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THE • JANUARY • 1941

ALUMNI · MAGAZINE THE » JANUARY « 1941 TI,e Cove,­

THE' JANUARY' 1941 INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE

Vol. 3 No. t],

News

LV. Progress Since 1938 I-h:RMAN B WELLS, AB'24 3 ~1 0 MATTER what the season of the Frank Allen- New J.D. Trustee NATHAN KAPLAN, '40 8 l' year, 's beauti­ ful campus has an atmosphere of Alumni Club Newsnotes CLAUDE RICH, AB'29 15 friend liness. Even the ice-coated scene University in December FORREST GARDERWINE, '41 16 featured on our cover this month re­ fl ects the warmth of the welcome that Alumni Notes by Classes _ ___ .______HILDA HENWOOD, AB'32 2l is extended to every visitor. Our cover picture, take n by Harry Ludwick, '43, of the Bureau of Visual Instruction of the LU. Extension Di­ Features vision, catches the friendliness of our delightful campus, a friendliness that Examining ... 5chool of Mu~ic ______CHAUNCEY SANDERS 9 defies ice and snow to chill its welcome. Alumni Active in Legislatures ______CHARLES W. SEMBOWER, '42 12 A University is more than a collec­ tion of students and faculty, classrooms and buildings, athletes and stadiums, books and research projects, trees or Sports campus walks. Our University is the spirit of all these things welded together Blitzkrieg ______. ______. ______Sports Review 13 into an unmistakable whole. There is nothing artificial in that spmt. Artificial things just won't mi:-.: Departments with that spirit. The campus has a p.ntural beauty that only The Great Voice of Alumni Lellers 1 Landscape Architect could create or de­ sign. The buildings, fitting naturally Hoosier Authors Boole Reviews 2 into that setting, show the spirit of our campus; their designers, being so in· III Clo~illg ___ .______.. ______. ______.. ______. __ _ Editorials 32 fJuencen by the campus beauty, have planned buildings that reflect that spirit. GEORGE F. HEIGH WAY, LLB'22, ANDREW G. OLOFSON, AB'39, Staff: editor; It is something that blazing hot suns managing editor; Ivy L. CHAMNESS, AB'06, AM'28, associate editor. or marrow·chilling winds cannot affect. Editorial Board: E. Ross BARTLEY, '14; WARD G. BIDDLE, AB'16; MRS. I t is that spirit that moves every pil­ ALTA BRUNT SEMBOWER, AB'Ol; JOHN E. STEMPEL, AB'23. g rimaging alumnus to deep emotion. It catches and holds the traditions of Published monthly, except Jlily, August, and September, by the Indiana University great events that have taken place here Alumni Association. Office of publica tion: Spencer, Indiana_ Editorial office: Union and the personalities of great men who Building, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. have trod its paths. Annual subscription rate $3.00 (includes membership in Indiana University Alumni As­ To everv 1.U. man and woman it sociation). Single copies 25 cents. iVfember of American Alumni Council. means something different something Entered as second-class matter October 9, 1939, at Ihe post office at Spencer, Indiana, intimately different, but t o all collective· uncler the Act of March 3, 1879. Iy it means the spirit of Old LU. Voice of the 11 IUHlDi JI Priend

More About grabbed it fro m outsid e. S. udents from in· Adams itlemorial side th en jumped out the window after him, Wortla which led to Ih e suspension, or expulsion, It. was interesting to read in your Decemher of some of I he students. Others struck in issue Mr. H. Walton Clark's impression of sympalhy with those expelled and left school, Cultivating the Adams memorial here in Rock Creek some of whom, including my falher, later cemetery, Washington, D.C. returned to graduate. Because he saw no special significance in On another occasion two o[ his classmates thi s famous statue, and because I think it i" were fugitives from justice, having milked a THE so fine, I submit herewith the impression neighbor's cow. As they were running away of James Hay, Jr. to this memorial which he G th ey passed an old blind horse, which they WONDER has entitled, "The BaffJing Face that Guards did not molest. However, Ihe blind horse COAL an Endless Sleep." Perhaps Ihi s will serv e later fell into, or al any rate was found in 10 reveal what an author was capable of ap· a pond nearby; and the runaways were also L preciating when he looked upon this statue. accused of pushing the horse into the pund. I kuow yo u will be able to get permission As Ih ey subsequently languished in the jug, to reprint Ihis piece by writing Mrs. Maude they called on a lawyer·friend of theirs in Hay, Purcellville, Va., c / o iVlrs. Clayton Pax· Bloomington to help them, and he succeeded E son. I think it is so lovely that it mi ght well in gelling them out of jail. ~ be published, especially if it had a picture My father took geology and bOlany under of the memorial which we would b e glad to David Starr J ordan, and one time Dr. Jordan gel fOl' you. look Ihe class to Wyandolle Cave. The ac· N Our JVIagazine gets better all the time. The count goes : "We walked nearly all the way, ads are very well laid out and the general and tw o or three of the girls gave out and appearance is most pleasant and easy to had to be ca rri ed along toward Ihe lasl; and read. I was about played out, not being used to D Mrs. FLORE"ICE BUSCHMANN Cl eveland, '18, sllch long hikes. It was before the general Managing Edi tor, li se of electricity when we visited Ihe cave. American Motorist. Each on e carried a torch, ancl even then Washington, D.C. everything would be as 'dark as a stack of o black cals.' EDITOR'S NOTE: Weare writing for per· "There is one place in the cave called 'hi mission to reprint the Hay article and ac cepl man's mi sery.' Jordan was so big that he t M(8. 's generous oller of a picture THE R could scarcely get Ihrough. Some of us wen: 01 the statue to be used with the anicle if through first and pulled, while others stayed we can reprint it. We also thank iJ;jrs. Cleve· WONDER behind and pushed, and so we finally got land lor her kind words about the Magazine. him through. Some places il was 90 feet COAL Coming from, a managing editor of a n. 7­ A hi gh to th e lOp, and in olher places we had tiowtl publication, these compliments on our 10 creep on all fours. At the lime the cave Magazine are noteworthy indeed. had been explored 23 miles, and it was thuught by some to be connecled with the IT SCORES HlIman Sidelights Monmou!.h Cave under the Ohio River." On I.V. History Mrs. OTTILIE DAVIS CUSHMAN. Va Iparaisu. EVERY TIME I am sorry to illform YO Il Ihal lil Y fa lhe .. , WILl.l;\M JAM ES DAVI S, AB·82, uf Benton Ha r· hur, Mich., died Nov. l. He would have enjoyed very lUllch attend· Another Alumnus "Points With Pride" A Hoosier ing Ihe leslimonial dinner for Dr. Woodburn. He knew Dr. Woodburn a l Ih e lime he was H ere's my renewal. It's a " big·time" Maga· a student and Dr. Woodburn was teaching zine, chock f,I1l of interesling piclures and Product in Ihe preparalory schoo!. arlicles. I enjoy reading every issue. Besl i\'ly falher always kept in close tuu ch with Wishes. his University and was a co nlributor to th ~ RALPH G. HASTINGS, AB'16. 01 Siadium and Dormitory Flme!. Washington, Ind. When my falher was in school it was still in Ihe single large building at the foot of Genuine College avenue. H e said, "1 went 10 Indiana Prefers Magazine [our years at nearly the cost of an auto. To Test Papers II cosl me $800, but I could not do it to· Merit day," At th e lime of hi s enlrance there was Keep up improvemenls to the Indiana stili commenl regarding th e admission of co· Alumni IVlagazine. I can find time always to eds to th e University and cri li cism " because read it as soon as it arrives. I prefer its pages one could see Ib eir ankles when th ey went to lest papers and reports of my social sl "dies STERLING-MIDLAND up and down slairs." pupils, so I read it throug h on th e day it The reminiscences at hi s class reunio ns arrives. Then when I've caught up on LU. COAL COMPANY affairs, seule down to rontine of grading were most inleresling and dealt., for inslance, -TERRE HAUTE papers, etc. wi I h I he lime of th e class rush when a stu· dent left his cap on the window sill of the H.OWARD R. BURNETT, AB'26; AM'36. classroom,. a nd a student of anOI her class Vincennes. Citizens IjOaD Hoosier 11 uthors

and Trust Co. By Dr. Bryan appears in the Introduction and is CO lli· mented upon in the body of the hook. In­ TVars 0/ Families 0/ Minds (Powell Leclures * te rests, Dr. Brya n tells us, guide our know. on Philosophy at Indiana Universily, ing, bringing to our allention those features GENERAL BANKING Fourlh Series). By WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN, of reality which we want to know and sllb­ AB'84, AM'fl6, LLD'37, President Emeritus ordinating the remainder. "And after see· of Indiana University. (New Haven: Yale * ing cl early day after day what we most want University Press. 1940. Pp. xx, 143. $2.) Roy O. PIKE, '00, Pres. to see, we do not see and finally cannot see President Emerit us Bryan's volume of Pow­ what we have ignored." The factors whi ch Member of Federal Deposit determine the original differences of " wh at ell Lectures is in a sense two books ; for Insurance Corp. Ihe philoso phical reader it is a forceful state­ men wish 10 know" seem to lie in fund a men· tal differences of personality. Each family ment of a problem fundamental in human thought; for Ihe general reader it is an o f minds, according to Dr. Bryan, is dis· tinguished by " a special kind of disposit io n inlroduction 10 a broad field of speculation with which they meet ex perie nce." to which he seldom gains such facile entree. Those who have known Dr. Bryan as pro­ Dr. Bryan is frank in declaring his own fe ssor of philosophy will find that the book intellectual family connections in the co urse is a judgment, ma tured through many years, of hi s writing. On the other hand, he states upon "the most fundamental conflicts of the hi s a.ll egiance to the dominant philoso phic91 history of cu llure with all their humor and tradi ti on of idealism, but on the other ha nd wilh all Iheir gravily." To those who have he suspends final judgment in the fa ce of in­ known him in hi s other capacilies, the book concl usive evidence, a trait characteri stic of the is a revelalion of Ih e broad culture which scienti sl's caution. As he says in a conclud­ has lain behind hi s work as public lecturer ing comment, "I have had sight of chaos and universit y president. and hell, but also, on f' Very side, I have seen the irrepressible emergence of order, Dr. Brya n slates hi s thesis in the Introctuc· They're Grinning r eason, bea uty, love." lion and then illuslrales il in the remainder Because of I he book, giving us "cerlain of the hi s­ A brief summary of this so rt is unfa ir to toric wars bel ween families of minds." Dr. Bryan's work because it must put aside the great wealth of illustrative materi al which • They're going to get a de· " Families of minds" are for him character­ istic " ways in whi ch men try 10 learn what he has brought together. Were one to read Iicious meal! they wi sh to know." Differences of opinion t.he boo k for these illustrations alone, he in Ih e hi story of human thought are, 10 be would find his time bOil nti rull y rewarded. • They're going where they sure, obvious ; bllt Dr. Bryan is pointing to Robert G. S t ep h e n ~ . I ndiana University. will meet their friends ! differences of a more radical and fundamental so rt. H e is speaking of thinkers "who in their extreme differences are as far apart as • In other words, they enjoy white, black, red, and yellow races." Study of a City gomg to . . . A co mplete list or classification of the Salt Lake City: A Regional Capitol. By various types is beyond the scope of Dr. CHAUNC Y D. HAnms, Instructor in Geoo-­ Bryan's treatment, but be does give us ra phy, Indiana University. (Chi cago : Pri­ numerous examples: the practical man ( Dan· va te edition di stributed by the University The iel Boone), the scientist (Galileo), the of Chicago Libraries. 1940. Pp. xv, 206. philosopher (Hegel) , tile poet (Keats ), the ' Maps.) (St. J ohn); the sceptic, the positiv­ ist, the believer in certainty ; the ma terial· A critical account of a la rge cit.y possessing Gables ist a nd idealist. many striking and unique aspects is here "The easiest and the usual way of study­ presented in a vivid and understanding manner. S. Indiana Ave. ing such groups of human beings is to adopi Reader inlerest is at once secured by an the point of view of one of them and to effective opening description of Salt Lake judge all the others from that standpoinl." City and its regional setting as viewed from To such a procedure Dr. Bryan objects. In­ a "skyline" drive skirting the foothills of stead, he proposes that we attempt to adopt the high Wasatch Range. With the aid of sy mpatheti cally tile point of vi ew of each nllmerous maps and eff ectual description the type of mind in t·tlrn so that we may come reader is easily carried through the syste­ to a n understanding of them ra ther than to matic and detailed geographic analysis of the UNIVERSITY a superficial distaste for all types but our city and it.s supporting region. own. Chapter II, "Scholar against Scholar," The book is concerned principally with an is both a clear example of the method pro­ analysis of Salt Lake City as a regional posed and an ample demonstration that Dr. capital. The functi onal inter-relationships be­ CHEVROLET CO., Inc. Bryan himself has achieved the sy mp3thy tween city and tributary portions of the In­ and understanding which he counsels. For termountain Province are emphasized. Thc Dr. Bryan such an understanding is desirable city provides a focus for the commercial , 324·328 S. Walnut St. because no one point of vi ew gives us all manufactural, social, and political life of the Bloomington knowledge. Each is merely "a partial Salt Lake region and it is in turn dependent revelation of reality." If one is to seek upon the region for its sustenance. The in­ knowledge of all reality, one mnst perforce terdependence of city lind region is most E. B. DUANE, Pres. seek partial knowledge on the way. strikingly developed in the well-populated The explanation of the underlying co ndi­ Wasach Oasis, whi ch is the core area. There, tion s which produce the " families o f minds" (Please turn to page 30)

2 1'he January 1941 INDIANA ALUMNI MAGAZINE

Volume 3 January, 1941 Numher 4

Alum.ni District Councilors and Cilib Presidents assembled in the Trustees' room 10 hear President Wells report on I.U. progress since 1938. President Wells Outlines I.U. Progress Since 1938

Advances Made in Buildings, Additions to Faculty, Reorganization and Business Management, But Three Great Needs Still Must Be Met

By , AB'24· Pre~ide"t 0/ ]",liana University

Two years ago when the alumni district councilors and remain to be solved. With th ese exceptions, I feel that fur­ club presidents met on the campus for their second an­ ther increase in building will not be necessary for another nual fall conference, I ou tlined the pressing needs of the Uni­ five years. Not that we could not use more buildings to good versity at that time and the steps that should be taken to advantage, but rather that other neecls are more important lllaintain Indiana on a level with the other great American at this time. universities. Two years ago I pointed out that we needed to add "new This past month when the alumni officials again assem­ blood" to our faculty if we were to keep pace with ou r con­ bled, it was a pleasure to be able to report the progress made temporaries. Since that time a number of our higher sal­ in -the past two years. aried men have retired. Using the ending salaries of these In the morning we visited Swain Hall-the new physical men as the starting salaries of their successors, we were able science building, and the new Business and Economics to attract many new men of importance. building, and saw there a part of the new physical plant In making these appointments we established a principle added recently to meet the needs that I outlined two years Lhat I feel is most important- that of making the qualifica­ ago. Last sprin g. the alumni officers saw the new dormitory tions of every candidate compete with the qualifications of facilities, and in March many more alumni will see the new every other candidate. This means that we want the best Hall of during its dedication. possible man for the job at the salary that we can afford These and other additions to the physical plant have re­ t(l pay. This principle of competition, plus the effect of the li eved our 1110st pressing needs for space. However, our new men, has resulted in greater interest in research and in library problem and a few minor housing problems still higher standards for our faculty.

Indiuna Alumni Magazine 3 During the past biennium we also have made significant school year handled a total of 25,844 cases-14,l38 men progress in organization. Our School of Dentistry, reorgan­ and 11,706 women_ Most of these cases were minor ailments ized under our scholarly new dean, Dr. Crawford, Geems and did not require hospitalization, but a few did. We han­ certain of Class A rating for the first time. The curriculum dled 328 cases in our infirmary, 50 others were sent to the has been revised to make the School of Dentistry comply Bloomington Hospital and five were referred to the Robert with basic univergity sta ndards and requirements. Long Hospital. Our School of Medicine, formerly operating as two :,epa­ Another program designed to improve conditions 101' rate units-one at Bloomington and the other at Indianapo­ the student body is individual guidance and counseling. lis-is now closer integrated under one dean instead of The alumni officials heard Ned Reglein, headmaster of the two, and \fe expect to integrate the medical curriculum with men's residence , explain the workings of this plan the fundamental sciences as taught in the other departments for the new dormitories. Each student has the benefit of of the University. adult advice, not only on problems of scholarship but also in matters of a more personal nature. The program is intended to orient the student to his University and aid him VALUE OF PHYSICAL PLANT 1940 in getting the maximum of benefit from his years here on the campus. 'We also note an increase in research activity with a total of 403 publications being written by members of the faculty during the past year. Our Extension Division continues to gain in popularity. With the purchase of the building in Fort Wayne, we now have buildings to house three of our Extension Centers. (Indianapolis and the Calumet district are the other two.) The University continually is being called upon to render an increasing number and variety of services to the residents of Indiana. The recipients of these services last year in· cluded one out of every three persons in the State. In other o words, approximately one-third of the population of Indi- MICHIGAN MINNESOTA ILLINOIS OHIO STAT( WI SCONSIN IOWA IND' ..... N ..... Tn spite 0/ Indiana's building program, the University still lags far behind other Big Ten universities in value of physical planl. STUDENT ENROLLMENT. NUMBER OF FACULTY The University 0/ Michigan has almost three times ([S extensive a plant AND AVERAGE FACULTY SALARY as I.U. It is interesting to note that of all the funds collected for development 0/ physical plant at I. U. from 1820 to 1940, only 43.07 per cent came from the State. Co alributions from alumni, stndents and friends ranks next with 20.77 per cent. Federal grants account for 18.88 per cent; seenred bond issues finan ce 10.72 per cent, and the remaining 6.36 per cent is miscellaneous or untraceable.

