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THE· NOVEMBER· 1938

ALUMNI· MAGAZINE ~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~

I~ A HOOSIER ALMANAC I~ ~ ~ I NOVEMBER THIRTY DAYS I ~ ~ I ~ ~ ~ I EVENTS in the far-flung In- I eyes from Iowa. 2 p. m. At night, Blanket I ~ diana University world will 1938· NOVEMBER·1938 Hop in the Gym, and you can take your ~ ~ I UTe choice of Fletcher Henderson or Rita Rio. ~ ~ take conscientious alumni over a"1Su iMo liu Th Fr Sa ~ ~ good bit of the landscape during DDfTl 2 3 4 5 13-Listen to the Hoosier Radio Work- I shop round table talk about "Distribution ~~~~ the Thanksgiving month. Below L!J ~~~~~ of Population." 9 :3 0 in the morning. ~ are presented, for your edification 6 1 8 9 10 1112 ~ ~ ~ ~ and cuff-jotted reminders, some of 13 14 15 14--South Bend papers please copy: ~ ~ Every Monday noon, S. B. alumni meet ~ ~ the hIghlights of University hap- 20 2122 23 24 526 at Y. M. C. A. ~ I~~ penings of the next thirty days, to- ~~~~ D I~~~~ ~ gether with a wistful look or two 15-Amencan Association of Univer- ~ ~ sity Women dmner at Union Building, ~ ~ back at the days that were. 6 p. m ~

~ I-FederatIon of Women's Clubs Illstitute today and to­ University Theater presents tonIght and tomorrow night, ~ ~ morrow at the UnIOn Building, Bloomington. "Stage Door," but come around to the main entrance of the ~

~ Terre Haute alumnI' ()men meet an d eat, 6 p. m. , D'emlllg Union at eight. Half dollar per head. ~ ~ Hotel. ~ ~ 16-0n this date in 1934 Dr. ]. E. P. Holland, University ~ ~ 2--0n this day 11 years ago the Coleman Hospital for physician, installed a chlorine treatment room where SIX ~ ~ 'Women and the Ball Nurses' home were completed at the students at a time could sit, study, sniff, cure their colds. ~ ~ ~ ~ Medical Center in . Bring the campus into your living room by tuning in today, ~ ~ and every Wednesday, on the program coming directly from ~ ~ 3-Hear Dr. E. M. Linton speak today (and every Tlmrs­ ~ ~ the Commons in the Union Building. Fifteen minutes of stu- ~ ~ day) on "Contemporary World Problems," at Ft. Wayne ~ ~ dent interviews and music, fifteen minutes of collegiate news- ~ ~ Central High School. 8 p. m. so cents. ~ ~ cast. 4-4 :30 p. m. WIRE. ~ ~ 5- vs. Boston College, in the Hub City. And the ~ ~ 18--State Drama Conference sponsored by Theta Alpha ~ ~I~ "Marching Hundred" will be along! Ph"I III U'ilion B UI'Id' mg, BI'oommgton. ays, s hi'opta k, n ~I.~

"" 6-Spin the dial to [400 to hear the University over WIRE, everything. Goes on tomorrow, too. ?'/. ~ ~ ~ 9 :30-9 :45 a. m. Three faculty men dISCUSS "Society and the 19-0h, boy, the PURDUE GAME! At Lafayette. ~ ~ Underworld." ~ I 20-Put down the funny papers and hear the University I ~ 7-Every Monday noon, Indianapolis alumni (men) meet broadcast on "Art and Society." 9 :30 a. m. and, at the same ~ ~ at the Columbia Club. ~ ~ time a week from today, "Music and Society." ~ I. Annual Indiana High School Principals' Conference in I. ~ the Union Building on the campus. Heads of North Central 21-First Old Oaken Bucket contest, and first game ever ~ ~ AssociatIOn-accredited high schools in the state WIll lunch. to be played in Memorial Stadium, 1925. ~

~ 8--Indiana Ur:ion Open Forum, 7 p. m , on the campus. Dr. 22-At 12 IS p. m. today, as every Tuesday, ChIcago alumni ~ meet at Harding Restaurant III Fair Store, corner Dear- ~ Allen C. G. Mitchell speaks. ~ ~ born and Adams. ~ ~ Raymond Beights, '39, and his string ensemble play this ~ ~ day, as other Tuesdays, over WIRE at 4 p. m. Also Indiana Union Open Forum at night. ~ Serl'es 24--University faculty members Sanders and Collins ~ 9-Emanuel Feuermann, cellist, opens Music m ~ ~ broadcast a book review from the Fireside Book Shop. 4-4 .15 ~ ~ Men's Gymnasium at 8 :15 $1 and up. ~ ~ of p. m. Regular Thursday feature. ~ ~ Thomas W. Rogers speaks on "The Economic Risks ~ ~ the Employee" at the C31umet Extension Center, East Chi­ Also THANKSGIVING DAY. (John and Mary will be ~ I cago. home from college.) I ~~~. 28-Another Interior DecoratIOn talk at Indianapolis Ex- ~~~ ~ 100Big dOlll's on campus: Armistice Day program starts ~ ~ tension Center. "Period Furniture" this time. ~ ~ with R. O. T. C. review at 1 p. m., then program in Alumni ~ ~ Hall an hour later. Also during the day (and Saturday) 29-Just 20 years ago today President William Lowe ~ ~ Hoosier State Press Association journalism conference, with Bryan received radio orders to demobilize the S. A. T. C. ~ ~ forums on country correspondents and local features. Ever Remember the war days? ~ I been one? I ~ First dance held in Men's Gym, 19 17. 30-Today the "DO NOT DISTURB" sign hangs on ~ ~ Alumni Magazine office door as staff gets December issue ~ ~ 12-Home Football Game: Fightin' Hoosiers vs. Hawk­ ready for mail. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ L E T T E R s 'S rIME SIRs-Congratulations ! Your fi rst tions of this kind. I wonder if all of our issue was enjoyed very much. "Revive alumni realize the work involved in I1 K-ItP us Again." getting out an issue of this character. cHfC \t\fILLIAM C,\ SSADY, ex'c>9. HowARD L. W VNEGAR, LLB'o7, Chicago, Ill. President, Commercial 0 yoliT Credit Company. 1 SIRs-I a m glad to have received the New York. 1/IIG Those on th e ed itorial board do.- Eo. 0" October issue . .. . It was a pleasant surprise to read, among those giving you advice on how to run the magazine, t/fiil a Sullivan lawyer, Mr. John S. Taylor Sms-I hasten to tell you that I like ['10, LLB'II], once a pupil of mine in the new magazine. It has vim and vigor "1::=== a country school in the old home state. and gives good glimpses of campus life. I think if he will judicially appraise the I particularly like the letters to the na me [of the magazin e] now in use he editors and the editori al come-backs. will find it quite suited to the need ... MARY OR\, IS, A ]\'1' 18. and if he will inspect the issue now out Indianapolis. he will find you had anticipated such You are now reading another.-Eo. ideas and were on your way. JOHN A. CUR RY, ex'oI, Editor, The Dispatch. S IR s-The new mag looks great a nd we certainly do want our name li sted Douglas, Ariz . ior a year's subscription as well as the membership in the 1. U. A lumni Asso­ SIRs-I've just finished reading the ciation. . . . H owever, the Missus first edition of the new magazine and I [E ugenia Huston, ex'3S] is quite con­ want to tell you you've got something cerned. She is just as proud of her PROPER LIGHTING there.. . . I liked especially the two­ alumni connections as I am, but we MEANS MORE COMFORT page spread of State Policeman Crab­ could hardly use two subscriptions. Do tree from Gnaw Bone. I hope you can you have some sort of a joint member­ AND EYE HEALTH! dig something like that out for every ship for husband a nd wife? After aU, issue. two kids from Indiana U. get married Plenty of the right kind of Only one squeak: You should use once in a while, and methinks some­ light involves a lot more than seven-point type for Alumni Notes. I thing should be done. personal taste. Reading, work­ nel,er thought I would be anxiously KENNETH A. GROW, eX '3S . ing. sewing or anything that scanning an alumni column to fin d out Yuma, Ariz. requires accurate sight requires about my classmates, and I had the Something is done. The ALUMNI MAGA­ a definite amount of li ght, not cheated feeling that somebody was ZINE, well aware of the nuptial tendencies of on ly for comfort but to insure spreading a few names out a wfully fa r alumni, offers associ ate memberships at $[ you r eyes against unnecessary when I did do that scanning. per year for wi ves (in additi on to the $3 strain. And far too often the I ndianapolis. E AR L H OH, '38. annually for husbands). This provides a light available is much less j oint subscription to the MAGAZINE and two The MAGAZINE will try to "dig something memberships in the A lumni Association. than that needed. out" like Officer Crabtree, of Gnaw Bone, - ED. Take a good look at your but not for every issue. Reason : cost. Con­ lighting. Ask at our showroom templated for a future issue is a pictorial SIRs-Your subscription re­ how yo u can have " Better survey of the University's correspondence Light - Better Sight." studen ts. quest before me. Enclosed fi nd my per­ The editorial board considered we'll se t­ sonal check. ting the "I Knew Him 'When" section in I am not an grad­ seven-point type two months before Mr. Hoff's suggesti on was made. Idea was aban­ uate-hardly an alumnus, as dear, doned because ([) not all alumni have such good Dr. Jordan once reminded me. Siqhlis sharp eyes as Mr. Hoff (who, as editor of .. . I yearly sent the, doctor a birthday the Indiana Daily StudeJlt, never wore greeting. Once egotistically I added to glasses) and (2) experiments on random­ the signature, "Your one-time stu­ PRICELESS selected alumni during the summer proved they preferred the present ten-point type. dent." This was courteously Let Subscriber Hoff see the bundles of as acknowledged, but the good doctor liqhf is .: yet untyped class news note's before he inked in following hi s signature, makes the charge' that "somebody was "Should we say student or matricu­ spreading a few names out awfully far." CHEAP - ED. late ?" Yet those good teachers of Bloom­ SIRS-A great many periodicals of ington days were patient with me and all classes come to my desk and this tried- Coulter, Bryan, Eigenmalln, PUBLIC SERVICE Woodward, Clarke, Ross, Commons, [TrIE INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE] is COMPANY OF INDIANA . the most attractive that I have and the fine Frenchman who raved as seen of uni versity or collegiate publica- (Continued on page 27) E M o Special Train to The Cover all history. The influence of a scholar (Photograph copyright by Harris alld Ewing) is geometric. The minds of hundreds of students who will be the scholars of Lafayette The appointment of Howard R. Tol­ the next generation are molded by a ley, 'TO, as chief of the newly consti­ single master. Consider just one line of account tuted Bureau of Agricultural Econom­ descent; Michelson came to Chicago ics in the United States Department because Harper was there. The group Football Game of Agriculture was recently announced of men who made the University's by Secretary Henry A. Wallace. This physics department the first in the na­ Bureau, the secretary announced, will tion came to Chicago because Michel­ Indiana vs. Purdue include all general programming and son was there, and among them was planning for adjustment conservation, Compton. In recent years scores of the Saturday, and marketing programs of the de­ country's most promising young physi­ partment. It will include the Program cists have come to Chicago because November 19, 1938 Planning Division and the general Compton was there. A similar succes­ planning for the marketing programs sion of leaders has come down in every $3.00 heretofore in the AAA, with which Mr. department that Harper made great. Tolley has been associated for the last "Harper had used every form of per­ Round Trip five years and since June, 1936, as ad­ suasion-short of violence-to lure the min istrator. scholars of the East into \V'hat they re­ SCHEDULE After graduation, Mr. Tolley taught garded as the intellectual wilderness. for a short time in the high school in His success in the face of his own genu­ (Going) Michigan City, Ind. In 1912 he went to ine concern for the fate of the project Lv: Bloomington 8:00 a. m. \Vashington as mathematician in the marked him as a rare master of the arts Ar: Lafayette 10:45 a. m. Coast and Geodetic Survey and in 1916 of choosing men and winning them." became a scientific assistant in farm (Returning) The book then lists the names of the management in the United States De­ twenty-nine scholars who have helel Lv: Lafayette 7:30 p. m. partment of Agriculture. In 1930 he especia lly endowed chairs. There are left Washington to become Director of Ar: Bloomington 10:15 p. m. 1)0W twenty-one "endowed chairs" at the Giannini Foundation of Agricul­ the University of Chicago providing Tickets good returning tural Economics. He has written pro­ for $TO,OOO salaries for men either in on all trains up to No.3, fusely. A Jist of his published works special chairs or for men in any field. fills more than six closely typewritten Sunday night, Nov. 20 These professorships permit the holder pages. to devote a large part of his time to re­ Mr. Tolley was born in Howard search and the guidance 0 f graduate County in 1889, graduated from Con­ workers. verse High School in 1905 and attended There is no doubt that there is such Marion College for one year. While in a thing as an overpaid professor, but the University he was a member of the there is also no doubt that it takes Travel With the Team University Band and a member of the money to secure great men-and it Euclidean Circle. His major subject takes great men to make a university in was mathematics. He was married in great. 1912 to Zora F. Hazlett, of Rockville, Safety and Comfort Ind. They have three sons, Grant, 22; District Councilors Elmer, r6, and George, 12. On December 10 there will be a Great Men meeting here on the campus of district councilors representing the twenty-five Through the courtesy of James Sey­ alumni districts in Indiana. This meet­ bold Adams, '23, of N ew York, the ing will be for the purpose of continu­ For further information call alumni office was presented with a copy ing with plans for strengthening our R. F. Schmalz, C. P. T. A. of a new University of Chicago publi­ alumni program in this state. At the cation entitled "Great Men." It is a initial meeting last spring the council­ Phone 3434 partial listing of "those persons who ors were given a complete picture of the have added to the enlightenment of University-its plans and problems­ mankind through endowed professor­ and were asked for their advice and ships at the University of Chicago." suggestions. It is the hope of the alumni "Great Men," the author suggests, office and of those in charge of the Uni­ "beget great men. If it were possible to versity's administration that through MONON trace the genealogy of a scholarly this method our alumni may be given strain, of a tradition of an idea, Wil­ the opportunity of greater service to liam Rainey Harper, the 'flashing their University. In like manner it is 1{oute comet in the western sky of the uni­ hoped that through their aid the Uni­ verse of learning,' would be seen to versity can become of greater service have been one of the most fertile men in to alumni, students and to the state. THE NOVEMBER 1938 INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE

Continuing the Indiana University Alumni ~uarterly and The Indiana Alumnus

Volume I Number 2

STAFF GEORGE F. HEIGHWAY Edito-r Cover Co-nienls ROGER A. HURST H OWARD R. TOLLEY, 'TO, CHIEF, BUREAU OF AGRICUL- k/allaging £ditol' TURALECONOMICS. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT IVY L. CHAMNESS Associate Editor OF AGRICULTURE EDITORIAL BOARD News E. Ross Bartley Ward G. Biddle ALUMNI RETURN FOR HOMECOMING Walter S. Greenough Thomas Buck and George Gardner 5 lIlrs. Alta Brunt Sembower Grads Throng Campus f or Kansas State Game John E. Stempel SONS AND DAUGHTERS 8 INDIANA UNIVERSITY IvlallY Children of A lutl/l/i Are Ellrolled ALUMNI ASSOCIATION THE UNIVERSITY IN OCTOBER President, NTATTHEW \VINTERS, ' I S, AlYl ' 17, 9 Indiana polis A Campus News Digest Vice-Pres., JOHN S. TAYLOR, ' 10, LLB' 11 , Sullivan "MEETING CALLED T O ORDER" ...... q Secretor)', GEORGE F. HEIC HWAY , LLB'22, News of Alumni Clubs Bloomington Treasurer, WARD C. BIDDLE, ' 16, Bloominglon "I KNEW HIM WHEN ..." ...... 20 EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Alumni News Notes by Classes 1936·39 FR.'NK E. ALLEN, '16, AM' 24, South Bend l\IRs. K..ATHARINE CROAN GREENOU GH, ' 11, Features Indianapolis DONALD A. ROGERS, LLB'27, Bloomington REFLECTIONS ...... Fowler V. Harper 4 1937·4() THE NEWS IS rvlY BUSINESS . Milton Ronsheim 7 LE)'IU£L A. PITTENGER, '07, AM'OS, Muncie l\IRs. ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER, '01, Bloomington THAT HIS WORK MAY LIVE O N ...... I I \VAJ.TER E. TREANOR, '12, LLB'22, JD'23, Chicago I TEACH INDIAN CHILDREN \Iargaret Winslow T2 1938·41 DEAN L. BARNHART, '11, Goshen BENTON J. BLOOM, '()7, Columbia City Sports ?vIRS. OLIVE BELDON LEWIS, '14, Indianapolis NEWELL H. LONG, '28, School of Music alumni FIGHT~N' HOOSIERS ...... George L Gardner 16 DOUGLAS H. \-VHITE, School of Dentistry alumni NEWS NOTES OF VARSITY SPORTS . William Buchanan 18 Alumni Secretary GEORGE F. HEIGHV.r A Y, LLB'zz IS THE ROD MIGHTIER THAN THE GUN? ...... H)

Published monthly, except August and Sep· tember, by the I ndiana University Alumni Asso· Departments ciation. Office of publication: 338 E. Market S t., Tndianapolis, I ndiana. Editorial office: LETTERS l lllion Buildiug, Indiana University. Blooming­ ton, I~ldiana. MEMO .. 2 Annual subscription rate $3.00 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni As­ sociation), Single copies 25 cents. FOR ALUMNAE ONLY Helen Weatherwax 13 Member of American Alumni CounciL Entered to the second class of mail matter ALUMNI AUTHORS Book Reviews 15 at the post office at Indianapolis, Ind., under the Act of March 3, 1879. IN CLOSING . . Editorials 32 I... by Fowler V. Harper, Professor of Law and Chairman of the University Self-Survey Committee

N REFLECTING on the purposes and objectives in another way, we are concerned more with train­ I of Indiana University, it often occurs to me that ing stuqents for action than training them for the American conception of a university as an insti­ thought. In this sense, the steady trend for several tution has undergone a change which, while almost generations has been anti-intellectual in character. imperceptable over a few years, is of the greatest This program is expressed in many ways and im­ significance when observed over a ,long period. His­ plifd in many others. The university must prepare torically the "university" was in a very real sense an its students to "fit" into some niche in life. It must institution of distinctly higher learning. It was a develop the "whole life" of the student. It must place where the student acquired an erudition in the extend its personnel activities to reach every phase arts, law, medicine or theology which represented a of his life. It must prepare him to "mix;" to "earn sophistication of a definitely high order. It was a a living;" to become "a good citizen." place where the accumulated knowledge and wisdom It is not to be denied that these are, in a sense, of the past was subjected to the distillation of medi­ quite legitimate and proper objectives. The em­ tative and critical analysis. _Later, the university phasis -placed thereon, however, might be interpreted became a laboratory for experimental science-a as an attenuated or eliptical analysis of the univer­ place where the frontiers of 4:nowledge were pushed sity's function. It might be assumed that such quali­ forward in the search for new truth. These func­ ties or attainments are desirable and, in some in­ tions naturally characterized the university as the stances, indispensable attributes of life itself, to habitat of thinkers, scholars and men of science. In which university training will invariably contribute short, the principal activity of the institution was something of value. On the other hand, emphasis intellectual, both on the part of the students and the upon such matters, as immediate objectives of the teachers. The university was a place where the university program, is calculated to obscure the minds of the students were trained and the minds unique contribution which such training can make of the professors were exercised and strengthened. to the "good life," namely, subjection of the mind Actually, there was little difference save in degree to the rigorous discipline of scholarship and the between the activities of student and the teacher. arduous task of acquiring knowledge. It was one of The one received guidance from the other. Each re­ the inarticulate assumptions of the classical univer­ ceived stimulus from the -other. Thus each con­ sity that such discipline and knowledge was in itself tributed to the "education" of the other. a great good and the means to even greater good. The thought is inescapable that the modern uni­ The university today may quite justly be charged versity represents an entirely different type of in­ with seeking to obtain the ultimate ends of educa­ stitution, both in aims and in procedure. We still tion without paying the price or exacting it from its pay lip-service to students. It is attempting to prepare young people the traditional pat­ for life without giving them the intellectual equip­ tern. We cling to ment that for so many centuries has been regarded the same names as a requisite to the most satisfactory mode of life. and labels. How­ In this gradual shift of emphasis, there is, I think, ever, the univer­ much that is unwise. It constitutes a direct, if some­ sity today is less what subtle, challenge to values which men from the concerned with time of the Greeks have held high. The university the training of the no longer represents Jefferson's ideal of an institu­ minds of its stu­ tion for the development of an intellectual aristoc­ dents than ,,~ith racy to which all have an opportunity of member­ the organization ship-opportunity, it should be noted, that is as of their social and nearly equal as political democracy can make it. moral prejudices While I do not abjure completely the so-called and the cultiva­ "practical" ideal in education on the college level, tion of skills and I cannot help believing that, in the long run, that techniques which, training is most practical which contributes most to presumably, will the intellectual growth of the student, and that it is be useful to them the peculiar province of the university to afford in their economic young people such training, if necessary, at the ex­ Fowler V. Harper lives. To put it pense of other attainments. L­ I ) J

