University of Minnesota - Gopher Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 522
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 522 of the 1932 volume:
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Engravings by Bureau of Engraving Printed by McGill Lithograph Company Photographs by Miller Studios Paper From Inter City Paper Company of Minneapolis LEON IIOYII Eilifoi-WILLIAM CISOVVE I HI r.OIĀ HEI or uyvi Tin ASS IIAI. 1 11ICLIC ATI OS Ol3 PHI3 SBSIOIE CLASS Ā«it flu lISIVEItSITYof HISSHSOTA MISSIaAIMNJS VoIiiiim l;Ā«i fy l3ivi Ill: III CATION ⢠⢠TP HE romantic figure of Paul Bunyan has become the patron saint of the 1932 edition of Minnesota's oldest tradition. The mythical legends told by the lumberjacks portray Paul as the hero of all time, for he was not only the greatest logger, but the first orator, the big business man, the greatest farmer, and the most renowned fighter. To him are accredited the construction of the Ten Thousand Lakes, the Mississippi River, the Black Hills, the Great Lakes, the iron industry and many other things characteristic of Minnesota and the Northwest. In presenting the forty-fifth volume of the Gopher, the editors have attempted to portray in its art theme, not only the legends of Paul Bunyan, but the strength and vigor of the North country. Minnesota is known as the land of lakes and pines, the North Star state, ami of all this, there is nothing more characteristic than the All-American myth, Paul Bunyan. ⢠⢠⢠⢠KVA Nil 31 IIIV(I CONTEXTS Hook 1 Tlio University Kook II Seniors Book III Activities Hook IV Athletics Hook V Organizations To Cyrus Northrop HAT voice was that that cried. āThe dav-star pales! Spake ye of twilight, reaper ? Look again! Float (he bright orb. dear-edged, above the plain: And harvest' gold, not un et'Ā . crown the vale , Listen! No signal from the nightingale . No turret trembling to the vesper strain. Look homeward! Lamples is the cottage pane: And dell ward! Not a spark the glow worm trail . Plunge, plunge, the sickle deeper in the corn! Day yet. glad day, its heart and hope ate ours! For us still beams the light that smiled at morn. Unset, undimmed, on sheaf and blade and flowers Long be it ere it pass the fateful bourne. And leave us. weeping to the sunless hours! āO. tt Fit him. ātt IS MEHOItlAM O.W.FIUKISS 25 O. W. Firkins 26 An Individualist w W HhN wc have had a remarkable man among us. it is well (o .stop and take note of the fact, Such a man was Oscar W. f irkins. Society has a healthy instinct to protect itself against its own pet virtues, which are diplomacy, complacency, conformity and mediocrity. These virtues it inculcates and forces upon its citizens, who readily absorb themāfor they are congenial to the nature of ordinary men. and easily seen to be the best means of making one's way in the world. But when it comes to the point where wc all look alike, share the same opinions, make the same remarks, and spend our time amiably patting one another on the back, societyāout of the sheer instinct of self-preservation, turns for help to some man like Mr. hirkins. who has refused to take on its plausible virtues. who won't lie. who knows what he thinks, svho has reasons for thinking as he does, and who in general has maintained his own picturesque individuality. hirst. however, society makes him run the gauntlet, the man of individual character. A prophet is not without honor save in his own country, liver since about 1915. when he was writing his brilliant reviews of poetry for The Nation, Mr F-irkins has been among the two or three most highly appreciated of professors in the university But I can well remember the time when he was an obscure instructor in rhetoric, with a bare half-dozen students, who were more impressed with his classroom eccentricities than with the splendor and subtlety of his thought. Then at length came Mr. I irkins' books and his national reputation to convert the skeptical or indifferent at home. I ally fourteen years ago the university administration paid him the unique honor of creating for him a special departmentāthat of comparative literatureāso that he might have a perfectly tree hand in the conduct of his work F or it is true that the born nonconformist does not work well in harness. Mr. I irkins' poetry, which has not been collected, is invariably marked by a fine sensibiliiy and by classic clearness and precision of outline, lie was a dramatic critic of rare dis-unction. Much of his finest criticism doubtless lies unpublished in his students' notebooks. He was passionately devoted to the theater, and svas often to be seen between acts restlessly pacing the aisles, umbrella in hand, sublimely oblivious to the observation of more placid burgesses. If he was not in a mood for the play, he would go home. I have seen him thus quit the famous national theater in Paris, and leave his seat unoc- cupied for the rest of the evening Perhaps he had been seized with the impulse to original creation. In the later years his imagination seethed with dramatic conceptions, which took the form of one-act plays. Some dozen of these have been collected in the volume entitled I wo Pas sengers for Chelsea. These delightful plays are most various in subject, tone and setting. They range from the seventeenth century to the present day. and romantic fantasy to drawing room comedy, from the desert of Algiers to a smart New York apartment. They are sparkling with wit. sometimes wistfully poetic, always sufficiently provided with the element of stir prise, and above all refined and humane in the interpretation of human nature. Considering how limited were his personal contacts, it is amazing how freely his imagination ranged over the whole field of life and human relationships. It is typical of him that, while he would not himself use the telephone or ride in an automobile, he did not deprive the people of his plays of these material conveniences. But the best of his writing is probably to be found in four volumes of biography and criticism He could not write a dull book. Those who read his life of Cyrus Northrop were surprised to find that, instead of the conventional record of a public man's career, he had produced a highly colored portrait of a human being, as interesting for bis personality and private life as for the part be played in the creation of out university. More important, however, are the biographies of three great writers, Itmcrson. Howells and .Jane Austen For here his interest in portraiture could be combined with his passion for literary analysis and critical appraisal And it was this combination which gave especial play to his wizard like, his prodigious command of words. F incst of all is his rendering of the benign and gracious per vonality of limerson, wfiom he calls the first of American ihmkcrs. That pertinacious individualist and nonconformist was, I believe, the strongest of formative influences on his own life and thought. Certainly his analysis of Ftmerson's thought is his finest display of dialectical skill And one is conscious here of something more than that There is a warm and vibrant sympathy in his account of Fimcrson's philosophy which brought together the three noblest of human conccp lionsābeauty, truth, and virtueātogether with that of God. in a single radiant synthesis That, one feels, must have been the faith in which he himself lived and died. āJoseph Warren Bearh 27 c W-jOMl.: I IMES, though infrequently, it happens that a man is so long associated with an institution that he becomes a part of it. and in passing, he becomes one of its traditions. Such a man was Professor Firkins. During the forty odd years that he was a member of the faculty, he watched thousands of students come and go, he saw the school grow from an insignificant beginning to the massive institution of today. Me was a familiar figure in Folwell Mall and in the Library, and he ranks with the greatest scholars of all lime. To the drama, he was. in the terms of the noted critic William Archer. āThe greatest critic in America.ā In the classroom, he will be remembered as an instructor who not only taught his work, but also lived it. There can be no doubt that with him. Minnesota has lost a figure never to be regained. It seems fitting and properthat the Gopher of 1932 should be a memorial to him. The old man of Folwell Hall has passed away, but so great was his influence that to the thousands of students and alumni who knew and loved him. Professor Firkins will never really be gone. 28 Paul Bunyan hail a temperamental habit. When in deep thought he would brush his beard with a young pine tree. If he had a knotty problem to solve lie would seat himself on a hill, pull up a pine tree, and sit for hours or days or weeks ruminating and brushing his beard. When extremely agitated over some particularly obdurate problem, he would stride through the forest, crushing undergrowth and knocking down trees at every step. PAUL IMISYAS 29 s' PAUt 6 UNFA CAM! ro A NN SOTA POAA C ANAPA YT U t n or paoi'j mr OCC A C CAMP N , M PNtiOt A J Wu MISSISSIPPI o vto - ā FOPMIO bVN N AAAI 7 PPC O A WAT IP TANA M NNCSOtA i O.OOO AAt . rOP AtO AY OA Ci . A roorpp nrj r PAUL SCOOP o our i a Ā£ supso op on a prsrnvo p . . r-. I V W A OV ā fMj O PIN to L AC N r Mt gnat Nteoto i g ā J OC ' VC U I 6AA7 ONCt OpANKS TNf HUM P VCA OP .Mr If, f PAUl 7AMC0 fHT WW W p YPjf Vā WPlVAWf ' A A S7FAMAOA1 CAASt UP TNf n vrn to jrm op PAuis me 30 p JL AUL BUNYAN. hero of .1 thousand and one glamorous tales of adven ture. is by adoption a loyal son of Minnesota. He himself declared. I am a Real American. Babe and I both are Real Americans hearts, souls and hides!ā Although his historic logging activities brought him into all the middle western states, his home camp was made, we believe, in Minnesota. The Paul Bunyan legend had its origin in the Papineau Rebellion of 1837. when hordes of French Canadian loggers joined in the revolt against their young English queen. Among the husky forest warriors was one bearded giant even more mighty than the rest, one Paul Bunyan. I his powerful savage, roaring, rushing, raging in battle like Samson among the Philistines, gained great fame during the rebelling. His exploits assumed the grandeur of legend. Later this same Paul Bunyan operated a logging camp, and stories of his mighty deeds and heroic achievements in the North Woods grew and multiplied. The life of a logger was a wild and rough one in those days, fraught with countless hardships and wearisome toil. The men lived somewhat like a tribe of savages, and the camp boss was the chief. A rigorous man he had to be. with exceptional physical power and courage, to enforce his will as the law of the camp. Paul Bunyan was the most famous logging boss of all Canada. His fame spread far and wide. And when, in the evening after the labor of the day was ended, men gathered in bunk houses to regale themselves with song and story. Paul Bunyan was the hero whose praise they sang the most. It was the American loggers below the Border, however, who made of Paul the legendary figure he is today. They gave him Babe, the big blue ox; they created the marvelous mythical logging camp; they peopled it with astonishing minor heroes. From the thread of a few stories springing from the lauded achievements of the Canadian master-logger, they fabricated a whole rich-colored fabric of legendary lore. Each camp bard added some delightful detail of his own imagining to the familiar stories. There are at least a hundred key-storiesā, and countless variations. The ballad and story-making art. which in the last century brought forth tales and songs as native to the soil as the grass of the prairies, is now perishing under the blight of modern democracy. Old legendary heroes, once as real as the sunlight, are now merely people in book history. But the spirit of these heroes, their rugged, fearless love of living joyfully and accomplishing greatly, has become a heritage of the country. And the cour age. the honesty, the dauntless energy of the greatest logger of all time will continue to enrich the heritage of Minnesota as long as there are trees, sunlight and shadow, and whispering leaves 31 A ilND now. to proceed into the book. An.innu.il is to be the history book of the year. But. in the Gopher of 1932. the editors have attempted to make die spirit of Paul Bunyan live again. We have tried to portray with the events some of the strength and freedom of the great lumbering industry of the state. What about the theme? The suggestion that the Bunyan motif be used really did not conic from a staff member at all. but rather from one Don Robertson, erstwhile editor of Ski-U-Mah. One evening in the spring of 1931. the Gopher editor was racking his rather meagre brain for a novel and appealing art theme, and friend roommate came through with the idea. We have found Paul Bunyan a most interesting chap with whom to work. As we developed our ideas, the giant logger became a very real character indeed. In the drawings of Mr. Kaiser and Ted Larson. Paul has been typified in an unusual and striking manner. We like him very much, and of course, we hope that you will. too. 32 THI; UNIVERSITY It was in the Winter of the Blue Snow that Paul Bunyan found Babe, the Big Blue Ox. One night he was awakened by a tremendous rumbling sound. Leaping up. he strode from his cave down to the bay. There the ice. seven feet thick, had been broken; great cakes of ice tossed on heaving waters. In the midst of the billows Paul espied two ears. He seized them and lifted. A head appearedāshouldersābodyātail. It was a new-born calf, blue as the strange snow, that had come tumbling down the tallest Northern mountain into Tonnerre Bay. Paul lifted the calf, and bore it in his arms to the cave. Paul was a husky big baby. An old lumber wagon was used as his baby carriage. His nurses had to tie his arms down, to prevent his demolishing the rail fences and other structures along the roadway. His feet dangled over the edge of the wagon, and tore up the road surface. This was not the child's fault, however: his feet were so far from his head that he seldom or never saw them. a I NISISTI!ATIOS 33 I'red li. Snyder Regents The Board of Regents is a constitutional body with full control over the University in all its phases. It can do anything and everything. It is the final board of appeal: its decisions are ultimate. Among its duties arc the engaging of staff members, approving policies, programs, and budgets, supervising disciplinary measures, and staff management. Regents are chosen from each congressional district of the state. The most important action of the Board this year was the establishment of the Junior College. āIt is a new educational venture.ā says President Coffman, 'designed to give students more generalized and synthesized experience in a wider range of fields.ā Liberalism is the keynote of the college, with training in social intelligenceā its chief aim. The Board undertook its development partially as a reactionary measure to counteract modern tendencies toward intensified specialization. It must be understood, they state, that the Junior College is not in any sense designed for misfits or unfits: it is entirely different in being an attempt to break down the limitations of college walls and barriers, and to develop individualism. Regents believe it will have a wholesome reactionary effect on the entire University. Retlenls in Session 34 President I olds Della Coffman Dr. Lotus D. Coffman, president of America's third largest university, is a man who loves all kinds of games and sports. Ciolf. football, hockey, fishing, trips into the open spaces of woods and lakes, trips to foreign lands and acquaintances with new types of peopleāthese are his special delight and his most enlivening recreations. For recreation, he thinks one must really relax by going as far out of the routine as possible. Extended tours such as his recent trip to Australasia are the most enjoyable part of his work, he says. Apropos of the student government question. Dr. Coffman believes that there is no such thing as group or centralized government. Government as an institution is a cooperative matter, and cannot be lodged in a select group or class. Its organization rests on good opinion, and it represents the composite view of the whole community. Educational standards of Australia and the British possessions differ mainly in emphasis from those of the United States, says Dr. Coffman. The English stress fundamentals and basic theories: the Americans stress experimentation and practise. The two types of institutions might reasonably profit by a coalition of techniques, he says, and develop an even greater versatility in future generations. Deans I awrtnee and f ord. aclinq in absence of the President 35 University Dean Perched nervously on the edge of n swivel-chair. Dean J C. Lawrence once declared in no uncertain terms that the ideal university would be a completely dean-less university. Coming from the chief dean of Onto Jam C. Uw nĀ« thc University, this seemed at first a startling paradox. Yet it was no less sincere than it was unexpected. Dean Lawrence makes a point of saying the unexpectedāpartly because the things one learns to expect are commonplace enough, and partly, too. because his viewpoints are strictly his own. He relies on no one for his opinions: and being a man of keen intellectual powers and ingenious habits of speech, his opinions arc consequently worth much Continuing to comment on his ādean-lessā idea, thc Dean said: āThere are seventeen deans at Minnesota. And most of us are unnecessary, cumbersome, out of date, extravagant. 1 can see no justification for the feeling of importance that rests with those pompous personages: the Deans. There are altogether too many people throwing out their chests, looking complacently down their own shirt-fronts. and saying: Look at me! What a great fellow I am1' No. I can't say that I sympathize with that sort of thing. And there is altogether too much of it here. At this point he was asked if it were not true that deans were a necessary adjunct to the administration and service of so large a university. Dean Lawrence smiled ingratiatingly. āCertainly not. he said. āHas it occurred to you that, once a man gets himself a job. he can create a lot of work for himself if necessary, in order to increase his importance and hold the job? Noāthe purpose of educators is to educate, to conduct research, and to justify the existence of the university to the people of the state.ā Obviously. Dean Lawrence is very much an individual. And above all things he is not a pedagogue He is primarily an educatorāone of the finest and a first-rate business man. The Dean came to the University in 1928. after seventeen years in business. He was graduated from Ohio State University in 1910. and taught Knglish at Westminster College for a short time. He has done big things in the rubber industry as his recent book. āThe World's Struggle With Rubber.ā will testifyāand has been president of at least two companies. Edward E. Nicholson. Dean of Student Affairs, is a great admirer of General John J Pershing, lie likes to tell about his undergraduate days at the University of Nebraska when the now distinguished general was commandant of the R. O. T. C units there. This friendly influence no doubt had much to do with the Dean's firm belief in military drill, riculum. Dean lid ward F. Nicholton its advantages as part of a college cur- Student Affairs Paul alien ut d a t rtat limber .nithe. u-ith Ulhtsh hi- Could fell a union of limber with The most enjoyable thing about his work, says the Dean, is when people come in to talk over their problems with him He has much advisory work in connection with undergraduate activities, and in helping students to solve their difficulties. Disciplinary matters are the most disagreeable and difficult to handle: there is often a good share of worry involved, while administering penalties is no easy matter. The Dean thinks too much emphasis is placed upon this phase of his work by the student body: it really comprises only a small share of the duties of the Student Affairs office, but is often amplified in the public mind. The Dean is called upon as consultant in a wide variety of problems, ranging from advice about classes and courses to that about private dilemmas. And the most humorous problems, he says, often turn out to be the most serious. I he Dean came to Minnesota from the University of Nebraska in September, 1895. as an instructor of chemistry. He taught until 1917. when the position he had held since 1916 as head of the Students' Work Committee demanded his entire attention. He had been interested in student work since about 1900. when the committee was first conceived, and believed that there was considerable need for improvements in the field of vocational guidance and placement. Minnesota as an institution is outstanding. says the Dean It does far more for its students than any other school that I know of. Liberalism in education is one of Minnesota's best features, he thinks, and is a distinct advantage to any school, provided it is not carried to extremes. In the field of student activities, says the Dean. Minnesota is one of the most progressive of colleges, in that the actual control is in the hands of the students themselves, the University administration acting chiefly in an advisory capacity. 37 Dean of Men There is one desk in the Administration building that always lias a handshake behind it. It belongs to Otis McCreery. Assistant Dean of Student Affairs. Dam Oils c. M turn Dean McCreery is a connoisseur of personalities. In his duties as counsellor and confidant to undergraduate men he makes nearly forty contacts a day. and he is vitally interested in every one of these. Me has the traditional Scotch Irish knack of āgetting next' to people, and understanding their difficulties. His job is his hobby: he likes working with people, making friendships. helping the other fellow. He likes to compare his job to thumbing the pages of a magazine. There's something different on every page: and each is the life story of an individual. The most difficult and disappointing thing about this work, ' said the Dean, is when certain people don't live up to your expectations. You feel as though your efforts have been useless. But happily, that doesn't occur often. Hunting, canoeing and fishing are D.āan McCreery's hobbies. He takes a keen interest in outdoor sports, and likes nothing better than to go off to the north woods for a week or so with a group of congenial friends. Now and then he takes time out from the duties of his office to play a little handball in the Stadium courts. He can be seen on the practice field, almost any fall afternoon, coaching the freshman football squad. Besides his interest in athletics. Dean McCreery has done much boys' club work. His interests have always been fraternal. During his undergraduate days at Minnesota he was active in Y. M. C. A. work, and still retains a dose contact with their activities. Many students know him as the big brother of the Interfraternity Council: he helps to straighten out innumerable difficulties and to keep the ball of good will rolling with the least possible friction. This is the sort of work that keeps him happy: serving as a mediator, and in so doing, making other people happy. Education, he thinks, is at its best when students are on their own: āThis condition makes for good habits and for success. The less paternalism there is in any given system of education, the better it will work. His theory of disci plinc is not a revenge against infraction of rules, but to find out what is best for a fellow, and give it to him. 38 Dean of Women The hiitthuppi River wa formed when Ho be aCeidentally overturned a water-tank, and the water ran down the valley Some years ago. a woman introduced herself to President Coffman at a banquet, and told him that some day she intended to be Dean of Women in his University. And the prophecy came true. Anne Dudley Blitz came to Min nesota as Dean of Women in 1923. Dtan Artnt DuJUy MlU after a career of rapid ascendency in Columbia. William Smith, and Kansas. She brought with her an enviable record of past achievements, a sincere desire to serve her Alma Mater, and a mania for collecting antique furniture and glass. What little spare time she had was diverted in pursuit of this hobby, and in making and collecting old jewelry, until, as she said, my house was so full there was no room in it for me. So I stopped. She now has a third avocation; a car. It is. she says, by far the most time-consuming.ā Many people think of this as a disciplinary office. continued the Dean. I have never considered it as such. Its function is in service, counselling and personnel work, and in an advisory capacity with campus publications. Dean Blitz has quite a list of activities to her credit. While at the University of Kansas, she was instrumental in the erection there of the first dormitory for women. She drew the plans herself, bought the furniture, and saw to most of the detail with unfailing patience. She was. for three years, secretary of the National Association of Deans of Women, and served four years on committees of the American Association of University Women. She has taught school in many capacities and in different grades; and it was her early advisory work while teaching in high school that helped her to decide the career she has chosen. With this resolution in mind, she went to Columbia to study for her doctor's degree. She was among the first to complete the course for Deans of Women, which had just been instituted at this university. The Dean is heartily in favor of co-education, praising the wholesome normal relationships that are obtained on the campus. She thinks that Minnesota is working along very sane lines, and that the new trend to put more responsibility on the student is commendable. I have been connected with a good many colleges. she stated, but I have yet to see the job I would trade for mine. I like it tremendously. Nowhere, she thinks, is there a higher standard, a better student body, and a finer administrative policy than at Minnesota. 39 Dean Royal R. Shumway Student Work Committee The editor of the Gopher of 1903 drummed on his desk and pensively furrowed a pair of very bushy eyebrows. No. it's not always a disgrace to flunk. he said. There is such a thing as a student being totally unfitted for a particular course of study. Royal R. Shumway now holds the position of Assistant Dean of the Arts College. To him. every year, come literally thousands of students, most of them with grievances more or less serious, in the hope of getting them straightened out. And it is seldom indeed that they are disappointed. Dean Shumway's job as adviser and confidant to S.L.A. students often entails a great amount of tact and diplomacyābut it is extremely interesting work, says the Dean. Not the least enjoyable of his many duties comes in the frequent amusing incidents that occur in the line of duty. One in particular he likes to tell about: the tale of a pre-medic who was having trouble with bis studies. He came to sec the Dean, who asked him why he had chosen medicine for a career. The lad replied that his mother, years ago, had had a dream in which she saw a doctor's grip, on which the boy's name was inscribed. So he took up medicine. Strange as it may seem, says the Dean, such incidents are typical of the reasons some students give for coming to college. That is why. too. he contends, that failure in a course is not always a disgraceāit often happens that the student is just wasting his time in one line of study, when he could be doing wonders in some other line. It is in connection with this last problem that the Dean's office renders its greatest serviceāthat of vocational guidance and adjustment. The Dean says that he gets the most satisfaction out of seeing a student straighten out his or her difficulties. I am intensely interested. he said, in helping the student make the best choice of objective he can make. We hope eventually to have something much more valuable to offer them in this line than the limited facilities we now have. The Dean favors specialized education, since it enables the student to go farthest in what he can do best. Mr. Shumway graduated from Minnesota in 1903, and subsequently taught mathematics here until 1909, when he took his M.A. degree at Chicago U. A natural inclination for committee work led directly into the position he now holds. He is a member of several mathematical societies, and has never lost interest in that field. A visitor to Dean Shumway's home in the evening, very likely would find him in the basement, at his cabinet-maker's bench. Working with wood and tools is his only hobby, and he has turned out some admirable work in his spare hours at the workbench. 40 Alumni Association The University's most enthusiastic contact man says of his position: There's no job like it in the world. Perhaps that is why E. B. Pierce, whose official titles arc Field Secretary and Alumni Secretary of the University, has made such a success of his job. Since his student days at Minnesota, everything he has tackled has reflected admirably the remarkable into his work. E. li. Pierce. Secretary energy and personality force that he throws Mr. Pierce has been with the University, as he says, since it was a pup.ā In 1905 he became Registrar of (he University, just one year after his graduation. During succeeding years he increased his activities and interests, especially in alumni work. He was one of the first to recognize the importance of establishing statewide interest in the University through the medium of alumni contacts. His present position grew from that recognition: and he was able to realize his plans, until now Minnesota has local alumni associations throughout the entire United States. It was chiefly under his direction that alumni subscription funds built our Stadium and the Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium. The Association has helped to increase faculty salaries and secure expansion of the campus, for Mr. Pierce believes that the job and service of the alumni is to help interpret the University for the people of the state. A big job. but a delightful one. he believes. Tennis, handball, squash rackets, hunting and fishing are his chief hobbies. He played, as an undergraduate, in the famous all-nation championship basketball team of 1903-04. under Docā Cooke. He earned four letters: two in basketball and two in track. He carries a watch that was awarded to him as a trophy for winning the Hennepin County tennis singles in 1923. He was. at one time. University handball champion. And he still takes considerable pleasure in all these sports. As a result of his keen interest in. and service to. athletics at Minnesota. Mr Pierce holds the chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Athletics. For eight years he has been chairman of the Committee on University Functions. He is a member of the Union Board of Governors. Mr. Pierce is fond of leaning back comfortably in his swivel-chair to review his years at the University. When I started school, the emphasis in education was just changing from the classical to the scientific. Next, it developed from the strictly scientific to the social and economic sciences. And now the tendency is toward stressing technical specialization 41 Dr. WILLIAM WA I TS FOLWELL. first president of the University of Minnesota, was a man of rare vision and prophetic instinct. He predicted the high school and its intimate relation to the University, agricultural instruction as a university enterprise. the junior college, the growth and expansion of the University, and lived to see his prophecies fulfilled remarkable foresight in the leader of an institution whose total enrollment numbered eighteen students of college grade in its first years. The period of expansion came in the administration of Cyrus Northrop, whose incumbency saw the birth of practically all the schools and colleges of the institution, while under presidents Vincent and Burton, a comprehensive building program was begun. When one contemplates the constructive progress of the past twelve years, two points of achievement seem to stand out in bold relief: I. The securing of freedom of the University from political interferences: the recognition of the University as a co-ordinate branch of state government. 2 The establishment of the University home-site for faculty residences. Progress under President Coffman in many ways transcends that of any of the previous leaders. The University happens to be the second largest state institution in America. It also ranks as one of the great educational centers of the country. That result has been achieved through the vision and abilities of its leaders. Minnesota today may well be proud of the quality of its institution of higher learning. āE. II. Pi tret. 42 Even as a child Paul had a prodigious appetite. Unfortunately the nurse entrusted with feeding him was poorly educated, and could count only to thirty-tu;o. Once she allowed Paul to eat seventy-four buckets of oatmeal porridge. Is a result Paul was sick, the nurse was fired, and Paul's worried mother invented the card index system now in general use. to regulate hts diet. STUIIEST liOVEItSHEST ā¢43 All-University Council Babe tnttked nn entire tertion i i land to the river at one drat 1 the treei uttrt cut, and the tec It on hatiled Ixtth, Jtnxm. .Uetth. Writi. Uotten Wry Pukttt. DruJvik Uo . C.er-itU IMirn, Siibolton. I.itt4 MEMBERS Weston Grimes. President John T. Bailey Gordon Bodicn Gordon Bowen Arthur Brudvik Bruce Canfield Ralph Golsclh Quinten Jensen Carl John Lind Cecil March Maurice Mm Richard Morean Romayne Nicholson lien nett Nyline Edward Pickett Lloyd Stanley Walter Swenson Marshall Wells 44 24i B ihr would not work unleu snow was on the ground, to the logging roodĀ were whtrtwaihed in nummer. to dtttivt him. Board of Publications Fowler Catti , Slower J. try NUMie n. Foffflg. [nekton, lle.tuehi.vi. Smith FACULTY MEMBERS Professor Ralph M Casey Dean Edward E. Nicholson Asst. Prof. Thomas M. Steward MEMBERS Cyrus O. Erickson. President Eleanor Broughton Irene Fogerty William Fowler Jack C. Fry Russell C Smith Jack Tews 45 Big J cx. i hr took. had a dinner horn o Ida and he Mru it 1.0 hard that pine Urn fell, end union,ā were itartid. Womenās Self Government Association Uiltef. UvloMtt. Often. I)t t.ftm1. iVou'o. Nitholton. Rtvwn MiWilhanu. (.or.tnn, C i |uĀ« Vakontn. Wo'lt. Huihmtl Crvittr. tkiHiki. Spnnfut, AltttJ. .UĀ«.VĀ uirf rĀ« , t ui'Jbitt. Ka itt MEMBERS Jane A Held, President Delphine Brooks Dorothy M. Brown Louise Brown Margaret Bushnell Joyce Crysler Lucile De Leeuw Wanda Fundberg Mary Gardner Dorothy Green Helen Paul Grigware Maxine Kaiser Margaret MacNaughton Virginia Miller Betty Mulvehill Sylvia Pakonen Mary Spooner Lenorc Wolfe EX OFFICIO Mildred McWilliams- YAV.C.A. Dorothea NylināW.A.A. I 46 Senior Commission S nJttwn. Mooit l.a mn, SuJM Koptlki, Itunhti, Kuhon'ihi. Mo tan, .Vrfuxi MEMBERS Richard Morean. Pres.. Academic John Kukowskc. Pres.. Law John Kopitke. Law Leonard Moore. Agriculture Burton Larson. Business Hugh Meindl. Chemistry Mervin Jordahl, Dentistry Bevan Bunker. Medicine Lully Sanders. Mines Robert Geehan. Mines Merl Seney. Pharmacy Earl Nelson. Education Harold Sanderson. Engin. ft Arch. 47 CĀ«ffion. HiXftft. AJami tturrJut. P ttnnn Srriih. Shtilm'i. Knixi CVmu. Katihtr MEMBERS Ralph Chase, President. Business Edward Adams. Academic Bernice Brown. Agriculture Eugene Bundul. Chemistry Howard Smith. Dentistry Dorothy King. Education l orn Rogers. Engineering Gilbert Carlson. Law McClelland Shellman. Medicine Harluf Peterson, Mines Klyde Kaliher. Pharmacy 48 Sophomore Commission oyjn intvofrrf ih - tw In tough country tf tht hilltop-, ixrre . y thor in th VHIU foiiiWt lnti olatJ ā Sr+htir ftfnuUVNimm MEMBERS Gordon Brown. Pres.. Academic Leonard Stahler. Agriculture Robert Conary. Chemistry Robert Monick. Dentistry Gordon Williams. Hng. ft Architcc. William Blethen. Law Donald Ingvolstad. Mines 49 Patti scooped out tire hole lor Lake Superior when hr nted-ed a retiree water tupplo lor i'urtv hn loduinn roadt. Technical Commission Mown (tuition. Iltt i. Iloutto. Ilitl PoJitn ytatth. t.rlanJ. Savnion. AnJuioo UonUMH FACULTY MEMBERS Professor E. W. Johnson Dean O M. Leland Professor R. E. Montanna MEMBERS Martin G. Swanson. President Clifford O. Anderson Gordon F. Bodien Francis R. Calton Kenneth B. Haugen Mark N. Hayes William C. Hill Cecil C. March 50 Agricultural Student Council I'aul't oxenun iharptntd their axti by rolling tlonn down hilli, and holding the rdqrx againit them a they went b j burbenhtehtr W'hteltf. Iron. Campbell llremet Hart Koprlke, flrou'n. Swenwt. I tlhir. WartfeatJ fiih MEMBERS Walter D. Swenson. President Keith Barrons Erhardt Bremer Bernice Brown Ruth C. Campbell Doris M Pish Laura H. Frost John Kopitke Harvey B. Kuchenbccker Thomas Rainc Jean Tellicr Fred F. Wangaard Russell E. Wheeler 51 Whtn Paul Bangui) todr on Babe Ā« bach. h wilt tibltilc-J to uu a Iclruupt lit vr the luttil lcit of the Bio Blur Oil. Inter-Class Council Diririrh, Aim,n. Hooch, C. Cry.hr, Ounon CWrv, Writ. Millar. Maroo.it IK,thro Prim .1. Cty.lrr MuU-rhill. OttJotr MEMBERS Ruth Dietrich Joyce Crysler. President Alice Duncan Helen A1 mars Mary Gardner Cjloria Boock Antonia Maroosis Margaret Bushnell Jane Millar Mary Jane Confer Betty Mulvehill 1 lelen Conley Josephine Pease Constance Crysler Virginia Peters Betty Darling Miriam West 52 I'aMmr. Rmn. fU.mhaU. Pitktll Font . Ptution. Hiffint, llj'pitn lltll n ti-u.fi'iA. Punt. Stiuliittm MEMBERS E. B Pierce. President. Alumni I. . S. Gillam. Alumni J. C. Sanderson, [-'acuity Ralph Andreas. Academic Milo Peterson. Agriculture Morris Grossman, Business Charles Halpern. Law Peter Pankratz. Medicine Harry Heltzer. Mines 5 } General Evening Studentsā Council Oeumonaltu Babe tan atvau and roamed the great Northwest. Hit big trorht formed the ten thousand lahet oi Sfinneiota. Stiff to. SjoJi Imtrton. Arkenowi, I'eltrion, Smith Boehm . Waltrn. Sullneo. Slitter, Sthtu drill in. tatophttl, fwiwifc, Dahl, Meant KihDttom MEMBERS C. J. Ackerman E. J. Anderson V. A. Anderson Anita Bochme Eleanor Campbell Hazel Dahl C. W. Emerson Katherine Fink Clyde Forinash Howard N. Griffin Pearl T. Miller Thomas E. Moore Gunnar Peterson Francis Sands Jennie Schey Sherman Skogen Clifford Smith J. J. Sullivan Frankie Walcen 54 Paul of Inn uud a great limlwr say I hr. with which he could fell a ucnon of timber with one mighty swing of the own. DtmnttU C' - rirh Harm, tunJtrtf. I'tlrtt Gulhtif MEMBERS Wanda F;undberg. Chairman Doris Bcmmels Margery Bercns Evadene Burris Margaret Guthrie Ruth McMahon Virginia Peters Elizabeth Goodrich 55 A.Ā«o P. Chtiurmrn. Koootfrnki II. GhutUMtn, Jjntur iofl. Bfonn. Iritkutn MEMBERS l.ouisc Bronn. President Alice Briggs Helen Christensen Patricia Christensen Marguerite Erickson Audrey Knox Betty Rogosheski Dorothy Samuelson 56 ā 'ā¢11. Rrnntit. BttnJtbuiv Hotfon. Paknntn. Kinf REPRESENT ATI VHS Sylvia Pakonen. President. Education Marjorie Bennett. Home Economics Maxine Burmeister. Chemistry Alice Brandebury. Business Pauline Cunningham. Social Service Katherine Rink. Art Education Lillian Haggart. Architecture Mary Harper. Journalism Margaret Jackson. Medical Technology Evelyn Johnson. Medicine Bernice King. Music Dorothy Paulson. Law Virginia Pettigrew. Physical Education Margaret Tallmadge. Education Evelyn Wall. Pharmacy Vivian Vanstrom. Nursing 57 W.S.G.A. BOOKSTORE Dorothy Brown, Manager. 1931 Alice Furbari, Manager. 1932 Josephine Hughes. Assistant Manager Dorothy Brown. Assistant Genevieve Billings. Assistant Doris Mae Smith. Assistant Mary Louise Oren. Assistant Ruby Green. Assistant Dorothy Mahle. Assistant W.S.G.A. TUTOR BUREAU Virginia Miller. Chairman. 1932 Eleanor Shaw. Chairman. 1933 Board of Associated Students Paul liked tt 7001 tmaht. To keep hit pip lilted required Ih entire time 0 J tutemper utprkinq with a KOPP shouel Hoard Membra MEMBERS Burton A. Larson. Chairman Dean R. A. Stevenson Barbara V. Angel Sheldon Beilis Marian F. Brown Edwin B. Chown Dorothy U. Green Chester R. Jones Robert H. Reed Kenneth L. Simpson Medical School Council Babe tnohed an entire icction of land to the tiller at one ilfttp; the tens were rut, and the :cc ion hauled bach. MEMBERS Carl John Lind. President. All University Council Bevan W. Bunker. Senior Class President Bruce H. Canfield. All-University Council Cyrus C. Erickson. Board of Publications Peter J. Pankratz. Union Board of Governors Herbert Schmidt. Medical 6 Oāclock Club McClelland Shellman. Junior Class President When Paul Bunyan and his husky loggers went to log off the Dakotas, they had difficulty in sharpening their axes, for they usually did this by holding the edge against a rock as it rolled down a hill, and there were no rocks and no hills in Dakota. To meet this emergency Paul invented the grindstone. This was much appreciated by the axemen, for it enabled them to grind an axe in a week, but the grindstone was not beloved by the Little Chore Boy. whose job it was to turn it. The original grindstone was so big that, working at full speed, every time it turned around once it was payday. 19 SJLilV -IIIX X HillLLVilrl.LI'l :IJS:IIIĀ S Dean J H. Johnston Science, Literature and the Arts Dean J. M Thomas 1 I: AN J. B. JOHNSTON. head of iIk college of Science. Literature, and the An , no longer plays golf. After twenty-five years, he has given it up because, he says, it is no longer a recreationāit is merely another study. The Dean takes a similar attitude toward other diversions popularly called recreations. For genuine relaxation from the daily round of problems and study, he goes on long jaunts into the country, and spends his vacations in mountain-climbing and canoeing. Whenever he has the opportunity, he leaves the city and crowds; metropolitan surroundings ate distasteful to him as a steady diet. In sunny spring and summer afternoons in towns, visitors are liable to find him in the back yard, pruning flowers or weeding his vegetable garden. Dean Johnston's recent travels abroad coveted the Central Americas and the northern Mediterranean countries. A small motion picture camera was a constant part of his equipment and he returned with many reels of films showing the domestic life of the natives. The study of foreign customs and social conditions has become a hobby with him. and in this connection lie has made a comprehensive survey of the general progress and sociology of present-day civilization. He believes that the present world-quandary and economic upheaval can most readily be avoided in the future by thorough and systematic education on the part of colleges and universities, teaching future sagacity in the light of historical precedent. Living, today. be says, is too complex and serious a matter to be passed off in the customary lighthearted, slipshod fashion. ⢠⢠⢠⢠Joseph M. Thomas. Dean of the Upper Division of the Arts College, is the Universityās unofficial golf champion. For many years he has held the unbroken record of a )2 for the old nine-hole course. He has played the course many times with this score, but has never been able to realize his pet ambition āto make a hole in one. Besides golf. Dean Thomas enjoys bridge and billiards, much to the consternation of his opponents, and has a flare for cooking. In this latter hobby he is a chef of no little skill and ingenuity: he has tried cooking es-erything from turtle soup to nut cake, and can baste a turkey or dress a goose as well as anyone. He particularly delights in preparing pics and desserts He insists that his tcsults have never killed anyone yet. but that he still is undiscouraged. The Dean further declares that he is as poor a hunter as Ik is good at cooking. Every year he makes a pilgrimage to the big woods with the hope of bringing back something besides store beef. but. as he expresses it. I can't remember ever having hit anythingāthat is. eatable. I don't believe I could hit a crow if its left foot was tied to a stumpānot to mention the proverbial barn This might wisely be taken with a small snifT of salt. Dean Thomas has been a member of the Minnesota faculty since 1909. and was instrumental in preparing the legislation resulting in the division of the Arts college into the Upper and Lower Divisions, formerly known as the Junior and Senior colleges, under the direction of Dean Johnston. ⦠⢠⦠⢠Many changes in methods of education and administration have taken place in the college of S. L. A. Deans Johnston and Thomas believe in ttying out new methods whenever the old system warrants a change or can plausibly be bettered The most radical development along this line is the adoption, this year, of a new ruling abolishing the cut rule and making attendance at classes a matter of petsonal student initiative rather than a compulsory administrative measure. Dean Thomas estimates that the average cost of education at the University to be about three dollars per credit hour per day. He suggests that in order to create the proper attitude on the part of the students, each person who cuts a class without a thoroughly valid excuse should be made to pay his three dollars. This would palpably diminish the already over-populous absent list as well as materially increase the value of an education in the eyes of the students, he believes. 62 Hjrold A. Adams Minrw jpolit 5. A. Aojfnii U. Schuyler Amumon Monitovi. WiKonnn R A. Au l(mi( Eleanor H. Andersen Minneapolis B, A- Miiiic Zeta Tan Alpha. German Club. V W ( A Big Sittre Carl P. Anderson Virginia B. A. Joumaliim Virginia Junior Collrgr Marion Andrews St Paul B. A. Atehitreture Maealettei: Social Commit! r, Y W.C.A.; Arrhilrrinral Sonny: Twin Sum. Swmtmier Jane Arey Eicrlnor B. S. Library Srirnrr Kappa Kappa Gamma. Folwrll Clnb. Arnold Aslakson Drtxrl Hill. Pennsylvania B. A. Joumaliim Phi Kappa Sigma: Sigma Delia hi; Silver Spur; Grey Friar; Bran Mum (uulieou Banquet. Chairman '12: llomceoaung. Feeihman WreV: Gopher. Feaiuie Editoe ' l' . Daily. Spoilt Night Editor '29. Night Editor JO, Copy I Jitor Ml. Editor 12 Doris Feme Axilrod Minneapoln B. S. Sociology Edith H. Bennion Sr. Paul B. S. Social Service Y W.C A : ll.g Sitter II Olga Berggren Minneapoln B. A. Library Eolwrll Club. John J. Boehrer. Jr. Minneapoln B. A. Psychology Phi Kappa Sigma; Silver Spur. Sigma Xi. Board eat Stodenl Publication! Lila Bonhus Minneapoln B. A. Academic Kappa Alpha Theta Donald Bowers Minnrapolii B. A. Joumaliim Leon M. Bovd. Jr. Aloandna B, A. Political Scirntc Alpha Tau Omega; Della Sigma Kho. Pin Delia Gamma; Sigma Eta Gamma: Gophtr. Editor '12; Gopher. Organization! Editor H; All U. Debate. Vanity. I rcihman-Sophoenoee Debate. Ereiliman-Sophoenoee Oiatoeical. Maujueit: Garcicb C lub. SLi-U-Mah, Managing Editot 'll. 63 All tin I'uiUmui of Iāattl Itun uan'i iimp weft on ukuh link, putted the Whole out It I Iran one lojjina ute to the nett Ruth Brassie St. Pawl 8. A. Aeadtmie I win Mild. Sli U Mlll Salet impugn ā52. Itnmeenming At-muni ā 1 Wright Brooks Minneipoln 8. A. Politieal Seicner l)tlli Kippi I ptilow: Phi Beta Kippi Dfbid; Mii.|u n Quentin N. Burdick Williiton Nollh Dakota B A. Law Signti Nw. Foothill Evident A. Burns Mmeieipolit 8. A. Hmoiy Delia Drill Drill: Moim lloinl, Y W.C A.. Pirthmin Commit-non. PimloM. Ptetident. YWCA Cibinct: W S O A , Vice-pretident. Senior Advaoer I ouoeil. Enlitifttent Chiumjn; lt n Situ . Albert N. Carlblom Gwinnei Nouli Dikou 8 A. I Phi Sigma Pbi: C.oneeii Hind. Milititr Band 0. 'VI. J2. Frink Caspets. Jr. Si. Pml B. A. Fine Am Im Kippi Ipulon; Spinnh Club, l ine Am Club: Ciopber Aimlinl : SĀ mini me Margate! V. Chase V-aimmgion IV. S. Soeiology Silin.i Delta (ijntnii. Coimopoll-ā an Club: IāM CM Delta. lĀ iĀ Sitter. Stndenu K.ligioui toon, (it. Virginia Louise Chelgren Sr. Paul B A. Liluaif Alplia Gamma Della: Butineii Womrn't Club: Folwell Club; .Ski-U-Mib: Univeetity Singen William S. Churchill Union. South Dakota B. A. 1 ā Union College: Gamma F.ta Gam-mi: Univenitv Singen Virginia H. Clare St. Paul B. S. Soeiology Sigma Kappa: Sienu Della Gant-mi. Kappi Phi. Big Sitteti Y W.C A. Dorothy M. Clark Si. I.ouit Park B. A. Joueeialiim AI pin Omuron Pi; Big Sitter: Daily. Mitqaeit. William O. Clarke llibbing 8 A. Aeadrmie Julius A. Collier. II Shihope e B. A. Aeidemie Phi Drill Gamma Inler-Oollr-gilte Debue Helen Conley Chitliolm H. S. Jouinalum Alpbi Omieron Pi; Coeonto. Iānyx; Kappa Phi; W.A.A.; Y W.C.A.. I ute Cabinet; Home- onung VI; Irethraan Week )0, VI; Junior UepuieMinve W.S.G A. Board: Motbrr'l Day 'VI; lloute Council Judiciary Board: Big Snter: I win Siller; Cmpl.er VO. Dally '29. āVU; Cap and Gown. Sceteiaiy-Treiiuter. 64 Vincent J. Conrad Winona B. A. Engliih United Sum Military Acadrmy Wimm State Tochdi Phalana. Honorary Minbti: Scabbard and Blade. Associate Mimber Joyce Ccyeler Minneapolis B.S. Sociology Pi Bela Phi; Sigma Drill Cuo mi, Trailed Club; Tam O Shinto. President: Inter-Class Council. Peeaident 'J2: B.W.: W.S.C.A Bond )2; WA A Board. Unorganized Spoilt Mead 'Jl; Soria! Chairman '!2; Big Sister: Vanity Basketball 'JO Vanity Track '29; Vartily Vo! leybsll 'JO; Numeral Winner ā¢29: Iām Winner Ā 0; M Winner Jl Pauline Cunningham Estelline. South Dakota 8. S. Social Seine Phi Mu; Sigma Delta Gam mi WS.GA. Intec Predcisionil Board. Big Since Myra Daniel Shilbtne. Mniouti B. S. Social Sett ire CuWre-Stockton College; Cist Omega. Sigma Della Gamma Winfield Deahofe St. Paul B. A Journal.int Lucile E. DeLeeuw Glencoe B. S. Library Scirnre Folwell Club: WSC.A,. Board, House Council Chairman; Big Sitfrr: Twin Sitter. Students Religious Council; YAV.C A Raymond Dowidar Minneapoln B. A. Liberal Aeta Earl Drolet Minneapolis B. A. Joomaliim St I bonus: Daily. Dwight Wilson Duncan SiouĀ« FjIIi. South Dakota B. A. Ilnglith Sioui l-allt College; Tau Kappa I piilcm; Pi Kappa Della. Daily Spoilt Slid. Cross Country Harold Elfmann Montevideo B. A. Journalism Alpha Tau Omega. Sigma Delta Chi: Sigma Eta Gamma: Hnmi-coming Committee, Aimtant Chairman ā JI: Skt-U-Slah. Make-Up Editor 'Jl. li. Gopher. Production Manager J2 Eleanor W. Evcnton Minnrapolit B. A. English Milwaukee Downee College. Gamma Phi Bela: Simor Advi-ioĀ«y Boaed J2: Pan Hellenic Council āJ2. Iāaa Hellenic Ball Committee Jl: All-U Dance Committee 12. Peethm.iis Week ommntre 'J2. Ftcd Fadcll Gary. Indiana B. A. Political Science Sigma Della Chi; Scabbaid and Blade; Neuman Club: Ituaner t Club. Daily. Spoilt Editor 'JO. 12 James W. Fcvlcr. II Duluih 8 A. Political Science Univeenty oi Caliloenia; Iāhi Delia Theta; Y.M.C A Cab.net Jl. 'J2 Lois Finger Minneapoln D. A. Political Science eta Tau Alpha Mortar hosed. Pan Hellenic Council, Piitidcni Jl. YAV.C.A.. Small Cabinet ā¢Jl. 65 Dorothy D. Firmed Windom B. S. Swill SĀ«r iĀ« Teaming Alpha Gamma Dtlii: Sigma Del-ij Gamma: Min m Literary Society: Rig Sum: Gopher. Junior Slafl 'JO. Interhou.c ouncil 'JO Ernetr E. Forstrom Minneapoli. B. A. Otology Sigma Gimnij Ep.iton; Otology Jouroil ( lub Annette Friedlander Minneapoli. B. A. Jouinalnm MnKinh Sixu-iv Duly Bu.inei. Suit. Evelyn Furber Minneapoli. B. S. Library Btlll Cimmi; Kolwell Club: Big Surer: Cmv.miy Singer., 28. it: Y WC A Harry G- Gafveri Duluth B. A. Ee.gl.th Miii)u lt Univrmty; Han ball; llon.icon.ing Committee: Swcdi.h I i.eeair Society Edna II. German Miftnoftolit R. A. Academic Rose B. Goldicb Mmneipoli. B. S. Library I'ulerell lub: Mrnotib. Jeanet L. Goldstein Daw ton B. S. Library Training Sign.i Delta Tan: PolWell Club: Big Sine. Jl. 2. Olive E. Griebenow Minneapoli. B. A. Millie Sigma Alpha lota: Y W.CA.: Vniver.ity Singcre. Virginia Griffith Minneapoli. B. A. Romance Language) Kappa Kappa Gamma: Spam.h Club; W.S.G.A ; Aquatic League: Y.W C A.: Riding Club Helen M. Grouse Minneapoli. B. A. Zoology Leon H. Hagen Minneapoli. B. A. Joutnali.m Sigma Clli: Gopher; Daily: Mat-quill: University S.ngec. Jeanne E. Hague Minneapoli. B. A. Ecoewmio Della Delta Della. Louise B. Hall Minneapoli. B. A. Academic 66 Jonik Kathryn Halloran Mmnr ipoht B. A. Psychology Delta Delta Delta; TjĀ«i O' Shinier. I'jnlldllnii. Social Chairman: $(ā !ā ( ..mminec on Student All mt: Military hill Line; Big Sitter: Twin Sitter. Jarvis M. Harper Zumluoia B. A. Social Scientci Coiaofmlltan Club ' 10; DipIO' malic Club: Intrenattoiul Fomin. Co-Chairman 'il: Studrntt For. unt. Chairman. ' 2; Countryman, Captain Freshman Salrt Team. Ailvrrtitinc Atiittant. Sc. Paul Campm Student Council '29; R.O.T.C.. Captain. I I I).. I I I A John H. Harvey Minneapolit l , A. Journalism I'lii Kappa Sirma: Sigma Delta (hi: Bran Maine Triad: Freshman ||op. I'uliticiry Chairman: Sophomore Frolic. Publicity Chairman: Junior Ball. Publicity Chairman -)0. āll. Gridiron Banquet. Committee Chairman 'il. 12; frnliman Week 'i2: Homecoming. 'il. Gopher. Copy Cditor 'i2; Daily. Reporter. ā29. City Atiittant ')0. City Editor. Night fcdilor 'il. )2: Mam urn Mary Heenan Minneapolit B. S. Library Training Aili Heikkila Evelrth B. S. Library MethoJi l-velerh Junior College Strand Hillehoe Warren B. A. Journalnm College of Puget Sound: Sigma Delta Chi, Homecoming il: Pledge Night Review 'J2. Gridiron Bamiuct 12, John W. Hocksira Peoetec B. S. Chemiitcy Duluth Junior College; I'lii Tan Theca Edith Holmheig St. Paul B. A. Mane Doris G. Jan ig Minneapolit B. A. Engliih Delta Phi Lambda J. Harold Johansen Duluth H. A. Phytieal Science Delta Tlicta Phi Mice O. Johnson Evelrth B. A. Libraei Mcihodi loU.ll Club Menfred L. Johnson Minneapohi B. S. Chemuiry William F. Hoefi Roe heller B. A. Economics Phi Della Thera; Perilling Rifles 'll. I.'.; Lint Lieutenant ā 2; Dally. Credit Manager II. '12: Kill, learn 10, Jl; Mao agee J2. Douglas R. Johnston Minneapolit II. A. Economics Phi Kappa Pti; M Club. Tennis 67 Paul'i axfmc j tharptntd thtir axt% by tolling ilowi c mcrt htIU. and hrddma the ā¢'dtfet aaaintt Ihfrn at thru twot by. Judith Jones Minneapolis B. A. Soeiologt Delta Delta Delta. Maxine Kaiser Si. Paul B. A. Speech Delia Zela; Zoa Alplu Pii: National Collegiate Playeri; Mot-nr Boat.!: B. W.; V S O A BojiJ. Social Chairman, Dram jik Soviet chjufMjn ā¢)!: Unirecaity Board oJ Social Am itiea: Y.W.C.A., Large Cabmti 'll. 'JJ; Student Fatuity Com mulct. Dili i l)Ā y Committee 12: Student loan IbhJ Committee W; SVi-U-Mih Amu jnt Sato 'll. '32: Debate }|j Mau|urrt: InwiHouic Batketball ' JO: Theater Woekibop Road ibow 'JĀ«. āJO: Dean Jolinieone'i Honor Count Committee; Kap pa Hhi Winner Intrrtoroeiiy De bur )l Big Siller. Andrea Kiefer Mmneapolii B. A. Political Science eta Tau Alpha: Monar tkvaeil; Phi Boa Kappi. Mineeia Liter ii V Society. Diplonaaiic Club; Y W.C.A.. Small Cabinet 'JO. ā Jl: Gopher 3 I. 'J2. Berniee Margate! King Minnrepolii B. A. Mime Delta eta; Sigma Alpha Iota. YWCA. Iāonrr Committee h airman Mum Club. W.S.G.A . Goman Club: Sluilent I aeuliy iwumittee. Big Suto Lucie Klammer Chaika B. A. Psychology ā¢'ball in I ileraey Society; Big Sntrr. Chesttne B. Knight Way ata B. A. English Phi Bela Kappa Minora I iter at Society; Univeriity Symphony Raymond J. Kopp St. Pa.l B. A. Academic John S. La Due Minot. Norlh Dakota B. S. Chemiltry Sigm i t In. Cmveriity Singen Adolph S. Larson. Jr. Sandiione B. A. Academic Sigma Phi r.pnlon Donald M. Larson Alexandria B. A. Lair Alpha 7 an Omega; Alpha Delia Sigma: Ski-U-Meb. Advonting Manager'JO.') I; Debate. Peeih man. Sophomote: Mittjueri; Cni-reetily Singen. Huiinen Manager Jl; Feethman Track: Ciopher. Editorial Boaed 'J2. Thoinat R. Lawler Roe hcito B. A. Iliitoty Pai Upiilon. leian Wedge; Phoenix. Junior Ball Geneeal Aoangr-menii (.ommiitee ' J I Esther Lenneville Dickmion. Nonh Dakota B. A. Jouenaliim Notth Dakota State Teacher tollege. Phi Omrga Pi; Big Sittee Toba Helen Levin Si. Paul B S. Mr.lull Social Soviet Evelyn Lewis Cambridge B. S. Soeial Soviet Sigmi Della Tau; Sigma Della Cummi. Y WC A. 68 Raymond A. Lewij Minitrapolti B. A, Academic Leonore Liebcrman Thief River Fall. B. $. Library Training Si gma D lu Tju: Folwell Club: Y.W.C.A.. Large Cabinet: Soii.il Seeviec Committee; Bin Sitter: Irethman Week Committee. Dit-teiet Chairmen '20. Mildred McWilliams Minneapolit B. A. Acadrinic Alpha Gamma Delia: Mottar IlMtd. I railrri Club: W.S.G A. Board 1: YAV.C A.. P.e.idenl ā32: Homecoming Committee '31: Irethman Comcuttion. Ptetident; Irethman Week Com-milter '30; Big Siiter Captain: Gopher Editorial Atiiitaat: B V. Ralph S. Magelmn Minne apolit B. A. Mmie Phi Mu Alpha: German Club; Jinlliartl Stholanhin 'JO, '31. 2 Genevieve Lonny, St. Paul B. A. Academe A. Elizabeth Mann Mineiripolit B. A. Sociology Phi Chi Delta: Big Sitter, Daily 30 YWCA. Robert Lynn Watcea B. A. Eronomtet I beta Chi Donald MacDonald Mmneapolit B. S. Economic! Carleton: Cht PĀ i. Antonia Maroosis Minneapolit B. A. Economic! Y.W.C A.. Commit.ion 20. '30; Ereihman Diteutnoa l.eader '32: Big Siiter: Tam OShanter. Ireature '31; Cap and Gown, Viee-Prctidrnt 32. Kathcryn Mercer Roc hence B. S. Library Seirecc Rc-ebeiccr Junior College. Marjorie F. McDoncll Minneapolit B. S. Library Mttliodi Zera Tau Alpha; Folwell Club: Y.W.C A. Sada R. Miller Winona B. A. Sociology Sigma Delta Tau; Sigma Della Gamma. Aubrey McOachern Bernice Millunchick St. Paul St. Paul B. A. Mathtenatici 11. S. Sociology 69 Dorothy V. Moore Minanpolii B. A. f'tyrhology Alphi Ciimni Drill Richard F. Morcan Minneapolis B A. Speech IāM Drill Thru: Silver Spur; Grey Friar; Scabbard mil Blade; Itunnm Club: Cider Officer Club: lloeurcosning '29. 'JO; I irthmin Week JO; Studrnt'a I oin fund. Executive Commil-lr ; Miluire Bill Committee '10. ā 1; Gopher. Editorial An muni ā JI. Sophomore Atiitlimi Garrick Club: Sophomore Commitnon. President; Senioi Commitnon. President: All-Sophomore Peetident: All- Senioe Iāreiidenl. Alt-Umvernty Council: Senile Committee on Student Pablicitioni; Intrtfiitcr-nity Council. William P. Morse Minneipolit B. A. Eeonomici Phi Drill Then: llomrcoming. Aitiilanl Quitman: Sophomotr Frolic: Gopher JO. 'Jl. Sylvia Elaine Mosby Sr. Piui B. S. Sociology Mary Estelle Mosher Minneipolit B, A. Rominee Languagci Newman Club. Bond Member: Big Sitter Mary P. Mosher Minneipolit B. S. Ltbeity Drill Gimmi: lolwell Club: Big Sitter: Y.W.C.A. George Munson Minneipolit B. A. Spinith Duke Univriuty: N'nioml Urn-vertity ol Mexico: Alpha Tiu Omega. Marion Agnes Murphy St. Piul B. A. Hittoey Umvrrtity ol Cjlilornii: Kippi K ippi Gimmi Fred Neff Ely B. S. Mithrmittti Ely Junior College. Constance Nelson Vttgmii B. A. Sociology St Olit; Sigmi Drill Gimmi Romayne Nicholson Duluth B. A. Aeidtmte Gimmi Pin Ben. All-Univeuity Council: W.S.G.A. Bond Harriett Nickerson Elk Ricci B. A. Aeidemic Orlclon College; Phi Omcgi Pi. Chet Oehler Minneipolit B, A. Jouimlitm I ambda ( lit Alpha; Alphi Dclti Sigmi; Grey Fine; Ben Jon too Club: Homecoming. 'Jl. 'J2: Feethmin Week Jl, 'J2: Skill Mih, Advetttnng Solieuoe '29. Advcrtiiing Mimger 'JO. Butt-nett Miniger 'Jl. '12: Mid-Wett College Conner Attoeiilion. Pro-ident 'J2. Ruth Ohman Eveletb B. S. Library Intituetioa 70 Ellen A. Oren Minneapolis B. A. Fine Am CtiUton College Alpha Phi; Thalian Litteaty Sourtj; National Collegiate Playert: Mm and Bonn; Maiqueet. Hoard o! Governor!: Sigma Eli Gimmi; Gopher. Editorial Board 'J2; Daily. Society Editoc 11. Skill.Mali. Annum An Editor JZ: Garnik Club. Mary T. Palmer Anatonda. Montana B. A. Botany University of Montana: Kappa Delta. Phi Sigma: Student ' I inaraa Club Ingrid Johanna Prdrntn Minarapoln B. S. Library Folwell Club; B.g Sitter: Uni-veeiity Stngera Harry E. Pederson Fcaree B. A. Englnh Chi Phi: Y.M.C.A.. Cabinet; Minnrtota Quarterly. Editor ā 2; University Singert āJl. Rosemary Pehoushek Minneapolit B. S. Soeaal Serf are Sigma Delta Gamma. Y W (. A.. Large Cabinet: Newman Club: Big Sitter. Persia Pooler Gteene. Iowa B A. Aeademir Martin C. Powers Keene. New Hampihue B. A. Englith Delia Upnlon: Sigma Delta Cbi; Iron Wedge. Brass Maim; Stodcnti' Loan Fund, Executive Committee; Moek Political Convention Committee 12; Daily, Lditoeial Ctiaiienan '12. S. Weston Printell Minneapolit B. A. Englith Laila T. Punkari Hibhing B. A. Bat teleology llibbing Junior College. Ruth D. Richardson Bemidji B. A. Aiehiteeiuce CaeletonCollege; Phi Beta Kappa E. Patricia Ritz Richmond. Virginia B. A. Political Science Wcbitce College; Bela Gamma Phi; Sigma Eta Gamma: Geetk Club; Thalian Literary Society; W A A. Hoard Big Sitter. Twin Sitter; Gopher. Editor-m-ehiet ā J2. Seeretaty 'JO; Minnrtota Daily. Women't Spoilt Editor. Donald Lindsey Robertson Fctgut Fallt B. A. Political Science Alpha I au Omega: Sigma Delta Chi; Phi Delta Gamma: Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Eta Gamma: Gxy Feiat. Silver Spue: Ben Jon von Club: Daily. City Attttiam: Ski-U-Mah. Ed.toi 10. Jl. 12: Mate)nett; Garrick Club: Inter Icaietnity Conntil, Theodore J. Roemer Maditon Lake B. A. Academia Alice Rosenficld St. Paul B. A. Mutie Phi Mu Epulon 71 Curtis George Rundell Minneapolis B. A. Economies ⢠In Psi: āMā Club. Ilounccom- inn Committee ā 0, 'Jl; llĀ«k SO. Thomas F. Ryan Duluib n. A. IriononMi Delta Upiilnn; Phoenix; lee Wedge; S.L.A. Repreientetive; Union Bond of Goveenoei; Home t oonng ommilSee '29; Junior Ball. (miiiiiI Arrangements Com miller 'SI. Nina Marie Si. John Minneapolis IS. A. Mimic Pin Beta Kappa: Mu lĀ h. Lpuloei. Roy E. Sample Spring Villiy IS A. English I iĀ«ini ( College Kenneth F. Schmidt Springfrld IS. A. Journilum Sigma Delta Cbe: Fortnightly ' lub; Daily; Y.M.C A . Cub lieiiy Manager; Track. Marie A. Schmitt Minneapolis B. A. Academic Virginia Margaret Schneider Minneapoln IS. A. History University of California Alice Schwartz Minneapolis B. A. Journalism Daily. Business Stall Evelyn Schweitzer Minneapolis B. S. Library Training hi Omega; lotwell Club; Big Sister; Freshman Week Com miller; Homecoming Committee S2 Margaret J. Schweizer Minneapolis B. A. Political Science Phi Beta Kappa; French Club 'Jl. Katharine Seymour Charles City, lonea B. A. Journalism I indenwood College; Chi Omega: theta Sigma Phi; Coeonto: Turin Sittea; Daily Staff 'Jl. 'J2. Robert L. Shannon St. Paul B. A. Journalism Minnesota Commont Club: Sigma Delta Chi: Foelnightly Cabinet: Baieball 'JO, '31. ā32. Rosalyn Shilkrout St. Paul B. S. Sociology Della Omega Iota; Menorab: Student International Service; Mrnoeah Board Annie Emily Shipley Minneapolis B. A. Sociology Delia Della Delta; Y.W.C.A., Small Cabinet 'J2. I arge Cabinet ' J I; Big Sister Captain 72 Dorothy W. Smith Ch.iholm B. A. Anatomy Nibbing Jomor College Delta Delta Della; Bit Siller; Mai-quen 'J I. '32. Grace M. Smith Winona B. A. rnRl.it. Lucille C. Smith Ely B. A. Bartniology Ely Jwni-or College. lone Sobotka Pine Ciir B. A. Univmiiy College Phi Omega Pi: Matquen. Henry N. Somsen. Jr. New Ulm B. A. Law Pi. Uptrlon; Pin Della Phi; It.wi Wedge: Phoenix: White Do Ron. I irihmin Week Diitrict Chairman '29; Maiqnrri: Garrick. Ptriident 'J2: National Collegiate I'layert: All-Jonioe-Preti-dent: S.I..A. Prceident; Intet-lotrrniiy Council 'll. '3 2; Cheer leader '50. 'J|. Irving Spiegel Minnrapolii B. A. Political Science El Circuto Eipanol. Pieiident: Diplomatic Club. Prctidenl. Marvin Peter Spinier Waieea B. A. Jouinalnm Theta Chi; Junior Ball Commit-If Chairman Ormal I. Sprungman Mmnrapclit II. A. Journalnm Daily '3 2 Jane E. Stackhouse Biimatck. North Dakota B. A. I nfliil. llollin. College; Delta Delta Della, Patricia Stephenson Minneapolii B. A. Flinch Gamma Phi Bela. W.A.A. Board ā¢29: Bit Since. Y.WC.A ; In ler-hovir Golf. Fmhnin Week Committee - l John V. Stewart Golden Valley B. A. iouinalnm Y MX, A., Secretary )0. II Y.M.C.A.. Publicity '29. Hi Daily ā29. '30 Elsie L. Swanson Brained! B. S. 5oe.il Servile Gvttavui Aitolphot: Sigma Delia Gamma; YAV.C.A Dotothy A. Thompson Minneapolii B. S. Library MerhoJi Phi Omega Pi; Fotwell Club '32; YAV.C.A.. F.nanc. Com mure '30: Big Sutri. Twin Siitee. Helen A. Todd Ellrndale B. S. Library Alpha Drill Pi; Kappa Phi; Fol-well Club; Hour Council: Uni-vemty Sintrii '31 73 Vivian Totten Si. Paul B. A. Hittoiy Iāhl Bela Kappa Margaret Sliding Waldron Minmipclii B. A. Speerh Kappa Rho: Miiuni Literary Sourly; Onhniii Tbalian Liu raiy Socmy; Maiqurri: Univef. my Singers. Helen Isabelle Walker Si. PĀ ul B. A. RomMii Languages Pmbylcnan Club; Spanish Club: Cndi Fiancaii; Y.W.C A om-mission ā19, 30; llig Quaintly Buiinrn Staff: MĀ Ā« quire University Sinpii. W. Alien Wallis Minnupolii B. A. Psychology Chi Phi; Daily. F-d.ioiial āJl. Bernard H. Wainbolt Akrlty B. A. Journalism Sigma Drill ( In: Gndiron Bis-qun, Ijxcculive Bond 52. Chair min ol Fiiumi Committee '52, Doris Ward Winoni B. A. English Nonhwcttcin: Alphi Oimonn Pi: Counio: Thru Sigma Phi. Helen Webster Si. Piul B. A. Psychology ill Tau Alpha; Y.W.C A.; Kimin Club; Geneva Club: Big Sulrr Dorothy Jane West Si. Paul B. A. Journalism Conaio; Minerva Club: Y.W.t A : W.S.G.A.: Twin Sister: Big SUlei: Daily Siafl: Univeniiy Singrn. Charles W. Winston Minnrapolii B. A. Anthropology Univeniiy ot Virginia; Dilia Kappa Lptilpa; Masquers. Marion Eudora Wood Minnrapolii B, A. MuĀ i Sigma Alpha loir. Music C.lub. Rolf Ylvisaker Minnupolii B. A. Music Lulhrr College; Phi Mu Alpha: Iphigenia : The Vagabond King . Florence Zippcrman Minnrapolii B. $. Social and Civic Work Edward P. Clarity Minnrapolii B. A. Univeniiy Colligc Dorothy Edwards Si. Paul B. A. Univeniiy College Micalrtlci College. Kappa Rho; r, Della v w . . Twin Sulrr; Muquiu; Univei lily Singrit. 74 Leonard E. Evans Minnopolu B. A. Uftiviriiiy Coll f Doris L. Hidde Oihkoih. WiifOAiia B. S. Umvmuv Collige OiliVoth Stale Teaehert' College; IImiw Roll; Nwdl Ctob; Y.W.C A . Latge f jbmii Connie E. Johnston Mimwipolii B. A. Univeimy College I ko L. Kaiser Mmnrapolii B. A. Univenity College Robert A. Phillips Minneapoln B. A. Uaivriaiiy College Corine Twetley St. Peal B. A. Univiimr College Pbi Bera Kappa: I.jbMi Alpha Pi.. Cyrus Erickson Si. Peal M. D. Medicine Phi Chi. Grey Friar; Board o( Control o( Student Pabltcalioni. Prettdrnr Margit H. Grytbals St. Paul M. D. Miilnnt Alfred M. McCausland ClarUrld B. S.-B. M. Mrdtetnr Phi Taa Theta. Phi Rbo Sigma: Student Keligioat Council; Wri-ley Playrn Helen McRay Minneapoln B. A. Academic 75 ESr.lSEEItlSt; V ARCHITECT III IE 77 Dean Ora M I. eland Engineering and Architecture Prof. S. Chat wood Horton It is not everyone who can have a mountain named alter him. Yet that is the unique distinction of Ora M. I.eland. Minnesota's Dean of Engineering. Architecture, and Chemistry. Mt. I.eland, a prominent peak near the coast of Alaska, was named as a special honorary concession in reward for the Dean's services as head of an international expedition of engineers appointed to settle a boundary dispute between the United States and Canada. This was the first time in history that a geographical situation had been named after a living manāand Dean I.eland admits that he felt rather queer about it until further christenings were made in honor of some of bis colleagues. After that, he said, he was more cheerful, and felt that he had a better license to live. More work as arbiter of international boundaries passed into Dean 1.eland's hand when he was appointed by Chief Justice Taft as one of a commission of two impartial judges to settle the boundary disputes between Panama and Costa Rica. Dean I eland believes the word dean to be derived from the German ādiener . meaning servant, because the position entails a tremendous amount of work. Yet he enjoys it. and likes the idea of being an integral part of the progress of the school and the individual students. Minnesota's S Chat wood Burton, professor of architecture, etcher and conversationalist par excellence, tells many a weird tale of travels in sunny Spain, of excursions to forgotten castles and remote civilizations, of Rifl battles in Morocco and snakes who bile their charmers on the nose:āall fur niched glamorous episodes in Ins itinerary. Concerning the last mentioned experience. Mr. Burton goes into detail Sketching, he says, is a rather passive occupationābut it can have its active moments, On this particular occasion he was sketching a snake-charmer in action, when the snake suddenly refused to be charmed any longer and bit his master on the nose In genuine frenzy, the magician bit the snake viciously in the back and skinned it alive. I never completed that sketch.ā grinned the professor, ā but I did another one that I later wished I hadn't finished The subject of that one. he said, was a fiery-tempered Spaniard who evidently couldn't appreciate art for artās sakeāfor as soon as he had seen the sketch of himself, he expressed his thanks to the artist by trying to knife him. Mr. Burton refused to argue, and narrowly escaped with his life. Professor Burton enjoy, a world wide reputation as an artist and sculptor In his recent travels in Spain, he followed no definite itinerary such as most tourists do. He traveled as the spirit moved him. going into all the out of the-way places he could discover. He rode horseback in country which was inaccessible by any other mode of travel. Perhaps the climax of all his stories of isolation is that of a tiny village lar into the mountains of the interior, where the natives still believed the Moorish Regime to be in control of Spain. āThey didn't know the war was over, said Dr. Burton. ⢠⢠⢠⢠Minnesota's College of l.ngineering and Architecture leads all other state universities in the United Slates in scholastic rating. It has always been conservative in its policies, and has furnished a pattern for more than one smaller school to follow Dean I.eland, as its head, does not believe that professional schools, especially the engineering divisions, could successfully make any radical changes in administrative policy without ruining the splendid foundations and scholastic standards of the school. Furthermore. he believes that modern trends in education, such as the moves to abolish the absence rule and put class attendance on an optional basis, can very easily undermine the morale of a school, and would ultimately tend to weaken the cardinal principles of training for the engineering professions thoroughness and industry. 78 Ray Alistjit Sc. Piul It. Mecb. E. Mechanical Engineering AnwiKJn SiXKiy of Mr hjni al Clifford O. Anderson Sc. Pol It. Mxh. I . Mechanical Then Tia; l i Tiu Sigma; Plumb Hob. A S M E . Pcmlcnl T2: Technical C onimituon See-rciiry-Tr.atuicr '12. David B. Anderson RĀ«l lllind. Illinou B. Aceh. E Archilectucr Au| uini Cnllc| . Tin Ren Pi: Tiu Slrmi Delia. Arcltitcccoral Society: Archilcccurit Y.jc Book. Tcriiuc.r '12. George R. Andmon Annin B. E. E. Elccccicil Th.li Xi Nelson E. Anderson Ru.mII BEE. Elccccicjl Carlcioa Collett: Kippi Eu Kippi. Tiu B.U Pi: Eu Kippi Nil; Grey line: Plumb Bob; Pntiti.fM Diy 10. II Richard A. Anderson HoMmeloid nc.e. CiĀ ii Triangle; A S.C. E. Wilford A. Andmon Minneipolii B. Mxh. E. Meelumul A S M E ; Hockey. John M. Appert Sc. Cloud B Mreh. E. Mrchinicil Tiu It.ii Pjj | i li. Sigma: AS M I Alhrrr E. Baak Johnion B. Ano. C. Acconioiieil M S.A.E Oscar Backlund Decc River B. MĀ«h. E. Mcehinieil Gniiivni Adolphoi Cotleie: Tel-in lc; PS Ml. John T. Bailey Wiupi.i. Wiieomin B. E.E. Ā« B. A E. Elccccicil Alpha Delia Phi. Th.ii Tin. Item Wedgt: Phoenn: Pnye; General Accintemeou Chairman Jnntor Bill: human Eleeceieil Show; SkiUMih. Anne; All Univenity Council Kenneth E. Benson MmrĀ 0|tolii B. B. l Waller C. Bloomquist Chnholm B. E.E. Eleccci.il Hihbmr Junior Collig.; Kippi Eu Kippi; A I F E. Gordon E. Bodien Minneipolii B. i c.v.l .li Pei: Tiu B.li Pi: Chi Ep ā¢ilon. Grey Frill: Plumb Mob. A S.C E . Engineer' Diy. S.cce-tacy 'll; Horn.conune 'll; Technmt Commotion: All-Uni-veimy Council, Treiiuecr. 79 liiij Joe. (he to oh. hetJ a Jinnee horn fO hiq. unJ he bleu.' it to hard I hut pine tenet fell, and c in I one t Mere Hurled Ruwell C. Bouck Kobbintdalr B f. C. El tuiĀ l W. Edwatd Bradbury Duluili tt Atth. P. Afthiiccioral Delta ( It : Scarab; AĀ«hilĀ«lĀ iil Sootty. Forton A. Chriuoffer Minneapoltt II MĀ«h. I!. Mechanical lau Beta Pi: lion Wedge; l i Till Si ma; Scabbard anil Iliad ; Mortar anJ Hall; A.S.M.E.; ( ad i Colonel 'll. 'it: Johnton Stholattbtp Sophuy M. Dahl Minnrapolit B. C. E. Civil Mortar and Ball; A n il an So- iilv nl ( nil Engineeri. Tom Breaky D Ā«ilt l.aV . Nonli Dakota B. Acio. E. Aeionautict Notlh Dakota Un.ecmty; Trl an(l NS.A.E. Harvey Daley Minneapoltt B. Arch. E. Architecture Alphi KSn (hi; Atchitettuial Society. EĀ«|intttāt Uookttoee: Green Tir Frederick H. Brockman Mmntapolit B. C.E Civil Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa. Wilfred D. Darli Ctotley B.C. E. nR Civil Triangle; Chi Epttlon; Engineer- Uookctote. Board ol l)itĀ lo t. Chairman 'it: Militat y Ball. General Arrangcmcnti Commit-t Ā it: Enginctrt' Day 'Jl; Crack Drill Squad; Amttican So ciĀ ir o Civil Ea|intm: Mortar and Ball. Cledo Bruneld Virginia B. E. E. Electrical Tan Beta Pi; Era Kappa No. Iārctidrni 'll. 12: Pi Tau Pi Six . Scabbard and Blade; Newman ( lob; Cadet Olticeia' Club; American Inuitutc ol Electrical Engineeri; Newman Club. Board ol Director!. 