Our School of Music, since reorganIZIng its curriculum, has been admitted to the Association of Collegiate Schools of Music. The School of Business co ntinues its steady prog­ ress, making significant advances in general statistics, marketing, finance, and insurance and in the placement of graduates. Another interesling siudy shows thaI enrollment has increased 48 In the Arts College the natural sciences have been ]Jer cent since 1932, (lnd the nllmber of jucullY members 37 per cellt , strengthened greatly thus offering much more attractive pos­ yet the average facllll)' salary shows a decrease of 9 Iler cent. sibilities for graduate studentg, particularly chemistry, physics, zoology and botany. We still have some areas lhar ana-1,187,932 individuals to be exact-received direct need attention in geology, physics and chemistry. In the benefits from Indiana University in 1940, an increase of 14 social sciences and humanities we have some strengths and per cent over the fjgures for 1939. some weaknesses. In general, these parts of our program The Extension Division through its lectures, visual aid still need major attention. In the humanities we have :lOme materials, mail libraries, public school contests, drama loans marked curricular gaps- anthropology, archaeology, Latin­ and seven other divisions accounts for the largest part of American history, culture and trade, Oriental culture and these services. No fewer than 758,390 persons benefited history, creative writing, fine arts, and comparative by Extension Division facilities during 1940, an jncrease philology. of 114,092. The teaching service of the University during The past two years have seen several other developments 1940 reached ] 6,910 persons, which included campus en­ that are encouraging. We have established a student health rollment for all terms, excluding duplicates, of 8,168, and center, {inn aced by student fees, that during the 1939-40 Extension and correspondence enrollment of 8,742. The

4 Th.e January 1941 total number of persons receiving University instruction ill 1939 was 16,660. We also take pride in the fine rating of the business ad­ ministration of the University. Three years ago the adminis· tration was evaluated in the Self-Survey report. At that time we ranked with the three highest of the 57 members of the North Central Conference with a rating of 838 out of a possible 1,000 points. The median for all institutions was ,595 and only three exceeded 800 points. Since that time we have corrected some of the phases of our business ad­ ministration on whi ch we received low scores. If the rating were made at the present time, it is safe to state that Indiana would receive a rating of 900 points-equal to the best of the ,57 members of the North Central Conference. So we see that we are operating as efficiently as the best of our contemporary universities. It is gratifying to know of the increase in the quality of studellts because of the program of the Director of Ad­ missions office. There is a growing esprit de corps on the part of the students, faculty and alumni , typified ill the motto, "For a Greater Indiana University, Not the Biggest But the Best!" All of these developments are encouraging, but we still are exposed at some points. Our three great needs at the present time are: (l) manpower; (2) library, and (3) scientific apparatus. In my inaugural address I called attention to a develop­ ment that IS no less true today than it was in December of 1938. The new School of Business building which also houses the De· partm.ent of Economics was the second new building on the campu.s "The star rating in the volumes of American Men 0/ visited as part of the Alum.ni Conjerence on Dec. 7. Science is the universally recognized mark of distinction ill the physical and biological sciences. Of the 12 men born and educated in Indiana to receive this coveted award dur­ Our second major need is greater library facilities. We ing the past ten years, none today remain to do their work have just had a comprehensive survey made of our library by three outstanding library experts. I quote from their in this State. Only two born and educated in other :,tates report: have been brought to Indiana. Therefore, we have Guffered a net loss of 10. Evidence equally startling with reference "Indiana's average annual growth in library holdings over to the loss of scholars in other fields is available. We must a 19-year period was 10,285 volumes, while the average conclude, accordingly, that year after year the State loses growth of the other 20 universities (of our type) was 29,· it large proportion of its most talented men. Loss of :mch 821 volumes. This difference suggests that Indiana's edu­ men as these constitutes a reduction ill human resources not cational and research programs and objectives are radically less serious than the loss of physical wealth caused by ..he different from those of most of the other 20 universities, erosion which yearly washes the productive top.soil hom or that Indiana is attempting to maintain programs similar our denuded hill land." to those of the other institutions under a distinct handicap The institution that can pay better salaries and furnish with respect to library r eso urces." adequate laboratory apparatus alJd library facilities get the ' Besides the addition of many much-needed volumes to best men . On all three points we are handicapped. our general Library, it is imperative that we make the As I outlined before, we have been able to attract Gome present quarters fireproof. first·class men to this campus. However, at the present We have been moving classrooms out of the Library, time we have fewer professors of senior rank and "the aver· until now ollly the Department of Fine Arts r emains. 'We age salary of all ranks is lower today than two years ago. hope to remodel Mitchell Hall and make it into a Fine Arts This means that we are trying to do the job with younger, Center. Then all of the present Library building can be more inexperienced men. This may not be a hopeless con­ lIsed for library purposes, the old classroom space being dition in itself, if we can find the money to induce the best made into seminar rooms. The cost of fireproofing, re­ of these younger men to stay with us as they prove them· modeling and increasing our volumes are included in our selves. Otherwise we will lose them to other institutions that request to the State Legislature. can afford to pay more. The third major need is scientific apparatus. If we are

Indiana Alumni Magazine 5 THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY DOLLAR THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY DOLLAR WHERE IT COMES FROM HOW IT IS SPENT

CURRENT RECEIPT S FOR OPERATION CURRENT EXPENSE FOR OPERATION 1939-40 1939-40 .

Anal yzing Ih.e I.U. dol/or 10 see where it comes from and how il is spent we lind that Ih e S t(lle a/I/lro/)rialions provides Ihe largest share o.f t.h e receipt.s, .')7.4 cenlS. S ladeni fees rallk next with 21.2 cenls 0/ each dollar receilled. Olher receipts in order are : hospital services, 103 celll s ; endowmenl, 10 .0 cents; sales and services, 6.6 eenls an d m.iscellaneoa s, 3.4 cenls. OllJ 0/ each dollar went, S8 ..') cenls goes fo r ill struClio n and research ; 233 cents l or hospitals; 05 .9 cen. IS jor buildings an d gro /l.nds; 4 ..1 cenl.s / or adminislralio n ; 4.·5 ('e nls /ar general expense; 1.9 cenls /or retirem ent 0/ bo nds anri inlerest, and 1.4 cents lor facllily relirement.

t(. carr y on r e~ea r c h of any importance, it is imperative A day or so ago I received a report from George W. that we provide the necessa ry apparatus to make this re­ Starr, director of the U niversity's Bureau of Business Re­ search work possible. search, regarding th e basic price trend for the next tw o years Thus we find that t.he three major needs of the Univer­ which indicates that we may have difficulty in making our ::- ity at this ti me are: qualified men, experts in their field , money go as hr as we planned. to teach and carryon research; library facilities to aid them Wholesale prices in general a re about 5 per cent higher ill teaching adequately and to encourage m ore graduate than a yea r ago. Some lines, like building materials and sludents to take advanced wo rk here, and scientific apparatus many steel products, have risen 10 per cent within th e last for th e q ualified men to use in several new and worth-while yea r and 7 per cent during the last six months. This rise research p rojects. will be accelerated as the defense program ga in s m omentum. These three primary needs were carefully considered in When the defense progra m gets under way expenditures making up our request to the State Legislature. We a re of th e nati onal government will exceed $500,000,000 a well aware of th e inc reasin g burdens being placed upon the month agaillst not more than $200,000,000 a month at pres­ taxpayer, but the cost of hi gher education ill the State of ent. Expansion of the purchases of the government; increases Indiana is today much lower in relation to total State ex­ in th e purchases on the part of business (the more reliablc penditures than it was in the depression years of 1932-33. nati onal indexes show th at industrial producti on is now During those troubled years, the University, like all divi­ 30 per cent greater than in Aug ust, 1939) ; competitive bid­ sions of State gCl vernment, took reducti ons in their budgefs ding for labor ; an increased use of the "cost-plus" method without a murmur. T wo years ago, th e State Legislature of awarding co ntracts ; increased consumer incomes ; ex­ increased our appropriation, an increase that was very wel­ pansion of bank credits; and an increase in the r apidity come to the people of India na. This year, we are asking with which the expenditures of both business and consumers for th e same amount as we have received for the past two will be made, all of these factors may be expected to bring veal'S plus a n additional amount to cover the three !~;rea t a sharp rise in prices. Jl eeds that I have outlined for you and some capital outlays Since the prices of certain industrial goods are already that have bec ome necessary. Also incl uded in this r ise is 10 per cent hi gher than a year ago, it is not unlikely that a n item of $19,679 a year which represents th e increase in when our defense program hits its stride prices of m an ~ ' the pri ce of coal used by the University. These increased manufacturers and most industrial goods will be at least coal prices resulted from th e Gllffe), Coal Bill th at recently 20 per cent higher tha n at present. went into effec t. Although the productive capacity of the United States

6 The January 1941 in some fields may be greater than that of Germany, ;t should not be overlooked that we are trying to do in a democratic way in two years what it has taken totalitarian Germany six years to accomplish. A 20 per cent rise in the prices of the materials which the University uses in its operation means an increase of $140,000 in the biennial operating cost, and even a 10 per cent rise will mean an increase of $70,000; matters not considered at the time the budget was prepared. ) n addition to the effect upon the operating cost of the University, a substantial increase in prices will affect the personnel and salary scale. It will further complicate our problem in getting qualified, new men at the salaries that we can afford Lo pay. I n these tumultuous times, we should not forget basic values. We should not sacrifice education and the oppor· tunity it offers our youth. The per capita cost of the Uni­ versity to the people of the State is only $.63 a year, far less than each of us spends on luxuries. Perhaps it may be­ Projessor Mitchell (right.), head oj the Department of Physics, i., shown at work with an assistant. on the I/.ew cyclotron (atonl­ come necessary for us to tighten our belts and do without smasher) that the Alumni District Councilors and Oub Presidellts some of these non-essentials so that we may keep the things saw all their tour oj Swain Hall on Dec. 7. really worth while. A state, a community or a family degenerates without By way of contrast, let us look at the English. The gov­ ernment has ordered the English universities LO carryon APPROPRIATIONS AND ENROLLMENT their normal routine as nearly as possible. The most dis­ INDIANA UNIVERSiTY REGULAR SESSIONS tinguished and valuable men on the faculties are not allowed 1931-40 to leave their laboratories and studies for the army. The P[RC(NT igJl slOO Pi:RC(NT "0 I.0 great old British empire, fighting for its political life, but

I.0 far more, engaged in a struggle to the death for the preserva­ ..-­..­ .­ I tion of the ideals of freedom and human integ rity, knows / /' / , 0.) 0 ..­ JO the values of its universities. ..--..­ 120 ..­ 2 0 Indiana University is indigenous to our Hoosier soil, and ..- ..- .- / : at the same time it is not indigenous to the world of F'ULL TIIoI( STUOCNT 5 - / / / ,00 100 -­ ----- scholars and scholarship. It is a living, dynamic monu­ '0 ---- 90 ment to the dreams and aspirations of the people of this --- APPROf'RIATIOf'tS­ r--- 80 "'- - .---v- 80 State. It holds a precious promise for future generations '" .~ 0c:=..~ 0 worthy of our sacrifice and our best efforts. r9JJ t9JZ 1933 1934 t9 J~ 1936 1931 19)8 1939 1940 In conclusion, I would like to quote from my message lo Tltis graph tells the story oj the lag of State appropriation behind the rise in enrollment in !-he last decarie. Using the year 1930-3/ the Budget Committee at the time we submitted our request as 100 per cent, we find thal in 1939·40 enrollment stood at. for the biennium 1941-43: lSI per cent but the appropriation had increased only La 118 pel "I have tried to present the picture as we see it, both cent. Most of this lag is due to the depression years, but still the sLory today shows that the Universl:ty has less money per student from the standpoint of the institution intellectually and than in 1930-3 1. from the standpoint of the commonwealth. Yours is the decision. Whatever it may be, we shall accept it in good strong leadership. A well-rounded educational program as­ spirit and take the amount of money you allow and make sures the development of our future leaders. We need strong , it go just as far as we possibly can. There is no magic, tf'achers to teach these leaders. llOwever, with which we can meet these important needs Truly, our society lives and advances as a result of the without money. We have no rabbits to pull out of any hats. ideas generated in the minds of men. It is one of the iunc­ We cannot get a quality product in the University without tions of the universities to train men to have bold, original paying for it any more than we can get a quality product and constructive minds. For centuries these institutions ill any other field without being willing to pay the price. have been the preservers and the transmitters of the cul­ "Year after year we watch a stream of eager boys and tural inheritance of the race. Only a few days ago, a dis­ girls pass through here on their way toward active service patch in announced the closing of to community and State. If we sometimes appear to push some of the most distinguished French universities. All of too hard, in our demands for the institution, it is because the universities in Germany are wrecked . Universities in oJ this stream of youth. For we know, as you know, that Holland, Belgium and Spain are for the most part closed. their future is now."

Indiana Alumni Magazine 7 Franl{ E. Allen, AB~16, Is New I.U. Trustee

Superintendent of Schools in South Bend Appointed To Serve Unexpired Term of the Late Val Nolan

like this has the activities section of the By Nathan Kaplan, '40 Arbutus grown. After graduation, NIr. Allen taught mathematics in NIt. Vernon high school, Frank Allen being congratulated by Alex later became head of the mathematics Campbell (right), president oj the I.U. Frank E. Allen is a Hoosier by birth, Aillmni Association, at the alumni conference. department at New Castle high school, by preference and by right of tenure. which is where he had the infinitely va­ He has never been other than a Hoosier. ried experience of coaching a basket­ His trail leads from Summitville, where ball team, with a few side sports thrown he was born 49 years ago, to South in. He later served as principal of the EBSTER, who generally has the Bend, where he is superintendent of school for two years_ Wright idea even in an abridged schools, and this is not the first time it In 1921 he became principal of Cen­ slate, brings to light the following on has crossed Bloomington, for he took tral high school in Muncie and four page 1039 of his Home and Office edi­ his AB from Indiana University in 1916 years later was elected superintendent of tion: and his AM in 1924. Even at his recent schools in that city, a position he re­ "TRUSTEE, a person to whom the appointment he was a member of the signed to accept the South Bend post. management of a property is commit­ Alumni Council and has for years been From 1931 to 1936 he served as a mem­ ted in trust for the good of others." active in the St. Joseph county alumni ber of the State Board of Education. Concerning Mr. Frank E. Allen, association which he organized. He now takes his place on the govern­ Webster couldn't have put it any better For a man who took two degrees, thus ing board of Indiana University along­ had he known the man. lVIr. Allen is definitely proving his scholastic ability, side Judge Ora L. Wildermuth, presi­ the type of person to whom trusts are Mr. Allen had a variety of other inter­ dent, William A. Kunkel, Paul L. Feltus, committed for the good of others, and, ests during his student career. He held Mrs. Sanford Teter, John S. Hastings, after the death of Val Nolan last No­ membership in numerous undergraduate J. Dwight Peterson and Uz McMurtrie, vember, he was asked to join seven oth­ organizations, played freshman base­ but this is not the beginning of his serv­ ers in a post that would give his abilities ball, varsity basketball jn 1915, and ice to the University. It is merel y a con­ wide play, that of member of the Board football in 1914 and 1915. From men tinuation of it. of Trustees of Indiana University, to fill out the unexpi red term of his late When the Board 0/ Trustees met in Fort Wayne on Dec. 15, it was tHr. Allen's debut. The predecessor. picture below, t(lken by the Fort Wayne fo/unal-Gazelle, shows Nlr. Allen silling on Ihe arm NIr. Allen is not new to the field of 0/ the chair. Others seated (left to righl) are William Kunkel, Judge Ora L. Wildermuth, education. He is steeped in administra­ Nlrs. Sanford F. Teter, and .standing: Uz i11cNJIlItrie; Dr. Herm(ln T. Briscoe, dean 0/ /a culties; tive experience. He has been a success ./. Dwight Peterson; President Herman /3 Wells; Paul Feltus; folm S. Hastings, and Ward G. Biddle, University Comptroller and Secretary to the Board 0/ Trustees. as a leader because he has always under­ stood the problems of the followers. He was one himself. And if these attributes do not sufficiently qualify him for his present positioll consider that: If the job requires strength and fight­ ing ability, he was once a football player at LU. Jf it requires patience, he was once a school teacher. If it requires nerve and courage, he once coached an Indiana high school basketball team. If it requires vision, he got 1t III the basketball coaching business. 8 The January 1941 ExalDining