4 The November 1938 INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE

Volume I November, 1938 Number 2

Alulllni Return for HOlllecoming

by THOMAS BUCK, '39 and GEORGE G_"\RDNER, '3-+

Herbert evades a pair of Kansas State tacklers before a Homecoming crowd of 18,000

PILGRIMAGE of thousands of old grads back Outside a tepee-shaped campfire flared brightly, and A to the campus; the traditional Powwow and its inside there "vas fooel, talk and "Marching Hundred" pre-game "pep;" the bitter and ballyhooed Law-Medic band music. Presi ding \\'as Allen G. :Messick, '12. feud; a jam-packed Union lobby ; luncheons and ban­ Speakers included Z. G. Clevenger, University director quets ; eight thousand wide-eyed Boy Scouts, Girl of athletics; I -Men's Association President Leroy Sand­ Scouts and Campfire troops swarming over the cam­ ers, ex'os, who pledged the support of the Alumni pus; fraternity lawns full of pledge-gathered decora­ Association to the varsity; President Emeritus \tVil­ tions; long file s of orange busses bringing high school liam Lowe Bryan, dubbed for the occasion "Heap students; the pageantry and clash of the Kansas State \iVise Man Bill-Lo" Bryan; President Herman B game under a perfect football sky, and the rhythm and Wells, and Coach A. N. (Bo) McMillin. rustle of the Band Benefit Ball on Saturday night­ Representing the football team of 1893. H arry Mc­ such was H omecoming in the year of our school, 1938, Dowell, a VVinamac attorney, reminisced of the grid Even before returning graduates and former stu­ sport in the old days. Benton]. Bloom, squad of '03, dents arrived to register in the Union Building, Home­ .< and Clair H. Scott, on the eleven in ' 13, told of foot­ coming festivities broke loose with the School of Law ball from their" 'way back when" angles. Foll owing "duck raffle" on Friday afternoon. Climaxing weeks the meal in the gym, two freshman teams battled to of libellous insult back and forth in the columns of an 18-18 draw in their game under the vaulted roof the Daily Student, the post-raffle invasion by the Laws of the Fieldhouse. of the Third Street :Medic citadel resulted in a water Saturday dawned bright and clear- and windy­ fight (in paper bags) between the two future profes­ and more alumni stopped at the Union desk to sional groups. identi fy themselves. Oldest grad to register was Mark That night the hatchet was temporarily interred P. Helm, '94, Indianapolis. Those from the greatest while the University and its visiting :;tlumni attended distance were Hubert E. Rich, '25, of \i\fichita, Kan., the twenty-sixth annual Powwow in the Men's Gym. and Fred G. White, '0S, Detroit, lv[ich., although other

INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 5 alumni from further away may have arrived on the with its four drum majors, strutted down the field, campus just in time for the kick-off. the teams loped out from the dressing rooms, came the As those not inclined to battle ,,,ere touring the toss of the referee's coin, the line-up, the kick-off, and Quadrangle and adjacent streets, eyeing the organ­ the Homecoming game was on! ization houses' Homecoming decorations, or glimpsing the University and Bloomington from atop the Union Crimson Makes Initial Touchdown tower, friends and foes of the Schools of Law and It was during this game that the Fightin' Hoosiers Medicine were over on Jordan field to witness the scored their first touchdown of the season, but it was "shyster-quack" softball game, successor to the bloody not enough to offset the early lead piled up by the football tilts of other years. vVestern visitors. The final SCOre was Kansas State The Medics won, I2-7, and both sides retired to the 13, Indiana 6. nearly dry Jordan for a tug-of-war. A greased rope Putting a patched-up lineup on the field, Indiana had previously been borrowed from the Monon and. started off in a determined manner, advancing to the although it once was used to pull around locomotives Kansas State 20 early in the first quarter. This proved and other rolling stock, it broke twice during the fray. to be Indiana's only real scoring threat of the game From the second break on it was anybody's guess as beside the touchdown march in the fourth quarter. to who was doing what. White-smocked Medics, Indiana started from its own 29-yard line. \;Vith wearing their black skull-and-crossboned hats, pum­ Vincent Oliver, Joe Nicholson and Swede Clasen melled the Laws in a free-for-all in the stagnant cam­ carrying the ball, Indiana made three consecutive fi rst pus creek Favorite trick of the Laws was to get a downs before a se ries of passes failed. Nicholson Medic down and slosh muddy water into his eyes. attempted a field goal which was blocked. Meanwhile somebody scampered away with the hand­ lettered " thundermug," won earlier by the Medics by Advancing again to the Kansas State 43, Nicholson virtue of their softball victory. tossed a long pass to Graham, which was fumbled , and Three hundred graduates and former students at­ Nieman recovered for Kansas State on his own IS. tended the luncheon held in Alumni Hall on Saturday Following an exchange of punts, Kansas State took noon, and a thousand other visitors were served in the the ball on its own 30. Seelye, back to pass, was University Commons. Shortly after twelve o'clock, chased back to the Kansas State ra, but he eluded a visiting Boy Scouts lined up in the field west of the pack of Indiana linemen and passed to Crumbaker on gym, each khaki-clad troop behind its council sign the Kansas State 35. Crumbaker threaded his way placard. then began the parade through the city. This down the field to the Indiana 8. Hackney, Kansas done, Scouts and visitors trekked to the Memorial State fullback, plunged to the Indiana 5, where he Stadium, ",here already the horseshoe's concrete sides fumbled. Bill Smith recovered for Indiana. were filling with colorful bits of humanity. Hursh punted out on the Indiana 48. Seelye passed Telegraph keys and typewriters hammered and to Munzer on the Indiana 34, and then ran to the Indi­ clacked in the press box, the ubiquitous program and ana 25. Hackney plunged to the 23, and Seelye passed "coke" salesmen stalked the aisles, one more grade to Munzer in the end zone for the first touchdown. school fan pressed his face between the bars of the Brock converted, making the score Kansas State 7, fence at the open end of the stadium, the J.U. band, Indiana o. (Continu.ed on page 28)

John F. Lindsey,'13, and Clair Indiana Union guide (right) White-smocked Medics hold When the "shyster-quack" Scott,'17, talk over H omecom- explains the campus to a aloft the Law-Medic "Thun­ tug-of-war rope broke, Laws ing with Alumni Secretary Homecoming tour Saturday dermug," baseball feud and Medics rolled in the "Dixie" Heighway, '22 morning trophy stagnant Jordan

6 Th e November 1988 by MILTON RONSHEIM, ex' 17 Editor-Manager, The Cadi-; (Ohio) RepltbliclIll

The News Is My Business

[Typical of America's 4,218 shirt-sleeved, jack­ But to the newspaper business. \Vhen I was in the of-ali-trades country weekly newspaper editors is NIil­ University I ignored the course in journalism. for my ton Ronsheim, ex'17. Typical also of the nation's rural bent was toward law. So a printing course at Carnegie press is his CADIZ REPUBLICAN, established in 1815 in a Tech and journalism at Pittsburgh were my only special county-seat town up on the roof of Ohio, where the hills peak wl:ldl~>, before the state begins its dip down toward preparation toward becoming a country editor. the river and the P1:ttsbu-rgh country. This is Ronsheim's After a couple of war years carrying a rifle over the story, "knocked out," he says, "in moments taken from Venetian plains and into Fiume (and meeting an I. U. mal?ing up forms for printing ballots." His picture friend in the army post office at Milan ), I became abO've is "the best I have time for with a murder trial hooked up with this old weekly paper, the Cadis Re­ taking about all my time." All quotes in the article are publican. from th e C ADIZ REPU BLI CA N.-EOITOR' S NOTE.] The Rural Branch Earnest vVorlurs will meet UCH water has passed over the dam since I tried on vVednesday, September 21, at 2:00 o'clock, M to run or talk a point for Indiana, in track or at the home of Mrs. Birney Hines. Cather'ine debate. Or since that time back in 1913 when, attend­ M egaw will be the leader. ing what I remember as Indiana's first state basketball My friend, Steve Noland, editor of the Indianapolis tournament, I spent a night talking with "Dutch" News, once told me that his real ambition was to edit a Krause, at the Phi Psi house. His fame as the man who good country weekly. In a way, a small town editor had beaten Ohio State in football was still the talk of has greater responsibilities than the editor of a metro­ the campus then. Now, a quarter of a century later, my politan daily. Everything he does, of course, is small only chance to wave the cream and crimson is the trip by comparison, but it has a mighty intimate and per­ halhvay across Ohio to Columbus to root every time sonal touch, which is lost through bigness. Indiana plays O. S. U. The fellow who dies or has an accident is one to whom But remembrances of things past remain. The old / you have often spoken. If the Jones have a baby, and board walks or the early spring trip to Arbutus Hill are you don't mention it, you are apt to lose friends. for still fresh in memory. And scattered over the world are you've surely known for some time that the event was people who have a deep, but rarely expressed, affection expected. And you surely knew that Sally Brown was for Indiana. They are just neither bigwigs nor small home over Sunday, for you saw her at church. So don't fry-just average citizens rubbing shoulders with other forget an item about her. Most of your news is per­ average citizens. Many are in the smaller places, like I sonal, about things and people you yourself know. The am. And. like me, many are tempted to stop every car little things you publish are fireside chatter, more inter­ with Indiana licenses that goes through town and ask esting than a murder, or a landslide in Colorado. the occupants what part of the Hoosier state they hail You not only write the news and editorials, but you from. follow it through to your sub- ( Continued on page 29)

I~DIANA ALU::VINI :\IAGAZINE 7 Sons And Daughters

'Back to the Campus of Their Fathers and Mothers Come Members of the Next 1. U Generation

AKDREWS, Thomas Ferdinand-son of Harry C . ...-\nd,'ews, '07 N THE forested Bloominglon campus for the ANTRIM, James Grant- son of X. G. Ant.rim. cx'14. first time this fall are many sons and daughters of ARBURN , Rosetnnry Kat.herine-daughter of L. \V. Arburn, '15. }IS'31. O ARCHIBALD, Joanna-daughter of Paul C. Archibald, ex'22. ARMSTRONG, 1\l ary J ane-daughter of ..i\Iary Duncan Armstrong, cx'20. another generation of 1. U. students-children of grad­ ASHER, J a mes Wilding- son of E. 0, Asher, '12, MD'14. AVERY, Robert Daniel- son of M. P. Avery, '0.7. uates or former students who attended the University BAGBY, Paul Robert- so n of W. A. BaRby, ex'll. HAILEY, Francis Ray-son of Edith Atkinson Bailey, ex'12. when Assembly Hall was the auditorium, the sororities RALL, \Va"'en Philip-son o f Clay A. Ball, '02. were on Forest Place and the library went around one BATCHELOR, James Woodford-son of James O. Batchelor, '09. BIDDLE, Nancy W ard-daugbter of Ward G. Biddle, '16 and Mrs. Biddle '29. corner and stopped short, without any of the wings and BI,!.KELY, Ramon Charl es--son of R. F, Blakely, ex'05. BOGGS, M artha Irene-daughter of Thomas Boggs, '23. turns it now has. BONSIB, Joan-daught e r of Louis W. Bonsib, '16. COTKIN, L ois Virginia daughter of Clifford Botkin, ex'2S. BRU"£", Ralph Waldo, J r.-son of Ralph \V. Bruner, ex'13. Large, also, is the number o f freshmen who are Bl'RKHoLDEn, Virginin--

8 The November 1938 The University 111 October cA Review of the Month's Academic Life, Campus Affairs, Autumn Leaves - and 1. U. News in Brief

H E Hallowe'en month found the University Chemical Society, and the th ree-clay " undergraduate" T campus hitting its usual stride of work and study, banking short course sponsored by the University, the play and progress. Now that the rush of registration Indiana Bankers' Association, and the Indiana Depart­ and the start of another academic calendar are all past, ment of Financial Institutions. At the chemistry meet­ the freshmen co-eds locked into their appropriate or­ ing Dr. H. T. Briscoe, new head of the LV. chemistry ganization niches, and the library rules and regula­ department, spoke on the place of that science in the tions mastered, the life undergraduate buckles dO\m University curriculum. Professor F. C. Mathers ad­ in real earnest. dressed the group on "Recent Studies in Electro­ Beneath the campus trees, painted now by autumn plating" with the warm and faded colors of an old Oriental Men at Work in Forest Primeval rug, hurry the University's six thousand students, each Back to hi s old haunts comes Robert Simpson, ex'32, intent on the problems of hi s day, and collectively in­ to do what he can with the campus trees. Simpson, tent on education-and its sidelines. Gray-clad R. O. now a tree surgeon, asserts that it is still possible to T. C. cadets dash for the drill field for the first Thurs­ save some of the ancient beeches and oaks, many of day afternoon review; piles of books tilt crazily on them two and a half centuries old. His technique is research tables in the library stacks; resolute students to pull his teardrop-shaped auto trailer up to the tree jack-knifed doggedly over newly-purchased textbooks needing attention, pull open the hatch, take out his under the goose-neck study lamps in the Fourth Street tools, and he and his gang go to work. rooming houses, and anyone seen without a leather­ So as the trees are patched, and Assembly Hall covered notebook under his arm must be on his way comes down, the new Union Building lounge goes up. to a dance. Under the clear and surprisingly warm skies of the Assembly Hall Is Razed month, work is forging ahead on the stone-walled new It being nothing in hi s young life, the casual fresh­ lounge for men. Present plans call for wood panelling man "alks around the roped-off Assembly Hall de­ inside, and regular he-man furniture. This room \"ill molition as though it were a usual thing. But many be for men only, and co-eds will be admitted to the an upperclassman and faculty member pauses to mark present lounge. the passing of a campus landmark, built in 1896 as the "Silas, the Chore Boy," was the opening Univer­ men's gym. T hirteen Commencements have come and sity Theater performance of the season, and campus gone in the old, rambling frame structure, and it was first-nighters jammed Alumni Hall to hi ss the vi ll a in, there that President Emeritus 'William Lowe Bryan was inaugurated in 1903. Six years later a swimming pool was added to the building, but since then a stage has covered the spot. Campus legend has it that the stage "'as built especially for the appearance of Maude Adams and her travelling troupe, and the old audi- ' torium has housed such notables as Otis Skinner, De \Volfe Hopper, and Forbes Robinson. The first (1922) Jordan River Revue was staged there, and during the war Assembly Hall was used as an army balTacks. But enough of backward-looking. Other October campus highlights included the state library conven­ tion and its attendant publishers' displays in the lat­ ticed booths set up in Alumni Hall, the Homecoming Day meeting of the Indiana section of the American Assembly Hall is coming down . ..

INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 9 cheer the hero and sigh with the dis­ educational director, spoke at the din­ what to do with the Warrens. There tressed heroine. No sooner did the ner session on October 24 on the sub­ are three of them: C. B. and W. B., curtain fall on the last performance ject, "Why Educate?" who are brothers from Marshall, and than the stage craft crew resumed its J. c., of Winchester, no relation to the pounding and painting in Mitchell The Man for the Job other two. But to make matters more Hall to fashion sets for the next pro­ complex, all are '37. Alumni are eligible to use the serv­ duction, the Broadway hit, "Stage ices of the Personnel and Placement Another honor came to the School Door." Bureau of the University, it was an­ of Medicine recelltly when Karl R. nounced by C. W. Barker, acting dean Ruddell, MD'I 1, was elected president Salesman, Go 'Way From My Door of the School of Business Adminis­ of the Indiana State Medical Asso­ October is also the month of the tration. Dean Barker pointed out that ciation. He is a widely known Indian­ undergraduate salesmen. Blue Key between one and two hundred alumni apolis physician, and succeeds Dr. members pace determinedly from or­ are registered at various times, and Herman Baker, of Evansville. the bureau will be glad to refer calls ganization house to house urging School of Dentistry members to buy their athletic ticket f rom employers to the various alumni yearbooks; neophytes on the Arbutus who are qualified for the positions Several members of the faculty pre­ staff open their sales campaign; Uni­ open. sented lectures or clinics at the annual versity Theater ticket hawkers collar Interested alumni should write to meeting of the American Dental Asso­ their friends on the campus paths, and the bureau for a personal data sheet ciation held in St. Louis during the Music Series salesmen begin the drive to list their qualifications and experi­ week of October 24. for paid attendance. ence for the information of employers Other activities of the school in­ And so the month goes. Dr. Ray­ who call for applicants for positions. cluded a symposium on the causes of mond Pearl, biologist of J olms Hop­ Last year-the third for the bureau­ dental decay by Drs. G. T. Gregory kins University, concludes his lecture 85.3 per cent of the business seniors and D. A. Boyd before the Jay County series on "Man, the Animal ;" business were placed. Dental Society on October 7, and Act­ school seniors apply for the $250 loan ing Dean G. D. Timons read a paper, scholarship awarded annually by the School of Law "Dental Medicine." before the Cincin­ American Bankers' Association; over nati Dental Society at its regular In his autumn report to the Law at Forest Hall some student equestri­ monthly meeting for October. School Committee of the Board of enne hangs a "Horse for Sale" sign Trustees, Dean Bernard C. Gavit re­ f rom her dormitory window; the Indi­ Indianapolis Extension vealed that the present first-year en­ ana School of Religion starts a cam­ rollment is fifty-one, and a total of Of the 2,287 persons enrolled at the paign to obtain funds for a building; 141 are enrolled in the School. A loss LU. Extension Center in Indianapolis, student politicians invite representa­ in regular enrollment of twenty-two over J,ooo were not taking work there tives of both major parties to speak at students is accounted for by the small last year, according to a report by campus gatherings; more russet leaves third-year class (first to enter under Mary Orvis, AM'18, executive secre­ float down to the campus paths, and a the three-year requirement plan) and tary. She reports that more than a returning senior who had been out of the fact that "last June the faculty ex­ third of the persons enrolled in credit school for six years gets lost in the courses are not working for credit, maze of new structures. cluded thirteen second-year students and one third-year student on the and about 600 persons are enrolled in -"Y- grounds of scholastic deficiency." non-credit popular lecture courses in social anthropology, interior decora­ Bankers' Conference New to the Law School this year is the grading system of "pass with dis­ tion, representative thinkers, painting Some 250 bank officers, junior ex­ tinction," "pass," and "fail," and being demonstration, and a history series on eClltives and employes of 140 Hoosier worked out is the new plan of compre­ "Our Historians Look at Europe '1'0­ banks were on the campus for the hensive examinations. The rule against day." three-day bankers' conference, Octo­ extra-curricular activities for budding Tribute ber 24-26. Oscar Cravens, prep'88, lawyers has "met with whole-hearted officially opened the short courses by cooperation on the part of the student Over the airlanes recently went a introducing James A. Stuart, 'OJ, man­ body," the report states. tribute to the late Blythe Q. Hend­ aging editor of the Indianapolis Star, ricks, former librarian of the School This year every six freshmen law who presided at the fi rst two sessions. of Medicine at Indianapolis. Speaking students have a faculty sponsor and After an address of welcome by f rom a sports broadcast, Norman are welcome, as are other students in President , and re­ Perry, Jr., \NIRE announcer, re­ the school, to consult with faculty sponses by Ross H. Wallace, director viewed the career of Mr. Hendricks, members during regular office hours. of the Indiana Department of Finan­ first man to broadcast a baseball game In the air are plans for the installation cial Institutions, and Robert H. Myers, from Indianapolis, and the first an­ of the honor system in the Law bankers' association president, the nouncer to send news of the state School. banker-students settled down to seri­ basketball tournament over the air. A ous classroom work, with six classes lawyer by profession, and secretary School of Medicine per day on the schedule. Outstanding of the Indianapolis Board of Public authorities in banking lectured to the The sophomore class is a roo per Safety at the time of his death late in classes, and at nights there were din­ cent Indiana University affair this fall, August, Hendricks had a wide circle ners and addresses in the Union Build­ according to Mark P. Helm, '94, of friends among University and mg. registrar, who says that the class is newspaper folks. "He was deeply and Dr. Harold Stonier, executive man­ composed entirely a f students pro­ sincerely interested in all things ager of the American Bankers' Asso­ moted from Bloomington. However, Hoosier," the I nd·ianapolis Ti·1Ites com­ ciation and for ten years its national that hasn't simplified his problem of mented editorially.

