3 a S- -3-3 390 ■(MIMIIMIIIIIIIIIItllllinilHIKMIIIIIKIIIIIIItdtllllll tMiimumumnMiMi whhiimiih- i XFS H-i i THE CROCKET SOCIETY An Organization of Students and Faculty of the Architectural Engineering Department MEMBERS IN FACULTY R. M. Bailie A. W. Kimball Mrs. C. H. Cowcill H. G. Spragle C. H. Cowgill George White OFFICERS AbRiAN L. Stanley President V. B. Allen Vice-President C. C. Nelson- Secretary R. T. Nichols Treasurer -a-g-H :ri;iiii!!i!iii!iiiii!iiiiiimi! H!iii!!ii!!i;: 391 • IIIH )H HII MIIIIIMIillMllltllMIIHIiniMIIIIUHIIIMUIIIIIHIIIIHHIM«IIIIIHIIIHWIIIM MU«IMIHII«llnlir CURTISS CLUB Organized at Iowa State College in 1912 Membership Limited to Those Students Enrolled in T vo- ' ear Course in Agriculture OFFICERS C. NoRMAK Brown Prrs ' uUnt Jewell Pallsov licc-Prisidinl Walter Steddon- Secretary-Tnasunr C. N. Brown- Horatio Brotherton ' Glenn Bremer Harrv Bickelhaupt Andrew C Anderson W. H. Calvert O. B. Tolke Walter Steddon Alvin Arp Kenneth Parkmill Kenneth Green George West Milton Wertz Clarence Larson MEMBERS Stith Travis Clarence Tamm Arnold Sunderman Andrew Peterson Jewell Paulson Robert Davis H. E. Pace Oscar Olson John DeLock Richard Davis Vern Lancmaid g. v. loonan I.. B. Kline H. H. Kramer Berhardt Kemper Oliver Kemper (Jerhard Johnson Harrold Hianline Ernest Hultquist R. C. Hawkinson C. L. Helm Frank Fister Philip Field Ervin Dickson Herman Doscher Herman Christianson William Nair •IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMtllllllMlltlltllltllllMKIIIIIIIIIIIiaillltllllHIIIIIItllllllllllllllllMtllltltHHIKIMIIIiMllltMUf ■n- T r-a■■g■a- r- • lllllltlHMIIt«l IIIIIIHIIItHIHHtimMIIIHIItMtllltllll IIHIIMIIIIIIIIHMHMUI lll IMIIIIIIMHIIHIHMHimill DAIRY CLUB Purpose: The purpose of the Dairy club is three-fold: first, to promote good fellowship among the dairy students ; secondly, to foster a better feeling among students and faculty; and third, to further the interests of dairying. OFFICERS G. Malcolm Trout President D. J. Retiek Vice-President C. H. Cooper Secretary-Treasurer AG COINCIL REPRESENTATIVES G. Malcolm Trolt Senior Ralph H. Sullivan Junior • IIHtltllllllllll«l tMIIII IIHIMI IHIIIt IIIIIHIIMItlllltllllllMHtllllll IMIiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII- DIXIE CLUB THIRD ROW: Dr. C. D. Rice. MnttoN. G. A. Hale. Eugene H.nle, Winslow. SECOXn ROW: Dukes. Lee. Stephens. Murph.v. F(ire. Smith, Briiwn. FIRST ROW: Hallum. Pace. Vernon, Randall, M.vrick, Anderson. Founded at Iowa State College in 1919 Composed of Students and Faculty from Southern States President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Alabama O. N. Massingale Joe Myrick 11. t;. Nixon G. V. Snedecor Mrs. G. V. Snedecor D. G. Sturkie W. L. Walsh Arkansas W. A. Craft George Hale Eugene B. Hale G. O. Randall Ira Fore H. n. Peters Doris McFee Florida Electa Gibson OFFICERS Fall A. B. Hallum Rodney Cecil C Y. Stephens HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Moore MEMBERS Georgia B. L. . ' nderson A. B. Hallum A. V. Hallum B. J. Smith C. Y. Stephens E. J. Murphy Kentucky Rov McCracken James Pace C. O. Rice Jane V. Rice Mississippi Mrs. E. W. Dunham E. W. Dunham Sara Hoke Ruth Canner Hoke Missouri Rodney Cecil Ada Mae Whiteside Spring Rodney Cecil James Pace Jane V. Rice North Carolina S. B. Lee J. H. Hilton West I ' irffinia J. E. Summers South Carolina W. A. Carver Oklahoma Eva Lewers Tennessee E. M. Brown F. G. ViCKERS John Winslow Texas M. J. Mellincer t ' iriiinia E. H. Vernon C. R. Wright 394 pj a ll!«IIIMIUIMHtllltltlllllHIHII «IIIMnitlll IIIIIHIHMUIMUIIIII«Hlllltt)llllll« IHIIIIIMIIHMHMIIIIMIMHIH--9 S 9-3fa-i FORESTRY CLUB Purpose : To promote interest in professional forestry and to aid in social develop- ment of its members. MEMBERS IN FACULTY G. B. MacDonald D. S. Jeffers President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer OFFICERS Fall E. W. Watkins Dewey Berkham C. W. Norton H. J- Andrews Perkins Coville Spring F. B. Trenk C. W. Martin R. M. Jackson 395 • llltllKIIIIIIIMtimillMIIIIMHIIHIIKIIKIIHI lllllltllll«IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII«ll ltlll«MMIHHMIHI«MIUIIIII-9 FRESHMAN COMMISSION THIRD ROW: Marv Humphrey, Pauline Sarset, .losephine Chambers. Eleanor Peregoy. Marjorie Roberts. SECOND ROW: Liiella Wright, Doris Donahue. Nellie Scott, Martha Schultz, Georgiana Steele, Clela Garrett. Frances Nelson, FIRST ROW: Marjorie Cannon, Margaret Macy, Dorothy Osborne, Ethel Greenway, Estella Sill, Jean McDirmid, Organized at Iowa State College in 1918 Purpose : To promote democracy and friendliness among the freshman girls and to give opportunity for the expression of ability directed in service for the class, the doling Women ' s Christian A.ssociation, and the college. OFFICERS Ethel CjReenwav .... President Mary Annette Humphrey rice-President Estella Sill Secretary Nellie Scott Treasurer MEMBERS Ethel Greenway Marjorie Cannon Winifred Brown Frances Nelson Clela Garrett Georgiana Steel Myrtle Kerr Hazel Hilton noROTiiY Osborne Nellie Scott Pauline Sarset Tean McDirmid Mary Annette Humphrey Frances Reynoldson Helen Smith Marjorie Roberts Eleanor Perecoy Josephine Chambers LuELLA M. Wright Martha Schultz Margaret Macy Helen Buch Doris Donahoe Estella Sill ■.•MHtl HIHHm«HIIHIIIHHIHI«llll IIIMHItli) IMIII(IIMIIHIIIfllt« lllllllll Min« IMIIHIIH IHHmiltllll .jr.iiiiimiiimiiinmiiiimniii iniMnimniiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiniiiiiiimi«imMmimniiii MtWHHiiliiiiiiim ' j- •• '  ? . '  • GENEVA CLUB THIRD ROW: Medora Grandprey, Dorothy Cass. Estella Sill, Agnes Grain. Marie Hartman. Laura Taggart. SECOND ROW: Priscilla Dodds. Verna Hunter, Mary Heald. Verena Meyer. Edith Elder. FIRST ROW: Laura Bublitz. Lois Baker. Marion Miller. Nancy Elliott. Gladys Watson. Maida Heiner. Purpose: To continue the friendship and the spirit of the ' . W. C. A. conference at Lake Geneva and to interest other girls in Geneva. SENIORS Verna Hunter Elsie Bentley Maida Heiner Gladys Watson Priscilla Dodds Laura Flynn Dorothy Cass Mary Heald Nancy Elliott Agnes Grain JUNIORS Florence Hahn SOPHOMORES Lois Baker Esther Pond Marie Hartman ' erena Meyer Laura Taggart Edith Elder Medora Grandprev Laura Bublitz Estelle Sill Marion Miller 397 HORTICULTURAL CLUB OFFICERS George DeHavev President Russell 1. Klopp r ' ur-Prrsidrnt George Decker Sccrrtary Guy E. Stockdale Treasurer DoKALD R. Porter .... Senior Represenlalite .Ifi Council Donald D. Cation .... Junior Represenlaliie Aei Council George Kreeger Serjeant-at-Arms • lllllllllinillinnniHIMimiHIIMiHIIHIM««IIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII lll HIMI lin MII(IIIIIMIIIIHHIIM JUNIOR WOMEN ' S ADVISORY BOARD m ' VHIRD ROW: Mfdora Grandprey, Lillian Stoutenberg, Martha Peppers, Callierine Maurice, Grata Tllorne, Marie Sullivan. SECOND ROW: Jean McFarlane, Ruth Elaine Wilson, Mar.iorie Jay, Marcella Dewell, Veronica Morrissey. FIRST ROW: Dorothy Cass, Lulu Robinson, Mary Heald. Eveleth Pederson. Anne Hopkins, Kathrine Goeppinger. Founded in the spring of 1920 for the purpose of sponsoring the Big Sister movement. OFFICERS Mary Heald PresiJinl Ann Hopkins I ' ici-PnsiJiiit M. RCELLA Dewell Treasurer ' erokica Morrissey Secretary PERSONNEL Mary He.ald Dorothy C.ass Marcella Dewell Katherine Goeppincer Ann Hopkins Catherine Maurice Veronica Morrissey Martha Peppers Medora Grandprey Eveleth Pederson Grata Thorne Ruth Elaine Wilson Jean McFarlane Lulu Robinson Marjory Jay Marie Sullh ' an Lillian Stoutenberg .IIIIIMHIIIillllMlltl ll l)IIIIIIIIIIHM«IIHI(IIIIIMIH)lllll«lltlMIIU ll lllilH PEBUL SECOND ROW: Brown, Behni. Ainsworlh. Wight. FIRST ROW: Trecker. Underhill. Nelson. Churchill. Pebul, a body of fraternity men, short in stature, organized at Iowa State College in 1923 for the promotion of a higher degree of fellowship among men of their type. OFFICERS Mark S. Nelsov President Charles H. Brown yice-Presidrnt David G. Aiksworth ........ Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS D. G. AixswoRTii John Behm C. H. Browm F. A. Bullock G. W. Churchill J. C. Greene W. B. Michaels M. S. Nelson F. R. NuTT E. R. Reed D. M. Sinclair J. L. Trecker R. M. Underbill K. E. Wight W-fT-rr-n-g-g ci- 400 i l llltmilHllinmHIIMHIIIIMIMIMMIIIIIIIIIHIHMII lllfninTn inTT:nirrniTii:iii:ii!iniT:iiimiTTir.niiinitp-sot i --i .yi RURAL ECONOMICS CLUB :- t : h Purpose: To promote closer bonds of fellowship among agricultural economics, farm management, and rural sociology students and faculty; and to collaborate with other departmental clubs and with the Ag Club and promoting various agricultural activities. MEMBERS IN FACULTV E. G. NouRSE G. H. Von Tungeln C. L, Holmes C. L. Benner J. A. Hopkins H. B. Hawthorne OFFICERS R. I. Culver President E. M. Johnson liee-Presuient T. H. Erickson Secretary M. S. Collier Treasurer R. L. Cllver Senior Representative lij Count il Theodore Uehlinc .... Junior Representative .Iff Council !ll«llllHIIIHIlnMMIIMIHIIIMIHIIIHIIIIII llillUI HIM«HimiU HIHH«HmHHimtlHmlin iHiH -fPTy-tiK ti-ir-B TfS rnr.inirrmnir SOPHOMORE COUNCIL fW V r THIRI) ROW: I.urn Faber, Alice Davis. Ruth .Tahn. Pearl Rolibins. bECOXl) ROW: Alma Boyce. Alice Johnson. Geraldine Brainard, Lptirra Porter, (iertnide Murrev, Xfi l Ta l.ir. FIRST ROW: Paula Bratmlich. Marion Richeson. Mar.v Reed. Helen Oldham. Edna Ruggles. Leone H:iin]it( ii. Purpo.se: To promote good feeling and friendship among sophomore girls. OFFICERS Hrlen Oi.dham Piisidnil M. Ry Reeo riii-Prisidiiil M.W.viE HOLSWORTII Siiri-lary Ruth John Treasur,r Mary He.xld Advisor PERSONNEL Gertrude Murr.w Llr. Faber Geraijjine Brainard Leorra Porter Nell Tavlor Pearl Robbins Alice Johnson F.DiTH Rlgcles Marion Swanson Paula Breunlich Marion Richessox Alice Davis Leone Hamptov Alma Boyce Helen Piper 402 C3333S lttKHMMH Mim imimHMII mHII H MIHtl)ll MMI)IHHIIMHIMIIIII IHIIIIIMMIIIHIHHUII Mt HI)l ' .S S« T. L. B. ifAfjm . K ' nA FOURTH ROW: King, Moss, Butcher, LevsPii, Kiggs. Murphy. Duvall, Botorff. THIRD ROW: Kloppenberg. Embree. Test, Paxton. Wingert. Ouren. Benson, George. SECOND ROW: Gord. P. I. Henderson. B. W. Allen. H. H. Henderson. Williams, Hillearv, Zerbe. Brown. FIRST ROW; R.vgh. Slater, Myers, Cownie, Raynolds, Ringland. Kollmansperger, Waller. An inter-trateinity organization founded at Iowa State college in 1902. Member- ship limited to men at least six feet tall. OFFICERS R. B. R.AYNOLDS PnsiJnit M. G. Levsen Vnc-President F. D. KoLLM. N ' SPERCER ..... Sfirctary A. B. Sl. ter Tnasurn- B. W. Alien B. G. Allen D. D. Benson R. S. BOTTORF H. C. Bltcher G. R. Bock el V. L. Brown C;. B. Brown C. T. Cow N IF. P. K. DUV. LL N. J. Embree W. D. George C. L. Gord J. A. R. H. NSON MEMBERS m. e. h. rdinc Porter Henderson Herbert Henderson T. H. HlLLE. RY H. F. Hutchinson Herbert King W. A. KLOPPENBtRG M. S. Zerbe F. U. Kollm.vnsperger M. G. Levson C. F. M.xsoN R. B. McKennan J. B. Moss A. W. MlRPHV R. B. Meyers Gregory Olren R. E. P. . T0N R. B. R.vynolds I. S. RiGGS J. F. RiNGL.WD S. S. Rygii James Sampel A. B. Sl.wer H. Z. Test V. P. Tyrrell C. n. Waller P. v. Williams M. C. Wingert Ira Young •niM IMIIH IIIIHIIHIIUU IIMIIIIIMMIIItMIIIMIIHIIIi«llltllllMII IIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIM«t llllllll««llllltlllllHIIII- 9.4ai-9-9 ' -9-9r-«SI 403 E ' !Cfe C«e.-|UtM«M«MIII«HtlllllllllltHMItlt))IIM«ltlllllllMIIIIII lllMIIMII  HIII«llll IIIIM«IIMH MI«M lttHtllllHIII. TRADES AND INDUSTRIES SOCIETY OFFICERS James T. Peters President Paul C. Beam riee-PresidenI G. L. Shaffer Secretary T. E. Chapman- Treasurer MEMBERS IN FACULTY W. M. Alsin E. C. Flynn L. P. Ardlser H. E. Howell J. M. Early G. I. Mitchell W. T. Elder H. J. Nethken Adolph Shane aito department of trades and industries L. E. PUTH R. C. RiEDESEL Virgil Glnder R. L. McFarland •c:-e-C. C C:-tllHllllllll)IIIIMMIIIIIilllltlMI lll«lliHtHltMIIIIHtllllllllllltllllltllM llllllllltmitH(IIMHU imillHIIIIII 9oa ' A-9-3 3- -t l i|lllltlllllllllllt«ltllllllllMIIMM«lll llll IH«llllllllillllHII|lllimiHIIHIIMItlllllHllltHIMIHI«HIIMIIMIIIIim! VETERINARY MEDICAL SOCIETY President . . Vice-President Secretary . . Treasurer . . UKFICF.RS C. H. Stance Honorary President Charles Murray Honorary Secretary Fall Spring Dox Baker Lester H. Brown . . . B. A. Zupp James H. Yarborough . . Maurice Boevers Albert A. Miller . . . Hexrv Van Roekel Bev Axdersov R. V. Merriman Representative to Cardinal Guild D. n. Baker E. A. Brockmeier W. P. Bower L. H. Brown M. I. Brown M. L. Boeners Frank Bonnotetter A. F. Burger FiLOMENS AlACAR Ben Anderson Norman Brinkman Joe Greer O. T. Douglas C. C. Chen J. L. MOAD C. A. Hauschen J. O. Buck R. F. Hess L. B. Mines R. O. Hughes C. H. Larson C. J. Li MEMBERS SENIORS R. W. Merriman F. D. Patterson R. E. Patterson D. D. Robertson J. R. Roch JUNIORS H. G. Dow G. A. Blohm L. L. Dunk A. R. Miller G. V. Grewell L. p. Miller Charles Hill A. F. Richie SOPHOMORES Olene Jacobson L. E. Stanton J. F. MuvRO Odell Simonson Arnold Nyline Garbel Sianian R. P. Reid R. B. Spearing FRESHMEN E. J. McClausland Sarkis Ter-Michael Ii-kanklin Jefferson C. H. Patterson Roland Sawder C. S. Greer G. B. Schnelle C. L. Simmons O. J. Schrac Clearance Swink H. C. Smith D. H. Summers George Thomas B. A. Zupp J. H. Yarborough C. B. McGrath J. R. Scott C. L. Stanley W. B. Peterson H. L. Church E. H. M ' hite Henry Van Roekel H. S. Sames Clem Pierce ianFrank Thorp C. A. TOWNE S. C. Cheng Leon Orr G. R. Brown Fidel Ochoa EElCEIHiCBiI Sa 1 w 33328 •je lll tt IM ltlHI lllll •HllllltMI IIMMI IIHIIIU «ilWIIMIMI«HHI MillMIUMMMIHt  H l IIUW mill. THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE Courli ' Mij J, .Y. Darliiii i E2327 c — , I Ilia — ur n m vjjjij i jjm — lia A j e gzzg — aut tb , — szr; --; tlonzo Irarninij that tyirii llir firofrssor ' s loii ' to tin- chaprl bi ' H luas not considercJ by the jadilly as an inditation of good scholarship or hrilliant menial Quality. llllHllllllltlM MtMIIIIIUUIIHIIII«lllll IIIIIHIIIIIIIIII«IUI||llltll ll|lllllllltJ|||l||IMI«ail«t«UIIIMI|ftlH IIUIIMailHIMItllllll«HI IIHIIIHIHIMIIIUIIIItllll)IIHI«IMIIH«tlllllMIHtllllMIHIHIUIIIIII M llllllll)l)MIIII. 407 ' i K -X x-g a3 Frfd M. Hansen ' 04, •w iose leaving the local collegiate association iias a great Jisa ' Pointmenl to lis host of faculty, student and alumni friends, has taken up his ' work as general secretary of the stale Y. M. C. A. COLLEGE Y. M. C. A. AND Y. W. C. A. Scattered all over the world are men and women who received part of their training for leadership at Iowa State College ' ' . M. and . W. C. A. During their attendance at the college, these students made the most of their opportunities and not only equipped themselves for leadership in their chosen field, but they also saw fit to train themselves for religious and moral leadership. Too much can not be said of these two organiza- tions for they serve by far a greater number of students than any other organization on the campus. In fact our collegiate Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. have national and inter- national renown and we want to take this opportunity of giving them the recognition and place in our annual that they deserve. The Editors. Ever since its organization in 1S90 by W. N. Parsons, the Iowa State College v. M. C. A. has had a steacl growth. Tama Jim Wilson, then a member of the faculty and later for a long time Secretary of Agriculture, was one of the principal persons interested in the organization and for many years led a large Bible class in the association. Among the student leaders of the first decade were C. D. Ball, now of the Department of Agriculture at Washington, and B. H. Hibbard, at present Tofessor of economics at the University of W isconsin. for nine years the Y was a purely volun- tary organization and it was not imtil the fall of 1899 that J. C. Prall, a graduate of the University of Iowa, was invited to become the association ' s first general secretary, devoting one-half time, each, to the local and to the student state work. The associa- tion then occupied an office in a dormitory room of the Old Alain building and had a membership of only 69. Under the leadership of Mr. Prall, the association began a very rapid growth in membership and activities. Mr. Prall served until Juh ' , 1909, when the membership had increased to 719. During that year 48 Bible study groups met in club, fraternity houses, churches and Alumni Hall with 520 men enrolled. Five hundred dollars were contributed to the support of W. A. Tener, ' 05, International Secretary in the Philip- pine Islands. During this decade the local organization had grown until, with ' ale and the University of Illinois, it was recognized as one of the three leaders of the student association movement. The association building, commonly known as Alumni Hall, was conceived and com- pleted during this time and opened for use in October, 1907. The building was at first purely an association undertaking. Two years later, the Alumni Association requested the privilege of contributing $15,000 to the fund for the purpose of enlarging the V. M. C. A. plan, the Alumni Association to be granted complete use of the building for one week each year at commencement time and the use of two guest rooms to be reserved for them at all times on the dormitory floor. This offer was accepted and the building erected on that basis. The association was incorporated in 1904, establishing a board of directors to manage its business affairs and to sustain a general advisory relationship to the organization. This replac ed the existing advisory committee which had only advisory powers. It is indicative of the religious activity of this period that eight men sailed for foreign fields, as religious leaders, and se en men entered . M. C. A. work in this country. Four men went to India: H. T. Ave ' , ' 05, W. S. Dudgeon, ' 07, L. E. Coates, ' 06, and W. F. Bishop, ' 06. G. A. Roberts, ' 06, R. W. Tidrick, ' 07, and C. F. Guthrie, ' 07, sailed for Africa. Mr. Tidrick lost his life in a combat with a lion while on a hunt- ing expedition. W. A. Tener, who was an outstanding leader in various student activ- ities, began Y. M. C. A. work in the Philippine Islands. The men entering Y. M. C. A. work in the United States were: A. Q. Adamson, ' 06, W. E. Packard, ' 07, H. E. Morrow, ' 06, L. E. Dreher, ' 04, O. E. Atkinson, ' 08, L. E. Paulson, ' 08, previously mentioned, and Fred M. Hansen, ' 04. A. Q. Adamson is secretary for the international committee of the Y. M. C. A. in China; Fred M. Hansen is State Secretary of Iowa after serving several years as general secretary of the Ames organization. Some of the other student leaders were R. K. Bliss, now director of agriculture extension; C. H. Stange, dean of veterinary medicine; T. R. Agg, professor of civil engineering; L. V. Forman, chief of field experiments. M. H. Bickham served as general secretary for two years, 1909 to 1911, follow- ing the resignation of Mr. Prall. Murl McDonald, now county agent leader for Iowa, was assistant secretary from 1908 to 1910. O. B. Moore acted as part time secretary after the resignation of Mr. Bickham until Dr. John P. Clyde, a graduate of Grinnell and ale Divinitv School, came to Ames in December, 1911. Dr. Clvde tlllHIIMMI « llttllll« MtH)IIIIHIIIIHHI llllll f«IIMIIHI1tllMIMIHIII M«lltllll  HimilHHMHl HIII! IIMIIIIIIHIItlll lll«lllln(lllll«ll ltlllMI«lllllltll ll lill|illl«Mltlll llll l««l)«l M««IIIM HI«HlllUIIIIIII)m- ser eii as gi-iu-ral sccrctan until the suninier of 1915 when Fred .M. Hansen, )4, was selected to succeed him. During part ot this time Mr. Clyde was assisted b R. L. Dickinson who is now recognized as one of the leaders in industrial association work with his headquarters at Columbus, Ohio. Mr. Hansen became actively interested in the ' . M. C. A. during his undergraduate days, being a prominent leader at that time. Immediately after graduation he became county Y secretary of Greene County, then assistant state secretary in charge of county work, serving in these two positions for eleven years. He began his duties in Ames in September, 191 . For two years, 1 17 to 1919, he was granted a leave of absence for war work and during the major portion of that time was Camp Secretary at Camp Dodge. In his ab- sence, A. R. Sayre and H. E. Morrow- were acting secretaries at Iowa State College. In war time, the local work was conducted under the joint super- vision of the board of directors and the war work council of the Y. M. C. A. Assistant secretaries at this time were E. G. Squire, George Carpenter, S. L. Schreiner, W. L. Lockling, F. C. Steven- son, and E. R. A ilson. China has drawn upon Iowa State College for men who received some of their training during the past ten years as under-graduates in the Y. ] I. C. A. in the persons of George Ritchey, ' 17, and Fred Rossiter, ' 20. H. E. Dewey, B B — - H 1 ' ' if of the former presidents of the association, is now in India, and also V- ' - - - ' - ' ' ' 16- - ' harles E. Smith. 