Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 140

 

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collectionPage 7, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collectionPage 11, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection
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Page 14, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collectionPage 15, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection
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Page 8, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collectionPage 9, 1937 Edition, Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1937 volume:

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' ' -',X.n.-- -' U a 1 v W 1 mg M, M AM Nw ' 5 1' J CR-RVVFORDSVILL-E, INDIFINH 747 ww, a,QQm1fAw937 'f W - -- V Q-X V V Q ' fx V' , ' . 3 !iVVx2iV V373 K N ss V V ar V V V iff: Q X V 2 ll lf V , , l' ,Vg W . ' V , : V ., W - 1 . , V V R . V ' V -4 -13251 . i 5 ' f T1 ' . V V I if . 14 ,Q . ,Y .V ' f .' , Q Q21 , ,1 V K V A .V ,arf 1' 'Z' ff' , , L, J. V V C V LVV, in 1- . V , V, VV. 6 .1 , ., V- .V ,. 4 4 ,Avy Qvi V 1 A ' ' iifagiff - . ul N Nw wmg Sak Vf V fx Vw Q u .B 'V A V mf! A ' f 25 W. ,,-: Vu , V V , 3,1 ' .. L4- ,f m V ' l , Y L V, lsixgl ,V ' V ' V Q 'VV Ei Jim g V L? V V ' T - s is? u W V Ame' . V 71? WP 'V'- L ' ' 'F ,., 544- . V V ,V iglsgi- g 4 V ? ' V Qi- -'r-.gf-V5 9 ,- ' V ., VN Us ' 1 Vw-N w P . ' ' ' Q Q ll - 75, 'Lg' ' n K , V A I ? ' W , ' . Q, 1 'Z ' 5 XYYQ ' V Q V' :g, 5121 - V V 5 Q i V if . 4 rx. Alf, s -4- .VV -- 1 1 sv: , V ,.,.,..i. V' ' -1 1V ,X ,, .,,. Q.,- - '--7 . , X. K. in V. 1 V . . 'YYW F .ng W V :eV VV': ,V Agn . , ' fwfgfz f Qig' V A , V ' V- A V VV iffk Q ' . f U :V ' :--1 V M . v 1 , N Published by s I , . if ' ' 1' M' Wm. Rasmussen ,uxzssfzss wsf.,f JJ V lf ZW! my if Q ' 1 X X Im ? M A QE , I -.,. .M t X x Lf 7 2 Y 6 Mfg V A I wx ...J 'QW wb . Ab . My Mui wgik if six f Z1 Wm ,gi 1 aw? PHULUGUE We of the Staff present to you this 1937 edi- tion of the Wabash with mingled emotions- anticipation. apology. pride. and relief. We are proud of the finished product, and only hope that you will like it as well as we do. We apologize for a few obvious defi- ciencies. It is a relief to be finished. The production of a year-book is no small job. and it is a con- stant worry: but it's a lot of fun in the long run. Well can we remember spending an entire Saturday afternoon of propping up fraternity badges and manipulating shadows for the ORGANIZATIONS division page photograph. We haven't forgotten the glue we got all over our hands, our clothes, and even the photo- graphs themselves. when we mounted for page three . . . nor long nights spent around the stove in the back of Hirsh's studio. ponder- ing over deep problems of proportion. reduc- tion, and contrast. And we'll never forget the task of getting all of the organizations and all of the individuals before the camera for their shots. In the course of the job we have learned photography. engraving. printing. sales- resistance. and how to write daily notes to J ' fi? .I 'sl , pl. I 5' by fl? 4 , jr! 'N KS Q-'Y ' rj X .l XX Vx T n ' 'x A x , f fl 9 Y? A I Q ff Xu X I4l PRULUGUE the Dean. In fact. we have gained the better half of a good. liberal education. Perhaps we should begin here and distrib- ute a few thanks which are due. In the first place. we want to thank all the gang at Hirshburg's, without which there would be no 1937 Wabash. Hirsh himself is responsible for most of the photography. and did a swell job. Kate Reynolds spent hours and hours overtime. arranging and identify- ing people and pictures and giving us the benefit of her eight years on the Wabash Staff. Skip and Iohn, too, helped us in every way and got us out of many a iam. We want to thank Ioe Todd and Noble Rop- key, of the Indianapolis Engraving Company. for all of their help. And we are deeply appreciative of the as- sistance and cooperation given us by Tom McConnell, of The Benton Review Shop, on the printing angle. . Having taken this opportunity of giving a bit of credit to tho-se who helped us, we have just one more thing to say-we hope you like it! THE STAFF ? 5 Q I U , , I Tl ,a ,I T 3 lb Q 'W V f if LX If ff W I' IX if 'V x fx -: iff 3 :Q l I A X X n 1 X Zi u J lffesfagsl 5 r l Public Llbrary 57-1118 y Gs-avrfordsville Ind f Jr? .H V, x-29 ,pr ,A -'tiny fy :' 1 Yr'--r, f lx . V1 KE .J .lx X' ff' W1 N 1 I 2x xx ff aw ,-qv N, 1, Q X 'f' ,f ,Aylxfx X f ' g Ng-f fx, 3 X X ,Q 2 X' ' Ik 1' x ,wxfwx f fn' V I X , M . ,, . + ! 4 ff , Q41 VL' XI , N, - Q -1523 Li.. ,A L N MN ,Q V N KM 7 ., ff, ,fy X M-.41 W' ' -J ffl I J!! fx! X X N, X N f . X- X v Lv L, f x pw gf vm :K , -- ,- V -. ,- '-Za 43 Q x ' -A - 1 -Q1 'jf , , 1 X ,1 . .' -4 fl K X ,'!- 'F ' . X 1 27,1 vlrxk .f--'g f ' Qxxff KJ Q ' ' 5 f ff' x Ney f 'fy' X KK' iff X-QNX J 4 , 1, - f , - , 1 ,, 'fi . N -'- , , ff 1 , 1 , 7, 1 I f x ,f I, K4 1. QV. f,,,f 1. .x V. e '- v P X f 1 W V Q V X i. X J Iv nf cg V, . Y' .fg -, , ,EJ ,f ' J , 1 -Jfx xx x X If t Y g NAiFfX t X :I ffl xxx , f' 1 1' 4 fx N. 1 Q. f- un r f N 'f' 1 Y ,L 5 X I f' ff Tm if X- 3 AX ' ' , ' 4 ' f I - ,! ' 'J 2 X R X , - 5 VAX 1 X X fy X , '4 3 X ' ' , w . .f ' XA Q ' I 5 I fi ' X Y x ' N ' 1 . M 'Q ff' ff I I X H ' ' 1 ' XY! , f Ky. 'L XXX ff K LX --. - X1 1 1, j , -1' k W N ' uf V- lg v f X S. -- j-X1 1 ,Q ' ,I lx. 1,71 .1 Qyfx .7 x-1 ,-- jeu X-, X 1-ll 5 Y f 1 '4 x' 'ri Ei? i ' YN N . W , A -- -..J ii u FX-, V' A-1 gg: , V mn.. .. x' ll l 1 ,--' 2--- - Zi ' ' Tv .,..:' fd? 'F'- N this, the first division of the book, we have included portraits of the officers of the Col- lege and of the professors, those of the members of the Senior Class Clabelled, not satirically, WISEMEND, and the other class groups. Beneath the Iuniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen will be found short essays supposedly typifying the classes-these essays being from the pen of one of the more imaginative members of the Staff. No offense is intended. Opposite this page Professor Hutsinpillar may be seen, explaining some singular phase of English Literature. C ULL X X K A Q 0, ,gg nl' , ' ' 'I ,ws Q' 'ffm M f Jyx 1 . ww X X Mx WZWM mwf- 35 X2 D, ff ,ff ZW QQ!! j x4 -ww 'N- 9 F F22 ff: X K X ,N -: fb mvwbpx X N if Y lxfjj Q j .LEEZZS 9 1 f x f , Q1 QQ 5 ar I W Q' f W in- N Y Q X ff , 1 I .V I . ' 3 X X Q f J 34 Yfxlf N M x J F X Ln AD, PRESIDENT LoU1s BERTRAM HOPKINS College pres.: b. Hopkinton, N. H., Aug. 11, 1881: s. Adoniram Iudson and Mary CMartinD H.: grad., Coburn Clas- sical Inst.. 1904: Dartmouth, 1904-06, M.A., 1925: DePauw U., L.L., 1930, Marietta Coll., 1930: Hanover Coll. Litt.D., 1932: Rose Polytechnic Inst., Sc.D., 1933: rn. Nora Lander, 1907: children-Florence Martin. Margaret Lander. Asst. to Gen. Mgr. ot General Electric Co., 1909-17: Classification oi Personnel, U. S. Army, 1917-18: lec- turer, Wharton School oi Finance and Commerce of the U. ot Penn. and Tuck School of Admin. and Finance of Dartmouth College, 1919-21: dir. of personnel, Northwestern U., 1922-26: Pres. of Wabash Coll. since 1926. Mem. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Person- nel Research Federation, Pi Gamma Mu. Clubs: University, Ouiatenon. LTRA TIEU 449, Z., , ., W . Y f 1 ' 1 Ig , '31 xx 9 x 12 .,.- V ' ' K A 'ff i 464 SA' ,I yi ftwfl E jj lil el F . N51 it f s Q ,Q 5 Q me li if X gg j ,,.,, , X 6... tm 3-. Cfi.-its dj! tililfs if 11 All TR. T10 , Q f- 3' r I 7 ,, K. KATE-' If .iirwlfifjf X if 1 I Ipit? Q P 135 we-2 it 1 N I K I121 DEAN GEORGE VALENTINE KENDALL Milligan Professor of English: b. Kirk- wood, Mo.. Feb. 14, 1891: s. George Iohnson and Eunice CColeD K.: Brown U., A.B.. 1912: U. Wisconsin, I-LM.: m. Yvonne Geyer, 1919: Instr. in English, Columbia U., 1915-1917. 1919-20: 2nd Lt. Field Artillery, U. S. Army, 1917- 1919: At Wabash since 1920: Dean since 1923: Mem. Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa: Clubs: Ouiatenon, Crawfords- ville Dramatic, Independent. Presby- terian. Interest in teaching field: poetry. drama. Hobby: trees, plays. ,t 1, , 9 ,f, 'lgii Kip x g J 1 DMI TR T10 REGISTRAR FREDERICK CARL DOMROESE Professor of German: b. Stolp, Ger- many, Feb. 29, 1880: s. Charles R. and Emilie D.: Butler U., I-LB., 1906: U. of i h AM 1915 m Dorothea Pintzke M c ., . ., : . , children-Ewald and Charlotte: Taught in Indianapolis schools, 1906- 16. Oberlin College, 1916-19: Mem. Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Beta Kappa, Ouia- tenon Club, Symphony Orchestra. Presbyn. Independent. Interest: com- parative language and question- naires. At Wabash since 1919. Spon- sor, Der Deutsche Verein. Hobbies: music, painting, and stamp collecting. Sec. of Indiana Coll. Teachers of Ger- man. P R as 'I R 'L fr to R Q I mv- sf R' 1 .4-0 1. R- i . r Jsflrt' .. - ' W Q X V483 X K A I ' -' in Yi' f F676 gs lm F N 1 J ,F 1 1 A A? rl 1 Q lol ' I ll - I p 1 I J R K x 'X ' if JL , 5.9 r-'25 it lwgi- j I , QYQE 13 ,VP -I 2 s.. 1. :, ACULT E. G. STANLEY BAKER Assistant Professor of Zoology: b. Peotone, Illinois, Iune 7, 1909: s. Walter S. and Hallie fGatesl Baker: DePauw University, A.B., 1931: graduate work at U. of Chicago: three summers at Marine Biological Laboratories: held Rector Scholarship and Rector Fellowship: m. Iulia Chapman: previously employed as factory manager H. I. Heinz Co.: Mem. A. A. A. S.. Indiana Academy Science, Alpha Pi. Gamma Phi. Club: Ouiatenon: Republican: Presbyterian. Interest: Embryology and Physiology. At Wabash since 1932. Hobby: Boy Scout work. ALBERT REIFF BECHTEL Rose Professor of Botany: b. Pennsylvania, March 21, 1882: s. Iohn 1. and Martha Reiff Bechtel: University of Pennsylvania, A.B.: Cornell University, Ph.D.: m. Lenore M. Bartow: children-Alberta, Bartow, and Iohn. Prev- iously employed at Pennsylvania State College and Cor- nell University. Clubs: Alpha Pi: Gamma Phi. Interest: fungi. Hobby: field trips. Presbyterian: Independent. At Wabash since 1920. Mem. Botanical Society of America. Indiana Academy of Science, Mycological Society of America. W. NORWOOD BRIGANCE Professor of Speech: b. Olive Branch, Miss., Nov. 17, 1896: s. Edgar and Rebecca Uoynerl Brigance: U. of South Dakota, A.B., 1916: U. of Nebraska, A.M., 1920: U. of Iowa. Ph.D., 1930: m. lane Martin, 1922: children-Shirley lane. High School Teacher in South Dakota, Nebraska, Illinois, 1916-22: U. S. Army 1917-19, Lt. 32nd Division, A. E. F. Mem. American Association University Professors, Na- tional Association Teachers of Speech, Lambda Chi Alpha, Tau Kappa Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa: Democrat: Methodist. Hobbies: fishing, golf, collecting rare books in Speech. Author: Classified Speech Models, The Spoken Word. Ieremiah Black. Clubs: Kiwanis, Country. At Wabash since 1922: at University of Hawaii on leave of absence. ' ROBERT WALLACE BRUCE Associate Professor of Psychology: b. Crown Point, Ind., April 7, 1900: U. S. Marines during the war. Wabash Coll. A.B., 1922: Chicago U., A.M., 1924: Ph.D., 1929: m. Louise Moon: children-one girl. Mem. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Kappa, American Psychological Association, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Xi. At Wabash since 1922. Hobby: hiking. , f in ettt so fr, ,refs 9 Cl A 1, B f 1, sax ft fin it it ff w r J A r K if V1 QQLW: 1 SQ- L,- 1: n- A fxfglxlilf-ff-: j X at W : I ll wi E f I x ' , X ,fx p hu 5 I , g gif X Sup lib! Q it is My ll J Uxwqlfxb E141 .FAUULT GEORGE ERNEST CARSCALLEN Associate Professor of Mathematics: b. Frankfort, Indi- ana, August 29, 1881: s. Robert D. and Mary Elizabeth Carscallen: Wabash College, A.B., 1906: U. oi Illinois, A.M.: m. Emma Mills, one child: Taught at Shaker Heights High School, U. of Illinois, Hiram Coll. Club: Ouiatenon. Mem. Mathematics Association oi America: Independent: Presbyterian. Interest: Geometry. At Wa- bash since 1921. Hobby: playing the fiddle. ROBERT WATT FULTON Instructor in Botany: b. Sistersville, W. Va., Ianuary 29. 1914: s. Lawrence W. and Laura CWattJ Fulton: Wabash, A.B., 1935: Mem. Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa. Alpha Pi: Republican. Interest: micology. At Wabash since 1935. Hobbies: fishing, hunting. Presbyterian. Home: Oconto, Wisconsin. O EDWIN ST. CLAIR GANTZ Instructor in Chemistry: b. Hynes, Iowa, March 17, 1910: s. E. S. Gantz. B.A., M.S., Ph.D., State U. of Iowa: previ- ously employed at State U. of Iowa, and Midwest Can- ning Corporation, Rochelle, Ill., as chemist. Mem. Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Phi Omega, Sigma Xi. American Chemistry Society: Republican: Church of Christ. Inter- est: analytical chemistry, application of X-rays. At ,Wa- bash since 1935. Hobby: stamp collecting. Clubs: Craw- iordsville Dramatic and Music Clubs. O ALONZO ERWIN GOLDSBERRY Instructor in History: b. Iamestown, Ind., March 15, 1900: s. Francis Marion and Maude Goldsberry: Wabash Coll. A.B., 1924: Butler U.. A.M., 1929: m. Marjorie Grenard: children-Iohn, Tom. Previously employed as teacher and coach at Shortridge High School, Indianapolis. Mem. Kappa Phi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sphinx Club, Herira Club, Men's Association: Republican: Bap- tist. At Wabash since 1931. Hobbies: bridge, billiards and golf. , asf ,My if H J . xg? 7' , Q W ' 44 L 5- I . M, t, Q? 1 4 , v, t 3 J' , ,L ,W . H J ,. ,W 3 G 1- .12 N Wg' affvgil 72 as ith? W Q G3 , A I , X. fgiy A ffliigvx ffilfiflf I AS-l ll, lflf--Q - i .N I 'Al Xaixllv-l , hah ei, lt gtk , . fy , f tw Xxx :fl-1 my gl li J if Q all Y-if ,LN is J 151 WS' . A vw ff 1: W- if , I l ik ttf it . ts- t at-Qizwxmn , - ' 'Sip 'Lx ' if fl' 5 vt ,391 W -X ' I 'W' -usa. N .. , , A 2 N, f A 'f ww f. 1' ULT THEODORE GREGORY GRONERT Professor of History: b. Iuly 28. 1887: Wisconsin U.. A.B.. A.M.. Ph.D.: m. Hazel Dessery: previously principal at Beaver Dam. Wisconsin. High School: taught and coached basketball at Centre Coll.. State Coll. for Wom- en. Texas. Arkansas U.: Personnel Adjutant in U. S. Army. Mem. Phi Eta. American Historical Association. Academy of Political Science. Indiana Historical Asso- ciation. Association of University Professors. Interest: diplomacy. Presbyterian. At Wabash since 1924. Hobbies: hiking. writing, gardening. LLOYD BRELSFORD HOWELL Professor of Chemistry: b. Piqua. Ohio. August 28. 1887: s. G. L. Howell: Wabash Coll. A.B.. 1909: U. of Illinois. M.S.. Ph.D.. 1919: m. A. lone Todd. 1909: four children. Previously employed as high school teacher and coach in Indiana. Ohio, and Illinois: graduate and research work at Ohio State U. and U. of Illinois. and instructor at U. of Illinois and Rice Institute. Mem. Lambda Chi Alpha. Sigma Xi. Phi Lambda Upsilon. American Chemistry Society, Indiana Academy ol Science. A.A.A.S.. Ouia- tenon Club. Interest: Organic Analysis. Physical Or- ganic Chemistry. At Wabash in 1912-13 and since 1924. Hobbies: research. fishing. gardening. Republican. Pres- byterian. O GEORGE WILLIAM HORTON Peck-Williams Professor of Physics: b.Chillicothe.1llinois. May 11. 1896: s. Rev. and Mrs. Edward R. Horton: Illinois Wesleyan. B.S.. Wisconsin U.. M.S.: m. Leah Burnsted: children--George William. Ir.. Edward Robert. Instructor Physics. Northwestern U. 1919-1921: Assistant in Physics. University of Wisconsin. 1921-24. Mem. of Tau Kappa Epsilon. Gamma Alpha. Sigma Xi. American Physical Society. American Association of Physics Teachers. Indi- ana Academy of Science: Republican: Presbyterian. Clubs: Ouiatenon. Dramatic, Music Club. Interest: sound. At Wabash since 1924. Hobbies: stamps. choral music. puzzles. NEIL CHARLES HUTSINPILLAR Associate Professor of English: b. Ironton. Ohio. February 20. 