University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) - Class of 1928 Page 1 of 680
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' , Hfj r  I . Vii mH. , ' { M ?, itVfc £ : Long before there was the university, or the stale called Wisconsin, ' there was The Forest. Silver-bound with water courses, studded with torquoise lakes, she stretched her emer- ald body along the pathway of the sun and brooded in dusky silence on The Mysteries. Here lived and loved, roaming the purple shadows and carving the torquoise lakes with paddle blades, a people. Noble were they, high of courage and quick of understanding. And we, an alien race, usurping their power and their place, pause in our hunt for knowledge along their misted trails to meditate . v_ opyriqnr arrv C.I noma ED- IN- CHIEF .oms L.Grambs BUISNESS MANAGER. I For here, along the reaches of Mendota, there goes glimmering in the twilight the flash of nwccasin soles. And is there, against the sky, a granite domel Are there bricks and tile along the beaches ' ] Foolish one! The Thunder Bird has caught you napping and given you a dream! See, naught but the bark wickiup among the branches. And those beads of light far-flung as of a strange city 1 Ah, Dreamer . . . The paddle-blade of your lover blinking in the moon! ♦ m 19 8 The Deer has picked his fleet foot from the uplands, and has flown to the North. The Wolf does not course the rabbit over the brushy hitis, to drop his hollow wail from Eagle Point. But go to the sanded glades, and you will see the symbols still printed for our reading by that most indomitable Brother m ' srs $H THt BAbacR 19x3 I PubLsLeJ L rl| Ine junior cIas$ ojihe Unlversit oT Wisconsin FOREWORD And who knows with what thoughts the shy maiden of the woods braided her crow-black hair against the silver mirror of a pool, one black braid between her dusky shoulders, and fastened it in an envelope of color! Surely the tasseled streamers blowing at her back were not meant to let her pass unno- ticed on the trail! Think of yourself! Pw TRADITIONS— Wisconsin is rich in these. And most valued of all is the lore of the ancient Indian who once camped on the shores where now rise the halls and towers of our university. With an Indian theme or background against which are depicted the new traditions — the Red Wagon — Homecoming — Prom — Serenades — Activities — we present to you the 1928 Badger. u DEDICATION There is rythm in the swishing of war-clubs! There is music in the hurtling of many spears! There is a lyric in each arrow sped from the shivering string! But ah! what grace, what beauty, what fathomless poetry in that spiral of blue smoke from the pipe of peace and happiness! • Wt ' W TRADITIONS silently yet steadily link the doing of today with the deeds of yesterday. Herein lies the secret of a cherished uni- versity. To all of Wisconsin ' s motivating traditions, and to the memory of those who created them, this, the forty-second volume of The Badger is most sincerely dedicated. And, just as surely, the young man in his wickiup, fastening an arm band on his pad- dle-arm, did not do so to disguise himself into seeming a log, a bush, or a twisted tree, when he swaggered down the village. Think of yourself! She of the HILL and of the water-ways, she who has learnt so much of wonderment, so much of Youth, from all the folk who spent part of the Springtime of their early days here, where Youth ' s spirit everlasting stays. Times when one studied, times when well content without its books. Youth wondered what life meant- what lay beyond the HILL and water-ways. — Legend and laughter, days that long have been — and all the pulsing present that is ours, spirit of woodland, spirit of the town, idleness and the long laborious hours, a heritage so vast yet all our own, the HILL-side holds the secret that has been. River ever lowing by the stalwart trees, whither art thou going, broken by the breeze? — How can we be knowing what the Indian sees? i n I ■... -. ■■:: P ' I «- - •.;; ' .. ■• • ■1 , T  ; ' -. . i -V. 4i • i ' . , r; ' - '  «-■■■■.i • ' . ■5- ' - •■= ■. .- ii ■. - - j B, ' f- - ■•• v ( . ) S J| ,t- l. y - ' ■J MhB: V r X f i — :v«!?s   •;-; v... .•■' ■iPi«o. ' t« -  -  ' .. ■' nd (Aey were youn ' , as you and I are young, those men that came what time the trees were green with Spring, or Autumn-lit with flame, and through the woodland wilderness they blazed their way, the trees that watched them wend along, stir their boughs and sway, but the little leaves that frolic there are green for us today. YoiUh flung the flame into the sun and made it shine — and all the songs the birds can sing are yours and mine, yet: — in the gloaming, all the shadows there are tike to Youth with its unanswered prayer, questing, — and finding nothing, like the trees that stir soft boughs to listless melodies seeking the sunshine, that they cannot seize. Green the grass, and blue the sky and the whole world waiting you and I : — Summer mornings, afternoons when the buildings blaze and the hot air swoons but oh, the magic of Indian moons! Did Youlh set the Springtime adancing on wood- land and plain — or was it the Springtime eternal returning again? Did Youth fling the warmth of the Summer to lighten the skies or was it the Summer reflected that glowed in young eyes? Day after day Youth wends its way, — pausing awhile, yet not to stay, and though the watchful buildings stand on either hand, the branches swing, out in the Spring, till the young heart seems like a bind in wing with its imagining. Shall I sing you a song of the blue blue lakes, and the long long shadows that each tree makes when the laughter-loving Spring awakes? when the heart beats high and the eyes burn bright, and all life seems like an April night: — for the years that come and the years that pass hold nothing more fragrant than wet green grass. BisTS Days, dreams and fancies . . . all are flitting past glad days, mad days how long will they last? — The Winter mornings, the Springtime hours, the city a garden with Youth for flowers. Where the sun-touched path goes winding, where the little shadows fall have you ever thought of finding the still secret of it all: — how the blue of lake and Heaven to the Summer day was given. up and away for the sun is out and the blue blue waters call, and Picnic Point beyond the bay is waiting for us all! Did once the Indian warriors shout and ply their swift canoe — where sunny waters sway about and beckon me and you? L , • ! J  i ttna l Chiaroscuro, shadows lirxger like the trace of spirit finger, like a tale of life and laughter and the little shadows after. Like to the Eagle ' s flight the flight of days: — where once the Indian roamed the soft leaves fall, cast a reluctant mantle over all in wayward Autumn days, — but the still Stone remains for men to gaze. Ways thai are old and worn by feel of Indian men, rvays thai are new, for other folk, young folk must come again, even as the leaves on boughs above will blossom forth in Spring, even as the bird retains its song, so Youth must sing,— dreaming awhile, before it must awake, — even as the moonlight sleeps upon the waters oj the lake. [dT j %l The OPEN DOOR— and life that waits before, and those that climbed the Hill, must now go down where the world waits them in each seething town: — and yet, next Spring the Hill will bloom as green with the Youth that comes and the memories that have been. JULiANNA Cotton. I I FRATION •%••••. And his last word was law! Was it war, he lead and braved, with war club (Mily, the blows of other brave men! Was it peace, he picked the ground for hunting, and taught the young men how to use The Forest into giving up her myster- ies. DMINKi FRATION 4 The President I AM DELIGHTED to see this issue of The Badger undertake to capture and to celebrate something of the historic spirit and significance of the University of Wis- consin. As the responsible head of a new administration of the University of Wisconsin, it has been a great relief not to have to look around for a new set of ideals. Out of her historic past Wisconsin brings five dominant ideals that remain sound standards for the guidance of her future. As I have stated them before, so I state them again as the ideals of sound scholarship and inspired teaching, of productive research and practical service, of the freedom to investigate and the encourage to follow the facts wherever they lead. The future of the University of Wisconsin will depend upon the dignity and loyalty with which these ideals are served. .ryn dTf UKy Page 31 Nluson Olbrich Gale SCHMIDTMAN Cashman RUNCE I- ' aast Grady Levitan HlRSCHMAN GUNDERSON Richardson Callahan McCaffery Waters Bachman Regents of the University of Wisconsin Glenn Frank, President of the University, ex-officio. John Callahan, State Superintendent of Public I nstruction, ex-officio. Officers of the Board of Regents Theodore Kronshage, Jr ■President Ben F. Faast Vice-President Solomon Levitan State Treasurer Ex-officio, Treasurer J. D.Phillips Business Manager M. E. McCaffrey ... ' ■.... Secretary Fred E. Bachman, Appleton 1930 John E. Cashman, Denmark . 1930 Ben F. Faast, Eau Claire 1932 Miss Zona Gale, Por age . . . . . . 1929 Daniel H. Grady, Portage 193 0 Adolf Gunderson, La CroMe 1931 Miss Leola M. Hirschman, Milwaukee . 1928 Miss Elizabeth A. Waters, Fond du Lac Theodore Kronshage, Jr. Milwaukee Franklin A. Nace, tola . George A. Nelson, Milltown Michael B. Olbrich, Madison . Victor B. Richardson, Janesville John C. Schmidtmann. Manitowoc 1927 1927 1928 1929 1931 1931 1932 Mrs. Clara T. Runge, Baraboo 1932 Theodore Kronshace. Jr.. President of the Board of Regents Page 32 The Hill of Learning — The Dome of Law Board of Visitors Regent Appointments George P. Hambrecht, Madison . July 1, 1927 Loyal Durand, Milwaukee . . . July 1, 1928 H. W. Kircher, Sheboygan . . . July 1, 1929 Mrs. Charles R. Carpenter, Madison July 1, 1930 Alumni Appointments Israel Shrimski, Chicago. B. E. McCoRMiCK, La Crosse. July 1, 1927 Mrs. Lucy M. Beery, Chicago . . July 1, 1928 July 1, 1928 Wm. J. Meuer, Madiion . . . . July 1,1930 Governor ' s Appointments Mrs. C. E. Patzer, Milwaukee Mrs. Julia A. Schnetz, Racine July 1, 1927 CarlJ. Hesgard, Oj orctoHe . . July 1, 1929 July 1, 1928 W. V. Kidder, La Crosse July 1, 1930 Edward Ashel Birge President Emeritus oj the University Page 33 Scott H. Goodnight Dean of Men F. Louise Nardin Dean of Women Deans of Men and Women To ONE WHO HAS been long at the Univer- sity, it is a pleasurable experience to thumb reminiscently the leaves of an old Badger of the years of his first residence here. How many half forgotten names and faces It brings to mind; how it recalls the thrills of student days, how oddly the derby hats, the standing collars, the long skirts and the Psyche knots, which were the height of fashion then, appear in contrast with the collegiate styles of today. And no less striking Is the change In the make-up of the book itself in comparison with the much more elaborate and much more dignified product of the present time. Two decades hence, the present Badger may suffer by similar comparison, but to one who is now a student it will be a priceless possession. It will be to him the treasure trove of fondest recollections, a souvenir of the golden days of youth. May all the memories be happy ones, unmarred by thoughts of experiences that seared and left scars. May the recollections be welcome t ecause of fidelity to friends whose love had earned it, of satisfaction over duty well done, or worthy Ideals realized by stead- fastness of purpose, and of trulmphs won by good sportsmanship and hard playing of the game. For the work and play of the day is not solely an end In itself; It is the foundation upon which the joy or the sorrow of the future must rest. M -- s2-SL; d ■Y CONGRATULATIONS to the class of 1927 and my godspeed to them as they leave the campus for the work-a-day world, are summed up in a phrase which I owe to a college girl. She was representing her college at a conven- tion. In a speech said: When I started away to this meeting, the girls who came to see me off didn ' t give me a corsage bouquet. They gave me a package of seed and said, ' Grow your own. ' The Injunction seems a proper parting benedic- tion for college to bestow on outgoing seniors. It contradicts the languid pessimism of those who murmur soulfully that college days are better than any days that lie beyond graduation. It affirms the commonsense and cheerful belief that those later years will prove to be soil on which will grow all the things which made the college years delightful. It upholds the bracing doctrine that life is shaped from within by the individual rather than from without by circumstances. A student who has been reasonably successful at college has a package of good seed. He goes out equipped with some power to work and some pleasure in working; a judicious amount of self-confidence; a friendly attitude toward people ; and some quietly and ardently cherished articles of faith, by which he expresses his hope for the world and his duty toward It. May each senior of 1927 find himself possessed of this package of seeds for happy living, and may his planting thrive! Page 34 Charles A. Smith Registrar James D. Phillips Business Manager The Admimstrators PRESENTING three rarely seen but invaluable members of the faculty — Charles A. Smith, registrar; James D. Phillips, business manager; and Glenn L. Gilbert, bursar. As registrar, Mr. Smith stands at the outer gate of the University, considers applications for admission, and ushers the fortunate thousands into this paradise of learning. He keeps records of the progress of each throughout attendance and finally bows them out into the cruel world at commencement. Mr. Smith has ever been thoughtful, patient, and sympathetic in the performance of his duties. J. D. Phillips is the man who utilizes the money re- ceived from state and bursar in purchasing the physical needs and necessities of the University. His judicious manipulation of the purse strings furnishes the material means by which we may attain the fullest mental gro ■th and makes possible this student community. To collect thousands of dollars in fees from graduates and undergraduates is the task assigned G. L. Gilbert, a familiar name in student check books. A more pleasant side of his job from our point of view is the loan funds, scholarships, and laboratory remittances with which we are occasionally surprised. These three men, e ' er in the background of student life, are the ones who make the wheels go round and whose work is vitally necessary to keep our home of learning in order and to make it financially successful. ' ' ' ' ' Bur?ar ' ' Page 35 ■• i:% i i wmm:. H Ivr JlKi ■k ' ' i - — ■IM ' w i r|, .,.._„. k- 11 i H ' ? s ' jSCSB ., 5« :3«siiii t ' ■rsj V TWS Kir i IS mM 11 ■W! 111 ■iE_r Ik T T — f -Jj MFjl- ' t ■' 1 . « ? .. H 1 f ■1 .,• ESJ mn Agricultural tiailjrom Henry i uadrangU ' H. L. Russell Dean W ' - ' ISCONSIN has been primarily an agricultural state, was learned early that no syst em of mere cropping our soils would succeed and so a diversified agriculture grounded on dairying was developed. For over a decade we have led in dairy- ing and because we have built steadily upon sound principles our system of farming often has been looked upon as a model by less fortunate states, in recent years. As the relationships of this industry which is of such vital import- ance to our commonwealth, become more complex, trained leaders in this field are more and more needed. To combine efficient produc- tion and proper distribution with a socially richer rural life is our prime objective and Wisconsin men have done yoemen service in attaining this ideal. For over forty years this institution has been ' sending forth men and women imbued with the Spirit of Wisconsin, and we are now better fitted than ever to help those who are training for rural service. . .. C.c.u.Ul£ The g Buildings Page 36 Sterling Halt se m THE PRESENT academic year will bring to a close an epoch in the history of the Course in Commerce. From its beginning in 1900, it has been a four year course in which freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors have been enrolled. Beginning with 1927-28, it will be a three year course. No one will be admitted who has not completed the freshman and sophomore years in this or some other college or university of high rank, and a year of graduate work will be provided for those who wish to continue their studies in business fields after graduation. Those who successfully complete this year of graduate work will receive the degree of M.A. in Com- merce. After this year also this phase of the activities of the Uni- versity will be called the School of Commerce instead of the Course in Commerce. It is believed that this change in the organization and curriculum of the course will enable us better to meet the needs of all who wish to study business subjects whether they be undergraduates or grad- uates. Before the end of the present year a bulletin will be published in which details of the new program and all other necessary informa- tion will be supplied. vV. tH Wm. a. Scott Dean The Chemistry Building Page 37 The Engineering Budding F. E. TURNEAURE Dean Engiineermg School THE WORK of the Engineering College is two-fold: teaching and investigation. Necessarily the greater part of its time and energy is devoted to the training of young men for the various branches of the engineering profession. — civil, mechanical, elec- trical, chemical, and mining and metallurgy. Research activities are, however, becoming increasingly important. The research work of the college has necessarily increased during recent years, and has come to be an important part of its activities. Results are published in special bulletins and in papers to various engineering societies. Five research fellowships are being supported by various industrial organizations of the state, four of them by public utilities, and one by a Milwaukee manufacturing concern. A considerable contribution is being received from the Engineering Foundation of New York City, an organization established by the four national engineering societies. Two fellowships have been established by these contributions, and three research fellowships are being paid from the University funds. The research and graduate work of the college is considerably restricted in some departments by lack of space, and it is hoped that this will be remedied in the near future by the construction of one or more buildings on the Camp Randall site, selected for the future development of the College. C7t C, v_ i -«- . i - --t. . The Drive — Past the Engineering Laboratories Page 38 The Library from the Lower Camfjus Graduate School IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL special emphasis is laid on bringing the student in contact with the research problems in his field of study. It is not only its mission to produce teachers and investigators, but to give that further training that is rapidly becoming so essential to those who enter into modern business and industrial life. We are fast becoming a society of experts, but this much abused word does not imply that the graduate student is to be called to a pedantic and uninteresting life. It simply means that a student can no longer acquire from an undergraduate course the professional and technical training the world expects. That very spirit of investigation which is the motive of the Graduate School is now almost universally recognized as essential to success in business, as well as in the professions. Charles S. Slighter Dean The Biology Building Page 39 Abby L Marlatt Dean The Hpme Economics Building TEACHING in the general subject of home economics was established in the College of Letters and Science in 1904, through the efforts of the club women of the State, who secured a special appropriation from the Legislature to develop courses that would be available as part of the general education of all the young women in the College of Letters and Science. In 1908 the Regents of the University transferred all of the courses and equipment to the College of Agriculture. During 1908-9 no work was offered. In 1909, the reorganized work, under a new staff, was offered as a new major in the College of Agriculture with freedom of election by Letters and Science students in their junior and senior year. From this beginning with one full professor, one instructor and one half time instructor, with one senior graduating and fifty-two students enrolled, the Department has grown steadily, moving from the base- ment of Agricultural Hall to the top floor of Lathrop Hall and then through the efforts of the club women of the State, into its present building which is in part occupied by the University Extension Division. In 1926-27, the work of the Department includes three general lines; resident teaching, extension and research. The faculty has increased from two and a half to twenty-seven in all lines of work. The enrollment has increased over six hundred per cent. The number of graduates is seven hundred and fifty-five. In place of one depart- ment there are three with graduate work and research publications to their record that rank us high among the home economics divi- sions in the country. ClMy ■MoL .i c6 Henry Quadrangle — Looking from Agricultural Hall Page 40 South Hall — The Home of the Journalism School ' ' HEN IN THE FALL of 1905, a course in news writing was offered as a part of the instruction in English composi- tion, the University of Wisconsin became a pioneer in a humble way, in what has since proved to be the most important movement for the advancement of the profession of journalism. At that time neither academic authorities nor practical newspaper men looked with favor on specialized training in college as desirable preparation for journalism. Gradually, however, as students who had taken courses in journalism in college demonstrated their worth in newspaper offices, sentiment changed. Today with some 225 colleges and universities offering courses in journalism, and with journalism graduates well established in the offices of newspapers, magazines, and advertising agencies all over the country, few ques- tion the possibility or the desirability of specialized academic prepa- ration for the profession. Last fall, 338 students enrolled in the four- year Course in Journalism, the largest number in any school, course, or department of journalism in the country. These results have been accomplished at the University with a minimum of cost to the state for laboratory equipment. Wisconsin ' s Course in Journalism has had only four rooms in South Hall, one of the oldest buildings on the campus. Some day, let us hope, the University will have a School of Journalism, with a building of its own fully equipped to provide adequately for the steadily increasing number of students who desire to secure the best possible preparation for the profession of journalism. y ju2- WiLLARD G. BlEYER Dean I Historic North Hall Page 41 Harry S. Richards Dean The Law School Law School THE LAW SCHOOL was the third of the present divisions of the University to be established. In 1 8b8, a one-year course was organized. In 188L the course was extended to two years; and in 1894, to three years. In 1905, the present prelegal require- ment of two years of college work for candidates for degrees was adopted. By a recent action of the Regents, three years of prelegal college work will be required for all candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Laws. This summary serves to show the rapid develop- ment in educational opportunity in this state, and the steady policy of the university to advance the standards of the Law School as rapidly as educational conditions permit. In this respect its practice has been in advance of that of most states, particularly in the re- quirement of two years of college training before beginning the study of law. Wisconsin was the first state university, and the first school, but one west of the Alleghanies to take such action. It was not until 1925, that the Association of American Law Schools made such a requirement a basis for admission to membership. Pioneering in advance standards, for a time curtailed the attend- ance, but since 1915, the school has grown steadily, and since 1924, the attendance has been the largest in the school ' s history. Of the sixty-four university schools in the Association of American Law Schools, this school ranks twelfth in point of attendance. Looking Down the Hill from the Law School Page 42 Bascom Hall at the Summit of the Hill ' E CALL our College of Liberal Arts the College of Letters and Science. The two names are precisely the same. Students of medieval history will tell you that the liberal arts were composed of three literary subjects and four scientific subjects, and that they were called liberal because they were regarded as peculiarly useful in educating a freeman It was the Romans, a very practical people, who governed the civilized world for centur- ies, that worked out the idea and passed it on to the Middle Ages and to us. The idea that the liberal arts are basic for the education of freeman. There is not a subject in the Roman list that is practical in our sense of the word. It seems, therefore, that there is good hard-headed backing for the belief that some of the most useful subjects are not practical, that is, gainful. Is it not so? One can not or would not, in many cases, sell for money his appreciation of a great poem or speech, or work of art, or the thrill of great scenery, or the joy of music, or the sym- pathy with fellow men which grows with the reading of history, or the wonder of nature heightened by science, or of human nature, disclosed by philosophy, or of goodness found in the New Testaments. The liberal arts you studied in your College days — 1 speak to you old grads of the future, even though you are in your senior year when these words are written, — whether you took a special quasi- professional course or not, were meant to help you discover the greatest goods a freeman may possess. How has it worked ouf George C. Sellery Dean I Looking Lross Lincoln Terrace Page 43 Mary Emocene Hazeltine Dean A Class at the Madison Free Library Library School I NE OF THE MOST inspiring developments in America has been the growth of free libraries and the increasing use made of them. In the comparatively brief period since the founding of the American Library Association, in 1876, American public libraries have increased from 2,000 to 18,000 today. In Wis- consin alone there are 218 public libraries, with 1,750,000 volumes, showing a home circulation of 7,500,000 a year. The Library School, founded in 1906, attains its majority this year. A school offering an intensive professional course, covering a single year, with a new class of specially qualified students every year, must necessarily have a unique history. Its annual registration is not large, since only one class is in residence in any year, but over a series of years both numbers and influence assert themselves, for the product of such a school is 100 per cent. The School summarizes its progress for two decades in terms of students as follows: 645 have graduated and entered the field of library service. In terms of influence, the four hundred and more graduates in active service are filling administrative positions of great responsi- bility as librarians of public, college, school, and county libraries. In the last decade, library work itself has entered many new fields, and in all of them the graduates of this school have done pioneer work, carrying forward the ideal of the School — to be found in the vanguard of all library effort. ( Ryu hou crjy .t .J _J (■The Gym from the Library Page 44 The Wisconsin General Hospital ALTHOUGH the original charter of the University provided - for a medical school and a medical faculty was appointed in 1 855, over half a century passed before instruction was offered in the first half of the medical course, in 1907, and over three quarters of a century passed before a complete medical course was offered and plans were provided for a building especially designed for in- struction and research in the medical sciences. The first class to be graduated in medicine at Wisconsin will be presented with degrees as doctors of medicine at Commencement next June. It is hoped that work on the Service Memorial Institutes which are to provide special facilities for teaching, research, and state service in the medical sciences will then be well under way. The time is most opportune. The importance of scientific knowledge on which to base measures to promote health and control disease is to-day appreciated as never before. C . ? Sxa oXju. Charles R. Bardeen Dtan Science I iall Page 45 Music Hall Charles H. Mills Dean IN KEEPING with the spirit of the 1928 Badger, A Retrospect oj Wisconsin, it is a pleasure to look back over the arduous path traveled by the pioneers in this work at Wisconsin and to gather courage and hope for still better things through the history of their early struggles. It is a far cry from the humble beginning in 1895, when a few students who were interested in music were housed in Ladies Hall, - now known by the name of Chadbourne, — where, with inadequate equipment and few instructors, they inaugurated the School of Music for the University of Wisconsin. Our historical notes tell us that in 1900, Library Hall was given over for the useof music students, though it was not until 1910 that its name was changed to Music Hall. We also fell heir to the Chapel ' which has been remodeled in the year just past into an attractive auditorium. Since 1914, our School has grown from 65 regular students to 137, with special students increasing from 19 to something over 150. The course has been improved until now the regular four-year course in the School of Music, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Music, is recognized throughout the country. Chadbourne Hall, the First Home of the Music School Page 46 The Nurses Dormitory IT ' Nurses School HE COURSE in nursing was organized and accepted its first H students in the fall of nineteen twenty-four. It graduates its first class of fifteen students at the June commencement, nineteen hundred and twenty-seven. The addition of the course in nursing to the curriculum of the University has met with great popularity among the student body as evidenced by over a three hundred percent increase in the enrollment this year as compared with the enrollment of two years ago. The Course in Nursing offers to the young women graduating from high school the opportunity to receive, through the University, an education which fits them for the greatest of the humanitarian services. There are two courses offered. A three year course leading to a certificate of graduate nurse and a combined five year academic and nursing course leading to a B.S. degree and a certificate of graduate nurse. 2 ty 2 x _ Helen I. Denn e Dean , Along the Walk Back of Lathrop Page 47 The Boathouse on the Shores of Mendola George Little Director oj Men ' s Athletics Men ' s Physical Education I EALIZING fully that college athletics and physical education should be conducted on the basis of participation fcr all, we sincerely hop)e to interest and provide for as many young men and women of Wisconsin in sport during the year 1927-28 as possible. We appreciate that we have a distinct obligation to the entire student body of the University in several respects. It is our duty to provide sufficient facilities to sponsor a broader program that will enable all to realize the full advantages of our natural environment here, permitting them to indulge in some form of out- door sport in the fall, winter and spring. Secondly, we desire to secure sufficient indoor facilities conductive to an extensive indoor program during the winter period. Our staff of men who coach the inter-collegiate teams, with the co- operation of the students, will make every effort to place the Uni- versity of Wisconsin in a substantial position in Big Ten competi- tion. We want our teams to be characterized as full of fight, sports- manlike and well-drilled in the technique of their respective games, and above all, representing our great University always in a manner that will make us proud to know them as the Battling Badgers. d n The Gymnasium Page 48 Lalhrop Hall Women s Physical Education I HYSICAL EDUCATION for women at Wisconsin started in 1878 with some volunteer classes in gymnastics, held in Ladies Hall, now Chadbourne, under the direction of an untrained, but enthusiastic, freshman. In 1889 Regent recognition was given and a small room used jointly with the Music Department became the first gymnasium. However, the work was not financed by the state, a small fee being paid by each student. The following year it was made a requirement. Since then the growth has been rapid and constant. 1910 was a significant date, for it was in that year that Lathrop Hall was opened. In 191 1 the professional course for the training of teachers were established. Since then the Field House has come and the W.A.A. cottage on Lake Mendota where one may find a camp fire and rest after a long hike. Despite all this we have expanded so rapidly and Wisconsin girls have become so interested in athletics that we have outgrown our quarters and are looking forward to a time, not far distant, we hope, when Lathrop may be taken over as a Women ' s Union and when a new and adequate gymnasium will be built adjacent to enlarged and permanent fields. Blanche M. Trilling Director of C o ' mens Physical Education Barnard Hall Page 49 The Cool Waters of Mendola — An Inviting Escape from the Summer ' s Heal Scott H. Goodnight Director of Summer Session T IS ONLY a few years ago that the Badger omitted all mention of the Summer Session. Then a versatile editor bethought himself of it. It has had its regular place since that time, and now one hardly understands how such a characteristic part of our aca- demic life could ever have been omitted. Requests are continually coming to make the Summer Session longer. Particularly graduate students and teachers who want an opportunity to make more rapid progress toward the coveted higher degree, are urging this request. The first answer will be given in the summer of 1927, when a staff of eighteen selected professors will remain in residence and conduct graduate courses for nine weeks, from June 17 to August 2b. The six-week session will be conducted as usual, running parallel with the first six weeks of the special graduate courses, and quite independently of them. The innovation is frankly an experiment, to learn whether there is a real demand for a longer session during the summer. Should there prove to be one, it is quite possible that the next step may be to lengthen the entire session to nine weeks, or even ten. While there are real objections to the plan, it will never- theless be carried out, if experience shows that there is a demand for it. The sole function of the Summer Session is to serve, and it will guide its course exclusively by the demand for its educational service. Wisconsin Summer School for Working Girls Page SO The Home of the Extension Division SINCE I am comparatively a newcomer in the University of Wisconsin family, I cannot, with some of the other deans, carry Badger readers back to the days when the faculty of University Extension consisted of Professor Lighty, and its equip- ment included a battered kitchen table, a chair, and a couple of letter files in an obscure corner of Bascom Hall. Nor to the opening chapter of its second important department about which Frank Avery Hutchins writes: In the fall of 1908 there were record slips on a spindle for ten or twelve loans which have now grown into the package library service which has brought information and enlightenment to hundreds of thousands of Wisconsin people. But my regret at not participating in the achievements of yester- day is not unmixed with elation at the opportunity to participate in the achievements of today and tomorrow. For University Exten- sion is away on a great race toward the new goal it has taken as its own — The whole University functioning in the life of the state. The high task of the new University Extension is to wipe out every line which divides the student off the campus from the student on the campus. Its chief problem will be to surmount every obstacle which prevents the man or woman in the most remote corner of the state from profiting as much as the student at Madison from all the knowledge and all the insight of the University. Its success, I think, will come not by multiplying the activities of a greater Uni- versity Extension Division, but by more perfectly transmitting to the people a greater University of Wisconsin. Cdl:iMr;J[)S ' y JJl Chester D. Snell Dean Looking Up From Linden Drive Page SI Until, taught in the wisdom of the Wood- lands, he emerged the victor against an enemy of the tribe. Who knows the thoughts of the young man who stands alone among his people and receives the insignia of deeds jwell done? Think of Yourself! pp I SENIOR: Clark Henry Abbott Marshfield CIVIL ENGINEERING A. S. C. E 2;ZetaPsi, Elizabeth Cooley Adams Springfield, Mass. SOCIOLOGY Class Secretary 3; Chairman Swingout Committee, Mother ' s Day 3 ; President Yellow Tassel ; Keystone Council 3 ; Freshman Commission ; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3; Chairman Industrial Department 3 ; Crucible; Gamma Phi Beta. Olive Adams Dubuque, Iowa HOME ECONOMICS Rockford College 1, 2, 3; Class Hockey 1,2,3; Class Tennis 3 ; Class Basketball i, 2, 3. Donald K. Alexander Wheaton, Illinois economics Chairman Music Committee 1 927 Prom; Sophomore Commission; Hares- foot Club 2, 3, 4; Haresfoot Play 2; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Florence E. Allen Madison journalism Daily Cardinal Reporter 2; Special Writer 3 ; Chairman University Exposi- tion 2; Vice-President Pythia Literary Society 2 ; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3, 4; W. A. A. 1. 2. 3, 4, W. A. A. Board 3, 4; Big W ; Small Emblem: Outdoor Baseball 1,2, 3; Class Volley- hall 3.4; Class Rifle Team 2, 3,4; Var- sity Volleyball 3; Varsity Rifle Team 2, 3; Press Club 1, 4; Theta Sigma Phi; Crucible. Thesis: Editorials and Special Articles in the Portland Oregonian. Rudolph Joseph Allgeier Chicago, Illinois chemistry Armour Institute I ; Legislative Scholar- ship 3, 4. Thesis: The Dielectric Constants of Emulsions. Emil a. Abendroth Milwaukee CIVIL engineering Daily Cardinal I ; Wisconsin Engineer I, 4; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2, 3, 4; A.S.C.E.2,4;TauBetaPi; Chi Epsilon; Junior Engineer; Sigma Phi Sigma. Thesis: The Time Stress Relation for Steel under Constant Strain. Lawson M. Adams Kenosha law Chairman Pre Prom Dance 2; Chairman Floats Committee, Venetian Night 3; Freshman Swimming; Phi Delta Phi; Inner Gate; Phi Gamma Delta. Henry C. Ahrnsbrak Sheboygan HISTORY President ' s Guard 2; Student Brother- hood of the Reformed Church. Thesis: The Quakers in Pennsylvania and their Objection to the French and Indian War for Religious Reasons. Isadore George Alk Green Bay law Student Senate 4; Student Editor Law Review 5; Sophomore Semi - Public Debate; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3, 4; Philomathia Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Delta Sigma Rho; Sophomore Honors. Herbert John Allen Wauwatosa Class Chairman Music Committee 3 ; Prom Fox Trot Committee 1928 Prom; Advertising Manager University Expo- sition 2; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3 4; Musical Director 3, 4; Tumas; Skull and Crescent; Phi Kappa Sigma. Thesis: Real Estate. Helen N. Allyn Lakewood, Ohio journalism Hillsdale College 1,2; Assistant Editor Alumni Department 1927 Badger; Editor Alumni Depanment 1928Badger; Daily Cardinal Staff I. Special Writer 4; Class Swimming 3; ThetaSigmaPhi; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Advertising. Page 56 EwALD Leonard Almen Ely, Minnesota JOURNALISM University of Minnesota 1. 2;DeltaChi. Thesis: Analysis of the Paris Boulevard Newspapers. Ruby Lucille Alton Linden HISTORY Lawrence College, 1 ; District Chairman S. G. A. 3, 4; Member of Wesley Foun- dation 4; Blue Shield, Secretary 4; Pan-Hellenic Representative 4; Beta Phi Alpha. Marguerite Amelung Cincinnati, Ohio HISTORY University of Cincinnati 1. 2; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Alice Emerence Anderson Madison CLASSICS Arden Club 2, 3,4, Life Member. Thesis: Virgil and Italian Topography, Dorothy Jeanette Anderson Racine psychology Beloit College 1,2. Mildred Ellen Anderson Tomah music Special Features Committee 1927 Prom; Awards Committee Venetian Night 2; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2; Wisconsin University Players 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3; Mu Phi Epsilon; Crucible; Kappa Alpha Theta. Lois Almon Milwaukee botany Milwaukee State Normal 1, 2; Legis- lative Eioard S. G. A. 4; Horx r Ten, Milwaukee Normal school. Thesis: The Spermatophytes of Camp Alice Chester. Eleanor F. Alverson Madison, Illinois home economics Class Volleyball 2; Euthenics Club 4; Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: The Influence of the School Nursery on the Food Habitsof Children. Martha Ruth Amon Sparta applied arts Poster Committee Father ' s Day 3 ; Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3; Sigma Lambda, Treasurer 3, 4; Phi Mu. Thesis: Birds and Insects in Decoration. Ben Raymond Anderson Superior structural engineering Superior State Normal 1 ; A. S. C. E. 4. Thesis: Salt Velocity Method of Flow Measurement. Malcolm E. Anderson Cobban COMMERCE Eau Claire Normal 1, 2; Commerce Club 4; Commerce Advisory Commis- sion 4. Thesis: Standard Ratios for Repre- sentative Companies. Mildred Hortense Anderson Larimore, North Dakota ENGLISH River Falls State Normal 1. 2. Thesis: Contemporary Opinion of the Lake Poets as Revealed in the Leading Periodicals, 1800-1850. Page 57 fe ' -slj SiGNE E. Anderson Red Wing, Minnesota FRENCH Si. Olaf College 1 . 2 ; Le Cercle Francais Leslie H. Andrews South Wayne CHEMISTRY Mathematics Club 3. Albert D. Annis Council Bluffs, Iowa economics Freshman Track; Varsity Track 3, Phi Delta Theta. William B. Antes Evansville journalism Delta Pi Delta; Phi Mu Delta Thesis: An Analysis of the Evansville Review. Matie Louise Arnold Glen Flora music Castalia Literary Society 2, 3, 4; Choral Union 2,3;WA.A.1,2; Class Outdoor Baseball 1. 2; Class Indoor Baseball 1, 2; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: Development of the Piano as Traced Through Its Literature. James Abram Arter M ilwauhee electrical engineering University of Wisconsin Extension Division, Milwaukee 1, 2. Thesis: Steam Cooling of Automotive Engines. Theodore L. Anderson De Kalb, Illinois philosophy Northern Illinois State Teachers Col- lege 1,2; University of 1 llinois 3 ; Alumni Committee 1926 Homecomirig; Hares- foot Play 3,4; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Thesis: The Systematic Philosophy of Hans Driesch. Elwin Arthur Andrus Troy Center law Milwaukee State Normal 1 ; Inter- normal Debate Squad of Milwaukee Normal I ; Law School Association 2, 3, David Joseph Ansfield Milwaukee medicine Phi Delta Epsilon; Regents ' Scholar- ship. Thesis: Relation of Physical Exercise to Blood. Marion V. Arnold Prentice zoology University of Utah I, 2; Member of Congregational Board 4; Chora! Union 3; W. A. A. 4; Class Tennis 3; Pythia 3. 4. Thesis: The of Anatomy Pisidium Idohoense. Ralph C. Arnold Madison chemistry Member of Baptist Cabinet 1. 3, 4; Phi Lambda Upsilon. Thesis: A Survey of the American Dye Industry. Ardin James Arveson Wautoma commerce Page 58 ' ii ArNE J. A. AsPLUNfD Stockholm, Sweden CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Swedish Gymnasium I; W Club 4; Varsity Fencing Team 3, 4; A. 1. C. E. 2, 3. 4, Secretary 3. President 3. 4; Inter- national Club 2, 3, 4; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi. Dorothy Gael Atkinson Madison ENGLISH Floor Committee Frosh Frolic I ; Circu- lation Department 1927 Badger; Pub- licity Committee 1927 Prom; Home- coming Committee 4; Freshman Com- mission; Sophomore Commission; W. A. A. 1, 2. 3. 4. Board 2. 3. 4. Cor- responding Secretary 4; W. A. A. Pin; Minor Emblem; Class Outdoor Base- ball I; Class Volleyball 2. 3, 4; Class Indoor Baseball 1, 2; Class Bowling 3, 4; Varsity Bowling 3; Varsity Volley- ball 3 ; Senior Honors; Pi Beta Phi Thesis: Galsworthy and the Novel of the Tribe, Arville J. Austin Green Bay ENGLISH Lawrence College 1,2; Delta Gamma. Anna Marie Bachhuber Medford latin College of Saint Theresa 1 . Thesis: Comparison of Ennius and Virgil. Otto August Backus Milwaukee MEDICINE Delta Tau Delta. Thesis: The Homology of the Upp)er and Lower Extremities as Regards Myology. Neurology and Osteology. Joseph E. Bacon Chicago, Illinois ADVERTISING Qrculation Assistant Daily Cardinal 2, Associate Circulation Manager 3 , Circulation Manager 4; Theta Chi. DoRRiT Elisabeth Astrom Fort Wayne, Indiana FRENCH Vocations Chairman S. G. A. 3; Vice- President of Class 4; Prom Week Com- mittee 1927 Prom; Chairman Luncheon Committee Religious Conference 2. 3; Y. W. C. A. Pioneer Club. President 1 ; All University Religious Convocation Committee 3, 4. Secretary 4, Vice- Chairman 4; Crucible. Secretary; Chi Omega. Clarence Newell Atwood Ottawa, Illinois journalism University of Illinois 1, 2; Assistant Editor Country Magazine 3, Editor 4; Publicity Committee 192b Live Stock Show; Saddle and Sirloin Club 3, 4; Sigma Delta Chi; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis Agricultural News of the Country Weekly. Paul Rolland Austin Madison chemistry First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; University Orchestra 3.4; Woodwind Ensemble 3, 4; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Mu Alpha, Sinfonia Secretary. Thesis: The Preparation of Nicotinic Acid and Other Organic Compounds. Hugo M. Bachhuber Medford medicine Sophomore Honors. Barbara D. Bacon Salt Lake City, Utah psychology District Chairman S. G. A. 2; Editor Religious Department 1927 Badger; Editor Senior Department 1928 Badger; Reception Committee 1927 Prom; Women ' s Button Committee 1924 Homecoming; Chairman Memorial Day 3 ; Freshman Commission, Secretary; Sophomore Commission ; Assistant Chairman Y. W. C. A, Bazaar; Class Hockey I; Varsity Rifle Team I, 2. 3; Student Forum 3, 4; Crucible, Trea- surer; Alpha Phi. Thesis: The Maze Learning of Carassius Carassius. Myron Edgar Baechler Fountain City history Freshman Lambda. Baseball; Kappa Beta t1 Pagf S9 Helene Carless Baer Niellsville HISTORY Milwaukee Downer College 1 ; Member of Episcopal Student Religious Council 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4; Mil- waukee Downer Club 2, 3, Secretary 2; French Club3;LieblingClub(M.D.C.) Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: The Diplomacy Benjamin Franklin. Gladys Bahr Manitoumc COMMERCE Whitewater State Normal 1 ; Women ' s Commerce Club 2. 3, 4, Vice-President 3;PhiChiTheta. Thesis: Ethics of Advertising. Glenn J. Baker Clearfield, Iowa geology Simpson College 1,2; Officer of Student Court in Simpson College 2; Secretary Everett Literary Society 1, 2; Honor Roll Simpson College; Simpson Com- mons Club. Vernon Barnard Bacnall J acksonf orl electrical engineering 1st Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; President ' s Guard I. 2; A. I. E. E. 3. 4, Executive Committee 4; Pi Tau Pi Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu. Antoinette Helen Baker Portage ENGLISH International Club 2. 3, 4, Treasurer 3; ArdenClub2, 3. 4. Thesis: Village Life in American Fiction. Gabriel George Balazs Racine chemistry LamlxJa Chi Alpha. Thesis: The Action of Selenium Chloride on Vulcanized Rubber. MiLO D. Bale Schullsburg agriculture Marjorie a. Banks Jefferson economics Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: The New Conception of Effi- ciency. Vere na Martha Barlow Madison ENGLISH Arden Club 3, 4, Life Member. Thesis: The Lyrics of Sara Teasdale and Edna St. Vincent Millay. Claire L. Ballard French Lick, Indiana ENGLISH Louise Mary Barbee Chicago, Illinois FRENCH University of Chicago 3; French Club I, 2; French Play 2; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis: Realism in Balzac. Fulton Campbell Barnes Madison political science Delta Chi. Thesis: What Is Public Purpose Taxation. Page 60 Lawrence Davis Barney Kitbourn ECONOMICS Advertising Oepartment 1925 Badger; Junior Council; Haresfoot Play 3. 4; Phi Sigma Kappa. Thesis: Clearing Houses. Viola Bell Barton Madison FRENCH Member of Presbyterian Cabinet 4; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: A Comparison of Pascal ' s Philosophy with that of La Rochefou- cauld. Helen Rose Bauer Kilbourn Thesis: Homeric Reminiscences and Virgilian Originality in Battle Scenes. Harry Louis Baumgarten Tomah ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3. Maxine Alice Baumgartner Monroe nursing Gladys R. Beadle Winnebago, Minnesota history Milwaukee State Normal 1. 2. Thesis: Women in Industry; with Special Reference to Massachusetts. Harold Packard Barrington Waufiaca agriculture Square and Compass. Adah E. Bass Chicago, Illinois physical education Crane Junior College 1 ; W, A. A. 2. 3, 4 Physical Education Club 2. 3. 4 Dolphin Club 3. 4; Outing Club 3. 4 Class Outdoor Baseball 2, 3. 4; Class Hockey 2. 3. 4; Class Indoor Baseball 2. 4; Varsity Indoor Baseball 2. Thesis: Playground Management. Bernice L. Bauersfeld Elmhursl, Illinois letters and science Faith M. Baumgartner Monroe nursing Milwaukee Normal School 1. Charlotte Elizabeth Bayne New York City psychology Junior Mathematics Club 2, 3, 4; Psychology Club 3, 4. Thesis: A Study of the Eyelid Reflex. Adelbert M. Bearder Beaver Dam ADVERTISING Marquette University I ; Desk Editor, summer of 1925; Sport Editor, sum- mer of 1925: Proof [Reader 2, Assistant Desk Editor 3. Rotoart and Desk Ed- itor 4; General Chairman Water Car- nival 1926 Summer Session; Phi Mu Delta. Thesis: Circulation Problems of Out- door Advertising. Page 61 HiLDECARDE KaTHRYN BeCKER Two Rivers EDUCATION Business Staff Country Magazine 3 Editorial Staff 4; Keystone Council 4 Euthenics Club 2. 3. 4; President 4 Pan Professional Council 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: Trends in Boys and Girls Club Work. John Alden Behnke Appieion ENGLISH Lawrence College 1, 2; Treasurer Y. M. C. A. 4, Y M. C. A. Cabinet 3. 4; Member of Congregational Board 4; Men ' s Glee Club at Lawrence Col- lege 1, 2, Assistant Manager U. W. Men ' s Glee Club 3, Associate Manager U. W, Men ' s Glee Club 4; Lawrence All-College Play 2 ; Trident Club, Lawrence 2, Vice-President 2, Fellow Men ' s Dormitories 4, Social Chairman 4; Tau Kappa Alpha; Forensic 2; Honors in English; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Thesis: Criticism as Reflected in the Periodical Essay of the Eighteenth Century . Genevieve Edna Bell Westfield, New York DIETETICS University of Rochester 1 . Thesis. Iron Content of Several Varie- ties of Nuts, Determined by Colori- metric Method Richmond Thomas Bell Milwaukee chemistry Business Staff Octopus 2. 3; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps; Freshman Track; Alpha Chi Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Pi Kappa Alpha. Thesis: Metastable Tin. Mildred Helene Bemis Antigo HISTORY Phi Omega Pi. Leonard Edwin Benedict Madison COMMERCE Ways and Means Committee Military Ball 3; Vice-President Sophomore Com- mission; Member of Wesley Founda- tion Cabinet 4 ; President Class of Wesley Methodist Church Group 1 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3. Major 4; Pistol Team 2, 3; Secretary-Treasurer 3; DeMolayClub 1.2, 3.4, President 3; Wisconsin Student Forum 3, 4. Thesis: Investigation of Prices in the Canning Industry in Wisconsin. Eulalie Charmian Beffel Milwaukee ENGLISH Chairman Traditional Events Commit- tee Mother ' s Day 3 ; President Red Gauntlet; Keystone Council. Secretary- Treasurer 2; National Student Council Y.W.C A. Cabinet 2. 3. 4, Secretary 2 ; Co-Chariman Campus Religious Conference 4, Vice-President 4; W. A. A 1, 2. 3, 4, Board 2. 3. Head of Track 2. 3, Small ■W ; Class Hockey 1. 2. 4; Class Track 1. 2. 3, 4; Class Rifle Team 3; Class Indoor Baseball 2; Varsity Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Mortar Board, Treasurer; Crucible; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: Masefields Sense of the Tragedy of Life. Herbert Charles Behrens Cedar burg MEDICINE Milwaukee Normal School I ; Member of Calvary Lutheran Religious Council 4; Phi Chi. Thesis Skeleton of a Bear. Glen Hugh Bell Madison LAW University of Wisconsin. B. A.; Local Advertising Manager 1925 Badger; Student Editor Wisconsin Law Review 3; Forensic Board 4. Treasurer 4; Joint Debate 4; Vilas Medal Wearer; Sopho- more Semi-Public Debate ; 1 ntercol- legiate IDebate Squad 3, 4. 5; President Athenae Literary Society 3. Secretary 2; Phi Alpha Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Eielta Sigma Rho; Sophomore Honors; Senior Honors. WiLHELMINA ELIZABETH BeLL Highland Park, Illinois SPANISH Denison University 1; District Chair- man S. G. A. 4; Class Basketball 2 ' Spanish Ciub 2. 3. 4; Italian Club 2, 3. 4, Vice-President 3 ; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3. Thesis: The Social Satire Element in the Marcos de Obregon. DurellJ. Benedict Fond du Lac COMMERCE Business Staff Literary Magazine 2. Thesis The Selection and Training of Chain Store Personnel, with Special Reference to Methods of Making it More Aggressive, Maurice F. Benfer Elkhorn MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Philomathia Literary Society I, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3 ; Member of Wesley Foun- dation Cabinet. 3; First Regimental Concert Band 2; A. S. M E. 3, 4. pQfie l2 Ena Marie Bennett Stafford, Kansas HOME ECONOMICS Editorial Staff Country Magazine 4; Ag. CollcRe f ' ederation Board 4; Euthenics Club 2. 3. 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron, Thesis: Study of Vitamin A. in Relation to Infections. Virginia Enid Berlin Tulsa, Oklahoma HISTORY Tulsa University. B. A.; Red Gauntlet; Yellow Tassel; Sophomore Commission; W. A, A., Board 2; Physical Educa- tion Club; Outing Club; Class Hockey 2; Class Tennis 2; Class Indoor Base- ball 2 ; Class Archery 2 ; Class Basketball 2; Varsity Dancing Honors; Spanish Club 2; Intercollegiate Club 2; National Music Sorority S. A. I,; Kappa Alpha Theta. William G. Bernhard Milwaukee CHEMISTRY Member of Calvary Lutheran Religious Council 2. 3, 4; President Church Group 3, 4; Assistant General Chairman Horse Show 3; Sigma Chi. Thesis: Research on Cholesterol. AvicE Mae Betts Madison SPANISH Charles Mountjoy Bice Hancock, Michigan AGRICULTURE President Agricultural Literary Society 3, Vice-President, Treasurer 1. 2; Stock Judging Teams 3; Ag. College Federa- tion Board 3 ; Badger Poultry Club 1,2; Vice-President 1, Treasurer 2; All Ag. Club 4, Vice-President 4; Farm House; Alpha Zeta. Thesis: The Effect of Ultra Violet Rays on the Breaking Strength of the Bones and the Production of Flesh on Market Poultry. Katharine Bicgert Evanston, Illinois ENGLISH B. A.; Member of Congregational Religious Board 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. I. 2, 3. 4; Outing Club 4; Class Outdoor Baseball I; Class Indoor Baseball 1, 2. 3; Pi Beta Phi. Richard F. Bergstresser Kansas City, Missouri economics Chairman Decorations Committee 927 Prom; Assistant General Chairman 192b Homecoming; Chairman Decorations Committee Venetian Night 3 ; Hares- foot Dramatic Club 2. 3, 4, Treasurer 3 ; Treasurer Tumas; Skull and Crescent; Alpha Tau Omega. Leander Gerhard Berven Sioux Falls, South Dakota physics Men ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Sergeant Cadtt Corps 1,2; Thesis: A Comparison of Diffusion Pumps. William Herman Bethke Stevens Point economics Stevens Point Normal 1. 2. Thesis: Financial History of American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Gordon W. Bevins Lancaster EDUCATION Platteville Normal 1,2; Beta Kappa Thesis Intelligence Testing. Marjory Murray Biggar Oak Park, Illinois home economics Gamma Phi Beta. Thesis: A Comparative Canned Tomatoes. Study of LuciLE Katherine Billington Wausau home economics Green Button ; Euthenics Club 4 ; Y. W.C. A. 1,2,3.4. Page 63 Nellie Mae Bilstad Cambridge ZOOLOGY Vice-President Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission ; Phi Beta Kappa; Sophomore High Honors; Phi Mu. Margaret Helen Birk Chicago, Illinois latin District Chairman S. G. A. 2; General Committee Father ' s Day 4; Chairman Mother ' s Day 3; Keystone Council 3; Freshman Commission ; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3, Finance Chairman 3; W. A. A. 2; Class Basketball 2; Vice-President S. G. A. 4, Judicial Board 3, 4; Phi Kappa Phi; Mortar Board; President Crucible ; Sophomore High Honors ; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Phi. Thesis: Homer and Montaigne. Mary K. Bishop Dayton, Ohio ENGLISH Randolph-Macon Women ' s College 1 ; District Chairman S. G. A. 3; Chair- man of S. G. A. Pageant Commis- sion 4; Hostess Mother ' s Day 3; Wis- consin University Players 2, 3. 4, Try- outs Chairman 3 , Vice-President 4 ; Fall Play 4; Pre Prom Play 3; Comedy Night 2; French Club 2, 3; National Collegiate Players 3, 4; Kappa Alpha Theta. Thesis • Modern Critical Theories of Literature. Albert Edward Blunt, Jr. Evansville CIVIL ENGINEERING Carroll College 1. 2; A. S. C. E. 2. 3. 4; Beta Pi Epsilon; Theta Chi. William Albert Bodden Menasha COMMERCE Advertising Manager Commerce Maga- zine 3, Assistant Business Manager 4 Transportation Committee 1926 Prom Box Committee 1926 Military Ball 3 Basketball 2; Alpha Kappa Psi ; Com- merce Club 3, 4, President 4; Beta Gamma Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Chi Rho, Thesis: The Application of Budgetary Control in Connection with the Cost Accounting Systems of the Paper In- dustry. LuciLE Grace Bohren Madison Journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, Special Writer 3. Society Editor 4; Society Editor of Summer Session Cardinal 4. Thesis: An Analysis of the Society News in the Wisconsin State Journal and the Capital Times. Martha Dayton Bingham Superior ENGLISH Superior State Normal, I, 2. B. A.; French Club 3, 4. Thesis: William Somerset Maugham ' s Outlook on Life. Edward Birkenwald Milwaukee CIVIL ENGINEERING Editorial Staff Wisconsin Engineer 3. 4; A. S. C. E. 2, 3. 4, Secretary-Treasurer 4; Wisconsin Student Forum 3; Chi Epsilon; Sophomore High Honors. Daniel Bisno Kenosha CHEMISTRY Business Staff Octopus 1.2; Publicity Assistant University Exposition 2; Phi Beta Kappa; Sophomore High Honors; Phi Epsilon Pi. Thesis: Animal Chemistry. RoMO E. Bobb Madison PHARMACY Stevens Point Normal 2, 3; Activities white attending Normal School, Class President 2. 3; Orchestra 2, 3; Member of Iris Staff 2. 3. Ralph Elmer Boeck Milwaukee civil engineering Freshman Committee; President ' s Guard 1 ; A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4; Y.M.C. A. 1, 2. 3. 4. Thesis: The Design of a Reinforced Concrete Arch Bridge for the Harrison Street Crossing of the Illinois Central Railroad at Madison, Wisconsin. Reva Alice Boll Rice Lake HISTORY Circulation Department 1927 Badger; Office Manager Circulation Depart- ment 1928 Badger; Information Com- mittee Father ' s Day 4; Dolphin Club 4; Class Hockey I- Page 64 Albert John Bollow, Jr. Milwaukee ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Milwaukee Branch of U. of W. Exten- sion 1,2; Square and Compass. Myrine Frances Borchers Des Plaines, Illinois music Whitewater Normal 1 , 2 Thesis: Comparison of Various Text and Some Supplementary Materials for the Grades. Grace Winona Botham Madison home economics Euthenics Club 3. 4. Thesis: Furs. Helen Marie Boyd Washington, D. C. ENGLISH George Washington University, B. A.; Kappa Delta. Thesis: Galsworthy ' s Philosophy of Life as Portrayed in the Forsyte Saga George Moritz Bracke Milwaukee DAIRY HUSBANDRY Assistant General Chairman Live Stock Show 2; Chairman Life Stock Show 3 Stock Judging Teams, Dairy Cattle 2 President Saddle and Sirloin Club 3 Alpha Gamma Rho. Mary Margaret Brandel Randolph JOURNALISM Reporter Daily Cardinal I, 2, Special Writer 3, Junior Editor 4; Decorations Committee Mother ' s Day 3; W. A. A. 3, 4; Chairman W. A. A. Banquet Pub- licity Committee 3; Field Day Pub- licity Committee 3 ; Press Club 2 : Coranto; Theta Sigma Phi. Treasurer 3. 4; Phi Omega Pi, Thesis: A Detailed Analysis of the Wis- consin State Journal. Dorothy R. Bolton Janesville ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A. 3, 4; Office Work Business Department 1 926 Badger ; Secretary Business Depart- ment 1927 Badger; Invitation Com- mittee Mother ' s Day 3; Pythia 3. 4; Secretary Yellow Tassel; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: The Arthurian Romance Cycle. Florence Boruszak Milwaukee PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club 3. 4, Secretary 4; Sigma. Robert Chellis Botts Industry, Illinois COMMERCE Western Illinois State Teachers ' Col- lege I, 2; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 4 Chester Braatz Green Bay mechanical engineering U. W. Extension Division, Milwaukee I ; Pi Tau Sigma. Max a. Brackett Elk Mound electrical engineering Sophomore Traditions Committee 2 ; Box Committee 1925 Prom; Philo- mathia 1. 2, 3; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; Freshman Football; Freshman Wrestling; Freshman Crew; Ail University Heavyweight Champion 1; Varsity Wrestling 1. 2, 3, 4; All- American Football 2, 3. Harold F. Brandenburg La Crosse commerce Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3, 4, Finance Com- mittee 3. 4; Me abership Chairman Campus Religious Council 2, 3, 4; Member of Methodist Religious Coun- cil 3, 4; Vice-President Church Group 3, Treasurer 4; Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3. 4; Glee Club Corporation 3, 4; Commerce Club 2, 3. 4; Commerce Advisory Com- mission 4; All-University Religious Service Committee 4; Delta Sigma Pi. I I Page 65 William Carl Brandenburg Hudson CIVIL ENGINEERING Member of Wesley Foundation Student League Cabinet I, 2, 3, 4; A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 4 ; Secretary- Treasurer Junior Class. Thesis: Economic Hydro-Electric In- vestigation on the Prairie River, near Merrill, Wisconsin. Olivia Helga Bratrud Spring Valley, Minnesota HOME ECONOMICS St. Olaf College, 1. 2; Delta Iota at St. Olaf College; W. A. A. at St. Olaf Col- lege. Thesis: Imitation Fur Fabrics. Bernhard E. Bremer Madison GEOLOGY Freshman Committee; Sophomore Com mission; Varsity Basketball 2; Geology Club; Phi Kappa Alpha. Lucille E. Brody Des Moines, Iowa FRENCH Grinnell College 1; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Thesis: Translation of Les Americanis Chez Nous, with Introduction. [ Luther Everett Brooks Wausau mechanical ENGINEERING Assistant Advertising Manager Daily Cardinal 2, Advertising Manager 3, Business Manager 4; Cardinal Board 4, Treasurer 4; Inner Gate; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Tau Sigma; EDormi- tory Fellow, Adams Hall 4; Beta Theta Pi. Alice L. Brown St. Louis, Missouri ENGLISH President S. W. G. A. 4; Keystone Council 4; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; Treasurer Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3; Mortar Board; Crucible; Sophomore Honors; Kappa Alpha Theta. Frank Harlan Brant Youngstown, Ohio horticulture Business Staff Country Magazine 2, Assistant Business Manager 3, Busi- ness Manager 4; Program Committee Live Sotck Show 3 ; President Ag. Col- lege Federation Board 3 ; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1, 2, 3; Alpha Zeta; Alpha Gamma Rho. Richard Knox Brayton Madison ENGLISH University of Wisconsin B. A. ; Art Staff Octopus 1, 2, 3, 4; Art Committee 1927 Prom; Freshman Swimming; Skull and Crescent; Phi Gamma Delta. Emma Iona Briggs Madison applied arts Henry Luesing Brooks Louisville, Kentucky political science Assistant General Chairman 1927 Homecoming; Athletic Board 3,4; W Club 2, 3, 4; Freshman Basketball, Captain; Varsity Basketball 2, 3. 4, Captain 3; Phi Delta Phi; President Tumas; Sigma Chi. Thesis: Senatorial Elections in Ken- tucky Since 1920. Henry W. Brosin Milwaukee letters and science Gertrude M. Brown Indianapolis, Indiana ENGLISH The Principia College 1, 2. Page 66 Helen Haskell Brown Rock ord. Illinois DIETETICS Rockford College 1. 2; French Cluh 3, 4; Euthenics Club 3,4; Arts and Crafts Club 3. 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3. 4; Alpha Gamma [Delta. Thesis: Vitamine B Study in Burbot Liver. Jackson Martin Bruce Wauwatosa LAW Howard University. B. A.; Member of St. Francis House Religious Council; President 192t -26 Church Group: Phi [Delta Phi; Proconsul; Harvard College Scholarship IQ21-22, 1922-3, 1924-25; Alpha [Delta Phi. Grover Harold Bruns Madison commerce [Delta Pi Epsilon. Walter Carl Buethe Wilmette, Illinois political science Chairman Reception Committee Mili- tary Ball 2; Second Lieutenant Cadet corps i. Captain and Adjutant 2; Pistol Team 2, 3.4, Captain 2; Manager Varsity Hockey Team 3, 4; Skull and Crescent; Psi Upsilon. Thesis: The Latin-American Attitude Toward the Foreign Policy of the United States. Virginia Bump Madison ENGLISH Sigma Kappa. Thesis A Comparison of the Plays of John Galsworthy with Those of Bernard Shaw. Vidamae Marsden Bunting Edgerton zoology Beioit College 1,2; Activities at Beloit College: Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2; Member of Vesper Choir 2; Delta Phi Alpha. Calmer Browy Marinette JOURNALISM Thesis: The Psychology of the Comic Strip. Gladys L. Bruns Madison letters and science Harold Edward Bruns Plymouth economics [Delta Sigma Phi. Blanche Louise Buhlig Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A. 3. 4; Girl ' s Joint Debate 3; Treasurer Pythia Literary Society 4; Wisconsin University Players 2. 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3 ; Class Swimming 1 ; Arden Club 3, 4; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: John Mansfield. Mariano Guzman Bundok Abucay, Bataan, Philippine Islands structural engineering University of the Philippines, B. A University of Philippines 1 : Inter- national Club; Philippine Badger Club. Hob ART A. Burch Ashland MEDICINE Lawrence College 1. 2; Interfraternity Council; Phi Beta Pi Thesis: In Medicine . Page 67 Hugh Lewis Burdick Lake Geneva ECONOMICS Business Staff Octopus I, 2. Assistant Circulation Manager 3 ; Traffic Com- mittee 1925 Homecoming; Sports Com- mittee Ice Carnival: Interscholastic; Mid- West Relay Carnival; Haresfoot Play 3 ; Freshman Track ; Varsity Track 2; Phi Alpha Delta; Theta Xi. Ellen Burkhart Benton, Illinois ENGLISH Frances Shimer College 1 ; Button Com- mittee 1925 Homecoming; Pythia Literary Society 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3,4, President4;ClefClub3,4; Keystone Council 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4; Delta Delta Delta. Florence L. Burkman Roscoe, Illinois HISTORY Margaret Dorothy Busse Algoma mathematics University of Wisconsin B. A. ; Lawr- ence College 1,2; Kappa Delta. Thesis: Jacobians And Their Uses. Jean Winifred Butler Ishpeming, Michigan sociology College of St. Theresa 1 ; Italian Club 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Theta Phi Alpha. Hester E. Butterfield Grand Rapids, Michigan FRENCH Charles Francis Burke De Pere MEDICINE University of Wisconsin, B. S.; St. Norbert ' s College 1 ; Secretary of Junior Medical Class; Sigma Sigma. Thesis: Changing Conditions in Rural Practice. Catherine G. Burkit Monroe, Michigan APPLIED ARTS Detroit Teacher ' s College 1,2; Arts and Crafts Club 3, 4; Sigma Lambda, President 3 ; Pan Professional Council 4 ; Delta Phi Delta. Thesis: The Origin and Development of the Miniseule Letters. Jefferson D. Burrus, Jr. Louisville, Kentucky POLITICAL SCIENCE Union Board 4, Vice-President 3, 4; Class Committee Chairman of Sopho- more Dance ; Student Member Executive Committee on International Relations; General Chairman 1927 Prom; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 4; Member of Vestry Episcopalian Religious Coun- cil 4; Athletic Board 2, 3, 4; W Club 2, 3, 4; Freshman Football; Varsity Water Polo 2 ; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4; Varsity Crew 2, 3, 4, Captain 4; Skull and Crescent: Iron Cross; Presi- dent White Spades; Sophomore Honors; Sigma Chi. Florence C. Butler Wauwatosa FRENCH Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Thesis Course. Mabel Jamison Butler Memfjhis, Tennessee PHYSICAL EDUCATION Keystone Council 4; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Pin Wearer; Physical Education Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Outdoor Baseball 1, 2, 3 ; Class Hockey 1,2,3; Class Volleyball 4; Class Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Volleyball 4; Chairman Editorial Board of Wisconsin Undergraduate Studies; Southern Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic 3. 4. President 4; Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: Ine Effect of Exercise Upon the Strength of the Connective Tissues. Earle Tindall Buttles Lake Beulah hydraulics 2; A. S. C E. 3, 4; Alpha Omicron Pi. Thesis: Thesis Course. Carroll College 1, Beta Phi Theta. Thesis: A Study of the Mendota State Hospital Sewage Disposal Plant. Page 68 Walter A. Butz Milwaukee GEOLCXJY Interscholastic 3; Mid- West Relay Carnival 2, 3; Freshman Track; Varsity Track I, 2, 3. 4; Varsity Cross Country 1. 2. 3. 4. Captain I; Spanish Club 3; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Thesis: Marl. Helen Baker Cady Evanston, Illinois ENGLISH Milwaukee Downer College 1 ; Member of Congregational Cabinet 2, 3, 4; Gamma Phi Beta. Thesis: The American Essay Since 1900. Catherine V. Cairns Cleveland, Ohio FRENCH Secretary Mystic Circle 2; Gamma Phi Beta. William A. Cameron Chippewa Falls law University of Minnesota 1, 2; Gamma Eta Gamma. Earl Nelson Cannon Delavan LAW University of Wisconsin, B. A.. 1924, LL.B., 1927; Class Committee Chair- man 1924 Commencement: Member 1924 Badger Board; Chairman Alumni Committee 1923 Prom; Chairman Floor Committee 1925 Prom; Commerce Club 1 ; Advertising Club 1 ; Phi Alpha Delta ; Theta Chi Mary Frances Byard Warren, Ohio PSYCHOLOGY Ward-Belmont College 1, 2; District Chairman S G. A. 3; Editorial and Business Staff 1927 Badger; Division Chief 1928 Badger; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Dyrrell Louise Cahoon Baraboo FRENCH Alpha Phi. Elizabeth R. Calvert Madison letters and SCIENCE Ruth Campbell Lebanon, Indiana ECONOMICS Thesis: Educational Revenues. Harry Russell Cant Westfield ECONOMICS Assistant Advertising Manager Daily Cardinal 2; Chairman Men ' s Arrange- ments 1926 Homecoming; Pi Kappa Alpha. Thesis: Thesis Course. F. M. Carbin Ruth Carlberg Omaha, Nebraska advertising Pate 69 Adelbert D. Carmichael Barringlon, Illinois HORTICULTURE Alpha Gamma Rho. William G. Carney M ilwaukee commerce Business Staff Commerce Magazine 1,2, 3, Advertising Manager 4; Freshman Basketball; Alpha Chi Rho. Mary Ellen Carney Kaukauna LETTERS AND SCIENCE Theta Phi Alpha. Earl F. Carpenter Oakfield ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING President ' s Guard 1; A. 1. E. E. 4; Vice-President Kappa Eta Kappa; Treasurer Tau Beta Pi; Vice-President Eta Kappa Nu; Sophomore Honors. Florence Roberta Carper Indianapolis, Indiana HOME ECONOMICS Butler College 1. 2; Editorial Staff Butler Collegian 1; Butler Dramatic ' Club; Chimes (Junior Honorary at Butler); Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: The Psychology of Dress. Vernon Gardner Carrier Essex Falls, New Jersey JOURNALISM Union lioard 4; President of Class 4; Editor the Weekly Cardinal 4, As- sociate Editor 4; Sigma Delta Chi, President 4; White Spades; Sigma Phi. Thesis: An Analysis of the Newark Evening News. William Edward Casely Marengo, Illinois HISTORY Thesis: United States Diplomacy Rela- tive to Panama. DwiGHT L. Caton Madison ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Freshman Football; Freshman Base- ball. William J. Chadwick Racine CIVIL ENGINEERING A. S. C. E. ; Beta Phi Theta. Thesis: A Study of the Use of Lumnite Cement for Testing Aggregate for Concrete. Elizabeth Chandler Sheboygan ENGLISH Carol Anona Chapin lola history Homer D. Chapman Darlington agriculture Page 70 Ellis P. Chellman Frederic civil engineering A. S. C. E. 2. 3, 4; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis Experiments on Energy Dis- sipation at the Base of Dams. Althea Marion Christenson Rubicon COMMERCE Class Basketball 2; Women ' s Com- merce Club 3, 4. Secretary 4; Phi Chi Theta; Gamma Epsilon Pi. Thesis: Thesis Course. Donald C. Christison Rifxin electrical engineering Ripon College, Ph B. Ripon College. 1 , 2 ; A. I . E. E. 3, 4. Richard Cassius Church Belvidere, Illinois letters and science First Regimental Concert Band I, 2. 3, 4; University Orchestra 4; Wisconsin University Players, Treasurer 4 ; Hares- foot Dramatic Club 3, 4; Haresfoot Play 3 ; Senior Class Play, Comedy Night, Lead 2 : Spanish Play 2,3; Span- ish Club 2, 3, President 3; National Collegiate Players; Phi Mu Alpha, Sinfonia; Alpha Kappa Lambda. William Wood Churchill Madison electrical engineering A. I. E. E. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Sigma. Sara Louise Cisler Marietta, Ohio ENGLISH Marietta College 1,2; Alpha Xi Delta. Cliff Lorne Childs Eau Claire letters and science Freshman Committee; Sophomore Com- mission; Geography Club 3, 4. Thesis: Physiographic Influences on Migration Routes in the Colonies. Evelyn Ruth Christians Johnson Creek APPLIED arts Assistant Advertising Manager Daily Cardinal 3 ; Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3 ; Pan-Professional Council 4; Sigma Lambda 3, 4, Secretary 4; Delta Zeta. . Joseph Anthony Chuck a Beaver agriculture Vice-President Forensic Board 3 ; Agricultural Literary Society 2, 3 ; Newman Club Church Group 1, 2, 3. 4, President 3 ; Ag. College Federation Board 3 ; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1 , 2, 3; Freshman Track; Farm House; Alpha Zeta; Phi Lambda Upsilon; High Freshman in Agricultural College; Sophomore High Honors. Charlotte Harris Churchill Monroe journalism Castalia Literary Society 2. 3. 4; Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Arden Club 2, 3, 4; Madison Hunt Club 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3. Mrs. Catherine P. Cirves Madison ENGLISH University of Wisconsin, B. A. A. A. U. W. Louise Clapp Morris, Illinois HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Club 3, 4; Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: Effect of Nursery Play School on Growth of Children. Page 71 pm: Georgia C. Clark Hot Springs, South Dakota PHYSICS Mathematics Club 4. Irving Hand Clendenen Oak Park, Illinois ECONOMICS Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2; Varsity Golf 3, 4; Mid-Western Club 4; Inner Gate; Chi Psi. Thesis: History of Finance. John Mercer Coaxes Wausau economics Virginia Military Institute 1 ; Alpha Delta Phi. Allan Roy Cole Cleveland, Ohio commerce Western Reserve University 1 ; Fresh- man Baseball at Western Reserve Uni- versity; Legislative Scholar 1, 2; Phi Beta Delta. Thesis: A Comparison of Deductions and Exemptions Permitted Under In- come Tax Laws of Wisconsin, New York, Massachusetts and United States. Wallace Allen Cole Madison chemistry River Falls State Normal 1,2; Varsity Wrestling 3, 4; Varsity Football 3. 4; Sigma Pi. Thesis: The Influence of Salts on Hydrogen Ion Concentration. Alice Ruth Comer Naperville, Illinois home economics North Central College I ; S. G. A. Board Member 3. 4. Vocational Committee 4; Transfer Club 2; Euthenics Club 4; Chi Omega. Vivian Gertrude Clark La Crosse ENGLISH La Crosse Normal School 1,2; Circula- tion Department 1928 Badger; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Wordsworth ' s Prose. Leslie J. Cleveland Aurora, Illinois mechanical engineering Business Staff Wisconsin Engineer 2, 3, 4; A. S. M. E. 3, 4. Secretary 4; Vice- President Pi Tau Sigma; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Harry David Cohen Superior law Superior Normal 1 ; Chairman of Ten- nis Committee, Summer School Water Carnival 2, 3 ; Member of Hillel Foundation Religious Council 2. 3, 4; Second Lieutenant Ordnance II epart- ment Cadet Corps 3; A W A Award in Cross Country; Freshman Track and Cross Country ; Manager I ntramural Department 1, 2. 3, 4: Varsity Track 2; Varsity Cross Country 2, 3; Inter- church Athletic Association 4 ; Vice Chairman Menorah 1, 2, 3, 4; Athena Literary Society 3.4; Palestine Builders 1, 2, 3, Secretary 3. Leota B. Cole Marshall music Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4, Librarian 3. Business Manager 4; Choral Union 2; Italian Club 4; Mu Phi Epsilon. Thesis: Music in thejunior High School. Madge Jean Collar Merrill ENGLISH Northwestern University 1 ; Vice- President Arden Club 3 4 ; Membership Chairman 2, 3. George Richard Comery Belvidere, Illinois commerce Sergeant Cadet Corps; Phi Pi Phi. Page 72 James P. Conway Wisconsin Rapids MEDICINE Marquette University I : President Second Year Medic Class; Freshman Football; Phi Beta Pi; Phi Kappa. Thesis: A Comparison of the Upper and Lower Extremities in the Human; from the Standpoints of the Homologyes of Bones, Action, and Innervations of the Muscles. Walter W. Coombs Madison LETTERS and SCIENCE Caisson Club 3.4; Scabbard and Blade; Lambda Chi Alpha. Ruth Elizabeth Corp Madison FRENCH Office Department Literary Magazine 3. 4; President of Choir of First Con- gregational Church Group I. 2. 3. 4; Women ' s Glee Club I. 2, 3. 4; French Club I. 2, 3. 4, President 3; Phi Kappa Phi; Sophomore High Honors; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Gamma Delta. Stella Marcelline Costigan Madison medicine Thesis: Optimum Antigenic Doses of Toxic and Non- Toxic Proteins. Juliet Covey Belvidere, Illinois home economics Euthenics Club 3. 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3. 4; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: A Comparison and Contrast of Women ' s Dress of the 18th and 19th Ce.ituries with those of the Modern Age. Dorothy Marcia Crane Adan ENGLISH Y. W. C. A. I. 2; Beta Phi Alpha Thesis: Cooper (The Historical Novel as Developed by Scott and Its Influence Upon Cooper). Ann Margaret Cooke Edgewood, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Pennsylvania College for Women 1,2; Sigma Kappa. Thesis: Kipling and His Short Stories. Kenneth E. Corlett Blanchardville commerce Business Staff Octopus 3. 4; Pi Kappa Alpha. Thesis: Legal Phases of Partnership Accounting. Francis Robert Coryn Si. Charles, Illinois GEOLOGY Geology Club: Theta Chi. Thesis: The Story of Marl from the Anticosti Lakes. Sylvester D. Cotter Madison electrical ENGINEERING Copy and Collection Department 1926 Badger; Lighting Committee Military Ball 3 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; Scabbard and Blade 3. 4; Pi Tau Pi Sigma 3, 4; Treasurer of Reserve Officers ' Association 3, 4. John E. Craig Oconomowoc agronomy General Chairman Live Stock Show 4; Chairman Dairy Cattle Committee Live Stock Show 3; Stock Judging Teams 3; Ag. College Federation Board 2 ; Fresh- man Football ; Alpha Gamma Rho. Laura Edyth Cranefield Madison ENGLISH W. S. G. A. Vocational Commission 4; Girl Reserve Work Y. W. C. A. 2, 3. 4- W. A. A. 2. 3. 4. Pin Wearer; Class Volleyball 2. 3; Class Bowling 2; Castalia 3. 4; Thesis: A Study of Some Types of Eng- lish Religious Lyric Using the Psalms as a Standard. Pate 73 Frances Ione Crawford Racine ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A. 4; Advertising Staff 1927 Badger; Busi- ness Staff Literary (Magazine 3 ; Chairman Alumni Committee 1926 Homecoming; Chairman Floats Com- mittee Venetian Night 3; Union Vodvil 2; Kappa Delta. Thesis: English and American Poets of the World War. Gladys Crowder Bethany, Illinois ENGLISH University of Pittsburgh I ; Blackburn University 2; Chi Omega. Regina Catherine Crowley Madison PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club 3, 4; Phi Mu. Carl Chatman Culp Madison commerce De Molay Club 1. 2. 3, 4, President 2; Spanish Club 2. 3 ; Square and Compass. Grant Reginald Curless Walworth medicine Oberlin College 1 ; Alpha Kappa Kappa; Gamma Tau Beta. Thesis: The Human Body in Its Topigraphical Aspect. Arthur Gerald Dahl Chicago, Illinois physics University of Wisconsin. B. A. Publicity Committee 1924 Homecoming; Transportation Committee 1924 Mili- tary Ball ; Freshman Committee 1 ; Sophomore Commission 2 ; Junior Council 3; Vice-President Y. M. C. A. 2. 3 ; Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; President ' s Guard 1; Phi Alpha Delta; Phi Mu Delta. Thesis: Magnetism and Electricity for High School Students- Howard Dean Crawford Wausau mining engineering National Advertising Manager Wis- consin Engineer 3 , 4 ; Varsity I ntra- mural Manager 4; Mining Club I. 2. 3. 4; Sophomore Honors; Triangle. John A. Crowe Charleston, Illinois Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon. James Gordon Culbertson Stanley LAW University of Wisconsin, B. A. Phi IDelta Phi; Alpha Tau Omega. Sabina Mary Cummincs Madison zoology George Warren Custer Madison electrical engineering First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3; Presi- dent ' s Guard 1.2; Rifle Club 2; Pi Tau Pi Sigma, Secretary 3. Hope Magdaline Dahle Mt. Horeb advertising District Chairman S. G. A. 3; Reporter Daily Cardinal 2. 3 ; Editorial Staff Octopus 3 ; Castalia Literary Society 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: Circulation Studies in Outdoor Advertising. Page 74 William Gustave Damerow Greenwood ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Captain Cadet Corps; Freshman Track ; Pi Tau Pi Sigma. Sylvester John Darling Milwaukee ZOOLOGY Delta Chi. Alma Claudina Davis Clear Lake, Iowa ENGLISH Mason City Junior College 1 . 2. Kenneth Charles Davis BeloU mechanical engineering Beloit College I ; Business Staff Wiscon- sin Engineer 3 ; Member of Congrega- tional Cabinet 3. 4; A. S. M. E. 3, 4; Pi Tau Sigma. Thesis: Diesel Engine Performance. Phillip Henry Davis Plymouth economics Manager Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew; Varsity Crew 2, 3. 4; Vice- President Inner Gate; Phi Gamma Delta. Lura Davison Waupun music University of Wisconsin B. A. Alpha Phi. A. Trueman Daniels Madison history St. Olaf College 1.2. Thesis: The Re-election of Woodrow Wilson. Lester G. Daucs Fort Atkinson LATIN Treasurer Forensic Board 3 ; Athenae Literary Society 1 , 2. 3 ; Young Men ' s Progressive Association 2, Vice-Presi- dent 2; Delta Pi Epsilon. Thesis: Pliny the Lawyer. Elmer Llewellyn Davis Madison mechanical engineering Milwaukee Normal School 1 ; A. S. M. E. 3,4. Lawrence Chester Davis Richland Center medicine University of Wisconsin, B. S. Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2, 3; Gamma Tau Beta; Alpha Kappa Kappa. Thesis Studies in Cardiac Hypertroph- Robert J. Davis Kirksville, Missouri ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Washington University I ; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi. Joseph C. Dean Madison MEDICINE Page 7S Chas. R. Decker, Jr. Milwaukee ECONOMICS Freshman Crew; Varsity Crew 1. 2, 3; President and Treasurer of Skull and Crescent; Tumas; Chi Psi. Otto Fredrick Deering Madison MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Walter Carl Deininger Monroe ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING President ' s Guard 1, 2; A. I. E. E. 3, 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Eta Kappa Nu; Sophomore Honors. Anthony Joseph Delwiche Green Bay AGRONOMY Agricultural Literary Society 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 2. Vice-President 3; Member of Newman Club Religious Council 1, 2, 3, 4; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1, 2. 3, 4; Agric Triangle 2, 3; Farm House. Louise Dennis Ashland letters AND science Ella Arnold Dewey Arcadia journalism Assistant Advertising Manager Daily Cardinal 3 ; Business Staff Literary Magazine 3 ; Arts and Crafts Club 3 Collegiate League of Women Voters 3 Coranto, Corresponding Secretary 3 Alpha Gamma E)elta. Thesis: Retail Advertising Direct by Mail. Martha Louise Dedrick Manitowoc medicine Thesis: The Cardiac Output. Conrad Edward DeHorn White Lake electrical engineering Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps ; President ' s Guard 1 ; A. I. E. E. 4; Pi Tau Pi Sigma. Carol Allcott De la Hunt Milwaukee speech Sweet Briar College 1 ; District Chair- man S. G. A- 2; Wisconsin University Players 2, 3, 4; Pre-Prom Piay 2; Union Vodvil 3 ; Senior Class Play 3 ; The Goose Hangs High 4; W. A. A. 4; Var- sity Dancing Ffonors; Orchesus; Na- tional Collegiate Players; Alpha Omi- cron Pi. Thesis: Relation of the Interpretative Values of Literature and the Dance. John G. Denninger Watertown commerce Norman Victor DeNosaquo Milwaukee medicine University of Wisconsin. B. S. Phi Delta Epsilon; Phi Beta Delta. Thesis: Conditions and Trends in Rural and Urban Obstetrical Services. Elizabeth Henriette Dibble New York City HOME economics W. S. G. A. House President 2; Chair- man of Bradley Memorial Work 3; Class Hockey 3; Bowling 2. i Page 76 Leah Elizabeth Diehl Madison ENGLISH University of Philippines 1 . Thesis Washington Irving in England. RUFUS H, DiMMICK Black River Falls COMMERCE La Crosse Normal School 1 , 2 ; Men ' s Glee Club 3. 4; Phi Mu Alpha; Phi Pi Phi. Esther Margaret Dixon Elroy EDUCATION Thisis A Critical Analysis of Tests in American History. Judith Edwards Dixon Madison MUSIC Castalia Literary Society I, 2, 3. 4. President 3; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3,4, Secretary 3; Choral Union 1, 2. 3; Clef Club 2. 3, 4; Keystone Council 3; Class Bowling 1,2; Arts and Crafts Club 2,3; University Choir I, 2, 3; Sigma Alpha Iota. Secretary 4. Dorothy J ANETTE Dodge Valparaiso, Indiana physical EDUCATION District Chairman S. G. A. 3; W. A. A. 2. 3, 4, Board 4, Pin Wearer; Physical Education Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 2; Class Outdoor Baseball 2 ; Class Hockey 2; Class Track 3 ; Class Indoor Baseball 2. 3; Crucible; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: Relation of Tests to Playing Ability in Athletics. Violet Elizabeth Dohse Prairie du Chien MATHEMATICS Class Outdoor Baseball 1, 2; Junior Mathematics Club 3, 4. James Edward Dollard Madison MEDICINE Alpha Tau Omega. Roberta E. Donham Chicago, Illinois LETTERS AND SCIENCE John Dopp Madison CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Glenn Richard Douglas Winter LAW Lorena Douglas Eleclra, Texas home economics Texas College of Industrial Arts 1, Thesis: A Study of the Art of Qui Iting with Special Reference to the Possibili- ties it Offers for Design in Modern Costume and in Articles for Interior Decoration. H. Isabel Dow Milwaukee CHEMISTRY Wellesley College 1 ; Collegiate League of Women Voters 4; Junior Mathematic Club 4; Cla ' s Bowling 3; Kappa Delta. Thesis: The Detection of Commercial Invert Sugar in Honey. Page 77 Cecilia Conaghton Doyle Fond du Lac LAW St. Mary ' s Notre Dame College 1 ; Rosary College 2; District Chairman S. G. A. 3, 4; Editorial Staff Classes Department 1926 Badger; Vice-Presi- dent Law School Association 4; Kappa Beta Pi ; Chi Omega. Edward M. Drissen Port Washington CHEMISTRY Phi Chi; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis: Oxidation-Reduction Potentials of Some Organic Systems. J. Benton Druse Milwaukee chemical engineering Milwaukee Extension Division 1, Chi Omicron Nu; Triangle. LuciLE Dudgeon Milwaukee ECONOMICS Mount Holyoke College 1,2; Keystone Council 4; Chairman of Student Indus- trial Business Group 4 ; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4, Presi- dent 4; W. S. G. A. Vocational Com- mittee 3 ; Arden Club 3. 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4. Lester Nelson Dukelow Oconomowoc MINING ENGINEERING Lester Thomas Earls Dell Rapids, South Dakota MATHEMATICS Sioux Falls College 1.2; Activities at Sioux Falls College: Class Secretary- Treasurer 2 ; Executive Editor Sioux Falls Stylus 2, 3; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 1, 2, 3; Secretary Y. M, C. A.; Activities at Wisconsin : President Philomathia Literary Society 4, Secre- tary 3; Junior Mathematics Club 3, 4; Pi Kappa Delta. Sherburn Moore Driessen Marion MEDICINE Lambda Chi Alpha. Thesis: Diurnal Variation of Red Blood Cells in the Normal Human. Dorothy M. Drives Madison NURSING Samuel Stanton Dubin Los Angeles, California LAW Class Committee Chairman Junior Advisory Board 3; Chairman Decora- tions Committee 1926 Prom ; Sopho- more Semi-Public Debate ; Secretary Philomathia Literary Society 2; Cam- Pus Religious Council 3, 4; Member of lillel Foundation Religious Council 3, 4; President Hillel Foundation Church Group 3. 4; Manager Varsity Water Polo Team 4; Phi Sigma Delta Leonard F. Duehr COMMERCE Vernon Henry Dyer Omro electrical engineering Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps, 3, 4; President ' s Guard I, 2; Member of Student Branch of A. I. E. E. 3, 4, Ruby J . East Greenville, Texas Page 78 Dorothy Anne Ebbott Palmyra HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Club 3. 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: Iron Content of Some Common Vegetables and Fruits Evelyn Marguerite Ekdahl Geneva, Illinois W PHYSICAL EDUCATION A. A. 3. 4, Pin Wearer; Physical Education Club I. 2, 3, 4; Class Volley- ball 3, 4; Class Bowling 3; Varsity Vol- leyball 3. Thesis: The Effect of Exercise Upon the Tensile Strength of Tendons. Ellen Ela Madison ECONOMICS Mount Holyoke College 2; Delta Zeta. Thesis: Bank Failures in the Northwest. Ernest E. Ellicott Chicago, Illinois mechanical engineering Art Staff Wisconsin Engineer 2; Hares- foot Dramatic Club 2, 4; Alpha Sigma Phi. S. Lee Ely Davenport, Iowa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ramona L. Enge Sauk City ENGLISH North Central College I ; Member of Wesley Foundation Religious Cabinet 4 ; President Bashford Club Church Group 4; Blue Shield 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 4; Beta Phi Alpha, Josephine Marie Eiting Kaukauna Milwaukee State Normal 1. 2; Arden Club 4. Laurence Conrad Eklund Tomahawk JOURNALISM Desk Editor Daily Cardinal 3, Asso- ciate Editor 4; Associate Editor Ath- letic Review 3 ; Hesperia Literary So- ciety I; Freshman Track; Sigma Delta Chi;ThetaChi. Thesis: Analyses of the Washington IDaily News. Oscar Melville Elkins Racine MEDICINE Assistant General Chairman Military Bail 3; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3. 4; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Major 4; President ' s Guard 1, 2, Lieu- tenant 2; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming 2, 3 ; Varsity Water Polo 1 , 2. 3. 4; Scabbard and Blade. Robert M. Ellis Evanston, Illinois ECONOMICS Prom Fox Trot Committee 1927 Prom Tickets Committee Ice Carnival 3 Manager Varsity Football Team 4. Tumas; Skull and Crescent; Alpha Delta Phi. Fred Joseph Emig Wellsburg, West Virginia chemistry Varsitv Boxing 1; Southern Club I, 2, 3. 4; Phi Kappa. Thesis: The Effect of Pressure Upon the Thermal Conductance of Gases. Mildred A. Engelbrecht Elgin, Illinois bacteriology Northwestern LIniversity I, 2. Thesis: A Study of Hemolytic Strep- tococci in Scarlet Fever Throat Cul- tures. Page 79 Larry Mathew Engelhard La Croose LAW Gamma Eta Gamma. TiRZA B. Ennor Madison MATHEMATICS Castalia Literary Society 2, 3, 4; Mem- ber of Presbyterian Cabinet 3 ; W. A. A. 3, 4; Class Volleyball 3, 4; Arts and Crafts Club 1,2; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Formation of Proper Cubics and Quartics by Continuous Deformation from Degenerate Forms. Rose Epstein Milwaukee PHARMACY Marquette University !, 2; Menorah 3, 4; Sigma. Thesis: Oleum Theobromatis. Willis James Erlandson Wausau George Washington University I ; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis: An Analysis of the Wausau Record-Herald. Edward Sidney Ersler Chicago, Illinois MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Northwestern University I ; Captain Cadet Corps 3, Lieutenant 2; Pi Lambda Phi, NoRBERT William Eschmeyer Norwood, Ohio HISTORY Advertising Assistant Daily Cardinal I, Assistant Advertising Manager 2. Ad- vertising Manager 3. Business Manager 4; Sophomore Honors; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Thesis: Ohio Congressional Elections of 1866. Mildred Encler Madison SPEECH Wisconsin University Players 1. 2, 3, 4. Try-Outs Chairman 4; Fall Play 2. 3; Pre-Prom Play 2, 3 ; National Collegiate Players, President 4; Alpha Omicron Pi. Ely Epstein Milwaukee medicine Phi Beta Delta. J. Raymond Erickson Newark, New Jersey electrical engineering ■W Club 3, 4; Varsity Track 3, Eta Kappa Nu. Walter C. Erskine Jacksonport commerce C lommerce Advisory Commission Sigma Phi Sigma. Catherine Matilda Esch Madison FRENCH Thesis: Henry Bordeaux and French Family Life. Albert Ellis Evans Racine medicine Purdue University I ; Gamma Tau Beta ; Alpha Kappa Kappa. Thesis: Ultra-Violet Light. Page SO Bettve Bruce Evans Ripon ENGLISH Ripon College 1.2; Wisconsin Univer- sity ' Players; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Chi .Omega. Richard E. Everett Madison ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Chi Omicron Nu; Freshman Honors: Triangle. Edith Louise Faithorn Wauwatosa SOCIOLOGY W. A. A. 2; Class Outdoor Baseball 2. 3; Varsity Outdoor Baseball 2; Alpha Phi. Virginia M. Fay Hayward Lawrence College 1 ; Treasurer of Beta Phi Alpha at Lawrence. Isabel Feistl Milwaukee MATHEMATICS Keystone Council 4; Mathematics Club 2. 3, 4; German Club 2, 3, 4; President Barnard Hall. Thesis: Matrices and Linear Transfor- mations. Harry E. W. Fenton Marshfield MEDICINE Vice-President Sophomore Medic Class 4- Gamma Tau Beta; Alpha Kappa Kappa. Thesis: Topographical Anatomy. Doris Iane Evans Markesan MATHEMATICS Member of Methodist Cabinet 3; Mathematics Club 3, 4; French Club 2. 3. 4. Thesis: Analytic Work on Curves of the Third Order. (Cubics.) Andrew C. Fadness Rio LAW Luther College. B. A ; Gamma Eta Gamma. Paul Holman Faust Evanslon, Illinois FRENCH Chairman Arrangements Committee Venetian Night 2 ; Arrangements Com- mittee Interscholastic 2; Drum Major First Regimental Concert Band 1. 2. 4; Wisconsin University Players 3, 4; Fall Play 4 ; Pre-Prom Play 3 ; Haresfoot Dramatic Club I. 2. 3. 4; Chair- man Haresfoot Follies; Haresfoot Play 2; Pi Epsilon Delta 3. 4; Chi Psi. Jacob Frank Federer Sheboygan economics Gamma Eta Gamma; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Panama Canal Trafific and the Transcontinental Freight Situation. Gladys Gwendolyn Feld Kansas City, Missouri journalism Ward-Belmont College 1. 2; Editorial Board Literary Magazine 3. Advisory Editor 4; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis: Analysis of the Kansas City Post. Sylvia Marie Fernholz Jefferson mathematics W. ' A. A. 2. 3. 4; Class Volleyball 1. 2; Class Track 1 ; Junior Mathematics Club 2, 3. 4; French Club 3, 4; Pan- Hellenic 2, 3; Sophomore Honors; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: The Hessian and Its Uses. Page 8 1 Ruth Margaret Filyes Madison HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Chi Omega. Laurens B. Fish Webster Grove, Missouri AGRONOMY Saddle and Sirloin Club 2; Alpha Delta Phi. Walter W. Fisher Oakfield electrical engineering Ripon College 1,2. Winifred T. Fletcher Grand Rapids, Michigan home economics Box Committee 1926 Prom; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Theiis: Agean History of Costume in Relation of Custume Today. Martha G. Flugum Stoughton latin St. Olaf College 1,2; Delta Iota, at St. Olaf College. Thesis: Virgil ' s Portrayal of Women in the Aeneid VIl-XII. Evelyn M. Fossum Cambridge history Keystone Council 4. Peter Andrew Finstad Drummond mathematics Wisconsin College of Mines 1. 2; Junior Mathematics Club 3, 4, Secretary- Treasurer 4; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis: Duality. Homogeneous Point and Line Coordinates and Their Appli- cations. Olive C. Fish Cleveland, Ohio LIBERAL arts Western Reserve University, Graduate; Western Reserve University B. A.; University of Wisconsin M. A.; Thesis: A Measure of AchievementXin Geography Teaching. Sarah Elizabeth Fitzhugh Ridgewood, New Jersey applied arts Connecticut College 1 ; Columbia Uni- versity 1925; Activities at Connecticut college: Vice-President Class of 1924; Class Committee Chairman of Enter- tainment 2, Manager of Basketball I, 2, Activities at Wisconsin: Class Track 1 ; Class Basketball 1 ; Varsity Track 1 ; Sigma Lambda ; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis: Colonial Architecture. Willard Lee Flint .Sioux Falls, South Dakota economics Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2. 3, 4;IFresh- man Crew ; Alpha Sigma Phi. Esther A. Fosshage Mt. Horeb journalism Office Manager. Business Department 1927 Badger; Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, Special Writer 3 ; Business Staff Octopus 2, 3; Women ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Class Bowling 3 ; Alpha Gamma Delta. Gladys Orene Fossum Beloil history Beloit College 1,2; W. A. A 3,4. Thesis: Columbia and Princeton Col- leges in 1775. Page ' JZ Ruth Edna Fowler Milwaukee LATIN Business Staff Octopus 2, 3; Women ' s Arrangements Committee 1027 Prom; Italian Club 4; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: The Classical Illusions Found in Dantes ' Divine Comedy. Neil Ashton Fox Plymouth EDUCATION Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 ; A. I. C. E. 1; Caisson Club 3; Beta Kappa. Thesis: The Achievement of Juniors Entered from Normal Schools as Com- pared with Juniors Who Were Non- Transfers. Floyd G. Francis Madison pharmacy Class Track; Varsity Track; Beta Phi Sigma. Kathryn Elizabeth Franey Madison MUSIC Assistant Editor Photography Depart- ment 1926 Badger; Editor Musi c De- partment 1927 Badger; Choral Union 2; Orchesus 3, 4; Corresponding Secretary Sigma Alpha Iota 4. Thesis: Piano Recital. Lowell Emil Frautschi Madison history Union Board 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3, Presi- dent 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 1, 3. 4; First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2. 3; Wisconsin University Players 2. 3, Treasurer 3; Tumas; Skull and Crescent; Iron Cross; White Spades; Sophomore High Honors; Sigma Nu. Thesis: Napoleon Bonaparte. Arnold Stanley French Galesville agriculture Freshman Crew; Saddle and Sirloin 1, 2. 3. 4; Delta Sigma Phi. Geo. William Fox Madison medicine Freshman Track; Varsity Track 2. 3, 4; Nu Sigma Nu; Chi Psi. Thesis: The Treatment of Necrotic- Enteritis. William B. Frackelton Lead, South Dakota electrical engineering Publicity Committee 1927 Prom; Fresh- man Track; Theta Tau; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Eloise Francke Madison GERMAN Sophomore Honors. Isabelle Frances Franklin Oxford FRENCH Milwaukee State Normal 1, 2. Thesis: Daudet. Helen Elizabeth Frazier Chicago, Illinois FRENCH Business Staff 1926 Badger; Class Out- door Baseball 2; Class Hockey 1, 2, 3; Class Indoor Baseball 2; Class Basket- ball 1; French Club 2, 3; Alpha Chi Omega. Oscar Walter Friske Sfyarta MEDICINE University of Wisconsin B. A.; Chair- man 14th Military Ball 3, Provost Mar- shall 3; Member of Lutheran Religious Council ; Calvary Lutheran Church Group 3, 4. Chief Usher 3. 4; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2, Major 3; Sergeant President ' s Ciuard 1 ; Alpha Kappa Kappa. Page 83 Lorraine Gladys Fritz Chifypewa Falls PHYSICAL EDUCATION W. A. A. 3. 4, Board 4, Vice-President 4, W. A. A. Pin; Physical Education Club 1.2,3.4; Class Hockey 1,3; Class Track 2. 3, 4; Class Basketball 3. 4; Varsity Hockey 3; Varsity Track 2, 3; Anderson House 2. 3, 4, Secretary 3, President 4. Ward L. Funk Groton, South Dakota ECONOMICS University of South Dakota 1, 2; Lambda Chi Alpha. Thesis: Insurance Policies in Industrial Labor Programs. Bertha Frances Furminger Appleton MATHEMATICS Lawrence College i ; Mathematics Club 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 4; French Club 2. Thesis: Invariants. Arthur Edward Gaik South Bend, Indiana COMMERCE Accountant Business Department 1926 Badger; Editorial Staff Commerce Magazine 2, Associate Editor 3. Editor 4; Chairman Finance Committee 1926 Homecoming; Commerce Club 2, 3, 4. Secretary 3 ; Commerce Advisory Com- mission 3 , 4 ; Beta Gamma Si na ; Sophomore Honors; Delta Sjgma Pi. Thesis: Wisconsin Income Tax Prob- lems. NoLA F. Gallagher Madison humanities Jane Gaston Dallas, Texas ENGLISH University of Wisconsin, B. A.; Census Chairman W. S. G. A. 3 ; Editorial Staff 1926 Badger; Finance Committee Vene- tian Night 3; Letters Committee Fath- er ' s Day; Wisconsin University Players 2. 3, 4, Secretary 4; Vice-President Green Button ; Keystone Council 3 ; Freshman Commission; Treasurer Soph- omore Commission; W. A. A. 2, 3 ; Orchesus. Dance Drama ; Secretary Mortar Board ; Crucible ; Sophomore Honors; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis Social Criticism in Recent Eng- lish Drama. Roy Edward Fulwiler Wauwatosa MECHANICAL ENGINEERING University Extension I, 2. Thomas Francis Furlong, Jr. Milwaukee MEDICINE Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4, Chairman Constitution and Elections Committee 3, Play Committee 4; Hares- foot play 3.4; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 1, Captain 2; W Club 3. 4 Manager Varsity Water Basketball 3. Freshman Track; Nu Sigma Nu; Chi Psi. Thesis: Anatomy. Camilla Dorothy Gabel Chicago, Illinois mathematics Enrollment Committee Ice Carnival 2, 3, High Point Winner 3 ; Pythia Literary Society 1, 2; Mathematics Club 4; Sigma Kappa. Jose D. Galaz Mexico City, Mexico electrical engineering George Carey Gallati Homewood, Illinois journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal I, Desk As- sistant 3, Desk Editor 4; Publicity Committee Venetian Night 3; Publicity Committee 1 926 Homecoming; Ar- rangements committee Mother ' s Day 3 ; Publicity Manager Men ' s Glee Club 4; Philomathia 2; Sigma Delta Chi. Thesis French Newspapers. Laura Gertrude Gaterman Manitowoc APPLIED arts University of Wisconsin. B. S.; Trans- portation Committee 1927 Prom; Art Committee 1926 Homecoming; Y. W.C. A. Discussion Groups 1. 