1 J - ice-president in 1920, is in the Belgian Congo; Flovd Crouse, ' 14, is located in ••V STIDENT VISITS HOSPIT.AL Chile; John ' Wheelock, ' 20, is teaching in Brazil, and R. E. Gibson, ' 15, is county secretary of the Y in Madison County, Iowa. It was with keen reluctance that the local association saw Mr. Hansen lea e. His genial nature won him a host of friends and his leadership in student w ork was recog- nized throughout the countr ' . During the past two summers he has been dean of the Secretarial Summer School at Lake (jene a, Wisconsin. Mr. Hansen ' s qualifications led to a unanimous request to as,sume the duties of the general secretar of state . !M. C. A. work and Ames is glad that the state of Iowa can still have his leadership. The following description of the scope and activities of the Y. M. C. A. at the present time, reflects to a large degree the energy and vision of Mr. Hansen who was such a large factor in the development of the local association during the past few years. PURPOSE The following statement of purpose adopted by the National Council at their meet- ing in Februarv, 1922: The Iowa State College ' ' . M. C. A. is a union of the student and facult members of Iowa State College for the following purposes: 1. To lead students to faith in God through Jesus Christ. 2. To lead them into membership and service in the Christian Church. e C C C C llll l IIIHIII(iHIM«IM)llini)l«illlll«l HII tl lill)l lll«mHIMHIIIIMIIIMIII IHMIIIfMtMtHIIIIHinnml lll.«B a t S S. 410 r.g-. g. «r.lll IHIlllllltlttllllHIHInm IHI ltlHHHIIIIillln llnmnltimil«t«MHHllWlim HHmHmHIHMIH MII 3. To promote their growth in Christian faith, especially through the study of the Bible and prayer. 4. To influence them to devote themselves in united effort with all Christians to making the will of Christ effective in human societ and to extending the Kingdom of God throughout the world. The four elected officers and ten other men comprise the cabinet which directs the policies of the association. Each cabinet member is chairman of a committee and is responsible for the promotion of that particular phase of association effort. Its work is carried on largely by the friendship council, composed of about 100 men. For the past two years the cabinet has met weekly, at 6:30 A. M., Thursday. The student officers for the past year were Cecil Hillman, president; Elmer Fritts, vice-president; AVesIey D. Clampitt, secretary; and James Brown, treasurer. The officers chosen for the year 1922-23 are: C. S. McElyea, president; Rober V. Macy, vice-president; R. Harp Smith, secretary; and Paid Villiams, treasurer. The other cabinet responsi- bilities are: gospel teams, downtown work, hospital visitation, social events, discussion groups, friendly relations, publicity, new student and freshman work, campus service. The board of directors is composed of Prof. F. W. Beckman, chairman ; W. H. Stevenson, J. C. Cunningham, H. D. Helser, AV. H. Meeker, Seaman Knapp, R. E. Buchanan, J. E. Foster, F. E. Brown, and the four elected officers of the organization. The discussion group program is one phase of association activities that has been watched with a great deal of interest over the country. The following is suggesti e of the scope of this mo ement which ran for 17 weeks this year at Iowa State College: Total number of groups organized 79 Average number of meetings per week (17 weeks) ... 51 Average total attendance per week 659 Highest total attendance for one week 922 Foreign student participants 34 Highest number of groups meeting one week 73 Total number helping as leaders 137 These meetings are quite informal in nature, and utilize the natural social groupings such as fraternities, rooming houses, or localities where six or more men are intere.sted. A wide range of subjects was discussed, including personal, campus, religious, and international problems. Included among the topics were these questions: Is there a necessary conflict between science and Christianity? Should America continue her policy of isolation from European affairs? How should one decide upon his life work? What do you mean by an efficient man? Are our college traditions worth while? Such a program gives an excellent opportunity for exchange of views and also is an effective means of training leadership. Two ways in which the Y serves the student body continuously are the Room and Employment bureaus. In the six months between September, 1922, and March 20, 1923, 358 people called the office for student help. These requests ranged all the way from washing dishes, mowing lawns, and cleaning house, to running errands and hiisk- ing corn. Three hundred and sixteen men secured employment during this time through the office. The valuation, at 35 cents an hour, for the 899 odd jobs filled, would be $1371.65 in addition to the 30 more or less steady positions handled b the Y . Fifty-se en men sent a deposit during the summer time to have rooms secured for them. On March 24, 1 ' 523, 105 householders had rooms listed which would accommodate 320 men. The Friendh Relations committee endeavors to assist the 80 students from other countries to make their stay in Ames more pleasant. This includes temporary loans when the longed-for check fails to arrive, assistance in securing rooms and work, enter- 411 tainment in the American homes and whatever will make for a ueil-rouiided student life. These students have had a valuable part in the association activities, serving as leaders and speakers in discussion groups, gospel teams. Rotary and rural community clubs, Suiula school classes, churches, and young people ' s meetings, and furnishing music in the hospital. A State (Oriental Student Conference was held at Ames, March 10, 11, 1923, which was attended by about 35 delegates. During this confer- ence, they discussed how the principles of Christianity can be applied to international questions and what they can contribute to, and expect from, American student life. This was perhaps one of the most significant meetings held under the auspices of the . M. C. A. during the past year. The hospital service committee is organized to be of ser ice in any way possible to men in the hospital. Ihey visit men, whether men or not, run errands, make telephone calls, bring over library books or whatever is needed to help the men in the hospital make their time more pleasant. A different man visits the hospital each day except Sunday. Thirteen different men worked on this committee in the past year and they estimated that 2,120 total calls were made. Stationery and magazines are furnished to the men in the hospital and many copies of the leading state news- papers were furnished daih during the winter quarter. Musical entertainments were rlso provided through the activities of this committee. Because of the excellent equipment of the various churches in Ames, the Y. M. C. A. does not carry on a very large social program. However, some of the social events are a well established tradition and always looked forward to by the student body. The annual stag mixer is held the evening of registration during the fall quarter. Usually the same week comes the big mixer of the year imder the auspices of the social com- mittee of the ' . W. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. The two associations also cooperate during the winter quarter for a freshman party in Alumni Hall when the association building is crowded. Sending out of gospel teams might be likened to extension service in Christian work. The peak of gospel team effort was reached in the year of 1921-1 922 when the 62 dif- ferent men visited 17 dift ' erent communities on 27 different trips. Forty decisions for the Christian life were made and from practically e ery community enthusiastic reports came back of the influence which these Ames men had exerted in these different places. Not the least valuable is the training and inspiration which it gives to the men who comprise these teams. Few experiences mean more in the training of leadership than a week spent on a gospel team trip. A whole volume of human interest stories could be written about the sum of money known as the Accommodation Loan Fund . Money from this fund is loaned to deserving students for a short time without interest when the longed-for check fails to arrive or a student finds himself without a cent. The Y is ready to lend a helping hand. Between June 1, 1922, and March 22, 1923, 107 different loans were made aggregating $1,509.12. The regular loan fund was established b the board of direc- tors from the four percent earnings of the cafeteria and now amounts to $10,000.00. This is loaned to jvmior and senior students upon application subject to the approval of the committee of the board of directors and is usually paid back after graduation on monthly terms. Only a portion of this fund is available every year but during this same period $1,945.00 were used, making a total for the year of $3,446.12 loaned to stLulents. This has enabled many men to stay in school and continvie their preparation for a life of service and effectiveness later. Many different activities center around AUmiiii Hall. The reading room receives nearly 30 magazines in addition to the daily papers and about SO local and county papers where men and women can learn all the happenings of their own communities. giC.g.C-HIMHIHM imMII«M HmilMH«HI«H Ht IMIIHMIIHWm 412 DISCUSSION GROUP MEETING AT THE THETA CHI HOUSE The game room on the second floor is always a popular place and over 230 men a month find recreation there. There are eight pocket billiard tables and two straight billiard tables in the large game room and the average number of hours played per month has been 1,792. M. Q. Ressler won the pocket billiard tournament held during the fall quarter. This becomes a permanent possession of the player when won three times. Jacob Levy won the billiard tournament in 1921 and 1922. Hundreds of games of checkers and chess are also played on the tables provided for that purpose. Over 40 different organizations use the committee rooms of Alumni hall and these meetings range all the way from early cabinet breakfasts to honorary societies ' initia- tions. A constant stream of men file in and out of the office seeking information, rooms, employment, second-hand books, telephone and telegraph service, personal con- ferences and scores of other requests. About 100 books chiefly on religious topics are in the Y. M. C. A. library and are in constant demand by discussion group leaders, students and faculty. The above reflects only a part of the campus service carried on bv the association. YMCA DISCUiMtl CBOUK - ISC. IOM-i3.  FBAtttiltlTr CBWK • awrtiiK itcoii cffoan . rMtfLU n unmt. tL JJ J .Cr.ltin IIMIIIHailHMIIIilllHHIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIillllHII!ll|l«IIIIIIHIIItllHIIIIIIIIIIMtllHllM |tMIII  ltlHI(llllll 413 r tllHIIIIHIIIHM«llltllllllllMII)IIMMI«HI«IHIIIinilMI IIIIIIIHIIIIMIHHHIIIWIMINI H HHHMIIIIIIMMMIIir One of the big features of the car is the Lake (icnc a Conference which is hehl soon after school closes at AVilliains Bay, Wis. For several years, Iowa State College has been represented by a large delegation. This conference brings together men from the colleges of the nine central states and it is al a s considered a privilege to attend one of these summer conferences. For deepening of con iction and giving a student a broader horizon, there is scarcely anything in the association movement that is more aluable. World-famed speakers discuss the economic, social and religious questions which college men must go out in the world and meet. Ames is planning to send a delegation of about 50 men this summer. The pastors of the different churches, the college chaplain and the general secre- taries of the two college associations form the Religious workers association which supervises all general meetings such as All-out-to-church Sunday and the all-college re- ligious meetings which are usually held during the winter quarter. Rev. Charles Gilkey of the Hyde Park Baptist church gave a series of addresses the first week-end of the winter quarter with the general theme, A Modern Interpretation of the Prin- ciples which Jesus Gave to Men. The ' . M. C. A. at Ames is considered an integral part of the Christian forces operating in a community. The association has always stressed the value of church membership and participation in church activities and for that reason have no regular scheduled meetings on Siuiday. Many influences enter into the building of character and the training for leadership and the association seeks to contribute whatever it may toward these two ends. The different activities which have been briefly mentioned are some of the ways in which the organization strives to fill its place in the building of Christian character, serving the needs of college students, and of training for a life of usefulness after the student ' s school days are over. Mdlll SCE.NE KtAR V ' CAMF, L.AKE CENEV.A ■ C: llllllllllll llllltl«M)llltllll(MII«IIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIilll llllltMIMII lffMilMII(tllMIIHI«imMltfWllllltMIII(IHI-9-9- Y. M. C. A. CABINET THIRD ROW: Dmu-an. Eckles, Smith. Ainsworth. McElyi.a, Fritts. SECOND ROW: McKee, Yohe. Stevenson. Pohlman. .Jacobs. FIRST ROW: Wilson. Brown. Hillman, Ila Wilcox. Clampitt. Delahooke. The purposes of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet are to lead students to faith in God through Jesus Christ; to lead them into membership and service in the Christian ihurch; to promote their growth in Christian faith especially through the stud - of the Hible and prayer; to influence them to devote themselves in united effort with all Christians to making the will of Christ effective in human society, and to extend the kingdom of God throughout the world. OFFICERS C. W. Hillman President E. A. Fritts t ' ice-President H.ARP Smith Secretary J. F. Brow.v • • Treasurer MEMBERS C. V. HlLLM. N hi ministration E. H. Fritts .... Devotional and Infer-Collei iaie Relations W. D. Cl. mpitt Recording Secretary F. H. Lei b. ch Treastirer-Memhersliip-Finance O. L. J.- coBS Gospel Teams C. S. McElve.a DoiArnloii-n Work CH. RLES Yoke Hospital Visitation H. RP Smith Social Events Tr.xcv Del.hhooke .... Rooming House Discussion Group Gordon Pohlman Fraternity Discussion Groups Warren O. Duncan . . Missions. Relief and Foreign Student Peter Ainsworth Publicity Warren D. Reck . . . Nevi Student, Special Freshman Work Lester Eckles Campus Service ?i •tidaLiJuutiLLiJiiiiuiiiLiuiumiiimiuimiuiii 3innnimirn- 415 • -Cr MM)IIMHIMIIItlll()l«lfll HIIIHt(IIIMIMIIIIII« ••«IIIIIIMIiHMI«IMHin«IM)HM (tlHIMI Mt)IIIIIMIII Y. W. C. A. CABINET -mn m 11 I Fl I ' ' d fi fc-V ji f ' i .JlfeX THIRD ROW: Miss Amv Hobson, Gladys Watson, Nancv Elliott. Marvel Secor, Claire Yungi-lass, SECOND ROW: Medora Grandprey, Vera Hunter, Mary Heald, Jean McFarlane, Edith Elder. FIRST ROW: Esther Pond, Jeanette Beyer, Miss McKinley, Maida Heiner, Lois Baker. Purpose: To deepen the religious life of college girls, to broaden friendships, to develop Christian ideals through all college life, and to train girls for Christian service. OFFICERS Gladys Watson President Jeanette Beyer I ' ice-Presidinl Marvel Secor Secretary ■ Edith Elder Treasurer Mary Heald Vnderiiraduale Field Representative Angelica McKinley General Secretary HISTORY OF THE IOWA STATE COLLEGE Y. W. C. A. The Young Women ' s Christian Association of lona State College was organized on Alay 25, 1890. There had been an organi ation known as the Students ' Christian Association organized in March, l S7iS, which hail inchidcd both men and women, and out of which the separate associations were formed. ' ] his organization conducted prayer meetings on AVednesday and Sunday nights. As there were no cars connecting Ames and the college at that time, the students also had their Bible cla.sses under faculty leadership. The association also spon.sored classes for the campus children. 