Morningside College - Sioux Yearbook (Sioux City, IA)

 - Class of 1933

Page 1 of 200

 

Morningside College - Sioux Yearbook (Sioux City, IA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1933 volume:

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Qi- x : E - K I' eff, '- Z 1 4 Z., ,f I Z ,Y I-' I' fgxvif-H-1-rv 1 Z Xl , View of Three States from Mount Lucia in Stone Park ,,L ,,,,, ,, , MARIORIE HUNTER Editor CLAUDIUS MEHHENS Business Manager Engrarings by BIERMAN ENGRAVING COMPANY SIOUX CITY, IOWA Prinlfng by VERSTICGEN PRINTING COMPANY SIOUX CITY, IOWA Photographs by YOUNGBERG STUDIO SIOUX CITY, IowA Y 4 ' us 5 v Q fm:-. 'Y 4 227 Q 1 s N 4353 . x. I7 Mn' Y' 'g ' 'Q - cm Mx- , wx X' 14 'QE 7' 'dai , 1 37 V V, - ' - 'W , u- .5 1 g fi , XQQK fi- VE 'h QWWQ4 N MQW, lip . my 1 k1rf.qhNo 'fm ,vb 4 0 N ' xx x 'N' --- ' ' A' X' J R fi mW'0a -H Zx ' ' K -N-W. M 'mb wfn- Q Q 1. -- sd. y J .IQ 1- tm- QQ ' '61 'ix X 2 s 5241, XAYLQ 4 I 3 I Y 06 ka ' 51 fb I il - Q W1 fi 4 .-sf' P . ,412 k 9744 F-' 1 wp. WF 4 V-.W I ..-4 3,5177 f W' 5 1.345 o f E., A G 7 E '-in ,S E' 5: ' v , 1 255 :aww-x Z X W Q-,ya 5 Q' , MQ 'Q6' , - X ,,' g4 aj X P g , - I X ,. , W ll I EN S S we af' 2 I I r 1 W xx E In ' E 1 45- I , QS' mf E , I 'ki ' -5 nu A1 U E 1933 SIOUX 2 W I, f M x20 S:-ff -4 t,-- f W -, .X X Publishedbythe 5 4 1' N Q . ' 1, X ' Junior Class of 55 l f 3 5 : f Q 5 N ' ' ' Z 5 S MOCIBDENGSIDE 4 5 Q X S 1 l 4 -5 LEGE E g N 1 K 4 x W 1 xx Z ff., Sioux City , X ll 2 Ill!! E 1 1 - sf' ml ',b'1qg:iil'u . . M I . gg nm 1 -V ' N -' 61. 2 i ' . M Q Sli' N ' w is E f X12 'W S N LLL' f I Y ggi, 'peg 'i E-3 : X '3q::5, ' .nz 5 7' ll E Iii, limi QL. f ,S X ' 4 ' f . f J ,JY Y ' - 2 J f ,K 33 - - V V -. Y 1. A ' r ,lj An, Y V-, Y W l ,Y ,E ,M .-rg. - - R A' Xlf' KX .az ,- ' ,f f X '-X XX fs fl E ggi' 54 i Y ,flfl R f ,Y 5, - ' f--' J iris 1 'K 4 5 g ' -74: 'F 'xi X lu' 'X N XX iff ? RN J j' 1-9, 3' X - - I - X ...sig 'f Egg ' 'lg - f - , f IIE! 152:35 Z E ' Y ,?:,:.1-' Hill!-EE g ' 1 f sisiiig- ullllllilli X 24?--Q 7 1 viiiiiiiiiiiig E5:iiii5iE5: f 'Qfj 'F'-'i4?SE!!2:iigig!? ri-iii :.-. H -- ' -2 E -sms llllm' ,: EN J - -2 f : : :nn ' . ,' W gy I - 3 :EF W y ?' 'f 'J 1 i.f- Z z. jf- -VA?-' E V 1- V -i.:- .. V --cl1 - 1 ' -Q - 1.-.-.im - - il,-1-' ,,A- g v,,l1--- 1- -,...? - ,..,'- -41- x ' 1 f P1 gt. f X ' X 50 5' My 4, 1 X, 'A f 5 N I . 1, I ', Foreword N 4 K f 7E, the Junior Class, have ly S assembled for your enjoy- l, 7 ment a record of the events of this , D school year. Each season brings ly' ,J with it certain representative ac- lNl,, tivities. These you will find por- i. , trayed here in their proper setting. ls May these remembrances be pleas- fx! ing to you and may you accept lg Xi this volume in the spirit in which Q Q it was compiled. 'N K , NTSB X? x if N x f Sf K f Agp-X' ix X X X 27f7bJ'fx , N ' ' . :N , 14 X. f x rf 7 .X . f , 1111 mzmnrram jf 1' f V f QC QE OPAL LIND, as 3 Z October 2, 1913 ix' , 0 r b 5 1931 Vx Nm Vx if gxf V 5' XP Q VW f fw l SAX ii , . My -Bif f f s x X f ei sm . X i Q4 1 ! l u x Dechcatlon ll 712, the Junior Class, are lf tx proud to have the honor of NWN ' dedicating this, the thirty-second K volume of the Sioux, to our new Xf X President, Robert E. O'Brian. Like f D the Sioux, he is staunch and fear- J ' lf ,J less. Selfless, understanding, and K Il i 1, modest in his associations with his K X- 1 students, he has already endeared tx himself to us. We appreciate the X X Xf l interest he takes in our problems Wt XIX and the enjoyment he derives V Q X from our activities. He is, indeed, N Q X one of us. X I N fx xy 'u I f ' x xl, ,E X Xl' K f 1 GSK' I QW XL x N-W... DOCTOR ROBERT E. KTBRIAN Q2 5 1 7f7Y'13 ff : x , 9. xl, 51 T-1 Q X X ' Table Of Contents FACULTY SPRIING FRESHMEN TRACK MUSIC ASSOCIATIONS SUMMER WOMEN s ATHLETICS SPEECH CLUBS AUTUMN JUNIORS FOOTBALL J OURNALISM SOCIETIES FRATERNITIES I f ? 4 I UA' f X I T Q Xl f K , L I I J Va If f A fr D SOPHOMORES W: f , I P x ,J la M' 57 1 YN .4 N X 1' f I A ,x Vx X N x N f x Kr I f I N .IQ XV A I WINTER SENIORS BASKETBALL HONOR FRATERNITIES TRADITIONS CAMPUS FRIENDS 1 f I 1 05 Sf 1 X 1 .A T f XR Fila if-v M4 59.1 I GRACE CHURCH There is no god but Cod!-to prayer-lo Cod is great! -BYRON. 1, , .M .fb V paw? , jx . Muff? ' e l, v wgzzfvm-' - 1551? Ig- :iw wif DORMITORY True friendship? laws are by this rule exprest, Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest. HOMER. MAIN HALL Teach me my days to number and apply, My trembling heart to wisdom. -YOUNG. GYMNASIUM Health is the second blessing we mortals are capable of a blessing that money cannot buy. -WALTON. CONSERVATORY Yea, music is the Pr Among the gifts tha One of the most ma ophefs art t Cod hath sent gnificentf -LONGFELLOW. Marjorie Hunte C1 d M h 1933 SIOUX Staff Edltor-1n-Chlef ................. Business Manager ......... Associate Editor ........ Art Editor ,....,....,.......,... Organizations Editor ........ Feature Editor .............. Snap-Shot Editor .........,. Class Editor ...,........,..,...,,. lVlen,s Athletic Editor ....... Womenis Athletic Editors Photography Editors ...,..... Typists ........................ Faculty Adviser ......... Top Row-Bond B k L C D Bottom Row-Hall, Qu R ,MMZW,,.'f- H . LJ7,4,,4,,,.,.5a.4a4-l-... WM, Zzjwm ,MMM JZ?- MAVMZ' WA? Zjfdw M fA,f?M7fwffjM '4 Awijw jn ffZfJM. lfs..V I f ilsli K .1 X, N. -. X - S N gli P Sigh I fl' ii T X N ff., TT ' in I Sf we x ,r 9 X if V 7 X! X! fD Xff iff ff I f X - ff 6553225 FACULTY Board of Trustees .W OFFICERS President ...,.,, ,,.,,!,.,,,,-,,,, ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, ,..,..... E . A . Morling, Emmetsburg ViCe.Prg5idem ,,,,,,-,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,.,...,.. C . W. Britton, Sioux City Sggond Vice-President ,,,,,,,,,, ....... W . F. Belling, CllElI'lCS City Secretary-Treasurer ,,,,,,,, ..........,....... .......... A . B. Gehrirlg, Si0l1X City EMERITI W. D. Boies, Sheldon N. R. Hathaway, Sioux City C. D. Killam, Sioux City Scott M. Ladd, Des Moines J. P. Negus, Long Beach, Calif. J. J. Hoffman, Cladbrook C. W. Britton, Sioux City Herbert Clegg, Fort Dodge C. C. Harshbarger, Onawa H. E. Hutchinson, Spencer .l. W. Kindig, Sioux City M. J. Klaus, Charles City W. H. Lease, Algona H. H. Lookin, Aurelia T. S. Bassett, Sioux City Charles Breun, Sioux City J. H. Edge, Spencer John Gralopp, LeMars P. E. Held, Hinton H. E. Hilmer, Rockford Mrs. J. G. Hobson, Sioux City G. H. Wessel, Dows W. J. Loeck, Odebolt R. D. Acheson, Sioux City M. P. Arrasmith, Cherokee E. T. Asling, Chicago, Illinois C. L. Barks, Orange City Charles Beacham, Farnhamville W. F. Belling, Charles City O. M. Bond, Sioux City J. J. Bushnell, Sioux City R. T. Chipperiield, Sac City 9'Deceased. J. G. Shumaker, Alamo, Texas Robert Smylie, Weiser, Idaho L. J. Haskins, Harold, S. D. L. I. Brenner, LaCrosse, Wisc. ACTIVE Terms Expire 1933 W. T. Macdonald, Ames D. P. Mahoney, Sioux City D1'. A. L. Semans, Fort Dodge J. L. Menzner, Ridgeway M. Metcalf, Paullina E. W. Oates, Storm Lake John Kolp, Manson G. M. Rufi, LeMars A. N. Sloan, Sioux City Terms Expire 1934 E. A. Morling, Emmetsburg Ralph Prichard, Sioux City Ed. Rich, Clear Lake B. W. Riner, Sheldon R. J. Sweet, Sioux City I. R. Tumbleson, Clear Lake J. C. Rasmussen, Spencer D. W. Stewart, Sioux City F. M. Pelletier, Sioux City? Terms Expire 1935 Ralph A. Gaynor, Sioux City W. J. Bertke, Sioux City C. H. Kamphoefner, Sioux City Miss Alice McElrath, Lawton C. H. Kingsbury, Ponca, Nebr. W. C. Porath, Storm Lake E. N. Tompkins, Sioux City B. A. Wendlandt, Dubuque S FACULTY Ll ROBERT E. O'BRIAN President s xi-vf: f kms A X ff f M' y f 'xf VMI' EXXY :Ill 'Ig' f X I f ' V V ': f y! H! 1,7 fl .Nfl if if ,. 0 '.f 'N' ' W I I Nu . Y f sv vjx A Wo YQXQ ,Z Z X SKx W 1 gi, wx xl 15. XVI, N! U big, w'I lx 3 X? 'N X s IAQ 14? J Jy X A G1 W SW 5221 fXf'f SWQFD .W NN X K ylbWZfX 44' 1tll'iQ XQQ 1 ' , N X- ' MA A: 3m9aSZ QCWMGW 3-5'5:N1,x' x, D MMI SI Q' H I W., 'ff 52 I cj 52? fl-9 X I xl xx? wfb W if 1 If I ,Z aa .P ijV7'1 FACULTY LILLIAN E. DIMMITT Dean of Women MYRON E. GRABER Dean of Men FACULTY JOHN J. BUSHNELL Dean of Extension FREDERICK W. SCHNEIDER Vice-President 'N X f W' Wx 'W NWI' EW IlIIN x'f A fly n..!! Ififl -S 7.' 1- LEW' n.ipJ KN ' wir -M m pi : I LV 'M Sv Wy A I EJ I NX x KQV , W Q . 'X Xl lg? X 'm M Ep P w Q rm 5, w'l lx xffi mx! xx 1 xg fl, J 3 X dl 52 5? ,wg i M39 .W N X NX X N x. ,O yn pgffdvzfs 0. W litlillg J l r: fl 1'W :dll ' , I - is X H. C- ,Q ite ef' ffl f? ' !' I1, ' . W . SI l 1 cl, ,, It u yi If X! Xfu oh WUIQJ rl fl -9 L., I W fD wfl 1'f :lf lfr I 'qw' f'f,Q EUGENE ADAMS Instructor in Violin Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Cleveland Institut of Music. HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A. M. Professor of Philosophy and Psychology Cornell College, Columbia University, Uni-rersity of Heidelberg, University of Berlin, Union Theological Seminary, University of Wisconsin. CLARA LOUISE ASMUS, Mus. B. Instructor in Pianoforte Morningside College. WANDA CASTLE Instructor in Violin and Violoncello HELEN BUCKINCHAM Assistant Librarian IDA M. CLINE House Manager of Womenfs Residence Halls JOHN JAMES BUSHNELL, D. D., Ph. D. Dean of Extension Boston University School of Theology College of Libernl Arts Upper Iowa University: Epnurrll. Seminary. JAMES AUSTIN COSS, B. S., M. S. Professor of Chemistry Illinois Wesleyan University. University of Illinois, Clark University. FACULTY Twenty X : CPN FACULTY f ANQQL Tu enly ne kX.,,CfQX f .4 Yin xlv I LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT, A. M., L. H. D. Dean of Women Professor of Ancient Languages Illinois Wesleyan University, Columbia University. Amcriral School of Classical Studios, Rome. LALLA GERKIN, A. B. Instructor in Biology Morningside College, Columbia University. LAURA CLARA FISCHER, A. M. Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages Carleton College, University of Chicago, University of Colorado. MYRON EARLE GRABER, A. M., Ph. D. Dean of Men Professor of Physics Heidelberg University. University of Michigan, Ohio State University, University of Chicago. University of Iowa. MARGARET FRANKE, Mus. B. Instructor in School Music Oberlin Conservatory of Music, New York U ty niversi . IRA JAMES GWINN, M. S. Assistant Professor of Physics Morningside College. University of Iowa. ARTHUR BENJAMIN CEHRING, A. B. Treasurer and Business Manager Morningside College. JAMES ,IUVENAL HAYES, A. M. Professor of English Literature Harvard University, University of Chicago. flf zlf, If f y I 1 ff ks 4 f il YXXJ III UI' I' U Z! Pie 'PI'-II., 2 . 'I ' Keir X I I I lI Vi6 v III W SII I N x f x X .lf XI ,if 'N XIII MW W I I I N VH fl XII x f'I I I xffl fix X JI N I QD 9 9'Qf 54,6 N X X N N- f 7 fff , wi muff 'Min lg N 1 1 fly, G H B HAWTHORNE B S M S P Professor o Sociology I Bachelor of Public School Music Instructor in Piano orte , WESLEY HOFFMAN A. B. A. M. Pro essor of History anal Politics University of Minnvsota. University of Chicago. niversi ' o cr ln. mvvrrr y o onn. HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND, A. . Professor of English Language, Emeritus X X f x fn f 'f 'f L Nj x I f K -1 I l 5 IL s: Mft!! X It . . M , v. .., . ., . . fill ,j h D X' lx ' .. f . . sl M University of Iowa. Ilrvva Stta c College, Wisronsi - Y 5 niversiy. '-'I' gNl,l. 'SQL X ,' MARGARET KLUGE, Mus. R. UV 'i ' f Z Oberlin Conservatory Nliami brnxu-ity Llutlarnl ll 'N Institute 'fl f l .hints I l rl' 'I' u' gl' J f ., sr ' ff I U fy IB 1 U Q fB f gf B 41 X , fs' X MQ, th X f X! JW I ll l fD Xffj rf' Ll' 4 If X, tl X f I I 'IL-1: Smith College, Oxford University. Englalml. HENRY F. KANTHLENER, A. M. Professor of Romance Languages Cornell College, Harvard University, Instituto Fran- cais, University of Madrid. Univnrsity of Llicago, University of Mexico, University of Dijon, France. EUNICE POLK MCBRIDE, A. B. Instructor in Romance Languages Wheaton College. University of Southern California, University of Wisconsin, University of Edmonton LUCY DIMMITT KOLP, A. A. G. O. Instructor in Organ and Theory of Music Illinois College of Music. MARY OLA MCCLUSKEY, A. M. Assistant Professor of Education Southwestern College, Univcrsity of Chicago. University of Colorado. Columbia University FACULTY Twenty-two FACULTY 'P Twenty-th, bi-5650 XL? LESTER MCCOY, A. B. Instructor in Voice Culture Morningside College, Pupil of L. A. Torrens. MARGARET MARGRAVE, A. B., A. M. Instructor in English North cenmu Cullcgc, Univc.-my of Chung... ELIZABETH NEWTON MacCOLLlN, Inxtructor in Voice Culture Oberlin Conservatory of Music. MIRAH MILLS, A. M. Professor of English Language Morningside College, University of Chicago, University of Michigan. PAUL MacCOLLlN, A. B. Director of the Conservatory Instructor in Voice Culture Oberlin College. Oberlin Conservatory of Music. FLORENCE CROSS MOOG, A. M. Instructor in French Morningside College, Harvard University. Columbia University. RALPH MAHLUM, A. B. Manager of Bookstore wimingsirlc1:0111-gt-. ROBERT MUELLER, B. M. Instructor in Violin Dun:-s Musical Institution. Chicago Musimnl College. Louisvil lr- Conservatory. vgy Qfvgfvb 2-3. ,yi x Q flflf lflf f X Qlllllvl' ENV Ill!!! NL, X lk 1 , I Lwtf .VNU l 4 fl l ff Q Ks, I Eigf Inllmljf If J v If QW Cv i N 1 1 s N x X my Af Xl RAW I 'w 'm il il, x fl i xL9l FN to 925 X Y l NX X f, C1143 fll fl il' ll I . .lf it my y it iffy giiihhl, 99 SI . Z' WL ,ff 2 3? f X01-23 X! X! ll-9 I l fD WO rf' X ll L,- 1 If x',f . .X X M fbp' QR mg , eq ETHEL RUTH MURRAY, A. M. Registrar Instructor in Ancient Languages Morningside Collcgc, University of Illinois, Columbia University. BERTHA CLOTHILDA PRICE, A. B. Library Assistant Southwestern Cullcgc, University of Kansas, University of Iowa. MARIAN NIEHAUS, A. B. Instructor in Physical Education Cornell College. University uf Iowa. MAUDE A. PRICE, A. M. Librarian University of Kansas, University of Chicago, Uni- versity of Wisconsin, University of Iowa. Columbia University ROBERT E. O'BRIAN, AB., B. D., A. M., D. D., Ph. D. Professor of Religious Education De Pauw, Garrett, Northwestern University, Wesley College. JAMES REISTRUP Instructor in Pianoforte Pupil of Rudolph Ganz, Pupil of Eric Schmaal, Pupil of Fritz V. Vuegeley. JOHN W. PARLETTE, A. M. Professor of Speech Ohio Wesleyan University. Cornell University. GLENN ROGERS, A. B. Personnel Director Morningside College. FACULTY Twenty-jour FACULTY if Q4-I QKCVQN A. B. Professor of Physical Education Albion College. VERNE E. STANSBURY, A. B., A. M. ' Professor of Education Southwestern College, University of Chicago, L l b U ty 'n um ia niversi '. EMMA F. SCHNEIDER, A. M. Instructor in English German Wallarc College. Cleveland School of Music. SAMUEL C. STEINBRENNER, A. M. Professor of German Charles City College. University of Strassburg, University of Chicago, FREDERICK WILLIAM SCHNEIDER, A. M., D. D. Vice-President Professor of Bible and Religion German Wallucc College, Drew Theological ' Seminary, Baldwin University. THOMAS C. STEPHENS, A. B., M. D. Professor of Biology University of Chicago. Kansas State University Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts. JANE LEWIS SMITH, A. M. Instructor in Dramatic Art Cornell College. Leland Powers School of the Theatres, Boston, University of Iowa. WILLIAM STOCKFELDT, A. M., B. S. Instructor in Economics University of Nebraska. ww - - Twffllylffvff S wwe tbpvv- Uryiblbs , JASON MCCOLLOUGH SAUNDERSON, get ,II x ff? N iff. EXY Igllfl NL! Rif f? f I f ' 1 1.1 ' ! lf Ii, ff !! A sz? I mf I .. I I I l I S I . V ,AI I . 10 Ji 1 xxlrlp I I , my XI K I x I X I N II KQV N X Q1 x :I I X I 1' I x X I my I X x QI I ' I X I G - xt D SG 5 I iff' I I I N It xlllrfx l l NN x XX C. ,Q Lhnfw ,lg L ff ll K if Nl l5 li if A fi A ll l'l'5lj3 ,,l ll' l if it cl!-1 lf D 71 if ff X317 fy! J Um ff Xl X! QW U23 Wil :ff Lf- 4 If X 'VDD' . tex 1 Q ,F iw FACULTY l ,f!' f CLADYS TIMM, Mus. B. Instructor in junior Piano Morningside College ERVINE CARL WENIG, A. B. Assistant Director of Athletics Morningside Coll:-gr. ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE, Ph. Professor of Mathematics Morningside College, Johns Hopkins University University of Chicago. FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, A. B Instructor in Pianoforte and Histor B. . Y of Music Morningside College, Berlin Conservatory of Mu University of Michigan. EUNICE WAHLSTROM, Mus. B. Instructor in Junior Piano Morningside College. SUZANNA ZWEMER, A. B., A. M. Instructor in Political Science Smith College, Barnard College, Columbia Uni sity, Northwestern University. s ve ic, r. Twenty Z 7 Q J N7 1 xl EH 'w! N-Xu. W x x 4 my: ,iv , Q 3 xv wmsgsiiv H il? ,' 1. fa fff? fm: va ,sf MW JSW-iwigvkggmgigfiflg Y' rw ! V NWf'WKSQWN'iU' ' S Q V 'fl S41 55 W ' V793 lx-J V JP- 55' H' Y rw? f inw- 'flllxf wr JW H115 ,E-L-A f s , cmxyfq ,-,Xgyf WNW! ,N .m. 1 l Q ' .Wf x ,V , S f gg, z ? V'?v ff? f E S- ..,, f' A 'J .-1 I E W ,5,xlj 5 rv ' M QQ A UN .V qqvv V P Mfrs ik 1 ' f if ' , ' I 'A ' . 'f M6 NNY Ma U'4'J1 k Y XV, .. '31 . , .-Q., A m ,f 1 , w..1.,yX ly 1 A15 ' Lg- 'saggy .ITE-IV, 3Xfi1wi0.3. ,I 1iN?,n , a vi? W 'K If ., .awfivyx H36 H? ' -fig JQ LFQ- - Nw W H S M H hd' , ' YL 53,7 ,uf 'V E: ,L xx A, 0' 4 ,nl IM- W :Q-i V Qkq3 !f W X L 0 3 ,v tu V f-1G?,:1?W:: ' .- Vjlaffy 1, V. . -if 1 gg fy- 1- -Aw?-wk. f JH ,--- N f X - JL ' ,ya-9 AIAA, gg ,..: Vrl' Z KL fig-. ,g:fLiQAJ-Y Y X In h Ifqzxk f I3-'f4LQ?1'a .l?H. f Sig :fi i ' - jf 3, B M , A ,,. va A,. , X K: '1. M , T A ' W is 'Il' ' Xjtlx U ,,,fg ,- ,, 1 ' 65,2 ',lv f - A 'I-- ,:v, YU' My - - ir N, V4 L X Q, I klkzzfiilrf Q. , 9 x w.x-, yu fvvr 1 .!:, llvl 'Hg' J -,.-' ' 'L.'. W ' f ' 4 W A ,,.- L T K ,j E , . ,X .,1Q , ' V ,f -M, ., V' . ,-.1 : . ,, ,.A , , . f 5 '3fW ' gx A' ' M, ,- ,,2QM I 'Vi' 24, ,ml it ' ' A'. f .e L5 Vvl, '21 MJ. ,. Q- W f - 'A ' ' ' -' '-,, 4 5 0 '.:. 1 L I ' Z 5- - J 4 'f lqv :Ay ig -I J 2 J 'l 5 P9 6 I 1, 54 S s E E sa 5 if 5 X A. vi S 5 1 ai rf 5 15 x E 1 f 'i 'l I 1 fl i . 3 -'- -- W ,fi fff' N9 if ldllllxlfl xl ll 'Q '1 'T l lk, 'Xxx QNQT' RHAEW 6755 :3ffgi TK at 'ly T ggpui SI l 1 Wjf Q 5 P: tx X LX, ' f MD MQQ3 4 rxf U ig kv 7 tif? 1 ff Lf Xf 'Ybbg . , ,, .. ,ff ff FRESHMEN JEAN SERRILL MOST REPRESENTATIVE FRESHMAN WOMAN Jean Serrill, selected by the students as the most repre- sentative freshman woman, is president of Ishkoodah and is an active worker in Agora and Y. W. C. A. yah FRJESHMJEN Lf eggs X YQ?- HOWARD DOBSON MOST REPRESENTATIVE FRESHMAN MAN Howard Dobson has justly earned the title of most rep- resentative freshman man as president of his class and his journalistic work. T J' QSM R CQ ggi X ,li x ,f If f 1 1 x x .lfl Xl I Rr!! xx fm xx' QP h. fl it wi l x I 1 1 xlfj FT XD SM Ji F42 af? I 4 A Kai Yllllr '. lil, ll f ' ... . ,rj Q Si gxa,f- f f T- f ll? N I l Il l it-EXE 2 -f ' Sv HF xmlo Y l tf7f: NW nxllifx NX IX 5 XX W 45 Q gww - I X X -'Nj 0 0 ' , rss-if is r 2: M 0 r , 1 ill SI 1' rl I 1 M! ss, Xf 7 QM WQQ V x W fit l x9 I UD WU :ff 'qbfev 'rs , ,, !,f Nf FRESHMEN 6355? - WAKU UUB5UN Freshmen President ............. ..............,...,.,..,........................ H oward Dobson Vice-President .............. ........ ,,..v........... G r etchen Gall Secretary and Treasurer ..,.........., .......... M ary Lou Kusian Student Council Representative ...... .,............ L ouis Larson f - A 'NX X Thy IFRESHMJEN Thirty-one Top Row-Allman, Anderson, Babcock, Baron, E. Bliss. Second Rowfliva Bliss, Brinkman, Brodie, Brown, Buskcr Third Row-Butcher, Carson. Carver, Chilson. Christensen. Fourth Row!Claussen, Cribbs, Dcllnos, Dnhson, Dnrr. Bottom Row-Foutz, Cuodell, Cray, Green, Hallin. Eff! FRESHMEN Top Row-Harlzell, Hayes, Hvilmzxn. Hellman. Herman. Serond RowfHimc-bnugh, Hockin, Holland, Hollander, Howe Third Row-'Hydnn M. Inlay, Jurobsen. James. Kuhl. Fourth Row-Lange. Larson. Littrell. Lorkc, Loomis. Bottom RowfMm-Elrznh. Marek, Marlin. Mecklenburg. Metcalf. Thirty-!u'n ESHMEN Thirty-lhree Top Row-Miller, Morrison, Motz, Nash, Nielson. Second Row-Nixon, Olson, Paulson, Pcllon, Pops. Third RowfI'owell, Prorhnzka, Ravcling, Reeder, Riscling Fourth Row-Rowe, Runrhcy, Sargent, Schenrk, Schroeder. Bottom RuwfSchultz, Slack, Soggc, Spencer, Staman. JFRESHMJEN Top RowfSteward, Stombcrg, Strong, Timm, Tincknell. Second Row-Tolles, Trenary, Tronsrue, Turnquist, Urquhart. Third RowfVande Vooren, Vaughn, Vermillion, Walhof, Wutsnn. Fourth Row-Weaver, Dorothy Weaver, Wheelock, Williams, Willfnng. Bottom Row-Woodford, Yanney. Thirty-foul X x Rx y 1. 5' Pk N ' 45 Jfu' 'X l nf' X-ggyaie ,ffl M N - lv ll I, nl I ll SIQ WK ya Xxx, Xl In I V x f?7 wa 1'f L, 4 , xlfxj N Q?gQ7'ff TRAQK J. M. Saundcrson E. C. Wcnig Coaching Staff Coach J. M. Saunderson, head of athletics, devotes most of his time to the fine art of football, while E. C. Wenig develops a basketball team and spends the rest of his time teaching freshman physical training. Dr. G .W. Koch is always on the side lines during practice and regular games. He is responsible for the well being of our teams and we are confident in his ability to 'Ldoctorw the boys. Athletic Committee The lVlen's Athletic Committee is responsible for and directs the Morningside activities and intercollegiate athletic relationship. This year the Committee consists of five men: Professors J. J. Hayes, R. M. Van Horne, V. E. Stansbury, I. J. Gwinn and J. M. Saunderson. Gwinn, Hayes. Stansbury, Van Horne. Th ty 1929.1 TRACK if l f? 14 ,Q n s N? N Mormngslde Track Records 25526 Javelin Lawrence snnth .....,A 1930 172 ft. I ff 1oo.Yenl Dash Kettle ......................... 1930 9.8 x Q 220-Yard Dash F. F. Hall ................. 1903 22.02 Kettle ............. ........ 1 931 22.02 , 440-Yard Run Hansen ........... ........ 1 930 50.3 880-Yard Run Hansen ....................... 1929 lm 58.5 Mile Run Wesley Dameron ...... 1921 4m 36.4 Two-Mile Run L. R. Chapman ........ 1908 10m .05 fl f 120-Yenl Hurdles Haven Means ........... 1928 15.5 1 f V, f 220-Yard Hurdles Van Wyngarden ........ 1931 25.1 if 880-Yard Relay fKettle, Bale, if f Hansen, Menter1..1930 1m 29.4 f Mile Relay fKettle, Bale, Hansen, Menter1..1931 3m 25.6 4 Two-Mile Relay fWalker, Lavely, N-IR 'I 0 V Morley, Curry1 ...... 1925 8m 15 K High Jump Jensen ........................ 1927 5 ft. 11 in. Pole Vault Paul Brinkman ........ 1928 11 ft. HM in. S K X Broad ,lump Paul Brinkman ........ 1926 21 ft. 6 in. Donald Cross ............ 1926 21 ft. 6 in. Shot Put Herbert Gottlob ....... 1929 41 ft. Discus Herbert Gottlob ....... 