University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI)

 - Class of 1923

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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1923 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 665 of the 1923 volume:

1 1 ww N , , I v 1 'a ,- f -af .0 'L 49 Q N .' 1 fb 'ry 19 S3 9 HJ YJ ab 4: ' Q El :U AJ I9 1 -m . .,. rm COPYRIGHTED sk fi I HORACE BREESE POWELL 3 NL 4 I SHERMAN BALDWIN GREEN 1' Q X iw 5 0 Q Q, 7 t v N NN 4 . N f ' F112 N2 'Jw ' N v ' . 5 , 12 I It .,,V 7 1 , N N I, ' 3, f l' ' - I N .'fgw 5 N EDITOR-3!lfN -CHLl'EfF N 3 N NX Q. I N N - N N N M' Yr-Rf N f 35 N aNuslNEs-5 ,MANAGER ' A N ' cfm Q 1 NN W FQ . w , ' ,z .rg .W avi-. '-f N N N N N N K X 1 1: E:' W 4?'f THE BAD G ER, NINETEEN TWENTY X THREE X r , ' - ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' - ' .1 ' I , , K 1 ' , , X , ,1---,, 1 -I - y , 4 , , Q CD19 CBADGER ASSEMBLED ef PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF 1923 of THE UNIVERSITY of W I S C O N S I N QAT QIVUXDISON 1 9 2 2 'Volume Thirty - Seven . 4' 4 . 1. 1 X - W , ,. 4 , , . , . II ' - iw X 1 N N 1 1 w ' 1 ia f . 1 . w v , w i , N ' ' 7 ' - Y, Y Y . gfz , .-- ff ' ' x M . . 11, V - , y -A 1 1 , , 1 , '. A, f 1 , ' I l S7 l tif vw lv rv Ni -- -vw- i- lip, W,l,1,,, , , .,i'., ,.,,, . l 1 A,,!,. ',g'.1v, Q' ., , i ,, l:gl1,,..7wi , .-xi 1 lil l if 1 kfguil ,J . I ,- -, fl lung A I fl .if 5. -W, if--Q 113.1 3 1 'vazilaf 17 -.'.. lr L. ,, T '11 TE? laik, 1 C21 3 1' ,l,,.,, if gqglfif O Willard Grosvenor Bleyer, who, as an edu- cator of national renown, has proved himself a dis- tinguished alumnus, and who, as the Founder and Director of the Course in Journalism at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, has done much to foster and promote the Wiscoiisin Spirit, the Class of 1923 dedicates this, the thirty-seventh volume of the Badger. I '1' dw' iHQ'. .:.-1 . i'5.,'4g'.l-11'1 X , -f 1 is 1.-g' 1.-'tix 5' .1-',..:1.A xfiiii , ,- ,, . LH 'DV -1--rw-.5---.x. ..--.c-f,..: -. ,., , , ,-, N lu, 'wg fiffffil-fiti- Q: sill: Fi W 553124-:-5 3fr'i'::ff1'j:-:i-L-Q3- --I-E5 ' if .4' 1 1 X '4,1.i.',L:-- --! --,-,l,,,,..g, - .4 , . I M, HARVEY DECKER MELVIN BENJAMIN ENGLER JOSEPH FERNANDEZ ANSLEY BRYAN MCCONNELL DAVID TRACY ROBERTS. DOROTHY ROBERTS MERLIN FRANK SEIFERT ESTHER MARGUERITE WEPKING CLARENCE MICHAEL WILLIAMS RALPH BAILEY YEWDALE H x 1 l. Q hh?-fi?-Silif-i'-iff-'SGJEIM5.'f-L?imif-m'-E- 4 ' lisa? 5'n22Eg f4P1f1-'if fwvrfzsf . ' 611: 5 54 QE-gf-Q-If-I-Q-L'1s,fJi'-I-Ps'-if-.ff.:f-s.afLE5r,i2 2-'2-L-211322-T2-E Ql2m-if5-Te-:Q-11.3L.g.E9 Q1 1 if 1 Q1 n my l gf ff hgl PM N4 5-1, T212 dl hill Wi' le'l'R2'f',f ill gaaigiiil we 5 ?5i2p feggii? 'Alf Ki-Fei -. P,lViUr1yy -.yyzw gl, - nhl ff 904 'yLl. x Q 744 Wm - nnqw his P4 iii? :Q . Q1 Weill wh Pggiijvrgn , Sunset and evenmg slam Q:-limi! ggi N 74iE1iWg,lh' ' And one clear call for Mme! 'S' by P YJQTQYV4 , , - , A'u:,:g1gl F' .wwf-A And may there be no mloanmg, of the bar, H1 vw, K3 fl? ru Wh nl no zz an L- N v e , pu u o sea. :V M - nz' 954 ld xi: Q4 635139, vgiiffx 5 ,'i'?I2gF'i Bal such ahlide as. moving seems asleep, td E , n l ' . ' ' '1 QJMQIQZ Too full for souncl and foam,' 5,1i,'.W ae is fdwgil When 'that' which drewfrornoul the boundless , fi' ,Eg 'W' -if d wr QW ' Z Turns?f1Za'inN home. YQMV1- ml Qfww wgggirn .. h . M Ph ti Twzlzghland evenzng bell, 5 75,3 H4 v9 H-flglyg And after uma the dark! 112319 Qjlfl And may there be no sadness of farewell lg QA X Whenlenzbark' ' five? V VA , BQMQL L1 ri Fil '31 Q1 ' 'L' ' .N 1 A ' wg For tho' from out our bourne of Tzme and E, ' ' Place ' if ' U ll? , .I sg! ig The flood 'may bear me far, Q2 g.4.5M1 rf: I 'hopeio see my Pilot face za face 5, 71' When I have crossed the bar. Q1 55317 3' '4 Qian Yi h af vw ,R '24 E513 7248 -ALFRED Loan TENNYSON. 51 2521 H Y! nm: gl gi vflwvw . '4 Wil. HQ Wi Hn- :VT P: Y-3: F4512 W3 5: rim? YH E wifi x l ' , H U-1 ?WlP3 ' le H4 MQW lil 1 wr EWU - 1 7.4 '- -- ' one-lm I. 154153 :id 3, I YQ xl Ju iw, L? 'Sl 5591 ',' .A ,Y ' l - gl! in rg K' Ulf ba E1 Ely it 25,3 H if iii' El nm- vw H4 pw ' I -l- va tri ' w -e YJ - . - 2 E rl: Q1 W4 - M 54 rl: ,gem 2 s ' e l ia Q1 E 1513-:avril-1-:wie 5-,T-2-ss sexi-ans-sf:-aeafaezm-Q fl-Y.-Zig W5 l 'A ' S 'L' f- ' -322: aw- -E' 25Y '53'- ?7 17TVT.Lq 4I3 D f7f 1'4ff:f'l..f'EE4 4 Q 1 P5 Ez1'c5,:3z?5Q?'EWUQf nj Piave-21:15I-is-1-1-:was-2-if-1f::-z-2:.1-3-:-1'-1fn-z-5-fzz.-fi.-225,-5-2145:a'z.'5ff1-I-:ji-jzgvsw X 'ff vi l, Y 'K I. E7 Y - 1 XS 'SX LE . -AF og S fvfj-L.-T.:-PE. I . pfx f '-. 4 ,. 'if 'f Il -f reg: - - 2 W' 3222? 15 I A I I 7 ' Q A THE SPIRIT OF WISCONSIN ADMINISTRATION CLASSES WISCONSIN WOMEN ATHLETICS ACTIVITIES CAMPUS LIFE ORGANIZATIONS HIT OR MISS .A-,gf -.? - -,, -A ..,.., , ffx A111 E rvK'F'U' ZH'- ,. ':'55 0, ,S 'ff-if Yi in 21 - f!,ll. ilfiisss, - ffiiiiigzi, -3555 r- ' 555ES!2Q::i, it E 2 5 ly- ?Lff?v N if airllluy . EEE' T ff 1 Q ' wnmrrrvm I i HIS Badger hopes to do more than record the happenings of a scholastic year-it further purposes to fulfill a long cherished dream on the part of its editors of refreshing the sons and daughters of Wisconsin with a sincere understanding and apprecia- tion of the true significance of that ennobling inspiration Which, for want of a better name, We have termedtthe Wisconsin Spirit. This spirit had its inception in the ideals and hopes of the pioneer fathers who saw the vision of and laid the foundation for the great commonwealth and university which today are ours-it is reflected in the ideals and achievements of the men and Women who are steadily going forth from the gates of our Alma Mater, inspired by her teachings. It is as indefinable and as infinite as the great in- fluence of the University itself and, try though We may to evalu- ate it, We cannot, for its Wellsprings are immeasurable. ln, f 1 ' , . ' V .v-H f Y ' mm F: ,V574.51-,.ng'.Hr41i.n-,u.g?.?Fi-21416 - '- ', 'J . - 1.5-,Q-A-w-wwf'---I-2 f-'4'l' ' ' ' 1 V --:mt N-W ' L - . elim I JW U I . S' in r g M Eff P4 an 1 v M 2 jg 9 PM m E4 x - Y 3 ii va 1 M Q a , f ' P? 11:1 ' . ., ! - iv l Ru F M 5 - .H gi the .begmn.vng S -xy ---- y ', ,YVGV ,. ,V - ', lj QW? the Mfmvtogw had S33 g 1a ms 1orL Wd He S5-vga: ' VZ' . ' ' ,, ' , ,Q gg I . 5 wS5Wwxbluest sky' S S QUIT: it Y Y TL auf.. . w Q gy above, me clqfaf g HM- 4 K A. 'de x' --1 1 H ff? 1 est lw 6 fm , M1735 and fhe faifesf H1155 ' V W Y X V N , ,.,. , Q WM hulls alb arownd gligg WV u w Him H14 E2 'A for our Alma gt g, mf ' t LWFYN1 Q 4 ,-a e: -ww m .915 E W E, me K4 il? M i' 2-55 X74 Zi -rf 1 - . ? EL fa 51,53 E1 am if f' 413 51 . X , ' '-4 Sfsfsif ,Y H K ' F-15 W if? 9 915' Q1 Q is f H' 1 21 a 1 U 2 lf rg if 9: 1 Q E, 55139 , A ? Q gig Z:-1 S H251 ' iv ,YA - . 551, 4 5: QM wil ? - W'f55lS Q if . Mm..,.-g:.f.run-Ewa-5-1-Q21-HW2552!WEa Z :W KETFIF fiifgf-Z,,7.,Ig-11fg1igmg:: Ay 'Zipkg-':4'5 3E.LE'E't5g! f- v'y xt .f r.r.r.r.5.5.5-ga,-1-5-.:2 4 'iiimf-Qi?-lfilm!-wana-1-nz-rs-zz-rg-x-an-na-af1-1 ..-4. 4 A - lv ., , -- - V ,I Wm v 1 i '-r N , I Xi' 1: Page Fourteen Wlzere Indians wigwammed, he saw Clzadbourne, home Qf Wzsconszn women The wilderness trail made beauhlful wilh memories and hopes Page Fifteen Page Sirleerz W'here rough experience once hewed, the vision of dignity and learning And pcacqful solilude where minds commune wzih lmrzls unspoken Page Seuenleen X P1196 Eighteen Mids! pow-wow he saw peace, naiure, and a whzle 77lClfl,S-f0y. 'YNY -And les! ilzcy forge!- fhe Armory, a slern but kindly seniinel Page Nineleen Prine Twenly No muskel guards llzis ruslic bridge on 1170 drive IUICJPI' H10 willows Placid llze luke and calm llze shore al lwiliglzl on fwcndota Y ,gait ' ,-f P age Twcnly- One Page Twenty- Two Dreams and visions and a white bridge in the distance The long loved walk for Numan, Lumen Page Twenty- Three P aye 'Twenty-Four The M'aniiou's vision, opalescent, lighfs ihe visia of the future THE SPIRIT OF WISCONSYN Page Twenty-Su: During all of the sixty- three years since Bishop Fallows graduated from N Wisconsin he has carried N on his workfor the world ' in the spirit of service founded on faith in God ' and in man thee res- I I lr , ver p ent readiness to sr1crUice and lo fight for the over- throw of evil and the ad- ' - , c me tof ' ht van e n rig . -Edward A. Birge ' N TI-IE Sixtieth Anniversary of my graduation, as the sole surviving member' of my class of 1859, I gave as my class toast: Fifty-nine, fifty-nine, All my years since then are thine. I can truly say that all the years of my life are years of increasing obligation to the University. Why? What is this Spirit of Wisconsin Which grips the heart of you and me? Some of it is man made. Some of it is God made. All of it is good. The Wisconsin Spirit in the University has been the spirit embodied in the' great seal of the State, ForWard .' The noble men who Watched over its earliest years saw the vision of a University which was to meet all the unfolding practical needs of the oncoming years. It Was to hold fast a high standard of purely conventional academic training, and yet Welcome every advance in scientific, agricultural and industrial require- ments. It Was to develop the highest standards of manhood and Womanhood in body, mind and soul in its students and thus prepare them for all the varied duties of Ameri- can citizenship. As the oldest living alumnus, I have had the privilege of seeing this wonderful Spirit of Wisconsin displaying itself through many college generations. The graduates and students, with Whom today I am renewing my youth, are marching under the same banner as those earliest classes - athletic, clear-eyed, straight-thinking, loyal - Forward is their watchword. i a zfggiwfzlfafai, a' a Berlon Braley is a poet of human nalzzre. He is an aplimisl whose lane- ful message is a helping hand. He gives color andpulse lo the common- place, but oflen he rises lo nobilily of lhoughl and 1 expression.-Aaron M. Braylon. I I e rim HAT has NVisconsin Spirit meant to me? Speaking in general, I do not know. But there are one or two particulars in which that spirit has had, I think, a lasting effect on my life. I gained a belief in democracy, at Wisconsin, and I learned not to take myself too seriously-an attitude which is a concomitant of democracy. For if you don't take yourself too seriously you can't successfully be a snob. These things are not in the curriculum, at least they were not when I Went to college, but they were in the very atmosphere about me for four years. And I've found that most of the real values in life itself are 'coutside the curriculum. By which I mean that though a man's Work or a Woman's Work is highly important in the scheme of things, the thing of greatest importance is to be a broadminded and liberal-souled human being. To the undergraduate, I think Wisconsin Spirit should mean democracy, because democracy seems to me even more poignantly the hope of the World. Wisconsin Spirit should mean service, because service turns hope into realities. Wisconsin Spirit should mean sportsmanship, because true sportsmanship asks and gives a fair chance to every man's endeavor, and goes about its work and its play with a clean heart, a trained body and mind, and an indomitable soul. Wisconsin Spirit should mean idealism, because ultimately the only lasting things are done by those incorrigible idealists who look reality in the face and are no Whit daunted or denied. We Page Twenty Seven llfiscorzsilr is proud rd' her cilizen and rzulfmr, Miss Zona Gale, and rr'- joices in the facl that her lalenls and shvmprllhy have been erzlisledfol' lhe common good. Governor John J. Bla im: ELL adjusted social relations, taste, and even the general virtues are more or less crude unless they are practised with a certain Other Look, a Seeing-through them. A recognition that there is in these a literal loveliness and meaning which may be divined and usually is not divined. That the Hve senses have, so to say, extensions which may be used here and now. This extension of faculty has always been a power of the artistg and the fact that nearly everyone is now a poet, open or secret. merely means that the perception of the race is being heightened to discern that which we used to call hidden. . Usually in youth this awareness is ready to be invited and is'either deepened or thwarted by school and university. These may train this divination or make it ashamed to be heard. To many, a university is a place where they have dreamed new things rather than a place where they have learned old things. I believe this to be the highest praise, and I am one of those who is chiefly grateful to the University of Wisconsin for incalculably multiplying the sense of the wonder and beauty of the inner aspect of living. If I were to try to dehne that for which I am specifically most grateful to the Uni- versity it would be those rare days on which the teacher turned from everything in hand and gave to the class an hour of talk compact of the richness of experience and conclusions which were his. . stef.. Page T enly-Eighl A un Ion of sc ien lijic genius Qlurned lo llzrill- mq use in lhe l Vorld lVurj I1 n rl fascinaiing personal qualilies, sels a mark Qf I'UI'l' dislinclion upon this son qf lVis- COIISfIl.-'.llII'7I!'S F. A. Pyre . N MY undergraduate days, Wisconsin Spirit meant the spirit of Everybody out - with his shoulder to the wheel. I believe it still means the same thing, and I hope it always will. t University life opens a new and interesting world to the Freshman entering Wiscon- sin, a world of new friendships, a world of new things to do. Pervading this world is an intense feeling of fellowship, of common interest, which stimulates activity. Activity in a common cause in turn stimulates fellowship. Wisconsin Spirit is the end product of that reaction. It is the spirit of fellowship in effort. Such a spirit cannot be vocalized. It must be lived. To be a Wisconsin student is to share Wisconsin's work and Wisconsin's play, and to each individual falls a portion of the responsibility for the success of Wisconsin undertakings. Willingness to take this responsibility and eagerness to work with others to secure success, give the measure of loyalty. . If fellowship in effort remain the guiding spirit of our undergraduate life, the Uni- versity will not fail in its mission. Modern life is a life of team play. Neither individf uals, states, nor nations can be independent in the direction of their actions. Each problem brings about differences of opinion, and whether these differences result in con- flict or co-operation depends on the spirit of treatment. The spirit of the University is carried by its graduates into the life of the State and the life of the Nation. May that spirit ever be the spirit of team play, the spirit that pro- duces co-operation and not conflict. May it ever be a true Wisconsin Spirit, the spirit of fellowship in effort. MW Page ly Nzne Page Th irly 1 w r ' 1 l Reared in lhe air Qf freedom, and schooled in the precepls of democracy this sturdy son of im- . i . . migran pioneers is an illuminating example of high American achieve- V ment.-Julius E. Olson. S ONE Who graduated almost forty years ago, a Word from me on the Wisconsin Spirit may seem out of place in view of the fact that in those days of small things the University consisted of only six buildings, inadequately equipped, and a student body of less than four hundred. And yet the spirit of which We are now all so justly proud was then as manifest as it is today. The truth is that the Spirit was born in those and the earlier days, born in the minds and hearts of teachers and students who were the pioneers or sons and daughters of pioneers who through great travail laid the foundations of a mighty state. Times Were hard, money scarce, and students were not of those Hwho had all the luxuries and some of the necessities of life but of those Who, as a general thing, had to struggle for the bare necessities. But one of the dominant forces which evoked and intensified the morale, the esprit de corps, or what we now call the Wisconsin Spirit grew out of the character, learning and personal influence of the late President Bascom and the professors of his day. Bricks and stones and a sightly place do not of themselves make a university, but men and Women of power and vision, gifted With enthusiasm to teach. ' To us of the former generation it is a matter of great joy that the present generation has not only preserved but greatly broadened and intensified the 'iWisconsin Spirit and opened up larger possibilities for victory in the expanding fields of human effortg that as of old so now and hereafter in what We undertake We have the confidence that fight and we will win this game ! Truly 'lthe spirit maketh alive. I V L Few sons of the Uni- versity have had so dis- tinguished a career as Dr. Paul S. Heinsch. As an author, in sub- jects relating to world politics, delegate to Pan- Americancan.gresses,am- bassador to China, and later as adviser of the Chinese government in ' ' America, he has well earned a lasting place in American history. -Burr W. Jones. N THINKING of old Wisconsin, memory reverts with special love to the men whose personalities as teachers impressed themselves most deeply on us. William F. Allen, the first leader in the modern development of Wisconsing Frederick Turner, whose eyes could say more than most men's oratoryg Charles Haskins, then a youthful prodigy of astonishing knowledge and memory powerg Richard T. Elyg William A. Scott, Alex- ander Kerrg Moses S. Slaughterg John B. Parkinson, and the Presidents Chamberlain and Adams, all left theirimpress. PresidentVan I-Iise I knew as a student,chiefly as aman of sci- ence, who was always ready to talk with us debaters about any question under the sun, social and economic, and from whom we always went away full of new ideas. The dearest memories cluster about the associates and activities of our everyday life. Athletics had not yet become so prominent in those days. We blew off all our surplus energy in shouting for debating teams and competing orators. The debating societies at that time were the real center of student life. But the greatest and most profound influence that we felt was that of the common- wealth Spirit of Wisconsin. Wherever I have gone in later life, I have been helped by the inspiration of the new life of a great commonwealth which became conscious of itself in those last years of the nineties. The broadening view of human relationships, the idea of the State as a big family, the devotion of the best talent therein to work for the general good, the testing of all rights by their just subservience to human welfare, these aims so clearly expressed in the Wisconsin Idea, helped me beyond words in facing the diffi- culties and responsibilities of an arduous time. I 44416 1 , Page Thi ty 0 e Daughler of lhe Iowa 5 , iw prairiesg maulder of ?j'. ,,,v ,, public opinion. on vital 'IQ issuesg wriler of charm- . . ing slories: aulhor Qf ag? books lhal have delighled multitudes of people and Q-:f Q of arficles on lopics qf ' great social impol-lance: ediloli ofa dislinguished and mfluenlial journal. -NI. Vincent O'Shca. OU ask me what the Wisconsin Spirit has meant to me, what it ought to mean to the undergraduate. What a diflicult question! For nearly all the things that loom as immensely important in student days become immensely and immediate- ly unimportant in after life! Nobody cares a great deal in the great competitive world whether or not you are college bred. No editor, if you are asking him to buy a story you have written, asks you whether you are from Wisconsin or Harvard or Northwestern. Yet. the set of stand- ards that were given you when you went to college will make or mar you in your life career. And these standards, these values, were formed quite unconsciously during your four years on the campus. While you were torn with excitement over the possibility of your being elected to a Greek letter society, your inherent bent toward democracy or snobbery was being crystallized. While you were concentrating on how many or how few hours a week would win you your degree, your standards of work. of your service obligations to life, were being quietly evolved. While you were ,groaning under the weight of the collateral reading for History I or English Il or Economics III the standard of your cultural demands on the future was taking its fixed direction. And in the after years, when you have almost forgotten whether you are a B. L. or a B. S. or a B.A., an editor of THE BADGER asks you to say something about the Wisconsin Spirit and you realize that your angle toward life, your demands on life, your interpre- tation of life breed back to those four heedless, happy years on the campus at Madison. And you rise up and call those years the most blessed and important' of your life. Page Thu ly- Two Vw, ' ' ' f L Qi..1.'1-1 I r I ii VL i . it ' 1, A , l I I .3 .y ., , i Q . -N - ii. , ., f. 4. N l . .Q fjl I N y ,,V Q 5 i i N 'g-1 til l i in .xii l T . it l 5.5 L ilji iii l V '- qi. ..' I l, ilk' v,' it I VW . l lifqi T Q Ml . X f . 1. L.i ' . -i'l ,y my l ii . V 'Yi' it? I! 'I l 1, r 4 Ned Jordan does such - l lh ' W' ' . . :nys for Lsconsm as , N. ' help creale lhc Council of ' Forly, and pu! over the ' lVIemor'ial Union cam- paign. H0'.v lhe lea- ' l ' A ' 1 ' hound's foe and the he- .. . . ' . ' man's friend.-Edward 1:- H. Gardner. 1 lf' 1 I HE MYSTERIOUS PGWER of money and the marvels of machinery in their 'iff M 4 influence upon the progress of the World, will always pale into insignificance in the li I brilliant light of the magic spirit of willing men and women. I 33 , if i 1 You might possess all the wealth of the World and the wisdom of all the hooks of i,f,i,l Christendom, and yet be poor indeed if you lacked association with men and Women dominated bythe spirit of serving others. The men Who laid the foundations for the great institution of which We are so proud ii today, possessed a vision and were guided by the true spirit of service. 1-ml They gave to the men and Women of Wisconsin an opportunity to acquire knowledge ffj and build character in an environment characterized by a broad spirit of academic free- if dom and service to the World. ff, . VI l Their early struggles against adversity only heightened their determination to jus- if tify their ideals. I lk 4i In the sacrifices which they made we iind a true expression of that unconquerable ,jig ww something-the Spirit of Wisconsin. Q ii L Y X iiif WWVTTW Hn TTT T T AW A TPage Thirty-Three l I l 1 A . 1 l - N , ,, l ,v . , i wr, ,l - i ' ' ' 'I , . l ' il V l N - , '- - The apliludefor journal- 11 .1 -1' islic work which William f l v T. Welsh displayed Q- . while in lhe Un irersily 3 , ' has been ably reflecled - N . and enhanced in his sub- ' ' - - ' sequent success as editor . , , s Qflcchnical Publwahons l' 'I I '-'11 'viii' ' X of wide circulalion. l is I ' '- '- I 77, A 1 -Gerlriicle E. Breese. - -' 5 V f ' ' 2 ' '- ' T ISCONSIN owes her greatness to two factors. She is the essence of the Mid- Westg and she has a cosmopolitan population with a cosmopolitan soul. ' This background of natural conditions has made the University of Wisconsin, and, reacting, the University has influenced the State. But far more, the University has left its mark upon the Whole commonwealth. Foster sons, like myself, born elsewhere, have, whether we would or not, carried the gospel of a cultured democracy throughout the length and breadth of the land. Even though once we might have been lazy of mind or sluggish of soul, yet our very blood is now imbued with the flavor of our environment. I feel that I have lived in-been a part of-a community which, changing in per- sonnel as every university group necessarily must, yet was and is inspired by an eternal abiding force. That force is belief in one another, confidence in the understanding of and co-operation with those holding to the same beliefs as one's self. Here there has always been harmony of thought in vital matters, more than tolerance for differences of convic- tions in others. I know of no state or university where this great breadth of outlook can be duplicated. Truly the Spirit of Wisconsin is a unique contribution to American W LNMM national life. Page Thzrly Four , X X X - X I cl -1.151 ,'5'.'l-limi? iff-fIf'w1l'1,f fl , ,. X , .El gf !Xj ' ' -'Xfsff' J' J Xwl1,ia4 ' 'I' lm' ll . ' X4 l X, A U .,., XXX. 5, ll . I '.l1,',. : l X,XX ,Xl 'I 1. I. 1 . na.:- - X, XXV XAX - NX ' xy A ,J SX X 'og :' 141, X5 'mg-i -IX ,lx 'K ill , . X. ,V . I X' 'Q-,Nfl fy XXXQ1 , 2. X E1 NX X ',X ' E',.f 4'X, L1xl1 ':i1 X . , U N X ' fl' i'l'fl.' V -X,,sX , at Q-hi 1 .XX -X X 1 AXA, 'gwlf ' QI 'f '- X , N , . X - ,XX vw, ,I A X X X I X, Xt' .IN 'I X :ll il?f':l+ , ,pai 53.1.34 sl 'X- ,X 'Xi X X',ilfiX,l'l ':X GX' xl. , X ' 31X,,igl,:,, V1 A IX . ',l'X fl - lv 1 X V, l: XlXyE X. XXX! , ,f 4 ' T it 'mf-Q1.5l2 .- A w'-gpg, , , ,. X , I Jw. ' I Xfr! JXIX 5'X gi it 122-X 'Xlj ' X- Xl 'W lx I ff Y , il rl: X. X X' 1 :tml .' 5 5X,XXXQXX xi 'fl l QW lil! , u 'XXX 5 ,1 1 I A! XXI'5,rQ,x, Joseph Coll Bloodyood X X - X N piggy X, slands with lhe foremost 1 . . i 5. - gyg,5:gij.1 of his colleagues ln. ihe f- v 2 M1-- 1-'X' medical profession as a X, , . X XX 3 'fw Qgzlffffwlx teacher, a surgeon, an X 'X : gl VX? fX'X mvcstzgalar, and a pub- . -' V V A ,, . ,I licisl, having lhe welfare N A' I 'L' J f fy V- 5 ', ' , :lhl Qfhylmanilyhixfirslaim 1 I ' I 8 I ' 'ii Xilii JE2.E?i:'illff..eQffl?Xll2.Siaii+f1'1XitfiSU mX1lfe--J- S-Evf1'1SXM- 1 1.-4 1, C., 2,-5,41.1,zezlfz--144--aa-fXfgs.gXl D- ASCOM and Chamberlain were Presidents during my years in Wisconsin from 18841 to 1888, but the present head ofthe University, Dr. E. A. Birge, was my chief teacher and inspiration. My impression then remains unchanged today-that the Wisconsin Spirit generated from the opportunities and the teaching which resulted in the practical benefits to the students in their later life work-to acquire knowledge, to fit ourselves for a selected vocation or a selected postgraduate professional study. At that time the Wisconsin Spirit and its purposes were little known to the world or appreciated. Today the world knows that Wisconsin has done most in research for practical benefits of the people, and in training students in fundamental knowledge with- out which their work in later life, in business or profession, would be of little benefit to the community. I have ever been grateful to the broad and generous spirit of the people of Wisconsin who gave me and many other young men and women this opportunity for a fundamental education without cost, and each year I am more and more confident that Whatever I have accomplished in my profession has been due to that fundamental training. Without it I would not have striven for opportunities which presented themselves, or, if I had, the effort wouldhave ended in failure. To me the Wisconsin Spirit means that its students soon realize that at Wisconsin the chief dayls work is to acquire knowledge to allow the students to work in some voca- tion or profession in Science or in Art for the practical benefit of their communities, and, in some instances, of the world. Gr q -,.-.. h-. ..,,,,,, ,.,, .,.-X X, ' ': ',w-.4X,..,f,,f.-.ff.,-,. A Page Fhuly Fzze ,,1 ...H '1 11 11 ,1 '1 1 1 ,.1 11 , 1' All M-1. 13 x'11 1 '1 ,Q '11 ,W 1 1,1 , 1 1 1 1 ,.1 - 1,' '1 1 W-1 1-1 X 1, -1 -'11 ,lx ,W W1 1 ,Q1 ,1-I., 1- H11 '11 , ,N 1, -1 gk 11' 1,21 .Wx .., '11 1 .,-11 . ,XI ,,l 11. ,'f11 1,11 Ni ffl 713+ N71 ,, X111 mlm 11 1 V1 ,,,1 1 ,1 1 15,11 1 ,Z1 N ,1 1.311 11 ' 11-51, 1 , 1 1 1 1' J' i v, 1 1 11 5 1 1 I 1 , 131, Page Thirly-Sir 1- . ,.-,, , .Y A V . --,- - v ,:'.,gIQ X ,K Q, X . F. Y, . ,W . Y X ,M ' ,TL.'jifiT3,1j'1 ,Q , ,' ADMINISTRATION ' l ' ' ' 1 ','iiifir'f-n- HAVE unwisely promised to write for T HE BADGER on the Wisconsin Spirit. but l'am not so foolish as to think that my writing can express it. For such a spirit results from a long series of causes, fewiof which are direct and fewer still are verbal. Deeds, rather than words, have given it life and its power-is shown as it inspires and rules the actions of those who come under its influence. ' U Consider how great is the variety of the factors which have combined to form the NVisconsin Spirit. Behind it are forces almost impersonal-the temper of the pioneer, self-reliant, adventurousg the temper, too, of the American pioneer who migrated with his family in order to form a new commonwealthg a pioneer temper, therefore, that not only sought but demanded knowledge as necessary to good government and happiness , and in this spirit created opportunities of education for the youth of a new state. There is also present on the campus t.he life of the State, a commonwealth that now looks back over three-quarters of a century of statehood. We share the temper not of a population but of a people-a people finding its highest conscious expression in a system of public education that culminates in its University. And with these wider influences are united the lives of individual men that have been poured into the Uni- versity in order that its spirit might be formed in symmetry and maintained in power. Statesmen like Fairchild and Vilas and Hoard have planned and worked to advance its fortunesg teachers like Sterling and Allen and Irving have wrought out its thinkingg leaders like Bascom and Adams and Van Hise have guided its progress. We recall these few names out of manyg but in naming few or many we do injustice to the creators of the Wisconsin Spirit. For great as has been the contribution of the men whom I have named and of their fellows, the Wisconsin Spirit did not come from them alone, and they could not have produced it. It was born, like the spirit of all great institutions, out of the affections and the energies of the host of the unnamed who have put their lives into the University. It is filled with the spirit of scores of legislators and regents who have caught the vision of a great university and have striven to make it realg it is vital with the thought of hundreds of teachers who have informed it with knowledge and discipline, with enthusiasm and wisdomg it is rich with the spirit of thousands of students who have come here with faith in learning, who have entered into and shared the life lived here on the campus, and who as alumni have carried it with them into the world to raise and purify their own lives and so to better the commonwealth. Out of all these forces, personal and impersonal, constantly acting and reacting on each other during nearly twenty college generations, there has arisen the Wisconsin Spirit, at home here on the campus. It has no voice, but we hear it in class and laboratory, in debate, in society, in sportg it is impalpable, but it lays its hands on every student who comes to usg it is invisible, but it is endowed with the eternal reality of the things that are not seen . We are true sons and daughters of Wisconsin in proportion as we are shaped by its power, but no one of us can adequately comprehend it, much less manifest it in its fullness. I id Pagel Thu lv Seven I if -1 L . A U. .I .+I 'xiii . ' --1 iii -1 ...H f-.I .,, s,,.,, . , , ,...v .. M ----A ------ -----al U-...,.--I.-. ,-. -L L. 4 -t i 55' v. u .I 1 1 4-- , . n - Q . . V4 -- - - I,jQ1,, -sl Lgtr' e.-.L.1 -- -Y'----Y ff'---'f f-f'- -'i+- - --' E liili I . j :Hifi . ldiilii , IW: K Y ' ligi. ' K f 1 . - , -.- ,,,V, , , , , .- - --,:..:.....f - - -'L-:.:.1. :s.u.:5:1n:sf:--'J -. --.-mai,-' ' N122 1 i U RD F RE! SE W TS I I I f f 'qldfff' iii? i u l V i Ui i It E . Q it----ffqizfgv-,.y:,j -112:-ref-.:. E: f- .:u,rr::f.r:::swn1::n.T.-3-.uazrfzziz-,:::'1-'':.-:fr'r:'E1LLAROQT! ' gk if W A: I , Y nag. W5 gvkwqii N 'mix' i K if N lf' ,K I -I-115mm Ygzw, . 5 :A . Q' H' XKQICJQTK V ffl! iiflii l X 'I . 1. I ,Ar Nga 4-,ff gljzl. I 1 , ffi Kg .ff ,ggifi OFFICERS 115555 I I . J. WVALTER J. KOHLEB . . . President BEN F. FAAST ......... Vice-President 2 1 Zgjjg HEN'BY J OHNSON, State Treasurer Ex- Ojic io Treasurer 5 1 ,iivjiji J. D. PHILLIPS .,...... Buszness Manager Trigg li l M. E. lViCCAFFERY . Secretary 'FQ' :Fi G-. L. GILBERT . . . Bursar F. X. RITGER . Purclzasing A gen! 'tfl QT att lziiil wif Mgr EQ PERSONNEL eg: EDNXVARD A. BIRGE ........ .......... . President of University, Ex- Oficio .lfql JOHN J. CALLAHAN ........ . .State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Er- Officio ij-til GILBERT E. SHAMAN, State at Large ..... ............... . Milwaukee H515 MRS. FLORENCE G. BUCKSTAFF, Stale at Large . . Oshkosh MI :WN A. J. HORI.ICK, First Distric! ......... . . Racine WALTER J. BUTLER, Second District . . . . . .Kohler Wi! 'ii' H L K Tl M fi if ' : -21 ARRY . OHLER. zird Distric! .... . .- a ison ,t 2 F JT ' . . . f THEODOIKE M. HANIDIOND. Fourth Dzslrzct . . Milwaukee THEODORE KRONSHAGE, Fifth Distric! . . . .Milwaukee :ligj Miss ELIZABETH A. W ATERS, Sixth Dislricl . Fond du Lac fig? D. O. NIAHONEY. Seventh Distric! .... . .Viroqua fi mf GRANVILLE D. JONES, Eighth. Distric! . . . . Wausau QPU EDWARD W. MILLER, Ninth Distric! . . . .Marinette xmij , BEN F. FAAsT, Tenth Distric! . . . . .Eau Claire IQ PETER EIMON,1fiE'lJ6TLiiI Distric! . , .Superior iii 1 E Y - Elini it. 1 ii A 'hifi : Y Z 1 . .Hill gillf ,J T' 1553 iii' E .1 .lt in 5 l :rss Weil its.: l Z ll : is 1551 'tl WIF- 'I :J ll ilqi , 3. Ii!! wt: I iff' ij: I iii? tag, .9-qt' L' - 'T' l tt Q . K 'J lfv H ff -W - - - .... s..Y 1 -W Aki--. . ,.1..-..,-- --. - , ,L ,E , I ..., Page Th iriy-E ight i1 l'1 - 1 31 BOARD OF VISITORS l l-. M V .5 LGQJQW-W Q I Y VY- I , i, Alf? APPOINTED BY TI-IE HEGENTS Qi GEO. P. HAMBRECHT, Madison EDNVARD M. MCMAHON, Blilwaukee LOYAL 1DURAND.lX'lllVV2'lllli6G MRS. CHARLES R. CARPENTER, Madison APPOINTED BY THE ALUMNI ISRAEL SHBIMSKI, Chicago. Ill. Mus. HOWARD GREENE, Milwaukee ALICE BEMIS, Chicago. Ill. WILL A. FOSTER, Elkhorn APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNOR MRS. CHAS. M. MORRIS, Milwaukee CARL J. PIEFGARD, Orfordville E. B. BELDEN, Racine W. A. TITUS, Fond du Lac 1,1 1 li 111 .1 1, - Nil . I '1 l lf 1.111 4 ! 11 :1 11 1 11 . 4 .IU 131' 11,1 H .1 1. , . 111 ,YA 1 .1 1 f 1 1 11 1 1. 1 ,ll l ' 11 1 1 , ' I ,111 1 1 1-1 IF111 1 7' 1 1II117' 1, '11 fl 1.1.1 11f1Q 3.11 111QL,jN 1?'1'1 1, .,, 1 11 '1'11.1 11114: mf-' ful KL? llgfili Jlyril will 'kjljf 1152 13? ll'ifiQ1 119' mls. l'7'f1i llqf. 111115 X1 fig. 'I 111:11 11111: 1114? 1: 1151111 ll'5:111 11152 1111, Wffl 1111. 1111: Wy. 1,. 1532. Mr:- i QHA 111-11 11' 1511 11 l1 15? 11,1 115121 fl'-'Fl l1 1. lilljl Iif, 1124. 'iffy W. 1 l1:'1' 1, 111 A ' 'l A, 1--'K ? .2 3'. 5'f7':I1 '?T-' Z' 'TCf1'1?'1 T . T' TTTT T' 7fQ1 ,7T TZTE 7'TFF47fE fm? 'F-'E 7 ',T f' 'f' 'T 7' 'WT' 7 1:1 'T-1 '.1:..1-'E' L - L mg -1444g.g,.:g.E-.Lg,-..EL.-,1.-L,,,-g..E,-,-:.L.,.,E ,.L.-.-1' ,gd , L ,, 1 1 - ,11,.,1,,A , , . , L . 1 Page Thirly-Nine l , v I . .,. .I. .lf 1, 4: I 3 l ill l ll .l' v . THE Dmivs 5, ,. I l 4 g I 4 l ll M RETROSPECTIVE glance over recent years l l shows the world tossed by odd winds of doctrine. i Ti! . Tj Thrift was cast aside and autos, diamonds, furs, A T and silks abounded. But economic law brought a T Q speedy reaction-enforced economy, a buyer's strike, pg l financial depression. Sobriety, integrity and industry ii il T were also discarded for jazz, booze, joyriding, garn- yllll l bling and lax morality. Today the press is insistently - F demanding relief from this surfeit of frivolity and ll M Q materialism and a return to old ideals. 4' lgpii i 4 Through it all.-Alma Mater has unwaveringly lg gl , stood for these very ideals. She has never flirted with l y the vagaries of the moment. Those ylvitliilin her gates T , i who have done so, have lever caug t er message. l W Not joyless drudgery noi' ascetic abnegation is her T aim, but self-mastery through hard work seasoned T 5' w with the good cheer and the legitimate pleasures Y which make for wholesome living. Wisconsin Spirit lf ffl L N lp, . g , e S S s seeks above all to develop men andwomen of spiritual, T intellectual, and physical power, who have caughtthe ' vision of grand ideals and who have the soul and the lm training to attain them. May the Class of 1922 be inspired by the true Spirit of V Wisconsin. Q w ' T I I A I a 'g',l HAT STAMP does the Spirit of Wisconsin put upon its women? Wisconsin lg gl women realize that they are women. with the responsibilities and privileges of women. Even when the fashion runs to prolonged irresponsible juvenility set off by a show of equally irresponsible sophistication, the Wis- - c g 5 ,gil consin woman realizes the beauty of a grown-up mind. f, ,,,' She knows that co-ed is only a little nick-name. will suitable as a fond, good-natured joke in the university fy , family, but not truly representing her. She sees the 354.1 mistaken ideal of life in the 'leo-ed when head-lines, quaintly forgetting the origin of the term, apply it to 1 l Hshrewd, keen, hard, worldly, little things in women's 'fl colleges. She knows that the typical co-ed is a mere ,ll trifler strayed from her proper place, intellectually f Q asleep, and waking only under the charm of Friday night. She knows that the typical co-edu loco- 2?-L-fl motion through life would be dancingg the true Wis- , consin woman walks, upright, comradely, and strong. . Q rl . .ll A z ,l ply y Wil! . . l l . g, I - l '7 Tffw 'Tri if'-'J 'fflfffif 'i r f'f' if ' ' ' 1 W' 1 ,rn-ft 4-r ' ,. Page Forty l l l 1 V' lllfr' A M1 li? A' 1 fri-IE LIBRARY soaoot y gli 4 mm ln' 1, all I' l lvl 4 'll il X ' li? OUNDICD .in 1906, the Library School has been training students for sixteen years ijfll in the spirit of service to the community. The graduates number 425g of these 204 W. y have at some time been employed in Wisconsin libraries, the average term of service all being three years each. This has given a tremendous impetus to library development Vjff l is '-.l throughout the State. ., 4 :ll During two months of every Near the academic schedule is suspended and the students 1I1. L1 1 1 iql assigned to libraries in the State for actual work. under the supervision ofthe faculty and yzqfy in the local librarians. This laboratory method has not only made practical instead of sl l lei: 41-' l il, theoretical librarians of our graduates. but has brought about an ,increased regard for lrfpi library standards in the State, besides helping in the actual advancement of its library Iljgj fir , organization. A body of enthusiastic students cannot be assigned annually to an average fill of thirty communities without performing a considerable SQITVICC, although primarily they lah are sent to learn. lin . . .. . - . . . l'rFl lil! Representing the state wide campus t. l2a libraries have served as laboratories for 11.1 ' my., Ejgy the school, receiving in return a total of 824- months of student work. Another point of ,, -'-r 1 , 1 v 1V-1 service is the new course offered to juniors and seniors who are preparing both to teach and 111, ,. ,M W.- it administer high school libraries. Already forty-nine have elected this course and have i 'il ' Lf been prepared in the spirit of the University for this field of service. jr, '11 ' 1.l or lr' 1 1 l 1314, 11-'N .41 .. JV 'r.'l itll Il l QI' lmi' lil Mal .ll 2, lil lzlf 1 1 V' VH' .v , U ml 1 , Mew . 1.4 ,,. Wi I1 H if' X'-,Si lil! 13:1 7 ,ill - 11-51. llll ' lkfl lill 534' xt l1 i t1 tp. vii 1 1 I1 ,1 i 1-il rg if il 1 ri: Kr Q., Q 1 lf! vi 1 rg .1 Sl ll ' lv i Q1 1,1 .1 l fl. V1 l lull l1.Q lil Wg 1 .1. ' 1 vas 11 ll X. li 1 , 5.1 l' R, A 1 1 1 . M11 15.1 11'.l 1' 11.,'y 2 11 l i Q, ,1! tl l 1 ..r ' fl-: 1 1.- 1. it i ' e y e A Page Forty- One H. fri U, 'I . U V, E vu. W l2 4 ,. w, JS' 1 r ,W -v .l- ,1- 5 Y.. 1 X 1 . n 'fw- ,J ,f U 1 1 .,.t Jr. , 1 ,H . In H.. -. ' 1,1 , l ' I I ' - --'1 r 'xQ':' - - A , S ws, a '- ' . - H ,.AVv H f .V . .. ff- S f 0 lf'-W' .,', I VA IA- I f V 1.xv ' Y -V ,,.,. , . . fi 211:-5 , , , ' 1 ' .,.. A, 1 Dvsnw r .1 Elf 1, I if ,Ygl- lg Nfl ,WZ will ' Qggf HE Spirit of Wisconsin is one of serviceg serv- 2 lifigl 1ce to the state and SGIVICG to soelety as a ma lg?-ill whole. It was ln thls sp1r1t of serv1ce that All lmglfl 1nstruct1on ln Journahsm was first undertaken at gli the Unlverslty of WISCOHSIH 1n 1905, and 1t has been ln this sp1r1t that 1t has been deyeloped durrng 33.51 the last slxteen years. In provldlng systernat1c gpg preparatlon for young men and young women if-All Cl6S11'1I1g to serve the state and the natlon through 1 1 A5 . . '-1. ty! newspapersand magazlnes, not only was the Um- 5,35 will verslty a p1oneer 1n a new field of educatlon, but 1t ffgif has always emphaslzed the nnportance of a broad Q35 ling foundatlon ln h1story,econom1cs, pohtlcal scjenee, y UQ phllosophy, language and lltepature, IH addltlon to W3 tralnlng ln J0l11'I1lZ:ll1SlL1C technlque. Slnce the suc- ' 0535 lf cess of democratlc government depends upon sound :jjj pubhc op1n1on, and slnce sound pubhc oplnlon IS ' 2, . ,- e .s..i, posslble only when the news of the day IS presented 1 Sfll and mterpreted falrly, accurately, and lntelhgently, 1 EJVC - - at there would seem to be no h1 her servlce that a ll H may unlverslty can render than to prepare some of lts Q, .ly students adequately for SCFVICG 1n the Held of y 1fgfQiE Journallsm. I i l QQIF3 'gif - l 7 , - l W IQ: lil--jm X 1-in ,,Y..'A ,MI 1 ' l- ' l 'J . lffjl wal., 'il-fell . ' A 'fix M l . : lkiff fw w tfi lies: Ill 1 Al- X Z VM ri-1+ nl-fs: -lt, 2 ' lzlill H1 -Ei! :lj 5 59. ill! E22 'Syl Ve' gl Y lil fr fliiii Ml: f Q lffg, lt il vi-lj ' ffl: , t A Manuscripls fluller and 5 .41 Llp fypewrilcrs click busily if-1' l -N , here-lhe copy boxes close 7,15 ll!! Qi al iwelvc sharp or zz bil 1 ,i before-lhe deans hold open Qifj C I 'fi house here, loo. beimezen ,Qlj Q semeslers. I if ql 3 w .ful Y l , A it l lf' ' Lil 7777fT'77' 377 - 'f'-lif' 5.A9'57i3?'- ' 2779 , -31:-L37-ef ff TT- fy- --.- N- ..,- , Y Y , A , ' - ' - - 1J.TT?fL, .T ' if Ji . Y ' 3 ' 1 ,f 'A , 5 W5 ,' ' 71' ,:- f ? ,Af T'EnF ' wV'f T S','?'L'lt ?'.:7ff'.113f:lZl Page Forty- Two -1, 1, . X jf F v .Wg VY: , iff FY: pf W u sf ZW 1 211 1 1 ,1 ij: N 55: 3 iii :Q A ff 1 ay, J MJ Q1 N if 5 Hn u S H? ,: il-K ' l 3, w 15251 fi? 5 iii 1 '1 1 rf' 1 W 9,143 iff ' M5 ,1 aij ' gif ? xi' by - m V . W IJ' 4 , I Ufg, LS. 1-.L rQ I 11, 1 , il W 'f-.1 ,E , W V 1 M in' 511,13 V Fjg , X P5 U U 1 u 'PI HQ: W 4 M., A 1 1 , Pa Us Fo rl y-Three VE 15 U gl ,,Q 5 q 5 ,A l' 1 H 1 Q f ' QQ lv rg V l iff V A J Igj' lff? Ygwi ff 'A g I P HE College of Letters and Science was estab- lished to equip the youth of the new State for Worthy living, by familiarizing them with the best that man has thought and done. The college still fosters its original purpose, broadened now to include, more consciously, the development ol' personality. tolerance, and sympathy. In addition, recognizing that the world needs special training. along many applied lines, the college has instituted many special courses , as chemistry, commerce, journalism and music. The peculiar virtue of these courses at Wisconsin is, We think, that they are not narrowly technical, but include an unusually large element of the older humanistic studies alluded to in my first sentence. Our neWer courses are meant to train not only for a living but for living. To you, graduates of the class of 1922, at Work or at play, I send greetings. Keep up your reading and your planning of better things. The life is more than meat. X Dear Old Main Hall--she wzziclzes over us from green cap to cap and gown. Page Forlv Four ETTE SCI EN F f if L1 A,.A,,, ,-4 .,, l.. ,-.X 1 V21 W 1-v Yu. Viz, ww, i2i'fl 4- .f,.? gfw mf ,,, ffiil 11--,-p 'W bfi?-1 1,4171 jfim 4Y.Y.. V v 'Vp I-, Wrj Em, Y.. rw: VUE L-1: 31.2 lv' ,X 1 1 , pw o mx! ' ii , vii 1 V lxflj W CAN M Q sf L! ,iff MJ-1 ww ,yy ': -w I' ,VW Niki! M Q., ,,U. i'f ', 'N nf! W M. F1 -1 ,M . QPF: sf-w ,.,. f w Hfwji lf! lfniz ,Wil ',3'z2f RW' , , ,1 imp! fx 4,f,. IE W ,A lx-,I It Wk' ' hr '. 'lmfl . . QI! ugfvl M42 N121 Mg, ,,,, ,lil Q' ,VN mm: !',.w lijfffifffxlfffjfffi g1ffjjg,L,-1g g,:g1L.g1lg 5 gil - Q, iii' if ,, + Q , Page Forly-Five X 5 ITHIN the Course in Commerce, esprit de corps among the students and Wisconsin Spirit have always been highly esteemed, and efforts to promote them put forth. An essen- tial part of the training of young men and Women who expect to follow business as a career consists in the development of the capacity to be loyal to an organization, of the ability to co-operate with other people, and of the habit of devoting oneself enthu- siastically to the promotion of the interests of the organization With which one is connected. This kind of training can only be acquired by practice and for this the University offers the best possible opportunities. During the years of resi- dence here, the University is the organization for the interests of Which students may Work, and the faculty and their fellow students are the people with Whom they may co-operate. Innumerable opportunities to do these things are offered by the Course in Commerce, and no Commerce graduate can be Well trained who has not taken advantage of them. .di6'wMi Old Slerling is famous for Bermy's snowflake leclure -and secrel sessions in Money And Br1n.king,'- they have 181 here, too,- some pass it and some- Page Foriy-Sim N--..,Q -....,i-,,,,, Q-1----.7-H'-'A---H ff- if 5 T .QfifTfgi:T jlijpf, ::1gg.:g'jjjT:Lj 'NAA'-i -f f H J - , Y W , -, I gLgQmg:.sg.agma1s.3: .bggz--:1.1,,L11.-,,,' gg, - f- V , ,M . . , , ,, , Page Forly .KJ 1 191. VNS MQ, wiv , I M- , 5' ml. 1:-Er, wi! V? HK , wi! ry--kg ,. HW' FMU F., U, ' 511,- fill Qcgz' 1.11 M-H New ,i I' Fw,-J! NJ' 1113, Wir? Heil? wifi, 'gftfji Ifgflq W W 033' 21312. Hu, jul Q w WVL, ,, UT: 4, . I Hg W i P' X1 g 21: 5 Q51 I 1, qw . n :F 5 ,ml ww 41 gf rw W T3 K F31 ' QQ, g H E221 Q 1 F 01 Sy E1 M2 Efm fl gee ,A R P iw 1329 43.1 1: iii 1311, jlilif ,Mi , 1 1 -1' Nb-T W7 me up lf. ' -Seven is . 5. .,. SW an-- M M., rag rw ,fag 4 Q 7 fs -' 1:-1 -' Here:-2 I A PQ 5 1' s T 'rn ,. I-. .Q 3 sm-1.m,., 11fJgg,,mg- 1 iff T 'l . y HE Wise and just administration of law is the Ivfyjg supreme concern of the citizens of the State. if The first prerequisite to this end is the lu existence of a Well trained and high-minded bar, without which an independent, enlightened bench ' Vfjl is impossible. The Law School performs its great- 11,4 .. est service to the State in training the future mem- llpyfl should aid the legislature and the courts in making lf-'f the law a more perfect instrument of justice. The W , Law School realizes this responsibility and oppor- l ' - . . . ill fy tunity for service, and through the medium of the Wisconsin Law Review presents to the State the l r I Q l I A l 4 l l r w l r. 1 , I bers of the bar of the State, but its duty and oppor- tunity does not end there. .Its faculty is engaged A in studying the law in its entirety, and its studies l J l w 1 results of studies and researches of the faculty and !,lil students of the school, H' gl 1 , .V Q, fp --1, ,r 1. fy' all L 4 ' 1 x w J ll fi MQ' i .-. l. ffl T311 N lf-M ,. 1 I H l Iiigii, li El rl l fill Htl' , ,,l ,X ,lf .l ' l Q sh, I 'l- ' r jf li . ii-11 Wfell. well, well,-h.ere's 1 V1 the old Law Shop-same V l 1 qs ever-they holdcouri up '. l an fhe lower and somelimes pri lhey pass judgment from , , - Vs 5 the front wzndowsl Q . .p 'f-' A , V A? V , ,Q ,, -, lf,Y,, ,Y -gY,+,WWA f Tijfv'-, g ' NY' fjikcf' gig: ir, 1- it ,- 'pg 1 K ' - --Q V- -- f - --- - --5-N-me -f -- -.- -vw-W--V-'A----f P age Forly-Eighl Tw' 777777747777 WT Y Y'i T' T' W W nwww' T 3 2 3 E g . Y I w Paqe Forly-Ning l ' rf I UL HE lessons learned here Well exemplify the Spirit of Wisconsinl'-the spirit of construc- tive co-operation for the progress of human- ity. In no state Will be found better illustrations of the value of such effort. Wisconsin boys are going forth imbued with the idea of service. The State has done much for them in giving them the resources of a great educational institution and from them 'she expects much in that those she trains will be imbued with higher ideals than those which center around merely sellish ambitions. The College of Agriculture offers to the youth of the State and nation through its instruction in the science and practice of agricultural methods, the opportunity for better thinking, better farming and better living. No one eper flanks oul at Ag Hall-ills far, far away from the wild womenf- and all the Profs are reg- ularfellows. l V Y v 1 I 5 W1 ,JF - ,... YY- , M Q v , , , Kg 14' L 1- Akrq -dl 'L--Wwlgikw ,W 1 ,M in f W Wrnrm-... ki.-f-- .W ,WW Mg -. , I I, ,.. A ,, 'W' N , . I 1 'I JH ' M if 13-, ml Vp U , fx is ,jf Q' ' ,ij .N ' '17 N. l 'fi' - i ,X jx QT ix V A Tw VCI: V1 5, if lf? Yi- fu? 14 ' 1 ' M f' H-3 Vw w I W1 I fl L V RI A in 4 y' ' Lf' 1 1 in fi fl fm 'pf , , . N 1' l -su QA jl E U 2 ' .f 1 f I ,f' W uv- ify , 2 sg ,J 45 ,, F w I X In N, , N-': ' ' mx, k 1 zgy, ' if fbi - 2 .H lg zw 'I lffi I V. Y lf M-1 I y Hx I :V-13 E MJ' ! M W f EW rw :M- llq L, hifi ' V1 1 1 , IFJ: in .. lm H ,Vj 1. UQ., 1 .5'4. ffl i 15: ,gf Qi3 uf L w ,,,. l'2'f1 ay-. MK ur-L I I asa' 52341 I: 3 ' - wb.: EDM vii mf 1 if 51? Fi? ,-- M -- m.--.-k.--n ,- , , F122 361' -v?'Q'.9i4vQ'fvfi 'L 7 Page F U' Ly- One HE College of Engineering has enrolled this year about 1300 students, and its instruc- tional staif numbers 85. Since its establish- ment, its growth has been closely parallel to that of the University as a whole, its attendance doubling every ten or twelve years. Beginning with the Civil Engineering course, established about 50 years ago, there have been added, successively, the Mechanicalj Electrical, Chemical and Mining Engineering courses, so that now all the usual technical branches are taught except that of architecture. Notwithstanding a very consider- able demand, an architectural course is not likely to be established for some time to come, as the available funds are insufiicient for that purpose. The Work of the college includes both teaching and research, but the relative amount of time devoted to the latter is very small. I? ,ZW Plumber-s'Hall-always Ihe hardesl place on lhe cam- pus-remember how we used fo razz lhe youngslers over on ihe sleps of fha Law Shop? Pane Fiftg Two 'lzbfzflf 'iizvf -- .-,, ' A Ulf' ' MT:-Y V - , 4: I ' - jf.--5.7. 1. -4. 7 X '-Mig' fj'if.r, 'ff' 7 ., Y '-if ,Y -,Y.,'A-., -V' : 57:'f'3'7if -1 - - . , x -04.23, ' 1 f 1 1 .ax ,uf P 4 1 ldv A X he 'Lx .AA 'WT :Ei I 2324 'ILM :ff ,Eff 'EN EE? CWS ga Eff 'Iii A 251' 5125: 1,527 N1 M191 1524 ffllg :iff i.Mi 155513 mi xiii' fl HQ! M' AW' WZ? img MM -HM 1:i'gfU Ura! :Z -W viii ml 1553? -ml Zigi N51 1155? :gql Wi like Vg? LBS I In lffgf' lm, 'RH QM 355126 59011 ERE :dx 1 KY fi? :il Wm mi '55 SH :W Zgr IM :QW I 'vi' :Ur Wi EW lf! I E:-:41'-iff-, Y A C 'f5'ff:'ff--P-. ' 11'-f?F' 1 i-122, . - Y ir Y . if :f5T'f:??35::: I if M , l-1 page Fwy- 5-.4 ww' 11' wg if 51' I W 5971'- V3 , vp-V ll 55N Eff , 41 VL 435: FSH. tiki' Qi!! Im: ffl? ,W HIL X x:- ' I 11 ' ,aw S' fy f' ,X ' V, if i 5 :il 'A .11 . 1, ,. I ,Wy , 1 5,4 ,. I.,,., I 1 123, .. ,A A .. H : .lg 5,4352 l 14, lngz xii iflif 'Pix :iw fr., n I gg! 5 E :yi 5 L 135, 1 Wlrg -'A' vf I -1 W 9,55 '. X 01,1 1 , 4 .H 1 If Wg A Q53 1 'MJ ! 3'l: ,kv HM. 31, Wx J , H 'r X 'Q-1 in ALF, 'I QLXA. Wy, 'WSH My' up H251 11: I 1. l' v 1351: ,aw 541: ikcrl , W AL Ml, W: Wi H514 .1 Wfqf W : W iw . L, ,. VHQQQ? Nfl. H31- :ug W ' w wx ' w w w v x Three I A w gwfrf.fawnfsw.-.ww-ff,p-:f-ftfiff HE Wisconsin Spirit in the Medical School is of the highest type. It began in the pre- . medical courses which preceded the organiza- tion of the first half of the Medical course. It has continued since this organization and gives every evidence of forming the most essential factor in the establishment of the complete medical course now under way. The Wisconsin Spirit in the Medical School is characterized by gratitude to the State for the opportunities for study, by an eager desire through hard and honorable work to prove Worthy of these opportunities both While in the school and after leaving here, and by a per- manent sense of affection, loyalty and gratitude to the State and the University for what Wisconsin gives. This spirit has made more than one student Who has seemed somewhat mediocre in ability on beginning the Medical course, achieve distinction in the school to which he has gone to finish his studies, and subsequently in practice. The de- termination to make good and to do good not merely for personal success but as an element in the advancement of the University and the State is thus in essence the Wisconsin Spirit ofthe Medical School. L,f2,BM. A' ya , -Q f A ix 'wif-Agfa: 1-I if - wwf ll : ,' 1 si Maxi ,w-ga' N bfi 'V il w g X NT S, 'li l 'sf' i ' 'Y C ' ' i if ff - .N 'I 'ff li ., ri f 'if' X it s -1,55 11 ' . if K X 4 f gf j S f fl Vf' L-,J . 'U - il-, I' P , If Ak r iff 52:1 jdxj ji ng? .1 i- '-1 ' ' ' 1 .4-5.12,-2-1-u Q 'Z .4 ll' ' X Q N x , , :rf V .17 ,wi Id, . .x i J 1 ' L:Qs::!a'm1a -,-, ' ll' 2 -.x ' lk- 1 1' M -' - ., si Y S,., ' I. ,lui if. I Q, ,X fr 1, V 4 f vp, gem! f wi ' - 1, -1 S: ,, .i,. , X rf ex '- N A .... 9 r I . X ' -. T if ki t V 'htel if 'll I v i gg-v-,lg X 1 ' . 1 ' i- fi -tiff f-'if2i5S'Qi-.- r -iW'3fiiiPi'E??fs-M 1 ' 1'-ifffi? Q15 ?gKfi.'ielgg?-f a f 1-2 g ',.,g,5 we f 7,4 f if - . , , - -fra im Qwsv 2--H , o::1:i', --X311 AY , M Faf'UlW IS Ulf fflff? Qf ik: 1-'if f 'niiilail'lg ff 'lfl!34,Ki A S Science Hall-from fur .,, Y? Elf 1 Q5 31525, jf fi beyond lhe limits of ihff 'V jf, i'g'Q ?ef- ii. -I Q me campzzs may we glimpgg 5K?,,M:: f,ig I ' 53 4 9 . x li. mgs from wzlhiri her rerl ,,,., ,.,., . . s.f.155gf1:5a1'ggQif- walls 90 ff1 fhf Sm!-wld Q7 A ' X fL 'l'1e ' 'A t i T'ff3i'-'1I Page Fzfly Ifour in 1 1 v V v 1 , X f 1 o N ' 4 Page Fifly-Five 5 Xin l' il E311 ri N the question g'What part does Music play in the Spirit of Wisconsin , the difficulty would be to find Where it is not an important factor. Can one imagine the effect of 1 G if any public event in university life Without music? A The various musical organizations 1 if in the University-the Bands, Glee Clubs, Choral Union, etc.-have prepared themselves -5-1 to supply music appropriate to the occasion. But, more than this, the School is gradually Y -rr. vc getting together music specially composed by university people which will he suitable for . E any of. these functions. ,tl rm- Perhaps the Spirit of Wisconsin is best exemplified in the musical sense by the training .qw I of men and Women who are able to take their places as leaders, and thus carry this spirit f throughout the country, serving not only the State but the Nation as Well. f-:ill figfi if Qi l QL, ' 1 .Lv 1- v ,X vi l 'Nl I il 'w 1 .l iiii J r T-.xr . ll .qi -Il .E f.-r 525' Nl Ani Rl ,, l 'wx if ,V R N r -r .4 ii si '3-.il jitt I rm ff! gl, .Ei Q Page Fifty-Sim 1 1 - 1 1 I UFS? 2f1T'TS'f Ti. 7 ' J 'Y ..a 1 ,.1 11 A. 1.1 ,A1, 1 Ii. '11 rx, 1 1 1 1 r itil 1. ,11 I. 11 .1 -11 Q11 - '1 1 ., , Y..Y-..,-,.- Y 1 W, 1, 1- gc, ..,.,.,11,. 1 ,.,.1., .f,,. ,,-.-, ,,,,, .,-. ,,, P933 l 1 111. 1 1 1. 11.1 1,11 1 :Lei l-f-'i---- Hr--7' -- -'-1----W-----1 Q L 1 ' -glg--.i-f--..-,.-,..,--i, ,v.,,,-,-, ,fc X 1,1 :lu 1 11'1f1 if-11 1 W T1 Tlv 1 N ' i . i' ' 'Er 1: f 1- --'- Q M :Thi V i -illl 2- W ,-1 - 1 1 1 , , 5 . ,., X ..., Tj , . . f... 4 1 1. -rl 1 113 .1 1. 1 1 111 we 1 -. m ic. .1 l T111 . 'WJ 1 M3 , . 11.1 'A W., A 1511! vi' I ' ' f L - - X A i' ,1 1-.0 1 .S 45W57?fm '1f1. e w an? '1 i' 'l1'1l , 1 ,, .1 Z' W i' 5 -.1 ' 1 1- ' ,.,. I N X 1 Nl ' a, 1 . , 11111- 2 1,1 11.1.Ku..,g21,1.Q4Er,ff5? vs ' .. ' 1 i I T W 1f1f'111f:i1f3'i3'1 fl M. I' V .,'V 1 ' 1 7 , 1 L ' .1 l 1l11f 1 '!'f'?1 1L'.V' li Q HE Spirit oi S91'V1CC,Wl11Cll has to such a marked degree become synonymous with 251111 .211 Wisconsin Spirit , is the slogan of all the training in the course in Home Economicsg 1' Q51 251.1 . . . . . . . . 115- f 1 1X1 service in making the Wisconsin home the greatest force in the upbuildlng of the 51:1 citizens of the future as it has been in the pastg service in public welfare Work through YUM fi? better housing standards, better nutrition for school children, better labor conditions in lfiljl I , n u u n n s 1 I 11 li jpg! the lives of the working mothersg service in community organizations in rural centersg :551 service in establishing better moral standards in the lives of young people. The grad- ' . . . . . . 1551 1 uates in the home economic courses are putting these ideals into the World-service. They 11121115 f ., are i'serving from the Atlantic to the Pacilicg from Canada to Louisianag in every part of ,lap Wisconsin, in our public schools, extension service, and in our hospitals and our homes. Tlfql 'liz ' ff 1 ' '1 '1 l1 1' 2.151 l 1 ,1 1 c W 1--ff . I1 XT? wi UIQ-QL 1 vii 5311 .Hi L U1 1 11' 17. ti ltlfi QM! 1Q11'11, ill 15 lr iiilhl 1- 1 1 1 ill 115111 if l L1 1111-5 ,311 ililzi H1 1 11113 11 ,3 I - Q1 l1.,Q1:1 ill 13551 .l 21 131121 ,I 1i14 i iii: 32.1, . iii: ':1I lil! i'11T1f1 y 1 1 W1 1.1.11 1 lil 215111 is Wil 121 1-11 ., 11, 1 111311 211 1 11 111 11 1 rl 131, 1 1 1.11 .71 G1 lil tif A A , , row..- -..--.7h.- . .w . rr. rho. c M iijiaizi'f'?-.iiziii 1f?2'l77-ff 1 7139 ' e ' . 1 1' Page Fifty-Seven 1 I individual prosperity and contentment, but a larger, fuller, and deeper sense of personal sf? at fx .ew ' XX? ww - 1 - ---- ,law -:ff , - f:-ra--f-'J-'A-fe A M1 - ff ff -an-We-A' ew-NM. f f 1, ' evra' ,.,, aswsevw-we-.f.w 1 ,- - ---- , ., ..,. . ere,- '- Q ' fl f' ., - 1 :.' ' ' ifitf' 3 if - ' :inf f V H - 7 ' V 1 . --- -,-- fff' . : -1-f-ef' ' - ' , -1- bf Y 4' 3 - 'Y ., 1:1412 sf r'fw,.e,.,A 'i f'i'i'f5 '- 'it r M2 -.. N ' ,I was K ,,,. : N Er ,,. E! 43 ' -13? I 7 ff n. f ..,. , .N 4 i' -- , iff X - Q io, sw , .le-5: affsef x rf' 2 2' - - L , , n-,N r N r ismmnn i NIV ERSITY Extension is an expression of the duty of the State University to the commonwealth to offer education to all Who can profit by itg to make available to those engaged in industry, in commerce, and in the professions the accumulation of knowledge gathered at the University, and through organized agencies to make it 2 applicable to-the daily pursuits of the people. The ends sought include not only greater , responsibility for the common welfare. The entire adult population, under this wider interpretation, may look to the Uni- ' versity for information from authoritative sources as a basis for intelligent public ,opin- ' ion.. Lacking knowledge, there can be neither right thinking nor sound judgment. ln the present crisis when the governments of the World are under test, there is need for the 1 spread of accurate and clearly formulated facts bearing upon the historical, geographical, , economic, and other aspects of current, state, national, and international problems. T Through the channels of University Extension the services of the University are avail- .,l S y , able for these purposes. , , 4 lj l l g i i w m , , .- 'Q y T lif. l 1 :T p ,, fl l 'Q T ll l l ,fu li ix l YU ' J i 'Ui l it ' i i in Pagei13ijLEiQ1Qf TTTi'i -'Ti MTim'Ti'T U TTTTT ii i 'T iii ii 1 5 , f i I Q E fr S 4161? E Q I I QW, lf 1? 'WYQ 1 is 'bw 4 Wi Nyfl 'lf Q l V 1. 1 X Xfff J' , ew W Y! f ff f 1 ,v ' ,7 wi ff? .. .. 4. '-: wg? I,-,f,f,.g: V - ,Ig V y . i i . T A -ag ,gif---ilgfriqj ?,Q.,iga,:,q,-3 , ,, , , - 54- - 1:0 f Se- 4- , -..,4-eval.-1-5 - - ' ,. .V . f fm: A - ' .-v wh- I-wo-M . 1. g, 1 -V f--5 - 1. ' - , 'wwe 4 - Q -:-.4 A a , r-1 . fzf A ,. ,,w..?-.-- 4 . , . 4' Lf- f 1- ,, -f..f -f - Af - -i i-:gg -' .N yi- 5535.1 445 'eyjwfg .. QM , I 1, 1 , A ,AQI ' - I--I Jun., ., ll LL students ofthe University of Wisconsin are required to take regular exercise for the iirst two years of college, but the Department of Physical Education offers so broad a program that the work is made a pleasure rather than a duty. No other institution is prepared to offer so varied a program in outdoor activity, because our con- venient lake offers opportunities for aquatic sports in summer and ice sports in Winter that are not rivallcd by any school in the country. The department feels that they are rendering a service to the commonwealth in develop- ing the habit of daily exercise which is such a factor in preserving the health and strength- ening the moral fibre of the young manhood of our country. It is their aim to develop a proper appreciation for the physical and moral, as well as the mental attributes, and to bring out the qualities of courage, determination, co-operation and self control which are often the direct result of team play. An erect carriage, a fine physique, and good address go far in making a compelling personality which figures largely in the success of a man, and its importance cannot be overlooked. With the academic curriculum of the school setting so high a standard that its grad- uates must of necessity undertake some ofthe heaviest tasks that the World offers, it is fitting that the curriculum of the department of phys- ical education measure up to this standard in building up a clean, healthy body and develop- ing those basic qualities of character which will serve them Well under trying conditions and which will test their mental and physical fibre. Page Fzfly Nine 1,, ':.'1-1 X.: VT-1' 11 , . 2,11 1,11-1-'11 . 1 1 .11-1- 1 11'1 1 ' M' ' ff., ' ff' '17 Li if..11'.j'FF1.-.Q Tfl ?'f7f-437-':'f7fL3tiff-flil22-1312-T21.'f?5ff?T'i33.5.2 5751522132-1x31-km W ' ' 75-2 1 J ..Y-..f-- T ---1... ..-. -.-W -Y WW- --. ' 'W' Y Y-'1 .1 'V '- f L1 2 7 U L 1- 1 551271. 1,-' 715517 -.J' 1' :1,'11-' - if J'-151'1-111.'-.1-1- S,fw-TT?-1 ,-if-' Q us . 1- 'i 'h ' '- 1 -1 f:i.f..,p41 -1.11114 11111 11111511 51.251f11i11f-2----Q-114.1:ft-1511119-fi ',-'1111:2f:1?T1:f1s1114Q121': '- P 3? Q11 1 1 .1 f.-.i'.' 1' --11. -:....J:lil1 ' - 4f',.p::i1, wiv'-1 -1.4.1 11. 1111.112 1-it 1:-1:2- Q-J! fy '1:Yi.,f,.w:Lfz4 1' 1,73 V., 1 5. -gg -14- ....f.-.1Y - - ,.1. 1. QL., 11 ,-:..' .rx x. 1,31 '1 -'11 A- F717 7-'1 if-'7f.'l73 Q--7.1'ij1Fi'111I3:'---215fi-if-E1E T?5f-T?-I5-fi':--'.'3-5?-'73'E-''3f'E7-fi-T?09?-'21-'5ZYZSZ11'--T115 3 12 1.31111 gf- 1---f -f---f--:Y f- if-----ff--11--------f--f1--- - ----W -f-------- - -- . , .. 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M .Mx l'L Kim: Hg .1-1 ,,, .W 1 , , -,J f '1 M ., , .1 w' M, llfj 'Jw ix U 1 ijiri' .H T11 1' ,gal My Vg HIL: H211 Ur' H51 ICU' ., .I :V ' .,f'1' J., '11,- ,.. ,,1 ,IH ,UN uf' yu r ng, M H' ,H .W 1 . ni, U., K .s 1 s ,',,, ,xi J., P , w r ,Hg ,W lx. ,W ' Page Sixty-Four 4 Y. W, 11 W7 w ii' NH HY' N wfmrl ,,- Rafi' lgf ' Y,-'ff WN: MT . U w, Vw ,rw Page S1171-'V-l lUE .W ,, , , , ua Wx 1 VW' w r 1 1 EVM w wa 1-Lf.: Vw, WWW, ,Q Qw N.rf' N-,',.' ,M iff x, my mlm' X-Mi 'ffl ,-ggi? MF!! Mlgfgi 1542! ?'Sv,,x .I x , :H 7451: lyjq .Wy -xy, 'Liz' Wfflf :jig irq NLE Mia, ' v .W N-ff! Vw NH! , ,I JF' .A4 . :Ji , lV'f wi v ,K , rj-xg ky.: , .,, M ,M M pf. INN wv4'. q 1-ww RU: , Page Sixty-Siu: , K ' w w 1 1 1, 3. Y . x V' mf xx' ij. gm I 4 1 il KH ffl, H,-'f fo X 1' ' w w.y. my ' NLE. mi- A Vx: U-vi W . A E W 1 vi L J N Page Sizly-Seven Page Simly- Eight MAE ESTELLE ABALY ....,.. . . Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Women in H. A. Jones' Dramas. ABE ABRAHAMSON ...,. Winlhrop Harbor, Ill. E 7 7 . COMMERCE Thel.a Chig Star and Arrow, Commerce Clubg Commerce Baseball 2, 3g W g Commerce Magazine, Assistant Business Manager 2. RIXLPH B. ABRAMS .- ......... Milwaukee CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineering Society 1, 2, 3, 4: Hesperia 1, 2. ADELAIDE MARION ADANIS ..... Oak Park, I Il. HA!! V X LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Zelag S. G. A. Board 2. 1 I I Thesis-Types of Evil Persons in Dickens and Their Functions in His Novels. A - SVEA M. ADOLPHSON . . . . .Edgerlon Jim,ps . LETTERS AND SCIENCE S. G. A. Board 39 Y. W. C. A.g Choral Union 2: French Club 33 Pylhia 2, 3, 4-3 Corresponding Secretary fl, NV . A. A. Indoor Baseball 2, 3gVolley Ball 1. - Thesis-Alphonse Daudet. Doaorrnf FRANCES AHERN ..,.. Fond du Lac JOURNALISM Press Club. . - . Thesis-The Advertising of Men's Clothing in America, HAlXX'EY CrERALD AHBENS . . . . . Two Rivers Haro ' AGRICULTURE River Falls Normal lg Gun and Blade 2. 3. -lg Agricullure Literary Society 3, 111 Square Club 3, 4. NIARJOBIE ALEXANDER . . . . Blilwaukee 'Muff COMMERCE NVomeu's Commerce Cluh 2, 3. Ll-, Treasurer 35 Treasurer Chadhournc Hall, fl. NELLE ALEXANDER ......,. . Paris, Mo, HOME ECONOMICS State Teachers' College, Kirksvillfa, Mo. 1, 2. Thesis-Elfect of 'Dietz on Lactation. RUTH ALEXANDER . - - . ...... -Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Zeta: Crucihleg Sophomore Commissioug S. G. A. Committee 2g Cardinal Business Ollicc 225 Badger :Eg .Iunior Advisory CommiLlee Thesis-Irish Rebellion of 1916 from the American Poinl. of View. JULIA. ALLEN ., . .... . Oshkosh . 6'Jwdy L , ' LETTERS AND! SCIENCE 'Delta Delta Delta: 1920. Badgerg, Freshman- and Sophomore Commissions. - LOUISE ALLi'N ............ Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma. h Thesis-A Study of the Lillle Plale Method lor Dip- Lheria Diagnosis. I ADELA1DEiJUL1A ANDERSON . . .... fVIcFarIanaf LLAHMY77 'LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha X1 Della: Forensic Board 4,3 Caslalia Literary Soclely 1, 2, 3, 4-. Treasurer 33 Y. W. C. A.g CahincL Council 4-g Wisconsin in China Drive 2, 33 French war Orphan CommiLl.ee 1, 2. Thesis-'I'hc Soeialislic Doctrine ol' Analole France. GrEllALD A. ANDERSON ........ Wh ilehall CHEMICAL ENGINEERING I LUTHER CARLETON AN DEBSON . . Scanrlinavia UA ndyn COM M ERCE Thesis-Excess Prolil Tax. GVXYLORD EUGENE ANDIZRSEN . . . Krm.kakec'. Ill. Gene LETTEIIS AND SCIENCE Phi Gamma Della: Inner Gale. I 'l'hesis--Classilicalion ol' Credil. Extended by Federal Banks Wilhin Lhe Last. Tcn Years. PERRY GEORGE ANDERSON . . . Edgcrlou uftndyn LE'l l'EHS AND SCIENCE- Hesperia. 'l'liesis--ElTecL ol' Trade Agreemenis on New York Building Trades. B UTH J. ANDERSON ......... Milwaukee H1zIl1 J A rzdy' .IOUHNALISM Glce Club 2, E15 Choral Union 1: Press Club 3, -lg S. G. A. Board fl, Thesis-A Critical Comparison of Lhc Local News Poli- cies ol' Lhe Chicago Daily Papers. V1c'ron Sic URD ANDERSEN . . Madison. MWC., b COM MERCE Lambda Chi Alphag Commerce Advisory Commission: Lutheran Student Cabinet. Thesis-Taxal.ion ol' Public Utilities with Special Reference to T. M. E. H. and L. Co. IRA R. ANDREWS ...... . . Hazel Green 4.-Andys: I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sophomore High Honorsg French Club 3, fig Square Club 4-. Thesis-Elhciency Determining Factors in Retail Stores. ANNA-THEODORA ARNQUIST . . . Hudson :zAnnes1 .COMMERCE W. A. A. IZ, 3, 4: 'Pin Wearerg Dance Drama 3: Ouhing Club 2, 3, 4g Girls Glee Club 3, 4g Treasurer 45 Pythia 3, 4--g Womerfs Commerce Club 3, 4-. K Thesisj-The-Chicago Daily News in' Relation to the Associated Press. ' TQSCAB F. ARVIDSON . . . . Marinelle ANT uArUyu ' COMMERCE gsllkosh Normal 1-, 2: Commerce Advisory Commission N10 F. AscANo' -' I I U Triyuegaroacagayun, Philippine I s. LETTERS AND SCIENCE' U UniversiLy of Lhe Philippines, 1, 25 Programponxmltieo mtirnational Cliibg Badger Club: Philippine Badger u m. Thesis-A Comparative Study of Lhe Training-of Teach- ers for Secondary Schools in the United States, Eng- land, France and Germany. E. GLENNASH . , . . . HarrisZown,I1l. uzip., AGRICULTURE I . Q ' Alpha Gamma Rhog Milliken Unlverslly 1, 2: Saddle and Sirloin Club: InLernational ClubgVTrack 3, 44. I I I I I I I Page Sirly-Nine ROBERT ABBOTT ASPINWALL . . . Fl. Atkinson :aBobu COMMERCE Tau Kappa Epsilon: Student Senate 43 Commerce Magazine 3g President Inter-Fraternity Bowling League 4. MOLLIE ASTELL . ........ . . Madison HELE JOHN LETTERS AND SCIENCE Platteville Normal 1, 2, 3. Thesis-House of Lords, Act of 1911. N HARPER ATEN ......... Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Butler College 1, 23 Pythia fl-3 Choral Union 4: Y. W. C. A. 3 4. Thesis-Henry James. THOMAS ATWOOD .... . . Gays Mills LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alif Mimg Hesperiag Sophomore Semi-Public Debate, Sophomore Honors. I Thesis-Research 'On the Reasoning Processes. LAWRENCE COPELAND AUBY ...... Madison MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Freshman Baseballg Freshman Basketball. EDITH HICKOCK AULTMAN . . . . Camp Dim, N. J. aiDedcss LETTERS AND SCIENCE Plii lVIug University ol' Missouri 1, 23 Y. VV. C. A.g Student Industrial Activities. Thesis-Philosophy of Benavente. MARY JOSEPHINE AUSMAN ...... Eau Claire ARTH HOME ECONOMICS Eau Claire Normal 2, 3: Euthenics Club 2, 3, fl: Secretary Castalia 4: Secretary Newman Club 2: Sigma Tau Sigma: Outing Club 3, Suffrage League 4, Country Life Club 4-. Thesis-A Bactcriological Study OI' the Spoilage of Tomatoes. UR EDYVIN AUSTIN . . . . Lancaster UAH.. AGRICULTURE Delta Sigma Phi. DOROTHY MARIEAQLTELI. ....... Evansville HDOH HDOF, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achoth: Delta Phi Delta: Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3, 4, President, 45 Badger Stall' 2, 3, 43 Exposition Com- mittee 3. T hesis-The Course in Fine and Applied Arts for the Senior High School. EILIZABETI-I BABCOCK ...... Bock Island, Ill. JOHN HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Omicron Pi. Thesis-Study of Oral Impediments Due to Nutrition. DAVIS BEZBCOCK ..... X ..... Neenah s'EJ0h!my?' , AND SCIENCE Psi Upsilong Skull 'and Grescei1t,gvKu'ISlux Klan. MARY RUTH BABCOCK ......... Nfadison LETTERS AND SCIENCE , Hockey Team 1, 2, 43 Secretary Yellow Tassel, Freshman and Sophomore Commissions. EAIRL DEIJBERT BADER . . . . .Lyndon Station .IDEZH ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Square Club: Wisconsin Engineer Staff: Captain R. O. T. American Association of Engineersg Press Clubg Daily Cardinal. ELEANOR BAGLEY .......... Cambridge 6 lBabe1 7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE 'l'l1esis-Hislory ol' the Child Labor Law of 'wrlSCOIISlI1. DONAIJD M. BAILEY .,.. . Sioux City, Iowa PAUL Don COMMERCE COURSE Phi Gamma Delta: Ames. Iowa. 1g Iron Cross: Business Manager Cardinal 413 Advertising Mzirizigcr Cardinal 3: General Chairman Homecoming 1922: Beta Gamma Sigma: Advertising Club 3, fl-, President 3, fig Advertising University Exposition 35 Council of Forty 45 Tennis Club 4-Q Badger Stafl' ZZ: Business Manager Homecom- ing Program 3. EDWARD BAILEY , ...... Menominee COMMERCE Stout Inslilule lg Federal Board Student: Twenty-tliree months service. AUSTIN J. BAIRD ........... Waukesha LAW Phi Alpha Delta: Phi Bela Kappa: Sophomore Honorsg Athenae. President 45 Service eighteen mon ths. KATHARINE PIOXVARD BAIR D . . . . Panama. Corazal, Canal Zone Pele LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Omicron Pig Oxford College 1: Y. W. C. A. Cab- inet Council 3. Thesis-Methods of Protection Against Liability for the Unintentional Illegal Employment of Children. JAMES STANNARD BAKER ..... Amhersl, lllass. scslann ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Phi Delta Thetag Tau Beta Pig Eta Kappa Nu. OSCAR ROLAND BAKER ...... Sl. Croix Falls 1 upolysar AGRICULTURE L Carleton College 13 Swimming 2, 3.: Junior Council 3: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3g Treasurer Presbyterian Cabi- net 3. HENRY H. BAKKEN .... . . . Blue llloands :LI-Iankn , LETTERS AND SCIENCE Acacia: SquareIClub, Secretary 3: Vice President 3: Philomathia, Treasurer 2g Gresham December Choral Union 1 h Thesis--International Migration 'ol' Labor In Foreign Countries. ELIZABETH CHURCCHILL BALDWIN . . . WeslAllis HOME ECONOMICS Gamma Phi Betafg Euthenics. Thesis-NuLrit.ional'Condif,ions in Children with Speech Defects. V GEORGE CLARENCE BARLAND .... . Eau Claire ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING' . A. I. E. Eg Wrestling 2g Cross Country 3. KARL SIMEON BARNARD . . . . Brillion Chawleyn PHARMACY ' Kappa Psig Square Club. . ' Thesis-Linimentum Sapoms Mollis. .XII I. ii i . , It JN Paqc- Seventy- One 1 l Page Seve nly- Two ERNEST M. BARNES ........ Stevens Point Ernie CIVIL ENGINEERING Civil Engineering Society 1, 2, A. S. C. E. 3, 4, Engi- neers' Student Faculty Committee 2. Thesis-Gravity VVater Supply for Dunkirk, New York. TYLER DAVIS BARNEY ....... . Sparta Barney LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Kappa Psi, Square Clubg Varsity Boxing Squad 1g Haresfoot Show 3. Thesis-A History ol' Sparta, Wisconsin. L. GRIFFITH BARRY ..... . . Oconomowoc ..Dip,, AGRICULTURE Pi Kappa Alphag Baseball 1. 2. 3, 413 W , Varsity Wrestling 3, fig Varsity Football 4. KATHERINE BARTHOLF .... . Glencoe, Ill. 4aKappersv I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phii Baseball 1. 2, VV. A. A., Y. W. C. A.g Fresh- man and Sophomore Commissions, U. W. Board 33 Sophomore Honors. ALICE GWENDOLYN BARTON ..... . Albany .1 A Z., LETTERS AND SCIENCE VV. A. A. Thesis--VVordsworth's Influence 1825-50. HELEN M. BARTON ....... Ypsilanl i, lllich. Bari LETTERS AND SCIENCE Michigan Normal College 1. 2g W. A. A.g Y. VV. C. A., Hockey 2, 3, Basketball 33 Baseball 35 S. G. A. Council. HERBERT JOHN BASSMAN .... . llflilwaakee Herb .IOURNALISM University of Illinois lg Senior Play 2. Thesis-A Study of the -Federated Press. GRAHAM BIXTTLES ....... . . Peoria, I ll. i'B1Ld COMMERCE Phi Kappa Sigruag Bradley Polytechnic 1. 2: 1920 Home- coming: Assistant Committee Chalnnan 'University Exposition 34 Treasurer Student Relief Fund 4-. MURIEI. CATHARINE BATZ ...... Sun Prairie 7!xBill17 I LETTERS AND SCIENCE St. Teresa College 1. 2, Junior Math Club. Thesis-The Theory of Real Numbers. LAURENCE H. BAUER .... . . Chicago, I II. Laurie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Methods of Taxing Industrial Corporations. THERESA CECIL BAUGHMAN . . .W Lsconstn Rapids ..B0.0ny,, CHEMISTRY Stevens Point Normal 1, 23 Chemistry Club 3, 49 Y. WV. C. A. 3,4-3 S. G. A. Board 3. Thesis-Malic Acid 'as a Substitute for Tartaric and Citric Acids in Food Products. GEORGE NVILLIAM BAUM .,...... La Crosse COMMERCE La Crosse Normal 1, 25 Student Cabinet Luther Memor- ial Church: Lutheran Brotherhood: Spanish Cluh. WALTER I'IENRY BAUM .... . La Crosse Wall COMMERCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2: Sigma Tau Sigma: Lutheran Brotherhood: Luther Memorial Student Cabinet: Hes- peria: Spanish Club: Memorial Union Drive. GEORGE BAUMAN ........... Oshkosh G. L. I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Psi Upsilon: Phi Delta Phi: Golf Tcam'20,'2I : President Golf Association. BEAR DsI.Y ......., Weslclijfe, Colo. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Della Phi. SAMUEL BECKER ........... Milwaukee ' KSQ rnrn ie' ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Harcsfool. Club: Athenae: Publicity Manager 3: Home- coming Sgecial Features Committee, Carnivalll-. Thesis- lassiiicalion of Due Process of Law in Social Legislation. DAVID VAN WALTER BECKWITII . . . Madisorz Bennie LAVV - Alpha Sigma Phi: Delta Sigma Rho: Atlienae 1. 2, 3: Inter-Collegiate Debate: Vilas Medal Winner: Assistant Student Editor Wisconsin Law Review. ELIZABETH BEEBE ..... . . . . Sparla Becky LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Politics in Shakcspeare's Roman Plays. IVIARGABET BEEBE .....,... . .Sparta LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit 1. Thesis-NVashington Irving's Reception in England. FRANCIS MARIE BEECHER .... . . .Peoria, I ll. rsFranv1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega: Mortar Board: Vice-President S. G. A.: Mu Alpha: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council: Junior Prom Committee: Exposition Chairman: W.A.A.: W Wearer: Ou ting Club: Dolphin Club: Crucible: Orchestra 2, 3, 41: Swimming Team 2, 3, 4: Varsity Tennis Team 2, 3: Tennis Champion 2, 3: Badger Board 4: Tennis Honors: Swimming Honors: Swimming Manager: Clef Club: Vice-President Senior Class. Thesis-Essays on Daudet. RICHARD BEGLINGER. . . . . . Oshkosh Dick . CHEMICAL ENGINEERING D Chemical Engineering Society: Athenac: Engineers' Minstrels: Sophomore Sergeant-at-arms: Engineer Stu- dent Faeulty Committee. ELIZABETH BARBARA BENNETT . . . Viroqaa uBennyn LETTERS AND SCIENCE A. A.: Outing Club 3: Pin 4: Indoor Baseball Team 1: Thesis-Latin America and the Oil Industry. RUTH MARIAN BENNETT . . . . Janesville Hattie MUSIC LV Sigma Alpha Iota: Clef Club 3, 4: Valparaiso: Minn, 1. ARTHUR H. BENSON ...... ' . Clear Lake 'LBens COMMERCE . ' River Falls Normal 1, 2: Badger 3: Cardinal 3, 44. Thesis-Thesis Course. Page Scvenly- Three A Page Sevenly-Four ABEL JOHN BERGE ..,....... Cambridge LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oshko h Normal 1, 25 Assistant in Business Admin- istration. ALFRED EDWARD BERGMAN .... . Eau Claire MQBCI-gen NAZQ: . COMMERCE Acacia, Eau Claire Normal 1, 23 Square Club 2, 3, 4g Director 2, 3, fig Treasurer 31 Exposition 31 Memorial Union 4. ' Thesis-Stabilization of the Coal Industry. . MELBOURNE BERGERMAN . . . Pueblo, Colo. I IAMEZN LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Beta Kappag Artusg Delta Sigma Bhog White Spades: Presideutilig Athenae 1, 2, 3, 44 Vice-President 35 President 413 Student Senate 35 Forensic Board 33 Badger Board 33 Badger Staff 1, 2, 39 Editorial Writer, Daily Cardinal 35 Closer, Sophomore Semi-Public Debateg Wisconsin-Michigan Debate 2g Wisconsin-Northwestern Debate, closer 3g Prom Committee 3g Inter-class Boxing Tournament 2g Council ol' 4-0, 43 Sophomore Honorsg Athenae Joint Debate Team, closer fig Junior Pipe of Peace Oration 3g Vilas Medal Wearer, Forensic UW . JOHN BERNARD ....,. . . Superior l'Jack LAW Superior Normal, 1, 2. RAYNIOND P. BETHKE ........ Elkhart Lake t.Ray,, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Tau Kappa Epsilong Pi Tau Sigmag A. S. M. E.g Fresh- man Track. ANTONY JOQEPH BIANCO . . . . Spooner Itywonyw MEDICINE Thesis-The Effect of the Hydrogen-lon Concentration of Perfusing Fluids on the Calibre ol' the Blood Vessels. HYNLAN J. BILANSKY ..,... . Milwaukee 4GHy97 COMMERCE Phi Sigma Delta: Scabbard and Bladeg Forensic Board ll: Philornathia 3, 4: Track Ig Lieutenant of Cadets 2: Cap- tain 35 Major 4, Chairman of Program and Printing Committee 1921 Military Ballg Assistant General Chair- man of the 1922 Military Ball: Cardinal 2: Associate Advertising Manager 3: Advertising Manager Wis- consin Athlctic Review 4-1 Advertising Staff 1922 Badgerg University Advertising Club 3. 41: Associate Editor Commerce Magazine il: Commerce Advisory Commission 45 Square Club GWENDOLYN VVARNE BILSTAD . . . . 'Cambridge Gwen LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Development Constitutional Government in Boot and Shoe Industry. . EMIL S. BIRKENWALD ........ Milwaukee Birkie CIVIL ENGINEERING Freshman Track: A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 41-. Thesis-Design of a Reinforced Concrete Arch Bridge axtufiutledge SL., Across the Yahara River, Madison, ' IS. LLOYDE WILLIAM BIRKETT . . . . Hazel Green 1 Bunch COMMERCE Thesis-Codification and -Solution ol' the Theory Division of C. P. A. Questions.. LOIIAINE ANNA BIRONGY . ....... Madison LETTERS AND 'SCIENCE Thesis-Distribution of Birds of Wisconsin. CLIFFORD EDWARD BISCHOFF . . Superior ' A'Grandpa COMMERCE Phi Delta Thetag Gun and Blade. FLORENCE MARIAN BISHOP . . . . Arcadia Flossy LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Relations Between Government, and Army Command in the Great War. 'TI-IEOPHILUS V. BITTNER .... . . llflayville ll Ted!! il T!! ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E. 3, 444 Badger Club 2: Councillor of Justice: Lutheran Brotherhood ll-3 Calvary Lutheran Church Council 43 Lutheran Student. Cabinet 2g Engineers' Minstrels BJORN G. BJORNSON ...... Rqykjavik, Iceland ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A, I. E. E. 114: International Club 1, 2, 3, 4-3 Tau Beta Pi 3. fi: Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4-. Thesis-Investigation ol' a Hydro-Electric Develop- ment on the Point River, Michigan. BTILDRED LUCILLE BLAKELEY ..... Evansville Mebsl' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Phi Delta: Arts and Crafts. Thesis-A Course in Commercial Art for Vocational and Junior High Schools. BEss FLORENCE BLANDING ....... Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Northwestern 1: Y. NV. C. A. Cabinet Council 3, 4: Indoor Baseball 2: Outdoor Baseball 2: Swimming 3: Physical Education Club: Outing Clubg Campus Religions Council 3. ISRWIN NVALTER BLATTER . . . . La Crosse Emu NIEDICINE Bela Theta Pig Phi Beta Pi: Freshman Foolballg Cir- culation Manager Athlelie Review 4-. Thesis-Action of Catharlics Upon the Stomach. RUTH NIARY BLINSTON ...... llladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse State Normal I, 2. Thesis-The Political Ideas ol' P. B. Shelley. ZIRIAN ALDRICH Busn ....... Fond da Lac NZM., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phig W wearerg W. A. A.: Swimming Honors: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 23 Treasurer 3: Cabinet 3. 43 Clet' Cluhg Dolphin Club: Outing CIi1bgVice-President 3g Chairman Prom Committee 3g Red Gauntlet Vice- Presidentg Yellow Tassel Treasurerg Vice-President Chadbourne Hall 3. Thesis-Intervention by the European Powers in China and Japan from 1895-1920. VV-ILLIAM BLOECHER ...... . Witlenburg . Bill - - A AGRICULTURE . . 4 Delta Pi Deltag Freshman Basketball: Varsity Basket- ball aWa 2g Press Club 33 Vice-President4-g.Assistan.t General Prom Chairman 4g Freshman Athletic Associ- ation. FRANCIS JOSEPH BLOODGOOQ ..... . M ilwaukec Cipadif LETTERS AND' SCIENCE . . Phi Alpha Delta: Trinity College lg Delta Psig War Service twenty-six months. l Thesis-The History of the Adoption of t:helFourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. NEWELL STEPHEN BOABDMAN . . , New Richmond Cl 77 ' Wal LAW , L Phi Kappa Psig Phi Delta Phig Varsity Trackg Athletic Boardg Student Editor Wisconsin Law Review. FLOBA JANET BODDEN ......... Menasha LETTERS AND SCIENCE. ' Phi Mug Wisconsin Literary Magazine 33 S. G. A. Board dig Badger Staff 4, Page Sevcnly-Five Page Seventy-Sim RUTH M. BOEDEKER ....... Sf. Louis, 11410. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Mu. 'Thesis-Germany's Peace Efforts. EDISON M. BOERKE .... . Ufausau 55Ed75 COMMERCE Delta Sigma Phi, River Falls Normal 1. 25 Varsity Gym fBrOadswordsJ: President Wisconsin Chapter Gun and Blade 2, 3: District President Gun and Blade Clubs 4-g Adjutant University Post American Legion 31 Service three yearsg Student Senate 4g Choral Uniong First Lieutenant Infantry A. E. F.g Interfraternitfyn Council 4. ELMER GEORGE BOERKE ........ IVausVa1.z COMMERCE Delta Sigma Phiq River Falls Normal 1. 25 International Clubg Choral Union. ROBERT L. BOERNER . . . . Port Washington EGBOH7 AGRICULTURE Agricultural Literary Society-11, 2,3 Cross Coun Lry Squad 1: Saddle and Sirloin Cluh 3, 4-g Chairman Program Commibteeg Country Magazine Staff 4. MARJORIE IVIAY BOESCH .... Burlingfon, Iowa 6AMarge9I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theliag W. A. A.g Dolphing Orchesusg Twelfth Night Joint Productiong Pre-Prom Play 19211 Varsity Movie: Swimming Team 2, 3g Dancing Honorsg Swimming Honorsg Hockey Squad lg Union Vodvil 11-. LAWRENCE RANDALL BOIES . . M inneapolis, Minn. Larry MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta. Thesis-An X-Ray Study of Dislocalzion of the Hip- Joint. MAROELDA KATHRYN BOLLENBECK .... IW ad ison LETTERS' AND SCIENCE A. 2, 3, 4g Outing Club 2, 3, 43 Physical Education , u Thesis-Volume and Value ol' Chief Exports by Months From 1911 io 1921. JOHN ROMEO BOLLINGER ........ Cochrane AGRICULTURE La Crosse Slate Normal 1, 23 Saddle and Sirloin Club 3. 49 Badger Poultry Club 3, 4: Gf8fL9l'iS Club 3, :lg Agric. Triangle 3, 43 National Dairy Judging Team 35 A. C. F. Board 4: Farm House Fraternity, Chairman Horticulture Exhibit.. UniversiLy Exposition 1921. EUGENE AYRES BOND. . . . . . Madison iLGene7! LETTERS AND SCIENCE Johns Hopkins 15 President Student Volunteers -13 Dixie Club 2, 3. Thesis-Industrial Government in Soviet Russia. E. HOWARD BOND ............ fllillon AGRICULTURE MilLon College 1, 25 Second Lieutenant. U. S. Infantry: Agricultural Triangle Club: Saddle and Sirloin Club. PERRYGREGORY BONK . . . . .Two Rivers V Glpeleil COMMERCE EDYVARD WIL1 IAM BONSLETT .... Woodslock, I I I , uEddie,' COMMERCE Sigma Alpha Epsilong Northwestern University 1. I l I I I GERTIIUDE LOUISE BONZELET . , , Illadigon ' Bonz1'e A NORMAL COURSE Sigma Kappa: Oshkosh Normal l, 2g Phi Kappa Phi Outing Club: Secrcuiry French Club 2g German Club. Fhcsls-Mussel. LELIKND LUNDY Boo'rII . . . Oklahoma Cily, Okla. 4 HLee77 COMMERCE Sigma Nu: Freshman Baseball. IIIMA Tl-IERIESA BORCIIERS ..,.... Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE 5fYllll1QW1ll.0'l' Normal l., 2g Pythia, Vice-PresiflenL 443 Iwell Lh Nlghl.: S. G. A. Council. 'l'lIesrsfSalI. River Irrigation Projccl.. AAGOT M. K. Bonolz ...,. . . Madison MUSIC Lutheran Normal School, Sioux Falls, SouLh Dakota 13 Clel' Club 1. 2: Girls Glee Club 2, 3: Sigma Alpha IoI.a. 'I'hr-sis-Recital. JOHN IIERSCHEL BOWLES . . . . Sl1eldon,Ill'. MEDICINE Kappa Sigma. Thmis-An X-Ray Examination of Sl.omach1MoLilily PHILIP GEORGE BOWMAN . .... . . .De Pere ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I, E. E.: Eta Kappa Mu. FEED C. BOYCE, JB. , ......... lVaI1sau COMMERCE Lawrence l, 2. LLOYD MEIIRIL BOYCE ....... lldilwankee .. Cap., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Badger Stall' 3g Hesperia 3, 4-3 Captain Cadel. Corps 3, ll-g Scahbard and Blade 3, 4g Servioe nineteen months. ROGER AJNSLEE BOZARTH . .D .I .Cedar Falls, Iowa I CHEMICAL ENGINEERING LESTER 'WILLIAM BRANN . . . . Bailqvs Harbor l s'sLarry1v COMMERCE Acaciag Commerce Baseball 2, 33 American Legion U ol' W 2, 3. 43 Commander 3g Thirty-second Division Clubg Square Club: Commerce Adviso . Commission: Com- merce Magazine Staifg Commercelglubg Union Memorial Division Commanderg Y. 'MZ C. A. Americanization Committee: Service Twenty-seven months. NIERVYN BRAUN ....... . .. Milwaukee Mulzi'- COMMERCE ' Cross Country 1. 2g Freshman Track 2, GEBTRUDE ELIZABETH BREESE ..... Waukeslza Trudie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Carroll College lg Alumni Editor, 1923 Badger 4. Thesis-Medical Inspection in the Public Schools. I I I I I l l l i I Page Sezvenly-Seven 4 I r I 1 I Wi I. 1 Page Seve nly-Eight BENJAMIN WALTER BREISTER .... Fond du Lac LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Tau Kappa Epsilong Oshkosh Normal 1, 2. ELSIE MAY BRENNAN ......... Lancasier LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Thesis-Cicero's Letters to Brutus. GEORGE FREDERICK BREWER . . I ndianapol is, Ind. L'Fri1Z y COMMERCE Phi Delta Theta, Butler College 1: Beta Gamma Sigma: Edwin Booth 2, 3, 43 Commerce Club 3, 45 News Editor Cardinal 45 Editor Octopus 4g Octopus Board 3gJunior Council Y. M. C. A. 3. ' Thesis-Accountanlfs Reports and Their Uses. ALLIE LLOYD BBEYVOGEL ...... Y. Brodheacl L4Brey95 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Phi. T hesis-Motor Truck Transportation . HARRIET BRIDGMANQ ....... Shirley, Mass. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gammag Vassar College 1. Thesis-The Atlanta Constitution in Relation Lo the Associated Press. 1 MARY FAWCETT BRIDGMAN . . .Sianley 'fBridge - ' 'JOURNALISM Chis'Omegag Theta Sigma Phig Y. W. C. A. Commission 1, Press!Glub 2, 3, 4g Bager Staff 2: Daily Cardinal 1. 3, 1Lg.SQeiety Editor 4, Publicity Chairman, VVoman's Vocational Conference 4: University Advertising Club 4. Thesis-Some Results of the Use of Cost Finding Sys- iems in Country' Publishing Offices. ARNE BRINCK ........ Chr isliana, Norway N' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Christiana, Norway 14 MILDREDO-H. BRINK . . .... Grand Rapids, illiclz. , 5' Y '1lfIid . A ,LETTERS AND SCIENCE Grand Rapids Club 3, 45 Secretary-Treasurer 3. 4. Thesis-The Poetry and Plays of James Thomson. MERRILL F. BROBST. . .. ........ Illondovi AQGBICULTURE Phi Kappag Ripon College 1: Mercier Clubg Saddle and- Sirloin Clubg Chippewa Valley Club. CARL EVANSBRONSON . . . . . : Spencer, Iowa C6BronS5! . 'COMMERCE' Sigma Chi: Skull and Crescentg Harcsfoot 2, 3, -lg Manager 3, 43 Production Manager of Union Vodvil 11. 'CLARENCE BAXTER BROWN ....... Highland MEDICINE Zeta Psi, Phi Beta Pig Sigma Sigmag Freshman Baseballg Iubermural ,Baseball 2, 3. Thesis-Inllueuce of Venues Pressure Upon Diaslolic Filling. EDWARD DEXTER BBOWNQ. . .. Hhinelander if , Dex ' i LETTERS AND SCIENCE Psi Upsilong Skull and Crescentg Treasurer of Sopho- more' Class. Thesis-The Future of Railway Development in the United States. GRACE BROWN ........ Kansas Cily, Mo. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Architccmre in English Literature. HUGH F. J. BROWVN ........ Sl. Louis, Mo. CIVIL ENGINEERING Chi Phi. Thesis-The De ign of a Reinforced Concrete Ollice Building. SUSAN DE LAITE BIKOWN .... Highland Park, I Il. Sue LETTERS ANI? SCIENCE Kappa 'Alpha Theta, Sophomore I-Ionorsg French Club 'I Preslm .- : xr lonl fl. 'I'lxesis-Romanticism as Found in Rosl.aRd's Cyrauo de Bergerac. CLARA A. BROVVNRIGG ...... 1Werrz'mac, N. C. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Cultural Studies ol' Suprolegniaceac. ROBERT IIART BRUCE ....... , . Iblilwazzkezf 'fBob ' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Lamda Chi Alphag A. S. M.'Eg Pi Tau Sigma. CLIFFORD O. BRUDEN . . . . . Eau Claire .Kalman CIVIL ENGINEERING Triangle, A. S. C. Eg Junior Councilg Y. M. C. A. Cab: inet. CARL NV. BRUEMIIIER . , . . .' .Mi'Iwaukee L6Red99 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING E Triangle, Studenh Faculty Committee 3, 4-5 A. A. E. SHERWOOD BIICKSTAFF ...... V. . . Oshkosh MINING ENGINEERING ,MARTHA,MERRY..BUELL I1 . . Madison ' - ' T.f Maid'ieI, Q, LETTERS AND SCIENCE I . ,'Kappa Alpha Tlietag University Orchestra 2, 3, 43 ,' Campus Religious Council: Uni6n'Vodv1l 4. . ,. L 1 - FRANK ANTHONY ........ Kiilaolzrh I W .,,, Y MECHANICAL ENGINEERING . IWiscOnsin.,Engineer 2, 33 Manager 3 Agnerigan Society D ,Iii Mechanical Engineers 3, 415. Pi Tau Sxgmagflfau Beta .. . .L , ' - Y BULQFER ..., . . . Peru, I Il. 1. 44GuSss! CHEMICAL ENGINEERING b GEORGE CI-HKISTIAN BUNGE .... y .T Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Kappa Psig Artusg White Spadesg Ku Klung Klang Phi Kappa Phig Star and Arrowg Phi Delta Phi: Skull and Crescentg Football W 2, 3, 4-3 ASSISYHM PFOIII Chairman 3g Student Senate 23 Comrnlttee of Forty 3: Assistant Basketball Manager 3g Junior Play 3. H Thesis-Extraterritorial of the Workman s Compensa- tion Law. I IM, I I, , I I . I .,! II' .I III, 'III I I ,I I I,' II QIII, X ,,,,.I XII. , I ..,, .I. I I, III II I IIQ I V, I..,I ' I II I I I Page Se'ucn.ty-Nine l Page Eighly CARLOS XEREZ BURGOS Manila, Philippine Islands Carling AGRICULTURE The Philippine Universityg Board of Directors of the Ertegnational, Cluhg Vice-President Philippine Badger u . ESTHER M. BURKE ..... . . Wesley, Iowa Burkie', HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Delta Pig Euthenics Club. Thesis-A Study of Underweighl: Children. CONSUELO BURWELL . ......... Madison Consil LETTERS AND SCIENCE French Club 1, 25 French Play 15 Freshman Commis- sion5 Freshman Mixer Committeeg Hockey J, 25 Basket- ball 15 Dancing 25 W. A. A. 25 Badger Staff 2, 31 Y. W. C. A. Board 25 S. G. A. Board 25 Sophomore Dance Committeeg St. Francis Society 3, 45 Junior Advisory Committee 35 Campus Religious Council 3, 4. Thesis-T he Dance in Shakespeare's Comedies. ALLEN JOSEPH BUSBY ..... .. . . Milwaukee LETTERS iAND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal 1, 2. Thesis+English Colonies in America. FERN MAE BUSBY ...... . . . Arcadia Buzz LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence 15 Cardinal Reporter 2, 35 Octopus Staff 3, 45 Pythia 2, 3, 45 Outing Club 35 Castalia-Pythia Debate, 1920e2lg Press Club 3, 4. Thesis-High School Reading in English. IRMA BUSWELL ....... . . .Kendall Buzzie . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence 15 Mathematics Club 3. il. 'Thesis-The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. FREDERICK N. BUSSEY .... . Chicago ..Ted,, , MEDICINE Phi Kappa Psi5 Gamma Tau Beta: Inner Gate: Ku Klux Klang Freshman Baseball Managerg Freshman Swimming Squad5 Haresfoot. Thesis- Foreign Bodies in the Stomach. JEROME ROGER BUTLER ......,. Walerlown CIVIL ENGINEERING American Society of Civil Engineersg American Associ- ation ,of Engineersg Newman Clubg Lieutenant U. S. Army eighteen months-France six months. Thesis-Design of Reinforced' Concrete Building. QNIARGARET BUTLER ......... Chicago, I Il. HOME ECONOMICS Dolphin Cluh5 Swimming Team. 3, ll: Swimming Honors 15 Red Cross Life Saving Corps 3, 45 Y. W. C. A. Board 35 W. A. A.5 Euthenics Club. ThesisfStudies in Basal Metabolism Performed upon the Benedict Respiratory Apparatus. MARIAN BUTLER ........ . Applelon I COMMERCE Lawrence 1, 2. CHARLES DAVID BYRNE . . . . . Oregon Chuck AGRICULTURE Managing Editor Country Magaziue5 Glee Club 15 Freshman Basketballg Sigma Delta Chi. EVRARD CHARLES CALUWAERT . . . Madison Eddie COMMERCE ' Delta Sigma Phig Scabbard and Bladeg Union Board 3 45 Council of Forty 3. 45 Traditions ,Committee5 Cadet Colonel IL5 Assistant Accountant 1921 Badger5 Press Clubg Commerce Advisory Commissiong Chairman Prom Committee 35 Associate Editor Commerce Muga- Lineg Military Ball. ARCHDPHELPS CAMPBELL . . . . .Easl Ellsworth Camel MEDICINE River Falls State Normal School 1, 2g Alpha Kappa Kappa. Thesis-Foreign Bodies in Slomach. CLAUDE WESLEY CAMPBELL ...... . Beloit V Unkie MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Lambda Cln Alphag Freshman Gym Squad Numeralsg First Hegzimenlzal Band 1, 2, 35 University Circus 23 Engineers Minstrels 3: A. S. M. E. 3, 4-. GRACE LUCILLE CAMPBELL ....... Madison HOME ECONOMICS Gamma Phi I?-clap Enthcnics Clubg Y. W. C. A. Cabinet fl: Dancing Honors 25 Congregational Studenlfs Asso- ciation. Thesis-A Course in Dietetics for Student Nurses. GLADYS FERN CANCE .......... Madison Glad LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Delta Pig Lawrence 1. 2. Thesis-United Slales and Porto Rico. CHARLES A. CAPEK ...... . .Antigo S4Kap1, COMMERCE Delta Chig Commerce Advisory Comrnissiong Com- merce Magazine. Thesis-The Foreign Investment Trust. HENRY WILLIS CAPEN ...... Bloomington, Ill. Heinie COMMERCE Sigma Chig Varsity Track Team 2, 35 Varsity Golf Team 2. LESTER JESSE CAPPON .... . .Milwaukee LILES7, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia: Alil' Mlm: Orchestrag Y. M. C .A. Thesis-History of Alabama during the Civil War. WELLS FRANCIS CARBERRY ...... Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Psi Upsiloug Milwaukee Normal lg Haresfoot. Thesis-Henry Arthur Jones as A Social Critic. BONITA GRACE CARLSON ........ Oshkosh Bonnie ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achothg Medical Women's Assoeiationg French Club. Thesis-The Influence of Meteorological Changes on Upper Respiratory Infections. THEODORE E. CARLSON .A . . . .Superior llTed55 AGRICULTURE X D Farm House Fraternity 9 Superior Normal 1: Dairy Cattle Judging Team: Saddle and Sirloin Club: Badger Poultry Club. , WARREN TUTTLE CARTER ........ Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Swimming Team 33 Arts and Crafts Clubg Exposition Committee. 1 Thesis-Experiments with Glue Mouldsfm Plaster Casting. AILEEN CASEY ........... Oconomowoc LETTERS AND SCIENCE W. A. A.g Outing Club: Outing Club Board 25 I. B. Team 1, 23 Hockey Squad 1, 2. 35 Prom Committee 33 Class Committee 2, 3. Thesis-Irish Drama. Page Eighly- One .ly 1 1 1 'V' 1 yi 1, '11 ' 11 1 ,Nfl 11-i .X NV 111 1 11111 1.,-11 1. 1 '1 ...L 111 1 l 1 111 ',1 1fi'1 1 1 ' .11 1.13 1',.,,1 1 1 1121 1 5 1 1 11,1 11111 :. -11 1' 1 11... H11 .'l'1. 1 11 1 1 11.',, 1111: 1'.llli 11 -1 '1'f1, 11'-1' 1. .11 111 1311 111 1-5,11 'lr 1 1f1f f 11'1 , ,,. M. 1 11, 1, 1 j-if .,. 1 1 1'11 1 1 1 ,.. ,1 ,,1 1 .1 1 11 , 1 1 . 1 ,3 1.1 1 15x 1..1,. 1f'1' 1 .., I . 1 1- 1'. Page Eighty- Two HELMER CORNELIUS CASPERSON . . . . Baldwin Casper' ' AGRICULTURE Alpha Zetag Farm Houseg Forensic Board 35 Secretary 45 Agricultural Literary Society, Treasurer 25 Vice- President 3g Country Magazine 25 Business Manager 35 Saddle and Sirloin 2. 3, 45 National Dairy Show Judging Teamg A. C. F. President 45 Traditions Commission 45 Lutheran Student Cabinet 4. RAYMOND J. CASSEBLY , . . . Madison, Wise lVl:ABTHA CASTLES ..... . .SL Louis, .Mo. Marly l 1' LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Alpha Gamma Delta5 Washington 1. 25 Junior!Basket- ball: Hockeyg W. A. A. Homecoming Committee 35 Badger Stai'I'5 Dixie Club. - .1 RUTH MADELINE CATLIN . . . . Glen Ellyn, Ill. Rufus HOME ECONOMICS Lewis Institute 1, 25 Euthenics Club. -. CARL FREDERICK C-EASTER . . C . Boise, Idaho rtDuke1a COMMERCE Phi Gamma Delta: Iron Cross: Ku Klux Klan: Star and Arrow5 Baseball VV 2, 35 Basketball W 2. 3, Captain 45 Athletic Boardg Council of Forty. Thesis-Analysis of Marketing of Manufactured Prod- ucts in Vifisconsin. REUBEN CORNWELL CI-IADBOURN . . Columbus ' 5 '.'Clzad . ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Signjia Phig Ku Klux Klang Skull and Crescentg Student Senate, Secretary 25 Assistant General Chairman Union Memorial Campaign 4. Thesis-WVilliam I'Iazlit.'t and the Early English Re- Viewers. MARTHA KUEHBISTED CHANDLER . . .Sheboygan A , ' '-'flVIarl MUSIC Sigma Alpha Iotag Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 45 Glne Club 3, 4-5 Choral Union 2, 35 Glee Club Vice-President 45 Clef Cluhy3, 4. -' Thesis-Instrumental Miisic in the Schools and the Future ol' the Private 'Teacher as Foreshadowed by Recent Developments. ELMER WTTLLIAM CHAPLEAU . .V CQ Port llfashingfon sschapvs ' COMMERCE 5 Delta Chi5 Freshman BasehalI51Commerce Baseball I5 Interclass Track 2: Sophomore Honors: .1922 Badger Stalfg Assistant Foreign Advertising Manager 19231 Badgerg Assistant 'Adverlising Manager .VV1scons1n Athletic Reviewg Commerce Advisory Commission 3, 4: Editorial Stair Commerce lvlagazine 4 5-.Commerce.C1uli 4. Thesis-A Study of the Leather Industry in Wisconsin. DOROTHY DEE CHAPMAN ....... M ilwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' .Chi Omega5 Milwaukee Normal l : Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. gfbulncil 2, 3, 45 Student Religious Conference 25 Classical Tlilesis-The Epodes of Horace. KATHARINE FAY CHAPMAN ....... Plalleville Chappie ' 1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Platteville'Normal 1-, 25 Yi. C. A. ROY MARION CHARLSON .... .. . Eau Claire ' 'COMMERCE . Commerce Advisory Commission: Sophomore ,Clit-iwg Commerce Crew. Thesis-Studies in the Wisconsin Leather Industry. CHARLES C. CHARMLEY ..... . . Madison PHARMACY Thesis-M agnesia Magma. :HELEN DAVISON CHASE ...... . Clinton, Iowa Chasey . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Mug W. A. A. 2, 3: Outing Club 2g S. G. A. Board 39 Y. W. C. A. fly. Thesis-The Bible in 'l'ennys0n's Idylls of lhc King. LEON IEVERETT CHASE . . . . .Viroqua uLeen CIVIL ENGINEERING Triangle: Tau Bela Pig Chairman Houds,and l'avr:menLs UnivcrsiLy ExpOsiLiOn: Firsl. Regirncntal Band 1, 25 Wisconsin Engineer Stall' II, ILQ American SocieLy Civil Enginccrsg American Association of Engineers. Thesis-I-lydro-Electric Dcvelopmenl. on Lhc Pshhigo River al. Caldron Falls. IIELEN COVVAN CI-I EFZTHAM ...... . M ilwau kee I-IOME ECONOMICS Kappa Alpha Thr:l.a: Freshman and Sophomore Com- mission: Y. W. C. A. I, 2: Serrelary Y. W. C. A. 2: Vice-PresideuL Y. W. C. A. 3: S. G. A. Executive Council 4: l'IOmccomin,g fl: Union Vodvil 4. Thesis-Designs for Twcnlielh Century Coslumes Derived From Lhe Fourlcenlh Century English Dress. VFSUNG CHEN .......... Fooclzziv, China LETTERS AND SCIENCE ,I Thesis-Induslrial 'Government in Anlhracile Industry. FRANKLIN CHESTER CHILLIIUD,1SCaIl.diI1.G.UiG,NOFUJdy NORMAL COURSE Phi Della Kappa: Slevnns Point. Normal 1, 2. Thesis-A Study of the Thorndike InLclIigence TcsL for College Entrance. lVlARTIN CHRIs'rENSEN ........ Milwaukee Cllrislicf' ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING CARL BERNARD CHRISTIANSON . . . Sievens Point '.'Cl1risly', ' CIVIL ENGINEERING SLevcns Point Normal 13 A. S. C. E. Thesis-The Design ol' a Reinforced 'Concrete Building. CARL ADELBERT CHURCH .... .... 1 Madison f' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Sigma Phi. E ' X Thesis-Basal Gonglomerale Between the Cambrian and Pre-Cambrian in North America. DOROTHY HELENE CHIJRCHILI. . , . .Milwaukee I X KLDOIFG ' JOURNALISM' Milwaukee Normal 1, 2. V l I V Y , Thesis-A Criticism of Book Reviewing IH Amerlcan' and - 'English Journals of' Opinion. MANLEY HAYNES CLARK ....... River Falls ulllann is 'CHEMICAL ENGINEERING A Alpha Ghi Sigmabg 'River Falls Normal 'lg U. W. E. C.g ,CheIiiical EIIgirjeers Chili ' MAEION E. CLARK . - .... 4. .Ind'ia.nap0Zis, Ind. 'ffoenef .. I MEDICINE ii f ' A Beta TheLa Pig Freshman Track Manager I..-7.2, 3. Thesis-Normal Emptying Time of the SLOUIZLCIL RALPH WILLIAM CLARE . . . Madison ' Doon PHARMACY Alpha Chi Sigmag Kappa Psig Cornell College 1. 2. Thesis-A Preliminary Survey of the U. S. Pharma- copoeial Fluid Ex tracts. l lf Ill lp rf' lif- if lr. lwl K.. I il ll.-. xi'- L. Page Eighly- Three I ww Page Eighty-Four CORA lVl'ARIE CLASMANN ..... . . .Milwaukee Corie LETTERSHAND SCIENCE Thesis-A I-Iistory of the Industrial Commission. EWART KELLER CLEAR ..... Forl Wayne, I nd . Zeke, COMMERCE Theta Chig Beta Gamma Sigma: Commerce Cluhg Associate Editor Commerce Magazine 2, 3g Sophomore Honorsg Commerce Crew 2, 3g Sophomore Semi-Public Debate Closer 2g Sophomore Investigation Committee 25 Editor Regimental Eagle 25 University Circus 35 Lieutenant. Cadet Corps 2g St. Francis Societ.y, President 33 Hesperia. Thesis-Cost Accounting for Hospitals. ELWOOD XVILLIAM CLEASBY . . . Eleva MENS! AGRICULTURE JOHN BOWIE CLULEY .... . Rosebuslz, Nficlz. Jack LETTERS AND SCIENCE Normal School, Mt. Pleasant, Mich., 1, 2: Phi Della Kappag Arts and Crafts, Y: M. C. A. Thesis-Vocational Rehabilitation of Wounded Soldiers and Sailors. HENRY JOHN COERPER ..... I ndianapol is, Ind. High Knee JOURNALISM Phi Delta Theta: Indiana University Ig Foreign Advcrf tising Manager 1922 Badgcrg Union Vodvil 23 1922 Prom Committeeg University Exposition: Advertising Man- ager Varsity Movie Reviewg Hobo Parade Committee 3. Thesis-Bank Advertising in Newspapers. .JOSEPH GARROLL COLENLAN ....... Janesville COMLIERCE Occidental College, Los Angeles 1, 2: Assistant Organ- izations Editor 1921 Badgerg Prom Committee: Coni- merce Football 3, Commerce Magazine 3g Editor Societies, 1922 Badger: Spanish Club. DIARY HELEN COLLINS ........ Da.rl1Tnglon LETTERS AND SCIENCE St. Clara College, l, 2: Thesis-Influences of the Romantic Movement in Amer- ican Poetry. SIDNEY R. COLLINS ..... . Reedsburg HDOC., CIVIL ENGINEERIN G Thesis-Bibliography ofthe Effect of Low Temperatures on Cement Mortar and Concrete. AVILLIAM K. COLLINS ,......... Madison Bill ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Kappa Epsilong Varsity Football 1. 