1886: s. Charles A. Hutsinpillar: Ohio State U.. A.B.. U. of Chicago. A.M. Previously employed as a chemist in Ivorydale. Ohio: taught at Culver Military Academy and Huron College. Mem. Phi Kappa Alpha. Ouiatenon Club. Interest: drama. At Wabash since 1920. Presby- terian. Independent. f 'J , .fi Q., , , K9 B 5- lr FIM? if x . 57' IJ! 41' A r 1 I l Tl' fig lx K gil X'-XB ,W Q X F X 1 K ! X ww' .4 it .1 - me Stir-Es L16 F C OBED SIMON IOHNSON Professor of Religion and Philosophy: b. Harcourt, Iowa. May 5, 1881: s. Iohn P. and Ioanna D. Iohnson: Oberlin Coll. A.B.. 1909: U. of California, Ph.D., 1925: m. Vida Lowery: children-Iames W., Ioanna D.: Chaplain Wa- bash College. Previously with missionary service, Can- ton, China: Instructor at Mills Coll.. Stanford. O., U. of California. Mem. Delta Sigma Rho, American Oriental Society. Royal Asiatic Society. At Wabash since 1929. Author: A Study of Chinese Alchemy. CHARLES ETIENNE KUONEN Instructor in Physics: b. Rensselaer, Indiana, October 10. 1911: s. Mae Kuonen: DePauw U., A.B.. 1933: m. Louise M. Butler. At Wabash since 1935. ULT 'if ,-N. Y, Lbs CLARENCE E. LEAVENWORTH h I Professor of Romance Languages and Literature: b. Q I f Middlebury. Vermont, April 27, 1887: s. Clarence G. and N 3 Iulia CE1dridgeJ L.: Hamilton Coll. A.B.: Yale U.. M.A.: lgggwf. U. of Chicago, Ph.D.: U. of Paris: Columbia U.: U. of l Florence: m. Annie I. Crim: children-William C. Taught X if languages in high schools in New York. Cleveland, and 1 ij in Randolph-Macon Women's Coll. Mem. Delta Upsilon, 1, I Phi Beta Kappa. American Association of Teachers oi' Q French, American Association of University Professors. R. I Interest: French. At Wabash since 1916. Hobbies: draw- ing, painting and gardening. o t - , - 'k LEVI ROBERT LIND , I Assistant Professor of Classics: U. of Illinois, A.B.. 1929: 1 A.M.. 1932: Ph.D. 1936. Mem. of Phi Beta Kappa. Phi f -up p Kappa Epsilon. Phi Eta Sigma. American Philogical As- ' 3 we 5' sociation. American Classical League. American Civil Liberties Union, Ouiatenon Club. At Wabash since 1929. 1 ' Hobbies: writing. poetry. research, tennis. Author: What Q Rome Has Lett Us 119353: articles, reviews, essays in the ' X learned journals. rf' 9 x if if , 9 G. if 'ga fu lla I , L' if , 413, lj' rl I I 1-it ffgufjgr :Pig 2 X fri? l ' 1' if 4 ll QC? 'f 1 , 1' X L' Ll - YI ff X: f 'l . Q .ac :wiv AK T Ml fm? n WW lijjj ' 575145: K, .BH 4 :N XX 95-l,,.,- V AY., rc- ,tx h h Ax , X ! ' A fl fi A ll f N f ll f V f .ml X X xx l lx, A Ex: 9 ff!! f F-X ' -, XYZ, xxxxl X X L 47 I it :L 9:43-il :iv Q. all 412. W - I Kish: W 17 5 5 'W Xi sr, 31 X N, 2 J I sf' HK q x P 5 .uv ,D X, fm Q83 C ll L Y HENRY CLOSE MONTGOMERY Associate Professor of Classics: b. Seymour, Indiana, August 1, 1901: s. H. C. Montgomery, Sr.: Hanover Coll., A.B.: U. of Illinois, A.M.: graduate work at U. of Colum- bia, Rome, Heidelberg, Vienna, Colorado: m. Margaret Stuart: children- Ann, Henry C., Ir. Previously employed as Athletic Director, High School, Divernon, Illinois: As- sistant in Classics Department U. of Illinois. Mem. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Eta, Phi Kappa Epsilon, Indiana Classi- cal Association: In college won letters in three sports: intercollegiate tennis champion of Indiana in 1919. At Wabash since 1926. Independent: Presbyterian. Hobbies: music, sports. Clubs: Ouiatenon, Crawfordsville Music Club. FERGUSON REDDIE ORMES Professor of Economics: b. Colorado Springs, Colorado, November 27, 1891: s. M. D. and Eleanor R. Ormes: Colo- rado Coll. A.B., 1912: Yale, A.B., 1913: U. of Chicago. A.M., 1925: m. Emily Schlemmer. Children-Robert, David, and Emily. Comptroller of Wabash Coll. Previously em- ployed as accountant, Pace and Pace, N. Y., 1919-21: Instructor, Georgia Tech., 1912-14: with U. S. Naval Re- serves, 1917-19. Interest: accounting, money and bank- ing. At Wabash since 1921. Hobbies: ping-pong, chess and guitar. Presbyterian. Independent. Mem. Alpha Sigma Pi. IAMES INSLEY OSBOHNE Yandes Professor of the English Language and Litera- ture: b. Crawfordsville, Indiana, February 25, 1887: s. Iames Harvey and Grace llnsleyl Osborne: Wabash Coll. A.B., 1906: A.M., 1907: Oxford U. 1911-14: A.B., CRhodes Scholarl 1913: Columbia, Ph.D., 1919: m. Elsie Alan Walkup of Crawfordsville, April 21, 1921 Cdied August 21, 19231 m. 2nd Frances Doane of Evanston, Illinois, Iuly 6, 1927. Children-two. Served as First Lieutenant Military Intelligence Division, U. S. A., 1918- 19, attached to American Peace Commission, Paris, Member Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa. Presbyterian. Author: Arthur Hugh Clough. IAMES IAMIESON PATERSON Assistant Professor of Economics, Director of Recrea- tional Activities b. Chicago, Illinois, October 30. 1899: s. Morton L. and Mary Clamiesonl Paterson: Northwestern U., B.S., Columbia U.: m. Marian Crane: children-Mor- ton L. Previously employed as assistant sales manager, I. I. Badenoch Co., Chicago. Mem. Sigma Chi, Beta Gamma Pi, Delta Sigma Pi, Deru. Political party-Mug- Wump. Served with American Ambulance Field Service A. E. F., 1917: A. E. F. 164th Infantry 1918-19. Presbyterian. At Wabash since 1927. Lf 1' ,h - at It ,, Q-'53, 'gl fl 1' M 9 , . ml f v. 'yi CHX FN Kiflgi Eli-1 p N ffm K Xi XX tiff Us sr. lafL.b.4if.iliQ:l?3f,klaP:'i... L-K, si if .lilxg Liss. L18 wixjyy bldg Nj, ft his ' JMX X!! ily N f MY M :Agni FACULT MYRON GUSTAVUS PHILLIPS Professor of Speech: b. Monticello. Indiana, April 22. 1905: s. F. R. and Gertrude L. Phillips: Wabash Coll.. A.B., 1929: U. of Iowa, A.M., 1931: m. Marguerite Uhl: Mem. Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Kappa Alpha, National Association of Teachers of Speech, and Elks. Interest: debate, dramatics. At Wabash since 1928. Re- publican. Presbyterian. Author: A Note Book for Begin- ning Speech fwith W. Norwood Brigancel. IOSEPH CRAWFORD POLLEY Thorton Professor of Mathematics: b. Cheshire, Conn.. August 17, 1897: s. Iames Clarence and Lillie Uimmer- sonl Polley. Yale, A.B., A.M.: Cornell U., Ph.D.: m. Mil- dred Richardson: children-Barbara, lane, Elizabeth Anne. Previously with High Schools in Connecticut and New York: taught at Yale, Colgate, Cornell, Susque- hanna U. Mem. Sigma Xi, Lambda Chi Alpha, A. A. A. S. Hobby: diverse interests. Independent. Presby- terian. Club: Ouiatenon. At Wabash since 1929. Inter- est: Algebraic Geometry. FRANZ SCHUBERT PRELL Instructor in German: b. Milbank, South Dakota, Septem- ber 28, 1909: Wabash, A.B., 1934: married: Alumni Secre- tary of Wabash Coll. Mem. Phi Beta Kappa, Omega. At Wabash since 1935. Hobbies: music and sports. Metho- dist. IOHN PAUL SCOTT Associate Professor of Zoology: b. Kansas City, Mo., December 17, 1909: s. I. W. and Vivian A. Scott: U. of Wyoming. A.B.: Oxford U., A.B., Rhodes Scholar: U. of Chicago, Ph.D.: m. Sarah Fisher: children-lean. Mem. Sigma Xi, A. A. A. S., Genetics Society of America, Ouia- tenon Club. Interest: heredity. At Wabash since 1935. Hobby: camping. 3 ,X Q wit .-bam.-nav ruff' ,iii N - f - X iii? . :wx fm 8 il' 1' I L DTV 'jx' l,5Tf1-'iff f if fini sf il' fi T ,zl , ' ily f' it it r --ii , , X f , N fb p 5 x Sig- -il?-5?.?5itiixifjf-:fs ' Q.. 85121 tm 3-. its X47 3' 'S 1191 A ,....4i' FACULTY WARREN SHEARER Assistant Professor of Speech: b. Washington, D. C., September 11, 1915: Wabash Coll., A. B., 1936: came to Wabash this year. IOHN DOREN TOMLINSON Associate Professor of Political Science: b. Wheaton, Illinois, March 7, 1903: s. George H. and Marion D. Tom- linson: Northwestern, A.B.: Columbia, A.M. m. Ieanne Duncan-Clarke. Director American Committee, Gen- eva, Switzerland, 1930. Mem. Delta Upsilon, Sigma Delta Chi, American Society of International Law. Interests: international affairs. At Wabash since 1929. Hobbies: belotte, gardening. Club: Crawfordsville Dramatic. ilk igiht gc I BYRON KIGHTLY TRIPPET Assistant Professor of History: b. Princeton, Indiana, 1908: Wabash Coll., A.B.: Oxford University, A.B.: Rhodes Scholar. m. Dorothy Clark O'Neal. Mem. Beta Theta Pi, Tau Kappa Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa, Ouiatenon Club. Interest: English Constitutional History. At Wabash since 1934. IAMES GILKEY WEDDING Treasurer. Wabash, B.C., Sc.B. ..- fj Xff ' W ' rf Kilgykjgm f' 'fl '11 I as ff: W :ls ,sf its E201 HARRY STRINGHAM WEDDING Librarian: Wabash, A.B., A.M. Indiana Library Association. . N' is ,fill 1 1? , W, I ' 1 WW !ls7?-if?L.ff2 il? t Tl. of Kink figs... T 3,11 JN X ,Dqii if Koa 9 rx, fig I 3 f if il iff 1 il K5 K X , ,fs.e.,,,v at t I , f . ' ,I .fic are ,s W L18 .its lf ,ni .x . x X IASPER ASAPH CRAGWELL IAMES HARVEY OSBORNE Thornton Professor of Mathematics, Associate Professor of Latin and Emeritus: Vanderbilt U., A.B., Sc.M., Mathematics, Emeritus: Wabash, A B Wabash, SC,D, A.M.: Mem. Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Beta Kappa. PQUARU UF Tlill'TEE' OFFICERS Iames P. Goodrich, LL.D ........,.... ,.... ...,..........., P r esident Chase Harding, A.M. .............,.s ....... V ice-President Oscar P. Welborn, A.M. ..,.........,.,.. .......... S ecretary Iames Gilkey Wedding, Sc.B. ....i.s ....... T reasurer Ferguson Reddie Ormes, A.M ....,. . . ...... Comptroller I. Edgar Evans, Albert Anderson, Louis B. Hopkins, Will Hays, Finley Mount. II. Mark Brown. Melvin Oggel. III. George Luckett, Matthias Haines, Oscar Welborn, Ioseph Daniels. Isaac C. Elston, Ir. IV. Iohn I. Coss, Edward Ames, Lee McCanliss. Iames Goodrich, Charles Williams, Eben Wolcott, Evans Woollen, Chase Harding. 3 --ri ffl if 55 ft 4 V 'P fr figjiigf JV ,L i , fu Rfb, M X is r P t Sv f it tl ,f L sv L YI iff ,K 't 4 it X XX fffillii' is i ' 3 t f fyill fi 'X it f xii! . L tl ll l 2-of . . is sl. .4.s5wr.+trLEiet'i.cQ sr, 3. 'Laffy' XJ fish 21 ..,A,A A fy if fili F p54Cif M EN W X 2, 2 ,J , ix 3 1 ww 'fb RQ ff f U 6 y ' f' ffl 1 l X , fl X Us Elgwwail-Q5 Q if tm A Cai LX new E221 ' 19- 7 '-v 4Ovx fx Fa 4 my QM 11 bl Sf Qs LS- N XX! 0 M E HJR A DISC E l l 4 F rt, 't F :fd . A li l A fl V j li I It 4 'QI' rl, ll 1 Ji I ' lk lik I 11 ' x ff ffl lil 2,-.J 5 I24 Harold H. Airhart DANVILLE, INDIANA German Club 3, 4. Richard C. Bachmann PEORIA. ILLINOIS Phi Gamma Delta, Alpha Pi: Division I: German Club, Bachelor, Chemis- try Assistant. Merle Bartoo PASADENA, CALIFORNIA Independent: Division IV. Morton L. Brann NEWMARKET Independent, Omega: Di- vision III: Basketball I, Baseball I. Independent: Division III: Robert Alexander PARK RIDGE. ILLINOIS Delta Tau Delta, Sphinx: Division III: Men' Club, French Club 2, 3, Pan Hellenic Council 4. Rudolph C. Bambas CHICAGO Division II. Richard L. Brady CHICAGO Independent, Alpha Pi: Division I: German Club 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 1, 2. Robert Edward Burk VALPARAISO Phi Delta Theta: Division IV: Golf 3, French Club 2, Bachelor 1, Caveman I, Basketball Manager 2. :'::1 l'll7l.- will 59, 'FH In ff? 559 ill K J X f f :iff ff L. J 22, Ar M ., I jpf 1 K 1 ,. 5 X Z QQ 'R if fftfipw !5 ?W,T-Xxx S X 4411- l.i.f.,.le.4n:s-get-34TJ,eC4l in kj, XJ LZCLA1 UF Ioset S. Crane CRAWFORDSVILLE Sigma Chi: Division III: Senior Council, Bachelor l. Chorus 2, Caveman l, Scarlet Masque 1, 2, Stage Manager. Bowman Downey INDIANAPOLIS Delta Tau Delta, Gamma Phi: Division I: Bachelor 1, Chorus l, 2, German Club 3, 4, Zoology Assist- ant 3, 4. Francis Fay COLUMBUS Delta Tau Delta, Gamma Phi: Division II: Glee Club 1, 2. 3, 4, French Club, Vice-President 3. President, 4. Byron I. Grater LEBANON Lambda Chi: Division III: Basketball Manager. I957 George A. Dawson CRAWFORDSVILLE Independent, Omega, Al- pha Pi: Division I: Cross Country 2. 3, 4. Robert R. Dyer HAMMOND Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Del- ta Epsilon, Gamma Phi: Division III: Bachelor 1, Circulation Manager 2, Business Manager 3, Ad- visory Board 4, Caveman 2, Wabash 2, Football 1, International Relations Club 3. German Club I, 2, 3, Chorus 3. Meyer Gomberg NEW YORK CITY Independent: Division III: Football l, 4, Baseball 1, Senior Council, Cross Country 2, Caveman. Charles T. Groves CRAWFORDSVILLE Independent: Division III: Baseball 1, Chorus 2, 3: International Relations Club. I ' t : Qt QQ ,T , 1 , Vs Q. ffl 4 Mn,-wg N fi ll is I is er -' f X X , X fi .1 I gli X. I 6 xg L XE a n ... ll . Q... ... Cr... f X:ll...s 25 QU' 4,1-612 'HPV -E ME- Edward C. Gullion, Ir. LEBANON Phi Delta Theta: Division IV: Scarlet Masque 1, 2, 3, 4: Caveman 1, 2, 3, 4: German Club 2, 3: Pan Hellenic Council: Speak- ers' Bureau 3, 4: Cross Country 2: Vice-President Senior Class. Charles M. Harrold, Ir. RIDGE FARM, ILLINOIS Independent: Omega: Al- pha Pi: Division I: Bas- ketball 1: Tennis 2: Band 2, 3: President of Omega 4: President of Alpha Pi 4: Cross Country 4: German Club: Zoology Assistant 4. Frederick Harry Heintz BLUE ISLAND, ILLINOIS Delta Tau Delta: Sphinx: Alpha Pi: Division I: Foot- ball 1, 3, 4: Sec'y-Treas- urer Alpha Pi 4: Men's Club: Physics As- sistant 3, 4. Remley Herr CRAWFORDSVILLE Sigma Chi: Division I: Football 1: German Club: Iohn Gunn VEEDERSBURG Independent: Division III. Bill Hays SULLIVAN Phi Delta Theta: Tau Kappa Alpha: Sphinx: Di- vision III: Caveman 1, 2: Speakers' Bureau 3, 4. Henry S. Helton DANVILLE, INDIANA Independent: Omega: Al- pha Pi: Division I: Ger- man Club 2. 3. 4. Francis N. Holroyd CRAWFORDSVILLE Lambda Chi: Division III: Bachelor 1: Orchestra 1, Alpha pi, 2, 3: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Pan Hellenic Council. e fr fn .M nm an --. K3 v If Y ' , , fl 5 ffl L ' F , gg ,fy iz, l V. WW ff !.n,.,,QKX,, W ,r iw- if! fx. 'X' fri- ill W ,Wit Q-Y-3 X, -I X W 'ard 'gp 3' I M 1, T '7'pi hp ,QC ll,f1ii3iALTx ,rg-.f ht ' fr ' Q' ll 3 r I 9 ' 'tir X U4 th 4' X 'S Dx, ' 9 X ffl I tx 1,51 X X A f , Q. ff 1 'xx , , X it' iff Wx L5 U 4- .filo Y' E ,sh X 3 swf' Q U - ff' X ' I '47 1 ss: .f1,.Qf,- is is ..1sa:5Ztks:.e::fg, View .sf raw L 3-. Kas 4 Jaxilb f26 UF IQSI Harold Hosticka CHICAGO Independent: Omega: Al- pha Pi: Gamma Phi: Di- vision I: Cross Country. Paul T. Hurt, Ir. INDIANAPOLIS Phi Gamma Delta: Gam- ma Phi: Division III: Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, 4: Men's Club: French Club 2: Bachelor 1, 2: Wabash 1, 2. Paul G. Ingersoll WAYNETOWN Independent: Omega: Di- vision IV: Basketball 1: Speakers' Bureau: Presi- dent ot Senior Council. Iohn W. Kingsbury INDIANAPOLIS Phi Gamma Delta, Sphinx: Blue Key: Pi Del- ta Epsilon: Tau Kappa Alpha: Division III: Scar- let Masque President 4: Business Manager 3: De- bate 3: Director oi News Bureau 3: Caveman 1, 2: Bachelor 1, 2: French Club 2: Glee Club 1: International Relations Club 3, 4: Hays Orator- ical Contest 2: Baldwin Oratorical Contest 3: Board of Publications. Norwood R. Hughes CRAWFORDSVILLE Independent: Division I. Paul I. Husting WILMETTE, ILLINOIS Phi Gamma Delta: Sphinx: Blue Key: Divis- ion III: Bachelor 1, 2, 3 4: Editor 3: Football 1 French Club 2, 3: Interna- tional Relations Club 2, 3 4: Scarlet Masque 1, 21 3 4: President of Pan Hel- lenic Council. Herbert Halston Iohnson INDIANAPOLIS Beta Theta Pi: Alpha Pi: Division I: Bachelor 1 German Club 1, 2: Bas- ketball Manager 2. Charles H. Klamer EVANSVILLE Phi Gamma Delta: Alpha Pi: Gamma Phi: Pi Delta Epsilon: Division I: Bach- elor 1, 2, 3, 4: Business Manager 2: Wabash 1: Band 1, 2, 3: Orchestra 1: Glee Club 3: German Club. i 'fe mn' I ww! QV' Qs-on ff' n riff give--3 plix qs, ri? Bi? fi X-Q , fx 5 VV 3 if K x I -XX 3 ,X I X X n fhifmh lg aL'eJrL:3-21332-4 at ... L 4-ffw iii 27 new 'Qi-fx: N 1 1 ..s... Es. . M xsk, -m Wm 'UV ,mai 1-nliilif' s-'P IS De an Kline CHICAGO Kappa Sigma: Division III: German Club 2. 