2; W. A. A. 1. 2. 3; Outing Club 2, Pin Wearer 2; Class Volleyball 2 ; Class Archery I ; Varsity Volleyball 2; Arts and Crafts Club I, 2. 3; Pan- Professional Council 3, 4; Women ' s Field Day Publicity Committee 2 ; Chairman Decorations Committee of Women ' s Field Day 3; Sigma Lambda, Secretary 3. President 4; Delta Phi CJelta, Secretary 4, Vice- President 3; Kappa Delta. Page 84 Lucille D. Geffert Madison APPLIED ARTS Elizabeth Marcia George Aurora, Illinois FRENCH University of Wisconsin, B. A.; General district Chairman W. S. G. A. 3; Chair- man Elections Committee W. S. G. A ; Circulation Staff 1927 Badger; Chair- man Prom Week Committee 1 92 7 Prom; Chairman Women ' s Auxilary Commit- tee Father ' s Day ; Chairman Ticket Sale committee Father ' s Day ; President Blue Dragon; President Keystone Council 4 Freshman Commission; Secretary Soph- omore Commission; French Club 1, 2 Crucible Mortar Board; Delta Gamma Thesis: French Biography and Letters Hallett Hunt Germond Madison PHYSICS University of Wisconsin. B. S., M. S.; Thesis: Theoretical Study of Electron Flow in Thermionic Triodes. Donald Eli Gill Madison commerce Class Publicity Committee 3 ; Ac- countant Commerce Magazine 1 . 2, Business Staff 3. 4; Finance Committee 1926 Homecoming; Ticket Committee University Exposition; Sophomore Hon- ors. Thesis: Depreciation Under the Federal Income Tax Laws. Marion M. Gilling Green Bay FRENCH Rosary College 1. JoHN Halbert Gittings Racine economics Wisconsin Student Forum 3, 4; De Molay Club 4; Artus. Thesis: Possibilities of New York as the Future Financial Center of the World. Geo. Rudolph Gehrke Apfyleton commerce Advertising Department 1925 Badger; Hesperia Literary Society 3 ; Member of Student Religious Council 1 ; Fresh- man Basketball; Commerce Club 3, 4, Secretary 4 ; Student Advisory Com- mission 4; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis: Studies in Outdoor Advertis- Irvin Herman Gerks New London electrical engineering First Lieutenant Cad et Corps 3, Cap- tain 4; Kappa Eta Kappa, Treasurer 4; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; Sopho- more High Honors. Lor A E. Gess Sheboygan speech University of Wisconsin, B. A.; Pythia 4; Sigma Kappa. John Philip Gillin Mac 1 .son SOCIOLOGY Student Senate 4; Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, Night Manager 4; Cardinal Board 3 ; Editor Proof Department 1927 Badger; Editorial Staff Literary Maga- zine 3, Editorial Board 4; Publicity Committee 1927 Prom; Publicity Com- mittee Military Ball 2, 3; Publicity Committee Venetian Night 2; Univer- sity Exposition 3; General Chairman Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day 3; Freshman Committee; Sophomore Com- mission; Junior Council; Chairman Publicity Committee Religious Con- ference 2, 3; President Y. M. C. A. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3 ; Member Baptist Religious Council 3; First Regimental Concert Band 1,2. 3, 4; Press Club 2. 4; All University Convocation Committee 3, Chairman 4; Alpha Kappa Delta; Phi Kappa Phi; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Thesis: Origin of Marriage. William H. Gilster La Crosse electrical engineering A. L E. E. 2. 3. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Pi Tau Pi Sigma Horace Arthur Gladden Alton, Illinois COMMERCE The Principia College 1,2; Delta Kappa Epsilon. Page 8S Charles Robert Glass Milwaukee CHEMISTRY Tali Sigma Omicron. Thesis: Effects of Electrolytes Upon Viscosity of Flour-water Suspensions. Eleanor Louise Gnatt Milwaukee ENGLISH Milwaukee State Normal School 1 . 2 Member Y. M. C. A.; Arden Club 1; Philathea, Milwaukee Normal. Thesis: Paradise Lost and the Aenied, Comparative Ideals of Life. Thelma L. Goban Madison HOME ECONOMICS Secretary Wesley Foundation Church Group 2; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Blue Shield 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 3. Thesis: Comparative S tudy of Institu- tion Equipment with Relation to its Economic Importance. Kenneth W. Goddard Dane COMMERCE Student Senate 3 ; President ' s Guard I , 2; Beta Phi Theta. Helene Martha Glenny Waterloo, Iowa Erwin C. Goebel Antigo COMMERCE Alpha Kappa Psi; Lambda Chi Alpha. Thesis: Analysis of Financial State- ments of the Consolidated Gas and Electric Company. Robert John Goetz Madison COMMERCE Alpha Kappa Lambda. Iowa State Teacher ' s Kappa Alpha Theta. Thesis; English College 1, Eunice M. Goan Millville FRENCH Lawrence College 1 . Rlou Fern Gochenour Whitestown, Indiana ENGLISH Butler University A. B. H. Ruth Godfrey Wauwatosa ZOOLOGY Rockford College 1 ; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: Inheritance of Dementia Prae- LuciLLE Ropiequet Goedde East St. Louis, Illinois SPANISH Stephens College 1 ; District Chairman S. G. A. 3; W. S. G. A. Board 3; W. A. A. 1,3, 4; LX lphin Club 3, 4, Secretary 4; Class Swimming 2, 3, 4; El Club Cervantes 2, 3, 4. Vice-President 3; Alpha Omicron Pi. Thesis: Social Conditions as Depicted by Los Quintets. Beulah Goldmann Milwaukee FRENCH University of Southern California 1 ; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Page 86 Edith Lucile Goldmann Madison APPLIED ARTS Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3. 4. Thesis: American Indian Art. Bertram B. Goodman Milwaukee Milwaukee Normal School 1, Epsilon Pi. 2; Phi Elizabeth Alexander Gore Sheffield, Illinois ENGLISH S. G. A. Board 3. Ida Goshkin Lafayette, Indiana ENGLISH John Amandus Grab Manaiva MEDICINE Lawrence College 1 ; University of Wis- consin B. S. ; Secretary Sophomore Medic Class; Phi Beta Pi ; Alpha Omega Alpha. Thesis: Present Methods of Medical Service in Cities of Various Sizes. Laurence Carter Gram West Allis Sophomore Semi-Public [Debate; Hes- peria Literary Society 1, 2, 3. Bernard Arthur Goodkind New York City, N. Y. POLITICAL SCIENCE Edgar S. Gordon Madison University of Wisconsin, B. A. Frances E. Gore Madison psychology District Chairman S. G. A. 3; S. G. A. Council 3; Class Committee I ; Program Committee !92b Prom; Member of Congregational Cabinet 4, Board 1,2.3; Freshman Commission ; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 4; Chairman World Education; Chair- man Y. W. C. A. Bazaar 3 ; Arts and Crafts Club 1 ; Psychology Club 3 ; International Club 4; Member Women ' s European Student Pilgrimage 3; Cruci- ble; Sophomore Honors; Delta Zeta. Thesis: Research on Maze — Learning of Human Beings. Olga Gottlieb Hutchinson, Kansas journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal 2. 3, Special Writer 4; Editor Campus Organizations Department 1927 Badger; Chief Or- ganizations Department 1928 Badger; Publicity Officer University Exposition 3 ; Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day 2, 3 ; W. A. A. 2. 3 ; Class Volleyball 1,2; Varsity Volleyball 2; Varsity Dancing Honors. Thesis: The Trend of Thought Toward the Theater as a Serious Art as Shown by American Dramatic Magazines and Articles. Grace Dorothy Graf Mukwonago home economics Member of Congregational Religious Council 1, 2, 3, 4; E Uthenics Club 2, 3, 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: A Study of the Chariot Wheel Pattern in Hand Loom Weaving with Special Reference to Possibilities for Variations in Creating Designs. Paul Leroy Grange Darlington agriculture Square and Compass 1 ; Acacia. Page S7 Cleo Margaret Gray Pennsboro, West Virginia HOME ECONOMIS Salem College, B. A.; Scholar in Home Economics, Thesis: Clothing in Relation to Woman ' s Health. Clara Ernestine Grebe Waupun applied arts Circulation Staff, Business Staff 1927 Badger ; Circulation Staff, Business Staff 1928 Badger; Business Staff Octopus 4; Member of Congregational Board 2; Class Volleyball I; Arts and Crafts Club 1. 2. 3 4; Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: Investigation and Illustration of the Child ' s View of Fairy Stories. Wallace Adolph Green Green Bay ECONOMICS The Principia Junior College 1,2; Phi Sigma Kappa. Alice Strelow Gress Davenport, Iowa MUSIC Pythia Literary Society 2, 3, 4; Wom- en ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Choral Union 1,2; Clef Club 2, 3. 4. Treasurer 4; Keystone Council 4; Mu Phi Epsilon. President 4. Thesis: Music as a Factor in the De- velopment of Personality. Virginia Grover Evanston, Illinois journalism Editorial and Circulation Department 1 927 Badger ; Editorial Department 1928 Badger; Outing Club 2. 3; Delta Zeta. Laurence G. Gumbreck Madison zoology W Club 3, 4; Conference Medal; Varsity Track 3 ; Varsity Cross Coun- try 3, 4; Sigma Pi. Thesis: Maze Learning of Cat. Floyd John Gray Springfield, Illinois economics Business Staff Daily Cardinal 1 ; Business Staff Octopus 1 , Advertising Manager 2, Assistant Business Manager 3; Pub- licity Committee 1925 Prom; Interscho- lastic Committee 3 ; High School State Basketball Tournament 1 ; Freshman Basketball ; University Advertising Club 2, President 3; Inner Gate; Alpha Tau Omega. Margaret Mary Green Evansville applied arts Phi Omega Pi. Daisy B. Grenzow journalism Monroe Editorial Staff Literary Magazine 3, 4; Press Club 2; Theta Sigma Phi; Sopho- more High Honors; Amelia E. Doyon Scholarship. Thesis: A Comparison of the Big Four Magazines. William Paul Griffith Oconomowoc economics Interscholastic 3 ; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3; President ' s Guard I, 2; Scabbard and Blade; Pi Kappa Alpha. Valentine Carl Guenther Sheboygan LAW University of Wisconsin, B. A., Delta Upsilon. Evelyn M. Gunn Madison ENGLISH Spanish Club 1, 2, 3. 4, Secretary. 3; Theta Phi Alpha. Thesis The Characters in the Novels of Thomas Hardy and Their Relation to Environment. 4 Pafe Sg ly. -r.-. , Bessie Evalyn Gustafson Waukegan, Illinois APPLIED ARTS Northern Illinois State Teachers Col- lege 1; Circulation Department 1928 Badger; Executive Board Octopus 3. 4; Women ' s Glee Club 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet I. 2; Varsity Baseball I, 2; Arts and Crafts Club 2, Secre- tary I, Vice-President 3; Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: Cross-Investigation of Colonial Art and Design in the Home of Today. LiSETTE Helen Haase Milwaukee HOME ECONOMICS District Chairman S. G. A. 3; Editor Forensics E)epartment 1 27 Badger ; Womans Arrangements Committee 1927 Prom: Buttons Committee 1926 Homecoming; Wisconsin University Players 3,4; OmicronNu; Sigma Kappa. Thesis: The Relation of the Sales Woman in Clothing Departments to the Consumer and the Source of Supply. Anthony Charles Hahn Water town Northwestern College I; Phi Beta Pi. Eugene L. Haley Chippewa Falls Eau Claire Normal 1, 2; Gamma Eta Gamma. Earl Franklin Halverson Superior COMMERCE SuF erior State Normal 1. 2; Beta Phi Theta. Evelyn H. Hamer Chicago, Illinois PHYSICAL EDUCATION Chicago Normal School of Physical Education 1; W. A. A. 2, 3. 4, Board 3. 4; Minor W Pin. Major W Numer- als; Outing Club 3, 4; Physical Ed- ucation Club 2, 3, 4; Dolphin Club 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Class Volleyball 4; Class Track 2, 3, 4; Class Indoor Base- ball 3, 4; Class Swimming 2. 3; Class Basketball 2; Varsity Volleyball 4; Varsity Track 3. 4; Varsity Swimming 3; Varsity Indoor Baseball 3, 4, Swim- ming Honors, High Apparatus Honors, Track Honors Thesis: Recreational Phases of the Playground. Clifford E. Gustafson Rockford, Illinois CHEMISTRY Phi Mu Delta. Thesis: Fractional Crystallization Crude Oil. Virginia Hag an Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Miriam Elizabeth Hahn Reedsburg HISTORY Reporter Daily Cardinal 3; Invitation Committee 1926 Mother ' s Day 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W, C. A. Membership Committee 3, 4; Memorial Union Drive 2. 3; Class Bowling 1. 2, 3. 4; Intersorority Bowling Team 1 ; Alpha Xi Delta, Thesis: George Whitefield in Colonial History. Margaret Elizabeth Hall Wauwatosa psychology and ENGLISH University of Wisconsin B. A. ; Editorial Staff Literary Magazine 3 ; Castalia Literary Society 2. 3 ; W. A. A. 1, 2; Outing Club 1,2; Class Track 1 . Thesis: A Quantitative Study of Re- mote Associations in Serial Learning. Peter Anthony Hamacher Madison pharmacy Kappa Psi. Thesis: Study and Synthesis of the Alkaloid Strychnine. Marian Jeanette Hamilton Chicago, Illinois psychology Alpha Omicron Pi. Thesis: The Psychological Aspects of Selling. Page 89 Nell Lucille Hamilton Hart ord, Arkansas University of Arkansas B. A, ; Activities at University of Arkansas: Chairman Girls High School State Basketball Tournament 1 924 ; Manager Girls Varsity Basketball 1923; President Women ' s Athletic Association 1923; Active Member W. A. A-; Runner-up Tennis University Finals 1924; Univer- sity of Arkansas Who ' s Who 1924 Activities at University of Wisconsin Social Committee. Graduate Club Graduate Work in Political Science Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis: La Follette ' s Control of Wis- consin Politics. Constance Anna Hampl Burke, South Dakota i. FRENCH r fc All Saints Junior College I, 2; Vice- President Girl ' s Council of St. Francis Club House Church Group; W. S. G. A. Board; French House 3; French Club 3. 4. Thesis: Realism in Daudet ' s Novels. Kathryn H. Handy Long Prairie, Minnesota journalism Hamline University ! , 2 ; Reporter Daily Cardinal 3. Junior Editor. Ex- change Editor 4; Publicity Chairman Pythia Literary Society 3, 4; W. A. A, 3. 4; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis Special Problems in Advertising Women ' s Ready-to- Wear. Claude Stanley Hansen Green Bay MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Marquette University 1; A. S. M. E. 3. 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Elmer L. Hanson Oconto COMMERCE Club 3, 4; Varsity Wrestling 2. 3. W 4. Thesis: Accounting Problems Federal Income Tax Law. the Virginia Louise Hanson Fort Monmouth, New Jersey home ECONOMICSj Drake University I ; Barnard College 2 Thesis: A Study of Herringbone Pattern in Hand Loom Weaving with Special Reference to Possibilities for Variations in Creating Designs. Robert Ellwin Hammes Madison COMMERCE Beda L. Hand Chetek Lawrence College 1; Spanish Club 3. 4; Casa Cervantes 3, 4. Thesis: An Analysis of the Eau Claire Telegram. Ruth Mary Hannan Milwaukee ENGLISH Mount Holyoke College 1,2; Editorial Staff Assistant 1927 Badger; Sigma Kappa. Thesis: John Galsworthy ' s Philosophy of Life as Portrayed in His Novels. Byron Willard Hanson Fargo, North Dakota ECONOMICS North Dakota State College 1,2; Editor Fraternities Organizations 1928 Badger; Business Staff Athletic Review 3; High School State Basketball Tournament 3; First Regimental Concert Band 3, 4; President 4; University Orchestra 3; Phi Kappa Sigma. Sidney J . Hanson Osceola law Hamline University 1, 2; Phi Alpha Delta. Dorothy June Hapeman Park Ridge, Illinois ENGLISH Beloit College I; Women ' s Committee Ice Carnival 2; Castalia Literary So- ciety 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 4; Class Swim- ming 2; Spanish Club 3, 4; Arden Club 4. Page 90 Alice Ruth Haraldson Davis, Illinois SOCIOLOGY Junior Mathematics Club I, 2, 3. 4; Alpha Kappa Delta; Sophomore Hon- ors; Phi Omega Pi. ■Barbara Harrington Tulsa, Oklahoma SPANISH Tulsa University, Milwaukee Downer College 1 ; Women ' s Arrangements Com- mittee 1927 Prom; Dolphin Club 3, 4; Sigma Kappa, Thesis: The Drama of Don Jacinto Benavente. Helen Mary Harris Pontiac, Illinois SOCIOLOGY Illinois Woman ' s College 1. 2; Member Y, W. C. A. I. 2. 3. 4; Class Outdoor Baseball 1 . Class Hockey 2 ; Class Basketball 2; Kappa Delta. Grace Louise Hart Elroy HISTORY Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; French Club 2; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: John Adams and His Relation to the Revolutionary War. Arminta v. Hartwig Madison W. Harold Hastings Madison CIVIL engineering Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4; Fresh- man Fotitball; A. S. C. E. 4; Chi Phi Thesis: Treatment of Industrial Wastes by the Activated Sludge Process. L. Doyle Harmon Mitchell, South Dakota POLITICAL science W Club 2, 3, 4; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball ; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4, Captain 4; President Tumas; Skull and Crescent ; Delta Kappa Epsilon. Arthur J. Harris Suf:)erior medicine Member of Hillel Religious Council; Athletic Manager Church Group ; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Base- ball; Phi Beta Delta. John J. Harris Cuba City medicine Phi Chi ; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Anatomy. Katharine Nella Hartman Reading, Pennsylvania journalism Entered Wisconsin as a junior from Wellesley College in 1924; as a grad- uate m 1926; V7ellesley College B. A.; Reporter Daily Cardinal 3; Contributor Octopus 3 ; Press Club 3 ; Coranto; Leg- islative Scholarship for 1925-6, Trans- ferred to 192b-27. Thesis: Analysis of Three English News- papers in Paris — Paris Daily Mail. Paris Edition of the New York Herald, and Paris Edition of Chicago Tribune Marcella B. Hartwig Marion nursing James Brush Hatcher Dayton, Ohio journalism Oberlin College 1 ; Assistant Editor Ath- letic Review 3, Editor 4; Sigma Delta Chi; Phi Kappa Sigma. Thesis: Book Reviewing in News- papers. Page 91 HO RTENSE HaUSAM Webster Groves, Missouri HOME ECONOMICS W. A. A. 2; Euthenics Club 2. 3, 4, Vice-President 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: Comparative Wearing Qualities of Silk Hose. Emerson Elliott Hawley Beaver Dam LETTERS AND SCIENCE President of Class 2; Special Chairman 1927 Prom; Varsity Football 3, 4; Tu- mas; Skull and Crescent; Zeta Psi. Ruth Margaret Hawley Glencoe, Illinois ENGLISH University of Wisconsin B. A. ; Treasurer Green Button; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Phi. Thesis: Galsworthy ' s Ideas of the Younger Generation and the Chancins World. Hope Ruth Heberlein Madison applied arts Member of Congregational Religious Cabinet 2, 3, 4; Class Basketball 1; Arts and Crafts Club 3. 4. Theodore S. Heian Stanley electrical engineering Geo. John Heimerl Milwaukee chemical engineering University Extension Division 1 , 2 ; University Orchestra 4; A. S. C. E. 4; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon; Triangle. Thesis: Air Lift Pump. Mary E. Hawkins Bowling Green, Missouri mathematics Hardin Junior College 1. 2; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: Affime Geometry. Esther Mary Hawley Madison journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal 1, Special Writer 2, Exchange Editor 3, Women ' s Editor 4; Organizations Department 1926 Badger; Copy Editor 1927 Badger; Editorial Staff Octopus 1 , 2, 3 ; Business. Staff Literary Magazine 1,2; Publicity Committee 1926 Prom; Publicity Com- mittee 1927 Prom; Publicity Committee 1924 Homecoming; Housing Committee 1925 Homecoming; Publicity Commit- tee Venetian Night 2, 3; Publicity Chairman University Exposition 2 Publicity Committee Father ' s Day 2, 3 Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day 2, 3; Wisconsin University Players 3. 4 Executive Board 4; Comedy Night 3, Chairman Publicity Committee Horse Show 2. 3; Prince of Wales Drill Team 2, 3; French Club 1.2; Press Club 1. 2. 4; Advertising Club 1,2; Theta Sigma Phi; Phi Kappa Phi. Thesis: Advertising Problems in the Suburban Newspap er. Josephine Senn Heath Enterprise, Kansas home economics Kansas State College 1,2; Business Staff Country Magazine 4; Clef Club 3. 4; Euthenics Club 3, 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: History of Women ' s Magazines, Second Period— 1870-1900. Frances A. Heckman Independence, Kansas ENGLISH Christian College 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet at Christian College 1, 2; Class Volleyball 3; Phi Theta Kappa; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: A Critical Study of the Book Reviews of Galsworthy s Novels. Lawrence Joseph Heidt Portage physics Mathematics Club 4. Thesis: The Dependence of Spark Fre- quency Upon the Efficiency of a Diathermv Machine. Helen Heinemann economics University of Wisconsin B, A. Thesis: No Par Value Stocks. Page 92 J. Herbert Heise Janesville chemistry First Regimental Concert Band University Orchestra 2, 3. 4. Thesis: Organic Preparations. 3. 4; Clarence L. Helgren Florence agriculture Saddle and Sirloin Club 2, 3, 4, Secre- tary and Treasurer 4 ; Agric Triangle 1 , 2; Alpha Gamma Rho. Palmer Edwin Henderson Ettrick LAW La Crosse Normal, Graduate; Gamma Eta Gamma. Henry Alfred Herman Pueblo, Colorado ECONOMICS University of Colorado 1,2; Zeta Beta Tau. Thesis: The Modern Woolen Industry in the United States. Harold Phillip Hermansen St. Croix Falls electrical engineering Eau Claire Normal 1 ; One Year in United States Army; Scabbard and Blade; American Legion. Francis W. Herreid Blair chemical engineering La Crosse Normal 1 ; Delta Sigma Phi. Newton J erome Heiss Delavan commerce Louis Heller commerce Marquette University 1 ; Palestine Builders 3, 4. Merlyn George Henry Madison medicine Platteville State Normal 1 ; University of Wisconsin B. A.; First Regimental Concert Band 2, 3. 4; Phi Chi, Secre- tary; Sigma Sigma. Thesis: The Relation Between Ma- ternal and Foetal Blood in the Rabbit Following Injury to the Placenta. Erna Augusta Hermann Madison applied arts Thesis: The Correlation Between the Study of Biology and the Graphic Arts. LuciLE Virginia Herold Relay, Maryland home economics Phi Upsilon Omicron; Gamma Phi Beta. Thesis: A Comparative Study of Com- mercially Canned Peas. James Webb Herron Vinita, Oklahoma agriculture University of Oklahoma 1 ; Stock Judg- ing Teams 4; Saddle and Sirloin Club 2, 3, 4; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2, Captain 3 ; Southern Club 2, 3,4. Presi- dent 4; Sigma Chi. Page 9} C. B. Herschberger Chicago, Illinois ECONOMICS Slogan Committee 1927 Prom; Chair- man Swimming and Tennis Com- mittee, Venetian Night 2. 3; Student Athletic Board Vice Pres. 3; W. Club 2. 3,4; Freshman Football; Captain Fresh- man Swimming Team; Varsity Swim- ming 2, 3, 4; Captain 3; Varsity Water Polo 2; Alpha Delta Phi. Thesis: Social and Bconomic Develop- ment of Washington Island. ' Ernest Jeffries Hewitt Evanston, Illinois ECONOMICS Freshman Committee Y.M.C. A.; Rifle Team 1,3; Scabbard and Blade; Sigma Phi Sigma. F. Leonard Hicks Denver, Colorado economics Denver University 1,2; Phi Kappa Psi. Charles D. Highleyman Janesville electrical engineering Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3. 4; Hares- foot Play 2, 3 ; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; Theta Tau; Scab- bard and Blade; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Roland Robert Hintz Sheboygan industrial education Member of Calvary Lutheran Uni- versity Cabinet 3 ; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3; Caisson Club 3, Pistol Club 3; Delta Pi Epsilon. Thomas August Hippaka Ely, Minnesota INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION The Stout Institute I, 2, Diploma; Phi Delta Kappa. Thesis: Course of Study for Senior High School Manual Arts. Dorothy Alice Hess Madison economics District Chairman S. G. A. 4; Reporter Daily Cardinal 3; University Orchestra 2. 3. 4; Clef Club 2, 3. 4. President 3, 4; Keystone Council 3, 4; Class Basketball 2; Class Bowling 2; Mu Phi Epsilon; Sophomore High Honors; Alpha Xi Delta. Virginia J. Hibbard Madison University of Arizona 1 ; Class Hockey I Class Rifle Team 3; Class Archery 2. LiLA Hicks Madison Orchesus 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Drama 2, 3, 4; Delta Zeta. Harold T. Himes South Bend, Indiana ECONOMICS Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4, Vice- President 4; Chairman Haresfoot Fol- lies 4, Haresfoot Play 2, 3, 4; Freshman Basketball ; Skull and Crescent ; Phi Delta Theta. Helen Hanan Hippaka Madison HOME ECONOMICS Stevens Point Normal 1,2; Euthenics Club 4. Thesis: History and Development of Conveniences in the Modern Home. Annette Claire Hirschfield Duluth, Minnesota JOURNALISM Advertising Assistant Daily Cardinal I, Reporter 2, Theater Editor 3, Music Editor 4 ; Business Department 1 92 5 Badger; Editor of Publications Section 1927 Badger; Business Staff Octopus 1, 2; Business Staff Literary Magazine 3; Chairman Housing Committee 1927 Prom; Officer University Exposition 2; Press Club 2. 3, 4; Coranto; Theta Sigma Phi; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Thesis: The House Organ — Its Place in Industrial Relations. Page 94 Hsu TsoN Ho Honan, China MECHANICAL ENGINEERING MichiRan College of Mines. I. 2; I- uchung Mining College, Honan, China, Graduate. Kenneth Hoel Baldwin medicine Second Regimental Concert Band 1,2; Phi Chi. Thesis: Surgical Anatomy. Norma L. Hofferbert Pekin, Illinois ENGLISH Member of Congregational Students Association Cabinet 4; Clef Club 3, 4; Thesis: Mark Twain and Thomas Bailey Aldrich as Interpreters of E3oy- hood. Harland O. Hogan Madiion pharmacy Finance Committee Military Ball 2; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2, Cap- tain 3; Rifle Team 1,2; Varsity Rifle Team 1,2; University De Molay Club I, 2, 3, Secretary 2, Treasurer 3; Rifle Club; Rho Chi; Sigma Pi Thesis: Quassia. A. L. HoLLISTER South Bend, Indiana LETTERS AND SCIENCE Clayton Ernest Holmes Sechlerville AGRICULTURE River Falls State Normal 1. 2; Blue Shield 3, 4; Allay Club 4; Farm House; Phi Kappa Phi. Thomas Merle Hoexjes Gary, Indiana economics Assistant General Chairman Military Ball 2; Ticket Committee Military Ball 1 ; Ticket Committee 1927 Prom; First Regimental Concert Band 3 ; Hares- foot Dramatic Club 3. 4. Secretary 4; Haresfcx)t Play 3 ; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 1, Captain 2; Sergeant Major President ' s Guard I ; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming 3; Varsity Water Polo 3, 4; Psi Upsiion. Margaret E. Hoff Madison home ECONOMICS Business Staff Country Magazine |2; Euthenics Club 3. 4; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: A Study of the Honeycomb Pattern in Hand Loom Weaving with Sptecial Reference to Possibilities for Variations in Creating Design. Lavona M. Hoffman Madison home ECONOMICS Thesis: Different Ways of Handling Blood for Making Tests for Hemolysis of Streptococci. Thos. Baker Holley Madison HISTORY Lambda Chi Alpha. Elizabeth Jane Hollnagel Chicago, Illinois political SCIENCE De lta Zeta. Neva Evelyn Holmes Genoa Cily ENGLISH Page 95 Frank Charles Holscher McFarland LAW Phi Alpha Delta; Sigma Pi. Robert Thomas Homewood Madison CIVIL ENGINEERING University of Wisconsin B. S.; Alumni Editor Wisconsin Engineer 2, 3, Editor- in-Chief 4; A, S. C. E. 2, 3, 4, Secretary- Treasurer 3; Chi Epsilon; Sigma Phi Sigma. Thesis: Tests of Some Common Types of Short Steel Columns Under Oblique Loading. Emiah Jane Hopkins Cleveland, Ohio PHYSICAL EDUCATION Western Reserve University I ; W- A. A 2. 3, 4; Physical Education Club 2, 3, 4 Class Hockey 3 ; Varsity Hockey 4 Castalia 4; Kappa Delta. Thesis: A Study in Training and Con- ditioning of Adolescent Girls and Adult Women. Barbara Hornby Cloquet, Minnesota ENGLISH B. A.; Class Committee Chairman of Finance Committee 2 ; Office Manager Editorial Department 1927 Badger; Publicity Manager Octopus 4; Special Features Committee 1927 Prom; Chair- man Button Committee Venetian Night 3; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission ; Secretary J unior Com- mission; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: Irving ' s Short Story. George R. Horrell Humbird letters and science LuciLE Horton Chicago, Illinois economics Chairman Women ' s Decorations 1925 Homecoming; Tickets Committee Moth- er ' s Day 2 ; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; Varsity Danc- ing Honors; President Mystic Circle; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis: Methods of Wage Payment: Premiums and Incentive Systems. Viola Naomi Holt Cambridge HISTORY Jean Hood Marinette dietetics Elmira College 1; Euthenics Club 3, 4. Thesis: The Antiscorbutic Property of White Potatoes as Shown by Biological Methods of Experimentation. Ervin William Hopkins Randolph chemistry Forensic Board 3, 4, Treasurer 3 ; Sec retary Hesperia Literary Society 2, 3. 4; Phi Lambda Uosilon; Sophomore Honors; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Thesis: The Chemical Composition of Bacteria. Edgar Horneck Elkhart Lake commerce Lawrence College 1 ; Commerce Ad- visory Commission 4; Alpha Kappa Psi; Delta Sigma Phi. Arthur John Horst Chilton civil engineering Thesis: Experimental Study of the Re- lief of Water Hammer Pressure De- veloped by Slow Closure of a Cylindri- cal Valve. Harry Horwitz Oshkosh medicine Class Officer Second Year Medical Class. Thetis: Anatomy. Page 96 Simon Horwitz Oshkosh Cyril M. Howard Brodhead COMMERCE Member of Congregational Students Board 2. 3. 4; Men ' s Glee Club 3. 4; Choral Union 2; Commerce Advisory Ccwnmission 4; Beta Kappa. J. Clayton Howdle Montfori economics Wisconsin School of Mines 1.2; Activi- ties in Wisconsin School of Mines : Member of Miner Board; Football 1,2; Alpha Tau Omega, George Francis Hrubesky Neenah chemical engineering University of Pittsburg 1,2, 3. Dorothy Anne Hughes Louisville, Kentucky sociology District Chairman S. G. A. 3. 4; Col- legiate League 3, 4; Phi Mu. Bertha I. Hull Madison ENGLISH Thesis: Some Aspects of the Renais sance of Herman Melville. George Richardson Hotton Williams Bay argiculture Member of Presbyterian Religious Cabinet 3 ; Chairman Finance Com- mittee Church Group 3, Trustee 2, 3, 4; Manager Varsity Swimming Team 2, 3. 4; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2; A. S. A. E. 2, 3. 4; Chi Phi. Thesis: Analysis of Large Scale Farms ' Margaret Frances Howard Winona. Minnesota HISTORY Milwaukee Downer College 1,2; W. A. A. 1,2; Class Outd X)r Baseball 1,2; Class H(x;key I, 2, 3; Class Basketball 1,2; Class Bowling 1.2; Varsity Hockey 1,2; Varsity Bowling 1,2; French Club 1,2; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: Education in Massachusetts Until 1660. Cornelia B. Howe Oak Park, Illinois ENGLISH Connecticut College 1,2; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Marjorie Mary Hubbard Ashland DIETETICS Stout Institute 1. 2; Activities at Stout Institute: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Philo- mathean Literary Society. Thesis: A Study in Nutrition. Jimmie Ayres Hughes Louisville, Kentucky physical education Secretary of Class 4; Chairman Pro- gram Committee 1927 Prom; Ways and Means Committee 1926 Homecoming; Chairman Reception Committee Moth- er ' s Day 3 ; Sophomore Commis- sion; W. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4; Physical Edu- cation Club 1. 2. 3, 4; Class Basketball 1.2; Alpha Omicron Pi. Helen Carroll Hunter Clarksville, Missouri psychology Southern Club 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3 ; Psychology Club 2, 3, 4. President 3; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: A Study of the Curve of (- or- getting in a Stylus Maze. Pa£e 97 L. Elizabeth Hunter Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Maurice O. Hussa Bangor ECONOMICS Adolph M. Hutter Fond du Lac MEDICINE Solicitor Business Department 1926 Badger; Solicitor Business Department 192 Badger; Collection Manager Liter- ary Magazine 2; Tirst Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3; President ' s Guard 2; Treasurer of Medical Class I ; Phi Chi ; Sigma Pi . Jane L. Hyde Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Hditor Index Department |928 Badger; Chairman ' omen s Arrangement s Cxim- mittce |927 Prom; Sigma Kappa Thesis: The Chemical Aspects of Ad- sorption as Related to the Bacteri- ophage Phenomenon. Creagh Inge Mobile, Alabama ECONOMICS Dolphin Club; Sigma Kappa Thesis A General Survey of the Iron River District on the Northern Penin- sula of Michigan. Marie Verona Irish Madison music Decoration Committee University Ex- position 2; Women ' s Glee Club 2. 1, 4. Treasurer 3 ; Choral Union 1.2; Sigma Alpha lota. President 4. Thesis The Motivation of Voice Cul- ture in the Elementary Grades. Florian Ojnald Hussa Bangor ECONOMICS First Regimental CorKert Band ; . 4, Vice-President 3. University Orchot ra 2; Varsity Baseball }. 4; Pi Kappa Alpha. Alvin Helmuth Huth Seymour commerce SopKotnofe Semi • Public Debate Trauurcr Hesperia Literary ScKiety 2 First Regimental CorKert Band 3. 4 Phi Kappa Tau. Thesis. Departmental Accounting. Ruth Harding Huyette Detroit, Michigan FRENCH W. a. a. I. 2; Dolphin Club I Class Swimming I ; .Mpha Phi. Thesis: De Klaupassant ' s Treatmen: Characters. Florence Lillian Imig Milwaukee ENGLISH Milwaukee State Normal School I, 2, E. Dee Ingold West Allis APPLIED ARTS Art Publicity Literary Magazine 2; Wisconsin University Players 4; Fresh- man Track, Varsity rcrKing Team 3. 4; Arts and Crafts Club 2. 3. Trea.sur«r 3; PsycKilogy Club 3, 4; Delta Phi Delia; S ima Phi Epsilon. Thesis Geographical Illustration. LOTHAR IVER IVERSEN Neu Holstein COMMERCE Sigma Pi. I Pate 9 1 Nelle Jane Jackson Maditon EtaajSH Imliaia State Notnnl I. Z. Tkau: OAtriiaff CitUdmn of SKilccc- Cau. Bermmakd Jacobs MaruMomnc WnxiAM O. Jackson South Bend, Indiana Z Gwnma Frarfman Bandbrii: Vanity BMd a0 2: Sisna Ptu Epdoni. WuxiAM August Jahn Milwaukee EfJCUtSH a an Kakl CunHE Jansky Madison FffVSKS Tidux C«wnic ir 9imfry BaO J: Fint Liacenn Cadet Coras 1: Choiir- nun Pnopnty Cnmninee Hone Shorn J; W CU Z, J, 4; Vanity Hodicy ctary Z; Z. ]; De JUnlay dub I. Z. Sccraafv ' tahonataa Club Z. ). 4. Vice- : I. Piewfant 4: Phi Sawna Phi: Sopnomurc rjomm: Si0raa PIm Si nia- Thau Cumdoionc in- Otrillitinn in Vacuum Tubr Gifciat«. Ruth Elizabeth Jenks PlaOeviUe HISTORY PbtlenlieStatcNiimnal I. Z. TUmu The Owerlanl Mad. HOWAKO W, JlRTLC COMMEKCE Bamtat Aiaiaant Daily CantimI 2: Edbonal StaC AOilttic Renew ?: Gcnetai QtaiiiiiMi Venetian Hi 7: O ia in m n Bonfire Canmincc I4Z6 l ir wm iiiiana; Intendiolaatc Conanit t « i. M BjWey Refay Carnival J; Fit MMimiGcMnmilf jtr: SopnamoneOm ' nmmon: Junior CouncA: Ffc rf a i ian Track; Vanity Tnck I. Z. 7. 4. Phi Kappa Tan. Tkou PkiUk: IMUtitx m the Manoac- ' nentFidd. Cam. W. Jahn North Milwaukee mechamklu. encineemnc Vlaniuaie LMtwraity I; A S. M. E. 7. 4, Pireaident 4: Pi Tau S«na; Tau Beta PL Hakky Roman Jankxi avn. encimeeiunc MawjpirtTe Vui r atH y t. Lawrence Flower Joseph Gir«0t Boy VECHANKAL ENCINEERINC Sophomixe Semi-PuUic Debate; A S. M. E ?. 4. Treaeurer 4: Tau Beta Pi: Sophomore tM Honon Tluncr Eoononsy of Vanoos Fuek in a SmaB Diesd Eiwineu Jean Marjorie Jeweul Omaha, Nebraska PSVCHOIjOCY AkhaOnionnPi. Tkoif. Apptication of Pcychofc«y AduotiHiv Alice Lucille Johns MUSK natrict Ghairaan S G A 4: Pytliia Litoary Society 7. 4; Women ' s dee CU 7. 4. Aoannamft 7. 4; Choni Vmon r. 7; Clef Oub Z. 7. 4: Italix dub 7. 4; Treawnr Mu Phi Eptilon 4: Phi Beta Kappa: Pm Kappa r a: Sofihoinore Hkmon; AMn Ddka PI Tacwiv Ptareo Recital Pa(r99 Carlton HardyJohns La Crosse POLITICAL SCIENCE Men ' s Glee Club 3 . 4, Business Manager 4; Alpha Chi Rho. Clarence Wesley Johnson Racine MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Freshman Track; A. S. M. E. 3. 4; Pi Tau Sigma; Triangle. Ida Mae Johnson Stoughton HISTORY Ways and Means Committee 1926 Homecoming; Chairman Luncheon Committee Religious Conference 3; Pioneer Club 1 ; Chi Omega. Thesis: Joseph Weeks Babcock. Con- gressman. Julia Mary Johnson Wisconsin RafDids botany Kansas University 1,2; Botany Club of Kansas University. Thesis: A Study of the Digestion of Sarracenia Purpurea. Polhill Wheeler Johnson Macon, Georgia journalism Columbia University 1,2; Sigma Delta Chi; Kappa Alpha. Thesis: A Critical Analysis of the Foreign News of Le Journal. Paris, France. Verna M. Johnson Racine sociology Member of Baptist Religious Associa- tion 3, 4; Secretary Church Group 3; Alpha Kappa Delta. Thesis: The Element of Personality in ocial Case Work. Carmen J . Johnson Wautoma mathematics Varsity Rifle Team 2; Junior Mathe- matics Club 2. Thesis: Canonical Form. George Carl Johnson Kenosha ENGLISH Editorial Staff Literary Magazine 1 , Associate Editor 2, Editor 3; Arden Club 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Lewis Prize Essay; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: The Development of the Poetic Powers of Thomas Chatterton loNE Margaret Johnson Madison FRENCH University of Wisconsin B. A. ; W A. A. 4; Orchesus 2, 3, 4; Varsity Dancing Honors; French Club 3, 4; Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3, 4; Dance Drama 3, 4. Thesis: Sentimental Humanitarianism of Hugo and Dumas Pi re. Marvin Joyce Johnson Superior chemistry Superior Normal 1, 2. Thesis: The Relative Reactivity of the Alkyl Radicals. Roy Sidney Johnson Madison economics Square and Compass. Thesis: Thesis Reading Course. Eleanore L. Jones Waupun FRENCH University of Wisconsin B. A.; Chair- man Reception Committee 1927 Prom; Freshman Commission ; Sophomore Commission; Alpha Phi, I Page 100 EvERETTE M. Jones Dodgeville AGRICULTURE C-hairman Swine Committee Live Stock Show 2; Chairman Sheep Committee iJve Stock Show 3; Agricultural Liter- ary Society 1.2; Stock Judging Teams J-at Stock 3; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1, 2. 3. 4, President 4, Secretary- Treasurer 2; Farm House; Alpha Zeta. Lucy Della Jones Birchwood ENGLISH Eau Claire Normal I , Thesis: A Comparison of the Troilusand Cressida of Shakespeare and of Chaucer. Roy DeWitt Jordan Marinette ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Circulation Manager Wisconsin En- gineer 3 , Special Articles 4 ; Music Com- mittee Military Ball 3; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3. Major 4; President ' s Guard I, 2; Freshman Track; U. W. Radio Cluh, President 3; A. I. E. E. 2. 3, 4; Kappa Eta Kappa. Secretary 3. President 4; Pi Tau Pi Sigma; Scahhard and Blade. Sylvia A. Jorgensen Kenosha botany German Club 2, 3, 4, Thesis: The Development of the Antherid and Archegone of a Pleuro- carpus, South American Moss. Milton C, Jorgenson Sisseton, South Dakota medicine George Washington University I ; Phi Beta Pi. Thesis: Pharmacology. Grant Ernest Judge Webster Groves, Missouri commerce Assistant Business Manager Octopus Thesis: A Model Accounting System for a Life Insurance Company. Frances Lucille Jones Baraboo FRENCH Alpha Omicron Pi. Paul G. Jones Black River Falls MUSIC Freshman Committee Y. M, C. A.; Sophomore Commission Y. M. C. A.; Music Committee Religious Con- ference 1 ; Organist Religious Con- vocations 4; First Regimental Concert Band 2, 3; Glee Club Corporation 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4. Vice-Presi- dent 4. Accompanist 3,4; Phi Mu Alpha; Secretary 2, President 3. 4; Delta Chi. Thesis: Organ Recital. Emil a. Jorgensen Waufjaca ECONOMICS Business Staff Country Magazine 3, Business Manager 4; Chairman Sheep Committee Live Stock Show 4; Agri- cultural Literary Society 3; Stock Judg- ing Teams 4; Saddle and Sirloin 1. 2. 3, 4; Varsity Wrestling 2; Delta Pi Epsilon. Gladys Vivian Jorgenson Sisseton, South Dakota HISTORY Sophomore Honors. Thesis: The Racial and Social Back- ground of Early South Dakota Gordon Francis Joyce Chilton Business Staff Octopus 2. Assistant Ad- vertising Manager 3; Phi Kappa Thesis: Worker ' s Education Movement. Enoch Edgar Judkins Grand Rapids Michigan philosophy Circulation Assistant Daily Cardinal I, Assistant Circulation Manager 2, Cir- culation Manajger 3, Associate Business Manager 4 ; Chairman Tennis I nter- scholastic Tournament; Chairman Cups Committee I92b Homecoming; Sopho- more Semi-Public Debate ; Treasurer Hesperia Literary Society 2; Finance Drive Chairman Y, M. C. A. 3; Man- ager Varsity Tennis 3, 4; Varsity Ten- nis 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 1, 2, 3, Treas- surer 2, 3; Arden Club 3. 4; Phi Kappa Tau. Thesis: Mysticism of Present Day. I Page 101 M H ' 1 Albert P. Kachel South Bend, Indiana COMMERCE Collection Assistant Commerce Maga- zine 2, Collection Manager 3, Business Manager 4; Commerce Advisory Com- mission 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Commerce Club 2. 3, 4; Delta Sigma Pi, Secretary 3, President 4. Thesis: An Analysis of the Financial Repxjrts of the General Electric Com- pany. OrmeJ. Kahlenberg Chicago, Illinois AGRICULTURE Crane Junior College 1.2; University of Chicago 1 . 2 ; Member of Lutheran Memorial Cabinet 4 ; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Howard Frederick Kahn Chicago, Illinois economics University of Chicago 1,2; Zeta Beta Tau. Norman Montanye Kastler Racine sociology Wisconsin University Players 2, 3, 4; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2. 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta. Thesis: The Lynching of Negroes in the United States. Samuel David Katz Marinette medicine Phi Delta Epsilon; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: The Ossification of the Ap- pendicular Skeleton at Birth in the Calf, Guinea Pig, and Dog, and its Relation to the Animal ' s Growth. Everett B. Keck Long Beach, California MEDICINE University of Wisconsin, B. S., M. D. ; Class Treasurer Medical School 3, 4; Nu Sigma Nu. President 2, 3; Alpha Omega Alpha; Acacia. Thesis: Relation of Medicine to En- gineering. Charles Kadesevitz Crystal Lake, Illinois COMMERCE Carthage College 1, 2. Florence Marion Kahn Appleton sociology Alpha Kappa Delta. Thesis: Settlement of Illegitimacy Cases in Dane County. Wisconsin. 1923-1926. Stanley Edward Kalish Indianapolis, Indiana journalism Spwrts Assistant Daily Cardinal 2, Spwrt Editor 3 , 4 ; Assistand Sports Department 1926 Badger; Sport Editor 1928 Badger; Editorial Staff Athletic Review 3, 4; Movie Committee 1927 Prom ; Program Committee 1926 Home- coming; I nterscholastic Committee 1. 2, 3; Mid- West Relay Carnival I, 2. 3, Publicity Committee Ice Carnival 3; W Club 4; Manager Varsity Cross Country Team 4; Press Club 2; Sigma Delta Chi. Thesis: An Analysis of The Indianapolis News. George Katz Madison political Science Phi Sigma Delta. Alice Avenelle Kauffman Princeton, Missouri HOME ECONOMICS Euthenics Club; Southern Club. Thesis: A Study of the Solomon ' s De- light Pattern in Hand Loom Weaving with Special Reference to Possibilities for Variations in Creating Design. Marion Estelle Keeler Chicago, Illinois latin Delta Zeta. Thesis: Virgil ' s Portrayal of Old Age in the Aeneid VII-XII. Page 102 Margaret Keenan Bridgeport, Nebraska MEDICINE Alpha Omicron Pi. Thesis: Comparative Anatomy of the Larynx. Marvel Keller Prairie du Sac economics Rachel Josephine Kelley Madison HISTORY Assistant Society Editor in Summer School Daily Cardinal 2; Assistant Editor Classes Department 1927 Bad- fer; Floats Committee Venetian Night ; Castaiia Literary Society 1. 2. 3, 4, President 4; Keystone Council 4; Class Archery 1. 2; Varsity Archery 2, 3. 4; Press Club 1.2; Kappa Delta. Abby D. Kendall Glen Ellyn, Illinois letters and science Northwestern University 1, 2; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: The Geographic and Economic Aspects of the Rubber Industry. Stella M. Kerr Madison letters and science Elsie A. Kind Menasha education Oshkosh State Normal 1 . 2. Thesis: An Analysis of Methods Pro- posed for the Measurement of Character Traits. Leslie George Keller Milwaukee LAW Member of Hillel Foundation Religious Council 3, 4. John Albert Kelley Manitowoc GERMAN Lawrence College. B. A.; Phi Beta Kappa; Gund Scholar in German. Helen Hollowell Kellogg South Bend, Indiana home economics Milwaukee Downer College I, 2; Edi- torial Staff Country Magazine 4 ; Home EcEditor4; EuthenicsClub3. 4 Univer- sity League of Women Voters 3 ; Phi Mu. Thetis: History of Women ' s Magazines in the United States. Lyda Mae Kenney St. Joseph, Missouri FRENCH Ward Belmont College I. 2; B A.; Activities at Ward-Belmont; Student Court; Editor Milestones ; Editorial Staff Hyphen ; Activities at Wiscon- sin: Wisconsin University Players 3. 4; Fall Play 4; Comedy Night 4; Pythia Literary Society 3. 4; Alpha Delta Pi. Daniel Anthony Kerth Racine COMMERCE Student Senate 3, 4. President 4; Student Senate Elections Committee Chairman 3, 4; Circulation Department 1927 Badger; Circulation Manager Commerce Magazine 3. Assistant Busi- ness Manager 4; Finance Committee Military Ball 3; Commerce Advisory Commission 3, 4; Commerce Club 3. 4, President 4; Newman Club 1. 2, 3, 4. Student Representative Co-op Board of Directors 4; Delta Sigma Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Analysis of Financial State- ments. Leslie George Kindschi Madison ECONOMICS Freshman Assistant Engraving Depart- ment 1925 Badger; Assistant Engraving Editor 1927 Badger; Floor Committee 1927 Prom; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2. 3, 4; Haresfoot Play 3; Delta Chi. Page 103 Grace Elizabeth King Milwaukee ENGLISH University of Wisconsin B. A.; Delta Gamma. Arlone Bradford Kinkaid Sioux City, Iowa HOME economics University Orchestra 1 , 2 University String Quartette Club 4; W. A. A. 2, 3. 4; Class Vol leyball 3. 4; Class Indoor Baseball 2, 3; Varsity Volleyball 3; Euthenics Club 1, 2. 3, 4; Kappa Delta. Thesis: A Study of Hemolytic Strep- tococci in Scarlet Fever Throat Cultures. 3, 4; 4; Clef Walter C. Kleinpell Madison medicine Phi Chi. Thesis: Anatomy. Lillian Alice Klindt Cassvitle APPLIED arts Organizations Department 1928 Bad- ger. Kelvin Frederic Klopf Niellsville economics University of Wisconsin. Ph.B.; Phi Kappa Tau. Margaret Louise Knauf Sheboygan physical education W. A. A. 3. 4; Physical Education Club i, 2. 3. 4, Vice-President 4; Class Volleyball 3; Class Track 3; Varsity Volleyball 3. Marjorie Burr Kingston LockjMrt, Illinois ENGLISH Sorority Editor 1927 Badger; Pythia Literary Society 3. 4; Pan-hellenic 3. 4; Delta Delta Delta Thesis: Shall and Will in Present Day Usage. Duane Howard Kipp Madison journalism University of Utah 1; Press Club I. 2, 3. 4; Sigma Delta Chi, Vice-President 4; Delta Chi. Thesis: The Newspaper ' s Influence on Amateur Athletics. WiLMA Mary Klevay Milwaukee economics U. of W. Extension Division 1, 2; Following Activities at U. W. Exten- sion; Vice-President and Treasurer Student Council 2; Editorial Staff Cardinal 3 ; Gamma Kappa Phi Honors 2; Phi Delta Delta Thesis: Industrial Unemployment In- surance as Compared with Unemploy- ment Insurance by Industry. Robert Frank Klockow Jefferson CHEMISTRY University De Molay Club 3. 4; Beta Kappa. Thesis: A Comparison of Some of the Methods Used in the analytical De- termination of Sodium Hypochlorite Solutions. Marcellus p. Kloser Cassvil le agriculture Music Committee 1925 Stock Show; Saddle and Sirloin Club 2, 3, 4. Peter Klerner Knoefel Terre Haute, Indiana medicine Honor Committee Medical School 4; First Regimental Concert Band 2, 3, 4; University Orchestra 1. 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Pi; Phi Mu Alpha Thesis: A Determination of Leucocyte Fragility. A Pate 104 Mary Helen Kober Janesville ECONOMICS Lawrence College I, District Chairman S. G. A. 4; Secretary Advertising Staff 1927 Badger; Spanish Club 3; Pythia 4; Alpha Delta Pi, Thesis A Critique of Henry Ford ' s rxonomic Philosophy. Philip Fred Koepcke Madison COMMERCE Sophomore Semi-Public Debate; Secre- tary-Treasurer Hesperia Literary So- ciety 3; Phi Kappa Tau. Thesis: Financial Analysis of the Ameri- can Can Company. Fred William Koepnick Milwaukee commerce Marquette University 1, 2; Chi Phi. Roy J. KopLiN Lake Mills geology First Regimental Concert Band 3. Thesis: Magnetics in the Interpretation Rock Structures. S. Elwin Kotz Monroe civil engineering Varsity Track 2; A. S. C. E. 4. Thesis: Velocity and Profile Studies on Submerged Weirs. William Homer Krehl Madison medicine Sophomore Honors; Lambda Chi Alpha, Calvin Albert Koehring Milwaukee commerce Associate Circulation Manager Daily Cardinal 2, Foreign Advertising Man- ager 3. Associate Business Manager 4; Badger Board 3 ; General Chairman Military Ball 4; Assistant General Chairman Military Ball 3 ; Assistant General Chairman 1927 Prom; Produc- tion Manager Union Vodvil 3; General Chairman Father ' s Day 4 ; Assistant General Chairman Mother ' s Day 3 ; Captain Cadet Corps 4; Beta Gamma Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Kappa Phi; White Spades; Theta Chi. Dorothea M. Koepenick Fond du Lac economics Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: A Comparative Study of the Different Tax Programs Before the Wisconsin State Legislature. Paul Vincent Koos South Bend, Indiana electrical engineering Theta Delta Chi. Edwin Stanley Korfmacher Cottage Grove medicine First Regimental Concert Band 3, 4; Kappa Psi. Thesis: The Effect of Thyroid Gland on the Cardio- vascular System. Ignace J. Krchma Luxemburg chemistry Oshkosh Normal School 1,2. Thesis: Dielectric Constants of Liquids. Paul E. Kremer Fond du Lac economics Varsity Baseball Manager; Inner Gate; Phi Delta Theta. Tumas; Page 105 Edward Stanley Kremski Milwaukee ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3. Cap- tain 4; A. I. E. E. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Vice-President Pi Tau Pi Sigma 4. Gertrude Krohn Black River Falls home economics Thesis: A Study of Design in Decorated Tableware Exhibited in the Madison Historical Museum. Clarence John Krueger Milwaukee chemistry First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Cap- tain 4; President ' s Guard 1. Thesis: Preparation of N. Butyl Ortho- formate and Other Organic Compounds and their Analyis. Florence Mary Kruc Madison botany Thesis: Cytology of Trimella Fusiformis Elizabeth Mary Kuenzli Wauwatosa history District Chairman S. G. A. 3 ; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; W. A. A. 1.2. 3.4. Board 3. 4, Treasurer 4. Small W; Outing Club 1. 2. 3. Board 3 ; Class Archery 3 ; Class Swimming 1. 2; Class Basketball 2. 3; Varsity Archery 3; Varsity Swimming Honors; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: England ' s Opinion of the Colonies in the 1 8th Century from a Social Standpoint. Genevieve Charlotte Kurth Wauwatosa ENGLISH Junior Orchesus 2: Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: John Keats. John Marcus Krings Madison journalism Thesis: An Analysis of Direct Adver- tising of Retail Stores. Marie Julia Kroner La Crosse commerce Class Archery 1 ; Vice-President Bar- nard Hall 4 ; Commerce Club ; Phi Chi Theta, Treasurer 3 ; Gamma Epsilon Pi. Thesis: An Industrial Survey of Madi- son, in cooperation with Ruth Scandrett. Eugene Krug Milwaukee political science Gamma Eta Gamma. Harold Edward Kubly Madison economics Chairman Floor Committee 1927 Prom; Assistant General Chairman 1926 Homecoming; Decorations Committee 1 92 5 Homecoming ; Haresfoot Dra- matic Club 2, 3, 4; Union Vodvii 2, 3; Phi Gamma Delta. Thesis: A Survey of Unions in Madison Since 1915. Ervin Frank Kurth Milwaukee chemistry First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 ; Presi- dent ' s Guard I; Philomathia 2. 3, 4; Caisson Club 3, 4. Thesis: Preparation of Adipic Acid and Other Organic Compounds. E. Gertrude Kurtz Milwaukee dietetics Member of Lutheran Memorial Religi- ous Council. Thesis: The Anti-Richitic Power of Eggs- Page; 06 I Helen Kyle Tomah ECONOMICS University of Wisconsin, Ph.B. Merle Peter LaChapelle Green Bay CIVIL engineering Carroll College I. 2; A. S. C. E. 3, 4; Delta Sigma Phi; Gamma Phi Delta at Carroll College. Thesis: The Dissipation of Energy at the Fo Jt of a Dam. Irene M. Lampert Boscobel home ECONOMICS Chairman of Bradley Memorial Work I, 2, 3; Euthenics Club I, 2, 3. Thesis: Note Books in High School Textile and Clothing Classes. Edgar Albert Landwehr Sheboygan CIVIL ENGINEERING A. S C. E. 2, 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon. Thesis: The Design of a Reinforced Concrete Arch Bridge. G. Don Larson Altoona ECONOMICS Eau Claire Normal I, 2. Olive Ann Larson Madison HOME ECONOMICS Thesis: Experimental Work on the Production of Rickets in Cats by Diet. Jack Kenneth Kyle Whitewater economics Whitewater State Teachers College I ; 2 ; Student Senate 4 ; Forensic Eioard 4, Joint Debate 4; President Athenae Literary Society 3 ; Young Men ' s Pro- fressive Association 3. 4. President 3; tudent Forum 3.4; Beta Phi Theta. Thesis: Migration of Industry from Wis- consin due to Taxation. Isabelle C. Lamont Gile mathematics Junior Mathematics Club 2. 3, 4; Italian Club 3, 4; Theta Phi Alpha. E. Elizabeth Landschultz Dubuque, Iowa applied arts Milwaukee Downer College 1.2; Delta Phi Delta: Kappa Alpha Theta, Thesis: The Influence of Religion on Indian Art. Ella Clarice Laperriere Menomonee, Michigan FRENCH Northern State Normal School I, 2; Cercle Francais 3, 4. Thesis: Balzar ' s Literary Taste. Lloyd G. Larson Milwaukee ECONOMICS Athletic Board 3. 4, President 4; W Club 2, 3, 4; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4 Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4, Captain 3 Artus; Iron Cross; White Spades Sophomore Honors; Theta Xi. Virginia Ann Larson Kane, Pennsylvania journalism Delta Zeta. Page 107 Rose Lauder Wahpeton, North Dakota HISTORY Grinnell College 1, 2; Business Staff Literary Magazine 3 ; Pythia Literary Society 1 ; Memi er of Congregationai Religious Board; Mystic Circle 3, 4; Gamma Phi Beta. Helen Estelle Lauter Indianapolis, Indiana LETTERS AND SCIENCE Indiana University 1. Thesis: Influence of Physiography on Population Distribution and Changes in South Carolina and Connecticut. Edith Ann Leach Burlington physics Keystone Council 4; W. A. A. 2, 3 Outing Club 1, 2. 3. 4. President 4 S. G. A. Freshman Scholarship Cup Sophomore Honors; Beta Sigma Omi- cron. Thesis: Study of Dependency of Spark Frequency on the Efficiency of a Diathermy Machine. M. Ruth Leamer Clinton, Iowa ENGLISH Midland College I, 2; Activities at Midland College: Student Court 2; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. President 2; Wynn Literary Society 1,2. Treasurer L Ralph M. Lechausse Newark, New Jersey MEDICINE Psychology Club 3 , 4 ; Legislative Scholarship 2, 3; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Physiological Chemistry. Howard James Lee Milwaukee MEDICINE Ways and Means Committee 1927 Prom; Publicity Committee 1924 Home coming ; General Chai rman I nter- schoiastic 3; Mid- West Relay Carnival 2. 3, 4; Chairman Decoration Commit- tee Ice Carnival 2 ; Freshman Com- mittee; Sophomore Commission; Man- ager Varsity Track Team 4; Manager Freshman Track Team ; Pi Kappa Alpha. Thesis: Histological Structures in the Rabbit Placenta, Richard H. Lauson New Holstein JOURNALISM Sigma Delta Chi ; Sophomore Honors.! Thesis: An Analysisof the New Holsteinl Reporter. Harold A. Lawrence Rockford, Illinois CHEMISTRY President ' s Guard 1, 2, 3; Publicity Committee Military Ball 3 ; Lieutenan Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; Lieutenart President ' s Guard 3; Sigma Phi StgmaJ Ruth Denise Leadstone Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH Dancing Honors; Mystic Circle; Delq Gamma. Mary Elizabeth Learned Sturgeon Bay HISTORY University of Minnesota 1 ; Member c Congregational Religious Cabinet 3, 4||_ Chora! Union 2; W. A. A. 1,2, 3. 4 Board 4; Physical Education Club 1;J Dolphin Club 3.4; Class Outdoor Base- 1 bfiil 1; Class Hockey 3; Class Swim- ming 4; Class Basketball 3 ; Varsity! Indoor Baseball 1; Y. W.C A, 1.2, 3.4;1 Madison Hunt Club 3, 4; Delta Delta,] Delta Earl Reuben Lee Cashton medicine Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps Delta Pi Epsilon. Lucille Mercedes Legler Genoa City home economics Euthenics Club 3, 4; Phi Upsilq Omicron. Page 108 William Leissrinc, Jr. Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Frederick Daniel Lemke Water town ENGLISH Heidelberg College 1,2; University of Wisconsin B. A.; Activities at Heidel- berg: Intercollegiate Debate Squad 2: Pi Kappa Delta 2; Activities at Wis- consin: Phi Beta Kappa 3 ; Senior High Honors; Scholar in English 3, 4. Hazel Winifred Lenhart Bismarck, North Dakota sociology Frances Shrimer Junior College I, 2. Earle Norman Lewis McFarland economics I Soliciting Department 1927 Badger; I Kappa Sigma. Thesis: Thesis in Labor. Jacob Levin Milwaukee civil engineering Campus Notes Editor Wisconsin En- gineer 2, 3, 4; A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4. Presi- dent 4; Palestine Builders 3. 4. Treas- urer 4, President 4; Chi Epsilon; Wis- consin Scholarship 1 ; Sophomore Hon- ors, Kleo Lidpeck Marinette home economics W. A. A. 4; Euthenics Club 3. 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Vice-President 4 ; Omicron Nu. Louis W. Lembcke Milwaukee University Extension Division 1, Acacia. Thesis: Stresses in a Building Frame Norma Kathryn Lemke Cadott journalism Eau Claire State Normal I. 2, 3. Thesis: Analysis of the Eau Claire Leader. Lee Levering Granville, Ohio mining engineering Denison University 1.2. 3; Kappa Sigma Samuel Levitin Madison law University of Wisconsin B. A.; Box Committee 1 92 5 Prom ; President Achenae Literary Society 3. Secretary 2 ; Sophomore Honors; Wisconsin Scholarships; Pi Lambda Phi, Clarence V. Libke Gay lord, Michigan economics Albion College !. 2; University of Wis- consin B. A,; Activities at Albion Col- lege: Representative Intra- fraternal Council 2; Secretary of Class 2; A Club 1.2; College Basketball 1.2; Col- lege Track 1.2; Sigma Chi Thesis Reading Course in Finance George Frederick Liddle Muskegon, Michigan civil engineering Editorial Staff Wisconsin Engineer 3. A. S. C, E. 1. 2. 3. 4, Vice-President 3; Theta Tau, Treasurer 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi, President 4; Chi Epsilon, President 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Thesis: Purification of Wastes by Means of Activated Sludge, Page 109 Helen Liebman Chicago, Illinois JOURNALISM Entered Wisconsin in 1924, graduatins in Three Years; Reporter Daily Car- dinal I . Special Writer 2, Alumni Editor 4; Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day 3; Press Club 4; Wisconsin Student Forum 3, 4; French Club 2; Executive Board of Undergraduate Wisconsin Studies, the New Publication Backed by Pan-Hellenic for 1926; Theta Sigma Phi; High Sophomore Honors; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Thesis: Analysis of Chicago Tribune. Arvid Emil Lillquist St. Cloud, Minnesota ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING School of Engineering of Milwaukee 1 ; A. I.E. E. 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu. George M. Little Rockford, Illinois MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2, Captain 3; A. S. M. E.; Pi Tau Sigma, Correspond- ing Secretary 3 ; Freshman Honors; Legislative Scholarship; Acacia. Frances Helene Lohbauer Madison SPEECH President Pythia Literary Society 3, Secretary 2 ; W. A. A. ; Class Archery 1 . Thesis: The Emotions in Acting. Ernestine M. J. Long St. Louis, Missouri letters and science W. A. A. 1,2, 3. 4; Class Outdoor Base- ball 1, 2. 3. 4; Class Hockey 1. 3, 4; Class Basketball I, 2. 3, 4; Varsity Out- door Baseball 3 , Thesis: The Effect of Hydrogen Ion Concentration and Buffers on Staining the Flagella of Bacteria. Merlin J. Lucia Sugar Bush agronomy William Z. Lidicker Milwaukee civil engineering Sergeant-at-Arms of Class 3 ; W Club 2, 3, 4; Varsity Hockey I, 2, 3. 4. Cap- tain 4; Polygon 3. 4, Secretary-Treas- urer 3; A. S. C. E. 3, 4, Treasurer 3; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon; Phi Kappa Phi; Triangle. Thesis: Air-lift Pumps. Edward G. Littel Madison commerce Commerce Advisory Commission; Span- ish Play 2. Thesis: Outdoor Advertising. Loraine Gibb Lloyd Milwaukee zoology Class Volleyball 1 ; Varsity Volleyball 2. Thesis: Orientation of Ants. Gertrude Lohman Two Rivers history Milwaukee Downer College 1; French Club 1, at Milwaukee Downer College; Staff Honor Societies Department 1928 Badger; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis : Relation of I roquois I ndians to the Colonies During the French and Indian War. Dorothy Belle Lovell Madison economics Euthenics Club 2, 3, 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: Lasses Involved in the Cooking of Meat. Raymond Horace Ludden Bloom ington MEDICINE University of Wisconsin, B. A,, M. A.; First Regimental Concert Band I, 2, 3, 4, 5; University Orchestra 1, 2, 3. 4. 5; Thesis: The Value Derived by a Medic Student from Hospital Visitation. Page no Carl J. Ludwig Milwaukee LAW Student Senate 4 ; Moving Pictures Committee 1 925 Prom ; President Forensic Board 4; Joint Debate 4; Vilas Medal Wearer; Sophomore Semi- Public E ebate; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3. 4; President Philomathia Literary Society 3. Vice-President 2, Secretary 3; Sophomore Commission; Rifle Team 1 ; President ' s Guard 1 ; Gamma Eta Gamma ; Delta Sigma Rho Arthur Norman Lund Stoughton history Survey Committee Military Ball 3 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 ; Delta Pi Epsilon- Thesis: Impeachment Proceedings in the Senate. Katherine Prideaux Lyons Hillsdale, Michigan. FRENCH Hillsdale College 1,2; French Club 4; Pi Beta Phi Thesis: Realism in the Novels of Balzac. Beatrice Merle MacGregor Madison MUSIC Member of Congregational Students Association 2, 3. 4; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Choral Union 1.  Robert L. MacReynolds Madison commerce Wisconsin De Molay Club 1. 2, 3, Vice- President 3; Delta Sigma Pi. Thesis: An Accounting System for Hospitals. Earl Patrick McCarron Kenosha LAW Notre Dame University Gamma Eta Gamma 1. 2. 3; A. B. Ruth Hedwig Lueck Madison history W. A. A. 1. 2. 3. 4; Class Bowling I; German Club 2 ; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Beta Sigma Omi- cron. Thesis: The History of the Democratic Party in Wisconsin Sirwe 1914. Hiram Arthur Lyke Oconomowoc economics Chairman Officers Banquet Military Ball 3; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4; Haresfoot Follies 3; Haresfoot Play 2.3; Captain Cadet Corps 3 ; Freshman Swimming; Scabbard and Blade 2. Thesis: Muscle Shoals. Ward Macfadden Fargo, North Dakota commerces Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3. 4; Hares- foot Play 3. 4; Commerce Club 2, 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma. Phi Delta Theta Margery Jean Maclachlan MacFarland letters and science Whitewater State Normal 1, 2. Presi- dent of Student Nurses 3, 4. Thesis: Problems of the High School Age. Robert Edgar McArthur Gary, Indiana economics Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3; Sopho- more Semi-Public IDebate; Member of Presbyterian Religious Council; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps I, Captain 2; Rifle Team 3, 4; Freshman Track; Al- pha Kappa Lambda. L. Bernard McBain Madison medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa; Sigma Sigma. Thesis: A Study of Cardiac Hyper trophy I Page 111 Jo H. McCartney Crafton, Pennsylvania COMMERCE President of Class 3 ; Sports Assistant Daily Cardinal 3 ; Assistant General Chairman Father ' s Day; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 3, 4; Athletic EJoard 4; Freshman Football: Tumas; Secretary White Spades; Phi Gamma Delta. Harold Doscher McCoy Sparta LAW George Washington University A. B. Activities at Washington University Chief Justice Rundell Law Club 3, 4; Phi Alpha Delta. Robert Cassius McCoy Madison electrical engineering Sophomore Commission; Junior Coun- cil; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4; Production Committee Haresfoot Play 2, 3, 4; A. I. E. E. I. 2, 3, 4; Po lygon 3, 4; Triangle. J . Agnes McDonald River Falls letters and science Ruth Mary McDonouch Denver, Colorado FRENCH Gamma Phi Beta. Kenneth J. McFarlane Janesville agriculture Business Staff Country Magazine 3, 4; Beef Cattle Committee Live Stock Show; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1,2.3,4. Edith McCollister Jerseyville, Illinois history Advertising and Business Staff 1927 Badger; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Clef Club 3, 4, Vice-President 3. Clef 4; Class Bowling 2; Delta Zeta. Marguerite McCoy Delavan history S, G. A. Board 3; Member of St Francis Episcopal Vestry 2. 3, 4; Col- legiate League of Women Voters 4. Thesis: The Relations of the United States and Great Britain from March 4, 1913, to April 6, 1917. Philip Wilkinson McCurdy Madison commerce Lambda Chi Alpha. Thesis: The Accounting for Bankruptcy Partnership Dissolution, and Liquida- tion, Kenneth B. McDonough Toledo, Ohio medicine Toledo University I ; Sigma Chi. Thesis: Anatomy. Donald James McFarlane Janesville chemical engineering A. I. C. E. 3. 4; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Sophomore Honors; Alpha Chi Sigma. Louis C. McGann Barahoo letters and science Page 112 Charles English McGinnis Kansas City, Missouri LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chairman Usher Father ' s Day 4; = ublicity Committee Venetian Night 3; ihletic Board 3, 4; W Club 2, 3. 4; sst. Cheerleader 1; Freshman I rack. .iptain; Freshman Swimming; Varsity -swimming 2; Varsity Track 2. 3. 4. jptain 4; Tumas; White Spades; kta Theta Pi. Alphonse Elmer McGrath Highland AGRICULTURE Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Farm House. James Ducey McGuire Denver, Colorado ENGLISH Loyola, Creighton, University of Colo- rado I ; Wisconsin University Players 2, 3. 4; Fall Play 3; Union Vodvil 3; Theta Delta Chi. Thesis: James Stephens: A Critical Appreciation. Lucile Ellen McKeegan Rock Valley. Iowa latin Grinnell College I; Pan-Hellenic 2; iBeta Phi Alpha. Thesis Pliny and His Circle of Friends. Ralph Earl McMullen Superior CIVIL engineering A. S. C E. 2, 3. 4. Thesis: A [Design for a Reinforced Con- crete Warehouse. Neil Burns McMurry Madison HISTORY Athenae Literary Society; Kappa Beta Lambda. Thesis: The Continental System. Stanley James McGiveran Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH W Club 2, 3. 4; Freshman Football; Freshman Track; Varsity Football 4; Varsity Track 2, 3, 4; Phi Kappa Psi. Malcolm F. McGrath Elkader, Iowa pharmacy First University of Notre Darne 1,2; Regimental Concert Band I . Thesis: Juniperus and Oleum Juniperi. Rose Mary McKee Madison history Pythia Literary Society I, Censor 3, Vice-President 4 ; Newman Club 1 , 2 . 3 , 4, Pan-Hellenic 3, 4; Theta Phi Alpha. Thesis: The Administration of Governor Upham. Inez Mary McManamy Madison psychology Psychology Club 3.4; Phi Mu. Helen Hiett McMurry Madison sociology Member of Baptist Religious Council Cabinet 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Chairman ChurchGroup I, 2, 3, 4;DolphinClub 2; Class Outdoor Baseball 2, 3 ; Class Track 1,2; Class Archery 2, 3 ; Class Bowling 3 ; Archery Honors; Arts and Crafts Club 2; Women ' s Commerce Club 2, Thesis: A Program of Negative Eu- genics for the Feeble-minded John Christopher Mackin Madison CHEMISTRY Hesperia Literary Society 2, 3, 4; Hares- foot Play 3; Sophomore Honors; Phi Kappa. Thesis: A Problem in Industrial Waste Disposal. Page 113 Nicholas A. Magaro Kenosha LETTERS AND SCIENCE French Club 1; Spanish Ciub 2, 3, Italian Club 2. 3, 4, President 3, 4. Florence Iris Mahoney East Cleveland, Ohio physical education Western Reserve University 1 ; Key- stone Council 4; W. A. A. 3. 4; Physical Education Club 2, 3, 4, President 4, Treasurer 3; Class Hockey 3. Class Basketball 3; Thesis: A Study in Training and Con- ditioning of Adolescent Girls and Women. Ethel Malec Madison letters and science Business Stafif Octopus 3 ; French Club 3. 4; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: The Treatment of the Family in Augier and Brieux. Florence B. Malzahn West Bend letters and science Advertising Staff Commerce Magazine 3; Keystone Council 4; Women ' s Com- merce Club I, 2. 3, 4, President 4; Pan- Professional Council 3, 4, Vice-President 4; Phi Chi Theta; Gamma Epsilon Pi. President 4; Freshman Scholarship Cup; Sophomore Honors; Phi Omega Pi. Bernice Marion Louisiana, Missouri ENGLISH University of Illinois 1; Business Staff 1927 Badger; Swimming Committee Venetian Night 2, 3; W. A. A. 1. 3. 4, Pin Wearer; Dolphin Club 2, 3, 4, Vice- President 4; Class Hockey 1; Class Track I; Class Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Basketball I, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Swimming 3 ; Sigma Kappa. Helen Mary Marks Madison chemistry Thesis: Preparation and Analysis of Sod i u m-Hy po-B rom ite . Gertrude Malla Magistad Forestville home economics District Chairman S. G. A. 4; Vice- President Luther Memorial Church Group 4, Cabinet 3. 4; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Outing Club 4; Class Archery l ; Euthenics Club 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 4; Beta Sigma Omi- cron. Thosis; The Effect of Caffein on Basal Metabolism. Elizabeth Mahorney Madison ENGLISH Treasurer Green Button I ; Treasurer Red Gauntlet 2 ; Freshman Commis- sion; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2; Kappa Alpha Theta. Thesis: Oxford University at the Time ! of the Victorian Poets. Ann L. Maley Chicago, Illinois letters and SCIENCE Rose Esther Mantell Racine journalism Editorial Staff Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, 3; Publicity Committee 1926 Home- coming; Castalia 3, 4; Coranto; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis: A Survey of the Leading Juvenile Periodicals in the United States. Muriel Gertrude Markham Beaver Dam journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, Special Writer 3, Junior Editor 4; W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Class Hockey 2. 3, 4,; Class Track 1. 2, 3; Class Basketball 1. 2; Class Eiowline 3. Ruth Elizabeth Marks Madison home economics Class Volleyball 3 ; Euthenics Club 3, 4 Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesif: Mineral Analysis of Cereals. Page 114 Wendell Herbert Marsden Fennimore MEDICINE University of Wisconsin, B. A. 2, M. A. 3: Alpha Kappa Kappa. Thesis: The Problem of the Crippled Child, Helen Ramsay Marshall Madison history Helen Evelyn Martin Bay City, Michigan journalism Bay City Junior College I ; District Chairman for Junior Advisory 4; Kappa Alpha Theta. Thesis: The Development of the Feature Article Laurence George Marty Monticello FINANCE Harold Marshall Mather Merrimac electrical engineering Lieutenant Cadet Corps; Kappa Eta Kappa; Pi Tau Pi Sigma. Morris Matsen Oregon chemistry Rifle Team 2 ; Gamma Tau Beta. Thesis: Direct Determination of the Molecular Heat of Gases at Constant Volume. Dorothy Marsh Milwaukee sociology University of Wisconsin Ph.B.; Fresh- man Commission; Sophomore Com- mission; Junior Commission; W. A. A. 1,2; Class Outdoor Baseball 1,2; Class Indoor Baseball I. 2; Pan-Hellenic 2. 3, Secretary-Treasurer 2, 3; Alpha Omi- cron Pi Wallace Sydney Marshall Apfyleton medicine Lawrence College I ; Manager Varsity Wrestling Team 3; Freshman Wrestling; Psychology Club 4; Zeta Beta Tau. Thesis: (I) To Deal with the Problem of Readiness or Difficulty in Inducing Potestas Cerevrum in Psychotic, Neu- rotic, and Feebleminded Patients. (2) To Perform a Study of The Rela- tive Values in the Different Methods of Inducing Monitum. Steven John Martin Linden, New Jersey ZOOLOGY College of the City of New York 1,2; Activities at College of the City of New York: Circulation Board Campus Tri- Weekly 4; Advertising Staff of Mer- cury ; Fencing Club 1,2; Biology Club 1, 2, Treasurer I, 2; Annual Biological Campaign I. 2; Chairman of Annual Biological Dinner 2. Activities at University of Wisconsin: Member of St. Francis House; St. Francis Episcopal Club 3, 4; Legis- lative Scholarship ?, 4; Henry Strong Foundation 3. 4; Research Assistant to Professor Hisaw 4. Thesis: The Anatomy and Histology of the Spleen of the Perch and Some Physiological Problems. Velma Elaine Massie Chetek mathematics Lawrence College Graduate; Lawrence College Ph. B. ; Scholar in Mathematics. Ellen Janet Matheson Grand Rapi ' tf , Michigan home economics Delta Zeta Evelyn M. Mattingly Nashville, Tennessee ENGLISH Ward-Belmont 1,2; Ward-Belmont A. B.; Kappa Alpha Theta. Page lis Else Johanna May Milwaukee GERMAN Milwaukee State Normal 1.2; German Club 3. 4; German Play 3; Milwaukee Normal German Club Vice-President I; French Club 1.2. QUENTIN J. MeEUWSEN Oconto CIVIL ENGINEERING Varsity Wrestling 2 Thesis: Investigation and Development of a Water Power Project on the Eel River in Indiana, Charles D. Meissner Milwaukee ECONOMICS Thesis: The International Organization of Labor. Thomas James Merar Detroit, Michigan MEDICINE Memoer of Hillel Student Council 3; Minorah 1,2; Palestine Builders I, 2, 3; Phi Delta Epsilon. Thesis: The Anatomical and Physiol- ogical Reaction of Hyperthyroid Se- cretion on the Hearts of Rabbits. Fayette Lewis Merriman Beloit SPANISH Programs Committee Military Ball 2, 3; Member of Episcopal Religious Coun- cil 1 ; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps. 1 ; Captain 2; Presidents Guard 2; Sigma Pi. Helen Jeanette Metcalf Madison psychology Art Committee 1 27 Prom; F ' reshman Commission Y. W. C. A. Sophomore Commission; Pi Beta Phi, Thesis Complex Sign in Diagnostic Fre Association, Virginia Elizabeth Meao Webster Groves, Missouri SPANISH University of Wisconsin B, A ; W. A, A. 1. 2. 3. 4. ' • W Wearer; Outing Club 3. 4. Vice-President 4 ; Class Outdoor Baseball 1,2; Class Hockey 1,2; Class Basketball 1; Spanish Club 2, 4; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: The Dramatic Works of Eduardo Marquina. Bernice Ida Meiselwitz Kiel HOME economics Art Editor Country Magazine 2; Eu- thenics Club 3. 4; Pythia 4; Secretary Omicron Nu; Phi Kappa Phi. Thesis: The History of Costume, in Line Parker Alton Meltzer Des Moines, Iowa economics Zeta Psi. Ewart Lytton Merica Rensselaer, Indiana political science Union Board 1,2,3.4, Custodian ot Building 4; Student Senate 3; Class Committee Chairman Sophomore Shuf- fle 2 ; Freshman Assistant Engraving Department 1925 Badger; Editor En- graving Department 1926 Badger; Editor-in-Chief 1927 Badger; Badger Board 3, 4; Assistant General Chair- man 1927 Prom; Boxes Committee Military Ball I; Chairman Men ' s Decorations 1926 Homecoming; Mid- West Relay Carniv al 1; Y. rvT C. A. i . 2. 3. 4. Cabinet 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1 ; Wisconsin University Players 2, 3. 4; Union Vodvil 2; President ' s Guard 1.2; Freshman Football; Interfraternity Council 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3, Secretary 4 ; All-University Religious Service Con ference 3 , Treasurer 4 ; Assistant General Chairman Gridiron Banquet 3; Sigma Delta Chi ; White Spades; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Thesis: Effect of American Foreign Policy on Diplomatic Activities of Foreign Powers. Paul Heber Merriman Madison COMMERCE Member of Methodist Student Cabinet 4; First Regimental Concert Band 3, 4; Commerce Advisory Commission 4 ; Beta Kappa. Thesis: A Survey of Electrical Energy Rates in Fond du Lac and Sheboygan. Oleta Meves Sheboygan LATIN Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Sophomore Honors; Phi Mu. Thesis: Mythology in Horace. Page lib Rose Lena Meyer Campbells fjort ENGLISH Women ' s Glee Cluh; Oshkosh Normal 1 Choral Union. James Gardner Meyst Milwaukee APPLIED arts Delta Phi Delta; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ethel Lenore Miller Madison ENGLISH De Kalb College 1.2. Thesis: Poetical Devices in Poe ' s Poetry Leslie Graham Miller Fond du Lac finance Sigma Pi. Thesis: Analysis of the Financial State- ment of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. Olivia Gardner Miller Orange, New Jersey FRENCH Welleslev College 1,2; Dolphin Club 4; Kappa Delta, Mary Elizabeth Milne Webster Groves, Missouri SPANISH Pre-Prom Dance Committee 1927 Prom; Alumni Committee 1926 Home- coming; W. A A, 1, 2, 3, 4, Board 4; W Wearer; Outing Club 4; Class Out- door Baseball 1, 2. 3. Class Hockey 2; Class Indoor Baseball 1, 2, 3; Varsity Outdoor Baseball 3; Spanish Club 2, 4; Sophomore Honors; Pi Beta Phi, Thesis Angel Gamuet, The Philosopher. Gertrude Marie Meyne Hortonvilie MUSIC Pythia Literary Society 2, 3. 4; Mem- ber of Calvary Lutheran University Church Council 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 2. 3. 4; Choral Union 1, 2; W. A. A, 4; Class Rifle Team 3; German Club 4; German Play 3. Thesis: Sources and Types of Music for thr Pre-Schooi Child Based on Experi- mentation and Observation. Edna May Miller Chicago, Illinois journalism Northwestern University I ; Reporter Daily Cardinal I, Sf ecial Writer 2. Junior Editor 3 ; Business Staff Literary Magazine 3. Editorial Staff 4; Press Club 1.2; Coranto; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis: Analysis of Le Matin. Harold Miller Milwaukee medicine Marquette University I. 2. Mary G. Miller Harrisburg, Pennsylvania FRENCH Thiel College 1, 2, 3; Activities at Thiel College; Varsity Basketball 1. 2, Man- ager 2 ; Varsity Hockey 2, 3 ; Class Basketball 2, 3, Captain 3 ; Class Swim- ming 2; Class President 3; Glee Club 2, 3. Manager 3; Art Editor Endymion (year book) 3; Assistant Business Man- ager Thielensian (weekly) 1 ; Observer ' (special column) Thielensian 2, 3 ; Secretary to Dean 3 ; Scholarship Swim- ming 2. 3 ; Y. W. C. A. 1 , 2. 3. Cabinet 3 ; Clionian (literary) 1.2; Gamma Delta. Activities at University of Wisconsin: Varsity Hockey 2, 3. Ralph Anthony Millermaster Milwaukee electrical engineering Review Editor Wisconsin Engineer 3,4; Chairman Decorations Committee Vene- tian Night 3 ; Pistol Team 2 ; President ' s Guard 1. 2; A. I. E. E. 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Sophomore High Honors. David Nathan Minkow South Bend. Indiana journalism Editorial Djpt. 1927 Badger; Member of Hillel Religious Council; Hillel Foun- dation Church Group; Manager Varsity Wrestling Team; All-University Boxing Champion 1, 2; Varsity Wrestling 2. 3, 4; Palestine Builders 1, 2. 3. 4. Treasurer 2. Publicity Manager 3 Thesis Advertising the Furnishings Depa tmsnt o. a General Clothing S tore. Page 117 BjARNE A. MjELDE Madison University of Wisconsin B. A.: Gamma Eta Gamma. Margaret M. Moe Union Grove ENGLISH Milwaukee Normal 1. 2. Thesis: Character Portrayal in the Poetry of Browning. Arnold H. Moeller Menomonee Falls commerce Business Assistant Daily Cardinal 2, Advertising Assistant 3; Business Staff Commerce Magazine 2, 3; 1927 Homecoming ; Finance Committee 1928 Homecoming; Hesperia Literary Society 1 , 2 ; Member of Calvary Lutheran Student Council 3. 4; Trea- surer Church Group 4 ; Commerce Ciub 2, 3, 4. Membership Chair- man 3 ; Commerce Advisory Commis- sion 3, 4, Secretary 4; Delta Sigma Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Wisconsin Scholar- ship. Thesis: The Advertising Agency. Beatrice O. Monsted New London letters AND SCIENCE Barbara Moore Streator, Illinois HISTORY University of Illinois 1, 2. Marvin Melvin Morack New London ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3. Cap- tain 4; A. 1- E. E.; Kappa Eta Kappa Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Scabbard and Blade. Lawrence O. Moe Black River Falls COMMERCE Business Staff Octopus 1,2; Editorial Staff Commerce Magazine 4; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4; Commerce Club 4; Commerce Advisory Commission 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Jacob William Moelk Janesville PHYSICS Varsity Gym Team 2; Varsity Hockey 2, 4; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Coefficient of Temperature in the Piezo Electric Effect in Quartz. Iris E. Moncar-Sellen Madison applied ARTS Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 3 ; French Club 2, 3. 4; Scholar in Industrial Education and Applied Arts 2, 3. Thesis: Symbolic Color and Lighting in Stage Design, Armenia H. Mooradian Fort Atkinson FRENCH Milwaukee Downer College 1,2; Activi- ties at Milwaukee IDowner; Literary Editor 1926 Cumtux; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3 ; French Club 2, 3 ; Milwaukee Downer Club 1.2, Thesis: Characters in Balzac and De Maupissant. Marion Edith Moore Green Bay HISTORY Milwaukee Normal 1. Grace Alma Morgan Spring Green ENGLISH it r Page IIS Gwendolyn Evans Morgan Cambria HISTORY rench Club 2, 3. 4; Pan-Hellenic Representative 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Selta. Iosephine Irene Morrison Ponliac, Illinois PHYSICAL EDUCATION iVard-Bclmont School I ; Alpha Chi )mega. Thesis: The Relation of Build to Ability. Katherine C. Morrissey Madison applied arts Circulation Department 1927 Badger; Chairman Art Publicity Committee 1927 Prom; Chairman Information Committee 1926 Homecoming; Wis- consin University Players 3, 4; Class Archery 2. 3; Pi Beta Phi. Thtsis: The History of English Illus- trators from 1850 to 1900. Arthur Lee Morsell, J r. Milwaukee law Sergeant-at-Arms of Class 1 ; Advertis- ing Staff 1925 Badger; Advertising N4anager 1926 Badger; Badger I3oard 3; Chairman Hobo Parade 1925 Home- coming; Haresfoot Play 4; Advertising Club 3; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Psi. Otto A. Mortensen South Milwaukee MEDICINE Phi Chi; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Sigma ; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis: A Study of the Sympathetic Innervation of Striated Muscle. Mrs. Ruth Jackson Mossman Madison ZOOLOGY Oneonta Normal School, N. Y. 1. Secretary of Clionian Sorority 1919. Ocean City Summer School. N. J. Harvard Summer School. Combs Con- servatory of Music, Phila. Columbia university. Thesis: Yolk-sac Circulation of the Guinea-Pig. John Taylor Morrison Owensboro, Kentucky MEDICINE Purdue University Graduate; B. S. Uni- versity of Wisconsin; Physiology M. S., 1925, M. D., 1927. Sigma Delta Chi at Purdue; Nu Sigma Nu; Sigma Sigma; Alpha Omega Alpha; Alpha Zeta at Purdue; Scabbard and Blade Purdue; Phi Delta Theta. Thesis: Personal Experiences at Uni- versity Clinic. Muriel Margaret Morrison Morrisonville applied arts W. a. a. 2, 3, 4; Class Volleyball 2; Class Indoor Baseball 1 ; Arts and Crafts Club 1, 2; Delta Phi Delta, President 3, 4; Sophomore Honors. Earl Lewis Morse Milwaukee economics Vilas Medal Wearer; Sophomore Semi- Public Debate; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3; N. O. L, Representative 3; Member of Hillel Religious Council 2,3; Union Vodvil 3 ; French Club 1 ; Athenae 1 ; Delta Sigma Rho; Phi Sigma Delta. Thesis: A Review of the Economic History of Palestine from 1880 to 1926, and a Study of its Economic Poten- tialities. Elmer Hans Mortensen South Milwaukee commerce Commerce Club 3,4; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Sophomore Hon- ors; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Thesis: Chain Store Accounting. Paul Leopold Moskowitz Milwaukee LAW Philomathia Literary Society 2, 3. 4, Secretary 2, Vice-President 3, President 4; Palestine Builders 3, 4; Vice-Presi- dent 4; Wisconsin Athletic Efficiency Award 2; Hillel Foundation Athletic Committee 3. Marie C. Moynihan River Falls mathematics River Falls Normal 1,2; Junior Mathe- matics Club 4. Thesis: The Twisted Cubic in Space of Three Dimensions. Page 119 Walter A. Muegge Lake Geneva PHYSICAL EDUCATION Member of Luther Memorial Cabinet I , 2,3.4; Luther Memorial Church Group; Freshman Football: Varsity Wrestling 1, 2, 3; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4; Varsity Track 2, 3. 4: Phi Epsilon Kappa. Helen Patricia Mueller Milwaukee mathematics W. A. A. 1,2, 3. 4; Class Swimming I. 2; Riding Team; Riding Honors; Madison Hunt Club 2. 3, 4, Secretary 4; Initia- tion Chairman 3 ; Treasurer Barnard Hall 3; W. S. G. A. Representative of Barnard Hall 2; Phi Mu. Walter Joseph Muller Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH Class Committee Chairman Freshman Dance; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2. 3. 4; Varsity Cheerleader 4; Assistant Cheerleader 2. 3; Freshman Track; Skull and Crescent; Chi Psi. Vernon Moffat Murray Milwaukee electrical engineering University of Wisconsin Extension Division 1; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi. Charlotte Georgia Nast Mountain BOTANY German Club 4. Thesis: The Development of the Sporophyte Generation of a South American Olenrocarpus Moss. Erna Maine Nehring Milwaukee SOCIOLOGY Editorial Staff Octopus 7, Business Staff 3. Esther Helen Mueller Forestville HOME ECONOMICS The Stout Institute 1.2; Omicron Nu. Rudolph Benjamin Mueller Hoi Springs, South Dakota ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Second Regimental Concert Band 1.2, Member Student Branch of A. I. E. E Myrtle L, Munro Wilmot, South Dakota ENGLISH University of South Dakota I. 2. Thesis: ' The Revelation of Personality Through the Subjective Element m Contemporary Poetry. ' James Walter Myers, Jr. Kenosha CIVIL ENGINEERING Advertising Staff Wisconsin Engineer 4; A. S. C. E. 1,2. 3, 4; Triangle. Paul E. Nehmer Fond du Lac commerce Sigma Pi. Louise J. Neitge Deer Park ZOOLOGY Sophomore Honors; Wisconsin Scholar- ship; Kappa Kappa Gamma Scholar- Fhip. Thesis: The Anatomy of a PigMontros- ity. Page no Charles Ellsworth Nelson Waukesha ECONOMICS St. Johns Military Academy 1 ; Union Board Assisting Staff 1, 2, Union Board 4; Pre Prom Dance Committee 1927 Prom; Chairman IDecorations Com- mittee Military Ball 2, General Chair- man Military Ball 3, Assistant Sec- retary I ; Assistant General Chairman 1926 Homecoming; Chairman Alumni Committee 1925 Homecoming; Alumni Committee 1924 Homecoming; High School State Basketball Tournament I, 2. 3; Chairman Banquet Committee Fathers Day; Chairman Banquet Com- mittee Mother ' s Day 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3; Finance Committee Religious Conference 2, 3 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2, Lieutenant Colonel 3; Presi- dent Cadet Officers Association 3 ; Secretary Athletic Board 3; Non- ' W Representative 4; Manager Varsity Elasketball Team 1. 2. 3. 4; Secretary I nner Gate ; Scabbard and Blade. Second Lieutenant 2, 3, Captain 3, 4; White Spades; Delta Upsilon. Thesis: Regulariration In Industry. Helen Louise Nelson Davenport, Iowa PHYSICAL EDUCATION Augustana College 1 ; W. A. A. ; Physical Education Club; Pythia; Gamma Phi Beta. Josephine Nelson SPEECH Ward-Belmont College I ; Office Staff. Circulation Department 1927 Badger; Manager Circulation Department 1928 Badger; 1926 University Exposition 3; Union Memorial 3 ; Pvthia Literary Society 2, 3. 4; Pan-Hellenic 3, 4; Inter Se, 3, 4; Alpha Xi Delta. Thesis: Eugene O ' Neill. Nander Manley Nelson Lady smith AGRICULTURE Alumni Editor Country Magazine 2, Assistant Editor 3; Chairman of Pro- crams Agric. Literary Society 1. 2, 3; Ag. College Federation Board 3; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1, 2, 3, Chairman Program Committee 3; Agric. Triangle I, 2. 3, 4; Farm House, Corresponding Secretary 3. President 4; Alpha Zeta; Sophomore Honors. Lucy M. Newell Evanston, Illinois POLITICAL SCIENCE Rockford College 1 ; Circulation Depart- ment 1927 Badger; Office Manager, Business Department 1 928 Badger W. A. A. 2. 3. 4; I jlphin Club 2, 3, 4 Class Hockey 2; Pi Beta Phi. Alice Caroline Nichols Delavan BOTANY District Chairman S. G. A. Board 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 4 Thesis- Embryo-Sac Development of Podophyllum. Elmer Harry Nelson Racine electrical engineering A. I. E. E. 3, 4; Sigma Phi Epsilon. James Morange Nelson Oak Park, Illinois political science Reporter Daily Cardinal 1, Desk As- sistant 2, Desk Editor 3 . Managing Editor 4 ; Managing Editor Summer Session Cardinal 3; Chairman Publicity Committee 1927 Prom; Chairman Pub- licity Committee Father ' s Day 3, 4; Chairman Gridiron Banquet Committee 3; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3. 4; Haresfoot Follies 2, 3; Haresfoot Play 2, 4; Sijgma Delta Chi 3, 4, Secretary 4; Inner Gate; Iron Cross; White Spades; Alpha Tau Omega. Margaret H. Nelson Edgerton economics Choral Union 2; W. A. A. 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 2, 3, 4, Secretary 4; Phi Mu. Thesis: Study of Old Age Pensions and Invalidity in Industry. Walter Fred Nelson Superior electrical engineering Superior State Normal I, 2; Triangle. Ruth Newlin Madison mathematics Junior Mathematics Club 2, 4; Blue Shield 4. Florence T. Nichols La Grange, Illinois sociology Bradford Academy 1. 2; Activities at Bradford Academy: Business Manager of Annals. Bradford Academy Year- book 1 , 2 ; Masqueraders ' ' ; Class Outdoor Baseball 1. 2; Class Hockey I, 2; Class Basketball 1, 2; Varsity Basketball 1. 2; Bradford Academy Honor Society; Alpha Xi Delta. Page 121 George W. Nichols Edgerton CHEMISTRY Newman Ciub 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Kappa. Thesis: An Analysis of the EBottoms of Various Northern Lakes. August Niebuhr La Crosse CHEMISTRY Marquette College of Pharmacy 1 ; La Crosse State Normal School 1 . EsTELLE Marie North Detroit, Michigan PHYSICAL EDUCATION Ward-Belmont College 1 ; Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: The Relation of Build to Ability. Mabel L. Nott Janesville MUSIC Clarence David Nyhus Chippewa Falls law Athena Literary Society 3 ; Men ' s Glee Club 3; Varsity Quartette 3; Phi Alpha Delta; Phi Mu Alpha. Gertrude M. O ' Brien Madison education La Crosse Normal 1. 2. Thesis: Integration of American His- tory and Twelfth Grade Problems. Doris Elizabeth Nicholson Oshkosh ENGLISH Oshkosh Normal 1.2. Thesis: The English Landscape in the Poetry of Matthew Arnold. Edith Daphne Norris La Moille, Illinois applied arts Class Volleyball 1,2; Alpha Phi, Thesis: Selecting Drapery Material for Aesthetic and Utilitarian Purposes. Virginia Lyman North Green Bay LAW Smith College 1 ; Activities at Smith College; Forensic Boar d 2; Chairman of Materials Committee 2; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3 ; Treasurer S. C. A. C. W. 2; Outing Club 2. Activities at Wisconsin: Efoard of Student Editors Law Review 2. 3; Kappa Beta Pi; Delta Sigma Rho; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Elizabeth L. Nowell Milwaukee economics W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3. 4 Thesis: Methods of Employing Labor. George Harrison O ' Brien Auburndale AGRICULTURE River Falls Normal 1. 2. Activities at River Falls Normal : Editorial Staff 1 ; Sports Editor 2; Class Treasurer 2; Athletic Trainer 1,2; Activities at Wis- consin: Stock Judging Teams 4; Saddle and Sirloin Club 3, 4. William Harlan Ode Baraboo CHEMSITRY Phi Sigma Kappa. Thesis: A Study of Certain Metastable Metals. Page 122 Elizabeth Margaret O ' Dea Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE tlass Bowling 1, 2, 3; Varsity Bowling ,2.3. lusU: A Bibliography of all Articles K ' ritten on the Geography of Europe Arnold George Oettmeier Fort Atkinson civil engineering V S. C. E. 3.4; Chi Epsilon; Tau Beta ' i: Sophomore Honors, Thtsis: A Design of a Reinforced Con- :rete Building. Marcaret Lenore Olds Madison LATIN k istant Office Secretary Daily Car- Jinal 3. 4; Press Editor 1928 Badger; Editorial Staff Octopus 2; Assistant Ad- vertising Manager Literary Magazine 4 ; Freshman Welcome Committee; Italian Qub 3. 4. Treasurer 4; Beta Sigma Dinicron. Lxxnparison of Livy and Ovid. Edna Bernice Olim Sheffield, Alabama journalism llMiversity of Alabama I, 2; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Thesis: An Analysis of the Birmingham News. Beatrice Gwendolyn Olsen Green Bay FRENCH Lawrence College I. 2; Activities at Lawrence: Spanish Club I ; French Club 1,2; Kappa Delta. Thesis: French Biographies and Letters Roland T. Olson Briggsville LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alice Mary Oerkwitz Milwaukee ENGLISH Arden Club 2. 4; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: The Social Element in the Modern English Novel. MicHA EL Jerome O ' Laughlin Randolph electrical engineering Wisconsin University Players 3. 4; W Club 2, 3, 4; Varsity Wrestling 1, 2, 3. 4; A. I. E.E. 2, 3. 4; Phi Pi Phi John William O ' Leary Appleton law Lawrence College 1.2; Phi Delta Phi; Delta Tau Delta Capitola I. Olmsted Mitledgeville, Illinois LETTERS AND SCIENCE University of Illinois I. 2; S. G. A. Board 3; University Orchestra 3, 4; Clef Club 3. 4; W. A. A. 4; Varsity Volleyball 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3. 4; Castalia Literary Society 4; Kappa Delta. Thesis: An Analysis of Class room Activity. Evelyn Dorothy Olson Rockford, Illinois FRENCH Rockford College I ; Wisconsin Uni- versity Players 3, 4; Pre-Prom Play 3; Kappa Alpha Theta. Thesis: The Development of the Writ- ings of Balzac. Claude Timothy O ' Neil Kilbourn PHARMACY Kappa Psi. Thesis: Ipecacuanha. Page 123 Eleanor Jane Orchard Superior MATHEMATICS Sweet Briar Collese I, 2. Barbara Osborn Tulsa, Oklahoma ENGLISH Stephens College i; Castalia 4; Y. C. A. 2, 3. 4; Delta Delta Delta. Harold Osterberg Cambridge PHYSICS Freshman Track; Varsity Track 1, 2. 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Sigma Phi, President 4; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis: Coefficient of Temperature in the Piezc Electric F fTect in Quartz. Grant Lyman Otis Madison HISTORY Pre-Prom Play Committee 1927 Prom Chairman Hobo Parade 1926 Home- coming; University Orchestra 2, 3, 4, Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2. 3. 4; Fresh- man Basketball; Varsity Basketball 2 Beta Thcta Pi Thesis A Study of the Decisions of John Marshall Through the Dissenting Opinions of His Collegues. Richard Gordon Owen Cambria economics . A.; Zeta Psi. Lyle J . Owens Wild Rose agriculture River Falls Normal 1.2; Swine Com- mittee Live Stock Show 3 ; Stock Judg- ing Teams 4; Saddle and Sirloin Club 4. Sylvia Louise Orth Milwaukee zoology Chairman Ace Section 1928 Badger; Badger Board 4; Chairman Dance Drama Mother ' s Day 3; University Style Show 4 ; Secretary Pythia Literary Society 1.2. 3. 4; Dance Drama 2. 3 4- W A. A. I, 2. 3. 4. Pin Wearer; Outing Club 4; Class Rifle Team 4; Class Swimming I, 3, 4; Dancing Honors: Minor W ; German Club 4; Orchesus 1, 2, 3, 4; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: Anatomy of a Cyclopean Pig. Carroll Wilcox Osgood Bloominglon medicine B. S. Wisconsin 1922; First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Chi; Sigma Sigma; Alpha Omega Alpha. Thesis: Medical Ethics. Helen May Ostrum Hancock MATHEMATICS Stevens Point Normal 1, 2; Junior Mathematics Club 4; Y. W. C. A. 4, FoLKERT Johnson Owen Milwaukee CHEMICAL ENGINEERING University of Wisconsin Extension Division in Milwaukee 1, 2; Sigma Phi Sigma. Emery E. Owens Wild Rose agronomy River Falls Normal I, 2; Kappa Beta Lambda. Gladys May Palmer Kenosha SOCIOLOGY Student Industrial Association 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta. Thesis Working Conditions in Industry for Women in Kenosha. Wisconsin. Page 124 Margaret Parham Madison ENGLISH i4otion Picture Committee 1927 Prom; ipanish Club 2, 3; Alpha Phi. fkais The Novels of Sinclair Lewis. Harry L. Parker St. Louis, Missouri GEOLOGY Desk Assistant Daily Cardinal 3 ; Floor Committee 1927 Prom; Haresfoot Dra- nnatic Club 2. 3, 4; Phi Gamma Delta. Maude I. Parry Guy, New Mexico JOURNALISM Coranto; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis: An Analysis of The Manchester Guardian. Margaret Blanche Patchett Kankakee, Illinois SPANISH ' University of Illinois 1. 2; Alpha Omicron Pi Mary Minerva Patterson Satida, Colorado physical education Colorado College 1 ; W. A. A. 2, 3, 4. Wn Wearer. Minor W, Physical Education Club 2. 3, 4, Board 3; Class Hockey 3, 4; Class Tennis 2. 3, 4; Class Indoor Baseball 2, 4; Varsity Indoor Baseball 2; Varsity Tennis 2. 3, 4. Ellen Janet Paul Milton Junction ENGLISH Class Basketball 1 ; Alpha Xi Delta. Thesis: Introduction and Notes to Marlowes Jew of Malta. Harry James Parish Superior economics Superior State Normal School 1 . 2 ; Athenae Literary Society 4 ; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Eioy ' s Work Committee 4; Thesis: Vocational Rehabilitation Legis- lation in the United States. George Ambrose Parkinson Madison mathematics Ohio State University. Graduate; B. S. 1922. M. A. 1923; Activities at Ohio State; Phi Delta Kappa; Pi Mu Epsilon. Gamma Alpha of Wisconsin. Thesis: Parallelism in Sub-spaces. Maurine Pearl Partch Columbus SOCIOLOGY Member of Congregational Board 2. 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 3. 4; Choral Union; Alpha Kappa Delta; Sophomore Honors; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: Changes in the Occupations of Women Gainfully Employed as Taken from the Census Reports 1870 to 1920. Susie Eleanor Pate Whitesville, Kentucky home economics Kentucky Normal School and Teachers College 1.2; Euthenics Club 4; South- ern Club 3. 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron. Thesis: Trade Marks and Trade Names of Women ' s Ready-to-wear Clothing Roberta E. Patton Byesville, Ohio latin Kappa Kappa Gamma Carlyle R. Pearson Madison MEDICINE Thesis Anatomy. Page 125 Dorothy Lee Pedigo Kenilworth, Illinois ENGLISH Ward-Belmont College I. Thesis: The Theme of Possession Galsworthy. Wen Yinc Peng Kiangsi, China POLITICAL SCIENCE Tsing Hua College, Peking. China, 1,2; Activities at Tsing Hua College: Stu- dent Council Chairman 2; Class Chair- man I ; Intercollegiate Debate Squad I, 2. Activities at Wisconsin: Vice-Presi- dent Chinese Student Club 4. Thesis: The Recognition of the Chinese Republic. Jacob Lincoln Pearlman Sheboygan chemistry University of Wisconsin, B. S. ; Ar- mour Institute of Technology 1 ; Lieutenant Cadet Corps 2 ; Lieutenant President ' s Guard 2; Rifle Team I ; Pi Lambda Phi. Thes is : An I n vest igat ion o f the Stearoptene of Oleum Aurantii. Freda Al Peterson Madison HOME economics Des Moin es University 1,2; Iowa State College 2; Activities at Iowa State Col- lege : I ndianapolis Delegation 1 , 2 ; Bashford Club Church Group 3 ; Home Economics Ciub; Extension Secretary; Kappa Pi . Activities at Wisconsin : Y. W. C A ;EuthenicsClub3. Thesis: Idiosyncrasies Toward Foods. Lester Peterson Westby agronomy Saddle and Sirloin Club 1 ; Alpha Gamma Rho. Marion Herfort Pelton Madison music University Orchestra 2, 3 ; Chora Union 1 ; Castalia 3, 4; Mu Phi Epsilon Juilliard Scholarship in Music. Thesis: Piano Recital Rudolph Perchonok Milwaukee pharmacy Milwaukee State Normal I. 2. Thesis: Extraction of MonardaFistulosa ' Norman J. Peters Plymouth mechanical engineering A. S. M. E.; Student Brotherhood of the i Reformed Church; Pi Tau Sigma. George Kent Peterson Laona chemistry Louise E. Petty Clinton, Iowa medical science Delta Zeta. Thesis: Comparative Anatomy of the Larynx. Martha Jeanette Petty Lancaster ENGLISH Jane E. Pfann Lancaster Club 2, 3, 4; Sophomore Marion, Ohio Honors. letters and science Page 126 Lydia Marie Pfeiffer Franklin EDUCATION Oshkosh Normal 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 3, German Club 3, 4. Joseph Jacques Pierard Marshall, Minnesota ENGLISH Delta Chi. Alfred W. Pingel Appleton electrical engineering Lloyd Thomsen Plank Fond du Lac pharmacy Transportation Committee Military Ball 3 : Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Major 4; President ' s Guard 1 ; Cais- son Club 3,4; Chairman Awards Com- mittee Horse Show 3 ; Assistant Secre- tary Correspondence 2; Freshman Crew; Madison Hunt Club 3, 4; Board of Governors 3, 4; University De Molay Club 3; Beta Phi Sigma. President 2; Rho Chi; Scabbard and Blade. Thesis: Chloral Alcoholate. Vernon Maxwell Plettner Algoma commerce First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; University Orchestra 3, 4; Freshman Track; Regent Scholarship; Sigma Phi Sigma. Thesis: Special Study in Outdoor Advertising. Robert A. Polson Montesano, Washington agriculture Washington State College 1,2; Night Horse Show Committee Live Stock Show 3 ; Agric Triarigle 3.4. President 3 , Secretary 4; Alpha Zeta; Alpha Gamma Rho. Helen 1. Philleo Rhinelander history Milwaukee Downer College 1 . Thesis: Study of Party Votes on the Tariff From 1846. Arthur Wilmer Piltz Rudolph civil engineering President ' s Guard 2; Chi Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Sophomore Honors; Sigma Phi Sigma. Thesis: Design of Reinforced Concrete. Ralph R. Piper Sharon agronomy Alpha Gamma Rho, Emma H. Plappert New Holstein journalism Coranto; Sophomore Honors. Reuben J . Pollock Manitowoc electrical engineering University of Indiana 1; Activities at University of Indiana; Freshman Foot- ball; Freshman Baseball. Activities at Wisconsin: Varsity Wrestling 1 ; Varsity Hockey 2, 3; Class Swimming 2; Alpha Chi Rho. Ruth Emily Port Portage speech Thesis: The Effects of the Cinema on Dramatic Production of America. Page 127 Ruth E. Porter Chicago, Illinois JOURNALISM University of Chicago I ; Orchesus 2. 3. Helen Marjorie Posthuma Chicago, Illinois APPLIED ARTS Northwestern University 2 ; Chi Omega. Thesis: History, Contrast, and Com- parison, of Realistic and Futuristic Sculpture. Kenneth Vernon Powers Cudahy medicine Program Committee Military Ball 3; Vice-President. Secretary Y.M.C.A. 4, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3. 4; First Lieu- tenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; Rifle Team 1. 2; Phi Chi. Thesis: The Effect of Chloroform on the Tonicity of Cardiac Muscle. RosETTA Powers Mauston ECONOMICS College of St, Teresa 1. 2; Treasurer Newman Club Church Group. Thesis: A Statistical Study of the Mi- gration Movements of the Leading Countries, 1919-1926, Comparing Pre- war vs. Post-war Movements- Fred Preu Madison CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Mildred L. Priess Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH University of Chicago 1.2; W. A. A.; Castalia 3. 4; French Club; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Stanley Dwicht Post Le Mars, Iowa ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING University of Washington 1 ; Freshman Swimming; Captain Water Basketball Team; Varsity Swimming 3, 4; Varsity Water Polo 3, 4, Captain 4; Tau Beta Pi 2; Eta Kappa Nu 2; Phi Kappa Sign a. Herbert F. Powell Oak Park, Illinois JOURNALISM Intramural Sports Editor Daily Car- dinal I. 2, Assistant Desk Editor and Skyrocket Writer 3. Skyrockets Editor 4; Editorial Staff Octopus I, 2, Ex- ecutive Board 3, 4; Sophomore Com- mission; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming 2; Sophomore Intramural Manager; Sigma Delta Chi 3. Vice- President 4 ; Sigma Delta Psi ; Non- Resident Scholarship 2, 3, 4 Delta Pi Delta. Thesis: Current Column Humor in the Chicago Newspapers. M. LoRENA Powers Mauston history College of St. Teresa 1, 2. Thesis A Critical Analysis of some of the Devices for Solving the Problem of Individual Differences in the Teaching of History. Inez Lillian Pratt Cambridge, Illinois HOME EONOMICS Euthenics Club 2. 