'Jl. ')2: Prethman Week. Dntnct Chanman 51; I'rethman Swimming; Ptethmati Track Jamei E. Dowd Minneapolit B, Mcch. E. Mechanical Thrta Tau; American Society ol Mechanical Engineer . Karl H. Bruscke Good Thunder B. E. E. Elrrtneal A I E E. Rudolph Ekar Chuholm B. C. E. Engineering Carl W. Christenson Ottrandrr B. E. E. electrical Kappa Eta Kappa Merle Engesct Wrlth B. C. E. Engineering 80 Russell F. Erickson M in ai ipolil B. Meeh, E. Meehinieil Phi Tiu Sigmi. Sobbitd inJ l'li lr; Momr md Bill; Amen ein Seuieiy ot Meehinitil Beigi-neen. Ollieeeāi Club: Cidet I Ā« C u i Artillery. Adolph E. Erikson Minneipotn B. Aieb. E. Aeebiteeiuee Erik G. Erikson Anvil B.C. B. Civil A SCf Nell Fardahl Mini t. Aeeh. E. Aiebneeioie Eino Field Kinaey B. Ar h. B. AubiiKini llibbing .Unior College. John C. Frederick Wlmi Beie B. C. E. Civil A.S.C E Sieve G.ullcr Mlnnelpoln B. E. E. Eleetiicil Kippi Bn Kippj. lion Wedge; Silv«« Spue; Alpbi lju Sigmi. PhiUnv: DikotiClub. President. A I D P.: Pi Bin Tin: Oftceei Club: Eagineett Day. Cbnnuin 29. 'JO. 'J I: MomĀ«nminx Committee '29. āJO: Eeeibmin Week '29. -}0; Military Ball. Chair-min '31: All-Sophomore SmnVe, Chiiimin ā 0; I eehno I og. Bui-mm Manager ') ). '31. '32: Alibi. I'rrilimin Blllillblll, Blirbilt, TlKk. Joe Goldberg Evrlrth B. E. E. Eleeinril A.I B E Earl A. Hanson Minarapolii B. E. E. Eleeieieal Pbalaa . Code OCeerāe Club William W. Harris Minarapolil B. Ano. E. Aeioeauucil A.S.A.E : Menonh Soeiels Clifford Hauge Piiidur. Montana 8. E. E. Eleeirieol Phalanx: OScee't Club. Vier-pietnieai: Signal Coepi. Li. Cob oael. Kenneth B. Haugen Saint Jiaui B. Aeeo. E. Anoniuiieil Si. OIi(: Sigmt No: Plumb Bob. M.S.A.B.. Peeiideal II. leehoieil Coemnmioo Franklin Hawkinson Si. Piul 8. Mceh. E. Meehaaical A SMB. Roger J. Hayes St. Pial 8. Meiti. E. Meehimeil PSi Delta Thin: AS.ME 81 Laurence E. Hendrickson Cokato 5, E. E. Electrical 1:14 Kappa Ny: Pi Till Pi Sigma: Itillui; Olticci'i Club; A I.E E. Helmet A. Holmstrom Si. PjoI lĀ . C. E. Cirll Mottar and Ball: A S.C.E, Roger B. Hooper Si Paul B. C. E. Civil John J. Huey Duluth B. E. E. Electrical Kappa Sigma: Scabbard and Blade Pi Tau Pi Sifima; A.I f. E : Enginerei Day j|. Donald W. Hum DiĀ«On. Illmoil B. AkIi. E. Aeehiiectyrc Architectural Yearbook. Track: Cron-country. Vir N. James San Antonio. Toil B. E. E. Electrical Kappa Eta Kappa: Technical Stall ā ( W.L.B.: Imiiiuie ol Radio tnginceei Clarence E. Johnson $1. Paul B. C. E. Civil Engineering A.S.C.E. Kelyth G. Jones Minnrapoln B. Acco. E. Acionaylical M.S.A.E. Melvin O. Jordahl Albcn Lea B.C. E. Civil I utlicc College; A S C E. Milford A. Jucen Gilbert B. Mech. E. Mechanical A S M E. Leonard Katz Minneapolii B. C. E. Civil Engineer'! Day. Chairman 'Jl: freihman Aihlciict, Manager 'It. Francis X. Kerr Minneapolii B. S. Civil 0 Electrical Lloyd B. Knuisen La Crotie. Wiicoann B. Atch. E. Architecture Robert J. Kutzler Wett Concord B. E. E. Eltcceical K.H.K.: B.K.N.: A I E E ; Elec tncal Show 31. 82 Henry J. Langer Miniwapolit Ā . C. E. Civil A S C.E. Ston J. McDermott Duluth U. C. E. EI 111 1I Ouluili Junior College: Kippi Eli Kipju; AMI. SiiiiIjm and Ti muter. Olaf Lrin. Jr. Roihtir ft.C.E. Civil triangle: AS.C.E.: Tetiln.i-I.og. Ikoid ol DirĀ« ort Ji Neil J. McDonald Minn. jpoJn B. Meeb. F Mcrbanieal I'i TĀ u Sigma: A S Mt : Ftctb-min Football; Hockey 'JO. 'JJ Albert E. Lilja Minnripolit B Mrib. E. MĀ«hanuil ill Bm Pi. Pi Tiu Sigma: A S M f 1 I ullKiin Siudiolt' Anoi ill ion Percy Marple Minnopolit B. MĀ« h. E. Mi(bjni jl Scon E. Linslcy Si. Paul B. E. E. F.lrdii il Kappa tia Kappa; Tau Bill Pi; I la Kappa Nu Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Si abbjid and Bladr: Oftenāt Club; A.I.E.E.: Mililaiy Ball. CKaiiman J2. Technol.og -J0, ā Jl. National Adwtfitmg Manager āJ2. Clifford 0. Mellin Minnripolit B. C. E. Civil Triangle Siabbaid and blidi. Moriar and Bill. Grirn Tm Oftcer'a Club; Military Ball JO. āJl; Engineerā Day 'Jl; Arab ; Vr tiling Manager Jl. Robert M. Lommen Lannboio B. E. E. Elrniiril I la Kappa Nu. Pi Tiu Pi Sigma; A I E I; . Officerā Club; Techno-I og. C0II 1011 Managrr; blcclri-nl Piny. Jumoi R pĀ«ieniative Jl. John A. Mokte Minnripolit B. AĀ«o. E. A OUIUI1 1I M01111 and Ball; M S A E.: tn-gmur't CĀ Ud i Club; Crack Drill Sijuid. Walter D. Lovell Minnripolit B. C. E. Civil Cailrlon College George Mooney Si. Paul B. MĀ«h. E. Mechanical Howard H. Lowe Mianrapolit B. Mrrh. E. Mtthannil Alpha Tau Sigma; 1Ā«lmol.og 'Jā . AttiHiau Ediioi JO. 'Jl; Arabi. Secretary Jl; AS M [.; A S H V I Maurice E. Norton Minnrapolit B. MĀ«h. E. MĀ«hamial Scabbard and BlaJr; Mortar and Ball: Military Ball. Grnrial Ar-langrminit Commillrr: Techno- log 1 83 James L. O'Marr SheeiJan. Wiorom B. C. E. ClvĀ«l A SC.E Lindley Parkinson Momi Ā«llo B MĀ«h. E. I lianglr A S,M l! Kenneth W. Pederson Minneapoln Engineeimg Ellis Peilen Si. Paul II Ano. f , AiiMiuiin Phi Epsilon Pi; Alpha Pb. Chi; Minneiota Society ol Aeconaulical I ngmecring; Menorah Society: Senior Anogmiijl Society. Aribi Frank Joseph Petek. Jr. Mmoiipolii II. Ai l . E. A1 I111 U111 Alpha Delia Phi: Scarab: Aichi-icccural Society: Arrliitectnral Yearbook: Architcel's Jubilee. Program Commiltei '2'l. 'Jl. I rrihmin Miner '2 . ' Jl. Tecll no t cvg. Orcalilion Manager '2 . Alton L. Pierce Duluili B. C. C. Civil Henry P. Piltelkow Minneapolii II. Aeio E. AerooJimol Alpha Eij RI10: MS.Ali: A S.C E : Senior Aeronautical Anon anon. PrcnJenl '(J; Uji. ball J I; Cion Country ' Jl. ' J 2. Harry Priest Duluih IS MĀ«h. E. Mrchanital Hunan Radow Si. Pa.l IS, Meih. E. Mrebanieal Sinma Alpbi sigma A S.M l: Max I. Rislcy Slicrbara IS. E.E. Electric jl Kappa I la Kappa: A I.E.I3 Charles J. Russell Sr, Paul IS C I Civil CI11 Ejnilon. A S C.E, Harold A. Sanderson Anoka 8. E.E ElĀ«meal I'au Biia Pi, I la Kappa Nu: Engineer Ā Day. Chairman āJl: Engineering ami Architecture. Sinioi Precidrnt. Walter Santelman Red Wing B.C. li. Civil Thna Kappa N'u: A.S.C C. C- Lionel Sarff Kctwarin B. E. [ Elrenieal 84 WjIim K. Scheibe Mmnrjpolx BE.E. flĀ«in j| Kjppj EfJ Kjppj A I I I ; Elcuiol Show Jl Milton E. Schmidt Ptihim R. C. E. Civil Tjw lieu Pi: Chi I p.iUie A s c n Frederic C. Shidcl Minaijpolu R. E. E. EIĀ«iiiĀ«jI Kjppj Eli Kjppj; ! ⢠Tju !ā⢠Sigou: Cjd i O Bl t'Ā« Club: Chi ( OpĀ«jio WLR mo. 3) 32. E. Villalon Sobejana Aimgjy. LjIIoioo, Philippion R. A io E. AooniiKnjl Coimopotilan Club: AS A I . PhilippiiMiot jnt. Pmultni Rond ol l)i Ā«ton ot C oironpoli t n Club: Pint lāUĀ«. I ifipinn AiuxiJlioo O1J 0 1 JI Conlot ā¢2K Albert W. Solhrim Dulvih R. C. E. CĀ« l Harold Stanley Mmnr Jpolli R. A io E. A 0 BJU jl Kjppj Si mj. M S A I: : live Year Out- dare C. Stout .Minuopolii R C. E. Civil Lloyd R. Sturgeon Amt-or B. MĀ«h U. M t llo Jpln Mj jI ««. S-ii-wj Chi A S M I Martin G. Swanson Minor Jpoln R. E.B. EI 1 1 JI Kjppj ElJ Kjppj; Plumb Bob A I I. E.: 0 Ā«o Tic EnginĀ« Ā TĀ«hnĀ«jl ConntiKinn: SrajK CoenmitNe 00 Siu l nt AUjiii 12. lumo lljll CoaimiiKc 'll llomĀ«omiox ConmitKe M2 Srnior lāiĀ«ui Coannitue '3? PlĀ«t Nile ExĀ«uiivr Cootmiilx 32 Hot C. Swenson EĀ«(ut FjIIi R. E. E. ElĀ«r i jl Park K Ā«ion Luiber 1l tc All .. tchnolo Randal Thompson Rrj h. North DjSoij B. A h. t A hitĀ«iu i! Gerald F. Timmins Mion jpolĀ« B ( 1 cĀ«.i Alptu Detu Phi A SC I . Oricnljnon I! S.C George B. Townsend M-no jpolii B. AĀ«h. E. AĀ«hiiĀ«iu jl Tju Sixoij I Iij; Tju B.ij Pi: Auhiutmte l:j utrv Prize MO 31. Ml 32 Gerald P. Uttley Minnrjpolll R. E.E. ElĀ«in.jl Kjppj E|j Kjppj: I.ibcul IĀ i UĀ«lon Club: I tipnrrn Day I lĀ«ui jl Show; A II I 85 John M. Waligora Sc. Paul n r. n. ClĀ« ifiĀ«ii I Ā«hao I ā¢ā . Hoard. t nyinĀ«f'Ā Pay. ftĀ« plioa ComniilHC I ooiImII Svcrre Windal Coccuntvooil B MĀ«h. F. Mxlnaiiil Mellon A. Wallio FintiyiM B.F.8. EI IC JI Rodney Wood IV lt I ouiihr Noe ill DjkiHJ ft, MĀ«h. E. MĀ«him al TmayU ASM E.J YĀ«bnol.Ā«y Kennelh W. Wall Si, PjuI ft C, F CI II JI k.ippj Ecj Kippj! A l l: I:.i Swimming T i nn; CioTI Adrian G. Wrucke Mianrtora Lak ft r Civil lljffllin Univocicjr: A S.C.F William W. Walton Mmn apolii ft. E.E. EI CII JI Alpha S.tmj l ln: A I F. I:.. I n CinĀ«r ftookĀ«o . Hoard '11: U(laĀ«l'i l jy. TĀ«jĀ«o Ā« āll. George F. Weigel Minarapolii II I Ccvil Muhiyaa TĀ«h. Tlxu Tjo. Tju ft u PI. I I., tpulcxc. A S E liarl R. Young Oh Jlonnj ft. Ayr. G. Ayiiruliuir A. S Aye Faymrrit. Pinulml 12: A S M I Dean Grayson Ball Miditon. SohiIi Dakoca ft A. A I111 IU1 Alpha IU10 hi: Kjppj Siycnj lolj. I rrbno l.og: AkIiiiĀ«iiujI V jr Hook. Ilsimrtc ManayĀ«. Edward G. Whitman Sc. PjuI ft.C.E. Civil A.SC.I John M. Wilton Mlnnr jpolii ft. C. E. EI 1 1 JI pill I JĀ« Yhrla; Kappa Eu Kap- pj; Sfalnn 86 Earl F. Beddow Union Snudi Djkou ft. A. Ar hii iui llucoa f ollryc Alpha Rho ( hi Minnitocj COPP IJ IV lluycic AtKKuiiun. Board oT ! ā ⢠II. )i Clarice M. Berg Sc. Paul ft. A Ai hltĀ«cuĀ« E) lu j. AI phi Alpha Cjjm-oĀ j: Tju Siyna Oflcj; AĀ«liicĀ«-rural Srxircy Y W.C A , Mem hi fillip CniamittM; Hiy SiĀ CĀ«. - pbĀ«. Ace Sea . Ski-U Mal. TĀ«ha .| y, AnhilĀ«Carjl lUIi- 01 Univrmcy SinyrM: Mila-do ; Vi jĀ d ol 1 Ik Nil | K p 'Em Happy. Eugenia Bjodstrup Mittbtll. South Ditou B. Inf. Artb. Architecture Alpha Alpha Gamma: Areli.teetotal Society Clifford D. Bloom White Bui B. A. Aiihncetuie MikIiiIii College; Alpha Rhea Chi: (- 11 II. 12: Inttr-Peo Ifiiiraiil Council Harlan David Boss Se. Paul B. Inf. Ateb. Interior Ai h An hiteciural Society; Niudtut IWIigiooi Council Harold R. Brynteton Mmnffpolii B. A. Architecture Phi Ddii TImi : Vuib. Robert G. Cerny La Clone. W.itonun B. A. Ai hiiĀ«iui Alpha Rbo Chi: Plumb Bob. Alpha I at Sigma: Techno-Log, An Hilitoi. Marx ChefTe Kfnotha. WniMim B. Inf. Affh. Afchitrctute Alpha Alpha Gamma: Aubiln-lural Switlv, Inlrrpiiitminnj. Bond; Siu.ic nu Faculty Contact Committee. Rudolph Dahl Duluth B. A. Anhucciuit Supuiof State I other College: Sigma Nu: Scarab: Atchiteciutal Society: I echnu l og. Board ol Direeton. Seetetaty: Atehiicctwt-al Year Book. Anociat Editor I. Editor 2. Joseph A. Gates Keoyoo B. A. Aiehiteeiute Catltton College: Delta lav Delta: Seatab I tail llimenu. Arehiteetural Society: Fteihman Football ā28; Cheer Leading ā19, to. 'Jl. Lillian Goldberg St. Paul D Ini Ateh. Atthitceiuir Gilbert B. Green Winona B. A. Architecture Theta Kappa Nu. Tan Sigma Delta: At aba. Atchiteciutal So-glrly; Atchiteciutal Jubilee. Mark N. Hayes Minneapolit B. A- Atehitcetot Scarab; Atchitcctutal Society. Pteiident 'J2; Technical Com-minion Eino A. Jyring Virginia B. A. Aiehiteeiute Virginia Junior College: Scarab; Tau Sigma Della Bernard H. Knobla OihVoih. Witconiin B. A Acellltcctuit Cmvcnity of Wiecontiu, Alpha Rho Chi: Archilccluaal Society; JmĀ« Ball: Si phomote Freilic: Architect Jubilee. Fteihman Week; Atabi. Ttack. fteihman William R. Koester Minnripoln B. A. Architectuae Alpha Rho Chi Architectuial Society Football ā8 Babe .waked an entire action of land to the tivtt at one drag; the teen were car. and the action hauled back. 87 Mjy E. Ohibtck Minaopolii ft Ini. Axil- tnlffiof Axb. I'nyx: Y.W.CA 5 k.Ā I Com- nilin, (.hjifimn; hi SilUC I win SiiKi; Y.VV.C.A . 1 jik I -ibinM. Smxll CjbiaM: Ai bit -toixl S xiĀ«lr. SĀ«uiĀ fy. Earl Pcicrson Minnxiwln ft A. Ai bilĀ«m Ā« Moiur xml Bill: Ar hi(Ā«iarxl So iĀ«ir. C. A. PrinĀ«ll Mmnopolii B. A. Axhiixinu yā.m.c a Prxnk S. Skillm-in ā¢mbioti ft. A. Ai hi(c iui KfKbctm JĀ«ntoĀ College Alpbx Rho CW: AxliiKdoitl Vxiely: AĀ«hiiĀ«iu jl YeĀ Ā«-boofc. Am Eililor. 88 89 CHENISTItY Chemistry Dean Ora M. I.eland Samuel C. Lind li is no wonder that Dean l.cland believes himself to be a diencr (German (or servant''): Not only is he the administrative head of the College of Engineering and Architecture: but also is he Dean of the School of Chemistry. Dean Iceland svas appointed Colonel in command of the Engineering Corps of the entire American Expeditionary forces in l:rance during the World War Me says he has no permanent souvenir to show for his active scivice; but his experiences as a member of personnel are. he says, quite as horrible as anything he could have gone through had he been in the ranks. The Dean comments spiritedly on the inhumanities of war; but. like most soldiers who have seen service, he prefers not to mention specific experiences. After the war. Dean I.eland remained in Europe long enough to help organize a technical school in Germany. The purpose of this school svas to educate German soldiers in various fields of engineering. It is today a flourishing institution, and is one of the many illustrations of Germany's trend toward peace-lime policies and methods since the war. J or ten years, Dean Leland has been tlie colonel in command of the 313th Engineers' Regiment in the 88th Division. Thus, with all his other interests, he is perhaps one of the busiest men in the University. The dean ship of three schools is no easy job in itselfānot to mention his countless other duties as colonel of a regiment, boundary arbiter, and international authority in many fields of engineering. Dr. Samuel C. Lind is director and active head of the School of Chemistry. In commenting on his work. Dr. Lind regrets that the greatest part of it comes in Septemberāalso fishing season in Minnesota. He is a great fisherman, and especially enthusiastic about trout fishing. Almost every September week-end finds him seeking good fishing spots somewhere along the North Shore of Lake Superior, accompanied by a friend and a tackle box But unlike other fishermen. Dr. I.ind is very reticent about telling whoppers . Besides frequent sessions of piscatorial bliss. Dr. I ind plays a good deal of tennis and golf. The former, he says, is especially beneficial for keeping in good condition when most of one s days are spent behind a desk. ⢠⢠⢠⢠I he School of Chemistry is a unique feature of the University of Minnesota. Almost no other university has specialized chemistry to the extent of organizing it into a separate school. At present it is undergoing considerable reorganization, partly due to the fad that two of tlie oldest and most valuable men on the staff. Dr. W. H. Hunter and Dr. E. P. Harding, are retiring at the end of this school year. Dr. Harding is at the head of the department of technological chemistry, and this department is so dependent upon his work and knowledge that his retirement will probably necessitate dropping tin- department from the school's curriculum. Both Dr. Hunter and Dr. Harding have played an important part in the history and tradition of Minnesota, and have been instrumental in many of the advances and researches in the School of Chemistry, Increasing the chemical faculty also is necessary for other reasons. Dining the past five years the enrollment hat doubled, and the consequent expansion has been great and rapid. The larger part of this increase has been in the Upper College more students from elementary colleges have transferred to the Upper College at Minnesota for advanced and specialized training, in addition to the normal increase of enrollment within the University itself. Dr. I.md points out that this growth of enrollment in the Upper College is indicative of the general trend toward specialization in advanced field, a characteristic factor in this age of science. The roof of the Chemistry building is now being used for studio-classes in architecture. This space will be prepared and fitted svith laboratoris s as part of the expansion program, and it will then be possible to absorb an additional thousand students. 90 Gabriel Borken Chuholm 8. Ch. I- tSmiul Engineering llihbmg Junior College: Amen cm Immure of ( hcaicil En gineenng Francis R. C.Ā lron Minneapolii U. Ch. I . Chemical I ngineeeing Alpha Sir nu Phi: Phi Si mi I āIn: Technical Comnumm 'JJ, A I ChT . Piniiltnl J2. ill nil Caroline Chamberlain Minnrapolii B. Cli. Analytical Chimiucy Pi della NV Phi (hi Delia; Prribvlenan Student i Auixu non. Piriulrnl: Womini Inlet-Iāroiriuonat Board: Siudrni't R -Itgioui Council Howard L. CondifT Prrlc Rapidi B. Cb. E Chrmiol Inpniiiin;. GeorgeW. Flanagan Sr. Paul B. Ch. E Chemical Engineering Alpha ( lii Sigma.' Tcehnol ⢠. Chemical Editor: Amine in In-imucr ul Chemical Engineer! Winfield W. hosier Mankato B. Ch. I Chrmiol Engineering Alpha Chi Sigma; Tin Deia Pi Pin I imbila Uprilnea: Alpha āEm Sigma; Mornr and Bill; A I ChT: ; Union Board id (iorir-non '31. '!!; Trcbiw In . himicil Editor JO, Aianeutc Editor Jl Harold E. Graves Morton B. Ch, E. Chemical Engineering llimlinr: Alpha Chi Sigma- Amrritan Inililure ol Chemical Engineering Engineer'! tlookslocc Bond Ambrose L. Hoffman Roeliciter B. Ch, F Chrmiol Engineering Bochritcr Junior College. Maurice B. Hoffman Sr. Paul B. Ch. E. Chemical Engineering AS Chi ACS.: Aeabi. J. Harry Johnson Minneapotir B. Ch. Che mitio SttpHior TocJwn (.'ollfgf Kenneth C. Johnson Minnrapolii B. Ch. E. Chemical Engineering Alpha On Sigma; Tau Bela Pi; Phi Lambda Upnlon. Fortnightly Club Frederick J. Kaim Minnrapolii B. Ch. E. Chemical Engineering Julius R. Katz Minnrapolii B. Ch. E Chrmiol Engineering S.gma Alpha Sigma. Tau Beta Pi Lloyd L. Kempe Si Paul B Ch. E Chrmiol Engineering Alpha Chi Sigma American In uiiule ol Chemical Engineer! I orlnighrlv Club Engineer'! Ilookitorr Board Iht Mmiiuppi Hii formal when Huhr tutt nrfiirntJ a uhtlrr-lc ⢠tt'ff.t ā¢nrullif Ii unit Maurice King Minnupoln It. Ch. E. Chtmiul l nroKiiiiit Sigmi Alpha Slum : Phi Sigma Phi; l.ead llimmu; Amifioa loilllUlt of C htllliul EltlMKtfi: hrdiiMn Wttk 'll; Home- MninK 'U: TĀ«hnol.o|. R point ā !ā Ā . 'JO; Anbi Piodac-ā ion Coramiim 'J2; Biad I ibra-nia '29. 'J2: Univcuiiy Sing-m: Unirtuiiy Symphony ā29. JO. C. Kennech Knox Minnupolii 8. Ch L. Chimital f ngmtiiing Mu Sirrni; Common Club Ponni|(hily Club; Jooioi Itill Cnmmiiltt Chairman: Ttthno- I o . OmibIoI EJilor V |; Anbi Robert Martin McAdam Si. Paul B. Ch. E. Chtmiul Enginnung Phi Kappa Sigma, Arthur M. Mark Cioihf B. Ch. Chummy George S- Michaeljen Mmnopolii B. Ch. E. Chtmiul Englattiin Augtbuig. Einar R. Michalson Chuliolm B. Ch. Chummy Max L. Neevel BalJwin. WiKoniin B. Ch. Chummy 92 Ralph E. Peck Minnrapolit It. Ch, E. Chtmiul Fngintuing I'aa Ā cĀ« Pit Phi I ambili Up i-Ion; Amt nun Intlilnit ol C.htna-ā ul I nginrut Oliver H. Peterson Minnupolii B. Ch. Chummy Edgar L. Piret Si. Paul B. Ch. E. Chtmiul Fnginttiint Alpha Chi Sigma; Tail Bn a Pi; Pin I ambila Uputon Amtiitan Iniiiiuu of I lumiut Enginttn. Paul Salo Cloqoti B. Ch. E. Chtimtal Eng.ntuing Alpha Cbi Sigma; Guy Fiiai: Silver Sput; Plumb Bob; Tali Btia Pi George Taft Minntapolu B. Ch. E. Chtmiul Enginttiing Alpha Tan Sigma; Tntnglt; llomtttimmg Commilltc; Tech-no l.o . Editor; Plumb Bob; Girtn Tit: (Jaity. Marlin J. Tenenbaum Si. Paul B. Ch. E. Chtmiul Enginttung Amtiitan Imiuutt ol lumital I nginuii: Arab Iālodumon Manigtt; Tttlmolng. ACS. William Von Fischer SpiingficlJ B. Ch. Chtmimy 1 ninglt; Amtiitan Intliivlt ol Chtmital Eaiinnn. AC.IHClM TIlPn . FOKESTliY .V HOME ECONOMICS 93 Dean I M ret man Agriculture, Forestry and Home Economics Dean Waller C. Coffetf One nun who burns iIk bridges behind him when lie lakes an impromptu vacation is Edward li. Freeman. Dean of the College of Agriculture, Forestry, anil Home Hconomics. His Iasi nip was to an island in the Gulf Stream oil ihc coasi of Florida. Dean Freeman was practically marooned, since it cost three dollars to reach the mainland. This also worked both ways: no one came to trouble him about affairs of the campus. I he complete manner with which this dean of three colleges tackles his work in addition to research on special problems accounts for the necessity of his recent vacation. For example. Dr. Freeman has worked out a plan to minimize the compulsory drill of R.O.T.C. and utilize in its place technical knowledge that students acquire in their regular work. But societies sprang to the fore and warded off a scheme which they held would be militarizing the Universityā. A radiant sense of humor sustains the Dean's; popularity today. It is said, in tribute to his manner of saying things, that feasters will let their ice cream melt while Dean Hdward li. Freeman makes an after-dinner speech, ⦠⦠⦠Walter Coffey. Dean of Agriculture, believes that he is almost human. But rainy days, he admits jovially, are ill omens for visiting students. His mind is on the University Golf Course, where he some day hopes to break a I 00. When that day comes. says the Dean, there's going to be a lug celebration. Though Dean Coffey fishes occasionally, he admits that he has a better time thinking about it. lie likes the woods and outdoor life, and during the summer vacation he usually is to be found in his cottage on West Battle Fake. Dean Coffey cares for most of the business and technical details of the Department of Agriculture, while Dean Freeman supervises the student affairs and is head of the Student's Work Committee. Opcr ation and maintenance of the farm itself is a big item in Dean Coffey's schedule. He also oversees and helps plan the Agricultural School extension curriculum, and directs the activities of experiment stations throughout the state Dr Coffey's pet ambition at present is to build an elaborate sheep-breeding plant. It is a tremendous task, however, and he maintains that the mere thought of all the textbooks he would have to revise before beginning the good work makes him hesitate. Something of note about the College of Agriculture. Forestry, and Home Hconomics is the honor system, used in all of the examinations Since its introduction seventeen years ago it has gained in favor anil success in operation. The students feel that it is not necessary for them to be watched like so many children livery four years the plan is contested for its retention and put to a student vote. In the last count the system received its heaviest support winning all but four per cent of the votes cast. For the promotion of interest among the students tin- Agricultural Royal livestock show as svell as the extra-curricular work done by the Block and Bridle Club are contributing factors. Neither agriculture nor forestry is restricted to the confines of the campus, but rather is state wide. Experimental plots are seeded in various sections to study and improve the yield of grasses and grains. The foresters, in addition to their field work at Itasca and Cloquet, arc awarded summer employment in the national forests. Many of them work on trail construction in the higher Rockies while others fight blister rust in Idaho A few foresters are enrolled in courses designed to solve the problems of wild life conservation as svell as of timber resource problem. Home Economics students can tell by looking at a carrot just how it ought to be cooked to retain its color. They study also the artistry of furniture, pictures, and domestic ornaments. As to clothes, they knosv not only the prevailing fashions, and the history of style, but also how to add creative touches of their own. 94 Louise B. Boos Minniapoln R' S| Aniioitiull Pi Beta Pin: Ftnhnia Commit-tton; Sophomore Junior Commit tion. D. Ellsworth Btady Lilt Pul. low IV S. Animal lluibin.lry All'llt Gamma Rho; I ivettoek Judging I tim; Bridle Club; (rnplitt 4 II Club, Kenneth V. Chapman Shakopec B. S. Dairy Alpha Gamma Rho; Alpha Ā«ta; Block and Un.lh Club: Junior Hairy Sumer Club. Pretidcnt '14: Sopboenoee Preiidrnt 'll; Sophomore Commrttion. Secre-lary 11: Sophomore I rolie II: Wtetlliog: Dairy Product! Judging Tram J. Earl Cook llrrman B. S. Dairy Mutbanilty Alpha Gamma Rho: Alpha Zeia: Wetlry Foundation. Small Coun-eil 29. āJO: Y.M.C A Cabinet; Gopher College 4-H Club. Block and Bridle ( lob: Junior Dairy Science Club: A|tei ulture Royal Induilnal I nhibit Chaieman 'll; Student Fatuity Dmnet. Co-Chairman 'll; Frethmen Dinner. Co-Chairman '12; Caleb Corr Seho'arthip '29: Dairy Product! Judging Tram 12 A. Orville Dahl Minnrapolit B. S. Mortirultote Plant Induttry Club. Student' I innran Club. Pretident: Punch-inello. Donald H. Ferguson Dettoit Label B. S. Fottmy Y M.C A : Ay. Student Council Donald E. Fish Iowa State: Phi Gamma Delta: Alpha eta: Gtey Friar: Silver Spur: Win and Bow: Senate Committee on Publications Countryman. Butinrtt Manager Angelinc Gallina Kf wjim ft. S. Agruvliur I: JĀ®oĀ«Km Lester O. Gilmoie Freeborn B. S. Agricultural Bioehemutty Alpha Gamma Rho. Alphi Zeta Pill Tau Theta. Block and Uridlr; Gopher 4 II, Punchinello; Wetley Foundation. Viee Parti-drnt 'll. I'rendenl '12: Y M.C A Council 12: Dairy Judging Team. Grenfall Frederick Harms Sr. Paul B. S. Hortieullore Alpha Gamma Rho; Alpha Zrra; Walther League Nelvin E. Haugland Spring Grove B. S. Farm Management and Eeonomira Alpha Gamma Rho: Alpha Zeta: Block and Bridle: Gopher 4 II Club: Agriculture Education Club: Wetley Foundation: Gen eral I iveilock Judging Team Jl Frank O. Janzen Mountain Lake B. S. Bioehemiitiy Michigan State College; Alpha Gamma Rho Clifford C. Klopotz Wayrata B. S. Agtieultute Jack V. McCullock Minneapolit B. $. Economut Phi Kappa Sigma: Alpha eta Wing and Bow; Countryman, Butinrti Manager: Football Team ā JO: Ftethman Batkttball 29. Paul lihed ct good tmoke. To keep hix pipe filled requited the entire time of a tulemper working u'tth a woop ihoftl. 95 Harry McMahon On Jlonm B. S Agtiiultusr lowj Sim College; Farm Home I mutiny, Block Xi IIihIIi Club: Ameriran Sootty Agricultural I ngmecfi, Student Member: C ounttyman. Agricultural Editor 'll. T2: Fngiorering Annual. Ediloi U Philip A. Swenson Chisago City B. S. Dairy Husbandry Alpha Zeta: Block and Btidle. Eugene Nelson Omaha. Nebrarka B. S. Biochemistry Alpha Xeta: Y M C A. Cabinet Stanley P. Swenson Ctannc t ail B. 5- Plant Pathology Sr. Olaf: Alpha Gamma Kbo: Alpha Zeta; Block and Bridle: Plant Indunty Club: Punchinello: Y M C A.. Cabinet 29. 10. Burton Oster Minneapolis B. B. A. Agriculture Alpha Zeta: Y.M.C.A Ernest Palmer Warren B. S. Agriculture Alpha Gamma Kho. Block and Bridle Club; Couniryman: Bate-ball Wrestling. Waller D. Swenson Chisago City B. S. Agntuliote Alpha Gamma Itho: Alplia era: Iron Wedge: Block and Bridle: Y M.C.A.: Smart Comniircc on Student Affairs 'll: Oratory and Debate Smart Committer ')2: Grneral Committee. Student'a Student loan Fund 'J2: A Itoyal. Buiinrn Manager: Agn-eultutr Studrnt't Council, preii-dent ā12: A!!-Unrveriity Council '12: I ivestork Judgiog Team: Daity Judging Tram Donald S. Voss Lincoln. Nrhiaika B. S. Agriculture University of Nebracka; Delta Upsitoo Kummar Sri MohanV.Raj Bombay. India B. S, Agrieulrure University ol Michigan: American Assoeiattoei ol Cotmopoiuan Clubs; Iniernation Relation Project; Foreign and American Student Reception ; International Student Srrvite Roy G. Wagner Minnrapolii B, S. Agneuliute Rudolph M. Stolen Gtanite Falla B, S. Agriculture Alpha Gamma Hho. Alpha eta; Btoek and Bridle; Agriculture Education Club ā2K; Counterman. Tfeature! āJO: Y.M.C.A.. Cabinet '29. Sylvan T. Warrington Auttin B. S. Agtitolnatr Alpha Gamma Kho. Block and Bridle Club; Y.M.C.A., Cabinet TO: Agticultuie Board of Publication!: Counityman 29, TO. Circulation Manager T2; Punch intllo. President Tl. Executive Committer T2; A. D Wilton Award Tl Edwin G. Strand Karlstad B. 5. Agriculture Fdneation Agtiiuliural Education Club. Jack R. Wasson Battle Lake B. S. Economies Alpha Gamma Klio; Block and Bridle. President; āMā Club; Union Boaid ol Governors '29. TO; l-rrrhman Football '29; Wrestling Tl. T2: Livestock Judging Team Tl. 96 Peter Jong Yap Honolulu. Hawaii B. $ Dim Huihimliy Umvmity of Hawaii. Paul F. Ziepclm.net Minniij nlit B. S. Animat llvibjmtn Phi Delia Thru. Silver Spin Football: Wreitling; Turk Dorothea Cahill Si. Paul B. S. Forcing Zen Tau Alpha; Foeeitty Club Y.W.C.A.; Freihman Corporation. Secretary. Junior Corporation. Screeiary. John T. Cann Faribault B. S. Forestry Harold E. Engstrom Roehrn B. S. Fotenry Alpha Gamma Rho: Xi Sigma IV Coin in.i Sigina Delia. Alpha Zeu Foeettiy CUb. Vice-preiident 'J2: Countryman Slat! 11 J. Allen Jackson Iāhitlipi. Wiuontin B. S. Apiiiuliure Fotenry Club Jack C. Kopitke Minneapolu B. S. Foieil Tcihnolog Tau Phi Delia; Pi Phi Chi. Xi Sigma Pi; Alphi Zela. GĀ«rv Friar; Foreitry Club; Inter Pro-letiiiunl Ball '12; Gopher Peavey Board SI Ciopber. Peavey. u ā ulalion Manage! ā 1. Editor '12. Student Council. Agriculture 'll, 'J2: College of Agriculture. Fotenry and Home Feononuei. Senior Pielideni āJ2; Senior Commiinun, Stcrtiary '12; Golf Intramural Roy Dale Sanders Detroit Lain B. S. Fotenry (irlelesti College: Alphi era. Xi Sigma Iāi; Fotenry Club. Foieiliy Club Banquet, chaitman Senior Advnor Jopher Peavey. Harry R. Stritman Minneapolu B. S. Foreitry Dlbiett' C-lub. Ronald J. Woolery St. Pawl B. S. Foeenti Fau Phi Delia. Xi Sigma Pi: Fotenry Club Noan Anderson Mootierllo B. S. Homt Eronomitt Y WC A . A C A B.g Sitter. CmvenilT Sinjin. Eleanor H. Arends Sr. Paul B. S. Homt Economiri Macalciter; Phi Mu: UFA: W.S.GA.: YWCA; Fmhmm Week. Anne Becchetti Hibbing B. S. Ediioiion (libbing lumoe College; New man Club; Home Econonmt Ai lociatioo Marjorie Belle Bennett St. Paul B. S. Home Eronomin Iāll! Cpuloa Ommon; Moilai Boaid: Torch and Dmall. Kap pi Phi; Agncolliirc Boaid ol Publirationt. Secretary: Inin Pioieiuonal Board; Junioi Com minion, Prrtidrnt: Dig Siitn W.S.G.A.; If .It A.; YWCA Cabinri Babe Would not wnrb untni tnow Win on tht ground, to the logging tooth were whiteutathnl in lumniiT. to deceive him 97 'Ā«u eould eaxih peel a log at clean ui a whittle hy holding the hath ut one md. while Hole polled at the other. Anita Bouquet Caledonia H. S. Horn Eeonomiit College of St. ilKtui! 1I.0.A.S Y V C.A : B.g Si UĀ«. Betty W. Broman Minnrapotil B. $. Monte Eeonomiet Chi Omega: Phi Uptilon Omi-eroet: II.I: A.. Chaiienan. Mem-h Ā hi| Committee; Big Sitter; (iopher Sale. Campaign 't , ' J I; Pinafore. Viec-peetident: A |Ā«ati l eague; Faethman ommntioo ā u. Vera M- Button Glatgow, Montana B. S. Education Montana Slate College; Della ..a; Bin Sitter; Hatkelball Mother; Swimming; 'lennit. Alice Carlson Minnrapotil B. S. Home Economic! M E A.; Y W C A.: Bag Sitter. Elvera M. Carlson luoti B. S. Monte Eeoaomict Y W A ; It I A : Big Sitter. Irene Florence Carlson Baltam Lake. Witeoniin B. S. Maine Eeonomiet Y.W.C A ; II E A Elizabeth Cormack Mmneapolit B. S. Home Economic! Y.W.C A ; It I A Lucille Crain Minneapolu B, S. Home Eeonomiet Y.W.C.A ; It E.A. Dorothy Dow St. Paul B. S. Monte Economic! Uaivenity Siogrtt, Clarice Ebert T roman B. S. Monte Eeonomiet ( ailcton; Kappa Kappa l ambda Myrtle Ebctt Teaman B. S. Home Economics Otic ton: Kappa Kappa I ambifa Eleanor B. Eidc Mmneapolit B. S. Dittttiti Sigma Kappa; Phi Uptitoo Omi-etoet: Toith and Dinifl; Y.W.C.A.. Conimiiiion. Cabinet ) . II I; A . Council -Jl. it: Big Silttt. Captain ā 2. Villa May Enblom Minneapolu B. S. Home Economic! Phi Uptilon Omieeon; Omicroo Nu. f'ceiiilenl 'V2; Toeeh and DiitaB. Y W.C..A. Cabinet 12; Home Eeonomiet Attoeialion; Big Sitter Theon E. Halverson St. Jamet IS. S. Home Economic! St Olal; Della Delta Delta; Y.W.C A ; W.S.C.A.; M E A 98 Edith Handy I. OAR Plain B. S. H M r R(0Ā«m.Ā« Margaret L. Hartmann llutehinton It. t, Home Eionomm Elsa Hendrickson Mmmapoln B. S. Mom Eeonomi t Big Sitter. Helen G. Humphrey Derr wood B. S. Dmetiei Kappa Phi: M H.A t W ( A Inga Estelle Johnson Si. Paul B. S. Education W.S.G.A.: Y.W.C.A.: M E A.: Big Sitter. Stella B. Kaul Faiihauli B. S. Mom Econoeniet Delta Zeta. Carol LaRue Ketlcr Si. Paul B, S. Home Eiomibiii Education Gopher ā Ā It I lub; Y V t A : V S.C, A : II.E A Dorothy Men ies Minneapolii It. S. Mom Eronomiit Y W C A , Cabinet; II I- A Charlotte Mollitor fjiniMiJIon B. S. Home Economic! Alpha Chi Omega: Phi Upiilon Omicroo: Torch and Dm alt, M l; A . Pceiident: Y.W.C.A.. Coenmittion: Big Suier. Captain ā¢J1; Y.WC.A.. Sreteiarr: Student Council. Marion A. Muir Winnebago B. S. Mom Economic! Mcriam Mullins Sauk Crnlri It. S. Home Economm Comma Phi fl ta Dorothea A. Nelson Minneapolii B S. rdiieation Irene H. Nelson Lake Mill Ion a B. S. Mom F.eonomiei Phi Upiilon OmiecoA Torch anJ Di.iad: HE A. Y.WC.A. Cabinet. Treainur '.'J. Ponchi- mild. Mildred Osland Minnrapolil It. S. Edmauon YAV.C.A.: Horn Economic' Attoeiatioo. UniMtutr Singrri I'niil liked a good tmokt. To htep hii pipe filled required ihr emite turn- oi a iwamptr u.-ofknut utith a uoup ā¢.hotel 99 Virginia Peters Minneapolis ft. S. Home Eeonomirt Pi Beta Phi. Phi Upiilod Omi cion; Minor Board. Pieinleni; I oil 'i tad Dliof W.S.C.A Board. Secretary {t. Tmiiihi JO: Ui Sister Cap and Gown, Piniitmi Valborg Peterson Madison ft. S. Edoration Alpha l.lii Omni: tin.A : Y.W.C.A ; Big Sum. fiophn Sain Campaign Beulah Plummer Minneapolis ft. S. Home Eeonomics ftig Sister; Twin Sitter; Umvrr-hit Singers; Kappa Phi; Withy Players Eleanor A. Renner Niw Piagnr ft. S. Ilomi Eisnomm ft.gSi.ir, YW.( A ftāSf. A.; II i: A Georgia Rose WlMKI ft. S. Hwwr Efonoiaui Helen C. Rote Si. Paul B. S. Home Hionomm Kappi Delta. Barbara A. Sampson OaV Tiiiac ft. S. Horn Economies Pin Untilon Otnicion. Torch ami Dittafl. YW A , about M Home Economics Association, Tieaiurer IJig Sulci Susan Schmidt Glint or ft, S Home Economic! Kappa Della: IJig Snlee; Punch-mrllo. W S.C.A ; Y W A ; II P A Lucy E. Simpson Minneapolis ft. S. Home Economic! Y.W.C A . II.E A . Sophomore Commission: Jmsioi Commission: Senior Communion: ftig Siller Margaret Snetting Cytut IV. S Education H E A . YWCA: W.S.C.A. Mildred Stenswick Two llaibort ft. S. Home F.eonomiet C oncordia College Mae Stephenson Prtiean Rapidi B.S. Ilont Eeoaomin Y W A.: Ā« It Club; H E A Gladys B. A. Ssvenson Long Cake ft. S. Home Economic II.E A.. YWCA Elizabeth TifTt Glencoe ft. S. Home Economics HocWoid College, Kappa Delta Phi Uptilon Omit run. Big Sister: WSG A YWt A.; IIE,A. 100 France Van Voorbiv Slialtlon. Iowa l . S. Hdwiiion MBA; YWCA. Cabinet: Torch anil Dictafl. Bi Siitea Ruth Vivian Walker 5l. Paul B. S. Home Eaonomia I'oMh and DUlafl: Iālii Uptilnat Omiaioo: Era Siema Upulon; YWCA. Prnidaol Jl. J2; HE.A.: W.S.G.A.: Y.W.C.A.. Cabman Homecoming. lluitoo Sale 'll; Bin Siilai Pundit-nallo. IlitCoiian 'JO. Ficthman. .Seiphomtur. Junior Samoa Coni-Rititaont. M. Elizabeth Wetherbec Si. Paul n. S. Horn a Iionomio Ruth M. Woolery Sc. Paul R. S. Education 101 Dean Everett rater Prof. . S. Iloihour Keeping up with the development in law is the most difficult pan of my work. says Everett Fraser. Dean of the l aw School. There are over one hundred leading law periodicals written in the English language, and they all contain new and varied aspects of legal problems. It is practically a full-time job to keep posted on all of them. It is a matter of common knowledge, however, that the Dean does find time to keep posted. ā and that he does so in an eminently successful way. The Dean's hobby is studying politics and international affairs. He is a strong believer in the League of Nations and the World Court I regard myself as student and teacher rather than an administrator. Ik says. Developing the ideas of a coming generation of lawyers, and shaping their training and their attitudes toward their profession, is one of my most pleasant duties. Dean l easer was born on Prince Edward Island. Canada, in 1879. He was educated at Prince of Wales College. Dalhousie University in Halifax. Nova Scotia, and the Harvard Law School Quite early in his college life, the Dean decided to prepare for specialization in law. Later, he studied law with the idea of entering politics, but changed his mind. He considered going into the field of Economics at Harvard. While he was at college he took considerable part in the debating activities. His teaching experience includes three years in Canada, and seven years at the George Washington University. Washington, D C. Dean I rascr is quite modest in his opinions of education. We still know very little where the values lie in the educational process. he says, and I am becoming more skeptical all the time of any fixed opinions about it. He approves the experimental attitude at the University of Minnesota, however. He likes particularly the idea of developing the student as a whole by stimulating his interest in more than a narrow field. ⦠⢠⢠⦠The legal profession is better than most critics think of it. Law is evolving toward an approximation of justice betsveen men. That indicates, of course, that I am an optimist.ā says H. S. Hoshour, professor of law and faculty representative on the law school council. As far back as his high school days. Professor Hoshour decided he wanted to become a lasvyer. He earned his B.A. at Gettysburg College in 1910. and was graduated with an 1.1 .B. from the University of Minnesota in 19 H His college activities included Phi Delta Theta. Phi Delta Phi. and Delta Sigma Rho. He was also a Phi Beta Kappa Between 1914 and 1927 he practiced law in Duluth, excepting two years of service in the army. Professor Hoshour used to play an occasional game of tennis, but now. he says, my pet sport is to get out in the Northern Minnesota woods, and fish. Law students of today,ā thinks Mr Hoshour. are facing their problem of legal preparation seriously. So far as the University is concerned. I approve heartily the new educational attitudes. ⢠⢠⢠⦠At the present time there are twenty four law schools in the country requiring six years for the completion of their courses. Minnesota is one of them. The University still offers its combined six-year course in law. three years in liberal arts and three in law. for svhich the student receives the degree of Bachelor of Arts on completing his fourth year, and the degree of Bachelor of Lasvs upon his completing the course. The six year course is an innovation at Minnesota. This is composed of two years in liberal arts and four years in law. leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in l aw at the end of the fourth year, and the degree of Bachelor of Laws on completing the course. The extra year of law training afforded by this plan gives an opportunity for a phase of law which has been neglected in undergraduate work before, a study of administration of lass- legislation, comparative law. legal history, and similar subjects. 104 Roy Chester Albin Mmneapolit L. L. B. (iiminj In Gjmmi; Band Robert M. Ash Ciiv. South OiUij B. A. L. L. B. South Dakota Suit College: Aea eu, I'lij Alpha Delia: Minnium Daily. Souih Eait Advrtiiting Manager I't, 10. Minneapoln AdmliliK Mmipi 10, II. Buuneti 'Jl, 'll, Unirmllr Rcpubhean C.lob, Pretidrai Moril J. Blomquist Si. Paul B. A. L. I- B. Phi Alpha Drlta Mmiwioo l.jw Rivior Sinclair G. Cowles Blow n't Valley I I B. B. A. AI pin Tm Omega: Mmneioia Only. National Ailvifiiun . Manager Jl Clifford F. Erickson Rid Win I. I. B. Noel C. Fleming Mmnupoln L. L. B. Sigma Chi: Phi Drlla Phi: Phoe-nix: lion Wedge: Law Review. President, Recent Cur Editor: Lew Sihool Council Evereii Freeman Virginia L. L. 8 Virginia Junior College: Dili Kappa Eptilon. Im.r Praleiniiy ( nunnl: Bairhall, Lrcihman Vai-Ā ity. Swimming, Iieihmjn Vat- iiy Wescon B. Grimes Minnr jpoln I 1 B Tao Kappa I pulon: Pbi Alpha Oelia. Grey Friar; l aw School Council ā)|, 1J, All Univcemy Council. Pretnlrnl 'll. 2: Hockey -2 i S. Alfred Halgren Wahion L. L. B. Sigma Phi Epiilow: Phi Alpha Delia Charles H. Halpern Glen (Jilin. North Dakota I I B Phi Epiitoa Pi, Diplomatic Club: Annual law School Banquet lrcihman Week '10. 'll: law Sehe ol Couneil 'JO. 'Jl Union Board ol Governixi 'JO. 'Jl. '12: Baikelball, leethman. Gordon G. Hanson Bonhelli, Nonh Dakota I I B. Roland John Henning Supeaioc. IVneoeaiin L. L, B. Delia Upiiloo; Phi Della Phi Emerson Hopp Noiihfield L. L. B. I.aileron College. Gamma Iha Comma Wreilling JO. John Kukowske. Jr. Pelham I. L. B. Delia Thera Phi: (ion Wedge; PI Phi Chi. Proleitional Athletic Council; Law Review. Student Board ol [ditort: law Sihool Senior Clan Iārendeni: All-Senior Pretidtot J: 105 Hclmi F.. Lukkarila Mountain lion L. L. 8. eta Tau Alpha: Kappa Beta Pi. Zela Alplu Par: Phi lidl Kappa Elvcro J. McMill.m Pnneeion L. I. B. Delta Kappa Ppiilom Phi Delta Phi; l.aw Review. Not Editor. MJiltKf S. Mot Willmar 0. A. I.. L. B. Guitavui Adotphui; Gamma Fla Gamma: Gt y Fiiai: law R . view, Editorial Ben id '51: Law School Council. Precidenf 52: All L'nivetntr Council. Kepiccen laliv liotn I he law School ā5 2 C ommon Iāccpul'i Ball, Chaitman Gcnctal Aiianiicnicnu Commit Jerry D. Murphy Coleraine L. I.. IV. Doroihy E. Paulvon Eitiliiat B. A. L. L.B. Bela Phi Alpha: Kappa Ulio: Mortal Board; Della Siyitra Kilo; Diplomatic Club: OmĀ Ā my Scnal Commute . Intetptolea. cional IVoaid: Activitiet Editor of Gofdict: SLiāUMah. Depart-m nt r-dilot VI; All U Debar ⢠1. '52 Letli C. Scholl St. Paul D. A. L. L. B. Lambda Chi Alpha: Phi Alpha Delta; Scabbard and Dlade: Kunncia Club: M Banquet 'VI: Homecoming ā I; Ski-C-Mali. Advettiiin Anociat 'It. '50: Univteaity Sinfret. Mort B. Skew Luvtrn L. L. B. Alfred J. Weinberg Duloih B. A. L. I.. B. Tau Della Pin Delta Siyma Rho; Mock Political Convenuon. Senate Committee '5 2: Formal VI), '51; Senior Prom Commute . Clraperonet '51; Speech Dr. patimem. Bunneci Manayet; Vanity Debate 17, '29. 29. '50: Ftechman.Sophomore De- bate '26. Marcin H. Ouo Wimhiop I.. L. B. 106 suitsisi; 107 Miss Deniford Nursing MinnĀ«voi.i can now boast that itv Student Health Service is more extensive than that rendered by any other university, according to Dr. H. S. Diehl, director of the department. The insistent demands of his duties as head of the Health Service have played havoc with Dr. Diehl's golf game and tennis aspirations. According to his secretary, the doctor often comes to the office in the morning with a tennis racket and a resolution to get in some good work on the courtsābut evening usually finds him in the same office, with the same racket and a postponed game. During his undergraduate days at Gettysburg College. Dr. Diehl was something of a star in tennis, and has won several loving cups since then in amateur competition. He is now a member of the University Committee on Inter-Collegiate Athletics, and attends all the athletic events for which Ik can find time. Dr. Diehl's pet form of entertainment is music. He goes to many recitals and symphonies during the year, and applauds with enthusiasm the splendid repertoire of programs offered by the University Con cert Course. Club work and professional meetings also IkIp to fill up bis program. The doctor observes that some of the most lasting impressions and vivid memories of a student's college life are the result of associations and friendships formed while under medical care at the Health Service hospital. Some six thousand students receive medical treatment every year: several hundred of these are interned in the hospital for short periods, while others come for examinations, consultations and prescriptions. The Health Service staff includes ten full-time and thirty part-time physicians, besides a corps of internes, dentists, nurses and technicians. All students of the University are entitled to one complete physical examination a year besides the regular entrance examination. Students also may receive hospital care for two days without charge, and may call for a free consultation at any time. The expense of maintaining the Students' Health Service is met by the incidental fee charged to each student with his registration. Of that fee. two-thirds is allotted to the Health Service. The remainder of its income is derived from charges made for individual services, such as X-rays, drugs, glasses and use of the operating room. ⢠⢠⦠Minnesota was the first university in the world to establish a School of Nursing. This school is a unit in the Medical division, but has an individual directorship under Miss Katherine J. Densford In the single year in which Miss IXnsford has been at Minnesota she has won the universal admiration of the students in nursing. She has had previous experience in working with groups of young women, which no doubt has stood her in good stead in taking over the leadership of the school. She has been affiliated with the Camp hire Girls for several years, and lias had considerable experience in coaching girls' athletics. Miss Densford is devoted to her work and has had little time for hobbies during the past year. Miss Densford is what might be called a connoisseur of symphonies . Having formerly lived in the East, she has been able to hear many of the great American concert orchestras. She is enthusiastic in her praises of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. Many statistical researches and country wide surveys have recently been conducted with a view to improving conditions in nursing education. Miss Densford has carried on several independent studies for the purpose of putting the school and nursing service on a wider educational basis. According to Miss Densford. the purpose of nursing education is to prepare young women to meet adequately the nursing needs of any community: yet one third of the work required of most students is m surgery, a phase of nursing which is almost negligible in ordinary nursing practice. Dean Lyon of the Medical School has been studying this situation, and it is probable that the results of his investigation may lead to helpful changes in the methods and curriculum now used in nursing education. 108 Elizabeth R. Addison BilviJoe. South Ditoia B. S. Nuning N SO A Betty A. Alberts Bolin. WiuMim C. N. Nailing Kay H. Bordcsvich Werien R. N. Nulling Bernita Bussc Miplnon R. N. Nuning Myrtle E. Drayer Dol.nJ. South D)tĀ«i G. N. Suiting Elizabeth M. Eytich Lt Cenne B. S. Nuning N S C. A Helen L. Goetch WhHe Bm tiki Anita Granquist Diiioii L1W1 R. N. Nuning Alice M. Isakson Lieingiioa. Mom m. G. N. Nuning hi Sitter. Bernice A. Olson Livingston. Monlini G. N. Nuning N S C A . Ouiimiu of Sub. Council '31 IJ; Big Sum Gladyce V. Olson Nibbing G. N. Nuning Nibbing Junior Coltigi Viola Radosesvich BoveV R. N. Nulling Ruth L. Rigler W.ibek. North Dakota R. N. Nuitinj Gwendolyn R. Sberratt Wimvillc R. N. Suiting R N Nuning I aul often meif a great timber uythe. with which he could till a teuton of timber with or.e mighty I wing of the atmt. Fern O. Thompson Minneapolis R. N. Noning Lila Thompson Erharl R. N. Nuriing Doris A. Tulman Duluth R. N. Nuriing Mary E. Wagiitr Minneapolis C. N. Nutting Merle Wilk Eiu Cliitt. Wiuonnn G. N. Nutting Beatrice Currier Kochtttei B. $. Medical Technology Rtxheitee Junior College; Phi Then Kappa: Twin Sitter, Bessie Hawk Minneapolis B. S. Medical Technology Alpha Gamma Delia) Alpha Delia lau. Mini at Board, Viec-Peett-ā¢leni -J2; Incerprofcsiional Board. Secretary' J I; Homecoming Week; Fredtmcn Week; Big Sitter: Ski-U-Mah. Ciceulalion Manage! TO. Salei Manager 51. 'll; Tam O' haater. Viee-pieudent 'll I 10 Ruth S. Morgan l.adyrmnh. WiKHim h. S. Medieal Teehnology Bernice Shalett Minneapolii B. S. Medieal Technology Menotali Soeiely. Alma Skerik Silver Lake B. S, Medieal Teehoologt Alpha Dtlta Tau Margaret Anne Skogland Keewann B. S. Medieal Technology (libbing Junior College: Alpha Della Tau. Gladys J. Smith St. Paul B. S. Medieal Technology Alpha Della Tau, Janet Smith Rocltfitcr B. S. Medieal Technology Kothcater Junior College: Alpha Delta Tau Alice M. Thomas Minneapolis B. S. Medical Technology Alpha XI Delia; Alpha Delta Tau: Mmeira l iterary Soeirly. il III ItESTISTItY Dentistry Dtan W. F. Lathy Mm Jatkson William I- I.asby. Dean of (he College of Dentistry, doesn't like to bug about his position. The most be will say is āwell, they haven't fired me yet. Not that anyone expects anything of the sort. Tar from it. Dean I.asby is one of Minnesota's most valuable men. and has a record of achievements that the most versatile of deans might envy. Born in Minnesota, he received his B. S. at Carlcton in 1900. and three years later took his D. D. S. at this university. He practised in fairmont. Minnesota for four years, became an instructor here in 1908. and acting Dean in 1927. He was a classmate of President Burton while at Carlcton. He now belongs to some seventeen honorary clubs, fraternities, and dental societis's, such as Omicron Upsilon. Xi Psi Phi. the Masonic order. Kiwanis club, the American and Minnesota Dental Associations, and many others. And to cap the climax of his career, he was recently elected to the presidency of the American Associa lion of Dental Schools, to serve during the period of I932-V3. This is one of the highest honors attainable in the profession, and a tribute not only to the Dean, but to the school of which he is the head. I like my job very much. says the Dean. In fact, one of the best things about it is the contact I get with the students in dentistry, something which no other position svould give me. T he content of the curriculum is perhaps my hardest problem. And it might further be said that the dental college curriculum ranks ace-high among American universities. Dean I.asby has a number of hobbies. His chief one. of course, is dentistry. Bill the lesser ones include motion picture photography, golf, and traveling. Then. too. he also is interested in business. He owns a summer cottage on l.ake St. Croix, and spends his vacations and spare week-ends there relaxing. Concerning the University's policies of education. Dean I.asby says: I think Minnesota is a leader in the development of educational ideals. And. thanks to men like Dr. I.asby. Minnesota is! Miss lone M Jackson graduated from the University of Minnesota in 192) with the degree of Graduate Dental Hygienist. She is working for a Bachelor's degree at the present time, and is now in her fourth year of faculty service 3S instructor and councilor of girls in the dental hygiene course. She has had practical experience in X-ray and dental office work besides being employed as dental hygienist in public schools. I his latter work has convinced her that there is a considerable need for more thorough dissemination of information regarding oral hygiene. Miss Jacksonās pet hobbies arc traveling and horseback riding She has also taken up golf, more or less seriously, but at present is a little dubious of her progress. At the present time. says Miss Jackson, the demand for skilled dental hygienists is far greater than tlx- supply. It is a comparatively new profession, having originated in the east in 191). The enrollment in the school at Minnesota has greatly increased, because it is a very attractive course for women, and they secure their degrees in two years. The Dental school was organized in 1881 as a division of an cast Minneapolis medical school. The following year it was moved to what is now knosvn as the old Asbury hospital, and in I 888 the school was made a part of the curriculum at the University of Minnesota. In 1892 the College of Dentistry was established in old Millard Hall, the present Pharmacy building, and in 1912 was removed fo its present building. This year marks another milestone in its history. The new Dentistry building, located in the Medical group between Millard Hall and the Institute of Anatomy, will be ready for occupancy the coming fall quarter. It is considered the finest Dental building in America. A clinic room occupying the entire third floor and the balcony is a unique feature of the building. The building has a northern exposure to provide for best natural lighting, and will lie thoroughly fitted with the finest of modern equipment. Dean I.asby says. Dentistry was formerly a mechanical art. but it has developed into a health service. Methods of doing work have improved, and of course, the X-ray has changed dental practice greatly. The biological sciences are also emphasized in dental instruction much more now than formerly. 112 C. E. Aga Minnopolu D. D. $. Si. Olif X. I ii Pin Audrey M. Bloom Mmorjpolti C.O.H. Francis Brennan Eyou D. O. S. Duluth Tuthtn College; Xi Pri Phi Art Brudvick Mohill. Notth Ditoti N'otth Dikoti University; Pei Omega; Grey Friar; Stlvrr Spur: Dmon Bond o( GovernĀ n All-Univerriiy Countil: Indnioni Ctmimjn Lowell R. Carlson Borneo D.D S. Xi P.i Phi Henry E. Colby Lnvrrne D. D. S. Dtltj Chi: Delli Sigmi Drill, Iron Wrdge. Pur : Daily 27-. William C. Collinge Zumbiota D. D. S. James F. Conlon Winnipeg. Cinuli D. D. S. Uniterm? ol Satkatrbewan: Pin Sigma Kappa. Evereii L. Earslcy Huron South Dikoti D. D. S. Pn Omega: Sobknd ind (Made: Officer Club: Dr Moliy Alberta Eba St. Plul C. D II. Phi Omega Pi nig Sistet āJO. ā Jl Miu)urrĀ« William P. Fredericks M inner poll D D. S. Glenn A. Giere Rotbntrr D. D. S. Phi Drill Thru Ralph Griebler Alrundtia D D. S. Pri Oat|i. Pi Pill Chi: Newmin Club; Ntibbinl mil Blade: Ol fitrir Club: Inter Piolrttionil Countil āll. PtenJent TI; Student' Student loin TunJ Committee George F. Hanek Nrw Prague D. D. S. St Thom i College: Drill Sig-mi Delta: Iānyx. Wrestling 2X 113 Merrill C. Million Muidoek D. D S. Ernest L. Nelson f mi Claire. WiKonun D D. S. Oscar J. Ogren Minneapolii Della Si mi Delta. Peier Opsahl Mmnr jpolli D. D. S. Elizabeth Peacha HiUiinx D.M. Dental Denial llvcwni'U. Senint I'ten. dmi. Leonard Peterson Si. Piiii D. D. S. Charles Arthur Pettit Minnopolit D. D.S University of South Dakota: Pii SoMviid mil I'la.lr Harry C. Holmes Breekentid||r D. D. S. Xi Iāli Phi; Phalanx Russell B. Howe Bfinidji D. D. S. University of Notlb DifolJ Josephine Johnson Ellradala D. It. Drntal Hygiene Mervin L. Jordahl Lake Path D. D. S. Xi Pti Phi; Seabhatd mil llliiii; Senior Commission: Semor Clast. Preside til Stanley J. Kaisersatt Montgomity D. D. S. Daniel A. Listiak Minnvjpolu D. D.S. Ingrid Mattson Virginia G. O. H. Umwintr Symphony )l Paul S. Pettit Minneapoii D. D. S. Iāll Omega: Seabbard and Hiade. Pee Junior Clan of Dcntiifty. Pmidtal 'JO. Sarloek M. Ries I lllnom D. D. S. Peter M. Schrocdcr Dr rĀ«ii Lakrt D. D. S. Alpha Sigma Phi Frank J. Seifert SĀ«. Paul D. D. S. Margaret Shaw Minneapotn G. D. H. Alpha Gamma Delta Alfred Smith Hinhanr. Queentland. Aumaha D D. S QviemtanJ llniveruty. Xi Pin; Cixnopolitaa Club John W. Smith Avion r i) s Pit Om.ga. Kenneth Sodergren Mmneapolu D. f). S. Sherwood R. Steadman Si. Paul D. D. S. l'cinĀ«ton Uainniir: Delta Sigma Delta: Phoenix; Otton' Club: Junior Hall, Chairman Chaperone remittee: Military Hall. General Arrangement ' J I Gustav Svendsen Philadelphia, Penntylvanu D. D. S. Koitgtgaard. Stavanger. Norway Xi Pii Phi; Norwegian Literary Soeirtv. Harold C. L. Swanson Minneapoii D. D. S. Phalanx; Cadet OlKerr ' Club Benjamin Swaltz Minneapoii D D. S. Lyle N. Valentine Tilden. Seine.ka D D S. Univcreity of NebraiVa. Xi P i Phi: S.alibatJ an.1 ISIade: ad.r Ott.et - Club; Milil at v Hall. Pobluitv John Vanderhoof Selb South Dakota D. D. S. Xi Pit Phi: Inteapeofeitiooil Atblene Coonnt: Geer Friar. Babe snaked an entire section of land 10 the niter at one drag; the trees utere cut. and the iection hauled hack. Milo J. Vlauk Nrlirjulj O. O. S. Robert James Wallace Si. I'juI D. D. S. Xi Pn Phi; R n J. Miiuicc E. Washburn Kuilliy. Nouli DjImj D. D, S. Evar F. Weasel Minnrjpolu D. D, S. MISSES X METALLIIIMiY 117 Dean W R. Appleby Mines and Metallurgy |-ound: iIm niOM loyal MinnesotanāWilliam K. Appleby. Dean of the School of Mines and Metallurgy has served as head of that school for forty-one consecutive years without even a sabbatical leave. I came here at the founding of the school in 1891 with a view to starting things rolling and returning hast at the end of five years to re-enter my profession. says the dean. However, five years soon passed. I didn't feel that the school was well established, so I stayed on from year to year, introducing changes and acquiring equipment. I was exceedingly interested in the work, and on this account I continued to concern myself with the school's development. Dean Appleby believes that the educational method used in the School of Mines is entirely satisfactory in the making of successful mining and metallurgical engineers. Developing responsible, efficient young engineers out of aspiring students is one of the chief joys of his position, he says. He enjoys personal contacts with his students, almost as much as a good game of golfāwhich is something, in these physical culture days At present Dun Appleby belongs to nine or ten honorary and technical societies, besides being director of the Mines hxperimental Station at the University, and Consulting Metallurgical Hngineer for the United States Bureau of Mines. In 1915 he was a juror of awards at the Panama-Pacific Imposition. division of Mines and Metallurgy, and in 1921 had charge of a party of engineers investigating coal and iron deposits in Manchuria for the Soviet government. The l ean spent his undergraduate day at Williams College, and later at Columbia University. ⢠⢠ā f rom elevator boy to educator might be a fitting title for the career of Minnesota's I:. H Comstock. Professor of Mine Plant and Mechanics, and assistant dean of the School of Mines. At least he likes to tell the story of his earliest ambition, when he ran the elevator in his father's office building. But now Mr Comstock devotes his entire attention to academic accomplishments, such as training undergraduates to grow up into engineers. Professor Comstock also holds tlie position of Chairman of the Student Work Committee; this brings him into continual contact with potential miners. He considers this perhaps the most delightful part of his job. Referring to his engineers-to-be. he says; āTheir mental attitude of getting by' has changed to one of 'showing tlie goods.' To be a successful engineer, the getting by principles wonāt do at all My pel ambition is to have the School of Mines be able to do everything it possibly can to develop each individual boy into a skilled, first-class engineer.ā Professor Comstock further diversifies his talents in Boy Scout work It is his favorite hobby: and because he puts much enthusiastic interest into it, he is now District Commissioner and Merit Badge Counsellor of that organization in Minneapolis. He also plays golf, but admits that he doesn't do so well. He is an ardent sports fan and seldom misses any of the major athletic evācnts at the University. ⢠⢠⢠⦠The mining industry in Minnesota ranks second in importance only to agriculture. says Dean Appleby. It is natural, therefore, that the School of Mines and Metallurgy should be one of the oldest institutions of the University. That the school is functioning properly is realized by those who call upon it and its graduates to render varied and efficient service. I he School of Mines has been established on the campus since 1891. It now grants four separate degrees. two being in specialized fields of Geology and Petroleum. I henry and practice are advantageously combined so as to produce a unified knowledge of the subject. Students make field trips to various mines and locations around the state to gain practical experience and working knowledge of geology and metallurgy. These trips are required of all students, and the same regulations apply afield as when in class attendance at school. 118 Glenn W. Andmon Minneapolis B. M. Mining Sign Rho: Society dI Minn Jam E. Hill Minneapoli. E- M. Mining Olaf T. BerRe Montevideo I: M O.eologr Slim Klin; Sihnol ol Minx Swilll Paul E. Jcrabrk Silm l air EM. Meiallmgy Tim (mi | i. Arnold C. Dahl Minneapolis E. M. Petiolcvm Si|m Rho. School ol Mmri Society, Peendent Floyd W. Erickton Minneapolis E. M. Mining Sigma IUio; Sihnnl ol Minn Social 7 Donald Fiihcr Shahopee CM. Mining School ol Mmai Socialy. Robiii W. Gcchan Minneapolis E. M. Grologi Tau Beta IN; School ol Minai Society; Colāteiideni. Senior (āIan. Harold F. Johnten Minneapolis EM. Caologr Sigma Him, School ol Minai Swialy, Wallace R. Paumon SĀ«. Paul E. M. Geology Gordon F. Scon St. Paul E. M. petfolenni Sigma Rho. Joe P. Sullivan. Jr. Mmneapolii E. M Mining Tau Kappa Epiilon: School ol Mine Society. I 19 121 IāHAItHACY Pharmacy Dean ā¢'. J. Wulling Prof. G. Bachman Who has seen the jungles and majestic wastes of Africa, or visited Europe and yet returned to sing praises of the North Star State? Dean Frederick J. Wulling. of the college of pharmacy, is one such person. He is what might be called a true Minnesotan. The Dean likes to compare America and Europe. In France, the scenery is pleasant.ā says the Dean, but the trees are planted in rows. How difTereni from the wild beauty of our Minnesota woods' Dr. Wulling admits that he is an out-of-doors enthusiast, and regrets that he cannot devote more time to field and stream. I have to think of my work and the profession it represents. he says simply. But somehow, he impresses one with his vivid enthusiasm for saddle trails, canoe trips, and northern sunsets As for sports, the old American game of baseball is his favorite. Only recently the dean pitched a nine inning game and scored three home runs. Golf has been something of an attraction for this vigorous gentleman with the smartly trimmed gray beard, but. he says. I havenāt had much lime in recent years. However. 1 expect to get out there on those links and have my fun before I gross-old.ā He believes that there arc a lot of people who go through life and never really enjoy it because they have denied themselves the privilege of appreciating beauty. The trick is to build up a definite interest. The dean has said, ā1 tell you itās all right to have a hobby, provided something useful can be made of it. The dean is something of a collector, himself. His office is decorated with a number of oil paintings of early and contemporary pharmacists, a part of his large collection. At his home he has over a thousand etchings, and many books of early and rare print treating pharmaceutical subjects. Students are amazed at his versatility, and find Dr. Wulling a mighty interesting person to know ⢠⢠⦠⦠It is a lot of fun being a secretary, according to Professor Gustav Bachman, secretary of the Minnesota State Pharmaceutical Association. In fact the piling up of evidence against less enthusiastic members is becoming a hobby with him He admits he should play golf, but be is willing to stay off the green and sink a wayward brother pharmacist instead of a putt. When asked about three-decker sandwiches and hardware specials for drugstores. Professor Bachman just canāt contain his jovial nature. Gol darn it!ā he invariably chortles, youād think we druggists didn't have a thing to do but keep pills out of our front window. Why you just ought to see the ter rible penmanship some of these doctors hand us on their prescriptions. And seriously speaking, weāve got a whale of a responsibility to see that people get exactly what is prescribed.ā It is not infrequent that doctors give the wrong proportion and the vigilant pharmacist is one whose suspicions lead to a correction that possibly averts the death of a patient, the professor believes. Weather conditions have little to do with the sensitivity of Dr Bachman's funny bone. It's the situation that counts. He tells the story of a freshman who was undergoing matriculation formalities. Dean Wulling asked him: Have you had any experience in pharmacy'āā-to which the green top replied. Well. I've lived on the farm all my life.ā Then Mr Bachman left the room. ⢠⢠⦠⢠Although some changes might be desirable, according to the dean's office, the College of Pharmacy is holding to its regular four-year schedule in harmony with the national association of which it is a member. Undergraduates, however, expect to put in five years because of the one year of practical experience required under the State provisions. Students who receive their diplomas are expected to have little trouble with the State examination. The college as a whole, is one of the best in the country, and is marshaled by a dean of unusual prominence as a scholar in the rs alm of pharmacy. 122 Katherine L. Amman Plaiaview B. S. Kappa Hpaiton! Interpinli.lion at lVoĀ nl Thomas Bartley Applelon B. S. Kippi Pti Max Couniryman Fergvt Falla B. S. Alpha Tau Oaiiji: Kappa Pti; Y.M C A Drive JO, ā¢)I; Jun-io Ball CnamilKi, Chairman 'JO: I tnhmm Football ā28. Marvin Fred. Goldberg Duluth B- s. Superior State TutSit ⢠Allege; Walling Club Jack Goldfarb Minnrapoln B. S. Alpha B.ta Phi: Walling Club. Horn,comm, J| Bernard Gordon Minnrapoln ft. S. Alpha Urta Phi; Waiting Club Atthur Hebberd LaCtont. Wnronnn B. S. Univrriily ol Wiuonnn: Phi Drlla Chi; Phi l amb-ta Epiiton, I:mil J. Hotejti Silver Lake I'hi Drlla Chi. Norton Club Quintrn Jensen Curinn o. lom B. S. St Olaf Coll.gr: Phi Drlla ( h. Silvrr Spur: Grey Friar; Walling Oub. Vicr-Prrinlrni: All Uai-veetity Council. Ben C. Johnson OmJj. South Dakota B. S. Kappa Pti; Walling Club: Union Board of Governor! '10. 'J I, '}! Lillian L. Kannenherg Minnrapoln B S. Kappa Epfilort; Walling Club. Prolettionel IVoatil: Big Sitter; Univertifr Siogert ' JO G. Harold Kulp Minnrapoln B. S. Alpha Taa Onega: Kappa Pti: Iron Wedge: Managriāt Clab '20. )1. VicrPreiulrnt 'll. U: M' Club Fried; Pay : Walling Club l-rr.hm.n Week JO; Junior Clan. Prctidrni Junior Coenmniion. Vicc-Prrti-ā¢lent; Tratk, Auitlanl Manager 20. JO Manager -J0. Jl Y.M.C A . Chauman Finance Drive 'JO Kendall B. Macho Spooner. Wnronnn B S. Si. Thoaut; Pbi Drlla Chi. N'rwman lob Wutling Club. Julius Manosevitz St. Paul B. S. Alpha Bela Phi. Wulling Club: Wie.lling JJ O;. iisronu fv H-rbr ran axxHiy and r named ihr areal Sorthuifit Hit big track formed the ten ihouund taket o Minneioia 123 Carl A. Peterson Belvlew B. S. Si Olal Ptii Delia Chi; Wall-in Club Muriel Starr Minne jpolii B. S. Kappa I puloa: Rho Oil Marry Rubcnttcin Gilbert B. S. I veleih Junior College; Iāhi Epii- ā ⢠« Pi. William N. Stebbins Hereon, WiuMiia B S. Kappa Pn. Phi Tan Thilii Uni-vretiiy Singeti Paul H. Schluter Minneapoln B. S. Phi Delia Chi. Walling Club: C.Inn I'miilitl '29. Iiiihmia CommittiiHt. Tldiam '29, Donald R. Sweeney Owaionna B. S. PM Delia Chi; Wallin Club. PtetidenI II. Inleepcofe.iioiial Council. VlM-Pir.ideni '12. Gen iĀ l Auangemenlt Commuter foe Inleipenle.ttnnal Ball '12. Merl Seney Minneapoln B. S. Sinieie Clan Prctidenc 12. Phi Della hi Leslie Tester Waeoeiia B S. Sidney Shorn Minneapoln B. S. Alpha Bela Phi Palmer A. Vogel Minneapoln B S. K O.T C. Helen Silver Mmnejpolii Si mj Ell Gamma; Minneiote Daily '28. 2 ; Exehange Editoe JO. ⢠I; W A A Board: Home-coming ( ommitlce. C āhaitmaa 11; l-eethman Week. Senior Adeline 'JO. Bi Snlee. Goplwe. Women i Aihlelir Editor āll. Simor Editor 2. Vainly Swim-mm : Aquatic l.eague: W SO.A . Social Commmee. W A A Boanl Evelyn L. Wall Crotby. Nonh Dakota B. S. Kappa I pulon: Inlerpeoletnoeial Bond; Bi Sitter; Umveniiy Singer., Walling ( lab Irving H. Sperling Minneapoln B. S. Alpha Bela Phi; Walling Club Paul A. Winer Doloth B. S. Dialalh Junior College; Delia Phi: Widling Club 1 au 124 Cordon W. Will if h Minnripolit B. S. Thin Chi: S Ā«bbu.l Ā l BUilr; Wullinj Club: Kusnrrt Club: Ofiim Club: Umviully Singm Almj E. Willi M.nm jpcl.i B. S. 125 Ll soijlv:hhih Paul ItkfJ a (food n nokt. To hrep hit ptpt filled required the entire time of a turomper Working ulith a uoop thouel Education Dean M. E. Haggerty Prof. C. W. Hoard man When Dean Melvin E. Haggerty has a vacation he it tempted to go in for a bit of monkey businessā. It was once his big hobby, and it made great copy for the old New York World. He wouldnāt talk, so the reporters ran the original razz sheet. They put him down as a young professor who was teaching the monkeys of the New York Zoological Garden to talk. A few days later he received a wire from a Spanish publication asking for all Spanish rights to the new monkey dictionary. Later he worked with apes, and more recently with dogs; but right now if time permitted he would be constructing puzzles to perplex monkeys. Dean Haggerty, incidentally, is responsible for that classical situation in svhich a monkey, in order to reach a banana, must use a stick. Nowadays, with no cranks or reporters to bother him. the dean often can be seen carrying a bag of golf clubs. If the ball can't be trained to stay on the fairway like a rat running a maze, he then plays his trump card. He goes fishing. Dean Haggerty is versatile in other ways. loo. He has two offices in different buildings; one in the Educational Research room of the Library and the other in Burton Hall. This arrangement serves to keep him fit. for his job is to make teachers out of aspiring college students. It takes the dean and his colleagues four years to turn a green cap into a black one. So that mote thoroughness may lie added to rhe job. Dr. Haggerty is introducing what he calls Qualifying l-.xamina tionsā, which each student must pass before being admitted to his senior year. The examination will test the juniors on their general knowledge of education as well as their aptitude in their special field. ⢠⢠⢠⢠It has been moved and seconded that all hats be removed in the presence of Dr. Charles W. Board-man. the ruling hand of the University High School. This inveterate fisherman states: I catch a lot of fish, but most of them are small.ā Since the day he hiked down main street of the old home town carrying a string of twenty black bass to the present day he admits that he has never caught a whopperā.ābut neither has Ik told one. I'm not sure.ā he says, whether my hobby is nature or nurture, but my father svas a great fisherman. During the twenty five years that Dr Boardman has been in Minnesota he has managed to sink a line in most of the important ten thousand lakes. He is not interested in whether or not there arc any fish in the lake. His requirements are simple: a hook and line, a row-boat, a pipe, and some water to float on. He has angled in mountain streams at the Yellowstone for trout, and some day hopes to round out his experience by trolling for tarpon off the coast of Florida. When tin- lakes are frozen. Dr. Boardman forgets all about the pursuit of marine monsters and turns to readingānot magazines of reel and camera, hut rather the Saturday Evening Post. They run some darn good detective stories,ā he admits with a broad grin. Of course, there is some administrative work to look after in his office at the high school, and he must grant interviews without end to graduates who are still hunting jobs. To avoid this congestion in the future he says. We will have to devise a more rigid system of selecting students before they are allowed to enter the college. In teaching there are many other qualifications in addition to scholastic ability. ⢠⢠⢠⢠The kmdergarden of the University , as the Unvcrsity High School has been called, is in reality a laboratory. Here instead of racks of test tubes the student finds rows of students, all more or less eager to recite. I hc classes are taught by the regular faculty but they cooperate with education students for the purpose of demonstrations. The public school system also lends a hand in the moulding of instructors. An unusual feature of the educational unit is embodied in the excellence of an organization svhich has been able to draw transfer students from the entire nation. About fifty per cent of its senior college and graduate students have come to Minnesota from sister institutions to complete their training. 128 Jane Affeld Mtnnrapolia B. S. Sociology Alpha IāIm: In Stxma Upiilom Motor Bond: ft. W, Com minion; WS.O.A.. Prtardfftt 32: Y.W.C A Small Cabmen Y.W.C A. I arye Cabrnct TO. Tl. Pin Hellenic Council 30. ā31; Big SitKr; Bib and Tucker Ttearutef 32. Conturlla M. Ahlgrcn Minnrapolia B.S. 1! null ill Uniwnilr of Noilli Dakota, Spanith Club; Fttneb Club; Pol. well Library Club; Newman Club; Twm Sirtrr. Linairc Alexander Mmneapolii B. S. Huron John AKcon Gilbtrr B. S. Huron lit mid ji Trirbrn College; Track '31. -32. Trygve Andersen Si. Paul B. S. InJormil Dorothy E. Anderson Minnrapolia B. S. An Kappa Kappa I ambda. Preiidtnl '31. '32; Spinnh Club: Walthei Lotor; Art Education Arrorn. non; Umveinty Singeti TO. '31. Flovd Anderson Minnrapolia B. S. Frrmlt Ftenth Club. Timn.rr TO. Kenneth E. Anderson Minnrapolia B. S. Srirnir Alpha SiRrm Pin; Mentor '3 1. 32; Hotkey II O. Henry Anderson Maple Plain B. S. Education Alpha Sirota Pi: Mmtoe. Thelma Anderson Duluth B. S. Hrirory Duluth Junior CoSIrcc; Zeta TĀ u Alpha, Helen Atkins McLaughlin. South Djlon B. S. Eltmentacy Education North Dakota Ifniveraity. Margaret Babcock Anoka B. S. Rontaoct Language Alpha Phi. Harriet Baker Si. Cron Fall . Wntomm B. S. Publtt Hralih Nutting Maealeiwr College: Phi ( In Dill a: Y.W.C, A. '213. 2 . Social Srrvitt Committee BrĀ Sruet. Rosell D. Bakke Wbtaton B.S. Jtantot High Sfhool Edufaiaon St. Cloud Teaehtra College: Y W.C.A.: Twm Siller. 129 Paul tould vault p fl a log at i Iran a a whittle bti holding the hath at otic tnd. Whitt ftaht pullrJ at the tilhrr Be r I ha K. Barry Miniui|ioln B. S. Gentian Alpha On Omega; Big Sitter. Kenneth N. Beadle Superior. Wittontin B. S. Pbytieal Etiolation Wheaton College; Iāhi liptllon Kappa. Alpha Sigma Iāi. Oflu Sigma !'