3: Senior Council. Charles V. Livengood COVINGTON Sigma Chi: Division IV: Scarlet Masque 1. 2. 3. 4: Band I, 2, 3. 4: Glee Club 2. 3. 4: Caveman 3. H. Lee McKinsey FRANKFORT Lambda Chi Alpha. Tau Kappa Alpha: Division III: International Rela- tions Club. President 4: French Club: Debate: Bachelor 2. W. F. Machledt WAVELAND Phi Delta Theta: Division I. ME P. R. Lee LADOGA Independent: Division III: Speakers' Bureau. Wayne Lloyd SULLIVAN Phi Delta Theta: Division III: Basketball 4. Robert L. McVie INDIANAPOLIS Beta Theta Pi: Blue Key: Pi Delta Epsilon: Iunior Phi Beta Kappa: Tau Kappa Alpha: Division III: Debate 2, 3. 4: Board ot Publications: Bachelor 1. 2. 3: International Re- lations Club: Oratory: Senior Council. Charles T. Martin. Ir. WOLCOTT Phi Gamma Delta. Tau Kappa Alpha: Division IV: Debate 1, 2. 3: French Club: International Rela- tions Club: Speakers' Bu- reau I. 2. , 22 2 I Q .fktm . . ff. XLTYKX f fjx' 44' 'BIN ! ' W. ifffrf ...cl A HQ' if? M I W We 43.135 QSM I I 4 J my sl.i'e.M5QlQf'. QU .L fi 3. 28 UF I957 Olin Meritt CRAWFORDSVILLE Independent: Alpha Pi: Division I: Baseball 1: Cross Country 2: German Club 2. Iames F. Moore KIRKLIN Beta Theta Pi: Division III: Bachelor 1: News Bu- reau l: Band 1. 2, 3. 4: Football Manager 3: Ger- man Club 2: Internation- al Relations Club. I. Bradley Moring FORT WAYNE Kappa Sigma: Sphinx: Blue Key: Alpha Pi: Gamma Phi: Division l: Football l. 2, 3, 4: Swim- ming 1. 4: French Club 1, 2: Pan Hellenic Council: Iunior Class President. Iohn C. Newell PEORIA. ILLINOIS Phi Gamma Delta: Sphinx: Division Ill: Foot- ball Manager 4: Swim- ming: Scarlet Masque: Senior Council: German Club Vice-President 4: International Relations Club. Ernest Rudolph Miller EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA Independent: Sphinx: Omega: Blue Key: Divis- ion III: Football 1, 2, 3. 4: W Men's Club: Ger- man Club. Robert Iacques Moore THORNTOWN Beta Theta Pi: Division III: Football 1. 2: Scarlet Masque l, 2: News Bu- reau l, 2: Band 1, 2: Bot- any Assistant 3. Martin Morrison CRAWFORDSVILLE Beta Theta Pi: Division III: Bachelor 1: French Club 2: Glee Club I. 2. 3, 4: Band 1. Samuel T. Patton WAVELAND Independent: Omega: Alpha Pi: Division I: Physics Assistant 4: Mathematics Assistant 4. to R fs sf, Wx! All -vw! t Q Mt , - all N 9 Wifi . :IP f ,J ,V ' I .D iff- .t'l 25 in? j7ifL 5 NA, Qt . 3 X lf r'!l 1:1 .5 ,R lv A, fx , fi 4 , to gmt fl eff 3 sf il E e..m.seQy,Ls-2-.J sf Qesla W Esselte if E291 42 Win av -W I W .W- ,,,..af-if BIS IIarry S. Phillips RICHMOND HILL. NEW YORK Phi Delta Theta: Pi Delta Epsilon: Division III: Board of Publications: Business Manager of the Wabash: Baseball Man- ager 3: Caveman 1, 2: International Relations Club. lack V. Porter ROACHDALE Bota Theta Pi: Division IV: Bachelor 1. 2: Cave- man l. 2. 3, 4: Baseball 1: Tennis 2. 3, 4. Iames R. Rogers ROACHDALE Lambda Chi Alpha: Sphinx: Division III: Bas- ketball l, 2. 3. 4: Men's Club: Vice-Presi- dent Senior Council: Iun- ior Class Vice-President: Sec'y-Treasurer Senior Class. Lyle S. Seaman NEW MARKET Independent: Alpha Pi: Division I: Basketball 1. 2, 3, 4: Football 1: Cross Country 2. f ,J C KEN ffl N ff Q1 Q QF I Nl If , nl, A :Iliff- f 1 'A I X' li? ' e- 4- ' I I7 ,I l y I 5 ZH il' 79 1 I, - fill , Nu fi I, ffl Y-lils' .I JJ Gi akin NIE Robert H. Plummer BEDFORD Phi Gamma Delta: Blue Key: Pi Delta Epsilon: Tau Kappa Alpha: Divis- ion III: Debate 1. 2, 3, 4: Speakers' Bureau 3, 4: Editor oi the Wabash: Publications Board: Hays Oratorical Contest I, 2: Baldwin 3: Bachelor 1: German Club 1, 2: Inter- national Relations Club. Carl B. Prestin TOLONO, ILLINOIS Tau Kappa Epsilon: Sphinx: Division III:Base- ball l, 2, 3, 4: Basketball 1: Caveman 1, 2: Senior Council Treasurer: Scar- let Masque 1. 2. 3. 4: Football 1: Men's Club: President of Sphinx Club 4. Verne Robinson HOBART Lambda Chi Alpha: Di- vision II: French Club: German Club: Bachelor 2. Iames Shepard COLUMBIA CITY Sigma Chi: Blue Key: Tau Kappa Alpha: Divis- ion IV: News Bureau 1: Debate 1. 2, 3. 4: Speak- ers' Bureau 1, 2, 3, 4: Hays Oratorical Contest 1, 2: Evans 2. 3: Indiana State 3: National Invita- tional 3: Senior Council. 55 it CL --Jef' A, 5 eff 1, K ff! f lm? H. fl ,' ASK fl v f Ml XX: It J ff KX L . , IIE- Blige UF William L. Starr WINAMAC Independent: Omega: Di- vision III: Band 1, 2. 3. 4: Glee Club 1. 2: Speakers' Bureau: German Club: International Relations Club, Caveman 2. Iohn N. Van Der Vries WINNETKA. ILLINOIS Beta Theta Pi: Division III: Baseball l. 2: Basket- ball Manager l, 2. 3. 4: Bachelor 1, 2: Band 1, 2: French Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Pan Hellenic Council. Arnold I. Veraguth WINONA. MINNESOTA Independent: Omega: Al- pha Pi: Division I: Ger- man Club 1. 2. 3. 4: Treasurer 2: Vice-Presi- dent 3: President 4: Chemistry Assistant 4. Fred B. Walker LAKELAND. FLORIDA Independent: Omega: Blue Key: Tau Kappa Alpha: Division IV: 'Y l 9 -J Robert C. Thompson CRAWPORDSVILLE Independent: Division II. lack B. Van Duzer CHICAGO Independent: Division II. George C. Wahl. Ir. INDIANAPOLIS Independent: Omega: Tau Kappa Alpha: Divis- ion III: Debate Z. 3. 4: Speakers' Bureau 3, 4: Tennis 2. Dan E. Walters VEEDERSBURG Sigma Chi: Division IV: Caveman 1. Z: Editor 3: Bachelor 1. 2. 3: Senior v 51 'asf' ' IQ ,pus 4,-I Fl'e9d'HCIYd9mCm College Council: Pan Hellenic I, 2: Debate: Chorus 3. 4: Council, Winner of Bible Contest 3. J A rg ffaf' -- fig' YK lm? ff? Q7 ,fl li ' K' di' if ,7- N I I' Tiff? f f 'C Q5 'Q' X V, fb-Xml KL33 fylgwsilg fflfm if Q f '- Q fpnfk wifi, KSZQI Qgf?Jil,ye ll Q m35f77?ff I , - I :tw X jg I 'V :f'l'X, 1 ft Eff' f fl J 1' I ffl: fjw, I Q A J fjy. ij: All '- A' fly! L: lx I A fi K I ff Xlxx 4 ss.: le-'..f.-, fi. mabrmss-QL ish, ss ssl 133415. 'rf titans W E311 .gill mn:'.'+ WWW ,ifpfdlsw ,qv , ISX NIE Albert Webb CHICAGO Delta Tau Delta: Gamma Phi: Division III: Presi- dent of Gamma Phi 3. Eugene Wilder, Ir. ATLANTA, GEORGIA Phi Delta Theta: Division III: Baseball 1: Bachelor 1: News Bureau l, 2: International Relations Club 2: Golf 2: Senior Council. D. lack White PRINCETOWN Lambda Chi Alpha: Sphinx: Division III: Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, 4: Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4: Men's Club. Charles Edward Williamson NEWPORT Independent, Alpha Pi: Division I: Football 1. Iames A. Wood WYOMING, OHIO Delta Tau Delta: Sphinx: Division III: Pan Hellenic Council: Senior Council. Robert I. Wedding CRAWFORDSVILLE Independent: Division I: Alpha Pi. Frank L. Weiland INDIANAPOLIS Delta Tau Delta: Division III: Butler 1, 2: Golf 3, 4. Howard W. Williams WINGATE Independent: Division III: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4: Foot- ball 1: Spanish Club 1, 2. Leonard R. Wolff WILMETTE, ILLINOIS Phi Gamma Delta: Blue Key: Sphinx: Division I: Football 1, 2, 3, 4: Cap- tain 4: Intramural Man- ager: W Men's Club: German Club 2: Chorus. Brooks Wynne BEDFORD Beta Theta Pi: Iunior Phi Beta Kappa: Division III: News Bureau 1, 2: Ger- man Club: History Assist- ant 4. C 4 if ,R f . fm E5 M3552 :fi ff , 1 , 'ff' '2f1L.,.,'i - !4fLi54! A 'fx 42 l QW A fl? I l is fi, 4 Wx I ' :va .W U ll :W lbw 1114- , El X14 ins .Q 1 rrp f LSL. 554344 j Jil' 3 L32 ,fist 7 rw I niiih X UF 1957 Prestin, Kline. Rogers. Shepard, Van Der Vries. Wahl, Fay, Newell. Gomberg. Brann, McVie. Wilder. 'E IUH UUU CIL HE Senior Council is made up of twelve members of the senior class, selected for their ability in directing college activities. One member is chosen from each one of the seven fraternities, and five are chosen from among the independent men. Among the duties of the Senior Council are spon- soring the finances of college clubs and organizations and regulating student conduct. By this council form of representative government the students as a whole are brought into direct contact with the administra- tion of the school. The Council holds a regular meeting every two weeks. At the beginning of the year the budget for college activities is made up, from the assessment included in the tuition fee. The election of Council members is performed by members of the preceding year's Council. Each new member must be approved by all of the members of the old Council. 1 ,PT all N if-Q as fi gk fi? J 5 4 at fn gf l 5 egg, as gf W p it of n X wg 1 X il ff ll X f -is f , if , X 1 XX , at K I, pix ki lv Q: k f X .za l so V K Al: lx X? NW lfbcgnl lg is tiff? Lxiillgg ff E331 ? xmigW'ggi Wg? F5 ig, ,V ,ER 9 ,AA ,. VW 'ng Q? Fw 6w 13 X f W , K 1'5 Q H223 ff yi? 44- F xfv 1 , ' l , ' I K, , Nh Y 1 '1 Q, in ,lf Q Q I If N , fi ' A bf . xxx I ,K 1 Xl! , xy! I X E A .. ff , JM . Qui X E341 IUNIUBS Qf lir...,.. HARRY RUTLEDGE CARL BERGQUIST SUl'HUNlOP.ES LESTER ADAMS FRANK KOBAL ROBERT BURWELL FHESHMEN A ORVILLE POST L BILL BURK A 4-5gLQvj2f .Eff X ff? if'f 'Jinx if fy? U ,EQ WA ,QR , Lf? 'Q' W in H CO T1 3 .f 4fJ fb? Njxg A ftx- KAL Y? vstw Tiffi 21, A x ,ffib maj? Q LXEQ 4 lx 'NX VY! Y 'A fffllmw W 27 My! J ff jf W X I ' X T Q X j Y 'VRXRXH A lx , REV! my Q J A xg J f 5 4 L LBJ mf gm ff Q M QL , . aaeemwg M23 ... 1 Us .. fine., ff Jmwb M E351 johnson, Alexander, McCul- lough, Rickett, Arnett Hough, Tapy, Zi egweid Colin, Gruca. Carson, Wright, Purdy, Davis. Sutton, Tauscher Berquist, Stone, Risley. Rasmussen, Berns, Larra- bee, Anderson, Baron Hays, Horn, Hester, Fa- 1 lll IUB vorite. Tyre, Reynolds, Schleich, Dryer, Piel, Edwards, Fertig, Zmija. l HE Class of 1938 was this year conspicuous main- ly for its inactivity and its jackets. The wearers of the maroon and gray waded laboriously through their pipe courses, sweating and groaning and with just enough strength to keep from falling by the way- side. Psychologically speaking, this is an interesting group. Having fairly well mastered the first two years' feeling of inferiority, the junior commences to build up that mighty wall of indifference which is so pronounced in the senior year. At the same time comes a wave of conservatism, an abhorrence for anything new, a hatred of anything that threatens to arouse him from his lethargic life and stir him into unwanted activity. ff w YP, f' A ,Ah .tt l , ste rx ft N-lf! if J Q Y? 'ft nw lv s V.. ,j fffigsgf' if A I 1 x , if , fel in f ' , 'W yybjff , V ft l c X !: ffr5 X F 5 , A t' 'fix' A il HGV ll lt Y H A ' K X X SN 9 X 65, A lmjx if X XX I N X f J A l, ' f ' X. ,f xt t, f f Qi L J af K 1 4-1 :il .sldzzwj .-'L.'24?.kQae.Q.V,w.Etj J rm 3- 35535 W J glib 361 CLASS NDERSTAND, this is the average junior. There were some notable exceptions-some brave souls who dared the scorn of their classmates and were actually distinguished in school affairs. These were few, but they gave hope to the rest of the school that the Class of 1938 was not a complete washout, not a complete one. Be that as it may, the juniors are soon to be autocratic seniors: the last vestige of humanism will drop from them and the final cloak of senior insouciance-d'ennui will come to take its place. But do not despise the junior soon to be a senior, my friends, do not hate them-for they know not what they do! Young, Shortridge, Mefford, Schleich, Rutledge, Zmija, Klokoski. Van Auken, Hamlin, Huber, Butler, lones, Gruca, Merrill Leming, Koffend. Hood. Starnes, Phillips, Larrabee Ludington, Hack, Savidge Heintz. Canine, Moritz. Langfitt. Gaines, Sidener Iohnson, Matthews, McKay Hegarty. F ii? li 9 ,S Q an ,252 TM W Lf c yr A lwlxgfl jpg-T if 26' Q In : I Xl',,,-,ff ye XV! W,-,ia Y fl l f ' 1 we D M'-fx,.,.g.,5..,, i ' 27 - , 'j L . li .3 'SL flvv Q E371 1 1 Fox, Wright, Schaub, Wins- low, Arnett, Mayberry, Kent. Burwell, Fuller, Lewellen Foreman, Lee. Barlow. Beswick, Gineris Gohman, Messick, Emerson Lee, Stross, Pack, Kobal. Wahl, Campbell. Knebel Kitzmiller. Stewart, Himes Cassel, Dearborn, Supple. Norman, Coy-Kendall, Flan- igon, Meschuk. Showalter White, Quickel, Hanscom. 1 UPHU 0 HE sophomore class ffrom the Greek: sophos, wise -moros, foolishl is composed of about seventy- five invalids recovering from the indignities of the freshman year. The air of amused toleration with which upper classes have long regarded sophomores has had its usual effect on the class of 1939: and, as a result, we find a group of comparative introverts retreating within their shells, Wearing a perpetual look of martyrish persecution, and gloating over their very own page in the Caveman. However, tempis certainly does fugit fast, for along towards May we find sophomore faces losing that haunted expression and adopting the aloof frown of the junior. Rivalry between sophomores and freshmen wasn't so pro- nounced this year, the sophomores holding them- selves down to the nasty but effective trick of setting off the freshman bonfire before time. ff 15, 'f . 9 9 W if 1 , Q ffl ' 1 W mf fr lf T f , r it A t Wt! , ,. N flllflflk all is lm A l fl 1 47 .T 4.61.3 ,frwzff is ami'-2-K-l?232.5lE:b-fff7f4,:'S 1.1, i t ttt. A ctfaffl. 381 HROUGH their efforts two beautiful Chic Sale palaces were consigned to 'ashes-and at the same time they burned up the freshmen no end. South and Peck Halls were the favorite haunts of the sophomore this year, and almost any afternoon groups could be seen romping about with fruit flies, mixing beverages in the Chem lab.. and iuggling warm ice in Physics. But all of that will be over soon, and the worrnish sophomores will burst into beauti- ful junior butterflies. From the drab, wriggling crea- tures of the second year come the gorgeous, ethereal beings of the third. So here's luck to the sophomore on the second half of the four year sentence! Iohnson, Rhode. Helfrich Iones, lewell. Hollinger . Wavrinek, Lane, Marciniak, Hunt. Stout, Kobalwitz, Ianus Ianus, Elliott, Weesner Wakeley, Adams, Nord- mann, Work. Novosel, Keck, Rich, Vosloh Hawkins. Walker, Wagner Smits, Fulton. Fisher. Long, Baur, Long Robertson, Pierson, Davis Stout. X tl l fill fl f Wi WW .ss H is 2.12-4LQQil.UfX225i Q:-,N 5-,, ,Fig-Qs 430 E391 1 1 Brooks, Sieber, Fisher, Bul- lock, Herron. Dewey, B. Iames, Stofer, Gostlin. Murdock, Griffin. Brum- baugh, Crowl, Tyler. Hen- son, Grimes. Hamilton, Boord, Grune- wald, Walker. Post. Mc- Carthy, Evans, Cossit Spear. Salyer, Moffat, Bechtel Haines. Moore, Van Sickle Hoopingarner. Iohnson Sanders. Scholz. Doermann. Schaedler. Iones, Sumner. Bushong, Kinnaman, Beers. Bash, Or- cutt. Eltzroth, Ryder, Law- :'l!'f5g 'again-,z!t1,sw less. HE class of 1940 is composed of fifty souls residing in ninety-six odd bodies. Supposedly one oi the most intelligent classes the school has ever seen, this year's freshmen early distinguished themselves as having an absolute lack of any theoretical or practi- cal learning, a startling paucity of the desire to learn, and a horrible lack of the desire to learn. But, never- theless, they showed themselves to be fine fellows with hearts of gold. Apparently their lot in life is to spread sunshine in every corner, whether it's wanted or not. Certain it is that their antics-such as painting the senior bench, discarding toques for nocturnal adventures, and generally raising Mary Nell-brought sunshine into the hearts of the Senior Council Csee page thirty-threel. f T5 fig K., GW AQ fl C9 GE ,Cs 17 5 5' f' 1. .fl l -F H ' li U 5, '- V 'rv' E4-X F 1' Avi ,fk's fi! V i f l 1 'TVN flFFf fx e X I A -evmffwp Lfilffflf 4' , , Q WJQ J ,li I V ! xii 'M -5 , A L' 4,1 gif, 'Ay g- , ffl . i e i W M U1 i N5 A A U Q bf! by Q50 E401 CL SS If UNSHINE it was, sunshine that often threatened to turn into a stormy day. But really, the fresh- men are not so much to blame. Offensive as fresh- men may be, they cannot help it. They are just a part of a gigantic machine, a cog in a massive flywheel. As a part of the Wabash system they lost their in- dividual personalities and merged into one huge group, displeasing and distasteful as it was. Soon, though, they will be sophomores and free to wreak their vengeance upon the class of 1941. And a ter- rible vengeance it will be, tool Lamond. Heimbrodt, Kime Carr, Michaelson. Bowman Elmore. Sheldon, Burk, Worley, Min- ton, Gorman, Milligan Gostlin. Allen, Rickett, Powers Cronk, Kraus, Wirt. Welfel George, Pease, VanCleave McDermott. Bordner, R. Iarnes, Spooner Hill, Ayres, Rohrs, Flanin- gam, Moffat, Shearer, Coch- rane, Ratcliff, Rhode. Steeg, Goodwin, Cronk Salyer, Winters, Supple Loveless. Sf gg, 5 Q' I: S l ktifs ,IQ ,gg 3 - fwf, . ,f W . ,AX , X , M l , Qt fs ,lg A -l if 42 X l :W W f iffy? p it 'Sins ' 'f' l K . ff lfff J X y .1 if 'S' -11 ' j7fbffl51? ' , f -F, J in , v s 4 j, H , fini 1 0f . ,, , ll NX, -. fs X , , W ' X ss X, xl ri UE jk-.'Nl-Tdflxo T fi 5 X QT Wk fi A - , W' l41l THLETICS have always played an impor- tant part in lite at Wabash-though not too important, as President Hopkins will tell you. In this section ol your year-book we have placed individual pictures of Wabash's athletes, to- gether with a few action photos snapped at various games. Write-ups of the principal events are also included-short but, we hope, to the point. In other sports, team groups are used with the write-ups. ATHLE T SRX W- , Q ,f -'X jg Q J, , x lk? W , V X 5 k N, 1 .5 - 44,1 - ,M Q 'xx ' P Xl! 1 t A 1 fhlgfx XY H15 X - , 1 A xwa- ,fa X X X 1 Q 1 R f J S X X saxhjmf, ? X A f Sf V r Q4 xg Lx Nl x WI R, 1 lo x X9 X 5 Lim 2, s. Il m'l i,.a COACHES ROBERT E. VAUGHAN Director of Athletics, Head Coach, Football and Basketball. IAMES I. PATERSON Freshman Coach, Football and Basketball. Director of Recrea- tional Activities. ALONZO E. GOLDSBERRY F Head Coach, Baseball. Assist- ant Coach, Football. f . 