416 In 1888, Miss Julia Wentch, Mrs. E. W. Stanton, attended a conference as a dele- gate from this association. T he first student summer conference at Lake Geneva was held in 1886. Although the question of forming separate associations for men and wom- en began to be agitated in 1884, it did not recei e favorable action until 1890. It was felt that more students would feel the responsibility ; that the existence of two associ- ations would secure healthful competition ; and that by doubling the number of officers, more students would receive training in leadership. Miss Maria Roberts, dean of the junior college, was elected the first president of the Y. V. C. A. The original mem- bership was 68 including faculty women. The two associations carried on the same activities as before with the addition of a missionary committee which arranged for a joint missionary meeting. Vithin the next five years they arranged with the State Normal School to support their own missionary. The Wednesday meetings were separate but the two associations still held joint Sunday evening services. Those who were here at the time say that the work changed so little that they were not much affected by the new plan. Among the early presidents were: Jennie Morrison, Mrs. S. W. Beyer, Elmira Wilson, and Julia Ventch. A new epoch began in 1905 when an advisory committee was chosen. The first members were Mrs. A. B. Storms, wife of the college president, chairman; Mrs. A. Newens, secretary; Mrs. Herman Knapp ; Mrs. S. W. Beyer; Mrs. Jennie McElyea Beyer; Miss Daisy Brown, aad Miss Winnifred Tilden. The purpose of this com- mittee was to furnish advice and helpful suggestion, to assist in the finance especially by interesting faculty members and friends, to make arrangements for a general secre- tary and to furnish a continuity for the work since they had a longer term of office. In the spring of 1905, Miss Ethel Cessna was invited to act as general secretary on part time. She received for her services twenty-five dollars. In the fall of 1907 Miss May Pardee, Mrs. E. S. outz, was employed as the first real general secretary. Even then the association paid only four hundred dollars as the secretary taught part of the time in the English department. The Y. W. meetings were then being held in Clio hall. During the winter Alumni hall, the present home of the as.sociations, was com- pleted. In the spring of 1908 the advisory committee entertained at luncheon the old and new cabinets, at which time the annual reports were given. This custom has be- come a tradition to which all look forward with pleasure. It has done much to give continuity to the work of the organization. Since then the Y. W. C. A. has had as secretary in turn: Miss Elorence Armstrong, 1908-1910; Miss Mildred Jones, 1910-1911; Miss Nellie Goss, 1911-1912; Miss Edith Helmer, 1912-January, 1914; Miss Gertrude Butterfield, January, 1914- January, 1916; ] Ii,ss Rhoda Foster, January, 1916-January, 1918; Miss Fina Ott, January, 1918-June, 1920; Miss Mary Osia, who because of illness was only able to act from September, 1920, to November, 1920; Angel ine McKinley, January, 1921, to the present time. A number of our members have been or are on the foreign field. Among those of whom we ha e record are Miss Estella Paddock, who was national secretary of the . W. C. A. in China; Miss Sadie Ellis, who has been a teacher in Japan and an association secretary in Hawaii; Miss Georgia Day, Mrs. Robertson, •llllllllllllllll tli HIIIMIII«Mltl lltlt IHIIilMIMIIIII llliMIHIIItlH ll t IMI(MIMHUIIIIMHIIIHniHlllllllf- uhn was in educational work in China ; Miss Sarah Fichi, who is now home on fur- lougli from Japan; Miss Harriet Reit el(lt, an association secretary in China; and Miss Daisy Mellon, Mrs. Rossiter, who is now in China where she has been teaching in the tame school as her husband. 1 he rapid increase in the enrollnieiit ot women in college has placed upon the ' I . W. C. A. a heavy responsibility in maintaining the high ideals and fine Christian atmosphere of the college community. The membership in the association has grown in proportion with the increased enrollment from 431 in 1916 to 785 at the present time. About 200 girls served on the cabinet and committees this year. Because of its community service program in helping the girls to secure employment and in finding rooms for the faculty and other employed women of the college it has been necessary to employ a full time office assistant and Miss Amy Hobson has been filling the position in a most cred- itable way this past year. During the fall and winter quarters of this year, 277 girls asked for employment and 203 employers made requests for help. There were 54 re- quests for rooms. Some of the regular association features for the year are as follows: Vesper services every Thursday at 4:15 p. m. ; weekly discussion groups in all the houses and halls occupied by women students; conducted a two day institute for senior girls and others dropping out to teach on the subject of community responsibility on the part of the teacher; raised five hundred dollars for the Ames in India fund which helps to support a summer conference for girls in India; collected and shipped eight large cartons of clothing for needy students in Russia: contributed to the fund raised by the Ames Social Service League and helped to furnish programs for the mothers ' club organized by the social service secretary; organized and advised a Freshman Commission for the purpose of increasing friendships and college spirit among freshman women ; had an advisory relation to the high school ' . V ' . C. A. ; had an all-college women ' s mixer and in cooperation with the ' ' . M. C. A. put on the all-college mixer; maintained a regular association program during the first session of smiimer school ; and had a dele- gation of 16 at the summer conference at Lake Geneva. The following women have served on the advisory committee this past year: ] Ies- dames R. A. Pearson, J. C. Cunningham, A. T. Erwin, Charles Murray, E. W. Stanton, J. A. Wilkinson, Dean Hazel M. Harwood. Dean Edna E. Walls, and the Misses Clarissa Clark, Dora G. Tompkins, and Helen F. Smith. Miss Smith who has been the chairman for the past two years has just completed ten years of member- ship on the committee. The Cabinet for the year 1922-23 with the position of each is as follows: President, Gladys Watson ; vice-president, Jeanette Beyer, who acted as the religious meetings chairman ; secretary, Marvel Secor ; treasurer, Edith Elder ; undergraduate representa- tive, Mary Heald ; and the chairman of the following committees: membership, Claire Youngclass; finance, Maida Heiner; community service, Esther Pond; publicity. Mary Reed; social, Nancy Elliot; religious education, Medora Grandprey; high school ad- viser, Lois Baker; freshman commission adviser, Jean MacFarlane; and Verna Hunter, ex officio a member because of being Woman ' s Guild president. + 18 FEDERAL BOARD OF VOCATIONAL TRAINING That chapter in the history of Iowa State College, which represents the w ork of the Federal Board of ' ocatioiial Education, is drawing to a close, not because it has lost its value, but because it has served its mission and has accomplished what it set out to do. It is expected that when the work of the Federal Board of ' ocatioiial Training will have made its last report, filed its last entry, and supplied the last book, over 1200 ' orld War eterans will have been given a technical traiiiing at Iowa State College. This year exacth ' 500 men were under the Federal Board. ' ocational training resulted from the determination of the United States govern- ment to treat her soldiers in the best possible way. Not only during the war did Uncle Sam acquire a reputation for treating his men the best but he continued this policy after the war was over. Early in the war it became evident that thousands of men would return injured, maimed and crippled. It was gathered from the experi- ence of England and France that, while some soldiers would be maimed for life, yet thousands of others would be able to take up the regular duties of life. So, at the insistence of members of President ' ilson ' s cabinet, and with the approval of the President himself, federal vocational training was expanded to take care of the returning doughboy. The federal government always has assisted state schools in their efforts to provide vocational training. A bill, which was passed by Congress early in 1918, called for the extension of this service to train returning soldiers, and sailors, who were incapacitated in the war. Immediately after the passage of this bill a survey was made of schools which gave vocational training, and appropriations were made by the federal government. The survey showed that about 200 schools scattered all over the country were offering approximately 63 vocational training courses. The largest and best equipped schools were asked to expand so as to train returning soldiers. They were requested to add certain courses which would be of particular value to men who were slightly wounded. In many cases funds were provided for more class rooms and an increase in equipment. In 1919, when the course was first offered, about 300 ex-soldiers enrolled at Ames. The next year the number jumped to 500. In 1921, about 600 men took the training. Since that time the number has decreased, 500 men being here now, and the indications are that not over 200 will be here next year. Of the 500 enrolled at the present time, 130 are taking the four-year collegiate courses, while 370 are taking non-collegiate work of some sort. The division of men taking the collegiate courses is as follows : agricultural economics, 3 ; agricultural education, 5 ; agricultural engineering, 5; agricultural journalism, 2; animal husbandry, 16; architectural engineering, 7; mechanical engineering, 7 ; mining engineering, 1 ; poultry husbandry, 5 ; ceramic engineering, 2 ; chemical engineering, 10; civil engineering, 21 ; dairy manufac- ture, 3; dairy husbandry, 2; veterinary medicine, 10; electrical engineering, 10; farm crops, 6; forestry, 5; horticulture, 3; industrial science, 4; and landscape Umar liakir iv w is com- u- ■ ..,,.., ... { ,1 I D , T architecture, .i. manJir of the .lines Post No. , • , . • • ■ ■ i • i i 37 of the .-ImerUan Legion  hen hrst organized the activities ot the federal recehnd the French Fourra- board throughout the nation were divided into three gere -while seri ' ing -with the principal sections: advisement, training, and place- 4 th company of Marines. '  « «fe- A m ' C. C- Scliidr sail; jorcii n service for fifteen months, •where he was seriously gassed and ivas awarded a Distin- guished Service Cross. Among the activities he has been iden- tified ivith arc business man- ager of 1924 Bomb, The Iowa Engineer, The Green Gander, and the 1923 Veishca. He is a member of Acacia and Sig- ma Delta Chi. John F.arliart was in Bel- gium and France for seven months. Since coming back he has become affiliated with the 1923 Bomb, The Iowa Agriculturist, The Iowa Stale Student, The Inter-Fraternily Council, Alpha ' Acta, Sii ma Delta Chi and .Icacia. (Conrad E. Larson served eighteen months overseas, and ten months of this he was in the Second North Dakota In- fantry. He has been prom- inently identified with campus journalism, serving on the Iowa .igriculturist, and being a member of Alpha Gamma Rho and Sigma Delta Chi. ment. Under the advisement section, men representing the board went to the hospitals and cantonments and talked to the men. They received their life histories, a sketch ot what their training and experience had been before the war, and other necessary infor- mation. They inquired as to their interests and just what the nature of their injuries were, so as to be able to advise them more effectively as to what .schools to consider. Then, they suggested certain schools which offered training in the particular fields in which the men were interested. In the training section Iowa State College has been doing its chief work. In the training schools the men went to work at the expense of the government. In this wa the government hoped to recompense in some small way for the sacrifices that the soldiers had made, and for their remaining physical handicaps. Under the placement section work, in which Ames has had a part. Uncle Sam has been locating the men in permanent positions and been keeping a check on them. After a man had located a job, his employer was sent several blanks which he was asked to fill out and send to headquarters periodically. These reports told of how the man was taking on the new work, what his best points were, and of what alue his training had been. In other words, it told of his results in the field. After a .short trial of this threefold system, it as somewhat modified in order to maintain closer cooperation. Under the present plan, one man is in charge of the whole arrangement, and, while the three steps are followed out as before, one man i.s in direct charge of the three sections. In order to facilitate handling details, the country as (ii ided into 14 districts and an officer placed in charge of each. Iowa is in the ninth district, which also includes the states of Nebraska, Mis-souri, and Kansas. Headquarters for this district are at St. Louis. Iowa has three of the 12 substations which have been established through- out the ninth district, the Iowa substations being at Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, and ' aterloo. 1 I ' llC C-eiC ' C ' Ere-llltlllllHMIItlHinilMHIIIIMIIItlllllllllllHIIIIIIHiHIIIiniMMIIiaMMIIIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIHIIIHIIHIIIMHHMill 420 C «IMHtlllll«ll««l l «ll IMIIIII(IM)MIH«IIMIIIIUUItl MIUIIUHI ltM(IMIHIIIIIIItlHllllllllinHIIIIIMII ll lir ' 131 D. D. Baker was luilh tin- 34tli division and satj; service in both England and Franc e. On lite campus he has been a member of the Inter-Frater- nity council. Vice-President Senior Class. Byron II ' . Hamilton ' ivas aivarded the Distint uished Service Cross for gallantry •while ivith the 168tli Infantry. He was picture editor of the 1923 Bomb. Leonard C. Deal laas liounded at Chateau Thierry in Hill 212 while serving with the 47th Infantry of the 4tli division. He was a member of the 1922 poultry judging team which made such a re- markable record last fall. When the board was first established at Iowa State College, the office was located next to the office of Prof. J. C. Cunningham, head of the two-year agricultural depart- ment, in the old agricultural engineering building. Shortly afterwards it was moved to the lower floor of Old Agricultural hall, where it remained for a few months until it was moved again to Central station, where it will probably stay until it finally dis- bands. Henry Giese, an instructor in the mathematics department, was in charge of the work at first. However, as the duties of the position grew, R. L. Buttrey was assigned to the position of coordinator. At first the pay of men attending schools was according to the rank they occupied while in the army. Later, this was changed, and now the men draw from 80 to 100 dollars a month, depending on living conditions and whether they are single or married. When the board was first getting on its feet, the Elks set aside 500,000 dollars as a loan fund to men who had a hard time getting on their feet. The Ames Methodist church also set aside 1000 dollars for the same purpose. The records made by the men, who are taking the vocational training work, are nothing less than phenomenal in many cases. Take the case of Oscar D. Pius. Before the war broke out he had seven and a half years of schooling. He was injured in service, and after the war came to Iowa State College, where he passed all the non-collegiate and collegiate work in mechanical engi- neering in 31 months. Further than that, his college average was 93 per cent, accord- ing to figures in the Registrar ' s office. Another case is that of Ferdinand Svoboda, who before the war was a ladies ' tailor in St. Louis. Injuries received in the battle of Chateau Thierry made it imperati e that he stay out of doors. He came to Ames, took a course in greenhouse super isioii, and after two years of training, grew chrysanthemums which took the sweepstakes prizes at the Midwest Horticultural show. At present he is foreman of one of the largest greenhouses in the state, which is located at Davenport. He hopes, some day, to own a greenhouse. Elmer Knudson was a farmer before the war, but when he lost his arm it seemed to indicate that he would have to give up his farm work. However, he heard of the • e! ' JB! ' « C:i tlHIIIIII IIIIIIIHtMIIIIIIHI MIIIM lltlliltHI IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII)lillllllllMtll)ll«HtllHIII)lllllllllllllllllt3-9-.3-9- 421 training which is being given here at Ames, and today he is a seed anal st with a large seed distributing company at Kansas City. R. A. Beyerink and George Sprick were illiterate foreigners at the time the war broke out. While in the service they learned to read and write. Following the sug- gestion of one of the officers in the advisement section, they took up a vocational course here. At the present time, one is a manager of the cooperative creamery at Orange City, and the other manages a poultry plant at Laurens. For 12 years prior to 1917, Howard Knight was a brakenian on the Boone divisioii of the Chicago and Northwestern railroad. An injury in the thigh made his return to railroad service impossible. After a course in poultry husbandry at Iowa State College, he is now operating a successful poultry farm three miles south of Boone. The fact that before the war Knight had never raised a chicken, shows the effectiveness of the training here. A 17 acre orchard near St. Charles is the battle ground in which Lars P. Johnson is making his fight to come back . Johnson is winning hands down. He has a fine orchard site, and with the training received at Iowa State College, he is sure that he is going to pay out. Before the war he was a miner in the coal fields near Des Moines. He came out of the war with one leg badly shattered by shrapnel. Bees and poultry are the combination with which Detlief Christiansen, who has a leg so mutilated with machine gun bu llets from the knee to the ankle that it is seven mches shorter than the other, is making good with. He has a four acre plot at Clinton, Iowa. The report of the Lnited States ' eteran ' s Bureau made in May, 1922, shows that 312,930 disabled were at that time either in actual training, or making preparations to do so. On May 1, exactly 14,006 were taking the strictly agricultural courses. The project training scheme in handling the men who have finished their courses at the col- lege is something which has been developed here at Ames. Its effectiveness is shown in the fact that many other states have asked for information as to its details. The scheme is to fit men into small farm businesses of their own, adapted to their physical and edu- cational ability. The following regulations must be adhered to by men ho care to take the advan- tages of the offer : In the first place, the trainee must have the appro al, as to capability and personality, of the agricultural division of the college. The farm which he selects, preferably on his own initiative, must be submitted to an economic survey by a representative of the L nited States Veteran ' s Bureau, cooper- ating with the countv agent. In the final selection the opinion of a local banker and a practical farmer is usually secured. The trainee must then work out a year ' s program for the operation of his farm, which program must secure the endorsement of the specialist from the state extension service. He must have enough money to make an initial payment on the land or to buy a long time lease and to purchase a small amount of equipment. He must imdertake to keep detailed records of his operations and to work in close cooperation with the extension department of the college. The Veterans ' Bureau and the college, on their side, help the men to find suitable farms, keep track of them through the extension service and through reports, and con- tinue the training-pay through the first year of farming. On the campus, students in training vmder the boaril have taken a leading part in activities of all kinds. In athletics, journalism, dramatics, debating, class organizations — in fact everv line of student endeavor. 