Ā«ā¢: Track '12: Ciyiona-tiunt ā J I. Dorm Bern inch Mmnr apolil B. S. Zoology I i Omen Pi; W S.fiA , Senior Advitoty Board. Hi Sum. Cor-tetponding Secretary: Matquett Agnes Benjamin Minneapoli B. S. Natural Scitnrr P. Lambda Thda: Student Lin-nran Club, Kieib Berens Minnrjpolit B. S. Science Central State Teacher- College; Minor tola Ride Club; Men In Education: Mmnccota Mentor. Artoeiate Editor Margery Berens Shakopte B. S. Hittoey Kappa lĀ ella. Ilia Sigma Upcilon; Newman Club; Senior Advitoty Board. Social Onitman; Big .Sitter; W.S.G.eV Henry L. Bettendorf Entry B. S. Adininittranon Frctliman l-ootball: I rrtliman Track. Edward Bigot Spnngfield B. S. Admlnitiraiion French Club. Sigurd Bockman Minneapolit B. S. Public School Mutie Pin Mu Alpha: Band; Univenity Singer : Univenity Symplioay. Benjamin Borken Clin holm B. S. Education Genevieve Bowen Biwabik B. S. Elementary Economitt Winona Stale Teacherā College. Elizabeth Bowler Minneapolit B. $. Education David Brody MinnopoJit (V. S. hUonon Ad.i MĀ« Brown Trent. South Dakota B. S. Edueiiion South Dakota Slate College: Y.W.C.A.: Bi Surer. Marjorie Browning Mot i. Noirh DUott B. S. Hiuoev 1 unco Shimer Juniot College. Delta Drift Della I'nilni. YWCA ; W.A.A , llod ot ll.itrry 'll; W.A.A, II.jd oi Trnnii 'll: Twin Siller. Kifleiy Tom Jl M Francis Bruce St. Paul II, $. Gilman .I) Tau AtpKi: w s c. A . IWiatil '10. Jl (Vernon Club: Pan Hellenic Connell: Y W A Big Siller. Florence Buboltz Cook B. S. Hutotr Ā U Tju Alphi. Ih.t.in ' lub Y W.C A Big Si.irt Matte A. Bukovac Buhl B. S. Home Eionoenm HE. A.; MIA: WAA; Y W C A 4.H ( lub: Bo-lint Ethel Btirbeck Duluth B. S. Science Duluth Junior College Studtnti I .moon ( lub. Phi ( Iti Delta Dorothy E. Burlingame Fju Chile. Wiieontin B.A. English Rosary College: Pi B.u Pitt. Y.W.C A.. Tw.n Siiter. l.'nivee-niy Sit.gen '11. 'M. Evelyn G. Bums Gltnwood B. S. English Vifginij Junior College: foluell Club George P. Burterfield M'finO|h)lll B S. Eduoiion Fay W. Burterwick Faribault B. S. Phytlcal Education Phi Eptilun Kappa. Alpha Sijm.. Pi: Minnriota Mentor. Annum Circulation Min.ig.-i JJ Gertrude M. Campbell Minnopol.i B. S. An Loien Carlson Matietu. Wit. B.S. Etigl.ih Augsburg College. Minot Stale College. Irene e . Carlson Minneapolis IJ. S. Fteoth I-eenrh (lub. V.S.GA Be Siitee. Swimming. hhtil (i QOGit smoke To titrfl hit pip. nihil nt iuri 1 ike entire time a I a ewiimptr utorhinef u ith u st oop thot'rl. 131 Bab would xomelimex xneah up behind a drive and dank all the water out of the river, leaving the lo )' ht'fh and dry. Saili E. Ofkon Hibbiot Ik. S. Social Seieneet Htbbing Junior College. Irene Carrier Mmnrapoln (I. S ComiurKill Dell i et i: Iāl 1 anibda TkrOI l it Sigma Upiiloo: Mentor. At-iituni Circulation Manager; Bond ol Publication . Sinclair Fanchon Chaffee FllibiBll B. S. Library Si Mary Halt; Kappa Alpha Thna Hazle M. Chapman Wol Point. .Montana B. S. PHyiical I-.lout.on Phyaaca! L Jucaiion, PeetiilcM: SjnlorJ Hall. Penident. Helen A. Cleveland Prinmon ft. 5- An Delia Phi Della; Art Education Aiuviaiwti Helen M. Clifford Mohall, Nonli Dakota B. S. Commercial Hilucaiioei ollege of Si. Caihuine; ( In Omega. Dmioni Women- Club; Y W A Harold E. Cloutier Ely R. $. Education Emma Cole Hope B. S An Valid Cny Sine Teat hr n College; Michigan Univenity: Waih-. region Univenity An Educational Atiotijlim Florence M. Conroy Mmneapolit B. S. Englilh liench lob German Club, Agnes Conway Mmneapolit B. S. Commceoat Bn i Pin Alpha: Buiinen Women- ⢠lob; Newman Club: Big Sitiee YWCA. Gladyce Coss Willmar H. S. Home Economic llaoilme; Omitron Nu: Pi I renb.li Tima. Y W C.A.: II E A Esther W. Daley Waierroun. South Dakota B. S. CI..I.I Welfaee Stephen College; Della el a; Y W C A Mary Adelaide Davey M a ion City. Iowa H. S. Commercial Colltli ol St. Catherine: Alpha Chi Omega. Bulimia Women't Club; Thalian Literary Society; Y W C A ; Big Suite Ruth L. Day Clinton Fall I). S. Mathimanci Mankato Teacher College; Pi I imbila Thera, 132 Dorothy Mary Dietz Si Paul B. S. Sociology Marie E. Dillon Wihiiu, WiMOAitn B. S, Natural Sitrnic Wellington SpnĀ i Junieir ..!⢠I e. Twin Stun Myrna E. Dtnsel MiyĀ B. S. German lirimja Club: University Wal-ther Secretary 1 J2: UnivrritlV Ruth M DomKa Mmnrrpoht B. S. Engltth Zcca Alpha l Ā i: I olĀ eil Ch b, Marjorie Door Mankato B. S. Union Mankato Slate Toibm' CĀ«l- U e. Agnes May Doyle Duluth B. S. Library Inttiuriion Uuluih Junior College. Mary Louise Duncan Marietta B. S.. R. N. Public Health Nutting Alpha Tau Delta Irven M. Eirrcim Mount Vernon, South Dakota B. S, Education Leonard C. Erickson Mtnnrapoht B. S. Miilwmiiln Phalanx Military: I eayci of Evening Stuiirnli: Y.M C A ; OBcar. Club. Board. Anna C. Etikson Autora B. S. Home Eton omiti Esther M. Erikson Amor a B. S. Commereial Florence Essen Duluth B. S. Mimic Duluth Junior Cotlrfi. Si -mĀ Alpha Iota; University Symphony. William W. Fineman Minnrapoln B. S. Adminittrition Ketaive Officer Training Corfi Mentor 1. Ā 2: All U P.bate ā¢SO. Jl. J2 Bernice Fink Minnr apolii B. S.. M A. Education St {Mali Newman Club R-e Sister JO. IVs Patricia Fish Mmnrjpolit B.S. All Kjihcrinc Flink l.ongnllr B. S. An Drill I'lii D(ll : Kippi Kipp.i I imMi. Inmprolettioei l Bond. Big Sum. Menlo : Umrmui Thitin: Julioi Cum. Elizabeth Forscth Si Pinl II. $. Engliili IN I mhJi rtwn: W.S.O.A.: Bi Sitter. Doris Iicnc Genge St mine. New York B. S, Phyiicil EiluniM Svudiii Univeruiy: Y.W.C.A.: w.A.A : I L A.: Aqunie I. eigne; Hoeneeommg Billooo Sile. Penny Carnival. Chairman: Inldālkniu Alhltue Allocution. Kpiiiuvumc Hi Sum. Bn-ketblll: Bite bill: Itockrv: Swim mil : Tinnii: Rifle; M Winner. Jran Gilrurh Oilaih B. S. Zoologe Dnlwlh Junior College; Iāl I imWi Th«« . Beity B. Gove Si. Piul B. S. Lilmif l illi Ciimmj; I'olwell Club; Hi Siller: Mji pĀ Ā«i . Univernty Sm e... YWCA. Medford Audrey Gram Buflilo h. S. Huioey Phi Oil Della: Univeniti Siagrii. Archie I. Green Augmia. Wiieoniin B. $. I'dneifioa Mercedes Gugisbcig Minkuo B. S. Phyiicil Edii'iiwn Mankaio Tenheri College: Phyi-ml Educittoa Auoe.iiioo; Lii Sigmi UpĀ ilon; Pi I jmb.li Midi, W A A.: A.juiii. I.eigne; Orehciii: W.A.A Bond: Balloon Silei. I liairman: Otehrut Diner Recital, Chairman: I hnr-min ol Imil ton ol Stile leigue Ā«l W A A.: Twin Sidee: Swimming: Tennn, Margaret A. Guthrie Minneipolii B. S. Engliili YWCA Senior Adviioey Bond Z. YWCA. Smill ibinel ā !: YAVC A,. Inge iliincl SO -)2; I'eethmin (iron? l.eider ')J. Ernesi A. Hakel Silrei Like B. S Itiuoiy 1 lieu Kippi N'u; Alplu Sigma Pi Merna Halverson Mmol. Nouh Dikou B. S. Child Welfne Mmol Sine Teieheei College: Cnmmi Pin Bell. Big Siller 'll. Mabel Hammond Roebrtirr B. S. Edurnion 1. vndon E. Hansen Fnmingeon B, S Education 134 Ethel J. Hanson SĀ«. Pant B S. Nanny Stbool Kindergarten Louise B. Milder St. Clond B. S. Ldue il ion Adelaide L. Harris Minneapolis B. S. Engtilh Wetlty Player ; Kappa Phi; W.S u.A.; Y.W.C.A.: Big Si ter; Twin Sitter. Rose Elizabeth Hollman St. Paul B. S. Englith Genevieve Haugstud CltMMOOl B. S. Mailiemaiitt Bin Pbi Alpha. Kappa Rbo; l)i| Sitter: Y.W.C A . large Cabin ! II. 12 Betsey Jane Hawkins Duluth b. S. Zoology Duluth Junior College. Gertrude L. Hawkins Sptmg Valiev B. S Commercial Pi LanM Theta; Butinea Women Ā« Club: Y.W.C. A.; W.S. G A. Seholatihip Alpha Hokcnson St. Loan Paik B. S. Child Welfare University Choiui: Y.W.C A Rachel Horning Appleton B. S. Latin Helen E. Hotz Shawano. Witeoatin B. $. Mathrmaiiet l et Peuti.be Vetein; Waltbet League: University Singers; YWCA Mabel Hawkinson Pine City B. S. Elementaty Kappa Phi: Big Sitter: Twin Sitter; Student ' Rcligiou Council. Anita Houltshouser Liihetville. Iowa B. S. Speech Eithetviltc Junior College: Pi lambda Theta: Kappa Rho; Kappa Phi: Weilev I'larrrt; Uni-veeĀ itv Singer : Mcnlot. Elinor J. Heath Bullalo B. S. Latin Phi Mu Eunice Houskc St. Paul B. S. Library Iniltaciion Moorhead State Trathert Co? lege: Folwcll Club. Wesley loimdation: Twin Sitter. 1 35 Mary W. Hum Minneapolis II. S. Am Drti Iāll! Alpha; Pan Hellenic: Art Education Association; Y.W.C A.; (aopher Sales. Ā« hair-mini Die Sitttt. Kathleen M. Hynes Sink Center IV S. Am Si Cloud Teachui College: olumbia Umvruity; Pi I ambda Theta; Ait Hoiition Amo till ion. Elvera D. Ingebrigtson Minneapolis B $ I ttgliih Park Region Lather College. Margaret Arlene Jackson Burnt nl IV. S. Physical Education PM CM Della: W A A. Board; Dig Sietec Ride Markimanihip lum: Sanford Hall. Treasurer; Y W.C A. Helen J. Jensen Cloquet B. S. Cilwnion Donovan A. Johnson MmntapolM B. S. fdaiiiin Alpha Sigma Pi; .Mtnioe. Amis-ram Business Manager ' V I Henry H. Johnson Minneapolis IV. S. Natural Seirntc Lola Margaret Jones Mmntapolii B. S. Speerb Kappa Rbo: 104a Comma. Peril Jam 'V2; lira Sigma Upnlon; I apt . PM President '31: Wesley Playrrt. Debate; MaĀ«|aeti. Marion Kaulbach Eau Claire, Witromin B. S. Education Eau Claire Suit Teacher'a Col-lr(i, Pi Bela Phi; Kap|ia Rho: Y.W.C.A.: Iniei-HoaM Couril. Kevin iM. Keenan Hill City B, S. Mathtmaiiea Margaret Keizer Riveriiilt. Illinoit B. s. English Irancct Slnmer Junior College; Delta Delta Della; W.A.A. āll. J2: YAV.C.A 31. 2. Twin Suite ' 2; Rillr Team 31. āJ2. Elizabeth Kitts Duluth B. S. Kindergarten and Nursery School aileron; Kappa Della; Big Sister; Daily; Mentor. Albion Willard Kljmmer Stewart B. S. Education 'Theta Kappa N'u, Agnes Knoster Form City. Iowa B. S. Commrtcial Kappa Delia: Uaivcraity Singers. I 36 Claire Knowles Mmn ipoiii Virginia C. Leepcr s. Child WdljK Blunt. South Dakota Catletou: Kappa Delta; MjĀ«- H. S. Education qurri, Inez A. Kolar Mmittipolii B. S. I nĀ -!.% Alpha Omicron Pi Evelyn E. Kron Cambndge B. S. fiiiliih Alpha Delia Theta: Y.W.C A.j Big Siller. Irene Lampc ilibbieg B. $. Hitioiy llibbing Junior College: Zell Tan Alpha: YWCA.: Ton. nightly Club Edward F. Lapic llopkini B. S. Freneh Alpha Sigma Pi: Mentor. Managing Editor: Bourgeon Gentil-hommr Mary Alice Larson Willmar B. S. Child Welfare Chi Omega: Ela Sigma Upnloa. Pretidenl )J: W.A A. 'Jl. ')2: Inlet-lloute Council; Mati)orti. Edna G. Ledyard Sioui l-allt. South Dakota B. S. Child Wrlfaie Lānirertiiy Walibrr League: Y.W.C.A. Laurin E. Leino Ely B. S. Bolanv Ely Junior College: Phi Sigma Kappa. Kay S. Loberg Minmapoln B. S. Ait Atpha Gamma Delta: Alt Education Alien iation. Eleanore Loring Fairmont B. S. Edceanon Sedoris N. McCartney Mmneapolii B. S. Fdueinon Helen S. McDonald Grafton. North Dakota B. S. Englnh Newman Club; Mentor Mary E. McDonald Port Atthur. Canada B. S. Zoology College Seholaiiea. 137 Isabel D. McElwee Bhoei. Sooth Dakota n. S. Pbytkcal CdMiiiM Huron College; Phi Chi Delia; W A A . Big Siiiri. Twiii Sitter. Lnella B. McGovern Fitilutilt B. S. Mathemitiei eta Tjii Alpha; Y.W.C A. Joan Mabty Em Claiee. Wiumimi B. S. Natural Science College ill Si, Benedict, Evelyn Mann Onatonn B, S. Mathematict ā Mankato Teacher't College Beta Phi Alpha Y W CA Beatrice Mark Ceoiby B, J. Education Sigma Dele. Tail: Y.NV.C A., l.aege Cabinet: Duma Commit lee. Chairman: Big Siiiee; Mnqiini Gladys Martinson Eigle Bead B. S. F.dueattein Jane E. Mason Miimeipolli B. S. Education Alpha PM, Martha Mattola I i, II. S. Child Wellatf l:lf Junior College; Della .tit: Y.W.C A : Twin Sitter Gwendolyn A. Melby Mmneapoln B. S. Education Priscilla Mendenhall Duluth II. S. Englith Alpha Gamma Della; Minceva I ileiacr Society: Iniee-llouie Council; Big Since. Phyllis Metcalf Priyighae. Iowa B. S. Education arlelon. P. Bela Phi; Y W. I A . Big Sulee. Lenorc A. Michael Willow CnĀ . Noilh Dakota B. S. Education Noilh Dakota Junior College; Phi Mu. Y.W.C A . Big Since. Harold T. Miller Mmneapolii B. S. Education Margaret June Miller Miimeapoht B. S. Speech Deake Univ nity; Kappa Rbo; Debate: I retbman Sophomore Oeatoeieal; Mauiueei. 138 Margaret A. Morcll Granily B. 5. I' ngluti Coranto Eugenia D. Moll Lake Crynal It. S. Phyaieal Education Alpha Pin: Phytrcal Education Senior Clacr. Pretideni: W.A.A.. Pliynol Education Aitoumon College ol Education Student Couoiil. Krprctrnlalive Jl. JJ, Inttr-Houtr Athletic (ouadl JĀ . ā J I Clarence L. Munn Minnrapolii B. S. Phytiral EiIiiciim Phi Kappa Sigma; Alpha Sigma Pi; Cirey lint M Club lowb.il 9. 10. 'll: Ttacl ā¢JO. 1. )J. Wilbur Fim MurtJ Minnrapolii B. S. Huioiy Autoia College: Alpha Sigma Pi: Ph. Delta Kappa. Y M C A Service Aw aid 1; Board of Publication ol Coll.tr ol E-duea-Ā«ioo 12, 'Jl Mrntor. Cireula-lion Manager ')2. Waller W. Nappa EĀ r B. S Phtixal E dotation Pin lipiilon Kappa: Swimming. Matiha Naramorc Brmidji B. S. Education Maitha Neilsen Mank.no B. S. Commercial Ikna Phi Alpha: Fortnight)! Cab.n.l 'J|. Y.W.C.A.; Hun HOI Wnemn Ā« Club; Big Sntrr. Capiain All U Party tom-imldr 'Jl Ir.ihman Wnk Committee ' 11 Agnes E. Neitzel Motion B. S. Education Brattice Minnie Nelson Minntjpolu B. S. Soria) Science Clarence A. NeUon Mankato B. S, Phyrtral I duration Mankato Slat. Teacher College: Mrn in Education. President Earl W. Nelson Minnrapolii B. S. Plum al Education Sigma Nit: Alplaa Sigma Pi: Carry Fttat: Scabbard and Blade, PrrtiJeai: Kunncit Club. M Club: Northrop Club. Preiidrnt: Board ol Publication in I hr College ol Education: Military Ball. Cxnrral Arrangrmrntt 'Jl: Senior Iāomminioo; Manjoerr JO. 'Jl. J2; Senior C.laar Prrtidrni: Senior ConmUiion. Vrcr-Prrit-Urnt: I tollman Football: Frnli-mao Bi.lvibill Catherine H. Nesvcon Miim jpolii D. S. Grim i Thelma Norman Minnrapolii D. S Engliih Kochratrr Junior Collrgv Kappa' Phi; Wriley Playrrt; Y W.C A W SG A Sadie M. Nylund Virginia B. S. ChilJ Wellare Virginia Junior College, Y NX' ( A . V S C. A t ap and Gown Big Sitter. Whrn Paul fiuru an toJr on Ikthr'i bath, he u'ar oblnjtJ Jo lave u itUuopt to see iht hinJ letji ol tht Hit IVue Or IV) Maybelle E. Nyquist Cilll|W. Montana n. s. cwm w.iij.c Y.W.C.A.: W.S.G.A.: Punthiti-illo '2?, 10: Univcrairy Singcrt: lhg Sitter. Clara C. Primon Slillnin B S. ConmfĀ«ul Kappa Phi; Bwiinrti Women-! lub: Y W.C A : W A A Hilvic Ouerblad Two lljcbon It. S. Commercial Kappa Phi: Buiineii Women-! ' lub Y W A Helen L. Peterson OiĀ« Momn. lowi B. S. Hucocy Aoguttana College Dorothy Marie Overion SĀ«. Paul B. S. Hinoty l Ā K Sum: Mnqwn. Sylvia M. Pakonen Mmneapolit B. S. Child Wellare Orln Zeli; B W. Society. In teiprnlrmonal BwnJ. I'tetideni l: W S G A. BĀ«jid. Treatarer '0; Big Siirer. Captain; Goplwr. Sophomore Atmtanl 'J9; Gopher Supplement āJO; Tam O' Shan m. l atl Chairman] Cap and Gown, ball Bjnqoil Chairman Freda Park Winona K S. Public llrallh Suiting Winona State Teaeheri. Mary Margurctie Pet tie Mmnrapolii B.S. An Alpha Omidim Pi: An Eduea-non Allocution; Pan Hellenic Council: Intceprofrmonal Board; Y.W.C.A.. Publicity Chairman; W S.G A.. Potter Chairman: Big hitter. Captain; Twin Siam. C aptain: Gophei .Stall: Univer-titv Singer ; Tam O'Shanrrr; Cap and Gown; Penny Carnival. Publicity Chairman Rhoda E. Pieree St. Paul B. S. Mniic Alpha Gamma Della: Gopher Stall; Editor o( Vanity Fair 0, 'll. Editorial Board ')l, JJ; Homecoming Committee 'JO. ā¢Jl: Big Sitter It. 0; SkiD-Mah Salei Tt, 'JO; Matquert: Uniirruty Singerc Wizard ol rhe Nile ; Mikado ; Robin Hood. A. Kenneth Pihlsirom Evelcrh B. S. Sot ill Science llamlinc Univeriity; Beta Kappa. Kenneth M. Parks Minorapolit B. S. Education Grace S. Pineus Eveletb B. S. Eveletb Junior College Sigma Delia Tau; German Clnb; Y.W.C A Dramatic Club. B.g Since. Virginia Persons Duluth B. S. Mathematic! Duluth Junior Colltge; WAA Ruth L. Pohjonen Chitholm B. S. Eel an 140 Margaret Pollock Duluth B. S. Bonny Duluth Junior Collrgr. Evelyn A. Rognlcy Hill 8. S. Couamrcrul Auguttaea Colligr. Ester Pouhan Elit B. S. Eduration W A A,: Aquatic I n)Ā«c I'E A. Ilene Root Minnrapotii B. S. Euglnh WAA. Board. RtlW Tom: YWCA Dorothy M. Powers Mmnnpolii B, S Library jr.il Englnh Polar til Club. Edwin E. Pumala Gilbrri B. S. Admm.nni.on Winona Snn Tcacbrt'a Collrgr. Amu Alpha Sigma Pi; Men-to . Bui in. it Manager. H. Robert Ransom AnnanJalr IS. S. Education CM PM Ruth Rosenberger St Cloud B. S. W.lia.r St. Cloud TĀ«athctāĀ« College Mary Elizabeth Rowe llibbing B. S. Mut.c llibbing Juniot College. Kappa Phi. Hazel Sandberg Mmnnpol.t B. S Elrmrnn.r St C.loud Ttatliti'i Collcgr. Lillian Redman Roteoe. South Dakota B. S. Education Glen D. Sard Ktrwalin B. S. Education S. Blanid Redmond Lannboio B. S. Mathematic Winona Starr ItadKii Collrgr. Joseph N. Schloesser Lr Crntrr B. S. Latin Collrgr o( St Thooaac Soecei Ml Lc11j Sconbcrg Enhtlville, IĀ«wi B. S, l .lt.f jiioii Helen Sears Minnopolii 0. S. Eirtluh A!p)u Xi Orlu; Mwiir Ikuiil Phi llio Kippj. Pi Unlnli Thru. Pu Signu tJpwlon-I jmbālj Al| h PĀ i; Mmciv 1. u.j.y Society; Y W ( A Cabinet; Stmlcnll' Rrligiom Couniil; Pjn IlilUmi (iotwil, Twjuih; Y W.C.A.: IrrUimjn foommiun; Mrntoi, I ditorol AimunC lluiil ol PublK.moni m Eduonoii: licihmin Wok. Annum Chairman: tlnivinily ol Minncioo l.ibuiy Auitlim Morris Segal Ereleth B, S. Phyiiol Fduoiion EĀ«lĀ li Jnnior College: Phi Eptilon Pi. Sigma Delta lāii; Swimming Jean Mary Sinclair Hibhial B. S. Phyrieal Eiluoiion Kendall College; W. A. A.: P I. A. Frances Snider Favlklon. Sooih Dakota H. S. L I oiioii t jilt inn: Alpha Gimnu Della; S W C A Esther F:. Snyder Minnrj|iollĀ« B. S. ConiBiiliil Kappa Phi. Butmrai Women ⢠I Lb: Twin Sixer. Y.W.C. A. Viena M. Soinero Si. Pawl B. S. lloĀ«( i lonimwi Ely Jumoi College; Ml A : Y W.( A. Mafalda Sonaglia llibhing II. S. Education Dorothy 0. Stcbbins Minnopolii B. S. Maibemaiiti W A A . Y W.C.A , llaiketball; Baieball: Mocker. Big Smee. Lloyd W. Stein Two Million B. S. Pdoolioa Acacia: looibalt JO. Jl. -Ji. Harvey W. Stenson Minnopolii B. S. I lino non IWo Theta Pi; Froliman Bait-bill; Slilion Anmmnio VV.I IS ; Umvrttily Singed Marjorie E. Stranger Minnopolii l . S. Public School Mutie Siymj Alpha loo: Univcfiuy Sinyrn Esther A. Streamlet Evansville B. S. I .luoiion Moorhoil TijdlriT olltge .John A. E. Stronsberg PlOIIOI B. S. Phyuol Education Mtbhmg Junioe College; Phi Mm Pi. 142 Helen Sundberg Biahaau B. S. MilkimilKI Pi I amb.ti Theta: Univtriiiy Walther l unĀ«; Y.W.C-A. Mary T. Swancon Buflalo B. S. Zoology CuliM; Drill Zna. Bi Suite; RaiVnbill: Hiubill. Hotkey. Trnuii Ntvj A. Swrnvon Si. Paul B. S. ln lul. Margaret Tallmadgc Si. Paul B. S. Malhrmalit Mottar Hoard: Eli Stgna UpĀ -Ion; Pi limWi 1 hcli; Y.W. C. A.. Small Cabinet 'JO. Jl. ā J2; Firihmm t.ommiiuon ā21; Mol bo i Day. Eiiiiliii t.'om-mittee ') I; Dill' Day. txiinvi Cnmntillte 'Jl; W.S.G.A.; Bi Sinn; Buaul ol Publiiiuoni Mary V. Taylor Minncipolii B. S, Fiiwh Mona Thompson Si. Paul D. $. Mutic Kappj Du: I'mvotiifr SmuĀ«i John Topolka Biwabik B. S. Naiuial Science Florence H. Tunell Mmnripotii B. S. Sooal Sennit Glenn Tylet Si. Paul B. S. Maibimaiiei Harold Ucofc Tylo B. S. Pliyiiul Education Univuiiiy ā¢( Wucontin; Bit. bill JO. ā I Eltena Ventura Mibbin B. S. Commenial llibbing Junior Colleye: Kappa Delia: Rutinrii Women ! Club: Bi Sinn; Twin Sinn Gordon Vidcen BnnJon B S. Education Sophie Vranech ChnMm B. $. FrĀ« h Kathleen A. Wahh Ely B. S. Punch Ely junior Colli !; Delta Zita: Y W C A m Emily V. Walters Raul Creek, Michigan RS, Education Mildred M. Welander Minncapolii 8. S. An Delta 7.tta: Eta Sigma Upulon: Ait Education Allocation: YAV. C A,; Rig Sitter. Captain: Skt U Mah. Am Stall ā29. JO. 'Jlj I'an I fell' me Council. Social Committee 'JO. Jl. Rothmg Chairman J I. -J2 Thelma E. Welch Minncapolii B. S. Education Myrtle Weyrens Hebron. Noith Dakota 8. S. Education Marjorie A. White Minnrapolii 8. S. Education Helen Wiggert I.cad. South Dakota B. S.. R. N. Education Alpha Tau Delta. Marguerite E. Wilkinson Ogtma B. S. Education Gladys Willcutt Minncapolii 8. S. Mathematics Morning 5ide College; Alpha Chi Omega. Alberta Wolsted Matmonr 8. S. English Kappa Phi Winifred Woltman St. Paul n. s. Att WoenenT Inter.Collegiate Debate; Masquers. Anne Zakula Kinney 8. S. Physical Education Mibbing Junior College: W.A.A.: PEA 144 IMIMNISS AltUISISTItATIOS 145 Paul i axemen thofpencil (heir axu by rolling Monet down hilli. and holding lire idon ccoinst them Ā«. ihiy u'riM by. Dean l(. A. Stcvemon Business Administration Like many other (leant .it Minnesota. Dean Russell A. Stevenson of the Sehool of Business Administration says that the most enjoyable part of his work is the associations it affords him with the students. Of course. he says, there are unpleasant moments in everybody's jobājust as there are red letter days. Perhaps the most uninteresting part of mine is earing for administrative details.ā Dean Stevenson, among other things, is an inveterate traveller. He has covered practically the entire North American continent, as well as most of Europe and some of the Orient. Es-ery vacation time finds him outward bound. One of his favorite spots is beautiful Vancouver Island ofT the coast of Canada. The Dean also enjoys fishing, and has done some deep sea fishing for salmon off the Canadian coast near Victoria. Me refuses to slate how big the one that got awayā was, however. The Dean does find, however, that he can wjx very enthusiastic over the prospect of climbing a mountain. At present he is planning a trip to southwestern regions of the United Statesāa journey he has been forced to postpone for some years. Dean Stevenson began his freshman year at the University of Michigan as a pre-law student in the Arts college However, through chance associations with three faculty members there, he became interested in business, and changed his course After his graduation, an expansion of the curriculum opened a faculty position for which he was recommended and which he has filled ever since. From Michigan, he went to Iowa. Cincinnati, and finally came to Minnesota, spending six years at each of the three latter institutions. ⢠⢠⦠⢠Picture if you can. the conventional hard-headed business man gone domestic. John .1. Kcighard. assistant dean of the School of Business Administration, provides Minnesota with one such situation. He likes to cook. Mr. Keighard is as much at home listening to the din of pots and pans as to the clatter of typewriters. Mr. Keighard insists that he enjoys his work. My job. he says, consists of helping students to find themselves and their courses. I must present answers to such questions as. 'Why can't 1 take this course?ā or AVhy can't I get into the School of Business Administration?ā Believing that there is room for improvement in the present educational system as well as in other fields of endeavor. Mr. Rcighaid says. ' I he disciplinary value of a college education is much less than formerly Mr Keighard came to Minnesota after attending the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, his home town, where he received his Bachelor's degree followed with his Master's degree at New York University. At the present time he is a member of the Slate Society of Certified Public Accountants, and the Minneapolis Chapter of Cost Accountants. ⦠⦠⦠⦠According to Dean Stevenson. Minnesota has a distinctive view of business education. It tends to develop broad backgrounds and analytical ability, with less stress on detail work. It teaches meth- ods of attack and organization in handling new economic problem , and tries to bring out individual initiative The aim of the school is to serve I lie state in three general ways: first, to train students for capable business positions; second, to conduct research for controlling the economic development of the region; and third, to furnish competent leadership and sound interpretation in economic fields. 146 Lucile Aitehison Arnold Pjrl !o J B. B. A. G'nrial Penn College; Cimnu Epsilon Pi Noyti V. Alger Minneapolis B. B A Administration limMi Clii Alpha. Seabbatd and Blade: Kunnai Club. OftĀ«n Club: Military Ball 10. M. Ilomeeoming '30. ā31 Maynard A. Alsaker Benton B. B. A Genual Delia Upulon. A. Merrill Anderson Dalaili 1). B. A. Pertonml Duluth Junior College. Cum-ranee Club; I utberan Sis.it. nit Association 31 Carlyle 0. Anderson limning B B, A. AJvmiiin Kjppj Sigmj. Atplu Della Sif-ml . InurlijiiffiKv Council 11. ā¢u. Barbara Angel Minneapolis B B. A. Tufli an.l Tijnii'oniuon Newman Club: Botiaeit Women s Club 10. Ml; Hoard ol Associated Siuiliou āll. '12; Huti-nrtt School Pield Diy. Assistant hiiinsen 'll; Business Sehrol Banquet, Aiilitim Quitman 12 Big Sitter, Captain 'll '12 Guy B. Arthur, Jr. Massillon. Ohio B. B. A. Iātoilui non Managrmmt Triangle; Gary Fiiat: A. M. A. 12; I R I; '29. JO. 'll. A I K K ; Pledge Nite, Quit-man 12; Homecoming ā12; Bust, nett F-ield Day. Chairman 'll; I rrthnsan Week, General Dnliiel Cliaitman 'll; Engineers Day. Mntliall '10; Commerce Ball. liaieman General Artangrmrnlt 12; SV. U Mah '12; Trelmo. I og '29: Arabi '29. Anna V. Arvidson Kaniliyoln B. B. A. Arenonting Alpha Delta Thru: Gamma Ep ailon Pi; Butmrtt Women Club Raymond N. Beim Minneapolis B. B, A. Aeeountm I'ti Upulon: White Dragon Ben F. Bellfuss Wnbte. W.stont.n B B. A. Finance Marquette Unittuiiy Newman Club Rossvelle Berne Minnrapolit B. B. A. Grreial Edwin Chown Winnipeg. Canada B B. A. Administration Uniter nt t ol Manitoba; Delta Sigma Pi. Hamnett Sibool Bowk Exchange. Manager. Harold V. Christianson Lead. South Dakota B. B. A. Accounting .Sigma Pin Fptiloe: Phaljnx. Tieaturce; Offieet's Club: Milt-taiy Ball. Auditing Committee Quitman āll Glenn A. Christie Winnipeg. Manitoba. Canada B. B. A Gcnaral Univeraity ol Manitoba: Della Sigma Iāi. Paul marked bit lop t hij pinching nut a piece urith hit htuwnuhund; hut hit- nun hod in trie an axe to ualp them. 147 William C. Chtistopherson Minneapolis B B, A. Gesweal Delta L'psllOO. Russell Loren Chrysler Minneapolis B. B, A. Miiihioiliiiiii Bill Giikkii Sigma; Bnitni N'Ā«vrt. MinluwlMmr Pdilot. John James Conroy Minneapolis B B. A. Aeroonrsng Newman Club Boji-i '31. '3J: Minnesota Bukikii Review 32. W Wallace Cowan lltl'hing B B. A Minhindlniit I libbing tumor follfic Pti Up-ulon: Pnyx; Alpha Phi Chi: Freshmiu Week ā30, William H. Crowe DĀ ul B. B, A Gran 1 Drill Signs! Pi. Gery FriĀ i; Phoenix: Alpha Drill Sigma: Busintti School Dance, Chau-min Bunnris School Smoko. Chairman: Sihool ol Business Field Day. General Arrangements School ol Ituiiarci Banquet, Grneeil Arrangement : junior Bill. hiiiman: Senioi Prom, Chairman; Gopher. Boti-nm Manager IJ: Slid Dirtcior '31: Daily. Circulnion Manager SI, Assistant Circulation Manager i?. '30. Business News. Sain Diircior '31 Norman C. Davey Hihbing B 8. A Aeeoiinung llibbing Junior College: Bell Gamma Sigma. Bela Alpha Pai Donald A. Consians Minnrapolis B IS. A. Grnrral jilrion College; Zria Pai; M Club: Freshman Baskriball: Frrshman Track; Track '30. ā31. M Donald D. Dickinson VrrnJale B B A Merchandising ( arlrloia College: Alpha Kappa Pii: Business News. Advertising. O- Kathryn Cook Minneapolis B B. A. Penoianel Alpha Xi Della: Business VĀ«. men . Onb; YW C A ; Big Suier Sylvia Diessncr Minneapolis B. B A Srcrrllriil Phi Mu Buunrss Women's Club: Y.W A Big Sister: Pan Hellenic '31. 32 Catherine O. Cosgrove Duluih B. 8 A. Siaiiiliei Si ( aihnine's: Alpha Omiuon Pi. Frailer Club: Busmen Women i Club W A.A.: YWCA : Junior Ball Committee '31: ll.vkry I . 31. Golf 'SO Paul James Coughlin Wairra B. B A Advertising Notre Dame University: Drill Sigma Pi. I 48 Gerald A. Dotson Minneapolis B. B. A. Geneial Lois Rurh Druck Sr. Paul IS. B A Secretarial Gamma fpsilois Pi. Kenneth L. Dryg Minn jpolit ft. ft. A. Cfiunl Donald A. Dumon Minnrapolit B, B. A. Genual Seabbard and Blade Jl. 12. Runncit Clob 'll. ā12 Old O Buret' Club II. IVdilial J2: Manager Club. Preiidrnl II: Cadre Offirrit' hall. General AĀ -raogcmrnlt Chairman 'll. Bati-ball. Annual Manager J ⢠. Manager āJl. Webster A. Fischer l.rwinon B, B. A. Accounting Koehettrr Junior College hria Gamma Sigma; Brla Alpha Iāu Louis A. Fisher M inner po! it II. B. A. Inilwili.il l ambda CM Alpha Bru Gam-fĀ«a Sigma: Huunctt Review Id: Tennit JO; Y.M C A . Cabinn 27. '28. Joseph L. Eitchcn .Minrw jpolu ft ft. A CtlMfll Everett Foisnun Evcltlh B B. A. General Alpha Kappa Ptl. N. Lawrence Enget Minneapoliv B. B. A. Grnrral lliua Orlia Chi; Y M C A . Cabinet JO. II. Fmhmaa Week JO II. Jl 12; Home-eoming 'll. J2; huiiarvi Selxx-1 Dance, General Arrangrtnenlv āll, 12: Inrerfratciriiiy Council Oj-pbrr. Attociate Botinm Manager Jl. 12 Gardner English Minnrapolit h. B. A. Central I ambda Chi Alpha: Alpha Della Sigma; Perilling RiBca; Mā llam|uel. Chairman ā10: Home-eoming, Eiceolivr Council; I012 Pledge Nile Revue. AuiiUnl Chairman 12: Sk.-D Mah, Bui, nrvv Stall 'll. 'J2: Aviivuni huuneu Manager 'll William A. Fowler Fargo. North Dakota B. B. A. Ctnrtal Wanda E. Fundbcrg Minnrapolit B H. A. Advttliving Alpha Della PI; Thru Sigma Phi Morlar Board Pinafore Homecoming. Avmlanl Cliauman 'll: ISig Sitter. Chaiiman 12. Matin. Chairman i l General Arrangement! 12 WSGA Boaid Ml. M2: Senior Adviteny Board. (Jhairman Ml. Ftctlmnan Week Ml. M2 Pan Hellenic Council Ml: IS W.. Minnetoca Daily '2 . JO. Ml: Senate Coen-miller on Student Publication! Ml. M2 Robert E. Evans Bangoe. Witronnn B. B. A. Finance Si. Maiv't College: Alpha Kappa Pti. Band Ml. M2. Rosalind Finberg Si. Paul B. B. A. Pertonnel Reinar V. Gabriclson Duluih B. B. A. Aeeounung Duluih Junior College Della Sigma Pi; Annual Butinett School Banquet. Committee Chaiiman: Butinett School Book Eichaogr. Atmirni Manager M2 Leo Gans Si. Cloud B, B. A. General Univenny ol Witconiin. l mvei my ol Prnntylvania; Thru Delta Chi 149 IIjIk ufotild iome timet tneah up behind a drive and drink all the water out of the fiver, leaving the loy hiah and dry Rudolph Garfin Muon Ciiy. low It B. A. Aeeonnrin Maioo Ciif Junior ullrtc Minamata Buunen Review, Buunen Si art Meyer Gold Minor Jpolil H B. A. Advrimmx Annual S hc 'l HaiM|url. Chairman; ftuiincn NrĀ i. AĀ« muni Adverlrung Mini((i JO. 'I: Mmnciota Buwneta Review. Botmen āll. ā)J. Payton R. Gould Minnrapolii B. B A. Gencial Alpha Delia l hi; Synton: Junior Bill: Gopher. Sophomore Ann lint ā 0. Editorial Annum 11. Editorial Board JJ; Duly Reporter Jt. |-frtkmjĀ« lloikey. hrnhaan (loll: Wi ll $laĀ« Paul G. Gray I nliiivillr. low B. B. A. Grnrril Cnivrnity o( Minotii: Alpha Tan Omex Dorothy U. Green Minneipoln B. B. A. Secretarial Murrar Board: Buunen Womm i ( 1.1, Prendenl J. Board II. Bond ul Aiwnrinl Student!. Sraour and Trrantrr 'JJ. W S.G.A Board JJ. YAV A.. I are Cabinet; llix SiiKr. Bun nen IIiim|oiI. AuMKIc ( III moan ā¢)2. Romola Griswold Sr. Paul B B. A. General Wallace F. Gronholm Minnrapolii B. B. A. General Rifle Team JO. )l. JJ Karn Marie Hansen $1. Paul B. B A. Srerecarial Bunnen Women Club; YAV. C A Lynn Hansen Shell l ake. Wiuonnn It. B A. General llrmline: Della S xma Pi. Mary Harper Worihiitxion B It. A Adveriitinx Alpha Gamma Della: Thru SiX n II Josiah Hart ell Minnrapolii B. B. A. Grerrral Della Kappa Ipulon. While Draxoa: I au Upulon Kappa. Junior Ball; I lethman Week: Piedxe Nile. Laurence J. Hendrickson Chippewa Falla. Wiaeooun B It. A. General lambda tin Alpha. Commerce Club; Univermy DeMolay Club. Ā«opher. Daily. Ski U Mab. A.-eountanl George N. Hiniker Minnnpolii B. B. A. Accounting I'nye Marrian L. Horky Minnrapolri It. B. A. Secretarial Beta Pin Alpha: Newman Club; Bunnin Club: Itix Staler 150 Elaine Hosp Minne apoht B B. A. Sirrnaiial ISonneti Women' Club Charlotte A. Johnson Aleaandiia B It A Aetouniinjj Waihlngton Umreuur. Frank G. Johnson Si Paul IS (S A. Geneial Della Sigma Pi. Harry M. Johnson MiĀ nopoliĀ« ft B. A. GĀ«nfril IrvinR C. Johnson Minnrapelu B. B. A. Genual Beia Gamma Sunn. Kenneth O. Johnson Si. Paul B. B. A, General Alpha I au Omega. Russel E. Johnson Viiginaa B. B. A. Geneial Vitgiuia Junior College; Beta Gamma Sigma; Band Jl. JJ Beatrice Kaner Neihwjuk IS. B. A Meeehio.linny llibbing Junior College. ISuiineai Women'i Club. William H. Kaplan Si. Paul (V. ft. A. Accounting Berton Kohler Minneapolis B. B. A. Mtithandning Alpha Delia Phi. Ida E. Kotchevar Ely B. B. A. Gmeial Allan Landkamer Mankato IS. B A. Mliehanilitiog Alpha Tau Omega; Newman Club Burton A. Larson Mmnrapolu B. B. A. Geneial Delia Sigma Pi. ISoar.l of Auo iaiĀ«J Stuilintt. Chairman; Senior Announcement!. Chairman School ot Buiineu. Senior Clan Pieiidem Melvin Levin Minneapolii IS B. A. Geneial Band 151 Paul could tauhj peel a lop at clean a a whittle bu holding the bark at one end, while Babe pulled at the other. Telford Lindborg Minneipolii B. B. A. Adoummt Pool bill '25. '26. John B. McNamara Superior. WiKMlia B. B, A. Gencol Superior Stile Toibm College: Cofumerrt Club: Univernty Sinjen. Helen Lofsness Minneapolis B. B. A. Meichimliting IVutinru W'ocaco'i Club 'JO. 'J I: Big Since. John F. McNerney Si. Paul IV. 0. A. Genenl Stanford D. Lohm.inn Zumbrou B. B. A. Finance Alpha Kipp) Pii. Charlotte Helen Lubov Si. Paul B. B. A. Arrounliug Dell) Onijj lot): Uuiincn We mm'i Club 'JO. Herbert Marklc Li Crone, Witcomin B. D. A. Finance 1.) Crone Snte Teicheri College: Phi Tiu Theta: Minium: University Singers: Fretbmin Wrci-lling: Frcihman Tcnnii; Wealcy Pliyeit, President 'J2. Spiros W. Maroosis Muligiicir B. B. A. Gmeral Kenneth M. McGhee Virgini) B. B. A. Accounting Virgini) Junior College Bel) Alpha Pei; Bell Gimmi Sigma: Bind 31. 'J2. Wilmett A. Maurer Si. P)ul B. B. A. Genenl Zen PĀ i. Samuel M. McKee Orringion. North Dikoca B. B. A. Firunee Aexii: Dakota Club: Duly. Sales Manager 'J2. Si Pjul Advertising .Manager 'Jl. Aclvcr-uiing Solicitor '30: Miiqiiu: Imeitiiierniiy Council '32: Go. pher. Beth T. Meyer Si. Piul B. B. A. Seereuriil Kippi Drlu: Biin'nen Women's Club; Big Sitler; Univcrtily Smgeri 28; YAV.C.A. Robert S. McNaghten Minneipolii It. B. A. Genciil Phi Kipp) Sigmi; Minneiot) Daily '29. 'JO; Gopher. Organi-enion Manager '31. Atmtint llunnen Mmjger ā 2. Ilomreom-mg. Commiiiee Chairman āJ2: Butineti School Donee. Genenl irangcmcnu Commuter ā32. W. Stanton Miller Minneipolii B. S.. B. B. A. Foieign Tnde 152 J. Stuart Moore Si. Paul B. B. A. Advettising Chi Phi: Alpha Delta Sigma: Homecoming. Booklet Chairman '31: Gopher '31: Daily Adver-tiling Minjjd in St Paul '31. '32: Matqucrt: Cherr Leader '28. '29. Frederick J. Morlock Good Thundir B. B. A. General Univtnity Waliher Lm|U. Vincent C. Mullaney Sc. Paul B. B. A. Genual Julian Mullin Minneapolis B. B. A. Gtniul James Myers Grition. North Dakota B. B. A. Finance Phi Delta Theta: ScabbatJ and Blade; Rnnacn Clob: Miliuty Bill '31: Homecoming '31. Alvar S. Nelson Duloih B. B. A. Finance Go{ h f Slid, Matt Niska Evilith B. B. A. AJminniraiion Evelelh Junior College: American Mimttnwnl Allocution. Mmneiota Branch: Hockey. Chester H. Nordeen MmneipoJn B, B. A. General Delta Sigma Pi: Alpha Pi Tan: Junior Ball. Muiic '31: Buiinen Banquet '31; Gopher Said '31: Butinrit Newt '31; Buiinen Student Countil '31. Donald O'Brian Getty tboig. South Dakota B. B. A. Central Roger G. O'Malley Baytrld. WitcMtin B. B. A. Finance Delta Sigma Pi: Buiincic Newi ā¢31. Curtiss R. Oberg Watertown B. B. A. Accounting Guitavui Adolphvi; Tbcta Xi: lotcrfraternity Council: Junior Ball Committee. Orlin Ofstad Ore B. B. S. Penoonel Virginia Junior College E. Andrew Olson Saginaw, Michigan B. B A. Finance Notthcin Statec Teacbera College. Weslie W. Olson Minneapolii B. B. A. Adrcniiing Univemly ol Chicago: Alpha Kappi Pal; Pnyx. Penhing Rilii: Univenity Singcn, In-itallation Banquet, Chaitman '3 I: Butineu School Banquet. AĀ io-ciatcd Chairman and Tcutimiiier 12: AII U Smoker. Manet ol Ceremonies '32: Gopher ā32: Minnesota Uuuneii Review. Edl-tonal Board: Univenity Singen. Pmidcnt ā32: Stadium Singen. 153 Harold Paul Peterson Balilt B. B. A. Genef.it North Pill College. Albert Ruud Virginia B. B. A. Accounting Virginia Junior College John B. Pugh Minneapolis H D. A. Graftal Theta Drill On Miriam Putin St. Paul B. B A. Crnrul Richard G. Rapp St. Paul B. B. A. Adreeilimg Alpha Pella Sigma; BfU Gamma Sigma. Robert H. Reed Minneapolis B. B A. Grnrral Drlla Kappa bpiilon; Uuunru School Dance: Briwni School Puli Day: Booneti Srliool Banquet; Senior Prom Committee: Gopher. Uuuneit Stag. Buunrii Ncwi. Aicociiie Buiinttt Mana gee: Union Board ol Governor!; Track Marian Rogalsky Minnrapolli B. B. A, Sitrtitrial Martha L. Ruhnke Minnrapolli B. B. A. Seem trial ailrlon: Alpha Drlra Pil lluti-nriĀ Wonin'i Clnh; Big Since Stanley A. Sather St. Paul B. B. A. Advrtnting Alpha Kappa PĀ i. Russel E. Sawyer Minnrapolli B. B. A. Plod action Managrmtni Fred M. Seed St. Croix Pallt. Witconun B. B. A. Accoonting Delta Sigma Pi; Commerce Club: Annual Butinrit School Banquet. I lianman: Board ol Attocitltd Studrntt ol School ol Bgiincn Administration 'J2; Chairman New ScImioI of Buiincti Building Commitiion: Gopher J I; BuĀ i-nciĀ Newt āJO. āJl. Iluiinet School Book Ifxchaogr. Manager ā JJ Aimltnr Manager 'Jl George N. Scirup Minnrapolli B- B. A. Genrial Maurice F. Selander Sr. Paul B. B. A. Grnrral Maurice I. Severson Duluih B. B. A. Advrriiiing Duluih Junior Collrgt; Commerce Club; l.ulhrian Slodrnlt' Attocialion. 15-4 Keniii-it) Simplon Minini|Ā lli B. U. A. (.mml ZilJ I'm: SiKm t elu Chi; Homecoming ( lunnin 'J2. All Univcitny owned 'J2: lluilnot School Bond of Anociitcd Siu-denu 'Jl; Gopher, Cimpugn M iu| i 'M: Minnetou Duly, City Aitiilint āIV. ā 0, Jl; Brin Mum George Lee Smith Si. Piul II B. A. AJnilliini Alphi Tin Omegi. Lillie C. Smiih Minnopolil B. B. A. Grnml Thu Chi: Bell CiĀ« i Sigtni Minnetou Uuunni Review 1! Lucy Snider Fiulkcon. South Dikou B. B. A. Gcncul Cirletoa: Alphi Gimmi belli: Inierhouie Couaul )]; Y.W. C A ClifTord C. Sommer Rath Cm B. B A Fiiiiiki I'tn Dell Thu : Silvci Sput: NT Club, l-reihmin Week. Ai ā¢oeuic Chuim.in 'll: ttnkrtb.ill :ā Ā . to, ji. ji Lloyd G. Stanley leid. South Dikou B. B. A. Gnunl Dili Signu I'i: Bond of Ano-eiltcd Studenn in Rmiacii All-Univeiiity Council Arthur H. Stremel Minnopolil B. B. A. Geneol Alphi Kippi PĀ i. Gordon W. Stuart Minnopolil B, B. A. Advritmng Edmund Wallace Tulloch Minnopolil B. B. A. Muihjniliiing l e Moby. Peei.dent Jl. Or iltmoi. Lawrence L. Vance Minnopolil B. B. A. Accounting Notthweiteta: Tlx 11 Chi. Phi Delu Guam : Bet Gienno Si mi: Beta Alphi Pri: Iton Wedge: Senate Committee: Gopher )2. Munition Bunnen Review. Cue Editor: Quutetly. Buuneii Min-i((i, Debite JO. Jl J2 Miaiger 'J2. Pillibuty Otltoeical 'J2: Uxtemponneoui Spoking ā 29. JO. Jl. J2. Ralph Walch Rollingtionr B- B. A. Gtneol Clifford W. Williamc Mitchell. Souili Dikou B. B. A. Teinipottilion Dikou Weiley Univmity A. Gordon Wood. Jr. Dwluili B. B. A. Gtaetil Hit] Jo . the coo ft. had a dinntr hern 10 big. and he bleu} it no hard that pine teen fell, and tyriontt were Marled. Graduate School Dean Guy S. Ford The first time Dean Guy Stanton Ford, of the graduate school, laid eyes on the coast of Europe he seized the Captain's binoculars and focused them on England. He spied several old towers dotting her landscape- Yes. sir. he exclaimed, peering at the turrets. I'll bet old Cromwell threw those up! That is the way Dean l ord is interested in. and just a bit enthusiastic over, everything. Incidentally, if the environment of the dean has any history, it is soon unearthed. He has learned to appreciate the present through a knowledge of the past. In so much as today's news is tomorrow's history. Dean Ford would like to visit Russia and watch the development of the second Five-Year plan. Russia, he believes, is undergoing just as exciting an era as that produced in France by the revolution. If the graduate school head were restricted to the United States for a jaunt he would depart without ceremony for the Southwest. He has seen the country before from foot paths, highways, and airways, but the blazing desert of the border country still holds secrets enchanting as the hills in which they arc locked. You might call Dean Ford a Jack of-All-Hobbies, his interests are so variedāa point of interest when one considers that even a dean must work. If the graduate school office is empty it probably means that Dr. Ford is at one of the endless committee meetings he must attend in addition to caring for his administrative duties. When President Coffman needs a right hand man he calls on Dean Guy Stanton Ford, be it for golf or business. ⢠⦠⢠Found: a department head with rats in his attic. Believe it or not. Dr. C. M. Jackson, head of the graduate school in medicine, has a drove of them in the Anatomy Building, It would seem strange. he said, to the uninitiated, that an anatomist should be interested in rats. All anatomy is not cut and dried, since basic knowledge must be utilized to further research. Some of his rodents are privileged to wear pink ribbons and live on sugar, while others exist on food more to the liking of a rat. Both of them seem to survive. A diabetic then is the result of a glandular failure, and not of a lemon meringue pie. Health Service records have furnished the anatomist with another sidelight. Students of today are. as a group, taller by two inches, heavier, and healthier than they were two decades ago. Dr. Jackson believes better living conditions are responsible. Men do not live any longer than they ever did, he believes, but more of them reach old age. You can't buy pans for the human machine, and eventually things wear out. Administrative affairs in his own department and the graduate school keep Dr. Jackson occupied, but he refuses to divulge any pet peeve . ⢠⢠⢠On entering the graduate school the former undergraduate is somewhat startled to find himself again with professors who arc specialists in their particular fields, but as tutors. He is placed under an advisor of his osvn choosing, and is left much more to his own initiative than the lowly senior. The graduate school at Minnesota is so organized as to provide training and facilities for research in widely diversified fields of endeavor, and yet it remains uniquely compact. Its medical unit is the largest in the world, a fact which the average undergraduate pacing across the knoll may not appreciate. This same person, while removing his science requirement, may wonder who it is that helps him draw what he is supposed to see under the microscope, or who the person is that moves about like a sinister shadow during the svriting of finals. This strange creature is probably none other than a graduate student. 156 Extension Division Paul often uud a great timber icgthe, With which ht could itil a ircuon of timbtr with onr mighty iw'ing of tkt arntx Richard R. Price H. B. Gislason. Assistant Director of the Extension Division and instructor of speech makes a hobby of his profession. ' I really enjoy attending lectures and hearing good speakers.ā he says, and I am a thorough believer in the influence of the spoken word. I think the most amusing remark I ever heard .i lecturer make was one by Bertrand Russell, in reference to the great Christian nations of the world. He defined them as being those nations thoroughly prepared for bloodshedā.'' Mr. Gislason is giving up fishing as a hobby because, he says. I've been at it for over twenty years āand itās getting worse all the time. The fish are getting smarter and fewer. But I enjoy all kinds of sports: golf is my favorite now. I'm going out one of these fine afternoons and beat the records of the big gunsā, too. Mr Gislason recently entertained a professor from the University of Iceland in whom he was particularly interested because he. himself, is a native of that country. I remember protesting violently against leaving Iceland when we boarded the boat to leave. he says. I was then three years of age.ā An LI.. B. and A. B. are now credited to this emigrant, both received at the University of Minnesota. He has been in charge of debating here for six years, and has written many bulletins on speech He is a charter member of the National Association of Teachers of Speech, and was the first national secretary of that organization. He nosv has charge of the University's radio broadcasts as well as the programs and slides sent to outlying schools in the state. ⢠⢠⢠⢠White-collar men are walking the streets of the city today looking for work because they believed that a college education was training that will enable them to earn a livelihood. states Professor R. B. Price, director of the Extension Division. They were wrong: men can be trained in processes and mechanical routing to fill positions, but education here is training in appreciations and attitudes. Education should pave the road to happiness, to a fuller and more complete appreciation of life. For that reason I thoroughly believe in the theory of adult education. he continues. The self-education of a man should not cs'ase upon his graduation. Incidentally. Dr Price himself took his doctorate in educational administration at Harvard twenty years after taking his master's degrees in Greek at the same institution. In the interim, he acted as instructor, and as superintendent of schools in his home town. Hutchinson. Kansas. He established the second extension division in the United States at Kansas University, and in I 91 J came to Minnesota to found the extension division here. Dr. Price's principal hobby is golf, although when asked about it, he'll merely smile and say: Well, yes. I do play. I've been trying to break a hundred all my life!ā ⢠⦠⢠⢠A most important project has been carried on in the extension division this year Under the supervision of Dr. Herbert Sorenson, the work begun three years ago of comparing the relative abilities of the extension class students to those of day-school students at Minnesota. According to the large amount of data which Dr. Sorenson has collected, it has been found that superior older students attending class in the extension division rate higher in general intelligence tests than superior students in day school. This apparently disproves the theory that older people are not as quick to assimilate knowledge as younger people of college age. Dr Sorenson's data includes statistics concerning the comparative numbers of men and women of various vocations and professions who are now or have been taking extension courses, and information as to the source from which they obtained their knowledge of the Division's services. In recognition of their research, the Carnegie Institute has granted the department SlO.OOO for the continuation of their work in connection with other American universities. The total enrollment in the extension division for the first semester this year was well over 6000. while the second semester showed better than a 4000 total. 157 Summer Session Thomas A. II. I trier I can prove chat I .im not the Director of the Summer Session, and that I hold no officially authorized position in this University. I am the cipher that has no value unless a digit is placed before it. Furthermore. continued Dean J. C. Lawrence, 1 am here to banish all deans, all red tape, and all petty officials from this institution. Perhaps some day we may have a university for the students. I have no hobbies. Dean Lawrence declared, my work is my recreation: I do everything that no one else cares to do. I have nothing to tell about myself that could be of interest to the students. I know that they arc not interested in me or my affairs. When I was young and foolish and a 'big business man,' 1 bad a great many pet theories and ambitions. Now I have none. I am still foolish, of course, but I'm no longer young. No writeup on the summer session could be more intciesting. amusing, and pathetic, says the Dean, than the story of the dear old girls who come back summer after summer, stupidly pursuing a degreeānot for the love of knowledge, but because the school board may raise their salaries a hundred or so if they get one You see. it's useless to try and keep me coherent. Dean Lawrence maintained, because nothing I say can possibly be printed. ⢠⢠⦠⦠Of the many interesting stories told about the Extension Division and Summer Session by Thomas A. H. Teeter. Assistant Director of the Summer Session and Assistant Professor of F.ngmccring in the Extension Division, perhaps his pet one is about a young man who entered his office one night with a red book under his arm. Can you teach me to read this book? asked the boy. It developed that he had bought it for 50 cents in a second hand book store because he liked the cover and it seemed a bargain The book was a text in calculus. Professor Teeter explained. We taught him to read it. finallyābut he had to go to school for two years first. He is now associated with one of the leading engineering firms of the Twin Cities, Many experiences similar to this come up in the routine of administration, says Mr. Teeter He enjoys this phase of his job, and likes the numerous personal contacts he is able to make with the students Professor Teeter's hobbies arc duck hunting, fishing, and golf I took mv Bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering at Purdue in 1907. Mr. Teeter said. Upon graduating. 1 taught there for several years. After the war I went to Oregon Agricultural College to leach and finally came to Minnesota in 1922. A symposium in music and a symposium in educational thinking will be included in the coming summer session: productions will be gis-en by the University Players and the University Singers. The usual enrollment of the Summer Session is about 5.000 with the great majority school teachers. It is for their benefit that the symposiums are planned. A projected improvement in the Summer Session is the introduction of the five day week, and the arrangement of the courses to make them merely a continuation of the spring quarter's work for the regular students. The range of courses offered will be nearly as wide as that of the regular school year. Many campus activities will continue on through tlx summer: arrangements have been made for plays to be given by the University Players, and several prominent lecturers arc slated to appear throughout the two terms. The total enrollment during last yearās summer session was nearly 5600 and promises to be equally as great this year. 158 Medicine All the bu ildirign of I'aiil flan-t atrip tlitre on ithnl Rate pulled (he whole out Hi Irony one tooymo lit to ihr n Ā Dean F. P. I. yon A grin wrinkled the corners of his eyes as Dean Scammon leaned back in his ehait. You want to know what my duties arc. as Dean of Medical Sciences' Gosh. 1 don't know! The Dean explained that while the duties of an administrative office are generally supposed to be specific, they arc extremely hard to classify. A lot of it is routine, of courseā-and no one is especially interested in that.ā he added. In spue of having a tremendous amount of work to occupy his time. Dr Scammon still finds time for his pet hobbyāreading short stories. And. contrary to the popular conception that professors and deans always read accounts of scientific researches, he chooses stories from such magazines as tin- Atlantic Monthly and Saturday bvening Post. He finds much relaxation in his reading, and no little amount of mental stimulation. He thinks that one can be a connoisseur of short stories just as well as of rare books or etchings or anything else. Like most other men. Dean Scammon likes to go on a hunting or fishing trip occasionally, although he feels that he is beyond the age when people take more than a passive interest in sports In 1897 he was All American mile runner: he was captain of the cross country team, and played varsity footballāyet he insists on calling himself a second-rate athlete ' Dr. Scammon has traveled extensively, having been in Europe every summer the last ten years lie was abroad for three years previous to the fall of 19 31. and upon his return came to Minnesota instead of the University of Chicago, where he had formerly been Dean of Medical Sciences. He likes the University of Minnesota especially, he said, since it is a state affiliated, a conscious and growing community, and oilers a friendly, cooperative group in which to work and live. ⢠⦠⢠⦠How would you like to be shipwrecked op a remote shore of Greenland and live on nothing hut fish for two whole weeks? That was the experience of Dr. L. P. Lyon. Dean of the Medical School. The Dean was one of a crew of eighty-six doctors who accompanied Dr. Cook, the noted arctic explorer, on a summer's voyage to Greenland. While sailing along the top of the world at about latitude 80. their steamer ran onto a reef, and was completely wrecked. I he patty managed to escape to the shore, which was not far distant, and later were picked up by a Gloucester fishing smack which luckily happened to be sailing that way. The episode is one of Dr I yon's most cher ished experiences. Dean Lyon is a great hand at puttering around with tools. Mending crippled chairs and putting up lattice work is one of his chief delights. The Dean is always ready to commend creative ability m others: āI admire a man who can take a collar box and a button, and make a useful Christmas present out of them, he declared. He owns a summer home on a Wisconsin lake, in which he has a complete workshop and plenty of tools. He uses it as a rendezvous where he and his friends can hammer and saw to their hearts' content. During his undergraduate days. Dr. Lyon had no intention of going into medicine or medical education. His first specialized studies were in biology, in which he received his doctor's degree at the University of Chicago. However, realizing the unlimited field for research in physiology, and having the opportunity to study it under Jacques I oad. the Dean decided to switch over to that field. He considers Jacques Load the greatest physiologist ol all time Dr Lyon later took more extensive study in Naples. Heidelberg, and Southern California, ⢠⢠⢠⢠The new dental building now in process of construction on the medical campus will include offices and classes for other medical sciences. Dean Lyon secs in this a new administrative policy, which will perhaps incorporate all the medical sciences, including medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and nursing into one unit under more centralized control. The next step in the development of the medical units of the university will probably be the building of a psychopathic hospital. I 9 ACTI VITIES When there were pancakes for breakfast at Big Onion camp, the griddle was greased by sixteen colored boys who skated over its surface with hams tied to their feet (they had to have colored boys to stand the heat). Big Joe was the only man in America who could make pancakes fast enough to feed the hungry crew of loggers. He had Big Ole, the blacksmith, make him a griddle that was so big you couldnāt sec across it when the steam was thick. The batter, stirred in drums like concrete-mixers, was poured on with cranes and spouts. And the huge golden pancakes were carried to the tables on conveyor belts. When Paul Bunyan rescued Babe, u'ho had tumbled down the mountain into Tonnerre Bau. he carried the blue ox to his cave. There he worked over him all night. nursing him back to life. Suddenly Babe thrust out his tongue and caressed Paul's neck, and Paul, discovering that he was ticklish, laughed for the first time in his life. Babe gazed ut him with affectionate, intelligent blue eyes, and Paul knew that he had found a real friend. ItEMtESESTATIVE HISSESOTASS 161 (Committee of $election (-president, .ft. (D. Coffman '.Dean ylnne 'ā¢Dudley (Blitz 'Dean (I R. i'Nicholson yy(r. Curtis 'Rundell Miss Inn 'Ramsey Advisory Committee (president, .ft. rD. Coffman 'Dean Ā£. R. 'Nicholson 'ā Dean Joseph JAf. āfainnuns 'Dr. 'Ralph ' ). Casey Mr- Curtis CRundell 'Dean _ lnne 'Dudley 'Blitz Mr- to- 'B. (-pierce Mr. A(. O. Crisler Miss Inn 'Ramsey 162 University or Minnesota Minneapolis office or the fruimikt April 11, 1932 Mr, Leon M. Boyd Editor, The Gopher University of Minnesota My dear Mr. Boyd: The committee, consisting of Dean Blitz, Dean Nicholson, Miss Ina Ramsey, Mr. Curtis Rundell, and myself, appointed to select the Representative Minnesotans for the year 1931-32, have chosen the following persons: Jane W Affeld Ed32 7 arida E. Fundberg B32 Maxine K. Kaiser A3 2 Mildred McWilliams A3 2 Virginia J. Peters HE32 Margaret Tallmadge Ed32 Arnold C. Aslakson A3 2 Gordon E. Bodien E32 Clarence Munn Ed 32 Donald L. Robertson A3 2 Henry N. Somsen L34 Lawrence L. Vance B32 163 164 (jane ylffeld 165 Arnold _Aslakson 166 Cls)cinda [ fundberg 167 (Jordon cBodien 168 yyfnxine Kaiser Qlarence Stfunn 169 --.V- 3Y(ildred J)f(cc(Q)illia,ms 170 171 cI)on Robertson 172 Virginia (peters 173 THen rij Sow sen 174 Sfofargaret (V a llmadge 175 J2awrence ance T A HIS section is to show special honor to those seniors who during their college course have been most outstanding in their service to the University and to their fellow students. That the section might be more impartial and carry with it high honor, the Board of Publications and the Editor of the Gopher have adopted the following plan of selection: Appointment by the Board of a committee of twelve, members of the faculty. Deans, a junior student, and the chairman of the Board of Publications, who determined the activities and qualities to be considered, with a rating scale by which to determine the ranking of those whose names were presented for consideration. The President of the University, the Dean of Women, the Dean of Student Affairs, and two junior studentsāone man and one woman selected by the Board of Publicationsāto be the committee for final selection. The selection committee, in choosing the present group of Representative Minnesotans. has given first place in its consideration to scholarship, followed by University service, athletics, publications, dramatics, debate and oratory, leadership, character, cooperation, unselfish service, and influence and attitude in the building of college or departmental morale. A place among the Representative Minnesotansā is an honor. May the appreciation of this honor increase as the years go by to such an extent that the incoming freshman selects it as one of the rewards to be striven for throughout his college career. āEdward H. Ntcholson 176 Paul liunyan felt impelled to do some Great Life Work, but he knew not what that work should be. Then the Wonderful Idea came to him. Hy the holy mackinaw, the seven slippery saints, and the great horned owl. he would invent the logging industry'. Fired with inspiration and zeal. Paul sat outside the mouth of his cave and delivered his first oration, describing plans for carrying on the work he had just devised. It was a mighty speech. iHtess 177 Goph er Editorial Leon M. Boyd, Jr. Gould Ril t Dypwitk Icon M. Boyd. Jr.. Editor E. Patricio Ritz, Editor-in-chief Pay son R. Gould, Managing Editor Otis Dypwick, Associate Editor Ralph E. Bachman. Technical Advisor Ted E. I.arson. Technical Advisor George Doyle. Technical Advisor Donald I.arson. Chairman. Editorial Board Donald Jennings, Editorial Board Art G. Lease. Editorial Board Ellen Oren. Editorial Board Rhoda Pierce. Editorial Board E. Kenneth Pottle. Feature Writer John Harvey. Copy Editor Helen Silver. Senior Editor Harriet Thwing. Organizations Editor Virginia Miller. Activities Editor Dorothy Paulson. University Editor Elton Hess. Athletics Editor Mary Andrews. Women's Athletic Editor MiJaoJtr, I. Otto, Wltlh. Jcooinft. I'oltlr. Stlttnt. Ilan'ev, Kntthl Iāltrtt. Xtootr. Ooufl.i. Rw, Lrait. Vaott, lUkrt, Iāoultoo, V. Otto Doyle. I hunoy. iiUtr. Kilt Hoihnrao, Milltr, I at mo 178 Gopher Business William Crowe. Business Manager Robert McNaghten. Assistant Business Manager Lawrence Enger. Associate Business Manager Ralph Chase. Associate Business Manager Kenneth Simpson. Sales Mgr. Marvin McClure. Album Mgr. Charles Swanson. Assistant Album Manager William H. Crowe Edward Pickett. Organizations Manager Jack Shaw. Assistant Organizations Manager Weslie Olson. Publicity Director Harold Mattlin. Assistant Publicity Director John Corneveaux. Office Mgr. Byron Webster. Assistant Office Manager Chau McNaghten Enger U'ynrjf. lit,-hut Atuti . Four T li. Miller Bfoun. Rtāi1trnnn. H i'Aorf. U'u kj i. Stanley, hnuhet lUanth tor ion. Wetiiin. MeSayhi n. f.rouv. liaeef, Mi Clure 179 Gopher Editorial All the buildingt āŗ Paul Bun yan't camp were on tkidi: Babe pulled the whole outfit front one loyyiny ute to the next l.arwn Silver Doyle Pottle Bachman T. I.anon Harvey Clyde Gorman. Aitisum Feature Writer Raymond Holm. Asst. Feature Writer Paul Wcichelt. Assistant Feature Writer Robert Baker. Assistant Senior F.ditor Glee Burrows, Senior Assistant Janet Cole. Senior Assistant Marl Douglas. Senior Assistant Donald Nelson. Senior Assistant Joe Winslow, Senior Assistant Kenneth Ray. Assistant Organizations Editor John Buckbee. Organizations Assistant Marion Johnson. Organizations Asst Mary Louise Oren. Organizations Asst. Phyllis Savage. Organizations Assistant Morean Susens. Organizations Assistant James Wirth. Photography Editor Stuart Moore. Layout Editor Margaret Knight. Secretary Eunice Gunderson. Assistant Secretary Marjorie Camp, Assistant Secretary Virginia Orfield, Assistant Secretary Clarice Berg. Art Assistant Katherine Kierland Art Assistant Marjorie Gray. Art Assistant Donald Larson. 2nd Sales Director Helen Silver. 2nd Sales Director Ruth Daugherty. Women's Sales Director Dean WykofT. Sales Assistant George Doyle. Sales Assistant Deloris Baarsch, Secretary Robert Madcr. Office Assistant Gopher Business tiuj Jitr, the coc k. had o dinner horn in biff, and hr bleu; it 10 hard that pint ttrri fell, and tffthrm utore itortrd. Marshall Taft. Office Assistant Lyman Molander. Office Assistant Edgar Blekrie, Office Assistant Marion Brown. Office Assistant Vivian Brown. Office Assistant Harry Aberg. Office Assistant Knight Wykoff Baarsch McClure Daugherty Simpson Picket t 181 Daily Editorial Arnold C Aslakxon Powers ladell Harvey Arnold Aslakson. Editor John Harvey, City Editor James R. E. Eckman, Asst. City Editor Marion Gold. City Assistant James Emerson. City Assistant Wilbur Elston, Special Writer Win Ellen McHachern. Special Writer Helen Paul Grig ware. Special Writer Carl Pearson. Special Writer Ruth Daugherty. Special Writer Marie Fanchcr. Society Editor Judvon Anderson, The Miller James R. F. Eckman. The Bystander John Forney. Copy Editor Earl Anderson. Assistant Copy E.ditor Martin Powers. Editorial Chairman Paul Anderson. Editorial Writer David Donovan. Editorial Writer Medley Donovan. Editorial Writer W Allen Wallis. Editorial Writer Bjorn Bjornson. Editorial Writer Fred E Fadcll. Sports Editor Stephen M. Harris. Asst Sports Editor E Patricia Ritz. Women's Sports Editor Mary Andrews. Women's Sports Editor (spring) Sueduek. Spmngtnan, Sehatlr. FtieetOet. I'or tee. Holmgren. Harm. Koteh, Stern, h oen too St event, Hoover. Norm. It. Donovan. I). Donovan. I'eaeioet. Union, hunk. Way, II item ContetJ. Cniware. Dan finer a. MeFaeheen. I vet ton, Kenning. AnJenon. AnJmvt, SanJm, Stvenhtrg. Itoirn Andre ton. Cot), Forney. Harvey, Atljkom. Pou' ri. a Jr II. J. AnJcrton. tenth re. F met ton 182 Daily Business Robert M. Ash. Business Manager Carl O. Linnet. Mpls. Advertising Mgr Samuel McKee. Sales Manager Lester O. Heartman. Southeast Adv Manager J. Stuart Moore. St. Paul Adv. Mgr Virginia Harris. Secretary Marie Jones. Assistant Secretary William Hoeft, Credit Manager Kenneth Malvey. Circulation Manager Robert M. A$h George Matt. Asst. Circulation Mgr A cKoc Linnet Moore MaWty. Mall. Koieh Hot 11 Hoopir. Jonti. Crow. IIarm. Schumu lliariman. Linrur. Ath. M Kte 183 Paul could easily perl a log ns Iran as a whittle by holding the bark at one end. while Habr pulled at the other Daily Editorial Forney Echman Fanchtr J. Anderson Harris Gold Anderson M.ui.in Sanders, Society Assistant Mary Jane Torrance. Society Assistant Jeanette Gagnon. Society Assistant Maine God ward. Society Assistant I-red I .hidon. Reporter Arthur Burck, Reporter Philip Schulte. Reporter Faith Tapp. Reporter Robert Hatch, Reporter Warren T. Way. Reporter Alice Swanberg. Reporter Mary Andresvs. Reporter Stanley Iverson. Reporter Doris Mcl erren. Reporter Marion Jacobs. Reporter Pearl Kenning. Reporter William Baker. Reporter Fdward Anderson. Copy Reader William T. Harris, Copy Reader Kerwin Hoover. Copy Reader Ormal Sprungman. Copy Reader Clifton Holmgren. Copy Reader Albert Kosek, Copy Reader Philip Potter. Copy Reader Margaret Burch. Copy Reader Courtney Swenson. Sports Assistant Carl Schubring. Sports Assistant Maurice Johnson. Sports Reporter Hardie Smith. Sports Reporter Donald Stevens. Sports Reporter William Johnson. Sports Reporter Daniel Stern. Sports Reporter Eilkan Groll. Sports Reporter Robert Alway, Sports Reporter Robert Ryder. Sports Reporter Ralph Pitman. Sports Reporter Joseph Hendrickson. Sports Reporter Emerson Hutch Holmgren Sprungman Anderson Hoover Harris Dauaheriu Donovan McEachern Elston Grigware 184 Franklin Schaller. Assistant Circulation Manager John Crowe. Advertising Solicitor Albert Kosek. Advertising Solicitor Marjorie Hooper. Advertising Solicitor Alice Schwartz. Advertising Solicitor Annette Friedlander. Advertising Solicitor Jason Yaggy. Advertising Solicitor Richard Hutchinson. Advertising Solicitor Larry Hendrickson. Accountant Daily Business Yaggy Hoe ft Malcey Hear (man Paul koofinl out iht hole for Lake Superior when he rued rd a merer water tup ply for ieing hit logging toadt Jones Hendrickson Harris Ski-U-Mah Editorial Donald .. Robertson Donald I.. Robertson. Editor l.Ā« Koevingcr. Managing fiditor IZ. Kenneth Potilc. Associate Editor Harold Elfman, Make-Up Editor Clarence Beck. Art Fiditor Ellen Oren. Art Assistant Conrad Nelson, Art Assistant John Smith, Special Writer William Baring-Gould, Special Writer Donald Jennings, Department f:ditor Kay Jut. Editorial Assistant Pottle Loevtnger Elfman Berk Ertl, Editorial Assistant I.oren a Meiners. Editorial Assistant Otis Dypsvick. Editorial Assistant Marjorie Gray. Editorial Assistant Merton Dobak, Editorial Assistant Ben Kern. Editorial Assistant Ruth Plank, Editorial Assistant Dave Donovan. Editorial Assistant Harvey Haiberlc. Editorial Assistant XjfuA. Nthon. Donovan. Dyponth. Ktm. Cut tut. StacSUtlen. Grey. Iloibtilt Snutb. Uttntn. Pottlt. Rohtttton. Ottn, DttA 186 Ski-U-Mah Business Chet Oehler. Business Manager Ted Valine. Advertising Manager Bessie Hawk. Sales Manager Ted Keller. Assistant Business Manager Betty Smollett. Secretary and Distribution Mgr. Gardner English, National Advertising Manager Frank Thompson. Office Manager Guy Arthur. Advertising Associate Robert Merz, Advertising Associate Robert Blackmar. Promotion Manager Robert Tudor. Promotion Assistant Richard Tudor. Promotion Asst. Jacqueline Redfield. Assistant Distribution Manager Larry Hendrickson. Accountant Chet Oehler Valine 11 auk Keller 187 Paul often uied a i uot limber i(lithe, with u hith hr Ā«Hihl I til a union of limber urilh oar mi ohto suiing of the or an. Techno-Log George Taft SlrVe Gadler EDITORIAL SI AM George Taft. Managing Editor Howard Helgcrson. Associate Editor Laddy Markus. Associate Editor Robert Cerny, Art Editor Rum Williams, Art Assistant Kenneth Sperry, Art Assistant Earl Ruble. Special Writer George Flanagan, Chemical Editor Roman Arnoldy. Mechanical Editor Robert Marshall. Technical Editor Clayton Ebert. Copy Editor I. C. Swenson. News Assistant John Hancock. News Assistant Philip Hedback. News Assistant Gayle Prcister, News Assistant Robert Raker. News Assistant Otis Meyers. News Assistant Wallis Erat ke. News Assistant Sam Levy. News Assistant R. V Peterson, Nesvs Assistant Robert Conary. News Assistant BUSINESS STAFF Steve Gadler, Business Manager Joseph Sewall. Local Advertising Mgr. Scott Einslcy. National Adv Mgr Ray Odell. Circulation Manager Adolphe Gadler. Collection Gordon Rosholt, Circulation TECHNO LOG BOARD Prof. A. S. Cutler. Engineering Dean O. M. I.eland. Chemistry Thomas Rogers. Mechanical. Chairman John Waligora, Electrical Malcolm Hope. Chemistry Rudolph Dahl. Architecture Olaf Lien. Civil StvL'all, Hoi hall. U'uf.gnrj. Ilrneoik, A. CaJlei. AfarAui. I.ien. UoiiMI Dahl. Oran l.tlanJ. I til. Culler, S. CaJlir 188 Business Review Chester Jones Meyer Cold EDITORIAL BOARD Chester Jones. Chairman Mabel Reeves Alice Brandebury Russell Chrysler John Conroy David Donovan Louis Fisher Margaret Hartley Leonard Hurwitz Herbert Holmsten Jeanette Johnson Powell Krueger Herman Laskcn Weslie Olson Wendell Peck William Robinson Leslie Smith Lawrence Vance Margaret Wackerman Russell Peterson BUSINESS STAFF Meyer Gold. Manager Robert Reed Rudolph Gerfin 189 Harry Pederson Minnesota Quarterly Lawrence Vance EDITORIAL STAFF Harry Pederson. Editor Anne Armstrong. Art Editor Edward L. Mayo. Editorial Board Ruth Anne Olson. Editorial Board Shcrna Shalict. Editorial Board BUSINESS STAFF Lawrence Vance. Business Manager Warren Hallum. Business Assistant Minnesota Mentor Edwin Pumata Paul liked a food tmoke. To krrp hit pipe filled required the entire time of a cutomptr working ufith a uoop tboCtf. EDITORIAL STAFF Edward I Lapic. Managing Editor Keith Bcrens. Associate Editor Carl Buckman, Editorial Assistant Doris Clark. Editorial Assistant Hazel Hcglund. Editorial Assistant Anita Houltshouscr. Editorial Assistant Dolly Hubbard. Editorial Assistant Helen McDonald, Editorial Assistant Wilbur Murra. Editorial Assistant Helen Sears. Editorial Assistant Elizabeth Guthrie. Art Editor Mary H. Moos. Special Correspondent BUSINESS STAFF Edwin E. Pumala. Business Manager Rodney Brainerd. Circulation Manager Donos'an Johnson. Circulation Assistant O. Henry Anderson. Circulation Assistant Albin Erickson. Circulation Assistant Jacob Rcmcr. Circulation Assistant Marie Jones, Advertising Manager William Fincman. Advertising Assistant Helen Compton. Advertising Assistant Ardis Elton. Advertising Assistant BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS Earl Nelson. President Dean Melvin E. Haggerty Mr Fred Kildow .Miss Dora V. Smith Elenetta Carpenter Wilbur Murra Margaret Tallmadge Helen Scars Cite A. tUiiKmon. Uettn i. itnCrtMH Hemmed, Johnton HeiifucJ. Iluhturd. linemen. Compton. Remte. UelXoneU. Gulhtte Pumote. l)t. Itvta Smith. Selion, l-epu. Jooet. Muete c I UDEN I publications arc at once a service to the campus community and a training ground for under-graduates who hope to enter upon journalistic careers after leaving college. The publications are mirrors of Minnesota life. They supply the news, they have a place in the interpretation of undergraduate problems, and they give focus and point to many campus activities. It would be dillkult to see how the student body could follow its routine paths without the information that serves as a guide to the thousands of college men and women in the columns of The Minnesota Daily. The Ski-U-Mah does not have this news function, but its purpose is to attempt to divert and amuse. The Gopher is a summary of the year, a veritable Minnesota Diary of events. Students gain experience, loo. while serving these publicationsāexperience which they can put to use later as staff members of general newspapers and magazines. In the past few years an increasing number of publications have appeared representing various university colleges and divisions. The Gopher. Daily and Ski-U-Mah have received high standing in national competition with publications of other colleges, showing the quality of the work done by Minnesota students. āDr. Ralph D. Casey. 