'Saga N, ms, ..,,'-if ig fl R! gl GA .u w,ivr, ,JM g it in fs jf ,gg W 1, fx ' ' 44 f z F r ' -Q . 3 1 V ' w L A ssshily 'L' 1. DVM ii ,Qi 22. B Qi! .L klai ly 45 . V A ,,JY7.,,, fi HE Men's Club is an association of Wabash men who have won their N-NME, CLUB Rich, Hester, Klo- koski, Marciniak, Moring. Gruca, Miller, Dawson. Mefford. Novosel, Rutledge, Nordmann, Davis Newell, Bergquistl Wolff, Seaman. Wahl, Rogers, Wil- liams. Sutton, Heintz, Lloyd, Hurt. Van Duzer, Iones, Van Der Vries, Long, Burwell, Adams, Kobal, Pack. Kitzmiller, Alex- ander, Prestin, C . emblems in some branch of the varied athletic program of the school. Mem- ooney bership is automatic, coming upon the Winning of a either for active participation in a sport or for work as a student manager or a cheer leader. The club has no official organization, but has for its aims sportsmanship, college spirit, and friendly relationship between athletes. Efforts are being made by some of its members to organize the club and elect officers. They feel that the organization will be an influential booster of college spirit and a body which is representative of the ideals of Wabash College. While it cannot be said that a majority of Wabash men belong to the club, it is nevertheless true that its membership includes a representative group of campus men. Due to the fact that its personnel is ever changing, it is almost impossible to get a complete roster of its members. 5 N C54 ,fy 19 ' il VU! lla Q5 3 Tp 'T' ff 1 ,ffl for ,fiifeff is as H ,iss f'f-fe' my M 3 '-I Lmjf!i,ny ff' W ' , l u-jx X fu W1 6,-.fx Wi A I ,ls , - . - X4 1, , X ww. l 1 Q l l V. . r 7:'li'5 M A l X A ' 'fl f mpg li Wm l. r .X t ,gg N it J kk Rx Xxx 3 1 j AE 1 :Xxx f, Q X K 1 gf l I flu'-X'X 'VY:y-' X 6 gl Nl W 1' K1 Gif -373,411 L5 ffl ffzg fn..-K iw ERD -in l46l I FOOTBALL LITTLE Wolff. Gilbert. Gruca, HE grid season oi '36 opened last fall with a great many rooters fearing for a team which had lost a great deal of its varsity line-up. These Miller' Ber9C1UiSi- K10k0Ski- fears and doubts were soon dispelled by a iight- ing Little Giant team which finally emerged from the season with seven wins and one loss. The loss was to the winner oi the Indiana Sec- ondary School championship: this defeat at the hands of Butler was by a score of 8-7. and most of the Wabash players trotted to the showers at the end of that game with a victorious smile on their faces in spite ot defeat. Sidener. :dig Jkwl ,ggggf si fQgQN giap F25 QKJQZQXQ Yjp riif jf? p p xl mg wr a f M any n g s A Wigs if ll W f f 'yu .!V A Tl, tl - A X xxx Xmx.iX:f.xNTxx fm, 1 H X9 J , W' , XQf I p 5 A yi A Eng? 'glib' X In E431 .9 1 5 . . r 1 -QQ' lil N ' L fx. . .. September 26: Wabash 6, Illinois College 2: S guests at Iacksonville. Illinois, the Little Giants splashed their way to victory in a veritable sea of mud. Ioe Gruca scored after a titty yard march dovsm the field by two passes to Pack and some excellent running plays. Mid- way in the last quarter Illinois College was ad- vancing steadily towards the Wabash goal line, but a tumble on the one-foot line spoiled their chances of scoring. With their backs to the up- rights our men displayed some excellent foot- ball strategy when they decided on a safety and a tree kick out of the mire. In spite of the poor footing, Pack and Gruca and Klokoski played heads-up ball throughout the entire garrnze. Substitutes, two. G 1 . A F if Schleich, Baker, Moring. Cooney. White, Lane, Rich. mi 'ff 1 If MV V . W 'I ,' 5 'AU ' I- X . I f A fi-Ni1t'l , ' ii -I . , 35, fn' ffl 77 - p 9 N77 f l d X X? A ' , X 'X if T g If I VV J qgfvlyiy 'VX ' , i: ,ft 2 l if' . , 1 1 , ' 1' , tn I 1 - l ,- I l I , I I. X r t X., .wt . -. X . I I f 2 ,I f fd 4. 1 , X I I , U W it X ' P I N ll .1 f 1 I 2 .I ww ' 1 If X ,f1 lip-i A ff .QW 46851 ?-gill' Dial , fp. 'W if El' W tg. sQs in 'V' JS' yi I Ll. Whiz 7.3147 I49l E501 Hurt, Reger, Tauscher, Cassell, Nordman, Rutledge, Wahl, Marciniak. October 3: Wabash 18, Earlham 0: HE boys in the Scarlet opened their home season on Ingall's Field by downing the Earl- ham Quakers. Wabash balanced a strong pass- ing attack with effective running plays and scored three times-twice with Pack carrying the ball and once with Klokoski crossing the goal line. The game was somewhat marred by frequent fumbling on both sides. Laterals were flung far and wide, and interceptions of these passes displayed the lateral pass in its most dangerous mood. Wolff and Iohnson turned in great cards for the day: Ioe Gruca was slightly injured. The Band wore new uniforms and played some fine tunes. Substitutes, eleven. . , N., V-Yi f -. v A G'-mg fm. 1 ,A ,J X gg 1 'fliiix '77 ge Y' fa H sv, tx 1 ,p gf? - 1 7 , .. Ei'7f,ilXlX ,ft A AN AR X 4xl f l lr, I I ff. N ,XJXA7 ' .tx H Y 1-Q' W-LD' 3.1 tfrws R13 G N .' October 10: Wabash 19. Manchester 6: HE following weekend the Wabash boys en- countered a heavy Manchester team which outweighed them from ten to twenty pounds. The aggressive Manchester backs ran into stub- born opposition when they tried to puncture the Wabash line. They were not able to score until the last quarter, when a Scarlet fumble gave them the ball on the twenty-seven yard line. Wolff made the first point-after in this game, the only one in three games. Gruca was the first to score. After the exchange of punts Wabash placed the oval on Manchester's twenty and made a push for another tally. A beautiful pass from Pack to Wolff scored the final count. Substitutes, five. Kobal, Adams, Pack. Heintz. Novosel. Burwell, Gomberg. nf 'fy ,Wfjm W QF, K' f my X N .X L7 .DJ Q If - ,naps ,f V7 ,V , JI, .A-. to 1 , N iiigyxw 'If KL fyj' ,X 1 N. X tow fp M K fc 1 cu, bl 1 j 4 1, l, ,iff i' ' 'l 9' 1 3 k 7 5 jlfx Q1 V, ,f N X ax I .I fg ' f X It x ' , up jf, M fp kj R -,A , Q 1 'T t, ,A f X , f X QL 1 tt t 3 f tl Vx its f it - 1 ff l ff QL!! ..s,u1s..sr,Uq,JffJ, it QL ...sl My f 51 VARSITY October 17: Wabash 19, Rose Poly U: N the second home game, the following week- end, the Scarlet encountered a big team which again greatly outweighed them. The Engineers, however, were not as capable as our boys-although they did have a fancy shift and some fancy new uniforms. In the very first period Cooney snatched a pass from the able arm of Bill Pack and made the first score. After recovering a fumble late in the quarter on their forty-five yard line, our aerial attack clicked and three passes carried the ball to the one yard line. Klokoski plunged for the second score. In the second quarter the reserve backs made their debut appearance en masse, but at the open- ing of the second half the regulars made the final push and the third touchdown. Substitutes, eleven. f 5 J . '71 ,,,,,ff W' lil mf Q5 Q17 if 5, gy- fx -if X. fy L gg. ,gee fag '-rl-r' M P, fi 1 ,,-by g if Qt 4 A ' .9 fi wx fl X ,ff 2- X i X N if s A iii C feb on i is 5.5 G x af 96 sw ff Jef- .l-1,69 s4....4,..'e.:52:s-a..1..i:.Y',42.vm Q.. 9 TRD 5. fini. Jacks 52 lilif Rickett, Beers, Bord- ner, Ayres, Heimbrodt. Michaelson. Martin, Kraus, Kime, Burk, Fisher, Trout. Sim, Winters, Moffat, Icrckson, Supple, Bech- tel, Lamond, Scrlyer, Goodwin, Loveless. Q1 diy gl -N l k f-fl! 3 W M e x 1' x,x. Y 'KSA ,lf 'V .wi ' Walid' ix X W M' l 'ff V Q ,ff 'W A 1 , L x Q l , l u if A Q mf , sl .a'i.l?JREQ-bi5lV,X2Xl2Jl'jiog- li! Life lg7?y? 13 53 October 24: Butler 8, Wabash 7: HE great event of Homecoming was this closely contested battle with Butler. Wabash displayed an aerial attack which left the heavy Bulldogs bewil- dered. We completed thirteen out of eighteen passes attempted. The Pack-to- Wolff combination gained the largest amount of ground. Cooney scored for the Little Giants and before the cries of triumph had subsided Welton of Butler charged through our line for a fifty-three yard gallop to the goal line. Wabash attempted to kick in the third quarter, but the kick was blocked for a safety. Cooney, Wolff, Iohnson. and Miller played the outstanding ball for the Little Giants. October 31: Wabash 20, Evansville 0: HE Little Giants travelled in the next game, and with the aid of the second string downed the Purple Aces on their own field. All of the scoring was done in the first part of the game, two tallies in the first quarter and one in the second. Pack spiralled a forward to Wolff, who lateralled to White just as he was tackled: White scored. Wolff converted. Later, Pack shot another pass to Wolff and he made the second touchdown. Kobal caught a pass from Marciniak for the third count. The Scarlet seemed to have hit their stride in aerial offense, for with Cooney and Pack rifling we completed eleven out of eighteen attempted. Substitutes, eleven. November 7: Wabash 21, Franklin 0: HE Little Giants returned and successfully terminated their home season when they downed the Grizzlies. By garnering three complete scores the Scarlet gave a fine exhibition for the throng of Parents' Day spectators. Cooney's pass to White netted the first count: Marciniak caught a pass and made the second: Hoke made the third. Substitutes, eight. November 14: Wabash 19. DePauw 0: XCEPTIONAL spirit was displayed this year before the DePauw game. Wa- bash scorched the D.P.U. green by scoring in the first period. Pack threw a beautiful pass to Wolff, who evaded the Tigers' safety man and made the first score. White returned a punt eighty-eight yards for a sensational touchdown. The Wabash stands went wild. Lennie Wolff made the final score after catching Pack's ball. Glorious victory . . . sensational plays . . . marvellous coaching . . . voluminous rooting . . . extra day at Thanksgiving! if 575 ff' fe 57 F 'P 'Uv .09 61 A fi at QU in W' Q.. Aa- f+1?V, divx, L gg Tse. ,wg-+ve PQ I : If! ' fffg.gi57i7 'f Q Gi? iw fi if C52 1 5477? ,Q X f fp 'J . ff ii -f ' 1 I Xxfflix lx ' ' xxx l xl . - fl! 9 Xkxx A X my XX I I t jf fx if jqu p 5 X f ,. 3 I X y t T 'ti ' f' '- a it j 7 L 5 0f if X f 37 ,inf gf! Lii5l12, sJ,ELZRSSQQ?L43':: Us Q53 rws ik 3252 TZ? 4fNfc?C: E541 BASKETBALL I957 Gruca, Hester, Fuller, L0ng,Bern5,L10yd, HE end of the basketball season found the Scarlet netters on the short end of a record consisting of four wins and ten losses-a per- centage of .28. The voices of sorrow and alarm can quickly be quieted by the assumption of an 'Earlham viewpoint' of moral victory. Coach Pete Vaughan was confronted with the task of replacing Heath, Davis, Booie Snyder, and Ben Mason, who comprised four-fifths of the starting line-up last year. lack Berns displayed the same sterling brand ot ball this year as he showed last season. Iack, always playing a steady and heads-up game, was the high point man for the season and the outstanding man on the Wabash squad. f rf! ,K , K'-X 1 U, -, V- 5 '! ,Am ,sw 1 t ' im. 2 mf' 2 , f, ' jf!! ' Q. -My dxf liflpl 'tif 34?-i:XV4,v,' Kg 'L NL-ft f . ,yogi jf INA! 1: A I fx ' it XX lv XJ! f N r, if n tt, it , fa 4, W st f 1 ff le A ,af,43'c+s,f,4'a.Y,42 r I,-1 -1,25 T-is km di A, Jtsyimss 561 I ' llA.'ltETllAlL N M ..,..,,,. fs. S-o HW V, WMM. ACK has another year on the team and will undoubtedly continue to make an earnest and conscientious effort. Captain-elect 'Tuck' Williams, fully recovered from the broken wrist that kept him idle last year, teamed with Berns as the other half of the forward combination. Tuck proved to be an exceptionally fast dribbler and the possessor of a keen basket eye, which placed him as an out- standing man on the team. Lanky sophomore Bob Long assumed the cen- ter position vacated by Heath and showed an aptitude for hook, spot, and under-the-basket shots. His steady play and defensive ability cheered the hearts of Wabash rooters. who will welcome him back for the next two seasons. ...mga Rutledge, Kobal. Seaman. Pack. Williams. Kitzmiller. f as c t it 'ft 1 ' ' PM N .1,j?iy t t Q- A r ' f 47.1 E f aw, 37 f f Sadly? in fl ,F A If f L Q WKTA' .Q X J ' 3' X E fAv,N?5f3ilFxX.:X I iv f NA NN I7 Q, H ,fr l l I rt, x X ' X ,f,.NwjVi H Y ' 1 l . X X47 .3l.s? :.1i..l.Jf.L.5m.:ks..ftlib3iJ-'iiH.:i! Wi .lil YZ W 57 OPHOMORE Bill Kitzmiller amazed the fans with his brilliant dribbling and aggressive- ness. 'Kitzie' was a bulwark in the Scarlet de- fense and will display his many talents for the next two seasons. The sophomore class had another representa- tive on the starting line-up in the person of the sturdy and stalwart Bob Burwell. Bob was chosen from the ranks of the football team to fill the gap at the other guard position. Burwell possessed the knack of being an able spot- shooter and developed into the backbone of the Little Giant deiense. Wayne Lloyd, ineligible last year, proved to be a very valuable asset both as a utility man and as a brilliant guard. Great things are ex- pected of Wayne in his next and last year. W IJ-17 WJ Q T3 Ill 491 'B A S31 'Q' xi, ,, lf' f ry ' A. ny! Fx' .ll gixjifddlfv 'V X A' it X U ylllgfn M2 A X ll my fx 1 6 f l Y ZW .gil .. Qi Le, dia. 476 Xirleerb Q L58 FRESHMAN BASIQETISA I. Welfel. Shearer. Tyler. Loveless, Minton. Michcrelson. Powers. II. Sumner. Cronk. Icxmes. Rhode. Kinncxmon. Hensen. Carr, Bechtel. .. f YT s rs. Q? r 67fW.ffM QLMW W. 'LM U MS ' uv X2 r ...F Q. LQ.E.v.sQ1sfgQp!3' N ,.. Qi .QL Qs. WZ' H515 73 W E591 Li fx 'N 'WN 'LSA lfgxifi . ieii-fQ f ffxifitf Wig 4' fQ.2fii5ff E E vii- zvfgix E 5 3 Q X t .lxq QQ' 1. W' 2 Q Q 5 E SSSQSQQSEQQS ulr ff o-o-'rrcro-50's-o-:ro-'rr f i QQQQQQQQQQQQ R X m ua m rn cn U1 cn rn ur cn rn -'7NiQ ::-'zzrs-'::-'::-5D '.:r::r::-s':r 1 5. sf- k,v t 5 2-9' ' 'Sify Ur:1sUa'faf'2 2UUs'1:1s1aU 59X gg?