Musical Education At Indiana University

Despite Hectic Early History, Music Now Is Recognized School in the University, With Mode,.n Building And Brilliant Faculty

has long been a prominent I.USIC 12th il/. a Series on. I.U. If. activity in Bloomington. The By Chauncey Sanders Bl oomington Band has a long and hon· orable history. Vocalists and instru· mentalists, in the old days, were al· than in the observance; but, to quote ways getting together for prearranged the Arbutus: " ... several reckless or impromptu concerts. There were spirits- among them Maurice Moore, numerous performances of light operas Frank Post, Roll Madison, James Cook, and operettas. And, from about 1860 Bed Sudbury, Will Cravens, Walter to 1890, the Senior Serenade was one Howe, and Isaac Loeb-decided to give of the most important features of Com· the serenade at all hazards. They mencement time. Born of the desire on engaged the May Belle (a heavy picnic the part of the seniors to pay tribute to wagon), and a colored band, and favorite professors, the annual serenade soon after leav ing the livery stable had was for many years "a real musical nearly all the rest of the college at their treat," as the 1894 A rbuills assures us. heels. The streets were repeatedly block· But in 1374 the juniors and the law aded, and the horses were almost mad· studen ts turned out with a variety of dened by the noise. Several under· unmusical instruments--chief among classmen were taken to jail; the colored them a " horse·fiddle"-and joined in. band was gradually wrought up to the Trouble immediately ensued, there was 'razzer' point ; and one of the negroes a shooting-in which a junior was fin ally shot in to the crowd , striking wounded-and for three or four years Hall, an underclassman, in the leg. Just th ere were no more Senior Serenacles. north of Sixth street, on Walnut, a little Later in the '70's the traditional per· bit later, James Simpson, a freshman , Deal/. R oberl L. Sanders 0/ lh e School oj formance was revived, with the juniors and others were tryi ng to pl ace a Mllsic has conducled both the Chicago Sym­ and the laws continuing to provide the carpenter's bench in front of the pranc· phony and lhe New York Philharmonic or­ cheslras and his compos':liofls have been oppositi on . In 1890 the seni ors seem in g horses, when the driver, a town played by many 0/ the leading orchestras ill to have decided that the serenade was tough, jumped to the ground and, with th e Uniled SLa tes . .. (below) th e girls' glee a custom more honored in the breach a large boarel, struck Simpson in the clllb at I. U. bell, who continued to hold the title Assistant Professor of German until 1915, was made Associate Professor of Music and Head of the Department of Music. In the year 1910-11 University credit for work in music was given for the first time, and five courses were offered. During Professor Campbell's regime the work of the Department was enlarged; there was wide-spread inter­ est in music on the campus and in town, and plans for an elaborate celebration of the University Centennial-in which music was to play a large part-were under way when Dr. Campbell died. Professor Barzille Winfred Merrill was appointed Head of the Department High honors went to the I.U. mell's glee club this past month when the entire group was in 1919; and in 1921 the Department invited to sing jor the Indiana Society banqliel in Chicago and lor the Alumni·Trustee banquet in Fort Wayne the following night. Above they are shown singing jor the big banquet in Fort became a School, with Professor Mer­ Wayne on Dec. 15. (Fort Wayne jonrna/·Cazelle photo.) rill as Dean. Since Dean Merrill's achievements were emphasized in Dr. face, frightfully lacerating the boy's and painting; music was apparently not Beck's article in the November issue of lips, and knocking him senseless. regarded as a Fine Art. the Magazine, perhaps I may be permit­ "This ended the serenades for good. In 1899 Lucius M. Hiatt came to the ted to state them here more briefly than Simpson was carried to the doctor's University with the title Director of would otherwise be proper. The ad­ office on that same carpenter's bench, Music. From then until 1910 Mr. Hiatt dition of several talented persons to and his wounds were sewn up. Hall directed the band, the orchestra, the the teaching staff, the increase in en­ and Simpson were both popular fel­ Glee Club, the Mandolin Club, and the rollment, the expansion of the cur­ lows, and the Seniors who had originated chorus; he also gave private lessons on ricula, and---crowning achievement­ the lark, as soon as they heard that reed and string instruments. Begin­ the erection of a new building, one of ning in 1908 Edward Ebert-Buchheim some one was dangerously hurt, for­ the finest 011 the campus: these are sook the wagon and hurried back to gave piano instruction and courses in evidences of the success that char­ offer their assistance." harmony and counterpoint; he also gave acterized Dean Merrill's tenure. recitals that were highly regarded by The attitude of the faculty toward When Dean Merrill retired and was such escapades can easily be imagined, town and gown alike. In 1909 Dr. made Dean Emeritus in 1938, Robert and there were doubtless other forms Charles D. Campbell, who was then L. Sanders was chosen as his successor. of musical activity that were deplored Assistant Professor of German, gave a Dean Sanders holds the degrees BM upon aesthetic grounds. But even thc course in the history and development and MM from Bush Conservatory, musical performances approved by all of music. Up to this time no college Chicago. He is a Fellow of the Ameri­ credit had been given for any work in were purely voluntary efforts, in which can Academy at Rome, having been in music, although a Department of Music students, faculty, and townspeople might residence there from 1925 to 1929. In all join. Indiana University-doubtless had been authorized by the Board of 1939 the Chicago Conservatory of Trustees in 1904. In 1910, Dr. Camp- like other colleges and universities of Music granted him the degree Doctor that day-was slow to sponsor and Dean Emeritus B. Winjred Merrill of Music. From 1933 to 1936 Dean slower still to grant credit for ac­ Sanders was Assistant Conductor of the complishments in music. Chicago Civic Orchestra; he was a About 1893 the University Glee Club member of the music faculty, University was organized under the direction of of Chicago, from 1935 to 1938. He was M. B. Griffith, ,-\'ho also gave private guest conductor of the Chicago Sym­ lessons in singing. A statement con­ phony Orchestra in two Grant Park con­ cerning music appeared in the Schedule certs in 1936. of Lectures and Recitations for the first In 1938 Dean Sanders won a prize time in the winter term of the year offered by the New York Philharmonic 1894-95. In that year five fraternities Symphony Society for a short sym­ had quartets-with pictures in the Ar­ phonic work; and conducted the Or­ butus-and there was a University chestra in its premiere of the prize­ Quartette, male, with an accompanist winning composition, Little Symphony and a reader of the opposite sex. From in G, in February, 1939_ The Orchestra 1896 to 1899 C. N. Hasler was in played the work again last season; it charge of musical activities; during has also been performed by the Min­ that period a Mandolin Club came into neapolis Symphony. Another composi­ being. In 1896 the University estab­ tion by Dean Sanders, Scenes 0/ Pov­ lished a Department of Fine Arts, but erty and Toil, has been performed by the it included only architecture, sculpture, Chicago Symphony, the Washington 10 The January 1941 Symphony, and the Illinois Symphony guest soloisl with the Minneapolis Sym­ orchestras. Dean Sanders is also the phony Orchestra and other organiza­ composer of the music for a ballet, tions and has given many solo concerts. L' Agya, performed by the Federal William E. Ross accepted an appoint­ Theatre in Chicago in 1938; Katherine ment as Assistant Professor of Voice Dunham was responsible for the chore­ in 1938. Professor Ross has three ography. Olher compositions by Dean degrees: AB and BM from the Uni­ Sanders include a Sonata for Cello, a versity of Wisconsin and MM from String Quartet, a Violin Sonata, and the Gunn School of Music; he has numerous others. Dean Sanders was also done graduate work at Columbia also one of the two musical editors of University and at the Outland Studios the Unitarian-Universalist hymnal, in Chicago. From 1925 to 1929 Pro­ Hymns oj the Spirit, published in Bos­ fessor Ross was Assistant Professor of ton in 1937. Music at Miami University; from 1929 In 1927 Ernest HofIzimmer, one of to 1938 he was engaged in professional the best artists in Europe and a great work in Chicago-singing with the Chi­ teacher as well, came to Indiana Uni­ cago Civ ic Opera Company and on versity as Professor of Piano. For 15 many radio programs. He has also had years he had been head of a masterclass much experience in church singing. at Stern Conservatory in Berlin. Pro­ Another new member of the music fessor Hoffzimmer has studied wilh Newest addition to the I.U. i\llusic laculty faculty in 1938 was Robert S. Tange­ Edward Mertke and with William Dayas is Ora Hyde, assistant professor 01 voice, who man, Assistant Professor of Music­ studied voice under great teachers bOI.h in this (one of the last pupils of Liszt) at COllnlry and ilL Europe. Sh.e sang with the Professor Tangeman received his AB, Cologne, with Victor Staub (teacher German Opera Company on a U.S. tour. magna cum laude, from Harvard in of Iturbe) in Paris, and with Feruccio 1932 and his AM from the same in­ Busoni in Berlin and Weimar. He also studied voice under Percy Rector stitution in th e following year. In 1933­ spent a year al the Royal College 0 f Stephens. Professor Nye has appeared 34 he studied at the Ecole Normale de Music in Manchester. in American Folksong Lecture-Recitals , Musique in Paris; while in Paris he In the following year Lennart von Song Recitals of American Music, was a pupil of Mlle. Nadia Boulanger. Zweygberg was appointed Professor of Radio Recitals over WLW and "'WNC, Before coming to Indiana he had been Cello. Professor von Zweygberg is :1 and in Oratorio. Professor Nye is the Instructor in Theory and Piano at Ohio graduate of the School of Music and the son of the famous American humorist, State University. He now has charge University of Helsingfors, Finland. He Edgar Wilson ("Bill") Nye. of classes in the history and the ap­ also has a diploma from the Con­ A member of the University faculty preciation of music. servatory at Sondershausen, Germanv. since 1926, Winifred Merrill was made Ora Hyde, Assistant Professor of He has studied cello with such maste~s Assistant Professor of Violin in 1938. Voice, joined the faculty at the be­ as Schneevoigt in Helsingfors, Carl Miss Merrill is a graduate of the In­ ginning of the present academic year. Schroeder in Sondershausen, Jacob in stitute of Musical Art in New York and Miss Hyde has the AB degree from Brussels, and Hugo Becker in Frank­ has done post-graduate work there; she the University of Minnesota; she has furt-am-Main; and theory and compo­ has also spent much time in Paris. studied in Europe with great voice sition with Sibelius (a life-long friend) Among her teachers have been Edouard teachers and has had work in dramatic and Kajanus in Helsingfors. Dethier and Franz Kneisel in violin technique under Charles Trier, pro­ The list of professors also includes and Dr. Percy Goetschius in composi­ ducer for Sir Henry Irving and for Samuel Thompson Burns, Professor of tion; she has also had lectures and Sothern and Marlowe. She toured Public School Music, who ca me to the coaching from :Mlle. Nadia Boulanger Italy with the Musica Viva Orchestra, University in 1938. Professor Burns In Paris. Miss Merrill has appeared as (Please turn to page 30) has an AB from Oberlin College and The School 01 Music building as it looked shortly a/ler landscaping was completed. an AM from Northweslern. After ex­ perience in the public schools of Ohio, Professor Burns wenl to , where for four years he was slate di­ rector of music in the public schools; in that position Professor Burns intro­ duced a program of "music for every child and every child for music" that brought him nation-wide recognition. During two summer sessions Professor Burns has been a member of the fac­ ulty of Teachers College, Columbia University. Douglas D. Ny e, Assistant Professor of Music, came to the University in 1925. He is a graduate of the Institute of Musical Art in New York and Indiana Alumni Magazine 11 28 Alumni to Sit in Legislatures

I.U. Men Hold Five Seats in Congress and 23 in Gen­ eral Assembly-Gain of Two

By Charles W. Sembower, '42

NDIANA University will be well rep­ I resented when Congress convenes on J an_ 3 and the State Legislature opens its biennial session on J an_ 9 with a total of 28 alumni present-a gain of two as a result of November's e1ecti o n_ Two other alumni will hold high State Indiana University alumni will play all. active part in the activities in the Indiana Statehouse offices_ when the Assembly opens on Jan_ 9 with no jewer than 23 graduates and fanner students silting in th e Legislatu.re and two others holding high Slale ojjices. The increase in LU_ legislators came in the State Senate with a total of nine alumni being on hand this session as to Congress_ They are Charles A. Hal­ New representati ves in the Assembly compared with seven two years ago_ leck, second district; Gerald Landis, are H.ay Geisert, Emsley W. Johnson, Although the personnel has changed Eeventh district; William H. Larrabee, J1"., Corbett McClellan, Edward Olczac, slightly, Indiana still has five men in 11th district, and Louis Ludlow, 12th Elmer C. Weller, and Matthew Welsh. Congress and 14 in the State House of district. Representatives re-elected were Howard Representatives_ James M. Tucker, Secretary of State, T. Batman, Charles Z. Bond, Hobart The only new LU_ face in Congress and Clement T. Malan, Superintendent Creighton, James R. Crawley, S. Hugh is that of who defeated of Public Instruction, are the two J.U_ Dillin, Robert H. Heller, George W. Eugene Crowe for the right to represent alumni elEcted to high State offices. Henley, and Harold E. Korn. the ninth I ndiana district in the na­ New State Senators are Harold W. Earl Wilson, AB'31, MS'38, the Uni­ ti onal House of Representatives_ The Handley, Robert G. Miller, Harry M. versity's only new Congressman, ea rned eledion of Wilson increases the number Shull, and Milton W. Thompson. Hold· his degree in three years in spite of of University men in the House by one, over State Senators are Charles H. worki ng his way through l.U. in order but Sherman Minton was defeated for Bedwell, Lawrence E. Carlson, Walter to defray his expenses. He is principal re-election as US Senator. S. Chambers, William E. Jenner, and of Vallonia High School in Jackson Four other 1.11. men were re-e1 ected Orville T. Stout. Count.y.

Th ese jOllr Iwlerrtn Congressmen lroll/. Indillna all were retllrned to fh e House 01 Rel'resenliltives by the IJO las in the el ection la st Novelll­ IJer. Le/t. 10 right, Ih ey are: Charles A. Hal/eck, AB'23, rel"esenling th; second distriu; Gerald La.ndis, 85'23. MS'38, represcnlillg Ihe Uni· versity's home distriel-tlte seventh; ffiilliam H. Larrabee, M D'98 (Special), representing the IJIh dislricl, and LOllis Ludlow, '96, veteran Congressma.n jor th e 12th distriel, who re-introduced his proposal jor a Consll:lU.lional amendmenl lhat would require a /Jol e oj the people be­ lore war could be declared. The Ludlow amendment, proposed earlier when the probability 01 U.s. parlicipation in war seemed less likely, received scant consideratian lrom Congress, but many Washingtoll oU5ervers expecl the proposal to be the subject. jor mu.t;h debale in view oj lhe presenl state oj warld condilions and the relation aj the Unil~d Slates thereto.

12 The January 1941 The only new I.U. man in Congress is Earl Wilson, AB'3l, MS'38 (extreme lelt above), who de/eated th.e veteran Congressman Eugene Crowe lor the right to represent Ih.e ninth Indiana dislrict. In the center are Dr. Clemenl T . M(dan, A8'1.5, PhD'30, and James M. Tucker, AB'30, LLB'32, who will hold high Stale of/ices. Dr. illalan, a mem.'Jer 0/ the /acullY a/ I ndiana State Teachers College, is the newly-elected Superinlendent 0/ Pf~blic l nsl.ru.etion, havi.ng defeated /ellow-alumnus, FLoyd I. iI1cil!Jurray , ill the November election. Jim. Tucker, Ihe only mem.ber 0.1 his pany to win a Slate office in 1938, was returned to the po.SI o.i Secretary 0/ Slale in November by a wide margin. At the right is Harry ,11. Shull, 'la, newly elected to Ihe State Senale, havillg previ:usly served IW O lerms in Ihe lower hou.se.

Charles Halleck, A B'23, tireless in Iy in the public eye now for his plan made him the founder and president his efforts for a fellow alumnus, Wendell to prevent war by a referendum of the of the recentl" revived Monroe County Willkie, AB'13, LLB'16, Presidential people of the nation. Historical Society. candidate, was re-elected for a fourth James M. Tucker, AB'30, LLB'32, New ill the State Senate but a veteran time. ran ahead of his party ticket to be of two terms in the lower house is William H. Larrabee, though not an ejected to a State office in 1938. While Harry M. Shull, '10, Auburn. As State alumnus in the strictest sense of the in the University he won the Niezer Senator he acts for DeKalb, Steuben, word, is accepted as such since he medal, awarded anllually to an out­ and LaG range Co unties. graduated in 1898 from the medical standing debater. Milton W. Thompson, PG'20, is a school which later became a part of Clement T. Malan, AB'] 5, PhD'30, prominent farmer in Vermilion County. Indiana University. is Professor of Political Science at He was formerly an instructor in Eco­ Gerald Landis, BS'23, MS'38, de­ Indiana State Teachers College. He nomics in the University under the late veloped many outstanding players for has been a member of the college faculty Dr. U. G. Weatherly. Lll. teams as a coach at Linton High since 1922. Charles Bedwell, LLB'07, S ullivan, is School. He is probably one of the Nine alumni will serve in the State a hold·over in the Senate, having served few athletic coaches ever to be elected Senate in the present session. since 1935. In 1915 lJ e was speaker to Congress. Harold W. Handley, AB'32, La­ of Lh e State House of Representatives. The first Washington correspondent Porte, is associated with his father in ML Bedwell has many family ties with to move up from the press bench to a a furniture manufacturing concern LU_ Two daughters are graduates and seat in the House of Representatives founded by his grand father. one is in J. U. now. is Louis Ludlow, '96. He is author of Robert G. Miller, LLB'93, is a B100lll­ Lawrence E. Carlson, '24, Hunting­ the famous book, From Cornfield 10 ington attorney whose widespread ton , operated one of The Daily Student Press Gallery. ML Ludlow is particular- knowledge of has presses during his undergraduate clays_

Four olher I.U. men in Ihe State Senale are ({e/t to right) Charles Bedwell, LL8'07; Robert G. ilifiller, LLH'93; William E. Jenner, AH'30, LLH'32, and Millon Tholllpson, PG'20. A c(!I1dii/a le /01' Congress in the recent eleclion, Hedwell was defeated by a lellow alumnu.s, Gerald LaT/dis, bUI his Ie rill in Ihe Stale Senate still has IWO years 10 run. Anolher ali-alumni fight /Offlld Robert G. Miller, an " /" 111:/11. in /oolbal! , de/ealing Os cur Cravens for Ihe right 10 reprcsent Monroe CO/lII I.y in I.he Senale. Hill Jenner, a veteran 0.1 many legislative call1)!aign., , will be Ihe [lfesidenl /Ira lem of lite Senale Ihis session aiter h.aving beef! minorily leader 0.1 his [larly in Ihe last session. Thompson , onolher alumnus 10 enler the Senate lor the /irsl lim e, was formerly (/. member 0/ Ihe I. U. jacuJly and now is a prominenl farmer in Iicrrnilioll COU.llly. Olhcl alumni in the Senale are Harold Handley, A 8'32; Lawrence Carlson, '24; If/aller S. Chamber.', '93, and Orvil!e T. S'-Oll.l, '03.

I nciiana Alumni itjagazine 13 In the Honse 0/ R epresen tatives 0/ the General Assembly are (le/t to right) W. Hobart Creighton, '20 ; Corbell McClellan, LLB'34; Elmer C. Wellor, '19, and George W. Henley, AB'13, LLB' 14. Creighton, re·elected to a fourth term in the Honse, is a member 01 the impo rtant budget committee. McClellan and Wellar are both new to th e House, be,' ng elected in November lor the first time. Henley, well·known ill BlooTl/· ington, i.s another veterall I:n the House. He was chairman 0/ the ciJSs 0/ '13 reunion at the Willkie noti/ieation ceremonies at Elwood.

This is his third Senate term, his fifth nus of '13, whose untimely death in Counties. in the Assembly. September, 1940, interrupted his candi­ W. Hobart Creighton, '20, Warsaw, A veteran State legislator whose four dacy for re-election. will serve his fourth term as a repre· children have also attended LU. is Ray Geisert, '14, Greendale, is a sentative of Kosciusko County wh ere he Walter S. Chambers, '93, publisher of new legislator. Emsley W. Johnson, Jr., has a poultry farm. James R. Crawley, the New Castle Cou.rier-Times. He is an LLB'37, Indianapolis, was a member of '10, Greensburg, is a former superin· associate member of the campus chap­ Blue Key and the Law Club at the Uni­ tendent of Decatur County schools. ter of Sigma Delta Chi, national profes­ versity. He was judge of Moot Court S. Hugh Dillin, AB'36, LLB'38, sional journalism fraternity. during his senior year. Petersburg, practices law with his father, William E. Jenner, AB'30, LLB'32, Corbett McClellan, LLB'34, Muncie, Samuel E. Dillin, LLB'OO. As an under will be president pro tem of the open­ while in the University, was editor of graduate, Mr. Dillin edited the Bored ing session of the State Senate. As an the Student Board of Jndiana Law Jour­ Walk, played a clarinet in the "March­ undergraduate, he was chairman of na!. Edward Olczak, '37, South Bend, ing Hundred" military band, and was the senior invitations committee, and will be one of three representatives from a star debater. majored in political science. He is ac­ St. Joseph County. Robert H. Heller, "33, Decatur, was tive in the Alumni Association. Elm er C. Wellar, '19, Dale, a World re·elected from Adams and Wells Coun· Orville T. Stout, '03, has been in th e War veteran who is a member of the ties. Representing Monroe County will mercantile and milling business in Vin­ Santa Claus Post of the American be George W. Henley, AB'13, LLB'14, cennes. His University work was done Legion, will represent Perry and Spen­ Bloomington attorney , re·elected. As at the l3i ological Station, Winona Lake. Cf! r Counties. Matthew E. "Welsh, '38. an undergraduate, he was president of Fourteen alumni will help make laws practi cin g law in Vincennes, was "uc­ Strut and Fret, dramatics organization, for the Hoosier State by serving in the cessf ul in his first political venture. and producer of the " Union Rev ue," lower house. Howard T. Batman, AB'29, wa s class campus show. Mrs. Merl e F. Coons, although not orator at h is Commencement. He is Harold E. Korn, LLB'35, Ft. Wayne, an alumna herself, was elected repre­ active in the Indiana University club one of three Allen County representa· sentative from Montgomerv County to at Terre Haute. Charles Z. Bond, JD'36, tives, is a member of Phi Delta Gamma, take the place of her husband, an alum- Fr:. Wayne, represents Allen and Whitley honorary forensic fraternity.