423 Byron G. Allen, Ed ' itor-in-Cliief Harold Z. EDITORIAL STAFF Byron G. Allen Anne Hopkins Richard B. Raynolds Alfred V. Murphy QuiNTUs C. Wilson George V. Westcott EDITORIAL COMMITTEES Art John Weber Jr., Cliairman Irma Camp Catherine Doolittle YoLANDA Prosper! Thomas L. Glass Men ' s Athleliis Harold C. Butcher, Chairman Loren E. Worley Franklin M. Reck Peter Ainsworth Edwin M. Meneouch ll ' oinen ' s .ll iletics Laura Bublitz, Chairman Campus Life Richard B. Rey ' nolds. Chairman Class Anne Hopkins, Chairman Quintus C. Wilson Chairman Joe Ringland, Cliairman Herbert E. King Lores P.. Worley Copy Peier Ainsworth Feature ( ' . Duff Sadler Charles T. Norton Charles H. Brown, Jr. Charles F. Mason Robert L. Howard Bernice Kirkham Katherine Goeppinger .iimiiiiininiiiiiiiiiitnHmmi t iiMmM iiiinniiiii i ' ii iniiii  iiMitmniiiinii M tniii 42+ office .himinhtralion BvROK G. Allex, Chairman Ruby ' Faul Marie Whelplev Men ' s Organizations Alfred W. Murphy Cyril H. Palm E. Raymond Wilson Chairman Col. P. M. Shaffer Robert V. Peterson John- H. Turner Ward M. Jones Harold Z. Test It ' omen ' s Organizations Marcella Dewell Katherine Goeppinger Angelina McKinley Chairman Mary Heald Lucille Wormhoudt Eleanor Elliott Our College 1926 Richard B. Rayno lds Barbara Dewell Donald Benson Chairman Katherine Holden Horace M. Chope Adolph F. Bohren Ruth Michaelson Starr Parker James D. Graham Irene Shaben Herbert Sinnard Margherita Tarr James D. Graham David Ainsworth BUSINESS STAFF Harold Z. Test Business Manaijer LOREN E. Worely Issislant Business Manat er Joe Rincland, H. F. Mei.linger . . . Circulation Managers John E. Jackson IJ-vertising Manager Allen Whitfield Publicity Manager CIRCULATION STAFF J. Newlin Embree Ada Havner Clarence Jack Paula Brauklich Helen Welty Helen Hass Lydia Armstrong Lee Rodda Dorothy McCarroll Vloyd Nutt ADVERTISING STAFF Clement C. Little Walter Brandt Howard M. Parkhurst Robert E. Pendry M. C. Lowenberc Cecil Johnson Ernest Vickers Robert H. Braunlich MIIII)IHI)lini tltmill lltllllll tllHIII)illtllilllHllllltllllllllllllllllMlllltlllllUHM ll llll«lil lllltllltlt 425 HIMtllMlltlO «llimMltlMmMIIIIHIII«ltmH«IIIHH  HmHMHH H  IIMIIItHIII-    THE GREEN GANDER K. R. Marvix, EAitor- ' tn-Cliiij C. C. ScHiDE, Business Managir K. R. Marviv Editor-in-C iitf C. C. SCHIDE Business Manaijer F. M. Reck Manai inii Editor R. E. Smith rl Editor Harriet Schi.eiter Issoeiate Editor Eleanor Mlrrav , .Issoeiate Business Manaijer P. M. DuKN Cireulation Manaijer A. G. Lennox Idvertisinii Manai er H. C. Butcher Camfus Editor R. W. Brandt Exehamje Editor L. L. nii.woRTii Puhliiity Manai er EnnOKlAL fDNlRIBITDRS R. E. Reed I. Schapiro H. P. King Rose Storm J. E. McFarland Kathrine Goeppincer W. A. Perry C. P. Streeter Mortimer Goodwin E. Ray Wilson ART CONTRIIir rORS Florence Todd R. E. Tawbaugh William Mazenec C. I.. Simmons Georgia Appei. n. D. Benson G. R. Bockei. Cathrine DooLmi.E BISINESS STAFF J. R. Roche C. A. Wheeler H. H. Parker W. P. COWDEN Ronald Fergi son H. M. Sherlock Opal Milligan C. L. Spahr THE GREEN GANDER THIRD ROW: Smith. Simnioiis. rnuin, Lcnncix. JIaiviii. Bochel. Culver, Schide. SECOND ROW: Goodwin, Schapiro. Harriett Sehlieter, Wheeler. Eleanor Murray, Streeter, Mazeuec, Reed. FIRST ROW: Reck, King, Perr.v, Kathrine Uoeppinger, Florence Todd, Cathrine Doolittle, Cowden, Dilworth. ORDER OF THE GOSLINGS iA.f.f THIRIl R(AV: .Smith. Schaperio. Schide. Deal. SECONl) ROW: Goodwin, Eleanor Murray. Harriett Schleiter, Reed. FIRST ROW: Dunn, King:, Marvin, Johnson, 427 .It mMH l IM HMWH«IIHIHIHmilH-a THE IOWA AGRICULTURIST Mortimer Goodwin ' , Editor-in-Chief M. A. Cass, Jr-, Business Manaijer Mortimer Goodwin : . Editor-in-Chief M. A. Cass Jr Business Manager H. L. Chase Cireulalinn Manager Leo E. Martix Adverlisiny Manager F. W. Beckman M. O. Helser PUBLICATION BOARD H. L. Chase Mortimer Goodwin M. A. Cass Jr. -IIIIIIIIIIMIIIllOltdllDllltllMIIHIIItlltlllKMIIMIIIIIItlllllMIIMIMIHHillllltMIHIIIII THE IOWA AGRICULTURIST t!f i t fVt FOURTH ROW; Wilson. Dilworth, Ainsworth. Jasper, Wescott. Siiigraaster, Culver, White, Denner. THIRD ROW: Cramer. Dunn. Satterfleld. Howard. Corwin. Martin. Berkhan. Lennox. SECOND ROW: McCord, Terry. Beath. Smith. Peterson, Rose Storm, Pflueger, Firkins, Goodwin. FIRST ROW: Reck, Butcher. Uehling, Cass, McKahin, Cowden, Chase, Cireenlee. F. M. Reck ASSOCIATE EDITORS G. C. Terrv C. E. Larsok DEPARTMENT EDITORS R. L. CcLVER L. L. Dilworth R. V. Peterson- Activities on Ag Campus Roland C. Ferguson ' A ' coc of Ami-s Brradiuinnrrs BuRCH H. Schneider . . • . . What llif Fanners are Asking Mark E. Cramer, Q. C. Wilson . . . loiva ' s Junior Farmers EDITORIAL STAFF H. C. BCTCHER K. R. Marvin K. C. Satterfield Theodore Uehlinc C. O. Greenlee Clark M. Howard John D. McKahin Robert G. Corwin BUSINESS STAFF ' . C. MOLISON W. L. White B. M. Sherlock CIRCULATION STAFF C. J. Denner M. R. Smith Marcella Dewell K.ATHRINE GOEPPINGER Peter Ainsworth Dewey Bercham Len R. Be.vth Waldo P. Cowden C. O. SiXGMASTER George Wescott Hess P. Jasper Arthur G. Lennox | JBg- ?r?- !lllli:! l!!!lll lltlllll!!lllll!!rTTrTr- 429 g.g.c-c-iiiiiiiitiiMiii i tnnmnin«i«ii niMMnitmmtiunii«itiiniiiim mmiii mninm«mMW « iiniiiiiMiiiii- THE IOWA ENGINEER C. C. SciiiDEj General lunatjer M. A. BuETTELi., i.tiitor C. C. SciiiDE • . General Manaiier Marc A. Huettei.i Managing Editor John D. SNAKE n:ir; Circulation Manager V. C. Anderson t iverlising Manager O. H. WEATHEr.ii 1 Piesii ' .ent .1. (. ' . F., .lines Chatter H. E. Pride Ilumni .LIvisor Edwin Kurtz • . Faculty ' .hlvisor C. S. Niciioi-s Family .LMsor THE IOWA ENGINEER tittJ.fiit  THIRD ROW: Meitvedt. Cervi, Follv, McVey. Kurtz. Bei-k. Hull, Andi-rsun, Uoodman. SECOND ROW: Thompson. Mi ' Dowell, Snakenberg. Schide, Jones, Wageck. L.vle, Paone. FIRST ROW: Farmer, Hauna. Arenson, Bickett, Currin. McMillan, Little, Mayser, Buttell. EDITORIAL STAFF Arthur G. Goodman • Usociale Editor R. D. Mavser Associate Editor F. W. SCHULTZ itumni Editor S. A. McCosH College h ' etus Editor Anthony Paone • Exchange Editor John T. Link Humor Editor EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS A. G. Cervi A. S. Christensen R.« ' MOND Hull Anson Marston Jr. L. G. Roller E. R. Reed J. H. Rust BUSINESS STAFF R. W. Hanna Office Manager M. N. Thompson Iss ' t Advertising Manager George L. Beck Ass ' t Circulation Manager 4 BISINESS ASSISTANTS R. D. Arenson H. J. Bates A. G. Currin R. E. Farmer P. C. Jones M. J. McMillan Henrv Meltvedt L. E. Peterson ItllltMHIHIIIIIIIIIIIMItMtMIIHIIMIHIUIIMMIIHIIHiiMIIH THE IOWA HOMEMAKER Rose Storm, Editor Rose Storm E.lilor Ethel Huebner Husimss Manager Llyra Price Circulation Manaijer Marcella Dewell -Irt Editor Eleanor Murray Issue Editor Kathrine Goeppincdr Issociate Editor Jeanette Beyer Issociale Editor PUBLICATION BOARD F. W. Beckman Florenxe Busse Mrs. Frank Kerokes Esther Pond Rose Storm Ethel Hlebver Llyra Price TinimiJiiJEx. THE IOWA HOMEMAKER THIRD ROW: Ada Ihivlier. KthtT Hielincr. Helen Hamilton. Opal Wind, Harriett Sluss. JIaida Heiner, Lueille Barta. Reva Pierre. SECOND ROW: Katherine Goeppinger. Mar.jorie Ja.v. Eleanor Murrav, Harriett Schleiter. Llyra Price, Greta Thorne, .Tuanita Beard. Bertha Sandvoldt, Viola Revnold.s. Clvdena Stanford. FIRST ROW: Clara Jordan, Marcella Dewcll, Viola .Tammer. E-sther Pond, Mildred Boyt, Rose .Storm, Agnes Noble, Laura Bublitz, Jeannette Beyer, Paula Braunlieh. EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS cl. r. ' jordev Op. l Wind Harriett Schleiter Esther Ravbvrn Jlamta Beard Reva Pierce Harriett Sloss Fern Green BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Bertha Sawoldt Hei-ex Hamilton Ada Havner Viola Jammer Mildred Bovt Agnes Noble mar.torie nobi.e Helen Piper CIRCIT.ATION ASSISTANTS MoNA Thompson Claire Youngclass Fern Green Esther Pond Florence Hahn Pearl Brown Laura Bublitz Pal ' i.a Braum.icii Marcei.la OEwnii. 433 IOWA STATE STUDENT C. p. Streeter, Editor-in-Cliief G. A. Metzcer, Business Manager C. P. Streeter EJitor-in-C iief G. A. Metzger Business Manager L. E. Clapp Managing Editor Meyer Stein Circulation Manager J. G. Earhart Neii-s Editor J. W. Johnson ' Xetzs Editor W. A. Whitfield Neizs Editor C. A. WocEN ' S 1 ' e vs Editor P. M. Dunn Assistant Scvis Editor Harold Parker -Issistant Neixs Editor Peter Aixsworth Issistant i ' ev:s Editor F. E. Sowers Idi ' irtising .Assistant L. A. Voccenthaler Advertising Assistant J. E. Jackson Advertising Assistant C. A. Wheeler Sports Editor S. H. Reck Sports Assistant David Ainsvvorth Sports Assistant Opal Millican ( ' omen ' s Editor Helen Hamilton Society Editor L. A. Harriman Exchange • lllltlllllllllllH tl llt IIIIIIMI(HlllilllllMIIIII«l«M  IMIIIHIIIIIIIIIII Hlllllt«IMIMIIIMIIIHtlllllMMIII lllt IOWA STATE STUDENT FOl ' RTH ROW: Jackson, Stein, Byrum, Beckman, P. Ainsworth, Yogenthaler, F. M. Keck, Hull, Wilson, Schierbaum. THIRD ROW: Peterson. D. Ainsworth, Shapiro, W. Reck, Wheeler, Whitfield, Simon, Bohren, Earhart, Dunn, SECOND ROW: Opal Jlilligan, Ruth Frail, Ethelyn Brown. Irene Shaben, Sarah Manhart, Lucille Barta, Ruth Knutsen. Mildred Hawkins, Helen Hamilton, Parker, Streeter. FIRST ROW: .Johnson. Metzger. Clapp, Alice Bowie, Wogens, Katherine Goeppinger, Sowers, Jessie Hill, McOosh. REPORTING STAFF F. M. Reck R. V. Peterson- R. V. Beckman C. M. Simon Warren Reck M. R. Smith Harold Brown L. E. McFarland D.wiD Ainsworth Katherine Goeppinger C. H. Jefferson Jessie M. Hill C. S. Hill Lloyd Peterson R. C. Benson Irene Sh. ben Alice Bowie R. H. Braunlich A. F. Bohren Ruth Prall Ethelvne Brown Harold Harris W. C. See Hudson Smith Mildred Hawkins Carl Schierbaum I. S. Shapiro Q. C. Wilson Ruth Knutsen Gr.ata Thorne R. C. Ferguson A. G. Currin C. J. Owens W. M. HonuE F. L. Olmsted L. M. Correll OIMIIIIIIH«HlllHMIIIIIHtllHHIHIItOIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIflllHMIIIIItlllUIIIIIII IIIIIMU«||lflMH«MHlHHIHHII« • IIH««IH«MMMHHIHIIIIIMIIIItlllllltltllltH(l llll)ll)IUIH(l MIIIIIIHIM(lllltllt«IIIIMItlllllll«IIMIMI Htl lll ' THE AMES FORESTER SECOND ROW: Prout, Mi ' li.tne. cirmm.us.ii. FIRST ROW: Martin. Downey, Towne, Trenk. .Miller, MiD.iwell. The Forestry Club of Iowa State College has, since 1913, published an annual book of a somewhat technical nature. Contributions for publication have been secured from foresters of note throughout the United States; local faculty members and students have prepared a number of valuable papers for each issue, while the activities of Ames foresters, alumni, and present students make up the feature part of the book. F. B. Trenk . Edilor-in-C.liicf C. W. Martin, J. C, Prout Issorialr Editors Lee Polixghorn, Eari. Downey Issislant Editors W. E. McDowell Business Manar cr G. S. McIntire, Allan Miller . . Issodatr Business Managers NiEL Cl.EMMENSEN, CiiARl.ES Tow N E . .Iss ' t Business Manat ers • iHiiiiiiimimMMinmtnn timmii«««it«Mmiimi itiiiMiii imiiiinimt mimmniwHinw mmm nuiii  - 436 tMIIIIIMIIIIIM IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIMMI«tllllllM«llllllllllllt lllinilllMtllMlilHllllllllliM«lllllilllllHMII ltlllim- ii R orenstcs 437 1 e IHI)IMHI IIHU IUilHII Mtlll)«IMIII«MltlHtlUHIIIII« IIIMIIItltllllHUItlil MI«l)IIIHIItl(lll inillHIIMMHHI 9 THE DEBATE SQUAD SECOND ROW: Pickus. Vhittii ld. Pflaum. Underwood. Hill. Peterson. FIR8T ROW: Kern, Kahle, Hurmison, Everett, Johnson. The test of any school activity is its later usefulness in life. For this reason the choice of college activities should be determined by cultural value and vocational utility, rather than by mere enjoyment. Taking this into consideration, no investment of time and energy gives a greater return than does debate. The successful debater must learn to investigate thoroughh ' , to analyze keenly, and to discriminate carefully. He must not only know, but must be able by the power of persuasion to get others to see as he sees. Iowa State College offers ample opportunity to the student who is desirous of taking advantage of debate. A course in fundamentals of debate is offered as a prerequisite for intercollegiate debate. This offers three hours credit. Three hours credit is also given to the individual making the intercollegiate team, and three additional hours credit for the second intercollegiate debate. A honor forensic A is awarded the person participating in two intercollegiate forensic events or one intercollegiate event upon recommendation of the debate coach. The credits, award, and benefits derived make debating well worth while for the student participating, not only during his school life but also in later years. .g.«i..g.g.iiiiiiiiiiiM«iii M ii i MMii«tMti iiiiitniiiiiiiiiiimiii niniim iitiMimnm i«t im«HMmmiiimiiitiHiiii 438 AFFIR.MATIVE TEAM: 11. S. Kern, Herbert Harmison, Louie Pi.-kus Question ' : Resolved. That the federal government should own and operate the coal mines of the United States. Decision : At Manhattan, Kansas State (Affirmative) 2 Iowa State (Negative) 1 At Ames, Iowa State (Affirmative) 3 Kansas State (Negative) . EGATI 1-; TEAM: .1. R. I ' nderwcjod. 1,. F. Kalili-. K. V. I ' elersuii. iiiiiiiiiiiiMiMMi  i MIMIiMMiMi ioiMiM«  iiiiilliiMtiiiHiiiiiMmiMm niiimiiiiimiiiiiniimminiiniii ; .:..j.a.a.3.av 439 MinUUilllillMllttHI)llltlltHIII ( IIIIIHIMi«IM)l MIIII MI«ll lll«MI«llllllll IIUmi IIHIM)IHHI-9 S 9 AMES-DRAKE-GRINNELL DEBATE AFFIR.MATIVK TEAM: L. E. Knhle, Herbert Harmison, H. S. Kern. Question: Resolved, That the federal government should own and operate the coal mines of the United States. Open Forum Debate with No Decision At Grinnell, Grinnell (Affirmative) Iowa State (Negative) At Ames, Iowa State (Affirmative) Drake (Negative) XECATIVE TEAM: W. A. WhilflelJ, K. V. Peterson, J. R. Vnderwood. Ca3C31 iiiiimiimiHHMMimtmiiHiminmiMimniMHHiimiii immiMWMiiHtmtumimww n Mniii a- ' +40 ■mHM MMiiiii iMiini  nMniMnniiiHtMmt  HimMiiiniiiMH  inim« niii«nmnninmmnmimmiiiii AMES-MICHIGAX AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE-PURDUE DEBATE AFFIRMATIVE TEAM: R. V. Peterson, L. E. Kahle, W. A. WhitBeld. QuESTiox: Resolved, That all labor disputes rising in public utilities should be settled by compulsory arbitration. Decisio ' i : Single Critic Judge At East Lansing, Michigan Aggies (Affirmative) 1 Iowa State (Negative) At Ames, Iowa State (Affirmative) 1 Purdue (Negative) |it NEGATIVE TEAM: J. U. I ' liderwood. C. S. Hill, Louie Pickus. 7T?r g-: •g ' C  « ' ' « ' «« «« MW ' «« H« ' « ' « M MIOHIHIimMmHIHMM«mnHMMIIHMIHWniHtM m« HIIHWI«M llltMIIHWni 44t «-T -- . -TP-BrT!l lit mi %tlHtmM « HllllHIIHIIHHtlllll IIIIHIIIIIM  HlimiMHmt« IH  H«H«MMHWMIHIH THE ORATORICAL SQUAD SECOND ROW: Textnim, Marv Hfald, Bnidlev, Wils FIRST ROW: Shipley, Allen, White. Vork in oratory plays an important part in the forensic activities at Iowa State College. Special classes are arranged by the public speaking department for students wishing to take work in oratory and those who wish to participate in the various contests of the year. This work has been under the supervision of H. A. Bradley of the public speaking faculty for the last two years. During the spring of 1922, two contests were held. B. F. Trenk, who spoke on the subject of Evolution or Revolution , won the Extem- poraneous contest, and St. Elmo Faith gained the first decision with Isolation or Cooperation in the Home Oratorical contest. For the first time in several ears, Ames was represented at the Mis- souri ' alley Oratorical Contest, which was held at AVashington Uni- versity, March 16, 1923. Byron G. Allen was the contestant, and he spoke on Roose elt — the ' oung Man ' s Ideal. Oklahoma. Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Drake, Washington, and Iowa State were repre- sented. Stanley Wallach of Washington University was declared the wiiuicr. The Annual Home Oratorical Contest will be held cluriii . ' the latter part of May, when John ' right, H. j. Wilson, T. A. Shiple , M. D. Textrum, and Alary He.ijd will comp-tc tor the honors.  IIIIIIIMIIIIiHIIIIIHIIIHI«limilltlllllHHIIHIMimHMmMHIMHHIIMIHHIIHH«imMHIMIIIIHimiMIHI HIH ■e-C-e-f e-C:rlMIIIIIIMIIMIHIIMHIIIMIIIMIIIIIIII«lll«lll«IHMIIIIIII(llltiHIH  IHMI(lnl««H«mtHHIHIM Dramatics ' i ou know it uould never do to keep all those people v.