-D.:.',1.:g5ggg',L:: SFS -X 253555325555 3' CD CD irfwgg aa 2: 5 Q, 8 3 jj, as s ,,, F.,-.ggi 0 oo U an co X ' s5S?rJl 3 8 -1 : if?-C-f, fb- 5' 3 JXS.-. A ffm in Cf ' QESU , ,Xt if Xl wif: I iii -X f 'HJ fp.-4-. Xs fillx, fiiif ,Bt ew E601 I957 BASIQETBASLL BOB ROGERS found his stride midway in the season and shined on defense and in the centre position. Bob will be greatly missed next year. Coach Vaughan had two dependable substitutes in Hester and Fuller: they proved their worth many times with their aggressive and sparkling perform- ances. The Scarlet tive consistently played well in the :first halt ol the game, but seemed always to tall down in the last half-and thus lost many close and hard- fought games. Prospects are bright for next season since only two men oi the present team will be gone. Forthcoming from the freshman class are several promising pros- pects-among them Carr. Minton. lames. Michaelson. and Rhode. Major awards were presented to Williams. Rogers. Seaman, Berns. Lloyd, Hester, Long. Kitzmiller, Burwell. Pack, Fuller. and the Senior Manager Van Der Vries. Schedule of games: December 10 Wabash 59, Taylor 28 Wabash Wabash Anderson 38 Montana State 36 X Q 5 x -. 5 Q I l 'D x VV .V 3 1 I , V ' ,..v,,, tzl G I L vvlv ,. .. ..... Q 1 - A wwf ., , q A, R si W, K ., b blblb., , . ,V E --.wx 5, ' l'A ,, 'V .A..AA f f ' ' LL IUS7 OLSTERED by the return of six regulars and several promising sophomores and reserves of last year's team, the Little Giant baseball squad looked forward to one of the most successful seasons in many years. Hav- ing won, at the time of writing, three of the first five starts and having lost the other two only by slight margins, the Cavemen's war- clubs are an ominous threat to those yet scheduled to cross their path. Pre-season reports of weakness and inexperience in the pitching department have been discredited Van Duzer, Hanscom, Beswick, Hunt, Prestine, Gilbert, Iones. Heintz, Alexander, Davis. by the sterling performance of lack White, Carl Prestin, Iack Hester, and Walt Davis. Perhaps the fielding is the weakest spot now. lack VanDuzer, veteran catcher, has done much towards backing up the team, and Wayne Hanscom, promising sophomore from Evanston, has a permanent foothold on the first sack. The rest of the starting lineup includes Dick Cooney, 2b: Ioe Gruca, 3b: Charles Beswick, ss: Bob Iones, lf: Carl Berg- quist, cf: and Bob Alexander, rf. , l, fi dis A 3: -U lf' i ffilf 'li N , V A 1 L X Kjx, 1 A js A .ull , .1 h fftrxr 'Y 1 I f XJ Q' 41 ijuyxxx X I' 'fi' To N 'nw ff' E ,Q .5 J ,RQ V' It Xb !,s.!'.5 1, Aww' 'P 'f VI it K L N A x! in 'I' .. A w sq Q fl.: j , 1, xx N59 4 ka 1 X f 3 ,' .N , .Q ,f j ' Z , ,N Q fy 1 4 ,yi djwlnfg K f f . M it ww if f 47 .235 L'1.'.a..5A-kssafiv, lfl2'Lnu isf.,Q lvl, ,Qi 335. .Emi dfj XJ M 621 BASEBALL Gruca. White, Bergquist. Spangler. Cooney. Rich. Hester. April 13: Wabash 2. Purdue 1: PENING the season. lack White won his own ball game by singling over short- stop to score Hester. who had tripled in the ninth inning. Allowing only seven scattered hits. White struck out nine Boilermakers in as many innings: Purdue used three hurlers. April 16: Franklin 2, Wabash 1: A pre-doped pushover Franklin nine put up a stubborn battle to defeat the Little Giants in their second game. Although Carl Prestin pitched a two-hit game. fanning six Grizzlies, inability to hit in the pinches and several errors gave Franklin the victory. April 17: Wabash 3. Franklin 2: Wabash 5. Franklin 0. The Little Giants wreaked vengeance the following day by taking both games of a double-header. Hester, pitching in the first. allowed only two hits. while a lone scratch- hit marred Davis' record in the second game. gm., X xg X ip J? j fair. 445, fhffdfj vm n WM ll. W A fly Wm M Wvygx we ts QL .SQ lm its as 63 May 14 April 22: Purdue 6, Wabash 5: RAVELLING to Lafayette, the Wabash squad was nosed out in spite ot a ninth-inning scare. A three-run rally in the fifth inning was insufficient to overcome an early tive-run lead. Six Wabash errors aided the Boilermakers con- siderably. Prestin and Davis, tossing for the Little Giants, allowed only seven hits and struck out three batters apiece. Remaining on the schedule are games as follows: April 30, Franklin May 19, Purdue May l Franklin May 24, DePauw May 7 Butler May 27, Butler Indiana Iune 5, Butler May 15, Butler 5 1 V x,pk x V l f t i a lv' 3 5 if ,pix LX lf sl? 'xt My XE. ..., axrnivllgblfif , Lg LU. f .UE f64 OTHER SPORTS UHUQL' Cfllll TRY I. Hosticka, Baron, Daw- son, Mefford, McDer- mott. II. Baker, Harrold, Gor- man, Schlick. HE 1936 cross country team enioyed the best season in several years. After a slow start the squad steadily improved under the skillful coaching of Stan Baker, to whom much credit is due. Captain George Dawson was by far the most consistent man to finish in the money. The fast- travelling star won two races. and placed sec- ond, third, or fourth in most of the other contests. Baron and Mefford, co-captains-elect for next year, also finished among the leaders. Hosticka, the fourth letter man on the team. improved rapidly, stepping along at a fast clip by the end of the season. Harrold and Stout showed great improvement in the season's final test. The Scarlet had nine meets, six of them away, including trips to Chicago and Ypsilanti, Michigan. Besides the co-captains, Stout and Gorman and McDermont will bolster the 1937 squad. A tentative schedule of ten meets has already been arranged. , all S in MV ft if? We 71- . ALA MY! UXJA ffl, ..,, ,fm 3 I PQ., ,Q Q I Y fx. KX 'li U foxy jf, if A '4f, ilqjfgf ,ix will K' i f lx jx F V l X fx , , p . XJ5, , XXX ,bl AAA! K 1 ' A il! Xi f,k! ,fn ,dA YAY xx X J ,XX ... .K i V., if li' lily 2 lil ...fl le., .LWB l E66 S s HE Wabash swimming team, coached by Iohnny Sutton, worked out at the Y during the 1936-37 season. There were several out- standing padcllers who carried the brunt of the attack. On Ianuary 8 the team travelled to DePauw, only to be ducked by the Tigers. However, the Scarlet captured the Medaly relay and back- stroke, the latter won by Ross Iewell. Lee, Newell, Porter, and Moring also showed up well in the meet. The following men worked out regularly in their respective events: Porter, Walker, Barlow, Moring, Newell, Coy-Kendall, Wakeley, Iohnson, and Cochrane, free-style: Iewell and Smits, back-stroke thrashers: lack Lee the main breast- stroke artist: Moring the diving. Most of this year's team is available for the 1937-38 season. Tentative meets have been ar- ranged with Butler, Purdue, and DePauw. The boys deserve a lot of credit for their efforts, since a swimming team is just getting started after an absence of several years. lNlNlINl5 I. Sutton, Iewell. Lee, Newell, Porter, Coch- l'ClI'19. II. Barlow, Moring, Wil- liamson, Wakeley, VValker. , s ixlzgedfji 54,334-rrj, Q, if Q we w XM,vlf2lill.f,- -A Mi T A' 'flb 1! fx ATX X 1,. W' B Y 4 -' w W A 5 v A ft ff , x lr A fm - 'ml N ' 5 y f-Nc, ,,--. W r 'iw V W 'W hs sf s...-L'e.msstlifMsl .ef es six. W I E671 TENN Meiford, Elliott, May- berry, Fertig. ITH three 1936 letter winners for a nucleus, and with the added strength of several promising sophomores, this year's Wabash tennis team should be one of the most success- ful in Wabash tennis history. Several matches with nearby colleges have been scheduled, and the team should undoubtedly score some vic- tories. Fertig, Davis, Meliord, all veterans of last year, should be able to use the benefit of their experience to Win over their opponents in both singles and doubles. Ioe Mayberry, a sopho- more, plays a fine, steady game, and should prove one oi the mainstays of the team: while Elliott and Norman can also be counted on to play consistently good tennis. Two seniors, Har- rold and Porter, will also probably be fighting for a place on the team. Matches have been scheduled with DePauw, Michigan, Indiana, and Indiana State Teachers' College. Tentative matches have also been ar- ranged with Ball State Teachers' College and the University oi Louisville. AV,,f . . r-p fp ',gf.' xlgvt f , 1 ,Qt ' ,,Wr ,fi A 2' l 4 G 9 T X fl f lflfll ffl 1 Nl l X ill l X T j R l x 1 X ff! lx ' I X ...M gas Davies, Weilcmd, Burk, Ziegweid. G U L F ROSPECTS for the Wabash golf team look exceptionally good, all indications pointing to a successful season. The team is composed of six veterans- Davies,-Ziegweid, Weiland, Burke, Groves, and Emerson. This combination should prove hard to beat. The following matches have been scheduled: two with DePauw, two with Indiana State, one with Armour Tech, and probably two with Pur- due. These should all be very interesting contests. Practice for members of the team started at the beginning of April, on the Crawfordsvllle Country Club golf course. Competition for the four places on the team should be very stiff, judging from the skill shown by each of the six players. Some money has been granted to the golf team for use in practice, and the team hopes to get playing privileges from the Club. fix has at 59 021 'X 'U A 3 rf .T if by - sf , Wjwgglv . V- 11 in Xf I lkllridg i Cf Q X 2 li fx 'l 'VK' -1 XLT, , vig l I 1.1.2.9 ' l , H X-Q ,L Jx.X:i:AH X 'X ' i 7fQf,1f'f' lx S X7 f fix Q M X frm X T f- ,t X .,,f -,1 1 I' f A, ,lx Y fjltlygw gm QE XJ, XM 69 kt . Q lm l.l9,M K I 1 ITBA HE intramural season began with fall tennis. This year the tournament was divided into the singles and doubles tournaments. Ioe May- berry, Beta, and Profesor Montgomery reached the finals in the singles just as the weather put a stop to tennis-so the points for the winner were divided. In the doubles, Montgomery and Paterson of the faculty triumphed over all opposition. Intramural activities were renewed by the touch football contest. A surprise defeat of the Betas at the hands of the Sigma Chis put the Betas in second place near the end of the sea- son: but they rallied and won over the Phi Gams in the last game of the regular schedule, so that the two were tied for first place. In the playoff game, the Betas downed the Phi Gams with a score of 18-12. Beta Theta Pi, winner in volleyball for the past four years, was knocked off of its cham- pionship seat by the Phi Gams. Five other teams tied for second place: as there was not time for a playoff, straws were drawn and second and third places went to the Kappa Sigs and Betas, respectively. In basketball, another exciting finish was written when the faculty defeated Kappa Sigma, f rf cw, IE: an sv. ip f' L' ffm' ,fl s-X 'N If 1'-'J 4'-- N - fu' lil - c r , wax 222 if r, f f if 77 wg: W L I X' X at J 1 n fl flllfflil ml l f x mi ,LW K it 47 .Ltr sf' lily gi .a.'.4,z.ssftef,,4z.fw. I QP me 5 ds.-at ' Lass I70fI X . is.. I PM X af' if! , - I . ,Z sy M Q . .V gh s 'r,hs-aT.l'f'Y -' A331 ' , li K 5 . 3? Na -, . 1, . l ,,g4Jg g1,55if,, 1 Y A its , ' f Nw ' M we , - c X ' X HBA. putting Beta Theta Pi in a tie with the Kappa Sigs for tirst place. In the championship game, the Kappa Sigs' Booey Snyder was high point man of the game with 17 points: he was also the individual high-scorer for the season. The nine teams playing ping-pong were divided into two groups, and the two leaders in each group met for the championship tour- ney. In the finish, the Phi Gams met the Betas and the two tied in the singles: but the Phi Gams nosed out the Betas in the doubles and were thus the ping-pong champions. As this book goes to press, badminton and kittenball remain to be played. Below is a list of total points so tar: Beta Theta Pi ............., Phi Gamma Delta ...... Kappa Sigma ......... Faculty ..,..,....,,...... Delta Tau Delta ....... Independents ...... Phi Delta Theta ....... Sigma Chi ................,.... Lambda Chi Alpha ..,.... .......l44 .....,.l3U .,,....10lVa 57 44213 442f3 fffff 40 292f3 20273 if .1 I , . W Fm ' 'I 1 - A - A Q3 if ,fi 6 ft,-A ' l tl 'FE' ,fx I . QI Yi? I I fm? J IP: ifjwxrx 4 nv X . flfinvlax gl' 1 xi 1lriZiv,ifip7r,xH! KL Q 2,5 all' I' , .2 I X I i ll . f si 19 li xl li fl I i I ' x 1 ' 1 5 I I 5 .1 I .J ' U 5 u . ' 4 my , I ill M w .I 5 ff I Q4 Q 9 wtf ll I W f' sf g .gl la. .i.'eJizshafALV, 42 Ji. at Qs 3. 335. .si ,XJ 13 I71l CTIVITIES outside of the routine classroom work must be a part of the lite at a liberal arts school: at Wabash they are many and varied. and nearly every Wabash man is in- terested in at least one of them. Among them are the various forms oi public speaking, the clubs for those interested in special fields. and the musical activities. We have also placed here the honorary fraternities, since most of them distinguish Wabash men active outside the scope of the classroom. CTI IPI wk- r 1,1 ,, , ,, 1 .sal Q 2 'I -ff Y ewxl ,J I5 ,zz Q' . 'if , ffm if ,A., rf gf I A? ' 4 ff wi fa. Q We ,X I A lv P ,. fy M ffi i , X i. it .. xx Q fm Qf 1 , , . ' ' y 'N 1 VK, ,, ' . fl' X, x , ef ff J 1 'X X Q i : f. , cg -Y ,QN .H U itll? A Rel E . AU Kappa Alpha is a national honorary fraternity for excellence in forensics. Men eligible for this fraternity must have partic- ipated in two inter-collegiate decision debates or one inter-collegiate oratorical contest. Out- standing members of the Speakers' Bureau are, with a recommendation from the Speech De- partment, also eligible for election into Tau Kappa Alpha. Several meetings were held last year, in which there was a strong move to revise the present constitution of the organization. The members also voted to send to the District Con- vention at Cincinnati two representatives, Pro- fessor Phillips and a student speaker: these men participated in an after-dinner speaking contest with a five-minute speech on the subject If I Were King. The Tau Kappa Alpha Key is in the shape of ,a scroll, in the center of which is a wreath. Iames Shepard was president of the fraternity this last year, with Robert McVie and Professor Phillips serving as vice-president and secretary- treasurer, respectively. 'TAU HAPPA LPHA I. Martin, McVie, Shep- ard, Plummer, Walker. II. McKinsey, Shearer, Kingsbury, Phillips. V A A f 3 will A A glow , 1 , if t ,VXX In-vi X ' 'I X A Ifrlkl rf' 11 Y ff, ,tx p X 'Q K V ft . p 1,fW,X 1 7 -l . x l Q fm Q L..5.5z:13llQ?,e2.l .S Q5 bm 5. JW XJ t.L sLzie in 75 HU Pl DELTA Elk IEIU URABIE EN on the Wabash campus prominent in journalistic activities are elected to be- come members of Pi Delta Epsilon, the national honorary journalistic fraternity. Pi Delta Epsilon has acquired a new rospon- sibility in recent years, since its president also becomes chairman of the Board of Publications. Members are chosen each Spring, primarily for excellence in journalism. Business managers of various campus publications are also eligible for membership in the fraternity, as a reward for their endeavors in the interests of jornalism. The emblem of Pi Delta Epsilon is a small triangular key, on the back of which is usually engraved the owner's name, college, and year of initiation. As soon as possible in the school year the name, address, and telephone number of each man in school is published in The Bachelor under the auspices of Pi Delta Epsilon. The officers for this year were Robert McVie, Charles Klamer, and Robert Plummer. 6 D is gt Nerf? Q ,ffl f t 9 l- ,ll 'Q p, if f it , ,X lg m-,,f,-.-.y U 5 Q ,Qt 47 as sf. Q. is A-.X ..'