192 When Paul invented the logging industry. I must outline my plan. he declared. To make a pencil he pulled up a pine tree, slashed off the branches, and charred the sharpened end in fire. He drew his plans on cliffs along a lake. If one outline did not suit him. he stepped down a mile or so and wrote up a new one. We still see these diagrams on the Pictured Rocks of Lake Superior. IāltOHS 193 Paul ā auttl uiulii peel .1 fn'p a (Iran in a whistle bu huldimj ihr barb a I onr end. White Ik: be put In! hi the other Junior Ball Grand Slatih Leaders From opposite sides of the stage in the Hotel Lowry ballroom. Helen Almars and Ralph Chase. All-Junior president, marched to meet and lead the thirty-ninth annual Junior Ball They were followed by Josephine Pease as the guest of McClelland Shellman. vice-president: Dorothy King and Howard Smith: Bernice Brown and Klyde Kaliher; Jane Millar and Howard Meagher. A turkey dinner was served at one o'clock in the Terrace Cafe, the Spanish, Italian. Crystal. Blue, and Tahitian rooms. A gold candle festooned with maroon tulips formed the table decorations. Brown leather favors combining a billfold, coin purse, and vanity case in one were given to the girls at dinner. The colonial atmosphere befitting to the eleventh of February was carried out in the black leather programs decorated with a colonial couple posed for the minuet. Norvy Mulliganās campus band played the forepart of the evening, after which Bert l.ownās Hotel Biltmore orchestra completed the ball. The ball music was broadcast over WCCO. Bill Gibson, campus announcer, describing the gowns of the leading girls to give radio listeners a vivid picture of the colorful Grand March. The general arrangements committee was headed by Howard Meagher assisted by Ned Adams. Waldo Marquart. Edward McAfee. Jack Fry. and Donald Gillespie. Through the efforts of the committee, the price of the tickets was low ered. and the number of guests was limited. Carol Geddcs. representative from the dean's office, assisted with the plans and supervised the details for the administration. The Junior Ball which has come to be the outstanding social event of the year was held first in 1 893 in the grand ballroom of the West Hotel. White canvas was spread over the carpets as a perfect dancing surface for the first ball. 194 cadets, Hut no March Two innovations featured the Senior Prom of 1932. held at the Lowry Hotel on May 9. The first was the selection of Richard Morean as Prom President and leader of the Grand March, instead of the old custom of leadership by the Senior President. The system, used by Wisconsin and other large universities, met with favor and probably will be continued. The second innovation was that after the elaborate preparations. there was no Grand March. Newspaper headlines for three days preceding the event featured the kidnapping of the leader-to-be. Richard Morean. and although he was returned shortly before the event was to take place, he was unable to take part in the program. The kidnapping followed close upon a number of difficulties in connection with the annual spring elections, which drew a good deal of publicity and comment with regard to the conduct of student affairs at the institution, and detracted from the dignity usually accorded the Senior Prom The music of Will Osborne was broadcast throughout the evening over stations WCCO and KSTP. Decorations of spring flowers added much to the color and gaycty of the event. Formal dinner was served at I :00 A M. and atomizers, engraved with the inscription S. P. I 932 were given to the girls as favors. The programs were done in black and white, the mortar board cap embossed on the cover Of the scheduled Grand March, first in line was Richard Morean. Prom President, with Bessie Hawk as his guest. Bevan Bunker was second with Helen Hickman as his partner: they were followed by John Kopitke and Mary Eleanor Gray, with Merl Scney and Eleanor Evenson close behind as fourth in line. Bennett Nyline. general arrangements chairman for the Prom, was fifth in line with his guest. Antonia Maroosis. 195 Morean. Hawk The l.euJets The Thirty-ninth Annual Military Ball of the University of Minnesota was held December 4. 1931. in the Hotel Lowry in St. Paul. Jane AfFeld and Cadet Colonel Porton Christoffcr led the Grand March. They were followed by Virginia Peters and Cadet Lieutenant Colonel Noyes W. Alger. Maxine Kaiser and Cadet Lieutenant Colonel Russell Hauge. Approximately 550 students ' marked timeā during the parade. Cannons, flags, machine guns, and other army paraphernalia transformed the Ballroom into a veritable arsenal. The Chairman of general arrangements. Edward Gadler. planned special entertainment which was staged in the various dining rooms during dinner. The formal banquet was served at one A. M. in the Terrace Cafe. Blue. Crystal. Spanish and Italian Rooms. Two orchestras of national reputation played for the ball. Jimmy Joy's which was held over at the Lowry especially for the ball, and Johnny Hamp's widely known broadcasting and recording band. This year the ball had an unusually gala and military atmosphere because of the splendid work done by decorations committee. The grand march ended in a clever maneuvering of the line of march which was very stately and military in character. The dancing lasted until 4 A. M : during the evening there was broadcasting over radios which described the ball in detail to radio listeners. Numbered among the patrons were the officers who direct the activities of the University Military department. Officers of the U. S. army attended from Port Snelling as honor guests. The Military Ball originated in 1893 in the form of a Promenade Concert given by the Athletic Association. Prom 1917 until 1921 it was temporarily discontinued because of the World War. but under the auspices of the cadets of the Advanced Course, it has again become an established custom. 196 I he Leader Through the one hundred per cent cooperation of its members the eleventh annual Interprofessional Ball, held in the Flame Room of the Radisson Hotel. January 29. succeeded in its purpose of perpetuating the Minnesota spirit among the twenty-three professional fraternities on the campus. Ralph Griebler. president of the interprofessional council and chairman of the general arrangements committee, led the grand march with Hazel Stockdale as his guest. Donald Sweeney, vice president, and Mary Ann Molitor were the second couple in line, followed by Harold Wardlaw and Andrea Keifer as the third couple. Ira C. Peterson with Helen Elizabeth Drake were the fourth couple in the grand march. Heading the Patrons and Patronesses list were Governor and Mrs. Floyd B. Olson. Dean and Mrs. Ora M. Leland from the Engineering and Architecture College. Dean and Mrs. W. F. l.asby from the College of Dentistry. Dean and Mrs. Everett Fraser of the Law School, and Dean and Mrs. Elias P. Lyon represented the Medical school. Composing the group of chaperons from the respective schools were Dean and Mrs. Edmond M. Freeman of the Agricultural School. Dean and Mrs. R. A, Stevenson of the School of Business and Dean and Mrs. Frederick J. Wulling of the College of Pharmacy. The Patrons and Patronesses were received by the general arrangements committee and seated at vantage points to watch the grand march. KSTP broadcasted a fifteen minute description of the ball including the grand march at I I P. M. and resumed the broadcast of the ball again at midnight. The ballroom was decorated with palms to lend it a tropical tone and music Griebler and Siorkdale was furnished by Art Goldberg and his band. 197 Panhellenu Oflutrt Amidst a setting of wild flowers Greek letter sororities gave their annual Panhcllenic Ball on April twenty-ninth in the ballroom of the Hotel Lowry. St. Paul. Art Gold berg's campus orchestra played from 10:00 P. M. to 1:00 A. M. The programs designed by Mary Pettit bore the outline of a white bird-āedged in leaf green on a white suede background. Approximately three hundred sorority women, the largest crowd ever to attend, escorted male guests to the ball. This dance is the only function of the year at which representatives of all the members of the Panhcllenic Council are present and at which a leap year plan is carried out. Proceeds of the ball were given to the permanent loan fund, just established by the Panhcllenic Council through an original surplus in the treasury. The Greek letter sororities intend to augment this fund year by year through the ball proceeds. Sorority and non-sorority women may apply for the scholarship -preference being given, however. to the former based on character, need, and recommendations. Helen Nieman. a member of the Panhcllenic Council as scholarship chairman, was in charge of the administration of the fund this year. General arrangements for the ball were taken care of by Jeanne I lalloran. who was aided by a committee composed of other committee chairmen: decorations. Josephine Pease: music. Dorothea Poppe: floor. Eleanor Even son: chaperons. Janet Parmele: tickets. Margaret Wackerman: and publicity. Win Ellen McEacbern. Members of Sigma Delta Tau. a group newly admitted to the Panhcllenic Council attended their first ball this year. Officers for the Council for 1912-33 arc: Mary Spooner, president: Dorothy Vcrrell. secretary. and Betty Welles, treasurer. Retiring officers arc: Lois l inger, president: Betty Mulve-hill. secretary: and Helen Sears, treasurer. 198 One of the Sunlit e Monday afternoon and Sunlight have become practically synonymous terms to hundreds of students. By 4:50 P. M. of those Mondays on which dances are planned, the Minnesota Union Ball Room is filled with couples. During the past year there have been the usual variety of motifs:ā3 green and white Freshman Sunlight opening the school year, and an Autumn party following. But the dance which created the greatest sensation was the Leap Year Sunlight on February 29th. T he stag line consisted entirely of girls: this time it was the masculine sex which experienced that nervous feeling until after the first cut. Ladies choose your partners was the cry. and for once the girls had an opportunity to dance with just whom they wanted: and. incidentally, to snub a few of the men who persistently overlooked them at previous dances. A new plan was formed this year of having the freshman, sophomore, and junior women's organizations sponsor one sunlight. Hostesses, with papers specifying their identity as such, tried to entertain the more bashful element. The purpose of these sunlights was to draw the members of each class closer together. Friday noons from 12:50-1:50 women from all colleges met in Shevlin Ball Room for the Social Hour. Hostesses were provided to introduce newcomers, and an orchestra for those who wanted to dance. I he program, furnished by campus talent, occupied ten minutes of each hour. A puppet show, offered as one Friday's program, was received with enthusiasm. Professor Rarig gave a humorous sketch at one of the first Social Hours: and at another. Lola Jones read Bachelor Sewing on a Button . Maxine Kaiser, as Social Chairman, had charge of the sunlights and social hours, assisted on the latter by Lenore Wolfe. 199 Educational institutions throughout the United States recognize the value of attempting to make their students into citizens well prepared to meet the various situations which they may meet later in life. To this end. students are required to participate in physical education and take courses in law. together with their program of the technical and scientific courses. Social qualities thus have become recognized as a necessary part of a cultured man's life. In sponsoring the Military Ball. Junior Ball and Senior Prom, the University attempts to give its students a chance to participate in social life which otherwise would be lacking. Admission to the parties is open to all members of the groups concerned. In most instances, underclassmen may also secure tickets after the demands of the cadet officers, juniors or seniors, as the case may be. have been satisfied. All business arrangements for the parties are made by student committees appointed by the commissions responsible for the balls. The prices of all party tickets have been reduced this year by rigidly curtailing the number of complimentary tickets issued and by more judicious expenditure of funds. The cost of a Junior Ball is nearly $2,500. with members of the general arrangements committee preparing the budgets and spending the money in such manner as to give each guest the greatest return for his money. āC. S. Gtddn I manual Advisor In Sltidrnl Affairs 200 Paul liunyan sent out word over all the North Country that he wanted menāhusky men. burly men. rough and tough and savage men. And from all parts they cameāmen with hard muscles and an adventurous spirit, to work for the master-logger in his great new enterprize. Paul was pleased with his men. and set them to work at once, carrying out his Wonderful Scheme just as he had planned it. He and his men were going to make history! MUSIC 201 School of Music Carlyle Scoff With only four students registered and warned by Mr. Emil Oberhoffer. the famous long-time conductor of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, that he was attempting the impossible at Minnesota. Mr. Carlyle Scott organized and became head of the department of music. The basement rooms of Pillsbury Hall, present offices of student publications were the first class rooms. Mr. Scott alone taught piano, harmony, history of music and directed a womanās chorus there. And in the same building was housed the botany department. Mr. Scott enjoys telling about the gradual growth of the music school. You know. he said, with such men as Fred Butters and Rosenthal leaching at the head of the botany department, they didn't have much trouble in ousting me from my place in the midst of them. They told President Northrop the noise Scott made was unbearable. He had to get out. Out I went and even off the campus. But President Northrop was kind enough to retain some interest in the music school and found a new place for me in an old hall over a present campus restaurant. It was an uninspiring. barn-like room. Many a morning I warmed the piano keys with a muffler heated on the radiators. However, we advanced rapidly. Students liked the work, and as I needed assistance, the administration moved me over to the brick house on Washington Avenue: the nurses of the University Hospital live in it now. Donald Ferguson was my right-hand man. He taught downstairs while I worked upstairs. We grew by leaps and bounds, and were moved to the Child Welfare Building. There our faculty increased in number. I heard that we were going to be paid a visit by the committee in charge of the building budget of the University and on the day they were expected the department was humming Our efforts were not unavailing for we headed the building list in 1921. and in 1922 moved into our new structure. Since 1904 the faculty has grown from one to thirty, while the student body is approximately three hundred. The music school has use of the Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium and also has the use of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra's $100,000 library, while the symphony players are available as teachers or for concerts of the department. 202 At tin symphony concert one evening this fall something unexpected. something unprecedented occurred. Mrs, Carlyle M. Scott, manager of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra came out on the stage of the Northrop Memorial Auditorium to plead with the audience for financial support which would enable the Board of Directors to contract Mr. Iiugene Ormandy for the musical season. She obtained it. and thus succeeded in stealing the beloved and very promising young director from his admiring audien;cs in New York and Philadelphia. Thru-out her fascinating career. Mrs. Scott has succeeded in doing the unexpected and yet be financially successful The faculty Women s Club, of which she was President in 1918. was hard pressed for money. To raise money, at Mrs. Scott's suggestion, four recitals were given with artists such as Schumann Hemk. George Mcader. the Flonzalcy Quartette, the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, and Gabrieievitch. The recitals were a huge success financially as well as artistically, and the incident started Mrs. Scott on her Mrs. Carlyle Scott When Paul Runyan rod on Ruhr' bach, hr tvas oMiyrd to uu j telricope to irr th hind fey⢠of the lliy fihir O.t famous career. Prom these recitals, the University Artists course was organized, l or twelve years students have been able to hear the greatest artists at ridiculously low prices. One of Mrs. Scott's favorite tricks resulting from her ability to discover comparatively unknown artists, is to bring here for her first American recital an artist like SigĀ« rid Onegin, who since has become the most popular contralto on the American concert stage. Because of the limitations of a small house for the University Artists' course. Mrs. Scott instituted concert courses for the public in downtown Minneapolis, moving from place to place as the audience grew. Iāirst she made use of the Lyceum, and as the audience grew, the Armory, and then the Minneapolis Municipal Auditorium. which has a seating capacity of ten thousand. One of her biggest undertakings was combining the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra with the University. She visualized the possibilities of making Minneapolis and the University the center of a country-wide musical influence. A unique situation exists at present. The University engages the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra for its full season of sixteen concerts. On Sundays during the symphony's season. Popular Concerts are played by the orchestra. 20} St,thin. Omul. Ihnniti. Stkvlr. I.nttteom. faukimn. I itJmon, Winfill, (āutbiaith IV. (Minn. H'.iir, I til. Xru'yorJ. l Mamma Mstkle. Stirlrr. Aābitlwn, Aw oan Sul Jit. DutJtn. S fĀ nv .'I. Sitnit . f'oiltt. fat'ham. h (4f. SihlOtlltt. RitJItr, Wt truth Human. lUIJain. Sukaai. flii tn AinntJ, Htahauah. Hath,it lUinJman AnJtmn . Itoaih. Stvnbitf. Ost'ti. I'rniott. Mifiutnn. Ilotitth. Manlfomtif. Suwnum Htnun llt'fin Cray. H'liiiV Oluw. Ottibimm!. Killtrn. Owirt, Iāatkt StaJbyi. Hophim Weslie Olson. President Harriet Albertson Mavis Anderson Olive Arnold Prank Atkinson Margaret Baird Ruth Baldwin Jennie Barnes Mildred Ben net Janice Berman Margaret Beyer Anne Blindman Sigurd Bockman Dorothy Bourek Helen Brohaugh Glee Burrows William Churchill Gertrude Crosby Ruth Davis Louise Denef Myrna Dinsel Allison Doeden George Eingert Grace Farnham Doris Felt Geraldine Foley Marjorie Foster Reynolds Galbraith Louis Gilpin Sheldon Gray Olive Griebenow Leon Hagen Lucile Hall Clifford Hamley Marjorie Hanson Katherine Hennig Helen Hoff George Holliday Anita Houltshouscr Dorothy Hopins Helen Huseby Erwin Johnson Marguerite Johnson Barbara Kennedy Janet King Edward Lofstrom Frances Lynch John McNamara Mary McGurren I lerbert Marklc Viola Mauscth Edith Moody Margaret Montgomery Agnes Neitzel William Newgord Gudrun Nykaas Ward Olson Dorothy Owens Kathleen Palmer Kenneth Parks Delores Prescott Ruth Rathert Nathal Riedlcr David Rit .en Lucia Roach Mary Rowe Leila Sconberg Margaret Schultz Walter Schulz Doris Selvig Marie Selvig Donald Siefken Gretchcn St icier Audrey Stevenson Marion Schroeder Gladys Ticdman Sylvia Weese Margaret Wemark Ruth Wicherski Lorna Zcmke f f ⢠U Ā« Killeen and Ohon 204 Robin Hood Finalt Robin Hood , one of the finest little operas ever produced by an American, and one which we suspect has had no superior as a popular attraction since the days when the Bostonians made glad the hearts of untold thousands by their inimitable production. was played ... by the University Singers, the University Symphony orch-tra . . . all under the direction of Earle Killeen. A great deal might be said in praise of the stage settings 3nd the lighting effects, for these were decidedly contributory to a most enjoyable evening of music and action . . . they were new. bright, cheerful, and suitable to time, place and action For an amateur performance it was very pleasing . . . Arid places . . . were of rare occurrence and there was a youthful freshness, vigor, and indifference to the conventional thing on the part of the chorus that, combined with an admirable color scheme in the costuming, carried the action along with a fine sweep. One of the finest numbers heard during the evening was Kenneth Schon's rendering of the song dedicated to nut brown ale . . . Sheldon Grey s characterization of Will Scarlet was notable for his admirable use of a resonant bass voice. A truly brilliant portrayal of the rollicking Friar 'Fuck was given by William Newgord. who combined voice and gesture in a finished performance. Last, but not by any means least, was Ed Andrews, one of the famous Andrews family of opera producers. As the sheriff of Nottingham and as one of those responsible for the fine staging, the other being Charles Ha .el-rigg. Mr. Andrews gave a particularly telling impetus to the whole. Whatever successes were won. and there were many, the credit belongs to Mr. Killeen, on whom the responsibility has rested. Robin Hood and Maid Marion āDr. James DaviesāThe Minneapolis Tribune 205 Concert bond MEMBERS Ned A da an Ikon Allen R l: A.n.d.ly I uni. Aeko Cicoigr AijjiiI Kileif.li Becker I ll Hcngtlon A II DkiwII I eon Hriwe.maa Richard ttiown I owell Deown Ni k R.klic.ch limy Hacklen Lee IVildwia Kolinil Him Wm Bowen It J (taller I until l ill on Albe.l ( nlblom I. II ChriMiiaion II A. Climmaion lit.land Cuney Kennellt Cnolt Arnold nae Cteo.ge ( rinr Don CIjiI Hene Dugniali I) DeVilli.il I T Drnniieia Robe.i DiviĀ M.lv.n Elder ( 111Ion i'hvii on. id lilmon Robert I.van. I Imer locketl Corwin I'm Mrrriim Iredi.ickt Daryl Gibtoa l.nlit Gum Harold Cunning (xiednn Gtiebmow Woodeow Gnmn Ron C.ieen I eo (iron Paul (iibbul (iaidifirr (ifiiejen Ke.mil llrlgeton Donald lleoii ill ll.leheoik lli.old Ilullften Kill'll lli.d.mja John llndimin Hairy limit I.fie Mown Wiynne Hopkiat Rob.rl lluil.in.il Lirl l.oai Jiniet Jirek IV II Jnnct lle.b J.m.n K T lolmvon V O. Jalton llirry Kien A.iliw. Kiln llen.y Kimble Edwin Kelm Ken Kilim in Julia Knnn ( bn Kitchen I Iona. J Keene Paul I.Dion Eetler La.tei. Awil.n I ing Ite.na.d I inn.a Philip l.olheop Beil I neon Albc.i Mi.ill 111. M. In.lie Dwight Mirim Item.(I. Miller I uibĀ«r Moeo Ralph Menton Wm Mooimann lli.old Ml.kut Gerald McNally Ken MlCd.ee June. Mil cod Iterm.d M.illiner Kay Murk S. Mi.lenten J Mreee Roger Nolop Clmlle Ne.l.ele.w Duane Olioo llnold Olton l.eo Orion Jack Pfe.lte. John Pivltrn Elmer Iāele.ictn Williee Iāeienoa John Pretlon I eetni.d P.oebtile C It Pelr.ton Carle Punter led Pipe.miner Edward Poeicn R. bi Price llakon Pclerton l on Pei.ton Eldon Remidee Sian Kolb TbeMRII Rune Ered Roiendibl Paul Sandr.i Wall Schulz Wm Sem C It Swin.on (ā urdoa Swen.e.n I born a l Swenuin Wendell Swinton lli.rr Sem.ngion S t if 'I r 1 Sainton (ieotge Sulan.eb lli.old Shipman Albeit Sh.im.nli Vernon Slenger ( hit Shield. Ken SleAemoa Arnold Sheldon Minhill Tali John Tium Onn. Ti.n.ei W. G. Tael Avery Tuekei k.l.n Tium Robert Upton (Jill. Wiilmd John Wenll.ng John Wiliout John Windborn Don Wright liearman and Adams 206 Band in Formation The University Band completed its first year under the direction of Allan A. Abbott with a maximum enrollment of 160. the largest membership in its history. New marching formations, created by George Aagard. the student drum major, featured the band s programs for the fall football contests, and the band entertained the student body at Homecoming and other campus functions. On Friday. November 20. the band boarded special trains en route to the traditional M jug game between Michigan and Minnesota. Arriving in Ann Arbor at 9:00 o'clock Saturday morning, they led the Minnesota student body in a parade through the streets, and later at the game headed the Minnesota rooting sections. The Band sponsored a series of sunlights in the Minnesota Union this year, as a means of raising funds for the purchase of Keys, awarded annually to graduating members of its ranks. The fifth annual Band formal was given at the Lowry Hotel. Friday. April 8. The grand march was headed by Edward Adams, president of the Band, and his guest. Miss Ruth Dietrich, who were followed by Edward Bearman. general arrangements chairman, and Miss Bernice Roth. Early in June, the Band held its Annual Banquet, at which time officers for next year were elected, and gold keys were presented to the graduating seniors. The Band also presented concerts both at the senior reception at President Coffman's home, and during the festivities of Engineer's Day. and was featured during Spring Quarter in popular evening concerts on the Mall. The Band is housed in its new quarters in Cyrus Northrop Auditorium, where it has the use of a large practice room, as well as a locker Abbott and Aagard room, several offices and equipment rooms. 207 University A turn wheeled Mtamfmal urn rtiiuirtd to ttir the huff UJt of joup needed to uilitt 1 thr appetite of the lo99tn. Symphony The University Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Abe Pcpinsky and composed of student and faculty members of the University, featured two classical concerts as its major offerings for the year. The first, given on December 2. introduced as soloist. Mrs. Agnes Rast Snyder, contralto. The orchestra offered Goldmark s Rustic Wedding , and Beethoven's familiar Egmontā overture. This concert marked the orchestraās first appearance in Northrop Auditorium. On April 6. the orchestra presented its second large concert. Professor William Lindsay, famous pianist, appeared as soloist and the orchestra played the D Minor Symphony of Cesar Franck, and Vivaldiās concerto in E minor, in which the siring section was featured. Victor Nilsson. Minneapolis Journal music critic complimented the orchestra on its fine performance. The University Symphony Orchestra . . . has progressed miles ahead of its standard of other years ... It did so well it deserved a far larger attendance than the one that turned out to hear it . . . Mr. Pepinsky understood how to give a gay similarity to the first vigorous allegro to the Bach and Handel music of this order. It was remarkable how the special glow of composite color was obtained from the Vivaldi concerto . . . Mr. Pepinskyās reading was artistically clear and surprisingly effective. As a special presentation for the winter quarter, the orchestra gave a series of ten programs, broadcast over W L B. in which modern classical and concert favorites were rendered. The University Symphony Orchestra appeared with the University Singers in Robin Hoodā. February 18. 19. and 20. and accompanied the University Theater Playersā outdoor dramatic offering. Turandot . which was presented on the knoll on May 24. 25. and 26. As a feature of Commencement week, the orchestra contributed the commencement concerts, presenting as soloists outstanding music students. graduated in June. , h, Ptpimky 208 Minneapolis Symphony Paul liked a good tmokt. To http hi i pipt filled requited the entire lime of a tuHtmptr urorhiog wi th a uoop thovel Cultural opportunities unheard of at most universities are available today to every student and faculty member of University of Minnesota, through the arrangement-āalready two seasons old and with a third season in prospectāby which the University presents the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra in its regular series of symphony concerts. During the past season, students and faculty members have heard concerts that ranked with the greatest in the world given by an orchestra rated as one of the five greatest in America, led by one of the most brilliant of today's young conductors, and assisted by world-famous artists as their soloists. Another season of even greater concerts is in prospect through the valiant fight which public-spirited men and women of the Twin Cities are making to save our orchestra. It is through the generosity of these citizens that the University has the Eugene Ormandu orchestra. Each year they have added nearly S200.000 to the amount that the orchestra earns to make its continued existence possible. This summer a new guaranty fund must be raised, new subscribers must be recruited, more season tickets must be sold. University students and faculty members will have their chance to help out with the orchestraās maintenance fund, and thus to show the men and women whose generosity has given them the orchestra year after year that they wish it to go on. We believe that the orchestra is too vital to the social, educational and business interests of the University, the city and the state to let it drop. The Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra represents the spirit of the University as perhaps no other single force can. for it has carried artistic ideals to other communities throughout the United States. āMrt. Carlyle Scott. 209 Sii riil Onegin U niversity Artists Course Mary Wniman University of Minnesota students each season hear the world's best music at the lowest possible prices in the University's Artist Course. Each year this course brings to students and faculty members the outstanding talent of the world. The artists course is famous throughout this nation and Europe. Artists count it a privilege to be included on its list of stars, managers marvel at the prices at which the course is offered. The artists course has brought many famous musicians and dancers to the campus and has often been the occasion of the American debut of artists who later became famous throughout the world Last season the course presented Lawrence Tibbett. Vladimir Horowitz. Mary Wigman. Don Cossacks Russian Male Chorus. Sigrid Onegin, and Yehudi Menuhin. Students and faculty members take full advantage of these opportunities for excellent entertainment. Each season the house, which seats 4800 persons, is almost entirely sold out before the season opens. Within 48 hours of the close of last season's course and the announcement of a few of the attractions to be heard next season or ders already were pouring into the office for the coming season Music at Minnesota is not only splendid but it also is appreciated by the students who have these unusual opportunities. 210 One day Paul came upon a man almost his size, sitting on a hill figuring on u great sheet of paper Behind his right ear were seventeen pencils: on the tip of his nose was an eraser. It was .Johnny Inkshnger. He was just the man that Paul needed. for production was so great, and the loggers so numerous that Paul himself could not keep up accounts and time-sheets. So .Johnny Ink-slinger was persuaded to become efficient camp book - keeper. llltAMA 211 EDWARD S. ST A ADI A graduate of Northwestern University. Mr. Edward Staadt came to Minnesota as Director of Dramatics in the fall quarter of 1927. Shortly after his arrival. Mr. Staadt urged that the Garrick Club and the Minnesota Masquers formulate a co-operative working agreement. And the organizations put such an agreement into effect almost immediately. A further attempt at drawing dramatic groups into a more compact identity was made when Director Staadt organized the āTheatre Workshop as a producing unit of the Speech Department. At the time the producing responsibilities on the campus were placed in the student dramatic organizations, and Mr. Staadt's efforts to place these groups together under the Speech Department failed. Altogether Director Staadt handled the difficult task of directing plays chosen often by leaders of student dramatic groups, with great competence and patience. He left two plays, Wind in the Southā, and Coming Through the Rye in the memories of students and playgoers at Minnesota. 212 A. DALE RILEY Coming to Minnesota in the fall quarter of 1931 to fill the position left vacant by the death of Mr. Edward Staadt in the early summer of 1931, Mr A. Dale Riley, graduate of Cornell University and the State University of Iowa, found that the Dramatics post at Minnesota was no easy spot. Interest in dramatics had reached a high peak following the Summer Session dramatic round table. The new director laid plans for a complete reorganization. He chose to control the entire Dramatic programāto make the office of Director of Dramatics a real job. As Mr. Staadt had done. Director Riley organized a Speech department producing unit, the āUniversity Theatreā, differing from Edward Staadtās āTheatre Workshop in that the entire season of plays was to be produced by the āUniversity Theatreā, taking production aspects from the student groups: Masquers. Garrick Club, and National Collegiate Players. 213 A. Dale Riley, a highly proficient and mild mannered young gentleman, lately of the University of Iowa, last night inaugurated his first appearance as director of dramatics at the University of Minnesota by presenting student actors in a masterful and artistic performance of ' The Good Hope , a drama by the Dutch playwright. Herman Heijermans. Professor Riley, who succeeds Edward Staadt. has set about establishing a new order of things in field of the drama at the university. The Good Hopeā is a soundly designed play, written without extravagance, thoroughly imbued with the realistic spirit, forceful, simple and direct. It is a tale of the men who go down to the sea in fishing fleets off the coast of Holland, the women and children who arc left behind, and the greed of the owners of the fleet. It has some of the stern qualities of Ibsen's powerful criticisms of society, moving irrevocably to final tragedy. Immediately one is deeply impressed by the stage settings and the costumes utilized by Professor Riley in his initial production. There is a definite unity and fineness in these essentials that adds enormously to the value of the play. Everything has been done in excellent taste, with painstaking care and a high degree of theatrical intelligence. There is complete harmony between the play and its representation. The characters arc portrayed with a keen appreciation of the roles, and several players are splendid. It is doubtful that more sustained, carefully delineated performances have ever been witnessed in a single play at the university. Par ticuiarly strong work is being done by Ruth Dietrich. Lillian Zaret. Sheldon Beilis, Sam Mirviss and Lola Jones. They are amazingly effective.āMerle Potter.āMinneapolis Journal 214 The Beaux' Stratagemā is an honest example of plays of the restoration period when wit was an accepted substitute for substance and when risque touches freshly imported from across the channel, somewhat chastened by staid English respectability, were the particular stimulants patrons of the theater demanded. Possibly the modern counterpart of such plays might be discovered in the works of George Bernard Shaw that so cunningly adapt themselves to musical comedy. Among the restoration dramatists. Farquhar ranked among the leaders who concerned themselves with parodies and satires on the pretentions of the day. writing with a mirthful, joyous freedom that openly rebelled against the sterner drama of the period immediately preceding. It is one of those constantly recurring times when the essence of good theater comedy is presumed to be found in retailing the amorous businesses of an inconstant gentleman of vast good manners, gallantry and capacity for saying pretty nothings . . . when stupid husbands were fair marks for playwrightsā humors. and when intrigue in boudoirs was quite the thing. Of such gay and inconsequential materials is The Beauxā Stratagem constructed, full of artificialities and vanities, clever, polished, and admirably constructed. Merle Osborne portraying Mrs. Sullen gave the outstanding performance. She has a positive flair for this kind of comedy. Her performance in the second act was especially gratifying. Richard Carlson acted Archer with gracious ease and Warrington Winters gave a commendable account of himself as Aimwcll. āMerle Potter.āMinneapolis Journal I'aul could twill ā¢ā¢ tl « etc,in oi a whistle by hotdinq the Ixtrh at one end. ufhiht lltihc pulled ol the other. The giant auditorium in which lesser plays have been more or less uncomfortable was a proper place for the sweep and magnificence of Julius Caesar , and Mr. Riley and his corps of assistants have done a prodigiously fine job of reviving this play as an especially meritorious part of their season of drama. It would be futile to attempt any addition to the wealth of praise that has been heaped upon this masterpiece of the most superb drama craftsman of them all. but the discovery that it has been so commendably produced and acted is something to celebrate. Mr. Riley has been eminently successful in coaching his players in the Shakespearean manner of acting. In the university production, the five acts and the innumerable scenes were combined in two acts. A single set of mammoth proportions that stretched across the great auditorium stage was utilized for all the action. The transition from scene to scene and from act to act was accomplished by a novel lighting effect that served the purpose of carrying the spectator alternately about the streets of Rome . . . . and to the other places demanded by the play. This was all handled with so much deftness that the illusion was as real as such things can be. Possibly the most dramatic scene in Julius Caesar is that in which Antonius delivers his oration over the body of his fallen leader, and here Mr. Riley's work was climaxed in a real triumph. The audience was electrified and deeply moved by this portion of the play. Throughout, the action moved with smoothness and precision. and in every detail the production approached professional standards. ā Merle Potter.āMinneapolis Journal 216 Right You Arc If You I hink You Arc by Pirandello was given by the University Theatre players under the direction of Clement Ramsland. The stage set designed and painted by Mr. Sebern will live long in Minnesota memories. It was in pink and silver of extremely modernistic lines and detailsāeven to the chairs, the telephone, and the slanting doorway. Arthur H. Peterson's portrayal of the tortured Ppnza. who may or may not be insane, was excellent. Mis scenes of argument with Wilva Davis, as vSignora Ponza. who may also be insane, were vivid and very impressive. When the tension of deciding who was insane was over, however, there still remained Albert Killeen's Now have you found the truthwhich was followed by his characteristic sneering laugh. Marian Pfacndcr's comical inferences, energetic presence. and frank remarks, relieved us and rang in our ears. The sweetness and simplicity of life was brought to us by Marian Miller in her ingenue role as Dina. Pirandello uses a husband and his mother-in-law. one of whom it would seem must be insane, to achieve his end. For three stirring acts we were tossed from one conviction to the other. When it was all over, the riddle was still unsolved by the dramatists, and each might make a solution for himself. The mischief was all caused by one man. a certain Aga .zi. who sets the small Italian town to gossiping. This role was acted by W. C. Georgeson with all the appropriate malice. The drama is an experiment with the thought that truth is relative, and we are content to believe what we want to believe. It is a sly argument against befogged thinking, a slap at the complacent conformist, and a sermon for tolerance. 217 Bab ā trtaheJ an entire tertian of land lo the river at ow drag, the treet avrv tut, urn the iettion hauled back- Turandot āTurandotā. the first outdoor dramatic performance of its kind to be given at the University of Minnesota, was presented by the University Players on May 24. 25. and 26. The play, under the direction of A. Dale Riley, was produced on the campus in a colorful Chinese setting, designed by Theodor W. Sebern. Ruth Dietrich, veteran campus actress, gave an unusually appealing performance in the role of Turandot. and Sam Mirviss was outstanding in the role of Caliph. Turandot 's lover. Others who distinguished themselves in their roles were William New-gord as Capoconiico. Saul Raskin as the emperor. Marian Miller as Zelima. and Taalk-cus Blank as Punchinello. Turandot . by Percy Mackayc. is the story of a banished prince. Caliph, who sees over a garden wall a princess of Pekin and falls madly in love with her. discovering later that she is the daughter of his fatherās murderer. Reluctant to marry. Turandot conceives a plan to force each suitor to guess three riddles, the penalty for failure being execution. Caliph alone knows the answers to these riddles and many complications arise when he arrives at Pekin, disguised as a beggar. For the three performances, bleachers with a seating capacity of six hundred spectators were set up on the campus. Lavish costumes and unusual characterizations made the play outstandingly different. Seven co-eds. led by Maxine Morken. presented an Oriental dance as the Emperor's harem. Minor parts furnished comedy: Marjorie Jensen as Harlequin, Walter Halstead as Chang. Leon Hagen as Barak, and Robert Brewer as Pantaloon proved adept Thespians. This Persian story was first used by the Commedia dell' Arte in Italy during the middle ages. Mackaye drew from this company of actors some of his characters, the most interesting of which is Capocomico. 218 You And I by Phillip Barry carried the University Theatre to high success on its road lour this year to Tower. Ely. and Rochester. Josephine Brown as Etta, the maid, kept the audience laughing wherever the players went. Charles Healy's presentation of the successful business man. Maitland White, whose ambitions had been thwarted in early youth, was an appeal to everyone. The son on whom his dreams of his own future were laid chose love instead of the career of an artist. Elizabeth Grobe made a charming Veronica Duane, the girl whose love for Roderick White, played by Jay Odell, took him from his life plans. Ruth Bachman's campus debut was made as Nancy White, and Saul Raskin added another role to his list of successes with the part of Geoffrey Nichols. The praise that the production was well done can be attributed to Miss Katherine Grill who possesses the ability to instill into her actors the light, laughing air so becoming to a sophisticated high comedy. Makeshift settings and two by four stages were no impediment to a group starting out with a fine play. A studio atmosphere was as easily created in Rochester with drapes and easels as on any metropolitan stage. Harry Sebern. director of painting and scenery for all the University productions, who astonishes students and faculty alike with his method of designing miniature setting models, painted the portrait for the play. Josephine Brown, who posed for the artist in the play, was the model for Mr Sebern Phillip Barry's career began after the successful run which You And I had in New York. It was first produced in the Harvard 47 Workshop. when Barry was still a student there writing for credits. Its brilliancy took it from there to New York. 219 (iff i I fit (k A, had a dinotr horn Ā o hia. and hr blew it to hard that pint Iren fell, and Ā«in torn uStte jtatted. The Players,ā dramatic organization of the Evening Students Association and latest addition to the University Theater, has made considerable progress within the last two years with Mr. Thomas Moore as its head. The group aims to develop a worthwhile organization by fostering the dramatic talent in the evening school classes. Tryouts are conducted on a competitive basis as the best means of promoting this aim. The meetings, held on the second Friday of every month were a subsidiary part of the club program: the main endeavor being concentrated on the staging of several one act plays. These productions were staged at the three special functions of the Evening Students Association: The Holiday Frolic. The May Mixer, and the Midwinter Party. The Eligible Mr. Bangsā, given at the 1931 Holiday Frolic in the St. Paul Hotel, was outstanding among this group. One of Harold Brighausās famous twenty minute plays. Lonesome Likeā, was entered in the 1931 Annual Play Tournament of the Minnesota Dramatic Bureau. Wedding Bells , the major production of the Association, directed by Miss Merle Osborne, coach of the University Theater, was so well received that the administration requested its presentation for the benefit of the summer school students. The Chanters, a chorus of evening students affiliated with the Players, assisted in the presentation of this musical comedy and review. The play, presented in the music auditorium, was favorably commented upon by Professor A. Dale Riley of the University Dramatic Department. In spite of The Players comparatively short existence, they have received considerable recognition because of their admirable contributions in the way of dramatic productions, and the club bids fair to become an outstanding dramatic organization by virtue of its untiring efforts and capable direction. Punchinello Paul often utf J o great timber tcijihf. with which ht eoulJ fell a rciion of timber with one mighty %wing of the at mi. The major production this year of Punchinello, farm campus dramatic organization. was The Queen's Husband , one of Robert Sherwood's best plays. The scene is laid in an imaginary European monarchy, where the Queen is the domineering character. and the King is not even the figure head; he is just one of those unhappy men known as his wife's husband . The plot revolves about their daughter who has just reached the age when marriage becomes eminent The Queen has planned a match with the most eligible young prince in Europe; but the princess, a very modern young lady, has a mind of her own. too. She is in love with the son of a wholesale plumber, and furthermore, is determined to marry him. The couple manage to get away with the aid of the Queen's husband, a kindly, pathetic soul, who knows that he will probably suffer for his part in the scheme for the rest of his life. Thus the would-be bridegroom is left standing at the church door with the expectant guests inside, and the unsuspecting Queen marching triumphantly to the wedding with the doomed husband at her side as the curtain goes down on the scene. The subplot. involving a most brilliant revolution led by typical, present-day agitators, adds greatly to the satirical element. Dorothy McManigal played the role of the overbearing Queen, while Edward Quales interpreted the part of the henpecked husband. The play was directed by Mr. Rutledge. Punchinello is the only independent dramatic organization on either campus. Its purpose is to promote the social and cultural life of the college: but in addition to that, the group manages to present at least one play each quarter, and a big dramatic production each year. Mr. Uamsland Paul Runyon invented the two-man law. In rouph country the tree on the hilltopa Were rut hut not those in the lalltit. Dramatic Staff Mr. Schrrn After a period of extra-curricular activity on the University of Minnesota campus, dramatics, through the establishment of The University Theatre in the Department of Speech, has been deemed eminently respectable, and taken into the academic fold. Instead of remaining a social activity I he University Theatre has become a laboratory for those who want to play in the theatre with the understanding that they arc. in return for the inspiration and stimulus of real training, obliged to give performances of which any actor might be proud. The University Theatre, then, has become an institution, a project, in the Department of Speech, through which the members of classes, especially the classes in Elements of Play Production. Stage-craft, and Direction. may do their required laboratory work. and. at the same time, raise the standards of production on the campus by presenting plays that are worthy of their efforts, in a manner that is worthy of their University. Without the preparation and training in the theatre and classroom, on the one hand, and the inspiration of great parts and the opportunity to play them before the best audiences of the Twin Cities on the other, such performances and productions as The University of Minnesota Theatre should present would be absolutely impossible. āA. Dale Riley University Theatre Technical Stall 222 Johnny Inkshnger's fountain pen was a hose run from a barrel of ink. Once during a rush of business he used two fountain pens, writing with both hands. But his thoughts and the writing of the two pens became jumbled, so he abandoned the method. One winter he devised the plan of leaving the dots off the i's and the crosses off the t's. Nine barrels of ink were thus saved on the payroll alone. 223 FOIIESSH Speech In hi whimsical, jovial manner Professor Prank M. Rarig delight in idling the story of the almost coincidental events which brought him to the ācloistered walls' of the Minnesota Speech Department. frank M. Rang It so happens. Mr. Rang relates, that during the administration of Cyrus Northrop. Professor John U. Gray of Minnesota found occasion to journey to Chicagoāwhere, they say. it is reputed all things may happen. Through a chance meeting of Professor Gray with Dr. Cumnoch. then head of the School of Speech at Northwestern and an acquaintance of long standing, it developed that Dr Cumnoch knew of the exact person to fill the recent vacancy in the Minnesota Department of Speech. Professor Gray returned to Minneapolis bearing among other things. Dr. Cumnoch's proposal, which was duly presented to President Northrop and acted upon favorably. The result svas that Frank M. Rarig. who had been teaching speech at Northwestern, breame coach of debate and oratory and instructor of speech at Minnesotaāan onerous title but one which he has borne well and developed greatly in significance and importance to the University. Under the guidance of his energetic personality, the University set out upon a new era in speech instruction. Previous to Professor Rarig's assumption of duties at Minnesota, a class in debating held a superficial existence, subsidiary to the department's aim to promote inter collegiate debate and oratory. The majority of effort was spent in preparing teams for these contests rather than training individuals in fundamentals. The inadequacy of such a program Professor Rarig immediately recognized and reformation of such practice immediately svas begun Scheduled classes in the elements of speech, reading and drama were organized and to these have been added a speech clinicāunder the present direction of Professors Bryng Bryngclson and F. I Holmesāwhose purpose it is to study and correct speech difficulties of various sorts. In addition to a program of intercollegiate debating, a number of local contests arc sponsored at Minnesota each year. These include the Pillsbury Oratorical contest, the winner of which represents the University in the Northern Oratorical Leagueāwon this year by Lillian Gillilland: the All Uni versity Fxtemporaneous Speaking Contest, which svas taken in 19)2 by Lawrence I.. Vance: the Freshman Sophomore Oratorical Contest; the Freshman-Sophomore Debate, and the Contest in the Reading of Verse. This extensive program speaks well of those in whose hands the welfare of this activity has been placed. It is gratifying to know that in oratory as well as in more celebrated forms of competition. Minnesota is qualified to rank among the leaders. ' 224 Oratory w The allegorical theme of the prize winning oration of 1931. American Delusionsā, gained the distinction of being one of the most unusual presentations delivered by a contestant in the Pillsbury Oratorical Contest in year - ā Burnell Koolish Burnell Koolish. whose speech won the contest, likened American civilization to a prehistoric existence with man at the mercy of an uncontrollable forceāa force composed of the physical makeup of the world and in the more modern relationship, the domination of machines and the machine technique of thought and action. Like men in a jungle, he contended. Americans stand insecure while surrounded by unlimited wealth. Based upon the rhetorical declaration that as rational and intelligent beings everyone mistakes the symbols of physical and mental well-being for its substance. Mr. Koolish elaborated his thesis with quotations and phrases epitomizing in their brevity the imagination of thought and construction upon which is based the merit of the oration as a type of declaration. Bigger, not better, is the war cry of America. The only national policy, has been toavoida national policy. Mr. Koolish declared. Coming to the University as a sophomore. Mr. Koolish contributed in that year to Minnesota's forensic success by helping defeat Michigan in debate. In addition to his consistent work in debate he won. in consecutive years, second and then first honors in the Extemporaneous Speaking Contest held during his sophomore and junior years. Victory in the Pillsbury Contest gave Mr. Koolish the privilege of representing Minnesota in the Northern Oratorical League contest. The Pillsbury Oratorical contest was originated by. and is now maintained in memory of. Governor John H. Pillsbury. One hundred and seventy five dollars in prizes arc awarded annually to the three outstanding orators of this competitive group Other prize winners in the 1931 contest included E. B. Sobejana. who soared to commanding heights with his plea for the Philippines in his oration Give us Freedom. and Isabelle Gillilland, who spoke on The Bread Line. Others in the final contest were Robert Wilson, with an interesting comment on International Boomerangs : Lillian Gillilland. who chose The Patriots as a subject of consideration and Laurel Eno. who joined the International theme by a discourse on International Harmony.ā A tteen-ivlieelediteamboJI u'dx required to stir tbt huqr vat of soup needed to mtitfij the appetites of the loggers. 225 (ā¢ā¢it.non. Vo Ht. Koutnh, Dtoo Ā Current proposals for the stabilization of industry were the background for the fall round of debates in the Western Conference. The question was. ' Resolved: That the United States should adopt a compulsory nation-wide plan for the control of production and distribution in major basic industries.ā A team from Minnesota traveled to Michigan to uphold the negative of the question. The men who urged a continuation of the present system of private initiative in business were Leonard Evans. Russell K. Johnson, and Robert Wilson, captain. They were opposed by Howard Limon. Victor Rabinowitz. and Nathan Levy of Michigan. Minnesota took the affirmative against Purdue on the home platform. In this contest James Gislason. Wright Brooks, and Burnell Koolish. captain, of Minnesota, met Frank Robey. R. V. DcLancy. and John Martin. The results of these contests confirm a superstition of some standing among debaters which holds that the privilege of traveling will be compensation because the team which traveled lost and the team which remained at home won its engagement. Michigan 226 1 Northwestern Paul likt l a oood tmokt. To kirp hit p p tillnt rtquitrJ ih tnlirr timt ot a tinampcr Hoiking with u troop ihovtl fmtam, K mw, Vvut. Ilaftitum During the week of March 6 Coach Knower and ihe members of the spring negative squad drove to Indiana University with practice debates enroute at the University of Wisconsin. Marquette University, and Purdue University. The debaters were Ira Peterson. Paul Anderson, and Lee Locvinger. captain. At Indiana they met an affirmative team composed of Milton Fincberg, Frank K. Edmondson, and David Cohen. The critic judge was Professor W. P. Sanford, head of the speech department at the University of Illinois. In delivering his decision, which was for Minnesota. he stated that the Minnesota team was the best he had heard in a number of years. The war debts question was debated on the Minnesota campus against Northwestern on April I. Lawrence I.. Vance, captain. Jean Hagstrum. and William Fineman. made up the Gopher team. The Purple was represented by Richard E5eterson. Paul Ziffren and John M. Erickson. Taking the affirmative of the proposition that the debts and reparations should be cancelled. Minnesota proposed that action as a step toward world peace and to stimulate business, while Northwestern suggested that the obligations be scaled down. Professor 1. M. Cochran of Carlcton awarded the decision to Minnesota. Indiana An.tĀ«u n. I'tUtiun. Vane 227 Vrnxf. (inUton. Hootoh rWirton. I'ettuon, Latvinftt. Knoutt Party politics and personalities entered into intercollegiate forensics when Minnesota debated the University of California on the proposition. āResolved: I hat this house oppose the re-election of Hoover in 19 2. Ira Peterson and Lee Loevinger of Minnesota defended the present administration, while Ernest Grove and Herbert Resner attacked their fellow Californian. A vote of the audience conceded to Minnesota the greater debating skill. The University of Pittsburgh sent Cyril Jacobs and Samuel Straus to meet James Gislason and Burnell Koolish on the proposition. Resolved: That the United States should enact legislation providing for the centralized control of industry. Minnesota proposed the change: Pittsburgh took the negative. There was no decision In the extemporaneous speaking contest, first place was won by Lawrence L. Vance, who urged the United States wipe out the debts and reparations problem through cancellation. Second place was taken by the plea of Saadia Gelb for a frank recognition of America's strategic international position. The other speakers were Genevieve Arnold. Lee Loevinger. Andrew Hayfor. and Irving Spiegel. Extemporaneous Speakers th ConUticntt 228 ChU. IIoutturn, ('iwh Kahn. Arn. 'J The civil disobedience movement in India occasioned the topic of this year's womens triangular debates, which was stated. Resolved: That Great Britain should immediately grant complete independence to India.ā Negative team from Minnesota met an affirmative from Iowa at Iowa City. I.enore Wolfe. Dorothy E. Paulson, and Edna Hanson, captain, traveled to Iowa to meet Portia Hahn. Elinor Cherny and Josephine Ball. The decision was won by Iowa. At Minnesota. Lola Jones, June Miller and Lillian Gillilland. captain, took the affirmative of the proposition againu Dorothy Edwards. Arlecn Van Doren. and Alice Peterson of Wisconsin. Professor Charles Templar of Hamlinc. judge, decided in favor of Wisconsin. In the annual Fresh man-Sophomore debate a subject which every Freshman and Sophomore man must contemplate was embodied in the proposition. Resolved: That military drill at the University of Minnesota be made voluntary. Jean H. Hagstrum. Saadia Gclb. and Charles Evans defended the prestige of the Sophomores: and Genevieve Arnold. Victor Birnberg. and Howard S. Kahn upheld the tradition of the Freshmen. Women Jat+it. K'niuir. Iātultc-n Uillit. GttlilUnJ. Wolh. limit 229 jLSPAUL BUNYAN would say. Forensics at Minnesota have cut tall timber. The Western Conference debate schedule began with a triangular debate on the question of compulsory governmental control of industry. The Minnesota affirmative team defeated the Purdue Engineers at Minneapolis and with a mighty blast laid low their well planned structure. Our negative team journeyed to Michigan where mental chips flew thick and fast, but Minnesota men were smothered under the Wolverine's giant pines. On January 28 a team from the California camp drifted in to debate the re-election of Hoover in 1952. An audience ballot decided in favor of the Minnesota Blue Ox. A downstream crew from the LaCrosse State Teacherās College came for a practice debate and floated back, badly defeated. The Blue Ox of Minnesota and the sacred while cow of India were tragically confused when the women varsity debaters met teams from Wisconsin and Iowa camps on the question of Independence for India. Later in the season, the affirmative crew debated before the Saturday Luncheon Club of Minneapolis. The audience recognized that our boys had firmly spiked the Pittsburgh case and had overwhelmed them with their raft of argument. āFranklin H. Known. 230 Paul Runyan invented logging. He was obliged to invent tools, also, because at his mighty swing an ordinary axe splintered like a match. He forged an axe with a cutting edge fifteen feel across, and fashioned a handle of ironwood. That broke with the first blow. Then Paul gathered a certain tall grass and wove a flexible handle fifty feet long and two feet thick. The modern sport of hammer-throwing was derived from this axe. MILITAIIY 231 Staff ācni 'x axtmn tkarptntd ihnr o.rri hi tolling ilnnrt dou n hiIIi and holding tht idgii oitointl thm us they wtni hy. The commandant of the Minnesota Reserve Officers' Training Corps modestly denies any outstanding characteristics, and says of himself. I am just a plugger.ā Though Major Hester is a retiring man. with a pleasant manner and kindly sense of humor, he possesses the dignity which befits well the title which he holds. The major says. I am a rotten golfer, but I am going to be good next year. At tennis the major is only an average player, but he is a master at fishing. Major Hester has a son who is following in his father's footsteps at West Point. Major Hester remarks with some pride that his son is six feet tall. Both father and son enjoy tennis and a recent letter from West Point announces. I am going to lick Dad at tennis this summer.'' And the major with true fatherly spirit is hoping that he will. Major Hester and his son expect to spend the summer fishing in those northern regions which Paul Bunyan once tramped. The major made a confession by saying that he does have one hobby after all. and that is his work. He expressed real pleasure and interest in being stationed at Minnesota, and regrets that he only has one year more to remain. He enjoys the student atmosphere and has done much to make military drill a pleasure rather than a burden. His efforts in this line have been rewarded for there is at present an exceedingly long waiting list for the advanced drill corps. There can be no doubt but that the students who have worked with him will regret even more than the major, that the time must come when he will be transferred to other fields. Major John lleMtr Rifle Squad When Sergeant Mylkc, who has charge of the University of Minnesota rifle team, lakes a vacation, he goes shooting. He is a devotee of the hunt, and much prefers trying his skill with a migrating flock of ducks for a target than the marks provided in shooting galleries. With such an enthusiast at its head it is inevitable that the Minnesota rifle team should succeed in rivaling the highest records. Sergeant Mylke has during his ten years of direction brought forth from his team excellent exhibitions of marksmanship. Since 1926 the Minnesota team has been meeting other Universities in the regular series of Big Ten Matches. At present the team competes in from twenty to thirty matches per year. Some of these are conducted by E K j a telegraphic exchange of scores. The grand climax of the year for the rifle team comes at the National Intercollegiate match. This year it is to be held at Champaign. Illinois. This match is a phenomenal display of accuracy, steadiness, and skill. Rabe would not work mow u'w on thr ground, logging toadt wen- whittu. in tiummrr, to dremle Sergeant Mylkc is an adherent to marksmanship as a clean sport. He believes that it is the best of training in muscle control and coordination. When asked his opinion regarding the future of marksmanship. Mylkc replied. There is no doubt but what rifle marksmanship is rising greatly to a higher degree of perfection. This is noticed not only at our own University but throughout every portion of the United States. Members of the rifle team are found expressing as much zeal for the art as does their director. It is through his fervent love for this sport that the spirit has transferred to the men. The admiration and esteem which he has won from his students have given Minnesota a team of which it may be proud. The Ride Team 233 Cadet Officertā Croup Appointments of cadet officers are made each fall as a reward for outstanding work in the two years of basic drill. Bach cadet must serve as a second lieutenant for three quarters before he becomes eligible for the promotion to any higher rank. The appointments are made by the staff of the military department and are based upon the quality of work done, interest in the work, and participation in extra activities in connection with the military department. The quality of the work done is based upon two factors, first the work done in class and on the field while conducting close-order drill in the basic corps, and second upon the camp record including the spring competitions. The summer following the first year of advance work is spent in camp at Port Sneliing. At the close of the camp term a rating sheet for each cadet is sent back to the Department. While at camp marksmanship is the most important single factor which goes to make up a cadet's rating. At the spring review medals and swords are presented to those cadets who display the most outstanding knowledge of military science. Excellency in the work is not enough. The men selected for the outstanding positions must show a very definite interest in the activities of the department, among which arc the officers' club, the general honorary fraternities. Scabbard and Blade, and Phalanx: and in the honorary unit organizations. Mortar and Ball in the coast artillery. Pi Tau Pi Sigma in the signal corps, and the Runner's club in the infantry. Membership in these honorary societies is based on the judgment of the active members of the societies and the opinion of the officers in charge of the advanced military classes. Heater, ChristofJer 234 Infantry Corps The infantry comprises the largest single unit in the Reserve Officersā Training Corps. In it are a large percentage of the Freshman and Sophomore groups which comprise the basic drill unit. Men in the basic corps of the infantry are taught the manual of arms, close order maneuvers 3nd the care of rifles. They also attend a series of lectures on medical attention. The advanced corps men receive instruction in the handling of troops, machine gun warfare, assembling of armaments, and the handling of small arms. Major T. Mcthvin. a graduate of Minnesota and in 1916 colonel of the cadet corps, is in charge of the first year advanced corps men. This group specializes in the study of war maneuvers. In the spring the cadets make maps of the campus. In this manner they are presented with some of the practical problems of the actual maneuvers of an army. Lieutenant Harlan Hartncss directs the work of the second year students in the advanced corps. The main objective of the work is to give the cadets practical experience in the handling of troops. This is done by commanding men in the basic corps in the technique of dose order maneuvers through a system of cadet officers, the ranking officer being cadet lieutenant colonel. In the fall quarter this position was filled by Noyes Alger, the winter quarter by Robert Stuebing. and the spring quarter by Donald Dunton. Infantry training, even for those who have no interest in military science as an occupation, does much toward building an upright carriage of the body, and teaches coordination of the body and the mind. It increases the dispatch by which a person receives reactions from his muscles. increasing his poise and self-confidence. O fitters Coast Artillery Paul marked bn lops htj pinching out n pint with his browm hand; hut hit men had to um an a. e to sialpā them. Coast Artillery The function of the coast artillery is to aid all other units in the performance of their functions, both defensive and offensive. It includes both harbor defense and the operation of big guns in the field. The American policy of preparation is to train the men along the sea boards in coast artillery, the men of inner section in field artillery, and those in the center, which includes Minnesota, in Coast Artillery and Anti-Aircraft. At Minnesota, coast artillery, and anti-aircraft instruction is under the direction of Major Willis Shippam and cadet lieutenant colonel Russell FErickson. All freshmen and sophomores in the colleges of engineering and mines, with the exception of the electrical engineers, are in the basic corps of the coast artillery. They receive training in dose-order infantry drill, lectures on the use of big guns and projectiles, and also the use of the R. A. corrector, an instrument used to compute the distance and speed of airplanes. In the advance corps there is a more detailed study of anti aircraft ballistics, the study of the flight of projectiles in connection with aerial warfare. Motor transportation is one of the biggest problems in the coast artillery and the advance students are taught methods of trans portation. together with instruction in the use of artillery. Another interesting branch of tin-work lies in the placement of troops, to resist or make attacks. To this end. the cadets are given a course in surveying each spring. The advance corps receive a series of lectures on military history and law with the object of demonstrating the success of various maneuvers in previous warfare. Shippam. Rrnhson T he Su nol Corps The communication system which the higher army commanders use to transmit their orders and messages to other officers is constructed and operated by the Signal Corps branch of the army. Efficient signal communication is vital to succeed in battle. The signal officers of the army, today, must be well trained in all modern methods of electrical communication. The signal corps also furnishes the general's staff with weather information, a very important factor in planning warfare involving the use of smoke screens and other camouflages. The basic corps is made up of freshmen and sophomore electrical engineering students. Enrollment in the advance corps is open to those juniors who expect to take the University course in communication engineering. The Signal Corps is under the direction of First Lieutenant Rex W. Minckler with Clifford L. Hague acting as Cadet Lieutenant Colonel. Students successfully completing the advanced course are commissioned Second Lieutenants of the Signal Corps Officers Reserve Corps as a permanent position. Basic corps members receive instruction in close order infantry drill, in telegraphy, and in signalling. The men become adept in all types of communication from the wig-wag to the complicated systems of modern electrical engineering, the type of communication in which the advance corps specializes. Besides the training given at the University, students, upon completion of their junior year, are sent to a six weeks' summer training camp at Fort Sheridan. Illinois. The university amateur radio station. W9YC. is under the supervision of the Signal Corps. AUrukltr. Honin' ⢠5? 237 1931 Review The work of the Military department reaches its grand finale each May when every unit passes in review before a group of military, state, and Twin City officials, a War Department official, officers from Fort Snelling. and members of the University staff. In the spring of 1931. the University of Minnesota department was inspected by Colonel Morman. the chief inspecting officer of the United States Infantry. For the past two years Minnesota has received a rating sufficiently high to permit advance corps men to wear a star on their right sleeves. The inspection takes a period of three days. Every unit, both of the basic and advance corps, is inspected. Various units put on different tyes of drill, such as with 37mm guns and the putting up of tents. The medical division is also inspected. At the close of the inspection comes the final dress parade held on the parade grounds next to Folwell Hall. Every unit of each corps participates in the maneuvers. To the spectator the massed marching of so many cadets presents a colorful and spectacular sight. The entire military unit passes a reviewing stand erected in front of Pillsbury Hall which affords a place of observation second only to the roof of Folwell or Jones Hall. The review of 1931 was under the command of Cadet Colonel Francis J. Bill .. It is at this time that awards for outstanding work in various corps are made, sabers going to the advanced men and watches to the men in the basic corps. In 19 31 Noyes Alger received a saber for being the best company commander. Edward L. Martin received one for being the best basic platoon commander and Forion Christoffcr for being the best first year platoon commander Chfitloffer. Hester 238 Crack Drill Squad Paul teoeiped out the holt lor Lake Superior usher, he reed ed a reiervr water lupply tor icing hit logging roadi The Srjuad One of the main activities of the Military Department of the University of Minnesota is the Crack Drill Squad. Membership in this organization is based on competition among members of the advanced drill corps and the second year basic drill corps. Major Willis Shippam C.A.C.. who in 1903 was the Captain of the Minnesota Crack Drill Squad, is the regular army officer in charge of the unit. This year the team was captained by Wallace A. Peterson, major in the Cadet Corps, with Maurice Dale, captain in the Cadet Corps, as adjutant. The squad is composed of twelve men and two alternates who are chosen on their ability to execute the manual of arms: and their knowledge of close order and fancy drill. Major Shippam reorganized the squad in 1928 when he first took over the oflicership at Minnesota, and since then has used the same maneuvers which are used by the regular army Fancy Drill Squad and West Point Academy. The main event for which the Crack Drill Squad trains is the Military Ball, at which time it makes its initial appearance of the school year. Every year since 1929 the organization has appeared on the stage of a downtown theatre. Each spring quarter the squad sponsors an exhibition of fancy drill in the University Armory when it competes with squads from the various Minnesota military schools. The squad always puts on a special exhibition during the Annual Spring Review in honor of the visiting army and government officials. Before the Annual Spring Review this year the Crack Drill Squad performed before delegations from the Minnesota division of the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, who were guests at one of the pre-review parades. 