]0 The November 1938 That His Work May Live On Memorial Is Created In State Library to the Late Charles Kettleborough, '07, AM'08, PhD'16

o HONOR the memory of the late Dr. Charles the same love they would have gi ven a natural son T. Kettleborough, for many years head of the state's and brother, his career would have been a very differ­ legislative reference bureau, a memorial collection of ent one. Were it otherwise. you would not now be books is being placed in the Indiana State Library. honoring his memory." Many alumni and other friends of the Indiana "star" In the minds of many a University official, state student of thirty years ago are active in this tribute legislator and other figures in public life, linger mem­ to his memory. ories of Dr. Kettleborough and his office in the State­ In keeping with the life work of Dr. Kettleborough, house. To him there came hundreds of citizens seek­ books on the subjects of government and public ad­ ing answers to questions of public administration. His ministration will be purchased for the special collec­ great talent, his painstaking thoroughness, and his tion. Christopher B. Coleman, director of the histori­ frank and open approach made his life a symbol of cal bureau of the state department of education, has service to his fellow man. The fruits of his labors are announced that the volumes will be marked by a me­ written on the statute books (If the state, and the kind­ morial bookplate designed by Frederick Polley. liness of his manner engraved in the hearts of all who "Rarely has a man in Indiana or any other state knew him. devoted his great talent throughout his adult lifetime "His work in the legislative reference bureau was to his commonwealth as did Dr. Charles Kettle­ outstanding," according to L. A. Pittenger, '07, borough," reads the announcement of the memorial AM'08, president of Ball State Teachers Colllege, and committee. Beyond the story of his career in the legis­ a classmate in the University of Dr. Kettleborough. lative reference bureau, lies the story of Dr. Kettle­ "Always quiet, composed and thoughtful, he rendered borough's undergraduate life on the Bloomington cam­ a very effective service to all legislators and, through pus, agd beyond that, of his boyhood in the small them, to the State of Indiana," Hoosier town of Topeka. Dr. Kettleborough never married. His Ii fe centered "I knew him from childhood," writes A. J. Yoder, around his work for others. Except for vacation trips ex'95, clerk-treasurer of the town of Topeka, "... we to Alaska and Hawaii for his favorite sport of moun­ were pals for many years during his boyhood and tain-climbing, and visits to the state parks and his Uni­ young manhood years in Topeka. He was an incom­ versity, Dr. Kettleborough's orbit was his Indianapolis parable companion to whose untimely death [Dr. hotel residence, the Statehouse, and the state library. Kettleborough was struck by an automobile last March] I t is especially fitting that the memorial to him be I shall never become entirely reconciled." located in the Indiana State Library, in which much of "\iVe hiked many and many a mile together," Mr. his interest centered during his mature life. It is also Yoder continues, "taught school in the same town­ fitting that the memorial be useful and unostentatious, ship; worked summers together as partners on the rail­ as was the career of this most useful of citizens. road as section hands .... I 'taught' him to smoke a ' Many contributions have been received at Dr. Cole­ pipe. I shall never forget that occasion-how sick he man's office in the State Library, where alumni may ob­ was after smoking that first pipeful, and how he lay tain information on the memorial. It is expected that across my bed, the palest live white man I ever saw." a sum of over a thousand dollars will be established. The "And now my oid pal is gone. He lies in a treeless, memorial was suggested and begun by friends of Dr. flowerless, cheerless cemetery .. . in the family lot of Kettleborough, among them Thomas A. Hendricks; Joe the Bylers who 'took him to raise' when he was a Rand Beckett; Joseph A. Andrew; Walter S. Green­ homeless waif, English born, four years old ... had ough, '10; Albert Stump, '12; Leo M. Rappaport; it not been for the care and devotion of this plain Edward D. Farmer, eX '99; Earl Crawford; Mrs. Mennonite family, consisting of the parents and four James L. Murray; DeWitt S. Morgan; Herbert P. daughters-there was no son-who lavished on Charlie Kenney, and Christopher B. Coleman.

INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE II This is Rosebud Agency ...... its children and their homes ...... and its primary schoolroom I Teach Indian Children

by MARGARET WINSLOvV, ',)2

[Miss Winslo'w's address, "Rosebud Agency, South by big hills, a big country \\ith nothing but hills and Da/wta," turned up just tantalizingly enough in the files canyons to break the sameness of the landscape. Even to make us decide th ere must be a storv there. There the trees were hidden dO'wn in the deep canyons. Quite 'Was. This is it.-EnrToR's NOTE.] " different from our Indiana hills and trees but interest­ y HEART skipped a beat when I received a ing in its vastness, beautiful; especially in the spring M telegram last January noti fying me to leave my when the prairies are covered with the blossoms o f wild home near Salem, Ind., and report for duty at Rosebud roses and cacti. Agency, South Dakota, as soon as possible. That was Quarters for employes are quite comfortable. I live in an " unheard-of" country: all anyone seemed to know a club where each two people have a furnished suite of was the fact tha t it \\as out west, somewhere near the two rooms and bath. Rosebud has all the modern con­ big round-ups and dust regions. Maps didn't help much, veniences of a city-except that the shopping di strict is except to show a few little towns, the Indian reserva­ crowded into two general stores. Lights, water and tions and a big open space labeled "The Badlands." se'wage systems are all government owned and main­ I was told to go by train to a little town in Nebraska tained. A good-sized dam has made a little lake which \\hich " 'as thirty-six miles from the Agency ; here I was is grand for skating in winter or swimming, boating and to be met by- 1 didn't know who! I had visions of fi shing in summer. being welcomed, in the middle of the night, by Big Everyone goes in for sports because we are isolated Chief So-and-So, riding to Rosebud in a buckboard or enough, so that we have to do our own entertaining. A at least a Model T; because the roads couldn't be very tennis club keeps up the courts, a golf club maintains a good and there was snow on the ground. To my sur­ course near hear and some o f the men have organized prise (and relief ) a gun club. Good riding horses are close, while pheas­ the principal of edu­ ants and coyotes are plenti ful if one likes t o hunt. cation and hi s wi fe Unlike public school teachers, the Indian service were there, took me teachers are on duty twelve months of the year--nine with them to the months in the classroom and the other three doing some Agency ane! gave me kind of community work. I was detailed to supervise a bed for the rest of 4-H Club work this summer and was proud of the Rose­ the night. bud clubs taking first honors on their exhibits at the I was awakened by Sioux Fair in the fall. church bells, that be­ Schools are of two types: The boarding school for ing Sunciay morn­ the whole reservation and the community day schools. ing, and my first im­ Both are equipped and mainta ined by the government. pression of Rosebud Children are sent to boarding school after they finish was a little town of the eigh th grade or if they live too far away to attend snow-topped houses, a day school. Here the pupils are furnished everything Margaret Winslow protected on all sides from handkerchiefs to pencils (Continued on page 28)

]2 Th e November 1938 For Alumnae Only Star's Return Is Thrill-of the-Month; Co-Eds, Alumnae Gain Recognition On and Off Campus

by HELEN WEATHER\VAX, '39 Managing Editor, The Indiana Daily Student

"MAR]OHIE \VEA. VERS COMING! She's go­ Although University co-eels are devoting time to nu­ in g to eat and sleep in the same house with us !" merous extra-curricular activities, they are not deficient The excited little Kappa rushed into the Daily Student in scholarship, statistics for last semester show. Delta office and, fingers trembling with excitement, proceeded Zeta sorority led the li st, with Pi Beta Phi. Phi Omega to type her "big story." Thus was heralded the early Pi, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta in October arrival of Marjorie \!\!eaver, ex'36, Indiana close competition. Co-ed organizations hold the first University's contribution to Hollywood. fourteen places in the list of forty-eight groups, with E ntering a movie magazine contest during her senior unorganized women averaging slightly hi gher than year because a sorority sister, Rubynelle Parks, eX'36, those organized. teased her into it, Marjorie, victorious. was awarded a Alumnae in the Big Red Book trip to New York. There she took dancing lessons. did professional modeling anel posed for ads. :Movie offers 1. U. alumnae also are "doing themselves proud," followed and she signed a contract with \!\! arner Broth­ with a number listed in the recent edition of Who's ers. followed six months later by one with Twentieth Who in America. Listed are: Professor Lillian Gay Century-Fox. Berry, '99, AM'oS, of the University Latin depart­ A steady stream of old friencls and new admirers ment; Mrs. Anna Lane Lingelbach. '95, ANI'96, pro­ flooded the Kappa house during Nlarjorie's two-day fessor of history at Temple University; Carrie E mma campus visit as she entertained with countless stories of Scott, '98, Indianapolis librarian: Mrs. Alta Brunt Hollywood and movie stars. "People in Hollywood all Sembower, 'O I, Bloomington; Gertrude Shields, '14, have fun. and it is a grand place to make money in a Indianapolis; Mrs. Emma Bain S\Viggett. '89, secretary hurry," she said. For would-be movie actresses she ad­ of the National Council of \Vomen, and Mrs. Bertha vised getting all the training possible with Prof. Lee Knight Landes, '9I, former mayor of Seattle. Mrs. Norvelle, of the University division of speech, to whom Landes, recently returned from a visit to New Zealand she attributes her success. and Australia, has promised to write on "An 1. U. Wearing a black velvet princess-line formal with Alumna in Politics," or a related topic, for an early puffed sleeves and ermine trimming, Marjorie attended issue of the ALU MNI MAGAZINE. a number of fraternity dances. Marveling at the new Sheila Jane buildings constructed since I936, she confessed that she Crooke, ex'38. is an­ "had thought there was a depression on" until she saw other former student how beautiful the campus has become. who has made good. Now a member of Co-Eds A1'ound the Campus the Prairie Farmer­ Activities for the University's 1,83I co-eds are reach- ~ WLS staff in Chi­ ing their usual rushing tempo. Co-eds thus far have cago, Miss Crooke proved themselves proficient in a number of fields. Ten has contributed writ­ women contributed to the first issue of the Folio , Uni­ ing to many publica­ versity quarterly for writers; eighteen were selected as tions, including The new members of Taps, junior dramatic organization, in Far11t Journal, Mc­ which no men IVon membership this year ; 350 were Call's jl1agazinc, inducted into the Y. \!\!. C. A. ; ninety-five were selected N e1.i.! York Times, for the women's chorus, and fifty-five enrolled in the Chicago Tribune. 1. U. co-ed banel, believed to be the onl y university and a number of Marjorie Weaver, ex'36 women's band in . the countr".. trade publications. "People all have fun ..."

INDIANA ALU?lINI ~IAGAZI~E 1:3 Two years ago she won a national con­ olis; Betty Martin, South Whitley; Mary Jo Jerry Gates, Indianapolis; Janette Graham, test with a poem commemorating the Tennell, Bloomington; Mary Jo Wright, Indianapolis ; Ann Henderson, Indianapolis; Odon ; Lenora Wilkinson, Gary ; Harriett Jean Humphreys, Evansville; Carolyn Kim­ fi ftieth anniversary of the presentation Hildebrand, Washington, D. C. ball, Mt. Vernon; Irene Krantz, Logansport; to the United States of the Statue of Mary Jane Lincoln, Columbus; Margaret Liberty by France, and was awarded ALPHA OMICRON PI: Mary Jane Ann Morrison, Kokomo; Patt Nichols, Armstrong, Bedford; Jeanice Bartling, Fort fifty dollars and a trip to New York. Spencer; Jane Rinehart, Louisville, Ky.; Wayne; Suzzanna Fogg, Greensburg; Ello­ Margaret Ann Roethke, Milwaukee, Wis.; The poem was published in a small gene Griffith, Scottsburg; Ellen June Ken­ Margaret Ann Shaul, Terre Haute ; Mary volume of the fifty best verses sub­ nedy, Dunkirk : Martha McIntosh, Worth­ Beth Steinmetz, Indianapolis; Barbara Wil­ mitted in the contest; one book went to ington; Jane Pursley, Newburgh ; Louise liams, Beaumont, Texas ; Alyce Wright, Me­ Roudebush, Winamac; Doris Rose, Crown the White House, another to the Presi­ tuchen, N. J.; Barbara Zeigler, Michigan Point; Rosemary Ruffing, Delphi; Margaret City; Betty Fraser, Bloomington; Mary dent of France. Thomas, Corydon; Martha Tierman, Rich­ Susan Schmalz, Bloomington. Now that the shouting and the tu­ mond; Carol Karr, Jeffersonville; Dona mult of Rush Week is only a breath­ Surr, Valparaiso; Norma McClintock, In­ DELTA DELTA DELTA: Mary Car­ dianapolis; Delores Small, Hobart; Betty son, Lafayette; Mellie Cox, Sullivan; Nancy less memory of the opening days of Calpha, Chicago, Ill.; Barbara Spencer, In­ Ellis, Shelbyville; Dona Jean Gifford, Chi­ school (which somehow seem already dianapolis; Louise Vittiton, Owensboro, cago, Ill.; Margaret Grundy, South Bend; far off), life in the sorority houses on Ky.; Wanda Pull ian, Indianapolis ; Martha Fern Hart, Chicago, Ill.; Naomi Kixmiller the campus at 1. U. is running as Ellen Wiesman, Kokomo; Maxine Morris, Vincennes; Jane Livengood, South Bend; Elkhart; Mary Elizabeth McIlveen, Bloom­ Marjorie Mellon, Springfield, Ohio; Betty smoothly as is its usual wont. A com­ ington; Reba Pendry, Bloorrungton; Betty Miller, Manilla; Suzanne Novre, Frankfort; plete list of the present semester's or­ Jane Greene, Gary. Jean Redman, Garrett; Mary Louise San­ ganization pledges follows: ders, Lafayette; Patricia Ziegler, Ham­ CHI OMEGA: Mary Benninghoff, Fort mond; Joan Unbenhour, Garrett; Jean Vit­ ALPHA CHI OMEGA: Elva Baughn, Wayne; Clara Bente, ; Dolores titow, Rockport; Elizabeth Whisman, Shel­ Greenville, Ohio; Sally Bollenbacher, Wash­ Cleaver, Fort Wayne; Marjorie Cole, West byville ; Elinese Burns, Bloomington. ington; Jesse Boswell, Anderson; Barbara Lafayette; Mary Elizabeth Hoover, Middle­ Drummond, Indianapolis; Mary Lou Fer­ bury; Martha Heightchew, Monticello; Do­ DELTA ZETA: Jean McGrew, New­ guson, Seymour; Marilyn Fleming. South lores Miller, Terre Haute; Elizabeth Neff, castle; Ruth McCracklin, Sullivan; Jane Bend; Jane Gaff, South Bend ; Rosalie Hol­ Fort Wayne; Mary Snapp, Whiting ; Nance Hudson, Detroit; Alice Crosman, Chester­ man, Indianapolis; Rosemary Miner, Pen­ Walker, Chicago, Ill.; Betty Jane Rowe, Mil­ ton; Josephine DeFrank, Sullivan; Marga­ dleton; Phyllis Morris, Jeffersonville; Jean waukee, Wis.; Catherine Marnan, Whiting. ret Hill, Marion; Vivian Johnson, Gary; Parent, Union City ; Virginia Stevens, Irene May, Corydon. South Bend; Pauline Taylor, Columbus. DELTA GAMMA: Dorothy Burchfield, Evansville; Ruth Colle, Anderson; Cath­ KAPPA ALPHA THETA: Brownie ALPHA DELTA PI: Alice Grandstaff, erine Durham, Indianapolis; Murene Fie­ Baker, Bluffton; Joan Barr, Rochester; Vir­ North Manchester; Marilyn Rader, Ches­ genschuh, Calumet City, III.; Virginia Flory, ginia Berkholder, Indianapolis; Nancy Bid­ terton; Mary Elizabeth Schilling, Indianap­ Indianapolis; Annette Ford, South Bend; (CoH ti,med on page 30)

"Meeting Called to Order" cAlumni Club News from Washington, Chicago, and Indiana Cities

Washington, D. C. Teachers' convention was held on Oc­ tober 28 in the Chateau Room of the NIVERSITY alumni living in and Alumni Club Schedule U near the Capital City are invited to Claypool Hotel. President Herman B a Big Ten Round-up to be held Friday Indianapolis (Men)-Every Monday \\Tells presided, and speakers included night, November 18. The Congres­ noon, Columbia Club President Emeritus William Lowe President, ALLEN WARNE, '25 Bryan, and Dean H. L. Smith, of the sional Country Club has been rented 6270 Park Avenue for the party and dance this year, and School of Education. A musical pro­ "all alumni, their families and their Chicago-Tuesday noons, Harding gram was presented by Prof. \Villiam friends are cordially invited," accord­ Restaurant, Fair Store, cor. Dear­ A. Ross, new member of the School of born and Adams. ing to the announcement of the Mid­ Music faculty. Alumni headquarters President, JAMES C. KIPER, '32 were maintained at the hotel during the west Con ference alumni organization. 35 E. Wacker Drive, Room 776 Attendance is limited to 600 and reser­ convention. vations may be made by telephoning South Bend-Every Monday noon, The Indiana-Il1inois football game Y. M. C. A. Woodley 6416 in Washington. was discussed at the October 10 meet­ President, CHARLES H.~HN, LLB'32 ing of the Indiana University Club of 1237 Longfellow Chicago Indianapolis (men). A luncheon was Terre Haute-First Tuesday of each held in the Columbia Club and Gerald The Indiana University Alumni month, 6 p. m., Deming Hotel Club of Chicago will have as its guests Redding, '26, led the discussion. President, NORMAN BIVIN, ex'27 campus students making the annual in­ 1640 Second A venue dustrial tour to the Windy City. Dale Terre Haute Cox, '24, public relations director of "Washington Impressions" was the the International Harvester Company, title of a talk given before Terre Haute will be the main speaker at a dinner on negie-I11inois Steel Company, Fruit alumni by E. Ross Bartley, ex'14, on November 4. Arrangements were made Auction Sales, and other industries October 4. Twenty alumni were pres­ by James C. Kiper, '32, president of the while on the annual pilgrimage for ent at the dinner, held in the Elks' Club. Chicago group. business school students. Norman Bivin, ex'27, presided, and The Bloomington students will also plans were made for a stag party on Indianapolis be guests of the Chicago Board of October 20 at the Mayflower Room of Trade at a dinner, and will visit the The annual luncheon of 1. U. alumni the Terre Haute Ho-use. A Thanks­ National Broadcasting Company, Car- in connection with the Indiana State giving dance was also discussed.