?lsl223ZtsaLsQJME ...Q up 3- aids Z axfiEQs.' me Il. ll r Il It ll It I HE Wabash Blue Key was organized in 1934 as an outgrowth of the national honorary fraternity which has existed on the campus since 1924. The organization is composed of men who are outstanding in extracurricular activities. It attempts yearly to sponsor some material im- provement for the school. Each year the Blue Key selects members of the faculty to be honor- ary members: this year these were Dean Ken- dall, and Professors Iohnson, Paterson, and Gronert. The graduating members of Blue Key select eight juniors and two seniors to be new initiates. The officers for the past year have been Iohn Kingsbury, Iack VanDuzer. and Iames Shepard. This year the Wabash Blue Key presented to the Butler chapter a key as a symbol of victory, after the Wabash-Butler football game. E 1 1 iBLUE.l4EY Kingsbury, McVie. Plum- mer, Van Duzer. Moring. Miller. Snyder, Husting. Shepard. il l. nr' 4 W Q05 0 t. '1 . F avzwjlff t'E5 5t i e ffwrfwf Qs' vw ..- W .L fkftfk, rr 'N 5-'i'J ' x ,fry I' ,411 .ray f lf? 'A I, fy 'f-A. ' K 4. v' w 1 1 'F' 1 Fi'Y7g1bl it 3 1 ill 1 Q tf ' ' 1' 71 1 'Q 1 W' X 1 1 L 1 sl ft l t W1 'tw if .W 1. is fi W Nl W . ies' 2 9-ei....'i3.l?l5Y2Wzbiglf,,XQ12t' ,if Q es. fifsfrit W 1 airwaves nv E771 XXI I Qi' rms?-'G+ ., PNN tgiglg , if fc? r 335' wif llcffyjbx Eg an r , -if REX ggffm. gM',,,si??F3Nl, QQMQJE gffliif' slr 9 :lay I fl 1 -1. gf Sg?f' xt. . pgj- Rxf X, M, gb 21-ffl, my x'fiT:,,' A ig qw E731 H U Illl A Rel E ,1WHNX.CLUB Newell, Berns Cooney, Prestin, F. Heintz. Kingsbury Kyle, Wood, Miller. Hester, Rogers. Iones White Wolff Morin , , g, Bergquist, Gruca. E. Heintz. Alexander, Hanscom, Lloyd Tauscher, Iohnson Pack, Baker. HE Sphinx Club is an interfraternity honor- ary organization for men who are outstand- ing on the campus. Fraternity alignments are not considered in the choice of members, and a large percent of them are independents. Pledg- ing of new men from the sophomore, junior, and senior classes is held twice a year, in the fall and in the spring. Following a policy long established, the Sphinx Club elects some individual to the Hall of Fame each year. Last year Dean Kendall was selected for the honor. A cup is given an- nually to the fraternity which has the best home- coming decorations: this year the Kappa Sigmas won the award. Also, the Sphinx Club has pictures of the captains in the three major sports taken and framed. On Class Day the club awards the traditional lily, shovel, straw, and brown derby. Pledges to the Sphinx Club this fall were lack Van Duzer, Lenny Wolff, Bob Rogers, Ernie Miller, Wayne Iohnson, and Crit Newell. Spring pledges were: Wayne Lloyd, Bill Pack. Wayne Hanscom, Bill Davies. Bill Baker, Roland Tauscher, and Edison Heintz. The officers of the club were Prestin, lack Burns, and Carl Bergquist. Professor Montgomery was chosen for the Hall of Fame this year. HU UHAHI MEGA is an honorary fraternal organiza- tion developed to promote the activities of independent men in campus life. The Wabash chapter is composed of men who are active in campus activities and who have at least a one- point-tive scholastic average. This year Omega assumed renewed activity in social functions. Early in the fall Omega sponsored a smoker for independent freshmen. In May a banquet for newly initiated men was held in Forest Hall. The most important event of the year for the society, however. was the all-school dance which it sponsored. The pro- ceeds from this dance, which was held on March 20, went to purchase sweaters for the members of the band. ' The following men were initiated into the or- U E ganization last fall: Paul Ingersoll, Harold Hos- tica, Thomas Mastin, Carl Starnes, Herbert Ris- ley. Carl Bergquist. loe Gruca. Rudolph Bambas and Fred Walker. The officers for the year were Charles Har- rold. Ir., Fred Walker, and Sam Patton. Veraguth, Ingersoll. Harrold. Walker, Bam- bas, Van Duzer. Mastin. Hosticka. Bergquist. Gruca, Dawson. 9 A . f S' ' fi ' N I, t gg, f-K 53 px Q5-s F425 il-QA itll li ff ' i Fx fl its ' ' I W 1 , lflihgx 'lf lflbx f :if wil X . tw .J 1 T t n Q it Nfl' 5355 5 f . r V' , TF- ,hgh ,V , Q1 lxexlljffil ?f4 f i lil X lf x 5 we -ff ,gi A X KI ly l X, D QL I X .XS X ,X ff Xxx ix 4 ,, Q NX V , L x . , 'NL-L t QL J. Llsimsaesgivmg J 'X L., .iii MP!! lihis if 79 ALPHA Pl I. II. III. Savidge, Heintz. Har- rold, Hosticka. Hough Gineris. Patton, Veraguth, Porter, Huber, Daw- SO11. Mastin, Seaman, VVi1- liamson, Reynolds, Shortridge, Bach- mann. UR HIE OUNDED for the purpose of correlating the various branches of science and bringing about a closer relationship of those students majoring in Division I is Alpha Pi, the local honorary science organization. Meetings are held monthly at which papers on Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, and Mathematics are read by club members. At alternate meetings lectures are delivered by professors or guest speakers. The membership in Alpha Pi is limited to those students who have maintained a one- point-five average, according to a new ruling effected this year. Eligible for membership are three-fourths of the seniors in Division I, two- thirds of the juniors in that division, and the professors in Science and Mathematics. Two sophomores of outstanding merit and who are probable Division I majors are also selected each year. In addition to the annual banquet, Alpha Pi is planning a visit to the Culver Hospital where is located a very complete laboratory of X-Ray Therapy. Officers for the year have been Charles Har- rold, Harold Hosticka, and Fritz Heintz. 0 f ffl 5? 'il if gl W f L TLJI A M M 'W' - ,iv ,qf. rf- . jew' 1 r,, a of f fm Q F I 'Tl lkgig qt X p My f X I I XX 1.3 'NAM ,V N -.Nj X 5 l 4 p U 10 J gf fum, . J JN ...zsrcctakehilr ELL ff .wiser E301 HiUNUl'1AP..I HE honor which is the most difficult to obtain on the Wabash campus is the election to Phi Beta Kappa. A man must have worked indus- triously throughout his college career to obtain this peak of scholastic distinction. For this rea- son the key to Phi Beta Kappa is significant of membership in the most treasured of all honor- ary societies at Wabash. Election to Phi Beta Kappa is not an honor only at Wabash College, but it is a distinction which is desirable all over the United States. Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest national honorary society in the colleges and universities of Amer- ica. It was founded at William and Mary Col- lege on December 5, 1776. Since that time it has expanded until there are one hundred and seventy-two chapters, the Beta chapter at Wa- bash being the forty-second in order of estab- lishment. On Class Day each year, the Beta chapter initiates its new men. They consist of not more than one-sixth of their graduating class and two members of the junior class, who have had an exceptionally fine record in school. The initia- tion takes place at a breakfast meeting which is held annually, in honor of the new men. The officers for the following year are also elected at this meeting. The officers for the year 1936-1937 were: Professor Domroese, President Professor Lind, Vice-President Professor Osborne, Secretary-Treasurer PHI BETA KAPPA ELECTIONS, 1936 Seniors Richard Bigler Frank Lanigan Laynos Billingsley Morris Merrell Robert Elliott Andre Rhoades Richard Hudson Herbert Rowe Iuniors R. Brooks Wynne Robert McVie ES PHI BETA l4Ail?l'A Qkf Mi IX!! if Xfirfl ll? at ,f-ll 1 -Q5 rl r r - Y' K fl A 1 254, sf iff- frfw l .fu , V , Q , fir.. If . , A .ll 1 f -,W fy A 41 Xyf NX W X X 6 lx T4 3 WL ., A 'ff ax il il. E .L isacrrvelgl-9-ll 5 ll qfflkfffy LN, 1 l311 H ,. f 611.1 ,Q fa Q Q 5 5555 I gy! 0 ff 5 QA l L KX y H, 4' ,N I , X fl Q' X N V ' 1 ,. x g 27 5 4e.QmwS,,f5'M.zbLP!L..g x'4 ' Qi XJ L82 H E A H IT .' IOHN KINGSBURY Winner, ot Baldwin and Evans Con- tests, third place, Indiana State Con- test. f. fe LJ Y. ,gi idx Q,f,0w WMI w IJ W 5 I llc FA J 'V 'I - f .. I ' f , I' H ,X Ay! , fm. If 'MK rt I iff' Q .ll Lx A PT 'bi -1E 'lfi5Y -A IHIAITHRY HE Speech Department at Wabash is famous all over the country, and many distinguished speak- ers have been turned out. On May first, 1936, War- ren Shearer, now an in- structor in Speech at Wa- bash, won the Indiana State Peace Oratorical Contest for Wabash. The contest was held in Indianapolis, with Butler University act- ing as the host school. Shearer defeated the contestants from Anderson College, Franklin, Butler, Earlham, Manchester, Goshen, Marion, and Taylor. Iohn Kingsbury won the third place in the State Oratorical Contest held here at Wabash: he also Won the Baldwin Oratori- cal Contest last Iune and the Evans Ora- torical Contest oi last tall. In all three of these contests he used the same speech, The Last Mile. Bill Larrabee Won the Hays Oratorical Contest, held here at the end of the second semester last year. , ,iq Q79 If F fs' 3, J, Ka, ,, fs ,A-,f1?'g1f2fi' 'X f grain 'iff f I f Q. A , 1 I 'l E, li 44,7 Q ill' U X f I X X ff, X ' .A if Q 5 ji ' If ' p f . p f , uf WN ,N ' ' I-l Al fl wx Q XX? k s.1..E..l,.fw.1s.tic,l:t5., S+'-f1f,,' 4... ' f .sa fri, fx THE ARTS DEBATES I. McVie, Shepard Shearer, Plummer, Walker. II. George, Tharp, Custis. Martin, Wahl, Risley. Leming. HIS year the Wabash Varsity Debate Teams, under the coaching of Warren Shearer, en- joyed a fine season. The teams participated in a total of sixty-one debates, ol which twenty- one were non-decision matches. Out of the forty decision debates, Wabash won twenty- eight and lost twelve. One of the especially interesting meets was the audience decision debate against Yale Uni- versity. Wabash deteated one ot the great Yale teams by a decision almost unanimous. Wabash took third place in the Manchester College Tournament, with seventeen victories out of twenty-four starts. The following schools were debated this season: Anderson, Eastern Illinois, Indiana, Wheaton, Northern Illinois, Hanover, Capitol, Lake Forest, Western State, Wayne, Illinois Normal, Michigan State, Bowl- ing Green, Manchester, Augustana, Rose Poly- technic, Asbury, Yale, Goshen, Adrian, Illinois Wesleyan, Monmouth, and Iames Milliken. The annual Hays All-College Debate Awards were given to McVie, Gaines, Walker, Plummer, Martin, and Shepard. - Kg fr ff? ss I fi? ,Q iff' iv 'LQ il . i f YF IT HX iiill 'I Fl EEK' .za 'Af' 'Til or ev A ll wt 1 if 2 T I X lli ill N flll,s-,-fl I 5 Elk? Q, T fr.-.fl,Jl..,.,,1 slams-s4lJ,lQsl .,. fi 5. WM X3 is E84 TlfE AIlT.' 'PEAHERS' BUREAll NE of the fastest-growing organizations on the campus is the Speakers' Bureau. Pre- viously directed by Dr. Brigance, it is now headed by Professor Phillips. The organization has just completed its eighth year and has, in these years, filled eight hun- dred engagements. The record for the greatest number of speeches in one year was set by Bill Hays in 1936. Hays spoke thirty-two times and turned down as many more calls because he was too busy. However, Ford Larrabee's two- year record of forty-five speeches still stands. The newest advancement, made this year, was the addition of the services of faculty speakers. Although the organization is prima- rily for student speakers, this addition has lent great prestige to it. The Speakers' Bureau is important not only because of the opportunity for experience which it gives student speakers, but also because of its help to the College. The speakers appear before service clubs, high schools, women's clubs, teachers' associations, business men's clubs. In this manner the school is made known to worthwhile men and women. This publicity proves quite advantageous to Wabash. Moore, Savidge, Gul- lion, Shepard, Lee. Martin, Phillips. Wahl, Plummer. J' lo lllfr-H-, '95, sf? , ff? W 71 Sie., 7 S XJ' .HI A5 t hx, 'gf ' S Q, A 'ly' ' A M51 .Qf 1 Q 0.1 rj Y fx GL All M W za w V T ,dl N ss A E851 X THE ART ll HE rythmic marches of the Wabash College Band rang out at all of the home football games this year, as well as at the DePauw en- counter out of town. In addition, the Band played for pep sessions in the chapel, for pee- rades, and for a few outside engagements. New instruments have been added from time to time, a glockenspiel being one of the most recent purchases. The band members' uniforms of scarlet coats and military caps have been completed with the purchase of black whipcord trousers with a scarlet side-stripe. One of the Sea-Goin' Band's most important activities this year was their sponsoring of the United States Navy Band concert in the Gym- nasium. This year, for the first time, recognition was given members of the band for services ren- dered. Omega made possible the presentation of white sweaters with scarlet lyres as awards for those who had been active in the band for two or more years. fe , G-2+ ' hgh M f 2 9 ff fi ff' '-5 W rfsgflf Mit, tt R .J I , fx - . Nf. I N W f K ' V 1 1, if .x ff a l l 1 XX Q ll fy EB gf 1.4, l .,, sf L... W4 X .Lis 86 T H E ARTS UNCH E 'TH A HE lourth consecutive season of the Craw- iordsville Orchestra has seen it even more firmly established about Wabash. The member- ship is composed of students and faculty mem- bers ol the college. musicians from the High School and elsewhere in Crawlordsville. and members ot the Indianapolis Symphony Or- chestra. The Symphony Society usually presents ar- tistic recitals on the regular season schedule of three concerts. In Ianuary the Society spon- sored a recital by Marjorie Howard Morgan, mezzo soprano, and Mary Nieman, pianist. Soloists at the regular concerts have been Vergil Phemister. bass, in December, and Mrs. Theo- dore Gronert, violinist, in March. The president of the organization is Professor Domroese. The conductor for the past season was Ioseph A. Gremelspacher, with Mary Avalyn Davis as guest conductor for the March concert. The Wabash chapel is used for all rehearsals and concerts, and certain ol the instruments and other equipment are furnished by the school. fel fl K t e- Y' 'TX iii TTS' ' TT 471 v X lil li Xl X I in X s ff' XC , Lfflfjf ff 0 ,421 , l 5 A fx A N 'I Lmj' ' A ' Nbji? Y HEEHJT N A xt E . 1 if .. y X p f . X 'X -X V t . X H K A l ,N , l XXX 1 i N i 1 -T ,f J fx T f it ul L . . ink- Q., Qdfn .ii gin fftaf of-1' A1 f it l w fi' 5. wh X-ss L if JK? Lil-. Tb 87 ' 1 Q THE ARTS HE Wabash College Glee Club was com- pletely reorganized this year, with a view towards changing its purpose. Frank Fickes and Frank Knebel, President and Secretary respec- tively, were instrumental in abandoning the large concert organizations of the past seasons in favor of a compact body of skillful singers, adapted especially for radio work. The Club's success is demonstrated by its rec- ord number of broadcasts. Under the direction of Professor Horton, the twenty-two Wabash choristers travelled to Lafayette in December, to sing over WBAA. The second radio performance was that over WIRE in Ianuary. The outstand- ing performance was given April 17 over the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Com- pany. The only in person performance was that in Chapel Ianuary 15. Accompanists were Bob Stofer and Profes- sor Prell. Featured in the concerts were a quar- tette, and solos by William Hill and Charles Livengood. UR l l .SQ M G P fl fl ffl if WW' if lf! ' X all x 'V Y lx W Il f ll ill .W lu We iw L if . .- M2 l -if Qc, .. Qs..