2. 3. 4: Varsity Swimming 2, 3, 43 Captain 11-: Edwin Booth 1, 2. 3, 45 Joint Production 23 Senior Play 35 Sophomore Traditions Committee: Student. Senate 23 Athletic Board 4: Skull and Crescentg Ku Klux Klan: White Spadesg Star and Arrow. MARTIN PRATT COLONY .... .... E vansville . .Dad , ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING VIRGINIA CONKLIN ........... Bl ad ison LETTERS AND' SCIENCE Alpha Phig Sophomore Hockey Teamg S. G. A. Ex- ecutive Council 2g Vocational Goiiference Committee 3g Chairman 4. Y W, . Thesis-A Study of Normal Flora of Threats by: tliei Little Plate Method. , GERALD MARSH CONKLING .... Lyons, Kansas 6CGerryVY COMMERCE University of Kansas 1, 29 Square Club. CAROL EVELYN CONLEE ........ .Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pylfhia 1. 2. 4: Treasurer 4: Pylbia-Castalia Debate 3g Campus Religious Council 2. RUTH ISABELLE CONLEE ........ llladison Pele LE'I l'El'lS AND SCIENCE Campus Religious Council 2. 3: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. COUIICII- 3. fl? Pylhia 'IZ Assistant Chairman Student Industrial 'Corporation fig Varsily Exposition AVALTER J. CONNELL . . , . . . .Menonzinec Falls Slicky CIVIL ENGINEERING Square Club: American Society ol' Civil Engineers, American Association ol' Engineers. A 'l'hesis-ElI'c-cl. ol' Aggregate Up to Three Inches on 'Lhe Strength of Concrete. M Am' FLORENCE CONWAY ..... . .Anligo Noise LETTERS AND SCIENCE St. Mary's ol' Notre Dame 1. Thesis-I'Iisl.ory of the Fox lliver Valley. M.uxoAnE'r IRENE CONWAY . . . .Colby uljegav LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Zeta: Cardinal Il. 'I'hesis-Newspaper Trealrncnt of the Coal Strike of 1919. GI...ND1'S IEMEIKSON Coox ..... Haverhill, Mass. Cookie,' I-IOME ECONOMICS Skidmore College 1, 2, 3: S. G. A. Board, Outing Clnbg Euthenics Club: Y. W. C. A.: S. G. A. COIIHCIIQ Spanish Club: Badger Club: Social Committee. G.fn'Lo1xn ,l .u.MEn CooN .... . Madison . MEDICINE Milton College 13 Phi Chi. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. Dems LORAINE COPELAND ....... Evansville , LETTERS AND SCIENCE ThesiseThe Philadelphia Bulletin in Relation to the Associated Press. HEIKMBERT FAULKNER COPELAND .... Chico, Cal. . Al Cope!! , LETTERS AND SCIENCE - if -Stanford UIIIEYETSITV 1 2 Y - -. . Thesis-Germinalzibn in Water Works. Ei2IuEN'FREDEB1CKA CORRELL . . .Memphis, Tenn.. I ss-' LETTERS AND SCIENCE W .Mortar Board: Phi Beta, Kappa 3g S. G. A. Presidentag , . i,Q111,ing Club President 35 Keystone 3, 4g Y. W. C. A. , , -,Cabinet Council 1, 2, 3, W, A. A. Board 35 Sophomore QQ Honors, Prom Committeeg Assistant Chairman Ice T Carnival. N Thesis-Application of Psychology to the Department Store. ALLEN L. CORRIVEAU ..... . .Port Edwards li 77 Al . COMMERCE MARTHA E. CORLEY .......... Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Nebraska State Normal School 1, 2. Thesis-The United States and Venezuela. Page Eiglily-Five Page Eighly-Sim ALFRED ROBERT COTTON . . . . Milwaukee uAZsr ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Alif Mimg Glee Club 43 U. W. Engineers' Club 2, 3, 43 Engineers' lilinstrels 3: A. I. E. E. 4. RUTH ANTOINETTE COULSON .... i St. Louis, Mo. ufluafusva - HOME ECONOMICS S. G. A. Board 2, 3g St, Francis Society 1, 2, 3, 44 Sec- retary 3. , Thesis-Suggested Course of Study in Home Economics for the Junior High School. A . ISADORE ELIZABETH COWARD . . . .Lodi 441-Zzyu ' .IOURNALISM Q Achothg Rockford College 1, 29 Theta Sigma Phig Press Club 3. 4: S. G. A. Board 44 Assistant Business Manager of Literary Magazine 3. ' ifhesis-An Analysis of Representative Country Week- ISS. EDWARD COX ............. Madison MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ' A. S. M. E. 3, 45 Student Faculty Committee 2. IRVING KNAPP Cox ...,..... - , Milwaukee ulrvlysv , MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Alpha Tau Omegag A. I. E. E. l ROBERT C. COXON ........... Madison y i.B0b,. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Elements of Strength in the Southern Confed- eracy. THOMAS TURMEAU COXON ........ Madison Tom LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beta Theta Pig Editor-in-Chiel' Ol' 1922 Badgerg Ku Klux Klan: White Spades: Iron Cross: 1921 Badger: Class Crew 1, 23 Badger Board 3, 4: Student Senate: Division Leader. Memorial Union Driveg Council of 40, 3. 4-3 President ft. Thesis-Problems in the Marketing ol' High Grade Securities. lvl.-XRGARET MUNSON COYLE . . . . Ridgewood Mpeg., ' HOME ECONOMICS Maryland College for Women Ig University Exposition. Thesis-United States Textile Trade with South Amer- ICH, EUGENE EDWARD CRANE . . . Ch ippeiua Falls Alek., COMMERCE Alpha Tau Omega. MARION LOUISE CRANE . . .' . , . .Williams Bay HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Kappa Gamma: Northwestern 1. Thesis-Fields Open to the Textile Major, MARGARET CLARK CRAY .... Lime Springs, Ia. lWaggie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Principia Junior College 1. 2. Thesis-The 'One-Act Play. I DOROTHY RITA CREMER .... .Red Wing, Minn. uD0lrv LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Omicron Pig W. A. A. Small Emblem: Hockey l, 2, 33 Captain 2g Manager 33 Outing Club, Board 35 Vice- Presiilenl. 4-3 Baseball 3g Castalia 1, 23 Junior Prom Committee 3. Thesis-A Study of the Minneapolis Journal. MILDRED EMILY CRETNEY ....... .Madison HOME ECONOMICS FF0Sl!m4Hl Bllsebilll Team: Sophomore Cricket Team. Thesis-The Effect ol' Economic Conditions on Cotton and Linen Since 1912. ZNIARION PENNEI.I.CROsBY. . . . .Rlzinelander npennn JOURNALISM Beloit 1: Minneapolis School of Arl. 2: Theta Sigma Phi: Board ol' Editors. Literary Magazine: Cardinal'3, 44: Bridger 2, 3, 44: President Journalism House 4: Octopus Board 3, -14: Press Club: 1922 Prom Committee: Col- legiate League ol Women Voters. Thesis-A Study of Art Criticism in American News- papers. TVTARY CROWE ........... Tulare, Cal. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Eastern Illinois Slate Teachers' College 1, 2. Thesis-Canada and the Empire. ROBERT T. CROWLEY .... . Janesville GKBOIJVT COMMERCE Commerce Advisory Commission: Philomathiag Mer- cier Cluh: Freshman Track. Thesis-The Development Ol' the Taxation of Railroads and Public Service Corporations in the Last Decade. CEONA DOROTHY CULLMANN ..... Wes! Salem LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit College 1: Castulia: S. G. A. Board: Outing Club. Thesis-The Polygon ol' Seventeen Sides. SARAH SHELDON CUMMINGS . . . zlflarqaelle, ivliclz. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Norl.hern Stale Normal 1, 2: S. G. A. Board 3: Spanish Club 4-1 Thesis-Thesis Course. ROBERT JAMES CURRY .. . . . .Baraboo Jim COMMERCE Kappa Sigma: U. S. Navy ten months. ROBERT BORDEN ELLS . . . . .Rockforci,IIl. Bob LAW Phi'Alpha Delta: Scabbard and Blade. LUCILE NIELSON CURTIS ........ Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi: Northwestern 1. FRANCIS L. CUSICK ...... . Easton, Minn. H S5 V COMMERCE - St. Thomas College 1, 2: Mercier Club: First Regimental Band: Union Memorial Committee. Thesis--Thesis Course. MARGARET FRANCES DALY . . . . . Chicago ilM'arj5? JOURNALISM Gamma Phi Beta: Northwestern 1, 2: Theta -Sigma Phi: Advertising Club: Senior Executive Committee: Press Club 3: Secretary-Treasurer 4: Cardinal Reporter 3: Special Writer 4: Badger 3-. 4: Manager Octopus Sub- scription Drive 4: Y. W. C. A.: Homecoi'ningfCommittee: Assistant Advertising Manager Varsity Movie Program. KENNETH FINCH DAMON ..... Spokane, Wash. Damn Ii LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Whitworth College, Spokane.-Washington 1: Blu Mu Alpha Sinfonia: Junior Council 3: Eug1neers,Minstrels 3: Soloisl.3: Glee Club 3, 4: Student Volunteers Conven- t' 2. Thifisis-Comparison of Ancient and Modern Rhetor- icmns. . ix l. Page Eigllly-Seven Page Eighly-Eight WALTER EDGAR DANIELS ..... . Oak Park, Ill. SSWaZi57 ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Student Senateg Cardinal Board of Controlg Press Club 35 Athenae lg JOHN JULIEN DANIELSON .... . . Rio COMMERCE ANNE MARIE DARCY ....,..... Hillsboro LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Deltag Lawrence College lv, 25 Spanish Club 35 Math Club 3, 4. ' Thesis-A Study of Plane Geometry on 'the Basis of Hilbert's Foundations. JOSEPH V. S. DAUKEYS ......... Madison GIDOCSU GllDuCky77 , LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Sigma Kappag George Washington University lg Gamma Tau Betag Letters and Science Football lg Medic Football 2. Thesis-Emp tying Time. of the Stomach after a Normal Meal Studiedlvy-theiX-Ray. A FRANKLIN CASE DAVIES ......... Racine I lHap79 D MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Delta Tau Deltag Swimming Team 2, 3, 45 Haresfoot 2, 3, 4: Mandolin Club lg Engineers' Minstrels. DUDLEY HOPKINS DAVIS . . . . . Madison ACDud?7 . LAW Psi Upsilong Phi Delta Phig Kappa Bela Phi. EULA EIIIZABETH DAY ...... Cleveland, 011 io . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sweet Briar College lg Swimming Team 43 Dolphin Club: VV. A. A. GRACE ANNE DEGAN .... . . Baraboo LGDege73 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Omicron Pi: Northwestern 1, 2g S. G.A. Board 3. Thesis-An Annotation of the Labor Laws of Wiscon- sin' with Attorney Generals' Opinions and Court Decis- IOHS. JANE ALCOTT DE LA HUNT ...... . Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal lg Twelfth Night. 'Ehesis-Relation of Parents and Children in Modern Tafllfl. ' JACK GRANT DELLINGEB ...... . . 'Dladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Preparation and Reactions of Amino Acids. HUBIPHREY EARL DESMOND . . . . Milwaukee Hump COMMERCE Sigma Chig Beta Gamma Sigmag Council of' Fortyg Inner Gateg Commerce Club: Advertising Clubg Commerce Magazine, Assistant Editor 2, 33 Editor in Chief 413 Badger 3, 459 Administration Editor 4. Thesis-Analysis of Sales Organization in the Leather Industry. ROBERT WILLIAM DESMOND . . . . Milwaukee 45B0b!7 SBDGZZN Y JOURNALISM - Sigma Delta Chig Press Club: Octopus 29 Cardinal Reporter 25 Badger Photographer 33 Journalism Expo- sition Committee 3. Thesis-The Development and Management of the Chxcago Tribune Circulation. f ELENORA BEATRICE DEVINE . . . .LarwiZl,1nd. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Mug Arls and CrafI.s 3, 114 Y. W. C. A. 3. 4. Thesis-Diploma Lic Nego LiaLiOns Oi' 'Lhe War wilh Spain, 1898. DONALD STEVENS DENVIRE . . . . .Sharon zsD0n1v ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Freshmen Gym Squad lg U. W. First, Regimental Band 1, 2, 3, flg'Lieul.enanlfI1g Square Club 4-5 A. I. E. E. EDWVINA DEXTER ........... . Jlladixon Eddie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Gamma: W. A. A.: Y. W. C. A.Cabineh Council 1: Treasurer W. A. A. 2g Mystic Circleg Presideuh Green Button 13 Keystone 1. JFROME DIAMOND ...... . .Milwaukee uljcrryva COMMERCE Menorah Society. V ' Thesis-LaLin and South .America. . XVALTER ER1l'IN DICK . . . . .Wfilwaukee Darbey ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E. 3, 11,3 A. A. E. 3, fl-. TIELEN BOZELLA DICKINSON . . . . Edgerlon li ' ' 57 Dickie MUSIC Girls Glee Club 2. 3, 4g Treasurer 33 Clef Club 2, 3, 41: Treasurer El: Choral Union 3,41 Sigma Alpha Iota. Thesis-Class Inslruclion and Ils-jlnfluencc on the Pri- vate Teacher. Ju1Es GILBERT DICKINSON ...... Nlilwazzkee uDick11 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Service, Two Yearsg Red Arrow Club: Treasurer 3. M ARY IVIYRTLE DICKSON . . . . . Freeport, III. Chaunce JOURNALISM Illinois 1: Dancing 1. 2, 3, 4g,Swimmiug lg Hockey 1, 2, 3, 45 Baseball 1g,W. A. A.g Cardinal Stall' 3, 4-g Press Club: Castaliag Spanish Clubg S. -G. A. 2, 3: Campus' Religious Council 3, 4g Y. M, C. A. 2, 35 Industrial Club Advisor 2, 3. , Thesis-Development of the Human Interest Story. Duns MANSFIELD DIETRICH . .. ,. ,. . Superior c4Day!v LETTERS AND SCIENCE 1 Superior Sl-ate Normal 1. 2. MARTAN GRACE DITQL . . ., ....... Superior A s LETTERS AND SCIENCE Superior State Normal '1, 2g Pythia.3,'4g Girls Gleef Club 3, 4-5 gClef Club 4. ' ' Thesis-Privafe Employment Agencies. ALMA L. DIPPLE. . Q . .y , . q .Baraboo lGDirnLpS7, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal 1. ' - y - Thesis-The American School Editions of KSCh1l1er's Maria Stuart . ' MIRIAB1 DOAN .......... Duluflz, Minn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma: Vassar 13 Red Domino 2, 3, 4:5 Treasurer 3g Vice-President. 4 g S. G. A. Executive Council 33 Cardinal 3. Thesis-Unemploy men t. Page l Eighly-Nine wj ,, ik Page Ninely u DOROTHY ANNE DOEBR ..... Ml. Vernon, Ind. Dario LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achothg Rockford College lg Y. W. C. A. Thesis-Scioto Land Purchase. JOHN ADRIAN DOLLABD . ' . . . -Fond du Lac Jack COMMERCE y Alpha Tau Omegag St. Thomas College lg Betalflamma Sigma: President Commerce Advisory Coiiimissiong Commerce Club. ' BERNHARD DOMOGALLA .... . .Milwaukee CHEMISTRY , Milwaukee State Normal 1, 25 Chemistry Club: Amer- ican Chemistry Socielzyg Thesis-The Preparation and Determination of Non- Alcoholic Flavorings and Extracts. JOHN EUSTACE DONALDS . , . .Superior Siclackfi COMMERCE Phi Delta Thetag Superior Normal 1. 2. JAMES ARMON DONNELLY ....... I . Oshkosh LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chicago University 1, 2. Thesis-San Francisco Building Trades. PERCY FRED DORNBROOK . . . . Aflenaslza Dorney', LANV Phi Delta Phi: Athenae 1, 25 Freshman Dee , Fresh- iman Blowout Debakesg Sophomore Semi-Public Debate. HELEN DOUBLE ........ Los Angeles, Cal. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theta: University California 1: Sopho- more Tennisg Twelfth Night-Production Manager. M. S. DOUGLAS ......... . lllilwaukee ..DOug., CIVIL ENGINEERING Marquette 1, 2g St. Francis Society, Secreiary 4: Inter- College Basketball 33 Campus Religious Council 3. Thesis-The Designiof a Reinforced Convrele Building. MARY A. DOWNEY ......... . Portage PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC Choral Union: Girls Glee Club. CHAUNCEY JAY DOYLE . . . . Milwaukee 66-Duke!! MEDIC Milwaukee Normal.l, 2. Thesis-Topographical Aualomy. JOHN HENRY DRAIZE ..... . .Brussels Jack CHEMISTRY Chemistry Clubl . . Thesis-A Suggestive Mo'difica'l:iOn for l.he 'l'iLer TesL of the Fatty Acids Present in Oils, Fatls, and Waxes. FRANK J. DROPKA ....... . fwamfiowoc CHEMISTRY American Chemical Society 4, Philomathia 2, 3, 4g Treasurer 45, Chemistry Club 2, fig Presidenl 4. Thesis-A Study of Railinose. lVlAIfIE DRESDEN E ........... Ladysmith Torch ' ' Milwaukee Normal 1, 2g Social Science Cluh. ghesis-Development ol' Lahor Press in the United I tates. EVERETT GLEN DREW .... . .Dubuque Iowa .aside CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Theta Chlg Alpha Chi Sigmag Tau Bela Pig Chemical Engineering Sooietyg Polygon , Thesis-Thesis Course. ' MONTROSE K. DREWRY .... . .Madison 1l'7only MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Tau Bela Pig Pi Tau Sigma: Wisconsin Engineer, 3, 41: Edll.0fflrI Badger Ski Cluh 2. 4: Presidcntlg Polygon 3, flag A. S. M. E. 3, 43 A. E. E. 2, 3. ITENIKY O. DROTNING ..... . .Madison Hank,' COMMERCE Phi Gamma D-ella:-Sigma Della PsigUniv1:rsity of Wash- ington 2: Engineering 1. 2: Service-Four years. Thesis-Premium Rate Systems. ' HORACE A. DUBOIS ........ . Neenah CHEMISTRY COURSE lX'lABGARET ITILDRETH DUCKETT . . .Boslon, Mass. upggn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega: George Washington 2: Outing Club 2, 3. 413 Board fl-: Y. C. A. Cabinet Council fl-1 Campus Religious Council fl: S. G. A. Board 35 Washington Club 32, 3g Yice-President. 2, 3: Illue Dragon Treasurer 41. lll'1f!SlS-IIlVCSllgIlllOIl Ol' Certain Alleged Relations Between Physical Characteristics and Mental Trails. HLUBERT C. DUECKER . . . . .Kiel CLPe!e77 COMMERCE Sigma Nu. LAUREL ADRIEN DUFFIN .... . . Whitewater Lois MDHHH AGRICULTURE Alpha Tau Omegag Service Three Years. Thesis-Cattle Feeding Experiment.. H. DUFEIN. . . . . . .Whitewater SlPPg7! A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Zetag Whitewater Normal 1, 23 Oilice Manager 1922 Badger 3g Wisconsin Literary Magazine 3g S. G. A. Board 3g Press Club 3, 4g Home-Coming Committee 3: Exposition Committee 3g Y. W. C. A. 33 Organization Editor of 1923 Badger 4g Chairman Registration 1921 Homecoming 4-5 Senior Class Commit tee 4. Thesis-Traditions of Scotland and the -Border as Shown by a Study of Popular Ballads. LEON FOSTER DUNWIDDIE . . . . . Delowan Dunn ie AGRICULTURE A' iA:cacgagqCoun'Lry Magazine Stalf 2, 3,4g Agricultural lt. ', . . U LUTHER LAHMAN DURKES . . . Franklin Grove, I II. Shall COMMERCE DOROTHY MARGARET DWIGHT .... . .ZVIad1'son Doesclz LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Kappa Alpha Thetag Mortar Board Treasurer 4-3 P1 Epsilon Deltag Twelfth Night 1, 2,-3, 45 Production Manager 39 President flg Treasurer P1 Epsilon Delta 45 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 2, 335 Chairman Y. W. C. A. Bazaar 3g Chairman Y. W. C. A. Banquet 45 Women's Chairman Memorial Union fl-5 Pre-Prom Play 3g Three Pills in a Bottle 4-. Thesis-Dramatic Criticism. Its Place and Value. l I 4 I l Q 2 I I Page Ninety- One Page Ninety- Two .ALBERT FRANK EBENTIER . . . Suiion, N, D. CIEbe7l I CHEMICAL ENG NEERING Sigma Phi Epsilong Chemical Engineering Society: American Association of Engineers, Engineers'Minstrels. REINHOLD OTTO EBERT . . . . fllarion E4Sim?7 h I MEDICINE Phi Chl: Hesperia: Badger Club. Thesis-Urogenital Development in the Pig Foetus. NVALTER HENRX' EBLING ..... . Richfield l6Ebe17 AGRICULTURE Acacia: Alpha Zeta: Square Clubg Saddle and Sirloin 3, 4: Agricultural Literary Magazine 25 A. S. A. E. Press Club 3, 4, Editor-in-Chief Country Magazine 4-g Council of gortyglg A. C. F. Board 45 Sigma Delta Chig Cardinal oar . ROLLIN EVANS ECKE .... . .Fond du Lac MROZ7 7 COMMERCE Occidental College 1, 2, Alpha Pi Del tag Beta Gamma Sigmag' Commerce Club: Associate Egligor Commerce Magazxnep Commerce Advisory Commission. ETHEL MARIE EDVVARDS .... . .IW ar ion iEEd!5 COMMERCE Commerce Club 3. 43 S. G. A. Board -lg Commerce Magagine 3, llg Badger Staff 3, 4. Thesis-Thesis Course. HARRY L. EDWARDS ....... . . Cambria AGRICULTURE Alpha Gamma Rho: Interfralzernity Conferenceg Saddle and Sirloin Clubg. Badger Poultry Club, Union Vodvil. MAX J. EDNVARDS ......... . Toledo, Ohio AGRICULTURE VVILHELMTNA EHRNIAN .....,. Oak Park, I Il. GKBIZIH LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Chi Omegag Clef Club 1, 2, 3, 4-4 Crucible 3, 4: Badger Slaff' 3: Junior Prom Committee 39 Union Vodvil 25 C13-emistry Club 25 Secretary Pau-Hellenic Associa- uon . Thesis-Relation ol' Various Proteins to an Uibicarius Skin Lesion. ELSIE ALVERNE EKERN ...... . .llladison COMMERCE Alpha Xi Della: Bowling 15 Cricket: lg French Club 1: Badger Staff 2: Crucihleg S. G. A. Election Chairman 3: Commerce Club 4: Commerce Magazine 4. Thesis-The Independent Treasury System Since Lhe Passage of Lhe Federal Reserve Acl.. ALVAH CHARLES ELLIOTT .... . . . .Mzzscoda scROwdy1s LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lambda Chi Alphag Freshman Footballg Baseballg CapLain Sophomore FooLballg Varsity Football 2, 3, :lg Varsity Baseball 2, 35 Captain 44 S'Lar and Arrow. Thesis-Industrial Recreation for Men. BERNICE ELLIOTT ....... Highland Park, I II. ISBlLnny15 , .IOUHNALISM Michigan 1', 2: Delta Zeta: Press .Club 3, 4, Theta Sigma Phig Wisconsin Literary Magazine 3. Thesis-The Influence of the Comic Supplement Upon Children. JUNE ETHYLE ELLIS .......... Jlladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Civil Government ofthe Philippine Islands. EDNVARD M. ELSTAD .... . .Wlzitehall Eddie MINING ENGINEER Nlining Club I, 2, 3, fl-5 Band 2. KATHERINE GORDON ELY ........ Madison nKaly,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theta: Treasurer Green Button 1 5 Pythia 2, 35 Swimming 25 Dolphin 3, 45 W. A. A. 3, 45 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 35 Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3, 45 Vice-President 25 Delta Phi Delta 3g 45 Life Saving Corps 3. 45 Vice-President 45 Chairman Junior Advisory System 3, 45 S. G. A. Treasurer 45 Badger Stall' 3, 45 Presbyterian Student Cabinet. JEAN EMERSON ..... ..... . Baker, Nlonl. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Montana State Normal 1, 2. Thesis-America as Seen by Eminent British Men o Letlers. ALOYSIOUS J. ENGELIIARD . . . . La Crosse LAW CARL JOHN ENGLEHARDT ....... lllilwaukee COMMERCE Phi Kappa Sigma: Iron Cross: Commerce Club 3, 45 Ad- vertising Club 3, 45 Manager ol' Parade, 1920 University Circusg Chairman of Bonfire 35 Homecoming: Chairman of Finance. 1922 Prom5 Treasurer, 1922 Badgerg Chair- man ol'S ecial Schools, University Exposition: Assistant General Chairman, 1921 Homccomingg Treasurer Senior Classg Red Cross Stamp Sale Chairman5 Finance Chair- man Ice Carnival. Thesis-Studies in the Wisconsin Leather Industries. WVILLIAM F.ENGELHARDT. . . . .Wlilwaukee Bill COMMERCE ' Phi Kappa Sigma5 Commerce Club 3, 45 Advertising Club 45 Union Memorial 25 University Circus 25 Homecoming 19205 1920 Prom5 Junior Class Committee 35 Advertising Manager 1922 Badger 35 Chairman 1921 Homecoming Decorations 45 Chairman Cap and Gown Committee 4. Thesis-Studies in Wisconsin Leather Industries. FLEUROUNGE ELIZABETH ENGELS .... Madison PHARMACY Thesis-History of Oil of Gaultheria. FREDERICK RIETBROCK ERBACH . . . .Athena Il ' ,Y Fr liz MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Annapolis Naval Academy 1, 25 A. S. M. E.5 Square Club. CYRIL LAM BERT ERICKSON ....... . M ondovi 6 i ' .91 Er Lck MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Lambda Chi Alphag Square Club5 Publicity Manager 1921 Badger 35 U. W. Band 25 Assistant Circulation Manager of Wisconsin Literary Magazine 35 First Union Memorial Drive. EDITI-I TIIELMA EBICKSON ....... West Allis LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Milwaukee Normal 1, 2. V ' K Thesis-George Sand as a Literary Critic. ROBERT ERICKSON ........... Cushion 6 4B0b3 1 MINE AND METALLURGICA-L ENGINEERING Delta Sigma Phig La Crosse Normal 15 A. I. M. M. E.5 hltgininlg Clubg Service U. S. A. and A. E. F. Seventeen ont S. ELAINE KATHERINE IESCHVVEILER . . .Madison Eschie,' LETTERS AND SCIENCE I l Alpha Phig Badger Board 35 Vice-President Social Science Club 45 Secretary-Treasurer Collegiate League of Women Voters 45 International Club 4. Thesis-Newspaper Treatment of Radicals. I Page Ninely- Thr ee l l l xi I l .ll Lili l l,'l -I fi li I.. lil .. I 7 My l'l,'i , . ,-... i,, l l l ...C Iyf Page Ninety- Four g ALF I. EVENSON . . . . . .La Crosse ssLqfs: 'J COMMERCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2. EDITH VIVIAN EWALD ...... Ml. Carmel, I ll. anEdy:: LETTERS AND SCIENCE Orehesusg Dolphin Vice-President 43 W. A. A.g Outing Clubg Physical Education Club: S. G. A .Board 4: Head of Dancing 3, 45 Physical Education Club Board' 35 Manager Indoor Baseball 39 Dancing. Apparatus and Swimming Honors. ALBERT B. EWING ..,.. . Louisville, Ky. HAZ., LETTERS AND SCIENCE -' V Alpha Tau Omegag Skull and Crescentg Junior 'Prom gui?-I1I,i'tteeg Badger Business Staff lg Badger Literary 'La .... Thesis-The Neutrality of Kentucky. ED'WARD ALVORD EYVING . . . . New Haven, Conn. ..Ed,, K A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Phig Philomathia. 34 Y. President 111g Oberlin College lg Y. M. CL A. 2, 3, 45 Football 'lg Scabbard and Bladeg Congregational Studenlfs Association 2, 3, 4-5 Choral Union 11-5 Memorial Union Drive 2, 4. Thesis-Unemployment Figures Since 1890. ERVVIN VV. F. EXLEY ......, . Zllenasha ultlan sa-Evra: MEDICAL SCIENCE Gamma Tau Betag Daily Cardinal 1916, 1917. Thesis-A Critical Study of the Gutzeit Method. GUSTAVEQ RUDQLPH FALK . . . . . Spooner . H Rudy., V COMMERCE .Commerce Advisory Commission 49 Octopus 3, 443 Union 'Memorial. '-Thesis-T he Federal Control ol' Railroads. RALPH LEONARD FALSTAD ...... .Eau Claire COMMERCE Daily Cardinal 1, 2: Associate Advertising Manager :EE Octopus 2: Commerce Advisory Commission 3, 49 pl Kappa Alphag Sophomore Commission. WILLIS .MOORE FANNINC: ........ .Delavan I S . . slew ' CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Sigma Nug Skull and Crescent: Basketball 2, 3. LL W g Tennis 2, 3, VV 3 1921 Prom Committee. EDIT!-I GRETCHEN. FAUERBACH ..... . llfladispon HOME 'ECONOMICS Euthenics Club 1, 2. 3,41 Country Magazine Stall' 4. . Thesis- Survey ol' Legislative Measures Pertaining lo Home Economics. CHARLES ELLIOTT F ANVKES .... .Dabuque, Iowa Charlie ' CHEMISTRY Sigma Alpha Epsilong. Badger 2: Chemistry Club 1, 2, 3, 45 University Exposition 3. Thesis-Absorption Spectra ol' Colloid Sols. ANTOINETTE M. FEE ....... . .Superior as Tuonyn l Y LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi -iOmegag,,Superior State Normal 1: Basketball 23 A. A. 2g 3, IL-3 Physical Education Club 2g Arts and Crafts, Club 3, 4g Badger 3-3 University Exposition 35 Prom Comrnitt.ee'3g'Class.Sbcial Cominittee 33 Thesis-The Temperatures' at which Enamels Mature. HAROLD R. FEHLAND ........ .. Illerrilli Joker LETTERS AND SCIENCE Gamma Tau Belgag Freshman Baseballg Inter-College Baseball. Thesis-The Relation of the Development ol' the Hard Parts of the Body to the Soft, Parts. EDVV ARD RICI-IARD FELBER .... lCh.ippewa Falls Chien . 'MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Phi IKilDDil.SIgIDE,lQ Armour Insl,iLul.e of Teclinologgy, Chicago, Illinois, Ig Scabbard and Bladeg A. S. M. E.g Caplain Cadel, Corps 24 Chippewa Valley Clulmg Service Eleven Monbhs. JOSEPH GEORGE FELDMAN . . , . .Madison ' .. . l'Joe COMMERCE Menorah iSOeiel.yg Social Science Club! FRANK S. FELLOWS ..... . . Algoma Doc MEDICINE Phi Chi. f ' Thesis-Topographlcal Ana tomy. CARL TIONVARD FELTMAN ....... Peoria, Ill. Bad', ELEC'I'RICALa,ENGIN EERING' Bc l a Theta Pi. , GENEVIEVE A. FELTS ....... Carbondale, ll. LETTERS AND SCIENCE DCll.H Della Della: Southern Illinois Normal 1, 2. Thesis- Simone byi Bireaux. - KATHERINE FERGUSON. . . . . . . Lake Geneva Kale Fcrgie JOURNALISM Thela Sigma Phi: S. G. A. Councilg Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Council: Press Club. Thesis-William Winter as a DramaLic Critic. LEANDER VVOODS FERGUSON . . ,. Madison COMMERCE Chi Psig Commerce Crew lg Commerce Advisory Com- mission 44. N , , - - 1 ALICE MARTHA FIDDYMENT . . , A, Norfolk, Va. IAAF: F LETTERS AND SCIENCE . I Baltimore Teachers Training School II: University ol' Chicago 2. , Thesis7On Transportation. VVILLIAM ALEXANDER FIELD,.JR. 1 . . Chicago, Ill. ' Alex, , COMMERCE Beta-Tlieta !Pig-'Urjversily of .Illinois 15 Inner Gafeg Scabbard' and Blade: .Fi-eshmau' Track Numeralsg Varsity Track Squad 3g Cadet-Corps 1, 2, 3, 49 Captain and Adjutant: 1,123 3g Lieutenant CpIone14g,Qres1dent Cadet OlIicer's Association 4g University Circus 23 Chairman Military Ball Banquet Committee 2, 3. MILTON ANDREWYEISCIEIER ..... . Merrill I lBud77 ' I LETTERS-,AND SCIENCE u La .Crosse Normal 1,.2: Philomathiag Square Clubg PhI Delta Karina- . s ' . . , Thesis-A Study 'of nie Status of the .Social Sciences. WCELI-EAISETIJQFISH . . l Cleveland, Ohio .f . .VH ulvlajiiu aaFvishiq:s i LETTERS AND SCIENCE ,, ' Cleveland Normal 1, 'lj Oiilgigjg Clgbfxv. A-3 Phys- ical Education Clubg A. A. P1n,i.Wea1jerg lliockeyq Basketballg Track'Teamg Apparatus.HfonOrs.V I Thesis-The Playground and Its EqiIIpn1ei11QSforjf1hIldren Under Ten Years. I .L . HAZEL MARY FISH ...... . Cleveland, Ohio Fishie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Cleveland Normal 1, 23 Apparaws- H0n0rS: A- A45 Outing Clubg S. G. A. Boardg Physical Education Club. 'ghesis-Growth and Development of Community enters. . Page l 4 l 15 i I l 1 , 1 , l iw!!! l il i ,il ' Ylili W: ',l 1,-ji f1 l fill 1 l.l. ill ,iigi 'hifi 'll Fi l All j l l., il i l l,l 'l fi iii ,,l i Ninely-Five Page Ninety-Sia: HELEN CLAIRE FITZGIBBON . . . . .Madison CSFHZ7! LETTERS AND SCIENCE Varsity Indoor Baseball 2, 31 VV Wearer Thmsis-Scales of Mud-Minnows. HENRY JOHN FLIKKIE .... . .Viroqaa Flick CHEMISTRY COURSE Chemistry Club 2, 3, 4. Thesis-The Introduction of an Aldehyde Group into a Molecule. WILLIAM CLAUDE FLINN . . . . .Superior IG ' 71 B zll COMMERCE COURSE Superior Normal 1: Commerce Advisory' Commission 4. SAMUEL THOMAS FoNG ...... . Canton, China CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Canton Christian College, Middle School, Canton, China 1. PERRY A. FOOTE ..... ...... E rie, Pa. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineering Society 1, 2, 3, 49 Athenae 1, 23 University Band 1, 25 Square Club 4. MARY A. FORNEY .......... Peoria, I Il . - LETTERS AND SCIENCE Bradley Polytechnic Institute 1, 2. Thesis-The Melodramatic Element in the Novels of Charlotte and Emily Bronte. FILIP CARoLUs FORSBECK . . . .Milwaukee GSDOCS7 MEDICINE Cross Country 1, 2, 39 Freshman Track Team 25 Holder of Ten Mile Walking Record. Thesis-The Relation ol' Endurance to Muscle Length. SONYA FORTHAL ......... Cleveland, Ohio LETTERS AND SCIENCE President Collegiate League for Women Voters: Vice- President Menorah Board of Directors of the Inter- national Clubg Physical Education ,Club. - Thesis-S. G. Meltzer, Biography and Contributions to Physiology. HERBERT VICTOR FOSHION . ..... .Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Surgical and Topographical Anatomy. EARL EDWARD FOURNESS . . . . .Nlilwaakee MINING Sigma Chig Milwaukee Normal 1. MATTE DOROTHY Fox .....,... . Waterloo LETTERS AND 'SCIENCE Thesis-The Chief Characteristics of John Masefield's Poetry. HARRY S. Fox .,.......... Janesville ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Alpha Deltag Oshkosh Normal 1, 2: Wisconsin Law Review: Chairman All University Traditions Com- mittee. RAYMOND VVALTEB Fox . . ' ...... Waterloo Balch LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lambda Chi Alpha. Thesis-The Canadian Employment Olliccs. FERN IOLA FOXON ...... Norlhamplon, llflanss. Bluelte LETTERS AND SCIENCE Smiyh 15 Physical Education Club 2, 3, 11-5 W. A. A. 3, 4-5 Oullllg ' Club, 1922 'Badgerg Varsity Archeryg Senior Swimming. . Thesis-The Pupils ol' Claude Bernard. L1LL1AN NTILDRED FRAZEE . I . . Nlowequa, I Zi. ..Mid,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Zelag Y. W. C. A.: Eutllenics 2, 3, 45 Prom Com- mittee 3: University Exposiliong A. C. F. Board5 Treasurer 35 Secretary LL5 Ilomecoming 1145 Associate Editor Country Magazine 114. Thesis-Relation of Sprouted Peanut Lo Diabetic Diet. JESSIE IEUTHEIKFORD FREDRICK . . .SL Louis, Mo. Jess LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Zcta5 Harris Teachers' College 1, 2. Thesis-Browning's Popularity in America. GLXDYS LUCILE FRAZER . . . . . Evanston, Ill. razed LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma: University oi' Illinois 25 Badger Slafl' 235 Alumni Homecoming Committee 3, 45 Octopus Stalffl. Thesis-French. DIARY ELLEN FREE .......... Neillsvillc LETTERS AND SCIENCE Superior Normal 1, 25 Mathematics Club. XIARY FREDONIA FBIES ..... .Richland Cenler Freddy LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mathematics Club 3, 4-. Thesis-A History ol' the Falls Line. LoU1sE FRITSCHE . . . .... . New Ulm, Minn. iiFPllZ,i . LETTERS AND SCIENCE, Sigma Kappag W Wearer: Basketball 1, 2, 35 Manager 35 Field and Track 1, 2, 35 Manager15 W. A. A. Board 45 Outing Club, Secretary 35 Physical Education Clubg Vice-President Blue Dragong Badger Staii' 4. ' FIDFLE FRITZ . .... . .Illczdison 'LFrilzz'e ' X MUSIC , Phi Mu: Choral,Union 2, 3, 45 German Club 4. Thesis-Piano-Classes in the Public Schools. JOSEPH E. FRONK . . . . . . M ishicoaft , Joe X LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Delta Kappa5,Oshkosh Normal 1, 2. . T hesis-'Ifypes df Errors in Arithmetic 'and' Their' Fre- quency of Occurrence. CARLYGUSTAVE FUHRMAN . . .f ., . Diibuque, Iowa s :GuSv! COMMERCE. . n Theta Chig Conimercc Magazine I.. 52, 3: .Collection Manager 25 Circulation Manager 35,COinmerce Club 3, 45 Assistant Treasurer 35 Commerce Crew l5.Commerce Cross-Country 25 Iowa Club. , t ' Thesis-Cost Accounting for Hospitals. SARAH D. GALLAGHER . . . . . Wilmeite, Ill. uisallysv LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Garnruag Northwestern University I Thesis-Unemployment. Page Ninfly-Seven i i,i Page Ninety-Eight LESLIE HSROLD GARBER . .... .Donovan Bluff li S! Les ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Theta Xig Tau Beta Pig Eta Kappa Nui River Falls Normal lg A. I. E. E.g Square Club. CLAUDE D. GARDNER ......... Platteville Pussie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Idzfnilbda Chi Alphag Platteville Normal lg Red Arrow Tliiasis-The Average Economic Life of the Principle Road Types. X ' EDYTHE MARION GARDINER .... . .Edgerlon L6Ed77 , LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Maintenance of the Working Forcc with Special Attempts to Methods of Computing Labor Turnover and Labor Holdover. IRENE GLADYS GARDNER ........ Ashland Lundy . LETTERS ANDKSCIENCE I Delta Zetag Northland College ,lg Tennis Tournament 19135 Prom Comm.ittee 19222 Jiinior Class Committee 1922: Homecoming Committee 1921. Thesis--Edgar Allan Poe as a Critic. REGINALD VVILLIAM GARSTANG . I ndianapolis, Ind. A 6 7 COMMERCE Sigma Chig Beta Gamma Sigmag Butler College 1: White Spadesg Council of Fortyg Commerce Club 2g Vice- President 35 President 4g Haresfoot Cluh 23 Secretary 11-3 Haresfoot Show 2, 33 Commerce Magazine 3: Associate Editor 3, 4-3 Chairman Special Features 1922 Promg Homecomin Committee 2, 33 Chairman Special Fea- tures 1922 Iiomecomingg University Circus 2g Expos- ition Committee 3g 1922 Badger Staff 3. ISABEL WHITNEY GARVEY ...... Chicago, I ll. G LIS07 7 J OURNALISM Chi Omega: Grafton Hall 1: Tennis 23 Swimming 23 Badger 4: VV. A. A. 2, 45 Outing Club. 2, 4. Tliesis-The Special' Feature Article in Women's Mag- azines. PAUL C. GATTERDANI ..... . .La Crosse HBf'l1fLlSl, MEDICINE Phi Beta Pig La Crosse Normal 1, 2g Red Arrow Cluhg American Legion. Thesis-Diagnosis of Auricular Fibrillation by Means of the Electro-Cardiogram. HERTILA A. GEBHARDT . .... . Juneau COMMERCE Thesis-Latin America. MARSHALL ADRIAN GEILFUSS . . . . Milwaukee Marsh CIVIL ENGINEERING Michigan Agricultural College: American Association of Engineers: American Society Civil Engineers. Thesis-Investigation of the Huntington Creek Irriga- tion Project. ROLAND JONES GEIMER .... . . Two Rivers Relic COMMERCE Milwaukee Normal lg Service Two Years. Thesis-The Economic Strength of Japan. FRED W. GENRICH, JR. . ........ Wausau , .alll-eddyn. LAW Beloit College 1', 2.- . CADDY GERTRUDE GEORGE ...... Gays JW ills :AJ-on NORMAL COURSE La Crosse Normal 1, 2. Thesis-The Magnetostriction fof a Specimen of Nickel Steel Alloy, 1 LLOYD GEORGE ....... Geneva, I ll. JOURNALISM Lambda Chi Alphag Sigma DelLn Chig Press Club 1, 2, 3. 4? 13fEShg11lW.TPflC1f 'EGHXIIS VaxrisiLy Boxing 25 Cardinal Ala , . 9 isconsm il,ez ' ,P bl' ' M - agzer 3g Board of Edil,ors Kiln-y dgalme U lclby an Thesis-Dramatic CriLicism in Five Weekly Periodicals. MILDRED MIARIE GERLACI-I . . . Chicago, I Il. HMM., .IOURNALISM Kappa Kappa Gammag Lake- Forest Collcgelg.TheLa Sigma Phi, PresxdenL fl-5 Cardinal 25 S6cieLy Editor 35 Keyslone Prcsidenlz fl-3 Press Cluhg Playwright Clubg Y. W. C. A. Gahinet Council 2, 3: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 33 1921 Prom Reception Committeeg 1920 Homecoming. Thesis-James G. I-lunekcr. VVALTER A. GESKE . .V G ....... . .Colgaie 'iWall,' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Elmhursl. College l, 2: Square Club. Thesis-The ALl.il.udc ol' Lhc ChrisLian Churches on the Labor QuesLion in America. ROLLIN B. GETTLE . . .N ..... . .Madison li'olli0i' W LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Freshman Track Squad: Chemistry Club. Thesis-The Absorp Lion ol' Hydrocarbon Gases by Non- aqueous Liquids. EUNICE JANE GrETZELMAN ....... Elgin, III. Eunie LETTERS AND SCIENCE I Alphia Omicron Pig Northwestern 1, 2.1 CORINTHIA GILBERT ........ Nevada, Mo. IlTippy!1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Bela Phig MonLicello Seminary 1, 2: Outing 2Cluhg Junior Mathematics Cluh. Thesis-The GeomeLry of Lhc T1-iangll. IDA GRACE GILBERT .L . . .. Oklahoma City, Okla. LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Virginia 1, 23 R. IVI. W. C.g Y. W. Cl A. 3. 4g S. G. A. Board 4-. Thesis-The Philosophic Difference inwthe Poetry of the Last FiI'Lecn Years. I NYRIA V.,GILE' . , ....... K . . . .Edgerton ' LETTERS AND ,SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta: Glee.CIub 3,114:.,CaTdinal Staff 2, 3: Badger 4'g Homecoming'Commii,tee 3, 43 Outing Club 4g Choral Union 3. ' . ' ' Thesis-Eifect of Trade Uaionsgand Employers' Asso- ciations on Public Employment. Service. MERRILL ALBERT . . i. . . .Peoria,IlI. G I 'fMllii ' - ' ,I MECHANICAL ENGINEERING - Phi Kappa Sigma'gLTau Beta Pig Pi' Tau Sigma. - CIARRINGTON CALHOUTNLGILL i. Grand Rapids, .7VIiclz. - V icskcorryas ' - COMMERCE ' . Beta 'Ifheta' Pig Whi'Le Spades: Daily Cardinal 1, 2, 3g Circulation Maifager l3:AssociaLe Bi1siiiessgMauager 25 Business Manager 3g'Advertisii1g Club 3, 45 Vice- Presiilentfi-g Council of Forty 3, 4.. ' AMELIA J. GIRYOTASQ . .7 ,gf . . Cicero, I ll. Gary ' Y . , ME-DTC'I'NE' Y ' - University of Chicago 2, 3g Wornen's Medicalf.Associa- tiong German Clubg International Club, I' A I Thesis-Determination of the Normal Emptiing Time of the Normal Stomach. f - JOSEPH BAIRD GLEASON ........ . Madison I 5 3 7 Pa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sioux Falls College 2, 3g Secretary of Campus Religious Councilg Baptist Student Pastor. I Thesis-Newspaper Treatment of Wages and Proiits. 1 'I IW.-I I .- . - - I l I l i in WZ. I I Page Ninety-Nine T51 if Page One Hundred EDWIN ENGWALD GLOMSTEAD . . . . Slurgeon Bay nsalomss CHEMISTRY Oshkosh Normal 1, 23 Treasurer Chemistry Club. Thesis-The Influence of Concentration on the Pre- cipitation of Metallic Copper from Solutions. IVILL B. GNAGI . ..... . . Monroe stBiNas MEDICINE Delta Tau Delta: Gamma Tau Betag Freshman'Football. Thesis-Elbow Join B. ' IVIAEK GOLDBEEG , .... . '.Madison 4'IVIac . COMMERCE Menorah 1, 2, 3, 443 International Clubg Social Science Cluh ' FRANK BENJAMIN GOLLEY . . ,Milwaukee 44DOC11 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Theta Xig Star and Arrowg WD l919g Gamma Sigma. IVIABEL Goo . . . ,.... .Honolzilin Hawaii LETTERS AND SCIENCE University of Hawaii 1, 2g Castalia: International Clubg Poultry Cluhg Y. W. C. A. Thesis-Fruiting Stages of Aspergillus and Penicillium. VIIOLET Goo . ....... .HonoIuIu, Hawaii CONIMERCE University of Hawaii 1, 2: Caslalia ll-5 Y. VV. C. A. 3, -L. RALPH GOODING . - ...... . . Fond du Lac 'LDeac CHEMISTRY lh'l'AR Zeta Psig Inner Gate. Thesis-The Determination of the Partition Coeliicients of Hydrogen Peroxide between Aqueous Solutions ol' Inorganic Salts and Organic Solvents. GARET GORMLLEY ...... . Spokane, Ilfaslz. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Delta Pig Washington Stale College. Thesis-The Effect ol' Reaction on the Autolysis ol' Muscle Tissue. ' ROY CHARLES GOTFREDSON ...... Green Balj' Babu . . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Alpha Epsilon: 'Leland Stanford University 2: Badger'Stalf I, 3. 4: Secretary and Treasurer Golf Asso- ciationg Vice-President Tennis Cluhg Freshman Base- hallg Varsity Baseball 2. 39 Tennis Team 2, 3, 43 Vim W'earer. , Thesis-Relation of Present Business Depression Lo' the High Hates 'of Railroads. EMOR1' LESTER GRADE' . . . . . IValerlown HE. L. V LAW Gun and Bladcg Marquette. HELEN B1.'GRQAYESL'. . . -. . . . . . .Viroqzm ' LETTERSNAND SCIENCE A I Thesis-Browning's Use of' Italian Material. SPENCER FREDNCWRAVES. . . ...... IVausazz asspencsv ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Pi Kappa Alpha. FRANK W. GRAY .......... llflilzuaukec LETTERS AND SCIENCE AVELLSLEY DOBSON GIKAW' . . . . . Illadison GEBUZ9, AGRICULTURE Alpha Zola: Ilaresfoot Cluhg Haresfool. Show 2, 35 Inner-Gale: Kappa Beta Phig Delta Tau Della. GEORGE W. GREENE ..... . . Madison SpcedeJc A , .IOURNALISIVI Sl'IllLl Della Chil Siffma Chi' Pre. l I' i ' 5-. . ... , ss C u 1, Wsconsm lntcr-Collegiate Press Associationg Treasurer 35 Seo- rctary 41: Ccnlral ,lnlerscholastic Press Association Director 4: Exposition Committee. 'l'l1esis-Proposcrl Development of a Newspaper in IVisconsin. .IENNIE GREENSPON .......... Appleton LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence lg Inlcrnalional Club 23 Meriorali 2, 3, 4. ASHTON CARTER CHKEGG . . . . Decorah, Iowa X 'LShorly I.,E'l l'ERS AND SCIENCE Dc-lla Chig Middle 'l'0mpleg Gun and Blade. Thesis-A Hislory ol' Winneshick Counly, Iowa. LESTER V. GIKIERI ...... A . . .New Holslein GGLESY7 COMMERCE Alpha Pi Della: Bela Gamma Sigma: Commerce Clubg Student Financial Advisor fl-3 Commerce Magazine Slafl' 3: 1921 Badger Slail' 2g Sophomore Honors. LUCY ANN GRIEM ......... New Holstein Lucy A nn MUSIC Girl's Glec Clubg Clef Clubg Sigma Alpha Iolag Choral Union. WALTER BERT GRIEM ..... . .New Holslein L5 CHEMISTRY Alpha Chi Sigmag Chemistry Club., Thesis-Preparation of Asym Diphenylhydrazine. GILBERT GEORGE GRxEvE . . . .Madisori Gi ' 79 Gzb MINING ENGINEERING I U Lambda Chi Alphag Hockey 1. 2, 35 U. Mining Club: A. I. M.VY VJ FRANCIS AVILLARD GRIFFITH ..... . 'Chicago lLBiZl33 i LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' I Phi Gamiilfg Deltag University of Ch1cago.1:.Unlvers1ty of Illinois 2i Commerce Advisory Commission 3g Uni- versity Exposition Committee 3. GEORGE HARRISON GROSS . . . . York, Penn.. Ll 77 Doc' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Acaciag American Association 'Of Enginecrsg Phil- omathia. . Thesis-Fuel Combustion. HAROLD HENRY GROTH .... . .Nlaniiowoc 1 65Hap?! Q COMMERCE - . ' Alpha Pi Delta: Commerce Advisory Commission 3. 4g Parliamentary Chairman Campus Religious Council 4: Campus Religious Council 33 Inter-Fraternity Council 4. Page One Hundred and One I 1 l r ,I , l ,il ,WW ,W i. , LJI ll Inge Ill' I I , ALFRED HENRY GRUPPE ..... W'esi Milwaukee c4Ale: CIVIL ENGINEERING Scabbard and Blade. Thesis-Investigation of Irrigation Project, Humming- ton, Utah. HANS E. A. GUDE ...... .Kristiania, Norway CIVIL ENGINEERING Theta Xig Kristiania, Norway lg Norwegian Houseg. Badger Ski Clubg Varsity Football and Track,.f23 '33 W Football 2g W Track 3. Thesis-A Hydro-Electric Development oliy the Paint River. A . J TERESA ESTHER GUERINI . . . . M iddlglioro, Mass. - Duchess Du!ch'l X ' r' LETTERS AND SCIENCE ,' - I Gamma Phi Betag Pi Epsilon Deltag Keystoneg'lNalrus Clubg Pythiag Red Dominog President--1. Thesis-The Psychological Causes allfi Qccasions of Truancy. , f, - ERNST A. GUILLEMIN ...,. I. North Milwaukee ..EEn,Lxe,, 1 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING American Association of Eugineersg Tau Beta Pig Eta Kappa Nu. Thesis-Two-Anode Magnetically Controlled Ther- ujibnic Vacuum Tuhes and Their Use in 'the Production of Continuous High Frequency Oscillations. EDNVIN M. C. GUYER ........ . Madison s4Nedvs LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Phi: Chairman Physics Exhibit Exposition 19221: French Play 1. 2. . Thesis-Variations in the Specific Incluctial Capacity of Sulphur with Change in Allotropic Form. LAURENEE HUGO HAHN ...... i. . Reedsburg Honnesl' MINING ENGINEERING Triangleg A. I. M. E.g A. A. Eg President 3: Secretary -I-3 Wisconsin Engineer 2, 3: Square Club: Mining Club. Thesis-The Partition Ccelficienls ol' Sulphur as Cal- cium Sulphide, Manganese Sulphide and Iron Sulphide between Anorthite and Cast Iron. ELIZABETH HALDEN ....... Duluth, Minn. Libbie LETTERSAND SCIENCE Chi'Omega: University of Minnesota 1, 25 Outing Club: Badger StaH'. ' Thesis-The Developmentuof the Federation oi' Social Agencies. HARRY HALPERIN . .X .... . . . Jlladison s s-F1661 7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Menorah Society: International .Cluh. Donorm' GRAcE.HAMELRA'rHf . . .Merrill - A Dodace .. COM'MEB.CE Alphi Xi,Deltag Girls' -CommercefClub. J.'SmU.aRfr HAMILTON ..... ' . . Westfield HH-am., JOURNALISM Alif Mim.: Edwin Boothg Sophomore Commission: Press Club 2, 3, 4: French Cluh 3, -I-g President 115 Square Club: l'Universite de Poiticrs 1920: French Plays 3, 43 Pub- licity Chairman Masonic Mixer Ll-. flfhesisg-The Development cf the Feature Article in -American Newspapers and Magazines. I . fin! LAURA .h A. . . llfliileivaier 1 . Aipim Delta fray enema 3, OutingfQCl1ib,3g 'WomenFs Organization Badger ll.. ' f - - ' ' , 11 , V L HEGINALD W. HAMMOND . . . . . Illanilowoc ..D0c,, MEDICINE Alpha Sigma Phig Gamma Tau Beta. Thesis-The Normal Emptying Time of the Stomach. Cf gg 3 . ri. i X Hzznrlred and Two ll All I-. IW I X.. I I7 I. IN. I1 II. I, I I. K. V' I, I. :RI I , X I IZIIUII QILII I - I :IDI I . ., I , I AYII .I , I ITU EI IIFII IIQI . lffi I III I 2.551 I W ., I I I,- I I EDVVIN GEORGE IHAMMEN . , Ripon L4Fd7! J F II RAGRiC,lJLTLiREI R arm ,ousegl upon 9 gricu Lura Lil. ' S ' lg 3,45 Saddle and Slrloln IL: COIIIILTY Nlugziziiiiadfrillll- Llmran Skudenlz Cabinet 1143 Luhhcrun Brothcrliond 4-. ETIIELYN ANNE PIANDRAN ....... Walerford Ethel LETTERS AND SCIENCE illll8SlS1Gl1l1I'21Cl.0l'lZi1LIOII. in Modern British and Amer- ican Drama. ' CATHERINE I. TIANLEY ......... Madison 'fKilly LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sl.. Theresa College 1. Thesis-Boston 1750 Lo 1760. EDYVARD VINCENT IIANLEY . . . Milwaukee Eddie MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Della Tau Deltug Crew W. E. LAMBERT A. TIANSEN ..... . Caslzion Hans LAW Phi Alpha Delux: Lu Crosse Normal 1, 22. :EARL PARKER LIANSON . ..... . MECHANICAL ENGINEERING NVisconsin Literary Magazincg Pi Tau Sigma: A. S. M. Eg Milwaukee University School. PAUL EDYVARD HANSON ........ . Mondovi CIVIL ENGINEERING Thesis-The Elfect of Large Sized Aggregate on the Strength Ol' ConcreLe. ' NIABGARET M. HOPPENYAN ..... LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Customs of the CourILryside in VVordsworl:h. HAROLD EUGENE HANSON . . . .Madison g . Sheri,1f LAW , Phi Delta Phig Red Arrow Clubg Inter-College Basket- ball 3g Inter-College Football 4g Lawrence College 1. 2. HUBERT F. HARMON ...... . . Sparia MEDICINE Gamina Tau, Beta 2, 3. 43 Square'Club 3. 45 Combat Service' 32nd Divisional. E. F. ThcsisfThe'Relat,ion.of the Joint Capsules and Muscle Attachiiients 'to the Epephyseal Cartilage In a Young Female Cadaxiour. ' FOREST D. IIARRIS . . .g . . . . Cuba City 'jlifmif , . I. . AGRICULTURE Q 'I A Saddle and Sirloin 3, 4-g Agricultural Literary Society. CLIFFORD HENRY HARVILLE . . . . Eau Claire it Clif!! MEDICINE Phi Chig Sophomore Honorsg Junior Council Sturlenls Y. M. C. A.g Sophomore Commission. - . Thesis-The Persistence of the Sciatic Artery III the Adult. I I1-IE' Ni I I TI I .IA I I I I Page Une Hundred und Three Page One Hundred and Four GLADYS MARJORIE HASKINS ...... . Madison Alpha Xi Delta: Castalia l, 2, 3, -1: Secretary 3: Pres- ident 4: Student Council of Defense 1: VVar Orphan Committee Chairman 1, 2: Freshman and Sophomore Commissions: French Club 1: S. G. A. Executive Council 2, 3: Judicial Committee of S. G. A. 2, 3, 43 Chairman ol' Mayhew Drive 2, 34 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 3: Presbyterian Cabinet 3: Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet 4 . Thesis-The Philosophy of Anatole France. ALBERT CLARKE HASTINGS . ..HaaS,, PHARMACY Tau Kapga Epsilon: Kappa Psi. Thesis- uaiacol Carbonate. EDITH AMY HASTINGS ......... .Kenosha LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Omicron Pig Milwaukee-Downer I, 12: Union Vodvil 4. Thesis-Musset. MILLIE LOUISE HAUSAIAN . . . . Madison uBub:.7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-A Criticism of Existing Employment and Yllage Indices and Requiremenls for an Ideal Index. ESTHER OLIVE PIAVEN ....... , . . .Hudson J OUR NA LISM Pi Beta Phi: Mortar Board: Theta Sigma Phi: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4: S. G. A. Treasurer 3: Outing Club: Treasurer 33 Freshman and Sophomore Commissions: Sophomore Honors: Red Gauntlet: Secretary: Pylhia 1. 2: Hockey 2g Swimming 1, 3. Thesis-Censoring of the Press Through the Alien and Sedition Law. WII.LIAME.HAwLEY . . '. . . . . Baldwin Bill COMMERCE Kappa Sigma: River Falls Normal 1, 2: Basketball 1, 2. Thesis-Thesis Course. REBA CLARIBEL ILIAYDEN ...... , .lldadison MUSIC Alpha Chi Omega: Clef Club 1, 2, 3: President 4: Glee Club,3, 4, W. A. A. 2: Badger Staff 3: Choral Union 2, 3: Keystone 4-3 Congregational Cabinet 2. 3, Ll : Secretary 3: Union Vodvil 2: Dancing Team I. 2: Dancing Honors 2: Mu Alpha 3, 4. RALPH HAROLD HEIDBREDEI1 . . . . Quincy, III. i5Kube!3 PHARMACY IV Alpha Chi Sigma: Kappa Psi: Sophomore High Honors: Crew 41: Illinois 1. Thesis-Terpcnes in the Oil of Monarda Punctata. BIARJORIE HECKER ...... . . Fl. llfayne, Ind. ChM'arg!9 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ripon College 1, 2. Thesis-Tennyson's Idylls of the King Contrasled with Malory's Arthurian Legends. FREDERICK CARI. HEIDNER . . . . llfesl Bend Frilz Pulz MEDICINE Pi Kappa Alpha. Thesis-The Eflecl. ol' Cathartics upon the Emptyiug Time of the Stomach. LAURA ELIZABETH HEIRI . , . . llfladison Blondy?l COMMERCE Women's Commerce Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Vice-President 4: Alpha Gamma Pi 3, 4: 'President 4: Thesis-A System ol' Accounts for a Department:S'rore. BESSIE M. HEINDEL ....... . . . Kenosha ulgeuzyvs LETTERS AND SCIENCE Platteville Normal 1, 2. Thesis-Modern Drama. RUDOLF J. I'lEINS ..... . .... . lwadison KG ' vl Rwllf ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Eta Kappa Nug American Institute of Electrical Engi- IJCGYS. IVIARSHALL LOUISE I-IEINZELMAN . . Kirkwood, Mo. Billie PHARMACY II Thesis-History ol' Snnguinaria Canadansis L. J ENNIE OLIVE ITIEISIG ......... Dladison HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Club 2, 3, 44 President 4: Keystone fl-5 A. C. F. Board 3: Exposition Committee 3: Campus Religious Council 'Lg VV. A. A. 4.3 Bowling 3. Thesisflnlluonco of the Economic Conditions ol' the I':1stFlvc Years in tho VVomon's Ready-to-VVear Market of Today. ICARL LYLE ITELXVIG ....... . . Danbury AGRICULTURE Alpha Zola: A. S. A. E.: Saddle and Sirloing Country Life Cluhg Superior Normal School l. LYDIA ANNE ITENDRICKS . . .... . Tomah LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omegag Literary Magazine Advertising Stall' 1. 21 Octopus Advertising Stall' 2, 3: Badger Stuff 25 Class Committee 3, Publicity Committee Memorial Drive 41 Rluc Dragon Finanvr: Committee 113 S. G. A. Board 2. Thesis-The History ol' Tomah. NORMA L. ITENNEL ....... Coshoclon, Ohio LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Omicron Pig Ohio 1. Thesis-The External Facls ol' NVordworl.h's Life as Mentioned in the Prelude . IYIARTIN F. TIENNESSY ..... . .Lone Rock L L 2 COMMERCE Platteville Normal 1, 21 Mercier Club, Newman Clubg American Legion U. W. Post. EDISONEARL HENRX'. . .... . -. . .Ashland 'KSwan MECHANICAL ENGINEERING A. S. M. E. 45 Polygon 3, fly Secretary-Treasurer 3. ROBERT ALLISON LIENRY . . - . McFarland ..BOb., COMMERCE Whitewater Normal 1. THELDIA M. HENRY . . . .N .... Davenport, Ia. A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Zeta: S. G. A. Board 35 Pan ,Hellenic 3, 43 Y. W. C. A., Badger Staff 4g Miehigan State Normal' College 1, 2. Thesis-Imperial Conl'erence,ol' 1921. BORGIIILD THEODORA HEBIKEID ..... Jlladison uBugS:s A W LETTERS AND' SCIENCE Alpha Xi Deltag Badger Stali' I, 2: Frerwhi Club 19 Class Bowling Team 1, 2, 34 Varsity Bowling Teams 2, 3. Thesis-Course of Employment 18904921. - LUCILLE BEATRICE HERRON . A ..... Milwaukee 'iL0u', Little Onei' LETTERS AND SCIENCE . Milwaukee Normal 1, 25 Le Cercle Francais. Thesis-The Comparison of the Elements ol' H. G. VVells' Early and Late Literary Styles of his Novels. Pafm One Hundred andAFive x v,l,' 1 ,- 1 1 Page One Hundred and Si.: f -I ROSWELL HARRY HERRICK . . . . . Mineral Point zz-Rose: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Scabbard and Blade 3, 41 A. I. E. E. 23 Secretary 3: Chairman 43 Cadet Corps, Lieutenant 13 Captain 2, 35 Major 4g Presidenfs Guard, First Lieutenant IL, Insti- Lute of Radio Engineers 3. -15 Military Ball Committee 2, 3, 45 Cadet Ollicer's Association 3, 4-g Engineers' Minstrcls 33 University Radio Staff 3, 4. Thesis-Vacuum Tubes as Telephone Repeaters. ELSIE ELIZABETHHESS. . . . . . . Madison nsElSvs HOME ECONOMICS , Euthonics Club 3, 4-g Sophomore HonorsgQExpositiOn Committee 39 Dancing 3, IL. Thesis-More Adequate Diets for Peptic Ulcer. J AMES SAMUEL HEss . .... . . Maaslon scsarnss MEDICINE Phi Beta Kappag Phi Beta Pig Sigma-Sigma: Basketball 13 Track 1, 2g Wreslling 3, 4-5 Bandil. 2. Thesis-Effect of Decreased Oxygen in the Respired Air Upon Metabolism. WALTER WILLIAM'HEWETT .... Arlinglon, S. D. UAF, AGRICULTURE Della Tau Deltag Glee Club 2. ROLLIN MARTIN HICKEY . . . . . Reealsbarg HI-NIH COMMERCE Notre Dame University lg Alpha Sigma Phig Commerce Advisory Commission 3, L15 Badger Stall' CHARLES RAYMOND HIELD ....... Janesville Chuck LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Religious Awakening ol' the Early 119th Century. ALVAH MOORE HILL .... . . Onalaska Allie MINING ENGINEERING La Crosse Normal 19 A. I. lil. E.g Mining Club: Square Club. BARBARA HIIJDIKETH ..... Washinglon, D. C. ..B0b,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE George Washington University I, 3g Chi Omega: Mu Alphag Clel' Club 2. 4: Washington Club 2: Orchestra -Lg Y. 'W. C. A. Cabinet Council 2: Outing Club 4: Blue Dragon Finance Committee 4, 'Tennis 2: Swimming 4: Vice-President Inter-Sorority Bowling 4-3 VV. A. A. GEORGE AMOS HILL . .... Q . . . . .Baraboo G. A. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E. 4. HAROLD DOUGLAS HILL ......,. M ilwaukec ' Harry LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal I, 2. Thesis-Galsworthy's Novels. MILDRED SARAH HILL . , . h A casanzva , .JOLLRNALISM , ha GpmI11a Ueltii,2 '2,M4g, Badger Staff 2, Llg Colllegiate League. of Women Yoters 2, :tgp Qqngriegaf tionalAStudent Cabinet fi.:-Journalism House Association 4, Beloit College li, 31 .f ' ,. Y - Y ,Q , Thesis-The Influence of the' Press 'on the Political Election of 1884. DAVID :EIERMAN HINTZ ....,. . Almond MEDICINE Stevens Point State Normal 1, 2. Thesis-Statistical Study of Thyroids. NI XRIETTA I-IIPPLE ......, . . . .Madison .LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Phi Dellug ArL Club 2, 3, 43 Vice-President flg Archery 2g Badger Shall' 2. Thcs-is-Research Work in Low Fire Malt Glazes with Special Emphasis on Color. M xumcn .ARTHUR :HIRSHBERG ..... Milwaukee KL 75 I A I 1' ' CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Phi Lambda Upsilong Wisconsin ,Engineer Slall' 1, 2, 3, 45 Chemical Engineers' Society. ' Thesis-Requiremenl. Fnllilled by Special Problems. 1311 lm. IEIIRSIG . .... . . Ml, florpb uljudvv LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Delta Dellag W. A. A. Small WV: S. G. A. Boarrlg Outing Club: Tennis Team I 5 Bowling 2. 3, LLQ Archery4g Homecoming CommlI.,Lee 3. 4g CasLalia. Thesis-The Benefits Derived by Vllclfare Organiza- lions from Lhc Use of the Advisory CommiLLee. 'XIILDRED LILLIAN HOCH . . . . Oak Park, Ill. 'Hohie HOME ECONOMICS Thesis-Influence ol' Environment.. Geographic and Climatic on Lhe Developmenl. ol' Design in Arts and Crafts and Costume. CXRL F. R. HOFF ...... Krisliana, Norway ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING RUTH E. ITOFFMAN ........., Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Nlilwaukee Stale Normal I, 23 VV. A. A. 3, 4g Junior Club fl. MaLhemulics '1'hesis-Diophaminc Analysis. SELNLA BERTHEA Horsoos ...... Slmwens Point LETTERS AND SCIENCE Stevens Point Normal 1. 2. Thesis-The Preparalion ol' Lhe Amylenes. EDITH M. HOGAN ..... . 4 . Superior H0gie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega: Superior Normal 13 S. G. A. Board 4g Onl- ing Club. Thesis-Welfare and Social Service in Department, Stores. GEORGE MAHSDEN HOE ..... -. . Milwaukee HDOC1: CIVIL ENGINEERING ' Triaugleg Milwaukee Normal 1, 23 Engineers' Minstrelsz Civil Engineering Societyg American Legiong A. A. E. Foobballg College Football andl Basketball. Thesis-Loss of Head in WoOd.Sfove Pipes. JOSEPH CARLTON HOLBBOOK . . . 0kmu1gee,'Ok'la. Joe'i' ' ' on i LETTERS ANDvSCIEN CE . Sigma Chig Bordentown Military 'lnstituteg Ku Klux Klang Skull and Crescent: BaskeLball 15 Traci: Teamg Council of Fortyg Traditions Committee: Chairman 2: Homecoming Committee. Chairman 4: Cap- Night Com- mittee,4.Chairmau il. ROBERT LYNDON HOLCOMBE . . . . Madi.9o1z Y . r.4B0bsa S i MEDICINE Phi Beta Pig Gamma Sigma3:,EdWlI1'B00th 1, 2, 3- 41 Union Vodvil 2g Senior-Play. 23 Props 2g Stag? fMf11'1ag-'if Junior Play 3g Props 25 Gym Tearnjgg VQPSHY GYUI Team 2, 3, 4g Manager 23 Interrfatidrizilf:Cluhg'VYars113y Circus 33 Acts Committee 3: Junior Rlaygflominiptee 3: Prom Committee 3g Junior Council 33 Assisllapt Director Varsity Movie 3. - A Thesis-MicrO-capillary-izonometcr Determination of Capillary Flow in Man. ISABELLE T. HOLDAHL ........ Belclorwillc - NORMAL COURSE Service, ,Eleven Months, U. S. N. R. F. h I Thesis-Seasonal and Geographical Variations in Tra llic. Page One Ilundrefl and Seven Page One Hundred and Eiglzl DOROTHY MAY HOLLANDS . . -, . . . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phig Mystic Circleg Crucihleg Union Vodvil 2. JOHN BENNETT HOLMES . . . Poinl Pleasant, IV. Va. Jack MINING ENGINEERING Triangleg University of Pittsburgh 15 U. VV. Mining Club, Presidentg Engineers' Minstrelsg Captain R. O. T. C. . HERBERT FREDERICK HOLSCHER .... McFarland I iHerb! 7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE A Alix' Mim. Thesis-A Digest of Stale Highway Laws. J ANET EUNICE HOLZER .... . . . . Milwaukee ' ccJan:1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Y. IV. C. A.: Freshmen and Sophomore Commissionsg Y. VV. C. A. Council 3g Thesis-Aptitude Tests and Their Application to DeparlmenL Store Employment. Management. HELEN HOOPER ............ Oshkosh LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Gamma. ERICH O. HOPPE ........... Plalteville LETTERS AND SCIENCE Plai.Loville Normal I, 2. Thesis'-Longitude and Latitude Delerminatiou and 'Llic Problem of Map Making. IMIATILDA OLGA TIORN ..... . .Brillion !l4aliI COMMERCE Nlilwaukce Normal I, 25 Outing Clubg Choral Union. DANIEL O. EIORNE ......... Slevens Poinl Dan AGRICULTURE Tau Kappa Epsiloug Stevens Poinl Normal I, 25 Foot,- hall 2g Varsity Football 4-. CATHERINE ADELE 1-IORNER . Grand Rapids, Mich. HOME ECONOMICS Gamma Phi Beta: Simmons College 1, 2. ' FRANCIS CRARY HORNIBBOOK .... . Marineile Frowney ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING EVELYN L. HORTON .... . .SL Louis, lilo. I' ii 1 57 .Ev Delta Zeta: Harris T. College, 1, ,2. ' I I Tlgesifs-Development of Robert Brown1ng's Religious Bc ie s. FRANK C. HOSVLAND .......... .Bloomer LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ripon 'College 1, 2. A s . Thesis-Receivership and Rcorganizauon ol Publlc Utilities. CLAUDE RANDOIJPII IIOWVARD . . . .Prenlice Dickl' PHARM ACY II Kappa Psi. Thesis-Wiich Hazel. CECELIA ANNE TIONVE ........ Darlinglon LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Slavic Immigration and Ils Efleclz on Real Wages. ' NIERVVIN TIAYDEN HOWES, JP.. . . . So. Milwaukee Mike MINING ENGINEERING Tliela Chi: EQ, 3, 4: Geology Club 41: Freshman Sxynmning: Umvorsily Circus 2: Junior Prom Com- mittee. CQARDINER G. HONVI..AND ...... .Bulle, Monl. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Leland Stanford Unixfersity 1: Chemical Engineering Society: A. A. E: Engineers' Nlinslrels 3. EDXNVAIKD LUDWIG I-IOYER . . . . Madison LAW Q Phi Alpha Delta. CLARENCE E. IIRUBESKY . . . Menaslza l6Bccky77 CHEMISTRY Alpha Chi Sigma: Chemistry Club. Thesis: PreparuLion of Mela-Loluol-OrLho-Lhiazinc. LADUHR MILOS HRUDKA . . . . Dlanilowoc Lhlquti! AGRICULTURE River Falls Normal I. 2: Square Club: Graflers' Club: The North ol' Scotland College of Agriculmre. TIONORE CLINTON TIUBBARD ...... Evansville S LI-Iubi 7 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Alpha Chi Sigma: Tau BeLa Pig Phi Lambda Upsilou, Chemical Engineers' Society. Thesis-Thesis Course. CHEN-CHOU HsU ....... Hang Chow, China AGRICULTIIRE ' ' Iowa 1 : Election Committee of Chinese Student' Alliance in the United States 3: Secretary Wisconsin Chinese Sludents' Club 3. V ROY MANNINGV HUBBELL . . . HubT' , ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal 1, Z. Q . Q . Thesis+Second Passenger Traffic .Census of Connecticut, ROBERT J. HUDSON ..... i . Madison Huddy .i ' MEDICINE Thesis -Topographical Anatomy- BERNARD W. HUEBNER ........ . Illadison MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Glee Club 2: Swimming 3, Ili: A. S. M. E, Page One Hundred and Nine E l Page One Hundred and Ten ARTHUR JOHN HUEGEL ........ Milwaukee Hicks CHEMICAL ENGINEERING , E Tau Beta Pig Engineers' Minstrelsg Chemical Engineer! ing Society: Vice-President 4g Square Club, Secretary fl. IDRYS O. HUGHES ....... . . Platteville Doc Yak AGRICULTURE Lambda Chi Alphag Platteville Normal 1, 2: Press Club 3. 4g Vice-Commander American Legion 33 Country Magazincg 32nd Division Clubg Literary Magnzineg Gun and Bladeg Summer Cardinal 3g Student Senateg General Chairman Pre-military Ball 45 Chaplaing American Legion 4. MARJORIE ROBERTA HUGUNIN ..... Janesville H Marjif LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-A Study of Pittsburgh Dispatch in its Relation to the Associated Press. MARION MACKEY HULL. ..... Milton Junction LETTERS AND SCIENCE MUSIC Milton College 15 Clei Club 3g Vice-President 4-3 Choral Union Advisory Council 3, 4. . Thesis-Piano Recital CHESTER EARL HUNZIKER ...... . Tomahawk 2 Chet MECHANICAL ENGINEERING A. S. AM. E. y LELAND HYZER. . . . . .Janesville IONA csLeeas LAW Phi Delta Phi. VIOLA IRISH ....,. .Underhill, Vermont uB0b,, .IOURNALISM Alpha Xi Deltag University of Vermont 1, 2, 33 Collegi- ate'League of Women Voters. - Thesis-Promotion Methods ofthe Philadelphia Public Ledger. MYRLE ISAACSON ....... , . . ..Superior Hlkien LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-In re Arnold, Pater, and Wilde. ALVIN MYRON JACOBSON . . . . Richland Center cc'-Iakesa AGRICULTURE Pltbeville Normal School 1, 2. JACOB R. JACOBSON ....,.. . . Madison AGRICULTURE KENIVETH HOPKINS JACOBSON . . . . Curliss ullaken JOURNALISM Sigma Delta'Chig Northland Colleggeg Eau Claire Normal 15 Press Clubg American Legion: International Club. Thesis+A Study of the Comic Strips in Daily News- papers.. LEONARD JOSEPH J ANSEN . . . . Kaukauna '-'L csLens: COMMERCE Phi Sigma Kappag Campion-College 1. Thesis-Thesis Course. I GLENN LENVELLYN JENKINS . . . .Sparla GL ' 73 J inks PHARMACY IV 'Theta Chig Wrestling Squad 2. Thesis-A History of Lhe Naval Stores Industry in the United States. WALTEIX THOMAS JENKS . . . . . Platteville LANV Platteville Normalg Band 3. REUBEN FRED JESSELL .... . .Madison Jesse CONIMERCE Lambda Chi Alpha. NIATILDA MITCHELL J EVVELL Grand Rapids, Mich. cspeggyas LETTERS AND SCIENCE' Junior College, Grand Rapids, Mich. Ig Spanish,Club 3, 45 Outing Club 3, Dante Cluh 3, 4g French Club 1, 33 German Club 4. It Thesis-Social Theories of Galdo's. ELLEN CLAIB JOBSON' ........ Danville, Ill. Jobbie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ward-Belmont 1, 2. LILLIAN JOHN . . ..... . Milwaukee Johnny LETTERS AND SCIENCE Treasurer Barnard 4: German Club: Y. W. C. A. Thesis-The History of Connecticut Claim to the Wes- tern Lands. EDITH MARY JOHNSON .O . . Grand Rapids, M ich. LETTERS AND SCIENCE VVestern Normal, Michigan 1, 2. I Thesis-The Seedling Anatomy of Pinus Sylvestris. G. ARTHUR JOHNSON ...., . .Suring John LAW A Northland College, Post-graduate. HOWARD LAWRENCETJOHNSON. . . . . .Racine Howie LETTERS AN D SCIENCE . Theta Chi: Ripon, College 1: Freshmen Football 1, 2g Numeral lg Varsity Footlgall 1, 2, 3, fi.. Thesis-The Strength of Abdominal Muscles. J AMES WARREN JOHNSON ........ Rye, Fla. Bummer CIVIL ENGINEERING Delta Upsilong A. S. C. E.g A. E. E.g Southern Club. Thesis-Tests of the Comparative Strength after Bend- ing of Re-rolled Steel and New' Billet Steel Re-enforc- ing Bars. , 1 LEONARD MARION JOHNSON . . .. . Orfordville 64Lenl7 ' COMMERCE ' - Lambda Chi Alphag Military Edition 1923 Badgerg Scabbard and Bladeg Major R. O. T. C.g Program Com- mittee Military Ball. ARTHUR L. JONES . . . . . . . . .Milchell, S. D. AGRICULTURE South1iDakota Clubg Country Magazine. .T1k:T',-1'V , E Page One Hundred and Eleven - I A r Page One Hundred and Twelve DAVID ROSWVELL JONES . . . . . Spring Green G6 7 Red ' COMMERCE t Alpha Pi Deltag Athenae 3, 4: Service U.S.N.R.Fg Menis Glee Club Ll.. EULALIA JONES . ...... Turtle Creek, Pa. Eukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega. Thesis-Survey of What a Number of Establishments Have Accomplished in Reducing the Turnover. JANET JONES ........... Wabash, Ind. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gammag Milwaukee-Downer 1, 2. Thesis-The Influence of Backwoods on Poe. JOHN PAUL JONES .......... Milwaukee 'iJohnny LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal 1, 2. Thesis-Annexation Movement versus Confederation Movement ln Canada. T. DELBERT JONES ........ . . Wales Gi TD!! MINING ENGINEERING Acacfiag Track Squad 35 Cross Country Squad 3: NVinner Cross-County Cup 3g Mining Club 1, 2. 3, 45 Junior member A. I. M. M.g 1921. Homecoming Committee. XYESLEY XVARREN JONES . . . . Madison new-ess? COMMERCE Alpha Phi Delta. JOHN ALOIS JORDAN .......... . Oshkosh A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Irish Land Legislation. STANISLAUS STEPHEN JORDAN . . . . Oshkosh 'Steven COMMERCE Atlleuaeg Secretary 2g Treasurer 35 Presidcub -I-3 Fresh- man Dec.g Sophomore Semi-Public Debate. LOUISE IVIARGARET .IORGENSON . . . Racine LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Delta. Q Thesis-The Name in Folk Tales. DEAN JAMES JUDAY ....., . Rhinelarzder AGRICULTURE .HILDEGARDBJ J UNG ......... Sheboygan HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Kappa Gammag Sweet Briar College 1. 'Thesis-Diets offvarious Peoples Throughout History with Speeialjefereuoe tox.Cereal-Grams. LEONARD JEROME KAASA .... . .lllerrill Jack AGRICULTURE - Alpha Gamma Rhog Saddle and Sirloing U. S. N. R. F. 'Twenty Months. MARIE KALLIO . ........ Finlayson, Minn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Duluth State Normal School I. Thesis-John Ruskin as a Descriptive Writer. EDITII KAMINSK ..... . Pliiladelphizz Karn', LANV Cornell 1, 2, Social Science Club. LELAND LEWIS KARAS ....... Ghicago, I ll. .. Ole.. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Delta Upsilon: Skull and Crescent, A. S. M. E. Thesis--Rerolled Bars Should Not Be Used for Con- crete Reinforcing. GEORGE JACOB KASTLIN .... . .La Crosse MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta: L. and S. Crew 1: Sophomore Crew 2 . Thesis-Dissection ol' the Mcmhranous Labyrinth ol' the Internal Ear. HENRY liA'I'Z . . ..... . . Milwaukee nl-Iank AGRICULTURE Chi Phig Alpha Zeta: Scabbarrl and Blade: Editor of Fresh Bibleg Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Chairman ol' 1922 Ice Carnival: Assistant. Chairman 1921 Agricultural Literary Society l. 2. 3. 'lg Captain Cadet, Corps, Asso- ciate Circulation Manager Cardinal 3: Circulation Man- ager Country Magazine 35 .Iunior Prom Committee 3g Decoration Comrnittec Exposition 3: Saddle and Sirloin 2. 3. ABRAHAM KAUFMAN .... , . . New York City LETTERS AND SCIENCE College ol' the City of New York 1, AI-tus: Athenae 2, 3.11-3 Secretaryg Vice-President: Sophomore Semi-Public Debates: Joint Debate Team, Social Science Club, Editorial Writer, Daily Cardinal. Thesis-Requirements Satisfied by the Joint Debates. CAROLYN CANTINE KAY . ..... Alliance, Olzio LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Deltag ML. Union College 1. EDNVABD PETER KEARNS . . . . Madison LAW' ' ' Phi Delta Phi, Phi Kappag Artusg iPhilori1athia. HELEN MARIE KEELEY' ......... lllayville LETTERS AND SCIENCE - St. Clara College 13 Union Memorial Driveg WY A. A. Physical Education Club, Outdoor Baseball 25 Indoor Baseball 1YlATILDA ELIZABETH KEENAN ...... llfladison HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Omicron Pig Y. W. C. A.g Freshman and Sopho- more Commissionsg S. G. A. Executive Councrl 25 Social Chairman Yellow Tassel, CruciblegVice-President, Treasurer, Chairman Exposition Committee 35 W. A. A. 2, 3, 49 Hockey 2, 3g Field 'Track 25 Baseball 2, 3, Small Emblem Wearer. ' .E A Thesis-The Study ol' the Bacteria Causing Spon- taneous Epidemics. ' GUSTAVE JOSEPH KELLER . . ., .A ppleion uGuSvs i LAW I Sigma Chig Chicago 1, 2, 3, 43 Phi Alpha Delta. VVILLIAM RICHARD KELLETT . . . . Neenah Bill CHEMICAL ENGINEERING t Delta Upsilong Haresfootg Union Vodvilg University Circus. Page One Hurtzlrcrl and Thirleen l'7, i. QT. 1 .ji lb- l l l 4 ll ll lv r w Page One Hundred and Fourteen V- HORACE BANTER KELLOGG . . . . Anligo :sKays1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Thesis-Paper Industry in Wisconsin. HOLLAND F. KELLOGG ......... Edgerton Hallie MECHANICAL ENGINEER Phi Kappa Sigma: Pi Tau Sigma5 A. S. M. E.5 Class Football 25 Varsity Football 4. ' ELIZABETH JANE KENNEY . . . . Palo1Alio, Cal. I 6-Betty!! LAW Delta Delta Deltag Leland Stanford 1, 25 President Pan- Hellenic5 W. A. A.5 Dolphin Clubg Outing Clubg S. G. A.g Legislative Board 3. SELVIDA GERTRUDE KENSETH . .X . . . Cambridge tlslallyii LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Deltag Castalia 3, 45 French Club 45 Y. W. C. A. Thesis-Alphonso Daudet. LEWIS H. KESSLER .... Columbia City, Indiana scLew:1 CIVIL ENGINEERING Delta Upsilon5 Chicago 1, 25 Student Chapter Amer- ican Society of Civil Engineers 3, 45 Campus Religious Council 44. Thwis-Air Lift Pump Performance with Size of Educ- 'tioniPipe Increasing Upward from thc F oot-piece. NORMA HELEN KIECKHEFER ..... Milwaukee ' Pele ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Chi Omegag Secretary Senior Class5 Joint Mixer Committee 19215 Satire Staff5 1922 Badgerg Chairman Exposition Program Committee 19215 Champion Archery Team 19205 Chairman Prom Supper 19225 Union Vodvil 19205 Basketball Squad 19205 Y. W. C. A. 19195 Mixer Committee 1918. J. ANDREA KILAND . , ......... Madison I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi5 Phi Beta Kappa5 Sophomore Honors5 Juriior Prom Committeeg Junior Play Committeeg University Circus 25 Twelfth Night 2, 3, 45 Treasurer 25 Vice-President '42 Twelfth Night Open Meeting 25 Joint Production 35 Open Air Production 3. Thesis-Women in James Shirley's Plays. JEAN WALLACE KILGOUR ..... La Grange, Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Monticello Seminary 1, 25' Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 35 W. A. A. 3, 45 Math Club 45 Hockey 3,5 Basketball 35 Varsity Field and Track 35 Outing Club 3, 4. lVIARY LULU KILPATRICK ..,..... .Belmont upain PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC Platteville Normal 1, 25 Sigma Alpha Iotag Choral Union5 Glee Club. Thesis-Group Piano Classes in Public School Music. DEAN PRICHARD KIMBALL . ...... Janesville LETTERS AND SCIENCE PhilomaLhia5 ArLus5 Philomathia Joint Debate Team. Thesis-Requirements Satisfied by Joint Debate. MARVIN S. KING ........... .Madison Marv LAW Phi Delta 'Phig 'Phi Kappag Beta Gamma Sigrnag Com- merce Club5 Advertising Clubg Commerce Mag:-1zine5 Editor-in-Chief 41.5 Cardinal Advertising Manager 3. MILDBED ALMA KINGSLEY . ....... Chicago ELMIZZ77 HOME ECONOMICS Lewis Institute 1, 25 S. G. A. Board 35 Euthenics Club 3 , 45 Outing Club 3, 4-. Thesis-A Sanitary Survey of Some Wisconsin Small Town. ARTHURXHIOUSTON KINNAN . . . llladison Sl 77 Arl COMMERCE - Chi Psi: Skull and Crescent.: Ku Klux Klan: Freshman Basketball: Varsity Basketball 2: Sophomore Dance: Chairman, 1920 Venetian Night: Chairman, 'I.92'l Home- coming Massmeetingg Chairman, Council 40: Union Board 2: Secretary 3: President. 41: Student. SenaLe 4: Union Memorial Drive: Dedication Day Chairman. I IHELEN SUSAN KINNE ....... Orojno, Idaho LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma: Whitman College 1: Badger Stall' 3: Varsity Quoits 2. Thesis--Tlie Greek Influence on Mathew Arnold. KENNETH IVIAXNVELL KINNEAR ..... La Crosse L L I 7 Doc LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Kappa Sigma: La Crosse Normal 1: Square Club. Thesis-The Present? Lumber SLandardizat.ion Move- ment. IIALPI-I NUEL KIRCIIER .... . .Nlerrill Halpl1ic,' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Assistant. Circulation Manager 1922 Badger: Expo- siLion Reception Commit.t.eo: A. S. M. E.: Lieutenant: R. O. T. C. 3: Captain 4. CECIL H. KIRK ....... Benclzland, Montana ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Tau Beta Pi: Octopus Board. Thesis-Electrification of Railroads. LELAND A. KIRST ........... Dodgeville ..Red,, CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Frosh Football: Frosh Wrestling Squad: Varsity Wrestlinf 2, 33 y Thesis-Special Rroblems in Corrosion of Metals. KATHERINE A. KITCHIN .... . . Chicago n KaLler,' ' J.: LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi: Chicago '1, 2.9 -YV. ,A...A: B., 4-: 'Swimming Team 3, 4: Outing Club '3, 4-: Swimming: Honors: Dol- phin Club 3, 454 Secretary 4-. A ' ' Thesis: Commercial Relations Between U. S. and Latin - Anlerica, 1 I N ' EBNA HENRIETTE KLOSTEBMAN. . . . . Shawano I' LETTERS AND SCIENCE . ' ' 'PHI Mui: A. A. 1-, 2: Crucible: Prom Committee. NAOMI A. KNAUP ...... . . Beaver Dam L K X V . as Omiss V H ' MUSIC GirI's,t Qlee ut- Qlula Qt .Choral Union. EEBTEA BARBARA KLNEER .... . . .Eau Claire ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE EARL EDWIN KNEEVERS . . . .Sheboygan 6iK'en-75 COMMERCE JOCELYN WINTHROP KNIGHT .... . . Racine. Joce,' LETTERS AND SCIENCE -Pythia. , Thesis-A Study of Herman Melville. t t t l Page One Hundred and Fiflecn Page One Hundred and Sinrlrfwz STUART CROCKER KNILANS. . . . .Sheboygan asStewvr COMMERCE ' ' ' Phi. Kappa Sigma: Freshman Dance Committee: Junior Prom Commil.Lee. ALBERT JASON KNOLLIN , . . Pocatello, Ida. HAI., CHEMICAL ENGINEERING . Iron Cross: White Spades: Star and Arrow: Ku Klux Klan: Phi Kappa Sigma: WH Track 2. 3: Captain 4: Athletic Board 3: President 11: Athletic 1.Council 44: Class Treasurer 3: Freshman Basketball: Student SenaLe 4: Council ol' ForLy. Tliesis-Water Turbine Tests. ARTHUR H. KNUDSON ..... . .Kenosha MEDICINE Milwaukee Normal 1. 2: Gamma Tau Beta: Naval Service. Thesis-Bony Exostosis. RUTH O. KNUDSON ......... . La Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2. Thesis-The Habils of Belosboma. ARTHUR M. KNUTSON . . . ' . . Sawyer KrzzL!y,' AGRICULTURE Farm House: Varsity Cross-Country Squad 3: Team 4: Lulheran Student Cabinel -lv: Saddle and Sirloin 2, 3, Ll: Badger Club 3. 4: Lutheran Brotherhood 4. XVILLIABI FREDERICK KOCH . . . l-Vest Poinl, Neb. Bill AGRICULTURE Theta Della Chi: Commodore Varsily Crew 3, 4: Judg- ing Team International Live Slock Show. gin-sis-Effect of Mineral Makler in Rations for Brood ows. WILLIAM JOHN KOEHLER . . . . M ilwaukee Bill COMMERCE Phi Sigma Kappa: Sophomore Honors: Commerce Advisory Commission. Thesis-The Public Debt, 1890 lo 1914. DOROTHY KOELSCH ..... . .Bo1'se, Ida. ..D0UyH LETTERS AND SCIENCE DclLa Zeta: Crucible: Sophomore Honors: Bow!ing'1: Y. VV. C. A.: W. A. A. Thesis-Kipling as an.Inlerpreter of Places. LEO HIENRY K.OHIJ ...,...... lilarslz field ssK'ingsv - LETTERS AND SCIENCE President Y.iM. C. A. 4: Closer Joint Debale 3: Pres- ident Hesperia 4: President Campus Religious Council 3: Council of Forty 4: Lutheran Student Cabinet 3, 4: Slimpholrriore Semi-Public Debate 2: Service, Sevenlecn 1 out s. FLORENCE E. KOHN ,A ......... Blaclison MUSIC Choral Union I, 2, 3: Glee Club Lie: Clel' Club -I. Thesis-Tests of Auainruenlz in Music. LOUIS J osEPH Konrrscu ....,... A pplelon LETTERS AND SCIENCE FLORENCE J OSEPHINE KOLTES . . A . Wazz'naIfEe I 9 J OURNALISM Castalia 2, 3, IL: Vice-President fl: Castalia-PyLhia Joint. Deba-Le 3: Press Club: Outing Club: German Club. Thesis-What College Women .Read in Newspapers. RIITII J os15PIIINE KOPPKE ...... LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Kappa: Refl DomiIIo 2,31 Pythi Domino ProducLionsf1-g Business Manage EMILY IELIZABETH KOSCHIN , . Milly IVIUSIC Choral Union: Sigma Alpha Iota. A DOLPII W. KOZELKA ..., Krazy AGRICULTURE Oshkosh Normal 1,'.2. FRANK LUDNVIG KOZELEA ..... AGRICULTURE Agricultural LiLerary Socichyq Oshkosh I'lAI,sEY KIKAEGE ......... Hal LETTERS AN D SCIEN CE . .Madison a 2, 3, -fig Red r 114. . . Racine . Jlffich icot . . Micliicot Normal 1, 2. . .llfladison D0llll Sigma Rho: Vilas Mrfclulg Forensic Board 11-g Hes- peria 2. 3. 45 Vice-Presidenl. fig Presidenl. fl: Sophomore Semi-Public: Delmle Closerg Joint Debate 33 Inter- collegiate Dehules 3, JL. PlUTI-I KRAUSIQOPF ..,...... LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-On the Smale ol' Molybdenum. VIOLET Kmason . . . . . .Bvio HOME ,ECONOMICS . illilwaukee . Green Bay Tlmesis-Comparalive Study of Clothing in Courses in Twenty ol' lhe Leading Universilies. NIARTIN HUDOLPH KRIENVALDT Lameros, Australia ZWarzf LETTERS AND SCIENCE UuiversiLy of California 1, 2g InLer-collegiate Debates 1: Delux Sigma Rhog Vilas Medalg Athenaeg Vice-Presimlent Sig Forensic Boardg Vice-President 4-9 Student Editor Wisconsin Law .Review'. BEssIE EDNIK KROHN , ..... . . i V V s4B6sssa ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE 7- - f-Ildviimlice 11 22 STG. A. Board 3. 5 . Lancaster Thesis-Governmental Administration of Lucius Fair- child. ' Vmfmg KROIIN .... .Blaa 1 Vw fr COMMERCE HANNA H. KROME ....... K, . LETTERS AND 'SCIEN I k River Falls . Milwaukee Milwaukee-Downer J: French Club 3,.Qfg,Treasurer'fl-5 French Play 35 Y. M. C. A. Bazaar Comm1Ltee.3gSpan1sh Club 45 Collegiate League ol' Women' Voters 4. Thesis-Translation ol' HL' Homme a la Rose . DOROTHEA KRONCKE .... HDOUN, HOME ECONOMICS . . Mad ison Thesis-Studies of Malnutriliou in Children. 1 Page One Hunrlrffd and Seuenleerz 1 v Page One JULIA ISABELLE KBONER ....... A .La Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE LaCrosse Normal 1, 2. ALVA KBOTZ . ..,. . . Madison GiNed75 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ELMER DELING KRUSE . . . . .Madison if 97 1 V' El l 5 COMMERCE V? ' . I H.AROLD MORSE KUOKUK . . . 'N .illlalusagi Kuke , AGRICULTURE , ' Band 2, 3g Agricultural Literary Society 2, 3, 4: Agri- culture Crew 2g Saddle and Sirloin 3, 45 Associate Ed- itor Country Magazine 3, 4g President A. C. F. 33 Chair- man Arrangements, Little International ftg Student Court 4: Chairman All-Agricultural Ball fl-g Alpha Gamma Rhog Alpha Zeta. b I FRANK W. KUEHL .....,.. F' oanlain City LAW Phi Alpha Deltag La Crosse Normal 1. 25 Business Manager 1921 Badger: Badger Board 4: Intercollegiate Debate 3g Prom Committee 35 Advertising Club 3, 42 Publicity Chairman Religious Conference 33 Campus Religious Council 4-: Council of Forty fl-g University American Legion Delegate National Convention 43 Service Six Months. ANITA E. KUEHN Q ....... . .Milwaukee Mielz HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Cluhg German Club. Thesis-Efliect of Chemicals on Spore-Rearing Bacteria . EDNVIN F. KUEIIN ..... . .Barnell nT0m,, AGRICULTURE Agricultural Literary Socgely: Secretary 25 American Society ol' Agricultural Engineersg Secretary-Treasurer 33 President -L. CONRAD L. KUEHNEIR ..... . . Cedarbarg 'iC'0n AGRICULTURE 1 Milwaukee Normal 1: Saddle and Sirloin 23 Gralfters' Club3, 44-1 Agricultural Triangle 2: Choral Union 2, 3: Social Science Club Ll-3 Country Magazine 3g University Exposition. ERNEST GOTTFRIED KUENZ1. . . . Colgate HDOCU PHARMACY aslsilstant Pharmacist University Hospitals 3, 43 Badger 4-. ' Thesis-The Manufacture of Medicinal Tablets. J. :HAROLD LAHMAN ..... .Franklin Grove, III. Shep ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE I Alpha Sigma Phi. HAROLD REMINGTON LAIB Dil N ..... Madison 'JuniorMarhematiqsG,l1itgZ,'g, K f f Thesis-An' Electron .Tubeiwi1glj,'.MQvingjGrid Coritriilg j- I. XVESLEY CHARLES LALLIER . . . . Nladison g'NapoIeon', ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E. 4-. Thesis-Hydro-Electric Power Plant Construction. , , , -,, , .-Z-R,..,'. 1, 5.,,,g:fi,'-ff 7 'g?T1b:.fiQ.2E vp, . -. , . . I I .,, .-,. Ml- i.,L I .'Qri'f.f. 2 2271. Hundred and Eiyhleen I W JULIAN JOSEPH LAMBOLEY ....... Belleville l 6CLarn71 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 1 ETFCQSIIIDLIII Swimming rl.lCElIl'lQ Varsity Swimming Team 5 . , I I ..,.,-. 5 FLORENCE NIAY LAMPERT . . . . .Lena, I ll. Lamme MUSIC Aohpthz Girls' Glce Club 2, 45 Choral Union 1, 25 Outing Club 15 Y. W. C. A. .l, 25 Castafia 25 Military Editor Daily Cardinal 25 French Club 11-. Thesis-Correlations ol' Music and Literature. ADINE I. LAMPTON ........ Jackson, llliss. A 'DI'ne LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Bela Phig MysLie Circleg Ward-BclmonL5 Sophia Newcombe College. ROBERT ELLSNVORTH LANE . . . .Janesville ..BOb., COMMERCE Lawrence 15 Scrviceg University PosL American Legiong Badger Club5 Methodist Studcnl. Cahinr-L5 Choral Union I, 23 University lVlen's Glee Club 3, Ll. LUCILLE L. LANGSTAD ....... E. . Appleton ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' 'M' A BRONVN CLIFFORD LANNING. . . .Black River Falls Bo ' ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Engineers' Minstrels 25 Glee Club. GEORGE R. LAUTENBACH ....... Weyazzwega Shorly LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lulheran Brotherhood 3, 4-5 German Club 3, ll. RALPH ELLIOTT LARSON . . . . .Madison lGFat7J COMMERCE Phi Kappa Sigmag Congregational Student Cabinelg Varsity Exposition5 Frwhman Track Team., JOHN A. LAST ..., ...... . Walerloiun AGRICULTURE Saddle and Sirloin. PHILIP C. LAWSON ...... . .Clinion 6lPl,Lil7! COMMERCE Beta Gamma Sigmag Commerce Club 45 Commerce Advisory Commission 35 Treasurer 45 Advertising Club 45 Octopus, Assistant Business Manager 33 Business Manager 45 Service, Two Yearsg Financial Chairman .-Memorial Union -Campaign. Thesis-Studies in the NVisconsin Leather Industry. PAUL HOWARD LEACH .... . ..... Joliet, Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE I . University of Illinois 1, 25 Editorial Boardg Qctopusg Press Club. '- THEODORE AXEL LEDIN ..... . Kenosha , m Ted M31 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 5 I ll Varsity Hockey 1, 25 U. W. E. C. 1, 12, 35 Square Club I -Q 1 3. 4. , ' 5 I Y I Page One 1'IllVldl'!!flYGfl!l Nineleen lv. A Page One Hundred and Twanlly EDWARD N. LEE ..,......... Chicago JOURNALISM Delta Pi Deltaz Chicago 13 Cardinal Staff, Reporter 25 Special Writer 35 Desk Editor 3, 45 1921 Badger Sta-fig 1922 Prom Publicity Commitfeeg Press Club 3, 45 University Exposition News Editor: 1921 Interscholar- astic Publicity Comrnittee5 Memorial Union Publicity 45 1921 Homecoming Program Committee. DONALD G. LEHMAN . . ........ Vifaupaca JANE seDOn:s ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING U. VV. Engineers, Club 25 A. I. E. E. 2, 45 Service Over- SBZIS. I ' S. LEHMAN ............ Madison LLJaney77 i . LETTERS AND SCIENCE VVard-Belmont 15 International Club. Thesis-Historical Background of 1,hefEriglish Folklore and Ballads. ' ARTHUR CARL LEMKE . . . . .Cadozft Aft 'COMMERCE lvhitewater Normal 1. ROBERT CARL LENTZ ...... . . . .Nlayvillc ..B0b,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Geology Club. Thesis-Beach Sands. DOROTHEA Evnansr LEVI . . . .hifadison MDG!!! MUSIC Alpha Gamma Delta-15 Pythia 2, 3, 44 Clel' Club li Orchestra I, 2, 45 Pythia-Castalia Debate 2. Thesis-Music Appreciation in the Lower Grades. NADIA LEVITIN .,.......... Illadison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Spanish Club 45 Spanish Play 35 French Club 2, 3, 445 French Play 35 Membership Chairman 4-5 Y. W. C. A. Bazaar 3. Thesis-Papers on Musset. LORNA LUCILLE LEVVIS ..... . . . . Oshkosh PEAR JOHN i'Siubby LETTERS AND SCIENCE Acol.h5 Secretarial Manager ol' Badger 25 Cardinal Staff 3, 45 Y. W. C. A. 2. 4. Thesis-Opportunities for Social Service in the Rural Communities of Wisconsin. LL1cHTFELDT . . . -. . . . .Mzflwaukee apala COMMERCE Alpha Gamma Delta: Alpha Gamma Pi5 Crucible: Commerce Cluh5 S. G. A. Executive Councilg Outing Club Board 25 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 3: NV. A. A. Badger Staff 25 Commerce Magazine 25 President Y. W. C. A. Summer Session 3. FRED LINDEN .......... Hayward H CIIGSS, MINING ENGINEERING Square Club: Mining Clubg Barrel House Clubg Sopho- more Football. GABRIEL ERIC LINDEN . .... Des hfoines, Iowa , f'Lindy ' MEDIICINE Iowa Sta1e'CoIlege,1'5 Phi-jBe'lLa Pi5 Gamma Sigma: Instructor Physical Edueationg Coachi Varsity Tennis. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. CARL WARNING LINDOVV ......... Elkhorn AGRICULTURE ZM.henae5 Saddle and Sirloing Sophomore Honorsg Alpha eta. RUTH LINDSTROM ..... , . . .Virocqua JOI-IN COMMERCE Alpha Gamma Pi: Commerce Cluh 1, 2, 3, 49 Secretary 35 Barnard Scorelary flg Lutheran SLudcnL Cabinet 3, 4, Campus Religious Council -L. Thesis-LaLin America. S. LINGENFELTER . . . . .Bullenlvlonlana .fljackn MEDICINE NV. S.. C. I, Thesis-A SLudy in Leukogenctic SLimulaLion. KARL PAUL LINK ......,.. La Porte, Ind. Charles AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY lfhi Lanihda Upsilonz Alpha Zeta: Alpha Chi Sigma. 'lhosis-Ihe EfIeuL ol' Oven Drying Green Plants aL Various Temperalurcs on Lhc Sugar and Starch COnLer1t ol Lhe Tissue. IYIINNIB I-IEN DERSON LIPPITT ..... .Porlo Rico AGRICULTURE Presidcnl. Agricultural Womcnis Associalion 3. Thesis-What. is Being Done hy Journalists to Popular- Ize AgI'ICTlIll.llFi1l Science. PENN P. LIVINGSTON ....,. . .Elk Mound Lz'vie CIVIL ENGINEERING Eau Claire Normal I g A. S. C. E.g Chippewa Valley Cluhg Varsil.y Wrcslling Team. Thesis-The Coellieicnts ol' Discharge of 'fainter Gales. PAULINE LLEWELLYN ....... La Grange, Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE University of Chicago 1, 2. ALICE VIDA LOEFFLER ...... .Armour, S. D. JOHN LETTERS AND SCIENCE Yankton College 1, 2. F. LONG . .,... . . Wesljield Jol1nn ie AGRICULTURE Stevens 'Point Normal I, 2. ERNST A. LONGENECKER ........ Neillsville JOHN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Ripon lg A. S. M. E. 3, 4g Hesperia 3, 4:-Pi Tau Sigma 3, 43 President 45 Service Thirteen Months. WALTER LONGSTAFE ..... .H uron, S. D. Hglack! 5 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Alpha Epsilongl-Iuron College 1. ThesisFAn Analysis ol' Connecticut Passenger Trallic. HARLIN GILBERT LOOMER .K ...... .Madison ' 'Doc ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE I Lawrence College 15 L. 8: S. Crew 1920: Y- M- C- A- C-abinelg 3, 4. .- Thesis-The Struggle Between the Christian Church and Organized Mammonism. CASEY VAUGI-IN LOOMIS ....... .Milwaukee ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Phi Sigma Kappag A. I. E. E. t 1 1 1 I t t Page One Hundred and Twenly-One X ,i. I., I ,X 1 I I Vw, 1 2 Pagez0ne Hundred and Twenly-Two GEORGE CURTIS LORD ....... . Cando, N. D. '4Boscoe ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ARTHUR NICHOLAS LORIG .... South Milwaukee 6lAri7J COMMERCE Alpha Pi Delta: Phi Beta Kappa: Commerce Magazine 3, 4: International Relations Conferenceg Commerce Advisory Comrnissiong Sophomore High Honors, Thesis-Highway Accounting. JAMES A. LOTZ ......... . . Cadoil liJim77 AGRICULTURE River Falls Normal 1. MERRILL DE WITT LOVE ........ Emerald 'LJolLnnie MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Thesis-Design Oi' a Front Wheel 'Drive Automobile. ALVIN MATTHEW LOVERUD . . Sloughlon MAF, . LAW Student. Editor Wisconsin Law Reviewg Exposiliong Law School Committee. FLORENCE Low ...... . . La, Porle, Ind. IGFZOY7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Wellesley 1. Thesis-Daudetn HOYVARD JAMES LOWRY . . . . .Colfax Judge LANV Lawrence College I, 2, 3, 4. HSIEH CHUN LU ..... Wusih Kiany Su, China ANIMAL HUSBANDRY Treasurer Agricullnral Society oi' China 3: Vice-Pres- idenL Chinese St.udenL's Club of NViscOnsin 33 Treas- urer 4. ALFRED DEXTER LUDDEN . . . . .Mineral Point I E 7 CHEMISTRY Chemistry Club 2, 3, 4-. Thesis-Effect, of Hydrogen Ion Concentration on the Precipitation of Calcium Oxalate. ERNEST M. LUNDA .......... .Madison Ernie ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Milton College lg MilLon College Club: A. I. E. E. Engineers' Clubg Engineers' Minstrels 3. ELIZABETH LODICA LUTHER . . . . Poyneiie if-Betty, Y V LETTERS-AND SCIENCE Milwaukee- Noi-mgil 1,7 - ,V , A Thesis-A S'ljIx'dy of ' N ewgpgpers, to Determine the AtLiLudes of Lhe Associated Piiess. ' . - . ONEITA LUTZ ......... . Sheboygan MEDICINE Bradley College 1, 2. LIARRY BURG1-I LYFORD . . . . .Hamplom Va. HH. B. JOURNALISM Beta Theta Pi: Sigma Delta Chig Press Clubg Cardinal 3: Homecoming Publicity 35 Prom Publicity 35 Expo- sition Publicity 3. Thesis-A Critical Analysis of Representative Country Weeklicm. AUTA EVELINE LYMAN ...,..,.. Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Boardg Crucibleg Keystone 4g Y. W. C. A. President 11-3 Cabinet 3, 43 W. A. A.g , W', Wearerg NV. A. A. Board 35 Chairman Field Day Committee 25 Sophomore Honors: Prom Committee 33 Homecoming Committee 2: Assistant Chairman Junior Advisory System 3g Congregational Student Cabinet 3, 41 S. G. A. District Committee 2. Thesis-A Study ol' The Providence Journali' in its Relation to The Associated Press. LAMONT L. MAC BRIDE ..... . Granton ' 'Mac' ' . JO URNALISM Thesis-A Study of the Style of Sporting News Stories. WVILLIAM GRANT M AC GREGOR ..... Wesifield 6lMac73 COMMERCE Ripon College 1. CHARLES PATTISON M ACINNIS . . . Pillsburgh, Pa. 5lMac?7 JOURNALISM Pi Kappa Alpha: Sigma Delta Chi 25 Vice-President 3: President Ll-5 Delta Pi Delta: White Spades 3: Vice- President 4-3 Daily Cardinal, Reporter, Desk Editor 23 News Editor 3: Managing Editor 1921 Summer Session Edition: Managing Editor-Elect 419 Press Club 2, 3: President 4: Chairman Publicity 1919 All-University Vocational Conference 2: Chairman Publicity 1920 Jamboree 3: Chairman Publicity Junior Class 3: Pub- licity Manager 1922 Badger 3: Y. M. C. A.: Sophomore Commission 23 Junior Council 35 Cabinet 'Lg Chairman Publicity 1921 Homecoming 4-3 University Traditions Commission 45 Board of Directors, Central Inter- scholaslic-Press Association 3, Lt. AVILLIAM BLAIR RJACQUWEEN . . . Oconlo riMac,1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Chi Sigmag First Regimental Band 1. 25 Inter- fraternilzy Conference 3. 43 Chemistry Club 2, 3, 43 Orchestra 2: Exposition 3. Thesis-Oxidation ol' Phenyl-Morphaline CNormal Phenyl-tetrahydro-oxazineb MIRIABI NICCAFFERY . ........ Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gammag University of Arizona 2. 3. Thesis-The Evolution of Trade. Unionism in the Foundry Industry of the United States RAY THOMAS MCCANN ......... Edgerton I I 5 LAW Phi Delta Phi: Student Editor Wisconsin Law Review 3, 4-g Secretary and Treasurer Wisconsin.Law School Association 39 President Law School Association 4. MARGARET ISABEL MCCASLIN . East Cleveland, Ohio lVIarg . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Western Reserve University 1. Thesis-Characterization in Mark Twain. GRACEfMCC'LIMzKNS . .' . '. '. ., . . Franklin, Pa. V LETTERS AND SCIENCE. Wheaton College 1, 2. Thesis-Personal Work in a Department Store. ANSLEY B. MCCONNRLL .... l. . .Darlington Mickey V COMMERCE 1 Phi Sigma Kappag Service Twenty-two 'Monthsg Track lg Junior Prom Committee 3. BRUCE R. MCCOY ....... . . Sparta , lIM'ac7I JOURNALISM Beta Theta Pig Sigma Delta Chig Hesperiag Red Arrow' Club 3, 43 President 4. Thesis--Wisconsin Weekly Newspaper Survey. i. i in i,,i in M ln ii' ii i l l. i i. l 1 l ,zu li if i . 1 lip il- l f, Vi. ml iii I if-f i K . Pane One Hundred and Twcnly-Three Page. One Hundred and Twenly-Four IVAN LELAND MCCBANNER . . . . Madison Mac PHARMACY American Legion. - Thesis-Histology of Cascara Sagrada. ADA WINNIFRED MCDIARMID ...,. .Burkhardi Winnie LETTERS AND SCIENCE River Falls Normal l.. 2g Outing Club 4: S. G. A. Board 44. 'figegii-i'g'he Secular Trend of Agricultural Production ROBERT EDMUND MCDONALD ..... ilwaukee I L Y 7 l Bob LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' - Sigma Nug Skull and Crescentg Ku Klux Klan3 C1ass Treasurer lg Haresfoot Stage Manager 3, 4g Football 23 Council of Fortyg Chairman Sophomore Mixerg1921 Badgerg Sophomore Traditions Committeeg Chairman 1922 Prom Play. MARGARET MCDOWELL ........ Milwaukee npegn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Gainmag Vice-President Sophomore Classg VV. A, A. Board 3g Crucible. Thesis-Relation of Volume and Value of Wheat Pro- duction to the Business Cycle of 1911-1921. IVIARY KATHLEEN MCDOWELL . : . .Robinson,III. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Delta Pig Illinois 1, 2. Thesis-Englandis Opinion ol' Abraham Lincoln 1860- 1865. EVELYN VOLMEE IVICFARLAND . . Los Angeles, Cal. - MEM., COMMERCE Della Delta Deltaq Hockey 2: Track 2g W. A. A.: Outing Club Board 2. 4-g Crucible 3: Homecoming Com- . mittee 3g VVomen's Commerce Club 2, 3, 4g Commerce Magazine Slafi' 2. Thesis-Conservation of Economic Values as a Legiti- mate Legislative Purpose of Due Process of Law. LESTER BICGARY ....., . .Norwalk 'UVIac MEDICINE Phi Chi: La Crosse Normal l. IZ. Thesis-Some Studies on Mastoids. CLARENCE WILLIAM M CINTOSH . . . . Edgerton irMacis 4 COMMERCE Phi Delta Theta: Kappa Beta Phi: Ku Klux Klan: Inner Galeg Star and Arrowg Freshman Basketball: Captaing Varsity Basketball W 2. 3, 4g Homecoming Committee 3. Thesis-The Percentage ol' County Funds Spent for 5-lighway Purposes in Proportion to All Other Evqzen- itures, - MAHJORIE BELLE MCKAY . . . .Waierford,Pa. Hflflickyn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Western Reserve University 1, 23 S. G. A. Board 11. Thesis-Political Reconstruction in India. NEIL SCOTT MCKAY ........ Huron, S. D. Scolly COMMERCE Huron College 15 South Dakota Clubg Advertising Club 5 Commerce Advisory Commission. JESSIE MAE 'M CK ELLAE ...... Blanch ardvil Ie l S.-Iessi 9 I LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achoth: W. A, AJ Outing Clubg Physical Education Clubg Archery Team. EDWIN DANIEL M CKINLEY . . . .Dodgeville Eddie MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta: Lieutenant R. O. T. C. Thesis-Hydrocephalitic Skull as Compared with Normal. - lVIILDRED C. MCLEMORE ....... Nevada, Mo. LETTERS AND SCIENCE ORA :RICHARD MCMURRY . . . . Evansville HMM., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Cl1i Psi: Football 2, 3: Wrestling 2, 3, 4-g VV 33 Swim- ming 3, fl-5 President Aero Club. I'IELEN lNflCNEIL ......... Virginia, Minn. Haun.y LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega: Milwaukee-Downer I. Thesis-A Study of the Sacramento Bee. VIOLA A. MAAC. ........... Milwaukee MVP IIOME ECONOIVIICS Euthnnicsg Y. IV. C. A. Council 3, flg S. G. A. Board 3. Thesis-A Study ol' Bacteria in HelaLion L0 Spon- Taneous Epidcmics in Mice and Rats. ARMON E. llhnm' ......... Roanoke, Va. Barney CIVIL ENGINEERING Sigma Phig Stanford 1, 2. Mums LAURICE MADSEN ..,... .Viborg, S. D. LETTERS AND SCIENCE South Dakota 1, 25 Alpha Sigma Phig Gamma Tau BeLa. VIOLET H. lVliADSEN .......... Oregon LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Development of the Rural Community Theatre Movement. .I os13PH WILBUP. MIKGANN ....... . lldadison ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Signal Unit Cadet Corps, Captain 3, 45 A. I. E. E. I . Oscfxn CONRAD MAGISTAD .... . . Foreslville 6 CMage7 7 AGRICULTURE Alpha Zeta: Sophomore I-Ionorsg Agricultural Literary Magazineg Saddle and Sirloin 3, 49 Badger Club 2, 3, 4, Soils Committee, Expositiong Choral Union. BEATRICE lVlAHER ....... Kalamazoo, M ich. LETTERS AND SCIENCE WOm811,S Medical Associationg Castalia. ANITA I. MAHLEB ....., . Milwaukee Nee1fz'i' LETTERS AND SCIENCE 1922 Badger. f Thesis-George Elliot. DAVID JOHN MAHONEY ....... Fond da Lac Dave LETTERS AND SCIENCE Zeta Psig Kappa Beta Phig Ku Klux Klang Inner Gateq Haresfoot 2, 3, 4g Union Vodvil 23 Chairman Junior Dance 33 Chairman Costumes for Circus 25 Chairman Homecoming Ball 3, Assistant General Chairman 1921 Homecomingg Fraternity Editor 1922 Badger, Council of Forty 23 Exposition 35 Chairman Senior Class Play 4. Thesis-Care of Public Health in Municipalities. l Page One Hundred and Twenly-Five l - F . X 1 l i. V ,i .i l l l . l , NW! MU I iw ,. N 'N if :ill all My, W gal :fl My 1' I ,. 1. 'I l i il 135 ii , 'll 1 ll l v if ' 'N ,. l 1 l ,Wi fi' ,wx vll il il fl ' ll Page One Hundred and Twenly-Sm: FLORENCE MAHORNEY ..... . . . .Madison AGRICULTURE Kappa Alpha Thetag W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Tennis 15 Bowling 1, 2, 3g Varsity 2g A. W. A. WILLIAM BRUCE l.VIAINLAND . . . Oshkosh Boots COMMERCE Psi Upsilong Kappa Beta Phi. AMY WAUGH MAKINSON ..... Kissimmee, F Ia. Tickle' ' COMMERCE . Alpha Delta Pig Florida State College 1, 2: 'WOmen's Commerce Club. Thesis-Wage Systems in Madison. MARTIN MANDELKER .... . .Milwaukee :AM-arts: MEDICINE Menorah 1, 2, 3, 4g Palestine Builders 1, 2, 3, 4g Secre- tary 35 Vice-President 4: Intercollegiate Zionist Society 1, 23 Essay Contest 33 Chairman Semetics Booth. Expositiong Varsity Track 22 Varsity Football 33 Jewish .Student Association. Thesis-Autology of Brain. SEVERO FRANCISCO MAR .... . Tampico, Mexico LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lewis Institute 1, 2. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. WENDELL HERBERT MARSDEN .... Fennimore 'A'Winkie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Square Club. 1 ThesiS+TopOgraph1cal Anatomy. HERBERT NELSON MARSH ..... .Stevens Point asHerb:s LETTERS AND SCIENCE Stevens Point Normal 1, 2. Thesis-Native Intelligence of Smokers and Nou- Smokers. THOMAS GEORGE MARSHALL .... .Belvidere I ll. I' Tom Slzeep', COMMERCE Theta Delta Chig Athenaeg Fraternity Section 1923 Badger, First Band 1, 2, 33 Saddle and Sirloing Orches- tra 1. i HORACE PERRY MARTIN. . .. . . . 1WineralPoint KAMartyI! COMMERCE f Advertising Club: Arts and Crafts Club: Congrega tional Studentfsx Cabinet, 45 President 4-5 Campus Religious Council 43 Executive Committee 4-3 Choral Union 2, 33 Freshmen Track Teamg Badger Staff 3, 45 Octopus 4-5 Memorial Union Drive. MARGARETE KATHERINE MARTINI .... Mad ison Mpeg!! LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Chi Omegag Union Vodvil 2g Junior Prom Com- mitteeg Junior Class Committee. Thesis-History of the Pottawatomi Nations. GEORGE MITCHELL MASON . . . .Verona LSTim5, COMMERCE. Acacia: Square Club: 'Ificketf Manager, Senior Class Play 33 Freshman Baseball 35 'Commerce Baseballs. Memorial Union Drive Captain, SenviEe,A.- E. F. DORIS HARRIETTE MATHER . . . . Ladysmith Dolls LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis--A Comparative Study ol' Henry the Fourthn and its Historical Source in the Chronicles of Holinslied . LYNN B. MATTESON ...... . . Clinlorwille scMaltya1 AGRICULTURE Lawrence 1, 2, 3: Agriculture Triangle 4. MLIRRAY CORNELIUS MATHEWS . . Ashland Maiiy COMMERCE Zeta Psi. BERNARD MEYER MIXUTZ, JR. . . . Itladison Bernie COMMERCE Chi Psi: Inner Gate: 1920 Religious Conference Com- mittee: Harestoot Play 1922: Junior Prom Committee, Union Memorial Committee. TERR ELL BENJAMIN M AXFIELD, .I R .... Milwaukee L L 7 7 M arc MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Theta Chi: Tau Beta :Pig Pi Tau Sigma: Haresfoot: Engineers' Crew: 1922 Prom Committee: A. S. VM. E. President. IVIARY NVILSON MAXWELII . . .Marslialllowm Iowa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chicago 1: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet' Council 3: Physical Education Club 2. 3, 4: Secretary-Treasurer 3: Outing Club 2, 3, 4-3 Board 3: W. A. A. 2, 3, 4-: Board 4. Thesis-Relation ol'Amount of Clothing Worn to Health. THELMA E. MAYTUM ...... Alexandria, S. D. KlFum7! COMMERCE Iowa University 1: South Dakota Club. Thesis-Commercial Condition in South America. DAYTON RICHARD MEAD ...... . Mfarinelie '1'Dick LETTERS AND SCIENCE Theta Delta Chi: Scabbard and Blade: Junior Manager Cross Country 1921: Captain and Adjutant Cadet Corps 2, 3, 4: Chairman Summer School Pageant 2: Memorial Committee: Homecoming Exposition: Military Ball Committee 2, 3, AL. Thesis-Unemployment of Labor. MARIE A. MEID ........ Indianapolis, I nd. LETTERSVAND SCIENCE Miami University 1, 2. T hesis-Development of Latin-American Trade. GERTRUDE ELIZABETH MEISELWITZ . . . Kiel . Gertie - HOME ECONOMICS ' Thesis-An Economic Study of the Growth in the Manu- facture of Cl1ildren's Clothing. LEILA A. MEISNEST ........... Branch LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwauk,ee,Normal 1, 2S,.Mathematics Club. Thesis-The Theory of ' Elimination. LOUIS C. MELCHER ..... A . . .Madison ' sz Chiefs: p LETTERS AND' SCIENCE ' Alpha Tau Omega: Prom Committee: University Circus: Military Ball Committee: Service SevergMonths. ANN LOUISE MENDENHALL . . . . Dayion, Ohio LGAndy!5 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ohio Wesleyan University 2. . . , Thesis--A Study of Child Planning Organizations of Wisconsin with a Comparison of Minimum Standards as Developed in Other States. Page One. Hundred and Tufenlv-Seven Page One 1 I i , Hundred and Tuienly-Eighl CATHERINE MENDENHALL ...... l Sheldon, I ll, Katie Dizzy LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Gammag Frances Shimer 1: Union Vodvil 2g Prom Program Committee 35 Pan-Hellenic 3. IL. Thesis-The Influence of Industrial Revolution on Nineteenth Century Fiction. WILLIAM MILLER MERCER . . . .Delavan AKBIZZZSS PHARMACY Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Psig Freshmen .Baseball gaptaing Freshman Wrestling Squadg Varsity Wrestling eam. . Thesis-The Organic Estus of Guaiacol. LEO JOSEPH MERICEL ..... . . A ppleion Merk COMMERCE Delta Chig German Club 3g 1923 Badger Staffg Service I Nine Months. CHARLES H. MERRIBIAN ...... . .Beloit iGRed97 CHEMICAL ENGINEER Beta Theta Pig Beloit 2, 3, Service Nineteen Months . DALE MERRICK ,......... .Eldora, Iowa COMMERCE Delta Upsilong Bela Gamma Sigma: Iron Cross: Track 2, 3, 4-5 General Chairman 1922 Prom: Union Board 2, 3, 43 Athletic Board 4g Production Manager 1921 Union Vodvilg White Spadesg Student Senate 3. FRIEDA A. MEYER .......... Milwaukee Frilz LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milxvaukee Normalg Secretary International Club: Social Science Clubg German Club. Thesis-Social Problems in Hauptmannls Dramas. HELEN A. NIEYERS .......... Evansville LETTERS AND SCIENCE Rockford lg NV. A. A. 3, 45 Outing Club 2, 33 Physical Education Club 2, 3, fl: Archery Honors 3. Thesis-A Study cf Vital Capacities. GORDON SUMNER NIEYRICK .... . Dladison sl Gordyx s ELECTRICAL 'ENGINEERING Acaciag Square Clubg A. I. E. E.g A. A. E.: Union Mem- orial. CARLENA J ANE BKIICHAELIS ....... Kenosha LETTERS AND SCIENCE Marietta College. Ohio, lg Milwaukee Normal 2. Thesis-The Orienting Influence ol' the Tertiary Butyl Group. . . . . . . ...flrkdale CARL FRANCIS MIKKELSON LAW Luther College I, 2, 35 Phi VVisconsin Law Review 2, 3. Delta Phig Student Editor . . . . . .Jlladison ADELAIDE H. MILLER . . . LETTERS AND SCIENCE NVhitewaber Normal 1: W. A. A. 2. 