3. 4; Arts and Crafts Club 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Delta. Josephine Harriet Price Milwaukee LATIN Milwaukee State Normal 1,2. Richard James Prittie Milwaukee Northland Gamma. College 1 ; Gamma Eta Page 128 Mildred E. Pritzlaff Milwaukee SOCIOLOGY .ockford College 1 ; Alpha Phi. Beata Naomi Prochnow Wilton economics 1emhcr of Luther Memorial Student ;abinet 3. 4; Secretary Church Group 1 , Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3. LuciLE Marie Puelicher Madison applied arts Thais: Interiors and Exteriors of Eng- lish Manors During the Tudor Period Ray H. Quade Kewaskum medicine General Executive Committee Medical School: International Relations Con- ference 3; Phi Chi; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Sigma ; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis Sympathetic Innervation of Striated Muscle. Laurence V. Radtke Fond du Lac electrical engineering University Orchestra 2. 3, 4; A. I. E. E. 2, 3. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa. Dorothy Jean Randall Janesville ENGLISH Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Manifestations of the Greek Spirit in some Modern Novels. Victor Hugo Prochaska Friendship CIVIL engineering Stevens Point Norma! 1; A. S, C. E. 3, 4; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis: The Long Time Record of Rainfall and Run-off as a Criterion of Future Flows. Louis Martin Pruess Milwaukee CHEMISTRY President ' s Guard 2; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sophomore Hon- ors; Research Assistant. George H. Pulsford Watertown COMMERCE Sophomore Semi-Public Debate 2 ; Philomathia Literary Society I, 2, 3; Varsity Wrestling Squad 2. Jane Robinson Radford Oshkosh ENGLISH Oshkosh Normal hool 1, 2; Delta Gamma. Roy Tarnutzer Ragatz Madison ECONOMICS Editorial Staff Athletic Review 1. 2. 3; Transportation Committee 1927 Prom; Manager Varsity Water Polo Team; Freshman Crew; Assistant Manager Varsity Swimming Team 3, 4; Varsity Tennis 4; Junior Varsity Crew 2. 3; Artus 3. 4; Sophomore Honors; Chi Phi. Thesis: Changing Concepts in Scientific Management Since Taylor. Joseph E. Rapkin Milwaukee ECONOMICS Sophomore Semi-Public Debate; Men ' s Glee Club 3. 4; Varsity Football 2; Phi Beta Delta Thesis: The Industrial Future of New England. Page 129 Gordon L. Rashman Milwaukee ECONOMICS High School State Basketball Tourna- ment 2; Athaena Literary Society 1; Member of Hillel Religious Council 2, 3, 4; Secretary Church Group 2, 3, 4; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2, 3; Varsity Water Polo 3; Phi Sigma Delta. Thesis: Labor in Legislation. Leland Earl Rasmussen Madison COMMERCE Manager and Copy Collection 1 924 Badger ; Assistant Business Manager 1926 Badger; Finance Committee 1925 Prom; Interscholastic 2; First Regimen- tal Concert Band I, 2, 3, 4; Commerce Club 2, 3, 4; Commerce Advisory Com- mission 3, 4; Delta Sigma Pi. Harriet I. Rathbun Madison French Club 3, 4; Sophomore Honors; Beta Sigma Omicron. Jay J. Reader Delavan CIVIL engineering First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2, 3,4; Freshman Track; Sigma Nu. Thesis: The Design of a Reinforced Concrete Arch. Thomas C, Reed Oshkosh Erna C. Reinhart Wausau HISTORY Stevens Point Normal 1 , 2 ; Class Hockey 2; Class Volleyball 2; German Club 4. Thesis: The Youthful Andrew Jackson. Edwin John Rasmussen Okanogan, Washington HORTICULTURE Chairman University Exposition 2; Agricultural Literary Society 1 ; Ag. College Federation Board 2, 3 ; Grafter s Club 2, 3. President 3; Apis Club 1, 2. 3, 4, President 2, 4; Alpha Zeta. Richard Updecraff Ratcliff Madison ECONOMICS Class Committee Chair man Class Re- lations 3 ; Rooming Committee 1923 Homecoming; Junior Council; Wis- consin University Players 2, 3, 4; Hares- foot Dramatic Club 3 , 4 ; Pre-Prom Plav 2; Union Vodvil 3 ; Haresfoot Play 3: Athletic Board 3; W Club 2. 3, 4; Freshman Swinv ming; Varsity Swimming 2. 3, 4, Cap- tain 4; Varsity Water Polo 2, 3. 4. Captain 3 ; Artus; Theta Chi. Thesis: What Labor Wants. Charlotte June Rathmann Milwaukee JOURNALISM Marquette University 1,2. Thesis: Style in Journalistic Writing. Dorothy J. Reagan Knightstown, Indiana FRENCH Union Vodvil 3; Dolphin Club 2, 3. Alpha Phi. George Norman Reeke Green Bay COMMERCE Phi Kappa Psi. Carl J. Reinhold Milwaukee CIVIL ENGINEERING Phiiomathia Literary Society I. 2, 3, 4; University Orchestra I. 2, 3, 4; A, S. C. E, 1; Phi Pi Phi. Thesis: Relation of Absorption of Con- crete to its Strength. Water-Cement Ratio and Grading of the Aggregate. Page 130 Claire Pauline Reinsch Madison POLITICAL SCIENCE Sophomore Honors; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Diplomatic and Consular Rep- resentation in the Far East. Isabel Anita Rheins Milwaukee ECONOMICS German Club 2; Girls Commerce Club 2; Collegiate League of Women Voters J, 4; Phi Mu Alice M. Richardson Elgin, Illinois ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A. 3; Busi- ness Staff 192b Badger; Slogan Com- mittee 1924 Prom; Member of Con- gregational Religious Board I, 2, 3 Alpha Chi Omega. Francis Joseph Richardson Afifilelon chemical ENGINEERING Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3; Alpha Chi Sigma. Mark Rick Wausau commerce Sigma Phi Sigma. Harold Ernest Rieger Toledo, Ohio ECONOMICS Skyrockets, Theater Page Daily Car- dinal 2. 3, Special Writer 4; Chairman Box Committee 1927 Prom; Union Vodvil 2, 3; Interfraternity Council 4; Phi Alpha Delta; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Fred M. Rentschler Madison agriculture Alpha Gamma Rho. Alice L. Richards Columbus, Ohio ENGLISH Ohio State University 1,2; Alpha Phi. Thesis: The Life of Percy B. Shelley and its Influence on his Poetry. Clark Cornelius Richardson Madison President ' s Guard 1 ; Spanish Club 2. 3. Thesis: Wavering Vistas. William Muir Richtmann Madison mechanical engineering University of Wisconsin B. S. ; Ad- vertising Solicitor 1925 Badger; Local Advertising Manager 1926 Badger: Business Staff Wisconsin Engineer 2, Local Advertising Manager 3; A, S. M. E. 3, 4, Secretary 4; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma, President 4; Honors in General Scholarship; Scholar in Me- chanical Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Lyle Clayton Ridgeway La Crosse chemical engineering La Crosse Normal 1 . Norman Edmond Risjord Ashland economics Hesperia Literary Society 1, 2; P Kappa Alpha. M 1 Wi 1 K 1 BVv i A HUHSii Page 131 Thomas Marion Risk Madison EDUCATION Stevens Point Normal 1,2; Phi Delta Kappa. Treasurer 2, President 3; Senior Honors; Assistant in Education 1, 4, Thesis: Better Teaching: A Study of the Factors Involved in Teaching Activity, and of the Factors That Make Teaching Activity Successful. Harrison Pace Robinson Wauwatxisa CHEMICAL engineering First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2; University Orchestra 2; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sophomore Honors. Triangle. Florence M. Rockwood Springfield, Illinois ENGLISH Lindenwood College 1 ; District Chair- man S. G. A. 4; Chairman Doll Booth Y. W. C. A. Bazaar; Undergraduate Wisconsin Studies Committee 4; Wis- consin Student Forum; Alpha Phi. Thesis: Mathew Arnold ' s Attitude Toward Romanticism. Bernice L. Rom M ilwaukee BACTERIOLOGY Euthenics Club 3. 4. Secretary 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Omicron Nu. Thesis: The Frost Little Plate Method of Bacterial Count of Milk. Helen Ruth Rooney Madison home ECONOMICS Home Economics Alumnae Editor Country Magazine 3 ; Euthenics Club 2,3.4. Vera Mary Root Sf aria ENGLISH Ripon College 1. 2. Thesis The Selection of Biographical Material for the Teaching of English in the High School. Andrew Allen Risser Fountain City ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING F ' irst Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 ; Varsity Wrestling 2, 3 ; A. I. E. E.; Pi Tau Pi Sigma. Marjorie M. Robinson Rock ord, Illinois LETTERS AND SCIENCE Florence O. Rodden Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Graduate nurse. Christopher Romes Twin Falls, Idaho APPLIED ARTS Arts and Crafts Club 2, 3, 4, President 4; Delta Phi Delta. Marian Agnes Rooney Plymouth HISTORY Rosary College 1,2; Kappa Delta Delaphine Grace Rosa Madison MEDICINE Editor Campus Groups 1928 Badger; Pythia Literary Society 3, 4, Cen. or 4: Member of Congregational Cabinet 4. I3oard 2. 3, 4; Class Eiowling 2.3: Inter- national Club 3. 4: Junior Mathematics Club 2. 3. Student Forum 3, 4; Sopho- more Honors. Page I3Z MiLLicENT Rhea Rosen Muskegon, Michigan SOCIOLOGY Member of Hillel Choir I, 2; French Qub I, 2. 3; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Florence Rosenfield Jonesboro, Arkansas ENGLISH Tulane University 1, 2; Activities at Tulane University: Newcomb Dra- matic Club I, 2; Newcomb Athletic Association I, 2; C lass Outdoor Base- ball 1 , 2 ; Class Hockey 1 , 2 ; Class Track 2; Class Basketball 1.2; Varsity Outdoor Baseball 2. Activities at Wis- consin: Alpha Epsilon Phi. Elroy Romayne Rowe Rochester journalism The Principia Junior College 1 , 2 ; Activities at Principia College: W. A. A. I. 2. Board 1. 2. Head of Baseball; Class Track I ; Varsity Hockey 1 . Activities at Wisconsin: Christian Sci- ence Society; Treasurer Church Group; Castalia; Coranto; Beta Sigma Omicron Thesis: A Comparison of the Editorial •nd News Policies of The Christian Science Monitor and The Boston Eve- ning Transcript. Harry William Rubinstein Milwaukee electrical engineering First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 4; Sophomore Honors; Tau Sigma Omi- cron. Carl Henry Ruhnke Wausau chemical engineering Carroll College 1. 2; A. J. C. E. 3. 4, Treasurer 4; Beta Phi Theta. Alice E. Rupel South Bend, Indiana sociology Goucher College 1.2; Alpha Chi Omega. Richard S. Rosenfels Oak Park, Illinois botany Dormitory F ' ellow 4; Sophomore Hon- ors; Alpha Chi Rho. Thesis: A Study of Photoperiodism in its Effect on the Carbohydrate Nitrogen Ratio in the Soy Bean with Special Reference to Production of Nodules. Henry L. Rosenthal West ALUs commerce Sigma Phi Epsilon. Thesis: Business Management. Pauline Lucinda M. Rowley Madison LATIN Kappa ; Sophomore High Phi Beta Honors. Thesis: A chological VII-XII. Study of the Use of Psy- Mocivation in the Aeneid David D. Ruehlman Plymouth MEDICINE Phi Beta Pi. Thesis: Pharmacology. Chester P. Rumpf Baraboo accounting Finance Committee University Expo- sition 2; Sophomore Semi-Pubiic De- bate; Hesperia Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Congregational Church Group; Finance Committee University Exposi- tion; Commerce Club 3, 4; Circulation Staff Commerce Magazine. Ross George Rusch Reedsville political science Business Assistant Daily Cardinal 2, Associate Advertising Manager 3; Busi- ness Manager Literary Magazine 4 ; Advertising Manager 4; University Exposition; Junior Council; Religi- ous Conference; First Regimental Con- cert Band 2; Alpha Kappa Lambda. Page 133 Gordon James Ruscha Milwaukee ECONOMICS Class Treasurer 4; Assistant General Chairman 1927 Prom; Assistant Gen- eral Chairman 192b Homecoming; Assistant General Chairman Venetian Night 3 ; Chairman Varsity Night Interscholastic 3; Mid- West Relav Carnival 3 ; Assistant Production Manager Union Vodvil 3; Union Vodvil 3; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Water Polo 2; Zeta Beta Tau. Thesis: Merchandising and the Modern Department Store. Nora Mary Ryan Lodi mathematics Member of Newman Club 3, 4; Junior Mathematics Club 4; French Club 4. Eleanor Kathryn Samuels Mitchell, South Dakota SPEECH Milwaukee Downer College 1,2; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Thesis: The Life and Influence of Gordon Craig, Charles I. Sarff Schullsburg MEDICINE Phi Pi Phi. Walter W. Sauber West Chicago, Illinois COMMERCE De Paul University I ; Editorial Board Commerce Magazine 4 ; President ' s Guard 1,2; Commerce Club 3, 4; Com- merce Advisory Commission 3 . 4 ; Delta Sigma Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma. Ruth E. Schaettle Mondavi home ECONOMICS Euthenics Club 2, 3, 4; President Phi Upsilon Omicron; Phi Kappa Phi. Thesis The Comparative Wearing Quality of Silk Hose. Clara Julia Ryan Lodi history Milwaukee Normal School I. 2. Thesis: The Contract Method ai Other Devices for the Teaching History. Yoshinari Sajima Tokio, Japan economics Daisan-Koto-Gakko College, 1. 2; Vestryman of St. Francis Club Church Group 4 ; Freshman Track ; Varsity Track 4. Thesis: Business Cycles of Japan. Elra I . Sanden Rio letters and science graduate nurse Aurelia I illian Sauber Marine City, Michigan physical education Western Reserve University 1 ; W A A. 2. 3, 4. Small W; Physical Education Club 2. 3. 4; IDolphin Club 2. 3. 4; Out- ing Club 4; Class Outdoor Baseball 2. 4; Class Hockey 2, 3. 4; Class Indoor Baseball 4; Varsity Hockey 3, 4. Thesis: Formulation of Optimum Con- ditioning and Training Regulations for Adolescent Girls and Adult Women, Fred A. Sauer Milwaukee economics Circulation Manager Athletic Review 2, Advertising Manager 3, Business Manager 4; Business Manager Program Committee 1926 Homecoming; Adver- tisi ng Manager Program Committee University Exposition ; Phi Kappa Sigma. Edward P. Schager Wilmette, Illinois economics First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2; Men ' s Glee Club 2. 3; Haresfoot Dra- matic Club 3; Skull and Crescent; Beta Theta Pi. Page 134 Robert Clark Schaller Janesville HISTORY ■its: Marto. His Relation with Danto i Jacobin ' s French Revolution. Joseph B. Scheier LAW fnivcrsity of Wisconsin. B. A.; Philo- lathia Literary Society I ; Social cience Club i, 2. 3 ; Student Forum 4; lenorah Society 1. 2, 3, 4, President 4; [iUel Foundation 2, 3. imis: Realism in the Modern Novel Harry Scheinpflug Boscobel ECONOMICS gnes Florence Schernecker Madison dietetics Mumni Editor Country Magazine 3; luthenics Club I, 2. 3, 4. fhesis: Acidophieus Milk. ( larence Otto Schlaver Sparta journalism sports Assistant Daily Cardinal 1 , Sports Desk Editor 2, Desk Assistant 3, Desk Editor 4; Publicity Committee 1927 Prom; Publicity Committee Mili- tary Ball 3 ; Local Chairman University Exposition 2 ; Sophomore Semi-Public Debate; Vice-President Hesperia Liter- ary Society I. 2. 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 4 ; Member of Calvary Lutheran Church Council 4, Press Club 2 ; Treasurer Sigma Delta Chi 4. Thesis: A Study of the Factors Influenc- ing Newspaper Editorial Policy in Respect to the League of Nations. Alice Schloegel Milwaukee HOME economics Phi Mu. Thesis: Service in Industry Florence May Schauer Hartford journalism Reporter Daily Cardinal 2, Special Writer 3, Theater Editor 4; Publicity Committee 1927 Prom Publicity Com- mittee 1 926 Homecoming ; I nvitat ion Committee Father ' s Day; Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day ; Theta Sigma Phi; Delta Zeta. Merrill A. Scheil Appleton chemical engineering W Club 4; Varsity Intramural Man- ager 1, 2. 3, 4; Alpha Chi Sigma; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Helen Clare Schenk Madison chemistry Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: A Comparison between Two Qualitative Tests for Uranuem. Dorothy Catherine Schlacks Chicago, Illinois history Alpha Chi Omega. Thesis: The Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire in the First Century, A. D Kenneth Charles Schlichter New Holstein commerce Business Staff Commerce Magazine 2; Commerce Advisory Commission 4 ; Kappa Beta Lambda. Thesis: Analysis of Certified Public Accountant Examinations. Laurance Schmeckebier Chicago Heights, Illinois ENGLISH Sigma Chi. Page 135 Mary Loraine Schmitt Chicago, Illinois SOCIOLOGY LORENE G. SCHOENFELD Edgerion MUSIC Lawrence College I; Women ' s Glee Club 1, ' i. A; Choral Union 2; Castalia 3,4;PhiMu. Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Choral Union 2; Castalia 3, 4; Phi Mu. Thesis: An Experiment in Class Teach- ing of the Adolescent Girl Voice. Alma Marcia Schroeder Madison NURSING Theta Phi Alpha. Veryl Gladys Schult Juneau mathematics W. A. A. I, 2. 3, 4. Board 3, 4, W. A. A. Pin; Outing Club 4; Class Eiowling 1. 2, 3, 4; Varsity Bowling 2, 3 4; Bowling Honors; Junior Mathematics Club 2, 3, 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Sophomore Honors; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: A Study of the Shapes of Cubic Curves and their Classification. Esther Lorena Schulz Madison EDUCATION Associate Editor Summer Session Daily Cardinal 3 ; Advertising Department 1927 Badger; Advertising Department Country Magazine 2, 3; Member of Luther Memorial Religious Cabinet 4; W Club 4 ; Freshman Basketball ; W. A. A. 3 ; Outing Club 3 ; Class Volley- ball 1 ; Class Tennis 4; Varsity Tennis 3. Meyer W. Schutkin Milwaukee MEDICINE Menorah Society I ; Phi Delta Epsilon: Chi Beta Delta Thesis: The Physiological and Anatomi- cal Reactions of Thyroid Injection on the Heart. Fred C. Schneider Fort Atkinson COMMERCE University of South Dakota 1 ; Ticket Sales Committee Live Stock Show 1; Freshman Track; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Grace V. Schoechert De Forest letters and science Viola Marie Schroeder Milwaukee ENGLISH University of Wisconsin Extension Division of Milwaukee 1,2; Phi Delta Delta; Secretary of U. of W. Extension Division 1,2. Thesis: A Comparison of the Works of Edith Wharton and Willa Gather. Paul Stephen Schultz Reedsburg COMMERCE Business Assistant Daily Cardinal 3, Foreign Advertising Manager 4 ; Fi- nance Committee 1926 Homecoming; Commerce Club 2, 3, 4; Commerce Advisory Commission 3, 4, President 4; Delta Sigma Pi. Thesis: The Present Status of Patent Medicine Advertising. Lawrence Clair Schumaker Milwaukee commerce Theta Xi. Thesis: TheProblemofBranch Banking. Marguerite M. Schwarz Freeport, Illinois PHYSICAL education District Chairman S. G. A. 4 ; Chairman Field Day Committee Mother ' s Day 3; Treasurer Yellow Tassel; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Board 3. 4, National Secretary- Treasurer A. C. A. C. W. 3. 4. Small W; Physical Education Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3 ; Class Outdoor Baseball 1. 2, 3; Class Hockey 1, 2. 3, 4;iClass Indoor Baseball 3; Class Basketball 1,2; Varsity Outdoor Baseball 1 , 2, 3 ; Varsity Hockey 2, 3; Varsity Indoor Baseball 3; Crucible; Kappa Delta. Page 136 Robert Bee Schwenger Milwaukee ECONOMICS Program Chairman Mid-West Relay Carnival 3; Forensic Board 4; Sopho- more Semi-Public Debate; Vice-Presi- dent Athcnae Literary Society 2. Treasurer 3, President 4; Vice-President Y. M. C. A. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3.4; Freshman Committee; Program Chair- man Sophomore Commission; President Junior Council ; Arrangements Com- mittee Religious Conference 2. 3; President ' s Guard !; W Club 3; Freshman Track ; Varsity Track 2, 3, 4; Varsity Cross Country 2, 3, 4: Wisconsin Student Forum 3. 4. Execu- tive Committee 3; Junior Mathematics Club 1.2, 3, Vice-President 2. Secretary- Treasurer 3; Artus; Phi Kappa Phi; Wisconsin Freshman Scholarship; Soph- omore Honors. Thesis: Financial Experiences of the World War Robert Scorgie Red Granite electrical engineering Kappa Eta Kappa. Veryl Erwin Scott Madison political science Sigma Phi Sigma. E. Randall Sears Madison economics Phi Kappa Sigma. Louie Carl Seefeldt Wausau education River Falls Normal School 1,2. Thesis: The Present Status of Di- recting and Preparing Programs for County School Supervision. Edward Henry Seim Wausau COMMERCE Circulation Department Literary Maga- zine 2 ; Box Committee i 927 Prom ; Manager arsity Cross Country Team I, 2; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Orville L. Schwoerke Oklahoma City, Oklahoma COMMERCE President Sophomore Commission; Y. M. C. A Cabinet 2; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, 4; President ' s Guard I ; Varsity Gym Team 3, 4. Mary X. Scott Oshkosh ENGLISH Oshkosh State Normal Schor)! 1,2, ' l Thesis: A Bibliography of the Pre- Raphaelite School. Elizabeth M. Scoular MeUen ENGLISH Oshkosh Normal School 1. Thesis: A Comparison of the Realism of William Dean Howells and the Realism of Jane Austen. Charles Victor Seastone Madison CHEMISTRY Editorial Staff Octopus 3, 4. Thesis: A Study of Some Organic Type Reactions. Dorothy L. Seering Campbellspori Lawrence College 1. 2. 3; Activities at Lawrence College: W. A. A. 1. 2, 3, Awards; Class Basketball 1, 2, 3; Ac- tivities at Wisconsin: Alpha Delta Pi. Jeanne Louise Seitner Saginaw, Michigan education Milwaukee Downer College 1 ; Euthen- ics Club 3. 4; Alpha Epsilon Phi y Page 137 Anne M. Seman Granton ENGLISH Norman Arthur Severson Cambridge CHEMICAL ENGINEERING A. S. C. E. 2,3,4. Thesis: Determination of Pipe Flaw by the Salt Velocity Method. Samuel Parker Shafer Milwaukee CIVIL ENGINEERING Freshman Track; Varsity Track 2. 3, 4; Varsity Cross Country 2, 3, 4; A. S. C. E. Emil Michael Shebesta Manitowoc medicine Thesis; Applied Anatomy. Clara R. Sherburne Fremont home economics Euthenics Club 3 , 4 ; Director Newman Club 4. Thesis: Calcium Phosphates and Iron Content of Tomatoes. Han Fan Shih Sian Fu, Shen Si, China economics Tsing Hua College, Peking, China 1, 2. Arthur Crawford Senske Virginia, Minnesota journalism Virginia Junior College 1,2; Desk As- sistant Daily Cardinal 3, Desk Editor 4; Sigma Delta Chi. Thesis: Study of the Chicago Tribune ' s News Treatment of the Russian Bolshevik Revolution. Fred Edgar Seybold Forest Junction economics Advertisiiig Staff 1928 Badger; Campus Religious Council 2,3; First Regimental Concert Band 1, 2; Rifle Team 1, 2; Freshman Track. Thesis: Railway Transportation. Frank J . Shaller Whitewater agriculture Robert Edward Sher Superior LAW Superior Normal School 1,2; Chairman Finance Committee Mother ' s Day 4; Vilas Medal Wearer; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 3, 4; Member of Hillei Religious Council 2, 3; All-University Religious Service Committee 3, 4, Treasurer 3; Delta Sigma Rho; Phi Sigma Delta. Cecilia Shetzer Detroit, Michigan APPLIED ARTS College of City of Detroit i , 2 ; Arts and CraftsClub3,4. Minnie Shlimovitz Sparta FRENCH French Club 3, 4, Vice-President 3, Sigma. Page 138 Carl Allan Sholund Eveleth, Minnesota COMMERCE Hazel Isabel Sinaiko Madison APPLIED ARTS French Club; Arts and Crafts Club. Edythe Doris Sinnard Waterloo, Iowa ENGLISH Western Reserve University 1, 2; Activities at Western Reserve Univer- sity: Y. W. C. A Cabinet I; Sigma Ornega; Campus Night Committee 2- Activities at Wisconsin; Arden Club 4; Kappa Delta. Thesis Sir James M. Barrie. IVANELL SkILLICORN Mineral Point COMMERCE Women ' s Commerce Club 2, 3. 4, Ad- visory Chairman 4; Wesley Players 2; Phi Chi Theta. Thesis: Regulation of Evil Practices Arising from Competition. Virginia Edith Skinner Madison speech Wisconsin University Players 2. 3, 4 Fall Play. The Goose Hangs High 4 Union Vodvil 3; Comedy Night 3 Kappa Alpha Theta. Ira Smalling Cleveland, Tennessee ECONOMICS University of Wisconsin Extension Division of Milwaukee 1 ; Pistol Team 1,2; President ' s Guard 1,2; Freshman Football; Varsity Wrestling 2; Varsity Football 2; Southern Club 1, 2, 3; Square and Compass; A. I.E. E., Stu- dent Branch; Wisconsin Scholarship. Thesis: Costs of Aerial Transportation. Gene Laura Simon ENGLISH Sigma Kappa. Ben Ervin Singer Oshkosh civil engineering Thesis: Design of a Reinforced Con- crete Building. Barbara C. Skelly Oak Park, Illinois ENGLISH Mystic Circle; Pi Beta Phi. Orlando Meredith Skindrud Mt. Horeb HISTORY St. Olaf College 1,2; Activities at St. Olaf College: Joint Debate 2; Gamma Delta Literary Society 1, 2. Activities at Wisconsin: Hesperia Literary So- ciety 3.4; Blue Shield. Thesis The Economic Position of the Ministers in Colonial Connecticut. Mary Catherine Slick South Bend, Indiana education Milwaukee Downer College 1 ; Alpha Delta Pi Thesis: The Psychology of Dress for Educational Purposes. Henry Stuart Smiedinc Racine history Lawrence College 1,2; Freshman Foot- ball at Lawrence; IDelta Tau Delta. Page 139 Florence Almyra Smiley Janesville BOTANY Rockford College 1. Thesis: Cytology of Erysiphe Aggrc- gata. Genevieve M. Smith Hinsdale, Illinois FRENCH Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Rousseau In American Peri- odicals. Harriet Florence Smith Detroit, Michigan FRENCH Office Department 1925 Badger; Secre- tary Business Department 1926 Badger; French Play 4; Varsity Dancing Hon- ors; Cercle Francais 2, 3, 4; Italian Club 3. Thesis: Realism. Paul Tracy Smith Hammond, Indiana history Special Features Committee 1 926 Prom ; Haresfoot Follies 1,3; Freshman Swim- ming; Varsity Swimming 2 ; Tumas; President Inner Gate; Zeta Psi. Ruth Smithyman Wauwatosa home economics W. a. A. 2 ; Outing Club 1.2; Euthenics Club 2. 3, 4, Vice-President 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Omicron Nu. Thesis: A Study of the Amount of Vitamine C, Extracted by Brine Solu- tion from Ripe Pickled Tomatoes. Anne E. Snodgrass Marietta, Ohio letters and science Alma Alice Smith Marshfield home economis Stout Institute 1, 2. T iM(j. Agriculture Chemistry Research. Gertrude McMasters Smith Montclair, New Jersey horticulture Editor Campus Features Department 1928 Badger; W. A. A. I, 2; Class Hockey 1,2; Agric Triangle 3, 4, Secre- tary 3, Treasurer 4. James George Smith Madison commerce Freshman Track; Delta Sigma Pi. Thesis: The Use of the Budget in Mod- ern Business Management. Winifred Elizabeth Smith Denver, Colorado psychology Denver University 1 ; Circulation De- partment 1 927 Badger ; I n formation Committee Father ' s Day; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Complex Signs in Diagnostic Free Association. Joseph Walter Snavely Milwaukee chemistry Transportation Committee Military Ball 3; Censor Athenae Literary So- ciety 2, Vice-President 3; Y. M. C. A. I. 2. 3 , 4 ; Sophomore Commission ; Secretary Junior Council; Second Lieu- tenant Cadet Corps 3, Captain 4; President ' s Guard 1 ; Varsity Gym Team 2, 3, 4; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sophomore Honors; Delta Sigma Phi. Thesis: The Probable Effect of Artificial Silk Upon the Future Raw Silk Market. Freix)ra a. Soldan Madison music Member of Luther Memorial Religious Council 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 4; Choral Union 2; Sigma Alpha Iota. Page 140 Norman Kraabel Solum Woodville POLITICAL SCIENCE First Regimental Band 1, 2, 3, Univer- sity Orchestra I, 3; Pumpkin Holier P!ay 2; Young Men ' s Progressive Association 4; Law School Association 3. Thesis: History of Election Frauds in Chicago. Alex Louis Soroka Sufyerior LAW Superior Normal 1 ; Joint IDebate 4; Illinois-Wisconsin Hillel Foundation Debate 3; Athenae Literary Society 2. 3, 4; Hillel Foundation Student Council Church Group 2. 3, 4; Menorah 2, 3, 4, President 3; Palestine Builders 2, 3, 4. Eleanor M. Southcott Dousman home ECONOMICS Editorial Staff Country Magazine 2; EuthenicsClub I, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 2; Blue Shield 1. 2. 3. Treasurer Phi Upsilon Omicron 4. James Milton Spees Piainfieid CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Stevens Point Normal I, 2; A. 1. Ch. E. 3.4. Howard L. Spindler Milwaukee economics Fraternity Organizer. Circulation De- partment 1927 Badger; Chairman Transportation Committee 1927 Prom; General Chairman 1927 Homecoming; Assistant General Chairman Venetian Night 3 ; Freshman Track; Varsity Football 2; Phi Kappa Tau. Thesis: Comparative Analysis of Oper- ating Revenues and Expenses o f Selected Railroads. Joseph Charles Springberg Madison MEDICINE Student Council Hillel Foundation Church Group; Freshman Scholarship; Phi Beta Delta. W. A. SOMMER Sheboygan DAIRY HUSBANDRY Alpha Zeta; Farm House. Roger John Soulen Kenosha MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Chairman Unorganized Group 1927 Prom; National Academy Basketball Tournament 3 ; Officials Committee Ice Carnival 3 ; Varsity Intramural Manager 2, 3 ; Manager Freshman Track Squad; A. S. M. E. 3, 4; Triangle. Marian Elaine Spater Detroit, Michigan SOCIOLOGY College of the City of Detroit ! ; Wiscon- sin University Players 2, 3, 4; French Club 2, 3; French Play 2; Alpha Kappa Delta. Thesis: The New Negro. Margaret M. Spence La Crosse FRENCH Lindenwood College 1 ; Activities at Lindenwood College: W. A. A. 1; French Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club I, 2; Lindenwood Club 1. 2; Freshman Honors. Activities at Wisconsin : Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Delta. Thesis: Balzac as a Critic. Margaret Helen Spoon Janesville history Member of Congregational Student Cabinet 2. 3, 4; W. A. A. 3. 4; Class Volleyball 2. 3. 4. Thesis: Relations of the United States and Haiti Since 1898. Ernest Vernon Stadel Beloit MEDICINE Kappa Psi. Thesis: Anatomy. Page 141 Margery Anne Stangel Manitowoc ENGLISH Alpha Omicron Pi. Marcella Reed Steel Milwaukee MEDICINE Women ' s Activities Editor 1927 Badger; Prom Week Committee 1927 Prom; Chairman Executive Committee Moth- er ' s Day 3; Keystone Council; Vice- president Yellow Tassel ; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3. 4; W. A. A 1, 2, 3. 4, Board 4; Dolphin Club 1, 2. 3, 4, President 4; Class Swim- ming 1, 2. 3. 4; Varsity Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; President Mortar Board; Delta Delta Delta. Thesis: Research in Anatomy. Tracy Steele Birmingham, Alabama letters AND SCIENCE Sweet Briar College 1 , 2 ; Southern Club 3, 4; Madison Hunt Club 3, 4; Sigma Kappa. Abe Stein Eveleth, Minnesota ECONOMICS Eveleth Junior College I ; Advertising Staff Daily Cardinal 3 ; Fred Howard Stemm, Jr. Chicago, Illinois political SCIENCE Union Board 1 ; Decorations Committee Venetian Night 3 ; Interscholastic 2 ; Mid- West Relay Carnival 3; Electrical Committee 1924 Homecoming; Father ' s Day Committee 3; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 3, 4; Haresfoot Play 3, 4; Presi- dent ' s Guard 2, 3; Assistant Cheer- leader 2; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming 1, 2, 3; Tumas; Secretary Skull and Crescent; Phi Delta Theta. Glenn O. Stevens Madison COMMERCE Assistant General Chairman Military Ball 4; Chairman Communications Committee Military Ball 3 ; Colonel Cadet Corps 4; First Lieutenant 3; Pistol Team 4; Property Committe Horse Show 3 ; Commerce Club 4 ; Caisson Club 3,4; Scabbard and Blade: Kappa Beta Lambda; General Chair- man University Horse Show. Thesis: Business Budget- Harold Clarence Stark Madison HISTORY Athenae Literary Society 3, 4; Cadet Corps 1.2. Rea J. Steele Superior HISTORY Superior Normal School 1, 2. Thesis: Burke ' s Reflections on French Revolution. the Frances Ann Steenbergen Paris, Kentucky HISTORY Randolph-Macon College I. 2; Alpha Xi Delta. Thesis: The Relation of Napoleon Bonaparte, at St. Helena, to the Napoleonic Legend. Mrs. Emma Virginia Stein Madison ENGLISH Mary Louise Stephenson Athens, Georgia home economics Lucy Cobb College 1, 2; Alpha Chi Omega . Thesis: In Statistics Department. Hampton R. Stevenson Ionia, Michigan LETTERS and SCIENCE Page 142 Flora Parker Stewart Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH Northwestern University 1 ; Activities at Northwestern University: Alethena Literary Society; Nimrod. Kappa Alpha Theta of Wisconsin. Thesis: The Poetry of Eidwin Arlington Robinson. Floyd Manerd Stiehm Madison electrical engineering Y. M. C. A. 2; Committee Memtser Discussion Group Campus Religious Council: First Regimental Concert Band I, 2, 3. 4. Silvia Ruth Stoekle Milwaukee ENGLISH Office Assistant 1925 Badger: Soliciting Department 1926 Badger; Business Assistant Daily Cardinal 3; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Arts and Crafts Club 2. 3, 4; French Club 3. 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Delta. George Allen Stole Sharon pharmacy Mid- West Relay Carnival 3 ; High School State Basketball Tournament 3 ; Athletic Board Baseball Representative 3,4; ■■W Club 2, 3, 4; Freshman Base- ball; Varsity Baseball 2, 3. 4, Captain 4; Vice-President Kappa Psi ; Rho Chi ; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Thesis: Baptisia Tinctoria. Elizabeth Nancy Stone Oconomowoc FRENCH Advertising Solicitor Daily Cardinal 1 , Business Staff 2; Delta Zeta. Austin A. Straubel Green Bay LETTERS AND SCIENCE Varsity Football 2, 3. 4; W Club; Tumas; [Delta Kappa Epsilon. Ruth U. Stibbe Peshtigo ECONOMICS Delta Zeta. John A. Stiles LMke Mills medicine Phi Chi. Lenore Romola Stolen Madison ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A.; Castalia. Thesis: A Study of the Figures of Speech in Sidney Lanier ' s Writings. p DORATHEA StOLTE Reedsburg FRENCH Assistant Office Manager 1927 Badger; Chairman I nvitations Committee Moth- er ' s Day 3; Secretary Red Gauntlet; Freshman Commission ; Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3. 4; Alpha Phi. William George Storck Madison commerce Assistant Manager Merchandise De- partment 1926 Badger; Manager Copy and Collections Department 1927 Badger; Boxing 2, 3, 4, Numerals I, Coach 3, 4; Commerce Club 2. 3. 4; Sergeant-at-arms 3 ; Commerce Ad- visory Commission 3, 4; Delta Sigma Pi, Harriet H. Strauss Marshfield LATIN Thesis: Comparative Study of Virgils ' Georgies. PagciAS Antonia Verena Streiff New Glarus ENGLISH Lawrence College I. John D. Stuart Springfield, Illinois ENGLISH Manager Organizations Department 192b Badger; Business Staff Octopus I . 2; Alpha Tau Omega. Gerald Lawrence Stutz Tomahawk commerce Business Staff Men ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Lambda Chi Alpha. Guy Suits Medford PHYSICS First Regimental Concert Band I. 2; University Orchestra 3. 4; University Woodwind Ensemble 3 . 4 ; Freshman Swimming; German Club 4; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia; Phi Sigma Phi; Sophomore Honors; Sigma Pi. Thesis: Conditions for Oscillations in a Vacuum Tube Circuit. LuciLE Mae Sutherland Flandreau, South Dakota ENGLISH University of Iowa. B. A.; Graduate Club; Arden Club. Selmer Arthur Sylvester Galesville COMMERCE Treasurer Cun and Blade Club 2, 3. 4 Alvin Monroe Strand Milwaukee LAW University of Wisconsin. LL.B.; Fresh- man Swimming; Varsity Swimming. Herbert Henry Stuessy Brodhead HISTORY Assistant Desk Editor Daily Cardinal 3.4; Forensic Board 3 ; Slphomore Semi- Publjc Debate; Athenea Literary So- ciety; Freshman Commission; Sopho- more Commission; Secretary Junior Council; Local Committee of U. W. Ex- position; Young Mens Progressive As- sociation; Beta Phi Theta. LiLLiE Emelia Suckern Manitowoc commerce University of Wisconsin B. A.; Women ' s Commerce Club 2; Spanish Club 4, President 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Sopho- more High Honors. Thesis: Analysis of Income of Partner- ship and Individual Business Concerns. Willis G. Sullivan Hurley LAW University of Wisconsin, B. A.; Busi- ness Manager 1 92 5 Badger ; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Phi; Sophomore Honors; Alpha Sigma Phi. Suzuki Gengo Otamachi, Japan LETTERS and SCIENCE Taihoku College, Graduate ; Taihoku College. B. A. Flora W. Tanner Martinsberg, W. Va. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma. Page 144 Doris Barbara Taylor Waupun PHYSICAL EDUCATION Dance Drama 1. 2. 3. 4; Varsity Danc- ing Honors; Orchesus. Gertrude Huson Taylor East Orange. New Jersey psychology Connecticut College 1,2; University of Wisconsin A. B.; Activities at Con- necticut College: Chairman Ex- exutive Committee Student Council 2; Class Vice-President 2. Delta Gamma of Wisconsin. Thesis: Comparative Study of Normal and Insane by Association Tests. Benjamin Richard Teare, Jr. Menomonie electrical engineering Editorial Staff Wisconsin Engineer 2. 3, 4; Junior Council; Vice-President Congregational Students Association 4 First Regimental Concert Band 3, 4 De Molay Club I. 2, Treasurer 2. A. I. E. E. 3, 4, Chairman 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu;PhiMu Alpha Sinfonia; Sophomore High Honors; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Charles Alfred Thacher Zenda journalism Assistant Desk Editor Daily Cardinal 1 ; Kappa Beta Lambda. Thesis: An Analysis of the New York imes. Gertrude Sophia Thiede Two Rivers home economics University of Wi consin, B. S. ; Eu- thenics Club 2. 3, 4; Omicron Nu Thesis: Inlluence of Vitamin D on Ask Content of Bones. Dorothy May Thomas Janesville latin Thesis: The Use of Alliteration in Virgil. Evelyn Elizabeth Taylor Camp Douglas HISTORY La Crosse Normal 1, 2. Thesis: The Five Liberty Loans. Mary Ann Taylor Madison FRENCH Thesis: The Influence of Balzac ' s Life Upjon His Work. Mary L. Tenbroeck Austin, Minn. Neal B. Thayer Antigo electrical engineering Editorial Staff Wisconsin Engineer 3, 4; Assistant General Chairman Military Bali 4; Decorations Committee 1927 Prom; Chairman Electrical Arrange- ments Committee Venetian Night 3 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3. Cap- tain 4; Pistol Team 2; A. L E. E. 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer 4 ; Scabbard and Blade 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Pi Tau Pi Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi ; Sophomore Honors; Phi Pi Phi. Gertrude Mary Thiemann Reedsburg FRENCH St. Mary ' s College 1,2; University of Wisconsin B. S.; Sigma Kappa Thesis: The Life and Works of Paul Deroulede. Ruth Elizabeth Thomas West Salem ENGLISH Lawrence College 1 . Page 145 Barbara G. Thompson Oshkosh LETTERS AND SCIENCE Darrel Ecke Thomsen Fond du Lac CIVIL ENGINEERING Decorations Committee 1927 Prom; Varsity Swimming l,2;A. S. C.E.2.3, 4; Chi Omicron Nu; Triangle. Aletha R. Thorncate Milton LETTERS AND SCIENCE Erna p. Tiele Colby ENGLISH Platteviile Normal 1, 2; Member of Baptist Student Cabinet 4: Spanish Club 3. Thesis: Joel Chandler Harris and the Uncle Remus Stories. Kathleen A. Timlin Milwaukee Georgetown Visitation Convent I, 2. Thesis: Yeats and the Abbey Theatre Movement. Oliver Eugene Tjoflat Ellrick medicine First Regimental Concert Band I. 2, 3, 4; Phi Chi. Thesis: The Effect of Thyroid Gland on the Cardiovascular System. Marian Emily Thompson Cleveland, Ohio APPLIED ARTS Connecticut College 1,2; Delta Gamma Vernon Wallace Thomson Richland Center HISTORY Carroll College 1, 2; Chi Phi. Thesis: An Investigation of the Correct- ness of More ' s Views Concerning the Conditions of His Time as Expressed in His Utopia. Lawrence Willard Tice Omro education Oshkosh Normal 1,2; Phi Delta Kappa; Scholarship in Industrial Education 2, 3; Acacia. Thesis: A Survey of the Record Systems Used in Continuation of the United States, in Cities between 10,000 and 200,000 Population, and the Formula- tion of a Standardized Record System for Use in These Schools. Mary Eileen Timbers Mansion Ernie Timm Milwaukee ENGLISH Milwaukee Normal School and Mar- quette University 1, 2, 3. Silas Burtron Tobey Wausau electrical engineering Business Staff W isconsin Engineer 4 Decorations Committee 1927 Prom A. I. E. E. 3, 4; Triangle. Page 146 Hugh L. Tollack Black River Falls ECONOMICS Sigma Phi Epsilon. Josephine Mary Town Shiocton PHARMACY Lawrence College 1 ; Pan-Profes- sional Council 4; Y. W. C. A. I ; Chem- istry Club I ; President Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Beta Phi Alpha. Clarence Hackett Traver Salt Lake City, Utah mechanical engineering University of Utah 1,2; Theta Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; Phi [Delta Theta. Nadine Trope Tulsa, Oklahoma FRENCH Lindenwood College 1.2; Activities at Lindenwood College: Alpha Sigma Tau; French Club. Activities at Wisconsin: Pythia Literary Society 3.4; Sigma. Thesis: Blazac ' s Autobiography in La Comedie Humaine. Frederick M. Trumbull Madison EDUCATION University of Chicago. Ph. B.; Activi- ties at Chicago: Graduate Scholastic Honors College of Education; Scholar in Industrial Education. Thesis: Education and Guidance of Junior Wage Earners. A. DeEsten Tupper Plymouth CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3,4; Freshman Track; A. I. C. E. 2. 3. 4; Alpha Chi Sigma. Harold J . Toner Kenosha • CHEMICAL engineering I.e. E. 3.4. Ruth May Trafton Mankalo, Minnesota Battle Creek Normal School of Physical Education I ; W. A. A. 2. 3, 4, [Board 4; Pin Wearer; Physical Eiducation Club 2, 3, 4; Class Hockey 2. 3; Class Archery 2, 3; Class Basketball 3; Varsity Archery 2, 3; Archery Honors. Thesis: Comparisons of Symmetry Developed by Different Swim .ling Strokes. Gertrude F. Troemel Madison applied ARTS Anna Truempler Alma ENGLISH La Crosse Normal I . Thesis: National Realism in the Read- ings of Sir Walter Scott. Anna Frances Tuffley Lancaster , FRENCH Beta Phi Alpha. Thesis: Richelieu. Noel T. Tweet Eleva ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING St. Olaf College 1. 2; A. I. E. E. 4. Page 147 Spencer Edward Ulrich Neenah CIVIL ENGINEERING President ' s Guard 2; A. S C. E. 2. Thesis: Experimental Study of the Relief of Water Hammer Pressure Developed by Slow Closure of a Cyl- indrical Valve. John Wilson Vallee Milwaukee ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING A. I. E. E. 2, 3, 4; Triangle. Dorothea Vandervest Oak Park, Illinois University of Chicago 1,2; Business Staff 1926 Badger; Business Staff Octopus 3, 4; Union Vodvil; Delta Zeta. Francis Van Konynenburg St. Croix Falls JOURNALISM Assistant Desk Editor Daily Cardinal 3; Men ' s Glee Club 2. 3. 4, Secretary 4; Varsity Swimming 2. 3. Genevieve Ilah Van Wagner Hillsboro HISTORY Thesis: The Development of Colonial Newspapers. Irma Louise Vaughan Madison LETTERS and SCIENCE GRADUATE NURSE Henrietta J. Utzerath Madison zoology Beta Phi Alpha, Thesis: The Anatomy Crogmani. of Candona Martha C. Van Abel Madison education Oshkosh Normal 1 , 2. Evelyn Carol Van Donk Green Bay HOME economics Stout Institute 1, 2; Euthenics Club 3,4; Beta Sigma Omicron. Thesis: A Study of the Antirachitic Factor in Market Eggs. Gerald Meredith Van Pool Janesville HISTORY Treasurer Presbyterian Student So- ciety 2, 3; First Re gimental Concert Band 2; Men ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Spanish Club 3; Phi Mu Alpha; Beta Kappa. Edith Caroline Vaughan Amboy, Illinois APPLIED ARTS 1927 Badger Board; Program Com- mittee 1927 Prom; Ways and Means Committee 1926 Homecoming; Y W. C. A. 1,2; Vice - President of Sigma Lambda 4; Alpha Omicron Pi, Thesis: The Decorating of a Spanish Home, R. Worth Vaughan Madison LAW Student Editor in Chief Law Review 4; President Gamma Eta Gamma 4; Sophomore High Honors; Gamma Eta Gamma, Page 148 |«BjiWiP««.«JW Marian Mallory Vedder Clinton Chairman S G. A. Musical Program 3; Women ' s Glee Club 3, 4, Business Manager 3; Choral Union I, 2; Clef Club 2. 3. 4; W. A. A. 3. 4; Varsity Dancing Honors; Orchesus. Thesis Recital, (Senior) Ernest F. Vilter Milwaukee MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Marquette University 1 ; Vice-President A. S. M. E. ; Pi Tau Sigma. Henry Eugene Vogel Suf erior medicine Superior State Normal I ; Freshman Wrestling; Varsity Wrestling; All-Uni- versity Bantamweight Boxing Cham- pion 2, Medal; Phi Beta Delta. Lillian Anna Voight Superior BOTANY Superior State Normal 1,2; Treasurer W. G. Church Group 4. Thesis: The Cytology of Conidiobolus Villosus. Elizabeth Volkman Eau Claire MUSIC Women ' s Glee Club 3; Chora! Union 1, 2; Chi Omega. Carlos Robert Vollenweider Buenos Aires, Argentina University of Buenos Aires 1 ; Phi Chi ; Thesis: Anatomy. Dorothy Ellen Villemonte Fennimore ENGLISH District Chairman S. G. A. 3; Castalia Literary Society 4; Arden Club 2, 3. 4, Treasurer 2, 3, President 4; Sophomore Honors. Thesis: Joseph Conrad His Tendency to Brood and its Relation to the Plot Structure in His Novels. Tesse Vinovsky Milwaukee LAW Marquette University and Milwaukee Normal School ; Activities at Mil- waukee: Marquette University Theatre Shakespeare Players; Milwaukee Nor- mal Dramatic Club. Activities at Wis- consin: Varsity Dancing Honors; Dance Drama 1,2,3; Kappa Beta Pi ; Orchesus. Thesis: Comedie Ballet de Moliere. Alice Violet Voight • Superior ENGLISH Superior State Normal 1. 2. Thesis: The Influence of the Comedies of Lyiy on Shakespeare. John Louis Voigt Appleton PHARMACY Mid- West Relay Carnival 3; Freshman Track; Varsity Track 2, 3, 4; President Kappa Psi; Rho Chi. Thesisr Quinine. Esther Margaret Volckmann Clinton, Iowa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Omega Pi. Thesis: Immunization through the Nasal Pharynx. Bernard Henry Vollrath Greenwood ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Captain Cadet Corps; Freshman Track; Pi Tau Pi Stgma Page 149 WiLLARD Carl Ward Fond du Lac ECONOMICS Phi Kappa. Thesis: Price Movements and Business Cycles. Nathaniel Sears Warner Elgin, Illinois mechanical engineering Elgin Junior CoUege I ; Member of Congergational Cabinet 3 , 4 ; Fresh- man Track; A- S. M. E. 3, 4; Pi Tau Sigma; Chi Psi. Eleanor Sparrow Warren Westfield, Massachusetts HOME economics Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission ; J unior Commission 3 , President 3 ; Phi Upsilon Omi«ron; Crucible; Sigma Kappa, Thesis: Storage and Inventories of Food Supplies in Institutions. Miriam Wasserman Chicago, Illinois SOCIOLOGY LuciLE Frances Watterson La Grange, Illinois FRENCH Phi Mu Hildegarde Margaret Weedy Tulsa, Oklahoma ENGLISH Carnegie Institute of Technology I, 2; Activities at Cargenie Institute: Class Basketball I ; Carnegie Clef Club; Secretary 2. Activities at Wisconsin; District Chairman W. S. C A. 4; Y. W. C. A 4; Chi Omega. Thesis: Characterization in the Works of Lafcadio Hearn. Dorothy Warner Madison sociology Sweet Briar College 1 , 2 ; President Mystic Circle 3, 4; Delta Gamma. Thesis: Sociology Migration of Negro From South. Victoria Warner Claude Texas home economics Texas State College for Women 1.2; Euthenics Club 4; Southern Club 3,4, Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Spanish Club 4; Alpha Gamma Delta. Charles Howard Wartinbee La Crosse chemistry La Crosse Normal 1, 2; Men ' s Glee Club 4. Paul L. Waters South Bend, Indiana economics ' • ' arsity Fencing Team 3; Theta Chi. Clara J. Webber Proctor, Minnesota FRENCH Michigan State Normal School I. 2; Business Staff Literary Magazine 4 ; Class Horseback Riding 4; French Club 3.4 Arthur Edward Wegner Tomah ACCOUNTING Accountant. Business Manager 1927 , Badger; Chairman Finance Committee! 1927 Prom; Special Features Committee 1 Venetian Night 3; Finance Committee | University Exposition 2; Chairman -f Budget Committee Fathers Day 4; President ' s Guard 1 ; Class Treasurer 3 ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; j Phi Beta Kappa; Sophomore Honors Thesis: The Municipal Budget. Page IH) f; ' v. • Helen E. von Weise Greenville, Illinois ENGLISH National Park Seminary 1 ; Kappa Alpha Theta. David Wagner Bloomville medicine Phi Beta Oelta Grace V. Wagner Madison SOCIOLOGY Sweet Briar College 1 : Member of Con- gregational Cabinet 3. 4; Treasurer Congregational Association 4; Alpha Phi. Dorothy Ann Walker Madison PHILOSOPHY Executive Board Octopus 3 ; Freshman Commission. Thesis: Santayana on Art and Religion Hubert Stanley Wall Rockwell City, Iowa mathematics Cornell Graduate: Cornell College B. A. and M. A.; Phi Beta Kappa; Fellowship in Mathematics 1, 2, 3. Anita Louise Walter Madison history Pythia Literary Society. Thesis: German Emigration to Pennsyl- vania in 1760. Esther J eanette Wang Wittenburg psychology St Olaf College 1. Thesis: The Relation of Complex Indicators in Diagnostic Free Associa- tion to Neurotic Instability. Victor Carl Wangenstein Duluth, Minnesota University of Wisconsin. B. A ; Phi Alpha C elta James Dan Walsh Mauston medicine Phi Beta Pi; Phi Kappa. Thesis: Conduction System in the Mammalian Heart. Randall H. Walvoord Racine electrical engineering TsAO Shih Wang Anfu Kiangsi, China POLICICAL science Tsing Hua College, Peking. China 1.2; Activities at Tsing Hua College; Chief Executive Students Association; Chair- man Students Council; Representative Peking Students Alliance; President Peking Students Alliance. Activities at Wisconsin: Chinese Students Club. Thesis: China in the League of Nations. John M. Ward Tomah LETTERS and SCIENCE Page lU Dorothea Ruth Weichelt Barrington, Illinois ENGLISH Northern Illinois Teachers College 1, 2. Thesis: Christina Rosetti. Harry Abe Weinberg Chicago, Illinois LAW Menorah; Phi Beta Delta. Ruth Alice Weiss Beloit HOME economics Beloit College 1,2; Board Representa- tive S. G. A. 3; Business Staff Country Magazine 4; Euthenics Club 3. 4. Thesis: History of Women ' s Magazines, Third Period. 1900 to 1926. Marie Alice Wells Madison economics Class Rifle Team 1, 2; Varsity Rifle Team Manager 1. Thesis: Rehabilitation of Injured In- dustrial Workers and Soldiers in the United States, with Special Study of Wisconsin. Archie R. Werner Bloomer PHARMACY Treasurer Beta Psi of Kappa Psi. Thesis: The Viburnums. Nathalie Alice Werner Mount Horeb ENGLISH Class Swimming 1.2; Chi Omega. Thesis: A Criticism of the Humor and Pathos in Dickens ' Great Expecta- tions. Elmer C. Weideman Columbus geology University of Wisconsin, B. A. Thesis: Trie Time Relation of Mineral Deposition and Faulting. Louis Henry Weiner Columbus agriculture Saddle and Sirloin Club 2, 3. 4; Alpha Zeta. Lester Lee Weissmiller Monticello medicine Kurt Frank Wendt Milwaukee civil engineering University of Wisconsin Extension Division 1,2; Ways and Means Com- mittee 1926 Homecoming; A. S. C. E. 4; Chi Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi. Thesis: Tests of Some Common TyF es of Steel Columns Under Oblique Loading. Harold W. Werner New London pharmacy University of Wisconsin, Ph. G.; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis: The Crude Drugs of the U. S. P. of 1820 and the Preparations into which they Enter (1925). Bibliography of Tolni fera Balsamum. (1927) . Edward Rudolf Wernitznig Lake Geneva economics Publicity Committee Military Ball 4; Athletic Manager St. Paul Chapel Church Group 3, 4; Second Lieutenant Cadet Corps 1. 2, 3, 4; Sergeant 1. 2; President ' s Guard 1,2; Publicity Com- mittee Horse Show 3 , 4 ; Freshman Track; Freshman Swim ming; Varsity Swimming2, 3.4; Varsity Water Polo 2, 3,4; Varsity Track 2 ; Caisson Club 3,4; Phi Kappa. Page 152 Donald Knilans West chemistry Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming 2. Thesis: Fractionation of a Typical Mid- Continent Crude Oil. Charles R. Westhofen Milwaukee history Marquette University I, 2; Pi Kappa Alpha. Graydon George Wheeler Pepin electrical engineering First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 ; A. I. E. E. 3. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa; Trea- surer Pi Tau Pi Sigma, Theodore Harvey Wheeler Ashland geology Alpha Sigma Phi. Blythe White Humboldt, Iowa ' sociology Bradford Academy 1 ; Alpha Kappa Delta; Gamma Phi Beta. Thesis: A Study of the Violators of the Prohibition Law. Edward W. Whitson Madison electrical engineering Gilbert Gustaf Westerlund Iron River, Michigan chemistry Phi Lambda Upsilon; Legislative Scholarship 2. 3. 4. Thesis: Preparation of Diphenyl Car- binol and other Organic Compounds. Charles John Westrich River Forest, Illinois civil engineering Class Traditions Committee Chairman 3 ; Chairman Ways and Means Com- mittee 192b Homecoming; Vice-Presi- dent Athletic EJoard 4; ' W Club 3, 4; Manager Varsity Swimming Team 1,2. 3; Inner Gate; Kappa Sigma. Thesis: 90 Degree Bend Study. Ralph V. Wheeler Kenosha philosophy Holy Cross College 1, 2; Chairman Alumni Committee 1926 Homecoming; Phi Kappa Tau. Thesis Critical Realism. Dorothy Whitaker Madison psychology Sophomore Honors; Delta Gamma. Thesis: Association Tests. Roland Frederick White Washington, D. C. mining engineering Chairman Survey Committee Military Ball 3 ; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3 , Lieutenant Colonel 4; President Guard 1. 2; Chairman Program Committee Horse Show 3 ; Freshman Crew ; Varsity Track 4; Varsity Crew 2; Mining Club 1. 2. 3, 4. President 4; Scabbard and Blade; Delta Upsilon. Percy Purves Whittingham Arpin mining engineering Stevens Point Normal 1 ; Square and Compass. Page 153 John Francis Wickhem Alexandria, South Dakota LAW Beloit College B. A.; Phi Delta Phi; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Harry J. Wienbergen Platteville EDUCATION Platteville State Normal I, 2; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Thesis: The Education of the Farm Boy and Girl in Lafayette County, Wisconsin. Ervin Siewert Wierman Waldo chemistry Member of Methodist Religious Cabinet 4; Wesley Players 4; Alpha Chi Sigma. Thesis: The Preparation of Isopropyl Orthoformate and other Organic Com- pounds. Marie Wilbur Janesville EDUCATION Marquette University I . Thesis: A Scientific Investigation of the Aims of Teaching American History. Ethel May Wilcox Osseo ENGLISH Eau Claire Normal I ; Campus Religi- ous Council 4; Member of Wesley Foundation 3. 4; Beta Phi Alpha. Earl Joseph Wilke Milwaukee Freshman 2. 3. 4;ThetaX AGRONOMY Football; Varsity Football Helen Josephine Wicks Chicago, Illinois JOURNALISM Copy Writer Editorial Department 1927 Badger; Copy Writer Editorial Department 1928 Badger; W. A A 2, 3, 4; Outing Club 2. 3, 4; Class Bowling I, 2; Sophomore Honors; Delta Zeta LUCILE G. WiENKE Beloit music Women ' s Glee Club 3. 4, Librarian 4; Choral Union 2; Sigma Alpha Iota. Corresponding Secretary 3, Vice-Presi- dent 4. Thesis: Organ Recital. Edwin O. Wiig Madison CHEMISTRY Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute B. 4; University of Wisconsin, M S. ; Sigma Xi Delta Tau Delta. Thesis: A Study of the Decomposition of Acetone-dicarboxylic Acid. Annette Lewis Wilcox Janesville APPLIED arts University of Chicago 1 ; Publicity Com- mittee 1927 Prom; Publicity Chairman Y. W. C. A. Christmas Bazaar 4; W. A. A, I, Class Hockey 1; Corresponding Secretary Sigma Lambda: Alpha Omi- cron Pi. Thesis: Correlation of Chinese and Japanese Ornament. Helen Dorothy Wilde Rhinelander LATIN Thesis: Country Life in the Poetry of Horace. Ruth Will Red Oak, Iowa PHYSICAL education Iowa State Teachers College I, 2; Member of Congregational Religious Eioard 4; Physical Education Club 3, 4; Gamma Phi Beta. Page lU David H. Williams Wales EDUCATION Agricultural Literary Society 1, 2; President Presbyterian Sunday Evening Club 4; Saddle and Sirloin Club 2: Blue Shield 1. 2. 3. 4, President 4; Square and Compass; Wisconsin Schol- arship. Marguerite H. Williams Oshkosh history Oshkosh Normal School 1 ; Member of Congregational Cabinet 1 , 2, 3, 4; ClassIIockey I, 2; Italian Club 1. 2. 3; Sigma Kappa. Thesis: The Attitude of the Mississippi Valley Towards Nullification from 1828 to 1832. Harold Charles Wilson Ephraim zoology University of Chicago I ; Research Assistant in Zoology 3, 4. Thesis: The Life History of the Herring Gull. Russell Griffith Winnie Milwaukee economics Class Publicity Committee Chairman 2; Reporter Daily Cardinal 1.2; Chair- man Pre-Prom Play 1Q27 Prom; As- sistant General Chairman 1927 Home- coming; Chairman Carnival Committee 1926 Homecoming; Wisconsin Univer- sity Players 2. 3, 4; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 2, 3, 4. Secretary 3, President 4; Pre-Prom Play 2; Union Vodvil 2; Chairman Haresfoot Follies 3; Hares- foot Play 2, 3; Tumas; White Spades; Phi Kappa Psi. Wenonah Winsey Appleton PSYCHOLOGY Lawrence College 1 ; W. A. A. of Lawrence College !; Delta Gamma. Thesis: Complex Indicators in Diag- nostic Free Association. Josephine May Winter Rewey chemistry Executive Committee Mother ' s Day 3; Keystone Council 4; W. A. A. I. 2. 3. 4, Board 3, 4, Treasurer 3. President 4, •W Wearer; Dolphin Club 2, 3. 4, Treasurer 3; Class Outdoor Baseball 1, 2.3; Class Hockey 3 ; Class Indoor Base- ball 3 ; Class Swimming 4 ; Class Basket- ball 1; Varsity Indoor Baseball 3; Phi Beta Kappa 3; Phi Kappa Phi 4; Mortar Board; Crucible; Sophomore High Honors. Thesis A Study of the Relative Effects of Various Catalysts in the Formation of Acetal. David Leslie Williams Madison medicine Phi Chi. Millard J. Williams Racine MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Business Staff Wisconsin Engineer 2, 3, Business Manager 4; Chairman Ways and Means Committee 1927 Prom ; Banquet Committee Military Ball 3; Member of Eioard Congregational Stu- dent Association 1, 2, 3, 4; First Lieu- tenant Cadet Corps 3. Captain 4; Fresh- man Track; A. S. M. E. 2, 3, 4; Polygon 3, 4; Pi Tau Sigma; Sophomore Honors; Triangle. Bernice Winchell Madison GEOGRAPHY Associate Editor 1927 Badger; Wiscon- sin University Players 2, 3,4; Keystone Council 4 ; Freshman Commission ; President Sophomore Commission; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3, 4, Chairman Freshman Department 3, President 4; Mortar Board; Crucible; Delta Gamma. Thesis A Geographic Interpretation of Holland, Clarence Herman Winning Beaver Dam chemistry Oshkosh Normal 1.2; First Regimental Concert Band 1.2; University Orchestra 1.2; Periclean Society 1,2. Gustav R. F. Winter Ant i go political science Chairman Transportation Committee Venetian Night 3; Sophomore Semi- Public Debate; Member of Calvary Lutheran University Church Religious Council 4; Vice-President Church Group 4; Hesperia Literary Society 1, 2, 3; Sophomore Honors; Delta Pi Fpsilon. Thesis: Decisions of Wisconsin Supreme Court Involving Constitutional Ques- tions. Berenice E. Winterbotham Madison ENGLISH Member of Episcopal Religious Council I. Page 155 Alice Margaret Wirick Beloit DIETETICS La Crosse Normal I ; Women ' s Glee Club 2; Omicron Nu. Thesis: The Effect of Coffee on Metabol- ism. Mary Elizabeth Wishard Mt. Morris, Illinois ENGLISH Mount Morris College 1, 2. Marguerite Paulina Wojta Madison mathematics College of St. Teresa 1 ; University Orchestra 3, 4; Blue Shield 3. 4; Clef Club 4. Thesis: Transcendental and Algebraic Curves with Special Reference to Their Historical Development. Vivian Florence Wolfson Oak Park, Illinois POLITICAL SCIENCE University of Chicago 1 ; Member of HiUel Religious Council 3, 4; All-Uni- versity Religious Convocation Com- mittee 4; Collegiate League of Women Voters 2, 3, 4; Sigma, Lethel a. Wolter Monroe ENGLISH John B. Woods Waterman, Illinois AGRICULTURE Member of Wesley Religious Cabinet and Board 3, 4; Ag. College Federation Board 2. 3 ; Saddle and Sirloin Club 1 , 2, 3,4; Blue Shield 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3 ; Agric Triangle 2, 3; A. S. A. E. 1. 2. 3, 4. Treasurer 3, 4; Square and Compass 3, 4; Recording Secretary 4. Winifred E. Wise Fond du Lac JOURNALISM Ripon College 1 ; Reporter Daily Car- dinal 3; Secretary Cardinal Board 4; Business Staff Octopus 3 ; Business Staff Literary Magazine 3, Editorial Board 4; Publicity Committee Religious Con- ference 3 ; Wisconsin University Players 3 , 4 ; Keystone Council 4 ; Coranto ; Theta Sigma Phi. Thesis: Journalistic Book Reviewing in the United States. IrMA J. WiTTKE Wausau French Club 3, 4. Thesis: Paper on Flaubert. Helen M. Wolfe Waukesha SOCIOLOGY Carroll College 1,2. Miriam M. Wollaeger Milwaukee GEOLOGY Women ' s Glee Club 4; Chairman Decorations Committee Horse Show 3 ; Chairman Ticket Committee 2 ; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3. 4; Dolphin Club 1, 2. 3. 4; Class Tennis 2, 3, 4; Class Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Swimming I, 2, 3, 4; Riding Honors; Arts and Crafts Club 1, 2, 3. Secretary; Madison Hunt Club 2, 3, 4, Board of Governors 2, 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Delta, Thesis: A Comprehensive Analysis of the St. Peter Sands. Donald Willsey Woodford Madison pharmacy KapF a Sigma, Thesis: Copaiba. Eleanor R. Wooster Madison music Castalia Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Member of Luther Memorial Religious Cabinet 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Vice-President 3 ; Choral Union 1 , 2 Clef Club 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 3, 4; Pan- Professional Council 3, 4, President 4; President Sigma Alpha lota 3; Sopho- more Honors. Thesis I. Recital, 2. A Course in Music Appreciation for Senior High Schools. 1 _iii-j Page 1S6 Betty C. Worst Lockport, Illinois APPLIED ARTS Wisconsin University Players 3, 4; Fall Play 4; Pre-Prom Play 3; Sigma Lambda: [Delta Delta Delta. Geraldine Millicent Wright Madison Alpha Omicron Pi- Thesis: Intratracheal Against Pneumonia. Immunization Dorothy A. York Superior history Superior Normal School I, 2. Thesis: Cultural Conditions in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Paul A. Younge Peoria, Illinois zoology Bradley Polytechnic Institute I ; Fresh- man Basketball; Varsity Basketball 2; Varsity Track 2, 3; Inner Gate; Chi Psi. Thesis: The Action of Ovarian Grafts and Hormone on the Mammary Glands of the Male Guinea Pig. Frank Vincent Zahorik Green Bay commerce Advertising Staff Commerce Magazine 2. 3; Freshman Crew; Varsity Crew 2, 4; Alpha Chi Rho. Adelaide S. Zens Kenosha Rosary College I. 2; Newman Club; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: Allusions to Roman History on the Shield of Aeneas. Frank Steele Worthington Sturtevant journalism Assistant Editorial Department 1 92 7 Badger; Chairman Publicity Commit- tee 1926 Homecoming; Chairman En- tertainment Committee Venetian Night 3; Haresfoot Dramatic Club 3, 4. Keeper of the Haresfoot 4; Chairman of Haresfoot Follies 4; Presidents Guard I; Press Club 4; Interfraternity Council 2, 3; Phi Mu Delta. Thesis: An Analysis of the Racine Journal News. Nien Chi Wu Canton, China agriculture Tsing Hua College, Peking. China 1. 2. Orris Sylvester Young Chili electrical engineering Lawrence College I. 2; A. I. E. E. 3. 4; Kappa Eta Kappa. Evan Raynor Yundt Milwaukee mining engineering Wisconsin Mining School 1.2; Square and Compass. Arnold Lloyd Zempel Manawa economics Whitewater Normal I. 2; President Athenae Literary Society 4. Secretary 3; Artus; Beta Phi Theta. Thesis: Statistical Study of Changing Hours of Labor in Selected Industries, 1890 to 1924. Helen M. Zepp Chicago, Illinois history Delta Zeta Thesis: Governor Winthrop Jr. in Connecticut. Page IS7 Kathryn Marie Zeratsky La Crosse FRENCH La Crosse Norma! 1 ; Women ' s Glee Club at La Crosse Normal. Margaret Ann Ziebarth Madison HOME ECONOMICS Newman Club I, 2. i, 4; French Club 2. 3: Euthenics Club 2. 3, 4; Theta Phi Alpha. Thesis: Costume Worn During the Period of the Louis in France. Clayton Melvin Zieman Randolph mathematics Phi Pi Phi. M arion Lucile Zilley Behil zoology Beloit College 1 , 2. Member of St. Fran- ces Episcopal Vestry 3. 4; Secretary of Vestry Church Group 4; Keystone Council 4; W. A. A. 2, 4; Outing Club 4; Class Hockey 2.4; President Nurses C ormitorv 4; Secretary-Treasurer 3 ; Pi Beta Phi. Thesis: Reconstruction of Pelvic Girdle of the Embryo Mole. Robert Edwin Zinn East Troy chemical engineerin:; Freshman Committee Y. M. C. A ; Sophomore Commission; Junior Council First Regimental Concert Band, Quar- termaster 3, 4; University Orches- tra 2, 4; De Molay Club i, 2, 3. 4, President 2; Polygon 3, 4. President 4; A. L Ch. E, 2. 3. 4; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Mu Alpha; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi ; Sophomore Honors ; Alpha Chi Sigma, Stanley Peter Zola Two Rivers CIVIL ENGINEERING Communication Committee Military Ball 3; First Lieutenant Cadet Corps 3, Major 4; Varsity Track 3; Varsity Cross Country 4 A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4; Caisson Club 3. Thesis: Technical Salesmanship. Orland Kump Zeugner Fort Atkinson CIVIL engineering Chi Epsilon; Alpha Chi Rho. Thesis: Experimental Study of the Relief of Water Hammer Pressure Developed by Slow Closure of a Cyl- indrical Valve. Aline Ziebell Aiilwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Forensic Board 3 ; Girls Joint Debate 3 ; President Pythia Literary Society 1, 2. 3, 4; Wisconsin University Players 3, 4; Keystone Council 3; Alpha Delta Pi. Thesis: Actors on the Art of Acting Celia p. Zileznick Superior SPEECH Superior State Normal 1 , 2 ; Corres- ponding Secretary Forensic Board I ; Intercollegiate Debate Squad 2; For- ensic Representative Pythia Literary Society 1 ; Phi Kappa Phi; Delta Sigma Rho; Sigma Delta Phi; Winner of Forensics W 2. Activities at Superior Normal : Women ' s Glee Club 2 ; History Society; Sigma Pi. Louise Anger Zimmerman Hart ord ENGLISH Union Board, Captain of Drive 3 ; Class Secretary 2; Publicity Chairman S. G. A. 3, 4, Council 4; Reporter Daily Cardinal 1, Special Writer 2. Con- ference Editor 3, Associate Editor 4; Copy Department 1926 Badger; Divi- sion Chief 1 927 Badger ; Assistant General Chairman 1927 Prom; Chair- man Women ' s Arrangements Com- mittee 1926 Homecoming; Button Com- mittee 2 4-2 5 Homecoming ; Assistant Manager Union Vodvil 3 ; Publicity Committee Mother ' s Day 2, 3; Fresh- man Commission Y. W. C. A.; Sopho- more Commission; Junior Commission; Chairman Tea Room 2, 3, Publicity Committee 4; Y. W. C. A. Christmas Bazaar; Vice-President Mortar Board Sophomore Honors; Sigma Kappa. Thesis: The Aestheticism of Oicar Wilde Lisle Lester Zodtner Portage CHEMICAL engineering W Club 2. 3, 4; Freshman Wrestling; Varsity Wrestling 2, 3, 4, Captain 3, 4; A. . Ch. E. I, 2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 4; Alpha Chi Sigma; Sigma Pi. Samuel Zweiger New York City SPANISH Sigma Phi Sigma. Thesis: A Survey of Novels. Hugo Wast ' s Crace Card Morley Madison APPLIED ARTS Advertising Staff Daily Cardinal 1, 2, Assistant Advertising Manager 3; Advertising and Business Staff 1926 Badger; Advertising and Business Staff 1927 Badger; Art Committee 1927 Prom; Freshman Commission; Sophomore Commission; Junior Commission; W. A. A. 4; Numerals; Class Indoor Baseball 1 ; University Advertising Club 1,2; Arts and Crafts Club I. 2. 3, 4; Sigma Lambda; Alpha Xi Delta. Thesis. Paris Influence on Art. Page IS8 I . rf ' .:■' •■' ' ' yM ' ' - ' i ' CLASSES DORRIT ASTROM Vice-President Gordon Kuscha Treasurer JiMMdi Hughes Secretary Jo. McCartney Sergeant-At-Arms Vernon G. Carrier President The Class of 1927 With the circulation of this Badger of the Class of 1928, the Class of 1927 has practically closed its active record as an under- graduate body. But little remains, at this time, except the ceremonies of Commencement. Then with a four-year course run, with an enviable name to leave behind, the class will join that great body of alumni which does not let Commencement mean an end of service to Wisconsin, but takes it as an oppor- tunity to do even greater work for the University as part of that large body of active graduates. If one word could be used to summarize the history of the Class of 1927, that word most certainly would be SERVICE. It has not been its lot to institute or invent. Coming to the University when its tenor was disturbed by influences both internal and external, we have experienced the birth of the New Era, which is now well established, and we leave the Uni- sity in a healthy, happy situation. Nineteen hundred and twenty- seven has had an active part in the re-adjustment. Other classes have been greater progenitors; 1927 has per- petuated and expanded on their endeavors. Mothers Day, Father ' s Day, the All-University Religious Convocation, Grid- iron Banquet, the Memorial Union, have all been started during our career by other classes. The duty and privilege of firmly establishing these institutions as part of Wisconsin has been the outstanding contribution of 1927. On the eve of our departure from undergraduate life at Wis- consin we see the Memorial Union building taking definite shape — a work in which the Senior Class took an active part. Return- ing in 1932, for our five year reunion, we most probably will see a Wisconsin stronger and more active than the one which we are now leaving. Then we can better tell just what part our work took in making it so. — Vernon G. Carrier, President of the Senior Class. Page 160 Dorothy Buck 1 in Vice-President Peter Dunn Treasurer Blythe Anderson Secretary Donald E. Miller Sergeant-at-arms The Class of 1928 The Class of 1928 enters upon its last year at the University of Wisconsin with the sincere self-assurance that it has partaken of its share in the activities and life of the school and has profited to the extent that it has served. Its members with their widely diversified personalities and opinions have contributed to the advancement of ideas. Their loyal co-operation and united effort have been rewarded by the achievement of success in the numerous activities they have undertaken. Co-operation among the individual members and between the class, the other classes, and the University has resulted in mutual accomplishments that have been of great benefit in the moulding of character. The members have organized to the end of establishing strong and concerted friendships. The class of 1928 rejoices in its privilege of seeing realized that splendid monument to the loyalty of the members of the University of Wisconsin and its alumni — The Me- morial Union. — William E. Clark, President of the Junior Class. William Clark President Pate 161 Edward P. Cole President Katherine Chesley Vice-l resident Robert Koehring Treasurer Helen l LLj. Secretary John Doyle Sergeant-at-arms The Class of 1929 At the mid-point of its career the Class of 1929 pauses to consider the already written past and the future that is before it. Not quite two years ago this class unhesitatingly assumed the responsi- bility of carrying on the aspirations and ideals of the true Wisconsin spirit. The faith placed in this organization was not unfounded for as it gradually assumes each duty and problem, 29 proves itself capable of making an unsurpassable record. In work and in play the class is achieving success. Realizing the part that the Memorial Union is to play in the future Wisconsin, the Class continues to give the utmost assistance in its projects. Individual members are stepping into the ranks of the leaders on the athletic field, stage, editorial desk, governing boards and every extra-curricular activity, yet they do not forget that their own interests are to be subordinated to those of the University and their Class. Loyal co-operation is the predominating factor in every task performed. The Class of 1929 is able to turn with this same unity to events of more recreative nature and realize all expectations in that field. It was due to this ability that the Soph Shuffle was made a social occasion surpassed by but one. A unified body, this class is confident that it will be able to fulfill all its ambitions for the future. As it has already worked to bring glory to its Alma Mater, so it will increase its efforts to make this ideal University an actuality rather than a dream. — Edward P. Cole, President of the Sophomore Class. The Class of 1930 The class of 1930 has effectively executed its initial projects in the various campus activities by the united support which it has given the committee chairman. Many members of our class have shown so much ability that we believe our future service for Wisconsin will give us even more cause for pride than has the start we have made. As an indication of this ability, there is the annual Freshman Frolic, which this year was highly successful and profitable, and which left in our treasury a considerable surplus to be donated to the Memorial Union fund. There is every reason to believe that the class of 1930 can furnish its share of true Wisconsin leaders, and can perform its share of constructive service. — Jerome Sperling, President of the Freshman Class. Jerome Sperling President Marian Palmer Vice-president Lorrie Douglas Treasurer Helen Reitz Secretary Robert Leahy Sergeant at arms Pate 162 I h BADGER: Iron Cross Senior Men ' s Honorary Society ROLLAND BaRNUM Jefferson Burrus Vernon Carrier Lowell Frautschi Lloyd Larson Charles Nelson James Nelson Page 164 Senior Women ' s Honorary Society EULALIE BeFFEL Margaret Birk Alice Brown Jane Gaston Elizabeth George Marcella Steel Bernice Winchell Josephine Winter Louise Zimmerman Paie 16! Crucible Junior Women ' s Honorary Society Class of 1927 Elizabeth Adams Florence Allen Mildred Anderson dorrit astrom Barbara Bacon Eulalie Beffel Alice Brown Margaret Birk Dorothy Dodge Jane Gaston Frances Gore Elizabeth George Virginia Sinclair Marguerite Schwarz Eleanor Warren Bernice Winchell Josephine Winter Class of 192S Blythe Anderson Ruth Borchers Dorothy Bucklin Sarah Chickering Phylis Edkins Marcella Eierman Mary Eschweiler Elizabeth Hirsig Esther Johnson Genevi eve J ones Florence Ludden Elise Roberts Viola Wendt Charlotte Wollaeger Pate 166 Junior Men ' s Honorary Society Class of 1927 ROLLAND BaRNUM Jefferson Burrus Vernon Carrier Lowell Frautschi Elmer Freytag Calvin Koehring Lloyd Larson Jo McCartney Ewart L. Merica Charles McGinnis Charles Nelson Russell Winnie Class of 1928 Donald Abert Louis Behr William Clark Edwin Crofoot Gordon Dawson Louis Grambs Clyde Kluckhohn Winston Kratz Marvin Lehmkuhl Franklin Orth William Schroeder Harry Thoma John Wilson Page 167 Don Abert John Allcott Octopus, Badger, Haresjoot, Co-Editor Octopus. White Spades. Florence Allen Herbert Allen Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Captain Hares oot Musical Director. Rifte Team, Crucible. Blythe Anderson Charles Andrews Class Officer, Crucible, W. 5. Basketball. C.A. DORRIT ASTROM W. S. C. A., Crucible. Barbara Bacon Badger, Crucible. Laura Barrett Josephine Barker y. W. C A. Cabinet, President Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Badger. Sophonwre Clubs, Y. W. C. A. President. Roll AND Barnum Varsity Football, Basketball, Captain, Baseball, White Spades, Iron Cross. Page I6S EULALIE BeFFEL W. A. A.. Mortar Board. Richard Bercstresser Hares oot, Homecoming, Memo- rial Union. Mary Bishop Wisconsin Players. Ruth Borchers Mother ' s Day Chairman, CrU cible. Henry Brooks Captain Basketball. Alice Brown Blanche Buhlig President W. S. C. A., Mortar Varsity Debate Team, Y. W. C. Board. A., Wisconsin Players. Dorothy Bucklin President W. S. C. A., President Crucible. Margaret Birk Ellen Burkhart Jefferson Burrus Mother ' s Day Chairman, Mortar Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, President Football, Crew Captain, Prom Board. Women ' s Glee Club. Chairman, White Spades, Iron Cross, Rhodes Scholarship. Page 169 Mary Lou Campbell Vernon Carrier Vic Chapman Richard Church W. .S. G. A., Prom, President Cardinal, Senior Class Presi- Captain Varsity Cross Country, isconsin Players, Haresjoot. Red Gauntlet. dent, White St ades, Iron Cross Track. William Clark Edwin Crofoot Gordon Dawson Dorothy Dodge President Junior Class, Swim- Varsity Football Captain, White Union Board. White Spades. W. A. A., Crucible. ming Team, White Spades. Spades. Lucille ' Dudceon y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Phyllis Edkins Laurence Eklund y. W. C. A., Crucible, Badger. Assistant Editor Cardinal Page 170 Mildred Engler C isconsin Players. NOREERT ESCHMEYER Business Manager Cardinal. Elmer Freytac Lowell Frautschi Business Manager 1927 Badger, President Union Board, White Captain Varsity Fencing Team, Spades, Iron Cross. White Spades. Jane Gaston Elizabeth George Jack German Mortar Board, Phi Kappa Phi. President Keystone, W. S. C. A. Colonel Cadet Corps. John Gillin Badger Staff, Cardinal Staff. Y. M.C. A. President. Frances Gore Louis Grambs Doyle Harmon Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Crucible. Business Manager 1928 Badger, Captain Varsity Football. Varsity Baseball Manager , White Spades. Page 171 Esther Hawley C. Herschberger Beth Hirsig Annette Hirschfield Cardinal, Theta Sigma Phi. Varsity Swimming Captain. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Crucible. Cardinal. Theta Sigma Phi. Barbara Hornby Octopus, Badger. Helen Hughes Jimmie Hughes Carlton Johns Prom Queen, Wisconsin Players. Class Officer, Y. W. C A., W. Business Manager Clee Club A. A. Genevieve Jones Esther Johnson Stan Kalish Prom, Crucible. Prom, Varsity Debate Team, Varsity Cross Country Manager, Crucible. Badger Staff, Cardinal Staff. Page 172 Harold Konnak Dan Kerth Badger Staff, Wisconsin Players, President Student Senate. Union Vodril. Clyde Kluckhohn Calvin Koehrinc Union Board, Merrufriat Union, Chairman Father ' s Day, Chair- White Sfjades. man Military Ball, Cardinal, While S ades Winston Kratz Robert Kreuz Lloyd Larson William Lidicker Class Officer, Varsity Swimming, Varsity Football, Varsity Track. Varsity Football, Varsity Base- Class Officer, Hockey Cafytain. Hares oot, White Sfyades. ball Captain, White Sfyades. Rhoda Luby y. w. c. A. Jo McCartney 9lass Officer, White Spades. Charles McGinnis Varsity Track Captain, Swim- ming Team, White Spades. Page 17} EWART MeRICA Ralph Merkel Walter Muller Charles Nelson EdUor-in-Chief 1927 Badger, Union Board, White Spades. Captain Varsity Basketball. Varsity Cheerleader. Union Board. Varsity Basket- ball Manager, Athletic Board. White Spades. Iron Cross. James Nelson Franklin Orth. Richard Ratcliff Elise Roberts Editor-in-ChieJ Cardinal. While Spades. Iron Cross. Union Board. Varsity Crijv. While Spades. Varsity Swimming Captain. Haresjoot. Athletic Board. y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Chairman Y. W. C. A. Bazaar, Crucible. Gordon Ruscha Nellie Jane Schneider William Schroeder George Schutt Treasurer Senior Class. y. W.C. A, Red Gauntlet. Business A anager Hares oot. While Spades. Captain Cross Country Iron Cross. Page 174 Robert Schwenger Forensic Board, Cross Country, Track. Howard Spindler Chairman 1926 Homecoming. Marcella Steel Mortar Board, W. A. A., Presi- dent Dolphin Club. George Stoll Captain Varsity Baseball. Dorothea Stolte y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Jean Strachan W. S C. A. Jack Wilson Varsity Football, Prom Chaii man, white Spades. Bernice Winchell Mortar Board, President Y W. C. A.. Assistant Editor 1927 Badger, Crucible. Russell Winnie Jo Winter Charlotte Wollager President Haresfoot Club, White President W. A. A., Mortar Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Crucible. Spades. Board, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi. ' Louise Zimmerman Mortar Board. Assistant Editor Cardinal, Crucible, Badger Staff. Page 175 y JMNI The Battles behind, the passing of many moons. The night blanketed with spray of stars. The council fire striving for the heavens, making another Sun. Who knows what men say who have been through The Mysteries together and who meet about a Fire ! Think of Yourself! ALUMNI Charles L. Byron President of the General Alumni Association As students in the University, the thought soon seeps into our consciousness that certain instructors stimulate and inspire mental curiosity along sympathetic lines of research; that some studies lend practical facts whose application brings improved efficiency on the farm or in industry, and that an accurate knowledge of social and economic facts aids in the progress of our day. In other words, as thinking students we begin to realize that the University of Wisconsin incorporates the ideals as expressed by President Glenn Frank — the ideals of sound scholarship, of productive research and practical service, of freedom to investigate and courage to follow the truth wherever it may lead. In the classroom and other phases of college life, wherever the seeds of these ideals find a fertile field, there will be a budding in student life and a blossoming in alumni life which will enliven a desire to help the University to maintain its ideals. It is important that the student cultivate an enriched subsoil that the growing or giving powers may develop naturally during alumni life. If the field is barren in the student, college spirit is apt to be wanting in that fellow as an alumnus. During the last several years, the senior classes, as a unit, have joined the Alumni Associa- tion,, thereby showing their interest and good-will in starting an Alumni life of helpfulness to the University. As 1 view it, the responsibility of maintaining these ideals should be shared in no small measure by the Alumni. United we can use our strength to the ultimate benefit of our University. ( Juoy. . Cc i vJ Page 179 The 1926 Reunion The General Alumni Association The General Alumni Association is a voluntary, co-operative enterprise, animated by a desire to serve the University, graduates, former students, active and prospective students. It is an organized, informed, interested, active force for the purpose of correlating the activities of the alumni with students and the faculty — a force that may come to the defense of the University in time of need, and that may support it at all times; it is a medium through which graduates and former students may render effective assistance to the University, thus enabling the University to render greater service to the state and na- tion, to exert a broader influence for good, and to improve upon the high standards and great accom- plishments of the past. The program of the General Alumni Association proposes to keep alumni informed of the progress and policies of the University through the publication of a magazine, which shall carry to individuals information of the accomplishments of the University; through personal contact, and through corres- pondence with individuals, groups of individuals, and local clubs by the secretary and the staff of the General Alumni office; and through the maintenance of a calendar of travels of faculty members and prominent alumni so that local clubs may be informed of their visits and call club meetings for the purpose of securing first-hand information from them. The program of the General Alumni Association includes the organization of Wisconsin Clubs whose duty and responsibility it shall be to represent the interests of the University in the community in which it exists; to protect her name, and to make con- tacts with local organizations that the service the University is rendering may become known to the community; to crystalize alumni opinion, to keep alive alumni loyalty, to be able to function in an ef- fective way on short notice, and to bring alumni into personal contact with one another as a source of congenial companionship and a means of developing greater loyalty for the University. Bl RCSTRESSER Page ISO John Bergstresser — The A ' umni Recorder Ex-President Birge once said: The former students and graduates of the University have a most important part in its work. They have shared the life of the University, they know what that life means for themselves and for others — most of all they know what it means for the state. . . Our former students and graduates must be centers of University life, still vitally connected with the University. . . They must be not merely individual centers of influence but they must strengthen themselves and their fellows by uniting so that their influence may be multiplied by union and made permanent by organization. There are more than sixty thousand graduates and former students. As individuals they may consti- tute a tremendous force for a greater and better Wisconsin, but as an organized group, that force may be multiplied many times. In a message to alumni last fall, President Glenn Frank said: As the year opens, there is a challenging air of expectation about the University. Granted genuine team work on the part of the administration, faculty, students, alumni, and state, I think we shall at least begin the writing of a new chapter in Wis- consin history this year. President Frank ' s challenge has met with a hearty response. From Maine to California, from Canada to the Gulf, and in foreign countries, alumni congregated during the year to dine, dance, review the his- tory, and discuss the achievements, the policies, and the progress of their Alma Mater. In some instances interest is bringing the clubs together weekly, and in many places informal meetings of groups of alumni proved so interesting that they have become permanent organizations. Through the General Association, alumni are multiplying their influence for a bigger and better Wisconsin and taking a part in the writing of a new chapter in Wisconsin history. w ■t a ' p% ' ' i | ; O K i Bart McCormick Alumni Associaliorx Secretary Page ISI of Distinguislied Alumni EVERY YEAR new achievements are accomplished by Wisconsin graduates and every year Wis- consin ' s roll of distinguished alumni accordingly must be enlarged. That the alumni roll may include all those worthy of the honor, the idea of a progressive alumni section was inaugurated by the 1927 Badger and has been continued as the Who ' s Who section of the 1928 Badger. Selection of alumni appearing in this year ' s alumni section has been based on the recognition candidates have achieved with consideration to their respective ages and sex, and the service they have rendered to the community and to the University during the imme- diately preceding year. The committee has strived to cover a broad field of diversified activities and to discover new talent. By so doing, they believe that the group presented in this 1928 Badger is truly representative of Wisconsin alumni. Page 182 Herbert E. Bolton, B.L., ' 95 Was knighted in 1926 by the King of Spain in recognition of his work in Spanish American History. He also published this year a four volume English edi- tion of Palou ' s New California, which is regarded by scholars as one of the most important contributions ever made to Pacific Coast history. Harold Cornelius Bradley Graduate Student, 09-10 Has just been appointed re- search consultant in the U. S. army chemical warfare service. He has been chairman for the past year of the Committee on Student Social Needs, Faculty chairman for Wisconsin ' s Fath- er ' s Day and was recently made chairman of a new Madison Memorial Union Committee. Asa G. Briggs B.S., ■85;LLB. 87 St. Paul attorney, has been re- elected president of the St. Paul Association of Public and Busi- ness Affairs, made up of 4,000 of the leading business and pro- fessional men in St . Palu . Throughout his life in St. Paul, he has been intimately con- nected with the important civic and public matters. Ko-KuEi Chen B.S.. ' 20; Ph.D.. ' 23 Has discovered a new chemical compound called Ephedrine. which has proved to be useful in the treatment of asthma, hay fever and in combatting low blood pressure. He is now as- sociate of Pharmacology at Johns Hopkins University. He has published numerous pfepers on subjects related to pharmacy Frederick H. Clausen B.S., ' 97: LL.B., 99 Has been president of the Me- morial Union Executive com- mittee since its formation, six years ago. He is at present personally directing the cam- paign for funds. Formerly he was president of the Alumni Association and of the Wiscon- sin manufacturers association and is now head of the Van Brunt manufacturing company. Arthur H. Curtis, B.S., 02 Has recently been appointed head of the Department of Gynecology at the Northwest- ern University Medical School. He is also president of the American Gynecological So- ciety for 1927 and C hairman of Section on Gynecology and Abdominal Surgery, American Medical Association for 1927, John Adrian Dollard B.A,, 72 Became assistant to President Max Mason, University of Chi- cago, in November, 1926. He was former secretary and cam- paign manager of the Wisconsin Memorial Union Building Com- mittee I n the capacity of secre- tary of the Faculty Committee on Men ' s Dormitories, he made the original dormitory survey. Frederick R, Hamilton Ph.B., 06; PhM . ' 17 Was inaugurated president of Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Peoria, 111., last March. He has done extensive work in studying problems of college adminis- tration, in recognition of which he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Columbia University in 1924. Margaret H ' Doubler B.A.. ' 10; MA., 24 Established this year the first dance major course in America She has created a new school of dancing which has had an important influence in America. Her dominating idea is to bring out any talent her pupils have thereby helping them by art to appreciate life. J OHN J . ESCH Was made chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion within the last year. He was a member of Congress for 22 years, during which time he was the author of many bills, including the Esch-Cummins bill in 1920. Among safety devices which he has promoted are automobile block signals, steel passenger cars, and train- control devices. Page 183 Ralph Dorn Hetzel A.B., 06; LL.B., 08 Was elected president of the Pennsylvania state college in 1926, coming to chat institution after nine years as president of the University of New Hamp- shire. During his administra- tion at New Hampshire, he raised the standing of the insti- tution from a state college to that of a University. Henry A. Huber, LLB., ' 96 Wasrelected Lieutenant Govei- nor of Wisconsin in 1926, to serve a second two year term From 1912 to 1924, he served the people of Dane county in the Senate. To help spread edu- cation and to lend assistance to educational institutions has ever been his aim and ambition. C. A. Johnson. B. M. E., 91 President of the Gisholt Ma- chine company and former presi- dent of the Wisconsin Manu- facturers Association, has been instrumental in bringing about a tie-up between the industry and the University. He is a member of the Memorial Union Executivecommitteeanda com- mittee to study the methods of securing a new field house. ' Emory R. Johnston, BL. 88;M.L.. 91 During his term as dean of the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, the school has grown from a small experi- ment to what is the greatest and most highly specialized specialized business school in the country. He is considered a world authority on commerce transportation. Burr W. Jones B.A. 70; LL.B.. 71 ; M.A., 74 After five years of service as justice on the supreme court of Wisconsin, has voluntarily re- tired and is now associated with Jaw firm in Madison. During his term on the Supreme bench he wrote a treatise on The Law of Evidence in the Ninties Previously. Mr. Jones was pro- fessor for thirty years in the Law School. Louise P. Kelloc BL, 97; PhD. 01 ; L D.. 27 Has just completed a book, The French Regime in Wis- consin and the North West. She is the first woman of this University to be granted the honorary degree, Doctor of Letters, which she was given last June, upon the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the earning of the degree of Ph.D. Kemper K Knapp B.S., 79; LL.B., 82 A prominent Chicago lawyer, has been one of the largest con- tributors to the University loan and scholarship funds He also is a director of numerous insti- tutions, among which are the Gary State Bank, Universal Portland Cement Co. , the North Western Casualty and Surety Company and the South Chicago Savings bank. Stanley. R Latshaw. 06 Was elected prisident of the Butterick Pattern Company, New York publishers. He is a director representing the mag- azines in this country and Cana- da on the Audit Bureau of Cir- culations, and on the governing board of Nation ' s Business. Bart E. McCormick Was recently elected Secretary of the General Alumni Associa- tion, terminating a sixteen year period of service as high school principal and city superintend- ent of schools of La Crosse. Wisconsin. He is well known as an efficient organizer. Theodore Kronshage. Jr. B A, 91; LL.B. 92 Has for many years served the University as a member of the board of regents. During his term he succeeded in secur- ing legislative appropriations for University buildings. He did very effective work in financing the men ' s dormitories which were completed this year and has always been helpful in directing the finances of the University. Page 184 Paul Odin Nyhus B.S.A., ' 26 Was just appointed U. S. Com- missioner of Agriculture to China. The purpose of his fxjst is to investigate agricultural conditions in China and to buiid up trade relations be- tween that country and the United States. He was formerly statistician for the United States department of Agriculture. Mrs. C. J. Otjen. B,A.. ' 14 Was elected president of the Wisconsin state league of Women Voters at the conven- tion of the League in Milwaukee in November. Mrs. Otjen has always taken a great interest in public affairs and has held numerous positions. Max Charles Otto B.A.. ■{)6;Ph.D. ' 11 Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin, has recently finished a book en- titled, ' Natural Laws and Human Hopes, ' in which he continues the discussion of the relation of science and higher life which he began in his earlier book. Things and Ideals. John W, Reynolds, LL.B., ' 02 Was elected attorney general of the state of Wisconsin in 1926. i revious to his election, he practiced law at Green Bay for nineteen years. He also served as district attorney of Brown county for four years, and has been actively interested in politics during his entire life. Walter A. Rogers A.B.C.E., ' 88 :C.E., ' 97 President of the Bates and Rogers construction company which has built many large con- structions throughout this coun try and Canada. Among the the structures completed by this company are the govern- ment dams on the Ohio River, many railroads, the reclama- tion Dam at Mindoka, Idaho, and the eighteen span viaduct at Cleveland, Ohio. Calvin Swenker, B.A., ' II Was appointed state commis- sioner of banking in February. Previous to this position, he was cashier of the First Na- tional Bank of Chippewa Falls four years and an examiner on the State banking department for ten years. He is also a di- rector of three organizations in Chippewa Falls. Israel Shrimpsky. ex 88 Conceived the idea for the Men ' s Dormitories which were completed this last year and is therefore personally responsible for these additions to the ' Uni- versity buildings. He has al- ways been ve ry active on Uni- versity boards, Mr. Shrimpski is a prominent lawyer in Chi- cago. Daniel Sieele, A.B . 18 Was recently appointed Sales and Advertising manager of Wilson Brothers company, one of the largest men ' s clothing wholesalers. Formerly, he was advertising manager and man- ager of one of the merchandising departments. Mr. Steele sug- gested the merchandising ideas that have been adopted by the clothing and furnishing in- dustry this year. Otis Wiese, B A., ' 26 Who has been out of school only one year, is now associate editor of McCall ' s Magazine, a fiction magazine with a circulation of 2.500.000 readers. While in the university. Wiese was one of the most active undergradu- ates. Maysie Stone, B.A., Won two art prizes last year at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, thereby establishing a new record in tnat 125 year- old school where students arc glad to win one prize in a year. Miss Stone has recently had a sculpture called Toil ac- cepted for the annual exhibit of the Academy. Page I8S Do you remember? The deep woods swathed in shadows, the Wickiup of the Tribe, a spot of light in the Sun. Voices • • • Laughter ... The smell of willow smoke. The young men, the young women, ablaze as the hills in Autumn . . . The flashing of red blankets. The subtle softness of doeskin cm young bodies • . • Where were the thoughts? Was the laughter because the forest lay in shadow? Because there was a swallow darting over the lake? Where is your memory? Think of yourself! C K9 i ' ■■-- f w ' IONS. ' ' J] f ?TT Varsity s In July, 1848, the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin granted a charter for a State University to be established at Madison. In the fall of that year the first Board of Regents met and the Universitatis Wisconsinensis became a reality. Our University has always stood out among the educational institutions of the country as one which has ever fostered the spirit of truth and as one which has ever sponsored investigation and the search for that truth. It is inevitable that a university which has so rich and noble a background should be the home of many traditions, both in and apart from the curriculum. The stu- dent body has not been insensible to the beauty and value of these traditions which have come down to it from out of the past, and today one finds at Wisconsin a wealth of custom and usage that has few equals in the country. Some of these traditions, like the green cap for freshmen, take quite tangible forms and continue year after year. Others have come to be connected with cer- tain special days each year, and it is with these latter that this Special Occasions section is concerned. The Assemblage Prexy — Past and Present Page 189 VXA Marching up the Hill Prof. Julius Olson The first official welcome that a freshman receives when he enters the University is one of the most impressive of cerem.onies that takes place at Wisconsin during the entire year. Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors gather in a body and march down the Hill to greet the newcomers at the foot and then escort them to the Exedra on Lincoln Ter- race where the University faculty, the student body, and the State have their spokesmen welcome the Freshman Class. A more fitting ceremony than this to introduce the new students to the faculty and the other classes could not well be devised. To see the classes all marching up the hill in a body is significant of the comradeship and the school spirit of Wisconsin. That the new class should be received by the student body is highly proper and is ex- pressive of the real interest that is displayed in each year ' s Freshman Class. Program Dean Sellery, Presiding The University Hymn: Light for All — Assem- blage Introductory — Dr. George C. Sellery, Dean of the College of Letters and Science Address on Behalf of the State — Governor John J. Blaine Address on Behalf of the Faculty — Professor Charles L. Slighter Address on Behalf of the Upper Classmen — Alice L. Brown, ' 27, Lowell E. Fraut- scHi, ' 27 The Address of Welcome on Behalf of the Uni- versity — President Glenn Frank On Wisconsin My Country ' Tis of Thee Page 190 Dads at the Came Father ' s Day Fathers Day has become one of the finest Wisconsin traditions. Its the day when the student body and the faculty play host to the fathers of Wisconsin men and women. It ' s the day when ' Dad ' comes to Madison to see what the University really does look like and to see what it really does to educate the younger generation. It ' s that day of days when home ties, severed in the fall before the opening of college, are first renewed, bringing attendant joy. This year Father ' s Day was distinguished by the defeat that Wisconsin suffered at the hands of Minnesota. However, the day was wonderful, and the game exciting; so the defeat did not rancour. An entire section of the stadium was devoted to the visiting fathers and their sons and daughters, and it is a well known fact that that section did more and better cheering than any other that after- noon. Dad became a true Wisconsinite and almost outdid his son or daughter in singing the praises of our Alma Mater. After the game President and Mrs. Frank held open house for father, son, and daughter on behalf of the Uni- versity and the faculty. The Third Annual Father ' s Day banquet at the Men ' s gymnasium in the evening was a very successful affair where the faculty and the fathers became acquainted and discussed the University, and, perhaps the younger generation. Staff Executive Committee Calvin Koehring Dr. H. C. Bradley Elizabeth George General Chairmen Vernon Carrier Jo Mc Cartney Elmer Freytag Harry McAndrews Charles Mc Ginnis Arthur Wegner Calvin A. Koehring Chairman Page 191 K. Morrisey H. Cant G. Otis S. Wheat ly F. Worthington M. Greer B. Anderson R. Wheeler E. Merica W. Murphy A. Gaik C. Westrich C. Nelson H. Brooks Homecommg 1926 No tradition of college days is more cherished by the W isconsin Alumni than Homecoming. Homecoming — what visions that conjures up of crisp, brisk days, a seething mob cheering in the Stadium, the eleven men in Car- dinal, the stirring strains of On Wisconsin, the Band in Cardinal capes, and, best of all, the re- newing of college friendships and the reunion of true friends. On the surface, it is a time when blitheness and jolly good fellow- ship seem to hold sway, but deep in the hearts of Wisconsin men and women. Homecoming is a period of re-consecration to the ideals for which Wisconsin has always stood. R. Bergstresser G. Ruscha Howard L. Spindler Chairman HOMECOMING PROGRAM Friday, November 12 7:00 — Stock Pavilion Doors open 7:20 — Mass Meeting at Pavilion 8:00 — Judging of Fraternity and Sorority Decorations 8:30— Bonfire Saturday, November 1 3 10:45 — Cross Country Meet, Wisconsin vs. Iowa 1 1 :30— Hobo Parade 1 2 :30 — Judging of Floats 2:00 — Wisconsin vs. Iowa at Camp Randall 5 :00 — Alumni Reception at Lathrop Parlors 9:00 — Homecoming Dance at Lathrop Gym The Sigma Kappa Welcome Page 192 The Torchlight Parade after ths Massmeeting Homecoming 1926 Committee Howard L. Spindler . . General Chairman Charles Nelson . . Associate Chairman Harold Kubly . . Associate Chairman Richard Bergstresser Associate Chairman Henry Brooks Associate Chairman Russel Winnie . . Associate Chairman Gordon Ruscha . . Associate Chairman Blythe Anderson Buttons Arthur Gaik Finance Ralph Wheeler Alumni Bev. Murphy Dance Harry Cant . . Men ' s Arrangements Louise Zimmerman Women ' s Arrangements Laura Gaterman Art Grant Otis Hobo Parade The Bonfire H. Kubly L. Zimmerman R. Winnie F. Sauer tJ!