-4, W ,klbgtlsel iss llll UE UIIIIH ESTIR I THE ARTS LTHOUGH the Wabash Collegians were organized only last year, they have since built up an enviable reputation as one of the leadingcampus dance bands in the state. They are in constant demand for local dances, in addition to fulfilling many out-of-town engage- ments. The orchestra now possesses a full set of in- struments, band stands, with amplifying ap- paratus and equipment for lighting effects. Excellent arrangements of the latest hit tunes are kept in stock, and special effects are ar- ranged by Forrest Foreman, pianist. A local of the American Federation of Musicians has been organized on the campus by the Collegians. Some of the principal engagements which the band has fulfilled include the first night of Pan- Hell, the Miami Triad, many high school proms, the Pi Beta Phi State Dance, and a half-hour broadcast over station WIRE in Indianapolis. The Collegians played for a successful sum- mer season at Turkey Run State Park Inn. This summer they have been booked by the South Shore Inn at Lake Wawasee, Indiana. I... fe, Q, -A eu, f Q vi ef ff, 3 Hy 'Viv CFn.f'vv FH 1 TAS l ivff W, ff fm le t r I 'fl if in sq NX ,I ,fx ,eta W If A34 lf., -X 'V .QNX ,A , X 5 ZFX N if 5 ffl gift, W ill '55,l,XqlX, fl Sit, X. QV .sal lil,,l,:3 si, Q, lb fit If glib! I ifssg QM E391 SIIAPILET MASUUE OMPLETING a successful season. the Scar- let Masque presented on May first Play- boy of the Western VVorld for the approval of the Wabash student body and friends ol the school. Last fall, as a part of the Parents' Day program, the group presented Libe1, as satire on the English judicial system. Playboy of the Western World was directed by Dean Kendall and starred William Hill, the talented young freshman who also had the lead in Libel. The setting ot the play is in Ireland, and the players were required to employ Irish brogue. Students acting in the play were Wil- liam Hill, Gilbert Supple, Iohn Koilend, lohn Kingsbury, Louis Schaedler, Bob Boord, Iohn Brumbaugh, Iohn Meschuk, and lack Ryder. Feminine parts were taken by Mrs. Kathryn Din- widdie, Mrs. Charles Kuonen, Miss Miriam Clements, and Miss Mildred Linn. Frank Kyle and Neil McKay were, respectively, stage man- ager and property rnan. l..ibe1. a three act courtroom drama. was directed by Professor Phillips assisted by Merle Bartoo. The cast included Max McCullough. William Hill, Iohn Kingsbury, Risley, Meilorcl, Purdy, Ianus, Knebel, Sieber, Newell, Van- Auken. Boord, Brumbaugh, Ziegweid, and Ry- der. Mrs. I. I. Osborne, Miss Eilene McKinley, and Mrs. Davidson took the feminine roles. Frank Kyle was the stage manager for this pro- duction also. 2 . x ' , - ' ,,. '- x V -A -.1 T , i ' ' ' A V: vi , X . xg' ' . . i . ' ' 7 't . f xi? VA! 'ii if 'f A f- lf f u ,yy Kip M f 554 Q SN K1 5' g Q VU' wx W f3 117 1 l 5 s, fy Wt . F2 1 f, , r , p A lik ' I b X b I K f x lf N., X f! f tl X t we A Lf Q, N LW l 5903 l tif Vt will L A3 J 4 ,XA from LIBEL from PLAYBOY OF TI-IE WESTERN WORLD fur-'X Tm U ik N M1 if V3 Y 1' 1 'U :WJ ff? X fU ,4+' : lfwv' AM' Axfx JJ:- ,iff qSfiQ Fm ,fin ,fffw ,YQ if X J., J, 'V 1 N, dx, E- 5 i V 1 N x kk Af gl! N ff fri k Dx fx ,gxF,ffgL EX .ff I , ,K Lwvrf , I ,eMig,':y. P, ,:1,iN'Q L if 4, 4. ' Aff' Nfl A' I, X f, I' I ,, - fl I Vf V .7 Lv-,b4,h, X K , 5 Q, .A 1,4 9 F rv X ,ll ' ,f if A' 1 I V X X Qfgx XX ' , ' X N VA 'lj ,i I xg LK ,f , 'fyfg wv X K A' 'jx 4, ,Nfl X sg L xx f, , l I X X X v. x ' X A A x X In 4 If , 3 , 1 N J , , ' g , in X: I ix x AUX x 1 X51 fy Y, C I V! A, Y ,MA -, 'f W lv, ft j 151' E 1 xx N M X gX4,,?V,,1 R X Xi l Jfikni i ' ' , - L ,' ,N ,, f ,, yjgj X x 3' xx 1 'A 1 1 . - I7 x gr , ' - A 1977 Xfliq xs L..AM '2. QfNX4AyQ 1LlAfLL4.,ff7, 'iqz w5V ffXf fQ1fL xwfwvww if d5z 6fJ L:XNwF2D 1 , 4 - .,.... I . .1 Y ,,..,,,. E911 PUISLICATIU. ll William Rasmussen Editor Wayne Iohnson Business Manager VVABA Editorial Staff, left side: I. Sanders, Hamilton. Martin. Steeg. Fisher, Long, Hanscom. II. Burk, Bullock, Walker, Post, Supple. Eltzroth, McDermott, Custis. Business Staff. right side: I. Kobal, Brumbaugh, Schlick. Iohnson. Bordner. II. Fox, Keck, Elliott, Crowl, Schaub. HE Staff this year was divided into five groups, with a sophomore member at the head of each and responsible for the work of each. These sophomores, efficient assistant editors, were Custis, Supple, Fulton, Long, and Hanscom. Paul L'Amoreaux and lack Curry were the camera editors: Earl Hollinger and Dick Stewart also helped. Freshmen on the Editorial Staff were Herron, Bullock, Dewey, Fisher, Bob Walker, Martin, Hamilton, Sanders, Doermann, McDermott, Post, Bill Burk, Eltzroth, and Steeg. The Business Staff was headed by its Man- ager, Wayne Iohnson, who made the book pos- sible by securing the advertisements. His staff is shown below. .' fi. . If i- - - fs f- M fr- A as ffl.-- ff' 'F . fy f v . I V wc, , pp ,A frhpug JM., il,f,.v,m,5-f- . , .X jfi t Kuff il, 1 t A4 fgf ,fm 1 Www , ,L X fl ft Milli Ml it My its f it f M .534 i ...Lt .Q ,fi all fs... W fslss E921 PU B .llE!lt7l'llBNF3 ll NDER the editorship of Bob Mathews. the Bachelor printed in the first semester the largest paper in its history-a ten page edition. Frank Fickes and lack Lee helped in producing many six-page editions: Bob Davis secured the advertisements which made these practical. In the second semester a new system was devised. whereby there would be four positions. inferior to the editor. which would give eligibility to their holders for the position oi Editor-in-Chief. These men were Carter Tharp and Iack Lee. Managing Editors: Bob Long. News Editor: and Frank Knebel. Sports Editor. Frank F ickes was raised to the position of Editor-in-Chief for the second semester. Robert Matthews Frank Fickes Editor. Editor. iirst semester second semester Bob Davis Hamilton Williams Business Manager. second semester Business Manager. iirst semester A I li EDITORIAL STAFF: I. Martin. Lee. Tharp. Long. Rohrs, Steeg. II. Beers. Knebel. Pierson. Ayres. Lawlis. Eltzroth III. Burk. Herron. Fisher, Wagner. Curry. BUSINESS STAFF: I. Boord. Kent. George. Davis. McDermott. Brum- baugh. II. Wirt. Long, Powers. Post, Dewey. Crowl. Wil- liams, Shearer. 'I , , T. If 3. 3 , i V ,-': , ff Vg . of-1 xiii I I U H? I ig X I :sf I .1 'V-J f-3'-97 .fl S' f-lf if ,S-'JV' 'N h U .-if - ' . ,ff'I '-95:1 f F' '-'S 'im f 'I-NC. fmt mfdffwv' wwvsI .If T.: I I I tnfk ,'f.ws rvwf I w 2fv.f -,J t R K 5 1 .pu , I gl-it II' 4.f.J. aft x A X! K , KL? tx f, X ,1 ' . - s f f an V K VT .31 Eyxt -1 tyyixlijlfgk fl,-17 Il, v I If-if yi it .I tiff? wc, . I f, vip -,tx 1 ft , f ff 1 . ,I 1 ' 'I I I I .I F it ' WJ I -Q I I ,L I T 'X .ri 1 'X ' . 1 I 4 I Q . X X, , ' - X' K I I' -ff . I' -I ' I ' x fl 'AL' MI I, J fl ,If - fx l t ,I J t X ,f Y X! K ,fl , Q 1 N It ff If f 1 Vx 5 I X, V, .3 I.. I I, ,XVI J ,V .X X 1 'L ' , ' fl ,t f 1 ' , , ' M I X I I ' t ' I I , t X I I f L A fu f N 4 l V- V' l i l Xl fl l I Q 'I I V X I N I i fl , l x i ' IX I I f J J fx, If E isA ' A ' 1 I' I 'F ' l' X4 I '- H . j I, I ,I I f-:- w . I I , ,at f I 1 I II-, , 4f I lg 1. . I X -- I f L ,I 1 is I 1 M- L .. li-.I lf' ,,,,?LZ.L X f I Irv id' f fz ' Q - if 2:24 , ,fy -, .-vs, S. f 47 se: islam? is tissue . 4 3 ft: We fi. vi ws.. 'I X qt. 15-N I E931 lu 'a tl'llI5LlUATIIl. Iohn Koftend Editor ' -CWM mm Sam Stone Business Manager CA HE Caveman. the campus humor publica- tion, was founded in 1923. It publishes six issues yearly of jokes, cartoons, and libel. The magazine has been particularly successful this year due to the combined inanities of Iohn Kot- iend and Sam Stone. Their political issue precipitated a mild riot. not only on the campus but also in the uptown district, by their nomina- tion of Charles E. Gaines for President on the Sno-Bull ticket. The Caveman uncovered a great deal of undergraduate literary talent, and much of the resultant material was reprinted in college magazines elsewhere in the country. Circulation was increased this year by four hundred copies. Editorial Stall. left side: I. Dearborn. Supple. Sanders, Porter. Business Stall. right side: I. Spangler. Robertson, Dewey. Herron. II. Moffat, Salyer, Gin- eris. f. ,M .N QTL ,ex ,. fi' W, My mf ,679 13. fix V' f ,ff ...Elf Q. E if C ff , A, ,ji .Mt 16275 J' LK N Q1 A WWA 'iff' Q , ijt, fl, 'jk It Y Mimitx ,l - fl I4 FAR, ,lglifgi rj xi! ' IX , A 'Xg.':,j' L15 . i.4. ' ,Lf K , I 4' ' 3' X xxx lk I- , i H 5 1 .7 lf! lil LB I Jlfawmiv Lil Q L Lil l ,rl QW Jlibxtbr ff f z, ' '. Yt 28. -2'-Y' Aft -Q , 3159 ani?-5,LL52'iw-W 1-421 'D-1 OD FRED , in ati:-Sw LI Q 941 PUBLICATIU ' Charles Gaines Director .WS BUHEALI HE Wabash News Bureau underwent a com- plete reorganization this year. Charles Gaines, present Director. and Richard Banta. College Publicity Director, increased materially the scope ot the agency by creating tour specific major divisions of news. Many new men were recruited to till these new departments: Ac- tivities. Photography, Sports. and Fraternal Groups. Since the reorganization of the News Bureau there has been a great increase in the number oi items written and dispatched. The cooperation between the Publicity Department and the original News Bureau has resulted in a highly efficient organization. Robertson. Sloan, El- liott. Walker. Griffin, Sal- yer. 5, fix ,A it I A 'pf if gi W N mf it A l , Q JM? ul fl M Qtmsltuf L Q sine 2, E951 5 , f, A , I:96 f. II L ll Il .' FIR E UH CLUB Spooner, Rasmussen, Fay, DeVoto, Long. Dearborn, M e s sic k Tharp, McDermott, Risley, Hollinger. Hill, VanDuzer, Pur- dy. Robinson. HIS year the French Club, under the guiding hand of Professor Leavenworth, held its usual election meeting in the fall and the follow- ing officers were elected: Francis Fay, president: Verne Robinson, vice-president: Bill Rasmussen, social chairman. Mock platforms were devised, and were presented very humorously in French. Dr. Coulter was present and gave a very inter- esting talk on French Customs. At the Christmas meeting a splendid dinner was served at the Leavenworths' home, and Mr. Collar related his experiences as a Marine in the Battle of Chateau Thierry. Appropriate presents were distributed by Le Pere'Noel. Professor Domroese extended a personal in- vitation to the members of the French Club to attend the showing of the Olympic Games pic- tures, and many of them enioyed these. In the second semester the bridge meeting was held at the Phi Gamma Delta house: and at the time of writing the members are hoping that the annual excursion to the Leavenworths' country place will take place as usual. M 'f fx , nfs 15375, 5313 ' ffl Q L0 z 7.37 f , i ' X I lj -ji, -. ff vlf'EgfjN sqft! HJ f l V , , , Mil f pt jj , n l fl. x, no F . , , my N i ft ,, JM i if W f w , lm I, Y MA ly '13 IA K, 4,,, In ,, lx 5 Y- V X ff K I v 5 g FN ,fl 1 ur 'f X ,f l-t- 5 LQ 1' 4 r j X X , 'x K If E fill l :N I 1 K7 l l ll I -, XX! l llflxx K 4 V - -. if 1'-f,Es! fi La,L.5z.ss.,tf:',lQTa wt, Ss is ia. ff fill Ximxsvss CLUBS ER Deutsche Verein plans three meetings each semester. On November 3 Professor Hutsinpillar addressed the club on the subject of his summer's trip in Europe. On December 13 the Christmas program was held at the home of the Domroeses. On Ianuary 8 Mr. C. Otto Ianus of Indianapolis showed the two reels ot pictures which he had taken in Germany, espe- cially those taken at the Oylmpic Games in Berlin. Some fifty students attended this meet- ing. On February 19, in the music room of the Chapel, Professor Montgomery characterized live of the leading German composers: Bach, Beethoven, Wagner, Brahms, and Richard Strauss. Examples were played on the Cape- hart. The purpose of the club is to foster German conversation and singing, and to acquaint its members with German literature and music. GEIWIAN CLUB Prell, Robinson, Vera- guth,Bambas.Newell, Miller, Domroese. Novosel, Haines, Col- in, Schleich, Emerson, Shearer, Moore, Bar- low. Zmiia, Klokoski, Walker, Kobal, Van Duzer, Harrold, Meschuk, Ziegweid, Knebel. J , N - , CQ rg f-feirf 1'-gif W , f ff, . 1 wk ..., A E if , f 4 .J .ls 'cl .sl if QW' ,sl Xivligms .H E971 1 A 1 I, L ll I5 5 EETINGS of the International Relations M Club are held once a month, at the various fraternity houses and in the old chapel. At these meetings, members discuss public affairs, na- tional and international questions. The club is affiliated with the national organization of the same name. It receives from the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace gifts in the form of pamphlets on the various phases of in- ternational relations. The officers of the club have been H. L. Mc- Kinsey, Iohn Kingsbury, and Crit Newell. Mr. Tomlinson has been the advisor for several years, and this year he was assisted by Mr. Shearer. The club arranged for Major C. Douglas Booth, visiting 'Carnegie professor, to conduct an open forum on March 8. An alurrmus of Wabash, Mr. Ellis Carson, spoke before the club and presented some interesting movies taken in Russia. INTERNATIUNAL RELATIONS CLUB r l :Q U A ? 1 - ftfgfby K qix xi ,FQ r Xmfx f Wg s 3 fm, w Q1 9,2425 66.52 ., ,, '17 ji.. jf f .f fl X lu x' 1 , F gif- i- If' X ,xx x' A p fvyg ' '-A! X l' ,KA fxgffii t la L .Y , W',l xxx , A ZJPMAX was 5 L L A, Q s . v ,Li .1 .,4,t,,,sss:.wl.Li.!, tif ,sl tu W L .Lis 598 f 37 fe , Q b ' T g A 1 vx SW 4 x w f W qw 5 X vA J , QLQFQMQ f A ELL frm Nfim E991 URBAN HERE are seven fraternities on the Wabash campus: each group is different from all of the others. and each has its merits and its fail- ings. Then there is the Association of Independ- ent Men, the organization for those belonging to no fraternity group . . . opposite this page is a picture including the badges of the fraternities: we apologize for omitting a symbol for the In- dependents, but we couldn't find one. Nw f Yip!! v ..., .A F VI - VQX Qi W LD 5, Vx Q f x N My , +31 ' if , .-1 , X 2 f , Q ' A ' N + Q N Q Q AX 6 Q f X QL gg f 1 f x. QMS 1 A Q. W A 45,39 9,1 51021 PA. if-HCELLEC ICC CUU e CCIL HE Pan-Hellenic Council is made up of one representative from each fraternity, who has been ap- pointed by his predecessor. The Council attempts to maintain a close relationship among the fraternities in their social activities, and to maintain a high standard grade requirement for initiation. The Council also pro- motes scholarship by the award of a cup, at the end of each semester, to the house having the highest point average. Probably the best-known function of the Council is the management of the annual spring dance, which is Alexander, Gullion, Hol- royd, Moring, Moritz, Van Der Vries, Husting. held each year around the middle of May. This dance is a two day affair, constituting the biggest week-end so- cial event at Wabash. The first discussions of the plans for this year's Pan-Hell dance were held early in February, and the avowed object of the Council was to have an even more successful affair. The orchestra of Red Norvo was se- cured, and he was accompanied by Miss Mildred Bailey. Officers this year were Paul Hus- ting, Brad Moring, and Iack Van Der Vries. 25:1 f V ' 5 X elm it N J is M f' Nl, Xt All .y ,Q U j Wm QNX W .fl .JH P J. Us 46? lXfulm,,.b 1031 H041 .. 1 1 -4 ... W 1, M .- . . ,J Founded at Miami University in 1839 Tau Chapter Established in 1846 gf if BOT? 41 1 b A I. N-.Qw1Si,f ' f:'ei::f'!,,f'w fx . 4 i f WP' Carson, Bullock, Herron. Forrest. Sieber. Brenner, Iames, Fisher, Custis. Vosloh. Elliott. Mayberry, Rich, Umble, Landis, Fulton. Pack, Messick, Ianus. Kitzmiller. Fertig. Hoke, Sutton, Kotfend, Kyle, Moore, Porter, Van Der Vries, McVie, I. Moore, Morrison, Iohnson, Wynne. 1 L QT? f JJ ii 'L' i --y fig HA. , ' . , 'Aff X 6 ff ,swf ,. if 1, wt tv! 1 ff.. ,X K ,Rafe fx A A . 1 , , , , , f V... , , f, N. I I 0 Z I ,IJ ,X H 1, y ,,f' ,Vit i ,f,,, N fx , Xl ' XJ ' . f, ' 1 'f . ' . W A' - f , f X fu. Q 1 . 7. QQ X xt f f XX ,,- f , .ff R. . , , t if ,. it Q X, V If Y ,X ,W A In X : ' ' , X S ,I ,X f' , ff 1 . , - a I l if A pl ,fi f' . Q. li l , ,i f C it X ' if ill ff X R ' Y ' W xl ' l l ' J f' 1 1 If I X fin C X l f f f , 1 ix 1 l .ie ,l 2 f to 5 , iff .1 MJ K , Kgs, 5 e , 1 ., , N v , . ,, f ,,,,Ln L. N .,, f-. K, 1 , ,,, La , 1 T3 ,A-4 F Y. '. f if ,, ull, yon- 'ew WE . X.