3, 1Lg Bowling 2, Indoor Baseball 3: Archery 35 Varsity 33 Archery Honors 33 Hockey 113 W Wearerg Outing Club 3. 4: Physical Education Club Board Atg Lutheran Student Cabinetg Secretary 3g Campus Religious Council 33 Religious Conference Committee 3. Thesis-A Study in Vital Capacities. BIRNEY FRANK MILLER ....... Omaha, Neb. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Phig University Jamboree 2, 39 'Chairman Refresh- ments 35 Assistant Circulation Manager 1921 Badgerg Activities Editor 1922 Badger: Wisconsin Engineer Staff' 2, 35 Mining Club 1, 29 Athenae 1, 2. 3: Vice- Presidenl. 35 Sophomore Semi-Public Debateg Y. M. C. A. Junior Council 3g Cabinet 41: Student Senate 35 Chairman Tickets 1922 Prorng Chairman WVays and Means Home-coming 1921. Thesis-Consideration ol' Basal Conglornerates in the Marine Sediments of the Pre-Cambrian in North Amer- 1021. 'EVA NIILLER . . . . . .Nlilwaukee REU., LE'l l'EIiS AND SCIENCE Milxvaiikee Nqrmal I. Thesis-Juvenile Courls and ProliaLion. FRANCIS CHARLES IVIILLER . . . Lafayeile,Ind. Fran AGRICULTURE Della Tau Della: Purdue 1. EZ. IVIQAUDE NIILDIKED NIILLER . . . Markesan Mz'lIie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Thela: Milwaukee-Downer lg 'l'well'Lh Night: Union Voflvil VI. OMAR B. IVIILLER .,..... . .1WaniZow0c COMMERCE CYRIIS BERTRANIJ NIINSI-IALL . . .Lo.sAngeles, Cal. ..Cy,, COIVIIVIEHCE Ili Kappa Alphag Edwin Booth: Senior Class Play 23 Service FourLeen Monlhs. .IESSIE NIARIE IXIITCHELL ........ Nladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit 2. 3: Y. W. C. A. Pageant. ANN AGNES MLSNA ........... Cushion LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ouling Club 31 Badger AdverLisirIg Stall' -I-g S. G. A. Board -I. ARTHUR HENRY WIOECK . . . Milwaukee Ari ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Hesperia. . IVILLIAM FREDERICK IVIOEHLMAN .... Madisorz 6lBill71 CIVIL ENGINEERING ' Triangle: A. S. C. E.: A. A. E.: Expositign. Thesis-A Gravity Water Supply for Dunkirk. New York. ERNST JOHN IVIOHR ..... .... M ilwaukee ..Dmly,, ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Theta Xig Eta Kappa Nu: Secretary 43 A. I. E. E.: iguarfe Cluhg Electrical Show 1922g.Serviqe Twenty-two out Is. V . . REINHOLD MOLZOW ..... . .Beaver Dam LAW Lawrence 1. JOHN FRANK MOON ...... . . Rosendaie MEDICINE Thesis-Determination of' the Accuracy of Pignet's Method of Determining the Muscle Efficleney ol' Man. Page One Hundred and Twmzly-Nirze Page Une Hundred and Thirty PARRY H. MOON ............ Madison ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Tau Beta Pig A. I. E. E. 3, 4g Engineers' Club 3, 43 Engineers' Minstrels 2. , A DOUGLAS MCCORD MOORHEAD . Moorheadville, Pa. . D0lzg AGRICULTURE Alpha Gamma Rhog Cornell 1, 2g Saddle and Sirloing, Grafters' Cluhg Track 3g Varsity Cross-Country 44, Varsity Track 4. V, ' i tl FRED .T AMES MOREAU .... . . Cosco ' HF. J. NORMAL COURSE i . Square Club. ' '- Thesis-Connecticut Highway Traffic Census 1921. AILEEN E. MORGAN ........... Wilmot LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit 1: Carroll 2: Outing Club: Y. C. A. Thesis-The Glass Bottle Blowers' Association. RUTH ELIZABETH NIORGAN . . . .Wilmot 44Dint.y75 A LETTERS AND SCIENCE 4 Beloit 13 Carroll 25 Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4-g Outing Club 3, 4-g S. G. A. Board 4-. ESTHER MARY MORRASY ........ Sliemeld MESH LETTERS AND SCIENCE Principia 1. 23 Outing Club 43 Y. W. C. A. 3, 4-. Thesis-A Criticism Of Kipling's Books for Young People. GERTRUDE LENORE lVIORRIS ....... Cambria LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ripon 1, 23 Y. W. C. A. Board 4. Thesis-The Administration ol' Governor Davidson ol' Wisconsin. . BEATRICE G. MORSE .... . .Fond du Lac ' uBeHyn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega, Grafton Hall lg S. G. A. Board 2. 33 Outing Club. Thesis-Shop Rule in the Dress and 'VVnist Industry. CURTIS BENEDICT MORLSELL . . .Milwaukee i'Curt LAW Phi Kappa Ilsig Phi Delta Phi. ANNIE ELIZABETH MORTON ........ Omro JO URNALISM Oshkosh Normal 1, 21 Outing Club, Choral Union. Thesis-Censorship Ol' the Press Through lhe Alien and Sedition Laws. SYBIL CLAIRE NIOSSMAN .... Huntington, W. Va. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Deltag Goucher College, Baltimore l, 2, Outing Cluhg Arts and Crafts: Secretary Southern Club. Thesis-Annotated Catalogue of Illustrations of the Mammalian Skeleton. MARY ELIZABETH MOULD .... Siozir City, Iowa JOURNALISM Sigma Kappag Grinnell l, 23 Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis-Muck-Raking in Modern Newspapers. NVILLIAM J. MOUNTIN ....... . Harlford Bill LETTERS AND SCIENCE Tau Kappa Epsilong ExposiLiong Hesperia. :l'hesls-Reduction Temperatures of Barium Sulphate Ill Atmospheres ol' CO2, HQ, CO, and C1,, and Loss in Weight at High Temperatures. EARL ROBERT MOXON ...... . Stevens Poinl eaMozn L CIVIL ENGINEERING , :Stevens Point Normal lg Square Club. Fhesis-The Design ol' a Reinforced Concrete Building. GUsTAv G. MLTELLER ...... . . Priricelon , :rGuS1s LETTERS AND SCIENCE Gamma Tau Bela. Thesis-Unusual Breaks of Long Bones. IELIZA BETH MARY MULROONEY .... .Bloomington RICH Bessie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Racial Elements of the American Frontier. ARD CHARLES MUNKNVITZ . . .Edgar Dick AGRICULTURE Farm House: River Falls Normal 15 Treasurer Agric. Triangleg Saddle and Sirloin: Inlcrnational Club: National Dairy Judging Team: Gun and Bladeg Country Magazine Stall. DONALD BATES MURPHY ....... Peoria, Ill. WILLIAM JOHN MURPHY . . RICH nD0nn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Bradley Polytechnic Institute 1: Square ClubgAdveztis- ing Manager 1921 Badger: Advertising Clubg Assistant Chairman Men's Arrangements 1922 Promq Chairman 1921 Homecoming Feature Cardinalg Tennis 3gTennis Club: Cardinal 3, 47 Prf-ss Club. Thesis-Municipal Bonds in Wisconsin. . .Clinlon Bill MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta. I Thesis-Hydrocephalitic Skull as Compared with Normal. ARD MICHAEL NASH. . . . .Madison Dick,' COMMERCE SEYMOUR CHARLES NASON ..... Kenilworlli, I ll. W CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Dell.a Upsilong Manager W Cross-Country 1921. GORDON EDWARD NELSON .... . . . .Superior Gandy' ' ' .LETTERS AND SCIENCE H Acaciag Freshman Football C23 W'Football 3, 45 Prom Finance Committee 3g Exposition Committee 3g Pres- ident Masonic Cluh 33 Y. M. C. A. Deputatlon Team. Thesis-Migratory Labor Cycles. LAURA M. NELSON .......... M ilwaakee LETTERS AND SCIENCE- Minnesota 1, 2. ' 1 Thesis-A Reconstruction Problem In Vertebrate Embryology. JOHN LEONARD NESBITT . . . . . Oxford 6'Laird LAW Carroll College 1, 2. l 1 . Page One Hundred and Thirly-One Page fjlll' Ilundrerl and 7',lil'fAV-1'll!lI AVILLIAM Bowman IVEWING ,.,. .Appleton Bill CIVIL ENGINEERING Lawrence 1. 25 A. S. C, E. 3, fl-. lhcszs-A Study of Coellicicnts ol' Triangular VVeirs of Vurmus Angles. VEHNA LOUISE NEWSOME .....,. . Waupaca LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oshkosh Normal, 1, 25 ,l'yLhia, Y. VV. C. A. Bm'N.1U1,v H. NISSEN .,... . . Madison .. Bryn., CHEMISTRY Superior Normal 1, 25 Chcmislry Club: Philomul.hia5 University Exposilion Commil.l.eo. N Thesis-Tho Shudy ol' Cnl.alysis in Lho Prepurzuion ol' Acclnls. VERA ,ALBEll'l'A NODINE . ..... Walerloo. Ind. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oberlin College 1, 2. Thesis-Browning's Optimism. ISIKEDEIKICK AVILLIA M NOL1'E . . . . . Wauwalosa LL, ' 7? F rLlz ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Acacia: Tau Beta Pig E111 Kappa Nu: Scabhurd and Bladci Square Clubg Polygong F:xc:ull.y Commilmr: 2. 3: Wisconsin Engineer Slnfl' I. 22. 3: Engineers' Club: , N , . ,, . . A. I. IL. In.: R. O. F. C.: IJIGIIICIHUII l. -2 Czxptzun J, il. PIIILLIP IJICKFZRING NOLTE . . . . Wauuuzlosa Phil COMMERCE Thom Dr-lLa Chi: Secrelnry Sophomore Commission: Orchestra l, 25 Sophomore FooLball 25 Haresfoot Pro- duction 3. 45 Haresfool. Club 3. 45 ,Prom Committeeg Homecoming Committee -I-5 Union Vodvil Orchestra 4. THOMAS Non BERG ...... Chrisliania, Norway MECHANICAL ENGINEERING EINAR AUGUST NORDSTEDT ..... . M ilwaukee MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Square Cluhg A. A. A. I. E. E..g Service. LAWRENCE EVEHETT NOREM . . . Milwaukee SL LETTERS AND SCIENCE' Alpha Tau Omega5 Skull and Crescent5 Edwin Booth 2, 3, 45 President 3,5 Council of Forty 3, 45 Track 253,45 Varsity Circus 2. ' - ALICE- ELIZA BETH Qmuss . . , . Qqnlon, Ohio S0akey'i 7 PHYSICAL EDUCATION Kappa D'elta:'WeStern' College 1, 2'2UClfUClbl8Q A. A.5 Physical 'Educalion Club5 Presideint 45 Outing Club: Bpard Member' 35 Dolphin Clubg Red. Cross Life Saving Ccrpsg W Wearerg Swimming,Honors,5 Track Team 3: Hockey Team 4-. , f . FLORENCE MILROY O,-BOYLE . . b. ',Ifa1Lkaun.a Floss V PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC Alpha Gamma Phig Outing Cluhg Caslalizli Glee Club? Choral Union: Lawrence College 2. LOUIS JOSEPH O,BRIEN ....... Danville, lilll COMMERCE Illinois 1. l i I I I l 1 1 l l Pnyr' One llunclred and Thi:-ly-Three Page One Hundreuf and Thirly-Four i' VVILLIAM D. O,CONNOR. . . . . .Hancock nDud,, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Pi Tau Sigmag Scabbard and Bladeg A. S. M. E., U. Engineers' Club, Square Club, Rifle Team 3, 4g Captain Rifle Teamflg Captain Cadet Corpsg Engineers' Mins Lrels. DOROTHY OECHSNER . ..... New Orleans, La. LETTERS AND SCIENCE - Pi Beta Phig Blue Dragong Entered as Junior from Newj comb College, New Orleansg Finance Committee Blue Dragon: Hockey Squad 4g Union Memorial Drive Lt, Outing Clubg Union Vaudeville 4. LORENA E. OESTREICH ....... New London Henan . HOME ECONOMICS Achothg Euthenics I, 2, 3. 4-g Castalia I, 25 Connery Magazine Stall' fig Home Economics Editor LL-3 Junior Prom Committeej GUY EDWARD OHLSON. . . . . La Crosse Holes MEDICINE Thesis-The Study of Urine and Blood Analysis in Experimental Pneumonia. JAMES TIMOTHY O,HORA . .A . Nlazomanie Jimmie LETTERS AND SCIENCE MEDIC Entered as Freshman from George Washington Uni- versity, Gun and Blade Club. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. MARGARET IVIARY 0,KEEFE . . . . . Waunakee 4fMudqe,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pythia 2, 3, 415 Outing Club 2, 3: Spanish Club Al-: German Club 4. Thesis-The Correlation ol' the Fairy Tale to the Ballad. MARY CATHERINE O,LEARY ...... A p plelon HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Club. Thesis-Problems in Textile Manixfacture. GOLDIE RAYMOND OLSON , .... Preslon. M inn. H Olyn ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Lambda Chi Alpha, Square Club. MILDRID KAREN OLSON ........ lwadison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omegag Clef Club: Associate Member 1: IVho's VVho ZZ: Chemistry Club 2, 3. 43 Catalytic Agent 33 Outing Club 4-. Thesis-The Salicylales ol' the Rare Metals. VALERIE E. OLSON . . .' ...... . .Racine , asvralsv LETTERS AND SCIENCE Badger Stal? 2: Classical Club: Keystone -lg Ircsidcnl Chadbourne Hall: Memorial Union 4. Thesis-Historical Significance of the Aeneid. J CHARLOTTE MARY OZMALLEY ...... Jlladison ..T0d,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Kappa, Hockey lg Archery 1: French Club 1: Crucible 3, 411, Secretary 33 Pythia 2, 3, f-lg Keeper ol' Archives 41. 'I'hesis-Translation ol' Emil Fabrels L'Argent. PHILIP EIDWARD O'NEII. . . . Cloquefle, M inn. asTipss LETTERS AN D SCIENCE Phi Delta Thetag Badger 33 Sophomore Traditions Committee 2: Chairman Sophomore Dance Committee: Sophomore Commission 2g Homecoming Committee 3, fl-z University Exposition 35 Duluth Regatta Committeeg Assistant Chairman 3: Interscholastio Basketball Tournament Committee 3: Pipe Commiuee 25 Finance Committee lg Cardinal 44. Thesis-The Economic Possibilities ol' Retaining Cut- over Timber Lands for the Purpose of Reforestntion. Louis T HEODORE OPGENORTH . . . . Kewaskum ..Oppie,, AGRICULTURE ROY BAzANOU1'rHORMOND . . . .Brookjield Squeak COMMERCE Alpha Pi Della: American Legion. Thesis-Sou th America. SOPHIA KELLER ORMOND ....... M ilwaukee ..Happy,, HOME ECONOMICS Eulhenics Club 2 3 44' S. G. A. Board 3' Bud er Stali' 3' 1 I v - 3 v American Legion 3, 4-. RIOAROO MAGLANOC ORTEGA . Tarlac Tarloe, P. I. Dick', LETTERS AND SCIENCE University of the Philippines 1, 2, Cosmopolitan Club: Filipino Badger Club. 'rhQSiS1TilG Task ol' I1 Supervising Teacher in the Phil- xppmes. GEORGE CARL ORVIS ..... . . Waukesha Duke COMMEHCIS Carroll College l, 2. CHANDLER OSBORN ..... . . Oshkosh Chan LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beta Theta Pig Freshman Gym Squadg Varsity Gym 2. Athenae l, 2, 3, 45 Sophomore Semi-Public Debate: Gamma Sigmag Haresfoot Production 33 Prom Com- milleeg Artusg Venetian Night Committee. CARROLL WILCOX OSGOOD . . . . Brodlzearl MEDICINE Band 1, 2, 3, 45 Hesperia 2, 33 Sophomore Honorsg Phi Chi, Sigma Sigma. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. I'IANS W. OTT ......... . . Walerlown COMMERCE Northwestern 1, 2. D.kLIES JOSHUA OYSTER . . . . .Ripon Ginodff ELEGTRICAIL ENGINEERING .Delta Tau Deltag-Ripon 1.3 SOphomore'Football. FREDERICK AUGUST' PABST . . . . . Oconomowoc V :sFred:s i y AGRICULTURE s Chi Psig . Inner Gatef Inter-,Fraternity Conferenbeg V Badger Slri Clubg Memorial Union. FORREST GLENN PADDOCK . . . . Ashion, I ll. Hijack!! COMMERCE Alpha Sigma Phig De Kalb Normal 1:-Star and Arrow, Athletic Boardg Baseball W g Captain 35 Beta Gamma Sigmag Commerce Clubg Square Club, ARNOLD SEAVER PAGE ..... .Kansas Ciiy, Mo. COIVIMERCE ' Missouri 1, 25 Overseas Service ten months. - h Thesis4Sources and Significance of Financial Statistics. 1 I E I I I I I i 1 1 Page One Hundred and Tlzirly-Five r 'uyv 01144 lluullrvd and 7'hir'I4v-Si.r 'ICDNA C. l, ALIQc:11r5lc. ....... . .Cliaseburg Polly HOMIC ECONOMICS . Lu Crosse Normal I,, 25 liulhf-zniczs Clubg Cusmliug German Cllulxg Choral Union. 1 'l'lir:siss-Mimm: Shudy ol' I'iC!llf-1if5SiSl,iIlg Bzlchcrizx. CSAIL WESIAEY 'PALMER ......... Madison ELliC'l'lllCAL ENGI NEISHING Tjzufiliirrclllxrirl Bludcg lixposihionq linggirioors' Miuslrclsg GENIsv1av'ia: .Am.YsLE PALMER , . . Uolunzbus Germ CI-IEMISTHY Ac:l'1ol.hq Amoricun Chomioul Socichy fig Chemistry Club 2, IS, fly: Recorder ol' Dum 41. Thesis-A Comparison of Lho Luborulory Methods for Llu: Prr:pnr:1l,ion of Sacchurin Clionzoio Sulphiuiclcj Gisonmfz .MACDCJNAIiIJ I-'Amcmn . . . SI. Louis, Mo. I.li'l l'El'iS AND SCIENCE 'Phi Gummu Dollug Badger Bnglrd 3: Summer Curdinul Sluli' Elg Dcuornlion Clluirmun 1922 Promg Tennis Cluhg Service U. S. N. Tlursis-Au Analysis Ol' Huilroud Buying 1890-1920. CAHYI. 'MUCOY PAIUUNSON . . . Wladison Porleie HOME IECONONLICS Kuppu Kappa Gmnrnng MorI,ur llourdq Cnrzlinul Ilourcl 3, 45 A- C. F. Board 2, Sl: Country Muguzinn 33 Frrwslimun Commission PrnsiclunI,g Sopliovrirwo Commission. 'l'hcsis-The Hole ol' Dielmics in Spmscli Corror:Livn Crises. Cinelli. PAUL PARSONS . . . . .hyaarlu iles lEl.ISC'l'RlCAL ENGINEICIXING Engineers' Clubg A. I. E. li. LIfIS'l'ER A. PAsr.:u ...... . .Mzflwaukec Las Ll'i'l I'lfIllS AND SCIENCE Dolln Upsilon. Thesis-A Hislory ul' Ilir: Orders ol' Liu: lurluslriul Com- mission. PLAY LAW1u1:Nor: PAULUS . . . fVIl'1llll1ll.k0f? ' 'J iggerx' ' IGLEC'l'l'llCAL ENGINEERING Sigmu Phi Epsilon: ICLH Kuppu Nug Tuu Bolu Pig Vursily Swimming 2, 3, 'L' ' WILFRE,lIJ GIJADS'F0NE PAYNE . . . Wauwalosa HDOCH LE'l l'EHS AND SCIENCE Milwuukec Normal 1. Thesis -George SUIIUIYIIIIIIVS Slnndnrds ol' I.il.urury Crilioism. l3lf:N.iAMIN Novus Pl3Ac:oc1K . . . .l3igl3r'nr1 lien, AGlllCUL'l'Ul'lE Furm ,llousigg Milwuukor: Nprmul I: Sxuldlg und-Sirloin E 4-5 PI'08l!l.lEIll.il-1 Iuuwrnulriouul Clulr fly ISXDU?-lllfl0ll 35 nion Mcmoria IL. Donor:-n' Louxsis PEARSON Upper Montclair, N. JV. l.I1I'l l'ERS AND SCIENCE Vussur Collogug Gummu Phi Bom. Tluwsis-l'sychologic:nl Sludy ol' Will 'l'ornporzimmml.. IAALPII J. P1cAns-10N ...... . .fi'If1.fll'SOIl COM Nl IGIKCE Squurnz Clulmg Service ll. S. N. Sovon Monblm. W ILLIAM SM11'H PEEBLES .... Lawrenceville, Va. . Bill COM MEHCE Randolph-Macon College 1: Southern Club: Treasurer 33 ASSOQIHUG Advertising Manager Who's Who 2: Cardinal Stall' 3, 4-3 Advertising Club 3, fig Publicity Chairman Charity Ball Mixer. Thesis-Development of Southern Railway Systems. PI-IILIP PEKOFSKY .......... lllilwaukee .. - ,. Phil , CHEMICAL ENGINEERING A. E. Menorah: Chemical Engineers' Clubg Palestine Builders. AGNES T HERESA PELZEI1 . . . . Caslzlon MUSIC SL. Mary's College ll: Glee Club Il: Choral Union 2, 3: Chairman Executive Council 3: Castalia 2, 3, Pnnsis .ALLEN PERKINS . . . Colorado Springs, Colo. GL if Perk LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Bela Phi: Gaucber College 1: Colorado College 2. Thesis-A Study of Thomas I-Iardy's Women Characters. IHENRY BERNARD PERLMAN . , . Madison Hffankn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Hesperia 1, 2: International Club 2: Boxing 2: Exposi- tion 3: Orchestra 1: Menorah 3, -14. Thesis-'I'he Ellcel. of Colloids on Liver Autolysis. IIAROLD WILLIAM PERRIGO .... , Oshkosh MPM., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oshkosh Normal 1. 2. Thesis-Industrial Government in the Chicago Build- ing lndustry. HUBERT LOGAN 'PERRIN . . . . Ashland ..Hub., CHEMISTRY Alpha Sigma I-'hig Football I.2,3: aWn : Chairman Service Committee Exposition: Homecoming Com- mittee: Inlerfraternity Basketball. Thesis-Certain Organic Salts ol' Uranium. ROBERT H. PERRY ....... . llfladison COMMERCE Superior Normal 1. IVAN HUGH PETERMAN .... . . Cecil 64G,yll JOURNALISM Beta Chi Sigma: Wrestling 2, 3, 45 Captain 3, 43 Wu: VV Club 4: Star and Arrow: Sigma Delta Chi: Press Club: International Relations Club: Y. M. C. A. 2. 3. 4: Who's Who Staff: Sergeant-at-arms, Junior Class: University Exposition Committee 3: University Tra- ditions Committee 4: Student Senate 4. Thesis- The Line O'Type or Two by B. L. Tf' DONALD EDWARD PETERS . . .... , Waterloo K4Pele!7 V LETTERS AND SCIENCE-EDUCATION Milwaukee Normal 1: Phi Delta Kappa: Commerce - Grew 1918. FRANK R. PETERSEN . . . . . Berlin Upeliev AGRICULTURE Square Club: Triangle: Saddle and Sirloin: Football, 1914: Baseball 1915: Union Memorial Drive 1921. F, PlALPI-I HENRY' PETERSEN . . . . .Milwaukee Kipeteii COMMERCE Milwaukee Normal 1. 23 Hesperia 1919, 1920. 1921: Censor.Hesperia,1921: Purole and Gold Club. l920.1921S International Relations Club: American Legion. . Thesis-Studies in the Leather Industry in Wisconsin. '51 Pug' One llundrerl and Thi:-ly-Seven Page One Hundred and Thirty-High! DOROTHEA S. PETERSON ........ Stockholm ..D0i,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2: Delta Zeta: Y. W. C. A. 3, 4: Outing Club: S. G. A. Board 4: Thesis-Some Eighteenth Century Influences on Words- wort . LAURA CECELIA PETERSON ....... Slocklzolm E 6 5 5 5 Pele LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2: Delta Zeta: Homecoming Com- mittee fly: Y. W. C. A. 3, 4-. Thesis-The Sense of Justice ol' Thacker:iy's Women. LYNDLE WILSON PETERSON ....... Shawarzo MEDICINE Lawrence College 1, 2: Gamma Tau Beta: Overseas One Year. T hesis-Bony Exostosis. LESTER WILIJIAM PETERSON . Q Leonardsville, N. Y. Pele CHEMISTRY Milton College 1, 2: Delta Sigma Phi: Phi Kappa Phi: Phi Lamda Upsilon: Gun and Blade: Chemistry Club: Service One Year and Eight Months. , Thesis-Reactions ol' Vinyl Bromide. OSCAR PFEFFER ........... Illilwaukee froze: . MINING ENGINEERING U. W. Mining Club: Secretary-Treasurer 3: A. I. M. E.: A. A. E.: Captain R. O. T. C. WINFORD WALTER GREILING ...... Green Bay LLWin77 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Triangle: A. S. M. E.: Square Club. RUTH ADALINE PEEIFER ..... Columbus, Kan. l.RlLfuSu HOME ECONOMICS Stale Manual Training Normal, Pittsburg, Kansas, 1, 2: Outing Club 3: Euthenics 3. 4. Thesis-History of Infanl. Welfare Movement. DOROTHY A. PFLUEGNER. . . . . .Milwaukee ADDI., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Gamma Della: Clel' Club: Glee Club: Y.W.C. A. Board: Junior Tennis Team. Thesis-L'Epervier. ' HARRY ALEXANDER PHILLIPS . . . Evanslon, I II. ..Hap., MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Sigma Nu: Inner Gate: A. S. M. E.: Captain Cadet Corps 1: Chairman 1922 Pre-Prom Dance: Wisconsin Engineer 3, 4: Wisconsin Flyers' Club: Service Ten Months. LYLE GRAHAM PHILLIPS . . . . . .Madison LSDOCH MEDICINE Senior Class President: Medical School 1921-1922: Zeta Sl. Thesis-Determination ol' Blood Volume Changes in Pneumonia. ELIZABETH PICKERING .... . . Madison I ..BeUy,, CHEMISTRY Achothg Phi Beta Kappa: W. A. A. Pin Wearer: 'Track 2, 3: Chemistry Club: Vice-President 4. Thesis--Derivalsions of 9 C105 Phenanthridone. IYIELVIN CHARLES PIERCE ....... La Cr-ogse Fa! LETTERS AND SCIENCE Tau Kappa Epsilon: La Crosse Normal 1, 2: Band LL: Engineers' Minstrels 3. Thesis-The Position ol' the Dominions in the British Empire. I'I.EmsER'r WILLIAM IDIES . . . . Sawyer K appa 6'Herb PHARMACY Psi. Thesis-M ilk of Mugnesizx. M Anrrm M AY PINNEY . . . . . SlzirgeonBay Mari LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal I, 21 Eutllcuics Club: Y. W. C. A. IKENE WENTWORTH PINTO ....,.. Zlfadisorz, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Northwestern 1: Gun and Blade. Thesis-American Policy ol' Lhc Caribbean: Cuba. GENEVIEVE A. POHLE ....... . Jlfladison, i'Doll.v LETTERS AND SCIENCE Arts :ind Crafts Club. 'l'hesis-Dziudct. EARL JOSEPH 'IJOKORNY .... . . Racine K appu PHARMACY Psi. Thesis-Halidcs ol' Guuiacol. SETH NVHITELY POLLARD . . . . ,Lannon LAW Phi Dc1l.u Phig Athenue. J ESSE M. PooLE ....... . .Slziocion Chawley PHARMACY Kappa Psig Square Cluh. Thesis-Chaulmoogra Oilg Its Treatment iu Leprosy. MQARGAREIT ISABEL POPE ........ Pewaukee Maggie Pop - Q LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-American Humorists of the Pre-Civil VVar Period in their Relation to Contemporary Thought. ANNA IVIAUDE PORTER ........ .Evansville LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit Ig Choral Unioug Outing Club. v . u Thesis-Comparison' of Accident Experience of Minors 'and Adults. CATHERINE ALICE PORTER ..... . .llfadison csKaty1a A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Stevenson's Appeal to the Child Mind. LEO J AMES POHTMAN .... . Ladysmith 5 Y 7 AGRICULTURE ESTHER V IOLA PoT'rs .......... flladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloit 1, 2g Student Volunteer 3, 45 National Student, Volunteer Council 3. 4. . Thesis-Institutional Treatment. ol' Lhe Delinquent Girl. Puge 0neVHundred and Thirly-Nine Page One l Hundred and Forty I MILTON ALDEN POWERS . . . .Cudahy Milt MECHANICAL ENGINEERING . A. S. M. 3, 4: Engineers' Club 3. 4: President 4: Chair- man Engineers' Parade 4: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3: Polygon 3, 4. ERNVIN JOSEPH PRESSER .... . .Milwaukee NEW.. COMMERCE Milwaukee .Normal 2: Y. M. C. A. Americanization Work: Service Twenty-two Months. Thesis-Financing Foreign Trade. EDWVARD ERNEST PRICE ..... . .Mansion J AME REG1 . ..Ed,, AGRICULTURE Alpha Zeta: Farm House: Agricultural Literary Society I, 2, 3. 4: Secretary 2: President. 41: Saddle and Sirloin 2, 3. 4: American Association of Agricultural Engineers 3. 4: A. C. F. Board 4. ' s ROBERTSON PRICE ....... Milwaukee iGJim77 V CIVIL ENGINEERING Triangle: Milwaukee Normal 1. 2: Engineers' Minstrels: Exposition Chairman: Intercollegiate Football: Captain Engineers' Team: A. S. C. E Publicity Manager 3: Vice- President 4: A. A. E.: Square'Cluh: Engineers' Parade: 1921 Homecoming Bonfire Committee: Glee Club. Thesis-The Effect. of Delay in Placing on the Strength of Concrete. NALD JOHN PRICE . . . . .Prescott CSBWS7 PHARMACY Powers Pharmaceutical Society: Glee Club. 'Fhwis-Trichiornes ol' the Ollicial Plants ol' the United States Pharmacopoeia. G VVILYN F. PRIDEAUX ......... Dodgeville i'Prid ELEc'rR1cAL ENGINEERING Boxing 1: Varsity VVreslling Squad 2. 3. L1-: A. I. E. E.: A. A. E. ELRIER CLARENCE PRIENVE .... 0rarzge1t1fIIe.IIl. J EAN ..Hed,, AGRICULTURE Theta Chi: Country Life Club 1. 2. 3: Live Stock Club 2, 3: Saddle and Sirloin bl-: Service Seventeen Months. TREZONA PRINCE ..... . Coleraine, Minn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achothl Eveleth Junior College 1. 2: WILIJIAIVI HENRY PURNELL . . Kenoslza uBiuu LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Gamma Della: Skull and Crescent: Harcsloot Club 2: President 3. 4: Prom Committee 3: Homecoming Committee 3: Cardinal Stall' 4. Thesis-The Stage Society, Inc. 1904. IERNEST N. PUSEY ......... . Barlles. Ky. AGRICULTURE Graflers, Club: Vllestern Kentucky Normal l. 2. ,JERRY PIERMAN QUAM ..... . . Slouglzlon K'.lerernial1 COMMERCE FRIE Tau Kappa Epsilon: Hesperia 1, 2: Secretary 1: Fresh- man and So homore Debates: Commerce Club L1-: 1921 Badger Stag: Commerce Magazine 1, 2: Circulation Manager 3: Assistant Business Manager 4. Thesis-Scientific Management. DATIELENE RADKE. . . X ..... Nkillsville Fr1flzy 'LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal l. 2. I - Thesis-The Child in American Fiction. QHARMON MONIXOE RADLEY ....... Wild Rose CIVIL ENGINEERING Thesis-'l'he Coellicients ol' Discharge ol' 'Painter Gates. HELEN Doms PAALL .... . . Toledo, Ohio .rpdeu LETTERS AND SCIENCE Normal College ol' the American Gymnastic Union 1, 23 A. ilioarclg Outing Clubg Baseball 35 Hockey 3. lhesis-'1 he Cleveland Plain Dealer in Relation LO the Associated Press. Nl ARGARET HAMSEY ..... . .Bzzrlinglon .Marg I-IOME ECONOMICS Alpha Omicron Pig Rockford 1: Milwaukee-Downer 25 Senior Swimming Team. Thesis-Symbolism Among thc American Inrlians-Its Use and Development. EUGENE JOSEPH RANKINX .... . . Applwlon, tlqeneif AGI-UOULTUHE I Freshman Footbullg Varsity Football 2, 3. Thesis-Growing ol' Wheat Seedlings in Solutions Renewed al. Various Rates to Determine Vtlhich Rate Gives the lictler Results. Vn.As LENOR RASNIUSSEN . . . Ocononzowoc LANV Snarelary-Treasurer Law School Association. IIWINO JULIUS RAU ..... . , Milwazileee Ulm.. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineering Society 2. 3, fl. DOROTHY M ARGARET RAY ..... . . Nladison, .. ,, Dol LETTERS AND SCIENCE Junior Mathematics Clubg German Clubq Newman Club. Thesis-Foundation Ol Geometry. Lois WVASSON RAYMOND ....... Troy, N. Y. HOME ECONOMICS V Omioron Nu: Euthenics Club: Treasurer 35 S. G. A. Council fl-: Y. W. C. A. 1. 2, 3, 4-3 Cabinet Council 35 Outing Club 2, 3. fl-g .Pin Wearen-5 Keystone. ROY W. REDIN ........ Y . 1 .R0akford,Ill. MINING ENGINEERING Theta Xig 1921 and 1922 Badger Staffs: 1922 Prom Supper Coinmittceg Polygon 3, 4,3 19,20 Engineers' Min- strelsg Service -Seventeen Months. -' RUTH ELIZABETH Rein . .V . . .V .... .Hurley LETTERS AND SCIENCE Freshman and Sophomore Commissionsg Sophomore 'Class Secretary: Census Chairman S. G. 1A.g Keystoneg , A. A.g Ghairniau Prom Conixiiittee 1921. Thesis-The Wisconsin Federation of Labor. LUCILLE AGNES REILLY . . I . . . Fond du Lac I ss-Ceilvs 1 Y LETTERS' 'NND SCIENCE, Oshkosh Normal I, 25 Junior Volley Ball? Basketball Lllg Catholic Students Association 3, 4-g' Vice-President mtg Women's Medical Association 4-g W. A. A. 4. VIVIAN MARY BEINERTSON . . . Milwaukee Aviv., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Washington Star in Relation to the Assn- ciated Press. Page One Hundred and Farly-One I Page One Hundred and Forly- Two JOHN JUERGEN REINKING ........ Zlfladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Psi Upsilong Haresfoot Play 2. Thesis-The Determinants of Sucrose in the Presence of Reducing Sugars. VVILLARD J AMES RENDALI, .... Des Moines, Iowa COMMERCE Sigma Phig Grinnell 13 Skull and Crescenlg Business Manager Octopus 2,'3g Business Manager Literuy' Magazine 3, 43 Commerce Cluhg Advertising Cluhf' OLIVERWENDELL REWEY . . . j'Madison Dink', I. f AGRICULTURE Y l Theta Delta Chig Agricultural Literary Societyg Saddle? and Sirloin, Press Clubg Country Magazinegf' Cross Country Squad. CAROLYN MARGARET RICHARDSON' .... Delavan G 5 ! 7 Cal COMMERCE WOIHCHQS Commerce Club. N ELS CORNELIUS RICHARDSON . . Sioux Falls, S. D. nRich,, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Theta Xig South Dakota Club, A. S. M. E. Treasurer 43 Pi Tau Sigma. CHARLES FREDERIC RAND RICHTER . . Milwaukee Carl MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Chi Psi: Kappa Beta Phig Inner Gate: Haresfootg Swimming Team 1917. IVIARY VIRGINIA ROACH .... M inneapol is, Minn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theta, Minnesota lg Vice-President W. A. Ag Hockey 2, 3, 4: Basketball 2, 35 Baseball 2, 35 HW VK earer. GARRET D. ROBAR ......... Aurelia, Iowa ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Iowa Clubg A. I. E. E.g A. A. E. CAROL A. ROBERTS .......... Wild Rose ' fB0b' ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Deltag Oshkosh Normal 1, 25 1922 Badger Slaffg Octopus. Thesis-Comparative Governments of Australia. HELEN HAYNES ROBERTS . . . . Winona, Minn. Skinny,' MUSIC Delta Gamma. Thesis-Music Memory Contest. RICHARD ALEXANDER ROBERTS . . . ..Dick,, COMMERCE Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Class Committees 1, 2, 35 Fresh- man Baseballg Union Memorial Committee .Clzicago, III. MARTIN RINDLAUB ROBERTSON ..,.. Platteville G6B0b73 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Platteville Normal. IIELEN LOUISE ROCK .....,.... Superior LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis--The Philosophical Content of Wordsworth's Poetry. KATHERINE EDITH ROCKWELL .... . Oshkosh JOURNALISM Dclta Gamma: Theta Sigma Phi: Cardinal 3, fl-1 Prom Comrmttccg Exposition 3: Homecoming 3. 'FIlCSISTI'IUll'lilIl Interest Stories in the New York Sun. i l?IlED WIIJLIANI ROEWEKAMP . . . Oshkosh Fritz AGRICULTURE Lambda Chi Alpha: Square Club 3, fig Agriculture Crew 21 Graflers' Club 3, 11-3 President. 4. IVIAURICE ROGA'l'Z ...... . . Niagara NMOS? PHARMACY Murquetle 1, 2. Thesis--Liquor Culcis. ANTHONY FERDINAND ROHLFING . . . Milwaukee Tonvi' CIVIL ENGINEERING - A. S. C. E.: Sophomore Football. Theiss-The Ellecl. of Delay on the Strength of Concrete. RUTH EWIANGELINE ROMIG ....... . Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Outing Club, Board 2: Chairman Music Memory Con- Campus Religious Council, Physical Education u . Thesis-The Louisville Herald in Relation to the Associated Press. BERTHA ELIZABETH HOSE . . . .RossvilIe, Ind. Bunny LETTERS AND SCIENCE Purdue 1, Physical Education Club 2, 3, 4g S. G. A. Board 3, Pythia 3, 4. Thesis-Reptiles of Wisconsin. KATHERINE ROSENBERRY ....... Madison LETTERS AND ,SCIENCE ALMA IVIARIE ROTH ......... Fowler, I nfl. HOME ECONOMICS St. Mary'sICol1ege 1, 2. Thesis-Hot School Lunches. DORIS MARIE ROUNSEVIIQLE ..... Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence 1, 25 S. G. A. Board, Outing Club. OLAF N. ROVE ............ Milwaukee if Oliw CIVIL ENGINEERING , Hesperia 1, 23 Secretary 23 U. Wi. E. 1. 2, 3, Vive- President 4, A. A. E. 3, 45 Vice-President. 3, President 4-g Polygon 3, 4g Wisconsin Engineer 3, 4. DAVID HAND ROWLAND . . . . Racine Dave', J OURNALISM ' Alpha Delta Phig Skull and Crescent: Sophomore Ecot- ballg Press Club 3,4g Octopus Staff 3,4-3 Arts and Cralis 2. Thesis-The Local News Policy of the Kansas City Star. i l I I I 1 i 4 I I I I Page One Hundred and For ly- Three Page One Hundred and Forty-Four CLARA CORA RUEDEBUSCH . . . . Magfville Bummie', LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence 1, IZ, Junior Tennis Team: Championship Tennis Team 1921, Spanish Club 3, 4-. Thesis-An English Rendition of Fabre's Cesar Birot- teau. JOHN EMIL RUEDY ....... . .Bangor Jack AGRICULTURE Agricultural Triangle 1, 2. CLARENCE AMIL RUFE ...... . . Gilmanlon AGRICULTURE . HERNIAN C. RUNGE .......... Sheboygan ' LAW Phi Alpha Deltag Engineers' Crew 1914-3 Law School Association: Red Arrow, SquareIClubg Gun and Blade, Service Three Years. CHARLES VV. RUSSELL . ..... .Flan.dreau, S. D. g'Chuck LETTERS AND SCIENCE Theta Delta Chi. Thesis-Increment of Land Values and Zone of In- creased Value oi' Land Adjacent 'to the Improved Highway. GEORGE PARKER ITYAN ...... , . . Madison CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Alpha Chi Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, Chemical Eilgineering Society 3, 45 Engineers' Minstrels 35 Student Faculty Committee 4. INTILDRED ELIZABETH RYAN . . . . llladison I NPe!l!lYH COMMERCE Lawrence 1: 1921 Badger Staff, Cardinal 2: NVomen's Commerce Club 3, 4. PATRICK HENRY RYAN . . . . Sheboygan Pai COMMERCE STANLEY MARTIN RYAN . . . . Janesvz'lIe Sian LAW Dubuque College 13 Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Phig Band 2, 3, At. JOHN Rvmonn . . . , . . .Lew1Ts. S. D. Jack LETTERS AN D SCIENCE Band 1, 2, 3, 4g Orchestra 2. 39 South Dakota Club, Haresfoot Orchestra 2, Choral Union 3. Thesis-United States' Trade with Brazil. 1837-1873. WILLIAM MERRITT SALE . . . . Louisville, Ky. Bill LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Tau Omega, University of Virginia 1: Iron Cross: Sigma Delta Chig Ku Klux Klan: I-Inresfoot 3. :tg Cardinal Desk Editor 2, 3: Managing Editor 43 Pub- licity Chairman 1922 Prom, 1921 Badger Staff: 1922 Badger Copy Editor, Assistant General Chairman 1921 Hornecomingg Press Club, Program Chairman 1921 .Homecomingg Program Chairman Exposition Council qf Forty, Student Senateg Senate Traditions Commis- Tcilxesis-The Influence of Henry .lqarnes on Conrad, ' McKenna and' Walpole. LINCOLN ABBOTT SOLLITT . . . . Chicago '1Linc COMMERCE Alpha Sigma Phig Freshman Swimming Team, Varsity Team 2, 3, 45 Commerce Advisory Commission. Thesis-Manufacturing and Marketing nl' Leather in Wisconsin. JOSEPHINE LOUISE SAMMIS . . . llrladison :tion LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Gamma Delta: W. A. A. 2, flig Arts and Crafts 2, El, 4-1 Treasurer 2. 35 Bowling .lg Tennis 2g Outing Club 1, 2g.Y. W. C. A. Board fl. Thesis-Survey of Art iII High Schools ol' Wisconsin. ARTHUR IVIAHTIN SAMP ......., , Cecil Esru PAUI. .LINE is vs Ar! MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Triangleg Council ol' Fortyg A. S. M. E.g Engineers' Crew 1, 2: Captain Varsity Crew 3. ER ADELE SANDEH ...... Fond da Lac Snyde LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence lg Library School Il. PHILIP SANDERS . . . . . .Nladisori SamLv MUSIC Milwaukee Normal I: Accompanist and Soloist, Men's Glec Club 2, 3. flip Mu Alphag Campus Religious Council 2, 3. Ll. M ARION SNr'rnE ......... Rice Lake LETTERS AND SCIENCE Physical Education Club: Hockey ,lg Basketball 25 Outing Club: Social Sciencc Club. ll. CLARE CASLER SAUNDEIKS . . . . ,llladison Dreamy JOURNALISIVI Castalia Literary Society lg Arts and Crafts Club 2, 35 Publicity Committee 23 Cardinal Stall' 1, 2, 3. Thesis-An Analysis of Special Feature Articles .in The American Magazinc. FRANCES BTARIE SAVQYER ..,. . Nlilwaakce Fran CHEMISTRY ' Castalia 1. 2. 3, 49 Executive Board 35 Head of Debat- ing Castalia-Pythia Joint Debaigegg Firstin Castalia Junior Ex 3g.Y. W. C. A. 1, 2.12, 4: Mathematics Club 13 'Suffrage League lg Chemistry Club' 2, 3, 45 Woman Voters League 33 WoIneii's Medical -Association 4-: Thesis-The Effect ol' Temperature' on Basal Metabol- ism Determination. Bradley Memorial v-Hospital. AV. .MEIKBILL SAWYEIX ..... . . Madison i COMMERCE l LVlIO.IJA.vr.'SCI-IAEFER . . , ..... '. .Milwaukee sgviyss PTLOR REGI LETTERS AND SCIENCE ?Oti1.ing Clubg Y. W. C. A.g Mzatliematics,,Qlul:'. TfhesisfMatheInatics-Graphical Construction, ENCE. ISA BEL Scniliizkisn . I . East Chicago, Ind . 5 I I 7 ' . ' Flo . HOME ECONOMICS, V . Thesis-Wisconsiifs Shareih the Legislative' Work of the Consumer's League. ' NALD R. SCHAUB ....... A- . Kewaskam ' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING DOBOTHEA IVIARGUERITE SCI-IIVLIDT . . . Freeporl,Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Outing Club 1, 2, 3g Junior Mathematics Club 1, 2, 3, 4 , Secretary and Treasurer 4. Thesis-Determinants. i 1 l i I i I I Page One Hundred and Forty-Five I 1 I I Page One Hundred and Forty-Sim FAYE ELLIS SCHMIDT .... . Madison .. H F eaiher LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Alpha Xi Delta: Badger 4-. Thes's-Descriptive Material and Descriptive Tech- nique in the Stories of Bret, Harte. HENRY SCHMITZ ....... . Chicago, I II . Hank MEDICINE - Delta Sigma Phig University of Chicago 1, 2. ARTHUR HENRY SCHNEIDER .... Chippewa Falls HARTN I . COMMERCE ' Zeta Psi: Assistant Business Manager Athletic Reviewg Floor Committee of Expositiong Chippewa Valley Club. GENEVA SCHOENFELD ...... . .Edgerton S E ! HOME ECONOMICS Phi Mug A. C. F. Board 4-: Euthenics Club 3, 43 Con- gregational Studen'L's Cabinet 3, 45 Country Magazine Staff 3, 45 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4. Thesis-Effect of Volatile Oils on the Germination of Certain Mold Spores. NORMAN NICHOLAS SCHOMISCH . . . .Appleton Norm COMMERCE Delta Chig Commerce Advisory Commissiong Commerce Magazine. - Thesis-An AccounLing System for a Print Paper Mill. DONALD FINNEY SCHRAM . . . Beloit HDOHH JOURNALISM Beloit 1, 2. I . . Thesis--Community Service in the Country W'eekly. FLORENCE MARIE SCHROEDER . . . .Milwaukee Schrade LETTERS AND SCIENCE Gamma Phi Betag Mystic Circle. HENRY FREDERICK SCHROEDER. . . .Milwaukee A COMMERCE 51925 Badger Spaffg Service Overseasg Lutheran Brother- oo . Thesis-An Analysis of the X Company's Organization. GEORGE FREDERICK SCHUBBING . South Milwaukee Triangle Fraternity. Thesis-Investigation and Design of an Irrigation Project of Medford, Oregon. MILFORD W. SCHUELER ..... . Fredonia AGRICULTURE ALVIN D. 'SCRUJAHN .... . .Fond du Lac HAZ!! ' I ' A H COMMERCE - 4 Lu lyheran Bro Lherhodd. WILLIAM WALTER SCHULTZ. . . . .Barron liBill37 AGRICULTURE Oshkosh Normal 1. NORBERTEDWARD SCHVVAKE . . . Two Rivers Dean PHARMACY Thesis-Liquor Antisepticus. ALEXANDER JOHN SCHVVARZ . . . Clzillon, HAP, PHARMACY Campion College 1: Alpha Chi Sigmag Kappa Psi. Thesis-The Volatile Water-soluble Constituents of American and Japanese Peppermint. Oils. LEO JOSEPH SCHWEIGER ......... Caslzlon , 4sD0c:s MEDICINE Lawrence College 15 Phi Chi. Thesis-Comparative Adrenals. CAIXOLYN SCHWEIZEIX . ........ La Crosse uv sy Cal LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi: Y. NV. C. A. Cabinet Council 35 Crucible 35 Dancing Team 2: Oirchcsus. Tlms's-The Effect of Immigration upon Opportunities for Employment. NN KLTER KELLY SCHNVINN . . . . .Red Oak, Iowa g'Wall LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Nu: Ilaresfootz Assistant Prom Chairman 3g Daily Cardinal Skyrocket Editor 1. 2, 3: Sunday Editor -L: 1920 Badger l: 1922 Badger Publicity Manager 3g Glec Club 1. 2: Council of Forty: 1919 Homecoming 23 1920 Homecoming Publicity Manager 3: 1921 Home- coming Program Editor fit: 1921 Exposition Program Editor 3: 1921 Inter-Scholastic Track Meet, Pub- licity Manager 3: Union Vodvil 1g Managing Editor Frosh Cardinal I: 1920 University Circus, Assistant Pnblicily Manager 2: Press Club. Thesis-The Influence of Anatole France upon the Novels of Norman Douglass. LEONA GERTRUDE SEAVER . , .,..., Clinton HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Della: Euthenics Club 2. . U Thesis-The Value cl' Trademarks in Advertising. VIVIEN ADELAIDE SEEBER .... Hozzglilon, Mich. fivivu I HOME ECONOMICS Sigma Kappa, Euthenics 3, 49 S. G. A. Board 2. Thesis-A Study of the Potato, with Special Reference to Their. Use in Institutions. ELIZABETH LEVVIS' SEHON ..... Louisville, Ky. R i.Betty,, LETTERS' AND SCIENCE Alpha ,Ornicronl Pig Bed ,Domiziog Charter Member 0rcih'esusg'Dancing 1, 2, 3: Dancing Honors lg Fresh- man and'Sophomore' Cornmissiong.Hockey Squad 1, 2, 3g Southern Club. ' I Thesis-Relationmdf Amount of Clothing to Respiratory Diseases. HELEN LOUISE SEYMOUR ...... -. Reedsburg JLETITTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-The Treaty of Fort Stanwix. LEO HENRY SHAPIBO ......... Milwaukee :Aish-api v CIVIL ENGINEERING U. W. Band 1, 2g U. W. C.VE. Society 1, 2, 3, 4g Badger Club 1, 2: Engineers' Minstrelsjig Menorah 4. ' . Thesiselfhe Investigation and Design of an 'Irrigation Project at Medford, Oregon. V HOWARD MELBOURNE SHARP .... . Oconlo Falls Howie . ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Theta Delta Chig Mu Alpha-Sinfonia: Eta Kappa Nu: Mens' Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 42 PI'6Sld0Tlt MQHYS Glee Club 4g Band 1, 2, 3, 4-g Quartermaster 41g'Publicity Manager Men's Glee Club 33 Engineers Mmstrels 3. MANLY SHARP ............ Evansville nReda1 I AGRICULTURE - Member of Stock Judging Team National Dairy Shpwg Member Agricultural Literary Society: Choral Umong Saddle and Sirloin Club. Page One Hunflrrrl and D V. K Forly- Scucn. Page One I I I I E I Hundred and Forty-Eight EVELYN M. SHAW .... . . . JOURNALISM . Madison Alpha Chi Ornegag Keystone 4: Press Club 43 Forensic Board 3g Pyl.h1a 3, 4: President 4g Badger 4-q Y. W. C. A. 3, 113 Cabinet Council 4. ThesisfA Study of the American Popular Magazine TreaLmenL ol' Child Labor Problem from 1890 to the Presen L Day. ELEANOR PRAY SHELDON . . ..... . Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis-French. HELEN C.SI-IERDA1-IL. , . . . Monfev'ideo,WIinn. MUSIC TTAZEL BELLE SHIREY ....... H-B . . Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE James Millikin University 1. Thesis-The Transition from Puritauism LO Liberalism in Amcrican'IJiterature. FRANKLIN P.SHOcKEY. . . . . Frank Oak Park, Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi 'Kappa Psi: Northwestern University lg Skull and Crescent. Thesis-Monopolics and Cost ProducLion. CARL EDNVARD SIBILSKY . . Doc., V MEDICINE Phi Chi: Milwaukee Normal 1. 2. 'IfhesisjAccuracy Ol' Pignelfs MeLhod '-exency In Man. Orro L. SICK ERT ......... .. 015, MINING ENGINEERING . .Algoma of Muscle Efli- . Milwaukee Phi Kappa Sigruag lvfining Club: A. I. M. E., A. S. M.E. PEARL IVIARYE SILJON ....... 'LETTERS AND SCIENCE SU. OlaI Colle'e I. 2, Thesis-The Stage 'Procluctioux Ol' As EMIL LEONARD SILVERNESS . . Silver COMMERCE M'ARION SIMONSON ........ LETTERS AND SCIENCE . . .llladison You .Like IL , . .fllorzdovi . . . Tomalz Thesis-PossibiliLies for Injured Men in the IndusLries of Wisconsin. NOEL R. SIMPSON ...... Jack Y COMMERCE Lambda Chi Alpha, Commerce Crew. LESLIE CLINTON SIMS ....... 6CLeS97 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Chig Sophomore Semi-Public mathia 2, 4-. . . Oshkosh . .Rice Lake Debate, Philo- T hesis-Lord Kitchener as Secretary of State for VVar. ISAAC SINAIIco ...... COM M ERCE . . . mllffadison Menorah 3, 11-. . . . . . . ..Iiacme CUSTAV SLEZAK ..... ILGUASH MECHANICAL ENGINEERING IAINVITYIICO I: A. S, M. E. DCJNALIJ CIIAIILES SLICIITER . . f ,Maflzfsorz ..D0n,, CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chi Psi. DAVID ANENDELI, SI.oI'HowEn . . . .Plalleville HWendy COMMERCE PlaLLcvillI: Normal I: Lambda Chi Alpha: Red Arrow Clubg Service Two Years. GWYNETTIB IELLSNVORTI-I SMALLEY .... Cuba City LAVV Phi Alpha Della. ERLING ARNOLD SMEDAI, . . . . II'TCl?l1I'llll'1d DDOCH MEDICINE Phi Bela Pi. Thnsis-Topographical Anatomy. MARY SAIILEY ,......... . Albany HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Gamma Delllag Euthenics Club. Thesis-A Study of Undernourishecl Children. BEULAII INA SIIITH ......,.. .Milwaukee Bugle LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal I, 2: Ouling Clubg S. G. A. Boardg Geographers' Club. Thesis-The Physiographic and Geologic Occurrence of Anlhracilc in EasLern Pennsylvania. EDWIN EUGENE SMITH . . . . . Jacksonville. III. Smiihie COMMERCE . Illinois College 1, 23 Square Club 3, 4-. Houzmo IIWINE SMITH ..... . .West Salem. Howie ' COMMERCE Delta Chi: La Crosse Normal 1, 2g Commerce Adyisory Commission 3. 4g Memorial Uniong AssisLant Chairman Financeg Y. M. C. A. Thesis-The Wellarld Canal. HYLVA EVELYN SNASHALL . . . . Janesville . snHyI0Sva V LETTERS AND SCIENCE S. G. A. Board 35 Badger Club 1. 2g Student Assistant in Geology 3, 4g . ' Thesis-The Muscles ol' Lhe Guinea Pig. ELMER F. SNEIDEII .......... Sheboygan Bud LETTERS AND SCIENCE Cross-Country Squad 35 Varsity Track 4-g Chemistry Club 2, 3. 4. - Thesis-The Absorption of Hydro-Carbon Gases by Non-Aqueous Liquids. Page One Hundred and Forly-Nine l Page 'One Hun,dr'ezl and Fifi-v HOLLAND HUGO SOLL ......,. Milwaukee ROY 6 K 3 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineers' Societyg Sophomore -Commissiong , Purple and Gold Club. SORENSON ........ E . . . lllilwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Freshman Gym Teamg President Sophomore Commisf. siong Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 43 Scabbard and Bladig Captain R. O. T. C.g University Traditions Commissiong Union Memorial Division Leader. , Thesis-Improving the Social Order Through the Christian Approach, by Reaching High School Boys-. THORVAL L. SORENSEN ...... . ...Racine MEDICINE . 'A ROBERT BAYLIS SPAWN ....... . Beloil ..B0b,, , LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lambda Chi Alphag Beloit 1. 25. Thesis-Joint Railroad Terminal F acilities, BYRON HOYT SPEAR ....... . .Pardeeville AGRICULTURE United States Naval Academy I. 25 Farm House? Agricultural Literary Society 3, 4g Treasurer 43 Agri' cultural Triangle 2, 3, 1119 Secretary 43 Saddle and Sirloin 2, 3, 49 Country Magazine AI-. RALPH BECKETT SPENCE ....,... La Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE 1 Alpha Chi Sigma: Phi Beta Kappag Phi Lambda Upsi- long Scabbard and Bladeg Sophomore High Honors: Lieutenant R. 0. T. C.g Captain 4: Athenae I, 2. 3, 4-g Vice-President 3: Exposition 3: Cadet Ollicers' Associ- ation flg Pistol Club 3. Thesis-A Study of Apparatus for the Electrolytic Preparation ol' Certain Organic Compounds. ALICE L. SPENSLEY .... . Madison HAI., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Gamma Delta: Freshmen and Sophomore Corn- mission. A Thesis-Correlation Between Learning Time and Elli- ciency with Special Reference to Department Stores. IRENE SPIKER . .... . Gary,Inrl. A-spike, y LETTERS AND SCIENCE W. A. A. 2, 3. 4: W. A. A. Board 3, 4g Dancing Honors: Dancing Team l, ZZ, 3, 45 Indoor Baseball: Hockey: Physical Education Club: Outing Club. ALBERT H. SPLITGERBER . . . Waterloo HAZ!! AGRICULTURE GEORGE DANIEL SPO!-IN . . . . . . Janesville LAW' A. B. XVisconsing Phi Delta Phi. KARL ARTHUR STAE HLE ........ Man ilo woe ssKaLyg,5', ELECTRICAL ENKGINIEERIQNVG D. TWORMAN STALKER ..,.. . Toiedog Ohio i'Skippcr LETTERS A N D SCIENCE Denison University l, 2g Phi Delta Theta: Square Club. Thcfsfs-'Standardiziug a Test Form or Technic in Manual Arts VVOodwork. 4 PHILLIP S. STAMBAUGH ..... Youngslowmi Ohio CHEMISTRY JASPER FAYETTE STAPLES-. . . . .Onalaska lap., COMMERCE La Crosse Normal 1, 2. RIARGARET REGINA STAVRUM ...,.. La Crosse ..Peg,, LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi. THOMAS L. STAVRUM ...... . La Crosse COMMERCE DANA PRESTON STEARNS . . . . Mason Cily HD. Pf' MEDICINE Gamma Tau Bela: A. E. F. Service. Thesis-Unusual Fractures of Lhe Long Bones. HELEN RUTH STEDMAN ........ Waupaca PHARMACY Thesis-Histology ol' Ccrlain Fruits in Genus Capsicum. FRED E. STEELE ........ . Wlelvina LAW Lawrence 1, 2, 3, 45 Phi Delta Phi. BRUNO ADAM STEIN ...... . . Germantown CHEMISTRY Lawrence 1, 2: Y. M. C. A. Junior Council 33 Badger Cluh 35 Gun and Bladeg Features Cornmibteeg 1921 Charity Bally Chemistry Club 3. 4. Thesis-Nitrite Decomposition Producls of Esters ol' Amino Acids. . ' EDNVIN A. STEPHENSON . . . . .Trenion, N. J. Steve I LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' De Pauw University 15 Della Upsilong Cardinal 2,,3g Badger Staff 24- Octopus 2. . Thesis--Increment of Land Values and' Zone of Increased Value of Land Adjacent to the Improved Highways. . ISABEL E. STEVEN' ........ . Glenwood City LETTERS AND SCIENCE GEORGE OLIVER STEVENS . . . .. -Chicago, I ll. ..Stev6,,Y COMMERCE Sigma Nug Skull ,and 'Crescentg Daily Cardinal lg Cox Commerce Crew 2. JESSIE DXIARIAN STEVENS . . . G1-andRapids,114ficlz. Jess HOME ECONOMICS Michigan Agricultural College 1, 25 Grand Rapids Clubg Outing Club 4-3 Eutheuics Clubg American Society Club of Bacteriologists. 1 I 1 V l i 1 i 1 i l v i Page One Hundred and Fifly- One Page Orteflluudrerl and Fiflhv-Two PEARL ESTHER STEWART ...., Baltimore, llld. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta: Gaucher College 1: VV. A. A.: Physical Education Club: Southern Club: Union Vodvil: Badger Staff: Bowling. , ' Thesis-Industrial Recreation. ' ALICE VESTA STOCKDALE. . . . .Belmont MUSIC Choral Union: Y. W. C. A. ETHOL STOCKDALE .......... Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Freshman and Sophomore Commissions: S. A. Judicial Committee: President Barnard Hall: Keystone. '1'hesis-Dominant Figures in the Railway Field. GEORGE BROCKVVAY STOLLEY ..... Milwaukee COMMERCE Sigma Nu: Inner Gate: Freshman Track: Sophomore Football Captain: Varsity Track 2, 3, 4: WU: Student Senate 3, 4: Athletic Board 3, 4: Secretary 4: Finance Chairman 1921 Jamboree: Sophomore Traditions Committee: Interfraternily Conference: Council of Forty. Thesis-Financial Condition of Railroads. ITERBERT A. STOLTE ..... . Reedsburg Herb COMMERCE Alpha Delta Phi: Skull and Crescent: Ku Klux Klan: Edwin Booth: Kappa Beta Phi: Band 1. 2, 3: Class Committee 1, 2: Executive Council of Wisconsin in China: Chairman Fraternity Athletics 3: Chairman Ways and Means 1921 Prom: Assistant Chairman Venetian Night 2: Badger Staff 3: Business Manager Varsity Movie: Business Manager Senior Play. Thesis-Fundamentals of Management. BXIARION BRUNETTE STRASSBURGER. . . Oshkosh J OURN ALISM Theta Sigma Phi: Cardinal 1, 2, 3, 4: Women's Editor 4: S. G. A. Secretary 3: President Red Gauntlet: W. A.A. W Wearer: Outing Club Board 3: Twelfth Night: Crucible: Secretary Junior Class: Press Club: Keystone 2, 41: Mortar Board President: Prom Committeei Homecoming Committee 4: Badger Staff 3: Varsity Movie Staff. Thesis-A Comparison of Book Reviewing and Literary Criticism in Representative Metropolitan Newspapers. DOROTHY STREETER ......... 1VIiIwa.ukee HOME ECONOMICS Delta Gamma: Milwaukee-Downer 1, 2. T hesis-Comparison ol' the Standards of Child-Placing Agencies in Various States. EIELEN GLADYS STROUP . . . Grand Rapids, Mich. LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Alma College 1: Castalia: Grand Rapids Club: XV. A. A. ALBERT CARL STUEBTNG . . . .Sioux Falls, S. D. ssAln COMMERCE Theta Xi: Sophomore Track Manager: South Dakota Club: German Club: Square Club. LORENZ E. SUINO ..... Iron Mountain, Mich. PHARMACY Marquelte 1, 2. 3: Kappa Psi. Thesis-History of Sassafras. ' VERONICA MAR! SULLIVAN ..... . Madison KlSully79 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Del ta-: Oshkosh Normal 1, 2. B DOROTHY DUNNING SUMNER . ..... . Madison LE'I TERS AND SCIENCE Delta Gamma: Class Vice-President 1. Thesis-Translation of La Vieillesse de Don Juan by Mounet-Sully and Pierre Barbier. Donornv SUMPTION ....... Kendallville, Ind. Dol PHYSICAL EDUCATION Earlbam College 1. 2: W Wcarer W. A. A. 13.4, Out- ing Club 2, 3, ll-: Physical Education Club 2, 3, 41: Vice- Presidcnt 4: Track Team 2, 3: Bowling 3: Apparatus Honors 2: Advanced Apparatus Honors: Archery Hon- ors. Tliesis-Muscular Coordination Wilh Reference to I-'hysirral Ellicxiency. Gm' M EnRn.i. SUNDT , ...,.... 'Slouglzlon .rTlL.!7:yn LE'l l'I'IllS AND SCIENCE Kappa Sigma: Football Captain: President. Senior Class: Wu: Track: Basketball: Freshman Track and Basket- ball: Star and Arrow: Ku Klux Klan: President W Club: Council ol' Forty: White Spades: Iron Cross: Sigma Delta Psi. Tliesis-l'layground Equipment and Activities for Boys Above T1-n and Young Men. NIERRILL F. Sl,J'l l'ON ...... . Clinlon, Iowa Sul AGIIICUIITUHE Phi Sigma Kappa: Ames l. IIOBEBT I. Svrrfxvsxv . , . . Racine Bob ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Eta Kappa Nu. IEDITH BLACKFORD SWARTZBAUGH . . . Toledo. Ohio alzzy.. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma: Ohio State lg Cardinal 2, 33 Press Club. ALMA N. SWINK .,.... . .Farminglon, Mo. MUSIC ELLEN IVIARION SNVETIL ....... Milwaukee PHYSICAL EDUCATION Orchesus: W. A. A. 1, 2. 4: W Wearer: Hockey 3. 4: Dance Drama 1, 3: Dancing Honors: Swimming Honors: Physical Education Club: Homecoming Committee. SAMUEL SYGMAN .......... Two Rivers LETTERS AND SCIENCE Winner Freshman Declamatory Contest: Athenae: Social Science Club: President 3: Sophomore Semi- Public Debate: Winner Junior Ei-Oratorlcal Contest 1921: Athenae Joint Debate. WALTER HERBERT SYLVESTEB . . Wauwatosa Sally COMMERCE Alpha Pi Delta: Gun and Blade: American Legion. Thesis-T he Consolidation of United States Railroads. RUDOLPH SYVERSON. ..... . . Eleva Rad COMMERCE Lutheran Bro thcrhood Councillor. OLGA ALMA TAFEL ........ Louisville. Ky. LETTERS AND SCIENCE v ' Southern Club: S. G. A. Board 3: Badger-Board 3. fl: W. A. A.: Y. W. C. A.: Publicity University of Louis- ville 2. , . 1 Thesis-Trade Rivalry Between Louisville and Cm- cinnati. STURGES PHOENIX TAGGART . . . Lake Geneva ' LAVV I l I Page One I1I,l.lldl'l'Ll and Fifly- Thru' Page One Hundred and Fifi-v-Four H.ARR Y GEORGE TALBOT . . . . . Madison Murp11!' ' MEDICINE Milton College Ig Milton College Club., Thesis-An Electrocardiographio Study of a Series of Clinical Cardiac Cases. ASKEL TARANGER . . .... Kristiania, Norway ARDY ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Frogner Skole, Kristiania, lg Norwegian House: A. I. E. E.: Badger Ski Club. Thesis-A Magnetically Controlled Vacuum Tube. s MQARIE TAYLOR ...... . iMadison Ardie', HOME ECONOMICS Delta Zeta: Euthenics Club 1, 2, 3, ft: Outing Club 2, 3: Suffrage Club 2: Inter-Sorority Bowling 2, 3: -L: Secre- tary 3. ' Thesis-The Fabrics and Designs of Costumes oi' Northern Peoples as Influenced by Natural Resources. HAROLD VVESTLAKE TAYLOR . . .Indianapolis,Ind- LEWI aiflaln LETTERS AND SCIENCE Bela Theta Pi: Wabash Collegel: Haresfool.: Composer 1921 Prom Fox-Trot: Badger Stafffl. 3: Assistant Editor Commerce Magazine 2: University Circus Committee 3: 1920 Senior Play: Exposition Committee. Thesis-Double Taxation in the United States. S WALTER TAYLOR .... , .lllilwaukee HL. W. AGRICULTURE Farm House: Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Literary Society 1. 2: Secretary 3, 4: Country Magazine 3: Businews Manager 111: Badger Poultry Club 3: President LL: Saddle and Sirloin 3, 4: A. C. F. Board 4-. WARIKEN ALVAN TAYIIOR ..... . Ashland FLOR ucopn COMMERCE Star and Arrow: Commerce Club: White Spades: Beta Gamma Sigma: Varsity Basketball: Captain 2: Junior Class President: Council of Forty. -IENE TEICHGRAEBER ..... Emporia, Kan . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega: Outing Club: Badger: Campus Religious Council. OWEN BOCKEFELLER TERRY . ..... Stoughton i.Jack-av ELECTRICALAENGINEERING Theta Xi: Philomathia 2: Alumni Prom Committee 3: Badger Staff 33 A. I. E. E. 4-: Square Club 4: Service U. S. N. Two Years. RICHARD CLARENCE THAUER . . . .Waleriown TVAL R ich COMMERCE Thesis-State and Local Expenditures and Taxation 1911-1921. TER CONRAD THIEL . . . . .Sclzleisingerville Walt CIVIL ENGINEERING ' Triangle: Scabbard and Blade: Sophomore Commission: Lieutenant Cadet Corps 1: Staff Captain 2: Military Ball.Committee 2: Wisconsin Engineer 2, 4: Circulation Manager 4: Vlfisconsin in China Executive Committee 2: A. S. C. E. 1, 2, 3, 4: Publicity Chairman 2: Vice- President 3: A. A. E. 2. 3, 4-. Thes's-Investigation and Design ol' an Irrigation Project at Medford. Oregon. MARGARET A. THOMAS . . . . . lVazLwau1'0sa 1VIargie COMMERCE Mortar Board: Pi Bela Phi: Vice-President Green Bul- ton: Y. W. C. 'A. Cabinet. 2, 3, 4: W. A. A. Boardilg Dancing Honors: Varsity Basketball Team: lVomen's Commerce Club: Women's Chairman of Annual Relig- ious,,,Coni'erence. MARJORIE THOMAS ..... . .Appleton f.Mid!Iev1 PHYSICAL EDUCATION D Della Gamma: Lawrence I: Inter-Sorority Bowling Treasurer 3: Hockey 2, 3: Basketball 2. 3: Outdoor Baseball 3: Campus Religious Council: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 3: Union Vodvil 2: S. G. A. Council 3: Hockey 4. GILMAN A. THONIPSON .....,... Ml. Horeb LGGNVY LETTERS AND SCIENCE Platteville Normal I, 2: Beta Chi Sigmag Lutheran Student CZIh1l'lFHl.Q Arts and Craftsg Lutheran Brother- hood Council. Thesis-Problems in Shop Installation. CILADYS E. THOMPSON ....... . Chicago ssGladYn I LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Tliesxs-Catalogue ol' Reptiles and Amphiheans. LILA THOMPSON ............ Elmwood LETTERS AND SCIENCE Stevens Point Normal t, 2. Thesis-The Colton Situation in South America. STUART EDWARD THOMPSON . . . Neenalz Slit LETTERS AND SCIENCE Della Kappa Epsilong IIIner Gate. Thesis-IVIass and Value Production ol' Mining in 'thc United States. MILDIIIBD IIIENI3 TIIIIONE .... , . .Cullum Ill. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Delta: Illinois Nvcsleyan I, 2: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 31 Castalia 3, fl-3 Girls' Joint Debate Thesis-Science Versus Art in the Teaching of Speech. VIOLA LOUISE THUEIIING . . .Milwaukee nw.. HOME ECONOMICS Milwaukee-Downer 1: Vocational Conference Com- mittee fl-. ' Thesis-Soda Fountains. ELIZABETH 'THWING .... . .lVIaumee, Ohio ul-getlyvs COMMERCE Alpha Delta Pig Womenls Commerce Club 2, 35 Pres- ident 43 Castalia 23 Commerce Magazine flg S. G. A. Board 4: Keystone 4. Thesis-Accounting Topics. JOHN XVILSON TIBBITTS . .. U. . Melrose Fred AGRICULTURE Farm House: A. C. F. Board. LEONARD P. TIEDEMAN . . . . .Madison i5Len7I CHEMISTRY T hesis-Lecithin Determinationtof Eggs in Ice Cream. M. RAVN TILLISCH ...... . Merrill , Pink COMMERCE Pi Kappa Alphag Service A. E. F. One Year. ERWIN RUSSEL TIPPLE .... . . Oregon ..Tip.. COMMERCE PAUL TITUS T OBEY ..,....... . W'ausau LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 1, 25 Gun and Blade-3, 43 President 4: Service Three Years, h ' Thes?s-Store Delivery as an Economic Solution for Railroad Terminal Congestion, I I L I I l Page One Hundred and Filly-Five Page One Hundred and Fifty-Sin: MARJORIE TODD ..,...... Sl. Louis, Mo. Hrlflargel' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theta: French Club 2, 3. RAYMOND AUGUST TOEPFER . . . .Oregon uRayn MEDICINE Gamma Tan Beta. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy and X-ray. IVIARTIN ALMER TOLLUND . . . .Blue lVIoun.ds SiMaity77 LAW Valparaiso University l, 2, 3, LL. ELG IE VIOLA VTOMLIN .......... llladison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis-Women Novelisls 1780-1820. CLARENCE GILBERT TRACHTE. . . . ,Watertown ' ' Tractor, l LETTERS AND SCIENCE Philornathiag German Club: Badger Club: Social Science Club:hExposition: American Legion: Service Eighteen Mom. s. STERLING HILL TRACY . .... llflemplzts, Tenn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Beta Kappa: Iron Cross: Delta Sigma Rho: Sigma Delta Chi: N. 0. I... Winner 3: Joint Debate Closer 3: Intercollegiate Debating 3: Winner Junior and Sopho- more Open: Vilas Medal: Philomathia, President. 3: Student Senate: President 4: Editorial Writer Cardinal 3, 4: Forensic Board 3: Junior Response: Council of Forty: Assistant General Chairman Memorial Union Campaign 4. Thesis-The Poetry of Catullus. WAIITER GEORGE TRAUB ....... lVIi1waukee A'Wallie CHEMICAL ENGINEER Sigma Phi Epsilon: Chemical Engineers' Society! Inter-Fraternity Council. NORBERT CARL TRAUBA. . . . . .lllarallzon MECICINE - Phi Beta Pi. Thesis-Topographical Anatomy. ERWINIITREBUS. . : . . . .Eau Claire Treb ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E.: American Association ol' Engineers: Chip- pewa Vallcy Club. WILSON DAVID TRUEBLCOD . . . New York City W, D. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Alpha Chi Sigma: Tau Beta Pi: Lambda! Upsilon: Wis- consin Engineer Staif 2: Publicity Manager Engineers' Minstrels 3: Y. M. C. A. Secretary 4: Southern Club: Presidentilg l92I Badger Sllalilg 'llrarlitions Commission fl-. CHAUSSON C. TSENG ...... Waslzinglon, D. C. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Tsing -Hua College, Pekin I. 2: International Club: Chinese Students' Club. Thesis-The Secular Fluctuation in Business 1890-1911 - ALICE NEEDHAM TUCKER .Y i . Berwyn, I Il. LiTuCk!I LETTERS AND SCIENCE W. A. A. I, 2. 3. 4: Indoor Baseball 3: Hockey 4: WVU: Pythia 1, 2, 3, 4: Treasurer 3: Forensic Board 4: Junior Mathematics Club 3, 4: President 4-1 Sophomore Honors. Thesis-A Survey of the Dilferent Geometrlcs and Their Inter-relations. FREIJA DEAN TUCKER . . . . Claypoal, Ind. Frilz LE'I I'ERS AND SCIENCE Norl.hwesLcrn 1, 2. 'l'hcsis-Spcculalion in Publix: Land Preccding Lhe Crisis of 1857. KAT1-IRYN 'INURNEY ....... Indianapolis, Ind. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha 'l'hel.a: Bullcr College 1: Orchcsus: Union Vodvll 'L ' ' Thesis-Tcnrlcncics in American Verso Since 19111. KAHLROGEII'l'I,J'r'rLE. . . . . Spencer, Iowa MTM.. COIVIMERCE Signia Chi. IIICI-IARIJ I'IANl..0N 'IIYRHELL , . . . Lake Geneva Dick . LAW - Sigma Chi: Phi Della Phi: Pi Epsilon Delta: Iunor Calc: Union Board 2, 3. 4: Haresfool: General Manager: Mary's Lamb : Captain Cadet. Corps 2: Scabbard and Blade: Alhcnae: Union Vodvil 2, 3: General Manager 1921 Senior Class Play: Class Prophecy: Chairman Commillcc nn EnLertainmcnl. Exposilion. XVILLIAM FIIANK UHIIIG ,.., Easl Orange, N. J. Bill MINING ENGINEERING Lehigh Universily 1: A. I. M. E.: Mining Club 2, 3, 114: Sccrclary and Tresaurcr Ll-. IES'I'I-IER MIIIIMI VANCE ,..... Edclyville, Iowa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Grinnell 1. 2: Clef Club L: Treasurer 4: S. G. A. Board 3. Thesis-'l'lIe One NCL 'Play. CLI-:MENT MEIIVYN VANDEIIIET, Slillenbosclz., So. Afr. Barney ' AGRICULTURE Alpha Gamma Rho: Interriayiqiial Club: Chairman Athletic Committee: Football: Hockey-: Golf. 'GLAYTON E0liRES'l. VIAN PEI.i'I' . . . .Fond du Lac W aa.-Ifanay. . LAW ' Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Philomathia: Phi Delta Phi: Kappa Bela Phi. FORREST FRANKLIN VARNEY ...... Greenuiood CIVIL ENGINEERING , George Washixigton-University 1. 2:fA. SJC: E.: A. A. E. CORNELIUS NICHOLAS VETTEN . . . .Sheboygan MEDICINE ,Phi Chi: Sophomore Honors: Wrestling 2. Thesis-Topographic-al Anatomy. ELIZABETH VINCENT . I ...... .Evansl0n,IZI. JOURNALISM : Alpha Phi: 'IIhol.a Sigma Phi: Badger StaFI 1923. EDWIN JOHN VOIGHT . . . . . . Appleion Eddie PHARMACY ' K appa Psi. Thesis-Podophyllism. Page One Hundred and Fifly-Seven Page One Hundred and FU'ly-Eighl OTTO FRED WALLMAN . . . CIIARLOTTEQCALVIN VOORHIS . . . .Yonkers, N. Y. Elli - COMMERCE Wellesley l : VV. A. A. Board: Bowling 2: Varsity Bowl- ing: Tennis 3: Varsity Tennis: Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet Council: S. G. A. Board: Women's Commerce Club: Social Science Club: Outing Club: Badger Stali' 4-. NAOBH E. VVAFFLE ......... Fond du Lac HOME ECONOMICS ' Euthenics Club: Prom CoInmittee:,Outing Club: Y. M. C. A.: Alpha Delta Pi. I Thesis--The Study of Underweight Children. ANGELYN WAGG ........... Appleton :AA ngen 1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Denison University 1. ' ELOISE WALDRON ......... .Fargo, N. D. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Secretary French Club: Social Science Club: Voca- tional Conference Committeefl. . Thesis-Alexander Sinith, Ewayist. MARGARET RUTH WALKER . . . Almond cspegss' JOURNALISM Chi Omega: Milwaukee-Downer 1: Cardinal 2: Badger 3: Press Club 2, 3, 4. Thesis-Newspaper Features Designed to Appeal lo Women in the Middle West. SHORES A. NVALKER ...,.... Duluth, Minn. COMMERCE Phi Sigma Kappa: College Crew 1. . . Stratford notzss MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Lawrence 1, 2: A. S. M. E. 3. 4: Campus Religious Council: Service Fourteen Months. DOROTHY RHO DA WARE ......... Portage LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Board: Pi Beta Phi: Badger Stall' 1. 2: Treas- urer Red Gauntlet 2: President 3: President Keystone 3: Outing Club Board 3: Vice-President Junior Club 3: Secretary S. G. A. 4: Chairman Homecoming Button Sale 4: Joint Committee 4: Orchesus. Thesis-Prevention ol' Unemployment by Stabilization of Production. ELIZABETH DALE WARNER . . .Illadison t.BeHyn LETTERS AND SCIENCE W. A. A.: Y. W. C. A. Thesis-Browning. LAWRENCE POTTER WARNER . . . .Beloit ullarryn COMMERCE Sigma Nu: Pennsylvania Military College 1:'ScahbaId and Blade: OlHcer Cadet Corps 2, 3, fl. WILLIAM EVERETT WARNER ...... .Madison Bill INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION Platteville Nornial: Stout Institute: Band Sergeant 2,f3, 4: Arts and .Crafts 4: Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4: Expo- sition: Haresfoot: Engineers' Minstrels 3: 3 MILDRED E. WABSINSKE ....... Marelzjield LSMUSH PHYSICAL EDUCATION W, A. A. 2, 3, 4: Outing Club 3, 4: Board 3: Physical Education Club: Hockey 1, 2: Baseball 1: Indoor Base- ball 2, 3: Varsity L-I .i 121 5. I. I. i ,A ,. I. ..y. ELDON LEVINGS WATSON . . . . Poynclle Wally AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING River Falls Normal 1, 2. JULIE COURTENAY WATSON . . . Dalullz, Minn. npalsyn LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma5 W.A.A. Board 45 Small Emblem 5 Cabinet. Council: Dolphin Club: Sccrchary-Treasurer 35 Crueibleg Presidenl. 3-5 Homecoming Committee 45 Union Memorial 45 Red Cross Life Saving Corpsg OuLing Club. . Thesis-Shop Magazines. ELIZABETH VVEAVER ...... Indianapolis, Ind. SKB0tty9Y LETTERS AND SCIENCE Butler College I. 25 Indianapolis Clubg Ouljng Club. ITARVEY VVEAVERS . ........ Cedar Grove AGRICULTURE Farm House: Saddle and Sirloin 2. 3, 45 A ricultural Literary Society l. 2. 3: College Crew 2, 45 iive SLock Judging Team 4. GILBERT WALTER WEGNER ..... . Wausazz i.Gib,, MININ G ENGINEERING Tau Bela Pi5 lvlining Clubg A. I. M. E. RONVLAND HENRY NVEHIVIHOFF . . . . Burlzfnglon Shorly', LAW BeloiL 1, 2, 45 Square Club. ISAAC VVEINMAN ......... New York Cily AGRICULTURE Agricultural Literary Society 35 International Club 1, 25 Social Science Club I, 25 Menorah 15 Palestine Builders 2, 3, 44. HELEN MAY WEIR ....... Des Moines, Iowa Weary LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Delta5 Iowa Wesleyan 15 S. G. A. Council 35 Badger Advertising Staff 3. , Thesis-The Hartford Courant in .Relation to the Associated Press. STANLEY EDWIN WELCH . . . . . Chicago 1 HTOTWH LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Gamma Deltag Illinois 1.5 Haresfoot. Thesis-Public Employment Agencies .of Chicago, Illinois. WILLIAM ALEXANDER XNELLS . . . . River Falls Bill - AGRICULTURE RODNEY CosTEI.Lo WELSH I. . . Madison l6Rod!! JOURNALISM Phi Alpha Delta: Sigma Delta Chig Delta Pi Deltag Edwin Booth 2, 45 Vine-Pres,idenp35 Union.VodvIl25 French Play 25 Prom Committee 35 Press Editor 1921 Badger5 Cardinal 25 Editorial Writer 35 lfress.Club 2, 35 President 35 Octopus 25 Editor 35 Managing Editor 4-5 Council ol'Forty. . l . Thesis-A Comparative Analysis of the l3Kll'l'f0l'18.l Style of New York Papers. HERMAN VVENDROFF . . . . . Milwaukee 'fHerm - COMMERCE Marquette I, 25 Athenae 3,.fL5 Menorah 3, 4. Thesis-Analysis of Financial Reports. L Page One Hundred and Fifly-Nine Page One Hundred and Sixty RAYMOND VVILLIAM WENGEL . . . Madzfson ..Ray,, CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Chemical Engineers' Society. PETER ALBERT WERNER .,..... . fllilwaukee Hpeza' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Normal 1, 2. Thesis-English Colonies in America 1583-17837, VICTORIA L. WEBNER ..,....... Oshkosh l4'V'icky!7 LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oshkosh Normal 1, 2g W. A. A. 3, 4g .Iunior4Swimming Team: Arts and Crafts Club: Baseball Team- 3, 4 g Dolphin Club 3, 4g Treasurer 33 Red Cross Life Saving Corps, Volley Ball Team: Dining .Club IL. Thesis-Theory of Color Belationslfps. DOROTHY EMMA WESTENDARP . . Coldwater, M ich. uDarpyn A LETTERS AND SCIENCE Michigan State Normal lg Dolphin Club: W. A. A.: Final Emblem: Publicity Manager Dolphin 1920: Club Instructor 1921: Outing Cluhg Physical Education Cluhg Swimming Honors: Archery Honors: Varsity Archeryg Swimming Team. Thesis-Capacity as Related to Physical Efficiency. IJIERBERT N. VVHEATON . . . . La Crosse I .Thlbn CIVIL ENGINEERING La Crosse Normal 1. 2: A. S. C. E. 3, Avg President 3: Triangle: Exposition: A. A, E. Thesis-The Effect of Delay in Placing on the Strength off Concrete. CATHERINE ELEANOR NVIIEELEP. . . Wauwalosa , Kellie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Freshman and Sophomore Commissions: Prom Com- rnitteeg Cabinet Council 33 Union Memorial 4-3 Y. XV. C, Cabinet 44q'Bluc Dragon Secretary 4. Thesis-Domestic Relations as Found in Wordsworth's Poems. CHARLES EUGENE XVYHEELEII . . . .Beloil V 6lGene! I . ' A CIVIL ENGINEERING Tqiangleg University of Cincinnati 1: Service Two Years. Thesis4I-Iyrlro-Electric Development on the Peshtigo River ab Caldron Falls. f VVARREN GREQO VVHEELER . . . Wbuwalosa LAW Phi Alpha Deltag- Hesperia. ALLEN WHELAN ....., . Madison LAVV Acaciag Stout Institute 1. BURTON I-IENRX WHITE . . . . . Oconomowoc ll 71 Burl LETTERS AND SCIENCE Theta Delta Chig Hesperia: Baud: Ski Club: Sopho- more Honors: Campus Religious Council: Varsity Track Manager. Thesis-Equalization of Bargaining Power as a Legiti- mate Public Purpose. HELEN VIRGINIA WHITE ...... . Madison HOME ECONOMICS Achoth: Freshman. and Sophomore Coxumissionsg Orchestra 1. 23 Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 43 Euthenics Cluh 2. 3 1 ll-. . Thesis-A Comparative Study Ol' Ready-l.O-Wear Cloth- ing with that Made to Individual Order. PAUL B. WHITE ............ Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Campus Religious Council Executive Committee 3. 143' :fl l l l l 1Mfiiiiiv.iWT ffif' Hi 'iH IVIARTHA PHELPS VVHITLOCK ....... Chicago LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lewis Inst,iLuLe 1: Y. VV, C. A. Cabinel, 3, II. Thesis-A CriLical Study of the New York Times. GEHTRUDE VVORTH VVICKENDEN . . . Sl. Louis COIVIMERCE Caslnliu 2, 3, fl. Thesis-Commercial Condilinns in SouLlI America. 4 DOROTHY XVIEPKING ....... . . Madison 6LDOt!7 HOME ECONOMICS Omicron Nug SecreLary-'I'reasurer 11-3 A. C. F. Boardg Euthenics Club. H:kRI.EX' BEAL W ILE1' ...,. . .Hancock Lee COMMERCE . Alpha Pi Della: Slevcus,Poinl Normal I.. 2: Square Club. 'II16SlS EC0llllUllC Conditions in South America. ROBERT L. XVILEY ..... . Chippewa Falls LAW CLARENCE VVILKINS WVILLE ...... Milwaukee Bill CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Pi Kappa Alpliag Track 1, 2, 4: Why Cross-Country 39 Cardinal 2. 35 Circulation Manager: Sophomore Co Inmissiong Junior Councilg Engineers' Club. ALFRED EDWIN NVILLETT . . . . Plainfield, N. J. MAIN LETTERS AND SCIENCE Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3: Campus Religious Council 3, 45 Presbyterian Student Cabinet 4. Thesis-Relations of New Orleans Times-Picayuue to the Associated Press. CLEMENT H. W ILLIAMS ....... Elkhart Lake 46 MINING ENGINEERING Sigma Nug Lawrence 13 A. NI. E. LENORE IVIARGABET WNILLIAMS1 .... Wazzkeslza ' 'LETTERS A-ND SCIENCE , . LL., .. ,L Z VMilwaukeeiNor1na1 1, 23 W- A- A-5 Ciistiilis- ' My MAHGAHET,AlN.N,wYILLIAMS . . ..... Bristol h V' i'fITOME ECONOMICSf' 7 f ' '. I Thesis?-SLi5i1iEsTig,I3asa-IfMetabolism Performed Siftlie . - Bened1Q.tfAIJpari1Qu?5 ' - H U ,, l5bIirEfI A. WVILLIAMSE. . . Ll .EstliEriiiZle, Iowa , . 4'Hf2ifiT1fg .g Elf? G0M5MERCE'1 'i'-fir'-9 3 gi. Ames lg Assistant Business ManageEiI?reIIolI'gIIouse. uvff- 'J ---rr-V IRVING WILLIS . . . . . . .Milwaukee Irv MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Menorah 2, 3, 4: Palatine Builders 1.-2. 3, 4. n Thesig-Engineering Sales Organization and Adver- tising. I I Page Une Hundred and Siculy-One Page One Hundred and Silly- Two EDYVARD MALCOLM FRITGOFF AVILSON . . .Bayfield Shorly AGRICULTURE Badger Sales Committee 2. IMA WINCHELL ............ Nladzson LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Thetag Mortar Boardg Sophomore Honorsg Y. W. C. A.: Freshman Commission: Vice-President, Sophomore Commissiong Chairman Cabinet Qounizil: Cabinetg Undergraduate Field Representativeg -W. A. A. UWHQ Hockeyg Basketballg Baseballg Tennis: Publicity Chairman 1921 Field Day: Pythiag Forensic Boardg Dolphin Clubg Green Button: Representative S. G. A.q Executive Councilg Red Gauntlet Publicity Chairman: Blue Dragon Presidentg Keystoneg Campus Religious Council. Thesis-Tables of Indices of Refraction of Minerals. SALOME WINCKLER ......... Y . .Nladison HOME ECONOMICS Thesis-A Study of Undernourished Children. INIARY ISABEL WINSLONY ........ .Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pythia 2, 3, 4g French Club 1. . Thesis-Translation of Spanish Playg Del Rey Abajo Ningunou, by Travelsco de Rojas. IVIABEL VVINTER .... . . . . .Madison . ..Mike., LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Board: Crucible: Why W. A. A.: Secretary 3: President 4: Keystone 4: Vice-President Yellow Tassel: Dolphin Club 3, 43 Castaliaz Physical Education Clubg Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Council 2. 3. Thesis-Connecticut Highway Traffic Census of 1921. ARNO ARTHUR WVIPPERMAN .... Cleveland, 011 io .. Wipe AGRICULTURE Oshkosh Normal 1, 23 Saddle and Sirloin: Choral Union. Thesis-The Trend of Science in Vilisconsin Accredited High Schools. FRANCES JOSEPHINE AVOCASEK . . Greal Falls, Monl. '4Pele APPLIED ART Montana State 1, 2. 3: Arts and Crafts Club. Thesis-Decorative Illustration. ELMER A. YVOELFFER. . . , . .iI'Vl1l0l'lO1l'll Wolf AGRICULTURE Farm Houseg Freshmen Baseball: Varsity Wrestling 3, 4-3 WH: Saddle and Sirloin 2, ft: Secretary 4: Country Magazine Stall' Ll-1 Agricultural Triangle. HARVEY THEODORE VVOLBERG. . . .IoIa Harms , COMMERCE Inter-College Boxing 2g Advertising Staff Literary Magazine 2. EIKNST VVILHELM ANOLINE ...... . Cumberland AGRICULTURE Agricultural Triangle: Saddle and Sirloin. HERBERT HENR1' Womens .... . La Crosse 4sGrurnpas MINING ENGINEERING Mining Clubg A. I. M. E. DOUGLAS TIABMAN XVOODWORTH . . .Sparta Fairbanks JOURNALISM Sigma Delta Chig Service Nineteen Months. Thesis-A Study of the New York Daily News. IELIZABETH LrsLE Vifooos . . . .LouisviIle,Ky. it -bs: x LL IIOIVIE ECUNOIVIICS Alpha Omicrun Pi: Ward-Belmont 1, 23 Southern Club. lhesls-A Study of' St,al.isLical Data Collected from Home Economics Graduates. JAMES PARK W ooos ....,, . Kansas Cily, Mo. .linznzie MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 5 Bela 'l'hel,a Pit Pi Tau Sigma: llnresfool. Orchestra: A. 'A. E.: Varsily Track 3. ff.: Varsity Football 3. ll: WV: W Club. , lsfxulfzl. LUCILE W IKIGI-I'l' .... Websler Grove, AIO. HOME ECONOIVIICS Pi Beta Phi: Euthenics Club 2, 3: Outing Club 3, ri: X. W. C. l. 2, 3, fig Union Memorial. l'hesis.-'lhe Efl'er:t, ol' Economic Conditions on Yard Materials Since l9I.2. CLINTON R. YAPIF ........... Madison CO iVl M Ell C E Platteville Normal I. ZZ: Gun and liladeg Square Club. iAI.'I'A rlllIIELE YVEONIAN , ........ Lai Crosse n 6 It Il 3 l.Ii'l l'EHS AND SCIENCE L,anCrosse Normal l, 2: Outing Club: I923 Badger .'l.a . Amour FREDEHICK XVOUNGBERG . . .La Crosse .. ., Al CIVIL ENGINEERING Acacia: La Crosse Normal Ig Presidenl. A. S. C. E.: Treasurer A. A. E.g Chairman Homecoming Bonfire Committee 1921. Thesis-Comparison ol' the Efl'ccI.s of' Different Mcthorls ol' FloaLin:1 Concrete on lhe Resistance Lo VVear. Eorrn IVIARIE ZANDER ...... 3 . . Two Rivers Eden LE'I I'ElIS AND SCIENCE Choral Union 1, 2: Social Science Club I. 2. ll-1 Pythia 2. 11-3 Suffrage League I, 2: Music Supervisors Certifi- cate ZZ: Counlry Life Club -I-. Thesis: Origins and Social Influence ol' NVbittier's Slave Poems. LUCILE T. ZANDER ...... . Brilfion Sammy .IOURNALISM Press Club ff: Arls and Crafls LI-. Thesis-A Study of' Lhe Best Country Wiecklies in llio Middle NVcsl. BENJAMIN ZELONKY . . . , . .... Milwaukee Ben CIVIL ENGINEERING A. A. Eg A. S. C. E: PalesLine Buildersg Menorah. Thesis-A Study ol' an Ejector for Low Head Turbine Installation. VVALTER OTTO ZEBVAS Q . . . Milwaukee - Walt - CIVIL ENGINEERING Triangleg Engineers' Minstrelsg Expositiong Engineer- ing Editor Cardinalg Civil Engineers' Society 2, 3, 4: A. A. E.g Homecoming Bonfire 1921g College Baseball. Thesis-Water Power Investigation and Design for Hydro-Electric Plant at Caldron Falls on the Peshtigo River. HARRY F. ZIMMEBMAN .... . . I .Neillsville Zim COMMERCE Acaciag Commerce Advisory Commissiong Union Mem- orial Drive. RUDOLPH CHARLES ZIMMEBMAN . . g Carrollville Gtzimi 7 COMMERCE Theta Chi: Beta Gamma Sigmag' Chairman 1922 Prom Transportation Commibteeg Varsifiy Circus Commlhteeg Junior Class Committeeg EXDOSIIIOUQ Commerce Club J, 2, 3, 45 Vice-President 45 Chairman Kommerce Khaper 3, 4-g Commerce Smoker ffg Commerce Mixer 4. A Thesis-Cost Accounting System for Architects. I Y i Przqe One Hundred and 1 I Siacly- Three COMMENCEMENT 5 Address of Welcome . . Class History ....,. Class Day Oration .A.. Farewell to Underclassinen Class Prophecy ...,. Presentation of Memorial. Acceptance by the Faculty Ivy Oration ...... Ivy Ode . . . CLASS DAY EXERCISES ' MONDAY, JUNEHF 20 MUIR KNOLL . FRANK L. VVESTON . . . W INIFRED TITUS . .LOTHROP F. FOLLET1: . . . .C.xVESLEYTlBAVERS .STERLING H. TRACY J unlor Response ..... ........,... FRANCES ELLEN TUCKER-RICHARD H. TYRELL PIPE OF PEACE CEREMONY MONDAY, JUNE 20 LOWER CAMPUS . . . ,NVILLIAMB.FLOREA DEAN FREDERICK XV. ROE I. ARNOLD PERSTEIN A .BIARION GOODXVIN Pipe of Peace Oration. . . . . .CHARLES D. Assovsxi' Junior Acceptance . . . . . AIELBOURNE BERGERNLAN Page One Hundred and Sixty-Four 3 :00 8:00 11:00 10:00 10:-145 11:4-5 12:30 1:30 3:00 4:00 6:00 9:00 10:00 10:15 3:30 9:30 P w I .P A A A IJ P P P P P p P A A I i l i l BACCALAUREATE EXERCISES i SUN DAY, JUN E 13 ppl l l i l i Address, Pm3s1DEx'r EDWARD A. Binois . . . University Armory CLASS DAY MONDAY. JUNE 20 ' -lvy and Class Day Exercises ...,...,., -'ml he A ellow Jackal' Senior Class Play . . . -Plpc of Peace Ceremony ,.... . . . . , . ' ALUMNI DAY T17 ES-DAY, JU NE 21 -Annual Busincss Alccling ,.....,..... -Exercises in Honor of Dr. Sterling . -Dedication of Sterling: l lall .... -Luncheon .,...,.,.. -Baseball Game ......,.. -Alumni Parade and Lincoln Ceremonx -University Band Concert ..... -Alumni Dinner .,.... . -Informal Heeeption .....,.., -Moving Pic-Lures of University Events . , . , . . . . Informal Alumni Ball .,...,,.......... COMMENCEMENT DAY WEDNESDAY. JUNE 22 -University Procession . ....... ., . . . . , N . . -Coimnencement Exercises . . , . . 'Muir Knoll .Open Air Theater . . ,Lower Campus , , . Music Hall . , . Music Hall . Physics Building . , .Lathrop Hall . . Lower Campus . . .Upper Campus . . Lincoln Terrace . , .Armory Hall . l7rr+sident's House . . . . Music Hall . , , Lathrop Hall , . Upper Campus Agricultural Pavilion 4 Page One Hand:-ul and Sirly-Five UNIOR JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS GUSTAV TEBELL . . NIILDRED KLANN . ESTHER NIAINLAND . . MORTON FROST . ARTHUR TROST . . .Presidplzl . .Vzfre-Preside1'1l . .Secrelary . . .Treasurer Sergflunl-al-Arnz,s Frost Klann Tebnll Mainland TroQL Page One Hundred and Si:nly4Sir X 4 Page One Hundred and Sixly-Seven v Page One Hundred and Sircly-Eighl . , , .,.. Y .,., .V -P 1 1 .3-.f,, ,, Jr,-x 'i , . ' ' ml 111-1 11' 1 131,111 1 1- 1 N 111 1 1 1 ,.1 1,1 1 14111 111 ' 111Hfl1 11 .al ,1 'ink 11 1131 V 1111 i 'Q' 1 M 1 1 V .1 1 1 Q1 1 1 1 1 11 1 Page One Hundred and Sizly-Nine i , 1 I i. V 1 y.. N X. V Page One Hundred and Scvenly 1 1 1, 1 ff 11 , 1 X 1 1 1 1 1 l'nfyf One llllllllfflf nnrl Sevenly-One li v w W p I lm 4 'W 'Ii 3-,s V ri ,-N v 1 3 Page One Hundred and Sevenly-Two , SOPHOM ORES SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS GEORGE CARLSON . . . Presideni JOSEPHINE SNONV . . . .V ice-President KATHERINE O,SHEA . . . . .Secretary GAMBER TEGTMEYEB . .,.. Treasurer GORDON ROBERTS . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms W,'A 'MN w 1 X!-1, Q X 1, 1-i R W MW V ,,. , , R jl 1 1 ,X V1 ,114 W NJ4 ' . , . V1 'I ., , W I 'haf' V , N, 1 -r 1 w , - gg 1 ' . ., , 1 iwji Tegtmeyer Snow Carlson O 'Shea Roberts Z Nfl W Page One Hundred and Seuenly-Three Page One Hundred and Seventy-Four 12 f 3 2 4 i 4 Pane One Hundred and Sevenly-Five FRESHMEN FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS JACK LARSH . . . . .President MARGARET IVES . . Vice-President JANE TRUESDALL . . . .Secretary RALPH GILES .... .... T reasurer NIARSHALL DIEBOLD . . . .Sergeanl-az'-Arms A Giles Ives Larsh Truesdall Diebold Page One Hundred and Sevenly-Six Hcadv -fbi' H16 Gun ..-u , ,ff The Bnlllzf Royal Sophs Celebrating I he Viclor-v Page One Hundred and Sm-enly-Seven HE four-color painting which is reproduced on the opposite page was secured through the courtesy of Neysa McMein, America's foremost Woman illustrator. To accompany the painting, which is her own, Miss NICM6l11 has selected eight portraits of representative Wisconsin Women, on the basis of the beauty, character, and womanly charm which they reflected. Irene Castle and Sally James Farnham assisted the artist in her selection. The preslige of any naliolz may be measured by Ihe spirit of ils women. 511 1 1 41 E P I Q J, QL -1 'F 3 5. E z L i f 1 4 ! 1 1 . ,M , ..A ., , A V,-A , W, , ,,, X 1 V z X. 1 E s l 4 i 1 HE Spirit of Wisconsin is nowhere more delicately mirrored than in the ideals and interests of the true Wisconsin woman. lt is just a little over a half century since co-education was instituted at the University of Wisconsin, and today women students are enrolled in every college upon the campus and have an active part in nearly every student interest and activity. Instead of con- Hning their study to the liberal arts, they are taking and often majoring in courses in law, chemistry, bacteriology, med- icine. engineering. and commercial sub- jects. The great number of Women's activi- ties. athletic sports, and organizations. and the diversity of their nature, nur- tures the spirit of co-operation and serv- ice. and develops leaders. This augurs Well for the future, for it evidences a thorough preparation on the part of Wisconsin Women for an active and Wholehearted co-operation in the affairs of the great competitive world which is just ahead. Page One Ilizndrerl unrl Eiylzly-Nine KEY TONE The membership of Keystone is composed of the presidents of all the recoqnized women s organizations on the campus. It aims to function as a sort of representative assembly in which all of the women of the University shall be represented, and to serve as a policy forming mediumfor all women's organizations. It aims also to secure the united support of the organ izations represented for all womenis activities and interests. mmsasasmnm 1 OFFICERS MILDRED GERLACH ............ President CATHERINE WVOODMAN . . Secretary and Treasurer M EMBEBS ............Barnard . . . .Blue Dragon . . . . . . Castalia . . Census Chairman . . . Chadbourne . . . . . Clef Club . . Euthenics Club . .... Glee Club . . . .Green Button . . lVIOrtar Board . . Omicron Nu . .Outing Club , . . .Pythia . .Red Domino . . .Red Qauntlet ETHEL STOCKDALE . . IMA WINCHELL . , . EDITH BLACK . . . ISABEL CAPPS . . VALERIA OLSON . . REBA HAYDEN . . J ENNIE HEISIG . . MARION MOSEL , . , MARY DEVINE .... NIARION STRASSBURGER . . Lois RAYMOND .... ELIZABETH KIRK . . . EVELYN SHANV . . ESTHER GUERINE . . lVlABEL JOBSE. . . ELLEN CORRELL . . , TVIILDRED GERLACH . DOROTHY DWIGHT . . TVIABEL VVINTER . . . CATHERINE WOODMAN lVlARION STRASSBURGER ......S.G.A. . . .Theta Sigma Phi . . . . . . . . , Twelfth Night . . . . , . . , . , . . .VV. A. A. . . WVOIIIHIES Agricultural Association . . . . , . . . . . Daily Cardinal M ERLE SHAW ............... Yellow Tassel AUTA LYBIAN ..... ...... Y . W. C. A. . Dolphin Club . . . . . .NVomen'sCo1nInerce Club DIXIE DAVIS .....,......,. ELIZABETH THWING . SONYA FORTHAL. , . . .Collegiate League of Women Voters Dwight . Lyman Davis Hayden M. Shaw .Iobse Kirk Devme D Black Raymond Capps Woodman Thwing Forthal Winchell Correll Gerlach E. Shaw Olson Helsig Page One Hundred and Ninety J OURNALISM HOUSE Journalism House was founded in 1921, so that women in the University with a common interest in journalistic activities might live together. All women majoring in the Course in Journalism are eligible for membership in the organization, which is honorary in that a two- thirals vote of the members of the house is necessary to the admission of any new member. The girls make an effort to have every member represented in some one of the many journal- istic activities onthe campus, and the organization is the first of its kind established anywhere in the country. . FACULTY ADVISER NVILLARD G. BLEYER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS NIARION PENNELL CROSBY NIILDRED S. I'IILL JUNIORS PORTIA B. LUGOFF BERNICE L. BRUNS SOPHOMORES Lois A. COLE DOROTHY M. LAYVTON EDITH A. PORTER BERTHA M. ELREL ANNA C. VON STOFFREGEN FRESHMEN DOROTHY GIBBS HELEN SCHUMACHER .IESSIE M. GRAVES Schumacher Graves Cole Elbel Lu gofl' Crosby Hill Law Lon Bru ns Page One Hundred a Ninety- One BLUE DR GO Blue Dragon is the Senior women's organization at U zsco zszn, and has for its aim the fostering and maintaining of a class spirit, and the promotion of a class interest in women s athletics and activities on the campus. To the end that this aim mav be accomplished fre quent gatherings CUl,Cl1fl1I'tCil0T1,S are held by the organization daring the school year OFF I CEBS IMA WINCHELL. . . President LOUISE C. FRITSCHE . . . I me President CATHERINE E. NVHEELER . Secrelars lVIARGARET H. DUCKETT . . Treasurer f i '-. V 'l??ilfiLV1i2', fj Wiflchell Frilsche Wheeler Dm-kel I Page Om' Hundred and Ninety-Two YELLO ' . ASSE All Junzfor women ol llze University are members of Yellow Tassel, founded by lhe class of 1916. As sponsors of the Junior advisory syslem, ils members frequently enierlain iheir Freshman adrisees with funclions given during ilze school year. OFFICERS NIERLE SIIAYY . . , . . Presidenl C. LOUISE NIOORE . . . Vice-Presidenl IRENE A. CLAYTON .... . Secrelarlv ROMAYNE M. BEHIWM.-xN . . . Treasurer ,,,, .1 Shaw Moore Clfiywn 1 w Berryman W . Page One Hundred and Ninely-Three RED GAUNTLET Red Gauntlet is the Sophomore women's organization, and it aims to foster the spirit of fellowship among all the Sophomore women ofthe University. I ts farther purpose is to pro- mote a class interest in women's athletics and activities. ' OFFICERS MABEL JoBsE . . . . . President ESTHER BILSTAD . . . . Vice-President PAULINE NENVELL . . . Secretary RACHEL HASXVELL . . . . Treasurer Jobse Bilstad Newell Haswell Page One Hundred and Ninety-hour ' t i GREE BUTTO Green Button, the organization for Freshmen women., was founded in 1912, and was the first of the class organizations to be established at the University. Through it, Freshmen wornen oecomelacquainted with Wisconsin traditions, and are encouraged to participate in alt university activities. OFFICERS NIARY DEVINE . . . , , . President GENEVIEVE HARD1' . . . Vice-President RUTH DONOVAN . . . . . . Secretary ELIZABETH MAHORNEY . . . Treasurer Devine Hardy DOIIOVHU M ah0 neY Pgae One Hundred and Ninety-Five COUNCIL YOUNG WOIVIEBVS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION The Young Women's Christian Association aims to serve every girl on the campus through its five administrative groups of two hundred and one girls. Cabinet, with the chairman of each department, is the executive group. Cabinet Council, with the committeemen of each department, is the legislative body auxiliary to Cabinet. Freshman Commission, an elected group of Freshmen women, aims not only to develop leader- ship among its own mernbers,but to create among Freshmen women a desire to serve. Soph- omore Commission is the same group, functioning in its Sophomore year. Board, with a representative from each organized house, acts as an educational and information medium. AUTA LYMAN . . . HELEN KASBEER . CLEO PARSLEY . . . . KATHERINE 0lSHE1X IMA VVINCHELL. . . MIBIIKINT AREY . . . ZIRIAN BLISH . . HELEN CHEETHAIII . BLANCHE FIELD . . GLAIJYS HASKINS . . ADELAIDE AN DERSON EDITH AULTLTAN MARY BALDWVIN MARY BALL BESS BLANDING MYRTLE BRANDT LUCILLE CAMPBELL ISABEL CAPPS DOROTHY CHAPMAN LOUISE CLANCY ALICE CORL MARGARET DUCRETT DOROTHY DXVIGHT Y. W. C. A. CABINET . . . . President . , . Vice-Pres ident . . . . . Treasurer . . . . . Secretary Un dergraduate Rep'tve . . . . Social Service . . . . . . Vcspers . . Advisory . . Publicity . . Industrial CABINET ESTHER l l1KVEN . . BELLE KNlGH'l'S . LOUISE MOORE . . CARYL PAIIKINSON . M.KHGtkHET THOMAS . BETTY THORKEISON CATI-IERINE WHEELER NIARTI-I x XV!-II'l'I.0CK MERLL: SI-IAM' . . . ALMA F ENN KATHERINE FERGUSON HARIETTE GREENE ESTHEII HARRIS ELEANoR HETKIT IRENE HENSEY LYLA l'lOLT FLORENCE I-IUPPIIICII LEONE IMMEL DORA INGRAHAM HELEN KEATOR HELEN KEENEY ELIZABETII KEAIPTON HELEN KINGSFOEII ALBERT-I KIRCHNPZIK ELIZABETH Klux MILDREIT KLANN KATHERINE ICLITI-TTER ARLEEN KLLVG ALICE LIGARE BEDA IVIACKIN JESSIE MCCLYAIONT HELEN MCCLANDRI-ss MARIEXN METC.XLF' HELEN PARKER DOROTHY PAULI, MILDRED REPIIINGFIIX MILDIKEIJ RIECK CABINET . . Religious Education . . . . . . . Finance . . . . . Sick Visitation . . . . . . . . Advisory . . Cabinet Council Leurler . . . . . . . . Social . . . . . Membership . Conference Leader . . . . . . Board KATHERINE ROSENBERRY HILDA SCHLILZ INIARJORIE SEvERENcI-: EVELYN SHAW GERTRUDE SLOCUM DORIS Surrn FLORENCE STQLTE PI-IYLLIS TATMAN VIOLA THUERINC: JOSEPHINE WIKLTIERS J ULIA W ATSON GLADYS VVEBBER HELEN ZUEHLKE M. Shaw - Parsley . Haskins Miss Anderson Blish W'heelcr Moore O'SlIea Cheetham Knlgh Ls Wmchell Haven Lyman Whitlock Kasbeer Thorkclson Field Page One Hundred and Ninety-Six PIELEN ANDERSON JANE .BALDYVIN ERNESTINE BLA1-z IELIZABETI-I BRONVN CI-IARLOTTE CASE ALICE CUIIAIINGS ESTHISII FIFIELD IVIARGABET IIROXVN MARX' BURCI-IARIJ EsTI-IER BIIETAD IVIARGARET CALISEN JEANETTE CHERRY ALICE CORL JANET CUIIIAIING NINA FERRIS LOIS ADIJINGTON ANN ANDERSON ANNE-I-TE BACKUS LOIS BOYVEN NORHIA CARL VERA CARLISLE ALICE COCIIRELI, NATALIE DENSAIOOR MARTHA DIEI-IL YOUN M N1 CHRI 'TIAN ASSOCI TIO FRESH M AN COMM I SSION ALICE GII.BIiRT CLARA H I-:R'rzEEnG LOUISE l'IOLT IVIARGARICT Ivlis DOROTHX' JORN BETTY M.Kli0lKNLZX' Dl7ll!J'FHX' M.K'FlIIS JI-:ssm IVIOIKIKISON GLAIJYS NOIIGORII JEAN PALICA VIRGINIA HEZNER l4II.IzAIsE1-II SEARS IIUNVOIK SKAAR liI,lZ,Kllli'I'll S'mL'I'I-7 SOPHOMORE COMMISSION PIAIIIETTIC GRFIICNl'I MAIIRINE HALL IELLEN HARRIS HELEN PIASXVELL R.kCHEL H.KSXVEI.I. ANITA HAVEIN M.ABEL JOBSE JEANETTE KENNAN Y. W. ALICE Drxow MURIEL EDWARDS MARJORIE EISTON MILDRED HIRsIc LUCILLE JOHNSON PRISOELLA JOHNSON MARION JUNEAU DOROTHY KING INIARIE KOWW'.NI.Kli I-IIQLEN KINCISIVIIIIIY ARLEEN KLUG HELEN KREBS JANET MARSHALL MARIAN MIiTC,-XI.l' MARGARET MIIRIIAY MAHCELLIK NEFF PAIILINE NENVIEIII. C. A. BOARD ELSE KUEl'Ih CAROLYN LITTLE DOROTHY NIATHIS ANNETTE IVIAYI-IEW' BEATRICE MILLS GERTRUDE NoRRIs CAROL PEET MARY PETERSEN VESTL RITTEIK FRESHMAN COMMISSION VIANION STRIENG ELIZAI-1E'I'I-I VPOMPKINS NI.-KIKY NVALKER IIIENE WI-IITEHEA rm JANET NVALLS JANE WIIITNEY HOSAIIONII NKlI.'l'li li ATIIERINE O'SI-IEA l'II.IzABE'I'II RILEY DOROTHY SIRI-SON ALETIIEA SMITH IQEOHGIA S'rANr1HFIEL ICTIIEI, 'I'IfRRI2:LL MARION RO BINSON ELEANOR SANFORD IQENEVA SCI-IOENEELD IEERTRUDE STEVENS PETE STENVART LOUISE TI-IOMAS DOROTIIEA WERDEN GRACE VVERTII HELEN XVINK ICLNI AN v Hertzberg Norgord Stnl I O C11 mmings Sl rcng Mahorncy John Tompkins M :I Lh is WVIIILCIICZIII HOI L Ives Fifield Palica Kasbevr Rez nor Baldwin Sknar A nfl I I son Page Oni' flllllllllll and IVIIIPIX SELCH E THE ICS CL B The Ealhenics Club was organized to study and discuss Home Economic problems and lo furnish social aciivizfies for ihe women in the Home Economics course. The club lakes an active pari in aiding Madisorfs local welfare work. OFFICERS JENNIE PIEISIG . . . . . . . . ..., Presideni CARYL PARKINSON . . . Vice-President F. LOUISE THOMPSON . . . . Secretary ETHEL METZ ,... . Treasurer MEMBERS HELEN .AGAR NORMA ALBRIGHT NELLE ALEXANDER MARY AUSMAN ELIZABETH BALDVVIN MARY BALDNVIN MARION BARNES VERNETTA BARTLE ALICE BULLOCK ESTHER BURKE MARGARET BUTLER ELIZABETH BYRNS LUCILLE CAMPBELL RUTH CATLIN MARJORIE CHASE GLADYS COOK TVILLMA COOPER HELEN COREY EDITH CRANE PAULINE DICKINSON VOLUNTA DINE TVIILDRED DOWNIE MIRIAM L. DUNCAN HELEN EMERY VERA B. ELLWOOD EDITH G. FAUERBACH LILLIAN FRAZEE HELENE FRENCH MARGARET D. FIX EDNA GEFKE CLARA GILLESPIE EVELYN GOESSLING MARION A. GREGG ESTHER HEDLEY J ENNIE HEISIG ELSIE HESS ELSIE HODGSON MARTHA TIOLLINGSNVORTH EMMA HLYMNIEL OLA JOHNSTON HEIJEN KEATOR MILDRED KINGSLEY ALICE KINSLOW ELIZABETH KNOTT VIOLET KRESGE A.NI'I'A E. KUEHN TIARBIETT LEWIS JULIA LINGENFELDER CAROLINE LITTLE VIDA LURRY GLADYS MAHAR ELIZABETH TVIAYNARD MARGARET MCHARDX' EDDIS MELLOR ETHEL NTETZ J ESSIE MORTON LORENA OESTREICH R lARY O,LEARY DORIS OLIVER SOPHIA K. ORMAND EDNA PALECHEK CARYL PABKINSON RUTH PI-'EIEER MARTHA PINNEY NlARY PURCELL LOIS RAYMOND NIILDRED BIECK BLANCHE M . RIISING VANGEL RUSSELL ELIZABETH M. S.-ALTER IRENE SCANLON GENEVA SCHOENFELD VIVIEN SEEBEB lVlARJOBIE SIMPSON SARAH SLATER TVIARY SMILEY FRANCES STACK JESSIE M. STEVENS INA STEVENSON HENRIETTE SUESSE PERSIS TALCOTT W AVA TAMBLINGSON GLADYS E. THOMPSON F. LOUISE THOMPSON MARION THOAIPSON VIOLA THUERING M ARGO TOPP TVIARGARET TOWNLEY FAITH TRUMBELL TXTARJORIE T RUMBULL DOROTHY VAN HOLTEN lVlERLE VAN HORN NAOAII W AEI-'LE CHRISTINA WEEKS HELEN WHITE DOROTHH' WVIEPKING SARAH XVISNEEIR ,ADALINE WRIGHT ISABEL WRIGHT DOROTHY VAN .Crane .Hess Weeks Schoenfeld M.ThOmpsOn L.'I'hOmpSon Ausman 0'LeRry Pfeifer Wflglzll . Callm Byrus ParkinSOn Mellnr Oeslreich Fauerhach Cook Bullock Frazee Ormund Dlcklnson KIIOLE Molz Rleck Heisig Thueriug Little Chase Kingsley Downie Page One Hundred and Ninely-Eight WOMEVSCOMMERQE CLUB Members of the three upper classes are eligible for election to the Womenfs Commerce y Club. It brings together, by its monthly meetings, women interested in commercial enterprise an.d co-operates with other commerce organizations in departmental activities. OFFICERS ELIZABETH THWING ....... . . . President LAURA HEIIVI . . . . . Vice-President NIAUDE KILLAM . . . . Secretary ELSIE IVERSEN . . . Treasurer MEMBERS 1922 MARJORIE IXLEXANDER ANNA ARNQUIST ETHEL EDWARDS ELSIE EKEIKN DOROTHX' :HAMELHATH LAURA HEIM PEARL LICHTFELDT RUTH LINDSTROM 1923 JENNIE BAILEY MARY BAILEY M,ARJOBIE DELBRIDGE KATHERINE FELIX JULIA PIARRINGTON ELSIE IVERSEN lVlARGARET KIECKHOFER M AUDE ICJLLAM 1924- BESSIE BERKLEY ESTHER BILSTAD AMY NIAKINSON EVELYN MCFARLAND CAROLYN RICHARDSON ESTHER RIGBY M ILDRED RYAN NIARGARET THOMAS ELIZABETH THWING CHARLOTTE VOORHIS .ANGELINE LINS BLANCHE MCKEEVER ADELINE INIEYER MARY NEB EUNICE RANSOM W ILMA TROST ALICE WILKINS HELEN ZUEHLKE .ALICE CORL IRENE HOFFNLAN McKeever McFarland Voorhis Alexander lversen BilsLad Zuehlke Hoffman N. Arnquist Lius Mackinson Delhridge Rigbe . Ryan . Kleklwfer Richardson Ekern Meyer Ransom Nee Barley I Barley ' Edwards Berkley Killaru Felix Lichtfeld Thwing Harrington Helm LlndsLrom I Page One Hundred and NinetJ Nifl5 THE WOMEN'S MEDICAL I ASSOCIATION, The I'V0fTl6l7,,.S' Nledical Association was organized in fhe .spring of 1919 to promole ihe professional and social invferesls of women studying medicine and ihe medical sciences at ihe University of Wiscon.sin. LYLA BRUNDIGE O FFI C ER S BEATRICE IVIAHER .............. Presidenl AMELIA BURWELL . ..... Vice-President AGNES CONRAD .,....... Secretary and Treasurer HONORARY MEMBERS DR. SARAH I. NIORRIS DR. DOROTHX' REED MENDENHALL DR. G-ERALDINE VERNON DR. MARY SAUTOFF ASSOCIATE MEMBERS MISS C. E. BREWSTER MISS J. V. INTAHER MISS IRENE BLAKE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY MEDICS I MARTHA BLUMER AGNES CONRAD FRANCES HOLFORD ALICE OUTHOUSE MARY ELESTEN ONEITA LUTZ FRANCES PERSTEIN CHARLOTTE CALVERT VERONICA FREITAG BEATRICE INIAHER MARY POPE PRE-MEDICS RUTH ANDERSON KATHERINE BACH JANE I-I. C. BALDWVIN BERTHA BLUMER MARGARET BROWN AMELIA BURWELL NIARGARET ALLEN LOUISE ALLYN BONITA CARLSON VIRGINIA CONKLIN MARION CONNOR ANABELLE CRAMER DOROTIIEA FORSYTH EMELIA GIRYOTAS EDNA GODSILALL MARGARET GRAHAM IRENE GROTH MARGARET HATFIELD FRANCES HIPPLE ELIZABETH KIRK MARTHA KOHL BEATRICE LINS EDITH PARKHILL M AJORS IN MEDICAL SCIENCES MARIE CORNS MARGARET GORMLEY BERNICE GRIFFEY ELSBETH HENNECKE IVIARIE LOTTES ETHEL IVIETZ IVIIRBELLE NETHERNVOOD MA RY NIMLOS HELEN PRATT BLANCHE SMITH FRANCES H. STEYVART JANE TENNEY BORCHILD TRULSON IVIYRTLE NIMLOS LUCILE A. REILLY FRANCES SAVVYER ETHEL 'TI-IENVLIS Hexmmwcke Griffey Cremur Lu l,z Connor Conrad Buch .CalverL Burwcll Ialolford Freimg Pram Brundage Sawyer Elrxsl-RR Conklm - Lol tes Oulhouse Kohl Blumer SLewarL Maher Pope Glryol-as Billdwlll Netherwood Page Two Hundred AGRICULTURAL WOMENS ASSOCIATION I The Agricullziral Wornenfs Associulioli al lJ YlSC0lI,SIII is one of lhree Simi lar organ iza- tions eslablisheclsarnong lhe colleges of lhe eozmlry. Il aims lo bring logelher alllwomeni majoring in llze College offlgriezzllzire. and lo enrouroge lhe choice of seienliHc ag vocalfon for women, OFFICERS CATIIEIIINI3 T. XNOODMAN . . . . . Presiflenl BARBARA TIASTINGS . . . ,.... Vice-Presidenl EUC-ENIE OUTHOUSE . .,.. Secrelary-Treasurer I'IIaYI.T.1E STENVART. . . . C'0l'l'l'SlJOIZdl.l1,f1 Secrelarv M I5 M B ER S RIINNIE LIPPITT JULIA VVHITEFIELD FLQRISNCE MAIIOIINEI' EUGENIA OUTHOUSE I'IEYLT.IE STEWART CHARLo'rTIs Balm ALAN IONE BRERETON BARBARA HASTINGS IVIARY JOHNSTON RIARY WRIGHT riculiure as ci CATHERINE T. WOOIJMAN Stewart Johnston Haslings Lippilt Brerelon Vfrighl, Nlnhorney Xvoogllngln BOFI-Clflilll OULIIOIIQP XVIIILFGTICIKI Page Two Ilundrell and One ' I I . A A' Holzer LindsLrom Stockdale John Schroeder .I BARNARD HALL V A A- OFFICERS ETHEL STOCKDALE ........... I. Presfdeni JANET HOLZER .... . . Vzce-Preszdent RUTH LINDSTROM . . ..... Secrelary I LILLIAN JOHN .... ...., T reasurer I ANNIETA SCHROEDER . ....... Social Chairman A YEAPUS CALENDAR A Ocl. TEN O,CLOCK TEA Feb. FORMAL DINNER DANCE Oct. HAI,LOWE,EN DANCE Mar. ST. PATRICK,S PARTY N Oct. HOMECOMINC TEA Mar. FACULTY RECEPTION 3 Nov. OPEN HOUSE Mar. INFORMAL DANCE 3 Nov. THANKSGIVING DANCE May TVIOTHERS, WEEK END 1 Dec. TEA EOR CHAPERONES May SPRING DANCE Dec. CHRISTMAS PARTY May SWVING OUT N 1 1 N 1 , N Page Two Hundred and Two - I I .. . I A' 1159. -iE 1'-5 ,Q .f 5122: , Q , kr A U Ivnrss n Bembe Ol:-mn Alexrmder Ross CH DBOUR E HALL OFFICERS NYALERIA OLSON ........ . . . President ELSIE IVERSEN ..,. . V1'ce-Presidenl ELIZABETH BEEBE . . . . . Secrelary IVIARJORIE ALEXANDER . , . ..., Treasurer JULIA ROSS ............ Social Cfzairmarz YEAR'S CALENDAR Sepl. 28 FRESHNIAN PARTY Jan. .9 AUCTION Sepf. 30 CHADBOURNE TEA Feb. 19 FACULTY DINNER Ocl. 10 INITIATION Feb. Q2 UPPERCLASSMAN PARTY Ocl. 15 FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE BAC RUEII Wlar. 3 INFORMAL DANCE Oci. 18 CORPIIDOR SPREADH Mar. 17 ST. PATRICKVS PARTY Ocl. 93 AT ITIOME Mar. 177 EASTER ECC HUNT Oni. ?9 HONIECONIING TEA Alar. 31 INFORMAL DANCE Nov. 4 INFORMAL DANCE Apr. 21 FORMAL DANCE Nov. 16' CORRIDOR PARTY Apr. 28. Nov. 94 INFORMAL DANCE 17.9, 30 RVIOTHEPCS VVEEK END Dec. 17 SEMI-FORMAL CHRISTMASDANCE May 7 FACULTY DINNER Dec. 18 CHRISTMAS SUNDAY SERVICE May 13 INFORMAL DINNER Dec. 21 CHRISTMAS CARDS May 30 SENIOR SWING-OUT Page Two Hundred and Three . 1 I ,312 ,gi -ai ,iS . iw 11 H1 mg 4, E' slit ull lx .M 2 It l l 4 l' .5 '52 ,f'a: l'2 wM li l? A ' TABI RD INN Tabard Inn was organized in September, 1919, as a wornen's co-operative house. Since September, 1921, it has been entirely self-supporting and will continue on that basis. The project is a very successful one with growing possibilities, and the m have found in it a genuine home and a true spirit offellowship. embers of Tabard Inn OFFICERS CORNELIA HEISE ........ . President VIOLEI' GOO . . . Secretary EDITH BLACK . . Treasurer OLA JOHNSTON . Chaperone GRADUATES JUNIORS SOPHOMORES HELEN PAULL EDITH BLACK RUTH TEARE SUE I'IADLEY ISABEL CAPPS ALCIE KINSLOXV DOROTHY RODERICK LOCKE DINE OLA JOHNSTON ANELLA WIEBEN SENIORS MARY AUSMAN FERN BUSBY MABEL GOO VIOLET Goo ELOISE WALDRON CHRISTINA WEEKS EDITH ZANDER FR CORNELIA HEISE NIARY .NICCARTHY ESHMEN ESTHER OAKES NIARGARET TOWNLEY ESTHER SEGNER NIILDHED ROWE VOLUNTA DINE 1 I I e - - C I L' O A 1 l F Ausman Capps Rowe Zander L. Dine Townlqy M. Goo V. Dine Segner Roderick Oakes Paull XVIeben NVnldron Teare Black Johnston Heiso Kinslow V. Goo McCarthy Page Two Hundred and Four Senior Swingoul ACTIVITIES of WISCONSIN WOMEN The Women's New Pier A , Freshman Hockey Team X Page Two Hundred and Five v X GES AND AGES ago, in the days when old Main Hall Was in its youth, and when North and South Halls had not yet settled into those attitudes of prim and staid old age which characterize them today, there existed on the campus of Wisconsin a type of co-ed, a gentle, shrinking violet-Whose time between classes was spent in diligent study or in highly intellectual conversations-Whose wildest dissipation in the Way of outside activities was an occasional fudge-party or a trip to vespers. That type has passed away, and today we have the co-ed, complex creature of many moods, who not only finds time for study and for occasional-we might almost say numerous-parties and dances, hut who has other interests as Well, and who ge Two Hundred and Sin: holds a position equal in importance to that of the all-around college man in campus activities. Every aspect of the co-ed's life tends to develop that spirit of eo-opera- tion, that power of leadership which is evidenced so often in the characters of women who are truly Worth while. The spirit in the dormitories, Chad- hourne and Barnard, in the rooming-houses, and in sororities, tends always to foster the co-operative instinct in the girls, inducing them to strive together for a common end. f Page Two Hand d fl 5 A 1 This is particularly true of the three eo-operative houses Where the girls assist in the management, in the expenses, and, to a certain extent, in the housekeeping. The Journalism House, too, develops the spirit of mutual helpfulness, and brings together girls banded by a common interest, the desire to pursue and capture the elusive muse of literature. The Self-Government Association and the University Young Women's Christian Association are organizations which enable the girls to share the responsibilities, the troubles and the problems of sister eo-eds, and, by Wise judgment, to assist in their solutions. Roth organizations are like big q T H ndred and Eiyhl ,gas-'vw sisters, ev er watchful for the welfare of the resourceful upper-classman, the sophisticated sophomore, and the Wide-eyed, frightened frosh. Correlated to these are the four class organizations, Blue Dragon, Yellow Tassel, Pied Gauntlet and Green Button, which ain1 to promote class spirit and to aid the girls in becoming acquainted with the other members of their groups. The athletic, outdoor girl Ends her interest in Outing Club and the Wlomenis Athletic Association, both of which seek to stimulate interest in all outdoor sports and activities and to develop physically fit Wisconsin Women. Pql' Hdd dN Page Two Hundred and Ten 'X X. X ff Q W Even the graces pause In marvel at their beauty As they danceg Musing, Creating, Building rhythmic melodies of precious thoughts And making tangible each little dream With mind and body in a symphony of motion. In all the courts of Fairyland there is No lovelier sight than this. -Kathryn. Turney T2 f .,f'-V ,, ,, 3 ' ,,.:-'Q 1 1 ' S ,fa is Aga! f '-f ' I ,af my H' ' ' 491 : b Qi- 2 ,I 'W' ' -4 www' ' , N... 3, 9 2 A 4 wx ?ii'7'A -'Q I u V, my? yff 1 fd: ,ja .....