-!lb!! ' W Committee Fred Sauer Program Business Manager Harry Thoma Program Editor Frank Worthington Publicity Ralph Metcalf Noise Lawrence Schmeckebier Traffic Ewart Merica .... Men ' s Decorations Marion Greer .... Women ' s Decorations Enoch Judkins Cups Allen Pederson . . Downtown Decorations Richard McKee Mass Meeting Charles Westrich .... Ways and Means Katherine Morrisey .... Information Harold Lenicheick Bonfire Fred Knauf Registration Stanley Wheatly .... Special Features The Winning Phi Pi Phi House Page 193 The 1928 Prom The State Capitol was transformed into a Spring Garden, 1 200 couples danced to the scintillating rhythm of a marvelous orchestra; laughter and gaiety were everywhere, and the 1928 Prom became part of Wisconsin ' s history. Wisconsin being at her best that night, cast off her cares, and danced in a new day. That night of February 5, when President Frank and Governor Zimmerman, both symbols of a New Wisconsin, bade the University make merry, was a fitting climax for a brilliant social season at Wis- consin, a night when romance filled the air, and youth and beauty reigned supreme. The Prom Page 194 Prom Committees Jack Wilson Chairman Helen Ann Hughes Queen William Freytao Assistant Chairman Kerwin Haggerty .... Assistant Chairman Genevieve Jones Assistant Chairman Edwin Larkin Assistant Chairnuin Laurence Meyering .... Assistant Chairman Luther Rundell Assistant Chairman Ester Johnson Prom Week Klea Palica Posters Charlotte Wollaecer Supf er Mary Lou Campbell Programs Henrietta Hainer Slogan Dorothy Hardy Rooming Mary O ' Neill Arrangements Milton Bolstein Arrangements Rex Radsch Ways and Means Rudolph Winnacker Decorations Edwin Crofoot Boxes Edward O ' hara Music Willi s Jones Movies Wesley Peterson Publicity Arno Leb_ Unorganized Crouf Arthur Anderson Finance Grodon Beach Traffic Paul Long Floor Henry Dellicker Tickets Hamilton Beatty Prom Play Richard McKee Pre-Prom Dances Donald Barr Fox Trot Walter Wilke Transportation Eli-Abeth Ashcraft Special Features Mary Harmount Reception Richard Ela Alumni John W. Wilson Prom Chairman L. Rundell G. Jones W. Frevtag Bolstein Jones Palica Radsch Anderson Wollaeger hlainer Barr Peterson Wilke O ' Neill Hardy Harmount McKee Page 19S The 1927 Military Ball R. White G. O. Stephens N. Thaver This year ' s Military Ball was, in all probability, the last University function that will ever be held in the State Capitol. With the completion of the Union early next fall, both Prom and the Military Ball will be held there and the Capitol will be used for legislative purposes only. With this distinction and beautiful dec- orations the Ball this year was a distinct success, and the martial aspect of the affair lent to it a particularly pleasing atmosphere. The affair, organized and managed as it was in true military man- ner, with chairmen all wearing truly mili- tary titles, was a representative Wiscon- sin social event. Calvin A. Koehrinc ChieJ-oJ -Staff Pane 196 Germann Plank Fulonger Jensen Cement Lund Mather Plank Ela Jordan Franklin Brigham Cutter Clark Highleyman Thomas H. Stevens F. Durham G, Dawson Margaret Parham Honorary Colonel Calvin Koehring Margaret Parham Glenn C. Stevens Gordon E. Dawson Roland F. White Neal B. Thayer . Frank Durham John Germann, Jr. Franklin Clarke Charles D. Highleyman Richard Ela . Wallace J ensen . Richard F. Clement Robert P. Pike Henry S. Stevens James W. Franklin Sylvester D. Cotter Arthur M. Lund . Roy D. Jordan Harold N. Mather Walter H. Fuldner Robert H. Brigham Perry Thomas Lloyd T. Plank . Don D. Kynaston Chief of Staff Honorary Colonel Personnel Officer Intelligence Officer Operations Officer . Supply Officer Executive Officer Adjutant Assistant Adjutant Recruiting Officer Billeting Officer Finance Officer Publicity Officer Drum Major Program Officer Decorations Officer . Signal Officer Survey Officer Mess Officer Service Officer Transportation Officer Printing Officer Communications Officer Provost Marshal Reception Officer Page 197 LXX L JLt % 9 UK ' - RI P ' ' ' I B k r ' ulHr Kij K ' j jtt A, ' -- - ' L jJ Mother ' s Day at the A. T. O. House The mothers of Wisconsin men and women come to Madison in the Spring to see the Campus in all its glory, to see Wisconsin at her best. From far and near came mothers to know more intimately the interests and pur- suits of their sons and daughters, and Wisconsin has kept this day apart for the purpose of expressing her devotion to Mother. This Spring Mother ' s Weekend was distin- guished by the most wonderful weather of the season and Wisconsin did her utmost to make Mother ' s stay at the University one which would linger long in the memory of those who came. Margaret H. Birk Chairman The Maypole Dance on the Upper Campus Page 198 - -v ■■■. a ' ■i . - ■- ' •■i ' : f ' ' ' «t •- .i 4 te illl i As : ' '  ' H K ' t - y s ' ' m ' C i E ! • ' • i ' i P --T ilk 3 ' na When we consecrate our Dead Once again Wisconsin has paid tribute to her glorious dead. The R. O. T. C. and the University Bands lent a martial aspect to the exercises which were held from Lincoln Terrace. The wreath-bearing ceremony, when wreathes are laid at the feet of the Great Emancipator by women of the University in honor of those who have laid down their lives for their country, is a fitting expression of the regard and honor in which Wisconsin holds her heroes. Lest we forget Present anns! Page 199 After the Float Parade Venetian Night In general, Spring at Wisconsin is a very beautiful sea- son, but once in a while that beauty is marred by storm and rain, and just such a storm raged on the day that had been set aside for the State Track Meet. That evening, however, the weather cleared up and Venetian Night was held according to schedule. Unfortunately the rain had done its damage and the pier decorations and the floating pageant suffered therefrom. Though the weather was not propitious, the spirit of the night remained unmarred and thousands of Wisconsin men and women gathered on the shores of Lake Mendota to see the brilliant and beautiful exhibition of fireworks. fj. Ik The Water Carnival Page 200 The Junior ' s Farewell to the Seniors Senior Swing-Out There comes a time in the course of a woman ' s college career when she has become a Senior and is about to leave the place that has been her home for four happy years and those who have been her college companions. Wis- consin has a beautiful traditional ceremony which sym- bolizes the farewell of the Senior women to the Juniors. The daisy chain precedes the march of the classes and the torch is passed from Senior to Junior on Lincoln Terrace at the head of the Upper Campus. The Concert Band, the dew on the greensward, the mellow glow of a Spring evening, all unite to give the Senior Swingout an atmo- sphere which is not easily forgotten. ■- ' ' ■% ■Passing between the Daisy Chains Page 201 The Baccalaureate Exercises Baccalaureate Exercises PROGRAM Trio — Praise Ye (Attila) Verdi Edith McCollister, Soprano Dan E. Vornholt, Tenor Eugene Leonardson, Baritone Invocation Rabbi Landman Scripture Lesson The Reverend Father Hengell Chorus — The Heavens Are Telling (The Creation) Haydn The University Choir Prayer The Reverend Mr. Wallace The University Hymn — Light for All The Assemblage Address — The New Decalogue of Education . President Glenn Frank Hymn — America, The Beautiful The Assemblage Benediction The Pipe of Peace Prof. Carl Russell Fish Page 202 The Second Outdoor Commtncermnt Just an hour before sunset when the Western sky was all ablaze, for the second time in Wisconsin history the Stadium at Camp Randall witnessed the passing of another Senior Class. The beauty of the day and the tranquility of the scene will always linger in the memories of those who bade farewell to Wisconsin at that time. Order of Exercises The University Procession The University Hymn The Assemblage Invocation The Reverend Mr. Robbins W. Barstow The University Salutation The Class of 1926 Address to the Graduating Class President Glenn Frank Conferring of First Degrees Announcements — Presentation of Medals Overture: Romance — RulDenstein The University Concert Band Conferring of Higher Degrees Conferring of Honorary Degrees Hymn to Wisconsin Benediction The Processional March Page 20! i X,v.. And She it was, who kept the fires with fuel. And, when her nearest kin returned tri- umphant from the wars, she gave him herbs. She took his scalps and tied them to a pole, and danced his victories round a painted tree, and sang his praises to a listening world. Ever, ever thus, halls of stone or hut of elm bark! e Kd E. Hawley R. Kelley L. Dudgeon D. Hess A. Gress E. Roberts F. Mahoney E. Leach M, Butler E. Possum I FeistI H. Keeler J. Winter B Winchell M. Steel H. Becker E. George F. Lohbauer D. Bucklin F. Malzahn Keystone Council Keystone is a governing council of W. S. G. A., composed of the presidents of all the Women ' s Campus Organizations. The organization sponsors Varsity Welcome, considers the advisability of any new organizations on the campus, submits nominations for W. S, G. A., and acts as an advisory board in general. Keystone is constantly looking forward, and the prestige it enjoys is the result of long service to Wisconsin. Officers Elizabeth George President Elise Roberts .... Secretary-Treasurer Members W. S. C. A Alice Brown Y.W.C.A Bernice Winchell W. A. A Josephine Winter Mortar Board .... Marcella Steel Glee Club Ellen Burkhart Castalia Rachel Kelley Pylhia Frances Lohbauer Crucible Dorothy Bucklin Mu Phi Epsilon Alice Gress Euthenics .... Hildegarde Becker Dolphin Marcella Steel Collegiate League of Women Voters Lucille Dudgeon Women ' s Editor Daily Cardinal, Esther Hawley Omicron Nu Sadie Lipman Red Gauntlet Helen Keeler Yellow Tassel Elise Roberts Blue Dragon .... Elizabeth George Chadbourne Hall .... Evelyn Possum Barnard Hall Isabel Feistl Clef Club Dorothy Hess Physical Education Club . Florence Mahoney Women ' s Commerce Club, Florence Malzahn Pan Hellenic Mabel Butler Outing Club Edith Leach Theta Sigma Phi .... Winifred Wise Census Chairman . Dorothy Bucklin Green Button ..... Marion Horr Page 207 District Chairmen Women s Self Govermneiit Association Governing Board of the Women ' s Self Government Association. Members are elected in 1 1 of the largest Women ' s Houses. A Badger of several years ago records the origin of W. S. G. A. in 1898. The emphasis placed upon government in its present title suggests the initial purpose of the organization, and also indicates one of its primary functions today. The letters W. S. G. A. hardly suggest the variety and color of its interests. W. S. G. A. does not govern to make rules, rather it promotes and advises scholarship, friendship, and worthy charities. The Junior Advisory Committee promotes friendship with new students and does it during the early days that the Freshman Women are at the University. The Scholarship Banquet aims to encourage sincere scholarship to which one girl from each organized house is invited. At this banquet freshmen women are told about the Scholarship Cup which W. S. G. A. awards at Swingout to the freshmen woman having the highest scholastic average. Over two hundred women co-operate in administering the government which is self imposed. W. S. G. A. Board, Council, and the District Chairman are the means by which the government is successfully run. The organization is eager and willing to co-operate in and foster under- takings of the student body. This loyalty and willingness to serve has been demonstrated this year by the participation of the women in Varsity Welcome, Homecoming, Mother ' s Day, All-University Religious Services, Memorial Union, Memorial Day, Father s Day, and in Athletic Tournaments. The Friday Cozies were managed by a social committee, and acted as a medium to get acquainted. The Christmas party was an event that many looked forward to, and three hundred enjoyed it immensely. The Fall Tea for freshmen, the Junior Advisory Teas, at Miss Davis ' apartment, the Valentine Tea, and St. Patrick s Party were also special events fostered by W. S. G. A. District Chairmen of W. S. G. A. Jean M. Strachan General District Chairman Florence Rockwood Helen Cox Martha Burke Sallie Davis Katherine Foster Dorothy Hess Elizabeth Nelson Katherine Keebler Hildecarde Weedy Mary Catherine Lloyd AiLEEN Knight Pauline Raynon District Chairmen Mary Louise Bell Blanche Buhlig Mary O ' Neil Helen Willard Alice Johns Ruth Sylvester Jessie Peake Mildred Cox Marjorie Bond Helene Johnson Jean Droppers Arline Ziebel Nellie Jane Schneider Esther Johnson Marguerite Schwartz Bernice Gelder Cornelia Flieth Fredora Soldan Norma Gaulke Dorothy Bolton Frances Crawford Dorothy Wittaker Betty Lyman Ruth King Page 208 Elizabeth George Blue Dragon Elise Roberts Yellow Tassel I iclcn Kcclcr Red Gauntlet Marion Horr Green Button Women s Class Organization Women ' s Class Organizations have ever played a large part in unifying the women of the University. In order to make this unification more compact, the offices of Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer have been eliminated; so that only the President, with the help of a selected committee, is the one that guides the destinies of her class. The class presidents are now members of W. S. G. A. council, and can therefore work more directly with her class to the betterment of its interests. These officers strive for friendship and co- of eration in their respective classes and also between classes, so that under- standing becomes more complete. Officers of the classes are appointed to serve on social committees of W. S. G. A. Blue Dragon handled the sale and distributed senior women ' s rings as in former years. Red Gauntlet and Green Button officers have also been on social committees, while the president of Green Button, with her contact with freshmen women, can show W. S. G. A. what they need and bring about the necessary results. Yellow Tassel prepares senior swingout, and Blue Dragon helps with the commencement plans of the senior class. The Spring Banquets are the scene of the nominations of the presidents of the various classes. At these banquets the necessary unification is brought about. Page 209 J DcaJman i D. Stoke E. Hirsig M. Eierman M. Steel J. I ! Srnith C. Brodnax F. Allen L. Barret F. Gore E. Roberts C. Wollaeger L. [Dudgeon Barker B. Winchell E. Burkhardt E. Beffel R. Franseen Young Women s Christian Association The Y. W. C. A. is an organization for all women interested in working and discussing together in Christian fellowship, that they may thus develop their spiritual lives. It is the purpose of the association to so develop Christian fellowship among its members through active service and friendship that the life of the college community as a whole may be made better. The association is built around a cabinet which in turn is supported by various commissions, clubs, sub-cabinets, and committees. The cabinet is the official council and includes all the officers and heads of departments. Officers Bernice Winchell EuLALiE Beffel. Charlotte Wollaeger Josephine Barker . Beth Hirsig Frances Gore . Rosella Franseen Edith Hope Smith . . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Finance World Fellowship . . Bible Study Social Service Laura Barrett June Deadman . Marcella Eierman Lucille Dudgeon Dorothy Stolte Marcella Steel Ellen Burkhart Florence Allen Phyllis Edkins . Sophomore Dept. Vespers Dramatics Student Industry Membership Social Girl Reserve Education Freshman Dept. S. G. A. Party Page 210 V Hj H H y B H HI 1  A ' ry p1P - K«i H Ei ' l Bl ' i I WdM Wi [K SHLr S w ■' ' ' L 3 B M Nutting C. Chesley G. McPherson J.Talbot S. Ringe O.Smith L.Snyder E Shaner P.Lawrence H Keeler J. Droppers E. Saxton J Bartholomy A. Findorff V.Fisher R. Pomerane E.Pennington O.Campbell G.Carroll E. Lawrie Bull K. Keebler S Davis L Bunker EBell M Droppers J.Alexander Sophomore Commission — Y, W, C. A Officers Sallie Davis President Katherine Keebler Vice-President Elynore Bell Secretary Isabel Bunker Treasurer Sophomore Commission is a group of thirty girls elected from the freshman department in the spring of their first year, on the basis of interest and leader- ship capacities which they have shown in their freshman Discussion Groups. Their primary interest is that of organizing and directing a dozen freshman groups which convene weekly throughout the year for the purpose of informal discussion of questions pertinent to Wisconsin women. These discussionals have a threefold purpose : that of stimulating thought and talk along various lines; that of acquainting new women in the University with one another, and with the organization of Y. W. as a whole. Sophomore Commission also has the work of compiling and selling the ofificial Y. W. C. A. calendar in the fall of each year. The Y. W. C. A. Bazaar Page 21 1 H. MacDonald D. Davis D. Gale E. H. Smith E. McEIphatric H. Coleman E. Bussey G. Hickox I.M.Benson S.Harris I.Olbrich G.Sherman E.Trumbull A Stoppenbach F. Hollman G.Simpson A.Gates E.Anderson R.Sylvester C.Collins M. Borneman J. Piltz C.Stokes M. Walker M. Wing C, Sattler E. Morrissey I. Fizette J. Biggar A.Johnson D.Jones C. Dinwiddie C.Howard M. Tufts R Critchell Sopliomore Y. W, C. A. Clubs The Sophomore Clubs are an outgrowth of the Freshman Discussion Groups, and as yet are in the experimental stage, this being the second year of their functioning. They are formed with an idea to bring sophomore women together, to enjoy new friendships and new ideas, and to create a medium through which sophomore transfers from other institutions can make friends and be drawn into Y. W. C. A. activities. This year they have made a study of comparative religions in an effort to better understand the contributions of the Christian religion. The three clubs this year were headed by Catherine Howard, Marian Wal- ker, and Helene Boyer. An important achievement of the clubs was the Association Paper, Y ' s Drop O ' Ink, the editors being: Margaret Alsop, editor-in-chief; Judith Ninman, managing editor; and Edna Trumbull, Dorothy Davis, Catherine Howard, Marian Walker, Jane Fizette, and Charlotte Sattler, editors of features, social activities, exchanges, copy reading, humor, and art, respectively. Elma Morrisey was business manager, and Jeanette Piltz the advertising manager. The years ' activities were officially opened on November 4 with a banquet, of which Dorothy Davis was general chairman. The advisors of the clubs constituting the executive committee are Edith Hope Smith, Margaret Sniffen, Elise Roberts, Josephine Lucas, Ruth Sylvester, Kathryn Lain, and Dorothy Bucklin. The Fortune Teller Wigwam Page 112 M. Hoft H. McLellan E. Hurd M. Horr C Conner, M. Ludden B, Collier C. Zinn A. Welter S. Marting H. Meiklejohn M. Charters M. Hoebel S. Owen F. Swensen, F. Lock E. Reese J. Smith Freslmian Coinmissioii Freshman Commission of Y. W. C. A. is a group of twenty girls, chosen in March from the weei ly discussion groups sponsored by the association. This year the number on commission was reduced from thirty to twenty, while the number of freshmen groups to be organized next fall was increased from ten to twenty. This change will make each commission girl a group leader and it is believed that better cooperation will result from this equal division of the work. Care was taken that each girl chosen should have high scholarship, leadership ability, and an attractive personality. These qualities are essential for the leader to have in order to stimulate her discussion group and thereby develop the new girl ' s ' interest in campus and current problems, enlarge their acquaintances and friendships, and initiate them into the larger sphere of work carried on in Y. W. C. A. The purpose of the Commission is to organize and lead freshmen discussion groups, put out the Y. W. C. A. calendars, and discuss problems of current topic and ways of helping the freshmen to get the most out of University life in the most worth while way. The Fireplace in the W. A. A. Cottage Page 21 3 V. Schult t . Ringe F. Ailc: R. Frazier G. Culver D. Dodge Milne E. Kuenzli L. Marty J. 1 R. Trafton M. Schwarz H. Mueller E. Hamer E. Beffel M Steel Winter A. Nauts B. Gelder M. Bingham Intramural athletics among the organized houses on the campus, class teams in the various sports, week-ends in the attractive new cottage on Lake Mendota are fostered by the W. A. A. to interest the University women in athletics. The governing board, consisting of five officers and a representative in charge of each sport, contracts all business and organizes the work of the association. W. A. A. Board Josephine Winter Lena Marty Alice Nauts Dorothy Atkinson Corresponding Secretary Veryl Schuldt . . . Bowling . President . Vice-President Recording Secretary Ruth Trafton . EuLALiE Beffel. Elizabeth Milne Marion Goodkind Evelyn Hamer . Marcella Steel Archery Track Outdoor Baseball Tennis Volleyball Swimming Marjorie Bingham . . . Hockey Helen Mueller .... Riding Dorothy Dodge . . Indoor Baseball Rachel Frazer .... Basketball Florence Allen .... Rijle Marguerite Schwarz Sec.-Treas. A. C. A. C. Gladys Culver Edith Leach. Miss Howard W. Alumnae Head President of Outing Club . Faculty Member Treasurer Elizabeth Kuenzli Final Emblem Wearers The final emblem wearers receive the highest possible honor from the Physical Education Department. Only Senior W Wearers are eligible for the award which is made each June. The essential criterion is athletic ability, but spirit, service, and scholarship also enter into consideration. The largest number ever chosen was in 1925, when five girls were selected. M. Bigelow Edith Jorris Beatrice Marks H. Shepard Page 214 A. Woldenberg C. Marling J. Peeke M. Tufts M. Kaltenbach C. Hussa M. Hoffman M. Rouche B. Howell O Miller B. Thompson S. Lenzer J . Meyer B. Briggs A Dean V. Kruse D Zemurray C. Anderson A. Bass S Ringe R. King R. Boll R Goldman H. Preston J Winter R. Critchell M. Parkhurst F Swenson S Owen F. Kinsella C Inge B Harrington G Jones B Lawrie L. Goedde M. Steel B Marion E. Hamer F. Ritchie A. Sauber E. Bell in Dolphin Club, organized in 1920, is an honorary organization, created to further interest in swimming. Its work for each year culminates in a swimming exhibition given by the members. Major and minor emb lems are awarded for proficiency in speed, form, diving, distance swimming, and stunts. Officers Marcella Steel President Bernice Marion Vice-President Lucille Goedde Secretary Evelyn Hamer Treasurer Major Emblem Wearers Elizabeth Brigcs Evelyn Hamer Helen Iglaner Beatrice Marks Bernice Marion Evelyn Marsden Marcella Steel Elizabeth Thompson Miriam Wollaeger Minor Emblem Wearers Charlotte Anderson Adah Bass Elynore Bell Reba Boll Lucille Goedde Ruth Goldman Barbara Howell Charlotte Hussa Helen Iclauer Jeanne Meyer Martha Mortenson Sally Owen Mary Parkhurst Frederica Pease Florence Ritchie Helen Preston Florence Swenson Elizabeth Wilson Ann Woldenberc V. 1 Page 21 S ' The Physical Lducation Llub Josephine Winter Physical Education Club Students of the Physical Education department organized the Phy- sical Education Club to promote an interest in their prof ession and to provide a means of contact among themselves. In furtherance of these ideals a scholarship loan fund, open to any member of the department, was established this year. Officers Florence Mahoney President Margaret L. Knauf Vice-President Helene Boyer Secretary Marion EJogcs Treasurer Class Representatives Jane Carling Senior Alice Nautz Junior Helen Hoopes Sophomore Charline ZiNN Freshman Eva Seen Graduate Croup HjlU ■Tf 3. ■' ■' ■i n M MU ' B } Wm iSiF .: n VH n ' ' ' ' jt_Br Hr ji J H HBeH I ■s ; Archery Practice Page 2If Beatrice Thomas Rose Lander Bernice Marion Ernestine Long Elizabeth Kuenzli Ruth Will Josephine Winter Basketball The major interest in winter sports centers in the basketball games. Strong competition for the title was promised as the teams were so nearly equal in strength. Mabel Butler LoRAiNE Fritz Elizabeth Kuenzli Ernestine Long Class of 1927 Josephine Winter Bernice Marion Rose Lauder Beatrice Thomas Ruth Will Hockey Wisconsin was fortunate in having for hockey work this fall an English girl who had played on teams in an English college and who had much to offer in the way of English technique. The full schedule of games was not completed because of the early snow. From the games played the championship was conceded to the class of 1928. Adah Bass, ' 27 Emiah Hopkins, ' 27 Marv Patterson, ' 27 AURELIA Sauber, ' 27 Marguerite Schwarz, ' 27 Varsity Team Sylvia Meyer, ' 29 Honorable Mention Margaret Boggs, ' 28 Marjorie Bingham, ' 28 Rachel Frazer, ' 28 Marion Danielson, ' 29 Thalia Keller, ' 29 Elizabeth Kuenzli Elizabeth Gilmore, Alice Nauts, ' 28 ' 28 Lydia Morrell, ' 28 Sara Owen Mary Patterson Emiah Hopkins Adah Bass Margaret Boggs Marguerite Schwarz Rachel Frazer Aurelia Sauber . Sylvia Meyer Paee 217 Laura Cranefield Tirzah Ennor Margaret Spoon Louise Nelson Dorothy Atkinson Evelyn Ekdahl Isabel Dow Elizabeth Nowell Mabel Butler Evelyn Hamer Capitola Olmstead Arlone Kinkaid Rachel Frazer Intramural volleyball among organized houses on the campus was introduced this fall. The Delta Zeta team won the first place after a long series cf games. In interclass contests the championship was awarded to the class of 1927. Mabel Butler, ' 27 Evelyn Ekdahl, ' 27 Evelyn Hamer, ' 27 Marjorie Morrison, ' 28 Varsity Team Charlotte Wollaecer, ' 28 Hilda Nathenson, ' 29 Hattie Trauba, ' I ' i Gladys Bauer, ' 30 Louise Nelson, ' 27 iRciNiA Ellis, ' 28 Honorable Mention Swimming Varsity Team Louise Lyon. ' 29 Pearl Malsin, ' 30 Miriam Wollaecer, ' 27 Marcella Steel, ' 27 Bernice Marion, ' 27 Florence Kerner, ' 28 Winifred Smith, ' 28 Pamelia Laurence, ' 29 Evelyne Marsden, ' 30 Mary Parkhurst, ' 30 Swimming Championship 1926 was won by class of 1930 Ruth Goldman Elsa Stecker Virginia Dcjwns Betty Briggs Freddie Pease Mary Parkhurst Florence Kinsella Wilma Huebsch Page 21 S Isabel Dow Muriel Markham Capitola Olmstead Dclaphine Rosa Dorothy Atkinson Veryl Schuldt Bowling At the end of the winter season the tournaments of winter sports are played off. Bow ling, among these, came too late to publish the results of the games. The teams as chosen are listed below. An intercollegiate telegraphic meet was held with Illinois Wes- leyan on March 23, in which Wisconsin took second place. The Varsity team consisted of: Veryl Schuldt 1927 Mildred Feile 1928 Camilla Ruskauff 1929 Gladys Sieverkropp 1930 Rifle Team The rifle squad, coached by Captain Hull of the University Military Department, competed in several meets during the early spring. The most important of these was the Big Ten meet, organized by Northwestern University. Wisconsin organized another meet among the smaller colleges. Those competing were: Jane Carling, Jean Drop- pers, Josephine Kleinhaus, Lena Marty, Eleanore McEvilly, Marie Zierer. Elizabeth Milne Ruth Peck Jane Carling Katherine Sherman Josephine Kleinhaus Nancy Sasser Eleanore McEvelly, Lena Marty Page 219 Virginia Mead Evelyn Hamer Ruth Trafton Ethel Miehlke Elizabeth Milne Emiah Hopkins Louise Nelson Jane Catling Aurelia Sauber After a series of six games, the outdoor baseball championship was won by the class of 1927. Of the nine members chosen for the Varsity team, four were from the championship junior team. Margaret Boggs, ' 28 Rachel Frazer, ' 28 Jean Strachan, ' 28 Marguerite Schwarz, Varsity Team ' 17 Marion Rhode, ' 27 Elizabeth Milne, ' 27 Ernestine Long, ' 27 Elizabeth Shepard, ' 26 Edith Faithorn, ' 26 The freshmen defeated the class of 1928 quite decisively in the first game of the season. As they had been the champions for the previous year, the remainder of the tournament held much interest for the other classes who were trying to prevent 1930 from winning its third cham- pionship for the year. Virginia Mead Adah Bass Jane Carling Dorothy Dodge Evelyn Hamer Emiah Hopkins Virginia Mead Class of 1927 Ethel Miehlke Elizabeth Milne Rae Sauber Ruth Trafton Marguerite Schwarz Louise Nelson Ernestine Long Mabel Butler Florence Allen Adah Bass Marg Schwarz Elizabeth Milne Marian Rhode Beatrice Thoma; Florence Mahoney Jo Winters Gladys Culver Page 220 Madison Hunt Club Riding Riding, for the first time, this year has been recognized as a team sport. The class championship, won by 1930, was decided in a meet held among the class teams, and comprised such events as the Egg and Spoon Race, Saddling Race, Tug of War, and Three Gaited riding. The Varsity team was chosen on the rider ' s ability to walk, trot, and canter in good form. Varsity Team Arline FiNDORFF, ' 29 Katherine Newborc, ' 29 Virginia Masden, ' 30 Elizabeth Swenson, ' 30 Pauline Mendenhall, ' 28 Eleanor Tallard, ' 29 Eleanor Metterhausen, ' 28 Elizabeth Ann Wilson, ' 29 Honorable Mention Gladys Fist, ' 28 Dorothy Potter, ' 28 Tennis The class of 1928, represented by Helen Hardenburgh, won the singles championship in the tennis tournament. The doubles champion- ship went to the class of 1927, through the efforts of Martha Arnold and Mae Weller. Interclass competition was particularly keen because each class possessed an outstanding player. Tennis honors were awarded to Helen Hardenburgh, Mary Patterson, Marion Goodkind, and Eleanor Steele. Mary Patterson Varsity Charlotte Flint Marguerite Schwarz Helen Hardenburgh ' 1 1 lary Patterson Charlotte lUnt Helen 1 lardcnburgh Page 221 kmmilimmmmmm. ' i ' - ; Loraine Fritz Dorothy Dodge Muriel Markham Eulalie Beffci Estelle North Evelyn Hamer Varsity Track Team Eulalie Beffel, ' 27 Lorraine Fritz, ' 27 Evelyn Hamer, ' 27 Edith JoRRis, ' 26 Lorraine Maytum, ' 26 Estelle North, ' 27 Two telegraphic archery meets were held with other schools during the spring. On May 15, Wisconsin, BrynMawr, Mount Holyoke, Cornell, and Northwestern competed. Wisconsin took fourth place. On May 30, Field Day, a meet was held with Michigan, in which Wisconsin took first place. The archery championship for 1926 was won by the class of 1928, with 1927 taking second place. Florence Allen Varsity Team Jane Carling, ' 27 Elizabeth Kuenzli, ' 27 Ruth Trafton, 27 Hope Zimmerman, ' 29 Hope Zimmerman Elizabeth Kuenzli Rachel Kelley Jane Carling Page 222 Going Uver Field and Track Field Day, May 30, was the scene of the final contests in field and track sports. The class of 1927 won with 66 points, more than 35 over its closest opponents, the class of 1926. Five records were broken, two by Evelyn Hamer, 1927. Class of 1926 Leora Ellsworth Edith JoRRis Lorraine Maytum Lela Thomas Class of 1927 EuLALIE BeFFEL Dorothy Dodge Lorraine Fritz Class Teams Evelyn Hamer Muriel Markham Estelle North Class of 1928 Catherine Barrett May Ekdahl Mary Felts Blanche Mazanec Flora Wilder New Records Class of 1929 Elynore Bell Helene Boyer Margaret Barry Margaret East Mildred Jacobson Thalia Keller Irma Ringe Madeline Rouesche Event Old Record New Record Discus 55 ' 5 59 ' 7}4 Javelin 90 ' IJ 94 ' 6H Hurl Ball 74 ' 9 78 ' 1 Running High Jump 4 ' 7 4 ' 7}i Running Hop, Step, and Jump. .33 ' 4 34 ' 5 i Holder of New Record Hamer Maytum Hamer Jorris Fritz Alice Nauts Page 223 For rythmic sense of action free We dance. To make life what it ought to be We dance. Why Dance? We dance to bring us sweet release From cares of day, and troubles ease So that we come at last to peace We dance. Page 224 For moulding characters of worth We dance. To realize our aims on earth We dance. To thrust conventions that confine Our spirits in too straight laced line To bring much nearer the divine We dance. Lorraine Maytum, ' 26. Page 2ZS X iLETICS A cloud of dust ! Sweating bodies glistening in the sun! See, the man in the crimson loin-cloth! Have these lakes ever heard such a roar of applause? Old stuff! y VT H LETI C S I L. Doyle Harmon Captain FOOTBALL i m nn ' ' 3 Sr- 1 ' __ ' I u i isli T, ■-m a« BJB ,« lit ■jtf? NPfc . r , J H 1 1 Westrkh Burrus Chapman Brooks Crofoot Nelson McGinnis Webster Larson McCartney Pike Pederson Stoil Athletic Board 1926-27 Members Lloyd G. Larson, ' 27 Charles Westrich, ' 27 . Edwin Crofoot, ' 28 Henry Brooks, ' 27 Jefferson D. Burrus, ' 27 Charles E. McGinnis, ' 27 John Petaja, ' 28 . George Stoll, ' 27. Allan Pederson, ' 28 . Jo McCartney, ' 27 Charles Nelson, ' 27 Kenneth Webster, ' 28 Robert Pike, ' 28 . Football Basketball Crew Track Cross Country Baseball Minor Sports Sr.-Non W Sr.-Non W Jr.-Non W . Jr.-Non W . President Vice-President Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative Representative The Varsity Cheerleaders These six men, under the direction of varsity cheerleader Blinks Muller, ' 27, formed the Wisconsin cheering team which was on hand for every sport occasion in which Wisconsin teams participated. Through Muller ' s work a well-organized and carefully co-ordinated cheering squad was assembled which was able to direct the cheers of the Badger supporters. E. Von Germeten W. Bliffert A. Moorehead W. Muller R. Morse T. Frost Page 230 ii ) Anderson, Orrin, ' 27 Basketball Alanne, K. S. 28, Swimming Andrews. Charles ' 28. Basketball AsPLUND, Arne 28, Fencing Bain, Frank 27. Basketball Barnum, Rolland 27, Football, Basket- ball. Baseball Brooks, Henry ' 27, Basketball BuRRUS, Jefferson D. ' 27, Football, Crew Bardeen, John ' 28, Swimming Beckley, Willard M. ' 28. Gymnastics Behr. Louis 28. Basketball Barr, Don 28 Basketball Boldenweck, Les ' 28. Tennis Burbridce, Earl ' 28, Baseball Buckley. D. A. ' 27, Crew Bassett, F. M. 28, Crew BiBBEY, A. L. ' 28, Crew Clausen, S. E. ' 27. Baseball Chapman, V. J. ' 28, Cross Country, Track ' Cameron, Don 28, Football Crofoot, Edwin ' 28, Football Chao, H. ' 28. Wrestling Cohen. L. ' 28. Wrestling Cole, Wallace 27. Wrestling. Football Connor, G. R. ' 29, Football Donagan, E. F. ' 27, Baseball EDouGAN, T. C. 28. Track Edwards, O. M. ' 27, Baseball Elleson, Earl 27, Cross Country Erickson, J. R- ' 27, Track Ellerman, Harry ' 28, Baseball Ellis, Robert ' 27, Football Emmert, L. V. 28, Skating Francis, Neil G. ' 27, Track Freytac, Elmer ' 27. Fencing Fortney, Thomas K. ' 28. Wrestling Foster, Frank 28, Tennis Gore, G. W. ' 27, Hockey GuMBRECK, Lawrence ' 28, Cross Country, Track Harmon, L5oyle 27, Football Herschberger, Clarence 27, Swim- ming Harget, E. G. 28, Basketball Hotchkiss, George 28, Basketball Jansky. K. G. 27. Hockey Jacobson. Irving ' 27 Baseball Kasiska, Robert ' 27. Football Kreuz. R. L. 27. Football, Track Kratz. W. W. ' 28. Swimming Kneebone, T. H. 28. Hockey Kingsbury, L, H. 28. Crew KiEWEG, H. K. 28. Crew Kresky. J. L. 29. Football Kalish, S. E. ' 27. Cross Country Larson. Lloyd ' 27. Football. Baseball Long. T.J. ' 27. Football LiDiCKER. W. Z. ' 27. Hockey Lamboley, R. G. 27, Baseball Leitl, Lester ' 27. Football McAndrews, Harry grad.. Football Track McGiveran. Stanley ' 27, Football. Track McGiNNis, Charles ' 27, Track Merkel, Ralph ' 27, Basketball Miller, G. C. ' 27. Basketball McCarter. John 27, Crew, Hockey Murphy. M. L. ' 28. Hockey, Baseball MuEGGE, Walter ' 27, Football Neller, Richard ' 28, Gymnastics Nelson, G. H. 28, Basketball O ' Laughlin, M. P, 27, Wrestling Orth, F. L. 28, Crew Petaja, John ' 28. Cross Country, Track Pederson, a. J. ' 28, Swimming Powers, Ed 28, Basketball Pahlmeyer. R. B. 28, Track Payne, J.J. 29, Cross Country, Track Ratcliffe, R. U. ' 27, Swimming, Water Polo Roberts, J. C. grad. Track Ruf, H. W. ' 28. Hockey RuNDELL, L. F. ' 28, Wrestling Reeves, William 28, Track Rose, Eugene H. ' 28, Football Straubel, a. a. ' 27, Football Splees, W. G. 27. Wrestling Schutt, George ' 27, Cross Country. Track Stoll. George A. ' 27. Baseball Sappenfield, Scott ' 28, Track Schwenger. Robert ' 27. Track Stowe, H, L. ' 28. Track Schuette, Paul 29, Football Von Bremer, George 28, Football Wheatley. Stanley A. 27, Swimming Weiland. H. G. 27. Baseball WiLKE. Earl ' 27, Football Wilson. J. W. ' 28. Football Weighers. Barton ' 28. Swimming Wagner, Rube 29, Football Westrich, Charles 27, Swimming Welch, M. C. 29. Football Zola, John ' 28, Cross Country Zentner Robert ' 28, Crew Varsity Managers z:: ►«- r y ' - t i,li W rf-= , • Tt ■kpj Hki r ' -TV ■waBiuKa WB m THSim m S. Kalish, Cross Country H. Lee. Track C. Nelson, Basketball R. Ellis, Football P. Davis. Crew Page 231 Hi n Conference Medal Winner Steven Harris Polaski, ' 26, of Nashotah, Wisconsin, captain of the 1925 second place football eleven, was winner of the 1926 conference medal by virtue of maintaining an average of 83.65 for his four- year course in the College of Engineering. Steve distinguished himself as being a fine end and a wonderful leader. Returning to school in 1924, after having dropped from the university during the year of 1923, Polaski filled an end position on the eleven and was honored with the captaincy for the following season. As leader of the football team he guided them to a second place in the Big Ten conference, the highest rating a Wisconsin football team has held since 1921 when they also finished second. Polaski was a member of Iron Cross, the senior men ' s honorary society, of White Spades, the junior men s honorary organization, and of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. He is a m.ember of Kappa Sigma Fraternity. Steve Polaski was a true Wisconsin man — an athlete and a scholar. Page 212 Little Thistlethwaite The Coaches Coming to Madison in the spring of 1925, when the University was in its most chaotic athletic condition, George E. Little has lifted it out of the lethargic state to the prominent place that Wisconsin has formerly held. Assuming the role of football coach, after the team of 1924 had failed to win a conference game, he brought the Badgers through to a conference second place with but the loss of a single game. Last season, handicapped by the lack of stars. Coach Little developed a team which finished fifth in the title race, and which lost but two games. With the idea of ' athletics for all, George Little resigned his football coaching job to devote all his time to his athletic directorship. To fill the shoes of Coach Little, Glenn Thistlethwaite, coach of football at Northwestern University, has been selected. Like Little, Thistlethwaite has taken a school where the football situation was bewildering and brought the school to the front. His Northwestern teams have finished second in 1925 and first in 1926, in the Big Ten. Wisconsin has profound hopes in Little ' s choice of a football coach, and hopes are high for the first conference gridiron title since 1912. Page 233 u Rollie Barnum. Rolland Barnum, ' 27, of Evansville, Wis., has earned a niche in the hall of Wisconsin immortals by the winning of nine major letters during his college career. Coming to Wisconsin as a freshman, Barnum played with the yearling football, basketball, and baseball teams, and in 1924, his sophomore year, graduated to the varsity squads, winning letters in the same three sports. Such, also, has been his rec- ord for 1925 and 1926. With RoUie Williams, ' 23, Barnum may be classed as Wisconsin ' s greatest athlete. A fine run- ning halfback, who could kick and pass; a basketball guard who as a senior has been considered with the best of the Big Ten, and a creditable baseball catcher who combined physique with brains, Rollie has accomplished the almost impossible. Included in this stellar record is the captaincy of the 1926-27 basketball team which finished in fourth place in the conference standings, and which was rated as the strongest defensive team in the league, largely through Barnum ' s guarding efforts. Barnum is a member of Iron Cross, the senior men ' s honorary society, and of White Spades, junior men ' s honorary society. His fraternity is Beta Theta Pi. Page 234 The Publicity Department During the past year the Athletic department has aimed to develop an efficient publicity bureau to form the proper contact between Wisconsin athletic activities and the press of the state and the coimtry at large. This plan of Director George E. Little was in keeping with the general movement in the universities and colleges of developing more efficient sports news bureaus. The newspapers and magazines have been so in accord with this movement that their demand for all types of service have made the position of Ath- letic publicity director one of considerable impor- tance. Our publicity department at Wisconsin operates in a small way on the same basis as the larger sport news syndicates. It supplies the editors with a mail service of timely athletic news, supplemented from time to time with art layouts, action photos and matts. The articles circulated by the Wisconsin bureau are received by 450 editors on the desks of all state daily newspapers, the larger Wisconsin weeklies, syndicate sport departments, athletic magazines, the majority of the dailies in neighboring states, and the most important papers of large circulation throughout the country. The publicity department is held generally re- sponsible for the attitude of the press locally and abroad, and therefore must create a cordial feeling to prevent unfavorable criticism. The local and the student athletic publications must be censored and all newspapers treated fairly on the matter of re- leases when important stories break. One of the main activities of the present type of publicity office is the conducting of the press box. This problem is most difficult during the football season when the press clamors for seating accommodations at the home games. It is a difficult matter to adjust the seating plan of the box to accommodate eighteen or twenty direct wire connections for the important contests and provisions must always be made for visiting representatives of the larger radio broadcasting stations. So many little accommodations have been given the press at games that the publicity director may go as far as he likes in developing his press box. Several of the modern football plants have an enclosed structure for the scribes, heated and equipped for complete comfort. Announcers inform the writers of all details of play and in some cases the men are even served refreshments between periods. The publicity men in most cases supervise all advertising compaigns involving the printing and circulating of posters, stickers, and all types of pamphlet advertising. They edit and write a portion of all athletic programs, magazines and bulletins published by the department. They are the reception committee for all visiting newspaper men and play Santa Claus to every scribe in the matter of tickets for all types of sporting events. Les Gage Publicity Director Page 235 i 1 : ji W ' r Jl - , c A t A Jl ♦ ■' %,- j| 9m fri Of%¥ Wilke Schuette Mansfield Straubel Burrus Kasiska Wilson Sundt, Assistant Coach Rose Burbridge Cole Shaw Leitl Welch Ellis, Manager Uteritz. Assistant Coach Conner Schweers Cameron Hotchkiss Muegge Bartlett Steinauer. Trainer Little. Coach Wagner Kresky Kreuz Harmon Crofoot Barnum Von Bremer Lieb, Assistant Coach Varsity Football From material of only a mediocre sort, but with veteran qualities, George Little developed a Wisconsin football eleven for the 1926 season which, though it finished fifth in the conference race, showed great power and flashes at times. Lead by Doyle Harmon, the team went through the season with fair success, winning three conference games from Indiana, Iowa, and Chicago, tieing one with Purdue, and losing to Minnesota and Michigan. In addition, the Badgers won two non-conference games, one from Cornell College, of Mount Vernon, Iowa, and one from the University of Kansas. Eleven men are lost by graduation for the 1927 eleven which has games scheduled with Cornell College, Kansas, Grinnell, Chicago, Minnesota, Iowa, Michigan, and Purdue. They are Captain Doyle Harmon, Rolland Barnum, Jefferson Burrus, Jr., Robert Kasiska, Robert Kreuz, Lloyd Larson, Lester Leitl, Stanley McGiveran, Al Muegge, Austin Straubel and Earl Wilke. The Coaching Staff K ' U-.- wi - ' - r-mi T . ■ISC ' rr i hA- mt m ' Uteritz Blaik Lieb Little Sundt Slaughter McAndrews Page 236 1 mamm Caagjwywwffia ' mmmm The Varsity Squad The Squad Prospiects for a strong eleven are bright, and with a new coach, Glenn Thistlethwaite, former coach of Northwestern, and a full supply of veterans and capable freshmen coming back, Wisconsin should finish well up in the 1927 conference race. Edwin Crofoot was selected as captain of the 1927 eleven, and with the graduation of Ben Friedman, of Michigan, should be a leading quarterback in the Big Ten. Besides, Gene Rose, who developed into the leading Badger backfield threat will be back. Kresky is another letter backfield man who will return, while Shaw and Mansfield are aWa wearers who should see service in the fall. A veteran line is expected with Wilson at center. Von Bremer and Wagner as guards, Schuette, at one tackle. Parks, captain of the frosh team at the other tackle, and We lch and Cameron at the ends. 1 ; iJ|fljfeMMBHHHflHH|| H ■i ill ' ' I ' lii iirii n ' ' ' i i m .  -w a,-  ,-. C Hk ' • ,-m, 1 TAe Freshman Squad Page 237 Crofoot, CafJIain-elect Burrus Harmon Wisconsin 38, Cornell Flashing a brilliant offensive, the Wisconsin eleven opened its 1926 Western Conference title quest with a decisive 38 to victory over the Cornell college team on Saturday, October 2. Early in the first quarter of the game, after employing a series of line bucks which placed the ball past mid-field, a long forward pass put the sphere on the Cornell two-yard line where Crofoot smashed over for the first counter. Cornell made one threat during that period, but the Badger line held for four downs on its own three-yard line. In the second quarter, after Kasiska had picked up a Cornell fumble, the Badgers opened with a powerful offensive, and Crofoot made a second touch- down on a pass over the goal from Barnum, the score was 1 3 to and 1 2 more points were added by touchdowns by Shaw, one of which was a 35 yard run. The half ended Wisconsin 25 Cornell 0. Two more touchdowns were added in each of the last quarters, both by Crofoot. Coach Little used practically every man on the squad in the game, and it proved to be a valuable practice tilt for the Littlemen. Page 238 Cameron Wilson Barnum Wisconsin 13, Kansas The Jayhawkers of the University of Kansas proved a harder nut to crack than did Cornell the week before, iDut the Cardinal wave of Wisconsin bore down with force and won a well-earned 1 3 to victory. The victory came in the form of a touchdown by Toad Crofoot, who raced 80 yards for a touchdown from the first scrimmage of the game, a point after touchdown by Leitl, and two place-kicks from the 25 and 23-yard lines also by Leitl. For the most part the game was a punting duel between Rollie Barnum, of Wisconsin, and Captain Zuber, of the visitors. The Kansas captain showed remarkably fine form, one of his kicks sailing more than 70 yards. The Badgers were a vastly improved aggregation over the team which downed Cornell the week before. The offensive continued in good form, while the defense had vastly improved. After the Kansas game, the Badgers faced a conference card of six games in as many weeks with Michigan, Minnesota, and Purdue appearing especially powerful. Page 239 Von Bremer Kreuz Wisconsin 0, Purdue Outplaying Purdue in every department of football, the Wisconsin eleven in its opening conference game, October 16, at LaFayette, Ind., was forced to a scoreless tie. Statistics point to a clear Wisconsin victory, but for some reason the Bad- gers seemed to lack the necessary punch to win. Wisconsin gained 209 yards from scrimmage to a 89 yard total for the Boilermakers. Six completed Cardinal passes gained 67 yards, while three Purdue tosses added 28 yards for the home eleven. Numerous thrusts were made at the Purdue goal, but each time the Badgers were forced back. Only once did the Boilermakers really threaten, that being in the final quarter, when the ball was carried to the 8-yard lirte, and could be pushed no further. Here Cotton Wilcox, the Purdue star, attempted a drop kick which was short, and the game had neither advanced nor deterred either team in the conference championship race. Page 240 Leitl Rose Kasiska Wisconsin 27, Indiana 2 For the first time during the season the Wisconsin eleven was scored on when in the final moments of the game Indiana made a safety. The score was 27 to 2, a well-rounded Wisconsin victory. Red ' Kreuz was the hero of the game, and the driving fullback showed his plunging ability by making the final Badger touchdown of t he game after a pass had placed the ball on the Indiana 26-yard line. The red-head smashed through on four successive plays to a touchdown. The first touchdown came when early in the game an Indiana fumble was converted into a touchdown by Doyle Harmon, who on a pretty play side- stepped and swished 17 yards for the initial counter. Kresky made the second counter after Barnum had intercepted a Hoosier pass. The other Badger score was one by Welch who was playing his first conference game at end. He received a long pass and scored. It was the first Wisconsin home conference game and was played before a crowd of only 13,000, many being kept away by threatening weather. Page 241 Wagner Schuette Shaw Wisconsin 10, Minnesota 16 To have not made a single first down, yet to have come within just a few minutes of beating a team which was declared to be the strongest in the coun- try, the Wisconsin team fell before the giant Minnesota team before 43,000 spectators, the largest crowd which ever jammed Randall stadium, October 30. The Father ' s day crowd which had come to see a great contest were com- pletely satisfied from the bone-crushing smashing of the great Herbert Joesting of Minnesota to the wonderful 82-yard run of Jeff Burrus, the Wisconsin end. After Minnesota had driven to the 18-yard line of the Badgers, Burrus picked up a fumble and like a frightened hare, raced for the first touchdown. Leitl added the point. Then the great Gopher backs and the fast charging northern line heaved and pitched, and the score stood 7 to 6. Peplaw booted a dropkick over during the second quarter, and the half ended 9 to 7 in the Gopher ' s favor. However, the Badgers proved they were the greatest ball-hawks in the country, and by following the pigskin, took advantage of another Minnesota fumble and Leitl made a place kick for a Wisconsin advantage of 10 to 9. Thus it looked like a Badger victory without a first down until near the very end of the game when Nydahl ran a punt back 55 yards for a Minnesota touchdown, giving them a victory of 16 to 10, breaking a three year tie. Page 242 % Wilke Carney Kreskv Wisconsin 0, Michigan 37 Smarting under a 10 to defeat handed it the week before by the Navy, and playing the last game ever on historic Ferry field, the great Michigan football eleven continued as the Badger jinx and on November 6 won 37 to at Ann Arbor. After having been classed as the strongest team in the country, the Wolver- ines had fallen before the Navy the week before through over-confidence, and they were primed to destroy the fondest Badger hopes. This was accom- plished with ceremony. After a slow start the great maize and blue steam-roller, which it certainly was, began to function on all eleven cylinders and snowed the Badgers under a passing and running attack which dazzled the Cardinal beyond all hope. However, the Badgers were great in defeat, and though it was a bitter sight, appearances were partly neutralized when the eleven continued to fight even when the game was beyond hope. Page 243 McGi ' Schweers Horwitz Wisconsin 20, Iowa 10 For the first time since 1921, Homecoming football games materialized into happy Badger victories when the Cardinals, showing a great reversal in form from the Michigan game of the preceding week, won a 20 to 10 victory from Iowa. The game was an offensive battle with the Badgers having the edge on the Hawkeyes. After the highly touted Nicholas A. Kutsch of Iowa had given his team a 3 to lead, in the first quarter, Crofoot scored on a pass by Gene Rose to give his team a 6 to 3 lead at half time. It was Rose who turned out to be the Badger star. His passing was superb and he also showed well in carrying the ball. Then in the third quarter, Kutsch playing as he was expected to, put his team in the lead with a touchdown and an additional point. However, the Cardinals were not to be denied, for Rose shot a beautiful 25-yard pass to Cameron who stepped over the goal- line for a Wisconsin touchdown. Doyle Harmon added a point, and the Wis- consin eleven was out ahead 1 3 to 10, never to be headed. A touchdown made in the same manner as the previous one gave the Cardinals a 20 to 10 victory — a happy thought and a pleasing finish to Homecoming. y -: A Ju Page 244 Parks Burbridge Muegge Wisconsin 14, Chicago 7 In just 12 minutes of play, the first of the game, the Wisconsin eleven ticked off 14 points and clinched victory from Chicago in the final game of the year which was played before 48,000 spectators at Stagg Field, Chicago, November 20. After Rose and Crofoot had risen to heights of glory, the Maroons, who had been threatening to snap out of their lethargic state all season, came to life and in the remaining three-quarters of the game sneaked over a touch- down, but it was one too few for the score ended 14 to 7. Rose scored the first Badger touchdown on a run after a pass from him to Crofoot had placed the ball next door to the Chicago goal. Then after some more passing, the second Wisconsin score came on a pass from Rose to Cro- foot. Leitl kicked both goals. The Chicago score came in the third period on a trick pass play. Playing in the game for the last time for Wisconsin were Captain Harmon, Barnum, Burrus, Wilke, Straubel, Leitl, Kreuz, and Kasiska. Page 245 Final Conference Standings Won Michigan 5 Northwestern 5 Ohio 3 Purdue 2 Wisconsin 3 Minnesota 2 Illinois 2 Indiana Iowa Chicago Per Lost CenZ 1000 1000 1 750 I 666 2 600 2 500 2 500 4 000 5 000 5 000 Pane 246 George A. Schutt Captain COUNTRY Jones Chapman Petaja Schutt Gumbreck Payne Zola Kalish Cross Country For the third time in as many years, the Wisconsin cross country team finished the season undefeated and as champions of the West- ern Conference. Coach T. E. Jones, who took the coaching taste left open by Mead Burke, the coach of the champions the two years before, assembled a team which was the strongest that has ever appeared in the Western Conference, and was perhaps the best balanced cross country team in intercollegiate circles. Three meets were held before the conference at Minneapolis, November 21, 1926, and in these three meets only two men finished before the whole Wisconsin five-man team. Starting the year with five major letter men and an aWa man, Coach Jones rounded out a team of seven men, one nearly as good as another. Tom Jones Coach Page 248 1st Koii- 1 h Jones. Coach, Ncul. Ca pi Scliuti. lihapnian, McKee, Petaja, Butts, Gumbreck, Zola, Walter. Egger. Kalish. Back Row: Hand. Fronck. Bokhout. Camp. Wetzel, Moe. Millar. Stewart. Sajima. Behnke. Egger. Hewitt. Lachapelle, Bevins. Williams. Henkle. Vaughn. S. Zola, Hickish. I The first test of the year came at Chicago, October 23, 1926, when a quadrangular meet with Chicago, Northwestern, and Indiana was held over the Maroon two and a half mile course, in Washington Park, Chicago. The power of the Badgers was made apparent when the first eight men to finish were Wisconsin runners, an American record in an intercollegiate quadrangular cross coun- try meet. The Wisconsin score was the lowest possible, a total of 15, Indiana was second, scoring 57 points. Northwestern was third with 67 points, and Chicago fourth with 7 1 points. The order of finish was : Chapman (W), Petaja (W), J. Zola (W), Gumbreck (W), tie for first; Captain Schutt (W), fifth; Payne (W), sixth; S. Zola (W), seventh; Bullamore (W), eighth; Fields (I), ninth; Alexander (I), eleventh; Schwenger (W), twelfth; Butz (W), thirteenth. Captain Schutt Page 249 Start of the Conference Run at Minneapolis Petaja Chapman The next week-end, Saturday, October 30, the day of the Minnesota game and Father ' s Day, the harriers again demon- strated their great power before a home crowd, and took the first five places in the annual dual meet with Minnesota. Just as the week before, four men, this time Captain Schutt, Chapman, J. Zola and Petaja, tied for first and Gumbreck finished fifth. The first Minnesota man in was Wexman, who took sixth place. The score of the meet was 1 5 to 40 and the order of the first ten men was : Chapman (W), Capt. Schutt (W), J. Zola (W), Petaja (W), tie for first; Gumbreck (W), fifth; Wexman (M), sixth; Binger (M), seventh; Payne (W), eighth; BuUamore (W), ninth; S. Zola (W), tenth. Then with a two-week rest, the Badgers engaged in their hardest dual meet of the year, one with the University of Iowa harriers, in Madison, Saturday morning, November 13, Homecoming Day. ¥ W ' Wl if ■' I. XmH K ii i 1 t ' ' j ' fa -r ' M ' ■fH i i fn «B i 2 ' , iiip .. ...Mpl JB -. ' ■--  . , , The Conference Run Page 250 The Wisconsin-loua Start Again the Cardinal flashed to the front, and after Hunn and Speers, the two great Hawkeye runners came first, and second, five Wisconsin men trailed across the line for another victory, and the third year of no defeats. The final score was 25 to 38, and the finish order was: Hunn (I), first; Speers (I), second; J. Zola (W), third; Gum- breck (W), fourth; Chapman (W), fifth; Schutt, Payne, Petaja, and BuUamcre (W), tie for sixth. The next Saturday, November 20, the annual conference meet was held at Minneapolis, and Wisconsin won its third title in three years with a total of 34 points, the low mark for winning the con- ference championship. The places won by the Badgers were fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, and eleventh. Chapman, who had won the Iff I J. Zola GUMBRECK Iowa warms up Page 251 Petaja near the Finish Payne individual honors the year before, was sent to Minneapolis early in order to rest for the meet as he was ill, but the illness weakened him, and fourth place was his best effort. Gumbreck finished fifth, Payne, sixth, Captain Schutt, eighth, and J. Zola, eleventh. Petaja, the sixth Badger in the run, finished seventeenth. Other scoring in the meet was Ohio State 63, Iowa, 65, Illinois 94, Michigan 128, Minnesota 138, Chicago 173, Indiana 191. Purdue and Northwestern did not enter teams in the classics. V ictor Chapman was selected to lead the 1 927 team at the annual election. Captain George Schutt, Captain-elect Victor Chapman, Lawrence Gumbreck, John Zola, John Petaja, and John Payne were awarded major letters. Stanley Zola and Charles Bullamore were given aWa awards, and Stanley Kalish was awarded the manager ' s letter. J. Zola, Payne, Schutt Page IS 2 Ralph Merkel Captain BASKETBALL Sundt. Ass ' t Coach Steinauer, Trainer Doyle Miller Kowaiczyk Tenhopen Barnum, Capt Nelson, Mgr, Holmes, ,Ass t v.oacn Gage, Ass ' t Coach Spooner, Ass ' t Coach Ellerman Hotchkiss Andrews Nelson Murphy Koenig Behr Meanwell, Coach (Merkel, Co-Captain, not on the picture.) A disastrous road trip near the end of the most success- ful basi etball season since 1923-24, kept the Wisconsin basketball five from the 1927 Western Conference cham- pionship. Supplementing the loss of two games on the trip, the team was handicapped at the start of the second semester by the graduation of Ralph Merkel, cc-captain with RoUie ' Barnum. Faced by this. Coach Walter E. Meanwell was forced to re ' amp his team. With the final reckoning, the Badgers stood tied for fourth place in the conference with seven victories in twelve games. In the opening basketball game of the year, December 17, the Badgers fell victim to the Franklin college jinx and lost to the Hoosiers by a 27 to 24 score. Coach Meanwell gave nearly every man on the squad a chance to show his wares, but the invaders were strong and came cut ahead. They won on free throws, making 1 1 points from the foul line. Wisconsin made 10 goals, tw o more than did Franklin. Rollie Barnum Co-Captain Page 2!4 Atkins Calkins O ' Connor Steiner McDermott Banks Boyd Cross Stone Warren Fry Holmes Sundt Foster Petrie Babler Diehl Matthewson Yule Chmielewski Hutchins Folsom Hedrick Theile Crain IDorr Dunlap Kjellgren Byman Rosenberg Paine Peterson Furlong O ' Leary Kye Rebholz Cape Hume The Frosh Squad The first victory of the year came when the cagers took Marquette into camp at Milwaukee on December 22. The final count was 29 to 26. The Badgers played a defensive game equal to the best of Tebell and Williams, the immortal Badger guards, and they deserved to win. Merkle led the work, showing a fine brand of defensive playing and scoring eight points. December 30 the Wisconsin five hung up another victory downing De Pauw college 24 to 20. The Badgers jumped into the lead almost immediately after the toss-up and never relinquished it, though the Greencastle, Ind., team did attempt a rally in the closing minutes. A notable victory was turned in by the team when on, January 3 at Cleveland, the Cardinals turned back the Syracuse University basketball team, champions of the East, in an easy 31 to 24 victory. The easterners had lost but three games in two years and had visions of upsetting the Meanwell coached team. Hank Kowalczyk, the giant sophomore, and Andrews, the pint-sized forward, were the contributing cogs, gathering 16 of the Cardinal points. With a favorable pre-conference ' record, the Cardinals opened a confer- ence year which was primarily success- ful, and when the season closed were the strongest defensive team in the league. Ralph Merkel Co-Caf lain Charles Andrews Page 1S5 Powers Nelson Lou Behr Captain-Elect It was a bad start, for the Badgers fell before the full- strength Indiana five in the opening game at Madison by a 28 to 23 score. Wisconsin took an early lead of 8 to 1 , but Coach Dean of the Hoosiers got his team functioning smoothly and the Hoosiers won easily. The first conference victory of the year was recorded when Wisconsin dealt the Ohio State five a 25 to 16 drubbing in the Armory on January 9. The game was a rough affair, 20 fouls being called on the two teams, but an air-tight defense, coupled with a powerful offensive, marked the tilt as a Wisconsin victory. Charles Andrews, scoring 10 points, was the high man. The first road trip was a complete success when victo- ries over Northwestern and Chicago were registered by the Badgers. Northwestern was snowed under 28 to 18 in a game in which Kowalczyk lead the attack with 1 2 points. The Badgers took an early lead and were never behind. To defeat Chicago on January 18 was a man-sized job, and only last minute tosses by Behr and Andrews clinched the victory, 33 to 30. The Maroons were ahead by three points when the Badger forwards accom- plished the vital shots for Wisconsin. Behr played a fine game and made 1 1 points. George Hotchkiss Page 2S6 Powers Merkei Nelson Northwestern fell the week after in Madison by a 25 to 24 score. Not until the final minute of the game did the Badgers achieve their fourth straight conference victory. The Purple lead all the way. Louie Behr was the hero of the fray with a last minute hat-in of a missed foul. Captain Merkle, playing h is last game before graduation, contributed a fine defensive exhibition. This closed the first semester for the basketeers, and with the graduation of Merkle, Barnum assumed the captaincy. Kowalczyk was moved from center to guard except for the tip-off, while Tenhopen and Miller were used in the center positions. The opening game of the second semester was a 19 to 14 defeat handed the Cardinal by the strong Notre Dame five. The exhibition was purely a defensive contest, and was close fought until the end. The half-time score was 10 to 10. The game was played at the armory February 8 and was the first test of the team with Merkle gone. Chicago was not the threat ' in Madison that they were on their home floor and the Badger short-passed their way to their fifth conference victory by a 3 1 to 20 score Feb- ruary 12. Chicago tallied but a lone point in the f irst 14 minutes of the game, while the Cardinals counted 14. The half ended 17 to 9. Near the game ' s end Coach Meanwell inserted his reserves, and it was here that Chicago made its strongest showing. Lycan Miller Hank Kowalczyk Page 257 - John Doyle Elmer Tenhopen George Kelson Then came the disastrous road trip which knocked the Badgers off the top of the conference heap with five victo- ries in six games. First, Ohio State who had been a pawn in the Cardinal hand a month before, turned back the Badger five 20 to 16 at Columbus, February 19. The Badgers seemed to be in a state of coma, and played their poorest game. The lighting system of the Ohio gymnasium also bothered the Madison five in their shooting. In between this road ride came a home game with Icwa which was won 24 to 21 at Madison, February 22. The battle was hard-fought, the lead weaving back and forth between the two teams. The journey which did the worst was one in which Indi- ana and Illinois both registered victories. At Bloomington, February 26, a fast attack by the Hoosiers shattered a hope for a Wisconsin title to a 31 to 23 tune. The game was a fast one, and the Cardinals made a determined threat being on the short end of a 15 to 13 halftime score. Ten- hopen, who played a fine game, against Chicago, was ill and could net make the trip, and this materially weakened the Badgers. Paie 258 Joe Murphy Ray Ellerman Guy Skndt Assistant Coach A second defeat was handed to Wisconsin by Illinois on February 28 by a 32 to 28 score at Urbana. The Badgers lead 14 to 11 at the half and were five points ahead near the end when Kowalczyk was forced out for personal fouls and the I Mini crept ahead. Obviously playing their greatest game of the entire year, Wisconsin snowed Illinois under a 39 to 13 score at Madison, March 5. The Badgers had their five man of- fense working to perfection, while the defense was so strong that the Suckers made but three field goals the entire evening. Lycan Miller, the La Crosse sophomore, was at the top of his game and was on the receiving end of much feeding from Hotchkiss and Behr. He totaled 20 points for the evening. Wisconsin closed the season by falling before Iowa in the new Hawkeye fieldhcuse on March 11 by a 26 to 17 score. The Badger defense cracked for the first time of the year, and this spelled defeat for the Cardinals. Hotchkiss played a good floor game for Wisconsin and scored 13 pioints for his team. Prospects for a strong team next year are bright. Captain Barnum is the only man to graduate, leavins such stars as Behr, Andrews, Hotchkiss, Kowalczyk, Tenhopen and Miller to return. Page 159 Final Conference Standings W L Pet Michigan 10 2 .833 Indiana 9 3 .750 Purdue 9 3 .750 Wisconsin 7 5 .583 Iowa 7 5 .583 Illinois 7 5 .583 Ohio State 6 6 .500 Chicago 3 9 .250 Minnesota 1 11 .083 Northwestern . 1 11 .083 Paie 260 Charles E. McGinnis Captain TRACK Standing — Klath. i-rancis, Meek, Trci ilcr. Bartlctt. Mcmmcr, Sappcnficld, McKee, Coates, SchroeJer, Gunibreck, Mucgge. Annis. Peterson, Schwenger. Osterberg. Winnacker, Butz. Zilisch, N. Francis, Murphy, Voight, Younge, Smith. Kreuz. Sitting — Fox, Barnes, Pahlmeyer, Stowe, Capt. Kennedy, Dougan, Erickson, J. Zola, Hestwood, Reeves, Braatz, Jones, Coach. Track Proving to be the darkhorse of the 1927 indoor conference track, the Wisconsin cinder men won their first title in the indoor classic since 1916, at Evanston on March 12. The Badgers accumulated 28 points, while Ohio State, their closest competitors, were garnering 18. The other teams finished, Iowa 14J , Michigan 12, Illinois 1 1, Chicago 93 ?, Northwestern 9, Minnesota 6, Purdue 1, and Indiana 0. The most noteworthy feat of the evening was the performance of Captain Charles E. McGinnis, who took three first places for his team, and got 1 5 of his team ' s points. McGinnis broke the conference record in the high jump clearing six feet five inches, and won the pole vault with a vault of 12 feet, 10 inches, and the high hurdles. T. E. Jones Coach Pate 262 Chamberlain Grupp Lalor Kanalz Wagner Ahrbecker Schrofer Moe Murphy Momsen Eisele Hansen Pinegar Lee, Manager S.Zola Butz Bullamore Williamson G.Smith McKee Walter Musolf Lysne Meyer D.Jones , Assistant Manager Jones, Coach Stowe Schwenger J Zola Payne McGinnis Petaja Pahlmeyer Erickson Gumbrech Schutt Lieb The summary of the meet: One mile run won by Kennedy (O.); Rue (111.), second; Petaja (Wis.) third; Little (P.), fourth. Time— 4:30.2. 50-yard dash won by Kriss (O.); Hester (Mich.), second; Hermansen (N.W.), third; Cuhel (la.), fourth. Time — :05.5. Pole vault won by McGinnis (Wis.); EJoyles (la.), White (111.), and Northrup (Mich.), tie for second. Height — 12 feet 10 inches. Mile relay won by Iowa; Ohio State, second; Wisconsin, third; Minnesota fourth. Time— 3:29.5. 440-yard dash won by Dougan (Wis.); Catlin (Minn.), second; Kriss (O.), third ; Oltheiser (Mich.), fourth. Time — :52.2, High hurdles won by McGinnis (Wis.); Cooper (Mich.) second; Otterness (Minn.), third; (other disqualified for knocking over three hurdles). Time — :07.6. Two mile run won by Hunn (la.) ; Hornberger (Mich.), second; J. Zola (Wis.), third; Cougan (C), fourth. Time — 9:44.2. Half mile run won by Williams (C.); Bevan (O.), second; Erickson (Wis.), third; Sittig (111.), fourth. Time — 1:59.5. High jump won by McGinnis (Wis.); Burg (C.), second; Rettig (N.W.), third; Thomas (la), and Bennett (C.), tie for fourth. Height — b feet 5 inches (New conference record). %A Kennedy 1926 Captain Pate 265 Kennedy in 440 Shot put won by Lyon (III.); Lewis (N.W.), second; Karsten (N.W.), third; Fornwald (la.), fourth. Distance — 47 feet 3 inches. In the opening meet of the indoor season Wisconsin fell before the strong Iowa team in an indoor meet at the new Iowa Field House, at Iowa City, February 12, by a score of 55 to 33. McGinnis was the high point man, getting 13 points for his team by virtue of victories in the pole vault and high jump, and a second in the high hurdles. A second place in the annual quadrargular meet at the Patten gymnasium, at Northwestern, on February 19, was the best Wisconsin effort. Ohio State won the meet with 57 points, Wisconsin scored 45 points. Northwestern was third with 31 points, and Chicago finished fourth, scoring 21 points. McGinnis was again the high man of the meet with 16 points gathered through firsts in the high and low hurdle races and second in the pole vault and high jump. C. E. McGinnis Kennedy V. Chapman Page 264 Kennedy at Finiih of 220 Yard Dash t Charles E. McGinnis, on February 26, carved a niche for himself in the hall of track immortals when he won the Illinois Relays all-around championship, scoring 5,463 points, the second highest total ever scored. Doherty, of Detroit City college finished second, nearly 30 points behind the Badger captain. McGinnis gave a startling performance, being the smallest man entered. He performed especially fine in the pole vault, the high jump, and the high hurdles. He did well in the dash, and even scored in the half mile run and the shot put. Two Wisconsin relay teams earned fourth places in events. The four-mile team placed behind a record-breaking event, while the mile relay quartet tied for fourth with Minnesota. Closing the dual meet year with Notre Dame, in an impressive 61 to 25 victory over the Irish, the Badger cinder men showed their best form of the entire year. The meet was run in the annex on March 5, and the home team took six firsts in nine events, slamming the two-mile and half mile runs. Notre Dame later won the Central Intercollegiate track championship, showing the power of Wisconsin, and the place they deserved in winning the Western Conference title. Ericl son Page 26S McCinnis in the Northwestern Meet After a third place in the indoor conference track meet the Wisconsin cinder team had to content itself with a fifth place in the outdoor conference meet held at Iowa City, May 29, 1926. Michigan took the meet in fine style, but Wisconsin individual performers were especiall y effective. It was the lack of men being able to pick up seconds, thirds, fourths, and fifths that spelled defeat for the Cardinal. Captain Kennedy became outdoor champion in the 440-yard dash by stepping the distance in :49. 1 . In the mile relay, in which Michigan nosed out the Badgers by four inches, Kennedy, running as anchor man on the Badger team, cut down a lead of seven yards, and was unofficially clocked at :48.4 for the distance. Dougan J. Zola Page 266 The 1927 Freshman Squad Victor Chapman won the two-mile event in a great sprint which nipped Rose, of Indiana, who had made a determined effort to overhaul the flying Badger. McGinnis tied for second in both the high jump and the pole vault, while Kreuz got a second in the Javelin throw, with a toss of 193.4 feet. In the opening of the outdoor meets, Wisconsin, on April 17, went to the Ohio Relays at Columbus. There the team hung up a national record of 4:26.2 in the one mile team race. Those running on the record breaking quartet were Chap- man, Zola, Reeves, and Schwenger. Three second places at the Penn Relays in Philadelphia, were in store for Wisconsin the next week. Victor Chapman, star two-miler, lost the first race of his collegiate career coming in behind Loucks, of Syracuse. The Wisconsin runner was suffering from a cold. Kreuz took second in the javelin throw with a toss of 191 feet 9 7 8 inches. McGinnis, the third Badger in the event, tied for second place with Anson, of Ohio State, with a leap of 6 feet 2 j inches. TTie same day the mile relay team was forced to a third place at the Drake Relays, held at Des Moines, Iowa. Kreuz Stowe Page 267 The 1927 Outdoor Squad In the first outdoor dual meet of the year, Wisconsin easily downed Minnesota, at Minneapolis, by a score of 84 to 50)4, on Saturday, May 8. The Badgers accumulated 1 2 first places in 1 5 events, while McGinnis was the high point man of the day with 14 points to his credit. For the first time since the inauguration of the quadrangular track meet with Ohio State, Northwestern, and Chicago, Wisconsin failed to win the event. Coach Jones team was forced to a second place, being beaten by Ohio State, 64 5 6 to 53 5 6, at Columbus, on May 15. Northwestern finished third with 443 points, and Chicago fourth with 13 2 3 points. Winning 89 2 3 to 53 1 3 over Northwestern, Wisconsin closed its dual meet season with a flash at Camp Randall, on May 22. Captain Kenneth Kennedy and Charles McGinnis were the stars of the day, each garnering 15 points by virtue of three first places. Kennedy won the 100-yard dash, the 220-yard dash, and the 440-yard dash; while McGinnis took first places in the 120-yard high hurdles, the pole vault, and the high jump. The team annexed 10 first places in the meet. Wisconsin track fans will have the treat of seeing the 1927 outdoor conference track meet staged at Wisconsin in May, this year. The Badgers, the indoor champions, should make a determined bid for the title with such stars as Captain McGinnis, Zola, Gumbreck, Petaja, Dougan, Stowe, Erickson and Kreuz. Wagner Smith Page 26S Jkhkkrson D. Burrus Captain CREW Teckmever, Kingsbury, Burrus. Basset, Bibby, Zendtner, Kiewig, Orth Coulter, Captain Although humbled in the annual Intercollegiate Rowing Associa- tion regatta at Poughkeepsie, June 28, 1926, the Wisconsin crew won a firm place in the hearts of all its supporters with its tremendous attempt despite its lack of power. Previous to the four-mile race, newspaper men impressed the country with the potentialities of the Cardinal eight, but Coach ■' Dad Vail, the grand old man of crewdom, held steadfast to his assertion that the Badgers lacked the power to carry them through to a victory or a high place. Dad Vail Coach Coulter 1926 Captain Page 270 A Trial Sfyin His assertion was borne out when the Cardinal flagged a seventh place in the race, the lowest ranking the crew has ever obtained in its eighteen appearances in the historic regatta. The whole Wisconsin record since 1898, when the boatsmen from Mendota went to Saratoga, where the race was held originally, has been five second places, three third places, three fourth places, three fifth places, three sixth places, and the 1926 seventh place. With sunset the race began and under stroke Teckmeyer, to whom ' Dad gave the glowing tribute that if he had seven more like him Teckmeyer Page 271 Coulter Teckmeyer Kingsbury Burrus Bassetc Bibby Zendtner Kiewig Treichel he would have the greatest crew ever, the Wisconsin eight went at a 3 1 -stroke to the minute pace, and at the half mile mark were in fourth place. Then as the great Washington and Navy crews, two of the fin- est to ever appear on the historic Hudson, surged ahead, the Badgers slipped into sixth place, which position they held until the finish when the eight from the University of California nosed them out by less than a half length. So again, the lack of competition and the handicap of lack of practice on open water told on the Wisconsin eight. The Cardinal I Kingsbury Basset Page 272 The Varsity blades are still the marvel of Poughkeepsie, for when a crew with but a quarter of the amount of practice all other competitors get can finish high, their work is truly marvelous. To all this is linked the name of Coach Harry Vail, the grand old man of crewdom. The 1926 Poughkeepsie race was one of what developed to be two sections — the Washington-Navy race, and the other six fighting for third. Coach Rusty ' Callow, whose Seattle eight won a notable victory, brought a crew which averaged 6 feet 3 and a half inches in COJ % V Zendtner KlEWIG Page 273 ' i|?l p .3 1 B HH IH .W n ' it-ii l - i imHI - ' - ' l iBi B =e Getting ready or an early Spring row height and was described as being perhaps the finest to appear. Bob Butler, scarce three years out of Washington, coached the Midshipmen, who finished a scant second behind the Washington eight. He had another crew of supermen. The 1926 regatta was indeed a fight between two of the finest. Then, in the second section, crews of power, but not equal to the great Washington and Navy eights, fought for a place, and the time shows that they were close: t f3 . Heck BlBBY Page 274 Ajler a hard pull Official Time for the 4 Miles 1. Washingtcn 19:28 3 5 2. Navy 19:29 3 5 3. Syracuse 19:52 4 5 4. Pennsylvania 20:03 4 5 5. Columbia 20:05 1 5 6. California 20:06 2 5 7. Wisconsin 20:07 8. Cornell 20:08 Hanson Orth Page 175 George Stoll Captain BASEBALL Lowman, Coach Galle Mossey J acobbon Murphy Mu5sa Decker Eilerman Barnum Tangen Larson Wieland Christ ianson IDonagan Schorcr Ace Siekman, Mgr. Stoll Burbridge Radke The 1926 Squad Guy Lowman Coach A second place in the Western Conference for the 1926 season, the highest place for several years, was the record of the Wisconsin nine. Building a team around several veterans and a group of talented sophomores, Coach Guy S. Lowman developed a strong team. Lloyd Larson, a junior, and an outfielder was the captain. George Stoll was the leading Big Ten pitcher, and he captains the 1927 nine. Prospects for a rank as high as last season, and perhaps a title, are favorable with the season ahead. Tangen, third baseman, was the only severe loss, as Wieland, a short stop who graduated, will have his place filled by John Decker, who played regularly last year until mid-season when he was injured. One of the most successful southern spring training trips put the Bad- ers in a fine fettle for the coming conference year. The trip in the South which took the Wisconsin team down to New Orleans for a game with Tulane University, found the Badgers on the long end of 2 of 6 games — a good record considering that the team had not got out of doors prior to leaving. The first game was with Union College at Jackson, Tenn., and the southern collegians came out with a 9 to 2 victory. Next Wisconsin fell before the University of Mississippi, at Oxford, in a walkaway for the home team, 10 to 3. From there on the Badgers started to get their legs and the rest of the trip loomed powerfully. Mississippi college eked out a 5 to 2 victory, but the Wisconsin team played a strong fielding game. Lloyd Larson 1926 Captain Page 278 Galle Grambs, Ivlgr. Kohl Kelly Janson Mansfield Rose Turton Beebe Stoll Cameron Lowman. Coach Gottscein Christiansen Aschenbrenner, Ass ' t Coach Ace Lynaugh Donagan Uteritz Ass ' t. Coach Thelander Pahl Jacobs Brility Hussa Jacobson Stupecky Wold Burbridge C ecker Jassey Knechtges The 1927 Squad The pitchers had not yet found their control, but a second game resulted in a 4 to 3 victory for the Badgers. George Stoll, pitching in fine style, turned back the Tulane nine 2 to in a beautiful hurling exhibition in which he presented the New Orleans nine with but one hit. A second game with Tulane was postponed due to rain. On the way north the Badgers engaged in a single game, that with St. Louis University, at St. Louis, and the Missouri collegians won 8 to 5. Before a crowd of nearly 4,000, Wisconsin opened its conference season April 17, when George Stoll won his own baseball game, driving in two of the three Badger runs for a 3 to 2 victory over Northwestern. In another practice game Wisconsin took the Madison Blues, the local professional team, into camp with an easy 9 to 1 victory at Randall field. The second Big Ten tilt for the Badgers was postponed on April 24 at Randall field due to rain. The Illinois baseball nine were the scheduled opponents. April 27 found the Badgers again in good form when they played a tilt with the Kennedy Dairy team, a local semi-pro outfit, and Wisconsin won 2 to 0. By defeating Chicago 8 to 5 at the Maroon ' s field on May 1 , Wiscon- sin kept its conference slate clean. Stoll won his second conference victory. On Monday, May 4, however, Purdue took the Wisconsin team into camp by pounding out a 6 to 1 victory on the Lafayette University ' s diamond. Jacobsen was on the mound for Wisconsin, but his best efforts could not fool the Boilermaker sluggers. George Stoll 1927 Captain Hans Tangen Page 279 The 1926 Freshman Squad Eddie Donagan A slightly built lad by the name of Walters, who was a relief hurler on the Michigan baseball nine, spelled bad luck for Wisconsin, and the Badgers lost their second conference game of the year on May 7 by a 6 to 4 score. After taking a safe lead by pounding Jablonowski, ace of the Wolverine staff, Walters tamed the Wisconsin team, while Wisconsin errors coupled with Stoll ' s failing in the pinches, allowed the Wolves to win. A seventh inning rally which netted three runs gave Wisconsin a well-earned victory over Notre Dame by a score of 5 to 3 . The game was played on Randall diamond. May 8, before a record crowd. By slugging the ball at the critical times Wis- consin won a Big Ten victory over the Minnesota baseball nine, by a 9 to 5 score at Minneapolis on May 1 1. George Stoll, who was on the mound for Wisconsin, let the Gophers down with seven hits, and won this third conference victory in four starts. Rallys were becoming the Badger forte, for another one, this time in the eighth inning, turned an inevitable defeat into a victory of 4 to 3 over Minnesota at Camp Randall on May 15. Stoll was again the victorious pitcher, and allowed the Gophers seven hits. Journeying down to Illinois, Wisconsin with Jacobsen turning in a most appropriate pitching game, turned back the Suckers 5 to 2. Jacobsen held the lUini to four scattered hits, while his ' Rollie Barnum Page 280 A Hit! mates were hammering the ball for 12 safe bingles. Because Christman, Northwestern third base- man, neglected to touch first base after he had hit a home run in the Wisconsin-Northwestern game at Evanston May 22, Wisconsin did not have to go to extra innings to defeat Northwestern 7 to 6. Stoll pitched a good game and ran up his string of victories. Purdue proved for the second time during the year to be too much for the Wisconsin team, and hopes for a tie for the title were sent glimmering. The Boilermakers turned back the Badgers 6 to 1 in a game at Madison, May 24. Six errors were registered against Wisconsin, which was the main reason for the defeat. A second place in the Big T en conference was grabbed off by the Wisconsin nine when behind a great bit of pitching by George Stoll, the Cardinals took the Michigan champions into camp by 6 to 4 in a game at Ann Arbor, May 29. In was another rally that won for Wisconsin — this time in the third inning. Rallying in the ninth inning, Wisconsin won its second victory of the season from the Madison Blues. This victory was 10 to 9, and Coach Guy S. Lowman gave all his hurlers a chance to work. Wisconsin played a good fielding game, making but a single error. The season closed with a victory over Chicago in a game played at Madison. The final count was 8 to 2. Irv Jacobsen Mike Murphy Page 281 Saje . Final Conference Baseball Standing, 1926 W L Pet. Michigan 9 2 .818 Wisconsin 8 3 .727 Purdue 7 4 .636 Illinois 7 4 .636 Northwestern 5 6 .455 Ohio State . ' 3 5 .375 Minnesota 3 5 .375 Indiana 3 6 .333 Chicago 3 7 .300 Iowa 2 8 .200 ■!• ' Swede Wieland i J Harry Ellerman Earl Burbridge Page 1S2 John Decker N. MINOR sport: Buehler Halsted Hotton Holmes Vinson Clark McGovern Steinauer, Coach Simpkins, Ass ' t Coach Wiechers Kinkaid Pederson Ratcliff. Capt. Kratz Tanaka Hanks Bardeen Baillie Post Rupert Hatelberg bwimming Winning four out of five dual meets over conference teams and taking a fourth place in the Conference Meet at Illinois, Coach Joe Steinauer and his Cardinal suited swimmers made a record this season which, although not perfect, is one of which they may well be proud. Losing only to Michigan and Northwestern, the Badger team finished, as always, well up in the conference and was feared and respected by every other team. The squad started the season gloriously enough at Chicago on January 1 5, with a close win by a score of 35 to 34. The meet was a battle all the way and was only decided in the last event, the fancy dives, where Wisconsin men took both first and second places. Rat- cliff took first place and McGinnis, not being content with his fame in track, took second. The feature of the meet was the 160-yard relay which Chicago won in 1:18, unofficially breaking the Conference record. Wisconsin was se- verely handicapped by the absence of Herschberger, Conference 50-yard free style champion. On February 12, Michigan journeyed here to engage the Badgers and left with a decisive victory. Outsplashing Wisconsin in practically every event, the outcome of the meet was never in doubt, and Wis- consin accorded the 49 to 20 score grace- fully. Wisconsin only succeeded in taking two first places, Kratz winning the 200- Ratcliff Captain Page 2S4 Simpkins Windsey Ross Bailey Lange Mesberg VIeet Nickel Von Maltitz Lonyoy Burns F-oseid, trainer Olson Davis Popkin Dolan Florez Crowell Siler Crowell Stearns Kaiser Ruez Dinnerman De Bever Von der Linden Gernen Crowley yard breast stroke and Ratcliff decisively winning the fancy dives. Michigans ' strength in the dashes was the deciding factor of the meet. Two weeks later when Steinauer ' s paddlers met Illinois at Champaign, they speedily avenged their defeat at the hands of Michigan by almost reversing the score. The Cardinal wearers emerged on the long end of a 42 to 27 result. The meet was closely contested and Wisconsin was hard pushed all the way. Several Illinois tank records were broken and the Wisconsin medley relay team came within three tenths of a second of tying the conference record. The next night the Badgers returned to Madison and gained their second victory in two days by overwhelming Purdue 53 to 16. The times of the meet were exceptionally slow, all men turning in much poorer results than at any previous attempts. An example of fine sports- manship was displayed here when both Kratz and Ratcliff allowed their team- mates to forge ahead of them and thus earn their W ' s for the season. Wisconsin took a first and second in every event except the 440. The Badgers again chalked up a victory on March 11, when they defeated Iowa at Madison by a score of 38 to 3 1 . A close battle was fought between Pattie of Iowa and Captain Ratcliff of Wisconsin in the 150-yard backstroke. The judges had a Kratz Page 185 Hotton Passion hlkins Scott Stewart Esser Steinauer. (loach Ragatz. Mgr. Ludwigson Leidlow Lange Post. Capt. Proctor Foster Woodsome Wright Mueller Hodges Stevenson Post Captain Water Polo hard time deciding which of the two had touched first, but finally gave the decision to Pattie. Carter of Iowa, last years ' confer- ence champion in the 200 yard breast stroke, again won this event here. Kratz, Wisconsin ' s ace, did not compete against him, being saved for the clash to come at the conference meet where last year he was just outtouched. Completely outclassed in nearly every event, Wisconsin lost the last dual meet of the season to Northwestern the following night at Evanston. The Purple swimmers romped away with the meet, emerging on the top of a 42 to 27 score. Wisconsin only took two firsts, one in the 30G-yard Medley Relay and the other in the 200-yard breast stroke. The absence of Herschberger in the dashes here also proved a serious handi- cap — one, in fact, which the Badgers could net overcome. Without him com- peting, Manowitz of Northwestern had little trouble in winning the dashes. Conference at Illinois On March 25 and 26, Wisconsin offici- ally closed the season by placing fourth in the Conference Meet, held this year at Illinois, Michigan took first, amassing a total of 49 points, Minnesota second with 27 points, and Northwestern third with 14. Wisconsin garnered 9 to take fourth place. Winston Kratz was the only Wis- consin man to take a first place when he won the 200-yard breast stroke. His time was 2:43 3 5, coming within 4 5 of a second of the national record. At the close of the season five major and six minor W ' s and one sWt were awarded to the swimmers. Clark, Herschberger, Kratz, and Pederson won major W ' s and Ratcliff was awarded a major with Captain ' s star. Bailie, Bardeen Hatelberg, Holmes, Kinkaed, and Vinson were given minor awards. Tanaka won the sWt and Hotton the manager ' s W. Captain Ratcliff was high p oint man for the season. Clark Pagt 286 Hatelberg Holmes Baillie Pederson In her second season of competition in water polo, whicln last year was substituted for water basektball in the Big Ten, Wis- consin bettered her previous average by 50 per cent. Winning half of its games in contrast to last season ' s record of no victories at all. Captain Post ' s team finished in fourth place in the Conference. With the return of Post, Stewart, and Woodsome from last year ' s team, the season began auspiciously and hopes were high for a championship team. With the first game of the season, however, these hopes were blighted, for Chicago, with last year ' s team practically intact and playing in its own tank, defeated the Badgers 9 to 4. Not disheartened by this defeat, however, Wisconsin came back in her next home game and in a closely fought battle de- feated Michigan 5 to 4. The next game was with Illinois at Champaign and was another setback for Wisconsin, for the Suckers garnered 8 points to the Badger ' s 3. Again handicapped by a strange pool and one much larger than they were accustomed to, Wisconsin was completely bewildered by the fast swirr.ming, open type of play used by Illinois. Once again in their own pool, Wisconsin ' s poloists once more evened the score by taking Purdue into camp to the tune of 5 to 2. The Cardinal clad team triumphed again two weeks later when they completely swamped Iowa at Madison. Iowa was lost from the first and the game ended with the score 9 to 2 against them. In the final game of the season. Northwestern, which tied with Chicago for the championship, received a real scare when they barely beat Wisconsin in the Evanston pool. With Wisconsin leading until the last two minutes. Northwestern managed to slip over two goals and eke out a 7 to 6 victory. Stewart, Post, Woodsome, Lang, Hodges, Esser, Ludwigsen, and Scott received minor Ws, Raggatz the manager ' s W, and Proctor and Stevenson sWt ' s. Page 287 . Brandow, Coach Ruf Murphy Silverthorn Jansky Rahr Mason Morris Cahoon Moelk Moorhead Soulin, Mgr. Mitchell Lidicker, Capt. Boyer Kynaston Drummond Hockey Rube ' Brandow Coach When W. R. Brandow abandoned his career as a professional hockey player last January and came to Wisconsin as the new hockey coach he found a most difficult task before him. In December, when the hockey squad first assembled, Tom Lieb was designated as the acting hockey coach to take the place left vacant by Ivy Iverson, the former coach, until a regular coach could be procured. George Little, director of athletics, and William Z. Lidicker, captain of the team, made futile efforts to sign a coach before Christmas. Meanwhile Lieb had taken active charge of the puck chasers in the absence of a coach. When Christmas vacation came the squad was still lacking a mentor, and consequently were not given a training trip as was the custom. W. R. Brandow, a well known hockey player in professional and amateur circles, arrived after the vactaion, and Lieb took up his duties as a track coach. In short, the new coach had but two weeks to get his sextet into condition for the series of games with Minnesota on January 14 and 15 in Madison. A hasty survey of his candidates revealed a lack of eligible players. Brandow lost little time and started at once to organize his team from the eligible material. The first game of the season was played in Madison with the Janesville sextet on January 7. In this game James W. Drummond, Cleveland, was started in the center position. As he was in- eligible for varsity play he was not used in conference games. The game was won by Wisconsin 4-1 . When the conference games finally were played with Minnesota, the Bad- ger sextet found itself sadly lacking in substitutes. Karl G. Jansky, Madison, and William Z. Lidicker, two veteran offensive players, were the stars of these games. John J. Silverthorne, River- side, Illinois, and William Rahr, Mani- towoc, were both utilized as centers in William Lidicker these games. Minnesota won both games Captain — the first 1-0, and the second 3-1. Page 288 The Frosh Squad When the Badger sextet met the University of Manitoba team January 21 in Madison, the first international collegiate hockey game ever played by Wisconsin was witnessed by a capacity crowd. The Manitoba team was hailed as the foremost amateur sextet in college circles. They had little difficulty in downing the Wiscon- sin team 7-0. In the first few minutes of play they scored five t imes. But it gave the Wisconsin team a good lesson in hockey, and the players profited by it. Throughout all the past games Lidicker and Jansky were playing brilliantly. But it was James M. Mason, a tall youth from Winni- peg, playing right defense, who thrilled spectators with his furious spurts down the rink with the puck. His defensive playing was likewise effective. Guarding the goal was Don Mitchell, who succeeded very ably in arresting the progress of the elusive puck. It was Mitchell who prevented the defeats from being far more one sided. His accuracy and alertness was unequaled by any goalie in the Big Ten. In the Manitoba game he was painfully injured about the head, but remained at his post to stop a total of 43 shots. Ineligibility and weather proved big handicaps to the hockey team. No sooner did the second semester come than word was received that Mason, Drummond, Silverthorn, and Moorhead were ineligible for further varsity play. Brandow now found his squad with- out a capable center. In Mason he had lost his best defense man. Alfred J. Moorhead, another of the ineligibles, was likewise a necessary defensive player. The original squad of 14 men was now depleted to nine players. With the few men he had remaining, Brandow formed a team of ability. But the outdoor rink was suffering from the sun and warm winds, and the squad was forced to idly wait for suitable ice. In the series of return games with Minnesota at Minneapolis the Gopher squad subdued the Wisconsin sextet by tiring out the few players that Brandow could use. Emil Iverson, Karl Jansky Bill Rahr Page 289 Don Mitchell Dyrell Cahoon ' Al Moorehead Jacob Moelk Mike Murphy the crafty Gopher coach, substituted his players often and by this means fatigued the Badger group. When Michigan came to Madison February 18 to play a series of two games with Wisconsin, the outlook was brighter. William Rahr after showing great improvement was started as the regular center. Michael Murphy, Manitowoc, was playing left defense. Jacob W. Moelk, Janesville, was teaming with Murphy at right defense. After outplaying the Michigan team throughout the game, Wisconsin finally lost 1-0 by a freak score made in the second period. Warm weather interfered and the second game of the local series with Michigan was postponed. Between this time and March, the Wisconsin hockey squad had practically no practice on the ice. They took to basketball as a means of retaining condition. On March 3, the Badger team left Madison for Windsor, Ontario, to play the first American intercollegiate hockey games ever played outside of the United States. On March 4, the local sextet lost to Michigan 2-1, before 5,000 spectators. Another defeat was suffered on March 5 by a score of 1-0. In the third game the Badger team lost by a single tally made after 30 minutes of overtime play. At Windsor the squad was feted at a banquet given by Wiscon- sin graduates. At this banquet Don Mitchell, of Duluth, the star Badger goal tender, was elected captain of the 1927-28 hockey team. Page 290 .Ik WitVi i W. f m The Carnival ■' .« fti.. ' 1 ' ' nM i- iw ;Afr«if«;i M«jdir indt r r rff. Ice Carnival Favored with ideal weather conditions on February 19, Wis- consin ' s second annual winter sports carnival was held on Lake Mendota under the supervision of Directors Brandow and Berg, and from the point of view of attendance and number of partici- pants actually entered, it was undoubtedly the most successful ever sponsored by the university. Practically all the honors in the men ' s skating events went to the four teammates of the Milwaukee International Harvester club, Florence Koepsel, Elfreida Raster, and Camela Gabel offered close competition in most of the women ' s events, and the majority of points awarded women participants were divided among them. Fancy skating and relay races affored more beauty and thrills to the onlookers. Farm House succeeded in winning the inter- fraternity relay for the second consecutive year. The ice boat race run over a five mile course had a record entry list of 15 boats. The Yellow Streak, piloted by Fosseid, won the race handily. On account of the unsafe condition of the slide, the ski jumping event was not contested. By winning this meet the Madison team permanently won possession of the huge skating trophy that was to be awarded to the team that won it twice. The Start Page 291 Holt Beck Schmitz Minkow. Mgr. Hitchcock, Coach Zodtner, Coach Brackett Brackett Meyers DeHaven Smith Splees, Capt. Cole Fortney The wrestling team experienced one of the worst seasons that the Cardinal matmen have had in many years during the 1926-27 season. Throughout the year it seemed as though old man jinx was taking his yearly exercise on the grappling team, for he seldom let up with his wrecking tactics, especially before a meet. At the conference gathering March 1 1 and 1 2 at Chicago, the Badgers walked off with one champion- ship and two third places. Midget Smitz, upset the dope and took one of the seven titles back home with him. The other two awards were given to A. Smith and D. Holt, 135 and 125 pounders respectively, after several preliminary matches in which these green men showed that they must be considered before any more conference titles are given out next year. EJesides this whirlwind finish, the Badgers did not do much damage to their opponents in dual meets during the entire year, because they were handicapped by the loss of two of their best men at the begin- ning of the year. Captain Bill Splees, a middleweight was the first casualty. He injured his arm a week before the Iowa meet and was lost to the team for the rest of the year. The men went to Iowa City on January 15, however, and gave the Hawkeyes a hard struggle, losing 17.5 to 7.5. In this meet coach Hitchcock suffered another setback when Wally Cole, runner-up in the conference, in the 175 pound class, injured his elbow. These losses, however, did not take away any of the fight that the Badgers had, and they tore into Illinois on jjnuary 22. Although his team did not fare well this year. Coach Hitchcock is looking forward to a better season next year, as he will have all the men back from this year ' s squad. Barring accidents, the following varsity men will be back to fight for their respective positions on the team: Smitz, Stetson, Cohn, Holt, Bridgman, Smith, Gasche, Meyer, Becker, Schuck, De Brackett, and Fortney. Besides these men, there are some freshmen who will be eligible for varsity competition next year. Page 292 Hinderliter Brill Kuhe Bartelt Vornholt Masely, Coach Schwoerke Neller Snavely Felten The Gymnastic team, under the tutelage of Coach Masley and the leadership of Captain Neller, concluded a successful season when they placed second in Con- ference ranking. Neller succeeded in scoring points in every meet of the season, and Hinderliter was a close second in the scoring column. Felton developed into a clever gymnast and was one of the three Wisconsin men to score in the Conference meet. Schwoerke, Brill, Kuhe, Bartelt, Vornholt, and Snavely were squad members all of whom were factors in enabling the team to win three of the five Conference meets in which it engaged. Fencing Captain Freytag, Waters, Asplund, Rabbe, HoUister, and Clarkson constituted the 1927 Varsity Fencing team which engaged in three dual meets in addition to participating in the Conference meet at Chicago on March 12. In the dual meets it met some of the strongest conference teams, and this stiff op- position resulted in victory over Purdue and defeat at the hands of Chicago and Iowa. The team ' s real strength was displayed at the Conference meet, however, where it took second place. Freytag and Waters won second places in the dueling swords and foils respectively, and Asplund took fourth in the sabers. Hollister Waters Freytag Rabbe Kashin .