239 V IDEALIZING the absolute need of having a nucleus of citizens with some degree of military training available for an emergency, a law was passed by Congress, called the National Defense Act which, among other provisions, authorized the establish ment of a corps for the training of reserve officers. The authorities of the University of Minnesota have cooperated with the Federal Government in the establishment of unitsof the Reserve Officers' Training Corps and the incorporation of military instruction in its educational system. The military instruction is quite varied, the character in general depending upon the particular college in which the student is in attendance, that in the Medical and Dental colleges being such as to insure the availability to the Government as reserve officers of some of its doctor graduates. In the Engineering College, we find one group of young men who are learning to be an additional asset to the nation in their knowledge of coast and anti-aircraft defense and another group who become qualified to insure communication. The instruction for those students who enroll in the military courses from all the other colleges is designed to afford training in that arm known as the Infantry, the arm which forms the bulk of any defensive force. āMajor John II. Heiltr. 240 Paul Bunyan preferred Swedes to direct his work, and this preference became known in the shanty houses. When Paul called his men together to choose straw-bosses, all hands were Scandinavian. There were. Nets Nelson. Ike Isaacson. Xlurph Murphy son. Ford Fordson. Kelly Kelly-son. Mat Mattson, and many more. Of course the wise master-logger recognized their deception and rejected all the pseudo-Swedes. TltAIMTIOSS 241 Freshman Week Freshman Week Commuter 1931 Freshmen Week Committee Philip Neville. Chairman Willis Smith. Assistant Chairman Associate Chairmen: Helen Sears. Robert Hurrle. Clifford Sommer, and Lila Ruth Owens. Executive Committee: Dorothy King. Olive Masters. Frank Kammcrlohr. Henry Nelson, and Ralph Golseth. Committee Chairmen: Office. Josephine Pease: Publicity. Ralph Bachman: Posters and Signs. Harvey Daley; Freshman Daily. Arnold Aslak son: Tours and Buttons. Curtis Rundell: Radio Broadcasting. Ralph Beigthol: General District. Guy Arthur and Russell K. Johnson: Booths. Eleanor Boyer: Wednesday Night Reception. Kenneth McLaren: Thursday Night Reception. Glenn Haycraft; Friday Night Menās Mixer. Richard Hutchinson: Friday Night Women's Mixer. Sylvia Pakonen: Carnival. L. Fallon Kelly and Maxine Kaiser; Housing. Richard Catlin: Convocation. Jean Parks: Scrap Book. Jane Shellman. 242 The Clan, of m 5 September 2 3 saw the opening of the fifth annual Freshman Week, a period of five days during which the Freshman was ā King.ā More than two hundred upperclassmen. under the direction of Philip Neville, chairman, and Willis Smith, assistant chairman, organized to give the incomers to the campus a real welcome and a spirited send-off into four years of college life. The committees had busied themselves since the preceding May. preparing for the greatest introduction ever offered to a Freshman class. Prior to the week itself, students and faculty visited each Twin City high school. The efforts of state committeemen, who had been busy all summer talking with new students, were culminated when Dean Nicholson and Dean Blit , conducted a series of trips throughout the state and spoke to groups of parents and Freshmen. A reception at which the students and members of the administration spoke, at which the Masquers produced a play, and at which other campus talent entertained. officially opened the week. The churches of Southeast Minneapolis united to entertain the class of 1935 at dinners and receptions. Two parties, one for the men and the other for the women, were extremely successful. The week officially ended Saturday night with the Freshman Week Carnival, which filled the Field House with Freshmen as guests of honor. Forty-five fraternities and sororities subscribed for booths, and the entire event was a replica of a large county fair. During the week Freshmen toured both the main campus and the Agricultural campus in busses which the committee furnished The green cap and the green feather returned again to the campus and were very enthusiastically received by the Freshmen as a mark of distinction entitling them to the help and assistance of the upperclassmen 243 The -Heed - Paul liked a (food smoke. To keep his pipe filled required the rnhre time of a lutamper utorhimj with a uoop shovel. Homecoming The Indian Drum 1932 Homecoming Committees Kenneth Simpson. Chairman; Assistant Chairmen: Wanda Fundbcrgand William Morse: Associate Chairmen: Harold Elfman. Virginia Peters and John Spear; Liaison Committee: Dean J. C. Lawrence. Dean Anne Dudley Blitz. Dean E. E. Nicholson. L. B. Pierce. Herbert Crisler. Dean Otis McCreery. Earle Killeen. E. G. Ericsen. Weston Grimes. Jane Affeld. Lois Finger. Mildred McWilliams, and Howard Meagher. Sub Committee Chairmen: Farm Campus Executive Committee: Donald Fish: Button Sales: Mary Spooner: Minneapolis Button Sales: Janet Parmcle: St. Paul Button Sales: Dorothea Poppe: f arm Campus Button Sales: Ruth V. Walker: Office Committee: Ruth Anne Olsen: Parade: Carl Henning: Campus Publicity: Strand Hille-boe. Minneapolis Publicity: John Harvey; St. Paul Publicity: William Harris. Jr.: Statewide Publicity: Stephen Harris: Radio: John Musser; Posters and Designs: James Niess: Open House: l.auricc Russell: Production: Fred Burg: Homecoming Day Program: John Ott: Booklet: J. Stuart Moore: Booklet Advertising: Philip Harris: Alumni Registration: Kenneth Pottle: Alumni Information: Curtis Rundell: Mailing: Neal Hall: Campus Decorations: Robert McNaghten: Twin City Decorations: James Myers: Sorority Decorations: Mary Alice Larson: Fraternity Decora tions: Jack Storkerson: Pep Fest Program: Kenneth McMillan: Pep Fest Bonfire: Paul Salo: Pep Fest Fireworks: William Shapiro; f inance: Gordon Bodien 244 Homecoming Big Jot. the conk. had a dinner horn xo big, and he hi to) it to hard that pine triei til. und Cijtlont were flatted IIometoming Committee Acquaintances were renewed, old times were discussed, and college days were enjoyed again as Minnesota graduates and former students gathered on the campus October 3 I for the 1931 Homecoming. Students and faculty members joined with the alumni in celebrating the one day of the year on which every Minnesota supporter returns in spirit if not in person to the campus. A spirit of the west pervaded the campus in keeping with the Roundup theme. Cowboys, bucking bronchos, and stage coaches of the early days shared in the task of welcoming the returning alumni. Floats depicting all phases of western activities made up the parade which started from the campus and went through the downtown district of Minneapolis. Thousands of rooters from all over the state gathered for the Friday night pep fest. Coaches, football players, and prominent alumni addressed the assemblage. A regular western rodeo with trick riding, broncho busting and bareback riding was produced in the Field House on Friday and Saturday nights. Fraternity and sorority houses were arrayed in gala style for the occasion. Ranch houses, saloon fronts and gambling joints changed University avenue into a veritable frontier town. Decorations on campus buildings added color to the celebration. The Minnesota football team led by Captain Clarence Munn and directed by Coach Crisler rounded up the Wisconsin football team by a score of 14 to 0. As the game started, the sun. which had remained hidden for a week, came from behind the clouds to greet the 50.000 football enthusiasts packed into the Memorial stadium. % 245 Pledge Night fhihe would xomenmet sneak up behind . dtiOe anti dttnh all the water out of I he ntftr, leaving the logx high and tfry Pledge Night Committee F;or the first time the Inter-Fraternity Council sponsored the Annual Pledge Night Revue in the hope of producing a show much more befitting the grand occasion of showing the new pledges. A committee, appointed by the Inter-Fraternity Council and known as the Pledge Night Revue Commission, managed the Revue. This committee was composed of Dean Otis McCreery. Fred Burg. Laurence Enger. Dan Feidt, Richard Morean. Don Robertson, and Henry Somsen. The commission decided that the primary object of presenting this yearās Pledge Night Revue was to prove to unbelievers that Fraternity and Sorority members could conduct themselves 3s ladies and gentlemen on these occasions. This primary object was accomplished so well that there is scarcely any comparison between the conduct at this yearās show and the shows of previous years. t t Guy Arthur Jr., was appointed chairman and Gardner English assistant chairman by the commission. The Revue was held for the first time at the Minnesota Theater. All of the Fraternities and Sororities including the Professional groups attended the Revue as groups. The attendance this year was very much lower than that of past years with a result that a loss was shown. The show opened with a special overture by the Minnesota Theater orchestra playing College songs and featuring a banjo solo by Lou Brcese and singing by Julie Madison. Following the overture a special picture entitled āMinnesota Memoirsāā was shown as a resume of all past events at the University of Minnesota. The stage show followed, from which campus talent had been eliminated. Aāhur and English 246 The Enter tainm Credit for one of the most amusing hoaxes of the year must be given to the Gopher staff. It has long been the custom in past years to devote a Convocation hour to the Minnesota year-book. The staffs have vied with each other in preparing entertainment with college songs, yells and other outbursts of college spirit. In a laudable endeavor to outdo its predecessors the 1932 Gopher staff proclaimed far and wide that Bernic Bierman, Minnesota's new football mentor would make his first appearance on the campus at the Gopher Convocation. Even more was promisedāthat this self same Bernic was to make a speech. In this manner they enticed football enthusiasts to the Convocation. The day arrived and the success of the Gopher staff was proven by the presence of a record-breaking crowd. The auditorium was jammed with eager spectators awaiting the moment when the great hero should arrive. In due order he w3s introduced and the so-called Bernie made a speech well befitting the occasion. The audience was well pleased and expressed its approval of the new Gopher leader. It was with varied feelings that the members of that crowd learned later that they had been fooled, defrauded, that it was not Bernie Bierman at all. The Gopher had scored a real success with its ingenious convocation. It will be remembered particularly by those who were mistaken. Perhaps a few wondered if the year book itself was going to Ik a hoax. too. Or would it be the real thing. Those who have prepared this issue of Minnesotaās annual have endeavored to make it the real thing. Whether it is or not we leave it up to you. our readers, to decide. Bunuan and Bierman (?) 247 The Engineering College of the University, in recognition of a custom prevailing in most mid-west universities, sets aside one day each spring as Engineer's Day. Tradition tells us that St. Patrick is revered as the first engineer and on St. Patrick s Day all engineers unite to honor their patron saint. St. Patrick's contribution to engineering was in the field of architecture. He erected the first keystone, known as the Blarney Stone, in the archway of Blarney castle. The great event of the day is the Engineer's parade. Mounted on white chargers. Earl Felt, reigning as St. Patrick, and Beatrice Johnson, his queen, led the parade in 1931. They were followed by a group of pages, undergraduates, picked for their outstanding interest in the department of engineering. The floats entered in the parade ranged all the way from a take-off on the lawyers to interesting displays of engineering feats. Of the latter, spectators found most interesting the running of automobiles by radio control. The parade formed on the engineering cam pus. marched down Seventeenth Street to turn on University and wind its way about southeast Minneapolis, finally ending on the knoll. St. Patrick and his queen ascended the royal throne at the foot of which was placed the Blarney stone. Then each senior engineer, wearing a tall green hat and green vest, the official robe of the Knights of St. Patrick, stepped forward, knelt and kissed the Blarney stone. At the same moment each received a resounding whack from the scepter of St. Patrickās queen. Thus they were officially dubbed Knights of St. Patrick. Festivities for the day were brought to a close by a green tea dance sponsored by the Engineer s Council. 248 The Sfituitippi River moi formed when litshe aaidentall i overturned a ivetrr-tank. and the water ran down thr t o!leu. Hard fighting freshmen engineers proved to the sophomores the truth of the saying that the early bird gets the worm when effective work in the first stages of the annual class scrap won them a close victory over the upperclassmen. The battle took place on the Parade grounds by Folwell Hall on October I 7. 19} I. and it was supervised by the technical commission. C. A. Koepkc. superintendent of the mechanical engineering shops, acted as referee for all the fights. Throughout the early part of the afternoon the first year men succeeded in piling up a convincing score by winning such events as the tilting contest, the burlap bag fight, the push ball contest, and the greased pole climbing race. Toward the end of the afternoon the freshmen showed signs of tiring. The more experienced sophomores, meanwhile, had carefully saved some of their strongest supporters for the tug-of-war. This event was to end the day. and the upperclassmen counted on the rope pulling to retrieve their losses and score a complete victory. The large crowd of spectators agreed that the final tugā was one of the best in the history of the scrap. The sophomores at last were able to drag the frosh through three heavy hose streams of water and were declared the winners of the battle. They had just begun to cheer for themselves. however, when the judges disqualified both sides for having too many participants in the tug-of-war. So the freshmen, wet and tired, found themselves the victors after all because of their previous score. 250-210. Both groups celebrated the day by attending a show and parading through the main streets of downtown Minneapolis that evening. 249 Senior Week Babe tnaked an enure union of land to iht river at one dtag. the trees were eul, and the union hauled back. Cap and Gown Parade On May twelfth. John Kukowske. All-Senior president, and Virginia Peters, president of Cap and Gown, led the black-robed procession which wound its way across the knoll, between Folwell and Jones Halls, and then to the Northrop Memorial Auditorium. They were followed by members of Mortar Board. Grey Friar. and Iron Wedge. At the end of the line came the dignitaries of the University, the Deans wearing the hoods and robes of their respective degrees and colleges, and last of all. President Lotus D. Coffman. After the march the seniors were honor guests at a Convocation where the president read the names of all the students receiving honorary awards. hollowing the Convocation, each senior woman became the guest of a junior woman at the Cap and Gown luncheon in the Minnesota Union. The atmosphere of spring was expressed in the green and yellow wall decorations with programs fashioned as garden gates. Honor guests were the mothers of the active Mortar Board members. For the outstanding coeds in the junior class this was a day of days. In and out among the tables went the senior Mortar Board women, who placed their caps upon the heads of the newly elected members. With less pomp but with as much interest the announcements were made of the names of those men to comprise Grey Friar and Iron Wedge for the coming year. A picnic at Phalen Park sponsored by the commission, a class dinner, and a free senior dance at the Nicollet Hotel concluded the festivities of the Seniors. Marks of distinction were borne by each senior during the last few weeks of the quarter. Coeds flaunted black and white purses, while the men walked with a new found dignity, aided by canes. 250 Graduation Exercises in the Stadium The first Monday of June is the traditional date for Commencement at Minnesota. In years gone by the ceremony was held in the University armory. With the growth of the institution a larger place became necessary and the event was transferred to the new stadium. In the solemn and impressive double column the seniors file into the great bowl of the stadium. It is the last lime that they assemble as a class. It is the night when achievement is to be awarded. After it. this group which has labored together for four years will dissolve and its individual members will travel to all parts of the globe. The joy of attainment is mingled with thought of regret. Student days are over, and will soon be just precious memories. A huge temporary platform is erected for the occasion. Upon it the Deans are assembled wearing the official gowns and mortar boards of their respective degrees and colleges. The President, highest official of the University, wears a simple black robe. He is distinguished by the gold lassie on his mortar board which he alone is privileged to wear. Following the commencement address made by President Lotus D. Coffman the candidates for degrees are presented by the deans of the various colleges. The arts college comes first with the candidates for honorary degrees leading the procession across the huge platform. Following the bachelor degrees candidates for masters degrees are presented. At the close the candidates for doctors degrees are hooded. When the last candidate has crossed the platform. the evening is closed by the singing of the traditional Minnesota. Hail to Thee . That song will live with the group in the years that follow serving always to remind its hearers of their college days. 251 A COLLEGE career should be undertaken, not only to study but to learn. And. that career should include the absorption of a good deal of the college atmosphere. The traditions of the institution play a prominent part in the life of the campus, events to be long remembered by the graduating class. As the oldest of Minnesota traditions, the Gopher has in this section attempted to present some of the events which occur year after year as highlights of student activity. Events such as Homecoming. Freshman Week. Cap and Gown Day will of course be readily recognized as traditions. Then, there are others, the Little Brown Jug. The Indian Drum, and the Bacon Slab, which are peculiar to athletics. However, it is the thought of the editors that the other events of the year are also Minnesota traditions. Everything from the Minncsota-Michigan football game to the Minnesota-Michigan debate goes into the annals of the school as a part of its history. To some. 1932 will be remembered as a peak in athletic progress; to others, as a climax of political controversy. But. be that as it may. let us attempt to leave our Alma Mater with a clear picture of the institution, so that our memories of college life may be as happy as those of the classes gone before us. 252 ATHLETICS Only once was Paul Bunyanās supremacy in the North Woods challenged. Hcls Helson was the insurgent. Hels was a good foreman, but his success, unfortunately, gave him an exalted opinion of his own powers. He resented authority, and was determined to demonstrate the fact that he was equal in power to Paul Bunyanāeven superior. The conflict came during the logging of the Mountain That Stood on its Head. It was the most Herculean jaw-hammering, chin-mauling, side-stamping, back-beating. arm-twisting, shin-cracking, hair-yanking, hell-roaring, knock-down-and-drag-out fight in all history. And the victor was the mighty leader of the new race of loggers. Battling Paul Bunyan. It is the consensus of opinion of the football squad of 1931. that though there may be throughout the country coaches more brilliant, possibly, from a technical and fundamental knowledge than H. O. Fritz Crisler. there does not exist anyone his superior in winning loyalty and devotion of his players: nor one who measures up better as a clean sportsman, a splendid teacher, a wise counsellor, an interested friend, and above allāa man. His inspirational leadership brought out from within us abilities unknown to us and his indomitable spirit fired us to fight just a little harder. āClocenct Munn. 253 Paul Bunuan in Or riled the woman taw. In tough tourney the irrti on the hilltop⢠uā rr cut, hut not thoir in the iniltcg. The Athletic Administrators during the past year have been very liberal in providing a chance for the entire student body to participate in games and sports. Athletic department heads and coaching staffs have cooperated as far as possible in promoting wider interests in minor sports. This is significant. Louis Keller. Professor of Physical Education, believes since sporting interests play quite a part in student life. In line with this program of greater attention to secondary sports. Professor Keller says that āthe general physical education course has become considerably more integrated, and at the same time has branched out into more activities, with Dr. .. J. Cooke increased attention to an athletic program which will develop better future activities. Physical educators are now stressing athletic activities which students will be able to use after graduationāthe carry-over activities, as they are calledāwith a view to developing a curriculum that will make students versatile in a number of sports. These developments were part of the administration of H. O. Crisler. of whom Dean OtisC. McCrecry says: Mr. Crisler. because of his personality and qualities of analysis, was able to so co-ordinate the different branches of the athletic department that it resulted in a harmonious and smooth-working organization. One of his greatest interests was offering a well rounded intramural program to the students. Mr. Crisler felt that the athletic administration owed a duty to the state, and through his contacts he formed many friendships for the University. Administration The Haditim. u putt of the greater athletic program 254 tug JOf, (hi- cook, had a dinner horn Ā«o hip. uni hr bttiv it w hard (hut pine trees Irll. and cpclonti u trr irattrd. Trainers On the morning of November 2nd. Oscar Munson, janitor in the University Armory, found in the visitors' locker room a gray five-gallon jug. which had been left there by the Michigan football team following that memorable game played with Minnesota on October 31st. 1903. Oscar immediately brought the jug to the office of the Director of Physical Education. where it was suspended from the hook above the Director s desk for six years. In 1909 it was suggested that the jug be used as a trophy whenever these two institutions met in football. John J;. McGovern. Minnesotaās first All-American football player, presented the j)aUt Woodward suggestion to the captain of the Michigan Team and the tradition really began at that time. Michigan won the jug the next two years, the two institutions did not again compete in football until 1919 when they met at Ann Arbor and Minnesota won by the score of 34 to 7. The coveted jug was chained to the floor of the Waterman Gymnasium. trophy room. The jug was given a conspicuous place in the trophy case of the Minnesota Union but the visit was brief, for Michigan defeated Minnesota the following year. Minnesota did not win the jug again until 1927. but lost it again in 1929 when Michigan again defeated Minnesota. May the jug continue as a tradition symbolizing the keen but friendly spirit of rivalry existing between these two great midwestern institutions. āDr. L. J. Cooke. Oscar Munson polishes the l ittle Brown Jua. 255 1 Paul itooprd out the holt for Laht Superior when hr Oireded Ā« rturot water supply for iurtif hn logging roatlx- Conference Medal During my eleven years as Varsity Swimming Coach at the University of Minnesota. I have coached and trained many Western Intercollegiate and National Intercollegiate Champions, but only one of these was ever awarded the Conference Medal which annually is given to the most outstanding athlete and scholar in the senior class, and I lament the futility of words which adequately will pay a fitting tribute to the Conference Medal Winner of 1951āLowell Marsh. The nickname āSpareribsā affectionately given to him by his team mates appropriates his six foot stature with its one hundred and forty-eight pounds: a physique which was respected by collegiate back-stroke swimmers in America, over a period of three years. Two sparkling brown eyes beneath a high, shapely forehead capped with wavy black hair and a well meant handshake thrilled me as he was introduced to me in March. 1928. Lowell Marsh Later at the University of Minnesota. I learned that his mental characteristics were as striking as his physical. His professors spoke well of him. his team mates admired his fine loyal competitive spirit, a spirit that embraced the best of training habits: his adversaries respected his competitive ability and extraordinary fine sportsmanship. in both victory and defeat. Ilis senior year was an example of When dreams come true.ā He captained his team: he won the conference and national collegiate back stroke championships. Outstanding scholastic work and athletic prowess gave him the Conference Medal, the highest honor a Minnesota athlete can attain. āNiels Thorpe. FORMER WINNERS Boles Rosenthal 1916 Earl Martineau 1924 Joe Sprafka 1917 Louis Gross 1925 Erling Platou 1918 Raymond Rascy 1926 George Hauser 1919 Rodger Wheeler 1927 Norman Kingsley 1920 Malvin Nydahl 1928 Neil Arnston 1921 George MacKinnon 1929 Arnold Oss 1922 Robert Ianner 1950 Rudolph Hultkrans 1925 Lowell Marsh 1951 256 1 Rooter Kings Come on. now, let's have that big lo-kee-mo-tive. Come on. gang, ya gotta get in on it.ā From the beginning of the football season Robert Hurrle, 1931 Rooter King, brought forth rous ing cheers from the stands with this pleading call. The cheers were invariably accompanied by many wild antics on the part of Hurrle and his coworkers. Charles Hibbard. James Kendrick. Ild mund Vollbracht. Lawrence Woods, Robert Cobb and Bill Cronk. It was the pep behind such ejaculations which brought the crowd to its feet when Captain Munn kicked for the decisive point after touchdown. The spirit of cooperation and enthusiasm which brought out the best in every Minnesota rooter was shown at the opening pep fest in the Auditorium before the football season opened, and at the two others which followed. Boh Hurrle Win or lose the Gopher squad was met at the depot on every return by these men. full of spirit and loyalty. Decked out in white sweaters and trousers with the old English maroon and gold Mā, the men could not fail to tell the team of Minnesota's pride. There is homage due the cheerleader for his untiring activities, but the real glory comes only in hearing the fans respond to his call Kenneth McMillan will lead the rooter corps in its pleas for touchdowns next year. He will give his services for many undergraduate assemblies, besides football games, and the constant demands to arouse the enthusiasm and campus spirit of the student body. Come on. gang! 257 N O T since Dr. II. L. Williams look charge of football at Minnesota in 1900 has the general athletic program appeared so promising as at the present moment. Splendid golf links have been provided and an adequate club house has been erected. The f ield House offers facilities for basketball, indoor football, baseball, track, and tennis practice. Our Stadium provides room for handball, squash racquet, track, wrestling and boxing. The Armory takes care of gymnastics. Hockey and swimming, while prospering, need more adequate housing. Facilities mean little without leadership. Minnesota now has both. Thanks to students, faculty, alumni, and friends, the Stadium came without cost to the institution. It in turn has earned the money that built the Field House, bought and equipped the golf links, and will earn the funds with which to provide for future expansion of our athletic program. In Herbert O. Crisler the University discovered ideal athletic leadership. He unified the department, won the admiration, respect, and loyalty of his severest critics, and holds the affection and esteem of students and faculty. With foundations well laid and sound principles well established and with Bernie Bierman. '15. selected as head football coach, the athletic fortunes of Minnesota appear to be approaching their zenith. āE. li. Pierce. 258 liven. lime Babe, the Big Blue Ox. needed shoeing. it was necessary to open a new iron mine. The ox was so Gargantuan and so frolicsome that Big Ole was the only man capable of shoeing him. Once Big Ole forged a pair of shoes for Babe at the site of the mine, and they were so heavy that when he carried them back to the camp he sank into the solid stone up to his knees at every step. FOOTItALL 259 In Memoriam Young man, go West: the famous advice of Horace Greeley must have echoed in the ears of young Henry Williams of Yale back in 1900. Perhaps the rugged but untrained football material of the far off northern school appealed to the creative genius of the young physician aspiring to coaching fame. Be that as it may, in this first year of the twentieth century. Docā Williams came to the University of Minnesota. A few men have served their schools longer, but none more brilliantly than did Dr. Henry Williams. With him opened an era of football achievement at Minnesota which was to last for a generation. The Gophers became a symbol for brilliant conception and precision of execution of football strategy. The Minnesota Shift became famous in college circles and marked the beginnings of a new epoch in gridiron tactics. 260 Dr. H. L. Williams When Doeā Williams retired in 1922 he left behind him a tradition of service and accomplishment unsurpassed by any man of his time. Liight championships won or tied for were the contributions of his teams. Never to be forgotten will be the famous 1903 6-6 tie with Michigan, possibly the all-time classic of mid-west football. To those of us who were fortunate enough to attend Minnesota during those well-remembered years, the passing of the great coach came as a personal sorrow, but his continued interest and advice, and his yearly discussions following important games, tempered the blow. With his death in 1931 ended a career which will remain a part of collegiate athletic history, and in his day and generation constituted the Golden Age of Minnesota football. 261 āDr. Leon M. Routl. 'OS Coaches lust Practice McCormick Wieman Two years ago. when Mr. Crislcr first assumed the responsibilities of athletic director and head football coach, his position was far from an enviable one. Coming to the University at a time when athletics, especially football, were in a particularly unsettled state, his task was a tremendous one. Events which followed his coming to Minnesota have shown the wisdom and farsightedness of his selection, although he now has gone to Princeton. Starting the 19 0 season inauspicious!)', with a squad unfamiliar with his style of play and an entirely new coaching staff. Crisler immediately began building his team with an eye towards the future. Ability to plan ahead, not only in football but in all other sports as well, is an outstanding characteristic of Crisler. Criiler Keeping pace with the steady development in other departments of the institution, the athletic department of the University of Minnesota has made marked progress during the past year. Much of this success has been due to the outstanding coaching staff which has been in charge of Gopher athletic squads during the year. Under the leadership of Herbert O. Crisler. director of athletics, and for the past two seasons, head football coach, the trend has been definitely upward in all branches of athletic endeavor at Minnesota. 262 Coaches SI or A (iv 9 Harris McKinnon No small measure of (his success goes to the men who aided in developing the squad. From l ad Wieman. who came to Minnesota with Crisler. and who has gone with him to Princeton, the Gopher linemen received instruction from one of the best line coaches in the game. Formerly a great player at Michigan, he has made as great Kaminski Emu a name for himself in coaching eight All-American line- men in ten years. Frank McCormick, former South Dakota university star, proved invaluable in the development of the backfield. Able, shrewd, and an accurate observer. McCormick had much to do with developing work of the ball carriers. Bert Baston. former All-American end under the late Dr. H. L. Williams, instructed the ends. Another former Minnesota star. Sig Harris, has assisted every head coach since the days of Dr. Williams. George Tuttle, former Minnesota player, acted as freshman coach With him were George MacKinnon, a former team-mate who taught line play to the first year men. and Dave MacMillan, basket ball coach, who. with Harris, aided the squad and acted as a scout. The manner in which Manager James Kaminiski and his assistants. Edward Mac-Afee. Richard Ernst and William Bloedel! fulfilled their duties also was creditable. Details necessary to daily football practices and the games were cared for smoothly under their supervision. A vV Hast on 26 All-Americans HAYCRAfT OAiTON Me GOVERN Today and down through the yearsāthey live in Minnesota's memory, these All-Americans They stand for everything the name signifiesāsportsmanship, leadership, fellowship. Great men. they have carried to the front rank, the heritage which came from the fine influences of our beloved Dr. Williams and Dr. Cooke. It is the noble work of men like these, that has helped to place their Alma Mater so significantly in the foreground. Erling S. Plaluu President, The M Club. 264 Clarence Munn The sterling football team of 1931 may well dedicate its fine season to Clarence Munn whom his team mates and coaches loved and admired as a clean, modest, unassuming athlete. With the best interest of his Alma Mater at heart, this sterling warrior of the gridiron and track has never wavered in unselfish sacrifice, steadfastness of purpose and good sportsmanship. He has been as wonderful in defeat as in victory. When the charge is made that Minnesota is deficient in athletic tradition. Clarence Munn will be the answer. ā . O. Crislrr. 265 Unbar Reihten Opening Doubleheader The 1931 football season was inaugurated with a double-header, the first to be played in Memorial Stadium. After having a close battle with a surprisingly strong North Dakota State eleven, in which they were forced to show their best fighting power, the Gophers came back to trim the Ripon Rcdmen. Straight football proved of little avail against the determined stand of the North Dakota line in the first game. Quarterback Pete Somers was forced to resort to the air and it was only the superb passing from Somers to Brad Robinson and Walter Mass that enabled Minnesota to emerge victorious by a one-touchdown margin. It was largely a team of reserves that faced Ripon in the second encounter of the bill. The Wisconsin collegians were more than holding the Gophers until Kenny MacDougall was sent on the field to take the quarter-back post. George Champlin carried on when MacDougall left the game, and ran the ball through the weakening Ripon defense almost at will. In both games Minnesota's weakness was the lack of coordination in the offensive line play. C ii lien 266 Minn.-20 Okla. A. 8C M.-O Coach Crislcr put too much power on the field for the Oklahoma A. fcf M. gridders. who fought strenuously for four quarters before going down to a scoreless defeat. In spite of the fact that the Minnesota victory was credited chiefly to its superior strength, it remained for Kenny MacDougall to fill the leading ball-carrying role again for the Gophers. MacDougall. entering the fray after his heavier predecessors had worn the fighting edge off the plucky Cowboys, dodged and twisted his way for a total of 84 yards, and scored one of his team's three touchdowns. Much of the noticeable improvement in the Minnesota back-field was credited to the presence of Quentin Burdick, whose work as blocking back supplied finish to the Maroon and Gold offense. The injury jinx which had pursued Burdick through four years of attempted service overtook him once more, however, and a badly wrenched knee forced him from competition for the remainder of the season Myron Ubl. Pete Somers, and .MacDougall shared scoring honors in this conflict. Ubl crossing the goal-line on a brilliantly executed pass from Somers, while Somers caught a pass from Ubl for his touchdown. Pat Boland. Marshall Wells, and Captain Clarence Munn were the strongest points in the powerful Minnesota line. Ntlion Andtrion liitrduk 267 Gay Cham pi in Minnesota-0 Stanford-13 The Gophers made the longest journey ever undertaken by a Minnesota eleven when they travelled to California for a return engagement with Pop Warner's Stanford Indians. After three periods in which the game bore much the same aspect as the scoreless tie played between the teams in Memorial Stadium the year before. Stanford seized the opportunity offered by a Minnesota fumble on the Minnesota 2 I-yard line, to launch its first scoring drive. Warner inserted a fresh backfield to charge through the tiring Gopher forward wall and this quartet made short work of scoring a touchdown. Minnesota, badly worn by her heroic efforts previous to this spirit-breaking score, could offer little resistance in the closing minutes of the game, and the Indians rushed nearly the length of the field for another score. Captain Clarence Munn. Jack Manders. and Pete Somers starred for the Maroon and Gold team. Phil Moffatt and Harry Hillman. 200-pound Stanford quarterback, were leaders in the triumphant march of the Indians. Again the passing and open style of play featured by Pop Warner were the outstanding factors of the Coastmen's attack. Ko hi Hiihe mohed an entire lection of land to the river at onr drag: the trea ufere cut. and the teciion hauled bach 268 Minnesota-34 Iowa-0 Iowa, her strength still rather shattered by the Big Ten clean-up of 1929. was helpless before the powerful and versatile attack unleashed by Minnesota, and saw her goal line crossed five times during the game in Memorial Stadium. .Jack Manders led the regulars in a parade which gave the Gophers a secure lead in the first half. Crisler then injected most of the squad in the second half to test his reserve men under Big Ten fire. They produced football much to his satisfaction in accounting for two touchdowns. The Minnesota line showed improvement in this game and ripped large gaps in the Hawkcye forward wall to allow Kenny MacDougall. Pete Somers. Jack Manders. Lloyd Hribar. and George Champlin to slip through on repeated occasions for fair gains. Marshall Wells. Pat Boland, and Captain Clarence Munn were especially effective in producing openings and leading plays in the second half attack. Robinson W. Hau Bradford Robinson and Allen Teeter on the flank assignments broke up the plays sent at them and frequently threw opposing ball carriers for losses of from three to 10 yards. Iowa could do no better than gain one first down from scrimmage. MacDouaalt 269 Wells Slanders Minnesota-14 Wisconsin-0 The most gratifying triumph in Fritz Crislerāscoaching regime at Minnesota was produced before a crowd of over 50.000 spectators as the Gophers roped Wisconsin in the Minnesota Rodeo Homecoming spectacle. Wisconsin, the pre-game favorite, was placed on the defensive in the first three minutes of play when, with the Gophers on their own forty five yard line. Jack Manders broke through tackle on a reverse spinner play and galloped fifty-five yards to a touchdown. Captain Clarence Munn. on a formation which made him eligible to receive the ball, was on the scoring end of a spectacular play. My Ubl. later in the game, standing near his own thirty yard line, whipped a pass to Brad Robinson who. as he was about to be tackled, lateralled it back to Munn who dashed across the goal line. The Gophers then settled back to protecting their lead. Wisconsin's powerful backfield gained only one first down from scrimmage in the entire conflict. Marshall Wells, who came in to help stem a severe Cardinal counter-drive in the second half, in spite of his arm which was helpless in a plaster cast, was the true hero of the conflict. C.apt. Munn [lain would tomf mn snmh up behind a drive and drinh all the ivalrr out of the river, leav-int) the toys hiijh and dry. 270 lioland T'refer Minnesota-14 Northwestern-32 After out playing die highly vaunted and tremendously favored Wildcats during the first half of the season's headline attraction at Evanston. with the score at the half 1 4 to 7 for the Gophers, the valiant Minnesotans were overwhelmed by Northwestern. Splendid line play featuring Captain Clarence Munn. who opened gaping holes through Northwesternās reputedly impregnable forward wall, gave Jack Manders opportunity to gain his momentum, and twice in that memorable first half he led stunning drives to touchdowns. Pete Somers also contributed much to the early Gopher success. The pace set by the Minnesotans against much heavier opponents began to show its effects just before the end of the first half when Purple launched a counter offensive which netted them a touchdown. In the second half the Gophers battled desperately to protect their lead, but were gradually forced to yield as the Wildcats pounded relentlessly at the Minnesota line. Finally Pug Rcntncr. a popular All-American selection at the conclusion of the season, shook himself loose for a sixty-five yard run to a touchdown. The Wildcats completely routed the invaders in the closing minutes of the contest with a versatile attack headed by Rentner. who engineered a ninety-five yard return of a kick-off. 271 Di liner Minnesota-47 Cornell-7 The Gophers were the chief participants in a field dayā put on at the expense of the Cornell team, and led a sustained touchdown parade which terminated with seven Maroon and Gold ball carriers having crossed the Iowans' goal line. This contest served as a breather while the varsity regulars, badly bruised from their bitter struggle against Northwestern, rested up for the impending invasion of Ann Arbor on the following Saturday. One star of the Northwestern affair. Jack Manders. appeared anything but in need of rest or lighter competition as he shredded the light Cornell line to bits and stamped himself indelibly by his play during a limited performance at full-back, which was the individual highlight of the game. The few minutes that the first string combatted the light Iowans seemed to demoralize them. Several reserve combinations then took the field to run practically at will through the Cornell defense, the work of George Cham-plin. quarterback; Myron Ubl. playing for the first time as a ball carrier: Gerry Griffin, blocking back: Sammy Swartz. I.loyd Hribar. fullback; Russ Willis, halfback; Mervin Dill-ner. end; Howard Kroll. tackle: and Ellsworth Harpole. guard, being especially notable and commendable. Midget George Champlin won the plaudits of the crowd as he scampered through the Cornell eleven for gains totalling over 100 yards, in addition to which he scored a touchdown. Griffin. Schwartz. Manders. Somers. Willis, and Ubl were the other Gophers to register touchdowns. Kroll 272 St tin Dcnntrlu Michigan-6 Minnesota-0 The Gophers made their most disappointing bid in years for the return of the Little Brown .Jug when they lost to Michigan, 6 to 0 at Ann Arbor. Nearly half of the first period of play had elapsed, with the Wolverines holding the upper hand in the all-around play, when William Hewitt cut loose on a mad dash around Minnesotaās left end and galloped 58 yards to the touchdown which assured his schoolās possession of the prized Jug for another year. The backfield quartet of Manders. Somers. Hass, and Ubl lacked precision and the aggressive Michigan line smothered anv semblances of a prolonged advance. Lloyd Stein arose to stardom in this conflict by cleanly outplaying Maynard Morrison. Michiganās veteran All-American center, and standing out in Minnesota's efforts to prevent the Michigan total from mounting. Captain Clarence Munn was another bulwark in the line. It was two substitutes who provided Minnesota followers with their only two thrills of the game. Sammy Swartz and George Champlin each broke away in the second half to slip through the Michigan defense for long gains, only to be stopped on both occasions by William Hewitt, the last man between them and a touchdown. 273 Kre .oufthi Ocn Minnesota-19 Ohio State-7 In the post season charity till with Ohio State, the Gophers unleashed one of the most spectacular offenses ever witnessed by a Stadium audience to whip the Buckeyes. This was the most smashing triumph in Frit . Crisler's regime. The Ohioans, with only one defeat on their record, came to Minneapolis the accepted favorites, and were vastly confident of victory. A gathering of 25.000 fans, mildly surprised as Wally Hass grabbed a pass from Pete Somers early in the second quarter to sprint ten yards to a touchdown, gasped in astonishment as Somers nabbed Uhl s pass and scored to give the Gophers a I 5-0 lead at half time. Somers' touchdown climaxed a brilliant ninety yard drive up the field. Ohio shoved across its sole counter shortly after the opening of the second half, but was powerless from then on to get within threatening distance. Jack Mandcrs revived memories of Herb Joesting and Nagurski driving over to the final touchdown, in the fourth quarter. Captain Clarence Munn clinched All-American honors with one of the most amazing all-around exhibitions ever witnessed on Stadium sod. His line play left little to be desired. His punting repeatedly drove the Buckeyes backward, and he carried the ball impressively on trick formations. Somert 274 Bernieā Bierman flif'iāv'l lUu.i'tn I believe that any alumnus, after being out of college for fifteen years, and having spent most of that time a great distance away front the campus would be somewhat thrilled at coming back: just as I have been. I find that great changes and developments have taken place in the Athletic Department, and in the equipment and facilities used. The armory, old Northrop Field. Dr. Cooke, and Oscar arc about all that remain of the old order But there is something else that is less tangible but which is still here just as it used to be. That is the real Gopher spirit. That may waver at times; but it is always going to be present and it should not waver: it should gradually be increasing in intensity. The vast increase in facilities and the im provement in the quality of those facilities is very striking Most of the inconveniences that have confronted Minnesota squads of the past have been eliminated. I have faith enough in Minnesota: especially in the students of the University, to believe that in spite of so called good seasons and bad seasons, the curve of football prosperity will tend to move upwards, and that Minnesota will always be considered a leader in the football world. āBernie But man 19 } o N OCTOBER I. 1886. the Ariel said, Several sickly attempts have been made to start a game of football. The interest in athletic sports seems to have died out . . . Turn out and keep up the honor of the institution. Following this advice, football became the major sport at the University. Dr. H. L. Williams of Yale was the first coach, serving from 1900 to 1922. when he was succeeded by William H. Spaulding. Dr. Clarence Spears came next, remaining for five seasons before going to Oregon. Herbert Orin Crisler of Chicago was chosen to succeed Spears in 1930. His first season was mediocre, with the scoreless tie game with Stanford the outstanding event. But the 1931 season was different. After losing to Stanford, the players defeated Iowa and Wisconsin. Hopefully students went to the Northwestern game, and watched Minnesota score two touchdowns. Then the Wildcats found their stride and Minnesota lost. Michigan also defeated Minnesota. The post season charity game against Ohio State gave the Gopher players the chance to express their hopes and determinations of vindication in the valedictory of Captain Munn and eight other seniors playing their last game for Minnesota. ā F.. li. Pierce 276 Doughnuts were popular with the loggers in Paul Runyanās crew. Rig Joe mixed the dough by a wonderful and secret recipe, and Rig Ole. the blacksmith, cut the holes with a punch and sledge. The crew received the doughnuts with great shouts and roars of delight, and each and every man ate fifty-seven at a meal. When they ale it sounded like seventy threshing machines devouring bundles of wheat. IB ASKETIBAL I, 277 In the 1932 basketball season the Gophers repeated their success of the previous year by tying for second place in the Conference standings with Northwestern. Purdue's powerful quintet won the championship, thereby succeeding Northwestern to the throne, after a turbulent campaign, at the outset of which the Wild cats had reigned as the favored team. Coach David MacMillan's first task at the opening of the fall practice sessions was to find replacements for Harry Schocning and Earl Loose, a pair of All-Conference forwards from the year before who had completed the allotted three years of service. Then too. Don Bondy. husky center star who was invaluable with his defensive ability in addition to Ins offensive play, was missing. With a pair of great guards in Captain Mike Cielusak and Virgil Licht. Mac'' went ahead to alternate and experiment with two sophomore forwards. Wells Wright and Walter Sochacki. and a trio of veterans. Lngebret-son. Brad Robinson, and Cliff Sommei The season was inaugurated with a practice clash with the North Dakota A. C. quint at the l ield House in which the Gophers tri umphed 31 to 18. Next the Oklahoma A ft M. forces came to the Lield House, only to be handed a 40 to 27 trouncing by the Minnesotans. Even greater power was achieved in Mai Miltun 278 Rtthtl Sommer the game with Cornell College of Mount Vernon. Iowa The Maroon and Gold basketeers ran up a 41 to 20 score, despite the fact that MacMillan made frequent substitutions and changes. Nebraska, a strong figure in the Missouri Valley Conference, proved to be no match for the rapidly shaping Gophers who did not extend themselves to claim victory. 32 to 24. Carleton College of Northfteld. Minnesota, furnished the Gophers with one of their most bitterly contested engagements of the entire season The sensational play of Dick Arney. Carleton's candidate for All-American floor recognition, gave the Minnesota guards a busy 40 minutes. Mike Cielusak and Virgil Licht delivered a pair of baskets late in the tussle to earn Minnesota a 19 to 14 win. In the final practice game Minnesota overwhelmed the South Dakota University five. SO to 24 for its most one-sided victory. Minnesotaās first Conference start was made against Chicago in Bartlett Gymnasium at Chicago, as the feature of the dedicatory exercises. The invading Maroon and Gold tos-sers held the Maroons to five field goals in triumphing. 22 to 1 4. The Gophers returned to their home court to meet its second successive tartar in Indiana. The Uoosiers kept on the Gophersā heels all the way. but Brad Robinson's basket just before the sounding of the final gun pulled out victory. 37 to 35. A fracas-loving, but exceedingly capable player in the person of Joe Zeller was chiefly instrumental in making progress difficult for the Gophers, but Cielusak and Licht stemmed his activities soon enough to prevent an Indiana victory. I he Gophers squared the count with Michigan by earning a 0 to 26 decision in the return go on the Field House court. Mike Cielusak starred through his work in holding down Norm Daniels, and in addition, scoring the basket which made possible victory, after the score had been tied at 26-26. Virgil Licht slipped in an uncanny one-handed push from the side to clinch victory at the cessation of play. Chicago and Iowa, who were beginning to eye the Conference throne after having subdued Michigan, were the next two teams to fall victim to the crushing drive of the Gophers. Chicago fell. 40 to 27. and Iowa, after bitter resistance, gave in. 24 to 22. The high aspirations of the Minnesotans were dealt a blow when Indiana turned on the Gophers at Bloomington to defeat them 27 to 22. The two-game road trip developed further disaster at Urbana where Illinois, a consistent trouble maker for the leaders, tripped the Gophers. 23 to 15. Wright Sftchth hi 280 Andenon [inqeltrvlson The Gophers were in no pleasant mood when they returned to Minneapolis to lake on Wisconsin. They ran through the Badgers 43 to 17. Brad Robinson. Ralph Engebretson. and Virgil l.icht. all three natives of Wisconsin, led the Minnesota scoring avalanche over the Badgers. The home schedule was wound up by taking a very appeasing victory over Illinois. 27 to 26. The final road trip resulted in a 24 to 22 triumph over Iowa at Iowa City and a 23 to 21 win over Wisconsin at Madison. The season s record revealed a win-losc percentage of .750 for Minnesota by virtue of 12 victories and three losses in Conference play, in addition to which six straight practice victories were registered. The Maroon and Gold outscored Big Ten rivals. 332 points to 290. For the last two years the Gophers have tied for second place in the conference. Coach Dave MacMillan is looking forward to a conference championship in 1933 and his optimism is well founded. Five veterans will be back, three of whom are sophomores. Virgil l.icht and Captain elect Brad Robinson complete the veteran roster F.rnst, munaqet 281 T 1 HE basketball season of 1931-32 was the best season that a Minnesota basketball team has enjoyed since 1919. At the beginning of the season prospects were none too bright clue to the loss of three regulars. Donald Bondy. a capable center, and Captain Schoening and Earl Loose, forwards. These men were outstanding perform ers. Captain-elect Mike Ciclusak and Virgil Licht were the only regulars from the 1930-31 season. The outstanding new men were Wright. Sochacki. Anderson, and Mace, who all played well, but lack of experience proved quite a handicap as the season advanced. Perhaps the most important factor in this successful season was the playing of Brad Robinson. In the previous season he had shown only mediocre ability, but suddenly became the outstanding player on the squad. This seemed to be the tonic needed to help what was considered only a fair team to go on to a tie for second place in the Big Ten. with nine victories and three defeats, all away from home. We arc looking forward to next year with the hope of continuing our success of the past season, although hard work will be necessary to keep up this good record. āDave MacMillan. Coach. 282 A list of the marcels of the kitchen and dining hall at Big Onion camp would fill an encyclopedia. Elevators, steam-drive potato mashers, aircooled egg beaters, force-feed batter mixersāall these were invented bg Paul Bunyan. Pood was carried to the dining hall on conveyor belts, and doughnuts were brought from the kitchen on poles which two men carried on their shoulders. timci; 283 I he individual achievements of several team members overshadowed the accomplishments of the Minnesota track forces during the 1951 spring track season. The first dual meet brought the Gophers against Michigan at Ann Arbor. The Wolverines displayed too much strength and balance in the track events, and limited the Gophers to four firsts Eddie Tolan. national American Amateur Athletic Union dash champion and coholder of the world's record for the 100 yard dash, swept the 100 and 220-yard dashes and was followed to the tape in both events by a team-mate. Jack Campbell. Johnny Hass. Minnesota's dash ace. could do no better than third place in his two pet events against the Michigan flashes. Clarence Munn and Charles Scheifley were the leading scorers for the Gophers. Munn copped the shot put and the discus throw for 10 points and Scheifley romped to impressive wins in both the low and high hurdles, to contribute 10 points. Sherman Finger's athletes made a field day of it against Northwestern on Northrop Field, piling up 80' to 55 $. Munn. Scheifley. Cam Hackle. Johnny Currell. and Johnny Hass shone in this meet. The next triumph for the Maroon and Gold track and field aggregation was at the expense of Wisconsin. 82 to 52 } 2. Johnny Hass featured this meet by speeding to a Hat hie ft n tier Munn liobc would lomitimn tnrah up behind a drive and dnnh all the water out id the river. Init -mg the logs high and dry. 284 Hess Scheifley Thompton Minnesota track glory was cast in an unprecedented radius when, during the course of the season Munn set a new all-time shot-put record in the Penn Relays, the outstanding invitational track meet of the Eastern outdoor season, with a mighty heave of 48 feet. 9 Y inches: and Johnny Hass won the 100-yard dash in the Rice Institute Relays in the time of 9.7 seconds against an array of the country's foremost dash greats. The Gopher Big Four . Munn. Hackle. Scheifley. and John Hass bagged 14 points in the Conference meet at Chicago. Munn displaced Sam Behr as Big Ten shot champion: Hackle tied Shaw of Wisconsin for first in the high jump: Hass won third in the 100-yard dash: and Scheifley took fourth in the high hurdles in the fastest Conference hurdle field of all time. Munn could do no better than fourth in the Intcrcollegiates where Hackle tied for fourth in the high jump and Scheifley garnered fifth in the high hurdles. The 1932 indoor track season was begun with Munn. Scheifley. Cam Hackle, and Elton Hess, a pole-vaulting ace of past years, back in the folds. In the first meet, the Gophers outscored Iowa. 47 to 38. A new dash sensation in the sweeping conquest in the 100-yard dash in the time of 9.8 seconds, a new Minnesota record for the event. Hass also took the 220-yard sprint. person of Harold Thompton. a sophomore, was uncovered. Ihompton sped over the 60-yard dash route in 6.3 seconds, just 1 10 of a second over the world s record. The Gophers dropped a closely contested dual engagement to Wisconsin in the Field I louse. 45 to 4 I. F.lton Hess soared I 3 feet 6 inches in the pole vault for the leading individual showing. I hompton again negotiated the 60-yard dash in 6.3 seconds. In the quintangular meet with Indiana. Purdue. Chicago, and Northwestern, at Chicago. Minnesota placed second to Indiana. The Hoosiers. paced by the spectacular running of Brocksmith. its candidate for the Olympic mile and two mile runs, had too much strength in the running events. Munn. in the shot. Schcifley in he l°'v hurdles, and I hompton. in the 60-yard dash, garnered Minnesota's first places, outdoor i j Minnesota represented by one ol the strongest arrays of track and field stars in a number of years, namely Clarence Munn. defending Big Fen shot champion; Charles Schcifley, one of the nation s ranking high hurdlers and a point V winner in the low timbers: Harold Thomp- ton. sophomore sprint find: Elton Hess, pole-vaultcr: Captain Cam Hackle, high jumper; Kay Burge, sophomore javelin star, and Marvin Diliner, discus thrower. W W Blake La Roque Nolle Currell o ft Rmmuxten The 1951 cross country squad was one of the strongest that Coach Sherman Finger has put in the field during his regime at Minnesota. The Nortli Dakota University harriers were the first to match their strides with the Maroon and Gold runners, and were swamped by a surprisingly strong Minnesota squad. 15 to 45. Captain John Currell, Henry Mundy. Francis Moore. Erhardt Bremer. Ted Rasmussen and Mike Seiler, all Gophers, placed ahead of the first Flicker representative. Currell was timed at 17 minutes. 26 seconds for the long grind. In the initial Conference Meet. Minnesota overwhelmed Iowa. 15 to 4 1. Currell and Mundy tied for first. Wisconsin, for several years the Big Ten's strongest exponent of distance racing, downed the Gophers by a score of 19 to 40. Currell. finishing second, was the only Minnesota man to finish among the first eight. In retaliation for the Wisconsin drubbing. the Maroon and Gold harriers made sport of Northwestern at Evanston. Seven Minnesota men. Currell. Bremer. Rasmussen. Dick Herrick. Paul Semple. Carroll Gustafson, and Seiler placed for a 15 to 45 victory. Minnesota placed sixth in the Conference Meet which was dominated by Brocksmith. Indiana's great Olympic distance prospect. Watson and Kemp of Indiana placed third and fifth. Currell. finishing fourth, was the only Gopher entry to earn points. Kulp Paul marked hit I opt pinching our a pit Ā« wit! brawny hand: but hi mm. to utr an ax to tcalp tl 287 f A'hE future of track athletics at Minnesota depends largely upon an increased interest in the sport on the part of the student body. This interest would bring out a greater number of candidates for the various events and insure a higher standard of performance and a continued high rating of the team in Conference competition. The improved showing of both cross country and track teams this year has given a great impetus to such interest. A big factor in stimulating this interest in school boys has been the Relay Carnival. held for the fourth time this year in our spacious Field House. The increased entry list from all parts of the state shows clearly that effort is being made to get track men in condition earlier in the year, thereby increasing the length of the season with better records as a result. Incoming freshman classes should have increased numbers who have a natural interest and enthusiasm for track with some experience in several events. This group, augmented by larger numbers of students who have the opportunity for high school competition, will develop men of caliber. āSherman linger, Coach. 288 ā¢'ā'I On the day of the famous black duck dinner Paul watched his men as. long before noon, they thronged about the coohroom door. The men's faces glowed with anticipation: tantalizing smells walled forth Then the doors opened: everybody rushed in. Words are inadequate to describe the wonders of that dinner. Suffice it to say the men lay in a delicious after-dinner daze for five weeks thereafter. HOCKEY 289 By amassing a total of sixty-nine goals to its opponents' twenty-six through a seventeen-game season, the 1931-32 Gopher hockey team placed itself with the strongest in Minnesota's ice history. The conclusion of the season found the Maroon and Gold pucksters claiming the Big Ten and Midwest college hockey titles. They were also rated among the five leading college teams of the country. Without having had the opportunity to engage in as much as one practice contest, the Gophers undertook the most important hockey venture ever entered into by a midwest college aggregation, when it played in the elimination series for the right to represent the United States in the Olympic hockey games. The Maroon and Gold skaters first answered the Evelcth Junior College challenge for the right to represent this sector of the country by trimming the invaders from the Minnesota Iron Range. 4 to 0 and 4 to 2. in a two-game series at the Minneapolis Arena. They next repulsed the Houghton. Michigan. All-Stars. to 4 at the Arena and then left for Boston to meet the Olympic All-Stars in the final round. The All Stars vanquished the Minnesotans. 4 to 0. The next night, badly fatigued from their gruelling engagement with the Olympic stars, the Gophers succumbed to Harvard, the pick of the East's collegiate teams. 7 to 6. The Gophers tallied four goals in a desperate last period assault, but were cut short of victory by the final bell. Frank Pond's wandering men then returned home to take up their bid for the Big Ten championship. They played host to the Wisconsin sextet in the dedicatory hockey game in the new St. Paul Auditorium, and overwhelmed the Badgers. 10 to I. Gordy Pond Hyman 290 Shacffer scored 3 goals and Laurie Parker whipped in a pair of counters to lead the Maroon and Gold attack. Two days later, on January 21. Michigan faced off against the Gophers in the first of a two-game series, at the Hippodrome. The Wolverines were subdued by counts of to 0 and I to 0. with only the sensational work of their All-American goalie. Thompkins. preventing the score from soaring. Minnesota then took on Michigan Tech at the Minneapolis Arena, and romped to identical wins. 8 to I. on successive nights. Laurie Parker and Marsh Ryman scintillated in the opening fray. Parker chalked up four goals and one assist and Ryman drove home one goal and was credited with four assists. A four days' invasion of Michigan found the Gophers drubbing Michigan Tech 6 to I. at Houghton; losing. 2 to I to Hancock, at Houghton; and nosing out the Calumet. Michigan amateurs. to 2. In the feature home game of the season the Gophers completely overwhelmed the touring Polish Olympic hockey team at the arena. 8 to 0. with Ryman and Shaeffer scoring two goals apiece. The pucksters made their second trip to Michigan, with the immediate objective of clinching the Big Ten title. A 1 to 1 tie and a 1 to 0 victory in the two-game series won the championship for the Gophers. With only one letter-man. Marshall Ryman. graduating from the squad. Minnesotaās 19 2-33 hockey forces promise the poten tialities of sweeping to the pinnacle of the country's collegiate hockey circles. Archibald Bonhu T 1 HE 1931-32 season was the most successful and interesting hockey season in the history of the sport at Minnesota. The schedule gave the team a great variety of competition. I lie season was characterized by the advent of the long cherished opportunity to enter Olympic competition and a trip East for a Minnesota team to compete against an Eastern college. The squad went to the finals in the Olympic competition being defeated by a combined New York and Boston team. On this trip to Boston, the team was also defeated by one goal by Harvard which is rated as the outstanding college hockey team in the country for the 1931 1932 season. Minnesota came home from the Eastern trip to win the Big Ten and Midwest championships without losing a game. 1'his is a remarkable achievement as Michigan had its 1930-1931 championship team intact for this season. I wish to pay tribute to the boys who played on this fast-skating, hard-checking championship hockey team. Their love of the game and the spirit of team play should be held as the standard for all future Minnesota hockey teams. āFran It Pond. Couch. 292 The big Auger River was a wild and impudent river, be jabbers and jiggers and bad luck to you. Raul bunyan. you'll drive no logs down me! .it cried, but no river, however fierce, could gel the best of Raul bunyan He tore a huge chunk off the top of a mountain, and hurled it down into the river bed. forming a dam. This lamed the river, and although it raged and roared and leaped against the mountain for a time, it soon became still. SWIHHISG 293 Although acclaimed by Coach Neils Thorpe as one of the greatest squads in his regime as Minnesota l ank Coach, the 1932 swimming team failed to make as strong a showing as in previous years. Its failure to cut a wide swath in Big Ten circles as in years past could be obviously contributed to the fact that the outstanding collegiate tank strength of the United States was distributed in the Conference. This was proven by Michigan's triumph in the National Intercollegiate meet at the end of the season, and Northwestern's close bid for third place which it was forced to accept only after a closely waged struggle with Stanford for the second position. In the first duel meet of the pre-season practice stretch the Gophers overwhelmed the Minneapolis Y. M. C. A. swimmers 48 to 27 in the Armory pool. They next took on the St. Paul Y. M. C. A. and nearly duplicated their all-around showing of excellence against the Minneapolis Y. M. C. A. in securing victory by a 45 to 30 score. In the final preparatory meet the Maroon and Gold tankmen reached their greatest strength of the season. They captured every first place and soared their winning total to 60 points to 15 for the Y. M. C. A. representatives. Northwestern, boasting in its ranks two sophomore dash freestyle swimmers reputedly able to flirt with national and world's records, handed Thorpe's crew a 42 to 30 setback in the Armory tank. The Wildcats swept the free-style races with ease. and. true to form, copped the first places in all but two events. Andre won the breast-stroke for Minnesota's only individual first and the Minnesota medley relay trio of Andre. Max Moulton, and Captain Tom Quail captured the other first place. Quail Thorpe 294 Minnesota's only Big Ten duel meet was taken at the expense of Iowa when the Maroon and Gold tanksters invaded the Hawkeye tank at Iowa City. Andre, in the breast-stroke, Moulton in the back-stroke. Lang in the 440-yard race, and Captain Tom Quail, in the 220-yard free style dash contributed heavily to Minnesota's total with first places. The Gophers received their most humiliating defeat of the season at Ann Arbor when the powerful Michigan squad, one of the strongest in Big Ten and Intercollegiate history, ducked the visitors by a margin of 53 to 22. Andre pulled out Minnesota's only first. The Big Ten gathering at Ann Arbor was somewhat disappointing to Coach Neils Thorpe as his splashers were forced to accept fourth place, whereas he had expected nothing below third. Wilbur Andre and Max Moulton captured second places in the breast-stroke and back-stroke, respectively, and the medley relay trio of Moulton. Andre, and Captain Tom Quail followed in the wake of the Michigan and Northwestern teams. Andre's individual battle with Johnny Schmeiler of Michigan was the classic race of the meet. In the season's finale Captain Tom Quail. Wilbur Andre, and Max Moulton made the trip to Chicago to uphold Minnesota in the National 1 ntercollegiates. Moulton surprised by capturing second place in the back-stroke and Andre gained a fourth. Minnesota's chances of placing fourth in the meet were dashed when it was ruled that Quail, swimming last in the relay, had jumped the gun. Quail had come in an easy third and these points would have enabled the Gophers to place fourth behind Northwestern. Lang 205 w W HEN speaking of the swimming season which just closed, one must take into consideration the men and the kind of competition they had to face. Led by Captain Tom Quail, the team engaged the three strongest swimming teams in the Western Conference. Northwestern. Michigan, and Iowa. We were still further handicapped by graduation and eligibility rules. The distance events were capably handled by Ordway Swcnncs. Frederick Leicht. and Captain-elect Wallace Lang. The trio of Tom Quail. Eddie Parrel, and Charles Ketola performed efficiently in the dashes. The season opened with Northwestern defeating us by a score of 42 to 30. The following week we journeyed to Iowa City and defeated Iowa 4} to 52. The next meet found us at Ann Arbor swimming against the Wolverines, national champions. In spite of our handicaps, we piled up 24 points against Michigan's 5 I. The Conference Championships were held in Ohio State's new natatorium. Minnesota placed fourth behind Michigan. Northwestern, and Iowa. In the National Championships at Michigan. Andre. Moulton, and Quail represented Minnesota in stellar fashion. Despite the numerous handicaps we have encountered, we are looking forward a more successful season in 1953. āāNiels Thorpe. Coaeh to 296 Sport, the reversible dog. was u good hunter, and always accompanied Paul when he went out after big game. Once when a pup he was playing in the barn, and Paul, mistaking him for a mouse, threw an axe and cut him in two. Instantly realizing what he had done. Paul quickly stuck the two halves together, but in his haste he twisted them so that the hind legs pointed straight up. After that Sport could alternate his legs, and run tirelessly. ItASEItALL 297 Beouchaine Although the 1931 baseball squad showed occasional bursts of expert ball playing they experienced considerable difficulty in gaining conference victories. Out of the eighteen scheduled games there were eight wins, two of which were in conference play. Coach Frank McCormick and his team opened their spring training practice with the University of Mississippi at Oxford. Mississippi, scoring a 5 to 0 victory. The next two days Mississippi came back to defeat the Gophers by scores of 7 to 3 and 4 to I. The spring tour was concluded at Louisiana State College where Minnesota triumphed 6 to 4. The first home game was played against the globe-trotting Uosei University of Japan. The Gophers pleased the local fans with a decisive win by scoring a 7 to 0 shut-out. Minnesota journeyed to Northwestern for her first Big Ten contest and suffered two consecutive defeats at the hands of the Wildcat hurlcrs. On the return trip home from Evanston the squad stopped at Madison to engage the Wisconsin Badgers. The Wisconsin pitching ace. Somerfield. aided by good field support had little trouble in trouncing the Gophers 8 to 4. The Minnesota squad made their next stand on Northrop field against the Carleton nine. Aided by the pitching of Bill Kasmaryn-ski and the heavy hitting of Adams and Burke, the Gophers chalked up an 8 to 6 victory over the Northfield invaders. The next conference game was with the powerful Northwestern squad on the Northrop diamond. The Gophers again succumbed to the Wildcats by the low score of 3 to 2. A road trip to Chicago resulted disas MtCormich 4 | ' 298 Loom trously for the Gophers when they dropped two games to the Maroons. 