-attiny JUNIOR CLASS PLAY ' 3 P A TAILOR-MADE MAN Scene from Act II By Harry James Smith December 8, 1922 CAST MR. ANTON HCBER, the tailor .... Lvle L. Blundell PETER McCONKIE, his assistant . . Erven J. Kowalke MR. ROWLANDS, a Newspaper Man . Herbert Harmisom DR. SONNTAG, a scholar . . . Wallace H. Loncworth TANYA HUBER, his fiancee Anne Hopkins JOHN PAUL BART, The Tailor Made Man Ralph B. Urmy, Jr. POMEROY, Jellicot ' s valet IvAv N. Ring WHEATING, the butler Henry W. Schoenleiv MR. STANLAW, a millionaire .... Alfred C. Kuehl MRS. STANLAW, his aristocratic wife . Dorothy M. Cass CORRENNE STANLAW, their daushter . . Nita Knowles MRS. KITTY DCPIY, a divorce ...... Rena Schlt BESSIE DUPFY, her daugliter .... Harriet Schleiter BOBBIE WESTL.AKE Kenneth J. Maltas RICH. RD CARROLL John F. Little HOWARD CRANE Pall Pahl HAROLD FLEMMING Harold S. Smith MR. RICHARD FITZMAURICE . . Chester W. Martin MRS. FITZMACRICE Florence Wright MR. REt;iN. ' LD CORTELYEAR . . . Wilblr Molison MRS. CORTELYEAR Bernice Kirkham PACLINE AMBROSE Tone A. Johnson ROSS CiIFFORD Hugh M. Corrouch I. FERRY STEMPLE Joseph F. Ringland DOROTHY SWIFTE Sarah Manhardt EIHYLF VINIE Helen Herr LOIS BIRNH.AM Marian C. Dlke VIRGINIA lUSlED Katherine Joy JAMES, a footman Artiilr F. Mlrphy MR THEODORE JELLICOT .... Carroll A. Wocens MR. ABRAHAM NATHAN Loren F. Kahle =1 E: ' B 444 JUNIOR CLASS PLAY SCENE EKUM ACT IV MR. GRAVSON, Nathan ' s Secretary . Richard Baum Ravnolds MISS SHAVNE, a Stenographer Ruth Shaw MR. WHITCOMBE, a Business Man . . . David L. Taylor MR. RUSSELL, Labor Leader .... !o t. cue A. Cass, Jr. MR. FLYNNE, Labor Delegate Clayton E. Holmes MR. CAIN, Labor Delegate Albion A. Blinks TECHNICAL STAFF Business Manager George Reese Advertising Manager Arthur G. Lennox Property Manager Edgar W. Kowakle Assistant Property Manager T. A. Anderson Direction of Mr. Lester Raines, Miss Mildred I. Throne and Miss Helene E. Wilson Time: 1916. Place: New York Citv. Act I. The tailoring establishment of Mr. Huber. Act II. Reception room of the Stanlaw ' s new home, the same evening. Act III. Bart ' s office at the .American Oceanic Shipbuilding Corporation, nine months later. Act I ' . Fhe tailoring establishment of Mr. Huber, the morning of the following day. liJ Isn ' t life the most wonderful proposition? W ' hh so much ahead always — so many big things waiting to be done! And a chance for everybody! Aren ' t you happy; Don ' t you think it will be splendid to see it through together. ' V ' ou know, it almost seems to me I can actually see them out there — ahead — the big jobs waiting for someone to tackle them. — Jn in Paul Bart 445 LOVE, THE LOCKSMITH T ' .JaDHi ■ I HE HOUSE THAT JACK AND DAVID BUILT ritfni by Thomas Kexxedy Presented October 27, 1922 at the Industrial Science Barbecue and November 23, 1922 at the Kanipus Vod-Vil To the left is the house that Jack built To the right is the house that Da ii! built CAST CUPID, the Locksmith . Hale Dickerson, Rich ako S. Ihompsox JACK, the Ill-doer Ralph A. Trexel MRS. JACK Margaret V. Sloss JACQUELINE Ada IIasver, Helen Herr OLDER DAUGHTER Louse Stephenson JACK, JR Robert L I ' nderhill DAVID, the Dry Loren F. Kahle MRS. DAVID Marcella Dewell DAVIE Hlbert (Jarrecmt, B. R. Meyers OLDER DAUGHTER Clvdena Stanford YOUNGER D.AUGiriER Berenice Newtsox FIRST DRAMATIC HOUR I SCENES FROM THE MINUET AND THE TRVSTING PLACE November 2, 1922 UNCLE JIMMY by Zona Gale UNCLE JIMMY Ralph A. Trexel MITTY Ruth Shaw MIS ' AMANDA TOPLADY Helen Beels CALLIOPE MARSH Tiielma M. Smith MIS ' POSTMASTER SYKES Margaret Mowrer GRANDMA Lilliav A. Stoutenberc JOSEF George Thompson- UNCLE ROD Cla ton E. Holmes THE MINUET by LoLis N. Parker THE MARQl IS Horace S. Kern THE JAILOR V. J. Venables THE MARCHIONESS Rena Schut THE TRVSTING PLACE hy Booth Tarkixtox MRS. CURTIS, the Widow Leone Hampton LAUNCELOT BRIGCJS Hubert Garrecht MRS. BRIGGS, his Mother Mvrtle Larson JESSIE BRIGGS, his Sister Helen Herr RUPERT SMITH Harold E. Sunde MR. INGOLDSBY Charles M. Woolman THE MYSTERIOUS OICE ..... Clarence L. Kellev Management Franklin M. Reck Properties Robert M. Underhill, D. L. T. ' VYLOr 447 SECOND DRAMATIC HOUR fi i SCENE FROM THE FATAL NECKLACE November 23, 19 22 THE FATAL NECKLACE A Burlesque Mellow Drama THE VILLAIN Robert P. Moscrip THE VILLAINES3 Dorothy M. Cass THE COUNTESS Margaret W. Sloss THE HERO Ralph B. Trmy THE HEROINE Nita Kxowles HUNTOON-HOWARD DUO Homer B. Huntoox J. D. Howard LOVT, THE LOCKSMITH (Repeated) TWO GAY DECEIVERS HE Harold E. Sunde SHE lOXE A. JOHN ' SOX THE ALET Erven J. Kowalke THE ACCORDIAN WIZARD J. W. Johnson ONE HUNDRED EARS HENCE HE Carroll A. Wogens THE WIFE Vernon- C. Pinkham THE WOMAN Hubert CJarrecht The Program Darrell B. Lucas Business Manager F. M. Reck THIRD DRAMATIC HOUR CHRISTMAS MATINEE December 14, 1922 Christmas Music IOWA STATE TRIO Edwin- L. Broderick, Leon C. Heckert, Homer B. Huntoom ON CHRISTMAS DAY IN THE MORNING Grace Riclimond Helen M. Tremain THE carolers- Howard Cation, Medora Grandprev, Donald Porter EsTELLA Sill THE CHRISTMAS SUBSTITUTE .... Anna S. Packard Rena Schut WHY THE CHIMES RANG E. A. McFadden Time: Dusk of a day long ago. The scene :s laid in a peasant ' s hut on the edge of a forest near a cathedral town. I CHARACTERS HOLGER, a Peasant Boy Robert M. Underhill STEEN, his Younger Brother Charles H. Brown BERTEL, their Uncle Clarence L. Kellev AN OLD WOM.AN Florence Todd Stage Manager L. L. Varner Electrician W. L. Trl ' LL Presented by the Class in Play Production. Direction of Mr. Lester Raines THE MASQUED PLAYERS ' PRODUCTION THIRD ROW: Trexel, Garrecht, Elliott, Moscrip, Kowalke. SKI ' ON ' I) ROW: Knowles, Kirkham, Schut, Stanford. Beels. FIRST ROW: Shipley. Kern. Kahle. Sunde. Urmv. ROLLO ' S WILD OAT b ' Cl.are Kumimer February 2, 1923 CAST HEWSTON, Rollo ' s Man Ervrx J. Kow.alke LVOIA, Rollo ' s Sister I ' lvdena St.wford ROLLO WEBSTER, A Youth with Aspirations Hubert Garrecht MR. STEIN, A Theatrical Manager . . Ralph B. Trmv, Jr. GOEOIE MacDIU-T, an Actress Nita Knowles ( .EORc;E LUCAS, an Actor Kenneth J. Maltas MRS. PARK-GALES | WHORTLEV CAMPERDOWN 1- All of the Profession THOMAS SKLLTERLING J 1 Margaret Sloss |- H. S. Kern- J ' ernon C. Pixkham AUNT LANE, Rollo ' s CJrcat-Aunt Helen Beels HORATIO WEBSTER, Rollo ' s Grandfather . Ralph A. Trexel BELLA, Honseinaid at the Wehsters ' . . Thelma M. S.mith Stage Manager T. A. Anderson Electrcian LoREX F. Kahle Manager (George Beese Direction ' As.. R.mnes, Miss Wu son, Miss Throne ACT I Scene 1. Rollo ' s studio. Central Park West. New ' ork City. Time Tweh ' e o ' clock oit a ni jrning in earh Spi ing. Scene 2. The same, the following evening. ACT II Scene 1. Rollo ' s dressing room, the Oddity I ' heatre. Scene 2. On the stage, that very moment. ACT III Scene 1. Sitting room, Cirandfather Webster ' s house. Shelbrooke. A few hours later. Scene 2. The same, the following morning. iim MimMnmHMmmi nminmMM«i ii  n  niinniiHMimmnminmiiiii «HmmwMi iii?i . a a  - 450 i|ll)IIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIHtlMllllltll«IMII IIIIMIIIIMIIinillM(lttllHIII lllllillHIH IIMIIIilMlilltMIIIIIIU- THE MASQUED PLAYERS ' PRODl ' CTIOX Scenes from RoUo ' s Wild Oat rC IMIIIIIIIM l««H«MMIII(l)IHIHI«HtlHlltllllllllllMII«MMI)lll M llll«llllllll IMII)llll«ltMM  l iMm«IHIII! 451 ' ] FIRST MEN ' S VOD-VIL IOWA STATE GYM March 3, 1923 First group prize awarded to Delta Up- silon. Second Group prize awarded to Beta The- ta Pi. Individual cups awarded to The Adelante magician and The Waller Girl of Delta Upsilon. PROGRAM I. Homer Huntoon ' s Jazzomaniacs O. Life on the Farm Frisbce House V. Ames as it Ain ' t or Kicked out of College .Ilf ' ia Tail Omcija A. Dark Moments Plii Delta Theta S. East of Ontario Phi Gamma Delta r. Hal Ynlsen, in something special . . . Tail Gamma A ' u A. The Woman in Green llpha Kappa Delta T. A Sick Coon Haelietor Literary Society THE HULA GIRL E. Lil from the Islands Lambda Chi Alpha C. Psychotherapeutics Sit ma Pi O. Holler Lowder and Company Delta I ' t ' silon L. Thurstow, the magician Idelante L. Romcttc and Julio, a la Shakespeare . Sii ma Alpha Lpsilon E. Cre vso Delta Tau Delta G. World Famous Dancers Beta Theta Pi E. Tables Turned Tau Kappa Epsiton ?. One Hundred Years Hence Business Manager A. A. Lexnox Electrician George Beese Stage Managers .... Jons A. Winslow, Earl W. Jones ■ONE HINDREO YEARS ilENCE I illli a 3 i 452 FIRST MEN ' S VOD-VIL iJd e1 ■IIIMMIIItlll tMIHIUMIIM(IIHIIIIIIIHIIIII llllllllllllllll IIIIMIMIIM«IIIIHIIIIIIlllllllltll)HI tUHI«lllllllllll-3 9-A-9-9 3-3r- M |- ' j llJLX.- .-a-- i-n HL FOURTH DRAMATIC HOUR A FAX AND TWO CANDLE STICKS February 13, 1923 An Old Fashioned Party on St. ' alentine ' s Night RALPH I). Vincent Williams N ' AXCV Rlth Shaw Hl ' GH Pail Paul THE BRACELET The Dining Room of the Westerns WILLIAM, the Footman Frank Traver SMITHERS, the Maid Marion Wilson MARTIN, the Butler Herbert P. Sindt HARVEY WESTERN Alfred C. Kuehl MRS. WESTERN Marcella Dewell JUDGE BANKET H. Warren Denisos MRS. BANKET Mona Thompson MISS FARREN, Governess Norma Harvey •IIMItimiMIM HUIMWMUIIIMIItlHMtt IIUI)Hilllllll l lll«IHMIIttllHMIHHIIIII(IHI(IIIIMtl«IIIHIMI«llllllll- SOPHOMORE CLASS PLAY Jacobs, C ' hurcliill, .Tones, Throiif, Raines. Wilson, Paine, Radt-Uffe. L ' nderhill. Nxitt. Taylor. Stephens. Phith, Albert on. Hilliard. Einbree, Cannon. Ains worth, Elliott, Reck, Kroeger, Pflue ' er, Harvey. Ciirijss, ' aiil)yke, Denison. Birinn, Bryant, Hass, Williams. POMANDER WALK By Louis . Parker March 30, 1923 PERSONS I THE PLAY PROLOGrE Helen Kroeger ADMIRAL SIR PETER ANTROBUS John- A. Bryant JIM, his Man Peter Ainsworth JEROME BROOKE-HOSKVN, Esq Harvey Pflueger THE EYESORE Floyd R. Nutt MR. BASIL PRINGLE D. Vincent Willl ms MRS. PAMELA POSKETT Ellen Birum JANE Marjorie Cannon MADAME Ll ' CIE LACHESNAIS Norma C. Harvey MLLE. MARJOLAINE LACHESNAIS Dorothy Van Dyke NANETTE Nell M. Taylor NHSS RUTH PENNYNHNT Marie W. Pl. th NHSS BARBARA PENNYMINT Helen Hass THE REV ' . JACOB STERNROYD, D. D., F. S. A Cliff Y. Stephens THE HON. CAROLINE THRING Nancy E. Elliott JOHN SAYLE, 10th BARON OTFORD Lawrence M. Clrtiss LIEUT. THE HON. JOHN SAYLE, R. N H. Warren Denison THE MUFFIN-MAN Warren D. Reck THE LAMPLIGHTER Leslie Hilliard PRODUCTION STAFF Rehearsal Director Helen Beels Business Manager Robert M. Underhii.l Assistant Business Manager Harold L. Jacobs Publicity Manager C.ml Chlrchill Advertising Manager Newlin Embree Property Managers George R. Paine, Parker Johnston Stage Managers Earl W. Jones, Frank S. Radcliffe M. C. Lowenberg, William H. Atherton Technical Directors L. F. Kahle, R. B. Urmy Direction Mr. Lester Raines, Miss Helene E. Wilson, Miss Mildred I. Throne .PlllMIHIHHIIimim  IHI Himil HHIHIIHHIIIWt«WIIIIMMHHHII Mim HMHimM imWIHI MMi mi ? . a   -a 455 nmnuur- .iimmmm: m E i t: m J ' ] .M SOPHOMORE CLASS PLAY POMANDER WALK Mn. Posketl, Sir PiUr, and Jim I ' m sure •we all hope they ' ll live happy ever after HllllllllliMIIIIIMDnillMlltlMMtlallMttlHMIHIII 4S6 IUH«HH«Mlt«IMHH)ltltHHIHI«HIIHIIIIIH(IIIMIIMH IMHHMHIIIIMIIIIIin)IMHlliilM THE LITTLE COUNTRY THEATRE ilil Dilworth. Uehling, .lolinsoii. Elliott. Trext-l, K.mii, tiarrecht. Miss Shattuck, Dickerson, Williams, Shipley, Stanford. Kern. SECOND SEASON PURPOSE Rural communities are showing a lively interest in play production. This interest is spread- ing to the men, women, and children of the farm. Farm bureaus have begun to use plays, sometimes as special programs for evenings of recreation. The purpose of the Little Country Theatre at the State Fair is to show what can be done in rural communities to produce plays with average amateurs, reasonable effort and with facili- ties such as are now available and are likely to prevail for some time to come. The Little Country Theatre of Iowa originated in 1921 under the direction of Miss Fredrica V. Shattuck and has enjoyed two very successful seasons. The program presented August 2+ to 31, 1922, and on the campus in October was as follows: THE CLOD By Lewis Beach Scene: The kitchen of a farmhouse on the border between the Southern and the Northern states. Time: Ten o ' clock in the evening, September, 1S63. CAST OF CH. RACTERS TH. ' VDDECS TRASK Hor. ce Kern M. ' XRV TR. SK Clydeka Stanford A SOUTHERN SERGEANT Ralph Trexel DICK, a Trooper Hubert (;arrecht A NORTHERN SOLDIER O. Vincent Williams THE TURTLE DOVE By Largaret Scott Oliver CAST OF CHAR. ' CTERS CHORUS David Taylor CHANG-SUT-VEN, son of Chang-Won-Vin, the Great, ruler of the Province of Canton .... Horace S. Kerx THE M.AND.- RIN Theodore Uehling KWEN-LIN, his Daughter Alice M. Kern THE GOD OF FATE Elwood Johnson THE PROPERTY MAN Ralph Trexel THE GONG BEARER Lloyd Lester Duworth iliil : X3 itiMitiiuiii imiinimim«Mtn«tl «m««HiiiiiHim i miiin 4-57 • UIM IIMIIIIt l««lll IIMMIIIIHIMIIHIIIIII HllllltMII l«llltMIIII IHMIMIIMIIIIIM)IIIIMIIHIMIHIM UMHIII-9 THE LITTLE COUNTRY THEATRE THE VERY NAKED HOY By StI ART Y. I.KER The scene is half vay to a proposal. CHARACTERS SHE Nancv Elliott HE T. A. Shipley, Jr. BROTHER Hale Dickersov Business Manager Martha Peppers Stage Manager T. A. Shipley. Jr. Assistant Stage Manager Hale Oickersox Director Miss Fredrica V. Shl ttlck Jllllllll4 lMI«ll«MUIltlllllllllHII«IHI«milllllllHHIHMllllllllHtltlllHHIIIIIII  « miHHHHIHIMIWM H MII. «   -Jf THE RESERVE OFFICERS ' TRAINING CORPS The si-rioiis lack of trained officers and in- structors at the outbreak of our great Ci il War no doubt led the sup|iorters of the .Mor- rill Act of 1862 to make it binding upon all state institutions benefiting from its provisions to offer instruction in Military Tactics in return for the aid given by the United States. It was under the provisions of this bill that loua State College formally opened to stu- dents on March 17, ISd . The following ear ( jeneral James L. Geddes, a distinguished eteran officer of the Civil War, was appoint- ed as Professor of Military Tactics and En- gineering . In 1884, (ieneral Geddes was succeeded by the revered and beloved (jeneral James Rush Lincoln, who remained as the guiding light of military instruction in the college for nearly thirt ' -eight years. The news of his death during the summer vacation of 1922 will ever mark in the history of the class of 1924 the loss of a sincere friend and counselor, as well as the loss to the college and militar ' department of the services of a dis- tinguished scholar and gentleman. Some fifty commissioned officers of the regular niilitar establishments today, together with several hundreds of capable officers furnished from his former students, for the Spanish-American and World Wars, e emplif the spirit with which he carried forth the wise purpose of the founders of the Morrill Act. With the lessons of the great World War then raging, vividly before the people, the Federal Congress passed the National Defense Act of June 3, 1916, which among other provisions provided for the establishment of the Reserve Officers ' Training Corps, placing the work on a .sound educational basis and providing for the capitalization of the product of military training in colleges, Iowa State College promptly applied for the establi.shment of an R. O. T. C. unit, but the exigencies of our entry into the World War delayed its organization until January, 1919, when the cadet bod - was organized into three branches, Infantry, Engineer Corps, and Field Artillery, with modern equipment to the value of about $273,000.00 loaned bv the Federal Govern- ment. To these branches has been added a ' eterinary Unit. The product from the class of 1924 promises to result in more than sixty graduates commissioned in the Reserve Corps of the United States Army, assigned to organiza- tions from their home localities and prepared to exercise intelligent command at an. - time in case of national emergency, while every cadet enrolled will have received training in correct posture and bearing and the principles of leadership and the handling of men which cannot fail to be of inestimable value to him in his civil career. The splendid spirit displayed by the Advanced Course students during the months that have followed the loss of the armory and equipment b - fire, on December 16, 1922, bespeaks a splendid insight on the part of the members of the class of 1924, into the true spirit of military discipline. It is worthy of note that this spirit was trans- mitted to the entire corps to the extent that following the fire, in spite of the fact that newspaper publicity invariably announced that all military instruction would be sus- pended until the end of the term, not a single class failed to meet, and that the records show a smaller percentage of absences than the average for the quarter. Pearl M. SuAthER Colonel, Infantry, P. M. S. T. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiHtimtiitiiMiimmtimtmiiiiimiiimmnHiHiMiitmiiimmHtnnUHmwi ' miMHiiiiiin- THE INSTRUCTING FORCE OF THE MILITARY DEPARTMENT THIRD ROW: Sgt. Chas. Diikir, Sgt. tiustuv R. Siewart, Sgt. Harold R. Lotz. Sgt. Edward E. Dixon. Sgt. Karl De ' aushn. SECOND ROW; Lieut. Theo. I,. Futrh, I,ieut. Robert H. Elliot, Capt. George P. Wiiiton. Capt. Fram-i.s Fainter. Capt. .James C. DeLong, Capt. Wm. P. Schwntel. FIRST ROW: Lieut. Robert G. St. .lames, Capt. Earl E. Gesler, Major Earl E. (iesler. Major Arthur Boetteher, Col. Pearl M. ShalTer. Major .Tohn K. Boles, Lieut. S. B. Renshaw. Iri •.ii;iiiiiiiH!iiiiii!iLiiiiiiiii!iaminE 461 •e-C e C: H IIIHIIIIIMHIIIItMI)IIIIMH)IMIIIMI)IIH MIIIMHIII llllltlllMM MIMIt««lll«H«)HNItlll IHIjMlimillllMMII-9-9- ' 9-9-9- SCABBARD AND BLADE Woods. KlMott. Osborne. Reiishaw, Shcldorf. SluirTiT. Dt-Lnnc Boles, Gesler, Dills, Rure. Senton. Dilwiirth. Kiiinler. Mines. MyEiiIt, Bryant. Textruni. Winton. Trniy. Stephens. Shepiird. Ilussey. M. ( ' . Smith. Vernnn. (lobeli. Himsen. Maltas, I ' etersnn. lianj en. Si. .lames. Srhwatel. Kutch, Ilolsinser, Test. Olsen. Fowler. 11. Liirson. S. X. Smith. Sehaefer. Scoville. Snyder, llarjier. C. Larson. Page. !lMIMIIIMIIIIIIIMMtMIIMIMI ll IIIIMIIIII(«lllllllllllltllM|||||IH|I|lMinM||tHMIHIII«IIHn«l«IHI«llttlnMMI|i SCABBARD AND BLADE Honorar} ' Military Fraternity A Company, Second Regiment Chapter Founded at Wisconsin University in 1905 Established at Iowa State College in 1915 Active Chapters, 27 OFFICERS Stuart G. Page Captain F. E. Shepard First Lieutenant E. B. Fowler Second Lieutenant Harry Larsox . First Serijeant HONORARY MEMBERS R. A. Pearson Herman Ksapp An SOS Marstox R. E. Buchakax W. L. Harper S. W. Beyer ASSOCIATE MEMBERS P. M. Shaffer J. K. Boles E. E. Gesler G. p. WlXTON R. H. Elliott F. P. Schwatel ACTIVE MEMBERS F. F. Faixter R. G. St. James J. C. DeLoxc T. L. Fitch S. B. Rexshaw S. N. Smith J. D. HlXES R. F. Mycatt G. L. HOLSIXGER C. W. Haxsox G. A Harper Kexxeth Malt as C. H. Larsox M. H. Scultz J. M. Peterson H. Z. Test F. B. Race L. H. U ' OODS J. W. HUSSEV J. A. Brvaxt Harri • Larsox L. E. Dills R. A. Olsex E. B. Fowler D. H. OSBOURNE R. R. GOBELI S. G. Page L. N. Haugex C. W- SCOVILLE G. L. Seatox M. H. SCHELDORF H. C. Smith L. L. DiLWORTH C. B. SCHAFER F. E. Shepard J. E. SXYDER C. V. Steve xs M. D. Textrlm R. B. Urmy E. H. Vernon .C IMH«Mt«mi«mHinillMIH MlltlllHII IM«llll)lllllll milllin ltlllllHIIHII«l ll IIIHI MItl IIIHHIIIHHI. 463 K. II. Vtrnnii. Hti ' r Sinnn. S. G. Page. Adn Hnvner. K. E. Dills. (Jettrgia Appel. C. Y. Stevens. LolIi e Brown. .1. K. SliiiiniKer. Mary Ellen Hiirtlfv. D. W. Osborne. Helen Nfwton. M. D. Textrum. Cliiire YoiingcUiss. H, E. Gordon. Mirium Mt-l-iiin. K. K. I-arsun. Ellen Hyrnm. 464 .UILaHIU liU Lliiu ; iiJi 1 J : ii;_LiiiiUii- 4.1 1-.. - INFANTRY ROSTER i :? ii Eugene H. Vernox ■ . • Colom-l Fred E. Shepard Linilitmnl-Colonii Stuart G. Page, Leslie E. Dills Majors Floyd L. Dilworth Rrtjimcniat Adjutant MiLTOK D. Farrar, A ' incext M. . voersov . Ratallion .hijutanis COMPANY A Clifford Y. Stephens Captain Wilber C. Molison . Marion Schultz ■ . . . . First Lieutenant Francis J. Pall . ■ COMPANY B . Captain John S. Bryant . • . . . Seeond Lieutenant . . . Second Lieutenant COMPANY D Myron D. Textri m Captain George A. Harper . J. K- Kent Seeond Lieutenant Seeond Lieutenant Seeond Lieutenant . First Lieutenant . First Lieutenant . First Lieutenant COMPANY •■£■ ' Hugh E. Gordon . Captain . ' d()I,ph F. Bohren .... First Lieutenant Frank R. I.loi d .... Seeond Lieutenant ■ . . ■ . . Captain James A. Van Nice .... First Lieutenant Robert V. Macey .... Seeond Lieutenant 465 ARTILLERY OFFICERS AND SPONSORS 4pv t fe- - i L. X. ILiiiK. ' ii, . L.r.rll:i D. ' w.-Il, •Tack Hussey, Murgviiirele Kirkmun. K. A. Olson. Frunct ' s Nelsou, 0. B. Schafer. lone Johnson, R. B. rrmy. Kuth Sliaw. L. H. Woods, Maxine amith. G. H. Holsinger. Ilt ' Ieii Piper- • IIIHtHIMUII IMIIHIIIMIHIIIMNI lllllllllllltlHMIII(IIMIItl MI llillllMMilll«IIIMMI ilMltHlillHMIHHHI ' ARTILLERY ROSTER Lee N. Halcen . Colon,i Jack W. Hlssev, R. A. Oi.se Majors Frank B. Race Ri-gimenlal Adjutant LoREX F. KahlE; C. W. Scovii.le .... Batallion Adjutants BATTERY A Conrad B. Schaefer Cafitain Corrv Fichter Second Lieutenant Walter H. Pkoesholdt . . . First Lieutenant i . T. Nichols Second Lieutenant i;o VEN Campbeli Second Lieutenant Ralph B. Urmv Loren F. Kahle BATTERY B Captain Harold P. King . . First Lieutenant Oscar H. Tnw . . . . CIL B. MiDDLETON ' . . Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant BATTERY •C Leonard H. ' oods Captain I ' . V. Schoenlein C. V. ScoviLLE First Lieutenant Harold Z. Test First Lieutenant WiLLARD W. Stevens , E. ( . Werentin . . . Second Lieutenant . Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Georce L. Holsincer . James E. Snvder . . . Lairence J. Peterson . BATTERY -ly . Captain P wight S. Holcomr First Lieutenant First Lieutenant Burcn H. Schneid-r n::RB RT H. HiNNAH Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Seiona ' Lieutenant •ill« «HWHItHf«M tHDIIIIHIIIHIIIIItlMMIttlttlllllDIII IIIMMItltHHIII IKHIHIIKIMIttltMIIII. if ENGINEER OFFICERS AND SPONSORS 468 ENGINEER ROSTER Ralph R. Gobeli Mujor JOHX D. HiNEs IJjutanI COMPANY A (George Lei-Axd Seatov C.ufain Lester H. Koemtezer . . . First Liiutiiianl Clifford J. Donnal Captain CJlekn E. Johnson .... S,(on,l Liciilntant John M. Peterson .... First Lieutenant Glexv I. P.4GE SeeonJ Lieutenant C. E. Fakris Seeond Lieutenant COMP. ' NV ' B Eugene B. Fowler Captain I ' . J. Johnson . . Mark C. Mleller ....... Captain John F. Clifton . Harry Larson First Lieutenant Lester H. Kellogg COMPANY C M. W. Sheldorf Captain Philip C. Jones . R. H. W ' h.lum Bode ....... Captain Paul M. Fowler . FL ROLD F. Steinbkecher . . First Lieutenant Raymond R. Hull . . First Lieutenant Seeond Lieutenant Seiond Lieutenant . First Lieutenant Seeond Lieutenant Seeond Lieutenant VETERINARY ROSTER C. H. Larson Captain H. C. Smith First Lieutenant J. R. Roche, R. W. Merrimxn Semnd LieutenanJs :iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiirii!iiiiniMi iiimi!i[iiiiiiiiirii!!ii!: i 469 Itonzo J,-iut,s to hiujiru- an aid,nl aiutidar,- for tin- inllryi- mandolin and iihi- cluhs. IIIIIIIIMIIIMIMMWHI MMIIIIIimilllHI«lllllimiHllimillllllHIIH llllllllllnimiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiniiiiiiii 470 Inter-Collegiate fudging Teams .iii iiiinimiinmnMnnnimiiiimt « imiiininniiniiinni nimi m nmtmniiniiwiwmtm iiimintn; 471 • ' IIIMIHItHIIMnMIIIIII)l|lllllllltlllM(IIIIIIIIIIIHMIIH l (IIIMIIHHIII llllll«Mtlllll lllllllll tMMIIMIIII(MII INTERNATIONAL TEAM .1. H. Hillon. H. B. Bovle. .1. C, Holbert. E. E. DiiWiert, I. S. Graham. Prof. P. S. Shearer. S. S. Wheeler. Siiu-f 1900 Iowa State College ha.s been represented in a (ielil of intercollegiate com- petition peculiar to schools of its type. In tiie fall of l ' )00 the International Li e Stock Show established a conipetitise con- test in the judging of live stock and Iowa State College as one of the first six .schools to take part. Since then the judging teams from Ames have taken part every year and have continuously enjoyed a reputation of one of the strongest contenders for the first honors. An average for the twenty-two years of the contest shows that the Ames teams have averaged 2.85 rank, with eight firsts, three seconds, and in every year but one they have ranked fifth or above. This is a much better record than that of any other school. At the 1922 show Iowa State won the coveted Uronze l ull offered by the association. Since the beginning of the International contest other fields of agricultural judging have been opened to teams from the various colleges. During the past ear Ames stu- dents representing the horticulture, poultry, dairy, and animal husbandry departments have been very successful in the various contests. Oi the eight teams representing the college Iowa State won four firsts and four thirds. The personnel and the records of the teams arc as follows: INTERNATIONAL TEAM Prof. P. S. Shearer — Coaili j, ( ' . lIoi.riERi — lliiih Man of llir ( ' .onr,sl II. K. Bovle E. E. Dubbert J. 11. Hilton- S. I. Graham S. S. Wheeler Recoril : First at the Stiulciits luilK ' mf; Coiite t, Internatioii.il Live Stdck Slmw, ChicQH , Illinois. SWINE jrnc.iNc; team Prof. P. S- Shearer — Coach E. E. Dcbberi. Iliijli Man of ih,- Contest S. S. Wheeler Carl Maloke J. C. Holbert E. .- . Frffts J. H. Hilton Record: First at the Students IiuIkIhk Contest, National Swine Shci . Peoria, III. COI.I.ECIATE pocltrv iriK;iNG TEAM Prof. H. H- Bittenbender — Coach C. A. Shellabarcer H. E. (Jordon R. L. Watkins I.. C Deal W. I.. Brows Record: First in production and exhibi- tion departments and sweepstakes teain at the Mid-West Inter-Collegiate Poultry JudginK C ontest of the Chicago Coliseum Show. DISABLED VETERANS POILFRN JIDCilNC; TEAM Prof. 11. 11. BrriESBENDER — Coach C R. Drake L. E. Wilsox F. E. FvLER M. D. Don- Nicholas Kass Record: I ir t in production and exhibi- tion departments at the Disabled eterans Judging Contest of the .American Ro al Live Stock Show. Kansas Citv. rtiihitiiliilinnniiniiiiiiiiaiiiiiiMniMii MiMiiuni(iiiiiiiMiiii«ii itiHiiiniiHHii«nHiiji«miM{i DAIRY HUSBANDRY TEAM DAIRY PRODITTS TEAM I ' rof. Earl Weaver, H. B. Boyle, E. O. Johnson, J. H. Hilton. H. F. Stevenson. DISABLED VETERANS POULTRY JUDGING TEAM POULTRY JUDGING TEAM 1. II. Biltenbender. C. A. .Shellnbarger. R. I,. Walkin.s H. E. Ciordon, L. C. Deal, W. L. Brown. •milllllll«llllM llltHllllllllllllltllllMIIII MIIHIIIIIIiniiriTrilMI ltl lllllll«ll«IIMMHimniH IHI nTITnmB=T rTBrg- g s--B--i SWINE JUDGING TEAM ite?iti pf lit il Oil III %l lil Prof. P. S. Shearer. Carl Malone, E. A. Fritt.s. E. E. Dubbert. S. S. Wheeler, J. C. Holliert, J. H. Hilton. STUDENT .irOC;iNG CLASS SI IDKNTS jrnciNC III ' Ri:i-()R|lS . I ' rilE INII-.RN.MIONAI I.UT. STOCK. SHOW : n:TTTCFityT? ra-- -r -1 474 imnw mm msW on fib no c 475 !R DEDICA HON To the Athletic Council To the Governing Board To the Ames Fire Department To the Fort Dodge, Des Moines and Southern Railroad TTTmTTmqTTimmnr.Tm T:nirniiTimTmn 47« Jl jatmiinL . ' iiimiiiiiiiiiiKiii ; - 1 took her home last evening; She surely was a peach ! But when I saw her stately house, She seemed beyond my reach. I could not help but linger, To stand a bit in awe ; But soon again I heard her step, And looking back I saw She hadn ' t even entered But was coming back again ; And then it dawtied — the reason why She hadn ' t asked me in. 3|  g.HIMMM«IMtMMMIMMt«HtMMM Wm IIWmMMIHmMmiMMtm MMIHHtlH l HH«llltlllHBM« • nilllllUIHIIIIIIIIItlM)lllllllltllllllMIHIIItllllltlMllttltlMltllllHlllllllttHMIHMHIMItlllllMMIHIMtltt IIIIU9 U-B-B-g-0-3g THE WOMEN ' S PAX HELL ():casion; Women ' s Pan-lhlleiiic Council Meetine. Place: CeiUral Biiildin-. Time: As near dirnier hour as possible. Scene: Deans Ilarnood and Roberts, Miss Hailev, and the Minor Student Reprtsentatives. President: ■• ' ill the meeting please come to order? We have only a few things to discuss today and I feel that we can be through in plenty of time to get home for dessert. The first thing under discussion is the rushing rules for next lear Pean Haruood: The faculty have talked the matter over and feel that we have a plan which would be verv successful. NVe sugges: that rushing be extended for one quarter and con- sis: of shaking hands with the freshmen once a week. Each sorrrity shruld have an assigned dav for the handshake. .Miss Kaile : Madam President, one objection to that which I see IS that some sorority girl might attempt to spike a fresh- man by giving her the grip. Student Representative: I Dean Roberts: I think that plan is a verv good one but some of the particulars should be considered. IMo sororitv girls should be allowed to rush unless they have passed fortv hours of work the two previous quarters according to Rule No.N 6 of the rule book. -Miss Hailey: Madam President, I would suggest that dur- ing rushing no girls shall have marcels or wear their hair over their e.irs so that all unnecessary expense and competition shall be eliminated. Student Representative: But we don ' t Dean Harwood: I think Miss Bailev ' s ' suggestion is i;-ry (lood. Ihere is altogether too much monev spent for looks bv the L ' lrls cf Iowa State College. During the twelve weeks of rMshuig, all girls should be required to wear their cooking uni- forms, n them they will a ' l be neatlv and becomingly dressed Above all no powder or perfume should be permitted ' , particu- larly Azurea or that abominable, suggestive kind called— love Me. Is that it? S ' liden; Representative: We would suggest Dean Roberts: Madam President, the sororities do not take this (|ues;ion seri ;usly enough. Expenses must be cut down and only twenty-five cents should be allowed per plate at any dinner party except the preference party which should be limited to thir-y cents. Student Representative: But we can ' t Dean Harvvrod: That would be a very good thing. Per- haps it would be be-ter if every house had the same dinner menu in order to eliminate any hard feeling. •Vliss Bailey: Madam President, it is utter foolishness for the girls to take the freshmen to Cranford ' s or Ford ' s when they are out walking. The sorority girls should carry a lunch with them for the freshmen in case they get hungry ' Restless movements from all parts nf the room ' as the clock strikes r, :15. President: I will appoint a committee of three to interview Newt, the chime ringer, and the janitors of Central building as to their views and suggestions for new rushing rules Is there a motion for adjournment? Meeting is adjourned. • llllllllllllllllllll MIIIIIIIIIIIII)ltl«IIM Mllllllllllllilllll HIIIMMIIIIIIIHIIItM)tlllilMIMIIill«IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIf9- -.9-7- 478 479 iii«imn i iiimn«tiiii HMni«im«itiiiniiii 1 his is ;i fair likeness of ' icior John- da, No. 1132+, who escaped from the state penetentiary at Fort Madison, Scptcinher 26, 1943. He is 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighs about 160 pounds, has blue eyes, and is partially bald, with fuzzy black hair. Complexion, dark. Occupation, proprietor of Ames Dress Club. Will probably be found around dance halls or l arber shops. $100.00 reward. Identifica- tions, diploma from Ames, and Delta Ter- rible Deal pin, carried at all times, and displaced ith pride. This is a good likeness of Maggie c;loss. No. 28592. Alias Soots Gloss, who absconded from the state farm at Rockwell City, Iowa, on April 23, 1943. She is 5 feet 3 inches tall, weighs 150 pounds, and is about 50 years old. Blue eyes, light hair, and light complexion. Occupation, actress. Will probably be found outside stage door, or displaying Molla Mallory poses on the tennis court. Identifications, Apple Berry Pi pin and se ' eral medals. This is considered a good likeness of Willard E. Peaflnwcr, alias (Jvp the Blood , who escaped from State Peniten- tiary, . ' Vuburn, N. Y., on May 20, 1943. Me is 5 feet fi inches tall, weighs 155 pounds, and is about 75 cars old. He has brown eyes, and a shortage of hair. Occupation, traveling salesman for Van Ess Hair Tonic. Will not be found at barber shops except for political purposes. Escaped from prison by outrunning guards. Identification, Ahowia pin, and notes on Theta Nu Epsilon speech. Re- ward 1,000,000 yen or 35 cents. This is a good likeness of Marty Good- man, No. 11638, who recently escaped from the Deportation Prison at Ellis Island, from which place he was to be deported to Russia on the 21st of May, 1943. He is 5 feet 6 inches tall, has brown hair, and eyes, and weighs 145 pounds. Occupation, former editor of the Police Gazette. Will probably be found roaming the streets with a soap box under his arm looking for a corner and a crowd. Identification, Hita Thin Pi pin, ::nd his grandfather ' s felt hat. H(unt if 1,000 marks offered- illJillllllllT 480 !iiii!iiii!miiiinr S ■ WHAT ' S WHO ON THE CAAH US Who ' s Vhat, Vhat ' s What and Why Vhat ' s Who Is Who, will be the contents of a magazine soon to be published by ye worthy editors of Iowa State College. It has been decreed that such is necessary to explain the many and varied types of people we now see adorning our campus. And so it goes. Soon the zoology department will wear their pet skulls on a string about their necks, the chemistry students will make themselves known by adopting hydro- gen sulfide in place of ye vampish Azurea. It will be no unusual sight to behold a brave young engineer surveying his lady love with his surve ing instrument, as they stroll about. Yea, even the ' ets are contemplating leading a spot- ted calf with them where ' er they go. Not to be outdone the Home Ec girls have decided that they will settle upon an emblem of strength and pow- er for theirs. From now on, henceforth and forever, each true Home F.c maiden will boldh ' flourish her stand-by, the worthy rolling pin. Any day, particular oung gentlemen may be seen saun- tering about, leisurely swinging their canes as they walk. These, we are told, are A. H. Seniors. With them are burly oung men clad in rough corduroys, topped with flaming bandanas and huge felt sombreros. These, we also are informed, are students of the Farm Crops department. With them may be seen figures dashing about in abbrevi- ated track suits showing by their garb their athletic tendencies. ■tlllllllllltlllllltllUtltHinitlltlHIIMIIIIIKHIDIIIillllKIII -181 • llllllltllMIIIIM IMIHII HIIM«MMI«l)nillHIIIIIMIIIIIItlllliHIIMIHIIIHHIItl«llllllillt MM«IMIIIIIIIII«llllll(- Cake Katcr (at dance) : What is tliat step that couple is doing? Ditto: That is the horse walk. First Eater: Why call it the horse walk? Ditto: Wafjon behind. Here ' s to the glass we love to sip, It dries many a pensive tear: It ' s not so sweet as a woman ' s li| But a darn sight more sincere. !.IIIMIIII)HMItlllllll l(IIIIM IMHIHIIIIIMHII ll(IIHII«IIHIMMHIIHIIIIIHIIIHI)IIMIIIIIIItllMttlMllimilMIIII .g.g-.g.«r i iiininiiiimmtmimi«iiniiiitimmi iiiiniiiiniiiniiMiimnnniin« mniunnnii imiiiiinniiiiin WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN It was in the early springtime That this little skit took place; Ihe campus was in grandeur, As was the old moon ' s round face. It was a scene that is well kiiown Beneath our campus moon. A thousand times or more, perhaps. It happened to the same old tune. The campanile stark and tall Stands there through every scene. It never moves or wavers But stands — sedate — serene. On this fair night, the first of May, The moon was extra bright ; This man and maid beneath the stars Had had an awful fight. Perhaps the man had tried to steal, Who knows, what might have been — But, alas! I was too far away, I could not tell, unless he tried again. Ah ! now he seems to plead with her, This maid with hair of gold. But no, she spurns him yet ; I fear he ' s grown too bold. His head falls down upon his chest. He gi es up in despair; Th? girl looks dciwii and sees him thus, All — she strokes his hair. He ros ' . ' and looked into her exes And then as is the way with men. He held her close and sighed for — Just then the clock above struck ten. Oh, Jack! she cried in accents wild, AVhat will Miss Johnson say? For V c been late ' most every time — I can ' t be late today. And then the man looked at the clock And wished that it were in A place where only bad things are — He thought — Vhat might have been. l l C « e-e.C«S C:-lllllllllllllllll llllillllllllU ll«MII«llllllllllll)llll«lll IMIMMHUHI «lll HIIIIIIIIIHHnHM IMIIHItllHII. ' 483 ■ffiirai: THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE Cniirteit] J. ,V. Darlimj llonzo lUlinJs tin- pris ' ul, ill ' s rxipiion to tin- joolball S ' juiul iinJ miits llii- Colteijc IliJow. 484 i-ar-millllimilllillillllillIll iiii !ri!iiirHiiim]iiirmiinintmi:iriiiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' AVhat is that thinj that is reclining against the brass rail? Is it a wild man-eating whoofus? No! It is not a wihi man-eating whoofus. It is a cake-eater. Step up close and look at the cookie-duster. He will not bite. It would be too much exertion. No, he has not lost his hat. I he X ' alcntino boys do not wear hats. It would hurt their slender necks which are very delicate so they go bareheaded and use vaseline and Slickem Hair Oil. No, he does not play in the band. He uses his sash as a carrier for his Violet Smilos and wears bell bottom trousers so he can draw in his feet like a turtle. If you see a thing with bell bottom trousers he is either a cake-eater or would like to be one. ' ou may think that the dilly-bird needs a hair cut, but that is just the cake-eater style. No, he does not stand at the rail all day. Some- times he goes to the tea shop and eats cake. Also he will talk to a girl if she will let it. At night he goes home and reads Tattling-Tales. No, it will not be here long for it has only a spongy growth in the place of brains. ' Tis better, my son, to become a student, or even a grind. Do not be a cake-eater I ' ■■■ a THE BUNK Once there was a fair co-cd, This story ' s short — the girl is dead All because, I ' ve heard it said. She wore consumption underwear. Now, it was silk and it was thin, T. B. ' s let all the breezes in ; AVait till summer or freeze your skin AVith consimiptioii underwear. l IIIMII«lllll«IIIIIIIHIHIIII IMIIIIint«(lll )nilM ll tlMltll)llllllllf3-9-.a 485 486 THE POWERS THAT BE WHAT? Occasion : Iowa State Athletic Council Meeting. Place: Nohody knows. Time: Nohody cares. Scene: Prexy, Beyer, Coover, Mayser and Curtiss seated about table. Prexy: Before I call this meeting to order I would like to meet the gentleman at the end of the table. Beyer (Introducing Mayser) : President Pearson meet Athletic Director Mayser. Prexy: Oh, yes, I recall ou very distinctly. We met in 1914 at our last meeting. ou haven ' t changed much. Mayser: Oh, that ' s all right. I ' ve been too busy talking to my friends and winning Valley championships to bother with any of you boys. Prexy: Well, Mr. Mayser, now that we have become acquainted again I hope we can have tr ue cooperation and continue our splendid record in athletics. Mayser: Cooperation is my middle name, Prexy, but please call me Charlie. Prexy (Interrupting): Meeting come to order. Roll Call. Beyer (Calls roll): The rest of the Oeans didn ' t feel like coming over, and the student representatives are not here. Coover: Were the student representatives notified of this meeting? Beyer: Prexy, Mayser and I decided that since the meeting pertained almost entirely to student affairs the had better not be invited. Surely you have not forgotten our policy in this respect. Prexy: Yef-, yes, that ' s right. The students, particularly the athletes, can discuss this at the Cardinal Guild meeting and if the Public Speaking Council agrees, perhaps the student body can have a jolly good pep-meeting some evening before homecoming next year. I ' ll try to he here about that time and maybe I ' ll say a few words then. Mayser; Why not wait until wrestling season when our boys will no doubt Prexy (Interrupting): Oh, yes, I think at this time we should pass resolutions commending the Athletic Council in appreciation of their efforts in securing such a fine gymnasium building. Coover: I agree entirely, President Pearson. 