-Xsplund Clarkson Daywitt Page 293 Lingren Larson Sweet Salaty Goodsitt Storch Curreri Blanchard Lasche Williams Davis Morse Approximately 1 15 men were enrolled in regular boxing classes for physical education credit during the two semesters of the past year. The classes met regularly in the tower room of the university gym- nasium and were under the supervision of Coach Storch. Two competitive meets were held in March. An interclass tourney involving elimination bouts was held from March 14-20, and an all-university tournament whose entrants consisted of those men who had been successful in the interclass bouts was staged as the last event of the season on March 26. The participants were divided in 8 weight groups, from featherweight through to heavyweight, and in addition to being crowned university champions in their respective weights, the winners in the final tournament were awarded numeral sweaters and gold medals. During the course of the season many good boxers were developed, and the hope held by the in- structional staff for the future is that the sport may involve intercollegiate competition. Golf With the rapid rise of golf as one of America ' s foremost sports in the past decade, it is altogether natural that golf at Wisconsin should assume its place as an intercollegiate sport. Joe Steinauer was official coach of the varsity squad last spring, while Adolph Bock who was the ace and captain of the team in 1925, consented to manage the affairs of the team. The team this year was composed of Captain Andrew Leith, Hunter Sheldon, Roscoe Grimm, Irving Clendennen, Ben Anderson and Bush Solbraa, substitutes. The first opponent of the year was Iowa at Madison, on May 6. The Hawkeyes were turned back under the Nassau system of scoring. 1 5 to 8. On May 8 Marquette played at Madison, where the Badgers were victorious, 20 to 3. At Northwestern on May 13, the Badgers had their first taste of defeat. The match was played during a downpour of rain at the North shore Country Club in Wilmette, 111. The following week at Madison found every member of the team at the top of his game; the Badger quartet took the Notre Dame team into camp, 15 to 18. Michigan was next, and gave the varsity its second defeat at Maple Bluff. The return game was played with Marquette at the Blue Mound Country Club, Wauwatosa, Wis. The Badgers won easily; both Grimm and Sheldon broke 80. Out of the total of six dual meets the record shows that only two were lost. The team placed fifth in the conference chamoionship held at the Kno ' .lwood Country Club, Lake Bluff, Illinois. In the individual medal play, Sheldon placed te ith and Grimm placed thirteenth. Anderson Grimm Clendennon Leith Sheldon Solbra Eiock, Coach Page 294 Winterble, Coach McMillan Giessel Foster Boldenwick Durand Kaner Judkins Tennis The Badger tennis team of last year has set a record that will be hard to equal throughout the coming seasons. The only defeat that was scored against the strong defenders of Wisconsin ' s title was dropped to Michigan in a 4-3 battle. This was one of the most spectacular and closely contested meets ever recorded in the intercollegiate conference. Cold weather and wet courts helped in the defeat of the racquetters by slowing down their driving game. Last year ' s team consisted of Leo Boldenweck, Sam Durand, Captain, Bill Giessel , Frank Foster, Oscar Kaner, and Bob McMillan. Eioldenweck, Durand and Foster were the reliable point getters in a hotly contested match. Captain Durand is the son of one of the greatest tennis players that Wisconsin has ever had, and it is greatly du3 to him that Wisconsin had such a successful season. Too much cannot be said for Bill Winterble, local business man and sport enthusiast, who has been coaching Wisconsin tennis teams for the past two years. Bill is a former Tri-State champion and instructs gratis in order to retain his amateur standing. It is largely due to him that Wisconsin is again producing teams that bring fear to her opponents. His engaging personality has made for him staunch friends all over the state. The team this year, under the leadership of Captain Leo Boldenweck, again bids fair to uphold the honor of Wisconsin among the Big Ten schools. The fall tryout, although rather short, disclosed some great prospects for the coming year, and Wisconsin again has the chance of producing a championship team. The lack of adequate facilities and inclement weather has retarded the teams of former years from beginning their spring practice before April first. This of course, gives an unfair advantage to a team that has had the chance to practice and develop their strength. With the backing of George Little, Director of Athletics, at the university, and Coach Winterble, the team is to have som: indoor courts that will enable it to practice the year round. Great thanks is also due to some of the people around Madison who have willingly lent their concrete courts for early season practice. Page 19! INTRAMURAL i. Phi Delta Phi Baseball Champions 1926 1927 . Under the guidance of George Berg and his capable staff of assistants, the Intra- mural department has had its most successful year since its introduction into the program of athletics at Wisconsin. Too much credit cannot be given these men for the manner in which they are conducting their department, which is gaining in popularity with the student body every year. During the year 1926-27 approximately 1,500 men students took part in the sport program offered by the Intramural department. The competition among the participants was the keenest type in all of the athletic events offered. Besides the interfraternity teams there were also those representing the independent and dormitory groups which participated in their respective leagues. The program of the department is divided into divisions, the sports being given ratings of major, intermediate, and minor. Points for the Badger Bowl being awarded according to the rating of the event. Basketball Basketball created the most interest among the fraternities and the resulting race saw the keenest competition among the Greek basketeers. Practically every fraternity on the campus had a team entered in the hopes of coming out on top. After the prelimi- nary and semi-final games had been played, the Alpha Chi Rho ' s, Beta Theta Pi ' s, Chi Psi s and Sigma Pi ' s were left to fight for the championship. The championship game was played between the Beta ' s and the Alpha Chi Rho ' s. It was a nip and tuck affair through- out, featured by close guarding on the part of both teams. The Alpha Chi Rho ' s, due to superior passing and basket shooting came out on the long end of a 11-8 count, thus win- ning the championship with Shaw, Black, Semnier, Andersen, and Bodden in their lineup. Sigma Chi Football Champions Page 29S Alpha Chi Rho Championship Basketball Team BEseball Baseball proved to be the big drawing card in the spring and resulted in a race featured by upsets. In the finals the Phi Delta Phi s, with a well balanced team won the championship. Bowling Bowling claimed a large list of entries and was very popular during the early winter months. During the first semester the teams battled for the leadership of the divisions. The second semester saw the winners enter the finals. The Phi Delta Phis, by winning 1 3 games and only losing 5 were the champions. Sigma Phi Epsilon was second and Theta Delta Chi, third. Football, etc. The football race came to an end in a tie between the Sigma Chis and Farmhouse. The game was played on a muddy field and was a hard fought battle throughout. The Beta ' s showed the way to the other Greek athletes in the indoor track meet and ran off with first place. Touch football was won by Alpha Chi Sigma. The cross country championship went to Farmhouse, who also came out on top of the heap in wrestling. The Sigma Chis won first place in free throwing. The Supremacy Trophy Last year the Intramural department started a new innovation when they offered a large trophy known as the Badger Bowl to the fraternity getting the largest number of points in interfraternity competition. This trophy, is to be held by the fraternity that is supreme in interfraternity athletics for one year, and passes on to the winner each fall. Beta Theta Pi was the winner of the Badger Bowl the first year it was offered. It is very remarkable to note that although the Betas did not win first place in any of the sports they entered, they amassed a sum total of points large enough to place the coveted Badger Bowl in their mantel for one year. On this years ' program there are still many events to be run off this spring and all of the fraternities are still hopeful of making enough points to win the Badger Bowl. Phi Delta Phi Bowling Champions Page 299 II ' m Work, and the joy of it! Bear-Claw always was a hunter, and yoi ought to see him down a goose in full flight A whirr of wings, a glint of hurtling flint and .food falling into the lake from tb sky! But whatever Bear-Claw, Wolf, and tha veteran artisan, Stone-Knife can turn tree ' s wrapper into the finest craft afloat Balance, poise, and speed! (Yet, have you ever watched the youni thing, Waving Fern, as she prepares th softest deer skins for a robe?) T I VI TI WISCONSIN LIFE Page 304 Page 305 BEFORE there was any University of Wisconsin, there was a Winnebago village on the lake shore, where Adams and Tripp Halls now stand. Very long ago, they say, two devoted Indian lovers lived there. The name of the maiden was Wissep-hu, which means Silver Maple, and the young brave was called Ho-po-ko-e-kau, meaning Glory of the Morning. While Ho-po-ko-e-kau was on a hunting expedition, Wissep-hu fell ill of a fever, and when he returned they told him she was dead. In his agony of grief and lone- liness, he climbed up the hill behind the village, where the Indians had built mounds in the shapes of animals. As he stood looking out over the wide lake and the wooded shores, he stretched out his arms and cried, ■Oh, Wissep-hu, tell me how I may find my way to you in the Happy Hunting Grounds! He flung himself down on the effigy of a bird, and buried his face in the long sweet grass. And then he felt the earth beneath him quiver, and a stir of air about him. He was borne up into the air on the back of a mighty bird, and carried away beyond the clouds to the Happy Hunting Grounds. Silver Maple and Glory of the Morning, as they walked in the meadows of paradise, remembered the lakes and hills of the land where they had been so happy. Let us go back for a while, Wissep-hu, said Glory of the Morning, and see how it looks now. They say that wonderful changes have taken place, and I would like to see them. So they mounted on the back of the great bird, and it flew with them past the Milky Way, and among the spinning planets, till at last it sank into its effigy again. For a moment the two Indians sat breathless with the thrill of their journey. Then they thanked the bird for its kindness, got up, and looked about them. Pate 306 What a magical thing has hafjpened! Would all the Indian villages in the world brought together make such a village as has grown up here among the Four Lakes? There is a noise like the humming of bees coming from the red-roofed build- ings that have replaced the Indians ' tiny homes. That is because they are full of freshmen. Page W7 Wissep-hu and Ho-jx-ko- e-kau had never seen any freshmen before, but they decided, after a few days of observation, that they would rather be mere Indian spirits. Don ' t they use bows and more? asked Wissep-hu when she saw the eggs fly at the bag rush. Page 308 Ho-po-ko-e-kau was inter- ested in the amplifier at the Varsity Welcome that made the voice of the Great White Chief sound as loud as thunder, hut Wissep-hu was more excited over the clothes the girls wore. The women wear war- paint now. she said tri- umphantly. Page 309 The Frosh seemed to have good apt eliles in spite of the way they were treated. Football was more exciting than la crosse, Ho-po-ko-e- kau decided, even though no one was killed, and the bands and cheering beat any Winnebago war-whoops he had ever heard. Page 310 After cheering the team at the send-offs, our hero and heroine were loyal Wiscon- siniles. Glory of the Morn- ing sped on spirit feet be- side the champion runners in the cross-country races, but Silver Maple was the only one to see him cross the line with the winners. Page 311 This delightful carnival of novel decorations, and non- sense, and noise that is Homecoming! All the peo- ple in the world must be here! Ho-po-ho-e-kau would have liked to compete for the turkey in the Thanksgiving races, but Wissep-hu wished he would learn to play a saxophone. f ' -f V : -. v.- v, Page 312 He quite enjoyed learning to fox-trot, hut he threatened not to take Wissef -hu to any more filays if she bobbed her hair, and she did love to see the plays! Page 313 She took special inventory of the styles, too, and Ho- po-ko-e-kau took inventory of the trophy room. Silver cups, he decided, were su- perior to scalps as signs of victory, because they left your best enemies ready for another good fight. Page 314 It ; Winter introduced them to new thrills: basketball, ski- ing, and other winter sports. They used to make snow- men in the days of the Win- nebagos ' glory, but the red- skinned maidens would have been amazed at the games the pale face girls played. Page 3i; The greatest winter thrill of all was ice-boating. But what was all this talk about kings and queens? — on ice- boats, too! The sky lent its stars to the great white pal- ace, and inside they are holding a great pow-wow. Two Indian wraiths had more fun at Prom than any- one else. Page 316 How different was this se- date modern riding from that Ho-po-ko-e-kau used to love in the old days! These tame, sleek animals were another strange sight. As for the White Man ' s magic that they called a newspaper, the intricacies of its production seemed stupendous. Page 317 Here is a strange and solemn procession. Has a great chief died? Wissep-hu was much amused to find that this gloomy spec- tacle had something to do with a great, mysterious feast. After that they had another pow-wow in the great white palace, led by another king and queen. They are building another palace on the shore of the lake. ' ' I thought it must take a hundred years to finish such a building, said Ho-po-ko-e-kau, astounded at the swift- ness with which the red girders swung into place. Page 318 He had to admit that he could not outdo Chuck when it came to running and jumping, though he had once surfiassed all his In- dian comrades. Wissep-hu was quite embarrassed when she arrived at the Rocketeers ' Prom minus a red ribbon. She had forgotten she was only a ghost. Page 319 Ho-po-ko-e-kau declared that no self-respecting In- dian brave would ever dress and act like a girl, but after he saw Haresfoot he began to think he had missed some good fun. Page no As spring advanced, there were rrwre of those fascinat- ing things called initia- tions. Silver Maple and Glory of the Morning spent many a bright afternoon watching a game called military drill. Page 321 They loved the warm morn- ings, too, when Lincoln Terrace was crowded with students enjoying a few minutes of relaxation be- tween classes. Wisssp-hu didnt like baseball as much as Ho-po-ko-e-kau did, but she always made him take her to the scene of action whenever there was a note of a serenade. Page 322 During Mothers ' Weekend, the 1 ndians fell a little lone- some. They wished they had someone to show over the campus. The ceremony of Senior Swingout, when the women to graduate, donned caps and gowns, impressed them mightily, but still they felt downcast. Pane 323 Till they stole a sail one glorious day. The festival of Venetian Night, with its fireworks, floats, and aquatic stunts, didn t surprise them half as much as a peep over some- one ' s shoulder at the inside cover of the new Badger. They also had a chance to see that people still knew what bows and arrows were. Page 314 Wissefi-hu was almost frightened back to the Happy Hunting Grounds when she heard the Memo- rial Day salutes. Both she and Ho-po-ho-e-kau were glad to see the emancipa- tion of the Frosh as they threw their caps into the fire. They don ' t act as if they were very old, do they? asked Ho-po-ko-e-kau as they watched the pajama parade. Page 325 Ajler the crew send-off, the alumni began to drift into town. Indians aren ' t the only ones who feel the call of the Hill by the largest of the Four Lakes. At last the time came for the final ceremonies of graduation. The black gowned seniors receive their diplomas and listened to farewell speeches. Page 316 The Glory of the Morning and Silver Maple walked sadly up the hill, now de- serted, and looked for the last time on the land they loved. I am glad that this time we are leaving Wisconsin together, said Ho-po-ko-e- kau and they turned to the faithful waiting bird. Page 327 Pnge 32S GOVERNMENT T.Harmon J. Sifle H. C, Thoma J. E GiUin C.E.Nelson L.Larson J. H McCartney D D Kerth President Glenn Frank Dean S. H. Goodnigh D. Barr J.Kyle W. Wilke J Sperling P. Greisser W.Peterson R. Engelk e B. Gale Student Senate The Student Senate is a body of seventeen members including representatives from each of the classes and major campus activities, working under a charter granted by the Board of Regents in 1916 for the government of undergraduate men. The group aims to solve various problems relative to student life and activities and to strengthen the co-operation between the faculty and students. Officers Glenn Frank Daniel Kerth Paul Greisser President President pro-tem Secretary Committee Chairmen Daniel Kerth . Donald Barr Charles Nelson Executive Committee . Judicial Committee Government Committee Members Daniel Kerth, ' 27 John Gillin, ' 27 Jack Kyle, ' 27 Jo McCartney, ' 27 Laurence Eklund, ' 27 Thomas Harmon Donald Barr. ' 28 Paul Creisser, ' 28 Wesley Peterson, ' 28 Robert Engelke, ' 29 Bryant Gale, ' 29 Jerome Sperling, ' 30 Representative of Administrative Body Lloyd Larson, ' 27 ... Athletic Board Charles Nelson, ' 27 Harry Thoma, ' 28 . Walter Wilke, ' 28 James Sipfle, ' 28 . Union Board Badger Board Forensic Board Cardinal Board Page 330 L.Zimmerman M. Horr M. Campbell J. Strachan F. Ludden M. Birk A.Brown B.Anderson D. Bucklin E.Roberts H. Keeler D. Stolte S, G. A. Council The Women ' s Self-Government Association is an organization of all undergraduate women who are enrolled in the University. It is governed by an executive council com- posed of the elected officers, major chairmen, and class representatives and a legislative Board of representatives from each house in which live three or more girls. Its purpose is to maintain a high standard of social life on the campus, not only through rules made and enforced by the university women themselves, but by providing the finest social opportunities; to foster and direct worthy activities; to give voice to the public opinion of University women, and to represent them in any project undertaken by undergraduates on the campus. Officers Alice Brown President Margaret Birk .... Vice-President Blythe Anderson Secretary Florence Ludden Treasurer Dorothy Bucklin . . Census Chairman Major Chairmen Elizabeth George . . Elections Chairman Dorothea Stolte . . . Judicial Chairman Jean Strachan . . . District Chairman Mary L. Campbell, Junior Advisory Commission Louise Zimmerman, Ruth Lauder, Publicity Lee Fairchild Bacon . . Executive Secretary Class Organization Presidents Elizabeth George .... Blue Dragon Elise Roberts Yellow Tassel Helen Keeler Red Gauntlet Marion Horr Green Button W. S. G. A. Board Members Lois Almon Ruby Alton Hazel Anderson Segne Anderson Gladys Bahr E. Babcock Wilhemina Bell Mildred Bemis Gertrude Beyreis Helen Bird Martha Black Angeline Blaze Elsa Bohmrich Marjorie Borockman Helene Boyer Hester Butterfield Susanne Burdick Margaret Cambier Ora Campbell Ruth Comer Juliet Covey Ann Cooke Maxine Corbin Edna Dale Adele Daskem Alice Davis Lura Davison Helen Dewhurst Cora Dinwiddie Esther Dixon Loretta Dodge Roberta Donham Jean Droppers Marjorie Droppers M. Virginia Ellis Katherine Fahrman Alice Field Katherine Foster Lorraine Fritz Margaret Green Dorothy Gregory Alice Halderson Constance Hampel BiDA Hand ' Betty Hannum Mary Hawkins Beatrice Hilles Norma Hoffenburt Edith Mae Holt Guinevere Hubbard Bernice Izaakowitch Joyce Jackson Katherine Keebler Thalia Keller Arleigh Kent Elsie Kind Arlone Kinkaid Julia Kohl Lilly Kruecer Rose LauSer Ruth Leamer Edna Laumann Lucille Legler Hazel Lenhart Louise Lyon Anne Melnic Katherine Metcalf Olivia Miller Margaret Nelson Paula Neumann Lucy Newell Alice Nichols Doris Nicholson Judith Ninman Susie Pate Mary Patterson Gwendolyn Paul Lucy Peck Charlotte Rattman Erna Reinhart Edith Rose Charlotte Rzoric Loraine Schmitt Helen Silverman Harryet Smith Elna Sorenson Savilla Struble Hazle Stewart Lillian Shencky Mariam Snett Thelma Simmons Jean Taggart Gertrude Taylor Martha Thompson Evelyn Wahlquist Marian Walker Violet Winkler Mation Zilley Page 331 PUBLICATION: I H. C. I HOMA Editor L. L. Grambs Business Manager The 1928 Badger May this Badger mean to you — Wisconsin! In their growth in size from the paper covered booklets of earlier years and in their consistent improvement since that time, The Badgers have reflected in a striking way the growth and development of our University. If the 1928 Badger adequately repre- sents the Wisconsin of today both in spirit and in fact, and if in addition it is able by its attempts rather than by its successes to serve as some inspiration to the succeeding staffs it will have fulfilled its purpose. If the efforts we have put forth, if the dreams we have dreamed, if the spirit we have tried to instill in this book reaches you, and in the years to come clears away the mists of time and carries you back to Wisconsin — her glories, her traditions — then success is ours. May this Badger mean to you — Wisconsin! The Editor. t I- I. Cunningham E. Freytag D. Stenjem C. [ )llard cJ . Best Hyde E. Merica C. Jamison Page 334 I 1, Alltii D. Trenary W. Grube J. Hyde J. Bar, W. Jer ker ensen W, Schnathorst M. Stevens I . baxton M, McLelland M, Byard E. Jenison O. Gottlieb J. Smith G. K Crowell S. Kalish Acknowledgments The success of a year book is dependent upon the support and cooperation extended in its production. This year ' s staff while one of the smallest in the history of the Badger has been more loyal than the imagination of those in charge had dared to expect. This spirit of mutual endeavor and cooperation has extended beyond the realms of the staff into the outside world. Those particularly worthy of acknowledgment are : Herb Brockhausen, of the Brock Engraving Company, whose counsel, enthusiasm and creative genius has made possible the 1928 Badger. Fred Schmelzkopf, Superintendent of The Cantwell Printing Company, whose unselfish devotion to the book has made possible many technical and typographical improvements. Miss Taylor of the Photoart House who has been especially helpful in the selection of scenic and feature pictures. Miss Seiffert of the De Longe Studio who has contributed much of her time and energy to the improvement of the Studio pictures. Miss G. Martin, for very kind consideration in distribution of Senior Summary cards. John Bergstresser, Alumni Recorder, and the committee which was of such valuable assistance in the selection of the alumni representatives. Miss Juliana Cotton whose inspiring poetic theme added much to the scenic section. The Badger and Carl Thomas Studios for the Studio photography. The Wooley Studio for the pictures of Dr. Bradley and Carl Johnson and those of the women ' s dancing groups. The David Molloy Company for their careful attention and helpful suggestions in the designing of the cover. Ml lids 1 1. 1 iaincr K Murphv J Dn.ppLTs G. Dcrhtr H. Willard H. Bcatty G. Jones B. Hanswn S. Orth B. Bacon D. Jones Page 335 W. Gucnther E. Holt G. Lohman I. Bunker C Williams E. Cooper R. Clement I. Benson Editorial Staff Harry Thoma Editor Louis Grambs Business Manager Wm. Schnathorst, AssI. to the Editor E. Saxton . Acting Associate Editor Josephine Barker Office Manager D. Jones, G. Jones . . Secretaries Division I — Elisabeth Saxton Olca Gottlieb . . Organization Chief Byron Hanson .... Fraternities Henrietta Hainer . Sororities Delaphine Rosa . Campus Groups Gertrude Lohman . . Honor Societies Ida Benson Music Gordon Derber .... Cadets Helen Willard, Church and Y. M. C. A. Gertrude Smith Campus Life Don Abert Stage Margaret Olds . . Publications Robert Murphy . . . Forensics Hamilton Beatty . Special Occasions Division II — Mary Francis Byard Sylvia Orth Aces Mildred Stevens . . Administration Stanley Kalish, Editor . . Athletics Winifred Guenther Richard Johns F. Schauer W. Randolph J. Strachen M. Lloyd R. Johns R. Allen D. Rosa S ' Higley Barbara Bacon, Editor . Classes Jean Droppers Edith Mae Holt Helen Allyn, Editor . . . Alumni Elizabeth Murphy Kenneth Crowell . . Engraving Ruth Allen .... Government Don Trenary, Editor . . Satire Robert DeHaven C. DoLLARD, Mem. Union and Wis. Union Marjorie Mac Lelland, Editor, Women Janet Smith Athletics Jean Strachen .... Activities Edward J enison Proof Richard Clement Copy Elizabeth Goebel Jane Hyde Index Wallace Jensen .... Printing William Grube . , . Photography Stuart Higly, Mary Lloyd, Dorothy Hess, Merton Lloyd, Isabel Bun- ker, Eleanor Cooper, Jean Polk, Lillian Klindt, Florence Schauer, Dorothy Glover, Addison Muel- ler, Catherine Williams, W. H. Randolph, Ruth Critchell Editorial Assistants E. James R. Newell D. Harter G. Clarke B. Buckley D. Abert A. Remley P. Edkins E. Fritschel H. Goldstein Page 336 , Nelson , Crosby D Ligh W. Fitzgerald S, Morris H. Dellicker D. Wilson M. Lorig C. Frick A. Batten R. Critchell A. IDubber . Polk . Allen F. Seybold G. Carroll L. Gross C. Trayser Business Staff Fred Crosby . Asst. Business Mgr. Grace Clark . Secy to Business Mgr. Lucy Newell . . . Office Mgr. Alanson Remley Treasurer Circulation Dept. Josephine Nelson . . . Manager Ruth Buckley . . Asst. Manager Reva Boll .... Office Manager Ruth McDaniels, Jean Talbot, Ruth Boll, Betty James, Women ' s Dormitories Phyllis Edkins, Women ' s Organizations Edith Rose FredJandry Men ' s Dormitories Walter Fitzgerald Don Abert Men ' s Organizations Henry Dellicker Advertising Dept. E. G. Fritschel .... Manager Howard Goldstein Asst. Manager in charge of local advertising Advertising Assisstants Nancy Sasser, Gaynold Carroll, Fred Seybold, Elizabeth Campbell Elizabeth Davidson, Alice Batten, Marion Driessen, Marx Lorig. Stanley Goldstein, Edith M.Holt Virginia Fischer, Florence Axen Merchandising Service James Allen Manager Oscar Foseid .... Assistant David Flambeau Assistant Copy and Collections Charles Trayser .... Manager C. L. Rauschenberger Assistant Ruben T. Lueloff . . Assistant Organizations Dept. David Lich Manager C. J . Frick Asst. Manager Louis Gross .... Assistant A. E. Dubber .... Assistant Douglas Wilson . . . Assistant Devore Hitchener Assistant Publicity and Purchasing Agents Donald Harter . g Publicity Agent Sherman Morris Purchasing Agent The 1928 Badger Board John Best President Dorothy Stenjem .... Secretary Ewart Merica . . Editor 1927 Badger Isabel Cunningham Charles Dollard Elmer Freytag, Manager 1927 Badger Grant Hyde . . Faculty Advisor C. L. Jamison Faculty Advisor E. Davidson E. Campbell N. Sasser R. McDaniel F. J and rev E. Goebel R. Boll D. Hitchner Page 337 R. Boll J. Talbot M. Driessen M. Lloyd James M. Nelson Managing Editor NORBERT W. ESCHMEYER Business Manager The Daily Cardinal And speaking of history, did you know that the Daily Cardinal is celebrating its thirty-fifth birthday this year? It was on a clear April morning ' way back in the year 1892 that the deet made its modest bow to a campus which was calling for an organ of news and student expression. From that year to this the Daily Cardinal has continued to serve the student body in a similar manner. Today the student publication has come to mean something more than a mere newspaper, something more than a mere chronological account of the year ' s events. In this great community of ours the Daily Cardinal has come to be a powerful force which daily acquaints the students of the fact that they are members of a body politic, a community of which they are integral members. More than that. The Daily Cardinal in the past hear has become an organ for the expression of student opinion through which many ills have been discussed pro and con and by means of which the students have come to take an even greater interest in the life of state and nation. F. Pollock L. Brooks W. Wise J. SiPFLE E. Freytag The Board of Control Page 338 H. Beatty F. Schauer A. Hirschfield C. Schlaver t ' i L. Bohren R. Clement S. Kalish H. Powell W. Peterson A. Gottlieb From the tempestuous days in the early fall when President Frank decreed that the Daily Cardinal had the right to express the truth as it was evident to the editors, there has been a definite attempt throughout the whole year to adopt the slogan We owe but one loyalty and that to the truth. Several innovations have been made during the past year including the birth of a Weekly Cardinal for mothers, fathers and alumni which, for financial reasons, had a short life but which is being sustained by means of the Sunday edition. Innovations have been made in the business side of the Daily Cardinal which will assure of a better advertising system, better circulation, and better means of collection which will pave the way for the next logical step in the development of the paper — a publ ication plant. And this step will undoubtedly be taken before the opening of the first semester next fall. Plans are ' now under way for the erection of a press, linotype machines and other necessities of a printing plant to be owned and operated by the Daily Cardinal corpora- tion of which every student is a member. When that dream is realized and the new offices in the Memorial Union building are occupied, the Daily Cardinal willjbe able to take its proper place among the leading undergraduate publications of the country. James Nelson Editor E. Hawley M. Lehmkuhl L. Eklund V. Carrier L. Zimmerman Page 339 D. Albrecht M. Fein S. Korman A. [Dennis A. Senske G. Florez I. Ways J. Noys W. Bectc C, Broatz E. Jenison T. Kirmse E. Hintz C. Schlaver M. Swanson A. Gottlieb B. Payne H. B )rre A. Bearder L. Bohren H Allyn PMalsin MOlds KColburn M Roy DZarbell B I, Izaakowitch I Sine M Alsop L Bohren J.Ninman F. Schauer F.Bauer N. Heuer J- Polk K, Hartman F. Holman E.Kissinger R. Lauder O. Bast H Beatty J Gillin E Ferree C Carey M Nutting N. Markhom G. IDuffield R Bookhout W Price .Hawley M. Ashcraft K Kuehne H, Morgan V. Carrier S. Kalish H. Liebman K. Handy D. Potter M. Lemkuhl W. Peterson H. Powell G. Derber C. Eklund P. Greisser A. Eichler W. Steven B. Trogsdorf Editorial Staff Managing Editor Associate Editors Laurence Eklund, Won en ' s Editor . Weekly Editor Weekly Assistants James M. Nelson Vernon Carrier Louise Zimmerman Esther Hawley Vernon Carrier Marvin Lehmkuhl Edward J enison Sports Editor . Stanley Kalish Night Manager . Adelbert Bearder Desk Editors . Hamilton Beatty Richard Clement, Alexander Gott- lieb, Joseph Hobbins, Marvin Lehm- kuhl, Wesley Peterson, Clarence Schlaver, Arthur Senske Skyrockets Editor . Herb Powell Society Editor. . . Lucille Bohren Literary Editor . . Wesley Peterson Theatre Editor . Florence Schauer Music Editor . . Annette Hirschfield Alumni Editor . . Helen Liebman Junior Editors . Beatrice Aronson Catherine Colburn, Dorothy Pot- ter, Idabel Sine Exchange Editor . Kathryn Handy Librarian .... Catherine Kuehn Special Writers Helen Allyn Russell Bookhout, Sylvia Der- mansly, Gene Duffield, Donald Harter, Tom Kirmse, Reene New- man, JudithNinman, Dorothy Potter Warren Price, Harold Rieger, Ida- bel Sine Reporters .... Margaret Alsop Fannie Bauer, Marie Heuer, Rich- ard Johns, Ruth Lauder, Diderich LuNDE, Harriet Morgan, Lester Velie Business Staff Business Manager N. W. Eschmeyer Associate Business Mgrs., E. E. Judkins Calvin Koehring Asst. Business Man. E. H. Ferree Asst. Advertising Man. . Marvin Fein Foreign Advertising Man., Paul Schultz Circulation Man. Joe Bacon Office Assistants . Margaret Nutting Margaret Olds, Pearl Malsin Asst. Circulation Mgrs., D. Benedict Walter Eckers Circulation Asst. . Collection Asst. Advertising Assts. Marjorie Roy, Orval Bast Board of Control Elmer W. Freytag Eliz. Ashcraft . Alice Purcell Erwin Hirsch Melvin Swanson. Florence Pollack Luther E. Brooks Winifred Wise . James Sipfle . President Vice-President Treasurer . Secretary Acting Member C. Braatz P. Schultz E. Jjdkins C. Koehring E. Ferree A. BL-arutr J . Uai Page 340 V. Carrier L. Bohren N. Eschmeyer G. Utter J. Nelson t£. Hawley J . Sipfle W. Peterson J. Martineau C. Braat7 The Summer Session edition of the Daily Cardinal is vastly different from that of the regular session. Coming as it does, during a period in which there are many strangers on the campus, it has as its first object the education of those who have but recently registered to the fact that they are University of Wisconsin students; that they have duties as well as rights; and that they form a compact community. Although the Summer Session edition is published but three days a week, the staff of seven (in contrast with 150 daily workers throughout the regular session) are kept busy from morning to night writing editorials, scraping up news, covering lectures and keeping track of the goings and comings of students. If a college publication may ever be compared to a small-town paper it is during the summer session. But say! it ' s fun. Part of the major work of the Daily Cardinal during the summer is the sponsoring of a water carnival which culminates the social and athletic ac- tivity of the session. To Dean Goodnight is due much praise for his excellent advice and as- sistance in conducting the Summer Ses- sion edition. As director of the summer session he was of invaluable aid to the editor in his attempt to answer the needs of the new students. Business Staff NoRBERT Eschmeyer Clayton Braatz J. M. Martineau James M. Nelson Wesley Peterson LuciLE Bohren . Ruth Gillen Business Mgr. Advertising Mgr. Assoc. Adv. Mgr. Marjory Roy Gladys Utter Editorial Staff Managing Editor Feature Editor Society Editor Church Editor Al. L. Bearder . Esther Hawley Dorothy Potter R. F. Butts . Assl. Adv. Mgr General Secretary . Sports Editor Woman ' s Editor Reporter Reporter Page 341 A. E. Gaik Editor A. P. Kachel Eusin ss Manager Made first appearance in igazme February, 1917 Motto: To present to the students the opportunities in various line of commercial endeavor, and to give them the advice and experience of business men. Editorial Board D. A. Kerth, Chairman W. A. BODDEN D. P. Knott Editor Arthur E. Gaik Faculty Advisor Prof. E. H. Gardner Business Manager Albert P. Kachel Assistant Business Managers Wm. a. Bodden D. A. Kerth Circulation Kenneth G. Marsden, Manager Chester P. Rumpf Editorial Staff George R. Gehrke Paul H. Merriman Lawrence Moe Arnold H. Moeller Walter W. Sauber Albert R. Cole Florence B. Malzahn Business Staff Reuben T. Lueloff Collection Arthur H Robert G. Harold O Schaars, Manager Lauson Leiser Ivanell Skillicorn Eloise Arnold Louisa H. Dengel Christine F. Sachs Richard R. Fischer Mortimer G. Huber Oscar E. Siren Edward J. Fronk Leah E. Watson Leo L. Ellickson Advertising IvEAUx W. Andersen Kenneth J. Williams Accountant Donald E. Gill M, i w - V _ %x ft E . 1, J, f , t . 4 W. Eiodden A, Wegner D. Knott I. Anderson E. Senneff A. Kachel D- Gill R. Lauson L Pritchard W. Carney K. Marsden D Kerth W. Sauber L Moe R Lueloff A. Gaik F. Malzahn C.Sachs 1. Skillicorn B. Zang L. IDengel C. Rumpf Page 342 C!. . A I WOOD Editor E. JORGENSON Business Manager The Country Magazine Date of Organization 1906 Purpose: House Organ of the College of Agriculture and Home Economics Editorial Staff C. N. At WOOD . Irving Cherdron Roland Hartman Jerome Henry . Donald Zellmer Walter Bubbert Editor Managing Editor Alumni Editor Cimcracks Editor Organizations Assistant Hellen Kellogg Josephine Heath Marcia Bennette Ena Bennett Waida Gerhardt LuciLE Legler . Home Ec. Editor Copy Editor Art Editor Alumnae Organizations Assistant Business Staff Emil Jorgenson . Business Manager Ruth WiESS . Harold Menz . Circulation Manager Marion Cook Kenneth McFarlane . Collections Morine Eva Dale Aebischer . Assistant Sadie Muesel Frank Shaller .... Assistant Home Ec. Business Mgr. Collections Assistant Assistant R. Hartman R. Weiss C. Atwood H. Minz J. Heath H. Becker W. Budderts M- Bennett L. Legler D. Zellmer I. Cherdron H Kellog E. Bennett F. Brant Page 34 i D. Abert, Editor J. Allcott, Editor The Octopus A. PoLACHECK, Busi-eis Manager Date of Organization 1919 Purpose: The Octopus mission on the campus is to foster original humor and art, and to main- tain these at a high level among student achievem2nts Motto: A jolly, red-blooded, fun-loving Magazine for the Young Folks, combined with elegant Parlor Entertainment. ' Don Abert John Allcott Allan Polacheck Abe Quisling Franklin Clarke Victor Seastone GORDY SwARTHOUT Richard Brayton Louise Ploner Helen Barker Jane Bull Elizabeth Davidson Edward Droppers Charlotte Flint Esther Fosshage Executive Board Eiito.-s John Ash, Exchange Her3 Powell Busin ' iss Manag2r Asst. Bus. Manager Advertising Mgr. Ralph Parkin Bessie Gustafson Grant Judge Editorial Board Alexander Gottlieb Art S.aff Idell Urquhart Leland Lamb Business Staff Ruth Fowler Clara Gre e Elizabeth Hollnagel Katherine Howard Dedrich Lunde Francis McGovern Collections Mgr. Office Mgr. Accountant Glen Florez Alfred Reed Marcia Bennette Clark Spargur Alfred Proctor Glenna Sherman Gordy Stauffacher John White Dorothy Vandervest Mortimer Huser M, Huber J Ash R. Parkin E. Droppers L, Ploner B. Dt lan L. Lamb D. Abert D. Vandervest W. Slavic H. Powell J, Allcott J. Powell M. Bennette C. Stauffacher B. Langland C Grebe B. Gustafson A. Polacheck F. Clarke Page 344 James B. Hatcher Editor Fred A. Sauer Business Manager Wisconsin Athletic Review James B. Hatcher W. H. Randolph Fred A. Sauer . Roy Thiel Charles Foster, Date of Organization 1920 Editor Assl. Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager John Allcott Writers Richard Clement Stanley Kalish Howard Jirtle Byron Hanson Edward J enison Chris Zillman Gordon Derber Art Editor S- Kalish E. Jenison C. Foster G. Derber F. Sauer J . Hatcher W Randolph R. Thiel Page 345 R. I . HoMEWOOD Editor M. J. Williams Manager The Wisconsin Engineer Board of Directors F. E. VoLK, Librarian of College of Engi- neering, Chmn. and Advisory Editor. R. S. McCaffrey, Prof, of Mining and Metallurgy, Secretary. N. E. French, Alumni Member. R. T. HoMEWOOD, Editor M. J. Williams, Manager. Staff M. J. Williams, Manager R. L. J. Cleveland, Advertising H. D. Crawford, National Advertising R. A. MiLLERMASTER, Engineering Review B. R. Teare, Athletics R. W. Leach, Advertising G. C. Ward, Editorials S. B. ToBEY, Advertising 0. L. Kowalke, Prof, of Chemical En- gineering. G. L. Larson, Prof. Steam and Gas En- gineering. L. F. Van Hagen, Prof, of Civil Engineer- ing. T. HoMEWOOD, Editor 1. W. Myers, Jr., Advertising Marvin Hersh, Campus Notes E. A. Abendroth, J. Levin, E. Birkenwald, R. R. Smith, Art N. B. Thayer, Daniel J. Kuenzli, Circulation Glenn G. Wolfe, Alumni Notes B. R. Teare R. W. Leach S. B Tobey H. D. Crawford M. J. Williams G.G.Wolfe P.H.Rosenthal G.C.Ward J.W.Myers M. Hersh J. Levin D. J. Kuenzli R. A. Millermaster R. T. Homewood E. Birkenwald R. R. Smith Page 346 C. G. Sghaeffer Editor W. C. Beck Business Manager The Wisconsin Literary Magazine Editorial Board c. g. schaeffer e. c. soderberg Viola Wendt, Nelson Editorial Staff John Gillen Ralph Izard Editor in Chief Associate Editor Gladys Feld, Carl O. Lauriston Sharp Daisy Grenzow Mackenzie Ward Edna Miller Gladys Fist Jack Roe N. T. Hand Ben Lancland Jr., Art Editor Ross Rusch . Ed Droppers Margaret Ruster , Russell Dymond . Mark Schorer . Advertising Department Ida Benson Nancy Sasser Elizabeth Cambpell Melvin Swanson Business Asst. Business Distribution Advertising Circulation Business Staff Mgr. Distribution Department Mgr. Marjorie Gibson Mgr. Margaret Ruester Mgr. Sylvia Dermansly Mgr. Ethel Straka Business Assistants Ferdinand Geiger Clayton Braatz L. Scott Marsh N. T. Hand E. Soderbers J. Roe N. Sasser M. Ward I. Sine I. Benson M. Renter E. Miller L. S. Marsh C Nelson E. Campbell W. C Beck W. Wise B. Langland G. Feld W. Paff M. Schorer V. Wendt S. Dermansley C. G. Schaeffer J.Alexander E. Droppers F. Ceig Page 347 The Alumm Magazine Bart E. McCormick, General Secretary and Editor Etta Radke, Assistant The Cjeneral Alumni Association is a voluntary, cooperative enterprise, animated by a desire to serve the University, the alumni, former students, active students and prospec- tive students. The General Alumni Association is a medium through which alumni (and this includes former students) mav render effective assistance to th e University, thus enabling the University to constantly render greater service to the state and nation, to exert a broader influence for good, and to improve upon the high standards and great accomplishments of the past. The General Alumni Association is an organized, informed, interested, active force for the purpose of correlating the activities of the alumni with students and faculty, a force that may come to the defense of the University in time of need and that may support it at all times. There are more than sixty thousand living alumni and former students of the Univer- sity. If they were all members of a great army of boosters, if they were welded into one great force in support of the University, nothing could impede the progress of our Alma Mater. The Wisconsin Law Review Board of Editors Prof. W. H. Page, Editor-in-Chief Frank T. Boesel Ray a. Brown W. G. Rice H. S. Richards Oliver S. Rundell John B. Sanborn John D. Wickhem Board of Student Editors R. W. Vauchan, Student Editor-in-Chief Isadore G. Alk Glen H. Bell c. e. fugina Virginia L. North Roger R. Tuttrup Harold J. Sporer Willis G. Sullivan Robert B. Tibbs Page 348 WISCONSIN UNION Lowell Frautschi The Wisconsin Union has the lofty aim of giving material ex- pression to the idealism of Wisconsin men. This year its chief contribution to university life has been cul- tural. Good music, good dancing, good discussion, have under its sponsorship, enriched the recreational life of students and their friends. For years the Wisconsin Union has played gcd-father to the Memorial Union project, which in another twelve months will finally provide it with that heme which the university community has so long needed. Then the cultural and social contribution of the Wisconsin Union will begin to match the needs of Wisconsin men and women. The machinery of the Union is ready at all times to foster under- takings which will benefit its members, the men students of the university. Lowell Frautschi, President. Page }S0 G. E. Dawson J. Fairbank F. Orth C. Nelson J. Burrus V. Carrier E. Merica L. Frautschi H. Konnak C. Kluckhohn The Union Board Wisconsin Union Concert Series During the past winter this series included six concerts, giving Madison and the university the greatest musical season of thei ' ' history. The Ukrainian National Chorus, Mario Chamlee, Harold Bauer and Pablo Casals, Sergie Rachmaninoff, Fritz Kreisler, and Sigrid Onegin were the artists, and Clyde Kluckhohn, with John Fairbank assisting, were the concert managers for Union Board. Union Board Dances at Lathrop Hall Every Friday and Saturday evening on which parties were sanc- tioned this year, students enjoyed these dances at Lathrop Hall. For several years they have retained their popularity as the best student dances, and as soon as possible will be transferred to the beautiful ballroom in the Memorial Union building. Gordon Daw- son was in charge this year. The Dennishawn Dancers As an experiment in bringing stage productions to Madison, Union I3oard presented the Dennishawn Dancers at the Garrick Theatre on February 9. So successful was the experiment, under the direction of Harold Konnak, that similar prod uctions wilj probably be secured next season. Page 351 G. La Budde R. Polachek J . Hanks R. Ela M. Lawton E. Fronk ' E. Cole R. Stebbins W. Walsh R. Andre G. Florez L. Sharp B. Gale H. Rasche L Bushnell The Assisting Staff Although the executive body of the Wisconsin Union is the Union Board, yet many of its enterprises are carried out by the Assisting Staff. The Staff is elected from a field of candidates on the basis of performance. Headquarters for Student Activities The Union Building, formerly President Birge ' s residence, is a temporary home for student offices, pending the completion of the Memorial Union. Union Board, represented this year by Ewart Merica, is custodian, and has met the need for increased space by securing jurisdiction of Langdon Hall from the Board of Regents. w§ m Harold Bauer t- ' ritz Kreisler Alexander Koshetz Sigrid Oncsin Pahio Casals Page 352 MEMORIAL UNION F. C H. L Clausen Byron G. Shrimski L. Gilbert I. Seaman J. D. Phillips J Dollard H. O. Seymour The Memorial Union Executive Committee C. A. Johnson J. S. Lord M. Mason G. I. Haight W. J. Kohler E. H.Gardner H. C. Bradley P. F. Butts This is the year the Union building took form in steel and stone, and these are the men who made it possible. Seven years of hard work by this alumni Executive Committee plus the giving of 17,000 students, alumni, and friends culminated last fall in letting a $773,000 contract for the first two units of the building, unequipped. The courage and the patience of the committee, many times tried, was tested to the utmost when it was announced in October that the lowest contractor ' s bid was $1 15,000 more than the cash on hand. The committee and its army of faithful student and alumni subscribers, rather than cut the quality of the building, faced the issue and in an emer- gency three weeks campaign raised $25,000 in cash and $90,000 on a note. The contract was let November 4 and actual construction, the dream of two college generations, has been continuous and rapid ever since. The central clubhouse unit and the commons unit will be done, but unfurnished, by 1928. The Executive Committee and everybody interested in having the Union are now working intensively for the $400,000 that will pay off the $90,000 note and buy furniture and equipment. If the building can be furnished, it will open early in 1928. John Dollard, ' 22, who as secretary has steered the Union project since 1922, raising pledges from $803,000 to $1,120,000 and cash from $221,000 to $774,000 besides playing an influential part in the undergraduate life of the University, left Wisconsin November 1 5 to become assistant to Pres. Max Mason of the University of Chicago, a Wisconsin alum- nus and teacher, and member of the Union Executive Committee. Dollard was succeeded by Porter Butts, ' 24, former alumni recorder and one time editor of the Daily Cardinal and president of the Haresfoot Club. He has the three-fold duty of directing the collection of outstanding pledges, of helping secure new funds for fur- niture and the third unit, and of planning with the University Committee the scheme for the furni.shing and operation of the building. John Dollard Porter Butts Pate 3S4 Designed in the architectural style of the Northern Italian Renaissance, the Union is in harmony with the general university building scheme and a proper companion for the beautiful Historical Library. It is the first step in the comprehensive development of the lower campus which is projected. The Union is built of buff Madison stone, trimmed with gray Bedford stone. A low roof of green tile, projecting pylons, a great curving bay. and the broken outlines of its three units make the building ideally suited for its site among the elm trees of the bending lakeshore The flagstone terrace stretching to the miniature lake harbor will be one of the beauty spots of the campus. The building, entirely completed, will cost $1,500,000 and will be the finest and most useful structure the university possesses. What a Union Is For Nothing that the professor or laboratory can do for the student can lake the place of daily close com- panionship with hundreds of his fellows. President Van Hise, Inaugural Address, 1904. The Union Will Exist to Make Wisconsin a More Human Place A community building like the Union is the result of a desire that is reaching universal proportions — a desire to enrich the barren hours outside the classroom, to bring human relations in education into their proper place of importance and usefulness, to restore personality to the university. Every university which has experienced the pains of size realizes the need for the restoration of edu- cation to its former personal basis, for the elementary physical facilities where the contagion and com- pulsion of a common purpose may be felt — to the profit of the intellectual and spiritual life of the Uni- versity. The need is being answered with Unions, commons and dormitories. The Union is the Recognition of the Importance of the Leisure Hour It is a place to meet, to eat, to talk, to work, and to play — under friendly conditions. It provides the facilities for creative work not afforded by the ordinary college plant : student activity rooms, the theater, sketch rooms, debate halls. It provides facilities for productive play: good books to read, good music to hear, good pictures to see, good games to play. It provides a natural and informal meeting place for faculty and students, where they do not have to talk shop, where the student may be initiated into the fine art of consequential and inconsequential conversation, where the appetite for the independent search of knowledge may be stimulated, and where the teacher may learn what a student really thinks about. The Memorial Union building will give us a living room that will convert the University from a house ' of learning into a ' home ' of learning. President Frank President Frank Dr. H. C. Bradley The University Committee on the Union That the Union may make its most valuable contribution to the social and intellectual life of the University, the president has appointed an all-university committee on the Union, representing students, faculty, alumni, and regents, which is to plan for the functioning of the building. The members of the committee are : Pres Glenn Frank, ex- John Bergstresser, ' 25 officio Norman Cameron Dr. H. C. Bradley, ex George Chandler, ' 16 ' I i . chairman Porter Butts, secretary Alice Brown, ' 27 Lowell Frautschl ' 27 Ldward Jension, ' 29 Clyde Kluckhohn, ' 28 Harold A. Konnak. L2 Oscar J. Schmiege. L2 Jerome Sperling. ' 30 Bernice Winchell. ' 27 Col. Joseph F. Barnes Prof. E. H. Byrne Page 35 S A. F. Gallistel Prof, E. H, Gardner Dean S. H. Goodnicjht, 05 Prof. E. B. Gorejon Prof, O. F. L. Hagen Don Halverson. ' 18 C V. Hibbard. 00 George Little Bart McCormick. ' 04 Miss A. L. Marlatt Prof. Alexander Mei- KLEJOHN Dr. W. a. Mowry Miss F. L. Nardin M B. Olbrich. 02 Arthur Peabody, ' 13 J. D. Phillips ■pROF. W G Rice, Jr. Prof. A. W. Hopkins. 03 Dean C S Slighter Prof. T. L. Jones, ' 96 Miss B M. Trilling. ' Prof G. W. Keitt. 11 Prof W. H Varnum Prof O. L. KowALKE. 06 Dr. F. L Weston, ' 21 Prof. C. D. Leake, ' 20 17 The Union Grows On November 10 — a hole. And then overnight the mushroom grew. Work shanties went up. Fifty men appeared, with ham- mers and shovels, mortar and sand. The hole was quickly filled. In all kinds of winter weather and in the teeth of the wind over Lake Mendota the work went on. Here are men riveting the build- ing together, 100 feet in the air. This day the thermometer read 5 below. On February 23 the first stone was laid. Porter Butts, Lowell Frautschi, and Dr. Harold Brad- ley celebrated informally. From Science Hall this was the view on March 15 — the steel frame done, the stone up to the second floor. By Christmas, 1927, the shell of the building will be complete. The job then will be to furnish it. Page 3S6 DRAMATIC: We ' re off to Europe John Mackin as Kathie Meet the Princer ' Sailing through seas of romance, laden with the wit and laughter of modern collegiates, and dancing with the spontaneity and joy of life, the good ship Nauseana brought Meet the Prince! twenty-ninth annual production and original musical comedy of the Haresfoot club to over 30,000 theater-goers in thirteen middle western cities. With the background of a student tour to Europe, in which everyone travels third class, the officers of the ship are students who are totally innocent of the science of navigation, and enticing beautiful girls distract wavering attention, the search for the long lost Prince of Heidlberg occupies the foreground. Gus, the collegiate baggage smasher, is bamboozled by the crooked envoys of Heidlberg into impersonating the long lost Prince, thereby letting himself in for a great deal of complicated situations. Greta, the vampish princess travelling incognito straightens out the tangle. Wilfred Roberts, ' 28, took the part of Gus, while Kerbert Earle, ' 28. who was Paula in Mary Ann, impersonated Greta. Russell Winnie, ' 27, president of the club for 1927, played Bill, while other men in the show were James Nelson, ' 27, as Gerry; Bryant Gale, ' 29, as Bob; Francis O ' Connor, ' 29, as Charlie Batz; Nathan Hindin, ' 28, as Louie; Kenneth Webster, ' 28, as Herr Soot, the Prime Minister; John Mackin, ' 27, as Kathie; John Moran, ' 27, as Beulah Batz; Paul Faust, ' 27, as Al, and Harold Himes, ' 27, as Joe. Kilrb Earle Page 3f)l Heidelberg The Play ' s the Thing ' Haresfoot started out on its itinerary March 31, giving its first performance in Rockford, April 1, and including Chicago, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Peoria, Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee, Sheboygan, Oshkosh, Appleton, and Janesville on the road tour. Besides this, six shows were given in Madison, on two week-ends. Over seventy-five students made the long itinerary with the club. The show consisted of a twenty-eight-man chorus, twelve-man cast, eighteen-piece orchestra under the direction of Herbert Allen, ' 28, and the production staff. William Schroeder, ' 28, was named business manager, Frank Worthington, ' 27, publicity director, John Leigh, ' 28, program editor, and Ralph Scheutz, stage manager. With an unusual plot which contained much room for action, Meet the Prince! was especially fit for a musical comedy in which male university students played the girl ' parts, as well as other parts in the cast, chorus, and pro- duction. Dancing was emphasized, while stage technique, gorgeousness of settings, the romantic and picturesque castle of Heidlberg providing a shadowy background. In fact everything that goes to make up a musical comedy, especially one of the youth and movement of Meet the Prince! was well done, equalling highest expectations and the publicity. With twenty-nine years of record making history behind it, the Haresfoot club can well beam with pride on its laurels, and polish ever brighter their motto: AH our girls are men. Yet every one ' s a lady. Kerbert Earle as Cr ta Bill ' Ogilvie, Kerb Earle, Red The Thre. ' Girl Friends Mack IN Page 359 E. Ellicott H. Lyke M. Ward R Winnie W. T. Schroeder F, Stemm R Church L. Kindschi H. Parker R. Ratcliff O. Elklns H. Himes N. Kastler W. Flindt H. Kubly P. F aust C. Highleyman H.Allen T. Furlong R. Bergstresser G.Otis F. Worthington L. Moe I.Clendenen K. Earle C.Emmanuel W.Mueller T.Hodges D.White W. Rahr R. McCoy J Nelson L. Gutsch W. MacFadden Hare All cur men are girls, yet every one ' s a lady Officers William Purnell Director Russell Winnie President Harold Himes Vice-President Thomas Hodges Secretary Kerbert Earle Treasurer William T. Schroeder Manager Frank Worthington Keeper of Haresfoot Prof. James M. O ' Neill Prof. James F. A. Pyre Members in Faculty Norman C. Bradish John Powell J. R. Caldwell Donald K. Alexander Herbert J. Allen Richard F. Bergstresser Ralph Brooks Richard C. Church Irving H. Clendenen Fred De Vries Kerbert B. Earle Oscar M. Elkins Ernest E. Ellicott Paul H. Faust Willard L. Flint Thomas F. Furlong Members of Haresfoot Laurence W. Gutsch Charles D. Highleyman Harold T. Hines Thomas M. Hodges Norman M. Kastler Leslie G. Kindschi Harold E. Kubly Hiram A. Lyke Ward Mac Fadden Joseph H. McCartney Robert C. Mc Coy Laurence O. Moe Walter J. Mueller James M. Nelson Grant L. Otis Harry L. Parker William M. Rahr Richard U. Ratcliff William T. Schroeder Thomas Shager Fred H. Stemm W. Paul Stewart John M. Ward Donald O. White Russell G. Winnie W. Purnell R. Winnie Page 360 W. Schroeder Captai 1 App ' ej ick Wisconsin University Players Officers Harold Konnak President Mary Bishop Vice-President Jane Gaston Secretary Richard Church Treasurer Mildred Engler Try-outs Manager Frederick Buerki Production Manager Perry Thomas Business Manager Mrs. Carol Rouch Associate Members Ted Ludden E. Ray Skinner A. Adams J. Alexander M. Anderson E. Beynon M. Bishop F. Buerki B. BUHLIG J. Chichester R. Church C. Crownhart E. Duffield M. Engler P. Faust D. Galbraith Members J. Gaston E. Hawley A. Hallister C. DE la Hunt E, Johnson N. Kastler L. Kenney H. Konnak M. Lehmkuhl D. Lindstrom J. McGuiRE J. MORAN K. MORRISEY R. Martin S. Meyers E. Olson M. Paula R. Ratcliff M. O ' Laughlin V. Skinner M. Spater P. Thomas E. Weibrecht H. Wirka R. Winnie W. Wise B. Worst A. ZlEBELL Fr.-nch Cluh Play Page 361 The HolL-ntol Under the direction of William Troutman, associate professor of speech, the Wis- consin University players presented The Goose Hangs High, the first of a series of five or six major plays, on Friday, October 9, 1926, in the Madison high school auditorium. How father was helped out of his difficulties by his family formed the main plot of the play. Mary Bishop, ' 17 , and D. E. Linderstrom, ' 26, carried the major roles of Eunice Ingals and Bernard Ingals respectively. The second of the series The First Year, a comic-tragedy, was presented in Cen- tral high school on December 4. The main roles were filled by Helen Ann Hughes, ' 28, Ted Ludden, grad, and Louis Gross, ' 29. As the title indicates the plot centered about trials and tribulations of a young married couple encounter in their first year of wedded life. A fitting introduction to the 1928 prom was given in the presentation of Captain Applejack in the Gar rick theatre on Feb. 3. All the adventure, bravado, and colorful costuming of the true pirate play was displayed in this tale of the metamorphosis of a spoiled young New Englander. Helen Ann Hughes, ' 28, prom queen, Mildred Engler, and Arthur Adams carried the title roles. In addition to these major roles Wisconsin players, in order to make the legitimate drama more available on the campus, also present from time to time one-act plays with no admission price. ' The Goose Hangs High ' Page 362 RELIGIOU The Y. M, C. A. Every student needs to get wisdom as well as knowledge. It is easier for the University to give knowledge and to meas- ure a student ' s progress in getting it. To know how to live f ' -M ' ' K ' ffir ■KB 9 ' ® more important than to :l ' n ™ ■- '  ![ff l know how to make a living. The Y.M.C. A. in the Univer- sity of Wisconsin exists to help students to find this right way of living. It does not claim any monopoly, nor does it hold to any preconceived dogma- tism as to what is the right way. The Y. M. C. A. gives practical aid to students scho- lastically and in their extra- curricular activities it fur- nishes social and physical bene- fits through the use of its build- ing which is for the use of all men students, and it affords spiritual direction through its sec- retary and its undergraduate officers. The Y. M. C. A. works with and assists all other student enterprises in which students try their moral fibre and exercise leadership among their fellows. Cooperation in the building of manhood for the best interests of Wisconsin rather than sole appropriation of the field is the aim of the Association. Through the dormitory, the employment bureau and loan funds, the infirmary service, the Frosh Y, the sophomore commission, the junior council, discussion groups, social committee, and other features, the association puts into practice its ideals of character building through constructive activity. Standing in the lobby of the University Y. M. C. A. is the Kenneth Sterling Day Memorial, donated in 1923, by Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Day, of Cleveland, Ohio, in memory of their son. It bears the name of the senior man who is chosen each year as the best specimen of manhood in the University. The five bases of membership are: Christian character, religious participation, student activities, scholastic attainments and physical development. The names already engraved upon the Memorial are Camber Tegtmeyer, 1924 John Bergstresser, 1925 ; George D.Hanna, 1926. The Memorial consists of a figure of a young man holding the globe upon which is this inscrip- tion: So long as earth shall bear such names as these, so long shall hope remain. Lowell Frautschi of the class of 1927 was chosen by the faculty committee of award for the honor this spring. Association Hall The dormitory is the home of 125 slu dents,and the fiublic rooms and recrea- tion facilities are for student use. T he Fireplace The large parlors and homelike atmos- phere at the Y are a club for hundreds of men students. Employment Service The employment secretary. Jack Bruce, secured over 200 permanent and 1200 odd Jobs for students this year. Apache Dance One of the series of successful parties this year in the new party room in the basement of the Y. Page 364 High Spots in the Y s Program With Henry Sloan Coffin as the main speaker, the ail- University religious week-end under the chairmanship of James Nelson, ' 27, and Eulalie BefTel, 27, was acclaimed un- usually successful this year. The purpose of the affair is to bring all students together in an all-religious series of serv- ices and to devote the thought of the campus for one week- end to religion. The freshman convoca- tions, under the direction of the Y.M.C.A., in cooperation with the class of 1930 were an entirely new innovation. The purpose of the convocations is to help the freshmen to find themselves. President Frank spoke on If I were a Freshman, was TheReiigionofaReasonableStudent. These affairs promise to become a Wisconsin tradition. The Y dormitory was the first modern dormitory for men at the University, and for twenty years has provided a home for about 125 men each semester. The dormitory idea has gained ground with the result that despite the erection of the new University dormitories, the Y has more applications than ever. The National Student Conference at Milwaukee was attended by 55 Wisconsin delegates, the largest delegation at this national meeting of over 3,000 students. A study of the effects of undergraduate activities on character, carried on by the Junior Council this year, promise to yield real scientific results of value to educators and students. The survey is being made of prominent alumni with a study of their undergraduate careers in an attempt to show what elements of college life most promote success. C. V. HiBBARD, ' 00 General Secretary John P. Gillin, ' 27 President and Prof. Meiklejohn ' s subject University Y, M. C A. Cabinet Parish Hoebel Ela Wallace Brandenburg Schwenger Beatty Behnke Merica Gillin Ekern Botts hlaver Page 36S Junior Commission Y M, C A. Wood Beatty Van Dtiren ■Weibrecht Marsh Orth Brandenberg Ela sity X A JL ssion Findley Metcalf Rogers Brott Port Thelander University Freshman Y. M. C A Committee Maynard Hanson Lehman Ruedt Folsom Bloss Lander Favreau Rogers Poss Page 366 H. Earl Care Ralph C. Arnold G. Ivan Wallace E. Tide V.Johnson H. Mackin C- W. Smith M, Hippie T. Keller M. Napper L. Clintsman R. Weiss L. Odell M. E. Russell A. Ranslem ISt e ' s Purpose: The Baptist Young People ' s Association has complete control over the work of correlating the units that administer to the social, recreational and devotional needs of the Baptist student groups. They strive to find effective means of developing Christian activities for young people. Officers Rev. C. Walter Smith University Pastor H. Earl Care . President LoRETTA Odell Vice-President Mary Ellen Russell Secretary Department Verna Johnson Marion Napper Margaret Hipple G. Ivan Wallace Louise Clintsman Ruth Weiss Ralph Arnold . Hugh Mackin . Thalia Keller Erna Tiele . Annabelle Ranslem Chairmen Devotional Music Social Life Deputation Teams I nterdenominational Dramatics Publicity Posters Hikes Suppers Home Hour Page 367 G. Rashman M. Cohen A. Sapiro J. Springberg V. Wolfson A. Moses B. Aronson S. HXibin E. Ersler I.Alk Rabbi Landman F. Wolf L. Keller M. Litow B nai B ritli Hillel Foundation Founded at Champaign, Illinois. 3 Chapters Date of Organization 1924 Officers Samuel S. Dubin President Beatrice Aronson Vice-President Gordon Rashman ■. Secretary Alfred Sapiro Treasurer Student Council Samuel S. Dubin President Rabbi Solomon Landman Director Religious Committee Vivian Wolfson, Chairman Gordon Rashman, V ice-Chairman Social Welfare Committee Alvin Sapiro, Chairman Florence Wolf, Vice-Chairman Menorah Committee Isadore Alk, Chairman Max Litow, Vice-Chairman Publicity Committee Beatrice Aronson, Chairman Samuel Dubin, Vice-Chairman Social Committee Joseph Springberg, Chairman Leslie Keller, Vice-Chairman Hillel Players Adolph Moses, Chairman Edward Ersler, Vice-Chairman Athletic Committee Harry Cohen, Chairman Meyer Cohen, Vice-Chairman Page 368 O. Friske A. Moeller H. Behrens W. Bernhard E. Haentzschel W. Gerhardt Rev. A. Haentzschel G. Meyne G. Winter K. Baumann V. Dobbratz Calvary Lutheran University Church Calvary Lutheran University Church is the student church of the Synodical Confer- ence (Missouri and Wisconsin). Its membership is almost entirely composed of students, and its activities are directed by the Student Council, working in conjunction with the Pastor. Officers Rev. A. Haentzschel University Pastor William Bernhard President GusTAV Winter Vice-President Verna Dobbratz Secretary Arnold Moeller Treasurer Committee Chairmen Clarence Schlaver Publicity Herbert Behrens Membership Karl Baumann Program Edna Haentzschel Social Gertrude Meyne, Waida Gerhardt Entertainment Myra Stein Representative of Girls ' Club Oscar Friske, William Seeman . . Church Committee Page 369 - t « -- ffS T f -f ff ft ..s • V JVM.I T , mf ■m IF Wf m ri Kopp Christison Warner MacGregor Wood Hyslop Rikkers Sarles Thome Buehler Elderkin Ellsworth Frost J . E. Series B. MacGregor Lerkin Cole Gordon Lauder Arnold Will Glover Marling Ele Beatty Hainer Droppers Mrs. Sarles Holt H. Kyle Partch Hofferbert Spoon French Critchell Willard Mavor Schneider Thiel Teare Hickisch H. Rasche Colburn H. Heberlein Rosa Lewrie R. Kyle Stiles Stowe Knott Johns Quilling R. Rasche McNaught E. Heberlein Morrissey Pollock Sutherland Cady Olbrich Webster Wagner Scantlin Sipfle Nuzum The Congregational Students Association Date of Organization. 1913 Purpose: The Congregational Students ' Association was organized to promote acquaintance and good fellowship among Congregational students, to afford them an opportunity to engage in some form of church activity, to provide a link between the stu- dent and the church, and to co-operate with other church groups on the campus in the promotion of programs of common interest. Cfficers Harry Thoma President Richard Teare Vice-President • Grace Wagner Treasurer Nellie Jane Schneider Secretary Rev. J. E. Sarles, D.D University Pastor Miss Helen B. Cady Social Secretary The Board Executive Chairmen Croup A Croup B Henrietta Hainer Hope Heberlein Croup C Croup D George Larkin Marshall Wood Cabinet Associates Allan Colburn Enid Heberlein John McCain Louise McNaught Harriet Millar William Sarles Jane Bell Waltz Group A Department I Roy Thiel Jean Droppers Ruth Critchell Karl Buehler Willard Mo msen Ruth Will Department 2 Claire Mayor Albert Quilling Judith Elderkin Elmer Ellsworth Rose Lauder John Nuzum Department 3 Edward Rikkers Margaret Williams Leeta Darling Guinevere Hubbard Florence Pollock {AMES SlPFLE -awrence Scantlin Group B Department I Hamilton Beatty Ellen Ela Laura Barrett George Gallati Richard Johns Isabel Olbrich Department 2 Richard Ela Sarah Chickering Edward Cole John Fairbank Betty Lawrie Katherine Mullenbach Department 3 Mary Learned Roy Kopp Dorothy Glover Russell Hall Charles Henderson Margaret Stedman Group C Department I Kenneth Davis Mauri NE Partch Edith Mae Holt Cyril Howard Armin Schneider Elizabeth Sutherland Department 2 Edgar Gordon Delaphine Rosa Beatrice MacGregor Floyd MacGregor Robert Rasche Frances Stiles Department 3 Donald Knott Margaret Spoon Marion Arnold Donald Christison Elma Morrissey Millard Williams Group D Department 1 Norma Hofferbert Homer Kieweg J . Alden Behnke Frank Hickisch Eva Seen Jean Webster Department 2 Helen Kyle Nat Warner Helene Boyer Kenneth McDonough Helen Spencer Harwood Stowe Helen Willard Department 3 Rachel Kyle Theodore Frost Dorothy French Frederick Hyslop Herbert Rasche Aleen Watrous Page 370 G. Dokken R. Benedict W. Muegge T. Johnson Rev. Soldan J. Magistad C, Sattler R. Strauss l-. Holscher I. Rasmussen M, Waldron M. Nelson E. Wooster B. Prochnow P. Kreutser C. Steensland F. Hook A.Anderson A.Sullivan I. Appuhn G. Magistad F. Soldan G. Johanson E.Kissinger O. Kahlenberg Luther Memorial Student Association To further Christian fellowship among Lutheran Students. Officers Raymond Strauss President Gertrude Magistad Vice-President Beata Procknow Secretary Gerhard Dokken Treasurer Committee Chairmen Frederick Jochem Social Chairman Charlotte Sattler ) k . ■• • r- , f Publicity bsTHER Kissinger ) Arthur Anderson Membership Amelia Soldan, Frank Holscher . Luther League Marie Nelson Music Page 371 ■r H Gibson A. Lenz L. Lemaire D.Roberts R. Garlock N. Ceaglske L. Dengel E Haskins Rev M G. Allison J. Stowers M. Nichols G. Haskins V. Baluss M. Shirk M. E. Williams G. Crowder V. Barton D Shirk Presbyterian Student Alliance Headquarters at 43 1 State Street Purpose: To provide for the Social and Religious needs of Presbyterian Students. Officers James C. Stowers President Milton E. Nichols Vice-President Louise H. Dengle Secretary Rev. M. G. Allison University Pastor Rev. a. L. Miller, Associate University Pastor Miss G. Haskins, Dean of Presbyterian Student Women Committees Alfred Stamm .... Mary Elizabeth Williams David H. Williams Milton W. Nichols Gladys Crowder Virginia Baluss Dorothy Shirk Lawrence Lemaire Norman Ceaglske Church Louise Dengle Publicity Bible School David Roberts Music Robert Garlock Bulletin Marguerite Shirk. .... News Sheet Arno Lenz ..... House and Grounds Herbert Gibson Finance Ethel Haskins Promotion Viola Barton Commissary Dramatics Sunday Evening Club Mathetae . Sarah Ely Guild Aletheia Guild . Social Activities Outdoor Activities Intramural Athletics Doris Kerr Westminister Guilds Purpose: To develop a symetrical Christian young womanhood. Sarah Ely Guild (Senior) Gladys Crowder President Irene Hensey Vice-President Mildred Enclebrecht .... Secretary Lillian Voight Treasurer Aletheia Guild (Junior) Virginia Baluss President Mary Elizabeth Williams Vice-President Marguerite Shirk Secretary Margaret Cass Treasurer Koinonia Guild (Sophomorej Eleanor Hammer President Glee Humphrey .... Vice-President Esther Haight Secretary Mildred Kniebusch .... Treasurer Freshman Guild Ruth Williams President Louise Evans Vice-President May Margaret Morgan .... Secretary Elizabeth Mathison .... Treasurer Page 372 E. S, Wierman G. Yule G. S. Paul Rev. H. Krussell G. Stanley H. F. Brandenburg R, R. Gunderson D. King R. Alton R. Enae E. C. Halverson G. Shipman M, C. Beran E. L. McCTarty E. Blakely P. H. Merriman E. Wilcox E. G. Prideaux C. Chapin M. R. Chase H. I, Cramer The Wesley Foundation of Wisconsin The Wesley Foundation of Wisconsin was incorporated by the Methodist Episcopal Church for the purpose of providing religious training, worship services, and fellowship for Methodist students at the state university. The Student Cabinet, which consists of representatives from all student groups within the Wesley Foundation, is the student executive body. The Student Cabinet Ellis C. Halverson President Carol Chapin Secretary Harold F. Brandenburg Treasurer Devotions Ethel Wilcox G. Stewart Paul World Service Ruby Alton Ervin S. Wierman Choir Gordon Shipman Wesley Players J . Edward Thomas Department Chairmen Cost Supper Dolores King Ralph F. Schilke Publicity Elinor G. Prideaux Freshman Bible Class Gordon Yule Sophomore Bible Class Ermina Blakely Bashford Club Ramona Enge Recreation Marian R. Chase Roy R. Gunderson Membership Edith L. McClarty George Stanley Junior-Senior Bible Class Paul H. Merriman Oxford Club Howard I. Cramer The Staff of The Wesley Foundation of Wisconsin Arlie H. Krussell, S.T.M Director Elmer L. Cooper Field Secretary Leon L. Iltis, B.M Director of Music Mary C. Beran Social Secretary Marren J . Bruhn Office Secretary Ellis C. Halverson Financial Secretary Page 37} E. Fronk W. Rogers H. Brandenburg E. Merica E. Befifel V. Wolfson D. Astrom J. Gillin E.James N. Sorenson G. Wagner gious Officers John Gillin Chairman Dorr ITT Astrom V ice-Chairman EvvART Merica Treasurer With the close of school this spring the university religious convocations will have completed a two years ' record of interdenominational cooperation on the campus. Attempting to combine dignity of service with non-sectarianism, these meetings have brought before the student body the most outstanding men of religion which were avail- able to speak to student audiences. This year the speakers have been Rt. Rev. Ingram, Bishop of London, President Frank, Rabbi Samuel Goldenson of Pittsburg, Dean Shailer Mathews of the University of Chicago, and Winfred Ernest Garrison, Associate Editor of the Christian Century. The March meeting was omitted on account of the all-university religious week-end. Edward A. Steiner of Grinnell spoke April 17. Student Committee Alexander Gotlieb John Gillin, Chairman Dorritt Astrom Eulalie Beffel Alice Brown Harold Brandenburg Edward Fronk Elizabeth James Ewart Merica Walter Rogers Grace Wagner Vivian Wolfson Faculty Advisory Committee Prof. William Kiekhofer Justice Marvin Rosenberry Rabbi Solomon Landman Prof. Carl Russell Fish Prof. George Bryan Page 374 MUSIC Fisher Tarrant Roberts Brandenburg Schnathorst Johns Still Dimmick Jones Stevens Berven McGrath Beardmore Prof Swinney Schuck Oberland Men ' s Glee Club Corporation Officers Malcolm C. Beardmore President Paul G. Jones Vice-President Henry S. Stevens Secretary David J. Roberts Treasurer William T. Schnathorst Librarian Carlton H. Johns Business Manager Malcolm C. Beardmore Leander G. Berven Harold F. Brandenburg RuFus H. Dimmick Richard R. Fisher Members of Corporation Carlton H. Johns Paul G. Jones Alphonse E. McGrath David J . Roberts William T. Schnathorst Prof. E. Earle Swinney Harry M. Schuck Henry S. Stevens Bayrd Still Irving S. Tarrant Dan Vornholt Pagt 376 Harper Adams Zander Fitchett Wormeli Roberts Tarrant Brandenburg Engeike Wartinbee VanPool Sprowls Schuck Fisher Schnathorst Maynard MacPhearson Howard Gray J. Nelson F. Nelson Oberland Dimmick Berven ■Jones Anderson Stevens Johns Jochem Brennan McGrath Beardmore Prof. Swinnev Divers Kamm Still Treskow Jareo George Anderson Jerrold O. Anderson Leander G. Berven Malcom C. Beardmore Harold F. Brandenburg Donald T. Brennan Lancdon Divers Walter Engelke Richard Fisher Laurence L. Fitchett Frank Freskow Theodore W. Gray Andrew O. Harper Cyril M. Howard Jack W. Jareo Frederick L. Jochem Paul G. Jones Ralph Leonardson Ted E. Maynard A. E. McGrath Frank H. Nelson j. H. Nelson Edward E. Oserland Joseph E. Rapkin Dave J. Roberts W. T. Schnathorst Harry M. Schuck Ralph W. Smith Alex Spowls Henry S. Stevens Bayrd Still Irving S. Tarrant Gerald M. Van Pool C. H. Wartenbee Benjamin Wormeli Eugene Zander Page 377 The Combined Bands Season 1926-27 The combined band of the university, composed of the concert band and the regi- mental band, plays on special occasions when a large band is needed. Its activities range from furnishing music for the ' arious student activities to giving high grade concerts in the cause of good music. It is an essential feature of the military exercises, convocations, and all other events of all-uni ersity importance. Picked men from the band played at the football games at Ann Arbor and Chicago, It affords an unparalleled opportunity for a liberal education in band music and organization. During the past year the band has recorded On Wisconsin, Varsity Toast, and Badger Ballad for the Victor Talking Machine Company. Officers E. W. MoRPHY Conductor Wardwell Montgomery .... Assistant Conductor B. W. Hanson President Donald M. Brixton Vice-President Robert E. Zinn Quartermaster Marshall B. Wood .... Assistant Quartermaster John B. Schiebler Secretary and Treasurer RuFiN W. Boyd Principal Musician Paul Faust Drum Major Piccolos J. E. Martin Stephen B. Miller Flutes W. B. Woodstock Edward a. Nusbaum G. L. Lincoln F. H. COBURN Walter P. Ela E. Flat Clarinet Frank Maresh First Clarinets RuFiN W. Boyd Thomas L. Bailey JoHN B. Schiebler W. W. Mutch Marshall B. Wood Paul R. Austin Edward N. Kramer J . Seary Wallace Worzella Wilber W. Maves Second Clarinets Oliver Tjoflat Alvin H. Huth Paul H. Merriman M. G. Henry Thomas J . Stavrum Floyd W. McBurney Glen H. Arthur Third Clarinets Louis K, Mantel RoBERT L. JaCOBSEN H. R. LiLLIE d. c. nowack Edward Gullard K. R. McDoucAL Orval D. Bast Fourth Clarinets Richard C. Church Edwin S. Korfmacher John T. Haight, Jr. •Robert H. Gunderson C. L. Eggert R. C. Jones Harry W. Barkow H. L. Grang Oboes Peter K. Knoefel W. C. Muddle M. R. Schorer Howard J. Achenbach Herbert A. Hamlin English Horn Peter K. Knoefel Alto Clarinets ' Donald Britton MiLO Ottow Bass Clarinets B. R. Teare, Jr. JoHN B. Miller Bassoons DoNALD C. Mathews Ellis Hughes •Kenneth Manning Earl G. Sisson Celii ♦Wilfred W. Behm J . Herbert Heise String Basses T. M. Dobrovsky •Gordon H. Snow Soprano Saxophones Russell Reed Gustave E. Archie V. F. Lindner Alio Saxophones A. R. McCreane R. N. Bachhuber Members of the University Concert Band Page 37S Tlie Concert Band The University Concert Band gives yearly a series of concerts which are open to the public. In this way, it supports a high educational policy, and is a powerful factor in elevating the public taste. Its programs are models of program building and its perform- ances are characterized by musical taste and artistic refinement. Alvin L. Groth {OHN A. KoRFMACHER .AWRENCE W. Brandt David B. Antine A. G. Peterson L. E. ROBEY Harold L. Kinyon Stewart W. Smith Tenor Saxophones R. W. Sullivan Kenneth A. Kern Gordon Kay Baritone Saxophones J. B. Moore F. L. Merriman Elmer R. Manthe E Flat Cornet Jay Reader Soto Cornets F. D. HussA Walter Damsteect Prentice D. Hale Rudolph Lhotak Frank R. Kramer Gordon B. Wallace Leland E. Rassmussen M. A. Trams M. L. Fenny First Cornets ' Robert E. Zinn Benjamin B. Blum H. E. Rex Robert E. McCormick Adrian A. Freund Arthur D. Wilson Second Cornets Earl I. Cooper WiLLiAM G. Campbell Walter W. Miller De Vore O. Hitchner Norman E. Douglas Lawrence A. Dodge Third Cornets Ormand B. Meslow C. G. Oeschner Paul R. Hopkins Lloyd A. Giessel Albert H. Klein Walter H. Schaefer Walter Rogers French Horns Wardell Montgomery AsHER E. Treat Raymond Miller A. H. Decker Earl D. Haley ' Frederick A. Maxfield Norman C. Schaefer Richard W. Orton J. O. Mithus Victor V. Hanson Charles W. Furst Clyde E. Say Kenneth G. Wickel Edward C. Soderburc Levi O. Dees C. A. Maaske Alvin H. Benesh Trombones NoRRis B. Hogenson ' Wilfred W. Behm ' Robert A. Buell Paul R. Eastwood Adolph M. Hove ' Vernon Plettner R. C. Goodrich M. W. Woodington Gordon Brewer W. J. Harris David J. Sachs Kenneth W. Wegner C. M. Parker John H. Kulp Kenneth N. Findley R. H. Burnham M. E. Aaberc Baritones ' B. W. Hanson ' Belmont H. Schlosstein ' Ernest B. Kellogg ' Lloyd F. Kaiser Elmer W. Ellsworth WiLLARD L. Wegner Carl M. Mielke Richard K. Wagner R. M. Adams Bruno J. H. Weisshappel Everett A. Johnson B. Flat Bass Irving A. Wien E Flat Basses ' Walton R. Manz Russell D. Eighty Clinton A. Vanhatta Burtran Borrud BB Flat Basses ' Russell W. Morhoff ' Ray L. Ellis Phillip Owens C. P. Olson Paul H. Schermerhorn Snare Drums ' John P. Swansen ' H. C. Carpenter G. E. Mackin Russell L. Machael Lyle B. Schueler Robert J. Leahy Bass Drums • H. L. Stokes EmMETT J. FiNCHER Tympani ' Earl E. St. John Library and Property H. R. Getz C. A. Getz Sam D. Fox Ezra H. Powell Norman Thomas Page 379 ■jp E. H. Smith R. McCombs L. Wienke T. Gobar J. Vedder R. Meyer B, Gustafson O. Kramer E. McCoUister M. McLay R. Cor C. Nelson G. Meyne A. Phillips A. Soidan F. Soidan L. Cole E. Beckwith R. Troyer M. Honeycombe A. Johns E. Steele E. Wood Q. Keller N. Gaulke R. Johnson L. Peckham L. Schoenfeld M. A. Nee A. Gress M. Vedder J. Dixon E. Burkhart M. Partch R. Knatz Woman ' s Glee Club The University Women ' s Glee Club is comfX)sed of forty-five voices, selected from university women by competitive tryouts. It aims to promote the highest interests of women ' s singing at Wisconsin. The Club this year is under the capable leadership of Mrs. D. B. Caster. One formal concert is given each year, besides numerous appearances on other university and civic programs. Officers Ellen Burkhart President Norma Gaulke Vice-President Edith Hope Smith Secretary Alice Gress Treasurer Alice Johns Accompanist Lucille Wienke Librarian Esther Fosshage Publicity Manager Leota Cole Business Manager Mrs. D. B. Caster Director Graduate M. Maclay Class of 1927 E. Burkhart T. Gobar R. Meyer L. Cole A. Gress G. Meyne R. Corp B. Gustafson M. Partch L. Davison E. Hunter L. Schoenfeld J. Dixon A. Johns F. Soldan E. Fosshage B. MacGregor M. Vedder N. Gaulke E. McCollister E. Volkman G. Gleerup L. Wienke Class of 1928 E. Beckwith M. A. Nee P. Terhune E. Hitchner L. Peckham J. Vedder M. HoMEYCOMB E. H. Smith A. Wagner D. McCullough E. Steel E. Wood E. Berg E. Hannum R. Johnson Q. Keller Class of 1929 R. Knatz O. Kramer M. LOUNSBURY R. McCoMBS C. Nelson A. Philips A. Soldan R. Troyer Pate 380 University Orchestra The University Orchestra is composed of sixty-four players comprising the advanced string players of the School of Music and a selected group from the Concert Band. As a concert organization rendering the symphonic works of the greatest composers, the orchestra has at many public appearances won the applause of musical critics and the appreciation of large audiences. The purpose of the orchestra is solely educational. The players are given every opportunity to familiarize themselves with the best orchestral literature. Violins Louise M. Rood Mary F. Watts Abraham I. Goldman Arlone B. Kinkaid Allen J. Tenny Charlotte E. Wallace Fred A. Bermann duane g. longaker Idelle Strelow Laurence V. Radtke Frances Hay Anthony Donovan Bessie L. Miller Leon Rubnitz Eleanor E. Tuttle Justin C. Washburn Sadie E. McCauchey Esther A. Haight Dorothea A. Rickaby Stuart A. Lyman Valeska Kelly Dorothy Mickelson Martha C. Adamson Howard L Suby Personnel Violas Wardwell Montgomery Russell Morhoff Richard Church William J. Gaines Celli Grant L. Otis Leon Perssion W. W. Behm J. Herbert Heise Robert A. Buell Basses T. M. Dobrovsky Gordon H. Snow Paul H. Schermerhorn Flutes George Heimerl Marguerite P. Wojta Oboes Peter K. Knoefel William Muddle English Horn Peter Knoefel Clarinets Guy Suits Paul R. Austin Bassoons Donald C. Mathews Ellis Hughes Alto Clarinet MiLO Ottow Bass Clarinet B. R. Teare, Jr. Trumpets Prentice D. Hale Robert E. Zinn Horns Raymond Miller Asher E. Treat Andrew H. Decker Frederick A. Maxfield Trombones W. J. Harris Vernon Plettner R. C. Goodrich Tuba Ray L. Ellis Drums John P. Swansen Tympani Earle E. St. John Piano Evelyn Feldman Page 381 p. Austin Treat Nyhus Zinn Roberts Behm Coon Schiebler Jones Schnathorst Church Kline Vornholt Oberiand Van Pool Mills Linner Swinney Montgomery Keenan Dimmick E. Gordon Suits Knoefel Founded at New England Conservatory of Music, Boston, 1898 Number of chapters 37 Local chapter Phi Date established 1921 Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Phi Mu Alpha, Sinfonia, is Wisconsin ' s outstanding music fraternity. Election to this organization is based on good scholarship and achievement in musical activities spon- sored by the University School of Music. Its object is the promotion of the best in music, particularly music written by American composers. In the spring of 1923 it inaugurated the annual Inter-fraternity song contest. Each year a traveling cup is awarded to the winning fraternity. Members in Faculty Prof. Cecil Burleigh Julian Harris Dr. Charles Mills Prof. Leland Coon Prof. Leon Iltis Maj. E. W. Morphy Prof. E. B. Gordon Prof. E. E. Swinney Members in University Graduates R. Keenan E. R. Linner C. C. Nyhus R. W. Boyd R. H. Dimmick E. S. Gordon P. G. Jones P. Austin W. Montgomery Class of 1927 H. V. Kline P. K. Knoefel E. E. Oberland Class of 1928 D. Roberts J. B. Schiebler W. T. Schnathorst G. Suits B. R. Te re D. Vornholt R. E. Zinn G. Van Pool M. B. Wood T. L. Bailey Class of 1929 W. W. Behm A. E. Treat Page 381 M. Rowland A. Soldan E. McCollister E. H. Smith R. Corp S. Meyer L. Snyder V. Fisher J. Heath A.Johns G. Thiemann F. Bailey T. Miller A. Kinkaid E. Burkhardt A, Gress M. McKinney B. Schroeder M. Nickles M. Wilkinson E. Wooster M. Vedder M. Moses S. Levine M. Rupp D. Hess M. Wojta H.Johnson I Clef Club is an organization for university women who are not in the music school. Membership is gained by tryout in voice or with any musical instrument. Its purpose is to promote an interest in music and to broaden the musical knowledge of its members. Meetings are held every two weeks when programs of unusual and varied interest are given. Several open programs are held during the year, and a formal concert is given each Spring. Purpose: Its purpose is to promote an interest in music and to broaden the musical knowledge of its members. Officers Dorothy Hess President Edith Hope Smith Vice-President Helene Johnson Secretary Alice Cress Treasurer Edith McCollister Clef Ellen Burkhardt Ruth Corp Alice Gress Edith McCollister Members in University Class of 1927 Josephine Heath Dorothy Hess Alice Johns Arlone Kinkaid Marion Vedder Marguerite Wojta Eleanor Wooster Helene Johnson Monona Nickles Florence Bailey Virginia Fisher Sylvia Levine Class of 1928 Theodosia Miller Merle Moses Mary Wilkinson Class of 1929 Marion McKinney Sylvia Meyer Martha Rowland Beatrice Schroeder Edith Hope Smith Margaret Rupp LoRNA Snyder Amelia Soldan Page 3X3 CADET: Lt. G. E. Carothers Capt. T. G. Cherry Capt. J. E. Hull CapL. P. H. Weiland Capt. E. G. Borden Capt. R. K. Learnard Maj. S. S. Reinhardt Col. J. F. Barnes Capt. G. A. Miller Instructional Staff There is a very general misconception of the aims and purposes of the R. O. T. C. in our Colleges and Uni- versities, and to this lack of understanding, may be largely ascribed the failure on the part of the incoming Wis- consin Freshman to avail himself of the opportunities offered him by the Federal Government and his university through the maintenance of these units at this University. In times of national emergency any army raised to meet such serious danger would be in proportionate strength of five-sixths civilians and one-sixth professional soldiers, the National Guard furnishing two-sixths and the Organ- ized Reserves three-sixths of all components. By enrolling in the R. O. T. C. unit, you members of the Basic Course have taken the first step toward preparing yourselves for a commission in these organized reserves. Con- gress has authorized the establishment and support of the senior R. O. T. C. units at certain universities and colleges in order to provide the necessary officers for the organized reserve component from the graduates of these advanced courses. At present the War Department has on its rolls over ninety thousand officers commissioned in the Officers ' Reserve Corps. Over 90% of these officers hold their commissions by virtue of their participation in the World War. Time, illness, press of business, and other causes rapidly deplete this personnel. The War De- partment looks for replacements for such casualties to the product of the R. O. T. C. units throughout the country. The estimated needs of such replacements can be given in round numbers as ten thousand per year. To the comment that military training has no place in our colleges and universities, the War Department in conformity with the provisions of the National Defense Act, as enacted by Congress, holds that our university ' and college men presumably possess those qualities considered necessary in an officer of the LInited States forces, and, therefore, it is manifestly fitting and proper that, if so desired, they may avail themselves of federal aided opportunities to secure the basic military training against any future emergencies. In this very democratic nation of ours, and in the absence of universal service in this country, our need of reserve officers can be supplied only through our educational system. As our civil activities look to these educational institutions for their future leaders, so also must the defense of the country look to the colleges and universities for material as the natural source of military leadership. The same qualities that have made the college graduate an outstanding factor in the civil life of the country are required for the successful command of troops. In fact, there is no other agency capable of supplying this trained military personnel. Therefore, our patriotic citizenship should regard the R. O. T. C. as the most important civilian component of the Army of the United States and take especial interest in its welfare and efficiency. (f- JJ. ' d Lt. Col. J . F. Barnes Page 386 F. C. Durham I. C. Stowers L, E. Benedict J.J. Germann F. W. Clarke H. A. Lawrence Cadet Regimental Staff Selected from the seniors of the advanced courses in R. O. T. C. instruction, the Regimental Cadet Staff comprises the best military talent in the university. With their activities and ranking of the first three years in the corps the entire basis for their selection, they form a staff competent to determine the policies of the student drill units. Responsibility for the showing made by the Corps in the special parade occasions participated in by the department, as the Memorial Day Parade, rests almost entirely upon the members of this staff. In addition to taking active part in the demonstrations, they form a committee that plans the activities in which the Cadet Corps will appear. With their graduation they receive Reserve Commissions as second lieutenants in the United States army. Cadet Officers Reserve Officers Training Corp Infantry Colonel IohnJ. Germann Lieutenant Colonel .... Frank C. Durham Majors. James C. Stowers, Leonard E.Benedict Captain and Adjutant Franklin W. Clark Captains — Armin P. Meisenheimer, Milton W. Paula, Clarence J. Krueger, Arthur N. Lund, Kenneth W. Goddard, Harvey C. Hyland. Field Artillery Colonel Glenn O. Stevens Lieutenant Colonel Roland F. White Majors . Lloyd T. Plank, Stanley P. Zola Captains — Millard J. Williams, Joseph W. Snevely, Robert H. Brigham, Calvin E. KoEHRiNG, David L. Harker, Charles D. Highleyman, orville L. Schworke, Wil- liam P. Griffith. Signal Corp Major Ray Jordan Captains — Vernon B. Bagnall, Sylvester D. Cotter, Irvin H. Gerks, Wm. H. Gilster, Marvin Morack, Niel B. Thayer, Wm. H. Edwards, Harold M. Mather, Grayton A. Wheeler. J.J. Germann G. O. Stephens Page 3S7 D L. Harker I J Newman E. R. Lee M. O Hussa S P. Zola t . R. Wernitznig CO. Stevens W G Bernhard R T. Bell L. T Plank F J Richardson E. F. Kurth R. R. Iliru; F. W. Eggers D. D. Kynaston Senior Artillery Organized for the purpose of supporting the movements and maneuvers of the infantry with a protecting fire, the importance of the field artillery cannot be over-emphasized in the national scheme of defense. Recognizing this important function, the University and the United States goverment have cooperated to build up and establish one of the finest collegiate R. O. T. C. field artillery units in the entire nation ' at Wiscon- sin. This year twenty-nine men are enrolled in the class of senior infantry. This number even exceeds that of the men choosing infantry and ably demonstrates the popularity of this branch of R. O. T. C. service. Instruction in this division of the Military department is concerned chiefly with firing problems, gun drill, and transportation on a practical side, while liberal work is done in Military law and history, on a theoretical side. Commissions in the army reserve corps are, upon the recommendation of Colonel Barnes and the Presi- dent of the university given the men completing the course. R. T. Bell W. G. Bernhard R. M. Brigham W. W. COOMBE F. W. Eggers W. P. Griffith D. L. Harker L. W. Haffield T. S. Heian C. D. Highleyman R. R. HiNTZ M. O. Hussa Field Artillery C. A. Koehring E. F. Kurth D. D. Kynaston E. R. Lee C. W. Matthews I.J. Newman L. T. Plank R. N. Radsch F. J. Richardson C. H. SCHWINGEL O. L. SCHAOERKE ' J. W. Snavely G. C. Stevens A. D. TuppER E. H. Wernitznig R. F. White M. J. Williams S. F. Zela Page 3S8 L. E. Benedict HA H. G. Hyland Lawrence F. C. E J nXirham Hewitt C. J. Krueger J. J. Germann F W. Clarke J.C. Stowers L S. Custer K. W. Goddard A. A. P. Meisenheimer , Lund jenior Ability to stand before an untrained group of men and give intelligible commands with a reasonable ex- pectation of having them obeyed is one of the most important qualities encouraged in the members of the senior infantry division of the R. O. T. C. To attain this end instructors in the military department have given over a major share of their class time to problems of leadership. Each member of the unit is given an opportunity to conduct and control the movements of the freshmen and sophomores in the infantry course on the drill floor. In addition to the work in leadership, members of the senior infantry are given practical and theoretical in- struction in the handling of infantry weapons, as the machine gun and three inch mortar. Duties of officers in the tactical employment of the squad, section, platoon, and company are also taken up in detail. Following the completion of their work as senior infantrymen and the enrollment in at least one summer training camp, the men, with the recommendation of Colonel Barnes and the President of the University, will re- ceive commissions as second lieutenants in the reserve army. Twenty-one men graduate from the course for senior infantrymen this year. L. E. Benedict L. G. Best M. A. Brackett F. W. Clarke K. H. Conway L. S. Custer F. C. Durham J.J. Germann K. W. Goddard E. J. Hewitt H. G. Hyland K. B. Kirk C. J. Krueger A. H. A. Lawrence A. N. Lund A. F. MacRavey Meisenheimer E. W. Paula J. F. Ricks J. G. Stowers Page 389 D. Cotter V, B. Bagnall M. H. Morack C. E. DcHorn V. H. Dvcr W. G. Damero A. A. Risscr H.M.Mather L. A. WoIIager G. E. Mackin G.W.Custer I.H. Gerks B. H. Vollarth G. G. Wheeler T. H. Saari R. D. Jordan N. B. Thayer W. H. Edwards jenior big s Comparatively a small group in relation to the infantry and artillery, the Senior Signal Corps, nevertheless, has an integral part to perform in the organization of the army with its highly specialized service. Limited to students taking electrical engineering, the course has become highly technical. The duties of the division in the army consist chiefly in establishing, maintaining, and operating all means of communication be- tween estranged units. Students enrolled in the course are given practical work in radio theory, code practice, and telegraph and tele- phone service. At the time of their graduation they have become capable and experienced operators in all wire means of communication. The War department has supplied the University with forty thousand dollars worth of communication equip- ment and Wisconsin has become one of the most efficient and complete college units for this type of service in the country. IDuring the year inspection trips for the course members are conducted through the Burgess Battery Company, the Wisconsin Telephone Company and the Madison Radio Station, WHA. At the end of the four-year course the men are graduated as experienced operators and eligible for reserve commiss ions in the United States Army. Nineteen men graduate from the course this year. V. B. Bagnall S. D. Cotter C. W. Custer W. G. Damerow C. E. DeHorn V. H. Dyer W. H. Edwards I.H. Gorks W. H. Gilster H. D. Jordan R. E. Krueger G. H. Mackin H. M. Mather M. M Morack A. A. Risser H. V. Rubinstein T. H. Saari N. B. Thayer B. H. Vollarth G. G. Wheeler L. A. WOLLAEGER Paie 390 A Risser W. Fuldner E. Kremski W. Glister A. Wunch M. Morack M Martin W. Damerow K Felber B. Vollrath V Bagnall C. DeHorn G. Custer R. Tyler C. Blschoffberger T. Saarl H.Mather W.Edwards R.Jordan S Cotter N.Thayer W Zermeuhlon G Wheeler Pi Tau Pi Sigma National Honorary Signal Corps Fraternity Alpha Chapter Number of chapters, 4 Date established, 1921 Vernon B. Bagnall S. D. Cotter Geo. Custer Wm. Damerow Conrad DeHorn W. S. Edwards Henry J . Felber Walter Fuldner Wm. Gilster R. DeWitt Jordan E. S. Kremski R. E. Krueger P. M. Long Merlin Martin H. M. Mather M. M. MoRACK Andrew Risser U. V. Rothermel Toivo Saari C. C. Schmidt Neal B. Thayer Ranson Tyler Bernard Vollrath GraydonG. Wheeler B. A. Wunch W. Zermeuhlon Page 391 The Guard President ' s Guard Composed entirely of students in the Military department and drilled by student officers, the President ' s Guard since its formation in 1920 has come to represent the best soldierly talent of the University. Strictly an honorary drill organization, membership is only attained after competitive trials among the members of the fresh- men and sophomore drill classes. In all military observances in which the University participates, the Guard plays a prominent part. Officers Captain A. Meisenheimer First Lieutenant . . . E. G. Von Germeten Second Lieutenant N. J . Baker First Sergeant E. L. Lochen Platoon Sergeant — 1st Platoon, F. C. Schwartz 2nd Platoon, E. Meisenheimer. Sergeants — 1st Platoon, W. S. Fiedler and C. Tour- viLLE, 2nd Platoon, Q. S. Lander and L. C. Osterman. Corporals — R. R. Gunderson, F. S. Hook, W. O. KuEHN, R. S. Parker, R. H. Pratt, L. C. Radway, V. F. Riley. R. C. AlKINS F. N. Anderson L. Anderson S. H. Aranoff N. Banfield W. T. Bingham H. E. Cleveland H. CUMMINGS D. Davlin D. Daud G. B. Denison R. S. Dexter W. V. Dugan C. Flem M. Ford Privates V. E. Gasser A. Getschman K. Graerer S. Hadden T. C. Marker M. D. Haviland M. W. Hess H. Holm F. S. Hook N. W. Hortsman W. Krause R. Kraut H. J. KiTTSLEY G. LOCHNING K. Marting C. J. Metcalf H. J. MUENICH F. Nicholas O. L. NiELSON L. F. NOGLING A. M. Paine T. Phillips L. C. Radway C. Rauschenberger R. Reinke J. Schaaf E. B. SCHMUHL R. L. Stewart L. Trawbridge Page 392 L jS K- Ti k yj M k. k •• A V • ' r ' 1 ? if _PS SS -¥. i«r Lieut. Carothers Hook Ashley Nathness IDurham Barrett Priess King Kutzke Fiedler Winch Higgins S?t Thomas Custer Rapraeger Varsity Rifle Team The 1925-1926 season was successfully completed by the Varsity Rifle Team in winning the Sixth Corps Area championship, and in placing third in the National William Randolph Hearst match. The team won five of the last six matches of the year. Among the excellent marksmen on the 1926-27 team are: Fred E. King, who held the University champion- ship in 1925; Frank C. Durham, holder of the 1926 State Prone championship; Gilbert Rapraeger, winner of the R. O. T. C. gold medal for 1926, and Dennett Barrett and William Kutzke, who have done some fine shooting in the past season. Although as yet there are no scores available for the 1927 season, as it has just begun, with a number of new men on this year ' s squad and under the excellent tutelage of Coach Carothers, the prospects are very good for an- other winning team. The Officers Lieut. Glenn E. Carothers, coach Sergeant G. L. Thomas, Assistant Fred E. King, Captain Alonzo F. MacRavey, Manager Burton E. Ashley O. P. Clark, Jr. A. K. Higgins Robert MacArthur Semore T. Nathmess L. O. Wallen The Team Dennett Barrett Frank Durham Frederick S. Hook Kenneth L. Mahoney Harold E. Priess L. S. Winch Lester S. Custer Walter L. Fiedler William Kutzke Clyde A. Morley Gilbert Rapraeger Scores for February 27 — March 12, 1926 Wisconsin 1991, winning 6th Corps Area championship Wisconsin 981, winning 3rd National Hearst Trophy Match Wisconsin 3757, University of Tennessee 3661 Wisconsin 3751, University of Indiana 3730 University of Delaware 3603 Norhwestern University 3123 Wisconsin 3610, Cornell University 3659 University of West Virginia 3604 Page 393 Pagir 394 tl v Pate 39i The Winners In the two years that the University of Wisconsin Horse Show has held membership in the Association of American Horse Shows, it has become one of the premier collegiate exhibitions of horsemanship. No other show of its kind in the country has been given the distinction of membership in this American association and Wisconsin is the only university in the country to rate it. Six years ago a University horse show was but a fondling in the hopes of a small group of Wisconsin army officers who saw great possibilities in a university exposition of horsemanship. Today in the sixth year of its ex- istence, it has become the leading show of its kind and attracts entries from both within and without the state at large, as well as from the university and Madison. This year marked the greatest horse show of all times for the University, both in the point of numbers of peo- ple attending and number of entries attracted. Three shows were given this year on May 6 and 7. Evening exhi- bitions were given on Friday and Saturday nights and a special matinee performance was given on Saturday after- noon. Trophies and ribbons given as awards this year were more numerous and attractive than ever before and the show has been so expanded as to embrace all nature events that would invite real demonstrations of equestrian ability. A major share of the credit for the show may be given to the efforts of Capt. Learnard, who served as faculty advisor of the show. Committees working with him who were responsible for the successful carrying of the show follow: Officers General Chairman . . . Glenn O. Stevens ,_ j. Assistant General Chairman . Lloyd T. Plank Program i „ „ , , , I Fred Egcers Puhliritv 1 -ALVIN KOEHRINC r-uoucuy DoROTHY PoTTER Entries Charles Highleyman Tickets Gordon Dawson Finance Fred Fischer Thoroughbreds Page 396 Passing in Review More than 700 men enrolled in the student R. O. T. C. courses turned out for the annual inspection of the Corps on May 19 and 20, 1926, on the lower campus parade grounds. The entire university unit consisting of the infantry, field artillery and signal corps went on parade before a War department inspecting board, composed of Major C. A. Stockton, of the U. S. coast artillery and Major T. J. Johnson, of the field artillery and Wisconsin army officers. While the university did not succeed in getting a distinguished college rating for 1926, it was only due to the smallness of the corps and the optional military training rule for Wisconsin students. Preliminary to the War department inspection the University units were inspected by Major General William S. Graves, on May 15. General Graves was at that time the sixth corps area commander under which the Wis- consin branch of the R. O. T. C. is grouped. Preceding as It did the regular inspection, it proved a good test for the cadets. During the week preceding the actual inspection the infantry unit was given a combat problem that took between 300 and 400 men on an offensive quest to Eagle Heights, where an imaginary enemy was successfully routed. The firing of a great deal of blank ammunition lent fire action to the occasion and enough noise was made for a regular siege. The maneuver combined the theoretical work of the classroom with the more practical ele- ent of the field and was conducted by the cadet officers in true military fshiona. In the final two days of the regular inspection each branch of the service represented at the University put on practical demonstrations of their duties that were witnessed by a large crowd assembled around the lower campus. The inspection culminated the year ' s military training for the cadets. Eyes Right! Page 397 FORENSICS E. Hopkins H. Thoma C. Zileznik J.Kyle W. Wilke B Bn H. Murphy Forensic Board Officers Walter Wilke President Harriet Morgan Recording Secretary Esther Johnson Corresponding Secretary Robert Murphy Treasurer The Forensic Board was one of the five administrative bodies created by the charter of 1916, which granted student self-government. Of its nine members, five are chosen by the literary societies, one member being allotted each organization, and four are elected from the student body at large in the annual elections. Chief of the varied activities in which the board engages is the fostering and general supervision of intra-mural forensic events. It also works in conjunction with the uni- versity speech department in such annual affairs as intercollegiate debates, the N. O. L. contest, and the state high school debating and declamatory tournament. Each year, the board endeavors to bring to the university men prominent in various fields who are of interest to the students and the public. At the present time the board is engaged in working out plans, by which forensics will be more widely encouraged in state high schools, and to this end is sending uni- versity teams to different localities which request them, furnishing judges for local contests, and in other ways is endeavoring to promote its expanded program. Page 400 C. Ludwig E. Morse G. Bell Vilas medals are awarded by the members of the speech department to students who excell in the intercollegiate debating and oratory. The Vilas medal is regarded as the forensic W and may be conferred upon seven forensic men and women each year. The medals are made possible through the courtesy of Mrs. W. F. Vilas, wife of Senator William Freeman Vilas, who in 1910 established a fund for the purpose of encouraging and promoting forensics at the University. Awards 1926 ISADOR AlK Harry Kovenock Carl Ludwig Earl Morse Marvin Peterson Melvin Thomson 1924 Glen Bell Henry Blake Harol Cranefield Henry Katowitz Harold Seeking Harold Sporer 192S Eileen Blackey George Fiedler Carol Hubbard George Mitchell Herbert Morse Virginia North Robert Sher 1923 Tom Amlie Ralph Axley Carroll Heft Arthur Inman Halsey Kroege Martin Knewaldt Fredrick Morean Wayne Morse Robert Stewart Page 401 1 ■9 si H i.f i € 1 js n?1 % £ J h Hi UK l 1 f T F ' ■tI I • .S If rt f r ' PL ■■ml gm 1 Nt. V - 1 ' TP K i If nH i PP ' R. Murphy E. Weinke A. Treat G. O ' Malley O Zerwick B. Wunsch K. S. Salvankar Harland Hill E Hopkins G. Damon R. Rasche O. Skinidrud C. Rumph E. Schoepp F. Axley F. Royt T. Tenhunen C. Schlaver J.Mackin Motto: Magna Parens Virum The Hesperia Literary Society was founded in 1854, and is thus almost as old as the University itself. During its seventy-three years of unbroken activity it has had a distinguished history and has built up a rich campus tradition. Its roll contains the names of more than sixteen hundred men, many of whom have since risen to positions of prominence in public life and world affairs. Thus ripe in years and experience, Hesperia looks forward to a continued period of service to its members and to the insti- tution of which it is almost an integral part. Officers First Semester Second Semester Frederic Axley William Anderson Benjamin Wunsch, . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Erwin Hopkins Harland Hill . Chester Rumpf . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer H. M. Groves L. Kahlenburc Members in Faculty J. H. Mathews E. R. Maurer J. F.A. Pyre E. R. Schmidt L. F, Van Hagan Frederick Axley Members in University Graduates Glenn Damon K. S. Salvankar Richard Church Laurence Eklund Erwin Hopkins William Anderson William Bundy Class of 1927 John Mack in George Nichols Class of 1928 Harland Hill Clarence Naujoks Robert Rasche Chester Rumpf Clarence Schlaver Orlando Skindrud Benjamin Wunsch Erwin Weinke Harold Baker Eric Kautz David Macpherson Robert Murphy Class of 1929 Gerald O ' Malley Lyle Pritchard Frederick Royt Julius Richter Edgar Schoepp Tovio Tenhunen Asher Treat George Wearing Page 402 D. Kerr S. Meyer L. Craneficld A. Taylor T. Ennor H. Moraan C. Schroeder l- Bailey R. Franseen A. Watts V. Wendt E. Feldman R. Lauder M. Honeycomb B. Schroeder R. ManteU L. Rood E. M. Holt C, Churchill L. Stolen M, Stein M. Eschweiler B. Osborn M. Peiton E.J. Hopkins V. Gough E. Feldman D. Villemonte S Dermansly D. Bucklin H.Meigs J.Dixon M. Henshue A.Kelly R. Kelley L. Schoenfeld M. Watts E.Kelly Castalia Literary Society Founded in 1854 Castalia Literary Society has, during its sixty-two years of organization, offered an active center for women who are interested in literature, writing, dramatics, painting, music, and forensics. Programs by the memt ers are presented each week. An annual debate is held with Pythia Literary Society, and debates are held during the year within the society. Membership is open, upon try-out before the society, to all upper class women in the University and to second semester freshmen. Officers Rachel Kelley President Mary Eschweiler Vice-President Dorothy Bucklin . Secretary Sylvia Meyer Treasurer Viola Wendt Historian Beatrice Aronson .... Forensic Board Representative Matie Arnold Charlotte Churchill Laura Cranefield Hope Dahle Judith Dixon Members in University Class of 1927 TiRZA Ennor Dorothy Hopeman Emiah Jane Hopkins Rachel Kelley Rose Mantell Capitola Olmsted Barbara Osborn Marion Pelton Lorene Schoenfeld Lenora Stolen Dorothy Villemonte Carmen Ammann Beatrice Aronson Dorothy Bucklin Katharine Dunwiddie Mary Eschweiler Elizabeth Feldman Class of 1928 Rosella Franseen Verna Gungh Monona Hamilton Edith Mae Holt Maurine Honeycomb Doris Kerr Ruth Lauder Harriet Morgan Almeda Olmsted Myra Stein Alice Watts Mary Watts Viola Wendt Florence Bailey Sylvia Dermansly Evelyn Feldman Myrtle Henshue Class of 1929 Alice Kelley Eunice Kelley Hester Meigs Sylvia Meyer Louise Rood Clara Schroeder Ann Taylor Rosamund Whitson Page 403 M. Roeder L. Nelson L. Gess M. Kingston A. Ziebell L. Kenney E. Murphy E.Morgan C. Fitch R.Lauder G. Meinke L. Hovendon M.Arnold A.Johns E. Johnson A. Gess H. Meiselwitz L. Thorns W. Horrell H. Zeimet H. Kobler E. Trachte D. Rose M. Nickles C. Zelesnick S. Orth F. Lobhauer R. McKee B. Buhlig D. Bolton E. Birkhart Pythia Literary Society Since the founding of the Wisconsin Pythia Literary Society in 1902, membership for women has been based on personal ability in such arts as music, literature, classical danc- ing, dramatics, and forensics. Because forensics is the most stressed of all the arts, often the weekly programs consist of debates on important issues of the day, and the an- nual Pythia-Castalia debate is a much anticipated occasion. However, the other arts are likewise represented in the programs of the society. Officers Frances Lobhauer President Rose McKee Vice-President Sylvia Orth Secretary Blanche Buhlig Treasurer Dean Louise Nardin Dorothy Bolton Blanche Buhlig Ellen Burkhart Lora Gess Marjorie Kingston Lyda Kenney Marion Arnold Ruth Buckley Marcella Eierman Marion Foote Caroline Fitch Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Frances Lobhauer Rose Mckee Gertrude Meyne Bernice Meiselwitz Louise Nelson Class of 1928 ViLMA Horrell Lois Hovendon Esther Johnson Elizabeth Morgan Class of 1929 Marion Napper Monona Nickles Gladys Borchers Josephine Nelson Sylvia Orth Ruth Port Delaphine Rosa Aline Ziebell Cecelia Zilesnick Elizabeth Murphy Margaret Reuter Esther Trachte Helen Zeimet Evelyn Olson Page 404 A. Ziebel E. Johnson M. Beil E. Lerner Women s Intercollegiate Debate Resolved, That military training be abolished at all State Uqiversities. Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Wisconsin Affirmative Aline Ziebell Ruth Port Matilda Geil Lathrop Concert Room April 21, 1927 Iowa vs. Wisconsin Wisconsin Negative Esther Johnson Esther Lerner Marcella Eirman Iowa City, Iowa Alternates Cecil Cohen Norma Gaulke C. Cohen Hesperia ' Atheinae Joint Debate Resolved, That student self-government at the University of Wisconsin should be abolished. Negative Team: Athenae Walter Wilke Alex Soroka John Kyle Affirmative Team: Hesperia Robert Rasche Irving Weinke Richard Church Music Hall December 15, 1926 Decision 2 to 1 for Athenae Judges: E. Ray Skinner Miss L. Rousseau E. W. Wells R. Rasche W. Wilke R Church J. Kyle I. Weinke Page 405 A. Soroka F. Hyne W. Wilke M. Weinberg I. Alk C. Ludwig R. Sher Intercollegiate Debates Question: Resolved, That the United States Government should refuse to give military protection to property which is owned by its citizens and which is situated on foreign soil. Triangular League — March 10, 1927 Wisconsin vs. Northwestern Wisconsin Affirmative Team Maurice F. Weinberg Francis F. Hyne Carl J. Ludwig Decision for Northwestern Music Hall Chairman: Prof. John Barnes Judge: Prof. A. C. Baird University of Iowa Wisconsin vs. Minnesota Wisconsin Negative Team Walter H. Wilke IsADORE G. Alk Robert F. Sher Decision for Wisconsin Minneapolis, Minnesota . L. The Northern Oratorical League, composed of six mid-western universities, was guest of the University of Wisconsin for its annual contest held in Music Hall, May 7, 1926. It was doubly significant and interesting that President Glenn Frank, who, as a representative of Northwestern University, won the contest in 1912, not only acted as chairman for the evening, but also had the pleasure of seeing his Alma Mater Victorious. E. Weight Bakke, of Northwestern, received first place with his oration: Creative Citizen- ship; J. Russell Lane, of the University of Illinois, second with an oration: What Price Speed; and Earl L. Morse, of the University of Wisconsin, third with an oration entitled Toler- ance and Progress. Iowa, Michigan, and Min- nesota were the other institutions represented in the contest. Earl L. Morse Page 406 J. Roe R. McArthur K. Webster W. Rahr J. Fairbank R. Church Intercollegiate Debates Question: Resolved, That the exercise of legislative authority in the control of the specific content of courses offered in educational institutions is contrary to the public welfare. Midwest League — March 18, 1927 Wisconsin vs. Illinois Wisconsin Affirmative Team Richard C. Church Robert F. McArthur William Rahr Decision for Illinois Music Hall Chairman: Judge: H. L. Ewbank Albion College Wisconsin vs. Michigan Wisconsin Negative Team Jack E. Roe John K. Fairbank Kenneth F. Webster No Decision Ann Arbor, Michigan Freshman Declamatory Contest The Forensic Board endeavored this year to arouse and stimulate the interest of the freshman class in debating and speaking. As a means to this end, it revived the Freshman Declamatory Contest and awarded a silver loving cup to the winner. The event was held in Bascom Hall, on November 30, 1926. Louis I. Boorda was awarded first place. His declamation was the ' Toussaint Overature of Wendall Phillips. Lawrence F. Gichner received second place, and Maurice B. Pasch, third. Louis I. Boorda Page 407 ' ZATION The Sacred Medicine Bundle, made from the skin of the sacred Otter! He alone knows the Powers in the stones, feathers and the barks of trees who wanders the Woods and seeks Her Mysteries! Orga ' Ik • ¥, HONORARY 1% f m nv. Founded at William and Mary College. 1776 Number of chapters, 99 Local chapter. Alpha Date established. 1899 Phi Beta Kappa National Honorary Scholastic Fraternity Officers Mendenhall, Prof. C. E President Wagner, Prof. G Vice-President Potter, Prof. P. B Secretary Smith, C. A Treasurer Anderson, M. axtell, m. c. Bacon, L. B. BiLLINGTON, R BusYN, H. F. Casely, R. E. Costerisan, G Crowley, R. M, W. Droppers, G. F. Gamm, R. L. Grether, a. S. Gronlund, a. a. Hawley, R. M. Hendrickson, M. Hu, I. Johnson, A. M. Members in University Class of 1926 Kehl, K. C. Lemke, F. D. Lund, R. J. MiNTZ, S. Oberdeck, L. L. M. A. Paddock, R. H. Parker, G. Pois, J. Powell, J. W. Pratt, C. D. QUADE, R. H. Rau, G. a. Rogers, C. L. Rollefson, R. O. Scheuber, L. M. Schmidt, L. M. Stehn, F. C. Sternlieb, E. E. Sutherland, E. D. Taylor, E, C. Wegner. a. E. Whitaker, L. J. Wild, P. S. Wu, C. F. BiLSTAD, N. M. BiRK, M. H. Bisno, D. Corp, R. E. Class of 1927 Drissen, E. M. Johns, A. L. Osterberg, H. Rowley, P. L. M. SUCKERN, L. E. Winter, J. M. Page 412 A. I. Asplund R R. Benedict V M Murray R. R. Schrader H. J. Heimerl R. E Zinn I H. Gerks S. D Post E. A. Landwehr K F Wendt G F. Liddle W. W. Churchill R J Piltz B R. Teare J. W. Vallee C Braatz A P Colburn E. Birkenwald DJ.McFarlane E. F Carpenter A G Oettmeier R. J Davis H. D Crawford C. W. John E. A. Abendroth R. K. Neller A W. Piltz R A Millermaster E A. Lillquist H, P. Robinson Founded at Lehigh University. 1885 Number of chapters. 51 Local chapter. Alpha of Wisconsin Date established. 1899 Tau Beta Pi National Honorary Engineering Fraternity Members in Faculty Abendroth, G. F. Bennett, Edw. Hargaugh, M. D. Hougen, O. a. Johnson, R. E. Kelso, L. E. Kinne, W. S. Kommers, J . B. Kowalke, O. L. Larson, G. L. Larson, L. C. Lindner. C. P. Livermore, J. D. McCaffery, R. S. Markwardt, L, J, Maurer, E. E. Mead, D. W. Meyers, A. C. Muehlberger, C. W. Nelson, D. W. Newlin, J. A. Members in University Graduates Neumeister, C. L. Phillips, J. D. Phillips, R. S. Price, J. R. Ragatz, R. A. Richtmann, W. M. RoARK, R. J. turneaure, f. e Van Hagen, L. F Watson, J. W Weaver, W Wiepking, C. a Williams, J. W Withey, M. O Benedict, R. R. Brooks, L E. Colburn, A. P. Friedman, L. Matthias, L. H. Class of 1927 Elected as Juniors Piltz, R. J. Schrader, R. R. Smith, J. P Summers, E. R Abendroth, E. A. Carpenter. E. F. Davis, R. J. Gerks, L H. Jaseph, L. F. Landwehr, E. A. Liddle, G. F. Lidicker, W. Z. M Lilliquist, E. A. Elected as Seniors McFarlane, D. J. llermaster, R. a. Murray, V. M. Oettmeier, A. G Post, S. D Teare, B. R Asplund, A. Birkenwald, E. Braatz, C. Churchill, W. W, Crawford, H. D. Heimerl, G. F. Jahn, C. W. Piltz, A. W. Class of 1928 Neller, R. K. Robinson, H. P. Thayer, N. B. Vallee. J. W. Wendt, K. F Zinn, R. E Page 41 3 C. D. Highleyman. E. Von Germeten K. Worthing E. Hewitt R. White W. P. Griffith M. M. Morack R. Ela G. L. Beach R. Jordan W. Bodden W. B. Thayer J. C, Stowers G. EXjuglas R. Bell G. Stevens W. H, Edwards P. Murphy H. S. Stevens W. W. Coombs S. D, Cotter C. E. Nelson W. Hahn H. C. Thoma F. McGregor E. Gordon Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1905 Number of chapters, 64 Local chapter, A Company, First Regiment Date established, 1905 Scabbard and Blade Officers Stevens, H. S Captain Thoma, H. C First Lieutenant Ela, R Second Lieutenant Stowers, J . C First Sergeant Associate Members Barnes, Lieut. Col. J. F. Hull, Captain, J. E. Carothers, Lieut. G. MoFFET, Col. W. Learnard, Captain R. K. Hamilton, Lieut. J. M. Reinhart, Major S. E. Miller, Captain G. A. Crosby, Sergeant W. Borden, Captain F. A. Weiland, Captain P. G. Heilman, Sergeant W. H. Cherry, Captain T. G. Thomas, Sergeant Members in University Graduates Fosbinder, R. J. Fulton, E. G. Leitz, F. Purncker, R. Sabin, S. H. Franseen, C. C. Gordon, E. Millington. P. E. Roche, B. H. Thompson, M. Fries, H. Issacson, L. E. Morrison, J. Schlotthauer, G. Thorson, S. Class of 1927 Bell. R. T. Crosby. M. G. Highleyman, C. D. Murphy, P. Ross, G. Bodden, W. A. Elkins, O. M. Jordan, R. Nelson, C. E. Stevens, G. Coombs, W. W. Hahn, W. S. Koehring, C. A. Plank, L. T. Thayer, N. B. Cotter. S. D. Heiden, L. H. Lyke, H. G. Ramlow, L. W. White, R. McGregor, F. Class of 1928 Beach, G. L. Dawson, G. E. Griffith, P. W. Morack, M. M. Thoma, H. C. Burgess, S. Edwards, W. H. Weaver, F. M. Stevens, H. S. Von Germeten, E. Clement, R. F. Ela, R. Hewitt, E. Stowers, J. C. Worthing, K. E. Page 414 N. M. Nelson F. H. Brant E. M. Jones J. A. Chucka R, A. Poison L. H. Weiner E J- Rasmussen W. A Sommer C. M. Bice Founded at Ohio State University, 1897 Number of chapters, 34 Local chapter, Babcock Date established, 1905 Alpha Zeta National Honorary Agricultural Fraternity Members in Faculty Alexander, A. S. Fuller, J. G. Jones, E. R. Morrison, F. B. Steele, D. G Babcock, S. M. Graber, L. F. Jones, L. R. Mortimer, G. B. Sumner, W. A Brann, J. W. Hart, E. B. KoLB,J.H. Richards, G. Tiffany, E. M. Brant, H.J. Hastings, E. G. Kraus, E. J. RussFi I , H. L. Troug, E Chandler, G. A. Hatch, K. L. Luther, E. L. RUPEL, I. W. Vaughan, R. E Delwiche, E. J. HlBBARD, B. H. Macklin, T. SCHAARS, M. A. Walker, J. C Ebling, W. H. Hopkins, A. W. MiLUM, V. G. Sommer, H. H. Whitson, a. R. Farrington, E. H. Humphrey, G. C. MiLWARD, J. A. Steenbock, H. WiLEDEN, A. F Frost, W. D. James, J. A. Moore, R, A. Moore, J. G. Members in University Graduates Stewart, H. W. Wright, W. H Caldwell, R. M. Elvehjem, C. a. Hull, H. H. Sarles, W. B. Vandervest, W. L Dickson, A. D. Finch, A. H. Parmelee, H. B. Schaefer, H. C. Weed, A Elmslie, W. p. Gunderson, F. L. Renard, E. J. ROTT, C. A. Class of 1927 Thomas, B. H. Zaumeyer, W. J Bice, C. M. Chucka, J. A. McGrath, a. E. POLSON, R. A. Sommer, W. A Brant, F. H. Jones, E. M. Nelson, N. M. O ' Brien, G. Class of 1928 Rasmussen, E. J. Weiner, L. H Aebischer, D. C. Burgardt, G. F. Cook, H. W. Howell, B. B. Weyker, L, M Page 415 R. Sher Founded, 1906 Number of chapters, 62 AIP, T Date established, 1906 Delta Sigma Rho National Honorary Forensic Fraternity Officers Bell, G. H President Gaulke, N Secretary Barnes, Prof. J . Alk, I. Members in Faculty Weaver, Prof. A. T. O ' Neil, Prof. J. M. Pyre, Prof. J. F. A. Bell, G. H. LUDWIC, C. Members in University Gaulke, N. Morse, E. North, V. Zileznick, C. Sher, R. Page 416 ■M P 1 E v ■1! S .f ;« M| rj H V 9| li 1 I A ■Hi B -rt Iot 1 LHiii ' ' H [ ll m ' Ai. jb Hhk ' F5 1 1 1 jil H M. Parry E. Hawley F. Allen G. Feid H. Liebman K. Handy A. Hirschfield F. Schauer M. Brandel W Wise H. Ailyn E. Miller R Mantell Founded at University of Washington, 19W Number of chapters, 33 Local chapter. Beta Date established. 1910 Theta Sigma Phi Women ' s National Honorary Journalistic Fraternity Member in Faculty Patterson, H. Allen F. Allyn, H. Brandel, M. Feld, G. Grenzow, D. Handy, K. Members in University Seniors Hawley, E. Hirschfield, A. Liebman, H. Mantell, R. Miller, E. Parry, M. Schauer, F. Wise, W. Junior Sullivan, B. ' Page 417 Peterson Eklund Kipp Powell Derber Weisz Albrecht Goodkind Johnson Carrier Snyder Freytag Senske Gallati Kalish At wood Schlaver Beth Nelson Lauson Kellogg Gottliei Founded at De Pauw University, 1909 Number of chapters, 38 L«cal chapter. Wisconsin Date established, 1911 Sigma Delta Chi National Honorary Professional Journalistic Fraternity Bleyer, Prof W. G. Prof. C. R. Bush, Hyde, Prof. G. M. Olson, K. E. Members in Faculty Miller. D. W. Salisbury, M. H. Prof. W. A. Sumner. Hopkins, Prof. A. W. Fish, Prof. C. R Members in University Graduate Kellogg, E. Atwood, C. N. Beth, E. F. Carrier, V. G. Eklund, L. C. Freytag, E. W. Gallati, G. C. Goodkind, B. A. Hatcher, J. B. Class of 1927 Johnson, G. C. Johnson, P. W. Kalish, S. E. Kipp, D. H. Lauson, R. H. Merica, E. L. Nelson, J. M. Powell, H. F. Schaeffer, C. G. Schlaver, C. O. Senske, A. C. Snyder, R. H. Albrecht, D. C. Derber, G. E. Class of 1928 Gerling, G. F. Gottlieb, A. Peterson, W. F. Weisz, J. S. Pledge Loughran, v. F. Page 41 S R. B. Schwenger H. Jerome L. G. Larson J. F. Federer R. T. Ragatz R. U. Ratcliff A. L. Zempel M. Leven J. H. Gittings Founded at University of Wisconsin. 1912 Number of chapters, 8 Local chapter. Alpha Date established, 1912 Artus National Honorary Economics Fraternity Commons, J. R. Glaeser, M. R. Groves, H, M. Members in Faculty Jerome, H. KlEKHOFER, W. H. Perlman, S. Whitman, M. Members in University Graduate Leven, M. Federer, J. F. Gittings, J. H. HOLLISTER, A. L. Class of 1927 Larson, L. G. Ragatz, R. T. Ratcliff, R. U. Schwenger, R. B. Zempel, A. L. Page 419 A. E. Wegner C. A. Koehring W. W. Sauber E. H. Mortensen F. H. Elwell E. H. Gardner H. R. Trumbower P. G. Fox A. H. Moeller Ward Macfadden A. E. Gaik W. A. Bodden D. A. Kerth Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1913 Number of chapters, 23 Local chapter. Alpha of Wisconsin Date established, 1913 Beta Gamma Sigma National Honorary Commerce Fraternity Honorary Members Clausen, F. H. Jackson, J. W. Elwell, F. H. Fox, P. G. Gardner, E. H. Members in Faculty GiLMAN, S. W. Jamison, C. L. Johnson, A. S. Trumbower, H. R. Scott, W. A. Members in University Graduates KORTH, H. T. Staten, F. a. Bodden, W. A. Gaik, A. E. Kerth, D. A. Koehring, C. A. Class of 1927 Macfadden, W. Moeller, A. H. Mortensen, E. H. Sauber, W. W. Wegener, A. E. Page 420 W m- A v i l 1 A. Weirick M. Cole G. TTiiede L. Haase R. Smithiman R. Lidbeck B. Rom E. Miller B. Meiselwitz Founded at Michigan State College. I9I2 Number of chapters, 19 Local chapter. Eta Date established, 1915 Omicron Nu National Honorary Home Economics Fraternity COWLES, M. Dodge, B. Manning, H. Marlatt, a. L. Members in Faculty Parsons, H. T. Reynolds, H. T, Winkelman, H. D. Sutherland, E. Woods, Dr. E. Clow, B. Members in University Graduates McCoy, E. Cole, M. Haase, L. Lidbeck, K. Miller, E. Class of 1927 Meiselwitz, B. Rom, B. Smithiman, R. Thiede, G. Weirick, A. J, P iie 421 M. J. Williams R. C. Cahoon C. Braatz E. F. Vilter C. W. Johnson N. S. Warner F. A. Mattka C. H. Traver C. W. Jahn E. T. Hansen L.J.Cleveland D. E. Miller G. M. Little K. C. Davis N J Peters Founded at Universities of Wisconsin and Illinois, 191 5 Number of chapters, 8 Local chapter. Alpha Date established, 1915 Pi Tau Sigma National Honorary Mechanical Engineering Fraternity Corp, C. 1. Hyland, p. H. Larson, G. L. Mason, W. A. Nelson, D. W. Members in Faculty Orth, H. D. Philips, J. D. Philips, R. B. RiCHTMANN, W. M. Shields, K. G. Trotter, R. A. Wilson, G. C. WoY, F. P. Braatz, C. Cleveland, L. J. Davis, K. C. Jahn, C. W. Members in University Class of 1927 Johnson, C. W. Little, G. M. Peters, N. I. Traver, C. H. Vilter, E. F. Warner, N. S. Williams, M. J. Baker, J. G. Cahoon, R. C. Class of 1928 Hansen, E. T. Mattka, F. A. Miller. D. E. White, H. L. Page 412 D. Abert W, Forrest C. Romes D. Ingold G. Meyst H. E)oke L. Gaterman G. Troemel E. Landschuiz M. Morrison M. Peterson C. Burkit M. Amon F ' ounded at University of Kansas, 1912 Number of chapters, 1 3 Local chapter. Eta Date established, 1920 Delta Phi Delta National Honorary Art Fraternity Kremers, L. R. Philipps, D. J. Members in Faculty Stebbins, R. S. Varnum, W. H. Amon, M. Burkit, C. Gaterman, L. Incold, E. Members in University Class of 1927 Landschulz, E. Meyst, G. Morrison, M. Peterson, M. Romes, C. Troemel, G. Abert, D. Class of 1928 Doke, H. Forrest, W. Page 423 H R. Piltz Schrader Heimerl Zeugner Liddle Abendroth Marker Wendt Lidicker Landwehr A. Piltz Homewcxxl Lenz Levin Merz Founded at University of Illinois, 1922 Number of chapters, 8 Local chapter. University of Wisconsin Date established, 1925 Chi Epsilon Honorary Civil Engineering Fraternity Abebdroth, G. H. Corp, C. I. COTTINGHAM, W. S. KiNNE, W. S. Piltz, R. J. Members in Faculty Lindner, C. P. Maurer, E. R. Members in University Graduates Smith, J. P. Mead, D. W. turneaure, f. e. Schrader, R. R. Van Hagan, L. F. WiTHEY, M. O. Abendroth, E. A. Birkenwald, E. Harker, D. L. Heimerl, G. J. HoMEWOOD, R. T. Class of 1927 Landwehr, E, A. Levin . Liddle, G. F. Lidicker, W. Z. Oettmeier, a. G. Piltz, A. W. Wendt, K. F. Zeuger, O, K. Lenz, A. T. Class of 1928 Merz, H. S. Pa t 414 F. Landon D. Hess M. Anderson L.Cole B. Wise A. Cress M. Pel ton A. Johns Mu Phi Epsilon Date of organization. 1922. Mu Phi Epsilon is the only national honorary musical fraternity for women. The purpose of the organization is to create and spread the appreciation of really good music, to give opportunities for expression to American students of talent, and to foster harmony in relation to all phases of life. By offering scholarships, conducting composition contests, and by furnishing support to all worth-while things in the realm of music the fraternity carries out its object. Mu Lambda, the local chapter, founded in 1922, follows the plan of the national organization begun in 1903. Among the musical appearances made by the chapter during the year were: the reception and recital given for the faculty, public recitals given by the group and by individual members, and the regular monthly programs given for members and friends. Officers Gress, a President Hess, D Vice-President Cole, L Secretary Johns. A Treasurer Members in Faculty Frances Landon Members in University Graduates Biehusen, M. Ryan, W. Members in Madison Anderson, V. Fischer, E. C. Class of 1927 Anderson, M. Gress, A. Have, R. Johns, A. Pelton, M. Cole, L. Hess, D. Wise. B. Page 425 R. RoIIefson E. R Bell G. R. Sears G. Suits H. Ostcrberg M. J . Martin K. G. Jansky Phi Sigma Phi Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1925 National Honorary Physics Fraternity Members in Faculty Ingersoll, L. R, Mendenhall, C. E. Roebuck, J. R. Snow, B. W. Terry, E. M. Members in University Graduates Bell, E. R. DURAND, S. R. Martin, M. J. Rollefson, R. Jansky, K. G. Class of 1927 Osterberg, H. Suits, G. Page 426 Phi Kappa Phi Founded at University of Maine, 1897 Number of chapters. 39 Date established 1907 Officers Roe, F. W President Marlatt, a. L Vice-President Eblinc, W. H Secretary Whitbeck, R. H Orator Bascom, L. Bennett, D. Bleyer, W. G. Bradley, H. C. Cole, L. J . Commons, J. R. dowling, l. w. Diesch, H. a. E. Ebling, W. H. Foster, F. M. Fulton, E. G. Goodnight, S. H. Gordon, E. B. GUYER, E. B. Guyer, M. F. Harbough, M. D. Hart, E. B. Hastings, E. G. Hibbard, B. H. Hopkins, A. W. Jones, T. L. Jones, L. R. Keitt, G. W. kowalke, o. l. The Faculty Larson, G. L. Leith, C. K. Lenher, V. Lescohier, D. D. Lindner, C. P. loevenhart, a. s. Macklin, T. Marlatt, A. L. Matthews, J. H. McCaffrey, R. S. McElvain, H. S. R. Mead, D. W. Metz, M. Mills, C. H. Nardin, F. L. Paxson, F. L. Phillips, J. D. Phillips, R. S. Roe, F. W. Roebuck, J. R. Russell, H. L. scallon, m. Schaars, M. a. Schaefer, H. C. Showerman, G. Skinner, E. B. Smith, W. S. Sumner, W. A. Tottingham, W. E. Turneaure, F. E. Watson, K. M. Weaver, A. T. Whitbeck R. H. White, H. C. Winkleman, H. Biehusen, M. J. Brooks, L. E. Other Members in the University Crowley, R. M. Ellis, G. Franseen, C. McNaught, H. L. Stehn, Mrs. F. C. Matthias, L. H. Powell, J. W. Renard, E. J. Sarles, W. B. Alk, I. asplund, a. Beth, E. BlRK, M. BlRKE NWALD, Brown, A. BuRRUS, J . Haase, L. Chucka, J. Corp, R. Earls, L. Frautschi, L Gaik, a. Gaston, J. GlLLIN, J. Hawley, E. Holmes, C. Jansky, K. Class of 1927 Johns, A. Johnson, G. Jones, P. Kerth, D. Koehring, C. Larson, L. Lee, H. Lidicker, W. Malzahn, F. Meiselwitz, B. Nelson, N. Nelson, J . Osterberg, H. Ragatz, R. Ratcliffe, R. schaettle, r, Schwenger, R. Sher, R. Snaveley, J Teare, B Thayer, N. B Vaughan, R. W Wegner, a Winter, J Wooster, E Zileznick, C, ZiNN, R. E Page 427 Alpha Kappa Delta Honorary Sociological Fraternity Founded at University of Southern California. 1920 Number of chapters. 14 Local chapter. Beta Date established. 1922 Officers Dedrick, C. L President GiLLiN, J. P Vice-President RoMic, R Secretary Reschke, a Treasurer GiLLiN, Prof. J. L National Representative Barry, A. G. Brayton, F. p. Colbert, R. J. Dedrick, C. L. GiLLIN, J. L. Members in Faculty MOHLER, H. C. KOLB, J.H. Person, P. H. Ross, E. A. Swan, W. B. Wileden, a. F. Young, K. Croft, A. E. Dahlberg, a. O. Hansen, A. T. LiNDSTROM, D. E. Lumpkin, K. Members in University Graduates Macaraig, S. E. Oldics, W. Petroff, L. Sammis, F. Sampson, L. W. Saunderson, G. C. Stehn, F. C. Tuttle, H. S. Cleland, a. I. Gillin, J. P. Haraldson, a. H. Johnson, V. M. Kahn, F. M. Kastler, N. M. Class of 1927 Palmer, G. M. Partch, M. p. Reschke, A. Spater, M. E. Stern, F. J . Tenbroeck, M. L. Werner, D. White, L. B. Wood, F. B. Dale, M.J. Ellingson, M. a. Class of 1928 HOEBEL, E. A. Pierce, F. E. Rasche, R. L. Abels, M. H. Braxton, G. Camp, P. Social Workers and other Members Ferguson, W. Griggs, M. Hanson, A. Lewis, L. L. Lumpkin, H. H. Matsumoto, R. rockwood, s. Romic, R. Stillson, S. Stenholm, a. Vacheron, D. Williams, A. Yerxa, E. Page 42S H. Romnes W. W. Churchill V. M Murray L. H. Matthias S. D. Post W H Fuldner E. F. Carpenter R.E.Johnson I.H. Gerks C E DeHorn R R. Benedict B. R. Teare J. W. Vallee N.B.Thayer R.J.Davis A. E. Lillquist E.Bennett R.J.Erickson W. C. Deininger R A. Millermaster V. B Bagnall Founded at University of Illinois, 1904 Number of chapters. 21 Local chapter. Theta Date established. IQIO Eta Kappa Nu National Honorary Electrical Engineering Fraternity Bennett, E. Johnson, R. E. Members in Faculty Larson, L. C. Price, J. R. Watson, J. W. Wilson, G. C. Benedict, P. R. Bagnall, V. B Churchill, W. W. Carpenter, E. F. Hebard, G. G. Members in University Graduates DeHorn, C. E. Deininger, W. C. Davis, R.J. Class of 1927 Erickson, R. J. Gerks, 1. H. Lillquist, A. E. Matthias, L. H. Murray, V. M. Millermaster, R. A. Post, S. D. Summers, E. R. Teare, B. R. Thayer, N. B. Vallee, J. W. Class of 1928 Fuldner, W. H. Romnes, H. Page 42: National Collegiate Players Founded at Universitv of Wisconsin, 191 ' 1 Number of chapters, I 5 Honorary Dramatic Fraternity H ' DouBLER, Prof. M. McCarthy, M. Members in Faculty ONeill, Prof. J. M. Troutman, W. C. Weaver, Prof. A. T, West, Prof. R. W. Borchers, G. Butts, P. F. Members in University Graduates LUDDEN, A. D. PURNELL, W. Rousseau, L. Roth, A. Skinner, E. R. Thorson, S. Bishop, M. Church, R. Undergraduates Encler, M. Faust, P. Harrington, J. WiRKA. H. Page 430 F. v5 SOCIAL FRATERNITIES u •ft ' r r si- Schneider Frelinger Droppers Sheldon Himes MacCartney Meyering Kremer Campbell Jacobsen Linley Thomas Olwin Jones Gale Traver Werrell Stemm Macfadden Annis Hamilton Eastin Founded at Miami University. 18 8 Number of chapters, 95 Local chapter. Wisconsin Alpha Date established. 1857 Beecher, B. S. Annis, A. D. Campbell, P. E. Crewe, C. W. Catlin, J. B. CONSIDINE, L. J. Harris, J. E. Larson, G. L. Harmon. T. C. Himes. H. T. Kremer, P. E. Droppers, E. R. Frelinger, G. A. Eastin, D. A. Douglas, L. N. Dunlap, M. H. Phi Delta Theta Members in Faculty Maurer, E. R. Ochsner, E. W. A. Stebbins, J. Members in University Graduates Linley, V. Class of 1927 Macfadden W. Olwin. C. Class of 1928 Jacobsen. E. A. Jones, D. S. Class of 1929 Gale, B. T. Class of 1930 Geiger, F. Heberlein. E. G. Werrel, W. a. Schneider, R. A. Stemm, F. H. Meyering, L. V. Sheldon, C. H. Werrell, W. A. Traver, C. H. Thomas, P. M. Hamilton, T. W. MacCartney, W. R Joachim, F, G. Mahardt. p. L. Pattison, D. H. Simpson, N. E. Page 4}2 R. A. Barnum R.P.Pike J E. Roe T. D. Healy J KFairbank G.E.Dawson M.E.Welch H.P.Clark J.R.Williams R. H. Bartlett C. O. Braatz T.R.Seymour J. Burgess P.D.Curtis R H. Swallow D. A. Lucas, Jr. J. A. Martineau B. A. Breen C. E. McGinnis G. L Otis E H. Ferree V. J Chapman Founded at Miami University. 1839 Number of chapters. 8 1 Local chapter. Alpha Pi Date established, 1873 Beta Theta Pi Bunting, C. H. Caldwell, J . R. Eyster, J. A. Barnum, R. A. Adams, A. B. Bartlett, R. H. Fairbank, J, K. Fedderson, B. L. Atwell, C. R. Baker, F. D. Curtis, J. A. Fish, C. R. Halverson, D. L. Learnard, R. K. Healy, T. D. Braatz, C. O. Chapman, V. J. Clark, H. P. Green, B. A. Hall, R. E. Hausmann, H. A. HUTCHINS, D. T. Lucas, J. A. Members in Faculty Leonard, W. E. Nettles, C. P. OcG, F. A. Pyre, J. F. A. Members in University Class of 1927 McGiNNis, C. E. Class of 1928 Cunningham, T. L. Curtis, P. D. Dawson, G. E. Class of 1929 Lucas, D. A., Jr. Martineau, J. A. Class of 1930 Morrisey, J. B. Murphey, F. X. Schwenker, H. R. Skinner, E. B. Smith, G. H. Oris, G. L. Ferree, E. H. Pike, R. P. Roe, J. E. Seymo ' jr, T. R. Stupecky, H. E. NOYES, J. T. Renoldson, J. Shomaker, L. Smith, H. L. J. Smith, L. S. Travis, S. D. Schager, E. p. Sappenfield, S. Swallow, R. H. Welch, M. E. Williams, J. R. Warner, J. S. Watrous, J. S. FULSOM, H. Page 43} R. L. McKee R G. Winnie J ABrennecke W. T. Schroeder R. A Jung F. L. Hicks J E. Moran G.Miller J. W. Drummond S. H. Boyer , D. O Mitchell ESchuetz J H Hat ly F. J.Geib A L Morsell S. G Kennedy L. A. Shriver D Hinderliter F. R Shugrue H. F. Moran Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Number of chapters, 48 Bradish, N. C. Brennecke, J. A. Hardy, J. H. Boyer, S. H. Drummond, J. W. Almer, M. H. Anderson, C. M. Barrett, F. T. Local chapter, Wisconsin Alpha Date established, 1875 Kennedy, S. G. Geib, F. J. Hinderliter, D. R. Boardman, W. W. Buell, R. a. Gant, J. R. Phi Kappa Psi Members in Faculty Calderwood, H. B. Members in University Class of 1927 Hicks, F. L. Moran, J. E. Class of 1928 McKee, R. L. Miller, G. H. Class of 1929 Jung, R. A. Mitchell, D. O. Class of 1930 Heather, R. M. Hobart, M. C. Morsell, A. L. Schroeder, W. T. Moran, H. F. Shriver, L. A. Kennedy, J. E. McDermaid, D. W. Moran, T. H. Dawson, P. M. Winnie, R. G. SCHUETZ, R, E. Shucrue, F. R. Reeke, J. D. Smith, R. W. Vrooman, C. D. Page 434 R. McMillen N. T. Hand J. M. Ward J. Leigh W. M. Stillman K. Webster C. Decker R Pabst J. Silverthorne W. B. Osgood P. Younge L. Boldenweck D. Freeborn J. A. Covert G. W. Fox W. Reeves W. H. Sheldon J. Hanks I. Clendenen S. Waite W. J. Mueller C Cameron R. Koss Founded at Union College, 1841 Number of chapters, 24 Lx cal chapter, Alpha Iota Date established. 1878 Chi Psi Clendenen, I. H. Covert, J. A. Boldenweck, L. F. Cameron, G. H. Freeborn, D. D. Calkins, R. S. Callender, R. Cassoday, E. J. Byrne, E. H. Decker, C. R. Faust, P. H. Fox, G. W. Hand, N. T. Leigh, J. R. Hagen, N. M. Dye, G. a. Fox, P. Jonas, A. F. Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Furlong, T. F. Johnson, H. S. Class of 1928 McMillen, R. S. Reeves, W. T. Class of 1929 Hanks, J.I. Koss, R. B. Class of 1930 Knight, H. S. Lloyd, M, M. Hubbard, F. G. Kuhns, S. a. Mueller, W. J. Pabst, R. E. Sheldon, W. H. Stillman, W. M. Ward. J. M. Younge, P. A. Waite, S. E. Webster, K. F. Osgood, W. B. Silverthorne, J. H. Mead, F. B. Mitchell, J. R. Nauth, W. L. Rawson, T. S Ward, W. W. Wilson, W. N. Page 43S Hansen Baird Jahn Bernhard Burrus Schmeckebier Ash Carney Larson Bach Brooks MacDonough Baldwin Weibrecht Marsh Floyd Metcalf Founded at Miami University. 1855 Number of chapters, 8i Local chapter. Alpha Lambda Date established, 1884 Sigma Chi AlTKEN, H. Bernhard, W. G. Bach, J. R. Baird, J. B. Ash, J. P. Bills, N. Castle, J . Clarke, J . Brown, R. A. Brooks, H. L. Burrus, J. D. Baldwin. R. Carney, R. F. Hansen, G. Howard, J . G. copeland, r. Desmond, T. Dreshbr, J. Members in Faculty Caddock, C. DURAND, L. Members in University DuRAND, S. Class of 1927 Jahn, W. A. Class of 1928 Floyd, A. H, Johnson, P. Larson, H, Class of 1929 Laidlaw, W. C. Class of 1930 DuNAWAY, D. Edwards, J . John, W. LiBKE, C. V. MacDonough, K. B. Larson, L. Metcalfe, R. H. Lynaugh, F. J. SCHEMPF, F. Lawson, J. LOCKHART, T. McCoRMICK, M. SCHLICHTER, D. Schmeckebier, L. E. Seybold, O. Weibrecht, E. L. Marsh, W. Paulson, J. Ross, M. SCHEMPF, E. Page 436 D. S. Seator C. E. Nelson R. F. White V. C. Guenther R. T. Harwood J. W. Wilson E. S. Vinson • W. B. Murphy J. E. Godfrey O. E. Lyons T. C. Etouoan R. L. Kreuz L. V. Emmert M. S. Grant C. H. Henderson J. R. Morris R. K. Neller R. E. Lambeau N. B. Wigdale E. C. Grouse J. P. Burnham H. S. Stevens Founded at Williams College. 1834 Number of chapters, 52 Local chapter, Wisconsin Date established, 1885 Delta Upsilon Members in Faculty Allen, C. E. Bleyer, W. G. Bradley, H. C. Cairns, Wm. B. Chase, W.J. Gardner, E. H. Kellogg, E. B. Members in University- Kremers, E. Read, F. O. Sellery, G. C. Smith, W. M Snow, B. W Crowley, R. M. Guenther, V. C. Graduates Class of 1927 Lyons, O. E. Powell, J. W DOUCAN, T. C. Emmert, L. V. Harwood, R. T. Kreuz, R. L. Class of 1928 Lambeau, R. E. Nelson, C. E. White, R. F Godfrey, J. E. Morris, J. R. Murphy, W. B. Neller, R. K. Stevens, H. S. Class of 1929 Vinson, E. S. Wigdale, N. B. Wilson, J. W Burnham, J. P. Crouse, E. C. Grant, M. S. Henderson, C. A. Ransom, B. M. Class of 1930 Seator, D. S. Sprowls, a. C. Ricker, S Allen, H. S. Harlow, F. E. Lewis, R. C. Johnson, C. R. McEachron, E. D. Ramsey, W. R. Wigdale, E. J Page 437 Young Kretschmer Herriott O ' Leary Schlicht A, Backus Morrison Henderikson Fischedick O. Backus Smeiding Stone Hayssen Stedman Conroy Oyster Founded at Bethany College. 185 Number of chapters, 72 Local chapter. Beta Gamma Date established. 1888 Backus, O. Conroy, J . Backus, A. Bloom, B. Grain, M. Curry, R. Glenn Frank Childs, C. Henderickson, S. Stone, P. Evans, R. Franks, E. holliday, m. Delta Tau Delta Members in Faculty Guy Morrison Members in University Graduate Holt. F.J. Class of 1927 Fischedick, J. O ' Leary, J. Class of 1928 Class of 1929 Young, F. Class of 1930 Johnson, W. Lamb, W. Herriot, J. H Smeiding, H. Oyster, G. Kretschmer, H. Nagler, L. McDoNOUGH, J . Morey, a. Schlicht, W- Stedman, J Hayssen, W. Stedman, L. Todd, W. Weyenberg, N. Page 43S t.t.f ,f f 1-..J.J S. Goodnight H. O ' Rourke J . McCartney T. Swanson A. Reed E. Rikkers W.Lyon E, Cole H. Parker L. White D. Abert T. Burden F. [Durham F Jensen V. Chase R. Evinrude A- Remley C. Newcomb A. Bierlv P. Davis D. White R. Bravton L. Grambs H, Kubly L. Gutsch W. Bundy Founded at Washington and Jefferson University. 1848 Number of chapters, b ' 4 .1.A Local chapter. Mu Date established. 1893 KiNNE, W. S. Adams, L. M. Brayton, R. K. Abert, D. B. burdon, t. s. BlERLY, A. W. Chase, A. V. Abert, R. E. Buchanan, R. S. kowalke, o. l. Kubly, R. R. Bundy, W. H. Durham, F. C. Grambs, L. L. Cole, E. P. Evinrude, R. S. Fitzgerald, R. W. Frost, R. J. GOODFELLOW, J . G. Phi Gamma Delta Members in Faculty Ross, E. A. SiMINGTON R. WlNCHELL, A. N. Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Davis, P. H. Kubly, H. E Class of 1928 Newcomb, C. }. Remley, a. Class of 1929 Fitzgerald, W. J. Goodnight, S. H. Gutsch, L. W. Class of 1930 Kubly, S. V. McCormick, R. B. Martin, S. Rikkers, D. F. McCartney, J. H. Rikkers, E. H. Swanson, T. L. Jensen, F. G. Lyon, W. O ' RouKE, H. D. Morsback. C. a. Page, H. B. Williams, J. W. Sarles, W. B. Parker, H. L- White, H. L. White, D. O. Reed, A. S. Simmons, K. D. Rader, H. B. Swanson, J . P. Page 439 S. D. Grace R A. V. Hitchcock D E Barr G. W Stukenberg R. H. Kasiska G.J. Miller M. A. Lehmkjhl R. Juds.jn G.D.Gibson j.C. McGuire J G. Woodsorrie Xc. ' Wray jT P. Greenwood P V. KoD5 F. Fischer P. M. Golley ' ' • .. - . „ . W. Walsh J . j . Ross ' D. Kynaston T. F. McCaul Babcock, S. M. Hitchcock, A. V. Kasiska, R. H. Barr, D. E. Fischer, F. H. Founded. Union College, 1847 Number of Chapters, 30 1 «1 )aav( Local Chapter, Sigma Deuteron Date established, 1895 Theta Delta Chi Members in Faculty Barnes, Lieut. Col. J . B. Members in University DoKE, H. B. Meiklejohn, Alex. Koos, P. V. Gibson. G. D. Grace, S. D. Class of 1927 Kynaston, D. D. Class of 1928 Greenwood, C. S. Jennett, a. J. Lehmkuhl, M. a. McCaul, T. F. Ross, J. J. Stukenberg, W, W. McGuire, J. D. Miller, G. J. WoODSOME, J . O. Wray.J.G. Golley, P. M. Drury, S.J. Dunlap, G. G. Greenwood, J . P. Gans, L, Hart, J. A. Class of 1929 Judson, R. R. Class of 1930 Hayden, J. F. Porter, H. A. Lauritzen, R. H. Stavrum, T. J. TUPPER, L. C. Walsh, W. W. White, J. J. Wilson, J. C. Page 440 Founded at Union Collese. 1833 Number of chapters. 26 Local chapter. Rho Date established. 18% BUETHE, W. Dean, J . Beardmore, M. boogher, h. Brazeau, B. Connor, G. Blake, G. Cass, E. CONLEY, R. Dean, F. Marshall, W. S. Stebbins, W. Gray. T. Hollister, S. Clark, W. Doyle, F. Fife, C. Foster, W. Ford, M. Furlong, H. Harmon, D. Heald, J . Psi Upsilon Members in Faculty- Members in University- Graduates Class of 1927 Lasche, R. Class of 1928 Gill, W. Hagerty, K. Class of 1929 LaBudde, G. Class of 1930 Kropf, R. Metz, T. Murphy, F. Olson, J . E. TiBBS, B. Lawton, C. Marshall, J. Hodges, T. Mason, J . Lungren, a. M. McNiCHOL, J . Murphy, M. Nash, G. O ' Connor, J. Redford, J . Stannard, F. Wolverton, J. Powers, E. White, W. R. McNicHOL, T. SCHUETTE, P. RUEZ, P. Streich, p. Wilcox, W. Winding, C. Page 441 E. Lewis S. L. Ely A. Proctor W. Slavik C. Meyers E. Anderson J. Hobbins J. Bell A. Small P. Farwell J. Von Germeton H. Lange R. Lysne K Pinegar F. Utely E Crofoot K, Godfrey C Westrich M. Rice G. Campbell Founded at University of Virginia, I86P NumiDer of chapters, 102 Bell, J. M. Crofoot, E. J. Kresky, J , L. Lange, H. F. AiNSWORTH, R. C. Atkin, G. S. Local chapter. Beta Epsilon Date established, 1898 Goodnight, S. H. Campbell, G. Ely, S, L. Daywitt, H. H. Farwell, P. F. Lysne, O. Meyer, C. F. Currier, G. E. Davis, L. M. Denniston, J. T. Kappa Sigma Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Falk, O. N. Class of 1927 Godfrey, K. A. McAndrews, H. F. WoY, F. p. Risteen, W. a. Poser, F. F. Class of 1928 Hobbins, J. F. Puelicher, R. T. Class of 1929 Pinegar, K. G. Proctor, A. S. Class of 1930 Foster, H. E. Gustafson, W. p. Lange, E. L. Rice, M. A. Von Germeten, E. G. Slavik, W. M. Small, A. L. Leitsch, W. W. LUDER, D. E. Morton, G. L. Westrich, C. J. Woodford, D. W. Utley, F. L. Williams, K. K. Noble, J. A. Slightam, R. C. Page 442 I J. Mason R. Stewart B. Hanson W. Vincent W. Churchill J. McKenna S. Post E. Robey R. Drew J. McCormick W. Randolph J, Hatcher J. Allcott H. Thoma E. Fritschet F. Sauer F. Eggers C Kellev J Morgan F Mayo H Kuckhan R Thiel H. Van Horn T.Frost R.Morse H. Halsted J Ziegweid H. AMen R. Schuler C. Kellogg K. Earle C.Foster Founded at University of Pennsylvania. 1850 Number of chapters, 34 Local chapter, Alpha Theta Date established, 1901 Fellows, D. R. H. Neumeister, C. L Allen, H. J. Allcott, J . Drew, R. H. Earle, K. B. Foster, C. M. Frost, T. D. Halsted, H. D. Fuller, W. Churchill, W. W. Eggers, F. W. Fritschel, E. G. Hatcher, J. B. Mason, J . W. McCormick, J.J. McKenna, J.J. Fournace, G. Harker, C. Phi Kappa Sigma Members in Faculty Taylor, J . W. Members in University Class of 1927 Hanson, B. W. Post, S. D. Class of 1928 Kellogg, C. J. Kuckhan, H. F. Class of 1929 Morgan, J . E. moylan, j. n. Randolph, W. H. Class of 1930 Mack D. Watson, J. W. Sauer, F. A. Mayo, F. T. Morse, R. T. Schuler, R. K. Roberts, C. A. Robey, L. E. Rosy, H. S. Marsh, H. Mueller, A. Weaver, W. Sears, R. E. Stewart, R. H. Tho.ma, H. C. Ziegweid, J. A. Thiel, R. W. VanHorn, H. Vincent, W. W. Robey, C. Page 443 I R Norcross L B. Fish CF Drake C B. Herschberger R. P Stebbins RM Ellis R.B.Nye H A. Dellicker W L. Momsen J.M Coates E F Kinkead W. N Rogers W. L. Tressler E W Nash R W Izard R.L.Sharp J R. Harrison J . P. Showerman C. K. Kluchholn B. W. Depue J. S. Sheldan F.H.Shaw R L. Price Founded at Hamilton College. 1832 Number of chapters, 17 Carswell, H. E. Bruce, J. M. Coates, J. M. Anderson, H. G. Dellicker, H. A. Izard. R. W. Barbee, R. Garrison. R. Daniels, F. Gage, L. R, Hooper, W. Ellis, R. M. Fish, L. B. Depue, B. W. Drake, C. F. Momsen, W. L. Grigsby, M. HiATT, H. Jaeger, C Local chapter. Wisconsin Date established, 1902 Alpha Delta Phi Members in Faculty Meiklejohn, S. Otis, D. Members in University Graduates Leith, a. Class of 1927 Harrison, J. R. Herschberger, C. B. Class of 1928 Kinkead, E. F. Kluckholn, C. K. Nash, E. W. Class of 1929 Nye, R. B. Sharp, R. L. Class of 1930 Laven, O. iviaRTIN, G. Parks, J. Roe, F. W. Saunders, A. Lund, R. J . Sheldon, J. S. Tressler, W. L. Norcross, J. R. Price, P, L. Powers, W. Slusher, G. Swenson, R. Scott, W. A. Studley, W. H. Taylor, T. C. Rogers, W. N. Stebbins, R. P. Shaw, F. H. Showerman, J. P. Tressler, I. Williams, G. Page 444 H Zillisch F. McGovern R.Nixon R. Zentner D.Joyce L, Frautschi M. Huber P. Ruppert J. Best ' G. Hotchkiss J Van Wagenen C Zillman L. Klinger K. Mainland H Evinger E.Gordon J. Reader J. McGovern M. Simpkins S. Wheat ley P.Wilson D.Meade R. Parkin Founded at Virginia Military Institute. 1869 Number of chapters. 101 Local chapter. Wisconsin Gamma Lambda 3ate established. 1902 Sigma Nu Chandler, G. A. Frautschi, L. E. Klincer, L. J. Best, J. S. Joyce, D. M. Adam, G. H. Arndt, J, A. Behrens, F. B. Krauskopf, F. C. Lescohier, D. D. Mainland, K. S. Nixon, R. A. Evinger, H. H. Gordon, E. S. McGovern, F. H. Benson, K. J . Buehler, K. W. Bergs, H. V. Colehour, S. p. Members in Faculty Meade, W. J. Nunemaker, J. H. Owen, R. S. Members in University Class of 1927 Reader, J.J. Class of 1928 Hotchkiss, G. H. Huber, M. G. Class of 1929 McGovern, J . N. Parkin, R. C. Class of 1930 Fritz, M. T. Goehrig, G. H. Hitchner, D. O. Huber, W. A. Simpkins, M. H. Van Wagenen, J. H. Meade, D. E. Wilson, P. W. Ruppert, P. W. Hume, J. P. Johnson, H. B. KURTH, F. S. Osborn, F. H. Wilson, H. F. Wheatley, S. a. Zillisch, H. A. Zentner, R. A. Zillman, C. C. Rogers, T. A. Schmidt, J. F. Stimpert, H. J. Page 44S G W. Threlkeld J. Germann W. B. Frackelton C.S.Anderson J. F, Ricks D.K.Alexander W. Stotts I H Rhnde ' w ' T Knn ATHSi u ' i ! ' S ■' ; S- lfe ' = ' 8 if-J ,[? g ' ' u f ' °° =P ' ' ' = C Mueller T. L. Anderson L. Pfiefer J. M. Rhodes W K. Kopp A. J. Holies H. L. Koehler G. K. Crowell N W. Eschmeyer E. W. Merica R. Fi Fiebrantz R. M. Behling J. C. Meyst Founded at University of Alabama. 1856 Number of chapters, 96 Local chapter, Wisconsin Alpha Date established, 1903 Sigma Alpha Epsilon AuRNER Robert, R. Members in Faculty Demiston, Wm. H. Meanwell, W. E. GiESE, Frederick W. Richtmann, W. H. Members in University Graduate Kopp, R. DOWLING, L. W. TWENHOFEL, W. H. Alexander, D. Behling, R. Fiebrantz, R. Anderson, C. Cleveland, R. Crowell, K. Babler, M. Chamberlin DlTTELBAC .IN, J. ;h, R. Anderson, T. Eschmeyer, N. Gibson, D. Germann, J. Dennison, G. Doepke, F. Dugan, L, DOBLER, R, Edgarton, a. Frederickson, E. Class of 1927 Frackelton, W. Class of 1928 Hatelberg, E. Class of 1929 Goble, W. Lawton, M. Mueller, G. Class of 1930 GiLBERTSON, A. Gschwindt, R. Lenhart, W. Manly, R. Merica, E. Meyst, G. Hoiles, a. Hunt, D. Pfeifer, L. Rhodes, J . Stauffacher, G. McCoy, J. Peterson, A. Peterson, L. Wickhem. John D. Wienbergen, H. Koehler, L. Russell, R. Stotts, W. Swarthout, G. Threlkeld, W. Peterson, N. Von Maltitz, H. Woodward, L. Page 446 Keck French Little Bingham Costello Ward C. Morrow Hebard Divers Felten Laubenstein Tice Myers Grange Ariens Whereatt Schult Lembcke Freyburger Skinner Acacia Founded at University of Michigan. 1904 Number of chapters. 33 Local chapter. Wisconsin Date established. 1906 Bakken, H. H. Bean, E. F. Bray, M. W. Donald, J. S. Ebling, W. French, S. J. French, S. J. Grange, P. L. Divers, L. P. Ariens, M. S. Frey, J. W. Hadley, F. B. Hebard, G. G. HiGBY, W. M. Iltis, L. L. James, J. A. Frost, H. J. Keck, E. B. Lembcke, L. W. Fehlhaber, O. W, Bingham, W, T. Collins. E. E. Memhers in Faculty Jones. T. E. Lenher. V. Leith, C. K. Leitz, F. B. Macklin, T. MacGregor, F. H. Members in University Graduates Hebard, G. G. Class of 1927 Leitl, L. J. Little, G. M. Class of 1928 Leitz, F. B. Morrow, W. J. Class of 1929 Costello, MR. Miller, E. B. Miller, W. S. Mills, C. H. Mortimer, C. B. Mowry, W. a. Murray, R. F. Morrow, C. A. Mason, F. N. Skinner, M. T. Myers, S. P. Anderson, J . Class of 1930 Freyburger, E. Felten, H. A. Lewis, S. A. Laubenstein, H. J. Owen, R. S. Swinney, E. E. Tice, L. W. Vaughan, R. E. Wilson, L. A. Wright, W. H. Schultz, p. H. Tice, L. W. Whereatt, J. C. Ward, G. C wl) Page 447 L D Harmon P A. Lytle J CPierson H S. Peffers A AStraubel O. P. Spielman W. C Noe B B Fisher L B Frazier C. N. Hodge W W Kratz C E. Turney D J Richards BHShaw R. H. Horton E.A.Rose S B. Scott Frazier, L. B. Fisher, B. B. Hodge, C. N. Bailey, J. W. BURBANK, R. F. Collins, P. C. Founded at Yale University, 8H Number of chapters, 45 Local chapter, Rho Delta Date established, 1906 Delta Kappa Epsilon Stephenson, C. IcKS, K. R. Harmon, L. D. Gladden, H. A. Hagcarty, F. J. Lytle, P. A. Peffers, H. S. Davis, E. J. DOLAN, W. W. Dorr, J. Members in Faculty Gilmore, E. a. Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Shaw, B. H. Class of 1928 Horton, R. H. Class of 1929 PlERSON, J. C. Richards, D. J . Class of 1930 Hamilton, J. S. HOAG, H. W. Briscoe, J. D. Bostock, H. S. Straubel, a. a. Kratz, W. W. Noe, W. C. Rose, E. H. Scott, S. B. McClure, R. J. Patterson, C. C. Peters, H. P. Turney, C. E. Spielman, O. P. Woodward, R. L. Powers, W. W. rucgles, w. g. Stewart, A. R. Page 448 R. Andree H. Johnson M. Farr W. Crouch J Nuzum E. Freytag D. Crane R. Bergstresser CDollard CHowdle W Davidson F Gray J Dollard J- Nelson L, Scantlin R. Clement G. Perisho J. Sipfle Founded at Virginia Military Institute. I8S5 Number of chapters. 85 Local chapter. Wisconsin Gamma Tau Date established, 1907 Brown, D. A. Buck, P. M. Bergstresser, R. Davidson, W. Brayton, p. Andree, R. HOWDLE, F. Lenmark, V. Clark, P. F. Evans, J. S. Butts, P. Dollard, J. Farr, M. Clement, R. Crouch, W. Callsen, R. Moritz, a. Pannier, P. Alpha Tau Omega Members in Faculty Henmon, V. A. C. Laird, A. G. Members in University Graduates Culbertson, J. Class of 1927 Freytag, E. Class of 1928 Dollard, C. Johnson, H. Class of 1929 Clement, G. Class of 1930 Prinz, F. Little, G. Middleton, W. S. Meek, W.J. Zdanowicz, C. Dollard, J. Grady, F. Howdle, C. Nuzum, |. Perisho, G. Crane, D. Roberts, H. Vrooman, C. Nelson, J. Stuart, J . Sipfle, J. Scantlin, L. Walker, R. Young, T. Page 449 J.Husting T Pray D Harter R Cody E. Carrier F Jandrey W.Phillips J. Nason W.Pope W. Hayhurst R. Winnacker W.Johnson H. May R.Anderson R.Larson T. Kirmse J Dixon K Porter V. Carrier S Oilman V Mabry H Laun L. Bushnell Anderson, R. V. Bushnell, L. F. Dixon, J.J. Founded at Union College. 1827 Number of chapters. 10 Gilman, S. W. Carrier, V. G. Johnson, W. H. Carrier, E. G. Kirmse. T. W. Harter. D. G. HuSTING, J.J. Local chapter. Alpha Date established. 1908 Sigma Phi Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Dawson, G. W. Class of 1927 Class of 1928 Pope, W. P. Class of 1929 Mabry, V. A. Class of 1930 Hayhurst, W. C. Phillips, W. B. Laun, H. G. Cody, R.J. Porter, K, C. Jandrey, F. W. Nason, J. H. Larson, R. S. Winnacker. R. A. Pray. T. P. May. H. C. I Page 450 W. J. Kahlenberg I. N. Fender H. Hagemeister F. A. Knauf W. J.Knauf W.L.Flint H P. Hoeper H. W Pierce F.R. Matter T.H.Wheeler J. F. Kahlenberg T.J. Hoffman P.D.Larson ■ij ' ' ' ' P D Dempsey J H Dunham E. E. Ellicott K. Hagemeister C T. Thompson A. F. Paustian N K Dcmmon W. C. Tubbs S. O. Tuhus Founded at Yale University. 1845 Number of chapters, 29 Ellicot, E. E. De mpsey, P. D. Demmon, N. K. CURRAN, G. W. Dunham, J. H. Ellickson, C. a. Brew, D. W. burkhardt, c. w. Local chapter. Kappa Date established, 1909 Alpha Sigma Phi Members in Faculty Buffet, G. M. Members in University Eagleburger, L. S. Flint, W. L. Hagemeister, H. F. Hering, E. R. Hoffman, T. J. Knauf, W. J. Fender, I. N. Hagemeister, K. Kahlenberg, J . F. Dana, D. C. Grasser, W. a. Graduates Harrington, J. T. Class of 1927 Hoeper, H. P. Class of 1928 Johnson, H. R. Larson, P. D. Class of 1929 Kahlenberg, W.J. Knauf, F. A. Class of 1930 Hartmeyer, J. H. Johnson, A. Koper, H. J. Sullivan, W. G. Thompson, C. T. Weaver, F. M. Morgan, C. J. Morris, S. O. Paustian, A. F. Kreiser, F. M. LiGHTY, R. D. Matter, F. R. Wheeler, T. H. Pierce, H. W. Tuhus, S. Meyer, F. W. Tubbs, W. C. Uehling, U. Miller, P. R. Strassburcer, J. R. Morrison, R. J. Vogel, E. D. Page 4! I E. H. Engel E. E. Hawley R. H. Pratt T. B. Roach P, T. Smith R. E. Merkel P. A, Meltzer A. B Crowell C. H. Abbott V. W. Lyon R. C Barrett R. G. Owen Founded at New York University, 1847 Number of chapters, 2S Local chapter, Lambda Psi Date established, 1910 Zeta Psi Miller, Capt. G. A. Pace, W. H. Blum, G. L. Abbott, C. H. y Barrett, R. C. Crowell, A. L. Crowell, C. L. ESCHWEILER, P. Hawley, E. E. Crowell, A. B. DUBBER, A. E. FiSHLEICH, K. Members in Faculty Reese, Dr. H. H. F. Members in University Graduates Gooding, G. U. Roach, C. E. Class of 1927 Meltzer, P. A. Merkel, R. E. Class of 1928 Encel, E. Class of 1929 Pratt, H. R. Pledges Hartmann, F. J. Jacobs, H. Lovewell, C. E. Uteritz, I. C. Owen, R. G. Mould, M. K. Mueller, J. R. Walton, J. H. Swan, G. C. Thomas, W. K. S. Smith, P. T. Lyon, V. W. Roach, T. B., Jr. Roberts, H. H. Welch, I. Page 4Sl E. Timm A. Blunt F. Coryn H. Lausche J. DeHaven D- Lunde R, Koehring C. Heald B. Bayha G. Hohnbach L. McGann D. Kennedy R, Reinke A. Hollister C. Koehring P. Waters E. Schmidt C. Frick T. Bailey J.Allen W. Bakke R. Ratcliffe J.Franklin W. Muddle W. Thurber A. McGreane J.Bacon J . Dahlman W. Eckers Founded at Norwich University. 1856 Number of chapters. 44 Elwell, F. H. Bacon, J . E. BiCK, K. F. Bailey, T. L. Deadman, B. C. Dahlman, J. H. Allen, J. T. Bakke, W. K. Bayha, B. S. Caldwell, D. M. Belter. R. W. Brandt, A. BURMAN, J.J. Local chapter, Psi Date established. 1917 Foster, F. M. K. Blunt, A. E. CoRYN, F. R. DeHaven, J. W. Edwards, O. M. Franklin, J. W. Clarke, F. W. Clouch, C. U. DeHaven, J. R. Eckers, W. F. Flambeau, D. B. foseid, o. p. FucHS, P. A. Theta Chi Members in Faculty Jenkins. G. L. Members in University Class of 1927 Eklund. L. C. Hollister, A. L. Koehring, C. A. Class of 1928 Frick, C. J. Heald, C. J . Hohnbach, G. D. Class of 1929 Florez, G. a. Hohman, E. E. Koehring, R. C. Class of 1930 Grebel. J. D. HURD. H. M. Landow, B. E. McGann, L. C. Ratcliffe, R. U. Kennedy, D. F. McCreane, a. R. Marsh, T. H. Lausche, H. W. Lunde. D. N. Nichols. W. C. Paul, J. A. Manzer, M. H. Parch, L. RUEDT, J. A. Reinhart, S. E. Trenary, D. C. Waters, P. L. Muddle, W. C. Reinke, R. E. Thurber, W. F. Schmidt, E. C. Timm. E. W. Vanderheide, E. T. zweifel, a. j. Smalley, p. G. Tenny, a. Ziese, E. a. Page 45} S B Tobey GSPaul R W. Leach J EBamberv RRSchrader H E. Kiewig ■R-; ? ' ' ■' ' ' ■? H C Lucht W F Nelson D W. Thomsen J B. Druse G. J Heimerl G J Mueller E.J. Grimmer R.I Piltz J - .y?] ' D.E Miller Ml. Williams R E. Everett R.H.Patterson G W Johnson B T. Weichers R. C. Cahoon C. D. Case W Z Lidicker D. H. Kuenzli R.J Soulen R. E Greiling H P Robinson H. C. Grupp J. W. Myers H. D Crawford R. C. McCoy R G. Walker K Martiny Founded at University of Illinois. 1907 Number of chapters. 1 1 Local chapter. Wisconsin Date established, IQI3 KiNNE, W. S. Crawford, H. D. Everett, R. E. McCoy, R. C. Bambery, J . E. Miller, D. E. Walker, R. G. Grupp, H. C. Larson, G. L. McCaffery, R. S. Triangle Members in Faculty Mead, D. W. Schrader, R. R. Soulen, R. J . Vallee, J. W. Druse, J. B. Hartenburg, R. S. Paul, G. S. Wecner, E. a. Lucht, H. C. Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Johnson, C. W. Myers, J. W. Thomsen, D. E. Class of 1928 Case, C. D. Mueller, G. J. Class of 1929 Kuenzli, D. H. Class of 1930 Holderness, C. C. Kubasta, R. W. Smith, L. S. Phillips, R. S. PiLTZ, R.J. Williams, M. J. Nelson, W. F. Lidicker, W. Z. Cahoon, R. C. Kiewec, H. E. Grimmer, E. J. Greillinc, R. E. Patton, L. C. WiEPKING, C. A. Robinson, H. P. Tobey, S. B. Heimerl, G. J. Wiechers, B. T Leach, R. W Gunderson, R. R. Martiny, K. C. GUTH, S. K. Pate 454 i R. A. Fischer E. C. Hoist L. J Hey wood R A. Poison R. T. Freitag F. H. Brant F. T. Burgy F. M, Rentschler L.T.Davis Z. Raabe J RModrall H C. Inman AM Butler R.W.Peebles J.W.Webb A. D. Carmichael R. R. Piper C. L. Helgren G. M. Bracke L. O. Peterson G. D. Humphrey H. H. Jepson Founded at Ohio State University. 1904 Number of chapters. 29 LxKal chapter. Iota ,,4J Date established. 1916 Alpha Gamma Rho Brann, J . W. Brant, H.J. Chandler, G. A. Chapman, C. J . Bracke, G. Brant, F. Brackett, R. Burgy, F. Fischer, R. Butler, A. Callenbach, J. Chapman, H. D. Craig, J. E. Halpin, J. G. Hatch, K. L. Carmichael, D. Helgren, C. Davis, L. Freitag, N. Freitag, W. Ellsworth, L. Ence, W. Members in Faculty Hayes, J. B. Humphrey, G. C. Kevlin, V. C. Members in University Class of 1927 Craig, J. Class of 1928 HOLST, E. Humphrey, G. Class of 1929 Heywood, J. Class of 1930 Henderson, R. Inman, H. Jones, F. KOLB. J. H. Moore, J . G. Parmele, H. B. Sumner, W. A. Peterson, L. Piper, R. Jepson, H. MoDRALL, D. Peebles, R. Piller, A. Porter, P. Van Lone, E. E. Walker, J. C. Wilson, H. F. Zaumeyer, W. J. POLSON, R. Rentschler, F. Raabe, Z. Webb, J. Van Wald, H. Stauffacher, D. Wagner, R. Pate 4SS R. H. Snyder J H. Wachsmuth R E. Ela F. W. Koepnick W. B. Hovey N.S.Warner H Conine F W. Brandt HA Ross C. H. Crownhart P.T.Ward O.E.Brown W. M Jensen Dean Millar Prof Trumbower Prof. Withey A D Gifford E. R Muntz R B. Murphy L. D. Lamb A. H. Beatty H. A. Konnak C A. Thomson V W. Thomson E. S. IDuffield G. R. Hotton C. E Kading H. W. WIrka Founded at College of New Jersey, 1824 Number of chapters, 29 Local chapter. Kappa Date established, 1916 Chi Phi Millar, Dean A. V. KiEKHOFER, Prof. W. H. Withey, Prof. M. O. Kading, C. E. Gifford. A. D. Beatty, A. H. Brown, O. E. Brandt, F. W. Cross, J. S. CULLEN, S. C. Ross, G. H, Hastings, H. W. Hotton, G. R. Crownhart, C. H. Ela, R. E. Conine, H., Jr. duffield, e. s. Ela, W. p. Fritsch, R. Members in Faculty Sharp, Prof. F. C. Schmidt, Prof. E. R. Trumbower, Prof. H. R. Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Koepnick, F. W. Konnak, H. A. Class of 1928 Jr Forrester, J. H. Class of 1929 Hovey, W. B. Jensen, W. M. Class of 1930 Fumbanks, L. C. godley, r. f. Gray, H. P. Snyder, R. H. Ragatz, R. T. Thomson, V. W. Lamb, L. D. Ross, H. A. Muntz, E. R. Murphy, R. B. Halverson, N. T. HiGLEY, S. L. GUYER, E. M. Hoffman, G. B. Millar, M. G. WiRKA, H. W. Warner, N. S. Thomson, C. A. Wachsmuth, J . H. Ward, P. T. Jones, C. R. Yule, G. B. Page 456 B. HoUey A. DeVoe G. Maassen O. Herman S. Driessen E Coombs H Horstmeyer G. Stutz G. Baiasz C Kestly S. Claussen B. Von IDoren P. McCurdy H Barton W. Burgess E. Goebel R. Bauder L. VerBryck W Funk Founded at Boston University, 1909 Number of chapters, 72 ® Local chapter. Alpha Beta Date established, 1917 Lambda Chi Alpha Babcock, R. W. Balasz, G. G. Driessen, S. M. Barton, H. Burgess, W. Clark, D. W. Gillette, R. W. Hamilton, R. Bauder, R. S. Funk, W. L. Goebel, E. C. Coombs, E. A. Coombs, W. W. Clausen, S. E. DeVoe, a. W. Hanson, R. I. Jacobson, R. L. Johnston, S. L. Kestly, C. F. Members in Faculty Fox, p. G. Tottincham, W. E. Members in University Class of 1927 Holley, B. T. Horstmeyer, H. F. Class of 1928 Herro, a. C. Maassen, G. C. Class of 1929 Neill, W. T. Steffen, a. H. Class of 1930 Leahy, R. Lease, R. Lips, H. C. Krehl, W. H. McCurdy, P. W. Rooney, J . M. Van Doren, B. J. Stetson, R. H. Tradewell, H. H. Weichert, C. K. Stutz, G. L. VerBryck, J. L. Wecner, E. F. Wendt, K. R, Lynch, R. E. Richardson, A. Nichol, G. Van Doren, D. K. NiEMAN, C. White, H. Platz, G. Page 4f7 ■. W. H. Ode S. G. Fedderly W, A. Green J W. Fieting L.D.Barney J.M.Strom B.W.Dennis H. C.Prichard H. A Westphal D S Morrison F. A. Huff EHeinekc F.W.Crosby S. E. Kjellgren L. T. Eckert R R Kjellgren A. W. Grubb H. C. Larson C. H. Counsell O. H. Winne J. G. Denningcr C F Andrews R. A. Kuckuk V. M. Hoppe C. F. Nottleman J.W. Nebel O. E. Fowler S. B. Nebel Founded at Massachusetts Agriculture College, 1873 Number of chapters, 46 Local chapter, Zeta Deuteron Date established, 1917 Andrews, C. F. Bonner, N. A. Crosby, F. W. Fedderly, S. G. Counsell, C. H. Eckert, L. T. Cooper, G. O. Phi Sigma Kappa Members in Faculty Morrison, F. B. Members in University Aschenbrener, E. a Barney, L. D. Dennincer, J. G. Fieting, J. W. Fowler, O. E. Grubb, A. W. Hanson, R. Heineke, E. Dennis, B. W. Hoppe, V. W. Kjellgren, S. E. Graduates Porter, H. V. Class of 1927 Green, W. A. Monte, D. C. Class of 1928 Indermuehle, a. I. Kjellgren, R. R. Larson, H. C. Class of 1929 Huff, F. A. Kuckuk, R. A. Class of 1930 McIlrath, W. F. Morrison, D. S, Stewart, H. W. Chorlog, J.I. Ode, W. H. StU3ENVOLL, H. C. Macnusen, L. C. SCHWEERS, M. F. Slechta, J . M. Nottleman, C. F. Stro.m, J. M. Wallrich, M. W. Straub, R. C. Winne, O. H. Westphal, H. A. Nefel, J. W. Prichard, H. C. Nebel, S. B. Rademacher, W. T. Pickett, P. F. Page 458 H. Lenicheck D. Fisher E. Seim C. Thiede C. Campbell H. Clark M. Scheil R. Dingman R. Sorenson H. Rieger V. Hunkel L, Orcutt R. Ferris F. Schneider W Guenther R. Parsons P.Stewart R. Gauley W. Hornbeck L. Koltes K. Sells Founded at Illinois Wesleyan University. IS ' ' Number of chapters, 23 Dingman, R. A. Barrett, D. F. Guenther, W. V. Cady, K, Campbell, C. R. Anderson, H. O. Frost, E. L. Local chapter, Lambda Date established, 1917 Tau Kappa Epsilon NoLAND, Dr. L. E. Finn, W. C. Orcutt, L. R. Hunkle, V. H. Parsons, R. C. Christensen, C. C. Ferris, R. G. Johnson, C. R. M. Bingham, M. H. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Perrin, S. H. Class of 1927 Rieger, H. E. Class of 1928 Sorenson, R. N. Clarke, H. D. Lenicheck, H. A. Class of 1929 Fisher, D. T. Hintz, E. E. Hoelz, E. p. Class of 1930 McKahan, G. Nicoden, a. C. Weed, A. Spooner, a. D. Scheil, M. A. Seim, E. H. Klement, H. C. Stewart, W. P. Powers, F. C. Schneider, F. C. Hunkel, E. P. Thiede, C. F. Koltes, L. H. Hornbeck, W. E. Sperling, J . W. Trastor, A. M. Taylor, R. P. Van Adestine, J. C. Page 459 Kanalz. J. P. Freytag. W. H Peterson. W F Smith. G J Wilke. E J Niles, J. R. Roenius. K. E. W. E. Opitz C. Y. Wiswell E. P. Kelly L. G. Larson S. G. Burgess T. B. Carter E. G. Johnson H. J. Utter E. S. Boston I. G. Amundson L. C. Schumaker E. W. Brody H. A. Kropf Founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1864 Number of chapters, 27 Local chapter, Phi Date established. 1917 Theta Xi Corp, C. I. BURDICK, H. L. Barber, M. W. Amundsen. I. G. Burgess, S. G. COLTENANT, H. Hyland, p. H. Carter, T. B. Kropf, H. A. Freytag, W. H. Marsh, L. S. Boston, E. S. Brody, E. W. Burke, J. G. Converse, J. B. Crowley, W. F. Members in Faculty Phillips, J. D. PUERNER, R. E. Members in University Class of 1927 Larson, L. G. Schumaker, L. C. Class of 1928 Nelson, G. B. Terry, E. M. Turneaure, F. E. Class of 1929 horton, r. r. Johnson, E. G. Kelly, E. P. Class of 1930 Drouet, W. SCHUTT, G. A. Smith, G. J. Niles, J. R. Opitz, W. E. Kester, W. Z. kowalczyk. h. c. moldenhauer, p. Jonas, L. A. Olwell, G. F. Wilke, E.J. Utter, H.J. MORHOFF, R. W. Peterson, W. P. Riddle, J. C. Page 460 D. Botham F. Herried A. French M. La Chapelle H. Guthrie A. Blied W. Snavely W. Mattek E Shifflett F. Shaller A. Fullbriggc B. Mattek H Bruns L Grandgurg V.Riley V. Hamel L.Mansfield G. Janecek FT Smith A.Schmidt H. Schlundt L. Smirz Founded at College of the City of New York. 1 899 Number of chapters. 40 Local chapter. Alpha Kappa Date established. 1920 Delta Sigma Phi Herried, F. Guthrie, H. Mattek, W. Botham, D. Bruns, C. Deards, R. L. Fargo, J. French, A. La Chapelle, M. Shifflett, A. FUHLBRIGCE, E. J. Blied, A. Gilbert, S. Hillyer, F. Members in Faculty Dedrick, C. Members in University Class of 1927 Snavely, W. Class of 1928 Mattek, B. Granberg, L. Janecek, H. Class of 1929 Riley, V, Mansfield, L. Pledges Jones, W. Licking, C. Ericksom, R. Horneck, E. Shaller, F. Smith. H. Schlundt, H. Schmidt, A. Osbourn, C. Schoenfeld, E. Bruns, H Madden, L. Hamel, V. Smitz, L. Schumacher, E. Wells, R. Page 461 ■i H Bullamore Westhofen Mellencamp Johnson Pahl Bremer Koenig Aaberg Risjord Corlett Junkermann Burbidge Holmes Cant W. Schorer Schacht Donagan Matthews Griffith Hussa Lee Bloxdorf Bell M. Schorer Kunz Sewell Founded at University of Virginia, 18 Number of chapters. Bell, R. T. Bremer, B. E. Belanger, O. M. Blozdorf, W. R. Bullamore, C. L. Aaberg, M. E. Aaberg, E. Ashman, R. Local chapter, Beta X Date established, 1920 Closs, J. O. Cant, H. R. Corlett, K. E. Burbidge, E. L. Donagan, E. F. Healy, N. R. Junkermann, C. G. hotchkiss, s. e. Cuisinier, F. Duffy, B. Ferber, H. Pi Kappa Alpha Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Leinfelder, p. J. Class of 1927 Griffith, W. P. Hussa, F. D. Wright, S. Class of 1928 Holmes, W. H. Johnson, E. D. Matthews, C. W. Class of 1929 Koenig, P. F. KuNZ, G. D. Class of 1930 Johnston, R. Lutz, F. Lee, H.J. Risjord, N. E. Mellencamp, K. W. Pahl, D. W. Roehl, O. C. Schorer, M. R. Soderburg, E. C. Melville, V. Tracey, G. Winget, W. Schacht, M. W. Westhofen, C. R. Schorer, W. C. Schrofer, C. G. Sewell, S. W. Young, D. S. Winsey, R. Wolf, F. Page 462 H. Tollack L. Smith H. Ahrbecker M. Wood I. Highland G. Liddle H. Rosenthal F. MacGrecor A. Meek F. Friedel J. Behnke J. Mithus N. Fischer C, Hansen H. Ruf H. Hansen E. D. Ingotd L. Moe R. Teare W, Butz C. Highleyman M. Reid Founded at Richmond College, 1901 Numfcier of chapters, 54 Local chapter, Beta Date established, 1920 Sigma Phi Epsilon Behnke, J. A. Butz, W. A. Hansen, C. S. Feldhausen, C. p. Ahrbecker, H. L. Bast, O. D. Beebe, T. J . Bruni, E. K. BURCH, K. C. Klein, M. W. Brouse, D. Highleyman, C. D. Holm, C. C. Ingold, E. D. Fischer, N. J. Hansen, H. H. Extrom, J. a. Friedel, F. W. Haight, J. T., Jr. Highland, I. H. Jorcenson, C. E. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Colburn, a. J. Class of 1927 Jacobs, C. B. Liddle, G. F. Class of 1928 Peterson, W. J . Ruf, H. W. Class of 1929 Meek, A. N. Class of 1930 Krueger, C. B. Parker. C. M. Waddel, J. Kanitz, R. W. MacGregor, F. C. Moe, L. O. Nelson, E. H. schie3ler, j. b. Weiss. H. C. Mithus, J. O. Reid, M. S. RiNDSLAND, W. C. Rosenthal, P. H. Smith, L. F. Rosenthal, H. L. Teare, B. R. Tollack, H. L. Wood, M. B. RiCHTER, W. H. Thordarson, T. Smith, S. W, Stevens, W. P. Torkelson, W. E. Page 463 tj ' f. f S. J. I merman G. Katz O. Kancr H. Woldenberg L. Behr S. Korshak E. Morse C. Horwitz A. Krom G Rashman J Alberts R. Laemie R Sher H. Perlman L Kulp B.Joseph M Breslauer K. Baker M. Pasch B. Schwartz C. Goodman S. Dubin L. Heyman L Cook Founded at University of Columbia. 190 NumJDer of chapters. 18 Local chapter. Pi Date established. 1920 Phi Sigma Delta Member in Faculty Kay, H. M., Dr. Members in University Graduate Slabosky, D. Class of 1927 DuBlN, S. S. Morse, E. L. Class of 1928 Rashman, G. L. Sher, R. E, Alberts, J . Baker, K. Behr, L. Imerman, S. J. Kaner, O. Class of 1929 Katz, G. Pearlman, H. Woldenberg, H. M. Breslauer, M. Cook, L. Goodman, C. Heyman, L. Horwitz, C. Class of 1930 Kroshak, S. Kulp, L. H. Laemle, R. Joseph, B. Krom, A. Olkon, I. Pasch, M. Schwartz, B. kM wl .jlfm fi V ' Ak ■■' fl SI « -l ikiU kn £C?i.- Page 464 Smith Zander Derber Hanson Jones St. Johns Chermak Albrecht Pierard Almen Darling Barnes Kelly Founded at Cornell University. 1890 Number of chapters. 30 Kipp Behm Kindschi Brennan Flynn Local Chapter, Wisconsin Date established, 1921 Delta Chi fosbinder, r. j. Almen, E. L. Albrecht, D. C. Behm, W. W. Berclund, W. L. Beckwith, W. Boyle, D. P. Blencoe, S. G. FOSBINDER, R. J. Friese, H. S. Barnes, F. C. Darling, S. J. Derber, G. E. Brennen, D. T. Burroughs, E. A. Chambers, D. W. CoE, C. E. Conger, R. A. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Flynn, R. G. Class of 1928 Kelly, H. M. Pierard, J.J. Class of 1929 Chermak, A. R. Hanson, M. H. Pledges Crocker, R. D. Dunlap, J . A. Eggers, j. R. Frisvold, C. C. Giffert, C. W. Jones, P. G. Steeholm, H. Jones, P. G. Kindschi, L. G. Smith, H. A. KuLP, J.H. Gill, C. H. Grube, W. K. Kramer, K. W. Leonardson, R. W. WlBLE, H. L. Kipp, D. H. Zander, E.J. St. John, E. E. Levenick, M. N. Peterson, A. T. Walkling, W. Warrington, A. Page 465 A Schoen J. Winter J.Nickoll M Goldstein H.Herman H. Kahn R Michels H.Goldstein S.Goldstein L Schram M Lorig C. Alshuler R. Polacheck I Newman J.Rubin M Bolstein S. Krueger E Loewenthal B. Fredman J.Rice A Polacheck G. Ruscha A.Moses R Simon T. Mandelstam J Schulein Founded at College of the City of New York, IS ' SS Number of chapters. 32 Local chapter, Alpha Kappa Date established. 1920 Zeta Beta Tau Herman, H. A. Goldstein, H. Kahn, H. F. Goldstein, M. Loewenthal, E. J. Lorig, M. Members in University Class of 1927 Class of 1928 Moses, A. Class of 1929 Michels, R. D. Marshall, W. S. Newman, I.J. Polacheck, A, Polacheck, R. Ruscha, G. J. Schulein, J. Alshuler, C. F. Fredman, B. A. Goldstein, S. G. Krueger, S. S. Class of 1930 Mandlestam, T. D. NiCKOLL, G, J. Rice, G.J. Rubin, G. J. Schoen, A. J. Schram, L, Simon, R. M. Page 466 k i ' 4 ' R.B.Johns F. C. Woolard F. L, Orth F. V. Zahorik I W. Andersen R J. Pollock A J. Pederson W. A. Bodden L. R Cole H L. Stowe D. C. Beebe C H Johns L L. Palmer K ELemmer I. S. Terra H. O Bjorquist W. G. Carney H. V. Somervllle W. P. Bliffert L. W. Ramlow M E. Rudolf W. S Hahn Bodden, W. A. Andersen, I. W. Beebe, D. C. Bliffert, W. P. Bjorquist, H. O. Black, H. Koch, R. W. Founded at Trinity College. 18 55 Number of chapters. 21 Local chapter. Phi Omicron Date established, 1922 ,| Caster, J . E. Cole, L. R. Carney, W. G. Johns, C. H. Kingsbury, L. H. Lemmer, K. E. Encelke, R. W. Johns, R. B. Kehr, G. W. McDermand, T. ostermann, l. c. Otjen, T.J. Alpha Chi Rho Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Pollock, R. J. Class of 1928 Orth, F. L. Class of 1929 Lacenecger, O. E. Meixner, E. L. Class of 1930 Peters, W. E. Putnam, M. L. Morgan, B. Q. Schmiedicke, p. Rosenfels, R. S. Zahorik, F. V. Pederson, A. J. Ramlow, L. W. Orth. D. A.. Jr. Rudolf, M. E. Shaw, K. P. Ramlow, A. C. Rather, L. W. Ruddick, R. M, Zeugner, O. K. Stowe. H. L. Tarrant, I. S. Somerville, H. V. WOLLARD, F. C. Squier, J. R. Stearns, N. E. Page 467 R. C. Strauss C R. Oldenburg K. F Baumann C G. Guenther A. F. Broecker R. D. Bienfang E H. Eggert R R Hintz G. H. Bruns C. A. Bunde R. W. Christianson K. W. Fallon T. H Nammacher E. R Lee G L. Ekern E. J. Winter L. G. Daugs G. R. Marth E. H. Suhr L. C. Lee G. F. Albrecht E. A. Jorgensen A. N. Lund G. R. F. Winter W. A. Trefz E. H. Munson F. G. Treskow Founded at University of Wisconsin. 1922 Number of chapters, 4 Bienfang, R. D. Bruns, G. H. HOUCAN, O. A. Fevold, H. L. Daugs, L. G. Albrecht, G. F. Eggert, E. H. Broecker, A. F. Ekern, G. L. Christianson, R. W. Guenther, C. G. Baumann, K. F. Bunde, C. A. Becker, E. F. Local chapter. Alpha Date established, 1922 Brummund, W. H. Dokken, M. G. Fallon, K. W. Dahlen, C. Erickson, L. T. Delta Pi Epsilon Members in Faculty Schlueter, R. J. Members in University Graduates Glasoe, G. N. Nammacher, T. H. Class of 1927 Jorgensen, E. A. Class of 1928 Hintz, R. R. Lee, E. R. Class of 1929 Hogseth, W. M. Lee, L. C. Class of 1930 Hanson, V. U. Hull, L. K. Trefz, W. A. Schlueter, R. J. Lund, A. N. Oldenburg, C. R. Spooner, L. E. Strauss, R. C. Marth, G. R. Munson, E. H. Suhr, E. H. Krohn, R. G. Meslow, O. B. Sordahl, L. O. Winter. G. R. F. Thorson, a. L. Trefz, W. A. Treskow, F. G. Thiel, C. J. Winter, E. J. Peterson, D. Page 46S J. Conway M. Murphy R. Noon D. Aberg R. Vasalle J. Cavanaugh E. O ' Hara S. Jennings W. Ward J. Walsh G.Joyce M. McKinley F. Rohrer K. Munsert D. Gannon F. Weichers H. Borre J.Gundlach J. Timbers W.Morris V. Hauprich F. Emig C. Hahn Founded at Brown University, 188Q Number of chapters, 20 Local chapter. Lambda Date established, I92I Phi Kappa Members in University Graduate Cavanaugh, J . Aberg, D. Conway, J. Borre, H. Hahn, C. Emig, F. Joyce, G. Masse Y, A. Murphy, M. Class of 1927 Mack IN, J. Class of 1928 Morris, W. Noon, R. Rohrer, F. O ' Hara, E. Schmidt, L. Walsh, J. Weighers, F. Wernitznic, E. Ward, W. Vasalle, R. McNamara, J . Donahue, J . Gundlach, J . Gannon, D. Hauprich, V. Class of 1929 Jennings, S. McKinley, N. Munsert, K. OBrien, L. Timbers, J. Page 469 A. Schafer B. Cape L Heiden B. Blowasch F. Gesteland W. Taylor A Dahl W. Antes A. Bearder C. Gustafson K. Kirk C Banks J.Miller F. Worthington E. Black L. Werner R- Peterson A. Engebretson R. Tyler Founded at Wesleyan University. 1918 Number of chapters. 14 Local chapter. Gamma Delta Date established. 1922 Bearder, A. M. Cape, B. M. Geittman, W. Burke, R. Phi Mu Delta Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Dameheuser, C. Class of 1927 Licking, R. H. Dahl, A. G. Gustafson, C. E. Engebretson, A. P. Gesteland, A. Miller, J. Kirk, K. B. Larson, D. Class of 1928 Heiden, L. O. Larson, D. F. Class of 1929 KURTH, J. Class of 1930 Taylor, R. W, Worthington, F. S. Peterson, R. F. Larson, J. L. ToURVILLE, C. Young, F. J. Tyler, R. Werner, C. Page 470 R. RIckert E. Murdoch G. Baker W. Wilke H L. Stokes H. B. Byrante S. Hummel L. Gumbreck F Holscher V, Wake L. Miller L. Iverson A. Bates E. P. Nehmer A. C. Himley C. G. Suits E. Gruner H- Hogan E. Kuhe C. Palmer A. Green A. M. Hutter E. Camp W. Cole F. L. Merriman E. Oberland Founded at Vincennes University, 1897 Number of chapters. 17 Local chapter. Tau Date established. 1922 Bates, A. A. Cole, W. A. Baker, J. G. Greene, A. E. Bryant, H. P. Camp, E. W. Crane, F. C. Gumbreck, L. Hogan, H. A. Gruner, E. Himley, A. C. Jochem, F. L. Kelsey, H. S. FOLSOM, C. Sigma Pi Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Hutter, A. M. Iverson, L. I. Merriman, F. L. Class of 1928 Holscher, F. C. Hummel, S. K. Class of 1929 MURDOCK, E. F. Class of 1930 Jarvis, J. A. Spracue, L. V. Miller, L. G. Nehmer, P. E. Kuhe, E. Oakey, J. A. Palmer, C. A. Rueckert, R. Wilson Suits, C. G. zodtner, l. l. 03erland. e. e. Wilke, W. H. Stokes, H. L. Wake, V. B. Page 471 R.Johnson A. Pingel E J.Koebke I Smalling D. Lindstrom H. Roberts D Thomas H Barrington O. Ingebritsen R. Korfhage D. Williams C. Upham S Watkins E. R. Yundt D Eastman S Schmclzer P. Whittingham J. Woods C Nees C Culp Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1917 Local chapter. Square and Compass Date established, 1922 Square and Compass Davis. J. B. Gulp, C. Members in Faculty Ingebritsen, O. C. Kennedy, L. J. Members in University Graduates Lindstrom, D. E, Iohnson, R. Pinglee, a. W. Barrington, H. P. Eastman, D. N. Class of 1927 Smalling, I. WiTTINGHAM, P. P. Class of 1928 Koebke, E. J. Neess, C. J . Class of 1929 Thomas, D. A. Class of 1930 Schmelzer, S. Rand, W. P. Upham, C. R. Williams, D. Woods, J. B. Roberts, H. H. Krofhace, R. F. Yundt, E. R. Watkins, S. B. , Page 471 A. Gottlieb M. Hersh S. S. Levitin E. S. Ersler S. S. Shefrin J. L. Perlman A. Gottlieb P. Halperin L. N. Velie H. Levitz A. Arnol M. Price B. Heilprin J. D. Kane Founded at Yale University. 1895 Number of chapters, lb Local chapter, Tau Date established. 1923 Pi Lambda Phi Arnol, A. Ersler, E. S. Gottlieb, A. Hersh, M. Gottlieb, A. Member in Faculty WOFSY, S. A. Members in University Class of 1927 Levitin, S. Class of 1928 Dapin, J. Class of 1929 Shefrin, S. S. Class of 1930 Halperin, P. Perlman, J. L. Price, M. Velie, L. N. Heilprin, B. Kane, J, Page 473 ■? f . I X f I I t t. t w- K. C. Schlicter W.F.Mueller R. H. Brigham G. T. Coffin J.D. Horsfall G. L. Beach C.A.Barton O. O. Egger G. O. Stevens R. J. Turton L. V. Lemaire C. A. Thacher W. B. Montgomery M. L. Minton G. C. Assenheimer A. A. Sellers G. R. Douglas S. D. Baillies M. E. Baechler K. R. McDougal E. E. Owens A. F. Schott H. Lowsma G. B. Thacher Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1923 Number of chapters, 2 HB Local chapter. Alpha Date established, 1923 Kappa Beta Lambda Baechler, M. E. Beach, G. L, Anderson, E. Gibson, E. A. Douglas, G. R. Owens, E. E Becker. H. J. Bonn, M. F. Assenheimer, G. C. Barton, C. A. Baillies, S. D. Coffin, G. T. Members in Faculty Atkins, Sgt. Major W.G. Cottingham, W. S. Members in University Graduates Kerr, H. W. Class of 1927 Schlichter, K. C. Class of 1928 Brigham, R. H. McDougal, K. R. Class of 1929 Eggert, C. L. Class of 1930 Egger, O. O. Hill, M. M. Lowsma, H. Stevens, G. O. Stowers, J . C. Montgomery, W. B. Mueller, W. F. Horsfall, J . D. Lemaire, L. V. Minton, M. L. Thacher, C. A. Sellars, a. a. Schott, A. F. Turton, R. J. Thacher, G. B. Page 474 J F Wolever R. J. Goetz D. J. Roberts R. G. Rusch E. A. Hoebel E. G. Harget E. O. Roberts :. H. Mortensen W. T Schnathorst C. E. Pence F. S. Hook R. H. Whitbeck J. L. Gillen E. A. Weinke R C. Church J. P Smith L.J. Cleveland R. E. McArthur W C Rogers W. C. Price J. P. Gillin E. W. Hopkins D. P. Newton O.J. Kahlenberg W. E. Dymond E. C. Baillie Founded at University of California, 1914 Number of chapters, 6 Local chapter, Epsilon Date established, 1923 Alpha Kappa Lambda FOWLKES, J . G. Clapp, F. H. Church, R. C. Cleveland, L. J . E5ymond, W. E. Baillie, E. C. Gillen, J. L. Folsom, H. F. Franseen, C. C. Gillin, J. P. Goetz, R. J . Members in Faculty rosenberry, m. b. Sevringhaus, E. L. Members in University Graduates LORIG, C. H. Class of 1927 Harget, E. G. Hopkins, E. W. Hoebel, E. A. Neuhauser, G. R. Hook, F. S. Pence, C. E. Trewartha, G. T. ROBBINS, R. M, Smith, J. P. Kahlenberg, O. J. McArthur, R. E. Class of 1928 Newton, D. P. Roberts, D. J. Class of 1929 Price, W. C. Schnathorst, W. T. Weinke, E. A. Roberts, E. O. Rogers, W. C. Whitbeck, R. H. Toenhart, O. E. Mortensen, EH. Rusch, R. G. Wolever, J. F. Williams, H. F. Page 47S D. M. Britton R. T. Casselman W. N. Johnson E. J. Hewitt A. J. Scherr E R. Summers F.I.Owen M. E. Teska G Abenroth W C. Treichel C Andrews E. W Ziebell W. C Erskine A. W. Piltz W. R Baker S. Zweiger R. T. Homewood Prof C. M. Janskv R R Smith E V. Hicks M. A. Rick E A. Abendroth V. E. Scott H. A Lawrence K G Jansky P. F. Murphv C. K. Stephens C. K Naujoks R. R. Schleck Founded at University of Pennsylvania, 1908 Number of chapters, 14 Local chapter, ,Mu Date established, l ' 23 Sigma Phi Sigma Abendroth, G. H. Jansky, C. M. Abendroth, E. A. Andrews, C. F. Baker, W. R. Britton, D. M. Care, H. E. Lee, a. Hicks, E. V. Erskine, W. C. Hewitt, E. J. Homewood, R. T. Jansky, C. K. Keir, M. I. Mueller, C. F. Grunwald, J. T. Palm, P. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Teska, M. E. Class of 1927 Lawrence, H. A. Murphy, P. F. Owen, F. J. Class of 1928 Naujoks, C. K. Class of 1929 Johnson, W. N. Konwinski. G. L. Class of 1930 McElvain, S. M. Summers, E. R. Piltz, A. W. Plettner, V. M. Rick, M. A. Scott, V. E. Schleck, R. R. Thompson, D. W. Schuerman, H. G. SCHILTZ, R. Rood, J. T. Smith, R. R. Treichel, W. T. Zweiger, S. Ziebell, E. A. Stephens, C. K. Perry, D. B. Pate 476 Zempel Buttles Root Kyle Halverson Goddard Silver Goshaw Mahlik Fagerlin Chadwick Hermanson Ruhnke Founded at Milwaukee Normal, 1 17 Number of chapters. 4 Local chapter. Gamma Date established, 1 )24 ► Buttles, E. T. Chadwick, W. J. Bach, M. Goddard, K. W. Halverson, E. Fagerlin, W. L. Beta Phi Theta Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Kyle, J. K. Class of 1928 Goshaw, P. L. Griesser, p. W. Fledges Class of 1929 Root, E. Class of 1930 Hermanson, P. Ellis, I. G. Mahlik, W. J. Ruhnke, C. Silver, H. S. Stuessy, H. H. Zempel, A. L. Page 477 G. Bevins H. Rusch A. Rusch L. Fitchett R. Meyers L Schueler C. Howard C. Mathison C. Robertson F. Flowers L. Kaiser G. Van Pool R. Radsch G. Volk L. Bonner N Fox C. Merriman C. Baker M Nichols A. Decker G. Lincoln G. Matthews D. Gwin J. Miller P. Merriman R. Klockow M. Sampson A. Plaenert C. Gwin Founded at Hamline University, 1901 Number of chapters, lb Local chapter. Mu Date established. 1926 Beta Kappa Members in Faculty Merriman, C. R. Members in University Graduate Plaenert, A. B. Baker, C. W. Bevins, G. W. Fox, N. A. Class of 1927 Class of 1928 Klockow, R. F. Merriman, P. H. Bonner, L. V. Decker, A. Fitchett, L. L. Howard, C. W. Kaiser, L. Class of 1929 Nichols, M. E. Radsch, R. E. Schwachheim, F. Van Pool, G. M. Gwin, C. Gwin. D. Lincoln, G. Mathison, C. V. Matthews, G. Meyers, R. Robertson, C. B. Sampson, M. W. Schueler, L. Volk, G. W. Flowers, F. Miller, J. E. Class of 1930 Rusch, A. D. Rusch, H. W. iRj? S ' ' Hb S ■' 1 i M k- t ' c,l|i H BBi HH I ■aS JP PI m Page 47 S J. Brazy E. Goodman D. Sachs S. Kahn E. Epstein C. Sand S. Saffro H. Popkin S. Sherman M. Goldstein M. Polochow D. Wagner A. Binstock M. Weinberg M. Schutkin H. Plans J. Epstein G. Gratz S. Liebenson H. Weinberg M. Litow J. Ropkin M. Kushnir A. Harris N. Specktor A. Cole T. Voge! H. Vogel Springberg R. Levy Founded at Columbia University. 1903 Number of chapters, 26 Local chapter, Chi Date established, 1924 Phi Beta Delta Epstein, E. Cole, A. R. Brazy, J. Epstein, J. L. Binstock, A. M. De Nosaquo, N. V Harris, A. J. Rapkin, J. E. Kushnir, M. I. Goldstein, M. Kahn, S. J, Goodman, E. Member in Faculty Gordon, S. M. Members in University Graduates Gratz, G. C. Class of 1927 Schutkin, M. W. Class of 1928 Litow, M. Class of 1929 Leibenson, S. Sachs, D. J. Class of 1930 Levy, R. Plous, H. Vogel, T. L. Springberg, J. C. Weinberg, H. H. Sand, C. W, Saffro, S. Sherman, S. POLAKOW, M. Wagner, D. Vogel, H. E. Spektor, N. J, Weinberg, M. Popkin, H. Page 479 ., .,, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' J Kilby M. Mattson H. Spindler A.Steele R. Hummel P. Musolf M. Waterman E. Kullman H. Ringier R. Wheeler E. Bulley K. Klopf W. Gilbert E. Peacock E Kramer O.Carlson A. Huth W.Jones P. Koepcke J.Jareo E. Judkins HUTH, A. Beeman, K. Bulley, E. Gilbert, W. BocviLO, F. BOYDEN, H. Chamberlain, H. Comfort, G. Founded at Oxford College, 1906 Number of chapters. 35 Godfrey, T. BUSSE, W. JlRTLE, H. Judkins, E. Blanchar, a. Carlson, O. Hummel, R. Jareo, J. Greabner, E. Gregorie, E. hogenson, n. Hollie, S. Kenyon, a. Local chapter. Omega Date established. 1922 Phi Kappa Tau Members in Faculty- Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Klopf, K. KOEPKE, P. Class of 1928 Graebner, W. Class of 1929 Kramer, E. Mattson, M. Musolf, P. Class of 1930 Kieller, L. Klehm, H. LiBBY, R. Mertz, M. MiELKE, C. Stephens, H. Kullmann, E. Spindler, H. Waterman, M. Jones, W. Kilby, J. King, D. Kastein, B. Motley, P. Paust, M. Porter, B. Roche, J. Sandstrom, E. Wheeler, R. Peacock, E. RiNGLER, H. York, R. SiKES, J. Tripalin, M. Williams, D. Zeran, F. „._( 1 .. -r ; vV? ' i:1-:3 f : ' . S r 1 •0 ' ' - . ;v. ' ! i ■r ' VMM |, -WW Page 480 R. Dimmick E. Brott C, Bourassa W. Nofsker H. McKaskle B. Schlosstein P. Finstad W. Forsberg B. Leicht V. Prochaska A. Einfeldt P. Boland T. Burrows W. Erlandson R. Zeunert E.Nelson W.Edwards I.Williams K. Maxham F.Evans M, O ' Laughlin C. Sarff C. Raettig N. Cocksy E. Chellman C. Groth W. Martin M. Scott C. Atwood E. Gullard I. Lueck C. Zieman N. Thayer G. Gehrke Founded at University of Chicago, 1916 Number of chapters, 16 Local chapter, Zeta Date established, 1924 Phi Pi Phi Evans, M. Atwood, C. Chellman, E. Burrows, T. COOKSY, N. Brott, E. Boland, P. Dimmick, R. Erlandson, W. Edwards, W. Einfeldt, A. Groth, C. Gullard, E. Bourassa, C. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Schlosstein, B. Class of 1927 Finstad, P. Gehrke, G. McCuTCHEON, K. Class of 1928 Leicht, B. Lueck, I. Martin, W. Class of 1929 Raettig, C. Milton, S. Class of 1930 Fromm, U. NoHR, H., Jr. O ' Laughlin, M. Prochaska, V. Maxham, K. Nelson, E. Reinhold, C. Williams, L McKaskle, H. Thayer, N. Zieman, C. Sarff, C. Tratt, p. Zeunert, R. Nofsker, W. Page 481 J. Goodman E. Piore S. Morell W. Stein H. Gruenberg J. Goldstein S. Hein R. Krauskopf M. Brill D. Bisno B. Goodkind E. Schuster B. Goodman Founded at College of the City of New York, 1904 Number of chapters. 24 Local chapter. Alpha Eta Date established, 1925 Phi Epsilon Pi Members in University Graduate Schuster, E. B. BiNSo, D. Class of 1927 Goodkind, B. A. Goodman, B. Goldstein, J. Class of 1928 Gruenberg, H. M. Krauskopf, R. M. Brill, M. S. Class of 1929 Hein, S. M. Stein, W. S. Goodman, J . Class of 1930 Morell, S. Piore, E. 1 M 1 ' 1 1 l fc n ' V j ■i ' .j P m H n In 1 mp 1 ■B wk Page 481 L. Epstein S. S Feiman L H. Paley H. T. Harris M. Mettel J. S. Cohen C R Glass S. Chech.k A J. Sapiro J J. Katz M. S. Fox E Byman P. J. Fox H. L. Rosenberg H. C. Dort L. Grossman M. P Frank A. M, Schefrin E H. Ziff B. E Salinsky D J. Zubatsky H. Shapiro Founded at University of Chicago, 1917 Number of chapters. 7 Local chapter, Epsilon Date established. 1925 Tau Sigma Omicron Members in University- Graduate Shapiro, H. Chechik, S. Glass, C. R. Fox, M. S. Class of 1927 Class of 1928 Rubinstein, H. W. Sapiro, A. J. Schefrin, A. M, Byman, E. DORF, H. C. Feiman, S. S. Cohen, J . S. Epstein, L. Fox, P.J. Grossman, L. Class of 1929 Frank, M. P. Class of 1930 Harris, H. T. Katz, J. J. Levine, a. D. Mettel, M. Paley, L. H. Miller, D. M. Rosenberg, H. L. Ziff, E. H. Salinsky, B. E. Zubatsky, D. J. Page 483 E. Epstein D. J. Ansfield H. Miller I. I. Rotter M. S. Fox S D Katz S. M. Turkeltaub N. V. DeNosaquo I. H. Lavine H, Shapiro T. S. Merer S. Wick N. N. Fein S. K. Pollack M. W. Schutkin T. L. Vogel Founded at Cornell University, 1 04 Number of chapters, 42 Local chapter, Alpha Psi Date established, 1926 Phi Delta Epsilon Members in University Graduates DeNosaquo. N. V. Pollack, S. K. Rotter, I. I. Shapiro, H. Turkeltaub, S. M. Wick, S. Ansfield, D. J. Epstein, E. Horwitz, H. Class of 1927 Katz, S. D. Merar, T. J. Miller, H. Schutkin, M. W. VocEL, T. L. Fein, N. N. Class of 1928 Fox, M. S. Lavine, I. H. Pate 4S4 E. F. Kinkaid G. E. Dawson H, C. Thoma K. H. Webster D. Barr J R Bach E. J. Powers W. B Murphy R. L. McKee W. Kratz R. C. Barrett L. L. Grambs R. Clement J. C. Stedman Founded at University of Illinois. 1906 Number of chapters, 13 Local chapter, Wisconsin Date established. 1918 Tumas Officers Grambs, Louis President Jones, Don Vice-President Murphy Beverly Secretary Thoma, Harry Treasurer HoTCHKiss, George Sergeant-at-ArrT s Members in University Organization Seniors Alpha Delta Phi Ellis, Robert Alpha Tau Omega Bergstresser, Richard Beta Theta Pi McGinnis, Charles Chi Psi Decker, Charles Delta Kappa Epsilon Straubel, Austin Delta Tau Delta Smith, Maurice Delta Upsilon Gallagher, Charles Kappa Sigma Godfrey, Kneeland Phi Delta Theta Kremer, Paul Phi Gamma Delta McCartney, Jo Phi Kappa Psi Winnie, Russell Phi Kappa Sigma Allen, Herbert Psi Upsilon Moorehead, Alfred Sigma Chi Brooks, Henry Sigma Nu Frautschi, Lowell Sigma Phi Carrier, Vernon Theta Delta Chi Fowler, Frank Zela Psi Hawley, Emerson Juniors Kinkaid, Eugene Clement, Richard Dawson, Gordon Webster, Kenneth Kratz, Winston Stedeman, John Murphy, Beverly Crofoot, Edwin Jones, Don Grambs, Louis McKee, Richard Thoma, Harry Powers, Edward Bach, John HoTCHKiss, George Carrier, Earl Barr, Don Barrett, Richard Pase 48 f K OCIAL ORORITIE; r K W ' 25?- fiW HVv IF H S. Fitzhugh G. McPherson S. Davis L. Horlon B. Noyes C. Howe V. North E. Mead M Rowland E. Wilson M. Greer E Samuels K Foster I.Cunningham W.Fletcher L Barbec D Larsh R Patton G Wilson Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded at Monmouth College. 1870 Number of chapters, 50 -! KK,r '  • • Local chapter. Eta Date established. 1875 Keay C. Barbee, L. Byard, M. Bridgeman, M. Casterline, M. Creber, a. Dadmun, M. Armstrong, K. Baldwin, E. Fitzhugh, S. Fletcher, W. Burnham, M. Cunningham, I. DaLEN3ERG, Davis, D. Davis, S. Foster, K. R. Clement, V. Friedl, J. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Marling, M. Class of 1927 Horton, L. Howe, C. Mead, E. Class of 1928 Greer, M. Class of 1929 Judson, I. Kiernan, a. Kleinhans, J. Class of 1930 Lasche, M. Fisher, S. North, V. Patton, R. Kohl, H. Larsh, D. McPherson, G. Noyes B. Raub, E. Rowland, M. Muller, V. Olson, C. Samuels, E. Tanner, F. Swenson, M. Tingle, V. Wilson, E. Wilson, G. Sheldon, E. Swenson, E. Page 488 D. Doyon K Palica O.Smith G.Taylor B.Thompson J.Collier H.Hughes R Leadstone A.Holmes M. Thompson J. Sumner B. Wincheil M. Hefferan E. Simmons M. Weesner C. Flieth P. Eidkins S. Miller E Seaman D. Warner G. King D Whitaker E. George H Dickens E Fosbinder M Walker Delta Gamma Founded at University of Mississippi, 1872 Number of chapters, 4 1 Local chapter, Omesa Date established, 1880 Allen, K. George, E. King, G. Dickens, H. Doyon, D. Black, H. Collier, J. BOVIER, E. Bramham, J , Collier, E. Fuller, E. Garton, N. Leadstone, R. Taylor, G. Edkins, p. Fosbinder, E. Connell, J. Flieth, C. Hefferan, M. Gary, K. Gage, J. Gordon, V. Gillette, L. Hodges, J . Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate O ' Shea, K. Class of 1927 Thompson, B, Class of 1928 Hughes, H. Miller, S. Class of 1929 Holmes, A. Lockhart, L. Class of 1930 Kney, a. . Lewis, A. LuEDKE, D. Mautz, H. Matheson, a. Jones, K. Thompson, M. Warner, D. Palica, K. Seaman, E Rose, E. Sample, R. Smith, O. Megering, M. O ' Brien, M. Osborne, M. Pace, D. Pike, L. Whitaker, D. WiNCHELL, B. Simmons, E Weesner, M. Lumner, J. Walker, M. Ringheim, R. RUMSEY, H. Sanborn, M. Sawyer, M. Smith, J. Page 489 ' .Wii}A . R. Will H. Sellery L, Thompson M. Hippie E. Adams D. Bateman E. McEIphatrick L. Nelson M, Biggar M- L- Campbell H Cady M, Houghton C. Cairns L. Herold S. Chickering J. Hay P. Meyer E. Kennedy R. Lauder H. Broughton B. White R. McDonough R. Piersen I. Kelley D. Vogel M. Nee Gamma Phi Beta Founded at Syracuse University, 1874 Number of chapters, 33 Local chapter. Gamma Date established. 1885 Members in University Class of 1927 Adams, E. C. Biggar, M. Cady, H. B. Cairns, C. Herold, L. Lauder, R. Class of 1928 McDonough, R. Nelson, L. White, B. Will, R. Bateman, D. Broughton, H. Bunge, H. Campbell, M. L. Chickering, S. Hay, J. HiPPLE, M. HocuE, M. McIntosh, K. Class of 1929 Meyer, P. Nee, M. Pierson, R. Sellery, H Stanley, V Thompson, L Biggar, J. Gallagher, M. Kaufman, E. Kelley, I. Kennedy, E. McDonald, H. McElphatrick, E. Class of 1930 Nash, V. schermerhorn, m. Temple, R. Vogel, D Wing, M Anderson, E. Borneman, M. Bressler, R. Bundscho, G. Campbell, J. Colman, H. Day, H. Herold, E. Hill, G. Holmes, E. McLellan, H. McLellan, M. Nugent, E. Reitz, H Stearns, V ToWLE, M Page 490 A. Snodgrass M. E.Jones E. Mahorney K. Keebler V. Manchester M, Harmount M. Anderson P. Laurence H. Glenny H. VonWeise E. Mattingly R. Harper M. Robinson E. Olson L. Landschuiz M. Stedman E. Gilmore B. Thomas P. Childe E. j. Vennum H. Martin V. Berlin M. Bishop M. Brown V. Skinner G Humbert M. McCune Kappa Alpha Theta Founded at DePauw University, 1870 Number of chapters, 54 Carns, M. Anderson, M. Berlin, V. Bishop, M. Beynon, E. Brown, M. Cambier, M. J. Carey, M. D. Carson, M. Keebler, K. Anderson, M. Daley, K. Local chapter, Psi Date established, 1890 Dexter, E. Bacchud, C. Brown A. Glenny, H. Harper, R, Childe, P. Evans, E. Failing, B. Lawrence, P. McCuNE, M. Manchester, V. Driessen, M. Finn, E. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Landschulz, E. Mahorney, E. Martin, H. Class of 1928 FUEGER, B. Gilmore, E. Harmount, M. Hinds, L. Class of 1929 Martin, M. Olds, H. Class of 1930 Hunter, J. Rice, C. Williamson, M. Mattingly, E. Olson, E. Robinson, M. Humbbert, G. Jones, M. E, Lloyd, M. C. Oscar, J. Smith, J. Stedman, M. Johnstone, M. Landschulz, C. Williamson, M. Skinner, V. Snodgrass, A. von Weise, H. Longley, M- MacGowan, H. Moore, H. Tallmadge, M. Thomas, J . E. Vennum, E. J. MacGowan, M. Overton, M. K. 1 I I!! ' !!! in ' --■' f; f f ' Page 491 J . Smith L. Newell E. Jarres V. Clark K. Biggert R. Murphy M. Wilmarth F. Butler E B. Albrecht L. Barrett B. A. Warder J. Gaston C. WoUaeger R. Allen E. Hitchner K. Morrissey D. Atkinson Milne V. Mead H. Metcalf V. Hagan B. Skelly Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 Number of chapters, 70 ]P f 1% Local chapter, Wisconsin Alpha Date established, 1894 Pi Beta Phi Atkinson, D. Biggert, K. Butler, F. Clard, V. Gaston, J . Hagan, V. Members in University Class of 1927 HUSTING, J. Mead, V. Metcalf, H. Milne. E. Morrissey, M. Newell, L. Reinsch, C. Skelly, B. Allen, R. Barret, L. Albrecht, B. Chesley, C. Albrecht, A. Brown, V. Clark, G. Coulter, E. Collins, C. McCoMBS, R. Connor, C. Gerla, H. Class of 1928 Henschel, M. Hitchner, E. Class of 1929 Murphy, J, Orr, L. Class of 1930 Hunn, J . Morton, J . HOILES, V. James, E. Murphy, R. Saxton, E. Strange, R. Welter, A. Wilkinson, J. Smith, J. Wollaeger, C. Werder, B. Wilmarth, M. Young, A. Page 492 RVI ■H ■■■■■■Kl ■« H I Kr H B l rM a i H 1 IB J|«1H y  a m K flA ff 11 ■flf P i| i JlK M n fl y V ' B mH m ' , - ■1 ■tii K !B c F - Ml K ' - ' ' H hI n w f || BnSI 1 J 1 1 ' l B i ni : ' iit£_ H R - B i : ' i K I H A [•;| „ 1 ■l ' 1 HI ' s ylH H 1 ■J Xu ' j tTm U ! 1 HL. I ! IL I I I K. Linden R.Owen J.Hyman P. Schuette E. Norris A.Richards M. Birk R, Borchers D. Cahoon Bartholomy B. Ingwerson M. Pritzlaff E.Jones B.Bacon F. Ludden J . Droppers L. Linden M. Eschweiler E. Faithorne H. Stebbins M. Parham R. Huyette D. Stolte F. Rockwood H. Willard L. Davison R. Critchell G. Wagner Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 Number of chapters, 28 Local chapter. Iota Date established. 18% Alpha Phi Bacon, B. Birk, M. Cahoon, D. Davison, L. Faithorn, E. Hawley, R. Members in University Class of 1927 Huyette, R. Jones, E. Norris, E. Parham, M. Pritlaff, M. E. Reagan, D. J, Richards, A. Rockwood, F. M. Stolte, D. Wagner, G. Bradford, E. Borchers, R. E. Eschweiler, M. Hyman, J. S. Linden, K. F. Class of 1928 Linden, L. L. Ludden, F. Owen, R. Shuette, p. R. Stebbins, H. E. Theurer, E. Walker, V. Willard, H. Barber, J . Bartholomy, J. Blunt, C. DOWELL, M. Freeborn, J . Critchell, R. Droppers, J . Emerson, M. Gould, B. Jackson, A. Jeffery, D. Class of 1929 Garn, E. Ingwerson, C. Lee, D. Class of 1930 Johnson, M. Mainland, M. Norris, L. Richards, E. Shaner, E. Meiklejohn, H. K, Price, J. Reynolds Smythe, M. L. Young, C. Smith, J. Stoddard, H. Walter, M. Page 493 J. Fish E. Stewart E. Brown I. Bunker M. Miller F. Heckman M. Moore E. Hersig A. Moores E. Cooper E. Page C. Williams S. Orth R. Schliesser A. Findorff L. Schroeder G. Kurth E. Meier F. Carper E. Holt M. Kingston B. Buhlig M. Learned E. Burkhart V. Gaugh L. Morrissey Founded at Boston University, 1888 Number of chapters, 71 Local chapter, Mu Date established, 1898 Delta Delta Delta Members in Faculty Allan, F. Palmer, L. Members in University Graduates RUBEL, V. Black, D. L. Kleuter, K. Class of 1927 Sanborn, K. Buhlig, B. BuRKART, E. Carper, F. Dahle, H. Heath, J. Heckman, F. Kingston, M. Kurth, G. Class of 1928 Learned, M. Orth, S. Osborn, B. Pfann, J Steele, M Worst, B Anderson, E. Brown, E. Cooper, E. Fish, J. Hersig, B. Holt, E. Lucas, J . Manson, N. Meier, E. Mendenhall, P. Class of 1929 Miller, M. Morrissey, L. O ' Neill, L. Pomainville, C Stewart, E Williams, K Bunker, I. Burke, P. Doyle, J. Edwards, K Findorff, A. Gaugh, V. Kruse, V. Class of 1930 Moore, M. Moores, A. Page, E. Scheisser, R Schroeder, L Ballinger, N. Burner, L. Claflin, E. Holt, D. Jones, G. Kinsella, F. Moorman, E. Oscar, R. Owen, S. Van Hagen, J Watts, E ' Page 494 J. Strachan B. Evans L. Ploner E. Volkman D. Astrom H. Weedy F. Kohlhase E. Nelson N.Werner H. Posthuma R. Comer C. IDoyle I.M.Johnson I. C. Mavor D. Singer M. Kaltenback H. A. Cox A. Doyle L. Dennis N. C. Gauike D Bucklin H Dines H Fleek 1. Torpy E Curry Founded at University of Arkansas. 1895 Number of chapters, 71 Local chapter. Nu Date established, 1902 Chi Omega Astrom, D. E. Comer, R. Dennis, L. Member in Faculty Mendenhall, Mrs. M. H. Members in University Class of 1927 Doyle, C. Evans, B. Johnson, I. M. Volkman, E. Werner, N. Bucklin, D. Cox, H. A. Curry, E. Anderson, M. E. DORGAN, C. Fleek, H. Gaulke, N. Dines, H. Class of 1928 Kohlhase, F. Mavor, C. Class of 1929 Doyle, A. Kaltenbach, M. Nelson, E. Posthuma, H. Singer, D. Ploner, L. Strachan, J. Torpy, I. Weedy, H. Tiedeman, R. Aten, E. Bellis, M. J. Blocki, R. Class of 1930 boynton, g. Klingenberg, K. Mullenbach, K. Posthuma, C. SOLMES, E. J. Page 495 M. O ' Neil G. North A. Richardson H. Barker H. Frazier M. Stevens H. Waller H. Herbster C. McCaffrey M. Stephenson A. Stoppenbach G. Sherman G. Lohman J. Barker A. Rupel D. Schlacks C. Howard R. Filyes F. Holman D- Dodge E. North J. Morrison R. Godfrey A. Johnson M. Howard D. Stenjem D. Galbraith B. Hornby D.Jones Founded at De Pauw University, 1885 Number of chapters, 46 Local chapter. Kappa Date established. 190J Alpha Chi Omega H ' E50UBLER, M. Dodge, D. Frazier, H. Barker, J. ElSELE, L. Barker, H. Chamberlain, A. Barton, E. Campbell, F. Johnson, G. Godfrey, R. Hornby, B. Howard, M. Filyes, R. Galbraith, D. Cron, L. Garrard, F. Coney, C. Flint, C. Long, M. S. Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Lohman, G. Morrison, J . Class of 1928 Herbster, H. Leland, M. McCaffrey, C. • Class of 1929 Holman, F. Howard, C. Johnson, A. Class of 1930 Miller. M. H. Pierce, M. PiNER, M. McCarthy, M. North, E. Richardson, A. Rupel, A. North, G. ONeil,.M. Jones, D. Sherman, G. Reese, E. Schlacks, G. swenson, f. Sayle, M. Schlacks, D. Stephenson, M. Stenjem, D. Stevens, M. Stoppenbach, A. Waller, L. Tweed, B. WiTHEY, M. Page 496 Martin Cole Cisler Dittman Morley Paul Hickey Nichols Glover Fragstein Hainer Moore Martin Akpeter Hahn Hess Schuette Steenbergen Nelson Zarbell Alexander Stebbins Founded at Lombard College, 1893 Number of chapters, 40 Local chapter, Theta Date established, 1904 Alpha Xi Delta Walker, R. Cisler, S. E. Hahn, M. E. Brace, I. Alexander, B. Altpeter, B. Dittman, I. Briggs, B. Hess, D. Morley, G. C. Buckley, R. Cole, M. Gale, D. Glover, D. Lounsbury, M. Eckern, I. Jones, D. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Hickey, L. Class of 1927 Nelson, J. Class of 1928 Fragstein, E. Hainer, H. Class of 1929 Martin, K. McDaniel, R. - Class of 1930 Pennifeather, M. RUDEN, C. Ryan, M. E. Nichols, F. T. Stebbins, D. K. Paul, J . Steenbergen, F. A. Martin, B. McKinnon, D. Moore, E. Pennington, E. Sovereign, B. schoefflinc, j . Schuette, H. Trippe, H. Talbot, J. Van Skike, M. Zarbell, D. Walper, E. Pi 1 U M 3 H hhI H y .v4 -j| H H Vfl ■r ' ftrf ' ir ™ 9} Kh I hSH II -4 - J w nn jj H u . . 3H Pase 497 G. Muir L. Thorns G. Culver E. Ashcraft I. Pratt M. Spence S. Kerr E.Dewey G Morgan G.James R. Corp E Fosshage F Pollack G Schrom A Elmslie S. Stoekle M. Sniffen M. Droppers H. Brown E. Deibler V. Dobbratz M. WoUaeger Founded at Syracuse University. 1904 Number of chapters. 38 Local chapter. Eieta Date established. IWJ Philips, Mrs. D. J. Smith, E. M. Brown, H. Carling, J. Ashcraft, E. Culver, G. Brouch, I. Cross, E. Dieteker, E. Fink, M. Alpha Gamma Delta Members in Faculty Spensely, a. Members in University Class of 1927 Kerr, S. Pratt, I. Morgan, G. Spence, M. Muir, G. Stoelke, S. Class of 1928 Deibler, E. Halderson, A. Leiser, E. Dobbratz, V. Harding, L. Pollock, F. Eichkorst, M. James, G. Schrom, G. Corp, R. Dewey, E. Fosshage, E. Droppers, M. Fosshage, F. Hayden, M. Hoeberg, M. Class of 1929 Elmslie, A. Class of 1930 HOFF, M. Johnson, M. Kleinpell, I. Lueshke, F. Williams, M. E. LOOMANS, S. Pattee, J . Polk, J. Winkleman, H. Warner, V. Wollaeger, M. Sniffen, M. Thoms, L. Williams, H. Sontag, J. Vance, H. Wallace, C. Page 49S E. Tough R. Hovey fi.AIverson L. Darling B. Gustafson C.Marks M. Brandel E. Shick A. Haraldson L. Clapp M. Bemis M. Butler A. McKellar G. Putnam C. Grebe E. Prideaux F. Malzahn T Hettrick M. Foote E. Sheffle M. Eva ugh A. Hai E. Volckmann Founded at University of Nebraska, IQIO Number of chapters. 20 Local chapter. Theta Date established. 1915 Phi Omega Pi Alverson, E. Bemis, M. Brandel, M, Butler, M. Members in University Class of 1927 Clapp, L. Grebe, C. Green, M. Gustafson, B. Haraldson, A. Malzahn, F. Volckman, E. Darling, L. Foote, M. Hettrick, C. Hovey, R. Kraege, H. Marks, C. Class of 1928 Mc Kellar, a. Prideaux, E. Putnam, G. Rosen, E. scheffler, e. Shick, E. Struble, S. Tough, E. Whitson, R. Caldwell, D. Caldwell, M. Class of 1929 Eva, M. Struble, M. Beswick, M, Grabandt, H Class of 1930 Herring, M. Sutherland, E. Vandivert, G. Page 499 c-nii jf- ' f r, M. Engler E, Vaughan J.Jewell H.Patterson M. Stengel R. Reinert R. Bird E. Bekkedal M. Patchett H. Butterfield E Davison L. Goedde J.Hughes J. Rehfield A.Wilcox C. Tegtmeyer M. Keenan S. Hardy M. Bobbitt M. Hamilton D. Marsh R. King C. De la Hunt M Stare F Jones Founded at Barnard College, 1897 Number of chapters, 34 Local chapter. Eta Date established, 1917 Butterfield, H. De la Hunt, C. Engler, M. Barron, H. Bekkedal, E. Bird, R. Bauer, A. DoWDING, G. Adams, E. Goedde, L. Hamilton, M. Hughes, J. Bobbitt, M. Davidson, E. Hardie, D. Hill, L. Hoffman, E. Clark, E. Laird, H. Alpha Omicron Pi Members in University Class of 1927 Jewell, J. Jones, F. Keenan, M. Class of 1928 Hardy, S. King, R. Kious, L, Class of 1929 ICKE, H. Laurie, E. McManamy, L. Class of 1930 Lunceford, K. Lynch, M. Marsh, D. Patchett, M. Stangel, M. Patterson, H. Pierce, F. Reinert, R. Rehfield, J. SCHIELE, D. Parkinson, E. Reader, A. Vaughan, E. Wilcox, A. Wright, G. Stare, M. Tegtmeyer, C. WiESE, A. Tufts, M. WiLKINS, M. Serwe, E. Page 500 B. Harvey C. Andersen F. Gore L. Coxon E. Smith H. Running M. Olson J. [Deadman M. Keeler E. Ela H. Folsom F. Higgins E. Roberts B. Boughner E. McCollister E. Matheson D. Vandervest V. Larson B. Hollnagel M. Mills H. Wicks B Schmid T Miller R. Stibbe M. Murray E, Higgins L. Petty H. Keeler V. Grover F. Schauer I. Urquhart O.Campbell J.Ehrlinger H. Zepp E. Briggs E.Stone B.Howell E.Christians Founded at Miami University. 1902 Number of chapters. 