University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1938

Page 29 of 288

 

University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 29 of 288
Page 29 of 288



University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 28
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if given the opportunity, assume an increasing share of its support VicevPresident Woodward saw the need for more eitv tensive dormitories to provide comfortable and attractive jaunjoundings t0 stimqlate student life. Too many students at this time lived ini-private rooms scattered about the Hyde Park area. In the Summer Quarter of 1930, the University leased three, fraternity houses as temporary residence halls-for women; in the' meantime, elaborate plans were being drawn up for both new menls and womenis dormitories. I By the end of 1927, the Joseph Bond Chapel was com! pleted, as'was much 'of the hospital group. The North Stand at Stagg Field was Enished1 and the great University 'Chapel'was progressing steadily, only the stonework 0n the massive tower remained to be completed, but because of the Imany intricate stone carvings required, the work could not be rushed. The old thsiology Building was renamed Culver Hall, and remodeled to house the Biology Library. Wieboldt Hall w'a's nearing its completion. All these new buildings were taxing the old Power Plant Although four new 350 horsepower boilers were installed, they could npt meet-expanding needs. John D. Rockefeller sent his ehgineer to Chicago, and plahs were madefor a mcidern plant on Blackstone Avenue with trade connections to the Illinois Central! A steam tunnel was constructed along the Midway to make connections with the 'old system, and prcivision was made for expan' sion eithe plant to meet future needs, for at some future date.' the University planned to generate its own power. In addition to continuing the great expansion pro' gram, President Mason vigorously supported campus ac! tivitiesuMirro'r- cohtinued its striking Success and develop' ment. Since the Mirror was a strictly feminine organiza- tion, actresses- talking male roles wore tailcoats over evening gowns; not until 1931 was the taboo 'on men in Mirror lifted. Then, Maroon headlines screamed thatt Mirror had selected twelve male D'AJ members as guest Twenty Two I Breaking the ground'for the Fieldhouse. - artists for llWhat,Hol The campus was startled, but to the present day, men are included as guest artists in Mirror productions. In exactly a decade, Mirror had become an almost professionally amateur group; its prestige and .82? patience merited the dropping of'catch titles. Henceforth, shows were presented merely as KiMirror Revuew Mirror-became a part of the Dramatic Association but kept its own board of' control which 'always consists of five women selected for their prominence in campus activities. T The dramatic organizations have had many recl letter days, of which we can mention only a fewLBack in 1902, the presentation of Ben Jonson's HThe Case is Jailteredf3 staged in the Elizabethan manner, was an occasion to be remembered. It was the First public presentation of this type in Chicago, and the stage director was Mr. Bruce Short, of New York City. Just imagine how the student actors' chests must have swelled with pride the night that William Butler Yeats' iiLand 0f Heart's Desire was presented H-with Mr. Yeats in the audience! Numerous distinguished visitors have witnessed DA. productions-' ' Helen Hayes among them. i The list of ermembers of University dramatic organiza' tions achieving fame is longu-Fritz Leiber, Milton Sills of Broadway and Hollywood, Frances Dee, Eleanor Merv ling, Emily Taft, Letitia Ides tstar dancer in MirrorL and Carlin Crandell are only a few Fred Handschy used to edit liPhoenix, and act in DA. production; you might remember his work in Tobacco Road. The estimable Harold Swift was at one time the president of the Dramatic Association, and Arthur Sears Henning, Vin- cent Sheean, Lewis Beech, Barrett Clark, and Sterling North have all written plays for the DA. Edwin H. Lewis, author of the lkAlma Materll contributed some of his work to the Dramatic Association. The mere mention of the Dramatic Association im- mediately calls to the mind of the person acquainted with the University of Chicago the name of Frank Hurburt OiHara, I15 tonce abbot of Blackfriarsll, later Director of Student Activities, Dramatics, and a prefessor at the Univeral'ty. In his student days, Mr. O'Hara wrote skits for the Dramatic Association and acted in their produe' tions. Inihis executive position of the last decade, his talent and ambition as a director have resulted in the present calibre of the Dramatic Association plays, and in the prestige of that organization on campus. In Max Mason's own words, Intercollegiate athletics should become more thoroughly the climax of a more general participation within the student body. And truly, the interest in athletics during his administration pros' pered. In November-of 1925 the first Annual Alumni Hometoming took place on the occasion of the Chicagov Dartmouth game. The prev gram included the ground! breaking for the field house before the game. frenzied frolics between halves, Cele bration in Bartlett after the game, and dinner dances far into the night at. fraternity houses. In December of the ' Nels Fuqua-undergrad, hair, and Blackfriars.