1 know at Ohio State our Gymnasium build- ing had the center in the middle and the sides ran around the ' edge. This proved very satisfactory. Beyer: That ' s fine. (Blows nose) Prexy: By next year we hope to have all classes dismissed at 5 P. M. so the boys can have unrestricted play until 6 P- M. Mr. Coover, what do you think of this? Coover: O. K. with me. Beyer: That ' s fine. (Blows nose) Prexy: Professor Mayser, how long have the present coaches been here? Mayser: None of them more than a year or so, I imagine. Prexy in chorus with Coover and Beyer: Oh, me; Oh, my; a year — they must all be dis- charged at once. Mayser: But won ' t . rt Smith get . Beyer (Interrupting): Who is this Schmidt? Prexy: Ves, yes, they must go, it cannot be. Oh, my. (All sink back into seats. Beyer ' s huge frame may be seen (|uivering under the strain. Prexy on the verge of tears. Mayser holds face in his hands. Curtis, z-zz-zzz-buzz-snore. ) Prexy (Regaining composure): What ' s this? (Picks up folded paper.) A petition signed by football team and other ' A ' men that present football coach be retained. Bosh, Humbug. What do they know about athletics? I have seen at least one football game a year for the past year and I know the situation. Coover (Reaching in pocket) : I have a letter from Linn Oleum, ' 03, located at Apricot City, Arizona. He wants to know how come Nebraska beat Ames in football this year. ill l|ii Prex : ThatV rinht. I didn ' t see the K me, but I :iin Mirc our bo s should have won, because we had voted $2.12 to paint the goal posts that ear. Coover (To himself) : My gracious. I do hope the papers won ' t hear that we paid to have those goals painted. We ' ll be professionalized sure. Oh, my. Beyer (Blows nose for 186th time): What do you think. Dean Curtiss? Curtiss (Awakens with a start) : Now out on my Rookwood farm I have eleven head — (stops, rubs eyes). Pardon me, gentlemen. I thought this was a Shorthorn meeting. I don ' t know anything about athletics, I just work here. (Falls asleep.) (Prexy, Beyer, and Coover in close consultation, while Mayser practices half nelson on table leg.) Prexy: We ' ve decided that all coaches must be discharged. A committee consisting of Miss Harwood, A. B. Noble and Miss Whitehead will be appointed to secure a new ship- ment of coaches. They will announce their selection three days after school opens next fall. Coover: Miss Harwood thinks that Professor Ryan of the Boston Dancing Academy would make a fine man for ' Varsity dancing. Beyer: I know the head of the Utah Music Conservatory and I ' ll write to him this sum- mer and get some football notes. I have some peachy football schemes of my own that I will gladly turn over to the new coach a day or so before the first game. Coover: Oh, Joy. I ' m so enthused. (Mayser breaks table leg.) (Curtiss snores peacefully.) (Beyer leans over and blows nose.) Prexy: Gentlemen, I firmly believe that this council should plan to meet every year. Some of the coaches might have been here another season if we hadn ' t convened when we did. Besides I do enjoy hearing other men ' s opinions. I guess that ' s all. Meeting is adjourned. Clrt.m.v. If c had our a , all the jails And the Inckuiis would be fidl, Of college politieiaiis, Wlio think they have a pull. I ' .i i i iiiir i rrT F 488 THE BRONZE BULL Filled with tear and trembling I opened the outer door, only to have my passage blocked by two heavily armed guards. Hoarsely I whispered the password Shorthorn Cattle and was relieved to see my challengers lower their weapons. I advanced but my rising spirits were given a sud- den setback for immediately in front of me sat Judge . Luckily, being worn out by his incessant vigil, he had fallen asleep, still maintaining his formidable rigidness. With much effort I swung the great oaken door ajar, and here I was to get the supreme shock of my perilous adventure. A black skinned giantess towered over me, tall and muscular and holding in her hands an enormous two-edged sword. Only my sub-conscious mind prompted me to utter the magic word Rookwood and I was allowed to enter. The immensity of the situation almost overwhelmed me, for I stood not within the tomb of King Tut-Ankh-Amen but in that impregnable fortress, that sanctum sanctorum of the Dean of the College of Agriculture. Here among a host of similar objects I found the thing for which I dared to search, a majestic bull, standing almost three feet high and cast in solid bronze. A historic piece of art created in Belgium by one of the world ' s greatest sculptors. A masterpiece which because of its excel- lency warranted the admiration of thousands of AVorld ' s Fair visitors and which is now a co eted trophy for which a hundred agricultural college men from two countries annually compete, being won last fall by Iowa State College. An honored prize with -hich such previous win- ners as Ohio State, Purdue, and Texas saw fit to grace their rotundas that isitors might know of the school ' s achievements, and that inider- classmen might be inspired to attain that position of excellency in judging live-stock that the trophy represents, and take the places of the toreadors who precede them. The deep carpets deadened my footsteps and I imagined I could hear the majestic animal snorting his disgust with his entombment for few knew of his presence and fewer still have seen him. 1 hurriedly e. - plained to him that his treatment was only characteristic, and fled. Out- side a sigh of relief escaped for at heart I am not an adventurer. DO YOU KNOW YOUR AMES? Did ou know that once upon a time President Pearson worked for a living? Do 1,011 know that none of the co-eds believe in free love? Not with candy and theatre prices where they are. Did you know that Fred Shepard never served as a model for athletic underwear? Did you know that Herman Knapp never participated in a parachute dropping contest ? Or that Red Urm ' ne cr turned down an offer to go into the movies? Or that he has never received one? Did you know that all the girls in school who wouldn ' t run for a beauty contest could be put in an ordinary sized telephone booth? Did you know that if the fellows believed everything the girls told them they would be awful saps ? Or that if the girls believed everything the boys told them they would be awful saps? Did you know that the Delt Athletes aren ' t half as good as they are painted by AVee Paige in the Des Moines papers? Or that Wm. Tilden II never defeated Wee in tennis for the simple reason that he never played him ? Did you know that the co-eds aren ' t half as bad as they ' re painted? Did you know that the knapsack wasn ' t named after Herman Knapp, although he has held the sack several times? Did you knou- that you can ' t judge an engineer by the slide rule that he carries? Did you know that one man around the campus never has worried about flunking chemistry or calculus? He is the guy who picks up the papers. Did you know that our new Advisor of Men still listens to the advice of his wife? Did you know that George Beese doesn ' t derive all his income from managing cam- pus theatricals? He sells candy as a side line. Did you know that the sorority girls don ' t get half the kick out of bum serenades that they register? Or that our Dean of Vomen closes her eyes when she dances? Did you know that Prof. Meeker is very friendly and lenient with all students, if they don ' t participate in intercollegiate athletics and never get a grade below 95? Did you know that all important men on the campus are officers in the R. O. T. C. ? ! ' llllllllllltlltllll)MIIIII«ll lll«lltllll«lll llllt«HIIMIllM«IIIIMMI IIIHMIt(HIII(MHMHIUHIHU«IMMIUtHMIH 3 9.-.3-9-9-a- 491 492 •miKltlllllllllllltMIIHIIHMIHIIIIIIinHIIIIHIIMItlllltllllllllMIIUIiltinltlllH MACK-SENNETT COMEDIES Produced by Mack Sennett 1712 Alesandro St. Los Angeles The 1924 Bomb, Ames, Iowa. Dear Editor: Just t vent -tovir years ago this spring I entered Ames College, one of the happiest moments of my life, and never a day goes by bat that 1 have tears in my eyes when I think of my college day.s and my Frat. Earh in my freshman days I affiliated with Beta, going in with One Lamp Louis, Gyp the Blood, and Mike de Pike. The upper classmen at that time were such men as Pancho ' illa, Jess Willard, Jesse James, Jr., and several other men of national reputation for their theatrical ability, and also many moneyed men. It was at Iowa State that the muscles of my eyes became voluntary, so that I can look at a woman ' s face and ankles at the same time. The training was very beneficial in writing exams. M ' darling son wants to be educated ami also has high ambitions to be a track man ; I am going to send him to my old Alma Mater for both reasons. The detours around the old |iost ofHce in the spring and fall make wonderful opportunity for cross country. It is my greatest hope that the happenings today at Iowa State have changed from the way they were when I was there. Many times at night my eyes deceived me into thinking that some loneh soul was resting on the steps of old Ag. Hall but investiga- tion proved that there was twice as many. Do they still teach chemistry in the old school? The profs in that department never trusted me, po.ssibly because I did not look straight ; but I must say in closing that I owe my success to that department. My eyes look both ways yet as they did in chem. fxams. Mo-o-o-o, Mo-o-o-o, Mo-o-o-o for Ames. Sincerely, vv aA 493 llll«tlMttlllMI«MlftllillMiai(Ht||ll|||M|l|ltllllllllMIIIMHtlMMII«tl IUH«IIMIMnif lill(MMIIIIIIt- h: i,,:z !i tJU Ax- d L. .£ .W |5 MJ U - ly- ■ - ' O-L ' -eif n yo. ' r!rr7 L Aj«-«. .-- t£ ' _j8-« t V A - fe pMl hai ' rTa-d -i: NE ETP iT IIIHHMWMIHIIW«IHHIHmH IHWHMIHt HllHIII HI«t  MHtllHHIIWIIW«IIIWtMH4«limHIMHH IIIMW HHIH II HMIHinMlltHllllltllMllltllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIliiil ►5 M 3 3 Anday RM. at l.S.C. 495 m «;«ie.g g«g«e«C.|llll«tlM llllll««llttHIHMIIIIIIIIIIItHIIIIMIMI IIIIM l  H lllll IIHM IIHIIIHIIMIM« IIH HlimiHIIIIM llllll. 1 OUR NEW FRATERNITY HOUSES A big building boom has hit Ames. Our leading; Boanliiig Clubs are no longer con- tent to live in ho els as they have in the past and for some reason they ha e all come to this conclusion at the same time. The result is that a bitter war is raging between those concerned to see which will outdo the other. 1 he total count at this time shows the number of new houses to be fort and that number of frats will move from the rapidly deteriorating west side to a more desirable site east of the Tri Delts. From all reports, the Sigma Nus started the rush when they destroyed their old Boar ' s Nest last fall and sold their property to the unsuspecting State Board at an enormous price and profit. This money, with what they wrenched from the poor fire in.surance companies for their worthless pile of junk will build and equip one of the finest and most complete feed bag emporiums on the campus. To give a very minute idea of the priceless way in which the Snake Headquarters will be finished, one might well mention the mammoth ball room, on the thirteenth floor, and a private telephone for e er inmate. Mm Following hot on the heels of the Sigma Nus in their ef- j forts to be houndy and to have a new house come the Alpha Gamma Rhos. The more broad-minded in the club realized how thoroughly ham- pered they were with a home right in town like the old one was, and how sad it made the future members to have to live like dogs and to have to wear white collars and shoes at all times of the day. So they went right to work and it was no time before ' .hey had a plan whereby they could build a beautiful countrv ' manor. Actual work has started and ne.xt year A. C R. will be as far from civilization as possible and over by the T. K. E. ' s. It is there that tlie freshmen will assemble next year for nose bag drill and for three squares per day. Ihey have spared no expense to make it a home for the boys and all the rooms will be floored with wooden blocks, and a specially made system of fans will circulate familiar odors of back home through them at all H • times. Not to be outdone by mere barbarians, the loyal brothers of Phi Sigma Kappa stepped forth and willingly offered their lives so that the chapter might have a new home. One of these slick insurance companies came arouml and offered to insure all the members to the 496 extent of the cost of a new house. Tin ' s would have been a good plan had there not been two drawbacks: the Phi Sigs rated themselves too high, and the company found that they were all about dead. Insurance companies have nothing to do with Les Mortes. Vhere there is a will there is a way as the old maxim goes and the result of the boys ' further work is pictured here. It, too, will be located on the frat. house row. Upon being interviewed one of the boys said, We don ' t want a house, we want a home, and judging from the picture they got their wish, for what is a home without its rubbish pile? Hardly had the excitement created by the Phi Sigs ' announcement died out, when there came a terrific rumbling from down town. At first we paid little heed to it, thinking it was only Egg Kowaike toot- ing his own horn, but after a while we were made to believe that his Lambda Chi boys were in real earnest. They have picked out a perfect location for their war on the Tri Delts and no doubt with their English manor, and nest of Shieks, Kowaike Alpha will be a menace to all those participating in the rush next fall. A few features will be : sound proof rooms for horn tooting, rare tapestries of the antics of Hugh and Swede , built-in spittoons, and bronze tablets con- taining Egg ' s Revised Rules of Chi -alry for the preps. Here we have the spacious new Adelante house. The last time we visited New ork, the announcer on the rubber-neck bus im- pressed us with the fact that the beautiful Vool- [ f ' - Ji ' BSX orth building was built entirely from the profits from many five and ten cent stores. Ve must ad- mit that this is no small feat, but we are right here to say that we have something to beat that right here at Iowa State. A wonderful home built en- tirely from cigarette butts. It seems impossible, but ou see the Adelante boys don ' t smoke. So they have saved their cigarette money for the last fifteen ears, drawn the interest, and now they are able to carry out the dreams of the Founders. Unlike the A. G. R. house, no unpleasant odors will initiate the visitor ' s sense of smell, and he can relax, without hearing the clicking of ivories, — y lEEa 497  MMHIIMMI IIMII1llfl IIIIHIII ll l««llllllll«llllllllllllftlllllMIIIIII MIMIIiail MlllllinHlllmMMMIIIIM|IMfm balls, cubes or piano. Nor w ill he hear the shouts of the r ' ■ ' ' ' players, for as you know such evils are furthest from tlie Ailelantes. ou know when those silly boys bought our house right out from under us, we didn ' t know just what to do, exclaimed one of the pretty Kappa Delta sisters to a HoMH reporter, ' ou see the old place has so many advantages, the coziest lounging room, and a perfectly wonderful porch. We just hated to give them up. It seems like all that is necessary to build a frat house is a lot and a bunch of nerve. Not lacking in cither, the Kappa Deltas went to work and will undoubtedly have one of the finest homes in Ames. They have their big porch, as one can plainly see, while some of the other features are: a public reception room, which one can enter knowing that he won ' t get the benefit of Bill Cure ' s glares, which make the innocent offender feel like a bach- elor riding a double deck bus on a beautiful uimmer eve. This will be a wonderful relief. Other features ill be a lounging room and parlor on the second floor for the Cellar Gang . All in all, it will be a right smart place. Gamma Phi Beta Vhat do we have here? Oh, yes, the new Gamma Phi Beta club house. The girls all decided that they were tired of being dubbed Swamp Angels and that they were getting too far away from the frat houses. So one of those slick contractors played on their vanities and slipped this wreck of? on them. We will admit that it doesn ' t show up like s ome of the new places but it was just what the girls wanted. It has a lot more room than the old place and will easily accommodate their huge chapter. To say the least they should have a clean sweep to success. On the long list of extras we find a completely equipped beautifying and marcelling department, disappearing beds, and electric-chairs for the Lambda Chi pests. Archie George Vashington Hampton McKm ' tt Vore Kollege Kut Klothes and was quite the hot spit. While Donald McCulbert Cerebrum IMcNice Wore medium class clothes of a medium price. Now Archie still dresses and looks quite as perk. His ambition achieved, a mere clothing clerk. While Donald, though he ' s not put on so much swank. Owns three cars, two farms, and the First National Bank. • iiiiiMii: ' 498 «iH« i tiiMiiw«iitHiii« imM ini miiimimninii miiininnnniiitiimii iiii Hiiiiniimi mnwniMMr.a 3  -a a.   .ixi 499 500  llllltlltllMlllilM IMtlllll l ltHI«l ll lll IIMHIIilll ltllllll IIIIHHItHI« HIIII m ' t H« l Ml MtMMH ' ADVICE TO THE LOVE SHORN Or Helpful Hints to Hairdressers Miss Beatrice Hairwax of the Ames Tri-Weekly Bugle, (comes out one week and then tries for the next three) has been secured to edit this colym. In behalf of those to whom advice has here been given, we wish to thank her from the bottom of our hearts. Dear Miss Hairwax: I have been following your kolym for a number of years in the Ames Tri-Weekly Bugle and the time has come in my life, as comes into every young ladies life, when I need your help. The young man who has come into my life like a comet (he makes me see stars) has given me the emblem of the sacred shrine of Delta Tau Helta and has prom- ised to grace my father ' s house. In these, my happiest days, when both theatrical fame and love have come to me, there is but one dark moment, that makes my happiness melt like grease in a frying pan — He has REFUSED TO SEND CANDY TO THE SISTERS! Aiui as a result, I have been unmercifulh thrown into the tub, as a cat is tossed into the creek. What shall I do, buy the candy or give back the pin ? Yours till my hair is red, Knita Kxowless Your Poor Girl. ' I sympathize with you in your bereavement. You are another innocent victim to the ravages of the D. T. ' s. Perhaps you might persuade the sisters to accept a pocket radio set. B. II. Dear Beatrice: How can I, a lowly minister ' s son, keep my standing with the |ueen from MacGregor at the Pi Phi house when my rival has a car. Anxiously, Claire Dear Claire: Stop chewing and get rich, the lady is too delicate to walk. B. H. Dear Miss Hairwax: Can you tell me how to lurther beautify my appearance. Punk Powers Dear Punk: No. B. H. Dear Miss Hairwax: Can you tell us how much the men ' s Pan-Hell cost. Forty-three and one-half of our girls were there. Chi O Dear Pie: At the last Inter-Frat Conclave, Captain Greene reported on his expenses as follows: Orchestra, $50.30; Hall, $20.29; Programs, $15.61; Hair nets, $10.3S; Miscellaneous, $90.02; Sundries, $200.17; Incidentals, $350.07. Total, $12730.84. I hope that this itemized statement will satisfy your doubts. B. H. Dear Miss Hairwax: Which is the farthest from the South Side, the . - li. R. house or the Pi Kap house. Ima ' alker Dear Ima: I ' he A. G. R. house is a little further from the South Side than the Pi Kap House. H. II. IIIL rTTmi!ii!ir!H!iirrrr 501 r?r- i-a-i :iiiiiiimi!iiincE •l lllllllllIlT t t H«inn HmmiimmnimiininiMHiiim«niiniM«  nMiiiiiiinitiiinmiiiiii«Mi intiiiiniiii iiii iiiti iiii MEETING! Anyone passing the Tail Kappa Kjisilon fiat heaiiqiiarters an ' Monday night (pro- viding he wants to waste an hour or so) might be interested in hearing the sounds which come up from the depths of the stuffy chapter room, and uttered by the loyal sons of T. K. E. wrapped in the sacred robes of an official chapter meeting. Meeting! — Hey, youse guys come on down. We want to get this thing over with! After much scraping of chairs the brothers are once more formed in the customary semi-circle and the gavel commands silence. Woof! mutters the Grand Sir Scallawag. Umph blaph, answer the assembled brothers. Once more we are formed for an official meeting, brothers. Do you promise to love, cherish, honor and obey the empty skull of T. K. E.? We do, comes from the brothers. Then shoot! (Song.) AVcll here we are, well here we are. Put and take, we eat cake, OOggie Va AVa Sis, boom, ah ! Tau Kappa Epsilon. Ah men ! Will Brother Arch Bish Polkadot call the roll? (Roll call.) Brother Grand Sir Scallawag! Brother Curtiss. I suggest that Bill Obcamp be excused from the meeting while he gets his false teeth ! Brother Obcamp, this is your second offense; don ' t let it happen again. Brother G. S. S. I move the committee on ways and means be instructed to fix the latch on the ice box door. I second the motion! yells Cure. Pipe down, Cure; don ' t you know the rules of parliamentary drill? Address the Chair. You have the motion and the second. Are you ready for the question? Question. All those in favor signify by the usual sign. All thumbs go to the nose. Motion carried. An ' more new business? Brother G. S. S., can ' t we have some shades for the windows on the south end of the house? enquires Brother Sindt. The Tri Delts are complaining of a very notice- able drop in the chapter scholarship average. I shall appoint Brother Gaylord chairman of a committee of one to investigate the advisability of such a move, replies the Grand Sir Scallawag. Brother G. S. S.