45 Local chapter, Tau Date established, 1918 Delta Zeta Christians, E. Ela, E. Ehrlinger, J. Folsom, H. Andersen, C. Deadman, J . Howell, B. Briggs, E. Boughner, B. Coxon, L. Bates, E. Charters, M. Paine, H. P. Gore, F. Grover, F. Hollnagel, B. Hicks, H. Higgins, E. Higgins, F. Kahlenburg, M. Campbell, O. Harvey, B. Keeler, H. Coombs, M. Grubb, D. Himel, M. Members in Faculty Members in University Graduate Jones, T. Class of 1927 Keeler, M. Larson, V. Matheson, E. Class of 1928 Moffat, E. Miller, T. Class of 1929 Morissey, E. Mills, M. Murray, M. Class of 1930 Lewis, E. Maas, E. FisK, C. McCollister, E. Petty, L. Stone, E. Schauer, F. Running, H. Roberts, E. Smith, E. Olson, M. Reineck, C. Reynolds, E. Marting, S. Mason, V. McCassen, B. Stibbe, R. Vandervest, D. Wicks, H. Zepp, H. Sylvester, R. SCHULZ, D. Vroom, J. ScHMID, B. Snyder, L. Urquhart, I. St. John, E, Turner, M. Page SOI f i ! ! 1 T ' L. Watterson H. Mueller R. Crowley M. Nelson I. McManamy M. Feile G. Schoenfeld M. Rufsvold H. Kellogg N. Bilstad O. Meves M. Ruesel A. Schloegel D.Hughes M. R. Amon I. Rheins M. Ekdahl T. Keister L. Schoenfeld M. Connell Founded at Wesleyan College. 1852 Number of chapters, 48 Local chapter. Zeta Beta Date established, 1919 PhiMu Members in University Graduate Schoenfeld, G. Amon, M. R. Bilstad, N. Crowley, R. Hughes, D. A. Kellogg, H. H. Class of 1927 McManamy, I. Meves, O. Mueller, H. Nelson, M. Rheins, I. A. Schloegel, A. Schoenfeld, L. Watterson, L. F. Connell, M. Ekdahl, M. Anderson, M. Febock, H. Feile, M. Barry, M, Keister, T. E. Class of 1928 Forseth, M. Class of 1929 Kuesel, M. Martin, L. Martin, J. Morgan, M. E. Miller, J. Rufsvold, M. Smith, E, M. Straka, E. Schweicer, J. Barsness, W. Burdick, S. Class of 1930 Parker, H. Paul, G. Wade, L. Pige S02 T Steele A. Kent D Taft L Cess E. Warren M Read L Haase V Sachse M. C. Corgan G. Thieman E Reppert G. Simon C Kuehne R Hannan H Cochrane A Cooke M Williams B. Paris L. Zimmerman J.Hyde B Marian C. Cable B Harrington S Harris R Johns C Jones J Anger M.Cooke Founded at Colby College, 1874 Number of chapters, 39 Local chapter, Psi Date established, 1919 Sigma Kappa Members in Faculty Landon, F. Mellburg, O. Members in University Class of 1927 Rankin, I. Bump, V. Cooke, A. Gabel, C. Gess, L. Haase, L. Hannan, R. Harrington, B. Hyde, J. Inge, C. Marion, B. Paris, B. Class of 1928 Sachse, V. Simon, G. Steele T. Thieman, G. Warren, E Williams, M Zimmerman, L Anger, J . Cooke, M. Corgan, M. Drake, M. Johns, R, Jones, S. Kent, A. Class of 1929 Kuehne, C. Lyman, E. Read, M. Reppert, E Se Cheverell, C Cochrane, H. Harris, S. Class of 1930 Taft, D. ' Albright, R. Carroll, G. Heindel, M, HORR, M. Krueger, L. Lippman, M. Orth, M. Preston, H. Robertson, C. Wollaecer, I Zimmerman. D Page fOi E. Lyman L. Gustafson A. Zens Ziebell R. Plumb E. Bussey M Kuehn H. Simonson M. Branstad M. Slick D. Hoffman E. Wray T. Fowler D Bolton A. Johns H Kober J. Covey E, Johnson A. Oerkwitz M, Bond B.Davis E Shanks J. Bull Founded at Wesleyan Female College. 1851 Number of chapters. 44 Local chapter. Alpha Mu Date established, 1920 Alpha Delta Pi Members in Faculty Reynolds Mrs, V [. S. Wacner. F. Members in University Graduate Diderrich, a. S. Class of 1927 Beffel, E. Bolton, D. Covey, J. Fowler, R. Johns, A. Kenney, L. Kober, H. Class of 1928 Oerkwitz, A. Slick, M. C. Zens, A Ziebell, A Bond, M. Branstad, M. E. Gustafson, L. Hoffman, D. Johnson, E. Kuehn, M. Class of 1929 Lyman, S. E. Shanks, E. Simonson, H. S Zeimet, H Bull, A. J. Bussey, E. Davis, B. Plumb, R. I. PiLTZ, J. Class of 1930 Randolph, F. SCHATZ, B. Schumacher, E. C Wray, E. L Harshaw, G. Perschbacher, B. Plumb, H. Wamnes, a. Young, R Pa e f04 C. Schroeder C. Olmsted O. Miller S. Meyer M. Schwarz A. Olmsted R. Bullesbach C. Ammann M. Rooney S. Smedal E. Barton E. Whipp H. Morgan R. Kelley C. Hussa B. Schroeder H. Orcutt E. Sinnard F. Bailey L. Rood L. Gaterman M. Ackley A. Kinkaid R. Franseen H. Boyd H. Harris A. Field I.Dow B.Chase M. Simonton M.Gail D.Sherman G. Witmer F.Crawford M, Chase Founded at Virginia State Normal, 1897 Number of chapters, 56 Local chapter. Tau Date established. 1920 Kappa Delta Boyd, H. Crawford, F. Dow. 1. Ackley, M. Ammann, C. Babcock, B. Bailey, F. Caldwell, T. Bleil, a. Franseen, R. Gaterman, L. Harris, H. Barton, E. Bullesbach, Chase, M. R. Chase, B. Field, A. Kreutzer, p. Fink, A. Members in University Class of 1927 Hopkins, E. Kelley, R. Kinkaid, A. Miller, O. Class of 1928 Eierman, M. Gail, M. Hussa, C. Class of 1929 Meyer, S. Rood, L. Schroeder, C. Class of 1930 Kroncke, H. Naset, C. Olmsted, C. Rooney, M, Schwarz, M. Morgan, H. Orcutt, H. Olmsted, A. Sylvester, J. Smedal, S. Trathen, J . Schutter, N. Sherman, D. Simonton, M. Sinnard, E. Schroeder, B. Vetter, M. Weeman, M. Witmer, G. Whipp, E. Smith, L. Pagt SOS H. Zaban J, Seitner F. Rosenfield E. Cohn G. Goldman M. Priess R. Newman M. Rosen C. Adelman N. Schreiber E.Joseph L. Brody F. Wolf B. Hoffman M. Gallinger A. Hirschfield H. Abelson L. Newman H. Liebman S. Friedman B. Goldmann F. Capes C Cohen Founded at Bar ard College. 190Q Njmtcr of chapters, 24 Local chapter, Sigma Date established, 1921 Alpha Epsilon Phi Members in University Graduate Malsin, H. Brody, L. Goldmann, B. Hirschfield, A. Class of 1927 Liebman, H. Glim, E. Priess, M. Rosen, M. Rosenfield, F. Abelson, H. Capes, F. Cohn, E. Cohen, C. Class of 1928 Goldstein, M. Hoffman, B. Schreiber, N. Wolf, F. Zaban, H. Adelman, C. CoviTZ, I. Feerer, G. Friedman, S. Class of 1929 Gallinger, M. Goldman, G. Hirschfield, B. Joseph, E. Newman, L. Newman, R. Adelman, F. Frankel, M. Freeman, M. Goldmann, R. Class of 1930 Goldstein, B. Labowitch, M. Leopold, M. LoWEY, J. Sideman, S. Woldenberg, a. Zimmerman, A. Page 506 M. E. Hawkins R. Lueck E, Leach V. Schult F. T. Rowe M. Theisen M. Kuenzli D. Koepenick J.Webster E. VanDonck W.Clark H. Rathbun G.Hart G Magisted B. Hilles M. Pier M. Partch G. Johanson H. Smith M. Olds E. Crawford Founded at University of Missouri, 1888 Number of chapters, 13 Local chapter. Alpha Alpha Date established, I92b Beta Sigma Omicron Hart, G. Hawkins, M. Koepenick, D. Kuenzli, E. Leach, E. Lueck, R. Members in University Class of 1927 Macistad, G. Olds, M. Partch, M. Rathbun, J. Rowe, £. Schult, V. Smith, H. Van Conk, E. BiNZER, M. Crawford, E. Hahn, H. Class of 1928 Hilles, B. Johanson, G. Sherman, K. Theisen, M. Chase, N. Clark, W. Class of 1929 Pier, M. Sannes, B. Webster, J. Evans, L. Henriksen, E. Class of 1930 Jaeger, C. VOLZ, V. Page $07 D. Wagner E. Haight H. Schenk E. Calvert L. Sawyer F. Purcell V. Bunting M. Nutting T. Johnson E. M. Martin C. Schlenter A. F. Tuffley M. Hoff M. Evans R. Alton H. Utzerath F. Aylward H. Seifert L. Peckham M. Reinhold R. Enge L. Biggar S. Fernholz M. Banks L. McKeegan R, Johnson D.Crane A.Alton H.Johnson R.Sawyer J. Town V. Fay M. Arnold H Hunter J. Goe E. Wilcox E. Malec M. Stetzer W. Adsit Founded at University of California, 1909 Number of chapters. 1 1 Local chapter. Iota Date established. 1925 Beta Phi Alpha Alton, R. Arnold, M. Banks, M. Adsit, W. Biggar, L. Alton, A. Evans, M. Bunting, V. Calvert, E. Crane, D. Enge, R. Aylward, F. Goe, J. Haight, E. Johnson, H. Johnson, R. Members in University Class of 1927 Fay, V. Fernholz, S. Hoff, M. Hunter, H. Class of 1928 Class of 1929 Johnson, T. Class of 1930 Nutting, M. Pierstorff, V. Sawyer, L. McKeegan, L. Malec, E. Schenk, H. Town, J . Peckham, L. Martin, E. M. Purcell, F. Sawyer, R. Schlenter, C. TUFFLEY, A. F. Wilcox, E. Utzerath, H. Stetzer, M. Reinbold, M. Seifert, H. Wagner, D. Page SOS F. Sweet M. Shlimovitz H. Rosenthal F Boruszak V. Wolfson G. Fischer E. Feldman M. Appleman Evelyn Feldman S. Levine R. Epstein B. Izaakowitch S. Dermansly R. Pollock M. M. Moses H, Weil E. Lakin S Thai G. Rosen N. Tro Sigma Founded at University of Wisconsin. 1924 Boruszak, F. Epstein, R. Members in University Class of 1927 Shlimovitz, M. Trope, N. Wolfson, V. Feldman, E. Izaakowitch, B. Lakin, E. Class of 1928 Moses, M. Pollock, R. Rosenthal, H. Weil, H. Dermansly, S. Feldman, E. Fischer, G. Class of 1929 Kaplan, R. Levine, S. Sweet, F. Thal, S. Appleman, M. Class of 1930 Rosen, G. Page S09 V. Ellis A. Schroeder E. O ' Malley B. Wernig M. Ziebarth E. Huerth A. Kelley M Ziebarth E. Hoffricter J. Kohl I Lament M. Neil D. Brown A. Pickard R. McKee C, Weyker M. McKenna I. Carraher E. Ripp C. Mulvey H. Dewhurst E. Gunn H. West T. Haig O. Bohri M. O ' Hora M. Jamieson M.Carney M. Brochman E. McEvilley J.Butler Founded at University of Michigan, 1912 Number of chapters, lb Local chapter, Nu Date established. 1924 Theta Phi Alpha Byrns, R. Members in University Graduates GOGGINS, K. Butler, J. Gunn, E. Class of 1927 Lamont, I. McKee, R. Ziebarth, M. Carraher, I. Carney, M. Dewhurst, H. Ellis, V. Haig, T. Class of 1928 Huerth, E. Jamieson, M. Kelly, A. Mulvey, C. O ' Hora, M. Pickard, A. Ziebarth M, Brown, D. Brockman, M. Kohl, J. McEvilley, E. Class of 1929 Neil, M. Nelson, P. O ' Malley, K. Schroeder, A. Weyker, C. CONAHAN, A. Hoffricter, E. Class of 1930 McKenna, M. McKenna, M. Ripp, E. Wernig, B. Page UO . H.Hughes R. Leadstone L. Morton R. McCombs V. Tingle A.J.Creber E. Saxton J. Hay M. Henschel V.Nash W OBrien J. Murphy A Welter M, Hefferan H. Kohl EKaufmann P.Meyer I.Cunningham R.Lauder J. Campbell D.Warner B. Skclly D. Siberts F. Tanner J.Hodges Cairns, C. Hay, J. Creber, a. Cunningham, Mystic Circle Founded at University of Wisconsin. 1904 Officers Warner, D President McCombs, R Social Chairman Cunningham, I Secretary Lauder, R Treasurer Members in University Class of 1927 HoRTON, L. Lauder, R. Skelly, B,. Class of 1928 Henschel, M. Kaufmann, E. Kohl, H. Hughes, H. Leadstone, R. Class of 1929 Hefferan, M. McCombs, R. Nash, V. Hodges, J. Murphy, J. Saxton, E. Class of 1930 Campbell, J. O ' Brien, W. Welter, A. Warner, D. Tanner, F. Siberts, D. Tingle, V. Page SI I E. Higgins C. Wollaeger V. Wolfson L. Gess S. Davis E. Warren H. Patterson L. Thorns R. King H. Hainer H. Wicks R. Borchers F. Crawford E. Feldman C. Sherman E. James R. Atten G. Morgan J. Nelson M. Robinson H. McGowan F. Tanner R. Pierson M. Butler P. Meyer R. Critchell F. Aylward Panhellenic Association Officers Butler, M., Phi Omega Pi President Davidson, E., Alpha Omicron Pi Vice-President Wicks, H., Delta Zeta Secretary Warren, E., Sigma Kappa Treasurer Faculty Advisor GuNTER, Miss M. E. Members in University Sororities Juniors Seniors Alpha Chi Omega Stenjem, D. Stephenson, M. Alpha Delta Pi Simonson, H. Bolton, D. Alpha Epsilon Phi Newman, R. Zaban, H. Alpha Gamma Delta Robbvatz, V. Morgan, G. Alpha Omicron Pi Bird, R. King, R. Alpha Phi Cunningham, M. Bannen, M. Alpha Xi Delta Hainer, H. Nelson, J. Beta Phi Alpha Aylward, F. Fernholz, S. Beta Sigma Omicron Sherman, K. Partch, M- Chi Omega Cox, H. Bonnewell, A. Delta Delta Delta Kingston, M. Burkhart, E. Delta Gamma Edkins, P. Warner, D. Delta Zeta Higgins, E. Wicks, H. Gamma Phi Beta PiERSON, R. Nesbitt, H. Kappa Alpha Theta McGowan, H. Robinson, M. Kappa Delta . . . . ' Eierman, M. Crawford, F. Kappa Kappa Gamma . . . . . . . Davis, S. Fletcher, W. Pi Beta Phi James, E. Wollaeger, C. Phi Mu Feback, H. Waterson, L. Phi Omega Pi Kroece, H. Butler, M. Sigma . Feltman, E. Lipman, S. Sigma Kappa Gess, L. Warren, E. Theta Phi Alpha Sarff, K. Bachhuler, R. PaeeilZ ¥ )SIONAL FRATERNITIES u It- r IS?- f0 N R. Torhson F. H. Leberman S. K. Lowry W. Hooper W. C. Treichel O. Fehlhaber V. DeWitt R. C Thauer J. M. Bruce T. A. Browne M. Farr G. Derber M . Weaver W. Crutcher R. R. Tuttrup W. Jackman R. B. Tibbs E. Freytag A. L. Simpson J. F. Wickhern R. Nixon J. O ' Leary N. Sullivan L. Adams T. C. Reed C. Greenwood F. W. Boardman R. Kopp H. Ginze J. Houck A. Morsell Founded at University of Michigan, 1869 Number of chapters, 55 Local chapter, Harlan Inn Date established. 1891 Phi Delta Phi BOESEL, F. Brown, R. Pace, W. H. Fraters in Facultate (Benchers at the Inns of Court) On the Wolsack Richards, H. S. RUNDELL, O. Sanborn, J. Apprenticss at the Inns of Court Adams, L. M. Culbertson, J. G. ASCHENBRENER, E. L. DeWiTT, V. O. Bruce, J. M. Farr, M. R. Leberman, F. H. Albrecht, G. F. Crutcher, W. H. Fehlheber, O. W. Freytag, E. W. Boardman, W. W. Bundy, W. H. Brooks, H. L. Derber, G. F. Browne, T. A. Falk, O. N. Inner Temple Lowry, S. Morsell, A. L. OLeary, J. W. RiSBERC, E.L. Middle Temple Godfrey, K. A. Hardy, J. H. Outer Temple Ginzle, H. F. Greenwood, C. S. Hooper, W. S. Houck, J . H. Simpson, A. L. Sullivan, W. G. Tibbs, R. B. Thauer, R. C. Kopp, W. R. Lenicheck, H. Jackman, W. L. Nixon, R. L. Poser, F. F. Wickem, J. D. torrison, r. n. Tuttrup, R. R. Wickhem, J. F. Monte, D. C. Swan, G. C. Reed, T. C. Treichel, W. C. Weaver, M. F. Page 514 J F. Zoerb R. Marquardt F. Diwoky D. McFarlane G. Buffett R. McFarlane W. Whitney L. Pruess R. Zinn F. Koelsch E. Martin P. Austin J, Ruhoff J.Forrester E.Jeffrey J.Crowe B.Browning O. Quimby R. Casselman E. Linner R.Reynolds L. Zodtner W, Woodstock R. Fulton R. Ryden I. Wierman H. Salzburg C.Johnson H. Templeton P Craig R. Robinson F. Cleveland A. Asplund R. Bell C. Rosenbaum R. Keenan H. Heaney M Schei! H. Cramer P. Richardson A. Stamm T. Whitenack A. Tupper L. Hurd P. Millington C.Jones A.Dickson H. Schrenk L. Menestrena J.Zola R. Haman J. McGovern Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1902 Number of Chapters. 39 Local Chapter, Alpha Date established. 1902 Adkins, H. B. Bradley, H. C. Daniels, F. D. c alder wood, h. n. Fischer, R. Hart. E. B. houcen, o. a. Kemmerer, G. I. kowalke, o. l. Kraemer, E. O. Dickson, A. D. Fevold, H. L. Asplund, A. J. A. Austin, P. R. Bell, R. T. Cleveland. F. C. Casselman, R. T. Krauskopf. F. C. LlETH, C. K. Lenher, v. Mathews. J. H. McCaffery, R. S. Meloche, V. W. Muehlberger, C. NOER, O. J. Oesterle, J. F. Ragatz, R. a. Alpha Chi Sigma Members in Faculty Schuette, H. a. Severinghaus. E. L. Steenbock, H. Truog, E, Walton, J H. Watts. O. P W. Browning, B. L. Buffett, G, M. Caldwell, W. E. Cramer, H. I. Members in University Graduates FiLSON, G. W. GUNDERSON, F. L. Craig. P. F Crowe. J. A. Jeffrey, E. W. McFarlane. D. J. Fogelberg, J . M. Haman. R. W. Johnson, C. M. Hallett, L. T. Hoffman. G. F. Class of 1927 Marquardt. R. R. Preuss, L. M. Richardson, F. J. SCHEIL, M. A. Class of 1928 Forrester. J. H. Class of 1929 McFarlane, R. W, McGovern, J. N- Dittmar. H. R. Diwoky, F. F. Finzel. T. G. Fulton. R. A, Hale, I. T. Heaney, H. J. Holt, M. L Hurd, L. C. Keenan, R. L. Linner, E. R. Jones. C. A. Sal_berg. H. K. Tupper. A. D. Wierman. E. S. Woodstock, W. H. Zinn, R. E. Koelsch, C. F. Ruhoff. J. R. Ryden. R. W, Madson, W. H. Marten. E. A. Millington, P. E. Peterson. J. H. Pfeiffer, G. J. Quimby, O. T. Reynolds. R. B. Robinson, R. J. Rosenbaum, C. K. Sorum. C. H. Schrenk, H. H. Whitenack. T. A. Zodtner, L. L. Zoerb. F. C. Zola, J. C. Menestrena, L. C. Whitney, W. B. Page US i t t«f V fi 1 f f f f f 1 f f; f f; J... ' ' l- f f, 1 f. t ,1% R. IDowney A. Dahl S. G. Myers S, Thorson F. G. Silberschmidt S. H. Sabin G. Winters S Hanson J S Cavanaugh H D McCoy G.Smith F Krez J VanWagenen L A Barden J Kohl W. Krueger H. W. Bast A Kilmer A. H. Nicolaus C Bell H, McAndrews E Cannon C D. Nyhus j Clarkson M. P. Coakley L C. Isaacson D C.Williams W F. Thurber H. L. Burdick F W. Evans B. Mattek L Williams D VanOstrand D Kennedy W. Clough F. C Holscher C E. Fugina H. J Lamboley A. L Quilling D. Frasche M. W. Wallrich J M Rooney Founded at Northwestern University, 1897 Number of chapters, 49 Barden, L. A. Bell, G. Cannon, E. Aberg, D. V. Bast, H, W. Burdick, H. L. Cavanaugh, J. S. Barto, C. E. Carter, T. E. Local chapter. Ryan Date established, K Glicksman, H. Fugina, C. E. Hanson, S. Holscher, F. G. Clarkson, J . Clough, C. E. Evans, F. M. Isaacson. L. E. Coakley, M. P. Dahl, A. G. Downey, R. H. Phi Alpha Delta Members in Faculty Herriott, M. H. Members in University Class of 1927 Kilmer, A. E. Krez, F. McAndrews, H. McCoy, H. Class of 1928 Kennedy, D. F. Kohl, J . Myers, S. G. Quilling, A. L. Class of 1929 Finn, E. A. Frasche, D. F. Krueger, W. F. Rice, W. G„ Jr Murphy, J. Silberschmidt, F.G. Nicolaus, A. H. Thurber, W. F. Nyhus, C. D. Thorson, S. R. Roberts, J. C. Sabin, S. H. Schmidt, L. Smith, G. Lamboley, H. J. Mattek, B. Rooney, J . M. Van Wagenen, J. Van Ostrand, D. C. Wallrich, M. Williams, D. C. Williams, L. Winters, G. Page 516 Schade Williamson MacCoIlum McCarthy P. Jorgenson Casey Hand C. Faber Folsom J Faber Smedal Van Doren Vanderkamp Burch M. Jorgenson Rau Mills Walsh Meunich H- Smedal Christiansen Reznicheck Wirka Solle Kaump Knoefel Dolmes Quisling McGuire Jannsen Reuhlman Clausen Pomerening Duehr Kehr Decker Clark Hougen Cmeyla Lochen Fechtner Haney Founded at University of Pittsburgh, 18 1 Number of chapters, 40 Local chapter, Alpha Pi Date established, 1915 Phi Beta Pi Bast. Dr. T. H. Bradley, Dr. H. C. BUERKI, Dr- R. C. Burns, Dr. R. E. Anderson, O. N. Clausen, C. T. Cole, L. R. Burch, H. A. Conway, J. P. Casey. J. D. Christiansen, H. W. Decker, J. J. Clark. O. Aylward, R. L. Dulac. H. a. Dawson, Dr P. Cromwell, Dr. H. Hodges, Dr. F. G. Guyer, Dr. M. F. Duehr, P. A. Dulmes, A. H. Folsom. H. F. Hahn, AC. Jorgenson. M. A. Cmeyla, J. L- ■Faber, C. A. Fechtner, H. H. Faber, J . E. Hauge. H. L. Heidtke. F. ' C. Jorgensen, p. B. Members in Faculty Leake, Dr C, D W. LOEVENHART, EDr. A. S. Meek. Dr. W.J. Members in University Graduates Hamre, C. J. Haney, H, F. Hicks. E, V. Kehr. E F. Class of 1927 Knoefel. P. K. Pearson, C. R. Class of 1928 Hand, O. R. Janssen, F. J. Kroyer. T. J. Class of 1929 Kaump, E. Class of 1930 Mills, C. S. Middleton, Dr. W. S. Miller, Dr W S. MossMAN, Dr H, W. Mowry, Dr. W. A. McGuire, L. J. Schade. R. E. Smedal, M. L Rau. G. a. Ruehlman, D. D. MacCollum. D. W. Pescor, M. J. Quisling, A. Kundert. p. R. McCarthy. F. D. muenich. h. j. Smedal, H. Muelberger, Dr. C. W. Pommerenke, Dr. W. T. Tormey, Dr. T. W. Trauba, Dr. N. C. Treweek, D. N. Vander Kamp, H. Wilson. O. M. Walsh. J . D. Wirka. H. W. Reznechek, C. G. Van Doren. B. J. Pomerening. C. H. SOLLIE, H. G. Tulloch, W. O. Williamson, R. G. Page 517 N. Vomholdt A. Lauck H. Sell G. I. Keenan G. O. Wolrath P. O. Hamacher j. Walters A.R.Werner R. Gunderson V. Benn Founded at Medical College of Virginia, 1879 Number of chapters, 65 O. Bangert H.J. Achenbach M, Miller C. T. O ' Neill J. L. Voigt G. A. Stoll J. P. McCain L. E. Adams H. Lindeman A. Schwake Local chapter. Beta Psi Date established. 1919 Kappa Psi Hamacker, p. O. Knapp, J. Adams, L. E. Bangert, O. Benn, V. Keenan, G. I. Achenbach, H. J . Gibbons, H. Gunderson, R. Member in Faculty Jenkins, G. L. Members in University Graduate Uhl, a. H. Class of 1927 O ' Neill, C. T. Stoll, G. A. Class of 1928 Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Hartwic, L. Lindeman, H. Werner, A. R. Lauck, A. GULICK, L. Miller, M. Schwake, A. Voicht, J. L. Vornholt, N. Sell, H. Walrath, G. O. Page fl8 D. Cameron T. Fortney L. Taylor G. Helz P. Eves A. Ulistrup A. Bibby H. Jamison A. Knutson E. Barsch N. Nelson G. Burgardt A. McGrath I. Delwiche E.Jones J. Chucka R.James H. Schaefer W Sommer J.Nelson H Hunn C. Holmes C. Rott E. Holt - ■A Delwiche E. Renard L Ellis E. EDelwiche L Rundell J Roy C. Bice D. Fink Founded at University of Missouri, 1905 Number of chapters, 5 Allen, B. W. Donald, J. S. Elvehjem, C. a. Ellis, L. S. Harrison, C. A. Bice, C. M. Barsch, E. C. Bibby, A. T. Delwiche, J.J. Local Chapter, Wisconsin Date established, 1921 Farm House Fraternity Frost, W, D. Hopkins, A. W. Jones, E. R. Heltz, G. E. Jamison, H. E. Knutson, A. M. Marvin, G. E. Chucka, J . A. Delwiche, A. J. Burgardt, G. F. Cameron, D. A. Cook, H. W. Fink, D. S. Holt, D. H. Members in Faculty Lampman, C. E. Loncenecker, G. W. Members in University Graduates . Ogden, W. B. Otterson, H. Price, E. E. Class of 1927 Holmes, C. E. Jones, E. M. Class of 1928 Delwiche, E D. Eves, P. K. Fortney, T. K. Class of 1929 Hunn, H. J. Moore, R. A. Morrison, F. B. Mortimer, C. B. Reed, R. H. Renard, E. J. Rott, C. A. Sabin, S. H. McGrath, A. E. Nelson, N. M. Howell, B. B. Nelson, J . H. Ray,J.S. James, R. Taylor, L. O. Schaars, M. a. Troug, E. Schaefer, H. C. Taylor, L. W. Thomas, R. C. Sommer, W. A. Rundell, L. F. Weyker, L. M. Ullstrup, a. J . I ' agl S19 H. P. Beatty O. A. Mortensen O, E. Tjoflat K. V. Powers J. H. Marks M. G. Henry J. A. Stiles H. J. Theisen H. Hendrickson H. Behrens V.Johnson J.J.Harris C- Vollenveider C. Bunde P.S.Dewey E. M. Drissen K. G. Beggs G.J.Kaska B. J.Esser S. L, Henke P. Marquart R. E. Sutton G. R. Horrell F. Coburn W. R. Tuft D. Wifliams J. S. Moffatc I. Waterman Founded at University of Vermont, ISS ' Number of chapters, 55 Local chapter, Tau Beta Date established, 1921 Phi Chi Members in Faculty Coon, Dr. G. P. Henke, S. L. Mortensen, O. A. Robbins, Dr. G. R. Friedbacher, Dr. K. Marks, J. H. Nelson, Dr. O. O. Sisk, Dr. I. R. Meanwell, Dr. W. E. Osgood, C. W. Sisk, Dr. N. J. Baldwin, R. Henke, S. L. Beggs, K. G. Behrens, H. C. Drissen, E. M. Barnes, H. Beatty, H. P. Henry, M. G. Hemphill, P. Johnson, V. Kleinpell, W. Harris, J.J. Horrell, G. R. Conway, K. Dewey, P. Members in University Graduates Marquart, P. MOFFATT, J. S. Powers, K. V. Class of 1927 Hinckley, R. HOEL, K. Class of 1928 Hatfield, L. Class of 1929 Esser, B. J. Class of 1930 Osgood, C. W. Quade, R. H. Senn, M. HUTTER, A. Stiles, J. A. Tjoflat, O. Hemphill, G. Kaska, G. J. Leonard, T. Springer, V. Sevringhaus, Dr. E. Wilson, J. A. Theisen, H.J. Watson, E. Vollenweider, C. Waterman, I. Williams, D. Sutton, R. Tuft, W. Page 510 m ' Gannon Bachhuber Manz Meili Morrison Owen Fenton Blum Monroe Matsen Rydell Rosenow Frechette A. Bachhuber Boudrv Evans Donkle Davis Thomas Williams Cechsner Birbeck Davis Founded at Dartmouth University. 1888 Number of chapters, 54 Local chapter. Beta Zeta Date established. 1922 Alpha Kappa Kappa Members in Faculty BOUDRY, M. Brown, G. Geist, F. D. Gillette, M. McKinlev, E. D. Members in University- Graduates PUESTOW, K. L. Stovall, W D. • Sullivan. W. W. VOCKE. W.J. Bachhuber. F. Blum. O. Emanuel, K. Goedecke. ' R. Haigh, F. Hansen. A. Long. C, Lundt, M. Manz, W, Marsden, W. Class of 1927 Nammacher. T. Neubert. a. Rathert, B. Schindler. J. Sharp. D. Sterling. R. Berwanger, W. Birkbeck. N. Collins. R. Curless. G. Davis, L. Evans. A. Class of 1928 Fenton. H. McBain. B morrisson. r Sannes. W. Bachhuber, A. Campbell, W. Cheli, C Ford. K. Frechette, F. Friske. O. Fuhlbricce Gannon, D. Cranio, H. Lachen, E. Martin. R. Class of 1929 Matsen. M. McCandless Meile. E. Oechsner. C. Owen. J. RoSENOW. O. Thomas. N. Urben. W Blanchard. B. Hauce. H. LeMahieu. F. Mothershead. J Schaeff-fr. W Class of 1930 SiMMONSON. R. 1 HOMPSON, R Williams, C. AiNSWORTH. R. Bachhuber. M. HUTH. E. Millard. E. Page SZI f JJ JJ.J W. W. Sauber P. S. Schultz K. M. Fox A. W. Peterson H. A. Friedrich A H. Moeller E. F. Heyden K . G. Marsden D. A. Kerth D. P. Knott R F Kamm J: C.Gibson R L MacReynolds A P. Kachel H.G.Davis C. F. Trayser R. G. Lauson A. E. Gaik F. E Kij W. G. Storck_ F. C. Towle_ E P. Senneff H. M. Schuck Founded at New York University, 1907 Number of chapters. 40 Local chapter, Psi Date established, 1923 Delta Sigma Pi Member in Faculty Gibson, I. D. Members in University Graduate Schuck, H. M. Fox, K. Gaik, A. E. Kachel, A. P. Kerth, D. A. Class of 1927 McReynolds, R. L. Moeller, A. H. Rasmussen, L. E. Sauber, W. W. Schultz, P. S. Fischer, R. R. King, F. E. Knott, D. P. Class of 1928 Schaars, a. H. Senneff, E. P. Siren, O. E. TOWLE, F. C. Trayser, C. F. Davis, H. G. Friedrich, H. A. Class of 1929 Heyden, E. Kamm, R. F. Lausen, R. G. Marsden, K. G. Prce f2Z NO. Sorenson P.E.Henderson M.Daffinrud B. F. Mathiowetz W. E. Kiessling J. Krueger K.E.Worthing F. H.Grover E. Krug W. H. Resh G. R. EDouglas C.J. Ludwig A. C. Fadness E. N. Waistead B. A. Mjelde B. H. Schlosstein H. T.Jordan J. F. Federer E. C. McCarron C. R. Lewis F. C. Qutlty E. L. Haley L. Kay M. Berglund W. A. Sheldon G. J. Larkin I. Rasmus W. O. Jackson R, J. Prittie O. E. Fowler L. J. Burr P. Owens R. E. Ladd M. I. Cundiff Wm. A. Cameron R. W. Vaughan P. Lehner C. O ' Neill Founded at University of Maine, 1901 Number of chapters, 24 Local chapter, Upsilon Date established, 1923 Gamma Eta Gamma National Professional Legal Fraternity Cameron, W. A. Douglas, G. R. Englehard, L. M. Fadness, A. C. Haley, E. L. Members in University Class of 1927 Henderson, P. E. Jackson, W. O. Ludwig, C. J. Mjelde, B. A. Prittie, R. J. Resh, W. H. McCarron, E. C. Berglund, M. busbym, a. j. Damsheuser, C. W. Cundiff, M. I Grimm, R, Grover, F. H Jordan, H. T. Class of 1928 Krueger, J. Krug, E. Larkin, G. J. Lewis, C. R. Mathiowetz, B. F. QUILTY, F. C. Schlosstein, B. H. Sheldon, W. A. Sorenson, N. O. Vaughan, R. W. BUCHARDT, D. E. Burr, L, J. Daffinrud, M. Federer, J. F. Fowler, O. E. Kay, L. Class of 1929 KlESSLING, W. E. Ladd, R. E. Lehner, P. O ' Neill, C. Owens, P. Rasmus, L Walstead, E. N. Worthing, K. E. Page !23 M. Huber P. Stewart E. Mortensen E. Goebel W. Schroeder W. Bodden I. Anderson F. Evans A. Anderson A. Wegner E. Horneck W. Macfadden Founded at New York University, 1905 Number of chapters, 5b Local chapter, Alpha Mu Date established, 1923 Alpha Kappa Psi Members in University- Graduate Evans, F. M. Bodden, W. A. Gill, D. E. Goebel, E. C. Class of 1927 Horneck, E. C. Macfadden, W. Mortensen, E. H. Stewart, W. P. Wegner, A. E. Andersen, I. W. Anderson, A. C. Best, J. S. Class of 1928 Dymond, W. E. Heck, M. A. Huber, M, G. Schroeder, W. Jensen, W. M. Class of 1929 Rapraeger, G. M. I tie 524 L---- R. Scorgie E. Kremski M. Morack W. Gilster A. Cuneo R. Benedict H. Felber B. Teare T. Saari R. Jordan N. Thayer C. Bischoffberger W. Churchill I. Gerks H. Mather E. Marshall W. Deininger D. Zillman L. Wollaeger O. Young E. Carpenter H. Mackin G. Wheeler Founded at University of Iowa, 1923 Number of chapters. 5 Local chapter. Delta Date established, 1924 Kappa Eta Kappa National Professional Electrical Engineering Fraternity Carpenter, E. Churchill, W. Jordan, R. Bennett, E. PURUCKER, R. A. Deininger, W. Gerks, I. Gilster, W. Bischoffberger, C. Cuneo, A. Members in Faculty Johnson, R. Members in University Graduates Benedict, R. R. Class of 1927 Kremski, E. Mackin, H. Mather, H. Morack, M. Class of 1928 Felber, H. Saari, T. Class of 1929 Marshall, E. Rood, J. T. Cox, G. N. Radtke, L. Scorgie, R. Teare, B. Wollaeger, L. Thayer. N. Wheeler, G. Young, O. Zillman, D. Page 515 «Jk m ¥. k- PROFESSIONAL ORORITIES r m « « 1 m I C. Schroeder E. Mar C. Birong F. Bergendahl A. Taylor R. McCombs L. Lockwood E. Hunter L. Wienke R. Troyer E. Steele F, Ludden M. Johnson M. Honeycombe V. Sachse L. Rood E. Wooster F. Axen G. James H.Johnson A. Borge K. Franey E.Wood M.Irish A.Wagner J.Dixon E. Haentzschel Founded at University of Michigan. 1903 Number of chapters. 4b Local chapter, Rho Date established, 1921 Sigma Alpha Iota National Professional Music Sorority Motto: Vita brevis ars longa. Object: The object of this sorority is to give moral and material aid to its members; to promote and dignify the musical profession ; to establish and maintain friendly relations between musicians and music schools, and to further the development of music in America. Bergendahl, F. Franey, K. Axen, F. Birong, C. Dixon, J. McCoMBS, R. Cross, E. Borge, A. Hunter, E. Haentzschel, E. Honeycombe, M. James, G. Rood, L. Gordon, V. Members in Faculty Eastman, I. Johnson, M. Members in University Class of 1927 Irish, M. SOLDAN, F. Class of 1928 Ludden, F. Paris, B. Class of 1929 Class of 1930 LiVERGOOD, F. Lockwood, L. Wienke, L. Sachse, V. Schroeder, C. Steele, E. Taylor, A. Maercklein, D. Mar, E. Wooster, E. Watrous, a. Wagner, A. Wood, E. Troyer, R. Schatz. E. NK A-t i 11 1 :;2 r ■{JK L 1 ! ' ' T ' HKi Page S2S Hr BL . • B 3| i Hi - P H r Hl . B K . H m i H H jc B B! -J V ' B ft ■V B -r riB i-i BP W - fl ji ' . B B M. Reuter E. Hawley W. Wise R. Carlberg R. Rowe R. Laude M. Parry M. Bell E. Miller M. AIsop G. House M. Brandel J. Ninman K, Hartman L. Bode S. D rmansly D. Johnson R. Mantell E. Plappert M. Hamilton E. Dewey I Sine Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1924 Local chapter, Margaret Fuller Date established, 1924 Coranto Local Professional Journalism Sorority Bleyer, W. G. Members in Faculty Hyde, G. M. Pattetson, H. M. Brandel, M. M. Carlberg, R. Bell, M. L. Bode, L. A. Dewey, E. A. Hawley, E. N. Hirschfield, a. C. Colburn, C. E. Cox, H. a. Members in University Class of 1927 Johnson, D. M. Mantell, R. E. Class of 1928 Hamilton, M. C. Lauder, R. purcell, a. e. Miller, E. M. Parry, M. I. Plappert, E. H. Reuter, M.J. Robertson, H. E. Rowe, R. E- Wise, W. E- Sine, I. Alsop, M. Brockman, M. M. Dermansley, S. Fink, M. A. TUCKWOOD, R. E. Class of 1929 Haentzschel, E. M. Holman, F. E. House, G. R. Class of 1930 Ninman, J. F. Palmer, E. F. Parsons, D. R. Zemurray, D. Schmidt, D. E. Weybricht, E..S. Page 519 f 9 f l fc .i t S M W t Jhi 1 f- 1 Int. ' V -( K ■, f- y ar- i f mg 4 1 Ir ♦■i ' l- ' L. : 1 - m Jw . lif « ' -ij O D. Lovell P. Wideman J. Heath M, Hippie E. Warren D. Rickaby R, Smithyman L. Hodson M. Wilkinson B. Bingham D. King W. Fletcher C. Marks W Gerhardt L. Herold H. Zeimet S. Pate E. )Uthcott D Ebbott H.Becker E.Bennett R. Schaettle K. Lidbeck B.Rom L. Legler H Hausam Founded at University of Minnesota, 1909 Number of chapters. 1 5 Local chapter, Nu Date established, 1925 Phi Upsilon Omicron National Professional Home Economics Sorority Marlatt, a. Manning, H, Members in Faculty COWLES, M. Bain, J. L. Parsons, H. Becker, H. Bennett, E. Ebbot, D. Fletcher, W. Bingham, B. Gerhardt, W. Clow, B. Graf, G. Hausam, H. Heath, J. Herold, L. Hipple, M. Hodgson, I. Members in University Graduates Class of 1927 Legler, L. Lidbeck, K. Lovell, D. Class of 1928 King, D. Raisbeck, a. Marks, R. Pate, S. Rickaby. D. Rom, E. Marks, C. Wideman, P. Schaettle, R. Smithyman, R, southcott, e. Warren, E. Wilkinson, M. Zeimet, H. Page !30 R. Egre G. Bahr H. Hinklev A. Christenson L.Watson I. Skillicorn M, Kroner J Strachan F. Malzahn B. Zang C. Sachs B. Johnson Founded at Columbia University. 1924 Number of chapters. 17 Local chapter, Iota Date established. 1925 Phi Chi Theta National Professional Commerce Sorority Bahr, G. Hensey, I. Christenson, A. HlNKLEY, H. Members in Faculty Members in University Class of 1927 Johnson, B. Class of 1928 Strachan, J. McElvain, H. Kroner. M. Malzahn, F. Skillicorn, I. Egre, R. Class of 1929 Urban, R. Page 531 I M. HuRo L. Geffert H. Patterson M. Tufts H. Febock B. Worst E. Vaughn J. Schweiger L. Gaterman C. Burkit M. Amon M. Heath Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1923 Number of chapters, 2 lAW Local chapter. Alpha Date established, 1923 Sigma Lambda National Professional Art Sorority Amon, M. R. Heath, M. Members in Faculty Varnum, Prof. W. Oehler, Miss B. Wilson, Miss D. F. Members in University Burkit, K. Christians, E. Febock, H. Hugo, M. Kaltenback, M. Class of 1927 Gaterman, L. Morley, G. Class of 1928 Class of 1929 Pettker, M, Vaughn, E. Wilcox, A. Patterson, H. Sample, R. Schweiger, J . Worst, B Tufts, M Page Sil H.Johnson F. Aylward B. Boardman A. Watts J. Town A. Hess M. Watts F. Bloss G. Bauer G. Figor Founded at University of Iowa. 1921 Number of chapters, b Local chapter, Zeta Date established, 1926 Kappa Epsilon Aylward, F. Hess, A. Bauer, G. Member in Faculty Wakeman, N. Members in University Graduate Boardman, B. Class of 1927 Town, J . Class of 1928 Watts, A. Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Bloss, F. Watts, M. Johnson, H. Figor, G. Page S3! F. Malzahn T. Town A. Hirschfield F. Aylward E. Wooster J. Strachan H. Becker H. Zeimet Pan-Professional Council Inter-Professional Sorority Council Date of Organization. 1926 Officers Wooster, E President Malzahn, F Vice-President Hirschfield, A Secretary Becker, H Treasurer Sigma Alf}ha Iota . Sigma Lambda . Phi Upsilon Omicron Phi Chi Theta . . Coranto .... Kappa Epsilon . Senior Wooster, E. Gaterman, L. Becker, H. Malzahn, F. Hirschfield, A. Town, J. Junior Wagner, A. Christians, E. Zeimet, H. Strachan, J. Bell, M. L. Aylward, F. Palt 134 ¥ f CAMPU GROUP! V Barnard Hall Feistl, I President Kroner, M Vice-President Wendt, V Secretary Gerhardt, W Treasurer KuLLMANN, E Social Chairman Beffel, E. Bruce, L. Dedrick, M. L. Anderson, B. Becker, L. Bennett, O. Brooks, A. GiLLING, M. Jorcensen, S. Kroner, M. Markham, M. Bucklin, D. Feile, M. Frankfurth, p. Gelder, B. Gerhardt, W. Members in University Class of 1927 Meiselwitz, B. Nast, C. NOWEL, E. Class of 1928 Goerbinc, E. Grobben, E. GuDsos, H. Knight, A. Krueger, D. Palmer, G. Rom, B. Strauss, H. Vedder, M. Krueger, K. kullman, e. LnEBERMAN, E. Niejahr, E. Rex, V. Vinovsky, T. Wilde. H. Winter, J. Stein, M. Strachen, J. Wendt, V. ZlERER, M. Alexander, J. Anderson, E. Bach, 1. Barry, M. Becker, H. BUSSEY, E. Champion, M. Davies, R. Decker, D. Field, L. Forman, J. Franklin, D. Gates, A. Goldberger, E. Grether, G. holzmann, t. Class of 1929 hubbell, j. Jax, T. Kuehl, M. KUEHN, M. KUESEL, M. Levine, S. Magistad, J. Meiselwitz, H. Moorman, M. Morrissey, E. Oberland, a. PiLTZ, J. Pomerane, R. Richards, L. Robinson, E. Rufsvold, M. Sattler, C. SCHATZ, B Simpson, G Steel, M Tibbs, J Trathen, J Weeman, M Whipp, E Williams, H Albrecht, E, a. Albright, R. E. Anderson, E, Anderson, M. Arnstam, T. Bain, C. Bartz, a. Below, M. BiBA, C. BURGY, C. Buss, D. Caldwell, B. Caldwell, M. Cheeseman, H. COE, F. Cohen, A. Colt, R. Compton, R. connell, a. Dermansly, Edwards, C. Egcert, M. Gates, A. Gerber, J. Glover, M. Goldman, B. Goldman, R, Grabeil, K. A. Class of 1930 Halverson, B. Hayden, M. Henrikson, E. Hill, M. HOLZER, C. Holt, D. HORR, M. Kastner, E. Knauf, a. Kroncke, a. Krueger, L. Kyle, C. Locke, F. Page fJ6 loomans, s. Maier, E. Martin, I. Middledorf, L. Misfeldt, R. Monahan, a. Moorman, E. McCaul, a. Naset, C. Orth, M. Palmer, M. Rosenheimer, F, schoeffling, j. Schumacher, E. Scott, M. Sena, E. Sinar, M. Smith, D. Stecker, E. Sutherland, J. Wamnes, a. Weinhacen, F. Weyher, I. WiESNER, T. Wollaeger, I. Young, R. ZiNN, C. Zimmerman, D. I Chadbourne Hall Officers FossuM, E. M President Haldorson, a Vice-President OsTERBiND, H Secretary Wright, V Treasurer Hall, ME Sergeant-at-Arms Prochnow, B. N Social Chairman Ames, M. Anderson, 1. L. Barron, G. M. Bassett, J . Delanger, D. Bellis, M. J. Bezold, I. B. Black, M. Bloom, C. Bloom, E. B. Blum, a. Bredlow, L. N f. Burmeister, V. Burnett, M. Caldwell, T. Canfield, D. Chase, J. K. Cole, R. S. Collins, E. E. Crichton, K. Curtis, R. A. Dickie, M. DucHAC, G. F. Egre, R. Evans, D. Feiker, M. Field, A. C. Findlay, H. Fink, M. P. Fosse, A. FossuM, E. M. Fossum, G. Fowler, S. L. Francis, A. Gier, M. E. Gillette, S. Grabaudt, H. Graf, E. M. Graf, G. Grenzow, D. Hahn, W. Haldorson, A. Hall, M. E. Hartnett, K. Hatch, D. M. Hathaway, L. Hauck, C. R. Heimann, L. Helz, R. Henry, F. A. B. Members in University Herring, M. Herrman, M. hoesly, h. b. Holmes, N. Holt. V. N. Horton, G. Haselhucker, a. Janda, H. Jirtle. p. Johnson, D. H. Johnson, H. E. Kelly, V. kundert, h. Klackow, N. Lemmer, R. T. LOYE, H. Martin, M. M. Marty, L. Mills, M. Moore, M. Moriarty, M. Munson, B. McCuLLOUGH, H. NoTT, M. L. Olsen, a. Olsen, B. osterbind, h. Pease, F. Peck, R. Petty, M. Plappert, G. Plumlee, E. M. Prochnow, B. N. QUADE, E. H. Quandt, B. Richmond, J. Ritter, E. Ryan, C. J. Reinking, M. E. Schiesser, R. SCHMID, B. Schmidt, C. Schnieder, H. M. Schneider, N. J. Serwe, E. Sieverkropp, G. Smith, J. Stern, fl Stiles, L. K. Stiles, M Stokes, C Stokes, E Stubbe, M SwENSON, E. H swenson, l Thier, D Thompson, E Thomsen, a. a Timmons, E Trumpy, R Twohig, M Urban, R. E Vance, H Verhulst, L. H Webb, E Weitzel, F. E • Wheeler, D Williams, C. B Witmer, G Wittich, M. J WOLTER, L Wright, V Wuerzberger, F zwolanek, h Page S37 Men ' s Dormitory Association First Semester, 1926-27 The Senate Chandler, G. A., Head Dormitory Fellow and Chairman Pro Tem. Jenison, E. H Vice-President ScHUCK, H. M Business Manager Treat, A. E Clerk Adams Hall Section Chairman Powers, J. C. Radick, C. L. hohman, e. e. TiMM, H. W. Boyd, M. A. Currier, G. E. ludwig, r. j. Jenison, E. H. Dormitory Fellows Behnke, J. A. Henshaw, p. S. McAndrews, H. F. Brooks, L. E. Franseen, C. C. Thomas, C. W. Rosenfels, R. S. Chandler, G. A. Tripp Hall Section Chairman Merz, H. S. RuEZ, P. N. Marshall, R. E. Miller, P. R. Wittenberg, M. C. Bainbridge, H. D. Grange, H. L. Fritz, M. T. Dormitory Fellows Thornton, H. R. Colburn, a. P. Craig, J. C. Weichert, C. K. Lund, R. J. Pommerenke, W. T. Bingham, E. M. ScHUCK, H. M. Page S38 Adams and Tripp Halls The eyes of every university in the middle west were centered on Wisconsin last September when she opened to five hundred freshmen men Adams and Tripp Halls, beautiful dormitories which were erected on ' the shores of Lake Mendota at a cost of well over a million dollars. The buildings themselves are unusual in themselves and have brought forth favorable criticism from representatives of many other universities who have visited them. The two buildings, each accommo- dating 250 men, have been laid out in quadrangles, each quadrangle being further divided into eight houses. ' The houses provide quarters for from 24 to 36 men. An older student, known as a fellow, acts as an advisor to the group. Each house has a living room, for which the residents of the houses them- selves provided with pianos, victrolas, magazines and newspapers. Living in houses, the groups quickly became intimately acquainted, avoiding the institutionalism which might develop were the 250 living together. The houses, too, have given rise to rivalry in athletics, scholarship and in every other phase of student life, all working together to mold a spirit in keeping with the New Wisconsin. Complete self-government, suggested by the university authorities themselves, was adopted by resi- dents of the dormitories early in the school year, and has been a distinct success. Each house has been organized, with the chairmen of each of these groups forming an executive body or senate. The senate, by the authority of a constitution adopted by the men, has had full control of discipline and student life in the two buildings. From the men themselves a president is selected twice each year to act as the executive for the entire organization and to preside over the meetings of the senate. Each hall, too, has its president, who is directly responsible for the enforcement of senate rulings in his quadrangle. The year has been replete with success, and a well-rounded program of student activity has been presented. An open-house was sponsored early in the fall. A Faculty-Student mixer was another event sponsored by the men. Social activity, too, received its share of attention, with a number of dances held in the dining hall or refectory building. Athletics thrived, with every natural i-esource at the door of dormitory residents. Swimming in the fall and in the spring attracted many, ice-skating, ice-boating, tobogganing, skiiing and hockey coming in for their share of attention in the winter months. Touch-football, basketball and baseball were other sports in which the organized groups competed with great interest. This comprehensive program of physical, mental and social activity was sponsored by the students themselves, but no account of the first year of the dormitories would be complete without a word or two about the fellows. These faculty members and older students, one in each house, acted as friends and big brothers to the residents of their respective sections. It was upon their shoulders that the respon- sibility for acquainting the many new men with the glorious traditions that are Wisconsin fell, and the manner in which they succeeded in their task is best reflected by the spirit the dorm men showed on every occasion. E specially grateful were the men for the work of George A. Chandler, chairman of the fellows in the dormitory. It was largely through his efforts that self-government was placed upon a successful basis, and he himself served as its executive head during the first semester of the school year. Page 539 The Villa Maria Villa Maria Date of Organization 192? Officers K. Timlin Rose, E. President W. S. G. A. Rep. Bauersfield, B. Barrett, G. Bellman, A. Anderle, H. Barber, J. Cunningham, J. Dines, H. Garrard, F. Bleeg, C. Bleil, a. Baldwin, B. Brill, D. Lauter, H. Lorimer, Z. Z. Corgan, M. C. Call, D. Gallagher, M. Gradle, L. Hewitt, N. J. Hoffman, B. L. Kaltenbeck, M. Lawrie, B. Connor, C. Campbell, J. Clement, V. Day, H. Members in University Class of 1927 Olson, B. Class of 1928 Hughes, H. Klenert, E. Kuehn, V. Class of 1929 Mainland, M. Meiklejohn, H. Meier, W. Parsons, D. Richards, E. Rose, E. Class of 1930 Friedl, J. Hanzel, G. Kadow, E. Lunceford, K. Richards, A. Timlin, K. Lauer, a. Martin, D. Meehan, V. Roynan, p. Schermerhorn, M. Shaner, E. SiBERTS, D. Smythe, M. L. Maerklein, D. Merica, M. Noth, R. Pease, F. Waltz, J. B. Stance, R. Weber, M. Talmadge, M. Tufts, M. Waskow, L. Watrous, N. Young, C. Reitz, H. Stepka, M. Wagner, P. Walter, M. B. Page S40 I like this place and willingly could waste my time in it The Arden Club Date of Organization 1925 Officers First Semester ViLLEMONTE, D President Collar, M Vice-President Wendt, V Secretary Johnson, G Treasurer Metterhausen, E Membership Chairman Second Semester Collar, M President Wendt, V Secretary Nelson, C Treasurer Members in University Allen, K. Anderson, A. Anderson, M. Baker, A. Barlow, V. Beatty, a. Beatty, H. Berkoff, L. Boerner, G. Brittincham, Mrs. Brown, L. Buck, P. Buhlig, R. Chase, H. Churchill, C. Clucston, p. Collar, M. Corrigan, J. Curtis, A. Burwell, C. Dahl, G. Dawson, E. Dodge, R. E. N. Donnelly, L. Dyson, H. O. Gale, Z. Gebhardt, A. L. . Gilbert, 1. G. Glicksman, H. Grubb, R. Gruener, J. Hapeman, D. Harrison, B. Hart, K. Herman, H. Hixon, a. G. Howard, E. I. Hubbard, F. Johnson, Mrs. H Jones, R. Kandel, E. Kluckhohn, C. LaBoule, a. Lathrop, F. Lathrop, H. B. Lathrop, M. Leonard, S. A. Leonard, W. E. Lyon, W. Martin, V. McIntosh, Mrs. K. P McKee, M. Mashek, a. N. Metterhausen, E. Miller, L. Murphy, C. Nardin, F. L. Newborg, K. Perry, H. T. E. PlCKARD, W. J. Pope, E. F. Pyre, J. F. A. Rasmussen, C. RiCKETT, H. Roe, F. W. Ryan, M. E. scallon, m. Schubring.Mrs. E.J. B. Schlichter, C. S. ScOTT, E. B. Sherry, L. Shirk, E. Smith, E. B. Smith, P. Spence, L. Splitter, H. Stitgen, E. Taylor, W. Timlin, K. Toms, A. ViLLEMONTE, D. Wales, J. G. Waters, E. Welch, A. Wendt, V. Wess on, C. White, H. C. Winnie, H. wollaecer, h. Wood, C. Page S4l L. Marty F. Wilder P. Finstad E. Bell A. Anderson V. Schult B. Furminger L. Biggar L Earls N.Ryan K. Wegner D.Evans K.Jansky F. Axen H. Osterberg E. Diebold L. Heidt H. Reimer S. Fernholtz V. Dohse H. Ostrum M. Statzer M. Moynihan C. Gabel Junior Mathematics Club Officers First Semester Jansky, K President Furminger, B Vice-President Finstad, P Secretary-Treasurer Members in University Anderson, A. Axen, F. Bayne, C. Bell, L. Biggar, L. Diebold, E. Dohse, V. Earls, L. Evans, D. Feistl, I. Fernholtz, S. Finstad, P. Furminger, B. Gabel, D. Haroldson, a. Heidt, L, Jansky, K. Marty, L. Moynihan, M. Osterberg, H. Ostrum, H. Riemer, H. Ryan, N. Schwenger, R. Schult, V. Wegner, K. Wilder, F. Ziemann, C. Page 542 R. Urban A. Dynes G. Bahr C. Sachs L. Crummey S Schuminski R. Pollock I. Hinsey B.Johnson F. Malzahn I Skillicorn L. Denzel A. Christ ianson Woman ' s Commerce Club Date of Organization 1917 Officers Malzahn, F, ' 27 President Sachs, C, ' 28 Vice-President Christianson, a., ' 27 Secretary Watson, L, ' 29 . . . ' Treasurer Members in Faculty Hensey, Miss I. A. Lins, Miss A. G. McElvain, Mrs, H. R Members in TJniversity Graduate AUCHTER, F. Bahr, G. M. Cape, J. M. Christenson, a. M. Dencel, L. H. Pollock, R. Barron, G. M. Crummey, L. M. Class of 1927 Johnson, B. Kramer, M. P. Kroner, M. J. Class of 1928 Sachs, C. F. Class of 1929 Dynes, S. A. Egre, R. a. Malzahn, F. B. Skillicorn, 1. suckern, l. e. Shuminski, S. S. Strachan, J . M. Urban, R. E. Watson, L. E. Page 543 E. H. Mortenson L. I. Iverson H, F. Brandenburg P. S. Schultz W. G. Storck F. E. King H. A. Friedrich E. P. Senneff D. P. Knott K. G. Marsden C. F. Trayser W. A. Bodden D. A. Kerth A. H. Moeller W. W. Sauber O. E, Siren A, P, Kachel C. P. Rumpf A. E. Gaik R. G. Lauson M. E. Anderson R. F. Kamm A. E. Wegner H. G. Davis L. O. Moe Men ' s Commerce Club Date of Organization I ' )03 Officers Fint Semester Kerth, D. A President Mortenson, E. H Vice-President ScHAARS, AH Treasurer Gehrke. G. R Secretary Iverson, L. I Sergeant-at-Arms Second Semester Bodden, W. A President Moe, L Vice-President ScHAARS, A. H Treasurer Huber, M. G Secretary Kamm, R Sergeant-at-Arms Scott, Prof. W. A. Anderson. M. Bodden, W. Brandenburg, H. Gaik, A. Anderson, A. Anderson, I. Davis. H. Friedrich. H. Honorary Members GiLMAN, Prof. S. W. Elwell, Prof. F. H. Gardner, Prof. E. H. Cool, Prof C. D. Members in University Gehrke, G. Gill, D. Iverson, L. Kachel, A. Best, J. Campbell, W. Dymond, W. Fronk, E. Jensen, W. Kamm, R. Class of 1927 Kerth, D. Marshall, R. Merriman, p. Class of 1928 Fischer, R. Huber, M. King, F. Class of 1929 Koltes, L. Lauson, R. Moe, L. Moeller, A. Mortensen, E. Rumpf, C. Knott, D. Schaars, a. Senneff, E. Leiser, H. Marsden, K. Smith, J. Sauber, W. Schultz, P. Stevens, G. Wegner, A. Siren, O. Trayser, C. Spoentzcen, H. TOWLE, F. Page 544 A. Nichols E. Taylor A. Knight N, Hamilton V. Wolfson M. Rooney A. Olmsted E. Whipp C. Olmsted M. Reuter I. Haight M. McCoy O. Meves J.Schweiger H.Lee V. Schult E. Nowell T. Keister S. Shuminski G. Magistad H. Anderson M. Hamilton M, L. Bell I. Sine I. Rheins A. L. Orr L. Dudgeon M.Nelson V. Wendt R. Lueck D KoeMnick G.Hart J. Hubbell S. Dermansly D. Hue- ' ' -fughes M. Gail H. Meiselwitz Collegiate League of Women Voters Dace of Organization 1922 Object: The object of this organization shall be to foster education in citizenship and to promote good government. Officers DuEXiEON, L President Wendt, V Vice-President Nelson, M Secretary Orr, a Treasurer ACKLEY, M. Alsop, M. Alton, R. Anderson, H. Banks, M. Bell, M. L. Bentley, p. BiLSTAD, N. BUCKLIN, D. BUELLESBACH, R. BUNGE, H. Clark, L. Cole, R. Dermansky, S. Dow, I. Dudgeon, L. Evans, L. Gail, M. Gnatt, E. Haight, I. Hart, G. Hamilton, M. Members in University Hamilton, N. Hubbell, J. Hughes, D. Keister, T. Keller, M. Knight, A. Koepnick, D. Lee, H. Lueck, R. McCoy, M Magistad, G. Meiselwitz, H. Meves, O. Nelson, M. Nichols, A. Nowell, E. O ' Brien, G. Olmsted, A. Olmsted, C. Orr, a. L. Rheins. I. Reuter, M. Rooney, M. Schult, V. Schweiger, J. Shuminski, S. Sine, I. Taylor, E. VOLZ, V. Wendt, V. Whipp, E. Wing, M. Wolfson, V. Page 545 O. Skindrud Cj. btanicv M. Beran D Lindstrom J. Woods R. Alton A. Woods R. Rasche D. Williams V. Fay V. Bunting A. Smith M. Bruhn T. Goba R. Enge E. Blakely Blue Shield Date of Organization 1923 Officers Williams, D. H President Enge, R Vice-President Alton, R Secretary Stanley, G Treasurer Members in Faculty AuST, Prof. F. A Professor of Horticulture Jones, Prof. E. R. . Professor of Agricultural Engineering KoLB, Prof. J. H. Professor of Agricultural Economics Nardin, Miss F. L Dean of Women Alton, R. Beran, M. Blakeley, E. Bruhn, M. Bunting, V. Enge, R. Fay. V. Ford, J . GiLBOE, H. GOBAR, T. Hathaway, L. Holmes, C. Kirkpatrick, E. Knott, M. Lindstrom, D. Members in University McCuTCHEON, K. Milne, W. Newlin, R. Rasche, R. Saeker, D. schilke, r. Schaefer, L. schaefer, w. Shindrud, O. Smith, A. southcott, e. Stanley, G. Thomas, E. Thompson, I. Watkins, S. Warner, V. WiLIAMS, D. H. WOJTA, M. Wolberg, F. Woods, A. Woods, J. WORMELI, B. Page S46 J.Zeitner R, Schaettle H.Nolan M. Ziebarth M. A. Ziebarth C.Arnold A. Kcllv E.Trumbull N. Zipsen L Clapp C. Sherbourne A Schernccker E. Southcott J. Heath P Wideman J.Hood E VanE nk H. Rooncy D. Lovell D Abbott E. Weaver K. Lidbeck AKinkaid M. Ackley G.Kurtz H Zeimeth H. Hippaca E.Bennett R Weiss J. Covey S Pate L Heuer M. Hubbard E. Kelly H. Hausam H. Becker R. Smithyman M. Wilkinson B. Rom M. Eva D. Wilcox Euthenics Club Date of Organization 1910 Officers Becker, H President Hausam, H First Vice-President Smithyman, R. . Second Vice-President Rom, B Secretary Wilkinson, M Treasurer Ackley, M. Allen, T. Alverson, E. Arnold, G. Ball, M. Becker, H. Bennet, E. BiLLINGTON, L. BOTHAM, G. Bratrud, O. Brown, H. Carroll, G. Clapp, L. Comer, R. Cook, M. Covey, J . Eva, M. Ebbott, D. Fladen, J. Gaggin, L. Gail, M. Gerhardt, W. Gibson, D. Golbraith, D. Graf, E. Graf, G. Griggs, L. Hainer, H. Hausam, H. Heath, J. Heuer, L. HiPPAKA, H. Hipple, M. HOFF, M. Hood, J . Members in University Humphrey, G. Kauffman, a. Kellog, H. H. Kelly, A. Kelly, E. KiNKAID, A. KuRZ, G. Larson, O. Legler, L. LiDBECK, K. Lovell, D. McCaffrey C. McKlNNEY, M. A. Machael, M. Marks, C. Marks, R. Meiselwitz. B. Meusel, S. Nolan, H. Pate, S. Perchbacher, B. Pfluke, E. N. Platt, E. Porter, V. Pratt, I. Rom. B. L. Rooney, H. Rude, D. Running. H. Schaettle. R. Schernecker. a. Schlichter. E. Searles, L. Seitner, J. Sherburne, C. SiM.MONS, T. Smithyman, R. Southcott, E. Stevens, M. Stewart, J . Stiles, L. Strubble, M. Thiede, G. Trumbull, E. Van Donk, E. Wideman, P. Wilcox, D. Wilkinson, M. Willis, L. Wilson, P. A. Ziebarth, M. Ziebarth, M. ZlEMET, H. Zipsie, N. Page S47 G. D. Humphrey R. R. Zimmerman R A. Poison W. G. Bubbert D W. Stauffacher F. B. Sazama T. A. Wirtz A. M. Trinka G. M. Smith D. C. Aebischcr J. E. Webster W. N. Milne B. J. Birdsall Agric Triangle Country Life Club Date of Organization 1919 Purpose: To train for community service. Officers Aebischer, D. C President Humphrey, G Vice-President PoLSON, R. A Secretary Smith, G. M Treasurer Trinka, A. M Member-at-Large Member in Faculty WiLEDEN, A. F. Members in University Class of 1927 Chucka, J. A. PoLSON, R. A. Smith, G. M. Class of 1 28 Aebischer, D. C. Humphrey, G. D. Class of 1929 Birdsall, B. J. Milne, W. N. Sazama, F. B. Hartman, R. C. Mitchell, D. A. Webster, J. E. Class of 1930 Bubbert, W. G. Stauffacher, D. W. Wirtz, L. A. Murray, M. S. Trinka, A. M. Zimmerman, R. R. Page 548 G.Wheeler W.Gilster N. Tweet V. Dyer K. Maxham D. Christison W.Churchill A.Turpin G. Custer C. DeHorn G. Paul R. Leach F. Thackaberry R. Thordarson E. H. Nelson E. F. Carf enter W. C, Deininger M. M. Morack D. C. Nowack A. E. Kratsch H. J. Felber M.J.Fischer W. H. Fuldner C. J. Bischofberger D. P. Tiedeman W.B.Montgomery V. B. Bagnall H. W. Rubenstein R. McCoy R. A Millermaster T. H. Saari K. C. Beemen N. B. Thayer B. R. Teare Prof. C. M. Jansky F. A Maxfield American Institute of Electrical Engineers Founded 1919 Purpose: Advancement of the Electrical Engineering Profession Officers Teare, B. R Chairman Thayer, N. B Secretary-Treasurer Millermaster, R. A. 1 Bagnall V. B. . . . . Carpenter, E. F. J Executive Committee Faculty Advisor Jansky, Prof. C. M. Members in University Graduates Benedict, R. R. Hebard, G. G. Class of 1927 Purucker, R. E. Summers, E. R Bagnall, V. B. Churchill, W. W. Carpenter, E. F. Christison, D. C. Cotter, S. D. DeHorn, C. E. Custer, G. W. Deininger, W. C. Deist, J. W. GiLSTER, W, H. Hein, T. S. Krueger, R. E. Kremski, E. S. LiLLQUIST, A. E. Morack, M. M. Millermaster, R. A. Montgomrey, W. B. McCoy, R. M. Oldenburg, C. R. O ' Laughlin, M. J. Risser, A. A. Radtke, L. V. Class of 1928 Rothermel, U. A. Rubenstein, H. W. Saari, T. H. Schmidt, C. J. Smallinc, L C. Teare, B. R. Thackaberry, F. B. Thayer, N. B ToBEY, S. B Tweet, N. J Vollrath, B. H Vallee, J. W Wheeler, G. G Young, O. S Bartels, a. T. Beeman, K. C. Bishofberger, C. J . Dyer, V. H. Felber, H. V. Fuldner, W. H. Fischer, M. J. LUECK, 1. B. Leach, R. W. McFarlin, R. Class of 1929 Maxham, K. E. Mueller, G. J. Nowack, D. C. Paul G. S. PUELICKER, R. T Swansen, T. L Tiedemann, D. P Kratsch, A. E. Maxfield, F. A. Parker, R. S. Sweet, A. L. Schoofs, a. H. TuRPiN, A. F. Thordarson, T Page S49 Saddle and Sirloin Officers First SemesWr Jones, E. M President WoLBERG, F. B Vice-President Helgren, C. L Secretary-Treasurer Heywood. L.J Custodian Craig, J. E Chairman of 1927 International Second Semester MoDRALL, J.R President BiBBY, A. L Vice-President Wolberg, F. B Secretary-Treasurer Burgg, F. T Custodian Alexander, A. S. Babcock, S. M. Brandt, H. J. COLLENTINE, A. C. Cramer, A. J. Fargo, J. M. Members in Faculty Fuller, J. G. Harris, R. T. Hopkins, A. W. Humphrey, G. C. Morrison, F. B. Rupel, I. W. Russell, H. L. Van Lone, F. E. Kleinbeinc, F. Aebischer, D. Anderson, A. Bartness, a. Bridceman, R. Bracks, G. Burcy, F. Bibby, a. Butler, A. Bredsall, B. BURGARDT, G. Craig, J. Cullenback, J. Davis, L. Dirks, H. Doyle, A. Ellickson, C. Ellsworth, L. Fink, D. Freitag, R. Members in University Freitag, W. goehrinj, n. GiLBOE, H. Helgren, C. Henry, J. Herron, W Heywood, L. Hildebrand, E. Hodgson, R. Holt, D. Inman, H. James, R. Jones, E. Jones, F. Keller, T. Lucia, M. LuNDE, D. Nicholas, N. Owens, L. Peebles, R. poehlman, w. Raabe, Z. Stauffacher, R. Webb, J. Weiner, L. Weyker, L. Wolberg, F. Zimmerman, R. Page HO R. R. Piper J. W. Herron E. A. Jorgensen J. R. Modrall L. J. Owens J. M. Fargo (coach) K.J. McFarlane CM. Bracke Fat Stock Judging Team The Winter Short Course in Agriculture The winter Short Course in Agriculture was established in 1885 and since that time has been an important factor in the agricultural development of the state. Among its graduates are many of Wiscon- sin ' s most successful farmers. The men who have been graduated are realizing today the value of a course giving technical knowledge, a broadened vision of agriculture, and an inspiration for the future. The course aims to keep so close to farm and rural community life that it can furnish real guidance in meeting farm problems. The large number of farmers in Wisconsin and other states who are finding life more abundant as a result of their attendance on this course attest the wisdom of those who founded it and of those who are now instrumental in its continuance. To secure a wider vision of the importance of agriculture, to learn the fundamental scientific facts underlying farm practices, to study the problems involved in successful farm management, to find greater interests in rural life, to bring together young men in pursuit of agricultural knowledge, to secure training in special agricultural fields, to obtain this information at the season when work on the farm is the least pressing, and to aid in securing desirable positions — all these purposes combine to give the young man interested in agriculture the supreme opportunity of his life. Page 551 Gosling Timm Pence bax Meslow Benedict Guth Stewart Weinke Dana Chambers Olson Monastersky Mc Arthur Kittsley Spooner Bloss Waffle Ford Paii Hogan Radway Root Randolph Lenz Schaaf Maxfield Leisk Williams Gittings Evans Sondern University De Molay Club Date of Organization 1924 Purpose: To further the general welfare and serve the best interests of the Order of De Molay, and to promote social, athletic, and fraternal activities among De Molays at Wisconsin. Officers First Semester Randolph, H President Radway, L Vice-President Waffle, R Secretary Hogan, H Treasurer Second Semester Radway, L President Waffle, R Vice-President Sax, S Secretary Olson, C Treasurer University De Molay Club 1926-1927 Benedict, L. E. Bloss, D. W. Chambers, T. G. Clark, D. W. Dana, D. C. Decker, A. H. Evans, R. D. Ford, G. Gittings, J. H. Gosling, A. W. Guth, S. K. Hamlin, H. A. HicKisH, F. L. Hogan, H. O. Johnston, S. L. Keith, M. W. Kittsley, H. J. Klockow, R. F. Leisk, J. H. Lenz, A. T. Maxfield, F. A. McArthur, a. M. Meixner, E. L. Meslow, O. B. Meyer, H. R. Monastersky, H. Moorhead, a. J. Norem, W. B. Olson, C. P. Paine, A. M. Pence, C. E. Plank, L. T. Radway, L. C. Randolph, W. H. Roberts, E. O. Root, E. D. Sax, S. G. Schaaf, J . G Sondern, C. W. Spooner, L. E. Stewart, R. L. TiMM, H. W, Van Vleet, J . G. Waffle, R. L. Weinke, E. A. Williams, K. J. Wilson, W. T. ZiNN, R. E Page S51 O. F. Deering J. G Baker E.J. Koebke O. W. Hembel J T Grunwald N. Bieiby A. E Fulwiler H. E. Rex R. R, Smith L.J.Cleveland I. C. Stovers L.F.Joseph N.J.Peters C. H. Matson M. P. Stothfang C. Braatz E F Vilter K. C Davis N. S. Warner M. C Wate rman D. W. Thompson C D. Case C. A. Kunz E S. Ersler H. C. Schlundt A. J . Sovlen C. W. John M.J Williams CM Little E. L. Davis D. R. Ligh American Society of Mechanical Engineers Officers John, C. W. . VlLTER, E. F. . Cleveland, L. J. Joseph, L. F. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Baker. J. G. Barton, G. L. boldenweck, l. Braatz, C. Breiby, N. Brown, R. bossort. o. Case, C. D. Cleveland, L. J . Davis, E. Davis, K. C. Deering, O. Ersler, E. fulweiler, r. Grunwald, J. T. Hahn, C. F. Hansen, K. P. Hansen, E. T. Members in University Ho. H. T. Hembel, W. Jacobsen. E. a. Jahn, C. W. Joseph, L. F. Johnson, C. W. Johnson, W. N. Koebke, E. J. Kunz, C. A. Polygon Lemarie, L. V Ligh, D. R. Little, G. M. Mattka, F. a. Matson, C. H. Peters, N. J. Radway, L. C. Rex, H. E. Schlundt, H. C. Smith, R. R soulen, r- j Stothfang, M. P Stowers, J . C Thompson, D. W Vilter, E. F Williams, M. G. Waterman, M. C Warner, N. S Object: To have at all times an organized body of representative students which can act for the interests of the College of Engineering; present to the faculty matters of special interest to the student body; and assist in or- ganizing the various activities in the College of Engineering. Officers ZiNN, R. E President LiDicKER, W. Z Secretary-Treasurer Lidicker, W. Z. ZiNN, R. E. McCoy, R. C. Williams, M. J. Members in University Whittingham, p. p. Beck, L. J. Brown, O. E. Fuldner, W. H. Thompson, D. W. Smith, H. A. O. Brown D. Thompson R. McCoy W. Fuldner R. Zinn H. Smith M. Williams P. Whittingham L. Beck Page ffS W. Lidicker E? II ' . T! -d V - ■%£ ' - - P W ' Vm - JP ! - - j .Am, f G. Thieman V. Hibbard J. Jackstm A. Dean F. Durand I. Johnson C. E£sch Bird Winz Bailey Chickcring Godchaux Glover Bliss Caldwell Le Cercle Francais Date of Organization 1908 Officers Chickering, S President ScHLiMORiTZ, M Vice-President Gibson, M Secretary Nelson, R Treasurer Harris, J Faculty Advisor La Maison Francaise Date of Organization, 1918, by Department of Romance Languages of the University Motto: La France Chez Nous Officers Fayard, Mme. Chaperone BoHMRlCH, E President La Perriere, E Social Secretary Smith, H Treasurer G. Mcrcier R. Borders W. Dcdrick C La Perriere F. Blein C Webber 1- Burgess E. Iglehart A. Ahrens E. Cesehamps E. Bohmrieh H. Smith Page SS4 L Suckern C. Bebb M. Christ cnson K. Manning D. French B. Hand K. Tufts I. Silva M. Cilley M. Jenschke W, Huebsch O. Pear sail Seybold M. Say lor La Casa Cervantes Date of Organization 1925 Purpose- To establish a social circle where those interested in the Spanish language and Spanish civilization may meet, and where important personages connected with Spanish interests may be entertained while in Madison Officers Silva. I. L President CiLLEY, M. A Manager, Treasurer Manning, K Social Chairman El Club Espanol I. Harriet M. Cilley K, Manning L. Suckern K. Peters . A. Jackson Page 555 K .M !?« ff m z And now the dream is over ... Or has it just begun? The wickiups are fading beneath the Spirit Sun: The laughter and the voices , , . The call of loon and snipe . . . And He-Who-Laughs, Bi-a-pid Sits smiling at his pipe! l W S « K J ■■.V; t ' y Foreword and Dedication It is to the traditions of Wisconsin that we dedicate these pages. To the dear and logical traditions, that make incoming neophytes wear peculiar green caps as a mark of their intellectual thirst, and cause freshmen and sophomores to indulge in indiscriminant clothes-tearing to prove their mental prowess; to the time-honored canons that enable one always to attend dry as dust lectures and keep locked up source material that promises to be interesting; to the aged rule that all texts shall be written by professors and r--Q - altered once a year ; to the infinite wisdom that gives beginning language students instructors who have imperfect knowledge of English; to the glorious force of intellect and democracy that ostracizes the Phibete and deitizes the football star and judges the true worth of a man by the shape of a pin worn on his vest; to these and to others, skaal and good speed! And if anything within these pages seems to be at variance with these fine old habits_ remember that it is probably just a delusion of the writer, brought on perhaps by the age of his dinner egg, or a sudden remark of his roommate ! I Page Sf9 And meets a few of the big men He is struck by some of the beauties of the Badger Campus He also spends some time in class-rooms, but this is never printed in the Badgers And in the spring he drives his costly motor Page !60 t t- In winter he spends time at the sport of ice-skating And of the Latin Quarter ' - ■JTl ! ;ir - Until one day, he meets a professor Lack of space prevents continuance of this bully story Page 561 Faculty Glenny, as his students affectionately call him, is a flower, so to speak, that dropped off the century plant into Wisconsin life. He now heads the department of oratory in the university and has become noted for his fine speeches almost from Sun Prairie to Middleton. He is a car salesman in his spare time and can often be seen driving on the left side toward Bascom Hall in one of his products. Fatima Louise Nardin is forever working for the in- terests of Wisconsin Women, seeing that they are tucked securely in bed at ten-thirty and keeping their systems from being contaminated with tobacco smoke. Women should be trained to express themselves, she states, hence they would become known as femails and go about giving locomotives, but the Delta Zeta mansion is too close to the Theta Chi house, a statement with which the Chis seem duty bound to agree. G. C. Sellery is the humorist of the campus, having won the Red Derby at a Gridiron Banquet. We really know very little about him, except that he is not head of the satire section. The G and C stand for Generous and Cheerful. Joe Steinauer has distinguished himself in many ways about Wisconsin. As trainer of the football team, radio broadcaster and keeper of the Fish Pond, he has become endeared to many Wisconsin students, but the reason that he stands out so prominently in the univer- sity at the present time is that he is the only member of the faculty ever to have become Prom Chairman and president of the WSGA in the same year. This is a history instructor. Nobody heard of him until this year when he blossomed out with all the accoutrements of a young instructor, including brief case and partiality for giving Ds. We would give his name, but it is so well known as to be unworthy of print. Just go up and ask him, if you don ' t know it now. He will probably tell you his life story. You can fire his history department, he smiles, I ' m here. The Little Doctor is what everyone calls him. He is the head of the medic department at Wisconsin. Always kindly, courteous, unbiased, unprejudiced, always a gentleman, he makes a friend of all who work under him. I came to Madison, he says, only because it sounded so much like Medicine. Page 562 r Classes Jefferson Burrus Stoughton, Kentucky AGRICULTURE Freshman 1; Sophomore 2; Junior 3: Senior 4; Most popular man by name of Burrus, 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Chi. Thesis: Effect of Scaring on Sodium Hydroxide. Lowell Frautschi Madison ENGLISH Badger 1, 2, 3, 4; Union Board 1, 2. 3, 4; Assistant everything 1, 2, 3, 4r Phi Beta Kappa 4; mentioned in Badger Satire 4; etc. 1, 2, 3, 4; etc. 1, 2, 3, 4 ' Sigma Nu. Edward Larkin Third Ward Republican Party I ; Democartic party 2; People ' s Party 3; Independent Party 4; Prom 3 ; Phi Psi Booster Committee. William Purnell Kenosha, Italy Pussyfoot Club 1, 2; Fiji Islands As- sociation 3. 4; Pussyfoot Club 5, 6; Fiji Islands Association 5, 6; etc. etc. Fred Stemm 1 9th Ward, Chicago Deacon, First Episcopal Church Group, Sophomore High Honors; Senior Hon- ors; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Beta Kappa. SiDNEEY ThORSON PAD House FINANCE Haresfoot 1 , 2. 3 ; business manager 4, 5, b; Dodge coupe. 7, 8, 9; Vfey graduate, 10, 11, 12. Paul Faust Unalaska Mens Beauty Prize 1. 2, 3, 4; Left Chi Psis3;C. M. St P.; Thesis: Amateur Photography (Sample on the Left.) Helen Ann Hughes Lima, Bean Pre-Prom play 3 ; Pre-prom dance, 3 ; Prom 3 ; post prom dance 3 ; Delta Gamma. Thesis: The Impromptu Promotion of Promising Promenades. EwART L. Merica Rensselaer, Indiana Jerome Sperling Sheboygan, Africa CREEK Frosh president 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Delta Sigma Phi. Tau Kappa Epsilon, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Pi. Oscar Thoma Cloversville, New York law Forensic Board 1,2; Reader ' s Say So column 3 ; Student Senatel3 ; Skyrockets 4; Bagder Satire Editor 2; Phi Kappa Sigma, President 4. Louise Zimmerman Waa, Illinois Cardinal 1, 2, 3, 4; Something or other 3 , 4 ; Women ' s Wei fare Committee I, 2, 3, 4; Almost Prom Queen 3; At- tended prom 4. --- ( Page 563 n. Gwendolyn ( Given ) DeLite ex ' 20, who left Wh- consin to take a role in Abie ' s Irish Rose Dia del Dia 13, famous in the bag rush of 09, is new running for mayor of Mexico City, Mexico. ' Ye Olde Coffee Shopt e, fashionable tea room just opened by Myrna McMac ' 10, on Park Avenue, New York City. Atmosphere is everything, said Miss McMac when interviewed H. Schaffner Marx, ' 02, and Otto Roquefort, ' 07, both alleged to have just completed an alleged ten year contract at Waupun, Wis. just out on a lark, Mr. Marx is alleged to have said. Page 564 Picture of Prom jusl after someone in the East Wing had dropped a bottle Junior Pronienade Wisconsin ' s Prom; Wisconsin ' s Pride became a mecca for the University when 1500 buggies were parked around the capitol, while within the edifice, 1473 happy couples and 7 men who had taken Alpha Chi Omegas, swayed to the strains of the augmented orchestra, which this year contained a Jew ' s harp in addition to the usual accordion and violin. The attendance at the prom was the more remarkable because nothing had been said about in the Cardinal. The name of the prom queen had been kept a secret, but it was finally discovered that she was an actress and not a telephone operator. The addition of the Jew ' s harp aroused some opposition on the part of those who wished to keep the promenade as unostentatious as possible, and it is proposed to have the next one informal and to hold it either in a deserted barn or the Gamma Phi Beta Dormi- tories. Helen Hughes Jack Wilson Scotty Goodnight Page S6S W. A. A. Model Collage The Women ' s Athletic Association was founded in 1913 with the idea of instilling a more womanly womanliness in the women of Wisconsin. The general idea appears to be that if a woman runs three miles, hikes five, swims ten, and tennises fifteen in an after- noon she is a womanly woman, which is nothing if not an interest- ing theory. The latest project of the WAA is the model cottage, so called because it has accommodations for only thirty-six, a model of which is shown above. In it will be everything that will delight a womanly woman ' s heart, in cluding dumbbells, Indian clubs, trapeze, boxing gloves, parallel bars, and an indoor track. It is certain that a more womanly womanliness will pervade those Wisconsin women that are womanly women as a result of this womanly woman ' s venture. We have never taken a WAA out to dine. Somehow we never want to. W. A. A. Song {Tune: School Days) School days, school days, dear Wisconsin U days, Tennis and hockey and basketball, skating in winter and hikes in fall We make the most of every day, We know both how to work and play And we ' ll teach you all to live this way If you will join W. A. A. Womanly Woman being Womanly Page Jf66 gWIS. oOW y IND I I- 127 _ 5 10 ■15 i I I I I I I I J I I I I I I I I i liiikif{|£ Scoreboard during an interesting moment in the Indiana Game A. darned nice bunch of boys ' is the reputation the fighting Badgers acquired by their heroic playing last year. They are, said sports writers all over the country, a dandy group of fellows. ' Or consider the words of one of their opponents in a recent en- counter. ' I would rather, he said, and his eyes shone as he said it, have the footprints of the Wisconsin team on my face than those of a team of pedigreed horses. Or, perhaps better, in the words of Coach Little. ' They were a fine team, ' said the coach. They had guts. That ' s why we need a new field house. The medics have accommodations for only one- third of their seniors, but we need a new field house. The football team is the living example of this. They were a great team. They had guts. They were he-men. i Close-up oj a long Michigan forward pass r Results of some of the practice games were a s follows: Wisconsin 8 Wisconsin 20 Wisconsin 16 Wisconsin 12 Wisconsin 14 All-Americans Freshmen 3 Second Team Blacks 2 All-Americans 6 Or e oJ the gridiron heroes Pcne 567 .■j%mfKj 1 Wrestling Mat on a Windy Day Track just after finish of 440 run Crew Track Crew is a process of sitting on a sliding board in the gym during the winter and sitting on a sliding board in a hioat during the spring, which is an im- provement, however slight. After six months of careful seasoning eight of these intellectuals are given the privilege of sitting on a sliding board near a city with an unpronounceable name. The purpose of this is to show off the wares of Wisconsin and to raise the prestige of the Badger diploma throughout the East. The humorous part is that it does. Track, unlike crew, is a process of chasing oneself around a large cinderpath or throwing oneself over a number of obstacles, or throwing a large object, either flat or round, as far as possible. Inasmuch as the runners never run to anyplace, and the people who throw objects have to pick them up and throw them again, the whole affair seems rather silly, but the track men appear to like it. Minor Sports The Alpha Sigs. Wrestling Wrestling, unlike track, crew, horse-back riding, or the Fordney-Macomber Tariff Bill, is a process of twisting a representative of the specie homo sapiens into a model for pretzels. This invigorating mental- calesthenics takes place under the tutelage of the amiable Hitchcock, who confesses that when he was in the navy, he was the championship. How can work under such a man be less than a joy? Varsity crew out for a little scull (practice Page S6S I Possible View of Interior of Future Union Building (But rwt Probable) Memorial Union The Memorial Union is one of Wisconsin ' s highest ideals, has been since 1492, and probably will be for some time. The projected Memorial Union is to be an immense affair, even larger than the Delta Gamma house and is to have real stone pillars, thereby eclipsing all efforts of Phi Sigma Kappa and Theta Delta Chi. The Union, when completed, will have copious rooms and will help university spirit, revive the old Wisconsin prestige, serve as an ideal and a mark for all incoming freshmen, aid the Lit circulation, help goitre, rheumatism, pains in the neck, and serve as an astring- ent, lubricant, and stimulant. It may also give the Delts another place to hang out, as the University Pharm appears crowded, although this is perhaps too startling a project for even Jack Bergstresser. It will be equipped modernly, the only feature missing being a straight-jacket and electrocution room for big men around the campus. It is another of these big, silent affairs, no press stories about it ever appearing in the student sheet. Have you paid your pledge? To be frank, neither have we. Union Committee Page 569 .VS S Editor-in-Chief, Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief, Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief, Editor-in-Chief, Editor-in-Chief Oh, Yes ! The man strangling his wife is the editor- in-chief. And I believe the one on the starboard of the cranberry handle is the editor-in-Chief. J Octopus Editor-in-Chief .... John Powell ' 96 Editor-in-Chief .... Don Abert (1912-1925) Editor-in-Chief .... John Allcott (no record) Advertising Gelvin ' s, Chesterfield, sometimes Frank ' s restaurant Collections Insufficient to mention Office Cat Allan Polacheck (Ha ! Ha ! you see Polacheck is the business manager which is an improvement however slight) The Badg. is delighted to give you standing room in the best publication on the campus. Oc- topus was originated sometime before the present school year. It furnishes the rotten jokes and cigarette advertisements for our greensward. In- variably Octy comes out on Wednesday with its usual high standard of art. Somewhere along the ridiculous line Octopus conceived an editorial policy by which editors break down nervously, graduate, leave town for liquor cures, go into the faculty or take up Pellmanism. Now this broad policy gives all the opportunity of editing this mag within the limits of one small school year. Darn white of Octy. What could our most active frat clubs do for activities were it not for Octy? Wisconsin Octopus, you have learned the lesson of service. Wisconsin Octopus, may your stuff Ah! we all win. Tis the editor-in-Chief. incrase! Congratulations ! ! ! Page 570 Sorry that only a small part of Badger staff could be present for this shot, the rest of them are out studying Indian Lore. Badger Left to Right: Louis L. Grambs, Isabelle B. Bunker, Harry C. Thoma. Ed. note : Harry is the first Badg. ed. to ever make a true state- ment for the press and you can bet we were right there to get it. WISCONSIN BADGER. PIONEER INDIANS. THINK OF MYSELF (anything will do) Readers of the Badger and listeners in who do not have an indispensable memory, when I was a Frosh with red hair, I got hotboxed into a big red brick fraternity house. Therefore, I have never felt a special mission in life. Honest, I never was spiritually inspired to be a Badger editor. I wasn ' t born in a log cabin in Rensselaer, Indiana. I am sorry as you folks are about it. As a kid in Milwaukee (the secret is out) I played with blocks and sailed boats in the bathtub, but I don ' t know anything about pyramids and uncharted seas. I have nothing to say about a new Wisconsin spirit; and if I did, I couldn ' t get anyone to write it for me. I would lots rather have been Prom chairman or fourth vice president of the Lit board. Remember that I don ' t think that this is the best Badg. ever published, and when you take it off the shelf in future years, I expect it only to disgust you. This is a awful way to talk but it is the truth. I ' m a failure. I couldn ' t get the picture in this Badg. that shows me handing Prexy the first copy. Maybe I ' d done better if my wife had only understood me. Page 571 I at Interior view of Si Whoop Frai Club Founded at Clyde ' s, 1812 Number of chapters, 13 Local chapter. Row Date established? Yes Sigh Whoopsilon Members in Faculty CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS ANDREW VOLSTEAD Class of 1776 WILLIAM KIDD ALFRED MOORHEAD ROUNDY COUGHLIN RIP VAN WINKLE THOMAS HARDY NOAH WEBSTER THOMAS O ' CONNOR WILLIAM CODY BENJAMIN FRANKLIN JESSIE JAMES Class of 2222 SIMON HERCULES WILLIAM TELL CHARLES BERGER CHARLEY HORSE DONALD QUIXOTE EDGAR GUEST CHARLES HAGGERTY Class of 1492 GEORGE WASHINGTON TRADE SMITH WILLIAM THOMPSON ANDREW MELLON MARK SMITH OSCAR PHIKAP GEORGE ELIOT CASPER ZYLIWOWSKI JOHN BROWN Frosh None have been found who will admit affiliation WILLIAM TAFT DAN BOCCACCIO LEO AFRICANUS JULIUS CAESAR SIMON LEGREE PATRICK HENRY JOHN ROCKEFELLER JOHN ADAMS ,,lj 1 ' r iji «fr|S -)-III III! iiji Page 572 Rustic Circle was founded in 1904, for the purpose of including the really nice girls of the school. It is a quiet, unassuming organi- zation with a membership restricted to only the very worth-while, but now and then cannot restrain a deserved outburst of silent pride because it knows it contains a group of by far the best of th e women in the university. Officers Warmer, D President Combs, R. . . . Social Charwoman Cunning, I Secretary Louder, R Treasurer % r S Page 57 i J adership . . . Leadership in methods, means leadership in busi- ness. In facilities and ac- complishments this bank has kept abreast of the requirements of busi- ness and industry. It is equipped to take care of all your financial needs. ci. 0 Ld FIRST WISCONSIN NATIONAL BANK Milwaukee Capital and Surplus Ten Miliion Dollars A Delt Tragedy (Note: This play, which is evidently only the portion of a longer farce, was found written in indelible pencil on a paving brick in an ancient Chaldean city and probably has nothing to do with the Wisconsin chapter of Delta Tau Delta. Out of deference to an aged Chaldean custom, no cast of characters will appear.) (Enter Choros dressed as elephants, Pi Phis, Clown Cigarettes, etc.) Choros : The aging year draws loved to its close ; Its work near done, it goes to seek The rest from whence it came; the longer days Are o ' er, full short the course of Phoebus runs Over high heavens. The old year dies, but, dying, Lives, and ends its life in holidays. (Exit choros in general direction of Dad Morgan ' s.) (Enter four Delts bearing before them plaster of paris bust of Glenn Frank.) First Delt: The dreary days are here, is gone the carnival Of Christmas, with its ties and shoes and shirts, Gifts given, that one ' s constrained to wear. Not yet come is New Year ' s, when, shouting With gay abandon at our games of hop-scotch, tag. Or blind-man ' s-bluff, we welcome to our breasts Our infant prince, the newborn year. Other Delts ; Rah, rah rah ! Rah, rah, rah! Rah, rah, rah! Only our bust is plastered! (Editor ' s note: This appears to be a religious ceremony done in honor of Ra, an ancient Egyp- tian god.) First Delt : The old year dies, but, dying, wraps Round its pale wraith the happy garb of pleas- ant holidays. Other Delts: Yeo! First Delt: Let us then, be on our way, And with a party light and gay Revel in lonely holiday! (Editor ' s note: Personally, we don ' t think that the above poetry is so hot, but it is in the original manuscript, and what is the translator to do? Fix it up yourself if you don ' t like it. Also, if you don ' t understand by this time that it is Christmas, and that the Delts are hanging over — note the snappy use of lonely holiday — and that they are going to toss a party, you might as well quit now, if you haven ' t already, for the manuscript gets more abstruse as it goes on.) {Continued on page 576) Page S74 f iW: Henry CLijtton Sons BROADWAY and FlFTH-Gary ORRINGTON and CHURCH-Evanston STATE cmd JACKSON - Chicago To Be Ready August 1st Lytton College Shop Everything for the University Man Suits, Overcoats, Hats, Furnishings and Shoes in this Exclusive Shop THE Lytton College Shop has earned an enviable place among Mid-Western Uni- versity men as a style authority on college clothes. Now we are enlarging its service to include the newest ideas in Neckwear, Suits, Hats — and everything else for the college man. V e are making it a larger, more comfortable Shop yet retaining the same chummy, exclusively university atmosphere. And, of course, the economies which our great volume of business permits, will aSect everything in the New Lytton College Shop. Shop Before School Next Fall Page 575 Come in and browse Time cannot change Cares cannot dull The charm of friendly books. 6 2 I ' 6 2 3 State Street Act Two {Continued from page S74) (Enter an Alpha Phi. There are hisses on the part of the more discriminating of the audience. She leaves and her place is taken by the Choros. They look pale and sooty ; they have been helping the Alpha Xi Deltas fix their boiler.) Choros: Hark, what footsteps wend their way To this high heme of Deltdom, this stoned shack Wherein enthroned stand the secrets And shrines of the caste of Delt? Hath Birnam wood to Dunsinane approached On friendly visit, like a Theta at the Kappa house ? Or hath Santa Claus, wearied of the sport Of fooling little children, shaved From his rockbound chain the hairs of age, And donned the pantaloons of coUitch men To frolic with his favorite Delts? (Choros dashes offstage and into Kappa Delta house. In a few minutes splashes are heard. The choros is jumping into Lake Mendota.) (Enter First Delt bearing not one, not two, not three, but eighteen fir Christmas trees.) First Delt: Lonely looked these monarchs of the woods Eiefore the portal of the merchant prince From whence I copped them. Happy now are they To adorn our feast and bless our holiday ! (Enter Phidelt.) Phidelt: Rahrahrah, rahrahrah, rahrahrah, rahrahrah! (He is helped offstage by two more-sober com- panions.) First Delt: Oh happy trees from copied woods Where dryads play, and falls the snow Hard as Home Ec pancakes . . . Lucky trees. Beautiful, more beautiful than shinoceri, Or Sigma Kaps, or Cheney, Lon. (Enter Merchant Prince.) M. Prince: Aha, my trees . . . First Delt: Thou liest, knave, Thou liest and thou know it. M. Prince: My trees I say. Secure they were As Phisig mortgage or Delt Gams In their own front parlor until you. Base knave, did come along and under- Handedly lift them. {Continwed on page 581) Page 576 For new fried delicacies Star ' Points of a Fine French Fryer The t 5«— French fried potatoes, meat cro- quettes, fish balls, fritters, doughnuts, and many other foods are more crisp, delicate, and wholesome when fried in deep fat in this Mirro French fryer. Booklet with fryer gives directions and recipes. The Design — A deep level-bottomed pan, twin-lipped for right or left pouring. A cor- rectly shaped basket, with rim rests on both sides for utmost security. Tk« Construction— The pan is made of xtra thicks hard aluminum, for long wear and resistance to denting and scratching. Handsome octagon handle, insulated, is locked to prevent turning. Heavily tinned basket. it n,95 The Price- So d by good mer- chantseverywherefor S1.95 — a little more in the far west. So many delicious things can be cooked in deep fat. And it is so easy — if you are equipped to do it— if you own this capital French fryer which Mirro has made for you. . . . Mirro makes all sorts of useful utensils for the complete out- fitting of the up-to-date kitchen— and makes them so excellently that owner- ship of The Finest Aluminum is a long-lasting satisfaction. An economy, too — Mirro ' s cost by the year is lower than common wares can show. Aluminum Goods Manufacturing Company Manitowoc, Wisconsin, U. S. A. To Introduce You to Mirro Quality ve to yourself that Mirro quaHty will save you money in the long run. Get this Mirro sauce pan, with cover ; new straight-side pattern, approved by domes- tic scienceexperts; 1 -qt. size. $1, at your favorite dealer ' s (a little more in the far west). Or pin $1 bill, check, or money or- der to coupon below. . luminum Goods Manufacturing Co. Manitowoc, Wis. For $1 enclosed please send, all charges prepaid, anytvhrrt in the United Slates, the 1 H-qt. straight-side Mirro sauce pan with cover. Name - Address . CLASS! Not by chance is The Olympian called the Queen of the Rails. The moment you step aboard this splendid train you sense a character and a quality not found in any other. A little finer cour- tesy attends your welcome and your service by attendants who are all Milwaukee employes and who treat you as the guest of their road. A little extra thought for your comfort and convenience is revealed in this most modern of train equipment — luxurious sleeping cars, observation-club car, ladies ' lounge, dining car serv- ing famous Milwaukee meals. And where your journey leads for six hundred sixty miles through the scenic glory of the Western mountains, your superb train is drawn by electric power. On the wings of a resistless force, The Olympian pursues its swift, majestic course, without noise or jarring, smoke or soot — incomparable Queen of the Rails! The only line operating transcontinental trains by electric power The only line oivning and operating its own sleeping cars between Chicago and Seattle-Tacoma The ' only line operating over its own rails all the way between Chicago and Puget Sound The shortest line from Chicago to Seattle-Tacoma and the Orient ChicaqoMIwankee StraulRailw! TO PUGET SOUND-ELECTRIFIED Page 578 The Event as it Happened The Alpha Xi Dells, busy with their indoor sport of fixing the Alpha Xi boiler, discovered one evening, that a man was lurking about the house. Forming the correct assumption that any man who would lurk around the Alpha Xi Delta house must be a moron, the girls telephoned the Madison police department and the Theta Delt house, working on the theory that any self- respecting moron would feel ashamed to be seen in their company and would move elsewhere. Both police and Thetadelts appeared in droves and Don Barr, who for some reason believed it was a baseball game, starred in the noise-making. Nothing much happened and after a while everybody went home or to bed or someplace. A fine time was had by all. As the Cardinal Would Have it: MRORON ATTAKS SORORTIRY HOUES Dean Walter Agard , St. John ' s to ba Instrucktor in Ex- parimentle School The Latin Quarter was aroused at an late our yestreday evening by the at tempts made by a moron to enter th Alpah Pie Dlola sorrity houce at 1 4 Lagndon street early in the mornnig . In repsonce to calls etaionshrdluetaion shrdlu tuo point out that Wlater Craig ' s for help , the Madisen pullase farse and over 4 OJO residents of the Latin Quarter ga thered about the hous. The mron was sighted entering a fifth story window by Donald Barr,,. ' 51 ' and was chaced fore blocks intwo the P hi Delta Pie howse bythe angy mob The mrorn is thought to bee the sam one who conduckted the last fiSacbbred and Blade initiation and stoT e the Fernch ex aminatio n pepers two years aog. At na early our htis morning Dean Godonihgt cud not eb reached, tiaoimshrd lucm fw yp? vbgkgj — l m We asked one co-ed what she thought of the Lambda Chis. She was perplexed. Lambda Chi Alpha? she said, Lambda Chi Alpha? Then her face brightened. Oh, yes, she said, they ' re the fraternity that has a calf for a mascot, arent ' they? Which is after all, perhaps, their sole bid to fame. MOSER The Business College with a University Atmosphere Prepare for a business career — be inde- pendent for life — at the only Business College in the West which requires every student to be a four-years High School graduate. MUNSON - SHORTHAND-GREGG SECRETARIAL COURSES In the Day School Girls only are enrolled A Bulletin giving complete information about the Secretarial, Stenographic, or Accounting Course will be mailed free upon request. No Solicitors employed. Beginning on the first of April, July, Oc- tober and January, we conduct a special, complete, intensive, three-months ' course in stenography which is open to COLLEGE GRADUATES and UNDERGRADUATES ONLY Enrollments for this course must be made before the opening day — preferably some time in ad- vance, to be sure of a place in the class. Stenography opens the way to independence, and is a very great help in any position in life. The ability to take shorthand notes of lectures, ser- mons, conversations, and in many other situations, is a great asset. Bulletin on Request No Solicitors Employed PAUL MOSER, J. D. Ph. B., President 1 16 South Michigan Avenue 1 2th Floor Phone: Randolph 4347 Chicago, Illinois Only High School Graduates are ever enrolled at MOSER (a43t) Page 579 From a Village of Homes ICoK er products—enameled plumbing it ' aTeandprivateelectricplams— are made in a village where houses are homes and yards are gardens; where civic pride arul prtde of good work go hand in hand HE things we grow up with! What ' s more important? Books, flowers, music, pictures, and — don ' t smile ! — even bath- rooms . . . Let ' snotcommercialize the thought too far, except to say that fine bathrooms and Kohler Enameled Plumbing Ware belong tO ' gether : that Kohler fixtures have teen pre- ferred these many years for their beauty and their immaculate enamel: that they cost no more than any other acceptable ware : and that you can always tell them by the name Kohler unobtrusively fused into the enamel. . . . Let us send you Booklet E. Kohler Co., Founded 1873, Kohler, Wisconsin Shipping Point, Sheboygan, Wisconsin BRANCHES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES KOHLER OF KOHLER Enameled Plumbing Ware Page 5 SO fclZ jZZx) The Problem of Yoimg Men s jClotlies is one to which we have given a great deal of thought. For years we have enjoyed the privilege of making clothing for college men and it is very grati- fying to see the large number of them who have grown up in the business world and who continue to buy Jerrems tailoring because they know they always get dependable quality at prices they know are right. A complete line of ready-to-wear English Top Coats. We suggest an extra pair of Knickers for Sport Wear. — Riding Breeches — English Cricket Flannels — Shetlands 71 E. Monroe St. 140-142 S. Clark St. FORMAL • BUSINESS AND SPORT CLOTHES 324 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago 7 N. La Salle St. 225 N. Wabash Ave. si {Continued from page $76) First Delt: I swear . . . (Enter national secretary of Delta Tau Delta.) Nat. Secy : Swear not. What means Outside the house of Delt this most Unseemly tumult? First Delt : (It is unfortunate that the portion of the play discovered ends at this particular point, the climax, as it were, of the act. But, of course, it has nothing at all to do with the Wisconsin chapter of Delta Tau Delta. The Wisconsin Delts, we feel sure, do not hang over Christmas vacation, nor toss parties, nor would they think of kidnapp- ing eighteen Christmas trees. Nonono. The manu- script was found, as we have stated before, carved on a mosquito-bitten rock on the banks of the Ganges. The Wisconsin Delts would not think of such conduct. May Allah, Continental Congress and Glenny Frank bear witness that we cast no insinuations nor aspersions. Nonono) Concerning Coeds Spare no expense with them ; offer to buy them anything, for if they want a pretty thing it is en- tirely up to you to purchase it. Telephone them often — no matter if the line is continually busy — tell them how you miss them, tell them how much you like their clothes, tell them enough to get yourself into a breach of promise case. They love it. Send them flowers on the slightest provocation ; follow this up with candy. Do not use rented Fords, but secure real automobiles. Continually ask them for dates even though you be rebuffed time after time; co-eds like patient men. Let them break your dates, and take it with a smile, for you should be happy to know that they even remember your name. Cultivate a smooth flowing line of talk and strain the parental pocketbook with the best of clothes. Always remember that clothes make a rhan great before the eyes of women, and that flattery to their ears is as water to a fish. Make all engagements at least three weeks in advance, for you must give them to believe that you con- sider them overwhelmingly popular. Then get yourself hitched to a cart, wiggle your ears, and say Hee-Haw! Page 581 Place: A Co-ed ' s Room. Time: After the Dance. First Co ' cd: Well, Betty came out with a new dress again tonight, as usual. Smartest thing you ever saw; I wonder where she gets them. Second Co-ed: I ' m sure I don ' t know, but I ' m certainly going to find out right away. Third Co ' ed: Ask me girls, I know. She gets them all at Manchester ' ' s and they are quite inexpen ' sive, too; that ' s why she can have so many. - — f DISTINCTIVE JEWELRY befitting the needs of all STUDENTS is constantly displayed at this store for all occasions ARCHIE TEGTMEYER, Inc. Jewelers Wisconsin Ave. at 4th Milwaukee Tresented by Alexander Grant Company Certified Public Accountants Audits Cost Systems Federal Taxes Special Analyses 7 South Dearborn Street Chicago, Illinois A. R. GRANT M. B. HOPKINS Page !82 A Debate . . . Riding vs. Walking Resolved: Why walk when it ' s more enjoyable to ride a Badger Rent-A-Car ■•I I -I 250 State St. In order to keep pace with the increasing demand, we have added a new fleet of cars which are at your service. Cadillacs and Buicks with drivers Call and We ' ll Deliver a Car to You Badger Rent-A-Car Phone: Fairchild 2099 Campus Idiocies The GirafFe Shuffle The epitome of feminine bsauty pictured above has just come down from the hill and is traveling toward home and True Confessions. She repre- sents one of the highest of Wisconsin types. Two books are entirely too much for her tender con- stitution and won ' t some big strong man please carry them for her? Her head thrust forward something like a well-mannered cobras, her camel hump, her books clasped inanely across the thing into which she pours lettuce salads and lemon ices, she minces forward at the rate of five or six inches a stride to a box of caramels in the second dresser drawer. It is too bad that lisping has gone out of fashion; she would use it. But still, she can make eyes at a professor afte r class, she can giggle appreciatively at masculine balderdash, she can cry so prettily after she breaks a date with you. The dear sweet thing! doesn ' t some strong brawny man come Why doesn ' t some he-hero take her books and throw them at her? Why along ? Page !83 The No. 50 BESLY CATALOG [BESIYI CHICAGO IS A COMPLETE LIBRARY OF THE LATEST AND BEST IN MECHANI- CAL TOOLS AND EQUIPMENT FOR 50 YEARS THE LEADING ENGINEERING COLLEGES AND INSTI- TUTES HAVE FOUND BESLY A DEPENDABLE SOURCE OF SUPPLY FOR THEIR REQUIREMENTS. MACHINISTS ' MILL AND RAILROAD SUPPLIES BRASS, COPPER AND BRONZE IN SHEETS, RODS, WIRE AND TUBES CHARLES H. BESLY COMPANY n 8-1 24 NORTH CLINTON STREET IVORKS: BELOIT, WISCONSIN CHICAGO IT ' S ALL CREAM ICE CREAM i :■t w -{ ji KENNEDY DAIRY COMPANY ' ' ■Our Wagon Passes Your Door Perfectly Pasteurized Milk • Cream • Butter •• Buttermilk Cottage Cheese « Milcolate Selected Guernsey Milk Page 584 ESTABLISHED 1818 flemen ttrni«l|in9 ©ooiist. MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Complete Outfits for School and College Send for Brooks ' s Miscellany BOSTON PALM BEACH NEWPORT O BROOKfl aNO Nsn LITTLE BUILDING Tremont cor. Bovlston PLAZA BUI LDING County Road AUDRAIN BUILDING 2 2 BcLLEVue Avenue Little Lessons for Lester One of the things you must remember, Lester, is that the university is run for and by and be- cause of the big men around the campus. You can always tell a big man around the campus, Lester, because he says Hi! to every fourth person who passes and will run half way up the hill in order to have a few seconds more to loaf around the Lincoln statue. He is worried all the time. He must get up early in the morning and study, for he has to be eligible, and then his day is one mad rush from class to committee, and from commit- tee to board of directors and back to committee again, leaving him little time to sleep and date, both of which he must do ; for a big man who does not date, Lester, feels that he is not fulfilling his career nor making it as rounded as it should be, and the thought cuts him to the quick. It is a hard life, being a big man. Why do they work so hard? Why, Lester, the reason that they work so hard is so they can get even bigger jobs and have to work even harder and become more and more worried. It may sound queer, Lester, but it is true. Come along, Lester, one of the creatures is starting toward us. He may want to talk politics. Be one of the girls ! Come one ! Come all ! Openings for only a few NICE GIRLS Exclusive ! Exquisite ! GAMMA PHI BETA wants only 33 more pledges Hurry ! Rush! Be one of the girls! New house now going up ! There is nothing like a brave bold engineer! For days they publish their defiance of lawyers, kopp ers, the state militia, and the four elements, and then, the day of their parade, they bravely march four blocks out of their course to bravely defy any eggs that the lawyers might decide to throw at them. There is nothing like the en- gineering school for pure, unadulterated heroism. Page 58S ii Welcome Stranger ' To Madison 17-19 E. Main St. C J E Phone B. 1435 Ladies and Children ' s Apparel Dry Goods and Millinery A Message to Newly- Elected House Managers . . . After all the chapter discussions on finance, you ' ve probably come to the conclusion that fuel is one of the greatest expenses in the house budget. If you want to cut down this expense, and heat the house at less expense than ever before — order coal from Drives ' next fall. It ' s high test — much heat and few ashes — making for economy. 