-T-, l Q LJ' LPA W -J-' I. Stout, W. Burk, Wirt, Steeg, Post, Good win, Gruenwald, Wahl. II. Iones. Kendall, Keck, Schlick. Schaub Iohnson. 205903 F 7' . 'F', ?. ' fiemi-4 q'r':.',ff tr- ' Q I -0. 1' 5,12 III. Hester, Baron. Langiitt, C. Hays, Iohn- son. Meflord. IV. Lloyd, W. Hays. Gullion. R. Burk, Phillips. ,, . . 7. , ... , .,.,,, A . I ,, . Founded at Miami University in 1848 Indiana Beta Established in 1850 Y , ,. s v fs., fl' ' 1' '., s. X , I 1 , f t.. ax xp I, J' 'X ,J . 1 ' , . ' ' t . . X w N X I 2 X t - t I X N X X X if I N t I I f 1 of .Le 5- if lx ff- -, H ,-f 1 --. 105 .S- I'HI GAMMA IPIELTA 1 1' . f . I It Founded at Washington and Iefferson in 1848 Psi Chapter Established in 1866 amgyp IV. III. Spooner, Michaelsen, Possitt, Hack, Beers, Ayers, Gostlin, Pierson, Hill, Purdy. Long, Hanscom, Walker, Emerson, Baur, Brumbaugh, Griffin, Bordner. Wayne, Powers. Heimbrodt. Wright. Gilbert, Trimble, Smits, McCul- lough, Kent,Phillips, L'Amoreaux, Fickes, Van Auken, McKay, Lee. Plummer. Newell. Kingsbury, Husting, Martin, Hurt. Klamer, Wolff, Dyer, Davies. Berns, Larrabee, Davis. lsil i Q ll fi i f ' if , - My ff iitl-, Lilfki Lit t ffl f?Qii fYg+ ifli mgjfigwt .CEE igkijlfxig if tiff Ei3..,k3 ll. QQ PQ., All W Qbfiiase 51001 . Cochrane, Van Sickle, Mertz, Hopf Kime, Pease, George, Rhode, McDer- mott. . Rasmussen, Tharp, Ziegweid, Hollinger, Curry, Sanders, Doermann, Hamilton Edwards, E. Heintz, Piel. . Wood, Downey, Webb. Fay, F. Heintz Alexander, Savidge, Weiland, Favorite AIA kkft 255?QL AW'-A '1 , + ' 1 1 Founded at Bethany College in 1859 Beta Psi Established in 1872 ,V ,-. rv ,L f 1.' .f , X , X ft, ffixy, - IN , r 1,1 , ,f 1 5 . - X - , ,ff X ' XR 1 1 ' , 3 . . I, L LX cf X X 4 j lj X , fy! LJ i. L- X 13 lv. A t, .17 K 'Q 1.-',,, 1071 L ' J ft lt X iw 'W V: le, Fl ' fs flvw fly at L 1:-If 1 - l ll V' '. 1 ' 1 Founded at Miami University in 1855 Delta Chi Established in 1880 smkngli Q uf HQ? 3 M4 3 -was mea I , I My Weltel, Bash, Sim, Crowl, Schalz, lack- son, Martin, Shearer. Kinnaman, Minton, Bushong. Marciniak, Weesner, Wavrinek, An- drews, Dryer, Knebel, Baker, Showalter, Fox, Beavers. Worley, Moring, Chupp, Iohnson. Mat- thews, Sidener, Hegarty, Williams, Kline, Snyder. , 1 it Q 7 J f V Y 1 qt, K 1' I fgllix A I-K, K. 57- f 1 X 54 - J ' f I ' ' l iff, . , Y ' vrr' I ' - 4 VJ xl, C L 1 J' 4 51' XY 0:2 fs .. 7 , , 1 ,Q , - N 3, I V X I Y p 4 A -1. I ,' xxx --N If 3 I i1'f1p7llfXt Xxgl i 'j - x L J i Z, K x f f' , I it fi ' l l lx ff lj li' X l if l X, J Fix N' A I Xl ix J , I f t , t . K W Q Y 1 ' l , f lRf.',5f 8 ' f K f , 1 8 M 1 M i 1 ' X, 1, l ,ff-' ,l f 11 ' l , l Xjfff Q ,Q l A ' , 5 , gf, 'll , 1 lf ,. 'L'f,,,lf::' Sill FQ A1151 45 , x.3s ' 7 C441 1 Aff igx,iT5b f1o8J fi. I4 A I' I' A I I I5 NI A I Founded at University of Virginia in 1867 Alpha Pi Established in 1895 2 2' .455 Q ' ,I -KP Qs. 25 e ' A' .ts A? I. Walker, Sayler, Sloan, Moffett, Supple, Winters, Iones. II. Kobal, Spangler, Iewell, Stewart, G. Supple, Dearborn, Robinson. III. Cooney, Moritz, Stone, Tyre, Gaines. IV. Crane, Livengood, Shepard, Walters. I I, , ft? I In I tt rshfl' .I I Q5 , IMI as VI5 'mt file nm .J ...J I sl 5 .AL WZ' .ISIS libel A 1091 AMISIIA CHI .LPHA Founded at Boston University in 1909 Alpha Kappa Established in 1918 ... -QA ... .vs , ,sf fg,:!,,A a7s.' 3. 1 ' A v U' . . TT :X 10 I. Lawlis, Eltzroth, Fisher, Ryder, Loveless. II. DeVoto, Hamlin, Iones, Long. III. Ludington, McKinsey, Grater, White. IV. Rogers, Holroyd, Robinson. f, ff: ff, ,W A an fi Q pm, 4:3 go if if ,Clif ' wi L ' VH ,gift F5 791375 fix sw X Y, ' I tl'ftXi1.i,fl 'X p -,..,fe,,t ' M ff-fl VW 9 f I ffl ,f M 9 f If ww I it Q I iles iii' XJ Q 51101 In v - lv IW 4v4, if '31, 5 M --., d Q QL A Qig igfivqgs .SQ .ixasxxjyff giy, wg 45g?ig! E111j Q., . Reynolds, Starnes, Ander- son, Canine, Campbell, El- more, McCarthy, Airhart, Hunt. Lane, Bambas, Van Duzer. Kraus, Worley, Allen, Rut- ledge. Veraguth, Young, Colin, Hughes, Gineris. Fuller. Dawson, Grimes, VanC1eave, Moore. Boord, Cronk, Trout, Gorman, Schleich, Helfrich, Berg- quist, Carr, Flanigon. Butler. Sumner. Hosticka. Burwell, Hawkins, Hoopingarner, Evans, Ratcliff. Lee, Bea- vers, Stout, Prestin, Gom- berg, Lewellen, Barlow, In- gersoll. Spears. Meritt, Patton, Wil- liamson, Gruca, Wright, Meschuk, Hough, Zmiia. THE ASQIIUIIATIUII UF IIIIEPI HE Association of Independ- ent Men was organized to perform some of the functions for the Independents that the fraternities perform for those who have chosen to join them. Independent men have as a meeting place Forest Hall, lo- cated on the west side of the campus. Forest Hall was the first building owned by the Col- lege. and when built, in 1833, it stood on the old school grounds north of the present campus. R, I . ff s xg . V K '33 ff , ff, GW f 1 TQ lla 55, fx BD 'lf' 9 ' . bw gpg? '--ll x Alfg ffl- Qi .rdf l ' yd W J M F n f I I a, GCN MW . --1 X, A I 11,2 'K 1 If 'hi ,N tra x I r LJ, , I ly X x ,'I,1xy k ,L E V 7 1 A WB, , X ffl N Ex ,XX EVX lx. I if I lf','Li X QL fill l 47 rlf' 3911 lsirl?52b5ieE-ftidfxiiltfhaknfid 5512! kiln 45. 67,9 . LQLREE. 112 OREST Hall was consider- ably remodelled the summer before last, and now provides living quarters lor a dozen men, selected by the College. Also, it provides a place for meeting and recreation for the independ- ent men. One room of the build- ing is occupied by a sort of canteen, where soft drinks and candy may be purchased and which is a gathering place for Wabash men between classes. Risley, Tapy, Dailey, Short- ridge, Hough, Zmija, Gruca, Wright. Murdock, Moore, Graham, Himes, Nordmann, Flani- gon, Arnett, Tauscher. Alex- ander, Prestin, Meschuk. Hood, Starr, Iohnson, Brady, Helton, Adams, Wakely. Holton, Stross, N ovos el, Hunt, Lane, Walker. Tyler, Huber, Lee, Arnett, Patton, Meritt, Wedding, Moore, Barlow. ,e 4: Y? so fig ft? X13 , av 1 3 -. ' a yt! l,Q?? F' X y ll, I.., lf' ,g ,Q T5 wx J ' Jn ,m K 7 Qin: lf lil! f lit? t My M ll my El f WN, 51131 FE EATURES seems to be the inclusive title that is given to all that is left over from the other departments of the book. These are mostly photographs. We considered including some samples of literary work. but gave up in despair after reading a few poems submitted for the purpose. Fate, they convinced us, is opposed to poetry in year-books. And so we have the Homecoming decorations. freshmen activities, and a few shots calculated to show how the Wabash man enjoys himself. fa f is gp Fig Fw W A 2,53 W W L ,fl W W6 fy f 0, , A A , Q35 R N I E :.....4QazxsS.ll5Q ,4zlfl W gs 5. dist JLREB ken, DD 1 y fn WN? 97 ,.14 93.1 F ill Ill E2 Hi '35 m m ll Y I fp ul e as Oy 'si l WALES!!! 3? Hlikxln . if' -1 Q Tv RESHMAN activities: Class Day submersion, showing the application of the fire hose . . . freshman scrubbing the floor at the Beta house . . .freshman wallowing in the mud. lucky enough to have retained his pot through it all . . . a view of that truly noble pile, the freshman bonfire, with a particularly good view of the traditional crowning glory . . . freshman taking a bath . . . two freshmen crawling on the foot- ball field . . . the bonfire again, revealing further intricacies of its construction . . . freshmen at the Class Day ceremonies . . . ,n , M, a r, ,:a. ,1n, J fii' ' B A if t by . tv 5 WABASH COLLEGE C Founded in 18321 THE PURPOSE OE WABASH The term 'education' is of very extensive import. It relates equally to the moral and physical nature of man, and comprises the development and training of all his powers . . . But I have chiefly in view, in my re- marks on liberal education, the improvement of man- kind . . . Education in its application to the mind, com- prises the development, right direction and permanent discipline of all its powers. To be thorough it must provide this harmonious and efficient action? -From an address by the frzfrst 1J'If'GSfd6lZf of the Col- ege, Dr. Elzfhu Whittlesey Baldwin, July 13, 1835. 8 A LIBERAL COLLEGE FOR MEN Bachelor of Arts Degree Only Limited Enrollment 350 Students Faculty of 32 3 Catalog and information concerning admission may be secured from the Director of Admissions, Orawfordsville, Indiana. llllIllIllIllIllIIIIllIllIIllllIIllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' 1 351-4w2'd3Ql36 'Ny ,wr ISCELLANEOUS snaps: the NYA at work . . . two pictures of organist Stofer at play. the second one snapped in Iones' Drug Store . . . Kate Reynolds at work on the Wabash: Skip at the same job . . . four guys with their heads together . . . Phi Gams at ease on their spacious verandah . . . caps and gowns . . . Phi Delts hold a session on the porch . . . the boys at the power house . . . about to be forked, a juicy morsel . . . more caps and gowns . . . Division II major studying for Comprehensives . . . Delts on the porch . . . 119 Robert Millis, NLD. Sllfl lien llur Building' Your Barbers FERN and ALEX l ll XVCst Main llllllllllllllllllllllllrllllllIll Illllllllvllllllllullllull lllllluu Distrilmutors of QUALITY Fooos Caterers to Fraternities, Hotels, Restaurants, and Institutions J. C. Perry 81 Co. ulll IIIIllxlIIIllIIII1lullllllullnlllullulllllllllllxlllllllu J. H. Beeson, D.D.S. R. G. Wilsoll, D.D.S. lO3j5 N. XVZ1Sl1lllg'EOll H. A. Iiillllillllizlll M.D. 320 Ben Hur Building lllllulll llnuulllllllllll Byron N. Lingeman M.D. 419--121 Ben Hur Building Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Coinriglixnaxrs or HENRY F. MILLER Phone S53 llllxllnllllllnlauvrllllnlu llnlnllulnlnlllllllulunlllllllulllnllll - BEN GROVES, Tailor - E decided. one line day, to take the camera and do a little climbing: these results might Well be labelled AMONG THE CHIMNEY POTS S SEWER PIPES OF WABASH: the odd effect in the center is the stairway in Center Hall . . . all of the others are easily recognized. 'Wwe 39 .K A x ,, B ' q 'ff-1 ' 4 45: 2 THE LAKESIDE PRESS R. R. DONNELLEY 81 SONS COMPANY Printers - Binders - Engravers - Lithographers 350 East Twenty-Second Street - Chicago Crawfurclsville Plant CRAXYFURDSY1LLE, INDIANA THOMAS D.SHEERIN AND COMPANY INVESTMENT SECURITIES FLETCHER TRUST BUILDING - BEN GROVES, Tailor - A H 5 ,Ar ,ff ONTINUIN G our random rambles over the campus, we caught the views on this page the same afternoon. The y need no explanation. 'a 'I 'IHS NFB we ,,,f 5123 ,fn U JM Il' I,l lXI ENTS OF Good111a11's DC1J31'l.l1l6l1t Store COMl0'l,llXlENTS QF A. C. Campbell FLORIST 900-902 Sloane Street COlXI'l'l,llXlliNTS OF CQMPLIMRNTS QF A L L E N ' S The New Book Store Good Ice Cream Pasteurizecl - Frigid Filtered Milk and Cream PROD UCERS' DAIRY PRODUCTS All Kinds of Coal B611 Davis C. J. Mahoney F at P6I11lSylY2llllZl Stock Pens Grocery and Meats Phone 709-'I ELSTON BANK AND TRUST CO. Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation . - BEN GROVES, Tailor - T the games: the bleachers tirst, then Hirsh stooping to stop some action . . . presenta- tion ot the Homecoming Decorations cup . . . the Sea Goin' Band does its stuff . . . past-master Phil Hanlin returns to lead the band at Home- coming . . . freshman in the car on the way to the DePauw game fain't love grand?D . . . otticial sports photographer works hard . . . the prexie shakes hands with an alumnus . . 'ZH 1.4. ,Y ,5,,.xf,,,,,,x.,. . ,,e , 1 Ml :mi -.a, K X ' Jw: 1 1 9' X l ' ' HI Tiiwtltaif t We g fr' I . W4 ' 3 A if 3 K .1-we 2 ,, ,, '51, Q5 .e Q AK ww W1 xA 'X f Q Ne . X . . ..,1 1 ,. , f Af-41 V V . ,V - if X ' Q: ft Q 1 - - 5 Xa KAHN ll Cloiffm-to-772.eaAun5 2 Z f UQAW X X lv 22 7 f f f' 'll li li tall A Wabash Tradition - for 30 Years - F. C. MUELLER TAILOR - 105 N. Green St. llllul IllIlllllulllllllllslllllllulllllullllllulnllllluInlunnlulnnllnnnlnlllIlIlInlllllllllullllllllllll llIllIulllIIunIllII-luIIIIllIIIIllulInII1lnlnnlnlulnllunu llll llnllnnnnnln llnnnlull Flowers for All Occasions Z ren the Florist, 200 xx: ixiaiu Woes M80 Newton Busenbark Minnie Pett's Flower Sh Op 218 East Main Str et ll8 XY. Main Plume 477 liicmclccl lllcmlaer F. L. D. IInlnlllllIIllllllllIllllllIlllluIllIlllllllIIllIIllllllllllllllllllulul 1uninunlulllulllllluulu IallI1IIIunnlnllunlllnllnllunInull lllnll lllllll lllllllllllll Soft Balls - Bats - Table Tennis - Tennis Racquets Presses - Covers - Pennsylvania Tennis Balls SCHULTZE 81 SCHULTZE THE Boon STORE - BEN GROVES, Tailor - XXX X N xx ex xve' ANDOM shots from our snapshot collection: Phi Garns seem to study in the bath room . . . other students in various poses of concentra- tion or relaxation . . . NX W5 t . ,- fb ',, -' if V 4 . ,731 x , Sm t5btS 1271 C'CeJlXll'l,lNliN'l'S OF F. W. WoolWo1'tl1 Company IIllllIllInlllluIIIllllluullunnulullnllllllsll COMl'l,lM IQNTS OF The Anleriean Launders and Cleaners T,llU1lC 1706 lull llllllllllllllll :lun vlllllllnn COMP LIM ILNTS OF TI-Ili Crawford Cafe Crawford Hotel Crawford Billiard Hall COMPLIMENTS OF THE BAKERS of A'Iioaf's Twisted Bread COMPLIMENTS OF The Bank Cigar Store Yours for a Square Deal Montgomery County Lumber Company Oppoeite Monon Depot I-IYCRADE DAIRY PRODUCTS Home Owned - Home Operated A CRAWFORDSVILLE INSTITUTION nlIIlllllIIllllluluullvnuxulllllllllulrsu nlnaullxlnlnlnun - BEN GROVES, Tailor - PE-MAN from among the Cavemen at Senior Study Camp, Turkey Run . . . this ceremony on last year's Class Day was the official farewell to Dr. Brigance . . . several pro- fessors may be seen, clad in their overalls . . . the morning after . . . Hagan carries off the Brown Derby . . . social life at Wabash . . . state of a Wabash senior after Comprehensives . . . we included the last picture because we were so taken with the expression on the crawling freshman's face . . . '-6 'n i 33.x lllllull lull llnlulllullllulnlllnll Crawfordsville Paint and Wall 1 Paper Co. This Morning's Bread The Cleveland Exclusive Paint and Wall Bakery Paper Service 221 E. Main St. Phone 58 AIllIlullIInllIllInllllnlllllllulllllll Inlllllllllllullllllllll IInllllunllllllllllllllllll IllIIIllInllllullllllnllllullll lllllllllllllllll lllllnlnllllllllllll lllllnllllullllllllllllll Bill Seliliek endorses the Service Laundry, and hopes that all VValvash men do the same. fig ff i I f- 'lll' i ii The Students' ,M - Ii' And Laundry Dry Cleaners VVe Appreciate your patronage in the past year, and look forward to serving you again next year. SERVICE Laundry and Dry Cleaners, Ine. S21 South VVashington - Phone 1855 - BEN GROVES, Tailor -- Official Photograpliers to the Wabasli HIRSHBURG STUDIOS For your portraits, developing and printing, film and other camera supplies, come to Hirshburg's. Large prints of any of the pictures in this book may be had from us at fifty Cents each. Printed by fha Benton Review Shop, Fowler, Ind . , , , u Y lqffvl . . V. Q I ,f 1 n n hd i nh 1 r I 4 U r J. L r 5' 11,4 .Q fu, 1 ! . . lddlf 1 u .f 1 . f . . . ..- u , ' 5 . ' flf' A '?fA. I . ,.-5 . I , I nb 5 b I' 1 .sffl 4 1: ' -u ll .1 '.L 4 .I rb 5. I .I 'v H . I ,X . 4 ' '1 nal X 'L .Q ,l '. . 4 '.. A.: - 4 ' . .' I-..' ' I I 1 I A . 4 My 'ul 'n,, ,t . '41 v ,,.' '-,V . xv- . . a 'Q 5' l L . It K K, ,. I l I gr., ug.,- ' . . :x . . V A .ly X ., L .I- - ' ' ' 1.4.- . .. ., . .l'A ' ' . 7 Yu X I ,uh . 'N HTIH X 'xg' ,lt-pu 5 ' .' .. ., , K . 'A Vgr ,975 aI- 4 V. ' '49 . , .A. ,FW ff' , 4 . U. .. . -, W . . 1 . U' .I ' . A s., M '. Q '. rf :lf .' 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Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

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1936

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1938

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