1930 135 ft. Captain Herbert Gottlob 1931 Track Summary DAKOTA RELAYS AT SIOUX FALLS, MAY 3 North Central Mile Relay-Won by South Dakota CAdkins, Kemper, Campbell, Wirtl11, North Dakota, second, South Dakota State, third. Time--3:24.6. QNew record, former record of 3:25.6 by Morningside College in 1930.1 College High Jump-Won by Evans, Wayne Normal, Stapley, Iowa Teachers, second, Hanson, South Dakota, third. Height-6 ft. fNew record, former record, 5 ft. 103A in. by Geer, of Doane, 1928.1 College Pole Vault-Won by Baxter, Iowa Teachers. Height-12 ft. SVZ in. fNew record, former record of 12 ft. 131, in. by Blakeslee, North Dakota Aggies, 19301, Whitmore, South Dakota, second, Stapley, Iowa Teachers, third. College Half-Mile Relay fFirst Section1-Won by Wayne Normal fDennis, Andrews, Copeland, Litel1, Sioux Falls College, second, Dakota Wesleyan, third. Time-1:33. fSecond Sec- tion1-Won by Yankton fPtak, Wilson, Sinkey, Mendel1, Iowa Teachers, second, Doane, third. Time-1:31. fFinal ranking on time basis, same as second section.1 North Central Distance Medley 1440, 880, Three-quarter Mile, Mile1-Won by North Dakota fSetterland, J. Thornton, B. Thornton, Pearson1, South Dakota State, second, South Dakota, third. Time-1O:55.5. iNew record, former record of 11:06.1 made by North Dakota in College Mile Relay-Won by Wayne Normal CLitel, Christensen, Andrews, Dennis1, Doane Col- lege, second, Nebraska Wesleyan, third. Time-3:29.7. College Two-Mile Relay-Won by Augustana, Sioux Falls fOrmseth, Erickson, Evanoe, Fjelestad1, Wayne Normal, second, Huron, third. Time-8:16.2. fNew record, former record of 8:23 by Doane College in 1928.1 College Javelin Throw-Won by Compton, Doane College C189 ft. 6 in.1 QNew record, former record of 181 ft. 2 in. by Dunkak, of South Dakota, 1927.1 Crakes, South Dakota, second 1170 ft. 7 in.1, Cooper, Iowa Teachers, third U65 ft. 1151, in.1 College 100-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle, Morningside, Jarrett, North Dakota, second, Kramer, South Dakota, third. Time-:1O. College 120-Yard High Hurdles-Won by Arnold, Dakota Wesleyan, Wirth, South Dakota, second, Welch, South Dakota State, third. Time--:15.4. DUAL WITH THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH DAKOTA AT VERMILLION, MAY 13 100-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle QM1, first, Wirth CSD1, second, Kramer CSD1, third. Time- 10.1. Pole Vault-Won by Whitmore QSD1, first, Garber QM1, second, Hansen CSD1, and O'Leary CSD1, tied for third. Height-12 ft. ' Shot Put-Won by Crakes QSD1, Gottlob CM1, second, Hutchinson KM1, third. Distance- 40 ft. 6 in. Mile Run-Won by Caddes KSD1, Larson KSD1, second, Wilcox QM1, third. Time-4:51.4. Thirty-seven x x lllfrv X 4 ' If ff 1 ,I ' V g Q... K! Z! is-L'-f 4 EEN! 6? - I Qc' X .3 i N l li l S 3 'Y S 1 v 1 .Kung w 1 x X X N! .lf Xl Inf' 'N If X l 1 l Sf X 1 1 fl V 1 rv l N O4 ,Q O X xy C Q 1 N 1 l W gQf 13- X-x X f X ON x Q X I xl: 0:3 '15 1 x dy N ,fvf X TRACK Fletcher Kettle High Jump-Won by Crakes CSDJ, Adkins CSDJ, and Hansen CSDJ, tied for third. Height- 5 ft. 6 in. D'scus-Won by Gottlob CMD, Kettle CMJ, second, Campbell CSDJ, third. Distance-134 ft. 2 in. 120-Yard High Hurdles-Won by Wirth CSDJ, Smith CMJ, second, Barker CMD, third. Time- , ff f Q f - 1 Ch n I v Eliffl l, r ' . 51 . Z' may f r, rf If xfpltih X! ll 'Q xv fD Aff? 1 If 15.9. 220-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle CMD, Kramer CSD3, second, Kemper CSDJ, third. Time-22.7. Broad Jump-Won by Sweeley CSD7, Koberg CMJ, second, Garber CMJ, third. Distance- 21 ft. 4 in. Javelin Throw-Won by Crakes CSDD, Smith CMJ, second, Gottlob CMJ, third. Distance- 168 ft. 4-40-Yard Dash-Won by Campbell CSDJ, Bones CMI, second, Weishaar CSDJ, third. Time-.53. Two-Mile Run-Won by Hermann CSDH, Frary CSDJ, second, Wilcox CMD, third. Time- 10:43.9. 220-Yard Low Hurdles-Won by Van Wyngarden CMJ, Smith CMJ, second, Espe CSDJ, third. Time-25.8. 880-Yard Run-Won by Larson CSDJ, Caddes CSDJ, second, Kemper CSDJ, third. Time-2:20. Mile Relay-Won by South Dakota CWeishaar, Campbell, Kemper, Wirth.J Time-3:30. IOWA CONFERENCE MEET AT CEDAR FALLS, MAY 23 220-Yard Low Hurdles-Won by Van Wyngarden, Morningside, T. Anderson, Simpson, second, Woito, Teachers, third, Haberichter, Teachers, fourth. Time-26.6. Discus Throw-Won by Sandberg, Iowa Wesleyan, Gjorde, Luther, second, Willert, Teachers, third, Peterson, Simpson, fourth. Distance-129 ft. 5 in. CNew conference record, old rec- ord 128 ft. 6 in. by Gottlob, Morningside, 1930.5 Broad Jump-Won by Grier, Teachers, Beckman, Teachers, second, Frazey, Iowa Wesleyan, third, Spurling, Teachers, fourth. Distance-22 ft. SM, in. CNew conference record, old record 22 ft. 9 in. by Gardner, Teachers, 1926.1 Pole Vault-Won by Stapley, Teachers, Lepley, Iowa Wesleyan, second, Baxter, Teachers, and Dresser, Iowa Wesleyan, tied for third. Height-12 ft. HM in. CNew record, old mark 12 ft. 1 in. by Baxter and Stapley, Teachers, 1930.1 Mile Relay-Won by Simpson CWeld, Simmons, T. Anderson, Llewellynlg Teachers, second, Par- sons, third, Iowa Wesleyan, fourth. Time-31372. 120-Yard High Hurdles-Won by Van Wyngarden, Morningside, Haberichter, Teachers, second, Barker, Morningside, third, Schrenk, Western Union, fourth. Time-16.8. 100-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle, Morningside, Boggess, Buena Vista, second, Nessett, Luther, third, H. Bradshaw, Iowa Wesleyan, fourth. Time-10.4. Mile Run-Won by Espey, Iowa Wesleyan, Grazer, Teachers, second, Wells, Simpson, third, Denekas, Central, fourth. Time-4:43. 440-Yard Run CFirst Sectionl-Won by Hiatt, Penn, Simmons, Simpson, second, Aaberg, Luther, third, Bleasedall, Western Union, fourth. Time-51.6. 440-Yard Run CSecond Section?-Won by Llewellyn, Simpson, Cullers, Iowa Wesleyan, second, Bones, Morningside, third, W. Bradshaw, Iowa Wesleyan, fourth. Time-52.7. Shot Put-Won by Willert, Teachers, Hutchinson, Morningside, second, Gerber, Teachers, third, Sandberg, Iowa Wesleyan, fourth. Distance-40 ft. 5 in. 220-Yard Dash-Won by Boggess, Buena Vista, Kettle, Morningside, second, Nessett, Luther, third, Kiatt, Penn, fourth. Time-23.6. 880-Yard Run-Won by Wilkins, Penn, Anderson, Parsons, second, T. Anderson, Simpson, third, Bleasedall, Western Union, fourth. Time-2:02.4. Thirty-eight TRACK Norman Barker, Herbert Bones, Ardell Garber. 880-Yard Relay-Won by Teachers fGrier, Woito, Baxter, Staleyl, Buena Vista, second, Simpson, third, Columbia, fourth. Time-1:3l.4. fNew conference record, old mark 1:31.7 by Buena Vista, 1926.1 High Jump-Won by Stapley, Teachers. Distance-5 ft. 8 in. D. Anderson, Teachers, Finley, Columbia, and Frazey and Flagg, Iowa Wesleyan, tied for second. Two-Mile Run-Won by Espey, Iowa Wesleyan, Risse, Teachers, second, Weed, Penn, third, Dardis, Teachers, fourth. Time-l0:39.3. Javelin Throw-Won by Cooper, Teachers, Hall, Iowa Wesleyan, second, Morton, Penn, third, Young, Simpson, fourth. Distance-173 ft. Il in. NORTH CENTRAL MEET AT GRAND FORKS, MAY 30 High Hurdles-Won by Welch, South Dakota State, Wirth, South Dakota University, second, Smith, Morningside, third, Van Wyngardcn, Morningside, fourth. Time-:l5.2. Freshman Relay-Won by South Dakota State, North Dakota Aggies, second, University of North Dakota, third. Time-1:31. Mile Run-Won by Pearson, North Dakota University, Hamann, South Dakota State, second, Caddies, South Dakota University, third, Thornton, North Dakota University, fourth. Time- 4:22. fNew record.J Discus Throw-Won by Gottlob, Morningside, Burma, North Dakota University, second, May, North Dakota, third, Eckholm, North Dakota University, fourth. Distance-135 ft. 8 in. 100-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle, Morningside, Howard, South Dakota State, second, Kramer, South Dakota University, third, Tarbell, North Dakota University, fourth. Time-:l0. 440-Yard Dash-Won by Wirth, South Dakota University, Painter, South Dakota State, second, Schweiren, South Dakota State, third, Ferry, North Dakota University, fourth. Time-:49.9. fNew record.J Pole Vault-Whitmore, Hanson and O'Leary, South Dakota University, tied for first, Garber, Morningside, fourth. Height--I2 ft. Half-Mile Run-Won by Pearson, North Dakota University, Kemper, South Dakota University, second, Adkins, South Dakota University, third, Ritz, South Dakota State, fourth. Time- 1:59. fNew record.l High Jump-Schwartz, North Dakota Aggies, and Hanson, South Dakota University, tied for first and second, Garber, Morningside, Hamann, South Dakota State, and Adkins, South Dakota University, tied for third and fourth. Height-5 ft. 1178 in. Two-Mile Run-Won by Hamann, South Dakota State, Herman, South Dakota University, second, 0'Leary, South Dakota University, third, Baird, North Dakota University, fourth. Time- 10:l9.8. Mile Relay-Won by North Dakota University fRaabe, Tarbell, Ferry, Setterlundlg South Dakota State, second, South Dakota University, third. Time-3:27.6. Javelin Throw-Won by Crakes, South Dakota University, Kortan, South Dakota State, second, Bunt, North Dakota Aggies, third, Webster, North Dakota University, fourth. Distance- I73 ft. 7 in. Half-Mile Relay-Won by South Dakota University CWirth, Campbell, Kramer, Wirthb, South Dakota State, second, North Dakota University, third, South Dakota State, fourth. Time- 1:29.8. Broad Jump-Won by Jarrett, North Dakota University, Ulvig, South Dakota State, second, Sweeley, South Dakota University, third, Hanson, South Dakota University, fourth. Distance- 22 ft. 2 in. Shot Put-Won by Crakes, South Dakota University, May, North Dakota Aggies, second, Mag- nuson, South Dakota State, third, Hutchinson, Morningside, fourth. Distance-41 ft. 3 in. Thirty-nine W3 TRACK f x ffv nfl :ff if 1'f ,, Sheldon Hutchinson, Lawrence Smith, Arthur Van Wyngarden. 220-Yard Dash-Won by Kettle, Morningsideg Kramer, South Dakota University, second, Welch, South Dakota State, third: Howard, South Dakota State, fourth. Time-:22.2. 220-Yard Low Hurdles-Won by Ludwig, North Dakota Universityg Welch, South Dakota State, secondg Van Wyngarden, Morningside, thirdg Espe, South Dakota University, fourth. Time-:25.1. Javelin Throw-Won by Crakes, South Dakota Universityg Kortan, South Dakota State, secondg Bunt, North Dakota Aggies, thirdg Webster, North Dakota University, fourth. Distance- 173 ft. 7 in. Two-Mile Run-Won by Hamann, South Dakota Stateg Herman, South Dakota University, secondg Ferry, South Dakota University, thirdg Baird, North Dakota University, fourth. Time-10:19.8. 1931 Track Season Precluded from championship consideration because of numerical weakness, the Morningside College track and field history for 1931 is concerned with individual rather than team achieve- ments. At the apex of the Maroon track troop was Mercury-footed Fletcher Kettle, the brightest star of Coach ,l. M. Saunderson's constellation of athletes. Beginning with a victory in the special 100-yard dash event at the Dakota relays at Sioux Falls, Kettle sped to brilliant triumphs in the Morningside-University of South Dakota dual, the South Dakota State invitation meet, the lowa Conference outdoor championships and the annual North Central Conference carnival. Kettle brought himself and Morningside additional fame by winning firsts in the 220-yard dash event in the joust with the Coyotes, the invitation meet at Brookings and the North Central pageant, which for the first time was held at Grand Forks. As a climactic finish to a career studded with notable successes, he represented Morningside in the Pre-Olympic try-outs at Los Angeles against the world's fastest sprinters. His best time of the year was :09.9, registered in the preliminaries of the lowa Conference outdoor session at Cedar Falls, a mark which established a new record. Kettle also won points in the discus throw. Second among the featured performers in the troop was Captain Herbert Gottlob, burly weight man who contributed liberally to the Methodist tally sheet in the discus and shot throwing events. He captured premier honors in the discuss throw in the dual with South Dakota Univer- sity, the South Dakota State invitation meet, and the North Central conference meet. A pulled muscle prevented him from defending his 1930 championship at the lowa Conference tournament. Eight dependable athletes in Sheldon Hutchinson, Keith Wilcox, Norman Barker, Arlo Koberg, Lawrence Smith, Herbert Bones, Ardell Garber, and Arthur Van Wyngarden constituted a strong supporting cast for Kettle and Gottlob in the Morningside track drama. Collectively they counted enough points to give the Maroons thirds in the lowa and North Central Conference champion- ships and second in the South Dakota State invitation affair. ln the dual with the University of South Dakota Coyotes, North Central circuit title winners for 1931, the Maroons were defeated 80 to 50. Hutchinson gave Gottlob a helping hand in the weight department. Smith was Saunderson's sole entrant in the javelin throwing field and proved to be a consistent point winner against any type of competition. Garber was the mainstay in the pole vault and in the high and broad jump- ing events. Commandeered by Saundy'7 into the ranks of the track athletes as a broad jumper on the eve of the traditional dual with the Coyotes, Koberg placed second in this event at Ver- million. Van Wyngarden, Barker and Smith, a trio of hurdlers, jointly won three firsts, two seconds, six thirds and two fourths in four meets during the season. Over the longer distances, in the running events, Morningside had only two candidates who were sure winners. They were Bones, who ran the 440. and Keith Wilcox, who specialized in the half-mile and mile jogs. Forty s 4 X ,fig we Xlfk-7 M 'xllff NX :N X xl: PW 'If' f W f Lf ',tXkj 1 'x l Q' K it iQWu'Q xi jaw' t SI .' I UQ! P0 nys fi X97 l tx Q We N! X f V2 3 Nix il 1 'f L fi 9 At ,D Music PAUL MacCOLLIN Professor MacCollin, Director of the Conservatory of Music, is one of the foremost promoters of musical en- terprises in Sioux City. Through his efforts music lovers of Sioux City and of the surrounding territory have the opportunity, each year, to enjoy concerts given by some of the greatest artists. He also directs the Summer Music Camp at Okoboji. Besides these activities, Mr. MacCollin spends a great deal of time in teaching and in directing the Morningside College Methodist Choir. F ty! Q! 'igfv Music L2 gary ,fi L kxm Cm I 220 Standing. left to right-Evans, Crain. Cusllnv. Iltissor. Decker. Leinbuch, Conner, Weed. Seated!--Granilich. Men's Uctette The Men's Octette was organized this year to take the place of the Mens, Glee Club. These young men have made many short trips to several surrounding towns, giving concerts in the high schools. Several sacred programs have been presented in churches of the city. Conventions and various organizations have received them enthusiastically. The reader of the organization is Harold Crain, and Franklin Evans is trumpet soloist. For the summer vacation some chautauqua work is planned. Morningside College Band Morningside College is proud of her band. Through the efforts of some of our faculty members the band has become an established organization. Music may soothe the soul, but it also puts pep into our football and basketball games. The climax of the season's work was the concert presented by the band in the college chapel, March 9, 1932. Robert Mueller, who directs the band, deserves a great deal of credit for making the band a success. Fully-lhr X lf!! r, ij J W. fl! xl x' N J VWH X ' ',z,I, 'L ,fx gf af ff' . W , fl S, My ,rc W lf X 1 X fit XX' l xlyl fx .W xf, VP wll It xfdl FTN 04 -Q ill Ji X 4, at we ZZ? X I X l X vs O7 l L 1' exft!!! az! K aint Il ,q 1 Fi fi NJ Q1 fi t lmi N x JRR R014 fy af' ' ffl ll :vt ' i i gllfibli 'ml' QQIIVJ SI , wa M ,J B H , if 7 M9 x f-IQJ i Q if I Om V0 iff Lf x',f xy! i 1 N 'foa- i x fqfgf gf? x 'gi-Q'-9 Musto k Row. left to right--Cross, llarlwr, Miller, Howe, Srhneiilcr. Rt-isser, Condell, Ili-ck:-r, Trenary, Weed, Crain, Fitzpatrick, llulu, Coss. Third Row-IJ. Anderson. Bond, Snyder. Molloy, Darling, Meckli-nberg, Stewart, Conner, Roan, Carlyon, Bissell, F. Evans, Burgess, Schrank, C. Gully. Second Row-B. Evans, Brodie, Fritts. Lillie, D. Smith ,Rnuwc-nhnrst, C. Walker, Held, Leonard, Steward, Propp, Hyde, Ivcp, Gull. Front Huwfllorkin, Muriel Kent. Polly. Nlrlfuy, Baxter, Brinkman, llcllmun, McWilliams, Butho, Lawrence, P. Wmmod- fmd, lrmin, lininv, lfiyrcs. Morningside College Methodist Choir Under the inspiring leadership of Professor Mactfol- lin, the Morningside College Methodist Choir is attain- ing wide-spread popularity as one of the leading a cap- pella choirs in the United States. Besides supplying music for the chapel services, the choir makes an ex- tended trip each year, giving concerts in various cities. Folly-juur Music MC? f I I I 1 5455. ,iff fx Ni, xx sq X ,WW A - X2y,yI', Xl ll 'VU it if i t l 72 p ii , 'if ' ' v , v in 3 1 Ilwrk Row. left to right-Ycziglcr. lloltlmus. Knowlton. llixon. Yxlnpculsem. Inlay. Hnnkins. Uorr, Sterling. C11-Kinv. Third Row--Miller. Smith. llziyvs. lolnluli. Steward. lliumlirh. .lzu'olrscn. Cowling. Squirt-s. XWK i hvruiwi RUWAJ. Wondfonl. llundy. fllziy. Peterson. Hzu'tm'll. Watson. flafley. lrorvwlvr. I. r:1' kv. Burns. Wiovd-. Y X First Row--Pope. Rumsch. Hoon, Lzxrson. Anderson. Brown. Nelson. Troiisrvlc. Squires. l.ung1v. X Furzy-fire Vesper Choir The Vesper Choir is one of the younger music organi- zations on the Morningside College campus. Directed by Lester McCoy, the choir has gained much popularity. Besides the assistance given in the chapel services. the choir plans a trip eacli year, giving concerts in the towns and cities in surrounding states. ,Mi Xl Wt fl xl N xfyl xlxlfl wp' Wo' X fb l il, w'l if ta Oli -QQ Ji QQ? G 1 W 5? 4 N gf ,X X, I at :El Wig -A ' ll . N 5 'l' I T H fl X ,B r 2425, Q1 'l I 02 N f I I, X ,, Q73 it I Music fs 'T,- info-J ffx ,J Louise Smith. Margaret Prnpp, Ardyth Vifalker. String Trio The College String Trio, composed of Louise Smith, violinist, Ardyth Walker, cellist, and Margaret Propp, pianist, was organized this year and has been much in demand in Sioux City. These young women have given programs in several churches of the city, have played for the Little Theater and College Dramatic Club produc- tions, and have presented selections for various programs and banquets. Fly Miusie Lees Evelyn llillcr, Joyce Woodford, Ardyth Walker, Louise Smith. String Quartette The String Quartette of Morningside College, composed of young women of the Conservatory of Music, has had a busy, successful year. The members are Evelyn Miller, first violinist, Joyce W'ood- ford, second violinist. Louise Smith, violist, and Ardyth Walker. cellist. Concerts in Sioux City and in surrounding towns were part of their schedule. Morningside College String Quartette The Morningside String Quartette was organized this year under the supervision of Eugene Adams. The members are: Eugene Adams, first violinist, Robert Mueller, second violinist, Charles Chase, violist. and Wanda Castle, cellist. Fty I X f f flf f if ff 5-QW! 0.1 1 fl x fill BN N Exif riyil i ., , X. Qfii.. Vo, fin! a ix M ' v y' Sv ,,l t in tgirl Mfg Sty, Q M43 X Cl Kolb at fi' X P I i lf. ,X rig XX xx D sg ,D J y X O af ts? 55? ia f MUSIC Top Row-Brower, Castle, Collins, Engleken, Evans. Second Rowflfinney, Franke. Cordon. 'lhlrd Row-Klugc, Larson, Mm-Lracken. Bottom Row-Mrwilliams, Miller, Munllcr, Prnpp, Svhrank. S1gma Mu Local Music Society OFFICERS First Semester Second Semesfer President ................ ......., M argaret Brower Evelyn Miller Vice-President ....... ,,,,.,,, E velyn Miller Alice Collins Secretary ............ ........ L ouise MacCracken Betty Evans Treasurer ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,i Stephanie Cowling Dorothy Anderson MEMBERS Dorothy Anderson LeClaire Engelken Wyonne Larson Dorothy Mueller Margaret Brower Betty Evans Louise MacCracken Margaret Propp Charlotte Champeny Grace Gordon Evangeline McWilliams Beatrice Schrank Alice Collins Marion Hughes Evelyn Miller Jessie Watson Stephanie Cowling Dorothy Jeep Honorary Members Wanda Castle Roberta Finney Margaret Franke Margaret Kluge Forty-eight M U s i C WCQQFQMN Qlhlfffb X ., ,T 15 XM' . 1 , , W1 xx Zyl t l 17, f f Xya E he 5 yf on , ff 7 56, , 'X 7,1752 f fi N , Z'!f,, .f ire Qrijff- ffvg xi-'f '.iR'gx 'n i N-lg :Ny m fs 3- N T K lx , fly 3 1 fx ,W wr I ,G 5 'r SI v, MD ,bmw W Q4 iw Top Row-Asmus, Bentley, Finney, Irwin, Kolp. E second Rnw--Marcnllin, Propp. D. Smith. fu B R fl... S ' ll Timm, Wahlstrom F. Vfnodford. J. W'o4 lf cl QM!! Mu Phi Eps1lon ,xy PHI ZETA CHAPTER National Honorary Music Sorority ' x,f . x f OFFICERS If President .,.............,. ....,.....,.....,..........,,.. ,.,....... B r ownie Wood Q ff Vice-President ......................,.................... ......... G ladys Timm ,Q fp Recording Secretary .,........,...... .........,...... L ouise Smith Q Corresponding Secretary ...........,.,...,.,....... ........... E unice Wahlstrom eh fl Treasurer ...........................................................,...... Faith F. Woodford Q y MEMBERS 2 go Clara Asmus Elizabeth Newton lVIacCollin Gladys Timm bl 1 Irene Bentley Margaret Propp Eunice Wahlstrom Roberta Finney Dorothy Smith Brownie Wood ', Muriel Irwin Louise Smith Faith Woodford Lucy Dimmitt Kolp Laura Stoneking Joyce Woodford Fty' l 1 XG Q w ! f X N 7 f 1' If 1 T9 K I I x ty ,W , , . ., MQV Morningside May Music x f , lr 'H IE ,J Festival, 1931 , I1 rx The Morningside College Music Festival was pre- 1-JI, g - XX sented May 15 and 16 in the East High School audi- ,N XXXT, -' torium. On Friday evening the choir, under the direc- XR- A ' . tion of Professor Paul MacCollin, presented a very fine ZW concert. The program was the same as the one given in . 3,511 JN Chicago, for which the choir received much recognition. .. Mrs. Paul MacCollin was the soloist with the choir. This was the only appearance of the choir in Sioux City. .ala-uw I x T117 'ld ll The following night, the combined symphonies of Sioux City and the University of South Dakota pre- SI l H sented the finale of the Music Festival. Professor Leo 1 , Kucinski directed this organization in their sixth annual W Q appearance. The ensemble formed by the two orchestras totaled over one hundred players, the combination being K 24? complete in instrumentation. M E 1 Sioux City Community I f Symphony Orchestra bf j The Sioux City Symphony Orchestra, under the direc- Xfsb tion of Eugene Adams, is a musical organization of X fm much prominence. The orchestra is composed of pro- rfn fessional musicians and college students. Each year a Cgkx G series of concerts is given, with noted artists appearing X I as soloists. NC The first concert of the year was presented at the fl '9 meeting of the Northwest Iowa Teachers' Association. X j The second concert was given February 21 in the tl? ,x Shrine Auditorium, with the Ballet Dancers from the X Carroll School of Music as the soloists. On April 17 fl the third concert was given, and again the Ballet Dancers Ll!! entertained as soloists. l I 1 x X 4,55 LM Fifty Nvgyf ix ASSUCIIATIIONS 1 XG A I f 1 5 X 7 ' P uf X T-9 X I X s kj I l ji it l I I Q ltlllk if I1 f l 155' g , .X-X N GN -' -1- N X . LD P C11 'fl df R - ll , f 1 A ,Ir I I X , Clarence Nash Paul Haviland 93 I u SI ' H Student Council I iifjf N32 Presidents .............. ....,...,.,.... C larence Nash, Paul Haviland K yf Vice-President ............ ..,..,........A......A......... A lice Hickman Q X Secretary-Treasurer ......,....... ......, ,.,,........... G r ace Gordon Athletic Representative ............ ....... H erbert Gottlob . Student-Faculty Representative ,.................... .,,..... M argaret Smith I f lf 7 Senior Representatives '40 President ...... .......................,......,..........., ............. A r lo Koberg Representative .. .,,...................... ....t.. ..,..,.. F r ank Harrington fn Junior Representatives Q7 G President ...... ............,,...,.......,................. ................. L o is Crane Xb Representative... ............................. .................. R ob Roy Leinbach x X 1 Sophomore Representatives , I9 President .......... ................................................................ E va Freer X I Representative .. ....................................................... Eugene Sherwood t, I Freshman Representatives lf D President ...................................................................... Howard Dobson X! 0 Representative .................................... .......... ......... L 0 uis Larson , If Y. M. C. A. President ............ ......i... R alph Baker ,S ,.. Y. W. C. A. President ........... ........... G race Gordon ' I Collegian Reporter Editor .... ............ H arvey Potthoff , 'J W. S. G. A. President ........ .Marjorie Belfrage X Z W. A. A. President ............... ............. G race Stoops X ', Pi Kappa Delta President ........ .......... A lice Hickman X NM Club President ............... .......... A no Koberg ff .ff-'fa Filly -t ASSOCIATIONS 3: Sigh -CX , g MSD X X I X I I ff K f l.tNJ l tx x 4 x I 1 ll I Xl X, ff x I XQ Top Rowfllaker, Belfragc. Crane, Dobson, Freer. uf lf, Second Row-Gurdon, Gotllub, Harrington. Hickman, Knbcrg. N ' Bottom RowfLarson, Leinbach, Potthoff, Smith, Stonps. MX X Q' fel, ' x ' 1 The Student Councd fl, N f'I The Student Council, that group of notably dignified personages K of Morningside College is the student governing body. Such activi- ,Xl ties as Freshman-Sophomore Day, Homecoming, Dadls Day, Thurs- X mx l day assemblies, the annual Walkout, and any matters of policy, XX y pep, or cooperation are the concern of this organization. This Nb Ill year, under the regime of two very capable presidents, Clarence Q 3 Nash and Paul Haviland, the program of the Student Council has X dl been effectively executed and enthusiastically received. kr N 1 f X sid? l Scarf' ' Fifty-three M' ,.,, ll Xlllrf. Sty: ll lf' CL, s f f ' Q 1: .Nfl Z1 ki .Lq.,.' A Q xg-I ll ll 1 'ls I N lf S ' v If W5 l .W NX A gh Pflflgh I F I I in , QV Xfj Ji 1 1 Qi il Qiggsg : ll szml l My x 2 X f lf X. ff? ll if , xl iw Eff :ff ki 4 il ffx ,awp N3 , frssooifirioixis fs daze! Alire Hickman, Helen Dnwn. Marjorie Hunter. Betty Evans. Agora Board OFFICERS President ............ ..................... ........., A l ice Hickman Vice-President ......, ........... H elen Down Secretary ....,.,..... ............ B etty Evans Treasurer . .........., .........................,......., M arjorie Hunter Senior Representatives Sophomore Representatives Harriet Smith Gleva Binger Dorothy Taylor Eleanor McCaffree Marjorie Belfrage Caryl Gaily Ianior Representatives Freshman Representatives .lean Serrill Gretchen Gall Gladys Graves Janice Hagy Lois Crane Leota McCoy Extra-Curricular Committee Marjorie Belfrage Cepha Pasek Freda McCray Louise Johnson Fifly-f AssocmrroNs 9 -fif: M? If ,X CN-CQ Top Row-Bclfruge, Bingcr, Crane, Cafly. Second Rowfllagy, McCafl'ree, McCoy, Smith, Taylor. Agora Agora is an organization composed of all the girls of Morning- side College. It was organized primarily for the purpose of de- veloping and coordinating the social and intellectual life of the women of the school. The Agora Board which directs all activi- ties of the organization, is made up of three representatives from each of the classes, the Agora officers, and the Presidents of the W. S. C. A., Y. W. C. A., and W. A. A. The Dean of Women is also a member of this board. This past year Agora has been very active, and not Without re- sults. It is the policy of the club always to have some project to further. Among its past projects are listed the Agora Bulletin Board, and the Womenls Athletic Field. The present project of the organization is the organ fund which will pay for the pipe organ installed in the Conservatory last year. Agora has also success- fully conducted the Big and Little Sister Movement, the Christmas Bazaar, and the Women's Banquet. The Art Club and Reader's Club are subsidiary organizations of Agora. F fly-fve 23. X l f I x ! x x SRX . f flf flf lf X! tw 1 fl lar . shy If 'fl IXLI X In If . u Za 1 I Z n ew it A Y xx., ll li I I I ,jj f 'V Al Sv ,, W . qjj K 1 xl' X 1 X X I x X .lf Yygl l N lj I X Y 1 Xu NN! fgix fr fr ! ill w'I lx xffl VN 04 ta W l X N I QCD f ASSOCJIATJIUNS N K l f X ty l l l it I 1 Q lxlilirl X lj X 'X l ll' - l N l - I , l xhqd Q - - ' .a fb X-I: ef' f :ll 1' l' 1 Q K5 ' !' ,,,, . C - M . M119 l, v .. Grace Cordon, Lois Crane, Harriet Smith, Cleva Binger. Il l r Y. W. C. A. 4 pf' OFFICERS X President ....,........ .................... . ........ G race Gordon X . Vice-President ........ ......... L ois Crane f Secretary ......... ........ H arriet Smith X f Treasurer .. ..................... .......... G leva Binger f CABINET Program Secretary ........,......................................... Helen Mary Quirin fin Membership Chairman ............ .......... E leanor McCaffree iv 6 World Fellowship Chairman ...... ................. V era Schuetz X X Music Chairman ........................ ................ B etty Evans W Social Chairman ...............,.. .. ......... Mary Melson I I9 Social Service Chairman ......... ......... H elen Bottom Xl Publicity Chairman .......... ........ R uth McDonald U f Hostess Chairman ......,.......................................... ....... D orothy Cross l gtg! 3 FACULTY ADv1s1-:Rs f f I 1, Miss Dimmitt Miss McCluskey L lf .'.f' F 'I X lf X Yup Fly ftssociftrioiws P Swm siege ff MZ 3 kfik f M5 Xl X X f f, if W ,ry Nw mf , ENV It lftli, 1558 'll f f' ., ff Iii! FQ + Hit -X Jll, I I tl V T-Q 5 'Z S l V I xxmffl , ,Q f NX I Top KowfBoltum, Cross, Dimmitt, Evans. K f Second RowfMcCalTrec, McCluskey, Xlllson, Quirin, S h I We 1' Y. W. C. A. X 1 N The Young Women's Christian Association on the campus is a group of girls adventuring with God in play, in loveliness, in friendships, in life full and creative. This year it has been our endeavor, through the activity of the various departments, through the Tuesday morning chapels, through social events, and educa- tional projects, to give to every girl opportunity for development of the highest and finest life. We have tried to provide contact with inspiring speakers, with lovely music, with poetry, with each other, contact with our best selves and with God. In the words of our national purpose: 44We unite in a desire to realize full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God. We determine to have a part in making this life possible for all people. In this task we seek to understand Jesus and follow Him. I ly-sew I y a xx' Ury' t lx, I il. w'I lx xfj VR ol ak 6, Jy X l i 6 , If L KI X M lxlllfx .5 , XX X.. I1 Piifft - I C4 ASSOCIATIUNS W if Al a ph Baker, John Crilfin. William Ganger. -m f lj .fit 'X l -fl o'. QQ O N f N x f -I ml l R1 l' ll. 9, M SI QI, Q Q x I Sf X131 y 1213. fi lg fp Xff :ff lf ll it Q Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS President ........ ,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, ......Ralph Baker Secretary .,....,,. ,,,,,,,,,,, J ohn Griffin TFCBSUICI' .... ....................,........ ...,.... W i lliam Gauger COMMITTEES Devotional Chairmen ................,.,.,,..,... John Griffen, Freshman Commlsslon Chalrman ......,.,,..,,,,...,,,,,,,,,,,, Gospel Team Chalrman .......,,..,,..,,. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,.,, Publlclty Chairman ..........,,,...,,,.. ,.,,,A,,., Walter Pritchett .Darrell Herman ...Willis Thurow .James Albertson S0C13l Chalrman .... ....................................... W endell McDowell ADVISERS Dr. R. E. O,Brian Dr. F. W. Schneider Dr. Myron E. Graber Fil ,ttssocrftrtoiws NP X V , , Top Row-Hermann, McDowell, Thurow. Second Row-Graber, 0'Brian, Schneider. Y. M. C. A. The activities of the Y. M. C. A. began when we introduced the Freshmen to ourselves and to each other through the medium of a Mmixern and theatre party. The weekly devotional meetings have been regularly attended, and constitute our most inHuential department. These meetings have furnished a series of contacts with some of the leading men of the city. The Gospel Team has been busy as usual. We have even as- sumed the position of discussion group leaders when occasion de- manded. Though our year has had its disappointments, we look to the future, hold tenaciously to our present standard, and urge our followers to gather our stumbling blocks into stepping stones to further development of Christian lives among men. F ly-nine .LQJEWE If 5CZ.fx l I ff ff Alvita., xx 1 I N x x ff? N fill lil -Lf X rx ffllfllf l ffl Iff' f ' X X I f 3. W .Q-Q7 W xg?-Ji 'f' l2fQN,9 x?,f QQ 1 Ke- it ft lr K V U l 4 'VH l If s I V l fl K 1 .lf XXI wtf I x XO W N f 3' . l lf X fl X I Ku D 5Qf ,3- X, . if if ASSOCIATIONS lt I l k 1 Jgilufllff l f ' 1 'D I L ' li il .R' OT-' .Q X X - 37, C11 ef' ' f :ji T5 Nr' ,I 1 X K ? F. .srl H-gig 'ul vw - ' Marjorie Bn-lfrugc. ,loyrc Woodford, Dorothy S h Clara Bergmann. sz if l r My W. S. G. A. f mi OFFICERS 4 X President .......... ........................... M arjorie Belfrage I Vice-President ..... ........ J oyce Woodford X f Secretary ........... ........ D orothy Smith f Treasurer ................... ....... ........ C l ara Bergmann lf Social Chairman .................... ......... R oene Brooks fy, Freshman Hall President ......... ........ B etty Melson X! Q Central Hall President ......... ........ D orothy Squires West Hall President .......... ........ C race Stoops m FW, Social Director ............ ....... M iss Margrave dl 7 House Matron ....... ................................... ............ M r s. Cline X I V HONOR COURT ll '7 President .............. ................................................... M arjorie Belfrage Vice-President ...................... ...Joyce Woodford ti? .7 Freshman Hall President ........ ........... B etty Melson X Central Hall President ......... ........ D orothy Squires If West Hall President .......... .......... G race Stoops LL-X Social Director ............... ....... M iss Margrave Q9 Ng 'iL.-be 5 y Top RowfABrooks. Melson. Stnnps. Second RowfMargravc, Cline. W. S. G. A. Through the cooperation of every dormitory girl the Women's Self-Governing Association is striving to build character and to uphold the morale of womanhood. This organization gives girls opportunity to express themselves and to know and make many friends. The social director and social chairman plan the social life so that the dormitory will seem more than a place to uhang oneis hat or usnatch a bite to eat. Ask any girl who lives or has lived at the dormitory about the events that center around the beautiful hearth, the open house, the teas, formal dinners, and receptions, informal parties and masquerades, to say nothing of the kitchen raids and pop corn parties. We sincerely believe that through moral, relig- ious, and social contacts we have united into a broader under- standing of one another. .Sly AssoeiArroNs if S'-STD: X 3 Il X X If f A lj x WD Ylzr . ENV :lil 1' f X I f l l ' 4' w fx . f -'X Fi' I ,f li .aff gf . 'Q 1- L-7 3:1 A 1 X! L l 'E ii X5 yi! I 1 L 7, 5 J ll s i v P' LW XX r W ww' Xlw I N l hw xx' . fx I Nfl it li, xx! 'N xx! Y ,S ,D 55 5? If I X16 il' X N 11 g, N ,w-X 1' f yi: P11 'f 44' ,., 1l RN 'Q 1 l l N b f it : I ll in SI , j' lilly If I 4 W gl 4, X119 1 l 'Mio 4 rv at A Tx I 7 xl If D Nlffl 1 k, 1 If x',f I X1 I 4 QP' I! fxc Qt fQQ if K fissocimriosis K7 Q , Alumni Association OFFICERS President ............. ........................................ W illis Forbes, '20 Vice-President .......... ...,...... E dna Bekins Moorehead, '22 Secretary ..,..........,. .,.,........... W illiam C. Wolle, '20 Treasurer .........., ,..,..,.................................,......,,,.,... I ra J. Gwinn, '22 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Term Expires 1932 Term Expires 1933 Dr. B. W. Riner, '16 Dr. Robert H. McBride, '18 Leslie H. Kingsbury, '13 Mrs. Marie Wood, Green, '13 Term Expires 1934 H. C. Harper, '11 Bernice Challman Wolfe, '16 C. E. Eerkes, '24 Alumni Representatives from College Board of Trustees Term Expires 1932 ........... ..................................... C . Lee Barks, '14 Term Expires 1933 ........ .... .......... I u dge I. W. Kindig, '06 Term Expires 1934 .............................................. Ralph Prichard, '15 Alumni Representative from Committee of Faculty Ira J. Gwinn, '22 Alumni News Letter Editor Ira J. Gwinn, '22 Year by year the Alumni army of our Alma Mater has steadily grown until to date it totals 1,609. Clubs are organized throughout the United States, from New York City to Seattle. Morningside has every reason to be proud of her Alumni, for among them are many prominent and successful men and women. The Alumni Association plans the annual Homecoming, Sioux Day, the biggest event of the whole year. Syl SUMMER 7 ,f f fy H f-W X xy . 22 ffff fm W W. VN Ns ,.1..,:- 3,2 gf TL '-L.. ,, -iq: ,xg , , 'iff . ,Q .Q y -fc . ,il 4' Cy! ,1,Qf'3s'zf,.Lx 3. f-3 ,gzgfifd . x in 'Wf ,' 15513 1251, . ' S1 1, W. 5 151 XE 21- ip, 'J' Q, Vf-E511 bk.. - .., 4 .. +I 1 4,'i 11.4. T I 1 i I L' bl! A- 5.15 ,RF s- if ,JH gnc ,INA mf .T ,C .gh . .vi -, qi E I , N IX x If 0' Tlffft 45 I I 1 'Lxll fp lQ'f 'X SK' V it . s..-7l! ff5 ,.!' ,pa . .1-Q53 ga NVQ, I! i, 7 I SI 1 rl MK Fi? 1 Xlffy W H fir fi 1 1 f K - I iwjmg? f J sopnomoities HARRIET SMITH MOST REPRESENTATIVE SOPHOMORE WOMAN The student body has conferred upon Harriet Smith, popular Conservatory student, the title of most repre- sentative sophomore woman. Sixty-four sopnomoiues NPTQCQXN .J yfi X X f I I I WX ,X g1XJ 1 lx KZ A K ff Yllaf. ill IMI' 1' ' X, f I f ll ftl IQ f f lflfid lf !! A .fL'a!- ,sf fig- ix E fe ' Ks., 3: ' I Niki ,e Ig-T . I 'wig ,ll m I li' ' S 1 V l ' xl U7 my JOHN SKRABLE MOST REPRESENTATIVE SOPHOMORE MAN Honored as the most representative sophomore man, John Skrable is known chiefly through his work in de- bate and on the Collegian Reporter staff. Sixty-five I x x l 1 1 Sn, I K u wtf it xlgqa if W X l. fl Vi? Nfl l I Nf FN X V 564 ska, W QD I gig? , J 1 xlllfx l KN yllflflfx X Q fp ' -JI X' XX. g 53,5 XX A . 'mag 1 in H sz , I I M Xf' f Nz, mb Q V D 'X f if? xff If E fx! 'f Qs K xyxL'xj Ziff K SOPHOMORJES ff?-SJ! Eva Freer Sophomores President .............. ............................................,............... E va Freer Vice-President ..,....,..... ...,,,.,. ....,,... E l izaheth Horrigan Secretary and Treasurer ............... ................ M ary Melson Siudent Council Representative ....... ....,..,.,..,.. I ane Smith S y SOPHOMORES Sixty-seven Tnp Row-Anderson, Bacon, Baxter, Bork. Bingcr. Second Rnw-Brown, Collins, Crenshaw, Durling, Decker. Third Row-B. Evans, E. Evans, F. Evans, Ferguson, Frcer Fourth Rnw-Gaffy, Gauger, Griffin. A. Hull, Herring. Bottom Row-Holdcrnft, Hoon, Horrigan, Hnrshal, Jones. SOPHOMORES Top Row-Kolbe, Lacy, W. Larson, Leonard, Lynge. Second RnwfMcDowell. MrQuigg, McWilliams, Martin, Melles. Third Row-M. Molson, Morrison. Neal, Nepper, Olensky. Fourth Row-Pattison, Sl-arable, H. Smith, Stolley, Taylor. Bottom RnwfTrome!er, Van Dyke, Van Peurscm, Welch, Yeager. Sixty-eight V Q ,ff , fff! ,ll N has , s ll yt: PVR ,N lxllqll 1 QT, 11. 1, ML ' X V - vi '. .f52 5- -use , Vg - M SI 1 rl X vit I ft 5' f mcg, nw GK QV? 9 VD iff? lf' M, KLM WoMieN's Mrrrtierics X x Marian Nich s The progress which has been made in the Womenas Athletic De- partment during the last two years is largely due to the faithful efforts of Miss Niehaus, director of physical education. Under her excellent leadership, W. A. A. has grown rapidly and is now rec- ognized as one of the outstanding organizations on the campus. We have all found in Miss Niehaus an efficient teacher, a true friend, and a perfect example of good sportsmanship. Women's Athletic Association Through its diversified program, W. A. A. offers innumerable opportunities to every girl in school to enjoy some sort of athletic activity. It has been the aim of W. A. A. to avoid individual glory and to encourage mass participation in all games, to promote a friendly feeling among the girlsg to interest all girls in some sport or sportsg and to build up high ideals of true sportsmanship, loyalty, fairness, cooperation, and a true play spirit to carry over into after-college life. S ly WUMEN'S Mrnrierios fees 5:9 C W. A. A. Board President ............................ Grace Stoops Baseball ,..,,,...,..,......... Beulah Outhouse Vice-President .................. lioene Brooks Unorganized Sports .................. Eva Freer Secretary ,.........,.....,........... Muriel Batho Hiking ,,,.,....,,,.,,,,.......,. Crystalle Dasher Treasurer ......... ....... B ertha Dieckman Tennis ,,,................................. Ruth Hulse Hockey ......... Basketball ..... .........Verona Fuller .....,.,. Elenore Quinn Volley Ball ........ ....... D orothy Taylor Hiking We have had many inter- Swimming .,.............. Helen Mary Quirin Social Chairman ................ Wilma Tolles esting hikes this year in W. A. A., and all the girls who have gone have made more friends, had a lot of fun, and have become much bet- ter acquainted with the woods, roads, creeks, and fences about Sioux City, both at night and in the day time. Our first hike was to Stone Park, and our new freshman girls were guests. Since then we have had five- mile hikes, ten-mile hikes, 6 a. m. hikes, 7 p. m. hikes, and overnight hikes. Swimming Swimming is a year-round sport and has been enjoyed by many of the girls the past year. The girls have taken swimming lessons at the Y. W. C. A. pool during the winter and many have become Mlied Cross Life Savers Seven y ne Xkm. KD X f I X X X x V ' meal KVM Skx als X x N 1 1 il7,1 EXW 'lr' 'Ai' f .fjzf . -' I if x-x I 9 412 SW ,V . C3 K X l x Xl lx fl ' N M .iflfr N f fi' il, Nfl x 1 xixj km, xx l S I ! ,S O X 1 . f ai Tex B . Xfngf N 'Ulf X N N X 5 l xl' I' gg ' f Ti ell 'X l gi s w 'Bl V ,o', R Hui 1 ,h pw ly 9 'lllllf .1 SI l i, fl W ga if Gill YKZQ Q it ,MJ x is Lf V' WoMeN's Arnterics Seniors Pin-riax Basketball This year the Seniors walked away with high honors in the inter-class basketball tournament, while the Pieria Society was heralded as champions of the intra-mural games. Both teams had to put up a real battle hecause the opposition in both cases proved to be rather stiff. A Wx. by , , ii YALE TEAM HARVARD TEAM Bertha Dieckman, Captain Grace Stoops, Captain Dorothy Taylor Muriel Batho Verona Fuller Eva Freer Beulah Outhouse Crystalle Dasher Wilma Tolles LeClaire Engleken Hazel Heilman Maribeth Squires Beatrice Schrank Elenore Quinn Adeline Hall Jane Townley Dorothy Weaver Era Bell Thompson YALE-HARVARD GAME One again the red colors of the Harvard team wave victorious over Yale. What a gamel The final score of 23-20 gives ample evidence of a close, exciting, and thoroughly entertaining game. 5 y WOMEN'S Arnuarrcs if fam X A - CTN X t , x UD X W gffyfld tl it 1 i I V' Ing' x r I f X w f 1 .M , Hockey f f' QQ. ,M ai:-5? ..,f 4, -v 'si' 'P Jf f'5'X-' WX A Q I 1,5 PM-1. I I K fish I W ll l Fate, in the form of rain, ruled that S1 Y X both Sophomores and Upper Classmen V will ,, should claim the honor of holding this year's hockey championship. As it stands, , they are both fully convinced that they won the tournament. Ji f There is nothing like a good game of hockey on a chilly October afternoon, and W hockey is fast becoming one of the most ' I X popular sports offered by W. A. A. X l Unorganized Sports Unorganized sports include archery, badminton, deck tennis, horseback riding, hiking, sliding, ski- ing, and any of the more individual sports that do not occupy a long season of the year. These sports have been very successfully organized this year and every girl has had a chance to enjoy her favorites. S yh f . 1 W: SSM x' O i it tb, FT t D fs fp X Jy K at L-'f X x ' e NN x N '75 yn wiv' f Ill iw lj x lt ' -.fxyzg an ,PM N 'I' ,I lj il lil S1939 Vx,- Nlfxhy I V f WOMEN'S Aruimsrics X H x j ,-f Q cv., ,, Z J!! I Top Row-Bntho, Dasher, Engleken, Outhouse. Q X Second Row-fQuinn, Taylor, Thompson, Tolles. f M. C. Sweater W mners f XX There were eight NM sweater winners this year, one sophomore, , X 7 five juniors, and two seniors, which fact shows a much increased X pb interest and participation in athletic activities. To win a sweater, one thousand points must be earned in athletic activity. It is a 0 an very great honor to receive a sweater and a very rare honor to qi 2 receive one at the end of the sophomore year. X I X' Volley Ball 1 -7 x l From the time when the girls bid farewell to the basketball sea- ,, son to the time when the lure of the spring weather takes them to lf D the baseball diamond, they keep active by playing volley ball. The X X fj interest in volley ball seems to be growing every year, and the girls , 1, all eagerly look forward to the tournament. L , I Baseball X 'lv What is more fun than for a group of girls to get together on the X If baseball diamond on a warm spring day and have a good old base- jg ball game? Baseball is a very popular sport, and both intra-mural 'QW' and inter-class tournaments are played. Seventy- NX X l 4 ff? xl: Pilfffet Hof e X qfja !g' H ffl ? 1l I 9911, SI l H I I iv, Q F253 Q fl tg, 265, X! X! xi 5 Nffb 1'f L.,- ff Qi 05 f7'7' qc SPEECH JOHN W. PARLETTE Professor John W. Parlette is the head of the combined depart- ments of speech and dramatics. His department had charge of the production of four major plays and a number of one-act plays during the course of the year. He personally directed the efforts of fifteen debaters in a schedule of more than fifty debates. The major part of his scheduled debates were non-decision debates. De- spite this fact, however, his teams made a very creditable showing at the state and national conventions, placing in both debate and extemporaneous speaking contests. S ty SPEECH GLEVA BINGER ROENE BROOKS ALICE HICKMAN MARY MELSON South Dakota South Dakota Q21 South Dakota South Dakota Yankt Midland Midland Western Union 121 Western U Nebraska Wesleyan N braska Wesleyan State Convention M uri State Tcavhc National Conven St Cunventio N l Con 1 RACE YVIAREK NANET1 A VARLOL South Dakota Yank Yankton Western U 'ti S atc T h 19314932 Debate Schedule Date School Team Place December 9 South Dakota U. f3P ......... Women Sioux City December 14 Wayne Normal C21 ........ .,..... M en Wayne January 16 Yankton Q31 ........,...,.. ....... B oth Yankton February 15 Iowa State Teachers .... ....... M en Eagle Grove February 15 Iowa State College ...... .,...., M en Ames February 16 Drake University ....., ....... M en Des Moines February 16 Simpson 121 ........,.. ....... M en Indianola February 15 Iowa State College ...... ....... M en Merrill February 16 South Dakota U ...,........... ....... M en Jr. Cham. of Com. February 23 Midland Q21 .................,,...,.. ....... B oth Fremont February 24 Nebraska Wesleyan 121 ........... .. ....... Both Lincoln February 26 Missouri State Teachers Q21 ........ ....... B oth Sioux City March 9 Western Union f3l ....,.....,........ ,...,.. B oth LeMars March. 9-11 State Convention ....,.... ....... B oth Cedar Falls March 14 North Dakota U ......... ....... M en Sioux City March 16 Western Union Q31 ....... ......,. M ixed Sioux City Mch. 28-Apr. 2 National Convention . ....... Both Tulsa, Oklahoma S J' Q3 CHCMN 3..,.fx l X X X f, Nc f H11 r g liz? td xiii Z! I EXW llil klwl ' X lNl!j lvf' V, 1 ' I Vffl 2 ,X ., ff!! X Qgxf' ff-KX, A 4 qv 1 I I Wu 1 2 f Sv , tt alll x X .lf X! Nfl xl xlwl I W WXXXP N! lpn' Nfl xfl l l xffi nw xx! ak ,J J y 9:3 32213 flff f I X S r X N NN 1X XXX s- 7 1, X gf: fflff X f ll I lla' fl' is THQ? I1 HR' g, 3 Tiana ' lt 'wt' -' WV' SI .i f' tv 3 y, 1k X LX, K 'slip f K! mi X, X! Xl f -9 Xl f ll f77 wfl iff if ff Il' KCI' xx ,f 1 .32 ,ytkf ,iff if SPEECH fffyqiz 3533 X ARNOLD BARON HARVEY NELSON BRUCE RI-IEDER Wayne Normal Wayne Normal Western Union 12, Missouri State Teachers Iowa State Teachers Western Union Simpson Western Union f2j HERALD HOF!-'MANN Iowa State College Drake University Simpson Western Union JOHN SKRABLH Iowa State College Drake University Simpson Missouri State Teachers Western Union AI.LAN THORNTON South Dakota Iowa Stutc College Nebraska Wesleyan Midland North Dakota State Convention National Convention MILTON RIXMAN Wayne Normal South Dakota Iowa State College Nohraska Wesleyan Midland State Convention National Convention Western Union DARYL WILLIAMS Wayne Normal Yankton Iowa State Teachers Simpson Western Union Seventy eight sipisiscrr sr QNX f ff S-STK? X ff-X LZ McCaHree, H. Smith, Winter. lntersociety Debates Each year the three societies of Morningside cooperate in con- ducting a series of two debates on the Oxford plan of having one representative from each society on each team as a regular part of the tryouts for the intercollegiate debate squad. This year the same topic as that used by the fraternities was used in the inter- society series: Resolved: That restrictions prohibiting professional athletics in colleges and universities should be abolished. The order of debates was: November 9. Affirmative Uuanita Winter, Muriel Batho, Eleanor Mcljaffreejg defeated by negative flilleanor Quinn, Gleva Bin- ger, Roene Brooksj. November 9. Affirmative fHarriet Smith, Katherine Vincent, Grace Edwardsjg won from negative Uane Smith, Mary Melson, Helen Andersonl. C Anderson, Blnger, Brooks, Melson, Quinn. J. Smith. S y L..,efx l Q 1 gli X flf f fl 4 ff' X M' gift 0.1 r w ! x N .Vi X1 X l NO R ww Nf QP, ll x g if vs da? QQ? Z X fr . llllfl IiL, l ZH 1 If ' l l G li ff! QQ ' ffm S fl n U I il WI s I v I Nw t pf 1 X X F spieeen W x r xX lr l yo P Qlflfs Q -WSU JD gi' -l- TQ 12 - N ij, Pffillx Larson, smbie, vanvfyngafden. 'off i f 5 ,-lnvg 7 - . ',.r y Interfratermty Debates sim, ' l f W 0 , f, My E ilflf Xlf 3 M XOQJ FU X9 X! X! QV? f Nf f F J xl 1 f Each year an important part of the tryouts for the menis inter- collegiate debate squad is the interfraternity debate tournament. To the winner is awarded a silver cup. This the Alpha Tau Delta fraternity won on the proposition: Resolved: That the restrictions prohibiting professional athletics in colleges and universities should be abolished. The order of the debates was: November 5 Afternoon. Affirmative, Delta Theta Pi fPotth0ff, Munson, Daviesj g negative, Alpha Tau Delta fSkrable, Larson, VanWyngardenl. Decision: Negative. Afternoon. Affirmative, Phi Sigma fRiseling, Mclsarnan, Rixmanl g negative, Sigma Theta Rho fH0we, Williams, Nelsonj. De- cision: Affirmative. Howe, Nelson, Reeder, Robson, Thornton, Williams. E ghty Davies, Evans, Munson, Potlhoff. Evening. Affirmative, Sigma Theta Rho fRobson, Reeder, Thorn- tonlg negative, Delta Theta Pi fMiller, Doty, Evansl. Deci- sion: Affirmative. Evening. Affirmative, Alpha Tau Delta fMatson, Steinbrenner, Hoffmannj: negative, Phi Sigma fPickersgill, Bottom, Rix- manl . Decision: Affirmative. November 6 Afternoon. Affirmative, Sigma Theta Rho fRobson, Nelson, Thorn- tonlg negative, Alpha Tau Delta fSkrable, Larson, Matsonj. Decision: Affirmative. i Afternoon. Affirmative, Sigma Theta Rho fRobson, Nelson, Thorn- tonj g negative, Phi Sigma fPickersgill, Bottom, Rixmanl. De- cision: Affirmative. Evening. Affirmative, Sigma Theta Rho fRobson, Nelson, Thorn- tonl 5 negative, Alpha Tau Delta fSkrable, Hoffmann, Matsonl. Decision: Negative. Professor Dickey, of the University of South Dakota, gave critic judge decisions after each of the debates. Bottom, Pickersgill, Riseling, Rixman. Fghy xffwf-Q5 SPEECH ?Q fx-4,X R -P23092 .Xillfx l X X X 4 f, X 'J fiifxf M 1 f fy r x x U xl Sty: lillfl liz 9 ,f J I ' if-.J fe-N ea f P J li: I KN,-'um S ' A a v Il T ,J . CQ K .if X Wi Im xl 't X r P Xxf x f, ,W N lx il, w'I tl xQl O ll -R ill t x X if IG QQ U 22? N X ,fi X l I X sf O ll N In l Vit '1 tl 1 l 1, Ol' nip k P, x, S' f xf fl? QP? li? Gif x ,tt ,Q L T , 0 f aa Mi Q55 State Convention Schedule lMenij Morningside fAiT. my Central ............ .LOSI Morningside lNeg.i Coe ...... .... W on Morningside CNeg.j Parsons ....,. .Lost Morningside lNeg.fl Penn ....,.,.......... .LOSt Morningside QAH. il John Fletcher ,... Won Morningside KAH. ii Simpson .......,......... .Lost Morningside lNeg.b Iowa Vllesleyan ......... Won Morningside lAff. P lowa State Teachers., .Lost Morningside lNeg.j Upper Iowa .......... Won Morningside l'Alf.D Luther ........ .Lost Morningside fLNeg.J Dubuque ,........... Won fWomenl Morningside lNeg.l John Fletcher ....... ,Lost Morningside fAff. fl Dubuque ................... Won Morningside fNeg.il Penn ...........,......,.......... ........ W on Morningside fNeg.l Iowa State Teachers ,,... ,...,... W on Morningside HUT. l Simpson ....,.,............ ........ W on Morningside fNeg.l Parsons ..............., , ,,,...,, Won Morningside fAiT.l Upper Iowa ...... .,.,..,.,....................... W on Morningside Central ...,..................,..........,...,....,.,...., Won National Convention Schedule tWomenl Morningside CAE. it Tulsa ......,..,.,......... ........ W on Morningside fNeg.l St. Olaf .........,,,......... .,...... W on Morningside fAff.j Bethany ..........,.......,,,,.,. ,....... W on Morningside fNeg.j Central CMissouril .... ..,..... L ost Morningside fAff. Edmund ...,.............,, .,...,,. W on Morningside fNeg.l Wichita U. ............... Won Morningside lAff. ll Alva, Okla. Teaehersu, ..., ..,.Won Morningside fNeg.l Ada, Okla. Teachers .... ,,.,,,,, L ost Eighty s IP is is c H yfxgxrggx Hickman, Rixman, Thornton. fMenJ Morningside fAff.l Washburn .,...................... ......... W on Morningside fNeg.l College of the Pacific ........ ,........ L ost Morningside fAff.j Trinity ...,.................... ,........ W on Morningside lNeg.l Aberdeen ...,.... ..,...... L ost Morningside fAFf.l Ripon .......... ......... L ost State and National Conventions f .ff QQ if lx fl l xiii For the first time in the history of the speech department at Morningside the college was represented both at a state and a national convention during the same year. Roene Brooks, Alice Hickman, Milton Rixman and Allan Thornton repre- sented the college in both tournaments. The Iowa State Forensic League Convention was held at Cedar Falls, March 9-11. Morningside participated in the men's and womenis debate contests and men's and women's extempore. The women won all but one of their debates and in total number of points Morningside received first place in the women's division. The Morningside men ranked fifth among the twelve schools competing in the men's de- bate section. ln extempore, Alice Hickman won first place on a uDiscussion of prohibition as a national issuef' Allan Thornton placed fifth on Mlssues of the com- ing presidential election. The Pi Kappa Delta National Convention was held at Tulsa, Oklahoma, from March 28 to April 1. The regular Pi Kappa Delta debate question, Resolved: That Congress should enact legislation providing for the centralized control of industry, was used. Competing with sixty schools, the women's debate team tied for fourth place. Hastings College, University of California at Los Angeles, and Ada College ranked above Morningside in this division. The men's debate team was eliminated in the fifth round. Miss Hickman again distinguished herself in extempore by winning second place in the final contest. A representative of Redlands University, California, won first place. Milton Rixman, representing Morningside in menis extempore, failed to place. Eighty-three Cs , X I f X f f X! 1.tx'J I X ff? Xflfifl I ,IU 'I if 1 71 f X 3.1.8, I l lv ytg sv ,p H X C3 N 1 x X I MV' N! NP 5 fl VJ w'I l xiffi 'N xx ,Q ,5 Ji l at R-if lfix 'XOXXC I X sa -V ,W X N X Ml!! L' I F ' l -Lil ,o', SQ' ll if 5.4' N :L II 5 Tl lil I l l 1' my, SI , l 4, ,, M X, I X lf, Xlsb x!AlQ ff 22 tl, X! J? lf, lf? Nlfil :ff ff xy! five,- f QQ? SPEECH JANE LEWIS SMITH Mrs. Smith has an interesting combi- nation of professions-that of mother, dramatic coach, and actress. Her di- recting of uWhat Every Woman Knows,', by J. M. Barrie, and her act- ing in allen deserve special credit. She is a graduate of Cornell, and was a stu- dent of Leland Powers School, and of Theodore Irwin. She received her mas- ter's degree from the University of lowa. .lane Lewis Smith Schedule of Plays for the Year 19314932 November 20, 1931 What Every Woman Knowsu .........,.,..... January 19, 1932 .By J. M. Barrie '4Children of the Moonv ......................... ......... B y Fltwin March 16, 1932 4'Doctor in Spite of Himselfv .............,.............. By Moliere HThe Valiantv ............,...............,. By Hall and Middlemass Ile .............. ........,,.,.............. B y O'Neill Eighty-fo sifieiecii if The Doctor ln Spite of Himself By Moliere and presented by Alpha Psi Omega, March 16, 1932 CAST or CHARACTERS Sganarelle .,,.....,.,,,...,........,.,............ Mr. Hayes Martine ............ ......,......... J anice Hagy M. Robert ,........ .......... B urdette Kindig Valere ,........,., .....,... G arret De Groot Lucas ....,o,, ..,...... M orton Pickersgill Jacqueline ....o.....,.. Maxine Steele Lucinde .... ............... C epha Pasek Gerante ,.............. .......... A llen Richardson Leandre ...,,......,,........................... John Bottom ln seventeenth century costumes 4'Prof. Hayes greeted his audience in an act of wife beating. Janice Hagy was his victim, hut she gave him a trouncing he did not soon forget fx!-X Sm me X X f X ggi?--J s 5 Ti l 1 W xl All , Jiflfl lxbr lf! If , xf'i L f ,f f 1 ., ff X Q'Q'f ' yi rag' yi! A I xx-! S pl .T 12 'll . ,T ll Sv , J by making him a doctor. uliedn Pickersgill was clever in his part as a half-wit. Morningside Dramatic Club Presents Tivo Une-Acts The Valiant By H0iLUOTf,1j' Hall and Robert Middlemass CHARACTERS Warden Holt ,...... ..... ..... ...............,.i........................ V i C t0r Bovee Father Daly ,.,,,,.., ,,,i,....,....,..............,.. G eorge Poppenheimer James Dyke ,,,,.,,., H ,,,,,,,,,, Albert HOI'iiI1gS Josephine Paris ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,-....-..,........ Helene Crenshaw Dan ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,i,,44,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,.,,...., C arleton Van Peursem Wfhe Valiant stars Albert Horlings as the prisoner who is about to he executed and who keeps his identity from his younger sister played hy Helene Crenshaw. Ile Hy Eugene U7Neill CHARACTERS Ben, the Cabin Boy .......... ........................ ........ E V Brett Sterling The Steward ,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, B urdette Kindig Captain Keeney ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ......,. A llen Richardson Slochum, Second Mate .,.,..,. ...........i.. J olm Bottom Mrs. Keeney .........,............ .,........... M rs. Smith Joe, a Harpooner .....,,,..i.vi.,...,......,.........,.,...............,....... Ray Friedman Mrs. Jane Smith displayed wonderful acting in her part as the despondent wife of the sea captain who goes insane because her hushand was more interested in gaining the Galle than in taking her hack home. l lfighfy -fire in X 1 x Af X! xi' I RCW swf xp j vi df! l I tel xx! ,RO Ji QD ai? Va Klfx-7 1 lf xii T9 spieiecn What Every Woman Knows A comedy by James M. Barrie, presented November 20, 1931, by the Dramatic Club CAST or-' CHARACTERS X James Wylie ...., ,,............,...................,............,... H ilton Turner N Al k W 1' ..... ,,......,...,.. J h B rt B X .X !,7 Daiftid Wiliii ,,.,. .,... .... M o rtono Plickecisgndrl lf! Maggie Wylie .......... ..........,..... H elen Down iff AJ Jil John Shand ,,.,.,,,,.,,.,.,. ,......... B urdette Kindig '- ' l Countesse de la Briere.. ......... Janice Hagy f . Lady Sybil ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,....,....,.. H elen Bond Mr. Charles Venables ...... ....... A llen Richardson Maid ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,....,..,,,...,....,,,,,,,.,....,........,... Ruth Nourse ,K 1 .X X 1 Cz- fix 4 ' 33 ur' SI f Z' 01, f, Qx M, ' X 'tlfv Nab yx!2tQg 4 fxx A X! X! C23 iff ki? YI,-ASQ Directed by Mrs. ,lane Smith Helen Down deserves credit for her interpretation of Maggie Wylie-the charm ing wife who wrote her husband's speeches so that he might win his place in Par liament. The Countesse was the wise discoverer. Children of the Moon A tragedy by Martin Flavin, presented January 19, 1932, Walter Higgs ...... by the Dramatic Club CAST OF CHARACTERS Thomas ....,....,.,...... James Albertson ...Edward Wendel Madame Atherton ..... .......... M axine Steele Jane Atherton ......... ......... J uarlita Winter Dr. Wetherell ......... .......... G arret De Groot Major Bannister ,..,. ........ W alter Pricllett Judge Atherton .......... .......... C larence Nash Laura Atherton ............. ................. ................. M 6 fry Beth Bl8Ck A Dramatic Club presentation which was directed by Mrs. ,lane Smith The story involves a family having a strain of insanity running through several genera tions. Clarence Nash deserves special credit for his excellent dramatization of Judge Atherton. Eighty will K N X S l S-S 0 X V y, In Q: H1416 RW xl I l EI F i , ln 'CXTEC 15 a ll ,gli SI I ' 1 1 Q , n, W t 9? M '2 S' f :cgi . 'HK W 1 ry V! Q33 iff' 1 fl X f it UO ff! f-555 fag ggggjfgg cross Art Club OFFICERS President ,.,,.,,.. ,,...,..,.....,............. F reda lVIcCray Vice-President ..... ....... E sther Conner Secretary ....., ....... E lizabeth Riggs Sponsor ,,,,, ,.,,..,,,,,,,,.,..,,,,..,.,.... M ary lVIcCluskey The purpose of Art Club is to promote art ap- preciation. The membership is limited to twenty- five. English Art was the subject chosen for this yearis program, with now and then a little current g art interspersed. Though the club members pro- fi ,,t, 1 vided most of the programs, we were fortunate in New procuring two very interesting speakers from ar- Leda Mpcray tistic circles. At our first meeting lVIrs. Fields, of Sioux City, gave an enlightening talk on current art, and at a later meeting Rollin Beard, of Moville, spoke to us on HThe Technique of Paintingfi illustrating his talk with two or three representative pictures of his own painting. I Christian Service Club OFFICERS President .............. ............................. G eorge Davies Vice-President ......... ...i.,...... I ames Albertson Secretary-Treasurer .. ...,................ Grace Jamieson Adviser ................,...,.,...,..,,,.. President R. E. O7Brian The Christian Service Club has been reorganized to take over the activities of the Oxford Fellow- ship, Student Volunteers and former Christian Ser- vice Club. The purposes of the club, as stated in the newly adopted constitution, are to foster a vital interest in religious work, to promote a Christian atmosphere about the campus, and to create a bond of fellowship among those entering Gmrgc Davies some form of Christian work. All persons inter- ested in full or part time Christian service are eligible. Its program includes sponsoring discussion groups and gospel teams, bring- ing in special speakers, and assisting in social activities. The club was represented at the May Convention at Grinnell to which delegates from Christian organizations on Iowa campuses were gathered. Eighty-e 1,11 cisiuiss 3: Cosmopolitan Club OFFICERS President ,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,...,.,....................... Louise Johnson Vice-President ......., ,........ H enry Hath Secretary-Treasurer ......... ............ H elen Bottom The Morningside chapter of the National Asso- ciation of Cosmopolitan Clubs was organized in 1925 with a membership of twenty-three. This year the clubfs membership is forty, the size of the club being indicated by the number of foreign- born students on our campus. The club has two specific purposes: To edu- cate its members regarding the different countries of the world by social relationship with students . from various countries, and to train its members Louise' Johnson to think and to act internationally. Didaska OFFICERS First Term Second Term .........Miriam Hoshal Margaret Ann Beck President ,............ Vice-President ...,.......... .......... N eva Calvin Lucile Henderson Secretary-Treasurer ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,.... E velyn Anderson Helen Claire Calhoun .........Mary McCluskey Mary McCluskey Adviser ...........,.......... Didaska, the organization of two-year normal students, has been very active this past year. The society, under the efficient and capable advisership of Miss McCluskey, has to a large extent fulfilled its social and educational aims. Programs giving udo's and dont's7' for prospective teachers are varied with outside speakers and observation of class instruction. Since for some years Didaska has been unusually successful in athletics, the surrender of the Intra- Mural Plaque this year was difficult. The pin worn by the club members represents the Lamp of Knowledge. Miriam Hoshal Highly- I PSN 'Simi lf? X X IA r W' IX' y vyjb Y Mill til, 1 - f ' I ,,- ,. ff? f ' Q , .K jd.- -iii? fe Q' HQ .N We x . J 'i X'-rr e fr Sv 4 , f C. fn x XI ,fl xl I xqifl wp' QPGI . .M it if i I, xffi VR l 04 CQ O, Ji Cd, QD I 2593 ,1 DMMQWM K-Q I 1,041 I l I ' X ' f L 3 hav-Q LJLJ 732 f X X ' A ' ff? 1 X X L L5 X I f, J al dw KSMEV Dramatic Club L 1 f X l OFFICERS aj' President ,.......... ..,..................... M orton Pickersgill L - i Vice-President ...... ................. I ohn Bottom T It NX' Secretary-Treasurer ...,......... .....,..,. .I anice Hagy ,Im K H s X yi: P if Q XP' IX '-pg 72 T' W-'fl 1 I K3 K - nw ' sw I 1 SI Q A fill' fu, X P, 3 5' f Nil, 24131 ff xf il IW .Wx xfg Ngfij Nf if ff X f 1 This year marked the beginning of the Dramatic Club as a permanent organization. At the monthly meetings, members of the dramatic art classes pre- sented one-act plays. Two of the plays were uPur- ple Passiona' and HThe Mayor and the Manicuref, Tryouts are held early in the school year, and Dramatic Club members are selected on the basis of their acting ability, their suitability for various types of parts, their appearance and their voice International Relations Club OFFICERS President ....... ................,...,......, A llan Thornton Secretary ....... ......... E dwin Mote Adviser .... ........................ ........,. M r . Hoffmann The International Relations Club is a group of college students interested in economic and politi- cal events occurring in various parts of the world which are of international importance. In addi- tion to the regular bi-Weekly discussions of the group, there have been special reports given about the education and work of communists in Russia Auannommn and the background and events of the Sino-Iap- anese argument in Manchuria. Much of the in- terest in the club is due to the work of Professor Hoffmann in assisting in the plan- ning and carrying out of the programs. A meeting of the International Relations Clubs of this part of the Middle West was held at Vermillion in April, at which Morningside was represented. Nty I alum 0 ul 5 SW c L U B s U XX fsfw f C CQ X X 1 9 Q X PrefEng1neers Club xv fib OFFICERS First Term Second Term President .,............ ........ C larence Nash Howard Robson ff ff Vice-President ......... ........ R ob Roy Leinbach Wendell McDowell Secretary .............. ,,..,... E arl Hicks Earl Hicks ff f Il! I Treasurer ....................................................,... .Dan Jordan Dan Jordan ' . . ' ff! Clarence Nash Howard Robson The Pre-Engineers, Club is a group of students organized by those interested in the engineer- ing profession and taking uprew courses in the various fields of engineering. Some of the activities which make for very valuable personal contacts both in the outside field and within the club are the Pre- Engineers' Night and the For- mal Banquet, both of which are annual events. The club also makes a number of engineering project inspection trips during the year. Combina- tion luncheon and business meetings are held once a week in the Physics laboratory. .lf yr mxfl xl xlwl Dr. Graber and Professor Gwinn are the club advisers. President .......,...... lshkoodah OFFICERS First Term ........lVlary Lou Kusian Vice-President ......... ........ J ean Hayes Secretary .............. ........ A udrey Stomberg Treasurer ......................,....,............................ .Audrey Stomberg Second Term Jean Serrill Denece Darling June Staman Jennie Ostapoff lshkoodah is an organization to which all freshman girls are privileged to belong. The purpose of the organization is to offer opportunity for a closer fellowship among freshman girlsg to foster the spirit of democracy in the college, whereby each girl may have opportunity to attain her highest developmentg to promote literary ac- tivity among the freshman girls, and to aid in establishing and maintaining high ideals among freshmen. This year the girls held their weekly meetings every Friday in the Y. W. Hall. They revised the constitution of the organization. At the monthly spreads, the girls planned to have something entertaining as well as enlight- ening for each of their programs. Ni ly ne Fwy' ff 'wif l m y f f' f'l.fl' . ff!! r '. , ' Wrap fwvys A 1 xx-.Z K 1 iluxlh , 2+ sv iw . 5 at X x 1 x I X x fy' 5 56 X! Nfl l xiffi F7 X fp Ji Q0 so f 2211 gf LK CLUBS 1 7 f F X s sa X I X X hy i f. lg fi'7 fl' R d 'Cl b , I li ,J ea ers u l X l J X ul XM ' OFFICERS -1 ll N ' Xl ' l XX .' President ..,..,.... Eleanor McCaffree T4 mx XX. S tk w,'S Vice-President .......... Maxine Steele Zxff 'N-K 'ilifxi flt Headefs Club is an Agora pro- qfih X tege. Its meetings are held twice ll 'Ill y a month, usually in one of the If I society halls, and tea is served after the regular meeting. The SI ll programs include a study of vari- Wll I ous types of literature. Since E,l,amMcCa,Tm, YQ Professor Hayes usually does most M of the reading of essays, dramas and novels, our programs are ale Q ways interesting and helpful. The members feel that their literary X background has been very much broadened by the experience. X, 1 sf , . X X Pf6fM6d1C Club Q66 OFFICERS X fm President ..........,. ......Y.......,....................... K eith Wilcox ft ' Vice-President ..,.,.. ........ G ordon Cawthorne 0 f gh 7 Secretary-Treasurer .............., Dudley Miller X! Adviser ..........,............ f ......,i,i.,,................. Dr. T. C. Ste hens X f p Fl '7 The aim of the Pre-Medic Club of Morningside College is to unite X the Pre-Medic students for the ur ose of more effective stud and P P Y xl' closer connection with the medical world. We have had an es- ! D pecially interesting program this year, including a lecture by Dr. lf 0 C. I. Stauffacher, of lnhambane, East Africa. Other meetings have I if been occupied by student programs consisting of special reports on L Q' various medical subjects. 4 I f of X f QQ 'Moo Q 'V ty! AUTUMN 3 3 F -3 ? Q V 5 k 5 5 ? E 'c A 3 2 QS E :4 E f, Q E Q E as 2 3 is 4 in .3 f 'FKIKIQX J mx N Sv-,I jii if fi 1 srm Il I 1 4311! 4x X 'Xxx OSI, mf 9 HNIVPQ x' ' P? X! X! I xl 63 1 'f L T, ? fzupfjq, I PX! JIUNJIORS LOIS CRANE MOST REPRESENTATIVE JUNIOR WOMAN Lois Crane, recognized by the students as the most representative junior woman, is one of Morningside,s most talented and popular singers. Ninety-jour JIUNTORS yr QTQM ff ,X LZ HERBERT BONES MOST REPRESENTATIVE JUNIOR MAN Herbert Bones, a prominent athlete, has been selected by Morn- ingside College students as the most representative junior man. N inety- Eve C CTN , X CD s f f, 'f l.KXJ tw 1 ! x X! I Sigh , I , ,xx fi if .,!ff Ig if uf f. ' X 2 'f S f U I Q C65 x Q .V Xl ,fl xl NN, if. rp, X , X 1 x VJ xfi lx fy, tn xx? EQ ,D tx Q0 f 52? . W mtl K X l I lplylxl ,if V ,X ' 1? ' xl' 0 ,ini f l its X A xQT'l..?4 qi' I ir ..- WN ff, it ?f?'7N l, ! 93 .1 SI W, I, me X 4 L Egg? g Xlf U do ls fxl! Q X f X f 2 lx If f rg! Xffj Nf L st x x 1 f f VUNJIORS jf f f 4 JDGQQK if X It ls Our Proud Boast to the World That These Students Are Members of the Class of 1933 Liss LOIS CRANE Bcause she has a mellow contralto voice and uses it. Because she presidents the Junior class. Because she is an Ath. And because of frequent trips from Omaha by a young man named Mossman. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS President ,..,.,...........................,....,......,......,....,.................,..., Lois Crane Vice-President ............,...,.........,.....,.....,..... ...,........ A llen Richardson Secretary and Treasurer ............ ............. E lenore Quinn Student Council Representative .... .......,... E ugene Sherwood N TUNTORB Lf Ninety-seven Ch fix X 1 sma l 17 X r CD Nfl 2,1 ' IRENE BENTLEY X f Il' l Because, not content with being musical and fto l lfflltf a limited degreej studious, she added to the N li ft X if world's hlessings by being pretty. And because of T Z if John Griffin. She's a Zet. X Lf L4 4' ffgli W 1 'X' 1'-42 HELEN BOTTOM -.. X! iff , 0 I Q,- Bccausc she is a Zet and a perpetual committee ' .0 I- ff, chairman. Because she will he president of the 1 at M Y. W. C. A. next year. Because .lohnny is her xi? brother. KA I .T 5 -.1 .- , K yy B- 's l .' Xl 1 Wg CLARA BERGMANN 0 j ll fwrmg T Nu Because she is a Zet and one of the niccst girls l i in school. Because of Harvey Nelson. Because I lil she is at musician. ' i I I ROENE BROOKS v 1 Because to list her activities would bankrupt this I ll, annual for the paper it would use. Because she X debates. Because she is n athlete and an Ath- X ' cnucum. f tw? i 1 . if 1 MERRY BETH BL , s Because she has red hair. Because she can act, 1 . I K' and proved it in Children of the Moon. Because, 4 lg! when her red hair, her rolling eyes and her lan , , Y ' A f ' guishing xoicc get into action, the boys ume A if 9 mddling after. ax 1-tb I f lang' ' f 4 J MARGARET BROWER -41 ' ' , . I. 4 Because when she plays the piano the boys and .7 'I I girls stop yodeling and listen. Because she wields , 6 a mean pen and promises to he an English teacher OAL. - of great strictness. I ' X I ,3.', Q- X ' KATHRYN BLAZER I l Because she is tall and good looking. Because f she is an Ath. Because she is a scholar and a X ff member of Eta Sigma Phi. X X THELMA BURGESS Q Q Because she has dark curly hair. Because she is ,X X a Zet. Because her smile always brings more in X I return. i b I f l I ' f Aff' l X , f ' X H x l I ff X Q7 f l X I X' X K 1 w l ' ii lx l ll ill f WILLIAM DROMMER sl r 1 I X ll X Because he dragged his 225 pounds of Willy all xl f the way from Pomeroy to go to school here. Be- ' X cause he entertains well in Tau Delta bull sessions. ii i Because he is the world's largest and most agile 11 it V X yell leader. X- ix kxwxpn 1 X X ,- MAUDE BURNS Rl o il ll .N o' Because she is a Pi. Because she has returned Q-,ff ful to her Alma Mater after a prolonged spree of AE- Af! l ll l lf K, W Q sc oo teac mg. ...f ,I x N ,. Nfl. I N f - l , 5 I 1 li ' ll i lhiagg 'Xi H lk I ESTHER CONNER i l I I 1. ' Because she could he a society girl but won't. l It i I Because she is a blonde, but none the less, at L l Hi! scholar. l 'l ' f f LECLAIRE ENGELKEN 619 Because she is causing a young man from Kings- ' ley to lose an excess of sleep. Because she sings X , and is a Zet. Because she is a permanent inhabi- K yy tant of the tennis courts. X 'Q fx , DOROTHY CROSS gb X Because she is a Ze! and a music student. Be- cause her voice has contributed to the fame of if Methodist H Capella. , V X f Q MYRNA FRITTS X Because after being here one short semester, she fu! has snagged herself two f2J UU bona Flde men. AXP f Because she is an Ath. Because she is Merrill's I I sister. 55 XI? X I I '9 JANICE HAGY X I Because when she acts, people laugh when she l wants them to, and cry when she wants them to. f l X, Because she is a Northsider and a Pi. l fl 'D CRYSTALLE DASHER f l X Because she is a Zet and because she is a fore- L fs most proponent of women's rights in athletics. Be- 'y cause her tomboyishncss makes her a very charm- i J ing girl. 5 . X K! I 'qbp Y lIlUNlURS Ninety-eight JUNJIURS if Sissy Ninety-nine 'L lf? QQ LU AIDA HALL Because her good looks bring the boys' looks but she leaves them Hat. Because her brunette features add efficiency to the library. Because she is a Pi. MARJORIE HUNTER Because she is very much like a certain lovable character John Held Jr. once created. Because she is editor of this book and a Pi. EDITH HAYNES Because she in nurse to some eighty girls who consistently get wct feet and stomach aches. Be- cause an athlete who was given up by the rest nf the cncds as a woman hater proved easy pickings for hcr. DAN JORDAN Because he has curly hair, a sunshiny smile and a voice. Because he is an eminent Pre-Engineer as well as a Sigma Theta. VERNE HOSHAL Because he is a married man. Because his saxo phone is an essential to any orchestra. GERALD KNIGHT Because he is a red-headed Delta Theta. And was in the Grand Public. Because he is. of course, a punster. RUTH HULSE Because she is the daughter of a preacher and the fiance of a preacher. Because she is u Zet. ELMA KOHL Because, already a musician, she has made a promising beginning in dramatics. Because she is an Ath. Because she is a brunette, the kind men marry. Cfb 'Zhu N 1 fl!! lf I 1 I f W, X X S ' f- l.KNJ X RX J xT.,1 Z If xy? Elias . get ' x fly' ,ff 'IL I', ' - Tfj 'I '7'Xf'i 63 AQ fi, in TQHQ U 1 M 1 'f ifa I V l ' . lO W csQfr xt!! Xl s t I N xgqf xl xAQ fm We xf, Q' l lj VJ NN 1' , xf3 FT l O4 cu O, 'x s A N, st SD gQf 13' f' X L12 ! f x -E -JN If Z I X ' f X Nl N I l 3 if it ill ff ,NH ll ROB ROY LEINBACH x X Because he makes music come out of u saw. Be- x cause he is a Delta Theta and has a Ford. Because R I X he spends his spare hours in the Physics lah. 1, I, - x f I' QNX- CLAUDIUS MEHRENS T: X X .365 B R d fh Ph - , F ecause e's a party man an one o t ose i g Sigs. Because he is business manager of the ff! gi' .All A ual 3 ,.zy' ' 1 -Ll. f ,I ' N Nr .. 1 W' I l f 3 A ' ' meh mpeg' W 4, R l MAR R TLING Jil' Because she's a very well lik Ath and ano her U y of these Dorm girls. 1, SI fi-JP l 1 DOROTHY MUELLER lf Because she is short and cute and dark. Because If she is a Zct and sings. Because of a curly-haired f ex-East High football sm. X 32 gf X217 :api W2 X! X! ll-9 X I U22 Nix fl r'f K, 4 'J' X Eff! LEOTA McCOY Because she is an expert letter writer. Because she has subdued a red-head. Because she is a Zet and a member of the chapel choir. LAWRENCE OSGOOD Because he's another of those Sheldon boys. Be- cause hc's making pretty good speed with one of the Pi's. LOUISE McCRACKEN Because, though a very little girl, she has de- toured a fair-sized Delta Theta. Because she is a Pi and a songster who works in the Con. MARGARET PROPP Because this Pi has received more boxes of randy than any other girl in school in school for her services as an accompanist. Because she is another brunette of the variety men marry. vvfie yUNteRs One hundred JIIUNIORS if AELENORE QUINN Because her southern accent kecps tall :lark men running after her. Because she is a Pi whose pert literary style has invaded many a campus publi- cation. CYNTHIA ROUWENHORST Because she came from a school in Minnesota. Because she's a part of the charm of the chapel choir. Q nr ALLEN RICHARDSON Because he is famous for his dramatic interpreta- tions of the Aobust vllain. Because he wears his A fraQrnity pin on a coedlirket. BEATRICE SCHRANK Because she is an Athenaeum and an athlete and because she has a profound liking for little red apples. ELIZABETH RIGGS Because she's the most brilliant girl in the Junior class. Because thc Collegian has seen a good many of her articles. VERA SCHEUTZ Because she is engaged to Verdette Walters. Be- cause when she is not in the book store she is in the Y. W. C. A. HOWARD ROBSON Because this Sigma Theta is the last word with a Pi president. Because he executives the Prc-Engi- neers. Because he is a debater. FRANCES SHEPARD Because, like a certain Hollywood star, she has red hair and lt. Because she is from Omaha anal a Pi. One hundred one yg if Xffb I l flf f f if X! 4 I .FQ xx ff BNI xx-J rs .Y X x 1 1 s x N I Swirl Sty! If I Ilia, I fx lc, ff ' If ,f , KY ,. I Xi 1 Q- M 'L 1 v I' W 0 N C3 4 1 x X give .lf ixfl Si W' af ,Wg Nfl I xvfi W xx it fp I x 22 Rl X if I X ,J X ON x Q ff f X. T5 5 I .54 ww fa ff UNIURS LOUISE SMITH Because if she will only fiddle Rome can burn. Because she is e Pi and her feminine charm at- tracts no less than her violin. ALLAN THORNTON Because he is noted as a debater who ties his opuonents in knots. Because he is the latest edi- tion of the Worthingtxzn Thorntons. Because he is a Sigma Theta Rho. MAXINE STEELE Because she thinks ham comes from a cow. Be- cause she has Morningsidc's most charming stage personality. Because of u certain triangular pin in her possession. Ky! I! -sxlllffx X 'IH' 1 EQ f. lm- '- ,N ifgfik I f U 4' I Il ! s 'NWN 'I wiv? lf , l I gm, H l 1 'ivy wx lxx 1,' f LX. 4 rf X! X! IIQ Xl xl fD U0 1 ,Ill If XT! I I X WILLIS THUROW Because he is seen occasionally in thc company of the champion woman's cxtemporancnus speaker nt' Iowa. Because his light complexion makes him attractive. Because he is u Sigma Theta. CHARLES STRATTON Because he's one of those traveling salesmen and li musician. YOSHIMITSUM TOYOSHIMA Because he came all the way from Tokyo to learn Methodism. Because he is a Sigma Theta and a Japanese patriot and because his friends call him Jack. Because we will be hearing of him when he gets working for a good newspaper company. DWIGHT STROM Because he is a basketball star and a Tau Delt. Because he had a brother who was a football star and a journalist. , DWIGHT WINNERSTEIN Because he drives a wide variety of cars from South Sioux City every morning. Because he is a Tau Delt. One hundred lwu E 7, 1 Pl N lx Q, 1 Q95 l N C12 a ff' lfllll l, 7 sw SIA WV gf X 1? f X19 NGIQQJ 2 X f X f ll -9 l gli? X Q' gf K1 X if 1 ,Or I lf N fijgzigg Pooraatr J. M. Saunderson This year Coach J. M. Saunderson received a tribute from the men of the athletic world when a banquet was given by them in his honor. Here he was commended for building, not only athletic teams, but men of high character as Well. He has instilled in his men the ideas of clean playing, clean living and clean thinking. 1931 Football Schedule September 27 Morningside ............ 7 Wayne Normal ................ October 3 Morningside ............ 6 Iowa State ........,...,.,....... October 10 Morningside ..,......... 0 South Dakota State ........ October 17 Morningside ............ 0 North Dakota State ........ October 24 Morningside ............ 18 South Dakota MUN ........ .. October 31 Morningside ...,........ 31 Western Union .,...,....,... November 8 Morningside .,.......... 12 Simpson .......................... November 15 Morningside ............ 4 North Dakota Uv ........ .. One hun d isoorisatt of briiqvgr l X54-I Q Harold Asmussen, Herbert Bones, llcrbert Gsliisb. 1931 Football Season nMorningside conquers University of South Dakota in traditional encounter on Bass field, 18 to or . . . N4-,500 fans see Morningside succumb before attack of strong Iowa State eleven at Stock Yards park, 20 to 6. Such are the vivid headlines that attract the eye when the 1931 Morningside College football season is reviewed. Six frustrations and only two triumphs were entered on the record sheet for the season. But by vanquishing the Coyotes in the feature game of the year and by holding such powerful juggernauts of the gridiron as the University of North Dakota and Iowa State to small scores, the Maroons realized a vast amount of satisfaction that crowned an otherwise luckless campaign with success. As a heritage from the redoubtable eleven of 1930, Coach J. M. Saunderson had ten sterling letter men at his command early in September. Morningside football stock took its first slump when John Popevis, burly all- conference and all-state guard, transferred to Purdue University. Almost on the A loose ball in the Sioux Day game-Smith recovers. One hunrlred ive X X f f,fy isffnixtj tw ff F IN. lil I'III i'.' X :K ali 'HQ I ?fIg4'174' If X f y , ., K' 7126? re' ' -ff ML' R A,9'.f 'fl A I W7 I U II I il'.y 5' I I I Sv I, . Q0 XVI I W I f .If Clif iii! X I if in I r 5, N! II f ln g D giif 6- k X N I X Nl X 1 Os N. ll X 573' iw roorefttt ii W I W I Q! I xl Hlviflffl Xl ll 1, PQI ll, x R X,- ik k:'.'g l J WW ful 'sig as , 'fit 93 1 I si A' ff tl v yj f if 5' f Wg rm GK Q25 1 if ,K J? if I V0 iff ,- 5 I 7, I X1 LJ C' Burton Hall, Paul Haviland, Arlo lxoberg. heel of this misfortune came the discouraging news that Sheldon Hutchinson, 190- pound all-conference tackle, had been barred from intercollegiate competition by faculty legislation. With two of his mainstays irrevocably lost for the season, Coach Saunderson began the arduous task of shaping a machine for the initial test of the season against Wayne Normal, September 27. A paucity of both time and reserve material was too great a handicap, and the Maroons dropped their opener by a 9 to 7 count. After a hiatus of some fourteen years, Morningside renewed athletic relations with Iowa State College, of Ames, before 4,500 spectators at Stock Yards park on the night of October 3. Fighting gallantly against the overwhelming man power of the Big Six conference invaders, the Maroons held their own until late in the second half when Dick Grefe filtered through tl1e wearied Maroon ranks for three touch- downs. Lawrence Smith averted a shutout by skittering across the Cyclone line in the fourth period, making the final score 20 to 6. South Dakota going nowhere. One hundred six -Y VRF of to N JF o apart. D' XWQQK .- Q- 'QE N 'Els g lf? Liilx l x ff? X w 'alll xy ll I I tl f if l f: ff I I f ' J'ff'f Alf!!! ' ' , X fsf' autx' fifzilii kj fn 1 y .5 X5 jfll ftxgmxg Lawrenre Smith, George Vcnson, Marvard Wyant. U ll S I If ' The three Fates conspired to deliver two more staggering blows to the Maroon S r l cause in the South Dakota State game at Brookings, October 10. Two regulars V lj were crippled-Herbert Bones for the remainder of the season, and Lawrence Smith X, for two weeks. Minus the services of this star duo, the unfortunate Methodists fell X0 , before the attack of the Jackrabbits 20 to 0, and a week later succumbed to the Y cm! North Dakota State aggregation by a 21 to 0 count. N 4' I , V! Morningside refused to stay down and on October 24 it sustained a precedent XX of some years standing by conquering the University of South Dakota gridders 18 fl to 0, in the traditional game on Bass field. Fully 3,000 alumni and students, part of N t X the Homecoming crowd, witnessed the rout of what had been publicized as a su- X l N perior team. N fl' ' l Snapping into victory formation at the sound of the opening whistle, the surging KG X' Maroons swept over the bewildered Coyotes like a tidal wave to register three touch- X X l downs, one in the first half and two in the second. Except for a few minutes at the X , my T at qi ,y , X fl tim, 0. ff' l x ffl FR! x X ! ak fn, N t X fl, C te l A 0 SQ? Venson off around the end for a nice gain. . One hundred seven v Vx lklfxl I NW R 1 '75 W Z 1 I lfui 'X l X i TR T-gba il' fi! Qs f' ..a if - llx 3 Ill' 1, , ll QQIV SI I II QQ iff? arf iv 49 , XZ, rob N 0:21 A df I fl QD Nlffl Nf if ff ?7'if roorearr fix Nj Edward Haunfler, Ralph Hilcman, Clarence Nash. very outset of the struggle, when the Coyotes recovered a costly fumble deep in our own territory, the Morningside goal line never was threatened. Emaciated in appearance and spirit, the Golden Eagles representing Western Union College, of LeMars, offered only passive resistance to the Morningside grid machine the following Saturday and lost by a 31 to 6 score. Coach Saunderson employed his reserves against the Eagles a greater part of the time, choosing to save his regulars for the two ensuing tilts. Following the gratifying triumphs over South Dakota and Western Union, the Maroons trekked to Indianola on November 8, where they received a 31 to 12 thump- ing at the hands of the football journeymen of Simpson College. Morningside's 12 to 0 lead at the halfway mark was dissipated in the second half hy Dick Richards, Simpsonas great all-western fullback, whose ferocious hall toting ripped the Morning- side defense to shreds. Nash stops this one One hundred eight FOOTBALL fm ff Kenneth Lewis. Paul Perry. I-,ugcnc Sherwood. Rising to unexpected defense heights, the courageous Morningside football team held the famed University of North Dakota eleven, four times North Central con- ference champions and second among the high scoring clubs of the nation, to a 14 to 4 score in the season's finale, November 15, at Bass field. The final standings of the conference follow: Won Lost Pct. Points Op. North Dakota GUN ..... ..... 4 0 1.000 220 28 South Dakota State ...,,. ..... 2 2 .500 33 44 North Dakota State ..... ..... 2 2 .500 53 27 Morningside ....,.......... ..... 1 3 .250 22 62 South Dakota HU ..... ..... 1 3 .250 16 33 Ohdd South Dakota hits a stone wall. fc X' gp I l X xg!! xl lf W, N! fri' lil 0, w'I l N? oil eQ ,D Ji X Q f SW ,Q S9399 .W I X mul K IX S xx M, 332, 1 I 1 my Ng J N QT? N ' -- ' 72 01 ' fi! --W ti .fill gil 1- J 'N rl 93N SI , W3 N mr 1 I Yu yi Xlf 3 XM x ITP? li lf l fD X f r x X, I 'VKX fs xfggggggg roornwrr l l' Row--Bvxlrh. Jungers. D. Litlrell, Willfong, C. Littrell, Hallman, Di Freshman Football LETTER MEN James Delioos Edwin Jungers Jason Saunderson Lloyd Lacy Gurney Day Donald Pauley Glenn Littrell Harry Oosterhuis James Willfong George Perley Lyle liunchey Robert Swenson Lyle Paulson Charles Goodell Dwight Mackaman Harold Bollman 552 129 N I it ill fx N N N it . X X-In P3455 L f In li ' X 93 SI .' Z' K yo1URNALisM Harvey Pntthoif Dale Jones I Collegian Reporter Staff Editor-in-Chief .................................,...,...........,............ Harvey Potthoff Business Manager ,..... .,............ D ale Jones My Associate Editor.. ..... ...........,., J ohn Skrable f News Editor ........... ........ B urdette Kindig Q11 Sports Editor ............. .,...... H oward Dobson Q Organizations Editor ..... ..,,........ E dgar Inlay X 5 Dramatic Editor ....., ........... R ozina Sacks Music Editor ............... ...,......,.., ............................... G r ace Gordon X , J Forensic Editor ...........................,.......,,...,.,...,...,..,......,... Alice Hickman Columnist .............................................................,.,,..... Milton Rixman X Special Writers ...,.. Howard Robson, Prof. J. J. Hayes, Almeda Soper Xf 7 Reporters .........................,.......,.............. Members of Journalism Class fl Xl O x 0123 T X Q' 1 9 X f f '7 X l I x f D X f fj 1 ff K T I if! X d I I Top Row-Dobson, Gordon, Hayes. 'grip' Second Rowfliickman, Rixman, Robson, Skrable, Snper. One hundred twel OFFICERS v l X X NN X ,wa ! .1 'F l Qi. in - x . - QT. L, S5 ff. a ffix Ti ll' in SI , f' ill., ,lf Q4 tp xx!! 7 ,ow LM Xf In X19 I x fD X112 :ff .,- 1 If XF' I xx I 'YP ' fex j 'lllfx ,wwf K sociiariies f if-1 Grace Stoops Margaret Smith Athenaeum Society ORGANIZED 1891 Colors: Blue and White Motto: Utile Dulci President ............. ..,........ .,,....., Vice-President ...................... .,,.,,... Corresponding Secretary ,....... ......... Recording Secretary .........,.. ..,,.,., Treasurer ....,.,...,..,............. ........ Faculty Adviser. Seniors Vera Fern Baker Marjorie Belfrage Margaret Kooyman Chalice Moore Margaret Smith Grace Stoops Mary Treglia Juanita Winter First Term, Grace Stoops Marjorie Belfrage Lois Crane Margaret Smith Boene Brooks Mrs. McBride Second Term Margaret Smith Juanita Winter Claire Stilson Beulah Whitney Boene Brooks MEMBERS funiors Katherine Blazer Boene Brooks Lois Crane Myrna Fritts Elma Kohl Margaret Ling Beatrice Schrank Claire Stilson Beulah Whitney Sophomores Helen Anderson Catherine Cardiello Anne Carey Anne Chudilowsky Stephanie Cowling Verl Crow Marie Duesenberg Eva Freer Miriam Hoshal Isabel Lillie Josephine Lynge Evangeline McWilliams NaDyne Nepper Doris Rockefellow Katherine Vincent One hundred fourteen SOCIETIES Une hundred ifteen 'I'np RowiAndcrmn, llc-Ifrage. Blazer, Brunks, Cranc. Second Huw'-flfrvc-r. Fritts. Hushul. Third RuwWKohl. Kuuyman, Ling, I.yngv. Fouxlh Huw-'MrXYilIi:ln1s. Mnnrv, Nvppvr. Bottom Huw Srhrunk. Smith. Stonps, Whitnvy, Winter fl sociieries GD 'WT L5 X ' f x kj I .Q ll l'lllll J ul fy ,Qu f n Y-lm li i N x XXXXQ. .1 X X ., YI ss ' if 52 fl! x..I30:' t ef' ' fig -...f ,I yy V N 'll gli! ll t 11 l Joyce Woodford Bertha Dieckman QQ 1 SI 1 P1er1a Society WJ If ORGANIZED 1908 9, Colors: Canary and Black J pf' Motto: Feliciter, Fortiter, Fideliter X X D OFFICERS 'J ld f First Term X l M! f. il? :login t7 'Q 9 J f ty 1 ff Fig? f7,' President .............. .......,... ....... Vice-President ............. Corresponding Secretary .......... ....... Recording Secretary ........,.,.. ....... Treasurer ...........,.. Faculty Adviser Seniors Bertha Dickman Grace Edwards Verona Fuller Grace Gordon Muriel Irwin Marcella Larson Eleanor McCaffree Evelyn Miller Beulah Outhouse Cepha Pasek Dorothy Squires Wilma Tolles Mildred Walters Joyce Woodford Joyce Woodford Bertha Dieckman Janice Hagy Evelyn Pruitt Mildred Walters Mrs. Kolp MEMBERS Helen White Marjorie Hall Dorothy Surber June Bonderson Juniors Maude Burns Ruth Falk Lois Gessell Janice Hagy Lu Aida Hall Alice Hunt Marjorie Hunter Dorothy Jeep Louise McCracken Ruth McDonald Margaret Propp Evelyn Pruitt Elenore Quinn Frances Shepard Louise Smith Esther White Sophomores Louise McGregor Alice Collins Betty Evans Elizabeth Horrigan Wyonne Larson Jane Smith Second Term Bertha Dieckman Eleanor McCaffree Lu Aida Hall Wilma Tolles Marcella Larson Jean Stephens Meribeth Squires Jane Townley A Catherine Coss Adeline Hall Emma Held Ardyth Walker Dorothy Taylor Helene Crenshaw Maxine Steele Caroline Iddings Jean Coleman Dorothy Baxter One hund d SOClIlE'lFllES Q1 Top Row-wBaxtnr. Bnnderson, Burns. Collins, Crenshaw, Divclxman. Second Row-Evans, Fuller, Gordon, Hagy, A. Hall, I.. Hall. Third Row-Harrigan, Hunter, Irwin, M. Larson, W. Lnrsnn, McCaffrcc Fourth Row-MrCrarken, Miller, Oulhouse, Pasck. Prnpp. Quinn. Fifth Row-Shepard. J. Smith, L, Smith. Steele. Surbrr. Taylor. Bottom Row-Tolles, Walters. White, Woodford. One hundred seventeen IS, QX l ' 'l t f NX x Q ' X-I1 p f Ill 5 ,., M' l I ll! 5 It Q 1 'X QI' ' I I' X V. HT- ,s'.v lf. ,,,' S' tx s-ll! w fi ff-' WQWQ ll vlfilllx will l'l nl' ll SI 'ff l 1 qv, ,, Q I A X169 V212 ff Xl Xl 1-9 lf., Wil N' L, I I x I 7? Lqsf' 51 sooierties ff we Xlfx-j President ................................. Vice-Presldent ,....................... Corresponding Secretary ,,..... Recording Secretary .............. Treasurer ...........,..,..,.,.....,...... Faculty Adviser. Seniors Helen Bond Lucile Bryan Helen Down Caryl Gaffy Alice Hickman Freda McCray Betty Melson 4 Helen Mary Quirin Dorothy Smith Juniors Muriel Batho Clara Bergmann Hel M en ary Quirin, Helen Down, Helen Bond. Zetalethean Society ORGANIZED 1898 Colors: Scarlet and Black Motto: Esse Quam Virleri OFFICERS F irst Term Helen Mary Quirin Helen Down Dorothy Cross Ruth Stauffacher Crystalle Dasher Miss Murray MEMBERS Crystalle Dasher Ruth Hulse Dorothy Cross Dorothy Mueller Helen Bottom Irene Bentley Leota McCoy LeClaire Engleken Sophomores Dorothy Anderson Gleva Binger Carol Lawrence Mary Melson Second Term Helen Down Helen Bond Irene Bentley Helen Bottom Crystalle Dasher Third Term Helen Bond Betty Melson Dorothy Smith Lucile Bryan Crystalle Dasher Katherine Morrison Josephine Petersen Mildred Polly Harriet Smith Jessie Watson Ruth Welch Opal Caffey Irma Peterson Genevieve Wintersteen Edna Leonard Maurine Harker Fern Beck Thelma Burgess Ohddgl SOCIETIES Tup Row-Burk, Bentley, Bvrgmann, Bond. Bingcr. Second Row-Bottom, Bryan, Burgess, Cross. Third Row-Dnbhcr, Duwn, lfngleken, Gully, O. Gully. Fourth Row-Hickman. Hulse, Lcnnurd, McCoy. Fifth Row-McCruy, B. Melsun. M. Melson, Morrison, Nlm-llnr, Ons' hundred nineteen Bottom Row-Quirin, Smixh, H. Smith, Welch. ' 'U- :-LN I- 9 3 4 v I SOfCllE'l'llES Athenaeum Grace Stoops Margaret Smith Roene Brooks Mrs. McBride Top Row-Brooks, Dashcr, Gordon, Hickman. Second Rowfliolp, McBride, Murray. B It Row-Quirin, Smith, Sloops, Woodford Intersociety Council Pieria Joyce Woodford Grace Gordon Ruth McDonald Mrs. Kolp Zetalethean Helen Mary Quirin Alice Hickman Crystalle Dasher Miss Murray Olddly f 1 fl l Q I X! N vi litullli XL' Xl 12 l lfl' ID I 111 - N, x :gZ'gi ef' - fr 113 l ff? f ul' 'V ' bbiwi Y .tl I' sr ' ff I fl' l rr 4' iff lFRA'l lERNllTllES R y tl Wirth Arthur Van Wyngardeu a mon Alpha Tau Delta Fraternity Organized in 1891 as the Othonian Literary Society Wg? lf I Sl? Q X President ..,..,....., I Vice-President ....... f Secretary ....,... X Treasurer. ty, X J 24 Seniors X Gerrit De Groot ,A 'Q Lyle Gilbert df I Earl Hicks di Herald Hoffmann X , Kenneth Lewis I George Poppenheimer Tl 'Q Lawrence Smith X Arthur Van Wvngarden xv Raymond Wirth X! 3 Juniors X X Herrold Asmussen I if William Drommer 1 f' Glenn Gustine I 'f Edward Haenfier , 'I' James Heacock X Af Burdette Kindig X Ni Wendell McDowell I Russell Nelson flfwfg Allen Richardson Dwight Strom OFFICERS First Term ........Raymond Wirth ,,....,..Gerrit De Groot ........J0hn Skrable Earl Hicks MEMBERS Malvin Williams Keith Wilcox Sophomores Victor Bovee John Griffin Horace Bushnell Ralph Hileman Fred Lander Howard Pattison John Skrahle . Kurt Steinbrenner Dwight Wennersten Freshmen Clyde Cairy Harold Crain Howard Dobson lra Eversoll Lowell Kindig Lawrence Kuhl Richard Matson Leonard Melles Second Term Arthur Van Wyngarden Gerrit De Groot John Skrable Earl Hicks Harlan Montgomery Vernon Reisser Jason Saunderson John Smith Louis Larson Ben Spry Albert Strong Everett Timm Jack Weed Carlton Van Peursem Pledges Coad Batho Gordon Cawthorne James De Roos Albert Horlings Kenneth Marsh Richard Showalter James Thompson Donald Trenary James Willfong One hundred twenty t f C Qffo ,anal ' f li Y I IFRATJERNIITIIES A s- 'v 'I . - K ' 1 . NN' WV W 'Yup Ruw7Dc Grout, U0 Rona. Dobson, Drommrr, Griffin. Svvnnd RuwfHivks. Kuhl, Larson, Lewis, McDowell. Third RuwAMe1lcs, Nash, Pattison, Pnppcnhcimvr, Hirhurdsun. Fourth Row-Skruhlv. Strom. Strung, Timm, Trcnary, Bottom Knw-Van Wyugznrden. W4-nnurslcn, Willfung. Wirth. One hundred twvnty-three 5, ' 1' ' N Nl Wa x..IuT f ll N , 44' lf X f 'I' fit' in I 1 ,J SI ,' I I if Nz, X! I IQ Xl lf lf D ii 1 ff P f- We I f XZGD X yclg Xlfxhj f?Kf' iff lFlR.ATlERNll'll'llES Jay Munson l Harvey Potthoff Delta Theta Pi Fraternity Organized in 1910 as the Ionian Literary Society President ........,..... Vice-President .,,,,,..., Secretary .......,... Treasurer... Seniors Maynard Bergren Leonard Carlson Frank Harrington Joy Munson Harvey Potthofi' George Davies Juniors Marvin Burgess Gerald Knight Van Ness Stiles Rob Roy Leinbach Joseph Calhoun OFFICERS F irsz Term Ioy Munson George Davies Leonard Carlson Gerald Knight Second Term Harvey Potthoff Leonard Carlson Charles Chapman Gerald Knight MEMBERS Sophomores Wilbur Brown Clarence Doty Franklin Evans Edward Evans Dale Jones Eldon Peterson Glenn Simpson Wilbur Anderson Raymond Weaver Freshmen Harlan Calhoun Charles Chapman Clinton Finch Dudley Miller Huber Myers Homer Patterson Robert Swenson Howard Tolles Charles Neill 0 1 d ll twenty-four IFRATJERNJITJIES One hundred twenty-Eve Top RowfAnderson, Bergren, Brown, Burgess. Secnnd Row-Davies, E. Evans, F. Evans, Harrington Third Row-Jones, Knight, Leinbach, Munson. Bottom Row-Potthoff, Simpson, Tolles, Weaver. O ix . . O S w yI NITIES 'I Third Term Herbert Gottlob Don McCarty Freeman Riseling Ardell Garber Robert McElrath Freeman Riseling Hilton Turner John Urquhart Verle Wetmore Dier Tincknell Roger Morrison Wayne Nokes Donald Pauley Edwin Jungers Brice Herman Frederick Motz Leland Bayne William Foutz , Q , v Q1 , . X , '5 Dai 5 x I f ay IH t K 1 ' K ei nl 'X 1 X XL l'1 'x r I E llllll hw J N x X 1 W 0 lQlI 'X X W X KXXXSA- X air l H' 0 0 f 44 Z f yn Qjif .af t Y' I l l. f - r J ' it fi Ii, I I Ardell Garber, Milton Rixman, Herbert Gottlob. pal ,til 1 RQ . Phi Slgma Fraternity ' ll SI 1 , Organized in 1898 as the Philomfilhean Literary Society W1 K oFF1cERs M First Term Second Term Q X President .............. .......... A rdell Garber Milton Rixman Vice-President ........... ....... A rlo Koberg Burton Hall X! ' Secretary .........., .....,..,. E ugene Sherwood Clyde Van Dyke Treasurer... .......... Ardell Garber Ardell Garber X V MEMBERS X166 Seniors Dwight Mackaman X fm Norman Barker Harold Bollman Dallas Olson 5 X John Bottom O Wg? Ardell Garber w Sophonfofes W 7 Herbert Gottlob Lheslef .Glu- X X Burton Hall Ray.We1nhe1mer X 1 ul Haviland LOUIS FOSWQT Dale Weaver I I 3 ldon Hutchinson Mawafd Wvant I 7 i Koberg Harold Decker X I lliam MCE11-ath Ellsworth Parker Pledges KV ,JRex McLarnan Clyde Van DYke f jj Paul Perry Marvyn Stolley Xf fy f Morton Pickersgill Freshmen I ff Milton Rlxman Jay Busker Bruce Cribbs x f' j Juniors Earl Fitzpatrick I 1, Herbert Bones Ernest Himebauch K Claudius Mehrens Leonard Johnson N 'l, Don McCarty Glenn Littrell K Eugene Sherwood Donald Littrell I 17 .fi Ohddl ly , , Gi Qblfiiji' ,mfr Q, Qqjiw lFRA'll lERNllTlllES W xofvzcq Top Row-Bottom, Blxsker, Crihbs, Decker, Foutz. Second Row-Gzlrber, Gottlob. Haviland. Hall. Third Row-Herman, Koberg, Littrell, R. Mc'Elrath, W. Mclfllrath Fourth RnwfMc-hrens. Morrison, Moll, Olson. Fifth Row-Pirkeragill, Riseling, Rixman. Stolley, Tinckncll. One hundred twenty-seven Bottom Row-Urquhart, Van Dyke, Weaver. , I M22 1 -...W l 5 I MEMBERS yell ixxlk K by sr N ll gl: PSF' 46' 5 111 1 N ' -,'s'7 fi ... f l fl? ll l, V QW.: H SI , I 1 I 41 5 Q , Xfj M xf 0l3,f! X 1 5? ,R Q qi lt? lji lfb Nlffj Nf K 1 K XZ x 'K 1 Mi ff N ,ijggg FRATERNHMES Harvey Nelson Godfrey Peterson Sigma Theta Rho Fraternity President ...........,.. Vice-President ......... Secretary ......,.... Treasurer... Organized in 1927 OFFICERS First Term ,........Harvey Nelson ........,Ralph Baker .........Glenn Darling ,,,,,,,.,,,....Willis Thurow Second Term Godfrey Peterson Lloyd Mattice Merlin Kolhe Willis Thurow Seniors Ralph Baker Olin Bissell David Carver Reuben Holthaus Harvey Nelson Godfrey Peterson Ralph Porter Homer Schaper Harvey Walker Juniors Daniel Jordan Lloyd Mattice Edgar Inlay Lawrence Osgood Howard Robson Willis Thurow ,lack Toyoshima Allan Thornton Sophomores Glenn Darling Carl Ferguson William Gauger John Gramlich Merlin Kolbe Ross Miller Edwin Mote Purman Remhe George Venson Winston Yeager Freshmen Everett Dorr Robert Hankins Kenneth Howe Maurice Inlay Donald James George Perley Bruce Reeder Leonard Rowse Clarence Steeves Emery Stewart Milton Stewart Hugo Welchert Daryl Williams John Yanney Pledges Charles Goodell Lyle Runchey Everett Sterling Roger Bosworth Marvin Collins William Van Horne Orville Knowlton One hundred twenty gh IFRATERNIITIIES Top Rowfliakcr, Bissell, Carver, Darling. Dorr. Second Row-Ferguson, Cauger, Goodell, Holthaus, Howe. Third Row4Inlny, James, Jordan, Kolhe, Nelson. Fourth RowY0sgood, Peterson, Porter, Reeder, Robson. Fifth Row-Runchey, Srhuper, Thornton, Thurow, Toyoshimo Bottom RowfWilliams, Yanney, Yeager. One hundred twvnly-nine 4' M 'SJ' ' if ATIERNIITIIIES Mfr NX X 4 ld' lwllll X X rl Q X 'X l ill - 'x - X 0 ', N' 9 .- , SA X N- ' ,f fi 03 L :Z'p:X S5 15 wr :' fl I w 3 '45 .1f!v1kN 'I WH17 I I I I 4 ll W ll sr ' ff I 1 wif f X , Nz, I X! I 1 X I V15 , 51 :ff Kf- .'f' Top Row-Davies, Garber, Gottlob, Graber. Second Row-Peterson, Potthnff, Skrable, Van Wyngarden. Interfraternity Council Delta Theta Pi Alpha Tau, Delta Harvey Potthoff Arthur Van Wyngarden George Davies John Skrable Phi Sigma Sigma Theta Rho Ardell Garber Godfrey Peterson Herbert Gottlob Edwin Mote Faculty Adviser Dr. M. E. Graber Ohddhy T ff I ' f' ff f CQ, I' 255115 Y f ffiff ffj X 5? x7NXNx k N N ff XXX XX N X 'Q N Q N 16.53 AQ . ky., 2 gig J JZ 'wi' 41 f , r x gp 1 , ,fy , . -X ' W. J , , E A+ Q 4. 'tg 'f :M ' vi W' 1 ' 1 E I ' ,- ak i f E 5 . , - W Nw . .x -I N , 5 f wt .ww-w ., 'nf' A '- , V ' fm- ' SENJIORS GRACE GORDON MISS MORNINGSIDE Because of her beauty and her gracious personality. Grace Gordon was given the title of Miss Morningside of 193l. the highest honor the student body can bestow. One hundred lh y l Ni fx?-N sieiwioits f ANQQSEQ BERTHA DIECKMAN W. A. A. GIRL To Bertha Dieckman goes the coveted W. A. A. page. It is an honor bestowed upon the senior girl Winning the most points in athletics. Bertha is an all-round athlete, a girl to whom the Women's Athletic Association is proud to give this award. 0 1 4 dlh :yn Wa J. XI rw, flf f I f f f r V' l KXXJ SKx I X x 1 x 1 ills in Xxnl 15-,, aw' Q' ol M il, Nfil u I .Q 'N r O4 -QM J Ji Nlil 90 f 2? ,- N I lil, 'll llly l f 1 ' ,QA f 1.0 gf Y'..L'4,f-' fx' if si, A x xx., R- U K il xu , f t s ' 1 v 2 I NJ Xml , f Ill f Q N X 15 X, X v.' O7 if V' 5 Jw fp 1 'x l l X ,o', Xxx N'5Z'g4p': liliul N vi sr I I Avy lf! f Xf I n ? QD al! 0 rf' L, fl! 1 f -Q Aijff we s1ENioRs xii? 55? If! Klfx-j ll K ll lxulf 1 1 , .25 x me cy- M. ' F ,V 2if 5j - . .- -X 4 . mgvaggf, GRACE GORDON MOST REPRESENTATIVE SENIOR WOMAN The most representative senior woman, as named by the students is Grace Gordon, who is known not only for her Y. W. C. A. and journalistic activities, but as an accomplished musician. 0ne hundred thirty-jour sieNioRS L2 12 CLARENCE NASH MOST REPRESENTATIVE SENIOR MAN Clarence Nash, student president and football star, is indeed Worthy of the distinction of being most representative senior man. 0 I d ed thirty-Eve -A k liz., X 'tj' X Xl!! lf' I f f X I SKx X x f M K .V XI Wm xl tw few Q13 wi VJ Nfl It xffl FR! ef xgfl J ij N fp 5 o 5Qf all W' k xl' l ill 'fly' il I xl f f Lqqli ...K I Ia!! 1 wi: KA, l - ' I I li I lk' I sv ,, W lllll XQQ 1 r u FFrf3W2 VII fa W! at QW ! :My MINI Wt SI I 1 1 !f X f ff Q ll if N 1 x Q x..h PAX N fn .'N uf, I, yi g l Xxx W E 39 xl 1 5523 f f I f ,ffzjggg sENioRs ARLO KOBERG Sioux City Phi Sigma, Vice-President 4g Pi Gamma Mu, Vice-President 43 Sioux Staff 35 Student Council 3 and 4, Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain 4g Football l, 2, 3, 43 Track 3, 4, President of Class 4, NM Club 2, 3, 4, President 3. OFFICERS President ...,,,.,., ,.,,.,. .,,,,.,,.,..,,,.,,.,, ....... A r l o Koberg Vice-President ............... .......,. W ilma Tolles Secretary and Treasurer .,...,.,... .........,....... G race Stoops Student Council Representative.. .,....... Frank Harrington ohddufy SlENllORS if One hun re I A-Nix QL'l Q-Sk RALPH E. BAKER Spencer Sigma Theta Rho, Secretary 3, Vice-President 45 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3. 4. President 4: Collegian Rr-porter: Student Council 4: Cosmopolitan Club: Dramatic Club 3: Vesper Choir. MRS. MIRIAM BLISS Sioux City JANE BARNETT Sioux City Y. W. C. A.: Agora: Didasku 1. OLIN BISSELL Massena Sigma 'lheta Rho: Y. M, C. A.: Chapel Choir 3: Band 3: Men's Glee Club 3. MARJORIE BELFRAGE Sargeant Bluffs Athenaeum, Vice-President 4-, Treasurer 45 Beta Beta Beta: Y. W. C. A.: Cabinet 3: Agora Board 4: Stualcnt Council 4: W. S. G. A. President. HELEN BOND Sioux City Zetaletheun, President 4. Vice-President 4, Chap- lain 4, Dircctress 31 Alpha Psi Omega 4: Y. W. C. A.: Cabinet 23 Agora, Board 33 Sioux Stal? 3: Student Council lg W'omen's Athletics: WK A. A. 3: Class Treasurer 1, Vire-President 2, President 3: Chapel Choir 4: Mudrigal Club 3g lntersociety CounCil3. MAYNARD BERGREN Beresford, South Dakola Delta Theta Pi. Secretary 2. JUNE BONDERSON Emerson, Nebraska Pit-riag Sigma Tau Delta: Agora, Sioux Stalf. 5.Z.fx lg X l f X X ff f f f 'iw 0.1 fue: tw X x 1 N f lg 'xf Xlll7,1l'. Qty: ll lflxllil ' I 4e.g'..f 1 A1 'XWQRYD R - 1 I li. xi 1 I tl- WI 1 lay l l v I' I Li 'J ull t x XP Af Xl lt! 'N xfj low xx' X rw' . 'M il, xfll l I r xx' FRN X NX X di l 5? C X X ff,f 54: OX. l C if SI ,' 7 fig!!! if W d X I 1 4 A X 2 f X I' M mf S T9 K I f x I N , :X JOHN s. BOTTOM -, ll. I Schaller l I llll, l I Phi Sigma: Alpha Kiwi. or-na 3, 4, President 4: f Alpha Psi Omega: Y. M. C. A. 1, 2, Cabinet 2. X Social Chairman 2: Collegian Reporter Staff, Sports Editor 31 Debate, lntcrfratr-rnity 2, 3, 4: Spanish X Club 1, 2: Football 1, 2: Cosmopolitan Club 1, 2. '- x 3, 4: Dramatic' Club. Virc-President 4. GEORGE DAVIES X H 1 71, Sioux Ciiy Y VR ff Delta Theta Pi, w'1fe.Pr.-,mimi 45 Interfratcrnity Council 4: Y. M. C. A,. Cabinet, Program Chair- ' man 2, Freshman Chairman 3: Debate, Collegintc 4. Nfl lnterfraternity 3, 4: German Club 1: Prc-Mc-dir ' Club 2, 3, 4: Class Vive-President 3: Band, 1, 2, 3: I: I Symphony 1, 2. LUCILE BRYAN n tl Cher if Q I Zctalelhean: hi Sig Iota: I-Ina Sigma Phi C. .: Spa sh Club: Wh A. A. GERRIT DE CROOT ivy ,ff Orange City I Alpha Tau Della, Vim--President 4: Alpha Psi Omega: Y. M. C. A.: Basketball: Football: Trark: yf Dramatic Club: Intcrfratvrnity Council 4: M Club. X MARVIN R. BURGESS X A Allen,Ne5raska fD iff 1 f if wif Wim to QQ lf 1 tr 6 f -9 an xg' D L I f X - Delta Theta Pi, Sel'rt't:u'y 3: Sigma Tau Delta: Collegian Reporter Stull: liziskethall 1: Trark 1: Chaps-l Choir 3: Vespcr Choir 2, 4: Band: Mun's Glee Club 2. 3. BERTHA DIECKMANN Sioux City Pieria, Vice-President 4. President 4: Sigma Pi Sigma, Vice-President 4: lshkoodah: Didaska 1, 2, President 2: W. A. A. 2. 3. 4, Treasurer 4: Dra- matic Club 2, 3: Yalc-Harvard 1, 2, 3, 4, Coptain 4: Intersoriety Council 4. DAVID C. CARVER Dolliver Sigma Theta Rho: Y. M. C. A.: Pre-Medic Club 1, 3, 4: Chapel Choir 1, 2: Band 1, 2, 3: Mcn's Glee Club 1, 2. HELEN DOWN Orlebolt Zetulcthean, President 4, Vice-President 3, 4: Sigma Tau Delta: Pi Kappa Delta 2, 3, 4: Alpha Psi Umvga 4: Agora, Board, Vice-President 4: Sioux Slrifl' 3: lshkoodah, President: W. S. C. A.: Intcr- society Council 2, 4. X: QTQ SENIORS 1 xsgfgx 13,5 One hundred thirty-nine CN:- ROBERTA FINNEY Sioux City Mu Phi Epsilong Sigma Mu. GRACE GORDON Sioux City Pieria. Treasurer 35 Pi Gamma Mug Alpha Kappa Delta, National Representative 45 Sigma M115 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, President 4, Vice-President 3, Social Chairman 3: Collegian Reporter Staff, Editor 3, Musical Editor 45 Student Council 45 lshkoodab, Vice-Presidentg W. A. A. 15 Class Secretary-Treas- urer 25 lntersociety Council 2, 3, 45 Miss Morning- side. VERONA FULLER Eagie Grove Pieria5 Y. W. C. A.: Agora: Spanish Club 25 W, A. A. Board, VicevPresident 35 Yale-Harvard 3. HERBERT GOTTLOB Larchwood Phi Sigma, President 45 Alpha Kappa Deltag Stu- dent Council 45 Basketballg Football 1, 2, 3, 45 Track 1, 2, 3. 45 Captain 35 Interfraternity Council 45 M Club 2, 3, 4. CARYL GAFFY Siorix City Zetalethean. Usher 45 Y. W. C. A.5 Agora Board, Senior Representative 45 W. A. A.5 Chapel Choir5 Madrigal Club. NORMA C. HALE Sioux City ARDELL GARBER Correctionville Phi Sigma. President 4, Treasurer 3, 45 Interfra- ternity Council 45 Alpha Kappa Delta 45 Sioux Stall' 35 Basketball 1, 45 M Club 2, 3, 45 Yell Leader 2, 3. PAUL HAVILAND Moville Phi Sigma: Beta Beta Beta5 Alpha Psi Omega5 Freshman Student Councilg Sophomore Class Presi- dentg .lunior Student Council Representative5 Stu- dent Body President 45 lnterfraternity Debate 25 Pre-Medic Club 1. 2, 3, 45 Basketball 2, 35 Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, 45 Track 45 Cosmopolitan Club 3, 45 Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4: M Club. SSX 543.6 I X 1 , 1 if-f Z I X I ,iff I f X I 1 Sfix 'Q 7 A Xl' X Xi K 'xv YN .N I f x ff? llfrf. EEYIII I 'lil' f 1, l R lf f lf- If 'G if A iffy f+ Q t 'ar X Q f N X ff, fi5,:2:xg I .uw -l i J V J QW? . Cyp C wtf . Y! Y Xi! l l x N X if ' x 'V il, 1 x fl x I xfj F7 N l QD 34 I.: X Re' xx -Q J Nxw I I f NN x X X Q X SA 1 C11 kj -5QW'V? .. sf. l l 1,93 W I fv f X!!! ff K' DARREL HERMAN Sioux City Y. M. C. A.5 Spanish Club. CHARLES HOSHINO Hariclzi-mum ALICE HICKMAN Sioux City fzlethulnz Pi Kappa Delta, Secretary 3, President 4: Y. W. C, A.: Agora Board 1, 2, 3. 4, Treasurer , rcsi cnt 4: Sioux Staff: Collegian Reporter Staff: Student Council, Vice President 4: Ishkoodah: Ik-bale. Colle iate 1, 2, 3, 4: lntersociet 2: Cos- , f 5 fw f. My It l ll' Xl I 1 U 1. x X , x ik 0 ' '4 Cosmopolitan Club. 5 !- 1142 4 WWW gl? l3ll,l Zur o Rl ' l 3 I' sd SI g I I I ll! Cl I X X V7 Xllsb xfllb ff xx I JI W fD Xffj :U Ll' 4'f lx Nfl Xl! Y mo1o'an uh 3, 4: Intersociety Council. MURIEL IRWIN Lake View Picria, Scrrctary 3: Mu Phi Epsilon 1, 2, 3. 4: Chaplain 4: Sigma Mn: Y. W. C. A.: Agora: W. S. C. A. 3: Chapel Choir 1, 2. 3. 41 Maclrigal Club 1, 2, 3: Symphony 4. EARL E. HICKS Sloan Alpha Tau Delta, Secretary 3, Treasurer 4: Y. M. C. A.: Collegian Reporter Stall: Spanish Club: Prc- Enginccrs Club: Secretary 4: Vesper Choir: Fresh- man Men's Club. LOUISE JOHNSON Bronson Sigma Tau Delta 4: Eta Sigma Phi 4: Y. W. C. A.: Agora: lshkoodah: Art Club 4: W. A. A. 2: Cus- mopolitan Club Vice-President 4. REUBEN S. HOLTHAUS Earlville Sigma Theta Rho: Alpha Kappa Delta: Y. M. C. A. Publicity Chairman 3: Football 3: Cosmopolitan Club 3, 4: Vesper Choir 3, 4: Band 1, 2: Grand Public 2. LENORE KING Bronson SENIORS One hundred forty SENJIURS of One hundred forty-one ff- LZ X te g I x7 'CD MARGARET KOOYMAN Orange City Athenaeum. Critic 45 Eta Sigma Phi, Vive-President 45 Y. W. C. A. 2g lshknndahg Didaska 2. FREDA MCCRAY Sioux City Zctalethcang Eta Sigma Phi, Vice-President 3. 45 Y. W. C. A., Cabinet 3: Agora: Collegian Ke- purtcr Staffg Art Club, President 43 Cosmopoli- tan 4. MARCELLA LARSON Sioux City Pieria. Social Chairman 3, Scrretury 3, Treasurer 45 Sigma Tau Delta: Alpha Kappa Delta: Y. W. C. A.Z Agora: lshlcrmclgihg Grand Publir. WILLIAM McELRATH Moviile Phi Sigma, Secretary 3, Ttble Manager 4: Spanish Club 2, 3: Basketball 1: Football I, 2, 3, 4. KENNETH LEWIS Avon, South Dakota Alpha Tau Dt-lm: Spanish Club 3: Basketball 33 Football 2. 3, 4: 'lrark 2. 3, 4. BETTY MELSON Rolfe Ze:-talethean, Vice-President: Eta Sigma Phi. Presi- dent 4, Treasurer 3. National Delegate 3: Y. W. C. A.g Agora, Board 35 lshkoodahg Womcn's Ath- lctirsg W. S. C. A., Honor Courtg President of Freshman Hall. ELEANOR MCCAFFREE Pierre, South Dakota Picria. Vice-President 4: Y. W. C. A. Cabinetg Agora Board: Debate, Intcrsnrietyg Reader's Club, President 3. 