- ,V-E V, , ff, jx ,,' , ,, ,1 i, ,f, J fy L ,Zf mf' U, Page Two Hundred and Twelve K K 'f15':-ff 4 Ji' img! . V x w x ,,,gfds5'fQ F':' x , Y f 4 1 f Q M--gr? f f 1 A 4' f X -,kV X ,Q f 'M QFQQS H W gf 'Slab W4 .eswfw 9 2 New Q AK- 'V NE N23,'i'N,-fx T A- ,QQ X 4,1 U. Ax, me'- ,ei ,f - ' . ..,. Mfg.. il t N ,, Q I x,w,.,,'r .rl A, i ' , 1 5 ,X , ,f f'T1cf:'?f 2554? if -- N 1 1 F'-.L.,f,9,' 3,1 4 -, 1- V 'a5'7f,334, ': K, -3.51, ',LJ4+Jf-. E J ,, ., ' , 161,-X, vw--Nuff' R --.117 . A2 V-5 '.5Q - ' 5. ' V - .. ' - . , Page Two Hundred and Thirleen , Ax 1 'x 1. ' 1 . ..... ., lf , 1 f , ,X ' f' ix ...es ,I zfffif' ' Z fd J 'h 1' E V2 ff ..w'ff'f 1 - - A ' V f QQ V Q.,-.,-.12 D ry W., 5 ' 1 ' ff! 'I ,mx fiiw. N .. xx. - 'N , D .sf-fav , 0 X Aa Q. x Q xy we iff? x V X J 2? w'25?f gazu .f X Vggwxtxig X5 X 'Cz Jw M A Mk: 1, M 5 , 1-. 0 4, . 6 C , A . 1 fix' ' - f . K Q: 4 ' ,gf 'XX vii N M, f ff-9 Z Q , . 'WJ :A WE X2 -7?-fx '. V ll--ff , 1 S M- N l z x- Page Two Hundred and Fourleen xg X '. .L QM- ,. X K x x , I. 'K ,- , ' ,tiff f , 1, P4-91 if ,,.,-,-1, , yi, ff'f5,I!T1L,,..jf5Z -i . ,gf-I f dw, 1 Y, AJ X xg ' A 1 Hf , 7k's' ' w ' ' 13fQ1i,? v???YQ V . 'vp I, ' 22. f,f7+,Ni'H' A ' l C711-- ZW 54 5 f 4 1 ff I f .q 5. W M --MM., .f. -, ' .Of . f .i ' mf--., ' j133?2:'i, A5 'X ., ' I x 4 2 42 4,-f .,,., 9' 1, -,, V ' -5 . Page Two Hundred and Fifieen R , fi 'A ,-V few 7 ,7 . .V -I ,.f'-f'ffQmGp1:. 54' LCA f V, V JJ! nj twig' ' A '33 ' 'SJW ' 'Rf' 3 ? f 'wx .2 V I , , 1 gf, 'w . , 1 . .yyu ' - , , , ' - 5. 54 Page Two Hundred and Sixteen WLM 'wif' Page Two Hundred and Seventeen - --,.-1-- f i .Y - vn- WISCONSIN WOMEN IN ATHLETICS THLETICS form one of the chief interests among the women of the University. Every year witnesses enthusiastic groups out for all the various sports offered inthe department of Physical Education. Spring and autumn seasons find Camp Randall alive with white-middied athletes. Tennis courts, the archery field, hockey and volley ball fields are busy with interested players. Winter sees Camp Randall deserted for the gymnasium at Lathrop, with basketball and baseball claiming the hockey fans of the fall. Evening periods are necessary, so crowded are the classes. Interested spectators line the walls as the practice games are played off. Competition is strong among the class teams, which are chosen in the middle of the season, and it is a difficult task to choose the varsity teams from the splendid material. Class contests are arranged by the managers to prove the championship titles. Fast and keen are these interclass games. I In dancing and archery, special tryouts are held, and honors awarded to the best participant. Swimming, which is an all-year-round sport, has proved the most popular. Over 500 were registered in the classes last fall, out of a total of 1622 who were registered in the department. The Women's Athletic Association cooperates with the department in the promotion of women's activities, and arouses a lively interest in ath- letics by alloting points for membership on teams and squads, for honors, and for perfect attendance. Page T nd nd Eighteen Trilling ' I'I'D0lIbl0r Lippil. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION The Department of Physical Education dates back to the time when Chadbourne was called Ladies' Hall, and one small room of thc hall was the extent ofthe physical education office. In 1910, when Lathrop Hall was completed, the possibilities ol' the department were considerably broadened with the gymnasium equipment and the extra rooms available. The next year saw the beginning of the physical education course as part of the ' University curriculum. At present, 175 women are enrolled as majors in the department. The Physical Education Department aims to direct student growth and development, to train physical edu- cators and play leaders. and to promote, by mearw of its extension work. a more effective organization of play and administration of physical education throughout the state. FACULTY MISS BLANCI-IE M. TIIILLING .... Associate Professor MISS MAIIGAIIET N. H'D0UIsI,EII . . .flssistant Professor MISS LOUISE LIPPIT ....... Assistant Professor MISS NIAPIIE CAIRNS ....... Assistant Professor ASSISTANTS MISS ALICE BuowNEI.L MISS ALFREDA M osscnov MISS EMILY ELMOIIE MISS CYNTHIA VVESSEN MISS ALICE GALL MRS. G. M. SMITH MISS ESTHEII W. KLEIN MISS LILLIAN STUPP , 'w yi, ff Q' 5g 'Asf I if - I 54 . 3 , . E , 9 ig M Q. I ltd , I 1 1 K my M 6 R Nb Y g I f J N 4 .. gasps et? 3,2 figs 'inn ft, I 'G Page Two Hundred and Nineteen WOMENS ATHLETIC ASS'N The Womenls Athletic Association seeks to stimulate interest in athletics for women and to encourage good sportsmanship. It is a member of the National Association known as the Conference of American College Women. W. A. Afs activities are entirely intra-mural, and it functions through a point system by means of which all women may compete for various awards. The awards, which are based upon athletic ability and spirit, are membership in the organization, the W. A. A. pin, the small W, the big W, and the final emblem. There are about 175 members in the organization. Every spring, VV. A.A. finishes the athletic year with a Field Day program at Camp Randall. Proceeds from this are used for the M00 scholarship which is given each year to a worthy student. Wt. A. A. co-operates with the tWen's Athletic Association in planning the annual Homecoming celebration. The administrative work of the organization is carried on by a board composed of the heads of various sports and of oyjicers elected by the members. Y, CIHYLOH T Tucker i Roach Voorhees Ewald Croskey Roll - Iklrk W alson '1 homus Scvcrence NVEI1 Ler Spikcr H uppriclx Knights age Two Hundred and Twenty PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLUB The Physical Education Club wa.s organized in 1919 lo bring lhe students of the Physical Education 'department in closer conlacl with each other and to create an interest in their profession, with lhe purpose Qffurlhering its .standards and ideals. hlembership in the club is open lo those students who have been members of the Physical Education department for one semester and who have passed the scholarship requirements. The .faculty of the department are members of the club. Monthly meetings are held at which matters of interest in regard to physical education are taken zz p. Prominent speakers are obtained for some of the meet ings ,' at others, discussion groups are held and the problems of the club are taken up and discussedg while at other times parties are given for the entire Physical Education department. The club promotes an advisory syslemfor freshmen and new girls, and attempts to aid beginners and interest them in the work. An effort is also made to keep in. touch with the alumnae of the departmentg one whole rineeling was devoted to reports of graduates of lhe department and the work which they are now oing. At all times lhe club co-operates with the Physical Education department, and endeavors to be of service to the department and all its members. OFF ICERS ALICE OAKES .............. President DOROTHY SUNIPTION ....... V. . Vice-President IVIARGARET MURRAY . . . . . Secretary-Treasurer ADELAIDE MILLER ....... Senior Representative FLORENCE HUPPRICH ...... Junior Represental ive MAURINE HALL .,.... Sophomore Representative MISS ALICE M. BROWNELL ...... Faculty Advisor SumpLion Hupprich Miller Murray Oakes Hall Page Two Hundred and Twenty-One OUT DOOB BASEBALL q CCOBDING to the emphatic statements of a cer- tain professor, no girl is supposed to be able to throw a ball in as capable a manner as a boy. We would be very glad to have any one holding such opinions come and Witness some demonstrations of girls' skill. At all events, some very good form was exhibited by teams as a Whole and by individuals in the contests of last spring. VVeather conditions prevented frequent and extensive practices, but Miss Williams, coach, very ca- pably and patiently drilled the squads in what time there was, turning out teams capable of playing Iirst class ball. Such ball Was exhibited by '22 and '23 in a hotly con- tested game to decide which class should be eliminated from the race. The game was characterized by quick- thinking and air tight defense. It resolved itself into a pitchers' battle, each pitcher, assisted by excellent field- ing, holding the other team to no runs and few hits, ex- cept in the third inning. In this inning each team gar- nered four runs and were held scoreless 'through the next five innings. The first half of the ninth inning saw '23 at the bat. It looked as though the side would be retired when a second base hit and a Wild throw to second gave '23 a run, and they succeeded in holding '22 scoreless in the last half of the inning. That this game did not occur on Field Day is unfortunate, for it furnished a better example of Miss Williams' coaching than the one played later, when the sophomores again defeated '24. By these two games '23 won the championship. Page Two Hundred and Twenty-Two INDOOR BASEBALL HE 1922 indoor baseball season was a most success- ful one. There was an unusual amount of enthusi- asm displayed by the girls from the very start, the enrollment for the four classes exceeded the enrollment previous years. , The Freshman class surprised the older and more ex- perienced girls with their ability and teamwork. Doris Burdick, as pitcher, and Hazel Weingandt, as catcher, Worked out signals and often put a trick play over on their opponents. The class of 192-L probably had the strongest team. Dora Harris, the short stop, was quick and used her head every minute of the game. Pauline Newell deliv- ered a fast and well placed ball which was rarely missed by either ofthe catchers, Edith Porter and Helen Parker. The Juniors played a good game and had a fine in- field, but they seemed to lack the speed of the Freshmen and Sophomores. The Junior class had an exceptional pitcher, Emma Stevning. She not only pitched a good ball that was hard to hit, but she maintained absolute control of the field after releasing the pitched ball. Wilma Trost, as first baseman, was very reliable and steady. Even though the number out for Junior team was limited, the material was very good. The class of 1922, as would be expected from Seniors, played a scientific and deliber- ate game. With all the deliberation, there was a lot of speed and almost painful accuracy. They had more trick plays and catchy balls than the other classes. The combination of Alice Tucker, Doris Boll, and Ramona Hayes in the infield could not easily be excelled for team work. The Seniors played a good game and showed mighty fine sportsmanship. Page Two Hundred and Twenty-T E Urban Daring Miller ARCHERY HE spring of 1921 found archery more popular than ever before. Great interest was shown in the tournament, and many honors were won during the season. Three classes competed in the tournament, the sophomores winning with a total of 536 - points, the freshmen taking second with 476, and the juniors third with 464. The highest individual scorers in the tournament were Jo Doring, Faith Urban, and Adelaide Miller. Honors are awarded to those who score 80 or above on 24 consecutive arrows. Practically all who won honors at all went far above this score. Much credit is due to Miss Alfreda Mosscrop, who is responsible for the increased interest in the sport and the enthusiastic endeavor of the girls to become more proficient in the use of the bow and arrow. VARSITY TEAM Jo DORING '23 ADELAIDE R lILLER '22 FEBN Foxoiv '22 A Donorm' XYESTENDARP 22 ARCHEBY HONORS Jo Don1NG ALoIsE SHAEEH FERN FoxoN Donorm' SUMPTION HELEN MEYEBS DOROTHY VVESTENDARP ADELAIDE lXlILLER NIARY VVISWELL PEG IAEA M Page Two Hundred and Twenty-Four .gil l l 1 A l l Shafer Hirsig l Webber WOMENS INT ERGLASS BOWLING . HE women's 'interclass bowling, under the capable management of Charlotte C. ,fl l VVOOPhlS '22, got away to a good start, and kept going until a successful season was ll ended. Squads were picked in the middle of February, and teams about the iirst of March. One squad and one team were chosen from each of the four classes. Match games were played off beginning March 20. ' Q gil The ten girls with the highest average, gained from their eight highest scores, con- stitute the squad. The seven girls from squad, who make the highest average, from four ffl new scores, make team. The schedule for 1922 Was: lst match: 2nd match: 3rd match: Seniors vs. Sophs. Seniors vs. Frosh. Seniors vs. Juniors Juniors vs. Frosh. Juniors vs. Sophs. Sophs. vs. Frosh. Great interest was manifested in the games, and enthusiasm and team backing ran high. HQ Much splendid material was developed. Among the highest scorers were Katherine Fuller '24, Ruth Staudenmeyer '24, and Gladys Webber '23. These girls should Fill, furnish excellent Varsity material. A great deal of credit is due the class managers, Whose untiring efforts are largely Mil responsible for the success of the season. They are: Florence Mahorney '22, Maude Killam ,23, Genevieve Hicks ,2fl, and Valentine Van Tassel 125. W Vf .1 lm . iff! i in, - l Page Two Hundred and Twenly-Five GIRLS, BASKETBALL HE 1922 basketball season has been an especially interesting one. The season was peppy, and hopes ran high before the coach, Miss Wesson, and the head of basketball. Belle Knights, chose the class teams. The annual tournament opened Friday, March 17, with a double header game between the Seniors and the Sophomores, and the Juniors and the Freshmen. Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores entered the games with prac- tically the same line-up that they had last year. The Juniors. who were victorious last year, lost Margaret Henry, an exceptional forward, but the Knights-Hupprich combination proved a great basket-getter in the preliminary and regular games. The team was also strengthened by the addition of Helen Pratt, whose guarding game was almost equal to that of Slim Mainland, last yearis Varsity guard. At the opening of the tournament, the Seniors, who ran a close second in the tournament last year, had high hopes for success this year. Lyman and Fish formed an offense of close passing and dribbling which seldom failed to put one or both of them in shooting position, and they did not often miss a shot. Several possible center combinations Worked with the three centers, Barton, Kilgore, and Boach, but in the opening game of the tournament Roach and Barton played the game. The Sophomores placed their hopes largely in the speed and team play of Billstead and Smith in the center. Harris, who as a Freshman, made last year's varsity, Was expected to do much of their scoring. The Freshman team was sadly handicapped by the loss of much of their best material through ineligibility. l ge Two Hundred and Twenty-Sir TENNIS 1921 AY after day passed by, after the opening of the Spring season, and still the gray clouds hovered overhead, giving evidence of not the faintest intention of dispersing. We soon found to our great delight that, no matter how dark the clouds, they always have silver linings. The girls who were lined up in the per- petual tournament and enrolled in the classes, soon had some thorough workouts in the way of close matches before the teams were chosen. ' livery class had splendid material, but not one of us can deny that the .Junior team had an edge on the rest. But there are other things to talk about besides that edge. At times there was close tennis, many times it was clever, and still more often the balls were smashed with beautiful, Hnished strokes. The type of game played by the different girls was varied. The Wyatt-Carlisle match s ' was conspicuous for its clever chopped strokes and its closeness of play. Then one day, Ellie, the big girl. took on the little Freshman Varsity girl, Lois Jacobs. No one rooted, for everyone was too intent on the clever plac- ings to take time out for cheering. One day down on the Park Street courts a crowd gathered as the Beecher-Schafer match went on. lt was not long until the game showed which way it was going to turn, but everyone seemed absorbed in watch- ing the low, beautifully curved balls that pounded back and forth. Miss Beecher's marvelous accuracy in drive and graceful playing was a delight to the onlooker. Lauffers were not wanting, and there were many low, sweeping backhand drives passed back and forth over the net. Sophomore doubles were represented by the invincible Carlisle-Schafer combination which combined splendid tech- nique and clever head work. The Beecher-Wyatt, singles on Field Day brought the Cup into the possession of the - 1 4 J umors. Q5 'G '12 ,xl Z A' . - i I if Wfe Q aa: A ' ..-'11 f. 7,-.V 725' -,fs ' , --Q , , 5 7 if 41 f Page Two Hundred and Twenty-Seven ,,f', .' -- , v , , l if Nw ,D r f ii' l f l :F lf. TQ ll. ' A I e ev T HooKEY ma AIlN!.ra1n! rain! And hockey practice called off again! However, an occasional cool, 552 dry day permitted some snappy practice under the direction of Miss Wesson and M212 Miss Mosserop. ,M I Hockey has become the favorite fall sport among women, and the class contests each year have proved almost as popular as football games. Ajjffl, The teams, although organized late, were made up of good material, and showed that 1, Q, they would be well matched, and that the championship would not be won without hard QW playing. Unfortunately, heavf rain and snow storms revented ractice for several 5 P P 32522, weeks. l . . . . lqzgi, Only two games were played, in which the Junior and Sophomore teams were vic- rlyfvy .1 .1 'filly torious. The annual home-coming game between the alumni and an all-star university f JJ, Siljffj team was planned, but was prevented by rainy weather. wif gy. The banner given by Miss Wesson last year, which was won by the class of '22, 1,-,, LM, could not be awarded this year. 1 it I 2' Page Two Hundred and Twenty-Eight ,.....,,.M.,,,,.,,....,.,.n,.- .,, ,. .. .. . , --I I JI ,W ,-I' I I I II. ff -gg-:':,4QL,' Ii-,Z 'siirf '.,,- . -, 11'-In I I 45, I I .'-f'.,, ,' 1 1 if. I I. ifffgfffija,-L,i1151 .- V Ti'- TTm'I Wi' W'ii A' ' 'om' I 'W 'w T ' T'II'.I'fI I fr ' I I IIEIE I ETEI I'fIi1 A I II ,IH IITII . If? f II -I' IIJIT I II SWIMMING I-IE 1921 swimming season closed with the Freshmen carrying off the honors ff with 478 points. Lois Barry ,25 was the highest individual point scorer of the WI season. The Sophomores were second with 380 points. the Seniors finishedithird, . I and the Juniors fourth. There were more upper-classmen out for swimming this year, and they furnished keener competition for the underclassmen. VARSITY TEAM I Lois BARRY '25 JOSEPHINE SNOW '24 MINNA LAUTEB '25 ,fur MABJORI Bonscn '23 JULIE VVATSON '22 SWIMMING RECORDS I I I I BREAST STROKE . , . . IVIINNA LAUTER .... . 120ft.33 sec. II . 111 .BACK STROKE . . . . Lois BARRY . . . . . 60 fi. sec. -I SIDE STROKE . . . . ESTHER HAVEN. . . , 120fi. 30 sec. 'flf FREE-FOR-ALL . . . , Lois B.Anm' ..... . . 120fl. 262 sec. PLUNGE . . . . FLORENCE Fox ........ 55 ff. DOROTHY VVESTENDARP fig' I DIVING .' ........... Lois BARRY ......... 99.6 out of a possible 102 IM' I IVI I. I -,II 'II .I I I.. III IIII, ,- I I 'III' My I1f.I ,,4 5 .IIlIiI ,.,. ,,gI. ..I III, I IIfI ' I I, I M. I! I I I II. I IIII I II,' I I,,4 I - ,I I I I 'I I X , I Page Two Hundred and Twenly-Nine OUTIN G CLUB 6 Outing Club is an organization designed to promote interest and fellowship through all outdoor sports. It concentrates its efforts especially on those .sports not- included in W. A. A. activities. Ten hours activity in at least two sports is required for active membership in the club. After becoming a member, a girl may win a club pin by performing twentyifioe hours in not less than three sports, by paying her dues, and by attending a majority ofthe club meetings, which are held the third Thursday of every month in Lathrop hall concert room. For leading five club parties, a higher emblem in the form of afell insignia can be earned. A big campifire picnic at Sunset Point opened the club's program in the fall. htore than 150 girls hiked out to the point and enjoyed a picnic supper. Stunts, games. and songs about the fire followed. OFFICERS ELIZABETH KIRK . .... President DOROTHY CBEMER . . Vice-President DOROTHY WILLIAMS . . . Treasurer RONIAYNE BERRYMAN . . Secrelarv BETTY SCHAFER . . FLORENCE HUPPRICH NIARY BALDWIN . . IRENE CLAYTON . . KATHERINE KENNEDY DELLA NIANN ..,. MARGARET DUCIQETT ESTHER BILSTAD . . IEVELYN MCFARL.AND 'NIARY ROACH .... MARJORIE RIIFF. . . . . . Skiing . . Ice Skating . Roller Skating . . . . . Hiking . . . Tobogganing . Horseback Riding . , . . . Boating . . . . Bicycling . . . . Picnicking ' 4. fl. Representative Publicitv Chairman Nlann Mr:Fz1rl:sr1d Qrerncr Bilslad Duukretl Berryman Roach Clayton Ixirk Baldwin Kennedy Huff Page Two Hundred and Thirly DOLPHI CLUB Dolphin Club is an organization of women interested in swimming. The club gives one exhibition each .semester in swimming, life-saving, fancy strokes, stunts, fancy diving, and water polo. The purpose is to encourage swimming as a sport, to develop it scientifically, and to present the results to the public. Since the formation of the club in 1919. the interest in swimming has been greatly in- creased, and the standard of requirements has been raised in order to limit the membership. A branch of the National Women's Life Sawing Corps has been established at the uni- versity under the auspices of Dolphin Club. Two emblems are awarded. The major emblem is awarded to girls who have attained certain high standards of .swimming and diving. The minor emblem is awarded to those who have passed one-half of the requirements for the major emblem. OFFICERS KATHERINE KITCHIN . . . . President EDITH EYVALD . . , . Vice-President ELIZABETH SCHAFER . ,.... Secretary 5 VICTORIA W ERNER . . ...... Treasurer OLGA ANDERSEN .... . Committee Chairman DOROTHX' XVESTEN DAIIP . ,.... Instr actor OLGA ANDEHSEN RXIABJORIE BOESCH JXLICE BROWY'NELL TVIARGARET BUTLER LOIS BEATT1' ISA BEL CAPPS MAJOR EMBLEM WEARERS DIXIE DAVIS EDITI-I EWALD FLORENCE FOX MRS. GILBERT SMITH MINOR EMBLEM WEARERS KATHERINE KITCHIN JULIE WATSON CYNTHIA W ESSEN DOROTHY W ESTEN DARP M ABLE W INTER PHYLLIS T ATMAN VICTORIA W ERNER V I '. ' 21 fl ,.. 2 f if A -nf - ' 2 I I ' , I ' -ifw rf'- ' . . . .5 45 -1,-5,-3'-1 l ,. ,. , , WH. ,,.,1..,.M,....,.,,,Jl,,.,i.,M..A.M,s-,a.,i,...,w.v.f..eI...,...-f,..,.....W.I,i.,..4....-., .... . -. ...,......, ., ,,,,, ,.L,,......,-L, , 'N . , . . A Ewald Kitchin Davis NVerner YVesLCIld1iI'D Page Two Hundrerl and Thirty-One F.-. fC'N --. , ulrsrrlx, A. -W-. M.. Y .,.'..-.... ... K-,v.'.,.Y. fr ' .W N. ,. ll ..' ' 1 1 '31 -gg.-. ,. , , .,,v-sr., ,- -,JSM w- , - -Aarrsyhziv. , ,, TRACK 1921 HE TRACK SEASON of 1921 was under the direction of Miss Cynthia Wesson, coach, and Louise Fritsche, head of the sport. As usual, the teams were chosen at two preliminary inter- class meets, one between the Juniors and Seniors, and the other between the Sophomores and Freshmen. Preparation for these meets had been carried on in class work three days a week throughout the spring period. The track meet on Field Day, which was won by the class of 1923, was the culmination of the season. Quite the most exciting event of the track year was the anonymous donation, at the annual W. A. A. banquet, of a thousand dollars to be used for a track on the girls' field, with any remainder to be used for further improvements. This new track should certainly bring the speed of the dashes up, and also create a new and added interest in the already popular sport. VARSITY TRACK TEAM AUTA LYMAN J ENE KILGOUR ALICE LIGARE ESTHER TVIAINLAND Donorm KROPF V l Page Two Hundred and Thirly-Two QQQQQQQ.. A u Q p 1 gfgggi' , ' M' I pw .. lil . FIELD DAY '+' tl UNE 4, 1921, marked the culmination of the year's athletic achievements among women in the annual field day program at Camp Randall. For days before the final event. classes had practiced, preliminary track meets had taken plaee, and participants had been selected from the splendid material available. Promptly at 2:30 o'clock, field day activities started with the Championship tennis matches. Over on the baseball diamond the Sophomores and Fresh- men were fighting for the championship. Interest rose as the staocato report of a revolver set off the par- ticipants in the track events. Girls were throwing the baseball and basketball, hurling the javelin, and per- forming feats at broad and high jumping. At the same time, a real archery tournament was in full swing, and nearby class teams were throwing quoits. Crowds Hlled the field, passing from one event to another. In order that the visitors might remain for the evening. W. A. A. girls prepared and sold box lunehesg sandwiches, ice cream and pie were distributed by girls in fancy costumes. A quaint old Maypole dance started the evening entertainment. White-frocked maids twined gaily-colored ribbons on the green sward , and took part in the folk dances that followed. l Field Day has a real significance, for it marks the progress of the women in the I athletic life of the University. 4 l l l Page Tivo Hundred and Tliirly-Three , vw , ,V MARY had a little car, which has been as active in earn- ing her W as has Mary herself. DOROTHYS right arm is one of the steadiest in school. It has won honors in both archery and bowling for her. She has also won points for her class in field and track. I Parfe luo Hundred and Thirllv Four C GW, 7 WEARERS ADELAIDE handles a bow and arrow with such skill that nxost of us are ashamed of our unsteadiness. STUCK earned her VJ in many different sports. She ex- celled in hockey and was elected head of hockey for the fall of 1921. Tuck's long suit is baseball. Everybody knows about Tuck and baseball. Where you see one you see the other. HMAB' is finishing her athletir' career at Wisconsin by leading W. A. A. after having been one of its most active members for the last three years. GIFITZ57! No one has disputed l7'itz's right to hold var- sity first base for the last two years. BELLE earned her W by shoot- ing goals in both basket- ball and hockey. She has a business sort of a mind which seems to Calculate her every movement.. WEARER L., TR .. ' A ' iz? J Q, ESTHEB has'by no means confined herzactivities to athletics, butishe has nevertheless, earned her W , ' M A f i ,, V, , -v , , TWV WW , i f , ffllqfyg 5, ,gil rnf, V, e g HSPIKE' was awarded her HW for participation in most of the sports olfered. She has done her best work in dancing. HUPPY,S,' strongest point is basket- ball. As manager of the Sophomores. she chose a team which took the class championshipg three of her team made 1921 Var- sity. 0 p, f f ff ' mb X ag J 'Z I , I Page Two Ilunrlrvzl and fhzrlv Izze - xx ry ,J ,--,K iii-f . Yep'- 72.4. 1' - it ' . .W ammgbwmmwmmgy SAIBTAQS is an indomitable forward in hockey-the despair of all her opponents. HBOBIYH plays b a s e b all every chance that she gets. She is a do-or-die athlete and she isn't dead yet. Page Tito Hundrecl and Thirty-Six WEARER Hiya hes! 5 F 3 .,f. , MFBITZH has had a consistent rec- ord for participation in athletic events. CLAUTO37 has always been a forward who was impossible to guard. She has been justly placed on Varsity basketball team for three years in succession. Her work in field and track is by no means inconspicu- ous. HSTRASS' has been able to earn her VN beside taking an active part in school ac- tivities. it -N we i V v iw .rg W M-se 5- by A A MARY MAX has created for herself an enviable record for par- ticipation in athletics well as in scholastics. WEARER '1i2g1'i':, V ,, MARC is the last girl who will ever be awarded her W in her Sophomore year in college. It was made pos- sible by her unusual pep and the old system of points. EDE Elays ball, dances, and as developed into an efficient swimmer since M,,4,., asZINr9 earned her NN in so many different ways that they are hard to enumer- ate. she has come to Wisconsin ELLEN has only been at Wiscon- sin for two years, but has earned her WH in that short time by steady plug- ging. Page Two Hundred and Fhzrlg .Seven INTEB-SOBOBITY BOWLING TEAMS ENTEBED TN FINALS TEAM WON LOST PCTG. ALPHA XI DEIJTA . .. . ' . . 25 8 .76 ALPHA GAMMA DELTA . . . 24 9 .73 ALPHA OMICEON PI . . 22 8 .73 KAPPA DELTA . . . . 20 10 .67 DELTA ZETA .... . 16 1-li .53 ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . . 16 14 .53 KAPPA ALPHA THETA . , . 13 17 .43 CHI OMEGA ....., . 12 . 18 .40 PI BETA PHI .... . 12 18 .-10 ACHOTH ....... . 6 211- .20 1-QAPPA KAPP.A GAMMA . . . 2 28 .07 RESULTS OF THE SEASON ALPHI XI DELTA F irsl ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Second ALPHA OMICHON PI Third High Team Game ALPHA Xi DELTA 713 High Team Average ALPHA GAMMA DELTA 565 High Individual Game ELSIE EKERN, ALPHA Xi DELTA 190 High Individual Average LEONA SEAVER, K.APPA DELTA 135 OFFICERS OF THE LEAGUE ELIZABETH SAMMIS, Alpha Gamma Delia ..... President BARBARA HILDEETH, Chi Omega .....,. Vice-Presidenl IRENE CLAYTON, Kappa Delia ..... . . . .Seerelary EDITH HESS, Kappa Alpha Tlzela . . . . .Treasurer WINNING TEAM-ALPHA XI DELTA Page Two Hundred and Thirty-Eight sb 1 HAZEL WRIGHT MARGUERITE CROSKEY THE FINAL EMBLEM Qf the Senior VV, wearers, a certain number is .selected each year to whom the Women's Athletic Association awards the highest athletic honor, the Final Emblem. The awarding of this emblem stamps the wearer as a girl having superior athletic ability. And more than that-it sig- nijies that her spirit and scholarship are unqaestionableg that she has given of herself in activities other than athleticsg that she is a leader in these activitiesg and, finally, that she is an example of the true Wisconsin Woman. WEARERS 1921 HAZEL WVRIGHT INIARGUEHITE CROSKEY 52 ses . ' :'i 1Q' of ily:-.il f ' , 'aa - :ta V . sts t Page Two Hundred and Thirty-Nine Page Two Hundred and Forly THL JTIU -. - .,x A PIRIT, defined by Webster as the vital force, is a necessary element to success in every activity, but in no department of the University is this so marked as in Ath- letics. It is Spirit that carries the ball over from the two yard line on the fourth down. It is Spirit that brings the team from behind in a losing battle and wrests victory from defeat in the last thrilling moments. Big, wholesome varsity spirit is the greatest asset a college may possess and is attained only through the concerted effort of students, faculty and alumni. l Beal varsity spirit is the spirit of service, of self'-sacrifice, of unselfishness. To the competing athlete it means giving up ease and many pleasures, it means doing a man's Work every day in order to be eligible for competition as Well as skillful in his sport. Successful teams are not accidents. They represent hard work, good coaching, clear thinking, and long periods of constant training. It isn't enough to join in the shouting of i'Let's go, Wisconsin on the day of the contest. Success on the field and the court can be attained only through Willingness to serve, every man fighting for Wisconsin, inspired with the realization that back of him is every Wisconsin student and alumnus. Real varsity spirit on the part of those who are represented by these teams is the spirit of loyalty, of appreciation, of good sportsmanship and of Whole hearted support. The joy of success all can share, but thc best proof of loyalty comes with defeat. Sacrifice and adversity are the real tests of true college spirit. Intercollegiate athletics hold a distinct place in university life that nothing else can ill, and the lessons taught in good citizenship and in the development of loyalty are as valuable as those received in the class room, since after all the main business of life is the living. Love of oneis college and loyalty to her cause even when it appears to be a losing one develops a spirit of patriotism that is one of the greatest assets of our commonwealth. Wisconsin Spirit in past years has placed our athletic standards in high places because of the full realization of its meaning by the men who have carried its colors and who have felt the vital urge of serving their school. This same Wisconsin Spirit, when the opportunity of service to country presented itself, proved a fighting force that placed our banners high in sterner conflict and brought honor and glory to the name. On this also must rest our future, so in the light of the glorious past, with a view to the future greatness, and with a full realization of what Wisconsin Spirit really means. let us move forward. Page Two Hundred and Iorlv One 1 THE ATHLETIC BOARD OFFICERS ' ALBERT J. KNOLLHV .' . ...... . . D . President CARL F. CEASER ........ . . Vzce-President GEORGE STOLLEY ...,. ....... S ecrelary PERSONNEL HW MEN ' WILLIAM K. COLLINS . . , . Minor Sports DALE MERRICK ..... Track FORREST PADDOCK . . . . . Baseball ARTHUR J. PLATTEN . . . . Crew GUSTAV K. TEBELL . .... Football MARK WALL ....... Cross-Country HOLLAND F. WILLIAMS ...... Basketball NON HW MEN EDWARD G. SCHERNECKER TI-IOMAs TREDWELL THE ATHLETIC COUNCIL J. F. A. PYRE .............. Chairman T, E. JONES ...... ....... I Yecrefary S. H. GOODNIGHT A. J. KNOLLIN J. D. PHILLIPS J. G. MOORE O. L. IQOVVALKE E. J. NICEACHRON , -A Cheer Leaders Page Two Hundred and Forty-Two HW? WEABERS FO0'l'l3ALL-James Brader, lloman Brumm, George Bunge. Carl Chrislianson, Edward Gibson, Ralph Gill, Stevens Gould, Rudolph Hohlfeld, Oscar Kiesslingz, Gordon Nelson. Guy Sundh. Holland Williams, JHUIPS VVoodS. Gustav Tehell, Thomas Slavrum. Alvah Elliott, Wallace Barr, James Donnelley, Harold Holmes, Ralph Scol,L. BASKETBALL-lVarren Taylor, Carl Ceaser, Joh-n Williams, Holland Williams, Gustav Tehell, Leslie gage. Douglas Gibson, Clarence Mclnlosh, George avzs. BASEBALL-Alvah Elliott, William Snow. Rolland Williams, John Williams. Carson Lyman, Edward Farrington. George Reudiger. Allan Davey, Richard Barry, Frank lVilliams. Forrest Paddock. Herbert ghrislianson, Carl Ceaser, Robert Hardf-ll, Carl IB ert. TRACK-Edward Johnson, Leslie McClure. Clarence Wxlle, Wellington Brothers. Robert Blodpzelit, Basil Mobley, Harry' Dennis, George Shelley, Wai'r.er Reget, Peter Platien, Joe Liskovec, Guerdon Nichole, George Fmkle, Clyde -Nash, Guy Sundt, Paul Kayser, Lloyd Wilder, Dale Merrick, Mark Wall, Albert Knollin, Howard Armslronfz. Earl Hirsheimer. SVVIIVIIVIING-John Koch, Mark Bach, William Collins, R. E. Peterson. GYMNAISTICS-H. Dean Kitchen, John Curtin, Elmer Klctzien. CREW-Fred Prehn, Karl Fauerhach. Raymond Klass- endorf, Arthur Platten, Paul Okerstrom, Gilbert Turner, Charles Puestow, George Toepfer, Edward Hanley. TENNIS-Hoherl Gollredson. Thomas Treadwell, Nich- olas Aefzesen. VVITESTLING-Ivan Peterman, Edward Templin, Ora McMurray. aWa MEN FOOTBALL-Raymond Irons, Everett Crozier, Edward Schernecker, Daniel Horne, Victor Anderson. BASEBALL-Harold Vanderhoof, Harvey Piggol.. TRACK-Hans Gude, Lawrence Norem, Gerald VVade. GYMNASTICS-Frank Kuboch, Ieslie Tasche, Merrill Hansen, Walter Porlh. VVBESTLING-Richard Barry, Irving: Haddorff, VValter Klass, Gwilym Prideaux, Elmer Wloelffer. SWIMMING-Franklin Davies. Page Two Hundred and For-ly Three THE CONFERENCE MEDAL LLAN C. DAVEY '21, popularly known as Wiscon- sin's Last Minute Winner all through the Big Ten athletic conference, was awarded the Intercollegiate Conference Athletic Association medal award at the close of the past year. Davey is the seventh Wisconsin man to have received this honor, which is awarded annually at each of the ten universities composing the Western Intercollegi- ate conference to the graduating student showing himself to be the best scholar-athlete of his class. The selection is made by the faculty and the athletic council. ..,. , ..... 4 gp! '1 we , l 1 K Hn .4 1 I I I , if , ig' N ly 1' 1 I x v ,Q , t 5 x 1 1, A Q X 1 S X5 V 1 X slijflf, ii X Afn is ,C 'V ff' ,Nr 2 I X I J aw..,.:s:'..e:,,1' A-nu, ' f 'aj . A 1 , N we 4 4' af, 1, f ., 1 W 4. 1 ffrgg 'gi Ng M-3' J Davey was awarded his Intercollegate Conference medal by virtue of having won five L'W's during his four years at the University. At the same time he maintained a Weighted scholastic average during the full four years of 89.4. He never received a Hoon or Nfailu during all his time at Wisconsin. Three of his '1W's were' won as a member of the football squads of 1917, 1919 and 1920 while two were won on the Varsity nines of 1920 and 1921. It was in football that Davey won the title of i'Last Minute Winner? Many men have won victories for their teams during the closing minutes of exciting games but it fell to Davey's lot to do the trick for his alma mater on three separate occasions. During two successive years. 1919 and 1920, he won the games against Chicago at Stagg field. Substituting for Barr in 1919, he entered the game in the closing minutes of play, with the score tied and ap- parently no hope for victory, sensationally to win for Wisconsin b y running 60 yards through the entire Chicago team for a touchdown. The following year. entering the game under practi- cally the same cir- I cumstances, Davey won the game for Wisconsin by a 38 yard drop kick which he made late in the fourth quarter. His other game he took from Minnesota booting a drop between the goal posts near the close of a wet muddy game at Minneapolis in 1920. Davey's athletic career at Wisconsin was interrupted for alittle more than one year while the plucky little quarter played his part in the World War. Davey enlisted in Dr. A. J. Ochsner's famous base hospital unit No. 11 with which organization he spent ten full months in France. Sailing in February 1918, he was deprived of one season of baseball. Upon his return to school. however, he succeeded in winning the regular varsity catcher position during the 1920 and 1921 seasons. .Winners of the medal since its inauguration at Wis- consln are as follows: , 1915, MIKRTIN KENNEDY 1918, EBER SIMPSON 1916, Dow HARVEY 1919, CHARLES CARPENTER 1917, MEfkDE BURKE 1920, ANTHONY ZULFER 1921, ALLAN DAVEY Page Two Hundred and Forly-Four CAPTAIN GUY SUNDT 1 SEASGN I 9 12 I 7 ,mv f 46 vfyqilfl I l1.l V 5f rqf,2la A, my- ,:f ,, Q' -' .5 f 4 ,, 4 ' ,f 1714.5 , . - Z. 4 ,f , Q Z? ,fx 'I ' 1' M M 429 ., ,,,.,,. ,, , - 456' ,gy . gi MW,,.27W Z ,, , 2 Page Twu Huurlred and Furly-Five ge 'wo FOOTBALL SEASON 1921 CHAMPIONSHIP is not always necessary for a successful football season. When Wisconsin closed the 1921 schedule by bowing in defeat before Coach A. A. Stagg's Chicago eleven, the Badgers dropped to fourth place in Conference standings. They were a potent contender for the title until Michi- gan upset all dope and held them deadlocked in a 7 to 7 tie. Even then they could boast of three victories, one tie, and no defeats. a record which has not been hung up by many Conference teams for several years. A victory over Chicago would have put Wisconsin in second place, second only to Iowa. which went through a year of consecutive wins. The victory was not forthcom- ing. WVisconsin fought bravely for three quarters to hold. the Maroons scoreless. but a young Mr. Romney, address Salt Lake City, spoiled the show by making a drop kick in the last three minutes of play. Three points did the work. They shoved Wisconsin down to fourth place in ofhcial ratings, although some Big Ten coaches have been heard to murmur inwardly that first place was none too good for the battling Badgers. lt was a season of upsets all the way through. Who thought Michigan would tie Wisconsin? Nobody. Who thought Illinois would lick Ohio State? The same person. And in the final clash of the season, Northwesterxfs Purple bruisers surprised the West by holding a championship Iowa aggregation to a ll to 0 count. Football' experts were floored during the whole season. Dame Fortune seemed to take delight in up- setting their prcdictions. They forecasted that Yale would beat Harvard, and it didn't. They augured that Chicago would beat Ohio State. and it didnlt. They even said that Minnesota would furnish some strong op- position to Wisconsin. That was the biggest joke of all. That game was one reason why everybody called the Wiscon- sin team 'fthe greatest since 1912? Coach John R. Richards issued his official call. for football candidates on Sept. 15. Before three days of practice had been engaged in, exactly 75 candidates were working out for positions on the squad. There was the quantity, but much of it lacked quality. Seven regulars lost by graduation in 1920 paved the way for a new crop of gray hairs in Coach Richards' head. Captain Red Weston, All-Western end, left a hard gap to lill at the left ilank. The henna-haired one had been one of the best. wingmen ever seen on a Wisconsin gridiron. Three years of Big Ten experience made him a hard man to beat and throughout the entire season there was no one at left end who reminded fans of Weston. The greatest pair of tackles in the West had also disappeared by gradua- tion. Ralph Scott, Walter Camp's choice for All-American tackle, and Howard Stark, a battling demon in the line, had completed their days of college football. Margoles, a guard, left another hole to be filled, as did Eggebrecht, end, who took up coaching duties at River Falls Normal school. Back of the line, HAI Davey, the GOULD man who twice in success- BRADER ion twisted the horns of Alonzo Stagg, was gone. Davey's ability to drop-kick, run with the ball, and direct the team was sadly missed this year. Ineligibility did its annual duty to aid in scrapping a good football machine. 'iShorty Barr, undoubtedly the best forward passer in the country, joined the All-American third team as a result of the faculty dictum. His Work at the pilotis position might have made a big difference in the Hnal results. Harold Holmes, one of the hardest hitting backs in the Rig Ten, also Page Two Hundred and F ly Seven After a contest in which the superiority of Wisconsin never 1 suffered from faculty displeasure. He helped Barr with th.eAll- Americans. Between themselves and a couple of other good men, they had an enjoyable time scrimmaging the varsity and aiding the regulars to perfect offense and defense against the playing of some of the best teams the Conference has ever known. Lawrence College was the Hrst opponent of a highly doubt- ful Wisconsin football team. The collegians said they were wait- ing for the 'SBadger onslaughtw, but down in their hearts they thought it would be a good close game. Wisconsin was in poor condition. The two weeks of practice undergone by Octo- ber 1 had failed to dispose of many candidates, and as a result the Badger lineup was a puzzle until the team trotted onto the field previous to the first whistle of the 1921 gridiron season. failed to display itself prominently at all times, the Badgers emerged victo- rious by a 28 to 0 score. Everybody but the man who marks the scoreboard wanted to see a larger count. Fewer scores meant less work to him. Wiscon- sin showed that it had a powerful back- field. With Captain Guy Sundt knock- ing the Lawrence line on its ear every time he took the oval, the line-plunging - game was proven worthy. With Bollie BUNCH Williams circling the ends, pivoting, dodging, whirling his way, the surety of the end-run game was noted. With Rowdy Elliott and Gould hitting the tackles after the manner of two pile-drivers, all d oubt about the power of a Badger attack evaporated. Wisconsin marked up 14' points in each half. Elliott was the individual scoring hero of the day. For the second consecu- tive time, he scored the Hirst touchdown of a Wisconsin football season, and the remarkable scoring work that he continued put him second only to Aubrey Devine of Iowa, in the matter of points rolled up during the season. The Wisconsin line was a puzzling quantity. Jimmy Brader, shifted from guard to tackle, performed in his custom- ary brilliant fashion. Tebell, right end. held down that position Page T Hundred and Forly-Eighl WILLIAMS in masterly style. Bunge. the third line veteran, ground up the Lawrence center as usual. But the remainder of the forward wall did not satisfy Coach Richards. He set out to change the unsatisfactory parts. It took some time. but he did it. South Dakota State College took its beating the following Saturday Oct. 8. When the last grunt had been grunted, Wis- consin was on the long end of a 244 to 3 score. A substituted quarterback earned Dakota's three points by booting a nice drop-kick in the third quarter after South Dakota State had rushed the ov al down the field with the speed of a doctor collect- ing his fees. Wisconsin made more fumbles than touchdowns. The field was oozy with mud, the ball was wet, and the game was slow. The Badgers failed to open up with anything startling, preferring to save their tricks until the opening of the Big Ten season with Northwestern on the following Saturday. A dusky halfback on the South Dakota team darkened the horizon for a few minutes when he went in during the last quarter. He jerked offa couple of good runs and his hel- met, but one poor lonely black man couldn't have hoped to stem the tide HOHLFELD of Badger invasion on that day. Opening its Conference season at Evanston, Wisconsin walloped the weak Purple by a 28 to 0 count. BowdyH Elliott continued his sterling work on the offense. Gibson appeared to have einched the quarterback job by his magnificent returns of punts. There was no question about Badger superiority. The Purple line showed more holes than a strainerg backfield men sifted through like coals in a grate. In its forward wall, Wisconsin showed a great development. After the game, Coach Stagg of Chicago jokingly offered to trade his Chicago line for Richards' Badger forwards. T Gould, shifted from the backfield to left end, showed his versa- tility. He did some nice tackling on the defense, and nipped passes for long gains. TEBELI, P Two H I crl and Forly-N 'sThe Northwestern game was no test for us , Coach Richards said after the contest. He refused to be optimistic about the future just because Wisconsin had beaten Elmer. Mc Devittis charges. He was right. Although Wisconsin took a 20 to 0 victory from Illinois at Urbana on Oct. 22, eleven fighting Illini will maintain to their dying day that the score should have been at the most, 7 to 0. Here is the story of the two touchdowns that made Dame Fortune solid with Badger fans. The little lady smiled when the forward wall massacred seven trying-to-fight Illini, blocked apunt, and gave l'Kibo Brumm the chance to nestle the sphere close to his bosom and fall on it for the first score in the game. Illinois had been shoved, none too gent- ly, back to within the shadow of its goal posts by the Wisconsin line, which showed enough aggressiveness and fight to have been seven slugging, smash- ing Jack Dempseys. The second fly in Illinois' oint- ment came when 4'.Iimmy,' Woods snatched a fumbled ball from the air and dashed through most of the be- wildered, befuddled, and bewhiskered Sucker eleven for a score. The Illinois end had received a pass. On being BRUMM preme hit between halves. age T o Hundred and Fifty tackled, he fell on his back and the ball bounded upw aids from his arms. It was a freak play, but avrlrty rn following the ball turned the breaks Wisconsinwards The earned marker came when Elliott pranr ed :JO yards around left end from midfield. He left the Illinois tacklers so far behind that he 'couldn't hear their shouts for help Early in the first quarter, Illinois missed its only chance to score when it .lost the ball. after coming to the Badger I0 yard line. The Wisconsin band made the trip to the game and Join ing with 75-pieces of the Suckers' musical outfit made a su ' rig. It was in this game that the Richardsmen first ran up against Conference football. The entire Illinois team gathered around the football and held a conference before each play. Then they would scamper back to their places with that great big secret. Wisconsin smeared them before they let the crowd find out about the secrets. The conclave before lining up is a beautiful ex- ample of what ,a football team should not do, according to the spectators' decision. Thousands of people flocked to Madison, the Mecca of the West, for the annual Homecoming battle with Minnesota. Pray- ing for a dry field brought Wisconsin rain and snow. The field was a collection of slush and mire, a condition believed to be ELLIOTT favorable for the heavier Minnesota eleven. Sensational runs by the Wisconsin backtield, especially P1ollie Williams, in his new role as quarterback after the injury suffered by Gibson in the Illinois game, brought the crowd of 22,000 people to its collective feet time after time. Williams scooted 75 yards for the most spectacular sprint of the day. In- tercepting a Gopher forward pass, Cap- tain Guy Sundt tore for 50-yards over the wet gridiron. Elliott and Gould, who played offensive half and defensive left end, also scintillated with some . flashy work. , , GIBSON Minnesota was simply outclassed by the overwhelming attack uncovered by Sundt and his mates. The ball was in Minnesota territory throughout the whole game, and the once- famous Minnesota shift was relegated to the dressing room. When the scores were totaled, it was found that the final count read 35 to 0. Nothing like it had happened since 1897 when Wisconsin gave the Northmen their worst walloping. The whole country acclaimed Wisconsin as one of its strong- est teams. One of the greatest backfields in gridiron' history was pointed to with pride. The forward wall, outweighed man Page Two Hundred a d Ffly P 1 T Hundred and Fif WOO DS At least four golden opportunities to score were tossed away by Wisconsin. lntercepted forward passes, failures to gain through the line, all did their damage when the Badger came within striking distance of the goal. Resolved to defeat Chicago for the third successive time. eleven football players and a couple of thousand rooters went to Mr. Stagg's play-ground. Although they were given nothing for three quarters and most of a fourth, they were entertained royally. It was a scoreless tie until Demon Thomas battered the Wisconsin line and with his pals carried the ball to Wis- ly to man, outplayed its opponent with amazing consistency, push- mg the cumbersome Gopher giants about in oozy, gushy, slushy, mud. With two weeks in which to prepare for a Michigan team that had been defeated by Ohio State and held to a 3 to 0 win over Illinois, Badger fans looked for an easy game on Nov. 8. Michigan alumni were shouting for the removal of Coach Field- ing H. Yost, veteran mentor. The Wolverine team was thought to be disrupted. It wasn't. Unheralded and unsung, the Wolverines stalked onto Camp Randall, and playing Wisconsin to a standstill, held an erstwhile championship contender to a 7 to 7 tie before 20,000 persons. Coach Yost's methods were vindicated, Michigan treated the deadlock as a vic- tory, and Wisconsin rooters put their championship desires in the hope-chest for another year. Gus Tebell picked up a rolling Michigan punt on its 3-yard line and trudged across the line for Wisconsin's touchdown. Michigan scored when Roby nipped a long pass and sprinted 15 yards with a clear field ahead of him. Tak- ing no chances on losing by one point, Goebel, Michigan end, changed his shoe and sent the ball spinning over the cross-bar for the tying point. CHRISTENSEN .1 -1 . consirfs 12-yard line. After HFritz', Crisler missed a place-kick, officials gave Chicago another chance. Enter a handsome M or- mon from Salt Lake City. He shouts a few signals. He holds his hands outstretched as if waiting for something. It comes. It is a football. He drops it to the ground and kicks it over a white bar for three points. Thirty thousand people go wild with joy. Chicago is 3 to 0 victor over Wisconsin. 1 lt was a tough climax to a brilliant season. Three chances to score were lost. Williams fumbled when Wisconsin reached the Maroon 6-yard line in the first quarter. A place kick was missed from the 30-yard line, and Wisconsin lost possession of the ball when it touched on the Staggmen's 20-yard mark. Plucky Captain Sundt played for more than a quarter with a broken collarbone and torn ligaments . ' in his shoulder. His work on the defense . I was inspiring. Sundt was in almost ev- , ery tackle. Several times he punted over if 50-yards when Wisconsin had been ff' pushed back to its goal line. Once he T booted the ball over 60-yards from be- 1... hind the line. He ended his career in the proverbial blaze of glory . T Gould played one of the best ' games of his football life. He smashed - the Chicago line to bits, put Captain Mc- H Guire in the shadow, and gained more HORNP' ground than any other player. Fritz', Crisler was the Maroon player who was mainly instrumental in-his team's victory. Q7 A ' With the last whistle of the Chicago game, six Wisconsin H ' stars closed their football careers. Captain Guy Sundt, Rowdy M Elliott, T Gould, Jimmy', Woods, Jim Brader, and George ' r Bunge sang their swan songs. Six of the best men who ever donned a Cardinal jersey will play no more for Wisconsin. Because of their loss, Coach Richards will be forced to build --.' U . up another backfield just as he built a line this year and John 1.. Richards will be equal to the task. With Williams elected gii,i j5'fg:QV captain of the 1922 football team, Wisconsin should again have i. T one of the foremost football teams in the country. C ANDERSON Page Two Hundred and Fifly-Three INDIVIDUAL SCORES ELLIOTT ...,......... 54 SUNDT .... . . 35 WILLIAMS. . . . . 12 GIBSON. . . . . 6 CROZIER . . . . 6 GILL . . . . 3 GOULD . . . . 6 VVOODS . . . 6 BRUMM . . . 6 7 TEBELI. ............ . THE FOOTBALL TEAM . OFFICERS JOHN R. RICHARDS ........ Head Coach CHARLES CARPENTER ....... Assistani Coach GEORGE BERG . . . . Trainer GUY M. SUNDT . . . .... Captain HOLLAND F. WILLIAMS .... Captain-elect THOMAS L. STAVRUM Manager HENRY J. HEIID, GEORGE E. GAR DNEB A ss istanl Managers PERSONNEL UW MEN JAMES L. BRADER ROMAN H. BRUMM CARL B. CHRISTIANSON GEORGE C. BUNGE ALVAH C. ELLIOTT EDWARD I-I. GIBSON STEVENS T. GOULD JAMES P. WOODS THOMAS L. STAVRUM, Managefs W aWa,' MEN RALPH G. GILL RUDOLE A. HOHLFELD GORDON E. NELSON OSCAR E. KIESSLING GUY M. SUNDT HOLLAND F. WILLIAMS GUSTAV K. TEBELL RAYMOND IRONS VICTOR C. ANDERSON DANIEL O. HORNE EDWVARD G. SCHEBNECKER EVERETT H. CROZIER SUBSTITUTES ROBERT II. SYKES IVIERRILL E. ZFAFT . HOWARD L. JOHNSON RORERQIQQC. X-YHITTEN BENJAMIN I-I. PEARSE RUSSEISLSJ. Wisconsin season in Scores 141 IFTOIIOIIIIOSIHS 21 goals after touizhdowns 18, drop-ki6k I? I CONFERENCE STANDINGS Team Won Lost Tied Pel. Toial pls. Opp pls IOVVA ...... 5 0 0 1.000 123 15 CHICAGO . -. . . 4. 1 0 .800 67 13 OHIO STATE . . fl 1 0 .800 76 7 WISCONSIN . . . 3 1 1 .750 90 10 MICHIGAN . . . 2 1 1 .666 48 21 MINNESOTA . . 2 4 0 .333 41 141 . INDIANA . . . I 2 0 .333 3 47 ILLINOIS ..... 1 11 0 .200 15 51 PURDUE ..... 1 4 0 .200 9 53 NORTHXVESTERN . . 0 5 0 .000 0 114 Page Two Hundred and Fifty-Foizr ROUNDY' REMINISCE, CE These reminiscences of Wisconsin's former football stars and teams have been compiled for the 1923 Badger by Ptoundy Coughlin of the Capital Times. Some of the Old Timers whom this Badger will reach will no doubt recall all of the incidents mentioned with a great deal of interest. Whether the incidents are within the span of our memory or not, however. all Wis- consinites will glory in them. Allen Davey and Eber Simpson are the only two men who ever won a conference football game for Wisconsin with a drop kick. Davey accomplished the feat on two occasions against both Chicago and Minnesota. John Messmer holds the record for throwing the longest forward pass which ever resulted in a touchdown for Wisconsin. He made the record in 1908. passing -'l-3 yards to Bud Culver in the Northwestern game. Messmer could stand in the middle of l.he field and throw the ball over the goal line every time. In all the history of football at Wisconsin, which dates back to 1891, only two Wisconsin men have made Camp's All-American team. They are Butler and Scott. Both men were tackles. 4 Old. old-time Wisconsin men will remember when we played Notre Dame at Milwaukee. Babe Spencer was leading the live badger mascot around the field when the animal found occasion to bite John Hickey, the team's trainer, in the leg. It was necessary for the band leader to club the badger with his baton before he re- leased his hold on the trainer's leg. During one year, about '98, Madison High school played the great Wisconsin team tova tie game, the Iinal score being 6 all. Curtis. Kull, Davis, and Dean were all on the high school team. Curtis and Dean afterward became captains of Varsity elevens. Pk PK PK PIC Pk Only two Wisconsin men have ever run the length of the field. following' the kickoff. They are 'tBill Juneau and Eddie Cohems, who per- formed the feat against Chicago at Stagg 'Field in 19Ol. Wisconsin won the game 311 to 0. Wisconsin's present football coach, John Richards, featured in many unusual plays during his gridiron days. Perhaps the most' famous of these happened when McPherson of Wisconsin fumbled the ball on Nlinnesota's five yard line near the end of a hard game. Richards recov- ered the ball among a crowd of Minnesota players and carried them all across the goal line with him, the ball under his arm. Not a Wisconsin man was near enough to assist him. a: as as as In the Chicago game during ,99 the entire Wisconsin hackfield played behind Harvey Holmes at tackle but were still penetrated at will by the Maroon attack. Toward the end of the game the backfield shifted to the' other side of the line. Then in three plays Holmes alone suc- ceeded in forcing the Chicago team back ten yards from where they had started. X PF PF X PF The other tackle was played by Art Curtis. During the four years that Curtis played tackle for Wisconsin no team ever succeeded in making more than a two yard gain through his position. A touchdown in 50 seconds! Pat O'Dea, full- back and the greatest punter that ever pulled on moleskins, stood on his goal line during the Michigan game of 1899 and punted the ball down the field with such force that the Michigan man .V . --1--1 Page Two Hundred and Flfly F1118 was unable to hold it when he caught it from the air on his goal line. Hyman of Wisconsin fell on it and thereby scored a touchdown for the Cardinal. In a game against Northwestern 'LPat',' O'Dea made a drop kick of 62 yards which stood as- a record until this year, when one of 63 yards was successful. Pat made the kick while on a dead run and at an angle and the ball sailed squarely across the middle of the bar. Wisconsin played a game against Yale in '99 which the Eastern team won when a substitute ran 80 yards for a touchdown. Yale had an undefeated team that year. but was kept on the defensive throughout most of the Wisconsin game by Pat O'Dea,s marvelous punting. During this game f'Pat made the longest punt of his college career, thc ball sailing 76 yards through the air. , 2- as Pk as an . . i . One Christmas night VVisconsin played the Carlisle Indians in the Coliseum at Chicago. The Indians did everything but scalp the Badgers and many of the players were unable to return to Madison for over a week because of their injuries. 'Ikey Karel and John Richards played on the Wisconsin team that year. A It was in '99 that Keg,' Driver. the present freshman coach, got his chance to show his worth as a Badger player. i'Pat', O'Dea was ruled out of the Michigan game for slugging. whereupon the VVolverines considered the game as good as won. Norskey Larson and Driver, however, took the ball on the kickoff and before Michigan knew what was happening worked the ball the length of the field for a touchdown. VVe beat Michigan that day 17-6. In 1900 Norskey Larson. the greatest back who ever wore the Cardinal, was the only man who could gain any ground against Minnesota. Making drive after drive he carried the ball the length of the field for a touchdown. but as he failed to kick goal Minnesota maintained the lead, 6 to 5. Norskey, however. started the hall down the field for the second time and succeeded in carrying it to the Hve yard line. Thenf'Jerry Riordan, who was captain, made three tries to put the ball across, and, never making an inch, lost the ball on downs just as the whistle blew ending the game. Larson walked off the field downhearted. - Stopping to think a moment-the statistics show that Wisconsin has won a clear title to the conference championship only twice since 1900. These two times were during the years 1901 and 1912. Stelfens of Chicago and Capron of Minnesota are men who have run the length of the field on kickoffs for 'touchdowns against Wisconsin. Capron ran on an icy field at Camp Randall in 1911, planting the ball under the Wisconsin goal after a sprint directly down the middle of the field. He was not even touched by a Badger player. as if rs is When i'Eddie Gillette played quarterback for Wisconsin in 1912 the Badger team was unde- feated. Gillette would stand back in the field without his headguard or pads and you could tell by his looks that he was saying. 6'Give me that ball! Two plays in which 'fEddie featured that year succeeded in winning the championship from Minnesota. Gillette traveled over 90 yards through a broken field and then on the next play made a perfect pass to Joe Hoeffell. Wisconsin's smallest end, who crossed the line for a touch- down In 1911 a man named Charles Pollock gave promise of being one of the most brilliant half- backs who ever played for Wisconsin. He madr- three touchdowns in the first half of the North- western game that year, and sent every Purple player who tackled him to the sidelines. The next game was against Iowa. and Richards went away to scout a game. leaving orders that Pollock was not to be used. Some one sent him into the game, however. and during the first half his leg was broken so badly that he was never able to play football again. OUR LAST CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM IN 1912 Page T110 Hundred and Fifty-Sir CAPTAIN HDUKEH CBASKETBALL SEASQN 1921-22 BASKETBALL SEASON 1921-22 AME FORTUNE failed to smile upon the Badger basketball team this year, and Coach Meanwell and his proteges were forced to satisfy themselves with the rating of second place in the conference. They had the satisfaction, however, of coming within 444 points of a 100072, season, and within five points of the conference champion- ship. With the exception of Mclntosh and Frogner, all of the regulars of the previous season reported to Coach Meanwell for practice last fall. The coach's plans were dealt a severe blow when it was discovered that not one of the crack 1924 freshman squad was available for Varsity competition. The outlook brightened a little when Williams, Tebell, and Irish were recruited at the end of the football , season, and a team was hurriedly thrown together in order to open the preliminary schedule. Captain Ceaser was the first man to get back into form, and he led the team through the preliminary schedule with varying success. The first three con- ference games were won, and chances for a champion- ship looked bright. Fate interfered, however, and three games were dropped before the team hit the typical Meanwell stride. ln the final contests, the Badgers were playing unbeatable ball, and they had little dif- ficulty in winning sufficient games to tie with Michigan for second place. The Badgers were not in good shape for the opening of the preliminary season, but managed to win all but one of the games. This game was lost to Pat'l Page's Butler College team, but the reversal was not indicative of any- thing, for every five in the conference lost at least one of its pre-season tilts. The first conference game was won from Iowa. Northwestern was also to be included on the initial trip, and it was conceded that victories in these two games meant a long step towards a championship. Gibson, playing his first conference game, worked well, and the combination looked like a winner. Iowa and North- western were licked by the scores of 18 to 15 and 21 , to 9, respectively. COACH MFANWELL Page Two Hundred and Fifly-Eight X The Wolverines came here to open the home season on the 14th of January. Michigan was known to have one of the strong- est Hves in the conference, and, after one of the best basketball battles that was ever staged on the armory floor, lVIeanwell's team managed to nose out a two point win in a five minute over time period. , Minnesota had been the darkhorse of the conference up to this time. The best that Wisconsin had to offer was not sufficient to stop the Northerners' string of victories, and the Gophers went back to Minneapolis carrying with them a 17 to 15 win. In the last moments ofthe game, the Badgers staged a come- back that looked like a sure victory, but the final whistle blew just before the tying basket was made. Championship hopes brightened again the following week when the Suckers came here for what was conceded to be the hardest home game of the season. Tebell and Gibson had been Q. ,, , ,vi - tfmw' f fa WZ fe N X X0 VN 'N C-gunman VD ri?-5 Safari: KD D-QE.- Eigfljm cn-ads H TO 5.513 alias? P' Ci' QMS SDCDH- 4-335: :J-5539. gp... cn e Ey,z 922951-'T 551:25-f Chcnw Cb CD :Ti-1f gag? cugfggg -elm gas? mmg? M . ETH-rggb 9993515 3:45, 214305. O2 arg? ...., ETQJDQE ig 5.2M O, oifgf, 53.025 Q- ' 2632 gg?-Lg fbi-1 J H' -. Qfjgye l 1 fi-99:-+2 rggr' 52:3 35053-' 5.9-QD CPCOFY' saga, ,.,.rl'Cl'UQ :v ?e5?5 on the hospital list for several days, but, with Irish and Gage filling the vacant places, the team went ahead and won by a score of 25 to 23. Although the margin looks small on paper, no team in the Big Ten conference could have beaten the class of ball that the Badgers were playing when the gun announced the end of this important game. Iowa, in the meantime, had been winning from one team after another, and members of the local squad expressed themselves as being more skeptical regarding the outcome of the Hawkeye vaders carried away a 24 to 18 victory. nursing a 17 to 18 defeat. ., erie f , , . 5 5' Negra. , ' 'Q ,,.. 3 . 3 i V see , 1,9 M 'f 9 gt xm,r.,,1 s. ' , 3-:1-f Lj ' . .:s1'-' . 'QQ 's -,sa N:-x ' Q 1-f fv 14112. A xg Peer:-ss . ,s,5?qrsfgsf.f - .- - , Q -Lqgswi-'1ff,-A, 1 Ly X .XXX . -lk: get . , tizpzmw N.,' . ,T jx. . ls, , . - ' -. GAGE The Badgers were forced to swallow another pill a few days later when Miller's free throws sent them home from Ann Arbor Wisconsin then went down to Urbana and gave their first real demonstration of the Meanwell style of game. They maintained a lead until the final moments of the play, when an Illinois spurt gave the Suckers a lead which was held until the gun sounded. The sad telegram which reached Madison read: H37 to 35, Illinoisf, Thus were Wisconsinis chances for a cham- pionship quietly laid to rest. Purdue still had several games to play, and it looked as though three defeats and a 12-contest schedule would be good for the pennant. It was now necessary to focus all attention towards second place in the percentage column. Northwestern came up for its annual game for the first time, in years. The Purple had just won two consecutive games, and they may possibly have entertained hopes of the third one. Meanwelfs proteges piled up a large lead in the first five min- utes of play, and spent the remainder of the time watching their opponents run through a unique set of antics which but little resembled a game of basketball at times. The score board read 25 to 11 when the fun was all over. HDoc Cooke and his Gophers were sent further into the cellar ELSOM when they took a 34 to 21 licking from the Badgers. Wisconsin Page Two Hundred and Fifly-Nine could not stand losing to any team twice in one season, and, when i'Cop Taylor launched a terrific scoring attack, the others followed. Before the smoke of battle had cleared away, the Minnesotans were completely baffled, and Meanwellfs men just marked time until the end of the game, The team was going at full force about this time, and the season closed in a blaze of glory when the Badgers gave Chicago two severe drubbings, after the latter quintet had licked Illinois twice. The decisive results of these two games partly atoned for the four narrow de- feats ofthe early part of the season. The scoring column does not give much information of note this year, as Purdue won the conference title with a nine-game schedule. which did not include con- tests with either Wisconsin or Michigan, both of whom were exceptionally strong, and both of whom tied for second place. The Badgers made the same record as they did last year when they tied for the pennant. - . , n. WILLIAMS Captain ' Duke' Ceaser played a dual role this sea- son by leading the complicated Badger attack, and by provid- ing a nucleus for the defense, which was responsible for Wisconsin's having the fewest number of points scored up- on her of any five in the Big Ten conference. He was a greater asset to the team than he was last year, and his fierce fighting spirit made him one of the most feared forwards in the mid-west. HDuke closed his college basketball career by caging three baskets against Chicago in the last game of the schedule. The play of Cop Taylor dur- ing the season was fitting for a player who has figured as promin- ently in western basketball circles as he has. The whole system of i play was built around Taylor's GIBSON scoring ability, and, though a marked man in every game, he rarely failed to lead the Badger scoring. Cop's record in the conference was second only to that of Captain Carney, of Illinois, and this is' remarkable when the difference in the style of play which the two teams employed is considered. Coach Meanwell will have a difficult task to find a man who can ade- quately replace Taylor in future years. Bollie Williams was placed on Fred Youngfs first all-confer- ence team. Williams, sensational dribbling and pivoting, and his ability frequently to penetrate the enemy's defense for short IRISH Page Two Hundred and Sixty tries at the basket, made him easily the best running guard in' the Big Ten conference. Bollie's shooting was somewhat improved this season, and, with another year of competition ahead of him, he bids fair to become the greatest running guard ever turned out at Wisconsin. Not only was Williams an effective guard under his opponents, basket, but he was frequently down the floor like a flash for a short try at his own net. Only Don - White, ineligible Purdue guard, could compare him in all-around ability on thebasketballcourt. With Williams and f'tius Tebell back next year, Coach Meanwell will have a pair of' experienced guards who can workin both offense and defense. The question as to who was going to fill the back guard job this season was decided just three days after the football season closed. Gus Tebell was the first foot- ball man to report to Coach Meanwell and he stepped into the position with the case of a veteran. No man on the team improved as rapidly as did Tebell during thepast season. ln addition to smother- ing every offensive rush of his opponents, he came to be one of the fastest floormen in the conference. I-lad Gus possessed a little more TEIWLL height. he would easily have headed the list of Big Ten guards. Wisconsin bids fair to turn out another great basketball center in the person of Douglas Gibson. He is not a spectacular player. but fits into the Meanwell offense nicely. and has the faculty of knowing how to nip offensive rushes before they get well un- der way. Gibson possesses all of the qualities of a star basketball player. and the end of another season of conference competition should hnd him comparing favorably with the all-conference cen- ters who have been produced by Coach Meanwell in bygone days. Leslie Gage was the darkhorse of the Badger squad this year. In the first game of the season. he shot the basket. which . cinched a Wisconsin victory. f'Les JACK WILLIAMS made his real debut into the basketball hall of fame in the Illinois game. The fans, who felt skep- tical when they saw him included in the initial lineup, came away from the armory singing his praises. His incessant fight and his coolness in breaking up the Sucker plays were the most important factors in the victory. The fact that Gage will be eligible for another year solves ea big problem for Coach Meanwell with respect to filling the places left vacantby the graduation of Ceaser and Taylor. Russell Irish is another man who has a brilliant basketball future ahead of him, He is a typical back guard, but plays equally well at center. Lack of experience and condition were all that prevented him from seeing more service, but his per- formance in the Illinois game, when he held Carney to a single BAREIS Held goal, insures him a position on next year's team. Page Tum Hundred and Sizly-One WISCONSIN VVISCONSIN WISCONSIN NVISCONSIN WISCONSIN VVISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN WISCONSIN W ISCONSIN SEAS N'S ECOPID , . 27 IVIICHIGAN AGGIES A . , 20 BUTLER .... . , . , 27 RIPON ..... . , . . 15 KNOX .... . , . . 23 IVIILWAUKEE . . , . . 31- LA CROSSE. . A , . . 27 NEB1XASK.IX . . . , , , . 18 IOWA . . . . . . , , . , 21 NORTIIWESTEIIN . , A , . 18 MICHIGAN . . . . , , , , 15 MINNESOTA . . . . . 25 ILLINOIS . . . . . , . . 18 IOWA . . . . . . , . . . . 23 IXIORTHWESTERN . . . . . 35 ILLINOIS . . . . . . . . . 17 IVIICHIGAN . . . . . . . 3111 IVIINNESOTA . , , A 211 CHICAGO . . . . 31. CHICAGO . CONFERENCE STANDINGS XVOII LOSL Pct. PUIAIJUE . . 8 1 888 W ISCONSIN 8 fl 666 MICHIGAN 8 '1 666 ILLINOIS . T 5 583 CHICAGO . 6 6 500 M INNESOTA GJ T 116 IOWA . . 5 T 116 OHIO S'I'ATIA:. , 5 T I16 INDIANA ..... 3 8 272 NOIz'rHwES'rEIxN. . 3 9 .250 0 Page Two Hundred and Sixty-Tu-O FRFISHMAN BASK ETBA LL SQUAD CAPTAIN HROWDYN ELLIOTT SEASO 1921 V It gg it biaww' X ' 2 T if BASEBALL Faye Two Hundred and Si-:ly-Three We ' . mi, neue, il . -i .VX -, ' '.-,1.- ' . In U, . z:, ..,A,, ' ..., 3.v,: f .Lv -.JM .... V. ',,, i. , rlhl A-Ml , .H IKT , 4 ALMS. It f H 1' A .,,. i . . . - .. - --., f -V,'Ah' 'A 5 iff SQWNQ- . 4 MW, ,7sa.cesi3R' - - H. 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Vbl , f V- 3 --', ' . 7 effww-:s3.f:q.gqfw,-sgi--'freer.:s..sg4:'se?:.:i,-1-Qease- , --L , i. . . , , , ., BASEBALL EASON 1921 FTEB several weeks of weary waiting and weather forecasting, Coach Lowman and Captain Elliott decided that they would brave the mud of the lower campus for outside practice, and the word was given for the baseball candidates to report. With the poor showing made by Wisconsin the previous year, prospects for a winning team were not exactly bright. Tony Zulfer and Sam ' Ogle were lost to the pitching staff, which at its best had been weak. Captain Elliott, Lyman, Davey, Farrington, Al Miller, and Ceaser were the veterans who were again eligible for the team. When it came to selecting a tenative lineup, however. Coach Lowman encountered a real task. New material of considerable skill had steadily turned out, and there was keen competition for every position. Coach Lowman decided that his hopefuls were ready for exhibition to the public and, on April 6, he invited the Northwestern college nine to Camp Randall for an afternoon's entertainment. Elliott, Davey, and Lyman wielded the willow in mid-season fashion and this, -com- bined with effective pitching by Frank Williams, netted the Badgers a 10 to 1 win. Milton college failed to put in an appearance on April 9, so Wisconsin's American National Pastimers did not see action again until April 11. The down-state brothers from Beloit made but few attempts to furnish any oppo- sition and were snowed under by a score of 13 to 0. Paddock, a sophomore. relieved Miller on the mound and displayed his ability in a most effective manner. The following Wednesday the squad left on what is known as the HBadgers southern training tripf, which consisted of two games, one with Notre Dame, and one with Valparaiso. 1 1 Badger fans were not given a chance to see their pen- COACH LOWMAN A nant chasers in action again until April 20 when, Coach Page Two Hundred and Sixly-Four We ., p George Downers Milwaukee Normalites journeyed over to cross bats with Wisconsin. Hoffman was assigned the slab artist'sjob. and he held the visitors to one hit. The final score was 13 to 0. This was the day which the fates had assigned for Elliott to enter the Babe Ruth hall of fame. ln the third inning. with two men on bases. the Badger bambino swatted out his first home run of the year. The Badgers were booked to begin their invasion of Hoosier territory on April 22, but rain made it necessary to postpone the opener for one day. Elliott and his outht were obliged to satisfy themselves with a 50-50 split on the double-header staged the day following. After being nosed out in the first game, 'fP1owdy found his eye and started a batting rally to put the second game on ice. On Friday morning the team departed for Evanston and Chicago. Christiansen pitched his first conference game against the Purple and won handily, 7 to 1. Elliott, Lyman, Farrington. and J. Williams all fattened their batting averages liberally at the expense of three Northwestern pitchers. but the performance of the team was not, on the Whole, up to par. The men displayed much better form on the following day when a 7 to 1 licking was given Chicago. Paddock pitched a Carl Mays brand of ball, and took a big step towards establishing himself as Badger pitching ace. Ripon was taken into camp to the tune of 15 to 5 when it came to town on May fl. Hoffman and Frank Williams per- formed creditably on the mound, and Hardell chalked up his first home run of the season. Purdue opened the local conference season on May 7, with Governor Blaine rolling the firstball. The Badgers took the Boilermakers into camp with a score of 12 to 1. Fans were treated to some big-time stuff in the line of infield play during this game, for several speedy double and triple plays were pulled off. Paddock heaved a fair game. Ruediger and Elliott wielded the stick to good advantage, the former getting a homer. A week later, Illinois came up to take on the Badgers. Lefty Barnes, the Illinois Andy Gump , and Paddock both pitched good ball. After the game had gone 13 innings, the Suckers gained a one run lead, which was all they needed to win. On May 20, Lowman took the boys down to Urbana to try to even up the count. For the first time, Elliott and his men could not hit. Their fielding was perfect, but baseball games CAPTAIN ELLro'r'r Page Two Hundred and Siafly as , -zf . .Q , 'f 3- I . -.mzzxzlzis , ' ,ra -v-- . as, - ate. V life ' ,. aren't won that way, and a 5 to 0 beating was recorded in the percentage column. Northwestern played here and was defeated, 9 to fl. Farrington played a stellar game in the infield, and Elliott featured with the Stick. Our rivals from the Midway stalked up the following Friday afternoon, but were nursing a 12 to 0 beating when they departed for home. Hoffman pitched a superb game of ball, and, aided by the hitting of Williams and Elliott, never gave the Maroons a chance. The next day the Badgers went down to Purdue and brought home an 8 to 2 victory. Paddock was wild. but had air-tight support. Once i again, Elliott starred with the W I willow. .pr V Two days later Coach Lowman and his band arrived in Ann Arbor to take on the ex-champion Wol- verines. The game went on into 18 fi, 1 innings,and Michigan finallyscored 5 . a win with a homer. we r T T -' , I -- M -f Frank Williams chalked up a 6 to 2 win from Notre Dame on June 4. Pat'l Snow was the star per- former ofthe day. if f,'?!pQfc' 1 . on the long end of the score. T f,,i7 ' 1- , :V M in N ga. , -, , 4,151 : - f-:fe Q ff, 1 V 1.14.1 . -' , f .A ,- ' 5 if .QQ 1, . ' - :es kwcffefifs -4. R539 , efask, .Q Serum- A k 'Q . fr xr 0 s at 5 xx f S5 lk 11 ' Q X l X f' 'ff , . f . 2 i . Ky, i X x X 5 2. K 3 ' s 'Q Nix H X? X ts E X' as ix sg be X lx rar 5 r QKYQX as XA sc r X New fs i f ,Sky ia ma. FARRINGTON On the sixth. Wisconsin fans saw the best exhibition of the year when the Badgers prevented Michigan from winning the Con- ference title by giving them a 7 to 6 beating. Although Paddock was nicked for two homers, a four-ply blow by P1ollie,' Wil- liams and a couple of smacks by Cap tain Elliott kept Wisconsin 'This game ended the most successful baseball season-in the hlstory of Wisconsin. Three defeats against eight victories f f placed Wisconsin in third place in Big Tens ratings. Several new men were uncovered whose ability should aid Captain-elect Paddock to lead the 1922 team to a high position in the Confer- aoizmmaa ence, and to a possible championship. Pafle 111 Hzndred and Sixty-Six CAPTAIN HAL KNOLLIN TRACK SEASCDN 1921 TRACK SEASON 1921 Y the 8th of April Coach Jones' einder men were gamboling over the track at Camp Randall in fine shape. On that date they tried their mettle against the frosh squad and overwhelmed the yearlings by a count of 109 to 26. COACH JONES Page Two Hundred and Siwly-Eight The first event ofthe season in which the Badger cinder- men took part was the annual Drake relays. a mid-west classic held at Drake College. lowa. '4Tom'7 Jones took nine of the Wisconsin speedsters down there on the 23rd of April, and. although they were in poor condition be- cause oflthe had weather which had prevailed at Madison. they placed in two of the three events in which they were entered. ' Wisconsin was invited to participate in the historic Penn relays held annually at the University of Pennsylvania, and drew the pole position in the medley relay. But because of the poor condition of the team. the Badgers withdrew. and only Dale Merrick and Lloyd Wilder. Wisconsin's two star pole vaulters. went east for the big event. There Merrick won honor for his school by tying with Gardner of Yale for first position at a height of 12 feet TM inches. and by winning first in the toss. Wilder also placed. tying with Harwood. of Harvard and Jenne, of Washington State for third. For their Hrst dual meet of the season, the team traveled to Chicago on the 7th of May. They swamped the Maroons by a 105 to 30 seore, taking 13 firsts out ofapos- sible 15. Knollin was high point man with a total of 15 markers. He skimmed over the sticks at a great rate. winning iirsts in both the hurdle events. and also annexing the 100 yard dash. Sundt brought home 13 points in the javelin throw, the shot put, and the broad jump. ln the pole vault, high jump, and half mile, Wisconsin made a clean sweep ofall points. ln their iirst home performance, at Camp Randall on May 15th, Wisconsin downed Minnesota, 104- to 31. Coach J ones, eindermen took lirst in 13 events. Anderson, the Gophers' flashy hurdler, beat Knollin to the tape in the 120 high hurdles event, but only after the Badger star had beaten him in the 220 hurdles and the 100 yard dash. Guy Sundt broke his own Wisconsin record in the javelin throw by tossing the spear 1605 feet. Captain Clyde Nash won the fast half mile. and Wall and Finkle took firsts respectively in the mile and two mile events. The team traveled. to Urbana on the 20th, and gave the Illinois track squad a little practice work-out. The strong lllini crowd took the boys into camp for a 99 to 36 defeat. taking firsts in all but one of the events. The Wisconsin vaulters remained unbeatable. however, and Merrick, Wilder, and McClure took first, second and third in order. The squad took on Northwestern in their regular stride when the Purple came up to Madison on the 27th. The Badgers rornped away from the Evanstonians to the tune of 101 to 31, for the latter took only two iirsts: Poliak annexing the century dash, and the giant Blackwood, the hammer throw. Guy Sundt was individual high point winner. He took firsts in the shot put and the broad jump for a total often counts. The big annual outdoor meet was held at Stagg Field, Chicago, on the fourth of June. lllinois was easily the class of the entrants. but the Badgers went down in a lighting mood and brought back a third. They nosed out the strong Notre Dame team. and ran close to Michigan which was a poor second. Wisconsin took four firsts. In the 5823463 mm. . , . Page Two Hundred u d 81 ly NIL mile, Wall beat MacGinnis, Illinois, in a close finish, Merrick did some pretty aviating for a win in the pole eventg and Knollin broke the tape in both the high and low hurdles. Sundt totaled five points in the broad jump, shot put and javelin. In this meet, Con- ference records for the high jump and the javelin went by the boards, and the time hung up for the 100 yard dash was tied. Captain Nash, after leading the field in a speedy half' mile for three quarters of the distance, was forced into third place by I-Iiggins, Ames, and Yates, Illinois. Wisconsin's other counter was scored by Wilder, who took fifth in the vault. The concluding feature of the season was a National Inter-collegiate meet, the first of its kind in America, held at Chicago on the 17th and 18th of June. Fifteen Wisconsin, trackrnen were entered in the various track and field events against the pick of the nation's cinder stars. The fame of the University was Well upheld, Badger men placed in six of the events in which they were entered. Wilder tied for first in the aerial event with three of the foremost vaulters ofthe country, and Merrick, Wisconsinls other star aviator, tied for fifth. Captain Nash, running his last race for his Alma Mater, took a third in the half mile, and Knollin topped the 220 yard low hurdles for a second place. Sundt's leaping ability gave him fourth position in the pit contest, and Finkle and Johnson brought home fifths in the two mile and 440-yard dash for the remaining counts. ,It is believed the affair will become' an annual classic, in which the West will have an oppor- tunity to test its ability against the East, Where the North will meet the South. age T 0 Hundred and Seventy INDOOR T RACK 1922 HE indoor track season this year was the most successful one since 1916, when the Badgers finished second in the Big Ten. In the first dual track meet of the season on February 18, at Notre Dame, despite the fact that the Badgers won the contest easily with a LL7 to 34 score, the team suffered a terrific blow in the loss of George Finkle, star two-miler of the West, who snapped his leg in the finish of a hot race against the Catholic's distance man. The break eclipsed the rising career of a runner who was destined to break many A records in his field. In the annual meet with the South Benders the Badgers easily had the edge. Merrick beat the Notre Dame record in the pole vault by aviating 12 feet SM inches for a first in his event, Johnson ran a speedy quarter, clipping off the distance in 52 2-5, one-fifth of a second slower than the record. The Wisconsin team, with Captain Knollin, Stolley, and Newell placing in the hurdles, -scored a com- plete slam in that event. Platten took first in the high jump, and Finkle won the mile run before his injury in the longer race. Desch, the Hoosiers' celebrated Olympic star, took the 40-yard dash in fast time. Coach Jones took a small squad to the annual Illinois relays on March Llth, and the boys did good Work against the larger number of teams entered. Dale Merrick did his best work of the season in a Vaulting duel with Landkowski, of Michigan. The two contestants fought the bar up to a height of 12 feet 9M inches where they tied for a new National Inter-collegiate record. The two-mile relay team composed of Ramsay, .I ohnson, Rossmeissl, and Wade, took third in a race which went WALI to the speedy Penn State crew at a new mark for the Page Two Hundred and Seventy-0 Page Two distance. George Stolley took a third in the low hurdles, being defeated by Sam Wallace of Illinois and 'the3Minnesota star, Anderson. r Q Q Iowa came to Madison on March ll., for the first time in the history of the two schools, to compete in a dual track contest. Wisconsin easily walloped the Hawks by a score of 53M to EBM. 3 y ,' 1,,yc M 'iPete', Platten starred by breaking the annex high jump record, ,1'-i , sailing over the bar at a height of 6 feet LLM inches. The old 3, record of 6 feet 2 inches was held jointly by 'iBob', Wahl and firsts and five seconds for the majority of their counters, being V f strongest in field events. Newell won the hurdles event after Stolley j had been disqualified, although he went the distance in better than record time. Ramsay won the half in a close race with Ashton of Iowa, and Rossmeissl took the two mile from Peterman, the Hawk- eyes' distance star. In the conference meet at Evanston, on the l 7th and 18th of March, Coach Gill's Illini squad swept up the majority of the points, winning the meet by ascore which doubled that of the Badgers, who took an easy second. Considering the loss of Wall and Finkle, the two distance men who had been counted on to score against Illinois' star milers and two-milers, the squad which Coach Jones took to the track and field games made a highly satisfactory show- ing. Captain Knollin won the hurdles from such stars as Johnson of Illinois, Sargent of Michigan, and Anderson of Minnesota. Merrick and Landkowski of Michigan indulged in another vault- ing duel, which resulted in a tie at I2 feet 6 inches. Ralph Spetz was high point man of the meet with a first in the 440, and a fourth in the 50 yard dash. The Badger dash man also carried the baton in the mile relay and placed fourth in that event. . Q 2x ' 1 V i v w y ' -4 - ' if -'- ' . . V . .. fx-if '1' v ' ,,:,. , If 'ZA -, i ,a,., 1, L- C 13 ' '-1 FE-.ffl :L- ',f 'r-- 'f gf , f1ff ,fft I ' I-1 ' 'mx Q Q' lf' - STOLI EY J Hundred and Sevenly- Two Jon Loomis, former Wisconsin athletes. The Badgers took six V 11 'f ' f 5 if CROSS COUNTRY 1921 T the beginning of the season. the outlook for a successful cross country team was not as bright as it might have been, but the indomitable Badger spirit could not long be subdued, and throughout late September and early October days. Coach Burke had about thirty-five candidates for positions on the squad trailing out daily along the drive. Under the guidance of Captain Wall, talent soon began to shine forth among the novices in the forms of Douglas Moorhead, George Finkle, Wayne Ramsay. Arthur Knutson, Earl Schneider. and Thomas Daniels. On the 8th of October, the Varsity squad defeated the strong All-American team in a practice run over the short two and seven-tenths mile course. After the Freshman-Varsity meet on the 15th, the squad was out to about twenty men, and preparation for the first dual meet of the season, with Minnesota, began in earnest. A time trial for the Minnesota meet was held on the 22nd. From the results of this trial, Wall, Finkle. Moorhead, Bossmeissl, Ramsay, and Daniels were chosen to oppose the Gophers in the meet at Madison on Homecoming day. W In Sweitzer, Hoverstad, Winters, and Moon, the Gophers had a quartet of veterans which had performed together for several years on the cross-country path. and the green and untried Badgers knew that they were in for a five-mile battle from start to finish. gl' COACH BURKE Two llundretl li S I Tl The first to round into the final stretch on Langdon Street was the galloping Finkle, who loafcd in far ahead of the rest. Next to cross the line was Captain Wall, and the Gophers were handed a defeat by the close margin of one point. On November 5th, Coach Burke took his men to Chicago to meet the Maroons. The race was run over a level one mile loop, and the Badgers swamped the weak Mid? way squad by a close sweep of the first five places. Finkle won easily, as usual, Wall was second, followed by Daniels, Knutson, and Boss- meissl in order. When the team left to take part in the Conference meet at Bloom- ington, on November 19th, it was with every man in the best of con- dition and filled with the fighting Badger spirit to bring home the FINKLE bacon. Running in a cold drizzle of rain, Finkle, the shining Wisconsin harrier, led the field of seventy entrants from eleven schools of the West, and broke the tape a winner. Captain Wall finished eighth, and ee y ' Knutson, running his best race of the season, took fourteenth. The 1 last two to count for Wisconsin were Pmossrneissl, forty-sixth, and Daniels, forty-ninth, giving the Badgers third place in the meet. 1 With a poor start, the team had anlexceedingly successful season, and it is gratifying to note that only two men. Captain Wall and Douglas Moorhead, will be missing from the Badger line-up next fall. K I Standing of the conference cross l 1 country teams: 9 ' 1. II.LINoIs . . 46 -. AMES .... 66 3. YVISCONSIN . 114 11. OHIO STATE . . 128 ' 5. lVlICHIGAN . . . 131 6. PURDUE .... 141 , 7. MICHIGAN AGGIES 171 8. NIINNESOTA . . 176 9. IowA ..... 180 X 10. NOR'FHWESTERN 187 ' ' 11. INDIANA .... 210 WALL Page Two 'Hundred and Seventy-Foiur CAPTAIN GEORGE O. TOEPFEB CREW SEASO 1921 ' f' M-. , p ' Q i'-:Tigger 'e4,:,1fz:m.-2415 -, f 3h2fQ5YZ'4f'Qaf522g- :f - . ' A ,A -' M? ,. -'-- -Q 1'-'ffj V. :Q--1 W ' ' k .3:,. if4H'l-5Afew -'f?ff ?EY'1?4f 1-1 .W g .:e':::...,,,.f.'- ' 11-- fr '552I'rf ' M. 'ii ?-i2If.'.9,.:z::JN, - ?'PZ:lkL'if', 'kQ,-1. H ,211'f:+,-'-'. :ff , -f v f.y,-.-h.ov,we.m! ,W-m,,4..,,.v ,mefrmm,4aw55yM,,.f ,.,- A-fx-. . , f, QW.. , .4 Mm, . 15.1 ,. I 'ffff if f , 7? .-45 1 5 ' , W ,. 21,5 M' , 47155 mg! .fww y , m7 ZQ44f2v2?'RS'Jwf'1 - ,wg -fvzwgaz , ' f . W Am. ff' ,, ff, Y. . ff, f , ,,, . A ,f f ,V Q I : .... K . ,,..., . , , , v,,,'9!,,M,2,5f ,, . my V, X . , Page Two Hundred and Scvcnly-Fine TX. CREW SEASON 1921 HE 1921 Varsity crew marked the beginning of an epoch in the history of rowing A at the University of Wisconsin. Its revival ended a seven year struggle to reinstate it as a major sport, and rewarded agitation carried on by various clubs and individuals in the University during the past five years. Coach 4'Dad Vail issued his first call for candidates during the first week of October, and within three days, two crews were working daily on lake Mendota. The fall period on the lake was short, but enough men of Varsity caliber were discovered to form a nucleus around which a crew might be developed. During the entire winter, about thirty candidates worked out daily on the machines. Up to this time, there was little incentive for the candidates to work, but with the decision of the Athletic Council to reinstate rowing as a major sport, the men responded more heartily. h As soon as the ice was out of the lake, men were again on the water, punishing themselves daily to get into shape for the first race of the season with the Lincoln Park Boat Club of Chicago. 1 , The crew was seriously handicapped, due to ineli- gibility of many candidates and to the injury of Arthur Samp, captain. Pay T Hundred and Seventy-Six COACH DAD VAIL The first race took place on Venetian night, May 28th. The Chicago Club, winners of the Western Championship ' , in 1920 at the Central ' B .i States Regatta, had a powerful crew. 'The race started at sunset on a B perfectly calm lake. L4 From the very start the ly Badgers took the lead iiff' and gradually increased it, crossing the line five lengths ahead of Chi- cago. The time for the mile and a quarter was six minutes, fifty-nine seconds. The second race of the day, between the Varsity junior eight and St. .lohn's Military Academy. was won by the Academy by a half length, due to a wonderful spurt at the finish. Because of ineligibilities, an almost entirely new junior varsity crew had to be selected two days before the race. The last and most important race of the season was against the famous Duluth Boat Club. The event took place on Superior Bay at Duluth, June twenty-fifth. Six thous- and rooters, including many Wisconsin alumni, packed the stands to witness an heroic attempt by the inexperienced Badgers to defeat the International Champions on a choppy course. The Duluth crew was the first to take the water. From the huge grand stand Page Tum I-Iuuclrcd and bevel ly Seven came a roar of approval. Then the Badger shell nosed out from behind the boat house. Both the Duluth and the Badger rooters gave the lighter crew a hearty cheer. Both crews, with a restful, sweeping stroke, glided down the bay for the starting position. Wisconsin drew the outer course. At the signal, Duluth jumped into a half length lead. Both crews were pulling a 40 stroke pace. Wisconsin gradually pulled up and at the half mile mark the crews were even. The stroke had dropped to thirty-six, and the shells swept neck- and neck down the stretch. At the three-quarter mark, the Badgers led by a man. The Duluth aggregation gradually drew up, but Wisconsin held, and, as the grandstand was approached, was only slightly behind. Then, as if by an automatic signal, within the last 100 yards, the famous Ten Eyck spurt, for which the Minnesota city has become famous, began. Coxswain Hanley pleaded for more speed, but the Badgers had given their last ounce.i Swinging in perfect form, at a terrific stroke, the American Champions crossed the line, winners by a length and a half. Old followers of rowing claimed that never before had the waters of Superior Bay been cut by oars of a more plucky crew than those of the Badgers. The mile and a quarter stretch had been covered in the fast time of six minutes and thirty-nine seconds. It was no disgrace to the inexperienced Badgers to lose the race, for this same Duluth eight later won both the National and Northwest International Championships, and finished the season undefeated. ' Too much credit for the success of the crew cannot be given to Coach 4'Dadl' Vail. With onlyua few men to work with, men who had had little or no experience, he developed a crew which did Wisconsin justice as the first Varsity Eight since 1914. Let us hope that it will not be long before he will again be able to take a Wisconsin crew to Poughkeepsie and Are you ready, Wisconsin Pi' will again be heard on the Hudson. ' 1921 VARSITY CREW PERSONNEL HARRH' E. VYAII ......... Coach WVILLIAM KOCH . . . . . Commodore KEN GARDNER . , . V1'r-0-Conzrlzodore TOEPFER, Capfain YY. . . . . . Bow Punsrow W . , , 2 TURNEIX W . . 3 Orcnnsrnom W. . , , -1. PLATTEN W, , l - 5 KLUssENnoRF W. , , 6 FAUERBACH W. . , , T PREHN W. , . Stroke l'lANI.EY W . . . Coxswain ,-,M 1 I I Pane T110 H ndred and Sevenllv-Eight MINOR SPORTS 1921-22 P T Hdd dS lyN MINOR SPORTS 1921-22 LTI-I OIT GI-I the Badgers won four dual meets, each one from amember of the Big Fouri' in swim- ming, they were nosed out by Minnesota at the Big Ten meet which was held in Bartlett pool, University of Chicago, on March 17, and as a result the Gophers were acclaimed title-holders. With the development of the best team, the year was also distinguished by the scintillation of .Iohnson Bennett ,24, the best swimmer that Wisconsin has known, who starred in every event that he entered. Coach Steinauer called his men out during the first semester to get them in shape for the first meet of the season with the Milwaukee Athletic club natators. A plethora of material reported and prospects appeared brighter than usual for a successful season. In their initial appearance, the Badgers took Milwaukee into camp to the tune of 41 to 27. The result of the com- petition forecasted the Wisconsin team's experiences for the remainder of the season. In return match with the M. A. C. on January I4 at Milwaukee they again defeated the Cream City club. with a score of 37 to 31. g 0 H ndrcd and Eighly COACH STEINAUER The first Big Ten dual meet was held on February 18 at Urbana, Illinois. Swimming in their home tank, the Suckers put up a strong battle, but Wisconsin duplicated its M. A. C. score and carried off the victory. Three tank records were smashed in this meet: Swimming in the 200-yard relay race, Story, Davies, Lamboley, and Bennett lowered the record time from one minute, forty-seven and one-fifth seconds to one minute forty-six and three-Hfth seconds. Bennett swam the 100 yard dash in 57 41.-5 seconds, one and one- lifth seconds faster than the former mark made by Capt. Ed Blinks of Chicago. Lamboley also splashed a little water over spectators to shatter the 50 yard mark. .lflc went the distance in 25 and 3-5 seconds. Capt. Bill Collins won the diving event. The championship Chicago team came to Madison on February 24, and although it came, and saw, it failed to conquer. Final score: Wisconsin -1-6. Chicago 22. Wisconsin won the 160-yard relay, the 410-yard dash, the 220-yard swim, the 100-yard sprint, and the 40-yard dash and took second place in the 100 yard event. Minnesota, the new swimming champion. Have Wisconsin tank men their third consecutive Conference victory. Score: 36 to 32. Fairey, Gopher water dog, lowered a Conference record by fly and 3-5 seconds when he made the 200 yards of the breast stroke in 2 minutes 4-0 2-5 seconds. Bennett pared 1 and 3-5 seconds oll' the record in the 220-yard free style swim. and the relay mark also went into the discard. Collins won the diving event. CAPTAIN COLLINS P In their fourth win the Badgers bettered Tom Bobinson's Northwestern University bunch, 36 to Northwestern had been walloped by Minnesota, but the Purple came H9 All-4 l 1112-':,s'-fm., B 'V iii , ' - ' , 4 ,.,. .. 