14 The November 1938 Alumni Authors Reviews of Prof W. T. Morgan's Last Volume on British History, and John Wilcox, '11, on Moliere

The Relation of k!oliere 10 Restoration Co'medy. By dramatist were acquired; it was mainly his plots and John Wilcox. '1 I. Associate Professor of English, comic devices. Hence his conclusion that the influellce Wayne University. ( New York, Columbia Univer­ of Moliere was only one element in the development of sity Press ; London, Oxford University Press, etc. Restoration comedy. 1938. Pp. ix, 240. Appendices, bibliography, and index. $3 .) It is possible that Dr. Wilcox underestimates the con­ tribution of a pioneer in this study, Dr. Dudley Miles, The comedy of the E nglish Restoration was not the whose thesis, in this same series, was accepted by a Co­ child of Moliere-such is the theme of this book. E m­ lumbia University jury in 1910. Of course, we expect barking upon such a perilous enterprise as a new study critical method in estimating literary influence to make of the literary influence of an author upon a whole great strides in twenty-eight years. Dr. vVilcox has con­ school of writers in another country, Dr. vVilcox states sidered it necessary, as we have seen, to devote an im­ his determination to maintain "a sound and consistent portant chapter to a new critical method. Dr. Miles can judgment in a field where the evidence had already pro­ hardly be blamed for judging the influence of Moliere duced a large body of contradictory conclusions." in accordance with the conventions of his time. In order to do this he offers, first, a chapter on "The We hope that this fine book of Dr. Wilcox will prove Background," and second, one on "The Method," with impregnable, and that another Columbia jury will not the following heads: literary commonplace, common­ reverse the verdict in 1966! BERT E. YOUNG. place of the theater, social commonplace, commonplace Bloomington. of life, identifying peculiarities, literary influence. + + + These principles are timely and seem to be soundly ap­ plied in determining the question of influence. A Bl:bliography of British History (I700-I7I5) , with Special Reference to the Reign of Queen Anne, Vol­ He feels that earlier students of this question have ume II, 1708-17 I5. By WILLIAM T. MORGAN, Pro­ too much adopted extreme positions, either exaggerat­ fessor of European History, Indiana University. ing the influence of Moliere upon Restoration comedy (Bloomington, Ind. : Indiana University Studies or conceding entirely too little influence. Nos. 114-Il8, December, 1936; March, June, Sep­ He has therefore made a thorough appraisal of all tember, December, 1937, actually published in De­ alleged parallels in Restoration comedy, and has in sev­ cember, 1937. Pp. vi, 684. $6.00.) eral cases reached a different conclusion from those of This volume is the second of Professor William T. his predecessors; for example, he denies influence of Morgan's four-volume bibliography of the reign of Moliere upon George Etherege, cited as an outstanding Queen Anne. It deals with the last years of the reign imitator by Wurzback, Miles, and others, and finds (1708-1714) and, in order to cover the aftermath of little in Vanbrugh and Crovvne. He maintains, more­ the succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715, it also over, that certain Restoration tendencies assigned too includes materials published in 1716. As described in briskly to Moliere were already working in pre-Moliere the review of the first volume (see Indiana University days and should be assigned to Ben Jonson, Fletcher, Alumni Quarterly, XXII, NO . 3, pp. 347-348), the or­ and Shirley. , ganization is chronological. Each chapter, which lists Dr. Wilcox backs up his appraisal with a quantitative pamphlets and memoirs published in a single year, is table-tables are usually conspicuous by their absence in prefaced by a brief historical introduction and a few such involved studies, where they are most needed-of words about the controversies that provoked the war­ thirty-eight plays (about 20 per cent of the total of Res­ fare of pamphlets and sermons. Some of the entries toration comedies) which "have some connection with are annotated. Moliere" (page 179). This period was, indeed, the heyday of the contro­ The writers who were really important in bringing versial pamphleteer. The climax of the war and the Moliere to England were Dryden, Shadwell, Wycher­ question of the peace, the fierce conflict of Whigs and ley, and Ravenscroft. Rarely would Dr. vVilcox con­ Tories, the feuds of factions, the bitter religious dis­ cede that the true spirit and philosophy of the French putes, and the question of the (Conlil1ued on page 3 I)

INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 15 Fightin' Hoosiers Varsity Grid Squad Riddled by Injuries, But Views November Schedule With Undamaged Morale

by GEORGE L. GARDNER, '34 Assistant to Director of Athletics

[For news of the Indiana-Kansas State game, see the A greater part of the li st of injured has not been story, " Alumni Return for Homecoming," starting on made public. The fact is that most of the players who page 5.] have been hurt are those who received a little more at­ ;\S Indiana University's football team headed into tention during the pre-season practice than those who n the second half of its difficult schedule last week­ have been carrying the burden. Consequently, there has end against \Visconsin, prospects were some brighter been a great deal of work to be done over, and naturally than the results of the first half o f the season show on the response has not been as spontaneous as could be the record. expected from a more experienced group of players. The Hoosier squad, which is now made up of forty­ Squad Dogged by Injuries six varsity candidates, has been beset by ill fortune ever In the opening game against Ohio State two fine since the opening game of the season against Ohio sophomore members of the backfield were hurt and State. have been unable to play since. They are Joe Tofil, a The coaches at the outset of the season realized that fullback, and Cobb Lewis, a halfback. Undoubtedly, fundamentally the squad was a good football team, but the loss of these two men has Ctlt down the efficiency of one 'vvhi ch would need the valuable experience to be the planned attack for the season. Also in this game gained only in actual competition before it could be Russell Sloss, a center, was injured and was unable to counted upon as a reliable machine. In this regard there play in the Illinois game. has been some noticeable improvement, but on the other In the lIIinois game Lawrence Usher, a sophomore hand the varsity combination has been caught off stride guard, received a broken collarbone and is out for the since that first game. season. Captain Paul Graham received a severely The inexperience of the various sophomores used has wrenched knee. Frank Petrick, regular right end, su f­ not been the entire reason that the team has faltered, fered a broken finger and missed the Nebraska and even though this factor is not to be overlooked. Injuries Kansas State games. John Widaman, end; Joe Nichol­ to key men, or players expected to carry a greater part son, Harold Hursh, and Eddie Herbert, all sophomore of the burden this fall, has caused an almost constant backs, came out of the contest with bad charley horses. revision of the offensive plans and there has been a re­ As a result of weak ankles John J anzaruk, another end. sultant lack of co-ordination and consistency in the was unable to play at Illinois, but despite his physical Indiana attack. handicap has been used at right end to replace Petrick, owing to lack of substitutes at this position. William Smith, who was regular left guard at the start of the season, has been on a part-time basis since the Illinois game, owing to a bruised hip. Vincent Oliver, half­ back, who has been shifted to fullback, has been handi­ capped by a sprained wrist, while Archie Harris, giant sophomore negro end, was hurt on the eve of the Kansas State game while participating in a game in a physical education class. Harold Zimmer, another sophomore back, has a sprained ankle. Despite this list of casualties, from which at one time twelve players were out of service, the squad has never lost its morale nor will to win. This in spite of the tre­ A Crimson pass in the first quarter of the Ohio State game mendous amount of work which has had to be done to

16 The November 19 3 8 The Hoosiers plunge into the Illini line I. U. around left end in the Nebraska game take up the slack, and the apparent futility of the attack T o start the second half Tofil ran with the kickoff to the \Yhich accounted for only one touchdown in the first Indiana thirty-six. Nicholson made a first down on the four games. Indiana forty-six. Clasen and Tofil made it fir st down Of errors. of which there have been many. there is on the Ohio forty-two. Tofil and Nicholson teamed in little to be said except that the boys who committed carrying the ball to the Ohio twenty-five, where Indiana these mistakes are bearing down more in earnest every was penalized for offside. Nicholson's pass to Clasen day to make up for the mishaps. was knocked down on the five-yard line. Ohio State punted out and Indiana started again from its own Ohio State 6; Indiana 0 thirty-one. Tofil's bucking and Nicholson's passing In the opening game of the season agai nst Ohio State, took the Hoosiers to the Ohio twenty-four. During Indiana Aashed its most brilliant and consistent attack this march Nicholson completed a pass to Petrick on revealed so far this season. The Hoosiers appeared set the Ohio State ten, but the Hoosiers were penalized for for an early arrival and a fine season following this con­ holding and the play nullified. Ohio State steadied and test. which was practically all Indiana despite the fact Indiana was forced to punt. Ohio State returned the that Ohio State won the game 6-0. Indiana completely punt and Oliver's long pass was intercepted by Kabealo dominated the play for all but four minutes and forty on Ohio's fourteen, Kabealo returning to the Indiana seconds of the ball game, and it was during this time forty-nine, where he was caught by Harris. that Ohio State ' fashioned its only sustained drive of Ohio State then started its march. From hi s o\\n the afternoon, marching seventy yards for the touch­ thirty Welbaum picked up eleven yards on the "Statue down. of Liberty" play. Scott picked up seven yards, and then In the first quarter of the game, Ohio State was un­ took a pass from Sexton on the Indiana thirty-one. able to gain, but Indiana taking a punt on its own Sexton passed to \tVelbaum on the Indiana twenty-one, twenty-nine sped off to a first down on the Indiana and ski rted left end to the Indiana eleven. Sexton then forty-three. F ollowing several punt exchanges Hursh passed to Scott for the touchdown. tried a long pass to Petrick, but it was intercepted by Indiana stormed back with a rush, tossing passes Langhurst of Ohio State on Ohio's twenty-eight. frantically, but was unable to fashion a consistent drive. Scott was thrown for a ten-yard loss as the quarter On a combination of passes and running plays the ended, and the Buckeyes kicked to Graham on the In­ Hoosiers advanced to the Ohio twenty-one, but Indiana diana twenty-two-yard line. Neither side was able to f was penalized fifteen yards for holding. The last­ gain consistently, although Indiana retained possession minute long pass to Archie Harris missed connection of the ball most of the time. Langhurst took Nichol­ on the Ohio fifteen, to end Indiana's last scoring threat. son's punt on Ohio's sixteen and advanced to the Ohio thirty-five. A pass a nd a cutback by Ohio State put Illinois 12; Indiana 2 Ohio State on the Indiana forty-eight, for its first trip Against Illinois, the Hoosiers received no better into Hoosier territory. Indiana made three first downs breaks than they did against the Buckeyes. There In­ in a row as the half ended. diana's fumbling and errors counted heavily against the In the third quarter Indiana completely dominated ' Hoosiers. Following a short kickoff received by Illinois. the play. Ohio State had possession of the ball only Indiana was constantly forced back by the superior three times, during which it attempted only five plays. punting displayed by Illinois. The first bad break came

INDIANA ALUMNI l\lAGAZINE 17 when Clasen's punt was The two teams see-sawed blocked and recovered by Il­ I. U. Football Schedule-1938 back and forth on the field as linois on the Indiana thirty­ the half ended. o-OHIO STATE 6 nine. The Illini advanced to To start the second half 2-ILLINOIS 12 the Indiana twenty-four, but Clasen kicked from the Indi­ o-NEBRASKA o Indiana steadied and frus­ ana sixteen to Elting, who 6-KANSAS STATE 13 trated an Illinois passing of­ returned to the Indiana Oct. 29-WISCONSIN at Madison fensive. Illinois threatened Nov. 5-BOSTON at Boston forty-two. Illinois advanced again, driving to the Indiana NOV.12-IOWA at Bloomington the ball tothe Indiana twenty­ thirty before Naddeo inter­ (Dads'Day) eight. Wehrli shagged a pass cepted Wardley's pass on the NOV.I9--PURDUE at Lafayette and ran the ball to the Indi­ Indiana twenty-four. Clasen Reserved Seats Iowa Game ...... $2.50 ana thirteen, then plunged to quick-kicked for Indiana, General Admission...... 1.25 the four-yard line. From and Illinois was penalized for there Brewer plunged over holding. Graham intercepted for the touchdown. Peterson's pass, running to the Illinois forty-two. Following the kickoff Indiana started on another Nicholson passed to Herbert on the Illinois thirty-one, drive which took them to the Illinois thirty-seven be­ and completed another one on the Illinois thirteen. Line fore Nicholson's pass was intercepted on the Illinois plays failing, Nicholson passed to Widaman. This was nineteen. Following a punt exchange Indiana started the disputed play of the game. The ball bounced out of clown the field again from its own twenty-seven, ad­ Widaman's hands, and apparently was touched by an vancing largely by passes to the Illinois thirty-four. Illinois player before it was retrieved by Herbert on the Hursh passed to Rucinski, who dropped the ball on the Illinois two-yard line. The officials, after some discus­ Illinois four-yard line. Hursh passed to Widaman on sion, ruled that the Illinois player had not touched the Illinois twenty-three, and his next toss was intercepted ball, and it was Illinois' ball on their own eighteen. by Wehrli, who returned to the Illinois thirty-two. Fol­ On the next play the Illinois pass from center was lowing another punt exchange Indiana once more wide, and Indiana was awarded two points on a safety. started from its own forty- (Continued on page jI)

News Notes of Varsity Sports by WILLIAM A. BUCHANAN, '39

Harriers Extend Winning Streak campus to complete work for his de­ Ex-I. U. Stars Shme in Pro League ACK at the cross-country helm gree. Smith was given a tryout this Indiana University's contributions to B after a two-year absence, Sid Rob­ summer with the Jersey City club in the the National Professional Football inson, PG'30, piloted the Hoosier mar­ International League. League \lave played an outstanding athoners to their thirteenth and four­ Although he was used mostly in re­ role in recent developments in the pJay­ teenth consecutive dual meet victories lief roles, Smith impressed Jersey of­ for-pay ranks. over Purdue and Butler on October 12 ficials favorably and will be promoted Corby Davis, all-American fullback and 19, respectively. Both meets were to a starting role next summer. The of the 1937 Crimson eleven, has been a won by identical scores, 19-36. Fort Wayne right-hander is owned by potent factor in the sudden reversal of Not since Michigan State did the the New York Giants. form shown by the Cleveland Rams. trick in 1934 have the Hoosier cross­ Davis accounted for one touchdown on countrymen lost a dual meet. Anothn Big Leaguer October 9 when the Rams surprised all Mel Trutt, veteran senior letterman, / the customers by turning back the pre­ took first place honors in each dual to Merrill May, eX'32, recently was viously unbeaten Chicago Bears, [7-7. pace Indiana's continued victory march picked up in the major league draft by Headlines accompanied the recent on the hill-and-dale front. The triumph the Philadelphia Phillies. Having been sale of Frank Filchock, ex'38, by the over Butler was the sixth in a row. The an important cog in the Newark Inter­ Pittsburgh Pirates to the Washington record books do not go back far enough national League club's team for the past Redskins. It was a definite step toward to show a reversal at the hands of the few years, the ex-Crimson third base­ the top for Filchock. The Redskins Purdue aggregation. man comes highly recommended to the were pro champs last fal1, while the Phillies. Pirates spent their odd moments grop­ Smith to Get Thorough Try May is the first Indiana man to join ing their way out of the league's cellar. Bill Smith, who pitched the Indiana baseball's big show since Vernon Wil­ The former Crimson passing ace was baseball team into a tie for the Big Ten shire, '36, went lip with the Philadel­ brought in to aid the ailing Sammy championship this spring, is back on the phia Athletics a few years back. Baugh in the aerial department.

18 Th e Nov e mber 1 93 8 Is the Rod Mightier Than the Gun? Wherein Two Alumni Dispute Hunting vs. Fishing and Two Others (and maybe more) Are Bystanders

day when the overflow flew down there, and he got an idea that they ",,'ere indigenously present or something. . . . Now, as to that tuna fish fellow-that reminds me of our pastime in the afternoons, when we have our limit of ducks. When we take a notion to do us a little fi shing down here we take the anchor off the tug, jam a duck or two on each point, and shy that into the bay@u. The first ten-foot garfish that comes along swallows the whole works. Then we rig up a block and a bunch of pulleys, hitch it around a good big green tree and the fireworks begin. \iVe crank him in until he shows a bit above the water and then the boys with the 30-30's be­ gin working on him. Yes, after we get the gar in, I Keith O'Hair, ex'29 (left, wearing vest), friends and fish amuse myself feeding the playful little 900-pound bears that are festooned about the tent. . .. Some of the H EN the bare-faced, postcarded statement, ''I'm pictures I am sending are of wild ducks that I have the best duck hunter in Arkansas!" came to the W called in close enough to enable me to take a snap shot 1'L\CAZI NE office the other day from Edwin C. McMul­ of, and, believe me, brother, that is a stunt. Send these len, '04, Pine Bluff (Ark.) physician, it seemed too pictures back, because they cost real money. The pho­ good to pass up. tographer who makes them for us said that the phoney While a message was being sent to Dr. McMullen, asking for proof of his prowess, there arrived, by some ducks he uses cost like thunder. ... Incidentally, if strange quirk, letters from three other alumni in widely 1. U. gets a game with L. S. U. or Vandy or Alabama separated parts of the country, telling of their success and comes south of the Mason and Dixon line, I'll be in hunting and/ or fishing in their sections. there, if I have to miss a duck hunt!" Kenneth Lee Wagner, ex'36, of Corpus Christi, Mr. O'Hair, who is a funeral director in the Oregon Texas, reported that he was "enjoying the best hunting town, kept both feet on the ground in relating his post­ and fishing in the U. S.," and this information was 1. U. sports career. "Tuna fi shing," he writes, "is a new passed along to the Arkansas doctor with the results sport off the coast of Oregon. Our party consisted of noted below. From \iVoodburn, Ore., came Keith nine, and we went O'Hair's (ex'z9) word that tuna fi shing couldn't be out in a forty-two­ beat out there, and the inference that hunting vvasn't foot boat. We the whole story of sport. At about the same time John went straight west A, Elliott, ex'I8, Kansas City (Kan.) dentist, reported until we came to on his vacation in Canada and the thirty-pound lake blue water, and ~outhecau ghtupthere. then stalied fish­ Dr. McMullen's letter of proof "vas the longest and ing. 'vVe estimated best documented. He sent a can of photographs, o f we were out about which one is reproduced on this page. A condensation forty miles when of his letter (also canned) follows: the first fi sh was "Enclosed find final and conclusive proof that I am hooked and it was tops, the first flight man of Arkansas and at large, the not long before greatest the country affords, the best duck hunter. Now, the water seemed of course, I wouldn't want to speak disparagingly of alive with jump­ that Corpus Christi bird, but confidentially, there ain't ing fi sh. Our first Edwin C. McMullen, '04 no ducks c1o\\n there. Really, he just got thar notion one (Cont'd 0 11 p. 27) Absolutely the tops. , ,

INDIANA ALU:~L\,I .\IAGAZI:-.IE 19 "I Knew Him When • • • " c/llumni News Notes by Classes