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from the other waited in vain at 63rd. 'ngh pressure methods included the pledging of freshmen whlle they were drunk. One Beta actually went at; farI as to pledgia freshman while both were in the Chl Ps1 lodge. In tde earlier day, there was a stigma attached to the mdepertt EM; no seiferespecting girl wouIld date a non'fratern; y man, and one Quad was ostrac1zIedIat aIclub partybIIoIJI' bringing an houtsider. Dean WllIklnIs med to estaIII ls order, in one instance, when he dlsmlssed three stuI enctIs at a settlement dance, charging that they were Imehpate .l Dean Wilkins also inaugurated the preferentlal dlnneIlI-I in ciuh rushing in April of 1924. In February of $925 tte Psi Upsilon fraternity won exemptlon from State rope: 3: Tax, because it was an educational and charltahIIe metigtl:l tion!H And in April of the same year, the MlhlgaIr-y af was inaugurated. It was in I927 that the then ernceIIIt: Wales visited the Chicago campus and dined m e Hutchinson Commons. I . In 1927 a quiet spot for relaxatlon, cailed the Umv Sod Fountain, was opened. Before-ltIs opIenlng, students chriZtened it more familiary the TTSpa. With its changigg character, it changed its name and has becoIme oug- $811If ee Peacock Alley, acrid with smoke and g0551p-- t e 0 She . I I I Agter the World War, there was a great mihax oIIfh i113: into the University. This fact may account 3015124 ewe triumphs in the 19203. In the years 1922 aILn b ketball had a champion football team w1thI a champmg asII the team in 1920 and 1924. The tenms team heI 0orIIIII 011 h championship for five successive years, .192II K; E 1924; the University gymnastic team bicameh aiglfal y repeatedly winning the title from II920 t rang 't Cr-isler In the sports limelight at' that tune were hi'zmurder: Campbell Dickson, Elmer Lampe tfamous fcnI I 15 fcer be 0115 tackle of NorthwesternTs star, Moan Ba. :1:ng d Chi- had caught a puntL Bob CurIIey twho drop;I 111k Paul Cago to the '24 championshlpL JIaCk P01; elIII3 f1 team Hinkle, and Ed Curtiss. The champtonshlp ISlot a 1 bid of 1924 had a perfect record; even though t eytonmy ton three games, and won two, the famous IllIgnoI: ?'m-le '5 which Red Grange starredt was heIdIZIvJ Y ', Y three kicks. , I I I I President Burton, reIalizingII t? Bievsggtyfogeggrg; ment of the h sical ant 0 t e I II , I I Plans for theptTyDeveloppment CampaIlgnI. For Iiim$egfgli needs $17,500,000 was deemed sufECIent, so abl' et 'Two firm was consulted on how to eqnduct the puH1c1rygft5ItOI new ViceIPresidents were appointed, james - ersity ' ' ' tt care handle internal affairs, and Mr. Trevor Arnett o I for business matters. For publicity and the epngifgnganog alumni for contributions, Mr. Henry JIlIlstlnI assistants Mr John Y. Aitchison were va1ted to ecome I I to the President. I Meanwhile RuSh Medlcal ' The Inter-Fratemily Sing. 0k traditional highlight through the yearsJ Chllege was incorporated o 24, our last championship football team. into the University U929; steps toward this nnaI achievement had been taken as far back as 1898. An anonymous donor had added a large sum to the fund for the building of the Diviriity School. tPresident Burton lightened pre' vious religious requisites fat the President and trusteesj The chiI' dren of Mrs. Anna M. Swift ene dowed it, and construction was soon started. Miss Marion Talbot provided a foundation, hearing her name, for the advancement of education of women by defraying the expenses of lectures, publications, research, etc. The original chapel plans were restudied in this-period, though unfortunately, the architect, Bertram G. Goodhue, had died-Mr. and Mrs. Wieholdt saw need of a building for modern languages and through the Wieboldt Foundation, gaveSSSOQOOO to he used in erecting the building. In the midst of the new round of activity, President Burton died on May 28, 1925. It was the responsibility of his successor to carry to completion the unfinished plans. max manna UHEE-IHEET ' Max Mason, a professor of mathematical physics at the University of Wisconsin, became the new President of the University of Chicago on October 1, 1925'. Dr; Tufts and Mr. Arnett who resigned as Vice-Presidents were replaced by Professor Frederic CA Woodward and Mr. Lloyd R. Steere. ' The Committee on Development had carried out a very successful campaign, and many new buildings were now under way. Swift Hall, the new Theology Building, was completed; Bond Chapel, the University ChapeI, and the Albert Merritt Billings Hospital were begun during 1925,26. The Carnegie Corporation endowed the Gradur ate Library School, while the Commonwealth Fund, Gen. eral Education Board, and the Laura- SpelmIan Rockefeller Memorial continued their help. The ' Illinois Training Schonl for' Nurses gave about a'haIlf aImillion dollars toward the establishment of the School of Nursing. The Dr. Girard von Schaick Foundation made special provision for research in pathology. Many .were the splendid gifts given in this period; some were for' buildings, and others for research endowments and professorships. The spirit of cooperation prevalent at the time is exemplified by the Alumni Executive Committee, which in the preface to' their T'Honor Roll of Alumni Contribu- tors to the Development Fund of 'the University 'of Chi, cage, stated: . . from now on, youcan feel reassmed that the alumni are an integral part ofI the institution, and that, as they grow in numbers-and wealth, they' will,