4 to I and 10 to 2. After a short rest Coach McCormick and his team returned to Northrop field to meet the Carleton College nine again. The visitors evened up their former defeat by passing the Gophers up 10 to 8. Minnesota next played host to Iowa Stale on the local field, and downed the lowans decisively by a score of 10 to I. The winning streak was continued against the University of Iowa a few days later on the home diamond, with Mattson pitching a superb game throughout. Riggs. Chop, and Earl Loose provided some heavy work for the Iowa fielders with their consistent long hits. Seven hits were recorded for the Gophers and four runs were scored to defeat Iowa 4 to 2. A week later Minnesota returned the game at Iowa City, where the Hawkeyes made a stubborn home-stand to turn the tables on the Gophers. Iowa succeeded, scoring 8 runs to our 4. The follow ing day the Gophers engaged the Iowa State Teachers on their home grounds. Burke pitched excellent ball to hold the Teachers to one run. while a home run by Earl Evans and powerful hitting by Riggs. Gay. and Adams enabled the Minnesota squad to tally 10 runs. In the final game of the season Coach McCormick groomed his squad to face Wisconsin with its great pitcher. Sommerfield. Wilfred Mattson was given the assignment of matching his mound ability against that of the Badger star. He came through splendidly with a no-run. no-hit exhibition, thought to be the first ever achieved by a Minnesota moundsman on Northrop field in Conference com petition. The score was } to 0 in favor of the Gophers. Houtih 299 InTEREST in the great American national sport of baseball is gradually being revived again in our colleges and universities after a period of decline following the War. This is particularly true in the Western conference and. more specifically, at the University of Minnesota. A glance at the records showing the number of men participating in this sport over a period of years will prove this statement. At present, including both intercollegiate and intramural competition, nearly eight hundred students are taking part in baseball at Minnesota, including freshmen and varsity squads and the numerous intramural teams. The future of baseball at Minnesota is a bright one. With the Held Mouse avail able for practice during the winter months, more students have turned out for the sport and there is more time allowed the coach to instruct and aid in the development of players. Increase in the number of junior American Legion teams and high school nines throughout the state also is aiding in the development of baseball at the University. Baseball, being distinctly an American game and one that makes for better citizens. should not be allowed to wane at any university engaged in the instruction of the men who will guide our country in the future. āfrank XfcCormtck. Coach. }00 The Winter of the Deep Snow everything was buried. Paul had to dig down to find the lops of the tallest White Pines. In order to fell a tree, the snow had to be dug away around it. Then sawyers were lowered down the snow cltlT to the base of the tree: it was cut. and then it was hauled to the surface with a long parbuckle chain to which Babe, mounted on snowshoes. was hitched. MlSOIt SIMMtTS 101 Tennis The 1931 tennis season, coming .is it did in the wake of a championship campaign in the year preceding, was acknowledged a successful one despite the three team losses suffered. After starting out impressively with an 8 to 1 conquest over Carleton College in the opening practice stand on the Northrop Field courts, the Gophers were handed a surprise trimming by Northwesternās racquet stars in the first Big Ten engagement of the season. Chicago next invaded the Northrop courts to humiliate the Maroon and Gold squad by the most one-sided count ever piled up against them, the match score favoring the Maroons. 8 to I. For the third consecutive year the individual duel between Captain Henry Yutzy of Minnesota and Scott Rexinger. Big Ten champion and nationally ranked ace. featured the match play. Yutzy started spectacularly against his adversary, but cracked before the steady and accurate fire of Rex-LJ inger late in the initial set and dropped the second by a wide margin of play. In a road stand commencing at Madison. Phil Brain and his racquet contingent edged out victory over Wisconsin. 5 to 4. They swept all but one match at Iowa City against the Hawkeyes and then went on to Ann Arbor where they met stiff competition in the Michigan netmen. who triumphed. 7 to 2. Captain Henry Yutzy and Captain-elect Charles Britzius. were the outstanding point winners of the season. Yutzy being rated as second in the Conference only to his Chicago foe. Rexinger Britzius. playing in the second position throughout the spring campaign, met defeat only three times in singles matches. Douglas Johnston and Floyd Scherer picked up many points by doubles victories. Brain 41 Brit tus Hty Jot, the took, had a dinar r horn to hi a, and hi hlrUi it io hard that pmr lttt (ell, and tutlontt uvrr tftirud. 302 Golf A golfing combination untried in Big I cn links campaigns represented Minnesota in the 1931 spring season. The team had only one veteran letterman among its numbers, but nevertheless completed its four duel matches without a loss, and then went on to win third place in the post-season Conference meet at Ann Arbor. Coach W R, Smith faced the season with Don Boh-mer as the sole nucleus around which to build a varsity foursome, but delved into the sophomore ranks for men who had distinguished themselves as freshmen and was rewarded by the uncovcry of four prospects, each one of whom was worthy of carrying Minnesotaās prestige on the links. They were Edgar Bolstad, younger brother of Lester Bolstad. Minnesota's former Big Ten champion and nationally prominent star. Johnny Mason. Lari Larson, and Cliff Bloom. With this group having been settled upon after a scries of trials. Coach Smith sent them against the Carleton College linksmen on the University of Minnesota Recreational Field where the Gophers trimmed a strong Carleton delegation, headed by Frit . Carmen, Bob Leach, and Dave Grannis. 12 to 6. In a Conference match at Madison the Minnesota foursome played to a 9 to 9 tie with the Badgers. 'T heir next conflict was with the Wisconsin golfers on the Minnesota course. Despite the brilliant play of George Roddy, its first man. Iowa fell before the sharpshooting of the Minnesotans. 14 to 4. The final duel match was a return affair with Carleton and the score of the first meeting was nearly duplicated. Minnesota winning by a count of I I to 7. Edgar Bolstad was the only Gopher entry in the Conference meet to finish in the first ten. Smith Spring Football The keenly regretted loss to Princeton of head football coach and athletic director. 11. O. Crisler. was atoned for by the announcement that Bernie Bierman. a former Gopher star, was to terminate a brilliant record of service and achievement at Tulane University and to rejoin his alma mater as chief gridiron strategist. In addition to Lowell (Red) Dawson, star quarter-hack of his Tulane eleven which was runner-up to Southern California for the national championship for 1931. Bierman set to work on spring practice with a strong staff of former Minnesota athletes. George Hauser, a great lineman in his time, was named line coach. Sig Harris and George Tuttle were chief aides for the spring practices. In addition to veterans Marshall Wells. Myron Uhl. Jack Manders, Brad Robinson. Lloyd Oen. George Champlin. Kenneth Gay. the coaching staff acclaimed as the result of showings made during the spring grind, such newcomers as A1 Pappas and Robert Fenner, ends. Phil Bengston and Stan Lundgren. tackles. Francis Lund, half-back. Carl Tenglcr. full back, and Erwin Berg, half-back, as potential varsity regulars when fall practice begins. Captain Walter Hass and Kenneth MacDougall were out for track and baseball, giving them no chance to work out under Bierman yet. The staff encountered as its most vexing problem that of un covering adequate material with which to fill in the center of the line and with which to replace Pat Boland, tackle, who is a senior. The passing of Clarence Munn. unanimous All American guard, and Lloyd Stein, star veteran center, caused the gap in the center of the line. A cheering situation will face the backfield coaches with Myron Ubl. Captain Walter Hass, Jack Manders and Kenneth MacDougall. all lettermcn. on hand for service in the fall. Dawson 304 Gym Team Simom and liollmx C oath Piper The gymnasium team was one of the most success ful Minnesota athletic groups entered in the Big Ten competition during the 1932 season. Coach Piper's charges went through three meets with the Conference's strongest teams, scoring victories against each. They wound up the year by earning second place in the Big Ten meet. Chicago, defeated once by the Gophers in dual competition, nosed out the Maroon and Gold tumblers for the Conference laurels. Headed by the splendid performances of Rollins, who compiled a total of 10 points in three different events in 3n amazing display of versatility, the Gophers buried Iowa under a I.OOI.25 to 639.75 total at Iowa City. Chicago brought forth more strength than did Iowa and the Minnesotans were forced to their best form of the schedule to win by margin of less than 100 points. 1061.50 for the Gophers, to 974 for the Chicago acrobats. In the third and concluding Big Ten engagement, the Gophers out-classed the Michigan squad 1012 and 882.5 at Ann Arbor for the largest scoring total achieved by a Minnesota gymnastic squad in several seasons in Conference competition. Rollins. Hill. Simons and Wenzel were the most consistent point winners for the Gophers through the season s meets. These four acrobatic stars were the leading figures in Minnesota's successful stand in the Conference meet. Kenneth Pottle's work on the rings was strong point factor. Coach Piper sent Gil Wenzel to the Eastern Intercollegiate at Annapolis where the Gopher star placed second in tumbling among a select gathering of the East's best matmen. Wenzel, a junior, was spoken of as an Olympic tumbling prospect following his stellar showing in this tourney. Asiiilant Coach Peril 305 M UCH has been written and as much spoken about the major sports in collegeā namely, these activities which make up the intercollegiate athletic program, but relatively little space and time is given to the so-called minor sports. While the larger program of intercollegiate contests is very important in college life, at the same time there is a value in the more neglected relatively minor activities which should not be overlooked. This value is referred to quite frequently as the ācarry-over factor. Two of the seven cardinal aims of education set up by the National Education Association are the proper use of leisure time and health. The program of minor sports in the university is directed towards these two points. A man is interested in and participates in those activities which he knows and has learned in his early life. When as a college student he learns and enjoys the so-called minor sports he equips himself with a background of athletic abilities which will aid him very materially in using his later leisure time healthfully and efficiently. It is with this idea in mind that the minor sports program is promoted. āLoutt F. Ktller. 30) After Paul Bunyan said goodbye to his huskies, and returned alone to the woods. no one ever knew what became of him. Some say that he and Babe ure logging the great arctic forests, the two of them alone. This mag be true: but the popular belief is thisāPaul is helping Santa Claus, and every gear on Christmas Eve he goes with the merry old gent to distribute presents to all good boys and girls. ISTItAMIIItAL 307 Paul wooptd out thv half ior l.ahr Superior when he need td a ttutot water nupphj for irmif hn 1099107 roadt MEMBERS Acacia. Frederick Schallcr Alpha Delta Phi. Edmond Vollbracht Alpha Sigma Phi. Allen Sponberg Alpha Tau Omega. Charles Will Beta Theta Pi. John Bryant Chi Phi. Robert Lofgrcn Chi Psi. Fran Jevne Delta Kappa Epsilon. Howard Hoene Delta Tau Delta. Herbert Richardson Delta Upsilon. Howard Mithun Kappa Sigma, William Cragg Lambda Chi Alpha, Robert Kappel Phi Beta Delta. Morton Canfcld Phi Delta Theta. Walter Hargesheimer Phi Epsilon Pi. Ellis Pcilen Phi Gamma Delta. Charles Tappan Phi Kappa Psi. Frederick Krahmer Phi Kappa Sigma. Jack McCulloch Phi Sigma Kappa. John Byrne Pi Kappa Alpha. Lucian Vorphal Psi Upsilon. Richard Heinrich Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Richard Hutchinson Sigma Alpha Mu. Philip Levy Sigma Nu. Russell Grant Sigma Phi Epsilon. Dow Tinker Sigma Chi. Robert Anderson Tau Kappa Epsilon. Harry Lathrop Tau Delta Phi. Harvy Goldstein Theta Chi. Harold Gruenwald Theta Xi. James Dcnnerly Theta Kappa Nu. Gilbert Green Theta Delta Chi. Gordon Williams Zeta Psi. John On 308 Winners of Participation Trophy Phi Delta Theta Paul could tadly peel a log iu titan ax a whittle by holding the hark at one end. while Btlbe pulled at the other All University Intramural Athletic Champions Wrestling: Alpha Gamma Rho Volleyball: Alpha Chi Sigma Golf: Pat Sawyer Tennis: Singles: Brusscll Doubles: Scherer and Scherer Basketball: Phi Delta Theta Bowling: Phi Rho Sigma Handball: Doubles: Modelevsky and Cohen Singles: Sam Stein Skiing: Phi Delta Theta Squash Racquets: John Poore Touehball: Miners Baseball: Omega Upsilon Phi Diamondball: Phi Kappa Psi Track: Phi Delta Theta 309 Through the facilities of the Intramural athletic department, every student in the University can at all times of the year, participate in some form of athletics. The recent additions of the field-house, stadium, and recreation field have made the department one of the outstanding organizations of its kind. T JL HE intramural athletic program is offered to all male students of the University who wish to participate in any sport. Academic and professional fraternities have their own leagues while independent league teams are organized by the staff of the intramural office from different groups of students. Pioneer Hall, menās dormitory, is organized into a group of teams which comprise one such league. The Universityās new 18 hole golf course which was the scene of the Big Ten golf championship this spring is also under the supervision of the Intramural department. An inter-department faculty golf league, and All-University open championship. and an Engineer's golf championship in addition to the interfraternity and varsity matches, prove the growing interest in golf by all members of the University. This is attributable at least in part to the fact that Minnesota owns its own course. Touchball. volleyball, handball, squash, diamondball. baseball and basketball leagues are sponsored by the department at appropriate seasons. A swimming meet and an interfraternity track meet are held once each year. Teams are given points toward an intramural participation trophy for winning championships and for placing men on varsity athletic teams. ā V K. Sm,th 312 One winter Babe got a misery. It was a slowly, deceitful illness, marked at first by the decline of his sportiveness, affection, and zest for work. Johnny Inkslinger was ordered to abandon his books, diagnose Babe's illness, and effect a cure. For sixty-three days he observed the blue ox. and pondered. Fight different cures failed Finally liberal doses of alcohol and castor-oil cured Babe. WOMES'S ATHLETICS 313 When Paul Runyan r dt on Rahe't hitch, he uui obliged to u r a teleuopr to yte the hind ley ot the I In) IIIue Ox. Officers Dorothea Nylin Margaret Trussell Marjorie Jenson None Root Elizabeth Coupcr President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Sec. Treasurer Dorothy Craig Dorothea Nylin Field Hockey Marjorie Browning Tennis Virginia Pettigrew Eleanor Fournet Golf Luella Kluck Volleyball Ruth Walker Interhousc Margaret Trussed Mercedes Gugisberg Aquatic League Hazel Kalash Basketball Dorothy Mueller Senior Representatives Constance Lieb Ice Hockey Hazel Chapman Betty Darling Swimming Alma Swenson Farm Representative Margaret Birch Baseball Gretchen Paust Hunt Club Dorothy Falk Track Margaret Lindberg Archery Joyce Crysler Social Alice Brooker Horseshoe Margaret Gadacz Mary Andrews Unorganized Sports Constance Johnston Riding Club Ruth Daugherty Publicity Eileen Hanson Fencing E. Patricia Ritz Lucille Larson Clogging W. A. A. Board 314 Seal Winner Mercedes Gugisberg W.A.A Sea! Not only through athletic achievement, but excellence in character and ideals, makes up the standards by which a girl is measured in the choice of winners of the W. A. A. seal. The seal, the highest honor awarded to a member of the Women's Athletic Association, is the reward of four years of character building and athletic accomplishment and marks the culmination of a series of steps upward in the University and in W. A. A. The first honor that a girl may win is the chevronāthis is followed by the numeral and finally those girls of outstanding ability will wear the M , which requires nine seasons of participation in sports and a scholastic average of Cā as well. From the last group several seniors 3re chosen to receive the coveted seal. Winners are selected by a committee composed of Dr. Anna J. Norris, one other member of the faculty of the department of Physical Education, the president of the W. A. A. board and a senior member of the association. This group bases their choice of who merits the seal on sportsmanship, poise, service to the University, scholarship and an interest in healthful living. Seal Winner 315 REPRESENTATIVES Betty Darling. President, Alpha Chi Omega Eleanor lournet. Vice-President, Gamma Phi Beta Mary Swanson. Secretary. Delta Zeta Hazel Kalash. Treasurer. Chi Omega Beatrice Scowe, Alpha Delta Pi l.ucy Snider. Alpha Gamma Delta Betty Bakke. Alpha Omicron Pi Mary Megan. Alpha Phi Dorothy Clark. Alpha Xi Delta Marian Bartholomew. Beta Phi Alpha Marjorie Browning. Della Delta Delta Betty Robertson. Delta Gamma Jeannette Gagnon. Kappa Alpha Theta Nancy Morrison, Kappa Kappa Gamma Mary Pickles. Kappa Delta Marion Kaulhach. Pi Beta Phi Elizabeth Swanson. Phi Mu Margaret Albrecht. Phi Omega Pi Hazel Chapman. Sanford Hall Avis Bcrglund. Sigma Kappa I ucretia Wilder. Zeta Tau Alpha Field Day 316 The M is the highest award that any girl on the campus can earn. It is bestowed on those coeds who have participated in nine seasons of some activity offered by W.A.A. They must have participated in a recognized W.A.A sport every season since they entered as a freshman. Most coeds receive it sometime during their senior year In former years few girls wore the M . since the requirements for the award were based solely on skill in sports and only coeds of natural athletic ability were able to meet them. Now. however, a participation basis permits any girl who is interested in keeping fit to find recreation in her favorite activities and to apply the time thus spent toward earning her M . Participation in at least four different activities, two of which must be team sports, is one of the major requirements of the award. The ideal behind these regulations is to develop an all-around girl who is interested in a variety of athletic activities. Coeds who have won their M's this year include Dorothy Brown. Joyce Crys-ler. Ethel Dietz. Alice Gantzer. Mercedes Gugisberg, Esther lleagle. Genevieve McDermott and Alma Swenson. āDorothea Nylin. Prnident VV'. t. t. Board W. A. A. Mixer 317 mV Each year the Women's Athletic Association tries to reach more girls by enlarging the scope of its activities. One phase of this work is carried out through the distribution of bulletins and interest cards and through sponsoring banquets, mixers and play days. The other phase, and the one into which the association puts the greatest effort, centers around the sports offered by W.A.A. This year several new schemes and a new sport have been inaugurated. Fencing, as the new sport, was offered for the first time during the fall quarter and proved so popular that it was continued for the full year. Twenty coeds wield their foils twice a week under the direction of Orest Meykar. fencing master and former officer in the Russian Cavalry. During the fall season any girl could participate in one or more of the five organized sports. Would-be marksmen shot at least two days a week in the armory; volley ball enthusiasts played regularly during the ninth hour, girls with dancing aspirations learned various tapping routines at their bi-weekly meetings: fencers clashed blades in heated contests in the orthopedic gymnasium and exciting games of field hockey drew the largest group of all. Fencing 318 Orchesis The warm fall days brought 52 coeds out for hockey practice and 3 4 of them received their seasons credit in W.A.A. The junior team won the tournament by defeating the Seniors 6-1 and the Sophomore-freshman group 6-2. Hockey is one of the most exciting of the team sports and one of the most successful in arousing enthusiasm. In addition participation in golf and riding activities among the unorganized sports were applied toward credit in W.A.A. Despite the busy season in sports the association found time to hold a Mitten Mixer for freshman girls during October, to arrange a play day for their own and to send entries toCarleton's play day. to observe Health Week and to give the annual fall banquet. Winter is not always dull and drearyānot when you are playing basketball every night, swimming twice a week with no thought of the winter outside, learning tap dancing under a competent instructor, popping away with a rifle in the armory or fencing like ye knights of old. W.A.A. offers all of these sports as recreation for snowbound coeds during the winter months. In addition it gives credit for skiing, skating and ice hockey. Tapping 319 Fourteen teams including nearly one hundred girls signed up for the round robin basketball tournament. Ninety games were played before Trailers were finally declared the winners. However, their claim to fame was short livedāKappa Delta, interhouse champion team, defeated them in the game played Penny Carnival night. This was the first year in the history of W.A.A. that swimming was offered during the winter season Interclass competition has been done away with and now the coed mermaids are tested and classified according to their ability and placed in A. A. C or D groups. Six practices and participation in one swimming meet were required for credit. Flutter boards were introduced as an aid to form swimmers. All in all the season was very successful. Approximately twenty girls received W.A.A. credit in tap dancing and a number of other coeds entered the class merely for the recreation it afforded. Forty-three out of the 75 coeds in rifle marksmanship won their participation points during the quarter and the rifle team scored successfully in several telegraphic matches with other schools. Rifle Marksmanship 320 āIn the spring a coed's fancy turns to sports among other things. Archery has been one of the successful spring activities. Two years ago the Minnesota team won a place in the National Women's Archery contest and this year they were entered in the Intercollegiate Archery contest. The girls met four days during the week to try their luck with the bows and arrows and the most accurate of these modern Robin Hoods made up the team. Track and tennis are directed by members of W A A. Tennis practices culminate in a tournament and trackersters show their ability with the javelin and discus at the annual track meet held the latter part of the spring quarter. Approximately 35 girls designated baseball as their favorite game this spring. Four practices a week were offered for the organization of league teams and by the middle of May an exciting tournament was under way. During the spring every coed may ride or play golf at her leisure and turn in the hours she has spent on horseback or on the golf course for credit in W.A.A. Spring, winter, or fall you will find fencers and dancers at work in the gymnasium. Interhouse ChampionsāWinter 321 Masque and Foil Paul could ta ihj pttl a log at dean at a whittle by holding the bath of one end, while Bohr pulled at the other. Within W.A.A. four honorary organizations play a large part. Swimming tests in form and speed and tests in diving must be passed before a girl may become a member of the Aquatic League. During January Aquatic entertained swimmers from Hamline University. Macalestcr College and the College of St. Catherine. The shadow diving demonstration presented at the Penny Carnival was one of the biggest accomplishments of the year. Mask and Foil, fencing society, was organized on the campus in the fall with Dr. Anna Norris. Orest Meykar. Dorothea Nylin and Elizabeth Noyes as honorary members. Membership in the club requires at least one quarter of active participation in the sport and its main purpose is to enjoy the āsocial side of fencing . I he Hunt Club is composed of accomplished horsewomen who canter about the bridle paths each week and who sponsor the horse show held each spring. Maidens of āThe Dance become Greek goddesses, brown bears, gnomes, little white donkeys and various other personifications when Orchesis. interpretive dancing organization, meets. The climax of the Orchesis program is reached in the recital given annually by its members. Swimming 322 Penny Carnival Paul liknl 17 nwkt Fo ht ep hi pip filled required lhr rntirt lime of u tUtamper tLCfhtnif ivilh a troop thavtl- The bedlam of color and excitement found on the midway of a country fair was transferred for a night to furnish the setting for the fourteenth annual Penny Carnival sponsored by the Women s Athletic Association. This miniature Mardi Gras is held each year in the women's gymnasium and is supported by booths from every campus sorority Pennies jingled in the pockets of students seeking to consult the fortune tellers, view the wonders of the world or try their luck at one of the numerous games offered by coed hawkers. 'Fen mermaids donned their bathing suits to demonstrate all types of diving while other coed swimmers, smeared with phosphorous, dazzled the spectators as they plunged about the pool. The fencing exhibition given this year was an entirely new feature of the carnival. Kappa Delta won the stiver loving cup with an Eskimo Pie Igloo. Second place went to Phi Muās Italian peanut vendor and Alpha Omicron Pi and Phi Omega Pi won honorable mention Kappa Delta also won the basketball championship from Trailers Club. Profits from the Carnival are used for current running expenses of W.A.A. and to buy new equipment for the various W.A.A. sports. Penny Carnival 32 T X HE specific aims of the Department of Physical Education for Women arc to teach our students control of their bodies in daily life situations and the fundamental skills in certain sports and games that can be used for purposes of recreation both as undergraduates and after leaving the university. As by-products to participation in these activities and the resulting stimulation of the functions of the vital organs, we expect to make contributions to the wellbeing of the individual. The girl who takes part of her recreation in big-muscle activity seems to increase her capacity for happiness of outlook and to decrease her capacity for nervousness. Prom a survey recently carried out. we find that many of those to whom we have taught the rudiments of tennis, golf, or swimming, have continued to enjoy the sport with their friends afterwards. If our students learn how to carry themselves and how to relax, if we can give them opportunity for the en joyment of vigorous physical recreation while they arc here, and the basis for the enjoyment of it afterwards, it will go far toward fulfilling our aims. Dr. J. Anna Norris 324 OltGASSIZ ATIOSS Paul Bunyan had never seen a woman: he wondered whether they were real people, or creations of fancy. But he met one when his loggers and limbers, swampers and scissor-bills, flunkies and buffalo-boys left him and went to Nowaday valley. Paul followed them, and made a farewell oration, which lasted for seventy-three hours. After that a woman came and stood looking up at the great man with brave curiosity. Paul lifted her in his hand, and she sat imperturbably powdering her nose while he examined her in wonderment. He had seen nothing like this specimen: he could not understand the woman-person. But he felt her power, and he surrendered to it. Paul heard rumors of farming possibilities in Minnesota, so he look a handful of seed and went prospecting. Seeds poked into the fertile soil immediately began to grow. Corn grew a foot a minute, and soon was so tall that Paul sent Big Ole to cut off the top of the stalk so that it would branch out and ear. In a twinkling Ole was carried up into the clouds. āCome down!ā, shouted Paul. HOSOItAltY 325 Alpha Sigma Pi Senior Education Babe waked an entire tertian of land to the rioer at one dray: the teeex mere cut. and the tettion hauled w.ft HONORARY Dr. Fred Fnglehardt Dean Melvin E. Haggerty James G. Umstattd ACTIVE O. Henry Anderson Kenneth Beadle Gordon Bowen Rodney Brainerd Fay Buttcrwick Ralph Engebretson Kopple Friedman Ernest Hakel Lyndon Hanson Donovan Johnson Edward Lapic Leonard Mach Harold Miller Clarence Munn Wilbur Murra Earl Nelson Edwin Puma la 326 Phi Lambda Upsilon Chemistry Founded. University of Illinois. 1899 28 Chapters Zeta Chapter. 1910 Big Jor. I hr cook, had a dinntr horn to big. and hr blrur 11 to hard that pin trm fetl. and tyclonrt a rrr t tar ltd FACULTY C. H. Bailey H. H. Barber R E. Brewer W. R. Brown G. O. Burr R. B. Ellestad C. Eide E. B. Fischer R. A. Gortner R G. Green H. O. Halvorson R. H. Hamilton G. B. Heisig T. Kameda D. E. Kvalnes W. M. Lauer S. C. Lind R. S. Livingston C. A. Mann F. H. MacDougall G. H. Montillon R .E. Montonna C. V. Net N. C. Pervier L. H. Reyerson C. H. Rogers B. F. Ruth V. M. Sandstrom L. A. Sarver L. I. Smith M. C. Sneed M. M. Sprung H. N. Stephens R. C. Sherwood A. E. Stoppel H. O. Wiles H. N. Wright L. Zeleny GRADUATE Samuel I. Aronovsky John L. Beal Frederick C. Beyer Charles S. Copeland L. Wallace Cornell H. Mauzee Davis Forrest R. Davison William F. Filbert Donald L. Fuller Donald C. Gernes Karl Goldner Stanley M. Jackson Otto G. Jensen Francis C. Fanning Elmer S. Miller Harold P. Morris Clarence L. Moyle John Rehner. Jr. Charles E. Rimpila Charles P. Roe Charles Roscnblum Ernest B. Sandell Marvin A. Spielman Vernon A. Stenger Frank H. Stodola Oscar J. Swenson Clifford J. Thor F. Lowell Taylor William J. Tomsicek Edward M. Van Du .ee August Willman Charles C. Winding Samuel Yuster ACTIVE Edward A. Brecht Raymond A. Callander George E. Crosscn Winfield W. Foster Arthur E. Hebberd Archie B. Japs Kenneth C. Johnson Einar R. Michalson Ralph E. Peck Edgar L. Piret Marshall F. Ruley William Schapiro Henry C. Yuizy Beta Alpha Psi Accounting Patti i axtnirn tharpvntd (heir axei Ini tolling tlonet down hilU. and holding (he cdart iiijaintl them Ā«s thru Went bu. Founded. University of Illinois. 1919 I 7 Chapters Rho Chapter. 1931 HONORARY H C. J. Pcisch FACULTY Francis M. Boddy Judson O. Burnett Edward Eriksen E. A. Heilman Oswald Nielsen H. J. Ostlund J. J. Reighard R. A. Stevenson GRADUATE Leonard Baillie Robert W. Bruce John H. Buelow Carl I.. Nelson ACTIVE Norman C. Davey Webster A. Fischer Alfred Haertel Donald W. Kuistad Kenneth M. McGhee William S. Mersky Harold B. Mielke Donald O'Brian William C. Robinson Lawrence L. Vance 328 Beta Gamma Sigma Commerce Pounded. University of Wisconsin. 1913 32 Chapters Alpha Chapter. 1921 foul morkrJ hi lag fcy (limbing out a pint with hi htownuhoml; but hit mtn hod tv uĀ r an omr to ualp them. FACULTY I. W. Aim R. G. Blakcy 1 M. Boddy A. M. Borak J. O. Burnett C. D. Corse F. B. Garvcr A. H. Hansen E. A. Heilman B. D. Mudgett R. A. Stevenson GRADUATE Leonard T. Baillic John H. Buelow Arthur A. Lampland Carl L. Nelson Blair B. Peterson Dan N. Rice Robert M. Wilson ACTIVE Russell L. Chrysler Norman C. Davey Webster A Fischer Irving C. Johnson Russell E. Johnson Kenneth M. McGhee William S. Mersky Donald O'Brian Richard G. Rapp Leslie C. Smith Lawrence L. Yancc Delta Sigma Rho Forensic Ilubt would not work units snow was on the ground, so the logging toads were whitewashed in summer, to deceive him FACULTY Franklin Knowcr Helen Conoycr Melba Hurd Howard Ciilkinson Robert Nethcrly William Prosser Frank Rarig Agnes Thorvilson Sommer Joseph Beach Frances K. Del Plaine Harvey S. Hoshour ACTIVE Elmer Anderson Leon M. Boyd. Jr. Philip Dybvig Isobell Gilliiland Lillian Gilliiland George Hartell Burnell Koolish Dorothy Paulson Alfred J. Weinberg 330 Grey Friar Senior MEMBERS Nelson E. Anderson Guy B. Arthur Robert M. Ash Arnold C. Aslakson Gordon E. Bodien Gordon Bowen Arthur B. Brudvik John Gordon Cole William H. Crowe Cyrus C. Erickson Daniel S. Feidt Donald E. Fish William A. Fowler Ralph G. Golseth Weston B. Grimes Quinten H. Jensen John C. Kopitke Carl John Lind Cecil C. March Maurice S. Moe Richard F. Morean Clarence L. Munn Earl W. Nelson Chet M. Oehler Donald L. Robertson Paul W. Salo John H. Vanderhoof W ) rn PjuI Bunyan rode on . bjeh. hr u trĀ ohligeJ to use j I elf sco pi' to ā-ft thr hind laps oi the Buj Mu Ox 331 Incus Medical Paul Hunyan invrntrd the two-man jo a1. In rough country the tttis on the hilltops uvtr cut. luit not those in the valhv. ACTIVE I-reel I A. Addington Harvey O. Beck Verl G. Borland Bruce H. Canfield Dell F. Dullum Cyrus C. Erickson Harold E. Gillespie Robert Hebbel H. E. Hoffert John E. Hynes Kenneth Malvey Wellington Rieke J. B. Riley Herbert W. Schmidt McClelland Shell man V D. Thysell William Wall Harry A. Wheeler A 332 Ocojiionuthj Babe tan away and roamed the great Natthwm Hii big trotht famed thr ten thousand lakes ol Minnesota. MEMBERS John T. Bailey Forton Christoffer Henry E. Colby Noel C. Fleming Steve Gadler John K. Hass Arno Jewett Chester R. Jones John Kukowske Thomas R. Lawler Bennett P. Nyline Martin C. Powers Thomas F. Ryan Henry N. Somsen Walter Swenson Lawrence L. Vance Henry Yutzy Senior Mortar Board I'out oiltn ultd a aunt timbre uvthe. with whirh hr rou i ftll u ui lion ol timber with ā¢if)r mu hiv twmti ol the arms MEMBERS Jane A field Marjorie Bennett Phyllis Beskin Evadcnc Burris Lois Finger Wanda Fundberg Dorothy Green Bessie Hawk Maxine Kaiser Andrea Kiefer Mildred McWilliams Dorothea Nylin Dorothy Paulson Virginia Peters I Ielcn Sears Margaret Tallmadgc Vivian Vanstrom 334 Founded, University of Texas, 1924 1 5 Chapters Alpha Chapter. 1924 'an trooped out the halt far l.rjfte Superior when hr rued ed a reserve water supply for itiftq hit lownq toads. ACTIVE Leon M. Boyd. Jr. Julius A. Coller. 11 Donald M. Larson Donald L. Robertson John H. Spear Lawrence L. Vance PLEDGE Jean H. Hagstrum Wallace R. Hoaglund Lee Loevinger 335 Phoenix Junior Baht waked an entire x ftion of land to thi' ticet at one drag; the fleet mete tut. and the section hauled back ACTIVE Cuyler C. Adams Keith C. Barrons George W. Clifford Walter B. Dahlberg Edward P. Gadler Walter Hass Karl P. Hehl Conrad P. Kat enmeyer Earl R. I.arsen Robert H. Lillyblad T. Parker Lowe Bernard A. McDermott George J. Moriarty Robert J. Niess Tom A. Rogers Charles H. Scheiflcy Harry C. Schoening Jack M. Vilett 336 Sigma Epsilon Sigma Sophomore Rube ilqiiU not itorh uni tit mow u Ā Ā on the ground. 10 the logging roadt were whttrwathed in lummtr. to deceive him. Founded. University of Wisconsin. 1927 6 Chapters Epsilon Chapter. 1931 FACULTY Dean Anne Dudley Blitz Miss Elizabeth Jackson Mrs. Mary S. Kuypers Mildred Almquist DcLoris Chaney Helen Elveback Dorothy Ferguson Alice Furbari Dorothy Harris Hanna L. Harris Laura Hughes Anna Lindgrcn Betty Ramsdell Rosa lice Stuber Alice Swan berg Thyrza Tyrrell L. Vivian Young Shiela Young ACTIVE 337 Junior Silver Spur Pauli axthxn ihatpentd their iijrj lw tullinti ilo wa down hilt and holding the tdctl ACTIVE Bruce Canfield Gilbert Carlson Ralph Chase Richard Ernst Jack Fry Fred Gould Richard Hutchinson AI Johnson Waldo Marquart Edward McAfee Kenneth McLaren Howard Meagher Clifford Menz Henry Nelson McClelland Shellman Russell Smith Jack Tews 338 Tau Sigma Delta Architecture Founded. University of Michigan. 1913 I 3 Chapters Beta Chapter. 1917 Puut morktd hit oj?Ā In pmthmq out a pine with hit tuawnqhand; hut hit mtn had Ā« u« an o e to āualp them. FACULTY F. M. Mann R. T. Jones Leon E. Arn3l Roy C. Jones Rhodes Robertson ACTIVE David B. Anderson Clarice M. Berg Gilbert B. Green Oino A. Jyring Melvin C. Stenrud George B. Townsend Gordon A. Wall II 339 Theta Sigma Phi Journalistic All the hititdinffi of Paul tun-uun'-t (amp uyrt on rfud . Hob inilt.il the u:hole outfit from one Ioanna tile lo the next lāoundcd. University of Washington. 1909 38 Chapters Nu Chapter. 1917 GRADUATE Mary Moos Janet Salisbury Shirley Warner ACTIVE Marion Gold Mary Harper Doris Ward Mary Culhanc Marion Rasmussen Alma Kerr Wanda Fundberg Helen Grigware Katharine Seymour 340 White Dragon Social 1āaul hhnl a flood imohc. To htfp bit pipe tilled required the entire hmr ot a twamper u-orhwy with a troop thovrl. ACTIVE Ralph Andreas Edward Banington Mil ten Bay by Gordon Brown James Campbell Richard Carlson Warren Drought William Dunlap John H. Eva Charles Healy Kenneth Kerner Parker Lowe Ambrose I.und Douglas H. Macintosh Jay O'Dell John Paulson Edward Pickett Norton Twite Edmund Vollbracht Walter Wood 341 Wing and Bow Agricultural Robe would aom.'fiVrjfs inrak up bs'hirtd a t ricv and drink oil I hr uājfiT our o r Ā Ā« ritvr. eav Ā 'ny rAv foyt high and dnj FACULTY Otis D. McGrecry William Rout ledge ACTIVE Henry Bull Donald E. Fish Jack Fry Donald Gray Fred Gould Lloyd Knight Sulo Koski Jack McCulloch Howard Smith Paul Ziegelmaier 342 Plumb Bob Engineering A Mern-whttltdtrtsjmboai uut required to Ā«rit the huge Out of coup needed to halitfy the apptOlft of the logger . ACTIVE Clifford O. Anderson Nelson E. Anderson Gordon E. Bodicn Robert G. Cerny Kenneth B. Haugen William C. Hill Cecil C. March Paul W. Salo J. Phelan Shirley Martin G. Swanson George H. Taft George B. Townsend 343 S, Otltr, Sloltn. fnjiliom, niA. VV. Vmwn lUuirrtxMti, Stnjtft. Chapman Krlton, fiwtWn. Coil . C. ilnmtr Kopiiht, Hatint l,t ull,xh. Hih, H ou'n, HauulanJ Founded 39 Chapters ACTIVE Clyde Baumhoffer. '33 William J. N. Brown. ā34 Kenneth Chapman. 32 J. Earl Cook. ā32 Harold Engstrom. ā32 Clarence Evanson. '32 LeoFenske. ā3 3 Donald F-'ish. '32 Lester Gilmore. ā32 Grenfall Harms. '32 Ohio State College. 1894 La Grange Chapter. 1905 Nelvin Haugland. '32 Teddy Holt. '32 John Kopitke. '32 J. V. McCulloch. '32 Eugene Nelson. '32 Burton Osier. '32 Dale Sanders. '32 Rudolph Stolen. ' 32 Stanley Swenson. '33 Walter Swenson, ' 3 2 344 Block and Bridle Livestock Paul toopĀ«i out thr holt Lake Superior when he n id a etutut uMttr ui lor itinp hit lopping rn m M. Ptiteton, Rnvinen, 1āitvii. Ilannof. II. Ptlenon. U'. Summon W'. MtMtriin. Wtiimen. It tint he It. Ohon Mavo. Cooh. Iltoty Jatnb t. Watutn. S Haninn, llolte le thou fat. Ha uflonj Founded 1 j §) Iowa State College. 1919 I 3 Chapters | pj Minnesota Chapter. 1923 FACULTY B. F. Ferrin W. H. Peters William Peterson GRADUATE Sam Bn gene P. Herrington B. Johnson C. Means M. Simons Phil Swenson ACTIVE E. Ahlstrand. '33 R. Backstrom. '32 G. Bcrggen. 3 3 E. Brady. '32 F. Brady. '33 C. Chambers, 32 K. Chapman. '32 R. Comstock. '35 E. Cook. '32 S. Doten. ā33 C. Fahning. '35 L. Fcnske. ā32 B. Ganrud. '34 J. Godden, '32 C. Graham. '32 R. Grant. '34 H. Grow. '34 William Grusendorf. '32 S. Halvorson. '34 B. Hansing. '37 E. Hanson. '33 N. Hanson. '33 L. Hart wig. '34 N. Haugland. '32 H.Healy, '32 M. Holle. '33 B. Jacobs. '34 H. Kuckenbecker. '35 G. McDougal. '32 L. McMartin. 32 W. McMartin. '34 C. Marti. '34 H. Mayo. 34 H. Meister. 34 C. Nelson. '33 T. Nodlin. '34 J. Olson. 35 R. Olson. '33 B. Pervis. '32 H. Peterson. '34 M. Peterson. '33 C. Pratt. '34 T. Raine, '34 E. Reinekc, '34 C. Rollin. '3 3 A. Roth. '32 C. Rovinan. '34 M. Rowe. ā34 I. Sample. '35 D. Seyforth. '34 L. Stabler. '33 S. Swenson. '32 W. Swenson. '32 R. Stolen. '32 S. Warrington. '32 J. Wasson. '32 W. Werner. '33 D. Weismen. '34 J. Wirt. '33 R. Zavoral, 34 Delta Phi Delta Art Babe waked on entire irction of land to the river Ā«jf am drui ; ifii irta Uttre cut. end the itetion hunted bach. , hrnfi. 5u'-tn . Flinh. lUuh (iti it , rUthlit. Clfi'tlaaJ, A. I lor, JVrftrf Founded 20 Chapters University of Kansas. 1912 Gamma Chapter. 1921 FACULTY Uilma Bergland Josephine Lutz Robert Hilpert Elmer Harmes Laura Haggerty Gertrude Ross Ruth Raymond Helen DruIcy ACTIVE Helen Almars I lelen Cleveland Katherine Rink Marjory Gray Elizabeth Guthrie Kathleen Hubbard Caroline Kitoe Betty 1.eland Jane Mason Katherine Woolsley PLEDGE Thressa Acherman Margaret Birch Louise Parker Marian Swartz Xlilnrr. lltnJrUhwn, A. O ioit. Ilatkv t-nmnun. SunJtium Kuuhr, Hovmtnn. MtXui. XI. 0!t.in ā¢S'. AnJttnm. Ptuntili. Sptthi, l.nultv Founded 23 Chapters University of Illinois. 1904 Omicron Chapter. 1920 FACULTY J. M. Bryant W. T. Ryan F. W. Springer C. F. Swanson GRADUATE L. F. Borchardt A. Hopkins A. Hustrulid P. E. Loye A. Nier 0. Norgorden J. Roe L. G. Swendson 1. C. Vigncss ACTIVE N Anderson. '32 F. Baumann. '33 C. Brunetti. '32 C. Christensen. '33 J. Hancock. '33 R. Haxby. '33 L. Hendrickson. '32 R. Kutzler. '32 S. Linsley. '32 R. Lommcn. ā32 L. Markus. '33 R. Milner. '33 A. Olson. '33 M. Olson. '32 H. Sanderson. '32 W. Specht. ā32 347 S'vtm, Jon ,. Potilt. AtrlJ I allrr-tj f, 1 turn If Litton. WtlinJtr, I Ā«man ACTIVE Jane A field Marjorie Berens Elcneta Carpenter Mercedes Gugisberg Kathleen Hubbard Lola Jones Mary Alice Larson Bessie Lyman Marian Muir Dorothea Nylin Phyllis Porter Helen Scars Margaret Tallmadgc Vivian Vanstrom Elizabeth Voker Ruth Walker Mildred Welander 348 CāthlhiJ. Itnun. Mai tr, Dutruh XUtUĀ n l. W-tHt. on 1. am GRADUATE Aurelia Childs ACTIVE Louise Bronn. '33 Betty Cashman. '32 Virginia Childs. '33 Ruth Dietrich. '34 Dorothy Falk. '3 3 Lillian Gillilland. '33 Thurmalce Hendricks. '33 Marjorie Jensen. '33 Lola Jones. '32 Dorothy MacManigal. '33 Ruth Mayer. '32 Dorothy Sonnenfeld. '3 3 Lenore Wolfe. '3 3 PLEDGE Betty Compton Elaine Dosen Dorothy Kennedy Elaine Nortz Merle Osborne Priscilla Rugg 349 Paul Bumian tiwtnird tht two-men sew. In rough country the Iren on tht hiUtopi wtrt rut. hiit not tho r m tin- callru L t I fit I: I I f ⢠⢠tfr ⢠m ⢠-⢠ā .v v W-' ā I : ;; ā¢; : Oufauoj Ktotfitt. fat ue. Mrttin. Petteion. A Johoton, lloi er Proton. Otrnn. Ā« Jahrnon. Ptruieg. Onhi, S irrhei Omwniluin. Weiilltth. Potter Motllin. Molten. Itubel, llnlnritttrm Cfniiiotlrt. Pinion. Shipfum, Norton. liithmooJ, hirktoo. Dotting FACULTY Major Willis Shippam Lt. R. A. Ericson Lt H. W Richmond ACTIVE Allan Bruce Eorton Christoffer Soph us Dahl Wilfred Darling LeRoy DuBrucq Russell Erickson Winfield Foster Mirza Gregg Helmcr Holmstrom Arnold R. Johnson George B. Johnson Harold Man I in John Mokres Maurice Norton Laddie Olexa Orvil Olson Berne Osmundson Raymond Penney Earl Peterson Earl Ruble John Speakes Richard Thompson Raymond Wcidlich Harold Hocfer 350 Mu Phi Epsilon M usic Founded. Cincinnati. Ohio. 1903 53 Chapters Phi Beta Chapter. 1927 All the building of Paul Pun i.mn's ramp were on ekidt flu hr pulled the whole vuihi lro r Ā nr logging uh to the rĀ«.Ā«r FACULTY Gertrude Hull GRADUATE Margaret Thomas-Adamcik Dorothy Amesbury Martha Baker Ethel Mae Bishop Donna Blake Winifred Reichmulh-Bollc Beryl Busse Margaret Christy Miriam Lieberman-Edelman Mary Alice Gale Mary Frances Lehncrts Marie Rybak-Licgl Ann Neubeiser Julia Rose Eunice Ryan Elizabeth Dolsen-Tifft Julie Waldo Hcrmion Wheaton ACTIVE Hildred Brohaugh Adelaide Lacy Marian Maurer Nina St. John A 351 Pershing Rifles Military Rabf waked an entire tertian of land to the river at one drat]. the trees were cut, and thr uttion hauled Iwth Vc eer. Melnnii. Suanton. ā¢rrii. dmfirn, Htfloft. Oontheuftr. J. Joint. V. Swtntvn Smut, Sfrate, Swrmon. Molt, Kntlhtni. Thinker, Sk mur, Kt-jct. Abety (MiniilaJ. Keiudlton. Inevjlh. I.indr uitl, Mount I. !'till ton, Kmdrick. of uu-.iy .raw. I-wet. S u. Wilkie. Xfntveikuur. Andttvon. Anftier Cranbeeb, If nil. Munch. Hackman. MaJte. Ilattum. Heard. U'iMJmhoi) UVyyi M. Ilnur. Haute. Jontt. Until Andre. Methern hounded. University of Nebraska. 1892 Company Eā, 2nd Regiment. 1929 FACULTY Maj. John Hester Maj. Theron Methven Capt. Porter Wiggins ACTIVE Howard A berg. ā35 Wilbur Andre. ā34 Robert Angstcr. '35 John Beard. '35 Harold Bessesen. ā35 Dan Buck man. ā35 Otto Dahl, ā35 John Donahower, '35 Justa M. Erickson. ā35 Carl Forsyth. ā34 Robert Fraser. ā35 Franklin Grimstad, ā35 Baldwin Hallaway. 35 H. Penn Harper. ā34 Bruce Harris, ā35 Joseph Hertogs. ā35 William Hoeft. '32 Howard Jones. ā34 John Jones, '35 J. Kallberg. 34 Jim Kendrick. '35 Harvey Keyes. '34 Leslie Knudtson. ā35 Art Lease. '34 Bertyl Lindquist. '35 David MacGregor. '35 El wood Mclnnis, '35 Charles Merrick. '34 John Peterson. '35 Kenneth Pottle. '33 Lyman Ritzinger. '35 Robert G. Rowell. '35 Albert Senter. '34 Howard Shaw. '35 Homer Shrewsbury. '35 Merwyn Skamser. '34 William Snyder. 35 Charles Stephenson. '34 Willis Swanson. '35 Leonard Thresher. ā35 Francis Walsh. ā34 Lyman Weaver, '34 Arthur Whitney. '34 Jim Wilkie. '34 FoiVtil. Catlblom. .VoyAAi. King Gtttn. Moch, Calhoun, I uthtr, Shipman Maimuutn. Saltoo. Abbot, lloth FACULTY William A. Abbot ACTIVE Edward Adams Roman Arnoldy Joe Bailey Robert Bruce Joe Calhoun Francis Calton Bruce Canfield Albert Carlblom Clayton Ebert Edgar Fleckenstein Elmer Foskett Ross Green Ralph Hardiman Maurice King Leonard Mach Leo Maykki Frank Nicholsen Theodore Rasmussen Stanley Roth Harold Shipman Avery Tucker 353 $u'tnn n. Toufot, (hurt, Sampion. Btonrt. Koll Croud), (ātotton. Slotiior. EUt. Srikon (human. Vim, I till. Cnblom, Wolkir, Urnntit. V uiiirmon. Saw tr Founded 1 7 Chapters University of Minnesota. 1910 Alpha Chapter. 1910 FACULTY Gladys Anderson Alice Beister Clara Brown Alice Childs Gertrude Dinsmore Marjorie Fnnis Harriet Goldstein Vetta Goldstein Hope Hunt Jane Leichscnring Wylie McNeal Kathrine Niles Gladys Nordeen Ethel Phelps Ella Rose Ruth Scgolson Mary Steers Lucy Studlcy Marion Weller ACTIVE Marjorie Bennett. '32 Betty Broman. ā32 Louise Bronn. '33 Florence Bruce. '33 Lorraine Crouch. '3 3 Eleanor Eide. '32 Villa Mae Enblom, '32 Elizabeth Koll. '33 Charlotte Molitor. '32 Marion Muir. '32 Irene Nelson. '32 Anne Pcarscn. '32 Virginia Peters. '32 Betty Rogcsheski. '33 Barbara Sampson. '32 Ruth Sawyer. ā33 Alma Swensen. '32 Inez Taylor. 33 Betty Tifft. ā32 Ruth Walker. '32 Adele Wurdeman. '33 354 Paul liked a 70 http hi% pipe ikt tniire lime it'ofhitm utilh ( Ituuj . Ka r r. Kvam. Swaruon, l.njmcll, Johoton. Itaur.mirn Iārlrrton Ottil. Maehnir Graofoatd. , rochr. Run. lioniĀ«, Kachitmochrr Vvfl, lion. Jewell, CootaJ. fo iyl r. V vinyl Jo. Schorr. lltnJmktvn Wi byf. Win. Jacobs. Jrttnn. Stunner. Scbrlpcl. S. CoJUr Connor. M'lyymi. Ilctiir. Loo-'tll. Ilarnun. Efithtoa. ChtiHuoion. Richmond Founded 4 Chapters University of Illinois. 1920 Beta Morac Chapter. 1930 FACULTY Lt. V. J. Conrad Capt. M. T. Davenport Capt. W. A. Ellis Lt. R. A. Ericson Lt. H. N. Hartncss Maj. J. H. Hester Capt. E. Krause Maj. T. G. Methven Capt. R. W. Mincklcr Lt. H. W. Richmond Maj. W. Shippam Capt. P. P. Wiggins GRADUATE P. A. Markson G. Quanrut! W. F. Soules ACTIVE J. H. Baer. 33 M. F. Baskcr. ā33 H. V. Christianson. '32 Geo. Connor. '33 L. C. Erickson. '32 F. Flores. '32 L. B. Forsyth. '33 Ed. Gadler. '34 S. Gadler. '32 D. Ganficld. '33 B. Grangaard. '33 T. A. Hammond. '34 E. A. Hanson. ā32 C. J.Hauge. '32 L. E. Hendrickson. '32 H. C. Holmes. ā32 C. Holmgren. '32 M. Jacobs. '33 O. A. Jensen. '33 A. Jewett. '32 W. A. Johnson. '33 H. R. Jones. '34 T. Kachclmacher. ā33 R. E. Kasper. '33 C. Kvam. '33 G. T. Leclercq. '33 E. Lodmeli. '33 P. Lowell. '33 A. F. Mackner. '32 P. Newman. '32 T. Orest. '33 E. Peterson. '34 W. Petri. '33 T. Rasmussen. '34 W. Rulicn. '33 W. Schorr. '33 D. Schrepel. '32 P. W. Searles. '33 Wm. E. Skinner. '33 C. H. Stacke. '34 H. C. Swanson. '32 R. Thompson. '33 L. F. Vobeyda. '33 A. L. Vogt. '33 J. West. '34 D. C. Wykoff. '34 r d tmahe. To hllcd retjuitrJ o( a twomptr stoop a j.h.y . Pi Tau Sigma Mechanical Engineering IKiut marked hit logt In pinching out i pine with hit Inawnghand: hut hit men hud frt a . an axe to tealf them. Men tlkneh, Knifhi. And er ton. ChnitnOtr, Gartner peit Ur . Rotulty. Mott mil, Rnkertinn, Itolānett, Konmamen Lil u. Applet. Iriektan. MotOanoiJ. I.etlit Founded 1 2 Chapters University of Illinois, 1915 Minnesota Gamma Chapter, 1922 FACULTY J. DuPriest John V. Martcnis B. J. Robertson Frank B. Rowley S. Carl Shipley Charles F. Shoop Hugh B. Wilcox GRADUATE Richard E. Hayden ACTIVE Clifford O. Anderson. '32 John M. Appert. '32 Forton Christoffer, ā32 Russell Erickson. ā32 Walter Gartner, '32 Henry Kanniaincn. '32 Morris Knight. '33 Donald Leslie, '33 Norbert Mcngelkoch. '33 Gayle Priester, '33 356 Robe would mmeiimt-t mtnh up behind Ā« drive and drink ell tht u ater out of the river. Uui mg the logi high and dry l imits . Hu'V. k'ritkion, Siorkinon. S'uOrt, Weitbte tun, C.tavti. ImuxII. HenJtitkuin. S10JJ01J. Uān wff. Krunrlti Mullin. klintklet, Lomrntn. Ciltoth. Kehbtr. Stwell FACULTY Scott Linslcy J. H. Hester Robert Lommen R V. Minckler Parker Lowell V. Shippam Clayton Mullin H. E. Stridor Fritz Nutter Wilbur Schorr ACTIVE Joe Scwall Clcdo Brunotti Fred Shidcl Paul Erickson James Stoddard Lloyd Graves Jack Storkerson John Huey Paul Tema Lawrence Hendrickson Robert Westbec Paul Gil loth Herman Wcstover Alva Kali her 357 Pettit. KrwJtton, Portlet . Steen Cutt'WI, Joedihl. Valmline. P. Pettit R. fiidiiM. toll . Motton Koteiree . link mo My ,-n, Knhmand, Corned. Notion Mullin Cbfiuoftt. Metrimtn, MeCultotifh. Keeute Kirkt Dun on. lienit thunrlli. Doth , IIIu, aftn. ei iouo Seix'ell. Wt ytll Hartnett. lienee, lluey. Smetnnf, I hornpton. ItoPeicil U'.yyint. Hoftnpatl Founded 77 Chapters University of Wisconsin. 1905 13 Company. 1st Regiment. 1905 FACULTY Maj. John H. Hester Maj. William G. Guthrie Maj. Willis Shippam Maj. William C. Webb. Jr. Capt. William A. Ellis Capt. Porter P. Wiggins Capt. William G. Walker Capt. Murray T. Davenport Capt. Emil Krause Capt. Hammond Birks 1st Lt. Vincent Conrad 1st Lt. Hewitt Richmond 1st Lt. Rex Mincklcr 1st Lt. Harlan Hartness ACTIVE Ford Alger. '32 Clcdo I3runetii. '32 Joe Calhoun. ā33 Forton Christoffer. '32 Lucius Caswell, ā33 Maurice Dale. '32 Alan Docltz, '32 Donald Dunton, '32 Robert DuPriest. '33 Carl Erickson. ā34 Russell Erickson. ā32 Fred Fadell. '32 Edgar Flcckenstein, ā34 George Forus, '3 3 Ralph Griebler. '32 J. A. Harris. ā33 John Huey. '32 Mervin Jordahl. '32 Nick Lahti. ā32 Scott Linslcy, ā32 Robert McCullough. ā33 Richard Morean. '32 Clayton Mullin. ā32 James Myers. 32 Maurice Norton. '32 Charles Pettit. '32 Paul Pettit. 32 Lowell Rieke. 33 Joe Sewall, ā32 Robert Stuebing. ā33 Daniel Stern. ā33 Neil Tangen, ā33 Frank Thompson. '33 Lyle Valintine, ā32 Harvey Wyvell. '32 358 Sigma Eta Gamma Gopher and Ski-U-Mah Editorial Jar, ihe cook, hod a dtnnrr horn to big. and hr blrm n Ā o hard that pine ireet (til. and o iionct mere tlartrd IVuhmen. t at ton, Iāotttr. ttuh. ljĀ c ntir i oulJ, Silvtr. Hoi Robin ton ACTIVE Ralph Bachman Clarence Beck Leon M. Boyd. Jr. George Doyle Otis Dypwick Harold Elfman Harris Golden Pay son Gould Donald Larson Ted E. I.arson Lee Locvinger Ellen Oren E. Kenneth Pottle E. Patricia RitZ Donald L. Robertson Helen Silver 359 Tau Beta Pi Engineering Paul axemen tharpencJ their axts ho eollmq alone down hitli. and holding the tdifei oouin-tt them os f jry went ho. 1ātirl, X. Johnson. Gtthan, JotJoo Japs, fmimmj W rift I. Peak, Kin is. Conner. Sehmidt. SJnndt. M. Johnson Cfnnimirii Itilinj. Cotton. Soto. loon. S'. Anderson, Olson, Jeiohek l.mstei . I itio. SonJtnoo. Chtittoder, ItoJirn, Slaeeh Ppunded 88 Chapters Lehigh University. 1885 Alpha Chapter. 1905 GRADUATE L. Brightbill A. Hopkins A. Hustrulid P. E. Loye A. Nier O. Norgorden J. Roc O. Swenson C. I. Vigness C. Winding ACTIVE David B. Anderson, ā32 Nelson Anderson. '32 John Appert. '32 B. M. Axilrod. 33 G. Bodien. ā32 Cledo Bruneiti. ā32 R. Calton, ā32 C. W. Christensen. 33 Porton ChristofTer. '32 W. W. Poster. '32 W. Gartner. '32 R. Geehan. '32 A. Japs, '3 3 Paul Jcrabek. '32 Kenneth C. Johnson. '32 Marvin Johnson. '32 Richard Jordan. '32 Julius Katz, '32 R. Kreiss. '32 A. Lilja. '32 S. C. Linsley. '32 C. March. '32 H. Meindl. '32 Einar Michalsen. ā32 Milton Olson. '32 Ralph Peck. '32 E. Pflciderer. ā32 Ed. Pirct. '32 P. W. Salo. ā32 Harold A. Sanderson. '32 Milton Schmidt. '32 Walter A. Specht. '32 Geo. Townsend. '32 Geo. Weigel. '32 360 Mosquitoes were even more fierce in Paul Bun-yun's time than the monstrous breed of the North Country are now. In order to conquer them Paul imported two pairs of Bumble Bees. Sourdough Sam brought them to camp on foot . . . this was the only way to travel, for the flight of the beasts could not be controlled. Their wings were strapped down, their stingers loaded in Sam's knapsack, and their feet shod with walking-shoes. ACADEMIC FDATEDSITIES 361 Bohe would not work unUu mow was on thr ground, so thr logging roads were whiteutothrd in sunimrr. lo itctivt him Interfraternity Council Anjrfoin 1 1 Km, WMl. Donovan Kutbn C mion Motion. Itooil. Somitn. fit inn, MtKrt. Pithtll, lljctty Smith. Vanrt. Mtinill. Mottndtr. I. nĀ«. Ptmitt Knbttiojn. Thornton. MtCrtttv. Fritll. Smith. Inf t FACULTY Otis C. McCrecry Dan F'ciclt REPRESENTATIVES Sam McKee. Acacia I.yman Molander. Alpha Della Phi Roberi Rcider. Alpha Sigma Phi Donald Robertson. Alpha Tau Omega Howard Meagher. Beta Theta Pi Allan Wallace. Chi Phi Edward Thomson. Chi Psi Casper Kavcny. Delta Chi Canter Kuehn. Delta Kappa Epsilon [ rank Nicholsen. Delta Tau Delta David Donovan. Delta Upsilon Carlyle Anderson. Kappa Sigma Sheldon Larson. Lambda Chi Alpha Richard Morean. Phi Delta Theta Robert Bailey. Phi Gamma Delta Russell Smith. Phi Kappa Psi [ā¢'rank Kammerlohr. Phi Kappa Sigma Daniel Pickett. Phi Sigma Kappa Rod Hood. Pi Kappa Alpha Henry Somsen. Psi Upsilon Jack Gleason. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Vernon Pierson. Sigma Chi Steve Lang. Sigma Phi Epsilon Gale Pricster, Sigma Nu Fred Burg. Tau Kappa Epsilon Henry Erickson. Theta Chi N. Lawrence Engcr. Theta Delta Chi Howard Prieve. Theta Kappa Nu 'Lorn Rogers. Theta Xi Charles Hawkins, Zeta Psi 362 QurmnlJ. lijihr, Mjn llrtrimtn. Puma . II. Jtntm 0. Jttiitn, Yount. I'rjfum. Sthulln. Amtnton llulfti. Jumnu. At ft. Ltnnrt MtKer. ,Wanton FACULTY J. C. Pouchcr Gustaav Bachman C. H. Rogers Founded. J. O. Baker J. N. Scarles University of Michigan. 1904 J. M. Bryant B. Silcox 28 Chapters C. A. Erdman C. R. Stauffer Minnesota Chapter. 1906 J. F. Frelin R. A Stevenson F:rank F:. Grant F. A. Holman E. W. Johnson E. M. Lambert W. R Meyers E. E. Nicholson Levi B. Pease A. V. Storm M. C. Tanquary T. A. Teeter J. S. Young GRADUATE Walter Anderson Arthur Forsyth ACTIVE Robert M. Ash. '32 John C. Barton. '3 3 Kenneth J. Cooley. '32 Gordon E. Didra. '32 Reynold A. Jensen. '34 Carl O. Linnec. '33 Samuel M. McKee. '32 Kenneth P. Malvcy. '33 Walter P. Manning. '32 George Matt. '33 Wallace Mattson. '32 Alvin Pearson. '3 3 Franklin R. Schaller. '33 Clyde E. Sumner. '32 PLEDGES U. Schuyler Amunson Walter Baehr Lester O. Heartman Donald J. Jensen Herbert Jensen Edwin E. Pumala Donald W. Quenvold Alan M. Young 363 WueJeemo. Campbell Yoh . Keeayuitt. Howto. Hyon, Goufc. Smoot t. Ditkieunet. Donnelly. Knyett. Uolarxltr. t.ovetoaj, Amvmo Ittown. A ofrouā. Kilbotn. Vollbtatht, .Stott. Mae Into,)ā llootlon. Gould. MtGtalh, Mtl.attn, Kohler. W'tlptort. Sitter Pounded. Hamilton College. 1832 27 Chapters Minnesota Chapter. 1892 FACULTY Bernard W. Bierman Franc Daniels William W. Folwcll Ray T. LaVake GRADUATE John T. Bailey Roger Cat her wood Stanley B. Ncwhall Aubrey C. Stahr ACTIVE Lowell M. Brown. ā34 Jack E. Dudley. ā33 Payson R. Gould, '32 Fred W. Hack. ā32 Donald M. Houston. ā34 Arthur H. Joistad. ā33 Kenneth Kerner. ā32 Berton S. Kohler. ā32 David L. Lytle, ā34 Douglas H. Macintosh. 34 William L. McGrath. '32 Kenneth W. McLaren. '33 Lyman A. Molander. '34 Robert R. Owen. '33 Lowell J. Peterson. '33 Drake E. Rogers. ā34 Robert A. Rossman. '34 Arthur C. Slifcr, '33 Franklin C. Sprecher. '33 Steven F. Stack. ā33 John E. Thornquist. '33 Gerald F. T immins, ā32 Morris L. Vance. '34 Edmund R. Vollbracht. ā34 Pierce M. Welpton. ā32 Robert E. Yohc. ā34 PLEDGE Donald P. Bergquist Robert M. Bowen J. Gordon Campbell Harry Charlton Wesley A. Dickinson Robert N. Ekstrum M. Lawrence Gosch Gray don J. Kilborn '1 heron A. Loveland Hector J. Morrow Lowell Smoots Paul L. Spooner Thomas Stott Myron J. Wurdeman 364 Ltrkiiāiu. fivJtr. finji . Xfoort UammonJ. Wtlion. SihfoiJir Thorn {non. O iwiwn SfMnbtr-n. AnJtunn. Lull. K-ikrla Founded. Yale University. 1845 Rho Chapter. 1916 35 Chapters FACULTY Dr. L. J. Cooke Theodore C. Blegen Landon A. Sarver O. H. Wangensteen Otto S. Zelner GRADUATE Ted. Kruger Benjamin Penrose ACTIVE Kenneth Anderson. '32 Thomas J. Bryan. '33 Francis Calton. '32 Clinton Dennison. '33 Christian Egekivist. '33 Thomas Hammond. '33 George Kakcla. ā32 Sulo Koski. '33 Howard Kroll. '33 Loci Lust. 33 Kermit Olson. '33 Robert Ryder. '33 Merle Sency. '32 Peter Schroeder. '32 Allan Sponberg. '33 Thomas Thompson. '33 William Watson. '32 James Young. '32 PLEDGE Weslie Balkins Duane Barton William Freeburg Wallace Fritz Chet Jespcrson William McKinney Lowell Maxwell Burrnett Olson George Rogers Ralph Stover William Turner Truman Yoder 365 IMtnn. Jtminai. Matt. Utnt. AnJtt. Sthnlley. HuIp hanttn. ountrvmtn. Otnmum. KounJahl. AnJitton. AafttJ Anhtno. Mnion, Nohtitton. Sthttnbttk. Nation Famtt. OMalltVi Upton. It. lUhlt. Will. Ft Ml lloufh. Smith fioyj FUman. l.anJkamtr Founded. Virginia Military Institute. 1865 94 Chapters Gamma Nu Chapter. 1902 FACULTY Channing MaeFadden Sherman Finger Jules T. Frelin John U. Hester E. P. Lyon Otis MeCreery Charles Rogers Martin B. Ruud GRADUATE George Bergh George Clifford Sinclair Cowles Stuart D. Fink Clyde Fiddes Oscar Nordquist Branom Riley Fritz Schade Maurice Sogard Franklin B. Stevens Duncan Stewart Charles Whitacrc Charles Winding ACTIVE Robert Aagaard. '32 Gordon Andre, '34 Vernon Anderson. ā33 William Ankeny. ā33 Robert Baker. ā34 Leon M. Boyd. Jr.. '32 Max Countryman. 32 Paul Dennison. '34 Duane Lames. '3 3 Richard Ernst. '33 Harold Elfman. '32 Donald Franzen. '33 Paul G. Gray. '32 Robert Harris. '3 3 Kenneth Hough. '32 Donald Jennings. '34 Kenneth Johnson. ā32 Harold Kulp. ā32 Allan Landkamcr. ā32 Donald Larson. ā32 Myles Mace. 34 Norman Nelson. 34 Harry O'Malley. '34 William Porter. '3 3 Donald Robertson. '32 Fred Rosendahl. '34 Charles Schcirtcy. '33 Boyd Schernbeck. '34 George Lee Smith. '32 Carlton Strathern. '3 3 Robert Upton. '34 Robert Utne. '34 Charles Will. '3 3 PLEDGE Howard Aberg William Baker Richard Black John Buckbee Waller Carlson Robert Cobb Marl Douglas Ervin Elkjer A! Fitch Orlic Foster George Gardner John Hall Lymen Hcitmillcr Charles Hokanson James Kendrick Ted Larson William Nelson Clarence Pfeifer James Ryder Gene Sciberlich Morean Susens Donald Watson Robert Willing William Zeiske 366 Mtlin. Roftfi, Kilhtn. Moulton. Ijoro ym. f'unh. Ijowf. Ih-lfj Brown. North. R I uJor. Wnldhat. R. I uior. I.uith Km phi l.turit, Riot knur. ffutfvm. Fottttn. Gtnlliof. Ilffont Jon i. J. Hull. I.ottno. Stunning. II. Hull Olnutt.l. Son.Croon totnfij. Mfofhff, Oilman. Ilaekty, Gttu't. Ā ryr FACULTY Cyrus P. Birnum J. V. Beach Ralph D. Casey H. E. Clifton Alexander C. Hodson M. V. Husbands Ray R. Knight F. G. McCormick B. D. Mudgett Edward E. Nicholson 0. W. Olmsted C. P. Sigerfoos E. H. Sirich E. W. Weaver GRADUATE Dave Marcley Wallace Merritt ACTIVE R C Black mar. '3 3 John R. Bryant. '34 Henry E. Bull. 12 John M. Bull. '3 3 John W. Forney. '53 Irving Fosseen. '34 John Funk, '34 Beverly L. Gage. '3 3 Richard C. Grewc. '3 3 J. Morton Harkey. '33 Curtis K. Jones. '3 3 Paul F. Kabot. '33 Albert E. Killeen. '34 Morris C. Knight. '33 Karl H. Larson. '3 3 Richard P Longyear. ā33 Founded. Miami. Ohio, 1839 87 Chapters Beta Pi Chapter, 1889 Robert B. Luick. 33 Howard W. Meagher. 3 3 Fred M Metcalfe. '34 Robert Morrissey. '33 Max G. Moulton. '34 John M. H. Olmsted. ā3 3 John W. Oilman. '33 Fred V. Rogers. '34 Edward W. Sanderson. '34 Harvey W. Stenson. '33 Leyden Swenning. '34 Richard B. Tudor. '34 Robert B. Tudor. ā34 Jason H. Yaggy. '34 PLEDGE Hilton M. Bailey Fredrick Bockman Robert L. Brown William II Burgum Allen A. Gentling William 11. Lewis Jack Lowe Sterling Mclin Ralph V. Norris. Jr. Charles E. Rudolph. Jr. Eric R. Sanderson Frank L Thresher. Jr. L. John Waldhicr 367 Babe waked an entire tea ion of land to the river at one dr a a: the treet u ete cut. and the union hauled bach- Chi Phi UJJAA 'ffā' % 1 §i v 5 I f f Ā« ? t S Fehmen. Hanvim, Ktam. Webb, Witliban. Kvem. Gathell Putnam. Wannamaktr. PeJetiun, ftembe. JepUVt. Couitlard it fee, U'yhull, P.ehetl, Kobtee. IteJJinf. Aikinujn. Stooee Lu ftm, Hctmentnn. Jewell. Welti I, Jnntl. Ilatlum. AnJeeum Founded, Princeton University, 1824 32 Chapters Gamma Delta Chapter, 1911 FACULTY Donald G. Paterson Arthur R. Upgren GRADUATE Drummond H. Seymour Conrad Kvam. ā3 3 Parke K. Linsley. '35 Robert C. Lofgren. '34 J. Stuart Moore. ā32 Arnold T. Mueller. ā33 Harry E. Pederson. ā32 Locke M. Perkins. '33 Wayne D. Pickell. ā34 Robert H. Ransom. '32 Norris E. Ream. '34 Paul S. Redding. ā34 Armen F. K. Reinke. ā33 Charles P. Smith. ā34 W. Allen Wallis. '32 F. Otis Wannamakcr. ā34 PLEDGE Charles Atkinson Rex H. Galles P. Craig Gaskell Dudley Jepson Lloyd H. Johnson Lucius W. Putnam Roland J. Schaar Martin E. Strand John M. Thompson Wesley D. Webb Raymond Willihan Dean C. Wykoff Karl O. Zieger ACTIVE Arthur L. Abbctt, ā35 Harold V. Anderson. ā32 Loren . R. Berghs. ā33 Harold W. Clausen. ā33 Jarvis Couillard. ā33 James R. F. Eckman. '32 Warren Hallum. ā34 Arne W. Heino, '33 Marvin E. Hermanson. ā33 Arno J. Jewett, ā32 Howard R. Jones. '32 Roy C. Kohler. ā33 It 10 Souihrait fth Street Hank,,, Wc-'.-J. P,a:im. h , MtViiktr. Yotrt. Ihlbt. Whtrltf Whalloa Crook. lb'll. MtĀ r. UftlionalJ. I Ā takā til. Who, Laā4 Shuhnt. Sthram, Uilltr. Stlncvtrt. Ala ay, Brown. Wav Yount Hutlrt. Cllbifl HiOtklunJ. Irrjncki. Fit avion. J,yn,-. Han.hU 7honooa. pi,kilt. Cnriwy. HI,thin Stirknrv, uf Jra Hirf FACULTY Colbert Searlcs ACTIVE Kent van den Berg. '33 William Blethen. '33 Kenneth Brill. '34 Gordon Brown. '34 Louis Carlson. '33 Robert Carney. '32 Hart Cowperthwait. '32 Erling Dalaker. '33 Roland Earl. 34 Robert Hurrlc, '32 Fran . Jevnc. '34 Robert Kierland. '32 Robert Labrce. '32 Donald MacDonald. '32 John Pewters. '34 Edward Pickett. ā33 James Rankin. '34 Curtis Rundell. ā33 Byron Schram. 34 Miles Shulind. ā34 John Stickney. '32 Edward Thomson. '32 Warren Way. '34 Fletcher Whallon. '34 Walter Wood. '34 John Yoerg. '33 Frederick Young. '34 Founded. Union College. 1841 25 Chapters Alpha Nu Chapter. 1874 PLEDGE Robert H. Alway Fredrick E. Bjorklund Charles R. Butler Stephen C. Chase William F. Cronk Peter M. Ferguson ISIS t niVmil|| Avtnat Southtait Miriam G. Fredricks Leslie L. Gilbert Rader J. Hilbe Bradley C. Laird Graham McVicker Wyman M. Miller William W. Moir Werner Schwyzer John P. Somers Frank A. Wheeler Willard White Albert F. Yoerg 369 Thielkt. Wilhimon Slub. HtoJbufi . hthtt. . Ketola i Ā«yy ni. I.. Keiolt. Ohman. Allen. I'eieeutn Han Joel. HUqtn. AnJetum, MeinJI Ihtfumn, I ana (.'ufiym Founded, Cornell University. 1880 38 Chapters Delta Chi. 1892 FACULTY Lt. Richard Erickson ACTIVE John Anderson. '33 Roy Anderson. '33 Edward Bradbury. ā33 Halward Blegen. ā35 Casper Cavency. '35 Henry Colby. '32 Russell Cornell. '34 John Corrigan. ā32 Leonard Hugunin, '33 James Lang. ā33 Hugh Meindl. '32 Richard Ohman, ā35 Ralph Peterson. '33 Eugene Thiclke. '35 Charles Wilkinson. '34 PLEDGE Floyd Anderson Earl Braggans Frank Chamberlain William Fie Francis Fisher Diehl Jerome Charles Ketola Lester Ketola Gilbert Randorf Charles Singer Roland Stech 1601 I' mv nlu Avenue .Vuulhrutl 370 Twite. Wioiron. Thm Sateet WĀ«riĀ«w . Voi AJamt, Camp hill. Iltuttknef C ā¢rppatf. Win iirbufft Pteieei. Tot nr. Home. Hinigtn, Ditkiy, Mnldltheook MtUilltn. Hauthtily. Horn til, Kvthn. fliwAi, fott nao. Cutlnte Founded.Yale University. 1844 47 Chapters Phi Fpsilon Chapter. 1889 FACULTY John Butler Louis E. Daugherty Ellet M. DeBarry Irvillc C. LeCompte Blaine McCusick Charles A. Savage A. C. Strachauer O. S. Wyatt ACTIVE Edward L. Adams. '33 Wright Brooks. '32 John D. Brueckner. '34 Douglas P. Campbell. ā34 John S. Coppage. ā34 Edwin Daugherty. '32 Robert J. Dickey. ā34 Terrill C. Foreman. ā32 Edward P. Freeman. '32 Philip B. Gartner. ā32 Joe Hartzell. 32 Hubert J. Hintgen. ā33 Howard F. Hoene. '34 Carter A. Kucbn. '32 Elvero J. McMillan. ā32 Harlow C. May. ā34 George B. Middlebrook. '34 Harry J. Mead. ā34 John E. Paulsen. ā34 Arden O. Persen. '32 Howard Porter. '34 Robert H. Reed. ā32 Albert B. Savage. '34 George R. Thiss, ā34 Norton S. Twite. '34 Lawrence C. Watson. ā33 Charles W. Winston. '34 Leo G. Win enburg. '34 Charles W. Win. '33 PLEDGE Reuben C. Brustuen Louis E. Daugherty Carl H. Engemoen Edwin Frenzel Thomas Gallivan William Gordon Walter Hoffman Robert How let t Clifford Larson Bernard Nauth William Norton Edwin M. Sabin Fred Sam mis James Sargent Robert Savage Martin Wales 371 Delta Tau Delta llonltn, Cole. Ktfn. Shuman. Gmlti Mttnl. Mthhjunl Rottth. Arnnuonf, llotttl. Btuurtll. Ilf tin lUrhtv. Sirtrltr Kufnwi l.txttool Lohli, lla.IUv. Iljtllt Houlihan, loohtv. IIanion Oiftai, Cummin Htfan. OIJ i, Sithohtn. John ion. fitJJow Founded. Bethany College, 1859 75 Chapters Beta Eta. 1883 FACULTY Ray Bowers ACTIVE Robert Armstrong. ā34 Willard G. Beddow. '32 Sheldon Beilis. '3 3 Robert Berkey. '34 Roger Cumming. '33 Joseph A. Gates. '32 Cam Hackle, '33 Walter Hass. '32 Robert Hoffman. '33 Fred Johnson. Jr.. '33 Ben Kern, '34 Nick Lahti. ā32 Henry Leveroos. ā33 Oliver Mcrril. '3 3 Tom R. Moore. '32 Frank V. Nicholsen. '32 James Roger Olds. ā32 Gerald Oyaas. '3 3 Rex B. Regan. '33 Ralph Rosene. ā34 Forbes Roseth, '34 John Shuman. '32 PLEDGE Eugene Boswell John Cole John Hadley Harold Maiden Eugene Hanson James Horrcl James Houlihan Jack Mehlquist Clinton Rosene Lloyd Sherman Donald Streeter John Toohcy 171} UnUātfuly Avtout Southtaii 372 Delta Upsilon Iāutil 11lied a food amohe. To hirf) hi' pipe hltrd requittil the entire lime o a tutanipi-r u'orkiny uāiih u voop thoi'tl Ahtftn llu.itj Drum, Albitthi. Wiifbl. ft of i 1āihon Milhun n.rttiir Gray. AnJttto i. II. ttoexHāon. Lobtte Uāvn )r. Dthlhtry I tlloU'l. liter I atom lentil. Mutlltr. Tio-iJelt Ditttki. tkirkltn.l Utleytt Pooitri. I). Oiinnwn, Htthltn. Dtiuoll. Hrjor lltnoire. Altektf FACULTY M. T. Davenport C. A. Herrick J. C. Litzenberg D. H. Minnicb W. H. Peters J. W. Powell W. A. Riley L. B. Shippce F. W. Springer GRADUATE David Burlingame R. J. Henning ACTIVE Dean Ahrens. '34 Henry P. Albrecht. '34 Maynard A. Alsaker. '32 Don Anderson. '34 Williard F. Bailey. ' 3 3 Walter B. Dahlberg. '33 David Donovan. '34 Hcdley W. Donovan. '34 David E. Driscoll. Jr., 32 F. Page Fellows. '34 William W. Frost. '33 Robert A. Gray. '3 3 John Loberg. '34 Founded. Williams College. 1834 57 Chapters Minnesota Chapter. 1890 Howard Mithun. '34 T. James Metayer. '33 Martin C. Powers. '32 Bradbury N. Robinson. Jr.. '33 Thomas F. Ryan. '32 Robert P. Reihsen. '32 Harry M. Schoening. '33 John Tatam. '33 Wells J. Wright. 34 Owen E. Wynne. '34 PLEDGE Lawrence Barrette Gordon Burkland William Drum Robert Diercks Kenneth Husted Alvin Hagen John Laivell John Mueller Robert Pelton Randolph Tingdale 373 5i 6f would iomrtimn sneak up behind u drive and dtinh all the water ur of the river, lean inn fo Ā« high and dru. Kappa Sigma WVJ. B'jrA-r. Hubil. Itonitv, S't lion. SonJ. Fowltr. Fnytbtihon ShtphaJ. DuVrinl. trmhr. Sutfjl. Keetnn. J. IlmJimen. $tnbn e CtoWIbtt. BonJy. llurif, AnJrtion. Iltnainf. 11 onion. CVĀ«yy, Fhnmpion Founded. University of Virginia. 1869 108 Chapters Beta Mu Chapter. 1 901 FACULTY Thomas G. Andrews Earle B. Fischer William Fowler Herbert K. Hayes R. F. Johnson Donovan Kvalnes Harold Macey F. E. Wieman GRADUATE Adolph Beber Fred A. Morton ACTIVE Carlyle F. Anderson. '32 Donald H. Bondy. '32 William Cragg. '34 Wilfred D. Crowther. '34 Robert W. DuPriest. '34 Ralph Engcbrctson. '32 Elbert L. Fenske. '34 Harold E. Gillespie. '32 Lloyd W. Hanson. '3 3 Malcolm L. Hanson. '34 John A. Hardiman. '34 Ralph S. Hardiman. ā32 Wendcl Y. Henning. ā32 John J. Huey, '32 Russel K. Johnson. 32 Clinton Jordan. '32 Joseph S. Lynch. '34 Harold Miller. '32 Budd Rich. 33 Dale Shephard. '33 Harold Stanley. '32 Sigmund Stricgl. '33 Anton Thompson. '33 PLEDGE John W. Burke Thomas J. Han if y Donald M. Johnson Wayne B. Lee Edward M. Maddock Ralph D. Nelson Harry Rubel Laurel B. Sand David M. Scribner George D. Ward 374 I. I Cvnpt ll. riittxt, K. lohnirtn. Vi'oltotl Inpliih. Ijmpton, J. MaiQartn. Oov Aiiktt. If'uhm. ltrr. MtMn. Vthnt, Kopprl. OthUr Wotren. I tukkuntn. A. Olu n. C. (ompbitl, Ktnnnh Jahmon. Olio. Iloltrtouk. bruit Kimntiv. Thotpt. Dorviruo. hibtr. Htn liUkton. Nil ion. Ah tr S. I'liiu. Otptn. Cut I .irinn, A. MoiQurm. Iltinuo. I honipion FACULTY I. W. Aim Roy G. Blakey Arthur Borak GRADUATE Dudley Ericson George Falkcnstein Kenneth Johnson Lincoln Page Donald Pratt Leslie Scholle Howard Schwanklc Nobel Shadduck ACTIVE Ford Alger. ā32 Philip Biesanz. ā34 Leon Day. ā33 David Donovan, ā33 Gardner English. ā32 Berkley Ertl. ā34 Lewis Fisher, ā32 Carroll Gaalaas. ā33 Lawrence Hendrickson. '32 Robert Kappel. .33 John Kimmey, ā33 John Kruse. 33 Grant Lampson. ā32 Sheldon Larson. ā34 Angus MacQucen. ā34 Founded. Boston University. 1909 83 Chapters Gamma Omega Zet3 Chapter. 1925 John MacQucen. ā34 Chester Oehler. ā32 Alfred Olson. ā34 Fred Olson. 34 Martin Otto. 32 Sidney Pratt. ā34 Cedric Reiman. ā3 3 Frank Thompson. ā33 Ray O. Wolcott. ā34 1116 SoulhfJit ilh Sltttl PLEDGE I.oren Aaker T. Rex Campbell Charles Campbell Edward Holbrook Judson Holden K. C. Johnson Karl Laukkanen Robert Merz Jack Melvin Ray E. Nelson William Schweiger Olaf Thorpe Ted Valine Lyle Warren Fredrick Weidman 375 Pout touhi r.nr w pirl a lop nt titan o a ivhntlt: fat holding th hath in on toil. u'hile Htilw pulled ul the other ipptinun, Kni. Moll. Mat tton. Etlftet. Hiein iirtif Kapptin. Remit. fount. Silvtr Coot till. Konohttf. Kttniltin. Ilalpttn Founded, Columbia University. 1912 39 Chapters Alpha Alpha Chapter. 1925 ACTIVE Jerome W. Bernstein. '33 Morton Confeld. '34 David B. Davis, '32 Hcrschel Englcr. ā33 Lawrence Englcr. ā33 Irving A. Halpern, '35 Reginald R. Isaacs. ā34 Philip Katz. '33 Samuel Megibow. ā35 Alan T. Moss. ā33 Solomon D. Posner. ā33 Morris D. Rosenberg. ā32 Gilbert G. Schwartz. ā34 Samuel Segal. ā32 I Ienry Silver. '32 PLEDGE Samuel Birenzweig Sylvan Goldstein Irving J. Kapplin Harry Maycron Bernard Remis Mitchel A. Walcnsky I. Charles Zipperman 376 Paul uoopttl out the holt or Lohc Superior when hv oetd rtl a rcterue waut supply (or King hit logging rr adt Shew. Hotliitov. (yConrttr. G. IWjlor. Htihtl. Paiiiib. l ull. I'. Pjg '.r. Pinhtrlon Dtuu bt. Nwtuth. Pillion. Cooht. Vonliut. It. Stutbinf. S, Stuttn'nf. Carlin, O rctihrethl. Oonahots'lf. Gr njuorJ. Mi,I. C,t. ni, C, ill in. Otnur Chtntplin, SlatPnm. Sfcnir Mtrlnlytt. ItaiftUwimrf. MrAtir. E ihin, Umi-t-hm ill , iturfi. Summit. Iturll. Mint . fXui tr. Stor an FACULTY J. L. Bostwickc H. S. Diehl E. P. Harding Harvey Hoshour M. B. Lambic George Otterness J. H. Owens William Prosser A. H. Speer J. L. Thomas William Smith GRADUATE Gustaf A. Carlson ACTIVE Glen Bethel. '3 3 Ward Blake. 