1880 Ca li fornia, is now a dentist with of­ SecretaY\'o MRS. VVALLAC£ PALMER fi ces in Holl ywood. Cal. lVIr. Nich­ .j00 N. Co ll ege' Ave., Bloomington olson a lso has a n A . B. degree from Harvard Universi ty. He and i'drs. \\1H.LIA l\( T. BLAI R, BL, former class secretary, died on October IS Nicholson, a graduate of Stanford at his home in Bloomington. Death University, have two sons, both doc­ was ca used by a hea rt attack. Born tors. in Bloomington of pioneer parents, 1899 Mr. B lair started in business as a Sec-reta.n- L AUREL C. TH.-\\,ER shoe merchant, la tel' operated a ha rd­ 510 N. M erid'ian, Apt. 7, Indianapoli s ware store, was one 0 f the orga niz­ LAUREL CONWELL THAYER was ers 0 f the Bloomin gton Cut Stone the guest of the Indianapoli s Na­ Company, once served as county au­ ture S tudy Club on the group's tour ditor and member o f the city CO Ull­ of southeastern Ind iana on Octo­ ber 16. Club members gathered at cil. He is survived by two children, "'/t _.=a.., Tames W. Blair, '08, LLB'09, and ~... :, .~ Laurel to hear iVJiss Thaver relate l'vIary Blair, ex'I7; a brother, James human interest stories of the town's \N. Blair, and a sister, Mrs. \Villia m early history and of its founder, H. Anderson (Ada L. Blair, ex'84) . Among October visitors to the campus Rev. James Conwell, her grand­ was GLEN LEVIN SWIGGETT, fa ther. Mound P ark, where the '88, AM'93, who visited the University meeting was held , was gi ven to the 1883 library, where is located the 5,000­ town of Laurel by its founder. Secretary.. J ULIETTE M ,\ XWELL volume collection he and his wife The Ambassador H otel, Indianapoli s (Emma Bain, '89) donated to the Uni­ versity last 'lear. 1900 A..ir mail bring~ word. as the Master of nine languages, authority Secre/ory .. MR S. EDITH H OLLAND GIFFORD } ( AGAZI NE goes. to press, of the on comparative literature and expert 3 150 16th St., N. W., W ashin gton, D. C. death of REV. R. SCOTT STEPHEN­ in Latin American affairs, Dr. Swig­ gett believes that "the eighth Pan­ Another example of the fa r-flung SON in Los Angeles on October 17. American conference in Lima, Peru, Hoosier in fluence : "I have been A Presbyterian minister, he re­ this December is of greatest sig­ elected president of the Hoosier ceiv ed hi s theological training in the nificance to the United States." In a Club for southwest \iVash ington," Chicago T heological Seminary and recent interview he said that conflict­ ing philosophies of government may writes JOH N B. ROBE RTSON, Tacoma served pastorates in Madison, S. D., menace our traditional Pan-American physician. a nd in Bellefontaine, O hi o. A fter policy. retirement in 1931, he went to Los For the past fourteen years Dr. and 1901 .\ngeles to speJld his time in read­ Mrs. Swiggett have spent nearly half Secretary, MRS. ALTA BRU NT SEhlllOWER of each year traveling over the world 702 Ball entine R d., Bloomington ing and writing. A loyal a lumnus, by camel, burro, rickshaw, boat, auto "I am still city attorney for the a lways "proud o f my University," or train-but they have yet to take city o f Logansport," writes BENJA­ he made a gi ft of $500 to I.v. in their first ride in an airplane. ~IIN F . LONG (LL B) . 19:?5. With the gift he wrote: "My gratitude for all the University has J. E. FITZGE RAW lives in W ash­ done for me is considerable. T he 1890 ington, D. C , and is assistant secre­ memory of those fine old days in Sfcrefary, MR S. ELLA COll R SERVICE ta ry of the National Canners' Asso­ 410 W. Main St., Greenfi eld the fin e old hall s is beautiful and ciation. touching." A testimonial dinner was recently 1902 held in Lincoln, Neb., for FRED D. Sec')'., M RS. KATI E OPP£RMA 1\ A :-IDR f: WS 1889 CORNELL, ex, Scottish Rite secretary 901 E. roth St., Bloomington Secretary. COL. T. ]. LOUD£N there. On October 20 ?lir. Cornell Mrs. CLARA M ULLEH PORTER , 420 N. Park, Bloomington moved ['0 Los A ngles, Cal. Reedly, Cal., briefl y spans the years A.NN A REINHARD LO UDEN , wife a fter her graduation : "Since leav­ of Col. T. J. Louden, B loomington, 1892 ing Ind iana mine were nine interest­ secretary of the class, passed away Secretary, PROF. CHARLES J. SEMBOW ER ing years as teacher of languages in 702 Ballentine Rd., Bloomington on August 2 I. S he was the daughter high schools. Then I added the name of the late Judge George Reinhard, LI1AI(l. ES T. KNIPP (AM'96) is of Porter to my ma iden name. A cl ean of the law school and vi ce­ emeritus professor of experimental son Paul a nd a da ughter Fay came presiclen t 0 f the University, a nd electricity at the Unive rsity 0 f Illi­ to us in due time. Paul has made me came to B loomington after her nois and li ves in Urbana, Ill., where a grandmother. Fay is li bra ri an in graduation from Oxford (Ohio) he has been a city a lderman since the F resno State College Library." College for \Vomen. She is sur­ 1936. D espite d istance and the lapse of vi ved by her husband, four child ren 1898 time, her " memory still cherishes and seven g randch ilcl en. "The pass­ Secretar\'. EDNA J OHNSON the thought of India na," and she ing of lVIr s. Louden is a real loss to 822 Atwate;· · A "e., Bloomington finds it still "wonclerful to belong to the community," the Bloo lJlillqton U. HOMER NICHOLS ON , former that throng of hundreds who pass Telepholl e commented. high school principal in Indiana and throu O' h its ha ll s."

:20 Th e Novem.v e r 1.9 8 8 1903 surance Company and JS a former ROBERT W. M CCLASKEY (LLB) auditor of state. Sccretarv, GUY C~ NT WELL is now located in New York City as , Gosport ma nager of the Travelers' Insu r­ Retiring after forty-one yea rs of 1911 ance Company, in charge of the of­ school \\'ork is J. L. HOUSE Sec'" " MR S, EDNA HATFIELD EO~!oN[lSON fice on Forty-second street. (XM'IO), who reports that he has -6 1S Ballentine Rd" Bloomin gton President of the twelfth district spent twenty-five years in the EI No news is gooc1 news in the case of the Indiana Medical Society is Centro (Cal.) High School and of J H, Ke(,K, J acksonville (Fla,) Dr. H. O. WILLI AMS (MD'I3), His Junior College, and was for sixteen sa lesl1l,a n, who writes in: "No news home is in K enda llville. years principa l there, as usual. Just pegging away." EDWARD E, JOHN STON (MD'I S) CLA YTON ULREY, for many years is attending surgeon at Station Hos­ 1905 with the Westinghouse Lamp Com­ pital, Fort Knox, Ky. pany in Bloomfie ld, N . J, is now in Seactar.l', PROF, LoGAN ESAREY Modest hope frol11 W. A, VVI SS­ North i'l'ianchester. 3-10 Henderson, Bloomington LER (AM'I4): "No ne'ws-just CHARL ES EDWARD WHITE, ex, is working along and waiting for an advertising di stributor for the Miles 1912 old age pension." Mr. Wissler is a Laboratories, of Elkhart, Ind., and Secrelary, M RS , RUTH EOWA RDS MCGRI FF metallurgist in N iagara Falls, N. Y. lives ill Canandaigua, N. Y. 9023 Vi, Outer Drive, Detroit, Mich, ORVAL DAVID TYN ER teaches This is also from Niagara Falls: OnTO WINGER (AM'07) is the mathematics in Lane Technical "My position is manager of the new new moderator of the northern In­ High School, Chicago, and is also products division of the R. and H . diana district of the Church of the a mathematics instructor in the Chi­ Chemical Department of the E. 1. Brethren, Dr. \i\1inger is president cago Technical College evenlrlg du Pont de Nemours & (O,"-PAUL of Manchester College. sc hool. J. CARLISLE (AM'q). 1913 GRACE TACKSON is a teacher of 1906 English i~ East Technical High Secretary, MRS. MARY N AS H HATFIELD Secretary, Ivy L. CHAM NESS School, Cleveland, O hio. 807 E. loth St., Bloomington 385S N. New Jersey St" Indianapolis Mrs, EDGAR L. RrcKA RD is head ESMO ND P. H ERSBE RGER is teach­ 1914 o f the depa rtment of science, Miami ing business la w at the Parker P ub­ lic High School, Chicago, and is also S ecretary, PHOF, JAMES]. ROBINSON ( Fla.) Senior High School, and 11 30 E. 1st St" Bloomington chairman of a discussion group at state president of Delta Kappa Going to Florida? Then read this Gamma in Florida. the International House on the Uni­ versity of Chicago campus. from PAUL KUN SCH IK (AM'r6): "For the past ten yea rs have been 1907 vice-president of the Miami Beach SecretaY\', 1I'IRS, AGN ES D. KUER STEI NER Bay Shore Company . . . oper­ IS27 E. 3rd St.. Bloomington ating three hotels and two golf MORRIS \\1, MdvIA NAilLAN , ex, is courses. \i\1ould enjoy having class­ the present county attorney at Law­ mates and friends call on me when renceburg and is also president of in Florida, just for a chat. The same the Dearborn County Bar Associa­ invitation applies for friencls of tion. Mrs. KuNSCHIK (Gail Doolittle, 1908 'rs)·" Secretary, J ULIAN J. BEHR Both a boost and a news note: 7-ll Avon Fields Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio "So happy that you are publishing L. EARLE MILLER (LLB) is a this monthly magazine," writes BES­ member of the city council of Indi­ SIE PA TRICK DUllBER, then adds, ana, Pa" and a former district at­ "Taught E nglish and Latin in torney of Indiana county. Woodrow \Vilson High School, WALT ER \A/, FOSKETT (ex), Palm Washington, D. C, last year." Beach (Fla,) attorney, is a member 1ilrs. ALBERT STUM P (Susie of the board of directors of the Al­ Thro) was injured in an automobile leghany Corporation, accident recently, while she ancl Mr. ROBERT B. KELLY, ex, is president This is ROBERT A. TROTH, '96, Stump were returning' fr0111 the Orleans horticulturist, and his famous Thro family reunion at J efferson­ of the Indiana Retail Hardware "multiple" apple 'tree. On this tree Association, and credit for that grow-but let Mr. Troth tell his ville. H er leg was broken just above news item goes to J j\ MES A. DILTS, story : "About five years ago there the ankle. LLB'll. Both men live ill \i\1inamac, appeared in my yard a vigorous seed­ ling apple tree. The first impulse was 1915 to use the grubbing hoe; the second, Secretary, EARL LIN ES 1909 to play with this tree before breakfast Box 295, Hightstown, N. ]. Sccretar)', GEORGE Vv. PURCELL and after supper. I began by setting CHARLES E, Boonr (AM'r6), 425 N. \Valnut, Bloomington buds on the tree. Having exhausted the varieties available in Indiana, I dean of men at Northern State "Missed only two games since 'Bo' secured buds from Maryland, Michi­ Teachers Coll ege, Aberdeen, S. D., took over the team," writes FLO YD gan, Iowa and Oregon, and now I have reports that he has been doing grad­ E, VhLLB;liSON, ex, president of a 127 varieties of apples, three kinds of uate work at the University of Colo­ teachers' placement bureau in Indi­ crabapples and six kinds of pears on rado a t Boulder. Mr. Booth is also this tree. Two years from now at anapolis. \ iVi llia mson is also vice­ least 100 varieties will be actually head of the department president of the Standard Life In- growing on the tree." at the Dakota school.

I"\"DIA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE 21 Here's a man who makes his plans lives in Tulsa, Okla. He attended 1922 a long ways in advance. CLAUDE M. the university there after leaving .')ecy., MRS. ANITA SWEARINGER iliDHAM SWINNEY writes: "Am general fac­ r.D. 424 E. Main St., Greenfield tory manager of the H. C. Godman BYRON D. ROBERTS and Mrs. Rob­ N ow sales manager of the Flem­ Company, shoe manufacturers, in erts (Laura Ann Pike, ex'23) live ing H. Revell Company, Publishers, Columbus, Ohio. Planning right in Las Vegas, N. M., where Dr. Rob­ and with that firm for fi fteen years, now to be in Bloomington in June, erts is professor of mathematics in is JOHN A . BURNETT. JR. He lives 1940 ." the Normal University there. They in Garden City, Long Island. have two children, a girl aged ten ]ldoRTON LONGNECKER is secre­ The hobbies of Dr. \NILLIAM R. and a boy aged seventeen. tary-treasurer of the Overmyer HARPER, ex, are, he writes, polo and l\Iould Company in Winchester. St. Bernard dogs. He is a physician It's been years since we heard and surgeon in Los Angeles. from ELLSWORTH C. MURPHY, ex, now a Chicago attorney, and he ac­ 1923 counts for himsel f as follows: S ecretary, VVILLlAM J. HILL "After leaving 1. U . law school I 5536 Gwynn Oak Ave., Baltimore, Md. taught in high schools in Poplar PEARL DUTCHESS WESTFALL, Bluff, Mo., and \Nabash, Ind. Later Spencer. is the subject of a sketch received a degree of JD from the in the Biographical Dictionary of University of Chicago, in which Contem.porory Poets, a new "\Vho's city I now practice." Who" of American versifiers. "Edu­ FRANK M. SUMMERS , of East St. ca tor, lecturer. writer," the book Louis, Ill., is assistant state's attor­ says of her, and credits her with the ney for St. Clair county. authorship of Lazy Lo),s, Tin}' Rills and Post Bacon Esso}'s. 1916 V. C. STIVERS, ex, of Kansas City, Sao'clary, 'vVARD G. BIDDLE reports that he has been practicing 601 S. Park, Bloomington general dentistry there ever since Exalted Ruler of an Elks Lodge his graduation from Kansas City One of the winners in a $200,000 prize Western Dental College eleven with over a thousand members is competition conducted by the James the position held by R. S. WALLACE, F. Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation years ago. of Aberdeen, S. D. Mr. Wallace is was MICHAEL JAMES BLEW, '15, The directOl' of the business AM'16. Mr. Blew spent two whole courses at Findlay (Ohio) College also a commissioner of public safety nights and one day writing his paper, (fi re and police) in Aberdeen. "Advantages of Substituting Wrought is ELBERT E. MAGOON, ex. Iron or Steel for Concrete in the Con­ Jv1 ABE L B ERN ICE GAL BRET H ALDEN P. CHESTER (ex), vice­ struction of Sewage Tanks." president and general manager of (Miller) was recently married to Now a research engineer with the 1\1r. J. c. Dowell, electrical engineer City of Philadelphia, Blew has taught the Globe Stove and Range Division of Pittsfield, Mass., where the couple thirteen years at Drexel Institute of of the Globe American Corporation, now jive. Mr. Dowell is a graduate Technology, is an expert on sewage Kokomo, is this year's president of treatment, water supply and road con­ the Institute of Cooking and Heat­ of the University of Missouri and struction. is employed by the General Electric ing Appliance IV1anu facturers. He Company. has served on the board of trustees 1921 of the Institute for a number of 1917 years. Secretary, MRS. MARJORIE HULL BULLOCK S cc retary, VILMER L. TATLOCK 2 [II S. High St., South Bend 116 S. 21St St., Terre Haute 1924 Persona1 Homecoming note: Secretary, HERMAN B 'vVELLS ALINE CULLISON. teacher of bi­ "Was back through the University 519 N. College Ave., Bloomingion ology in Tilden Technical High last October. The new buildings LAWRENCE L. OSBORN (AM'27) School, Chicago, says she is still try­ reports that he has introduced two ing to "interest the boys in my and campus are still one of the finest in America and furnish fond memo­ new courses in the curriculum at classes in bugs, crawdads, 'n things." ries.. . . Best wishes for a greater the University of :Maine. One was 1. U.," writes DANTO N VVVETH general chemistry for chemistry 1919 LANDESS. ex . from Port Allen, La. majors, and the other was advanced Secretary, MRS. ETHEL LARM STEM BEL Dr. Landess received his AB at inorganic chemistry. Bridgeport Louisiana State University and his Production manager of the Pack­ LOUIS FRANCE CONTER, Crown MD from Tennessee. ard Electric Division of General Point broker, describes himself as ROBERT F. BURGAN (ex ) is title Motors Corporation is the position "just another Hoosier pulling for examiner for the Los Angeles filled by LELAND BADGLEY THOMAS 'Bo.' " County Flood Control District. Be­ in Warren, Ohio. He is married to 1920 fore taking this position three years DOROTHEA \VILLIAMSON, ex'26, and Secretary, ago, he did similar work for the they have three children, Ann, [2; MRS. GERTRUDE MIEDEMA WILLIAMS state division of highways and title Jane, 10, and Charles, 9. 5726 Carrollton Ave., Indianapolis companies. \Nith Mrs. Burgan, A school teacher for fi fteen years, BENTON 1. SPRINGER, ex, is super­ w'hom he married in 1930 at Santa FREDERICK B. ARMBRUSTER, of Po­ intendent of warehouses and ma­ Ana, and their five-year-old twins, mona, Cai., has quit the school room chine shops for the Pure Oil Com­ Patricia and Kathryn. he Jives in to become a mail carrier. He has an pany for Oklahoma and Kansas, and Los .I\ngeles. AM degree from the University

22 Th e Novemb e T 1.938 of Southern Cali fornia. i\1rs. Arm­ 1926 She had been teaching home eco­ bruster (Juanita Hill, ex'29) Secreta!')" ROBERT ALLEN nomics and physical education in teaches in the Los Angeles city 427 N. \Nashigton, Bloomington the high school at Delphi. school system. Rated as a superior ETHEL V AN CLEAVE FOSBRINK, Secretary-treasurer and a direc­ teacher. she has given demonstra­ of \Vest Hartford, Conn., writes to tor of the Mayflower Association is tions of work for other teachers at say that R. L. (Jick) KENDERDINE. the title of CHARLES F. BENZEL, the superintendent's request. '38, last year's grid captain, was a Sca rsdale, N. Y . He holds similar recent guest in her home. "Con­ positions with the Pilgrim Explora­ 1925 gratulations to Coach 'Bo' on the tion Company. Secretary, MARGARET H. GEYER All-Star game," she adds. 909 Portage Ave., South Bend Adding to the growing list of Hoosiers in Florida is CHARLES DA­ "Since graduation have been in MON Moss, ex, Coral Gables. "Came veterans' hospitals in Florida and to Florida in 1925," he writes, "dur­ North Carolina," writes C W. ing the well-known boom, and have HOFFMAN (MD'28). He is now been operating a construction busi­ with the Veterans' Administration ness for the past ten years." in Oteen, N. C, and adds: "Health good, and enthusiasm high for a Mrs. CHARLES O. GAYLORD great year at 1. U." (Mary Frances Thompson, ex) writes from vVashington, D. C: T. E. BROADIE (MD'28) reports "Since attending art school in vVash­ tersely, "No news," then proceeds ington, have been connected with to give some: "Still operating the the Library of Congress in the administrative end of Anker Hos­ U ni ted Sta tes copyright office. I am pital. St. Paul, Minn." now an 'examiner' (of maps, works H. H. HORNER lives in Howe and of art, technical and scientific draw­ is sales manager for the Anker ings, photographs and prints, and Holth Manufacturing Company of pictorial illustrations)." Port Huron, Mich. This is the twelfth year as super­ 1928 intendent of the White Pirreon New Indiana director of the National Secretary, MRS. LORETTA HULMAN TAFT (Mich.) schools for C C RIN~LE.R Education Association is L. V. PHIL­ 20r E. Main St.. Fredonia, N. Y. (MS'35)· LIPS, '15, principal of Lincoln High A. F. RroFSKI (MD'30) is located HENRY G. BADGER, AM, is a spec­ School, Vincennes. A native of Greene County, Mr. Phillips taught in \Vilkes-Barre, Pa. "Anthony ialist in educational statistics in the in township high schools there after Francis II is eight months old and United States Office of Education, leaving 1. U. He is in his ninth year doing well," the message reads. Department of the Interior. He has as head of the Vincennes school. two children at 1. U., Joe, '40, and Mr. Phillips is a former president "I have been a physician with the Leonita, '41. of the Indiana State Teachers' Asso­ Inland Steel Company at Wheel­ ciation, and now chairman of its ex­ wright, Ky., for the past three M. J. (Muggs) LORBER reports ecutive committee. As the Indiana from Camp Nebagamon, v\Tiscon­ member of the N. E. A. board of di­ years," reports Dr. VVILFRID C sin, that this summer he celebrated rectors, he will help to acquaint GETTELFINGER. He received his MD Hoosier teachers with the work of from the University of Louisville in the tenth anniversary of the camp, the national group, hopes to increase of which he is director. I-Ie asked all the state membership of 6,611 by 10 1934· Indiana people up in that neck of the per cent. It's a little early to announce it, woods to drop in and see him, but it but there'll be one candle on the birthday cake at the home of Mr. may be a little late for that now. LEO MARTIN CHAMDERLAIN and Mrs. N ElL PIERCE (Jane Ensle, HILBERT E. RUST, agency super­ (AM'27, PhD'31) is registrar and '28) in Evansville this November visor in the Indianapolis agency of professor of education at the Uni­ 24. Cake and candle are for James the Aetna Li fe Insurance Company, versity of Kentucky, Lexington. Ensle Pierce. has been named president of the In­ LEON ARD L. WILLIAMSON, ex, is MAX E. BLUE is a physician for dianapolis Association of Life Un­ a partner in the S-W Induction the Kentucky State Board of derwriters by the board of directors. Company, Chicago. "We are en­ Health. He lives in Burkesville, Ky. R. W. LEFLER (AM'27) is a gaged in manufacturing radio coils, MAX B. VAN OSDOL, of Seymour, teacher of physics at the La Salle­ which are sold to the radio receiver is an analytical and consulting chem­ Peru Township High School and manu facturers," h~ explains. Junior College and lives in La ist. He specializes on cereals and Salie, Ill. 1927 cereal products. JOHN H. Cox is in the coal and Secretary, MRS. MILDRE D LEGGE NESSEL LEE FORBES CRIPPEN, PG, is in lumber business in Nappanee and is 801 S. 6th St., Goshen his ninth year of teaching at Berea married to ELIZABETH HELM ('24), MAREDlTH HEATON VVYTTEN­ (Ky.) College, where he is associate according to a note sent to the BACH (MD'29) is in general prac­ professor of history and political ALUMNI MAGAZINE by M. P. HELM tice in Elmira, N. Y. sClence. ('94), Indianapolis. L. W. M cFAlL (AM'28) is assist­ 1929 New president of the Springl"teld ant manager of the Oxford Paper Se cretary, MRS. MIRJAM COMIlS RUIlEY (Ohio) Federation of Teachers is Company, in Rumford, Me. r809)0 N . 7th St., Terre Haute PAUL B. PARKER, director of physi­ BEULAH L. SMITH (ex), Mrs. One of the alumni authors, JOHN cal education at the Roosevelt Tunior Clarence Switzer since May 29, now F. BARNHILL (LLD), reports that High School in the Ohio city.. lives on a farm north of Otterbein. the entire text of his Hatching the

INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 23 AlIlC'rican Eagle has been set up in pOSItIOn for the last six years, he ana division of the District of Co­ Braille by the National Library for was previously purchasing agent for lumbia public library. "This is the the B lind. The book is a narrative the Sequoia National Parks Com­ local history division," she explains. of the American Revolution. telling pany. MARTHA EUl)oRA MOO RI:: is now the story of-as the jacket puts it­ CLO YD ANTHONY, AM (PhD'3S) Mrs. Arthur J. Shepard, Jr., and "Philip Fenton. bashful lover. but a writes in to tell us that "during the lives in Houston, Texas. bold and devoted follower of \Nash­ past two years I have been associate For the past year GLEN D. BROW N, ington." Dr. Barnhill is also author professor of teaching social studies, AM. has been professor of indus­ of SlIrgica/ Al1atoll':l' of the Head and since August principal of the tria l eclucation and head of that de­ alld Neck coll ege laboratory school. at Central partment, in charge of extension Another alumna to join the du Missouri State Teachers College, education in the University of Ponts is MurnEL E. PLACE , of Wil­ vVarrensburg." iVla ryland. He now lives in Balti­ l1lington, Del., who is now em­ June, [939, is the date set by more, where he formerly had an ad­ ployed as a staff assistant with the EMMA L. DENT, MS, for receiving ministrative position with the public R. and H. Chemical Department, her LLB degTee. She is now teach­ schools. E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. ing commercial subjects and living :Mrs. ANNA MAHCHETT-CURLESS, ALICE MAE RAMSEY (GN) has in Parkersburg, VV. Va. MS, has resumed her teaching in been employed at the New York Here's an idea from C. M . HAR­ the English department of the Mar­ State Hospital, Raybrook, since IUS, JR., ex: "Still a booster of 1. tin Boots Junior High School, Mar- July. u., especially 1. U. band. Think out­ Ion. iVIARGUERITE S. CLEME NGER of-state alumni should have greater Mrs. GLENN R. HOLBEN (Mina writes: "I am Intake Supervisor of contact with schoo!." Mr. Harris is Sweeten) reports from Chicago: "1 the Department of Public Charities. managing the KZ P harmacy 111 am studying voice in addition to Akron, Ohio." Casey, Ill. keeping house for a grand hus­ L. 1. STEINBACH (AM'30) writes 1930 ban d." in from Danville that he is now head President, JOSEPH A. SMITH From RICI-TARD H. MILLER of technical service for the Chicago 223 E. 35th St., N ew York City (MD'33), comes this note: "PAUL Apparatus Company. GEORGE G. GRAV ES is associated STIER ['32, MD'33], WAYNE GLOCK ARTHUR A. KIESS and Mrs. Kiess . with the Dunbar Furniture Manu­ ['32, MD'33], MAU RICE GLOCK r34, ( Ruby E. Miller, '28), formerly of facturing Company, of Berne, as a MD'34], A. P. HATTENDORF ['29, Chicago. are now living in Hinsdale, furniture designer. MD'3I], ARTHUR ROSER ['31, II!., where Mr. Kiess is a chemist. Mrs. JANE GOTTMAN ANDERSON MD'33], A. R. SAVAGE ['30, ROBERT F. MILES is film librarian reports tha t she and her husband MD'32] and their wives will join for the 20th Century Fox Film Cor­ "own and manage over 300 acres­ Mrs. Miller and myself to form a pOl'ation, Beverly Hills, Ca!. In this the Sunnymeade Stock Farm, near party to attend the -Indiana-Purdue Noblesville." They have two boys, game at Lafayette. After the game Duane, four years old, and Steven, we will be guests at the home of ED­ two. MUND VAN B USKIRK ['32 , MD'33J and Mrs. Van Bllskirk for a buffet ELCANOR SCOTT DUNLAP is dean supper." of o'irls and English critic teacher in the"' laboratory school 0 f Indiana 1932 State Teachers College at Terre Sec'y., MRS. LAURA JANE STOUT RAMSEY Haute. 3033 Broadway, Indianapolis DR. EOM UN)) L. KEENEY is prac­ J. B. GARCIA (MS'3S) reports ti cing medicine in Baltimore and, he that he is teaching and studying in writes, "is associated with the chief New York C ity. "I would like to of the allergy clinic of Johns Hop­ obtain a doctoi·'s degree in educa­ kins Hospital." tion," he writes. BI':TTI NA JOHNSON is employed 1931 as a stenographer in the employment Sec')' ., M RS. PEGGY CULMER HUNCILMAN office 0 f the Prest-O-Lite Storage 5302 Carrollton, Indianapolis Battery Corporation in Speedway. Another I. U. alumni doctor is "Special Development Engineer" W. W. REY l\;,OLDS (MD'33) , who is is the name on the desk of J. E. HAT­ practicing in Fair Haven, N. Y. F. W. SHOCKLEY, '17, has been FIELD (PhD'36) at the Willard Stor­ named acting dean of the school of education at the University of Pitts­ Since February I ARTHUR J. age Battery Company in Cleveland, burgh. In addition, he will have PALM ER (LLB) has been county at­ Ohio. Mr. Hatfield was formerly charge of all adult education work, torney at Huntington. A former with the Eagle-Picher Lead Com­ including late afternoon, evening and prosecuting attorney there, Mr. pany, of Joplin, lVIo. Saturday classes, the university ex­ Palmer is a member of the firm of tension division and the summer ses­ THEODORE D. ARLOOK (iVID '34) sions. Bowers, Feightner & Bowers. is practicing medicine at Elkhart. Formerly head of the University's W. (Buddie) THOMPSON is a Fort Wayne extension center, Mr. H. RALPH E. HAMILL (LLB), Indi­ Shockley was assistant to the dean of wood carver in N ashville, in the hills anapolis attorney, is chairman of the University of Wisconsin extension of Brown county. the Young Republicans of Marion division before becoming director of university extension and summer ses­ DOROTHY J. VVATKINS is assistant County. He is also president of the sion head at Pittsburgh in 1925. to the curator of the vVashingtoni­ Jrvington Republican Club.

24 The November 1038 RI::DECCA 'WHITTINGTON is em­ U nited States history and physical ployed as child welfare worker in geography there. the ~Iontgomery county department Assista nt superintendent of the of public wel£a re a nd Ii ves in Craw­ Sunnyside Sanatorium at Indian­ fordsville. apoli s is the work of DONALD \V. T. GORDON MILLETT, ex, ,vants it BRODIE (lVID). He has two children. know that he's manager of Millett's Donald Charles and Mary A nn. Colonial, Inc.. Hammond dealers in HARRY P. COOPER (JD'36) sums sporting goods and electric house­ up his post-I. U. career in this fash­ hold appliances. ion: " I have two children, Carol FORD L. LEMLER (AM'37) is the and Harry P. III. I am assistant new head of the bureau of visual secretary of the National Associa­ aids at Washington State Coll ege, tion of Mutual Insurance C0111­ PlIllman, \Vash. M r. Lemler left pan ies, and generaI counsel for the th e directorship 0 f the I. U. Bureau Indiana Fanners' Mutual Insurance of Visual Instruction on Septem­ Company, Indiana Union Mutual ber 15. Insurance Company and the Farm­ 1933 ers' Mutual Liability Company, a ll Photograph by B achrach Sl'Crelary, MRS. NLIRY SLUSS ROTHROCK of which my father manages." "We are pleased to announce the ad­ Carver Hall Apts.. Leiper St. & Ox ford BARBARA MOORE is a buyer for a Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. dition to the firm of Mr. W. M. Mc­ department store in Chi cago. FARLAND [ex'20]," reads a recent ROBERT S. OCLEIlAY (JD'35) will statement from the law offices of Cro­ spend this winter at Yale U niver­ VERA E . KE NNEDY is teaching foot, Fraser, Connolly and Stryker, in sity, assisting a faculty member in English and speech and coaching de­ Omaha, where this alumnus is now bate at Crown Point this year. located. the preparation of a new ed ition of While at Indiana, McFarland was a Collifr on Bankruptcy. At present MARY JANE SOMMER is a secre­ member of Sigma Delta Chi (journal­ Mr. Oglebay is employed by Mat­ tary in the Bureau of Engraving, ism) and played on the varsi ty bas­ thew Bender & Co., Albany (N. Y.) \iVashington, D. C. ketball team. After earning an LLB law book publishers. at Illinois, he practiced law in Vin­ Since April ROBERT \ 11/. TERRY cennes, later was a public utilities at­ Dr. :M. E. STERN (MD'3S) is at has been editor of tbe Batesville torney in Chicago. Other highlights present chi ef resident of the Willard H erald-Tribune. of his career include the vice-presi­ Parker Hospital in New York City. dency of Consolidated Electric and RUTH THOMPSON writes: "Sin ce Gas Corporation. outstanding work on "Looking after prospective I. U. the NRA copper code, and assistant g raduation I have been teaching general counsel for American Smelt­ students always," writes MILTON home economics and am now located ing and Refining Company. McFar­ MAID ENBERC, of Marion, where he in the high school at Frankton, land now specializes in federal tax is connected with the National where I conduct 4-H Club work." law, corporate and financial law. Ch in a Company. On October 8 VIRGI NIA KUI­ HAROLD L. RICH (ex) and Mrs. :VIELL, daughter of the mayor of V in­ ROSEMARY ROI:I::RTSO N (PG). Rich (Dorothy A. Traylor, ex':B) cennes, became the bride of Arthu r now Mrs. E ugene R . VanMeter, live in East Lansing, :Mich., where A. Osborne, Marion attorney. Re­ lives in Salem. he is field representative for Amer­ cently lVI iss Kimmell resided in In­ ican States Finance. JUDSON WEST, JR.. is employed as dianapolis, where she was engaged a research chemist by the Magnavox If you ever hear the call letters in secretarial work at the State­ Company, Inc.. in Fort \1I/ ayne. \\!9ZYL come in over the short house. \r ave band on your radio, that's ALVfN ]'vI. BOlWEHS (.r\M'36, "I am now secretary of the busi­ EARL F. ]VIOORMAN (AM'34) ,a Chi­ PhD'37) lives in Cuyahoga Falls, ness office of the University Hos­ cago research chemist who has taken Ohio.. and is employed as a research pital of the University of Michigan ," lip amateur radio as a hobby. chemist by the Goodyear Tire and writes MARTHA LLEWEL Y , DIEHL. R ubber Company in Akron. DWIGHT \N. SHERON is the Indi­ "I have been working there for two ana sales representative for the Os­ years and enjoy it very much," she "A former member of the Physics born Paper Company, of IvIarion. adds. Club at I. U. is carrying 011 as head WENDELL P. METZNER is in the 1935 of tbe science department and phys­ research department of the Mon­ ics instructor at Lincoln High Secretary, MRS. ISABEL CONNOLLY BUIS School." reports EUGENio O'CON­ santo Chemical Company, of St. c/o Dr. Lester Buis. He1\ry Ford Hosp., NOR, 0 fEast St. Louis, 111. Louis. ?d rs. ~IIl': TZNER was for­ Detroit, Mich. merly Lois Rake, '35. VIRGINIA MARTIN is teaching PAUL J. DAS HER, AM (PhD'37), English in the high school at \'v'in­ a chemist, reports : "Nothing new, 1934 namac. sti ll working for B. F. Good ri ch in S ecretary, L YMAN SMITH Akron." Versa illes KENNETH H. BROWN and Mrs. B rown (Rosamond Hoagland. GN), 1936 RUTH F. HOADLl':Y is working on ",,·ho were married on July 1, are liv­ S ecretary, RUTH ENGLIS H her master's degree in sociology at ing in New Albany. Mrs. B rown Frankfort the University of Chicago. was formerly an assistant super­ RUSSELL B. WYATT is employed This is the second year in the An­ visor in the Robert Long Hospital, as an analytical chemist for Coleman derson High School for CHARLES Indianapolis, and Dr. Brown was an & Ball. Manu facturing Chemists, C. DENNY (I\M'38), who teaches interne in the Methodist Hospital. Norwood . Ohio.

I~DI ANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 2.5 WILLIAM ADAM BIKKLEY writes gow, Scotland, where he is 1I0W from Sewell, . J.: "I am continu­ studying. ing my studies in Crozer Theologi­ Another outdoor note: KE ' NETH cal Seminary and will also teach a LEE VV AGNER, ex, postcards in from course in New Testament Greek." Corpus Christi, Texas, that he is CORNELIUS ABBOTT (MS) is prin­ "enjoying the best fishing and hunt­ cipal and director of education at ing in the U. S." the Indiana Boys' Industrial School RUTH E. DICKINSON is teaching in Plainfield. in the elementary grades at J effer­ No recession here! Dr. CHARLES son School, Anderson. H. CON ALLY (DDS) writes: "I have been practicing in Detroit for the 1937 past two years and enjoying lucra­ Secretary, ELEANOR JONES tive practice." 26 E . Mechanic St., Shelbyville GEOHGE W. SHONKWJLF.R is en­ G. ELLSWORTH GREENE is now gaged in the real estate business in employed by the University as an Chicago. accountant in the comptroller'S of­ DEAN E. CASSADAY is credit man­ fice. He was formerly connected ager for the Jefferson County (Ky.) with Price Waterhouse & Co., Chi­ Medical Society and the Louisville cago. District Dental Society. He is also A farm leader is HERSCHEL D. STEPHEN PAAR is entering his owner of a business bureau render­ NEWSOM, '26, master of the Indiana second year as supervisor of the ing accounting, income tax, credit State Grange. With his wife (Blanche junior boys' division of the Butler and collection service to the profes­ 1. Hill, ex'29), Newsom will attend Mitchell Boys' Club in Buffalo, N. Y. sional men of Louisville. the National Grange convention in Portland Ore., November 16 to 24. DORIS MARTIN is employed by Jo­ FRED ALBERT GRIFFITTS, PhD, Between fifteen and twenty thousand seph E. Seagram & Son, Inc., in writes to tell us that he is pro fessor Grange members will be present. Lawrenceburg. Newsom left his farm near Colum­ of chemistry at Ma ryville (Tenn.) bus last month to preside at the sixty­ MARY MARGARET BRUNER (GN) College, with classes in general, ana­ eighth annual convention of the In­ was married recently to Vincent lytical and physical chemistry. diana State Grange, held at Goshen. Westfall. They live in Indianapolis. Both state and national organizations DR. GEORGE F. MAURER, DDS, of the Grange urge members to work MAURICE E . STAPLE.Y (PG), for­ has completed his first year of prac­ for the best interests of rural Amer­ mer head of the English department tice in Muncie, after serving a year's ica, have fought for R. F. D., better country schools, rural electricity; of the Calumet City (Ill.) High against insect pests, weeds and free School, has been appointed super­ railroad passes, count Franklin D. intendent of the Corydon schools. Dance to Roosevelt among the 800,000 mem­ bers. On October 14 BETTY FRE.DERICK, "Battle of Bands» ex, became the bride of FRE.D 'vVIL­ with SON, '36. T he wedding was held in interneship at iVIethodist Hospital the bride's home town of Kokomo, FLETCHER HENDERSON in Indianapolis. and the couple will jive in Indian­ and JOHN E. EARLY, LLB, Evansville apoli s, where Mr. Wilson is a senior RITA RIO attorney, was married on September in the 1. U. School of Medicine. He is the son of C. BEN 'vV1LSON, ex'IS, at 17 to Miss Ann G. Walker. a gradu­ ate of Rockford College. of Bloomington. Sigma Delta Chi's W[L13UH E . ROSENBAUM is now BLANKET HOP employed by the Sherwin-Williams 1938 Paint Company in Chicago. Secretary, DORIS SEWARO November 12 ' Men's Gymnasium Y. W. C. A., Huntington Tickets $1.98 per couple \Ve've asked JULIUS SCIINEIDER­ Roy PILLE (PG) is head coach C.R.A. M AN to write us h is experiences as a student at the University of Glas- and assistant footba ll coach at the Dayton (Ky.) H igh School. DAVID W. SHAFER (ex) and Miss E lizabeth Young, both of Rochester, were married recently. Mrs. Shafer CITY SECURITIES CORPORATION is a graduate of the Bronxville High School and Hyland Hall in New INYESTMENT SECURITIES York, and attended the National College of Education in Evanston, Represented by Il l. T hey live in Rochester. J . DWIGHT PETERSON '19 HELEN L. WALDRON (ex) is now RICHARD C . LOCKTON '30 NOBLE. L. BIDDINGER '33 Mrs. Lester T. Gordon and lives in In d ianapolis. E. w. BARREn '20 C. W. WEATHERS '17 VIRGINIA MAPLE writes: "I am teaching auditorium and junior high 417 CIRCLE TOWER -:- INDIANAPOLIS school English in the Centre Town­ ship High School, South Bend."