Th e lat.e M erle F. Coons, '13 (extreme le/t ), was a c(lnriidate for re·elect.ion to the House but he died shortly belore election and his wife ran in his lilace and was elected. Mauhew W elsh , '38, ({nd Emsley W . .lohnson, Jr., Ll.B'3?, are two marc newco m ers 01/, th e legislatl:ve scene, both being elect.ed lor the first tim e in NOL· ember. Other allil!!ni in the lower house (whose pidllres we were unable to secure be/are deadlin e) are Ray Geisert, '14 ; Edward Olczak , '37; Howard T. Batman, AB'29; Charles Z. Bond, .lD'36 ; .lames R. Crawl ey , ' 10; S. Hugh Dillin, AB'36, LL8'38; Robert H. H eller, '33, and Harold E. Korn. , LL83.5 . This brings the total number 01 the I. U. co ntingent in the lower hOlLse to 14- the same as in 19.38 .

14 The January 1941 .,..TVews Flashes

the I.U. Alumni Club World

HIEF items of interest in the alumni the Alumni Association, served as toast­ By Claude Rich, AB'29 Cclub world this month concern the Alulllni Field Secretary master for the banquet. The arrange­ annual fall conference of District Coun­ ments for the affair were supervised by cilors and club presidents on the Cam­ Otto Grant, .J r. and Mrs. Clyde F. Dreis­ pus Dec_ 7 and the meeting of the Board ever before "beccl use of the collapse bach. of Trustees with alumni of Northeastern of the universities of Europe_" The Trustees met the following morn­ Indiana at Fort Wayne Dec_ lS-17_ "I agree and I think most of you ing for their regular meeting and con­ agree," he continued, "that the United cluded business the next day. .51 Alumni Attend States should huild battleships and a rm A breakfast in honor of the wives Fall Conference itself against possible invasion, but un­ of the Trustees was held on Tuesday less some prov isi on is made for the morning b y the Fort Wayne club. Jane A total of Sl alumni were on hand preserva tion of intellectual a nd spiritual Vesey Smith was the chairman. for the fall conference of alumni offi­ inspiration our battle will be lost before cials with President Wells and Comp­ the first shot is fired_ We have to keep Mrs. Lewis Gives Alumni troller Biddle who discussed problems free our educational institutions to com­ Broadcast Over WIRE of University administration_ bat the ideologies of the aggressors." Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewi s, president The morning's program included William A. Kunkel, publisher of the of the LU. Women's Club of Indianapo­ visits to Swain Hall, which houses the Fart Wayne Joumal-Gazelle a nd mem­ lis, reported t o the citizens of the State cyclotron, and the new Business and ber of the Board of Trustees, ex tended concerning th e alumni conference held Economics building_ Ned Reglein, head­ the official welcome to the Board and here Dec. 7 over ·WIRE 011 Dec. lS. master for the men's residence center, .J udge Ora L. Wildermuth r esponded. She described in detail the new facil­ ex plained the student guidance program Alex Campbell, nati onal president of ities in Swain Hall and the Business and at the luncheon held in the Union Build­ Economics building and the projects for ill ~_ Alnmni in indianapolis and th e benefit of society now under way The afternoon session, held in the Iwd Branch iVicCm cken tell th em about his in those huilclings, and also reported Trustees room of the Adminislration whirlwind basketball team and the "blitzkrieg" ,·he gist of the President's message to Building, was turned over to the Presi­ that the Hllstling Hoosiers are staging this the alumni at the afternoon session. dent ani! the Comptroller. year. Bmach spoke at a luncheon in Indian­ apolis shortly be/ore his team headed 10 the A dinner wa s held in the Union Build­ West Coast, alld in Los Angeles he addresser! Terre Haute Club Honors in g and many of the alumni stayed over a Big Ten club luncheon when he broughl his High School Gridders to see Indiana open its 1940-41 basket­ team /0 that city to play U.C.L.A. and U.s.C. The Terre Haute club co-operated in ball season with a rousing 44-31 vic­ staging two affairs in h onor of high tory over the University of Georgia_ school football players this month. Among those present was Frank E_ On Dec _ 10, the club coll aborated Allen, member of the Alumni Executive with the Chamber of Commerce in spon­ Council, wh o had been appointed to the soring a luncheon at which Lenhardt 1. U_ Board of Trustees the day before_ Bauer presented the Turkey Trophy to the winner of the Garfield-Wiley foot­ .500 Alumni Attend ball game. Fort Wayne Banquet Two days later, in co-operati on with More than SOO alumni were on hand the Terre Haute radio statio n and the for the banquet that opened the two-da y Pllfdue alumni, the club staged a ban­ meeting of the Board of Trustees at quet in honor of the All-Wabash Val­ Fort Wayne on Dec_ l S_ ley football players. Red Grange was In the principal address, President the principal speaker alii! films of In­ Wells said the responsibility of Amer­ diana and Purdue football games were ica n universities today is greater than shown_ Indiana Alumni Magazine 15 Massey and Rachel Norman won posts on the invitations committee. The next two ranking appointments - chairmanship of the Memorial and breakfast committees-went to Betty J 0 Hanson and Ruth Imes, respectivt'ly. The remaining co-eds appointed were as follows: Margaret Smith and Vir­ gmla Austin, memorial committee; Kathryn Alexander, Betty Harris and Charlotte Jeanes, tree·planting commit­ tee ; Janet Hamersly, Martha Crum and Virgene Moore, peace-pipe committee; Catherine Cherry, Elizabeth Dawson, Mildred McBride, Ruth Heitz nnd Marian Combs, breakfast committee. • University In DeeelDber Christmas Spirit Pervades Campus Many underprivileged Bloomington HRISTMAS vacation starting on Dec. f1 youngsters greeted Christmas morning 21 curtailed activities on the cam· By Forrest Garderwine, '41 lJ Associate Editor, joyfully when they beheld the gifts and pus this past month, with the Yuletide Ill1lian" Daily Student clothing given them by campus groups. theme dominating most of the events Pleiades, upperclassmen's social hon­ held. Robert Sill, memorial committee; Hugh orary for women, gave their annual Two important selections senior Funk and William Keck, tree-planting Christmas party for two needy children, class officers and junior prom commit· committee; Richard Aikman and Ber­ showering them with gifts and togging tee-were far behind schedule, both nard Kaufman, peace-pipe committee. them out in new clothes. having been appointed before Christmas Members of the Association of Wom­ vacations in past years. However, the en Students, as in past years, dressed senior class office·winners were ready Margaret Lou May Is Senior Class Secretary dolls, and 400 little girls received them for announcement when school re·con­ as gifts. Chief competitor for the highest cooed vened on Jan. 6 and the prom commit­ Staff members of The Daily Student office won by Mary Susan Stull (1940 tee was expected to be selected not much chipped in to buy an ll·year·oJd boy Homecoming Queen) was Margaret Lou later. a complete outfit of clothes, and many May, who was selected for the post of social organizations also bought cloth­ secretary. Betty Anne Tillman, Betty Stoner, Stull Head ing for needy children. Joy Dickerson and Sophia Nicholas all Senior Class Officers were appointed to the Siwash commit· Dick Stoner and Mary Susan Stull tee, and Marv Jane Straub, Vera May Union-A..W.S. Give were selected president and vice presi­ Free Christmas Dance dent respectively of the class of 1941. New President 0.1 the Senior class is As a surprise present for all students, Selected under the present "merit sys­ Richard B. Stoner, who IS president, 0/ th e the Indiana Union-A.W.S. gave a free tem" Stoner and Miss Stull won their Union Board in addition to many olher cam­ dance in Alumni hall Dec. 13, with For­ offices by being active in the greatest pas activities. rest (B1ackie) Eherenman's campus band number of activities as evaluated by the providing the music. Eherenmans, only "merit system" rating chart. This meth­ having been formed recently, made its od of sel ecting senior class officers has first appearance on the campus at this been in effect since 1935, but campus dance. leaders believe that a new method will be developed for next year in view of Christmas Concert the limitation of activities plan recently Well Received adopted. The annual Christmas concert, which The other ranking senior men were: was presented for the first time in 1922 Val Nolan, Jr., chairman of Siwash and which has since then become a cam­ committee ; Marvin Miller, chairman of pus tradition, was presented Dec. 8, the invitations committee; Philip Coop­ with a mixed chorus of 225 voices and er and John Jay, Siwash committee; the University's Symphony orchestra. William Menke and John Kistler, invita­ As in past years, excerpts from Han­ tions committee; Daniel Chiddister, del's "The Messiah" were sung, ano treasurer of class; Jack Fairchild, chair· soloists were: Naomi Bosworth, '43, man of tree-planting committee; Bruce Elizabeth Haupt, '42, Lou Grimsley, '43, Decker, chairman of peace.pipe com· Warren Wooldridge, '43, and Bryant mittee ; Clay UleIJ, Robert Menke and Millikan, '41. 16 The January 1941 Fisk Singers Top Convo Program . The Fisk Jubilee singers, famed Negro organization from Fisk college, Nash­ ville, Tenn., were greeted by a j am­ packed Alumni hall when they appeared at convocati on Dec_ 1 L Other conv o(; ation programs during the last month delivered by faculty mem­ bers included Prof. Winifred Merrill, of the School of M usi(; , who presented a violin concert of Fritz Kreisler's musi(;; P rof. Harry C. Sauvain, of the S(;hool j of Business, who spoke on "Making the World Safer for th e Investor," and a { piano recital by George M_ Daggit, of Indiana's 1940 Dolphin Queen, j an.e Shabinger, '44 (center), who with her two attendants. the School of Music_ Marge Bu.ckmaster, '44 (lef!), and Irene Sanders, '44 (right) , ruled over Ih e Dolphin Club's Water Follies on Dec. 14. Proceeds of the aflair were lIsed to send I.U . .swimmers to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., for winter training al the annual water carnival Ih ere. 17 Seniors Initiated By Phi Beta Kappa ference of educators in 1920, and he Engel Exhibit Draws Seventeen seniors, new InItIates to delivered the commencement address in Favorable Comment Phi Beta Kappa, hea rd Professor W. 1925. Oil and watercolor paintings b y Pro­ Prescott Townsend give the president's fessor Harry Engel of the Department address at the organization's initiation Evelyn Eaton Speaks of Fine Arts drew praiseworthy com­ banquet on Dec. 16_ At 18th Matrix Table Illent from visitors who viewed the The new members of the scholastic Evelyn Eaton, author of the current exhibit in the Bookstore's mezzanine honorary and thei r major subjects are: best seller, " Quietly My Captain Waits," galleries, as the depicti on of rural and Val Nolan, Jr., and Mary Frances Her­ told some 400 faculty women, co-eds, industrial life m Southern Indiana CallJp, history; Marga ret Lou May, Mrs. and townswomen about her methods of quickened the interest in the exhibit. Ruth Linder Froberg and Martha Bas­ gathering material for historical novels sett, Latin; Frederick O. Mackel, anat­ when she spoke at the annual Matrix omy ; NIrs . Ruth Imes, French ; Mary "Vodvil Varieties" Table banquet Dec. 10. Susan Stull, Charlotte Anne Jeanes and Staged on Campus Sponsored by Theta Sigma Phi, WOIll­ Lloyd Evans, English; John D. Kooken, en's journalistic sorority, this year's ban­ Professional vaudeville troupers may psyc hology; Betty Anne Tillman, John quet was th e 18th in a series which has have given up the ghost years ago, but R. H yndman, Chester A. Stayton and brought such distinguished writers as campus talent proved th ere's life ill the Betty J 0 Dickerson, chemistry; Carl Doroth y Canfield Fisher, Marjorie Hillis old dog "vodvil" ye t at the "Vodvil Christopherson and Royal E. Purcell, and Dorothy Thompson to the campus. Varieties" whi ch was presented by the government. University Theatre Dec. 5-6. About the only thing missing was an animal act, Nobel Prize Winner Mary Susan Stllll, Indiana's 1940 Hom e­ coming Queen, added two new honors 1.0 her and as a dimax to the song and dance To Speak on Campus long lisl this month with the Senior class acts and comedy skits, was the per­ Dr. Arthur H. Compton, physicist, Vice Presidency and initiation 10 Phi Beta formance of "Darktown Doin's" headed Nobel prize winner and religious leader, Knppa. by Jim Clark and other Negro students. will be a guest on the campus the last of Eugene O'Neill's "Ah Wilderness" this month, speaking at convocation and will be the next production staged by al ~o a d inner that will be gi ven in his the I.v. Theatre, and it will be produced honor. in the new Music building Feb. 12-13_ His achi evements in physics include A cast of 27 students will have parts in discovery of change in wave lengths the productions, with some of the parts of X-rays when scattered, and as a and triple cast. religious leader he is co-chairman of the National Conference of Jews and Christi ans. I.U. Enrollment Largest in State Harvard Delln to Give Indiana leads in total campus enroll­ Powell Lectures ment in the State of Indiana and ranks Dr. Roscoe Pounds, dean-emeritus 12th among th e nation's largest sc hools, of the Harvard University Law fc hool, according to Dr. Raymond Walters, will deliver the annual Mahl on Powell president of the University of Cincin­ lectures on the campus next May. nati, in his annual survey of American Dr. Pound has appeared on the cam­ college and university enrollments in pus before, speaking at a centennial con· School and Society magazine. Indiana Alumni Magazine 17 Basketball Blitzkrieg

Hoosiers Set Torrid Pre-Conference Pace in Winning Seven Out of Eight and Averaging 47 Points a Game

Bd! Menke (38) scores with one-handed U.C.L.A., California push shot in Indiana's 39-36 victory over No Match for Hoosiers Buller. (Photo by Bob NIcConnell, '42.) U.C.L.A. and California were no G FG FT PI" TP W. Menke, c ...... 8 32 13 15 77 match for Indiana in the Hoosiers' sec­ HE basketball blitzkrieg is on. From Armstrong, [ . ... 8 21 10 14 5:1 ond and third games of the West Coast TWest Virginia to the Pacific Coast Zimmer, [-e·g...... 8 16 9 15 41 invasion. California's Bears made the basketball players stand with their Schaefer, fog ... 8 13 9 12 35 belter showing, losing only 42-39, but Francis, f .. 7 14 5 10 33 mouths open, marvelling at the 3peed it w;-ts the sluggishness of the LU. team Logan, [ . '" 8 15 2 11 32 of the Indiana offense. They know Dro. g ...... 8 12 7 14 31 more than the brilliance of the Cali­ for they have seen and most of them McCreary, 7 7 6 12 20 fornians that made the score so close. Denton, g ... 6 7 2 5 16 have been conquered. The Udan" never had a chance R. Menke, c 7 5 4 3 14­ Facing one of the toughest pre-Con­ Swanson; g ... 6 4 4 1 12 against Indiana, scoring only 8 points ference game schedules ever outlined for Gridley, g ...... " . 5 3 0 2 6 in the second half to corne out decidedly an Indiana team, Branch McCracken's Driver, f ...... 5 2 1 7 S 0 11 the weak side of a 51-26 score. Hustling Hoosiers won seven out of Molter, f . . ... 2 o 2 o :2 eight starts. Even in defeat the I.U. boys Torphy, g ...... 2 o 0 1 0 Hoffman, c 1 o 0 o 0 won the plaudils of the crowd. One You. Read About, Hasler, g . 1 o 0 o 0 But Seldom See Heine, [ 1 o 0 o 0 Kentucky Bows, 48-45, "A Press Agent's Dream" was the In Sugar Bowl Game Totals ...... 8 151 74 116 376 cornment of sportswriters before the Kentucky's Wildcats, champions of Stanford-Indiana game on Dec. 21 in the boys had been given a sobering the Southeastern Conference, put up a which Branch McCracken brought his dash of defeat in their pre-Conference plucky battle against Indiana in the team to San Francisco to play the team menu. Sugar Bowl game Dec. 30, but the coached by his former coach, Everett LU. all-around brilliance won out, Dean, wh om he succeeded as LU. coach. 48-45. goes high ill/o the air /0 snatch One New Odeans sportswriter called ([ in Indi'll/G's victory over Georgia. The drama of pupil meeting former Indiana the greatest of the 12 teams (Ph% by Bob NIcConnell, '42.) teacher was completely overshadowed that have played in the annual classic by the 60-59 overtime victory scored during its six-year history. by I ndiana over Stanford's great team. At the haH it was 22-21, Indiana. At U.S.C. Wins, 41-39; the conclusi on of the regulation playing Ends I.U. Win Streak time it was 54-54. In the overtime pe­ All good things must have an end­ riod, the Hoosiers managed to chalk ing, and so it was with Indiana's win­ up a one point margin. They don't ning streak of 29 straight non-Confer­ come any closer than that. ence victories when the travelling Hoosiers met up with Southern Cali­ National Champs Win fornia at Los Angeles, Dec. 27. Three Other Games Off to a slow start, Indiana staged a brilliant rall y, led by Herman Schae­ Indiana's National Collegiate cham­ fer, but the T rojans were "primed" for pionship team ripped through three this one and backed into a 41-39 vic­ other teams, making their most im­ tory by stalling at the end. pressive showing at home. Rather than being discouraged by this Georgia provided the opposition in blot on their record, Hoosier follow­ the opening game of the season but ers seemed pleased and relieved that went down gaspin g, 44-.31. Butler, play- 18 The January 1941 ing at home, caught the Hoosiers un­ laxed and almost paralyzed them, but Bill Menke and Andy Zimmer scored 21 points between them and Indiana won, 39-36. Marshall College came all the way from West Virginia to stage a br,illiant ball-handling exhibition in the Field­ house, but they found that it took scor­ ing and not fancy dribbling and fancier passing to win. The score was 53-22.