32 Harold Brynsten. '32 Everett Drake. '3? George Doyle. '33 James Ericsson, '3 3 Douglas Erskin. '32 Glen Gicre, ā33 Bernard Grangaard. ā33 Gerald Griffin. '32 Harold Carlson. ā31 James Fcslcr. ā33 William Deutsche. '3 3 Walter Margcshcimcr. ā33 Roger Hayes. '32 William Hocft. '33 George Holliday, '3 3 John Hovdc. '32 Kenneth Krost. '12 Alton Lindblom. '32 Virgil Licht. ā33 Ed McAfee. ā33 Richard Morcan, '3 2 William Morse, '32 Roy Oen. '3 3 Founded Miami University. Ohio. 1848 101 Chapters Alpha Chapter. 1881 Paul Pinkerton, '32 Eugene Rogers. '33 Chester Sitz. '3 3 Clifford Sommer. '32 Nds Stalhcim. '33 Robert Stuebing. ā33 Fred Taylor, '3 3 Maurice Pontius. '33 Charles Rief. '3 3 James Meyers. '32 Robert Tucker, '33 Robert Miner. '34 PLEDGE A. E. Agather Thomas A. Braggdon Erwin Burg George Champlin Donald Comer Morris Cooke John Donahowcr Lloyd Dreveskracht Ralph Edison Leslie Grant Keith MacIntyre Sterling Nor beck James O'Conner Robert Parrish Howard Shaw Russel Stuebing Marshall B. Taft George Taylor 377 Phi Epsilon Pi Bthe jnaked an wire section of land to the rivet at one dray tht tree were cut, and the section hauled back. Lecanl. Ctattman. Swart . S. Ilatprrn. Unit, It.tbintr b. DmtiJatt III man. Sthwrit tt. Sinvkin. ' on. W tint! tin. Koufttuo C. tiatpoa. Steal. I tttmao. Hodman. I'tiltn. jonown. Hoh mitm Founded. College of City of New York. 1904 30 Chapters Alpha Delta Chapter. 1923 FACULTY Arnold Rosenstein GRADUATE Ralph Helstcin ACTIVE Junior Robitshek. '34 Harry Rubenstein. '32 Maurice Segal. ā32 Melvin Sinykin. '35 Sam Swartz. '33 Arthur Weinstein. ā35 Henry Zon. '34 PLEDGE Bernard Dimsdale I.ee I.itman Don Schweitzer A. Lionel Brill. '35 Leonard Freeman. '3 3 Donald Graccman. '33 Maurice Grossman. '32 Elliott Hoffman. '34 Charles Halpern. '32 Samuel Halpern, 35 Sidney Kaufman. 33 Arthur Levant. '34 Ellis Peilen. '32 I0IS (Stm.vrf.fv Avtnur SoalhtaU t Ā J W Wt Ā i t Otcatinnallg Hahr ran away and roamed the great Northwest His big truth t formed the ten thousand takes j( Mintwota t f f ft Iti' F 8Ā« w . Coir. MuU-thill. lector. 8. Joimi. Uoiupomtty. htnnu NtwMI, Rurkr. heting-GoulJ, Dully. An lltirii. Jnftnutn Sthtotdtr, tltinnyian. ('entity, C. Jnntt, l.imlnrion. Al Until, Blair Platou, Kin ion. Ctsnon. Pith, Burnt. Wttntr. Slit quit i FACULTY Walter J. Breckcnridgc John C. Brown Frank E. Burch Solon J. Buck L. D. Coffman William F. Holman A. C. Krey E. S. Platou Henry Schmitz J. M. Walls Thurston Weum GRADUATE Joseph P. Rinnert ACTIVE Robert Beattie, '33 Leonard N. Bennett. '33 Beverly R. Bunn. '34 John A. Burke. '33 Willard J. Conley. '32 Donald E. Fish. '32 Vance B. Grannis. '32 J. Arthur Harris. '33 John W. Hoffman. '33 Burton H. Jones. ā34 Charles H. Jones. '33 Stanley V. Kinyon. 33 Founded. Jefferson College, 1848 73 Chapters Mu Sigma Chapter. 1 890 Waldo F. Marquart. ā3 3 Ralph V. Platou. ā34 George R. Schroeder. '35 McClelland Shcllman. 33 Lloyd W. Taylor. ā33 Ted G. Warner. ā33 PLEDGE William S. Baring-Gould Kenneth H. Blair Finn O. Bockmann Robert S. Davis Patrick H. Duffy Alanson Harris Robert E. Hatch H. Sears Lamberton Lorin K. Johnson Robert D. Montgomery Eugene T. Newhall F. Leon Sanna Mark D. Van De Water 379 Iw, Knifhli Jtnttn. KnuJtrr), Od.iuij, Raihctl. Duntjp Smith. Albfifht. Curtail. W. Jnhnuytt, Ihakt. Cailmn I'rtnat i , nut r.- AnJtnoo, Ntlton, ! unJvtcn lltitko. U. IhlOrv. Olutn. 1. Uilliof, Putnam. S'rw mJ Ktohmit llinnmy. Portoni. Johntton. CoOtt Founded. Washington and Jefferson University. 1 852 52 Chapters Beta Chapter. 1888 GRADUATE Dan Feidt ACTIVE Joe J. Calhoun, '32 Richard Carlson. '33 Albert Coffee. '32 George DeLong, ā34 Robert Dilling, '34 James Drake. 33 Melville Drisko. '33 William Dunlap. '34 John Eva. '34 Will Fawcett. '34 Carl Henning. '33 Albert Jensen. '3 3 Douglas Johnston. '32 John Knights. '33 Fred Krahmer. '32 Sanford Lungren. '34 Jack MacKay. '33 William Newgord. '34 Warren Parsons. '32 Russell Smith. '33 Donald Trenary. ā33 PLEDGE Eugene Albright Cyrus Anderson Edgar Blekre John Carroll John Dilling William Johnson Vance Johnson Leslie Knudsen Russell Nelson Robert Putnam Kenneth Olson Fred Reichert Joe Winslow 1609 Vmvtruly Avrnut Swlhnir 380 AnJntat). Wolbtan. ihnJtr FotUtr, Point. McCulhxh. lautr Durbani. SurJ'tuin. Cofixi'MUi. Kmtmtrlaht. tout ton Hunk lavlor. Unlit, Mint. Iroi Ktntt Sukhum, tjumuno llanttn. Swtnton. Jutlut Nitholt. Wald ion. bah! Halt tv UtAJam. button, hufith. SltSathltn. WtllvtJ FACULTY Ralph H. Dwan William J. Routledge GRADUATE John J. Boehrer, Jr. ACTIVE Arnold C. Aslakson. '32 Frederick W. Baumann. '33 Kenneth Ei. Benson. '32 Ralph E. Blyberg, '32 John J. Corneveaux. '34 Gerald A. Dotson. '32 James P. Emerson. '34 Robert M. Parrish. '32 John H. Harvey. '32 Lloyd Johnson. '32 Frank C. Kammerlohr. '33 Carle Ave Lallemont. '32 Wilfred H. Lauer. '34 Robert M. McAdam. ā32 Jack V. McCulloch. '32 Donald W. Mclncrny. ā32 Robert S. McNaghten. '32 Clifford W. Menz. '33 Arlcigh B. Miller. 34 Robert P. Minder. '34 Clarence Munn. '32 Courtney N. Swenson. '34 Stanley N. Swenson. '3 3 Founded. University of Pennsylvania. 1850 39 Chapters Alpha Sigma Chapter, 1915 George W. Taylor. '34 Allen M. Teeter, '32 Myron G. Ubl. '34 Ray R. Willard PLEDGE Earl H. Anderson Ben W. Bartels Marvin W. Bros Arthur A. Burck Bcrnon L. Dahl Charles H. Dunham Loren W. Erickson Grover W. Forster Hans F. Hansen Donald A. Justus Marcus H. Mattison John E. Nichols J. Phillip Potter John G. Reiter John M. Sunderson John P. Walbran 381 Phi Sigma Kappa hrt iKAāiki, Vault. Hutth. SI atari I'fttrtnn. .W moo ftrath irvoi! MiUhHI. CUth, At not Jr. Kuhrtniaihu. L fttM. uuv AMttrtan. Wnvtt. Whitt, hi tnt. I but. WicKMtam Muhin . Atnutraai. Mum . LunJ. C. Vttutan. Vithtit Founded. Massachusetts State College. 1873 52 Chapters Beta Deuteron Chapter. 1910 FACULTY Albert P. Baston Albert Jenks William Middlebrook Frank Pond Carlyle Scott Clayton E. Ebert. '33 Thomas O. Kachelmacher. Albin G. Krc .owski. '32 Donald O. Lagerlof. '34 O. Philip Lund. '34 George H. Marking. 35 George O. Murray. '32 Clarence R. Peterson. '33 Daniel B. Pickett. '32 E. Kenneth Pottle. '3 3 Hot C. Swenson. '32 Lyman C. Weaver. '34 Jack W. Wickstrom. '33 PLEDGE Wilford Anderson David Bloch '33 Clinton M. Butts William Chard John Cracrafi LeRoy DuBrucq Corwin Piss Harries Hibbard William Hoff Raymond Holm Albert Kelly Edward Larson Gordon Lawler Ambrose Measure E. Gordon Peterson Francis Remus William G. White GRADUATE Byron J. Olson John H. Peterson Paul E. Weber ACTIVE Elmer W. Ahlstrom. '32 Jack L. Armstrong. '33 Roman F. Arnolde. '33 Fred H Brockman. '32 Donald G. Burch. '32 John P. Byrne. '32 Thomas F. Clark. '32 Edson M. Curry. '33 Ig.; '4' j;. ⢠? I lift Ai'tnat Southron 382 All the buildin t of Pat. | uoāi camp utcre on . hid pulled thi id hole out I. HooJ, U O'vtn. It. XWim, (ā¢ā¢mu. Sttnfit. Gtlltit Uaharxv timet. Webb. M. Stlton. I:.. O.'iorj Ctoofft. tUr nal, Sriltr. button. VotpaM. RrtJtmut ā¢Sinu. Cannot. Matt, Wotih. Jotrnioo FACULTY Harold E. Briggs John P. Turner GRADUATE Robert Nethcrly ACTIVE Elmer Apmnn. '33 Helmcr Brockhoff. '33 John Burton. '3 3 George Bredemus, 34 David Clough. '34 George Connor. '32 Milford Gillett. '34 Roderick Hood. '32 Lawrence Johnson. '33 Cliff Mace. '33 Morton Nelson. '33 Myron Nestor. '32 Otto Phares. '33 Clarence Reierson. '34 Vernon Scott. '33 Lucian Vorpahl. '3 3 William Walsh. '34 Founded. University of Virginia. 1868 80 Chapters Beta Chi Chapter. 1922 PLEDGE Ralph Adams Frank Biernat Bernard Dombeck Spencer Gartz Lester Holt Charles Mahaney Ralph Nelson Eskil Olson Magnus Olson John Roning Ernest Seiler Vernon Stengle Walter Sochacki Carrall Webb Karl Zeimes Halt %naktJ jn entire Mnun of land to tht ruw tit one drug; the treex were cut, ond the k tion hauled hixh Psi Upsilon Knohlauth. Ovp with. Harm I. ā 'ā¢levtnioo, TivetJa. Pnrwn. Campbell. T. Iltinrith I). MtConnon. It. MtConnon. J. MotiU. Iltalv. Moeonev. Wilhinton. Melirt IlibhaeJ. Iluphn. U. Ileintitli. Bout etl. IV. Xlorni. OJttl. Cot Ion, John ion l.olib, M'hti . Uaion. Britt. I Ur lull. Arty. Coleman Callup, linfet. Baebtee. Sawyer. Palme. Shotkey. Ilaebetle. Sleothman Ctn oeif. I.awler, Quail. Heim, Simpton. Vila I. Ilutlt u. Somtrn Founded. Union College. 1833 27 Chapters Mu Chapter. 1 891 FACULTY Arthur T. Mann Frederick M. Mann Henry F. Nachtrieb Joseph Pike GRADUATE Jack C. fiarton John P. Crowley II John A. Hager Ralph F. Merchant Philemon C. Roy Maurice H. Strothman John Tweedy ACTIVE John C. Barzcn. '34 Roger Barrett. '33 Raymond N. Beim. '32 Martin S. Buehler, 33 James H. Campbell. '33 John C. Cotton. '35 W. Wallace Cowan. '32 Otis J. Dypwick. '32 Robert G. Engel, '3 3 John R. Fry, Jr.. ā33 Milton A. Gallup. '32 Howard G. Gibbs. ā33 Lloyd A. Gregory, '32 Harvey Haeberie, '34 Charles T. Healy. '34 Charles T. Hibbard. '34 Richard D. Huxley. '33 Thomas R. Lawler. '32 John E. Mason. '34 Donald F. McConnon. '33 Donald L. Melin. '32 William M. Moroney. '34 Walter F. Muir. '32 Jay G. Odell. Jr.. ā34 James E. Orme, ā32 Newton W. Pierson. 33 Robert R. Pinger. ā32 Thomas H. Quail. ā32 Fred W. Ruplin. '34 Albert T. Schuster. '32 Curtis B. Shockey. '34 Vernon C. L. Simpson. ā32 Henry N. Somsen. Jr.. '32 Jack M. Vilctt. '33 PLEDGE Marshall L. Abbey. Jr. James B. Arey William T. Boutell James P. Coleman. Jr. William J. Devaney Herbert S. Hartzell Thomas G. Heinrich Lynn H. Johnson. Jr. Henry K. Knoblauch John C. Lobb William H. Morris John R. Morris. Jr. Stephen G. Palmer Jack A. Price Waldorf I. Reichert James F. Richards C. Lyman G. Ritzinger Charles Sawyer W. Claude Stevenson, Jr. William A. Wilkinson 384 S tnjhr, Oootint, O'StmJttmrnv, Joliomn. fttmon. I'unk. Clark Noeti. KoJIorJ. Ilunblnton, Htthmtn. Orl-iuh Foliar J. Khnjtl lluuhlu n. Xtonh. NnilU FACULTY ACTIVE J. M. Anderson W. C. Coffey D. MacMillan J. F. McClendon L. F. Miller C. A. Moore George O. Pierce George Tuttle J. E. Wodsedalek GRADUATE Harry Copps Henry Filiatrault John S. Gibbons Franklin Kline Ralph Bachman. '33 Goffe Benson. ā34 Eugene Carlson. 33 Irving Clark. '34 Robert Derrick. '3 3 Malcolm Ellingson. 34 Robert Funk. 34 Jack Gleason. '34 Lester Goetting. '32 Fid Hutchison. ā33 Karl Johnson. '33 Robert Klingel. '32 Allan Marsh. '33 Allyn Miller. 33 Philip Neville. ā33 Harold Noran. ā34 Chester Nortz. ā33 James OShaughncssy. '34 It If l uV.Yum Avtnur Soulbrau Founded. University of Alabama. 1856 106 Chapters Minnesota Alpha Chapter. 1902 Eric Pollard. ā33 Lawrence Radford. '34 William Schultz. ā34 Jack Shaw. '34 Jack Storkerson. '34 John Urbatch. '34 PLEDGE George Anderson Philip Bengtson Kenneth Curie Lewis Gilpin Philip Halvorson Warren I lanson William Huntington Allen Johnson Gordon Jensen Paul l.al.iberte Dave MacMillan Thomas Mowcry Roland Muessing Edward Olson Donald Peterson Fred Porter Stanley Radzom James Ricily Clement Roach Field Starks Thomas Sutherland Wade Tozier 385 Paul could rarity pert a Ioq a than at a whittle by holdmij the bath at one end. while Habe pullrd at the other. Sigma Chi 1'i rri, Jovi Sollir, Cloi J.m. Ptoditl. Sworn. SihntUti. ftnntt t ,oJ rv. (i iiiwit, Iāftuin. Si ā¢Ā«h. Strone, Coin en. I il u. Yount. KinĀ fy. Ihthc. Crutram, Fvtelt. UnfttniO'i IlnthiH. Johoion. MorK. AnJftutn. Sluii nw. Colbrrf, AmyMaMl WoOtiruH. I'UcnJtr. tillySUiJ Nufriil. firming. Cirttne Founded. Miami University. 1855 94 Chapters Alpha Sigma Chapter. 1885 FACULTY W. Li. Brooke D. Davis H. New hart GRADUATE K. Abernathy R. Jordan H. Vogel ACTIVE Robert Anderson. '54 John F. Claydon. '54 Maurice Colberg. 54 Noel Fleming. 52 William Gleason. ā54 Henry Greene. '55 John LaDuc. ā52 Robert H. Lillyblad, ā55 John Lendvay. ā54 Gill Kingery. ā55 Walter Mork. ā54 Laurence Nugent. ā 5 5 Robert Nelson. '54 James Pearce. '5 5 Vernon Pearson. '5 5 John Pfaender. ā55 Fred Riebe. ā55 Stanley Salter. '54 Harley Schneider. '52 Jack Schock. '55 Robert Strong. '52 Lloyd Sturgeon. '52 Robert Tenner. '54 Leonard Swanbeck. '55 Robert Woodruff. '5 5 PLEDGE William Corrigan Milo Evarts Milford Graham George Greene Walter Halstead Douglas Hayward Winston Hey hoe Edwin Joos William Johnson William Proffitt Burton Ringbloom John Sonnen Charles Stevenson Carl Tengler James Ungerman John Young PI nil it D lin. Pear i n.tif ifff' Kutamjer. Cottim, WAinioo Xratlnrt. Q. Ihir. irA, Skiu.vi, t'eablftr. lirant. Uttr. Martin I'. IhirJitk. litlnuiff. Ctafk. I loom I. Sat ton. Jobnu n Htjain Culltt. Shat it, S'tlion, Dahl. Printer. Drake FACULTY William H. Hmmons Archie Jones John L. LaMonte Horace Morse Lieut W. Richmond ACTIVE Garfield Anderson, '33 Frank Atkinson. '34 James Barr. '32 Eugene Burdick. '33 Quentin Burdick. '32 Carl Carlstrom. '34 Burton Clark. '34 William Collins. '34 Donald Crabtree. '33 Leonard Cutler. 3 3 Rudolph Dahl. '32 hounded. Virginia Military Institute. 1867 98 Chapters Gamma Tau Chapter. 1904 Francis Drake. '32 Roy Del in. '34 John Del more. '34 Russel Grant. '34 Henry Griffith. Jr.. '3 3 Kenneth Haugen. '32 Kenneth Ho watt. '3 3 Harold Johnson, '33 Larry Kulander. '35 Charles Marlin. 34 J en Mattison. '32 Milton Mattson. '3 3 Earl W. Nelson. '32 James Omarr, '32 Jack Pfieffer. '34 Gale Patterson. 3 3 Gale Pricster. ā 3 3 Everett Pearson. ā32 Ned Saxton. ā34 Ferris Seashore. '32 Mortier Skewcs. '32 Harold Shaffer. '33 PLEDGE William Dreesen Jack Entriken Virgil Flynn Harold Hanson Phillip Heddack Gordon Lagcrstrom Ralph Newell Burton Parriott Evan Stone Evcrette West rum Lyle Wcstrum Dave William Burton Waldron rout marked hit. logt by pinehing out a piece with hit brawny hand; but bis men had fo use an axe to u-afp them Slone. WieJ. Itorelloe). Hitt. Hunmne. V utloth II,lion. SterruJ. Ano. I'm . Cp ortJM. Cooh IhrJ O'Amito. SchonJtl. DoviJtott. Cheitlionio ). Dunlop. Sloe Key Loner- Skinnri 't'inhir N' ii. Solomon. Kclm, (Steen Pounded. Richmond. Virginia, 1901 67 Chapters Alpha Chapter. 1916 FACULTY John J. Craig Ingwald Priswold Charles V. Net Dan N. Rice Porter P. Wiggins GRADUATE Tegnel C. Grondahl ACTIVE Pred J. Cook. '32 Harold Christianson. '32 Dan D'Amico. '32 John Davidson. '3 3 Don Egcrmaycr, '33 William Green. '32 Theodore Hilton. '34 Gordon Jackson. '33 Walter Kannc. '33 Edwin Kclm. '33 Stephen Lange. '3 3 Edward MacKay. '34 Lynden McIntosh. '33 Clifford Nash. 32 Harold Ness. '32 Wayne Plank. '32 Lei and Posz. '34 Nile Running. '3 3 Harry Schandel. 34 Gordon Sevcrud. '33 William Skinner. ā33 Ward Smith. '3 3 Hubert Swanson. ā33 Dow Tinker. '33 Edmund Tulloch, '32 Wilson Wied. '32 Carl Zapffe. '33 PLEDGE Frank Arco William Bird Walter Duckett Tom Dunlop Stephen Erickson William Ferguson. Jr. William Hazelton Marvin Kent Leland Larson Edward Long Waynne Stone 388 Tau Kappa Epsilon Hahe would lonwimn int.ih up Murid a drive and drink all I he Walrr out of the tit'tr. having the log: high and i n MtCealh, Wtlihifir. l tcu. Kory. IhtrlutJi TumtuJ. Crimtt Murphty. llnrotr. Sullu'on. Nixon. Slhnttl. tt'ofih f . Calvin, ll.inito, ( httvtt. iayuofu Kiminthi. SkonottJ. l.toit lltll Muth Will. Smith. C. Ctlptn. Durxan ft Ur loo. SloJif. KimMr. Kitty. Ltu A, Mitlurt. l.inJittam FACULTY T. J. Catlin Samuel Eddy R. ! . Grismcr R. L. Kozclka W. H. Stead F F. Wildebush GRADUATE O. H. Chistophcrson A. O Lampland J. E. Lofstrom ACTIVE John E. Baggalcy, ā32 Fred D. Burg. ā34 Howard A. Cheever. '32 George L. Cummins. ā32 George G. Davis. ā34 Dwight W. Duncan. '32 Weston B. Grimes. '32 James B. Kaminski. ā32 L. Fallon Kelly. '33 Charles W. Kennedy. '34 Kenneth L. Kimble. '34 Harry I.athrpp. '34 Richard M. Leick. ā35 C. Stanley Eindstrom. '34 Ralph H. Loofbourrow. '33 Marvin J. McClure. '34 Robert F. Mader. 34 Founded. Illinois Wesleyan College. 1899 36 Chapters Theta Chapter. 1917 William F. Murphcy. '34 Donald B Peterson. '34 Allyn W. Schoen. '34 Berger Skonnard. '34 Joseph P. Sullivan. '32 Francis M. Walsh. '34 James R. West. '34 PLEDGE Carl G. Caspers William D. Duncan Torvald Eberhardt Henry J. From melt Robert Gould A. Shelton I iall Robert E. Hansen James W. Horner James W. K1 ingle Art G. Lease James E. McGrath Charles H Muth Norman J. Nixon Richard C. Poucher Ruddy B Schnell John H. Smith Edward B. Tunstead Harrison B. Wclshonsc 389 All the huihlintfi of Paul Hun Han't tump Wete nn thills: Babe pulled (Ik whole outfit from one logt iny me to the next Theta Chi t-i Ā£ i - f fTfji 9L ' M m rrf L ā mk ā iw A ' Ā« j;t t f ? 1 ⢠ft | f t (irwWIhlU, Slrntutf. I.. Ilmen, llendetton Shipper d, Overt. Cl fNr , jfiw SOiummtu, Kmyhi fold, (Xrctn. hit jell. Witueh, Cm , VĀ«w o. PoIIwi wm O. Utnvm, Siru Smith. Hubbard. I tie bum, Spinier. I yiyi Founded, Norwich University. I 856 48 Chapters Alpha Pi Chapter. 1924 FACULTY Lewis Beeson H. A. Da laker James M. Edmunds Henry A. Hrikson GRADUATE Paul W. Gilpin J. Riis Owre ACTIVE Carl E. Erickson. '52 Henry B. Erikson. '35 Thomas K. Ford. '33 Ralph A. Fritzell. '34 Walter L. Geist. '34 Richard W. Girvin, '33 Harold C. Grunewald. '33 Lloyd M. Hansen. '34 Orrin A. Hanson. '33 David Henderson. '33 John C. Ilubbard, '33 Robert L. Lynn, 32 Lloyd C. Knight. '32 Robert J. Niess. '33 J. Riis Owre. '32 Henry Polkinghorn. '34 William M. Schummers. '34 George N. Seirup. '32 Charles G. Sheppard. '34 Leslie C. Smith. '32 Marvin P. Spittler. 32 Lawrence L. Vance, '32 Richard L. Varco. '34 Lester J. Welch. '35 Gordon W. Wittich. ā32 PLEDGE Paul W. Gilpin Melvin G. Person Russell T. Peterson Martin Senn Bruce W. Stenberg 390 lidbr would not work unU'ti inow wax on thr ground. in th logging road were whitrwjzhrJ in tuntmtr. to dtomhr him Ttipp. William, r. Il.itbloi llaJJin, I'athrr Slain, Dnnahoo. Sltiihuāv XltKibbin. Wrtli. Cmi, Ol Ilham, J. Ilolblm Ihion. Aaoumh. DĀ«v( . ( ..Jim Piht. Lawttrxt. Path AnJttxnn, Skimut, Whtlr. thaiifll. Ptltfltm It uhlan, WitnJ, Inftr. KamilonJ, AJ.wu. Smith Founded. Union College. 1847 29 Chapters Tau Deuteron Chapter. 1 892 FACULTY James Davies Guy Stanton Ford ACTIVE Cuyler C. Adams. 33 Judson H. Anderson. '34 John Bergan. '34 Robert H. Biron. 33 Reginald C. Cushing. '33 I.aVern J Donahoo. ā34 N. Lawrence Enger. '32 Clifford Erickson. '32 Leo Gans. '32 Fred C. Halbkat. '33 Noel G. Henke. ā34 Thad B. Lawrence, ā34 Addison M. Parker. 34 Robert V. Peterson. '34 Joe M. Pike. ā3 3 John B. Pugh. ' 3 2 Max O. Ramsland. '34 Willis D. Salisbury. '35 Richard S. Skinner. 34 Howard B. Smith. '33 Robert L. Stultz. '34 Thomas G. Wellman. '34 Bob White. ā33 Gordon D. Williams. 34 Robert C. Wood. '34 PLEDGE Kenneth A. Awsumb Arnold Brassett Robert D. Doyle Frederick W. Halbkat Robert E. McKibbin Willard V. Ofsthum Robert S. Tripp Charles J Wells 391 K fin, Kai , kibmck. Sthpoh. ShtntJliitf, Levy ll.ilfum Wtirmnn. Hiuitrl. Iipnuei. Stufiito, liaihn Ftinhif. Millet. Koolith. tlkmJ. Sum Simon Miller. '32 Everett C. Ravits, '34 Leonard Ribnick. '33 Herman Rosenblatt. '33 Marvin C. Schpok. ā34 Phil Shanedling. ā35 Jesse Shapiro. '34 FACULTY Raphael J. Koflf Arthur W. Margct Samuel H. Maslon Sam Stein GRADUATE Nathan Lifson Paul Wolff ACTIVE Robert D. Bailin, '35 Bernard Bokhaut. '34 William A. Brussel. '35 Milton M. Ecinberg. '34 Justin D. Halpern. '35 StephenS Harris. '3 3 Gerald S. Juster. '35 Samuel Karby. '34 Sheldon M. Koff. ā34 Howard S. Kohn. '35 Burnell S. Koolish. '32 Philip J. Levy. '34 Bernard I.ipman. '34 392 Myer R. Shark, ā34 Philip J. Stern. ā32 Emanuel Weinstein. '35 Jerry Zalkind, '33 PLEDGE Sidney Blicker Arnold Crane Justin M. Druck Richard M. Light Bernard A. Smiler 15 L'mveemv UvnĀ«ir Svnihetir Founded. College of the City of New York. 1909 39 Chapters Kappa Chapter. 1915 Theta Xi r ā : JTi M '5 3 i t t T l ā Ā Ā ! r t Rw Jot. the cook. had a dinner horn to hit , and hr bleu: it to hard that pine trtrt frit, and euefonei wire trart d Hntntfitn. Ciult'tn. Hinght n. Johnmn. O'Htion. Obttg. Btmii Itontotk, fiogtt Siodnlg. I ide. l.unJe. Ihll Olit Ihnntttg. Matifuardl. C luliSi. Ptmif Hathtin . Corbrll Klint. l.unJ. HuhiuJoon. G. A. Andttutn. Kimmtt. Htown. G. H. Audition FACULTY A. S. Culler John Durfee Henry Hartig R. R. Herman Elmer Johnson J. V. Marten is George Priester H. C. Richardson F. B. Rowley W. T. Ryan GRADUATE Lawrence Clousing Donald Rhunke Howard Holmgren, '33 Donald Eide. '32 Clifford Gramith. '34 Erving Johnston. 33 William Hill. '32 George Kimmel. '35 Neil Kline. '32 Wesley Lund. '33 Donald O'Brian. '32 Curtiss Oberg. '32 Thomas Rogers. '33 Founded. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 1864 32 Chapters Psi Chapter. 1920 PLEDGE Kenneth Bern is Luke Corbett Alden Fredin Norris I unde George Marquardt William Matheson Francis Stodola ACTIVE George R. Anderson. '32 George A. M. Anderson. '33 Charles Bingham. ā32 Kenneth Brown. '32 Norman Carlson. '33 Donald Childs. '33 James Dennerly, '33 John Hancock. '33 Zeta Psi Baht tnaked an entire Ā«ttan id land to tht rivet at ant drag; tht tree uārco tut and tht jccfioo hauled hath Larson. MiCiur. iprlirmn. 1. Ilotnt. forint Van. Snnu.tin la.,wĀ NitMat. ft-nur. t njnttrk. Comrdm. AJtmi. fink. Lorkturi Lrvif). .Vrtittn. Itawtum. Uuuirr. II. Vwrmni. Uunta. . JUoniiuv. J milMW Cfowiir. MtKtnnr. W'vcrtl. Wmlltn. Ilrunrh. Thomas. Ilatrhrf flint Srtion. lloJirn. I'. Ilnrnt. Simpum. totJwnh. Johnuui Founded. New York University. 1847 30 Chapters Alpha Beta Chapter. 1899 FACULTY Walter Finkc J. I. Parcel J. C. Sanderson GRADUATE S. Arthur Harris Donald Johnson. 33 Gordon McCrac, ā32 Clifford McKenzie. '34 Wilmert Maurer. '32 Walter May. '33 Manccl Mitchell. '34 William Montague. ā34 James Moore. '3 3 Donald Nelson. '34 Lowell Nicholas. '34 Kenneth Simpson. '32 John Spelman. '34 Lee Thomas. ā33 Vernon Watters. '34 Harvey Wyvcll. '3 3 PLEDGE Vance Brown Edward Habberstad Glen Haycraft John Landmark Harold [.arson John MacGowan George Morrissey Russell Nelson Robert Nielsen Alfred Papas Alvin Robertson Howard Snowden Floyd Voss ACTIVE Allan Adams. '34 Gordon Bodicn. '32 Miles Chadwick. '33 Fred Closway. '33 Donald Constans. '32 Ray Dustrud. '33 Marshall Ervin. '32 l.eonard I ink. '32 Phillip Harris. '33 Charles Hawkins. '33 Wallace Hughes. '33 Everett Hussey. '34 394 The bees that Paul Bunyan imported to eradicate the mosquitoes caused trouble far more serious than that they were intended to cure. They fell in love. Bees and mosquitoes intermarried. And the offspring, as so often happens, were a great deal worse than their parents. They had stingers fore and uft. and could gel their victims coming and going. Loggers were in const ant danger of attach, and were defenseless. ACAItEMIC SOIMMMTIIS 395 Anjrm't. John too, Knlllt. Mahti Pmmrlr, Out rut ninth, I hti'int), Chtiilitltun WMkttmao. HovJr. ttrllioamtii, Sāmill .UariVw iiin Sobolh . (itoiftton hr nth, Willi. Slittnojn 1āctir. K inf, (ā¢lOffiuit. Poppt Wood. I bmp Lttnuto, Xlttaihirn, OJilt, Stultiihitl, Hr ft . Hallow). Sttmano. Iālllil REPRESENT ATI VES Mary W Andrews Harriet Thwing | Alpha Chi Omega Betty Wells Margaret Stevenson | Della Gamma Dorothy Georgeson Helen Ncimann | Alpha Delta Theta Katherine Tharp Mildred Welander | Della Zeta Janet Brown Helen Loomis | Alpha Delta Pi Eleanor Evcnson Elaine Hovde | Gamma Phi Beta Inez Johnson June Smallwood | Alpha Gamma Delta Dorothea Poppc Jane Wooley | Kappa Alpha I licta Mary Pettit Dorothy Verrell | Alpha Omieron Pi Marjorie Berens Win Ellen McEachcrn | Kappa Delta Marjorie Myers Janet Parmcle | Alpha Phi Moana Odell Mary Spooner | Kappa Kappa Gamma Margaret Christiansen Esther F:rcn h Gladys Anderson Mary Hunt j Alpha Xi Delta ā Beta Phi Alpha Sylvia Diesner Anna he lie Rivctis Edna Bellingmeir lone Sobotka Betty Wood jphi Mu | Phi Omega Pi Pi Beta Phi Dorothy King Margaret MacNaughton | Chi Omega Dorlhy Mahlc Margaret Wackerman | Sigma Kappa Jeanne Halloran Josephine Pease j Delta Della Della Alice Bardwell Vivian Johnson | Zeta Tail Alpha 396 Ottouothillu fiabc tan tiuMV and foamed l be tifetil North us it HiĀ big truths formed the ten thousand lakes of Minnesota. Van AmiJatt. Nrlion. Coiiillo. Willful!. Pelieion. HhtJin. DlMM , l . Kilty Oitn. Dmyhtny. John!on, AnJnwt. Atmileyt. Itufhn, tlunno lUthihf. if. Kilty, Cumminyt. I'tone. I. yon. Ht'jtrtUiiJ Retry. Jbwiny. Smith. Davty. Uoālmy FACULTY Gertrude Dinsmore Olive Johnston Mary Kuypers ACTIVE Mary W. Andrews. ā34 Bertha Barry. '32 Margaret Cummings. '34 Betty Darling. '33 Adelaide Davey. '32 Eileen 1 lansen. '34 Dorothy Kelly. '33 Laura Hughes. '34 Mildred Lyon. '32 Merry Mable Merrick. '34 Merylc Miller. '32 Charlotte Molitor. '32 Kate Pearce. '34 Margit Pearson. ā32 Valborg Peterson. ā32 Lucille Rhedin, 33 Louise Smith. ā33 Harriet Thwing. '33 Caroline Van Arnsdall. '34 Founded. DePauw University. 1885 56 Chapters Alpha Lambda. 1921 PLEDGE Marguerite Armitage Evelyn Bjornstad l.orraine Costello Ruth Daugherty Alice Duncan iH 11Ih Aiitwe Sruthi.m 397 Louise Hatfield Marion Johnson Margaret Kelly Catherine Kennedy Lee Nelson Imclda Ochs Phyllis Savage Gladys Willcutt Wilton Wilhtitt, MtFttrun, St our. tlrnr. Jtttoll Wrbtr, I alt unit. Ilaym-rn. UāiĀ i Mart'll. Catprnut. Whilt l umivxiiftf. Munnm.t ' JJ. KuUnJtr I j ( . SlouJl RnllimMi LooĀ WH. I unJStfj. Fittltt. RtOuMt. Cottinx Founded. Wesleyan Female College. 1 85 1 55 Chapters Alpha Rho Chapter. 1923 Helen Todd. ā32 Margaret Weber. '33 Helen Wilcox. '33 Jane Wood. '3 3 PLEDGE ACTIVE Janet Brown. '33 Elcneta Carpenter. '32 Estelle Collins. '33 Jessie Dunwoody, '34 Jean Fieslcr. '33 Wanda Fundberg. '32 Lillian Hall. 33 Harriett Jarvis. '34 Marjorie Jewell. '32 Adelaide Lacy. '3 3 Helen Loomis. '34 Mary Louise Loomis. '33 Jeanette Manning, '33 Betty Reutiman. '33 Martha Kuhnkc, ā32 Beatrice Scow. ā34 Louise Stoudt, ā33 Lillian f lagman Margaret Kulander Jeanne La France Doris McFcrran Ruth Sharp Betty White Miriam Witham Margaret Zclner 1009 Unn'tfulv Avtnut SrMlhmtl 398 I'atil uooptd out the hot lor l.ahe Superior uihrn hr arc'd id a retrtvt ivuh-r tupplv lor icint} hn loi omy toadt Alpha Delta Theta AnJenon. AroĀ . St oil vt it, AtViJeun, ttiliuw lUmheJeon Wimarwi, OJioo, Millet, (irMjn Ā llotnur. felt firm GRADUATE Dcrricc Anderson Helen Heggen Margaret Nordholm Margaret Wulff Helen Neimann. '33 Mildred Peterson. '33 Lee Olson. '34 Muriel White. '33 PLEDGE Founded. Transylvania College, 1917 23 Chapters Tau Chapter. 1931 ACTIVE Ann Arvidson. '32 Dorothy Georgeson. '33 Hope Hosmer. '3 3 Moira Manning. '33 Dona Miller. '33 Evelyn Burchedean Irma Ekstrom Evelyn Kron Helen Stafford r06 llth Avenue Southern 399 tit ait. Moote. KirS. (iintt Chtlftm, Danohut, Sttlty IttJhtlJ Rthtr l.tuJto. Compton, t.nbtra, (Nun. SmJtt. Stho itbutf, Smollett Slatoubrey. Finh. SniJtt. 1āireet, UtCttt, Nirftoh, SmullwetJ SI nJtnh ll. ItnttaJ, Jutinven. Iliu-k, lo eetv. Harper. Potto. RnjnryaiJntt Founded, Syracuse University, 1904 46 Chapters Delta Chapter. 1908 GRADUATE Charlotte Larson ACTIVE Jane Albrecht. ā33 Jane Baker. '33 Evelyn Baumgardner. '32 Dorothea Bradt. '33 Delphine Brooks. 33 Jane Cadwallader. '34 Virginia Chclgren. '32 Elizabeth Compton. '34 Helen Mae Costello. '34 Eileen Donohue. ā34 Olga Fink, ā33 Dorothy Finstad. ā32 Irene Fogcrty. '32 Elizabeth Goetz. ā34 Lillian Haggard. '33 Mary Harper, '32 Bessie Hawk. '32 Inez Johnson. '3 3 Leila Kcncke. '33 Noel Kirk. '33 Freda Lauden. '34 Kay Loberg, '32 Dorothy Belle McCrec. ā34 Mildred McWilliams. '32 Janet Macoubrey. '34 Priscilla Mendenhall. ā32 Dorothy Moore. '32 Hope Nichols. '34 Ruth Olsen. '33 Rhoda Pierce, '32 Phyllis Porter. '32 Jacqueline Redfield. ā34 Frances Schomburg. ā33 Evelyn Seeley. ā33 Margaret Shaw. '32 June Smallwood. ā33 Betty Smollett, '34 Frances Snider. '32 Lucy Snider. ā32 PLEDGE Elsie Carlson Carolyn Davies Jane Elwell I lelcn Grenier Betty Grey Janet Johnson Dorothy Johnston Betty Leitz Inez Mattson Peggy Jane Mills Jean Tucker Ruth Van Nest III I Ith Avenue Snullieatt 400 snout was on the wound, to ihr logging road t were whitewashed in summer, to deceive turn Alpha Omicron Pi Smith. Kotor Coy Spent' Swvmon 5 hik ftrv n h tar llutthu. Jtmtn. Gatin UnhotJum, V-flker Bt'oquttt UnJt Jehl Athlon, Simp ton. Ilomme hoeh t C.oiotovt, Conlty. Oevit. LenJrum Skinner StokftJ. Ctooth. Uulr.ne, ttokkr. tt'of r. So u. Silvert V It, Olivet. UVign. 'rim. CJe k. Wood inf. UāttJ FACULTY lone Jackson ACTIVE Jean Ashton. ā34 Betty Bakke. ā3 3 Ruth Brace. '33 Margaret Bryan. '33 Dorothy Clark. '32 Helen Conley. '32 Catherine Cosgrove. '32 Mary Coy. '3 3 Lorraine Crouch. ā33 Margaret Davis. '34 Ethelmac Eylar, '34 Ruth Gasink. '34 Irma Hammerbacher. '35 Helen Huseby. '34 Marjorie Jensen. '33 Inez Kolar. '32 Alice Linsmayer. ā33 Margaret Mulroy. '33 Elaine Nortz. '34 I.aurme Oliver. '33 Mary Pettit. '32 Helen Richardson. '33 Ruth Scofield. '33 Marie Sclvik. '34 Margaret Skinner. '33 Eloise Smith. '34 Founded. Barnard College. 1897 43 Chapters Tau Chapter. 1902 Dorothy Sonnenfelt. '33 Helen Spencer. '34 Irene Underdahl. '34 Dorothy Verrell. ā33 Elizabeth Volker. '32 Doris Ward. '32 Ruth Wilson. '32 Lenore Wolfe. '33 Mary Woodring, '3 3 PLEDGE Aileen Bergquist Alta Davis Helen Claire Landrum Eleanor Marshall Irene Murray Alice Nienaber Gayle Sampson Neota Silvers Maxine Swenson 401 Pauli, axemen sharpened their axes by tolling iron down hills. and holding the edges ctiaitul them tu thru went hit. Mlfff'i Heat Set I. M fM. t'lumilr, Wtotne. I'ovr, llunlir. Ktbtoth Strulhttn. GfrtWi. Van Sithlr. Millar. Krllty, ftw t ant Cnnnntlv. Keyti. Knnita.1, Ftoantr, Field. M. Oltn .yarn. UomW Knoll, Ml l.aufhtin, Colmari. MtCratktn, Coon AUtlJ, Wouitf, llmretuotk. Mo it, lluniwfton. MannttuJ Founded, Syracuse, New York. 1 872 35 Chapters Epsilon Chapter, 1890 ACTIVE Jane Affcld. ā32 Margret Babcock. ā32 Mary Ella Brackett. '34 Mary Jane Coleman, '33 Jessie Coons. ā33 Barbara Dow, '34 Mary Field, '33 Katherine Frogner. '34 Mary Gardner. '34 Lavender Greaves. '33 Elizabeth Haverstock. 33 Margaret Huntington. '34 Renee Keyes, '34 Eleanor Knott. '34 Constance Lane. '33 Betty McCracken. '34 Helen McLaughlin. '3 3 Dorothy Mannerud. '33 Mary Alice Magaw. '34 Jane Millar. '33 Alice Morrison. '34 Eugenia Mott. '32 Marjorie Myers. '33 Ellen Oren. '32 Mary Louise Oren. '35 Janet Parmele. '34 Mary Proper. '35 Catherine Van Sickle, '34 Jacl Wells. '34 Ellen Wcarne. '32 Ruth Woutat. '32 PLEDGE Jane Connolly Ruth Herbert Mary Hunter Ruth Keirstead Betty Kelley Ruth Lyon Martha Page Mary Ann Strathern 402 Alpha Xi Delta Juhruon. Compton. Ohon, Uato). Chtiilttuon. Cook (latlotk. SttmuuJ, Alhimon. Httthrk, Cllk. HtomtaJ. Halhttl Foatut. fttnth. II. ftwiMl. 1āttnoit. Steti, Ou'tni Joint. HuM nan. A. Ihomat. Shipptt. Wtyrant FACULTY Kathryn Cook. 32 Clara H. Koenig Evelyn Fouscr. 34 Founded. Lorraine Kranhold Esther French. '33 Galesburg College. 1893 ACTIVE Eleanor Johnson. '34 54 Chapters Mu Chapter. 1907 Elsie Atkinson. '32 Laura Berchek. ā34 Marie A. Jones. '33 Virginia Olson. '32 Elizabeth Brunstad. '32 Dorothy Owens. '32 Ruth Stemsrud. '33 Pauline Buhlman, ā32 Ruth Rathert. '33 Alice Thomas. '32 Margaret Christenson. '34 Margaret Rarig. '33 Helen Thomas. '34 Helen Compton. '33 Helen Sears. '32 Myrtle Weyrens. '32 Dorothy Belle Clark. '33 Elizabeth Shippee. '3 3 PLEDGE Fern Garlock Deloris Prescott 403 Beta Phi Alpha All the buihlintjx oi Paul Bun-uun'i comp were on tkidt: Bobs pulled the whole outfit front ope logymu life to the next f Imki I houu Mann. Mulallv Dr B- Ccuiuvy. Bonouāi ftipha. tlaaiuh. Hanjotph Ihm irud, Childt. lUirkt. Coir. Hnily W'texr Ittvif. ,Sulim, I1 aultoo. IUiihuJomnx Hum. Andennn Founded. Berkeley. California. 1909 32 Chapters Kappa Chapter. 1924 Judith Mulally. ā33 Martha Neilsen. '34 Dorothy Paulson. 32 Irene Randolph. '32 Sylvia Weese. '34 Miriam Clarke. '32 Anne De Boer. '34 FACULTY Eleanor Anderson GRADUATE Mary Meda Burke Aurelia Childs Emily Ripka Katherine Thayer ACTIVE Gladys Anderson. '33 Delores Baarsch. '33 Marian Bartholomew. '33 Dorothy E. Black. '33 Agnes Conway. '32 Genevieve Haugsrud. '32 Mary Hunt. '32 Evelyn Mann. '32 PLEDGE Margaret Beyer Glee Burrows Janet Cole Rita Herrly Marian Horke ItOI SuuihtoU lib Vi ml 404 Mulvthill. Coo A, tllur. Homtn. Ctlltvh, Notion. Stymouf Holt. Jobnion. Hostl Kototh. IāontfotJ. foppc. 5 humi tt lulpit. faun. Otr Krtithbpvm. ChOtttJ Hopktm. Ilomon, Hath, Houmen. Btomto. SteiljonalJ llthn Kalmh. Knott. I man. hilji, Itaniil, HotNou hti.n. Kin? FACULTY Dorothy Hosford GRADUATE Elinor Gould Gretchcn Pause Founded, University of Arkansas. 1895 89 Chapters Pi Beta Chapter. 1921 ACTIVE Catherine Bauman. '34 Eleanor Boyer. '32 Betty Broman. '32 Helen Carlson. '32 Helen Clifford. '32 Virginia Childs, '33 Helen Cook. '3 3 Myra Daniel. ā32 Marjorie Hansen. ā34 II) 10th Autnui Soalhtotl 405 Margaret Hanson. 34 Regina Hoff. '33 Dorothy Hopkins. ā34 Janet Johnson. 34 Hazel Kalash. 33 Helen Kalash, ā33 Dorothy King. ā33 Mary Alice 1-arson. '32 Helen MacDonald. 33 Margaret MacNaughton. Betty Mulvehill. ā33 Chrystal Nation. 3 3 Marion Orr. '3 3 Dorothy Pfefferle. '32 Winnifred Poppe. '33 Mabel Reeves. ā32 Jean Roth. '33 Katherine Seymour. '32 Evelyn Schweitzer. '32 Jeanne Tellier. 34 Ruth Turpie. '3 3 PI. EDGE Patricia Christenson '34 Hunt ill. Mitrni. Ilono, Kti tit. Inoualion, Smilh OotJon. fw Halt, (lath Elton. Ihothon llamtJilt. A halt . Hoot. Initio. Hunt. Kuppti SiathhM! If. Will. If turn. lUohouoh. Iloou . Ilallofan Founded. Boston University. 1888 81 Chapters Theta Chapter. 1894 FACULTY Jane Leichsenring Mary Skinner Grace Torinus GRADUATE Evadene Burris Carolyn Hammond Ellen Jones Catherine Rask ACTIVE Mildred Brohaugh. '33 Marjorie Browning. '32 Ruth Clark. '34 Katherine Friberg. '34 Evelyn Gordon. '33 Jeanne Hague, '32 Jeanne K. Halloran. '32 Theon Halvorson. '32 Ruth I linchon. '33 Lenore Ingwalson. '33 Bertha Irwin. '3 3 Mildred Joesting. '33 Judith Jones. ā32 Margaret Keizer. 33 Gretchen Kupper. '33 Syneva Martin. '34 I.ucile Merritt, 3 3 Josephine Pease. '33 Betty Ramsdell. '34 Laurice Russell.'33 Doris Selvig. 3 3 Annie Emily Shipley. '32 Dorothy W. Smith. '32 Jane Stackhouse. '32 Jeanette Thomas, '33 Lois Will. '33 Mary Lou Wold. '34 PLEDGE Doris Abeler Dorothy Abeler Audrey Anderson Catherine Barrett Helen Louise Bengson Hortense Boutell Ruth Cash man Nola Cheely Ardis Elson Alice Gray Emily Hall Muriel Hoien Elizabeth Perinc Dorothy Root Helen Stevenson 406 Delta Gamma ā¢ryf-x. I tavion, Wat,ho. Kr bi drnbt. tārunon. fatmtt Hewn. Witlisent. WalUtt, Koftv lioa. Hen amm, HuiiA'ell I tuiĀ«hi. Muultij. Iāabrnf. Whtlf. Zuppkf, Cetnltt, f.nJren Oi'roiw, 5btp uuj. Shaken. Suvtnvtn Hemet. Menhir Haumanry. Welite, I urber AJamt. Oehtet. linkman FACULTY Ina Firkins Helen Smith GRADUATE Betty Burwcll Helen MacGowan Portia Weeks ACTIVE Mary Adams. 33 Katharine Baumann. '33 Gwcndola Bcescley, '33 Maude Benjamin. '32 Mary Bones. '34 Katherine Endress. '32 Dorothy Ferguson. '33 Evelyn Furber. '32 Elizabeth Gove. '32 Elizabeth Grobe. '34 Helen Hickman. '32 Virginia Johnston. '33 Mary Mosher. '32 Margaret Oehler. '34 Dorothy Peterson. '34 Betty Robertson. '34 Dorothy Sheppard. '34 Margaret Stevenson. '33 Donna Wallace. ā33 102b Sontbcau iih Sum Founded. Oxford College. 1872 47 Chapters Lambda Chapter. 1883 Betty Welles, '33 Lois White. '33 Herma Zuppke. '34 PLEDGE Louise Brown Janet Burwcll Mary Jane Confer Frances Enright Lois Groves Lillian Hcnscl Louise Krebs Maxine Morkcn Dorothy Ovrom Bess Palmer Jean Tanner Jeanne Taylor Jane Thomas Peggy Waldin Dorothy Williams A Merit ⢠uihofeJtteiimboot a ai r ryuired to itie I ft huge tut of soup needed to Mfii v tite uppetitei of the loggu . 407 KnuJlum. Kin . Il u-orrf. ttr yaitl. Sthumarhn. JCrxut. Swanttiom Haul. Poottr. lii'v. U'tltnJtt klaiiol . Wthh I tmmpvtn. AnJtrun. i halp. Pakontn. Util. l unjifwit. II 1 Nirlanitt. Nmii. .«⢠itl, luim Dairy Juimwn Founded. Miami University. 1902 59 Chapters Gamma Chapter. 1923 FACULTY Alice Timberman Bowers Margaret McLacken Mary Steers ACTIVE Margaret Andersen. '34 Barbara Bell. ā34 Clarice Berg, ā32 Jeanette Barquist. '34 Vera Button. '32 Esther Daley. ā32 Irene Carrier. ā32 Bernice Hair. ā33 Anita Howard. ā34 Maxine Kaiser, '32 Stella Kaul. ā32 Bernice King. '32 Dorothy Liebig. ā33 Geraldine Lundquist. '34 Martha Mattola. 32 Ruth Nielander. '33 Sylvia Pakonen. '32 Vivian Pooler. '33 Harriet Rees. ā34 Mary Jane Ring. '33 Ruth Schumacher. '34 Mary Swanson. '32 Katherine Tharp. '33 Charlotte Thompson. '34 Kathleen Walsh. '32 Mildred Welandcr. ā32 PLEDGE Pauline Ecklund Winifred Hart Audrey Knox LaVere Knudtson Eleanor Mills Elsie M. Nelson Lois Swanstrom Margaret Wemark 408 ā¢jjiiiT'iMt. JrviiĀ«. Monvd Gt v GunAttion A lltown. nfi titin Koitht. f'tirtnt lltutt, It. lUisu'n PlatnJit, I.ana. Ounbei. li-Jion. I hantputn. Sptllltr IUK,e r uith v, Coopt', Krnn itv. Wallit, l.on'r. Wivt't, (aihman. hirtltoJ I titbit a. lloiJtlt llulfotttn. ISaktt. htvrntt. Huihntll. Xttftni. OiVon, (mMi um. fv ii 1. Jhown Finth. WHJ. Milltt. .ViVWfcxj. Ilotilr. lift nun. Ift linf, Latum. HuthhtiiJ FACULTY Adah Grandy Marion Jones Florence Pitman Elinor Thompson Florence Warnock GRADUATE Ruth Stevens ACTIVE Maxine Baker, '34 Katharine Barling. '33 Alice Ann Brown. '33 Josephine Brown. '33 Ruth Burkhard. '33 Beatrice Cashman. '32 Betty Cooper. ā34 Jane Davis. '32 Louise DeGroodt. '34 Eleanor Even son, '32 Grace Finch. '34 Eleanour Fournet, '33 Catherine Giberson. '34 Mary Goss. '34 Marjorie Gray. ā33 Merna Halvorscn. '32 Carol Hoidale. '33 Elaine Hovde. '33 Kathleen Hubbard. ā32 Katherine Kierland. ā33 Lorene Larson. '33 Louise Miller. '34 Virginia Miller. '33 Miriam Mullins. '32 Romayne Nicholson. '32 Betty Purvis. '32 Glenora Somers, '3 3 Dorothy Sweet. '33 Geraldine Teisberg. '34 Founded, University of Syracuse. 1874 39 Chapters Kappa Chapter. 1902 Helen Thompson. '34 Virginia Wallis. '3 3 Florence Weld. ā34 Eva Woolsey. 33 Kathryn Woolsey. '33 PLEDGE Mary Baker Lorraine Bohan Betty Brown Laura Bruce Margaret Bushnell Dorothy Dixon Nora Dunbar Mary Fish Harrictte Gilkerson Eunice Gunderson Elizabeth Hagaman Harriet Kemp Dorothy Kennedy Margaret Knight Lora Lee Lowe Helen Manuel Marion Pfaender Elizabeth Sargent Audrey Saari Helen Spinier Catherine Tuohy Adah Wigen 409 Johann. I'll . Somm'illt. I'-xmi. Shall. 1āimtnr. lion II V infmtn. Ilulh.-it. Pawn. I.oihrop. Iāattarxi Atntttn. Munion' i, I'm in ion. I .uni. Ihtjir. Ilot. Popp Aon. Ihrhl. Jami. HtnJtll. Satmun. IIou1 (Mil, Wild, ShtllenurĀ . Oay, U'oof (y, ChaHtt. Kithirupp Founded DePauw University. 1870 60 Chapters Upsilon Chapter. 1889 FACULTY Gladys Gibbens Elizabeth Nissen ACTIVL Mary Louis Arntsen. '34 Elizabeth Ayre. '34 Harriet Ayre. '34 Fanchon Chaffee. '32 Isabella Davis. '32 Marjory Davis. '32 Marion Diehl. '33 Margaret Ellis. '34 Marie Fancher. '34 Elaine Godward. '34 Mary Eleanor Gray. '32 Nivea Haw. '33 Elsa Hoidale. '34 Ellen Hulbert. '34 Dorothy Jones. '33 Jeanne Kiekcnapp. '33 Janet Laing. '33 Betty Leland. '33 Jesse McDonald. '34 Mary Patterson. '33 Emogene Pember. '3 3 Dorothea Poppc. '33 Villcttc Powers, '33 Agnes Quamnie. '33 Janet Rose. '34 Jane Shellman. '33 Ruth Townsend. '33 Constance Weld. '33 Jane Woolley. ā33 PLEDGE Kathryn Anderson Ardene Berg Elinore Dahn Mary Flor Jeanette Gagnon Jane Lathrop La Verne Meadows Janet Poore Mary Lou Randall Betty Rieger Jean Short Virginia Somerville Maxine Sorensen Mary Jane Torrance 410 Klin. thtmofc. ItKt 1 . Hill. Wdy f, Vrnlufd A dfWl Siren, Iron, Pitkin. UtCethtfn. Hon. t'aulian, tt'tif Ahlnimn, KtniUr. K n-mtnr. Mti tf, Hnbit. patmtt, Jnhnini. AmMi Nitkali. Jobnivn. ,Wic,UjniĀ«l. I SthnnJl, Oiwn J, MtCtbt Stu. Collini Till I. hĀ« m. t.'ouprf l) v Ckcaiionatty lie be ran au-w anil roamed thr great Nnrthuuu. Hi big track formed the ten thousand take of Minneiota Kappa Delta ACTIVE Lillian Ahlstrom. '32 Carola Ambli. '34 Margery Bercns. '32 Carol Collins, '32 Elizabeth Ann Couper. Marion Day. '34 Fern Fisk. '34 Laura Frost. '33 Flora Gilmore. '34 Helen Griswold. '33 Dorothy Hill. '34 Founded. Farmville. Virginia. 1897 71 Chapters Sigma Beta Chapter. 1918 Ruth Jachning. '34 Nola Kammeier, '34 Elizabeth Kitts. '32 Agnes Kloster. ā32 Gcorgine Leigh. '33 Bessie Lyman. ā32 Win Ellen McEachern. Dorothy MacManigal. Iris Mann. '34 Ruth Mayer. ā32 Beth Meyer. '32 Lorraine Paulson. '32 Elizabeth Phillips. '33 '33 ā 3 Mary Pickles, '3 3 Marjorie Robic, '33 Helen Rose. '32 Susan Schmidt. '32 Alberta Seiz. '33 Betty Strait. '33 Betty Tifft. '32 Ellena Ventura. '32 Miriam West. '34 PLEDGE Jeanette Johnson Genevieve McCabe Rachael Nickois Charlotte Rice Marion Voigt Oithru. Klftn, liaurt. Cobh. A ryiQi'u, Ltwn, Jrhwmnf. Do Jit. Cotrtll lift. Uotntoo. Ihtlnih. (lilotJ. tirom hinn. Houitll. Van Dr tt'Ā«rĀ«r. M'r.yM Human IfiConniui, traiir. H. frliui. KmMauth, Oryory, Horror J, I'nhrll. SanJrtk Af. I til in, HnictJ It. I. vnrh. thitirnrr. tlotrhrlJrr. tVnj.i, WrtJ, KrtUr I'. I ynth, luhon Arty. Muir, (iiilhlb, I alia. 0Jrlt, A mmirut. Mtatnn Founded. Monmouth College. 1870 68 Chapters Chi Chapter. I 880 GRADUATE Betty Bauer Jean Dickey ACTIVE Jane Arey. '32 Mary Batchelder, 34 Virginia Griffith. '32 Jean Marie Mill. '34 Joyce Kennedy. '32 Alice Klein. '33 Emily Knoblauch. '34 Jeanette Latta. '32 Elizabeth Lynch. '34 1 larriet Lynch. '34 Nancy Morrison. '34 Maurene Morton. '32 Marion Muir. '33 Moana Odell. '32 Miriam Pickett. '34 Mary Spooner. '33 Alice Wright. '34 PLEDGE Avery Barnard Inez Bedard Della Boutell Madra Corel I Anne Duncan Alice Eraser Frances Gifford Marion Ives Betty Keller Virginia Lewis Marion McConnon Neill Meginiss Marion Sanders Alice Schoening Janet Van De Water Judy Weed Helen Beim. '34 Mary Bohan. '34 Mary Louise Bohmer. '33 Jane Boyd. '34 Ruth Olive Bradshaw. '33 Eleanor Broughton. '33 Betty Cobb. 34 Ruth Dietrich. ā34 Betty Dodge, '32 Barbara Felt us. '34 Mildred Feltus. ā33 Isobel Gregory. ā34 412 Ilitkutn. lUiJir. Sujrmiir ftivflt. V'. Diriuui. Stihll Jitfimn ) l iUhhtli, Tully, lunpnei Ihninti. f'un Mny iĀ m Hath. Mithtil, KooJ FACULTY Florence Litchfield Laura Mac Miller GRADUATE Hazel Catur Eva Cox Dorothy Crabb Katherine Kehoe Ida Rood ACTIVE Eleanor Arcnds. ā32 Madelon Bridge. ā33 Founded. Macon. Georgia. 1852 59 Chapters Zeta Eta Chapter. 1924 Pauline Cunningham. ā32 Sylvia Diessner. ā32 Viola Diessner. ā3 3 Vivian Elsenpeter. ā33 Dorothy Erickson. ā33 Delores Fahey. 33 Elinor Heath. ā32 Gertrude Holstad. ā32 Lenore Michael. ā32 Flecta Raw ling. ā33 Annabcllc Rivctt. ā32 Ruth Sackett. ā3 3 Elizabeth Swanson. ā34 Katherine Traflf. ā33 Margaret Tufty. ā33 PLEDGE Maurine Aultfether Florence Budge Helen Johnson 413 Lartof. lloub)Of. Uym, Ob, ?. Hubei tun Yotinf, f'bj. Hillitmtitr. Ltnntifillc. SthtrlJeeufi, Hufouhetki Thotuputn. It, Kmimtli. It. RtmmtU, Subtil to. Ahlkeeehl Founded. University of Nebraska. 1910 1 8 Chapters Kappa Chapter. 1917 FACULTY Bernice Cady Melva Hurd GRADUATE Vivian Cady Mildred Hostbjor Wathcna Myers Helen Robertson Harriet Warner ACTIVE Margaret Ahlbrecht. '33 Dorris Bemmels. 32 Ruth Bemmels, '32 Edna Billigmeier. '33 Alberta Eha. 32 Harriet Larson, '3 4 EstherLenneville. '32 Betty Rogoscheski. 33 Margaret Schielderup. '33 lone Sobotka. '32 Dorothy Thompson. '33 Shicla Young. '33 PLEDGE Jane Oberg 414 Paul liked a pnod tmokr. Tn http hn pipe RUrd required the entire time ot a nu.'ampit working with o Koop t hovel. OāS'til, llothmtrt, Hummtl. Athtt, (ittfintt. Hubttl ion. Htltnvtf. Ik.ot V. !f.xĀ 'n Thotnai. OttinWiofl, Kuthl. I tompuytt. Cuatmini. OwtnI. I.citan. Howto Halt. Kttint.lv. Kaulbtth. Grigweft. FiltGibboni. Irmnanit. M. Brown. StnJttton Certain. Iātitn Hintmgimt. IlibtrtninJ, KreJ, Sttvrnion. Setkti Chspin, Itftti. Mtltall. KteiJItt. Ilmtigy. KinrbrU. Slithrltl. tooth FACULTY Monica K. Doyle Margaret Gable Alice F. Tyler GRADUATE Lois Sellers ACTIVE Founded. Monmouth College. 1867 77 Chapters Alpha. 1890 Jane Acker. ā34 Helen AI mars. '33 Gloria Boock, '34 Louise Boos. '32 Dorothy Burlingame. '32 Jane Ann Carman. '33 Eunice Chapin. '33 Joyce Crysler. '32 Lois Fogles. '32 Mary Fit Gibbons. '34 Margaret French. '33 Irma Jean Gaertner. '34 Helen Paul Grigwarc. '35 Elizabeth Huey. '3 3 Marion Kaulbach, '32 Mary Ann Kimball. '33 Janet Kreidler. '32 Jane Mason. '32 Virginia Mendenhall. '34 Phyllis Metcalf. '32 Wilhelmina Michelet. '33 Lila Ruth Owens. '32 Virginia Peters. ā32 Ina Ramsay. '33 Edith Reed. '34 Marlys Robertson. '34 Adelaide Rowley, '34 Sybil Sanderson. '34 Virginia Thomas. '34 Grace Thompson. '33 Betty Wood, '34 PLEDGE Ruth Bachman Madeleine Belanger Marian Brown Vivian Brown Lorainc Cummins Meredith Donaldson Betsy Emmonds Lois Habberstad Jeanette Hall Jean Hummel Audrey Jane Kennedy Lucile Larson Katherine O'Neil Margaret Ruehl Virginia Sackct Audrey Kay Stevenson 415 ilamm. Kiflft, Atkrtmir, t'lruui Go iSitnn. IImih I rtJrmn, Wtintltin. Krnntr l.nbttrr rn. !U km I.run. Milltr. Mirk. Sti.il Vera Schanfeld. '32 Marion Segal. '33 Etta Trcmblatt, '35 PLEDGE ACTIVE Theresa Ackerman. '32 Mary Bassin. '33 Phyllis Beskin. '32 Gladys Davis. '32 Zelda Goldberg. '32 Jeanet Goldstein. '32 Dorothy Harris. '34 Saragrace Kenner. '33 Evelyn Lewis, '32 Leonore Lieberman. 32 Beatrice Mark. '32 Sada Miller. ā32 Minerva Pepinsky. '33 Grace Pincus. '32 Eaye Rigler. '34 416 Bernice Feldman Bonny R. Gordon Edythe Kohn Henrietta Levy Minnette Lifson Evelyn Weinstein 416 11 ih Ai-rmit StMilhrml Founded Cornell University. 1917 I 3 Chapters Nu Chapter. 1929 [14r, Huthtt. Wahh, KtehtTolh, Mahtt. EUtabtth Johnu n. Pouhon. [nfJahl Tapp. Ctate. Kop; tlbtt tt. Domi, Nhumhttf. EJnh John ton. Waantt Vita Johnion. Ilatilty, I. at inn. Waekttman. Hautnittin. Stine FACULTY Melva Shackleford GRADUATE Elizabeth Dorns ACTIVE Founded. Colby College. 1874 5 3 Chapters Alpha Eta. 1921 Virginia Bachman. '33 Avis Berglund. '33 Virginia Clare. '32 Eleanor Eide. '32 Mildred Engdahl. '34 Margaret Hartley. '33 Helen Hauenstein, '33 Josephine Hughes. '33 Vera Johnson. '33 Lorna Larson. '3 3 Dorothy Mahlc. '33 Helene Rhomberg. '32 Evelyn Satter. '34 Faith Tapp. '33 Margaret Wackcrman. '33 PLEDGE Edith Johnson Elizabeth Johnson Eloise Keckefoth Mary Jane Koppclberger Blanche Wagner Rosemary Walsh i Uern-wheeted ihnimboat UWt required to stir thr huge vuf V. soup needed to ulitttf the appetites ot the tuggers. āflu i'ou i f0 i y pff a lop at titan at Ā« whittle by hoi Ainu the bark at one end. while Ha be pulled at the other. I amp . RarJuNtt. Wehilrr. Tharkee, Bontnn, IkiMl . I'almer Trainer, Peer ion. I. AnJenen. Rrunkoix'. Poll re, brake Kieler. OnranJer, f. John ion, T. AnJetion, A. AnJenen. UtCovten. Ll nrh Wit Jet, Af, John ion, lltute, Mebonell, Grtm. V'. Johnion. f infer Founded. Virginia State Normal. 1898 69 Chapters Alpha Tau. 1923 FACULTY Marjorie Dean Mitchell ACTIVE Frances Johnson. ā3 3 Mildred Johnson. ā33 Vivian Johnson. ā33 Andrea Kiefer. '32 Helmi Lukkarila. '33 Marjorie McDonell. '32 Luella McGovern, ā32 Helen Webster. '32 Lucretia Wilder, ā33 PLEDGE Helen Drake Irene Lampe Emma Lynch Jeanette Ostrander Kathleen Palmer Linnea Pearson Cordelia Thacker Gretchen Tragcser Alice Andersen, '33 Eleanor Andersen, ā32 Thelma Anderson. 32 Alice Bardwell, '34 Dorothy Bonhus, '33 Frances Bruce. '32 Charlotte Brunkow. '34 Florence Buboltz, '32 Dorthea Cahill, ā32 Lois Finger. ā32 Addie Fisher. '33 Hazel Foster. '32 Murrell Green, '33 418 Paul enjoyed ihe annual log drive. Ilia fast foot work made him a good man on the round Stull . and in spile of his great weight he could run nimbly with his pike on the floating logs ā even on the small ones. He was a white water bucko , and rode water so rough that ordinary men were afraid even to drink of it. It was said in the shanties that Paul could spin a log till the bark came off. and then run ashore on the bubbles. MHtFESSIOSAE Fit ATEIISITIES 419 Pi Phi Chi Pput marked his logs h i pinching out u piece with hit trniwmj hand; but his men haJ to use an axe to scalp them A. Knlh, Kojutkr. DowJ. Net son. S. Wolfe. Lathee lleht. ttoeoeentate. Match. Mottlio. VaeyJeehoul Hloom, Riith, An.letutn, Gammell Kahouuht. Ptltnon. GeieMee. Suwr jry, W'oeJIaw ACTIVE Alpha Chi Sigma. V. Colby Anderson Alpha Gamma Rho. Arthur Roth. Jr. Alpha Kappa Psi, Stanley Roth Alpha Kappa Kappa. Alvin Williams Alpha Rho Chi. Clifford Bloom Delta Sigma Delta. Walter Borgendale Delta Sigma Pi. Harold Wardlaw Delta Theta Phi. John Kukowske, Jr. Gamma Eta Gamma. Ira C. Peterson. Jr. Kappa Eta Kappa. Kenneth Malek Kappa Psi, Ray Lacher Nu Sigma Nu. John C. Barton Omega Upsilon Phi. Wilburn Nelson Phi Beta Pi. Ronald E. Risch Phi Chi. R. Gammell Phi Delta Chi. Donald Sweeney Phi Rho Sigma. Robert W. DuPriest Psi Omega. Ralph Grieblcr Sigma Rho, Karl F. Hehl Tau Phi Delta. Jack Kopitke Theta Tau. J. E. Dowd Triangle, Harold C. Mattlin Xi Psi Phi, John Vandcrhoof 420 Alpha Chi Sigma Chemistry Hahe would wmetimi'i mm A up behind a drive anil drink (ill the water out ol the river, having the logt high and dry. kempt. Kybetf, Muuvri. Litkrohoen. Hath Tutu, V. CoĀ«w Rutei , Stratum. Clark, Hope, Ptrtl, l.mJner l n.hr. I tanefen. Hampel. Ctruhre. Cratvi. OunueeettJv, Oehme f filer. AnJeiion. Juhmtm. āllmtitrup. R. Got lot r. Sato FACULTY K E. Brewer R. B. Ellestad C. V. Firth I. W. Geiger R. A Gortncr F. F. Grout H. O. Halvorson W. N. Latter S. C. Lind F. H. MacDougall Chas. A Mann G. H Montillon Ralph F. Montonna F- I:- Nicholson I . S. Palmer N. C. Pcrvier 1 II. Reycrson W. M. Sandstrom L. A. Sarver G. I ā¢'. Sidcncr L. I Smith M. C. Sneed A. I:. Stoppcl R M. West H. O. Wiles GRADUATE J. Backmann J. Beal A. Beber W. W. Benton H. I- Bios jo A. E. Cameron C. L. Faust W 1 Filbert D I. Fuller E. J. Hammer E. J. Hoffman S. M Jackson C. M. Langkammeter A. W. Lindert C. W. MacMullcn I W Miller R. E. Miller S. E. Miller C. L. Moyle J. R. Rehner C. P. Roe G. W. Smith F. H. Stodola H. B Strombcrg O. Swenson E. N. Van Du .ec A. Willman ACTIVE V. C. Anderson. '34 J. A. Anthcs. ā34 C. M. Bach. ā3 3 W. E. Beach. ā3 2 til Southern? Oak Street Founded. University of Wisconsin, 1902 48 Chapters Beta Chapter. 1903 M A Bolltne. ā3 3 H. M Boyd. ā33 F. G. Bowers. '3 3 J A. Clarke. 35 R. L. Conary. '34 R. S Dahms. '34 W. K. Dunwoody, 33 C. D. Ender. '35 G. W. Flanagan. '32 I W. Flynn. '34 K. J. Forderbrugcn, '33 W. W. Foster. '34 W. H Furst. '3 3 R. A. Gortncr. '33 H. E. Graves. '32 C. A. Hampel. '34 M C Hope 33 K C. Johnson, '32 I I.. Kempc. '32 G. I Lindner. '33 F. E. I irkenhou . '32 E. L. Piret. '32 M. I Ruley. 32 M E. Rvberg. '3 3 P W. Salo. '3 2 C. I: Stephens. '3 2 W W Tholstrup. '32 PLEDGE W Gortner F R Hart W. F. Hollcn J B. La Clair M. I Smith P. H. St.les 421 Alpha Gamma Rho Agriculture finite snohed on entire tee non of fund to the ciott at one drat}; the frees were tut. and the ml ion hooted tst(k ttonoa. Wanon, Roth. Mnitrf. Inanrom. Fenikr, S. Otton. Cutttll Heaurh. Sample. It. Penhken. E. liraJg, ttetconoo. Jacobi. Palmte. Wirt Trahan. Ilaemt. R. Ot ion. (lodjcn, klcli.yugat, Ilf trick. llauglanJ. Hum, Marti Nelton. Cook, C. Penhken, I. heady, Jan ten. Wneman. Heim. Gilmore AhtoranJ. Unmet. Chapman. W. Sactruon. Stolen. S. Swrmon Warrington Founded. Ohio and Illinois Universities. 1908 32 Chapters Lambda Chapter. 1917 FACULTY W. H. Alderman D. Anderson E. Angelo W. L. Boyd W. Ci. Bricrley W. B. Combs A. M. F ield C. P. Pitch A. L. Harvey Fi. O. Herreid R. R. Humphrey K Ingwalson E. C. Johnson H. C. Kernkamp W P Kirkwood P. Lowe E. S. Miller W. E. Petersen W H Peiers W. M. Sandsirom A V, Storm I I.. Ullyot GRADUATE. R Bailey B. Baldwin S. Easter A. Porte O. Hill V. Hubbard H. Mortenson W. Nelson M. It yberg C. Shumway D. Smith H Trelogan H. Ukkleberg E. Wheeler ACTIVE Eric Ahlstrand, ā33 Edward Aiton. ā3 3 Keith Barrons. '32 Karl Bonde. ā33 Ellsworth Brady. 32 Francis Brady. 3 3 John Brauch, '33 Erhardt Bremer. '34 Lowell Brown. '3 3 Charles Chambers. '32 Kenneth Chapman. ā32 Earl Cook. ā32 John Currell. '3 3 Harold Engstrom. '32 Leo Eenske. '33 M. Plot. '32 Lester Gilmore. '32 John Godden. '3 3 S. Halvorson. '34 John Hanna. '32 Leigh Harden. '32 Grenfall Harms. '32 Nelvin Haugland, '32 Richard Herrick. '34 Eldrcd Hunt. '32 Richard Jacobs. '34 I rank Jan cn. '32 Glen McDougal. '3 3 C. Marti. '34 Harold Meister. '34 Richard Olson. '3 3 Stanley Olson. '32 Firncst Palmer. '32 Douglas Pendergast. '3 3 Claire Peschken. '5 3 Herman Peschken. '3 3 Thomas Ftainc. '34 O. Ridd. '34 Arthur Roth. '34 Ivan Sample. '35 Rudolph Stolen. '32 Stanley Swenson. '3 2 Walter Swenson, '32 Alfred Trabms. '34 Sylvan Warrington. '32 Jack Wasson. '32 I rede rick Welch. '34 D. Weseman, '34 John Wirt. '3 3 Herbert Woolery. '32 PLEDGE H. Wilford Berg It. Burkholder Ralph Comstock Gardiner Graham Ralph Grant Harvey Kuckenbecker W McMartcn Homer Mikkclson Lyle Norton E. Pederson Dutee Seyforth John Shaver C. Herman Welch US} Cleveland Avenue North, St. Paul 422 Clark. Hrtyh, lUrtllmt, litniarmn. S'r float, Foktt. I.ynth, unlau t-m Shandt tl. Hoot. Hunktr. SttanJ, Oliott, With arm. Flynn Haytn Nraly- FnoJohl. Ilotlman. SitmiruJ Kilty. II. Johmon. Anna Hot. Srrtina Utton. littk, Hnhira. Ilopkmi. Loomn. Situ, at I FACULTY Wm. F. Braasch A I:. Benjamin A. F Bratrud P. H. Bray P. I . Berrisford L R. Boies Frank T. Cavanor W. L. Colby A. R. Colvin Wm. H. Condit I J. Cook Gto. R. Dunn I . G I: rick von F B Exner I:mil S. Geist C O. Hanson W. P. Herbs H. G. Irvine E. Starr Judd I: M Kaspar J F. Madden Chav. II. Mayo C A McKinley I. T. Murphy D. F. Noonan F. A. Olson O. A. Olson Oscar Owrr Waller R. Ramsey C. A. Reed G. N. Rubbery. A. G. Schult e J. H. Simons S. G. Sweitzer G. J. Thomas H. L. Ulrich J. A. Urner B. A. Watson A. A. Wohlrabe C. B. Wright GRADUATE G. Benjamin Paul Bunker John Caldwell E. W. Cedar F. . N. Cook W Craddock R Koucky R. V. Sherman Stewart Shimonek ACTIVE Arthur Abbett. 'F4 Jerc Annis. 'F4 Harvey Beek. 'FF James Bender. 'F5 Harold Benjamin. FF George Bergh. F2 James Blake. āF5 Roland FFoettner. ' F4 Bevan Bunker 2 Henry Clark. 'FF Founded, Dartmouth College. 1 888 48 Chapters Psi Chapter. 1898 George Clifford. 'FF Kenneth Dickenson. 'F2 William Engdahl. FF Ronald Fankboner. 'F4 John Flynn. 'F4 Leslie Fokrr. 'FF Fred Gunlaugvon. 'F4 Wayne Hagen. 'F4 Olaf Heiberg. 'F4 Richard Flerbst. 'F2 Herbert Hoff. F2 Walter Hoffman. 'F5 G. Wendell Hopkins. 'F2 Robert Johnson. 'F5 Rolland Keefe. 'F4 George Loomis. 'F2 Joseph Lynch. 'F4 Donald Nealy. FF Lloyd Nelson. 'F5 Grant Olson. F2 Carl Potthoff. FF John B. Rdey. āFF Albert Seermg, 'F2 James Shandorf. āF5 Robert Strand. āF4 Duncan Stewart. āF2 Jesse Stocker. -F2 Harold Stemsrud. āF4 Bernard Urenn. āF4 Alvin Williams. 'F4 PLEDGE Norbert Frey Frederick Hoffbauer John Hood Percy Johnson Luverne Johnsrud 423 Paul' axvmrn sharpened ihrit axtt by rolling norm down lulls, and holding thr tdget againif them os ihty Went l y. Alpha Kappa Psi Commerce IMJmfh. Rotfkohl, Salhtr. I Jahruon. Coo , Li man J. l-riktcn. ,VWioĀ«. l.unJtn urfiii. MlOrrf. t. Slltmtl, Slrhmun. Ualhmi, Slhunfcr, Wrlih lighter Vmlr. IS. Jtnim. I.allrot. H. Event. WrumunJ. II. Mnion Ihtkinion, Lobnmtm. Ohoa, llogee ftoilt, I hot pc. U'lfton Founded. New York University. 1904 55 Chapters Alpha Fta. 1922 FACULTY Francis M. Boddy Edward Eriksen Frederic B. Garver Alvin H. Hansen Ernest A. Heilman Laurence R. 1.unden Bruce D. Mudgett John J. Reighard George M. Robertson William H. Stead J. Warren Stehman Roland S. Vaile Robert Weidenhammer Henry G. Winans GRADUATE Roswell Curtiss Robert Murphy Wilson ACTIVE John M. Boldingh. ā34 Kenneth C. Cook. ā34 Donald D. Dickinson. ā32 John W. Ekman, 13 3 Evan O. Evans. '33 Robert E. Evans. '32 Everett Forsman. '32 Walter L. Hager, '32 Neil H. Jensen. '33 Chester R. Jones. '32 Harry M. Johnson. '32 Lloyd Johnson. '33 Maynard LaBrot. ā33 Frank LaCasse. '3 3 Willard Lighter. '34 Lyle A. Limond. '34 Stanford D. Lohmann. '32 Clayton Mathias. ā33 Douglas McGregor. '34 Harold Meilke. 32 Carroll M. Nelson. '34 Wcslic W. Olson. '32 Wesley W. Olson. '34 William C. Robinson. '32 H. Howard Roerkohl. '33 Stanley D. Roth. ā33 Stanley A. Sat her. ā32 DeKoven L. Schwieger. ā33 Arthur H. Stremel. ā32 Eugene F. Thorpe. ā34 John E. Welsh. ā34 Mason Will mars. ā32 PLEDGE Earl Hayck William Hilchings Harold Johnson Webster Pajunen Al Schummers Robert Wassmund I Paul hhtd a tjnnd unokt. To hrtp hit pip hlliil (tquitid the tntite lime of a twartiptr u.'orhino with a uoop thovtl. Willnmt. I. Johnum. l-ahjr. Wtlll. 7 ru'i tin bit SuinktUnrr. Sioiktv Abbot. St ttiitom. ft on. I.olntum. Hamilton Robtr. Wat nr i. Sptrty. Auvmrn. Wolltr. lUkrt Bloom. Ctrior, hall. Halt a. Knobla. BrJJou . Sbillnsin FACULTY Leon E. Arn.il S. Chat wood Burton Dr. William F. Holman Frederick M. Mann Harlow C. Richardson Founded. University of Illinois and Michigan. 1914 10 Chapters Mnesiclcs Chapter. 1916 ACTIVE Loren Abbett. ā34 Russell Baker, '34 D. Grayson Ball. '32 Earl Bcddow. '32 C. Donald Bloom. '32 Clinton F. Campbell. '32 Robert G. Ccrny. '32 Harvey S. Daley. '32 Walter H. Frost. Jr.. '34 Arnold R. Johnson. '33 Harry T. Johnson. '3 3 Paul A. Kilp. '34 Bernard H. Knobla. '32 William R. Koester. '32 Austin H. Lange. '33 John H. Lindstrom. '34 Richard C. Robinson. '33 Frank S. Skillman. '32 C. Herbert Starkey. '33 Kenneth M. Sperry. '35 Edward J. Steinkcllner. 35 Jack lews. '33 Hubert M. Walters. '33 Marshall Wells. ā33 Russell E. Williams, '34 PLEDGE Robert Auvinen Russell Barber Willard C. Hamilton Kcrmit O. Johnson Edward V. Lofstrom Francis B. Robie Fred Segerstrom Kenneth R. Waller 425 Bab would not work unleu mow u'tu on the ground. i Ā thr logging foods were whitewashed in uimnitr. to deeeiot him. Delta Sigma Delta Dentistry SubbnI. Alltn. Calba. .Ā«iUtn. Oj ro Oujba. Morn. MiS'rllv, Judbmi, Itoiftuu . BfttftilJjIt Dan. Vlouh. Grtf f. VtUn. 1'iht Or, Willith. Abtaonj. Unbba n. SttaJmin. Htr A Or. Tbrnn Pounded. University of Michigan. 1884 31 Chapters Theta Chapter. 1894 FACULTY Dr. Archibald B Butter Dr. Norman J. Cox Dr. George M. Damon Dr. George D. Estes Dr. Boyd S. Gardner Dr. Henry S. Godfrey Dr Charles A. Griffith Dr. I.ce A. Marker Dr. Raymond R. Henry Dr. Clare li. Herman Dr. Raymond C. Johnson Dr. I.ester C. MacCarthy Dr. Herman A. Mavcs Dr. Riehard S. Maybury Dr. Mark O. Partridge Dr. Charles P. Peterka Dr. Charles li. Rudolph Dr. Joseph 1;. Shcllman Dr. Louis W. Thom Dr. Edsvard T. l inker Dr. William D. Vehe Dr. James A. Walls Dr. Oscar A Weiss Dr. Amos S. Wells Dr Charles A. Wicloff Dr. Harold C. Wittich active Goetlw Ahlcrona. 52 Keith Allen. '33 Walter Borgendalc. '3 3 Waldo Bugby. '32 Donald Burt, '32 Henry li. Colby. '32 Horace Brayshasv Leon Geyer. '3 3 John Einncgan Herbert Gulden. '32 Douglas Ganfield George Hanck, '32 Roy Gessnet Maurice Hoghaug. '3 3 Arnold Gilmer Harold Judkins, ā33 George Greiner Orvin Moen. '33 Warren Hanson Gerald McNally. '33 Robert Hart Oscar Ogren. '32 Jerome Hiniket Joseph Pike. '3 3 Joe Keller Orlando Stabbert. '3 3 Paul Keller Sherwood Steadman. '32 Ronald Mitchell Ldvvard Slszemp. ā33 Milton Larson Maxsvcll Ihorson. '32 Stanley Lundgrcn Vcrner Velin. '3 3 Robert Monick Milo Vlasak. '32 George Portcus Maurice Washburn. 3 2 Paul Porter Russell Kisbrudt PLEDGE Mihlo Schaefer Harry Schocning Arnold Amley Robert Stultz Maitland Bradley George Webber 426 When Paul Runuan rodt on Rube ⢠barb, hr woi obliged la u r a trltxop lo it thr hind «⢠ ol iht Rig Blue Ox Drttuan Witlh. I'tut tan. I.ation A bit . Mota, Hat hut AJann Coughlin. Wat 4 la . Whitt. Ilanin i. Date. Caitits Walktt. I anntt. Millrt. Wrhilir (mure. Uilltt, Chtiltie, Kttm Chut. Chou-n. SreJ. Uttk. Oabntlioti. SoeJttn FACULTY J. O. Burneti O. E. Hcskin R. L. Ko .clka H. P. l.ongstaff H. L. McCracken O. Nielson K. T. Setre R. A. Stevenson ACTIVE Harry M. Abcrg. ā34 Charles G. Adams. '33 Blynn B. Beck. '34 Robert A. Brisbane. '32 Howard Buckley. '34 Francis Bunn. '3 3 Lyle Castles. '34 Ralph C. Chase. '33 Edwin B. Chown. '32 Glenn A. Christie. '32 John C. Comer. '34 James P. Coughlin. '32 William H. Crowe, '32 Maurice Dale. '3 3 Leonard E. Engeman. '33 Reinar V. Gabrielson. '32 John Glas, '33 Lynn B. Hansen. '32 Franklin G. Johnson. '33 Erwin E. Kelm. '33 Burton A. Larson. '32 John McCracken. '33 Harvey W. Miller. '33 Chester H. Nordeen. '32 Roger G. O'Malley. '32 Wallace Peterson. '34 Founded. New York University. 1907 58 Chapters Alpha Epsilon Chapter. 1924 Fred M. Seed. '32 Lloyd G. Stanley. '32 John R. Tanner, '34 Durwell Vetter. '34 Harold Wardlaw. '3 3 Howard Wardlaw. '34 Mortimer Watson. '33 Byron B. Webster. '33 Byron S. White. '33 PLEDGE Arthur Ahl Edgar Bleckery William Dreesson Francis Hackctt Kenneth Hedberg Norman Lindstrom Donald Miller Luther Moen Donald Walker James Wirth Dan Wright 427 Cufutr. Johintn. Stour. Cmmtll. Smoldt Slilltt. Windhottt Hoot. Uix . Xturpbv Notdtttom. Notion. Hutton lioppt. Cht'vtr. ,UĀ«DĀ«nwĀ«. Kakouukt, Solum. Andttton. IMoium HuufhtnJ. Jnhnttm. Walttiui. Sittfx. Kunnint. Thill. Smith Founded. Baldwin Wallace College. 1900 62 Chapters Mitchell Senate Chapter. 1904 FACULTY GRADUATE Kenneth MacDougall. '33 George Smith. ā34 Loren Miller. ā34 Richard Mixa. ā34 Arthur Nordstrom. ā33 Austin Norton, '32 Charles Root. ā34 Carl Running. ā33 Logan Scow. 34 Walt Sirene. ā32 William Thiel, ā33 Robert Walerius, ā33 John Windhorst. '34 PLEDGE John Murphy Eldon Smoldt Clarence Solcim ACTIVE Oscar Anderson. ā32 Chester Burton. ā34 Lyle Cheevcr. ā34 Charles Currier. ā34 Robert Emmett. '32 Wade Halvorson. ā32 Gerald Haugland. ā3 3 Carl Hoppe. ā33 Chester Johansen. '34 Lester Johnson. '33 John Kukowske, Jr.. ā32 Farm House Agriculture Oeratioriatlv Italic can aa.iv and roamed the real Norlho-'e  ⢠Hit t i l teach formed the ten thomand takeĀ of Mmne. iu. Ivtnofi. Ool(i), Hunting, S'nJIcnJ. Putvtt. MtlgeatJ, Fithrt Mayo- Fronton. OJtanJ. OoHith, llanuin, Luton. W 'rente. Run the Tail. Itotmbrri. F.btthut, (itou). Unit , Rolling). St 11 Ur ('option. Ora . H. Ptlrtton. Otaham, M. Ptttrton. Adami, UtMafnon Founded. University of Missouri. 1905 7 Chapters Farm House Fraternity. 1931 FACULTY R. W. Dawson G. Sallee C. E. Mickel H. K. Wilson GRADUATE H. Hedges P. Harrington C. Means M. Powell B. Tait ACTIVE James L. Adams. '33 Stanley R. Doten. '33 Chester W. Graham. '33 Edwin A. Gray. '32 Howard E. Grow. '34 Earle Hansing. '33 Henry A. Healy, '32 Paul L. Holmberg. '32 Vincent E. Iverson. '33 Jacob H. Janzen. ā34 John Larson. '33 Henry Mayo. 34 Harry McMahon. '32 Arthur Mclgaard. '33 Truman R. Nodland. '34 Harry J. Peterson. '34 Milo J. Peterson. '34 Ezra P. Reineke. '34 Clair Rollings. '33 Miles G. Rowe. '34 Leonard Stahler. '33 Wessley R. Steller. '34 William G. Werner, '34 PLEDGE Clarence Capcron Carl Franson Seth Fisher Ebenhard Gandrude Melville H. Griffith Martin L. Odland Herman Schultz Raymond Ebcrhart 429 Clmv. Albm. Ihrbtr;, IlmJtUkton. Churthill. Iliwhrx. Gruutndot .Uayooioo, lotnold. t.cnlt, halt. ,ttt. laxh4lt Kfiuen. f ynn. Lou'tit. lUrtnt. Albrttbi. Catlian, Arnold Finieih, I'irhl, Fimlurn. F'tkltin, Pttkim, Wold Jai. Murphv. J. I). Murphv, Ptltfton. Mot, Millet. Spat. Ilopp Founded. University of Maine, 1901 33 Chapters Chi Chapter, 1 924 FACULTY J. Murdoch Daw ley ACTIVE Roy Albin. '32 Paul Albrecht, ā32 Lincoln Arnold. '33 AI Bcrens, '32 Gilbert Carlson. '33 William Churchill. '34 Edward Cleary, '33 Wallace Ecklein. ā33 Thomas Flynn, '32 Arthur Geer. ā 3 3 Ben Grussendorf. ā34 Ronald Hendrickson, ā33 Emerson Hopp, ā32 Rueben Magnuson. '34 Robert Major. '33 Wayne Marshall. '33 Maurice S. Moe. '32 James Murphy. ā32 Jerry Murphy. ā32 Clarence Perkins, ā32 Ira Peterson. '33 Bernard Pirkl. ā33 Joe Rainieri. 32 John Spear. ā32 Rudolph Wilier. 33 PLEDGE Obid Eastvold Arvid Falk Allen Finseth Avery Finstuen John Herberg Fred Hughes Charles Lantz James Lowrie Ellard Wold 430 Kappa Eta Kappa Electrical Engineering ShcphrrJ. Sthtth . W'i ioo. MtDoiKiujh. Mvvmjuiil. Abrttntmian, Bokrtr Qutiitv. f ttJint. Otl.ollunt, SumIJoii Meltk, Kuttv KvĀ i- Will . SulhttlanJ. ShiJil. AnJition Gitloth. CftoiKmoo. Jtnui, Dfmrf, Smith. OoJItt It Dir mol I. Amrtn. Kutthr. Su onion. Limity. Kuhtmion. TaJJ FACULTY J. M. Bryant L. C. Cavcrly H. E. Hartig E. W. Johnson J. H. Kuhlmann F. W. Springer M. E. Todd J. S. Webb GRADUATE C. J. Ackerman R. Campbell H. Palmer L. J. Schnell F. Wherland ACTIVE A. Abrahamson. '34 N. E. Anderson. '32 R. Beightol. '33 W. C. Bloomquist. '32 K. J. Bohrer. ā33 K. Bruscke. '32 G. DcLaHunt. '33 S. Gadler. '32 B. Galles. '32 V. N. James. '32 R. J. Kutzler. '32 S. Linslcy, '32 S. J. McDermott. '32 C. J. McDonough. '33 Founded. University of Iowa. 1923 5 Chapters Beta Chapter. 1923 J. Qucaly, '34 M. I. Rislcy. '32 W. K. Scheibc. '32 W. J. Shepherd. ā33 F. Shidcl. '32 J. Stoddart, '33 M. G. Swanson. '32 ill Southtot W'clmil Stmt G. Uttlcy. '32 K. W. Waltz. '32 J. Wilson. '32 K. Zeiglcr. '33 PLEDGE F. R. Dressel E. L. Fredinc R. Haxby P. W. Ryan F. Smith E. Sutherland A. Turnquist Paul uooprJ out the hole tor Lake Superior when hr rurd-rd a rrutut u.āai r supply lot itint) his loQtjtruj roads. 431 Puthngamt. HaJJrn. Marring. Petition, Tu trdy. Platou. Pothmr, llibbrl KirtlaoJ. ft. Nation, Paution. Ston hbrl4, t mot, Bray, langt Mmr. fttrhtr, Mnniort. Roy. Pingtt. StheJr. It. Sri ion. I.rrean Shrllnun, Futhtiow, dim, l.aPtrc, Per ton, Slrbbnu Huai ton Hegi, ItoJg ion. Spāttltt. Titliuh. Print, Lot it r 0 0, Portent. Retromr Founded. University of Michigan. 1882 38 Chapters Epsilon Chapter. 1891 GRADUATE Charles E. McLcnnen Howard Vogel ACTIVE Milton Ba koine, '32 John C. Barton. ā33 Fred Becker. 34 Verle E. Borland. '32 Kenneth Bray. '34 Earl Boehme. '33 Theodore J. Catlin. '33 John G. Cole. '32 Richard Fuchslow. ā34 Norman Giere. ā34 Albert T. Hays. ā33 Fred Hadden. '34 Corrin Hodgson. '32 Robert Hebbel, '33 John E. Hynes. '32 Donald Huston. ā34 Robert Kierland. '33 Robert LeBrec. '34 Luther Lcraan. ā33 James E. Lofstrom. '32 David Mardey. '34 Donald McKinnon. '32 Wallace Merritt. '32 Leonard Monson. '33 Charles McLennan. ā34 Robert Nelson. '34 Harlan Nelson. '34 Malvin Nydahl, ā33 Robert Priest. '32 Ralph Plaiou. ā34 Donald Peterson. '34 Owen W. Robbins. '32 McClelland Shcllman. ā33 Fritz Schade, '34 Harvey Stanchfield, '33 TheodoreStebbins. '33 William Swcdbcrg. '33 Jerome Textor. ā34 Jan H. Tillisch, ā32 John Tweedy. '34 PLEDGE Dave Burlingame George Halladay Paul Kabot Robert Love Stanley McCain Wallace Muir Donald Paulson Robert Pinger Carleton Strathern 432 Rob would not Work unln. mow wax on the ground. i the logging r J%idt were WhitewaxhrJ in tummtr. to drttiv him Xrluw), lionwo, Kerteeo, Coonr n. Ja'iotw. Iāei nt Dullwn. Rote. DtnhtM, Lturfni. Ilill JimiMi Till, Hertvrif. Iātoinhtl f.chlmt, Vi'imtl [Hu, HoJtroiXtt. Thi itll, Olton, Set ion FACULTY Youbert Johnson Charles Potter Walter Ude GRADUATE Joe Lawless Edward Maeder AI Meyers Nelson Youngs ACTIVE Gordon Anderson. ā34 William Blomberg. ā33 Carl Coombs. ā35 Randall Derifield. '34 Dell Dullum. 32 Carl Eckhart. ā33 Earl Ellis. ā32 Gustave Hanson. 32 Elmer Hartung. '32 Emil Johnson. '34 Phillip Karleen. 32 Herbert Minthorn. '32 Norman Nelson. '32 Wilburn Nelson, ā35 Alton Olson. 33 Peter Pankratz. '33 Roy Payne, '33 Founded. Pennsylvania Medical School. 1876 27 Chapters Sigma Chapter. 1906 Ray Proeschel. '35 Loren Race. '35 William Rademakcr. '35 Fritz Schleinitz. '34 Stanley Simons. '35 Roy Swenson. '32 Duane Thysell. '33 PLEDGE Leonard Bates Norvel Brink Robert Hill William Johnson Robert Kamisch Richard Neary Roland Riehm John Van Volkenburg Gilbert Wenzel Dick Whitney 433 axtmrn tharprncd thtir u) tolling Manta down und holding tht idea l thtm ui ih ii u'Ā nt fry. Phi Beta Pi Medicine Klune. .Vein. Motiaely Mall, S. Ofi-.ii. I. Sehmidl. a. Irithon. Wilton. Sehelty t.'attoll. tllinfei. Noble, Meet . Robot . Naybbi. Viehoten, Roulem lUierJ. Khne. (irejell. Doyle. Wall. Humble, Stbwei. tr, I'atbet, R. F.eiebton Hawn, Wilfhl. MJnth. Mat liny, (oilman. Tiftte, liixh. So rJ CireenSelJ. K. Given. Jlenion. Bettham. Venn, Salim. AnJtui. Caitni. Lemon Founded, Pittsburgh University. 1891 44 Chapters Xi Chapter. 1904 FACULTY Karl W. Anderson E. T. Bell C. J. Clausen R. G. Green C. M. Jackson Joseph King J. S. McCartney William Peyton Charles Skinner Sam Solbaug Roy E. Swanson GRADUATE Ellis Gierc C. H. Meade O. S. Randall Grant T. Rasmussen Ray Schweigler ACTIVE Ferrick Aldrich. '34 Frank Andrus. '32 Clayton Beecham, ā32 Clifton Benson, 32 Robert Cairns, '32 William Carroll. '33 Thomas Doyle ā34 George Ellingcr, ā34 Alvin Erickson. '34 G. Giedell. '34 Theodore Greenfield. Hugh Hawn. '35 Frank Klune. '33 Herbert Lcnton. '32 Paul Marling, ā35 George Moriarty. ā33 Rouncc Moses. ā34 Leo Naykki. 34 Woodrow Nelson. '35 J. L. Noble. '33 Kenneth Olson. '32 Stewart Olson. '34 William Parker. '34 George Penn. '32 R. Perry Richardson, Ronald Risch, ā34 Henry Rokola, '34 Ward Roulein. '33 John Rumball. ā34 Carl Sandt. ā34 Russell Sat her. ā32 R. C. Schelly. ā33 Fred Schmidt, ā35 Herbert Schmidt. ā32 Theodore Schweiger. '35 Stanley Tyler. ā34 Angwaid Vickoren. ā35 William Wall. ā33 Ira Wilson. ā34 Wale Wright. ā33 PLEDGE Thomas Bond Edward Coffman Ralph Erickson William Kline Bernard Lenz George Matt Bradner Mcrtz 434 Phi Chi Medicine fltJrthĀ«9!t!t it PituI murkril hit lain hi flinching out it pitiāe with hit htowngHand; hut hit men hud to uu an use to ica p them. f f t f f 9 I', lohnian. ttUfinuf, l-ahmonn. I avne. Virtue, Kir t, rorixurt, Yu rut WhtliK nt. W'Ā« K . .V n . Youne, Tuomintn. Ataon. U'u ion S nnikv, fill, M tiffin, I tut ho. flour . lUown. Otmoven. Voruen Cnnumrit, Htiloth. Uti tn I) John too. C. r, U, Kritin , II Jnhntoo Sort turn Sinn, (nllripit. fiiihitin, Mtlctf. Cain FACULTY Dr Raymond Bietcr Dr James Bruscgard Dr I:. M DeBarry Dr, E. P. Lenger Dr F. F. Folcv Dr G Koepcke Dr. George Hudson Dr. Shirley Miller Dr William Herbst Dr. Irvine MeQuarrie Dr. Arthur Rusclse Dr. H N Wright GRADUATE Wallace Armstrong Dr. Herbert Carlson Robert Hamilton Dr. I.. Lang Dr. B. Palmer Dr. Bjarne Pearson ACTIVE Marvin Adams, 33 Thomas Angland. 32 John A Anderson. ā3 3 Ncls Anderson. '32 John Alexon. '33 Fred Amy. '34 Howard Banck. '35 James Brown. '35 Charles Bergen. '32 Charles Betloeh. '33 Leon Cain. '32 George Cardie. '3 3 James Deagon. '34 Daniel Donovan. '33 Cyrus Erickson. '32 George Erickson. '32 Joseph Lmond. '32 Robert hwald. '32 Roman Fait. '3 3 Henry Fisketti. '34 Robert Gammell. 3 3 Martin Eorsmark, '35 Founded. University of Vermont. 1889 61 Chapters Kappa Chi Chapter. 1920 Paul Gans, '34 Donald Gillespie. '35 Bennett Graves. '33 Meredcth Guernsey. '33 Vic Haury. '35 George Hillman. '34 Henry Hoffcrt. 33 Alvin Jenson. '34 Douglas Johnson. ā33 Harold Johnson. 34 Karl Johnson. '32 Paul Johnson. '34 Emil Keller. 35 John Laync. '34 Horace Lien. '32 Id. Linden nicy cr. '35 George l.e Clerc|uc. '3 3 Robert I.owe. '32 John Lohmann. '34 Kenneth Malvcy. '3 3 Walter Manning. '32 Robert Mattison, 35 Liner Monson. '34 Hugh Morgan. '34 Ray Mulrooney. '3 3 Pierre Nyvall. '33 John O'Donnell. '3 3 Malcolm Pearson. '34 Joseph Peters. 3 3 Donald Peterson. ā3 2 Wellington Ricke, '32 Wyman Roberts. '3 3 Henry Roemer. '34 Elmer Sorenson. '3 2 Kenneth Stem. '3 3 Theodore Stransky, '33 Hagbart Rice. '34 Charles Rogers. '34 James Tltomson. '32 Robert Thielen. '35 Mark Virnig. '33 Sid Watson. '32 William Watson. '33 Walter Wells. '32 Walter Woock, '34 Bert Young. '33 William Yunck. 34 PLEDGE Kasper Caveny Henry Finney Amos Gilsdorf John Hammcrcli Bruno Junnilo Theodore Keskey Herman Koschnit ke Kenneth Marchion Eugene McElmccl Donald Nevitt A. Sether J. Skogland Leroy Smith Sam Tuominen Stewart Whetstone 435 Phi Delta Chi Pharmacy All r iĀ buildings of Paul l un-Ā« im i comp were on xhids: Bohr pulled the whole outfit I tom one logging me to the wtf Xatytlt. Matho. Iltbbarj. RulUtwuk, āitbustler. tluJSr. Swttiuu Arnrutn Sfhlulir. TimnMil. Ilanion. KttuSibrta Stars Slttnth. I bum non, limit Srrvy I'rtttMM, Thomtan. Kaiihrt, Orfntt. StltCul, Jtfirn Founded. University of Michigan. 1883 31 Chapters Theta Chapter. 1904 FACULTY Gustav Bachman F. K. Butters C. V. Net . C. H. Rogers F. J. Wulling Merle Seney. '32 Stanley Shima. '33 Christy Star .. '33 Donald Sweeney. '32 Harold Thornton. '33 Holmes F. Timmons. ā34 PLEDGES William Budke Foster Butterwick Orace Hanson Leslie Lendc Alfred Naegele Sylvester Schueller Basil Thompson ACTIVE Bernard Aable. 32 Theodore Arneson. '32 Edward Degner. '33 Arthur Hebbard. '32 Norbert Henle. '34 Emil Horcjsi. '32 Quentin Jensen. '32 Klydc Kaliher. '33 Henry C. Kruckeberg. '34 Kendall Macho. '32 Charles Merrick. '34 Henry Nelson. '33 Carl A. Peterson. '32 Paul H. Schluter. '32 436 Phi Rho Sigma Medicine fg I 5 1 5 5- Ā«.Ā« 51 ?Ā !! ā¢ā Ā Ā Ā ,Ā«. 