1 Payer Two Hundred and Eiglziy-One back with a vengeance and the meet was close at all Etimes. Wis- consin finished first in all but two events, with Collins, Bennett, Czerwonky, and Gilbreath winning first positions. With the last of the dual meets lout of the way, the life guards began their week of' steady, intensive training for the Big Ten meet at Chicago University on March 17. Preliminaries were held on the 16th and Wisconsin qualified enough men so that it appeared to have a strong chance for the gonfalon. Minnesota also got enough men in the finals to insure a battle for the pennant, while Chicago and Northwestern looked dangerous. A new Conference individual swimming champion was crowned when Blinks, of Chicago, lost his laurels to the Badger Bennett. The Wisconsin man took the 40-yard swim, and the 100-yard dash. Lanpher, of Minnesota, captured the 440-yard event and gave his team enough points to win the meet. The relay quartet, composed of Galbraith, Davies, Lamboley, and Bennett won a sensational race in the Mid-Western swimming classic. , BENNETT Page I uo Hundred and Eigh-ly-Tum COACH HITCHCOCK WRESTLING 1922 HE first dual meet which the Badger mat men had on their 1922 schedule was the contest with the Gophers, March 10, in which the Wisconsin team lost by a 30 to 20 count. The redeeming feature of the meet was the splendid showing made by both Captain Peterman and Templin in pinning their opponents. Peterman disposed of the Gopher's star, Stoner, in seven minutes. Woelffer also showed to good advantage. On February 18 the Badgers staged a scrappy come- back, and won a close match with Northwestern, 28 to 22. Clever work by Templin, Peterman, Heuer, and Phelps put the Badgers across for a win. Captain Cyn proved his ability again,by throwing his opponent in a fast six minute bout, while Phelps, wrestling his first dual bout, toppled Jennes for a fall in a furious battle. A big crowd turned out for the first contest held in Madison in two years. The Maroons came to Madison on March 4 with only four men, but they were suliiciently versed in the art of wrestling to defeat the Badgers, 32 to 18. Peterman was off form, and received a draw with Hatowski of the Midway. A bad cold hampered him, and other members of the Badger team. Templin won his Page Two Hundred- an d Eighly-'I'hrc third consecutive bout handily, while Phelps, in the bantam class, received a forfeit for the final scores. The final match of the dual season, on March 10, proved dis- astrous for the Badgers when Ames, unscored on in five previous meets, won another shutout, the result being 52 to 0. Peterman and Templin were the only Wisconsin men able' to put up a battle against the veteran Ames matmen, losing by close decisions. Lack of enough dual meets prevented Wisconsin from entering more than one man in the iinals for the individual titles. held at Wisconsin on March 17 and 18. Templin, star 158 pounder, was the man who made the grade, and he acquitted himself splendidly by winning second place. A terrific bout with his old enemy, Mcliibben of Ames, resulted in a close decision for the latter, which gave the title to the Iowan by an advantage of only one minute and 32 seconds. Large, interested audiences witnessed the championship bouts each evening. PETEHNIAN M. Ai , . gimiffsf T3 3, Q-.,,r 'T W' t 1 3, ' 1 .qv ' N-' ' f V ' N p 'i in' '- fu: fi-1 2. V, I lflfs 1-Z 2 - 10 T10 Hundred and'Eigh'ly-Four X 1 552 ' iiziifi . M V . 1 A 'fl GYMNASTICS 1921 T the opening of the Gym season. things looked certain for a championship at Wis- consin. Practically the same team that gave Chicago such a run in 1921 was back, and all were looking forward to winning the conference. But conflicting schedules between the swimming and track teams and gym squad lost valuable men to the team. Nevertheless, with Captain Kletzien, Kitchen, and Porth as a nucleus, Coach Schlatter built up a combina- tion that came within 116 points of the title. Four champions, four seconds, a third and two fourths, was the surprising total rolled up by the Badgers in the Conference Meet of the year against eight competing teams. Captain Kletzien nosed his team-mate, Hansen, out of first place in the sidehorse event, while Walter Porth proved the big star of the entire meet by taking a first in the parallels, and two seconds. Dean Kitchen tumbled as never before to beat Stahl ol' Illinois for his second consecutive championship. Edison Boerke won his W by winning the title in the broadswords con- 136Si-. A In the iirst conference dual meet, held at Madison on March 4, the veteran Maroons won out by a score of 730 to 716. Wisconsin was ahead on place points at the finish, but lost out by Chicagols superior work in the events they took. - Hansen, Porth, and Kitchen were the individual stars for Schlatter's team, winning firsts in the horse, rings, tumbling, and parallels. COACH SCHLATTER Taking four firsts, Wisconsin piled up leadvon Min- Page Two Hundred and Eighly-Five nesota in the final dual of the season, at Minneapolis on March 11, and won 1113 to 1069 points. Capt. Kletzien was in fine form and Won his event handily, as did-Kitchen and Porth. The latter 'took two firsts, when he placed first in the rings and club events. Wisconsin scored 30 place points to Minnesotais 23 in this meet. Both meets with the Milwaukee Y. M. C. A. team were victories for the Wisconsin men. The first one in December, with all of the Badger stars in the lineup, was a virtual Walkaway. The second meet was taken by a margin of only a few points. WINNERS OF THE GYMNASTIC HW BOERKE , KITCHEN LEITZ HANSEN KLETZIEN PORTH CONFERENCE STANDINGS CHICAGO, first PURDUE, fifth WISCONSIN, second NEBRASKA, sirlh 11'1INNESOTA, third OHIO, sevenfh ILLINOIS, fourth IOWA, cighlh Page Two-Hundred and Eighly-Sian Tredwell Aagesen Cfotfrcdson Pxckard COACH LINDEN TENNIS 1921 HE first Conference tennis match of 1921 was played with Northwestern, and resulted in a 5-1 victory for the Wisconsin men. Captain Gotfredson defeated Quinlan 6-0, 6-3. Tredwell defeated Newey 7-5, 6-1. Aagesen defeated Thomson 6-3, 6-1, and Pickard defeated Brown 6-1, 6-4. In the doubles, Pickard and Gotfredson were defeated by Newey and Quinlan, but Tredwell and Aagesen won from Cahorn and French 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. - The team journeyed to Ann Arbor to meet the strong Michigan team, and was turned back without winning a match. Tredwell, who was playing first, went down before Captain W6Stb1'OOk of Michigan, the Conference champion, 6-1, 6-3. Angel of Michigan defeated Aagesen 9-7, 6-4, after a very hard struggle. In the doubles, Munz and Westb1'ook of Michigan defeated Tredwell and Aagesen 6-1, 6-2, while Gotfredson and Pickard also lost to Bundel and Angel of Michigan 6-2, 6-2. The following week Chicago came to Madison for a dual meet. Tredwell, of Wisconsin, defeated Captain Vorhies, of Chicago, after a close match 6-2, 3-6, 6-2. Page Two Hundred and E gl ly In the second match Captain Gotfredson, after a terrific up- , hill struggle, managed to beat Segal, of Chicago, 6-8, I0-8, 6-il. This match was replete with hard hitting and spectacular play. Segal, after winning the lirst set ran the score to 5-1 ,A,, match point in the second set, only to lose out before 'the , undaunted Badger. Although Aagesen made a poor start, he l regained his form in time to overcome Gold of Chicago 5-1, ,igi,,.t . ,gi 6-0, 6-4. Pickard, however, lost to Frahenstein 6-3, 6-2. ln the doubles, Tredwell and Gotfredson, playing together for the iirst time, were beaten after two hard sets by Vorhies and Segal, the Conference double champions, 8-6, 6-4. ,,,...,,,.,'f, ,, The Conference meet, at Chicago, took place the week following the dual meet with Chicago. In the singles the WVisconsin team did not fare so well. All the men were AAGESEN eliminated in the first round. In the doubles, Wisconsin fared somewhat better. Pickard and Aagesen were eliminated in the first round, playing Newey and Quinlan, of North- western. Tredwell and Cotfredson, however, reached the semi-finals, and went down to defeat only after four hard sets with the ultimate champions, their old friends Vorhies and Segal, 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Late in .I une, T redwell played in the National Intercollegiate Lawn Tennis Tournament at the Merion Cricket Club at Haverford, Pennsylvania. He was defeated by Captain Mallory of Cornell 6-I, 6-3. The tournament was won by Phil Neer of Leland Stanford TREDWELL Page Tuio AHuniiiiedYariIzI EigIzl.v-E'ii1IhIw V T I I .1 COACH BORGELT BOXING 1922 ISCONSIN amateur mit slingers had plenty of chance for action in two intra-mural boxing tournaments. which were held under the direc- tion of the inimitable Eddie Borgelt, boxing instruc- tor and one of the headiest men in the present day amateur boxing game. Interclass championships were decided on March 10th and llth, with all previous winners in University padded glove tourneys barred from competition. The All-University boxing titles were decided during the week of March 13. Preliminarybouts were staged, and Winners were forced to go through an elimination process until they reached the finals after several tough sessions in the roped arena. Fred John defeated Koons in the rniddleweight division, although he was outweighted 12 pounds. In the welter- Weight division, Moore went through four rounds of tough milling with F abera before he finally Won the title and the right to challenge Jack Britton-professional champion. 2 ' Hirsh won from Gould in the bantamweight scrap. Le Vielle got a decision over Klack in the featherweight division. The judges were divided on the result of the match, but the deciding vote of the referee gavevthe bout to LeVielle. Page Two Hundred and Elghly N e A speedy go saw Martin winning from Geller in the lightweight championship matches. , G H. Two big fellows clashed when Stipek and Strain stepped to the center of the ring in the light-heavyweight bout. Stipek got a decision after three rounds of hard milling in which both men took much punishment. Gold medals were awarded to winners of each of the six bouts, one bout in each weight. -I One of the best fights during the season was that held in the inter-class tourney in the heavyweight division. Fabera shaded Stipek in a nip-and-tuck set-to. but Stipek fought a game battle and in the All-University, however, he came back and won the Wisconsin championship by walloping Strain. Russell beat Jorgenson for the 140-pound interclass title. Gould won from Fortier in the 120-pound class, and Moore emerged victor over Pearson in the 150-pound division. I Gould won by aggressiveness, but Fortier kept himself well-covered and the fight was close. Gould won each round and the bout. Veteran Ray Moore took Pearson in the last two rounds after the first had ended in a draw. La Vielle won over Leonard in theg130-pound class, and Leonard steam rollered over Comstock to enter the final bout, but was unable to step as fast as Le'Vielle. Page Two Hundred .and Ninety f 5. , HOCKEY 1922 N the first season that hockey has been listed as a Wisconsin minor sport, Coach Vineris puck chasers played eight games with the best squads in the Middle West. Although unable to emerge as victors in a single contest, the Badger hockey sextette offered severe competition to each of the eight teams, and characterized itself as one of the fastest teams of the season. For the first time, a rink was laid out and Hooded this season on the lower campus. Dr. A. K. Viner, Canadian f hockey star, consented to coach the team. Gilbert C. Grieve Was elected captain, and practice began in earnest for the first game. In their first game of the season on January M, the Badgers Went down to defeat before the Milwaukee Athletic Club team, by a score of three goals to one. Captained by A. J. Schinners, one of the best players of this section, the Milwaukeeans Were held to a close score throughout the entire contest. M. A. C. scored first and jumped into an early lead, but the Wisconsin defense tightened up, the offense scored one point, and a large crowd of spectators was Well satisfied with its View of a big-time hockey game. -Minnesota came here for a two-game series on January 27. The Gophers' team Was one of the best from the Frozen North. In the first clash, they took the Bad- gers into camp with a 3 to O score. Captain Chet Bros led the husky Northmen to a victory in the second game, also. VVisconsin scored in this battle, but When the game was ended, Minnesota was on the long end of a 3 to 1 score. The Badgers displayed much improvement in defense, the dependable, goal-tending of 'cTommy,' COACH A, K, VINER Tredwell holding Minnesota Well up the rink. Page Two Hundred and N Wisconsin took its first hockey tripon February 3. A return series was played against Minnesota at Minneapolis, with the result of two defeats in two contests played. The Swedes copped the first slaughter by a 12 to 2 score. The Badgers stacked up against Minnesota again the next day, and were trounced 7 to 0. Ten days of practice livened up the Badger offense, and when it stacked up against Michigan at Madison on February 14-, the Wisconsin men had a good chance for its first win of the season. Wisconsin scored' three goals against six which were counted by the Wolverines. Blodgett and Grieve had been playing consistent games for the Wisconsin hockey team. Combacker was another luminary who maintained a speedy pace throughout the season. He learned his hockey at Hamlin college, an institution which beat Minnesota early last season. Another trip was in store for the men when the Athletic Department carded a game with the title-contending Notre Dame team, which had gone through their season without a single defeat. On February 18, the two squads .met on the South Bend rink. When the smoke of conflict had cleared away, the score read: Notre Dame 3g Wisconsin 1. The Badgers put up a stiff' game, but were unable to overcome their opponents on a foreign rink. Continuing their trip into the Northland, the Vinermen played a return game with Michigan at Ann Arbor on February 21, and Michigan hung up five goals to one for WiSC0I1SiD- CAPTAIN GRIEVR The season ended with a record of no victories and eight defeats, but the squad fought hard in every one of the contests and only in rare instances did opponents have a walk- away. Increased. interest will be taken in the sport next year, more candidates will report to the coach, and the development of prospective stars this year will aid in making Hockey one of the most important minor sports on the Wisconsin calendar. Howard B. Combacker has been elected Captain of the team for next season. e1Two Hundred and Ninely-Two 5 CAPTAIN EUGENE TUHTAR ' r FR ESHMAN FRACK -f Z 202.133 .95 TVQE, , ff'-,-vi' 4 I T ER SCH QI ,ASTIC E 1921-'22 ' ' 'if Page Two Hundred ullrd Ninety-Three yt' INTER-SCHOLAST IC TRACK i NE state interscholastic record was broken in Class A of the twenty-seventh annual track and field meet which Milwaukee East Division won with 32 points at Camp Randall on May 28. Stoughton High School captured the class B title with a margin of 3 points over West Allis which won second place. The contest for state honors was a battle between Milwaukee schools all the way. Tuhtar, Milwaukee North division, was the only entrant to shatter a record. The M ilwaukeean hung up a new Wisconsin interscholastic high jump record when he cleared the bar at 5 feet IOM3 inches. The old mark of 5 feet 9 inches was held by HBob Wahl. Milwaukee South, and former University of Wisconsin high jumper. Christoffersonf Chippewa Falls, also bestcd Wahl's record, but he was unable to reach the height set by Tuhtar. Only three counters separated first and second positions in the Class B final standings. Stoughton vanquished VV est Allis by scoring a majority of points in the field events. Wisconsin High furnished strong opposition for the leading teams and managed to finish in third place with 19 points. Jefferson led the trailers with 12 points. Two Hundred and Nrnely-Four THE NORMAL MEET OA CH George Downer and his Milwaukee Normal track squad came to Madison on June 4 and upset the dope by winning the sixth annual Normal school cham- pionship track and field meet. Eight schools were entered in the states' school track classics. Three of them were closely hunched in the standings. Milwaukee scored 41 points. La Crosse, 35, and Stevens Point, 31. Five records were shatteredg Thiessenhusen, Milwaukee, broke both the mile and the half-mile records, the former by 4 2-5 seconds and the latter by 165 of a second, and Beget, La Crosse, high-jumped 6 feet, which is 6 inches more than the former record. Precourt, Stevens Point, threw the javelin 6 feet 4 inches farther than the former record and Van Ells, of Downer's championship squad, broke the shot put record by 1 foot. Precourt was individual high point winner of the meet. He chalked up enough points to beat out Field, La Crosse, who took second place, two markers in the rear. Downer's men placed in practically all of the events. By taking first in the mile run, 100-yard dash, half-mile run, 220-yard dash, shot put, and half-mile relay, the Milwaukeeans showed themselves to be the class of the field. The results were: Milwaukee 413 La Crosse 353 Stevens Point 31g Oshkosh 143 Whitewater 10: River Falls 4g Superior 4g Platteville 0. Page Two Hundred and N F v WISCONSIN-IOWA RADIO MEET ITH radio messages flying thick and fast between Madison and Iowa City, the Badger freshmen, on March LL, swamped the Hawkeye yearlings in a novel wireless meet by a score of 55 1-6 to 34 5-6 points. This is the first time that any school in the United States has ever engaged in a track meet by wireless. Messages crackled through the Middle Western air with regularity and, with every result received at the University wireless station. a few more points were chalked up on the Badger side of the scoring column. The feature of the contest was the work of Vallely in the half mile. The Badger star clipped off the distance in the fastest time that has been made on the annex track during the past season. bettering the speediest marks of Johnson and Wall, Varsity regulars. His record of 2 minutes 3 2-5 seconds came within a few seconds of the annex record. ' The individual star of the match was Coulter, an Iowa freshman, who placed in the 440-yard dash, the 110-yard, and the shot put, for a total of II points. Tuhtar, Wisconsin, was a close rival with I0 points for firsts in the high jump and the hurdles. Wisconsin freshmen took 7 out of I0 firsts. The Wisconsin freshman track team broke even in its two wire meetslheld during the indoor season. The Badger yearlings lost a telegraphic match to Illinois by the close score of 46 to 44. With the advantage of a much larger and faster track on the side of the Illini, Badger frosh did good Work in holding the score as close as it was. Individual stars were Tuhtar in the high jump and V an Ells in the shot put. Vallely beat his Illinois opponent in the half-mile run by nearly 8 seconds although the Illinois entrant had the advantage of a better cinderpath. Hart, Tuhtar, Vallely, and Van Ells were Badger yearlings who took first places. Tuhtar took his in the high jump and in the 40-yard high hurdles. g T 0 H ndrcd and Ninety-Sing INT ER-CLASS OUTDOOR MEET y HE freshmen track team easily won the annual interclass outdoor track meet which was held at Camp Randall on October 21 by scoring T0 5-6 points, an enormous margin over the counters chalked up by Sophomores and Juniors. . The Sophs came second with 485-6 points, and the Juniors showed that they know a shot put from a high hurdle by scoring 15 points. Van Ells took first in the shot put, Wade and Ellison took first and second in the quarter-mile jog, and Utgaard won third in the high hurdles for the Juniors. Freshmen made a good showing in all events and Coach Meade Burke had a squd, of good material with which to work. The yearlings took seven first places in 14 events, and many seconds and thirds. The yearling squad selected by Burke included Roberts, Stebbins, Jones, Tuhtar, Thiessenhusen, Smithyman. Hilberts. Van Ells. Benson, Mainland. Damerow, Fabera, Iwen, and Stangel. all of whom had shown consistent class in the workouts and in the inter-class meet. Pug? Two Hundred and N'inely-Seven FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL OPHOMORES showed that they. too, are susceptible to the desire for breaking tra- ditions when the second year football team defeated the freshmen eleven, 14 to 0, on Saturday, November 54 at Camp Randall. With everything against them except the referee, who was neutral, the Sophomores snorted onto Camp Randall and played a brand of football that was out of sight. Con- sistentfollowing of the ball gave them their two touchdowns and the first Sophomore victory in many moons. Shortly after the start of the game, Saari, soph back, grabbed a frosh fumble and skirted left end for 20 yards to make the hrst counter. Bieberstein, who starred through- out by his brilliant playing in the line, made the second nick in Coach Driver's pride when he broke through the heavy freshman forward wall, nipped a blocked punt, and ran for the goal line. His touchdown and the goal by Stoll gave the Sophomore outfit 14 points. The old-fashioned Minnesota shift employed by Driver's charges was killed and the yearling backs tried in vain to pierce the sturdy Sophomore defense. In the second half they brought the pigskin to their rival's two-yard line, but the golden chance was missed and the frosh lost the oval on downs. This was the last time that they were in a position to score. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL SQUAD g Hundred and Ninely-Eighi INTER-CLASS INDOOR MEET RFSHMEN and Sophornores continued the class rush and football rivalry when their track teams met in the gym annex on December 3. The Frosh romped away from the second year men and unreeled a 71 to 33 victory in the annual event. Ten first places went to the victors and the yearlings clearly outclassed their opponents both in the Cinder and in the field events. Two men tied for individual high scoring honors. Wallis, '24, and Schneider, '25, both counted 8 points: Tuhtar was third with 7 points. Wallis had a first in the 40-yard low hurdles, and second in the 40-yard highs, while Schneider placed first in the high hurdles and second in the low sticks. Tuhtar took a first place in the high jump and a third in each of the hurdle races. Although the meet was the first held on the Badgers remodeled indoor track, some fast time was hung up in several events. Coach Mead Burke's frosh squad foreshadowed the class that it displayed later in the season. Vallely in the half-mile, Hilberts in the two mile, and Van Ells in the weight event all showed that hthey had the makingsf' For the sophs, Wallis. Gibson, Hurley, Kreiger, and Slaughter were the only men to place. . Page Two Hundred and Ninely ANNUAL HW RELAY CARNIVAL N FEBRUARY 25, five annex marks were shattered and one tied, at the biggest W Relay Carniva ever held at the University of Wisconsin. Al Knollin lowered George Stolley's record in the 45-yard low hurdles by one-fifth of a second, skimming over the sticks in ,5 2-5 seconds for the new mark. The Wisconsin track captain also Mead Burkeis high hurdles mark of 5 2-5 seconds and took first in the 40-yard dash, winning three firsts in the seven open events of the meet. ln. the speedy state college relay, the Beloit college quartet clipped 4 3-5 seconds from their annex record made last year, setting a new mark of 2 minutes 22 seconds. Postel, of St. John's Military academy, tossed the 12-pound shot for a distance of 42 feet 1 inch, a new mark in the academy event. Shattuck Military academy shattered the record made last year by the Culver team in the academy relay. The Minnesota squad cut the annex record by 12 seconds in the feature race of the evening. Captain Mark Wall and three other gallant. sprinters bore the Alpha Chi Omega banner to the lists in the inter-sorority race. Gamma Phi Beta, Delta Zeta, and Kappa Delta took second. third places. respectively. tied Coach and fourth The Arlie M ucks trophy for the open event shot-put went to Guy Sundt when he won the event for the fourth consecutive time. Sundtis heave of 39 1 and 1-4 inches captured the event for him. The interfraternity relay was one of the fastest and most keenly contested events of the event. Spetz, Wille, Wade, Newell, McClure, Scott, Pi Kappa Alpha's speedy outfit made the distance in 1 minute 40 2-5 seconds, coming within one second of the annex record. Event 40-yard High Hurdles. , 40-yard Dash ..... F irsl Second Third . KNOLLIN CWD NEXVELI, CWD iABMSTBONG CLa CD . KNOLLIN CWD JOHNSON CWD ADDIE CBeloitD 40-yard Dash Military Academies CSt. J .D DOWDING GRAvIss CSt. J.D GOLD CShattuckD Shot Put ........ SUNDT CWD GUDE CWD Military Academy Shot Put POSTEL CSI. J .D PIERABD C ShattuckD DEHMLOXX' CN.W .D 45-yard Low Hurdles KNOLLIN CWD STOLLEY CWD VVALLIS CWD Running High Jump- Military Academies .... WODDINGTON CCUlX'4,-EFDSCHONKE CSt.JohnsD lV1ATLOCK CSt.JohnsD Running High Jump . . . PLATTEN CWD GIBSON CWD TUHTAB CWD Pole Vault. , .E ..... lV1ERRICK CWD ToMLINsoN CWD JONES CWD Running Broad Jump. . . SUNDT CW D ADDIE CBeloitD HOLBROOK CWD High School Relay-VVon by Madison High Academy Relay ..... SLLATTUCK CULVEP. ST. JOHNS, lnterfraternity Relay PI KAPPA ALPHA TI-IETA CHI SIGMA NU Wisconsin College Relay . BELOIT lYlILlVAUKEE NORBIAL l1'1ILTON Intersorority Relay . . . ALPHA CHI OMEGA GAMMA PHI BETA DEIJTA ZIZTA Record 5 2-5 secs. 4 3-5 4 4-5 39 ft. 42 ft. 5 2-5 M 11n. 5 ft. 6 ft. 12 ft. 22 ft. 10 4-91 2 Min. 7 213 1:40 2:22 8:20 4-5 2-5 Page Three Hundred INT RA-MURAL CROSS COUNTRY RUN HE freshman cross-country squad, one ofthe best developed in recent years, found most of its competition in the second Varsity squad and the All-American track men. ln the first meet on October 17, the freshmen won from the Varsity reserves, 29 to 26. Bert l-Iilberts '25, won the 2.7 mile race in 17.01 minutes. ' A team of long-distance runners from the College of Engineering won the 2.7 mile race in the inter-college cross-country meet on November 12. Thiessenhusen, running for the Commerce school, took first place by covering the distance in 16 minutes and 27 seconds. He led a procession of runners which numbered 40 men. Hilberts, Letters and Science, took second place, and Hazen, a disciple ofthe slide rule, finished third. Members of the winning team who get the Engineering insignia are: Thiessenhusen. Hilberts, Hazen, Trier, Smithyman, Manthey, Greeley, and Fabera. The last intra-mural cross-country meet ofthe season was run off on November 18, when freshman and sophomore teams competed for the class championship. The year- lings won easily from the second year men. Thiessenhusen captured first place in 16 minutes and 55 seconds. The next three men to finish were Freshmen,-Smithyman, Perry, and Trier taking the positions. Herrman kept the sophs from being whitewashed, and Sommer, another second year man, followed him. Suzuki. a frosh, finished next, with the rest ofthe field strung out far behind. Page Three Hundred and One INTER-FRATERNITY TRACK MEET T looked like a Greek field day in the gym annex when fraternity teams pranced onto the annex track for the annual interfraternity classics. Scoring a total of 40 points, the Pi Kappa Alpha team Won the annual inter-fraternity track meet on December 10, with one of the best balanced aggregations that has ever been assembled by a group. lt almost doubled the number of points counted by their nearest competitors, the Sigma Nus. Theta Chi chalked up 18 markers for third place in the meet. Although they took only three first places, the Winners presented a team Well- balanced enough to count in 10 of the 12 events which were held. lt was the second time in two years that Pi Kappa Alpha has been victorious in the annual meet. One annex record was tied during the competition. In the 40-yard high hurdles, Newell, a speedy Pi Kap, skimmed over the sticks with the speed of a racehorse.. He tied the record of 5 2-5 seconds made in 1916. Hammann, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Salentine, Sigma Nu, also did some spectacular work in the hurdles. Hurley turned the 40-yard dash in 4 4-5 seconds for the Lam Kais. Thiessenhusen, Theta Chi, showed excellent ability in the mile and two-mile runs, Winning both events in record time. The broad jump also brought much exceptional home-talent. Roberts, a Phi Gamm, cleared 21 feet 11 M inches, which is very near to the indoor record. L, The relay was the feature event of the meet. Theta Chi stepped out and won it in 1 minute 42 2-5 seconds. Sigma Chi was second, the Phi Kaps were thirdg Pi Kappa Alpha Was fourth, and Sigma Nu finished fifth. i- P,age Three Hundred and Two INTER-FBATEBNITY BASKETBALL IGHTING their way 'through the regular preliminary games and then through the semi-finals and finals, Kappa Sigma Hnished the tourney this year with a record of consecutive victories and no defeats. They gave aremarkable exhibition of con- sistent playing. In its first game on December 12, the championship outfit defeated the PsiU's, 20 to 0. Three days later it beat Sigma Chi by a score of 15 to 6. After the holidays the com- bination defeated Zeta Psi, 18 to 5, Delta Chi, 25 to 2, Delta Sigma Phi, 17 to 7, and Sig- ma Phi Epsilon, 13 to 12. ' In March Kappa Sigma ran away with the Chi Psis by a 28 to 7 count, and then Went into the final game on March 6 for a win, a title, and a cup, Walloping Beta Theta Pi, 37 to 18. The lineup of the champions was: W. Morrison and Miller, forwards, Meyers, centerg C. Morrison and Below, guards. The teams finished as follows: KAPPA SIGMA. . . . First BETA THETA PI. . . . Second DELTA UPs1LoN. , . . Third CHI Psi . . . . . Fourth CHAMPION KAPPA SIGMA TEAM Page Three Hundred and ANNUAL TURKEY RACE N egg is only an egg according to Omar Khayarn, but when this same egg gives its owner the distinction of having won last place in the annual Turkey cross-country race, it may mean something. Lenher, '24, and Cleveland. '25, tied for the booby prize. Out of a field of 15 entries in a one and one-fourth mile race, Lehner and Cleveland came in last, chest to chest and eye to eye, long after the rest of the procession had finished. Ray Thiessenhusen, '23, won the race, getting the turkey, and the Elsom Trophy which goes with a victory. He was thirty yards ahead of Bert Hilberts, '25, who Won a goose. Harvey Hazen, '24, took third place and drew a duck, Boy F. Herman, '22, slipped into fourth position for a rooster, and Ralph P. Smithyman, '25, won fifth place and was given the hen. THE START Page Three Hundred and Four INTRA-MURAL GYM I-IEN the intercollegiate gymnastic meet was held on February 25, a large num- ber of men turned out to represent their schools. The Engineers proved to have not only the most able men, but, perhaps, a small amount of luck as well, and managed to carry off the laurels. 4 The Agrics took second, while the Commerce men trailed behind with third place. The Engineers, however, had to put forth their best elforts, for they found some keen competitors among the other entrants. When it was all over six men were awarded numerals. They were Bumer, Porth, and Hansen, from among the Engineers: Stevens, and Reinhold from the Agrics, and Thompson representing Commerce. The inter-class meet was the second important gymnastic event. Of the three classes represented, the Juniors took first, the Sophomores second, and the Frosh third,-and last. From the beginning, the Juniors were well in the lead. Their men, Bumer, Kubosch, and Porth, did some exceptionally fine work on the various pieces of apparatus, and the points which they were awarded made victory certain. Numerals were given to Stevens '24, Bumer '23, Kubosch '23, and Porth '23, The third meet was the annual contest between the Varsity squad and the Frosh. The Varsity men, ofcourse, were superior to the yearlings, and took the meet with the crush- ing count of 39-6. Page Three Hundred d FL Page' Three INT EB-F BATEBNIT Y BASEBALL HIBTY-SIX teams entered the Inter-fraternity league this year, and with high hopes began to combat valiantly for one of the five cups. After a necessarily large number of elimination games, the Alpha Sigma Phi and the Tau Kappa Epsilon teams loomed up as the strongest contestants for first place. By hard playing Tau Kappa Epsilon defeated the Alpha Sigs in the finals. With the first and second places awarded, competition increased for the next three places. When it was over, Phi Gamma Delta was found to be third, Acacia fourth and Phi Beta Pi, fifth. Eight teams had entered the final series of games. The Phi Grams defeated Gamma Tau Beta, 7-3. Alpha Sigma Phi won from the Phi Kaps by a 5-0 count: Acacia squeezed out a narrow 5-LL victory over the Phi Beta Pi outfit, and the Tekes vanquished Phi Sigma Kappa, 4-3. The victorious teams played again, with the result that the Alpha Sigs overthrew the Phi Gams, 9-4, while Acacia lost to Tau Kappa Epsilon. Later the Phi Beta Pi team won from the Phi Kaps. The championship Tau Kappa Epsilon team was one of the best combinations that inter-fraternity baseball has ever produced. Each of its players possessed ability. The line-up was as follows: Smith, pitcher: Hill, first base: Koch, second base: Bathert, short- stop: Clement, third base: Du Bois, right field: Monroe, left field: Krel, center field: and Fiedler, manager. TAU KAPPA EPSILON CHAMPIONS Hundred and Six INTER-FRATERNITY BOWLING HE Alpha Sigma Phi bowling team carried off the first place in the annual tournament this year. Phi Sigma Kappa was awarded second place, and, at the schedule end of the tournament, Alpha Chi Sigma, Kappa Sigma, and Tau Kappa Epsilon were tied for third position. Knutson, Phi Sig, led the individual averages in the bowling with an average of 1755. The other bowlers who rolled at least 165 in the finals were Smith, Alpha Chi Sigma, Hickey, Alpha Sigma Phi, Emanuel, Theta Xi, French, Theta Delta Chi, Miller, Kappa Sigma, Rose, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Griem, Alpha Chi Sigma. The championship team was composed of Hance, Meyer, Porter, Sanderson, and Hickey, and the second team included Dauksys, Hoffman, Kalley, Ruediger, and Knutson. The tournament this year was one of the closest that has been held in many seasons. The winning team was in the lead from the start, while the rest were bunched closely throughout the entire competition, even to the finals. ALPHA SIGMA PHI CHAMPIONS Page Three Hundred cl S Page Three Hundred and Eighl ,,.:V-X ' , z.:-ze , .,. ,.XV, lx, -V-.-0.--.w.-., 'K J 'V . ,V , ., ,,.,, V. ,4,,..,.,..,,.. , 4,,, , M:i.F.?:,:M:,, 5 V . AV ,.,, ., ..,,. V . - ,,.. V ..,.,x, x ,.. ,,..,.,.W. T V, ,.,k,, X ,,,, 4. ..,. .,,,. - Vmi.-.V .,.. V,,V:.,,VV,.,,... , V- ..-.,, V. -VN -,,x ,.,. 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Q5-QV,VV-3V.f,:,,.,V,4g4,A.v,V ,gagV,,f4gXz2'a1.,-gVV3- V 1-gf-fi:-leww I V .gpg ,,gfgfVia,z1,:if:,V :zQi2,V'V':5 ,gi Vagiigzgig-.VM ' V5VTVff-g , ,.V,Vf:w V-VW.,-1-g,.,'Vyf-.-wV-,Vf-V--MVKVVJQV, Vw, f .V, ,,y:,g,,A V N, V f fn:-,VM TQ fy 1? Q. 4, W.,v . V. VM,.w.fx ,,,V., ,.k,,...,., , V, - V,,f.g: Vf.f,.5,Vg,V:gg,.V -'--- V f,'V...V:' ,A V. ,Q ,V..V VV ,-Vp ,XV .,.- ,V-f V ,. VV V.-,,- V, .V :,2,V,.,V,-41V , , .V ,VVVV f ,- V ,A Af W, :nf ,VV VVV, .,-f,1 - -1 ty: ,: .j mg, pw. hid' V- , ,eg zz-'v v civ V 71, V -4, -:,.V:1f-' - ' 3-A fV.V,-YE' .fn 1-4. AGTIVITIE , A 1 ' N his outside activitiesi' the student learns many things about working with others for a common interest, and about managing his own part in a common enterprise that will be invaluable to him many years after some of his curricular studies are hazy memories. After all, collegeis only alittle World, where we learn by practical experience how to live most successfully in a large one, and he who is active in campus affairs is prepared for the broader and more important activities which are just ahead. Page Three llurulrcd and Nine I Page Three TEE STUDENT SENATE OFFICERS PRESIDENT E. A. BIRGE ....... President Ex-ojffcio ROBERT B. STENVART .... .... P resident Pro-tem M AYNARD VV. BRONVN ....,. ..... I Secretary MEMBERS ALBERT J. KNOLLIN JACK A. LARSH WAYNE L. MORSE IVAN H. PETERMAN HORACE B. POWELL JAMES W. POWELL WVILLIAM M. SALE ROBERT B. STEVVART GEORGE B. STOLLEY ROBERT A. ASPINWALL RALPH E. AXLEY EDISON M. BOERKE RTAYNARD W. BROWVN WALTER A. FRAUTSCHI LETCHER P. GABBARD IDRYS O. HUGHES ARTHUR H. KINNAN - The Student Senate of seventeen members is the sole legislative and representative body of male students at the University of Wisconsin. It is the duty of the Senate to govern the men, and in it is vested the bulk of student government. The Student Senate co-operates with the Self-Government Association to promote obedience to its laws and also with the Faculty and Board of Regents to promote and assist in carrying out the laws laid down by them. It is composed of five representatives from the Senior class, three from the Junior class, two from the Sophomores, and one from the Freshmen. The Cardinal Board of Control, the Forensic Board, the Athletic Board and the Badger Board, also are represented. Hurtdrea' and Ten SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION The Self-Government Association is the. governing body of the women students of the University. All women students automatically become members as soon as they register. The Association has diverse aims. The greatest of these is to further the spirit of unity among the women on the campus. The Association further aims to co-operate with the Student Senate in matters relating to both men and women students. Through the Legislative Board, which is composed of a representative from each room- ing house, from each sorority, and two from each of the two dormitories, the Association aims to establish a feeling of unity among the women on the campus. The problems of each house are brought before the board and discussed in such a way as to give each mem- ber an opportunity to state the reactions of the girls in her house. The Executive Council consists of the officers of the Association, and one representative from each of the various organizations ol women. The Judicial Committee consists of the President of the Association, three Seniors, three Juniors and one Sophomore who are selected from the University at large. EXECUTIVE COUNCIL ELLEN CORRELL . . .... President FRANCES BEECHER . . . . Vice-President DOROTHY W ARE . A .... Secretary KATHERINE ELY , . ...... Treasurer ISABEL CAPPS ..... . . Census Chairman HELEN BARTON . . . Athletic Representative ALICE LIGARE . . . Religious Representative TEMPERANCE JOHNSON . Mzzsie Representative IRMA BORCIIERS . . Dramatics Representative MIIIDRED HEPLINGER . . . Literary Representative KATHERINE FERGUSON . .lournalistic Representative HENRIE'r'rA BURNIMIAM Civic Interests Representative HELEN CHEETHAM . . Blue Dragon Representative ELEANOR HEAD . . . Yellow Tassel Representative PAULINE DICKINSON . Red Gauntlet Representative PEARL LITCHFELDT . A . Commerce Representative Lois RAYMOND . . Home Economic Representative VIRGINIA CONKLIN Vocational Conference Chairman l I Litchfeldt Replinger Ferguson Burnham Dickenson Barton Beecher Ramsey Correll Ware Ely Raymond - Capps Cheelhum Burehers Head Conklin Page Three Hundred and Eleven Chadbourn Baker Tracy - THE MEMORIAL UNION DRIVE LOYAL S. BAKER . . ......... General Chairman REUBEN CHADBOURN . . Assistant Chairman STERLING TRACY .......... Assistant Chairman COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN PHILIP BREDESEN PHILIP LAWVSON . LEE MCCANDLESS RICHARD M EADE ROBERT GERHOLZ DOROTHY DWIGHT . . . . . . . . . Publicity . . . . . . . Finance . Salesmanship School . . Canvassing Lists .,..,.1Wen .....W'omen XTILLETT KEBIPTON . . . ....... Special Features PROGRAM OF THE DAY Bishop Samuel Follows, '59, presiding. Varsity Toast, by the assemblage, led by Dr. Charles H. Mills The Flag Raising Ceremony, directed by Ilflajor John S. Wood The Regiment of University Cadets at Attention. The Flag is Raised on the Memorial Site, as The University Band Plays The Star Spangled Banner The Reading of the Gold Star Roll, by hfajor Wood. The Flag is Lowered to Half lldast. ' Salute to the Dead by the Firing Squad. Sounding of Taps. Dedication Service. Introductory by Bishop Fallows. Governor John J. Blaine. Representing the Slate. President Waller J. Kohler. Representing the Regents. Dean S. H. Goodnight, Representing the Faculty. President Israel Shrimski, Representing the Alumni Association. Arthur H. Kinnan, Representing tlze Students. Hon. Milo Kitlleson, Representing Cilv of llladison. Derlicatory Pronouncemenl by Bishop Fallows. Address by George I. Haight, 599. Three Guns, Announcement Qt' the Beginning of lhe Campaign. Sona, 'i0n Wisconsin , by the Assemblage. Page Three Hundred and Twelve THE MEMORIAL UNION The tireside which will Warm the hearts of the hundreds who each year become discouraged and lost in the bigness of the university-the Commons which will satisfy not only the hunger for food, but that greater hunger for comradeship which is best satisfied around the general dining table-the theater, recreation rooms, and student organization ofiices which will increase the pleasure and comfort of student life in positive channels for good-these will be found in the Memorial Union. It will be the center which Will receive all alumni news and interest, to which the alumni will congregate to meet each other at Homecomings and Cornmencements, and which will sow again the seeds of love and devotion for Wisconsin among the thousands of Alma Materls sons and daughters, to the end that they become reunited in spirit and activity-a recreated alumni body. Its Memorial Rotunda will keep alive before the living the aims and sacriiices of those who gave their all in service to nation, state, and university, that the world might be saved from the autocracy of materialism. The edifice itself will provide a great symbol of Wisconsiri, always rising before the mental vision of her children, and establishing anew Wisconsin's leadership in the field of practical ideals. The whole, a practical ideal at Work in the life of the University,--such is the concept of the Memorial Union. - . --1,1-s'e41.':if.M ng, '. , f . ' 1' sf ?-,:.f1s'5t .vi 5.-'JL ' f , if g . sy. , ' f,v,3l:v, ggsfiigfi , ,.i-,5 . . -, Wg: ,f ,ggi L f'-55,, 1 Etgjy 1, I A Y ' 2 -3:19 -' i '1 Zf if 't:.'-.H-.-istiffffff -' 1 . , , we V ,- 1 - :,- f-fm H , - .H sf, ,, -. ,114 eo me, ' ,, I M. 1i!'?'Is' f.. L' ' 2 11 1 I - ' 'c'ff:?'4f? ' i He '- g51,..,',77f4,1' .w:,2,,,: -.4 1, g,,a:1,.' Jai 3 51255 -? PM ',..4,J' ff? gzffefzg-2 1 1, J,g,.?.., z' x,.g, ff an V, iff, f- -1 gag, ,jf ay ,ii , t 5 V- ' ' ,, Tff .: 'gf-2' jf' f : ,. ' 21, 'g 5. 5Ps! 'iii ' VW iii ii' H ifi ? Ji-!2'f1 I iff file ' EZ YT Q .fe 1 2515. .5- i y,f2f,Pa- 1jue,,eE,g'gZ33 1wZi:w N 'TM Q ' ff-Mft .F ff- uf, ff-,f'ef,-g, ':- Vflwiasasf 12 2, ff,q..!, .nl . i lt..-sw .. J. .w , ai- , -, .. ,, Y.: Je, A f . 1 4:1524-ffgi'!fizf.x?1 aesdfg :QM iz if Q-S+' 3 :W wav ! 55zfw: 2:.f-- 232237 sf: - 1 ..,, ?,S s.fyg,L, t 'jf' 11 f.pi'f '2 Qfa:3P jgwffs' -i23fa1qS?if' I Q ' ' 1555-i 'i:iifs-waz'rzefff?fTfI3 544' -ii? 'V '5 Wi. 'fi filiwf 'P ' V A I ,itc ,,,.,..i 'ff J ' 1 U ' .1-:san 1: es, - ' ii , I I xr' ei ',f1.fL ,j if I . H. -' ' - - ' an f - ,. ', 1 .:?f',':,' ' f :1 'f ff Q' effgir iz . 3.4L?-2 zEfg?52?f,,'f,, . I fx, , A, W ,.,- N, , ,,Ls,.w,1-ff., I , Q? V -T7 , .1,., 'fn15'l 1 7 -sLfii4i'i'i?! a:z'2 f t -' H' H-'K 1 . I 4 ' ' ' , 'et , igetvs' tis . ,, p - ' M 1 I: ' Q5--' 5 :r 2 V . -' . A W- . 'fb 54 I ,-vvv- , , 1 5 ,W -fi'-:ae-'V-mweyse-f we E Page Thr-cc Hundred and Ylxlrleen Gage Baker Merrick Frawley Caluwaert Kinnan Wanzer Frost UNION BOARD OFFICERS ARTHUR KINNAN . ,... . . . . . . Presidenl DALE MERRICK . . . Vice-President MORTON FROST . . . . Treasurer LESLIE GAGE . ........ . Secreiary ' MEMBERS LOYAL S. BAKER LESLIE GAGE EVRARD C. CALUWAERT ARTHUR KINNAN RUSSELL FRAWVLEY DALE MERRICK MOBTON FROST GORDON B. WANZER The Union Board, one Of the governing bodies Of the University, includes representative men students from the Senior, Junior and Sophomore classes. Authority has been granted them by the Student Senate to regulate the social life of the male students. During the year, artists' concerts and mixers are held under the supervision of the Board. Student dances have been scheduled throughout the year in Lathrop Hall. The proceeds Obtained from all events overseen by the Union Board during the last year have been contributed to the Union Memorial fund. THE STUDENT COURT HARRY S. Fox ..... . Cl1iefJus-lice GEORGE A. BENNETT . , . . . Engineering REGINALD W. GARSTANG . . . . Secretary REIGNALD W. GARSTANG . . . . Commerce TERRELL B. MAXFIEIJD . . , . Engineering LIARRY S. Fox . ,... .... L aw MARTIN R. IKRIEVVALDT . . . . L Sz S ORVIN H. ANDERSON . . Commerce HAROI,D M. KUCKUR . . Agricullure HOMEIK D. KESTEN , . . Medicine JOHN H. SARLES ....,...... L M S Mnxfield Kriewaldlg Kuckuk Surleg Bennett Garslang Fox Anderson Keslen Page Three Hundred and Fozzrleen Ekkgwggfeef? CAMPV5 F BLICATIONS l Horace B. Powell TTIE 1923 HORACE B. POWELL . Sherman B.- Green B DGEB . . . Editor-zn-C11 ief SHERMAN B. GREEN .......... Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF ASSOCIATE EDITORS E. DORMER CHRISTMAN JOHN H. Administration HALBER1'H0.KRlT .......... . . Editor Classes ANNIETA SCHROEDER, HELEN KASBEER ....... Editors NYRIA GILE, Ass't Editor: FLORA BODDEN. LOUISE BURD, MARGARET BRARANT, IRENE DAVIS, LOUISE FRITSOI-IE, GERTRUDE HELLER, HELEN HOVDE, HARRIET HEXVITT, M.kRY JABIES, WILHELIIIINA MEA DE, DOROTHY PAULL, ETHELYN SELL, EVELYN SHAW, CHARLOTTE VOORHEES, HENRY XVILLARD, DORIS ROUNSEVILLE. Spirit of llfisconsin Section. GERTRUDE BREESE .....,.......,.. Editor LUCILLE SIMPSON, Assistant Editor. Campus LU'e JAMES PERKY .................. Editor MAYNARD BROWN, DOROTHY BR.NDFOHD, FRED SIEBERT, MARY WISWELL. Activities ' J ESSIE MCCLYLIONT ................ KITTY CALLAHAN ..............,. Assistant WILLETT KEBIPTON, Drama Editor: KEITH DAVIS, Assistant: HELEN SMALLSHAWV, Press Editor: BETTY VINCENT, Assistant: CHARLES RAWSON, Forensics Editor: PHILLIP DEIOHER, BER- NICE BRUNS, Assistants, WILLIAAI FREDERICK, Special Occasions Edttorg ETHEL ZIAIMERATAN, Assistant: LEONARD JOHNSON, Military Editor: ROBERT LUEHNING, Assistant: M.ARION LVIOSEL, Music Editor. Editor Athletics - CHARLES LEWVIN, . . . . .....,... . . . Editor WARD Hrcrcocrc, CHARLES PUESTOW, ANILLIAM SOVEREIGN. Art GERTHIIDE KEHL .............. . . . Editor HE.LEN MCLANDRESS AND FAYE ELLIS SCHAIIDT, Associate Editors: FLORENCE BAILIE, KENNETH FAGG, FREDERICK FLICKINGER. SHERRY GREEN, BIIAHTHA GROAN, DOROTHY JOHN- STON, WALTER SCI-IUETZ, MARIE AVISHART, HUBERT BEER. SARLES HELEN K. STILXVILL Organization LOIS DUFEIN ...,............... Editor K.kTHRX'N PERRY, Assistant: HELEN SCHLOSSER, Campus Club Editorg BETTY YVADMOND, Assistant: JOHN SMART, Fraternities Editor: VICTOR C. ANDERSON, .Assistant Editor: EDITH HESS, Sororitics Editor: FRANCES BEECHER. Assistant: KARL MAIER, Honor Groups: E. A. GILXIORE. Assistant. Photography HOWS'.ARD LKICMURRY ...... . . . Editor Copy DOROTHY CLARE ................. Editor M.AHGAHET FATHAUER, CATHERINE JOHNS, PORTIA LUGOFE. Office Admin istrotion GERTRUDE ADELT ....... Secretary to Editor-in-Chief HELEN GUDE ,... ........... 0 flice Manager KATHERINE BIGHABi, DOROTHE.N CIILKIN. DOROTHY HARIEL- RATR, LOIS HAMMOND, SYLVIA H.KZ.NRD, PJLIZABETH HOLDEN, MTXRJORIE JONES, MILDRED MORGAN. ROSAAIONDNOLTE, DORIS ROUNESVILLE, BETTY SHOLES, MARION AYRES, EISA YOUNGER. Hit or Jlliss CAROL ROBERTS . ...,............ Editor S'rEvE REICHERT ,.... ...... . . Assistant XVILLIAAI DORWARD. DAVE ROWI..-IND, Wisconsin ll on1en RAIARION CONNOR ................. Editor LOUISE RICKEAIANN ..,,......... 1 . Assistant HELEN PONVELI., Van ity Fair Editor: RONX'ENA BROWN, Assistant, OLGA ANDERSON. Athletics Editor.' .NIARJORIE RUEE, HELEN PATTERSON, Assistan ts: LAURA H.NXI1LTON. Organizations Editor: ALMA DIPPLE, Activities Editor. Engraving Department ELLIS FULTON .................. Editor ALFREDA BIISENBARK, M.NRJORIEDEl.BRIDGE, HERAIANHOFF- AIAN, CHAD RANDOLPH, IRENE DAVIS. Sophomore Assistants AIIRROSE PENNEFEATHIZR, ALLAN NVALTEH, DAvID XVHEELER JAMES SUTTON. THE BADGER BOARD Powell Sumner Snveramzo' Paqe Three Hundred and Sixtfren Coxon Llllllltiy Green Fullon Stilwell Clan-cl Adgll Kashcer xn- 4 Gucle Connor McClymonl Kohl ChrisLman ,L M.. . ,.,... l. i A . ., ' i -4 2 - ' 1 , 'f .f 4 ,, N 5 ya , 1 Q1 fy my ' 9? l R f ?,,.- xg' X aa ,S ff ,gr . ms: 3352- ,EM A 1 ' 1 Q f- X 4 ' f Q 1 I .' - .. A . 4 43,5 2 - 7 4 - f l 5 i ' f' L E I , v Breese Roberts Porky Dullln Schroeder VM, .f,- 1. , . ,. , V, X lf , ' 5-fy3'.rf,,1f:1 5. , - V , , Q - Q 7 ., , A, ' -fx 1 1 1' ' x, K f'-gf-fx 1 . 7535 Y ' 3 ' ' M - w .ff - . 7 f '- i 'f 1. Q1 M 1 I ' 35213 4. ' , 2 3 , 1 h , . ' Q . V ML, f- X, ' fi A H5 ' 5115! Q QFD - ' ' yi?f f' '15 - n ,1 Krissy? , , 4.. Wm ,.:,. . gf rl.. 3 K - WE- , -ym k, ,. , .,x,,, ' 5363 f'-fl? 31, ig Wife 5 .2 ! Q' f v .1 ih .5 6.i'f.Qfif i P' .1 . , g '- - 45 V-21:35 2 515 1 L 1 ' 'ggi og, f J ,SQ . W - , .P ,. V ., , .f 1,1 1 ,.., X V NM .- :. .,f , .4 M-nf, 1 -f V , -'f - --r- A 'V A ' 'X X ' f 1 1 gf'-rw -H sv 'fcriib -fLf'w7Hf5,-,!.- -'1' wm::a1fm'W.f:': 3 ENC 'f M'.Esi.?4 V f1 ,.g'2v': -. ' lVIcMurry Mclmnrlrf-ss Kromlrs Simpson Fritsche Falhauer Bodden Schmidt Di ppel Anderson Delbridge Reichen Anderson Wheeler Hewitt Morgan Powell - Puestow Perry W'iswell Crosby Mainland Schlosser- Hickock Page Threer Hundred and Sevenleen Sutton Johnson Gile Rounsev illc Paull Sarles Ayers Gilmore x , ,.,i.,,,:4 ., .,4..,,,, Q f W, -f ' .Q 2 - Y - ,. V. :ge-12,112 . ,. ww -. 'f 1 I gi-my , ., , :Qs f rags? 5 f- - N .. fgaw lf, ,sp Q1 . V 77 ' . ,H , , .. f -A . - A r - ,ff C' ' MX , . ,Q , 1,3-X ,f ,ff -sv-af ,..1..,.- ,,:,Q.',-,J J.. 15,1441 ' -' ,' . V, U, ,. fb, . WM- W. .. , .'. 'V'., . .... ,A -avi, w, .W ., - ,ffvfiw-4NWA.,V. ,,,bLLf:4.,-H.ff3,a1Qfg.g,-f--qnvw V,-,-4,-7-'Fi:?!2f, f-:sf ,, fr, ., 1129- - qgffzawxawzawfzsrmmfasawwmwmmxwxwibws-iasewG:wesQ,4.i+MMKim-awe:-N1fNs,m,..4ffr,niw.fim,..,m ,,..,f,af.,,,, ., ,,,,,,V,,, a NM ..,, f,.v.,.y, 1 . ,,4.: .,...., A..N M..a..-,...,,..mW.M, ,-,,-,x M K.,x Y ,.L.. Q ..,x .,h..,,W.n,.,f,M,. X,v. W xx-b M ,,Q, . -1-,: Q ,1f. .-..,. V, --,.-x. ,,--f.xv M Brown Hoard Hoffman Hazard KempLon Zimmerman Jones Schue Lz ' NVall.er Maier Beecher Smart Hess Hull' Randolph Bu rd Brown Dorward Bowlby Vlladmond Holden Joh ns Callahan Flickinger -1 'fezi-.-ai-I+ . ' V ' if .-::. ' ' -. 3 -'J-' H.. gf-5: I , , A , ,: . .. - -:g . 4 - K 3 . . :Mix-.,:, 1 ig-1,555 . V- 5 .,.. , ., - , . -- -. ' N -' . I . zsf rr- nr X N. 5-1? ., . i N' 1 ff .1 fish LQ? Pl? X K ' S my gszifif. -. ,, l 'SFT' ' 5 -f-'V ' 15. :CQ '41,-4:25 - 'PS ,, , ' ':.:-',5 .u41s pat,-':wf1f'4' -rp '. ' I.: .. L 1, 'X -,'- ' 2 , . kr V ml g 1 , A f i - W J i iz f - - Al-' S ' - . i,-Wai.,-g,,Z,'K .' ,vw-2' 2 1 f , - -- . -. - . L , wg. Lugoll' Sovereign Hamilton Bebh Brabant Heller PaLrick Sh aw Voorhis Crandell Groan Davis Deicher Luening Thomas Stanchfield Page Three Hundred and Eighleen V I. -.7-A.. . 3 f :I ez Q ,, EN N ee- ' l Green NVISIIIIIL llCIllICl'CKl Llicr Lcwin Rickcmxuiri Edwards BllSOI1b2II'li ViIII:enL TI'273f?QLN21e , . , . A --A 4 f . - I . -- ' I I . P A . 2 A I .19 A ' ' e1.1'1.g..3 ::41i:..f7' .. 'jagagi .. .. . . .. .. ' 1 Rowland Bziilie James Ilzimclrul h Willard Biglmm Brzullbrrl Yunger ,-A I FFF- - '-1 J ' .V ii. f- , A . . - ,- .M - 1. in -ff . .si -.1 .. ' A ., .f I ,. -A y we-i 1 ...Ti A? W' 'I' lr - 41 ff 'Za . ' - -f -- . - ,, . , A ,, . l .. . . . ...ffvgfe ..,. . 7 . . Wfilliams Davis Smallshziw Bruns RIIWSOII Hill Frederick ' Mosfal US NESS STAFF HELEN ZUEI-ILKE. . . .. . . . Asxislanl Business Illanagcr FOREIGN Adu,,,,iSinq MIKRJORIE DIEEENTIIALER . .... . . .I . . Manager LOB V S CLKRK ' Mnnaqpr EJSTHER BELLOXVS .... . Assglanl Illvfganager A. . I . .. ..... .. . , g 1.1. .V - - -I f n C, GLADYS I. PETERSON ........ . Asszslanl Ivlanager Lum HEL lcon Iwo a ag r Lomlslaff OFFICE STAFF HAROLD A. FREY ............,. I . . Nfanriger ETHELX'N SELL IIILLIAN TYLER HUGO BACI-IUBER ...... , ..... Axsislani Nfanager HIXRHIET SMITH DOROTHY WILLIAMS HOWV.ARD CULVER. LEE D. H.-XNSON. EUGENE D. KELLY. INEZ GENEVIEVE IIICKS DORIS GORNILEY E. MORRONV, BERNICE ELVER, DOROTIIY LANVTON. cJSCAR A. ALICE AVRAY MILDRED GUENTZEL SANDER, MIXRIAN SE CIIEVERELL. RlITH STAUDENIIEYER, JOSEPH E. VAILE, HARRY VAN ORNUiI, AVILLIAM H. WENZEL. ADMINISTRATION Foreign BLANOI-IE FIELD ........,....... llflanagcr ELMER CHIXPLEAU, Assislani Manager: PAUL ROBERTSON, Manager Chlbago Deparlmenf: IEDXVARD LEE, BEVERLY T. MIXSSLICK, JEROME BJERKE, Manager Nlilwazzkee Deparlmentg HELEN KEENEY, LESLIE BRUNHKE, LOUIS S. BERKOFF, LESTER SOHENKENBERGER, Copy and Colleeiion ALLEN B. SNII-'EEN ....... -- ........ zlflanager ALTA YEOAIAN ..,.,........ Assislanl Manager MABEL CRUMAIEY, ARXIIN DORAu,GERIRUDE HARLEY. ELTON HOCIQING, LEO J. MERKEL, ANN MLSN.-K, HELEN VVHEELER, CATHERINE E. KENNEY, OLIY'IE MCDERXIOTT. Ass islanis ALFRED WEED, Junior As.sislani,' EDGAR J. SXll:l'H. Sophomore Asszslanlg HOWARD LYQIAN, Sophonwre Assistant: FRANK FREENIAN, Freshman Asszslanl. NED CHEWV ..,.............,. Nlanager ADOLPH BACI-I, CARROLL F, CALLEN, ALBERT U. DEJLCON CIRCULATION ROGER B. RUSSELL ........... ' .... Manager WILLARD F. KIROI-INER . . . Assnciale Manager HELEN KINNE .... . . Assislanl Manager LEOLA URBAN . , .... . JESSIE RAYMOND .....,. . . , . . . Manager . . . . Secretary OFFICE STAFF PAULINE PETERSON CAPITOLA STEENSLAND IQILBOURNE HANSON ARLENE MCKELL.AR LOIS PALMER - JULIA ROSS NELLE ICNILANS ALICE LIGARE ROSAXIOND N CLERICAL ISA BEL TROT'FER BERTI-IA ELBEL HELEN KINOSI-'ORD TREAS AUSTIN J. STIBBE . ORVILLE FEHLHABER . BURKE ROBINSON. . . ELIIER VV. ANDERSON MARION BARBER LYLA HOLT NORXIA CARL MARION JUNEAU MARX' COOLEY RIARIANNA CHANDLER LOUISE GOTTLEIB N CHARLOTTE HERNIES LOUISE CLANCY OLTE WORKERS LYLA HOLT MARGARET MARTINI HILDEGARDE SCI-ILICHTER URER Treasurer . , . . . Cashier . . Purchasing Agenl , . . . . . Accounlanl LAXVRENCE STEBBINS Page Three Hundred and Nineleen Clark Stibbe , Chew ' Zuelxlkm Russell A Petv. rsen -pf J. . .4 2- ,.-1 - - , K irschner Frey Lyman Fehlhaber 1 11,4 4. 2 -- 1 . Q H ' .. 5 QL vj:ftvf:5.1z:',' W - f ' , 4 Sw. 2 ' : - 'I 1 Q25 l -: ' IQ if? 'ls T is . . We 'fl Nfl ' '-in 3 'Q X -, Q - - .. fy? I . . .V A fl gg qszgf 2-5 1 if ' ai F , ' I K' V , 'Q ' 'k' f f 'TI'-1 T' 59' :-I 5:5-. 9 43-l s gh ' , --,mf 9 'yew ' I . in. .. Q, -Q' f.- ,Q H fe: we-,. wwf 1 f . -. fr-:'.:-vw: I i J ..-1:'v- 'f . . - . :. - . . -' .. -- ffl QSM F' Wife-. '?'5' 'f'fv.-'W?FX1-f-will l...M,..,M.,,,.,,. ,.v.,..,. M WM,,.n..l,.4...,.a ,,,,. , ,A,..V,.. ,.,. .. .,., ,, 4., .,,.., . . .-., ,..v,,:,,1.1.,. m,,.,Q Anderson Urban Sniffen Bjerke Field ? :Buchhnher Diefentlxaler Chapleau if2'1?'i ss fm. ,, - W ' ww - ., -.::.s?F.f:. 'Vid if-,N-. f mm ' -:. 11552: ' 5,3 4 , .- , .ml ,s - .' 5 if ' fifissi 'if : 4:3 rrp-1 fs-fm ' .V '47 l. l . ,, ,K ,cgi T , , 'V ' . - ,- xl 1, :X 1. e i. -V ,Q ,.,, Q , -Ye .' F , 1-3 6 ' P2 -, ' e Az... , , Qi' Pa gg, - 135 -5:5:-:5::1L 3:- ' j:,:4' . ' : 5.4 Stebbins Robcr Lson Law Lon Raymond Hazelwood Barber Culver Weed E111 , .,.. W. ,.,.., .. ,x... . . . . . , ,... .,,,. ,,,. . , . . QM.---1 ' .xg 1 7 A Q, :J J , Q , - vs I ., im 1 -1-1 1 . ,F 1, If .1 , ., . ' .. ' -N352 L.: yy .gay Y Y iif..-.-2 s - ..:,..,.,:j V . rf, v -- 1 2 . -. -- 1 ' : ,gl 1. '-f' H i n T.: ,K K W , ya X' 2 ,.,, .V .. fi ,Q 1 u g ,. , -, W- 5, . 49, , ,, r. is fs . , wb. 1. gf, .fg f ' , 'H ,Q 1 :Ag - , Yi 's -' 162 M liz., . A .gy .1 s f. 4 - az-1 :Qs -. Z - , :Q wang. w - 1. .-. , ..1-. , , h , . i l Keeney Harley Yeomzxn lx mlans Slaudenmeyer K mgsford Wlllllams 'l yler f W Sell Carl Wray Coolev Bellows P lhel Hanson Sbeensland -. J N ' V. 'A S ,f f. '- ' .. ..,. ' - 1 . , n ' 'l K , .... I z 5? ' 'Jai ' ' 'LQQFQ -aafmfm-f ' .s,fzf-:- X ' :g5.g.3.,g -s bs nge lf g 5134 QQ . - i Q ' 2255. a ' va 1 'vga ,Fifi . H455 V-1 ., g125vgf5..,,.,gf paws. f yr-sw 'I' . Sbfg . I gk.-f ' nf:-.l . .: D 1s --wif, b -'I iw -' ' -f --- .vv .Awww .,.. V .m,,.,,m.,,z. M... ..., M .....,.M ,., , ...A,.,.W, ..,, . ..,,.,,...W ..........l .,sm-,.. ........ . ,...,W,m.., .... VW..- ,,.... N... .,.,.. ..N,,.v..,.- .... ..- MM, .,... .WX ,... ,....,......e.,....,,,.. Hermes Mc Kellur Wheeler Holt Kenney Juneau Elver Berkoll' Page Three Hundred and Twenty n - 1 1 N X 1 , , X w Smi Lh M lsnu Mc Lernorc PIXIHICI' VV1:nmrl Su ruler RUSS Clancy ali. . ff .T ' ' ' -, il Q1 ' I' 41 .1 . g, 6 Wir 515.1 me , ' . X1 r, 1 - , . 16' , 81 14 1 1 Wu V- ' :'1f,f.ifs1f' ,.' , 12 '. , ',1 1 ,M , ff 22,155 anim 1 i ' A A f Z2 1 ' L sm 'ww Ea 'X I-1: . , .' Y 5 151, W g 1 '55 - 1, Q. , 1 12 , 1- 0 -V 115115 Mg: 1 M , 1- 1 vw -fu i f 4 1' 'N' Hicks Gormley Mzxrlini Hanson Vim Ornum Ln? Se Chevfercll Towslfey ' .1 1, - 7, .ww v QQ E fsl: N! fl: r .1 1 ,YI d Jw-nc , vvfali YV' 1 Q 1 1, I 11112. f . 1:1 Hg:-1:1 K ' -f 'S f ,, ,,:. ' , mf? ' E P ajI?a,' MY i ' 1 5 Q2 v f . ,151 f 15 F ' Q 4 , gf, , ,,. , Z... .I ,437 3.2314 kf . :? 5ix?13'f n' 1 11211 55 -:i 511: g,-f f- f n. , ea L 1 . Q 91-.. F K B I 45 ff? 1 5' N ij f 7 2. f gli!-ff 'L . , 1111. if 1 .W if-I1 'k1'1?f:' 3 L. 1.0 if v . Q W 3132? - 5' 3 . A V ', Wi 1' Qfivi Q 1 f Q ' 1 H 3114 3 iii' . A' ' , ' Q -in 1 , w . Musslich N0lLe Chandler Ligurc Kelley Morrow Guen Lzel Bock Got Llieh Doran McDcrmol.t Schlich ber Vaile Crummcy Hocking TroLter Badger SLafI' Party Page Three Hundred and Twenty-One Sale WILLIAM M. SALE . . G. FRED BREVVER . . . IVIABION STRASSRURGER . . CHARLES J. LEWIN . . . H. HICKNIAN POWELL . GEORGE L. GEIGER. . . DAVID K. STEENBERG . WAIJTER K. SCHWINN. . NIARY BRIDGNIAN . . STERLING TRACY . . .ABRAHAM KATIFMIAN . DONALD M. BAILEY . PHILIP G. BREDESEN . RUSSELL FRAWVLEY . . Bailey THE DAILY CABDINAL EDITORIAL STAFF . . Managing Editor . . . News Editor . . Woman's Editor . . . . Athletic Editor Assistant News Editor Conference News Editor . . . . . Desk Editor . . . Sunday Editor . . . . Society Editor . . C'lziefEditoriat Editor . . . Editorial Writer Desk Assistants: PORTER BUTTS ROBERT REY NOLDS, KARL A. IWAIER 'NIAURIOE PERSTFIN VVALTER PFISTER. Special IfVriters: IVIARGARET DAIY BERTHA BURK I-L-KRDT, IVIARY DICKSON HELEN SNIALLSHAWV ELIZABETPI NVADMOND, PENNELL CROSBY VVILLIAM J. 'TANNENVITZ Reporters: MARGARET CALLSEN NVILHELIIINA MEAD, HAROLD E. INICCLEI LAND ELIZABETH BRIGGS, MARJORIE BURR FZRA J CRANE WVILLIAM W. SOVEREIGN SHELDON WANCE KATHERINE PERRY, THOMAS DANIELS BUSINESS STAFF . . Business .Manager . A dvertising Manager . Cireataz' ion .Manager Associate Advertising Managersz' DOUGLAS K. NEW- ELI,, ARTHUR H. ARDIEL, JEAN ROSENTHAL. Merchandise Service Manager: BLANCHE K. FIELD. Advertising Assistants: VVALTER h PLEWKE BURTON G. BILLINGS, MARION MOFHLENPAH LOTS COLE. Business Assistants: XVILLIATVI PEEBLES MARGARET BRENNECKE, CALVIN C. OAKFORD GFORGE O COOPER. - THE CABDINAL BOARD OF CONTROL Ehling Frey tag Scolben Balliel.Le Swensen Page Three Hundred and Twenty-Two ,-... 2 er E 2? 22. 91: si. cu 'o 5 7.2. S5- Q14 235 Sm iii U29 in sf? 44-4 QS, O.-+ 55 C5 Sa. if S. 5 5 EE O: is G71 or m z 52. Sgr 'B 312 52 az E.-'Jw gn, Ez 22 2 mm U2 91 P CQ r 1 Q OT Bredesen Geiger S l'-rasshurger Bridgeman Powell Fraw ley ' BULLS Lewin Brewer Tracy Schwinn Ardiel Steenberg Newell Rosenberg Field Pfister Maier Fraulschi Vance Deicher M uier Crosse Esles Plewke Brown Cooper Wudrnond Perry McDonald Crosby Sovereign McClelland Bruns Moehlenpah Ruff Daly Mead Colc Callsen Schott Lugoff Page Three Hundred and Twenly-Three Gangelin Kendall l THE WISCONSIN LITERARY MAGAZINE EDITORIAL STAFF PAUL V. GANGELIN ........ Ediior-i n- Ch ief BOARD OF EDITORS PENNEL CROSBY HORAOE GREGORY IVIAVIS MCINTOSH MARGARET EMMERLING EAIiL HANSON KATHERINE ROCKXVELL LLOYD GEORGE DOROTHY SHANE?- BUSINESS STAFF W ILLARD J. RENDALL ........ Business Manager HERBERT D. SAPPER ..... Assislanl Business Manager ELBERTO B. GREENBERGER . . Associale Business llfanager EUGENE A. GrILMORE ........ Circulafion Nlanager KARIJ REYNOLDS . . .,.,. Adveriising JWGVIUHCQF PAUL G. CLEVELAND . . Credit and Colleclion Manager JULIAN S. TELLEE . ..... Publicily Manager I Odell Reynolds Bening Gilmore M alsin Arey George Greenberger Hanson Rendall Sheldon Sapper Teller Gregory Wyckoff MOI n Losh Luedke Gangelm Emmerhng Kennan Sickles Page Three Hundred and Twenty-Four I CEcII. IQIRK ' HORACE GREGORY KENNETH FAGG DAVID B,ONVI.AND PORTER BUTTS MARGARET BEEBE HELEN GUDE VINCENT CONLIN GORDON LEWIS Welsh Lawson THE WISCONSIN OCTOPUS BOARD OF EDITORS PAUL H. LE.-xc!-I MARGARET BRA BANT PENNELL CROSBY EDITORIAL STAFF CEDRIC E. SHAMAN CHARLES IDEWIAREST ROMAN BOLLENBECK HODNEY C. WELSH .......... Managing Edilor G. FRED BREWER . . ...... Edilor HUBERT F. TOWNSEND . . . Associale Eflilor HENRY S. RUBEI ..... .... A rl Edilor ARTHUR M. FREYTAG ..... . Efclzangc Edilor GLADYS FRAZER M URIEI. LEITZEL BUSINESS STAFF LAURENS G. HASTINGS COURTLAND CONLEE PHILIP C. LAVVSON . ......... Business .Manager NORBIAN D. SCOTT . . . . Assisianl Business Wlanager ARTHUR TOWELL . . . ...... Advcrlising Manager MILO E. SMITH ....,. Assisianf Adveriisz'ng fwanager FIOBERT' L. BURNEY. . . ..... Circulation Manager OSCAR A. SANDER .,..... CLARK J. LIAZELVVOOD G. R. FALK ELIZABETH IVIAYNARD CLARKE AUSTIN XVILLABD F. KIRCHNER Colleclions EDSVIN SANBORN H. C. BACHHUBER BARTEL B. BOROHERS THEODORE CAMLIN Page Three Hundred and Twenly-Five TI-IE COMMERCE MAGAZINE EDITORIAL STAFF EDITOR HIIMPHREY E. DESMOND .ASSOCIATE EDITORS REGINALD GARSTANG ROBERT REYNOLDS HYMAN BILANSKY JOHN DOLLARD ROLLIN EOKE , EDNVARD CALUNVAERT , ART EDITOR WOMENS EDITOR KENNETH FAGG ELIZABETH 'III-IWING HERNIAN WVALTHER ELMER CHAPLEAU ADVERTISING PETER R. M OELLER, M an ager ASS ISTA NTS ARLEIGH LUTHER VERGIL HOICK GERTRUDE VVICKENDEN LESTER F. SCHENKENBERG BEBNICE RHODE ALICE WILKINS EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS JOHN MB. SHAFRIN .ARTHUR INMAN WILLIAM BONING BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MANAGER HAROLD R. REHBEIRG ASSISTANT BUSINESS M G-R. JERRY H. QUAM COLLECTIONS ' ORVIN H. ANDERSON. Wlarzagrfr ASSISTANTS SIDNEY LANG ELSIE EKERN DURWOOD DU BOIS BESSIE BERKLEY DON BUEHLER HAROLD BE-RG CHARLES CAPEK ROMAN ROLLENRECK CIRCULATION ARTHUR N. LORIG, Manager ASSISTANTS IYIARJORIE DELRRIDGE ELIZABETH THWING GORDON THOMSON FRITHJOF MOELLER NVORMAN SCHOMISCH ELMER GESTELAND Page Three Hand:-ed and Tu'enl4v-Si:r I Drew ry lluesu THE WISCONSIN ENGINEER EDITORIAL STAFF lVlONTROSE K. IJRENVRY . .... Edilor EARL D. BADER .... . . Alumni Edilor ROBERT B. BOHMAN . . , Campus Eclilor I'lARRY A.. PHILLIPS . . Alhlelic Edilor Lucius E. CHASE NlAUlllCE A. l'llRSHBERG JOHN W. SMAWI' JOHN K. Roms I I F BUSINESS STAFF I f FRANK A. BUESE . . . . Business Jlflfznager l W ALTER C. THHIL . . . . Czrculalion Jlflanagel' BENJAMIN F. WUPPER. . . . Adverlzsing Manager I I 3 A OLAF N. ROVE ROBERT F. PFEIFER LAVVRENCE4'lS. SOGARD I N I FREDERICK D. BLANCH REEVE O. STROCK I I II' III-II f 'I I I lg' I lfwi 2 . II . I Ili? , W ,.... I II I 1 Il' II - I 1 I ..II I I l I I I I' I ' I I I Pfeifer Bohman Drewry Strock' Tlmil I Rusch Wupper Butler B uese Sognrcl ' K olb Chase Phillips Blanch Smurl. Hlrshberg Page Threw Hundred and Twenly-Seven Fbling N Taylor THE COUNTRY MAGAZINE EDITORIAL STAFF WALTER EBLING . . . I ..,...... Ediior N CHARLES D. BYRNE . . ..... Managzng Erlclor LORENA OESTREICH . . . Home Economzcs Edzlor XVALTEH E. SCHUETZ ............ Ar! Edilor ASSOCIATE EDITORS E. GRETCHEN FAUERBACH CLARENCE L. KU'FIL F. LOUISE I.'HOMPSON HAROLIJ M. KUCKUK XVERNER P. IVIAYER ALFRED NN EED ALUMNI EDITORS -ROBERT L. BOERNEH GENEVA SCHOENFELD BUSINESS STAFF IIEXVIS W. TAYLOR .......... Buxiness Manager EDWVIN G. I-IAMMEN . . . Local Advvrlising Manager FOREST D. HARRIS ..,.. Nafionrzl .ff1d1rarlis1'ng Managrfr HENRY J. KATZ .......... Cfrculalion. Wlanager BYRON H. SPEAR , . . Assislanl Local Aa'verlis1'ng Manager LOIS RAYMOND ..... Assislanl Local fldzverlising Manager I-IAI..BER'I' HOARD. . Asszfslan! Nalional f1dz'er1z's1'ng Manager STEPHEN H IVIATTEQON - - . L ' ' L ...... Cf-llo,.1...'l I. LEON B. DUNNN'IDDIE ' Ir U U I H I vm an Q Page Three Hundred and Twenty-Eight I Shoul Is Trggl-, THE ATHLETIF REVIEW .J EDITORIAL STAFF NVOIITH E. SHOULTS . . . . . . Ediior HERBERT BROCKHAUSEN . . . . Ari Edilor HUEERT IIIOYVNSEND . . . . . Carloonisl WALTER PFISTER . . . . Humor Edilor XVARD ITICKOK CLARENCE POST IXIOBMAN SPERL LEO TQLEMPEBER LEO SOGARD EDMUND SUTHERLAND BUSINESS STAFF ARTHUR VV. TROST . . , Business Manager I-IYALAN BILANSKY . . Adverlising Aflanager GEORGE STOLLEY . . Circulalion Manager FRANK GERHAUSER ...... .... T refwurer EZRA CRANE HENRY HOLLENEECK JOHN RICHARDS I C. CHAPLEAU ARTHUR INMAN JOHN SWIFT . W. .f Stolley I Platten Shoul ls Trosh Inman Bxlansky Townsend Pfister Gerhauscr Chupleau Page Three Hundred and Twenly-Nine 4 1 ' j 1' ' '11 ' 57: '.ii'121.-1: 111, '1i,1i'7'- is fi111'T,1,'1-f-,1:g.-Mr asa -'-1 -:pp-1 1-, - -1 - -ff, 1- - .. N -.. --. 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' 1 11 1 1. 1 1-1, ,11 1, V1 1' 71. 1-1,111 ,1 1. 17'-I 1, 1'i11 1 1 1':1 5f1f'1 . ' -11 - 1 1'.I11 11'1 1i' f' 11fj1,'lvA 1 ' 1111 1'-,T 112, 1 151, ,1 fg1..'.'1'7', 1 11A.,.. 1, 1 251 1f ', 1 51 13,5 l 1111 1.31 Q31 11 1 1512 111 -iff '1 1 TIE 1:5151 1 1 1f1111?f111R'T1 lf: 1 . 1,1 1,1 I:11yf1IF71f, UT I 1113111 1,'1 .'1 14- 111' '1 11 11 1' ,,,1 1 1 ,,1 111 111:11 1 '1 ,1.1 , 1. 1 , .111 . I', 11111 1 ,. 1 111111, 1 11,1 1 1 1.1 11 ,. 3111 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1.11, 11 . 1 1. 1. , 1 1.1 1 . . 61111 1-, 1 1-11 X '.1 Inf: :-' 11 1 1,1 ' 1 115- '- 111 :Ll . 1 1 1? 4, 1,1 1 1 111:11 . 'h 1 1 K 1 1,41 1,11, 1 1171 11,1 1 ' F2521 11111411 1. - ,- 1 ,M ,..-,,,: Y-A-,A fl.- 1-1, ML. 1 1, ,.A:,, ,. A. , Y1?.,-.,...,-,M -41 1 , 11113,-,1 - '1 11. 1' V' ' ' '-7 'a -1 -1--1--,-111.1--'-1-1 r-:1 xv-1 1-5 -- 1 f. - ---1 .H ...H-.,. ..,. 1 ...., '1f '1 1 1' - ' ' : 22,1 1- 1 L1-:,:i,':'L-1,-'LQ ' 1 'A 1- if 5' f '1 ' ' A ' 'T' 1111111 ' 1 1,1111 - ,YYv,,,,, ,A ,AV V V fi vrifvgv-A-Ariii fit M'-If i U-viii' L if W frxnirf ' ' ' ' 1 1 ' lg 11: 11 i A' .' ', 1 ygw 1,,- '1 1- .1 1. . ' ' ' '1 -11,71 - iff-2 TA' f'1'i'2'11fi1'fH. ' 1 11 141111 QJYZ1' 3' 1 i111 11 '1 2 if 'f'1 1 231 11.111711 11 - '1 1 1,.-. . Page Three Hundred and Thirty 11 ,- 111-1:1 ,N-af L ' .. ' . tri .'J1f'2 ',,f'fQ. ' x 1 . -.,,..,, ,,,, ,, .,, ,,-, : . A, -'1--fx.-,K Y H :luv gv , , Y .. -TAL 5 , ,V SPECIAL OCCASIONS Sale W Bailey Mahoney Engelhard L 1921 HOMECOMING DONALD M. BAILEY , . . ..... General Chairman WILLIAM M. SALE 1 DAVID J. MAHONEY . . Assistanl General Chairmen CARL J. ENGELHARDT CHARLES P. MACINNIS . WALTER K. SCHWVINN . ARTHUR F. MARQUETTE . FRANK P. HYER .... WILLIAM F. ENGELHARDT FRED BREWER .... ADOLPH F. YOUNGRERG . REGINALD W. GARSTANG COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN . . Publicity ARTHUR H. KINNAN . . .... Nlaussmeeling . Programs JOSEPH HOI,BlKOOK. . .... Overflow Dleeling . . Dance DONALD MURPHY . . . . . Homecoming Carnival . . Parade PHILIP G. BREDESEN . . Program'Business Manager Decoralions BIRNEY F MILLER . . ,.... Ways and Dleans . . Alumni DOROTI!Y WARE ............ Bulion Sale . Bon Fire EDRIUND ASCHENBRENNER . .... Finance . Features LOIS DUFFIN ..... . . Registration Page Three Hundred and Tlzirly-Two Everyluodv iurned oulfor lhe Big Bon-Fire. 1921 HOME COMING HE 1921 Homecoming wasthe biggest and best of all Wisconsin Hornecomings. The new cement section on the east side of the stadium was dedicated at the game, and, even withthis new part of the stadium, there was not nearly enough room for every one joined in the biggest i'loc-omotiven ever heard at Camp Randall as Varsity took the field. Wisconsin played the Gophers, and as usual. the newspaper predicted a win for the famous Minnesota Shift. But Varsity was at its best that day and literally ran away with the game. Wisconsin won easily to the great satisfaction of the thousands of alumni and students who left the 'field eager to celebrate the victory at the other festivities of the day. HOMECOMING PROGRAM FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 7:00 A. M. Mass M eeting, Men's Gymnasium 8:00 A. M. Homecoming Carnival. Men's Gymnasium SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 10:00 A. M. Second Annual Hobo Parade 10:30 A. M. Alumni Council Meeting 12:00 M. Alumni Luncheon at Lathrop 1:05 P. M. Band escorts guests of honor. students, and alumni to Camp Randall. 2:00 P. M. Kick-off E 6:30 P. M. Class Reunion dinners. 9:00 P. M. Homecoming Ball at Lathrop Gymnasium and Concert room. Chi Phi House ........ Firsl Prize Fralernily House Decorrzlions Y Y Page Three Hundred and Thirly-Three 1 l James L, Brader Mary C- Billdwili THE 1923 JUNIOR PROM - STATE CAPITOL FEBRUARY 3, 1922 The Junior Prom, first instituted in 1896, has become the greatest social event of the uni- versity year. It was held in the armory until 1906, when permission was obtained to use the state capitol. It takes place as the chief event of a week of social activities between semesters. Formerly the chairman was appointed by the class president, but now he is elected by the class at large in the ,fall of the Junior year. JULIEN LUNNEY RALPH BALLIETTE . LLOYD BROWN . LUCIUS CHASE , . G-ERTRUDE COLLINS VINCENT CONLIN . KENNETH FAGG . . ARTHUR FBEYTAG MORTON FROST . . HELEN GUDE . .. BENJAMIN HEALD JAMES L. BRADER ........... Prom Chairman MARX' C. BALDWIN ............... Partner ASSISTANT CHAIRMEN ARTHUR TROST G. LONVELL GEIGER COMMITTEE CHAIBMEN . . Finance PARKER LIIGLEY . . . . Special Features . . . . . Floor FRANCIS LAMB . . . . . . . Decorations . . . . Tickets FRANCIS KAREL . . . . . . Transportation . . . . Foxtrot Pre-Prom Nlovie . Art Publicity . .... Alumni . . . Music . . . Supper . . Reception W AYNE MORSE DANIEL 0,NEIL . . . . . Ways and Means lWen's Arrangements XVALTER PEISTER . . ...... Publicity JOHN SCHEE ...... ........ B axes ANNIETA SCI-IROEDER . . . W'omen's Arrangements NIARJORIE SEVERANCE ......... Programs Page Three Hundred and Thirty-Four l Geiger Lu nncy Trosl A sclmnbremmr Pfister ' . Severance Brown Fagg H igley Collins Schroeder Heald Bulliette Schce Gude Karel FreyLag Morse ,mu ,DJ O,Nei1 Lamb Page Three Hundred and Tlzirly-Five 1 I Evrard C. Caluwaerll HCIUI K S1 lwlll T ENTH ANNUAL MILITARY BALL STATE CAPITOL, APRIL 7, 1922 EVIIARD C- CALUWAERT ....... General Chairman HELEN K.. STILWVILL . . ,,,,,, 7 .,,,, Paringf ADVISORY CHAIRMEN AYILLIAM A. FIELD ROBERT LUENING ASSISTANT GENERAL CHAIRMEN I-IYALAN J. BILANSKY D. RICHARD MEAD .JOHN S. FRITSCHLER PAUL T. TOBEY COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN HAROLD NIAIER . . . LESTER BRANN . . . JOHN E. SI-IELDON . . JOHN H. JAQUISH . . . LEONARD M. JOHNSON RALPH HAWKS . . . M ORD BOGIE .... ALLAN W. WALTER . ROSWELL HERRICK . . FREDERICK NOLTE . . LAWRENCE P. XVARNER IDRYS O. TIUGHES . . FRANK B. LEITZ . . EIEL H. MYRLAND . . ROBERT THONIAS . . ...,........PubIz'cily .....Bores . . Refreslzmenfs . . . . Nlusic . . . Programs . . . Receplionk , Special Fealurrs . . . . . .Floor . . . .Eleclrical . . .....,. Decoralions . . .......... Tickels Pre-fwililary Ball Dance . . . Ways and Illeans . ..... 1 Program . . . . Proper!-v Page Three Hundred and Tlzirly-Sin: if-A ' w 1 11 l qu x lW I 11 1 1 W l l 1 , W , W 1 1 1 1 l l lf. W A . . Q 1 W LUGIIIIIQI Tobey Frllschlcr Meade l Herrick Braun Hilarxslcy Sheldon Field .laquish Johnson Bogie Hughes Leiiz i W W Nolte Maier Warner Waller W Hawks Page Three Hundred and Thirly-Seven Alpha Gamma DelLa THE VARSITY JAMBOREE LATHROP GYMNASIUM, APRIL 1, 1922 MAYNARD W. BROWN ......... General Chairman COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN RICHARD F. GIBSON ........... . . Finance NED CHEW ..... . . . Stunis WILLIAM M. SALE . . . . . Publicity ROBERT A. ASPINWALI. . . . Coslumes HORACE B, POVVELL . . .... Prizes LEON DUNWIDDIE . . . . Decorations IVAN PETERMAN . . .... Floor G. LOWELL GEIGER . . . . . Program MARY BRIDGMAN . . . . Rqfreslzmenls WALTER FRAUTSCHI . . . . . Tickels IDRYS O. HUGHES. . . . . lllusic Alpha XI Della Page Three Hundred and Thfrly-Eighl MILITARY Major Milligan Major Wood Major Ward THE MILITARY DEPARTMENT ' OR years the work of the Military Department has been classified by students and faculty as 'iDrill.,' This Word Was suitable, perhaps, When infantry close order drill was the Alpha and Omega of military instruction. Today, however, the scope of the work has been so broadened that Drill', is a misnomer which must be superseded by the more comprehensive term, HMilitary Trainingf' Close order drill is only a minor part in a complete scheme of military training. The Corps of Cadets, as now organized, provides a four-year course of instruction in Infantry, Field Artillery, Signal Corps, and Ordnance. The College of Engineering gives courses in signal communication and ordnance engineering which are a required part of military work for advanced students in the corresponding units. The Infantry and Field Artillery courses comprise an equal amount of technical instruction. A large amount of training equipment, including sufiicient horses for interesting and profitable courses in equitation, has been provided by the government. No expense has been spared to make the work as complete as possible in the time allotted by the University. Students Who complete any of the advanced courses are eligible for a Reserve Officer's commission. Moreover, these courses are acceptable as electives in all colleges of the University and carry academic credit. The Work of the Cadet Corps as part of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps of the Army has shown marked progress during the past year. The increase in the number of Juniors and Seniors enrolled is the best indication of that progress. Each year since 1919 has brought an increase of more than one hundred per cent in the advanced courses, one hundred and twenty such students being enrolled at present. With a corresponding giiqrease during this year, Wisconsin will be furnishing the country a large quota of Reserve icers. Lt. Erickson Capt. Ballard Capt. Comstock Lt. Keeley Capt. Crane Page Three Hundred and Forly N V i I .Aluihm .1 ' Thu Review on the Lower Campus THE ANNUAL -INSPECTION HE annual inspection was held in May 1921. Wisconsin was again given the NDIS- TINGUISHED COLLEGE rating. The chief test now applied by the War Department in determining military rating is Whether or not a proper complement of trained officers is being furnished for Reserve Corps commissions. Wisconsin has been steadily increasing her number. With a continuation of this growth and with a continued high standard of endeavor in the basic course. the Distinguished College rating should be obtained annually. At present the University holds four such ratings, awarded for the years 1915, 1916. 1919, and 1920. ' The VVinning Company Page Three Ilundrerl and For-ly-One INQFANTRY I I STAFF PERSONNEL EVRARD C. CALUWAERT. . ..... Colonel I VVILLIAM A. FIELD . . . . . Lieul. Colonel ,I I'IYMAN J. BILANSKY . . .... Major I N LAWRENCE P. WARNER . . . . ....... Major I ROBERT L. I4UEN1NG ,........,.... Major I I DAYTON B. MEAD ......... Capiain and Arljulanl II ALLEN W. VVALTER . . . Caplain and Reg. Supp. Ojjlcer 'I I I I I I 'I I III II II I I I I I I II .W I Iw III ..- ...W ., ,LA , .M .,,,, ,,....,..m,,.,.,,,, .Y,.W....,,. ,..e,.,....,.,.. ,, . , ,V II I I ,Y I I I' ' I I, I ,XI Q I . .II I I I VI I ' I ' a Bilansky Wal Let Field Caluwaerl Warner Mead Page Three Hundred and Forty-Two I FA TRY Run' l'?!'1'l'llI.IN I e N 4 e 5 A f ter a few weeks of lra in ing W - 1 e e e e e Larson Lei l z Spense Hart Crab tree Ba lcs Stephenson Boyce Dams LaedL Green Cross Bogie Page Three Hundred and Forly-Three , RTILLERY Calling llw Encmgfs Range A Salufe 1 , ,.,, ,.,, ...,, , , , , , Kitchen' Dmwry L. M. Johnson KMzljorD Arnold O'Connor Page Three Hundred and For!-V-Fou 1' ORDNANCE lfrfrzrb' for u Try- Ou! A Brilixh 75 ' E. VV. Johnson Wupper Holmes Palmer Page Three Hundred and Forty-Five IGNAL GORP Wy The Field Se! in. Operalion w N r ,,, fl ' w 1 , Field Signal Equipmenl , A' ' , ,SL , , . A , KnolL Noll,e Herrick CMa,iorJ ' Walls Magamx Page Three Hundred and Forly-Six PISTOL CLUB Bonlu Dcichcr Lindbergh Sgt, Shire O 'Connor Ru ffnlo God l'rey THE RIFLE CLUB Lindbergh BeaLl.y Dnichcr Bolendcr, Mgr. Russell, Capt, Palmer Breed Major Vvarrl Couch Aullman THE PRESIDENTS GUARD Page Three Hundrezl und Forly-Seven. Page Three Hundred and Forly-Eight 0 ,lf l,, rgwnfxfazr' -2' - V .,,...WQ1m1 WM?- wg,.a , F:-1, Www? Ag, W., 6. y f -.4 iff wmwwihi GIRL ' GLEE CL B The Girls' Glee Club of the University has forty members chosen from the student body The membership is limited, and based upon tryouts held at the beginning of each semester, from which a committee .selects the .finest voices, making a choicefrom the best in the University OFFICERS MIss MADEIJON WILLBIAN ..... . . . Director lVlAR10N MOSEL ..... .... P resident MARTHA CHANDLER . . . Vice-President HELEN GELLER . . . . . Secretary ANNA ARNQUIST . . . . . . . Treasurer MERLE GIBBS . . ....,... . Librarzan. MEMBERS GRADUATES RACHEL GRIFFITH SENIORS ANNA ARNQUIST GRACE DILL REBA HAYIJEN ARGOT BARCE HELEN DICKINSON FLORENCE KOHN MARTHA CHANDLER NYRIA GILE FLORENCE LAMPEBT J UNIORS A HELEN BELL HELEN GELLER MARION M OSEL WINIFRED COLLIER NIERLE GIBBS DOROTHY PFLUEGNER OLIVIA F ENTRESS . FRANCES LANDON IRMGARD SIEGMEYER BCIABEL SHOXVERS ELSA YUNGER SOPHOMORES ERMA COMSTOCI4 HCELENE FRENCH BEULAH MILLER EHNLA DUNCAN GLADYS GARNESS MARGARET MOORE MARY DOWNEY N AOMI KNALYP AGNES PELZER LUCY ANN GRIEM VIRGINIA NIAYER TEMPERANCE JOHNSON FLORENCE ROBB TVIERTIS SHANKS FRESHMEN NZATALIE DENSNIOOR LOUISEYWIADDEN EMILY DAVIDSON ' HILDA SCHULZ Kohn Yunger Davidson Bell F en Lress Pelzer Schulz Robb Downey Garness Griffith Pfluegner Arnquisl Johnson Lampert. Showers Densmoor Landon Hayden M. Willman Knaup Moore Chandler Griem 4, Siegmeyer Coms Lock Duncan Collier Gibbs Mosel Gile Barge Mayer Dxcklnson Page Three Hundred and Fifty I MEN'S GLEE CL B The Universily Glee Club has developed into a musical club which no longer savors of lhe usual glee club character, but has laken on lhe qualily of a high grade group of singers, lhat now compares wilh any of lhe besl glee clubs in lhe counlry. The membership in lhe club is based on rigid lryoulsg il includes only lhe jnesl and mosi capable vocalisls. OFFICERS HOWARD M. SHARP ....... OSCAR CHRISTENSEN . . XVI-IITFORD I'IUFF . . . . HARR1' CARSWELL .... . THORIAS DARTNELL ..., ,. . PROFESSOR E. E. SWINNEY .... THOLIAS K. BROYVN DIELVIN BREITENSTEIN ARTHUR C. JOHNSON ELBIER C. ANDERSON WELLS F. ANDERSON ROBERT L. BURNEY KENNETH F. DAMON ALFRED COTTON THOBIAS DARTNELL JOHN IRWIN NORRIS WENTWORTH WVESLEY BRANDENBURG OSCAR CHRISTIANSON LAWRENCE DUNN FREDERICK STANLEY PAUL SANDERS Presidenl and lllanager . . Business Manager . -, Publicity Manager Secrclary and Treasurer . . . . . . Librarian . . . Director MEMBERS FIRST TENORS JAMES E. IXJACKIE RICHARD O. BASBIIISSEN NOEL STEARN M ALCOLM UNSETH ALFRED WILLETT SECOND TENORS LELAND C. DIETSCH Cl-IRISTIANA HENDRA BERT HILBERTS ' BARITONES RICHARD W1 FABNSNVORTH ROBERT LANE JOHN M URPHY BASSOS VVILFORD HUFF DAVID JONES BROWN LANNING HERBIAN HOFFMAN KARL S. MORGAN RALPH W. SHARP JOEL SNVENSEN CHARLES KELLUM WVALDEMAR NAUJOKE EDWARD OTIS JAMES PRICE FRANCIS WHITEHEAD LLOYD LENTZNEB SAMUEL SCHMIDT HOWARD M. SHARP ACCOMPANISTS ROBERT NETI-IERCUT Anderson Die tsch Otis Johnson Lanning Stanley Dar tuell Huff LeuLz ner Heudra ' Brown Brel Lenstein Jones Nethercub Stearn Cotton Kellum Sharp Hoffman Sanders Naujoke R. W. Sharp Murphy Schmidt, Swinney Wi1leLL Swenson Damon Price Page Three Hundred and Fifly-One CLEF CL B Clef Club is an organization of about thirty girls chosen from the student body for special musical ability, either instrumental or vocal. Tryouts for membership are held in the Spring and Fall, when the Club hears each. applicant and chooses a limited number. Regular closed meetings are held twice a month during the school year. An annual open concert is given in the Spring. OFFICERS PLEB.-A HAYDEN ......... . . I. President MARION l'IUI.L ..... . Vice-President J ANET BREITEN RACII . , , . Secretary ESTHER VANCE ......... . . Treasurer TEMPERANCE JOHNSON .... . . . . . Cliff GRADUATES RACHEL GRIFFITH ADULT SPECIAL CLARA LEISER SENIORS RUTH BENNETT ZIRIAN BLISH FRANCES BEECHER MARTHA CHANDLER JANET BREITENBACH WINIFRED COLLIER RIGMOR ESTVAD RUTH BEERE DOROTHY BRADFORD IBIVLA DUNCAN LUCY ANN GRIEM BARBARA HASTINGS MILDRED SHEERER NATALIA DENSATOOIX HELEN DICKINSON M. GRACE DILL VVILHELMINA EHR MA N REBIK HAY DEN J UN IORS BARBARA I'lILDRE'l'H IQATHEBINE KEEN FRANCES LANDON AllARlON lVlOSEL SOPHOMORES CORNELIA IJEISE GERTRUDE HIXASE TEMPERANCE J OHNSON Lois JACOBS NlARGABET MOCJRE FRESHM AN NlAI'lIAN HULL LULU KILPATRICK FLORENCE KOHN ESTIiER VANCE OLIVE A'flITCHELL DOROTHY PELUEGNER ELSA YUNGER SYLVIA ROSENBERG NORMA SCHOEN FLORENCE ROEB HEI.EN XVHEELER JENNIE OlNEILL IIILDA SCHULZ Heise Hildreth Beecher Hastings Kilpatrick Yungcr Bradford Ehrman Sheerer Landon BreiLenbach Mitchell Dickinson Johnson Chandler Blish Wheeler Robb Keene Moore Collier Leiser Dill Griem Schulz A Griilith Haase O'Neill Bcebe Hull Hayden Densmoor Eswad Mosel Rosenberg Page Three Hundred and Fifty-Two CLA a I N wrs vi. Lrrlcs con N ms 11 AR ITONES Jolm Hydjord Earle Christoph Kliment I.. Honeycomb Harold Addington Carlson D. Gaupcr Meyer H. Katz Carl W. Krause M. I.. Gibson Carroll W. Osgood T. G. Hendrickson Robert W. Harvey Joseph C. Lotler Elton C. Hooking OBOE Frank Kohn BASS CLARlNE'l Leo P. Dunbar PICCOLO S. Harwood Gregory CLARINETS Donald NV. Prideaux Ralph A. Smith Clarence O. Heimdal Clarence R. Martin Clarence P. Baechler John R. Nalbach Oscar E. Anderson. Norma1r'K. Lillis Franklin C. Potter Frank J. Urabeck Carl J. Zilch BASSOON lilillard B. Smith SAXO PH ON ES Lester J. Tickfer Arnold E. Roehl Chester J. Schmidt Lyman B. Kimball Elliot W. Guild UNIVERSITY BAND ' FIRST REG! MENTAL CONCERT BAND MAJOR E. W. MORPHY . . LIEUT. JOHN H. JAQUISH . . . . AssisLanlConduclor LIEUT. DONALD S. DEWIRE . LIEUT. 1-lOW'ARD M. SHARP SERGEANT FRANK KOHN . SERGEANT JOHN P. NVELLS . . . . Conductor . . . . .Quartermaster Assislan t Quarterrnasler Concert MilIl'lf2,'PF SERGEANT STANLEY M. RYAN O 1 1 . Drum Miijar s1aac:EAN'r JOHN RYDJOHD . . . Principal Musirfzmi Karl R. N. Grill Herman O. VVallhers Carl A. Hoppcrl SAXOPHONES Jacob E. Alschuler Ralph W. Sharp Waldemar P. Sehoonoll' Leon L. Katnliasz ltlanford C. Galby Karl YV. Emanuel Charles E. Holden BASSOON Raymond H. Ludden COR N ETS John I-l. Parmley John H. Jaquish Frederick W. Nirnmr-r J. Arthur Gulson Jean F. Rolfe Donald S. Dewire Arnold'J. Bionfang Waller A. Frautschi Robert I . Morris Gerald-B. Tjoilal FRENCH HORNS Donald M. Bennett WVilliam E. Warner S. Allen Buseth James H. Sohey Aubrey K. Brewer Edward D. Morris Donald B. Osborn TROMBONES NVendell Bonesleel Adolph H. Emerson Darrell D. Mclnlyre Harry NV. Balch Francis I.. Cusick SECOND REGIMENTAL BAND MAJOR H. NV. MORPHY . . . LIEUT. JOHN JAQUISH . CORONETS Charles A. Inman Ferd R. Lholak William S. McC0rkle . Karl S. Morgan Maurice S. Cook Fred E. Mooney John A. Hager Edward A. Boerner VVilliam VV. Boettcher FRENCH HORNS Charles V. Goodrich John A. Leirich Wilherl. J. Hefty Wilmer L. Ragalz Edward J. Sohey Adolph G. Kammer Floyd M. Stiehm Harold L. Donkle . . . . . . .Conductor . . Assistant Conductor TROMBONES George H. Tomlinson Julius NV. Boeokh Peter J. Burelhach Harry M. Javohsen August W. Spitller Everell L. Gage BAHITONES Robert A. Clark Edwin A. Uchling B FLAT BASS Ernest B. Kellogg E FLAT BASSES John L. Jenkins Thayer H. Ricketts Paul E. Friedrich Ollo H. Meili STRING BASS Guerdon H. Head E. FLAT BASS ES Theodore Stevens John E. Gray BB FLAT BASSES John B. Leonard John P. lVolls DRUMS Homer D. Chapman Wvilliam F. Hookings Isaac J. Gcsme Chrislopher Hendra Melvin C. Pierce BB FLAT BASS Einar J. Norman DRUMS Dwight S. Gabriel Robert R. Freund Russel C. Otis Fred E. Seyhold DRUM MAJOR Henry C. Hollenbeok LIBHARIAN Edwin A. Reeve Page Three I1lLfIdl'f'dlIIIC1 Ifzflw Tlzret Page Three Hundred and Fifty-Four FGFENSI QS v , VILAS MEDAL WEARERS , 22- , . -f rv ff- , vp easfgge, , V ww' The first William F. Vilas medals were awarded in 1910, through the coiirtesv ofAnna U Vilas. During succeeding years the initial fund has been increased, and the 'Vilas Uedal is now annually -given to not more than seven students who have represented the Unwersitv in an I intercollegiate debate, or an oratorical contest. The medal is the ojficral award ofthe Uni ,versity for excellence in forensic endeavor. FACULTY ALFRED P. IIAAKE .ANDRENV T. XVEAVER RALPH AXLEY ' THOMAS AMLIE DAVID BECKSMITH .MEIJBOURNE BERGERMAN FRANK W. CosGRovE IN UNIVERSITY ARTHUR INMAN HALSEX' KRAEGE NIABTIN 'KBIEYVALD1 XVAYNE L. MORSE STERLING TRACY Bergerman Amlie Weaver Morse Inman Tracy Kriewald L Krae e Page Three Hundred and 'Fifty-Six THE FORENSIC BOARD To odrninisler forensic ciffairs, and cooperale with lhe rariozis forensic societies of ihe Uni- rersily in proriding lhe mos! imferesling and helpful programs, the Forensic Board has been organized. Two members from ihe Senior class, one from lhe Juniors, and one representative each from Ihre .4gf'iCl1ULLf'Cl,l Lilerary Sociely, Alhelzae, Caslalia, Hesperia, Philomathia, and Pyllzia., comprise lhe board. OFFICERS IIORER1' 15. S'I'lCNV.-KRT .,...... ,... P resiilenl ,MARTIN R. KRIENVALTYI' . . . Vice-Presirlerzl 1'iE'LN1'ER C. CASPERSON . . ....... Secrelary W AYNE L. MORSE . . . .....,. Treasurer IJENRY M. BLUME . . Co1'rexpon1firzg Secretary MEMBERS A DELAIDE J. YXNDERSON FREDERICK H. KRAEGE TIYMAN J. BILANSKY FVIARTIN R. KRIEW.-xLDT I1ENHY M. BLUME VVAYNE L. MORSE I'IELMER C. CASPERSON ROBERT B. STENVART ALICE N. TUCKER n , Y ' w 1 Kraegu Shewzxrli Casperson Kriewulzlll Anderson Bilansky - Morse Blume fucker Pruyre Three Iluugrcoi and Fifly-Seven I . I., Seefiflg Amlie Kriewald t. INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES WISCONSIN vs. WYASHINGTON UNIVERSITY St. Louis, Missouri, January 6, 1922 ' PRESIDIN G OFFICER PROFESSOR C. H. WOOLBERT, University of I llinois WISCONSIN NEGATIVE TEAM MARTIN R. KRIEWALDT HAROLD A. SEERING THOMAS AMLIE CCloserj Decision: In,WiSconSin'S favor. X Questia-nf That the Kansas Industrial Court Plan fm' the Settlement of Inelnstrial Disputes be Spread Throughout the United States. I WISCONSIN vs. MISSOURI Madison, Wisconsin, January 6, 1922 PRESIDING OFFICER PROFESSOR G. N. MARY, University of Iowa WISCONSIN'S AFFIRMATIVE TEAM CARL R. ROGERS ALBERT H. BROWN CARROLL R. HEFT CC1oserj Decision: In VViScOnSin'S favor. A Rgggrg H0fl Brown Page Three Hundred and Fifty-Eight W l I I Tracy Stcwarl Karel INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES WISCONSIN VS. IVIICHIGAN Madison, Wisconsin, March 17, 1922 PRESIDING OFFICER PROFESSOR F. M. RARIG, University of M innesola. VVISCONSIN'S AFFIRMATIVE TEAM FRANCIS K. KAREL ROBERT B. STEWART STERLING H. TRACY fCIoserD Questvlon: Resolved, That the United States Cancel the A llieol War Debts. PRESIDING OFFICER WIscoNsIN vs. ILLINOIS Urbana, Illinois, March 17, 1922 PROFESSOR W. C. SHAW, of Knox College WISCONSIIVS NEGATIVE TEAM HENRY W. BLAKE - PHILIP G. DEICHER FRED J. IVIOREAU CC'loserJ Morse Moreau Blake Page Three Hundred and Fifly-Nine Deicher Kraege GIGBSOII INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES WISCONSIN tvs. MINNESOTA Dfladison, Wisconsirz, April 6, 1922 W ISCONSIN'S AFFIRMATIVE TEAM CLYDE W. GLEASON WAYNE L. MORSE FBEDEICK H. KIRAEGE lClosery Question: Resolved, That the Several States of the Uulteol States Should Adopt the Kansas Court Plau for the Acljuollcattou of Disputes Between Capital and Labor. WISCONSIN VS. NORTHWESTEBN Evanston, Illinois, April 6, 1.922 WISCONSIN'S NEGATIVE TEAM LEO I-I. Koi-IL ARTHUR C. INMAN IVIELBQUENE BERGEBMAN I . rf. ' l Qi 1 11, ljlx. lll ,, I . rf' flw io ,M if Q, Bergerman Inman Kohl W ...V A .4 il -, v It-V--13V :fi t Page Three Hundred and Sixty PHILO M ATHIPCS TEAM Snrlcs Kicssling Lamb Hawson Erickson Deicher SOPHOMORE SEMI-PUBLIC DEBATES MAY 28. 1921 CQUESTIONI Rasolvedf Tha! Ure Urzilcrl Slales Should Aid Her Shipping by a Svslem Qf' Subsidies. PHI LO M ATH IA, .fijfirmati CHARLES A. RAWSON .EDGAR L. ERIOKSON ve vs. H ESPERIA. Negalivr' FRANCIS K. IQAREL CYRIL BALLAM ,PHILIP G. DEICI-IER. Closer VVAYNE L. MORSE. Closer DECISION: For ATI-I EN AE, A-Uirnzalizve EUGENE P. NIEYEB ERNEST WATSON SAMUEL SOREF. Closer DEOISION: For HESPER IA, AjiYrrn.ali1Je LIERBERT D. HBNTZEN SUEL O. .ARNOLD RALPH AXLEY, Closer DECISION: For llm ,'1fH1 I71flll'UP. 07261 .fbr llzr: Negalive, Iwo. 118. PHI LO M ATH IA. Negalive JOHN SARLES JKLFRED C. GOESSLING LESLIE F. LAMB. Closer 1110 .-1jYirnzai1'v?. Iwo: .lbr lim Negalfve. one. vs. ATHENAE. Negalivz' BERNARD IVIONFRIED SAMSON SARGIS D W ILLIAM HA BER. Closer the Ajfirmalive, oneg for lhe Negalive, Iwo. HESPEHINS TFA M Karel Ballam Morse Hr-ulzcn Axley A ATHENAITS TEAYW Soref M Onifried Haber V VVaLson Sargfs Meyer Page Three llundrfrl flllllsiilil-Y-0116 I I NORTHERN ORATORICAL LEAGUE ANNUAL INTER-COLLEGIATE ORATORICAL CONTEST IOWA CITY. IOWA, MAY 5, 1921 Presiding Ojjicerg PROFESSOR ROLLIN M. PERKINS, University Of Iowa. THE CONTESTANTS ABRANI M. DE VAUL .......... . HA Plea to America MISS GLADYS PENNINGTON .... Return America HIARRY KREGAL America and the Immigrant. OSCAR A. BROWN OutpOSt,S Of Latin Civilization PLUSSEL IQIBKPATRICK ........... 4'The Hope Of Peace STERLING H. TRACK' ........... America and Britain for Civilizatio Un iversil-v of Iowa Un1'versz'ly of Illinois Universily of Jllirznrsola Un ivers ily Qf 1VI1'ch igan Norllzweslern Un iversily U n1'z'ersz'ly of Wisg-onsz'n ns: Decision: Wisconsin. firshg Illinois. Second: Northwestern. third. The J udgesz PROFESSOR G. N. NIERRY . . . PROFESSOR C. H. WOOLBERI' . PROFESSOR P. M. RARIG . . . PROFESSOR T. C. TRIIERLOOD , PROFESSOR J. L. IJARDNER . PROFESSOR J. M. O,NEILI. . Page Three Hundred and Szarly- Two Un iversily of Iowa Un iversify of Illinois Un ivcfrsily of Minnesola Universily Qf Michigan Norlfzweslern Universil-v Un z'versz'1'y Qf Wisconsin X A , Callahan Rillnr Capmn GIRLS' ANNUAL JOINT DEBATE Jllusic Hall, April 28. 1992 PYTHIA VS. CASTALIA Question: Resolved, That the Passage of the Soldier Bonus Bill Being Granted, the .Money be Raised by a Sales Tax on All Retail Transactions. CASTALIA'S NEGATIVE TEAM PYTHIA'S AFFIRMATIVE TEAM ANITA JONES KITTY CALLAHAN CATHERINE BOYD VESTA RITTER PEARL ANDERBERG CCIoserJ MARJORIE CAPRON CCIoserD Jones Boyd Anderberg Page Three Hundred and Sircly-Three Lamh I Kimball Deicher FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL JOINT DEBATE December 17, 1921 PHILOMATHIA VS. ATHENAE PBESIDING OFFICER GOVERNOR JOHN J. BLAINE Queszfion: Resolved, That cz. System of Compulsory U7T677ZfDIOj'77'Z,611f Inszw' ance Applvicalile I0 at Least cz llifciiority of the Indziszfrfial TfV01'ke7'S of W'isc01zsin be Adopted by Wisc01z51'1z, CC07ZSffffZ'LIf7:07ZCZHfV C01zceded.j T f Judgesl: Professors Sharp, O'Nei1l, Weaver, West, Judge W. C. Owenq A Decision: For the Negative, lhreeg for the Afiirmative, two. PHILOMATHINS NEGATIVE TEAM ATI-IENAI-FS AFFIHMATIVE. TEAM LESLIE F. LAME PLBRAHAM KAUFAIAN DE.A.N P, KINIB.ALL SAMUEL SYGMAN PHILIP G. DEICHEP.. CCl0serJ NIELBOURNE BERGERMAN. CCIoserj i I , lim, ini' l.'j il' i, , K aufman .Sygmun Bergerman Page Three Ifl.lIl,lll'CLZ and S1f.1:Iy-Four ATHENAE LITERARY SOCIETY Througlzoul lhe sevenly-I-wobyears of ils exislence at lhe University, Alhenae has armed lo provmole careful and systernalirc inresligalion and discussion of current e1venls wzih ihe logrcal andforceful preseniaizon of conclusions. Meetings have been deroled io debale and discuss ion. OFFICERS ANTHONY NERAD . . . . . . SAMUEL SOREF . . vVlLIIAM HABER . . 'EUGENE P. MEYER. . SAM SNEA D' SA MUEL BEORER ......... SAMUEL BECKER MELBOURNE BERGERMAN SIDNEY CI-IARNEY GLENN DAEI,HOIJSEN IXBBAI-IAM FRIEDMAN ALLAN IIALLINE VVILI-IAM HABER FRED JOHN MORRIS KARON THOMAS AMORY HENRY BLAKE JOHN DAVVSON TED FIELD EDGAR KAPP GLEN BELL MAX BRIL1.. EPPLER GUTZ W ILLMARTH J ACKMAN MEMBERS SENIOBS DAVID R. JONES STANISLAUS .JORDAN .ABRAHAM KAUFMAN MARTIN KRIEWALDT JUNIOHS MAX NTALLIN EUGENE MEYER BERNARD MONFRIED ANTHONY NERAD SOPHOMORES JOHN KOHL CARLTON lVlEYER IIERBERT MOIRSE T. H. NAMMACHER EDWARD PERRY FRESHM AN -JOHN LARSON SIMON I.Ev1TIN NEIL MCBJIIRRY JACOB NIANTELL . Prcsidcnl . Vice-Presidenl . . . Secretary . Treasurer . . Censor Press A gen! CARL LINDOW R. NORNIAN REITAN SAMUEL SYGMAN JACOB WEISNIAN HERMAN XVENDROFF SAMSON SARGIS SAM SNEAD SAMUEL SOHEF MORTON STEINBERG AUGUST SHERR EDGAR SMITH ABRAHAM SYGMAN EUGENE XVILIIAMS LEWIS MRKVICKA ALFRED N ICOLAS FRANK TRESKOW Levitin Moyer Snead Nerad Mrkvicl-Ia Larson Bell Jackson Nmholds Kapp Friedman Jones Sherr C. Meyer Amory Kohl Lindow McMurry Mantell Williams Perry Haber Bergerman S. Sygman Vlfcndrofi' A. Sygman Mallin Treskow Brill Blake Karon Smith Bvcker Steinberg K lllifndfl Page Three Hundred and Swls Five PHILOM THI Philomathia began her thirty-sixth year with a fresh determination to serve her members and to be served by them. It is the aim of this literary society to foster the development of the undeveloped rather than to trust success to the gifted few. ThoughUul, timely discussions of important national and international questions, a full renewal of Philomathian spirit and vitality, and another victory in the annual joint debate are among her accomplishments of the past year. OFFICERS FRED COHEN , . .... President FRANK DROBKA. . . Treasurer EDWARD EWING. . . . . Vice-President STERLING TRACY . . Censor MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS JOHN R. ABBOTT HYINIAN J. BILANSKY FRED COHEN FRANK J. DROBKA vVALTER DAHL PHILIP DEICHER EDGAR L. ERICKSON EDWARD EVVING MILTON FISCHER HENRY HOEACKER ARBIE L. BROOKS RODGER C. CRABTREE ARNOLD ENGELKE MILTON H. ERICKSON ANDIKEXV EVVING GERALD FOSTER WALTER FRAUTCHI ERNEST GREENE LEE HANSON HENRY ALBERT HARLAND BILBERT JOHN HARRINGTON DEAN KIIMBALL BRYN NISSEN LEO SHEN LESLIE SIMS J UNIORS JOHN HOLZNIAN OSCAR KIESLING LESLIE F. LAMB RALPH H. LICKING PHILIP MARQUART CHARLES RAYVSON SOPHOMORES ROY HERRMAN LYMAN B. KIMBALL HENRY W. KLOS OTHMAR LANDKAMER H. H. LASKEY RAYMOND H. LUDDEN IVIALCOLM lxflCDONALlJ FREDERICH NIMh'IER EDNVARD SEERING FRESHMEN IEVORY I'IEUSTON HAROLD SPORER LOWELL SLAGG STANLEY SLAGG CLARENCE TRACHTE STERLING H. TRACY JOHN P. RETZER HENRY ROMBERG JOHN SARLES FRED SCHNELL WORTH SHOULTS ROBERT B. STEVVART HAROLD SEERING LAZARE SHAPIRO NATHAN SIEGEL GAMBER TEGTMEYER ELDON IIIHOMPSON GEORGE H. TOMLINSON ALLAN W. VVALTER GORDON WILLSON ARNOLD ZUBE M ILTON STANGEL STUART STRONG ALFRED 'I OLL Hofacker Fischer E. Erickson S. Slagg E.Dei'cher Ewing SLewarI2 Strong Seering Rawson Foster Harrington Brooks Shoulls Willson Sims McDonald Hanson Heuston Nissen Schnell Lamb Nimmer Herrman Landkamer D. Kimball Drobka A. Ewing Holzman Gilbert Greene Siegel Ludden Toll Bilansky Tracy Cohen M.EricksOn Thompson Lzlskey Klos Page Three Hundred and Sixty-Sin: HESPERIA LITERARY SOCIETY The Hesperia Literary Society has completed the sixty-eighth year of it.s existence in a brilliant and successful manner in social and forensic activities. In its weekly meetings throughout the year it has devoted itself to the art offorceful speaking, to clear thinking on the important issues of the day, and to the cultivation of the Hesperian spirit of good fellowship. OFFICERS - I'IEN'RY M. BLUME . . . . President CHARLES GRECO . . . Treasurer RALPH A.XLEY . . . . V ice-President LEO KO!-IL . . . . Guardian SETH lA'lCKlTRIClC . ..... Secretary JOHN SLEZAK . . . . . Censor MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN I ORS JOHN ATNVOOD VVALTER H. BAUM LLOYD M. BOYCE REINHOLD O. EBEBT CHARLES GRECO LEWVIS W. AMBORN LYBIAN K. ARNOLD SUEL O. ARNOLD RALPH E. AXLE1' HUGO C. BACHHUBER OLIVER T. BANTON HENRY' M . BLUME RUSSELL D. BREWINGTON LORAN S. CLARK WILLIAM P. FLYNN GEORGE M. KEITH ROSS G. KITCHEN HAROLD E. .ASI-ICROFT CARL W. DAMSHEUSER FRANCIS L. DEMAN GEORGE J. FIEDLER FJLMER A. Kl.IETZ1EN LEO H. KOTIL F. ITIALSEY IQRAEGE ERNST A. LONGENECKER J UNIORS H. LESTER DARNSTEA DT CLARK A. DUNN LIAROLD J. DVORAK ROBERT P. GERHOLZ l'lAROLD IIARTWVIG l'lERBEIXT D. HENTZEN K. FRANCIS KAREL H. DEAN .ICITCHEN AVAYNE L. MORSE CHARLES B. PUESTOW SOPHOMORES DONALD D. IJAIIN ALBERT J. MCGLASSON FRESHMEN CLIFFORD C. FRANSEEN WNILLIAM D. GELTIER KLIBIENT L. HONEYCONIB I'lELMUTI-I G. KLETZIEN W ILLIAM J. MOUNTIN FRED J. IVIOIREAU RALPH H. PETERSEN BURTON H. VVHITE LANVRENCE P. RICHMOND FREDEHTC C. RISSFZR VERGIL H. HOICK ROGER B. RUSSELL JOHN SLEZAK IIERMAN O. XVALTHER ALBERT W. WEEKS BEN C. WHITE PHILIP W. VOLTZ SETH R. MCKITRICK FRED S. MOHME DAY'ID SINCLAIR BENVERLY T. IAAASSLICH EDYVARD J. SOBEY BERNHARDT A. TOSTENSO EDNVIN A. UEHLING N Ashcroft. Baum Wal Lher Har Lwig Slezak Boyce Kleltzien Fiedler Risser Dvorak 'McKi Lrick Kle Lzieu Morse Kraege Amhorn VVeeks Sobey Clark Blume Atwood Petersen Kie Lh ' Arnold McGlasson White White Kohl Ebert Axley KI lzchen Damsheuser Page Three H undrerl and Szzrty Seven AG R IC ULTURAL LIT E SOCIETY L OFFICERSH EDWARD E. 'PRICE ....... . FRANK L. KOZELKA . . . BURON E. SPEAR ..... RAYMOND C. KLUSSENDORF .... HELMER C. CASPERSON LEON F. DUNVVIDDIE EDWIN G. ITIEMMEN FOREST D. HARRIS GERALD B. I'IEEBINK WILLARD B. ALBERT ARTHUR O. ALBERTZ STANLEY G. DAHL THOMAS R. DANIELS J OHANNES D. DE XVET ELLSNVORTH W. BUNCE HARRY F. CLEMENTS HERBERT H. ERDMAN I. O. HUNBRE GRADUATES J . T. OERICK SENIORS HENRY I. KATZ .ARTHUR N. KNUTSON FRANK L. KOZELKA HAROLD N. KUCKUK EDWIN F. KUEHN OSCAR C. lVlAGISTAD JUNIORS CONRAD A. ELVEHJERN JOSEPH A. GAHR WILLIAM A. HARTMAN ZHOWVARD E. J AMJSON RAYMOND C. KLUSSENDORF ROGER P. IYIATTESON SOPHOM ORES I'10XVARD R. LATHROP STEPHEN H. MATTESON VICTOR J. OLSON WALTER F. RENK FRESHMEN HER BERT C. SCHAEFFER RARY . Presidenl . Secrelary . Treasurer . . Sergearzl-al'-Arms IEIJKVARD E. PRICE MILFORD W. SCHUELER MANLY F. SHARP BYRON H. SPEAR LEWIS W. TAYLOR HAROLD H. METCALF XVERNER P. NIEYER ALBERT M. TERNES M ELVIN C. VISTE CLARENCE VV. XVEBER EDYVIN H. ROHRBECK JOHN C. ROBERTS GEORGE D. SCARSETH NIARVIN A. SCHAARS Harlmun Elvehjeru Price Klussendorl' Casperson ' Me Lcalf Erdman La Lhrop Ternes Daniels Hohrbeck Matteson Schaars Matteson Renk Kuckuk U Kozelkfx Alberts Hunhre Schaeffer Roberts Gregor Magislad Dahl - Harris Vlste Gnhr Jamison KI1llLSOH Sharp Schueler Clements de VVet Spear Hammen Page Three Hundred and Sin-ly-Eight ADELAIDE ANDERSON IVIARY AUSMAN CEONE CULLINANN IVIARY DIXON PEARL ANDER BERG EDITH BLACK ALICE BULLOCK ALICE FBICK MABEL GOO VIOLET GOO CATHERINE BOYD LOIS COLE YVETTE GOLDBERG HELEN BOWLES CASTALIA LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS FLORENCE KOLTES . . . NIARY AUSMAN . . SELVIDA KENSETH AGNES PELZER . ISDITH BLACK . . !' . Pres iderzl Vice-Presidenl . Sccrelary . Treasurer . . .... Musical Direclor A DELAI DE AN DER SON ....... Forensic Represerzlal ive MEMBERS SENIORS GLADYS I'I.-'LSKINS SELVIDA KLENSETH FLORENCE KOLTES .IUNIORS EDNA GROTH NIILDRED GUENTZEL ANNA HIEBERT LYLA I'IOLT FRANCES PIUGHES I'IELEN IVICLANDRESS SOPHOMORES JENNIE GREGG ESTHER HILBEIKTS ANITA JONES GERTRU DE KASDIN FRESHMEN CATHERINE CAVANAUCH VERA HEIDENIAN BEATRICE MAHEB EDNA PALECHEK FRANCES SAVVYER GERTRUDE W ICKENDEN EVELYN MALONEY AGNES PELZER HELEN STROUP MILDRED THORNE LENORE WILLIAMS LEAH YABROFE RIILDRED REDENLAN W. LOUISE THOMPSON BEATRICE WALKER IVIILDRED HANSON Cole Anderberg Cullman Frick Sawyer Haskins Guentzel McLandress Hanson Kasdin Wickeudcn Stroup Bullock Groth Jones Dxxon Palechek V. Goo Redeman Thorne M. Goo Holt Goldberg AnderSon Yabroff Heidemau Kenseth Ausman Black Koltes Cavanaugh Gregg Wxllmms Page Three Hundred and Surly Nme . PYTHIA LITERARY SOCIETY I . I The Pythia Literary Society, founded twelve years ago, hasfor its purpose the development ofthe literary and artistic abilities of its members, and the encouragement of womenas par- ticipation in forensics. Proud of her members' increasing interest in debate and oratory, Pythia is working for an opportunity to enter theintercottegiate debating jietd in the near future, thus broadening the scope of her activities. OFFICERS . . . .President CAROL CONLEE . . . . . .l . . . . . Treasurer . . Vice-President ALICE EFUCKER. . . Forensic Board Representative . . . . . Secretary . A MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY H EVELYN SHAW . IRMA BOROHERS . ALICE OUTHOUSE . SCHOLAP1 KATHRYN MYKEI, SEN IGRS SVEA ADOLPHSON HELEN ATEN IRMA BORCHERS FERN BUSBY CAROL CONLEE RUTH CONLEE GRACE DILL ELINOR BROWN BERNICE ELVER BLANCHE FIELD HELEN GELLER GERTRUDE HARLEY GOLDA BRANT MARY BURCHARD KITTY CALLAHAN M.ARGARET CALLSEN MARJORIE CAPRON M AREL CRUMMEY LAURA HABIILTON E. lVIARIE HAYES J OCELYN KNIGHT RUTH KOPPKE VERNA NEXVSONIE MARGARET O,KEEFE J UN IORS EULA JANDEL LILLIAN J ENNINGS DOROTHY LONG BEDA MACKIN HELEN MARTNER MARY 'NEE SOPHOMOPIES MURIEL EDWARDS LOUISE GOTTLEIB HELEN HECK CORNELIA HEISE GENEVIEVE HIGHS BERNICE NICCULLOM CHARLOTTE O,MALLEY BERTHA ROSE .NIARY LEE BUTTER EVELYN SHAWV .ALICE TUCKER ISA BELLE WINSLONV EDITH ZANDER ALICE OUTHOUSE LAURES ONVEN NIILDRED BEPLINGER F. LOUISE THOMPSON IYIILDRED XNIMMLER LETITIA O,MALLEY NIARIE SALM PESCH SARA PHILLIPSON DOROTHY REICHERT VESTA RITTER EDITH SCHOENBERG Aten Newsome Coulee Heise NVinslOw Crummey Edwards Thompson Arnquist Gottlieb Capron Koppkc Replingcr Nea O'Keefe Coulee Schoenberg 'Grucnheck Brown MOCullom Reichert Outhouse Callahan. Shaw .AdQlI!l1S0D LOHS F1015 .EWCILH II. , Page Three Hundred and Seventy ' L' ' 92 . f, 4 5 Q: f I ffl 45' f E STA E THE H BE FOOT CL B WILLIAM H. PURNELL . CARL E. BIIONSON . . . DAVID J. MAI-IONEY . CLARENCE E. FERNBERG GEORGE A. BARTLETT SAMUEL BECKER CECIL D. BRODT CARL E. BRONSON FREDERICK N. BUSSEY WELLS E. CARRERRY REGINALD W. GABSTIKNG MORD M. BOGIE RUSSELL C. BOND FRANK C. DAVIES PAUL V. GANGELIN OFF ICEBS I . . President REGINALD W. GARSTIXNG . . . .Secretary . . . .Manager THOMAS W. TREDWELL . . . . . . . Treasurer . Vice-President WALTER K. SOHWINN. . . Keeper Qflh Hazeefoot MEMBERS IN FACULTY JAMES M. O,NEILL SENIORS EUGENE M. J USTER VVILLIAM R. KELLETT DAVID J. MAHONEY ROBERT E. MCDONALD TERRELL B. IVIAXFIELD PHILIP P. NOLTE J UNIORS WALTEIK S. KIDDER L. GERALD KOCH JOHN JVIOKREIS HAROLD H. PAUL HORART C. PRICE JAMES F. A. PYRE WILLIAM H. PURNELI WILLIAM M. SALE, JR. W ALTER K. SCIIWINN HAROLD W. TAYLOR RICHARD H. TYRRELL STANLEY E. WELCH STEPHEN B. REICI-IERT JOHN H. SCHEE EDMUND P. STBOTHMANN HUBERT F. TONVNSEND THOMAS A. TREDNVELL EVERETT C. YERLY HONORARY MEMBERS R. A. BAKER IALUBREY BOUCICALT OSCAR JAMES CAMPBELL LUCIEN CAREY CARROLL CASE CHARLES CHITTENDEN THOMAS H. DICKINSON R. C. DISQUE JOHN DONOVAN EDWARD EBEBPILE FRANK EDSALL NIARCUS FORD ' HENRX' MORGAN VVILLIAM NORRIS XVILLIAM OPPEL LEE F. POND J. E. SAUGSTAD OTIS SKINNER GEORGE SPENCER EDWARD SPRANGER I'IERBERT P. STOTHART LEO T ORRE JOSEPH TURNER CHAUNCEY W ILLIAMS CARL GREGORY GEORGE KELLY L. A. ZOLLNER Sale! Bond Brodt Nolte Taylor Reichert Gars tang Bronson Koch Mokrejs Kidder Bussey Carberry Kellet Schwinn Yerly Strothmann McDonald Schee Bartlett J uster Price Purnell Mahoney Gangelin Townsend Bogie Becker Davies Welch Page Three Hundred and Sevenly-Two RALPH SCI-IEINPFLUG W ILLETT KERIPTON J. VINCENT CONLIN PIERBERT BONING HAROLD BENTSON JAMES BRADER FRED BREWER J. VINCENT CONLIN KEITH DAVIS ROY FRENCH EDWIN BOOTH DRAMATIC CLUB OFFICERS e . .v . Presidrnl XVILLIAM TANNEVS'ITZ . . Vzce-Preszdarrl LANVRENCE NOREM . . , . . . . Sccrelary MEMBERS RICHARD MCCAEFREY LEE lVl.CCANDLESS CYRUS .lVl.INSI-IALL NVAYNE lVl.ORSE M. NIONFRIED Q LAVVRENCE NOREM l'IICKMAN POWELL PLEDG 'ES JACK HZARRINGTON JOHN BEEFEI. KENNETH FAGG PIORACE GREGORY J. STUART IIAMILTON LAURENS HIASTINGS W ILLE'rT KEMPTON DON NIARVIN ARTHUR NICCAFFIKEX' . . . . . . Treasurer . . Keeper ofthe Mask HENRY RUBEL RAIIPH SCHEINPFLUG FOSTER STRONG WILLIAM rFANNEYVITZ Ro DNEY WELSH PIORACE WETMORE Twenty-one years ago Edwin Booth was founded to promote the serious drama at the University of Wisconsin. Since that time the club has been a notable factor in dramatics on the campus and in Madison. During its existence, the policy of the club has never been a commercial one. Profit from productions has been the means, rather than the end. The club meets every two weeks, and at the meetings matters of dramatic interest are brought before its members. It also participates in joint meetings with the womenls dramatic clubs, Twelfth Night and Red Domino, Last year Edwin Booth established a precedent by producing the worldls first student photo-drama, an example since followed by colleges and universities all over the country. Since that time the Varsity Movie has been playing in Wisconsin cities and at other universities. This year the club presented The Shooting of Dan McGrew', at the Homecoming Carnival. It also joined with Red Domino and Twelfth Night in producing the Pre- Prom play, On the Hiring Line , which has been referred to as the best joint play ever produced here. Tannewitz McCaffrey Scheinpllug Kemp ton Davis Holcombe French Conlin Gregory Rubel Brewer Welch Fagg Hamil Lon Morse Page Three Hundred and Seienly Three TWELFTH NIGHT I DRAMATIC SOCIETY Twelfth Night Dramatic Society was established to stimulate an interest in dramatics among the Women students at the University of Wisconsin. Tryouts for the first forty applicants are held at the beginning of each semester and election to membership is made from those trying out. Regular open meetings are held the first Tuesday of each month, at which time a pro- gram of dramatic interest is given by the members. Once a year a regular open meeting is given for the public. At this time, three one-act plays of high dramatic value, artis- tically staged and professionally conceived, are presented. OFFICERS DOROTHY DWIGIIT , ....... . . . President ANDREA KJLAND . . . Vice-President ALICE F RICK . ....... Secretary IVIERLE SHAW . . ........ Treasurer ALE1-I-IEA SMITH . . . . Mistress of llze Wardrobe INIIEMBERS MARJORIE BoEscH HEIIEN DOUBLE NIILDRED NIILLER IRMA BORCHERS DOROTHY DWIGHT LAURES OYVEN LILLIAN BRESLER ALICE FRICK SARAH PHTLLIPSON DIXIE DAVIS CAROL GOODYEAR NIERLE SHAW -JANE DE LA HUNT ALINE HALL ALETHEA SRHTH GEBALDINE KIAEPPEI. ANDREA KILAND Borchers K iland Frick Miller Davis H all K aeppel Double Bresler Phillipson Smi th Dwight Owen Shaw Boesch Goodyear Page Three Hundred and Seuenly-Four RED DOMINO A DRAMATIC SOCIETY OFF1C ERS ESTHEII GLIICIKINI ........ . . , Prggidgnl MAIIIAM DOAN . . . Vice-Presidenl CHRISTINA AFFELD . . , . Secrelary ALMA F ENN. . . ..... Treasurer OLIVIA FENTRESS . . Produclion Manafler HONORARY MEMBERS GERTRUDE E. JOHNSON MARGARET H,DfJl,JBI,Ell ALUMNI CHRISTINA AFFELD PAULINE AMBIIOSI3 NIIRIAM DOAN IVIILDRED DOYX'NIE RIABGARET ERIBIERLING ALMA FENN FLORA FILTZER PIERTZLER MEMBERS OLIVIA FENTRESS ESTIIER GUERINI HILDA HENDIIICKSEN FRANCIS M. I'IUGI-IES ARLINE KLUG RUTH KOPI-KE IXOBERTA LOYVDEN AGATHA MCCAFFERY OLIVIA ORTH ELIZABETH SEHON HIELEN TYRELL DANE VERMILLION SOLVEIG XVINSLONV Affeld Emmerling W'inslow Hendrickson -Fenlress VI-rmillion McCuH'ery Lowden Hughes Doan ' Schon Koppke Guermi Fenn Klug fjful Page Three Hundred and Seventy Fwe I HARESFOOT PRODUCTIONS HE production of Kitty Corner, the twenty-fourth annual production, set a high mark in the Hares- foot shows. VVith 1Vells Carberry, William Purnell, Reginald Garstang, Hubert Townsend, Porter Butts and J ack Cornelius heading an all star cast, the club appeared in seven cities-Milwaukee, VV,-aukesha, Racine, Kenosha, Oshkosh, Green Bay and Madison in the state-and Rockford and Chicago in Illinois. The appearance in Chicago was the first in seven years, when, in 1915, the club presented Jan of the Trails , at the Studebaker theater. With music by Earl Carpenter, lyrics by Horace Carver and the book by Paul Gangelin and Theodore Scholtz, all of whom were connected with Miss Quita , the 1921 production, Kitty Corner was generally acknowledged to be the most successful dramatic achievement of the University year. The coaching of Harry W. Spingold, the Chicago manager of Lewis and Gordon, was repsonsible for the professional finish of the production, while the efiicient management. of Carl E. Bronson made the trip a successful Hnancial venture. I Haresfoot continues to hold its high place in Wisconsin dramatics, being the only dramatic organization in the state which annually Writes, acts, and produces a complete musical comedy. Prize competitions for the best book, lyrics and music as well as for positions on the cast, chorus and production staffs are open to all students in the University. ALL OUR GIRLS ARE MEN, AND EVERY ONE A LADY Page Three Hundred and Seuenly-Six EDWIN BOOTH PLAYS T the Open Meeting which was held in Lathrop Hall, March 31, Edwin Booth Dramatic Society presented three one act plays: HA Night of the Trojan Warn, In a Workhouse Ward . and L'Pokey',. The Open Meeting is a time honored tradition of the society, dating back to 1902 for its origin. The object of these meetings is to present a program of interest to the public. This year's Open Meeting was pro- duced under a staff headed by Harold Bentson and Herbert Bening as associate produc- tion managers, Horace Wetmore as business manager, and Ralph Scheinpflug, Arthur McCaffery, and William Tannewitz as coaches. , Page Three Hundred and Scvcllly-Seven Page Three RED DOMINO PLAYS AST year the policy of Red Domino in casting plays was decidedly broadened. The members of Edwin Booth now try out for the men's parts, which were hitherto taken by girls, thus making possible more finished productions, andsetting a higher stand- ard for play acting. This season the club followed last year's policy of presenting a group of one-act plays. A Shepherd in the Distance by Holland Hudson, and coached by Esther Guerini was something the club had never before attempted. This is an entire play in pantomine, each gesture being accompanied by an appropriate sound from the 'ilVlaker of Sounds. Boccaccio's Untold Tale by Harry Kemp, and coached by Beatrice Humiston, was a tragedy of the Great Plague . with a rich background impressively and artistically rep- resented. The last of the series was i'Phipps . a bubbling farce, written by Stanley Houghton, and coached by Flora Filzer Hertzler. Hunrll-ed and Seveniy-Eiglzl THE BELLS OF BEAUJOLAIS The Gun and Blade Club, a University organization of disabled veterans of the World War, presented The Bells of Beaujolais as a Pre-Military Ball Play at the Parkway CAST Theatre, March 25th. AUGUSTUS, Duke of Beaujolais . . Paul T. Tobey JOHN BENDER, a wealthy American . John Sheldon LARRY, a young American ..... Cedric Johns TONY. a young American . . . John VV. Desmond HARKINS, Bender's English valet . . Eiel Mryland PIERRE, a juggler ......... Roberl Luelzr CHIcoT, a wrestler , . . . . Cassius lVIcCormick COUNTESS MARIE, betrothed to the Duke .... Olivia Fenlress AUNT SARAH J EssUP. Bender's Sister Dane Vermilion PHILLIS. Bender's daughter .... Helene French BELLE. her friend ......,. Gertrude Haase SUNSETTE, a candy girl ...... Deborah Olds FANTINE, maid to the Countess . . Florence Kohn ' DIRECT'ORZ MISS ALICE KEITH, '16 COMMITTEE CHAIHMEN PAUL C. TOBEY ....... General Chairman RICHARD AUSTERMANN . . ..,.. Finance W ILLIAM HARTMAN . . ..... Tzckcls EIEL MYRLAND ....,....,. Programs HAROLD PALMER .... , . . . Properlies HERNLAN DUSTERHOF'l' . . . Stage lWanager SIDNEY TRORSEN . . . . . Electrician HAROLD lwlAIER ........... Publicily - .I Page Th reef Hundred and Sezverfly-Nl ON THE HIRING LINE UHIDFI 4 ,1 , OUUDP U F11 U2 'S HP' Ev' fb? in GPC ga. o E: 54 o Lana' 34 E.: U29 39 FD im 551' 5293 we Env ii mr:- Us-P gn: Ma 50 QUE sw is V1 O2 EFF- mr go: 'LET it-+ :Q-, mm CD14 EE 28 Om Fat 20 :D 90.4 W no C+ NIUINIL I52I 1 sr , 1 YE! .11 ' A 1 H R.S A X75 A 'T a ,, Tl! T AV ', iV'Xx A, .EX lt T 5, . if ...X X XGSSW 1 5 2 UNION VODVIL ORCHESTRA F. TALEE, TALIE, TALOE G. OH GEEV' H THE POVVER OF MUSIC 1. BILL PURNELL J. 99Z Nerve and 172, Talent AWARDS TRIELES ' B'IEN,S GLEE CLUB QUARTET HSOME MORE TRIFLESF' 'ETHE TOLL OF THE DESERT,7 FRIVOLITY REVUE FIRST PLACE: BILL PURNELL SECOND PLACE: A. O. PI, FBIVOLITY REVUE Page Three Hundred and Efghly- One B. A good old fashioned medicine show presented by the inimitable Alpha Gamma Boughs. -The faker peddled an indefinite supply ofliniment to a nondescript gang of folk, who were immediately inspired to performances that were marvelous. We wonder where they got it. C. Dot, Port and Bob, meaning in the vernacular. Dorothy Cremer, and the Butts Bros., ltd. Dot tickled both the ivories and the audience with equal success while the Bros. satng and danced. It was straight vaudeville stuff. an act that any circuit would be proud o . g D. Kappa Alpha Theta talent, which is always pleasing, demonstrating the charm that music hath. Really the music wasn't the half of it. Milly Miller's pantomine called forth signs of reminiscences from the feminine part of the audience. An excellent fantasy, well portrayed and well received. E, William H. Purnell. You know what that means: Bill, with a new line of cracks and a few impersonations, kept us gasping with laughter. With Willard Sumner as a background and a lot of stage presence as foreground, he added that-er-personal touch to the show, and got first prize. F. Red Domino, Twelfth Night and Edwin Booth Dramatic Clubs collaborated in ce Hundred and Eighty-Two presenting a melodrama which all goes to prove that the world is made up of little things- Trifles,' the dramatists call them. This one act play added variety to the program and was well received by the audience. G. The Menis Glee Club. A quartet that reminded us old timers of the once famous Rusty Hinge Quartet. Notable voices and a selection of new songs furnished a pleasing interlude to the more frivolous parts of the program. H. 'aS'lVIore Triflesl' lived up to its name. Bill Kellet, Sol Winslow, and Dorothy Oechsner amused us with a little song and dance hit of a finished nature. Bill should go into musical comedy. I. We didn't know what was dawning on us at the beginning of this act. But when Heinz Rubel opened his balmy mouth we discovered the Joker. Disguised in a coat of burnt cork and a Long Island accent, he ate up the gags that his sparring partner, Mr. Les Gage, handed him. . f J . Nine bubbling, bouncing, scintillating beauties from the A. O. Pi Lodge, to say nothing of Reginald Garstang Cin personj presenting a metropolitan interpretation of terpsichorean arts. Coached by Doc Dorward, the act was 'a Warm knock-out. Page Three Hundred and E lily CAMP US LIFE W ml! 1 K .J -X,-1 x W. .12.g1w,3l2.54? 7 f 'fel Agw-wfmfg 4 ji - 1 51 ffflaff f Nwz wffilfda' ga, kj Qhggj GmWaf ,A 1:5 if , , '- yF.- Q3 +51 ml ,152 4525 wi PQ: 25332 fig 1 UMW msg 1154 gig 54 gf iffy? . 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Page Three Hundred and Eighly-Siu ,lwv ,.Q4....5eQ,.QgQ 4. 'Jn'- xjf's1,, gfx? P 5- , rw V Q S 6. Va fi .mf wx.1A'M 5Y was-lk? 5, -.. ,,,.q:,,, 5,'n11 -1-mswgfrywrazcfA-mfr:-V:-,311 I ,Vagina -,.v ,f-f n. i n 177 4,-,, . 02' 'sg af, ,v 4' A A5359 as '-gwgd xA 4, Tfgamv ,f N AW 4 30776101 4? 7 If 6 1 fwggyfiii Q i MH A M M8 ww WW 1, in d? 2 a V...-0' U I Y 554-Q, , aff f x ,-449, U Qi M0 9 f fffff 05' 0 -f ff f y: 4' 'J V fwfng jk V074 f f ffjqfwfk f W' M14 ac- dfiffief f n-14,1 -' A 1 mwnzg f '3' ,, ' Zi? ff ffffff ffwfgfhsfff-1 in 'eV f if X!-10 150,151 JMW 'S 5 fy f A-g !' W z-xsmim 4 'YF QF ,WLVPW 55 fffa ff ffhv 1 5 4 44 4 fhfw flffv 4 fwmf' .1 vw . . - ff . 3 ,, . L . W , . ,, , A , Q .E V . , 1- h ., '. ' f- fV .V . . 49 X V L12 , - - ' V ' A A W . 3? W? V 'L ' 1 - Tm : ' V'f'-ff,,4-ww A f 'zfH5'f ff, 1 1 H - i' f A H A 1 51'-+4 A x -A - 1 - 3. - x 113, , 'f . V, , H.. -3- ,, .. 1 p, , ,rv -4 ,Q 41 ,fi -. ,. ,. ' V. . ,. . :X 4 . 4. , ,. p V4 'f :fi iQ'i?+f:lf?'- wifi ri V . 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Q The lradiiional Varsily Ufelcome is lhe way llze greai University has of ojicially extending ils welcome and hosp1'laI1'!y lo llzc incoming freshmen. Page Three llurzdrerl and Eiglzly-Seven V Y -- - -MW - M- 'm v ' ' b w w r -Www' v 'fm ,- af kv? Q 6 I q 5 :qw wg sr ., QW Q f 'W F., igeagfix? ww, Lf QL! QR w Q 4' Mfk ! N4 X 3 1, X sg Q 5 M U 1 AR ? QS? 233 Eiixmig bis mir 4:- , Q '9 Q5 3 QW gi 1 53711 Lv- B 2 Q' h Q X 5 'J f S' , 5355 V334 fe, ,ia f ' ying' 2? my X a 4 mv- 'i 'N 'QM' 2- QT Q! PM ,f 35'fh'?4 'Q 4: Wfxik rf VT' QM! 'vm A1 f2 'W1jK, A- 'M2ffQi. QSM .3 X A 9 Z 3 MQQX 3 1 me , fa 4 ' 'QS 33, mf W A Qvxts 3' , 'F' wgxgggy N W'fw S 'S 511 N' A L WV 5 J,-ggix. affix! i Sr-lx ,mix Q ,la Qggkg-N N630 Q' 12455: gan? N Aye gm if Q f'Yfg3?f?3s?2A?i 6 if 2 'WW X W ' 1 9' A1255 w zammzzeassswfm Wiwfhix aww, ox ' niawwslrxdfg 523Q29,6'lf:fL V57.m'N3zi.585'.Ed-45? MQW SQ 'QRS 'N QNX r WXWWW? 9 W 'X 'Q , R Ekgmai an K mvsswffwg w :X X ss 4 1 N X t. ,J is gx 'fx Belirving that No man is wholly a man who has lost out of him all of lhe boy , lhe sophomores and freshmen engage each fall in harmless but iradilional hazing. Page Three Hundred and Eiglzly-Eight .Q asm The armual Class Ruslz. slaged by the lwo lower classes, inspires class spiril and is one ol' lhkf primary sleps in lhe evo! ul ion of Wisconsin S'p1'ril. Payr' 7,lll'l'l' llllllllffd und h'flflll4! lvl.llf V mfg., .1 me A ' . Page Three Hundred and Ninely In llzefall eleclions sluden! self-governnzenl j7nds expression in lhe eleclion Qf sludenl oficers by sludenl volers. The Badger drive also coniribales iofriendly campus rivalry, when compel ing learns engage in a lively sales campaign. ,-4' . ww ,r gy'--Y' - tsg3'Nifgg? wgaw- rio ,r ' , an-14,552 mx S- . , . ,, - . , Weis - 35 ,4 0 X 4. sf - WY ff 9 15 Y ZH5fi7?Gi727fE4G'EZ'W5 - Mfr? 3? . 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' ' , 01 1 - -fra' :12,., '2:. -Fx X.,5:::,Sz'. -9127 ,.,.p',51:-rfb .-' iii L.:':!'1:5S2! f 5?'.':Rf'.,'1'.': 4-f2'j'H-,-HGV: W.-3523 1,5 4' ' ' :::.- 4 Q .,,., K., , .W ,., -- WY , M-2 7.,,, .Y.. + -::::L 41f'mr ,W,f, .- 4, -.2 . . : m-My X1-NME ' ' 'A - , b - J my- V '- - . .9 if bbw' Q GQ Si Q N Q QQ fax M 'fv 9 4 v v 1 z H g .wa-w+w,s.gsq.. am-ww YQSMSS fx' ix we 2? v 4Qfw N343 Wqgqrr, , N9 x 1 ,vga 1 'fig 4 , 'k qM'7fSg4l? Q 9, f'g'fZfx?xSff1efS 48' fy we Q R ,aw My WH, ' 2 ?:fS3,v'f,,Xa wwMm mww W me-meisswr mf' W'wwmtm xrmwQx 0444 Tlzr Homecoming Hobo Parade adds in mirth and feslzfvily lo wha! llzefoolball game gives in clean sporlh and vfclory. . Then comes ilze bonfire In llze e11rn1'ng, and lhe Grads rvlzzrrz home inbzzed wiilz Ihr' spfril fha! is ever prcfscfnl 171 U10 lrzslzfulzon. Pagl' Tllreo Hundred and Ninellv-Two ,ww fm 'TQQSXQQQ4' ' X X 'mvvff Q Me. 4 , ,V K o A , ,gf M , - . - A ff : wa' no ' - .. h af MM ., ,W-I ,ff f-- N----V -A 1 V A f 4- 014 My ,. ,W my 4.9,,,,4.f.Rmm,, , . -. Y,AM,.-. Y f YL wf42m!2? ,ff o f f m '3l,.,,., ,: ,, ri.. .M-,1. fg,,g-g.,4446f fffowwz-pf hzmfw-' ,WJ , .,w ' . . , , ,, A ,fan A , v 'W ,, IW f 71 f' But von cannol buy wzlh gold llze old ab s'orLat1ons Homecoming has a deep significance in tha! ll perpeiuafes fhe bond befween llze alumni and llzeir Alma Hlaler. PIHIP Thfwf Hundred and Nanrlv fhlec Page Three Hundred and Ninely-Four Arnu'st1'ce Day. coming as llmfalfillmerzl af lhe world's hopes and praversjbr peace. is fill ingly celebrafed each year. :''.1.'2QrE:.:1sm2!:1vHf' ' 1 , , -f :-'::.g5,-1:Q- My vw-w , 5,1154 A -W , ,. , W., W- ,.... , 7- W 4. :eff V . si ,i ll A A :iqigmij ::E, W-:LM gl.. lk ..,. , ., ,-Ad v I 7,1 ,NZ-Sfffagy . my l ' , gf-J rx - 'A If -',. f f,,J1y, I rf-M b Si t 1- iff? 5 , ,hw .1 . N qi- 7, 'i , W ,f V f 1, 0 A I Aly. , ,... ., . ,W H , , f' www' f ' J ,gf ff z rlffik f F 1 N f y X X , , L L, f A x, , ,bg 2 5 . X , X X M X QE X A5 X, hw 51345 M gl kf 9 IQ t rf , 221 Q ouaffgs .w Q3 0 fy. Kg, f 4 xx. 44' 427,74 5, 5 4 fa 1 KV' ffrfvff, 1 Q ' '- QV. ' 5' ' af '11 ff M f ff 5 ,, fy Q 'Va f NRM -.g,,... bk. fb A 1 , ff W 177 4 141 gf, .51 ,,c.u,, ' 1 X N Mfpiiilf ' M' A 459 I 6 ' ' ff , 1 W, X 'sq jg 'S' '33 'X f , , 4 X f -QA ws. W. 2 075, if my . fl + , Y NN 3 f A ,M 3 'f - 'H 'if 2 L., sf M ' ' J Y - . ..,. , , M V.--D ' 1-' Z,L 1' z.,.::w I' P 1 -' - f f,--- N--1 4' Mi W... . , f-. 3 A A f I ,p, f I flaw 1 , fi ,N ' ', 'f 'V W r-M fd J if A' h Z G . Q 4 W... 1 ax, N, V. 1' My W4 Q f 17 M., A' Y' W If f ' A4 f ,, f, ' Aff if ' - w:,a4z'wx. gggrm, www Azad- 2' - ' ' If ' ' ' , ' . A ' X . S T110 X . L +'iT1L'f 3 - 5 ' 'T 53.1, '5 -' 2 XXX !. : 1 A., ,. , Q 1 N H ,, 3 1 V 1' ' N4 ' ,W , .' A 'cf . 5 N Q, 'fffg a5Ji Qg 2 V ' , , KL- 5 1 1 1 .31 ' -L , A ' - , 1- .- A ' A - , ' 41? gi? ,., King WinIer's call is answered by lhose hundreds qf siudenls who love ihe Yang Qf crisp winlry air and the varied sporls wh ich 111111 season Qffords. Page 7'IIl'Rl' fIlll1!lI'PIl' and lVflI!'14V'I'wil'E rg 1 1 1 . ,rixff-Wig 'ff V. 1-v--was SEQ ':i,1QVZ54rz3i V A I f f::ff,'2,giQfFf1, E'm1fGi's.2 Q . -431 ,1.,ggg,f2.7 f:,1,.',Lzf17Z5gf , I ' V , , 1 -I ' 1-':Q'1ffFf5sf',z, . Q f f f '+L' s , , ,V ..... w .,. .,-,., ,M...-,-.,.v...'.f.-.2-1-1-Q:-.-- - ---L, f , V , V- , Q. ,W-111,33 V . , l . u . , -.126 15123 it .,,...,,..v:.a AM K I I ' fi n ' .. ' .i ff '- 1? ff ,. ...,,. W g-we V ' , n I 'K Q F . yi' .. 1 fl : Y but lm 1 5' - ' ... . ' -f -1- sff' -f . .:::5 .Q s:a 1arT- 'f -,. Y - . .-rf-4:. -5-1:xwsf+m. .vf1 ',..:Jsf1- Q. .: 7'3L:.M.Q,.w2-sW- ,s,.:L,1,X.z . f fy .. ,. 417 ! f - :QQ V H- 42' ' L.,-46,-uv,-.-gzff' ff' f ' fs ' f 'W ,A V g--:zziiiuwii'4'1g:.'1-QIQQQV' , I ' 'M f ty, . ' 4 , . . Y 'f1'Ffea.4 'fi ..w,y - Page Three HLLlll1'1'!?!l and Nfnfly-Sim The gala dagv Qf winterfor ouldoor lovers is lhe day QI' the Ice Carnival wilh its ice-boat racing and skating. aw , i s .sig x. i s a Q, xx. Pl . 7 kxx is X '41 is 1 yxii WN XX fav 59111: 4 -lhn , .1 The Ski Tournamenf, gif! of ihe Norsemvn, is another example of the diversily Qf Wisconsin sports. If Dame Naiure does nol provide snow, it is imporledfor Ihe Iournarnenl. Pago Three Hllfllllffd and lVirrz'Iy-Seven Saint Patrickis' Day is iradilionally celebraied willz five Engineers' Parade, an array af nzoiley humor and friendly jesis al the olher schools and colleges Qf lhe Unz'vers1'ly. Page Three Hundred and Ninely-Eighl . www. Mew, Q ' 1 NN 111.5 , ' 2 'ill ,ff IW: k, XR-:ff ,S 4 X.. f J l i f r f 1 E ' Q, A, V in Wg? B fn? VSV 1 a x F 0 , , .lk 'H A' 3 I I 5 X5 fig? g fx SEE Ya A ' I' A2 7 Mx Sf? Li , - 1 WK M4140 fi ff , , GQ? '45 f?7f X 2 K ,f is r , 4 H V if 9 v f , f 4' MQ fro. ,Xi Q14 Q 1 , , J.: 3 M, . Zag, ,fy ,gy , M 41 f ,i 52A W ,' x, v'l1if 'K' ,f 1 '52, iff XJ: Hg, fa r 5, 4.0 5 fl' 0 'K' A A ' M ,QQ , M, X if ,W p'Q,',5 9, 1 W S' ' .,., if 9 gf 5 Q K-1 ii 4K-52 'w6 2 if fl I .-sw A 31, J! amz' 1 1 N 4 f , if Q f A 1. -.... W1 a K! I ' 4 I I 's ' 4 UW ,f ev ' 1? Z I H. if Kg -:gp 1 'Q .i 5 x ,. i , r '7 ,. 1 f rw 9 S lx' 43 4 4 V W A f A ' ,., nf 'fx ,, . ' ff 71' , ff ' f , 0 ' .if is x. X A 1 4 ' 1' fvsfvf 7 v 4 M f 1 -5- '-f:,12 l....-1 QLIQQEE1. . -' - 2 an ' i'Y -'W' 'T - V'W f 'f 'fL ,wz'4ZY4i'K ' ,frm - ,f +'..zf'fwm:-ff-.,s' ,Q f ', ,A 1 A ' AQ ' f-fn? f p f 4 V ' K' -'h' ' ' Q arf + 1, i -, ' C ,,,.V . ,:. I ,x A ' ,A4' . wmfwb f 'f fHSf .lv ki jg ? - 291, w ie A' -1 ' , se. 5 in ,W h J 15 i , . .,1 9g,Q5'.f - . za-we ' Q Q - www- .. , fi . .54 -,L7m.1LmfM.eL::j-f f gy., 1 11.,,1w,. uf' ' - -- -0?.vv:f'.- , !'T':,JfW j x , FHPZ5' . ' 'V : EMM 455, -eng-we 'W r i f , . ....- I , 4, :I ' ' ' Q-1 f H1 'ww ' 'fa fe ' if As ihe Parade winds through Slate Streef, wilh Sain! Patrick himself ai its head, lhe Engineers triumphantly exiol lhe privileges of being an engineer at Wisconsin. Page Three Hundred and Ninrely-Nine ap ,M is-vi z.,- we T bf-gdb, v -Aw-,flfg v-7-gzg m1fnf ' V' J 'A ,,4,W, . - 4,, :-w wf - 5 ,3394 vmfw b i - I ra ' X - J ,E -- sill 4 V , .V - .n - - f-7 vw'-fl r ws in c . x gl A an 4 nc' xv , we W. 1 H mf -4' s 'ff 4343! L Q H4332 A Wifi Q 315 43 'Q my 9' f we 'fr gY':i Q1 , ,ww aww 1 , M my GH K mv ,, ,J N X 'Y fi- xl 533 aw 9 ,Q ,X W bw zelgfixlfsl ., ,N NE K , X P 3 Ax skim Q Q X MQ W Rm zmflggviggbf-rfmw 'sf . wa may A ull ,N fx mx wif Www? 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M 1 5 , -r --qw - , - f 1, 11' cz., , J R::1.4,, 'EYE ' 5. 5 ' Q3249'-:Qfffwiai-:LP.'-if-Sfwc .v '- W-S4f?1W z'f-i2 :'frf':'.g' Xw x N z gl .4 T ygl 3 if wa l' ' f ff 1145- N34 , W wswgfmgg' N f + gm 3 2 mai, 2 W Q A 4 y-1 S W 4 ab: V- 4 wifi, . gg ,M u Mug, N X' 1 ,ggifkwi fp, xgwfawx Kgim 55,4 , wk, 4 N11 ,Z 3 g n ,51s,,wg1,,fimx:c4,,SQ'5-?,l Wm 531 fe Ka.: YI 'MX ,ww - wisiif 'gifs ggi? X ,, XX? ' wa, W s Q shyyfyf wg 1 ' ,mam ma ww wmwwfa, f 24KZf3si4'z-,vfafszawaaffgsfzazvffv 2 'WWW ?ZZK!'? f'2 ZSE5i .5,4z?5i1irr'i'? 1 4- fx 4 Pagv Four Hundred Al the public inilialion Qf Haregfool and Ku Klux Klan, humorous but harmless pranks enliven the occasion for speclalors as well as jbr the initiales. - 1., '25:L1',1.:,f The open air concerts on spring evenings on the upper campus are a source Qf deliyhl bolh lo flze iownspeopie and lo lhe siudenls. Page Four llunrlrvrl and Ong Page Foul' Ilundrvd and Two Co-eds plav an aclive and QffL'Tl picfuresque par! in the many fesiive occasions lhrouglzoui lhe year. 3 ,,.- v. -V-M..-,V-0.-V U, xg, AR, 1 V-9'f',,gx,w1 XX 1 422-'lfizl , nv- -m' 2s:'.:4r az ' ff-'f -fsv h -Q4-w:fV-1 ,ff:nav+w . 4- 1 455 v w g y, A , m,,v4Z4 5.g. ,4Ag,y12,1..:,a 1-V ' wwf: -'-P Pn fzwf SE-z -.., 15118 -. .z -:Y F .-,. -1. - .- - M - . V 1 A ,. 4 R yn .X , ' . ,, V,., .- -Vbq -V5.4-.wif MLW A H 1 ' it ' '- Z 4-' Wg-?5fisf3if24?A - , gh: i, -iffy... ,R , 1 f V' 'X' V '-1 4'1 f- TZG' V12- ML ,.' :- V- fl AV V V if , f- i f ' ' ' '- ' 'iii' '1 A ', ' 5 . 'N I , ,,,?gX4,,,W:h ., ' '. - A Aw j WQMTW-fbv '- , 4wA,,aV'g,.Q,p '61, i qzlaslyilf 264-Ui 3 ' K V' ' . . P' V. -+1-1-wwf-xvf'f:f' H 1 Va i ,' -- N V in Vx 'Z VX Ia- 'VWZ,Jff Tfkfiiwi. ' L QQ 1, A? Rf' - 9315593545595 9 'Q X991 -vqf,,Z,:V K .. 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V -Q .,,.- -,V Q, -:.:-gnrg:-131'-.n,..,, A . F, si.. mai? ' J, A ,C 4. V I V VL ' ,Q ,4V,'fV:1::?45, ,1 . ,, -gy I, -,Vg-. AS -' ff! 1 V ?- u - . -' 'QV , 'V V - 'feiw' ' .V if V ' ' 2 f- ' Y' 5: ' ..- : -. 2 J: ' 'iii 1:--. .-: ff.,1-:-wzfsff'-ff.-.V ' '1 Y V., ,. ' - .-fa' . V V , ' - we 1: gk . ' -mf-5:1 A, , V1-5 . x 4 ' - W -A - ' ix. av ' .- I f ,. Q -W pb : 'X . 2:4 ' ' :H . 'Nl 'fi ' .425 '4-if -, , ' .-Vfirfvim. ',I'3:.'5:I::j QV.-1.3 ' - M , ' ' Zia: 1 x... ' On ifs aniual lrip, Ihe Varsiiy Glce Club iravels ihrough ihe slafe andforms anollzer link in llze chain of jiiendship and co-operation 'lL'lll'Ch urziles lhe commorzweallh and Uze Universily. Payr Fnur Hundred und Tllrrr w-,V-Vw QE- g.,w:gg,,Q,.gs Mv4'41w-1 -uv V , 2 -Azfwlifizwsswl S ,m' PF0 W N 24-Q 01 GssYfW1-Swrl s : fx,. ....,92fKfs..bWiL A - - , N V1 ., - sg - 4' ' ii W J. , L:-EN . V , -. V . - r IK flsgx WQYW s , sg A ss , hmm W, .s w MV S29 Vi 95 wifi CE 5355? Q Q X5 Q Aw J, M' S ,s , EzQQ'?35,. 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V i VVl1en spring and ihe greai oui-of-doors bring iheir subtle insistent call, the campus, ilze lakes, and ihe universily drives abound wiih promises of beauiy, present and Lo come. Page Four Hundred and Four' We ask you-is there anylhing, anywhere, equal lo lhe charm of our own Menclofa? IJUIIF FOILI' lfuuzlf-nfl 111111 Five Page Four' Ilundrflri and Sim QQYCE EXP0 ' sed QL' A' wfgC2RNNmouNgl0N The Varsily Ifxposilion, which' lakes place every four years. is a C0lLSfI'ILCIl l7P dwnonslralion Qi' U1 an-I1 Levenzenls of lhe Urzwm-szly workshops and class rooms, V 5,.f.w.- .am - '11-V x' .ff 21 , V Z -N M 'rsfiigglw M My v A ik ...QQ ggi A225 BN fllw 6 in W QW, I wwf .f J M 'rw f X' a,,,f'g,,gVf4 41 Q jg I 'a W YT? Wim 'V 441 iq mxfwwgyw' S xx age S1594 2 W. mmarasmicai -'aw-wwffffif' f, fi 'if-'g fmwf fv www aifynrfwm ,ff if f aff f Ziff? 1' :WW ,Wigegf M f J f , W4 y Z nf W M1 gf viz? dwmuf, V Wiz ffff 747 fwf ' f ff Zffwbwbf 1742? 4 iff ff 'Q ,. X. fi sq a 'S 3 Q ,Q S, Ei R. 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V , ,- , Lis IE'- ' ' ' ' X 3 ' - ' ., '. ., .Zl ' Y , ,, ,. ,.. , , 11- ' V , V 1 --M . , .111 25Q'a,.54,1 f f'0VV'WzWfwV' .Wm -QVf1f:fff1.cf- Y -4 - if exwfu- wffkwxfim ffm X --if.,f!MA7'f ifYffZ' , ' '11- X 3 2, ,. mi' Q,2::,,,,g,ea-1 Al. -ggggzf-' VVVAyVl,Q,43gf-Jgfgf'-- f WfiAf' 1 ,:,V 5' 23 s -4 1. V- .1 ' V2 :A1 k V f , ' V lfwmgw w V:-,fmfffl , Jw., . , .yu- -wie' 'V . . 1 ' rp Kr:.1fv-M-f:c1.m .ff wf:wz:ggrx:'7m:wrgv4.ms '1fn :wa- ' e':Z'P-ffw-'f 'o :-f v .wr f fif h, V 2 VNf2w:w: f: f': 1', J 'hz'if-ww-:ff:.wWwz Vit! 0 Patlerned crfler ils Chicago namesake. Ilze Lillie Irzlernalional has for ils purpose an educalional ezlzibilion Qf pure bred live slock. and provides valuable pracllce for llz.e Universily slack judging leams. Page Four Illllllfffll rind -SUPP!! ,V , , .,, . ..,f MH: X.. .-MVN V. .+V ,-.., , ,, V- ,.x.,ww.x.Ww--,vY1x,., Vy...a.-,ew ,.W,,,:.,,,S2wNK!,,W ,,,, W,.,k,:,,5Wc,QS,,,. 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The .Mecca af' lhe Freshmen is Cap Nighl, when the first year men, afier burning lheir green caps upgn a huge bonfre on llze lower campus, plunge inlo Lake Mendota I0 become immersed in Ihe Varsiliv Spzrzl. Page Four Hundred and Eighl Pago Four Hundred and Ten Graduation does no! SGUFI: lhg siurlenfs corzneclion wilh. I1 is Ablma Maier,-indeed, il marks lhe begznnzngs Qf new bonds and slronger Iles. V Q X wmysq f M' 553355 sgwcksmmw Nmmmm 93 'Mu-5 N w Q mm 'Y-EXW :RJ Q MIVM na, Kwai fx 2 F -.M N-677. Rv' Nwz: V 'I H27 2 ': WZ' 'Sli :MA I ixfljff N9 xf,'?1i5f f W ni ZW' fir v Q W 1 x Ng 5'i'3,'4' yt, 4 JQRJJHW j A Y V., MW' 4 QSEWVW Ma2Q4'22,Vfs,f3f2QV if ff 'i'S!?K!:7M7W'?f Z f W4 ' WE 4 c 2 iw N5 , 1 MW f WQQ1 ff 1 A 115' 'iw Swv '4'f'-,uf , 41-9'4 JM-, ' ' f fgf 'fZ,.4v2H:?..'VW. fA:5z1 1 401 ff? gamma fwl 'TILE ww ,., f fv , 1 7 f fp f JN ff' 'Q Z V' xiiswsm. yf q iiigsz 'fff!7Y'fz9 aiu lfyfiw iff 1 f e x,-NV -- - M- - . : -'s-s51v.,f ..- ., mm .V - , , V - ' h V .. 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Those lazy, delighl ful summer days fnally come when il is pleasanl lo forget the classroom. and I0 seek Mendolrfs haunts- Paqe Foul Hundred and Twelve Q- -. ' 'M z ' . . 1 -ff mama , - , ,,V, . ., , W of 1.14 -Q .jx v,. ,:f,- A w. f 2 ,xc ' K I Y , :J 3 5 Q3 .5 3, ,W .W , G - e ,,,.,, V ,I JN X ,Z 3. -N 6-fy Leif ., - :gg.i 5f, :- ,, . g ' 'A 'Q' g?ff?':.',4,655--wr . 2 ., . Q, L2 'E Q 4 ' --f . . '37 ' H-,ffE.,2.... 5:1 I 1 5. ,4 .,.,.,., V, , I Q V ,. ,,, ., 'fl ,,,.,,.. , ., . . ,, . . ,,,. ,H I ff 5 j. 1 5, '- V- Q' . vi x j,,.5,,.613rff6:i'Y'---- .5 , f f qu. , I, zz 6 M f 0 X , f QQ. ' Q 1 f 2 ' K1 A 1 f e .K A A I V- U Q ,Q Q W 32 My ,A UM ' 'G 5 ,f gf: .1 QM. V.,2,,4f .,., U73 Q, . . Vg? 1 1 In , Y f 4, 7 2 j ., X 5 ' , P., . ,xo y.. dat ,TW .fp 7 QM Q , ,, ! j K a W . f Q A 4, 2, Q . , Q yi , 2 ,. fc ff 7 X, w 5 , A M X A 1 f ,x We 4 yy 7 A, 9213 -if ' f eg ' M , 1 , , Us f Lf 4 5 cj? ,, 'Xp 1 , . ma f yy Q x S Q, + 4 f f my , , f M 0 4 1 ' grief H 'ft t ,.,,, 4-,MA - ' . '+h2 . - V .e :ft -. ' 5 AY- +.f'F,5g.', , - - - A ,713,-7Z1?: ,.59.61b'v . ....... f . V 15.9.1.5 , ' F : - -:e.+.:4f,7, A. .yzqagpa a- , ji-.. --2,444 4'fg:.:gMy. 4.4 24.5. A ,g k A. , .gm x f 4. 41 .Ag f,- -we .f ,W ,U 6 ' .. - ' !kfif:S'4',fA1,, '51-:L .fjf-2! :1:,ITf9f zf5e, '!4,fvJ f y. 2, :xAm,5.,.m3m:,ggmH253A,MXZM 4,.ig..,U5f ,,QQ:fgfZQ To drifl idly in a canoe, io picnic af Sunsel Point, or io dive and swim al one of lhe many piers llzai break IVIendola's shore. Page Four llunrlred and Thirlefn u x C 5 H A5 9? : Ps. am 4 3 41 , F ,, , , -size .. The cool walers of Ure lake, and the many piers provided for balhers cause Menzlola Zo swarm wilh lovers of aquatic sporls. Page Four Hundred and Fourlcen 4 f'Mrx.-..xfwE.,m.. '4 9?xf 4 ' 5' - 1' '- .1' .4eE ' a ?4i'7.-' W W IZ? ., ,..,,....w- W sy - x La A Mp- .3 ur . ' .' - f :' '-dwg .g:- gm, Nw --wif-Ev , ,g :., f-.af fy , .X g Q .QF ovary A .N , A . , .. li, mpg ,N , ,f , H 44 .V .ww xl . 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W ...nm 1 5 3 'ffl 1 'Qs' ' V14 - T H 4 fm ' 2 11 1, Vw' A' Page Four Hundred and Sixteen ' ORGANIZATIONS xf WK, ' 'smkfa k , - , xx ffffx '- S ' FRATE ITI E5 INT ER-F RAT ER N ITY CONFERENCE The Wisconsin I nter-fraternity Conference is an organization composed of one Junior and one Senior from each fraternity in the University. It takes charge of all inter-fraternity athletics. It keeps in touch with the National I nter-fraternity Conference and with its findings. The fraternities derive great benejits from its open forum for the discussion of all matters of vital importance to the Greek letter organizations. MEMBERS SENIORS JUNIORS A. YOUNGBERG . . B. MACQUEEN . . . . J. W. MOULDING . . . H. L. EDWARDS . . HAROLD GROTI-I . . . . H. PERRIN . . . NVILLIAM SALE . F. COSGROVE . . S. L. WALLACE. . FRED PABST . . . STUART THOMPSON . C. M. BOERKE . . . NVELLSLEY D. GRA1' DALE NIERRICK . . B. H. SPEAR . . . L. W. PETERSON . . C. R. HONVARD. . ELMER PRICE . . . LEONARD JOHNSON . GUY E. OHLSON . . FRED GENRICH . . G. FRED BRENVEB . WILLIAM PURNELL . T. D. BARNEY . . . ALBERT J. KNOLLIN E. G. JUSTER . . . ANSLEY B. NTCCONNELL ..... C. P. Mc INNES . . THEODORE GILBERT F. M. TROWBRIDGE J. C. Holbrook. . . GEORGE STOLLEY. . R. S. CHADBOURN . W. G. TRAUB . . . R. M. BETHKE. . . T. G. lVlARSHALL . WESTERN W. PIDCOE . . . . . L. H. GARBER . . . C. BRUEBIMEB . . . LYLE G. PHILLIPS . Page Fou Hundred and Eighteen Acacia ...... Alpha Chi Sigma . . Alpha Delta Phi . . Alpha Gamma Rho . Alpha Pi Delta . . . Alpha Sigma Phi . . . . Alpha Tau Omega . . . . Beta Theta Pi . . . Chi Phi ...... Chi Psi ...... Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Sigma Phi . . Delta Tau Delta . . Delta Upsilon . . . Farm House .... Gamma Tau Beta . Kappa Psi ..... Kappa Sigma .... Lambda Chi Alpha . Phi Beta Pi .... Phi Delta Phi . . Phi DeltaTheta . . Phi Gamma Delta . Phi Kappa Psi . . . Phi Kappa Sigma . Phi Sigma Delta . . Phi,1SigIifi?a Kappa . . Pi Kappa Alpha . . Psi Upsilon ..... Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi . . , . . Sigma Nu ..... Sigma Phi ..... Sigma Phi Epsilon . Tau Kappa Epsilon . Theta Delta Chi . . Theta Chi .... Theta Xi . . Triangle . . Zeta Psi . RALPH BALLIETTE B. HUBBARD DOIIGLAS K. NEYVELL E. R. CHENYE R. G. WILLIAMS E. H. GAUSTAD ROBERT ELY BEN JACKSON HICKNIAN POWELL WVAYNE RAMSEY ALLAN W. WVALTER G. A. HUSEBY LEE EDWARDS WALTER H. PORTH U. P. NIEYER H. A. PINKERTON N. J. KELLMAN THOMAS MELHAM AUSTIN STIBBE CECIL F. DULL WALLACE BARR J. M. LUNNEY DON NEWCOMB J. ALEXANDER WALTER PFISTER A. SCHEINFELD C. L. ASCHENBRENNER WAYNE lVlORSE J ABIES STEWART J , XV. LONGSTAFF H. C. BONING LEE lVlCCANDLESS A. G. HALLINE M. C. STEFFEN LESLIE A. HILL E. P. lVl'EAD B. F. HEALD J. W. SMART J. C. lVlACKIE ALLAN PARK FRATERNITIES In lhe order of lheir eslablishmemf at the Universily. PHI DEL1'A TIIETA .... BETA TIJETJK PI . . PHI ISAPPA Psi . . CHI PSI .... SIGMA CHI .... DELTA UPSILON . . DEI.TA TAU DELTA . , PHI GAMMA IJELTA . . THETA DEI,'F.A CHI . . PSI UPsILoI-4 .... KAPPA SIGMA. . . PHI KAPPA SIGMA. . SIGMA NU ...... ALPHA DEL'l'A PHI . . . SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. . . DELTA KAPPA EPSILON . . ACACIA ........ ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . SIGMA PHI ..... ALPHA SIGMA PHI . ZETA Psi ..... 620 North Lake Street 622 Mendota Court 289 W est Gilman Street 150 Iota Court 630 North Lake Street 611-44 North Frances Street 16 Mendota Court 521 North Henry Street 22 Langdon Street 222 Lake Lawn Place 621 North Lake Street 614 Langdon Street 625 North Henry Street 64,0 North Henry Street 627 North Lake Street 524 North Henry Street 615 North Lake Street 225 Lake Lawn Place , 106 Prospect Avenue 619 North Lake Street 1041- Langdon Street ALPHA GAMMA RHO . . . . .1726 Hoyt Street CHI PHI ...... . . 200 Langdon Street PHI SIGMA KAPPA. . . . 211 Langdon Street THETA Xi ...... . . 168 Prospect Avenue LAMBDA CHI ALPHA . . . . 148 West Gilman Street TAU KAPPA EPSILON . . . . 619 Mendota Court THETA CHI ..... . . 1410 West Gilman Street DELTA SIGMA PHI. . . . 210 Landgon Street PI Ii,-KPPA ALPHA . . . . . 131 Langdon Street SIGMA PHI EPSILON . . . . 13114 West Gorham Street DELTA CHI .... 150 Langdon Street PHI SIGMA DELTA. . 209 Bernard Court PHI KAPPA .... 407 Wisconsin Avenue ALIF MIDI .... 1530 University Avenue BETA CHI SIGMA . . 609 North Lake Street PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES PHI DELTA PHI, Legal. . . ALPHA CHI SIGMA, Chemical PHI ALPHA DELTA, Legal . TRIANGLE, Civil Engineering GAMMA TAU BETA, Medical PHI BETA PI. Medical . . KAPPA PSI, Pharmaceutical ALPHA PI DEIJTA, Commerce FARM HOUSE, Agriculture . DELTA PI DELTA, Journalism PHI CHI, Medical 616 North Lake Street 625 North Frances Street 271 Langdon Street 438 North Frances ,Street 5 Langdon Street 11,16 North Carroll Street 115 Ely Place 313 North Mills Street 309 North Mills Street 118 West Johnson Street Page Four Hundred and Nznclccn Pa LQ A 1 .fy-.'fffG'1gKlfw :'fHuWs.f-'iiyg .4 ,WM ' ff Q 9 Founded, Miami University, 181118 Wisconsin, Alpha, 1857 Number of Chapters, 88 HOMER D. ADKINS BENJAMIN BEECHEB LUCIAS T. GOULD CLIFFORD EDWARD BISCHOFF GEORGE FREDERICK BREWER HENRY JOHN COERPEB, JR. JOHN EUSTACE DONALDS SIDNEY MILLARD BOYDEN EDWARD HAINES CURRIER ROBERT WAYNE HARVEY PHILIP FOX IQIILBERT ROBERT AXELANDER CURTIS CLARKE ALBERT AUSTIN THOMAS WHEEIJER CARPENTER PHI DELTA THE 620 Norlh Lake Street. TA MEMBERS IN FACULTY ARNOLD BENNETT LIALL FRED HODGES GUSTUS LUDVVIG LARSON MEMBERS IN UNIVEBS SENIORS LAWRENCE W II LIAM GREGORY LYLE CLIFFORD LIARVEY EARL JOHN HESEDIAN CLARENCE WILLIAM IVICINTOSH JUNIORS ROLAND BENJAMIN KEYS J ULIEN INJANDELERT LUNNEY ROBERT EMMET M ORONEY IVIARTIN EMMETT NIORAN SOPHOM ORES DELOIT FAST ESTES FRESH M EN KENNETH BAIRD COATS FRANCES LLOYD DAvIEs CHARLES B. STEVENS EDWARD ROSE MAIRER FLETCHER ANDRENW' PARKER WILLIAM DAvIsON STOVALL ITY JOHN RO DGERS NiORONEY PHILIP EDNVARD O,NEIL STANLEY MARTIN RYAN CHARLES Ni.-XRVIN TRINNIER LIOBART CAN DEE PRICE JOHN HUSTON SCHEE GEORGE Ni.-XCKENZIE ULIBREIT WILLIAM AIIEXANDEIK W ERRELL DELBERT Home .PAIGE ROBERT CHAPPELL SALSBURY GEORGE HAROLD SCOFIELD Ryan I-Ieseman C. Harvey Paige MOI L h K B . - Estes Currier Lunney Curtis Donald? OSJ. Moroiigg R. Hggriicgl O'1iiQiiwer Coerper Schee NVerrell Bischoli' Price Umbrcil R. Moroney ge Four Hundred amid TIDenty E My I L ..., 4 ,. W ov, , 4, 2:1500 , , 1 Q4.:.ffmf4Ly:mie:::dd2ziI:,f '. v f if E- 93' GJ I I Vw .4163 I I Bon o 5 V Z W fm Founded, Miami Universily. 1839 Number ol' Chnplers, 81 JOHN ADAMS BALLARD CHARLES HENRX' BUNTING JOHN ENGLISH EYSTER GORDON SCOTT FLUCHER BET THETA PI M EMBEBS IN FACULTY WVILLIAM ELLEHY LEONARD ERNEST LINDSTROM CURTIS NE'F'FElS FREDERICK AUSTIN OGG DONALD LITTLEJOHN H.AI,X'EIiSON ELBERT SMITH COBB EUGENE THEODORE IEDXYARDS VALDO OLIN ELLINGSON FREDERICK W. GENRICYI ERNVIN WVALTER BL.-KTTER MARION EUGENE CLARK THOMAS TURBIEAU COXON JAMES LYMAN BRIXDER FRANK WILLIABI COSGROVE FREDERICK JOHN ELLISON HAROLD JACK BENTSON ADOLPH BISMARK C.kRD BOCK EZRA JENNINGS CRANE ROBERT LI.-ARMON B.-XRNETT W.ARREN WNESLEY BARNETT JAMES FRANCIS AUGUSTINE PYRE ROBERT E. RIETTGER JOI-IN RICHARDS ERNEST BROXVN SKINNER MEMBERS IN If NIVERSITY GRADUATES MILTON R. l4l.AR'l PHILIP Fox LA FOLLETTE WILI,IJX5I LAT!-IROP ROBERT BRUCE MCCOI' CARL PIONYAHD FELTAIAN CORRINGTON CALHOUN GILL HARRY BURGH LYFORD WILLIAM ALEXANDER FIELD, JOHN BERTIKAM FITZGERALD TRYGVE GIJNDERSEN SO KENNETH STUART GARDNER RIXLPH GREGORX' GILL CHARLES LESLIE HIKYDEN FULTON HERMAN LEBERMAN CLIFFORD SIMPSON NOLTE CHARLES HOYGE NIERRIMAN ROBERT STERLING PALMER GI,lCNN D. ROBERTS RUSSELL DEFO REST SCIIO ENFELD SENIORS CHANDLER OS BORN 'IIHOXIAS LOXVELL ST.-XVRUM HAROLD WESTLIKKE TAYLOR JUNIORS JR. CI-IARLIB ARTHUR INMANI CLARENCE ARTHUR POST HIKROLD CLARE SMITH PHOMORES RES BENJAMIN FRANK JACKSON HOWARD BERT!-IANI LYMAN STEXVART HORN MANSON HMEN DONALD ARTHUR POLLOCK JAMES NVYNNE SUTTON WVISCOIISIII Alpha Pi, 1873 622 Mendota Courl, GILBERT SNIITH PIOYVARD LESLIE SMITH LEONARD SEWELL SMITH MAXWELL AUSTIN SMITH WVILLIAN! S. SXIITH NORIIAN RICHARD TORRISON FREDERICK RASLOO USHER CLARENCE H. WOODXIANSEE JAMES PARK WOO ns HERBERT HALLIDIKY TAYLOR JR GILBERT EXIANUEL WARD HOLLAND FRANKLIN WILLIAMS LOUIS FRANK MEEK RO BERT CLI EEOR D NETHERCUT STANTON EUGENE 'TAYLOR ALEXANDER VAUGHN WINCI-IELL PROCTOR THOMAS WRIGHT Fitzgerald Ellison Stavrum Woods Brader XVilliams Nethercut Field Blauer R. Gill Cosgrove Lyman Jackson Inman Bock Gunderson Hayden Meek Ward Clark Osborn . Manson Bentsou Post C. Gill Lyforrl Coxon Feltman SmILlI Pllflc Four Hundl-erl and ,Fwpnly One MZ sf 5 v A gf' :nI':cfw:'f A 4wiwzwwv-f?1M?fXfw M, A .f ' N . ,' A1 x , . I5 7 V4 -few wkrwn VW 37 5- Founded, Washington Sz Jefferson College, 1852 ' WiSCOrlSil1, YAlIJh21, 1375 Nllmber of Chapters, 47 28 East Gilman Street, PERCY MILLARD DAWSON EVERETT HALE TYLER DAVIS BARNEY NEWELL STEPHEN BOARDMAN GEORGE CHRISTIAN BUNGE JOHN ALEXANDER, JR. CHARLES FAYETTE BELLONVS HAROLD CLARK BUELL CLARE SMITH BRADLEY. JR. EMERSON DUNCAN MCNEIL, JR. EUGENE FLYNNE CRAWFORD RENE JAMES HEMINGWAY PHI KAPPA PSI MEMBERS IN FACULTY ROBERT CALVIN FRENCH ARTHUR SIPERRY PEARSE HENRY WHITECOMB SWEENEY MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS FREDERICK NEWTON BUSSEY ROBERT CREGO LEWIS J UN IORS EZRA DORIVKER CRISTMAN KNIGHT DICK FARWELL THOMAS MCMASTER NILES THOMAS OCHSNER NUZUM SOPHOMORES PAUL HENRY IVIUENZBERG BENTLEY SMITH FRESHMEN DONALD CUTHBERT MACARTHUR CURTIS BENEDICT IVIORSELL JOSEPH EDVVARD RYAN FRANKLIN PERRY SHOCREY STEPHEN BARNHEARDT REICHERT JOHN ALBERT SENNEFF, JR. FRANCIS EVERETT YERLY CARL RICHARD VONNEGUT ROBERT CLAY NNI-IITTEN IJARRY DEMPSEY- REID FREDERICK ALONZO TIKGGART Ryan Buell Sweeney Blrnge Alexander MacArthur Farwell Bradley Morsell Cr1SLman Hemlngway -Barney Nlles Shockey Lewis Bellows Taggart. Bussey Smith Nuzum Reld Sennefl' Yerly Boardman Crawford Vonnegut McNeil Page Four Hundredand Tweniy-Two W l I A ,- -'-- 151' gf . A ' , Af : 1 I zf- If ,1,.f,5f 'AAS It . lff,. 'V fjf.: ' '21 ' ' 'I-I J: I V . I . I.. ' I ' A 2 ' I J A Founded, Union College. 18-L1 Wisconsin, Alpha, Iota, 1878 Number of Chapters. 22 150 Iota Court CHI PSI , MEMBERS IN FACULTY EUGENE HUGH BYRNE CHARLES FOSTER SMITH FRANK GAYLORD I'IUBB.-'IRD HORACE KENT TENNEY GRADUATES EGBERT BIRD BUNDY LEANDER WOOD FERGUSON EDNVARD ANIGHT HOOKER ROBERT IRVINE BLAKEMAN LAWRENCE WILLIANI CRAMER T ORY BYERS FOI' BYRON BARXVIG, JR. WILRUR JOSEPH EDDY FRANCIS FAVILL BOWMAN, JR. EVERETT MORTIMER BRIDGE CLARE WALTER BURKE EDGAR ANDRES RYGH MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS .ARTHUR IFIOUSTON KINNAN ORA RICHARD MCNIUBRX' BERNHARD MEYEIX MAUTZ, J FREDERICK AUGUST PABST JUNIORS EUGENE A. GILMOHE, JR. THEODORE FAXON HALL LAVVRENCE GERALD KOCH A. CLAYTON RECTOR CHARLES FREDERICK RAND RICHTER DONALD CHARLES SLICHTER RUDOLF PABST WVAYNE RAMSAY EDMUND PENNEL STROTHIVLAN RICHARD STANISLAUS MCCAFFERY, JR. SOPHOMORES KENDALL ADAMS ELSOM JOHN DIKAKE FITZGERALD EDWARD C. HEGLER FRESHMEN ARNOLD GEORGE BUR JOHN B. CASSODAY EDWARD ELLSWORTH DYE GORDON BRADLEY WANZER HORACE ORTON WETMORE RAYMOND MILLS LULL PHILIP HENRY N IEDERMAN FRANK PI-IISTER STEGEMAN NVILLIAM OGIIVIVE VME AW... ,..,. ., . l Ferguson Eddy Wetmore Koch Strothman Mautz Foy McCaiTery Blakeman Elsom R. Pabst Kinnan F. Pabst Cramer Ramsay Wauzer Hall Richter Slichter Fitzgerald Gnlmore Page Four Hundred and Twenty-Three .., . A 'O . . . , I . , A ., lf I ,. .J . R' 'Ri ' w h y? dy? 1 5, -3 J ' 1475 -A' 1 . f,- : N ' m -A-. W if ,AA mf R 'W'ff'- f'?'H'I ' f ...,. . ' - 0 ' F 'f'7i ' '.f1L- 59141 23513-' f 'F 15- 1-i i-iw T'-IR A 1' TX' I . iw:-Af' I A 5 I - I , '. .sniff- QT:- .. A '.i7 -RJ va 42 , I ' ,, ,R 1. S .,.,.. ' 1.3 V. 1 A4 Ptgifwgg ,-:.y:'Q:'1:,u, ::1:r::5.:.M. ' ..-f' .- Engl 3,1 W ., .I gag-,1,A,. viral-f , g W f ' A A . If M , I ' -' - I f' --:5afI:a.:3I-Q -' - -.2 N :.:,..-11'--.KY-1 I N5 35, 4 , 135 -- .,. f1 Ei , ' Evil-.1-..J 3 M - QRS ' J' . I . rig!! , I 1: - 1 -Q. A.-,. . ,I ' . A . .A ,- - - nz, .: ,1.gq,.., ,- . 'g r I II, 7? ' ' QS: 1. A - ' , A? - -' .- -' .I f gg W 11-:ref '-2: 5-A: A .R A 4 7 :---. 4' Ai. . 'f - I 1 E4 ' 2 ' .- 7 f' '. 'E-'Sri ' 121- Z I . ' - we -' 1z--..A1,42!2'-:Z2'a9..,..,':., A' ' A A 1 1:10 f 1 ff f- , A --W . f JP SEER? ,wa - Af, N Q.. ... .- 54,-S, ff.,.-I rp-Af? It 43 g ll :I - gmgdy- -1. 1 Irs? 1 J 'nf I fx Ei ' ' :mimi-f - '2-4:1 f . . . - -5 .. if .A , - , f V' f IA: JT- I : 1-ii' viii: ,. 'I-:v1S,f44ff1T f-' 'A HA,.wl-'f '+w.,.1.:,-.5-MAWAQWXP-A, A,1'12 -+1-. 'I-' .f ., ,- 2- .,,.- f,'.Q.,7:1:3 I. - , - -I . +21 ' V--N +V - - - - 'w s ww A . .f'zs.-'W:---.-1--:-:- 'mf . ,. I , . - ,A Aj,-Am'-f ,,..,-fi .. . ' I, -I ' I f . Sw A ' ' A -' I I 1 I ' ' .- Af... fiixiiiiiizx- 2452 ' -' ,:.i 'G 4' gmfw, '17 TT ' f' '?94,4:Q.w:c-z-4- - T ..I:3-2522! I f . - -1 ,Z .. .E U V. .x,..:w-A-R.-f, .,.. ,.L,,- A., .,.. A .. .....,. ...f..,. ,....fA7 -...MQ Founded, Miami University, 1855 Number of Chapters, 76 ALEXAIVDER G. FITE CARL EVANS BRONSON HENRY W. CAPEN HUMPHREY EARL DESMOND MORD MAUGHAS BOGIE HERBERT EDWARD BONING, JR. GEORGE ALLEN DORSEY WILLIANI GOULD DORWABD PAUL VICTOR GANGELIN CURTIS F. MOSS DAVID C. ATWOOD WILLIAM J. BONING THOMAS H. CARSON SIGMA CHI MEMBERS IN FACULTY LEWELLYN B. PAURSONS CHARLES SUMNER SLICHTER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS REGINALD WILLIAM GARSTANG JOSEPH CARELTON HOLBROOK JUNIORS HALBERT WENHAM HOARD ARTHUR MARQUETTE JOHN MOKREJS ROBERT HENRY OLMSTED JOHN OTTO PAULY SOPI-IOMORES FRESHMEN WILLIAM M. DAVIES MERRILL B. ESTERLINE DONALD G. IHRIG JACK A. LARSH Wisconsin, Alpha Lambda. 1884- 630 North Lake Sueet HENRY W. TABOR NORMAN LINCOLN JOHNSON CHARLES DAVIS ROHR EARL ROGERS TUTTLE BURKE H. ROBISON ERIC VERNON RHENSTRONI WALTER EDXVARD SCHULKE BYRON FERRIS STORY W. RAYMOND TRAUT HARRY' LEE MCMURRY ' JOHN GILEREATH XNILLIAM J. PAULY RAYMOND J. STIPEK ADDISON B. YOUMANS McMurry W. Boning Ca so Om I1 H. R ' R I-A . ' Tull,le Desmond Garstang r Soar!!! reaHOlbrook onmgronsor? luboliflokreigh Paugijpek Y Capen Traut Paul Schulke Story .Eslerline RhensLrom Dorward Oumans Fourness Olmsted Bogie Atwood Ihrlg Gangelin Dorsey Moss Page Four Hundred and Twenty-Four I Founded, XVillizIIns College, 1834- Numher Ol' ChRpLers, -1-8 CHARLES ELNIER ALLEN WILLAIXD GROSVENOR BLEYER HAROLD CORNELIUS BRADLEY WILLIARI CAIRNS JAMES CROVVELL CHERRY GEORGE DEWEY FRANK JAMES WARREN JOHNSON HOWARD RIDLEY COAIBACRER KENNETH STANLEY FAGG EDWARD JOSEPH FRAWLEY ROBERT WILMER BLACK CHARLES JAMIESON CHAMBERS JOHN F LADOES MARSHALL DIEBOLD GEORGE BOYINGTON GRAHAM VALENTINE CARL GUENTHER WELTON WINANS HARRIS DELTA UPSILON MEMBERS IN FACULTY NNAYLAND JOHNSON CHASE GEORGE CONSERVE FISKE EDWARD HALL GARDNER EDWARD KREXIERS CARL LEAIAI MARUGG MEMBERS IN UNIV ' L SENIORS XVILLIANI RICH XRD KELLETT LELAND LEWIS KARAS DALE MERRICK ROBERT PAUL MACDONALD JUNIORS GEORGE EDDY GARDNER WALTER HENRY PORTH SOPHOMORES CHARLES C. JENSCH JAMES GORDON MACGREGOR FRESHMEN WILMARTH JACKMAN ERNEST BOWMAN KELLOGG WILLIAM MCCORKLE S- 614 North Frances Strec,L FRANK OTIS REED GEORGE CLARK SELLERY WALTER MCMYNN SVIITH BENJAMIN WARNER SNOW RSITY CHARLES SEYMOUR NASON LESTER ADOLPH PASGH EDWIN A. STEPHENSON KART, REYNOLDS , RALPH KENNETH SCHEINPFLUG MYRON RAY STEVENS ARTHUR RICHARD SAARI GEORGE CLARK SELLERY, JR. SAMUEL DEAN THOMPSON D. W. HERBERT MACKINNON GEORGE ALBERT MUNKWITZ CLEMENT KINGSLEY PHILLIPS GILBERT SCHYIITZ Gardner Saari Cherry Merrick Black F rawley Reynolds A Kellctt Combacker Frank Nason Scheinpfl ug Karas Fladoes Thompson Sellery Fagg M. Stevens 'Chambers Pasch Johnson Por th J ensch Stephenson Page Four f1llfldl'Pd and Twcnly Five .uzwf Iv 'iv' 'A 'W ,f if . LW . H, A Wisconsin, 1885 I ' Jvf If -21 I ATA I iNJ'h af ,scam-S f' . . 1 ' .H , fi , A i 3? I If 4- -, .- Q L. , ,. G, R--w, .- ' ' - 1 ' ,, A I Founded, Bethany College, 1859 Number of Chapters, 65 FRANKLIN CASE DAVIES WILL BENDER GNAGI WELLSLEY DOBSON GRAY HENRY MOORE ANDING GEORGE WALLACE BARTLETT, GERALD RICHARD GORMAN ALLAN PENFIELD HENDRY RICHARD CHUGAR ATKINSON JAMES CHURCHILL BAKER WILLIAM NATHANIEL BLINKS JOSEPH MCLAIN BRICKER J Wisconsin, Beta Gamma, 1888 ' 16 Mendota Court DELTA TAU DELTA MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS EDNVARD VINCENT HfXNLEY WALTER VVILLIAM HEWITT HCJRACE PERCIVAL HOUGEN ELLIOTT Fox KISER JUNIORS VIVIEN LYNN EDWVARDS SOPHOMOPIES FRANK WEIR REEVES FRESHMEN FREDERICK CHARLES BRIGHTLY, JR. JOHN DELOS DENISON, JR. JAMES BOWMAN HIPPLE EUGENE HERMAN KRAEMER FRANCIS CHARLES MILLER HARELL ALEXANDER MURDOCK DALIES JOSHUA OYSTER GEORGE BAUMANN GATES DON.-XLD JACKSON lVlOREY AUGUST VINCENT STEGEMAN DONALD AUGUST STOCK FRED CHARLES NICCORD JOHN lVlORBIS RILEY OSCAR HJALBIER BIPPE OSCAR NIONTY TECKEMEYER ALBERT GRAY MATHER Anding Murdock Teckemeyer Gnagi Smgeman Bricker Reeves Mather Hippie ALI-Iinson Edwards Brightly Baker Hendry McCord. I Blinks Hewint Gray Hougen Oyster Rippe Kiser Stock Davles Morey Hanley Riley Denison Gates Miller Gorman Page Four Hundred and 'Twenly-Six A 63 6 ff 5 1 if AZ M 'vi 0' Jn J? I 4 Il A 5 3 'V kj 9019 - - ' ' f f 1 .W Q.. I, Izzy, A aww 4 gf ' , . f I - : 1 M ': ' . .A f f-. , ,ff ff ' ,. A ff , 2 2' f I , , ' ' g . f - ft 1 . f .M 5, W- rf' 14 A4 A., Zy y f R, A ' D: :,.'5H..f'z'7 ' 4 ,, Ze I f A . 5, 1, K P -. . - t if 112 fl .I gg .I 4 . 1 -I I avi va If ,W I1 wg. - fa, Vs Wg M . , ,, , 9, ' f .A , ' 1 ,Q- S Z i 'J ,I , V ff . , A,-1 'Q 1, if X' ' ,YZ .sgfw ac. I 2 '1971'-b??', 'P 1... Number of Chapters, 611- AXEL E. BERGGREN A. G. HINALAN ARLIE P. JULIEN HOWARD G. PIYMER G. EUGENE ANDERSON DONALD M. BAILEY CARL F. CEASER ROMAN W. BOLLENBECK CHARLES K. CARROLL IVIORTON C. FROST RUDOLPH L. HOHLFELD ARTHUR H. ARDIEL BURTON G. BILLINGS FARNHAM CLARK LAWSON M. ADAMS GORDON AREY MILLARD BUMP F. WILLARD GRIFFITH Founded. Washington Sz Jell'ersOn College, 184-8 Wisconsin' Mu, 1893 PHI GAMMA DELTA MEMBERS IN FACULTY WILLIAM S. KINNR OTTO L. KOWALIQE EDWARD A. Ross 521 North Henry Street ALEXANDER N. NVINCHELL JOHN W. VVILLIAMS BEN W. ROWLAND MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES SENIORS HENRY O. DIIOTNING KARL V. HOHLFELD GEORGE M. PARKER JUNIORS ORLEY C. HOLT JAMES T. LACEY DONALD C. N'EVl'COMB HERBJERT R. PRESTON SOPHOMORES RICHARD W. FARNSXVORTH HORACE R. HYMER FRESHMEN DANIEL O. HEAD EDWIN A. HESS ATHOL F. ODELL CLAYTON B. ROBERTS ASSOCIATES PHILLIP F. JOHNSON TIMOTHY H. KRAFT LOUIS R. MANN THOMAS HV. POND WVTLLIAM H. PURNELL STANLEY E. XVELCH GORTON RITCHIE EDWIN W. SANBORN JOHN H. SARLES LLOYD R. TAYLOR AI.BERT F. MARTIN RICHARD G. PRITZLAFF MARION E. STRAIN NORNIAN F. SIX NEIL F. TUTTLE VVILLIAM H. WARD LEROY L. ROBERTSON ' Anderson Drotning Hohlfeld Strain Clark Hymer Ceaser Newcomb Martin Ritchie Parker Lacey Ardiel Bollenheck F rOsL Sarles Pritzlah' Preston Purnell Bailey Sanborn FamsworLh Billings Welch Pond Taylor Holt Page Four Hundred and Twenfy-Seven I QAX . ,fsfbf w 5 9 als-3 .- 5515 N95 , ' Sl 1 ll '11 1212 32522 I, AER ll, I 2 ,I Y A-' .,, w ' A , m f .,.1.1 .:,,, -Mgeeefz... .,,Y,.,, K I .W Founded. Union College 1347 Number Ol' Chapters, 29 STEPHEN IVIOULTON BABCOCK CHARLES WILLIAM RUSSELL HERBERT STANLEY MANSFIELD PHILLIP P. N OLTE THOMAS GEORGE MARSHALL ROY LAVERNE FRENCH ARTHUR HUNTINGTON BOYLAN FORDYCE E. TUTTLE JOSEPH THOMAS DELFOSSE, JR, DOUGLAS NELSON GIBSON ARNOLD J ARVIS JOHN J. HOLLISTER Wisconsin, Sigma Deuuzron 1895 22 Langdon Street THETA DELTA CHI MEMBERS IN FACULTY HONVARD BAILEY DOKE JAMES HOLLAND BALLANTINE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS HOWARD MELBOURNE SHARP BURTON HENRY WHITE WILLIAM F. KOCH JUNIORS EDWIN MEAD RICHARD FORD GIBSON HARRINGTON G. YOST SOPHOMORES WELLS FOSTER ANDERSON VAN DYKE PARKER FRESHMEN EDWARD P. BAILLIE DAX'TON RICHARD MEAD LEO JOSEPH FEDERER OLIVER W ENDEL REWEY ROY PHILLIP KNOLL ISAAC JAMES GESME ROBERT HART SIRES JAMES KING GIBSON EDGAR WILLIANI HABIGHORST HIARRX' BURNETT BURNS HARRX' CAMERON COOK ROBERT EDWARD HILBRANT Mansfield Marshall Sykes E. Mead Tuttle Anderson Rewey Gesme French Russell Boylan Nolte YOSL Federer Gibson VVhILe Koch Sharp Gibson Knoll D. R. Mead Page Four Hundrrfd and Tufenly-Eighl 'J' .r-Q, T T A 5 ,,, ,gf 4 WWE .GW LA .:'?Tf?4 1 A . ,,', W Founded. Union College, 1833 Number ol' Chapters. 26 WILLIAM STANLEY MARSHALL MAX M ASON JOHN DAVIS BABCOCK GEORGE ALEXANDER BAUMAN EDWARD DEXTER BROWN WELLS FRANCIS CARBERRY EDWIN JAMES CHAPMAN STERLING DONALD EWALD THEODORE JVJARKLEY GILBERT INIOBRIS ADAM BELL CHARLES BAI.LARD BREAUX THEODORE TAGGERT BROYVN BERTRAND HERRIOK DOYON JAMES CORNISH BOLTON PHILIP EDWIN DENU WII.LIAM LOGAN FENLEY HARLEY WALKER FORBES JOHN ALLEN HAGER PSI UPSILON , 'V l 'IL' A D. MEMBERS IN FACULTY JULIUS EMIIJ OLSON EDWARD THOMAS OWEN MEMBERS IN UN IVEBSITY Collegf' Qf Lau' DUDLEY 1'IOPKINS DAVIS SENIORS IJORACE ALBERT DUBOIS STEVENS GOULD FRANK WINCHESTER GRAY VVILLIAM BRUCE NIAINLAND JUNIORS WILLIAM VILAS PIANKS MAURICE TIENRY M CCAFFREY SOPHOMOR ES CHARLES STEWART GOODYEAR VVILLIAM FOSTER INGRAHAM, JR BENJAMIN HUGHES PEARSE FRESHMEN WALTER ALDMOND HAGIEIK HENRY LIUNTINGTON PIAMILTON ROBERT LAWRENCE HARMON JAMES WARRINGTON LYONS, JR. NEAL HOWARD MACNICHOI. JOHN KENNE'FH NIOORHEAD JOHN JUERGEN PIEINKING JOHN M CMYNN NVILLIAMS FREDBICK LEVVIS SPERRY PIENRY IJARNDEN NOBLE E PIARVEY BRONVN PIGGOTT JAMES BEEVE STEVVART JOSEPH MARTIN POWERS JOHN CHESIVEY STURTEVANT ROBERT REESE THOMPSON THOMAS ROBERT WALL NORRIS GOODHUE MURPHY JOHN RINGLING NORTH ALBERT GEORGE SCHMEDEMAN ROBERT MCKEE THOMAS EDWIN CHESTER WITWER Wisconsin, Rho, 1896 222 Lake Lawn Place Page Four Hundred and Tu enly Nzne I I ' A 4' f M 12 55 ' yi' .. A A ' ' R . zf v 1' ? wifi Af- Founded, University of Virginia, 1869 Number of Chapters, 91 SCOTT HOLLAND GOODNIGHT LEIGHON CHARLES BORDEN JOHN HERSCHEL BOWLES ROBERT JAMES CURRY MARTIN PAUL BELOW JOHN WILLIAM BLATTNER CHARLES WENDELL BONESTEEL JOHN CHURCH CORNELIUS WILLIAM MCH.iBD GARDNER DOUGLAS WASHINGTON ALLARD JOHN ROBERT HENKEL OWEN STANHOPE HITCHINS HENRY AUGUST MEYERS CLARENCE DONALD MORRISON HOWARD COLBY MORTON KAPPA SIGMA MEMBERS IN FACULTY Wisconsin, Beta Epsilon 1898 621 North Lake Street WILLIAINI HENRY LIGHTY MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS VVILLIAM EMERY HAWLEY HAROLD RUDOLPH LEE EARL KINGSLEY LOVERUDE OTTO MARTIN RITZENTHALEB J UNIORS GEORGE LOVVELL GEIGER DELWIN CHARLES JACOBUS LLOYD MARTIN JOHNSON EVERETT WARD JONES EUGENE DAVID KELLY THOMAS WALTER MELI-IAM SOPHOMORES RUSSELL J OHNSTONE IRISH WILLIAM JOHN MORRISON EDWARD FALK POSER F RESHMEN STACY NVELDON O,BRIEN JACK FRANCIS PAYNE GUISERD IVIERRILL SUNDT PERCY ODIN SUNDT ROBERT LEROY WILEY EARL W. IVIILLER ELBIER EHLERS PRICE EDYVIN ALLWORTH REEVE GUSTAVUS TUCKERMAN, JR HARRY' JAMES VAN ORNUM JACOB THOMAS REED HORACE VVILLIAM RISTEEN IVIARSHALL HENRY SMITH WALTER GORDON PERRY STEVEN HARRIS POLASKI FREDERICK FALK POSER Melham Reeve Blattner Price Ir'sh J R' L H 1 B 1 Hitchins Borden P. Sundt Miller I Van Orntiiriris Ritzenlihgfcgi' J acobaiig eyGeiger Oneswe Gardner Kelly Loverude Wiley G. Suudt Bowles Tuckerman Curry Heukle Page Foul' Hundred and Thiriy IJIMM 5 ff? N I Q-,'b1J 7S,fffJ ff KY rx- OAL, RE' Rf M f II 1561 Wi ff WN Q RAB? ffl' 'MA 11,2 Yo 4 62531135 ' '. 'nw' 111 1 3 j'?'3:w if Q-. - 'WTI' 'QQ' 3 , ages . ' 4 11 . F luff . 4 , Q , A-3 Fifa, ' . .1 ju. . I L, ..1:rf' f 'jgf'-Bf1p:.zwvf- -w - A- 1 1 1 'L' ' -' :f .,:,.'-L-' iw-,,. 7 :L I E l l , J I 'Q ' T , ll , 1 l A5 in W Y i 5 l 4 f fi gl , A xg' x X 22 Q I A .I l i, f . -A .1 'l ',u f ' A ' iw A , Z '. , 4? i l' J. 'Rig aff ' l sw? 11:9 5 . + gh 1363, I I, ,L . A, . 4'-:K T... H. 'xii nf- I ,f .N Founded, Universihy of Pennsylvania, 1850 Number of Chapters, 31 PHI KAPPA MEMBERS IN FACULTY Wisconsin, Alpha Theta, 1901 614. Langdon Street SIGMA HENIIH' KELLER, JR. JOHN XVARNEIK TAYLOR JAMES WEBSTER WATSON LOUIS ERHARDT REBER VVARREN WEAVER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY Graduale STENER BENJAMIN HALY'ERSON SENIORS GRAHAM BATTLES CLARENCE ALBERT BRANDT CARL JOHN ENGELHARDT AVILLIAM FREDERICK ENGELHAR DT EDWARD RICHARD FELBER CECIL DEXVITT BRODT ELTON SPRECHER HEASLER WALTER STANLEY KIDDER HARRY MATHEWS FAULL CHARLES ANTON Fox , HENRY CLAY HOLLENBECK HAROLD HARVEY HOLMES HENRY P. EHRLINGER WALLING VAN VLIET F Ox H1ERRI'TT ALBERT GILES HOLLAND FRANCIS KELLOGG KENNETH MAXWELL KINNEAR STUART CROCKER KNILANS J UN IORS HERBERT HENRY BROCKHAUSEN WALTER JOHN PFISTER VVILLARD CARLYLE SUMNER SOPHOMORES ROWLAND GRAHAM JONES NORMAN KENNETH LILLIS CALVIN CURTIS OAKFORD DICK RODDEWIG BOLFE BIGELOW SAWTELLE FRESHMEN FRANK A. FREEMAN RALPH ELLIOTT LARSON CARL LOUIS NEUMEISTER THEODORE EUGENE STARR OTTO LEONARD SICKERT IRVING LEOPOLD WOODHOUSE HUBERT FORCE TOWNSEND ARTHUR W. TROST SHELDON REDLIN WOLFE ALFRED W. SCHNEIDER JULIUS RAYMOND SHILS LAWRENCE M. SWVEENEY ALBERT SEMAN TUCKER BERT M. HILBERTS KARL A. NOBLE Holmes Larson Knollin Hollenbeck Knilans Stark Brodt Sumner. Felber Kidder. A Sawtelle Sickert. Brockhausen Roddewig Jones Kinnear Tucker Kellogg Gxles Halverson Llllxs Pfister Battles Oakford Townsend W. Engelhardt Brandt C. Engelhardt NeumeIsLer Sweeney Faull Page Four Hundred and Thirly-One J IN T- 42: -FA AR: , W3?33'f' :H 1 1 A . f ., A. wx E :NR NI XS xN K X S SR A A K:-QA L u ' Av A .AR R .Q , A 'QM :T , I , ' 1 - U, -'Ag ,. .g g 'SNS Rv QATA- SAA-gs ie. 315: Aw Ax A wiv :QA 2- ' ' 3:9 'ti . N,-AAAIQ 1, Q- I 5514 is A- A i f f fiajlgl: 'E fr i I xx f 1 Founded, Virginia Military II1SLiLul,e. Number of Chapters. 83 SIVIILEY BLANTON GEORGE ANTHONY CHANDLER WILLIAM OTIS HOTCHKISS LELAND LUNDY BOOTH ROBERT LEWVIS BOSWVORTH HUBERT LESTER DUECHER JOSEPH JACKSON HOPKINS VVILLIS MOOIKE FANNING RUSSELL CONNVELL BOND EVERETT IIARVEY CROZIER SETH IIARVVOOD GREGORY DAVID OSBURN FARRAND VVIALTER ALBERT FRAUTSCHI PHILLIP DRENV FREEMAN HARRY SYLVESTER KEARBY GUSTAV HENRY KOCH GORDON ROWLEY LINDSAY 1869 SIGMA NU XvlSCOllSlI1, Gamma Lambda, 1909 625 NOI'Lh Henry SLreeL MEMBERS IN FACULTY I FRANCIS CRAIG KRAUSKOPF DANIEL DIVANCE LESCOI-HER WVARREN JUDSON NlEAD RAY SPRAGUE OWEN HIARLEY FROST NVILSON MEMBERSAIN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ROBERT EDMUND MCDONALD GRVILLE .ALEXANDER OSMUNDSON HARRY ALEXANDEIK PHILLIPS WVALTER KELLY SCHWINN CHARLES lVlARION SMITH JUNIORS I LEE lX'lCCANDLESS JOHN ARTHUR PLATTEN SOPHOMORES ORVILLE LESLIE JONES LAWRENCE I'lENRY ODELI, FRESHMEN PHILIP EVANS lVlODlSETT THOMAS XVARD NIORONY EDGAR NEYMAN GEORGE OLIVER STEVENS GEORGE BROCKXVAY STOLLEY LANVRENCE POTTER WARNER CLEMENT XVILLIAMS FRANK TISCH XVOLFE PETER WIICHAEL PLATTEN JOHN WILLIAM ROBERTS GILBERT CHARLES TURNER THOMAS GORDON ROBERTS FREDERIC GEORGE SALENTINE GER.-XLD HUGO STOLTZ KENNETH SINCLAIR lvl.-'LINLAND EUGENE W ILLIAM TUHTAR ALLEN lX'lELVlN ZIEGLER Schwinn Booth Duecker A. Plaugen P. Plabteu Crozier Frautschi Bosworbh J.'ROberl,S Gregory Bond Fanning Smith McDonald Osmuudson G. Roberts Wolln Warner Stevens Odell Sholley Williams McCaIIdlesS Phillips Page Four Hundred and Tlzilily-'I'1uo ,Q af, fwjyf y ,of , ffy Wffyfy I0 'L ' ,249 X7 x ffLl7W,f.f4f4efP' fif? J ff W ff r 9,0 V ,..L'P! I AAU f ff E R RAE IfEM12WA,f54 T A'A T Ll f a: , T ' . f i - 1 M56 U , gfpf '1 ' , . .- 44 95:1 I' ' 'S li 29155 ' ' , A -I AW A . zz- .Lge A I ' . -'1 s-'--124 . i . - f .1 ml ,9 : f ., 1 wi -'Z F21 1 1 , ', . v 'x : 2 it ' 1 ' - .,' ' '-wmv: I1 A , f T V251 ' I M f - If., Founded Harnilton University 1832 Wisconsin 1902 Number Df Chapters, 26 y RICHARD THEODORE ELI' NVILLIAM ANIASA SCOTT GEORGE LEE BEARDSLEY ROBERT OLIVER BLODGETT PHILIP GUNERIUS BREDESEN RICHARD WINFIELD ELLIS PAUL BEKINS JOHN DICKSON BLOSSOM GEORGE EDWARD AURACHER FHEDERIC SHERMAN BAKER 640 North Henry Street ALPHA DELTA PHI J MEMBERS IN FACULTY FREDERICK WILLIAM ROE FARRINGTON DANIELS OLIVER PATTERSON WATTS EDWARD MOREHOUSE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS JOSEPH WATKINS RJOULDING NIARK E. NESBIT J UNIORS LESLIE RICHARDS GAGE GEORGE BREWSTER HAZEN SOPHOMORES LAURENS GROSE HASTINGS ALFRED HOFFWIAN HIATT ARTHUR TILT MOULDING FRESHMEN ROBERT DICKINSON CASTERLINE NVILLIAM DAVIS ELLIOTT HANS RICHARD GRIESSER DAVID HAND ROWLAND DOUGLAS KINNEY NEWELL HENRY SCOTT HUBEL THOMAS ALANSON TREDWELL W ILLIAM CLARKSON NORRIS, JR. DONALD ROBERT NORRIS CHARLES DOUGLAS MCLAREN, JR. EI IOTT HALL SHARP Ellis- Bekins Gage Blossom Blodgett Bredesen Beardsley Tredwell Hastings J. Mouldmg Hiatt Hazen Rowland Baker Rubel Nesbit Newell A. Moulding Page Four Hundred and Thirty-Tlzree ,Am 2,4415 .,, fn' A 4, I . . 7 nr - - ' Wisconsin. Alpha, 1903 rg9Alahama1 1856 627 North Lake Street SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON MEMBERS IN FACULTY WILLIAM LLOYD DAVIS EDWARD GEORGE HASTINGS WILLIAM HOVS'ARD RIOI-ITMAN WILLIAM HENRY DENNISTON WALTER ERNEST MEANWELL WILLIAM HENRY TWENHOFEL LINNEAUS W AYLAND DOWLING JOHN DUNNE WICKHAM MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY Law School LLOYD JOSEPH BROWN WALTER DAVID BEAN EDWARD WILLIAM BONSLETT CHARLES ELLIOT FAWKES JOHN MORRIS DODD RALPH JOHN GIBLER HERMAN GEORGE ENGELKE WARD ROMAYNE HICKOK DONALD BRAINARD THEODORE EDMUND CAMLIN CARLSON DEE GAUPER SENIORS ROY CHARLES GOTFREDSON JOHN WALTER LONGSTAFF RALPH RAY MOE J UNIORS ALFRED KENDRIGK GRAYSTON FLOYD ELMER NELSON SOPHOMORES FRESHM EN NEIL ROBERTS HICKOK HAROLD ODEE FREDERICK NENVELL TROWERI DGE RICHARD ALEXANDER ROBERTS STANLEY RAYMOND SIDIE GEORGE OTTO TOEPFER ARTHUR RAYMOND VVALL CHARLES PICKEN WARREN PAUL KEDZIE ROBERTSON GEORGE SHELDON VANCE VVILLIAM MUIR RICHTMAN HENRY HOWEY SHUFELDT CHARLES El'INfET WALL U A. Wall Gotfredson Longstaii' Brown Roberts C, Wall Moe ' l Odee Camlin Yance Robertson Brainard Bean Gauper Sxdle Grayston Trowbrldge Dodd Bonslelt Engelke Paqc Four Hundred and Thirly-Four lifffii-W1 '55 'f1Z ,3'?Zff'Z1f'1+'W ,. 9 . K E QQ! I 1 I ff lx gs A I- , A5 ,y f nil In Aff. -1 .PV TTI Yyl' , 2' I f 337 . ' 'P LSI S-eff' 1: I ' Founded. Yule University. 1811-11- Number ol' Chnplcrs, 43 I AI , TR.. ,: DELTA KAPPA EPSILON MEMBERS IN FACULTY Wisconsin, Rho DelLa. 1906 524 North Henry Street, SAMUEL JACOB BRANDENEURG MOSES STEPHEN SLAUGHTER EUGENE ALLEN GILMORE NVILLIAM KINNEY COLLINS JOSEPH PORTER HOOK THERON TAGGART CHAPMAN NORMAN ST. CHARLES CLARK STEPHEN VANDYKE HORTON HAMILTON CHASE JOHN CARLTON COLLINS WADE HAMPTON ENGLISH PHILIP CLINTON GAULT CARL STEPHENSON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS CARL EDWIN PETERSON HAROLD JOSEPH SPIELMAN JUNIORS SILAS GAYLORD JOHNSON JEREMIAH OWEN MOGG SOPHOMORES FRANCIS VVALKER MORRIS LYALL JOHN PINKERTON WILLIAM EDWVARD RITCHIE RODNEY OWEN SIGGELKOW FRESHMEN NEILL SMITH GRAHAM, JR. MAURICE LEE JOHNSON NED HARRISON LEAVITT MILLARD E. MOGG, JR. RICHARD DODGE REEX'E STEVVART EDNVARD THOMPSON GUSTAV KENNETH TEBELL JAMES UNDERHILL SNYDACKER ALLAN WYLIE WALTER . JOHN AIIDEN WILLIAMSON NAT JOEL HOWELL TVIICHAEL LATVIAR STIVER LORENZA WILLIAM WELSH THOMAS BLAIR WILSON W. Collins Walter O. Mogg S. Johnson Williamson Peteyson . Hook Thompson Clark Spielman Tebell Horton Ritchie Morris Pace Four Hundred and Thirly-Five I If , Rc U79 Ma ' ,-X27 I yzfj , f?22fA' A4 Reg TL. ,p in Q ar Founded, University Of Michigan, 1 Number of Chapters, 27 PHILIP CLUGSTON JAMES E. DAVIS FREDERICK BROWN HADLEY W. O. HOTCHKISS LEON LEONARD ILTIS THOMAS EDWARD JONES CHARLES KENNETH LEITH ANDREW IRVING ANDRENVS HENRY HARRISON BAKKEN ALFRED EDWARD BERGMAN LESTER WILLIAM BRANN LEON FOSTER DUNWIDDIE WALTER HENRY EBLING RALPH ERNEST BALLIETTE MARION ELIAS BENEDICT WESLEY WELLINGTON BBANDENBURG GEORGE ADOLPH FIEDLER ARTHUR LLOYD ANDERSON ACACIA MEMBERS IN FACULTY VICTOR LENHER FORD HERBERT MCGREGOR THEODORE MACKLIN WILLIAM SNOW MILI ER CHARLES HENRY MILLS GEORGE B. MORTIMER BAY SPRAGUE OWEN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES WILLIAM CARROLL FHAZIER SEN IORS TRUMAN GREYE GLENN GEORGE HARRISON GROSS T. DELEERT JONES GEORGE MITCHELL IVIASON GORDON SUMNER MEYRICK J UNIORS HENRY CHESTER FULLER HENRY PARKER HIGLEY LLOYD S. KAPPERS , FRANK BANTLIEY LEITZ SOPHOMORES GEORGE ALFRED BALLAM PAUL RAYMOND IRONS FRESHMEN TIERBERT WILLIAM SCHMIDT 904 Wisconsin, 1906 ' 615 North Lake Street WALTER THEODORE SCHRENK .JOHN A. JAMES VVILLIAM BURLEIGH TISDALE LOWELL LESLIE TOWNSEND RICHARD ENGLISH VAUGI-IN CLARENCE BUEBEN WISE XVILLIAM HARMON WRIGHT EARL LESTER XVHITFORD GORDON EDWVARD NELSON FREDERICK WILLIAM NOLTE ALLEN AVHELAN ADOLR FREDERICK YOIJINIGBER I'I.-SRRY FRANCIS ZILHIERMAN NORMAN MCLEOD MITCHELL LOUIS ELLSNVORIH NELSON' THEODORE VOTTELER HOWARD IWCKINLEY ZOERB BORT BALDNVIN SUMINER G Higley Mason Irons Nelso F' dl N l L .'t K ' Bergman Youngherg Fuller Benedict H Eblinge Ealliettee Smliflitoheiil Z MeyrickappelglennWhltfotlgallam Zoerh Zimmerman Dunwiddie Vottler Bakken Braun Anderson Gross Jones Paqe Four Hundred and Thirly-Sim I I. Hyfugf I, figaw . 5, Ig I J , 5 R If ff z B R f I I 5 ' I 2 - eww , , .. ' '11 I f2flfw':?5 ' 2 If ' IAM? .I f- g 03' fav' ff ,, jg i I 2 5 ,I I, I . , A V SIS 'Gif ' Plz 1452- ,Ll-.. gl .,, Z! , ' ' 5 il' z 1 -TSW' .' I f I ggi li Ig A fi 1 f I LZ i J' A 155' 15,2 1 gli S A . I A ggi! W A if . , ,ig 5 1 I fm! L E ....,- I i 1 A---2,6 .,.. - R5 1 f , Y H. .Y v Syl I F ' M 'l ' V. .-'Q .' A :ks F 1 ' Mx! , , I Number ol' Chzxplers. T5 JOSEPH SPR.-XGUE EAZANS VIVIAN ALLEN HENMON IRVING KNAI-P Cox EUGENE EDNVARD CRANE GEORGE CUNDALL DAVIS J UDD BURNS ROBERT GILAIAN ELY JAMES RUSSEL FRAWLEI' HILARY EDWIN BACON EVERETT ALAN BOGUE ROBERT PADDOCK BUTTS JOHN BERGSTRESSER JAMES CULBERTSON Founded. X lfflllliil Military Insl,il,ulc. l865 ALPHA TAU OMEGA MEMBERS IN FACULTY ARTHUR GIURDON LAIRD WALTER JOSEPH MEER MEMBERS IN UNIVE SENIORS JOHN ADRIAN DOLLARD LAUREL ARDIEN DUFI-'IN ALBERT BUTTON ENVING JUNIORS ARTHUR FREYTAG HENRX' FIELD HELMAR ARIEL LEWIS SOPHOMORES PORTER FREEMAN BUTTS CLAYTON CHENEY CARLTON EGBERT DOUGLAS CARL GENAL HAUSMAN FRESHMEN GEORGE DIXON Wisconsin, Gamma Tau, 1907 225 Lake Lawn Place 4 VVILLIAM MIDDLETON , GRAHAM STUART RSITY LAWRENCE EVERETT NOREM LOUIS CHESTER MELCHER WILLIADI MERRITT SALE KARL MAIER HAROLD JOHN MAURER ROBERT TOLERTON CLARK HAZELWOOD JAMES ARTHUR ROWLEY EDWIN SIGGELKOW FLOYD GREY CHARLES ROWLAND Cox Tolerton Norem Crane Bogue Maier Maurer P. Butts Freytag Sale Melcher Frawlcy Dollard Held R. Butts Bacon Ewing Burns Hausman Lewis Ely Page Four Hundred and Thirty-Seven 1 I .,, wel 5 q If I A ,fy w...- 4 ' as I - -- -'ff ifz5...Av:'-.,11S ' , I f W Number of Chapters, 10 www' Founded, Union College, 1827 WISCOHSIH, Alpha 1903 SIGMA PHI MEMBERS IN FACULTY STEPHEN NVARBEN GILMAN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY REUBEN CORNWVELL CHADROURN ALLAN GATES HALLINE CHARLES VILAS GARY GEORGE CRANSTON GILES SIDNEY HOWARD BLISS PAUL CLEMENT CLEVELAND GEORGE WALLER DAWSON JOHN COLEMAN DAWSON SENIOPIS ARMON ERCELL MABRY' J UNIORS HENRY POPE. JR. SOPHOMORES lVIILTON JOHN KISSEL FRESHMEN LESTER LEWIS KISSEL JOHN MICHEL KOHLER JOHN FOSTER MANIERRE 106 Prospect Avenue- XVILLARD J AMES RENDALL CLINTON IRISH XYASSON JOHN FALK NIURPHY THOMAS M UMFORD XYINSTON ROBERT TA1'LOR PORTER FREDERICK DANIEL SEEBER PORTER CASE TAYLOR STRAXVN TRUMRO Kohler Seeber Manierre Bliss G. Dawson L.Kissel Porter Trumbo J. Dawson Taylor Cleveland Cnirnsl Giles Murphy Halllne Pope Rendall Chndhourn Gilman Mabry Gary VVinsI,on M. Kissel - Page Four Hundred and 'l'hirly-Eighl DAVID VAN WALTER BECKNVITH ROLLIN MARTIN l'IICKEY FORREST GLENN PADDOCK 1 4 ,,, 1 ff f V if, 5 f? I1 ',,',i-14,10-,1'o1'ff ,.jQ..,I :CE 1 1 5 ' , V, ...W 1 wit ' W , wi - 1 Il: R' - if , fa' C if , f , '14 . . 256126 A , f Tlx A-ary. f ' A I.f'T'rA:.Q:9f f ,gf :V 1 - ' -W 1:1 . . 'Q 1-42:7 ' ' 1 . WCA X 1 Founded. Yale University. 1845 Wisconsin, Kappa. 1909 Number of Chapters, 2-1 619 North Lake SLreeL ALPHA SIGMA PHI MEMBERS IN FACULTY DONALD J IENKINS KENNETH LOYAL SCOTT- MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS CARL ADELBERT CHURCH REGINALD WILMOT HAMMOND KARL ALBERT ALBRECHT llflYRON CLARENCE BIDNVELL DONALD OCHSNER BRACE LUCIUS PETER CHASE AIIFRED R. GANTI-IER RALPH BENJAMIN CURREN REGINALD ERNEST DEAR SAMUEL LENHER , TOM ALLEN HOWARD LEANDER CULVER CARL JOSEPH MILLER 1 JOHN HAIKOLD LAHMAN ll'lARS LAURICE MADSEN JUNIORS EINAR H. GAUSTAD LYLE STANLEY HANCE HERSEY ITANSEN BERTRAM BYRON LANGEN FRANK PETER MEYER SOPHOMORES EUGENE CHARLES MENG AMBROSE JAMES pENNEFEATHER lVlAXVVELL FRANCIS REINHOLD FPIESHMEN FRANCIS lVlEYER FRANCIS WILLIAM PFLUEGER MARK CARL PORTER HUBERT LOGAN PERRIN WARREN ALVIN TAYLOR COLBY ARTHUR PORTER RALPH EDWARD PUCHNER BRUNO JOHN ROHDE GEORGE WEBSTER SANDERSON CEDRIC EDWARD SEAMAN JOHN FREDERICK SULLIVAN JOHN LIEBER ROE EMIL L. STEIGER HAROLD PATRICK TAYLOR ALDEN GUY SHOWALTER VVILLIS GREGORY SULLIVAN Hansen H.Taylor Sanderson Scott Albrecht W. Taylor Dear Gaustad Hance Seaman Lenher Meyer Penuefeather Bidwell Porter Puchner Sullivan Sollitt Ganther Hickey Beckwith Chase Rohde Brace Langen Curren Lahman Paddock Hammond Reinhold Madsen Meng Page Four Hundred and Thirty Nine ww 'Q , Q ' , f. -'R L ' 0? 9414-3-18' I W1 ' WW H9499 Wisconsin Lamda Psi. 1910 Founded, New York University, 181117 164 Langdon Street Number of Chapters, 27 WILLIAM HERBERT PAGE CLARENCE BAXTER BROWN JOSHUA GOWER ELDER RALPH GOODING ROBERT WHITCOMB BROWN RICHARD MALCOLM CONNOR PAUL ESCHWEILER LOYD EARL HARDY JAMES WATERS CLANEY ZETA PSI MEMBERS IN FACULTY JAMES HENAI WALTON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ELVIN MANN HARTLETT DAVID JOHN NIAHONEY MURRAY' CORNELIUS IVIATHEVVS STERLING DONALD PETERSO-I ' J UNIORS NELSON RUSSELL FAIRBANTCS FRANK PERRY HYER GEORGE BUTLER LILLY SOPHOMORES JOHN DANEORTI-I MAXCY GERHARD OWEN PAULSON FRESHMEN MAURICE HARDCROVE LESTER R. HOWARD GUNDERSON WILL ARTHUR STOLTE LYLE GRAHANI PHILLIPS ARTHUR HENRY SCHNEIDER VVARREN K. STRATMAN THOINIAS ARTHUR DONALD MARvIN ALLAN LAMOREAUX PARK CARROLL ENVART ROACH MERRILL QEDXVARD TAFT DAVID EASTBIAN XVI-IEELER CECIL REED W ILLEY L Gooding Connor Phillips Taft H d B Lilly Roach Paulson Hartlett Elder Schiixgidlgr mlilllnaxcy Mathews Brown Thomas Peterson Marvin Park Fairbanks Mahoney Page Foul Hundred and Foriy J U .. ' .-41' -I ' '7 : Y, U K f, ' - 592 , , WI, V, , . 4 If I . ' V . . .5 u f L I Tw V :M-df.: I A A if 1 .' ' ig A- ,f 2 . J I , ' sa-.. 'N' f any -I , fu.EF,,'-' I' V. . Mg , A A I U C ' .uw wwmn. -,,,,Y,f ,, , iz Founded, Ohio Slam. 190-L Wisconsin, IOI,a, 1916 Number of ChIIp1.ers, I8 1726 Hoyt Street JOHN WILLIAM BRANN GEORGE ANTHONX' CHANDLER ALBERT CHARLES FIEDLER JOHN BARRY TIAYES ELZA GLENN ASH H.ARR1' LLOYD EDXVARDS EDWARD REYNOLDS Cl-IEWV ELMER DENNIS BYRNS WILLIAM HENRY FREDERICK WHITEORD LYNN HUFF EDWARD HAROLD GIBSON ELMER CHARLES BOUGHTON GILBERT WILLIAM COMSTOCK ROLAND GODEREY FRITSCHEL ROBERT LOUIS HESSE ERWIN FREDERICK DAVIS EDNVARD BLEWITT CHARLES HESS ALPHA GAMMA RHO MEMBERS IN FACULTY GEORGE CALVIN LIUMPHREY JAMES JOHN I'iAI.PIN LEON KILBY JONES JOHN IJARRISON KOLB AVILLIAM ALLISON SUMNER MEMBERS IN UNIVE SENIORS LEONARD JOHN KASSA HOIVIER DWVIGHT CHAPMAN JUNIORS THOMAS LOZIER DARTNELL CLEMENT VAN DER REIT LIARRIS FARMELE FRANK DONVLING MCKAY ASHLEY VAIL MILLS SOPHOMORES JOHN EMMERSON CRAIG RAYMOND THOMPSON RALPH BRUCE WACICMAN ERNEST CALLENBACH A JOHN CHINN READ FRESHMEN JOHN KAISER HERBERT KROPP JOHN CHARLES WALKER HARLEY FROST WILSON CECIL EVERETT WHITE 1 JOHN JONATHAN YOKE RSITY ' HAROLD MORSE KUCKUK DOUGLAS IVICCORD MOORHEAD EDWARD GEORGE SCHERNECKER LESTER JOHN OOSTERHUIS JAMES BARNEY PERRY KITCHELL PHELPS SAYRE WALTER EDNVARD SCHUETZ EDWARD MAGRUDER SMITH KENNETH METZ ROYER CHESTER ELLICOTT ROSWELL STINCHFIELD THEODORE STEVENS MILTON ERIC SCHMELLING MORRIS WILLIAM WENTWORTH RICHARD TNGRAHAM CHARLES WHITWORTH l Dartnell Parmele Perky Schernecker Wackman Edwards Davis Boughton Moorhead Read Oosterhuis Huff Burns McKay Chew Kuckuk Royer Kassa Frederick Mills Fritschel Hesse Schmelling Chapman Craig Stevens Stinchfield Gibson Thompson Schuetz Smith Sayre Ash Comstock Wentworth Page Four Hundred and Forty- One A wi , - 1 I 2 Z? I - M ----' A ,Q -wi 'il XEI1 Ag, P, - fb' .,... .. 2? 15' 1 ,R rr ff 1 56 X L A ' Q , If 4 ,.. Founded, Princeton 'University, 1824- Number of Chapters, 25 ALFRED PAUL HAAKE WILLIAM HENRY KIEKHOFER ANTHONY WILLIAM PESCH ALLIE LOYD BREYVOGEL HUGH JOHNSTON BROWN EDWARD ALVORD EWING HARRIS GIBBS ALLEN ARTHUR WILLIAM AYLWARD ROLAND WILLARD BURT VVILLIAM HINMAN CONINE RICHARD MAYFIELD HEADLEY JOHN CALVIN EMERY ANDREW GOODYEAR EWING LEE DELBERT HANSON MALCOLM GRAY MILLAR DELBERT STUART CHI PHI Wisconsin. Kappa. 1916 200 Langdon Street MEMBERS IN FACULTY ' ADAM VAUSE MILLAR NVYMAN SIDNEY SMITH FRANK CHAPMAN SHARP IVIORTON OWVEN WITHEY MEMBERS IN UNIV ERSITY GRADUATES SENIORS EDWIN IVIICHAEL COOLEY GUYER ROBERT AUSTIN HARRIS RALPH ELI LIAVVKS WARREN SYDNEY HUBBARD J UNIORS ALVIN RIETBROCK KLANN LESLIE FRANCIS LAMB XVASHBURN STARK LYON HARBESON :HICKMAN POWELL ROBERT LEONARD REYNOLDS SOPHOM ORES CHARLES HAWKS. JR. EMORY MARK HEUSTON FRESHMEN EDMOND ROBBINS SUTHERLAND BUEL FELLOWS WEARE LOUIS BYRNE SLICHTER HENRY' JOSEPH KATZ BIRNEY FRANK MILLER J AMES ALLAN TORBET JOHN WILLIS RICHARDS CARL ROSS RUSSELL THOMAS STOKLEY XVOOD WORTH EDVVARD SHOULTS ROBERT SHEPARD XVALLIS GILBERT FREDERICK HOFFNIIANN H.AROI.D RYAN lvl.-XIER RIIDOIIPH JUUL NOER EARL EUGENE WY!-IEELER ALLEN ELOID W OLF Headley Aylward Lyon Burt Klann Shoul I s Torbel. Guyer Harris Allen I Emery Conine Maier Miller Ewing Hawks Katz Ewmg Wood Millar Haake Sharp Kiekhofer Pesch Breyvogel Reynolds Richards Hubbard Powell Hoffmann Hanson Noer Wallace Lamb Russell Brown Page Four Hundred and Forty- Two - . .. . 'gi ' g f f 17 .. .I hw QAZE I . ' .ygw r 3 iff V 11 , A-41 mf, ' 'f 51fj?f1f' ig .V I E ' ' fiziff x ff-.153 ft.'WMf ?ffH . ff fm ' 5 ' 50 W' 5, M 4' 1-I A A' ,az --...Abe we 45 I1 if W J 'Eff 1 I I Vs, 133,11 ,A if P -aft Founded. Massuchnsclls Agzrivullnral Collozzo. 1873 Wisconsin, Zel.a Deuteron. 1917 Number of Chapters. 32 211 Langdon Street EUGENE DAVENPORT PIOLDEN .JOSEPH V. S. DAUKSYS LEONARD J. JANSEN NVILLIAM J. KOEHLER EDNFUND L. ASCHENBRENER ROY ANTHONY BERGMAN SYLVESTER G. KALLEY PAUL J. AYLWARD HOWARD M. BUTTERFIELD WALKER G. DOIJLNIEYEB CLARENCE P. BAECHLER LEROY DUDDLESTON JOHN J. CHORLOG PHI SIGMA KAPPA MEMBERS IN FACULTY 4 FRANK B. MORRISON LIARRY STEEN BOCH IJAHOLD WILSON STEWART MEMBERS IN UN IVEBSITY ' SENIORS CASEY V.AUGHN LOOMIS JAMES ANDERSON LOUNSBURY AINSLEY B. NICCONNELL JUNIORS ADOLPH KLOSTERMAN DEAN A. NIILLMAN DONALD MILLMAN JEROME J. PICKFORD SOPHOMOBES NIELVIN D. EBBRT PHILIP A. HOFFNIAN ALBERT W. KORTHAIYS FBESHM EN FORD K. GREENE CLARENCE KNUTSON DONALD K. MOKILLICAN GEORGE J. SCHUTZ, JR. MERRITT L. SUTTON SHORES ADALBERT WALKER CHARLES P. REUDIGER JOHN SWIFT MARSHALL J. NVALLRICH OTTO D. RUNTE JOSEPH A. SCHUDT LAWRENCE L. STEBBINS HAWLEY V. PORTER ALFRED E. REED VILAS I. RUHMER Su t.l.On Pickford Swift Bergman Jansen - Kalley KIOS terman Koehler McConnell Asohenbrener Dauksys RU6lllgBF Wfxlker Ebert W al'rich Aylward Schutz Loomis Lounsbury V Stebbins Page Four Hundred and Forly- Three ,mf :KTTH 31:5-f sy, ,. .1 432,251 J' ,, gf im? :Wfw , A-M ,f,T...- ....,..,, 5 4,.., , ,. .. ,H uy.,- uns' v.u7?' -' YZ 5,. I ,.., Founded. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1864 WISCOHSIH. Phi, 1917 Number of Chapters, 25 158 PFOSDGU AVENUE CHARLES IVES CORP WALTER CURRIDEN MACKEY JAMES DAVID PHILLIPS WILLIAM WORDEN BOLTON LESLIE HAROLD GARBER FRANK BENJAMIN GOLLEY, JR. HANS E. ANKEB GUDE ROBERT BRUCE BOHMAN CLAUD JOHN DEBBINK CARROLL FRANCIS CALLEN GEORGE ALFRED CARLSON THEODORE DODGE THOMAS BRANDON CARTER HERBERT LAWRENCE HAND THETA XI MEMBERS IN FACULTY RUSSELL EDWARDIPUERNER EARLE MELVIN TERRY FREDERICK EUGENE TURNEAURE JOHN EDNVIN WISE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES SEN IORS DUDLEY JOHN MILLS ERNST JOHN MOHR ROY WIIIBIER HEDIN JUNIORS ALVIN JAMES EMANUEL SHERMAN BALDWIN GREEN WALTER EDWARD PFLEGER SOPHOMORES WILIIARD BELL HANCE I OTTO LFISSING DONAIJD MCGREGOR IVIATHESON HARVEY ROCKEFELLER MELCHER FRESHMEN THEODORE CARROL HOTCHKISS HAROLD ALFRED KROPF PHILIP BROOKS MILLS FREDERICK STEWART TURNEAURE NELS CORNELIUS RICHARDSON ALBERT CARL STUEBING OWEN ROCKEFELLER TERRY JOHN WILERED SMART BENJAMIN FRANKLIN WUPPER CARL WILLIAM MAY CLARENCE SIDNEY WVIELAND GEORGE LOUIS ZAMZOW HERBERT CHARLES OPITZ HENRY JOHN SPRIESTER Lessing Hance Math so G b HI d T d., Stuebing Richardson D. Mills e Rledin at eIVieIand rmCarlsOn el-ryGolley D0 bWupper Bohman Mohr Debbink Zamzow Emanue Green Taylor Bolton Opitz Pfleger Carter Callen Smart Spriester Melcher Hotchkiss May P. Mills Page Four Hundred and Forty-Four 1' 4 fy' f I f M AXA i x' I I IW' Em fm! f' JW-'T'.mf rvwr, . :W R130 rwwftf-'A-I izfivi-MW . -f 0- 21 AfffZ9fQf?g.e9, l.i1f2.?,.b:.,'55'Y ui. Z.'xzYL'., J ,EJ-MW W, fV,..f1kZ4fiWHdA4nm Founded, Boston University. 1909 Number Ol' Chupters, 59 Wisconsin, Alpha Beta Zeta, 1917 148 YVGSL Gilman Street I ' 51,5 1, A 1,,'- ' I . ,-RIA J .5 I a O LAMBDA CHI ALPHA MEMBERS IN FACULTY RODNEY VVHITTEMOREBABCOCK VIRGIL PORTER LEE JAMES DONALD MACLEAN LETCHER GABBIKRD LENVIS VVILLIAM AMBORN VICTOR SEGURD ANDERSEN BRUCE NIARTY BI UM ROBERT HART BRUCE CLAUDE VVESLEY CAMPBELL ALVAH CHARLES ELLIOTT CYRIL LAMBERT ERICKSON LESTER ANDERSON VICTOR C. ANDERSON CHARLES J. BABIES WALTER EDWARD BAUMAN FREDERIC CHRISTIAN BECKMAN HENRY MARTIN BLUME DONALD CLINTON BAUDER LESLIE BUSE HAROLD COULTER FRANCIS FINUCANE BRYN GRIFFITHS THEODORE SCHOLTZ MEMB ERS IN UNIVERSITY GORDON NIGHTINGALE SENIORS RAYMOND WALTER FOX CLAUDE DENNIS GARDNER LLOYD WILLIAM GEORGE GILBERT GEORGE GRIEVE IDRYS OR.-XLAND LIUGI-IES HEUBEN FRED JESSEL WILLIAM J. BRYAN JANISCH J UN IORS ROMAN I'IENRY BRUMM EDNVIN F. DUFFY NIAX. H. EDNVARDS FREDERICK ROGERS FLICKENGER LIERBERT DICK I'IENTZEN DARELL DONALD NICINTYRE SOPHOMORES DONALD NASH COOLEY JOHN JOSEPH HURLEY JAMES WILLARD POWVELL FRESHMEN KLENLENT LEROY HONEYCOMB HAROLD HORSTMEYER LEONARD MARION JOHNSON FREDERICO NOGUIIIRA GOI DIE RAYMOND OLSON FREDERICK ROEWEKAMP NOEL RUSCH SIMPSON ROBERT BAYLES SPAWN DAVID SLOTHOWER LEE BROWNELL NICHOLS ARNOLD HELMU1' NIELSON EUGENE MCCARTHY HORACE BREESE POWELL DAVID KNOX STEENBERG AUSTIN J. STIBBE FLOYD YAUDES JOHN SANDERS PACKARD JEROME A. STRAKA ROBERT HURLEY PAUL KENNETH RAY KENNETH VAN DOREN , , Bruce V. S. Andersen ,Erickson Roewekamp L. Anderson V. C. Anderson Johnson Flickenger Neilson Janisch Olson Gardner Slo thower Straka H. , Powell J essel Stibhc Steenberg McCar thy Elliott Fox Blume' Hurley Bauder Atnborn Hentzen Brumm Spawn Hughes Campbell Mclntyre Cooley Page Four Hundred and Forty Fzve A .v Q i .L 'A Z1 A-YK 4 A .- ,.,,, .. ,,..,, II. . A - 5 55,548 N urnher of Chapters, 18 ROLAND MILLER ROLAND M. BETHKE ROBERT A. ASPINWALL RAYMOND P. BETHKE B. WALTER BRIESTER HANS EMTMERLING RALPH O. FIEDLEB ELMER J. FECHTNER DON F. GALLAGHER HAROLD G. HEWITT LESLIE A. HILL DURWOOD C. DUBOIS ROBERT H. GOLLMAR A. CLARKE HASTINGS WILLIAM H. KLASS ARTHUR ALVIS ALBERT W. DEAOON Founded, Illinois Wesleyan University, 1899 Wisconsin, Lambda 1017 TAU KAPPA EPSILON MEMBERS IN 'FACULTY 619 Mendota Court ROGER H. LUECK MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES CHAUNCEY J. PELLOW SENIORS DAN O. HORNE ELMER F. KLEMENT WILIJIAM J. MOUNTIN MELVIN C. PIERCE J UN IORS K. FRANCIS KAREL AARON I. KOCH ALBERT H. LAHMANN FRITHJOF MOELLER SOPHOMORES DONALD MOCOMB HOWARD J. MONROE OSCAR A. SANDER FRESHMEN ROY DINGMAN FRED VV. RADKE THOMAS H. BINNEY JERRY H. QUAM KARL H. BANG LEWIS A. SCHMQIDT HERDIAN P. SIEBKEN WALTER H. PETTERSON DONALD E. RATHERT NORIVLAN M. SPERL ALFRED W EED HERIBERTO D. SAPPER EARL SCHNEIDER DNVIGHT SPOONER VVILLARD G. SANDEB LESTER J. SMITH Hastings 13080011 Aspinwall O.Sander Horne Karel R. P. Bethke Monroe . Gollmar Sapper Petterson Alvis W. Sander Spooner BreisLer Radtke Lahmann Dlflgfllafl M0uRtln MOeller Quam Rang Klass Smith Sperl Hill Schneider Weed Hewitt Dubois McComb Pellow Binney Koch Schmidt Gallagher RaLherL Page Four Hundred and Forty-Size 1 I I -I 0 rl , lf ,. af? G1 xiii 7-EQ? 1 F4 Ai ' -M ' fe S7 AA,A, A gwgwyfa w z -, , Founded. Norwich University. 1856 WiSC0I1SlIl, Psi, 1918 Number Ol' Chapters, 34 ORVIN RICHARD BRUNROW WHEELAN DWIGHT SUTLIFF ABE GUNNAR .IXBRAHAMSEN EWART KELLER CLEAR EVERETT GLEN DREVV JOHN EDWARD DOERR, JR. LEROY DELOS EDWARDS LYMAN HERBERT HART LUTHERIJESLIE HOLMAN KARL HENRY ACKERMAN HAROLD FREDERICK BOVVMAN ELSWORTH WILLIAM BUNCE EARL VERNON CANNON FRANK ALBERT FLUCKIGER WILLIAM RALPH GILES ALBERT ERNEST GONZENBACH JOHN DWIGHT HART WILLIAM ANDREW HIESTAND , THETA CHI MEMBERS IN FACULTY FAYETTE H ERRERT ELWELL 14-0 West Gilman Street SIDNEY LINCOLN MILLER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES LESLIE XVILLIAM TASCHE SENIORS CARL GUSTAVE FUHRMAN MERXVIN HA1'DEN I'IOWES, JR. GLENN LLEWELLYN JENKINS JUNIORS BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HEALD HAROLD WILLIAM MERRILL CARL ERNST MUELLER SOPHOMORES HAROLD EDWIN DANIELS GEORGE HOBART GILLAND, JR. BENNETT ROBERT LEWIS, JR. EDWARD ALBERT MANNS F RESHMEN ROGER EASTMAN J OYS LEE MENTA KRAFT ALBERT WILLIAM MENKE JAMES HUGO WEGENER TEBRELL BENJAMIN MAXFIELD WESTON WILLIAM PIDCOE RUDOLPH CHARLES ZIMMERMAN WALTER JAMES MUELLER RAYMOND THIESSENHUSEN HARRY ARTHUR WALTEMATH WILLIAM HERMAN WENZEL STANLEY WALTER NEILSON DELBERT JONATHAN QUAMMEN HORACE HUSSEY RATCLIFFE, JR. ARTHUR LOUIS WIGGIN GEORGE ALEXANDER RIDDELL RALPH JOSEPH STEHLING ARTHUR EDWARD TIMM HERMAN EDWARD WEGWART JEROME CROSBY ZUEELT Quammen Fuhrman Pidcoe Clear Maxfield Howes Doerr , . Gilland C. Mueller Abrahamsen Cannon Hart Heald Zimmerman Elwell Wzaltemath Wlggm Edwards Bowman Ratclifl' Merrill Wegener Lewis Holman Drew Daniels Jenkins W. Mueller Bunce Page Four Hundred and Forty-Seven AAAI? Z ' .1 N o f Number of Chapters, 35 VANCE L. BOHNSON ARTHUR EDWIN AUSTIN EDISON MORSE BOERKE EI.MER GEORGE BOERKE EVERETT BIRDLEBOUGH MAYNARD WILSON BROWN HERBERT OTTO CHRISTIANSON JAMES THOMAS DAWSON ALEXANDER MYRON GIBBON ARTHUR WM. CHRISTIANSON WALTER OTTO GUTKE MENDEZ NATHANIEL HANSON RALPH VICTOR GALBY RALPH L. NICHOLS Founded, College of the City of New York, 1899 WiSC0HSiI1, Alpha KHDDZX- 1920 DELTA SIGMA PHI 210 Langdon Street MEMBERS IN FACULTY JOHN MERRIII FARGO MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS EVRARD CALUWAERT ROBERT ERIOKSON JUNIORS JOHN E. GRAY SIDNEY MYRON GREILING IRVING R. HADDORF NORMAN MORTINIER HALVERSON CHRISTOPHER HENDRA HERNIAN MILLER HOFFNIAN SOPHOMORES VICTOR CLIFFORD HUNT FRANCIS DONALD JOHNSON JULIUS NIAYNE MCCOY STUART BOWKER Mc Cm' FRESHMEN LESTER ORCUTT KENNETH MCCONNELL LESTER WILLIAM PETERSON HENRY LENZEN SCHMITZ GORDON ARNOLD HUSEBY JULIUS JOHN STEUBER JOHN PETER SERVATIUS JULIUS WILLIAM THOMPSON ANTHONY CHESTER TRAYSER CHARLES ALFRED OLSON J ORGEN ARTHUR STROMMEN DONALD TRAYSER GEORGE GRISWOLD STEBBINS ARTHUR ROBERT W IENKE I A. Christiansou Gibbon Peterson Vivian Gray S. McCoy McConnell Stueher McCoy Thompson .Hendra Erickson Weinke Halvorson H. Christianson SLebbIns Bohnson D. 'lfrpyser Brown Schmitz Gutke Johnson Birdlebough Ross E. M. B rk Haddorf Galhy Greiling A.T1-ayser Hanson Huseby Dawson HunL Caluwaert Hoffman oe e Page Four Hundred and Forty-Eight ' A X 3, in-w.f' , S' f I . , befnwf f' I F A , . X9 I 'ga .Q W I WV? 94,14 4, ff? 'ff f fm 1 f e'. ii' E! 2. '05 J I IIKA 'D , JE I 1, . I ' R . 'EI E iff' ' ,WM ,,.4Q,,. t A ,, , .,,,.?, . gf W: , . 2 . w a 1? I 3 2 7 .,.. L , jx 4, , fx 'L ' .I SMI ' 1 -yi' , ff' af ' 'ng , 5 XJ. M- HKA N f -- ' 5 EW f -A' 9. 2 1 5 5 S W Ya-.' f:,'f,f f-355 ' '23 I :iff 2 'v:41.,'Ywzy,.,w ff ' II .f:e's4I',Yf2 1 ' I I I f I .ltr f :-:AR I Numbers of Chapters, 53 CARL H. HOPPERT R. O. RUBLE L. GRIFFITH BARRY RALPH L. FALSTAD SPENCER F. GRAVES FREDERICK C. HEIDNER LYMAN K. ARNOLD ROBERT L. BURNEY CHARLES N. DEMAREST MILTON L. DOOLEY MILO HOPKINS EDNVIN A. CARLSON DONALD BELL ROSS F. DUGAN HAROLD CRANEFIELD Founded, University of Virginia, 1868 XViSc0nsin, Bula Xi, 19 PI KAPPA ALPHA MEMBERS IN FACULTY A 20 131 Langdon Street L. P. W HITEHEAD WILLIAM B. LERCI-I FREDERICK W. IVIADISON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ' NATHANIEL B. HUSTING CHARLES B. NIACINNIS NVILLIAM M. NIERCER CYRUS B. IVIINSHALL JUNIGRS OTTO F. KAUFMAN, JR. OSWALD L. KELLER LESLIE W. MCCLIIRE WAYNE L. MORSE FOSTER S. NEVVELL JAMES D. I-I. PETERSON SOPHOMORES FLAVIAN A. LEINFELDER DUANE LONGAKER CASPER M. NASH FRESHMEN CLARENCE W. WILLE RALPH F. SPETZ M. RAvN TILL ISCI-I FRANCIS C. H. SCADDEN NORMAN D. SCOTT MILO E. SMITH WILLIAM J. TANNEWITZ GERALD C. WADE IRVING L. WADE HAROLD B. ROBINSON HENRY H. SANRORN DONALD H. JONES Kaufman Scadden Carlson Madison Barry Minshall FaIsLad I Heidner N. Scott Dooley T annewitz Leinfelder Tillisch Hopkins Nash Husling Newell Burney Maclunis Smith McClure Hoppert Peterson Demarest Mercer' Wllle O. Scott Page Four Hundred and Forly Nzne I I E I I WI ' I A',. fs ffv' I T I :fin ,,,V- I W I 'f Founded, University of Richmond, 1901 WISCOHSIH, Bela, 1920 Number of Chapters, 48 134- West Gorham Street SIGMA PHI EPSILON MEMBERS IN FACULTY MICHAEL KIIINE ELMER IXIARTIN NELSON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ALBERT FRANK EBENTIER WILLIAM ROBERT REUTER ERMIN SMITH RAYMOND LAWRENCE PAULUS EARL RUDOLPH BRANDAU HARRY RAYMOND HERTZ HAROLD HOLLI WILSON DALE FLUGSTAD WILLIAM HAMMANN CLARENCE CARLYLE HOLM GEORGE LANGE WILLIAM CARL BENSON NEIL BLUMENSTEIN ., ' JUNIORS RAYMOND VVILLIAM KANITZ HERBERT ALBERT KOEPKE VVILLIAIVI ANTON OUWENEEL RALPH SHAW SOPHOMORES KARL WALTER OTTO CARL EUGENE SCHAEFER FRESHMEN PAUL EDXN'ARD COLLINS NVALTER GEORGE TR U GEORGE ROBERT SPANGENBEBG MILTON CARL STEFFEN ALFRED LOUIS SUI-IR WILLIAM EMIL SCHUBERT HAROLD CHARLES WEISS JOHN XVELLS ARTHUR ZIMMERMAN GEORGE K. KRESS WILLIAM HERRALY INIIACDONALD , I I . 'I I 1 -4 I 'l IV I I I I ' I . Suhr Ehentier MacDonald Ouweneel Smith Hertz Lange Collins Werner Koepke Weiss Spangenberg Schubert Schaefer S1,el'l'en H.Holm Kittleson C. Holm Trauh Zimmerman Otto Wallschlacger Hammann Blumeustein Wells Kanitz Kress Paulus Drake Benson Rrandau Mn., . ' . II, I Page Four Hundred and Fifty K 1 fy 1 V ,- 1 if I 1 1 90 I X' nl Q 'W 91 00 if wf ff! W Y ZZ X 9' I X11 I 22, 4 9 ye, 'WW' WWW A51 f f. A 5MwA5ZfW3fF if 6 Zifffzfizf Aff' 2 4' Founded, Cornell Universily, 1890 Number OfCl1apters, 23 EVERETT F. PATTEN OSCAR CHRISTIANSON LORAN S. CLARK FRANK P. FOSGATE ASHTON C. GREGG CHARLES A. CAPEK ELMER W. CHAPLEAU WALDO W. BATTEN DANIEL W. DONNELLY KENNETH L. CORBETT ALBERT ELLIS QUENTON R. ARPIN DELTA CHI T 1 4 3 J Wisconsin, 1921 150 Langdon Street 1- - if.. 'fic :Mir L 3 ?,f.s,w .1 , E .' f 121254 1 I , 'gg , 1 I A .. ,vw . . . ,W . K MV- f. ,wa 'fc-fwpmlssz - -.223 .- S 4 ,, , ' .,.: NIIIIVIBISBS IN FACULTY HARDY STEEHOLM MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY Law School LANVRENCE E. HART RAY P. LICI-ITENWALNER CLIFFORD G. MATHYS IVIABTIN R. PAULSON SENIOBS LEO J. IVIERKEL NORMAN N. SCHOMISCH JUNIORS HAROLD A. FREY VICTOR F. JUNGERS SOPHOMORES HENRY P. INGEBRITSEN HORACE R. TAGGART FRESHMEN PAUL H. PAULSON J. EMERY PORTER LESLIE C. SIMS HERBERT L. WIBLE IVIILFORD W. SCHUELER HOWARD I. SMITH OSCAR E. KIESSLING ALIEN B. SNIFFEN GEORGE A. TYLER GEBHARDT F. VETTER GEORGE E. WEBBER GEORGE P. .IEFFERS Tyler Capek Jungers Sims Kiessling Hart Vetter Batten -Christiansen Steeholm Schueler M. Paulson Patten Clark Sniffen Litchtenwalner Schomlsch P. Paulson Donnelly Dix Smith Mathys Wihle Frey Chapleau Merkel Page Four Hundred and Fifty- One lziglj., N. ,f- M... f N V 1 , 72,72 W 1- ' I Q 1 V , Wa, 9912579 l LI. '2 ' I- I ' we - ' I fix Q 1,1 .4,.,e sri? W. ...XA I 5 2 A - WWI gg ,fJ,vW3fg5ffrW,y:wwW-',v'f7591P?'4fi2 fifW?' :wrf 'wQvsw22:rzfgf?' A -.,. A ff ,wwf IW' . :.f.fi.- V- Founded, Columbia University, 1909 W Number of Chapters, 16 HYMAN J. BILANSKY LOUIS A. EISENBEHG MELVIN BORUSZAK CHARLES EISEMAN NATHAN GRABIN DAVID CHUDNOW PHI SIGMA DELTA MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS FRED COHEN EUGENE M. JUSTER .IUNIORS ELBERTO B. GREENBERGER SOPHOMORES MELVIN M. HOFFMAN LEO A. KLEMPERER FRESHMEN ARTHUR C. MALSIN AARON SCHEINFELD JOHN M. SHAFRIN MAURICE PERSTEIN JULIAN S. TELLER LEON W. ZAHNE PHILIP L. JACOBSON iscousin, Pi, 1921 209 Bernard Court A I 2 . UL Cohen- Shafrin Klemperer Perstein Eisemau . Boruszak Malsin Eisenberg Greenberger BI1ansky Juster Schemfeld Zarne Grabmll Chudnow Hoffman Teller age Four Hundred and Fifty- Two J UNIORS mm, Wypffffwf ff JW 2 P2 1 A , fi A ,,fff35fQ'.g H f ,ff Z . ,w,s...,f 1,4 .f V,, .f , AA H 1 z 4 ' ' :i f ' '- ,fg' WQ25j?.. PM A ' pi 552311, Mi. J 1 .- 'fb A 57, ' - A . . V ,...,. . 'wh-I L., V I I. ig. 612' 1 , , f , ,Af,.. . Founded. Brown Universil.y. 1888 Number Ol' Chapters. 10 PHI KAPPA fm! Wisconsin, Kqppa. 1922 fl-07 Wxsconsm Avenue MEMBERS IN FACULTY R. S. NICCAFFERY N SENIOHS EIDNVARD P. KEARNS M.ARvIN KING TVIERRILL F. BRO BST THOMAS L. AHERN ALBERT C. BARRETT WALDEMAR F. BOHRI CLAUDE C. COOPER EARL T. HARRINGTON HAROI.D J. TVICCARTY GERALD T. MCCORMIC FRANK W. GRIMM K MICHAEL J. I'IENEY CLARENCE J. I'IUGI-IES WVILLIAM J. MfXDDEN JAMES E. TVIANION STUART A. MCCORRIICK OVID O. MEYER DANIEL C. O,NEIL SOPHOMORES CLIFFORD J. MCHUGH RAYMOND J. QUINN FRESHMEN LOUIS J. O,BRIEN RUDOLPH A. OECHSNER PATRICK G. POWERS JOSEPH J .' PROKOP WALTER P. STUMPF JAMES E. XVARD IRVING A. REEKE RALPH L. SHERIDAN GEORGE C. HUME Ahern O'Neil Powers McCormick Sheridan Heney A Manion Barrf-t L Prokop Oechsner Bohri O 'Brien McCormick Madden McCarty Brobs t Meyer McHugh Page FOUI' Hundred and Flfly Three mf- ., H'- 231352 5 37,v2I Q45 'F' RR ggi. f-A LS , Af Founded, University of Wisconsin, 1920 Number of Chapters, 1. JOHN T. ATWOOD LESTER J. CAPPON OLIVER T. BANTON HAROLD DVORAK FRANK D. CRANE ROBERT B. ATTWOOD ALIF MIM 1530 University Avenue MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIOBS ALFRED R. COTTON J. STUART HAMILTON HERBERT F. HOLSCHEIK JUNIORS GEORGE H. FINKLE WALTER B. FRANZ SUMNER J. HARRIS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN BRUCE M. HANIILTON IVALTER C. HOLZBOG RICHARD W. VAN HOUTEN HAROLD HARTXN'IG CHARLES A. RAWSON EARL C. XYEITERMANN JOHN HOLZBOG ' Weitermann J. Atwood J. Holzbog Crane Van Houl.en Hartwig NV. Holzbog Holscher Harris B. Hamilton Rawsou J. S. Hamilton R. Atwood Cappon Dvorak Franz Page Four Hundred and Fifly-Four N-1 . 4 . nv ix 5+ . I. I ff' 1,.- A 'Ii-I ' . ' ...W AI ' in Aff 4'1 2: 'fi t ff - -V .I 4 4 If, . 4? an-N ' -. .gjgsw 4 i. 9 5255 ' 47.7 - .. gms! ,- f Q ,2 A , 555' ' A . Af LM Q ' I 'W ' N4 A. Q.. V 1 L 7 5 LA - k 4 '?' M4 iff 4 if li ff ' I ,j 22 1 1.1. -np. 'V '7 .A NAVY' . . - , f . .M ,.,A.1..m.n W . f A-5-.,s,Qw ' ZIV 1 X 5 s, A lf A 5 3 Z9 . E , , 1 , , , . , 4., 2. .IR I s, 1-Ig. Ill F A - .g. f -f-- I -' yn f' aww . ' gg M15 Founded,Trinil.y College, 1895 l Number of Chapters. I9 G. ARTHUR JOHNSON F. HALSEY KRAEGE E. WALTER ANDERSON H. DEAN KITCHEN ELROY R. LUEDTKE EARL R. CORNNVELL ALPHA CHI RHO MEMBERS GRADUATES JOHN R. MCCRORI' SENIOR IVAN H. PETERMAN JUNIOR ROBERT L. LUENING W ALTER NYHUS WILLIAM A. OAKEY LESTER F. SCHENKEN BERG SOPHOMORES ARMOND L. GOLAY FRESHMEN EDWARD B. BLAIR Wisconsin, Phi Omicron, 1922 609 North Lake Sweet GILMAN A. THOMPSON STERLING H. TRACY ADOLPH W. SPRAIN ROBERT B. STENVABT GORDON S. THOMSON GANIBER F. TEGTDIEYEB Schenkenherg Thompson Thomson Slvewart Oakey Luedtke Anderson McCrOry 1 Tracy Sprain Luening Peterman Johnson Cornwell Nyhus Kraegre Golay Kltchen Page Four Hundred and Fzfly Flue ge Four' Hundred and Fifly-Sir RULY the last of the Mohicansf' this little group was found last summer on the banks of the Thames, in Massachussetts, Where many years ago burned the camp-Hres of their forefathers. Before the coming of the white man, the great Mohican tribe Was driven by the invading Mohawks from their council-fire at Schodac, an island of the Hudson, from which they had ruled the valley. They Went to Stockbridge, Massachussets, and came to be known as the Stockbridge Indians, because, after many years, the tribe, sadly decreased in numbers, was placed on a reservation there. Later they were again pushed on, this time to a reservation near Green Bay, Wisconsin, with the tribe of the Munsees. Chief Occum, who stands with his hand shading his eyes is a direct descendant of the mighty Uncas, and Wears his regalia. The women are Indian prin- cesses,--and the last of a glorious people. With the passing of the present generation the race becomes extinct. T 'za' Q, , sw og, Q K M 'WN .r W .. 4' '.Q an 65' ,, as 1 M K aye Four Hundred and Fifty-,Seven 7 ' ?1iZ5I35l' f' 751' TWH :w42l?q'WI. ' Aa ,gk ...E-E. f L... . 1, . . we .1 3.3413 .M 3.4221 3.6552 KW .,.., ffl.. . 3 Y: , .gy gf 5' ' L' si' , Q? 5 I 233' K W, 19' Q M54 Founded, University of Michigan, 1869 Wisconsin, Harlan 1891 Number of Chapters, 448 FRANK BOESEL STEPHEN WARREN GILMAN ARNOLD BENNETT HALL NEWELL S. BOARDMAN DUDLEY H. DAVIS PEROY FRED DORNBROOR FRED W. GENERICH HAROLD E. HANSON LELAND H. HYZER EDWARD P. KEARNS MARVIN S. KING WALLACE A. BARR GEORGE C. BUNGE EDWARD H. BORGELT LLOYD BROWN JAMES L. DOPP WALTER C. FERRIS WILLIAM J. B. JANISCH RUSSELL PHILLIPS JONES PHI DELTA PHI Professional Legal Fraternily MEMBERS IN FACULTY Benchers al lhe Inns of Courl On the Woolsack 616 North Lake Street WILLIAM HERBERT PAGE JOHN BELL SANBORN HARRY SANGER RICHARDS HOWARD LESLIE SMITH OLIVER SANIUEL RUNDELL JOHN D. VVICKHAM MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY Apprentices af llze Inns of Courl Inner Temple WIIILIAM LATHROP GEORGE VVILEY LENNON RAY T. MCCANN CARL F. RTIKKELSON CURTIS B. MORSELL ORIN I. NEVVTON CARL E. PETERSON SETH W. POLLARD ELLIS D. POTTER Middle Temple CALVIN O. CROCKER CARL H. DALEY LORENZO LYMAN D.kRLING HAROLD H. PAUL Ouler Temple ROY E. KILI,EEN THOMAS B. IVIARTINEAU JOHN ROGERS NIORONEY VVALTER H. PETTERSON GLEN D. ROBERTS STANLEY M. RYAN HERBERT H. SMITH GEORGE D. SPOHN FRED W. STEELE RICHARD H. TYRRELL C. FORREST VAN PELT ROBERT L. XVILEY CHARLES D. ROHR H.AROLD C. SMITH BRY.AN TORPHY LESTER SEYMOUR BYRON F. STORY JOHN C. THOMPSON FRED W. TROXY'BRIDGE VICTOR D. VVERNER Seymour Thompson Brown New Lon Dornbrook Hyzer Werner Steele Borgelt Y Killeen Dopp Tyrrell Janisch Ferris Daley Patterson Bunge . King JOIISS Ryan Pollard Darling Peterson McCann Van Pell Nvlleb' Crocker Roberts Barr Paul H. H. Smith Story Mikkelsori Lathrop Boardman Morsell Kearns Martineau Lennon Hanson H. C. Smilh Torphy Page Four Hundred and Fifty-Eight ' 'V ' vsgfw --,M ,H .----.P-.7 W. A n 43 vw' ' ' ' mf ' fi? if g'z'zg',sffg-ffm., ' Q E, .M K? ,. I . gg,-4' M' ff M: 'Ulm I? - -1 I A I A4243 X f - , 'fiilffi I I Founded, UniversiLy Ol' Wisconsin, 1902 Number of Chaplcrs, 33 HOMER BURTON ADRINS ANDREW IRVING .ANDREXVS HAROLD CORNELIUS BRADLEY VAN LORAN BOHNSON ELBERT DX'SART BOTTS ORVIN RICHARD BRUNKONY FARRINGTON D. DIANIEIS JESSE ERYVIN DAY ERNST DAVID FAHLBERG RICHARD FISCHER LOUIS BENJAMIN H.AINES ROLAND MARTIN BETHKE ARGI-IIE BLACK FREDERICK CONOVER SI-IELDON DICKENSON MANLEY H. CLARK RALPH WILLIAM CLARK EVERETT GLEN DREW OSCAR HENRY GERHARDT LPH CHI SIGMA Professional Chemical Fmiernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY EDWIN BERT HART PI-IIL!P JOHN LIICKEY CARL ARTHUR PICPPEIKT LJLAF A. HOIIGEN JOHN DONALD JENKINS JAMES HAZLETT JONES ARLINGTON COLTON KRAUSE FRANCIS KRAIG IQRAUSKOPF' HENRX' AUGUST LANGENHAN CHARLES KENNETH IIEITH VICTOR LENHER ROGER LUECK RALPI-I B. M.XSON JOSEPH l'IOVY.ARD IVIATHEWVS RICll.XRD STANISLAUS MDCAEEERY JOSEPH F. OESTERLE LLENVELLYN BRA DI.EY PARSONS ROLAND A. RAGATZ RALPH EDAVIN RAMSAY EIXNEST RUDOLPH SOHIERZ JOHN HENRX' SCI-IMIDT MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GUERDON HERBERT HEAD HARRY NIILLER JOHN RALPH KOCH N ANTHONY VVILLIAM PESCH VILLIERS-WILSON MELOCHE HASSO KARL PESTALOZZI SENIORS JOHN PHILIP GERI-IAUSER HONORE CLINTON HUBBARD XVALTER BERT GRIEM ARTHUR JOHN HLIEGEL RALPH HAROLD HEIDBREDER WILLIAM BLAIR MCQLTEEN CLARENCE EARL HRUBESKY KARL PA UL LINK Wisconsin, Alpha, 1902 625 North Frances Street WALTER THEODORE Sci-IRENK HENRY AUGUST SOHUETTE EIMER L. SEVRINGI-IAUS HARRY STEENBOGK u MARTIN TOSTERUD EMIL TRUOG JOSEPH HENRI WALTON OLIVER PATTERSON WATTS ROBERT VERNON WILLIABISON CLARENCE RUBEN WISE EAIIL GLYSTIXVE SCI-IMIDT HUGH LONGNVILL TEMPLETON HAROLD F. WAKEFIELD GEORGE PARKER HYPKN ALEXANDER JOHN SOHWARZ RALPH BECKETT SPENCE WIIBON DAVID ITRUEBLOOD JUNIORS CARTER HENRY ANDERSON GEORGE VINCENT BENNETT HOLG.AR WURTZ RASMUSSEN BRUCE WATSON HUBBARD M. Clark Anderson Heidbreder Spence Link . Head ' Lueck Jones Bolts Black R. Clark Huegel Jenkins PCSLRIOZZI Gerhardt Ryan Drew Rasmussen Haynes Brunkow McQueen Hruhesky Hoppert. Trueblood Pesch Mason Griem H. Hubbard Gerhauser Schmidt B. Hubbard Koch Bennett Schwarz Page Four Hundred and Fzfly Nine iq . pez. f , E A f f V M y , I 1 55 , , 5 L gp 2 c Vg: -T1-' A Au - . Y ,. A .: ' .f l 2 ., . Q -A . A 1 Founded, Northwestern University, 1897 Wisconsin, Ryan, 1904 Number of ChapLerS, 41 EUGENE ALLEN GILMORE AUSTIN JOSEPH BAIRD CHARLES PATRICK CADIGAN TIMOTHY FRANK EGAN ROBERT BORDEN ELLS WALTER STANLEY FISHER WENDELL BONESTEEL EGBERT BIRD BUNDY LEO JOSEPH FEDERER JAMES MAURICE FITZGIBBONS ROBERT LEONARD GILBERTSON LON BRENVER BEST BRUCE MARTY BLUM PAUI. EDMOND FRIEDRICH 271 Langdon Street PHI ALPHA DELTA Professional Legal F ralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY HARRY GLICKSMAN JOHN GORDON MCKAY MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS HARRY FOX LAWRENCE WATERBURX' HAIIL LAMBERT HANSEN RALPH MAXWELL IMMELL JUNIORS CARROLL RAHN LIEFT JOSEPH JACKSON HCJPICINS CLARENCE JOSEPH HUGHES GEORGE JOSEPH KREBS FRANK VVILLIAM KUEHL SOPHOMORES FREDERICK DALE HUEER EUGENE PAUL MEYER DANIEL CALLAILAN OiNEIII EDXVARD LUDVVIG HOYER GUSTAVE KELLER I'IERMAN CARL RUNGE GWYNETTE ELLSWORTH SMALLEY WARREN GREGG WHEELER ERNEST HERNIAN PETT JOSEPH HAROLD PLECK ARTHUR ONVEN ROBERTS ARTHUR RICHARD il-'ONVELL FREDERICK CARL SEIBOLD H. STANLEY MANSFIELD RODNEY COSTELLO AVELSH l 1 Bonesteel Rohcrls Meyer Wheeler Immell Smalley Welsh Fllzgibhons . Ells Cadigan Hansen Kuehl Mansfield Krebs Keller Runge Federer Hopk Ins Halline Fox Bes L Pleck O'Neil Bundy Baird Hoyer Pell Blum Towell Friedrich Hell Hughes Huber Page Four Hundred and Sixty fff ffm, fOfAf47'01?ff 'f fWf7WWW? W Umm if 4 V if Zficfffw X QW S f A we si-la. 4, will ,A2,3?f?ffif2QZ I4 fog X if f ' 5' ,245 V ,- 1 53.3, -, f . -N: 1 35221 iff' 're 4 M1552 f - Ura Im., - I ' 4,4 , A 6341 632 I ' I gr . mf ff A AA f , L ' 4 A Founded, University of Illinois 1907 Wisconsin 1913 Nllmbef Of Chapters, 6 l 438 North Frances Street DANTEL VVEBSTER NIEAD WILLIAM SPAULDING KINNE LAWRENCE HUGO HAHN CLIFFORD OTTO BRUDEN CARL WILLIAM BRUEMMER LEON EVERETT CHASE WINFORD WALTER GREILING GEORGE MARSDEN HOE RALPH NORTON GVREENMAN LA VERNE MIIITON HOFFMAN JOHN BURTON LEONARD JAMES EVERETT MACKIE ITIERMAN KARL VON KAAS WALTER ARTHUR KUENZLI TRIANGLE Prqfessional Civil Engineering Fralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY RICHARD STANISLAUS MCCAFFERY LEONARD SEWALL SMITH HENRY HERMAN GUMPRECHT CHRISTOPHER ARMIN WIPKING MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES SENIORS JOHN BENNETT HIOLMES VVILI-IAM FREDERICK MOEHLMAN JAMES ROBERT PRICE ARTHUR MARTIN SILNIP J UNIORS ANTHONY JOSEPH NERAD THOMAS CHESTER NICHOLS RUFUS SEELEY PHILLIPS ORA CLYDE RABBITT ARTHUR JACOBS RABUCK SOPHOMORES EARL LEROY CALDWELL HOWARD VINCENT HAYWARD GUSTAV MAURICE LUNDBERG GEORGE FREDERICK SCHUBRING WAIITER CONRAD THIEL HERBERT HUDSON WHEATON CHARLES EUGENE WHEEI. ER WALTER OTTO ZERVAS REINHOLD HENRY RAUBE CHARLES EUGENE SILVER LAWRENCE TAYLOR SOGARD GEORGE PHILLIP STEINIVEETZ CARROLL ELBRIDGE ROBR HAROLD JOHN YOUNGBERG Holmes Nerad Leonard Steinmetz Caldwell Zervas Hoffman Phillips Nichols Bruden Wheeler Thiel Silver Greenman Samp Moehlman Schubriug Mackie Greiling Bruemmer 1. Von Kaas Rabuck Hahn Price Sogard Youngberg Wheaton Kuenzli Lundberg Chase Babbitt Robb Page Four Hundred and Szzlv One VVILLIAM S. SULLIVAN gif? 5 EEE uf 3 mmm. 'ning - 1 X f 41 .. Inu? 1. .wx A Founded University of Wisconsin. 1916 5 Langdon Street GAMMA TAU BETA Professional Medical Fralfernify MEMBERS IN FACULTY PAUL FRANCIS CLARK JOSEPH DEAN. MILTON BORMAN EVERET CABIPBELL LAWRENCE R. BOIES FREDERICK BUSSEY JOSEPH DAUKSYS ERWIN W. EXLEY HAROLD FEHLAND WILLIAM B. GNAGI WILLIAM GREGORY ALPHONZ E. BACHHUBER JAMES G. CURTAIN THOMAS H. FLARITY ALVIN CHRISTIAN FLORIN KARL W. EMANUEL WILLIAM M. GUTHRIE CLIFFORD DEMPSTER BENSON JOHN ENGLISH EYSTER FERDINAND GEIST EDWARD ZELLMER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES SENIORS HUBERT HARMON GEORGE KASTLIN ARTHUR KNUDSON R. W. HAMMOND MARS MADSEN FREDERICK MADISON J UN IORS HARRY F REDERICKS EDWIN B. GUTE A. E. GILLIS ALBERT H. LAHMAN STANLEY EDWARD OCHSNER SOPHOMORES ROBERT TANNEY KROHN RALPH METCALF IILIUBERT JOHN HINDES FRESHMEN HARRY LAWSON FEABER LUCIAN G. CULVER IVAN ELLIS EDWIN MCKINLEY WILLIAM M URPHY GUSTAV GOTTLIEB BIUELLER LYNDLE PETERSON DANA PRESTON STEARNS RAYMOND AUGUST TOEPFER NIARK WALL JAMES T. O'HARA H.AROLD ALLEN PINKERTON CHARLES B. PUESTONV EDXVIN G. SCHUTZ CHESTER. ALEXANDER PERRODIN GSCAR WALTER THOENY RAI MOND JOSEPH PORTMAN Guthrie Puestow Harmon Fehlancl Geist Mad' K Ll' C b ll h Peterson Exley McKinley Culver Ellis Murphy lSm?I'hoe:?f HIiamm2:z'rxIclI, 8 Florgxc SrI?I1udson Krohn Emanuel Mueller Boies Toepfer Madsen Pinkerton Gute Stearns Page Foul Hundred and Sicvly- Two . if f' ' HH? If, :a1',ffii+:'eZ4faf,, in 1 ff, A, ,mf . iff-,I R11 W 'Iii fi? 11545 ' f'1I'J'QaV, . V 1 '1 ,, 1. vi . ..gi H If if if iafiakpaxiif A I Q I' ' - ,I h M gmc' I 'yi 15? I? f MJ' Rf Syl ' . ff' ' .,,.,j'l J .. eg A-'IA ' If-'fw 541 -- -nkf '.Qo,ll.- 'M ' ' ' ' ' .V - 1 ' x Founded, University of Pittsburgh. 1891 Number ol' Chapters, 442 THEODORE H. BAST HAROLD CORNELIUS BRADLEY PERCY DAWSON THOBIAS KENNETH BROVS-'N VVILMER CHARLES EDNVARDS WILLIAM ELLIOTT JAMES SAM HESS ROBERT LYNDON HOLCOBIBE STEPHEN P. GYLAND CLARENCE BAXTER BROWN ERWIN WALTER BLATTER PAUL CHRISTOFFEBS GATTER DAM ROWE GEORGE BAKER ROBERT W. BROWN LELAND CHARLES DIETSCH EMMET ADDIS DRAKE EARLE CHRISTOPH WILLIAM MCKINNON ANDERSON LEO KEHL DOUGLAS T. PREHN Wisconsin, Alpha Pi, 1915 416 North Carroll Street PHI BETA PI Prqfessional Medical Fralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY FRED J. IQIODGES BEGINALD JACKSON Cl-IAUNCEY DEPEXV LEAKE ARTHUR SOLOMAN LOEVENI-IART XVALTER JOSEPH MEEK WILLIAM MIDDLETON WILLIAM SNOW IVIILLER MEMBERS IN UNIV GRADUATES GEORGE CHARLES KREUTZ ALBERT ERXVIN IVIEINERT SENIORS ADOLPH HERNIAN EMERSON EARL T. HARRINGTON ELVIN MANN HAHTLETT HARRY J. MCGUIRE JUNIORS CECIL F. DULL GEORGE FIEDLER HAROLD JOHN HEATH C. OLIVER HEIINIDAL FRED C. PREHN SOPHOMORES JOHN S. PACKARD AGNAR SMEDAL ARTHUR SPERRY PEARSE W HEELAN DWIGHT SUTLIFF THOMAS TORMEY LESLIE W. TASCHE ALBERT GAYLAND YOUNG JOHN S. LINGENFELTER GABRIEL ERICK LINDEN ERSITY ' EDWARD NOEL PETERSON CLARENCE WOODMANSEE GUY EDWARD OHLSON ERLING A. SMEDAL NORBERT CARL TRAUBA STUART A. MCCORMICK RUFUS A. SCHNEIDERS SAMUEL JOHN SULLIVAN PAUL WILLIAM SCHULZ ARNO W. SOMMER AUGUST WESLEY SPITTLER RUDOLPH A. TESCHAN ' C.B.BroWn Dietsch A. Smedal Meinert McGuire Kreutz Dull E'Teschan D. Prehn E.A.Smedal Edwards Fiedler Sutliff Trauba Emerson Spit-Ller Gatterdam Young Gyland McCormick Blatter Baker Schneiders Vlfoodmansee Drake T.K.BI-Own Meek Pearse Bradley Miller T asche Bash Dawson Loevenharu Kay 'Leake Anderson Harrington Sommer Ohlson Holcombe Heath Sullivan R.W. Brown Schulz Hess Christoph ,T 'Wi'-fi. . . , Page Four Hundred and Szxly Three - P352 Q am if ,7 jgwiglii 4554 , A-A 35? 'QA ss? ' Mi' .ig ff, QL fl y., -.- A E ' QR A? . f 4. 4 if ' ., ...VW vw-.fy W-.N.,,... yi-A-W, A-. ff, - if 'MR -A C' -J . .EA Founded, Russell Military Academy, 1879 Wisconsin, Beta Psi 1919 Number ol' Chapters, 105 115 Ely Place KAPPA PSI Prqfessional Pharmaceutical Medical Fralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. A. LANGENHAN H. P. REIF KARL SIMEON BARNARD RAYMOND GOETSOH ALBERT CLARK HASTINGS RALPH HAROLD HEIDBREDER CLAUDE RANDOLPH HOWARD RALPH WILLIAM CLARK MILTON A. DOOLEY JOHN ADOLPH BOSSHARD CLEO C. CAMPBELL DONALD CLARK LYLE E. GAGE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS FOREST THOMPSON KELLMAN HARRY E. LOUNSBURY WILLIAM MILLER MERCER HERBERT WILLIAM PIES JUNIORS EARL EDGAR GAGE NORRIS JOHN KELLMAN ARTHUR J. KRAUSE SOPHOMORES JOSEPH T. DELFOSSE, JR. FRESHM EN ARTHUR HERMAN HACKENDAHL HENRY J EGI ARTHUR G. PHILLIPS FOREST E. PRITCHARD EARL JOSEPH POKORNY JESSE MYRLE POOLE ALEXANDER JOHN SCHWARZ N ORBERT EDNVARD SCHNVAKE EDWIN JOHN VOIGT HUGH CHARLES IVIICHELS PALNIER WILLIAM TAYLOR EDGAR LOCKHART TILFORD CHARLES ROWLAND EDWARD SIGGELKOVV EARL W EITERA-LAN Schwarz Barnard' Lounsbury R. Clark Hcidbreder Pies HasLi s P l N K Il L. GageT Goetsch Rosshard Kellman -Tilford D. Clark Michels Krausgg Jag? e Phillips 9 li-Ttcilvtsrard I aylor Voigt Pritchard Welterman Schwake Pokoruy Campbell Hackendahl E. Gage Page Four Hundred and Sifvly-Four ., f- ,:, 2? ' mf MR' f' ' - ,. A .,. AU AW., fx .. . 35311 A19 77' . .A 9, f 4 A I ff f X ff,afff7f9 B' 4 f , :.ff ::j11Ww . . ' , fe: 1- f .V , I eg,-3 - f .iffg .WAY 3 J ff., Q. . . I .'7'l- I2 if, 1 15 . ' il-Q.9',g wa ' ffv .4 ' MZ .'f I 2255, . ' ve 2 ' y ' ' 4 'Q .:, . ,. 2, I ' ?f2? ,7'7ViW Founded, University of Wisconsin. 1920 Wisconsin, Alpha, 1920 Number Of Chaplers, 1 313 North Mills Street, CARMAN GEORGE BLOUGH CHARLES MCCOY CHAPMAN RICHARD JOHN DEGERSTEDT ERNST RAY NICCARTNEY LESTER VICTOR GRIEM HAROLD HENRY GROTH ARTHUR NICHOLAS LORIG ORVIN HENRY ANDERSON WILSON MCGINNIS CROSS KORT FUCHS MANEORD CASPER GALBY WILLIAM JAMES FRONK ALPHA PI DELTA Professional Commvrce Fralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY LIENRY JOHN DUWE J. CURRIE GIBSON MEMBERS IN UNIVE GRADUATES IJERBERT VICTOR PROCKNOW SEN IORS DAVID ROSNVELL JONES NVESLEY WARREN JONES ROY B. ORMAND J UNIORS ELNLER RAYMOND GESTEIIAND WILBUR JAMES HEUER SIDNEY JAMES LANG PETER RUDOLPH MOELLER SOPHOMORES ALBERT JACKSON MCGLASSON KARL F. MCMURRY RSITY ' FREDERICK W. NEIISON HAROLD RONIAINE REHBERG WALTER HERBERT SYLVESTER HARLEY BEAL WILEY ROLLIN EVANS ECKE HERMAN O. WALTHER WILLIAM JAMES WEBB KENNETH GERMAIN WILLIAMS HERBERT LUVERNE WOLCOTT JOSEPH CANNON PAYNE I Anderson Sylvester Groth Nelson Moeller Williams Ecke Webb Walther Lorig Galby Duwe Heuer Fuchs Griem McMurry D.Jones Gesteland Procknow Wolcott Blough Nelson W. Jones Degerstedt Rehberg Gibson Lang McCartney Ormand Cross Page Four Hundred and Silly-Five I F64 hifi eral. Am, v' . 