Just 12 Games A'way From Big Ten Title If Indiana can play its best basket­ ball for its next 12 games, you won't Ileed to look far for the Big Ten cham­ Willi. nine seniors and several experienced juniors available, jew I.U. ians expect.ed all)' pion. raw sophomores to break into [,he Hoo sier lineup, but these newcomers all have seen action During the past two seasons, Indiana in the pre-Conference games and jour oj them made [,he trip to [h e West Coast. Leit to right they are: Logan, Heine, Denton, Driver and SW(ln son. All bl£t H eine mode the Irip West. has romped through all non-Conference competition, but in league play they had their "off days" and lost three games captain of the 1940 eleven. each year as well as the title. Harold Van Orman, former Lieu­ But no matter what happens, the tenant-, was the whole Conference will know that Branch 44-Ceorgia ...... ,' " . '" 31 main speaker at the banquet. 39-at BUller 36 has a potent team in his "Fireball Five," 53- Marshall 22 as one sportswriter describes them. 60-at Sianford (overtime) 59 Campbell Kane Sets Indiana's chief threat, of course, will 42-at California """ 39 Sugar Bowl Record be Piggy Lambert's pesky Purdue 51-at U.C.L.A. 26 Although Indiana's other sports teams basketeers, who somehow manage to 39-al Southern California 41 will wait until February to swing into 4-8-Kenlllcky al Sligar Bowl ",, 4S figure in the championship picture every action, some of Indiana's star trackmen year. In Bl anken and Sprowl, th e Jan. 11- lIIi no i5 Champaign already are in action. Boilermakers have two of the Big Ten's 13-. ORTHWE"TEI1I" HERE Long-striding Campbell Kane added best players. But that's not all, no fewer 27-Michigan Ann Arb"r another record to his growing list when Feb. I-Purdue Lafayelle than 20 players having figured in Pur­ he won the half-mile at the Sugar Bowl 3--0HIO STATE HCKE due scoring during its warm-up games. lO-IolVA "".. .. ,...... ,. HERE in the time of 1 :53.4. Roy Cochran, That game at Bloomington on March IS--MINNE,OTA HER!-: also invited to the meet, placed a close 1 may decide the Conference title. 17-0hio Stale Columbus third in the 440-yard dash. 22- 10wa, ...... Iowa City 2 WISCONSIN . """. Huu: Football captain-elect Gene White, standing Wee Willie Smith , honorary loolball cal'­ i\'lar. l-PuKDUE ". HERE in front of the Old Oaken Bucket Ihal he lain lor 1940, alfaches Ih e " I" 10 the Old 3-Chicago "'''.... , Chicago helped bring back to Bloomington, tells I.U. Oaken. Buckel c/win with the assislance 0/ jons at [he annual sports banquel. Ihat the CO(fch Bo M cMillin. Leroy Sanders, president. Hoo siers e:> pect to keel' t.hot Bucket herc Judging on pre-Conference showings, 0/ Ihe "/" Men's Associalion , smiles his (11'­ next year. the other " tough babies" will be N orth­ I>TOval. western, }owa, Michigan, lllinois and Wisconsin. Ohio State, :iVI innesota and Chicago have had tough sledding in early games, but all of them have potent teams that may upset some champion­ ship hopes even if they don't have so much hope themselves.

Purdue Game Hero ' I To Lead '41 Eleven Gene White, the man who ki cked that field goal thnt 1icked Purdue, will be I nd ialla' s ] 04] football captain. The likable South Bend junior was chosen for the honor by his mates at the annual fall sports banquet sponsored by the Indiana Union, Dec. 9. Wee Willie Smith, Indiana's diminu­ tive guard, was elected as honorary Indiana Alumni Magazine 19 SIDELIGHTS From the Sidelines

Just A-Coastin' Football All-Stars Many rabid J.U. basketball fans fc ~ l Mike Bu cchianeri and Eddie Rucinski that the Hoosiers did too much coast­ provided the scoring thrills at the North­ ing on the West coast against Cali­ SOLlth football game in BinninghanL fornia and Southern California . . . Ala., on Dec. 27 . .. Big Mike kicked Branch McCracken had a tough time the two points after touchdowns that deciding just whom he would have to enabled the to 'win, 14-12 .. _ leave home on the Pacific trip ... He Eddie caught a 27-yard pass for the was supposed to take 10 or 11, but i:he North's first touchdown and snatched sophomores looked so good against anoth er one out of the air to go 56 Marshall that he couldn't leave four of ya rds to the one-foot line as the half them home, and so he took H squad of ended .. . Spanky Ga hm, Indiana's 13 . . . Jay McCreary got a tOll ch of most valuahle player in '40, saw little the flu in California . . . Previouslv action in th e East-West game in San he had been slowed down by a charley Francisco New Year's Day because of horse . . . Herman Schaefer the Ted Livin.gston, former I. U. star tackle, ac· a wrenched back . _ . Ted Livingston, counted lor Ih e first Pro All-Slar touchdown feature headlines twice on the Western Indiana's other all ·star performer this against the Chicago Bears in Los An.geles on trip ... He found o ut that the Navy Dec. 29 when he in.lercepled a pass / 0 lie frowned upon amateur photography thc score at 7-7 ill Ih e second qnarl er. Thc when a battleship was doing the posing. Bears staged a second hall splurge 10 Will, 28-14. Livingston, one 0/ the st andonl line­ and he wired Lana Turner, luscious men ill pro /ootball, has becn wilh the Cleve­ movie star, to meet him at the train lan.d Rams s,:nce he IC/I Indian.a in 1937. in Los Angeles ... Interest in the West coast games ran at a fev er pitch ill _ .. He hadn't scored for 39 minutes Bloomington and the Rendezvous reo against the New York Celties, but he broadcast a play-by-play account of.he poured two baskets through the hoop out-of-town games with Bob Cook and in the last minute to give the Indian­ Walt McElvain at the mike ... Many apolis Kautskys a 39-36 triumph ... Bloomington alumni went down to 3ee Ernie and Tom ewin probably will he th e Sugar Bowl events ... Five of the seeing regular ac tion for the Louisvilk Hustling Hoosiers got air-sick on 1:he Colonels in baseball this year .. . In­ plane flight from Los Angeles to diana's Big Ten championship wrestling Memphis, Tenn. team was nosed out of the Midwest wrestling title this year by Purdue .. _ Bill Moss, lormer higft school loolball coach The Boilermaker grapplers should make at Fort Warn e, BloomJield, Elkhart, M Oll/.cnce, Ill., and Bcnton Harbor, Mich., celebraled Clyde Smith, former line coach at I.U., also the Big Ten meet much tougher this his debut as a collcge fool bull coach by I.um­ lumed au/. an undefeated, unlied lootball year . .. The LU. swimmers spent the ing Oltt 01/. undeleated, nnlied leum. He leam Ihis year, his LaCrosse (Wise.) T eachers Christmas vacation in sunny leallt Irim,rning everything in sighl. coacher! at Shu rtlcll collegc in Illinois. getting ready for the tough competi­ year, kept the Pro All-Stars in 'ihe tion ahead . .. Competing in a league that has a sw i mming team every year game against the Chicago Bears by in­ like Michigan's is tough competition in tercepting a pass and running it bac\ any language .. . Bo McMillin gave ihe for a touchdown to tie the score at 7­ all in the second period ... Bob .Tones, president's address at the annual meet­ former I.U. football great, was drafted In g of the fo otball coaches associa­ tion in New York during the holidays out of his job as head football coach ... E. Hayes, Indiana's great track ilt Central High School in South Bend. C. roach, spoke on " Distc1nce Running" to He is to report to the Army in Janu­ ary ... Chris Dal Sasso, LU. captain th e track coacbes. in '36, has been Bob's assistant at Cen­ tral ... Frank Petrick, forme r Indiana "Indiana's Greatest" star end, coached football at Columbia A. H . (COttOIl) Berndt was selected City hi gh school this year. by th e INdianapolis News as the great­ est athlete ever to attend LU.... He Assorted Sports was selected by Chris Hankemeier. News Henry Becker, fortner baseball star, sportswriter, ~vho wrote a series of ar­ is now with the FBI . .. ticles about the greatest athletes to at­ still knows how to win basketball games tend each of the State schools. 20 The January 1941 Around The News World A IUlnlli Notes... With I.U. Alumni ...By Classes

1880 Compiled by ... 1896 CynUS E. DAVIS, AB, and Mrs. Davis, of .. . Hilda Henwood, '.12 Reminiscences from HAnny V. CnAlc, AB, Bloomfield, r ecenIly cele braled Iheir 54th of Los Angeles : "1 entered LU. in 1890 and we dding anniversary. They were married on my first contact with real intellectual Iile Oct. 7, 1886, ill the i'l'felhodist Church In came through Dr. WO OIJD UnN, Dr. BHYA N, Linton. Mr. Davis is the oldest me mber of and Dr. JORDA N, each of whose classes I at· Ihe G reene County Bar Assoc iation. te nded. Each year since, for 50 years, the recoll eClion and memory of these three m e n has occurred many times to me, thus showing 1882 the power of a personality on a n individual. 1 ha>e often in the Illany clays that have Funeral services lor Mrs. Edgal' M. Mich· elapsed since I graduated wished that I en er (LOll EMMA BAXTEn) were held ill mi ght see and meet these three men o nc" Co nnersv ille 011 Nov. 15. A teac her in Bloom· again, but strange to say, s uch favor has ington before her marriage, site had lived in never been granted to m e-these m en exist f a)' Connersville, where her late husband W 2S me only through me mories." principal of the high sc hool.

1887 1897 Relired two years ago after teaching for Another supponer : " 1 want my s ubscrip­ nearly half a century, WILLIAM L. HESTEn lion to b egin with the issue that has the died on Nov. 22 at hi s home in N ew Albany. six·page a rticl e about WtLLKIC," writes ANi',' H e began teaching in Lawrence CO llnty and B. COL LI i'S, AB, AiV] '09, of India napolis, had taught in New Albany for many years. former ins tructor in English a t the University. C. L,' UIlOj\' HooPEn, PhB, AM'88, retired WILLIAM F. BR1TTSO N, AB, still carries on Chicago school teacher, is plannillg to spe nd hi s business as inveslments brok er in Dallas, part of the win:er in Ann Arbor, Mich. Texas, with o ffices on i\'lain S ireel. ELMEn B. STEWART , AB, of Yellow Pine, Benjamin F. Long, AB'01, LLB'OI, Alumni O SC An O. WH !TEN ACK, A B, is the edi tor of Ala., r ecall s his hrst days in Bloomington: Dislrict Councilor ior While, Carroll and Cass the cosmopolitan section of the Denver Posl "As a rather bac kward product 01 the woods co unties, died Dec. 27 at his home in Logans­ Open Forum. of Rush County, J arrived in Bloomington !,ort a/leI' a 10llg illness. Mr. Long was a .Mrs. CLAnA MITCHELL Murphy, AB, is hav­ in 1883 on a iV[onday evcnin g and from 8 member of th e I.U. Board o.i Trust ees from. ing a long visit with h er sister in Portland, o'clock Tuesday morning unlil about 5 p.l1\. 191 .5 to J98.5 and served (( S wesirfenl ior the Ore. Mrs. Murphy re tired as social s tudies Thursday Dr. WOO DBURN was the leading Board a nUII/ber oj ,rears. teach er ill Ihe Bloomington high school las t lormentor in tests on 16 subjects, all I had year. tried to absorb in Illy you thful years of study. At any ral e I got through by the forbea r· ance o f Dr. Woodburn and Ihe next morning 1898 did my first hike down College Avenue 011 GEOn CE M. HOWE, AB, re tired teacher of LAWRENCE V. i\·[,\yS, LLB, tS an attorney in Ihe famous a crobatic brick, tha t tllrned over German, is living in H en dersonville, N ,C. Anderson. wil It every fro~I." Mr. Howe was an instruc t.or of German in O~" o L. REf!), AB, is associated with the Universily between 1893 a nd 1895 and YOllngstown College in Youngstown, Ohio. tallght German in Colorado College, Marietla 1888 College, and at H a rvard. l[AR KY E. CAIlF- , AB, Indianapolis physician ROUEt

1910 Phone 2131 RA LP H F. BLATCHLEY, AB, of Dllnedin, \V 00 D lV AR D Fla., sends in Ihe fo.ld e r announcing the memorial meeting held recently by the W_ S. Blatc hl ey Club o.f No.bl esville for ils " Patron Since 1894 Saint, WILLI S STA NLE Y BLATCHLEY ," AB'87, INS URAN CE AM'91, LLD hon'21, late na lionally known naturalist. Part of the memorial tribute was an e xhibitio.n o.f Ihe club collecti on o f Blalch ­ leyana, which alllong other mementos, in­ FlUE AUTO CASUALTY cluded his co.mplete bibliogra phy, co nsisling • • • of 250 published litles. E ARL BR OO KS, '06, Noblesville physician, was in charge of part G. B. Woodward '21, Jeff Reed '24, C. M. White '29 of the event. LAWRF.NCE HURST, AB, is associale pro­ Citizen's Trust Bldg. fessor o.f social sciences in Ball S tate T each­ ers Co.llege. 22 The January 1941 JOHN H. TRINKLE, AB, is principal o[ the hi s oldest daughter, HARRIET ANN, )s a memo New man Township Hi gh School, Newman, ber o( the cl ass of 1941 at LU. and is in III. Ih e School o[ Music. JAMES P. WRAY, A B, is an attorney at law 1911 in , Mich. WALTEH O. LEWIS , AB, LLB'14, is deput y attorney-general of Indiana. He and Mrs. 1917 Lewis (OLIVE BELDON, AB'14), have a new CHARLES J . CAUNT, widely kn own in aut o· address in Indianapolis, 3360 North Meridian motive circles in Indianapoli s, died recenll y Streel. at hi s home in that cily. Six 1.U. doctors were among the 11 GEORCE H. WEAR, A B, is in governmen t Hoosiers selected as new [ell ows of th<' service and works in Ih e Federal Bui Iding, America n College of Surgeons: EAHNEST Indianapoli s. He is married and has two IVA N BREN NER, AB, MD '13, Winchester: daughl ers. In Ih e yea r after hi s grad uation .. Tm:ODoR E ROOSEVE LT HAYE S, MD '33, Mun· he se rved in th e World War. cie; WESLE Y i'v[ERLE HOI'PEN RATH, BS'19, WILLIAM C. REED, BS, MD'20, RAY M. MD'20, Elwood; WILLIAM HARBY H OWARD, BORLAND, AB'24, MD'26, and DILLON D. BS'20, MD'22, Hammond ; SA M W. LITZE N' GE ICER, BS'29, MD'31, all Bloomington phy· BERCER, MD '27, Anderso n; and ALAN LEO sicians, have been appointed as lecturers in SPABK S, BS'2.3, MD'25, Indianapolis. anatomy fol' the I.U . School of Medicine on the campus. In an att empt to provide cli nical studies for the practical applications o( 1913 Specnlation as 10 what appointment Sher· anatomy in the fir st year o( medi cine, th e HASSAL T. SU LLIVA N, AB, until recently man M. ,ill/inton, LLB' I S, recenlly dejealed UniversilY will offer lectures by Dr. Bor· with th e News-Senlinel in Milwaukee, is now jor re·elee tion to th e U.S. Senate, lVou/d gel land on X·ray, by Dr. Geiger Oil th e nose and with the Chi cago H erald·American. in apprecialion 0/ his vigorous support 0/ Ih e Ihroa t, and by Dr. Reed on applied anatomy The assistant treasurer of the Union Trust present (,dminislralion: For mnny years his of th e body. Company in Indianapo li s is EVEHETT E. LETT , name has been menlioned as a candidale /01' AB. a high judicial I)osl. A Washinglon columnisl reports lhnl Shay is being considered as the THEODORE C. i"'lcKESSO N, AB, LLB, is 1918 While HOll se liaison man wilh Congress, and practicing in Phoen ix, Ari z., and is still in· L U. folk prepared a leaflet, " Life with the most recenl rumor is lhal he is being terested in Ih ings 1.U ., for he wonders Lali,,! " for di slriblltion on Ih e annual visit­ considered as governar oj Pnerlo Rico. whether th e " Associalion has publi shed a ing day of pareJllS at Ihe South Side High new catalogue o( alumni ." School, Fort Wayne. Three of the {our Latin leachers in th e school are Mrs. Roy Welty CRA CE JACKSON, AB, Cleveland teacher, (C HACE MELLE N, AB), EA RL E. STE IlNEH , wa s a witness of th e Willkie reception in 1916 her home cit y during the ca mpaign: "1\ LUCIAN G. HICKMAN, AB, AM '17, college grea t and most enthusiastic audi ence of visitor for D.C. Heath & Co., textboo k pub­ 21,000 greeted WENDELL WILLI-dE at the lishers, di ed on Dec. 8 of a coronary throm· Cleveland aud it orium. The parade on Euclid bosis at hi s home ill Tea neck, N.J. He had A Weleome for Avenue, upon arrival of hi s special train, been on the facull Y at I.U., Tex as Chri st ian broughl more than 150,000 people, miles of Universit y anu Beth any Coll ege. I.U. Alulnni licker-tape, and snowstorms of confelli-· " Have a daughter, EMILIE L. RICHARDS, ill one of Ihe greatest pol ilical demonst rali ons 1.U . this fall in yo ur beautiful Sycamore HaJJ. A,vaits You! t \'<'r seen in Cl eveland." LU. has made many changes since my lime and is still the 'pride of Indiana,''' reports AN SEL A. RICHARDS , AB, of Roa noke. 1914 MAHX C. ERcHAn T, AB, writes: "Always ROBF.RT E. CO NWAY , BS, MD'16, In­ glad 10 see th e Alum.ni Magazine. It always dianapoli s ea r, no se, and throal specialist refreshes my mind as 10 what is going on for 20 years and member o[ 51. Vincent's al the University, and I am always looking and City hospital staffs, di ed at his home for news of th ose in school during my time. on Nov. 30 of a heart attack. Burial was )n Am still practi cing medicine in Huntington." Good land, hi s birthplace. A sister and a HARLA N S. YEI'INE, AB , AM'18, officer in brot her survi \' e. the Cl eveland Trust Company, reports that PAUL WF.ATHERWAX, An , AM'lS, PhD'18, LU. professor of botany, is th e new head of th e Indiana Acauemy of Science for Ihe coming year. Other officers include several LU. alumni: WI NOi'l A WELCH, PhD'28, De­ While In. -Bloomington Pauw professor of botany, secretary; WILLIAM P . MORCAN, A]\,I '22, PhD'26, professor of Eat at biology, Indiana Central Coll ege, treasurer ; and PRE NTI CE D. EDWARDS, AM '23, PhD'29, at Ball State Teachers Coll ege, editor. JOHN FRANKLI N MOORE, AB, is teaching STONE'S CAFE in th e schools in North Manitou Island, Mi ch. On stationery headed: " Radio Station "Good Food Since 1924" GRAHAM IloTEL KITE, Firsl Nali onal Televi sioll, IlI c., Fidel· ity Building, Kansas City, Mo.:' comes a 327 Woodlawn Ave. P. C. Gilliatt, Prop. note from ROllERT S. PAYTON, AB, LLB'15, who left Ih e state of Indiana a number of BLOOMINGTON, IND. years ago. Indiana Alumni Magazine 23 AB '24, and F)1AN CrS FAY, A i'I'I '39; others in Fort Wayne who co ntributed to the lea £l et with tes timonials on th e vallie of Latin were : REX. M. POTTE)1F, AB, AiVf'26, chief li­ brarian; Mrs. Walter Thornton (JUANINA Yo li NG, AB'13), hou sewife; Mrs. LAURA BnAOLEY Moring, AB 'OO , A M'08, civic work­ er; and EnwARD G. McARDLE , BS'33, MO '.3.:;.