9 wwwMM HlMiU ) (? Jor. the coah. had a dinner horn to big, and ht hie us it to hard that pine ittrz ML and cartoon user,- tiarud Undeedoht. Vandreatuii. Matt Wallaet. So-rnion IV. Wallaet. l.inJ. I.a.tort. llammrritaJ. Qatllo. Srotltum Maum ion. VVauon. Jerome. Whilnetl. Stott, llamhn, Witmot. Crime 1, It. Stolpeitad Vhlea. It- Ctllnixe- Palmer, t aMi)unl. Krtuir. MtCoutlcnd. A. Sfolpritad. D. (iillnpir Canfield. lUihee. Cehnuo. II re pee llatth. Shot. Sehmidt. Pearioa, O. Aodtreoo IJuPtitu, Ā£. Aodtetoo, Jacob 1. Sabo. Sraihoee. Over. Cooper. Peerrti FACULTY Dr. Arne Anderson Dr. L. W. Berry Dr. F. F. Buck Dr. I;. J. Borgeson Dr. C. C. Crirchficld Dr. F. E. Foley Dr. F. G. Hedcnstrom Dr li. P. Lyon Dr. J. F. McClendon Dr Horace Ncwhari Dr. Arnold Schwyzer Dr. Willis Thompson Dr. K. W. Stenstrom GRADUATE Dr. Lee Alderson Dean II. Collins Dr. John Eneboc Dr. R. L. Hargraves Dr. Francis Lynch Dr. J. K. Mocn Martin Wallace ACTIVE Edward Anderson, '34 Oliver Anderson. '35 Russell Baker, ā34 Earl Barrett. '32 Clifford Bolinc. '32 Clarence Buckley. '32 Bruce Canfield, '3 3 Charles Cooper, '3 2 Ralph Dahlquist. '34 Robert DuPriest, '34 Robert Dyer. '34 Warren Dicsncr, ā33 Ralph Eckman. '32 Bernard Flesche, '33 Burton Grimes. ā32 Delmar Gillespie. 33 Harold Gillespie. '32 l.ynn Hammarsted. '35 John Hamlin. '35 William Hatch, ā35 Douglas Jacobs. '34 Robert Harper. '34 Bourne Jerome. '34 Founded. Northwestern University, 1890 45 Chapters Theta Tau Chapter. 1908 Carl Krause. '32 Gerald Laxon. '34 Carl Lind, '33 Carl Lund. '32 Mcrril McCausland. '3 2 Glen Maurit son. '35 Simeon Mullins, '3 3 George Olds. '34 Louis O'Brien. '35 Leonard Orth. '33 Carroll Palmer. '35 Arthur Pearson. 34 Francis Sabo. '3 2 Harold Scheie. '35 Robert Schmidt. '34 William Scott. '32 Rosel Seashore. ā32 Lawrence Sjostrum. '35 Torsten Smith. '33 Armer Stolpestad. ā33 Herbert Stolpestad. '3 3 Leonard Swenson. '35 l.aurcmius Undcrdahl. '35 Charles Uhlcy. '32 Charles Vandersluis. '34 Marc Wallace. '34 Martin Wallace. '34 William Wallace. '34 Leon Wasson. '35 Lloyd Whiicsell. '32 Cecil Wilmot. '35 PLEDGE Cameron Hewitt Robert Qucllo 437 Unite would tome limn sncoh up behind a drive and drink all the Wilt iff out of life river, leav- ing the loo- hi oh and dtv Psi Omega Dentistry Smith, thIt. f uutil. Itirhr. Gullit h ton. l-otilru. Pott l.ippmto, Outlet. tooji. Krautc. Sthtttt. ftttwte AnJttton. C. Pout. lUuJuh. P. Pttlit, Gtiehlet Founded. Baltimore College of Dentistry. 1892 37 Chapters Zeta Kappa Chapter. 1919 FACULTY Dr. Erwin F. Allis Dr. Peter Brekhus Dr. Ambert B. Hall Dr. Earl A. Nelson Dr. George W. Reynolds Dr. Fred C. Thiers ACTIVE Arthur A. Anderson. '32 William C. Baggs. '33 Elgin C. Bamgert, '34 Alex R. Bell. '33 Henry Brewer. '33 Herbert W. Britt. 32 Arthur A. Brudvik. '32 Everett L. Earsley. '32 Joseph C. Fawcett. '33 Robert M. Ferrish. ā32 Ralph G. Griebler. ā32 Lester H. Gullickson. '33 Gustavus T. Krause. ā32 Fred Lippman, '32 Charles A. Pettit. '32 Paul S. Pettit. '32 Henry Rippe, '32 Norman K. Scherer. '32 Franklin R. Shatter. 33 John W. Smith. '32 Milo J. Wallin. '33 PLEDGE Howard Disney Marcus G. Franta 438 Tau Phi Delta Forestry tvintn. Btrkttr, Sfgilfo ā, lit rum, KiJIinglOfl. N titan lluhttla. Otmmott Whttltr. Sihtn. Rut. Clark Suptr WcntaarJ, fttf, Kopitkt. f turnon. ttgltt. Unit FACULTY J. H. Allison R. M. Brown Clyde Christensen Merril Deters Ralph Lorenz Henry Schmitz GRADUATE Robert Anderson Stanley Buckman Ernest Dahl Sam Frisby M. Rigg George Sea berg Donald Stewart ACTIVE Wilhelm Bcckert. ā34 John Clark. '35 Jack Densmore. '35 Charlie Evenson. ā32 John R. Fry. ā33 George Her ion. '34 Fed M. Holt. '33 Aatos Huhtala. '32 Edward Ivcrscn. '32 John Kopitke. '32 Founded. Washington University. 1924 3 Chapters Beta Chapter. 1926 Harry C. Miley. '33 Ralph A. Nelson. '34 Harold C. Nilsen. '34 Walter Ridlington. ā34 John R. Riss, ā35 Paul Scastrom. ā34 Peter J. Super. '34 Frederick F. Wangaard. ā33 Sheldon F. Zeigler. '33 PLEDGE Frank Alexander Mike Brind3 Jack Collard George Haridman 439 A Mtm-uJhrtttitutamhryjl umi required to flit I hi huge uj of mup riteJeJ to uiit g the uppeitUi of the logger Theta Tau Engineering I'cul could entity pcc! a log at dean at a whittle by holding the hack at one end. while Be he udhJ at the other. ftfoevr, Xwaman, StJam. Bourn. VV'. Jahnton. A'. Johaton, Bill ItoJa . Chnunffi, Ifyotmit. BattMtmi . (jeotbnrr. Bnlriu'. Wnytl Odell, fox. ttnmbnll. Andt! ton, Wiltox, Ftetbmm. Dowd. C.ttff Founded. University of Minnesota. 1904 22 Chapters Alpha Chapter. 1904 FACULTY W. H. Emmons E. H. Comstock W. F. Holman W. H. Parker O. S. Zelner Roy H. Farchmin. '32 Charles W. Fox. '33 Louis Gerischer. '34 Robert C. Graebner. 34 Mirza F. Gregg. 33 George F. Hupp. '33 Allan A. Hutchings. '33 Kenneth R. Johnson. '33 Wesley H. Johnson. '34 Frank W. Murphy. '32 Theodore Nylund, '34 Ray H. Odell, 32 Harluf C. Peterson. ā33 Richard E. Schuett. ā34 Marvin G. Sedam. ā33 Rolf G. Swanson. 34 George Weigel. ā32 J. Hebden Willox. ā32 PLEDGE John Danchertsen Herbert K. Erickson Kenneth K. Kirkland Morris C. Knight Lewis F. Martin Henry Rahn Floyd M. Robbins Louis P. Schmitt Kenneth Shaw GRADUATE F. J. Billz R. Grover R. W. Hill W. J. MacLean ACTIVE Clifford O. Anderson. ā32 Robert H. Barthclemy, ā34 Roger G. Bosscn. '34 George B. Brimhall. '33 Charles W. Britzius. '33 Harold H. Christoph. 33 James E. Dowd. '32 Roy S. Dynesius. '34 Triangle Engineering Paul scooped out the hole for I.ukr Superior when he need-rd a rrtetue water tupply Johntan. Tati. Whirl amt. Ifmf Milhn. Traolit Darlinf. I von W' iroivr. KaUher. Ktotnnf. Turnon. Woo . Orai-ti t.nn Perhinion, Stobir. Tapir rl. Hi Horn. Milltin. AnJitun. HaiTtunJ. Smith DarnnaxhU, Pi rainy. Randolph. Anhjt. Von Fiiihit. Ilathn. Korpht. OufV.r if FACULTY W. E. Brooke H. A. Doeringsfeld J. R. DuPriest Dean Ora M. Leland F. W. Springer H. B. Wilcox GRADUATE Lee Amundson Edward Gould Edward Loye Ingof Sergistad Lyman Swendson R. E. Wald Founded. University of Illinois. 1907 I 5 Chapters Minnesota Chapter. 1922 ACTIVE R. A. Anderson, ā32 Guy B. Arthur. Jr. '32 Oscar Backlund. '32 Tom Brcakey. ā32 Wilfred Darling. '32 Aldcn Elstrom. 32 Lloyd Graves, '33 Laurence Hallin, ā32 Russell Johnson. ā34 A. E. Kaliher, ā33 Ray Kracmer, ā33 Olaf Lein. Jr.. '32 Roger Lynn. '34 Harold Mattlin. '34 Clifford Mellin. '32 l.indlcy Parkinson. '32 Willard Randolph. '33 Herbert Scobie, '34 Willis Smith. ā32 George Taft. ā32 John Tenold. '34 William Von Fischer. '32 Robert Wberland. '33 Rodney Wood. '33 PLEDGE Ray Hoag Melvin Kernkamp Edward Kuphal John Peterson Lloyd Waliner I lerman Westover 441 Xi Psi Phi Dentistry Bulit soaked .in entire see non of land 10 the river at one drau. the trees titer cut, and the section hauled hath. Ofitahl. SvenJun. Sifftt. Jontteo. lUinovton. 11 aft man, WjUan Shirk, frmytb, .attae. Xteunan. tohnioe,. Qvintl, F.tln a-.f . JoeJM, llolmn. VanJith a, Hetnnan, Caelum. Valentine Founded. University of Michigan, I 889 31 Chapters Phi Chapter. 1905 FACULTY Dr. R. Green Dean William F. Lasby Dr. H. Little Dr. J. Little Dr. George Lunbcrg Dr. H. C. Nelson Dr. C. F. Otto Dr. A. A. Pagenkopf Dr. C. W. Waldron Dr. H. Worman Dr. J. O. Baker GRADUATE Dr. A. M. Smith ACTIVE Clarence Aga, ā32 O. Hjalmar Anderson. '32 Francis M. Brennan. 32 . Lowell R. Carlson. ā32 Gale Ellis. ā32 Lyle Forsyth, ā33 Harry C. Holmes. ā32 Norval E. Jensen. ā32 Walter A. Johnson. ā33 Mervin L. Jordahl. ā32 Per S. Opsahl. '32 Stephen P. Quinn. 32 Claire Siegel. ā33 Gustav Svendsen. ā32 Lyle N. Valentine, ā32 John A. Vandcrhoof. ā32 Robert J. Wallace. ā32 A. Ray Waters. '32 Frank Zallar. '32 William Zwick. ā32 PLEDGE Freeman L. Blunt Eugene Daley Elbert Fenske Bernard Hageman Joseph Hamer Mortimer Harrington Herman Janssen Charles Krumbicgcl Harvey Monson Ronald Miller Lewis Ryan Randall Ryder Cccel Sherk Arthur Watson 442 Chi Epsilon Civil Engineering h Occaunnallu Ihht ran auJatj and roamtd thv jrrut Northmrtt Hu big trarh.% formtd Ihr irn thousand lakn of ilihntfOUl l.mJhirm. H. Cottu-n. Hubbard. Ztlntf. G. Cailtort. Oilman Maiyulai. Wiiffl. SthmiJi. Halim. WakiHild Ituinll. Kimi. lloJitn, Ditlmy Founded University of Illinois. 1921 Alpha Chapter. 1923 8 Chapters FACULTY L. H. Hallin. ā32 Frederic Bass J. C. Hubbard. ā33 Leonard F. Boon J. D. Jacobs. ā32 Alvin S. Cutler O. M. Lcland John I. Parcel Otto S. Zelncr G. E. Lindhjem. ā33 R. F. Kreiss. ā32 E. Margulas. ā33 ACTIVE G. E. Bodien. ā32 G. H. Carlson. '33 R. Oilman. ā33 C. J. Russell. '32 M. E. Schmidt, ā32 H. Carlson. ā33 H. Wakefield. '33 W. D. Darling. ā32 G. F. Weigel. '32 4-n Covnirvman. Xloikntr, Uaihit. k tUy. Onto. Iloiutr. F. Johnton. CtlUnJ r Miiftt, Slrbbtnt. Ihuilry. VoiĀ«hi. blown. GotJnn. Jotwith Doth . Almm. CutiluoJ, llouhin. Koutn rntt tt, Kulp, fiuhtr. II. John ton Founded Epsilon Chapter. 1928 Medical College of Virginia. 1879 81 Chapters FACULTY Rugnar Almin Earl B. Fischer Charles V. Smythe GRADUATE Carl A. Goldner Ralph Voight ACTIVE Thomas A. Bartley. '32 Edwin Borchcrs. '33 Orville Brown, '32 Ray Callander. '32 George Crosse n. '} 3 Max Countryman. '32 Alan Docltz, 32 Maurice Droen, ā32 Herbert Grafsland. 33 Ben Johnson. '32 Frank Johnson. ā32 Ray Lacher. '33 Harold Kulp. ā32 Arnold Mackner. '32 Conrad Katzenmeyer. 33 William Stebbins. '32 PLEDGE John Hoisser Ray Johnson Hilary Jozwich Lambert Kecley 444 Phi Alpha Delta Law When Paul llunujn rnJe on Rabe't back, hr Wat obliged 10 ute a (rlttcopv Io see (he hind Inf (he Bit} HIu Ok.. S'nh'tUtn. Ceoblree. Hue 9. Shier. Ath. OeangoorJ, Oot t. ever cot. Ctektnt, Stholle. J chit ton. Oalekee. Ktmhle Kelli , ten mover, (idmri, Iāeali. Slomrjiiitt Founded. Minnesota Mitchell Chapter. 1922 University of Chicago. 1 897 52 Chapters ACTIVE Weston Grimes. '32 Walter Anderson. '13 Alfred Halgren. '32 Robert Ash. ā32 Kenneth Johnson. '33 Ward Blake. '34 L. Fallon Kelly. '33 Moritz Blomquist. '32 Kenneth Kimble. '34 Fred Burg. '34 Henry Leveroos. '33 Donald Crabtree. '33 Frank Nicholsen. '34 Harold Dalaker. '33 l.oche M. Perkins. '34 Leon Day. '33 Donald Pratt. '32 Albert Egermayer. '32 Leslie Scholle. '32 Dudley Ericson. '32 John Storr. '33 Bernhard Grangaard. '33 James Young. '32 445 Paul Runyan invented the two man iĀ«m In tough tountru the trc on the hilltopĀ were tut. but nut thow in the Valley Phi Delta Phi Law lltneuetef. Sutfent. Stofonev. them I. Neville. Ni njon. Dtaht. McMillan, t'eikimn l.umrlonJ, Mtei uati. Somu-n. SharooJ. SheJJuch, C oin i . Orient, IInufh I lenrirQ. I homuMi, lx.h. f ijjn. (h.tinxvihe. Sitnthman, Merchant hounded Dillon Inn. 1891 University of Michigan. 1869 56 Chapters FACULTY Wilbur H. Cherry Ralph Dwan Everett Fraser Harvey S. Hoshour Henry Ii. McClintock James Paige William Prosser Henry Rottschaefer ACTIVE Robert S. Carney. '55 E. P. J. Chapiewskc. '52 Everett Drake. '5 5 James Eriksson. '55 Dan Feidt. '52 Clyde Fiddes, '52 Noel Fleming. '52 Phillip Gartner. '52 Henry Greene, '33 Roland Henning. '32 Elvero McMillan. '32 Waldo Marquart. '33 Ralph Merchant. '32 Phil Neville. '33 Nobel Shaddock. '3 3 Franklin Stevens. '32 Morris Strothman. '32 Edward Thomson. '32 PLEDGE Roger Barrett Clifford Janes Stanley Kinyon Kenneth Hough Arthur Lampland William Moroney R. Paul Sharood Henry Somsen 446 Ktor . .lfĀ«Kuv. GrĀ«y. Srhen. Swaoion. Lirtiutom. CĀ«fou v O'Ctwvx . J. Prtrrron. tUthnād'n. rum. DaWUrin. YUiiater. Uarntll. ib%nn Shommto. ft. I'rtmon. AnntnJtoO. Hablrtf. Iloldtidft. Rtnnry. ā⢠Ouimmil, Jontt. AupprtU, Xlilltr. 4r utn. Math. Stoll. Ptprmhu New England Conservatory of Music. 1898 57 Chapters Founded Alpha Mu Chapter. 1925 FACULTY Cecil Birder Donald Ferguson Rudolph Goranson Fritz Haugert Archie Jones Earl Killeen William Lindsay Abe Pepinsky Carl Schever Carlyle Scott Clyde Stephans George Slump GRADUATE Earl Amundson Donald Dabelstein ACTIVE Donald Aupperle. '54 JamesColosimo. '32 Sheldon Gray. ā34 Earl Irons. '34 Edward Kinney. '32 Ralph Knowles. '32 Edwin Lindstrom. '32 Jack MacKay. '33 Leonard Mach. '32 Ralph Magelssen. '32 Harold Miller. '32 Kenneth Parks. '32 Robert Peterson. '32 Kenneth Schon. '33 Sigurd Swanson. '32 Rolf Ylvisaker. '32 PLEDGE Eli Barnett Harry Dahlner Pat tee Evenson D. Gibson William Holdridge Harold K la nek Dwight Longfellow William Liegl Clifford Menz John O'Connor James Peterson Albert Shomcnto 447 Bohr nahfJ an mitre section of fund lo the nt ee at ant dray: thr tree ititle cat and the trelion hauled hack. Scarab Architecture UtlM-th. Ilotnun,i l.rmtft. U'.Wi-.n May Coanrtty, l.unJbtre, Xtvore. Pneh. S yiborr. Daht Cro nwi. tiiynimxi. OtnuttJ Lf urn ttryn, Rrjdbtt'y. (itltti. Rader. JtftiOf Founded. University of Illinois. 1912 Khona Chapter, 1924 1 3 Chapters FACULTY Rudolph Dahl. '33 Ivan DoscfT Joseph A. Gates. '32 Roy C. Jones Mark N. Hayes. '32 Robert Jones Kenneth E. Hornung. ā33 Frederick Mann Eino A. Jyring. ā32 Rhodes Robertson Bernard G. Lampe. ā32 Elmer E. Young GRADUATE Leland R. Amundson Lin wood Brightbill Francis Gorman E. Alfred Swanstrom Jerome W. Larson. ā33 Kenneth R. Lund berg. ā33 I.ynden Y. McIntosh. '3 3 Harlow C. May. '3 3 James E. Moore, '33 John M. H. Olmsted. ā33 Frank J. Pcsck, ā32 ACTIVE Ferris L. Seashore. ā32 Willard G. Beddow. '32 Melvin C. Stenrud. ā32 W. Edward Bradbury. ā32 Dow T. l inker. ā33 Helmer E. BrockhofT. '3 3 Harold R. Brynteson, ā32 LawrenceC. Watson. ā33 William Charles Budge. Jr.. '3 3 PLEDGE Weaver D. Connelly. '3 3 John W. Cole Prarion. Harm Poiit . Ilohnftin. ftwĀ vMn, Driitoil l.onunorr. lornry, K h ttir.Ā« t.. ArrJtrron SthmiJt. Ill man Hatvty. J AnJttton. Powtft. Ilarnhatl. WamMl. AiUhinn F;oundcd. Minnesota Chapter. 1916 DePauw University. 1909 44 Chapters FACULTY Thomas F. Barnhart Dr. Ralph D. Casey Robert W. Desmond Edwin H. Ford Fred L. Kildahl William P. Kirkwood Kenneth E. Olson Thomas E. Steward GRADUATE John Gibbons Stanley D. Kane D. H. Seymour ACTIVE Earl Anderson Judson Anderson Arnold Aslakson William Costello David Donovan David Driscoll James R. F. Eckman Harold Elfmann Fred Fadell John W. Forney William T. Harris John H. Harvey Strand Hillcboc Clifton Holmgren Lee Loevinger Carl Pearson Philip Potter Martin Powers Donald Robertson Kenneth Schmidt Robert Shannon Kenneth Simpson Bernard Wambolt James Weeks 449 Alpha Delta Sigma Advertising Paul could raiilu peel a log ui thun ui a whittle bu holding thr bark at one end. while f atĀ«r pulled til the other. Pounded. University of Missouri. 1913 42 Chapters Dean Edward E. Nicholson Chapter. 1923 FACULTY Dreng Bjornaraa William J. Madden ACTIVE Robert Biedcrmann William Crowe George Doyle Gardner English Donald Larson Edwin Mai berg J. Stuart Moore Chet Oehler PLEDGE Carlyle Anderson Richard Rapp Emil Swanson Raymond Thcricn 450 Pete MufrauJ was a big. bragging butlg from Quebec. He boasted that he could beat Paul Bun-gan. and set out to challenge the master-logger. He found Paul in the act of lifting a sledge and a team. The road was narrow, and turning difficult, so in his leisure moments Paul aided his men by picking up the team and turning it around. When Pete saw this display of strength he fled, exclaiming. He lifted team and hall! team and h all! IāltOFESSIOSAL SOItOltlTIES 451 Paul marked his hnjt bu pinching our a piece with his braurnyhand; but his men had to uu' an axe to scalp them. Alpha Alpha Gamma Arc hi I eclurc I inimrvf AllurJ. U itiao, 11 11 Ilnj.t.M.I tin BtodU up. Slot Founded. Beta Chapter. 1022 f Washington University. 1018 8 Chapters FACULTY Ruth Carter Edith Gardner ACTIVE Inez Allard. ā33 Clarice M. Berg, '32 Eugenia Bjodstrup. '32 Louise Hall. '32 Lillian Haggard. '33 Alice Linsmcycr, '33 ChefTeMarx. '32 Dorothy Wilson. ā33 452 Alpha Delta Tau Medical Technology Riilft would tonwlimet wrak up behind a drtOt and drink all ihr water out of the river. Uacini the (oifi htt b and dtu Jathton. Skoeta sJ lltmmveJ, Aj««i O'mn .uri Skrtnk. Hunk l'hnmat, ⢠Smith Smith. ll nāt J ACTIVE Catherine Barrett. '33 Carolyn Hammond. '33 Marjorie Hanstad. '33 Nancy Harrison. '3 3 Bessie Hawk. '32 Margaret Jackson. '33 Helen Luick. '32 Jeanette Olsen. '33 Alma Skerrik. ā32 Margaret Skogland. 32 Gladys Smith. ā32 Janet Smith. '32 Alice Thomas. 32 Alpha Epsilon Iota Medicine linin' ā.naked an entire -.eelion of land to the river at one drat), the ireex owe cut. and the tec lion hauled hack 5m ih. Knifhlt. C.rjnJu lemon, Oilmen. O'Siien Itipko, or tew aĀ friun. Hotniunn MtCut Moii.u.n, Spuf tm. Wultt. t.r. ltā.O IrowAmin. CiWml F-ounded. Ann Arbor. Michigan. 1890 22 Chapters Epsilon Chapter. 1901 F;ACU1.TY Ruth lioynton Mattie Bullard F;sther Grcisheimer Edith Potter ACTIVE Helen Brockman. '33 Elizabeth Conforth. '32 Margit Grytbak. '32 Caroline Helmick. '32 Eleanor Iverson. ā34 Harriet James. '34 Evelyn Johnson. '34 Cathryn Knights. '33 Charlotte Morrison. ' 3 3 Veronica O'Brien. '33 Jane Oilman. '34 Emily Ripka. '33 Helen Robertson. ā32 Sibyl Smeby. '32 ClementineSpurzmen. '33 Marjorie Wulff. ā33 PLEDGE Nina Anderson Katherine Corson Margaret Grandy Dorothy belle McCree Florence Smith Alpha Kappa Gamma Dental Hygiene InHnitoa, Nttfjit, llaitlrn. Nuhtrli SuOor,I. Dalilftn Jmurt. t. fr n r. Slunftr fiobmion. Wilton, ftxifl. (ā¢f.t-n fii j v. f n eooA. haJ j dinner horn so tnif. and hr hltut 11 to hard (hat pine trm felt, and (v.lonet were started. hounded. Alpha. 1022 University of Minnesota. 1922 4 Chapters ACTIVE PLEDGE Margaret H. Boesel. ā32 Josephine George. ' 32 Dorothy Jensen. '32 Jeanne l.aFrance. '33 Elizabeth Netherly. '33 Jane Robinson. '33 Marian 13. Wilson. ā32 Mildred Allen Joyce Dahleen Jane Hasslcn Kay Johnston Eileen Munger Mabel Nelson Marguerite Stafford 435 Jot) neon. Jocgtmon, lluthlfom. (Sotnick O'NtiH. Mote non, SuiftnUnj. lloli. H,,wtn Founded. Beta Chapter, 1928 University of California. 1927 6 Chapters FACULTY Cecelia Hauge Almira Hoppe Esther Thompson Helen Torgcrscn ACTIVE Alice Ames, '34 Edith Anderson. '32 Virginia Benton. ā34 Jeanette Blake. ā33 Victoria Blasjo. ā32 Laura Bowers. ā34 Bernice Dalen. ā33 Alfreda Danielson. 33 Sadie Ericson. '33 Frances Gunlaugson. ā33 Marcella Mealy. ā34 Mildred Holt. '33 Marcella Hullstrom. ā33 Jane Irvine. ā35 Elvera Johnson. '32 Anne Lindeli. '32 Agnes Love. ā3 3 Ellene Mclstad. 33 Charlotte Molstad. ā34 Mildred Montag, '34 Margaret Montgomery. '33 Myona Morrison. '34 Mona OāNeill. '34 Lena Paskewitz. '34 Eleanor Sandahl, '34 Bernice Sutherland, '33 Christie Tostenson. '34 Vivian Vanstrom, '33 Helen Wiggert. ā32 PLEDGE Margaret Benson Teresa Gornick Helen Jorgenson Doris Larson Lillian Piltingsrud Sovalla Shields Kappa Epsilon Pharmacy Paul liktd a need imokv. To krtp hn pifu Mhd itquirtd the entire lime of a itvamptr u-'Ctkiru} with a troop ihcvrl Norm. Suoontoe . John Amt. Ammon. Well. Johomn Founded. Alpha Chapter. 1921 University of Iowa. 1921 9 Chapters GRADUATE Laurine D Jack ACTIVE Katherine Amman. '32 Esther Jahn. ā34 E. Lucille Johnson. ā32 Amy Norris. ā34 Lois Simonton. '34 Muriel Starr. '32 Evelyn Wall. '32 MY Babe would not u ork unltu xnauf tcji on the ground. the logging roadi were whritwathtd in rummer, to deteive him Kappa Rho Forensic V.utter Unite, IhJueJ Kith, !.Ā Am.U. HnllOiuuitr. Jemtn. Oirfoev. IJu'eiJt, WolJtun 11 .Inter, W.tlle, C.illilUnJ, Millet. Ilru ttuil FACULTY Helen Cannoyer Melba Hurd ACTIVE Gloria Boock. '34 Virginia Childs. '33 Isabella Davis. '32 Dorothy Edwards. '32 Anna Fleck. 33 Lillian Gillilland. '33 Helen Grigware. '35 Genevieve Haugsrud, ā 3 3 Lydia Herman. '34 Marlys Hilmer. '33 Ruth Hoisted. '33 Anita Holtshauser. '33 Marjorie Jensen. '33 Lola Jones. '32 Noel Kirk. '34 June Miller. '32 Katherine O'Neil. '34 Dorothy Paulsen, '32 Margaret Waldron. '32 l.enore Wolfe. '33 PLEDGE Virginia Anderson Genevieve Arnold Isobel Gregory Dorothy Harris Marguerite Jones Marion Kaulbach Helen Clare Landrum Ruth Mayer 458 CftWkfOOU'. (iiwi). Uāfi . Ihnrmi. LttioJ. St$tltr Sironvtt. Chtiiiimuon. U'lffiitHM. Tutmun. Sirtntff I u i. HW. Kiix, Cipimli Founded. University of Michigan. 1905 62 Chapters Sigma Sigma Chapter. 1924 FACULTY Blanche Kendall Mary Malcolm Gertrude Reeves Kate Tritchell GRADUATE Grace Bergen Bernice Giles Canfield Bernadine Courtney Gertrude Ford Virginia Foreman Florence Hagelund Janet Rohweder Ruth McClintock Schwar mann Grace Wolfson ACTIVE Ruth Ackerman. 54 Margaret Christianson. '54 459 Florence Essen. 52 Sylvia Flagstad. '55 Olive Griebenow. '52 Katherine Hennig. 55 Ellen Hulbcrt. '54 Blanche Kendall. '54 Bernice King. '52 Margaret I.eland. '52 Dorothy Nutt. '55 Minerva Pepinsky. '52 Gretchen St icier. '55 Margery Stranger. '52 PhyllisTurritten. '55 Katherine West. '52 Mary Wigginton. ' 5 5 Marion Wood. '52 PLEDGE Luva Mae Jensen Phyllis Stranger Cfntir. htltt Clttf. Auvnuif. 4ihmitll t.nĀ 'u Uarntl niiĀ«J, ( ijimintiftom, 'I hntiffium. 1āibouihih GRADUATE Sally Foster Dorothy Hosford Mildred Hostbjor ACTIVE Margaret Chase. ā32 Virginia Clair. '32 Joyce Crysler. 32 Pauline Cunningham. ā32 Myra Daniel. '32 Dorothy Finstad. '32 Evelyn Lewis. ā32 Janet Kriedler. '32 Sada Miller. '32 Constance Nelson. ā32 Rosemary Pehoushik, '32 Vera Schanfteld. '32 Marie Schmidt. '32 Elsie Swanson. '32 Harriet Thompson. '32 460 Trained Ants were utilized in the early days of the logging industry. Paul Bunyan developed a breed of Ants (or Uncles, as they preferred to be called) that stood six feet tall, and weighed two hundred pounds. To overcome their habit of hibernating all winter. Paul supplied the ants with mackinaws with three pairs of legs. They ate nothing but Copenhagen Snuff. The Ants proved invaluable, and did the work of our modern tractors. IIELMillOIIS 461 Studentsā Religious Council Paul often uxcd a qrrat timber xujthe. uuih which he Could til a uttion a lin brr with unr mighty tiling of the artm ADVISORS Rabbi Aronson Father Peters Benjamin Schmoker Rev. C. A. Wendell Lois Wildy OFFICERS Carol WelchāPresident Arthur LoishncrāVice President l.ucile DeLecuw Secretary Glenn Haycraft- -Treasurer REPRESENTATIVES Caroline Chamberlain Margaret Chase Andrew Presbyterian l.ucile DeLecuw Glenn Haycraft Baptist Eleanor Johnson Arthur Loishner Lutheran Students Fred Hughes Carol Welch Newman Club John Glas Mabel Hawkinson Wesley Foundation Kerwin Hoover Mark Woodward Y.M.C.A. Marion Finney Grace Solcther V W.C.A. Founded. University of Pennsylvania. 1890 105 Chapters Newman Club of the University of Minnesota. 1903 Paul Kotiptd out the hair nr l.ahe Superior when hr need ed a merer water lupply lor ifing hn logging mad . OFFICERS PRESIDENT- J Arthur Farley SECRETARY Barbara Angel VICE PRES,āEvrrrii F. Baeh FINANCIAL SEC'TYāCledo H.un.rti TREASURER John F Burke HOARD OF DIRECTORS Viola FfMii Mary IIkiuo lli abeth Dootry George WiirJ Mjij Mothar Kenneth Stewart ( arol W,l h MEMBERS Hovabellr Adamt, H John A 1 ayne. 1 ootuello AbljH , )2 Bernice l etter. 14 Baibiia Angrl, 'A2 Alexander MacDonald 1 Alice Arecott ') 1 Helen MacDonald. 11 Einxi Hath. '12 Peter Maloney, Jr 11 Mjiy Baldelli. 12 Eleanor Marehill, 14 ikimrit ItutJii, J) Eugene McHugh, 'll Anne Becchettt '12 Helen Mil auyhlin. 11 Etalo J Becchltli 12 Howard Me Nall) 1 i Beet F Betlluii. 12 Margaret Montgomery. 11 Fiiikx It tow o 'll Margaret Mori eon. 1 hatbtvn Brown, '11 Cheater H Motneeu 11 I'riRtii Brennan. '12 Catherine Morrit J 1 ( ledo ItiUnetll. '12 Helen Morrit. 11 Nick J Biklacieh. 'll Mary Morrit. '12 John 1 Buik.. 12 J. Graham Mother. 14 ( alhritne Huini 12 Mary Mother. 12 Paul Campion, ā Donna Mary Mod. 'll (hailo Carlin. 'll Eleanor Mullen, 'll Dr Florian Cirrran Pauline A Narhe. ā14 Sarah Cina. 12 Joteph A Niedeee. 'll Ed waul Clvtdalr. 12 Dorothy Nienit. 11 Mrlrn Coedon. āIS Thontat O'l.oughlm. 11 Joxpli M Connolly. 'll Al.ee Pallanek. 4 John J, Conroy. '12 Rntrmarv Peltoutrk. 12 Miiiiin Corrigan. ā11 Paul Peendcegatl, 'll William Craw lord. 12 1 aweenee Peobtl. 'll Ann Coll. 11 Bernard M Pirkl. 'll Elmer Cm. 14 William W. Peouty. 12 MaorUr O'Alton ā12 Vernon Quainrance. 'll Alia Davit. 'll Marjorie (Jumn. 14 Marir DeVanrv. 14 Ray Rademarher. 'll Robert N. Dinkrl, '12 Henry Radotevieh, 12 Eliaabrih Doolry. 2 Floernee Rattier, 'll 1 lianor Dortr. 14 Lawrence Riiiee. 11 Maamr Ellcnprlcu. ' 15 Fred Rorhauten. 1 Vivian Elteopeten. 11 Jeanneilr Roiliauten. 'll 1 aoirila Filiauaulr. '12 Creilia Reed. '14 VisĀ«m FiĀ hĀ«t. IS l.aura M Reinke. '12 Maryam Flanayan. '14 Paul Riehire. ā14 Mary Folry. 14 Eugene Ronay. 11 Viola Frania '12 Cieritude Sauie. '14 Bruy Full. 11 Margaret Schulte. l( Helen Frtia. 11 Mane Sihmnt, '12 Hairtrffc Fuller. '14 John Shaugltactty. 11 Mary Keenan. '12 John Simooel. 'll Joteph E llendrickton. 11 lark SkoglanJ. 15 Raphael J Higgint. 11 Margaret Skogland '12 Maerian Hoeky. 12 Allred M Smith, 'll Feed Hugbet. '14 Henry SliitlMir. 12 fcejiai llurle) 'll Kennnh Siewail. 'll N.ck Hurley. 11 CUra Tabaka. 11 William Jolly 11 Bernard Wambolr. 12 Frannt Keegan 'll Anthony Wetttrnberyer. 'll John A. Kirteh, 'll Carol Wrleb, 'll Hugo Kulilmann 1 Roberta Wettel, 'll 1 eo Koiawa. 14 George E Wiard. 12 Jeanne 1 aFrance, 'll Margorrile Wmgeeene. 11 Theodore 1 aiell. 11 Albert Woletky. 11 Gertrude Woojdnk. 11 463 . ā¢. U. Cbffl. Mvnlf HtH . c. l xti. Sohti Johnson. rtufiioJ. Potbtrg, Moftrnwi Thttt, Htletn SĀ«r Ā«r. Stonbttf GretnirlJ S , Xtlum fjtf. Rihhtii .KrJftum Suanl'trf, ' ink GRADUATE Maud Forberg ACTIVE Dorothy Anderson. '32 Faith Anderson. ā35 Mildrid Belsheim. '34 Dorothy Bonhus. '34 Esther Broecker. ā34 Katherine Flink. 32 Ruth Gagnath. ā33 Marguerite Greenfield. '34 Hulda Melcen. ā35 Eunice Hokenson. '33 Ethel Johnson. '34 Olive Lee, ā33 Dorothy Pedersen. '34 Betty Rogosheski. '3 3 LeilaSconbcrg. ā32 Irene Seeger Miller. ā32 Alice Swan berg. '34 Irene Underdahl. ā33 Florence Zeycr. '32 PLEDGE Clarice Ebert Margaret Ebert Myrtle Ebert Agnes Johnson Harriet Nelson Florence Sack Bertha Sol vet Helen Thees Constance Trygstad 464 Miller. non. H aerie. Seaman. Ptlettoet, SrouV. Pel teem. It Randolph, Whitney t. Ilare, V. Hare. Heard, Allan, Hon.{Hut, Soper. Smith lloimrt Helm Oileebtad. Snyder. Sue , Ward. I. Randolph. I.lhot Ihlt tr OllrehUd Rennet I, l.epene. there infer, Taylor. Ve'olte Cowan, T. Plummer. Rowe Maurer. Stoudl. H. Plummer. Todd, SI, Hand'd fib Claee llufhri Founded. Kansas University. 1916 20 Chapters Delta Chapter. 1918 GRADUATE Phoebe Allan Lucille Fassett ACTIVE Margaret Barbaree. 33 Bernice Brown. '3 3 Dorothy Brown. ā32 Virginia Clare. '32 Fern Fisk. 34 Edwina Hare. '32 Virginia Hare. ā3 3 Adelaide Harris. '32 Mablc Hawkinson. '32 Hope Hosmer. ā33 Helen Humphrey. '32 Josephine Hughes. '34 Marguerite Johnson. '3 3 Lola Jones. '32 Stella Lammers. '32 Marion Maurer. '3 3 Ruth Morgan. '3 3 Hilvie Otterblad, '32 Virginia Pemberton. '33 Claudia Perkins. '33 Clara Peterson. '32 Irene Peterson. '35 Buelah Plummer. '32 Twylah Plummer. '33 Irene Randolph. '32 Marion Randolph. '34 Ruby Randolph. '3 3 MargaretScullin. '34 Elizabeth Smith. '35 Esther Snyder. '32 AvisSogge. '34 Louise Stoudt. '33 Helen Todd. '32 Doris Whitcomb. '33 Lenorc Wolfe. 33 Alberta Wolsted. '32 PLEDGE Juanita Beard Lois Bondhus Lucilla Bridson Kathleen Cowan Margaret Davis Nan Jean Dueringer Ruth Alice Dunlevy Ruth Elliot Grctchen Headley Alice Heard Anita Houltshouser Luella Lepine Edith Moody Gay Miller Thelma Norman Helen Otterblad Peggy lone Peterson Patricia Redman Mary Rowe Geraldine Sandberg Margaret Scharfenberg Beatrice Scowe Thelma Smith Jean Stark Margaret Steenson Mary Taylor Myrtle Tabbert Margaret Ward Dorothy Whitney Jane Wood 465 Phi Chi Delta HoWt, UiBran Kun t. Van S'tit. HtnJix Omanjn. Winn. J.-hnwn. Httmtt Coltmao. Ctont. IUown Mann. W at lit I man f ounded. Chicago. 1921 7 Chapters Gamma Chapter. 1924 GRADUATE Marjorie Cunningham ACTIVE Gladys Anderson. ā32 Harriet Baker. ā32 Madge Ames Brown. '32 Ethel Burbeck. '32 Margaret Chase. '32 Ruth Cummings. '32 Medford Grant. '32 Coral Hemmingson. '34 Beulah Johnson. '32 Margaret Jackson. '32 Etholwyn Julius. '34 Elizabeth Johnson. ā34 Carol Kus' lcr. ā33 Lora Belle Kunze. 34 Isabelle McElwec. ā32 Ruth Rathert. ā33 Viola Snyder. ā32 Dorothy Wade. ā34 Joyce Winberg. 34 PLEDGE Neva Bendix Dorothy Black Margaret Beemcr Gladys Ingold Betty Mann Rosaiyn Mac Bean Jeanette Ostrander Ruth Van Nest Bernice Warren 466 tVĀ Ā v Paul marked hit lotji by pinching out a piece uHlh hit breiu ny hand; but hit men bail to nit on oxe to tiiilp them. V. i t ft It t Sliler. Toy toe, Campbell. Demon licit Itiown. Pellet V'oor v ā Ā« J. Keene. Sehronkir feocnei pern. Poller If...ghee llayieall. PeJetton FACULTY James Campbell 1 Ioward Meagher. President James Fesler Phil Potter. Vice President George Frogner Glenn Haycraft. Secretary Jack Hall Wallace Petri. Treasurer Harry Pederson Arthur Slifer ACTIVE Fred Taylor Goffe Benson Howard Keene Lowell Brown John Forney N. Lawrence linger Mark Woodward 467 Kixh. Ohm. Ohrhrtk. Havtntotk, Lotion llomioi , lUikin. Iltuiukr llonion Collint. Ship!ft MtW'ilhomi, llovJr. TollmoJot Y.W.C.A. CABINET Mildred McWilliams, President Elaine Hovde. Vice-president Estelle Colhns. I rcasurer Margaret Ochlcr. Secretary Annie I;. Shipley, Freshman Elizabeth Haverstock. Membership Ina Ramsay. Finance Edith Reed. Office Hostess Dorothy Rock. Religion Margaret Tallmadge. Faculty-Student Margaret Bruncke. Social Service Ruth Olsen. I c Rel. I.orna I arson, International Forum Phyllis Beskin. Resources Mae Ohrbcck. Social Helen Scars. Students' Religious Council Evadenc Burris. Geneva Special Projects Margaret Hanson. Fortnightly I averta Huff. Bi Racial LARGE CABINET Helen Beim Genevieve Billings Gloria Boock Delphine Brooks Prances Bruce Helen Cook Margaret Cummings Dorothy Derrick Jessie Dnnwoody I.enorc Eiberman Lois Finger Lucille Fisher Pern Pisk Helen Fritz Alice [ urban Ruth Gasink Murrell Green Eunice Gunderson Margaret Guthrie Emily Hall Genevieve Haugsrud Nivea Haw Alice Heard Vivian Johnson Maxine Kaiser Audrey Jane Kennedy Harriet Lawson Lorraine Lund Beatrice Mark Merry Mcrick Marjorie Meyers Virginia Miller Antonia Maroosis Betty Mulvchill Josephine Pease Rosemary Pehoushek Elizabeth Pertnc Miriam Pickett Helen Robbins Virginia Smith Jean Tanner Jeanette Thomas Grace Thompson Harriet Thwing Marguerite I resavan Dorothy Verrell Margaret Wackcrman Florence Weld 468 In Paul Bunyan's camp there were hypnotic story-tellers, who told of the marvelous adventures of great hunters and loggers: and singers who could make you laugh and cry at the same moment. livery night but Sunday, when the twelve hours of toil in the woods were ended, and supper was over, the tired loggers would be cheered and consoled by the bunkhouse bards. There was one for every shanty. CLIIIKS SOCIETIES 469 American Society Mechanical Engineers Ihhe u.ā- u'J JOflH' inwr unah ur Iwhmd a Jriitr and drink all ih.⢠uMfĀ« r out of the riotr, Imnf-intj i he lo }. hii h iwd drtj Wood (Hit. ( Ā«! , Hupp. OUon. W. VmIwa u imon Xlrnatlkixb, AtnoMv. iVwimi, tuntwmn. KoMioi l.ttht. F.bcrt. Ilopkim. Ropttl. SunJtll. Ikuror. Apptfl. RuJou-IikIiii. Slun fori. K f v Ctuiuotn rĀ iwr. IhJbjift. Jvm Millintn. Ilcino. Kullin. Murlioit. H'tu try. AUlPII, Iārinlrr. IlĀ vn Kotph . Du ft HU. fnekton. Hnfi'tium O. dnJnwn. Knifkt, HuĀ . Lilia FACULTY C. T. Boehnlein W. E. Brooke E. A. Comstock 4 R DuPrivst A R. Ford R. E. Gibbs C. A. Herrick C. A. Koepke J. V. Martenis B. J. Robertson F. B. Rowley J J. Ryan C. F.Shoop H B. Wilcox L. L. Wood ACTIVE R Alstatt C. O. Anderson W. Anderson J. N. Appert R. Arnoldy J. Borror N. E. Carlson F. Christoffcr J. E. Dowd C. Ebert A. Elstrom R F Erickson M. Ervin R. H. Farchmin L. J. Fischer J. W. Gill G. M. Gractz F. D. Hamerski F. Hawkinson R. J. Hayes P. Hedback A. Heino R. Helbig F. L. Hopkins G. Hupp A. Hutchings R. W Johnson M. A. Juten R. L. King M. C. Knight P. LaLiberte D. E. Leslie A. E. Lilja N. J. McDonald N. F. Mengelkoch G. Millman K H. Miller G. M. Mooney O. N. Mueller M. E. Norton C. K. Olson L. Parkinson H. Poate H. Priest G. Priester H. Radow W. H. Ripkin T. Rogers H. Rollin D. C. Rollins C. F. Sines W. Smith L. R. Sturgeon S. S. Sundell F. J. Ventura L. F. Vobeyda P. N. Wallfred L. C. Weaver R. Wood E. R. Young 470 American Institute of Electrical Engineers item- wheeleduevmboat a Jt truirtd to vir the huge vji of ioup needed to ulrt y the uppetitei of the tojftn. Sthtrbr, Lommtn, ItanC'xk. Suāfrtuxi II j l y, Lindei . Srwmjn Kttpka, U'jhi. Welho. h-utk VĀ« iun. lUunetU Kutiltr. SenJtnon. Katihte. Su'antao. .WcUwiwiri. PnJioui. Imkiw FACULTY ACTIVE R. M l.ommcn. '32 J. H Kuhlmann F. Baumann. '33 J. J. Mangan. '33 K J. Bohrer. '33 L. Markus. '3 3 GRADUATE W. C. Bloomquist. '32 S. J. McDermott. '32 L A. Anderson C. Brunetti. '32 C. J. McDonnough. '33 J. T. Anderh R. Bouck. '32 A. Melloh. '32 G. G. Bowers K. H. Brusckc. '32 S. M. Norris. '34 R F. Cunningham W.J. Dea. '33 C. L. Ottinger. '3 3 G. H. Dolcman H. L. Erickson. '3 3 C. F. Prideaux. '32 E. J. Evans P. L. Erickson. '3 3 M. I. Risley. '32 R. P. Howe J. Goldberg. '32 H. A Sanderson. '32 G. J. Hoskin J. Hancock. '33 W. K.Schiebe. '32 R E. Jones L. E Hendrickson. ā32 W. G. Shepherd. '33 J. S. Kochevar J. Huey. '32 M. G Swanson. '32 1. H. Lee R. Haxby. '33 W W. Watson. '32 H. A. Palmer A. E. Kaliher. '33 M. Wallio. '32 H F Pokorney R. J. Kut .ler. '32 K. W. Waltz. '32 F' J. Smykal S. Linsley. '32 J. M. Wilson. '32 471 American Society Civil Engineers Paul tculJ unitu peel a log at than a a whittle hy holdino the hath at one end. while Babe pulled at the other. It. i artmn Hamrrihi, Pennington Aar . 5kwmran Saeilelmgn. G. C rfmi, f) M Finn, Lovell, Rrtiit, Wruete. Oilmen Sibinull, lluttrll Chilit . Chriilitoion, Ā£iiku n. l.nn llo iek. Kritnui Satuiehi. Maltimo. Sthepiro, JoeJahl, Halim. flmMDiM, Ih untie It llsmon. Netum, Weigel. Hill. Holmitiam. Hcxittn, Darling FACULTY S. M, IXsht M. Kittle A Pints I'nthlU IIiii W l Dj.lmg I:. Kilpiind II K. Pun GRADUATE A 1 Nowiiki 1 libci G Wiliiicn S f l)iĀ Milan W. F.. Dnckru R. Ekn E. G. EiiIim A Klmix R. Kuril II J. I.Ā n t O Lri . Jr J F. Ripkrn l Kfin C. Ruitcll W W SinUlmiB ACTIVE W P. Flints J. I inb.ui N. E. Simon A. G. An Jr non J. C. FinlniiLi W. C. Lincoln F. Sclurltr 1 A Anibuon K R Gssbs 1 1 lohn N J, Sciispiro K. E Binion W. C Gturnbtgsn R. P. I.onsfur M Sihmiji G. J Bins W. E. Ouiislion W O. Lovrll II. T. Skogirn C II. Bihjliim L. II llsllin V. I.oriin A. W. Sol bum R. Ā£. DlrbĀ«i E. A. Ilamirtki C. Matkksncn W. t Sol.i sit V E. Ilock F. M llswilsml J. O'Miif A K. Solum (i t. Bodisn J. A IliJJmj 1 Mimn A. Stafford M, 11 llov Jin II C llrlganon II. Msulin Stonl C W llm iui O C- llrlisib M. Mntiion II J, SunJittom H I Uruailrii M. E. Iliimanion II Miyiinn G. II. Strjniliom f II iliocknua W c. Hill R. McKibbon W. II TsirnJ K R Blown V llindirnun O. Merer. G, F. Timmini M. I) Rami II A. Holf R. E Momun P. Wsgnk otd Ci II Ciiluin G II. Holniquiit .1 M Nr lion II Wakefield II Isihon II A Holmmom R. Notion B. Willses t T. Cater 11 B. Iloopcr C. Olio R Winn l . II ChiMt C. E Johnion R Oilman G E Wrtgrl C II Cliriiniaio M O. Jordslil K. Pedmon E G. Whnmin 1 T Cantn C L Jordan J Ptnnintloa A G. Wracks 472 Paul trooped mil the hoU lor l.ohr Superior when hr nerd-td a rncrvr Wilier tup ply lor kina hit logging roods Art Education Association Arhetman. āouvri. Ptrher. Mrttili, Sthu.tr re Killot 'Wooi. I.eland, llJtcJar, Gulhtir. Henley llant. Colt. Cleveland. timer. SULaufbtin. tiru r IlnbharJ. Guy. Omni, Hater. AnJretnn rACULTY llilm I., Rcrgland Helen Diulty Elmer E Hairnet Robin Hilpeii Josephine S. Lutz Gertrude Duncan Kim M(lĀ ) I: Shackleford Witraa I). Wolfi ACTIVE Tlirau Adtimin I nr C. Allard lltlln Almatt Row Alt hog Audtey Amidale Dorothy E. Anderion I ouiir Anderion Ruili Anderion Jean Harlow Albion Mutiril Atkins Uoloeis Haaneli Maxine Baker Virginia Bin Gwiailoli Binliy Marjorie Bill Neva Rendu Atyce Biddle Marguerite Birth l.er.oie Bordcau Esther Bioecker I roni Broegec Laura Bluer I utilr Bluer Ruth Bruscke Marjorie Cady Giirrudc fimplwll Monni Carlton Elrncu Carpenter Edna Cm I awrence C jIiim Wilmi Chiiholm Helen Cltvrlir.il Emma Cole Mary Jim Coleman Jrttir Cooni Anne B Cooprr Marion Craig Esther Crane I.online Cummin (Iniec Cumn GĀ iii Dahl Cladyi Dallti Row Dililoriu E lobelia Davii Ellin Drvanry Kathryn Dooley Eilrrn Donohue l.orrainr Du l,a Ruth Dunlevy Eihrl Dunn Maiy Eastman Muncl Elnoe Migdeicne Ildredgr Mary Emiy Jianrnr Evans Eueillr Fitehtr Patricia fl.li Kalhrrinr FUok Bruy Flynn Jayne Fooit Rulh Fieehaul Nellie Eremouw Mathilda Gantrrr Mary Girlougli Mvilie Glatset Miriam Goldberg Helene Goodell Helen Grail Gordon Granbeig Chailoite Gran Marjonr Grey Iāatiieia Gieen Fli ahelli Grove Elizabeth Guthrie Evelyn Gerhardt Foil Hlbbeniadt Lillian Haggard Helen Hammond Jeanette Hall Flurrnce Halvonon Virginia Hare Mrs. Ethel J Hanievn Ruih Evelyn Hailing Itabella Harmon Marion Harrna Deana Harm Dagmit lledin Grate llireiek Rita Herrlv Bertha I llilder Jaci|ueline Hoāleran John llnent Dotothy Horwitr. Kathleen Hubbard Mary Hunt Jane Hutehinson Kathleen Hvnn I more Ingwalton Atiee Jacobson Frieda Jcneen Minorii Jemen Evelyn J ohm on Hard Kalarh Katherine Krybor Kathetine Kurland arolinr Kiltoe Virginia Kivlti Margaret Knight llartiec t.amioa Gertrude I ang Rudolph Lang Nora I arten Ted l.artpo Mary Alice I anon Edna l.cdyaid I moee Leegard Betty l.eland Sue Lew Maigaeet Libert Mane C. I.ieich A inn Linehan Allte Clatr Lmimaver Kay l.oberg Jean l.otketbr Winifred Lomaninev Evelyn l.oun In. Mann Hrlvia Markkula Jane Maion Anna Manila Julia Maui Helen Mcl.aughliu I unit Merritt Francea Mcyee I more Michael Margaret Miller Irene MnVowity Virginia Moate Lillian Mom Jeanette Neal Helen M Nehoo Iāhyllit Nelton Ruth Nrlaon Sadie Nylund Maunnr Olime l.ouiae Oibcrdio Weatiay Iāage Allred Papaa I ouiie Paikct Dotothy Pedetion Vieginia Pemhetinn Mary Print Valletta Powen Minon Pulling Jacqurliee Redlield I ilUan Reimr.tad Etraeor Reiir Mary Reuich Helen Reynold) Inne Knlau Aliee Ritchry Cathensc Root Ethel Roiendahl Rivia Roienberg Germaine Roy llrlrne St John Margaret Saritt Gordon Sehlichting Rulh Scofield Marion Schwartz Leila Sconbetg Georgiaaa Shumway G SI. Seeerud Cathmne Simpson Vivian Smeby Dotothy Sonnmfeād Claia Springrt Marjorie Stem Ralph Stem Jane Stone Ella D Stucky Ruth Strinson Jane Thom a % Do. H. Tmke. Vet Townsend Mn Agnes Ella Ultisb Loretta Walter Mildred Welander Betty White Margaret White Grrltudi- Wirnrelr Florence WtitcC Claice Wile Marguerite Wtlkinioa Gtrtcodr Willard Elizabeth Wise Maty Lou WoW Dorothy R Wilton May Woodring Eva Wootsey Kathryn Wonlwv Adde WurJeman Ethels n Zwighs 473 Behe naked an entire section 0 land to the river at one draq: the trees were cut. and the section hauled lurk. Business Womenās Club AnJttii ). 5 ouv, Krllu lluMiruin. Hoip. ntn hineJ OFFICERS Dorothy Green. President Elaine Hosp. Secretary Helen Clifford. Treasurer Pauline Buhlman. All-Senior Representative Alice Andersen Dorothy Kelly Junior Representatives Beatrice Scosve. Prc-Business Representative MEMBERS Roseabelle Adams Lucile Aitchison Harriet Allison Alice Anderson Astrcd Anderson Elmina Anderson Ann V. Arvidvon Pauline Buhlman Esther Bauer Alice Brandcbury Marion Brown Vivian Brown Eileen Burns Estelle Collins Helen Clifford Lois Camaish Kathryn Cook Lorraine Costello Margaret Cummings Louise De Groodt na I Youngs. Advisor Sylvia Diessner Helen Doyle Sarah I agerstrom Jean Gifford Dorothy Green Gertrude Hawkins Evelyn Hill Elaine Hosp Marie Hansen Martian Horky Alberta Hocnig I aura Hughes Mildred Johnson Beatrice Kaner Dorothy Kelly H. La Vete Knudtson Ida Kotchevar Mary Lackerby Beulah Meisenburg Kathryn Mol ahn Flora Nelson Alice Nienaber Dolores Noren Dorothy Noren Imelda Ochs Lee Olson S. Joyce O'Neal Hilvic Otterbbd Evelyn Pearson Hazel Pearson Stella Peterson Clara C. Peterson Lucille I. Richards Marjorie Rea Evelyn Reding Evelyn Rognley Martha L. Ruhnkc Margaret Siesvcrs Beatrice Scosve Adelc Shogren Helen M. Skjod Esther E. Snyder Psāarl Youngren 474 ( homUy, Kar h. Ktn lrnr. Uriah. Kratt. Warren. Smith, Stillwell Camphtll, Slilltf. tun, bathmt. Ohcton, Homan. t.Htedye W alien. lllieihn llihn Corn . Ila rl ttrall. falton. Vnnnna Cony S'thofi. (itiflirt, lull. Ihllan. Moot , t meti.v . Srhweppr MEMBERS Thomas E. Moore. President Howard Griffin Perry Morton Ingold. Director Gene Flesch Beryl Bieecher Don Henry Anita Boehme Henry Holsteen Harry Bratt Leonard Jaeger Ha .el Bratt Cecil Krelitz W. C Bunnell Albert Kueffner Eleanor Campbell Leona Livingston G. N. Chumley Carleton Luff Helen C. Corey Pearl Miller Veronica Corey Esther E. Nelson Neal Cullen Arthur Oilman Ruth Dillan Mabel Okeson I.ucile Doyas Ann Roman Mary Dunlop Clifford C. Smith Catherine Eldredge Kenneth Stillwell C. W. Emerson Winifred Schweppe Gladys Falton Frankie Waleen Harland Gauper L. E. Warren 475 lUamtoJ. Ilhnuv. Conttv. Will. f.o J Stymuut. CrouM. Were. Iā tllcrlr. AoJtnao Pounded. Gamma Chapter. I 928 University of Wisconsin. 1924 3 Chapters ACTIVE Astred Anderson Elizabeth Biasing Elizabeth Brunstad Helen Conley Florence Crowe Marion Gold Kathryn McMahon Margaret Morel I Dorothy Pfcfferle Katharine Seymour Doris Ward Dorothy West PLEDGE Dolores Fahey 476 Ā£ Fortnightly Club Whin Pout Bunt ,in rode ,m Bohr t bach, hr unn oblitfrJ to utr Ā« iric.Kopr to irr the hind letji of the Bit Blur O Sort,,. II.miwi lloootun.l. II JoRnuxt, Ptln. K Johnwn. .nwi, Eritkioa Km p. Crytltr. Gotti. I, Krym. I .Vrfion, DĀ«y, Srrouit Ruthnrtl, thtlinm. II out lull, II. .Vc ion, Cenip. friti fl oon.,n. CĀ«lĀ«n Perinr. h.rtnr. Hanlon, Moulton. K. Knox ACTIVE Kenneth Johnson Margaret Bushnell Howard Keene Marjorie Camp Lloyd Kemp Reynolds Caleen Audrey Knox Constance Crysler Kenneth Knox Elizabeth Day Kyle Levau Olga Ekstrom Max Moulton I.oren W. Erickson Harvey Nelson Helen Fritz Lee Nelson Elizabeth Goetz Ralph Norris Margaret I. Hanson Elizabeth Pcrine Cilenn Haycraft Wallace Petri Wallace Hoaglund Philip Potter Kerwin Hoover Richard Strauss Harold Johnson Robert Shannon 4 77 Garrick Club Paul Punuan invented tht Iu.v man mu', In tough country thr ttrvi on the hill topi were cut, hut not thou in the valley t'.rrut. lUrVit. b'tvillr. Maitan. tirlti i l ryu fjl Kuril, Somirn, RnbrtlUuj Amtrfion HONORARY Charles Bay ley Ward C. Burton Elbert Carpenter Arthur Hartwell Carl W. Jones Roy Child Jones Sumner T. McKnight Carleton Miles Horace T. Morse George Norton Northrup Merle Potter I.. Clement Ramsland Otis Skinner IE. A. Weaver ACTIVE Judson H. Anderson Sheldon E. Beilis Fred D. Burg I.eon M Boyd, Jr. Richard D Carlson Richard H Ernst Ralph G. Golseth George I,. Herter Clifford J. Janes Robert H. La Bree Waldo F. Marquardt Richard F. Morean Howard W. Meagher Phillip Neville Wayne D. Plank Donald 1 Robertson Henry N. Somsen Kent Van den Berg Kendrick A. Wilson 478 All the building of Paul Bun-uan't (amp uwr on tkidi Babr pulled the whole ouifit from one logging tilt to the next Home Economics Association C. ('hiiholm. MtXtlly. Gotti. Su'rowm, Ztmkr Obtff. hilt. Uolite tampion Hinmcn Noan Anderaon Alma Engine l:l(UO( Arrndi Sophie Elickton Winn And inn ClanĀ« Eberr MiHJHI Andrtmn Thora Egland Maty I.OdK Arnttm Fthrlmar Eylar Iāhylln Atleten Margaret Imbrrland Jean Andrew M IICU II Erickao Ailindii My il Ebert Mildred Aendt Dororlwa Inn l:vtlĀ n Bake Gertrud Fotter Akim H I1 111 Vivian Foiter Muj«« Bennrll Viola Fran 1 rmj Dixhmr 1 aura Froil 1 nail IVun D xiĀ« Fith Anita Bouquet Ardoilt Gilpin Hrtly Hioman Angelin Gallma Rllti Btuirk Anna Mat Gigoer 1 v lyn Buuhrdean D0.1t Grand llnbni Bailey Oltvt Gilman 1 u ll llerklund ll i n Grail Mt non Hum Flr abeth Gotl IlMllhl H U Ā« Hath Gryrbak l.ouue Hmnn (ā¢eratdmr Gaavti H tnt t Biown Dixorhy Halvertnu l. nnĀ« Berlin ilililh Hardy H 11 I 11 Bradr 1 lx on Halvinon Ah Hriggi Marta ! Hartmann llnbio Bell Flu HrndritVton Ruth H n iiu i llrlin llumpliKY Violet B tg Paulint Hunt Mity B1j V Hrltn Hodgman Vitgmia Drown Irtnt Hartman AlĀ« Carlton l.tonr llanttn Iren lion Ruth Hathaway Glady Coti Ona Italian Hi jbtih Cormack Aurelu HaugeruJ Janet Col ā hernial Htnilntk Elvira ('nhoa Helm Horton 1 U.lll ( J Ā« Hop llotmiy ll l n Cliintenien (ā¢ail lluikinton 1 mi u ki Mildrttl Hankm Eleanor OuliĀ n Marjorie JtwtII Edith 1 hniKnun Inga Johnton Gertrude Chalgten Ina Joy harlot huholm Mildred Joetting Belly Caihman lltltn Johnton Sirjli Cm) llildrgatdi Johoton 1 oroinr Crouch Marion Jatkion t hailo Couingbam arol Ktiltr Ruth Campbell Margaret Knipt Iājiri ii ( heartentrn Flout Kdktloth Dorothy Dow Ruth Kyomt Evelyn l ouk lb.- l Paula Klamp Ann Drl on Ptarl Kenning Dorothy l o Jv Stlma Kvalr l Utnr Down Audriy KĀ o Dorothy Day Fliaabtlh Ko!l 1 u ll Dtion Strlla haul 1 li )lĀ«th Dollenmaver 1 mnia KoSar Mirion Day Abigail Kittleaon Honor fnly l.oatif Knudiou IWliy H lĀ« Either Leverrntt Villa Mx FnMnw Ruth l.itn Anna Ink ton Many 1 indb tg Irma Ikitrom Kathrrmr l.ivden Mary l.utdtrt Fltanox Krnmr l.my 1 aughhn Cxorgia Rou Mabrllt l.imliiman Helm Rotr Ruth 1. mdtlog AĀ iĀ Ray Ruth 1 auderdalr Tima Rito Roth l.ohmann Iāll ilia Kugf Mrlba 1 aHuĀ« Drily Rogothrtki Ali l Ā«i| 1.unlit Ration F-trn Mattton Harbara Sampurn Dorothy Minr.ti Suian Srhmidt t harlot Molltor lint Srrgrr Marion Muir 1 ury Srmpwvo Dtola Malbtrg Margaret Snrttmg Miriam Mullim Virna Snmrio loot Mill. Mar Strphrmon Htroi Meiater Alma Swenaon Gtrirudr Mt'Ntlly Gladyi Sweat row Frihtt McbtiiD Dotorea Swrnron Ida Moninn Frora Stark ('atbninr Morrii Mar Anna Srhauit Margarti Murphy Ruth Sawyrr Dorothy Mon 11 Dorothy Samuriton Florrn Muhatlioa Ruth Srolirld Dona Mill Euni Snook Eliir Mathlai Mildred Strnawiik Marion Matthrwion Matiotir Smith Dagny Morkruil Ruth Swrnry Hrlrn Muir Hum Srhmidt Synrra Martin Evelyn Sell Margarti Montgomery Kathryn Sribold Dorotlua Nrltoo Grrirudr St urn Margaret Nrviui Drily Tift Irtnt Nrlion athrrmr Twreddal Frra Nirkrli liarrl Thorp Paulint Nath Inez Taylor Fount Nrlton Ada Todarn Mari Nagoviky Jrannr Trill Marbrl Northiutt Helen Valentine Mildrrd Otland France VanVooihia Margatrt Opp Marcia Vig Janr Obog Marion Veldt Vivian Olton Ruth Walker Margot i Prrriro Viola Wanour Ann Prarion Maty Watkennn F.lvcra Prtrrton L'heabeth Weihirbe Muni Prarion Ruth Woolery Vnlbrrg Prtrrton (ienevirve Wood Virginia Pt t JoyĀ« Wood ⢠Ah Pirha Futile Waenee Mary Pirklra Helga Wogenton ilrulah Plummet Kathiyn Walk Maigaret Ptmdlc Minan Weal 1 lirabnh Pond Jean Woodward Manila Pag June Wood Mali Pratotiout Jenie Wall l o othy Perm Doeit Whitcomb Mary I'erkma Muriel While Mildred Prtrrton Margaret Wenilmg All Pollanrk Violet Wold Fdith Pa1m |uitt Adel Wsrdeman Mitdird Paitoni Maty Woodnng l illian Pit harlot Young Sarah Duitin Juanita Zelmder Agnra (.liaammr 1 oena itrnke Innt Randolph Luella Zetk Ptirnon. Btookt. Killtrn, Blank. Mayor. Jenmnyt, Hr the. Wlmlon Co vr. Somtrn. Booth. Ktrktnapp. Rohm ton. MtKtt. Uirvni Mark. Moott. MtClurr. Knurr, Iāitrte. Rutct .. Jontt. Bury, flayrt. Carlton. M. lonrt. U'rfion. Brllit ACTIVE Jud Anderson Jeanette Barquist Sheldon Beilis Doris Bemmels Paul Bcske Edna Billigmeier Talkeus Blank Gloria Boock Leon Boyd Eleanor Boyer Wright Brooks Fred Burg Carl Burkland Betty Burwell Richard Carlson Beatrice Cashman Virginia Childs Betty Compton Jessie Coons George Cummins Ruth Davis Francis Drake Richard Ernst Betty Gove Marjorie Gray Susan Lavender Greaves George Herter Donald Jennings Lola Jones Marie Jones Maxine Kaiser Frank C. Kammcrlohr AI Killeen Clair Knowles Meyer Liss Meridith Longworth Miles Mace Beatrice Mark Herb Marklc Ruth Mayor Marvin McClure Helen McLaughlin Sam McKee Kenneth McMillan Sam Mirviss Richard Morean J. Stuart Moore Earl W. Nelson Jay Odell Ellen Oren John Paulsen Robert Peaslee Virginia Pemberton Arthur Peterson Rhoda Pierce Wayne Plank John G. Poor Katherine Preston Fritz Raiter Marion Rassmussen Don Robertson David Shannon Dorothy W. Smith Evelyn Smith lone Sobotka Dorothy Sommcnfield Henry Somsen Ardelle Tankel Kent Van den Berg Jack Vilett Margaret Waldron Clair Wile Lois Williams Kendrick Wilson Charles W. Winston Warrington Winters Lenore Wolfe I illian Zaret 480 Wat Jr an, FinttaJ, AifA lUorxh. Minittnhall, Ko h I I'tnnt I. .Ā«iWA lUtth l.aaJon. V.attr. Cmv Hau.!iny Kmaht Ohm A'i tin. (oak, (Ail hr it GRADUATE Andrea Kiefer Margaret Boddy Noel Kirk Mary Elvcback Chestinc Knight ACTIVE Freda I.audon Marguerite Birch Priscilla Mendenhall Betty Biasing Marjorie Meyers Gloria Bloock Ruth Anne Olsen Helen Cook Elizabeth Ferine Mary Culhanc Katherine Putnam Ruth Davis Flecta Rawling Helen Elvcback Dorothy Rock Olga Fink 1 lelen Sears Dorothy Finstad Margaret Waldron Betty Graves Elizabeth Waters Margaret Guthrie Dorothy West Ida Jerome Lillian Zarct 481 Minnesota Society Aeronautical Engineers Paul marked hit hnjt by pinchmo out a piece umb hit brawny hand; but his. men bod f.j use an axe to scalpā them ftwtiā I'robule. MatCreyor. Murphy. An Jr r inn Vnttn, Sryrrl I hampton, Iāetttuin ttai rit. Ctilli iM, ttotuon. litltol. Wrhmtnn. SrhatiJItt Pent ion, Enthion Mohtet, A k M kA. Kinrmty. Ilmi tn, Ahttmtn, Back , Sp FACULTY John D. Akerman Charles Boehnlein F. D. K noblock ASSOCIATE Carl Bavolik Elmer Berglund Thomas Bragdon Merle E. Carman Harold Gay John Goldstein D. E. Hart Eugene 1 lolstan Carl Johnson Dave MacGregor Russell Miller Roland Nygrcn Clifford Peterson Oscar Wehmann ACTIVE G. A. M. Anderson H. V. Anderson L. M Anderson Stanley Bergstrom Robert Erickson Harold Fagrie Lester Gustafson Lowelle Johnson William Johnson John Mokres Frank Murphy Elies Peilen Leonard Probstle Walter Safford Bernard Schroeder Robert Segal E. V. Sobejana Walter Spivak Harold Yesnes 482 .irjy.il, Afut'in, V. V. Ua quei l.aujtf . I arp 10 I.. Carpio. Iāaiui tuol, ,11 A Carpio. I'itttt Sobajina. Hainvm. VaIJrt PRESIDENT E. Villalon Sobejana. '32 FACULTY Cyrus P. Barnum Frances M. Pierce GRADUATE Guan on Getulio Alfredo Ordonia ACTIVE Pedro Agustin Antonio V. Buot Jose Carpio Simplicio Carpio I .ucas D. Carpio I say as C. Juan Mauricio Lauder Nestorio N. Lim Jose Manganan Manuel V. Marquez V. Valdez Marquez Primo Paragas Crisistomo C. Pasos E. Villalon Sobejana Ambrosio R. Valdez PLEDGE Pablo B. Alcantara Angeles Mangaser Carlos Parilla Adriano R. Rafosas Froilan B. Maglaya 483 Punchinello Paul tcooprd onf Ihf holt for l ain Suptrior u'kr t ht ortd td i etttevt wau-r tupply for iting hit logging roadt ā¢Sftinvf. Iteounp. I nJmnni, Mthhthan, Mai j i iImnrt, Ktixk.- Vruhktn. Oi.ii . Simuttuin. Hart OintiHi. Htutm. I'loJitQiitt. Warnmiten FACULTY Robert C. Lansing William J. Rout ledge GRADUATE Stanley M. Jackson ACTIVE Ralph V. Backstrom Louise E. Bronn Bernice M. Brown Viola Diessner Elaine R. Dosen Gertrude L. Foster Lester O. Gilmore Helen M. Graif William T. Grussendorf John P. Ha nna F: Id red Hunt Earl M. Hansing Thurmalee G. Hendrick Leila Kcncke Margaret F. Knipps Lorenz R. Lmdstrom Dorothy MacManigal Homer A. Mikkelson Douglas R. Pendcrgast Claire E. Peschken Thomas W. Rainc Priscilla Rugg Dorothy L. Samuelson John H. Shaver Stanley P. Swenson Lucille Theisscn Kathryn E. Walker Sylvan T. Warrington C. I lerman Welch. Jr. Frederick W. Welch Margaret E. Went ling PLEDGE Phyllis M. Aslesen Ruth L. Bengtson Henry E. Bull Marguerite M. Erickson I (clen G. 1 lumphrey Donald V. Josephson Abigail C. Kittelson Lucy E. Laughlin Joseph J. Mayan Dona L. Miller Milo J. Peterson Arthur H. Roth. Jr. Bernice N. Schmidt Inez E. Taylor John J. Wirt 484 Skin and Bones Paul could entity peel a tog m clean at a whittle by holding the barb at one enJ. white Robe pulled at the other i M- 9 ,1 T , I __________________________________ mKmr. fellut. Ihhmtr. Sleventon, Hunlmilon. Pmtrrutn. OuM Lelinn. WtU. lieuirvnn. IhvJ W'teene. Mi Mahon ACTIVE ALPHA PHI Margaret Huntington Ellen Oren Ellen Wearne DELTA GAMMA Katharine Baumann Virginia Johnston Margaret Stevenson GAMMA PHI BETA Katherine Barling Grace Cornwell Lorcne Larson Kathryn Woolsey KAPPA ALPHA THETA Marian Diehl Kathryn McMahon Mary Patterson Constance Weld KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Mary Louise Bohmer Jane Boyd Mildred Feltus Moan a Odell 485 Pattiās axemen sharpened thrir axes hu rolling tlonci down hill , and holding the edaet tigomM them os they u'ent by. Itaionvt.b. I arlmn It mi. II. Ot ion. anna. Mellir I ..nth hull tt. Kuthmiki. I I hump nan, AJJiion, tāhittipa, Sfoliahn Shtttail. Uolhttf, It.litt. Ham, Iulnmn Flihktma. Knthe M.lbv- I.lihtmtnn. Itall Siolpt. i.undrtton. t. I hotnp.on I. I.Jmuitr. MaitanJ hti hlan.1. Iltatt, āration. ft natal I. tout Johman ACTIVE Porn Mamon (iladyrr Olwn 1 l. abrlh Addiion Oral. Minion I rrda Parki harlr.nr Andtnoo Barbara llui rt Evelyn I'alirrmn Edith An.lrrton Ruth flood 1 uni. ('ration Eleanor A ml. non llil.n Mu.lcy Julia P«««i NĀ«mi Aniiffioo t avilla Imrnrr Maigarn Iāliillipp IWiry Albrrit Alirr Itakion Dorothy PriĀ« ll l n him Either Jatc.bi Viola Radmevirh Martial Hilil ā Margaret Jaiobton Errant Hail linn [liork Ttulma Jimrn (runila Itaaniry Vkioiij IVIotja Elvira Johnion Kuili IWglet Kay II..mI.Ā uV Harriet John ton Etlhrr Krl loK Vdcu Rnxlii lorn Johmon ( olttta Kewalt Bdniu Bniir Ir.nr JoliAwn llrlrn Riddlr Amy Hutlrt Nrllrr Johnion 1 o i.lhri Kmg I'lortnrr attiOA Either liangat Crtadyi Hind. Kmh C Munition Pella Kennedy Grnrvirvr Rut l.otcrn Damrliun Adrlmr Klnnr Eihrl Rurggrr Malm Diifiy Irrnr Klimp Ina Sandbrrg Vrta l rĀ«ry llrlrn Kolbe Gwendolyn Shrrrm MU IJidmjAn Clara Krueger Margarrl Smith Myrtlr Dtayry Sophie Kaihiniki Krha Sialty Martin Dkwi arol Koi Iir Amy Slolp: Mll| Pun.in Monlr Kyrlland llrdvig Slrombrrg Emma Mlium 1 ilhil l.rhmi .Iran Vaylnr Eli abttb Eyrirli Maybrlle l.ryml Fein Thompion Paulina Elrtihri Rote I.Khrniinn l.ila 1 hnmpion ( lata 11.VI.mi Anna l.imlrll Mabrl toluihrk Ooroahy Fold Eraitrei Mi Mir l)oril Tillman Dorothy lia.li.li L'Ā«r Mallard AliĀ« Twrrl fraruc. Cluton llrlrn Cwxhi Cm rliu.fr Min.fl Alma Mrlhy Hull. Woulal Mary Wagnrt Maty (iordnn CĀ raĀ« Wrlrh Anna Ciani|unl Kuby Molbng 1 l.aoorr Whrlr (.tadyi Ciun.lnvun lent M.nimin llrlrn Wiggett Amy Gtitialton Kailul Mol ahn Mrrlr Willt Eleanor Moony Dorothy Norm Marjory Wright Dorothy Mall Brrnur Olum Sara anna 486 Chilrlt. WttoJ Hrii)lunJ. Mormon four nr I. Wilton. Cr yiltf Btuuirnrur. MtWiIhumi Cntfret'r, Itnun Swtti. 0'S til FACULTY Jessie Dunwoody Gertrude Baker Eleanor Fournct Alice T. Bowers Ethel Harrison Alrha Curtis Elsa Hoidalc Jennie Hawkins Patty Hynes Elizabeth Jackson Marjorie Jensen Dr. J. Anna Norris Margaret MacNaughton Florence Warnock Mary Alice Magaw Nancy Morrison ACTIVE Mary Moos Avis Berglund Mildred McWilliams Margaret Birch Katharine O'Neil Elizabeth Birch Josephine Pease Marjorie Browning Virginia Pettigrew Jane Cadwallader Miriam Pickett Virginia Childs Dorothy Sweet Catherine Cosgrove Ruth Wilson Joyce Crysler Jane Wood 48 7 Sandttt. A Chilth Warm I. )ttn. I'r him, Arulrtwi tooth. XI. I_ Otto. H'f fft, Bmrovni ufftori, Tfru'i iv- Zfi ff Xn' v ACTIVE Hazel Pearson Mary W. Andrews Claudia Perkins Harriet Bloomberg Marion Rasmussen Aurelia Childs Mary Elizabeth Ricker Virginia Childs E. Patricia Ritz Adelaide Davey Lucia Roach Betsy Emmons Marion Sanders Alice Furbari Harriet Thwing Virginia Harris Margaret Trussed Eunice Hokenson Ellen Wearne Bessie Lyman Thelma Welch Ellen Oren Florence Zeyer Mary Louise Oren 488 VĀ i Vwnhti. KnVfitlf, itWu f- )Uutr t)oy .Vonurluw). C loilrwi o. Va'MWrt Urniui C'r MĀ«h. liJt. Slolitor. r.n'Mnn' BWiihii ftlhtr raylāf CotUfotl. .tytton MEMBERS Marjorie Bennett. '32 Florence Bruce. '33 Ruth Campbell. ā34 Pat Christiansen. ā33 Martha Collicotte, '33 Lorraine Crouch. '33 Marion Day. ā3 3 Eleanor Eide. 32 Villa May Emblom. ā32 Thcrmalc Hendricks. 33 Abbegail Kittleson. ā33 Alice Long. ā33 Gertrude McNally, '33 Dorothy Menzies. ā32 Charlotte Molitor. '32 Irene Nelson. '32 Carlene Rose. '33 Barbara Sampson. '32 Dorothy Samuclson. '33 Ruth Sawyer. '3 3 Alma Swenson. '32 Inez Taylor. '3 3 Jeanne Tellier. 34 Francis Van Voorhis. '32 Ruth Walker. '32 489 Paul Runyan invented the i woman taw. In rough rountnj tht It tel on the hilltops were rut. hut not thou in the t.'alley. Players Douflat. Katth. Ftu, Kutt tut. SomMr. Millet. Halit. Guilin. Mult. Fltttb Chumlrv. Ilullxotr. Ltlulae. C ompbtll. ft in. Mirttt. Mei tti. toman. Shtlictll Mutti. Ilotiutn. Wooet. Iātatl Milltr, Kihltitatn. Wttttto. Fttfuiim. Ilvnmlt MEMBERS Albert KuefTner Frankie Waleen. President Ray Lyons Lura Orsborn. Director Paul Meade Elgie Blixt Laura Meyers Eleanor Campbell George Miller G. N. Chumley Pearl Miller Betty Cowherd Harriet Miner Don Douglas F. E. Moody Catherine Fldrcdge Thomas E. Moore R. Morris Ferguson Winifred Myers Gladys Falton Arnold Nolte Katherine Fink Albert Pelt Gene Flesch Marguerite Phillips I larland Gauper Betty Prices Howard Griffin Ann Roman Helen Heathcote Lawrence Sombke Henry Holstcen Albert Starch Inga Johnson Kenneth Stillwell Elmer Kihlstrum Valborg 'Fanner 490 Agricultural Education Club FACULTY A. M. Field V. E. Nylin A. V. Storm GRADUATE Roland Brooks Walter LeMon R. S. Newell ACTIVE Edward Aiton Ralph Backstrom John Barnes Enock Bjugc Stanley Doten Erwin Draheim Raymond Ebcrhard Leon Fcnskc Paul liked a good tmoke. To keep hiI pip tilled rtijuirtd the entire lime of a giuamptr ivorkinp urith a tcoop ihovel. Seth Fisher Chester Graham Edwin Gray William Grussendorf Leigh Harden Nelvin Haugland Allen Johnson Harold Lawrcnz Glen McDougal Loren McMartin Ernest Palmer Milo Peterson Carl Radkc Clair Rollings Lester Schwantz Dutee Scyforth Edwin Strand Elmer Ziegcnhagen 491 National Collegiate Players When Paul Runyan rode on babr't bath, he uah obliged to W a teleuope to tee the hind Icy of the My blur Ox. Founded. University of Illinois. 1916 34 Chapters Minnesota Chapter. 1921 FACULTY S. Chat wood Burton Dorothy-Ann Erehart Lincoln Holmes Kenneth Ingwalsen Dr. Anna Phelan Ruth Raymond Frank Rarig William Rout ledge Arthur Wilcox ACTIVE Judson Anderson Taalkheus Blank Francis Drake Betty Emmons Maxine Kaiser Sam Mirviss Philip Neville Ellen Oren Henry Somsen 492 Paul ohtn uud a great Umber ugthe. with u huh he could fell a action of timber With one mighty luting of the armj. ACTIVE Lelah A. Ball Agnes K. Benjamin Elizabeth Bowler Ethel L. Burbeck Richard H. Daggy A. Orville Dahl Evelyn L. Harris Eleanor C. Lawrence John B. Moyle Flora R. Sandoz 49 Omicron Nu foil snakeJ an entire section of land to the rioer at one drag; the trees uftrt cut. and the section hauled bach. Founded. Michigan State College. 1912 26 Chapters Rho Chapter, 1923 FACULTY Eleanor Anderson Alice Biester Clara Brown Alice Child Gertrude Dinsmore Harriet Goldstein Vetta Goldstein Hedda Kafka Mildred Larson Jane Leichsenring Wylie B. McNcal Katherine B. Niles Gladys Nordecn Ethel Phelps Ruth Segolson Mary Allen Steers Lucy Studley Marion Weller Myrtie Williger GRADUATE Mrs. Catherine Farrel Mrs. Lyla Flogler ACTIVE Gladyce Coss Villa May Enblom Marie Lindberg 494 When Paul Bunyan made his stirring farewell oration the loggers stood in mournful silence. Tears rained from their eyes as he said. My merry men all. you have been and are the joy of my life. But now the time has come when we must part. Always remember your old friend, your faithful friend, your everlasting friend. Paul Bunyan. I wish you good luck always. Adieu, my good bullies, my lusty savages, my merry he-men. adieu. THI: LAST worn 495 Acknowledgment T X HE art work for the opening section and the division pages as well as the scene section was done by Mr. August Kaiser of the Bureau of Engraving. The finest artist in the country , as Mr. Kaiser has been described by other artists of note in the Twin Cities has done a magnificent piece of work in his portrayals of Paul Bunyan. And in so doing, he has contributed a beautiful art section to the Gopher. It is a most outstanding part of the book. l ed Larson, the art education student who designed the corner drawings found on each page and the sub division pages has contributed some of the best student art work in an annual. Ted also supervised the drawings of the fraternity and sorority houses and the college buildings. The whole of his work has. we feel, been very well done indeed. And. by the way. most of the page layouts are his work. too. The borders and cover were designed by Mr. B. C. Robertson of the Bureau of Engraving. One of the outstanding men in that field. Mr. Robertson has. in our opinion, done a very neat job for the Gopher To Art Segal and Bill Dobbs of the Bureau of Engraving, we wish to extend sincere thanks and appreciation for hours of time and effort spent on the book. We have been able to. at all times, draw upon their years of experience in the production of school annuals and we have found their advice invaluable. The paper for the body of the book was furnished by the Inter-City Paper Company. We have found that in addition to his wide knowledge of paper and printing, the manager. Bill Preston, has a keen understanding of the difficulties of producing an annual. Throughout the year, we have been able to go to him with many problems and to work out the answer. By the way. the paper isKromcart Dull created and made up specially for the Gopher by the Appleton Coated Paper Company of Appleton. Wisconsin. We demanded a dull finish stock with the finest of printing qualities, and due to Old Man Depression, at a very low price. Mr. Preston furnished the answer that fit the bill. The McGill Lithograph Company has done, we feel, a very fine job of printing the book. We are deeply indebted to George Langworthy. Herb Singer and to Earl Boynton for their efforts in turning out the book. Eollowing the time honored custom. the copy came in late. The task of printing a book in a short space of time was handled with utmost efficiency by the concern. 1 he portraits for the senior section, as well as the groups and Representative Minnesotans were done by the Miller Studios. To Mrs. Dalrymple and to Walter Eriske. the staff extends its thanks. The photography has been very capably handled. In particular, we feel that the Representative Minnesotan section has been very beautifully done. We are also indebted to the University Foto Shop for the informal snapshots throughout the book, and to the Twin City newspapers, the .Journal. Tribune and the Pioneer Press for the action pictures in the athletic section. Two members of the administration. Dean Nicholson and Carroll Gcddcs have aided materially in producing the book. During an unusually hard year, we have found their help invaluable. A word about next year. The destinies of the 19 3 Gopher are entrusted to Otis Dypwick and George Doyle, editor and business manager respectively. Both of them have put in a good deal of time in preparation for their work, and have proved to be capable and hard working. The best ol luck, always. 496 Index A Aagard. George 207 Abbott. A. A. 207 A berg, Harry 181 Acknowledgments 500 501. 502 Adams, Ned 206 Administration Section Afield. Jane 164. 196 Ag Students Council 51 All-Americans 264 AII U Council 44 Almars. Helen 194 Alpha Phi Chi 08 Anderson. E. 184 Anderson. Earl 184 Anderson. Harold 267 Anderson. Judson 184 Anderson. Vernon 281 Appleby. Dean 118 Aquatic League 18 Archery 20 Archibald, Coach 291 Arthur. Guy 246 Ash. Robert 18 Aslakson. Arnold 165. 182 n Baarsch. Doloris 181 Bachman, Gustav 122 Bachman. Ralph 180 Baker. Robert 180 Baseball Section 297 Basketball Section .... 277 Baston. Bert 265 Boatman 206 Beaux Stratagem 215 Bethel, Glenn 279 Big Sister 55 Bicrman. Bernard 275 Blake ⢠286 Blekre, Edgar 181 Blit , Dean A Dudley 39 Board of Associated Students 59 Board of Publications 45 Board ol Regents 34 Boardman. Charles 128 Bodien. Gordon 167 Boland, Pal 271 Boiihus. John 291 Bookstore 58 Boyce. 1 loyd 295 Boyd. Leon M . Jr 178 Brain. Phil 02 Brit ius. Charles 02 Bunk. Arthur 184 Burdick. Quentin 267 Burton. Chaiwood S. 78 Business Res'icw .... 189 c; Cadet Officers 2 4 Champlin, George 268 Charity Ball 198 Chase. Ralph 179. 114 Cheerleaders 257 Chnstoffer. Forton 196. 2 4 Cielusak. Mike . . . . 278 Class Scrap 249 Clogging 319 Coaches 262. 26 Coast Artillery 2 6 Coffman. Lotus Delta 35 Coffey. Dean Walter C. 94 Commencement 251 Conference Debate 227 Conference Medal 256 Cooke. Doctor L. J 254 Cornell Game 272 Crack Drill Squad . . . . 239 Gnsler. Herbert O. 25 . 262 Cross Country Section 287 Crowe. John 185 Crowe. William 179 Currcll. John 287 1) Daily Staff . 182 Daugherty. Ruth 181. 184 Dawson. Lowell 275. 04 Dennerley. Jim 27 Densford. Miss 108 Dillncr. Mervin 272 Don Cossacks. The 210 Donovan. Hedley 184 Doyle, George 16 Dramatic Section 211 Dypwick. Otis 178 K Fckman. James R. I 184 Llfman. Harold 186 Liston. Wilbur 184 Emerson. James 184 Engebrrtson. Ralph 281 linger. Lawrence N 179 Engineer ' Day 248 Lnghsh. Gardner 246 Erickson. R 2 6 Ernst. Richard 26 . 281 497 Index F Fadtll. Ercd 182 Panther. Marie I 84 F arm WSC.A ⢠56 Fencing ⢠.... 518 Field Day ⢠516 Finger. Sherman W. 284 Firkins Setiion - ⢠25 Firkins. O. W..................................26 Ford. Dean Guy Stanton J5. 156 Forensic Medal ⢠... - 228 Forensic Section ⢠225 Forney. John 184 Football Section 259 Fraser. Dean Everett ⢠104 Freeman. Dean Edward M. - 194 Freshman-Sophomore Debate 250 Freshman Week ⢠24 2. 24 5 Friedlander. Annetter I 85 Fundberg. Wanda - - 166. 181 G Gadlcr. Steve ........ 188 Gay, Kenneth ⢠- 268 General Athletics - 251 General Evening Students Council 54 Gislason -............................ 157 Gold. Meyer ........ 189 Gold. Marion ⢠- - 184 Golf......................................... 505 Good Hope .... .... 214 Gopher Sales Convocation 247 Gopher Staff .... |78 Gould, Payson 178 Guelder. Ralph ... 197 Gridin. Gerry .... 266 Grigwarc. Helen Paul 184 Gugisberg. Mercedes 515 Gym 505 II Hackle. Cam.................................. 284 Haggerty, Dean Melvin E. 128 Hague, A......................... 2 57 Harpole. Ellsworth 275 Harris. Sir. - 265 Harris. Steve ⢠- .... 184 Harris, Virginia - ⢠185 Harris. Will - 184 Harvey. John 180. 182 Hass. Walter ⢠269 Hauser. George 504 Hawk. Bessie - - 195 Heart man, I.ester 185 Hendrickson. I.arry 181. 185 Hess. Elton ... 180. 285 Hester. Major John H. 2 52. 254 Hockey Section 289 Hocft, William 185 llolle, Spencer 286 Holmgren, Clifton 184 Homecoming - 244. 245 Hooper. Marjorie 185 Hoover. Kerwin 184 Hoshour. Harvey 104 Hough. Kenneth 299 llribar. I.loyd 266 Hurrlc. Robert 257 Hutchinson. Richard 181. 185 I Infantry 255 Inter-Class Council 52 Inter Professional Ball 197 Intcr-Profcssional Board 57 Interhouse Athletic Council 516 Intcihousc Champions 521 Intramural Participation Trophy 509 Intramural Section 507 intramural Snap-Shots 510. 511 Iowa Game 269 J Jackson. Doctor 156 Jackson, lone 112 Jennings, l on 180 Johnston. Dean 62 Jones. Chester 189 Jones. Marie 185 Julius Caesar 216 Junior Ball 194 Junior Commission 48 R Kaiser. Maxine 168. 199 Kaminski. James 26 5 Keller. Ted 187 Kenning. Pearl 185 Killeen. Earl 204 Knight, Margaret 181 Koolisb. Burnell 225 Kosek, Albert 185 Koski. Sulo 268 Krczowski. Al 274 Kroll. Howard 272 Kukowski. John 251 Kulp. Harold 287 I. l a Roque 286 l ang. Wallace 295 Fapic. Edward 191 1.arson. Don 180. 181 Larson. Fed ā - 180 498 Index Latby, Dean William ... 112 I.ait Word Section - ⢠⢠95 Lawrence, James ⢠⢠35. 36. 158 l.eaxc. Art ...... ⢠180 Leland. Dean Ora - - 78, 90 Licht. Virgil...................................... 278 Lind. Samuel........................................ 90 Linncc. Carl ..... 183 I.oevingcr. Lee............................ - ⢠186 Loose, Earl.........................................299 Lyon. Dean Elias P. .... - 159 M MacDougal. Kenneth ... 269 MacMillan. Dave .... 278 McAffc. Edward............................ 263 McClure. Marvin -............... 181 McCormick. Prank .... 262 McCreery. Dean Otis C. - 38 McEachern. Win Ellen ... 184 McKee. Samuel ........ 183 McKinnon. George 263 McNaghien. Robert ........ 179 McWilliams. Mildred ..................170 Mace. Myles................................280 Malvey. Kenneth ....... . 185 Mandcrs. Jack ....... 270 Marsh. Lowell...............................256 Matt. George................................185 Masque and Foil.............................322 Medical School Council......................60 Michigan Game ....... 273 Military Ball ............................. 196 Military Section .......................... 231 Military Staff .............................232 Miller. Virginia ....... -180 Minckler, Rex ....... 237 Minneapolis Symphony ..... 209 Minnesota-California Debate - 228 Minnesota Indiana Debate - ⢠227 Minnesota Mentor ..... 101 Minnesota - Michigan Debate - 226 Minnesota-Northwestern Debate 227 Minnesota-Purdue Debate ... 226 Minnesota Quarterly .... 190 Minor Sports Section .... -301 Moore. Stuart........................ 180. 183 Morean. Richard ...... 195. 250 Morse. William ...... . 245 Munn. Clarence ------ 265. 270. 284 Munson. Oscar ......... 255 Music Section ............................. 201 Mylkc. Sergeant............................ 233 N Nelson, Earl Neville. Phillip Nicholson. Dean Edward North Dakota game Northwestern game Nylin. Dorothea o Ochlcr. Chet Oen. Roy -Ohio game Oklahoma A M game Olson. Weslie ⢠⢠181. Onegin. Sigrid ... - Opening section Orchesis Ortn. Ellen Organizations ... - - 305 Ormandy. Eugene P Paul Bunyan map Paul Bunyan section Paullson. Dorothy Pearson. Carl -................... Pederson. Harry Penny Carnival Pepinsky. Abe..................... Peril. Julius ....... Peters. Virginia ⢠- 172. Peterson. W. A. - Phi Delta Theta -................. Pickett. Edward...................... Pierce, E. B. ------- Pierce. Rhoda - -- -- -- - Piper. Frank ........................ Pledge Night - Pond. Frank - .............. Pottle. Kenneth......................... 180. Powers. Marlin .... Press section.......................- Price. Richard Proms section ....... Pumala. Edward.................... Punchinello .............. Q Quail. Tom........................... R Raimland, I C. .... Rarig. Frank ..... Rasmussen. Theodore Ray. Kenneth...................... Regents. Board Right You Are ... 267 242 37 266 271 314 187 274 274 267 204 210 1 319 180 494 209 30 29 180 185 190 323 208 305 251 2 3ā 309 181 41 180 305 246 290 186 182 177 157 193 191 221 294 222 224 287 181 3a 217 499 Index Reigh.ud, Assistant Dean - I 16 Reihsen. Robert - 266 Representative Minnesotan section 161 Rifle Team............................... 23) Rifle Marksmanship ⢠320 Riley. A. Dale ...........................213 Ripon game ā ........ 266 Ritz, E. Patricia 178 Robertson. Don - 171. 186 Robin Hood - - 205 Robinson. Brad 269. 279 Rollins.................................. 306 Ryman. Marshall ....... . - 290 s Schaller, Franklin ...... 185 Scliieflcy. Charles................ 285 Schwartz. Alice......................... -185 Scott. Carlyle - ......... ⢠202 Scott. Mrs. Carlyle........... 20) Sebcrn. Kenneth 222 Seed. Fred ........ 181 Senior Commission ...... 47 Senior Prom ......... 195 Senior .section............................61 Senior Week - ........ 250 Shippam. W. ....... 2)6 Shumway. Dean Royal ... 40 Ski-U-Mah............................ 186 Signal Corps .............................2)7 Silver. Helen................... ] 80 Simons....................................305 Simpson. Kenneth - - - - - - 181. 2 15 Smith, Hardic................... ) 85 Smith, Willis - 2-12 Snyder. E. B - - )4 Sochacki, Walter - -.................. 280 Social Hours............................. 199 Somers. Pete..............................274 Sommer. Cliff ...... . 279 Somscn. Henry 173 Sophomore Commission ....... 49 Spring Football...........................304 Spring Review.............................238 Sprungman, Ormal .................. 184 Staadt, Edward............................212 Stadium...................................254 Stanford game ............... 268 Stein, l.loyd........................... 273 Stevenson, Dean Russell.................. 146 Stockdale. Hazel - - - - - 197 Student Government section .... 43 Susens, Morean ....... | KI Swartz, Sam...............................272 Swenson. Courtney........................ 185 Swimming section......................... 29) T Taft, George - 188 Taft. Marshall 181 Tallmadge. Margaret 174 Technical Commission 50 Techno-1.og 188 F'eeter. Al 271 Teeter. A. II. - 158 Tennis 302 The Players 220 Thomas, Dean 62 Thompton. Harold 285 Thorpe, Niels 294 Iāhwing. Harriet 180 Track section - - - 28) Traditions section - - 241 Trainers 255 I urandot ⢠218 Tutor Bureau 58 u Ubl, Myron ... - - 271 Union Board of Governors 5) University Band .... - - - 206. 207 University Singers 204 Unis'ersity Symphony 208 V Valine. Ted 187 Vance, Lawrence L. - - - 175, 180. 190 w Webster. Byron 181 Wells. Marshall 270 Wieinan. F ad - 262 Wigmann. Mary - 210 Williams. Doctor .... 260. 261 Wirtb. .James - 180 Wisconsin game .... .... 270 Wolfe, F.enore 199 Women's Athletic section 31) W. A A. Board - - - 314 W. A. A. Field Day - 316 W. A. A. M Winners 317 W. A. A. Mixer .... . 317 W. A. A. Seal .... 315 W. A. A. Swimming 322 Women's debate 2)0 Woodward, Dave 255 Wright. Wells ... 280 Widling. Dean 122 Wykoff. Dean 181 Y Yaggy. Jason 185 You and I 219 500 r Art Opening Section, Scene Section and Division pages by August Kaiser Bureau of Engraving Border Design by B. C. Robertson Bureau of Engraving Sub-Division and Border Drawings by Ted E. Larson Bureau of Engraving 501 Photos Snapshots by University Foto Shop Action Pictures by Minneapolis Tribune Minneapolis Journal St. Paul Pioneer Press 502 Cover Cover Design by B. C. Robertson Bureau of Engraving Executed by S. K. Smith Co. Chicago r
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