4 4 4 the:j. b. drives fuel CO. Phone: Badger 628 303 South Patterson Street Campus Idiocies The Cracker-box Wisecrackers One thing about college, and especially about fraternity life, is that it teaches a man to become a gentleman. It certainly does this to at. Nobody who is not a gentleman could think of the inex- pressibly wise and witty things that the lads who speckle boarding club porches and lawns can crack at the girls who are passing by. Sometimes they know the girls, sometimes they don ' t. It makes no difference. The village Chesterfields can say Ah there! or there she goes! just as cleverly and easily to a perfect stranger as they can to the blind date they got a year ago come Michelmas. All hai! to the deans of intellect, the paragons of virtue, the fraternity crackerbox wisecrackers! Page fS6 YEAR FOLLOWS YEAR— BADGER FOLLOWS BADGER— STYLE FOLLOWS STYLE, AND THE STYLE ORIGINATOR IS CHtirtev louse CLOTHING DESIGNED TO MEET THE AP- PROVAL OF WISCONSIN MEN. OFFERED FOR YOU EXCLUSIVELY BY OCONNELL MADISON -- 109 STATE AlEl MEYER vWISCONSIN STREET Page 587 c NABH Leads the World in Motor Car Value awi7 roundations of Success Success that lasts— and grows— can be built only upon the foundations of Quality and Value, Day after day, year after year, Nash cars continue to command ever-greater respect, ever-increasing enthusiasm from the people of this country. The remarkable success of The Nash Motors Company— a career of achievement that has held the automotive world spellbound in amazement — is attributable simply to the fact that it has consistently offered a higher degree of quality and a fuller measure of value. These are the foundations oi continue success. (iJ;ffA THE NASH MOTORS COMPANY Kenosha, Wisconsin (5125) Page 5SS When the Engineering Graduate Goes Out to Looli for a Job • • • . . . he finds that he needs industrial experience in addition to education. This industrial experience may be haphazard and of little value or it may be organized and effective. Organized and effective industrial experience means apprenticeship. We were one ofthe first in the state to establish apprentice courses for college graduates. The Falk Corporation Mil ' waukee Open Hearth Steel Castings Heavy Duty Oil Engines Herringbone Gears Falk-Flexible Couplings Contract Machine Work Apology We afX)logize. Heartfeltedly, if there be such a word, we apologize. Throughout the entire domain entrusted to our care, the Theta Chi boarding club has been mentioned but once. But there is a reason for this, a real reason. It is not that we are a member; it is not that we know nothing dirty about them, far from it; it is not that if we men- tion them, half the readers would accuse us of poor taste in riding our own outfit and the other half would accuse us of throwing them publicity; it is none of these things. Rather it is that we are living in the house this semester and there have been dire threats whispered in dark corners, and the Chi Psi clothesline has disappeared from its wonted posts. That is the reason, and it is a real one. But still, we apologize. Page 589 g BADGER STUDIO Q C ) o Q PQ O Q CO O Q PQ ( 5 o Q H 00 o PQ xn O Q H W O Q PQ BADGER STUDIOS GO BADGER STUDIOS « O HH Q CO C 3 O Q BADGER STUDIOS D Q d Q I3l)e ! a6oier P Stu6l05 C 3 W C 3 o Q o Q rUstic l lortraiture S. J. Liesman, Manager Telephone: Badger 7904 Jttadison . ' . . ' . Wisconsin O o PQ PQ 03 ( ) 00 O O  — t Q dd Q Our Patrons . . . Q H The General Public, Government, W Q C D State, City, University Officials :?o w and Students, High Schools and CO CO ( Normal Schools, we solicit your PQ Q patronage on the merits of our work Someone, Somewhere, wants your photograph now ( 5 o o Q ffl BADGER STUDIOS Ui u o PQ BADGER STUDIOS GO dd D O C 5 g BADGER STUDIOSS s ro a BADGER STUDIOS dd d O H d O GO dd d Q W GO H d I— I O ( I ( I D O C 5 Pof e 590 The Climax of a delightful Dinner is a dish of Creamy, delicious ice cream for Better PHONES; Badger 1821 orBadger 1822 Ice Creams, Ices and Sherbets call The American Ice Cream Company 525-527 University Avenue Sign Over the Union Building Candy Store TO ALL CONSUMERS LET IT BE KNOWN That the storekeeper pays cash for his stock. That he expects his customers to do likewise. That this is not a dispensary for any of several philanthropic organizations of the community. That four (4) pennies do not make a nickel nor four (4) nickles two bits. That the laws of the commonwealth do not recognize car checks, life savers, towel checks, or milk bottle caps as legal tender. That credit will be extended only on presenta- tion of references from Joe Gish, Louie Schmalz, the Board of Regents and any four of the Twelve Apostles. That any further discrepancies between the flux and influx will cause the immediate discon- tinuance of th e store. All of which seems to prove either that some of the campus pillars have slippery memories or that the Phigams make a habit of hanging around the Union Building. On Alumni Reunions Alumni reunions are an odd game where all the contestants meet together and see which can make the biggest ass out of himself. The reunion occurs after final examinations are over and collitch has settled down for the space between exams and commencement. Then the old grads come into town by the front door, shouting as they come. They put on some sort of clothing that puts to shame even the movie version of what the well- dressed college man is wearing and go forth to meet others in other brands of wearing material. Whenever two of the same class meet, they sit down together and discuss, first, A ' s children; second, A ' s wife; third, B ' s children; fourth, B ' s wife ; fifth, what has happened to the people they used to be acquainted with in college (neither knows much about this) ; and sixthly, how the uni- versity has deteriorated since they left it. They may be right, but one of the dangers of graduation is that then you will be an alum and may be tempted back to one of the class reunions. A modern course in Popular Piano Playing by Jesse Cohen. B. 2729. F. 4467 THE . ,«., f, NINETEEN TWENTY EIGHT fMB A D G E R, ' UNIVERSITY or WISCONSIN 7 0. LANGDON STREET - MADISON Mr. H. K. Brockhausan President, Brock Engraving Co. City. Dear Brock: It s through-almost-this year of work and worry and fun. The last engraving has been delivered, the presses are rolling, and now that we catch our breath after the last hectic weeks,, Harry and I want you to know how we appreciate what you have meant to the 1988 Badger. It ' s not the mechanical work of engrav- ing alone which we appreciate. To be sure your organization functioned with splendid efficiency, but the big reason we are happy that we chose you for the Badger engraver is the personal In- terest you took in the book. Vision, imagination, artistry-you gave, us all of these. And then combined with them practical common sense and what seemed to us an endless knowledge of mechanical possibilities and limitations. You checked a hundred minor details which would bo missed by any on who hadn ' t been through the mill of annual production. You took such an interest In the book, were so insistent that cuts, art and cover were Just right, that we want you to share whatever commen- dation the 1928 Badger may win, both here on the campus and from critics in the annual field. Sincerely, Editor-in-Chief Business Manager. H A P R.Y L O U J S C . T H O M A B. G R,AMBS KairiCSIIIBUIil ipiinesiitsriia EDITOR,-IN-CHIEF BUSINESS MANAGER- QUJ2wa)itk This New A941 Model STEWART represents a new epoch in gas range con- struction. A new principle is used which does away with chipping and crazing of enamel. Satisfaction assured with this latest Wis- consin made product. Buy Wisconsinhiade Goods when you can get better values and better service than elsewhere. [Ask us for name of nearest agent for STEWART Ranges. The Fuller- Warren Company Milwaukee Wisconsin Makers of STEWART Stoves and Furnaces GAS RANGES NIEDECKEN i GIVE REFRESHING HOURS Write for Bulletin B. 27 Hoffmann Billings Mfg. Co. The UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN has used PETTIBONE UNIFORMS for several years PETTIBONE ' S furnish UNI- FORMS to the most prominent schools throughout the country. CAPS AND GOWNS— For Facul- ties and Students. Made to your order or furnished from our large rental stock. COLLEGE FRATERNITY COSTUMES— PARAPHERNALIA Separate Catalogs for Each Organization. Write, mention- ing articles you are interested in. THE PETTIBONE BROS. MFG. CO. CINCINNATI, OHIO Military Tailors and Lodge OutHtters Over Half a Century. Orchard at University— POLAR BEAR ' S— Real Malts Phone: Badger 1993 Office 125 State Street Castle Doyle Coal • Wood Building Material Main and Livingston Yards Regent and Monroe Campus Idio cies The Activities Stride Active and virile, the pillar of the university is rushing from someplace to someplace. Look at the stride, manly vigor expressed, and he pushes and jostles his way forward among the press, pausing only to nod or say hi! to every casual acquaintance or person he thinks he knows. You would think that he was hiking toward a meeting with the president of the United States Steel Cor- poration concerning a position after graduation, or at least to a conference with Glenny Frank about the future of the university. But no, he is only ambling home to a cigarette and hand of bridge with Bud and the boys, but he knows that his business-like air will attract attention, and the knowledge is as balm to his anguished soul, for he is a big man on the campus and must support his position. The shop for the fastidious woman— The LORAINE BEAUTY SHOP—F. 822 CORRECT CLOTHES FOR UNIVERSITY MEN UR COLLEGE MEN ' S Department, newly opened, specializes suits and overcoats of that quiet trend in cut and cloth which is now the mode with students at America ' s great Universities. $ 0 and Up. Fine Furnishings The Sign of Fine Hats Style r J] Worth OGILVIE JACOBS Second Floor 20 East Jackson Boulevard Chicago Page S9S The New Franklin The Franklin car is one of the few automobiles now remaining in the fine car field. The Franklin Company maintain its policy of making a better car rather than cheapening their product to make a cheaper car. A criti- cal inspection of this automobile will convince anyone of this statement. Come and see the Franklin and you will be convinced of the truth. (r o c- -9 222 RITTER North Henry St. AUTOMOBILE COMPANY Madison Wis. Stanislaus Wheatley (1907) This promising young knit-wit is taken by many to be rr.uch younger than the above date would indicate. He doesn ' t even act his age, nineteen. For seme reason or other, Stan (as he is affectionately called by the few who speak to him) was born in Wannetka, Illinois, just south of the railroad tracks. Stan ' s early life was spent mainly in three places, out of school, in the village stone quarry and around the village millinery shop. The fact that he didn ' t go to elementary school is not so important because there are surely other attendant circumstances to one ' s being so dumb. At the village stone quarry our lad learned to swim and dive. It is told of Stanislaus that his passion for diving originated after the village spender had lost a two bit piece in the quarry and offered five cents to the finder. After hunting for two years, Stan began to amuse himself by going into the water in novel attitudes, and hence his tact for diving. He and his gang used to hang around the millinery shop to cast flirting eyes at the ankles of its patronizers. It was here that Stan acquired the habit that he cannot conquer, try as Jo Steinauer will, the habit of wimmem. Stan came to college ; to our college, and became a slimy Sigma Nu. It is told that the aforemen- tioned village spender was a Sigma Nu from Yardmore College, Belcher, Idaho, and pledged Stan as soon as his diving ability became apparent. The important and most distressing thing con- cerning Stan ' s college life was that he learned to dance. Yes he learned to take a girl by the waist and twirl and twirl around the floor, twirl and twirl right into other couples and go on twirling and twirling without ever a word of apology. This last regretful characteristic of Stan must be an outgrowth of his small town training. He ' s doing nicely now. Has almost twenty credits in three years. With one caution we end this, Stan. IDon ' t hog the dance floor in your senior year or there will be a Vigilance Committee on hand to rid our happy community of squirts who like to show off. CRAMTON BROS. PHARMACY t SCHROEDER HOTELS WALTER SCHROEDER, PRES. fireproof - Sleop in Safoty Page 597 Electric Maeic in Your Kitchen To Cook Electrically generally suggests an Expensive Luxury. There is no question that an Electric Range in your kitchen is a luxury but not necessarily an expensive one. With a reasonable electric fuel rate now available in many communities, and a most recent model MONARCH Electric, it is possible to cook elec- trically and also economically. A MONARCH Electric is a dual-use range — it will cook for you while you serve or serve you while you cook. With its many efficient features and automatic equipment, it should become the same as a servant in your kitch- en, always ready to perform its duties dependably and without watching. MONARCH Electrics are made by the makers of the famous -and- s„-iat,t.s ist.E. Coal-Wood Home Cooking Devices A RANGE FOR EVERY HOME Gas and Combination MALLEABLE IRON RANGE COMPANY BEAVER DAM, WISCONSIN The Candid Cardinal Gather ye: congregate you: come one: come both of you. Following are some excerpts from THE CAN- DID CARDINAL. Of course, you never heard of it before, but for once the low down, the way low down, on the campus Deet and its con- tributors. Things are printed in the Candid Cardinal as they are. Nothing is altered. We re- gret that the entire Candid Cardinal cannot be presented herewith; ' twould be too lengthy. The committee of sixty-seven for Jeff Burrus pub- licity is too ef cient. Well, well Wallace, pass the excerpts. Numb a One The order by no means indicates their merit. (You folks have probably heard that seven thousand students here are on a committee called the Memorial union comm. It is their duty to collect small sums at various times, sums ranging from 90 to 390 thousands of dollars from the remaining one thousand students. In order to help these seven thousand tired committee workers, P. Butts writes pep letters for the front page of the Cardinal. It seems that the odds are against the one thousand, but Butts helps in the coercion both of the said thousand and of Cardinal readers by these letters. Here goes the letter from the Candid Cardinal. Some of it is had to be translated from the Hebrew, so don ' t trust our accuracy more than ninety thousand dollars.) Good morning folks, how ' s your pep this morning? Mine ' s allgone. I was at the of ce from two to three yesterday. The 36 holes of golf didn ' t make any difference. It ' s this Memorial Union building that is getting me down. Now you ' ve heard that the union is in debt something over 1000 dollars. Well now do you want the building to go WITHOUT knives and forks, and the drive executives to go unsalaried or are you going to pay off that 300,000. It ' s up to you. I ' ve quit worrying. I ' ve found an unsuspecting bank that will give the Union a note for my next salary. A crisis has been reached. Whether this is the 85th or 86th crisis in the history of this drive, don ' t ask. Our backs are against the wall. Send that check in to-diay. There ' ll be an army of workers there to grab it. It ' s up to YOUSE GUYS. Are you going to have my salary borrowed or paid in cash? Wisconsin men, I ask you. A modern course in Popular Piano Playing by Jesse Cohen. B. 2729; F. 4467 ' e Choice of Wisconsin Students! The Branch Bank POR the past .school year, the Branch - Bank has been the financial home of 95% ' of the University folk. The conveni- ent location of the Branch has made this Bank their favorite. Because we have been so closely related to students and their financial affairs, we are more able to serve them. Madison merchants gladly accept Branch Bank checks. It is a safe and better way to handle your finances while in the University. Students ' Banking Headquarters The Branch Bank of Wisconsin State at Gilman Page 599 K©ss©ei©]Ii ' § Coreer 6 o 6 o 6-- o (r o c o (T-fo ff ' fo c- o C-+0 (r o r J (T o (T+o C-+0 ff- o (r o (T o r o Meet you at KcssenicK s Corner has become a by-word with Uni- versity Women . . . the nearest real shopping center to the cam- pus. On State, a block from the Square. 6 J r o ff- o 6 o 6 o ff o ir o 6 o c-fo c ' - o ff- ) ff- o (r o (r o 6- o (T+o ff ' +o e-- o Kesseeieh ' s U8 yiorlb TaircbUft Street !ftta6ison . ' . . ' . Xsftsconsin We have all the important New Books and Best Edi- tions of the Classics. We specialize in Personal selection. Mail Orders receive careful attention l Let Us Help You Build Up Your Library Campus Idiocies I The Beauty Brigade One side, men! Just keep off the sidewalk. Just try and net keep off the sidewalk! It is the sorority beauty brigade. The dear girls are en- tranced with the irr.portance of their own conver- sation and really cannot be bothered by such mere trifles as men, sidewalks, and common courtesy. Besides, they are sorority girls. Just one side, men, and no intimation that you are not getting more than your just due, lest six eyes tell you that if the owner were not a lady she would inform you of the way to act in public, you boorish pup. Just one side, men, and bow down and worship. Think how lucky we are. They condescend to let us live. Fa.nhild 521— U. W. MEAT MARKET— 728 University Ave. hafs in a s ame ? That depends on what is back of it The name Burgess has a real background. The Burgess Battery Company has come to be one of the outstanding figures in the dry battery field. Burgess Batteries for years have been recognized as a standard of quality. They have been selected for use on expeditions to all corners of the globe where dependability was an absolute neces- sity. They have back of them years of scientific research and a record of satis- factory service. The C. F. Burgess Laboratories, Inc., is universally recognized as an unusual organ- ization. Its experts are constantly called on to solve difficult technical problems. Its contributions to the industrial and com- mercial field have not been few or unim- portant. We are proud of what the name BURGESS stands for— and just a little jealous of its reputation. BURGESS BATTERY COMPANY CF. BURGESS LABORATORIES Pate 601 An Airplane View of the Paper Mills of The Champion Coaled Paper Company, Hamilton, Ohio Compliments of . Hamilton, Ohio I I Upon Whose apeir- Q his (Boofc 7s Printed Page 602 You Spend 20 Years in Bed . . . Make sure that every minute yields the rest that restores and invigorates If you live until sixty and sleep eight hours a day ycu spend twenty years of your life in bed. You cannot afford to waste a precious minute of those years without the soundest sleep you can obtain. Feminine charm depends en it. So dees the masculine force that wins in business. Now you can fathom new depths of sleep; you can enjoy a new measure of luxurious relaxation. At prices irresistibly low, the world ' s largest makers of sleep equipment offer you revolutionary advances in mattresses, springs and beds. Entirely different from ordinary mattresses, the BEAUTYREST is a super-mattress that shapes to your body curves and lures you to relax. In a similar and equally scien- tific way, The ACE bedspring compels your brain and muscles to let go of their day- time tasks, and rest. SIMMONS beds add the final sleep assurance, for they are as solid and silent as they are beautiful in their new designs and finishes. Start tonight to get the added health and energy you too can enjoy from the third of your life which you spend in bed. SIMMO BEDS MATTRESSES SPRINGS ' [Built for Sleep Excerpts from Badger of the Past Ye editor-in-chief thinks (honest !) : 1 . That a certain girl from a certain place has the sweetest disposition of any girl at Wisconsin. (She ga e me a second date. That proves it.) 2. That Pitman B. Potter (we wish we knew his second name, wouldn ' t be surprised if it was Billingsomnia) is correct in his choice of something or other. (We never missed a guess yet and we insure this one. Small Skyrocket for me, please.) 3. That the SAE ' S are the best dancers, the best sports, the best drinkers, the best all-around good fellows you can find on the campus. (We are a Sig Alph and we know.) 4. We sincerely wish to take this occasion to dedicate this section (of Satire, Slush, and Skiro- sis) to those dumb socks who think they know- more about anything than we do. 5. Strange, isn ' t it, how some people will insist upon belie ' ing that their opinion is far better than any other person ' s ! 6. That all women lock the same at a distance, but look entirely dissimilar when vou see them closer and THAT ANY MAN WHO DENIES THESE FACTS IS NOT WORTHY OF THE NAME OF BADGER! 7. That the Horseshow was the best Wisconsin ever had, and more than that, the best in the West. (The horses looked far more intelligent than any we have ever seen.) 8. That the Haresfoct show was the best Wis- consin ever had and more than that, the best in the West. 9. That the 1927 Badger was the best Wiscon- sin ever had, and more than that, the best in the West. 10. That Dr. Meiklejchn is a sincere friend of all men in the University. Ycu miss a third of your education if you miss contact with him. (I am one of his best friends.) PS. These are thoughts written after sixty hours without sleep and after remaining in one chair for ten hours without getting up. It was damned white of us to go to all this bother just so you could read the Badger. Think what you wculd have missed if we hadn ' t. Now that the 1927 Badger is an assured success (another skyrocket for me, please) — adieu Wis- consin, wculd that the less talented mortals could love ycu as ha e we. RUNKEL BARBER SHOP 1 ■: J ■■! i yi Good Clothes Are Always the Best We Sell Good Clothes Rex ford Kelder Largest University Clothiers in the West 25 Jackson Blvd., East Chicago . . Illinois Badger Expense Sheet At Last — Pinkerton ' s have uncovered the mys- tery of Wisconsin. No longer will we conjecture at Badger finances; now we know! Selah! Read and believe every item if you can. Aaron, the account! ! Receipts Receipts are neither so many nor so important but here they are. Sale of fourteen Badgers at various times throughout the year $84.00 One eighth share of Union big. candy store profits for year 0. 52 Sale of tin foil, old newspapers, tires and ice handles collected by Badger staff 3 .90 Rent of Badger office for Gamma Phi Spring Formal 2.50 Salvage on old loving cups donated by the fraternity of Phi Kappa Psi 1.18 Tips 2.36 Prize money for tenth place won in big Ten Year Book Sales contest .10 Ransom for Mrs. Murphy ' s little girl 4.20 Estimated income from the editor ' s week indulgence in Ten Minutes a day (which makes seven days) 1 . 00 Sale of two pairs of editor ' s old shoes at 20c and 22c respectively .42 Resale of books stolen from library Also the work of the live wire business staff 1 . 00 Estimated value of student good will 0.13 Total $125,385 add that up and see if it ' s right. And the Disbursements are also worth the time taken in looking. Salary, Satire editor $000.00 Phi Gamma Delta Building fund 250.00 Rent-a-car 98.98 Bonds, bails, fines 22 . 22 First sweeping of Badg. office, September .50 Second sweeping of Badg. office, March 50 Expenses of Badger-walk-to-picnic- point-and-back-and-roast-marshmellows party 2.97 Pencils 328.00 Phi Kappa Sigma rushing expenses (which is an example of jxKSr income on the investment) 300.00 Cigars, cigarettes, favors, malteds and black bottoms 34.45 Result of libel suit for certain satiric material 100. 1 1 Monkey food 4. 08 Salary Badger foreword writer 10.00 Contribution to Harry Thoma for Union board fund 100.00 Share of expense in placing in U. W. Museum the Pi Phi upright piano 4.40 no matter how you add this up it ' s too dam much. KAPLAN ' S FRUIT STORE BUY EVERYTHING POSSIBLE ON YOUR CO-OP NUMBER For Every University Need the Wisconsin Student Buys at the Co-op There is no store in the heart of the student quarters and so near to the campus whose stock is as complete as the University Co-op. Every textbook, all the needed materials and supplies are to be found within our doors. Our men ' s department carries a large and complete stock of smart college apparel . . . the same holds true for the Co-ed corner. Dainty gifts will be found in the Gift Shop. The Co-op is surely the store for college folk. Purchasers Share in the Profits Every student is privileged to join the Co-op. It means a great saving. At the end of the year rebates are divided among the members. For the past number of years, the rebates have amounted to 15%, and this means a huge saving on your edu- cational expenses. It pays to join the Co-op. THE UNIVERSITY CO-OP E. J. GRADY, Manager STATE at LAKE ■i!! BUY EVERYTHING YOU NEED ON YOUR CO-OP NUMBER .„..-. .. . ' ..J Page 605 Xl)hat You Take With You . . . livhen loarsity days are over . . . ! ' ; is a price ' ess heritage . . . hard-won knowledge . . . pre- cious experience and memories . . . a staunch foundation for the days to come. Naturally, your heart will al- ways warm at mention of Madi- son, city of your Alma Mater and Varsity days. No matter where your fate may lead you in the civilized world, Mr. Ray-O-Vac, the sign of French Battery Products ... in- comparable RAY-O-VAC Bat- teries and Flashlights . . . will greet you. We know you ' ll be glad to meet this old college friend . . . that you ' ll be true to him. Let him serve you now, and in the years to come. t French Battery Company Madison, Wisconsin Page 606 Madison ' s Accredited Riding Academy Reliable Mounts for Novice or Professional Fashion Stables J. p. Corcoran, Principal 2024 University Ave. Badger 7223 We Teach the Theory of Riding STORE OF FRIENDLY SERVICE fl Among the memorable events of the naughty Nineties was the Badger of ' 95, edited by C. Howard Cady and man- aged by C. F. Burgess, since of battery fame . . . and the beginnings on State Street of this store . . . (i[The men of those days, as now, came to the Friendly Store in quest of the nat- tiest in bowler hats, of credit until the crops on the old homestead were marketed, or of an ad to k eep the Badger a jump ahead of the sheriff . . . C[In those days, as now, we did our best not to disappoint them KARSTENS On the Square .•. Carroll near State .•. Badger 453 Campus Idiocies The Slicker Artists Tatooing is not done in polite society, but the slicker artist fills the gap by judiciously spilling quartsofindiainkonhisoilskin. The result is a het- ergeneous mixture of names, caricatures and clever cracks, such as Kiss me kid or things equally sidesplitting. The effect is startling even when one is used to it, and it is the cause of much head- scratching and many editorials on What is the younger generation coming to and why isn ' t it ashamed of itself? on the part of those who view it for the first time. It is only fair to say that this practice is dying out somewhat, but not nearly fast enough. A small bounty on each oilskin brought in, the bounty to be doubled if the slicker is riddled with bullets and bedoused with blood, might help. A modern course in Popular Piano Playing by Jesse Cohen. B. 2729; F. 4467 t- hotoavt House WILLIAM J. MEUER, President Commercial Photographers for The ic)28 Badger ig28 Prom U. W. Athletic Department Cardinal, Senior Class M ilwaukee JournaL and All Sororities and Fraternities at Wisconsin It has been only thru continual adherence to the ideal Service above Self that we have been given this confidence Page 60S E. J. FRAUTSCHI, General Manager and Treasurer MADISON FUEL CO. ♦{j Telephone: Badger 3 Madison, Wis. Froc s for the College Girl Tiffany ' s The quality is in the dresses more than in any fine phrases. To see them is more convincing than anything we might say Phone: Fairchild 6060 524 State St. Our staff correspondents ha ' e been unable to discover the name of this man, who has all the earmarks of being high in the ranks of the ROTC. He looks like the sort of man who would be on Forensic Board and who would have his name printed in the wrong place on the Union I3oard ballots. We wish that we could remember his cognomen, it seems to us that we met him some- place and we may have to introduce him some day. We are certain that we would not care to know him socially. But yet, what is his name? PS. Our staff correspKDndent just returned with the identification of the man pictured to the left. He is the Unknown Soldier. Why not THE DORMS Fire hoses Dandy riots! Excellent for sophs Fun! Live in the dorms and become a pol tician Watches— B. L. BLANCH FLOWER— Jeweler. 605 State St. We Specialize in Building High Grade Monel Metal Kitchen Equipment — for— Hotels, Hospitals and Institutions CHINA, GLASS AND SILVERWARE Special attention given to Crests on China for Fraternity Houses WESTERN GLASS AND CHINA CO. MILWAUKEE. WIS. The College Woman ' s Favorite Store for Immediate Wants The Co-Ed s Convenient Corner, next to Branch Bank of Wisconsin State Street Leader State and Gilman Dry Goods Women ' s Apparel The Candid Cardinal Excerpt Numba Two (And on Sunday the front page is littered with The World ' s Window. We keep nothing from you however rotten, here ' tis. And Fevvens sakes understand that the first person is used by the editor of The World ' s Window, not US.) ■I see by the New York Times that three hundred Marines are being rushed to China. What does that mean, How should I know? Sacco and Vanzetti, according to Madison papers are getting a dirty deal. I think this column stands for defense, everybody else is. I see by the Literary Digest that if all the Camels smoked in Caledonia, Michigan, in ninety years were placed one on top of the other, they would probably fall down. What- tuyuh think of that? According to the New Republic, Mussolini eats crackers in bed. I don ' t know why I should make that startling revelation in this col., but I read it. I see by the Christian Endeavor Leader that in Kenosha or Los Angeles, I have forgotten, a man was killed after a jump from a three story building. (Oh yes, it must have been Los Angeles.) Oh dear, will people ever slow down enough to take elevators. .-i-- (And Lm telling yuh that guy makes the Sunday front page.) University biog. Bascom hall can burn down, the engineers can parade forever, Birge can be succeeded by Frank and Frank by another, additions to Bascom and Medic buildings can be erected, the Phi Delts can pledge another Cincinnati mistake, Sunny Pyre can wear high shoes with knickers, Prof. Byrne can get pie-eyed and wander in the Theta House by mistake. Daddy Foster can lecture without a shirt on, but the climax of all unbearable events in the university ' s history comes after the Sigma Kappa spring formal when Aunt Abby Marlatt bursts her way into a Yellow to oust another who rightfully belonged there. Something besides Sig Chi bragging gripe; and this display of Marlatt ' s is one of them. Four years student service COLLEGE TYPING COMPANY For Years ... A Campus Institution of Friendly Service ; Capital City Rent-a-Car 434 w. Oilman St. Fair 334 child 531 state St. C4 Cherished emernhrance . . . Gordon Dawson Milwaukee was the scene of Dawson ' s birth. He just grew up because there was no other direc- tion to grow in. A little knowledge along the way didn ' t serve sufficiently to make him a college politician. True, he did squeeze into Union board but as a prom chairman he made a good com- mittee man for Horse Show. It ' s a strange fact that the frat club of Beta Theta Pi take it upon themselves to run a prom every other year, and G. Dawson bears out the not unknown fact that they can ' t do it. Dawson may again feed girls on Sunday nights at Lawrences but with Sigma Kappas and the Drive he is thru. If a half baked demagogue shines around a few hours late for an engagement or wears spurrs to infantry drill that one is our Dawson. And he ain ' t a bad egg either. MALTED Jfewll V MILK yfl ' uJ M All flavors : K !SB«j H - Campus Soda Grill -The Place That Malted Milks Made — Next to Library — Page 611 X® of the 1 28 ( adger f i I This is a snapshot taken v C f f ' X in our pressroom during t - the last two weeks of « , printing the Badger |] - ' Yes, we rushed x K a bit to get the jj ■sk books out on % time! I) T HE 1928 Badger is the best annual Wisconsin students have ever produced — if you ask us. We believe you will agree that the u nique treat ' ment throughout approaches perfection — or just a little bit of O. K. Are we right? C[The Editor, Business Manager and the Badger Staff deserve great praise for such a splendid memorial to the Class of 1928. Only those stu ' dents who have a direct contact with this work realize the vast amount of time and untiring effort required to make possible such a volume. ((The work of the Engraver is par excellence- colorful artwork and engravings that would im- press even the stoical Indians portrayed. C[And though we may be a bit prejudiced, we think that the printer deserves a little credit. We are proud to have participated in the produc tion of the 1928 Badger — we hope you like it! This Badger is the ninth that we have produced — maybe there is a reason 9 for such popularity. And we do various other university printing — big and little jobs — why not consult us? Cantwell Printing Company 123 South Pinckney Street Madison, Wisconsin ® Page 612 Continuous LAUNDRY SERVICE Since 1884 ; ; 1 Alford Bros. Laundry Co. Campus Idiocies The Hangman ' s Noose How sweet! Not to say how becoming, how petit, how demure! Joe has spent a full half hour tying a four-in-hand this morning until the knot measured a full three inches across. What a ster- ling masculinity ! Caesar never wore his tie with a knot three inches across, nor Hamilcar, nor even Alfred the Great! All these years the world has been waiting for a man who can tie a knot three inches wide. Nothing is too big for him : captain of industry, presidency of the United States, controlling stock in the Ford Motor Gampany, Forensic Board. How lovely it is, how cagey, how effective, how asinine! Have you ever gone to Madison? Sure, I was a student there for three months. What do you think of the university? University? Oh, I was a Phi Kappa pledge and I never visited the thing. :•■f Theses, topics, themes, mimeographing— COLLEGE TYPLWG COMPANY e Lon es Studio Has CA ain Scored in ad CT- Picture (Perfection It is not only our business but our in- terest and desire to render a service wliich is not only commendable at the present, but which will make students select De Longe in all future College picture needs ... Badger Staff Pictures — The Junior Prom — Homecoming — Horse Show — Military Ball — 1000 Senior Pictures and others — taken by De Longe De longe studio 525 State Street Phone : Badger 3121 Page 614 Eat at J wrence s 662 State St. 13 17 University Ave. Proper . . . College men accord due deference to the correct- ness of clothes by Gelvins Gelvin ' s of Madison Apparel for Wisconsin Men 64 State Street James Nelson Little Jimmy Nelson is a product of Oak Park, Illinois, and is another example of the necessity of more control over interstate commerce. He distinguished himself in Oak Park by his ability to kick other persons in the shins during the course of soccer games and also on account of his good work as assistant leader in the Wolf patrol of Scout troop 17. Coming to Wisconsin, he went ATO, which is sufficient proof of his state of sanity. Despairing of ever making a gentleman out of himself, he early tried to become a lady, and even- tually starred in Haresfoot shows by virtue of writing the reviews and knocking the other actors. He is also a member of Phi Kappa Phi, which organization he likes very much, to judge from an editorial he wrote about it just after his election had been announced. All in all he is a very good boy, quiet and modest, without a committee of sixty-seven for publicity — he really doesnt need it, you see. It is also rumored that he is somehow connected with Cardinal, but numerous investi- gators who have made numerous trips to that office have always found him busy on some com- mittee that prints its heads in big black letters. Vem Carrier Hail to the red hair, hail to the freckles, hail to the prime handshaker and senior president; his name is Vem Carrier. There are numerous stories about this boob ' s red hair. It is found in an old Sioux legend that Carrier fell out of a high chair when a babe into an open fireplace and lied there until weeks later when he was discovered by blood- hounds. The poor kid never was right after that. Upon bumming his way out west on a cattle train he met up with another tramp, in Toledo, Ohio. That tramp turned out to be the Traveling Sec- retary for the fraternity of Sigma Phi. This last named thought that Vem, regardless of his hellish hair, had possibilities of being a fraternity man so he gave him directions to Madison with a note to the men of the club here. Our Carrier took the next freighter for the four lakes city. By sundry underhanded methods, this gentleman secured notable positions on the campus. He got a shirt tail job on the Cardinal, got to make wind for a storm scene in Union Vod. But the climax came when he after a supposedly campaignless election came out as senior president. A modern course in Popular Piano Playing by Jesse Cohen. B. 2729. F. 4467 IVhen V Plus Sat Plus Uh u ' ou Want Quality isfaction le fewest odes In idies ' and Misses ' Dresses Suits Coats Furs i Phon Fine Stationery Students ' Supplies Job Printing Mimeographing Crepe Paper Decorations Visit WOLDENBERG ' S Cloak Corner 32 East Mifflin Street 1 ETHERWOOD ' S -Badger 701 519 State St. Unsung Heros of the Year TheR- Drinkii Plumb Rund] The fDcople who hold the dogs during ROTC reviews. The frosh who wear their green caps. The roommate who trundles off to bed after propping up against the dresser a note that reads, Dear Jack: I forgot to wind the clock. The man who reads all the Cardinal editorials. The non-union laborers at the Union Building. The Theta Delts who yelled Quiet Hours ' on Langdon at three in the morning. ■S Line includes Sanitary ig Fountains, Bath and tng Fixtures and Supplies. Th( grade Yoi Two year i social Iti Tride about party pen t ceedir t two Gamma Phi pledges who made their s. J just can ' t keep these sorority women down, years ago they had a fire contest, and this t is a fight to see which can have the most privileges taken away. 5 exceedingly unfortunate that our artist is a t. There are so many things we could say them, their baseball games, their St. Pat ' s Our artist would probably sink a drawing Pirough our editorial epiglottas. It is ex- igly unfortunate that our artist is a Tridelt. [e-Spence Mfg. Co. Milwaukee, Wis. Pate 616 Universal Grocery Co, Madison, Wis. 25 Stores in Madison 25 Branches at Monroe (2) Beloit (3) Janesville Stoughton Edgerton Sun Prairie Richland Center Columbus Beaver Dam Jefferson Portage Waupun Oshkosh (4) Menasha Monticello Sauk City Fond du Lac (2) Baraboo Mount Horeb Appleton (3) Berlin Ripon Evansville Neenah Brodhead Prairie du Chien Mineral Point Oregon Lancaster Prairie du Sac Lodi Horicon We Live and Let Live Universal Grocery Co. For Nearly Fifty Years Students have lcx)ked to this store for newest in men ' s styles and reliable prices. Here ' s what we can serve you . . . Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes Johnston Murphy Shoes Stetson Hats ! ( Olson Veerhusen Co, 7-9 North Pincknev Street Jefferson Stoughton Kentucky Burrus. Well this is an interesting case. If anyone thinks that this is a publicity stunt sponsored by Jeff ' s publicity committee of sixty-seven, they are wrong. This section accepts no bribes. In a hovel in Stoughton, Kentucky, our Jeff was born some time ago. No one had been able to understand how he could acquire a southern accent from living in Stoughton, but the fact remains. After a furious youth of jail-breaking, incendiarism and plain orneriness, he went to college and had all the human taken out of him by the much talked of fraternity of Sigma Chi. Jeff was a winner from the start here. He served as second assistant chairman of the ways and means committee for the Freshman cap night. In his sophomore year he startled the university by making the crew, but it is rumored that Dad Vail owed him money at the time. By the time he became a junior he had met a bim from China and wanted to do her honor so he lent out a lot of money on hardly no security at all and was elected Prom chairman like a damn. A passion with Jeff is publicity. 1 I YELLOW Bad 500 ger CAB i! ' ) We Haul Trunks Neat, accurate, prompt service— COLLEGE TYPING COMPANY Z e Problem. ... of choosing the correct Athletic Knitted Wear for all college and indi- vidual needs can be easily solved . . . Write us and we ' ll gladly help vou decide. We Specialize in College Knit Athletic Wear O ' Shea Knitting Mills 2414 No. Sacramento St. Chicago, 111. MUSCLE and Judgment are prime essentials to success. Milk is good for both of them. CopyrtKht Nov. 1925 It was a great school year. A man chased a Phi O Pi and a burglar entered the Phi Gam house. Both were ultimately acquitted on the grounds of insanity. There are several prizes we should like to dish out about the campus; First, to Jack Wilson a prize for being the most dangerous dancer on the campus. Prize, a straight jacket and a picture of all those he has maimed or injured by flying feet or elbows. Second, a prize to Gamma Phi Beta for pledging activities. Prize, an entire fioor of the Union Building for use as a study hall. Thirdly, to Arthur Adams a token for bravery. It seems that one night after a Theta formal he delayed his departure some minutes for the purpose of osculating the entire Theta chapter. Prize, a pair of glasses. Fourthly, to Delta Gamma a prize for relieving the stone-cutter ' s famine. Prize, one picture Waupun Prison. Fifthly, a token to Alpha Gamma Delta for the most easily satisfied pride on the campus. It seems that they are intensely proud of being Alpha Gamma Deltas. Prize, three lemon seeds. Page 618 ReadytO ' Wear Frocks for all Occasions 9 e 1 II ixnsi iJ ii This Store Has Served THE Wisconsin Men HETTY MINCH faithfully SHOP For More Than Thirty Years! 9Q :? P 6 • • Exclusive Gowns Made to Order 9 I P 22 STATE ST. P 228 State St. • Madison, Wis. Dear, consistent, traditional old Wisconsin! Bring or Mail Us Your Shoe Repairing It passes a ruling forbidding coeds to ride out of ■town on dates and then lets its own special pet, the Union Board, give dances at Bernard ' s Park, bringing the number of dances in the city down to a snappy zero. As a little problem in etiquette, what is a young man to do when he comes to the foot of the stairs to shout for the date of his choice and discovers at the top of the steps four females, wearing amongst them, one-half (the top one) of a pair of The Goodyear Shoe Repair pajamas, one chemise, and one whatchacallit? Company Something should be said to relieve the situation; but what? You figure it out, we can ' t. A. J. Schultz, Proprietor And what if the nineteenth kitten on the left hand side did think that the satire section was rotten. It was undoubtedly supported by the Satire editor, his assistants, the Badger editor. and both people who subscribed to the Lit. We Make Dancing Sandals and Corrective Gym Shoes Think of yourself! As a matter of information. Miss Ruth Kellogg is the artist who drew the excellent picture for Campus Idiocies. Out of regard for Ruth, how- ever, it might be well to say that she had nothing Phone: Badger 5164 to do with the prose inscribed beneath them. 652 State St. Madison, Wis. COLLEGE BARBER SHOP— Corner State and Lake Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll The cover for this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois very M.olloy Made Cover bears this trade mark on the back lid. iiiiiiiiiii iiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Page 620 Compliments of Dearborn Chemical Company i: J Campus Idiocies The Campus Rabbits Jack and Angus are careful lads! Shall a wind that is only sixty-five degrees warm and com- pletely unsterilized catch them off their guard? No indeed, not them, they have their fur coats. Vanish all chances of pneumonia, typhoid, or seven-year itch (there is little anyway, as the temperature is above seventy and the sun is shining) . . . they have their fur coats. Somehow they have forgotten to protect their head from the elements. But they needn ' t bother. The head is the part of their body about which they should show the least concern. The Candid Cardinal Skyrockets ' ■— C_ = ' by Jonah I ' m a Sigma Chi I ' m a Sigma Chi I ' m a Sigma Chi by Gordy I ' m an S. A. E. I ' m an S. A. E. I ' m an S. A. E. Chorus by Readers Who the hell cares? Who the hell cares? Who the hell cares? Prescription work is the main part of our business — LEWIS DRUG STORE Phone: Badger 373 624 E. Gorham St. Bernard s Boat Line W. p. Bernard Madison, Wisconsin On Lake Mendota Public Launches to Bernard ' s Park Around the Lake Larce Dancing Pavilion in Connection Launches for Private Parties Ice Boats in Season Paddling Canoes and Row Boats General Paper Supply Company Tay-cho-Pera School Supplies Madison Wisconsin We ' re in th. ' Badger once a year. We ' re in your house twice a day. Tag em and hang em up. OWEN VETTER Satisfaction Cleaners Phone: Badger 7542 531 State St. Cleaning Pressing Repairing Com hments of HOLEPROOF HOSIERY CO. MILWAUKEE Reliable Since 1891 THE MENGES PHARMACIES 26 W. Mifflin St. 1825 Monroe St. 901 University Ave. 1511 Monroe St. MADISON. WISCONSIN Robert Morse Robert Morse is a product of Chicago, where they have the biggest stockyards in the world. The story was started that he was the cause of the great panic of 1907, but this cannot be sub- stantiated. He worked for forty-five years as a pretzel bender in a famous Chicago pawnshop before coming to Wisconsin. Here he has dis- tinguished himself in comparatively few ways, as he is a Phikap, which is entirely too much of a handicap for anyone to overcome. Probably his only prominent activity is Tau Delta. He is now busy earning dimes by holding canines dur- ing reviews of the famous Reserved Officers Train- ing Corps (which corps is by the way, our idea of a real practical joke on the university) and taking roll in somebody ' s lecture. As soOn as he collects enough money he will buy a haircut. Jewelers— WUILLEU Ml ER ' S— 656 State Street For a decade The Choco- late Shop has been Univer- sity Headquarters for dainty luncheons, fountain service and delicious candies. The Chocolate Shop Black-Hawk Riding Academy, Inc. ' The Home of better Public Saddle Horses —Across from Lathrop Hall — Phone: Badger 6452 1019 Conklin Place Facials . ' . Shampoos . . Marcels . ' . Manicures Water Waves Dry Shampoos State Street Beauty Shop Mrs. Ida Osthoff Mrs. Josephine Pledger Mrs. Clara Davey Props. Open every Wednesday Evening Phone ' Fairchild 4580 But did the little squapoose dress himself up in pretzels and figleaves for the purpose of going canoeing or to study Math 1 in the stiff lab? I ask you. Think of yourself! And the big buck Indian took the little buck Indian and shot four bears and a rhinoceros with purple horns. Think of yourself! It seems an odd thing to say, an extremely odd thing, but the Theta bath water is suffering from a severe attack of pebbles, so the Thetas get their mud baths in their own house. And they don ' t leave a stone unturned when taking them. And seventeen squaws folded up the tents and stole away in the May evening, their teeth chatter- ing with the cold. Did they do it for pleasure or because the buck Indians would have clouted them on the side of the head if they had refused? Think of yourself! We have a little ' Gift of Friendship For every occasion The Mouse Around Shop 416 State Street liii Madison ' s IPonderful Food Store Piper bros. On Ihe Square at Hamillon and Pinckneij Opposite neu? Belmont Hotel You ' ll Enjoy Shopping Here Phone: Bddqer 561 ttladison, ILJis. Page 623 OTTO HARLOFF KARL LOPRICH Harloff-Loprich Electric Company Electrical Supplies and Service Phone : Badger 191 506 State Street Madison . . . ' . Wisconsin For Qood cfhinqs to Eal IDittipefs 729 University Ave. Phone: Fairchild 4200 The Home of Fine Printing Mayer Printing Company Phone: Fairchild 364 . © 117 S. Webster St. Madison, Wis. 23 E. Main Street Smart Fashionable Wearing Apparel for the Co-ed . . . COATS SUITS DRESSES Furs .-. Shoes .-. Millinery At Popular Prices Always J ' S E N S E N BOOT SHOP 614 State Street Quality Shoes :: Hosiery CRESCENT CLOTHING COMPANY Value First Store One of the Wisconsin traditions that this one indispensable memory did not dwell upon at great length is the Drive. We cannot fathom the reason for this omission, but we apologize for it. While on the subject of traditions, here is a quotation from Reynolds, Indian Life and Customs: ' The Indians were an indescribably dirty people, and their villages were sunk in the utmost depth of filth. Their favorite dish was a young puppy, nicely stewed. And here is one from the 1928 Badger Foreword, . . . and so we clothe this Badger in one of the state ' s most cherished traditions, the Indian. Think of yourself! ii i Page 624 538 State St. Phone .Badger 1180 Pantorium Co Cleaners and Dyers Madison ' s only Master Cleaner The Best for the Least Money Madison Wisconsin For Flowers Floral Decorations Plus Service 230 State St. FLORAL CO Madison, Wii W|F tt i W i- mmm. M ' ' s K J ' SM i Pi : I H ' ' ' wis IkX i ' ' «i im lC im% ' ii aA. ■• , ,„ _. : fdl jtmSlS ; JyA A New Sigma Nu Where a friendly, courteous service adds to the pleasure of shopping among smart wearables. Complete as ' sortments of new, up ' tO ' the minute styles popular ' ly priced. Baron Brothers RENNEBOHM BETTER DRUG STORES Five Stores Convenientlv Located Fancy Groceries and Fruits FRANK BROS. 611-613 University Ave. Ptone: Badger 71 MADISON PACKING COMPANY, INC. EslabllshcJ 1913 Burton Neesvig. Mgr. Wholesale and Retail Meats Packers and Curers of American Brand Hams, Bacon, Lard and Sausage 305-307 W. Johnson St. Madison. Wi.. House of Quality l.i i iM ' J- I . i Page 62S 1 BllSER ' S QROCERl icheUeu Food Products ! 1 1 Phone: Fairchild 1800 1337 Uniuersitq Aue. Morgans Malted ; Milk Billiards The Candid Cardinal Excerpt Numba Something (The Cardinal runs another department which does nothing but unload trash onto the readers. Readers Say So col. is terrible, but since it ' s there the Candid Cardinal must produce.) Dear Editor: I am far ahead of my time. I have the fore- sight and philosophy to see and live in a world to come. I knows the ups and downs of child bearing, smoking and manly dress. In fact, I am very smart on the subjects of women and V ( ' ! i i 1 i ■r 672 State Street very anxious to explode my mouth about them. I like to get into this column and show that there are a few women left in the univer- sity who are still tough and two-fisted. I stand for tennis and hockey and basketball and all to publicity that can possibly accrue to one who , writes foolishly enough to this column. I am ANTIONETTE. ] i Page 626 ' Uhe UNIVERSITY PHARMACY H. W. Leonard 2 ' ® : . . . Where the student demand for quahty and serv ice at a reasonable price is satisfied . . . 2 ' ©K CORNER STATE and LAKE STREETS Establhhed ISS4 Conklin Sons Company Coal, Coke, Wood and Ice Fuel Oils, Sinclair Gasoline, Lubricating Oils, Greases and Building Materials Cement, Sand, Gravel, Lime, Sewer Pipe Brick and Building Tile iill ::il Branch Offices 641 -645 W. Main St.. 212 So. Baldwin St.. 102 Linden and Yards St.. 322 E. Gorham St.. 2423 Monroe St. Main Office: 24 E. Mifflin St. ;-; I Phone: Badger 25 Madison, Wisconsin III Dear Editor: We are a group of lads out at the dorms who after six months of bull sessions have started a club to which only atheists can belong. Isn ' t it interesting? We thought so. WE tried to read a little Philosophy and the Bible, but we could not understand either of them. Don ' t you think we are justified in becoming atheists? One of the boys read about them in an almanac, so we thought we would like to go in for it. We are only Frosh, but my how smart. We have had English la and Chemistry la so we can judge knowledge pretty critically. Declar- ing oneself an atheist is loads easier than the quadratic equation so we thought it would be both facile and intellectual to adopt Atheism. No, we aren ' t telling our mothers about it. But we are leaders in thought of the unixersity. Just think, we are atheists! And to think that we are only Freshmen. Why should this man Meiklejohn believe in God? He ought to hear us argue it down. We are prime asses. Atheist Club The Dorm LETTERCRAFT lncorf}orated Makers of Dance Programs and Engraved Stationery for the Whole Middle West 725 University Ave. Madison, Wis. Patt 627 BADGER DENTAL DIRECTORY DR. W. L. GILLETTE 206 Washington Bldg. Fairchild 2190 DR. E. E. BAKER DR. J. B. BAKER 313-16 Washington Bldg. Badger 470 DR. M. W. POHLE 672 State Street Office — Fairchild 4332 Residence — Badger 4344 i® DR. E. W. FLOHR 321-25 Washington Bldg. Fairchild 1220 DR. P. S. BARSNESS 307-8 Gay Bldg. Fairchild 313 f i m ttf ' i , II ■LJ KM a t M Grimm Book Bindery 454 W. Oilman St. Phone: Fairchild 469 Madison, Wisconsin Little Lessons for Lester No, no, no, Lester, those men who are passing are not waiters, nor even morticians. They are college men out for an evening of hilarious enjoy- ment. They wear the funny collars and black clothes because it is a formal party to which they are going. A formal party, Lester, is one in which the man must do three things. He must buy flowers, he must invest in a taxi, and he must tell the girl she looks pretty. Usually the last is the hardest of the three. Why do they have formal parties? They have them, Lester, because the women folk enjoy them. They appear in dresses that are comfortable and very little else and they have the chance to look at the men in their monkey suits and say, ' Oh, how funny you look. Then they giggle. Besides, they get the flowers and the taxi, and they are told that they look pretty. Women will do almost anything for those three. Of course formal parties are enjoyable, Lester. You can tell that the men are going to enjoy themselves because they look so bored. That is their way of expressing their enthusiasm. What ! Mill and Office: 138-142 N. Frances Street Madison, Wis. C. B. FRITZ COMPANY General Contractors Phone: Badger 712 Dealers in Pine, Hemlock and Hardwood Lumber Why don ' t they look happy if they are enjoying themselves ? Why, Lester ! How ycu talk ! Don ' t you realize that when a person looks as though he was enjoying himself it is a sign that he is a ribald boor and not fit to take into polite society? It is a fine old tradition that a man must look bored, and we must not go against the traditions, Lester. The Badger would not like it. Come along, Lester, and I will teach you some things so that when you go to college you can be a Deke and smoke cigar- ettes and be a real college man. Come now, Lester! . Page 62S Diamonds Watches Jewelry Silverware Stationery Trophies BUNDE UPMEYER CO. Milwaukee Designers ' and Manufacturers of High Class Club and Fraternity Jewelry of All Kinds Uhe Co-ed ' s Favorite . . . Eberhardt ' s Cardinal Beauty Shop 625 State St. Phone: Fairchild 3966 The Candid Cardinal Society (And dear ones the social page is a scream in our daily paper. Sassiety at our U. takes the worm eaten cake.) Delta Gamma Well it ' s about time we were throwing a dance. Do you expect to live on your reputation all year? The elephants never forget; we ' ve heard, and be cagy with Sig Phi elephants. This dance will be thrown in the New Delta Gamma barn on Langdon and Carroll Sts. Plaster, nails, wooden horses and shavings will facilitate the dancing. If you get roped into this party, try not to get lost in the labyrinth. Some say that the barn was built this way in order to keep any man that they could get into the house, and others say that the architect went crazy. The dance will not start till ten o ' clock because the music has to work at the Majestic till nine thirty. It will be a big affair if all the blind dates show up. They never have before, but maybe they will this time. HI MEAT Goeden Company I if! FalrcLiU 5200 OLDER - THAN BASCOM HALL today ' s graduates are tomorrow ' s executives who will remember that excellent printing establish- ment in their old college town, the . . . Democrat Printing Company One Fourteen South Carroll Street Madison . . ••• Wisconsin Page 629 Where You See the Styles of Youth- PARSONS 121 State Street Madison . ' . Wisconsin Gowns, Dresses, Coats, Suits, Wraps and Furs . . Fur Coat Specialists . . Repairing, Remodeling and Storage Phone: Fairchild 378 R. T. ROYSTON Plumbing and Gas Fitting ' 1319 University Ave. Madison, Wis. i ' II Tht Thompson Orchestras play at The Cameo Room Esther Beach Available jor Private Parties c Phones: Badger 2020 or Badger 2021 t Superfluous Hair Removed ! ! ! TRICHO SYSTEM Not for just a day, a week, nor a year; but always! Consultation without obligation Booklet on Request Awarded Grand Prize Paris, 1925 THE COMFORT BEAUTY SHOP 114 State St. Phone: Fairchild 421 Tricho System In all princpial cities Open from 6:30 A. M. to 8 P. M. Breakfasts Our Specialty The Waffle Shop Lunch Red Home Coo]{yng Cream Waffles and Wheat Cakes at all Hours 422 State St. Phone: Badger 5150 Page 630 Manufacturers of Pumping Machinery and Air Lift Equipment ROAD MACHINERY DYNAMOS and MOTORS Power Plants of all Kinds Designed and Installed Motor and Dynamo Repair Work Engine and Mill Work WISCONSIN FOUNDRY AND MACHINERY CO. Madison, ' Wis. There ' s Joy and Comfort in Well Repaired Shoes —and Dignity in a Good Shoe Shine Hats Cleaned and Blocked J UNITED SHOE REPAIRING AND SHINE PARLOR 524 State St. Phone: Fairchild 2019 it ( When in Madison we welcome you back to . . . THE COLLEGE LUNCH Mrs. E. L. Riising, Props. {0pp. Chem. Bldg.) 1202 University Ave. Phone; Fairchild 2944 434 State St. Phones: Badger ii63 ' ii64 MALONE GROCERY AGENCY Richelieu Pure Food Products Wholesale and Retail GROCERIES-FRUITS- VEGETABLES Tumas Initiation, or Frovii g thct Some Men make the Most of their Opportunities ct Wisconsin (Satire continued on page 650) Page 631 As we write this the sound of a piano comes across the lawn from the Tridelt house ; the first blush of spring transforms the view from the study room window into a thing of life and promise; we cannot see the lake, but we know somehow that the canoeing is fine and that many boats dot the waters of placid Mendota, bearing cargoes of happy humans, out for an afternoon of pleasure. Four years we have stayed at Wisconsin; we have seen class rushes, and football games, and, upon a time, we heard the closing hymn of a fraternity initiation re-echoed across University Bay. Four years we have stayed at Wisconsin and seen men come and go, succeed and fail, graduate or leave for home on the sore-eye special, but in every case we have noted, for it was a thing so obivous that one could not help but note, the moulding influence of the university. Wisconsin, we have thrown many stones at you in the course of completing our section, thrown them gladly, with Puckish delight, in respionse to the call of duty. You are a giant, Wisconsin, one that can defy or laugh at the tiny darts that happen to be cast at you, and you know, that deep in our hearts you are our love and that we are, and always shall be, pleased and proud to forever own ourselves as Badgers, alma mater, and that until the end of time we shall thrill at that splendid name, Wisconsin. THE SATIRE EDITOR AND HIS HENCHMEN. Page 632 Advertiser ' s Index AlfordBros. Co 613 Aluminum Goods Mfg. Co 577 American Ice Cream Co 591 Badger Rent-a-Car 583 Badger Studios 590 Baillie, OConnell Meyer 587 Baron Brothers 625 Bernard ' s Boat Line 622 Besly Co., Charles H 584 Blackhawk Riding Academy 623 Branch Bank of Wisconsin 599 Brock Engraving Co 592 Brooks Brothers 585 Brown Book Shop 576 Bunde Upmeyer Co 629 Burdick Murray Co 586 Burgess 601 Buser ' s Grocery 626 Campus Soda Grill 611 Cantwell Printing Co 612 Capital City Rent-a-Car 611 Cardinal Beauty Shop 629 Castle l Doyle 594 Champion Coated Paper Co 602 C, M. St. P. Ry 578 Chocolate Shop 623 College Lunch 63 1 Comfort E5eauty Shop 630 Conklin Sons Co 627 Co-op 605 Crescent Clothing Co 624 Dearborn Chemical Co 621 DeLonge Studio 614 Democrat Printing Co 629 Dental Directory 628 DrivesFuelCo., J. B 586 Falk Corporation 589 Fashion Stables 607 First Wis. National Bank 574 Frank Bros 625 French Battery Co 606 Fritz Co., C. B 628 Fuller- Warren Co 593 Gelvin ' s 615 General Paper Supply Co 622 Goeden Co 629 Goodyear Shoe Repair Co 619 Grant Co., Alexander 582 Gridley Dairy Co 618 Grimm Book Bindery 628 Harloff-Loprich Electric Co 624 Hawthorne Eiook Shop 600 Hoffman Billings Mfg. Co 593 Holeproof Hosiery Co 622 Jensen ' s Boot Shop 624 Jerrems 581 Karsten ' s . 607 Kennedy Dairy Co 584 Kessenich s 600 KohlerCo 580 Lawrence ' s Restaurants 615 Lettercraft 627 Lytton College Shop 575 Madison Fuel Co 609 Madison Packing Co 625 Malleable Iron Range Co. 598 Malone Grocery Co 63 1 Manchester ' s -. . . . 582 Mayer Printing Co 624 Menges Pharmacies 622 Miller ' s 624 Minch Shop, Hetty 619 Molloy Co.. DavidJ 620 Morgan ' s 626 Moser Business College 579 Mouse Around Shop 623 Nash Motors Co 588 Netherwood ' s 616 Ogilvie Jacobs 595 Olson Vccrhusen Co 617 O ' Shea Knitting Mills 618 Owen Vetter 622 Pantorium Co 625 Parson ' s 630 Pettibone Bros. Mfg. Co 593 Photoart House 608 Piper Bros 623 Rennebohm Drug Stores 625 Rcntschler Floral Co 625 Rexford l Kelder 604 Ritter Automobile Co 596 Royston, R. T 630 Rundle-Spence Mfg. Co 616 Schroeder Hotels 597 Simmons Co 603 Speth ' s 619 State St. Beauty Shop 623 State St. Leader 610 Tegtmeyer, Archie, Inc 582 Thompson ' s Orchestras 630 Tiffany ' s 609 United Shoe Repairing 63 1 Universal Groceries 617 University Pharmacy 627 Waffle Shop 630 Western Glass i China Co 610 Wisconsin Foundry Machine Co 63 1 Wittwer ' s 624 Woldenberg ' s 616 Yellow Cab 617 Page 634 Book Index Acacia 447 Activities f Adams Hall 538 Administration 29 Agriculture Administration 36 Agricultural Triangle 548 All-University Religious Convocation . . . 374 Alpha Chi Omega 496 Alpha Chi Rho 467 Alpha Chi Sigma 515 Alpha Delta Phi 444 Alpha Delta Pi 504 Alpha Epsilon Phi 506 Alpha Gamma Delta 498 Alpha Gamma Rho 455 Alpha Kappa Delta 428 Alpha Kappa Kappa 521 Alpha Kappa Lambda 475 Alpha Kappa Psi 524 Alpha Omicron Pi 500 Alpha Phi 493 Alpha Sigma Phi 451 Alpha Tau Omega 449 Alpha Xi Delta 497 Alpha Zeta 415 Alumni Magazine 348 Alumni 177 ArdenClub 541 Artus 419 Athletic EJoard 230 Athletic Review 345 Athletics 227 Baccalaureate Exercises 202 Badger, 1928 334 Badgers 163 Baptist Young People ' s Association .... 367 Barnard Hall 536 Baseball 277 Basketball 253 Beta Gamma Sigma 420 Beta Kappa 478 Beta Phi Alpha 508 Beta Phi Theta 477 Beta Sigma Omicron 507 Beta Theta Pi . ■433 Blue Shield 546 B ' Nai B ' rith Hillel Foundation 368 Board of Visitors 33 Boxing 294 Cadets 385 Cadet Instructional Staff 386 Cadet Regimental Staff 387 Calvary Lutheran Church 369 Campus Groups 535 Cardinal 338 Castalia Literary Society 403 Chadbourne Hall 537 Chi Epsilon 424 Chi Omega 495 Chi Phi 456 Chi Psi 435 Church 363 Classes-Officers 159 Classes 53 Clef Club 383 Collegiate League of Women Voters .... 545 Commencement 203 Commerce Administration 37 Commerce Magazine 342 Congregational Students ' Association .... 370 Coranto 529 Country Magazine 343 Crew 269 Cross Country 247 Crucible 166 Dedication 8 Delta Chi 465 Delta Delta Delta 494 Delta Gamma 489 Delta Kappa Epsilon 448 Delta Pi Epsilon 468 Delta Phi Delta 423 Delta Sigma Phi 461 Delta Sigma Pi 522 Delta Sigma Rho 416 Delta Tau Delta 438 Delta Upsilon 437 Delta Zeta 501 DeMolayClub 552 Dolphin Club 215 Dramatics 357 Electrical Engineers 549 Engineering Administration 38 Engineering Magazine 346 Euthenics Club 547 Extension Division 000 Farm House 519 Father ' s Day 191 Fencing 293 Football 229 Forensic Board 400 Foreword 6 French Club and House 554 Gamma Eta Gamma 523 Gamma Phi Beta 490 Golf Team 294 Government 329 Graduate School 39 Gym Team 293 Haresfoot 358 Hesperia Literary Society 402 Hockey 288 Homecoming 192 Home Economics Administration 40 Honorary Societies 41 1 Horse Show , 396 Intra-Mural Sports 297 Iron Cross 164 Journalism Administration 47 Junior Mathematics Club 542 Kappa Alpha Theta 491 Kappa Beta Lambda 474 Kappa Delta 505 Kappa Epsilon 533 Kappa Eta Kappa 525 Kappa Kappa Gamma 488 Kappa Psi 518 Kappa Sigma 442 Keystone Council 207 Lambda Chi Alpha 457 Law Administration 42 Law Review 348 Letters and Science Administration .... 43 Library School 44 Literary Magazine 347 Luther Memorial Student Association . . 371 Mechanical Engineers and Polygon .... 553 Medical School 45 Memorial Union Executive Committee . . . 354 Memorial Union 353 Memorial Day 199 Men ' s Commerce Club 544 Men ' s Glee Club 376 Men ' s Physical Education 48 Military Ball 196 Minor Sports 283 Mortar Board 165 Mother ' s Day 198 Mu Phi Epsilon 425 Music 375 Mvstic Circle 511 Page 63! National Collegiate Players 429 Nurses School 47 Octopus 344 Omicron Nu 42 1 Organizations 409 Pan-Hellenic 512 Pan-Professional Council 534 Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Ph Alpha Delta 51b Beta Delta 479 Beta Kappa 412 Beta Pi 517 Chi 520 Chi Theta 531 Delta Epsilon 484 Delta Phi 514 Delta Theta 432 Epsilon Pi 482 Gamma Delta 439 Kappa 469 Kappa Phi 427 Kappa Psi 434 Kappa Sigma 443 Kappa Tau 480 Mu 502 Mu Alpha-Sinfonia 382 Mu Delta 470 Omega Pi 499 Pi Phi 481 Sigma Delta 464 Sigma Kappa 458 Sigma Phi 426 Upsilon Omicron 530 Physical Education Club 216 Pi Beta Phi 492 Pi Kappa Alpha 462 Pi Umbda Phi 473 Pi Tau Pi Sigma 391 Pi Tau Sigma 422 Presbyterian Student Alliance 372 President ' s Guard 392 Professional Fraternities 513 Professional Sororities 527 Prom 194 Psi Upsilon 441 Publications 333 Pythia Literary Society 404 Regents 32 Saddle and Sirloin 550 Satire Section 557 Scabbard and Blade 414 School of Music 46 Senior Artillery . 388 Senior Infantry 389 Senior Signal Corps 390 Seniors 55 Senior Swingout 201 Short Course 551 Sigma 509 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 446 Sigma Alpha lota 528 Sigma Chi 436 Sigma Delta Chi 418 Sigma Kappa 503 Sigma Lambda 532 Sigma Nu 445 Sigma Phi 450 Sigma Phi Epsilon 463 Sigma Pi 471 Sigma Phi Sigma 476 Social Fraternities 431 Social Sororities 487 Spanish House and Club 555 Special Occasions 187 Square and Compass 472 Student Senate 330 Summer Session 50 Swimming 284 Tau Beta Pi 413 Tau Kappa Epsilon 459 Tau Sigma Omicron 483 Tennis . . . . . . 295 Theta Chi 453 Theta Delta Chi 440 Theta Phi Alpha 510 Theta Sigma Phi 417 Theta Xi 460 Track 261 Triangle 454 Tripp Hall 539 Tumas 485 Union Board 351 Union 13oard Assisting Staff 352 University Band 378 University Orchestra 387 Varsity Rifle Team 393 Varsity Welcome 190 Venetian Night 200 Vilas Medal Winners 401 Villa Maria 540 W. A. A 214 WClub 231 Wesley Foundation 373 White Spades 167 Wisconsin Life 303 Wisconsin Union 349 Wisconsin University Players 361 Women ' s Commerce Club 543 Women ' s Glee Club 380 Women ' s Physical Education 49 Women 205 Wrestling 292 W. S. G. A 331 Y. M. C. A 364 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 210 Y. W. C. A. Freshman Commission .... 213 Y. W. C. A. Sophomore Club 212 Y. W. C. A. Sophomore Commission . . . .211 Zeta Beta Tau 466 Zeta Psi 452 Page 636 Personal Index Aaberg, E 4b2 Aaberg. M E 379-462 Abhot, C. H 56-452 Abels, M. H 429 Abelson. H 506 Abcndroth, E. A.. .346-413-476 Abendroth, G. H 413-476 Aberg, D. V 469-516 Abert, D.. 167-168-336-337-344- 439 Abert, R. E 439 Ace, Evan 278-279 Achenbach, H.J 378-518 Ackley, M 505 Adam, G. H 445 Adams, A. B 361-433 Adams, E. C 56-166-490 Adams, E. M 500 Adams, L. E 518 Adams, L. M 56-439-514 Adams, Olive 56 Adams, R. M 379 Adamson, M. C 381 Adelman, C 506 Adelman, F 506 Adkins, H. B 515 Adsit, W 508 Aebischer, D. . 343-415-548-550 Ahrbecker, H. L 260-463 Ahrnsbrak, Henry C 56 Aik, 1 368 Aikins, R. C 392 Ainsworth, R 442-521 Aitken, H 436 Alarme, K. S 231 Alberts, J 464 Albrecht, A 492 Albrecht, B 492 Albrecht, DC 340-418-465 Albrecht, E. A 536 Albrecht, G. F 468-514 Albright, R. E 503-536 Alderson, A 331 Alexander. A. S 415-550 Alexander, B 497 Alexander, Donald K 56- 360-446 Alexander, J 211-361-536 Alk, Isadore G. . . . 348-401-406- 416-428 Allan, F 494 Allcott, J 168-344-345-443 Allen, C. E 437 Allen, Flo 56-166-168-210- 214-222-417 Allen, H. J . . . 56-168-360-443- 485 Allen, H. S 437 Allen, 1 337-453 Allen, K 489-541 Allen, M 555 Allen. R 336-492 Allgeier. Rudolph J 56 Allison, M. G 372 Allyn. H... 56-335-336-340-417 Almen, E. L 57-465 Aimer, M. H 434 Almon, Lois 331 Alshuler, C. F 466 Alsop, M 340-529 Alton, A 508 Alton, R. . . 57-331-373-508-546 Altpeter, B 497 Alverson, E. F 57-499 Amelung, Margurite 57 Ames, M 537 Amiie. Tom 401 Ammann, C 403-505 Amon, J. R 57-502-532 Amundsen, I, G 460 Anderle, H 540 Andersen, C 501 Andersen, Ivequx W 342 Anderson, A 541-542-550 Anderson, Arthur C 371- 195-524-544 Anderson, Alice E 57 Anderson, Ben. R 57-294 Anderson, Blythe 168- 161-166-192-193-331 Anderson, C S 446 An derson, C. M 434 Anderson Charlotte 215 Anderson, Dorothy J S7 Anderson, Prof. E 474 Anderson, E. J 490-536 Anderson, EIna 494 Anderson, E. R 212 Anderson, F 392 Anderson, G 377 Anderson, Hazel 331 Anderson, H. G 444 Anderson, H. 459 Anderson, 1 544-299 Anderson, I . L 537 Anderson, I. W. . . .467-524-299 Anderson. J 447 Anderson, Jerold 377 Auderson, L 392 Anderson, M 541 Anderson, Malcom 544 Anderson, Margaret E 502 Anderson, Marion L 536 Anderson, Mildred Ellen.. 166- 57-361-425-491-495 Anderson, Mildred H... - 57-412 Anderson, 23 1 Anderson, O, N 517 Anderson, R. V 450 Anderson, Signe E 58-331 Anderson Theodore 58-446 Anderson. V 425 Anderson, Will 402 Andree, R 352-449 Andrews, Chas. Francis . . 231- 168-254-255-458 Andrews, Chas. Fred 476 Andrews, Leslie H 58 Andrews, Elwin A 58 Anger, J 503 Annis, Albert D 58-262-432 Ansfield, D.J 58-484 Antes, William B 58 Antini, D. B 379 Appleman, M 509 Appuhm, 1 371 Archie, Gustave 378 Ariens, M. S 447 Armstrong, K 488 Arndt, J. A 445 Arnol, A 473 Arnold, Eloise 342 Arnold. Marion V.. . 58-370-404 Arnold, Mattie L... . 58-403-508 Arnold, R. C 58-367 Aronson, B 340-368-403 Arnstam, T 536 Aronoflf, S. H 392 Arter, J.A 58 Arthur, Glen H 378 Arerson, Ardine J 58 Aschenbrener, E. L 279- 458-514 Ash. J. P 344-436 Ashcraft. E 195-340-498 Ashley, BE 394 Ashman, R 462 Asplund, A.J. A 59-231- 293-413-428-515 Assenheimer. G. C 474 Astrom, D E 59-160-166- 168-495 Aten, E 495 Atkin, G. S 442 Atkins. W. G 474 Atkinson. D. G 59-214-492 Atwell. C. R 433 Atwood. C, N., . 59-342-418-481 Aust. Prof. F. A 546 Austin. A. J 59 Austin. PR 59-378-382- 381-515 Axen. F 542-528 Axley. Fred 402 Axley. Ralph 401 Axtell. M, C 412 Aylward. F.. ..508-512-533-534 Aylward. R. L 517 B Babcock. 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G 63-360-37 Berwanger, W 521 Best. J L 334-337-445-524-544 Best. L. G 389 Beswick. M 499 Beth. E 418-428 Bethke. William H 63 Betts. Airce Mae 63 Bevins. Gordon W 63- 249-478 Beyman. E 361-491 Beyreis, G 331 Biba. C 536 Bibby. A. L 231-274-550 Bice. CM 63-415 Bick. K F 453 Biehusen. M. G 425-428 Bienfang. R. D 468 Bierlv. AW 439 Biggar. J 212-490 Biggar. L 508-542 Biggar. Marjory M 63-490 Biggert. Katherine 63-492 Billington. Lucile K 63 BiUington. R. A 412 Bilstad. Nellie M... .64-412-502 Bingham. B 530 Bingham. EM 538 Bingham. Marjorie. . . .214-217 Bingham. M. D 64 Bingham. M. H 459 Bingham. W. T 447 Binso. D 482 Binstock. AM 479 Page 637 Binzer. M 507 Bird. Helen 331 Bird, R 500-SI2-554 Birdsall, B.J 548 Birck, P 541 Birk. Margaret H 64-lt)4- le5-lbb-169-198-33 1-412-428- 493 Birkbeck, N 521 Birkenwald. Edward. . .64-346- 413-428 Birong, C 528 Bischoffberger, C 525 Bishop, Mary K... .64-169-361- 430-491 Bisno, Daniel 6+-412 Bjorquist, H. 467 Black, D L 494 Black, Helen 489 Black. Howard 299-467 Black. M 331-537 Blackey, Eileen 401 Black, EH 236 Blaine, John J 190 Blake, 441 Blake, Henry 401 Blakeley, E 373-546 Blanchar, A 480 Blanchard, B 294-521 Blaze, A 331 Bleeg, C 540 Bleil, A 505-540 Blencoe, S. G 465 Bleyer, W. G 41- 418-422-436-529 Blied, A 461 Bliflfert, W. P 230-467 Bliss, L. M 554 Blocki. R 495 Bloom, B 438 Bloom. C 537 Bloom, E. B 537 Bloss, D. W 366-552 Bloss, F 533 Bloxdorf, W. R 462 Blum. A 537 Blum, B, B 379 Blum, G. L 452 Blum, 521 Blunt, A. E 64-453 Blunt, C 493 Boardman, B 533 Boardman, W. W 434-514 Bobb, Romo E 64 Bobbitt, M 500 Bock, A. B, C 294 B jdden W. A 414-420-544- 524-467-342-299-64 Bode. L. A 529 Boeck. R. E 64 Boerner, G 541 Boesel, C. F 514 Boesel, Frank T 348 Boggs, Margareta. 220-2 16-2 17 Bogvilo, F 480 Bohnrich, E 554-331 Bohren, L G 340-341-64 Bokken, H. H 447 Bokhout, R 249 Boland, P 481 Boldenweck, L 553-435-23 1-295 Boll. RE 215-377-64 Boll, Ruth 337 Bolls. N 436 Bollow, A. J 65 Bolstein, M 195 Eiolton, Dorothy 65- 512-504-208-404 Bond, M 504 Bondry, M 521 Bonner. L. V 478 Bonner. N. A 458 Bonniwell. A 512 Bookhaut. R 340 Boogher. H 441 Boorda. L. 1 407 Borchers. G 430-404 EBorchers. M. F 65 Borchers. R. E 493-166-169 Borden. F. G 386-414 Borge. A 528 Borneman. M C 212-490 Borcickman. M 331 Borre. H 469 Borrud. B 379 Boruszak. F 65-509 Bossort.0 553 Bostock. H. S 448 Boston. E. S 460 Botham. G. W 65 Bottram. D 461 Botts. RE 365 Boughner. B 501 Bourassa. C 81 Bovier. E 489 Boyd. G 255 Boyd. Helen M 505 Boyd. MA 538 Boyd. R, W 382-378 Boyden. H 480 Boyer. Helene 331-370-223-216 Boyer, S. H 434-288 Bf)ylc, DP 465 Boynton. G 495 Braatz. Clayton 553- 413-433-262-347-340 Brace. 1 497 Bracke. G. M 550-551-455 Brackett. MA 389-65 Brackett, R 455 Bradford, E 493 Bradish, N. C 434-360 Bradley. Dr. C. H 517- 191-428-437-515 Braham.J 489 Brandcl, Mary M. 417-529- 9 Brandenburg, H 544-65- 365-306-360-377-373-374 Brandenburg, W 66 Brandon, W. H 288 Brandt, A 453 Brandt, F. W 456 Brandt. H.J 550 Brandt. Lawrence 379 Brann. J. vV 455-415 Branstad, ME 504 Brant, F. H 455-415-66 Brant. H. U 455-415 Bratrud. O. H 66 Braxton, G 429 Bray, M. W 447 Brayton. F. P 429 Brayton. P 449 Brayton, R. K 439-66-344 Brazean. B 44 1 Brazy, J 479 Bredlow. L. M 537 Bredsall, B 550 Breiby. N 553 Bremer. BE 462-66 Brennecke. J . A 434 Brennen. D. T 426-377 Breslauer. M 467 Bressler, R 490 Brew, D. W 451 Brewer, Gordon 379 Bridgeman, M 488 Bridgeman, R 550 Briggs, B 497 Briggs, E 501-66-215 Brigham, R. H 387-197 Brigham, R. M 388 Brill, A 5.0 Brill. M. S 482-293 Briscoe, J D 4.8 Brittingham. Mrs. T 5+1 Britton. D. N 476-378 Brlity, F 279 Brockman, M. N 529-510 Brody, E. W 460 Brody, Lucille 506 Broecker, A. F 468 Brooks, A 536 Brooks, Henry L, , 436-485-5 14- 193-162-169-230-231 Brooks, L E .413-538-428-390 Brooks, Ralph 360 Brosin, H. W 66 Brotc, Everil 366-481 Brough, 1 498 Broughton. H 490 Brouse. D 463 Brown. Alice L 66-165-166- 169-190-207-331-355-374-491 Brown. Calmer 67 Brown. DA 449-510 Brown. Elsa 494 Brown. Gertrude 66 Brown. Helen H 67-498 Brown. L 54 1 Brown. MB 491 Brown. O. E 456-553 Brown. Ray A 348 Brown. R 514-553 Brown, V 494 Browne. T. A 512 Browning. B. L 515 Bruce. J . M 67-444-5 14 Bruce. L 536 Bruhn. M 546 Brummund. W. H 468 Bruni. E. K 463 Bruns. C 461 Bruns. G. H 67-468 Bruns. Gladys L 67 Bruns. H 67-461 Bryan. G 374 Bryant. H. R 471 Bubbert. W G 343-548 Buchanan. R. S 439 Buchardt, D. E 523 Buck. P. M 449 Buckley. DA 231 Buckley. R . . 336-337-404-497 Buckley, W. M 231 Bucklin. D... 161-166-169-207- 331-403-495-536 Buehler. K. W. 284-286-370-445 Buell. R, A 381-379-434 Buellesbach. R 505 Buerki. F 361 Buerki, Dr. R C 517 Buethe. W 67-441 Buffet. G. M 451-515 Buhlig. B 67- 169-208-631-404-494 Buhlig. R 541 tiull. , .J 211-504 Bull, Jane 344 Bullamore. C. L... .252-363-462 Bulley. E 480 Bumps. V 67-503 Bunue. C. A 468-520 Bundok. M. o 67 Bundscho. G 490 Bundy. W. H 402-439-514 Bunge, H '  90 Bunker, 1 211-336-194 Bunting, C. H 433 Bunting, V. M 67-508-546 Burbank, R. h 448 Burbridge, E. L 231- 230-245-2 8-279-282-462 Burch. HA D -517 Burcn, KG 463 Burdick, H. L 68-460 Burdick. S 331-502 Burdon, ] ' . S • 39 BurgarOt, G •♦15-550 Burgess, i. o 41-.-- 160 Burgess, W •♦5 Burgy, C -.36-503 Burgy, F -.55-550 Burk. J . vj -.t 0 Burke. Cnarles F 68 Burke. M 208 Burke. P 19-. Burke. R 4 0 Burknardt. C. W 451 Burkhart, E.,. .68-169-207-210- 380-383- ' i04-49-i-512 Burkit, Catherine G. . . .68-532 Burkman. Florence L 68 Burleigh. Prof. Cecil 382 Burman. J.J 453 Burmeister, V 537 Burnett, M 537 Burnham, J . P 437 Burnham, M 488 Burnham, R. H 3 19 Burns, R 285 Burns, Dr. R. E 51 Burr. L.J 523 Burroughs, E. A .d5 Burrows, f 481 Burrus, J. D. , .68-164-167-169- 230-23 l-23tv238-269-271-351- 436 Burwell. C 541 Busbym, A.J 523 Bush. Prof. C. R 418 Bushnell, L. F 352-. 50 Buss. D 536 Busse, Margaret D 68 Busse, W 480 Bussey, E 212-504-536 Busyn, H. 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Harry D 72 Cohen. J. S 483 Cohen, L 231 Cohen, M 368 Cohen, E 506 Colbert, R.J 429 Colburn, A. T 463 Colburn, A. P 370-413-538 Colburn. C. E 340-529 Cole, A. R 72-432-479 Cole. E. P 162-352-370-439 Cole. L. B 72 Cole. J. G 380-428 Cole.L. B 425 Cole. L. R 467-517 Cole. M 497 Cole, M 421 Cole, R. S 537 Cole, W. A 72- 231-236-292-471 Colehour, S. P 445 Coleman, H 212-490 Collar, M.J 72-541 Collentine, A. C 550 Collier, B 213-489 Collier, J 489 Collins. C 212-492 Collins, E.E 447-537 Collins, PC 448 Collins, R 521 Colt, R 536 Coltenant. H 460 Comer, Alice R 72 Comer, A 331-495 Comfort, G 480 Comery. George R 72 Commons. J. R 419-428 Compton. R 536 Conahan, A 510 Coney, C 496 Conger, B. A 465 Conine, H 456 Conley. R 441 Connell. A 536 Connell.J 489 Connell, M 502 Connor, C 21 3-492-540 Connor, G. R 231-236-441 Conroy. J 438 Considine. L. J 432 Conveise. J. B 460 Conway, J. P 73-469-577 Conway, K H 389-530 Cook, H, W 415 Cook, L 464 Cook. Marion 343 Cooke. Ann M 73-331-503 Cooke. Mary 503 Cooksv. N 481 Cool. Prof 544 Coombs, E. A 457 Coombs, M 501 Coombs. Walter W. . 73- 388-414-457 Coon. Dr J P 520 Coon. Prof. Leland 382 Cooper. Earl 379 Cooper. Eleanor 336-494 Cooper. G.0 458 Copeiand. R 436 Corbin. M 331 Corgan. M. C 503-540 Corlett. K. E 73-462 Corp. C 460 Corp. Ruth. . . . 73-380-383-412- 428-498 Corrigan. J 54 1 Coryn. F. R 73-453 Costello. MR 447 Costerisan. G. W 412 Costigan. S. M 73 Cotter. S D 73-197-387- 390-391-414 Cotting ham. W. S 474 Coulter. E 492 Coulter. H 270 Counsell. C. H 458 Covert. J. A 435 Covey. J 73-331-504 Covitz. Q 506 Cowles. M 421 Cox. G F 525 Cox. H A 208-512-529-495 Cox. M 208 Coxon. L 501 Cracker. R. D 465 Craig. J 550 Craig. J E 73-455-538 Craig. P. F 515 Grain. M 255-438 Cramer. A.J 550 Cramer. H. 1 373-515 Crane. DM 73-508 Crane. Donald F 449 Crane. F. C 471 Cranefield. Harold 401 Cranefield. Laura E 73-403 Crawford, E 507 Crawford, F . . . 74-208-505-512 Crawford. H. D 74- 346-413-454 Creber. A 488-511 Crewe. C. 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W 541 Teahy, R 162 Teare, Benjamine R.. . 145-346- 370-378-381-382-413-427-428- 463-525 Teckemeyer. 271 Tegtmeyer, C 500 Temple, R 490 Tenbroeck, M. L 429 Tenhopen, E, F 254-258 Tenhunen, T 402 Tenny, A 381-453 Terhune, Mrs P 380 Terry. EM 426-460 Teska. ME 476 Thacher. C. A 145-474 Thacher. G. B 474 Thai. S 509 Thauer, R. C 514 Thayer, N. B 145-196-197- 346-387-390-391-413-414-427 428-481-525 Theile, W. F 255 Theisen. H.J 520 Theisen, M 507 Thelander, T 279-366 Thiede. C.F 459 Thiede, G. S 145-421 Thiel. Roy 345-443 Thiel, C.J 468 Theiman, G 145-503-554 Thier, D 537 Thistlethwaite, Glenn 233 Thoma, H C 167-193-330-334- 336-370-414-443-485 Thomas, BE 217 Thomas, B. H 415 Thomas, C. W 538 Thomas, DA 472 Thomas, Dorothy M 145 Thomas, E 546 Thomas, G. L 394 Thomas, J. E 373-491 Thomas, L 223 Thomas, N 521 Thomas, Norman 379 Thomas. P. M 361-432 Thomas, P 197 Thomas, Ruth E 145 Thomas, W. K. S 452 Thompson, Barbara G.. 146-487 Thompson, C. T 451 Thompson. D. W 476-553 Thompson, E 537 Thompson. 1 546 Thompson, L 490 Thompson, Marian E... 146-489 Thompson, Martha 331 Thomson, Melvin . . . .401-414 Thompson, R 521 Thomsen, A. A 537 Thomsen, Darrel E. . . . 146-454 Thomsen, C. A 456 Thomson. Vernon W.. . 146-456 Thordarson. T 463 Thorugate, Aletha R 146 Thornton, H. R 538 Thorson, A. L 468 Thorson. S. R 414-430-516 Thotak. Rudolph 379 Threlkeld. W 446 Thuerer, E 493 Thurber, W. F 453 Tibbs. J 536 Tibbs. R. B 348-541-514 Tice. Lawrence W 146-447 Tiedeman. R 495 Tiele. ErnaP 146 367 Tiffany, W. A 415 Timbers. J 469 Timbers. M. E 146 Timlin. K 14(v540-541 Timm, E. W 146-453 Timm. H. W 538-552 Timmons. E 537 Tingle, V 488-511 Tjoflat, Oliver E.. . 146-378-520 Tobey, Silas B 146-346-454 Todd, W 438 Toenhart, O. E 475 Tollack, Hugh T 147-463 Torkelson, W.S 463 Tormey, Dr. T. W 517 Torphy. 1 495 Torrison. N. R 514 Tottingham. W. E 428-457 Tough. E 499 Tourville, C 392-470 Towle. F. C 522-544 Towle. M 490 Town. Josephine M 147- 508-533-534 Trachte, E 404 Tracy, G 462 Tradwell, H. H 457 Trafton. Ruth M 145- 214-220-222 Trams. M. A 379 Trarer. Clarence H 147 Traster, AW 459 Trathen, J 505-536 Tratt, F 481 Trauba, H 218 Trauba, Dr N. C 517 Traver. C. H 432 Travis. S. D 433 Trawbridge. L 393 Trayser. C 337-522-544 Treat. A. . 379-381-382-402-538 Trefz, W. A 468 Treichel. W. C 47( 514 Trenary. DC 335-336-453 Treskow, F. G 468 Tressler, W. L 444 Trewartha. G. T 475 Treweek. D.N 517 Trilling. Blanche M 49 Trinka. AM 548 Tripalin. M 480 Trippe. H 497 Tromel. Gertrude, F 147 Trope, Nadine 147-509 Troutman, W. C 430 Troyer, MR 380-528 Truempler, Anna 147 Trumbower, H. R 420-456 Trumbull. E 212 Trumbull. F.M 147 Trumpy, R 537 Troug. E 515 Tubbs, W. C 451 Tuckwood, R. E 529 Tuffley, Anna F 147-508 Tuft, W 520 Tufts. K 555 Tufts, M 212-500-432-540 Tubus, S 451 Tullock, WO 517 Tupper, A. De Esten 147- 388-515 Tupper, L. C 440 Turkeltaub. S. M 484 Turneaure, F. E 38- 413-428-460 Turney. C. E 448 Turney, M 501 Turton, R.J 279-474 Tuttle, E. E 381 Tuttle, H. S 429 Tweed, B 496 Tweet, Noel T 147 Tuttrup, Roger R 348-514 Twohig, M 537 Tyler, R 391-470 U Uhl, A. H 518 blrich, S. E 148 Upham, C. R 472 Urban. R. E 531-537-543 Urben, W 521 Urquhart, 1 344-501 Uteritz. I.C 236-279-452 Utley, F. L 442 Utter, G 341 Utter,H.J 460 Vacheron. D 429 Vail, HE 270 Valk, F. E 346 Vollee, W 148-41 3-427-454 Van Abel, M. C 148 Van Adestine. J. C 459 Vance, H 498-537 Van Cook. E 507 Vanderheide. E. T 453 Vander Kamp, H 517 Vandervest, D 148- 344-499-501 Vandervest, W. L 415 Van Donk. EC 148 Van Doren, B.J 457-517 Van Doren. D K 366-457 VanHagen. J 494 Van Hagen. L. F.. . 102-346-413 Van Horn. H 443 Van Lone, E E 455-550 VanNatta, C. A 379 Van Ostrand, D. C 516 Van Pool. G. M 148- 377-382-478 Van Skike. M 497 Van Vlut. J.G 552 Van Wagenen. J.. . . .445-516 Van Wagner. G 148 Van Wofd. H 455 Varnum. Prof. W 532 Va Salle. R 469 Vaughn C 249 Vaughn. E 148-500-532 Vaughn, 1. L 148 Vaughn. RE 348-415-447 Vaughan. R. W.. . . 148-428-523 Vedder. M 149-53fv380 Vedder, M.J 380-383 Vclie, L. N 340-473 Vennum. E. J 491 VerBryck.J. L 457 Verhulst. L. H 537 Vetter. M 505 Villemonte. D E... 149-403-541 Vilter. E. F 149-553 Vincent. W W 443 Vinovsky. T 149-536 Vinson. E. S 284-437 Vocke. W.J 521 Vogel. D 490 Vogel. ED 451 Vogel, H. E 149-479 Vogel. T.L 479-484 Voight. A. V 149-262 Voight. L. A 149-372 Voight. J. L 149-518 Volckman. E 149-380-499 Volk. G W 478 Volkman. E 95-149 Vollenweider. C. R 149-520 Vollrath. B H 149-390-391 Volz, V 507 Von Bremer G. A 231- 236-240 Von der Linden 258 Von Germeten, E. G 230- 392-414-442 Page 64S Von Maltitz, H 285-446 Von Weise. H 491 Vornholt, D... .202-293-360-382 Vornholt, N 518 Vroom, J 501 Vrooman. CD 434-44, w Wachsmuth, J . H 456 Wade. L 502 Wadedel.J 463 Waffle. R. L 552 Wagner. A 380-528-534 Wagner. D 479-508 Wagner. F 504 Wagner, Prof. G 412 Wagner. G J70-3 74-493 Wagner, P 540 Wagner, Richard K 579 Wagner. R 455 Wagner, Rube 231-236-242-263 Wales, J. G 541 Wahlquist, E 331 Waite, S. E 435 Wake, V. B 471 Wakeman, N 533 Walking, W 465 Walker, J. C 415-455 Walker, Marian . ..212-331-489 Walker, R. E 449 Walker, R. G 454 Walker, V 493 Wallace, C. E 381-498 Wallace. Gorden B 379 Wallace. G. 1 367 Wallace. Rev 202 Wallen. L. 394 Waller, L 496 Wallrich, M. W 488-516 Walper, E 497 Walrath. G. 518 Walsh, J 469-517 Walsh, WW 352-440 Walstead, E. N 523 Walter, MB 493-540 Walters, H. W 263 Walton, J H 452-515 Waltz, J B 370-540 Wamnes, A 504-536 Ward, G. C 346-447 Ward,l. M 360-435 Ward, MacKenzie 347 Ward, P. T 456 Ward, WW 435-469 Warner, D 489-511-512 Warner, J. S 433 Warner, N, S 370-456-553 Warner, V 498-546 Warren, E. S. 166-503-512-530 Warrington, A 465 Wartenbee, C. H 377 Washburn, j:C 381 Waskow, L 540 Waterman, 1 520 Waterman, M. C 480-553 Waters, Elizabeth 32-541 Waters, P. L 453 Waterson. L 502-512 Watkins. S 472-546 Watrous. A 370-528 Watrous, J . 423 Watrous..N 540 Watson, E 520 Watson, J. W 413-427-443 Watson, K. M 428 Watson, L. E 342-543 Watts, Alice 403-533 Watts, E 494 Watts. M. F 381-403-533 Watts, O. P 515 Ways, J 340 Wearing, George 402 Weaver, Prof. A. T 416- 428-430 Weaver, F. M 414-451-514 Weaver. W 413-443 Webb, E 537 Webb, J 455-550 Weber, M 540 Webster, J 370-507-548 Webster, K. F 230- 407-43 5-485 Weed, A 415-459 Weedy, H 208-495 Weeman, M 505-536 Wegner, A. E 191- 412-420-428-524-544 Wegner, E. A 454 Wegner, E. F 457 Wegner, Kenneth W. . . 279-542 Wegner, Willard L 379 Weibrecht, E. I 361-366-436 Weichell. D. A 1 52 Weichers, Barton 231 Weichers, F 469 Weichers, C. K 451-538 Weideman, Elmer C 1 52 Weil,H 509 Weiland, H. G 231 Weiland, H 386 Weinberg, H. H 479 Weinberg, M 479 Weiland, Capt. P. G 414 Weinberg, Harry A 1 52 Weinberg. M. F 406 Weinberg, Harry J 154 Weiner, Louis H. . . 1 52-41 5-550 Weinhagen, F 536 Weinke, E. A 402-475-552 Weinke, Irving 405 Weirick, A 421 Weiss, H.C 463 Weiss, Ruth Alice 1 52-367 Wcisshappel, B. J. H 379 Weissmiller, Lester Lee. .. . 152 Weisy, J.S 418 Weitzel, F. E 537 Welch, A 541 Welch, 1 452 Welch, M. C 231-236-433 Wells. E. W 405 Wells, Marie Alice 152 Wells, R 461 Welter, A 213-492-511 Wendt, Kurt Frank.. . .152-413 Wendt, K. R 457 Wendt, V. 166-347-403-536-541 Werder, B 492 Werner, Archie R 1 52-518 Werner, C 470 Werner, D 429 Werner, Harold W 152 Werner, Nathalie Alice 1 52-495 Wernig, B 519 Wernitznig, E 152-388-460 Werrel, W! A 432 Wessener, M 489 Wesson, C 541 West, Donald K 153 West, R. W 430 Westerlund, G. G 153 Westhofen. C. R 1 53-462 Westphal. H. A 458 Westrich, Charles 153- 193-230-231-442 W etzel, W 249 Weybright, E. S 529 Weyenberg, N 438 Weyher,J 536 Weyker, C 510 Weyker, L 415-550 Wheatley, S. A 192- 193-231-445 Wheeler, D 537 Wheeler, Graydon G 1 53- 387-390-391-525 Wheeler, Ralph V 153- 192-193-480 Wheeler, T.H 153-451 Whereatt.J.C 447 Whipp. E 505-536 Whitaker. D 153-208-489 Whitaker, L.J 412 Whitbeck. R. H 428-475 White. BIythe 153-490 White, do: 360-439 White, H C 428-451-541 White, H. L 439 White, J J 344-440 White, L B 429 White, Roland F 153- 196-197-387-388-414-437 White, W. R 441 Whitenack. T. A 515 Whitman. M 419 Whitney. W. B 515 Whitson, Edward W 153 Whitson. R 403-415-499 Whittingham, Percy P. 153-553 Wible. H. L 465 Wick. S 484 Wick. Kenneth G 379 Wickem. J. D 514 Wickem, J F 1 54-348-5 1 4 Wicks. Helen J 154-501-512 Wideman. P 530 Wiechers. B. T 284-454 Wien. Irving A 379 Wienbergen. H 446 Wienke. Lucile G... 1 54-380-528 Wiepking. C. A 413-454 Wierman. Ervin S..1 54-373-51 5 Wiese. A 500 Wiesner. T . 536 Wiess. Ruth 343 Wigdale. E.J 437 Wigdale. N. B 437 Wilbur. Marie 154 Wilcox. Annette L 154- 500-532 Wilcox. E 373 Wilcox. Ethel M 154-508 Wilcox. W 441 Wild. PS 412 Wilde, Helen D 1 54-536 Wileden, A. F 41 5-429-548 Wilder, F 223-542 Wilke, EarlJ 154- 231-236-243-460 Wilke, Walter 195- 330-400-405-406-471 Wilkens, M 500 Wilkinson. J 492 Wilkinson. Mary 383-530 Will, Ruth 154-217-370-490 Willard, E 521 Willard, H. 208-3 3 5-3 36-3 70-493 Williams. A 429 Williams. C 336-494-521 Williams. C. B 537 Williams, D 480 Williams. DC 516 Williams, David HI 55-472-546 Williams, David Lee 155 Williams, H. F 475-498-536 Williams, 1 481 Williams, J. R 433 Williams, J. W 413-439 Williams, K.J 342-552 Williams, K. K 442 Williams, L 516 Williams, M.E 372-498 Williams, M.H 155-503 Williams, Millard J 155- 370-387-388-454-553 Williams, M. S 346 Williams, R 372 Williamson, M 491 Williamson, R. G 517 Wilmarth, M.. ' . 492 Wilson, Arthur D 379 Wilson, D.F 532 Wilson, Douglas 337 Wilson, E. A 215-221-484 Wilson, G 421-488 Wilson, Harold C 155 Wilson, H. F 445-455 Wilson, J. A 520 Wilson, J. C 440-447 Wilson, John W 167- 175-195-231-236-437 Wilson, O. M 517 Wilson, P. W 445 Wilson. W. N 435 Wilson. W. T 552 Winch. L. S i Winchell. A. N 439 Winchell, Bernice 155-160-165- 166-175-207-210-3 f«-498 Winding, C N441 Wing, M 212-490 Winget, W 462 Winkleman, H 421-428-498 Winkler, V 331 Winnacker, R. A.. . 195-262-450 Winne. O H 458-541 Winnie. Russell G 155-167 175-193-360-361-434-485 Winning. C.H 155 Winsey, R 462 Winsey, Wenonch 155 Winter, E.J 468 Winter, G. R. F 155- 369-468-516 Winter, Josephine M 1 55- 165-166-175-207-214-216-217 412-428-536 Winterbotham, B. E 155 Wirick, Alice M 156 Wirka, H. W. 361-430-456-517 Wirtz. T. A 548 Wise, B 425 Wise, W 156- 207-340-361-417-529 Wishard. Mary E 156 Withey. M. H 413-456-496 Witmer, G 505-537 Wittenberg. M. C 538 Wittich. M. J 537 Wittingham, P. P 472 Wittke, 1 rma J 1 56 Woita. M. P 156-383- 387-546 Wolberg. F 156-383- 387-546 Wofsy, S. A... .156-473-387-546 Woldenberg, A 215-506 Woldenberg, H. M 464 Waldron, M 371 Wolever. J. F 475 Wolf, F 368-462-506 Wolfe, G, G 346 Wolfe, Helen M 156 Wolfson, Vivian F 1 56- 368-374-509 Woilaeger, C 166- 175-195-210-218-492-512 Woilaeger, H 541 Woilaeger, 1 503-536 Woilaeger. L. A 390-525 Woilaeger. Miriam M 1 56- 215-218-498 Wollard. EC 467 Wolter, Sethel A 1 56-537 Wolverton. J 441 Wood. C 541 Wood. E 380-528 Woods. Dr. E 421 Wood, F B 429 Wood, MB 366- 370-378-382-463 Woodford. D W 1 56-442 Woodington. M. W 379 Woods, A 546 Woods, John B. . . . 1 56-472-546 Woodsome. JO 286-440 Woodstock. W. H 378-515 Woodward. L 446 Woodward. R. T 448 Wooster. Eleanor R 156- 371-383-428-528-534 Wormeli, B 377-546 Worst, Betty C 157- 361-494-532 Worthington, K. E 414-523 Worthington, Frank S 157- 192-193-360-470 Worzella, Wallace 378 Woy, F . P 442 Wray, E. L 504 Wray. J. G 440 Wright. G. M 1 57-500 Wright, S 462 Wright, V 537 Wright. W. H 415-447 Wu. C. F 412 Wu. Nien Chi 157 Wuerzberger. F 537 Wunsch. S 391-402 Y Yerxa. E 429 Yodtner. L. L 471 Yohn, W 298 York, DA 157 York, R 480 Young, A 492 Young, C 493-540 Young. D. S 1 57-462 Young. F.J 438-470 Young. K 429 Young, 525 Young, R 504-536 Young, T 449 Young, P A 157-262-435 Yule, G, B 255-373-456 Yundt, E. R 157-472 z Zaban, H 506-512 Zahorik, F. V. . . 1 57-467 Zander. E.J 377-465 Zarbell. D 340-497 Zaumeyer. W.J 415-455 Zdanowicz, C 449 Zeimet, H 404-504-530-534 Zellmer, D 343 Zempel, A. L 157-419-477 Zemurry. D 529 Zens. A. S 1 57-504 Zentner, R 231-273 Zepp, H. M 157-501 Zeran. F 480 Zeratsky. K. M 158 Zermuehlen, W 391 Zeubner, R. A 445 Zengner, OK 1 58-467 Zennert, R 481 Ziebarth, MA 158-510 Ziebcll, A 158- 208-361-404-405-504 Ziebell, E. A 476 Ziegweed, J. A 443 Zieman, CM 158-481-542 Zierer. M 536 Ziese. E. A 453 Ziff. EH 483 Zileznick. C P 158- 404-416-428 Zilsch. H. W 262-445 Zilley. ML 158-331 Zillman, C C 345-445 Zillman, D 525 Zimmerman, A 506 Zimmerman, D 503-536 Zimmerman, H 322 Zimmerman, L. A 1 58- 165-175-193-331-340-503 Zimmerman, R. R 548-550 Zinn, C 213-216-536 Zinn, R. E. . .158-378-379-382- 387-413-428-515-552-553 Zodtner. L. L 1 58-292-5 1 5 Zoerh, F. C 515 Zola, J. C 231-248-249-251- 262-263-515 Zola. S P 1 58-249-263-387-388 Zubatsky. D.J 483 Zuscha. C 192 Zweifel. A.J 453 Zweiger. S 158-476 Zwolanek. H 537 Page 649 When in the Dark Look or Why Was the Alpha Delt Boathouse Editor ' s foreword. This is a play, and all of the writing is what the people said. We can ' t find out who wrote it. You can guess if you want, but we tried that too. This is a college play. The setting is by the student senate and the art work on the bicusped by Irv Tressler. Act the First Scene the First (hcw ' d you guess?) (Ia)cations : the first scene occurs down in a big building on the square. The building is the tele- phone exchange of Madison, which is the city where the college is located which we spoke of before and are speaking of now. In this tele- phone building are rows upon rows, three in all, of big boxes with rubber hoses stuck in them. Before these boxes sit girls who place the hoses here and there according to the numbers you don ' t ask for.) Scene the Second (Now get this straight, this is a telephone office where work telephone girls. The first scene of this play is in the telephone ofifice. Its darn serious I tell yuh.) Rachel: Number please! Voice on Phone : Lincoln 1613 Rachel: Pardon me. V. O. P. : I know he s dead Rachel: I ' m trying to complete your call. Scene the Third (Now scene two was just to give you the idea of a telephone office. Here goes the play. In the middle of one of these rows of boxes sit two young girls Flo and Zoe, American girls. One is dressed in red and the other in red, the one next to them is in dutch, she has her gum in her hair. No, Warren Walsh is not hiding behind this row of boxes to keep from the photographers; in fact, he ' s not behind any row of boxes, who asked that any way.) Flo: Well, Zoe, what ' s on to-night? Zoe: Well, Flo, not knowing I can ' t say? (Cbck strikes thirteen till seven.) Flo: We ' re off at seven to-night and I craves excitement, baby. Zoe: So do I, let ' s think. (At this point both of the girls sit and think. The Y. M. C. A. calls the fire department but doesn ' t get them. The French house, despite numerous Qu ' est-ce vous voulezs and Sapristis fail to complete a call. See the girls are thinking. Its darn serious. All right now go on with the play.) Flo: I have it! End of scene three and start of scene four (Apparently Flo ' s having it had something to do with the acts, we couldn ' t figger it out.) Zoe: What? (The girls engage in whispers during which whispers the Y. M. C. A. burns down on account of the phone service.) Zoe: That ' s ducky! (See she picked that up on the corner of Carroll and Langdon. No allusion to a sorority house, of course.) The grandfather ' s clock yawns seven exactly and the girls take off their ear phones and say in unison Selah Brechects. I don ' t know why; we couldn ' t figger it out. Scene Five (girls have repaired to the cloak room.) Flo: You call; I ' ll look up the number. Zoe: All right baby. These boys are cute. (A giraffe appears eating a straw hat but the girls pay no attention ; he belongs to the manager ' s little boy, the boy ' s name is Clearence, but who cares? We couldn ' t figger it out.) .Flo: Badger 186! (Now the girl is trying to get Badger 186 on the phone, see? We couldn ' t figger out whose number that was. It ain ' t the infirmary, nor the A. O. Pi house, not the general hospital. Well the girls can ' t get connected until a quarter till eight and so the play goes on.) Voice on Wire: Hello (funny thing for him to say.) Flo: Is this Elmer? V. O. W.: Probably. Elmer who Flo: Elmer Frytuck, or if he ain ' t there call Nelson or Clark. V. O. W.: I ' ll call for them, (finis of scene six) Beginning of scene seven (Now gentile readers, if you can ' t understand that the girl is calling somebody on the phone, you had better start over again and read the red type more carefully. The phone the girl is using is a black one, strange to say and the girl is speak- ing English. On with the presentation, Emery.) Lapse of short time while V. O. W. shouts for Frytuck, Nelson and Clark. Page 650 V. O. W. : No they ain ' t in. They are down at the Orph. Flo: Well, this is Flo speaking. I ' ll meet you and anybody else you can sober up at the T. A. D. P. B. H. at 8 thirty. O.K.? V. O. W. : Well (stuttering) yes (hesitantly) at (haltingly) OK. (Now V. O. W. can ' t figger out anything but he answers phones (the secret is out, he ' s a Frosh) at B. 1 86 so he is in for anything. F ' lo hangs up, because she is thru. The date is made (maybe that ' s telling you too much), and Flo and Zoe leave for T. A. D. P. B. H. The V. O. W. staggers out of the phone booth and falls over a prostrate fraternity brother (another secret is out) and himself lies on the floor swooming.) Act two Things are going lovely now. We had the V. O. W. in a swoom, or why not be real candid and say we had the Alpha Tau Omega in a swoom which is what happens, well the A. T. O. (contraction for Alpha Tau Omega) was swoomed by us because we didn ' t know what else to do with him while the girls are going to T. A. D. P. B. H. Any way he can ' t take the name of the Press house in vain while in such an inebriated state. Now mean- while, the girls are on their way. But low, they stop at Shorty ' s Dugout for a couple of Cows and Horses Gone Wrong Avec, which according to Burt ' s Shorty Dugout — English dictionary means two hamburgers with. The goils eat and to go Langdon street where they throw rocks at the Theta Delt house. At Henry street they render a few psalms for a yet warm cadaver lieing in the guttra. He was traveling secretary for the Travelers Protective Association and went insane looking for a knob to fit Kane, Pennsylvania. Well now you should have had time to test the legitimacy of this playlet by determining from the phone book whether Badger 186 fits the A. T. O. house or is merely fictuous. So the play will go on, dammitts-darn serious.) Scene one {We lost the manuscript, yes when the ofifice boy canoe tipped over. The girl was saved.) Scene two (Same as scene one, but we found it again under the Pi K A pier sealed in a wheat shock. So here goes on with the presentation. Florence. See Florence has replaced Emery as our amenuensis.) Flo: Do you think he will have blue eyes? Zoe: Did he talk like it? (The girls are excited.) Flo: Turning down Henry street toward the lake.) He must be a Frosh. He didn ' t seem to know my voice. Page 65; Zoe: Turning down Henry street toward the lake. See they are going to gether) and where? to T. A. D. P. B. H.) Flo: Shhhhhhhh! Zoe: Do you know where Lake Erie is? Floe: Shhhhhhhh! Zoe: But 1 kept my handscleansincechildhood. Flo: SHHHHHHHH (Flo gets mad. Zoe is off her nut. They get to the end of Henry street. Flo gets madder and Zoe goes farther off her nut. Things are lovely by now. The V. O. W. has gone to the trysting place. The Alpha Delta Phi Boat House, to wait. Ahh the secret is really out. The girls don ' t go into the boat house but stand on the outside and make a noise like a wampy-oolah, but sweeter. The Frosh hears and answers in the same code. He must be a second semester Frosh.) Frosh, which was formerly the V. O. W. : My name ' s Smith. (Now if you can figger out who the real Frosh is from that hint you ' ve got us because we couldn ' t find out his real name in the first place.) Floe: I ' m Floe and she ' s Zoe (poetry). Now don ' t think we are too forward hut you must understand that we know quite a few of you brothers and since they are not home you will do. (Now is Daddy Foster was in hip boots lectur- ing about this play, no he wouldn ' t have to be in hip boots, he would probably say that the climax had been reached. Something has got to happen if the play is to go on and be a success, and undoubtedly the play will be a success so some- thing will probably happen. But don ' t get anxious and the master mind will clear everything up just as he did after the Phi Mu stayed out all night. The Alpha Delt boat house is like the house it goes with, about to fall to pieces. The Madison, the town the college is in, building commish has condemned it as being unsafe and the Loyal League for Protection of telephone girls ought to do the same thing. The lake is near by and the sky directly above. Chris Zillman is back on Henry street throwing his hat in a ring. Now this seems unnecessary but I want you to get the feel- ing and setting so you will understand what comes next. Don ' t forget that the climax is now attained and something has got to happen. Well it begins to snow and then it quits. In the distance cries of pajama parade are heard but it appears in the mornin g papers the parade could be seen only thru a window in Grady ' s. It quits snowing. Oh you say it quit before, well we ' ll change it. It starts snowing. Get ready, folks here goes.) Flow: Yes we are acquainted with some of the boys and I know they would sanction anything that we do. Now Mr. Smith the facts are these: {.Continued on fxige 6S2) (Continued rom f age 6 1) You live in a nice red brick house which leaks only on one side. You have a chair, bed all the comforts in the world. When you get to be an upperclassman you will have the privilege of using the back steps during parties. Others are not so fortunate. Down at the telephone office we have a lounging room and that room, is the only joy. Zoe: Pleasure Floe. Floe: It our only something or other, Mr. Smith. (Aside to Zoe) Quick wake Mr. Smith up. Well in this lounging room there is hardly any- thing; so a few of us girls got together after lunch and thought it would be a bully idea if one of your fratbros. could be the first contributor to our newly created fund to buy gold fish and new arches for our lounge room. Mr. Smith will you come thru? Think of yourself. Frosh: NO! End of act two Act three immediately follows (You see just as we told yuh. Something hap- pened. Well after such a disappointment, the girls leave the Frosh in T. A. D. P. B. H., oh that ' s right we told you what those letters meant, well the Frosh is left in the Alpha Delt boat house then the girls go back to town. On their way they take it again seriously to throw rocks at the T. Delt house which doesn ' t make any difference to yo u or to us and shouldn ' t to the T. Delts in view of the evidence that others have tried to bomb it.) Zoe: The cheap skate!!! Flo: TheA. T. O. Scene two Frosh: I ' ll be darned. (This shows you how mad he was. He walks up thru the snow, we haven ' t forgotten that the snow is snowing to the house and goes in. Strange thing. He undresses and hops into his night shirt and pants. He goes to bathroom and chases the ducks out of the wash bowl. He washes his face, for no reason other than that he is in the bathroom. He sneezes and contemplates.) Frosh : You know Elmer (Elmer has come home from the Orph. I ' ve lost all my power over wimmem. Act tour Frosh goes to bed. Act five Frosh goes to sleep. Finis. If you ' ve liked our play tell us; if not tell the A. T. O. ' s, it ' s their fault. Campus Idiocies The Student Cars Student cars are a cross between an automobile and a junk heap, and are often, strange as it may seem, seen about college towns. The reason that they are called student cars is because the term student is loosely applied this year and does not necessarily mean one who studies. A student car can hold seventeen ordinary people, and, asamatter of fact, usually does. One of the strange idiocyn- crasies of student cars is that they suffer from engine and carburetor trouble. This happens in lonely spots, and the theory has been formed hat the engine craves company and just pinest away and dies when it reaches anything that seems like solitude. An inevitable rule about student cars is that everyone must pile in the front seat. Four or five people will be cramped in the narrow confines of the front of a seven-passenger, while the rear is entirely denuded of even one ordinary person. Not even Scotty Goodnight has ever been seen riding in the back seat of a student car. You give the answer, we can ' t figger it out. Page 652 Rush (As the man who wrote the French comp books would do it.) 1. Do you like the meals they serve in our fraternity ? 2. I like the soup, the salad, and the coffee which they serve here, but the chicken and the artichokes I do not like. 3. Observe, if you please, the water tumblers out of which you are drinking; they were pre- sented to our little club by a prosperous alumnus who is now in charge of fraternity accounts here. 4. I admire the glasses and also the silverware. 5. Would you care tosmoke (fumir) acigarette? 6. No, thank you, but I will smoke (Fumir) a cigar if you have one. 7. Let us enter the living room where many of my friends are already seated about the fireplace. 8. I shall be very glad to enter the living room with you. Little Lessons for Lester No, Lester, that is not a Polar bear coming down the street ; it is a fraternity man in his very own raccoonskin. A fraternity man, Lester, is a very interesting object. He is a person who must wear exactly what everybody else does, and in exactly the same way that everybody else wears it. If ties are going to be striped, he will wear striped ties; and if brown suits are not to be worn, he will never be seen wearing one. What would hap- pen to the fraternity man if everyone decided not to wear pantaloons? Oh, Lester, don ' t be silly. Still, the experiment would be an interesting one. No, Lester, that is not a hunk of coal the fra- ternity man has stuck in his mouth. That is his pipe. Every fraternity man must have a pipe, Lester, they are wearing them this season. It gives them an appearance of nonchalance which hides the fear that they are constantly entertaining. The fear they are constantly entertaining, Lester, is that they do not look exactly like every- body else. What do the fraternity men talk about What the fraternity men talk about, Lester, is mainly the other fraternity men, although they sometimes branch off into talks on sorority girls, necking, and liquor. Some day, Lester, a fraternity man will make a remark not on those three subjects. Then the sky will come down and play marbles with the Kappa chapter. And that, you will admit, would be a very silly thing for the sky to do. Why are you taking off your garters Lester? You want to be a fraternity man? Oh, Lester, don ' t take them off right here in public! Stop, Lester, STOP. ing 9. The cups which are now upon the mantle- piece (fumir) were won by members of our fra- ternity in athletic competitions of many sorts. 1 0. How many they are and how pretty is each one! 1 1 . How enjoyable it must be to belong to a fraternity such as is this one. 12. Yes indeed, we have much fun (fumir). 13. We eat and sleep together and at times we become drunken and go to the restaurant of Mr. Lawrence for the purpose of making much noise. 14. Would you care to take a button? 15. No, thank you, I will not take a button. 16. I shall go to other fraternity houses where a so .they will feed me and tell me nice things a ' bout myself. 17. Goodbye, I am very pleased to have had the opportunity of meeting you. 18. Goodbye also and I sincerely hope that I shall soon see (fumir) you again. Little Lessons for Lester No, Lester, that is not a riot. If the people were dressed in robes and carrying spears, it would be Grecian tragedy and be art, and if they were dressed in little of anything and were carry- ing swaggersticks it would be a musical comedy and be vulgar, but as they are just dressed in the extraordinary things that college people usually wear, it is a Lathrop dance and strictly proper, as it is always chaperoned. Of course there are a good many couples on the floor, Lester; it is a thing to be expected. It is one of these restricted dances, restricted to the people who will buy tickets. Yes, yes, people actually pay to get in and dance on two square feet of floor between a pillar and a Union Board member who got in on a pass. You can tell that they are college people because they never clap between dances and never apolo- gize when they bump into anyone. A college man, Lester, will apologize on sight, he will apologize when he opens a door for you, or when you take his best girl out for a walk, or when you touch him for two bucks, but when he gets on the dance floor he becomes of his life a thing apart and not all the king ' s horses, or F. Louise, or Glenny Frank could wring a Pardon me out of him. And as for clapping between dances, it just isn ' t done, no college man would think of it. Lester, what are you saying? You heard a co-ed say it? Shame, Lester, shame. Come home, we will wash out your mouth with soap and water. Page 653 PRINTED BY CANTWELL PRINTING COMPANY MADISON. WISCONSIN .;u-i M mMm : .•■•••• ' '  T ' i i «i !)w i iw   j i  «i w f i  I ] i i i i i  i WW  m vv itmi tmritim im m ' mimmmitmfmmf i, t:;! ' ' , ■' ?.. ' :■;
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