1919 ROBE)1T S. SnMPFJ::L, AB, is presid ent of a newly incorporated Celery-Vesce Sales Cor­ poration in Indianapolis, and HOMER H. COCH­ RAN, '23, is vice-president. Celery-Vesce, a propri etary for headache, has been on the market since 1893. The new Ia ctoTY site is on Daly Street. MAR GARET DAVE NPOl1T, GN, is now Mrs. Howard Elliott West meier and lives at 3725 North Oxford Street, Indianapolis. iVIrs. Frank V. Lamson (jV[ARY LOl':' DEPUTY, AB, AM), continues her work as landscape architect in . The career that started on the toss oj ft The first In(hana woman to head Ih e Amer­ coin has taken E. Eftrl Moore within a step Mrs. Roger A. Scott (HEL EN COBLENTZ , ican Legion Anxiliary is Mrs. Lonis J. Lem· 0/ the top. General superintendent 0/ the AB), is associated with a department store Slra (Enid Frist, '16),0.1 Clinton. The new no­ Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation works at In Dubuque, Iowa. lional president, unanimously elected , be­ Gary, he has been /iromoted to a vice·presi· came known through her leadership in auxil­ dency 0.1 the Steel and General Molors cor­ iary rehabilitation and legislative work in flOration s. As soon as his successor al Gary 1920 which she served at dij/erent times as chair­ is nam ed, he will begin his new work al DALE B. SPENCER, AB, publisher of the mall oj the national co mmillees. In 1936 she Pitlsburgh as direclor oj industrial relations. Gr eenfield Reporler, reports that he has a was president 0/ th e Indiana department and Mr. Moore has been all associate oj the I.U. son and a daughter in LU. at present, Ri ch· in 1937 she was elected national vice·presi­ School oj Business, olle 0.1 12 men who serve ard and Phyllis; th e third, Dorothy Dale, will dent oj the central division and also repre­ in. thai capacity 10 advise students and laculty enter the University next year. sented her State on the national execul1:ve members 0.1 the school, to help develop bnsi· "The rennion of th e regular ba sketball '5' committee. Fi ve years' teaching in the pub· lIess cUfficn/a, and to lecture on the campns. of 1919 and 1920 with th eir famili es at i\Ic- lie schools, secretarial work, membership on th e Vermilion Coullty board oj charities, or­ ganization 0.1 Red Cross chapters and Libert y Loan drives during th e World War, and worl,: in club and civic groups haue occupied her time since she left I. U.

Co rmick's Creek State Park this last July THE DRINK was tb e highlight of Ill)' summer," writes in URBA N B. JEF FlHF.S, AB, superintendent of schools at Charleston, Ill. " We plan th e next one for 1945-cutting the usual inter­ EVERYBODY KNOWS mission of 10 years down to fiv e." CLAUDE K. T URMAN, AB, is a special agent for the No rthwestern Mutllal Life Insilrance COJlJpan y in Juli et, Ill. Whoever you are ... 1921 EflMU ND CRITCHLOW , AB, recentl y acquired whatever you do ... wher­ the Union City Daily M essenger, a Kentucky newspaper that started as a weekly publi­ cation in 1926. Critchlow had been on tbe ever you may be ... when Elkhart Trnth for the past several years. RUTH STEPHE N" AB, AM '26, PhD'34, is you think of refreshment assistant professo r of history and political science, University of Tennessee, extension you welcome an ice-cold division. J. EOCAf\ SWAI N, AB , AM'22, teaches ill the social science ciepartment of MlIhl eJlb eq Coca-Cola. For Cola-Cola Coll ege, Allentown, Pa.