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same year, eighteen thousand five hundred Chicago fans went by train to the Chicago'IHl'nois game at Champaign! In January 1926, our baseball team crossed the Pacihe to participate in the Seventh International Baseball Series, held in Japan. Temporarily shadowing the sun of athletic success was the death of Johnny Johnson, trainer of the University athletic teams for over twenty years. In Feb! rUary of 1926, we had a polo team, supported by President . Mason. Intramurals continued -'suecessful from their start on the Chicago campus in 1923. In July of the same year, the addition to the North Stands on Stagg Field allowed eighteen inches per person instead of seventeen. We dent: know whether this signified'a biological trend or'mere kindness of heart. Many were the students who slept through lectures without having to get dressed and come to class when, in 1927. lectures were presented over the radio at'nine A.M. Disgracing the august tradition ofthe University, the freshmen of 1927 wore green caps, the sophomores ten-inch red feathers, and the seniors carried canes. From gut era dated the selling of cigarettes in the Reynolds lub. Publicatibns continued their zealous activity during 'the Mason administration. In a convulsion of ambition tDeu cemher 1926J, the Maroon staff spewed forth a sixty- page Holiday edition. Upon the retirement of Dean of Women Marion Talbot in 1925', the realization of the growing range and Com' plexity of women's problems led to the suggestion that a council might better be able to meet the situation. The original committee consisted of Miss Talbot, Miss Wall lace, and Mrs. Flint, chairwoman; these at once called into the council Miss Abbott, Miss Blunt, Miss Breckinv ridge, Miss Dudley, Mrs. Logsdon, and Miss Rickert. The hnal council consisted of twentyvfour members: Mrs. Flint tappointed chairman 'by the Universityh PresidenQ: twenty members ex-oiiicio; and three appointed by the President from a list suggested by the Council. These three held office for a three year period, the object of which was to bring fresh blood into the counciL When Mrs. Fh'nt resigned in 1930, she was succeeded by Miss Dudley. o Stagg irih'the Grand Old Runabout. But President Hutchins had arv- rived with his ideas on the reorganize' tion of the University. His appoint! ment: of Mr. Works as Dean of Students in the College. made the council seemingly: unhecessary. We might diepute that idea. At any rate, women's affairs at the University now struggle along under the supervision of a student organization, the Board of Womenhs Organizations, without Dean Works whoSe zictivitieh- as De'itn of Students in the College 'naturally makes impassible a great deal of con! sideration to womenhs problems. In the University's beginning, as a Baptist institutien1 students were' re quired to attend chapel' daily. tThis was reduced to weekly attenda'neetfnr the undergraduates; then in . 1928', compulsory attendance was abolished for all .but the freshmen. Gym Was compulsory for men, while women were required to pales a swimhaine; test, to be a' member .ingomedteam for one year, arid to specialize in one sportEgNot until the Daily Mateon poll in 1931, showing thafstuden't's were against compulsory? physicei education by a ratio of 3:1, were the restrictions removed. - I O Michelson and Compton, tlwo of-the University's greatEst.

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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