26 The November 1938 MARY J EAN NETTE CLEVELAND pany H, officially opening Chicago's (ex), of Greenfield, was married \t\fo rld Fair in r&}2. recently to Robert R. Ruetschi. for­ Two year s ago I had the pleasure of merly of Saltville, Va., and a gradu­ again meeting Dr. Fellows, once assist­ ate of the University of Virginia. ant to Prof. Clarke, his auburn hair The Ruetschis live in Milwaukee, now snow white, now head of hi s de­ " ·is. partment at the U niversity of U tah. Two 1. U. g raduates have been . . . Earlier I had luncheon with Dr. granted a IV a rds for grad uate study Commons a t our Palace Hotel; he at Harvard U niversity. ROBERT F . was the same quiet, learned, clear­ jhGILL holds the Walter Kessler headed man as of yore. Occasionally scholarship" for a student from In­ I contact some former Indiana stu­ diana," and ROB ERT S. ASHBY was dent. ... These happenings a nd contacts have awarded the George Fisher scholar­ been pleasurable a nd good; your mag­ ship. Both men are enrolled in the azine is but a nother breath o f good, Harvard La \V School. pure, fresh a ir in these our somewhat JIA R]ORIE FINKBINER is society sordid times.... ~ditor of the Bloo'/'/I.ington (Ind. ) A director of the Indiana University LEE C. RnD, ex'9j. World . Foundation, HUGH McK. LANDON, San Francisco, Cal. Woman's Director of the Hunt­ hon LLD'31, was this month elected --0-­ president of the o.1umni association of ington (Ind. ) Y. W. C. A. is the po­ his alma mater, Harvard University. sition held by DORIS SE\VARD. Mr. Landon is vice-chairman of the Is Rod MightierThan Gun? board of directors of the Fletcher (COillintted from page 19) :VIARTHA S MITH has entered Trust Company, Indianapolis. Wellesley College to begin 'work President of the James Whitcomb trip we took forty- four tuna; the sec­ toward a master's deg ree in French. Riley Memorial Association since its ond trip. sixty-nine, a nd the third, 124, incorporation in 1921, Mr. Landon lVJ:ARY J .... NET HAMILTON is secre­ headed the campaign for money to for an average of twenty pounds per tary to the dean 0 f women a t George build Riley Hospital for Children at fis h. To catch them \-ve trolled a t a Washington U nive rsity, \t\lashing­ the University's medical center at In­ speed of about twelve miles per hour, dianapolis. He has also been promi­ a nd the skippe r said the fi sh were trav­ ton, D. c., where BETT Y W HITLOCK nent in many other civic and business is studying la w. affairs in Indianapolis. eling about sixty miles per hour when they struck~at least it seemed so, for CECILIA HENDRICKS, who s tudied they took out about 300 feet of line be­ radi o at Columbia University last e rs (U. H. and P. B. ), were building fore they could be stopped, and then it Slimmer, is continuing her work in brain power I was developing sinew, was a tug-o'-war until the fish was in radio at 1. U. muscle, bone ( including head bone) the boat. ... A nyone from 1. U. who Enrolled in the University's and endurance through required physi­ would like to try his hand a t this, get School of iVIedicine at Indianapolis cal work and des ired play .. . with in touch with me, and I will a rrange a is HELE N \l~N VACTOR . Capt. N uckols, Dan Louden and Com­ trip," Mr. O'Hair offers.

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Letters L. G. BALFOUK COMPANY

(Co illiillll'd fro III pa ge J) Manufactu,rers of ...... Indiana University Alumni I butchered his lJeautifull a n g u age~on those intermittent times eithe r s ide of Medals .. Trophies .. Cups aTe invited to visit the 18t)o, when I could muster cash for Plaques .... Class Rings BalfouT Offices located in ires, books and food.. .. Cash was Service Awards ... Badges 36 principal cities. m:ually buttressed by work for a loca l Fraternity Jewelry ..... The INDIAN APOLIS OFFICE farm implemen t fi r111 , a Iivery s ta ble or Announcements ... Favors is located in the Board of for Bloomington's first daily, a small four-pager of my lifetime fri end, Mr. Programs and Stationery Tmde Building. O. II. Cravens. While Cha rles Greathouse. John LLOYD G. BALFOUR, '07 MARK HANNA, '22 Ward, Emmett Branch, Bill Louden, Presiden/' Sares Manager ... et a l.. including the Smith broth-

Known for The BOOK NOOK DELICIOUS FOOD, "The Campl1,s R estaurant" QUICK SERVICE AND COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE Long Recognized as a Traditional Spot at Across from Campus on Corner INDIANA UNIVERSITY of Indiana and Kirkwood Avenues

I\DJA\'A ALU~I~n )IAGAZL\TE, 27 Alumni In Safety Group Day schools a re similar except th aI Homecoming the Indian families live in the commu· Six Indiana University graduates (Coll!ill/.ted from page 6) nity and children come to the scho o! were recently invited by Governor M. Oliver took the kickoff and returned each day. A day school teacher and hi, Clifford Townsend to become mem­ to the Indiana 28. Hursh passed and family are reall y models for the com­ bers of the Indiana Traffic Safety ran the ball to the K ansas State 4[. munity_ Everything centers around tht Council. The group of sixty-one mem­ bers will serve as an independent where he was forced to punt. school and sometimes the teacher has to do more community work than ac· advisory committee on safety, affili­ Hoosiers Score in Second Period ated with the governor's Co-ordinat­ tua l teaching. In Slimmer, he must su­ ing Safety Committee. Hoosiers prom­ In the second half, Indiana, going pervise the community garden and ani· inent in civic, education, professional into the wind, was forced back deep in mal projects, or take educa tional leave and industrial af:airs were appointed. its own territory on punt exchanges. and attend summer training school, be­ I. U. graduates named include: Punting from the end zone, Bringle's sides hi s month's vacation. Dean L. Barnhart, , 11, president, In­ kick was carried back by the wind The school here at the agency whe re diana Democratic Editorial Associa­ to the Indiana 15, and the ball bounded tion; Rose E. Boggs, '23, president, I teach is not a typical day sc hool. Most Indiana State Teachers' Association; to the Incliana 5 be fore it was downed. of the parents o f my pupils are govern· Albert E. Cole, '14, AM'27, southern F rom there, Blanke, on a reverse, ment employes a nd have li ved by white Indiana district governor, Rotary In­ scored Kansas State's second touch­ sta ndards a ll their lives. T here are ternational; Burton Don Myers, down . T he kick was wide and score some white pupils and some full­ AM'l1, dean of the University School stood K ansas State 13, Indiana o. of Medicine at Bloomington; L . A. blooded Sioux, but most o f them are Pittenger, '07, AM'OB, president, Ball Hursh's fine ki ck went out on the mi xed. T his group of children is much State Teachers' College, and James J. Kansas State 12. B lanke punted to like a ny you might find in a rural school Robinson, '14, professor of law, I. U. the Indiana 4, but Indiana was penal­ of Indiana except tha t they a re some­ ized for clipping, and it was Kansas times more timid and shy when State's ball on the India na 47. Fol­ strangers are a round. lowing another punt exchange, Indi­ Indian children are especially adept After the ana took the ball on its own 44. with their ha nds. A little six-year-old Nicholson passed to O liver, who can model good cowboys, dogs, and INDIANA -IO'VA GAME scampered down the sideline to the even a recognizable teacher. They love Kansas State f4, where he was to work with clay, crayons or paint and downed. Nicholson then passed to seem to know how to make things be­ Bring the Whole Family Graham for the Indiana touchdown, fore any training is gi ven. As a gen­ making the score Kansas S tate 13, eral rule they are a happy group (espe­ to Indiana 6. His kick for point was cially prima ry children ) and love wide. music. Many of them a re interested Kansas State sta rted a drive which in dancin g and sta rt I nd ian dancing as, ended when Indiana held for downs soon as they ca n walk. It seems th at THE on its own 25-yard line. Unable to our whole educati onal system a ims to gain, Hursh kicked out of bounds on train the Indian boys and girls to make GABLES the Kansas Sta te 20. U sin g purely a living right here on the reservation ; power plays, Kansas State drove so the emphasis is put on vocational down the fi eld to the Indiana 35 as the training. even if it is game ended. A t the Sioux F air this fall a great --0 -­ congress o f all the Sio ux tribes met and "Dad's Day" for a whole week feasted on buffalo. I Teach Indian Children furnished by the game reserve. Fami­ (COli til/lied from page / 2) lies came with all their belongin gs and and live in the dormitories or practice made almost a complete circle o f tents cottages. The school is a community in a round the fairgrounds. The I ndians itself and off ers a variety of vocational brought out their full dress costumes and academic training for the India n and paint, for each day they danced th e Known to all 1. U. boys and girls. Junior cattlemen own "Omaha" with all their tribal customs. Their gorgeous eagle-feathered head­ for thei r own cows and pasture them with the school's herd . Care of chickens, d resses, quilled and beaded dresses, FINE FOOD sheep, rabbits and goats is ta ught in a shirts, belts, bags and a rm bands made similar way. Girls may take, along a ll the white people envious. with other slfbjects, such courses as O f course. this great, empty country housekeeping.laundrying and weaving. can't compare with the southern In-

INSURANCE G. B. WOODWARD CO., Inc. Established 189 ", Personal Effects-Automobile G. B.Woodward,'21 Jeff Reed, '24 C. M.White, ex'29 Household Goods-Burglary Preside"t Treasurer Sec retary Accident - Health - Life Citizens Trust Bldg., Bloomington, Ind. Phone 2 J 3 1

28 Th e _Vov e ll/,v e r 1 938

- • S1'URGIS, Margaret Ann-daughter of. James D. diana trees and hills that I love, yet Sturgis, LLB'12, and Ruth Wylre Sturgis, there is something fascinating about ex'ii. SUTPHIN, Ina Elizabeth-daughter of J ohn Sutphin, this land that gets you. We are iso­ ex'09. INDIANA SWAN. Marian-daughter of Mrs. Otto Swan (Lil. lated, yes, but most of the time life is lian Ridgway, '17). interesting; at least we ha ve been able TALBOTT. Ann-daughter of Dr. J. E. Talbott, 'OS , A Nl'l O. UNIVERSITY to make it so for the eight 1110i1th~ I've TA YLOR, Ellen Louise-daughter of Thomas Lacy been here. Taylor, MO'OS. THOMAS, Hilda-daughter of Gladys Boseworth ---0--­ Thomas, '16. THOMPSO N, Mary Jane- daughter of Ralpb F. BOOKSTORE Thompson, '16. TReMOR, }loyd Henry-son of Victor F. Tremor, Sons and Daughters '21, MD'23. (Continued from page 8) VEACH, Richard Lester-son of L. W. Veach, '18, MD' 18. presents KE-'-'EDY . Russell William-son of John William \-VALKEN, William Peon, Jr.-son of Wlilliam Kennedy, ex'20, and Mary Russell Kennedy, '19. Walker, PG'26. LAMASTER, Marcell a Kathryn-daughter of Kathryn WALLS, William Hyland-son of William L. Walls, Coleman, PG'3S. ex'OS. LITTELL, Harry Bagot-son of Harold Littell, '12, WALTERS, J. Jewel--daughter of Edward C. WaI· CCke oVew AM'30, PhD'33. ters, '10. McCu NTOCK, Norma Lee-daughter of Cecil L. WILDERMA N, Betty Carol--daughter of Edna M e· McClintock, '24, AM'30, and Anna Sears Me· Afee Wilderma.n, ex'IS. Clintock, ex'ZI. WILLAN, Robert Merril-son of H. R. Willan, 'IS, MCCURMICK, Betty Anne-daughter of H. D. Me· MD'17. Cormick. MD'OS. WILI.IA>IS, Barbara May--daughter of Laila Ghorm· Cl'ractice ~ouse McCuRDY, Bill Robert-son of W. R. McCurdy, ley \Villiams, ex'l1. ex'16. WINSLOW, Robert Leslie-son of Nellie Burke McELWEE, Marilyn--daughter of R. J. McElwee, Winslow, '13. DDS'Z2. WINTERS, Jane Elizabeth-dau~hte .. of Mattbew McFARLAND, \Valter Robert Emison-son of Walter \Vinters, 'IS, AM'17, and Ninetta 111ingsworth C. McFarland, ex' 17. Winters, ex'20. McILVEEN. Mary Elizabeth--daughter of Mrs. AI· WISENBAUGH, Paul Eugene-son of W. C. Wisen­ bert McIlveen (Mary N ea l, '26). baugh, '13, DDS'26. McIKTOSH, Martha Louise-daughter of Calvin F. WOODS, Mary Margaret--daughter of Arba Leonard .The most appropriate gift Mcintosh, '13. Wooos, MO'09. McMAHAN, Jeanne--daughter of A. R McMahan, YEAGER, Marjorie Marie-daughter oJ Edna :Martin for the entire holiday 'OS, and Geraldine Sembower McMahan, 'OS. Yeager, ex'lO. McNABB, George B.-SOil of G. B. McNabb, '16, lIN ".t Robert Otto-son of Mrs. Otto link (Lera season MU'19. !lurkey, '07). MANN, Lois Irene--daughter of Robert J. Mann, '12. M.'-SHALL, Glenn Linas, Jr.-son of Mrs. G. L. ---0--­ Marshall (Kathleen Bright, '27). }\IARTINDALE, Marjorie Jane-daughter of Mrs. ]. Earl Martindale (Claudia Murray, ex'30). The News Is My Business :MAUZY, Rohert Jamerson-son of H . Louis Mauzy, .All the favorite recipes '13. (Continlled from page 7) L\IEI 1'\SCHEIN, Warren G.-son of Tim Meinschein, lIsed at the Practice House MS'3S. MELLEN, Rob«t Lee, Jr.-son of Robert Lee Me!· scriber's doorstep. You see that the len, LLB'07. METC.

I:\,DIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE 29 Cadiz, or lived here, are Clark Gable, KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA: Norma Bal­ The News Is My Business actor; Mary J abe Akeley, explorer and lard, French Lick; Joan Bonsib, Fort (Coll/il/ued from page 29) Wayne ; Sybil Burleigh, Springville, Ohio; educator; John A. Bingham, states­ Peggy Burrell, Indianapolis: Mona Vir­ the reputation for knowing 'most man; General George A. Custer, sol­ ginia Dellanoy, Ande'rSon; Margaret Ed­ everything about the community. Of dier; Percy Hammond, drama critic wards, Rye, N. Y.; Ann Fuhrer, Mt. Ver­ ( who started in this office); W. H. non; Barbara Healy, Aurora. I11.; . Conny the 2,200 towns entered, our little Hurst, Peru; Helen Kuehn, South Bend ; county seat of 3,000 persons is holding Holmes, archaeologist and anthropolo­ Helen Konald, South Bend; Catherine its head up as the winner. Among those gist; Lynn Harold I-lough, clergyman Karges, Evansville; Becky Morris, Nobles­ listed as giving claim to this honor, and author; Bishop Matthew Simpson, ville; Madeline Pugh, Indianapolis; H a rriett clergyman; Edwin M. Stanton, states­ Rutledge, Indianapolis; Mary Sailors, South persons IV ho were born in or near Bend; Marjorie Scholz, Evans\'ille ; Mary man, and General Thomas M. Vincent, Helen Schultz, Chicago, II\.; Liberta Ste­ Civil War soldier. phenson, Marion; Marjorie Stewart, 'vVa­ bash ; Helen Thieme, Fort ·Wayne; Mary John Coultrap was surpr·ised Jane Thompson. Indianapolis; Rebecca \Val­ Stoute's to find an immense bug ,in his ley, Fort Wayne. rain barrel a1/d he brol/ght it PHI MU: Jean Bash, Indianapolis ; Veryl PHARMACY in to the a!fiee to see what Ann Brownell, Valparaiso ; Betty Chatten, hnd of a " critter" it could be. Milford; Marcile Irle, Columbus; Dotty Lackey, Indianapolis; Elaine LaHadney, Cut Rate Drugs It was a Giant vVater Beetle, Chicago, III.; Dorothy N ussmeier. Colum­ Graham Hotel Building one of the largest insects to be bus; Betty Lou Schneider. Elkha rt; Martha found in this country, large Joyce Smith. Valparaiso; Mary Woods, BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA e'l/01lgh, in fact, to capture and Poseyville; Marjorie Ann Price, Columbus; eat fish severall:nches long. Robia Watson, Indianapolis ; Jean Maha ff ey, Prescription Goldsmith ; Betty Kay Mills, Kohlesville. Specialists Of course there are hundreds of PHI OMEGA PI: Ruth Dawley. Michi­ other activities that fall to the country gan City; Dorothy Bottorff, Indianapolis; editor who accepts his responsibilities. Dorothy Knoop. Gary; Anna Jane Hacker, Bloomington; Josephine Lockard. Milan; We Deliver ' Phones 2316-5062 My own have been diversified, includ­ Jane Fowler. Reynolds; Gwyn Hinshaw, ing being Sunday School superintend­ Shirley; Norma Jane Henninger. vValton; ent, American Legion commander, Georgianna Giovanini, Hillsboro: Ellendell County Red Cross chairman, county Gelltry, North Liberty. political chairman, election board clerk, PI BETA PHI: Billy Allen, \Vashing­ publisher of the life of one of the ton ; Mary Jane Batchelder. Indianapolis; Lois Frank, Fort Wayne; Vera Judd, Stur­ Pause ... county's notables, and candidate for gis, Mich. ; Patricia Harrison, Attica; i'vlary office. Elsner, Seymour ; Carolyn Thurston, Shel­ This is rather a personal account, but byville; Betty McCormick, Vincennes ; Ma­ rian Ireland. Brownstown; Betty Jane 'vVil­ it is probably similar to that of most Iiams, East Chicago; ·Madeline Scully, Gary; Refresh any other editor of a successful small­ Martha Jackson, Spencer. town paper. Everything is not roses or SIGMA KAPPA: Alice Applegate. Win­ bouquets. There's not much rest, day amac; Ann Clifford, Lapel; Marian Dingle, or night. But there's no other job in Chicago, III.; Louise Foster, Bloomington; the world that can take its place, once France's Gramse, Buchanan, Mich. ; Gretchen you get into the saddle. I hope to ride Hoppers, Middl.etown; Margaret Ruth Kreikhaus, Evansville; Jane Martin, Rush­ along in it until my own up-ana-coming ville; Mary Betty Moldthan, Indianapolis; boys-and I have four of them-shove Doris Nicholson, Evansville: Betty Nieder­ me into the background. haus, Haubstadt ; Roberta Poland, Indian­ apolis; Elizabeth Sailer, Indianapolis ; Mar­ garet Sturgis, Indianapolis; Edith Traut­ --0-­ man. Michigan City; Vivian Woods, Fort \\fayne. SIGMA PHI UPS ILON: Betty Brown, For Alumnae Only Cleveland; Bernadine Dee, Indianapolis; (Con/;lIued from page 14j Ruth Feibleman, Terre Haute; Shirley Fine, New Albany; Florence Fe'igal, Louisville, dIe. Bloomington; Betty Bohannon, Terre Ky.; Mildred Harowitz, Indianapolis; Rosa­ Haute ; Jane Clifford, Valparaiso; Pat De­ lie Levenson, Indianapolis ; Lorraine Lewis, Prez, Shelbyville ; Shirley Dunten, La­ Gary; Jeannette Poss, Gary; Evelyn Pollak, Grange; Dorathea -R6seE:1Ifcm;-S-hcridan ; Gary; Leona Rabinowitz, Indianapolis; Janet Lee F1eehart, Roswell, N. M.; Char­ Joan Sacks. Indianapolis; Betty Savesky, lotte Fleming, Indianapolis; Jane Gillespie, Marion; Alberta Shalansky, Indianapolis. Indianapolis ; Janet Gorrell, \iVin amac; Mariangenece Helvie, Valparaiso; Chloe ZETA TAU ALPHA: Georgia Vorgang, Evansville; Helen Jean Schwindler, Cul­ Hooke, Noblesville; Bety J ohnson, Lo~ans­ port; Louise Miller, Crawfordsville; Jayne ver; Vera Bretz, Huntingburg; Caroline Milteer, Gary; Dorothy NewhauSe'r, Bluff­ Bueschele, vVinslow: Mary Lee Coultas, Tell ton; Mary Reese, Lafayette; Lela Jane Ross, City; Aline Cutler, Hammond: Mary Emi­ Bloomington ; Elizabeth Rowe, Glen Ellyn, hiser, Akron; Patricia Gevars, LaPorte; III.; Jean Wills, Inddianapolis; Jane Win­ Dorothy Graf, Richmond; Florence Hrusko­ ters, Indianapolis; Jean McMahon, i'vlem­ vick, Whiting; Ann Hooge, Mobile, Ala.; phis, Tenn. Betty Irwin, Elnora; Rachel Jones, Ander­ son; Margaret Handley, Brookville; Peggy KA PPA DELTA: Jeanette Straub, Fort Myers, Wooster, Ohio; Violet Sexton, Indi­ COCA-COLA BOT. CO. \Vayne; Carol Koeber, Fort Wayne; Ruth anapolis; Marjorie McGaw, Indianapolis; Phone 3541, Bloomington, Ind. Dippell, Huntington ;· Eva Jean Craig, Fort Betty Philip, Indianapolis ; Catherine Rich­ \\Iayne; :Margaret Cieznik, South Bend; art, Indianapolis; Ann Talbot, Lirna, Ohio; Anna Case, Camden. Kathlyn Collier, Martinsville.