IS pure refreshment-familiar to everybody 1922 WtLLlAM H. TlHHlINJ., AB, film editor of ... and ice-cold Coca-Cola IS everywhere. the M·G·M studios, di ed recently at hi s home in Los Angele,,- Born in Kokolllo 41 F3r, ago, Mr. Terhnne had been in Hollywood sinrc 1924 when h., started hi s (' ar ~e r with Univer­ sal 5t "dins. 24 The January 1941 of the 72nd annual meeting of th e American Philological Association in Baltimore on Dec. 26-28. WILLIAM E. GWATJ(tN, Jr., AM, of the University of Missouri faculty, spoke 0 11 "The Father of Pompey the Great"; CLA UDE W. BARLOW, AM'30, of the Mount Holyoke faculty, had a paper on the " Rhelorical Ele­ ments in the Rhesus"; EDGAI{ H. STUI1TE­ VANT, AB'98, Yale University, discussed " 0­ Stem Adjectives from Declined Genitives"; and Aubrey Diller, assi~tant. professor of Greek at LU., gave a short talk on "The Oldest Manuscripts of the Ptolemaic Maps." 1924 DtCK HELLEn , AB. former secretary to Governor M. Clifford Townsend, will open a five·cen t-to·a·dollar variety store in Hills dale, Mich., on Jan. 11. NfL Heller moved his family to Hillsdale during the latter part of November. Returning to Bloomington recently to ad­ dress the League of Women Voters was Virgil M. (Skit) Simmons, '17, recently WtLLlAM E . TnEADW AY, AB, executive sec­ Kenneth M. [(""ket, A 8'21), ussistant co rn· resigned as commissioner 0/ the Indiana De· retary of the Commission on Interslate Co­ missioner oj the Indiana Department 0/ Can· paT/ment oj Co nservation to resume law prac­ o peration. In this position since 1938, he servation, also resigned his position as 0/ Jal/,. tice in the newly-organized law firm of Sim­ represent ed Indiana at the Public Health and 15 , but rumors have it th.al. he will be alJ' mons, Simmons, Hamihon and Eley at Bluff­ T echnicia ns conference in Chicago and ap· !Jointed tu fill the vacancy cal/.sed by his Ion. His resignation takes effect .Tan. 15. pea red before I he temporary national eco­ present chief, Simmons. nomic comnussIOn in Washington, D.C., Wanted: 12 reports. "We were ' 13' GN's last April to testify on the effect of eastern EARL KnSKER, LLB, became city attorney in 1922-whal are the other 12 doing?" fDA trade barrie rs in Indiana. Mr. Tread\Vav of Richmond on Jan. 1. At that time KATHARYN WALTZ, GN, asks. Writing ill received the LLB from George Washingto~ Keisker resigned hi s place as attorney for fro)]] Los Angeles, she reports her activities University and Ihe SJD from the University Wayne Township. with the hope that others will follow suit: of Michigan, practiced in Spencer for a ''I'm delighted to belong again to my Alumni number of years, and served as a member SAMUEL J. BONHAM. AM, is superinlendent Association. Still doing crippled children's of the Indiana House of Representatives from of schools in Niles, Ohio. work after these many years. At present am 1935 to 1938. Al so on the Commission with working for National Paralysis Foundation, Mr. Treadway are HUGH A. BARNHART, AB'15, following up on all the infantile paralysis of as secretary, and JACOB WEISS, Indianapolis 1939 and 1940. It is predicted a discovery Extension, as vice·chairman. will be made this year, after 50 years, we're T eachi ng : ARCHER W. FISHBACK, AB, hoping. Recently I attended the Fourth World AM'25, history, general science, Bedford CITY SECURITIES Congress for Crippled Children in London. junior hi gh school; ESTHER STALLMAN, AB, Expel-ienced the first 'blackout' on Aug. 10, AM'26, acting head, department of librarian­ the night before sailing." ship, State T eachers College, Albany, N.Y. CORPORATION " Hoosiers in Oregon-when the famili es of R UB IN HEROLD STIEHM, BS, iVID'26, as­ Professor O. R . CHAMBERS, AB, AM, and sociat e professor of clinical medicine 8t the mine reunited at Corvallis a few weeks ago University of Wisconsin, came to the campus -a highlight of our vacation in the Pacifi c in December 8S principal speaker for the northwest," writes THOMAS C. HEI STAND, AB, annual meeting of the Indiana Student Investmellt Securities of Bartlesville, Okla. Professor Chambers is Health Association. bead of the department of psychology in EDITH ELtZABETH CALHOUN, GN, does pub­ the Oregon State Agricultural Coll ege. lic hea lth nursing in Racine Wis., and works FRED W. TAVEN NER , BS, MD'24, is physi­ for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Com­ Represented By: cian and surgeon for the Owens Illinois pany. Glass Company in Gas City, Ind., and has J. Dwight Peterson, '19 practiced for 15 years. He and Mrs. T aven ner, the former Eunice Young, of Anderso n, hav ~ Richard C. Lockton, '30 t\vo girls, Theodosia and Mary Helen. COMPLIMENTS , E. W. Barrett, '26 1923 OF Noble L. Biddinger, '33 Clinical director at the Richmond S tat e Hospital, ERNEST F. JONES, BS, MD'25, ha:; C. W. Weathers, '17 been appointed acting medical superintend­ ent of the institution to succeed the late in· SPRIGGS M. F. Landgraf, '30 cumbent. Dr. Jones, who has been credited with notable success in applying the new Frank 1. Parmater, '38 "shock therapy" treatment to the ment.ally DAIRY PRODUCTS iii at the institution, formerly practi ced in Marion. 3rd at Madison ARTHUR M. FINNEY, AB, is associated with 417 Circle Tower t he Commonwealth Edison Company in Chi· ('ago. Bloominglon INDIANAPOLIS LU. '1"8 5 well represented on the prflgram Indiana Alumni M (tg(tzine 25 1925 MAX J. LORBER, BS, director of Camp ELLIS FLOWERS Nebagamon for boys on Lake Nebagamon in Wi sco nsin, is in SI. Louis to serve as presi­ FOR l.U. dent of th e SI. Loui s section of th e American Camping Associa t ion for th e next two years. "Can't supply Indiana with any further • F[owers quarterbacks," he says. "Reason: tw o girls compose our family .." • D ecorations Two members of the class were speakers • Clllsases for th e co nference on management of munic­ ipal public works held on the ca mpus in Novenlb er. RAL PH. HANNA. AB, LLB'27, pub­ li c co um;elor for the Public Service Com­ mi ssion of Indiana, made th e open in g ad­ 30+ E."Ist 5th B[oolllinston dress on th e legal relation of the sta te to municipal public works. WALTER HELMKE, LLB, city at torney of FOri Wayne, followed Mr. Hanna on th e program with a discussion of th e duties of a city att orney in co nn ec· ti on with municipal public work s. Mr. Helmke Bloomington was recently elected a trustee of the In­ stitnte of Municipal Law Offi cers, a national organizatjon. Dr. Hardy L. Shirley, A 8'22, has been di­ Bakillg Co. rector 0/ lhe Allegheny Foresl Experimenl Slation at Philadelphia, Pa., since 1939. A/leI' 1926 leaving I. U. Dr. Shirley laughl three years Maker.• of Two class memb ers co ntributed to a re­ al lhe Ull iversily 0/ Nev(ula, spenl. lhe nexi. cent issue of th e Indiana Magazine 0/ His­ Ihree years ill graduate tvork al Yale and HON-£-MADE and lory. Mrs. Walter E. Treanor (ALINE JEA N earning the PhD ill ]928, and Ihen a year TREANOR, AB) in collabora ti on with the late as ass/slanl in biochemistry al. the Boyce CARTER'S DUTCH MA lD Mrs. MargartL Story Jea n writes a paper on Thompson Inslilule for Planl Research ,7/ BREADS "The First Families of White Oak Springs, Yonkers, N. Y. Beginning in 1929 he spenl 1810-1817." White Oak Springs wa s th e mO$t len years in research work lor U.S. Foresl lIi.,;1 our Rell/il Shot, important $e Lll ement on the buffalo trace in Service al lhe Lake S I.ates Foresl Experimenl IndiaJla Territory from Clarksville to Vin· Slation at 51. Palll, Minn., be/ore being cennes and th e site of a fort. MlulREO promoted 10 his present job. STOLEIl, AS, A M'29, PhD'38, hi story teacher in Wil son Teachers Coll ege, Washington , D. in the Pub/icalions 0/ Modern Langl/.age As­ C, writes on "The Democra ti c El ement in socialion oj Am.erica. Dn. SMAL LEY, AB, AM­ the New Republican Party," a modified part '31, is instructor in English at LV. Mecca For Alumni of her doctoral di sserta ti on. SHEPHERD YO UNG , AM, head of the Je­ partment of commerce and manager of th e 1927 campus bookstore at Indiana State Teachers • College, di ed on Nov. 23. He had been a GEOnGE S. MOOHE, BS, MD'29, is prac­ member of the faCility for 22 years. You Will Like Our Good Food t icing in Anderson; FHANK E. GAUT, DDS, Teaching: CARL ZIMMER,'IAN, AB, AM'3Z, Excellent Service Lakewood, Ohio; and Mrs. Christian F. Andersen (EMMA G. JULIAN, GN) does n urs­ principal, Logansport; HERSCHEL HOUSTON, Moderate Prices ing in Munci e. elementary principal, Elkhart. Rosella Grace, the first girl in a family "Christm as Gifts and the Gift-Bringer" by of four boys, is the new daughter of NOBLE LESLIE D. JOHNSTON, AB, AiVl'31, of Earl­ THE BOOK NOOK H. KOONTZ, BS, and Mrs. Koontz (BLANCHE ham College, in the Dece mb er Clnssical FAYE KELLEY, AB'26). Mr. Koontz is man­ OUllook is an accollnt of Roman Clis tOIllS Just across from the Campus ager of the Coca Cola bOIiJillg plant in and a speculati on as to how tir e character Bloomington. Santa Claus developed. Captain GEOllGE W. McDANIEL, DDS, HAllOLD E. iVIOORE, AiVI, director of the dental officer attached to the Sixth U.S. University Bureau of Teacher Reco mmenda­ Infantry, has been called to Fort Knox, and tions, is the new president of th e National Mrs. McDaniel (MAllY LOUISE COllR, AB'2.3). Institutional Teacher Placement Association. "ith her eight-year-'old son has moved from Mr. Moore was vi ce- president of the Asso­ MO NROE COUNTY Bloomington to take llP residence ill Eliza­ ciation last year. H e came to the University beth, 14 miles from Fort Knox. Dr. McDan­ in 1936 from Terre Haute, where he was iel is with the regiment commanded by superintendent of Vigo Co unt y schools, to S1'ATE BANK Colonel Harry B. Crea, head of military take charge of teacher placements at th e science and ta cti cs at LV., 1923-28. The regi­ University. ment, one of the most famous in the regu­ "The Friel/dly Bank" lar Army, ha s a hi story going back through 1930 128 years. Teaching: LEONA J- KUH N, AB, English, Member Fort Wayne, Crown Point; BYfOn D B. Cox, 1929 ~1S, principal, Albany high school. Federal Deposit The December Classical Journal in its MARY C. STEEN, BS, was married on Nov. InsUl'ance Corporation s('cti on "Classical Articles in Other Pllblica­ 23 to Frederick C. Reister, associated with lio ns" ca rrjes a resume of DONALD A. the Reister Insurance and Realt y Company S;\,IALLE Y'S " A Parleying with Aristophanes" in New York City. Mrs_ Reister is dietitian 26 The January 1941 In a New York Hospital. The couple live Charles and Hobert. will be the plant manager and will also c<'n· In Springfield Gm'dens, Long Island. In response 10 the recent News·Leller aboul linue in charge of the li'-luid plastics labo­ the Magazine, HAROLD C. ASHEB, DDS, wrole ratories. Formerly employed by Servel, Inc., 1931 in from l'vIontclair, N.J.; "Your leller was and the Tennessee Enamel iVlanufacturiug most interesling. Of course I'm 'carryin' my Company, he has been engaged by Ferro in A recent bride of Ihe class IS RUBY B. bricks,' and boast of my Alma Maler and research work for new products. He is co­ ?"IILLEH, AB, who had been employed in Ihe promote it on every possible occasion. This aUlhor of Ihe article on "Errors in ReAectanct' Ireasurer's deparlmenl of Ihe L.incoln Nalional year we have an even greater opportunily to iVleasurements of Porcelain Enamel Surfaces" Life Insurance Company of Fort ,'layne. look wilh pride upon the results of our in a recent Ferro Technical Bulletin. At Now Mrs. Lee P. Hnlchison, she lives in school, because of the MAN who oJIered his present he is working on a PhD degree at Charleslon, S.c., where her husband is services to the nation. I'm looking fonl·ard Ihe Case School of Applied Science in Cleve­ assislant professor of malhemalics at The land. Ciladel, military college. 10 the klagazille again this year and hoping I can find lime to gel ont there to see some iVIAIlJORIE HouK, AB, MS'33, is Ihe director ROBEHT B. J-.\ABTZOC, Goshen atlorney, reo of these struclures I've been seeing pictures of Ihe Wesley Foundation al Iowa Siale cenlly married Miss Wilbnrla Lowman, of of and reading about. Things mnst look dif· Teachers College, Cedar Falls. Winona Lake. ferent." 1\·1O's; CHARLES A. FIEL, Jr., BS, MD'36, EDWABD WILLIAM GBOGC, AB, is a chemist ROBERT K. HOADLEY, who took his first at the Cit)' Hospital and Dispensary, Bayonne, in Hammond. degree from ,Vashinglon and Lee UniversilY N.J.; MODESTO R. PARACAS, BS, MD'34, at and Ihe AM from Columbia, is leaching Eng· Creslon, Iowa. 1932 lish in Ihe high school in Tenafly, N.J. Teaching; ABLENE E. VANAUKEN, BPSM, PEBLE ?VIAHIE PAHVIS, BS, of Hammond, "Vedoc," a new liquid plastic finish for music, Elkharl; DWIGHT PBATHEfi, AB, sci· sends in informalion aboul two classmates; use on refrigerators, washing machines, and ence, Bedford high school; EDNA B. HAI.L, CIHBLES l-l. PBOllDFIT, BS, NID'.34, has a other sheet metal products, is Ihe discovtTY BS, MS'38, elementary, New Castle. Ihree·year residency fellowship al Mayo; he of LOBAN S. O'BANNON, AB, chemist with Ihe RUDOLF B. MYEHS, AB, MD'38, has a was praclicing in Mishawaka until he left Ferro Enamel Corporation of Cleveland. T)w residency in the Illinois Eye and Ear In­ for Roclwster last winter; he and .Mrs. prodnct will soon be manufaci nred in a new firmary, Chicago. Mrs. Myers (MABY ELIZA· Proudfil (EVELYN KOJ.-fN, BS) have Iwo boys, plant adjacent to Ihe Ferro building. O'Bannon BETH REID, AB'36) has a position as a buy­ er for Carson Pirie Scott and Company. While she was in Los Angeles, where Dr. Myers served an internship in the General Two Alumni Active With CBS Hospital, she held a post in one of the big depa((ment slores. ment, Shattuck dashed oul 10 get a pair of JOHN M. BIJRGlN, BS, who had been prac­ fllll·lengih socks. Because it was Sunday and ticing medicine until recently in Advance, shops were closed, Shalluck raced home for died on Nov. 17 in Bedford. The widow, Ihe a pair of his own. Lauglllon liked Ihe Shal· former ELSIE LOUISE FOSTEB, GN'.31, and tuck socks so weI) that he kepi them, send· two children survIve. ing Shalluck a much more expensive pair. Shattuck, sli"11 unmarried, went to Columbia five years ago from Moody's Investors Servo 1933 ice. He is now representative on the Fred From WALFRED A. NELSON, BS, MD'35; Allen and Major Bowes "Amateur Hour" pro· "1 met a great LU. personality here last grams. July 25. He inoculaled our Salt Lake City thoroughfares wilh a brealh of characler, competence, and color direct from our LU. campus culture. His name!! WENDELl. WJLLKIE." MOBRIS E. STEBN, BS, MD'35, is now as· sociated with the Veterans Administration as medical officer at Ihe Administration Fa· cilily in San Fernando, Calif. Mrs. Stern was JANE VANDEMENT, GN'34. PAUL R. WOODY, BS. is out in TrentoIl, N.J., as salesman for the Siokely Canning Company. A trouble·shuoter for Ihe Columbia Broad­ EVEfiETT EARNEST MANES, AB, is pastor easling System is JAMES SHATTllCK, BS'31, of the Federated Church in EI Paso, Ill. He whose job it i~ as a progralll service execntive has taken degrees in his work from the 10 make slife that commercial programs run University of Chicago and Ihe Chicago Theo· off sllloothly and on schedule. And Ibereby logical SeminaTY, and for the past folll' years hangs a tale, says Ihe CBS office; was pastor at Ihe Congregational Church Shalluck, who never expects to iii I Ihe in Walworlh, Wis. shoes of Charles Laughton, can always boast Professional locations; GUY EVERETT Ross, Ihat Laughlon has been in his socks. On one Mrs. Burton B. Helm (MABY ELLEN TODD, MD, Anderson; LESTEH A. KALEB, DDS, De· of Ihe Sunday programs Laughlon was to read AB'34), has an important administrative posi· troit, Mich.; MABY ISABELLE KING, GN, frolll "Of Time and Ihe River" by Thomas tion as assistant in CBS's "The School of AB'38, Los Angeles, Calif. Wolfe. In a rehearsal shortly before Ihe pro­ Ihe Air of the Americas," a continuous daily A son was born on Nov. 25 in the Coleman gram, Laughton settled in an armchair, series of programs for classroom use. Part Hospital, Indianapolis to Mrs. Thomas E. dangled his legs over one of Ihe arms, and of her task is to familiarize leachers, in the Pallon (ALICE FBANCES RODARMEL, GN). slarled reading. Elsa Lanchester, Laughton's 220,000 classrooms that llse the programs, Caplain Pallon is allached to the medical \vife, Slopped him. In that position, Laughlon, with Ihe best means for using Ihem. Afler corps of the U. S. Army at Carlisle, Pa. in ankle socks, was exposing 10 inches of calf. leaving Bloomington, Miss Todd, as she is' lvIi,s Lanchester insisted Ihat her husband knowlJ at CBS, went 10 Radcliffe for an AM. could nol sil thai way in fronl of an audience, then traveled and studied abroad for Iwo 1934 and Laughton insisted that he could not read and a half years, worked in Widener Library THOMAS H. ETZLEfi, AM, is studying and in any olher position. To seille Ihe argu· al Harvard, and joined CBS lasl June. teaching at Ohio State University this year. Indiana Alumni Magazine 27 A son, Anthony James, "weight 91 pounds, cothe, Ohio; ROBERT LYLE MOORE, AB, sales· when not soaking wet," was born to J\Jr. and man for the Remington·Rand, , Mrs. P. H. Reitinger of Chicago. The mother La.; MARGARET BARRICKLOW, GN, nurse in a is the former YETIVE BnowNE, AB. private hospital, Monterey, Calif.; CLIFFORD SIDNEY GELB, deputy prosecutor of Knox E. RENAKER, BS, with the Ben Franklin County, and Miss J\'lary Ethel Conger, Vin· Store, Eaton, Ohio. cennes University, were married last month. FIELDING Wn.LlAMS, BS, MD'39, is physi. RUTH TURLEY, AB, and Frank Conins, cian and surgeon in Huntingburg; KARL G. both of Chicago, were married on Nov. 11 at HELM, BS, MD'38, is in Shoals; and RUBERT the bride's home in English. Mrs. Collins WEEKS, DDS, is at Fort Knox, Ky. is on the editorial staff of both the maga· DOROTHY CLEVELAND, BS, and GEORGE M. zines, National Schools and Hospit(ds, and HOPKINS, AB, both of Kokomo, were mar· Nlr. Collins works in a bank. ried this fall. She works for the Rowland Teaching: EOITH VJI1GINIA f-](TNTm, AB, Title Abstract Company, and he teaches so· English, Beech Grove; HARVEY V. RAQUET, cial studies in Central School. MS, science, Washington High School, In· VERA MELBA PFEIFFER, AB, and RUSSELL dianapolis. G. MASON, BS, another recent bride and groom, live in Memphis, Tenn., where he is 1935 employed with the Globe Union Company, RICHARD VOLlVA, BS, MS'38, who this Inc. Mrs. Mason, a graduate dietitian of fall started his fifth year as line coach at the City Hospital, Cincinnati, had been the New Jersey State Teachers College, Up· working at the City Hospital, Indianapolis. per Montclair, sends in notes on other former Announcements of these marriages have football players: JOSEPH ZELLER, BS'32, JVIrs. Glen R. Hnjjord (Juanita Hinman, just come in: MAllY JANE SCHMUCK, GN, 1'I'IS'34, is line coach and player with the A B' 31), has resigned her position as assistant nurse in Fayette County Memorial Hospital, Newark Bears, professional team; JAMES A. state supervisor oj the WPA Museum ProjeCi to Theron S. Cully, assistant road super· ELLENWOOD, '40, is playing for the Paterson oj Indiana to accept a new position as ofjice intendent of Fayette County, at home, 322 Panthers, also professional. manager and research director oj the Melmoy Western Avenue, Connersville; VERA MAE "Am now acting chairman of the depart· Picture Service in ] ndianapolis. The service BRAUN, AB, to Harold Griffey, at home, ment of music in the Laboratory School, In· is the exclusive dealer jor certain projection 1903 West 12th Street, Anderson; JUNE diana State Teachers College, Terre Haute," equipment and classroom jilms. ill] rs. H ul­ BREEN to Francis H. May, Jr., Notre Dame reports DENETA SANKEY, BPSM. jord lives with her husband at 400} South aud Harvard, at home, Streator, Ill.; JOSEPH Clay Street, Frank/ort, where he is accountant L. SKOZEN, LLB, and Miss Genevieve Tebik, HARRIETTE PERKINS and WALTER L. COHI', and cashier oj the Farmers National Bank. both of Hammond, at home, 4119 Sheffield BS, MD'.37, were married on Nov. 15 and She was married last September. Avenue. are living in Philadelphia, where he is resi· dent physician in pediatrics in Temple Uni· HARRIET BACHMAN, AB, is a student in the University of Chicago and lives in the versity Hospital. Word of the sudden death of FRED JOHN' International House. Announcement has been made of the mar· SON, BS, of Chicago was telegraphed by J. riage of FllANCES HUBER, AB, to Frederick Frank Lindsay. Johnson was an "J" man in ROLAND OBENCHAIN, AB, who took his Hassel Steen, chief clerk, in the Bessemer, football and had been working for the John. law degree from the U ni versity of Michigan, Lake Erie, and Pittsburgh Railroad offices son Hardwood Floor Company of Chicago. has become associated with the firm of Jones, Obenchain, and Butler in SOllth Bend. in Greenville, Pa. Since leaving the Univer· The date has not yet been set for the sity she had been employed as dietitian at wedding announced for ROBEIlT C. KECK, AB, CHAllLES EOWARD SMITH, BS, lives with the Buehl Hospital in Sharon, Pa., and the and Miss Ruth Edwards, River Forest, Ill. his bride, the former Miss Jean Elaine Lutheran Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. Keck practices la w in Chicago. Swedenborg, of Ashtabula, Ohio, in Chicago at 57.37 Kenmore. He is with the Burrough,; JOHN :M. TAYLOR was found dead on Recent marriages: WALTER DEHAVEN, BS, Adding Machine. Mrs. Smith has been en· Nov. 15 in a tourists' camp near Dallas, Texas. assistant treasurer of the General Electric gaged in modeling and selling in Mandel's One of 10 accepted from 100 applicants for Federal Credit Union, Fort Wayne, and Miss store. training in the Canadian Royal Air Force, Elizabeth Dorothy Noll, also of Fort Wayne; be was on his way from his home in In· CHLORAL COONS, AB, employee of the Women in the news these days include dianapolis to enroll at Dallas. Previously en· Bartholomew County welfare office in Co· LILLA A. FELL, GN, who last month began rolled at various schools for flying, he was lumbus, and Miss Marilouise Harman, Han· her new duties as nurse in the U.S. Navy seriously injured in an accident last April over College; ETHEL GUNYON and Glen E. base hospital in San Diego, Calif. She had at. San Diego ang had been at home since Harrell, at home, 812 West 10th, Marion. been assistant head nurse in the Riley Hos· then. His death was attributed to a hlood pital, Indianapolis, for the past. two years clot. from the heart. and before that was in the Children's Me· 1937 morial Hospital at Chicago. She will be in 1936 "First child, a boy, born on Sept. 3," is the Navy hospital for at least three years. the latest word from J. WRENCE SIMS, MD, "One year 'Before the Mast' with a hypo L\ Indianapolis. 1938 in one hand and looking forward to another JOHN M. KIMMICH, BS, MD, lS now prac· and final year of safe voyages between San JOSEPH C. HANNON, DDS, has moved his ticing medicine in Kokomo. He has three Francisco, Honolulu, Guam, and Manila with office from Oak Park, Ill., to Fairmount, Ill., sons, the oldest Robert, 19 years old, a an occasional side trip through the canal to and DONALD M YEIlS, DDS, has closed his freshman in the LU. School of Medicine. Brooklyn" is the status of J ,\ MES BERNARD office in Champaign, Ill., to join the dental The others, aged 13 and 11, are in grammar SEAMAN, MD, captain in the medical corps corps of the U.S. Army, and is now at school. of the U.S. Army and transport surgeon on SCOLL Field in Jll inois. the U.S.S. "Grant." Writing from Fort TYRUS I-I. KIHK, BS, Arcanum, Ohio: VIRGINIA CURRY, AB, GN, is in Fort Wayne Mason, Calif., he said, "Would like to say "Still teaching school and active in Scout· as teacher of sciences in the School of Nurs· hello to all my friends and enemies." ing; took the local troop (I'm Scoutmaster) ing of the Lutheran Hospital. MABGAllET ROSE McLAUGHLIN, now Mrs. on a 750·mile touring camp through south· ROIlERT BOYD, BS, is in flying school at Joseph E. Mannon, is at home in the South ern Ohio in August." Maxwell Field, Montgomery, Ala., and Linwood Apartments, Indianapolis, where Occupations and locations: LOUISE WORTH' GEOIlGE CHANDLER, BS, admitted to the her husband, a graduate of Ohio Northern INGTON, AB, advertising and selling, Logans· Naval Reserve air corps, has begun train· University, is city salesman for the Lilly port; ROBERT DANIEL JA~1ES MURPHY, AB, ing at Glenview, Ill. Company. salesman lor the Armour Company, Chilli· HERBERT EI.LER has just completed a tour 28 The January 1941 to Cuba, Panama, and olher points In the Crossing, at 1911 North Alabama. Atlanlic on a Navy crui se. At home in Bloom­ Practicing: PA UL FRED GREEN, DDS, in ington al present, he will in June return to East Chi cago; EMANUEL JACOB GIlEEN, DDS, New York to complele hi s course in naval in Elkhart; JAMES GAYLOIlD SHANKLI N, MD, Iraining and will receive a reserve com­ associated with Dr. Neal Davis in Lowell; nlission as ensign. WE SLEY C. WARD, MD, at 116 East 4O:h, Teaching: JOH t" MCSHERRY, MS, principal, Indianapoli s. Knox; KENNETH WOODROW GUNNING, BS, LLOYD O. SCHAFER, BS, is credit manager basketball coach, Silver City, N.M.; MARGARET with th e Commercial Credit Company in In­ i'l'lILLER, BS, English, bi ology, physical edllca­ dianapoli s; Roy H. THOMPSON, Jr., AB, chem· lion, Gas City high school. ist with the Du Pont Company in East Chi­ Marriages reported: RA CHEL SHULL to cago; and ALfRED W. OLSON, AB, metal­ Charles Roy McCormick, DePauw and Har­ lurgist, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, vard, at home, Muncie ; ELINOR SIEIJER, AB, Chicago. 10 LEE BOUIlLA ND STORMS, BS'36, A 1'v1'37 , J OH N R. WALTER, AB, is now a salesman PhD'39, chemist in the research and technical for th e MacMillan Company and operates departmenl, Red Spot Paint and Varnish Ollt of the Chicago office of the publishing Co mpany, Evansville, at home, Washington firm. Apartments; WILLIAM J . SPAIN, Jr., and CHARLES KELSEY , BS, formerly with Fire­ MARGARET ELOISE TAYLOR , '40, at home in stone, now is employed in the office of the Frankfort, ~vhere he is assistant manager of Studebaker Company in South Bend. Ih e Franklin Security Company. CLARICE BELL, BS, in connection wilh her L duti es as Latin teacher in Ihe Winslow high Margaret lane Newton, 118'40, was married 1940 school, sponsors a Latin newspaper, The to Robert Lou.is Stevenson, A 8'40, LL8'40, on Panorma, containing not only news but cross­ One of 10 college graduates selected from Dec. 29 at Indianapolis. Stevenson, an "f' the United States for merit in their college word puzzles in Latin, Latin jokes, and man in iootball, reeently lVa s elected prosecu.t­ olher Latin features. work and for rank in the civil service ing attorney 0/ GreeTle Connty. The S/eveTl­ examination, ANN MCCOLLEY , AB, has an Marriages reported to the Alumni Office: sons will Iive in Linton. appointment in the Walter Reed Hospital , RAY FIRE STF. IN , BS, medical student in In­ Washington, D.C., fOf a one-year training dianapolis, and Miss Eleanor Rodin, Purdue, co urse in physiotherapy . As a student at home, 1624 Pennsylvania; MARJORIE VOOR­ ROBERT C. MOORE, BS, formerly with the physiotherapy aide, she st udi es at the hos­ HEES, BPSM, 10 Elmer McCall , senior in Firestone Tire and Rubber Co mpany in Ak­ pital and is on duty in th e clinic. During the Fresno State College, at home, 839 Home ron, Ohio, is now an accountant with the sLImmer she was empl oyed in the Lilly plant Avcnue, Fresno, Calif; HELEN JANE SM ITH, Conco Company in Mendota, Ill. in Indianapolis. GN, to Charles Melvin Allen, with the Allison Mrs. Donal d E. Mayo befor e her recent Word comes that ALVEllTA SOHL, BS, who Engineering Company in Indianapolis, at hom e, marriage was KATHLEEN EDWARDS, teacher in had been employed in Midland, Mich., has 612 East 20th; JAMES R. NEWKIRK, BS, and the Kokomo schools. Mr. .Mayo, Purdue, is Mi ss Clara Rasmussen, University of Illinoi s. a research chemist in Gary, where th ey liv p, been ill and is back at her home in Ham­ mond. IRWIN HOSTETTER, BS, senior "med ic," at 427 Garfield Avenue. New members of th e bar : THOMA S J. married AUDREY GIBSON, '41, on Dec. 2.3. iVIAnILOU THOMAS, BS, and LEWIS D. RADIGAN, LLB, admitted before the Indiana DOROTH A ApPLEGATE, BS, was married 011 i\'/A SON, '37, since their marriage, are at home cOllrt and now taking a graduale Nov. 17 10 Hugh W. Frey and is living in at the Villa ApaTtments, Cleveland Road, course in law in Ca mbridge, Mass.; WILLIAM Ca rm el. SO llth Bend, where she is secretary in the B. DOUGLA SS, LLB, admiued before th e In­ BET TY KI NG, secretary 10 ComplrolJer Siudebaker Corporation, and he is with the Nalional Storage Wal'ehouse Company. diana comt and t he Federal di strict cO Llrt Ward G. Biddle when he was manager of and now associaled with hi s father in Fort the University Bookslore and laler assistant JAMES A. HUSTON , AB, AM'40, is a slll­ Wayne; BEH NA RD NIEZER, LLB, with the to him when h e became secretary to th e dent in New York University. He is studying law firm of Niezer and Ni ezer in Fort Wayne. Board of Trustees, was married on Nov. 30 history and government on a feJlow ship. to James Burham, a nalive of but Teaching: MARY M. ADAMS, BS, boo k­ Births: Charles Robert to GeoRCE L. L w~ ­ keeping, physical education, John Adams now an oil lease broker in Indianapolis, EN WF.BER , BS, and Mrs. Leinenweber (VIR­ wh ere th ey liv e at 245 West Maple Road . School, South Bend; VICTOR PAUL HO EHNE, GINtA FELTUS, AB'34) , of Bloomington; Wil · BS, physical education, social stlldies, AUfora; Mrs. Burham had been working in Indianap­ \j am Sherrill Johnson, Jr., to WILLIAM S. olis for the past year. MiltUAN MIDDLETON, AB, library science, But­ JOHN SO N, BS, and Mrs. Johnson, of Angola. ler Co unty, Ohio; WILLIAM EHERENMANN, ELiSAIJETH MANN , BS, who taught school AB , social studies, Bourbon; JACK WILLI AM 1939 last year in Neoga, Ill., is in school thi s year BROGAN, BS, physical education, J eff erso n­ From East Chicago, LEO A. MILLER, BS, for graduate work and is serving as nigh t ville; FREIDA SPARKS, BS, commercial sLlb· writes in : "I didn't realize how much I mi ss chaperon at Beech Hall, woman's dormitory . jects, Bloomfield ; CHARLES SUKMA NN, BPSM, the place until I came back. Can I do any­ The wedding of HELE N EMILY SHERMAN , supervi so r of vocal and instrumental mu sic. thing up here 10 help?" BS, to J erome Loui s; Krumpelman, also of Oak Grove, La.; WENDELL WAMPLER, BS, MARY E. ALDRED, AB, reports: "As neady Loui svi ll e, took place last monlh. elementary, Muncie. as I can figure, I'm about the last memo NO RMA RAHE wa s married to HE NIlY J . J OANN LVIJ IlOO K, AB, and CHARLES CHITTICK, ber of th e class to remain single. I'll be at DECKER, Jr., BS'37, on Nov. 21. They liv e '39, recently married, are at home in Frank· Greene T ow nship High School, South Bend, in Indianapol is. fort , where he is manager of Hari, Inc. They to teach Engli sh in the seventh, eighth, ninth, JOHN H. F RAZIER , BS, has a bride, th e liv e at 306 South Jackson. CASSIE BAMMER , tenth, and tw elfth grades. Parents [MEREDITH form er Mi ss Ev elyn Fleming, of Kokomo, is GN, recent bride of James J. Nettles, is at C. ALDRED and BLANCHE SUMMERS Aldred], empl oyed at the Commercial Credit Com­ home at 618 Wesl Emerson, Princeton, where both AB'12, are grooming two more Aldreds, pany in ] ndianapolis, and lives at 112 bel' husband is employed by the Southern Bea and Pat, for LU. Sister ROIJERTA, AB'35 North Alabama; anothcT groom is CLAKENCE Rai lway. MARJORIE SLAIlAUGH, BS, is the (AM Columbia '39), is with the Bureau of A. POST, with Dun and Bradstreet in Chi­ bride of Ralph W. Thornburg, Jr., graduate Research and Measurements of the Fort cago, wbo married RHESSA ROUTH, '37, of of the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy and Wayne Public Schools." near Greentow n ; NOLAN O. DAWSON, in the employee of a Walgreen store. MARY LUCILE WILSON, AB, alld MARY office of George Hitz and Company in In­ Tn offi ces: ALDr:;N JOSEPH MOORE, BS, FRA NCES MAROl'EY , '40, allended the Univer­ dianapoli s, is at home with hi s bride, the Allison Manufacturing Company, Indianap­ sity of Texas last summer. form er Miss Dori s Jean Rund, of Stones oli s; EDW ARD H. HELFRICH, Jr., BS, servi ce Indiana Alumni Magazine 29 cost de partment, S unbeam Electric Ma nu · facturing Company, Evansville ; ALICE STllEY , AB, R egi strar's Office, I.U. Unalaska, Alaska , hi s claimed one of the sons of the School of Business. JA MES PICK· ERING, BS, sa il ed recently from , Wash., for Unalaska, Al eutian Islands, where he has a positi on as assistant manager of one 0f th e stores o f th e Northern Commercial Com· pany, that operates tradi ng centers and stores in Alaska. ROBERT lVIARTZ, BS, has answered the call to colors. Before he went to Fort Benning, Ga., as second li eutenant in the infantry reserve, he was with the American S ecurity Company in Marion. HENRY W. BECKEH , AB , LLB, who passed the stat e ba r examinat ion recently, has a post in the Indianapolis office of th e F ed· THE PLACE eral Burea u o f Investigation. KATHERINE MORRISON, BS, who had been teaching in R ensselaer, died on Nov. 30 in In Bloomington the Indianapolis Methodist Hospital. Is the Brides and grooms of the hour: J EANNETTE A holiday season bride and groom were DI CE, AB, and RonERT BATTON, J L, '41, state l eannelle Prinz, AB'40, junior prom queen junior bank exa miner; ROB r::llT H. PENN , in 1938, and William Krajt, BS, with the AI· BS, and BETTY J EAN KHE UTZI NCER, '41. liso n Engineering Cnmpany in IndianalJolis. Th e wedding look "lace on Dec. 22. Mrs. RENDEZVOUS Krafl has been teaching ill. Central Nornwl Hoosier Authors North Side Square College. (Continl/ ed from page 2)