4. EVELYN ROSE MILLER Sioux City Pivria: Sigmu Mu. Vice'Prcsidcnt 4, Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet 2: lshkoodah: German Club. Vice-President 3: Women's Athlctirs: Yale-Harvard: Vesper Choir 3. 45 Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4: String Quartvttc 4. 3.3.6 l X l ffl ff X f f f 4 , f Sgr.. , is P x 1 X s 1 Y if '. iii' 5 , l2T ' L?f! - F ' , i fs X f gage ,.,1 fi' 5 ' lfil 2 i ' Il I' Ia li I rl . VQNP 1 si I I wtf x NX. N as si? l M Wig il, wil lx xfj QD N ,mln Q1 SENJIUEE l l f' Z, f Q 1 X 1 4 A X ,I , 7 f 'f 1 Q Y X up - -V i N ' V CHAL M E ,K ,I ICE 00R I , Mfr Sioux any X I Ill f Athenaeum: Y. W. C. A.. Geneva Chairman 3: ' X Agora: May Fete 1, 2: lshkoodah: Didaska 1, 2: X W. S. G. A. 1, 2, 3: Cosmopolitan Club 4: Vesper I: I l Choir 4: lntersociety Council 3. C ' .5 , N -'qs PNN , HARVEY NELSON 4 'QQ NN, . '75 Goodell C..'lh' Sigma Theta Rho: Pi Kappa Delta: Y. M. C. A., ff!! x- Treasurer 2, Vice-President 3: Collegiate Debate: jp X ,ll N ' A Interfratemity Debate: Band: Reader's Club: Inter- ..L.f.- 'xlf V fraternity Council, President 4. - sv- . V - Il I of ,.. X . .JW I gm,-59 ,K I JOY BENJAMIN MUNSON I ' I 5 i lil Jewell I Delta Theta Pi. President 42 Collegian Reporter I Statf 3: Interfratcrnity Debate 3, 4: lnterfraternity H Council 3. 4. l 1 BEULAH OUTHOUSE WJ? Moorhead X Pieria, Sargeant at Arms 4: Y. W. C. A.: Ish- y I koodah: W. A. A. Board 3, 4: Yale-Harvard, 2, 3, 4: f Reader's Club. X CLARENCE NASH f ' Sioux City Alpha Tau Delta, Vice-President, Sargeant at Arms: X Sigma Pi Sigma: Alpha Psi Omega, Vice-President: Student Council President 4: Pre-Engineers Club, N! Vire-President 2, 3, President 4: Football 1, 2, 3, 4: ly? Dramatic Club: M Club. 9 V CEPHA PASEK xf . . r- Sioux Cnty f Q Cm Pieria, Secretary 3: Sigma Tau Delta, Secretary: I j Alpha Psi Omega: Y. W. C. A.: Sioux SMH: Win- ter Fete 2: lshkoodah: lntersociety Debate: W. A. X! A. 1, 2: Dramatic Club: Readefs Club: Grand Public 2, 3. X f Y 1 - ' X I 7 LEONA MARIETTE NEITZEL ' f Lakefield, Minnesota 1 l l Pi Gamma Mu 4: Alpha Kappa Delta 3, 4, Secre- f QD tary 4: Y. w. C. A., Council 1, 2, 3, 4: lshkoodah: Spanish Club 3: Art Club 4: Cosmopolitan Club 4: X f IJ Dramatic Club 3, 4: Vesper Choir 1. I I f In GODFREY PETERSON - Arthur ff l I 1, Sigma Theta Rho, Vice-President 3: Y. M. C. A., 1 Treasurer 3: Football 3. , X f I I I x 1 X 4 .fig One hundred forty-two siamoas :P One hundred forty-three '.,L'X P-sg MORTON PICKERSGILL Morfilie Phi Sigma: Alpha Kappa Dc-lta: Alpha Psi Omega: Intv:-rfratvrnity Debate 2, 4: German Club 1, 2. 3, 49 Dramatic Club. President 4. HELEN MARY QUIRIN Sioux City Zetalcthean. President 4: Y. W. C. A., Cabinet 2. 3, 4: Agora, Board 3: Sioux Staff: Student Coun- cil, Secretary 3: Ishkoodah: German Club: Pre- Mcdic Club: W. A. A.: Intcrsoriety Council. GEORGE PERRY POPPENHEIMER Rathven Alpha Tau Delta: Sigma Tau Delta: Y, M. C. A.: Dramatic Club 2. 3: Vcspcr Choir 2: Band l. 2. 32 Readerha Club 4. MILTON C. RIXMAN Hartley Phi Sigma. President 4: Intcrfraternity Council, Prcsidcnt 4: Sioux StaH: Pi Kappa Delta: Alpha Kappa Dr-Ita: Sigma Tau Delta, President 4: Cos- mopolitan Club: German Club. ViccvPrcsident 2: Intercollegiate Debate 2, 3, 4. RALPH PORTER Alta Sigma Theta Rho: Sigma Pi Sigma. President 4: Y. W. C. A.: Prc-Engincvrn Club. HOMER STANLEY SCHAPER Sioux City Sigma Theta Rho: Y, IVI. C. A.: Gorman Club: Preflingineers Club: Cosmopolitan Club: lntcrfra- ternity Council 2. HARVEY POTTHOFF Morgan, Minnesota Delta Theta Pi. Secretary 2, President 4: Sigma Tau Delta: Pi Kappa Delta: Y. M. C. A.: Sioux Staff: Collegian Reporter Staff, Reporter 23 Asso- ciate Editor 3, Editor 4: Student Council 2. 41 Collegiate Debate 2, 35 Intcrfraternity Debate 2, 3, 4: Spanish Club: lnterfratcrnity Council 3, 45 Grand Public 3. DOROTHY SMITH Sloan Zctalcthean: Mu Phi Epsilon, Historian 4: Sigma Mu. Treasurer 2: Y. W. C. A.: Agora: W. S. G. A.. Secretary 4: Dramatic Club: Chapel Choir 2, 3, 4: Vesper Choir 1. gfxifl ' i ff N ' gl , YY 1' 'l ,f X ll ifllklf 'fx fu ky f f I2 , .ff ff , X .f' SQWJW' ?2N512'QQ5 N3 i- I wiv lmpx I I 'Kilda I' ' 'M I 1 I V lx I t , .lf x t C455 if xl XO Xfm if Q I I xl! 'U X Sify W 35 552 at ff Ss. -N f X N R XX N-Q ' f I lt I X O7 fl , Hg if at iff f fl l . xx' X -sal 'o', A X 'ni ,,' 'x We li, I HW SI l f lv, pp X E2 X,- gf lf, no gg? Q .1 .7 fl I xi' f? WJ 1 Lf' 1 If fix 1 C f 4 f 7 je MARGARET SMITH Onawa Athenaeum, Secretary 2, Treasurer 3, President 4: Intersoeiety Debate: Sioux Staff 3: W. A. A. Board: Student Council Representative 43 Spanish Club: Intersociety Council, Secretaryg lshkoodah, Secre- tary: May Fete 2g Winter Festival 23 Didaska: Grand Public 3: Sigma Tau Delta. ROBERT S. THOMAS Hospers Sigma Pi Sigma: Pre-Engineers, Historian 2, Secre- tary 3. ALMEDA SOPER Woshton Collegian Reporter Staff. WILMA TOLLES Sioux City Pieria, Secretary 4: Y. W. C. A.: Agora: lshkoodahg W. A. A., Board, Social Chairman: W. S. G. A. 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 3: Yale-Harvard 4: Vice-President of Class 4, Biology Club 4. GRACE STOOPS Sutherland Athenaeum, President 4: Sigma Tau Delta: Alpha Kappa Delta: Y. W. C. A., Cabinet 33 Agora: Sioux Staff: Student Council 4: Ishkoodah: Span- ish Club 2, 3, 4: Didaska: W. A. A., Board, Secre- tary 3, President 4: W. S. G. A.: Yale-Harvard 2, 3, 4: Captain 2. 3, 4: Secretary-Treasurer Senior Class: lntersociety Council. ARTHUR VAN WYNGARDEN Manson Alpha Tau Delta, Treasurer 3: Y. M. C. A., Presi- dent 3, Vice-President 25 Student Council 33 Inter- fraternity Debate 3, 4: Basketball 4: Football 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4: Vesper Choir 3, 4: Band 2, 3, 4: M Club 2, 3, 4. DOROTHY JANE SURBER Sioux City Pieriag Sigma Tau Delta. MARGARET WEIR Hawarden Collegian Reporter Staff 4g May Fete 2: Pre-Medir Club: W. A. A. 2: Cosmopolitan Club 4: Dramatic Club 2. SENTQEEM ,rkfA,X One hundred forty-four SENJIUES Lf QQ One hundred forty-ive xfQ'X ff TS? N Q X Q 2' 1 W 4 f Xl lill Ili' MILDRED WALTERS X 'l f' if Rockwell City 1 if ll flgbf Pierizl. Treasurnr 4: Y. W. C. A.: Ishkmwrlah, Vice- f f ,qlf President: Reader's Club 2, 3. K li X ' ' - , x ff JUANITA WINTER - ,jf Hinton X .K X .,, V3 tl 2 far-X Y y Atlicnamlmz Intvrsuriety Dclmlvx Spanish Club 1. '21 I yt' .f I Dramatic' Clubg Kcadefs Club: Grand Public 3. A l K 7 XX o f ilk: N l HELEN WHITE I' li' Sioux City ' Pierizi: Alpha Kappa Della. Treasurer 4: Y. W C A i U l RAYMOND WIRTH -. G0 Cherokee , Alpha Tau IJ:-lux, Presirlvnt 43 Irm-rfratcrrl Yxcxp Cnun4'il4. X Q 1 if Xl BEULAH MAE WHITNEY X fl M0bridge,SouthDakotu Q l Athenaeum. Secretary 4g Y. W. C. A.: Agora: Ish- kumlnh: Cosmopolitan Clubg Readcfs Cl b X Il ' x JOYCE WOODEORD M fl Sergeant Bluff X fx Pieria. President 4: Mu Phi Epsilon 4: Sigma Mu N , 2, 3, Vire-President 3g Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4. X Cabinet 25 Ishknodahg lntersociery Debate 2, Cor ' 'X man Club 1, 2. w. A. A.: W. s. G. A., vm- C1 President 43 Chapel Choir 1: Vespcr Choir 3, 4: X 1, Intersociety Council 43 Symphony 1, 2, 3, 43 String 4 Quartette 3, 4. X fl, i ' r x ff f'T X x -Q ,D N s X f GI W N f ga f ' f all jffi '10-Nfl, 'r EWU? x 1'll1fl f' ' SENIORS -X I 3 w xx l il fl Q lx l Ur, - ' x '- lr xXx '. . X 'O ' ff! X, 0 :Q ,N QE' qi: -4 . . . li gl Remammg Semors l fb I K Q 4 5,5521 xl' ll 7 Norman Barker Frances Meissner l 3V Willard Bell Edgar Otto gl I l Grace Edwards Paul Perry S I ll John Haakinson Erma Petersen l l Burton Hall Ruth Phillips W-,W Marjorie Hall Evelyn Pruitt H? Frank Harrington John Sailer k yl Herald Hoffmann Anne Schuetz Q X Burdette Kindig Lawrence Smith Stanley Kruschwitz Dorothy Squires X X ' Mary McEwen Margaret Turner S' X Rex McLarnan Harvey Walker Xf y l Y X we cf 1 K7 X I f '9 1' f l f D X f rj 1 'f K f- x ' ,f x ' ,N ed nlrslll lui QNAQ y, I: P iff XJEQQQQQQ BASKETBALL GR,Xt 1774 .l My 4 'llf , av' . J if ll J 0' ' ' NJ-f . KR- Nfl. MW X 'WZ . IQWWG? ' ' N-'yyff fff 1 .Vg l Z . .sfgwlx 'lx who' . gm.: SI ' Q W, nip x, tl Xf it kb I Qc gs X f ,Q 5 ff' ki' 'ez Q W1 ffrw lg Q-5' 1 I A former athlete of great repute and of whom Morningside may Well be proud is uObe Wenig, our head basketball coach. Not only does he coach basketball foot ball and track, but he is as well, a prominent golfer in the city and state 0 e has Won the respect, the confidence and the liking of the entire student body December December December December January January January January January January February February February February 5 10 12 16 8 9 11 15 22 29 8 9 10 19 19314932 Basketball Schedule Morningside Morningside Morningside Morningside MOfD1HgS1d6 .....,.. ......... Morningside Morningside Morningside ..,..... ......... Morningside ........ ......... Morningside Morningside MOfH1HgS1dB ..,..... ......... Morningside ,..,..., ......... 2 5 Morningside Western Union Midland ..,.... Wayne ..............V... Western Union ....... North Dakota MUHU... North Dakota State .,.... South Dakota State ..,... North Dakota MU ,',.. North Dakota State ...... South Dakota State ...... Midland .,........,.,........ Wayne .,................. South Dakota MUN ..... South Dakota State ...... One hundred f ' 'X 1 We BASKETBALLXJY TQ ff QM? cs , 23. ,yi X 0 xlp f ff! lf lf! M' RNA f fake 1 0 K l N Herbert Bones, Gerrit De Groot, Ardell Garber. I m f 1 1931-1932 Basketball Season The closing chapter in Morningsideis book of sports for the 1931-1932 season might reasonably be called 4'Virtue Goes Unrewardedf, For it is the elegy of a luckless Maroon basketball team that kept coming back for more, even after twelve successive defeats. When a team salvages only two victories, both against mediocre opponents, out of a fourteen game schedule and finishes at the bottom of the North Central Con- ference pile for the third consecutive season, one would rather expect to find it hope- lessly lost in a pessimistic fog. But neither coach nor players labored under the yoke of a mental complex of disaster. Instead a philosophical optimism permeated the campus. It is a line tribute to the ill-fated crew to say that when they approached the end of a weary and discouraging trail they played their best ball of the year. The burning sting of defeat was somewhat assuaged by the spectacular achieve- ments of Captain Arlo Koberg, big blond guard, who merited a position on the hon- orary All-North Central team, despite his affiliation with a losing club. His unprecedented feat of scoring 60 points to rank fifth among the high scorers of the league established him as the outstanding player of the season. Uncanny ability at dropping the ball through the hoop from any angle of the floor enabled him to score nearly half of the Morningside's total points for the season. A dearth of capable material at the opening of the season presaged the unfortu- nate days that were to come. As holdovers, Burton Hall, Marvard Wyant and Koberg constituted the nucleus of Coach c'0be', Wenig's new machine. Other aspirants were Clyde Van Dyke, Ardell Garber, Eugene Sherwood, Gerrit De Groot, Dwight Strom. Jack Haakinson and Herbert Bones. 0 hundred forty-nin 1 e x illfil' lil Ili! l'1'f xr f 1 ' ,M fg 1 i If HL 4?-'sfgaf ,C KW' xi! A I we ll 1 n 1' I l it S 1 V J xl 10 ol 1 1 x .V Xl ,xl xl Wa x'I 'X gh! .2 a GU .2 1 f ,f x V i I ,Q 1 ,f f . .1 LJ Y IJ. M, .Y :r ,fy ,I f ' ,q ' J 'J ,f J M!! fl 1 ' ,K f 1 . ,Q '71 9 0 Q . 1 W , ff f ,gg 15 . f 4 f J fs, is A L L t f . ' ' X 'L' I 0 lr 4 K f ll, 146' L 1 z K X if api W I X M f ff . K x f . V I M2 ' if V11 1 Iidlllllflpp ' ' X f 45 ' ' N '-'I ' XXX. . xgilx XD' 275 3 C11 S' eff f ' f' 5 l ll ' '1 2 1' ?'2 ifNNlf!llliiu l 23 sr ' if i I Burton Hall, Arlo Koberg. Eugene Sherwood. ul-j lf! gf Qu 1 Roseate hues colored the basketball horizon when the Methodists, on successive X weekends, trounced Western Union 29 to 17 and Wayne Normal 22 to 12 in the N - opening brace of games. Little did the staunch adherents of Morningside realize 'X that already their team was at the end of its victory tether. X!! An ominous warning of impending disaster was sounded a few days later when Wy N 1 a horde of Midland Warriors administered a 31 to 25 trumping on the home court. Xtpb It went unheeded, however, and the defeat was excused as an upset or just one of XXQQQ those things. However, when the Maroons succumbed before a sporadic Western A V63 Union attack in a return engagement a day later, campus concern was aroused. Q' 7 There was a disposition on the campus to believe that the Maroons would prove N f more successful in the annual North Central Conference race. But this proved to be X f a false hope as Morningside was delivered a crushing defeat in its loop debut against fl '9 North Dakota University, 33 to 12. X V On the same trip, the Maroons took it on the chin from North Dakota State, 33 lf D to 24, and South Dakota state 44- to 21. HMoanin' Low,' was adopted as the official X! 0 theme song at Morningside when the luckless Maroons dropped three straight games I ,I lo the same schools in return contests on the home floor. L ,- ,Q K TL Ni qbo One hundred fifty BASKETBALL John Haakinsnn, Dwight Strom, Clyde Van Dyke, Marvard Wyunt. A weekis cessation of North Central hostilities resulted in two more stinging defeats, both at the hands of Nebraska opposition. Wayne Normal avenged an early season loss with a rousing 37 to 27 defeat and Midland triumphed by the decisive score of 39 to 17. The final blow was dealt the following week by the University of South Dakota Coyotes who also had lost their former glory on the court, when they trimmed the unfortunate Maroons twice, 44 to 25 on the home floor, and 31 to 21 at Vermillion. Freshman Basketball LETTER MEN Jason Saunderson Lloyd Lacy Glenn Littrell James Willfong Lyle Runchey Clyde Cairy Harold Bollman John Urquhart Emery Stewart Charles Chapman Charles Goodell One hundred fifty-one X 1 x f l 1 Xlxifi gh l N1 5,15 I U, X f'I x x VV, mm O4 Ng jj, ' x 'r 2 f 22? I f fyilgii .WJ Y at 1 llll U V' r Ml, . f llll 1 QM SI l Q13 QCD X A ef dei, aw Gp 21 i f We x , ,Q 2 ffm ,Xe ndgQQQfg5 BASKETBALL mn-N. an yngarl 4-n, felt n 1. lhrl, lim Wyant. lxl g. lh-i.rrml. Slxunx. llnll. Middle Huw--Asnm-.4-n. Lmti- ' ' h li N XX l K l l l- li l l P 1 l H l l N 'CM Club MEMBERS Harold Asmussen Norman Barker Herbert Bones Gerrit De Groot Ardell Garher Herbert Gottloh Jack Haakinson Edward Haenfler Burton Hall Paul Haviland llalph Hileman Sheldon Hutchinson Arlo Koberg Kenneth Lewis Clarence Nash Paul Perry Eugene Sherwuod Lawrence Smith Clyde Van Dyke Arthur Van Wfyngar George Vensun Marvard Wy'ant 0 I1 u den ndre x Cf HoNoR isiaarieiaixiriies x 'If , Alpha Kappa Delta xl lf In xl! fx!! OFFICERS xll ll ,I President ..... ,............,.,................. J ohn Bottom X xl I Secretary ,,.,, ....,... L eona Neitzel -R I l Treasurer ......................,.... ,.,.7.,..,,,........ H elen White '11 ' 'N 'xg RXDA' The Alpha Chapter of Iowa, Morningside Col- Xik ' 361 lege Chapter of Alpha Kappa Delta, national hon- lx 4 ' . . . . . 0, gf: 'ij orary sociological fraternity, was organized in Zz? 4,511 1922 for the purpose expressed in its Greek name, 'li ' 7, Anthropos Katamonthano Diakonesis, that is, an fi Mg I W investigating society for the purpose of service to 5.55114 ll , humanity. It has for these ten years been inter- ' l BV mittently active in scholastic and social pursuits. R' I l This year the fraternity has carried out a program SI U in which the social service oliicers of Sioux City f h'1B0 0m l ' have at each meeting given a talk on the work carried on in the city. Several W., if sociology students who have done research work in Sioux City presented their find- , ings in the form of special reports. iff Mig I I I X Alpha Ps1 Omega f T, Syl OFFICERS 9 President ..,........ ......................... A llen Richardson A rin Vice-President ....,..... ........ B urdette Kindig If 6 Secretar -Treasurer .... ...,... M axine Steele Y X Reporter ..,..,,..,,...,.,........,,.,.....,..,,........, John Bottom x 0 1 At the national convention of Al ha Psi Ome a, 'I P S Xl national honorary dramatic fraternity, held in St. 1, Louis, Missouri, November 26, 27, 28, 1931, six lf D members, Professor J. J. Hayes, Janice Hagy, John Ny 0 Bottom, Cepha Pasek, Allen Richardson, and Max- , ff ine Steele, represented the Alpha Gamma east of L f Morningside College. This fraternity has seven- I 1, Allen Rich d teen members, and often sponsors interesting social 'f' times. At a recent meeting the members elected N X -L the best looking girl and boy members-Helen Down and Morton Pickersgill. The X cast for uThe Doctor in Spite of Himself was chosen from Alpha Psi Omega. i Albxig One hundred fifty-four HONOR raarieimiriies 3: OFFICERS Megas Prytanis ,.,.,.,............................. Betty Melson Megas Protohyparchos ................,..,.. Freda McCray Megas Deuterohyparchos ...,...... Margaret Kooyman Megas Epistolographos ..,............... Ruth Barchman Megas Grammateus ...... ,A,. Ruth Barchman Megas Chrysophylax . ........,. Lucile Bryan Megas Pyloros ....................,.....,.,,.. Elizabeth Riggs Eta Sigma Phi, national honorary Latin frater- nity, is composed of major and minor classical students of high scholastic ranking. Its purpose is to encourage classical scholarship and to create an , appreciation of classical culture. This year the Bm, Mmm program included a study of Greek Drama, Roman Religion, and Roman Drama. The social program includes an annual Saturnalia Celebration in the form of a Christmas Tea and a spring reunion banquet. This year the banquet was held April 21, the sixth anni- versary of the establishment of Nu Chapter at Morningside College. In addition to the other activities Eta Sigma Phi sponsors a local Latin Club at East High School. Phi Sigma Iota OFFICERS President ,,,,,,,,,,, ..,,..... P rofessor Kanthlener Vice-President ...... ....................... M rs. Moog Secretary ..,..... ........ H elen Herzoff Treasurer ....................,......................... Mrs. McBride Phi Sigma Iota, national Romance Language fra- ternity, is composed of honor students elected from the French and Spanish classes, the membership being limited to twelve during a school year. The clubs meets once every month, at which time pro- grams are presented with a view to furthering in- terest in Romance literature. The programs this year have been varied and especially interesting. H.F.K,,,,,hlc,,e, At the first meeting, Mrs. Moog gave a colorful description of her trip abroad. At the second meeting, Professor Kanthlener de- scribed Mexico. Other programs have included Christmas in various countries and studies of French Dramatists. Leota McCoy and Mrs. McBride compose the program committee. One ltundretl-fifty-five Eta Sigma Phi F41 lf' I X lf lf If! .Y l.tKJ rt- I X x 1 X x XX x! Xwlllfaf l, fill llll llllf oo . .jj 4 X link I fe-W si: . V I .fm ' .5 F l U Mal J Ili? A sv , f tt' . Cy 4 .lf Xl Wm xlw vt Xf' xff af 3 s I ,l 5, N fl i I xffl l al 955 A-P A 'ff' yt ff? Q xi X 'ilnf N IX lf Il I as 1-N' ll ll VV., .g b! 92 I SI , it 1 1 Q, if W 5 K 7, X XM 107121 tl X I xf JW lf! VD hffj 1'f Lf 1 If gg Z -95 I HONOR iaailtrisiwiriias Sigma Pi Sigma OFFICERS President ........ ........,., B alph Porter Vice-President ..YYi ,.,.... B ertha Dieckman Secretary-Treasurer ...,... Wendell McDowell The Omicron Chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, na- tional honorary Physics fraternity, was installed at Morningside May 21, 1930. The organization has grown since that time, and though its membership is not so large as that of some of the other organi- zations on the campus, considerable interest is . . Ralph Poiter SIIOWH 1I'l IIS pI'0gI'CSS. Morningside is very fortunate to obtain a charter for a local chapter since the standards of the fraternity are very high, and few of the smaller schools can meet these requirements. Its purpose is to promote an interest in the advanced study of physics, to stimulate individual research, and to provide a means for common dis- cussion of current developments in the field of physics. Beta Beta Beta OFFICERS President ,.... .........,............. ......... D a vid Thomson Secretary ..,....,,,,... ,...., ...,..,...,.... M a rjorie Belfrage Beta Beta Beta, national honorary biological fraternity has chap- ters in eighteen states and three Chinese cities. The Tau Chapter of Morningside College was installed May 21, 1928. Designed to promote interest and scholarship in biological sciences, Beta Beta Beta membership is accessible to those who have taken a certain amount of biology and are interested in the subject. Since only two of the members returned to school last fall, the club was not very active until enough new members were initiated to make the organization a live one. One hundred fiflyrsix HoNoR iF1aAr1sRNirt1as ,, , TNQ Sigma Tau Delta OFFICERS President ,,.,,..... ...............,.,,........... M ilton Rixman Vice-President ..... ......v.... H clen Down Secretary-Treasurer ............. ...,......... C epha Pasek The Gamma Beta Chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, national Professional English fraternity, was or- ganized at Morningside in 1926, The purpose of Sigma Tau Delta is to select those students who have interest and ability in creative composition work or in English Literature, and to nurture that interest by mutual association. Membership is limited to eighteen, chosen from English majors of high attainment in scholarship. Milton Rixman The varied interests of the student members are aptly welded together by the leadership of the faculty members, Professor Hayes, Miss Mills, and Professor Gwinn. Pi Gamma Mu OFFICERS President ........... .......... L ois Gessell Vice-President ...... ........ A rlo Koberg Secretary ........... ......................... ......... M i ss lVlcCluskey May 29, 1929, Morningside College organized the Iowa Delta Chapter of Pi Gamma Mu, national Social Science fraternity. Stu- dents who have attained an exceptional scholastic record in the study of social sciences, including sociology, anthropology, economics, commerce, business administration, law, political science, history, geography, ethics, religion, education, psychology, philosophy, and biology, are eligible for this society. Its motto is nYe shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free. The purpose of this organization is to fix in the minds of its members the ideals of scholarship, scientific attitude, method, and social service in relation to all social problems. One hundred fifty-seven X I X lf ff f rj I n'xxJ x N x fy Ni fn ', EXY Ill, tub, X nl ffl X ' , DGXMZ' , yy X y, gf A .,.g'.f yas- ,Q - Ns? ' I , '5 1., ' l fllllll I 4 l Sv , NC . ,yy i .VI X1 I ,Rl xg! xl wfg N! QP? X lx fl. fl i X l iff, fx ' N l 04 -Q 0, Ji X dy G' Q97 221 I, lil NX .X K ' Pi Kappa Delta xl: Pi4l6kN OFFICERS 1- W President ...,.... .. .,....... Alice Hickman Vice-President ...... ......... ll Iilton Rixman Secretary ,,,,,,, ..,..... R oene Brooks i L ' Lil i: fl 1 'X S' X W 9' 5 11' lil, 'V Q' SIMD l 1 7 fQ HUNUR lFRATlERNll'll'lllES llfvjy Alice Hickman f iff Q MEMBERS X Mr. Parlette Milton Rixman Alice Hickman Harvey Nelson Harvey Pottholif Helen Down 1 John Skrable Arnold Baron Cleva Binger X Herald Hoffmann Richard Matson Mary Melson X! j Allan Thornton Daryl Williams Grace Marek Qfsb Roene Brooks The Iowa Delta Chapter of Pi Kappa Delta is one of the most gf CQ active of the national honorary fraternities on our campus. Mem- bership to this organization is obtained by meritorius work in de- if bate, oratory, or extemporaneous speaking. The national organiza- I 'Q tion sponsors a national contest once every two years and a series X I of provincial contests the other years. In the number of points Won If 5 at these national conventions in the last six years, Morningside held jg first place. Pi Kappa Iglelta is reslponsible for much of the interest X! 0 in forensic activities in orningsi e. 1 'f K ,- X 1 I ii 0 h mired fifty-e ,givf Qi 'riaani'rioNs ffq' f-'x fxf' x N ,lt 1 NN x Q l yt: P qlffb 7 ., X will 1 l I ,fqxf 1-U11-' V X 'S iildllnn lil 1 ll ' ', it ll 92, SI , cf, ,Q Elf? t P, 5 lf, wb fl' to it lil l fD Xffj 11' tf ff X. X I f Freshman Mixer lf you are a uThirty-fiver, you probably have more or less vivid recollections of that Hstirringv affair the MY7' Associations threw for you that first night after you, the f'Fresh,' little breezes Cto bel of dear old Morningside, blew into town. What a born Master of Ceremonies George Davies turned out to begand how properly dignified MHonie,, Rogers, Prof. Parlette, Clary Nash, and Paul Haviland managed to appear when their turn came to perform. Perhaps by this time you have learned that that 'fgin-u-wine ole time fiddler's contestv wasn't quite the best our Con students could produce, fthough it might have been the funniestj, and that college isnlt much like Hawaii in spite of the uke duet and the tap dancers. The refreshments-ice cream for the most part-concluded the mgood timew which Mwas had by all. Funny how little it takes to make children happyl Dads' Day Banquet The Men's Banquet is an annual affair peculiar to Morningside College, instituted in order that all Dads of Morningside men might have the rare privilege of taking their sons to a perfectly scrump- tuous feed under the pretense of being taken to said feed by said sons. It was held this year on November 14, at the Women's Resi- dence Halls, as a fitting climax to the fraternity luncheons, and the Morningside-North Dakota football game. Cornie Eerkes, former Morningside student and faculty member, was the principal speaker of the evening. The toast program included speeches by Paul Haviland, toastmaster and Dads' Day chairman, Harvey Potthoff, Richard Matson, and Harold Decker. Other features of the banquet were vocal selections by Earl Fitzpatrick, an interesting dance num- ber by Leon Dunlap, a small West Side colored boy, several piano solos by Edward Wendell, and the usual charming waitresses to furnish appropriate scenery for the occasion. One hundred s ty rRADirioNs QL: .J if? I .4 FreshmanfSophomore Day An authority on weather has said that whoever is in charge of the waterworks on Freshman-Sophomore day is just plain perverse. No official survey has been made, but it is extremely doubtful whether any of the extant alumni can remember a time when the howling pack didn,t wade through mud pies. This year was no ex- ception. There was the usual concourse of unspoiled and eager freshmen, and a similar contingent of supercilious sophomores out to win an easy revenge for last year's defeat. But fate for freshmenl decreed otherwise. The end of the cane-rush found the sophomores in rags or less, the freshmen victorious and jubilant, and the rain coming down in everything from buckets to sheets. After a luncheon served in the gym by the W. A. A. the blood- thirsty Frosh went at it again and tried to dry up the Floyd with the already waterlogged Sophs. Needless to say, they succeeded. That evening, the victors and losers were honored at an All-College party, which was really a county fair with all the side-shows and exhibits. hundr d y -X infix I X f ff! X ff! V' y Xfrw 1 N' fll. ESV: llllfl Ilbf , ,f ,fl lg Sfsii' f A 0,5493 INN yfgilxsrsyi A l xx., f l 1 H a 1 T I 1 I Sv , y .wo Yifxf .1 Skx 1 1 W5 K, .lf by si xl XO. My N! N! l U75 K W ' f gif Z X i Lil Iullll I 1 - 1 kxy +55 X Woig ECZQWK wil l If RFU I SI I ll cv, yr Q rl X Xf WWW? Q I x f? S10 :If L, I, xf,f I is ,iggggg rRAoirioNs jf fx! QS gf Sioux Day The inauguration of Dr. Robert E .O,Brian as seventh president of Morningside College was a special feature of '4Sioux Day, l93l. The academic procession formed at Main Hall and marched to Grace Church. The processional was followed by an invocation made by Rev. W. T. McDonald. The chapel choir sang Mendels- sohn's 'fludge Me, O Godf, The Honorable E. A. Morling, Justice of the lowa Supreme Court and President of the Board of Trustees, presented Dr. O'Brian, and the installation was conducted by Bishop Locke. Dr. Alexander Ruthven, President of the University of Michigan, delivered the charge, to which Dr. O'Brian responded with an inspirational inaugural address. Following the inauguration ceremony, the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws was conferred upon President A. G. Ruthven. Dr. F. J. Seaver, curator of the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens, received the degree of Doctor of Science. The degree of Doctor of Divinity was conferred upon Rev. A. C. DeLapp, of South Norwalk, Con- necticut, and Rev. B. J. Riner, of Sheldon, lowa. Rev. P. W. Burtt pronounced the benediction. Dignataries who were present for the Sioux Day activities were honored at an inaugural luncheon at the Women's Residence Halls. C. W. Britton, of Sioux City, presided. Music was furnished by Conservatory students. One hund d ly l TRADJITJIONS XP X gf f-X T N 'Six Preceding the luncheon there was a parade through the business district. The College band headed the procession, which included floats of the various college organizations. Loving cups were pre- sented to the two organizations whose floats were judged the best. The Women's Athletic Association Hoat won first honors. The Morningside-South Dakota football game was scheduled for the afternoon. Preceding the initial kick-off the combined Morning- side and South Dakota bands and the string of floats paraded around the field. Then came the great game. Both sides fought with the tradition of the successes and defeats of thirty years behind them. The Coyotes yapped valiantly but to no purpose. When the battle ended the score stood 18-0 in favor of the Maroons. Following the game the Board of Trustees held a public reception at the Women's Residence Halls in honor of President and Mrs. R. E. O'Brian. Miss Grace Cordon, chosen as HMiss Morningside by the stu- dents, was honored at all the Sioux Day festivities. hundred sixty-thy X X iii X fx? I ftf f lf' lf me 1 1 X x 1 I . AK X Klxf' I lm, Sit! xl I X 'fl ill w'l l 4 .Q ol CM tx as 22? f ,- If ff NI 50.1 ,Z if Sly lllfllmlf .Q fi I! Q.. ls Alina, I K sp' I x fr .- W SEJXD Wig I INV 1 I J . Sv , y NN, . CWS Q X It kltlrfx - f'1 ' 1 '-J N- K, 11 :1:.Qi 5' ' Il ,5 W' R W Tk? ,IN Ml ,. sim' l 1 wif da 5 71 lk X I ,Q if -.569 M0123 4 fl qi ll X! X! 1 -9 xl b wa L 1' gf ff 1 ,I 59 1 rRADirioNs Xex 1 Ntfxj-9 Rideoutfff1931 Yes-the name has been changed, or should be, for when 99.9 per cent of the students ride out, how can it be called a walk-out? Anyway, the usual derisive howl, uWot ya goin' ta class for?,' ffrom a college studentll pealed through the front hall at 8:00 o'clock on the morning of May 1, 1931, and the whole establish- ment, more or less, led by Hobart Mossman, made a wild dash for Floyd Monument. The day was grand and the wind collected all around the monu- ment waiting for us. After climbing hills and walking railroad ties awhile, we got together and Mossy, as Master of Ceremonies, introduced Harvey Potthoff, who fed us a highly digestible history of the foundation of Morningside College and the walkout habit Harvey Nelson contributed his own original interpretation of the 23rd Psalm, and Lois Crane, to a uke accompaniment, told us why she wouldn,t marry any man. Professor Hayes wound up Paul Havilandis jocular advice with a prophecy of the future of Morningside. Our fortunes being thus comfortably arranged for us, we began to sniff about for the all-necessary food. A large supply of pop, Dixies, and Hot Cross fdogj biscuits was discovered and quickly consumed. May Morning Breakfast lt's the early bird that catches the wormw is a well-known adage apparently applied in the case of the May Morning Breakfast which was held May 5, 1931. It brought with it the sunniest morning of the whole year, and everything was perfect. Shut your eyes and imagine lattice-work, flowers, pretty waitresses serving luscious food, music while you eat, and all this mixed up with springtime and birdsongs. Could anything be sweeter-especially when your fraternity isn,t serving breakfast this morning? 0 hundred sixty-f Women's Banquet MAH the world's a stage and all the men and women merely players, tra la. So said Shakespeare, and what more appropriate theme could have been found for the Women's Banquet of April 25, 1931? The novel toast program built about this theme included as toastmistress, Mrs. Stansbury, who spoke on the subject, HAS You Like 1t g Betty Evans, representing the freshman girls romped in 'gGreen Pastures , Roene Brooks, for the sophomores, spoke earn- estly on '4The Importance of Being Earnestvg and Eleanor McCaf- free, a junior, ventured on nStrange Interludef, The seniors, rep- resented by Marilla Conley, decided that MAll,s Well that Ends Well,', but Mrs. White, for the mothers, brought the Wanderers back to 'LApron Strings. Having paid 4'The Piperf' Rex Hinshaw, who played several clarinet solos, and listened to the Men's Glee Club HMeasure for Measure, the banquet was declared a success. JuniorfSenior Banquet On May 20, 1931, the Juniors entertained the Seniors at the an- nual Junior-Senior BanquetAonly it wasnit a banquet. It turned out to be a picnic. ,lust who was accountable for the original idea, we canlt say for sure-perhaps it was the master of ceremonies, Milton Rixman, and then again it might have been the general chairman, Cepha Pasek, they're both original. Anyway, as far as those present were concerned, the thing was a huge success, not because there was a large crowd fthere wasn'tDhbut because there was plenty for the adventurous few to eat-and they needed it to get fat and keep warm on. South Ravine was second cousin to Greenland that day. The program consisted of humorous talks by several jolly Juniors and sensible Seniors, including Helen Bond, Junior class president, the Honorable Rixman fhimselfl, and best of all, Professor Hayes. hundred sixly'h1'e rirtanirioixis if I l f Xlsfx ' I X Q , X! Yikf tw 1 x x X 'xp zfl 17,11 EEY1 ll lflllhf l fxl lu: if lg If ,M X 1 . f D. . I if , A A - j' .lit I I lt,-j j 3 'H S 1 V I . Egg .Vi Xl Wx! xl iQ We N! Q1 X lx I Xl 3, 1 V X27 xx CM tx x N af? x!'N i ef i xl N3 Illini! ill p al l N swf ,F C52 Z' v !' ' f 5 Il ggi! SI . 1' MZ I U1 M ! X Xlf 7 mb x 17121 Q 'B df 1 if XV Ev? liz 1 ff 'flap' Faculty Reception The Faculty Reception was held October 2, 1931, in the drawing room of the Womenis Residence Halls. For the first time the tra- ditional idea of the reception as a stiffly formal affair was changed when President O,Brian announced that the reception was not to be formal unless one cared to consider it so. This change was not so much a change in form, however, as a change in atmosphere. There was the usual line of faculty members, but after the in- troductions, they mingled freely with the students. Many students discovered for the first time that professors are human and quite enjoyable company, and the faculty was given a chance to see their charges with their hair combed and in their ubesti' clothes. Every one had' the pleasure of meeting the new President and his wife formally, for the first time. Open House The hitherto quiet and studious atmosphere of the society halls was transformed this year to one of a more Msociablei' nature with the adoption of an open house policy. Under this plan men are privileged to visit the halls Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday afternoons from two until five o'clock. Thus it is on those days, at least, bridge tables have replaced text- books, and the coeds have ceased to live the solitary lifef, Following the stringent rules of last year when no men were per- mitted to frequent the halls, the present policy has been well re- ceived as a progressive step in moulding Morningsidels more exten- sive social program. One hundred sixty l X 'l'RA.Dl'l'llONS fffw- Wim ?fh7ZZ: 24 ,465-,Z ' if W l7fZf4w?'Qr77ZW f Ma ,M W 25,155 , 1222 2111 575 W MQW? ,f V Wifi fJfff5 mf M 44fv30f40'f5ff'9'744f0Q0-'a4Afff,Q-fZy,.A.Sg iff, ,MFQMJ 'f f' pff,Zf6f,!7f4Mff4q,4Q,,,L! f.4jw4wW4,f Q f MW l4,..e,!-J' f Z ' 'ZJVIAA-C'f5'j1,ML,,. FRIENDS ALPHA TAU DELTA 1 W 01151 ygh FRIENDS x X!-XI X KM ,' .:N5N ' 'A 7 .. ' X . zghw Rm Refi E unnnnnn ii .-.-.1........ Fl COAL uummnmunnn I' COAL Q - Morningside Lumber and Coal Co. H A Morningside Institution Morningside Avenue and Lakeport Z CGAL Phone 6-6122 COAL 5 E1 -1-----------'--'------ ---------------------'---------------------------------- GIFTS CREETING CARDS S E ' S z STATIONERY CDNFECTIDNERY is ---------'---1--'-----'-'----'-'------------- ---------f ----- ------------------------------1------------------------.- ' ' Ei ' ' ' - ' '- El Ao Q I AeA C. W. BRITTON ' ' . 1 i'l:ef:,2'f1Q-f'?53if A COMPANY gf , ' 222-25 Davidson Riiildiiig IA AAIA V J x , , Q YW t i- , N f i E We Buy and Sell -1 I .i,.E H CONSERVATIVE INVESTMENT ,I vii-IG Boom- I i SECURITIES E fl Q E Emu llnllllllnnlnn u nnuuunnnuunnnuunu u lllillilliiiiiii....i..i.i...i.,....,. 5 E .,.V- Yan Toilets-1 0 F-X E LI E askev x 3 - E 3 X:00YbaxLp'YY3ck' - :.' Q :.'::f.' : EIU' llllllllllnllnll I vlnvluvnnnunnunnn I ililIiiiiiiliiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil .Fl i,iwW2fikw?' ie I Lf Goiigmc M ' L C SMITH AND CORONA ' ,,1 we iqiipmgg, ' ' TYPEWRITERS E 1' W 09: Q ,. - 2 lsvfntxsiaksngm Office Supplies and Furniture E l d4,fM'1 Rebuilt and Rental Typewriters E g I i ,ff Raimi uiiI i t z VE R S T E G E N .i.,i iz 0 PRINTING COMPANY - 607 Pierce Street Ei E IIIIIIIII mu iliiiii ii iiiii E1 E1 uuunuununnnn I niInnnuunnnnunInuuuuuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiii. Q Ollly RI NlQ , X f 2 1 ,Q M X 1 N x Qf?lttK.J , Xfgkfill llw' ffQA pgga SQ-q'5.,,. ff ffiSuY?5i5l li W-H lI'wVI if l V l ll ical K 1 I I lf Xl 'ill xl xlib I N A X I Q I A fl Wi l l iff! 0 X R X Q- FRIENDS ATHENAEUM 01144 y HEAT SATISFACTION IERIIENIOS 9 QM Sim? 14 -I . .,............. .,......,,.,.T,.................,...,.............. .....................,..... S . CQ , I I N IDRUGS I The DISTINCTION and PRESTICE of HOUR STOREY, assures you quick, accurate, and dependable SERVICE. DiXSOn'S Pharmacy 10101135 Finest Suburban Drag Store At Peters Park Phone 6-5545 E' For 39 'Years- The Safe Home for Savingsn z Woodbury County Savings Bank Established 1893 Fourth and Nebraska Streets lilllllnllnnnunInIIIIInInlnInInnnnlnununununnI InInununmulunnxnlnnnnnunnnnlnnmnum:uunnnnnnnn EllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllslllllllHIE millllllllllllllll'llllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllll ORCUTT'S Ojer Standard WILSON SPORTING GOODS EQUIPMENT The Experfs Choice SPECIAL SCHOOL PRICES 312-314 Nebraska Street gn tlllfil O 5 : I : : 1630 Third Street mlnnuunnnuInuuunnulnunluuInInInnunInuuulnunnnum QIIIHIlllllllllllIlllllllulllllllllllnulunulnlnnunlulnlllllllulllu Olddp .,........................,................................................. ..............FI Illlll I ' f f, Ae. I AJ I x x 1 x .If yr ,fl xl NIT' X fx If A lx it, x fi I XV fl, E A SQ CP J I I U If YIIIII' III HI! IlI'f X W y!! I I I ffl' .I Z fm Q.. I XYQ Q'.f' L NPA 6: f- I xt I ,II MI 'QMIA F I I Nl I I IW M I Sv II' I C55 I FRIENDS PHI SIGMA FRTJENDS x K Q CQ X X 1 A2 5 El ' El X , r A E X V 1 Q ' ' , I , It is smart to be tlfwzfty- El ,,l-,, Q : I ' T r X , f lj Among right-thinking people it is no credit to be T considered a careless and indifferent buyer. y ' of 'fy rg . , .ff '54 But it is a mark of distinction to be pointed out Ki' - ,ff as a careful, thrifty shopper. 3x1 lt is considered smart to set a better table at a ik lower cost, which can be accomplished by confining J your purchases to the I l A1 im 1 my V l Council ak Stores 5 lf 2 . All In Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Minnesota Q i l E ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Illll llllll L f . lf Ji THE PAUSE THAT SQ E 24-Hour Cadillac Ambulance REFRESHES ilclf, Service MX Al 1 X P 5 :ll W. Harry Christy ff' : lt l 3 UNDERTAKINC 5 5 I Q Q? PA L R X Coco Cola in Bottles Tl l X E Morningside Masonic Temple I 1 1 n Chesterman Q T 4112 Morningside Avenue C O. ' f I ga! 13: ----------'--' -----------K- ra -l--------'------K--. L. Oldl I FRIENDS ZETALETHEAN 0 I rl Ll seventy-fuur RRiieNios 3: QWCWI HCR N X STUDIOS .A ,fff 5I9 Fourth Street ax-if SIOUX CITY IOWA I F ' '' ' xtlff, : glilgyffl I I X lf! R' E i 1 7' I I Photographs for This Annual and Many Previous Annuals E Made by Youngberg : Elm................................. .......,.. ................7:1 gg....................,.................:.,............,........................f:1 A Big Meal for Twenty Cents BARN EY'S THICK E MALTED MILK E The store where there is always a 2 Registered Druggist to fill 5 5 E ' your prescription. : 2 BARNEY DRUG Morningside Pharmacy O I tl J serwnly 'fire Sv I I A In VNC I W f I SCI RCW veit f' xp rp' R lxj .L N f'l 2'5- ' x Fi, tx R22 Qgiti if M4 K 11 Q fl RR FRIENDS PIERIA ozdd, IFIIIIENIIIS Enxxlilliin1nunulnununlnnin IInlnlnnlunnmnnllIuIllIlllluuunuunulnxnnull BOOTHS FOUNTAIN SERVICE ROGERS' LUNOHEONETTE ON THE CORNER SOFT DRINKS MEALS Ep...............................................i... ..................i.....,...................... ....K........................ El I In -I --mm..mum-I.mmmnnm-I First National Banlc in Sioux City ,,.VZ41 . i .4 I . fg. aaaa I 5 i at .'.- AN- 4: ----- . ' if - : . lf'-,M bf-,. Lv--,aj::1,. se- I i A ,-3 ,z:,azl? ' ' VM ' I i 3 E A. , ,... . A L I I 2 fi' ' ., ,1A' , mv: ACM .,... :,:E 5, , I Y W - .,,:,,...,, ,.:. Z :Z -.-.- 1 ,I ' . SIOUX CITY'S NEW BANK YN C-QQ E, 'I 2 xi KJ Mug gf , ifbzpklxkx FN I x x ff Xqflli EXY Illl llvlf ,f I I 1' ff A fi- lax, Rx, 5 xx' A I 125, T' HE Ig! I III! ll I . Y I SV ,I . cgi I x I X X N I XIII Iw- xfl P I X1 fl X I I Q lllllllll I lllllll Ill xlffl Elm Ivllll I IIlrllfllllllllllllllllllllwlll I rllnulnllunnnnnennunIlnnunnnsuInxnrunnu::nnunununnnnnnnnnlnnnnnnunn lun nninnnnnnsunnnunnnunlnunnunuuuunnannnnuu mm u FT E WM. BEUTTLER, A. I. A. RALPH ARNOLD, A. I. A X X D I O I BEUTTLER 55 ARNGLD at I A I ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS K - Specializing in the Planning Of Public Buildings FQI0 Phone 5-5374 5 X 405 67 810 I um Ext-h ge Building SIOUX CITY, IOWA , gy? Eg llnlll: mm lnluluuuxnnru mmm: nuxxnuuru EJ 0 I J I1 FRIENDS DELTA THETA PI Olld ygh PRMENDS PSQQX x CQ A ,CHQ . tgp OH6'Y1fYLg You- X, ,Af 5 Ty 'l Ill 1' -Unusual Strength in Capital and Surplus f, 4 : I lf f -48 Years' Experience U 'ty -The Best of F3Cll1l1CS I -.. 'ff 'fa ffl -The Well Known HSCCUTITY SCI'V1CC,7 xiii-,'4vf t ,fp .. , ,v fvll tx ii! ff, I fo -W its HSECURITY FOR SAVINGS ' s f 'X 'gil' ECURI t f 5 t 0 0 y 2 lf of SIOUX C113 l wg, ft at ----'-----'-' ----------------------------------l------.-'---,-----------------------------..... -.-......- t QB . lf --- --'-'----'-- - -'-'- '-'---'- '----'- '! -'! '-X'--1'-----' -- - - ------ '---'-- -'-'----'- Ia QQ ' 5 T X We Wish Success to Morningside Students 3 . : X I, The Paramount Confectronery TSW, PASTRY, LUNCHES, ICE CREAM X AND CANDIES E gif ,Y 3 Phil Papas 519 Fourth Street CNN at ---l------------------------------- ----------KK---1-------',ft----.-------t- --ll-KK-----K--1---K--..--t---K------1--.-------.t. x O Q X 'l ' '', ' ' ' 1 ' El X X my RENT A NEW CAR I xg 5 J S 1 1 - X Barnett s Drtve It Yourself .- Q I Telephone 5-4054 614 Nebraska Street ga W A 0111 FRIENDS SIGMA THETA RHO One hundr I 1,h y 'E FRIENDS of SEQ? Iannnnnun lllllnullululullllg-I PROSPERITY COMES FASTER TO THOSE WHO SAVE REGULARLY Start your account today with : The Toy National Bank El ------------- -------------'----'-----------------------------------'-- '-'- -------'--'-----'----------------------------------- ---------- ET a -------'--'''-'--- '------ ----'-'-1-'--'----'---'--------'--'--'-- '---' a 15' - - ---'-'-'------ '- - ' '21 Aalfs Paint E-3 Glass . . CO, Sioux City WALL PAPER Stock Yards uThe House of Quality 2 - and Servicev - Home Market for the Great 5 S 1011 Fourth Street Phone 8-6578 E S Northwest E Fa ---'----------------------------------f-----f---------------------------'---- Er ------------- -'-'--'------ - - - ---------- la -1---!'l'---' --'- ---- E1 AMBITIONS Frosh.-To be graduated in four years, have a good time, earn a lot of E money, and become famous. Soph.-To be graduated in three years, have a good time, and earn a lot of money. Junior-to be graduated in two years and have a good time. Senior-To be graduated! MShe's a Follies girlf' mllhell you say! MYepl She gfollies' the boys aroundf, Bill had a billboard. Bill also had a boardbill. The hoard bill bored E Bill so that Bill sold the billboard to pay his board bill. So, after : Bill sold his billboard to pay his board bill, the board bill no longer E bored Bill. Ep............ .... ............. ..........EI 0 h d d ghy X n,, f X f ff l W if XX 3 'jill ENV Il lflglsiy, x lx ! I! lf5'llflllL7' L 'ff IE if lb! I .. , . jd, X ',q'.f- 'ff fa-X QQQ A xx., l 'QSM I 'P i l 1 ily ll ! Sv ,, y Lit 7 1 all . lf K 1 X C3 xf l all RCW' if ip, X1 'ln l, Il f Ji QD gig? ,biigi , AQQ? QlQMZZwWfMAB6 2 wif, M y MJ OG A ',mJ ,WV' T R PHS 2 W Wfgggi 2MMw154LliZAmMZZZZiQ44?Q fflll X ' Q M M ww 5 R AM QM-,, 625354 ,ggiggg 1Wjf GQQQQWQMAWWWMQMMQQ ggafiaam fK2map751E?qN S TW . ml I' JH Z T170-elw-wa.,-NCSA if Qual g vim W 5 7 WWW? V V x MQ ww fi g 5+ 33 ww f A P 0N . W QW si 74 ' Li gXKX'S QE ffz.X. , D Q' . 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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.