— And so it goes way into the night. 503 I MMtMt «MM44IMIIIIIIMIHIIMIIMIIHmtMHIHIM««miHH IIIIIIIIIIHHIHIHIIMttHI  HlmHHmil l IIMI. « « -a JOE RINGLAND AND THE SLEEP AND EATS AT LUNCH— T ;,- EMior MUSIC We ' ve eaten from off the mantel, We ' ve don e it full many a day ; Insufferably large were the blisters, The price that all Freshmen must pay. Take my advice, Do your duty, And advice is a thing to be took When there ' s songs to be learned Don ' t stop off with one. Learn every darned song in the book. MUSIC MUSIC Something New All the Time Wright, Player and Grand Pianos Brunswick ' T honographs Sheet Music Q. R. S. and Vocal Style Rolls runswicl and Columbia Records RADIO SETS and SUPPLIES | I l£n0ss iUustc Housr | Everything Musical | Main Street AMES, IOWA | •lllllllll(IIMIIIHIUIMmUIIMI l«ll llllillHlil)HIIIIIII IIIMIMIII IIIIIIIH l«IIIIIIHIHII IIHI«)lllllllllllimil- 50+ a:e-c:iHUiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiitii i uiii iiniiii«HiuiiiiiHiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMi«fMiiiiHi«Hiiitii)iiiiitiu- SH-H-H-H-H-H! BOOTLEGGERS Hist! Not a word! Here comes another. The sibilant whisper hisses through the dusk. Halt! How nian ? A nebulous mumble, and a dusky portal slides back to close again silently after the passage of the importunant one, and the peaceful sabbath stillness again prevails. Another comes, his features masked and hidden with an impenetrable veil of sus- picion. He too is swallowed by the darkness. And now the numbers increase. Softly and silently they sneak along forgotten paths, stealthily secreting themselves in shadows and just as softly are they admitted to the mysterious portals which close as a tomb behind them. Sherlockishly, they approach this darker spot in the night ' s misty gloom. Furtively and with many a backward glance, they draw near the obscure entrance. The mysterious question is softly whispered, a silver clank and jingle as of many little chains is heard. The door opens and in the brief interval that it is ajar, sweet strains of music strike the listening ear as of a distant chapel choir, but an occasional crash and syncopated strain dispel the illusion. What can it be that so silently but surely draws these many people? What myste- rious mutter is it that answers the softly spoken question? What fairies ' fetters are they that so musically jingle? Can it be that some unlawful occult art is being surreptitiously practiced behind this all-absorbing entrance? Perhaps it is the den of a bloodthirsty chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. What can it be? The mystery deepens. But now the door swings open and a stream of humans pours forth to be swallowed by the shadows. What is the unholy purpose of this clandestine den? The question is answered by a girlish voice carelessly breaking asunder the fetters of silence that bind this sinful spot. Oh, Harold! Wasn ' t that the loveliest picture? These bootleg Sunday movies are sure the gnat ' s ankle. THE MAJOR -Wn THE M.MORESS WIN ' WITH 11976347821! Editor ' s Xolr: You lan srr li ' lio is i ointi to run it thouijli Kra-Qi-a-VL-1.: ■ iiiiiim-B THE lOO ' .i MAN, OR CJLIMPSES OF THE TRI DELT BULLETIN BOARD 3 r {e:$ :-M :$:v- Tr:T;-:-r:r:-:r;r:-J:r:-7;r:r;T;T:T:T;f; t ®t|p QLaiU t nokstor I 6 DEALERS IN it I Text Books, Drawing Instruments and Students ' Supplies Station A AMES, IOWA i ' i 5 I r!( -:-;T;r:T:r;-;T;T;r:-;T:f:T;r;r:T:$;sK ' }$K5K{e{$! ae:e!r:e!S{eieK?K er e C:-)IIIHIIII«ll)tl l«IHIHIIIIMHIIM lll)lll«IIIIIMHIMIIIItMlllilllllllMllillllHIIIM«iMIIHIIH)HIIIMIII =yy??T: m THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE Cm rlfsi J. .V. DarliHfj .Itonzo brinij taui lil that fu ' .rHty, hrolliirly oi Ills chosen (ollriie fratcrnily. ' c iinJ I luirily air llii- tin if iinal principles of nir iiiiiimiHMiHiimiininiiiniiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiii iiiMtitmMHim«iiin«mnMumiiiiimitnm-a- - ' a-a- George: Gee! ' ou sure did get fat this summer! Georgette: I weigh exactly 125 stripped. George : You can ' t tell exactly ; these drug store scales are liable to be wrong. GOLD MEDAL I I rp, T T l Folding Furniture i FOR Campers and Tourists Cots Tables Chairs WE HAVE THEM IN STOCK ill i A. H. HAGEN Hardware 211 Main Street Phone 389 iiillHit«Mi«ninniinHii«iiim iiiiiMiii iimmnini«m«iHMiMi MniMMm  wniim m • r s-B-n-i ' 508 Over at The Gamma Phi house There is A Girl who is So talkative That when she Wants to think She has to Rest her Chin On her hands To keep her mouth Shut, so that she Won ' t interrupt Herself. Satisfaction with Every Transaction OF AMES, IOWA A Bank for All the People E. J. ENGELDINGER President EARL RICE Vice President C. E. WATTS Cashier s!e{ 9fe :T:aeK-:$:e:e:f-;r;r:Tif;T!f:T;f:f;r;r:T;f;e{t-i9 : -- -3 -a- n -a-amuv.:::i::r - S09 THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE Ciiifrttnif J. .V. Dnrliiiif Incid ntally, .llonzo lias in tin- ruiuitimi lirrn fukinij up ii I ' ll ' 0 t u l y- i uiliu Is of a Col- lege liducation in llie class room. lllllllllllll IIIHUIimilHlnmillllllllllHHIIIIIIH IIIIHIHIIHIIIIIHHIIIHmimi«IIHtiH««IIIHII IUIIIIII 7{e! 5 ' 6i 3 ' 9;e 3 )! I If you want the Best i send your clothes i to Ames Laundry it 15 219-221 5th St. Phone 47 We use onlv Soft Water Remember GODDARD ' S GIFT SHOP Gifts for all occasions . . The home of the famous Martha Washintrton Candies and Old Fashioned Cream Fudj e 219 MAIN ST. AMES - IOWA -!f!41-!-K-T!f!-7!f!-r lc!Trl4!i?-!-r!-f!-?v$j$f CO0O0tSB K $ I i b Watches Diamonds i ! L. C. Tallman ' ' Gift Counsellor ' Main St. Ames, Iowa S H 6 ;v Quality is Foremost ' ' THE CHOCOLATE SHOP L,uncheonette and Fountain Service Whitman ' s, Foss, Huylers Crones CHOCOLATES AMES, IOWA ■A IIUMIItllllllllMIIIMII IMIIIIIItlllllll)IHIIItlllllllll«IM IIIMIIHIIIt IM)l«(MflUMI«IIMII lltlllMII|i9 9- RITCHIE STOCK FARM Stratford, Iowa J. C. RITCHIE, Prop. Ritchie ' s Stock Farm has been breeding, feeding and showing their Belgians for the past eight years. It is our endeavor to follow up our old standards so that people desiring Belgians bred with a high standard can rely on the Ritchie Stock Farm in the future. m JAXETTK DE MAETER. Grand Chanipiun Mare. lijwa Slate Fair and Interiiatioual Belgian Hurse Show, 1921. Ritchie ' s specialize in the breeding of Belgian Horses, Hereford Cattle Shropshire Sheep, Duroc Jersey Hogs and German Police Dogs. iiiiiii. ' iiiniiimmMiiir uiuumuiutxtJB-B- l«t. J. iLii-JJj ' i; JuimiMwHinnwHmnniiiimiiniiHuimiiniMHiumti First Stude: Where have you been? Second Stude: Sea voyage, oV top. First Stude: Veh ? Second Stude: Uh-huh, ridiii ' the marcel waves. -L 1 - . .i. k 4 A. Hpb ' A i i n - 1 ,:i..w r I .•• ' mbshJHT C m - .• . IN THE SPRINGTIME WE HAD A SNOW STORM iiiiiiiiiHiiiiimitiiiimnnHiimmiintHmti iiiniiiiiinimi niMniiiimMMm«innwtn«iiinmMimiM ' m THE EDUCATION OF ALONZO APPLEGATE ( „iiih:sii J. .V. DniUni) One of llir cliief courses in the Fresliman curr ' uiilum is learning lulicre to liead in — subject generally administered in a most efficient manner hy uf ' Per classmen. •IIIH M IM ll llimiMHIimil IH HI«limimH«HHim«ltllHIHIIMIUHIIIII IHMI MII HII MHHIIHWIHHIII •llllltlllltlllMIII nHIIMI mHHMI)IIIIM«UltllllllllltMIIIHI IM Hlt)MI M«IMIII illlllHltl« lll IIMHII H AWKEYE CEMENT mm. A ways Dependable MANUFACTURED AT DES MOINES, IOWA PROMPT SHIPMENT VIA Chicago, Burlington i Quincy Railroad, Chicago Great Vestern Railroad, Chicago, Rock Island Pacific Railw ay, Chicago Northwestern Raih ay, Chicago, Milwaukee i ' St. Paul Railway, Des Moines Central Iowa Railroad, Ft. Dodge. Des ] Ioines - Southern R. R. Minneapolis «S: St. Louis Railroad, Wabash Railroad AND CONNECTIONS HAWKEYE PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY DES MOINES, IOWA JlllNltlHII(IHI««lll llllllll HIIIIHIIIIIIIMHIIII IIMII«  l lintl HIIIIIIII lltMHIHIMnHWImni lllt IH, ' innminiiiiinin«niiniiniiinimmiinmM«mMiiM«mHiii« i Rent a Ford and Drive it Yourself AGENCY i for I DURANT ami STAR | 2 . . . i Come in and see our full line $ Jc of new cars. 1| We also have a line of slightly used cars. H ' 0 The Florsheim Shoe Finding the st. le of shoe pecu- liarly yours is like finding the right y2 girl ; doesn ' t have to be done over again. Perhaps your intended is Sit  .: l i lu THE BRIGHTON §10 DUITCH BROS. | 327 Lincoln Way 110 Main St p AMES, IOWA i i i I Truehlood Shoe Store ' Canipustown Ames, Ia. $ I i|2 ■K;K:ie HS ;$} -:-:-:f.s ' -:T -ii . mrj Students a jeiv years back v:erc a crooked lot and cheated in exams f iHiiMiiHimmmmiiiiiiiiiiKHHi « innnimn«nnmHiii imiimn) niii iiniin mmiii. 516 HmiMUUIIIHItllllilllllltllllHIIIMIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIUUIUHIItMIHIHtllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIUHnilillUIIIin aeieK!e}9K) e r{ K:B!e:$:e;e:v;€-; ;6{e;T;-;T .si i-m:ii i s ' ,e ' . zBmim ■3 I Plumbing Electric i J CONTRACTS SERVICE I I S Cranford Coffee Shop . N vv . i- $S i v; CvSi l 1 A ccessories i i ' - Campustown Ames, Iowa W.G. MADISON CO. I I Ames, Iowa i T t ' ' The Best Place to Eat ' ' I HIGH GRADE I COMMERCIAL PRINTING T)ance ' Programs Banquet Menus House Papers Stationery I TRIBUNE I PUBLISHING CO. I I AMES. IOWA HERB KING AND YOfNG PRINCE !llllll tlllimiHWMIHIUHIIt il«llllllll l«l HHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHHIIIIIIilll ltlliailll(ltllll IIIMIIIIIIItllllllll S17 kjtf -a -s -tr- •.e« ' HllltlUM«HtllWI«IIHIII« HtMnMIHIIMIIII(lll«ltlUWIItllllHtlllllllll lliMIHIIIIHIII)lllll)M IIMIHI)IMII( ' -9 ' riipvo, Hull ' Kill. (Ion t cry. You ' re a hack Tiuinlier now. T know. They ' ve lenetlu ' iicd your skirls, ntn your feelings are hurt, And yotir jiowdcrcd knncs (Icm ' t show. There. little f1iip]ier. don ' t soh. It ' s iKit such a cruel degradation. Though they ' ve lengthened your skirts, the men can still flirt, And use their imngination. tllllllllll Mlli llillMllll il«lil«MI llliltlH«nillllltllllllllilllllllllM iltHllllttllHHHim4l«t llll ltHimUlya  -J-J : J-J.M 1 518 T . •iiHiiiiiiiiiiiiii iM tiiMiiHitMMmmnimiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiniiimi mii«iii«miiminiimmiiimniiiiiiiiii The initials of a friend You will find these letters on many tools by which electricity works. They are on great generators used by electric light and power companies ; and on lamps that light millions of homes. They are on big motors that pull railway trains ; and on tiny motors that make hard housework easy. By such tools electricity dispels the dark and lifts heavy burdens from human shoulders. Hence the letters G-E are more than a trademark. They are an emblem of service— the initials of a friend. GENERAL ELECTEIC it -KIWMWttMIMHtHIMH HIHHIIII HIHMIIMMI l W«IWmmtlllH MIH H«IIH IIMIIItl«l l)IHM IHIIt. a a 3 S  .9« 519 The S ' uima Xus enlrrtaini-d llic Fire Department s,.-tiii«iKii2«a9{, : i. JUNCH... Meals Short Orders Pastries PRINCESS and AMES T HEATRES i i TRY OUR SUNDAY | i . DINNER I We Serve Waffles THE CAMPUS i LUNCH I i I i Campustown Ames, Iowa £ k9K 5e4r;s{ :-;-;-:-:-;-:--;4:TK-B{-c-;Tje-H-; ' 9}?-i : e 9 Where the College Collects the ' Pre-eminent in PICTURES Paramount and First National Attractions THE FINEST ORCHESTRAS -j. IN THE COUNTRY | (.KKl ' .llNX, A OLD 1 Rll ' .MI liuJdiini inurniilisls nhnut to blossom fmih 520 IHHII«M MMH«MIIII IMHItllllllllMnMlllllltIIIIIIII lll)IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlltll lllltllMI lll   IIHIM W lll 3 9 9r9r3 -9 3-( l I a: MOTORCYCLE COP A SNEAK DATE THE FAIR ' Is conceded to be Ames ' Foremost Stort both in Prices and Oualities Everything ou buy of us is Absolutely Right or we would not carry it FINEST LINE OF LADIES ' SUITS, COATS DRESSES and FURNISHINGS Kuppenheimer ' s Clothing Edwin Clapp ' s Shoes E. t - AV. Shirts for ] Ien All Priced at the Loncst Possible Prices Ames, Iowa 3 3 3 ie o e}-3[e a $: ' ){€■ ;T!$:$:$:6;$!iJfeB■:9 •!e :$Be} es $!eK«-BKe■ B:5 }aB ac-C W;-C-C. C C-IIIIMtniltlMIHtlUIIIII«ltillliM IIIIM IIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllHIHIIIIMIIt HIII«llllillillllltUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII(- 521 K333 . ' IH«H«MHIII)ll(l H(IIIMMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHilHMIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIMHI))lllllltHt li)IIMHINHII IMHII  lll i 2 We have one of the best displays of • j Sporting I Goods , in the state and always aim to have 5 the latest and best equipment for i I Golf I 1 ennis I Baseball I Track I Camping Fishing Hunting B ( and other sports in season. t Consult us about anything in the I ' . I 1- ■ • S sportnig goods line. i our in- t3 quiries will be appreciated. I L H. KURTZ CO. is IltirJii ' iri (iiiil Stiortiitii Ciooih l i Sporting Goods Dept. I 312-314 Walnut St. d| Des Moines, Iowa V The Most I Convenient I Bank i for members of College Faculty, T -,- Students, Employees, or Residents ■ ' [- of College Community. r T ' i SOUTH OF CAMPUS I t _. -a f- «, -f9K;{SK;fc-esi ' i9ie;T!-T{eKK-;4:T:4 b- sc-i ieiei-rH- ENTR-ANCE TO DAMM-ANV H. LL I •«T «•«■?«: «:♦««,€;« IHItllllllHII IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIItlt l«MI lll« tMtlllMtlltltllllltlHHIII milllHHHIIIIIIIIIIimiHIHI ' . fPJB ' eh ieie es Delivery Service Phone 124 Everything in Hardvifare Carr Hardware Co. AMES, IOWA When Yoii Need Anything in Our Line Come In and Let Us Show You Our Stock Complete Line of Sporting Goods and Points We Appreciate Student Patronage Union National Bank i UnionTrust.: Saving sBank | Cashier A. J. Martin ! -T-. • IMIIIIIIIIIIMIH lttltlllt)lll«IMIMIIItMI«IM«IIHI l«tlll i)IIMIHMil ll)HI«l a$:f!9K }s e:sK-: seie{e{e}eK«;sK-!9K:-: K jK ieKr! e-{e{9K et4eiSKfC4 i6ie{8K«i$ ' ,e:-r-!e;--:-:T;Tif;T;f: Best Electric Company | | Q U A D E Electrical Merchandise Student Supplies Heating Appliances Radio Supplies Eled:ric Cleaners High Grade Photography Eel ISO II Plio II graphs — Records We have served the students and faculty of Iowa State Col- lege for 25 years. % m. 4 I 3 130 Main St. Ames, Iowa J}e}8fefe i-3 ieii-3 i6 ' a-i eSia8fc!- ;B}8i-3feB 1 +17 Main St. Ames, Iowa 5 I Every Banking Service 15 That is what this bank ofi ' ers. And back of our service stands % a reputation for courtesy and attention that guarantees that we will handle your business with the utmost care. A bank organ- ized under the laws of Iowa — a niember of the Federal Reserve System. Story County Trust and ' P ' ' ' • $70,000.00 Savings Bank 0 AMES, IOWA PARLEY SHELDON, President B. J. SHELDON, Vice President F. H. SCHLEITER, Cashier ' { le oKKiiejT s Tiei Ti iSieieK- jeK-BeejsK ieK tc-HjejrBK eir} ■TTT: iMHHIfHtHIMMflmiHHIIHlmlOtllMMItlHIIHIIIIIHIIflMltlllMIIMHIIIHIIMIHHMIIIItMIIMIItllltltMmilMII. ' 524 ;-;T: ;$:9K-:e{-3aeie 5Kfe;$i ii eeie K5e5i-3K H. L. Munn 1921 $795,288.35 1922 $980,315.40 1923 $1,037,509.13 % We are proud of this growth, jj; Xfi but we are more proud of the fact M ij that the people of this community have had the continued confidence aj is ■ U- ■ • • I.- L 1. 1 S ( in this mstitution which has made P this growth possible. p % LET US SERVE YOU $ Ames National Bank || Ames Trust and Savings Bank a AMES, IOWA i Lumber Co. AMES, IOWA LUMBER THAT IS ■i ( IP LUMBER I Headquarters for Everything in Building Material i iimiiiiimiiiitiitimiiniimnnnmniinii«iiiiiiiiiiinnii  Mi t«ni nm«HiMMtHiminiiiiliMiiiiiiii Quick Service — J i iih Quality — Low Cost I ' I ' hat is tlu- aim of the Coi.r.EGE Inn. % High quality of food at a low charge means that you get the beiieiit of our extensive buying, careful cooking ami efficient serving. A Place for Students to Eat I W(st College inn John I. Nelson, Manager t I THE . S . ?|art tubio Photographs that Please AND Frames that Satisfy G. T. HART I $ i Main Street Ames, Iowa HIII«MMMHMIItimmHIIIIHIIH«IIIIIHI HmWHMftmilHmil«IHHI HIMIHIHimiimmM«H Hmi 526 IMIHUUUIIIIMtlllllMI«lllllllll)lllllllliaitllll«t tllMtllll IIIIMIIMIIII l l IOWA STATE COLLEGE The Iowa State College of Agricultuix- and Mechanic Arts conducts work in five major lines: Agriculture Eugiueeriug Home Economics Industrial Science Veterinary Medicine The Graduate College conducts advanced research and gives instruction in all these five lines. Four-year, five-year, and six-year collegiate courses are offered in different divisions of the College. Non-collegiate courses are offered in agriculture, home economics, and trades and industries. Summer Sessions include graduate, collegiate and non-collegiate work. Short courses are offered in the winter. Extension courses are conilucted at various points throughout the state. Research work is conducted in the Agricultural and Engineering Experiment Sta- tions and in the Veterinary Research Laboratory. Special announcements of the dift ' erent branches of the work arc supplied, free of charge, on application. 527 a TIIK KDICATION OF ALONZO APPIJCGATE I „,nlr,,i .1. .V. Dillli, It: llomr jnr llir Uol ' uiays. V . V ii f ' -■¥■ ■f. ri '  ' J


Suggestions in the Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) collection:

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Iowa State University - Bomb Yearbook (Ames, IA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927


Searching for more yearbooks in Iowa?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Iowa yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.