urban, transportation, agricultural, a nd ag­ Examining • • • ricultural activities reach a clinlax. Much of (Co I11i:w ed i rom page II) Ih e tributary arid district has on ly sli ght singing the atona l music o f Dalla Pit: · Where Yon Get: effect upon the city because of its scant popu­ c ola; during the German Opera Com· • Sizzling Steaks ______lati on and limited resources. The functional units within Salt Lake City pany's tour of the United States she The Way You Like Them! rell ect th e types of services which it renders sang the leading role in D eems Tay­ to th e surrou nding region. Deliberate eariy lor's opera, The King's Henchman. • Delicious Dinners planning fi xed the street and block patlern Miss Hyde's repertoire includes the Fit for a King! of th e city and geographic features largely determined it s site and directi on of growth. roles of Elsa, Elizabeth, Sieglinde, Aida, • Tasty Salads ______The contributions of the Mormon Church to T osca, Butterfly, Mimi, Musetta, Mar· That Melt in Your Mouth! the development of the urban and r egional guerite, Mic aela, C a rmen, a nd Aelfrida, patterns of occupance are clearly demon­ besides German lieder, french and strated. • Anything to Eat Italian songs, o ratorios, and operettas. Salt Lake City is th e ou tstanding urba n At Reasonable Rates! agglomeration between Denver a nd th e Pacific The instruc tors include Mrs. Ruby Coast and its strategic int er-regional position Lane Mosemille r , Ins tructo r in Music, gives it great national significance. An espe­ who has the BlVI deg ree from Indiana Pins: cially satisfactory account of th e Ill ovements University; M ontana L. Grinstead, In· of goods and people within and through the • Entertainment region reflects both th e local and inter-region­ structor in Piano, who holds three In­ That Makes a Hit! al bases for the large growth of the cit y. diana degrees- AB, AM, and BM; The book is an important con tribution to Mrs. Vivian Vincent Green, Instructor • Service ______.. __ .... __ ... the ex panding literature of urban geography in flute and Director of the Indiana Exuding Friendliness! liS well as a highly sati s factory a nal ysis of the cit y and region of whi ch it treats. De tailed • Atmosphere _. ______...... and critical field observations, extensive That's Really Chummy! Jibrary resea rch, an adequate set of maps (accompanied b y deta il ed notes on sources of • Air-Conditioning dat e) , carefully selected sta ti st ical informa­ tion, voluminous and exact foo tnotes, selected BOUQUET SHOP For Your Comfort! lists of reference works, frequent correla­ tions with general principles of urban geog­ raphy, and numerous compariso ns with cities • • • elsewhere contribute notably to the value of FLORISTS this study. A lucid a nd pleasin g style make for readability and understan din g, with the result that the absence of photographs 10 The Rendezvous WASHINGTON at fIFTH illustrate the la ndscape forms and fundions is scarcel y to be noted espec ially in view of Is Where You Meet the widespread general acqua intance o f most Blooming ton rea ders with t his region. Your Friends! CLIFFORD i\1. ZlEllE ll , AB'22, AiW23. University of Cali fornia. 30 The January 1941 Illas season for many years under his direction _ One of the things of which thp School of Music is most proud is its Indiana library. Miss Ethel Louise Lyman came to the University last year to take GlassW'are! charge as librarian. With the help of a number of NYA students great strides have been made in the arranging anJ classifying of the lOpOO volumes of books and music and the 3,000 phono­ graph records which the library now contains. Included are the complek works of Beethoven, Handel, Mozart. Palestrina, Purcell, the Denkmaler Deutscher Tonkunst, and the English Madrigal School. There are 400 on:hes­ trations and a large library of choral music for the Glee Clubs and Chorus. The Music Library serves faculty and Margaret Ann Johnstoll, AB'4!J, is now the students alike, and renders special bride 01 All-Americon fullback Corby Duvis, service throughout the State_ BS'39. They were married Dec. 21 in Wil­ mette, Ill., and will li ve in 5", Charies, llI., The Music School is annually host where Corby is couching high school football. for the State solo contests conducted by the Extension Division of the Uni­ University cooed band, who has the versity; and this year, for the third BS degree from Fort Hays Kansas successive time, the finals of the State State College; Newell Hillis Long, In­ solo and ensemble contests of the Cen­ structor in Music, who has the AB and tral and Southern Indiana Band and AM degrees from Indiana and the Orchestra Association will be held here. MS from Northwestern ; Mrs. Evelyn Such are the achievements then, of Saxton Locke, Acting Instructor in the School of Music of Indiana Uni­ Piano, who ha" an AB from Linfielcl versity: the acquisition of a large and College and a BM from Northwestern; distinguished faculty, representing tal­ G\~orge Young Wilson, Acting Jnstrue­ ent and training in all fields of music tor in Theory and Piano, who has a and fully qualified to provide excellent 13M from the Eastman School of Music teaching in all those fields; a large and ~Pld an MM from the Union Theo iogi:;:'lJ growing student body, including those Beautiful Hand Blown Tum­ 5elllin2J"v; George Daggit, I n~trlJ c t or who plan to make the practice of some blers With I.U. Seal in Color in Piano, who has an AB from the Uni­ form of Illusic a profession, those who ThaI University tOllch for your own versi~j' of l'I'linnesota; and Max \\0011­ wish to become public school teachers home. Modern in design, these tum­ bury, Part-time Instructor in Trumpet, of music, and those who wish merely blers are guaranteed by the makers \"lho is First Trumpet of the Illdianap­ to increase their knowledge of music -Glassylvania Company, Oil City, ;)lis Symphony Orchestra_ as a means of increasing their enjoy­ Pa.-to satisfy you or your money Two more individuals who must be ment of the good th ings of life; and ;) back_ remembered whenever the School of fine new building_ Show your friends how much you value Music of Indiana University is under Unfortunately these gains have not your LU. connections by using discussion are Professors Jorn L. Gei­ been accomplished without some loss. these ~Iasses with the two-color at­ Iractive seal in University colors_ ger and Edward Bailey Birge, both of Those who knew the School of Music whom retired, after long and honorable in the old days say that there was a __C~p_a~d_ ~a!!:. ~?!.V!. _ service, in 1938_ Through his own en­ morale, a spirit of camaraderie, about LU. Alumni Office thusiasm for opera, Professor Geiger the students who frequented old Mitchell 301 Union Building did much to encourage a love for that Hall, that seems to have disappeared Bloomillgton, Ind. art in all who came in contact with with the move to a new building. But Please send at once, prepaid,...... doze n glasses wilh I.U. insignia as him; and for many years he directeJ it is undoubtedly true that whatever checked below, for which I enclose my the Girls' Glee Club, with admirable change has occurred is merely a check for $ . results. Professor Emeritus Birge, who symptom of growth. In the change ...... doz . 5 oz_ size $2_50 holds an AB degree from Brown Uni­ from a small college to a great uni­ ._ .... . __ .. _doz_ 10 oz. size $2.95 ...... _ ... doz. 12 oz_ size $3.35 versity and a BM from Yale, had versity, some things are lost ; but the ...... se ls (l doz. each size) $8.50 much to do with the development of losses are much more than compensated music in the public schools of Indiana; for by the gains_ The School of Music Name but in Bloomington he is especialJy is performing- and performing \vdl--­ Street remembered for the performances of its function as a part of Greater In­ The Messiah, given during the Christ- diana University. Town

Indiana Alumni Magazine 31 WHEN the State Board of Education nominated Frank tion, but the biggest bloc of individuals was served by the E. Allen for the unexpired term of the late Val Nolan far-flung Extension Division, which through its lectures, and Governor M. Clifford Townsend made the appointment, visual aid materials, mail libraries, public school contests, they performed a service which should be appreciated by drama loans, and seven other divisions served a total of J.U. alumni everywhere. Mr. Allen is well qualified for this 758,390 Hoosiers. Health and hospitalization service position and the Board should find him quite through the University Medical Center in Indianapolis valuable in the months to come. He is a man were extended to 66,870 persons from all of the State's A Wise who has had wide experience in handling ad­ counties. Business men of the State to the number of ap­ Choice ministrative problems in connection with proximately 23,500 were direct recipients of research studies, education. For the past 24 years he has been business counsel, and other activities of the School of Busi­ active either as a teacher or an administrator. His keen ness, while the School of Law and the Institute of Criminal understanding of his fellow workers and his keener under­ Law Administration performed services in their respective standing of the problems of education have won him praise fields for 8,616 judges, State officials, State and city police, from all sides. and others. The . Speech and Hearing Clinic, aided by a Quiet, unassuming, confident, he gave us a quick picture grant from Psi Iota Xi sorority, aided 78,098 children handi­ of the type of man that he is, when he spoke at the luncheon capped by speech and hearing defects. at the conference of District Councilors and Alumni Club These and many other services, Hoosiers, Your Univer­ Presidents on the campus Dec. 7-one day after his ap­ sity gladly renders for you. Whether or not you have ever pointment. "I consider my appointment quite an honor," he set foot on the University campus or not, Indiana is your responded modestly in response to his introduction. Stating University. Your financial interest in the University may that every graduate owes a great deal to his University be small (cost of the University through State funds amounts whether he is connected with it in an official capacity or to 63 cents for a full year for each resident of the State). not, Mr. Allen added, "I will give my time and effort to the but your personal interest can be as great as you care to University and I am sure that it will be an interesting and make it. Indiana University truly "serves Hoosiers"! profitable experience." May we add that we feel sure that the "interesting and profitable experience" will not be limited to Mr. Allen alone but will also be shared by the Board of Trustees, the Uni­ versity, and the alumni. THE State of Indiana long has been known as the "hotbed" of basketball in this country. Many great players and many great teams have been turned out in this State, but never has Indiana University won an undisputed Big Ten basketball championship. Is this the year to end this streak? ANY doubt that Indiana University is underemphasizing Branch McCracken's boys confidently say that its program to "serve Hoosiers" is dispelled completely this is the year. They are determined to wrest by the report of direct services rendered to residents of the This that crown away from the lads up the Monon. State during 1940. One out of every three Hoosiers waS Year? They licked the Boilermakers twice last year the recipient of some direct service performed during the but took other Conference foes too lightly. A year by J. U. Through its three general repetition of that will be fatal this year. Indiana has a great fields of activity-teaching, research, and basketball team, probably one of the greatest in the game's "It Serves direct service-the University in the 120th history, but they will have to play their best basketball for Hoosiers" year of its existence, contributed directly all 12 games to win the title in this league. Even the teams to the welfare of 1,187,982 residents of relegated to the second division by sportswriters in pre­ the State, an increase of 14 per cent over 1939. A total of Conference predictions are capable of springing up~ets at 16,910 differeat individuals received University instruc­ any time. SAID THE ELECTRICAL MOUTH TO THE ELECTRICAL EAR ...

"Joe tookjalher's shoe bench out. This is only one of the many Busily at work in the interes t of She was waiting at my lawn." tests to which telephone equip­ everyone who uses the telephone Ifyou were passing through the ment is subjected in the BeJl Tele­ is one of the largest laboratorics Bell Telephone Laboratories to­ phone Laboratories. And there is in the world. The development of day you might hear an electrical a reason for the selection of those the telephone in this country is mouth speaking this odd talk, or particular words. of the value of this research. whistling a series of musical notes, I t happens that the sentence, In times like these, the work of to a telephone transmi tter. "Joe took father's shoe bench out," the Bell Telephone Laboratories This mouth can be made to and its more lyrical companion, is especiall y important. repeat these sounds without vari­ "She was waiting at my lawn," BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM ation. Every new telephone trans­ contain all the fundamental mitter is tested by this mouth sounds of the English language The Bell System is doing its before it receives a laboratory or that contribute to the intensity part in the country's program manufacturing O.K. for your use. of sound in speech. oj National D1ense Chicago's celebrity . .. a hotel of great a . . . on Fort ""ay ne* it s regis ter, in Inn'; Panther and Malaya joy the hospitalit y of where the grea test s\\ ; the KEE NAN ; 300 beau· play ... li sten nightly and WENR ... Gu e rooms all wi tl! bath. the world of tom restau ra nts, all su sonable. T ap 1700 Rooms-1 and Continental From $2.50, $3, Dining Room.

Indianapolis

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F Many Years TUSCANY Roo.f. MIRAB AIl , Favoriie Hotel 0/ COFFEE SHOP. I.U. Alumni . Fine /ood and drink service at Terre Ha ute . moderate rates

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"Perpetually New" 300 Rooms Luxury in Dining at small cos!. in the beautiful BOUllBON ROOM

For Busin ess lVIe e t ing s ~ Social Parties, Bridge. AM BEll, MURAL, and CHASE ROOMS Also Official I.U. Alnmlli Hotels