30 Th e November 1938 Rohrig attempted another field goal Fightin' Hoosiers which missed connections. Graham (COlllillued from page 18) fumbled and Brock recovered for Ne­ four-ya rd line. Hursh passed to O liver braska on the Indiana twenty-one. SULLIVAN'S on the Illinois thirty-eight. Nicholson Hopp and Rohrig made a first down passed to O liver on the Illinois seven­ on the Indiana ten. Indiana held and teen . Nicholson passed to Petrick, took the ball on downs as the third who lateraled to Graham. Graham ad­ quarter ended. Presents vanced to the Illinois fourteen, where During the fourth period Indiana he was hit by two Illini players and advanced to its own twenty-two, and fumbled with Illinois recovering. Indi­ Clasen punted to N ebraska's thirty. Fashion Park Suits ana gambled to the last minute, throw­ Nicholson passed to Graham, and it Don Richards Suits ing passes and finally, deep from his was intercepted by Burris and returned own territory, Nicholson's pass to to the Indiana twenty. There Indiana Dobbs Hats Zimmer was intercepted by Ehni, who again held. A fter another punt ex­ ran for a touchdown as the game change, Nicholson's pass was inter­ Interwoven Hosiery endeu , with the final score, Illinois 12, cepted by Hopp, who ran to the Indi­ Inuiana 2. ana twenty-three. Nebraska drove to Jantzen Sweaters the Indi a ~a sixteen, but the Hoosiers Arrow Shirts Nebraska 0; Indiana 0 steadied and Rohrig attempted his At Nebraska, its third start of the fourth held goal and again the kick was season, the Hoosiers found themselves no good . (lind many other defen sively holding a heavier and more --0--­ fine bmnds experi enced Cornhusker squad to a scoreless tie. Alumni Authors In contrast to last year's game (Coillimted from page IS) against the Huskers, Indiana waged an succe,sion with its atmosphere of in­ almost entirely defensive battle. Ne­ trigue and plot all provided the urge to braska was within the Indiana twen ty­ write. The result was an amazing num­ yard line six times, but the Hoosiers ber of publications. Defoe, as these held determiningly to throw back every lists show, could produce as many as scoring threat. Nebraska attempted forty-six items in a single year. The Bloomington four field goals, but was unable to capi­ names of Swift, Steele, Addison, Cot­ talize on a single trial. ton Mather and Bishop Burnet occur The deepest Indiana traveled into frequently. The appearance of the ~ebra ska territory was early in the names of Marlborough, Oxford and first quarter, when Nicholson passed Bolingbroke shows tha t soldiers a nd to Herbert, who was trapped by a statesmen did not neglect this field of When You're Back swarm of Nebraska players on the Ne­ activity. for that braska thirty-two. When the pile was The writers found a large public. As unraveled Dodd, of Nebraska, had pos­ the author says (pp. iv-v) : session of the ball. Fol1owing an ex­ IOWA-INDIANA GAME change of punts Herbert ran to the In­ "Pamphlets which caught the pop­ diana forty-nine for a first down. Nich­ ular fancy sold like wildfire. At least November 12 olson ran right end to the Nebraska one hundred thousand copies were forty-one and his pass was intercepted sold of Defoe's True-Born English­ by Dodd on the Nebraska eleven. man at the beginning of the century. Don't Forget Neither team was able to gain consis­ More than ten thousand copies of tently and resorted to punting during Swi ft 's Conduct of the Allies (17II) were sold in a single month. One the period. Hopp, 0 f Nebraska, kicked out of bounds on the Indiana sixteen writer assures us that in a country STONE'S and Clasen's quick kick into the wind of nearly five millions, the Spectator went out on the Indiana twenty-nine. had a circulation of fourteen thou­ Nebraska was thrown for a loss, and sand. Forty thousand copies of CAFE Rohrig attempted a field goal from the Sacheverell's famous sermon were Indiana forty. Indiana was penalized sold in a few days, and a scurrilous to its eleven-yard line for holding as the attack upon the Doc~r ran through The Place Where the at least a dozen editions." half ended. Old Gang Meets To start the second half, Mikan Such are the materials that Professor kicked off to Callihan on the Nebraska Morgan has so carefully investigated twenty-fi ve. Callihan ran fi fty yards to and arranged in this volume. A third the Indiana twenty-five before he was volume covering correspondence, dia­ caught by Oliver. Nebraska lost six ries, journals, periodicals, dramatic yards and Rohrig attempted hi s second literature, and secondary works will kick from placement. A fter Indiana appear within a few months. The un­ One Block South of Campus had checked two Nebraska offensives, published manuscrips will constitute Hopp returned Clasen's punt to the In­ the fourth and final volume. on Woodlawn diana twenty-one. Following the first CARL F. BRAND, AB'J S, AM'16. down on the Indiana twenty-one, Stanford University, Cal.

I\DlA~A ALUMNI MAGAZINE 31 In Closing ... Editorials

E.' DER reaction has had time to set in against the waiting for. " ... I have been inactive so long, so far as R first issue of the INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE and, writing is concerned," Mr. Ade tells us, "that I find it on the whole, is has been favorable. Some of the com­ terribly hard to get back into the swing. I have a feeling ment is printed in "Letters, " but more was picked up in that some morning I will get up in the proper mood and random conversations with graduates and former stu­ all pepped up and finish the thing in a hurry." The dents back for Homecoming, from snatches of talk with MAGAZINE is willing to wait for that morning. and read· ers can rest assured that in an early issue Mr. Ade will campus folk, and from overheard gossip as the editors regale them in his best manner, as he has many a student hung around the fringes of conversing groups. generation of I.u. folks. Some of you didn't like the manner in which you had to fight your way into the tightly-rolled wrapper of last Added Respo1ZSibility for the Staff month's issue, so we're changing that and mailing them There's a great tapping of trowels, scooping of mortar flat and folded this time. Others thought the "Letters" and creaking of winches beneath the editorial office were too long and slim, so now they're being set single windows these days. Its hard to get out a magazine with column width. Enough comments were heard against the the new men's lounge going up just outside on the Union crowded appearance of the leading articles type pages, terrace. As an old-line building constructor of the side· so we're "opening" those up, with more white space. And walk engineer variety, we had heretofore specialized in we sympathize with those readers who sought in vain for excavation-watching, but its just as much fun to observe the page numbers at the top 0 f every page (they really one building going up on top of another, we find. When don't belong there if there's a headline on the page), so the last scaffolding is cleared away, the final sofa moved down to the bottom of each page they go this time. in and the last drape hung, we're going to feel that we've really helped. Those are some of the changes you asked for: If you There's no reason at all why the rest of the alumni ask for more, you'll probably get them. Its worth a try, shouldn't feel that way about this building, and others on isn't it? the campus, for some of them were constructed as a re­ Let's Talk About Pictures sult of alumni participation in the Memorial Fund. You Just about all the pictures taken on the campus, in this ought to come back and see your handiwork a little more issue and the last, are the work of the Bureau of Visual often, don't you think? And there's many other things Instruction in the Extension Division of the University. going on down here you've paved the way for-things The Bureau, its photographers and their cameras have going on in men's minds, and between the covers of been enthusiastically on tap whenever the MAGAZINE books, and in the laboratories-things you've helped start wanted a picture, and they deserve some public notice for and can help to continue. Come down and get acquainted thei r coopera tion. with the real, behind-the-scenes University and the direc­ Credit for the cover picture idea for this 1110nth goes to tion its taking. It can help you, and you can help it. Uz McMurtrie, 'oS. When he saw Howard Tolley's pic­ ture in the Indianapolis Star, Mr. McMurtrie frantically Coming Up for the December Issue ripped out the article and posted it to us. Immediately For December, we're going to try to let you have a machinery was set in motion to secure a print of the new look at some of those famed Thomas Benton murals on agricultural economics head. Letters were dispatched to Indiana history which will hang in the new campus audi­ the D epartment of Agriculture and to torium. A Iso on the agenda is a story by an the picture agencies, with the results on alumnus who's been pretty busy founding a the cover. Ideas making a magazine-and new junior college down in Kentucky, a re­ covers-as they do, the rest of you are in­ port on the Foundation-sponsored study of vited to duplicate the McMurtrie alumni­ the profession of business counsellor, news con SC Iousness. notes of your classmates, the wind-up of the football season and pre-game informa­ A Letter of Regrets tion on basketball, all the regular features True, you were promised in October that and, best of all, the inaugural address of George Ade, hon LLD'28, would be a con­ President Herman B vVells to be delivered tributor to this issue. Your indulgence is on December I. Holding the MAGAZINE for requested, with the assurance that the story that may make us a little late, but we'll be by the famed Hoosier author will be worth with you. INDIANA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESENT ORGANIZATION FOUNDED 1913

" ... to unite the alumni ill closer bonds of fellowship, to further their interests i,~ all proper !Uays, to foster . .. the ideals of the University, ... to strellgtheu the University by informing the public concerning her "Work alld her services to the state and nation."-Article II, CONSTI­ TUTION. DISTRICT COUNCILORS District I-Lake County District 14--Vennillion, P arke, Vigo, Clay and Sullivan RAY THOMAS, '22, LLB'24, 50~ Broadway, Gary STANLEY STOHR, '28, LLB'30, 1316 S. 18th St., Terre Haute District 2- Porter, LaPorte and Starke Counties District 15-Marion County DAN BERNOSKE, '26, MD'29, 731 Pine St., Michigan City RALPH THOMPSON, '16,1203 Merchants Bank Bldg., Indianapolis District 3-St. Joseph and Elkhart Counties District IS-Hancock, Henry, Shelby and Rush Counties ALEX C\MPBELL, LLB'30, 330 E. SuttenfieJd, South Bend JOH N MORIU S, '12, 425 S. Main St., Newcastle District 4--LaGrange, Steuben, Noble and Dekalb Counties WILLrAM HUSSELMAN, LLB'33, Auburn District 17-Wayne, Fayette, Union and Franklin Counties District 5-Newton, Jasper and Pulaski Counties WILLIAM ROMEY, '27, 103 S. 14th St., Richmond EMMET LARUE, LLB' 12, Rensselaer District 18---0wen. Greene. Monroe and Lawrence Counties District 6-Marshall , Fulton and Kosciusko Countie;; GUY CANTWELL, '03, Gosport DAN GIBSON, '33, Plymouth District 19-Morgan, Johnson and Brown Counties District 7-Allen, Whitley, Wells and Adams Counties JOSEPH KIVETT, LLB'30, Edgewood Ave., Martinsville CLARENCE McN"\BB , '14, LLB'19, 4305 Drury L~ne , Fort Wayne District 20-Bartholomew, Decatur, Jackson and Jennings District 8---Benton, Tippecanoe, Warren and Fountain Counties HERSCHELL NEWSOM , '26, R. 3, Columbus HARRY SCHULTZ, ' 16, LLB'20, JD'20, 714 S. 22nd St., Lafayette District 21-Jefferson, Ripley, Dearborn, Ohio and Switzerland District 9-White, Ca rroll and Cass Counties JOHN SCOTT , '25, 309 W. 2nd St., Madison BENJAMIN LONG, '0 1,1004 E. Market St., Logansport District lO-Miami. Wabash, Huntington and Grant Counties District 22--Knox, Daviess, Martin and Pike Counties A. HARVEY COLE, '07, LLB'08, I Y; S. Broadway, Peru WILLIAM JENNER. '30, LLB'32, Shoals District 11-1"lontgomery, Boone, Putnam and Hendricks District 23-Posey, Vanderburgh, Warrick and Gibson Counties WILLETT H. PARR, JR., ex'25, 730 N. Meridian St., Lebanon JOE S. HATFIELD, '30, JD'33, 901 E. Powell St., Evansville District 12--Clinton, Howard, Tipton and Hamilton Counties District 24--0range, Dubois, Crawford, Perry and Spencer GLEN H fLLIS, LLB'25, R. R. 2, Box 18~, Kokomo j.'.MES TUCKER, LLB'30, Paoli District 13-Madison, Delaware, Blackford, Jay and Randolph District 25-Washington, Scott, Clark, Floyd and Harrison H. B. ALLM.~N , AM'31 , Superintendent of Schools, Muncie WALTER CR IM , '02, 50S W. Market St., Salem STATE CLUBS (The offieer listed is the president). Anderson-Russell Stewart, LLB'29, 1821 Indianapolis-(women) Mrs. Stuart Wilson, New Albany-Irvin Fleischer, '33, 174() De· Fletcher SI. '22, 4307 Park Ave. pauw Ave. Angola-Bluford L. Healey, '32. Kokomo-Clifford Lineback, BPSM'32, 21S North Vernon-Fred Matthews, LLB'23. Bedford-John S. Woolery, '29, MD'33, Cit· N. Purdum. Peru-Mrs. Leonard Kolb,'17, 176 E. Sth St. izens National Bank Building. laGrange--Gerald Fisher, '29, LLB'31. Petersburg-Lester Nixon. ex'36. Bluffton-W. A. Patton, '01, Patton·McCray Lake County-Herschel Cole, '23, MD'25, 247 Plymouth-Dan Gibson, '33, 825 S. Michigan. Co. Humpfer, Hammond. Princet"n-Maurice M. Miller, LLB'31, 110 Brookville-Virgil McCarty, LLB'23, LLM'24. Crown Point-L. F. Conter, ex'19, 317 S . Hart. Columbia City-Benton J. Bloom, '07. N. Main St. Richmond-J. Brandon Griffis, LLB'16, May· Columbus-Earl B. Pulse, '31, Reeves Auto East Chicago--Joseph MOStly , '20, AM' Z2, fair. Co. LLB'23 , U. S. National Bank Building. Rochester-Charles Hoover. '3 2. Barnhart­ Connersville--Byron Jackson, '3 1, 160S Ohio Gary-H. L. Kahan, ' 17, MD' 19, 73S Van Trump Co. Ave. Broadway. Rushville- Walter Keaton, '3S, IOSY, E. 2nd St. Cr3\>'fordsville-William F. Peacock, DDS' 3S, Hammond-A. B. Scott, '30, Recreation Salem-Emmett C. Mitchell, ex'06, E. Hack· Darlington. Center. berry St. Danville--John D. Taylor, LLB'32, 418 E. Lebanon-John R. Porter, '17, MD'19. Seymour-Mrs. Ward Gossman, '30, 407 S. Broadway. Liberty- Walter F. Bossert, LLB'07. Chestnut St. Decalur-G. Remy Bierly, 'IS. Linton- Gerald Landis, '23, MS'38, 669 N. South Bend-Charles Hahn, LLB'32, 412·1S Delphi-John Smock, '30, LLB'32. E. 1st St. JMS Building. Evansville-William Little, ex.'28. Citizens logansport-Troy Babcock, DDS'26, Broad· Spencer- Mrs. Willis Hickam, Jr.. '18. Bank Building. way and Fifth St. Sullivan- John S. Taylor, '10, LLB'II, 117 Ft. Wayne-Alexander M. Campbell, LLB'30, Loogootee-Hugh Gray, ex'28. N. Section St. Federal Building. Madison-Eugene Cooper, LLB'37, SOS Broad­ Te rre Haute-J. Norman Bivin, ex'27, 22 1 Goshen-Fet'die D. Nessel, '27, 801 S. 6th St. way. National Building. Greencastle-Marshall D. Abrams, LLB'26, Marion-Merrill Davis; '12. MD'14, National Vincennes-Eugene V. Donie, '33, 519 N. 24D Anderson. Bank Building. 4th St. Greensburg-William L. Woodfill, LlB'34. Mentone-Charles Manwaring, '32. Wabash- Philip Eskew. 1I1S'33, Higb School. Huntington-Arthur Palmer, LLB'31, S3 E. Mt. Vernon-W. E. Jellkinson, 26, MD'Z6. Washington--Carl Chattin, '34, JD'3S, 7 N. "Market St. Muncie-Edgar Davis, 'IS, MD'19, 1423 E. Main St. Indianapolis-(tnen) Allen Warne, '2S, 240 Main St. Williamsport-Mrs. Bertha B. Fleming, ex'09. N. "Meridian St. IN OTHER STATES BosIon, Mass.-W. C. Mattox, ex'09, 24 Man· Grand Rapids, Mich.-John Alan Smith '30, Omaha, Neh.-E. S. Brumbaugh, '12, LLB'13, emet Rd., Newton Center. 1026 Cooper Ave., S. E. 306·7 Patterson Building. nowling Green, Ky.-Frances Richards, Houston, Texas.-James G. Donovan, LLB'08, Oklahoma City, Okla.-C. M. Branson, AM'30, 1340 College St. 1225 Heights Blvd. lLB'09, 1601·3 Petroleum Building. Champaign·Urbana, IIl.-Prof. O. R. Over· LOllisville, Ky.-Lawrence Tuley, '04, Pick­ Philadelphia, Pa.-N. O. Pittenger, '29, man, '10, AM'll, 610 W. Nevada St., rell & Craig. Swarthmore College. Urbana. Los Angeles, Cal.-Robert E. Harris, '2S, Phoenix, Ariz.-John W. Laird, '00, Phoenix Chicago, 111.-James Kiper, '32, 3S E. Wacker AM'26, Publications Dept., Los Angeles Junior College. Drive, Room 776. Junior College. Providence, R. I.-Mrs. Ruth Telfer Barrett, Cincinnati. Ohio--Charles Gerhart, '28, Ad­ Miami, Fla.-Park H. Campbell, LLB'25, ' 14 , 2S() Massachusetts Ave. vertising Department, Proctor and Gam­ S30 Seybold Building. Pullman, Wasl1.-Mrs. W. C. Kruegel, '94, ble. Milwaukee, Wis.-Harry Wilmer Donovan, 604 California SI. Cleveland, Ohio--Walter Koenig", '31, MS'32, '23, 4201 N. Farwell Ave. St. Petersbllrg, Fla.-Nelson Poynter, '24, 16360 Euclid Ave., East Cleveland. Minneapolis, Minn.-Dwain M. Ewing, '30, St. Petersburg Times. Colorado Springs, Colo.-Mrs. Telfer Mead, 909 Northwestern Bank Building. St. Louis, Mo.-Joseph Garnier, ex'27, 4S7 23 E. Boulder St. New Haven, Conn.-Frank R. Goldman, '12, N. Kingshighway. Columbus, Ohio--George F. Arps, AM'OS, LLB'13, S Washington Manor. Washington, D. C.-John J. Reinhard, '06, 216 E. lane Ave. New York, N. Y.-Charles Benzel, '27, Suite LLB'07, 3213 Foxhall Road. Denver, Colo.-C. E. Compton, '9S, S07 E 4500, 20 Exchange PI. Wichita, Kas.-Clinton C. McDonald, '22, & C B uilding. AM'24, PhD'26, University of Wichita. Laugh at Wintry Blasts

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