2,933 V 5 ggi, I . Iv'f f'M R I fy , .. Founded, University Of Missouri, 1905 Number of Chapters, 5 FARM HOUSE Prqfessional Agricullural F ralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY Wisconsin Chapter, 1921 309 North Mills Street WILLIAM DODGE FROST EDWARD RICHARD JONES RANSOM ASA MOORE ANDREW VVINKLE HOPKINS FRANK BAHBON MORRISON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES JOHN ARLINGTON ANDERSON GAROLD WILLIAM HEAL JOHN THOMAS ODIERNIK RUSSELL ELWELL FROST SENIORS CARL CLARENCE LINDEGREN RICHARD CHARLES MUNKWITZ EDWARD ERNEST PRICE BENJAMIN N OYES PEACOCK JOHN ROMEO BOLLINGER THEODORE EPHRAIM CARLSON HELMER CORNELIUS CASPERSON EDWIN GEORGE HAMMEN ARTHUR MAGNUS KNUTSON JUNIORS CONRAD ARNOLD ELVEHJEM HOWARD ELMER JANUSON RAYMOND CLARENCE KLUSSENDORF SOPHOMORES EDWIN HERMAN ROHRBECK ROY JOSEPH BIBELHAUSEN LIPPERT SPRING ELLIS XNIILLARD BENJAMIN ALBERT GEORGE WILLIAM LONGENECKER RALPH ALPHONS TIEDJENS BYRON HOYT SPEAR LEVVIS NVALTER TAYLOR JOHN WILSON TIBBITTS HARVEY JOHN XVEAVERS ELNIER AUGUST XVOELFFER YVERNER PAUL NIEYER V ILAS DEVAULD YOUNG MARVIN ARNOLD SCHAARS Elvehjem Omernikh Casperson Weavers Klussendorf Price Tiedjens Munkwitz Young Longenecker Llndegren Schaars Bibelhausen Tibbitts Taylor Ellis Jamison Albert Frost, Woelffer Peacock Knutson Anderson Spear Hammer: Carlson Meyer Page Four Hundred and Sixty-Sin: 0,1 Founded, University of Wisconsin, 1921 - Wisconsin ChzIpl,er, 1921 Number of Chap'-CFS. 13 118 Wesl, Johnson Sl.reeL .i'f -s..L-F? I MI: fy gm DELTA PI DELTA Prqfessional Jozzmalzfsm F ralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY WILLARD GROSVENOR BLEYER GRANT MILNOR HYDE ANDREW W INKLE I'IOPKINS EDWARD MARION JOHNSON W ILLIAM ALLISON SUMNER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS WILLIAM FRANCIS BLOECHER EDNVARD NOBLE LEE GEORGE WEBSTER GREENE JUNIORS ERIC MARTIN HALLING OLIVER TERRELL BANTON HERBERT HENRY BROCKHAUSEN CHARLES JULIUS LENVIN HAROLD EDNVARD MCCLELLAND EDWARD JEROME MCDONOUGH SOPHOMORES COURTLAND REED CONLEE RICHARD HUGH CROSSE GEORGE LONVELL GEIGER J EROMIE OLIVER BJERKE CHARLES PATTISON MACINNIS RODNEY COSTELLO WELSH W AI.TER JOHN PFISTER CEDRIC E. SEAMAN FRED SEATON SIEBERT HUBERT FORCE T OWNSEND FRED LESLIE KILDOW I I I I 1 I I I I I N. II. II 4, In Brockhausen Benton Coulee Siehert Greene Bloecher Lewin Crosse Lee Bierke Pfister Halling Maclnnis Townsend McDonough McClelland Welsh Kildow Geiger Page Four Hundred and Sixty-Seven 1 Founded, University of Vermont, 1889 'Y'-g . - Number of Chapters, 46 VVlSCOI.lSlD, Tau Beta, 1921 G. H. ROBBINS OTTO E. BENELL ETHAN B. PFEFFERKORN GAYLORD P. COON HEINHOLD O. EBERT FRANK S. FELLOWS ERWIN J. KADERABEK FRANK B. PLATT . 'fs . A PHI CI-II Professional llfledical Fraiernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY W. E. IVIEANVVELL VV. M. DONOVAN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES HAROLD E. HENKE ALFRED E. KOEHLER SENIORS CLIFFORD H. HARXVILLE LESTER MCGARY CARROLL W. OSGOOD JUNIORS GUY K. TALLMADGE ERNEST S. WATSON EDXVIN J. SCHNELLER LEO J. SCHNVEIGER CARL E. SIBILSKY CORNELTUS N. VETTEN VVALLACE B. W HITE ANTHONY E. ZALEXVSKI Watson Benell Fellows Vetten Tallmadge Pla Lt White Osgood Ebert Kaderabek Zalewski Henke Coon Schweiger McGary Koehler Schneller Pfefferkoru Hai-ville Sibilsky Page Four Hundred and Sixty-Eight I Q sv K 5 'ax Y qffmsww 'zfl .4,,1,, ff SOHO TIE , SORORITIES h I-N THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT KAPPA KAP-PA GAMMA DELTA GAMMA .... ' GAMMA PHI BETA . . KAPPA ALPHA THETA PI BETA PHI .... ALPHA PHI ...,. DELTA DELTA DELTA CHI OMEGA .... ALPHA CHI OMEGA . ALPHA XI DELTA , ALPHA GAMMA DELTA ACHOTH ...... ALPHA OMICRON PI . DELTA ZETA . . . SIGNIA KAPPA . . PHI MU ..., KAPPA DELTA . ALPHA DELTA PI . SIGMA ALPHA IOTA . Page Four Hundred and Senenlgv 'AT THE UNIVERSITY . . . 425 Park Street . . 250 Langdon Street . . 428 Sterling Court . . . 823 Irving Place . 233 Langdon Street . . . 819 Irving Place . . 120 Langdon Street . 615 North Henry Street . . 1-I0 Langdon Street . . .4-311 Sterling Court- 418 North Frances Street 629 North Frances Street 626 North Henry Street . . . 10 Langdon Street . ,430 Sterling Court . . 222 Langdon Street . .15 East Gilman Street . . .135 Langdon Street . Century Club Rooms PANLHELLENIC ASSOCIATION The Pan-Hellenic Associalion, seeks lo mainlain lhe lzighesl slandards of sororily life and lo promole in lhe besl possible manner a spirit of sympalhelic and helpful co-operation among llle sororilies al Wisconsin. Ils aim is lo support lhe high ideals of lhe women sla deals in llze Universilgy and lo bellerfll lhem lo be lrue cilizens in laler life. BETTY KENNE1' . . BEATRICE IVIORSE . . . W ILHELMINA EIIRIIAN . . ADELAIDE ANDERSON . . SEN IORS J EAN PRINCE .... VVILHELDHNA IEHRM.-KN . . . . SELVIDA DELBRIDGE . AIJICE SPENSLEY . . MATILDA KEENAN . . VIRGINIA CONKLIN . . ADELAIDE ANDERSON . BEATRICE MORSE . . BETTY KENNE1' . . ELEANOR GRAVES . . MARION BARBER . . ESTHER SCOFIELD . . IMA NVINCHELL . . EDITH BLACK .... MILDRED GERLACH . JESSIE lVl,ORTON. . . ERNA KLOSTERMAN . HELEN DICKENSON . . CHARLOTTE O,MALLEY OFFICERS MEMBERS Achoth ..... Alpha Chi Omega . . Alpha Delta Pi . . . Alpha Gamma Delta . Alpha Omicron Pi . . Alpha Phi .... Alpha Xi Delta . . Chi Omega .... Delta Delta Delta . . Delta Gamma . . Delta Zeta Gamma Phi Beta . . Kappa Alpha Theta . Kappa Delta .... Kappa Kappa Gamma Pi Beta Phi ,.... Phi MII ...,.. Sigma Alpha Iota . . Sigma Kappa . . . . . President . . Vice-President . . .Secretary . . Treasurer .IUNIORS PIESTER MARTIN AVINIFBED FLETCHER GRACE GREENWOOD DOROTHY L,I'IOMMEDIEU EDITH HASTINGS OUISE CLANOY ELEANOB BOTH ISABEL TROTTER MARY PETERS CATHERINE MENDENHALL THELNLK TIENRY CAROL GOODYEAR GEBTRUDE COLLINS SELVIDA KENSETH HELEN KJKSBEER CATHERINE GRIMES FIENRIETTA SUESS GLADYS GARNESS HELEN STILLWVILL Paqe Four Hundred Ind bevenlv One A: 'i Q 13 W 2 Af slg 4 v ..' My ' Z v, ya- 5 1 .- . X 1-5 , g s A AA-'- L-I I Z - . . . f Rf , ' fl :fm 1- . A 0- 2 ' 'N I -2 f , k'TTr,1'- 1 ': -A- - , - ' - 2 I , ,AA vm-'Fw I . A. --pit'-:Q .w-LgI'25',.:4..f:A A L 1- - ,J -, , 1 :L 1' up-, :gf-fp . -'i M II 1 , - , . 11 -aw '- I' . I . . ,..,,. I -' s' f if A iv2.Jf?2 4 - T A I , Ru ' ' ufiiai I f nv- I '2 2 X I 7 L ' ' irpsliif A f f s :g.fe'i -1- 1: -- ., ..-f. -. , A A ' 4' 335.81 V W I . ' xmvfmgngg 'fifif ii g f'- Aisqf'-A . I , ,, A . .. ,A - 1 I 5'-gf A I f I - AA .fi-if 5, 79,5 I 5 5: 3' .31 g I , ,.: :V f ,.,. ' , . . - A - ' , g f' Founded, Monmouth College. 1870 Wisconsin, Eta, 1375 Number of Chapters, 48 425 North Park Street KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA MEMBERS IN FACULTY EMILY ELMORE MRS. F. A. SPRAGUE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY LAURETTA CONKLIN MOSIER SENIOBS HARRIET BRIDGEMAN RUBY BRITTS BETTY CASTLE MIRIAM DOAN PAULINE AMBROSE MARY ALCINDA BONNIFIELD KATHERINE ELDER ANN ANDERSON DOROTHY BONDURANT FREDERICA CRANE MARY CUNNINGHAM CATHERINE DAVIS CAMILLA FENN FLORENCE HINNERS. LOUISE HOLT GLADYS FRAZER MILDRED GERLACH JANET JONES HILDEGARDE J UNG JUNIORS ALMA FENN HELEN KASBEER ALICE KNOEDLER SOPHOMORES EDITH JACKSON CLARA KEELER GEORGIANNE KIMBERLEY HII,DEG.ARDE LUEDKE F RESHMEN ELIZABETH HOLBROOK HELEN JOHNSON ALICE KINIBERLEY CATHERINE M CGREGOR ISABEL SCHAEFER CARYL PARKINSON ELEANOR SHELDON ISABEL SWARTZBAUGI-I JULIE WATSON HELEN RAPP LEONE SANDERS HELEN PATTERSON JANET IVIILLAR ELIZABETH OSIUS VIRGINIA PLATTENBERG ADELAIDE RICHARDSON CATHERINE W ILSOR IVIARION STRENG JANE THORP HARRIET THORP CAROLYN TURGRIBISON Doan Parkinson Swartzbaugh Sheldon Crane Luedke Gerlach Jackson Fenn Patterson Millar Osius Ambrose CasLle Swartz Kasbcer Anderson Britts Wa lson Frazer Kimberley Elder Jones Page Four Hundred and Sevenly- Two J f .MJ , m f A,-fr -A -A-M ----- 11 ' . jg w .wa . - : f a , + 45 leaf' f 1 5555 ff A '- I sf- zp 7 ' gs fAr1 ,fa ' 4 ' 41 , ' '11 Aigififi, w is A Q -I wav' '- - ' J' ,,s'bfe.-gwgp-I M c - . : J A. Founded. University ol' Mississippi, 1872 Vkfigconsin, Qmega, 1.880 Number of Chapters, 30 CATHERINE ALLEN EDXVINA DEXTER SARAH GALLIAGHER BXIARGARET lh'1CDONVELI ELEANOR GRAVES ELEANOR HEAD EUGENIE BAUMAN HELEN BRADFORD J OSEPHINE BRADFORD KATHERINE DIE1'RICH MARION BARNES LAURA BLAUL HARRIETT BROWN JULIETT CLARK AVERY DAVIDSON DELTA GAMMA MEMBERS IN FATULTY 250 Langdon Street LILLIAN STUPP MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS HIELEN IJOOPEH KATHERINE NIENDENHALL KATHERINE ROCKWELL HELEN ROBERTS JUNIORS IVIAJEL HOOPER KATHERINE I'l0RTON SOLVEIG WINSLONV E SOPHOMORES DOROTHY JONES JEANETTE KENNAN KATHRYN KLAESSEN ELAINE MABLEY FRESHMEN RUTH EASTNIAN BEATRICE FOWLER MARGARET HOBART MARCELLA JUDSON JEAN MCNAMARA DORIS OLIVER DOROTHY STREETER DOROTHY SUMNER MARJORIE THOMAS MARIAN MCCLINTOCH HELEN ROCKWELL JVIAVIS MCINTOSH BLANCHE MORITZ KATHERINE O,SHEA FRANCES SEAMAN JEAN PALICA DORIS PIKE MABGUERITE SHERWOOD LUCILE WANZER LUCY WHITTAKER Dexter Mendenhall K.RockweIl Dietrich Klaessen H. Hooper Seaman O'Shea Gallagher Jones McDowell Streeter Mabley Bauman M. Hooper H. Bradford J. Bradford Sumner Mclntosh H.Rockwell Kennan Graves Page Four Hundred and Sevenlg Three .7 . A --L M. JZ.. , I.. 1. 3 s .3 , 4.x- ,wvggfg 262 ffl.. , ff A WS H fu-f Tv ., ,',. , 5234.3 , -4-5.411 , 21-I.. 'f , EA' 'V ., 3.5. A - . .. 3,.ff.i 'f mff'-f.. ' ., ' - ly . 1 -' -NN. . , ai -A 9,14 uw. Tv-1--..,k MQ '4 f SQL' xy- .Tig-3, .-f' A -I. -' ...a -f -f A -. , A fi. : A.. my f A ::fffi'f2H g:5'5'fii'ff2'f 12 ',:f11'P 'f' .. Aw: . V A figfa, 1-I Era, 15 , , '- i'2f'1 E.r'f' I '.L'5'y l 51752 ,gg - .. 52:32, gif- Ii' J -542155 - ' A 4 - , - ' .. A C9 ff I Anvwh., .M . 1- 1- A sw f Sm 124 Is:-fag? Hf:,f. ,.: :Afgg,rfQff g, - . ,Q g , f2:gy.L67,,, a 45: 3 lqfiffbrs as A iw 'fff 1' 1 1 1 if gen:-M f'-U -if ,W V 2253? F HL' .121-sw wif- '-If-il lc.. '8- - ' 'T i'5'f'Y?z '5 .. , ,-:, ,.:g 'g: 2g- .,1 I ,, . :Y -'V- -,I, ... . , -'M Founded, Syracuse University, 1874 WiSCOrlSiI1. Gamma, 1335 Number of Chaptcrs,f27 ELIZABETH BALDWIN GRACE LUCILLE CAMPBELL DOROTHY COERRER MARGARET FRANCES DALY MILDRED VICTORIA ANDERSON MARGARET BRENNECKE EDITH L. CRANE OLIVIA PRIMROSE FENTRESS CAROL MARSTON GOODYE.AR AILEEN HALL IVIARGUERITE BAINES GERTRUDE BOHRER MARY JANET BURCHARD JANET ANDERSON MARY ATWOOD HELEN BRANNUM 428 Sterling Court GAMMA PHI BETA ' MEMBERS IN FACULTY ALICE GAUL MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES HELEN OLSON- SENIORS ESTHER TERESA GUERINI DORIS MAXINE LOVELL GRACE B. MCCLIMANS CATHERINE BXIEYER J UNIORS CATHERINE HORNER ESTHER JACOBS LOUISE LAMSON GRACE LOUISE MAXCY 'RUTH VVILLARD PARKHILL SOPHOMORES CATHERINE MARX' CORBETT ELEANOR DAY FRESI-IMEN LORRAINE BROWVN PEARL I'IOCKING HARRIET JACKSON HELEN IVICCARTHY DOROTHY LOUISE PEARSON FLORENCE MARIE SCHROEDER DOROTHY RODIAINE SHANER lNlILDRED AILEEN RIECK DEBORAH IONE SHANER ALINE PARRY SMITH ELIZABETH TURNEY HELEN TYRRELL DANE E. VERMILLION JULIA M. J ACRSON ROBERTA BIDDLE LOUDEN PIELEN BURDEN SMITH RUTH KNAPP CATHERINE BJCCAUL BEATRICE SELLERY Maxcy A Bohrer Burchard Bn ines Olson Sll1lIl6I' Smi Lh Shaner - C?1mDb9ll Brerlilecke Sohroeder Pearson Fen lrcss H all PaI'klIill lVlCCllIl1BIiS Anderson Sml l h Rieck Goodyear Daly Coerper Crane Page Four Hundred and Sevenly-Four Founded, DePauw Universily. Number of Chapters, 46 IVIARY ANDERSON MIARJORIE IVIAY BOESCH SUSAN DELATTE BROWN MARTHA NIARY BUELL HELEN CONVAN CHEETHAAI DOROTHY IWQARGUERITE DWIGHT IDA ATKINSON RACHEL HALL BRADISI-I GERTBUDE E. COLLINS RUTH BEATRICE DICKOVER NELLIE .JUNE GRAY VIRGINIA BENSI EY JEANETTE CHERRY JANET MARY CUMMINGS CHARLOTTE JANE CURRY ELIZABETH REAMS ELSOM ISABEL FAIRBANKS ELIZABETH CAIT BROWN VERA KATHERINE CHAPMAN LUCY LOUISE GALE 1870 EE U A Qh,,f?,A 4 'gr E5 ffl! -9146! ,ggi ,kzff Ai! WW A 55553122 I. .A-In --A - 3 7 , fr I ' ,I .-171' 1 ff. I , ' .. gm ff A ' '2 v, ,,, f ,:f'1 ,. fmf f Af - ff , - gy I 1 Q - -::- , V- -A Y E ,A : I' I ' ,Af ' -,I V .- Uv ' sz ' A 'Wa 2 :fm Wg' if Dix. UM I2 ' y ,I ' 1 .M'wC,-'f Lg f ' ' 557,-,52:f, '- A, , QT -T 7,,ff y,, ! 7 V' .. .,I, fi fgr' :1 ii ii .,. ,, , V ,ff , if ,' If - I ' 2 i ff, I I 15,4 A? E, , , L. , , .ga 1-, Z, 41 41 I 4, 4,y 5, 1, , I I ' r ,AI , , . I 'ii' x LQ M45 V-5. ., , 7' ff 0 'ia ' if A fa III ,I W - - .,,,-X7-Y'-' --M I- ff' ' v f., AW mmm, W -WN...,,,,, I sf Wisconsin, Psi, 1890 823 Irving Court KAPPA ALPHA THETA MEMB'ERS IN FACULTY M AIXIE CARNS RUTH CHASE ELSIE DEXTER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS HELEN DOUBLE KATHERINE GORDON ELY ESTHER IVIERNVYNE LINDSTEN FLORENCE IVIAHOBNEY IVIAUDE MILDRED MILLER JUNIORS EDITH HESS GERALDINE DOROTHY KAEPPEL KATHERINE E. KEEN IVIAUDE MARIE KILLABI IVIILDRED HAAL KLANN BELLE KNIGHTS SOPHOMORES ISABEL FARRINGTON GRACE LIOPKINS KELLOGG CATHERINE EILEEN KENNY CARMALITA LEWIS K.ATHRYN JANET MARSHALL RUTH ELEANOR NEIISON FRESHMEN MARION BERNEIOE GUILD ELIZABETH KNECHT ELIZABETH NIORGAN MAHORNEY IVIARY VIRGINIA ROACH KATHERINE ROSENBERRY MARJORIE TODD KATHRYN TURNEY IMA WINCHELL K.ATHRYN ILLEEN PERRY ELIZABETH LATILAM SHOLES ELIZABETH STUKEY WINLA MARIE TROST BEATRIOE CHATEAU TURNER DOROTHY FAY SCI-IEIBEL SARA MILDRED SHEERER SOPHIE STEIGER ELIZABETH TAYLOR MARY SOULARD TURNER DOROTHY ELIZABETH WILLIAMS ELIZABETH PAYNE HEINHOLDT SARA TAYLOR ELIZABETH TOMPKINS Scheibel M.Turner Kellogg Perry Ely NOISOI1 Sifilgef T0dd Mahvrney . Knights Kaeppel Klann Gray Buell . Double Brown B. Turner Boesch Winchell Lindsben Roach Miller Wlllrams Elsom Turney , ' TYOSU , Kenney Keen Bradish Collins Dwight Sholes Cheatham Hess Dlckover Klllam Page Foul' Hruirll-ed and Scvenly-Five A f , f Aw.: Aw- . 1-'INF' .v vi 1- 324 ' ff X 'T as L' A ve .. VT ,A W ries-iS I.mr Founded, Monmouth College, 1867 WiSC0I1SfI1, Alpha 1394 Number of Chapters, 65 233 Langdon Street LUCILE NIELSON CURTIS CORINTHIA GILBERT KATHERINE H. GRIMES ESTHER OLIVE HAVEN DOROTHY IVIAY HOLLANDS VIVIAN ELLISON CHEATHAM KATHERINE HTJLLINGER JOY BAGON THELMA DAVENPORT BLOSSOM ANNE VVINNIFRED ESCH FLORENCE FOX DOROTHY JANE ADAMS JEAN ALEXANDER GERTBU DE H. BINGENHEIMER PI BETA PHI MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ADINE TERRELL LAMPTON RUTH HATHAWAY LAYLIN MARY WILSON MCLEAN DOROTHY OECHSNER PERSIS ALLAN PERKINS JUNIORS ALICE LOUISE LIGARE MYRA M. MCGORBILY MARY JEAN MAVOR SOPHOMORES ELLEN WILSON H.ARRIS ANITA KATHERINE HAVEN HAZEI, MARIE HEDSTROBI DELLA GARRETT MANN PAULINE NEWELI, FRESHMEN EARNESTINE LOUISE BLATZ HELEN M. BURT VIRGINIA CAMP JULIA ISABEL HITGHNER CAROLINE SCHVVEIZER MARGARET STAVRUM IVIARGARET A. THOMAS DOROTHY RHODA WARE ISABEL WRIGHT JESSIE IYIORTON ELEANOR ROBERTS SANFORD ROSABIOND NOLTE CATHERINE HARBIET PORTER IVIARY ELIZA BETH RANDOLPH FRANCES ROYCE DOROTHY A. JOHN ANNETTE LOUISE LOTZ JANE TRUESDALE Harris Perkins Curtis Stavrum Nolte McLean Grimes VVare Haven Schweizer Mann Oechsner Ligare Thomas Hullinger Bacon H ollands Randolph Sanford Royce Wright. Mor ton Page Four Hundred and Seventy-Sim if '0 X W,4v? 'g f Z wwf '55, 4, 3 , 1 I.: 1' . 33,evf3 . ,ff rj 1 a v, 4 V I- :f fi, V 5: '2'1,, ',gx1'f' r , , '4 r xw 4 9 S K-K W' :fwf fum. MU N Q' lf -W ff, I .f,- V . M., . A fi? MI: ,G , f f W S ff ' 9 X BA ww rw: ' Aw 23,1 . ,, ,H - fp W W, W., W , f . , 'V Founded. Syracuse UnivcrsiLy, 1872 Wisconsin, Iota, 1896 Number ol' Chapters, 26 319 Irving place KATHERINE BARTHOLE ZIRIAN BLISH CHRISTINA AFFELD MIRIAM GORDON AREY MARY BALDWIN PHYLLIS ADELE BOTT DOROTHY BRADFORD LOUISE CLANCY KATHABINE FARNHAM JANE BALDWIN ANNA Fox RUTH LYON-CAMPBELL ALPHA PHI MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS VIRGINIA CONKLIN ELAINE ESCHVVEILER ANDREA KILAND JUNIORS DIXIE DAVIS MARGARET ANTHONY EULASS MARGARET PAGE MOORE NIARJORIE REUM SEVERANCE SOPHOMORES BARBARA HASTINGS ETHEL JONES ALICE ELIZABETH FREEMAN GEORGIANA KERR F RESHMEN RUTH MERRILL BLANCHE PEABODY KATHERINE KITCHIN ELIZABE FH VINCENT HELLEN FRANCES SMALLSHAW FLORENCE STOLTE MARY ELIZABETH THORKELSON CHARLOTTE WEAN HELEN KINGSFORD ELLEN KNIGHT GEORGIA STANCHFIELD VI DA SHEPARD CATHERINE ST. JOHN ELIZABETH STOLTE Severance Knight Hastings Bradford Bartholf Stollpe Blish Davis Conklin Kiland Eulass Moore Arey Vincent Clancy Wean Eschweiler Kitchiu Stanchfield Thorkelson Freeman Affeld Kingsford Kerr Jones Baldwin Smallshaw BOLL Page Four Hundred and Sevcnly-Seven ,Ie , A 555145 .341 ' , J 1 f-54' 'I I' , fl . f 5, 35 I ' 4' 935 Founded, Boston University, 1888 Number of Chapters, 63 Wisconsin, Mu, 1898 120 Langdon Street DELT A DELTA DELTA JOY ANDREWS FLORENCE ALLEN JULIA ALLEN GENEVIEVE AMELIA FELTS NYBIA GILE MARIANNA CHANDLER LORRAINE DUNN JULIA ANN HARRINCTON IBENE HENRY I JANET MARY BREITENBACH LUCILLE HANSON J OSEPHINE MARIE HIRSIG KATHERINE DOROTHY KLEUTER I X MEMBERS IN FACULTY RUTH BITTERMAN HELEN MCDONALD MRS. W. ELLIOTT SARA STINCHFIELD MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS PEARL THEODOSIA HIRSIG ELIZABETH KENNEY JUNIORS IVIARY JAMES C. LOUISE IVIOORE LOUISE ELLIOT RICKELIAN MARJORIE ANNE RUFF SOPHOMORES ABLENE KLUG I AGATHA GRACE MCCAFFERY MARCEIIIA NEFF FRESHMEN EVELYN VOLINEER MCFABLAND SYBIL C. MOSSMAN PEARL ESTHER STEWART KATHERINE YATES SANBORN HELEN ELIZABETH SCHLOSSER EVELYN SHEAKLEY IVIARY M. NVISWELL HELEN OSCAR HELEN VIRGINIA ROSS KATHRYN ELIZABETH WINTER HELEN XVYCHOFF I I A ALICE ADAMS GRETCHEN GILBERTS HELEN NEWX'ELL I ALICE CU1vIMING.S MILDRED ELIZABETH HIRSIG JANET OLSON ' BEULAH JAMES ' I ,I I I L, . ,..,LI,. ..., .,,E ..EE , I yi i I- N r A wwf I I I , ml ' W1 ff? : 1 i If I ,I Q I 5 I . I ' I I Felts u Wiswell Kleuter McCatTery Dunn Kenney ' Harrington Gxle Schlosser McFarland Ruff Winter Breitenbach Hanson Stewart Ross Mossman Rickeman Moore Allan Page Four Hundred and Seventy-Eight W , f if Z - fe f ' . v w t ' - 2 5: 1 H fgiiffsviw ff-2 Hffgfs ga A ' 1 A, ff JW' f T A 'e,,.:vf., I J . iw QWMHZ sg '-. '-g ,, ! fs M3 ' 7'-L ..Q9TH'f. jgyf ' ev 2 2 ,A A 4? ,, , . . ,Q V. .A Ql, 'M 4 if ,N f 1 'X 1 2 1 A 4 7 A I f fl vw f as :Q gg -2 if . ,xv . .1 444 . -A .. M K rlfi , J fii ' ' f7'r ,, 4 , af i' ' .4 M .f fi- I I 5 5, A ' , ff , VST. Founded. University of Arkunsns. 1805 Number OI' Chapters, 50 LOUISE KATHERINE KELLY FRANCES NIARIE BEECHER MARY FAVVCETT BRIDGMAN DOROTHY DEE CHAPMAN M.ARGARET HILDRETH DUCKETT M. ANTOINETTE FEE MARION VICTORIA CONNOR ELLEN VIVIAN DOLLARD VERA ALICE EASTMAN MARGARET ANN CALLSEN KATHLEEN HARMS MARTHA F. HOLLINGSWORTH HELEN CALLSEN Wisconsin, Nu, 1903 615 North Henry Sweet CHIOMEGA MEMBERS IN FACULTY MRS. LENORE D. CATON M EMBERS IN 'UNIVERSITY SENIORS ISABEL XVI-IITNEY GARVEY ELIZABETH l'IALDEN LYDIA ANNE I-IENDRICKS BARBARA IPIILDRETH EDITH lVlARGARET HOGAN EULALIA JONES J UNIORS ELEANOR ELIZA BETH GLASCOCK CILADYS PETERSON HELEN NICNEIL BEATRICE GERTRUDE MORSE MILDRID KAREN OLSON FLORIENE TEICHGRAEBER M.ARGARET RUTH WALKER MARY STAMATS ISABEL JANET TROTTER DOROTHY VAN METER SOPHOMORES MARIE KOWALKE DOROTHY REICHERT MARGARET REICHERT HELEN SI-IERDAHL FRESHMEN NIARGARET CHORLOG WILMA GRACE COOPER ELIZABETH MASON RUTH CECILY STAUDENMEYER IONE SUTHERLAND CHRISTAL LOUISE VANDER HORST EMILIE SANDSTEN Jones Hendricks Trotter Hildreth Halden Morse Hogan Harms Peterson Teichgraeber Staudenmeyer McNeil Glascock Sherdahl Van Meter Olson Connor Duckett Eastman Callsen Fee Reichert Reichert Chapman Bridgman Kowalke Beecher Hollingsworth Dollard Vander Horst. Walker Page.Four Hundred and Sevenly-Nine ,--zu, I ' ' ,R ,- ' :IA I ,:' ,-zv:A:: .- --' : i?' Q 1- 1.-A .mg ww A if A gr I Milk f ,EAA Number of Chapters, 28 MARGARET H. DOUBLER WILHELMINA EHRMAN REBA HAYDEN CATHERINE BARRY VERA CARLISLE NATALIE DENSMOOR FLORENCE FLEMING ALICE FRICK ELIZABETH CORDELL LUETTA CRANDELL HELEN HASWELL RACHEL H.ASWELL WINIFRED FLETCHER HELEN BLAKE ALICE COCKRELL HELEN HUMISTON Founded. DePauw Univegity, 1885 Wisconsin Kappa 1903 ALPHA CHI OMEGA MEMBERS IN FACULTY GERTHUDE E. JOHNSON GRADUATE MEMBERS BEATRICE HUMISTON SENIOBS NORMA KIECKHEFER SUSAN LEARY MARGARET MARTINI J UNIORS HELEN GUDE GERTRUDE TIARLEY MARIAN MOSEL MARY-JEANETTE NEE SOPHOMORES LUCILLE LARSON JEAN MARQUIS DOROTHY MAYER DOROTHY REDEKER ELIZABETH RIDELL FRESHMEN MARGARET IvEs LUCILLE JOHNSON 146 Langdon Street MARGARET MCCABTHY MIRIAB1 ORTON EVELYN SHAWN LAURES OWEN ELIZABETH SCHAFER MERLE SHANV HELEN SVVENSEN KATHLEEN TYLER IREIW SALE DOROTHY SWENSEN MARCO TOPP GERTRUDE WVALLACE CATHERINE O,NEILL RUTH KELSO MABEL KNOLLIN ELIZABETH SAMMONS Schafer Gude Fletcher H'd Il Eh E. Sh F ' k ' ' 0 LD.Swensen H.SwenseI1 Mossel O'Neil1 Hlxiden Bai-Igran Neeaw C43-TisleKlDcw152I?ger Mayer R. Haswell Marquis Crandell Salb M. Shaw Larson H. Haswell Cordell Martinei Topp Page Four Hundred and Eighty L.- ff2lmEwEEEEEEwERER 4' QL, 4 fm ------ - lm A Q f? 4 Ii 2,7 W4 W, ik W a Mmfd QW 1 1 H 1 ' W' W Zi a, Q? W H 1 ? 3 if Q af' A ' V 4 , '- ' 1, 'Z 1.jw'1- 2, 4- V ' fs' M 3 I ' ,K 73 2 f f wi 1 if? ' TW' 2 VW' -M -ffc. ' 2 - 5, ..., , EAEAERM I-S+ Q-54 I . awhfwdffv f 4 . ,,f- X- 'I'-J ' gy, ,I ,A 'JI ' 4' I- , . f -+ . f 1' ff .. . 1 '14 g f -'Z f I . . '- if ,.,. S- 'ff - , W, 3342 eh, ' J, ' f 5:55 ' ,. 'Y fi I 'Rf' Varvfa , 1 Founded. Lombard College. 1893 Number oi Chapters, 33 ALPHA XI DELTA Wisconsin. Theta. 1904 4-34 Sterling Court HELEN GUNDERSON A GLENN MILLER 'MEMBERS IN FACULTY HELEN B. SMITH RUTH SMITH BESS NVILLIAMSON GRADUATE MEMBERS MARIE RIKER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS . . IONE IRISH ADELAIDE ANDERSON ELSIE EKERN DOROTHY HARIELRATH GENEVA BIRD ROWENA BRONVN MIRIAM EVANS HELENE FOSTER IRENE DAVIS RUTH EKEN LILA EKERN MARJORIE ELSTON GLADYS PIASKINS BORGHILD HERREID CAROLYN KAY CAROL ROBERTS JUNIORS SYLVA HAZARD HELEN MCLANDIKESS HELEN MACKIN CLEO PARSLEY SOPHOMORES HAZEL GODDAJXD MARGARET KNOX HELEN ELIZABETH POWELL FAYE ELLIS SCHMIDT VERONICA SULLIVAN HELEN VVEIR DOROTHY PATRICK MARION RICHTER PAULINE TEMPLES BEATRICE XVALKER ELEANOR BOTH EMMY LOU SI-IELTMAN ALETHEA SMITH GERTRUDE STEVENS FRESHMEN GLA DYS NORGORD LUCY SMITH OLIVE DINGMAN CATHERINE SULLIVAN Goddard Hamelrath Weir Sullivan Roth . Hazard? Hiker . Herreid Richter Patrick Ekcrn McLandress Bird , Ixay . Mack III Stevens Parsley Ekern Smith Evans Roberts Schmldt Page .Four Hundred and Ecghly- One WN. 22 3 .I A N , 'il 31554 iw if 'li lil? ,Hg -:was Q 1 , l l 'UI Q-,a 'l ull ij .- , Founded, Syracuse UniversiLy. 1903 Number of Chapters, 23 MARTHA L. CASTLES MILDRED HILL ELIZABETH KATZ DOROTHY l,I'IOMMEDIEU JOSEPHINE HORNADAY MARGARET KIEKHOFER LoIs ADDINGTON JANICE BOARDIWAN LUCILE EHLERT Wisconsin, Beta, 1905 4-18 North Frances Street ALPHA GAMMA DELTA MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS DOROTHEA E. LEvI PEARL LICHTFELDT DOROTHY PFLUEGNER ELIZABETH SAMMIS J UNIOPIS EDITH NELSON IVIILDRED BEPLINGER MARGARET SICKELS SOPHOMORES NINA FARIS ELIZABETH HALE FRESHMEN PAULINE HOEBEL MILDRED W OHLIPOR D JOSEPHINE SAMMIS NIABY SMILEY ALICE SPENCELY BLANCHE A V ASTINE HELEN W AssON GLADYS AYEBBER DOROTHY JOHNSON NIURIEL XVARNES I'IELEN XVINKELMAN - Addington Spencely Replinger Smiley Nelson E.S '. .I,S' i H hl Hel 7 ' Llchtfddl. Johnson I Sickles Russel Wohlford WehheEImm1I..evi dmI?flIIegnIT 0 Hill le Elaliion NVInkelman Faris Boardman Warnes Kiekhofer Hornaday l'HOmmedieu Vasline Castles Katz Page FOUI' Hundred and Eighty-Two I I ..IgU1. .-1.,,, ,, gI?f ,,:,, Wg,,ff .H5. f'f,- 7 - Hbgwf I ' I , I , Ilx I I I 7' imap 'I fi If- ' I 9, KD! u ' ' ' I f , 3-1? Igpxig I. I 3 I gm ' iff ' 'af ' WIS- 4. 5 . II' If I A ' III I 5 If IT' I , A-M ,, ,.,, M,-I ,,,, . W I I V , W . ' ' . u,,...1LW, Y ' , M Founded. University ol' Nebraska, 1910 Wisconsin, Kheth. 1915 Number Of CIHIPLCFSI I2 629 NorLh Frances Street I I MEMBERS IN FACULTY BERNICE ALBRIGHT bcorr ' MEMi ERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS DOROTHY AxTELL BONITA CARLSON ISADORE COWARD DOROTHY DOERR FLORENCE LAMPERT IDORNA LEWIS .I ESSIE MCKELLAR LORENA OESTREICH GENEVIEVE PALMER ELIZABETH IJICKERING JEAN PRINCE HELEN WHITE JUNIORS ANNE ALEXANDER NOHRIA ALBRICHT RUBY ANDERSON RUTH BEANBLOSSOM MARION BJORNSON DOROTHY FEREBEE HESTER MARTIN MILDRED REYNOLDS EDITH SUPPIGHER SELMA WALLESZ SOPHOMORES DORIS BALDNVIN LAURA BOYD LUCILE BUTLER VERA ELLYVOOD ARLENE MCKELLAR ROSALIND TOUGH FAITH URBAN FRESHMEN DOROTHEA IVIOELLER I I I I I ' I I' , I , I, . II . If I, , I, -I 4' 1 , I I L . , . V ,- Suppigher Elwoofl Doerr Bjornson Alexander Baldwin Tough Carlson Lampert Urban Bovd Pickering Axtell White OESlfGlCh Martin McKellar Anderson J. McKellar I Albright Wallesz Prince Palmer Ferebee I.ewis Beanhlossom Coward Butler Reynolds Page Four Hundred und Eighty- Three ' ai 1-1' .' - 25, -. , page -. - 1 5 :jg3:5z::..Im:::'4 -:-:An IM ., fixi- 1 l A Q 5 9 I bv f W .' I 5' 75? .. w as Q if -Img- 15552: 5 - ., V VVYVY. ,.,.... Founded, Barnard College. N. Y., 1897 Wisconsin, Eta 1911 Number oi' ChapLers,'2T 626 North Hen Y Slfeet ELIZABETH BABCOCK KATHERINE HOWVARD BAIRD DOROTHY ELIZABETH CREMER GRACE ANNE DEGAN FLORA MARIE ALCORN HELEN MAE GILKISON HELEN ELIZABETH MOERS ELIZABETH MORRISON FLORENCE ENIMEL J OSEPHINE KEECH GERTRUDE HELEN IVICFARLANE JOAN MCFARLANE FLORENCE LOUISE BREITEN BACH HELEN MARIE CREMER IVIARY LOUISE DEX'INE MAUDE ALENE GRAY ALPHA GMICRON PI MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIOPIS EUNICE JANE GETZELMAN EDITH AMY HASTINGS NORMA LILLIAN HENNEL STELLA CORNELIA JOHNSON JUNIORS EYVELYN MUIJHALL MAE FRANCES OICONNOR IVIARY THREA DGOLD PADDOCK ELSBETH VIOLET BINDER SOPHOMORES IVIARY LOUISE IVIULHALL DOROTHY E. PAULL ELIZABETH RILEY ELEANOR SHEPPARD SIKES FRESHMEN STELLA KATHRYN GRUENHECK EMMA JOSEPHINE JOHNSON PEARL MARIE KLEVEN IVIATILDA KEENAN IVIARGARET RAMSEY ELIZABETH LEWIS SEHON ELIZABETH LISLE WOODS ETHEL M. ZIMMERMANN ETHEL CAROL TULLY JOSEPHINE FERRIS SNOW H. DOROTHY TECTMEYER KATHHYN TUNSTALL DOROTHY LOUISE XVIESLER IVIARION LAVON LYNCH NIARY RILEY ELIZABETH HYDE SEARS . Tunstall WieSle1' T921-meyef Degan Babcock Getzelman Cremer Hastlngs - Johnson Ramsey Keenan Tully . Moebs Gilkigon Kee-ch Emmel Baird Hennel Sehon VVOOds Zimmermann Snow Riley Page Four Hundred and Eighty-Four 'T 'Sf Iii W Founded. Miami University, 1902 Number of Chapters, 11-0 HELEN CATHERINE POUDER ADELAIDE MARION ADAMS RUTH ALEXANDER MARGARET IRENE CONNVAY LOIS HENRIETTE DUFFIN BERNICE ELLIOTT MARJORIE HELEN ADAMS OLGA F. ANDERSON MARY ELIZABETH BRIGGS NONA DOROTHY BLUM LOUISE E. BURD MARGARET ELIZABETH ICI-ERR DELTA ZETA MEMBERS IN FACULTY 55 E i Y 4 ,Q Av.. I A I I .ms'a'a, if 5 Vifisconsin, Tau, 1918 10 Langdon Street EDITH GLADSTONE WRAY MEMBERS IN UN IVEBSITY SENIORS LILLIAN NIILDRED FRAZEE JESSIE RUTHERFORD FREDRICK IRENE GLADYS GARDNEII THELMA M. HENIKY EVELYN LEONA HORTON JUNIORS , MARION CHILDS BARBER MARION LOUISE HAFNER SOPHOMOHES MABEI- JOAN SAUERHERING FRESHMEN LORRAINE IONE KREATZ VIOLET HENRIETTA SHARRATT IDA VIRGINIA STONE DOROTHY KOELSCH DOROTHEA PETERSON LAURA C. PETERSON ARDYS MARIE TAYLOR IJELEN E. PRATT LIONA SELLERS HAZEL ELIZABETH YOUNG MARIE MARGARET STRUVE ADELAIDE MARIE WILKE D. Peterson L. Peterson Kreabz Pratt Duifin Gardner Koelsch Henry Sauerhering Anderson Sharratt Sellers Frazee A. Adams Ponder Struve. Ellxott Barber Conway Kerr Fredrick Horton Taylor Hafner Brxggs Wllke M. Adams Page Four Hundred and Eighty Fwe :gif S I F if fi r ' : I T5 ii? 25751 5,1 I 415 Y P A9 gf - LK Z4 ' -Q: i l 121 fl ,ff Q S Founded, Colby College, 18744 Wisconsin, Psi, 1919 Number of Chapu-rs. 29 4-30 Sterling Court GERTRUDE LOUISE BONZELET RUTH JOSEPHINE KOPPKE CHARLOTTE BELSCAAIPER CHARLOTTE S. BREMER BERTHA EHDIAN BURKHARDT MARY ELIZABETH ALT DOERFFER PAULINE DOROTHY DICKINSON GLADYS IBENE DIERUF GERTRUDE lVlAP-IE HAASE ELSE M ARTHA KUEHN SIGMA KAPPA MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS LOUISE CATHERINE FRITSCHE lVlARY ELIZABETH lVlOULD JUNIORS HELEN HARTNETT CLARK ADELENE WILDER JAMES GERTRUDE KEHL FRANCES IJIELEN LANDCYN SOPHOM ORES lVlABEL RUTH JOBSE PRISCILLA JOHNSON S. KATHERINE KENNEDY LILLIAN CECILLE. N ETZOW FRESHM EN MARGARET T. PERGANDE MARION RUTH STILWILI, CHARLOTTE lVlAHY O,NlALLEY VIVIEN A. SEEBER HELEN clARDNER ROTHSCHILD HELEN ISLATHERINE STILWILI, DOROTHY FRANCES WILLIAMS LETITIA M. Olnfl.-KLLEY EDITH AUGUSTA PORTER JANET I. TAYLOR FRANCES HLII,L WARREN HAZEL DOROTHY NN EINGANDT James Haase Seeber Frilsche Warren Belscamper H. Stilwill Bremer Kuehn Dickinson Taylor Dieruff' Clark Burkhardl. Kennedy R. Sljlwill Landon XVilliams Porter I.'O 'M alley Pergandc C. 0 'M alley Mould K vlil Al Ldoerffer Johnson RO Lhsuhild Page Four Hundred and Eighly-Six 5 ,lllfl ,VG I 'i F1 ' :A My , 51: 4 'M' ' ww I l MN N! My WW lil 1352 3 K' 5, 'Q ' II: If 745' ' , QGQPI. L, 'Y I, Founded. Wesleyan College, 1852 Wisconsin! Zela Bam. 1919 Number of Chapters, 36 222 Langdon Sued EDITH AULTMAN FLORA BODUEN RUTH MARGARET BOED EDNA HENIPE ELS BETH HENNECKE MARJORIE J ONES DOROTHY CRAIN HAZEL ANN FLEISCHER CLARA KLOSTERMAN GERTRUDE DUNI,AP EKER PHI MU MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS IAIELEN DAVIDSON CHASE ELEANORA BEATRICE DE VINE FIDELE FRITZ .IUNIOHS ELIZABETH TI-IELMA KREBS W ILIIELMINA MEAD ARLINE LENORA PAGE ALETTE SHRINER SOPHOMORES KATHRYN CAROLYN KOHN ELLA MAE LAMBERT NlARGARET lVlCI'lARDY FRESHMEN lVlARGARET IIENNECKE ROSANNA KINDSCI-II ERNA HIQNRIETTE KLOSTEMIAN GENEVA SCHOENFFILD I'IENRIETTE SUESS HELEN VFBETTEIN NIERLE VAN PIORN ALICE MARTENS MAIKGARET MOSES G ERTRU DE RO BINS I Jones Bodden Schneufeld Chase Kohn Hennecke Shriuer McHzIrdy Kloslerman DeVille Suess Aul Lmuu Van Horn Crain K rebs Page Bocdeker Fleischer Lambert Fri Lz Page Four Hundred and Eiglzly-Seven, 4- - 'III all - -'LL A. --.' ,La I 1 Zi ', VMEJQXA ' le l Has v. . Kfffl i Il I' ' H 1 ' 'wwf I 7 Founded, virginia slam Normal, 1897 Wisconsiq. Tau, 1990 ' I Number of Chapters, 36 15 East Gllmafl Street I KAPPA DELTA MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY I GRADUATES fl CECIL KATHRYN HILL MARIE LECLAIRE DOROTHY REIAM VVILSON ANN MARIE DARCY SENIORS SELVI DA GERTRUDE KENSETH LEONA GERTRU DE SEAVER I LOUISE MARGARET JORGENSON ALICE ELIZABETH OAKES IVIILDRED IBENE THRONE I JUNIORS ' GERTRUDE ELLEN ADELT IRENE ALBERTINE CLAYTON ESTHER .I EANETTE HARRIS EDITH BEBNICE BLACK IRIS S. FELLOWS FLORENCE SUZANNE J OSEPHSON ALICE FAIRFAX BULLOCK GEORGIA LORETTE FESS ANNETTE DIARY O,CONNOR SOPHOMORES QM INIABEL RUTH BROWN OLGA IVIARIE KVAMIIEN IVIARIAN STEELE ' I DOROTHY ELAINE DODGE FLORENCE LOUISE DIAGAURN FAITH TRUMBULL IVIILDRED REDELIAN FRESHMEN MYRA CONNELL MARIE MCKENNA DORA ORCUTT MARGARET KNAUF ESTHEB MARIAN OAKES IVIARJORIE TRUMBULL' I lr I1 I Q , . I l , I I l , I . I ', 9 Steele Foss .Seaver Kvamme M. T b ll D df J Connell E. Oakes Adell, Harris 'Ighrone rmIliel:Iseth 0 Elslagaugrfgensggglonulmjr Truzbggkes Redeman McKenna Brown Black Fellows Darcy O1-gun Bullock Page Four Hundred and Eighty-Eighl ,d ,YK -V I I 1 , :wr ' I ' ffff I W L 2, , , I , , LL ,V.. - ,... ,. ..Z3Q2ff2 .- f 'E3,W'jiI: , 1 nah! - ga ' ,mf f I- ,?.5Wf's Q f, S: Y Q f5I : zo . ' f -' f .5 , 'wife 'bf xkffi- l . 5 ?I -' V lghbflzt53,-'.fl' 1 , ...sg ' ,,.4,.. 1. M,.',1, fm, w,l1,fE1,4'3,l.-fu, Founded, Wesleyan Female Collogc-. 1851 Number of Clxuplers, 311 ESTHER BURKE GLADYS CANCE MARJORIE DELBRIDGE ILSTHER FEHLHABER HELENE FRENCH NELLA M. BURGESS MARIAN A. CAVANAUG DORIS GORMLEY I-IARRIETTE GREENE H CONSTANCE GREENWOOD ALPHA DELTA PI Wisconsin, Alpha Mu 1990 135 Langdon Street M EMBEBS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS AIARGARET GORBILEY LAURA HARIILTON IVIARY MCDOWELL JUNIORS GRACE E. GREENWOOD IVIARY ESTHER HEADLY SOPHOMORES IVIARIAN JUNEAU GLADYS LANE IVIARIE SALM PEscH FBESHMEN DOROTHY NELSON ESTHER SCOFIELD Ann' NIAKINSON ELIZABETH THWING BEATRICE HOLTON ELs1E 1vERsON VVILMA NEULING MILDRED RIESTERER BERNICE J. RHODE DOROTHY SUTOR ALICE VVRAY RUTH WIEDEMAN Cavan augh Delbridge Lane Makinson Hamilton Iverson Neuling French Headly Sutor Rhode Greene McDowell Burke Gormley Juneau Scofield Wray Nelson Pesch Burgess Ries Lerer Gormley Fehlhaber Canoe Greenwood Thwing Page Four Hundred and Ezghly Nzne .1 'U Q :: C.. cv cz. E' 5 ll' 1 'U' o 'I 41 :T -3 : ... o o .4 1 5 .ll 'I E 'Z' :Q T :T o .- c O o 3 5 . Q I O . Q O :' E Fl TD '1 In H. N Q. . Q,e3i'f3-Egg A sf' rf 'Til--1 2 if mi-. . ' 'JM .P O O . 5 f C I '1 '4 . Q. 5- I. 2 5 1' CD IRENE EASTMAN J OSEPHINE JONES ILTIS RUTH M. BENNETT AAGOT BORGE RUTH BEEBE W INIFRED COLLIER LUCY ANN GRIEM SIGMA ALPHA IOTA MEMBERS IN FACULTY FLORENCE M. NASH ADELON ,HAR T ILLM I M F I Y W AN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS MARTHA KUEHMSTED CHANDLER HELEN R. DICKINSON JUN IORS GIIA Dvs GARNESS SOPHOMORES TEMPERANCE D. JOHNSON LULA KILPATRICK OLIVE M ITCHELL NIERLE IRENE GIBBS ETI-IEL NIARIE LEMMER M ILLY E. KOSCHIN A Eas Lman Lemmer -Griem Bennett, Garness Reehf- Koschin Willman ' Kilpatrick Johnson Chand er Mitcheli Gibbs Collier Il Lis Dickinson Bm-ge N ash Paqc Four Hundred and Ninety HGNORAND CLASS SOCIETIES Founded. William and Mary College, 1776 lNumher of Chapiers. 93 PHI F. C. SHARP . . G. SHOWERMAN . . . ELIZABETH A. SMITH , C. V. A. SMITH .... MELBOURNE BERGERMAN ELLEN FREDERICKS CORRELL IWINNETTA A. HASTINGS JAMES SAMUEL HESS ANDREA INGER KILAND VViscOIISin, Alpha, 1899 BETAQKAPPA OFFICERS . . . . . . President . Vice-President . Secretary . . . . Treasurer 1922 Elecled as .llmiflrs ARTHUR NICHOLAS LORIG HARRIET L, MANSFIELD ELIZABETH PICKERING EDNA LOUISE SMITH RALPH BECKETT SPENCE STERLING H. TRACY ROSAMOND ALLEN NEVA ESTHER ANDERSON JOHN GOWER BAKER MARY GRATIOT BALE ALAN ARTHUR BOYDEN LESLIE EDWIN BROWN WARNER SMITH BUMP CHARLOTTE J OSLIN CALVERT BURTON CLARK F ERN ELIZABETH CONSTANCE ETHEL DAVEY HELEN MAE DICK WILMER CHARLES EDWVAR DS JANET SYLVIA EPSTEIN ADELE MARIE FALK HERDIS PARKER HANSON EMIL HOFSOOS ELIZABETH HUSTON FRANCES ERNESTINE JENISON MIRIAM LOUISE JOHNSON LUCY MARY KELLOGG NORNIAN FRANKLIN LASKEY HILDA BARNEY IVIABLEY 1921 Elecled as Seniors BEATRICE JESSIE MCCONNELL LEONE NICDERBIOTT CHARLOTTE GENEVIEVE MCEWAN ALBERT ERYVIN NIEINERT PURCELLE VERNITA PECK ELEANOR LELIA PETERSON MARVIN GARFIELD PETERSON BURR WENDELL PHILLIPS MARY ELLEN PRESTON WARREN HERLAN RESH DOROTHY MAY ROUNSEVELL HARBX' HEBRIAN SCHLOMOVITZ GUY HAROLD SMITH VICTOR SPARTAN VON SZELISKI VERA MAY TEMPLIN GLENN THOMAS TLRENVARTHA FENG TSAI BERTHA A. VOIT GRETCHEN PAULINE V OTTELER VVILLIAM H. XVALKER LOLA FERNE WHITE CLARA FLORENCE XVIG DER VVARREN FINCH WRIGHT Hess Bergerman Lorig Smit-h Correil Paqe Four Hunclr-Ml and Nznety- Two Tracy Has Liugs Pickering Follmled, Lelfligh UIIivfersil.y, 1895 Nlllflllllf Ol' Chapters, 32 tl Wisconsin, Alpha, 1899 JEDXVARD BENNETT ARTHUR C. DAI-ILBERG M. FRISCH IJONVARD H. FULLER ERNEST I-I. I'IAlATYVIG DONALD L. I'IAY W. C. LIOTCHKISS OLAF E. HOUGEN LESLIE E. A. KELSO WILLIAM S. KINNE LAWRENCE E. BIEAIELIER GUERDON H. HEAD CLARENCE A. ANDREE J. STANNARD BAKER BJORN G. BJORNSON FRANK A. BUESE EVERETT G. DREW LESLIE H. GARBER TRUMAN G. GLENN ARTHUR J. HUEGEL TAU BETA PI Honorary E11gI'neI'r1'ng Frallfrnily MEMBERS IN FACULTY JESSE B. IKOMMERS 0'FTO L. IQONVALKE J. D. LIVERAIORE EDNVARD A. IWAURER DANIEL 'W. MEAD RICHARD S. NICC-AFFERY JAMES D. PHILLIPS LEO J. PETERS JOHN R. PRICE ROLAND A. R.AGATZ H. E. SCRRADER MEMBERS IN UN IVE GRADUATES GUSTAF M. LUNDBERG DAVID W. IWCLENEGAN SENIORS CElecled as J Im iorsl LEON E. CHASE IVIONTROSE K. DREWERY IVIERRIT A. GILES ERNST A. GUILLEMIN HONORE C. HUBBAIKD CEleL-led as Sen iorsj CECIL H. KIRK PARRY H. MOON FREDERICK W. NOLTE JUNIOR EVERETT C. MEYERS FRED J. SINGER FREDERICK E. TURNEAURE LESLIE E. VAN IJAGAN CLAYTON N. WARD JAMES W. WATSON WARREN WVEAVER CHRISTOPHER A. VVEIPKING D. M. WILSON JOHN E. AKVISE RJORTON O. WITI-IEY RSITY CLARENCE W. IVIUEHLBERGER LLOYD M. SCOFIELD TERELL B. MAXFIELD RAYMOND L. PAULUS WILSON D. TRUEBLOOD GILBERT VV. AVEGNER CARL L. NEUNLEISTER ANTHONY F. ROHLFING GEORGE P. RYAN HERBERT H. WHEATON Maxfield Nolte Andree Head Rohlfing Kirk Bjornson Ryan Giles Wheaton Drewery Meyers Wegner Huegel Garber Glenn Baker Biemiller Trueblood Moon Hubbard Drew Neumeister Paulus Buese Chase Page Four Hundred and Ninety- Three MEMBERS IN FACULTY Founded, Ohio SLaLe UIIiverSiLy, 1891 . I Number ol Chapters. 29 Wisuonsm ChupLer, Babcock, 1905 ,A .. - I A ALPHA ZETA Honorary Agriculiural Fraterniiy HUGO WILLIAM ALBERTZ J. ARLINGTON ANDERSON ALEXANDER ALEXANDER STEPHEN MOULTON BAECOCK ROLAND MARTIN BETHKE ARCHIE BLACK JOHN WILLIAM BRANN GEORGE A. CHANDLER EDMUND JOSEPH DELWICHE WALTER E. DUFFY EDWARD GEORGE HASTINGS KIRK L. HATCH BENJAMIN HORACE HIBBARD ANDREW WINKLE HOPKINS GEORGE CALVIN HUMPHREY JOHN AMBBOSE JAMES EDWARD RICHARD JONES JAMES H. JONES LEWIS RAIJPH JONES VEBNE G. MILUM EDWARD HOLYOKE FAHRINGTON JAMES GARFIELD MILNVARD WILLIAM C. FRAZIEH WILLIAM D. FROST JAMES GARFIELD FULLER JAMES GARFIELD MOORE RAMSON A. M OORE FRANK BARRON MORRISON LAWRENCE FREDERICK GRABER GEORGE BYRON MORTIMER JOHN R. BOLLINGER CHARLES D. BYRNE THEODORE E. CARLSON HELMER C. CASPERSON WALTER H. EBLING WELLSLEY D. GRAY KARL L. HELWIG NVILLARD B. ALBERT TIHOMAS R. DANIELS ELMER M. NELSON GRIFFITH RICHARDS HARRY LUMAN RUSSELL VICTOR A. TIEDJENS EDWARD W. SHELLING XVYMAN S. SMITH HUGO H. SOMMER HARRY STEENBOCH WILLIALI ALLISON SUMNEH EDWIN H. THOMPSON EBIIL TRUOG I-IERMAN W. ULLSPERGER RICHARD ENGLISH VAUGHN JOHN CHARLES WALKER ANDREW ROBINSON WHITSON GEORGE S. WEHRWEIN WILLIAM HARMON XVRIGHT OTTO RHEINHART ZEASMAN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS HENRY J. KATZ FRANK L. KOZELKA LIAROLD M. KUCKUK CARL C. LINDEGREN KARL W. LINDOW K KARL P. LINK J UNIORS THOMAS L. DARTNELL OSCAR C. IWAGISTAD HAROLD H. NIETCALF BENJABIIN N. PEACOCK EDWARD ERNEST PRICE MILFORD W . SCHUELER LENVIS VV ALTER TAH'LOR HARVEY J. XNEAVERS I'IOWARD E. JAMISON RAYMOND C. KLUSSENDORF Lindow 1 Price K lussendorf Casperson Weavers Bollinger Link M etcall' Katz Schueler Daniels Lindegren Ebling Hclwig Byrnfg Kozelka Taylor Carlson AlberL KIIckuk Magis Lad Jamison Peacock Page Four Hundred and Ninety-Four fx 93 . I I II A I I Founded. Uxxiversily OI' XViscOI1sin, 1907 Z A Number OI' Chapters, I5 3 ,V Wisconsin, Alpha, l907 BETA GAMMA SIGMA Ilorzorary Cornnufrcf' F ralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY FAYETTE HER BERT ELWELL MARVIN STEPHEN KING EDWARD I'IALL GARDNER KARL FRANKLIN MCMURRY STEPHEN XVARREN QIILMAN WILLIAM AMASA SCOTT MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS DONALD M. BAILEY HFGINALD W. GARSTANO G. FRED BREWER LESTER V. GRIEM ESVART K. CLEAR PHILIP C. LAVVSON HUMPHREY E. DESINIOND DALE MERRIOK ' JOHN A. DOLLARD FORREST G. PADDOCK PIOLLIN E. EFKE WARREN A.. TAYLOR HIIDOLPI-I C. ZIMMERMANN Taylor Garstang Ecke McMurry- Clear Merrick ' Dollard Elwell Scott: Brewer Gllman Gard Qqr Klflg Bailey Lawson Desmond Griem Paddock Almmermaun Page Four Hundred and Ninety-Five X '.s .3 ' QQ . 'i l:4-I '. 'X' ' TR mf. Founded, Universny of Illinois, 1905 If N Number ol' Chapters, 14 Wisconsin Chapter, 'l heta, 1919 EDWVABD BENNETT JAMES PRICE .EIOWARD M. SHARP ERNST J. IXGOHR RUDOLPH HEINS LESLIE GABBER PHILLIP BOWMAN IIIIGO L. RUSCH ETA KAPPA. NU Honorary Electrical Erzgineering MEMBERS IN FACULTY JAMES NVATSON J OHN WISE LEO J. PETERS MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS ROBERT SVITAVSKY H. STANLEY RJANSFIELD HARRY IVIILLER JAMES S. BAKER HERBERT H. BECK J UNIORS THERON A. BROWN NEWELL E. FRENCH RAYMOND PAULUS CASEY V. LOOMIS FREDERICK NOLTE ERNST GUILLEMIN BJORN BJORNSON LOUIS G. ADAM Svitavsky ' Beck Heins Garber Bjornson Baker Nol Le French Brown Paulus Muller Mohr Radke Adam Sharp Busch Bowman Guillemm Loomls Pane Four Hundred and Ninely-Six 4 iv Founrlncl. fllnivcrsily ol' Illinois, 1015 Number of CllUDlfCfS. 3 WVisr:onsin, Alpha. 1.915 A. E. BERGGREN C. I. CORP W. L. DABNEY HAY P. BETHKE ROBERT H. BRUCE FRANK A. BUESE IVIONTROSE K. DREWER I' IVIERRITT A. GILES ROY P. ANDERSON ANTHONY J. NERAD PI TAU SIGMA Ilonorartv Mechanical En.gim'er1'r1g Soczbly MEMBERS IN FACULTY D. W. lx4CLENEGAN lf. l-I. HYLAND G. L. LARSON J. D. PHILLIPS MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SEN IORS TRIIMAN G. GLEN EARL IIANSON CHESTER E. l'lUNZIKER HOLLAND F. IQELLOGG JUNIORS W ALTER H. PORTH EAIXNEST A. LONGENECKER r11ERRELL B. MAXFIELD WILLIAM D. O,CONNOR NELS C. BICHARDSCJN JAMES P. WOODS NVERNER I. SENGER IRVING L. XVADE Bethke YVoods Berggren Larson Nerad Giles Maxlield Anderson Wade Dabney Hyland Senger Buese Drewery Hanson Glen Porfh I ongeneck Pr Bruce- McKlf-IIne.c'au O'Connor Kellogg Page Four Hundred and Ninety-Seven f A 5 w J Wx N K y A xl DELTA SIGMA BHO Honorary Forensics Fraternity MEMBERS IN FACULTY ALFRED P. HAAKE JAMES F. A. PYRE ARNOLD B. HALL W. RUSSEL TYLOR JAMES M. O,NEILL ANDREW T. WEAVER THOMAS AMLIE RALPH E. AXLEY DAVID V. BECKWITH MELBOURNE BERGERMAN LAWRENCE W. HALL ARTHUR INMAN A MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY HALSEY KRAEGE IVIARTIN R. KRIENVALDT WAYNE L. MORSE STERLING TRACY FRANCIS W. COSGROVE ARTHUR F. FILBEY 1 2 Kraege Amlie Weaver Haakc Tracy Kriewalt Inman F ilbey Morse Bergerrn an Pagk: Four Hundred and Ninety-Eight Founded. UniversiLy ol' Washington, 1909 Number nl' CIl1lIli,CfS- I9 VVILLARD G. BLEYER MARY BRIDGMAN ISADORE CONVARD PENNELL CROSBY MARGARET DALY BERNICE ELLIOTT I -I -1 I ,ll I Wisconsin, Bella, 1910 THETA SIGMA PHI Honorary Prqfcssional Jolzrnalislic Sororily MEMBERS IN FA CULTY RUBY A. BLACK MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY IYZATHERINE FERGUSON MIIIDRED GERLACI-I ESTHER HAVEN MARY MOULD KATHERINE ROCKVVELL MARJORIE RUFF I'IELEN SMALLSI-IAW MARION STRASSBURGER ELIZABETH VINCENT JOSEPHINE WALTERS F 0 R ff R k 11 Crosby Sbrassburner smallshawerbuson Daly U Gerlaciic we Haven Elliott Miuld Coward Page Four Hundred and Ninely-Nine Founded, DePauw University, 1909 I Number of Chapters. 31 Wisconsin, 1911 SIGMA DELTA CHI Honorary Prqfessional .lournalisiic Fraternity MEMBERS IN FACULTY JOHN GOWER BAKER WILLARD GROSVENOR BLEYER CARL RUSSELL FISH CHARLES DAVID BYRNE ROBERT WILLIAM DESNIOND WALTER HENRY EBLING ROY L. FRENCH GEORGE WEBSTER GREENE Pane Five Hundred ANDREW WINKLE HOPKINS GRANT IVIILNOR HYDE MEMBERS IN UNIVER GRADUATES FREDERICK IJENVIS SPERRY SENIORS KENNETH HOPKINS JACOBSON HARRY BURGH LYFORD CHARLES PATTISON M ACINNIS BRUCE RIEGE MCCOY IVAN HUGH PETERMAN JUNIORS GEORGE LOWELL GEIGER CHARLES JULIUS LEWIN HABBESCJN I-IICKMAN IJOWNELL HUBERT FORCE TOWNSEND EDWVARD IXIARION JOHNSON VVIYMAN SIDNEY SMITH VVILLIAM ALLISON SUMNER SITY XVILLIAM IVIERRITT SALE STERLING HILL TRACY RODNEY COSTELLO WELSH DOUGLAS HARNION VVOODWVORTH Y Q -ixiifm .? f SIGMA SIGMA Ilonorarjv .fWr?fl1'cal Socicluv All members Qf lhe nzedfcalfaculiy Qf the Un iversily of Wisconsin are ex-Qfficio honorary members Qf lhe sociely. MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS MILTON C. BORMAN CLARENCE B. BROWN THOMAS K. BRONVN CHARLOTTE J. CALVERT NVILMER C. EDNVARDS IVAN G. ELLIS JAMES I'IESS ILIOMEB D. KESTEN GEORGE C. KREUTZ ALBERT E. IVIEINERT CARROLL W. OSGOOD LESLIE W. TASCHE IVIARK H. WALL Page Five Hundred and One Founded, University of Wisconsin, 1912 5' Number of Chapters. 6 Wisconsin, Alpha, 1912 JOHN R. COMMONS RICHARD T. ELY OSCAR CHRISTIANSON MELBOURNE BERGERMAN GEORGE C. BUNGE WILLIAM F. COLLIPP Q X-.13 1 1 ARTUS Honorary Economics F ralernity HONORARY MEMBERS WILLIAM H. KIEKHOFER J. GORDON McKAY MEMBERS IN FACULTY ARTHUR J. MERTZKE GRADUATE MEMBERS EDWARD P. KEARNS ACTIVE MEMBERS ABRAHAM KAUEMAN DEAN P. KIMBALL SIDNEY L. MILLER SELIG PERLMAN JOSEPH H. PLECK CHANDLER OSBORNE WORTH E. SHOULTS ROBERT B. STEYVART Mertzke KcKay Stewart Bunge Miller Shoults Kearns Commons Ely Kickhofer Perlman Bergerman Kimball Chris Liauson Kaufman Collipp Osborne Page Five Hundred and Two ,Tr Founded. 1912 Number of Chapters. M E Wisconsin, Etn, 1915 ,f x ink .A A . 5- x' M?-I OMICRON NU Honorary Home Economics Society Ornicron Nu was founded in 1912 for the promotion of leadership and scholarship. Election is based upon general participation in University activities and scholarship. The organization maintains a scholarship fund for students in Home Economics. OFFICERS Lols RAYMOND .... ......., resident DOROTHY WIEPKING .......... Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS IN FACULTY GERTRUDE ARBAGAST ANN BRAUN MAY L. COYVLES JEAN KHUEGER HAZEL MANNING ABBY L. MARLATT GLADYS MELOCHE ELIZABETH MILLER HELEN PARSONS DOROTHY ROBERTS MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES ELIZABETH BEYE HELEN C. GOODSPEED SENIORS Lois RAYMOND ELIZABETH BALDWIN DOROTHY WIEPKING CARYL PARKINSON Page Fine Hundred and Three m5w 's Riffikf Founded, University of Wisconsin, 1919 Number of Chapters, 5 Wisconsin, Alpha 1 ' 'A Q ,iii-Af PI EPSILON DELTA Honorary Dramatic Fraternity Pi Epsilon Delta is an honorary dramatic society with chapters in the larger universities that offer specialfacilities for dramatic work. Elections are based on dramatic attainment, in acting, managing, directing and research. Page Five Hundred and Four MEMBERS IN FACULTY IEDGAR BERNARD GORDON WILLIAM ELLERY LEONARD MARGARET HIDOUBLER JAMES IVIILTON OINEILL GERTRUDE E. JOHNSON ANDREWV THOMAS XVEAVER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS IVIARGERY BOESCH WELLS CARBERRY HELEN DOUBLE DOROTHY DWIGHT MIIKIAM DOAN REGINALD GARSTANG JAMES BRADER OLIVIA FENTRESS HORACE GREGORY JUNIORS ESTHER GUERINI ANDREA KILAND LANVRENCE NOREM W ILLIAM PURNELL FOSTER STRONG HENRY RUBEL RIALPH SCHEINPFLUG WNILLIAM TANNEWITZ H. ADKINS S. M. BABCOCK V. BOI-INSON H. BRADLEY E. B. HAIIT C. HEUGEN D. KAHLENBERG O. KOWALKE F. C. KRAUSKOPF E. KREMERS V. LENHEH R. BETHKE F. BISCI-IOFF A. BLACK B. CARROLL C. FAHLBERG G. I'IEAD P. HICKEY C. HOPPERT J. JONES J. KOCH E. KOEHLER O. GERIIAIIDT M. HIRSHBERG H. HUBBARD K.. LINK la, '. -. kiflx ' - Q -I. -A 'I' PHI LAMBDA UPSILON Honorary Chemical FraLernily M EMBEBS IN FACULTY A. S. LOEVENI-IAIIT J. H. MATHEWS F. B. NIORRISON J. L. SAMMIS H. SCHUETTE E. SEVIIINGI-IAUS H. SOMMER H. STEENBOCK W. E. TOTTINGHAM E. Tnuoc J. H. WALTON GRADUATES V. NIELOCHE C. MUELBERGEB E. M. NELSON L. PARSONS R. RAG.ATZ B. RAMSAY J. SCHMIDT H. STEVENS J. VEIIHUST B. V. WILLIAMSON UNDERGRADUATES L. PETERSON H. B. SPENCE W. TBUEBLOOD Page Five Hundred and Five Founded, University of Wisconsin, 1905 'Ev-5 Airy - , , Number of Chapters, 23 .S -' Wisconsin A. Company, First Regiment Q ... ff .ge Alfie' Su SCABBARD AND BLADE Honorary Miliiary Fraternily MEMBERS IN FACULTY MAJOR JOHN S. WOOD. USA CAPTAIN JOHN A. BALLARD, USA MAJOR ORLANDO WARD, USA SERGT. MAJOR WILLIAM G. ATKINS. USA MAJOR HOWARD MILLIGAN, USA 1sT. SERGT. FREDERICK W. POST, USA CAPTAIN JOSEPH H. COMSTOCK, USA VAN A. JOHNSON LYMAN K. ARNOLD HYMAN J. BILANSKY LLOYD M. BOYCE EVRARD C. CALUWAERT WILLIAM A. FIELD WILLIAM M. CROSS EDWARD A. EWING THOMAS E. JONES MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS MILTON R. HART RALPH HAWKS RALPH B. SPENCE ROSWELL H. HERRICK JOHN H. J AQUISH LEONARD M. JOHNSON J UN IORS FRANK B. LEITI HENRY J . KATZ D. RICHARD MEAD FREDERICK W. NOLTE WILLIAM D. O'CONNOR LAURENCE P. WVARNER ROBERT L. LUENING JOHN W. RICHARDS Luening Ewing Mead Field Spence Leitz Johnson Nolte Florn Katz Cross Boyce Herrick J aquish O'Connor Arnold Richards Post Bilansky Warner Ballard Ward Comstock Caluwuert Atkins 'Page Five Hundred and Siz Founded, JOSEPH C. ELSOM THOMAS E. JONES ELMER A. KLETZIEN FRANK L. BUMER MERRILL E. HANSEN V641 -mf 'ff M University of Wisconsin, 1918 Y Number of Chapters, 1 GAMMA SIGMA 'Honorary Gymnaslics F ralernily MEMBERS IN FACULTY GABRIEL E. LINDEN FREDERICK E. SCHLATTER GUY S. LOWMAN JOSEPH C. STEINHAUER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATE LESLIE W. TASCHE SENIOBS FRANK B. GOLLEY JUNIORS H. DEAN KITCHEN NORMAN KOCH ELMER C. KRIEGER SOPHOMORES WILLIAM HAMMANN ROBERT L. HOLCOMB FRANK KUBOSCH WALTER H. PORTH Bumer Linden Kletzien Krieger Kitchen Kubosch Hammann Por th Koch Five Hundred and Seven DONALD MOORE BAILEY MELBOURNE BERCERMAN CARL FREDERICK CEASAR W Page Five Hundred arm' Eighl 2 ig -L ,... . gf. W 'LAJ 'C G 555' IRON CROSS Honorary Senior Sociely MEMBERS IN UNIVEB SITY 1920 LAWRENCE VVATERBURY HALL 1921 M ILTON CARLTON BORMAN 1922 THOMAS TURMEAU COXON CARL VICTOR ENGELHARDT ALBERT JASON KNOLLIN DALE IVIERRICK WILLIAM MERRITT SALE, JR. GUISERD MERRILL SUNDT WARREN TAYLOR STERLING HILL 'TRACY 7 ' MORTAR BOARD A Senior Women's Honorary Sociely Election io membership is made al lhe end of the Junior year ship, service and womanliness. on the basis Qf scholar- OFFICERS IVIARION STIIASSBURGER . . . President NIABEL WINTER .... . Vice-President ESTI-IER HAVEN . . . . Secretary DOROTHY DYVIGHT ........... Treasurer MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY FRANCES BEECHER ESTHER HAvEN DOIKOTHY WARE ELLEN CORRELL AUTA LYMAN IINIA VVINCHELL DOROTHY DWIGHT CARYL PARKINSON MABEL XVINTER IVIARION STRASSBURGEH MARGARET THOMAS Page Five Hundrerl and Nino f, ALPHA GAMMA PI Women's Honorary Commerce Sorority MEMBERS IN FACULTY IRENE HENSEY SENIORS LAURA HEIM PEARL LICHTFELDT RUTH LINDSTROM JUNIORS MARGARET KIEKHOFER N - A3 ,Lindstrom Kiekhofer Hensey Heim Llchgfeldr Page Five Hundred and Ten I CHUCIBLE Junior Women.'s Honorary Society Crucible was formed two years ago with its membership consisting of a representative junior woman from each sorority and four non-sorority members. This year, however, it is an honorary junior society based on .scholarship and leadership. Crucible gives an annual scholarship to a university woman. , OFFICERS ALMA FENN . ........ President MERLE SHAW. . . . Treasurer ALICE LIGARE . . . Secretary MEM BEBS OLGA ANDERSEN ISABEL CAPPS IRENE CLAYTON JO VIRGINIA DORING VERA EASTMAN HELEN ELLIOTT ALMA FENN BLANCHE FIELD AILEEN HAMILTON MARGARET HENRY EDITH HEss HELEN KASBEER MAUDE KILLAM ELIZABETH KIRK BELLE KNIGHTS ALICE LIGARE MARY GRAEME LINDSAY LOUISE MOORE CLEO PARSLEY MARJORIE RUFF M.ARJORIE SEVERANCE MERLE SHAW GLADYS WEBBER MARGARET WUERPEL l Severence Kirk Arey Capps Moore Parsley Webb er Fenn Kasheer Eastman Clay t.on Andersen Hess Knights Killam Ligare Ruff Field Page Five Hundred and Eleven LAWRENCE WATER BURY HALL MELBOURNE BERGERMAN GEORGE CHRISTIAN BUNGE THOMAS TURMEAU COXON WILLIAM KINNEY COLLINS JAMES LYMAN BRADER PAUL VICTOR GANGELIN WAYNE LYMAN MORSE Paqe Fave Hundred and Twelve WHITE SP ADES Honoraryufunior Society MEMBERS IN FACULTY ALFRED PAUL HAAKE MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES SENIORS REGINALD WILLIANI GARSTANG CORRINGTON CALHOUN GILL ALBERT JASON KNOLLIN CHARLES P. MCINNES JUNIORS HAR BESON HICKNIAN POWELL MILTON C. BORMAN DALE RIERRICK GUISERD IVIERRILL SUNDT AVARREN ALVIN TAYLOR RALPH KENNETH SCI-IEINPFLUG GUSTAV K. TEBELL HOLLAND FRANKLIN WILLIAMS ia!!! gf 6533725 of im: fa . .15-1.1 ,,. 'ii' DELTA PHI DELTA Honorary Prqfessional Ar! Sociely OFFICERS LILLIAN STEWART . ........ President DOROTI-IY AXTELL . . Vice-President IAIARTHA CIROAN . . Secretary STELLA CLARK . . Treasurer IIONORARY MEMBERS WILLIAM H. VARNIIM DELLA TYILLSON MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES STELLA CLARK SENIORS IVIILDRED BLAKEL1' NIARIETTA HIPPLE JUNIORS KATHERINE ELI' IVIARTHA GROAN HELEN MCLANDRESS SOPHOMORES GERTRUDE KEHL DOROTHY AXTELL IVIARIAM ABEY EDITH JACKSON LILLIAN STEWART AGNES TUTTLE IVIARION IVIETCALF Clark Tuttle Hipple Ely Axtell Jackson Blakeley McLaIIdress Groan Stewart Willson Arey Haak Kehl P1zge'F'ive Hundred and Thirleen MU ALPHA ' Founded, University of Wiscrmsinr 1921 Honorary Musical Sorority HONORARY MEMBERS MRS. LENORE D. CATON MISS HELEN GUNDEHSON MRS. HELEN PIPER LAW MRS. LUCILE CAMPBELL COOPER MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES MARION PHELPS SENIORS FRANCES BEECHER HEBA HAYDEN RUBY BRITTS H JUNIORS :JANET BBEITENBACH BEATRICE WALKER GRACE JONES 'VERA EASTMAN 4 FRANCES LANDON IBARBARA HILDBETH FLORENCE ROBB SOPHCMORES Lois JACOBS Robb Page Fipe Hundred and Fourlcen Lando? EHSIZIDHH Walker Jones B1-ei Lenbach Q Beecher , Hild re th Jacobs Britls , fiffffr 22' - , 1-A MYSTIC CIRCLE lllysiic Circle which was originally organized for social purposes, is now annually engaged in some big charitable work in llladison. A varying number of freshmen are elected each year io make lhe membership, eighl from each of lhe following sororilies: Bela, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Phi Bela Phi. Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi OFFICERS DOROTHX' I'IOLLAND . . .....,.. President HAZEL HEDSTROM . . . Treasurer IECIVVINA DEXTER ADINE LAINIPTON PAULINE AMBROSE KATHERINE ELDER JOY BACON MARGUERITE BAINES EUGENIE BAUMAN DOROTHY BONDURANT MARY ATWOOD MARION BARNES LAURA BLAUL BLIARY NICLEAN ..........,.. Secretary MEMBERS IN FACULTY LORETTA CONKLIN MOSIER MEMBERS IN UNI SENIORS MARY IVICLEAN CATHERINE MEYER JUNIORS KATHERINE HORTON SOPHOMORES HELEN BRANNUM HAZEL HEDSTROM GEORGIANNA KIBIBERLY FRESHMEN TIIELMA BLOSSOM MARY CUITNINGHAM ELEANOR DAY VERSITY DOROTHY HOLLAND FLORENCE SCHROEDER JESSIE MORTON SOLVIG XVINSLOW HOBEHTA LOUDEN KATHERINE O,SHEA MARY ELIZABETH RANDOLPH MIRIAM SCHWARTZ LOUISE HOLT CATHERINE MCGREGOB Randolph Cunningham Winslow Blossom Schroeder . Barnes Blaul Horton McGregor Day McCOy Brannum Atwood Lamp ton Baines I O'Shea Bonduran L Bauman Bacon HedsLrom Louden Schwar Lz Elder Holland Kimberly Dex ter Holt Morton Page Five Hundred and Fifleeiz J UN IORS .I W ,X 'is ' mm m -1 .K i 2 'L --fx KU KLUX KLAN Junior Inlerjfralernily Social Sociefy OFFICERS EVERETT W. JONES . . ..... . . RUSSELL FRAWLEY RICHARD F. GIBSON MORTON C. FROST MORD BOGIE . , President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Corresponding Secretary MEMBERS IN UNIVERSIVY SENIORS XVILLIAM SALE . . THOMAS COXON . . ARTHUR KINNAN . VVILLIAM COLLINS DALE MERRIOK . GUY M. SUNDT . . CARL CEASAR . . MORTON BUSSEY . ALBERT KNOLLIN . JOHN BABCOCK . . JOSEPH HOLBROOK ROBERT MCDONALD REUBEN CHADBOURNE . . . DAVID MAHONEY . Alpha Delta Phi . . Alpha Tau Omega . Beta Theta Pi . . Chi Psi ..,... Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta . Delta Upsilon . . Kappa Sigma . . Phi Delta Theta . , Phi Gamma Delta . Phi Kappa Psi . . Phi Kappa Sigma . Psi Upsilon ..., Sigma Chi . , . Sigma Nu . . Sigma Phi .... Theta Delta Chi . Zeta Psi . . . . LESLIE GAGE . RUSSEL FRAWVLEY . JAMES L. BRADER . JOSEPH HOOK . GEORGE GATES . EDWARD FRAWLEY . EVERETT VV. JONES . J. HOUSTON SCHEE . RIORTON FROST . HAROLD C. BUELL . HUBERT TOWNSEND . VILAS HANKS . MORD BOGIE . LEE TVICCANDLESS . ALBERT HALLINE . RICHARD GIBSON . NELSON FAIRBANKS Fairbanks Frawley Gales Ceasar Gage Coxon McIntosh Jones Gibson E.Frawley Halline McCandless 'lownsend Hook Babcock Braden- Sundt Brodlz F rost. Sale Mahoney BO 18 Page Five Ilunrlred r1ndSiasleen SKULL AND CRESCENT Sophomorr' Tnlvqfralvrn ily-Social Sociely OFFICERS GORDON B. VVANZER . MORRIS A. BELL . . JAMES K. GIBSON . CURTIS F. MOSS MERRILL E. TAFT . HILARY E. BACON MORRIS A. BELL HAROLD J. BENTSON ROBERT W. BL.ACK ROBERT P. BUTTS DELOIT F. ESTES RICHARD W. FARNSNYORTI-I CHARLES A. FOX WALTER A. FRAUTSCHI CHARLES V. GARY JAMES K. GIBSON FREDERICK C. BRIGHTLY JOHN L. BEROSTRESSER CLAIR W. BURKE CARLTON J. COLLINS H.kRRY C. COOK EUGENE F. CRAWFORD WILLIABI ELLIOTT MERRIL B. ESTERLINE JOHN A. FLADOES WALLING V. FOX NEILI. S. GRAHAM, JR. President Vice-Presid ent Secreta ry Treasurer Sergean L-a L-a rm S MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GERALD GORMAN EDGAR W. TTABIGHORST LOYD E. ITARDY LAURENS G. ITASTINGS STEPHEN V. HORTON CHARLES C. JENSCH HOWARD B. LYMAN EIIERSON D. RKTCNEIL CURTIS F. MOSS ARTHUR T. MOULDING CALVIN G. OAKFORD PLEDGES LESTER R. GUNDERSON TWAURICE A. ITTARDGROVE ROBER'r L. HARBION DANIEL O. HEAD BERT M. HIIJBERTS ARNOLD G. JARVIS RUSSEL M. KISTNER DONALD MACAIITHUR JOHN J. MANURE HAROLD W. MEYER HOWARD C. MORTON DELBERT R. PAIGE JOSEPH M. POWERS GORDON T. ROBERTS RTARSHALL H. SMITH .ALBERT V. STEGEMAN BTARION E. STRAIN NTERRILL E. TAFT CARL R. VONNEGUT GORDON B. W ANZER HORACE O. XVETMORE - THOMAS M. VVINSTON GEORGE A. RTUNKVVITZ CLIFFORD S. NOLTE ROBERT C. SALISBURY ELIOT H. SHARP FRANK P. STEGEMAN THOMAS D. TAYLOR OSCAR XV. T ECKEMEYER FULTON H. TEBERMAN NEIL F. TUTTLE EDWIN C. WITWER, JR. ADDISON B. YOMANS Lyman Powers Winston Paige Bell Benison Black Smith U Fxaulschi ' Hastings Esles Vonnegut VVanzer Stegeman Roberts Gorman Gibson HQDIQDOFSL Bacon M cNeil Moulding NIOSS Jcnsnh HorLOn Fox Bu LI S Oaklord Page Fiw' Hundrrd rrnrl Sevenlean x v - A U :ggi it vi: A , L INNER GATE Sophomore Inieiffraiernify Social Sociely OFFICERS NORNIAN C. CLARK . .... .,.. P resident JOHN FITZGERALD. , . Vice-President ARTHUR ARDIEL- . . Secretary JOHN BLOSSOM . JOHN ROE , . . PORTER BUTTS , WILLIAM HAYDEN JOHN FITZGERALD NORMAN C. CLARK ALLAN TIENDREE .I ,. GORDON MACGREGOR THOMAS REED . , JERE CROOK . , ARTHUR ARDIEL . BENJAMIN PEARSE , BENTLEY SMITH. . VVILLIAM PAULEY HENIXY O,DELL . SIDNEY BLISS .... VAN DYKE PARKER PAUL ESHVVEILER . GORDON AREX' LAWSON ADAMS ROBERT BARNETT JOSEPH BRICKER EVERETT BRIDGE THOMAS CARSON EZRA CRANE JAMES CULBERTSON HOWVARD CULVER JOHN CASSODAY PAUL CLEyELAND WVILLIAM HAYDEN .,..,........ Treasurer ACTIVE MEMBERS Alpha Delta Phi . . Alpha Sigma Phi Alpha Tau Omega . Beta Theta Pi . . Chi Psi ...... Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta . Delta Upsilon . . Kappa Sigma , Phi Delta Theta . Phi Gamma Delta Psi Upsilon . . . Phi Kappa Psi . Sigma Chi Sigma Nu . . Sigma Phi ...A Theta Delta Chi Zeta Psi ..... PLEDG GEORGE GRAHAM FLOYD C, GRAY TTANS GREISSER WALTER HAGER VVELDON HARRIS lX'TAURICE JOHNSON JOHN KOHLER JACK LARCH CHARLES NLACLAREN FRANCIS lViEYER PHILIP NTODISETT WILLIAM MAXWELL RALPH CURRAN CLAYTON CHENEY EZRA CRANE KENNETI'I ELSOM L. JOHN PINKERTON JOHN RILEY SAMUEL THOMPSON HORACE RISTEEN ROBERT CURTISS BURTON BILLINGS JOHN STURTEYANT PAUL TVIUENTZBERG JOHN GILBREIATH GERALD STOLTZ JOHN TYIURPHY HARRY BURNS JOHN M AXEY NORRIS TVTURPHY EDGAR NEX'NIAN XVELDON O7BRIEN GORDON PERRY HARR1' REED PXICH.-XRD REEVE DONALD ROCK WILLIAM STOLTE FRED TAGGART FLOYD WATTS DAVID WHEELER Blossom Burns Elsom Gilhrca l.h PcarSe 'Thompson Risleeu A rdiel R08 - Curran Maxey Pinkerl on Hayden Fi Lzgerald Pauley Sl ol Lz IP lllm Riley Crane 0 ' Dell MacGregor Sl urleva n l- Smi lli Clark Cheney Pane Five Hundred und Eighleen IRM cA1Tl7 5 CLUBS - BTS AND CB. FT CL B Arts and Crafts club, the membership of which is elective, was founded in 1919 to bring students of art into touch, through organization, with nationally known art organizations and to keep them in touch with campus publications needing their work, like the Badger and the Octopus. OFFICERS DOROTHY AXTELL . . . . . . . . President MARIETTA HIPPLE . . Vice-President ARTHUR HUGHES . . . . .Seeretary MARTHA GROAN ....,,......... Treasurer DOROTHY .AXTELL FLORENCE BAILIE MILDRED BLAKELEY HERBERT BROCKHAUSEN MRS. STELLA PAYNE CLARK JOHN B. CLULEY ARTHUR N. COLT MARY COOLEY LUCILLE CURTIS ELEANOR DE VINE KATHERINE ELY ANTOINETTE FEE HOW.ARD FUNK ANNA GEBHARDT GRETCHEN GILBERT RALPH S. GRAVES MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY IVIARTHA GROAN MILDRED GUENTZEL INIARION HAFNER HELEN ANN I'IART3IEYER INIARIETTA HIPPLE ARTHUR HUGHES GALEN S. IRWIN ALFRED H. JENSEN DOROTHY JOHNSON GERTRUDE KEHL MARTHA KLERNER VIOLA IQNONVLAN ISABELLE KRANERT VERA K. LEE GEORGE LENHER GENEVIEVE POHLE JULIA ROSS JOSEPHINE SAMMIS MARIE SAMMIS DIARY SCHNEIDER WALTER E. SCHEUTZ FLORENCE SCHVVEIZER MRS. R. B. STEWART IWIARIE STRUVE MRS. .AGNES N. TUTTLE WILLIAM E. XVARNER VICTORIA VVERNER GRACE WERTI-I CARMEN XVHITE FRANCES XVIEDENBECK FRANCES J. XVOCASEK LUCILE ZANDER Bailie Gunderson Curtis De Vine Axtell Sammis Cooley Werth V Ross Zander Hafner Fee Krannrt Struve GebhardL Sammis klerner Schneider Blakely Martin Stewart Hughes Groan Gilbert. Henry Cluley VVerner Irwin Johnson Lenher Stewart- Lee Jensen Pohle Graves Page Fwc' Hundred and Twenty PRESS CL B -Mf'I11.bership in Progs Club is 6l6?Cll.1'f', according lo scholarship and aclivilies in slfadenl 1JllbIlCfLlfIf0Tl.S. I ls obyecl Is lo f urlher acquaintance among sladenls inieresled in the press and to ajford opporlzznilyfor 1'nLeres!ir1.g speakers and disczzssion., as well as social affairs. OFFICER S CHARLES P. MACINNIS . . ...... Prvsirlcnl WILLIAM BLOECHEH , . .,..,. Vice-Prcsirlenl IVIARGARET DALY . . . . . Svcrelary and Treasurer MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY GRADUATES JOHN BAKER WVILLIAM BLOEUHER MARY BRIDGMAN ISADORE COXVARD PENNELL CROSBY MARGARET DALX' ROBERT DESISIOND Lols DUI-IRIN GERTRUDE ADELT HERBERT BROCKHAUSEN BERTHA BURKHARDT ROBERT BURNEY RICHARD CROSSE ARTHUR FREYTAG KENNETH FAGG GEORGE GEIGER PORTER BUTTS KITTY CALLAHAN CHARLES DEMAREST SENIORS BERNICE ELLIOTT IEATHERINE FERGUSON IVIILDRED GERLACH GEORGE GREENE MILDRED HILL KENNETH JACOBSON .IUNIORS IDRYS HUGHES FLORENCE KOLTES CHARLES LEVVIN EDWARD LEE PORTIA LUGOFF KARL MAIER ' SOPHOMORES EZRA CRANE BERTH.A ELBEL HELENE FOSTER CHUNG SHU KWEI PAUL LEACH HARRX' LYEORD WILLIAM SALE MARION STBASSBURGER STERLING TRACY IVIARGARET WVALKER RODNEY WVELSH H.AROLD NICCLELLAND MARY IVIOULD KATHRYN PERRY GLADYS PETERSEN HORACE B. POWELL WILLIAM TANNEWVITZ ELIZABETH WVADMOND DOROTHY LAXVTON DAVID STEENBERG DANE VERMILION I I I , . Page Five I'llllllll'!Lll and Trrrfnly- Une I TERNATIO AL CLUB The International Club, which unites sluolents of all the nationalities represented at the Unizwemity, has for its molto Above the Nations is Humanityy It alms to promote the spirit of brotherhood and mutual interest. OFFICERS J OHANNES D. DE AVET . . . - I D - Pf'f?SiCl9flf ISINASE MALLARI . . . . ,. V106-Pf0Sld6fLl FREDA MAYER. . - - -Secfelafl' RIGMOR ESTVAD . . - Tl'P0AS'UVf?f' IVIEIWBEBS IN THE UNIVERSITY DIRECTORS PERCY M. IDAIVSON UNITED STATES MJKRY M. BAUSCH HOWVAHD T. BEAVER EDISON M. BOERKE CONSTANCE B. BREWVER B. CEI-ILER PROI-'. PERCY M. DAWSON P. DAY ELAINE K. ESCHWEILER RIGMOR ESTVAD SONYA FORTIHIAL RUSSELL E. FROST B. FULLER EMELIA J. GIRYOTAS GERALD HEEBINK KENNETH H. JAOOBSON MIXRY JOHNSTON R.8CHEL M. KELSEY JAPAN-TOKITARO SUZUKI R:XCHEL M. KELSEY SONYA F ORTIIAL UNITED STATES GRACE E. LANGDON PROF. AVILLIAM E. LEONARD MRS. VVILLIAM E. LEONARD HERAIAN H. LEVITZ BERTHfk LIFSCHITZ RICHgXRD C. MUNKNN'ITZ BENJAMIN N. PEAOOCK HOWARD H. ROGERS Lois K. STENVART ROSIVELL H. STINCIIEIELD JOEL SXVENSEN lv.-x J. WOOD PHILIPPINE ISLANDS EUSTAQUIO G. AQUINO ANTONIO F. ASCANO JUANITA A. BARTOLOME CARLOW X. BURGOS P HI LIPPINE ISLANDS FELIGE O. CEYALLOS LEON V. LINSANGAN PEDRO T. LINSANOAN ISINASE NI.-KLLAHI RAIION G. M.kRQIIEZ PRO B. NIARINEZ RICARDO M. ORTEGA NICANOR G. TEO DORO ROBERTA P. XIILLATUYA CHINA HENRY H. CHAO CHEN-CHOXW' Hsu H. T. LINN WVILLINGTON Y. LIU CHIA L. SHAO IVIATTHEXY H. SHEN YANG DING TSU YIN CIIIEN Yu ICELAND-BJORN G. BJORNSON CA RLONY X. BURGOS INDIA SWAMINATHA S. AIYAR MOI-IINDRA BAHADUR PANDURANG C. PATIL SOUTH AFRICA BENJAMIN J. SAIIT FERDINAND VAN DER MERYVE CLEIIENT M. VAN DER RIET JOI-IANNES D. DE NVET SOUTH AMERICA CHARLES L. CAMPBELL ALFRED HUDSON JULIO F. LANDA FERNANDO SOLA BELGIUM HIARC SOAIERHAUSEN IRIIA S. DE JANS PORTO RICOTISIDRO NIARRERO TOSHISUKI Snmlzu IRELAND-CONNELL BOYLE ROUMANIA-.lol-IN NESTOR ' BOHEMIA-V. STBELA MEXICO-PEDRO R. VALDIVIA RUSSIA-ANNA C. STOFFREOEN FRANCE-M. PONS NEW ZEALAND-CECIL R. RUSSELL SIAM-NAI LOCHAYA GERMANY-MARTHA NICOLAI NORWAY-K. HENIJRIKSEN SWITZERLAND-E. SCHNEIDER Su'1iL Lochaya Swenson Levilz Lu Muukwitz Hnvbiuk Oehler Aiyar Mallari Bausch Giryolas Johnslon Van der Riet. Shimizu Suzuki Campbell Riera Hudson Sola Van der Merwe Schneider LIIISHIIQZIII Boyle Strela Peacock Beaver Somerhausen Patil Lopez Mulsomolo Ortega Tsu Burgos Marrero Brewer Esbvad Sloffregen De Wet De Jaus Pons Bahadur Liusuugam Page Five Ilunrlrerl and Twenly-Tw - . .. J. PHILIPPINE BADGER CLUB The purpose of lhe Pb1'lippir1.e Badger Club is lo bring the members into joini conlacl wzlh llzc Unzverszly and lo dlssemznale accaraie informalion Io lhe American people reqardmq Plzzllppme affalrs and condilions. OFFICERS l IRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER I ELIPE O Cm XLLOS ...... EUSTAQUIO G. AQUINO ..,. , . . Preszdcnt ANTONIO I' AEC KNO . . . FELIX B. SABAO ,... .Vice Preszdent PRO B NIARTINEZ . JUANITA BARTOLOME . . . . Secrelary FFT ix B SAR A0 . .ROBEHTA VILLATUYA , . Treavurer MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY EUSTAQUIO G. AQUINO ANTONIO F. ASCANO J UANITA BARTOLOME CARLONV X. BURGOS INIARIANO CARBONEL FELIPE O. CEVALLOS IVIANUEL GONZALES ISMAEL IVIALLAR1 Ro BE RTA VI LLATU YA RAMON INIARQUEZ PRO B. IVIARTINEZ JESUS DE IVIESA GERARDO O. OCFEMIA RICARDO ORTEGA AGUSTIN Ro DOLFO FELIX B. SARAO NICANOR TEODORO Page Five Hundred and Tuenlw Three .X ,- YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OFFICERS ROY E. SORENSON ......... . Preszzdvni MILTON A. POWERS , . .,... Ifzcc-Preszdenl GAMBER TEGTMEYER . . .Sccrelary and Tregzsurgr STERLING TRACY ..,..,.......A.. Sherz 17' INNER CIRCLE RJILLARD B. SMITH ,...,. . . , , .... Prcsidenl I'IENRY C. SMITH . . . V ice-Presidenl FREDERICK E. WOLF ..... . . General Secrelary HAROIJD E. ASHCROFT FREDERICK H. CLAPP CARL W. DAMSHEUSER LESTER C. DINGEIJDINIE ROBERT D. GRUBB JOHN H. HOLZBOG LLOYD W. LENTZNER C. HEIXBERT LLOYD CLARENCE F. RHIARTIN CHAD G. NIEVVMAN ELMER C. INIUESSE .JUNIOR COUNCIL LEO M. POVVERS PERC SORENSON R.ALPH A. SMITH ROLAND R. TEWS GEORGE F. XYALSTED . WORTH E. SHOULTS. , . .,.... . .President CARL R. ROGERS ......... . .Secretary HARRY' F. AUGUSTINE EDWARD H. GIBSON TREO DORE J. MARTIN JOHN M. BE:-'EEL ALLAN G. H.ALI,!NE LEE MCCANDLESS KURT FUCHS GEORGE D. HOCRING RAI' E. ORR JELMER R. GESTEL.NND LOGAN A. JONES THOMAS A. TREDNN'EI.L W . . Orr Gibson Rogers n Trsdwell Geglqland Fuchs Marlin McCandless Shozxlls Hocking BeH'el Page Five Hundred and Twenlly-Four Balmer Sorenson Gcrholz Buxlon Carlson Miller Bruden NVOII' Truebloocl Kalz Sohncller Ewing Kohl Shoulls Baker Clark YOUNG MENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION THE CABINET VOFFIC LEO H. ILOIIL ...,.... NIANLEY H. CLARK . . . XYILSON D. TRUEBLOOD. . JAMES C. BUXTON ..... . ERS . . . , . Presidenl . Vzfce-Presidenl . . Secrelary , . . . . . Treasurer COMMITTEES OSCAR R. B.AKER. Americanization ROY E. SORENSON. Bois Work CHARLES P. BKIACINNIS. Discussion Groups LEO H. KOHL, Fellowship Meetings RAY E. BABER. Foreign Student Work NIANLEY H. CLARK, Membership CLIFFORD O. BRIIDEN, Social Service - EDNVIN J. SCHNELLER, Badger Club BIRNEY F. NIILLER, Deputation Teams ROBERT P. GERHOLZ, Religious Conference JAMES BUXTON, Finance HENRH' KATZQ Handbook and Freshmen XVelcome LORAN S. CLARK, Sick Visitation EDNYARD A. ENVING, Vocational Guidance SOPHOMORE COMMISSION Cd.-AMBER F. TEGTMEYER . EDWIN A. CARLSON . . W ALTER A. FRAUTSCHI .... . . . .Presideni . VI're-President . . . . Secrefary ELSWORTH W. BUNCE DONALD N. COOLEY J ERE L. CROOK CALVERT L. DEDRICK Ross F. DUGAN JOHN C. EAIERY GEORGE H. GILLANIB gLEE D. HANSON XNILLIAM F. INGRAHAM JULIUS M. McCo'r JOHN F. MIIRPHX' FREDERICK W. NIXINIER ROBERT F. PFEIFER VVALTER H. PLEWVKE GEORGE L. Rr-:ED EARL F. NVANDREIJL JAMES T. WATSON EI.-XRL E. YAI-IN Hanson Pfeifer Ewing Gilland Starker Poppe Kimball Noer Dugan Cooley Wa tsou Rai cliff Dedrick Carlson T4-gl moyer Field lVl urphy Nlmmer Page Five Hundred and 'lmenlv Five CHEMI TRY CL B . The Chemistry Club is organized to further the interest in clzemistryfand to spirit of fellowship among those .specializing In that branch of sczence. U RICHARD FISCHEH LOUIS KAHLENBEBG AUBREY K. BRENVEB ADOLPI-I FROEHLKB THERESA BAUGHMAN BERNHARD DOMOGOLLA JOHN H. DRAIZE FRANK J. DRORKA CHARLES E. FAWKES BRYN NISSEM ELSA GIBIDILER PARKER HIGLEY BRUCE W. HUBBARD ANN R. ALEXANDER WARREN BUSSE MEMBERS IN FACULTY VICTOR LENHEB .IAMES H. WALTON HOWARD IVIATTHEWS MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY GRADUATES HASSO PESTALOZZI SENIORS EDWIN E. GLOMSTEAD WALTER GRIEBI C. E. IIRUBESKY ALFRED D. LUDDEN OSCAR C. IVIAGISTAD JUNIORS TVILLIAM J ERVING ARTHUR KRUEGER LUCILLE LANGSTADT KATHERINE RONVLAND SO PHO M ORES ALICE CLANCY RUTH HARMISON FRESHMEN EDWIN BUXBAUM HUGH L. VIIEMPLETON ANELLA W IEBEN MILDRID K. OLSON GENEVIEVE PALBIER LESTER W. PETERSON ELIZABETH PICKERING BRUNO STEIN LEONARD TIEDEISIAN IVIARGARET ROWLEY GEORGE SPANGENBERG INEZ WILLIAMS DAVID SINCLAIR ETHEL SOUCIE promote a Harwood Tiedernan Stein Gimznlsr McQueen Peterson Fllkkie Peslalozzi Templelon Olsen Fawkes Snieder Nissen Pickering Hrubesky Sommcrs Baughman Griem Rowland Domogolla Draize Drohka Wieben Brewer Williams Spangenberg Palmer Glomsteud Soucie Ludden Clancy Rowloy Page Fwe Hundred and Twenty-Sin: JUNIOR MATHEMATICS CLUB The Junior Mathematics Club is made up Qf undergraduates who are particularly inter- ested in mathematics, and its purpose is to extend that interest. OFFICERS ALICE TUCICER ......,...... . . . .President PEARL ANDERBERG . . . .... Vice-President DOROTHEA SCHRHDT ........ Secretary and Treasurer MURIEL BATZ IRMA BUSWELL FRANKLIN C. CHILLRUD ANNE DARCY PEARL ANDERBERG AGNES DEL,ANEY DOROTHY FITCH HELENE GORDON GRADUATE MEMBERS PHILIP DOWLING MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY SENIORS MARY FREE FREDONIA FRIES RUTI-I HOFFINIAN ERNA KLOSTERILAN ALICE TUCKER J UNIORS VIOLA JENSON SOPHOMORES VERNON LANVRENCE LEILA MEISNEST DOROTHY RAY VIOLA SCI-IAEFER DOROTHEA SCHMIDT ETHEL JOHNSON JEAN KILGOUR HENRIETTA WEBSTER :NIILDRED HAWKS Ray Gordon Kilgour Free Jenson Klosterman Schaefer .Hoffman - Dclancy Darcy Batz Buswell Anderberg Tucker Schmidt Johnson Fries MEISHGSI, Page Five Hurzflrett and Twenty-Seven THE BADGER CLUB Ii is lhepurpose oflhe Badger Club io promoie goodfellowship and sociabilily among the men and women of fhe Universily. .Membership is open io all sludenls ai Wisconsin. Regular meetings are held every Sunday evening during lhe school year at lhe HY parlors. Ai these meeiings ihe opporlunily is given lo get acquaznfed, lo lake part in com- munity singing, and io hear L'DadH Wolf or some oiher speaker. Oiher social acfiviiies for lhe members are hikes, skaiing, and oulings appropriale fo lhe season, and every Chrislmas a parly is given for lhe poor children of llladison. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE EDWIN J. SCHNELLER , A ..,........ .President HELEN KEATOR . . . .... V ice-Preszdenl DON VV. GALLAGHER .,...,. .Secrelary and Treasurer VNORBIAN REITAN. GRACE VVERTH ..... Circle Leaders KENNETH W IOKEB, LOUISE THOMPsON . . Host and Hostess HAROLD VVICKER, ELSIE HODGSON . . , . Refreshments HAROLD SCHIER .,..., , . Social MARX' D1cKsON ...., . Receiving JADLES T. WATSON . Publicity . SAMUEL SCHMIDT . . . Music GEORGE DARBY . . Arrangements Heitan A Baker Schmidt Wicker VVicker Schier Wblf 4 Thompson Field Wirth Schneller Keainr Gallagher Hosnck Darby Page Five Hundred and Twenty-Eighl CAMPUS RELIGIOUS COUNCIL The Campus Religious Council al lhe Universily of Wisconsin meets monthly for dis- cussion and consideration of ils work. If delermines lhe church amliation of all siudenls and gives this information Io lhe Madison churches. I l holds an all-Universily reception at the beginning of each year, and conducls Bible Class publicity, religious convocaiions, conferences, forums, and Lenlen Services. The Council seeks lo lrain the siudenls of the various groups lo do religious work ejfeclively and co-operalively. The Campus Religious Council embraces several failhs, and includes one paslor, or religious worker, one professor. five sludenls from each of lhe following groups, and from any olher groups which accepl lhe general invilalion lo enler lhe fellowship: BAPTIST CHURCH METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH EPISCOPAL CHURCH REFORMED CHURCH EVANGELICAL CHURCH UNITARIAN SOCIETY JEWISH STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION Y. M. C. A. LUTHERAN CHURCH Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS ADRIAN SCOLTRN .......... .... . Presiden! KATHERINE ROSENBERRH' . . . . .Vice-President REV. N. C. KIMBALL .. . . .... Secrelary Page Five Hundred and Twerily-Nine IPANI SH CL R t The Spanish Club has been in existence for sim years as an educational and social organ ization devoted to a more extensive study of Spanish than the classroom oyjfers. At the bi weekly meetings musical numbers, playlets, and talks by Spanish students are given. The annual Spanish play is given under the direction of the club. HUL-CEE M. ACTON GEORGE W. BAUM WALTER II. BAUM IVIARION E. BENEDICT HELEN M. BERKWICH EUGENE BROSSARD HAROLD C. BUELL LEWIS W. CRAWFORD SARAH S. CUMMINGS CALVERT L. DEDRICK RIIARY M. DICKSON RALPH J. DROUGHT OFFICERS HERBERT D. SAPPER ........ . . 1 .President ELIZABETH M. FISHER . . .Vice-President CALVERT L. DEDRICK . 4 , Secretary HUL-CEE ACTON ........,...... Treasurer MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY ROBERT T. DUNSTAN LAWRENCE E. EMMONS ELIZABETH M. FISHER IDA GOLD OTTO H. HZAELSIG GRACE G. IIANVLEY CHARLES R. HIELD ELBERTA A. HILES HERBIAN M. HOFFMAN ALFRED H. JENSEN GENEVIEVE R. JONES HANNAH KROME FERNANDO SOLA NADIA LEVITIN DOROTHY C. MEYER LEWIS R. IVIRKVICKA SYLVIA R. NEINTEBOFF IVIANUEL ORTEGA JOSEPH J. PROKOP GEORGE L. REED CLARA RUEDEBUSCH HERBERT D. SAPPER MARGARET B. SICKELS DOROTHY SMITH HENRY SMITH, JR. Hield Prokop Sola Acton Mrkvicka W. Baum G. Baum Jensen Hoffman Orutqga Hiles Dickson Fisher Emmonds Benedicl. Dedrick Jones Ruedebusch Sickles Levnbm Haelsvg Meyer Cummings Crawford Sapper Drought. Gold Reed Kreme - Page File Hundred and Thirty FRE CH CL B The Undergraduate French Club ofthe University of Wisconsin was organized primarily to enable its members to make progress in speaking and understanding the French language, and to become better acquainted with lhe art, literature, and customs of France. At the meet- ings of the organ ization, held every two weeks, French songs, dramatic performances, talks by students and members of the faculty especially intimate with French customs and literature, and general social intercourse constitute the program. OFFICERS J. STUART PIAMILTON .........,... .President GEORGE D. HOCKING . Vice-President and Program Chairman ELOISE AVALDHON ..,............ Secretary H.ANNAH RROME . . ..,.,.. Treasurer NA DIA LEVITIN ...,....., Menzbersh ip Chairman IVIARIE LOUISE BONNET R. F. BRADLEY IRA R. .KNDREXVS MARY ASPINXVALL LOIS B. BEATTIE MARY BONZELET DOROTHY BRADFORD SUSAN BRONVN ALICE BULLOCK RUTHMARY BURROUGHS BONITA CARLSON MARY CHASE FRANK D. CRANE ELIZABETH ELSOM BABETI-I FERNBERG EMILY FRANCOIS ALICE GOODELL M E MEMBERS IN FACULTY A. G. FITE RIARGUERITE PONS HELEN SMITH LOUISE E. GOTTLEIB IVIARIAN GUILD IVIARION IIAFNER STUART HAMILTON GEORGE D. HOCKING CATHERINE KENNEY SELVIDA KENSETH RUTH KOTINSKY DOROTHY KREBS I-IANNAH KROME FLORENCE M. LAMPERT NADIA LEVITIN N IVANELLE LEWIS DORIS A. LINGENFELDER NIAXVVELL A. SMITH IVIARGUEI-'CITE TREILLE MBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY J. D. MARSHALL HELEN M. MCDONALD ALBERT H. OSTERMAN BERNICE POLASKY DOROTHY SCHEIBEL SAMUEL F. SCHMIDT FLORENCE SCHWEIZER ELIZABETH L. SHOLES DOROTHY SICKLES IRMGARD SIEGMEYER MARJORIE TODD ELOISE W ALDRON SELMA WALIESZ DOROTHY E. WILLIAMS HELEN ZIELSDORF Bonnet Sholes McDonald Hamilton Irwin Smith Carlson Lampert Beattie Elsom Scheibel Hocking Teller Schmidt Marshall Pons DeJans Aspinwall Chase Bonzelct Malsin Bullock Kenseth VVilliams Francois Treil le Lingenfclder Gottleib Waldron Keeney Leviian Krome Sickles Siegmeynr Lewis Schweizer Paar Five Hundred and Thirty-One SQUARE CL R OFFICERS W. STANWAY JACKA. . . . . .Presidenl JESSE M. POOL . . .- . . Vice-President ERWIN J. KADERABEK . . .Treasurer ARTHUR J. HUEGEL . . . .Secretary ALFRED E. BERGMAN EBWIN J. KADERAREK . . .Trustees NORMAN M. MITCHELL E HUL-CEE M. ACTON HARVEY G. AHRENS CARTER H. ANDERSON IRA R. ANDREWS RICHARD W. AUSTERMANN EARL D. BADER WILLIAM S. BALDWVIN RALPH BALLIETTE TYLER D. BARNEY KARL BABNARD DONALD C. BAUDER ALFRED E. BEBG-MAN HYMAN J. BILANSKY LAWRENCE E. BLAIR WALTER B. BLAIR ALBERT E. BLUM BRUCE M. BLUM HERBERT W. BOHLMAN MEMBERS IN TH PHILLIP C. BRANCH LESTER W. BRANN MERVYN BRAUN RUSSELL D. BREWINCTON MAYNARD W. BROWN JOHN N. BRUCE ARTHUR A. CANTWELL ERNEST L. CHAMBERS SYDNEY C. CHARNEY JOHN B. CLULEY GERALD M. CON'KLING VV ALTER J. CONNELL GERALD R. COULTER JAMES E. DAVIS LOUIS F. DECLER DONALD S. DEWIRE EDNVARD S. DODGE ERNEST DOPP UNIVERSITY WESLEY M. DUNLAP THEODORE EDWARDS FREDERICK R. ERRACH CYRIL L. ERICKSON H.ABBY E. FARNSWORTH JOHN A. F ARR U MILTON A. F ISCHEB ALBERT C. FISHACK PERRY A. FOOTE HAROLD W. FREVERT HONVARD V. FUNK EARL E. GAGE LESLIE H. GARBER TRUDIAN G. GLEN JOHN A. GOODLAD BEN T. GREEN LONNIE L. GRIER LAWRENCE H. HAHN Dodge SLuebing Shith Wehmhofl' ' Sims .Erhuch NeWLon Freverl. Braun Petersen Fischer Andrews Ball1eLLe Wiley Wright. Muehlherger Moreau Coullner Goodlad Ahrensr Kaderahek Jacka E. E. Smith Meyrick Connell Mitchpll Sohneller Robertson L. E. Blair Kolb Auslvermann Stalker Heuke Dunlap O'Connor A.E.Blum Wupper Page-:Five Hundred and Thirly-Tzvu JOSEPH ALFRED HALL LYNNE H. 1'IALVERSON NORBIAN M. PIALVERSON J. STUART HAMILTON CARL R. IJANSEN WIENDEZ N. l'IANSON HUBER1' F. IJARMAN DONALD L. HAY HAROLD E. l'lENKE NIYRON T. PIERBEIED OMER HOUKENI LADIMER M. l'lRUDK.-K ARTHUR J. I'IUEGEL A. KARL I'IUNTLEY GORDON HUSERY W. STANXVAY JACKA OLIVER M. J ACOBSON G. ARTHUR JOHNSON ENOS G. JONES LOGAN A. JONES ERNVIN J. KADERABEK lRVIN W. KEEBLER NORRIS J. KELLMAN CLAY G. KNOWLES JOHN K. KOLB SIDNEY J. LANG HOWARD R. LATHROPE THEODORE A. LEDIN ERNEST W. LUNDBERG GUSTOF M. LUNDBERG FRANK C. lVlCADAMS QU HE CLUB AVALTER W. NlAIIl0'I'TIi NVENDELL I-I. M ARSDEN GORDON S. lX'lEYBICK VERNE G. lVlILUM NORMAN M. NIITCHELI. ERNEST J. N10I-Ill CJRIE B. NlOl-IR FRED J. MOREAIJ CLARENCE W. lVlI,IEHLBERGER ALFRED T. lVlUEHLENBIKUt1H DONALD B. MURPHY IEIEL H. NIYRLAND GEORGE NEWTON EINAR A. Nl7RDS'I'ElDT AVILLIAM D. 0,CONNOR GOLDIE R. OLSON XVALTER E. PAULSON RALPH J. PEARSON FRANK R. PETERSEN RUEUS PHILLIPS JESSE M. POOL ORVILLE E. RADKE OTTIS H. RECHARD. JR. NIARTIN R. ROBERTSON FRED NV. ROEWEKAMP FRED SCHNELL EDWIN J. SCHNELLER EDNVIN A. SCHOENEBERG EDXVARD G. SCHULTZ EDWIN C. SEVERSON OLE A. SIMLEY BJORRISON SIMS .JACOB J. SINAGUB ISAAC SINAIKO DONALD P. SMITH EDXN'IN E. SMITH LEONARD M. SMITH WILLIAM M. SMITH XVILLIAM O. SNODDY l1ALPH J . SPRAGUE ROY L. STITH D. NORR1AN STALKER ALBERT C. STUEBING CARL H. SWENSON JOHN D. SWIFT CARL C. TENHAEFF OWEN R. TERRY ADOLPH G. THORSEN RICHARD J. VAN TASSEL HENRY J. WARMUTH ELDON L. W ATSON ROWLAND H. WEHMHOFF CHARLES L. XVELLS HARIIEY B. WILEY JOE H. WILSON XVILBER VV. VVITTENBERG SETH A. WKVOLFE ERNEST H. WRIGHT BEN F. VVUPPER CLINTON R. YAPP VILAS D. YOUNG JOSE ZAPATA HOWARD M. ZOERB Erickson .Johnson E.W.Lundberg Cluley Anderson Edwards VVOli'c C VV Lundberg Young Jacobson Foote Hamilton Pool Kellman Barnard Davis Lulhrope Bader Yapp Van'l'assel Murphy Hay Conkling Gage FarnswOrLh Dewire Phillips Brunch Zoferh C.R.HansOn Ledin Schnell Simley W'iLheuberg Bruce Lang Knowles Dopp Page Fin' Hunzlred and lllllly finer AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERS The American Association of Engineers has for its airn the raising Qf'fh6 eihical and technical standards of the engineering profession and ihe promolzon of boih the economic and social wcbrare of fhe men in the profession. OFFICERS OLAP N. R0vE ........ . . .. President IVIONTROSE K. DRENVRY . . . . Vzce-President JAMES T. IDANVSON , . . . . . Secreiary ADOLPH F. YOUNGBERG ............ Treasurer EARL D. BADER H. F. BIERSACH H. W. BILLE G. J. BORGMAN L. E. CHASE C. C. CONC-DON M. K. DREVVRY A. F. EBENTIER L. L. ENDERS W. S. FIELD H. GIDDINGS R. GREENNIAN G. GROSS E. GUILLEMIN G. GUSTIN MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY I. HADDORFF H. HAGEN L. HAHN A. HANNIKINS L. HOFFNIAN M. HowEs G. HOYVLAND J. .IOYES L. KANARIJ C. LABSON E. LOVERUD J. IVIACKIE G. IVIEYRICK W. M OEHLMAN E. NORSTED1' O. PFEFFER W PROCHNONV O. RABBITT W. RICE G. ROBAR G. STEINMETZ W. TIAIIEL W. THOMAS CHEN-KUEH TSAO A. VOBACH XY. VVALTERS H. W HEATON A. XYOUNGBERG D. ZUEGE E. PRICE J. PRICE I I I I I Dawson Love Thiel Rove Varney Dick Hahn Marks Lovcrud Trebus Geilfuss Tsao Bader lIadd0rIT Rubar Pekofsky Pridenux Guillemiu Wallman Page Five Hundred and Thirlxv-Four LANVRENCE AUDI' HARRX' A. PHILLIPS A. E. BERGGREN AMERICAN SOCIETY MECHANICAL ENGINEERS C. I. CORP .... OFFICERS TERRELL B. IVIAXFIELD , . . . EARL P. HANSON . . W ESTERN W. PIDCOE NELS C. RICPIARDSON NVEF-NER I. SENGER . MEMBERS IN FACULTY C. I. CORP P. I-I. HX'LAND MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY DAVID W. IWCLENEGAN GRADUATES SENIORS EDISON E. PIENRY FRANK A. BUESE EDNVARD L. Cox FREDERICK R. ERRACH TRUIVIAN GLEN WINFORD VV. GZBEILING EARL P. HANSON CLEBURNE S. BENDER EDMUND H. HAUGEN ROGER W. KAHLENBERG RUDOLPH C. JOHNSON EUGENE G. LIEBERT JOHN B. LEONARD AVILLIAM'C. LU CHESTER E. HUNZIKER ERNST A. LONCENECRER NIERRILL D. LOVE TERRELL B, IVIAXFIELD THOMAS NORSERG WILLIAM D. O,CONNOR CYRIL L. ERICKSON JUNIORS WILLIS L. M ANNING DONALD A. TNTCARTHUB NORLIAN M. MITCHELL WALTER H. PORTH LESTER O. HEICHELT LINCOLN A. RIETOW REINHOLD I-I. RAUBE Honorary Chairman Chairman Vice Chairman . Secretary Senior Treasurer Junior Treasurer G, L. LARSON' IVIERVIN O, FLOM AVESTERN W. PIDCOE NIILTON A. POVVERS NELS C. RICHARDSON ARTHUR M. SAMP OTTO F. AVALLMAN RAYMOND P. BETHKE ARTHUR RYNDERS CHESTER J. SCHMIDT C. EUGENE SILVER NVERNEB F. SENGER HALBERT A. VVELCH TRVING L. AVADE LIONYARD M. ZOERB Page Fi I rl ll a d Tflrlv Five ANHHRUlAN'SOGIETY'OF'CIVIL ENGINEERS STUDENT CHAPTER The American Society of CivilEnginecrs aims io advance lraining in engineering andpublic speaking and to promote a closer union of lhe men inthe Civil Engineering course. The Wis consin chapter, ajjiliated nationally during the past year, was formerly the U. of VV. Society of Civil Engineers. RETIRIN G ADOLF F. YOUNGBERG OLAF N. ROVE .... WILLIAM B. NEWING . ERNEST M. BARNES . LEON E. CHASE . . ERNEST M. BARNES EMIL S. :BIRKENYVALD HUGH F. BROWN CLIFFORD O. BRUDEN J EROME R. BUTLER LEON E. CHASE CARL B. CHRISTIANSON SIDNEY R. COLLINS W.ALTER J. CONNELL IVIALCOLM S. DOUGLAS ARTHUR E. BROWN F. L. BRUMER JAIVIES T. DAWSON LEO V. GARRITY RICHARD S. GOODRIDGE SHERMAN B. GREEN HELRIERV C. AMUNDSON ELBTER W. BECKER VVALTER G. BONANVITZ ROBERT E. FINLAYSEN ALFRED H. KETELHOHN OFFICERS . . Presideni . . . . Vice-Preszilenl . , . Secrciary-Treasurer . . . . Publicilylllanager . .....Crilic.... ACTIVE EARL K. LOVERUD XVILLIAM F. MOEHLDIAN LEVVIS H. KESSLER LOUIS A. SCHMIDT XVALTER C. THEIII MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY SENIORS ALDEN C. FENSEL MARSHALL A. GEILFUSS GEORGE M. HOE LEWIS H. KESSLER PENN P. LIVINGSTON XVILLIAM F. IVIOEHLMAN ROBERT B. POWELL JAMES R. PRICE H. MONROE RADLEY ANTHONY F. ROHLFING JUNIORS IRVING R. H,ADDORFF GEORGE T. LATIMER EARL K. LOvERUD ELROY R. LUEDTRE ARMON E. IVIABRY BENJAMIN IVIARIATEGIU I. EDWARD IVIARKS JOSEPH A. IVIAIERS SOPHOMORES CHARLES E. HOLDEN TED R. KING CARROLL E. ROBB FRESHMEN NVILFRED D. LEXIEILLE OSCAR J. VVALLSCHLA EGER OLAF H. ROVE GEORGE R. SCHNEIDER LEO H. SHAPIRO W ALTER C. THEIL FORREST F. VARNEY HERBERT H. WHEATON CHARLES E. WHEELER IADOLF F. HrOUNGBERG XVALTER O. ZERVAS KENNETH N. RIILLS OSWALD J. MUEGGE LOUIS A. SCHMIDT FRED A. SIMONS ROY L. STITH LIONEL C. TSCHUDY ROBERT P. VILLATUYA ARNOLD S. ZANDER GEORGE J. SCHMIDT LAURENCE T. SOGARD HAROLD J. YOUNGBERG ARTHUR L. AVIGGIN Douglas Moehlman Newing Rohlfing Tschudy Brudeu Mxlls I Fqnsel Varney Simons Wheeler Theil Birkenwald Shapiro ' Muegge Marlategxu Loverud Garrily A. Youngberg Rove Barnes Nlarks Brumer Price L. Schmidt A.BrowII Christianson Radley Dawson Livingston Geilfuss Butler Kessler Page Five Hunrlrera' and Tlzirlrv-Sin: CHEMICAL ENGINEERS SOCIETY MEMBERS LYLE C. IJARVEY ....,..., . . . President ARTHUR J. HUEGEL . . . . Vice-President GEORGE V. BENNETT . , . . Secrelary GEORGE P. RYAN .............. Treasurer CARTER H. ANDERSON RALPH B. ABRABIS ROGER A. BOZARTH AUGUSTINE J. BULFER EDWIN D. COLEMAN EVERETT G. DREXV ALBERT F. EBENTIER ASHER R. ELLIS PERRY A. FOOTE JOHN P. GERHAUSER LYLE C. HARVEY KENNETH S. .AMES RUSSELL M. BECKERIIAN GEORGE V. BENNETT J. CARL BO DE THOMAS R. BOGUMILL JOHN J. CHYLE MAGNUS C. HANSEN MERRILL E. HANSEN CLARENCE M. HARE STUART O. FIEDLER HAROLD FLORMAN MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY SENIORS RIAURICE A. HIRSCHBEIKG CIARDINER G. IJOKVLAND ARTHUR J. I'JUEGEL XVILLIAM R. KELLETT LELAND A. KIRST ALFRED S. KRENZ CHARLES R. NIERRIMAN C. SEYMOUR NASON CARL L. NEIIBIEISTER PHILIP PEICOESKY IRVING J. RAU JUNIORS FRANK J. HABHLTON H. DEAN KITCHEN FRANK KUBOSCH ROBERT B. LEWIS FRED M. IVIILLINGTON NEVIN H. McKAY CLEVELAND F. NIXON FOSTER S. IXIENVELL AVALTER E. PFLEGER SOPHOMORES CLARENCE L. HAWVN VVALTER A. KUENZLI FRESHMEN ERXNIIN J. MILLER ROBERT L. RUNDORFF IVIARTIN R. ROBERTSON GEORGE P. RYAN LEON SILVERSTONE LEONARD D. STOLL XVALTER G. TRAUB HENRY J. WARIIIUTH RAYMOND W. YVENGEL CLARENCE W. VVILLE DONALD C. SLICHTER H.AROLD J. SPIELALAN WARREN J. ROBINSON HERBERT J. SCHULTHEIS CHARLES A. SILVER SSU H. TING HAROLD H. TOBIN CHARLES M. TRINNIER THEODORE VOTTELER KENNETH M. XV.-KTSON .JOHN F. XVELCH B. A. VVIEMER Page Five Hundred and 'llxzl SFUPII THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS PROFESSOR E. BENNETT WVJALTEH E. DICK EARL D. BADER HERBERT H. BECK GEORGE C. BARLAND TI-IEOPIIILUS V. BITTNER BJORN G. BJORNSON HOLCAR L. CHRISTENSEN JAMES G. DICKINSON LESLIE H. GARBER EHNST GUILLEMIN WILLIAM C. BERTEIS ROBER1' B. BOHMAN LEMORE S. CLARK ROBERT A. CLARK SIMEON M. COE GEORGE H. FINKLH NENVELL E. FRENCH WILLIAM A. CVLUESSING PAUL G. BEER FRED D. BI.:SNCH THOMAS J. BOERNER CHRISTIAN H. BURKHIXRDT JAMES K. DOUGLAS GEORGE VJ. BONSI-IEA UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN BRANCH OFFICERS R. H. HERRICR . ..... , .V ..... Chairman H. L. RUSCH ........... Secrelary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. B. BOHMAN J. C. LOTTER MEMBERS IN FACULTY PROFESSOR E. BENNETT MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES H.XRRY I. MILLER HELSIER SORENSON SENIORS MIXLCOLAI P. HANSON RIIDOLE J. HEINS ROSWELI.. H. TIERRICK GEORGE A. HILL CARI.. F. HOPE LOGIIN A. JONES HAROLD R. LEE DONALD G. LERMAN JUNIORS HOIILETT H. GERNIOND FRED E. GOETz LANVRY H. HEDSTROBI NEAL D. HEIIRICK FRANK P. HYER ROYCE E. JOHNSON PAUL E. KAv.xN.xuGI-I ALVIN R. KLANN CASEY Y. LOOAIIS ERNEST M. LUNDA J. WILBUR MCGANN GORDON S. NIEYRICK ERNEST J. MORR PERRY H. MOON FREDERICK NV. NOLTE EIN.fKR A. NORDSTEDT G.SIL XV. PALMER NVILLIMI KNOTT RAYMOND A. KRUECER ICENNETH E. LAMB OTH51.XR F. IINNDKMIER JOSEPI-I C. LOTTER FILMER A. ORR FREDERICK A. RAHR LIIZGO L. RUSCH SOPHOMORES XVILLIAM A. ERDNIIKNN ALLEN M. FRASER HENDRICK J. GRECG EDGAR D. LILJA HERBERT-C. M.'kYER H.xRvEx' R. NIELCHER FREDERICK W. NININIER RICHARD T. PERRY HORKCE H. R.xTCI.II'E RALPII S. REED FRESHMEN XVILLIAM R. CARLYON HIXROLD N. Snow G.x BRIEL C. YUN CECIL P. PARSONS GNN'II.YNI F. PRIDEAUX G:XRRET D. ROBAR ROBERT I. SVITAVSKY AKSEL TARANGER 0XX'EN R. TERRY ERWIN H. TREBUS DELBFIRT H. SCI-Lxcm' DOMINIC F. SCHMIT JOI-IN W. SMART JEROME R. STEIN REEvE 0. STROCE LOUIS M. TRAISER ANTHONY C. TRAYSER LOUIS L. SCI-IROEDER IEVERETT J. TI-IOIIAS HOWARD C. XVEINGANDT JOHN P. XVELLS R.kYRlOND J. STIPEK Guillemin Rusch Douglas Bartels Garber Lol ler Nordsledl BOI!STlEil Larson Slein Dick Beck Trebus A. N. Hoelz Reed Traiser Boerner Hedslrom Lehman Billner Gregg Weingardl Skow Traysgr - E. A. Landkamcr Sorenson C. E. Hoelz Palmer R. Herrick RalCliiI'e Fraser Lunda Gcrmond Dlckxnson Lllja Melcher R. B. Bowman Smart G. C. Yun Rlanvh Burkhnrdl Rahr Hynr Bader Moon Mohr Schachl Ninnner P. G. Bowman LOOIIIZS Gonlz Collon Pave Fzve Hunrlf-rd and TI1.i1'L.v-Eighl MINING CLUB AIIiIiz1LRcI with AII1f:ric'an Institute Of Mining and IVIetRIIIIrgiI'z1l EREIIIRPIR OFFICERS .IOHN B. IIOLMES ......... .,.., P residenl XYFISLEY O. GERICRE , . , . Vice-President WILLIAM F. UHLIG . . . SFFFPICIFQV-7-'I'6l1.S'lll'6l' EVERETT W. JONES . . ,,,.. PublicI'l.v CLIFFORD C. GLADSON . ,..,. lI7llC'kl'l' xYAI.'l'EIK W .HBOLEY . . Asxzklrznl !VI1u'ker GEORGE J. BARR ER LAYVRENCE H. HAHN HOYVARD G. ITIYMER GUSTOF M. LUN DBERG SHERWOOD BUCKSTAFF EDNVARD M. ELSTAD ROBERT ERICKSON EARL E. FOURNESS XVESLEY O. GERICKE GILBERT G. GRIEVE ALVIN J. EMANIIEL MILNER H. HAYVKINS OTTO B. HERRENER EVERETT W. JONES WVALTER W. BOIIEX' ARNO B. COVELL WV. G. DALLMEYER CLIFFORD C. GLADSON HENRH' EHRLINGER OLIVER M. JACOESON MEMBERS IN FA CII IITY JOSEPH OESTIERLE RICHARD S. INICCAFFERY EDWIN R. SHOREI' MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES HERBERT J. LIIECK LOUIS R. IVIANN SENIORS ALVAH M. HILL JOHN B. HOIJNIES T. DELBERT JONES HERBERT J. KEMLER JOI-IN F. LINDEN OSCAR PFEFFER JUNIO RS CARL F. LARSON CARL W. LEERTHUIS H RICHARD S. RICCAFFERY. JR. SOPHOMORES M ITCHELL G. GORROXN' ABAN J. HUNSA DER GEORGE A. KRIZ DONALD M. M ATHESON FRESH MEN CHAD G. NEWYIBIAN GEORGE E. XVIGGERS GEORGE OIBRIEN LLOYD M. SCOFIELD CHEN K. TSAO ROY W. REDIN OTTO L. SICKERT XVILLIAM F. IIHLIG GILBERT XV. NVEONER CLEMENT H. IVILLIAMS PIERBERT H. XYOLTERS NEVIN H. IXJCKAH' JOHN V. WIANGOLD IIIAMON G. IVIARQUEZ ROBERT F. XVOLVERTON ARLING A. NELSON FLOYD A. NELSON EDWARD R. SIRIN' RICHARD E. W'ILEY JOE' H. XVONG ARTHUR J. JYAHN Flllflf' Flair lrrr I fl rl lharlx NI MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SADDLE AND SIRLOIN Saddle and Sirloin Club, formed in 1920, is for students interested in animal husbandry. An annual stock show, the 4'Little International, is held in the spring of each year, and livestock judging teams are sent to Chicago to the National Dairy show and the Inter- national each year. A. S. .ALEXANDER S. M. BAECOCK ARTHUR O. ALBERTZ JOHN P. ANDERSON USCAR E. ANDERSON SAM J. ARNOLD JOHN G. BECKER ELMER E. BERTOLAET ROY J. BIBELHAUSEN ROBERT BLODGETT ROBERT L BOERNER JOHN R. BOLLINGER DONALD O. BRAOE H. T. BURDICK ELMER D. BYRNS THEODORE E. CARLSON HELBIER C. CASPERSON LESTER CALDWELL THOMAS R. DANIELS ERWIN F. DAVIS ARNO A. DENNERLEIN J. D. DE WET AUGUSTUS DU RANT HARRY L. EDWARDS MAX J. EDWARDS CONRAD A. ELVEHJEM ROLAND G. FRITSCHEL OFFICERS BENJAMIN N. PEACOCK ....... . . . D. President HOWARD E. JAMISON . . . . Vice-President ELMER A. AVOELFFER . , - . - Secretary JOHN NISBET ...... .....,,.. T reasarer FOREST D. HARRIS ............,. Custodian RAYMOND C. KLLTSSENDORF . Manager of 192? International MEMBERS IN FACULTY J. G. FULLER A. W. HOPKINS G. C. HUBIPHREY F. B. MORRISON W. A. HENRY R. S. HULCE F. KLEINHEINZ H. L. RUSSELL RUSSELL E. FROST W. S. GERRER FOREST D. HARRIS ROBERT HARRISON BYRON F. HEAL GAROIID W. HEAL GERALD HEEBINK HALBER'F VV. HOARD CLARENCE F. IVERSON ITOWARD E. JAMISON ,CLIFFORD L. JAQUITH G. W. JENSEN LEONARD KAASA CHARLES R. KELLUNI RAYMOND C. KLUSSENDIJIKF ARTHUR M. KNUTSON CLARENCE L. KUTIL HAROLD IVI. KUCKUK HSIEH C. LU CHARLES J. IVICALEAVY GEORGE F. IVIARVIN F. IVIERWEVANDER DALE C. MERRIAM ITAROLD IVIETCALF XVERNER P. MEYER EMIL A. INIILLER ASHLEY V. NIILLS HUGO A. IVIURRAY DOUGLAS MOORHEAD RICHARD C. M UNKVVITZ JOHN C. NISBET DONALD R. NORRIS RUDOLPH R. OECHSNER JOHN T. OMERNIK LESTER J. OOSTERHUIS LESTER PALMER EDNVARD J. PAULUS BENJAMIN N. PEACOCK CLARENCE PETERSON EDWARD E. PRICE ELMER C. PRIENVE EDNVIN A. REEVE WALTER RENR J. C. REOD K. M. ROGER O. F. ROBINSON KITCHELL P. SAYRE .NIILFORD XV. SCI-IUELER WARREN H. SCOTT ANALTER E. SCHUETZ GEORGE D. SCARSETH SUMNER SELLARS J. SHELDON RAIIPH SMITHYMAN V. H. SPIER RALPH J. SPRAGUE RUSSELL S. STILES ROSWELL H. STINCHFIELD LEXVIS VV. TAYLOR JOHN W. TIBBITS REUBIN J. TENPAS ROBERT C. THOMAS NIELVIN C. VISTE BROXVNING WARREN BRUCE L. XVARYVICK GUIDO L. AVEBER ALFRED YVEED WILLIAM A. XVELLS HAROLD E. AVICKER ELMER A. W OELFFER SHELDON AVOLFE ERNEST W. W OLINE VILAS D. YOUNG .. . .. ...... .. L.. ,Ll I 5 lage Fzie Hundrrffl and Forty AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE FEDERATION The Agricultural College Federation was organized in 1919 to promote student activities- tn the college The executive body Qf the Federation is the Federation Board, which is com- posed of representativesfrom each of the recognized organizations in the College Qf Agriculture, from Ihe faculty, and from the student body. HELNIER C. CASPEBSON ...... . . President LILLIAN M. FRAZEE . . . . Secretary LIPPERT S. ELLIS .... . ......... Treasurer JOHN R. BOLLINGEII. HELNLER C. CASPERSON . . . . WALTER H. EBLING . LIPPERT S. ELLIS . . LILLIAN M. FRAZEE BARBARA HASTINGS . JOHN A. JAMES . . . I'IONVARD E. J AMISON BERTRAM B. LANGEN .EDXVARD E. PRICE . FLORENCE RAY . . . GENEVA SCHOENFELD LEVVIS W. TAYLOR . F. LOUISE THOINIPSON JOHN W. TIBBITTS . DOROTHY W IEPKING BOARD MEMBERS Poultry Club Alpha Zeta Country Magazine Agric Triangle Student Body Agricultural VVoInen' Agricultural Faculty Student Body Student Body s Association Society of Agricultural Engineers Home Economics Faculty Euthenics Club Agricultural Literary Society Student Body Saddle and Sirloin Club Onlicron Nu Bollinger Price Schoenfeld Caspersont . Frazee 'Ebling Ellis Taylor Hastings Jamison Ray Tlbbll-15 Th0U-115500 Lallifell Page Five Hundred and Forty-One COMMERCE CL R u A Commerce Club elecis its membersi on fhe basis Qf scholarship and activities in the com merce school. ' OFFICERS REGINALDwV.GARS1'ANG ...... . . . President HUDOLPH C. ZIMMERMAN . . .I Vice-President ROLLIN E. ECKE ..., ,... S ecreiary ROBERT L. REYNOLDS . . ..... Treasurer HULIPHREY E. DESMOND . . Assistant Treasurer FAYETTE H. ELNVELL EDWARD H. GARDNER ABE ABRAHABISEN ORVIN H. ANDERSON HERBERT E. BONING LESTER W. BRANN G. FRED BREWER EWART K. CLEAR ELMER S. CHAPLEAU PETER V. CHELI HULIPHREY E. DESMOND JOHN A. DOLLARD ' MEMBERS IN FACULTY STEPHEN W. GILMAN ALFRED P. HAAKE NIARVIN S. KING ROLLIN E. ECKE JOHN C. EMERY CARL J. ENGELHARDT WM. F. ENGELHARDT CARL G. FUHRMAN REGINALD S. GARSTANG LESTER V. GRIEM CHARLES HANVKS ARTHUR C. INMAN PHILIP C. LAVVSON KARL F. NICNIURRY W ILLIAM A. SCOTT PETER R. NIOELLER FORREST G. PADDOCK JERRY H. QUAM ROBERT L. REYNOLDS HAROLD R. REHBERG AVILLARD J. RENDALL JAMES A. TORBET ARTHUR W. TROST HERLIAN O. W ALTHER RUDOLPH C. ZIMMERMAN Lawson Brewer Andersen Moeller Ecke Clear Griem Trost. Fuhrman Quam Zimmerman Gilman Garsbang Hawks TorbeL Reynolds Walther Inman Randall Abrahamseu Cheli Chapleau YV.Engell1ardl. Paddock Brunn C.EngelhardL Page Five Hundred and Forty-Two . DVERTISING CL B The Adz'erlisin.g Club brings speakers and prolnoies discussions among those sludenis who are parlicularly iniercsled in adreriiszug. Ilffembership is eleciive, on. ihe basis of ability- shown through work on campus or oulside publicalzons, and parzficipation in various adver- lising courses. EDNVARD H. GARDNER OFFICERS DONALD M. BAILEY . . ..., President CORRINGTON GILL . . . . . Vice-Presirleul WILLIAM F. ENGELHARDT . . . . Secretary PHILIP G. BREDESEN . , . Treasurer HITINIPIIREY DESRIOND . , Direclor XVILLARD RENDALL . . Director MEMBERS IN FACULTY ERNEST M. FISHER ALBERT G. HINALAN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY SENIORS DONALD M. BAILEY HYMAN BILANSKY MARY BRIDGENI.AN ELMER CHAPLEAU IVIARGARET DALY PHILIP G. BREDESEN HERBERT BROCKHAUSEN LORAN S. CLARK HENRY J. COERPER BLANCHE K. FIELD WALTER PLENVKE HUBIPHREX' DESINIOND CARL J. ENGELHARDT WILLIAM F. ENGELHARDT PHILIP LANVSON HORACE IWARTIN JUNIORS J. RUSSELL FRAWLEY CORRINGTON GILL SHERMAN GREEN ARLEIGH J. LUTHER PETER R. MOELLER DOUGLAS NEWELL SOPHOMORE S NEIL McKAY DONALD MURPEIY W LLLIAM PEEBLES H.AROLD R. HEHBERG W ILLARD RENDALL GLADYS PETERSEN J EANETTE ROSENTHAL JOHN SHAFRIN LESTER SCHENKENBERG .ARTHUR TROST .ARTHUR rl.lOWVELL Newell' Tros L McKay Moeller Gill Desmond Luther Frawley Randall Lawson Field Bredesen Bailey Gardner Petersen Clark C. Engelhardt Martin Murphy Rehberg Daly Bila nsky Peebles VV. Engelhard L Coerper Pagrr Five Hundred and Forly- Three UN . D BL- DE Gun and Blade was organized at Wisconsin in 1919, for ea:-service men disabled in the world war and now under government iraining in lhe Universily. It maintains a club room in the Union Building an.d has esiablished a loan fund for bonus students. OFFICERS PAUL TOBEY ,........., .... P resident RICHARD S. AUSTERMANN. . . .Vice-President CLIFFORD S. HAWVLEY . . .,.. Secretary WILLIAM A. HARTMAN . . .... Treasurer HERNIAN W. DUSTERHOFT ........ Sergean!-at-Arms BOARD OF DIRECTORS - EIEL H. MYRLAND JOHN E. SHELDON-Chairman PAUL T. TOBEY HENRY F. KELLER, JR. WILLIAM C. CHRISTENSEN HONORARY MEMBERS DEAN J. D. PHILLIPS . . . Ex-counselor YVALTER CHISHOLM . . Madison Sub-district manager DEAN A. V. MILLAR. . . Counselor RIELVIN H. TIEGE .... University Co-ordinator MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES KENNETH V. BRYAN THOMAS F. LELAND JOHN E. IVIIZELL HENRX' F. KELLER, JR. VERNE MILUM GOVAN N. STRODLAN SPECIALS JAMES A. APKER IRWIN D. BADOW FORREST M. BARBER BERNHARDT A. BARNDT JAMES P. CLEM1-INS KENNETH B. COATES ARCHIBALD E. CRISLER HERMAN S. DUSTERHOFT EMMET T. DULHANTY CHARLES M. DONNEIJLY HENRY B. EVANSON GEORGE S. GESSERT EARL S. GOFE DAVID N. GORMAN RALPH S. G'RAV'ES IRL R. GOSHAWV CLARENCE F. GRUEBNER BERT V. HASKELL GO DFREY H. HAUG RALPH C. HOADLE1' HANS G. HORNE JAMES R. JACOBSON JOHN F. JONES GEORGE JULIUS EMIL B. OKESON PAUL A. KING WILLIAM F. KLOCKAU ARTHUR R. LOOKER NIAURICE LAURET CHARLES M ACKO ARTHUR L. RXICCAFFERY GROXVER E. IVICNIILLIN LELAND G. IVIELROSE H.ARRY E. IVIETROPOULOS FREDERICK E. NIUELLER IYIATT P. MUELLER HAROLD L. PALMER WALTER C. PROCHNONV XNILLIAM F. RIEMER HUBERT I. RODE XVILLIAM H. SEARLES NV.-ALTER S. SEVALIA JOHN E. SHELDON JOHN G. STRATHERN DANIEL M. SXVEET GLEN E. SVVENO PAUL A. THATCHER HERBERT H. WHITE ALLEN W. WHITE JOSEPH J. ZALESKI Palmer Smith Kleinhammer Scholten Van Steenherg Strathern Goshaw Munkwi Lz Gruebner Richards Doudna Berndt Vogel Gesser Sev alia Jones Thatcher Peterson Prochnow Steadman Hume Jacobson Auslerrnan Fritschler Bailey Horne Rabuck McDonald Barber Goff Wolworth Zielsky Mueller Riemer Looker Headley Milum Sweno Page Five Hundred and Forly-Four HARVEY G. AHRENS PAUL E. BAILEY EDISON M. BOERKE ROGER A. BOZARTH RICHARD C. MURKWITZ RICHARD W. AUSTERMAN HARRY M. BALCH MAYNARD W. BROWN ELMER D. BYRNES RALPH I. CANUTESON XVILLIAM C. CHRISTENSON ALONZO C. COOK LORENZE L. DARLING JOHN C. FRITSCHLER EARL E. GAGE EINAR H. GAUSTAD MI1'CHELL G. GORROW WILLIAM A. HARTRIAN LLOYD E. HUME GEORGE A. BALLAM RICHARD BUTLER WALTER D. CAHILI. EARL L. CALDWELL FARNHAM CLARK LOUIS F. DEGLER ELMER F. GILSON EMORY L. GRADY WALTER O. GUTTKE CLIFFORD S. HAWLEY BEN O. ANDERSON LLOYD J. BROWN CLEO C. CAMPBELL NICHOLAS DEBIETBOPOULO CHARLES GRECO S UN AND BL- DE SENIORS EIEL H. NIYRLAND RENE W. PINTO R. NORMAN REITAN BRUNO W. STEIN NVALTER H. SYLVESTER JUNIORS FRANK P. I'IYER HENRY P. INGEBRITSEN GUSTAVLIS E. JOHNSON NOBLE G. LARSON HUGH L. LEWIS HARRY E. LOUNSBURY IJOWARD J. LONVRY LESLIE W. NICCLURE LAWVRENCE lXflCDON.ALD JAMES T. Olli0RA ELMER E. PRICE FERDINAND T. PRICE EDWIN A. RAMAKER SOPHOMORES JOEL HENDRICKSON CLARENCE F. IVERSON CLIFFORD L. JAQUITH EDWIN E. JOHNSON HERMAN A. KLEINHADIBIER HUGO L. KUESTEIK ROBERT A. MERRILL EVERT OERTEL FRESHMEN BEN JACKSON JOHN G. KAISER CHARLES A. OLSON JOSEPH F. PAXTON FRANCIS H. RABUCK PHILLIP W. RICHARDS PAUL T. TOREY EDWARD J. RYAN ADOLPH YOUNGBERG IDYRS O. HUGHES LESTER W. PETERSON LESLIE H. HOCKWELL SIMON T. PAOLSTED EDWARD RGTHBIAN HERMAN C. RUNGE CLARENCE A. RUST HAROLD B. REYER ADRIAN H. SCHOLTEN ROBERT C. THOMAS FLETCHER TIJRGESON GODFREY W. VALINE GILBERT E. WARD FRANCIS L. WEBSTER CLINTON R. YAPP EPHRAIM L. PETERSON HERBERT H. SMITH JACOB A. SPIES REED THORPE ADOLPH G. THORSON VICTOR VAN STEENBERG JOHN M . TOLLEFSON ARNOLD J. DE VRIES JULIUS B. VOGEL FREEMAN W. RUMAGE LEONARD M. SMITH RALPH A. STEADMAN HERMAN W. VVOLFF LLOYD F. WOLWORTH Johnson Peterson Lowry Okeson Haskell Clemens Iverson Graves Sylvester Everson Bryan Kaiser Cook Kucsser Rockwell Lauret Michels Shelhammer Reyer Yapp Field Mueller M.SearlS McMillan Hughes R.BOzarth. Rode Gilson Boerke Dusterhoft Hartman Austerman Tobey Teige Cjisholm Hawley Sheldon Christensen Pawton Tollefson F. Price Valine Dulhanty Campbell Mctropoulus Ramamker Haug Oertell Cahill ApkerE Gage Page Five Hundred and Forlv Five .MJ RADGER SKI CLUR An unprecedented Audience of 41,000 ski enthusiasts, thrilled by 100 foot leaps from Nluir Knoll by 50 of the countryts best ski jumpers, attended the combined Minnesota Wis- consin dual meet, the Wisconsin State Championship, and the M id-Wfestern meet February 18. F reakish winter weather ojjfered no snow for the meet, but that mattered little for the flaky crystals were imported from the North. Besides sending representatives to neighboring meets, the club created a precedent by entering a member in the Canadian Championship meet at Ottawa, Canada, with creditable results. Skiing is rapidly assuming its well deserved position as one of the foremost Wisconsin winter sports. OFFICERS M. K. DREWRY' ........., .... P resident GORDON TAYLOR .... . . Vice-President OSCAR CHRISTIANSON . . . . . Treasurer KENNETH FAGG . . . .... .,.. S ecretary THOMAS NORBERG. ......... . . Hill Manager TEAM HANS GUDE-Captain AKSEL TARANGER BINAR ISDAHL SVERRE STROM TOM NORBERG OSCAR CHRISTIANSON MEMBERS ARNE BRINCI-1 KNUTE HENDRICKSEN FRED LARSEN SVERRE STROM HAROLD BRYN CARL HOFF TOM NORBERC. AI-:SEL TARANGER OSCAR CHRISTIANSON ORLEY HOLT LYVIND OLSEN GORDON TAYLOR MONTROSE DREWVBY BINAR ISDAHL R. T. PLUNLMER SIDNEY THORSEN KENNETH FAGG NED KROTZ BILER SCHJOLBERG ALVIN WEGEMANN ROBERT GOLDBERG SVEN Kv.-WEN C. F. SILVER RAY VVENGEL HANS GUDE KENNETH LAMB CLYDE STRACHAN It .5131 ,. pit IV.. .K wig. ,Wx It 'wt I t 'lt 1 5 M, ijlfi Page Five Hundred and Forty-Sir A T HE FRE CH HOUSE The French House was established in lhe .summer session of 1918. I is purpose is lo exfend the use of the French language among its members and to broaden their knowledge of French Izlfe, songs, and cusloms. OFFICERS lxflISS RJJTH PIURLBUT . . Chaperon PAULINE LLENVELLYN ..... . . . President HELEN lVlALSlN ....... .... T reasurer lVlLLE. lVlARIE LOUISE BONNET . , . . DONALD PIALVERSON ..... lVlLLE. M LLE M LLE M LLE Direcior of French . . Business Illanager FRENCH GIRLS BONNET, Scholar ....... . Limoges w PONs.Seholar . . . .Paris SALVAN.II1Sl,I'UCf,OI' , . . Bordeaux DE JANS, Fellow . . . Brussels, Belgium l 'm l l l lil! w-3 'l . , L L . , , r 1 ll - 5 '11 l , ,, lf l l, - 1 ll , l lin 2 Gold Hurlbut Bonnet P0115 DG Jams Mfllsln Johnson Kinne Epsleiu Addinglon Llewellyn Schweizer Salvan Page Fire Hundred and Forly-Seven I I I V E A 1 F 1 ' 4 5' y PRESBYTERIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION The Presbyterian Student Association consists of all students at the University registered as Presbyterians, and their affairs are controlled by the Student Cabinet. The Presbyterian Synod of Wisconsin maintains at the University a club house, dormitory, and regular services of worship under the direction of the sta jj? All Presbyterian students may make themselves at home at the club house and chapel at the corner of State and Murray Streets. THE STAFF R. G. RIEIVLAN ............ University Pastor M. G. ALLISON . , ..... Director of Religious Work MYRTLE J OBSE .............,.. Secretary OFFICERS CHARLES A. RAWSON ......, . , . President IVIINNIE BEATTIE , . . . . Vice-President HELEN BELL .... . . . Secretary ROLLAND BAKER .............., Treasurer COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN SOCIAL PUBLICITY RELIGIOUS EDUCATION HERNLAN HOFFNIAN HORAOE B. POXVELL CHARLES RAWSON KATHRYN PERRY DOROTHY JOHNSON MUSIC FINANCE SOCIAL SERVICE HOUSE HELEN MCLANDRESS ESTHER HAVEN ALFRED W ILLETT JAMES NVATSON GILMAN TAYLOR ROLAND BAKER LUCILLE SIMPSON KATHERINE ELY Baker Bell Powell Perry WilleLL Johnson Wvatson MuLandreSs Hoffman Johse Rawson Ely Riemau Simpson Page Five Hundred and Forty-Eight LILLIAN E. LAWSON .......... Womerfs Secreiary ga 1.f:.'I1i liinkl .ww . , . . S . , . , . ' ,m. W I V, 53,17 ,nl My QWWWQQWMMWK. .2 A if ' 5 1 .ff . M a . If if . I 4 If rd, 'ygk I , V- 40' , ' A' W rf w J ' KA aff . - . I 520. wwf 1 , f W' - .A IQ 59: Aw I EA- I 1' f yon MM ,. lg I5 aw I A fin Az z -W X if . ,WWI . 3 1 ma , 537 , 3 iw ' 5 32, EV 5 5 z q13q...,.A51:.:Gv- 32.3143 ' Q9 ar WZ- IONGREG TION L STUD I ASSOCI TIO ' The Congregational Sludenls' Associalion is an organization composed of all Congrega- lional sludenls al the Un irersily of Wisconsin. Ils object is mulual acqnainlance and the pro- molion of lhe inleresls of llze Christian Church as an agency for lhe beilerrneni of individual clzaracier and lhe i1npro1'ernenl of life in all ils relalionships. ' OFFICERS I'IORACE P. IVIARTIN ....... . . . President NIARTHA M. BUELL . . Vice-President RUTH BEEBE ..... .,.. I Secretary ROBERT C. NETIIERCUT . . ..... Treasurer REV. J. E. SARLES . . . . Universzly Pastor GENEVA SCHOENFELD LAXVRENCE B. DUNN EDWVARD A. EWING ISABEL FARRINGTON RACHEL L. HASWELL ELIZABETH D. WARNER IVIABEL VV INTER ROBERT L. REYNOLDS GERTRUDE E. BREEZE PAULINE D. DICKINSON IVIURIEL M. EDWARDS ELIZABETH M. KNOTT JAMES RALPH EUGENE G. VVILLIAMS D EPARTM ENT CHAIR M EN CHURCH FINANCE MUSIC PUBLICITY SUALNER J. EIARRIS GEORGE O. DARBY GEORGE E. FREESE IVIARIE H. KOWALKE IIELEN G. OSCAR CAROLINE SCHNVEIZER HOLLAND F. WILLIAMS REBA C. I-IAYDEN LIELEN R. DICKINSON IWYRON B. JUNKINS IVIAHION F. NIOSEL CARROLL W. OSGOOD ELEANOR R. SANFORD W ARREN A. TAYLOR RELIGIOUS EDUCATION SOCIAL JOHN H. SARLES ELIZABETH A. BIGLOW RALPH E. LARSON CALVIN C. OAKEORD HELEN V. PATTERSON FRANCES L. ROYCE HELEN A. WHEELER KENNETH S. FAGG EUGENE A. GIILMORE IVIILDRED PIILL L. FRANCIS LAMB AUTA E. LYMAN EDWIN W. SANBORN THOBIAS M. WINSTON SOCIAL SERVICE ELIZABETH BEEBE MARGARET L. BROWN N. JUNE GRAY HELEN A. HASWELL ALVIN R. KLANN NVALTER A. KUENZLI JOHN A. WILLIAMSON Freese Schoenfeld Larson Warner J. Sarles Brown Klann Biglow Y Gilmore Buell Sanborn Oscar Lamb H. Haswell Williams Hayden OSgood Mosel Harris R. Haswnll Dunn Williamson Hill Pauerson Kuenzli Breeze J. E. Sarles Martin Lawson. 'Knolt Nethercut Kowalkc Wheeler Sanford Ewing Schweizer Darby H. Dickinson Reynolds P. Dlckmson Taylor Gray Ralph Pago Five Hundred and Ifolly Nzne I I I I 'II-.. ' ,I L RM .. ' ' , I I LUTHEBAN CABINET I mx ,. ,.. .-. . . . 3 I ,f32TI,ffi' I if OFFICERS ly QI REV. A. J. SOLDAN ..,.... . INN IVIABION NEPBUD . . . I ffl HERBERT PROCKNOYV . , I' kj I LEO KOHL .... . I , RUTH LINDSTROM ....... RELIGIOUS EDUCATIONAL COMMITTEE A Ill BERNICE ELVER, Chairman ml I I EDNVIN C. HAMMEN w, IVIILDRED E. GUENTZEL . fl ALBERT H. LAHMANN BIBLE CLASS COMMITTEE PHIL G. DEICHER, Chairman , ,i ENIDIA DANIKOEHLER I' -'LI ELSE M. KUEHN OTTO B. HERBENER I W FINANCE COMMITTEE WILBUIH XVITTENBERG, Chairman I V fx STELLA V. JOHNSON . ,f HELBIER C. CASPERSON ' MUSIC COMMITTEE GEORGE BAUM, Chairman ERNEST PETT ADELAIDE IYIILLER . . Un iversily Pasior . S!udenlSecre1fary . . . . . President . . Vice-Presidenl . . . . . Secrelary UNIT SYSTEM COMMITTEE ELROY R. LUEDTKE, Chairman JOHN F. IVIURPHY BEN C. WHITE LOUISE I-I. ELSER SOCIAL COMMITTEE FLORIENE TEICHGRAEBER. Chairman ALETTE S. SCHREINEB TRYGVE GUNDERSON VICTOR S. ANDERSON PETER R. IVIOELLER VERA T. CARLYLE MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE TAI-ITHUR M. KNUTSON, Chairman WALTER H. BAUM PUBLICITY COMMITTEE GILALAN A. THONIPSON, Chairman OLGA M. YIQVAMMEN FRANK W. KUEHL I xl X I . Um w Herhener Kuehl Casperson Luedtke Moeller Deicher Thompson W. Baum G. Baum Elven' Elscr Johnson Petl Kvammen Wittenberg Schreiner 'l'eich,fzraeber Guentzel Murphy Miller Knutson Staab Rev.S0ldaI1 Neprud Prockuow Carlyle VVhile Lindstrom A - ., . . - . , ,,.,,J. .V . .., ,. , - -A Y. .. Page Five Hundred and Fifty Q i :LA, Cf fl .V.,f : ' LI FHERAN BROTHERHOOD HUGO W. ALBERTZ GEORGE W. BAUM WALTER BAUBI THEOPHILUS V. BITTNER TVIARTIN R. KRIEWALDT VICTOR E. BITTNER CHRISTOPHER H. BONNIN PHILIP G. DEICHER HERBIAN W. DUSTERHOFT ELNIER R. GESTELAND CHRISTIAN E. BURKHAR DT HERBERT H. ERDNIAN HARRX' H. GEHRKE .J MEMBER IN FACULTY OLAF A.. HOUGEN MEMBERS IN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES CLARENCE I. l'IEHDR1c1KsON RIYRON T. PIERREID PIER BERT V. PROCHNOW SENIORS GEORGE R. LAUTENBACH FREDERICK W. NELSON VIL.-XS RASHUSSEN IZIENRY F. SCHROEDER JUNIORS ARTHUR J. GULSON RIERRILL E. PIANSEN fTMER HOUKENI HAROLD F. KNOXVLES ELROY R. LUEDTKE XVERNER P. NIEYER SOPHOMORES TRAUGOTT H. NAMMACHER FREDERICK W. NININIER ALVIN D. SCI-IUJAHN CARL E. SIBILSKY RUDOLPH SYVERSEN CTILMAN A. VFHOMPSON WALTER E. NYHUS JULIAN L. PETERSON PIERBERT S. ITOSNVELL ELMER C. STAHLKOPF PAUL G. THESSIN HAROLD A. SEERING HAROLD YG. SILJAN JOHN S. STOLTE Houkem Hougen Schujahn Luedtke Deicher Herrcifl Erdmanu Thompson Baum Nyhus Bittner Kriewaldt Stahlkopf Nammacher Thessin Stolte Baum Gesleland Billner Ffurkhardt Schroedfxr Meyer Prochnow Syverson Knowles Albertz Roswell Gehrke Lautenbach Sibilsky Dusterhoft Hansen Bounin Gulson Hendrickson Nimmcr Peterson Rasmussen Page Flvf Hundred and Frflv One M.: XXLNN PK? NX xv K Page Five Hundrerl and Fifly-Two .l,s : www' HITOR MISS I POLONIUS MISSED IT ' Y SON , said the very wise parent, 'cYou are going to college. That in itself is enough to damn you, but there are other influences within the Great University which will do their share. You will probably borrow and I do not doubt but that you will lend-and never be paid. I am modern. I do not kid myself. You will husband nothing and that is well. But I am sending you to the Great University to learn the Co-ed. 4'There is your education. There is universality. The curriculum can teach you nothing, but if your Alma Mater can give you the opportunity to learn the Co-ed, has she not conferred all knowledge? 6'They tell me that the only course the co-ed really studies is Man and Nature, and that, perhaps, is true. And it is her class room of which you must beware. In my day she worked on the Drive-I do not know where it is now, but you must learn all that. '4She is fair, more beautiful than in my day, they tell me. She knows that natural selection is responsible for that, and so she is the more dangerous. 4'They will tell you that she paints, that her skirts are too short. and that she need not work because the profs are only men. All this you will see but it is not in this that she is dangerous. She will take you to church and pray demurely under a scarlet hat. That is more fatal than knickers. She will kid you in public, sympathize with you in private, and be altogether desirable. You will hear of her lips and her eyes. but in these there lies no . danger. But, my son, you will find, at the Great University, co-eds whose perfection lies beyond these perfections, and here you have found your match, Here is a woman. ge Five Hundred and Fifly-F-'mr BOY-P - GE AN EN are wonderful. This must be so for they modestly admit it themselves, and have supporting them the freshman girl who says, I think they're just grand, they'1'e so difTerer1t here than they are elsewhere , and the senior girl who says with emphasis, They Certainly are. Their democratic wa-ys and unselfish devotion to a fellow is supreme. Though a man have Pullman teeth and dance like a pretzel, his fond brother will staunchly pro- claim, 'iHe's a wonderful fellow, why his father owns twenty-seven oil fields. Such Jove- like generosity, it will be observed, is never detected in the membersuof the opposite sex. Man is. of Course. long suffering, but this is true of particularly the poor college man. Few co-eds appreciate the true worth of thc-se creaturcfs, and some have actually been known to turn one of these superior beings down, when. on a Saturday night at 7:30, he called up for a date. Such ingratitucle is unsufferable, and hence these mis-guided women are not worthy of the attention which is so graciously showered upon them. ll are fluffy Hittel'-flops, Cannot talk sensible, and lack sufficient gray matter to keep anything on their minds but a marcel. By some strange 'trick of fate, these same women graduate, but of course it is by pull that this is accomplished, for everyone knows that there was nothing there to justify the accomplishment. Some day, it is to be hoped that the true worth of these exalted mortals, whom We call men, will be made known, but inasmuch as they. by their persistent modesty succeed in keeping their virtues hidden under a bushel, as it were, it is entirely possible that the ignorant, presumptuous Co-ed will never know how highly she has been honored. , . - . . 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Hifi- ,,, , 44 7 '. af 71 'X ' smfw-rw f 2 , ,:-4 fllfiyf .2 ' ' 511, ,. R,J7P.xl1 -2, ' ,. - V V ,lg-Q 3 I - 1 -2 I mn , -. 7, , - , ,nn y - Y L , If , , V1 ... . ,, g,S..,-gg-x x- Y V. af- , .- - ,Y -, Hd- --- z V-ff ,lf f N., - f L Z c , , I .J f .1 4 ' ' - ' NW , 14-:..-,S 7 f,f41, L 1 ,J h 5 -- 4 , ,hffff - ' v f W' . M -::' ,J 4 2 i-: X 0, , ...ir -'- - f 4 f H JA '-Tb 'Y-f' f - f'-il - fl ,yf .fu Jim V X 542, . -ff... ii:--4 2, gig?-V Eg x:+ i J fix 11, it, -Li M! 3 ,xfi' J 'f -i , yi Y 1' 3 ' , , f-Q' H: ,fi - --a+' 1 - Z V f' 4-ZW - ' ' -- V - if 551 f L L jj 'N cw- Y , Y W, klj .T X4 p ig ff ,ff V-:H VZ . i 1- i -'ft ' F! -V-J Y f iris- A , , -lf--ff,? ' LV+' ' 'V - f' ' .w :Q ' -37 if fV'v -2' , ' jg .5-'Z ff , -L' l, ,.. , 4 ,W , , Y , 1' A MODERN ELIZA Page Five Hundred and Fifly-Fill? Why Some Sladenls Flank 181 Dear Miss Blake: I am twenty years old. Do you think I am too young to be kissed 9 DEE ZEE It all depends upon whether your face. Dear Miss Blake: I have a roommate who'keeps me awake every night telling me about his love affair. What shall I do? Doc HUGHES Hit him on the head, and carry him to bed. He needs plenty of sleep. that's all. Sign on Table Lamp in Libe reading room: Only low conversation allowed here. 4'Hang it all , yelled the yegg, as he stubbed his toe and swelled a foot. There are some Profs who Edget and twist They shake their ears and wiggle their fists They stamp their feet and pull their hair And grind their teeth, and rant and rare, They pound the tables and slam the doors And then raise -- when some one snores. The Alpha Gamma Dell-5' Gel lheir Weekly Conszfgnmenl Dear Miss Blake: ' How can I become popular with the boys? What is the population of the Beta House? PIE PHI I refer you to Grace Maxcy. ' They have not taken the census there lately. Dear Miss Blake: I am in love. Am I nutty or just foolish? Told a girl last night that I really thought a great deal of her. She said, Let's change the subject. Do you think I rate with her? WILLIAM FREDERICK - You are both: in fact, those two Words do not start to explain your condition. Are you dumb or innocent? You rate very, very low. Never. never tell a co-ed that you are in love with her. She merely thinks it is adorable and begins to look around for her next victim. Dear Miss Blake: P A girl told me she could not study after she had seen me in the library. Do you think she means this? WAYNE MORSE I could answer this question much better if you told me whether you are a child, or still in your mother's arms. Goodnight Violales lhe Page Five Hundred and Fifly-Siu: No-Cal Rule Rameses II, Class af '54 B. C., who won llze Javelin llzrow for Wisconsin in lhe first Nile classic which was lzeld in llzal year. 1- Firsl view ever taken of ihe cellar enlrance lo llze Kappa Sigma Cave Tlze enclosure is now used for pledges during flzeir period Qf assimilalion. 234 one . Y kweage ' .,.,, f 1:55-g S 'Pus AA, we..,++,m A 4 Q I I4 6 X- 1 1 - 4 fy 0 I lliigllclll A ll A 4 79 HRW, I9 1 FW: 'l ' THE ALPHA CHIS ANNEX A NEW FLAPPER Page Five Hundred and Fifly-Seven ROOMING HOUSE DATES AY, fellows, have you ever wondered what goes on between the time you say, Miss Mendota, please , and the time when she says, Why good-evening, Jim -like a spring breeze, you know? I've got some dope on it, straight from the sisters-no, they don't call 'em that at a rooming house-but what's the difference?-they wear each others clothes-all in the family, you know. When youlve been announced, she says, or does not say Thank youn to her land- lady-depending on the time the landlady shuts the door on Friday and Saturday nights. Then she powders her nose. Next, she enters her wardrobe and shakes for the dress of the evening-. A black dress gets it,-a black dress that she Hsimply loathes. ' So she calls in the House for advice. 'lWhat'll I wear? she says. And then- Oh, that one?-I wore it to Thompson's last week. Wear your new brown oneiv' 'Id adore to-are you sure you don't mindiv' f'Thank you just loads-you're a dear. Of course she says this last very sweetly and then she yells-Cmaybe you hear her and maybe you don'tj Say, Dot, will you comb my hair? Make it snappy-.Iimis waiting. Then she borrows all the earrings in the house-tries 'em all on-and then wears her own.-Then she powders her nose, borrows a hair net-powders her nose-shines her finger nails-brushes her coat, or borrows Bettyis cape-Cdepending on where Betty ish-powders her nose-pats her hair-and trips down the stairs like a spring breeze as I said before. But that isn't all. The House which she assembled for advice continues to give it. And before they send her off, the House proceeds to line up-line forms right to the- and the girls take turns leaning over the stairs or the bannister-whichever is more convenient out of turn-or GIGGLES. - to get a glimpse of her guy. And woe be to the damsel who shoves-or squeezes in HF' Jimmie- VVould you shout for help if I should 'A kiss you? v 7 -. I. K Mary-'LI couldn't very well do two things at the Q ji- 'Q4 1 ,Q same time, could IP I Z s j-Rl ig. A r f' '4' ' ,fx I xx-.af . ' ixi at J 'X wg ,E x Xu' I il I W 'E 2- -S.-It .. A I I 1 L if . ,I Flap- A kiss always reminds nie of bologna in . , Xlgx 3,3 -. . . , N the refrigerator. r . x -gf I-l: y, Jack-Hveh,-1'11 bite. :Ling-72 . 39-1-.Z .. 1 Flap- Both are doggone nice, you know. :T-Q AEK -: 1 xiii' f1 J, rf' Z-it 1.Iv1p ar at ae at A+ A f L Ches-K'Wl'1at was all the stir over at the Tri-Delt - A 5 .' Mansion? X. -3' H W I O , a - .ne of the pledges made a mistake and WWW I ,- hung out the ice-card instead of the open house 'vm M , ,T-' sign. - - -' 'i 1: A fee. we f aff.-A 'fe W4 'X '92 -- 1- 1 ' E' Stude-'LI was just thinking- Prof.-'LThat's something new. Page Fine Hundred and Fifty-Eight I ,T 'FSU otfreclson- OUR TWO EMINENT CLOTHING . MERCHANTS 4 JERUSALEM JUNCTION She-Lelfs drop in for lunch at Coney Island. He-All right. but don't you dare breathe it to a soul. FAMOUS LAST LINES 'LDad, lim brokef' I had a perfectly wonderful time lonightf' k'I'm all dated up until next Junef, Dropped.H Total house bill, S89.65. 'Tm terribly sorry, but I'm all mixed up in my dates. FOUND: A pair of dice near the Lambda Chi House. Owner can have same by calling in person.-Dean, Goodnight. 'FOIXSALE1A wonderful line. Although badly worn, it is still in considerably good condition. Call at the Tri-Delt House any week night for demonstration-Helen Sch losser. LOST-A heart in the 'Tri-Delt House. Finder can keep it until she is tired of same --Jim Perky. 'FOUND-A new lady friend. However, former owner can have the same in two weeks. -Doc Dorward. HS 1 .H O Ong OH DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING,-OH GRAVE, WHERE THY VICTORY? 5 JLIM- at e ow W o a es ie es a Q 49 r Th fu htk t'kt t I uyly the Parkway is a goodlpoker player. 5 f FLANI-'iHOW,S that? . A- fff F1 IDI-ISHS always opens up for a pair. t V I il, . . Q, X ALPHA-'gGo1ng to have a little two handed I QW .1 DELT- No. underhandedf' oe -Wt vQ, 1 .ar g f THERE WAS AN OLD WOMAN- Pagc Fine Ilundrcd and PLH3 ALI!! FRATERNITY PLEDGING. x Baetnciiinfiwnixwl' ,- R5 .HELD psis 'A that Scales 1 -F K' E. ' HQ ought to do : lqo lbs, X 4 .. J H15 hair 15 long x gg. :Sm in muah-' f fxvc. i Q 1 0 ev fi mar: iii: ' S? f A I ' l wuz: llll ull Q IIHWIW s... -1'-im V k 1 Ill' L ilgiiiiii a ,. W V '-.L Qiijfb, ' M i f- f I i llnilx QQ 51.7 rn Q- I 'S ' C' Q aflqst fmd . f- 'f A Qi ' fm!-:if W Cfugggn CHEAP QU , . Ill R ' , AN ., Q I I ' grandfather BOAD , A - --4, . V , Wa I W'?34 'i ,SQ K' in V Z I -.1 S151-na APPLY I Z Pm xi. ., To SL M 3025 f Q gk Sw 'W' iii 1 -fl f Q 17 in, MMG f I l IZ an A 'M fi ly K 3 H 2 ki I If 11 v W' V 11555. V Z 1 .- .zmzuf-'gig H ' of boffl ' ' , A ' x DGKG Leif fig buffae P51 ' Lrhl-cgT5Frofiiledg6S 0 1-,H Oh hh gy HP will Inks our .Z 31 'f X ,fx lodge- - 0,79 . Zvf, it-x 61 1. X . 0 IA f ' N I ' W i '-f' A W LJ 'S' 1 ,ff , Q Wg C VL i .:- '- BUCK ' MK e 1 , xxx 1 411.1 I 2 : -- I, Burl-5 E . K 2 ' N f' f Bob Qofifmisoii .f X - T There was once a sweet Gamma Phi Who said If you kiss me, 1'll cry - So he gave her a smack,-and She hit him 21 crack, And he didnit know who-when-or why. VVhen you are down in the mouth think of Jonah-He came out all right. ge Five Hundred and Siacly M L05T k w A Slucly mamLw W N N The Follies of Frances Slreet + 5UN. MON. TUE5.wED. Tnufzsvm. SAT. SUN.WM0HJU55-MED.3'HURS.FRL iBL.5UN-,m5!-'DQW5D-WUBS..FRl- ,SAT SUN. MON , 10 4 A , ,f 'ff:,. s s ' T Joe Ho0k's Graff Page Five Hundred and Sizly- One Chi O Let's go Anywhere You know Who gives a SORORITY YELLS DELTA GAMMA If she is a ham As long as she pledges Delta Gam. GAMMA PHI Lickety bus, lickety bus, What in the world is the matter Nothing at all, nothing at all, Even the Ice-man gives us a call. with us? DELTA ZET A We want a man! We want a man!! We Want a man!!! VVe Want a mam!!! ,N Siege' PI PHI I want to be- I want to be- I want to be- LOVED. ALPHA PHI Sogoritee, sororitee, Hully, hully, hully gee, The barbefscook pledged Alpha Phi f A? 'gil 'L 4 W , 3 I Zu ' ' 5 1 img j rl .eruul ' 0 j g, D, :iff A 'l ,f 7 A ' , 1 4? i l i iq! Q., f-Xt if 'Ulm L J 1 I zhsu f ' M ' Mi I -- li ' 55 , u mol I A A , mmm! J'---' E ,. By 1 ix S ! L fl is KAPPA SIGS f f GIVE ' f , PROSPECTIVE E I PLEDGES ...D if ' THE THIRD fi f DEGREE - ' f Page Five Hundred and Sixty- Two 4 Z Z f I I 5 f f Z f I I 7 7 Z I f 4 . Why should I curl my hair for him? He said t.he 'trouble couldn't be mendedg I-Ie said it, must be good-bye and go, And he took up his hat and all was ended. So all was over. And I'm not dead And I've shed all the tears that Iim going to shed. And now he's wanting to come again, Perhaps he's sorry, perhaps he misses The hill-top girl. VV ell let him come! But no more love and no more kisses. Whatever the future, gay or grim, Why should I curl my hair for him? HK pci wi. fff of 0 fi THE SIGMA NUS MAY START THEIR RUSHING SEASON-THEIR PLEDGE PINS HAVE ARHIVED. - Page Five Hundred andSi:cly- Three GEE. ITI GLAD TO BE HERE I'D HATE TO TI-IINK I HADNT BEEN ASKED. 5 I... WI-IEW! IT'5 HOT IN HERE. THE VIUSIC, LAST DANCE. SURE K4 WAS AW FUL. ' eeoaes DANQES 5 ILIC.I-I I BETTER THAN I EXPECTED DER WHO THAT 0II:CAIN TOO. A BILL I5 CTS 2 GEELVIY FEET I-IURTGEORGE SOIIE MORE OF THAT SICKLY I HAS BEEN STEPPING ALL LINE OFHI5. IF HE DOESNT OVER TH EN .TOO. 2 JP SHUT UP SCREAM. I 'EX- oume one HE'6 I WONDER WHY I svsa cms wx-ru I-um. NOT VERY TI RED OI-I BOY LAST DANCE WOT AN EVENING- AND THEY RE HAVINGA PARTY EVENING W ITH HI I I 1X TOTIORROW. AN OTH ER 'alll I . C ' 2 ff HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED WHAT A PROM GIRL THINKS ABOUT? ge Five Hundred and Sixty-Four They sat alone in the moonlight And she stroked his tired browg Dearest, I know my life's been fast, But I'm on my last lap now. SKPFPF There was a young flapper who rolled 'emg Not needing her garters, she sold lem: But when it got cold, And she wished 'em unrolled, The poor dear had nothing to hold 'em. WISCONSIN MILK DID IT! Little Willianz, the pride of the Sigma Chi Lodqe, sr wwf' ww ...-4 8-15. WT i?ZMrsp. V , 5 so - Af ,mv ai .At W ,4 vsiiif . ag , 424. .f M1-1'-:A , ' 31 112:--,-. f fra, GA, f y Qc:-W :V klzarnfflas ' A s -1 ' wmv- f f 27-'mf Taken from Professor Roofs History Blue Books. Q. What is a Martyr? A. A Martyr is a fantastic animal, half man and half goat. Q. What is a Papal Bull? A. A Papal Bull is a bull kept by the Pope, exclusively for the nourishment of his own children. .351 , I v 4 I Ag ,I' gyw.,,, .,, M ,x K s.1.st:,mafs:,-c ,..,.- 1 .A I, fy ' aifigt., 1 ..,. X Q eff '- f tt, 4. f I A- .A-sg 9 , . .WA reef 5823 is x:,A:3 . took first prize in the 1923 ' ' I Badger Better Baby Contest .A A V ' V A A A , '-' ',.:4ff:'L.5Af, , ' , w--inf-, , l ,V . J ' ,fJ17942v' recently. Some kzd-wat! ' ...., A A W A Page Five Hundred and Sizly-Five 11.f is 1 if 4 Q 111441,--1: -1 - -' 1 ' ,fx ., , r, 111-111, 1 fill' . N '1111Xwf1we11Qfff51- 1 4, -1 ff,-w'lT f 1 ,'f1-1'121-'1 1Y1, -11.1192115213 , 1 1 1'11l v' W 1 1.31 Emllvll ,,,, ,.,, , 1. 1 ' . 1 C111 11 ASL g 111117 Y. 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T1 51 k 1 , .ff-A, Q'1,s1'1 , 11 1 .. 11 1fsf-:11111- 1 5 1 11, 11 1 1f,.q. 1 - 1 igfyszesif 'n1qs-1-:,-ew - 1, X , 1 , 1 ,, . 1 1 11 f ' ,1 V -N 1: ,at - 1' xgq-ef-gigrgg .gp -' up ,1-11 , 1 .1 11 ,. ., V 441'-fa1.:.,1- 1. , , , -, 1 . 1 i-, 11 11 31911119 , ff: '1,, - .. 15 1.. ' 1-1 A 1 lil ' 1 .Q-L11 , ' 1 ' ' 1 v 1 , f ,, M Quill? ' 51?-J-1111f ' 1 1 . 2 1 3 , , K '-- ,Men ,vb X ,H I A - 1, A X 5 , iawfg111s::iL3, 1 j -K .1 1, 1 1 f 1' Ti-IE, ATO, D06 1' THEY ALL RUN TRUE TO TY3?E l It's the Deans that spoil our gladnessg It's the Deans that make us blue, ltls the Deans that trample on our sunshine With their ill-intentioned billet douxg It's the Deans who have no tender feelings Where their tender feelings ought to beg If our Universities were Deanless Oh, how happy We all would be. ALIF MIM RUSHES 'EM EARLY Page Five Hundred and Sixty-Sin: .f To ,,.- E 12 'ini 'tif- m. '-ug: - vw-.L, 1 - 'J l14'1:',?,a'g?i.5 'F' ,,,. ,pu V . ,n --N.. 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If you should Search to Tipperary Youill never find a little fairy Like Dorothy May: But 'less my shirt is spotless very The Prom is off for me and Mary. Don't fail me, pray. HWoN'T YoU COME INTO oUR PARLOUR9 .. .. .. .. .. Page Five Hundred and Sizly-Seven ' . ...,,. L: :5 . . . 11:5-.I ' EY EEE ' 'EE E E FE' EE EE E EEE EE' E Ei 5 z zz: :: : z ::5,:::- : : . :: : - 5 5 E. EE ZZ EEIEEE : E ' EEE:E 15: 555 iii? Emil? 'i5'555 55 55 'fini 55 5? . EE 555555 5 55 5 555255 522535-525i55Si55' . 5555 5.1 125.522 . '::- .. :::::. 1 1EEIE'E 5255 2.5555 .5. 555.552 EEEIRA, 1.2 if 555 55551 5 SY EEE 5 E 5 5. 55 555555 'afii '5 .t1:1' : 3' ': 1: 1. ::.:':::' .:'f::: 5 QJ5555.. 5 5.55 55 5255.5 5555's 5 555255 SE: 5 .F .. .,., . .... . 5 .:- -5: 5 .1 55:51 55 :5 555- 5-wuz: 51:55 .. I, 5- 52. EE 2 . EEfE:1fE EE EW: ' E'.EE?i:E E EEEE 12:-1 5 5:.,.:5 5 5 55 '::. 5: 5: ::: :, 5: 515.5 : 1:55 55 :- 5 . 555 5 5 5' ,5: 15: 55: 5: 5: :zz-z 1 555: - 5: .:. 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Page FivelHundred and Sixty-Eight ULEST WE FORGET, FAMOUS LINES TI-IE SOUTHERN SYSTEM EASTERN LINES THE NEW YORK CENTRAL LINE UNION PACIFIC Page Five Hundred and Sirly-Nine 9 - G .,., - --,,. . , 1 f v lf-, , -- s f , -w x A li f y! ,X N i 5 'ix I l X 5 YT XX ' X I -x ,A 'K Y awp ,1 1 ' 5' gg X' -- iw? f I i x . 2 XX! - i - ' iid 'i ' .Y X, ss I 1 . 'wk J? .T QJ '-WN' ig Q 1 , f X, W . qi M y Qi ii X i ' I 9 Q X , ,. W. , ' - -K kk M we X ,f9 ' A Q '11, f S Gene I . ' ,515 2 ' f ' ... ig Page Tn Lovin? nemo- S ,I alt - Sun x'nrQ6nsen,'SE?.. ' ,N ig Pans' ' FRU- wma Ban r-neu-qnesr X Hb. A I f 4 Yufv-9Ye . e :m: :vim -1 x9 Wim: L ' ,, i s Y :- , A H A +309 'if I Q. U ,- .- fr x '. 'V 2 QQ- ' k -as in W' , yr' - .f QA , 1 -1 ' Q quam J 4 iv' i . .1 E N 5 ' :X 'ig en' X ' i 1 ' ' ' Tx-ie SK:-Kung ueao ' 25 I UFOE Hens A You Guae Yun-lFer-.whmh Tlobodv candemjg 6 , SCL OWQ 3 k f ii SKOAL! From Scar1dinavia's rugged shores Come the Norsemen riders bold, The Viking used to knock 'em dead, Now the Ski king gets knocked cold. -Five-Hundred d S 63 X K 4 ff 4 W The Chi Psi Rushing Commillee An A. 0. P. Rouglzneck Parly 1 2 N 2 y THE BETAS' RUSHING BUS QNOw iurn to the fraierniiy seciion and see the 75 names on the Bela Page-D Page Five Hundred and Seuenly- One N 1 THE RHYME OF THE FLAPPERS CWITH APOLOGIESJ It is an ancient Pedagogue And he stoppeth flappers three By thy marceled hair and dreamy eyes Where goest thou to spree9H The old Libe's doors are opened Wide, And we must fast jazz in A VVhere youths are met, and dates we get, Mays't hear the merry din? He holds them with his skinny hand, There is a Deanw, quoth heg Pipe down, we're on, oh greybeard loon, What care for Deans have We? The three co-eds sat in the Libe They cannot choose but hear As thus speaks on that Kappa Sig And the Delt with eyes so dear. An Alpha Delt came on the left Out of the stacks came he, And he smiled bright, and on the right Sank down beside the three. And now there came both glance and smile And they grew wondrous boldg And names and notes came floating by With flippant words untold. On either side, a prudish scribe Shot them an envious glance: But angry studes and M. A. grads Their joys did not enhance. At length came the librarian Around the post she cameg As if she'd been a mighty Dean Sent in Miss Nardin's name. All in a hot and hectic Libe The angry one did tower Right up above the three she stood And made them quake and cower. And every tongue struck dumb with fright, Was withered at the rootg They could not speak, no more than if They had been choked with soot. Oh, sweeter than the stuffy Libe, Far sweeter to the three, To walk with Delt, and Kappa Sig, And Alpha Delt, with glee. Farewell, farewell, hear this we say To thee, oh stupid Libe, He rateth best. who flirteth Well VVith Prof, or man, or scribe. He rateth best who flirteth well NVith men both great and small, For the dear Dean who ousteth us He never ousts us all. X, , aim Z i 5 - ....if3.?'!!s!!!!!!!!u1n - I lllllllllllllllllll Q L -i THE SORE EYE SPECIAL Page Five Hundred and Sevenly- Two DELTA GA M MA PLEDGING 7206K TZOTM 7:08 7:13 7:22 at EXTRACT FROM THE MINUTES OF KAPPA KAPPA GAYIMA Meeting called to order at seven p. ni. by President Watson. Sisters Pauline Ambrose, Georgiana Kimberly, and Janet Jones asked to be excused. Permission not granted. T015 Sisters rise and sing Delta Gamma how we love thee. 7 :OQM Sidney Bliss calling Miss Kimberly on Badger 111188. Chi Psi house calling Miss Ambrose on Badger 6988. 7:03M Sisters kneel and sing razzing song to Sister Janet Jones for promiscuously using University Library, 7:04 Use of Opium and narcotics in Sorority houses discussed by Sisters. Motion made by Sister Sheldon to vote for or against the use of pipes in Chapter meeting. Those in favor ...... 20 Those not in favor .... 20 CHildegarde Luedke undecidedj Sisters Ambrose and Kimberly return. Sisters again kneel and sing two verses of the Kappa 7 205 V3 razzing song. Sister Freddie Crane makes motion to buy G. Fred Brewer and fiancee engagement ring. Motion seconded by Gladys Frazer. Treasurer's report. Motion made that Miss Crane's motion be repealed. Motion seconded by Treasurer and chapter. Miss Ambrose called to phone. Sisters spend two minutes in silent thought over Mr. Horace Wetmore. President VVatson permits discussion on Mr. Wetmore for three minutes. Sister Ambrose returns, discussion stops. Automobile horns tooting outside. Sisters Schwartz, Jackson, Crane, Frazer, Jones, Ambrose, Kimberly, and Cunningham excused to powder noses. Meeting adjourned. Eight sisters absent. Sis- l l ters sing Sigma Phi polo song, Delt Tipple Chant, I and Beta Safety in Numbersf, GAMMA PHI RUSHING Page Five Hundred and Sevenlg Three A , COLLEGE CAFETERIA CAFETERIA is where you go to eat when you have corn beef and cabbage at your regular boarding place. A cafeteria is where he takes her when he is nearly broke, or, more usually, where he takes her after they have been engaged for a year. A cafeteria is where you go thru a Get-Lost-and-Find-Your-VVay-Out system of iron railings, or stand up and wish for a strap for half an hour before you get your food. A cafeteria is where the sweet young things go in bunches and eat at the corner table. Where absent- minded professors absent-mindedly hang their umbrellas, and as absently-mindedly eat pie and cake at the same time. Where the feminine English instructors get the table near the window and Watch the students going by- so interesting, you known. - A cafeteria is where you spend all you have, and get what you can with a sweet smile and perseverance. A cafeteria is where you decide between rolls and bread, salad or pickles, and feel as though you had made the decision of a life time. A cafeteria is where you ask for hash under another name. A cafeteria is where you grab a paper napkin-or a lady gives you one free-and you proceed to chase it during the whole meal. l A cafeteria is where you attempt the balancing stunt with a tray, and wonder how they do it. A cafeteria is where you need a course in engineering to get a glass of water. A cafeteria is where you think you are going to get some real food and you get-slung. - '?e,e:: ' X X if 35 -7 X 77 X - X 'Q 6 E- r 2' g ff ae et af ,, 'LI ul El ' if X QE ' X 1 'E U QJE , fir 'Qi ' -X, . Vf K! 'E Page Five Hundred and Seventy-Four MISS FUHRMAN'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS The real Eastern school in the heart of the Middle VVest. Only bright, healthy girls accepted. Exceptional instruction given in domestic science, interpretive dancing and tea dancing, accounting, bridge Whist. Prepares for Vassar, Well- esley, Smith, Bryn Mawr, and Waupun. TOWNSEND HALL A select school for particular girls and young women. Unlimited number. In- fluences wholesome and otherwise. Out- door life a reality. Delightful location in beautiful Langdon Valley, one block from Mendota. Magnificently land- scaped, beautiful Spanish buildings. Se- lect patronage 48 states. Address, Box 614, Langdon. Write for catalogue, Principal, Box 140, Gilman. - rf- ...ly , - H, 5551 A lzldfg- , N - ,- A . , Q . Q .f .A ., 1 A -, . Q .1 , L. A e5:5:.,i-Q. ,H --'. . I , . I-r-Ngrfqgg-3,3 yi .-:gr 1. 'f .r Ka - - iv ftfqfaf-f f, 15:53pm ev, ' X- fi 1' i 4-C135-,S1'af' .f . - , 1 ff 'T 'r 1412 if fifi C :. - i f-5 L' if ' 'f . f .lf . as-ww , i. :Sem f1E'..vf .1 sa ' gg. -- . f ?w2,,a , . . ,gag S' , if 2f1v+-M ,. W :Y . . - . ' I 4. 1 ' I I 5.2 gl ,, 9 . fe JJ: ' , -, -2'-:: ,Afga .g,wff: r ' af -My ug ' E.fffef,ig fQ,- rf., ..-3 3,.',--.4 , ' 4-3 f , .1 ,.- tai, , v -.Q . LQ , K' '-f -- .,,,' 151 W A ff ,. 'g 'fcvzxyi.:,..,.,..:,,s f .V V 4 , . -W..4:-.a.,,e.e...:.-..,,-.::. ,.., 1m:a,i.L.. .g.. .,.,. ..,., , .f,. :.,..g:,..... ,.4.,,. , .ay May.-1 ,, 1 IDLEWILD For girls and older young women, from 17 to 40 years of age. Special attention given to dancing and expression. Courses 4, 5, and 6 years. Environment and care approach the ideal. Embracing climate. Sleeping porches. Send for booklet The Perfect Lady, or 'AHOW to Attain Charm. Miss Niles and Miss Bunge, Principals. Address, Box 28, Gilman. THE BADGER HAS INVESTIGATED THE SCHOOLS HERE ADVEBTISED AND! FINDS THEM TO BE EXACTLY AS REPRESENTED Page Five Hundred and Scvenly Flvf- ., ,:. QQ 51,8 A may we have afwisconsin when Gr-eeki beats Cn-ee.K. ,,et4,m.t.nsf.vf.,1.,,L,,,4,...uM ' 6Zgf..n4wpleAqesm1-we V g Q. Av-mo .fp U- A X-lombue N.Qhf4fh.m-m,,,,e of?h.ineas.Phv-ash. ,gc Qy f Nhff' 'b miirafm K who LS bemq rgshea. hi. Cmmm .X ,Rak im 'Q ssfrxn VX Z ' K V T .- P ' J s.,I ' ,nf fi 1 tx P w 2-1- W ' I Q mslgvl X The cvtfs ufrfhe button anChwnceVY Q Q I 'AA , SgiismgastzeFUn'Qf,S nf'fm W Ngn 11 . ' - ' ' ' 2:2.:'::.f , Lh2'fm2fZ . x . V 'uw' '-'.., ,-. J 1'-L v f 1 L '5 I K -'T' 1 . 4 I' A X , Wy gf ' , W'-4 .U - 9 ,gf M, - W V is ' N 2' 2 I X 1 . s al -f Wm V se. -ia, N QW' M V - Wi' :Qu A mmaaei ' , N AU- then, 1, 1 - ' - I Pixfsig . 1 x-I 6-X xi! f w K 5 ' ' 1 ig W m Y X i -I tl Lawn cvwp Future ofPhLFs1Y - ' A. Y nefxqes -P ll How gheg be-Aazzlethe ,G Q4 mm-1-1 U an Siqma NU-comer-S K-1 -ff Y ULH QF Hddd.S gyg Dear Miss Blake: Ol' what 11atio1111 con 1 posed il litivs is Aiiiwillllilff' largely Pollovks. flernians, and Chi Psis. Dear Miss Blake: ls S. A. li. strong i11 ll11- South? Yes. Also in lhe sto111:11'l1. Dear Miss Blake: Do the Belas Ihr grrahsil ow pluclgf- lblltlons up for No. During rusliing sm-11so11 they play hide Y' illltblliillli. The r11 shevs. upon Ii111li111., a l111l.to11. rise and shoul HIiIltil'l'iS keepers. losers wvvpt-rs and are thus plr.-cl,Q'1-fl lo said 1'l11l1. Dear Miss Blake: Why does the fiilllllilii l'l1i c'l11l1 serve free lu11c'l1 on the eva- of' every Salmlialli? It ls 111 llll'lI' 1-onstil.11l.io11 lhal a vc-rtain n11111- lwr of 1111111 must vross their Llirvslxold per illlllllllll and that is one 1111'tl1od of g1'll111gr llll'lIl z1c'1'oss. NZ ff W Z 1 k 74 5 f Q 5' -Q3 may., l f '-..,.. 1 A X J 0 l sz-'f-sssgsrt--f Nf f., es' .e wr -:.:: new i.'fa'-'MJ ' 'nb .0 Q o v lg? K- Q, ,f . ,. ' ex 'tv 13:45. , ww. nf . 1 .,,,4g,E, ggggvax 0: ..' w MIR-.rss 'l1QI'f ' 5.55 N Q' Wu Q'r9?!i N' .'?i3:: 'Ili L, ya! avg :Bt ' ' pf arg., ,- ... .:, .fx 5.1.3. 2, ,,,,,, .tus lil? niiii' 4 -31 ' 7.511 'S 1-faq' ir S' I 1 0-eff. if-i 1 1 l 1 ' gl l f 'f l 1 1 1 -V y i ss i I l X 5 :2'lf','-':H-, y . - f . f ' 'P vi f3i fT'Q.Ef'f f'i f .f l 1 ' ..a3':g1.f' ,rf- ' '-11-1g'1:1i, 1 f - J - f ,gig-,. f y if . A- Q S - X 4' -, Y X -- -lf 1 J J v - ,'- f Ag' ,, f lo' ' X .I tg, As. . f' xp Pfggtg-:E1J2. :'E:i 5 . Ag5i.., 2::S5riL:'2ls , .. .N 'ze-I:--:--:--asf:-im. , '-' ,..'.,1 ,. -'-- .,, -urns: pq ,-4,279 -. e -5--l '.1 f 5.,.,J:xhaZ51. .1 Q D 31 ,1 0,0 , n .12 1 P I .fwwiify . 1 pp, . , . i',jh,::,.f,2, Qi?'x i'.4 '-. 4' f' 4+--N Lf . , ,-, ,.'g5,f494 ga:-gg 31- 1 V ':1 '19 ' 1--in 'ii' N -...J 1' In Ks. i'u'i'E -2- -il x at , A Case in Dispule I 8 1 ,,.., . ,,,. I if, 5 ii: ., ,., 'gl xi BX' Q 5 .fs - ji? 5 -.1 11 . . y -,., Y 5-3 np, A .k X255 , :ff M f f , 5 f Q fri? , , ,f ,E , ,f 'Z 5?' f , 523 4 ' y 4 if , I 'ze if Z X fe 4 41 f 5 a H: is 1 W7 A2 1 ff 5 ., -.5-14:1 f, is ,gp 1 'Cie W: ,. 224 53:-ff 'Z , - N. :fye,':1. ?,g,'f,f : 9' ' 1. Z5 X' - sg 1 Way 4597-f - y 'zz 2 The Lil SIIIIU' Dear M iss Blake: Do X011 think I rould find a soul mate? I am 6 feet -111 inches tall, weigh 115 pounds, have a face like Dave Mahoney's. a laugh like Scottyis. hair like Shockey's, and a personality like Doc ITIl1gIlGS-I5 I. M. LONESOME Stranger things have happened. Dear Miss Blake: My papa and mama think I am too young to be married. but I think it would be quite the stuII'. How can I get the idea out of my mind El KATE PERRY See Professor Hyde. Dear Miss Blake: Every time I go to a Phi Kap dance, the boys step all over my feet., What can I do to prevent this? MARY JAMES Dance by yourself. Dear Miss Blake: I am just a poor little Delta Gamma sister. I Want to dance next Friday night and all the Psi Us are busy. What would you advise? Sorry, my dear, but my only advice is to stay home and try to be happy. I see no alternative for you. Page Five Hundred and Sevenlv 9r'uen RELUCTANTLY, WE YIELD THE PEN I S the presses are rolling out the last forms of the 1923 Badger, we Wish to take this, our last opportunity to express our sincere appreciation to all who have contributed in any Way to the successful culmination of our yearbook. While regretting sincerely that time and space do not permit of individual recognition, We feel that there are some Who, because of their especial interest and outstanding services merit particular mention. To Mr. George C. Bell, of the George C. Bell Studio Inc., who furnished the remarkably beautiful and artistic photographs in the Interpretive Dancing section, to the Photoart House, and to Mr. S. J. Liesman of the Badger Studio, with whom We have enjoyed a most pleasant association, and Whose personal interest has contributed much to the suc- cess of our annual, We are indebted for the unusual quality of the photographic Work in this Badger. I 'T . y A Mr..J. J. Sher and Mr. W. T. Greig, of the Bureau of Engraving, Minneapolis, have given us therlinest kind of Art Work and Engravings, and have offered us ideas and sug- gestions from the richness of their experience, which have been invaluable to us. Our printers, the Western Printing and Lithographing Company of Racine, have given us the best printing which it is possible to turn out, and this has been due very largely to the splendid efforts of Mr. Lee Archer and of sMr. Charles Brose. Last, but by no means least, the entire Badger Staff deserves the highest commendation. Becruited from the largest Junior class in the history of the University, its talents have been unusual, and it is only as a result of the united efforts of its members, that the 1923 Badger has become a reality. Beluctantly, then, We yield the pen to our successors, for We have found, in the midst of our Work, associations and friendships which can never be lost to us. And, if We have had to forego many things for this Badger, the experience has been eminently Worth While. , THE EDITOR P g F ndrerl and Seventy-Eight The Badger Advertisers 'k i i' HE advertisers in this vol- nrne consist of rnerehants, hitsiness organizations, trades- inen who seeh and receive the patronage of college inen and woinen. These advertisersare not believ- ers in a one-sided hargaing to inerit student patronage, they are the supporters of student insti- tutions. For this reason these advertisers deserve stitdent sap- port. There is initeh to he read farther. Badger Satire is continued a- inong these ads. T PagF Ildd dS lylNn Q 1 N 1 + 1 N W 1 , 1 f N Page Five Hundred and Eighty I - I Consolidated Water Power SSL Paper Company F2553 I i I I Mz'lfs at Wisconsin Rapids, Biron, Stevens Point, Appleton, Wisconsin Y I V i 4 l i 5 ,V,s . 1 n i ii,.,.s .asita 4 f Safe Mllk JI -.v- 5:5135-,Q HI'lf3l'ItS sc lnvalids gN0 cooxmzc. Phe 'iFood-Drink for All Ages. Quick Lunch at Home,OfF1ce,zmd Fountains. Ask for E-IORLICRYS. f1E12?s'Avoid limitations 84 Substitutes Good Goslz-Galoslf' PY Pnglr Fire H1 cl 11 an ll Eiglflj' ESTABLISHED IBIS eamZQ2ZiZmt W Sl DZ Ciggeeea bv IIQIIIBIIB 'urnizhgmg uns, MADISON AVENUE CQP. FOPTY'FOURTI'I STREET NEW YORK Telephone Mttrray Hill 8800 This is a Complete Establishment operated continuously for more than One Hundred Years under the same name and still in the control of the Direct Descendants of the Founders We specialize in the Qutfitting of Men and Boys from Head to Foot with Garments and Accessories for Every Requirement of Day or Evening Wear Dress, Business, Travel or Sport, Illustrated Catalogue on Request BOSTON NEWPORT TREMONTCOILBOYLSTON 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE B ROOKS BROTHERS Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the leading Hotels and Clubs I Tri-Delt Open House THREEI 253.00 .L QQ xxx 1 Shelbpal al 5 RUBBER CAP 13 DIAPHRAM FDR EITHER HELL Stethoscope FSEEF ' SHEPPARIT5 ALUMINUM BELL S .et-:erx:23?'xx11 1'- q,M.l.,4x,tx.fq:1 j'?lsl'xNf :k11, 'Nxt tl 153 AND 'w::SE5SI:5:Qll Nxt argl' J xx: 1 1- wxtxxx-samletxurr 'awe 2'-:--x-fm-'cxxgx nu 2 EAR TIPS -l 12 Erffxwxxix xx -xxxwxx 'klxxrxx xx AX :sxx -xx.-xxxx. .EQNXQQ .Ng lls E.'f3Q,l1l 503. x ix Q 'x.x.gz2 I .. i . ,K xx I X MX XXI Xxx X Sharp 81 Smith x Mzundacturers and Exporters of X Xdb xx NNN x xx IX xxw X X xx X X I NX lx I Ixx X x x t Ix f :YM .xxwxx W f ll lm ,lair x hllmwhiix 1 xi M xx X x Xxx, xx xxx XX xl I Xlxxxxlxxxlf x N HIGH GRADE WARN xx Ylx ulx ,xo 7 lxlh I Wx xl b SURGICAL W xxxxx X INSTRUMENTS AND Xkdl ll 112 .. I x.x.x...xxx x .J1 HOSPITAL' SUPPLIES CHICAGO, ILL. CBetween NVabasl1 Ave. and Michigan Blvdj llx lxvli xl Ill xcxvllhl-I l Page Five Hundred and Eighty- Tivo QNX 3 HERRINGBONE GEARS We manufacture efficient power transmissions. Our plant, equipped With the latest types of ma- chinery 'and conducted along strictly modern lines, operates the largest gear cutters in the world. Our foundry produces open hearth steel castingsafrom l to l00,000 lhs. for all commer- cial purposes. . A We extend a most cordial invitation to gradu- ate and undergraduate in the Engineering Col- lege of Wisconsin University to inspect our plant. The Falk Corporation Milwaulqee Wisconsin Once a Tri-Delt met a Phi-Delt On the lake drive wideg And the Phi-Delt asked the Tri-Delt If she'd be his brideg Phi Delts are all right for fussingw, VVas the 1naid,s reply, TRY THIS ON YOUR MOUTH OHGAN VVhere are you going, my pretty maid? Fm going a tea-ing, sir, she' said, And where are they tea-ing, my pretty 1naid?,' ' U, The Kappas have asked me, sirn, she said. And how is your fortune, my pretty maid? My face is my fortune, sir,', she said. 66 c'But, when it's time for wedding hells, '40h, than they X,VOn,t pledge you-3 my pretty I'll pick a regular guy. maidf' VVhoinell asked them to, sir, she said. CG Gruen Watches f l See our splendid assortment of i. y -Ill GRADUATION WATCHES : llil 8 Pye feature liii WISCGNSIN sr. ilOR. E. WATER Goodlioifing l i MILWAUKEE Tl 57 Page Five H d d and Eighlg l'l How IVIANY defec- tifoes, do yon thinh, ainong the Nation's coming inen and woinen owe their physical and inental short- eoinings to wrong feeding? Milk, renieinoer, is Natnre's best food fortnan. -GR I DLEY Milwaukee I 9 2 3 l u Alld cz Tall Ill Dark, Handsome Man! 130th Year THE OLDEST AMERICAN FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE ooMPANY ASK ANY INSURANCE MAN about the OLD NORTH AMERICA. AILV One Hundred and Thirty Years of Service to Founded 1792 CAPITAL Agent and Assured. ss,ooo,ooo. AINIPLE RESOURCES ANIPLE FACILITIES DEPENDABILITY PROVEN Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA IN CONJUNCTION IVITH THE Indemnity Insurance Company of North America Q VVRITE PRACTICALLY ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE EXCEPT LIFE Any Agent or Broker in the United States Can Get You Ixh07'flZ1f77167'Z.CIl Policies P F H dd dF't'lF' l Students- The University Inn I3 I7 University Ave. We are ready to give you prompt service at reasonable prices. Good Food. Under new management. The Stag at Eve Had Drunk His Fill. Madison Packing T Company E lvholesale and retail purveying of OUR OVJN LITTLE BEDTHVIE STORY Once upon a time there was a cow and a humble bee. The humble hee was resting upon a patch of clover in the pasture. The cow came along and ate the clover and, incidentally, de- voured the humble bee. ' Down in the stomach of the cow, the humble hee was very discontented. lt began to plot revenge, but very soon it became drowsy and fell asleep. And when the humble hee woke up, the cow was gone. Oh. Merciful Darkness P fiotels, Clubf, l l Resmummu' F7'C7,If67'7'I,1lZfi6S cmd S07'07'Z'Zf'fCS Our Specialty l V I r Phone 4920 307 vvesf Johnson st. l Nladison, VVisconsin er I 7 F llllIllll'f'll and Eiryltlv-l l'r' 1 I A I l 5 Il I l The pictorial section pictures in the i923 Badger were all taken especially by us for the book. Three months l ,f were consumed in making these few pictures. The Badger and ourselves have been deluged with com- pliments on our Work-these have been practically our sole compensation. Giving satisfactory service means more to us than does money, so we feel fully repaid for our expense and effort. l Qur motto, Service above Selfn, has saturated our business through and through. You will receive the benefit of that policy Whether your business with us be small or large. i f T e Photoart i ouse Wm. J. Meuer, Pres. Oflicial Commercial Photographers to the V923 Badger. Page Five Hundred and Eighfy-S1'z Students Interestedin Sales- manship Should Investigate The Life Insurance Field THE CENTRAL LIEE Qflers a Splendid Opportunity to Young Men To Enter a Profession Worth While from the Standpoint of Service to the Public and Personal Advancement A. C. LARSUN, State Manage?- First Central Building Phone Badger H48 A lVIadison, 'Wish ll I l f DR. J. A. BANCROFT C A , DR. V. G. BANCROFT 3 Q . Dentlsts 'QB' X- AV 75Efi , f-'afizfheg l l Corner of Park and University Avenue l 5 Above Menges Pharmacy l l 1 901 University Avenue l l f l l l l Wilkens-Anderson a l l 1 A A i Cggnpgny 3 ipsum THE ofuzmn l -or unch you iave put in tiesc years 5 l of preparation Q . . Q1 Cur LIFE INCONIE Scientific and I11dUS'E1'13l a policy U , Q-V Q with the Y 5 v . ' 'lil la.-Xl. and ljl .RMiXNENT DIAXBILITX Supphes X l features - guarantees and l RO'l2ECTlON OF YOUR ITUTL-RE Chemicals AETNA Life Insurance Co Sena' for our new catalogue- jusz' of the press l T 2l7-223 IN. Desplaines Sr. Chicago, Ill ul Hartlornl. Lonn. Albert E. Mielenz, Mgr. l lm' XYisconsin and Northern Michigan .,, ,. v. . . . i nl- l'll'Sll Wisconsin Rational Bank Bldg. l V I i , Milwaukee. His. Have you cunsiclcreml LIFE INSURANCE SALESMANSHIP AS A CAREER - Exceptional opportunities for men and women of ability. ge Five Hundred and Eighllv-Eiqlzl The LUMBER NUMBER Badger 46 WUI FUI the BH! Prompt Serw'ce-Qualify D Doyon 81 Rayne Lumber Co 638 W. Mifflin Street Madison, Wisconsin Paradise Farrn Canned Fruits and Vegetables bring all the goodness of q orchard and garden direct to your table. Gould, Wells 81 Blackburn Co. I Distribufo rs MAD1soN, W1sCoNs1N u he ,gear 'F .A , 15-1LW,,L,, W, g if - Q Forward 1 922! ' t Commencement is the time of begin- ? nings, even though it does mean the ti severin of our old colle e ties. ln QI Y f your new life vvork you Will find the banker ready to advise with you on how to make your dreams come true through regular saving and Wise in- vesting. FIRST VVISCONSIN .NATIONAL BANK Milwaukee Capital, Surplus and Undioided Profits Ten Million Dollars In Getting Ahead Today young men know that good clothes are not only a necessity but an investment as well. They know that it pays to keep up their appearance, and since outdoor life has taught ' ' ltes of Fweeds, you'1l see more Tweeds worn than them the comforts and lasting qua 1 1 ever before. h ld tl ontidence of 111 any young business men who appreciate very Jerrems' tailoring o s ie c high grade clothes at moderate prices. Unusual Values, 355, 365 and 375 Our Knickers and Sports Suits are high achievements in the tailoring art . ,Three Stores 71 East Monroe 314 South Michigan 7 North La Salle Chicago, Ill. U ge Five Hundred and' Ninety Todd .V 1110 Select your Bradley bathing suit today! It is none too early-if you Want what you Want. Aftereall, Bradley can only make so many of these wonderful Bradleys every year. Your dealer will be sold out if you delay. Stop in at the store that sells Brad- leys and select your color, your Weave and your size. Or Write to us for the Book of Authentic 1922 Styles. BRADLEY KNITTING CO.. DELAVAN,WIS of5Doors . Page Fizfe Hundred and Ninnel MILWAUKEE il ii Q-C55NDE3 ?Olll Cleaning, P1 essmg and .Xltcmlxomrs t Nezltly Done for lids and Co-eds S15 University Avenue WVHOLESALE L L E DRUGGISTS X E' f - v . . B. B lc . D . E. E. ' ' Service fobbers Dr J 3 er . T Bak S- 8 8 Denusts 27268 -l I 4 ' Wfashington Building MILVVAUKEE NVISCONSIN R 1' al! Pl P d er 470 ungers Ranges Will Do All That Others Do g With Less Worry fb - 7 - and Expense To You. 9 Els af' Jungers Stove 81 Range Co., Grafton, Wis. P FI-Ia'dd'V Steinway Pianos exclusively az' HOOK BROS. 'I 0 COLLEGE CLOTHES A Specialty HARRY A. SMUCKER Reasonable P77065 602 North American B ld g Ch g IH I I NETHERVVOOUS 519 STATE STATIONERY and PRINTING, of course -but more than tliat-distinctive, inexpensive gifts for any occasion- PARTY FAVORS, DECORATIONS and GREETING CARDS for every purpose. 1 fig R Hx 31 TI y l7VEf,7!'l'ZU0!l!Z71.f ' FIA-I I J R Iqftrmi I 'i 1 ef' 1 s . 1 1 ll ' ell ! llll- x N ' 146 Langdon St. ,I X '49 , A BACK DOOR I HAND-OUT. hirty Years of Leadership THE Creamery Package Mfg. Company were pioneers in the manufac- ture and distribution of milk handling machinery and supplies, and from a humble beginning thirty years ago have grown until twelve great manufacturing plants are now necessary to satisfy the demand for the CP-Master-Built Line Of machinery for creameries, cheese fac- tories, ice cream plants and dairies. The Creamery Package Mfg. Co. Sales Branch. Ufhces: Uffrnfe to Nearest Onel Chicago, 61-67 W. lslinzie St. Omaha, 113-15-17 S. Tenth St. Boston, 1-10 Vxfasliington St. N. Philadelphia, 1907 Market St. Buffalo, 133-137 E. Swan St. Portland, Ore., 6-8 N. Front St. Kansas City, Mo., 1408-10 VV. 12th St. San Francisco, 699 Battery St. Minneapolis, 318-20 Third St. N. Toledo, 119 St. Clair St. VVaterlOo, Iowa, -100-8 Sycamore St. II F e Hundred and Ninety-F M . Home E 1 . all. x ' I , - 'Q NX , 11 .W ,?:,'s-ifjfffg X ks ,N w x wig Q31 I XX U't':1'a X F 1 -lm rr 2- K' 1 OUR FURNITURE PLEASES gig? C. R. Jerdin CS-U 119 S. Pinckney Street 113 King Street The Parker Company 12 Sout Sfafjofzery Suppliaf Eminem Furniture Job Prmfmg Sole Agents For Art Metal Filing Cabinets S'C1em'co Office Desks 1 Willard N. Parker, '90 Presiafenf 11 Carro11 Street, Next to Te1ephone Bui1ding Madisong Wiiseonsin Read The Capital Times. VV hy? ' 523 STATE ST. DE LONGE BLD'G. BECAUSE itys one of the newsiest The popular shop with discriminating Women who appre- . . . ciate the careful sanitation, the courteous attention, and papers in W1scons1n. Our readers the skillful administration of beauty aids found here. stay by us because they have con- PHONE BADGER 6211 fidence in the news stories and ad- vertising which We print. Over 13,000 CIRCULATION DAILY THE CAPITAL TIMES NIADISON, WISCONSIN Official Paper of the State of Wiscorzsizz For Service and Good Work p VARSITY BEAUTY SHOP T Not far to Walk. 415 N. Park. Eadger 429 Oh Gamma Phis have their baby stare And the Kappa Delts have their grin And the Delta Grams of grace are spare, And the Acoth girls are thin Though they all have charms in certain ways, I tire of them all, And when I Want a pleasant change, I go to Barnard Hall CHORUS For, when the Goo girls make goo-goo eyes, My heart goes pit-a-pat, Their Hawaiian styles and Hawaiian smiles Have got it all over the other girls, wiles, Though I ean't tell one twin from the other, I canat help but fall, For, when the Goo girls make goo-goo eyes, They get me, thafs all. CASTLE 81 DOY E Coal, Wood Masons' Supplies Main Yards: 801-11 East Main Street West Side Yards: Monroe and Regent Streets Telephone, Badger 1993 Main Office, 125 State Street Madison, Wisconsin ge Vega Banjos and Gibson Mandolins at HOOK BR OS. Five Hundred and Ninelv-Sia: Do Your Clothes Lend You Confidence? Tailor 1naa'e cloflzey carefnlly plannea' ana' perfectly execnfeel, are a'i5Zincz'i2Je. They powers clzaracier in flzefnselffef. Such clothes give you a sense of confidence and poise. W e specialize in exacfbf fneefing your ineli'via'nal neecls. Richard W. Farmer 16 West Jackson Boulevard Telephone Wabash 4879 Chicago, Illinois. WT A D H A M S l Say It With Flowers Oil Company A i MUWAUKEE,WISCONSIN ARTISTIC FLoRAL DECORATIONS Chemists Refiners Engineers and i I CoRsAGEs High Grade Power Plant and lXfIachin'ery Oils. Steam Cylinder, Engine, Dynamo, and Tur- bine Oils. Badger Lubricants. Wadham's Tempered hlotor Oils for all Ntotor cars, trucks and tractors. Sold By Quality Dealers I Efveryfwlzere , Bouquets Our Specialty. Rentschler Floral Company Store 226 State Street Phone Badger 179 BJ.-XDISON, NVrscoNsrx , , Fatlier to Dean : f'XVh'it Pall: 'Elon must never go , K D- C . . Q . branch do you consider the in bathing atter a hearty h H meal ,, most profitable for my hoy'. ' Dean: ul can hardly say, M ll: XVI ? 8 13 hut I think a good willow Pall: Yeti won't ind it theref' switch, or a stout Hickory rod would he as good as any? Bill: t'XYhat's the matter with you? Nyria: HI swallowed a dinieg do you notice any change in me. -k i' i' Mord: XVas she shy when you asked her age? Reggie: Yes, I imagine about ten years. TIEDEMANNS 3 PHARMACY Qzuzlify .lfirsi KAPLANS FRUIT STORE Uvlzolesrulz' fznfl Rvfzzfl -P02 State Street. Phones: Badger -lOl-402 fOr gg-- O Drugs, Toilet Articles, School I . i I Supplies, Etc. 1 ll H if W , asa Those Snzooilz .llffalted lllilkx vlmfle with 0111 i Plume lllade Ice Cream ,,S,,m IAUSTQ N NYE 702-704 University' Avenue l RPADY'T2pQ5AfR git-PI2OTI'HNG Phone Badger Loom Nielert ,h'ie': Steiiianei' uLute Ellestad Five Hundred and Ninelv-Eialzl A I W V -- HIGH CLASS BAKERY GOODS CAPITAL DAIRY COMPANY Wfvlzolcfsalrf and Retail Butter, Cheese,,1VIi1k F 1120 ' 1801 1VIOnrOe Street 6-10 West VVi1sOn Street, Mzrdisori, VViseOnSin U. W. Meat Market 7,28 University Avenue. Phone Badger52I MADISON, WISCONSIN Madison Rug Factory J. F. SCOTT, Propricftrar Cleaning, Weaviiig, Reniaking, Shanipooing and Resizing 124- West Rlifflin Street Telephone Madison, Wisconsin Badger 1356 M L W -J 4 gig-K .MI v ,..kA , in N AVA 'MJ ,, v-Ma ' -I -ff ,, I , I 2 -4: v- Sv II-- f f 'f . , ' Q- gf Ei -4:'E17? Ifmmss- ,S . ,. I , , ,I f so S1.,.A,f:.f',v.., 4115-f-If , - I tsvvgx, v'-,X ,Nu S -2,1-.,:we-'Q-5215-' 1, xv, f , is A ,g ' ' ,, .. -r1II.:,r-ww : vw an-I 1' if 'A1 17.'f 5'-Si..X'5 I3-24'if:?42iiNf'Z21l'?5,,1g1-N.q Q45 l'7'.'-P' F' 3' v ' '!f'?Ql5 '?f'5f1' -559' 1955? I-Q'ffz,i.: fi 1, ess: vi ', -1- m:'Q: f:-tffzi , .4 -A W- ' I .,,, A W , I' W .M ,M ,,,,,. , , , ' 7, 0 an :S-q u -,I--. .::Lv,,5 !,w,gfff,a:wxf-piggy:- ft I :Hz i'4A'T'137 'jW1 '3 5ixQv-r, --cf' -V-5 I- M A JT ' '37 'S f 331 fs fir .SSt:5zX'-izw Y. 'L-7-1STw112w1i?fLZ A WIWIIIFS' f iff view? 'A mm gp, S Isa SERVICE FOR ALL BATTERIES, STARTERS, LIGHTS, IGNITIGN I Exiafe Distrzbutors MADISON BATTERY SERVICE COMPANY 250 State Street IVIADISON, WISCONSIN Sc Dr. F. W. Eauerbach DENTIST Q N 60-1 Bank of VVisconsin Bui1ding Badger 831 EAT Teekemeyeras Candies Teckemeyer Candy CO INIadisOn, Wfisconsin 1 Page Five Hunzlrezl and N I N A. D. SCJ. V. Frederickson . General Contractors PINE, HEMLOCK and HARDWOOD LUMBER 65335555 Manufactu 7671? of Builders' Material MADISON, WIscoNsIN - Herman Mack Quality Grocer- Cotlee Roaster 419 State Street Phones: Badger 7760 and 776i Polly Ambrose: 'tOh, sir, catch that man, he wanted to kiss men. Patsy Watson: '6Never mind, thereall be another one along in a minute. UNIVERSAL FRAT HYMN. Little bill thatas due Nightmare that you are I just wish that you Were in Zanzibar. The Thetas are out for blood, they say, Meow!!! Meow!!! There's going to be an awful fray. Meow!!! Meow!!! VVhen Kate and her band are on a tear, The rest of the lassies had best beware, For the fur flies fast 'When the Thetas are out for blood. B. C. Fisher W. R. Fisher THE only insurance that will benefit your family is the insur- ance you ony-not what you FISHERS, hope to take on later. FINE CIGARS KEPT FINE Thinking Well is wiseg planning well is wiserg but doing well is Q wisest and best of all. I Every.he-man knows he should Cigars, ICC Cream, Soft Drinks, have life Insurance. Don t Walt BILLIARDS for mogal supgort to prompt you to o your uty. London Made Pipes Do the best you know how, and and buy at least a small policy of Smokers' Supplies Northwestern Mutual Life ln- surance Q from the Unifoersity Agency 20 W. Miflilin Street Next to the Hub Phone Badger 4668 MADISON, WISCONSIN JOHN B. GAY Maizager and associates Commercial National Bank Building Badger 884 I ge Six Hundred BRANCH BANK WISCONSIN State and Gilman Streets CAPITAL AND SURPLUS 5360000.00 All General Ba11f2z'12g Tmnmcted SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRAVELERS CHECKS BOLD DEPARTMENT MAKE GUR BANK - YOUR BANK Established 1873 A. H. FETTI Manufacturing Jewelry Co., .flfazzufzzcturzfrs GREEK LETTER FRATERDUTY JEWELRY 6'5?i'Z5'4i5'i5 2l3 North Liberty Street BALTIMORE, MD. l o l VVhat makes a wild Cat wild? ' STEW R STOVES AND FURNACES ,,,,, ' Q GOULZI TKKUZ M 6617! G Ll' H l 17 ere, ,,ii5 00 50 li 52.s2,2-5.354515 1 A ,EEEE'E'EE.EEEE. 1 Good dentists mean good teeth 'tti f'tr 1 5' EEE-EE? nweeeneeti,,rsin?ni A fr . - 1 he WU TIM W .,..r ' 55E,5555'5?'?5'i. f : DR- J- A- BANCRUFF ' te t DR- V- C- BANCRUFT GRAY AND VVHlTE ENAMEL, VVITH GLASS DOOR AWD NIEPCURY THIIRNION ETE 1 1' x ' l ll R Only one of more than 200 different types and sizes oi Gas, Combination and Coal or Wood burning ranges and heaters made under the trade name Stewart -'Vliis name has been used continuously since 1832 and is :m synonym for quality both in materials and worlcinzinshin. STEVVART Stoves and Furnaces Are Made by The Fuller-Warren Co. INHLVVAUKEE, VVIS. Agencies in All Principal Cities and Towns. at Corner Park and University Ave.. Above Nlenges Phurmzicy Badger 3682 Page Sin: Hundred and Two You want to know VVHAT you are eating Brainerd and Harte are the QUALITY grocers of lvladison Only national liner of goocir are fold at the B1'ai1'zc'1'd-Ha1'tc' rtore. Visit us and try our RICHELIEU groceries. 706 University Avenue Badger 6408 A - l K B B 'l l Afzdelsofz Bray. Co. Thr HYUIIIK' of Cl0llI'fl'.Y-1'U 17-19 lVest Alain Street. Rladison, lVis. l Distinctive Apparel l For VVomen and Mfisses at the lowest prices con- sistent with the best quality. l l 1 Ciix 1 if if Ever 'M- mti'-A 1 -f4f3. 'a4 ,ii ivfsf F ' Y S-F r -:Wilt Eff fs! . . A4i' .51sf,:y 1 'Fl vii, 1 N' P -tu N gr, 1,i ,.--Af r, X A if 3155. X?lX.:7 -xl ' A not-Qflr v v A 1 Wifi? i 3 J l I 1 l HENRY T. SHELDON LAWYER Commissioner, Circuit and Superior Courts 413-414 GAY BLDG.. MADISON. WISCONSIN Y K ' Nu . BG-1- f'. 'egg 1:- 1 N - :tl-.2 1 PETTIBONE HEADQUAZXRTERS HAS HAD THE A FQR: H PLEASURE FOR Lgiizfg- SEVERAL YEARS k ' v , , , I r'ADi2r LEXIFORMS Of TURNISHIM fi it AND Act'1zSSoRii2S UNUPORMS 'ro 1' SWORDS s'rnDizN1's or 'rniz BELTS UNIYIERSITY or PENNQNNTS WISCONSIN Iffffgws Lodge Supplies for all Secret Societies. g . A . I ' , - 1, RINCETUN A I . , I ' i - ' 'CI 1: E? Write us for special Belt- Bargains l PETTIBQ B' l R. S. King T. 0. Helleckson W est Side Garage l . . Storage-Tires-Repairs 617 University Ave., Phone Badger 7090 llwladison, Vlfisconsin. I. I 5 F LAUNDRY All work done neatly- with quick service CALL BAD GER +000 tate Street Leader Dry Goods and VVomen's Apparel Your most Convenient Store Next to Co--op Corner State and Gilman Madison, XVisConsin Pugf' Siu' llulr1I1'f'1ll1rlrl Tl The Big Season is Almost Here! Don't delay another minute, get lined up with the famous CCWII- son line of athletlc goods. Thea y0a'll be ready for the int games. Let us show you our new line of BASEBALL, GOLF, TENNIS and GYM EQUIPMENT. THE HUB A complete line -of athleiic equipment aofw 071 display. Polly of the Foll ,, Badger 1046 Coal - Coke - Wood STRUCK 81 IRWIN FUEL CO MADISON KOHLER or KOHLER The widespread and increasing demand for Kohler products reflects a public confidence based upon forty-nine years of adherence to the highest standards in manufacturing and merchandising. Kohler Enameled Plumbing VVare has a Widespread reputation for beauty, utility and durability. Kohler Automatic Power and Light, produced in the same great factory, furnishes to farms and to all isolated places an ellicient, reliable and economical means of generating standard 110 volt current automatically and without storage batteries. Information regarding Kohler products is gladly sent to all who are interested. KOHLER CO., FOQZQED KOHLER, WIS. SHIPPING POINT: SHIEIBOYG.-xN, XXIIS., and Seventeen American Branches. PRINTERS OF EVERY HING From the smallest card or circular to zflze largest lzoola or catalog Democrat Printing Company Madison, Wisconsin ll4-124 South Carroll Street Phones :- Badgef 486-487 Page Sis- II I I I 1' c' Carl Russel Fish: Now, you have that in your head, you have it all in a nut- shell? He: Here comes the young parsong I wonder if he means to join us? f i 1' THE FISHEL BROTHERS QBENNIE AND ART IEJ alt seems Funny that a watch keeps so dryf' Yeh, when it's got a running spring inside. Sam: Don't you think that Olive has the most inistrusting eyes?,, Hill: 'tYes. they're always watching one another? She: 'tVVouldn,t it be nicer to propose first? il' f if Mrs. C: I hope that young man never kisses you by surprise? Marion: 4'No, he only thinks he does? 5 I Autowash Your Auto HAVE YOUR AUTGMOBILE VVASHED AUTOWASH COMPANY Open Day and Night 644 STATE ST. ecreailblz 6' Rebesbmenis Opposite lllinois Central Depot Fairchild 1328 l Mirneographing Multigraphing Job Printing Complete Direct Mail Advertising Service Let us give you the benetit of our experience by helping you plan y o u r n e X t advertising campaign. Wiscyonsin Advertising Company Phone B-5128 Llth Floor Pioneer Building .filfter Atiguit I, 1922-7th Floor Bamfr Bzzildzizg gc Sm: Hu cl danrlS1:rt - - l KEHL,S School for Dancmg Thi! Qflglllal 3-s N, PINCKNEY sr. N N Satisfaction g1121l'E1I1tCCCl or money refunded. Cl Sffflkj fH7.d Qhop-f private lessons. Lady or gentleman t ler. W h I toH dance, to lead, to follow VM: kno 1 - - v y x urty- ve years expemence. King and Webbler Streets Prior. F. W. KEHL MRS. KEHI LEO KEHL Q Phones:-Studio F-561i-Resicl I3 1770 ZGHEQGCHW VJWCUCIWPS fe. When in trouble or need of repair Call Badger 450 and We'll be right there VVe also carry zz complete line of first class A .I A X T I R E S A C C E S S O RI E S WISCONSIN AUTO SERVICE COMPANY Ed. Iungman GUS. T0rgCSOf1 NZUUCH TOTQCQOU IXIADISON, VVISCONSIN INIRS. B. IOACHIIVFS CANIELS DELICIOUS HOME MADE CANDIES QUILLEN a DREWS 507 State Street What you Want when you get Smitlfg FLOWER Shop a hair cut and shave CUT FLQWERS you get at . DESIGNS 1 - TED PLANTS SINGERS BARBER Sr-rorf 1 PUT 1 ' u ' W e Delzver Careful work Rapid serwee I ' Phone B, 335 Sanitary methods U2 Mm Get lhe new music at HOOK BROS, I SIIIIJY Mrs. Langley Cat Kappa Delta Housejz Mabel, I Wish you Wouldnit stand outside with your beauxfi Mabel B.: Why, I was only there for a second. Mrs. L.: Is that all? I really thought I heard a third or fourth? OUR IDEA or Goon ADVERTISING Fordovvner fWlio has lost his carb Insert- ed the following: Elizabeth come homeg all is forgiven. Proud father: Here's my son Walt, just honie from college.-Wliich side of the house do you think he resembles 'Pi ALSTED-KASTEN CO. MILVVAUKEE, WISCONSIN I-I. P. Alsted C. I. Kasten G. E. G. Kuechle Fine Jewelry Artistic Silfver Smtionery FmZe1'nz'Zy Pins imuuyMAUTzs FIRST CLASS SMOKES and BILLIARD TABLES Phone Badger 3160 823 University Avenue 'I ge Sim Hundred and Eight axjden vxllzz On ffze Square Above American Restaurant Dollar Chicken Dinner Special Sunday Dinner I2 to 9 P. M. For Reservations Call F. 966. F. G. OETKING, Ma1zager. T is not hard to find a store which sells clothes. The thing that is hard to find, is a store which deals in clothes combining the best features of style and quality, and Whose prices are Within your means. Wilsoii-Bisho-p clothes insure you of that ease of mind which a finished per- sonal appearance gives, and make you confident that you are Wearing the hest clothing there is. VVILSUN-BISHOP CO. Tower Building, 6 No. Michigan Ave., CHICAGO 9 . . H I Unlverslty The ome of STYLE, VALUE and SERVICE Pharmacy Wm Corner State and Lake Streets I The Very newest Fashions in outer Apparel for the DRUGS, Miss are shown IMPORTED PERFUMES hrst at our store. and Highest Quality Garments at moderate pricings. STUDENT SUPPLIES egywgkg-5 , PARSONS CLOAK 81 SUIT COMPANY 121 State Street T I PI B 40 XI. O. Birk, Jldlltlgfli I ' A Pittsburg young Iady named Kitty Kopp Meat Market Once hopped on a train for the city. 924 Atwfyod Avenue The train hopped the track, Phone 9362 And sprained the Gi1'1's back, I She,s hopping mad nowg what a pity S HINE S HAVE I S HAMPOO UPREME TUDENT ERVICE WHEN YOU THINK OP AUTOMOBILES YOU THINK OF ROLLS ROYCE WHEN YOU THINK OF BARBERS THINK OP RUNKEL'S BARBER SI-IOP 616 STATE ST. JOHN RUNKEL, Prop. Six Hundred and Ten Ii F f 0 V 041 RYIO TEURIZED Q. J E QU-Q? L Dol' , html? 7715 P43 293 Vue-' Aswan 9 I l- - i. C-0 Nb .- 5 2 lo, 1 'nu'-. 'PQQ S -new -A. ae Ish, . The Fountain of Youth Ponce De Leon sailed across un- charted seas-strong in the faith that he could find in the vvilds of Florida a fabled Fountain of Youth, a foun- tain that Would renew his youth, and give him life and strength and vigor. He failed, but- Nlany a modern Ponce De Leon has found his Fountain of Youth in the greatest of all foods-BULK. Milk, the only food for young chil- dren. Milk, the necessary food for growing children. 1VIilk, the essen- tial food for adults Who Wish to keep their bodies young and to retain the vigor of more youthful years. Drink more pure, perfectly pasteur- ized milk and liberally use other dairy products. Ask for Kennedy Dairy Companyls Cottage cheese, Fancy Creamery Butter and VELVET Ice Cream. Kennedy Dairy Co. Distributors of perfectly pasteurizecl milk. Sole manufzicturers of Velvet Ice Cream. MADISON, Wis. ree CREAM PLANT MILK PLANT 629 W. Wash. Ave. 618 University Ave. Badger 2751 Badger 7100 riginal A om ef ' n f is- X 'ln leg l---l-'l- ltr, misq' , ' . CREAM Egg W F mmm l h N W ,Q uv Q wi-NKQG R91 2,m19U,,, P7451 3 l I 1 1 i vi-r Or,-.yllgm -. , i'3-Eau'- F J Q05 ' 41-if wi Q 1 We Nr-..,,,, 1959 Y 'mu Cn yi -2'i :3 or Page Siu: Ilunzlrrd and In THE CUMFORT Steak and Oyster House SI-ICP For Men and Women Marcels, Shampoos, Chiropo- cly, Face massage, and electrlc needle Work. Ben Stitgen, Proprietor W e aim Z0 satisfy our trade. Telephone Feeeehlld 922 209 Wisconsin Life Bldg., Madison. Meeleem Weeeeeele' GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Eyes Examinerl-Lenses Ground The Latest and Most Artistic IN THE GIFT LINE DIETRICH-DENU Always Found at 4 THE UNIQUE SHOP OPTICAL SPECIALISTS 130 State Street, Madison, Wisconsin M d . VVis. Pioneer Block-Next to O ph Theresa Mae Hat Shop Two-twenty-three State Street All That is Distinctive and Exclusive in Millinery for the College Girl Telephone Badger 2063 1 :g:g:f::::::::e,-1:1::. z H1 Q 1 Gas Appliances A -'l 1- 3 1 - - fi f iff -f-f 'l 'e 'eff ::': ieI S .:.: f i :Iif i B B CADUGTZPW Yellow Cab . . . X Always mzereszed za zts R A N G E S patrons, comfort E CONNECTED :sg Bad ger FREE W m. Schwoegler Yellow Cab Sc Transfer Co. 315 stare sr. Tel. B173 W HAUL TRUNKS AND BAGGAGE fIAfter July 1 will be at 490 sate I g Six Hundred cl T Z MAIN PLANT GENERAL ELECTRIC coMPANv Us ,. . J M, scHENEgrAnYN.vg A Gateway to Progress There it stands-a simple forty-foot gateway but unlike any other in the entire world. Through it have come many of the engineering ideas that have made this an electrical America. The story of electrical development begins in the Research Laboratories. Here the ruling spirit is one of knowledge-truth- rather than immediate practical results. In this manner are established new theories- tools for future use-which sooner or later find ready application. The great industries that cluster around Niagara Falls, the electrically driven battle- ships, the trolley cars and electrified railways that carry millions, the lamps that glow in homes and streets, the household conven- iences that have relieved women of drudgery, the labor-saving electrical tools of factories, all owe their existence, partly at least, to the co-ordinated efforts of the thousands who daily stream through this gateway. e al lectric General Oflice Q Q H1 p any Scheifriegtady, Qs-486-c Pave Six Hundred and Thirl Q X 4 is-'ww t Life,s Little Tragedies. Some of the difficulties overcome hy THE BADGER STUDIO in taking our 1923 Badger photographs. Good ailor for College Men That's what I am-a good tailor for college men 3 which means a good tailor for all men. I find that college men know what they Wallt, pretty dehnitelyg and that's what they wont. I give it to them, they say sog VVisconsin, Michigan, Princeton, Yale, Harvard, men say so. Pfheh yozfre in Chicago FII hegloaf to ree you, and look my thingy ofoer with you. Suits at 5565, 375, 390, made right. . . oiiey I I5 South Dearborn Street, Chicago I S H Il dl I Chocolates 25 Genuine Photographs 256 Twenty-live photographs, size I M XZM in a A carton ready for mailing, of the University of Vlfisconsin g also all principal cities and points of interest. The Grogan Photo System, Inc. 522 Reed St. Milwaukee, Wis. One Collegian to the other: CHQ Rexford CLOTHING 7th 25 E. Jackson Blvd. Kimball andrea? and Szrteen. Where do you 'buy your clothes? RUS: Kelder FOR MEN i Floor Building Chicago, Ill Page Six Hundred Edithh'cThere,s something funny about Elizabeth lately. Kate-- Yes, I understand they are to be married. t Q X Alice:- 3So, he has your ring. Does he love you much ? Helen 2-g'Yes. Every time we're alonefi ' -nr if af THEY ARE ABOLISHING ONE PIECE BATHING SUITS. ONE FROM ONE LEAVES NOTHING. ' DANCING MAY BE A VVASTE OF TIME, BUT SOME MEN SEEM TO SQUEEZE A GOOD DEAL OF PLEASURE OUT OF IT. i i it Prof. z- YVhat do you think of Political parties? Stude:-4'Don,t know, I never attended anyf' i uSleep Tightj' said the Benevolent One as he put the drunlgen man to bed. Otto I-larloff Karl Loprich Harloff- Loprich Electric Co. Contracting and Electrical Supplies Corner State and Francis Streets hladison, YViscor1sin Largest F ireproof Garage in Madison Capacity 200 Cars-Individual Stalls General R6j56lZ.7'Z-HQ' at Reasonable Rates in most modernly equzfbpeci shop. Full line of tires and storage batteries ACCESSORIES OF ALL KINDS Complete gas and oil filling station Our serfuice will impress you. This is the f1pa1'tm.e111f house for azufofsrzobiles. Purcell - Wischan Company 436-440 West Gilman Street 531 State Street Phone: Badger 7544 I J Six Hundred and Eiglzlfeen Furniture Reflects Personality Homes that are remembered be- cause of the beautiful and com- fortable furniture in them reflect the personality of those living in them. Furniture of this character changes a house into a home. Well informed readers buy such furniture because their tastes are rehned and because they know its possession is a perma- nent one. Frautschifs Furniture reflects personality, and inspiration is easily derived from its showing. FRAUTSCHI- FURNITURE 213-219 King St. .1-X A x 2 2 A f lt' f A .Q ' 'WZ' a- iii , - ' '.- . is-' DQ X l ,' Q some -' -' 'i-., Little Cinderella says: Om' WORD is our BOND. O. M. NELSON 85 SON. INC. OLDEST - JEWELERS - NEVVEST 21 No. Pinckney If I couldnft get another set of PARAGON DRAWING IN- STRUMENTS, you couldn't buy these at any price.'7 Engineers and Draftsmen, with years of experience behind them, tell us this every day. The same thing is said about our SLIDE RULES, SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS, etc. Our name or trade mark on a Drawing Tool guarantees the Quality. Look for it when you buy again. KEUFFEL 81 ESSER CO. ZVEW YORK, 127 Fulton St. General Office and Faczfories, HOBOKEN, AT. f. CHICAGO ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO MONTREAL 516-20 S. Dearborn St. 817 Locust St. 30-34 Second St. 5 Notre Dame St. XV. Drawing Materials - Mathematical and Surveying Instruments Nleasuring Tapes I1S1l1I!1N1 LAWRENCE' UNCH We are always here Brand new Cafeteria upstairs Evidences of reversion to type around our Dave Mahoney fgoing to the Alpha Phi Jolly Old Campus are almost enough in formallz Taxi, how much is it to Irving themselves to weaken our faith in the Place?,, Bryan argument. i k i Taxi: HOne dollar and a half, sirf' Mutt: Say, Jeff, can I borrow your dress suit tonight? Jeff: Sure, but why the formality?,' Mutt: Well, I coi1ldn't find itf, Olivia Fentress: L'Oh, I wish the Lord had made me a man. Heinz Rubel: 'tHe did, and I'm the man. Dave: 'eHow much for the lady? Nothing, sir? Taxi: Dave: 4'Take the lady, Iill walk. i' -k i' In sport he called her a lemon, nice And said he'd be her squeezer Instead he felt like a lemon ice, And she was the lemon freezer. apital ity Meat Market A. G. Metzinger, Proprietor Wholesale and Retail Dealer in QUALITY MEATS Choice cuts of all meats Our specialty is HOME MADE SAUSAGES Phone Badger 2905 42l State Street Madison, Wisconsin gl! Six Hundred d T L 'Ol lil-ll! ui-I-un -lu: 5 Of Y l I I I I I . ----------.. ......... . , f . 1 s-,fffawlqlggfaal : ' I I I . 2 .-Tsffsfihff 's 41.-wtf-,-is Wsfqlsl-!!Xl' - n m y .QM i,5Nl,4 hi 5 'ig5f1- yn. .- .Y : u Liiiglry SUPREMACYA For the past fifteen years the Educa- tional Department of the Bureau of Engraving, Inc., has been collecting a vast fund of information from the ex- periences of hundreds of editors and managers of Annuals. This data covering organization, financ- ing, advertising, construction, selling and original features has been systematically tabulated and forms the subject matter for our series of reference books. These are furnished free to those securing Bureau co-operation in the making of engravings for their books. Begin Where others have left off. Profit by their experience and assure success for your Annual. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING, INC. , soo SOUTH FOURTH STREET MINNEAPOLIS 'C o UU - 1 , I College days, Varsity days, Days of real studyg Other days, Business days, Also days of study, VVhen you Want furniture for the room, the fraternity or sorority house, We will he pleased to have you visit our store. We shall he mighty glad to serve you. UP ON THE SQUARE Q War Quin euseus KBei'torCl,-Furniture Satisfaction m di59 'lH5m5i'1 Quality Guarzzzzteed ,, Service 7' V i X521 Z' , 'E g' T'X e . i f ' r Nj Ja: Q-lm'Dmm Did y'u go Alpha Den, Abie'? No, not yet? Cou1'te5y,' Our Motto . v J- -, Wzkcou5z'u W 271 Outfit Your Mz'fzd Kunteus Wil! Outjit Your Body The University of this great state is equipped to furnish you with a high and liberal education. Karstens is equipped to furnish you with your bodily needs in high quality clothing, furnishings, and shoes. With the aid of both, you are prepared to go out and meet The Ho1v1e of Frz'euo'ly S67 UZ.C'8,, the World. 22-2-l N. Carroll Street ge Siu' Hundred and Twenly-Two Your Linens will receive the magic touch, if left in our care. Try the A LFORD method and you will note with satisfaction how much longer your shirts, collars, and all linens will Wear. glue finest linens are not damaged by our methods of laun- ering, All worli requiring care is done by hand, insuring perfect satisfaction. C.ll Bzdg ' l72 andnlour ivagiiin will call promptly llladison, Wis. l I Roy Redin-WI-er-ah-um- Jeweler- Bring that tray of engage- KC -, .,, ment rings here, Harry? If ZZ 'Y new we have ff ' 4 4 4 ' ' M' ' s ' VVaiter, bring me S40 worth of ham and eggs H c We donut serve half portions sir? C D 1 oats, resses, r P Y Ixirjcihciioiismlinxy MORSELL Sc KEENEY Solicitors of Patents and Trade Marks 30 Years' Continuous Practice 803 Majestic Bldg. Milwaukee Phone Gr, 1404 VVOLDENBERCYS 1 cLoAK CORNQER WY: appreciate your patronage and-are ever ready - ' to adiust any purchase to your sat1sfact1on.SERVICE 1X,IlHhn at Pinckney Street THURINGER-GARBUTT CO. 430 STATE ST. Pllfll' Sfgr Illlnllrfrl rznrl 7'uvr'nl ll A little music shop devoted to the creed of only the finest merchandise -service, unusual in character-a friendly place to buy Victrolas- Brunswicks-Vega banjos-King saxaphones-popular music. UNIVERSITY MUSIC SHOP, INC. At SII State St, Phone -Badger 7272. First Sweet Young Thing-Dick proposed four times before I accepted him. t'VVhen Reggie proposed to you, did he Second Ditto-To whom, dear? get down on his kI166S?,, ' ' ' I should say not? Junior- VVhat made you vote against Wliy didn't he?,' Jones in the Frat election ?5' 'iVVel1--er, probably because they were Senior- Oh, he'll never amount to any- Occupied at the time? thing around school,-all he does is study. MT DID YOU EAT A BROWN BETTY FOR A NICKEL? Schubert Candy Co. CANDIES OF ALL KINDS Madison, Wisconsin PLEASURE TIME CHOCOLATES P ge Six Hundred and Twenty-Four The Cover of this annual is a product of THE DAVID J., LLOY C . C'7'6ClZ'O7'5 and Ma1z1,LfacZu1'e1'5 of BOOK AND CATALOG COVERS specializing in college and high sehoolanuual covers. 2857 NoRTH VVESTERN AVENUE Send for Samples CH1CAGo, ILL1NoIs CVoice over the tele- phone?- He1lo, is that you dear?,' Marge Boeseh: g'Yes, who is speaking?,' W1 2 -. 229 ' E5 V - . -, Ss f V ff. ' WVVVQ ESQ? S A 5 . if ' . , .4-:.,:-fa' ,QV Vw' n vw f-'N 1 ,K ' ,V ,mf 'E --E--V-MVA--Mwmfxf W... 5 ' S 3 ., L:' iwazff1g,.?viMfsV:M V 'Mt a I . , ,N , V , ,.QM.N,,,,,,,,,,,,.V,n ,W,,,W3 1, V: . .' , ::' ,f -wtf'-f --12.5 V V ,V 5, 4 .sV ,g,- , A ,. llv . - -3 , .t - -E, .-.-z Y',V f f .V , J ' :Vg ,V Y ,M ,Wg 5. -Qq,,i.5V - ,ffm f .V V V -V ,E-K V V . V' - I+ M .V , . , , ' .4 V f t'?i,E 4. V ' . . ' ' ' A V f 2. V ' 'ff ' .x,:c. L. ..:, X guy, H ,M ,,., . .4 .,,..:. Vw l,. .4 V VVV 1'.,V 'Ae' .Ve1EV:E,V -- .V -Veh VVuV VVVV VVVV V,VEVV4 V VVVVVVV -VVVVVVVVV VVVV W' ' ' W .- Y' - QW? V,-fV-Vg-nv .ffmVw.-V'1-W2:?Q,6fQ4,pQgp:Vf3' 414 ,- 5 ---- y ' I ,Q ,ferry X Qa- ,- ' LSF FW - . 1 - 2 12 2 2 my ..... -:r:r-::':-.j.'g -P+'-'1-211:25-,:2:5:Vf:j:zjszfzw. 1 -. -J All Alpha Chi Swimout Geier's 428 State Street THE STORE EOR MENV Offers Quality and Service Throughout the Year Pagr Sir-Hundred and Turcnly-F' i LA Y T O N soHooL or ART INDUSTRIAL DESIGN COMMERCIAL ART INTERIOR DECORATION COSTUME DESIGN ILLUSTRATION NORMAL ART SCULPTUR E C. R. Partridge, Director 1 MILWAUKEE p 158 hlason Street The most modern ball room in WISCOHSID is the Cameo Room in the Beaver Insurance Buildlng Next to the Orpheum Thompson Orchestras are ava1IabIe for all parties. Phones: Badger 2020 Badger 2021 HOTEL ASSOCIATIUN Milwaukee, Wisconsin 'Why do the Phi Gains have so many fOI'1l1211S'?,, They like to wear their other suits Company once 111 awhile. W I Qmzlzzfy Supreme SCHMITZ BROS. Practical Plumbers ' . Estimates Cheerfully Furnished. D lefs in Dzmgler and Monarch Gas Ste B S86 11 State St t Ma 1' XX il ' E r bhshed 1897 Phone: 139 139 SINAIKQ BRQS. MADISQN' WIS- FUEL 1 .. ---W - , P1S1IdllllS BERNARDS BOAFF LlN p On Lake Mendota W' P- Bernard Public Launches to Bernard's Park around the lake. Large Dancing Pavilion in connection. Paddling Canoes and Row Boats. Launches for Private Parties. Ice boats-in season. Phone Badger 373 624 E. Gorham St. - MADISON, VVISCONSIN. Pair O'Dice Lost BAILLIE - HEDQUlST CO. The Neckwear Irlouse of AILZCZZ-.S'07'l. Men Guthtters We have everything a man needs in Wearing apparel Buying Quality Merchandise assures durability and satisfaction. Eh'JYEC7Cl'VEARH0L1J5.fJ10.Dl506'- fl S H d ed and Twenty-Eight aillie Hedqaisfev Scholtz fln Man and Nature Coursejr VVhat animal makes the nearest ap- proach to man ?,' W Stude: 'LThe Cootief' fix She: lsn't it rather hard to eat soup through a mustache? He: c'VVell, it is quite a strain? shiner, as he shoved off for the Bootleg- gers' convention. KEELEY-NECKERMAN l HARRY S. hl.XNCl'lESTER F or Fair it Graduates K ' .A 1 p ' Frocks as fresh all i s and dainty Q as May flowers, ' accessories that nf , --f ', a d d smartness, at distinctive chap- eaux-all are here to make gradua- tion days happy. QW 2 ei pg ' f 5 X X an l' .Tp N X M 462 sewn ' -9' -5 C K0 w 'You'll keep still tonightf, said the Moon- L I V A 't ntft nt t Parkway I . I Q hVC1 Popular Theatre K MA ISONS PHOTOPLAYTHEATRE L E l Formerly the Fuller Opera House. S I 44NeVCf - I x Puffs SPECIAL MOTION PICTURE EVCTY Night- AFTERNQQNS PRODUCTIONS 7215 YO 9100 2 to 5 , EVENINGS and Mfmees- 7 to H Wed. Sat. 81 Sun. LEGITIMATE Seats Reserved for CONTINUUUS ATTRACTIONS All Perforfvtaftcex Saturday - Sunday I at Holidays The ' THE BEST 2 to II THEATER BEAUTIFUL IN VAUDEVILLE Synonyfvt for- GOOD FOOD GOOD SERVICE CLEAN DISHES VARIETY College Refectory 672 State St. Right off State Street COLLEGE TAILORS The Student's Tailors VV. Johnson Street. General Paper and Supply Company MANUFAC TURERS OF Tay - Cho - Pera School Pads and Papers Betty VVadmond: c'XVhere can I get a T. N. E. Pin? Marion Se Cheverell: That's easy,- Get a Date with a 'lDel'c. Ladies Auxiliary-T. N. E. - 2 Vb, u it ,O EX ll I ll l lm. ltllllt A L s ' ' f f 'SVA . rrar eerrrf Q ,.a1.f THE FRANKLIN The easiest riding and most economical car. Buying a car is buying transportation, nothing else. First consideration is comfort of transportation, second is economy. The economy of the Franklin car has long been established by owners' records. 20 miles per gallon of gasoline-12,500 miles per set of tires. QNationa1 Averageq A ride of 50 miles or more and you will say that this is the easiest car you ever rode in. Let us give you this demonstration. RITTER AUTOMOBILE COMPANY Telephone B. 347 222 N. Henry St. Madison, Wis. ge Six Huni I d Th ly AMERICAN ICE CREAM COMPANY H. A. HASS, Proprietor. Wlrolesale and Retail Manufacturers of FANCY ICE CREAMS ICES, SHERBETS, ETC. THE CREAM OP CREAMS Telephone: 1821-1822 525-527 University Avenue. Madison, 'Wisconsin J. B. DRIVES FUEL COMPANY ooAL H- Wooo me Coma and BUILDING MATERIAL 303 S. Patterson St. Phone Badger 628 THE BADGER S T A T Z E PAINT AND PAPER CG. The Ag. College Book Store Picture Fmmmg, Glazing and D ecor ating Ulmer-Sify Avenue d 11 Qt 1 Badger 77 308 State St. I 'ix Hundred and Thir 21 13011 ent 2111 Wnmg OIUPHHY Z Madison, Wlisconsin 471' Manufacturer of Pe ll' 'e Vfffl' 33: fA1 ' ' , Q 4 5 sixxx 'f ii' M Wh I T 'T ' if ..i. -1 , Tents Awnin s Fla s and Auto Tents '. -. ,fl,w,,Iif i? LifiY f111'-1.1 -FV'-1 a' 1' I -,ge m 7 7 , - if KARL KROFF 5fC1'efa1'Y -r ' ' ' Q Phone B. 663 Life is just one - Mistress: Are you married T' Bridget: t'No,1n, I humped into a door. Prof: '6Miss Rockwell, why arentt you taking n0tes?', I Katey: My father took this course once. Beautiful, Original cmd Exclzuizve aswell Furniture Will always be recognized by those Who appreciate the best. When you purchase furniture such as vve are shovving, you are giving to your home distinction and individ- uality at a cost no greater than is ask- ed for the ordinary. Our display is unusually large, and We cordially invite you to come in and inspect this beauty in better fur- niture, and again impress upon you the elimination of any obligation on your part to buy. HASWELL FURNITURE COMPANY f The Hovne of Good Furniture I-Iaswell Block 117-119 STATE STREET You'll Never Have a Truer Friend In college or out in the World than a SUIT or OVERCOAT Carrying the label of HART, -SCHAFFNER and MARX Qualify, Style and Value are sewn into every seam Q OLSON Sl VEERHUSEN Co. The home of Hart, 'Schaflner ik llflarx Clothes. 7-9 North Pinckney Street MADISON, W1scoNsiN P q Six Hundred and Tlzirly-Two Q0 0 I 00 X I I ' H60 ..'6:: 'QQESQ-GQ ':i1 5 Q5 'im . ' ' WX Q. -.ag Z U! .f G 'dt f Q i W 'ca' 'G5 t J j ti 59' '64 M' W GJ X if G' GG i i W G Our representative visits Madison four times each year. ' 7759 Meng Sfop Dockstader 64 Sandberg H6 SOUTH MICHIGAN BOULEVAFZD 4 X Ch1CS o DEVOE ART MATERIAL VW ! V QXCAN p 0 Nm ta 0 AGENTS Foil DEVOE PAINTS 5 4' S' f Q 415 State Street ' Badger 1186 Wladlson XVISCOHSIH . 4, 1 Q s ' 27 0 gl if is 5' 1142 ii Ig I ...7 FRED KLEIN COMPANY .,y, wing x Lives of Football Men remind us YVe can write our names in blood, And, departing, leave behind us, Half our faces in the mud. Dick :-'tSee that girl over there? Sheas the girl I gave my frat pin to last June, but the engagement was broken OH? Bob-'tDid you get it back ?,, Dick-- Get it back ? YVhy, three months later she wrote me and asked if I wouldn't have the stones reset? Joan- My lips are all chapped. VVhat shall I do ZW Dorothy-t'Eat Onions. That will keep the chaps off your lipsf' ' WWW ' un 1111111 11 - O llllmlll ii i If a man is easilv satished in the matter of clothes, there are a number of good makes for him to choose from. But if he is more exacting than the average and desires the uncommonly fine in style, tit, fabric and workmanship, he will sooner or later come to Sfmzyfom' Clothes Sold in Madison by -16? Specialists in Apparel for lvlen ff Boys 27 NORTH PINCKNEY STREET P ge Six Hundred and Thirly-Four YVHGLESONIE, APPETIZING PQOD Cooked Right Rezlsonzlble Prices University Y Cafeteria JENSEN'S BOOT SHOP QUALITY FOOTWEAR 614 State Street Qui' especial aim is to properly serve the STUDENT 521 State Street Fairchild 422 J. C. SCHMITT Waffle Shop 111-l W. Dayton St. We Cater to Students. For SMART, DISTINCTIVE u Footwear OrZhopeo'z'eez!!y Correct Coll on BLIND 51 SANDER 217 State Street Marinello Shop SoCCia1tieSr Facial, Perma- ? nent Vlfaving. 2., Marcelling and Manicuring .2 MRS. W. WENGEL Phone P 79 225 State Street The Universal Grocery . Co. 9-Stores in Madison-9 We Izifoe and let live 412 State Street 817 University Ave. 1701 Monroe Street 405 Atwood Ave. Spiek and Span says, Give Ford 81 Nyberg ez elzemee on serfoiee and q1,Lol1'fy. A I342 Mound Street FQRD 901 E. Alohnson Street and I354 Williamson Street 109 S. Webster Street NYBERG 2104 E. Washington Avenue Press Shop We sell for less Our goods ore best. 409 N' Francis B - 4493 I 9'Il1cI 1l'l'l lf Jewelry That Is Apprecz'aZeo , A A. E. Larnboley THE JEWELER 220 State Street Madison, Wisconsin You can dress better for less Ili DUFI-iY'S Q . VV'e carry a complete line of DIAMONDS Women's Wear WATCHES CUT GLASS STLVERWARE Etc. Q M. A. DUFFY Rilillinery and Woinen's VVear FINE ENGRAVING and WATCH Telephone Badger 2377 REPAIRING 324 State Street Expertly Done BOYD'S ORCHESTRAS Recognized for I EXCELLENCE and RELIABILITY Q Tailor Made Music to Fit the Occasion. GLOBE BAKING CC. Specializing in Fine breads, cakes, and pastries for sorority and fraternity tables. 219-23 East Blain St. Fairchild 533 The Cardinal Pharmacy The new drug store at University Avenue and Park Street Ice-Creams, Sodas and Cool Beverages TRY ONE O11 Your Way H07'7'l8 from Class I P SHlrlll'llS' Quizilidv Svrvice :ind Salisfzlvlion i D , 'swf 1 . . A., i 0 C JxlccI'I.II':L'ICC l' 1TRUI'1'Sy Mcinlzc-1' Anieriean Institute Of Architects SCllOll?-f!'XC7.lKlCil'lllCS-IHSlZit1lflOllS Pliunc 1163-lllivl -534 Slate Sl.. Ai-illllSO1l. Nliis. 36 Tcnncy Block, Nlaclismn fi eee-A ee A - :I n a A W A Y N . N i . , . E Q CJ1 - C,1 QOH i Cmiiplinicxits of Rii.xL'l'O1zs ' Iiginlc uf Xliscunsm Uiuhlnig Muclismi. XYiN. Park Hotel Special ,Htteniion io Dinner Dances Exclusive GOWns ease STREET DRESSES EVENING WRAPS AFTERNOON PROCKS EVENING GOWNS Q-5945229 Miss Hetty Minch 226 State Street MADISON, WISCONSIN Badger 3029 MCKILLOP ART COMPANY AND PORTRAIT SHOP Sll211Tl1DOOl11tQ' Facial Massage Scalp Treatments Manieuring RAIN-XNATER SHAMPOOING U.W. POWDER PUPP SHOP Anna B. Scholz Phone Badger l9l3 219 N. Bassett St. MADISON, XVIS. KLUETER 81 COMPANY WHOLESALE GROCERS Madison, Wisconsin Page Siz fI1lI1dl'6liILfld Tfzirlp 9 What is the KCCO-QP . HAT is one of the first questions that the new student will ask upon arriving at Madison. Feeling that a great many future students will read the Badger, we 'are going to tell you in a brief way, what the CO - OP is. ' In 1892 a number of Alumni rented la small room and sold supplies to students at prices very much less than was being charged by the book stores. In 1894 the CO-QP was incorporated and has been do- ing business since, increasing the stock each year until now we have about everything that a student might need, in books, school supplies, furnishing goods, shoes, athletic goods, etc. To become a member of the Co-Op, and we advise every student to join as soon as they arrive, you pay 52.50 for a Life Membership and receive free a 5152.50 fountain pen. Each membership is numbered and on every purchase that you make you call your number. At the end of each year you get a rebate on all you have purchased during the year. For the year 1921 the rebate was 202. That gives you some idea of saving. i During the summer we are going to enlarge our store and by fall we will have a complete line of clothing. We are not at liberty to an- nounce the makers but we can say that we will have the finest line of young men's clothing in the country, and we hope you will wait until you arrive here to buy your clothing. Our prices will be as low or lower than any other store in the country, you will get your rebate at the end of the year-an additional saving and you will get clothes that are built for college men. That does not mean that they will be freak clothes but it means that they will be hnely tailored, of high quality and gerfecgly fitted. If you buy your clothes at the Co-Op. you will be well resse . The Co-Op is a students' store, no private capital, controlled by the Regents and Alumni, operated for the students. You will save money if when you reach Madison you ask two questions-VVhat is the CO- OP and where is it. University Co-Qperative Co. E. J. GRADY, MGR. 506-508 State St. Nfgdigon, ll I-Idd dThlF1Il PIPER'S TI-IE BIG GROCERY MARKET AND BAKERY Efveryifzing to ear under one V00 f Service - Quality - and Fair Dealing have built our business. so YEARS IN MACDISON - STILL cgj1oiNG STRONG PIPER'S - on the Square He-I know a man who stayed home with his wife every night for fifteen years. She-Thatis what I call devotion. He-No, it was paralysis. Mae-Is your burg a sporty town? Hughes-Sure is. YVhy, when the wind whistles, it whistles jazz. She was a Brainy girl And so every time He took her out They said he had A good head On his shoulders. Established 1854 CO KLI 81 SONS COMPANY Coal, Wood and Mendota Lake lee CEMENT, STUCCO, VVHITE LIME, HAIR 85 SEWER PIPE Main OPE1ce: 24 E. Mifflin St. MADISON, WISCONSIN Page Six Hundred a Ll fl I N Rugs of Quality as interpreted by the laeenest buyers MEANS NEW YORK STO RE The House of ez Thousfma' Love All Rugs SR T l 1 Th P ' . C HH TOTIUTH ,,4,. ,U ,? ,eef T ' A Abee . Alniost a family word for REAL satisfaction in 1- C L EAN ING PRESSING - 5 fis igjign 'E and Machinists, Mill and Railroad Supplies Brass, Copper, Bronze and Nickel Silver BESLY GRINDERS - BESLY TAPS The leading Engineering Colleges and Institutes have found Besly Quality and Service a Decisive factor. Charles H. Besly Sc Company. 118-124 N. Clinton St., Chicago, Ill. bug from Haw Use the phone, calling Badger II80 or 1598 and leave the suit or gown in the hall-the rest We will do-guaranteeing satisfac- tion. 533 State Street Next to lNfIorgz1n's. P ge Sim Hundred and Forty Palace of Sweets 20 No. Carroll Street MAD1soN's LEADING CONFECTIONERY See us for quality Candies and Punches If z'z s from the Pal., Ifs the BEST We carry a complete line of electrical supplies and appliances for the needs of students. Repair Work Promptly Done Schaub Bradford Electric Company 229 State Street, Phone Badger 5166 ge r:.fQv, . V - A-59:4 wry A 4 X .,., .. ..,, ,,.:.,.1,af - ' .1 Mez. . V :1'f3i1G?'E5F'3'f- :df-13132-I3 'f 'h!' ' 5? 7 Y 11' J: 3.1. 3 get-3f:.:f--a rf eff ,g ,A .,,.-M wafew V f Z 'M22'f':7Sk52 ,- f ., , ..-,,w,-aw V - H -V X 4 fff? ,.: 1 .. - ff -1 Bare Facts HIE No matter what the occasion there is a Sunshine Biscuit that will please. The uame assures you of supreme biscuit goodness. Sunshine Biscuits Every meal Every a'ay PgSHddlFl0 CUDAHY'S MARKET Agents for the famous brand of Peacock Ham, Bacon and Lard Dealers in choice Beef, Lamb, Pork, Muttorr Best Quality Sausages Wholesale hflarket for Fish and all kinds of Sea Food lll W. Mifflin Street Phone, Badger 920 - 921 ll Early Birds YVE come to you today for the thirty-second time. We are always at your elbow to serve you well and faithfully. Our goal is to im- prove upon these performances each year. The Menges Pharmacies TRI-DELT THEATRE CContinuous Vaurlevillej ORCHESTRA A-Symphony-Life is Dunn-Seholtz B-THE JAMES TWINS A Riot of Nonsense Absolutely No Dull Moments C-SCHLOSSER and COMPANY V In The Merry-Go-Round , CSon1ebody put hex on and forgot to take her offj . D-THE OH BRYAN GIRL ' ie ar in lau evi e KI'lDlgofXdllj in E-WISWELL-PERKY, LTD. CTl1E! Siamese fwmsj in Love's NVhir1pool,l F-RUTH JONES CHerselfJ CShe Rivals Irene Castlel in Va1nping Freddiel, fA delightfully clever farceJ Tl fl ll ie en ing wi surprise you. gilt Pays to Srnilen XVatcl1 for announc rent of Open House near future. CNVhen you can show 'em dimplesj When Planning Your ollege Annual We can help you in the selection of the paper best suited for your purpose. We specialize in paper for school annuals and other college publications and among our large line you will find just what you need. Lei us send you printed specimens 01' plain sheets for Zestzhg. tandard aper Com an Milwaukee ge Sim Hundred and Forly- Two 1855 CRANE SERVICE embraces more than 20,000 products, including all the plumbing requirements of bathroom, kitchen, pantry and laundry, valves, fittings and piping for heating, Ventilating and refrigeration systems, as Well as the most accurately designed steam specialties for the dependable operation of a modern industrial power plant. I ---CRANE co.--- 836 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago 1922 Branches in 70 leading cities Works-Chicago and Bridgeport ' Page SLR llulzrfrfd Und Foil- Il H GAMM JEWELRY 1 lille Zfffiffriif TSI bfymfffflrefafly appearance. .QUALITY FIRST, I Brown Boot Shop, 224 State St. e S A encv 3100111 Q 1 PADGER BARBER SHOP NVholesale Distributor of I . NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES 716 University Ave. Theodore Matrange 102'King Street Phone Badger 1121 Madison Wis- I'm just too mean to cry. ' u Where do We eat? Frank,S Alexander Restaurant KOYHIUUSCT H Why? Cornpa y PriCeS and Service are right. 6th Floor LOUIS W. WALDORF, First National Bank Building ge Si 0: Hundred and Forlw'-Four All the latest song and dance records HOOK BB OS. ,X Y, Readycliiiloreci CLOTHES for Gentlemen PON the leading cam- puses east and west, Ogilvie SL Heneage N ' clothing and furnish- ings have for years contrib- uted materially to the college man's reputation for good dress. Year in, year out, We en- joy the patronage of those to whom style and quality is everythingg and of those who look Well to every dollar'sworth We are always happy, upon wired or written instructions, to make hotel, theatre or cafe reservations for out of town men omas Ei Eeneage FORMERLY QGILVIE E5 HENEAGE 'Dine CLOTHING -'Ufne FURNIS Hmcs Uine HATS twwcnfy EAST jfxcxs ON Boulevard C H ICACO Telephone: Badger 5319 DR. I. E. SCHEURELL DENTIST 672 STATE STREET Victor S. lN'1aurseth Optical Specialist 521 State St. I Heinz: 4'XVhat is the shape of a kiss?7' Polly: NI donut know? Heinz: Oh, give me one, and We'11 call it squaref' i 1 .i PARK HOTEL SHOW much is my bi11?', 4'What I'OO111?7, I slept on the billard table? Sixty cents an hour. Sane the Surface ' ana' yon sane ALL Wilhelm Brothers HERBERT XVILHELM Phone 2883 CHARLES M. XVILHELM Phone 238-F PAINTERS and DECORATORS 411 W. Gilman St., Bladison, Wisconsin Paper hanging ana' Interior Finishing Oni' Specialty Call on as for the Best in Quality and S enaice We cover your Work with Satisfaction 510 Six I'Ill ci d and Forlv-Six RAMSAY LAND CO. LANDS Madison, Wisconsin ITS RIGHT IF I WRITE IT Ferdinand I. Gauer Representing METROPOLITAN LIFE Room 200 Gay Bldg.. INSURANCE CO. of New York. MADISON, VVIS. Office Phone B. 7516 Res. Phone B5832 The Daily Cardinal Steiff The Best Place to Shop Direct serfvice fzcfifn sectional inarkefs NORTH EAST Frank Bros. WEST SOUTH 111621115 AN INVITINC PRODUCT at El. LOW PRICE 609-611 University Aye. Phones: B-5335, B-2689, B-71 If itis to be had-we have it. Maw - Olson Dry Goods Co. A More that .vatisfes customers. The house of Munsing Wear Black Cat Hosiery Thon1son's Corsets and other Standard Merchandise Everything in Women's wear. H ILMAN BAKERY 121 East Main Street Badger 1109 s t a dr X . 1 I I' : -' . -' ff . , -' ff .. f I s FFOJTI Z. 1 E 5 If 5 ' f ' ? .- -4 rdd r t 1 C 4 Bair F ' 5. Z 0 f QRS QQQQQ gag 1 dfwlssmefi W 12'i :fora I vgavsr ng v -.- N o lf' 8 ff? es? ' lift S than 9 91229922 lrr or 9 , ut 1 ? T, 52 , r r ' Aw ! ' ' f - ' ,,!- Z ' 4 ,. , rm. .,,, 4 2 ' 3 2? Page Sim llundrel cl I I Sc 6 WEHRMANNS TRUNKS. SL'I'I'C.-XSES, AND LEATHER GOODS Largest Stock in Southern Wisconsin E lusive Agents for Hartmann and Indestructo Trunks 116 KING ST. MADISON, WIS. SUTTER PLUMBING CO. Plumbing and Gas Fitting 103 NORTH HAMILTON STREET Phone Fairchild 450 Sumner 81 Cramton, Druggists I-Ioyler's, Johnson's and Funke's Candies 670 State Street, MADISON, VVISCONSIN. Fresh Log Cabin Bread Wlhets Your Appetite Log Cabin Baking Company 507 University Avenue. Badger 1875 Come to The Do Nut Shop for . WAFFLES WHEAT CAKES and WHOLESOME HOME LUNCHES Served at any time from 7 A. M. to 12 P. M. Phone Badger 5150 422 State Street g Six Hundred and ForL,v'Eiyhl 1 Pt. CRUSOE - Home was never like this. Cut Your Fraternity Bills Thru The Warner System of Fraternity Management Allow us to reduce your bills and decrease your chapter labor thru concentrated purchases, cash discounts, and accurate records. Regbreyefzted in: University of Minnesota University of Chicago Rush Medical College University of Illinois University of Michigan Northwestern University University of Wisconsin 642 State Street Nladison, WVisconsin MGSER SHORTHAND COLLEGE . Special ' f Three Months C ottrse Gpen to University l Graduates or l Undergraduates BULLETIN ON REQUEST I I6 S. Michigan Av. Twelfth Floor Randolph 4347 .V cnrcfxoo I- High School I - Graduates ONLY ' are Enrolled REPRESENTED IN MADISON BY ENDRES ELECTRIC CO Chas. Polacheek 81 Bro. Co. MANUFACTURERS GIF' LIGHTING FIXTURES 217 81 219 Third St. Estimates cheerfully fttrhislzed MILWAUKEE, WIS. I llflrs. F. lVl. Scott Nlrs. F. Kinney e THE MADISON R' E' Buser BEAUTY SHOP Dfffllff' W MARCELLING A SPECIALTY Staple Md FQHCY Gf0Cf'3TiCS llflanicuring, Shampoo, Facials, Q Scalp Treatments Goods D6Z'L'ZJr?7'66i P7'O1'l'LpZZy Phone Fairchild lO05 i 3Cl2 State Street Phone 1016 1337 University Ave Madison, Wisconsin TESTIMONIAL Dear Doc: I had a wart on the back of my neck. After taking two or three doses of your patent medicine, the wart moved around to the front of my neck, and I now use it for a collar button. Yours gratefully, DAVE MAHONEY The Home of Fine Printing M0 110f5'Pf A m i l f P1-my Roo m 'M X ,ki 'J 'ji P 111103 ,yll1 .i.1 if nvyzm-A-, fl'v5?l1IY-, . r, get -f-snip -B , d ,- , -,'- - 1,5113 ,.g lgtga '--19.311-3,1 'LIZ' FIX ,alillsa ., .. .... - Nfw TWH . . . '--' .aifgiiiistimus Q- H3331 , v On EWU' , T C' HJ H fpffffffl f 017 1' 2l'R l Adu T T T X S. ,.., . . ..,.,1 .-. ai D Cantwell Printing Company 121-125 SOUTH PlNCKNEY STREET, Bill-XDlSON, TVISCONSIN Buescher Saxaphones and Ludwig Drums at HO OK BROS. gc Sim Hundred arz1IFil'ly Luncheon Punch The Chocolate Shop ffffow of my H01 Fudgd' Home Made Candiesfznaf Ice Cream Chocolate Favors l I I I 53254 STATE IVIADISQIX Established 1867 E THE VILTER MANUFACTURING CO. Builders of ICE MAKING AND REFRIGERATING MACHINERY CORLISS AND PGPPET VALVE ENGINES Q35 Clinton Street Hlilwazzkee, fffzxcorzszzz Puff 'iv' llunrlrzf The Record of This Organization Is something which cannot be over-valued by those Who have money to lend. Our manv years of successful experience in loaning money and the knowledge gained therefrom, can be relied upon to save investors from possible mistakes. Hundreds of substantial VVisc0nsin people can be found to attest to the advantages of investing only in securities we recommend. The Ioseph Boyd Company BONDS MORTGAGES MADISON, WISCONSIN. Just one, he cried, andlstole a kiss A The maid cried out, Alack, I do not like such things as thisf And straightway gave it back. He thought he,d surely made a hit Sigma Phi iWhen for his photograph she prayedg Pledge Pin KOut when this callsf, she wrote on it, And gave it to her maid. P. L. Morgan 8: Co. Business Counselors Counselors On Federal and State Taxation, Accounting, Auditing, Systematizing, Retail Management. Welconie, Stranger Burdick 81 Murray Co. Lzzrlies' Ready-to-Wear Dry Goods and Mz'llz'ne1'y The Burdick 81 Murray Co. will do for you anything any good store ought to do. Come in. WASHINGTON BUILDING Madison - Fairchild 1700 Wisconbln 17-19 East lXfIa1n Street I ge Six Hundred and Fifty-T CONSULT ME FIRST Hersch Grocerv Companv My retail lumber department in connection with mv ' ' job department enables me to make you a low price on your repairing. GROCERIES OF QUALITY C. B. FRITZ, C011f1'ELCtOl' and Builder . wvri tu' 1 , .02-eo Shop' 155 N mjimglfftviscmnSilfoll' Belden f 1' 1125 Mom-me si, Tel. Badger- 6135-6136 Schadauer China Shop The Tableware Store of IVIadison 307 State Street Badger 3471 Get Your Hair Cat at I-IACKETT'S Barber Shop 127 State Streft Badgm' 5312 hfladison, W'is. Fraternities, Sororities, Rooming Houses We Invite Your Tracie Madison Fuel Company Phone Badger 3 E. Frautsehi, General Nlanager 601 West Doty CI-IECKER CAB For any occasion-Formal or Informal Badger 805 Fairchild 32 Meat-Goeden Madison ar I 509 Monroe Badger 7320 The Beavers LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE FROM AGES 2-60. Total death Claims paid 5EI,6oo,ooo. Combined assets 31,800,000 Page Sir Ilundrerl and Fifly Th L -at L If I ttf --, S Ms- , app, ' - A ' Qggtifikfms. , ,, p I ' IWISCONSIN FOUNDRY .land MACHINERY CO. V Madison, Wis. i e F Dynarnos and Motors ' 'f E'iE'f ' ' .gsm Manufacturers of Nlining Nlachinery and Equipment Power Plants ot All Kinds Designed and Installed Nlotor and Dynamo Repair Work Engine and Nlill 'Work A Busy Saturday Night at the Al' House CC GG THESE GIVE THE STAFF THE LITTLE BLUE BLUES. Is the Badger going to be out on time?v Are you going to have a good Satire Sec- tion?9' ' ccWon't you be glad when the work's all Gi C6 over?,' I don't see how you do it. Can't I help out in some way? I'll have an hour or so to spare sometime next week. The copy I handed in at the iirst of the year was all wrong. Is it too late to change it?,' DEDICATED TO THE ART SCHOOL ,Twas a maiden sweet, VVho, from her retreat In the Art Lab came a-sighing, Then I noticed she was crying, And, as she drew near, I said, g'Listen Dear, Please in me your griefs conlideu, And the maiden thus replied, CHORUS I've got the blues, I've got the blues, I've got those Maxfield Parish blues, I can't sketch and I ean't paint, My scenes all look like what they aint, My teachers try as hard as glass To help me to display some class, But, somehow, I can't mix my hues, I've got those Maxfield Parish blues. A Theta Xi freshman named Jim Went to look for a leak with a glinig But alack and alas, The leak it was gas, VVe'll now sing the fifty fourth hymn! FF Telephone Central 5880 A. E. Gilberg 81 Co. Clncorporatcdj Canned Food Products Coffees, Teas Pure' Fruit Jams A , Pure Fruit Jellies 229ClXL?iE?lEErl3i Sfieff Page Siz Ifunzlred and Fifty-Four HIS, fhe 1923 CBadger, is from the CPress of Cfhe Western Printing 54 Lithographing CQ., Racine, Wis. l X .. 2' G 6 ,J ig is Adieu to thee ageing a vain adieu! 'There can be no farewell to scene like thineg The mind is colored by your every hueg Qlvlore mighty spots may rise, more glaring shine, CBut none unite in one attaching maze flhe brilliant, fair, and soft-the glories of old days -Byron. Page Six Hundred and Fifty-Sir


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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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